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Page 14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Higher rates create consumer problems
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )- Utility

rates lnrnostofOhio' s big cities have
been creeping upward since June
1982, creating problems for residents, especially the poor, Ohio's
consumer counsel says.
A swvey by the counsel's office
looked at combined rates for gas,
phone service and electrtcity in the
seven Ohio cities with populations

Earthquake
shakes area
PORTSMOUTH , Ohio (AP)- A
small earthquake was reported
Wednesday in southeastern Ohio
and parts of West VIrginia and
l&lt;entucky, but apparently caused
Uttle or no damage.
The National Weather Service a t
Huntington, W.Va ., confirmed tha t
the earthquake occurred at 10:03
a.m. It said the quake was believed
. to be centered in the Greenup
County area of eastern Kentucky ,
about 20 miles southwest of
Portsmouth.
An employee of the Greenup
County sheriff soiflcesald there had
been no reports of damage and that
no one in the office had felt the
tremors. A deputy in the Scioto
County (Ohio) sheriffs office also
said there were no reports of

over 170,(XX). The survey also looked
at rates in large cities in neighboring
states.
Four Ohio cities Increased their
ranking 1n the list of 14 cities with
populations of 170,(XX) or above.
"The bottom line is that rising
utility bills are making it more
difficult to live in these cities,
especially for those suffering financial hardships," Counsel Wllllalfl
Spratley said.
·
Toledo's ranking among the 14
cities was thesameasin1982, but the
ran kings !or' Columbus, Cleveland ,
Columbus and Akron rose. Ranktogs for Dayton and Cincinnati .
dropped.
The office used figures from
utility companies, taking the effective rates of June30 for 500 kilowatt
hours of electrlcity,13,000cublc feet
of gas and the individual flat line
telephone rate.

Philadelphia had the highest bill
at $156.97 a month. followed by
Toledo, with $154.29; Columbus,
$142.38; Cleveland, $139.25; Detroit,
$138.16; DaytDn, $137.74; Pittsburgh, $137.13; Akron, $132.79;
Lexington, Ky., $131.00; Cincinnati,
$129.71; , Grand Rapids, Mich.,
$126.37; · Indianapolis, $121.60;
Louisville, $116.84; and Fort_ Wayne,
Ind., $116.35.
The average combined bW was
$134.70, the study said.
The studY said customers in
lndlanapillls expertenced ·the highest rate of increase in the year ended
June30.
.
Customers there saw bills rise31.~
percent. Customers in Columbus
were second, with a 21.4 percent
increase, followed by Akron, 20.5
percent and Toledo, 19.5 percent.
Rate increases averaged· 17.4 percent, the survey said.

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
Now Is The Time To ...

BOB AND CHARLENE HOEFLICH
(Afred P.M. Or On Weekends)
~~=~

rn--

Motor vehicle
funds arrive

~=~ ~.=t.::ii.

109 High St.

LADIES'

liTTLE GIRLS'

Fall Dress Sale

Fall Tops Sale

24 \1.

REG. '20.00
REG. '36.00
REG. 143.00
REG. '52.00

Registrar Michael J . McCuUion
today announced the Bureau of
Motor Vehicles has the seventh
advance distr1butlon of 198311cense
tax revenues totaling $16,099,952.42
ready for disbursement to local
governments . Meigs County's
share of the distribution Is
$48,530.96.
Warrant requests in this amount
have been sent to the state auditor's
office for preparation. It Is anticipated that these warrants will he
ready tor mailing to each county
auditor by August 24.
The latest dlstr1butlon brings the
total to over $172.9 million in vehicle
registration fees collected and
returned to Ohio's 1,062 taxing
districts since January 1.
This money Is regularly sent to
county and local governments to be
used for br1dge and road maintenance and repair. The Registrar
.noted tqat license revenues are the
prtmary source of funds for these
local road Improvement projects.

.. :..........SALE '15.99
...........•.SALE '28.79
.............SALE '34.39
.............SALE '41.59

New styles and colors for fall in kntt tops, flannel shirts, blouses
and sweaters. Sizes 0-24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X. 7 to 14.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

....................... SALE
18.00 ........................SALE
111.00 ......................SALE
'16.00 ...................: .. SALE
15.50

Weekend Sale' prices on pre-recorded cassette tapes and stereo
albums. Country, popular, sound tracks, rock, children's music and
·
religious .

Bridle cowhide leather in black or brown. Sizes
30 to 50. I'~ inches wide. SALE.

I

REG. '5.79 .................................SALE
REG. '7 .79 ................................ SALE
REG. '9.79 ................................. SALE
REG. '12.79 ................................SALE

'

on Hanes
Underwear!

14.65

'6.25
17.85
'10.25

$895

MEN'S and BOYS' -

t"(

I

Black 1% Inch Width
LEATHER BELTS .

I

SIZES 32 to 50

Famous Inspector t2
As Seen On TV

$715

MEN'S and BOYS'
MEN'S and BOYS'

Tube Socks

Gym Shorts

Famous Springfoot quality. Big selection of
colors plus white. Boys Sizes 7 to 11. Men's Sizes
9 to 15.

Regular price 15.95. Sizes Small (28-30), Medium
(32-34), Large (36-38). Extra large (40-42) . 100%
Polyester in solid colors of kelly green, gold ,
maroon, navy, scarlei and royal t!ue.

1.59 White With
Color Tops ...................... '1.19

1

11.89

Red Heart.

The quality yarn
COATS and CLARK'S

S16 9

Sweat Shirt Grey

Color Tops ............ .'......... '1.59

Wintuck Yarn

3 ounce skeins. Big selection of solid and variegated colors. Famous
Red Heart quality by Coats and Clark.

Published every afwmoon , Monday
· rhrou~rh Friday,

111 Court Strt'f't , by the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co mpany · Mul-

SALE

timedia . Inc., Pomeroy, Oh io 45769. 99\!-

2156. Second cla ss pos tage pa id at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Mem))('r: The As soclaiCd Press. Jn · Jand Dally Press Assocl aton and thf'
Amer ican Nl"wspaper _Publi shf'rs As-

$}39

SKEIN

Playtex•

sociation, Nati onal Advertising Rcpre. sPntatlve, Branham N('wspapN Sales,

NEW FALL

733 Third A\•enue, New York . New

Junior Blouses·

Yor k 1001i.
POSTMASTER : Send addre ss to The
Dally Sentinel. 111 Court SL. Po meroy,
· Ohio 45769.

SVBSCRIM!ON RATES
By Carrlf!r or Motor Route

All new fall colors and styles. Famous brands like Lee, Stuffed Shirt,
Wrangler and Underground . Solids, stripes and plaids. Complete
range of Junior Sizes.

........ ........... $1.00
I

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

PRICES
....................... .. 10 Ce nts

Subscribers not desiring to pay tlwcttr·
rler may r('mlt In advance direct to
, The Dally Sen!!nel on 3. 6 or 12 monlh
basis. Credit will be giV E'n ca rrler each
monlh.
·

No subscrtptlons by ma ll perm it ted In
' towns where hom e carr ier service is
avnllable.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTrDNS
lmdde Ohio
13 Weeks ............ ..................... $14.04
26 Weeks ...... .. ... ...................... 527.30
52 Weeks ................................. $.'11.48
Ouf•lde Ohio
13 Weeks ................................. $15.21
26 Weeks ................................. $:19.64
52 Wnks ........ .... .......... . .......... $56.21

Reg. 1865.00
Little ~ck Stow ....... Sale 1815.00
Reg. 1940,00
Regular Buck Stow .... Sale '885.00
Reg. 11060.00
Big Buck Stove .......... Sale 1975.00

Leather Belts

A Dlvl!llon of Multimedia, Inc.

Dally

Stoves! Free Delivery, too!!

SALE! MEN'S $695

(USPS 145-9611)

One Month ..... ............. .............. S4.40
OnP Year ................................ $52.80
SINGLE COPY

Special Auaust'Sa!e prices on the famous Buck

'12.00
'16.00
'23.00
'29.00

................................ SALE '9.59
................................SALE S12.79
...... .'.........................SALE S18.39
....... :........................SALE '23.19

SUPERt:sALE
20%0FF
SUGG£STED m...._

Cross Your Heart' Beau1tful Ones' ·
8t new fashion lace bros (styles 474 &amp;. 487)
all LMng' bros
alii can't believe lfs a girdle'
girdles &amp; ali-In-ones
·selec19d styles only

FREE

PARKING

•

at y

e

Pomeroy,OH.

SALE

'4.39
'6.39
'8.79
'12.79

Tape and Album Sale

ADC coupon
dates announced

One Week

THE
PHOTO PLACE

'2 Sectiona, 14 Pou••
20 C.nh
A Multimedia Inc. New1paptr

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August

Meigs board adopts
transportation plan
By BOB HOEFUCH

This includes our entire stock of new fall dresses
in misses sizes 6 to 20 and half sizes 12\1 to

'

Saturday, August 20
10:00 A.M.-Garden Tractor Pull-Tractor Pull Area
1: 00 P.M.-Pretty Baby Contest-Show Ring on Hill
x-1: 00 P .M.-Chain Saw Contest
4:00 P.M.-Quarter Horse Races
7:00P.M.- Tractor Pull-Center Field
x - Grandstand Attractions

For Your Appointment or More Informacion CALL

SPECIAL WEEKEND PRICES ON QUALITY NAME BRAND MERCHANDISE

The weather service said the
tremor measured 3. 7 on the Richter
scale, a readingthatcancausesllght
damage. In Portsmouth, radio
station WPAY said It received
several calls from listeners saying
their windows and dishes rattled
somewhat.

Aid to Dependent Children Coordinator Dortha Riffle has announced that September coupons
may be picked up according to the
following schedule for last name
initial:
Friday, August 19, A through C; ·
Monday, August 22, D through I;
Tuesday, August 23, J through Q;
and Wednesday, August 24, R
through Z. Coupons will be Issued
tram 9 to 11 a.m. only on these days .
If recipients cannot come on the
appointed day, they are asked 1to
come to the ADP office at the Meigs
County Health Department on
September 6 from 9 to 11 a.m.
Due to the Increase In case load
and the amount of paper work, no
coupons wUI be issued after 11 a .m .

Meigs fair program

Call The Photo Place and make your appointment for those
treasured "milestone" senior porrrnirs.
·
You'll like the · individualized attention you receive at The
Photo Place and you'll like the reasonable prices.
Your preview set will include 9 to 12 different poses before era·
ditional oil backdrops and before several oewly created outdoor set·
ttngs. We give you a variety from which ro make your final selection.

V•I .32,No.90
Copyrightod 1983

damage.

The Daily Sentinel

The study looked at rates In
Youngstown and Canton because
they are considered major cities,
even though their populations are
under 170,(XX). Rates !or Youngstown residents rose 20.5 percent to
$132.79 and for Canton residents, 22
percent to$119.67.
Spratley said rising gas costs
accounted for most of the Increases.
He noted that gas bills Increased
nearly $27 a month in Indianapolis,
for a 57 percent increase. Columbus
and Toledo followed with respective
increa,ses of 29.1 percent and 28.4
percent.
He said five cities were !!erved by
subsidiaries of the American Electric Power Co., . and, of those,
Columbus and Canton ranked first
and second In monthly electrtc bills.
He said Toledo and Columbus.
customers paid the highest bUts of
customers in six cities

A plan to reroute all school buses
of the Meigs Local School Dlstrtct-resulting in ~ much Improved time
situation for students and a possible
savings of $8),000 tn transportation
costs--was unanimously adopted
when the district's board of education met in regular session Monday
night.
The plan becomes ·effective
Tuesday when classes for the new
school year get underway. It is a
result oi a transportation problem
study In the distrtctwhlch began last
January.
Paul Wood and C. P. York, area
coordinators of school transportation for the Ohio Department of
Educatlon, presented the plan to the
board and 14 school bus drivers who
were among residents attending
last night's three hour session.
There were a few protests from
son\e of the drivers present, but,
Wood pointed out the plan was
developed after an extensive study
ofthetransportationproblemso!the
district. He warned drivers that one
route could not he taken out of
context-of the overall plan because
any Individual could Improve upon
one route, but, that would elimlnate
proper regard for all of the routes
which had to be considered.
Supt. Dan C. Moms last night
reported, that in some instances ,

students have been arrtv!ng at their
respective schools as much as an
hour and an hour and one-half before
clljSses $tar! In the mornings
because of the bus scheduling. .
By the same .token, students are
delayed and waiting to ·get to their
homes In the evenings, he said. The
plan will greatly reduce the ttme
students spend walling for bus
transfers to get home in the evenings
as well as reduce considerably the
time students spent In mornings at
their schools walling for classes to
start.
York In a comment to those
attending ihe meeting said he had
never seen anything like the poor
bus service thaat has existed In the
Meigs Local School Dlstrtct.
"You have kids waiting every·
where. They are putting in lOand 12
hour days getting to and from
school", York remarked.
Wood pointed out the plan had to
be worked out for the rerouting
using existing facilities and he
challenged anyone at the meeting to
Improve upon theoverall plan which
he and York have developed for
rerouting the buses. Dual busing will
be used tn some areas which w1U
mean that all high school students
will be picked up and taken to their
locatiOn and then elementary students in that same area will be
transported. This will inean a
change in the starting time of

classes. Middleport Elementary
will start at 8 a.m. and then high
school students wW he picked up.
Cl1155es In some locations such as
trhe Salem Center and HarrtsoqvUie Elementary Schools will not
start untU abOut 9 a.m. and al the
Pomeroy Elementary School at
about9:15.
Wood said that the rerouting plan
reduces routes from 27 to 261n the
distrtct and reduces miles driven
per day to 1981 in comparison to 2435
dr1ven In past years. This savings,
all costs remaining constant to last
year, w1U mean a savings of the
district of ab0ut$!ll,(XX)annually not
counting the positive influence of
students spending considerably less
time getting to and from school,
Wood reported . Wood said that the
plan w1U Improve the situation not
only for students but for dr1vers as
well.
He warned that the rerouting will
be a "headache" for drivers for a
few days, but he encouraged them to
attack the changes positively and
give the plan a fair chance when
classes being on Tuesday of next
week.
There will he no change in the
amount of money received by
drivers, Wood stated, and the board
of education pointed out that any
drtver who finds more time ls
involved in carrying out the plan will
(Continued on page 14)

CllAMJ'ION HOLSTEIN-·In dairy cattle Judging

at the Meigs County Juidor Fatr Thursday, the
animal owned by Becky Lee, dairy princess and

dooghter of Mr. WJd Mrs. Robert Lee, Racine, was the
grand champion of the Holsteins.

Board buys two buses;
•
•
accepts resignation~
•

Clerk-Treasurer Jane Wagner was authorized to
place advertisements for two new 65 passenger school
buses when the Meigs Local Scbool Distr1ct Board of
Education met in regular &lt;JesSlon Thursday night.
The board accepted the resignations of Sue
Cunningham, E.M.R. teacher, Clottne Blackwood,
substitute teacher, and Mary Rose, Middleport
kindergarten teacher for several years.
Theboardwitha3-2vote,decldedtousetheFarmers
Bank and Savings Co., l3ank One of Pomeroy and
Central Trust Co., for depositories for the next two
years beginning Aug. 23. Robert Snowden said he felt
the district should use only the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. since It Is a locally owned bank. His motion
to that effect failed to get a second. A motion to
continue using all three banks came after Larry
Powell commented that all of the banks pay local
taxes, the board approved a motion to use all three
facUlties with members, Powell, Richard Vaugban
and Arland King approving and Snowden and Robert
Barton voting against the motiOn.
Employ ......,._
Various transfers were approved and Kimberly
Adkins was employed as junior varsity girls'
basketball coach and Carson Crow as a junior high
football coach.
The board hired Belva Glaze and Helen Milhoan as
.cooks for the next school year. A discussion, however,
brought out that MUhOan had not worked any during
the past school year and board members expressed
opinions that It was not fair to hlresomecinewhowas
first on the senlortty list when that Individual bad not

worked or had worked very Uttle in the previous school
year. The board asked that Supt. Dan C. Morris come
up with a plan for the next meeting whereby this
circumstance can be prevented.
Theresa York was given a leave of absence from
Aug. 22, 19&amp;'1 to Jan. 3, 1984 and requesls to attend
professional activities were granted to Eleanor
Blaettnar, Gordon Fisher and Ed Harkless.

Monday.

.

· Hysell saki parents at the teenagers were !!erved summons
Wedneaday.

animal Is Pat Jolul!ion, Dave Climer, Londonderry,
Ohio, with his Mllklng.Sh~rthom, Jo Arut Callaway,
Reedsville with her Ayshlre and Joe Parker of the
Leland Parker family, Pomeroy, with his Jersey.

GRAND AND RESERVE CHAMPION JERSEYS.
-The Jerseys of Joe Parker and Jim Parker, 1-r, wnn

grand and reserve champion honol'H of the dairy
cattle at the Melp County Junior Fair Thursday.

The board went on record as not wishing to provide
voluntary registrars for the purpose of registering
voters in the secondary and vocational schools of the .
district. Membership In SEOKW A for 1~ was
renoewed and the board endorsed the Trl Valley
Conference Constitution and by-laws with all voting
yes except Snowden who said he did not acknowledge
Meigs Local being in that league.
Acxepted as tuition students for the next year were
Mike Chancey. Heida Cobbs, Huey Eason, Micbael
!Goes, Courtney Knapp, Amy Beth Redovlan,
SbannonSlavin,DarrellStoneandJaneAnnWWiams.
A detailed grading and promotion-retention proposal
was adopted.
Named to the substitute teachers list were Barbara
Matthews, Kitty Cassell, DebOrah Pickens, Karen
Probert and Debra Foster.
Theboardwentonrecordwlthanlntenttotermlnate
the services of Ernest :rrtplett, a custodian, and •
granted release tor athletic purpooes to Tern Marte
Roush. Transportation agreements for handicapped
students to Meigs High SchoOl and to Rio Grande and
Jackson were reached with Robert Eads and EdBaer.

Two teenagers face arson charges
Two Pomeroy teenagers have
been charged with arson in coMection with the Sunday fire which
gutted a abandoned building In the
vlllage's downtown business
distrtct.
The two boys, 15 and 16 years old,
will bave an initial appearance
Monday belore Meigs County Juvenile Coort Judge Robert E. Buck.
Charges were flied by Carl R.
Hyaell, county juvenile omcer, after
the suspects were questioned

FOUR GRAND CHAMI'IONS4&gt;rand champions
of the four broods of dairy cattle shown at the Meigs
County Fair Thursday, open class, went to, l·r, the
Holstein owned by Bob Lee, Racine, holding the

The boys allegedly entered the
three-story buUding at 1~ Court St.
abOut 10 p.m. Sunday. According to
Hysell. otflclals suspect they set fire
to a newspaper and threw It on a plle
of trash in the bulldlng. The motive
appears to be "boreOOrrl," he said.
The blaze was reported to the
Pomeroy Fire Department at 10:38
p.m. When the fire department
IUT!ved, !lames were shooting,
across the street. Villalle flreflgb·
ters, with assistance !rom tudts
called !rom, Muon, Mlddleport and
C'.aiHpoii.S, had the blaze under ,
controlby3:lla.m. Monday.
Pttuauy Fire Chief Charles

Legar said the buUdlng, owned by
Amy Kingsland Jones of Wellston,
was a total loss. However, tt Is
difficult to put a dollar value on the
structure, be said.
One fireman also broke his thumb
while battling the blaze, Legar said.
No other Injuries were reported.
The acljo!nlng iaw of!ice of
attorney Patrick 0' Brien reporteldy received about $100,(XX)
damage.
Involved In investigatiOn of the
blaze were Legar, State Fire
Marshall tnvestlptors Frank Elsnaugle and Jack Pyles and juvenile
officers Terry Gardner and Hysell.

Dickersons, Guthrie take horse pull
Arnold and Dickerson of Urlchs·
ville and George Gu thrle of Guysville captured the top spots In the
middleweight and heavyweight
caJegortes of the horse pulling
contest held Thursday night as the
grandstand attactlon at the Meigs
County Fair. ·
Winners In the middleweight
caJegory, 3200 pounds and under,
were Arnold and Dickerson, first; .

Bob Callaway, Reedsville, second;
D. W. Higgins, Belmont, W. Va.,
third; Tom Bone, Jamestown,
fourth; Denrtis Annltage, Cambridge, Wise., fifth; Jerry Newhart,
Sencevllle, Ohio, si.xth; Harold
Newhart, Senceville, seventh; G . R.
Douglas and Son, Coolville, eighth;
Charles Bowersock, Dart, ninth;
and. Bill Bowel"l!OCk, Route 5,
Marietta, tenth.
Winners in the heavyweight

- ~-===~~--~------------·+-' -----~--~- -

category, 3W1 pounds and over,
were George Guthrie, Guysvllie,
first; Otlo Klesel, Republic, second;
Ellis Derry, ZanesvUle, third; Bob
Hall, R. D. Marietta, fourth; John
Roberts, Johnstown, fifth; Storts
and DeWitt, Frankfort, sixth;
George Davisson, Murraysville, W.
Va ., seventh; and Bob Bowersock,
Route 5, Marietta .
Cash prizes ranging from $1.25 to
$.ll were awarded In eight places.

--

�Friday, August 19,. 1983

Contlllen_
•

Nader's bully boys.______w__i__llia_m__A__. R__us__h__er

The Daily Sentinel
~

Ill { 'ourt

Stre ~l

Po m f' f O)', 0Mo

DEVO'fED TO THE I :'tiTER EST OF' THE :\1EIG S-:\IA S O~ ,\RE .•\

~'il
~v

. . . .. ._. . ._. . . ,.........,..=, ....

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Puhli !Oi hi•r

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

1\.s..~l !-' lanc Publi sher Controlle r

Gt&gt; nt&gt; ral :\lllnagl'r

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
S ews Edit or

A !\fEMBER of The- .-\s.&lt;iOCiu.lf'd Prt'S'. lnlaM DaOJ Prt_.s.oj ..tYooda rion and lhei\nwrienn News papt&gt;r PuhtlWI'S :\..--.oooc latloo.

'

· LE'rT'ERS OF OPISIO:\' IU't' w elromL&gt;d . The)' should hE' less than 30t word."~ ­
AU letters at'\' suh.lt'ti to edltln~t and mll:';t IX' signed ~ith name . ~and te~
nwnber . ~ U.R'ilgned IN1t'r.i "W 'ht&gt; puhl.ished. Utte rs shedd lW' ln good
addrtossln~~: iHiut&gt;S. not pm;ot\Witks.
·

1..11..•.

NEW YORK (NEA ) - Hardly a
week goes by, it ~ms. without
another battle between some group
of . college students ~nd their
adversaries In the university ad·
ministration or el5ewhere. Almost
Invariably the local liberals- the
ACLU, or what have you - are to
be found on the side of the students.
This has happened so often that
some people have been misled Into
supposing liberals are just natu·
rally fond of college studen ts. Out in
Minnesota, however, a situation
has arisen which suggests that
liberals' fondness for college stu·
den ts depend on how closely the
students toe the liberal line.
Uke many institutions of higher
learning, the University of Mlnnesot.a has chartered a Public Interest
Research Croup (or PIRG) . These
PIRGs were Invented by Ralph

Nader, and are organized on a
statewide basis In m any states. The
Individuals PIRGs and the state
PIRG organizations engage in
various sorts .of political activity,
practically all of them liberal
beca use that 's whst Nader is. For
example, the sta tewide Minnesota
PIRG (hereinafter MPIRG ) hired
the lawyers for the three students
who opposed linking federal studeilt
aid to compliance with the draft
reglstration Jaw.
In many places, including UM,
the local PIRG is financed by a
small fee which the school Includes
on the student's blli. This system Is
called a " negative check-off,"
because the student is charged th.,.
fee unless he checks a box lour
times a year, while registering,
Indicating that he doesn't want to
pay IL Most students go alorig,.

leaving the box unchecked. This
yields Impressive sums of money.
In the case of Minnesota, fees
collected at UM provide niore than
8J percent of MPIRG 's entire
budget.
All went well until thls past
spring, when a loose coalition of
.-elatively conservative students
acquired a voting majority on the
board of directors o1 the PIRG at
UM and followed this up by electing
chapter officers and taking over all
eight seats reserved for UM on the
board of MPIRG. Then, It being
time forUM 's Regents to renew the
university's "contract" with P~G.
the new PIRG board asked that the
terms of the contract first he
renegotiated In certain particulars.
S~iflcally , they wanted to replace
the negative check-oil system ,
which. Is offensive to !pany stu-

Where did the
~ation's deficit go?
· What a wonderful recovery it would be if there weren 't so many killjoy•
around with tl)eir long faces and agitated consciences, nagging us with all
their womes about deficits and credit crunches.
:Why, even the White House folks are enjoying the party, as you can tell
fri&gt;m the cheers that go up from there whenever unemployment falls or
ln!)ustrlal production rises or Detroit announces another big week for car
sales.
And if the White House can forget about about the big budget deficits and
all the dangers deficits are supposed to hold, why should others worry and
rudely poke their fingers under our noses while we try to partake of the
punch?
Lyndon Johnson might have sCorned them as Nervous Nellles, because
they do have a way of disrupting the festivities, but Ronald Reagan may
have an even more effective way of dealing with them: of late, it seems, he
ignores them.
The issue of budget deficits, it seems, has va)1i.shed, for the summer at
least.
But not the budget deficit itself, which still lingers in the area of Sax&gt;
billion a year and the financing of which, the womers warn us, rntiht just
. force business and consumers out of financial markets and end the
recovery.
"Self-deception may work for a time In Washington,'' say the jiitery folks
·at the Morgan Guaranty SUJvey, who just can't get the issue out of mind,
inayhe because they see each day what the govenunent's borrowing needs
;rre' doing.
· Such as, they say, reducing the pool of credit for the private sector and
(Jutting upwaro pressure on Interest rates.
They maintain that self-deception "will not Work - and is not workingIn the nation's financial markets," as evidenced by the one-point rise over
the past two months in the cost to the government of long-term borrowing.
Paul Voicker, the Federal Reserve chairman, Is wonied. "Left
\Jrulltended, the sltua tion remains the most Important single hazard tD the
sustained and balanced recovery we want," he told the House Banking
Committee in July.
' At Bankers Trust, economists Doriald Wooley and Beverly Lowen
recently completed a study In which they estimate that in the second half of
the year the Treasury will have to raise $125 billion, nearly $25 bllllon more
than was raised in the first six months of the year, and 46 percent of all
·
financing.
: Thf¥ are arnongthe iongfacesat the party- someofthedtspepticfolks
who just can't seem to have a good time durlngwhatmanyothersconsider
io be one of the nicest economic parties ever.

Letter
. to editor
.

-----------------AppPeciates assistance

I'm sorry tha tit's taken so long to
get this letter written, but I've had a
great deal of work to do In closing
up for the season.
The Meigs Community Theater
had a good reception this year and
as the producer I'd like to thank
everyone who helped out In even a
small way. There were a great ·
many people and it 'd take a million
pages to list in what ways they
helped out .
I'li Jist some of them:
Kermit Wa lton, who let us hold a
bake sale in front of his store. The
Pomeroy Council who let us use the
auditorium. Bill Quickel, who
loaned us lights and helped make
the job of special effects easy. We'd
never have done it without the
gentle push of Shirley Carpenter
who helped out by not letting me
quit. George Francis, whose truck •

made It possible to get chairs for the
auditorium and Pomeroy Elementary for the use of them.
And this year's players, who
made the show work and made It
fun,. even though there was a lot of
hard work and harsh words but It
still was a great show. Thanks to
Clinton Tuqter whose ideas made
the great segments happen.
Chuck and Debbie Johnston for
their help In Oeshing out the show
and made It come alive lor
everyone. Dl)&lt;ie Bealrs who wanted
to shoot me on more than one
occasion I'm certain.
U there is any play you'd like to
see, please let me know and I'll do
what I can to get 11. This is a good
county and I'm glad you let me do it.
God bless all of you and see you
soon. -Jeff Hilleary.

Today in history
Today is Frlday, Aug. 19, the 231stday of1983. There are 134 days !eft in
the year.
Today's Highlight In History:
On August 19th, 1812, the U.S . frigate Constitution- aiso known as Old
Ironsides- defeated a British frigate In the North Atlantic during the War
of 1812.
On this date:
. In 1692. five women and a clergyman were executed In Salem, Mass.,
after being accused of witchcraft .
In 1934, a German plebescite approved the vesting of sole executive
power in Adolf Hitler as Fuehrer.
In 1955, the worst flood In the history of the northeast U.S. took 200 lives in
Connecticut and nine other states.
In 1900, a three-man court in Moscow convicted American U-2 pilot
Francis Gary Powers of espionage and sentenced him to tO years In prison.
Ten years ago: George Papadopoulos took the oath as president of
Greece and lifted martial Jaw.
F1ve years ago: A federal judge in Chicago set bond at$1mllilon cash for
Wllllam Kamplles, who was charged with delivering top secret defense
material to the Soviet Union.
·
One year ago: Israeli approval of the Lebanon peace plan ended a
10-weeksiege of West Beirut and ensured the releaseoftwoisraellsoldlers
captured during the confiict.
Today's birthdays: Publisher Malcolm Forbes is 64 years old. Jockey

Wlllle Shoemaker Is 52. ·
.
Thought for today: "'Tis never too late to bewhatyoumlghthavebeen."
- George Eliot, English novellst (1819-188l).

.,
'

~

dents, with an " affirmative cht!Ck.· '
off' under which students would be
billed for the PIRG fee only If they·
checked a box requesting this.
Well! Great was the hullaballoo:
One wouid think the UM PIRG
board's wishes would be honored 1n:
such a matter; after all, the 1982-83
edition of MPIRG's descriptive
brochun: declares that "each new
generatiori of college student" shall
have " the opportunity to reshape
and modify an organization that is
distinctly theirs." But !hen the
Soviet constitution guarantees tree
speech, too.
First the university's Regents
rejected the new board's request as
untimely and renewed the contract;
Including the negative cbeck-ot!
feature. Then the MPIRG board
unseated ail eight of Its new UM
directors, citing their opposition to
a negative check-at! as the reason.
F1nally, the MPIRG board gave
itself the authority to determine
who shall sit on local PIRG boards,
Including the obstreperous one at
UM. (Connoisseurs of the tot.alllar·
ian temptation will enjoy the blunt
language of the latter provision: " ...
a determination by the State Board
that the local board does not suit the
needs of its student body shall he
grounds for refusal by the State
Board of Directors to recognize the
legitimacy of the loca.l board as
constituted and to take such action
as may he necessary and appropriate to constitute a legitimate local
board." Jawohl!)
Whether or not UM's Regents will
consent to see their students
manhandled In thls way remains to
be seen. One Regent has been
moved to demand that the MPIRG
board justify Its actions. Lawsuits
threaten.
But meanwhile, what an Interest·
ing demonstration of that famous
liberal affection for Independentminded students! And where is the
ACLU?

Watch the Camshaft _______Ja__ck__A_nd__er__so_n
WASillNGTON - When the
average American buys a new car
- kicks the tires, slams the doors
and tries out the padding in the
seats- the chances are pretty good
that ·the salesman never mentions
the camshaft. It's an Integral part
of the engine and is pretty much
taken for granted.
But General Motors failed to
warn 15 mlllion car buyers that
using a certain type of engine oil
would cause premature wear in the
camshafts of their V-8 engines, in
use since 1974, The result of using
the wrong oll could be a $400 repair
bill, according to Federal Trade
Commission documents.
The problem with the GM
camshaft usually crops up after
25,000 miles on Chevrolets, Oldsmoblles, Bulcks and GMC trucks.

Normally, a well-lubricated cam·
shaft should last the life of the
vehicle.
To keep the magnitude of the
camshaft problem from the carbuying public, GM arranged with
the ITC to use local arbitration
boards and handle complaints on an
Individual basis. The FTC has not
given final approval to this. Meanwhile, the true extent of the
camshafe problem has been hidden
from the public under a 198l court
order seailng hundreds of
documents.
My associate Tony Capaccio has
obtained evidence of GM's cover-up
from Internal FTC documents
turned up by Rep. AI Swift,
D-Wash., and interviews with
Industry Insiders familiar with the
case.

In the mid-1970s, according to buyers have laid out $00 mllllon for
these sources , GM learned that
repairs that might have been
certain types of oil, classified for avoided if the company bad told Its
u5e in both gasoline and diesel customers what It knew ,
vehicles, were causing camshaft
And It's alead-ptpecinch that GM
failure because they lacked sutn·
knew about the camshaft problem
cient anti-wear protection.
early on. Internal documents show
Cleveland FTC Illes showed thst that GM toid its dealers about the oU
camshaft failure occurred In "70 · problem between 1976 and 1978 percent of the reported cases at
but waited untU 198l to tell Its
20,000 miles or Ia ter, with an
customers.
average failure at28,tm." The FTC
· "It appears that significant constaff was aware of 3,345 complaints
sumer Injury did occur due to GM's
of camshaft failure.
non-disclosure," stated one FTC
According to the documents, GM analysis. "Consumer loss that did
claimed only a one percent failure
occur could bave been easUy
. for Its camshafts. Even accepting avoided If GM had adequate oU-use
the company's estimate, that would
Instructions In its owners' manual
remain a minimum of 150,tm once it learned, at least by 1975, of
defective camshafts. With an esti- the problem ... Absent such disclomated average of $400 ' for each
sure, GM owners were unlikely to
repair blll, that means GM car !earn of the problem."

The Boster interview

Spencer owned horses .shine
in Meigs fair ·harness races
Mr. Browntown, a harness horse
owned by Roger Spencer of Pomeroy and driven by Don Spencer,
formerly of Pomeroy, breezed to
victory in both the first and fifth
races to take the trophy for the two
year-oid trot division In Thursday
Meigs County Fair racing action.
The trophy for that division was
donated by Simmons Olds-CadlllacChevroiet of Pomeroy , ,
Finishing second In the first and
fifth was Magic Marken , owned by
Mary Owen of Marietta.
.
spencer horses did well in the
second and sixth races also, with
Countertop, owned by. Roger
Spencer and driven by Don
Spencer, ·finishing first in the
second and second In the sixth. ,
Donridge, owned by Dean Flem·
lng of Lowen, finished second in the
second and first in the sixth trace,
wfiich was Included In the two

year-old trotter division.
In the three year-old pace
division, Ding Dong Bell, owned by
Peggy Carter of Chillicothe, won
the third race with the fastest track
time of the day, to take the division
trophy, presented by BroganWarner Insurance. Second In the
third race was Wolfcreek Time,
owned by Dick Morga. Marietta.
Races four and eight In the three
year-old trot division were won by
Flight Sargen\, owned by Rodney
Hanson, Jackson, with $uccess
Honor, owned by Lewis Copenbauer of Coshocton , finishing second in both races.
· Bob Tale, owned by Charles and
DoriS Norris of Lockhourne,
crossed the finish line ahead of the
field in both the seventh and
eleventh races to lake the three
year-old trot division trophy, donated by Swisher Lohse Pharmacy.

&amp;&gt;t'Ond In the seventh and
eleventh was Tryst Joe, owner Joe
B. Lanning of Newark.
The .ninth race, three year-old
pace, was won ·by Frank, owtiers
Peggy Caner of Chillicothe and Blll
Robinson of Hlllshoro, with Adios L.
R. of Larry Dale Hall, Mt. Vernon·,
taking second.
The lOth race, also a three
year-old pace heat, was won by
Jo·Mi-Jo, owned by Leonard Mills·
Iagle of Lowell and Shirley Duckworth of Marietta, and driven by
Don Spencer. Second In the tenth
was Springdale L., owned by Tol'\l
Poulton and Terry Van Rhoden of
(; r oton and Mount Vernon,
respectively. .
Horse harness racing was schedule&lt;! to conclude with a third day,
Friday afternoon, at the Meigs
County Fair track.

bullets, not bird shot. u we scatter
our political ammunition over the
entire Southeastern Ohlo area, we
will bag nothing. I have no Illusions
about state government , Democratic or Republican. They want to
spend state money :where they wUI
get the most votes. Only by exerting
our political muscle to the uirnost
behind a single project can we
expect to get any improvement at
all.
I recognize that half a loaf Is
better than none so would be happy
to support any one project ap·
proved by the SEORC as !he
dominant voice In Southeastern
Ohio. I will admit that I would be
much happier supporting a new
road between Athens and the
Ritchie Bridge because I have been
publicly advocating such an improvement for the past 16 years.
But I realize that other sections of
the area have equally strong
feelings about other projects. I only '
hope the members of SEORC
consider the good ol the whole area
. when making their choice.
I think It was In the fall of 1967
when I attended a meeting at !he
Racine High School chaired by
Frank Cleland, then Racine postmaster. The subject of the meeting
was a bridge over the Ohio River to
make access to the new Kaiser
plant below Ravenswood more
convenient to Meigs County
workers. At that first meeting I
remember several proposals were
outlined, most not feasible. At
subsequent meetings, businessmen
from · Ravenswood attended and
agreed upon a proposal for a new
brid!!" and access road. It was
roughly the same plan the State of
West VIrginia adopted tater when
they built the present Ritchie
Bridge. At that time U.S. TT, the
Inter-state freeway between Cleveland and Columbia, S.C. was being
built through Silverton, about five
mUes from Ravenswood. It offered

ing nicely when It was all brought to
an abrupt halt by the collapse of the
SUver Bridge at Pt. Pleasant. The
people of Ravenswood and West
Virginia remained Interested In the
project which culminated with the
construction of the Ritchie Brid!!".
Ohio DOT officials never regained
their enthusiasm and for a time the
brld!!" was mockingly referred to
as the bridge ending In an Ohio
cornfield. The Ohio DOT has
widened and resurfaced parts of
Route 124 but it is still a long and
dangerous access road to Inter;.
staten
&gt;.

SPENCER- Don Spencer, VIncent, continues to
he a lllandout driver or harness horses at the Meigs
Couat)' Fair comlnl!( tbrouglt eaeh year with ..vera!
wins. He Is pictured here coming in lor a win In the
loth race at the Meigs Fair Thunday driving a three
year-old pacer, Jo-MJ.Jo, owned by Shirley Duck· ·
...........
~

---

worth Lowell, Marietta. Spencer drove his uncle's
horses, Roger Spencer of Pomeroy, Thursday to three
other first place wins und a seeond, Don 18 the son or
the late Sidney SpenC&lt;)r who was a Pomeroy mayor
and was wo exL"eUent harness !KJrse tnilner and
driver.

-

Five run rally gives ·Reds
comeback victory over B.u cs
PITI'SBURGH (AP) - A mid·
game gnat attack didn't drive
Pittsburgh Pirates Manager Chuck
Tanner bnggy, but three ninth
Inning-walks, Duane Walker and a
five· run Cincinnati Reds' rally did.
. Walker delivered a three-run,
pinch·hlt double in the ninth
following three successive walks as
ihe Reds beat the Pirates 6-5
Thursday night, ending a pair of
streaks.
"We've been winning and coming
back llke that, but this is the first
time in a while It's happened to us, "
said Tanner, whose team ended a
five-game winning streak. "We just
lost it."
"We haven't been able to do
anything right," said Reds Manager
Russ Nixon, whose team had lost
four in a row. "It's nice to win one."
The Pirates had survived a
Invasion of tiny bugs, which bugged
both players and fans for several
Innings, tD take a 8-1 lead Into the
ninth, thanks to home runs by Tony
Pena and Jason Thompson and a
first lnnlng, run-scoring wlld pitch
by rookie Jeff Russeil, starting just

his second major league game.
The lead seemed especially sate
since the Reds had managed only a
second inning homer by Johnny
Bench~ and since relief ace Kent
Tekuive, unscored upon In his last 19
appearances, wasreadyattheflrst
sign of trouble.
That came after Gary Redus led
off the ninth with his 14th home run,
offCecilioGuante, to cut the Pirates'
lead to 3-2. Tanner Immediately
summoned Tekulve, who got two
outs sandwiched around a Bench
single and a walk to Nick Esasky.
"I just didn't have my control,"
said ioserTekulve, 6-3. "ldon'tknow
what it was. But I don't have any
excuse for it."
Tanner then brought in Rod
Scurry to pitch to Eddie Milner, who
quickly took two strikes. But Scurry
suddenly lost his touch and wound
upwalklngMilneronadlsputedcall.
"He threw the ball right down the
middle but he didn't get the call
(from umpire Joe West)," Tanner
said. "He had him struck out."
Scurry, with the bases loaded,
walked Ron Oester,to !lethe game,

and Walker greeted Manny Sar·
mlento, thefifthPtrates'pltcherand
fourih of the Inning, with his double
oil the l'i$ht&lt;enter f\eid fence. •
The Pirates rallied fortworunsin
the .bottom of the ninth on Mar:vell
Wynne's sacrifice fly and Johnny
Ray's RBI doUble, but Ben Hayes
gotBillMadlocktofiyout,savingthe
victory for Tom Hume, 2-5.
Walker is now hitting .375 with 11
runs batted in as a pinch·hitter.
"Some guys can do it and some
can't, and he can:: Nixon said.
"!go up and look.for a pitch I can
handle, " Walker said. "I don't have
too much scientific stuff. I do what I
can. Sometimes you sit there and
wonder If you're going to get used
tonight, but I'm able to be loose up
there.
"I'm glad to be abie to do It right
now, but I'm going to t.aik tD Russ
and teli him that 1 don't want to be a
ptnch-hliter forever . I'm glad to he
In the big leagues and have a job, but
1 want to play."
.
The two teams continue their
four-game series tonight, with the
Pirates' Rick Rhoden, 9-9, facing

'

.

'

I

.

The Daily Sentinel

pitcher Gaylord Perry lor their pao1
in disputing the umpires' call .
The ·only one of the four a l the
resumption of the game Thursday
was Howser, who watched on
television In the Royals' clubhouse .

i LJSI"S I -'5·96(1 I
A 01\'l!iiOn uf MuUhm.-dht , Inc.

Pu bl l-;hpd I'VPI'Y afwrnoo n, Monda y
lh r ou ~ h F'r ld:w. 111 Coul'! Sti'N'I. bvttw
( l hlo VuiiC'y Puh l\s hl nJ.: Co mpany . 'Mul·

Iin1C'I IIa . ln r .. i' OmProy, I lh\n 457&amp;9, 992·
postag P p aid at Po· .

:l l ~l i. ~mn d el a s.~

mPro.v. Oh io .

Series rot the Pittsburgh Pirates. fr;;;:;;;;;::;:;;;~11
But, Dan Quisenberry, .who
pitched the final three ou is in the
. historic pine-tar game, said it w~uld
be "remembered as a completely
different scenario."
It took just12 minutes 'to play the
final four outs of the suspended
pine-tar game. And finally, at 6:20
p.m. EDT on Thursday, it went into
the books - although New . York
Manager Billy Martin flied one last
official protest.
The Kansas City Royals had
beaten the New York Yankees 5-4 on
a two-run homer hack on·Juiy 24 by
George Brett.
"New In the Area "
Brett, who hit the homer with an
·g Years Experience
Special Introductory
Illegally tarred bat, wasn't even
around tD wilness the end to this
Rates
. most bizaJTe event In baseball.
"FREE ESTIMATES"
Brett's homer originally was

ACCENT
fENCE

nullified by umpires because of his
excessive use of pine tar. Four days
later, American League President
Lee MacPhall made history by
returning the homer to Brett, along
i
with his hat. But, at thesame t me,

~ -·

..'-·

program Thursday. Mike Wnmcr, left, Is pictured
presenting the trnphy . hlruokel provldL'41 hy the
Broglllo·Wanoer lnsunUtce Agency.

Pine Tar game
fin..lly over
..
NEWYORK(AP)-Itwasn'tthe
World Series.
It wasn't even the playoffs.
It wasn't as big as the Black Sox
Scandal of 1919, nor even as
memorable as BUI Mazeroski's
home run that won the 1900 World

- ·i

_...,

.

,.,~.--:-,.;,.._.......

M &lt;'1111H•r : T tw A s ~u du t&lt;&gt;d r n· s ~ . In·
l and Da ll v Pn•ss Assorltt ton un d thf'
1\1)\N it an NP W!i\) &lt;11)1' 1" Pul&gt;II Shf'rs A ~ ·
~ Of' I LI !I o n , NUIIOII fl l Ad v('rllsln g: R1•pr~ :..
1wnt atl vc•. B r anham Nl'wspn pf'rSo lcs ,
7."1:l •Thlrrl A vrn uP, Nf'w York, New
York lllm 7.

I'OST MI\STI·:H: Sl•nd adcll'f'SS TO Th&lt;''
Jbll y St•!trlnr•I, IIJ Co urt.St .. Pom f' roy, '
O t11n -1fi7ii!l.

SUIISf ' lliPTION ltATES
lly {'arrlt·r or Mulor Routt&gt;
Ont• wr .. k ......
. ... ........ ................. suxf
O nt&gt; Month .................... ...................... $4..40
On" Y« •a r .......... ... ......................... S!'i2. flll .
!-iiNGI,E COPY
'

Pnu·..:s

Onll y ............................ ....... 20 CC'n ts ,
S ub sr r l hf' r ~

not d t&gt; ~ lrln ~ lu puy th('('3 1'·
rlPr mu y rPmlt In adv ance• dlr('('t to
Th1• Dully St•n tlnt'l on :1. ti o r 12 month
hu ..,JK. Crr dll will IM' gl vrn rHt'l'll'rC'ac h
m orr th .

No suh.. c · t· lpli on .~ by ma li J&gt;t' r mltiC' d ln
luWJl )o. Wht •rp h OUU' t"iiiT IPI" SI' I' VI&lt;'C l.&lt;t

:1 \'ll ilnhl v.

MA ll .

''

1:1 11'''''' ·' .

~~~l~~~7:,: 1r;;''J nNs

. ................... $11.04

1 Wroh ................................ $27 ..10
~· 'l \Vr ••ks .......... . ,, ......... ., ..... ,.,, S51 .4K'
"""'"• Ohio

Pomeroy, OH.

1.1 "'"'' ' ·' .......................... . ..... 110.21

PH. 992-6931

;,; wr&lt;&gt; • ...... ...
.. ....... m.64
''' wr"'' ... . . .. .................. t's.21

~~~~~~~~~~~~~--=========-===

' MacPhail ejected the Royals third ]
baseman along with Manager Dick !Howser, coach Rocky Colavito and

CELEBRITY MATCH- ProYIDCihlillle Jlrl&amp;ceald beatthe boyo,
the Chicago Knocken AD Girl Mud Wl'l!llilen look Paul Barnett.
president of Bank One al. Pomel'O)', and "BII Red" al. WMPO Radio to
the "mud" In the Melp Count)' Falr'a (ll'lllldliand altracUon '111unda)'
night. 'lbe mud wretlllen proved popular drawing one ol the larp!SI
crowds ever. Here llarndt, altlred In'black leotards, lakes a fall from ·
"Rockln' Robin.''
'

ATTENTION

DAIRY
FARMERS

•
Kenner Bush Is now chairman ·of
the highway committee of SEORC.
I hope he still retains ·the enthusl·
~·

asm he once had!

.-.

.·

I'M GoNNa 6ELL You
Ttfi~ BoLT foR ONLY

FOUR C8fft'i!

iuJe

~eLL THi~
60LT- To Tlfe MiliTaRY
FoR $JJ,If69!

I

Swats lllell ecoaomtcally.

floW Po r Po IT?
n.L TeLL You How 1

~ I Cal'l aFRlRP TO
PRacTIGi!LLy Give

IT awav

Vour

With Pennectrtn, a little
gose a long, long way. That's

1976 PONTIAC LeMANS ..................................... 11295
4 Dr. Auto., Air.
1975 FORD CLUB CAB ..................................... '1695
Auto., PS.
s
1976 DODGE Yz TON TRUCK ............................... 1295
Short bed. Standard.
1977 CHEVY LUV •·...........................:: ............... '1895
Standard, Long Bed.
s
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE .................................. 1095
4 Or. Looks and runs good.
· s
1974 FORD F-250 .............................................. 895
Runs Good. Automatic.
s
1974 VOLKSWAGEN STA. WGN .............................. 995

what makes It so Inexpensive
per season . What's more,

new Permectrln Strips cost

less than competitive Insecticide tags to save you even

more.

Swats lllell aalely. The active Ingredient Is ODf of the
most powerful compounds against files, yet It's con·
sldered to be one ot the safest !or us on and around

.horses.

Swats Rl• longer. A!llong as aU swnmer with
the new Pennectrin Strips. They're designed longer
to work better- with greater useful surface area.
So as your horse swinas the strip, more insecticide is
spread to the ho~ body.

JH I . Ilia St.

MODERN
SUPPLY·
112·21M

'1lot ltort B "AIIIIItla olltllf''
Por - Pets. StiiiiH, Llrp l Smell Anl"!lll,
Lawa &amp; G11dtn1

POIIIIOy, Ohio

.

.....

TROPHY - Ding Dong Bell, owned by Peggy
Carter of Chillicothe, was the lop three year-old pacer
In the Meigs County Fair harness horse racing

Mario Solo, 13-9.

Lawell Wingett

a direct route from this section to
the South, something the sponsors
of the Pomeroy bridge had envisaged when that span was built.
At that time I w~ M~igs
correspondent .for the Athens Messenger. I wrote to the publisher,
Kenner Bush, outlining the advantages of the project oot oniy to
Meigs County but to all the counties
from Meigs to Franklin.
f{e quickly threw the resources o1
the paper behind the project and
hosted a dinner at the Ohio
University Inn at Athens for civic
leaders and officials. from cities
between Charleston and Columbus.
High Deparirnent of Transportation officials from West Virginia
and Ohio attended a meeting and
plans for the project were progress-

'

t-

------------~----------~~

I

I have read the interview in
Sunday's Times-Sentinel with Mrs.
Jolynn Boster, State Representative, on her first seven months In
office. The freshman legislator
seems to have made remarkable
progress In grasping the compll·
cated reins o1 slate government.
She realizes that she bas her work
cut out for her in representing a
rural district in an administration
that Is big-city orientated.
She put her finger on the crux of
the highway problem In Southeast·
ern Ohio when she says, "Unfortunately, we have so many priority
projects." She was obviously referring to the six high priority projects
stressed in the report of the
Southeastern Ohin Regional Council a couple of weeks ago. In the
report they gave high priority to
three projects; the access road to
the Ritchie Bridge in Ravenswood,
Route 35 between Jackson and
Gallipolis and a U.S. 23 by-pass
around Portsmouth. The other
three listed in the report were the
Route 35 by-pass around Jackson, .
and two sections of Route 50 In
Athens County. Mrs. Boster adds .
another in her interview, Route7ln
Gailia County. There is no doubt
that all are needed as Southeastern
Ohio has been so consistently
neglected for the last fifty years.
Although she doesn't say so, the
new representative is apparently
asking the political and economic
powers that be In her district to
come up with a single project that
can be supported by all. By asking
her to choose any project over the
others would be calling on her to
commit political suicide. But If such
an eminent organization as SEORC
were tD deckle on a stngie high
priority project, then she and other
elected officials may feel tree to
support it without dire political
consequences. I am sure she
understands that we must hunt
Improvement projects armed Wtth

Pamel'!ly-Middleport, Ohio

SEE US FOR ALL
YOUR DAIRY NEEDS....

SUGAR
RUN MILLS
Mulberry Ave.

Pomeroy,

PH. 992-211'5

'
OH.

�Friday, August 19; 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi~

Athens captures fifth straight
Bill Thomas All-Sports title

HORSE PULL -Bob Calaway: left, Reedsville,
owner wad Leonard Cremeans, Coolville, Were
among lite horsemen gathered at the Meigs County
. Fair Thul'!!day night preparing to take part In the

seven forflrst,slxforsecond,flvefor
third, etc. '
Here's the final point totals for last
year:

Athens High School captured Its
fifth slrafght .WIIlJam E. (Bill)
Thomas All-Sports title according to
figures released today by Tom
Metiers, Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League statistician.
The Bulldogs boys and girls
athletic squads compiled 56\) points
\n 10 conference sports during the
1982-83 campaign.
Logan finished second with 53
points. Ironton. and Waverly tied for
third place with 40 markers.
Gallipolis was fifth with 33\);
Jackson sixth with29andMefgs last
with 26. '
Athens flnishedlastlnfootball, but
won league titles In cross coontry.
golf. basketball and track. The
Athens girls won the basketball title,
and !!nlsluid second In volleyball.
Logan won ·the boys division with

annual horse puDing contest. they are pictured with
Calaways team of "Bock and Dick," participants In
the Hghtwelght CIIL!lS.

--.Ohio
-

~~p~

Majors

HOME

AMElliC\N LEr\GUE
EAST DIVISION

.

W

MUwauk£1(&gt;

Baltlrnort&gt;
Iklmll

Toronto
New York

L

50
52

"'

53

58
~ll

"70

2"i;

Elo5ton,

SJ'OLEN ~ : R.Hendt&gt;rson,

GB

.571 -

~

I~

.169
!DB
542

ll,i:
Jl,i:
.487 10
.417 18M!

" "

Boston
~ev&lt;&gt;land

Amla.s,

:5.

ret.

" ""

o;
o;

RUNS:

Cooper, MUwaukee, :zi: Klllle, Olk:ago,
25; Rice, lbtm. ?&gt;: Wlnftcld, New Yo.-k.

\\'FST DIVISION
hk:ago .
G5 !)3 ' .551
.Kansa..• City
58 58
.500

6

Qak.

land. 74: R.Law , Otlcago, 55: J .Cruz, Otl cago. ~ W.WIIson, Kansas City, 47;
Sam ple, Texas. 36 .
PITCHING !10 dt.&gt;cislonsl : Haas, MU·
waukee, ·ll·2, .8t6, l.38; Gossage, New

York, 10.3, .7'69, 2.1B; Rigfl(&gt;t11, New York.
13-4 . .1m. 3.28: Mct:il'@fi!OT, Baltimore, e.
5, .750, 3.10', Schrom, Minnesota, IH.
.7.11, :\If!.
S'TRIKEOUTS; Moms, Detroit, lil.i:
Righetti, New York, 137; Stleb. Toronto.
L17: F .Bann.ister, Chicago. 125: Sutcllflf',
Cll'\·eland. 118.

oakland

00

63

~a~

57
57

61
63

""
.......
.47::1

70

.426 15

SAVFS: Qulsmbeny, Kansas ary, 32:

74

.:m "'

Caudill, Seattle, 22; R.Oavts, Mi'lnesota,
22: Stanley, Boston. 22; Lopez, Dcfrott.

tallforfl]a

~
46

)unnesota
,$(&gt;attle
,

Thut'!lday'r~

Game

'
9

,. Kansas GUy ~. Niw York t OOnt'luSion

1£.

&lt;t~f

NA.TIONA.L ~GUE
BAITING I:.UJ at bals \: Madlock. Pills·
bui"Rh. .Jlol; Hl'ttdrlek. St.l..ools, .32.1;
Herr, St.Lwls, .323: Lo.SmHh. St . Lool.~ .

SWIIX'fl!l?d " pine-tar'' ~amc
"' Only game scheduled

..

FrkiiU''s Gamm

;.J~s c:;~ ~ga~: ~~u~

.321:

cruz.

Hooston. J19.

, ..MrCrei','Or l~Sf. 2. o -n\
•
, Olk'a;;:o ! Dotson 12-7 and Koo.srtlll11 11.5)

RUNS: Mu~. Atlanta , l lll: Ra!ll('S,
Montreal. Sl: Evan~. San F'ranct!ico, 78:

c lll Texas /Honeycutt 14-8 a nd Hough 10.
101. 2. 11-nl

Garvey, San Diego. 7a Hon..or, Atlanta,
15.
RBI: Dawson, Montre.J, 9'l: Mu'l'h.Y.
Atlanta, !14: Schmidt Philadelphia, 83;
Guemro, Los Angeles, 75; Hendrick,
St.lools. iO;
J .Davis, Chicago, 10:

~attle t'-lark 5-51 at Clell(&gt;land ( Hc~ton

'7-4), lnl

Tomnto IOancy 13-7) at Boston 11\ldor"
'lfl.8) . (nl

California (FoNCh 11-71 at N{&gt;w York
CGuidry 13-8). (nl
OaklMd ICol'lf'O)I S-51 at Milwaukee
(Suuon 7-9!. IM
· Detroit rMorrts
tCastUio S lOt, 1n1

lf·8t at Minnesota

T.Kennt'dy,

Montrelll, 142; lbon. Houston. 142: Cruz.
Hwstm, 140; BuCkner, Chicago, 139.
DOUBLES: Buckner. Chicago, l'!:
Knight, HOUS'!on, :&amp;, ~J1dl, St.Lwls. ·

Sa&amp;untay'll GamM
Kansas CitY at Baltimore
Toronto at Boston
•· seattle at Ol'\·cland. tnt

21: J .Jtal•, PIIUbtlrgh, ~: OUver. Monln'L\1, V: Wallach, Montreal. 27.
miPLES: Butler. Atlanta. U: Mon&gt;no.

cautornJa at New York. In I
: oakland at MUwaukre. inl
~ Olleago al Texas. (nl

Monll't'al, 7: GrE't'n, St.Lwl\, 7: Raln('!i,
Montreal, 7.
HOME RUNS: Schmidt. Philadelphia,
27: DaWMn., Montreal, 26: Evans, San
Franctsro. :zi: Murphy, Atlanta . 25; GlK'rrero. Lm Anples, 21.
STOLEN BASES: Raines. Montf('al, ~ :
Wllsm, N~ York, fJ; S.Sax., Los AnJttL
1€5. li; LeMaster, San Fran.cl!co, .li;
Wiggins, $an Dkogu, Jt

~

NA.TIONAL LEAGUE
FAST DIVEION
W L Pet. GB
Phlladfolphla
1\'l 54
.538 -

' Plttsbur&amp;h
· Montreal

62
00

56
58

,&amp; . Loub

57

Sl

Chi&lt;'~

!)II

66

New York

48

71

~tlanta '

, WEST DIVtiiON

$an

F'nulclSco
. j':tnclnnat1
•;,.

!'.ll8 3 ~
.48.'1 &amp;!h
A50 lOY.!
.&lt;1)..1 16

·"'

.:159

-3¥.!
7

~

61
64

·"'

.·"
m'

ll
~~

55

67

.451 16!7

71

Los Anaele&amp;
; Hoostar
Sari Diego

1~

.525

50

116

52

&amp;3

56

00

'lbur8day'a

Gama~

· ~ Otlcaeo J. Auanta o

:. PhUadelphla 4. San DIC$1'0 2, 10 lnnlngo;
• Cincinnati 6. Pittsb..trgh 5
, • St. Loul!; 5. Houston 4, 10 Inning'!
... f"f"N Yock at l..o5 Ansel~. pp:l . n:1ln

PITCHING (11 OOctslonst: P.f'ef't'2, At-

lanta. 1J.4, .'165, 3.16: Montefusco. San
Dll'80. 9-J, .750, J. ~: Den~. Phlla·
delphia, 13-::1, .722, Z..ll; Ryan, Houston.
12·5, .706, 2.36: Rclgrrs, Montreal. I~ 7.

ll..oUal'
~

~lOt ,

tnt

Ptllladeiphla tCarlton 12-lll at Los An-

tetes IVail'nalela 12.£1, In I

I

.

New York (Lynch 8-7) at SM Fl'llJ'Id.'ICO
(Davi&lt;l2-J). {nl

Saiunlay'a Garl'ltf!,
Atlanta at Chkago
New York at San Francisco
Clnc1nnatl at Plttsb.ngh. (n)
Houston at St loots, (n)
PhUadelphla at Los Ang(&gt;k&gt;s, In)
• Onzy games scheduk.od

' Leaders

NEW.SPRING HOURS
Mon .-Fr1- - 9·00
to S·OO
Sa turd y 9 .00 t 1 .00

Waverly ........ .................. ................... .. 20

~THE

Meigs. , ....................... ...... .......... l 3

GRAVELY
SVSTEIVI

A.MEJUf'AN LFAGUE

•'

RUNS : MoUtor, MUwauktot, · 82:
•: E.Mumy, Ba!tirTlurt', 19; Rlpkl!JJ, B&amp;ltJ·
~ rnon:&gt;, 19: Cooper, MUwall)(eo@, 78; Yount,
1
" Mltwaulll!e, 77,

RBI:

1•

~.

Boya' PolDIB

STRIKEOUTS:

~::~s:::::r:::::::::::::

HITS: Dogp. Boston. 1~: Whitaker.
Detroit , 1~1: COO!X'r. MIIWAUkl'f'. 149:
Mo::-Rae, Knn M&lt;~ Cll)', 14.'1; Wa rd , Min·

ltl.
DOUBLES: Boggs, Bostoo, :II; McRae,
K.aNu City, !II; Hrilek, Mlrueota, l'J:
• LN.Parrlsh. O!Molt, 33; Rlpktn. Balll·
• ~ rncft, 33; "Youm, Milwaukee, 1'!.
' . TR.JP~: Grift~, Toro1to. ~ Wlnfteki.
'" ~ New York. 8: 6 are tlfd with 7.
ooWla,

•' -

RESERVE CHAMPION IIOLSTEIN~ 11te reserve

SEE YOU ;t~/
.,*~ ~ FAIR f

chwnplon of the dairy Cllttle, Junior division, went to
the llolsteln owned by Jerry Smith, Racine.

THE

Londonderry.Anlmalsexhlbltedby
David Crfmer Jr. won first place
awards fn get of sire, produce of
cow, and junior helfer calf, with
second places In three females,
senior yearling heifer, junior yearUng heifer, cow two to three years,
senior helfer calf, along with senior,
junior, and grand champion
awards.
Sandra Climer's entries were
awarded first place in three
females , two generations, cow four
years and over, cow two to thr·ec
years, senior yearling he!fer, juntor
yearling helfer, senior yearling
calf, and second places ln get or

MEIGS CO. FAIR
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1983
10:00 A.M.~Garden Tractor Pull- Tractnr
Pull Area
1: 00 P.M.-Pretty Baby Contest - Show
Ring on Hill
'1: 00 P.M.-Chain Saw Contest
4:00 P.M.-Quarter Horse Races
5:00 P.M.-Sweet Mountain Sound
Gllmores
7:00 P .M.-Tractnr Pull- Center Field
• -Grandstand attraction

RESERVE CHAMPlON STEERr-Loii Robinson
Ritchie, of Robinson's Farms, Alfred, Ohio had tlte

grand champion steer, of the Meigs County Junior
Fair Wednesday. Lori Is the daughler of Mr., and
Mrs. Wilbur Robinson of Alfred.

CHOOSE

CLEAR.ANCE ·sALE
FROM

I
FIRM:

4

DIFFERENT

. STEARNS &amp; FOsTER
(Umitld Qalnlitin)

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
manager of the 1983 Ohio State Fair
. sayshe'dllkenextyear'sfalrtohave
more agricultural attractions and
less of a carnival alr]'losphere.
Fair Manager Jack Foust, who
was crowned baby of the midway as
a 3-year-old 60 years ago, waas
appointed fair manager In January.
Foust expects next year's fair to
be more a product of his own Ideas.
Much of this year's fair was planned
before he took over.

Q~ALITIES

r

EXTRA FIRM:

BY STEARNS AND FOSTER

Although he admits the rldes and
games in the midway attract
crowds, he' sconvlncedcfty folks are
just as interested in seeing how a
cow is m liked as they arelnrldinga
roller coaster.
So, Ohioans from city and farm
alike are beingireated at this year's
falr to an all country music pa vllion,
a petting zoo of baby !ann animals
and a refrigerated display of cuts of
meat .
.
Next year, Fousfhopes to expand

Our starting firmnes,s best suited for auest bedroom or
liaht to medium sleeping needs. Beip Damask cover.
Rea.
Safe
Twin .. ,..,., ........:.$129.95
Full ... 11C11 .......... $169.95 $129
Queen "' .......... $399.95 $299

Kimlet

Regal Splandcw

SAVES: Ll&gt;.smJth, Chic~. 19: Rear·
don. Montreal. 18: Bedrosian. Atlanta, 16:
Tekul\•e, Plttaburgh, 1~: Holland Phlla·
delphia 14: SJ-Iowe, los Angell's, If: J..a.
\'t&gt;lle, San Francisco 14: Minton, San
Franrl!ro 14.

PORTlAND TRAIL Bl.AZERS-'I'rBded
Pl&gt;ll.lr C\OYIUrd!alql. cmter, to Detroll
Pistons In excbangp foc a l!IM thtnJ.rwnd \
drat! Choice. 1'radP.d the draft ~hts to
Granville Wallen; t'el"'ler, 10 Indiana Paccn · In exchanl"' for a l!II!W ~~eroOO.round
drat! Cbol~.

....,.,....._

Nlldonal FooJbaU ~
BAl. TIMORE COLTS-l'raded Reese
Mct:aU. light md, to Tampa Bay Buccaneers In exchanQt&gt; for an Undbcbsed
draft cbo(('{' _
WASHlNCTON R£DSKINS-An ·
camp. Placed Bob Wlndder, guard,
lhP lnjuml mlE!rYe lilt.

Drl

HOO&lt;E\'
N--..Jicder~

CAl..GARY flAMES-51aned Richard
l&lt;romm.leftwtnr.
NEW YORK RANGERS-Siped Nick
~ Wing.
'

F'Otll,

"""""'

MajDr ..... SGool:'« Le.,.ae

PITTSBURGH

George ~. rnldftekter, and Keith To-

ur.

defen~r- ml~ldPr,

to

one-year con-

tracts.

OOU.&gt;JGE
NEW MEXIOO STATE-Named Pa!J1ck

Knapp head womsl's bula!rball coact\.

VALPARAf30-Nam«i [)roeoN Pringle
tract and tleld coacb.
WIWAM
PATERSON-Named

CfON countr)',

a..

PORTLAND, OH.
From Pomeroy: Take 124 East

CANNING TOMATOES
PEACHES &amp; · CORN

..

"WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS"
Bring Your Own Container

...

WARM MORNING
CIRCULATING HEATERS
AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR GAS
HOME HEATERS

TWIN SIZE

1.
2.

..

TWIN SIZE
REG. •169.95

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YOU CAN BUY

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EACH

~IECE

TWIN SIZE
REG. $109.95

11t1.

SIMMONS .

lwurious Simloam• Ia' extra comfort.

An exception~~ value It f!lese prices.

'

=lh FUR N I T U A E
.L~ SHOW ·C AS E

'

''
''
'·

•

AT
DEALER'S
COST

' $119
$159
$399
$539

GOLDEN VALUE IV
......., Firm: Tlris beautiful Simmons
rnatrreB set c:amblnes all the e•clu.ive
con51rudion features. A quHted pillow

;

•

.,,

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4.
5.
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QUALITY ENGINEERED LONG-LIFE BURNER
"FIRESIDE" GLOWING RADIANTS
INTERNAL DRAFT HOOD
RIGID FRAME CONSTRUCTION
QUIET OPERATING "CARPET OF COMFORT' BLOWER
PICTURE FRAME STYLING

BUY NOW AND GET

$50

TO

$1 00-OFF

If you inlend to install bottle gas to heat with,
See us now. Bottle gas is the most reasonable heat you can use.

PLUS GREAT
TIRE SAVINGS

•

mp plus a luxurous i!lld damask
CIM!r. So beautiful you'A hale ID CIM!r
hp,

ALL BEDDING WITH DISCONTINUED
COVERS AND ALL MIS-MATCHED
'
SETS REDUCED UP TO

I

EACH
PIECE

Silo

Twin ...,., .............$159.95
Full. - .............$209.95
QrMn (stt) ............... $506
Killl (Set) ..................$729

GOLDEN VALUE I
FIRM: This famous Simmons
bedding leotures exclusive AdjustoReste ails Ia' finn support Layer.; of

•
eS~
Ll ~L

FOR YOUR
R OR TRUCK

•

TWIN SIZE
REG. $169.95

Sale
Twin-...,., .. :~-- .. i1o9.95·
m.oo
Fun. tlldl ......... $149.95 $119.00
Qulin (Set) ....... $379.95 . $279.00
Kirw !Sell .........~$479.95 $359.00

'

VR-85

EACH
PIECE

t.q.d aa!Nnr ~ mach .

.,'

PH. 843 _51·93

•

$liS
$149
. $349
$529

EACh
PIECE

SPIRrr-Slgned

01

HARRIS FARMS

FEATURING ... ~.

Transactions
'
IINl!IJ!'l1I,W.
Nadl:ioll Pmkdhl t\MoclMion

,'

I

Twin Eldt ............. $159.95
Full &amp;ell ..............$199.95
~ Set .............$469.95
rq Sot ............... $699.95

2 Pc. Sets

•

I

r-------~D.~~~~~~·

$"'

the down-home feeling with more
displays, more specialized animal
shows and more help from farmers
In falr planning.
Foust Is enthusiastic about what
he calls "Ohio's show window of
agriculture and business.''
Foust knows a comfortable fair·
goer is more likely to come back.
He's added benches for foot-weary
folks and removed fences to make
the grassy areas more Inviting.
He also has a crew of college
students surveying departing falrgoers about wbat they liked and
disliked and what they want to see at
VP:.r'&lt; fair.

-·

r;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l

SEE RUTLAND FURNITURE FOR
YOUR HEATING NEEDS NOW

Beautyrest® and Stearns &amp; Foster

~~~:~~~~!L

Dairy cattle owtied by Joan sire, produce of cow, and junior r--~L~ECiG'-A~L--;:;m:;;;-~--Ca laway, Reedsville,· Bob U&gt;e,
hell
If
er ca ·
The Public Utilities Com·
Racine; Leland Parker, Pomeory:
In the Holsi eln division, chammission ol Ohio has set
1
b 11 nd junlot· ch m !on
and David Cr!mer Jr., Londondp on u a
a P
lor public hearing, Oase
erry, took grand champion honors
female were owned by Robinson
No. 83 _3 1-EL -EFC , tore In open class competition at the Dairy, Shade, with senior chamview the luel procurement
pion and grand champion female
practices and policies of
Meigs County Fair Thursday .
In the Jersey division, animals belonging to Bob Lee. In other
the Ohio Powe r Company
exhibited by Leland Parker won
Holstein classes, awards were: bull
the operation ol 1ls Else honors In the classes of cow four calf. Robinson Dairy; cow foUr and
tric Fuel Component, and
years and over, first and second;
over: first, Bob Lee, second, Don
related rnatters . This hea rjunior yearling helfer, first and Smith·, Racine, third, Leland
ing is scheduled to begin
at 6:30p.m. on Thursday,
second; three females, first and Parker; cow two and under three
August 25. 1983 althe
second; and llrstlncowthreeyears years: first and second, Robinson
.and under four, junior helfer ca lf,
Dairy; senior yearling helfer, Bob
Ci ty Council Chambers.
2t8 Cleveland Avenue,
two generations, mother and Lee; junior yearling helfer, first
daughter; as well as junior cham- and second, Robinson Dairy; senior
SW. Canton. Ohio 44702 .
pion female, senior champion heifer calf, Don Smith; junior heifer
The session will end al
7:30 p.m. or such later
female, and the grand champ calf , first and second, Robinson
Dairy, third, Davta Smith, Racine,
time as is required in order
award.
Joan Calaway entered dairy
Do
·lo accommodate those
fourth,
n Smith; get of s1re :
w
. ailing to lestlfy .
cattle In the Ayrshire division which
Robinson Dairy; three females ;
won first and second !n cows three Robinson Dairy: two genera tlons :
All in teres led parties will
years and under four; and first In
Bob Lee.
·
be given an opportunity to
senior yearling helfer, senior helfer .
Premiums of $13, $10, $8, and $8
be heard . Further inforrded
h
h
mation may be obtained
calf, jtln!or hel!er calf, produce of
to 11 rst t roug
by contacting the Comwere awa
cow, three females, two genera· rouqh place winners, as welt as
mission.
!Ions: mother and daughter; ,alid
ribbons; rosettes were given to
THE PUBLIC UTILifiES
junior, senior, and grand champion champions, with grand champs
COMMISSION OF OHIO
female In that division .
receiving trophies .
By : Mary Ann Qrlinski,
In the Milking Shorthorn division ,
Secretary
honors were
split
between
David
Climer
Jr. and
Sandra
Crfmer
of

tarllon, PhUadf&gt;lphla,

.'

o :

r-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;,;;;,;;;,;~

CORNI;R OF THIRD AND OUVE - GAWP()LIS

'

:~~

132: Ryan. Houstoo , 128

Mllwaukel!, lOl.i Wintleld,

81.

a :

Pittsburgh, 146: Valmzuela, lns Anw-1('5.

, - New York. !K; L.N.Pan'lsh, De:trott, &amp;1;
ruce. Bol!lton. 81: Slrr\morls, MUwaukee,

sui&gt;To&lt;aJ

'""''"" . .. .... ........ ............ ................ 31

"''""""
that Matt Mendenhall, dt&gt;fenslve E!ld lOt

BATTING (~ at bllltlll: Bogp, BMton,
: .311; Carew, CalifM\Ia, ..'R.; Bmt, Kan·
, sas City• .332; Grlrtey. New York. .3.».
, McRse. l&lt;all58S City, .331.

Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992-2975

26

20.1; Solo, Cincinnati. U1J: McWilliams,

Frlclat• GanJOI

, Atlanta (Niekro 8-71 at Ch~8J.I'O tRaln"Y
12-9)
C\ndMIItl (SoW l't-91 at PlnsburJ[h
tRhodBI '-9), IDI
Ho;&amp;stoo !MaOden ~It at St. Louts
(L.aPolm 10-7), 1n)
' Montreal (Bums t-41 at San • Diego

204 Condor St.

.68:2, 2.95.

" San Francli!iCO 5. Montreal 3

:

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

-Super Savings On Quality Bedding By

Houstoo, U: Cruz. Hou., ton , 8; Dawson.

DMrott at Minncgota, tnt

GRAVELY TRACTOR

Logan .. ....... ..... ............... .. ....... ........ 36
AtheJ\9 .. , ....... ... .... .............. . .. ... ........ 3'2

ream

rookie to throw the ball.
"If we had it to do over, I probably
would have ·had Bruce (assistant
coachBruceCoslet) callrunsforthe
first few plays togethtmsettled In,''
Gregg said. "We decided tD throw
sornl!thlng fairly safe that's easy for
the quarterback to read. Well, the
best-laid plans ... "
The Bengals took a 10-7 halftime
lead on the strength of fullback
Charles Alexander's running. Alexander gained 90yards on 17 first hal!
carries and scored a second-quarter
touchdown with a 2-yard run.
New York quarterback Richard
Todd, who missed the second
exhibition game with a hurt thigh,
knotted the score with a 17-yard
touchdown pass to Jerome Barkum
In the third quarter. Todd played a
little more than ~ quarters,
completing 14 of 22 passes lor 152
yards.

Sfm DIL¥J, 70.

HITS: Daw1011, Montreal, 148; QIIV('r,

rr::::::::::::::::::::::;

: ::::::::::::::::~~

?. Melgs .....~;;,;;;;~· ~j'p;;.;;j""""""

ID.terceptions help Jets defeat Bengi.ls, 20-17

Scoreboard ...

LOgan'""""" .................. , . . ', .. . .. ' ' '''''' 17
Galllpols ......... .......................... .. ...... !~

Waverly .............. .... .. ... ...... .......... 40
5. GaUJpaJJs .............. ... ................... : .. 33\i
6· Jackson ................ ... ,..................... 2S

36 paints. Athens won the girls
cllvislon with 241) points.

engineered a 55-yard scoring drive,
This time, the Jets did themselves
tossing an S-yard touchdown pass to
ln. Ryan hit Mike Augustyniak with
rookie Mike Harmon with just over a 9-yard pass, and the fullback then
six mlimtes to play.
fumbled away the ball.
After a Cincinnati fumble, Ryan
One play later, the game went to
then drove the Jets 43 yards ID the
overttme.
Bengals' 28. But with 44 seconds to · , Cincinnati, looking for Its first
play, Leahy missed his second
exhibition victory, took the kickoff
straight field goal attempt, this one
and decided to bring · In rookie .
from 45 yatds out.
quarterback Jeff ChriStensen. The
"I was very upset at myself," first play was a pass, and .ChrisU&gt;ahy said. "But that was a long
tensen fired the ball to linebacker
one."
Mark Jerue. He returned It 8 yards
The second Jet Interception of the
tothe22, and the Jets ran three plays
game nearly gave him a shot at a
before Leahy hooted the winning
shorter one. Backup quarterback
field goal2: 15jnto overtime.
Turk Schaner! threw downfleld on
"Defense was the key to our
the next play and defensive back
success," said Jets running back
George Floyd Intercepted, giving
Freeman McNeil, who made his
New York the ball on the Cincinnati
first exhibition start and gained 61
31.
yards In 13 attempts.
Gregg was second-guessing himself for not running a few plays with
Christensen before asking the

~=Ji:::::::::: :::::::::: :: :::::::::: ......~1!

Ironton., ............ ........ ..... ............. .. ... . 9

Team
Pes.
t. ·A.rhens ....., .. ............ ...... ................. ss~

Pointswereawardedonabasfsof

CINCINNATT (AP)- The Cincinnati Eengals usually prosper
through the pass. But Thursday
night, they buried themselves by it,
with Ne\v York Jets kicker Pat
Leahy tossing the last shovel of dirt.
Bengal quarterbacks threw three
lnte~tlons, with the last one
settlilg up Leahy's 31-yard field goal
In overtime that gave the Jets a 20-17
victory In a natiOnally televised
Natlonal Football.U&gt;agueexh!bltlon
game.
"We wound up killing ourselves
thrOwing the ball," Eengals Coach
Forrest Gregg lamented.
The Jets, who boosted their
exhibition record to 2-1, tied the
score In the fourth quarter behind
backup quarterback Pat Ryan. He

Spb-Total

Meigs ....... .................................. ...... 13
Jackson .............. .... ............ ..... ......... 12~

.... I.e....

W. E. (BW Doma&amp;)

}~:::.;:::::::::::::::

Name dairy ·cattle champions

Glrlo'Polnls
Teun

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

OUTSTANDING OUTRIDER - Ten year-old Mica Jones on her
horse Smoky Is serving as outrider lor the Meigs County Fair horse
harness racing program. Mica, lor the third year in a row, leads the

SIMMONS

MOTORIZED

OFF .
•FREE
DEUVERY
•FREE

harness

ADJUST ABLE BED
'

-

OPEN DAILY TO 6 P.M.
MON . • FRI. TO 8 P.M .

446-3045

WHIII CUSTOMIR
SATISFACTION
.
'
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN.
'

,,

.

~

&lt; :• ..•' •'.

'

~~.;.$114400

, PARKING

"'UP"" past the grandstand before each race.

'

MEET ME AT THE MEIGS INN ·
.'

Luncheon Special Every Day 11 A.M. T0/2 P.M. ·
New Dinner Special Every Evening 5 P.M. TO 9 P.M.
Lounge Open Daily 11 AM. TO 1 AM. (Closed Sundays)
Come On Down- Give the New Manager a Try.
'

FOR QUICK SERVICE AND A BOTTLE GAS COMPANY
PERSONALlY OWNED BY THE GRATE FAMILY

•

'

'·

•

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

19, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

~y.

OR

August 19, 1983

Page-6

Fair Beef Queen .named
Lea Ann Gaul, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Gaul, Sumner
Rnafl, Chester, was recently named
the Meigs County Beef Queen. She
has been representing Meigs Coun·
ty's beef Industry this week at
various events at the fair.
She has been active In ·4-H nine
years, and has had several champion and reserve champion entries
In clothing and food judging durtng
her Involvement with the organization. She has been awarded champion and reserve champion trophies for her RegiStered Polled
Hereford cattle In both 4-Hand open
class competition at the fair ,
Miss Gaul also represented
Meigs County at the Ohio State Fair
two years In cooking and lood

rh:is Me&amp;sage and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Kingsbury Home Sales VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.I
&gt; AutomOtive
Complete
..
&amp;Service : ·
716 S. Second
~~~!!
:
Strvice
.

projects.
She has held every office In 4-H
clubs, and has served as a junior
leader with the Eight Is Enouj:h
club one year. Presently, she Is a
member of the Meigs County Better
Beef Club.
In 1970, she was chosen Little
Mlss Meigs County at the Meigs
County Fair.
Miss Gaul wUl be a junior at
Eastern High School this fall, where
she paJ:tlclpates In volleyball, softball, marching and concert band,
class Officer, StUdent COUncil, and
yearbook staff. She attends the
Chester Methodist Church.
She was sponsored by !he
Headquarters Beauty Salon, Forest
Run.

hit
-.

992-9921

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co. ·~

•

ol Columbus, o.
804 W. Main
992-2318 Pomeroy

with devotions on "Discipleship" by·
Mary Cundiff.

lore, India was read by Helen
Teaford.

Officer's reports were given by
April Harmon, secretary, and Ann
Sauvage, treasurer. It was noted
that 63 shu tin calls had been made.
Tracts were distributed and a
freewill offering taken, The birth·
day card of the month was sent to a
missionary, Janet Linde. A letter
from Marynelle Kirkwood, Banga-

It was announced that the annual
meeting will be held at New
Lexington, Sept. 29. Several plan to
attend. The reading program was
also discussed. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Sauvage and Linda
Ferrell and Mrs. Cundiff had the
spiritual life closing, "Greg Goes
with Grandpa."

992 -3978

SAROAIN MATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
ALL SEATS I 2.00

erso~

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH - 326 E .
Maln St.. P!l""""Y. Sunday ...-vices Holy
CoQ'!munlon on the ftrst Sunday ol each
month, and combined with mornln&amp;:prayel'on
the third SUnday. Momlngprayer and sermm
on all other Sundays of the month. Church
ScHool and nursery care provided. Cottee
hou"r In the Parish Hal11mmedlatelylollc1oollng
the service.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W. I
Mali1.St., NeD Proudfoot, pastor. Sible school,
9::1) a.m.; morning worship, 10:3) a .m.j
Youth m~lngs. 6: :11 p.m.; evening worship,
7: :tJ p.m. Wednesday night prayer JllEirt?ting
and Bible Rudy, 7:Xl p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In charge.
Sunday holbless meeting, 10 a.m.; Sunday
School. 10::1! a.m. SUnday School, YPSM
Eloise Adam!l, leader. 7::11 p.m., salvaUon
meeting, various speekers and music specials. Thursday- U: .:11 a.m. to 2 p.m.•Ladtes
Home League, members in eharge, an
women ln\!lted: 6:415 p.m. Thursday, Corps

GRANGE - Carla Rlfe and Bill Dyer, Meigs County Grange
l'rlncess and Prince are pictured at Wednesday's observance of youth
night.

State Fair awards

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER

Cadet Class (You.ng Peopl~BlbJe) . 7: l) p.m.
BJble Study and Prayer meetlfli, ~ to the

Richard H. Billman II, O.D.

public.
·
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH, Route!, Shade. BlbleSchool7p.m.
Thund.ay; worship !M.'I'YI.ce 8 p.m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST,' 3.'J'n6 C'tdldren'1 Home Road
(CountY Road 76) 992.-. Vocal music.
Sunday worship ~0 a.m.: Bible study 11 a.m.;
wcnhlp, 6 p.m. Wedne&amp;day Bible study, 7
p.m.
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
.CHURCH - Clifton j.ucu, putor. SundaY,

113 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PH.992-2920
VISION EXAMINATIONS
HARD &amp; soFT
CONTACT LENSES
Insurance and Medical
Cards Accepted

Delicious .
RibeyeSteok
c~w:,.

2 for

..,,,,,,... ....

..

b•:~ucifully

dnojolnnl

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

II'"·' ·ln,.,;,.ft ·"""''' 1.......
PI\. 112· 2031 or HH72l

Tllllt'l rondero••· St alrhouse In the USA!
The Biggest Llttl~. e~teak Dinners including
Imagine. 1i!Jo tasty R/be/ba~ steaming baked potato
an all-you·can-eaf sa a
,
and warm roll with butte~ -

•Restaurant Has Moved from the Dome to the Main Building
•EhJgent Dining At A Femtty Reataurant
Rt. 62
Ph . 304-675-6276
*Only 8 Mile• from Pomeroy Bridge

HOURS: Mon.·Sat. Ootn at 5. Sun. ll a.m tn' n.m.
SPEOAL THIS SUNDAY: a.old of Baked Steak or Veot Cutlet, Mashed PotatotJ ·
and Goovy, Com, Hot Roll &amp;

Bo··-.. .. . .

•

'(

f,~':'r'

Blf Cllo,.fl

'

Sted

'

~~~~~.,.
5 99

•

'

Bll
Dln,..r•

2 for '5.99
lnCIIJdts all

~ou-c&amp;n-tal salad II

S•lflll B•r

$~.19

I :.,:' c:"::'i,~t~~~:.:'.l"".

'

" ,,._,... ""' ""lot.

you~n~t salad bar NOr;~:~

~a~~~!~~:~~~~:\o:~~~=~J~:~fol ' ~:::~~~~,~,::f~~~~;;'i4iJ•~' ~~ti~:l~-·~
,'
f1111WII:n .
not e.p.IIMtlrtllf
e.-...,
- tl\7/la

•Communion Altar Ware
•Weekly Bulletins
•Singspiration V.I.P.
Subscription
•Flag Sets

be uudw~tr.ot~tl dtstounts kn
met -'tparttclpltln;stea •
IIOUUS

.........
"""
' ""''

MIDDLEPORT

prltsfll-

not inti -'1Plrltt1Pat: :.,
hGuses.

J:tld . .l

J:lldllllll

1(11(15

- steak - 1!111«1
- K u s o-~ooo;.choppedbeel
'- tnspecte
11
CI'IO pped ste•

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
992-2641

lr

1

~ J or

MILL ST.

- - - • ....
Lunch
special!

iitio••--T-.,,.".st
•., • •~r:...s::.· T
]' •';',.
I 2 for •5.99 II S•"""''"" "'"" 2 .or 5•9 9

WE ORDER:

9::11 a.m.; l'llOI1I1nl worshlp1 10: J):

oose. Selvtces, 10 a.m. Sunday, Evening
services, SUnday and Wednesday, 7 p.m.

· ·r~,.

Uterature

~hod.

evening w&lt;rshlp, 7: :II p.m. Mldweel prayer
meeting, 7::1) p.m.

FAITII TABERNACLE CHURCH, Batley
Run Road, ReV. Emmett Rawson, pastor.
Handley Dunn. supt. Sunday Khool, 10 a.m.
Sunday E"VE'nhig service 7::1&gt; p.m.: Bible
teaching. 7:30p.m. Thur!lday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cheny St., SYTI·

~

•Communion Cups
•Communion Bread
•Bulletins
•Candles
•Choir Music
•Cross &amp; Crown Awards
•Sunday School

Morning w~,!f!: ~ .m.
FIRST SOuut,;RN BAPTIST. """""""Y
Pike. Davkl Hunt, pastor; Ro:Ier Turner,
Sunday School Superintendent. Sunday

MIDWAY COMMUNTI"Y CHURCH, Old

honcrJI Hf ~ n~lmtn! ,
I ~&gt; I • ~II " ' v1~n

,

J

a.m. Mrs. Worlf!Y Frandl, supt .

Preaching ~ervlces f1rlt a~ third Sundays
following SWJtlay School. Youth rneet1ni
every Sunday, 7::1) p.m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.
Preaching 9:» a.m., n.nt and second
Sundays ot each month: th1rd and fourth
Sundays each month, won hlp 5('t"V''eft at7: :ll
p.m. Wednesday evenings at 7: 3&gt; p.m.,
Prayer and Bible Study.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mulber!1'
llelghts Road, Pomeroy. Mlc~el Planltowskl., pastcr; Marie Sptreos, Sabbath School
Supt. Sabbath School II at 2 p.m. on Saturday
w11h worship services foUowtne al 3: 15 p.m.
RUTLAND F1RST BAPI"IST CHUROISister Harriett wa....... Supt. ~nday School.
9::11 a.m.: morning wtnhlp. 10:45 a.m.
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, David
Mann, minister: WUllam Snouffer, Sunday
School supt. Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.;

Dexter Rd., Dexter. Pastor Woody can, Jr.
Pastoc . .Sunday School W a.m. Sunday
evening servl~. 7 p.m.: Thunday even1na
service, 7 p.m.

WITH FLOWERS
Tu " '"d

SChool 9::JJ

two

REMEMBER

Three Meigs County youth people
received outstanding of the day
awards at the Ohio State Fair
Monday. They are Betty Jo Hunt,
Long Bottom, quick meals; Kevin
Na pier, Bidwell, Intern a tional
foods, and Donia Crane, Pomery,
food preservation.

RESTAURANT

S. S. Supt .. Sunday Sc~K:~pl, 9::11 a.m.;

m~ worship 10: ll a.m.; evening service
6p.m.; mld-weekservlce,~, 7p.m.

Steams,
sonofof 2120
Leo !M.Pvt.
andGary
OpalA. L.
Steams
Monroe Ave., Point Pleasant, W.
Va., has completed a combat
engineer course at the U.s. Army
Training Center at Fort Leonard
Wood, Mo.
Durlng the course, students were
trained In the techniques of road
and brtdge building, camounage
and demolition. They also received
Instruction In combat squad tactics
as weD as In the use of Infantry
weapons.
His wife, Dlana,ls the daughter of
VIrginia Jenkins of 126 Boundary
St., Oak Hill, Ohio.
.
The prtvate Is a graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.

·

UPPER RIVER RD.
(Across from the Airport)
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

When one haa flmally ac:qulred a home lib thi s, In a
neighborhood like lhh, one has no more problems.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

L'"-.L~
~

Right?

Wrongl Economic problema may be fewer. Pel1lonal and
lomUy problems oflen bee&lt;;~me n1ortt t:omplex. Some
might y un heppy people llv it on Easy Stroot.

212-;-~:·;.~eet

·

' 992· 3785, POmeroy

There's nothlns wrong with wan Uns to get ahe11d. inltletlve, ambition , persever1mce are tmdowmenis Cod
wan t. ue to de velop. Bul material goals must not crowd
outsplrltuo.laims. ln trying to gain every ti:Jing one can
become nothing.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
/;HRISTIAN UNION. Lawrence Manley.
put&lt;r; Mrs. Rus"'ll Young, Sunday SChool
Supt.' Sunday School 9: :JJ a.m. Evening
worship 7: ~p . m. Wedneoday prayet" meet1no
7::11 p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURa! OF GOD, Racine
- Rev. James Satterfield, pasttr. Morning
wor.;hlp9:454.m.; SUndaY SclrJol10:45a.m.;
evening wcrshtp 7 p.m. TUesday, 7:.]) p.m.,
ladles prayer meeting. Wedneday, 7::11 p.m.
YPE.

MIDDLEPORT F1RST BAPTIST, Corner
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev. Mark McCJuna:.

Sunday scOOoJ 9:15a.m.; Dan White, Sunday
School supt., John Reibel, Sr., asst. supt.
MorOIIlJ Worship 10:15 a.m. Youth meeting
7:XI p.m. Wednesday, Including wee tots,
eaier beavers, Juntor astroanull, and Junior
and~lorhl.gh BYF: choir practlceS:J)p.m.
Wednesday; prayer meet Ina: and Bible study,
Wedneoday. 7::1! p.m.
CHURCH OF CHRIST. Middleport, !lth and
M&lt;ltn, Bob Melton, mtnilter; AI Hartson,
a¥octate minUter, MUte ~h. Sunday
Scllool Su......-1. Bible School, 9: ~
a.m .; rn&lt;n~lng w&lt;nhfp, 10::11 Lm.: eYE'Dinl
wtnhlp 7 p.m. w-.y Bible Sludy and
Y&lt;luth 8l"OUP ...-Inp, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURa! OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Co-poston, !ll'v. CW1el Coyle and
' Rev. Nancy Coyle. BID Willie, lllnday ochool
oupt. Sunday ochool. 9:30 a.m.; rnontlna
tp.&gt;rship, 10::11 a.m.; SUnday ~ ~c
lneetlng, 7 p.m. Prayer meettnoWe&amp;lelday7

..m.

&lt; ~D PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OFMEJGSaxJNTY,ReY.Wan&amp;Johnlm,
dir«'tCI';
alJcatlon.

Harold

Johmcft,

dlrfd:cr ot
.

HARRISONVIU.E PRESBYTERIAN,

WorshlpServk:e, 9a.m.; Church School, 10::1!
a.m.
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN,
Cllun:h School, 9 a.m.; Mllrtllltl w&lt;nhlp,
10:15. Bible Study Tlalq, ll a.m.; Bit*
study, 'I'Itundol'. 7:30p.m.
sYRACUSE FIRST IJNrT'Eil PRESBY·
TERIAN atun:h. Cburdl !lchool, Ill: lS a .m.;
rtiOl"lllna w&lt;nNp. 11: ll a.m.; Ill* Study.
...._,, 10 Lm.; Jtlldor tutti lllCh
Youth Group, Sun&lt;loy,, 6 p.m.

RU'Il.AND CHURCH OF GOD, Paster,

Rev. John Evans. Sunct.y school, 10 a.m.;
Sunday wcnhlp, 11 a.m.: Chlldren's chU1't'h,
11 a.m.; Sunday E'Vl'nlng seM.ce, 7 p.m.;
Weme.day ...rung YWilflladiiS awilllory, 6
p.m. W - y !amlly w&lt;rllilp, 7 p.m.
HAZEL COMMUNlTY CJruRCH, Near
Long Bottcm, Edsel Rarf, past..-. Sunday
school, 9:lla.m.; Worship 10: lla.m.; Prayer
meetlng7:ll p.m. Thursday . .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPrJST.
(:&lt;)mer Alh and Plum. LesUe Hayman,
~a-. Sunday' sehJol 10 a.m.; Morning
Worship, 11 a.m .: Wednesday and Saturday
Evening services, ~l'ism.

Your famll)' ialn mtedlln need of Faith . In ne ed of Love.
In need of Direction.

Sunday Monday Tuasdav Wedmisday Thursday
Psalm 1 Kinos Psalm
Psalm
Psalm
1:1-6 3:1-15 16:1·11
25:1-22 27:t-14

frkjay
Psalm

Saturday
Hebrews

141 :1·10 13:1·19

COf\"19nt ltl~ Ktitltr ~~ 91rYa
W1~i.lmt N~ Fttluttt 8yiiCioe.tt, Inc. • P, 0 . 11-0~ 1024, Chlrlo!lftvlllt, Ya. 1210C1

COOPERA11\IE PARIIH

UNJIED MEniODI8T CJIUII()I
.FIQ' Sluer, DlredCir

NOitTIIIW!T CUJSTI!R

Rev._ ... _
Rev. Rldunl'l'bomao

ALFRED - ChW'Ch ScOOol 9:l1 a.m.;
Worship, lla.m.; UMYF,6:00p.m.; UMW,
THird 1"uesday, 7:ll p.m. CommunitY ftrst
Sunday.
rn~ Wonbjp 9 a.m.; Church
School IOa.m.; Bible Study, Thun;day. 7p.m.
UMW, first 'nnlrsday, 1 p.m.; Communion
ftrst Sunday.
JOPPA - Worship, 9:30 a.m. ; Church
School. 10::1! a.m. jllble Study, Wednesclay.
7:llp.m.
UJNG BO'ITOM - Church School, 9::JJ
a.m.: Worship. 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednes·
clay, 7:ll p.m.; UMYF, Wednesday. 6 p.m.;
Commumon First Sunday.
REEDSVILLE - Church School, 9:00
a.m.; W&lt;nhlp 11 a.m:
TUPPERS PlAINS ST. PAUL -Church
SC'hcd, 9a.m.; Worstdp, It a.m.; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 7:l1 p.m.; UMW, Th1rd Tuesday,
·
7::1! p.m.; Communion llrst Sunday.

---CI!NTIIAL CUIIJJ1I:R

Rev. lllaal&lt;tr w. lll&lt;ntrleld
Rev.llobortl!:.-

Mev. Robert Rldlr, Jr.
ASBURY (Syracuse I -Worship, 11 a.m.;
Churrh School, 9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible

Study, Wedne!day. 7::Jl p.m.; UMW, !lrst
Therday. 7:~ p.m.; Choir Rehearsal. Wed·
nesday, 6:~ p.m. ; UMW, !ow1hSunday, 6::1!
p.m.
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
Sc:hoci, 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7::1)
p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7::1! p.m.;
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. C001r rehearsal, 6:l:l
p.m. WMneKiay.
Fl.A1WOODS - Church School, 10 a.m.;
Worship, I a.m.: Bible Study. Thursday, 7
p.m.: UMYF. Sumay, 6 p.m.
FOREST RUN- Won hlp, 9 a.m.; Chw-ch
School, lDa.m.; ChulrPracttce.TIIesday, 6:ll
p.m.; UMW, first 'I'Uf!sda.y, 7::1J p.m.
HEA'm (Middleport) - Chureh School,
9::1! a.m.; Worship, 10: ~a.m . ; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 10 a.m.; UMW, second Monday,
7::1) p.m.; UMM , third Monday, 7:3) p.m.
MINERSVILLE - Worship Service, Ill
a.m.; Olurch SChcd, 11 a.m.; UMW. thJrd
W~esda)!.l p.m.; Choir practice, Monday.
7:Jl p.m.
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship S..VIce, 10
a.m.; Church SchOO.·, 11 a.m.: UMW, second
Tuesclay. 7::Jl p.m.; UMYF last 1"uesday, 7: ll
p.m.
POMEROY - Church School. 9: lS a.m.;
Warship service, 10: :l) a.m.: Choir rehearsal.
Wemeoday, 7::11 p.m.; UMW, sro&gt;nd Tueoday, 7:lJ p.m. ; UMW, last Sunday, 7 a.m.;
UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS - Churc-h SctKlol, 9:15
a.m.; Worship, 10 a.m.; Bible study,
W - y . 7::1! p.m. ; UMYF tSenlon~),
Sunday, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) , e-very other
· Sunday, 6 p.m.
RUI"LAND - Church School, 9:4$ a.m.;
Wonhlp, 11 a.m.; UMW fEvenlng Clrolel.
second Wednesday, 7:3lp.m.; UMW, second
Thunday, 1 p.m.

SALEM CENTER - Church School, 10
a.m.: Wilrsblp. 7 p.m.
SNOWVU..LE - Wot'9hip, 9 a.m.; Church
SchoollO a.m.
,

----

S001111!JlN CLV!Il'EII
Rev• .lama M. Ori
Rev. Muil
i'1JNI

w.

APPLE GROVE - Church SciK)ol. 9 a.m.;
Worship, 10 a.m. (first and third Sundays) :
UMW, IM!COnd '1\aday, 7:3) p.m.; Prayer
meeting Wednesday, 7 p.m.
BE11IANY - Worship, 9 a.m.; ChUJ'th
School, 1D a.m.; Bible Study, Wemeoday, 10
a.m.; Dareas Women's Fellowship, Wednead,.y, U a.m.
CARMEL - ChW't'h School, 9:lJ a.m.;
Wonhlp, Ill: &amp;5 a.m.; oecond and rour1h
&amp;mdays); Fell...,ship dinner wtth Suttoo.
tiU'd Tlllnday, 6::1! p.m.

EAST lEI"ART- Church School. 9 a.m.;
WcnbiP, JO a.m. (!letOftdandfourthSUndays:
UMW, lint 'l\8day, 7:1l p.m.

IEI"ART FALLS - Wonhip, 9 a.m.;
ChUTCh School, 1fl a.m.
MORNING STAR - WoniiiP, 9::Jl a.m.:
Church Sc11&gt;ol, Kl:ll a.m.; Bible Study,
Thursday, 7::1l p.m.
MORSE rnAPEL - Cloireh SChool, 9:~
a.m.; WonNp, lla.m.
POR'Il.ANil - Church School, 7 p.m.;
Wonhlp, 8 p.m.; UMYF, Wedladay, 7::1!
p.m.
RACINE WESLEYAN -Church School, Ill
a.m.: w...-. 11_ a,m.;,_UMW, !Durth
-7::1lp.m.; --~tllei.MI.
11nt Wodiatoy, 7 p.m.; Mon's PraY"'"

B l =We-'
-

11)', 7a.m.

a..rcll School, 9:30 a.m.;
- niiC w&lt;nlllp, 10:411 a.m. (ftl'll IJid third
~I; ............ dinner with Carmel,
tltlrd 'nllnday. 6:10 p.~ .
_ _
•.

KENO CHUR&lt;.:H Ot' &lt;.:HRIST. Oliver
Swain, Superintendent. Sunday school 9:.1}
a.m. every week. .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. William
Crabtree, pasta-. Sunday School, 9:ll a.m.;
PVenlng servtce, 7: :J.lp.m. Wednesd ay prayer
meeting, 7: ~ p.m.
BEARWALI.OW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRJST. Duane . Warden, minister. Bi ble
dac;s, 9: :II a. m.; morning w&lt;rshl p, to: lJ
a.m.; evenlnewershlp, 6:ll p.m. Wednesday
Bible study, 6:00p.m.
NEW STIVERSVILLE ffiMMUNITY
CHURCH; Sunday School service, 9:45a.m.;
Worship service, 10:ll a.m.; EvanR{!Hstk
Service. 7: :ll p.m. Wednesday, Prnycr
meeting, 7:lJ p.m., Thursday.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIS'I', PoiTI(&gt;I"Oy-

HarrisonvWe Rd.; Robert PurteH, minist er :
Steve Stanley, Sunday school supJ . Sunday
scho61, 9: :.l a .m .; wcrshlp servi('(' 10::D a.m.;
Evening worship Sunday, 7 p.m. and
Wednesday, 7 p.m.

ST. JOHN LIJ11iERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grove. The Rev. WUllam Mlddleswarth.
Pastoc. Church services 9:It a.m. Sunday
School10:30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST. Paul
Pratt , past Cr. Sunday SC'In:ll, 9: :It a.m .. lArry
Haynes, S. S. SuJ:(.; mornJng wc.-shlp, 10:00
a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE.
Rev. Thomas H . Collier, pastor, Martha
Wolfe, Chalrman of the Board of Clu-lslian
Life. Sunday School, 9: ~ a.m.: morning
w&lt;rship, 10:30a.m.; Sundaye\•enlngwarshlp,
7:30p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday, ?::It
p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAP11ST.Don L. Walker.
Paster; Robert Smith, Sunday School sup!.;
Sunday School, 9::JJ a.m.: morning wocshlp,
10:40 a.m.; SUnday evening wcrshlp. 7:30
p.m.; Wednesd ay evening Bible study. 7::.&gt;
p.m.

p.m.; Evening WorsnJp, 't::JJp.m. Wednesday
Prayer and Bible Study, 7;.Il p.m.
DEXTER CHUROI OF OIRISI', Charles

Russell, Sr., minister; Rick Macomber, supt.
Sunday school, 9:l:l a.m.; w'l nhip service,
10:~ a.m. B!bl£&gt; Study. 1\Jesday, 7:l:l p.m.
REORGANIZED GIURCH OF JESUS

CHRIST OF LA1'1"ER DAY SAINTS.
Portland-Racine Road. WUIIam Rou.i!ih, pas·
tor. Linda Evans. church school director.
Chul"('h sctnol, 9::U a.m.; mornin g w cnhlp,
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
servK-es, 7::W p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev. Earl
Shuler, · paster. Wors hip service, 9::U a.m.
Sunday school, 10::Kla.m. Sible Study and
prayer service ThurSday, 7: .Il p.m.
CARLETON CHURCH , Kingsbury RDad.

Brother Marlon Williams, pltstor. Sunday
school, 9::£1 a.m. Ralph Carl, superintendent;

evening wershlp, 7: l&gt; p.m. Prayer
Wednffiday, 7::rt p.m.

mcetln~

WNG OOITOM CHRISTIAN, K en Keifer,
pastCJ". Wallace Damewood, Sunday School

Supt . Worshlpservl ceat9 a.m. Bible&amp;hool lO
a.m .
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, Rev.
Therl'Qn Durham, pa,tor. Sunday School at
9:JJ a.m.; Morning wmhlp at 10:30 a .m.
Sunday evening servicr' a1 7:JJ p.m.;
Thursday servk'es at 7:.Il p.m.

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev .
Lawrence Gluesenramp, pa.~tc:r; Rev . Roger

Willford, assistant pastcr. PreaC'hing servi-

ces, Sunday 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting
WcdnC'Sday, 7: .II p.m .: GaJ;~ Grlrtlth. leader
Youth groopo;. Sunday evening, 6: .))p.m. 'olltth
Roger and VIolet WIUford as leaders.
COmmunion servlce tlrst SuOOay each month.
WHitE'S CHAPEL. CoolvUio RD. Rev.
Roy Deeter. pastor. Sunday sctool9: lJa .m.;
worship service, 10::Kl a.m. Bible stud y and
prayer service WedneSday, 7:00p.m.

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Pomeroy , 0 .

Racme 949· 2550

Service Meeting, 8: Zl p.m,

Needs th at God 1upplte!l

![&gt;

Groceries General Mercnandise

Meeting, Wedn"""". 7::1! p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Joy Clark. pastor; Worship service Sunday,
10:00 a.m.; Sunday sctnol, ll a.m.: worship
service, 7:30p.m. Wednesda.y prayer nwet ·
lng, 7:XI p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN 1N
CHRIST CHURCH,, Rev. Robert Sanders,
J)astoc; Don Will, lay leader. Llx:att.&gt;dlnThxas
Community ott CR 82. Sunday school. 9:Xl
a.m.: Morning worship service, 10:45 a.m.:
evening preaching service second and fOurth
Sundays, 7::l) p.m.; Christian Endeavoc, first
and third Sundays. 7:Xl p.m. Wedne;&lt;~ay
tya)'er meeting and Bible study, 7:;ll p.m.
JEHOVAH 'S WITNESS, 37ll9 St~te Route
124 (OnemUeeastotRutland) . Sunday, Bible
lectW"t' 9:30a.m.; Watchtower study, 10::!)
a.m.; 1\Jesday, Bible study, 7:.JJ p.m.;
Thursday, Theocratic School, 7:l:l p.m.;

Middleport, Ohio

RENE, Corner Union and MuibEt'l)', Rev.

ThomU Glen McClung, pastor. Clyde Hend·

AOMfSSION EVERY TUESDAY S2.00

,

GffiL SCOUTS - These are the top Girl Scouts of Melp County In
their respective levels :who were presented trophies at the Meigs Junior
Fair Youth Night observance Wednesday. They are Shari Cogar, Senior
Troop 1205; Velerte Simpson, Southern Cadette Troop 115 and at the
front, Elizabeth Downie, a member of SaHsbury Brownie Troop 1200.
The fourth award went to Amy Luckeydoo, a junior, not pictured.

.

"

Middleport-

Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday School Supt . Sunday
School 9:3) a.m. : Morning Worshlp 11 a.m .:
SUnday evening s:.ervtce, 7::11 p.m.; Prayer

p.rr\.,
under dtrectkxl
of Allee
"""==--~---------J
MMEROY
CHURa!
OF Nease.
THE NAZA·

Phone 446 -4524

I~===========~------------­

outstanding Junior troop 1100; Mary Ash, Cadette
Troop 115, awards for the outstanding troop on that
level and the ou~ding of all troops in the county;
Debbl Buck, BroWnie Troop 12'71, and Shirley Cogar,
.
Senior Troop 1208.

;_;::o;::::~~::f!;,;

lO:sd a.m.

Grange awards given

LEADERS - Trophies went to the most
outstanding Girl Scout troops In Meigs County
Wed!loSday night as a part of the junior fair youth
night observance. Leaders with their awards from the
left ~Lynne Anns, accepting for Judy Humphrey,

r
0

Syracuse

~~~

Stearns completes
Army basic training

SENTINEL

John F. Fultz, Mg'r.
Ph. 992·2101
Pomeroy

•' lliEN
RANKUN"

Cabinet Making

531 JACKSON PIKE· RUO WEST

Star Grange was awarded first
place honors for Its display In the
·Senior Fair Building at the Meigs
County Fair this week, followed by
Hemlock Grange. Each grange will
receive a $50 premium for Its effort
and contribution to the fair
festivities .

·

~

THE DAILY

RAU.'S

·11UNITY

Asbury United Methodist Women meet

. ,rr.
1

Phone 992·3480 ,

, -~ . MEIGS nRE
':: \
CENTER, INC.

·

Mill Work-

'

Wednesday. KUa has been In 4-H work for eight years
and JUebel for 11 years. Riebel Is al5o the year's junior
fair king.

'I_,

,9
• I ~ '

MARK V SIORE
Middleport n~ ,

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomero~

Wm. "Bill" Brow.n, Owner
Phone (614) 742-2177

Lea Ann Gaul

992 · JJ2S

iNSIJRA!'1 rE
SE.RVI ' ~~

Servu:e

m

· Pomeroy

The

Pomeroy

Brogan-Warner
Sales and

Rutland, Ohio 415775
J~

Blltzkrelg, local rock band, will
perform at the Meigs County Fair
Saturday night beginning at 9 p.m.
The show will be held on the hill
stage.

"Useful Bridges" was the topic of
the program given by Opal Kloes at
the recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women held at the
Asbury Church.
Scripture was taken from Ephesians and readers were Marcia
Karr, Mary Usle, April Harmon,
Helen Teaford, Mary Cimdiff with
prayer by Mrs. Kloes.
Mrs. Kliles opened the meeting
with a reading, "Faith That Smiles"

992· 2955

Equipment

'lli

Prescriptions

Locust &amp; Beech Street

To perform at fair

4-H- KUa Young, ReetlsvDJe, and John Riebel,
l'omeroy, were named the outstanding Meigs County·
4-H girl and boy at the Meigs Junior Fair Youth Night

The

Pomt'l"oy bypass. Hev. Hobert smun. Sr.,
past&lt;r; Rev. James Cundiff, assistant patter.
suOOay SchJol. 9: XI a.m.: morni~ w&lt;nhtp,
10:.1) a.m.: l"Vening W&lt;l'ship, 7:3:. p.m.
Women's FeUCM'shlp, Thesdays, 10 a.m.

Wednesday night prayer service, 7::JJ p.m.

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Masoo. meet
at United Stl'e1 Workers Union HaU, Ra1lro8d

Street, Mason. Morning worship 9::11 a .m .

SuOOay SclKd lO:ll a.m. Evening SeiVice, 7
p.m. Prayer ineetlng Wednesday. 7:Jl p.m.
Midweek Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.
FORESI' RUN BAPTIST - Rev. Nylo
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch. , S\iperlft.
tendent. Surxtay school9:lla.m.; second and
fourth Sunday~ wcrshlp service at 2: :D p.m.
M'f. MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Main Sis., Mlddl~. R&lt;&gt;v. Calvin Mlnnll,

pastcr. Mrs. Etvln Bumgardner, supt.
Sunday schOOl, 9: ll a.m.; wtr.~hlp servl~.
10:45 a.m.
BURUNGHAM SOUTHERN l3AI'Tm"
CffiJ RCH , Route 1. Shade. Pastor, Don Black.
Affiliated wtth Southern Baptist convention.
Sunday school, l ::JJ p.m.; Sunday wcnhlp,
2::Jl p.m. Thun;day ......u.g Bible study, 7
p.m.
PEN'T'ECOST'AL ASSEMBLY, Radne,
Route 1.24. WUliam Hoback, pastoc. Sunday
school, 10 a.m.; Sunday evening servtcc::, 7
p.m. Wcdneiday evening service 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPrl~. O:m Cheadle,
$up!. Sunday School 9: ~ a.m. Morning
Worship, 10: ll a.m. Prayer Service: alternate
Sunda;o.
.

CHURCH OF GOD OF ~OPHECY .
Located on the 0 . J . WhJte Road off hlghw ay
100. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday School 10
a.m. Classes rc.- au ages. Junior Ctrui'C'h
11:00; Morning Worship, 11:00; Adult 0\oir
ctlce 6:00 p.m . Sunday. Young People's,
ldren's Church and AW!t Bible St udy,
ednesday at 7:ll p.m.
HOPE BAPTIS'T CHAPEL- 570Grant St ..
Middlepot1; SundaySchool,lOa .m.; morning
WCI'hstp, U a .m.; ['V{&gt;ning worship, 7 p.m.
Wednesday evening Bible study and prayer •
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
meeting, 7 p.m. Affiliated with Southern
A\1('. , t~ Rev. Clar~ Baker. pasur. Carl
Baptist Convention .
Nolllngl\am. sumay School Supt. ~
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST Schoo1 10a.IT!. -claUes for aU a.gWJ. EW!nill(l:
State Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
$E'rvlces, 6p.m. Wednaiday, Study, 7:ll p.m.
Seevers, mlni&lt;lter; Sunday &amp;hool Supt., Stew
Youth~. 7:;!1 p.m. Friday.
Pickens. Sunday school., 9::.) a.m.; morning
E:CCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mill St.,
WIJ('shlp, 10:.ll a.m,; evening won~ hlp, 7 p.m.
Mlddlep:H1. Paste.-~ Brd:herchul·k McPh«Wednesday W&lt;rShip, 7 p.m.
s~. · Sun1ay School at 10 a.m. Services ·
JUBILEE CHRlSTIAN CENTER Sunday evening at 7 p.m. and Wednesday at 7
Georgc.&gt;'s Creek Road. Rev. C. J . Lemley,
p.m.
pastt7; Paul Poar, Church School Supertn·
ANTIQUITY BAPriSr, Rev. Earl Shula-,
tendcnt. Chutth sctnot. 9:ll a.m.: morning
pw;tcr. Sunday school 9:ll a.m.; Ctl.lrch
w(Y'Shlp, lO ::Jl a. m; evening service, 7 p.m.
savlce, 7 p.m.; youth meeting, 6 p.m.
Bible Study , Wednesday, 7:00p.m. Classes lor
TuPSday Bllje Study, 7 p.m.
all ages .
FULL GOSI'El.. LIGHTHOUSE. llll5
HUand Road. Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, paste.-.
ST. PAUL LIJTil:ERAN CHURCH, Corner
Danny Lambert, SUnday SchOOl Superintendof Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy. 1be
ent . SUnday Morning service, 10:00 a.m.;
Rev. WWiam Mlddleswarth, Paster. Sunday
Sunday evening serv!C(&gt; 7:l) p.m. Services
School at 9:45 a.m. and ChW"Ch Services 11
Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 7:l) p.I'Jl. ·
p.m.
.
WORD OF FAml. ~1 Mill St .. Mlddl&lt;port;
SACRED HEART. Msgr. Anthony Glanna·
Richard Ste\vart, pastor. SundBy momlng, :
more, Ph. 992-5898. Saturday evening Mass,
10:!M\ Sunday evening. 7::111. Tuesday mom7:31p.m.: Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.
~ Btbk&gt; Stldy, 10:00; W~ay PVening,
Confesston.c;. one-hall hour bf'fore each Ma&amp;s.
7:!1. Thursday morning video with Kenneth
CCD Classes, 11 a.m . SUnday.
Copeland, 10:00; Friday evening vldw with
V!Cl"ORY BAPTIST" - $:!; N. 2nd St ..
Kenneth Copeland, 7: ll.
Middlepon. James E. Keesee. past~-. Sunday
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF TilE NAZAmorrUng wcrshlp, 10 a.m.: evening service. 7
RENE, Rev. Glen&amp;n Stroud, pastcr. Sunday
p.m.; Wednesday evening worship, 7 p.m.:
School, 9: :~ a.m.: Wors hip Service, 10:~
VLsltatlon, Thur.day, 6::JJ p.m.
a.m.; Youth Service, Sunday, 6:15 p.m.;
'f1UNlTY CHRISTIAN ASSEMllLY . CoolSunday evening service, 7:00 p.m 1 Wednesvllle - GUberl Spencer, pa.c;.tcr. Sunday
day Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7:OOp.m
school, 9:3) a.m.; mornln~ servk:e, 11 a.m.
NEASE SETIU:MENT CHURCH. DoSunday l'Vt'lllng service, 7::Jl p.m.; mldwt'Ek
nald R. Karr, Sr., ·pastoc. Sunday afternoon
tyayer service Wednesday, 7:J&gt; p.m.
services. 2:.Il; Thursday evening service,
MOUNT OLIVE ffiMMUNITY CHURCH.
L.awrence Bush, pasta-; Max Folmer, Sr.
~FlRS1' BAPTIST' CHURCH, Mason, W. Va.
Superintendent. Surxlay ScOOol and mornlnK
Paster, 8111 Murphy. Sunday SC'Ix&gt;al, lOa. rn.;
wnhlp, 9::.&gt; a.m. Sunday evening service, 1
Sunday Nening service, 7::ll p.m.: Prayer
p.m.; Youth lllN"'Ing and Bible Study,
mertlng and Blbl~ Study Wednesday, 7:~
Wedn~ay , 7 p.m.
p.m. Everyonl:! welrumf'.
~
UNITED FAml CHU~C_H - !W~~e 7 on

~

-

Rtm..AND CHURD-1 OF' CHRIST, Dan

DANVILLE WESLEY AN . Sunday School.
9:]) a.m. ;.monUngw&lt;nh.lp 10: ~5a . m . ; yooth
service, 6:45 p.m.; eveninA wcrshlp, 7:30
p.rri .; Wedne5day, 7:ll p.m . Prayer und
Praise.
DANV1I..LE HOLINESS CHURCH. located
on Route J'lj between Vlntoo and L.angsvUie.
Rev. Ben Watts, pastcr. Sunday Scrool, 9:30
a.m., Bob~ Lambert S. S. Supt .; Morning
Worship, lO::ll a.m.; Children's Happy Hour
6:45 p.m. Prayer &amp; Bible Study, 7:ll p.m.
Mlsslonary meeting tlrSI Wednesda,y or each
month, 7:lJ p.m . For information caU
388-1146'7.
SD..VER RUN BAPTIST. Bill Little.
pastoc: Steve Utile, S. S. Supt. Sunday SC'hOOI,
10 a.m.; mCI'tling worship, 11 a.m. Sunday
evening wu-shlp, 7:31 p.m. Prayer ma&gt;tlng
and Bible SIUCiy, Thun;day, 7::10 p.m.; youth
meeting WednESday at 1 p.m.
CHRISTIAN FEUOWSIDPCHURCH,383
N. 2nd A..,., Mlddle!x&gt;rt. Sunday School. 10
a.m. Sunday and Wednesday Evening
Serv1ces 7: J) p.m .
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD. Rev. R. E.
Robtnsm, past()". SuMay school, 9:JJ a.m.;
wcrship service, 11 a.m .; PVenlng servlce,-.7
p.m.; youth service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Robert E . Musser, pastCl'. Sunday school, 9: :Jl

a.m.; Paul Musser, supt.; morning w(I"Ship,
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7 p.m.;
mid-week service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 'mE NAZA·
RENE - Rev. JamES B. Kt«le, paslor.
Shennan Cundltr. superintendent. Sunday
Schod, 9:JJ a.m.; Morning Wcrshlp 10::It
a.m.; Evangelistic 5er'VIce, 6 p.m. Prayer and
p.-alse Wedn~ay, 7 p.m.; youlh meeting, 7
p.m.
.
EDEN UNITED BRE111REN IN CHRIST,
Elden R. Blake, past..-. Sunday School 10
a.m .; Robert Reed, supt.: Morning sennoo,
11 a.m.; Sunday night servkes, Chrlsttan
Endeavcr, 7::JJ p.m.; Song service, 8 p.m.;
Preaching. B:ll p.m. Mid-week Prayer
meeting. Wednesday, 7 p.m., AlVin Reed, lay

1 -.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHR!STIAN, Rog..Watsm, past(r, Crenson Pratt. Sunday
Sctm supt. Morning wcntdp, 9:;)) a .m.;
SUnday .elm, 10: l) a.m.; evening service,
7::1! p.m.
MT. UNION JlAl'TI!iT. Rev. Tom Dooley;
Joe Say~. SUnday SChxi Superintendent
Sunday JS'hool, 9:15 a.m.; evening worship,
1 : ~ p.m. Prayet" meetlne, 7:ll p.m.
w.m«&lt;~ay .

'nJPPERS

PLAINS

CHURCH · OF

CHRIST, VIncent C. Waters, In. minister;

Helman Black. superintendent. Sunday
School 9:3) a.m.; evening service, 7 p.m.;
Wemesday Bit* School, 7 p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF 'll!E NAZA·
RENE,

Rev. Herbert Grate,

putcr. f'rank

Rlftlt&gt;,IIUpi.SUnolay School, 9:30a.m. Worship
aervtce, U a.m. and 7: ~ p,m, Prayer
rneetVtc. WeGtesda)l, 7 : ~ p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE MEI'HODIST
CHURCH, Rev. Robert Milia-, pastor; L~
wrtgttt. lllrect&lt;r or Clu1stian Education.
Sumay Scllool, 9::lla.m.; Momtng Worship,
10:30 a.m.; q&gt;oJr .Pra2'!&lt;:'"· S~!"'&amp;.Y· 6::1!

Monl ux, pastor. Bill Nlchol"ion, Sunday
school supi. Sunday school, 9:l:l a .m.;
morning W(J'Shlp and rommunlon, 10:;r}a.m.
RLm..AN r'&gt; BIBLE METHODI ST- Amos

Til lis, pas tor; Sonny Huds(Xl, s upt. Sunday
school, 9:l:&gt;a.m . Morning worship, lO:;r)a.m .
Sunday PVenln g service, 7:00. Wedneiday
evening service 7:00p.m.; WMPO Program,
9:00a.m. eut·P Sunday morni ng.

Sermonette

RUTLAND CHURCH OF TilE Nt\ZA·
RENE, Rev. Lloyd 0. Grimm, Jr., pastor.

Sunday SChool, 9:.JJ a.m.: WCI'Ship servi ce,
10:30 a.m.; 'young people's service, 6 p.m.
Evangelistic service, 6:ll p,m. Wednesday
servke, 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller St.,
Mason. W. Va. E:ugPne L Conger, minister.
Sunday Bible Study, lOa.m.; Worship 11 a.m.
and 7 p.m. Wedn~ay Bible Study, vocal
music, 7 p.m.
MASON ASSJ;:MBLY OF GOD. Dudding
Lane, Masoo, W. Va. Rev. Ronnie B. Rose,
Pastor. Sunday School 9: ~ a. m .: Morning
Worship 11 a.m. Evening Service 7:JJ pm.
Wednesday Women' s Minis tries 9 a.m.
tmretlng and prayer). Prayer and Bible
Stud~· 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRL'&gt;T 1N
CHRL'&gt;TiAN UNION. The Rev. Wllllam
Campbell, pastor. Sunday Sctx&gt;ol. 9:l:l a.m .:
James Hughl&gt;s. supt .; evening service, 7::11
p.m. Wednesd ay evening prayer meeting,
7:.Il p.m. Youth prayersetviceeach'l'uesday.
FAIRV IEW BIBLE CHU RCH, Letan. W.
Va., R! . 1, Mark hwln, pasta-. Wor!lhlp
serv:ll'€5, 9:ll a.m.; Sunday School, 11 a.m.; '
CYenln g wershlp, 7: l) p.m. Tuesday cottage
prayer meeting and Blbk&gt; study, 9:30a.m.
Worship service, Wednesday, 7::l) p.m.
OUR SA V!OUR Ll!I'HERAN CHURCH Walnut and Henry Sts .. RaveiL'iwood. W. Va.
The Rev. George C. Weirick, pastcr. Sunday
School, 9:lJ a.m .; Sunda y w«hslp, 11 a.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH , now located
on Pomeroy Pike. County Road z; near
Flatwoods . Rev. Blackwood, pasta-. Services
on Sunday at10::JJ a.m. and 7:Xt p.m. with
Sunday scll&gt;ol . 9:ll a.m. bible study,
Wednesday, 7::l0 p,m.
F AITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST- St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Paster, Rev.
Franklin Dickens. Sunday morning, 10 a.m.
Sunday evening, 7::ll p.m. Thursday evening,
7:3) p.m.
STIVERSVD..LE ffiM MUNITY BAPTIST
CHURCH, Paslcr Robert Byers. SuMay
School 10 a.m'.; Worship Service 11 a.m.:
SUnday evening servlre, 7: J) p.m.: Wednesday everl!ng scrvtce, 7: :lJ p.m.
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCI·t,
Inc. - Paul St., Mlddl.,..-t. Rev. O'Dell
Manley. pastcr. Sunday School, 9:l) a.m.:
Morning wcnhJp 10::11 a.m.; evening worship, 7:ll p.m. 1\Jesday,U;:JJ p.m . Women's
prayer meetlrur. Prayer and pralle service,
Wednesday, 7:il0 p.m.
Rtm.AND APOSTOUC CHUR01 OF
JESUS OIRIST, Elder JamEI Mill..-. Bible

otudy, w....-y, 7: ~p.m.; SUnday School,
10 a.m. Sunday nl&amp;ht ll'I'Vlce, -~= ;rJ p.m.
POMEROY WESLEYAN IIOLlNEil8 Harrisonville Rood. Earl Fleldl, poot&lt;r.

I saw It happen again, yesterday- the old "bonsai treatment."
It's the world's worst form of robbery; the sad part Is that tt Is
perfectly legal.
·
The "bonsai treatment"- that's the best description l ean think
of to lllustr~te the censorious actions of so large a segment or our
population who derive a particular delight In finding fault with a
fellow human being. The procedure Is so similar to that old Oriental
art of dwarfing trees.
Now, the word "bonsai," when associated with miniature trees,
Is a most respected art, Indeed. The bonsai tree may be hundreds r1
years old, still blooming In lhesprtng, producing fruit In the summer,
and swapping foliage colors. The bonsai mal:' be a pine, a cedar, a
cypress, a juniper or elm. The bonsai Is Identical, In all features, to
almost any tree with one Important exception -It will fit In the palm
of your hand.
It takes a special sort to cultivate bonsai trees whose clever
beauty Is the result of painstaking tying oft of tap roots again and
again. One needs fertilizer, a pair of shears, a grafting knife, a
trimming saw, a wire nipper, a twlg nipper - and that's just the
beginning.
But It's all worth It, some say. The end produc1, just a few Inches
taU, Is an exquisite conversation piece. The bonsai would cost
hundreds or dollars, depending on Its age - and here's where the
analogy ends.
Some folk get their kicks by dwarfing people. They' 11 go out of
their way to tell you.why you should aim your sights low. Since they
are "friends," they wiU try to get you to "be realistic." Too often, we
never stop to understand that realism Is what we make It -that we
Impose our own limitations through our minds.
, Of course, there are always those who are willtng to remind us of
our llnnltatlons. Their words are not generally recognized as
defamatory. They're more likely to be cloaked tn a "let me give you 8
little piece of helpful advice" routine.
Now, helpful advice we ·c an all use If, Indeed, It' Is helpful. The
"bonsai treatment" can never produce anything but a baleful
' Influence on the person who permits himself to become the pawn,
· Those larcenous martinets who belittle others to make
themselves look a little bigger, should be taught a lesson. Let'a
politely Inform them I hat dwarfing Is an art with trees, that oplnlOIII
are the cheapest commodities on earth. - Lee Miller, Rector, Grace
E;plscopal.

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Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 19, 1913

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Friday,

•

Family Medicine

A!ollstant Professor
of Family Medicine

Ohio University College
of Osleopathlc Medicine

: QUESTION: I have high blood
p;essure, and my doctor just
prescribed a potassium supplement. Wha t does potass!'.!!l!
, ANSWER :
P&lt;&gt;tasslilm is a
minera l t ha t 's
trn po r tant In
malnta lnbig · the
bOdy's balance oft
•-·
fl\llds and. chernt, ·•· ..f
C!llS both Inside and outside the cells
ol the body. Some signs of
p(ltasslum deficiency in the body
'

Include weakness, Irritability, men·
tal -disorientation and irregular
heart rates .
Most people consume enough
potassium . through CQmmon foods
to satisfy the body's requirements
for It However, a number of
diseases and many drugs can cause
potassl)lm to be lost or not absorbed
bY the body. Diuretics or " water
pills" used in treatment of hlgh
blood pressure and in .certain·
diseases of the heart such as
congestive heart failu re are a mong
those that cause potassium loss.
·Malntalnlng proper potassium levels is especially critical for some
heart dlsease patients because o!
other drugs used along with the

'

I
diuretics. For exam ple, dig!talls beans and pot alOe!;. Surprisingly,
QUESTION: Can 's i get m y potassium supplements do have a
can have a serim1s side effect on the coffee and tea also contain substan·
needed potassium through my d tet? had aftertaste to them but ' the
heart if tbe Pc&gt;tassium level ln. the tlal amounts of pota,sslum.
I don't like the taste of the manufacturers usually have In·
body is not adequate. That's why
QUESTION: Can w ou get too
·strilctions' on how to minimize tbls
potassium medic ine. ·
potassium supplem ents are often much potassium?
•
ANSWER: Often people . who taste - cbeck your medication IX'
preScribed in trea ting these ailANSWER: Just as '- too little
h ave hlgh blood pressureandare ol) . as~!: your doctor or pharmacist tor
ments. 'There are a bout two million potassium in the body can cause
medications whl.ch have the side belp.
Americans who regularly take . serious problems, too much potas·
To monitor how your body ,Is
effect of lowering their potassium
potassium supplements .
slum in the body can also be
levels simply can't get all the using potassium, your physician
QUESTION: How much potas- detrimental. Excessive potassium
potassium their body needs just may ask you to gefpetiodlc checiQ;
sium is normal?
In the bOdy is usually caused by
tbrough food . Your physician may on your potassium blood levels. It !S
ANSWER: The normal intake of defective kidney excretion. To treat
want you to consume foods rich In lmporlant to loJJow through and get
potassium In an adult's diet is about
high potassium levels ln. the bOdy,
potassium and also to take add!~ these so that your doctor can take
four-five grams per day. This doctors try to correct the underly- · tlon;tl potassium in the form of a rorrective !ICtion shoold the pola:i·
satisfies the recommended daily Ing problem With the kidney,
tablet or liquid. ·
· slum level either go too low or 1J:l;O
allowance o! potassium. Potassium
whether It is from Intrinsic disease
These potassium supplements hlgh, If you have any further
occurs naturallY in many foods,
of the organ or from drugs which
are prescription drugs and you questions on the use of potassl.u!n.
Including bananas, orange juice,
may be Interfering With the kid·
should follow your physician's please ask your physlciaD the ne~
raisins, meats, peanut bu,tter, bran,
ney's proper functioning.
advice in taking them. Some of the tlirie you are In to see him or her.

; ' (A regular feature prepared by

the American Cancer Society to
help save your life from cancer.)
' QUESTION: Can one smoke a
small number of cigarettes without

· tlsk?

· · · ANSWERllne: No. Since every
· clgaretle causes som e nann to the
· body, even relatively light smokers
show lung damage on autopsy,
. Besides, in practice, most smokers
~m . to find It difficult to smoke
· only a lew cigarettes. The average
U.S. smoker today consumes
nearly a pack and a halt of
' cigarettes a day.
QUESTION: What is the effect of
carbOn monoxide (CO) in cigarette
~moke?
.
.
· ANSWER!ine: ·Carbon monoxIde, which makes up about four
percent of th£ smoke of the avei:age
' American ·clgan:tte, has a sti'onger .
· 8f!lnlty for red blood cells than does
' oxygen, which red blood ceUs are
tneant to distribute 1Xl the body's
tissues. Thus CO In smoke quickly
displaces a large amount ol ilxygen
' in red ceUs, forming "carboxyhe' inogiobln." The average smoker
· has from 2.5 to 13.5 percent more ni
this substance in 1he1 blood than
, nonsmokers. Whlle nicotine causes
' the heart · to · work harder, It
depJ;'lves the heart of the extra
; oXygen su.ch \vork demands. Car,ixm monoxide also promotes cholesterol deposits in arteries. It
Impairs vision and ludgment, and
. roouces attentiveness to sounds.
· fhus CO Is dangerous to drivers,
-reduces athletic performance, and
poses particular hazards to flight

'

Descendents of Richard and
Susan Gr!ru!tead gathered Sunc!;ly,
August 15, for the annual family
reunion at the Union Campground
near New Hliven. A picnic dinner
was served at noon to those
attending:
Genevieve Grinstead, Mike,
Dick, Jeff and Wendy Grinstead,
Grinstead reunion
Descendents of Richard and
Susan Grinstead gathered Sunday,
August 15, for the annual family
reunion at the Union Campground
near New Haven . A plcnl.c dinner
was served . at noon to those

Ht~rden

attending:
Genevieve Grinstead , Mike,
Dick, Jeff and Wendy Grinstead,
Bob, Anita, Carol and Jennifer
Grinstead, all of Albany; Doris
Herner, Marlorle Brookover and
Bentley, Sandusky; Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd M!Uer, Jackie West, Ma·
rietta; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Grinstead, Nelsonville; Jean Johnson, Racine; Sonna Sperra, Campbell; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Joe
Grinstead, Amy, Paula, and Loti,
Sibyl Ann Foster; Robert Grinstead ,
Belpre; Vernon Grinstead, Mr. and

reunion at Forked Run
Pamela Racine; Jim Forman,
Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Kendall
and graddaughter, Michele Mar·
shall, Warren , Mich.

TheHardenfamilyrecentlyhelda
reunion at Forked Run Lake with a
potluck dinner all p.m.The blessing
was given by Mrs. Johnetta Harden

TOP - Key persoiUiellor the top 4-H booth at the
Meigs County Fair hold their banner award given lor
(he honor. The top booth was prepared hy the ''Eight
!" Enough" Club. From the left Susan Wolf, Pat

are

Wolf, dub advlllor, and Mell&amp;sa MDJer. Melanie
Stethem also serves as an advisor. Second place booth
was done by the IHgh F1ylng 4-H (:lob and third place
went lo the HWblliles Club.

'D

o''1 A

meets

Chester CouncU No, 323, Daugh·
ters of America, met recently with
councllorMaryK. Holterpres141ng.
Sadie Trussell was reported to be
In Veterans Memorial Hospital. A
thankyounotelromBettyandVirgil
Roush for a yellow mwn on their
50th wedding anniversary wa:; read
and acknowledged by the group.
Representing the lodge at the
state convention at ~chfleld Is
Charlotte Grant, and also attendng
are Dorothy Ritchie, State Sentinel;
Marcia Keller, State PubUclty
Committee member; Esther Smith,
Deputy of District 13, and Doris
Grueser.
cake furnished by the lodge were
Refreshments
of ice
cream
and
served
by Elizabeth
Hayes,
. Ruth

. who also presided at the meeting in
the absence of Mrs: Debbie
Sechrest.
Prizes were awarded to Earl •
Harden, Weston, W. Va., the oldest
man there; Mrs. Esther Hafden,
Syracuse, the oldest women; and
· Ml'S. Leota Kendall, Warren, Mich.,
who traveled the farthest.
Door prizes were given to Scott
Lisle, Syracuse,and Karen and
KelthUsle, West Jefferson, for their
early arrival to reserve tables. ·
During the afternoon the family
visited,' went swimming, and took
pictures. Mrs. Karen Lisle was
elected president for the next
reunion to be held at the same place
on the(ourlh Saturday in July.
AttendlngwereMr.andMrs.Earl
Harden, Westoo, w. Va .; Dale
Harden and sons, P. J . and Earl D.
II; Becky Reisinger, Canton; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Harden, Syracuse;
Mr. and Mrs. James Harden, Janet
and Jacob, London; Robert Harden,
Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Don Lisle,
Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Lisle, Todd,
Scott Travis Syracuse Mr
d
Mis.' Roy Je~. ~berl; :::d
Rochelle, Forest Run; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Usle, Jason and Nicholas,
West Je!ferson; Mr. and Mrs. Jolm
Nelson, Middleport; Teresa Harden
and Bob Wllilams, Pol'lli!roy; Mi's.

~rn~~~~t.i:wa:~,:;
Penny Smith, Eileen

: at the Meigs Fair. She beloogs lo the Eastem High School Chapter,

and Andy, Kathy Rickard, Kathleen
Roush, Amy MacKnighi, ~
Louise Grinstead, Walter Gdn·
stead, Mrs. Cecil Dunkin, Stepblin
and David, Mr. and Mrs. Thorilas
Grinstead, and Mr. and ~­
WU!lam McFarland, all of NI!IN
·
Haven.

erews.
QUESTION: What in cigarettes.
ANSWERline: We do not know
~;:exactly, but a number of Substan·
: ;ces In smoke condensate are
;::carcinogenic in animals . A number
:.;of others are co-.carclnogenlc ·that Is they can produce cancer
: when combined with other cbeml·
• .. cals present in the smoke. Otbers
' are tumor promoters. Once a
cancer starts they can cause It to
,grow faster.
:

FOR THAT BACK
TO SCHOOL
STUDENT IN
HIGH SCHOOL OR
COLLEGE, STOP IN

.•.

AND SEE .OUR NEW

The 48th annual Parker reunion
·was held at the Tuppers Plains
.Elementary School Aug. 14.
; Hal Parker, Parkersburg, asked
:the blessing before the basket

F-ALL MERCHANDISE

• dinner.

OUR BIG SALE ON

.

,. : President Nellie Parker called
~
'
• -the business meeting to order.
:-:secretary: treasurer VIrginia
; :Parker read the minutes of tbe Ialit
: m eeting. Offl.cers elected were
: : Nellie :Parker, president; Albert
• ·Parker, vice president; VIrginia
'
- -Parker , secretary-treasurer;
: :Ralph Parker, in charge of gUts .
· • ::I&gt;roposalS passed were largest
: ~family 'must be llvlng under one
:;..,or, and that table service and one
. "'meat be fymished by the reunion

SUMMlB MEflCHANOI~I
CONTINUES!

~:~o!~~=th~~~~

-&lt;

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

~ ..tt:easury.

BEOFFERS vou AN EXTRA
DROOM FOR YOUR HOME!
.(Delivered to your door.)

• • Gills were given to Lottie Parker,
:::Oldest woman , 95; Raymond
• ~·parker, oldest man, 76; Heather
• :Hart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
: ·:Wuuam Hart , 15 months, youngest
: :-gtrl; Bradley Parker, son of Mr.
~ ~d Mrs . J ack Parker, three

..

HIDE·A·BED SOFA--made only by SIMMONS

Morris, 'Thelma' White, Elizabeth
Hayes, Mae McPeek, Opal HoHon,
Genevieve Ward, Cora Beegle.

··.....
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'

HIDE-A-BED!~ SOFAS BY SIMMONS COME IN A WIDE VARIETY OF
STYLES, SIZES, SHAPES. AND COLORS. THEY TURN A UVING ROOM
QUICK AS A WINKI THEY'RE
INTO A GUEST BEDROOM BEAUTIFULLY CONSTRUCTl!D OF THE FINEST MATERIALS AND
FEATURE THE MARKETS' FINEST INNERSPRING MATTRESS ..... THE
INCOMPARABLE BEAUTYREST&lt;I.

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POMEROY - Parents of all
Southern Local SchOOl District
kindergarten students lor the
• 1983-84 school year are to meet
Wednesday, August 24, at 7: :Jl
In the Southern High School
: ' cafeteria. Those who are not
registered maydJsoat that time.
Parents are asked to take record
of immunization, proof of recent
· • skin test, and clllld's birth
•. certificate.

•

ONl V HIDE·A·BED ® 1181 BEAUTYREST® ,
BENEDICT - 1'\Jpular .,.,,.,mp&gt;rary ligllt-beck style with duroble

·p.m.

IOO!b IJliyester wide-wale OJrduroy. Coo!&gt;ins ti'e luxtrious Beautymt@ '

mattress, with a ""chanism that is easy ll """" or clo!e, and also stullly
and comt&gt;rtable.

$1695

REG. '999

'

$6}400

\

· STOP IN AND SEE ·OUR SELECTION OF . HIDE-A..aED SOFAS
'T ODAY. AVAilABlE IN nMN, FUU.. OR auEi!N SIZE$.
'
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BALL POINT
PEN WATCH

PREPARE FOR YOUR HOLIDAY GUESTS NOW!!
. I

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ONLY

•

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•72 Super, long wearing
fabrlca available.

............

Lifestyle
CORNER OF THIRD &amp; OLIVE
GAUIPOLIS - 446·3045
\

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ON HIDE·A·BED SOFAS WITH THE
BEAUTYREST• MATTRESS
•10 frem•• to
choooe from .

FURNITURE
SHOWCASE

· •8 Week Delivery
period.
•FREE
DELIVERY
•FREE
PARKING

:'
'•
: Bailey reunion
• RACINE -

Descendants of

! ! John and Joanna Bailey will be

I

i i held Sunday at the S1u1ne Park,
; 1Racine. A basket lunch will be

cJ7ia 8imtnoll3 cJbucR

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LADIES' PENDANT
DIGITAL WATCH

:
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Southern
Kindergarten
registration

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.DIGITAL WATCH
With Calculator And
'Musical ·Alarm

Happenings

•

•

DIGITAL WATCH
With Metal ·Band

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BAHR CLOTHIERS

SFHUORWCNITASUREE

t; .

I • served at noon.

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..\I

f IHayman reunion

lt

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MEIGS COUN'IT- Descend·
•antso1EdandEitzaHayrnanw111
l hold a family reunion Swlday at
Forked Run State Park. Dinner_
l wlllbesel'lledat12::Jlp.m. In the
event of rain, the reunion will be
~ held at the BelJevllle Lock and
' Dam shelterhoule.

I·
OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.ll.
liON. &amp; FRI. TO I P.ll.

WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION IS OUR MAIN CONCERN

QUESTION: What a re chances
of being cured of lijng cancer ?
ANSWERllne: Very low. The
overall live-year survival rate Is
about 10 percent. Most form s of the
disease start inSidiOUsly and produce no symptoms until too fa r
advanced for e(fectlve t reatment to
begin. The Surgeon Genera l's
Report oll979 states that " the past
15 years have brought little significant progress in tbe early diagnosis
or treatment of lung cancer." The
report goes on to point out th8t lung
cancer is largely a preventable
disease. That is, It .can be prevented
' by not smoking.
·
QUESTION: Once one stops
smoking, is It okay to have a
cigarette now and tben?
ANSWERllne : No . Nicotine
seems to create a lasting tolerance
tri the bOdy. When an ex-smoker
takes a Cigarette, even years after
quitting, the nicotine n!actlon is
trigge,OO and he ·or she may be ,
quickly hooked again. In the same ·
way that a recovering alcoholic can
never drink agail&gt;, an ex-smoker
should never smoke again .
QUESTION: Is passive slllQking
l!azardous?
· ANSWERline: Pa911!Ve smokingIs the breathing of ·smoke from
soneone else's cigarette. The~'\\ is a
dlt!erence between mainstream
smoke, which Is inhaled directly by
the smoker, and sldestream smoke,
which Is released Into tbe air by the
smoldering cigarette. Mainstream
smoke mainly affects the smoker,
but sldestream smoke,. contains
higher percentages o_ftar, nicotine
and noxious gases when It leaves
the cigarette. Even when diluted,
sidestream smoke may cause
strong allergic reactions in some
·people. A few preliminary reports
have Indicated that it may create a
risk of lung cancer among persons
who do not smoke. While definite
answers to questions about passive
smoking are not yet available, this
is a problem of growing concern.
For more information .call 992·

0/
/0

•

•
•
F1nanc1ng
On •

.Selected Models To

GUARANTEE

Qualified Applicants.

RULES :
1. Customer must have bonafide written order .
2. Order must be approved by dealership management.
3. Vehicle m~st be a comparably equipped and priced unit.
4. If Riverside Motors Inc, cannot meet or beat your best
'offer, the follow ing steps must be taken to receive the $500.00
guarant~.
'

•

TERM S: $7, 000 MAXIMUM, 36 MONTH S, 25 PCT. DOWN
PAYMENT. NEW CAR S ONLY!

REBATES IF ANY REMAIN WITH THE DEALER

•

'
1. Vehicle mu st be actually purchased from other dealership.

.

2. Bring _proof of purchase and reglstr.atlon of the same
·
vehicle to Riverside Motors In c.
3. Orlglnel window price sticker for cars, and window
equipment sticker for trucks of the purchased vehicle must
be made available .to Riverside Motors Inc .
·
4. 11 the above criteria Is met, the $500.0CJ'gua rantee will be
·awarded.
·

STOP IN AND SEE:

Wendell Vaughan • Bill 'Ole' Haas • Bob Ross •
Pete Somerville • John Sang- Tommy Sprague
- Herb Jarrell.

7531. .

WE WILL MEET OR BEAT ANY BONAfIDE OFFER ON
ANY COMPARABLE CAR OR PAY YOU 5500.00
,

:Parker reunion ·held

,-jRo~be~·t~H~ard~en~;~Sandr~~a~,~Ra1~p~h~an~d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Ballard,

F'.H.A. - Pam Davis received the trophy as the outstanding Future
• Homemaker of Anlerlca at Wednesday nlgbl~s Y Oldh Night observance

Mlchaei,Mr.andMrs.Mark~

: •causes lung cancer?

Orr,
Goldie Frederick, Dlrolyn Holley,

.

Mrs. Tony Flelds,.Hartford, W. Va.'
Erancis Stewart, Usa Stewart
Crump and Nickle, Tim Rawl.lnfl$,
Mafjotie Grinstead and Voneda
Powell, Mason, W. Va.; Sibyl
Grinstead, Doris Yonker, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Rousb, Mr. and Mrs.
DanllY Roush, Gil, YVlllllll!, and
Jody Gill, Letart, W. Va.; SIISI\Il
Grinstead, Summer and Toby,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Roush and Jason, Mr.
and Mrs. Todd Grinstead aJid

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'

Sml~~::~~~ll.
Ethel
Ll·f,S~",.=1,
Betty Roush, VIrginia Lee,
J~ IL y ...~

RIVERSIDE

All cigarettes smoked
~amage your health

Grinstead reunion held at New Haven

•

Ohio

Ct~ncer Answerline

Potassium maintains ·fluid and chemical ·balance
By Edward Schreck, D.O.

August ,19, 1983

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months, younges_i boy; traveled
farthest, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Parker, Danbury, Nebra~. 1,200
miles; largest family , Mr. and Mrs.
Btll White, Diana, Cindy, Kellee
and Billy; married longest, Mr. and
Mrs. C. 0 . Newland, 53 yeari.
Others present were Ralph and
Jimmy Parker, Mae Dorst, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Parker and Jason,
Freda and Foster Bean, Tom and
Frank Parker, Emma, Keith,
Rachel and Whitney Ashley, June
and Robert D. Ashley, Lola Griffin ,
Binlce Tuttle, Helen Hart, Wilber
Parker, Mr. an&lt;l Mrs. Joe Poole and
Will, all local; Belly Parker, Mr.
and Mrs. Theodore F. Parker and
Mark, Willis, Brenda· and Btian
Parker, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Hecox and family,
Derrlch Hecox, Rockford, Ill.;
Francis Frederick, Smithville, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Sam Davis,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
'Russell Parker, Davisville, W. Va. ;
Kelda, Randy and Ashley Jill
Smith, Clifton, W. Va .; Gall Mills,
Eliz.abelh, W. Va.
, The 1984 reunion will be held the
second .Sunday In August at the
same place.
·

.Enterprise
UMW picnic
The United Methodist Women of
the Enterprise United Methodist
Chureh conducted a family picnic
and swimming party recently at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. James Will ,
Will'sHlll.
' Attending were Rev. and Mrs.
Rlcluird RothemiCk, Mr. and Mrs.
PhU D. Ohlinger, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Crane, I:lorlfu, Jo Ellen, Billy, and
Ben; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Pullins and
Scott; Mr. and Mrs. Paul F)'lck, Mr.
and Mrs. Dan Cotterill and Cynthia;
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Sisson, Nate, and Brenna;
Tract Casto, Mr. and Mrs. Ed King,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Dixon, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Grueser, Kelly,
· Tara, and Danlelle; Mrs. Charles
Warth. Davkl, Darrln, and Amy;
·Mrs. Paul Simpson, Valerie, Joanle,
and Teresa; Mrs. Sellm Blazewlcz,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hunnel and Art;
SIWill LJgbttoot, Brian Will, and the
host and hostesS.

Ashley to Utah ·
Robert G. Ashley has returned to
Salt Lake City, Utab, where he Is
atlt'Jidlng the University of Utah,
after spel1(!lng Sllllllller vacation In
Melp ' County with family and

trlends.

..................

USED CARS AND TRUCI&lt;S
CARLO
Reef with white hall top, V-8
engine, power •leering and
brakes , automatic transmission, air conditioning ,
am -fm radio, 44,000 miles.
Loca I Owner .
____ NOW
WAS

22.95.

.1

'1695

2 dr .. dark green, V-8 engine,
power steering and brakes,
automatic transmission, air
conditioning am-fm stereo,
spilt front seats, sport
mirrors .
WAS
SPECIAL

'1395

1995.

1

1980 FORD MUSTANG

4495.

1995.

1

'995

'3995

BLAZER

power steering and brakes,
automatic transmission, air
conditioning, am-fm stereo
radio, mud &amp; snow tires.
WAS
NOW
1

4995.

'4095

'3495.

5295.

'4695

1

2995.

'5295

4-wheel drive, V-8 engine,
power steering and brakes,
automatic transmission, air
conditioning , mud and snow
tires, good co•ditlo•.
WAS
NOW

59.95.

1

'5195

'2795

'1995
JEEP CJ-7
HARD TOP

Pickup
Flareslde, 6 cyl.
engine, power steering and
brakes , automatic transmission , am radio, log lights,
swing lock mirrors.
WAS .
NOW

5995.

NOW

3495.

1978 PONTIAC
GRAN PRIX

cyl. engine 4 speed transmission, mud and snow tlres,
A-1 condition .
•
WAS
NOW

5795.

'5195

1
THUNDERBIRD
V-8 engine, power steering
and brakes, automatic transmission, air conditioning,
am-tm stereo radio, sport
mirrors, white side wall tires .
WAS
NOW
1

4295.

T-Top ,

v.a

engine, power
and
brakes·,
automatic trans., air condition ing , cruise control , am .
fm stereo radio S-track .
WAS
steering

4995.

1

1980 MERQJRY

4

1

•

•

'2695

1

engine , autolnati c
transmission, power steering,
am-fm s tereo, 8 tr ack , good
tires .
WA S
SPE CIAL

1981

1

transmission, am .fm stereo,

atr
conditioning ,
sport
mirrors, new tires . Local
trade In;
WAS
NOW

4 cyl.

transmi Ssion, am radio, white
side wall !Ires, full wheel
covers. Local Owner.
WAS
NOW

1978

4 wheel drive, V-8 engine, ,

WAS

4 dr., 4 cyl. engine , automatic

• 1

V-8 engine, power steering
and brakes,
automatic

conditioning, tilt and cruise,
am-fm stereo 8 track.

NOW

WAS

1976 GMC PICKUP
8 foot bed, 6 cyl. engine, power •
steering, 3 . speed tran.
smlsslon, rear step bumper,
good tires.
WAS
SPECIAL

2 dr., silver with half vinyl
roof, cloth Inferior, V-8 engine,
power steering and brakes ,
automatic transmi ssion, air

2 dr .. white, 4 cyl. engine, 4
speed transmission, full wheel
cOvers, white side wall tlres.

1

.......~ -

~

1976 CADIUAC DtVILLE 1977 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

'3395

3 dr . Hatc hback, 4 cyl . engine,
4 spee d tran Smission, air
conditioning, am -fm stereo 8
track.
WAS ·
NOW

'4995.

'4395
1979 FORD FUTURA

6 cyl. engine, power steering
and
brakes,
automatic
trans mi Ssi on ,
air
con ditioning, sport mirrors, am1m r~ dlo .
WAS
NOW

'2695.

'1995

-

NEW CARS AND TRUCI&lt;S
19B3 MUSTANG GL .

3 dr. power steering, alr condition , protection pkg ., power brakes.

WAS $9,542.

· . 19B3 FORDLTD

'8549

d&lt; . .sedan, automatic, ps, rust protection , alr cond., t. gloss,
walls, wheel covers, vinyl trim.
WAS $10,0$9.
4

W·

'8952

Stock No.-3008, om-fm digital, stereo, sunroof, vent windows.

1983 V.W. PICKUP
Dleselengine, hlqh output heater,-stereo radio, prep.
. WAS $8,209.95
'

'8339
'7748

19B3 RENAULT ALLI.ANCE
no. 3552,2 dr . 4 _.t, w-woll5, oir cond ., t. gla55, radio, rear
window defroster.
..,
WAS $7 ,675.

·

19B3 FORD F·100 TRUCK

262

8 cyl. , automatic, p. steering, p. brakes. mirrows, gauges, vinyl

trim, rust protection.
WAS. $9,890.

·

'6997

19B3 FORD F· 1DO TRUCK
6 cyl.,

step bumper, power brakes, 19Sxl5 tires.

'6696

1983 V.W, RABBIT

, 19B3 V.W. RABBIT
WAS $8,995.

19B3 MUSTANG L.

2 dr ,, tinted glass, 4 speed trans.,.rust protection.
WA S $7,395.

.
'8149

No, 3036, am-tm radio, rear wiper &amp; w.. ~he r, front vent windows,
roof rack, splash guards, leatherette Interior .
WAS S7,m .90

'6933

.1983 V.W • .RABBIT
GT-1 am-fm stereo, rea r speakers, vent windows, mats.
WAS $8,985.
_.

'8431

19B3 RENAULT ALLIANCE

No. 3549 automatic, w. walls, visibility group , p. door locks, alr
cond .. p. steeerlng, rear window defoQger , am-tm stereo, cruise
control. protection group .
WAS $9,566 .

'8991

l9B3 FORD F·150 4x4 TRUCK
300 Cl D engine, 4 speed, p. steering, p. brokea, trax lux axle,
mlrrows, rust protection, mud and snow tires .
. 3T600

'

�l'c!9e-1 0- The

Doily Sentinel

.Pomeroy-Middleport,

'

Friday, Auguit 19, 1983 '

Ohio

Experts disagree on cause of airliner fire
. FORT MITCHELL, Ky. (AP) Experts who examined a burned·

out Air Canada DC·9 disagree on the
cause of a fire that broke out In flight
and claimed 23 lives .
There were 46 people on the flight
from Dallas to Toronto. The crew of
five and 18 passengers survived.
The fire poured thick black smoke
into the cabin !rom the rear of the
plane as it made an emergency

landing a t Greater Cincinnati Inter· Thursday that he believes the fire
began In the plan~'s lavatory, but
national Airport on J une 2.
disagreed
with earlier testimony
"I don't believe we have a really
good clue at this point other than the that an overheated toilet flush pump
fire didn't start in the trash bin," ignited material around II.
Fire-resistant material around
said James Brenneman, a fire
protection engineer from Sunny· the pump was separated from the
vale, Calif., who inspected the plane pump by about an Inch and air
circulating In that space would have
lor the government.
Brenneman told the National carried neat away from the pump
Transportation Safety Board on and prevented the materials from

of maintenance for Air Canada 's
DC-9s, said the pump had been
changed in May and the area around
!t cleaned of any dust or debris that
mlght have been ignited by an
overheated motor.
A Canadian gdvemment expert
told the board earlier that he
believed an overheated flush pump
was the "most llkely" cause of the
fire.

lgnitlng, he said.

Fire damage indicated that the
fire did not begin In the pump, he
said, hut somewhere nearby the

commode.

·

Brenneman said the fire could
have been started by burning paP,er
towels thrust through a hole beneath
the lavatory's vanity cabinet, but
said there was no evidence of this.
JIUiies R.iddoch, superintendant

A

Business Services

Heat from the pump probably
caused Its wiring to short and
surrounding material to catch fire,
said Max Vennlj, an electrical.:
specialist for Trpsport Canada.
· If the fllgbt crew had been more
concerned about the popping of
three circuit breakers in the cockpit'
that were connected to the flush ·
pump motor, Vermlj said, lhe fire
might have been less serious.

BOGGS
U.S. IT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deer,

'

Hoe

New Holllnd. Bush

Farm Equipment
Diller

&amp;

Service

'

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

&amp; Inspected"

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

R aaidantial

742·3196

"'"'

Kitchen Cabinets~ Roof·
inc - Sidinc - Concrete '
Potios - Sidewolks - '
New Construction ~ Re·
madeline - Custom Pole
Barns.

THE
TROPHY
·KING

Trophy
CHARLES SAYRE
Manufacturers
AND SON.
PLAQUES
ENGRAVING , Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

wetlne8dai. Pictured wllh the ' ·

Route I
, Lona Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

Np Homes - Extensive
Remodelinc.
.. nsurence Work
.Custom Pole Bides.
&amp; Garaces
•Roofinc Work
eAklniiMIII &amp;Vinyl Sidinp
15 Years Experience
'
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7583
or 992-2282

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Cla~sified Dept.
lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

The Vest 2 Ways!

ribbed borde! and buttons.
Crochet every.day-useful vests of
pompadour yarn. Pattern 7517:
Sizes 10·12: 14·16 inclu ded.
$2.50 lor each pattern. Add
50&amp; each pattern for postage
and han dling. Send to:
Alice Brooks t111ts :J 1 7
Reader Mail
'
The Daily Sentinel
ilox 163, Old Chelsea Sta., New
Yn, NY 10!13. Print Name,
Address, 2lp, Pattern Number.
YOUR NEXT CRAFT IS in our NEW
19M NEEDLECRA FT CATALOG
Ower 170 varied deSigns. 3 free
palterns. Send $1.50

~ll CRAFT

BOOKS. .$2.00 each

112·PriiO Af&amp;IIIOI ,
11 J.EHJ ~rt ol Hlirpin Crochet
109-Sew+Knii!Basic tissue inc!)
107·lnstanl Sewin&amp;
!06-lnstant fasl1iGn
104-lnstant ......,
103-15 Quills lor TodiJ

All Boob and Catalog-add 50(
each for postaee and handlin~
135-Dolls &amp; Clothes On Parade
134.14 Quit~ Machine Quilts
133-Fnluon Home Quilting
llZ·QuiH Ori&amp;inals
131-~dd a Block Quilts
129·Quick 'n' EISJ Translers .
128-(ntelot&gt;e Patchworll Quills
126-Thrifly Crafty Flowers
125-Pelal Quilts
121·Pillow Show·Offs ·
118·Crochet with Squ11es
11 HHJ ~rt of Needlepoint
1!4-C.mplele Afchans

SIDING
54

tx,~B~
.

Oress w or casual, choose the ·
look ~ou love in eas~ crochet.

One has a drawstring waist and
peplum ellect. lhe other a

/ )'tr" ,

Sub Contractor ·
Bids
Requested
For The Maples
Elderly

Housing 1

Pomeroy, OH.
CALL: John Pupa
Northland Parle
Homes, Inc.

FREEZER SALE
CHEST MODELS

LAND
SALE
Water · Electric

Bath House
&amp; Boat Dock
NO MONEY DOWN'

--,50 Per Mo.

DIRECTONS ...
South on Rt. 7, 5 miles below
Caffipolis, to Raccoon Crk.
llridp Md follow ~s.

SHOW SAT., SUN.

.. .

MIDDLEPORT - Corner lot
- Beautifully remodeled 3
bedroom home. equipped
kitchen, central air, many other
features. Will sacr~ice at

Cu . Ft. .. . 1325.95

$36.500.00.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

AUCTION SALE

MIDDLEPORT Small 2
bedroom, INing room. kitchen,
and bath block home with
garage. Level Jot $10,900.00.
RUTlAND - Approx . 5 acres
oi level' grou nd with a 3
bedroom home Ihat has a deck
around 2 sKies, garage, full
basement and is in excelent
locat~n. $38,900.00.

614-992· 2181

BEN TOM CORPORATION
42198 Pomeroy Pike Iacross from Meigs High
School)
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Ben Tom Corporation will offer for sale at 10:00 a.m. on
August 27, 1983 the .following trucks and equipment:
11~11 ea. 1976 Ford LTD Car; 1 ea. 1973 Ford 'I• Ton
Pickup; 3 ea. 1976 Ford 'I• Ton Pickups: 1 ea. 1978 Ford
150 Ranger Pickup; 1 ea. 1971 Ford F350 Ton Truck; 2ea.
1972 Ford F350 Ton Trucks; I ea. 1969 Ford F350 Ton
Truck; I ea. 1970 GMC 2 Ton Truck: I ea. 1969
International 2 Ton Truck.
Bidding on items offered for sale will be as is where rt is.
Terms · of sale are cash or check with letter from bank.
AUCTIONEER-M. L "Bud" McGhee
of McGhee Auction Company, Gallipolis
Ohio Licensed &amp; Bonded in Ohio &amp; W. Va.

Real Estate General

EAFORD(H

NEW LISTING - NEW LIMA
ROAD Bi·level with 4
bedrooms, large lamily room,
island kitchen with buik·in
range and dishwasher, cenlrill

REALTOR '

Phone
1-(614) ·992 ·3325

vacuuming. intercom system,

II basement carport, huge
nice barn, equipment shed,
and approx. 47 acres. Believe it
or not, only $57.900.00.

NEW LISTING ...,. Attractive 3
bedroom home in Pomeroy,
lurnac~ handy kitchen, covered palo, 'A acre lot Just
$17,1100.

NEW LISTING NEAR
POMEROY 1!.2 acre
building site. $6,900.00.

NEW LISTING 7 rm.
remodeled 2 s101'/ frame looks
n~~ about II acre of levelland,
and equipped kitchen .

COULD BE A SIIALL DAIRY
FARM - 89.5 acres, wtth
appr,.. 40 hllable acres and 40
in pasture. Some tim~r land.
Several good outbuildings, and
mineral go with !hi; property.
House needs some war~

$32.500.

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.'S
CARPET SHOP

IN THE COUNTRY - 1 acre
and 5 rm. old' home with new
bath, etc. $13,500.
·

Largesl Selectton In Soulheaslern Oh1o

CARPET
$1295
Selection

GOLD

Of

SEAL

CONGOI.EUM

POMEROY MULBERRY
AVE.- Tum 'Em Loose-1 \1
siCIY home in excellent neigh·
borhood, children can walk to
scho~. Th~ is a family size
home with 4 bedrooms. Large
living room with fireplace.
Bui~· in dishwasher, new carpet
throoghout Front and side
poo:hes. Forced air natural gas
heat supplemenled by woodburner for cheap costs.
$27,500.00.

RUTlAND - One siOI'/ 6 rm.
home 2 bedrooms, bath,
garage and large garden.
As~ng $35,1100.

$13.95

Good

$48,00J.OO.

TAKE OVER - Older remodeled homa Carpet, furnace
and real n~e. Little down.

STARTING AT
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

*Campsite...
"Big Foot Park"

ranch home. 2 year; old, patio,
121&lt;!4 buildin~ woodburner
and brick chimney. House ~
insulated. B.B. electnc heat
.Approx. 1h acre lot Only
$43,00l.OO.

SPECIAL
15

121160 ARUNGTON - 1972
mobile home w~h extra rrn
Only $7,500.

Sq. Yd. lnslalled

ANSO IV NYLON
$15.95

$6,500.00-6 rms, bath, T.P.
water, nalural gas ahd
equipped kitchen.

Yd . Installed

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

REALTORS

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
GRI 992·6191
.1e1n Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692
Jo Hill 985-4466
Office 992-!259

WOODS 44 acres of
hunting firewood and fresh air.
About $310.00 per acre

$399 ~AJrRRY
1 ROLL ONLY IN BROWN

NEAR JONES BOYS - Walk to
eai or store. View of river and 3

¢

"Beautiful, Custom
Bu itt Garages"
Call for free siding estimates. 949·2801 or
949·2860.

992· 2259
BRADBURY - 3 bedroom

5 Cu. Ft. .•. 1235.95
8 Cu. Ft. ... '285.95
15 Cu. Ft . ... 1355.95
20 Cu. Ft. ... 1418.95
25 Cu. Ft. ... 1472.95

Columbus, OH.
614-846-3400

BISSELL ·
SIDING CO.

Misc. Merchandise
POMEROY,O .

PART-TIME HELP
NEEDED IN THE
SYRACUSE AREA.
CONTACT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
AT 992-2156 OR 992-2135

ll ·! l·tk

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

LOST Pleaae help us find a
long haired white male cat
with blue eyea. Anawera to
Cory in Patriot·Rio Gi-anda
area . Reward . Call 814·
379·2472 anytime.

'Sidinc
'Roofing
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodeling

20

Years hperience
In Home Area
FREE ESTIMATES

:
1

Call 843-5425

J-5-2 mo_pd

KEN'S

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

APPLIANCE

SERVICE

AND HOME IIAINliNANCE
'Roolint ol all typos
Rasldentlal &amp; Commercial
'Guilt" &amp; Downspouts
'Stor11 Wiadows &amp; Doors
FREE ESniATES
20 Yurs Elperience
WOIIK GUARANTIID
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742·2834
or 949-21JI.Q
.
7·.t\' ·l mo. oa.

A

Con be more.

Housing
' Headquarters

~

1

.,

(H
IUUOR

No Sunday Calls

USED .
. APPLIANCES

sites, !8Cia· ·
mation, ponds, utility construction and septic links. .

Washers. Dryers
Ra~. Refripntors
Ai' Conditioners

Pipeline, well

Bob Camptell &amp;
Don Rose

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

RACINE,OH.

742-2352

PH. 949-2224
"Bonded &amp; Insured"

l-1 J.tfc

• Route

4, Pomel.?lt••

ROOFING

m. new

All types of roof
or repair, gutteiS and
downspouts; 11J11er clean·
inc and painti~W, st01111
doots and windows.

OAK

FURNITURE
*Tables &amp; Chairs
•Comer Cupboards
*Buffet, etc.

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

WOOD
WORLD

I

or

2506 Grand Central Ave.
Vienna, W. Va.

949-3091] 1,.,

ARROW FLASHING
SIGNS
FOR SALE OR RENT

8-3·1·1110. pd.

1-18·111110.

8". B"

Chesler, Ohio
Ph. 986·4289
If No Answer, C.JI 985·4382
1
Dewayna Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All Makes and Models
Antenna lnslailation
House Calls and Shop
Service Available

Around
•Dump Truck

M.L.

~rbiiugh's. Archery

CONTRACTING

&amp; Huntirt Supply

RECLAMATION
.

: TUPPERS PlAINS, OH.

"Bows &amp;Accmories
'Guns &amp; Ammo.
'live filii, Fishin&amp;
llcllle
'H111t1n1 &amp; Fishin&amp;

"Excavating

"Ponds

•septic Tanks

Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

742-2328

"Hauling
949-2293
Racine, OH.
S.l-t1c

4-Zl·ttC

7· 15·1 mod. 1)(1.

(Formerly Employed by
lee Construction,

and Supply
'Water Pipe
"Gas Pipe
"Regulators

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

PHONE: 992-7816
7-27-1 mo . Pd .

- Dozers
-Back hoM

- Dump Trucks
-Lo!Boy
- Trencher

-Wet.-Sewer
-Gao Linoo

'Fittings
Phane:
Residence: 985-3837
Warehouse: 985·3509
8-H mo. pa

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING
•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION

WOK

- Septic S\'lhlms
LARGE OR SMAL\. JOBS

PH. 992-2478

8-IB·I roo. pd.

RADIATOR
SERVICE
' Wa c:an repair and , .
core radiatonl and hea·
tao COftll. We can al10
1

' acid boil nl rod out ,...
diatora. We al10 l8pll(r

O..Tankl.

PAT HILL FORD

•LAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

BOIIDED &amp; 10M GUMANTEI:D
PHONE Jll CLIFFORD
992-7201
P.ffc

992-2196
Middloport, Ohio
·
l·ll·tlc

NEW

CUSTOM BULDING
•Custom B1iH Homes
•Viceroy Homes
From Ca~ada
•Modular Homes
demodeline Jobs
•Pools

ULTRA CLEAN

DRY FOAM EXTRACTION METHOD
CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
DEEP CLEANEIOI- SHORT DRYING ,TIME
USE SAME DAY- AN11-IIESOIL DETERGENTS
CoMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL
•Professional Spot Removal Service
•Wall &amp; Clilill&amp; CINninc
"lnsuronca Work Welcome"
James Kniaht-273·5388
.....'
In Rovenswood
·~
Rick Hovatter-992·2606
In Middleport
,.. "Free Estimates On All Services"
HI mo.

I
I

I,

LEONARD F. ERWIN
CONTRACTOR

s.

36629
Rt. 7
Pomeroy

. 985-3366

7·28·1 mo , pd .

COMPLETE
RAO!ATOR SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
Core to the l.arpst Radia:.
tor.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. hperience

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 9'12-2174
2·26·tfcc

Sizes start from 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sl11s from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsulatd DOl Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS-.
.RI£!n~. 011.

· • . 1;

Ph. 614-Jfl-.s !n
10-6-tk

JEWELL'S

MINE RUN

PLUMBING and
HEAnNG

STRIP
COAL

•Experienced
•Reuonabla
•Woolt

Ou.nm'-1

BIG OR SMALL
992-6030
Minersville, OH .
8/19/1 mo. pd.

JO'B -

SJ()OO A

,.,.,

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair, parta, and
supplies .
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one haH mile ' up
Goorgu Croak Rd.
Call
446·0294 .
Balloons for all occasions.
Say Happy Father's Dey,
Happy Birthday, llo'Je You,
Get Wall. It's A bov or It' a a
Girl. Anything you wiah in a
different way. Delivered to
hoapital or home Open 9 to
7 . Bo!loona &amp; Co.. 446·
4313 .
Register for Tiny Tot
Nursery School in Aevens·
wood. Two or three day
so011lon , Coli Sholly Low.
304-273-B4B9.
LETART MACHINE SHOP
end engine repelr. Marvin
Floworo-304·B86 · 3361,
Chorloa Thomas-895-3822.
Jim Young· 304·BB2·3333.

Giveaway

8 klttono to gl-woy to
good homo. Coll448·0924.

Warranted by Sears
For 5 Years.

'h lrlah Senor &amp; 'h Lob ..
llotroivar. Coli 441·0451.

Old plono vood cond. Call
114-258-1206.
Kittens. Coli 446·7739.

..

·~

CATALOG

TDN

PH. 992-2280

. -~,

Gregg •

Petty

2·23 tic
•

.,

.

l 'i

onytlmo.

3 puppies, CoH 814-3877743.

MERCHANT

:r-n. 992-2178 ·

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE·
COMMUNITY COLLEGE
Seek : ADMISSIONS
COUNSLER . 12 months po·

Gibbe-Ownen
H ·ltt

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Lor.. dog. Port Wolkor
hound. · whlto. 814·
98&amp;·4302.

' .
.

Male or female full time or
pan time. No experience
neceuary. Call 814-3870411 for appointment .
TYPING JOBS· Typing to be
done at home . Part time or
full time , Call. including
evenings and weekenda. 1716· 842·6000, Ext. 6634.

12

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service . Estate. Farm. AntiRUB &amp; liquidation sales .
Ucansed • bonded in Ohio&amp;.
wva. 304· 773-6785 or
304· 773-91B6 .
Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Canter. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.
Consigmenta of new end
used merchandise always
welcome. Rich•rd 'Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276-3089.

9

Wanted To Buy ·

We pay cash for late model
clean ueed cera .
Jim Mink Chev .-Oidslnc.
Bill Gene Johnson
446·3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heater•. Swain Furniture, 448 · 3169. Jrd . &amp;
Olivo St .. Golllpolio, Oh.

Will pav good price for u•d
mobile homes. travel trailers
&amp; campers. Coli 614-446·
0175.
Two bay hoise trailer. Must
be in good condition. Call
446-1066 ask for Gary.
BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old
furniture. gold. silver dollara, wood ice boxes, stone
jar•. antique•. etc., Complete households. Write:
M.D. MIH,r. Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992·7760.
Wanted to buy. N•w, uud &amp;
antique furniture. Will buy 1
piece or complete house·
holds . Also complete Auctl·
oneering service. Call Osby
A. Mortln 614·992 ·6370.
Buying dolly gold. oliver
coins. rings. jewelry.11erling
ware. old coin•. large currency. Top pricea. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd. Avo.
Middleport , oh . 614-992·
3476.
Now open Point Pleaunt
Poying top dollar
for acrep met•ls. gla•"·
battarlos . Call 304·675·
1084. Rt. 38. Henderson.
Rocycll~g.

WV.
LEFT front rotor for 1980
AMC Spirit, 8 cyl . call
anytime. 304·876·6974.
~
~

11

---~-

EARN tJIItrll mon-v tUn or
partMtlme, no explrinect ne-a10 ry, Coli Fuller Brush
-Co. JD 4 •• 78.2 61 B.
u
RESPONSIBLE babysitter
for 1 YNrold. 2 dayaaweek,
304·871-8289 .
ONE tMcher for Point PleaNnt Child • Fomlly Dovel·
opmont Clntor; opply at 540
&amp;lh. Avo. Huntlngtcrn boforo
a p.m. August 30th .
South-n Community
Actio~ Council Inc. Is on
Equol Opportu~lty

Empoyk.

Situations
Wanted

Babysit in home for preschool age . Spring Valley
area. Call 446·B325.
Student needs round trip
ride to CheaapAake. daily .
Call 446-4701.

I

&amp; Vicinity
3 Family Garage Sale Saturday Only 9 to 6 . 502 Oak
Dr ., Spring Valley. Teenage
&amp; children clothing .

First Time Yard Sale Four 3 family yard sale August
Family Yz mi. up Bulaville 19-20. 9 a .m. to 6 p.m. Nice
Rd .. Plants SubdlvLalon. Fri. large womena clothing .
Alum . awnings. 1976 ford
&amp; Sot . 9 tll7
Van. Maplewo od Lake, SyrFirst Time Yard Sale Fri . &amp; acuse. Oh .
Set. SAM, North of Cheshire
on Roush Lane. 1 mi. out.
Martha Brunson.

.. :... Pt ·Pieas·a·ii't' ... ·

&amp; Vicinity
Yard Sale Fri. &amp; Sat. 19th &amp;
20th , 9 :00· 4 :00 . Toys. ·- -- ------------ ----- ------- -game• . clothing . 2913 l.ARGE toy sale , good buyt
Brook Or .. Pt . Pleasant. WI/. for Christmas, 126 English
Road. Pt . Pleaaant . Thurs Garage Sale Friday &amp; Satur- day till ?
Westbrook Subdivision V• day at Green Acree Subdivimi . out Bulaville Rd., tum sion, 379 Le Granda. Good CARPORT sale, Thuraday &amp;
right . Thurs., Fri . &amp; Sat. 9 to clothes &amp; misc . i.t ems . Friday, $ -5, 101 English Rd.
7, Lota of 1chool clothaa .
Priced cheap .
Appliances, plants &amp; misc.

7 Family Yard Sale Aug .
19th, 20th, 9-7 Shoestring
Ridge, down Rt . 7 at Clipper
Mills.

1- - - - -- - ---

Yard Sale Aug. 18-20.
Clothes, Cl.lrtains. knick Garage Sale Tues. Aug . 23rd
knacks. Ooe and six tents at Campbell's·residence, on
,m i. out Kemper HoUow Rd. Bulavllle Rd ., 1 mile out.
Draperies, pictures and·
Garage Sale Frl: &amp; Sat. Aug . clothes, and misc . items.
19th&amp;20th.9·7. AtCente·
,
,
.
nary, Bernice Baladen'a.
· F~rstT1meyard_ Sale 6 Fam1ly
Yard Sele 1/• m1le above Clay
Schoql on Rt. 7 . Clothes,
Yard Sale 424 Hedgewood . furniture, Home Interior, nic
Wed ., Thurs. 8t Fri. 10-7
nacs. Friday 8t Saturday.
9:00 to --·
Yard Sale Fri. &amp; Sat. from
9 ~ 1 9 miles from Gallipolis 6 Femitv Yard Sale Doris
toward Eureka. Lotsohuper Harder residence. Ewing ton.
nice clothes-all sizes, an - Mon . Aug. 22 . Something
tique rocker. books. misc. for everyone.
things . Come see!
460"12 1st. Ave .. Gallipolis.
Yard Sale Fri. &amp; Sat. O.J . Sat .. Sun. Aug. 20 &amp; 21.
White Rd. aecond brick Clothes 12-14, mise house
h'ouse. Excellent childrer.s &amp; hold items. shoes. etc.
adult clothing, portacrib,
alnger sewing machine ,
electric skillet, toaster oven,
toys, &amp; other baby items.

···....P.oniiirov ....... ··

6 Family Garage Sale 7 miles
our Rt. 141 . Aug . 19· 20.
9-5.

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

2 Family Yard Sale Adult 8t
children clothing, furniture.
tovs . On 160 between Vin - 2 family vard sale-August 19
ton and Ewlngton. Aug . 19 &amp; 20 . Long St . Rutland .
&amp; 20, 10·6.
Yard sale-August 17-20 . 9
a.m. to 6 p.m. Rt. 7 by-pasa.
100 yards from intersection
Yard Sale Fri. &amp; Sat . 9:00- of SR .143 and 7 . Watch for
4 :30 . Located on Kristi Dr. signs . 4 antique tables,
off At. 36 W. across from 5toneware. tools. collectiGallia Auto Sales. Toddlen bleS, clothing, and lots of
clothes. adult clothing &amp; miac . items. · 614 - 992 *
mise household items.
2851 .

21 '

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommends
that you do businesa with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering .

31

Homes for Sale

V~RD

sale, featuring _good
back to school clothmg &amp;
etc. 1 12 Pleaaant St. Point
Pleasant, Thursday &amp; Friday.
Yard Sale, Friday &amp; Satur· .
day. Auguot 19 &amp; 20. 104
Highland Ave . Pt . Pleasant.
Tools. books, misc.
GARAGE sale , FridaySaturday. 9 till dark, 3203
Jackson Ave. Irene Dolittle,
Pt. Pzaasant . Antique parlor
desk. treadle Singer tawing
machine. 304 - 676 ~ 1 694.
TWO familv yard sale, Friday

&amp;a Saturday, 9-5, 2615 Mt.
Vernon Ave. Pt . Pleasant .

YARD sale. 9 a .m . till 6
p.m., August 20th. Saturday . Blibybed &amp; Items .
chairs, men owmen S. boys .
clothing &amp; misc . items. 4
Miles from Henderson traf· .,..
fie light. up Rt . 36 on right.
Rain cancels .
THREE fani~y
' yard sale. first
time this year. Friday &amp;
Saturday . 180 ·N . Park Dr.
Pt. Pleasant .
YARD tale, rain or ahine .
Saturday 20th . and Sunday
21st . 10 till7 Beside Henderson Police Station. Clothet,
books, glass. Cheap .
.....
YARD sale.

Pt. PleaAn.t
Monday, August 22nd ~-.
2409 Jefferson Ave. Clo- )
thing. books. games &amp; 'J.
household items.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

4 acres ranch home. 4 yrs.
old, 4 • dr., 2 baths, 2 car
garage with anached barn.
Concrete 1 id ewa I kl.
porches. &amp; driveway. Extra
water tap. Fenced in pasture
&amp; beck vard . Will accept
mobile home as down payment or part of . Asking
$68,000, North Gallia area.
Call 614·3BB-9969 .

For sale bv owner. 1981
Kingslv all electric mobile
home, 14x70 with 7x24
Will do baby1itting in your
expando. 2 bdr ., 1% bath,
home in evenings. Caii614 utility room, central air,
38B-9777.
fireplace, awning &amp; under·
pinning . Reason for selling
Room, board and care for an
must relocate . Price
elderly person In my home.
Reasonable. Call992· 6022. MOVE TO THE TOP Wol7~~--~--~~-­ $20,000 . Call 614· 246 ·
would like to ihow vou how 3 bedroom house with 2 car 6672.
Will do babysitting In my Youcaf'lstartatthetopofthe car · port, ' basement . 1-,-------...,.-homo . Live In Middleport real eltate industry, domi- gla 1 e.d · In front Porch • 1978Schulta14x70.2bdr.,
· ba c k p o rc h, k't
2 bath, ex. cond., total
area. Call 614·992·6349.
nating the selling and listing screened ·In
1•
.
woo d - electric, central air, assumevolume in your area, with a c h en app I111ncee.
Will do babvsitting In my minimal dollar investment, burner with new chimney. ble loan with $1 ,000 down,
home. Racine area . Referen- through an auociation with and 9 loads qf cut wood. Call can stay on rented lot.
992 7286
French City Brokering Serces . 614·949-2779 .
our company. Call or write
·
vice, 446-9340.
us for information or en
Will do babytitting in my interview : Strout Realty, Sale by owner-Rustic hills, 1
--------homa . Rocksprings area . 1
D
H 1 B01 N F
Syracuse . 3 bedrooms. 2 1979 Sterling 14x70, 2
614-992-2762 .
nc., ept . .
·- ront baths, bi-level with patio &amp; bdr., total electric, central
,•-- - - - - - - - - - j Call
St .. Harriaburg, PA 17102.
2
air. ex. con d .. can be left on
1 -800-641-4266 or cover . 3x30- car garage.
WOULD like to do babysit- 717 _234 _01 38 .
16x1 2 barn. 614-992-2961 rented lot . French City Brokting in mv home. Jefferson I-=:~;;======= after 6 p.m.
ering Service, 446-9340 .
Ave . Phone anytime, 304- I ·
875-3352. Fenced yard, 22 Money to Loan
A GOOO HOME FOR 76, 14x70 Fleetwood, 3
daughter19months.
S3600 . NICE 10x40, bd!:· bath &amp; half, plentY
ELECTRIC HEAT, EXCEL· ~~~~~~;~apace, air cond.,
HOME LOANS Low fixed LENT CONDITION. $700. I~
Call 614·245 ·
rate. Leader Mortgage, n E. DOWN, BALANCE Fl· 517B.
13
Insurance
State, Athens. Ohio. 1 -614- NANCED, 36 PAYMENTS r=-:--:-::-:--::---692 ·3061.
OF $105.4B , A MONTH. 1979 14•60 Oakbrook, 2
304-67~ - 271 1.
bdr., gas heat, firepl•ce,
SANDY AND BEAVER In ·
10x20 redwood deck with
aurance Co. has oHered 23 Professional
10 acres, black top road near awning, frame und!ll:rplnservices for fire insurance
Leon . Soon to have city ning, with tie downs, very
Services
coverage in Oallia County
water, house with outbuild- good cond . Call 614 ·367for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal property PIANO TUNING Back to ings $26,000 . Down pay- 0658 aher &amp;PM. if no
coverages are available to School Special $26 normal ment to finance balance. answer 446-2929 .
meet individu•l needs .. Con- tunings . August only . 304-46B-1920 otter 6 p .m. 1976 Kirkwood 1 4x70 total
tact Kail Burleson, agent . Ward's K&amp;'vboard . 446 House and 2 lots in Mason. electric. 3 bedroom, 2 full
Phone 446· 2921 .
4372 .
May be financed bv FHA. baths, water aofatner, re friget"ator stove. underpin Are you paying to much for PIANO TUNING-LANE DA· 304· 773·9118 .
ning , back porch, barbeque
yOur hospital-health insu- NIELS. Raliable service
Practically
new
home.
6
pit and land included .
rance. Call Carroll since 1986 . Associate of
Snowden, 448-4290 .
Brunicardi Mualc Co. Phone rooms, completelv fur- $14,000. Steve Price 614niehed. 7 miles from Pt. 992· 7726 anytime.
614·742-2951.
Ploosant. $3B ,OOO. 304 · 1~=:-:::-~-::-----676· 7313.
USED Mobile Homo1. 304·
18 WantedtoDo
I~
576-2711.
----· 1 ~
FIVE room house. % acre,
good wall. aeptic system. 1977 OAKWOOD 12x6B,
31 Homes for Sale
Southside. Mason County, central air, all electric . Call
General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable Newly remodeled 2 story 304·937· 26B6 or 304·676· 304-676-3B62 botwoon 5
3676 .
&amp; 10 p .m .
and dependable. Call 446·
frame, 11h b•th, 3% acres.
3159 between 9 and 6 .
city schools, riverview .
197B 14•70 THREE bod ·
room, 2 full baths, washer.
Lawn Mowing no yard to big $32,000 . Coli 446·4222 32 Mobile Homes
dryer;- Clishwaaher, central
or small. Reliable and depan· between 9 &amp; 6 .
for Sale
air. owner will finance at 1 2
dable . For estimate call
4 bdr. ranch home. largelR. 1 - - - - - - - - - - percent, $ 13.•000 . Will de ·
448 ·3159, 9 to 6.
full basement, with garage,
liver within 25 miles . 304wood burner Included. city TRI · STATE MOBILE 45B·1960.
Trash hauling, coal, or any- schoolt, 2 miles from town. HOMES . USED· CARS, I- - -- - - -- thing . Will pick up old
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS. 1959 NEW Moon troilor.
refrigerators. TV'I, dryers, Call 448·0276.
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL rough shopo, $1 ,000 . 304·
washers . Call 614-388~
Houa8. 2 acres more or lesa 446-7672 .
675-7577 ~fter 3 p.m.
B813.

1---------a.

1-------- --

1------:-:--- -:
Will do babyolttlng and
typing in my home. Twenty
years experience. Call 44696
_ _ 3_ 6_·_ _ _ _ _ ___

1 DEPENDABLE

child cora
aveilable in my home. Play
room, fenc'ad yard. 304675-2627
·

~

Help Wanted

·;, .. ·Giiiiiiiofis·....... .

aition effeCtive Septam~er

THE West VIrginia Army
National Guard is looking for
people to fill ita ranks. If you
are a high school senior or
graduate and have no prior
LOST: 9 month old Beagle service in the military, the
pup . Childs pet. Welt Virginia Army National
Rock 1 prl n ga - Flatwoods Guard may be the place for
voul Earn good pay. good
area . 614-992-2762.
benifita. job training and
Would the person who found educational auiatanca for
the \:ot rider car seat on Rt. only 1 weekend a month .-nd
248 Iaiit week, please call 16 days each summer. For
814·9B5· 3926 In late oven · more information call Ser·
ings or return rt at end of gent Lutton et 304·8763960 or call toll free 1 ·800·
driveway where found .
3619.

Standing timber, any
amount. Call 614-388 ~ _9_9o_s_._____________

4

Installed And

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

.

quality uud c•s.
Goiiiomis

NOW OPEN, Flx·lt Shop,
2101 Jetferton· Ava . Pt.
Plaaunt, Gla11 (etched),
screen repairs, sm1ll appliance repairs. handMade
laothor goods. Now l used
merchandiae for ..... buy or
trade . Stop In-play video
·gomet. Snocks. 9 o. m .-10
p.m . 304-875·248&amp;.

"FREE ESTIMATES"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

'We sell

1-'1~712

3

Rernodelinc &amp; New Homes
"FREE ESTIMATES"

B·l·l· mo

G&amp;W Plastics

JOHN'S AUTO SALES

PATRICK &amp; EUGENE ·
· JOHNSON

CARPENTRY
SERVICE

License
'DOl Supplies
Hrs.: WHkdlys 10·6
Sit. &amp; Sun. 10·8
Closed Tues. &amp; Wed.

box 66B. Kerr, Oh 45643.

Hound . 6 month• old. Lost
Sun. In Le1art Falla. On
medication. 61 4-247 ·
2806 .

Call: 949-226~

Replacerrlent Letters

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE '
SERVICE
•Lowest Rates

Lost and Found

•Waahere •DishwllheJI~
Rangn
' Auction every Tuesday
•Refrigeratou
night. Pt . Pleasant , WVa.
•Drven •Freezers
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Farm,
PARTS and SERVI~~"'
household, estate. etc. Call
614·367·7101.

'·

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

equipment. Send resume to

LOST: Male Norweigan Elk

8

985-3561
All Makes

H. L. Wrilesel

HEMLOCK
PIPELINE

All black female kitten . 3
months old . 614 -992 2369.

EUGENE LONG

Real Estate General
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

HELP WANTED

\
7517

Business Services

11

••·

Sale•man 1or electronic
2 black kittens. 1 · female
with 11ub tail S. 1 mele .
About B weeka old. 614992· 5B1B .

6

"CUT OUT

PHONE 992-2156

Daily ~ ·

335B.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

FOR FUTURE USE"

. ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION ,

The

You c•n make good Money
u.,ing AVON. Call 448·

9, 1983. Minimum qualifl·
1 Brittany Spaniel &amp; Border cation it e bachelor's degree
Collie. Mixed . Female . 614 -, with 2 years experience In
recruitment or equivalent
247-4292 .
15 Years hperien&gt;e
preference . Responsibility
will be ' development· and
Free
Doberman
pups.
Male
992-3987
&amp;. farilale . Mother regis - maintenance of working re ·
I mo pd -ll i 12
lationahip between the col·
tered. 1·614 -667-3417 .
lege and prospective stuFree electric stove 36 in . Old dents market. Maximum
but works goods . 614-867- pertonal contact with pro 3417.
aoectlve students and parents. Travel. Salary will be
MOTHER tiger cat &amp; 4 commanaurate with expekittens, to good home, 304- rience. Send application before application deadline of
8B2·3590 .
August 22, 1 9B3 to Office
SMALL mixed ·breed puppy, of Personnel. Box 969 , Rio
-Addor. and ........."'s
4 month• old, black and Grande College, Rio
-Rooll,. and guttor _..
Grande, Oh 45674. Appllca·
white. 304-675·2476.
~hCN.. wortc
tion
consists qf letter of
-Piumblnt and
FOUR small pups, part Tar- interest, reaume, trans olo.tolcalwool!
rier &amp; Dachshund. Phone cripts. and three references.
(Fr.. Estimates)
Rio Grande ia an Equal
304·676-179B.
0 pportu nitv-Affirmative
PUPPIES. 9 montho old, Action Employer.
992-6215 or9'12-7314 , Cock
· a· poo. to nice home.
Pomeroy, Ohio
·
Piano player. . for Gospel
phone 304·875· 1282.
11·26·f1 C
group. Must sacrifice time.
Call 675-2242 .

12-20-tlc

The Daily Sentinel

2 Border Collhu , 10 monthl
old . 1 male &amp; 1 female. All
ahot1 • r1ble1 v1ccanat1on .

Help Wanted

CARPENTER
SERVICE

&amp; Commercial

8-1·1 mo.

'

YOUNG'S

For all your wiring '
needs; furnaces re- ·
pair service and hi·
stallation.

Call

11

Giveaway

•Remodeling

MIUER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

PH. 992-3047

the Meigs Counly Fair
animal Is Ed Amolt.

•Planing
•Shop Wolk
•New Construction

J.24·rfc

Wedding cakes and
All Occasion cakes

REsERVE CHAMPION BUlL-David Gloeclmer
of Country Road Farm, Rt. 2, Racine, had the reserve
champion poDed Hereford llullln open class judged at

Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

Also Transmission

TERESA'S
CAKE
DECORATING
"Licensed

Custom
Sawmill Work

GARAGE
St.

-

Ohio .

614-949-2009 .

Roger Hysell

SALES &amp; SERVICE ·

Porta

Junior Fair. Judging took place Wednesday at the
Meigs County Fair.

4

---------~---------,...---------l

Farm Equipment

DUEL CHAMPION...Jay Blackwood of Blackwood
Hereford Fanns, had the grand champion Hereford
buD and grand champion Hereford female of tbe

.

.. 19, 1983

21

Businell
Opportunity

1---------.
St
&amp; C
8 •rv•ce
S 1 11 onC
on1
v ence tore.
erry-ouy
wtth beer llcenae. Busineaa
&amp; building for Nle or will
laue building and aell bull·
nen. Located on corner of
Rutland St • N. 2nd Ave..
Middleport. Call 593-7377.
E-..
•••-- Auto 8 ..,100
~
,~-u-~.
:;.·-~~=;:~:i~~~WV; 3 Mya.
..
.
locadon.
~"'
bulln nle! for~
1
0
0
0

...,

~

•

&amp;:.ft Tr;BB~ c 1'ii .ft'.;; ~

;:;:::. 1·304·875·2912.

•,

on
Rt. 160 between
VInton,
B7 Ft. Porter&amp;
well, 1 ---------CLEAN USED MOBILE
$22.000. Call 614-JBB· HOMES KESSEL'S . QUAL·
9063.
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
Almoat new 4 rms • bath, RT 36 . PHONE 446-7274.
low 120'•· Call 446·0924.
1 BBD Bayview 14•70. 2
In Middleport, newly remo- bdr., central air. Call 61 4deled home with fireplace, JBB -991 8 or 446·8211 .
po11lble woodburner, c l o H I - - - . , . - - - - - -to schools and shopping. 1969 Oetrioter mobile
Coil 614·992·8941 .
home. 10x46. Call 446·
34t3.
3 hdr. ·2 . .,.., Rt. 21B, 1
---------Gallipolis, 'h mi. off Rt. 7 , 19BO Windsor 14x70 whh
Coli 448·9232 .
7x22 expondo, 3 bdr. , 2
.-.... ~-btth,l1ero.mlcrowave,cen·
~·"• 2 bdr. house large tralair, storage building. and
fenced in back yard, utility mora . Will alao leaae. Muet
room, in city. Cell446·1431 ••• to appreciate. Rodneyor 448: 1886.
Cora Rd. Call 614·245·
8229.
Extro nice houiO on Rt. 654 1---- - -- - - · approa. 3 mi . Eaat of Porter. 1978 Governor 1 4x70 with
Priced reduced. Shown by porch Bx30 and underpin·
eppolntment only. 448 - ning. 3 bedroom. 1 '1.1 bath.
9340, 448-7901 or 814· waohor-dryor, stove. rofrig·
_z_e_e_-8_4_1_3_.- - - - - erator, air conditioner. new
carpet, will furnish If
Located in Syracuae-Near needed. excell•nt conditiOn.
echool • swimming pool. 3 on rented lol. Mervin Dale
bedroom 1 ttuated on one- Caldwell, T. .ns Run Rd .
third ocro lat. U4,500. Coli 814 - 258 - 1482,
304-BBB-3934.
13,600.

~~~=~~~~~~~

133

for Sale

1 - - - - - - - - ' - - -1"

- --

Meigs Co . Rd . 1 B. 88 acres
1 / 3 pasture. 2 / 3 wooded,
all mineral rights. unlimited
gravity fed apringwater,
maturing timber. fenced in
pasture, 24' by 30' pole
bern. large utility building.
Beautiful 8 room home, all
electric, completely insu ·
lated . lncludea new carpet.
fenced in yard. self cleaning
oven , side by side refrigerator freezer. Aahly ~Wood
burning stove. Ideal fot kid•
and horus. •aa,ooo. Call
446 -9610 or 992·3505.
32 acre farm, 3 bedroom
hon1a, 2 outbuildings off
R1yburn Road . $38,000.
304·675 ·5336 oltor 5 p.m.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

36 acres at Rodnev on W.T.
Watson Rd. Owner financ ·
ing available . Call446-8221
after 6 weekd•v•·

''

'

�'I

'
Page-12- The Daily
35 Lots

-

Sentinel

.l!o Acreage

They'll Do It Every Time

with 19 ft . travel trailer
awning &amp; deck. Priced to
ooll. 448-9340, 448-7901
or 614-266-6413 .

Approx . 7 - 10 acres of land

with big barn and •ilo. 2
good out buildings. located
at Bradbury . $28,000.
Clo1e to Bradbury .chool.
814-992-7713 .

FIVE acres with bllement,
city water, Pt. Pleasant. call
304-773-6713 after 7 :00

p .m.

54 Mi,sc . Merchandise

Kanawt'la

River,

6

56

miles

from ·Pt. Pleaaant. call 304676·7641 evenings.

Knauff Coal &amp; Firewood Buy
now tor seasoned wood this
winter. Call614-266·6246.

Gerbils for ule . 2 for e8.00 .
$8.00 each in stores. Maka
good poll. Coll441-3412.

For sale metal culvert 6 Inch
thru 60 inch in stock. State
approved 16 g'auge 12 inch
$6.35 par ft.. 24 inch
$10 .10 por ft . 36 Inch
815 .50 per ft. Also plastic
culven in stock . 6 inch thru
18 inch, 8 inch$ 1 .SOper h ..
12 inch 83.60 per ft . Ron
Evans Enterpris~s . 4 mi .
South of Jackson on ST. RT.
93, 614· 286 -6930.

Australian Shepherd-Blue
Heeler puppies, 7 wka. old,
aJlcellent pats. Call 614379-2143 .

Ill Sweda Cash Registers.
elac . Call 1·614-367·0378 .

16 acre• land on black top
road SSOO . acre. Recently
surveyed . 304-676 · 7641

Firewood cut up slabs $15
pickup load. Call 614·2466804.

evenings.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

Pets for Sale

by Larry Wright

-----~

·Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Call 446-7786 .

Cottage and 1 acre along

Houses for Rent

4 bdr. house with 1 Vz baths,
At. 7 8t Eureka . $260 mo.
Call 446-4222 between 9 &amp;
6·
4 bdr. house 6 acres of land
on Rt. 160 in Vinton. Central
air_
, $360 mo., sec. dep. &amp;
ref. Call 446-3.175.
8 room house in country,
$176 . Co11676-6104.

6 rm houn in Crown City.
Call 614-256 - 1744 after
3PM.
House for rent in city 6
rooms &amp; bath. furnished Or
unfurnished. Call 4460924.

Remodeled 2 story house.
721 Third Ava .. Gallipolis 7
roorpa &amp;: bath. large bac"·
yard, off street parking, no
pets, 8210 mo., $150 dep.
call 446-2997.
3 bedroom &amp; bath in Rutland. 614-992 -6868.
Three bedroom brick home
with large extra lot, located
just outside New Haven.
City water, central air and
heat plus fireplace. $300.
per month . Comp . fur nished. For more Information call after 6:00; 304676-3996 .
LEON. all electric, 2 baths, 3
bedrooms, available immedlatly, 304-468-1980.
THREE bedroom duplex, full
basement. nice yard . 304678-3030, or 304-6753431 .

42

Mobile Homos
for Rent

Nicely furnished mobile
home, central air and heat, 1
mi. below city, overlookin iJ
river. Adults only. 4460338 .

2 bdr. trailer located on
Upper River Rd. all utilities
paid eKcept electric. Oep.
roq . Call 446-8668.
Furn., 2 bdr .. new carpet. in
Crown City. Call 614-2566620.
2 bdr. trailer heats with
natural gas. adults only, no
poll. Call614-387-7438.

~

bedroom trailer . Fur~ nishad . No pets. Depoah
'"quired . 614-992-2749 .

,.

;z

bedroom mobile home in
•8acine. 614 -367-0288 .

'·~

bedroom, furnished mo: bile home on 1 acre of
~round . Couple with 1 child
' pnly . $200 per month . Call
' 742-2763.
'). bedroom. $36 . per weak
plus utilities. $100 deposit.
.. No pets. 614-992-6284 or
'992- 6732 .
" :Adults only . 2 bedroom
"lnoblla home. Air cond.,
deposit and references required . Utilities included.
.614-992-3847 after 6 p .m .
~miles out on SR 143 from
~1 . 7 .

:----------~mall

2 bedroom furnished
,I•. trailer, Burdette Add. $126 .
~er month. plu• utilities,
! ' Oepoait Required. Call Ro, ... ulee 304 - 876 ~ 4600 Mon.
• ·-thru Fri. 9 -4 .

I' - - - - - - - - ··r. 44
:C:

I ' -------------

Apartment
for Rent

~2 bdt. Regency Inc . Apart:::lments Utiltiea partly turn .•
available now.
r•--;·apanmantl
.:..•200 per mo. A·One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager. Real-

_____

;: tor. Call 304-675-6104 or
"
-304-676-7386 .
,._:_

•• Furniahed apt ., $210, utili·
...
, • . ties pd .• 1 bdr., 920 4th
'•• l Ave., Gallipolia. Call 448; 11416 after 7PM .
Furni1hed apt ., 1 bdr .,
t226. Utllltl01 pd .. 920 4th
Avo.. Golli polll. Call 448•· 4416 attar 7PM .

,,.

·:-2 new unfurn. 2 bedr. apta.
819 Second AVe., Gelllpo111. C -A . garage. f260 U76 . Call 446-2168 .
,
·Kanauga nice 2 bdr., with
carpet, waaher and dryer
jt hookup, $195 plus electric
ond gal. Coli 1- 304-273" 9746 or 446 -2927.
v furni1hod opt. 1 bdr. f196.
:• wolor
olec. poid 7 Nail
~:Avo. Oolllpoll1. 441-4411
after 7 p.m .

a

-

The Daily Sen~nel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'13 '

Page

76

lit

Auto .JIIrts .
A

_,

•

••

Tl-£ 1&lt;1 IC+tNEY "«lUR
CALLED IS c:::H HIS Wltf SAY·
4

MtNO tF I HAV&amp;: 1'1 LOOK I'IT?
THAT PUZZLE CLJI!IE, PETE..

svr

1've NeveR eve.N.
H~M~r&gt; OF -r~ ~CJ&gt;i1~;p ~­
OF-Il\e-MoNTH c~uB"!

r

' ,ffF;

Walker Coonhounde. Born
March 1. 1983. One male.
two femiJie, 876 each. Calf
614- 246-9678.

~~~ ~(

~
~~~
~~

HILLCREST KENNELS
Barding all bl'ftda. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman pLippiaa: _ Stud
Service. Call446-7796.

/~ rtf

AKC Regi~ered Poodle puppies, also adult dogs. Call
448-0867 .

"J..J..-.J'-..,k--'..._~~--:=kl-U

Gelded Pony. Bridle • saddle: Vary gentle. e200.
814-247-4292. First houH
on top of Mile Hill Road.
Racine, Oh.

"::

-

• · 11

·

H&amp;'&lt;So "l"OUP. ~fo.I · E:A5-V­
UH, MOOSE- I!IUT H~
DIDN'T TURN OUT THE
WAV YOU WANTED, !&gt;0
YOU MATE' HIM~

YOU' VE- 60TTA

HIT ME , SA~Y l
YOU' It~ RUitNJG

THE SCENE.

clel and realdentlal. free · '·
eatimatn. Cell 814·266· ~·
1182.

i~terior

.1.Amt

u.s""', ,u 011 ~~

I-----------

.

th\1M.l'VE GOT
NOTHIN&lt;l

~~fi!Niir

ONE5 5HAF!E
5014EBOOY

6!1AAIN', DE&lt;leiER5BUT TIIEF!E ilf!E TWO
H//1)$ 0' 51MRER5-

COOLOI(T YOU HAW· SliE WOIJL{)t(T
BUY TliE LAND SELL ~HILE Tli05E
YOU NEED
FOOL E~PEf!IMENTS

THE CROP
DU5TEF!5

TH'GM~RT

FAOM Ml55
HAVE A CHANCE 0'
PEASE, MR.
SUCCE/EOIN'-'...
KIN&lt;l '? ~..-"---:
HEY/•.

ELSE'S PIE I

..

'"""''

--------------------- -·

ALLEY OOP'
MEBBE I CAN SEE
SOMETHIN 1 FROM TH'
TOP OF THIS RISE!

Ql.LLEY 00P IS FORCEI&gt; TO
BAIL OUT OF &gt;liS IIURNtNG
Pl.ANE ...WITH NO PMA.CHUTE!
8 · 19

GASOLINE ALLEY

~oin' f be ea6y

..

1-::-:::-::-::--------.1

WAITl THAT'S IT l
YOU'Fle &amp;FtlL.LIANT,
eAS.Y! THE 01..0 MAN
WOULD NE-VE-R: HIT
I·IIS ~!THAT'S
THE'lfEFlFE:CT t
ENOIN Gl

STUCCO PLASTERING •
textured ceilings c;ommerw

PAINTING •
. and ·;
exterior, plumbing. ropfing, _~ .
aoma remodeling. 20 yrs,
Bulk firewood 7 -10PM. saw BOARDER Colliee. 11rge
season yourself &amp; save. 817 black &amp; whltl, excellent 1 - - - - - - - - - - - ' T ' - - - - - - - - - - - I e x p. Cell614-38.8·9862. ·
dog or ""'· 304-6881-----------r---------~ face cord. Call 614-388- work
2467 ·
84 Hav 8o Grain
72 Trucks for Sale
Mareum Roofing: &amp; Spout_8_2~4_6_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
ing. 30 yeare experience.
~
Two m1le AKC Old English
epeciallzing In built up roof.
44 • Apartment •
Will burt bin stocker 8. sheep dog1, 6'h wHkl old .
1971 Ford 66 PS, 1chool Coll614-388-9867.
46 Space for Rent
furnenco 24" good cond .
$260 . aach. 814-367 - Approlt. 40 a~re field Corn, bua new motor ' &amp; brakea.
for Rent
Call 446-1672 .
0666 .
limed &amp;. fertilized. working exc. cond., e1,1!100. Call RON'S Televition Service • .
Office space S. beauty shop
1---------------- - space . Call Cleland Realty . 2 air conditions. Call 446corn picker &amp; 40ft. elevator 614-2&amp;6 ~ 1468.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quhar, and
BEAUTIFUL, AKC rogl1- f6,600. Colt 614-388614-992-2269'
3171 .
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -· tered Garman Shepherd 9300.
1979 OodgeVztonahortbed house calls. Call 67&amp;-2398 ,
Furnished upstairs apl . 2
•.
Wood
tabla
with
4
chain
pupplea,
6112
weeks
old
.
PU, V-8, auto; PS, PB, real or 446-2464. 1
rooms &amp; bath, clean . adults S.INGLE trailer site for rent,
'
only. no pets, ret . req . Call all facilities available, large 875, end table &amp; coffee Solid black , and bla~k-ten - HAY, 2nd. cutting, 304- nice. $2,996. John'• Auto F &amp; K Tree Tri
'
ln'g, atump \"'....:
$60. Call after 4PM , 1ilvor. 304-676-4217 .
676-2991.
Sol01. 441-4782. Gallipoll1.
446-1619.
garden . hunting &amp; fishing tabla
446-4787 .
Oh. Open BAM to 7PM,
ramoval. Coll67_•·1331.
- .'
very close. $20. month.
Apartments (equal houaing 304-676-2026 .
1977 Ford F-100 pickup, 8 RINGLE'S SE~ICE expo, ; •.
Musical
New Oak Furniture. tables, 57
opportunityt one bedroom
cyl., atandard, exc. cond .• rlenced roofln
including ::
chair•.
cupboards,
pie
safe,
Instruments
rent starts at $167 per
f3,300. Call 446-9109 or hot tar applice . on, carpen. '-..:1
~ry
ainb. Paul Conkels
month, two bedroom starts 47 Wanted to Rent
114&amp;-9180.
ter, electrlcl•n. l uon. Call •
Antiques. Tuppers Plains.
at $193 . Deppsit $200 (no
I II
304-676-ZOBI· or 871,. .'
p_ets) near Spring Valley
Kimball Entertainer Organ .
77 Chevrolet pickup 4x4 4680. I
I
. .:
Cinema. Call 446-2746 or A nice home, can be an older 260 gallon fuel or gasoline Only 2 years old. APing
good cond. Call anytime
tank
on
6
foot
stand.
$160.
71
Autos
for
Sale
leave massage.
one, must have at least 8 or best offer. 10'x 16' all $700. 814-992-3209.
6111-26tf-6009.
Wtter Well•. Commercial ~ ·
roona, etc. Located in city of aluminum awning . 83jj,O.
and DomHtic. Test holes. •
Mercerville 1 or 2 bedroom Gallipolis, preferably downBaldwin piano. EKe.' cond. 2
yeara old. Church use 78 4 dr. Mercury Marquis 1982 Dttlun piCkup with Pump• Sal•• •nd Service. '
$176 mo . Call 446-1167, town . Excellent care will be 614-992-2805.
topper. 986-4332.
Ps • PB , olr, 6 w .• aoot, otero !8 · 5 Monday-Friday.
- -- - - - - - - 304-895-3B02.
given by responsible lady For Sale-&amp; ' Brush Hog. three • 1 . 600 . 614 -992-3824.
sound. Call days 448-4383, 19 76 Toyota Pick-up with Get your carpet in ship
and 13 years old son . Call
Furnished effiancy apt . 446-9545 or 446-2548 or point hitch . $300. Gibson
SELMER flute, 304-882- ove. 446-0139.
~irsweap
airconditioner,
2483.
1-:-::~~------tOP.per. Excellent condition. shape. Water remov1l, FREE
$160 plus utilities. Call contact Evelyn at Oscar's
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
37000 btu , 220 hook up.
1978 Volkowagon Rabbit 4 ,_6_1._4_
- 9_8_6_-_4_19_8_._ _ __
Wisema·n Real Estate Restaurant.
CLEANING. CAPTAIN
S460.
1972
Delta
Olds.
as
1
Agency, 448 -3643 .
LOWREY Pagent organ, ex- apd.. AM -FM tapa. new 19
Coal cook stove, cellent condition, t2.000. tire 1 , new brakes, new ex·
79 Plymouth Arrow plck- STEAMER 814-448-2107.
never out of carton but now 2915 Birch Ave. Meadow- hauat. •2.196. John'• Auto up: Excellent condition. Sun
@IIFVIJIRdlll
2 bdr., 1% baths apartment.
slightly rusty-$300. See all brook Addition . Pt . Sales, 446·4782. Gallipolis. roof, topper, 4 new radial E &amp; R TrH Service, fully
ground floor. $360 . mo .
at
Sawmill. north of Racine, Pleasant.
tire•. new battery. 83800. insured. free estimates.
Oh. Open 9AM to 7 PM .
51 Household Goods 47698
includig utilities. Call Wise614-986-3686.
Phone 814-367-0638. eon
Carmel Rd.
man Real Estate Agency,
after
5.
TOP
CASH
paid
for
Iota
I
-1-9,..7_7_C_H
_E_V_R_O_L_E_T_t_ru_e_k,
446-3643.
model uaad ca,..
Smith
Fruit
.
SWAIN
Solid walnUt 6 string banjo 58
Buick-Pontiac, · 191 1 East- 10ft. truck camper. 4 wheal SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
Garage Apartment 4 rooms
8o Vegetables
AUCTION
&amp;
FURNITURE
$260
..
oizo
181adlao
winter
ern Ava., Gallipolis. 446 , drive Scout. 304~ 773· piece culltom fit your halnJI. ~
&amp; beth, available August 22.
62
Olive
St:,
Gallipolis.
6
coat
$8
.•
2
motorcy~le tires
Guaranteed. A.d v.ncad Gut= ·~ ·
2282.
6397.
No children and no pets. Call
ter, (Day 814-692-4086.1
614 - 266 - 1903 or 446 - place wood living room suite $20. 614-367~ 7729 .
whh 6 inch flat arms $399, 1 -::~--::-:---------­ Yellow &amp; white sweat corn. 1981 Plymouth Horizon 1967 DODGE D200 % ton (night 61 4-698-8206.) '
3748 .
.
duel wheels, good cond ..
bunk beds complete with Girls 20 in . hi-rise bicycle. 1 Coll614-268-1684.
auto., PS, air, AM-FM atero: flatbed, call304-67&amp;-1248.
bunkles $199, 2 piece an· year old. Western flyer .
Roofing and Carpentry
like new, 6,800 mi. Call
Kanauga . Nice 2 bdr. with
tron
livingroom
suites
$199,
$40.00
.
Call.
986-4317
afCanning
tomatoes
83.60
work,
general rep~in, c•ll
carpet, stove 8a refrigerator.
448-7646 or 614-268- 1982 CHEVY S-10, V-8. 4
bu. Pick your own . Call 1636.
Anthony Wlllierrisbn. 814· ...
Washer &amp; dryer hook-up. antron recliners $99. Qther tar 6 :00.
1peed. 304-882-2704.
446-7496 attar 5.
367-01911.
$196 plus electric &amp; gas. recliners &amp;80, maple dinette
sets
$179,
love
oeats
$70,
REPOSSESSED
Sign!
NoCall 1-304-273-9745 . Re1978 Buick Electra Umited. 1980 pickup bod, 8 ft.,
duced rent for, managing hide - a -bed $260, boK thing downl Take over pay- Canning tomatoes; t4.00 4 door, loaded with extra's, 304-876-3237.
springs
&amp;
mattress
twin
or
menta
$68.
monthly.
4'x8'
bushel.
picked.
Bring
own
82
Plumbin'g
apts.
no 'rust, excellent condition
,_.
full $100 set regular-firm flashing arrow sign. New contain•r. 614 -247-4292 .
8o
Heating ·
throughout, one owner,
8120,
maple
dinette
chairs
bulbs,
letters.
Hale
Signs.
2 bdr. trailer, 1 bdr. apt.
85,300. Coli 446-0784.
73 Vans 8o 4 _W.O.
furnished. Beautiful river- $36, wash stands 834 Call FREE 1-800-626·7446 CANNING tomatoes, 84.&amp;0
maple
rockan
$69.
7
piec~
anytime.
bu
.
Sliver
Queen
corn
,
view. Fo1ter'1 Trailer Park,
CARTER'S PLUMBING
1982 EXP ••· cond. Call
chrome dinette set 1149, &amp;1-:-:--------$1 .25 doz . .Rt. 82 at old 446-4680.
1980 AMC Eagle Limited
Kanauga, Oh. 446-1602 .
AND HEATING
piece dinette set $89, used . 5 place living room suite.
Pentasote Plant. Pt.
auto. tran1.. PS. PB, AC,
Cor.
Fourth and Pine .
'
uuitet, refirgera - EJ~c . cond . $200 . 614-9135- Pleaaant.
POL, AM·FM cauette,
1 bed room Apt. $196. mo. bedroom
79 ford Club Wagon loaded, f6.300. Call after 6, 4118- Phone 1146-38B8 or 448- ,
tors, ranges, chest, dre11ers, 4346.
including utilities. Equal wringer washers, TV 's,
4477
YEllOW lrHitone canning 22,000 miles. 87,800. Call 8060.
houaing opportunjty. Con- dryeree, &amp; shoes. Ca11446· Kenmore stove &amp; refrigera- peacheanowavailable,re81- 446-1066 Ilk for Gary.
tact Village Manor Apts.
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT3169 .
tor. Fro at free. • 150. 614- onable priCes. Pleate bring
1980Ford 4 wheel drive
614-992-7787.
986-4346.
your own bu!'el containers. 66 Corvette very good cond. pickup, with · body liner, ING. Fomerly Dewitt''s
GOOD USEOAPPLIANCES 1-::----------- 111th year !":
tho Call onytlmo 614 - 268 - manuel trana .• custom 360 Plumbing. Cott 814-3672 bedroom furnished Apt.
washers,
dryers,
refriger85
piece
bedroom
suite.
area.
Bob's
_8::0::0::9:--::-::--~---- heavy duty, With 12' tlre1 8 0176.
6 I 4 -992- 6434 or 614- 992'
tors. ranges . Skaggs Ap- maple. Has twin bed1, mat· 304-773-6721 .
10' rimo. Call 814-3876914 or 304-882-2666 .
pliancas, Upper River Rd .. tre 11 ea &amp; box springs. Very days, till dark. · .... !';'....
1978 Z-28 Camara, 4 apd. , 7185.
83 Excavating
•
beside Stone Crest Motel . good cond. $186 . 614-986T·top, PS, PB, air cond ..
1 bedroom apt in Pt. Plea- 446-7398 .
4346.
POTATOES for sale, ,, 6 .00 power windowa, sharp 1979 Ford Bronco 4x4
sant. 304-676 -6364.
a 1 00 lb. Coli 304- 882 _ •6.200. Call 446-8614.
Rancher model, AM·FM
LAYNE'S
FURNITURE
36
inch
aluminum
storm
ca1oette, AC. f6.400. Call DOZER WORK By To~ ·A·
Furniahed one &amp; two bad- Sofa. chair, rocker, otto- door with frame . $16 . 614- 3273.
1980 2 dr. Dodge Aspen, oftar 4PM. 448-4787.
Hanna, ponds. ' ditch e-.., --:;
room apt . Middleport . man, 3 tables. (extra heavy 992-7362 .
buementt, e1c. Call 441S-• i
~auto, PS, PB, low mileage,
Adults, no pets. Month rent by Frontier), $686. Sofa,
real nice, *2.796. John's
4907 . Corter &amp; Evan• :
plus tlOO. security. 61 4 - chair and loveseat, $276 . SPECIAl firewood, pick-up
Auto Sale, Bulavllle Rd. Call
Tranaport~tton.
·
;
992-3B74 .
441-4782, open 9 to 7 .
Sofas and chairs priced from load . $25.00 at farm .
74 Motorcycles
Lonnie Bogg1 'Excavatlnf'.. • ;
S286 . to 1896. Teblao, $46 $36.00 delivered. 304-B96- 61
Fa m E
•
Apartments . 304 - 676 - ancf
up to t126. Hide·a- 3396.
r
qUJpment 1979 Honda Accoid air
Dozer, backhoe, dumptruck. ·
5648 .
beds ,$ 440 . and up co
cond .• AM-FM *4.000 .
Work by hour or job. Call
$626 .. Recliners, $176. to
MF tractor, like new. with Days call 448-2933. eve, 1974 Hondo 350, 7,1100 446 -7903.
APARTMENTS . mobile $360 ., Lampl from 828 . to 1976 FORD Granada, bruah hog, plow, disc, lay- 448·2414.
actual miles. Call 614-388homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant 875 . 6 pc. dinette-s from S650. 1071 Honda 175, off plow, &amp; grader blade. 1-----,,-------- 9766.
Cat 216 hoe; dozert,
' crane,
and Gallipolis. 614·446· $99 .. to $436 . 7 pc., $189 . $300 . 10ft. aluminum boat, Coli 448-3163 before 5
1978 Buick LeSabro hardloaders, dump truck. Call
8t21 .
and up. Wood table with six $76. Phone 304- 676· 4188 . after 6 448-3336.
.. ' lop. For tale or trade &amp; ·71 Harley super glide very 114-441• 11112 biiWeOO •
chairs $426 . to $746 . Desk
guitar. Call 446-7832 .
good cond. with new motor. 7:00AM &amp; 8 :00PM .
ONE bedroom apartment, 811 () up to $226 . Hutches, FUEl. oil furnace and 600 ' 3 pt . 6 ~. dit.c for sale. $300. 1-:-::~:--------- custom front end. Call any8226 month, all utilities 8660 . and up. maple or pine gal . 'tank . call304-676- 814· 742-2047..
1979 Fairmont Ford station· time 814-266-6009.
Good-1 EKcevating. bne~&gt; ~
paid, 304-676-2696 .
finish . Bunk bed complete 22&amp;9.
wagon. auto., real clean, 1----------- menta, footers, driveways,
with mattresaes. 8260. and
~OMEMAOE heavy duty •2.996. John's Auto Sale. 1980 CR80, 70 Trail bike. nptlc tanka, landsceplng.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER . up to $396. Baby beds, FIREWOOD , oak
maple, f~r.awood apliter, electric Bulaville Rd . Call 448· Caii446-120B.
Coli anytime 446-4637,
Apartments now available to 8110 . Mattresses or box $26 . load. delivered. 304- stan, Wisconsin V-4 po·· ,_4_7:-8_2_._o_;p:_e:_n__:_B.:.t.:.o.:.7_.____
James L. Davi~on . Jr.
elderly &amp; disabled wtth an springa, full or twin, S68 ., 896-3966 .
wared, e&amp;OO. 304- 678- 1·
1981 Kawaaawki 260 etreet owner.
income of less than firm, 888. and $78 . Queen 1----------- 4681 or 304-8715·1647.
1979 VW Rabbit. 4 spd., air bllf;e low mllaaga. Call448- -----~ - .
$12.300. Renting for 30 sets, 8195. 4 dr. chests. EXTRA good top soil delicond .. AM - FM radio , 4803.
J .A .R. Construction Co.
percent of adjusted income ~ $42 . 5 dr. cheats, $54. Bed vered, 304·675· 7771 .
e2,996. John's Auto Saht. 1~---------- Water Lines, Footers ,
.Phone 304 -676-8679 .
frameo, $20.ond $25 .. 10
1!3
Livestock
Bulavlllo Rd . Catl 4116- 1974 Hondo Choppar 30 in. Dralno. All kind• of Ditching.
4782. open 9 to 7 .
over front end. CB 760 F. Rutland. Oh . 614-742· ·
gun - Gun cabinets, $360.. FULL size mattr8ss B. box
2 bedroom apt . $126 . Partly dinenechairt S20 . and $26 . springs with bed frame.
- ~~ Call614-949·2737.
2903.
furnished. Hendenon Trailer Gas or electric ranges, $325 876 . 304-676-6427 after 8 6 yr. old guelding good 66 .. !t'!u•, Cutlass . 442,
Court.
uptQ $375. Babymatreaaea. p.m.
rlder.Call anytime814- 268· 69,000mlles, price t1 .000. 1978 KZ 7&amp;0 Kewauki Melga Excavatingl Bulldozer
$26 &amp; S36, bodfremao $20,
6009.
Call446-9687.
Motorcycle. H01wlnd1hlald, &amp; backhoe Hrvice. Bate·
1 bedroom apartment. K 8a K $26, S. t30.kingframe$50. WANTED to buy : usad tin
li•sy bar. cruiH control·.
Mobile Homes. 304-676- Good selection of bedroom roofing. Hay for sale, $1.26 2 Holstein Springer heifers. 1974 Chevrolet Malibu luggage rack, back rest, new mente. footers. land1caping,
drivawayt, farm ponds.
3000.
suites, cedar chests , bale. Phone304 -676-2320. Due to freshen In approxi- Classicgoodshapa, S1,000. chainandsprockets. Aaklng 114-742-21107 or 114-742ro~kers . metal cabinets ,
mately 30 dey. $750 ..ch . Call after 614-387-7147. $1200. See or cell Gary F. 2088 .'
1
'. ~
TWO bedroom apartment, sw1vet rockers .
SHOTGUN barrell for B70 Cell448-4063.
Hysell at 814-992·6388 Or
'pl090
Henderson, 304-675-1972 . Used Furniture -- bookcase
Remington, 26", improved
1967 Ford Mustang, 814- 992•6850.
BACKHOE, dQtor, dump
ranges. chairs. dinnen sat: cylinder, varticla rib. 810Q . Super Chix 2 year old *1.800 . Call 614-388truck. llcenud •eptlc aysNICE 3 room furnished
repair.
wood table and chairs, dry- 304-676-1874.
gelding, trained . Excep-l-:8-:&amp;-:0::8:. - - : : - - - --:--1982 KIY!I'asaki 6&amp;0 LTD. tem lnltaUment
apartment. private entrance, en,
refrigerators and TV's. 3
tional show protpect. Call
Windjammer, lowers, am- 304-6711-7168.
.
downtown. 304-676-3811. miles out Bulaville Rd. Open SMALl air conditioner, 614-992-2488 daya • late 1982 Camero 87,000, fm ca11ette. Cfankbar, sisay
9am to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri ., $126 . 304-676 -2937.
ovanlng1.
27,000 mll01, 304-882- bor. • 1600. 304-882Furnished apt . adults, close 9am to 6pm, Sat.
2461.
3221.
84
Electrical
to Hospital. No pets. 304- 448-0322
PIGS-'26.00 each. 814lit
Refrigeration
676-2267.
986 -4104 .
1980 TRANS AM, blaek 83, XII 80 HONOA. $800.
55 Building Supplies
with gold t-top, olr, tope &amp; 304-876-3031 .
Washers. dryers. refrigera·
2 Holstein milk cows. 1 new tires, 49,000 miles,
gas &amp; electric rengea,
45 Furnished Rooms tors,
yaarl old. HOO. forthotwo. f&amp;,IOO. 304-676-6B&amp;O.
1972 HONDA CB, 360, Appliance Service All mak8a
.
S90 up, 30 days guaranteed .
Bullding materials
and models of washara,
Bargain Barn 446~8033 or block, brick, 1owor pipoa. l-8::-:14_-_9_8_6_-4_13_7_._____
dryers, refriger~Jtor, 1ir con1982 . MERCURY LynK, •260. C1ll 304-896-3679.
For rent Sleeping Rooms 448-8181 .
windows , lirt.tels. etc . REGISTERED Hereford warm morn 1ng wood 1tove. 1978 KAWASAKI, 7.600 ditioning, dithwasher• 8a
and light house keeping
,
Rio Grande, bull. HOO. 304-882-2271 __
C 0 11 304 17
ranges.Bargain Barn, 446room1 . Park Central Hotel . Uoed wooher1
&amp; drter, wide Claude
0 . cau Winters,
1 _ _-_ _6_-6_4_6_6_.___ actual mite1. $767.00. A-1
614 _2 46 _6121 ,
Call 446-0768 .
choice. Kenmore, Whirlpool ,
or 88~~33&amp;8.
,condition. Phone 614-992· 8033.
GE, Maytag all fully guaran81 CHEVETTE, 2 door. 7104.
SEWING Mechine repaire,
Sleeping room 81 16, utiliteed,
30
Jdays.
Call
61
4
·
'
J
.
.
l
a
u
t
o
m
a t l c , beige.
excellent
seNice. Authorized Singer
ties paid, range &amp; refrig. 268 -1207.
r
concltlon,
$31.000
mile•
SaiN • Service Shirpon
t38oo.oo. 304-11&amp;- 3778. 75
Boats
Share bath . Man only. 446OUR BOARDING HOUSE
lth M. j H
Scissors . Fabric Shop ,
4416 attar 7 p.m .
w
a or oople
Nice selection of washers
1971 PONTIAC Catalina, 1_ _M_o_t_o_rs_fo
_ r_ s_al_e__
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
7
needs minor repairs Ia bat- ,.
dryera.
refrigerators.
ranges. Call
446-8033and
or
~
,:.,CAN~
"f~L~
tort. f400 Phone 304-876· 0
46 Space for Rent
448-8181 . Bargain Barn 2
'&lt;II~~~~~·. ~~J!!'
1 B' Crealinar tri-hull walk
86 General Hauling
4681 or 875-18117.
miles out Georges Creak Rd.
·;:; 1.7',._ L.ln,5TME
!':
~.~
through wlndlhlold, 60 HP
1
1975 FORD Moverlck. 4 Mereu~~· ..sterling boat
Trailer lot located on TV &amp; Appllancn, 627 Third
&lt;
&gt;... .;.., j :
T'..:iEtli' : ...
• good -co-nti ,, ,4&amp;o.
door,
PS, P8, I cyl., 250
JONES 80YS WATER SERAddison-Bulaville Rd .
u
0100.
Avo. Gallipollo. 448-1899.
[
,;; ,;;;., '
ontlna,
fiiiO.
304-175VICE . Coli 614-367-7471
Adult1 only. Call 614-367• Spin washers, gil &amp; electric
·~"
;.;l
7677 oflor 3 p.m.
otl111-367-0891 .
dryers, auto washers, gas •
oltt
"7 !l" 1 (
""'
7438 .
Aluminum Ban Rig '78
electric ranges, refrlgera·
: /"' 1m..,
1971 VEGA, V-8, 360 en- boot. '78 40 HP Morcury, 79 Need something hauled
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
ton, TV 1011.
~
I
gine. turbo tran1mlalon, treiiM, Thrultar trolling mo- aw1y or something moved?
Park, Route 33, North of
Holley carberator, Elderb- tor, depth finder. good Wo'N do h. Coli 1148-3169
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call 2 love seats, 2 tub chaire,
, r
~laak
manifold, excellent eond.. t2.600. Coli 448- betlwaan I and I.
992-7479.
lounge chair It ottoman,
~
condition,
f1100 . 304- 840B.
. ~
lamp (floor), carpet. Call
676-36111.
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
1 ! I
TRAILER opace, 3 miloo 446-11 eo .
Grumman fllhing boat cam· Coli Jim Lanier. 304-1711from town, junction 2 &amp; 82
1974 Chevy Malibu. P.S.. plote with 18 HPmotor, mag
7397.
~
at old Y, 304· 875 -3248 3 matched GE washer •
' •'
p.b. 1310. 614-992-7196.
18 trolling motor, condryer pain, .2 while pair, 1
after 8.
steering end IWivel Mats.
avacado pa~r, 12- 15 other
1982 Dollun 200SX, Prl.. on lnopactlon. Coli
87 Upholeterv
Uptown Point pteaaant of- good washer• 8r dryers to
lo o dod . 1 1 4 - 9 9 2 . 11 3 7 _Ve1g:ll7j·j"2F&amp;~I;;·1;;;8;;;9;;1;.
fice or retail apace aVailable choose from Guaranteed 30
avenlngs.
In prime location. Ground d1y1. Coli 614-2&amp;6-1207.
1978 Flberform 11ft. with
level with frH P"rking. &amp;2&amp;
1976 Chevy Cliovotto Hotch 1t80 80 Mercury motor
TRISTATE
oq. ft. to 1&amp;76 oq. ft. Color TV 26 in . acreen floor
iodt.
toad . -. Soot with powor
1981
UPHOLITt
SHOP
ovallobla. 304-876-9748 or model, f100. Call 1148acoaptoblo oftor. 114-992- traitor. Coli 18 -2867 oftar 1 163 Soc. A " Gollpoll•
9687.
'
304-67&amp;-2194.
2682.
&amp;PM.
441-7833 or
-1133. ·
t

41

Friclav. Auguot 19, 1983

19, 1983·.

' '

DICK TRACY •

.

Nice lot on Raccoon Creek

p

Ohio

in' bac~ up. carry in'

~===~ ··:

1-:::----------

:;;::::::;:=-=.~
·.

n.:...;,.:; ··:; :

'I YW'II'IT THE PEOPLE HERE 1
J1) KlilJII WH0'5 IN CHARGE I
&gt;OU'Rf A WRIIfHT: .. AND
THEY'D EIETTER RESPECT
)'OUR AUTHORITY/

•'
&lt;
......

---------·

1----------a.

1---...,.-------

1----- --::.____

e.

a

Evening television listings-----------------...;_;......________________
8/19/83
EVENING

6:00. • Ill CIJ m a
ClJ Nawo

(()MOVIE: 'Gregory' I Gl~ ·
(J) Tic Toe Dough
(J) I ONem of Jeannie
(J) (lj) RH&lt;Iing Rainbow
• Wild, WUd Wo1t
6 :30 8 Ill (!)NBC Nowo
Cll Love That Bob
(J) F - Knowo Bolt
(J) e (jJ ABC Newo
8 (J) (jJ CBS Nawa
(J) Dr. Who
® OYer &amp;sy Opera star
.. Dorothy Kirsten joins cohosts Mary Martin and Jim
Hertz to share tier refreshing
outlook on lifo. (Closed Captioned)
7:00 D (J) PM Magozlno
(I) laraal: America's Key
10 Survtv.l
(]) Sj&gt;ortoContor
(J)G'""Acre1
-.. [)) E~nment TonlliJht
CD Chorllo'• Angel•
II (J) Tie lac Douth
(J) (IJ) MocNoii-IAhrer
Report

1-:-::-::--:-:-------

I:;;==;======:
and

0 ,,
-ro

&lt;~~~&amp;~;i~ \

l'i

I~~" vr

1

7

~

~
~

IE

'i-,

C1J News

.,

-

..
;

O&lt;S .

(J)AndyOrifflth
(() II (J) Family Foud
· (I) Busir,..• RepMt
: • tiD You Alkod For It
()!) A Bolly, M8ybo
e
(jJ Entortoln....rt

~~r

~~ LoaQuo BoHboll:
i&gt;lttaburvhotMontrui

8 :00 (I) MOVIE:, 'Time Bondltl'

CI)Bupor-

. · (]) Cfl FOo-l: Tooonto
. . .. Otdwo

".

' - I"' .'.:·

1-----------

1

v.-,

aft.;i;;h

rop,

.
II (jJ People'• Coun
SterTrek
Ill Malo&lt; l.oague
Be1eball: Cinclnnlti at
Ptttoburgh
(I) COnlumer Aeportl
Consumer Reports answer•
kay quelllons about everyday products.
(]) NFL'1 Greotnt Momente
NFL"s Greatest
Moments present• highlights of the 1966 World
Champion Green Bay Pec~ ­

I

7:30
..

0
~~;;.,·
'"'~"~~;;;~'i"~~iir~

i

rn ClJ m

··' (J) MOVIE:._, FrH'
(J) 8 Cll NFL Pre·Soooon
Foot:bolf:
M-1
n .

-·--·

w"""'""""

(!) AIH-IIIdney HorrtA' women with the ability to
sniff out troub6a egrHI to
help t . detective father
aoiYa eomt ~.... 160 min.I

eCillll_cit_
Dilly's Chancel of winning
a beautY contalt are rwmote
etter Bou Hogg accepts a

w-·•-

"""· IRI\110 min.I

-.• Clll111
Plul Duko ..WM/
[Oined
by top WO!Ohlngton )ouml~

,.

•'

ists analyzing the week's
news.
•
MOVIE: ' Nioht ond
Day'
8:30 (I) SwiA Family Robinson
(J) Ill! Wall Streat Week
Louis Rukeyser anal~zea the
·sos with a weekiV review
of economic and investment
matters.
9:00 Ill MOVIE: 'VIce Squad'
(]) 700 Club Today's program features Modal of the
Year nominee. Tin.a Louise
and the story of a woman
who conqered Leukemia.
(!) Knight Rider Michael
and Oevon face an earlier
prototype of K.LT .T. that
lacks the built-in concern for
human life. (Rj (60 min .t
8 (J) (jJ OaiiM 8obbV
springs his trap on J .R. !A)
.
!60 min.t
(]) Llwrnakara Lawmakers .
repons on the weekly activities of Congress.
(ll) Middletown 'St~cond
Time Around .' An engaged
couple, whoae first mar·
rlages ended in divorce, try
to come to term! with their
future togethet' . IRI t60 min .}
.
(~loaed Captioned]
9:30 (J) Entorprl1o
·
10:00 BCIJ(l) Elochtod The murder of a disco owner leads
Eischied to the conclusion
that it was a gang"nd slaying. iRI !60 min.l
CIJ HBO Rock: Stevte
Nick• In Concert This rock
star performs her btggest
hits.
([I TBS Evening Naws
•
(I) (jJ F.tcon Crest
Chase and Maggie watch
their marriage crumble under
the weight of his murder investigation end her movie
acrip1. (A) (60 min .)
(I) Computer Programma
Ill! Naws
eiNNNoww
1Oo30 (J) Star Time
(J) lnoido Bulin"' Today
aD Ma.twplece ThHtre
'The Fleme TrMs of Thike .'
The Grants arrive In Kenya
and discover that things ara
not as roay as they e~e: ­
pec:ted. (Rt (6o min.) [Closed
Captioned I
, 1,oo

1~~ ; ·wai.
([I MOVIE: 'flrofox'
(J) MOVIE: 'Felten Angol'
CD 8w: taCtnter
(J) Allin F-.y

11:11~...!~
~
.

11:30

Iso;

City, NJ

from

(J) U
(!) T.......
t. -

•

MOVIE:

'Doc

Cotllno

Hooklr'a Bunch'
(J) PBS l.ote Night
(jJ All In tho Family
II ClZ Nlghtllno
.Gun•moke
1 2:00 (I) Bums &amp; Allen
Cll Night Trocki
()) Nlghtllne
(1]1 MOVIE : 'Tho Land That
nme For~t'
12:30 D Ill CD Fnday Night
VIMol
()) Jack Benny Show
g BJ Music Magazine
Evening at the lmprov
12 o46 Ill MOVIE: 'Tho Pride of
the Yankees'
1 :00 (]) MOVIE: 'The Mission·
ory'
()) I Married Joan
. ()) Emertalnmam Tonight
(jJ Newo
1 :30 Cll My Uttte Morglo
(I) Best of Midnight
Specials .
(lJ MOVIE: ' Premature
Burial'
t» CNN Hudllne News
• Americal's Top Ten
1 :46 ({) Spon.Centar
2:00 II
Ill NBC NOWI
Ova might
(]) 8ach1lor Father
({) CFL FootboUo Toronto
at Ottawa
CD NeWS/Sign Off
• Mary Hartman, Mary
Hartman
2 :30 (I) MOVIE: 'TheBe1tUttle
, Whorehouse In Texas'
• (J) Lifo of Riley
3:00 B (I) Nowo
C1) MOVIE: 'Thing• Are
Tough All Oyer'
.
(l) 700 Club Today's program features Model of the
Year nominee. Tina Louise
end the story of a woman
who conqered leukemia.
3:16 (jJCNN Headline Now1
4:30 (J) H80 R-: Stovla
Nic:b In Concert 'This rock
star performs her blgge&amp;t
hits .
Ill MOVIE; 'Imp"""''
Channele'
Cll Ro1o Begley
(l)
AuatraUan
Rules
Footbell

e

a

e

. 8/20/83

a

· t!itVMWtJI'
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
I Hindu
lestival

OOWN
I Rapier part
%Window

5.Miles
or Bette

style
3 FaD In love

10 GoH club

4 A needle hayslsck

II Wise one
1% Mona -

5 Challenged
1 C.Ugula's

13 Words In

a threat
14. GoH term

I!I'ffiing
7 ''Rhoda 11 star

15Shade
of color

STvrinkling

IS Greek
lelter

9 Cotwtant
11 "The of Music"

17 Scottish
lake

15 Did
gardening

Z% Papal
palace
Z3 Pedestal
Z4 Royal
edifice

18 Food

Z5German

19 Radiation

wlit
00 Lack

7:30

--·
-·

Iern- Look

.

(J) MOVIE: 'Honl&lt; Wll ·

ct.. -

Zl VloUnboiv

aulatlance
D Editor's
dlret:lllirL
34 Jujube ·

engraver

' Zl!lardy heroine

II Girl's naine

%1 Minuscule
Z%Corrunand
Z3 Sugar source
%4 Beyond

1:.-+-f-+-

ZS Verve
%8 Belgian

corrunWle
cavalryman
!9 Shelter

1} lfl}f.\.0 \j)'i}

~

\9

~THAT 8CRAM8LIO .WORD GAME
~~*
byHenriAmoldandBoblee

Unscramble these rour Jumbles,
onelener lo each SQuare, to form
lour ordinary words. ·

31 Scepter
33 Fit!or
!arming
35 Church
part

36 Occupation
:n Bridal
symbol

TRYAR
1

30 Mining find

r J . . . . ,.

38 Admission

·~'::""'-=-· ··

311 Bjornson

novel

ALTEM

I K)
INUCHAHI
L,_.b,._t -'-~--'--'-~

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

J ()
Mswel:
Yesterday's

j
A "(

Is

WHAT A REAL.
FIRM MAKES iHAT
MAY GO OFF IN

iHE HEAT.
Now arrange the drcted ltttel'l to
form the aui'prlM anewer, a1 IL.IQ•
ge1tecl by the above Cl'rtoon.

XXI)( XI XXr·

(Anawera tomonowt
Jumbles: BLOOM HANDY ADJUST IMPUTE
Answer: It's a case of peas or beans- A POD

.
I

Here's how to work It:

AXYDL8AAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply 1tand1 for another. In this sample A J•
used for th'e three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leUers,
apo1trophes, the len1th and formation of the words are aU
hintl. Each day the code lell crs are dilferent

CRYPTOQVCYrES

EVENING
7:00 • (J) Dance Fever
(J) I Spy
(I) D (I) Htt Haw
(!) Marnorl1s with Lawrence Walk
(J) Harry Chopin In
Concert
()II At Tho MoviH
ill Solid Oold

Yesterdsy'sAnnor •
Z'IUkeS.

27 European

LL)

Uame: The Show H• Never
J

9:00 D (l) (!) NFL Pre·SIJeaon
Football: Pittsburgh at
Dallas
·
Cf) MOVIE:
'Summer
Lovers'
Ill MOVIE: ' Prom Night'
CHI Clastic Country
Ill ClJ Love Boot A woml!frl
brings happiness 10 a former
lover, a men gets caught between two women and Gopher rescues a man traveling
with his wife . (RI 160 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
fll) Those Amazing Animal•
9:30 (I) Jukebox Saturday
Night
10:00 (]}Sing out America..
(fi) Great Performances
'Brideshead Revisited.' Julia
reveals her relationship with
AeJt while Sebastil'ln tries to
recover ' from his alcohol
problem. 1AI (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
II~ ABC News Cloaeup
lilt INN News
10:30 (l) Short Featura
(]) SportsCenter
(J) TBS Wnk1nd N•wa
1m Glen Campbell Show
11:00 Cl) Not Nec ..aarlly The
News This show promises
to be everything the current
news is not.

Ill r,:tOVIEo 'Cetaotrq_phe'
.({) CfL Football: Edmon~" at Mo~reel
G) Hann•'• Ark
Cfil Matinee at the Bijou
'Prelude to War.'
8 :00 Bill(!) Dlff' ront Stroke•
Arnold Pfepares for his first
~ate . (R) \Closed Captioned]
' CI) MOVE: 'Tho Flomo'
(I) MOVIE: 'A Distant
Trumpet'
(l) Telethon: United Negro
College Fund
Ill (J) (jJ Back Together A
ceiestiBI computer has run
crazy, causinq the late Herkle Burke to be earthbound ·
until the error can be re solved.
()) All-Star Swing Reunion
(jJ T.J. Hooker Hook er's panner is criticized by
other policemen for not
shooting 1 cop-killing juvenile. (R) ts6 min .) [Closed
Capttoned}
• Barbara Mandrell and
the MMdrell Sisters
8 :30 D Ill (!) Fact•. of Ule A
military school cadet asks
Natalie to ~P him win the
retpect of his father . lAI
[Closed Captioned)
Ill (J) (jJ MOVIEo 'The
Wi1'
'

WTX

NRQ

RVWZDB

LW

LB

XRBQ

ZVTXMLR

VMRQ

wz

BTZEMK

BXX

JZ

RCK

TXDBXMS . - BZEDYX
Yeelerday'o Cryp.....ote:

THERE

TRUMXW,
NTQ
KDZNC

ZABYED. X

IS NOTIUNG lJKE

WOMAN'S WORK TO ·, F.ST THE METTLE OF A REAL
MAN.- ROBE!ITHENRY MILLER '
Cllttl ~l"i F••'':"••S,ndlcele. Inc

•1

�14-The Daily Sel!tinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-Meigs board__

i_c_on_rm_u_ed_rr_om--=-P,...:.ge_J_I_

Friday, August 19, !983

.....----Area deaths--

Weekend weaiher foreca~ts

recelveaddltlonalpay.

commented that perhaps, some
one hour prior to the services at the
slaff members could work and earn
Harold L Proffitt
the
Partly cloudy and warm tonight 80s n-Jay. Lows
church.
Questions arose as to how
' lri...,--~ -passes to school events. Powell and ·
iiOs
to
the
mid
IIOs
Sunda~
and In the
and Satunlay. Lows tonight near 75.
00s
Monday
and
Th~
-~an"::' s:~~~~w~~~dt~ Arland King abstained from voting Harold Lloyd Proffitt, 57, Por- Edith S. Dildine
Highs Saturday between 88 and 93.
WllUld be worked out. This morning
on a motion to withdraw the passes tland , died unexpectedly WednesEdith McGucken Sheridan DUchance
rain Is
10 percent '1=======~::=:~==;
_
tonight
and 20olpercent
Saturday.
~ 1¥! ani10WJced that kindergarten but members, Richard Vaughan, day night at the Jackson General dine, 72, Rt. 6, Athensd!edThursday The
1
Snowden
and
Barton
voted
that
the
Hospit
a
l
,
·
n
Ripley,
W,
Va.,
'allowmorning
tH
1ze
Med'1
Ce
te
ExtendedOhloForecast
, UNCLE BOB'S
classes In Pomeroy, Rutland and
''
a o r
oca
n r.
Mldc!Jeport will not be started next
passes should be discontinued ing a brief Ulness .
ShewasagraduateofShadeHigh
SundaythroughTuesday
CHICKEN PALACE
n.esctay but will open on Aug. 29. . except to the personnel designated
He was born at Rolandus In School and attended St. Joseph
Falr~andlllooday.Showers
Rt . 681 East of Darwin
Parents will be notified as to the bus
by Snowden In the motion.
Meigs County, a son of Pearl Harris Nursing School In Cincinnati. She
and thunderstonns n-ta.v. Highs
"Live Bands - Every Sat. Nile"
.driver Involved and the session their
The boa,rd also voted to increase Proffitt, Portland, and the late John was a nurse at Sheltering Arms
from the mid to upper 80s SWHI&amp;¥
Dark Hollow Grass-Sat .. Auc. 20
thepriceofstudent
ticketsfrom$1to Proffitt. He was a farmer and Hospital , Athens ,.'o r severa 1years.
and Monday to the upper 70!1 to low
9:00 to 1:00
·
cblld wUI attend. Kindergarten
c!illdren of Harrisonville and Salem ·. $1.50 lor basketball, football and served with the Mercha nt Marines She was a former cook at Ohio r-,;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Center will attend morning sessions
wnestlng contests with the feeling In World War II. He was a member University, a former employe of
that
the increase is in lincwlth other of the Church of Jesus .Christ of CentraiOhio MilkCoopera tlveand a
_at Rutland and Rutland area
children will be. attending afternoon area schools.
Latter Day Sa ints, Portland - member ofChrlst The.KlngCathollc
.sessions, Supt. Morris said.
The percentage of adult football Racine .
Church.
ticket
sales
which
has
been
chanSurviving
besides
his
mothe
r
are
She Is survived by three sons '
A major problem with the
•
•
- ailopllonofthenewplan came when
neled from the athletic department his wife, Eula Bunner Proffitt, Thomas (Jerry) Sheridan, Holmes•
to the instrumental mus ic depart- Portland·. three daughters, Mrs. ville' Oh ·'· PhilllpRlchardSherldan '
a,bus driver objeCted to the board 's
•
suggestion that drivers go to the bus ment again came before the board. Patricia Cozart, Route 3, Sandy- Rt· 2' Guysville·' J · Patrtck Shert·
•
The recommendation was· that the ville ' W· Va ·•· Mrs · Sand Y Mapson • dan, Rt · 6• Athens; tw'o d aughters,
garage In Rutland before Tuesday
band shouldreceiveeight percentof Champalne, Dl. , and Mrs. Candy Mrs · Dale(Margar
· etEllen) Perry '
toconterwlthDirectorofTransportatlon Roger Holman on the location the net . proceeds instead of eight Cox, Ravenswood; two sons, Danny Rt. 1. Athens; Mrs. Glen (Cecelia )
'"grand·of their new routes under the plan. percent ofthegrossproceeds wltha Ray of Martinsville, Ind. , and Dearth ' Rt · 1' Stockport·' ..,
llmltof$600forthesea_
son.
Whilethe
Randy
Ray
Groose
Creek
S
C
·
children
and
tw
gre
t
The drtver said' that drivers should
'
• · ·•
o
a gran d sons;
-LADIES' FALL DRESSES -MEN'S LEATHER BELTS
'
board agreed that the eight percent
five brothers, Jim, Milton, Fla.; one brother, Thomas J. McGucken,
be paid for the Iinne Involved. The
tothebandshoulq
beonnetproceeds
Chester
Lisbon·
Ro
Lew'
ill
·
Cin
l
tl
1st
M
H
board had d_!fficul'" in coming up
,
.
y,
1sv e,
c nna ; ones er, ary am,
FALL TOPS
GYM SHORTS
'' on paying the from the games, the motion passed
Raymond, Portland, and Homer, Charlotte ' N· C·
With some agreement
drtvers for the Iinne Involved.
by the board did not set a $600 Racine, and five grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
'
-CASSElTE TAPES AND ALBUMS -WINTUK YARN
maximum for the band.
He wa s preceded bY his fa the r, a Mpnd ay a t 10 a.m . at Chris t The
Finally, however, they agreed to
-HANES UNDERWEAR
-JUNIOR BLOUSES
Last year, the band received sister, Florence, and a brother, King Catholic Church with Msgr·
pay drtvers for two hours Iinne. ·
$84l.91 aseightpercentofthegross
Robert.
DonaldE · Horak ottl Cia
· ting · Burta 1
Grows Impatient
, Board President Robert Barton proceeds but would have received
Services will be held at 2 p.m. will be in Mt. Calvary Cemetery,
Saturday at the Portland· R a cine Athens. Frtends may ca11 a t the
only$612.31hadthepercentagebeen
grew Impatient when Holman asked
Church of Jesus c~~-t
" a! Horne in Athens
-If he would be paid for Iinne that he based on net proceeds.
'u"' of Latter Hughes Fun.r
Following an executive session,
Day Saints with Elder Evln Ervin Sundayfrom2to4and7to9· In lieuof
might have involved over a regular
the board set special meetings for • officiating. Burial will be In Great· flowers the family requests do nawork day in conferring with the 26
1•
&lt;!rlvers between now and ':'•esday
Aug. 2,6, Aug. 29, Aug. 30, andAug.31
Bend Cemetery.
!Ions be made to the American
,I
&gt;" into
for the purpose of negotiations with
Friends may call at the Straight- Cancer """
"--tety ·· Roseary serv Ices
morning when thenewroutesgo
•
eft
all of the sessions s~bject to
Tucker Funeral Home in Ravens- will be held · at the funeral home
t
r
· Barton
ect.
cancellation.
wood
W
v
this
1
d
'
S
d
t
7
said that everybody
, . a..
even ng an ,or
un ay a p.m . .
~ways wan~ money a nd he Is r-----------------------------------------------------~--~-----------L--------------------------------~-----------­
''getting tired of It". He told Hoinnan
he could handle the 26 conferences
~luling the regular work day-- only
Frtday and Monday remains--and !f
he was dissatisfied he should "step
down". There was no provision
made for paying Hoinnan for an
extra Iinne involved, but two board
members sitting close to Hoinnan
assured him that he, too, would be
paid for any overtime Involved.·
In another action, the board voted
three to two abstentions for with·
drawing the ·m any passes to school
events Issued in .the district. This
was at the suggestion of Board
Member Robert Snowden who said
that passes should be limited to
athletic . scouts, workers and the
press instead of to au school
personnel. Board Member Larry
Powell said he liked to see the school
personnel on hand at school events
and that he felt they are a helpful
q
factor in maintaining discipline.
Gordon Fisher, athletic director,

mx\;

Today's
Times-Sentinel

uppe~

AJoar the JUve~... ............ B-1-8
II I m ............. : ............. E-1
Clalllfleds •..............••.•.•• D-1-7
Deailis ............................. A-4
Edltorla!s ......................... A-2

Fann ...;, .. ,, .. .................. E-2-3
IA»cal •••• •••••••••••..•••••••••..•·A-4-8
Sporlll _............................ Cl-11
Take-One .................. ' .. IMert

SPECIAL WEEKEND SALE
PRICES ON -

=~JN ~~~~~

:~~Ss:::Jys·

•

18

Emergency runs
Five calls were answered Thursday and one early Friday morning
by units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Center.
At 8:21 a .m. Thursday, the
Middleport unit went to the Stonewood Apartments for Joe Carsey
who was taken to the Holzer Melcal
Center; at10:54a.m. the Racine unit
took Martha Proffitt from her
Portland home to Veterans MemorIal; &amp;I 2: 10 p.m . the Rutland unit
tnlnsported Patricia Cleland to
Veterans; at 4:08p.m. the Pomeroy
unit took Iris Roush from the
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans, and at 6: 18 p.m. the
Pomeroy unit transported Ronald
Diles from 104 New St. to Veterans.
At 2: 14 a .m. the Roy Sorrell was
taken from Meigs Mine 2 to the
Holzer Medical Center.

1
VHF • UHF • FM
'

Mast not Included

nella

Powell. •

88

The driver of a truck that was
Involved in an accident Aug. 12, In
~ch Bob Molden, apassengerdled
of injurtes received, was Pamela
Sione not Pamela Molden, the
family of Mr. Molden reported. The
drtv~r was not the wife of Mr.
Molden according to the family.

Pocket $6 in Savings on This
Handy, Little AM/FM Radio
• . . . . lal

,, •

Q""'

(11-

111111111_1_;-;l
L ·~

••

....
"" .,

Of

•10

"'

... f , . , ,

Pleads not guilty

.., ....

Portable Cassette
Recorder-Save 118.07

.

JacliSon PeA names president
Story oil Pip E-1

. .

+

.

tmts

·--

Glenn says military show unneeded
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -Democratic presidential
candidate John Glenn says a show of military force off
Honduras Is ·mnecessary and an oveiTeactlon by the
Reagan administration.
'
''1berernay be a Iinne fora show afforce," the Ohio
senator said Frtday. "But let's keep this IIi
peupectlve. Let's make our . show of force
commensurate with the threat."
.
"All this because there are5,00&gt;to7,00&gt;guerrJ}las In
the hills," Glenn said, re~ to leftist lnsulients
seeking to unseat the government of Ji;J.Ilalvador,
Honduras' neighbor,

building up to a blockade Is a very dangerous type
thing," Glenn said. "The president better be tlllnklnc
very carefully before we put up a blockade. If we 9!!1
up a blockade we better mean it. This Is not the Cuban
missile crisis revisited."
' "If we ~ up a blockade and they call oor bluff, tiJr
president better make up his mind If he wan,ts to slnlt:
Russian ships," Glenn said.
Glenn also attacked the Reagan admlnstratlon ~r
providing covert aid to forces opposing the socialist
government in Nlgaragua.
"We are not suppo.!;ed to go In and dump other

Glenn, one of six declared candidates for the
Democratic rumination, was In VIrginia for a prtvate
$1.!m-a-couple reception In Vtrebd&amp; Beach. ·
The mllltary exercise he crt~ will Involve 19
Navy ships and as many as 4,1XD Army and Marine
troops In amphibious landings and other maneuvers
off the coast of Honduras.
Cuba and Nicaragua have protrayed the exercise
as an attempt to intlmldate Nicaragua's socialist
government, which the Reapn administration
accuses of aiding rebels In El Salvador.
"I think all the great show of force and the talk of

Former Rio
clerk pleads
not guilty

govenunents In that area, " he said.
GleM's tunct-ralser was hosted by Dr. Ronald I.
Dowretz of Portsmouth, who was a major fund-raiser
In the unsuccessful
Senate campaign last fall vf
Democratic Lt. Gov. Rlcluir::l J. Davis.
Glenn was gneeted at the airport bY about 40
supporters, Including former Attorney General
Andrew P . Miller, Glenn's state coordinator In

u.s.

VIrginia.

"There Is no question he would be far and away the
strongest candidate In VIrginia," Mlller ·satd.

White bound
over to grand
jury in Moore
murder case

'

GALLIPOLIS - A fotmer Rio
Grande clerk-treasurer entered a
rot guilty plea to a charge of theft in
office during an arraignment Frtday In Gallla County Common Pleas

Court.

.

Linda Miller was placed on $5,00&gt;
IIDSeCIIred appearance bond by
Judge Richard ROOertck. A trta1
date remains to be set.
Mrs. Miller. was accompanied at
the arraignment by her attorney,
. WUlliunConley, who requested that
Roderick waive reading the tndlctment a grand ju_ry that met Aug.
10-11 secretly issued against her.
The sta(e auditor's office charged
In May that Mrs. Miller wrote 19
unauthorized checks totatllng$5,325
Ill herself and her husband, the
village waterworks supertntenctent.
Mrs. Miller, who resigned her
position wlth the vtllage Jan. 4,
repaid the village $6,936 In Febru:
· ary. The discrepancies were dlscoYef'ed In an audit conducted on Rio
Grande government from June 1979
to January of this yeap, The
auditor's report also charged her
with miscalculating an employee's
· salary during the period covered by
the audit.
A not guilty plea to three counts or
trafficking In drugs was entered by

CHESAPEAKE -The man held
for the shooting death of Oyer
AllisOn Moore, 76, Rt.1, Crown City,
was bound over to the grand jury in
Lawrence County Common Pleas
. Court following a preliminary
hearing in county ·municipal court
Friday.
Tnunan Roger White, 34, Rt. 1,
Proctorville, was returned to the
Lawrence County JaU. The grand
jury Is expected to meet In
September.
.Lt. C.R. Diamond of the Lawrence
sberlff' s department was the only
witness to testify during Ute hearing.
Diamond described the scene where
Moore's body was found last
Sunday, In the cemetery Of an
abandoned church on. Sandfork
Road Dear Lecta.
White was 81Tested early last
Monday following an "Intensive"
lnveatlgat.ton bY Lawrence authorities, G8.1lla County sheriff' sdeputles
and Huntington, W.Va. pollee. .
Lawrence County Prosecutor
Richard Meyers told the court that
Moore apparently died of gunshot
wounds tohlsfaceandthe backothis
head. White and Moore had apparently gone squirrel hunting Aug. 11,
when Moore was last seen In White's
company.·
White's bond has been set at
(Continued on page AJ)

•

Joseph H. FeiTell, 35, Rt. 1,
Thunnan.
Ferrell was arrested by theGallla
County Sheriff's Department durIng a sweep of suspected dnlg
dealers May 17. His was the second
of two iiecret lndlctmellts IsSUed bY
.the grand jiuy's last session.
Roderick lnfonned Ferrell that If .
convicted 0t aU thn!ecountsagalnst
him, Ferrell could
a mlnlmwn
11-year jaU sentence. His bond was
set at $5.000.
.
,• . . ,
Jerry D. Raines; ~. Ri. 1,
Scotlow1t, pleaded not guilty to two
separate lndlr.tments brought
against blm by the grand jury.
'
He was charged .with felonious
assault lnconnectlonwithasbootlllg
Incident 011 Lou Soothers Road near
MercervUle July 16, and wttil
trespassing. Rodei1Ck continued
Ralnes'bondfromGalllpollsMunlclpal Court.
.
Also pleading not guilty were two
other cases referred to ·the grand
jury from municipal court Charles E . Davis, 25, Cheshire,
charged with aggravated assault In
a July 2 incident, and Tony Slone, Tl,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, cited for dollll!!ltlc
'violence on June 26.
Roderick continued their municipal court bonds.

faee

Computer use expands in area schools
By EBICIENNINGS
11mm s 11 •I swr

'

Reg. 15.95

:had

CTR-60 by Realistic

By Realistic •

. . _..,

Keith Musser · appeared before
Meigs County Common Pleas Judge
Charles Knight recently and plead
not guilty to a chargeofvandalism.
Judge Knight set _bond at $5,!XXJ.
Musser Is presently lodge in the
·
Meigs County Jail.

0

=~
~~ :teG~:=.
::~~!·~~=~=~::-!
said he ran for
board In 1979 guingon; We
sane consistency

Cut 36°/o Off
380/o
88 •

the

Built-In Mike

·=w;~~t~~;'!!~

Reg. 49.95

This rugged portable lets you enjoy mus1c, news
and sports wherever you go! Slide-rule tuning
dial , 2'/4" speaker, built-in AM and telescoping
· FM antennas . With earphone a{ld wrist strap.
#12-634 Bauery extra

.
Ideal for lectures or personal memos!
'

Counter and cue/review help find selections fast. variable tone control. AC/
baneiy operation. #14-1 010 Banerles oxtra

Accordin~

Check Your Phone Book for the lladllelllaek Store or Dealer Nearest You
A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

..

l

0

becauae of his concern over the
condition of elementary buildings
. lhrlllghoutllledlstrlct.
• "I feel we'VI' made progress in

• Auto-Level

Seeks divorce

'

C-7

w.-aca1e

Clarification

to an entry in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court,
Donald Lol)ZOFowler, Rutland filed
suit for divorce against Marjorie
Jona Banks Fowler, Rutland.

Story.

seem

\

ONLY

Meiis
liainess
racing-results
p.

acclimated with working and'teachcounty scl!oob, said "Instructors state of the al't," he said.
lng knowledge about computers.
from each elemeatary school will be
Last year, the Gallipolis City
GALLIPOLIS - Jobn was a
The Gallla County SchooiDistrlct
trained in the 1181! ofthe computers, School System spent $50,00! and this
student In the Gallipolis Qty School also .has an expanding program
and then wUI Implement the year the system I~ spending $20,1XD,
System and had experience In geared at ect~!fating students to
program within their classroom."
he sail!.
computers for !our years. Does he become farnlllar with the technical
Computer awarness and underInaddltiontohavingcomputersat
have an advantqe on competitors skills necessary to be su~sfulln
standing at the younger age:; Is the high school, there Is at least one
1n the tight job market?
working with computers, according
InvalUable· tpr fiature employment computer at each elementary
·
·
You better believe lt.
to Superintendent Gary Toothaker.
possibilities, Mlllilns said.
school, he pointed out.
' .
By KEVIN KEU..Y
. elected to the board with Deel in
Computers. Those eloetronlc wiWithin the county system, there
Kenneth Fanner, who Is helping
'lbni'B Seud!ocl S&amp;aff
1979, listed better facilities as his
zarctry machines that only a select essentially are three levels to the
coordinate the computer program
"We hope to have every student 1n
GALLIPOLIS - Three lncwn- reason tor seeking another term on
few people
·capable of han· computer program, Toothaker
for the Gallipolis City School the school ~'Omputer literate by the
bents 011 the GaUia County Local the board.
dling and worldniwlth
said.
Dlstrtct, said, ''We are empahaslz- time he or she Is out of high school,"
Board of Education !acing reelec·
"The only thing I'm Interested in
·
"At the elementary level, we
1ng helping the students to have ·a he added.
t1on In November ~ve aniiOUnced Is better schools," said Halley, a
Several area acboot'dlstrlcts are merelywanttomakethemawareo!
better ability to understand the
Ell.lngson said teachers- reallzlntenttons to run again, while a new farmer and Gallla County Highway moving in the dln!ctloll which wm the computers," he said.
cwnputers - not necessarily teacll lng the advantages of becoming
!ace will be seen on the Gallipolis Department employee whO served allow the stutlellts to develope a
Students are taught basic skills In
them to become computer skilled In using computers In the
QtyBoardofEducatlonnextyear. · oneyear011tbeboardfollowingthe thorough undentandlng of usiDc working with computers at the
programmers."
clas~- have been attending
Additionally, new candld!'tes will . consolidation of county schools In computers.
junior high school level so that they
Gallla Academy will provide oyer workslxlps and O\hercomputer skill
seek seats on both boards, the 1974.
· ·
•
"In k.eeplng'up.wlthstaterEQulre- can become ''computerUterate,"lk. ' 20 computel'9 for students to use courses to become trained 1n
Tlmes-Sentlnelhaslearned.
Prlortothat,Halleyhactservedl2 · ments, a
computer added.
beginning thll fall, according to
computerskllls.
·· Fred J. Dee!, ·presldeni of the years as a member or the Hannan
program 1s belnllmplemented at
Toothaker said students are
prlllelpal Jolm !:lllngson.
I Alt!Wgh the Meigs Local School
Farmer said "we've had compu- Dlstrtct does not have computer
county local, board ~r the past two Trace lOCal board. He said he wotild GaUia Academy High School," said taught actual usage skills at the high
· years, took out a petition two weeks promote the bond Issue.
GaUipolls City llcbooi .SUpetlntend· school level. adding that Interested
ters at the hlghldlool for five years, education in Its CUrriculum, Superilgo, claiming It was "no secret" he
Newcomer Claudia M. Lyon, ent Joe Carter.
·
.
. students can learn how to program
and we're constantly updating intendent Dan Moms said that he
decided to run for his second appolntedinMayto~ !belate
A nwnber of imchers within tliR the computers.
them. " He added that, ''We'retrthg fol'liees that the district will soon be
·term on the board.
Bruce Stout, Is seeking reelection to Gallipolis City Sebool system haw .
Roy Mullins, who Is coordinating
to get them at-tbestateofthe art."
Implementing · a computer
The county's 4-H extension agent fill the remainder of Stout's term.
attended wur•4•,... to bectme the computer program for the
• "Right now, we feel we're at the program. ·
for the past several years, Deel, a
"I'VI' enjoyed the lour months,"
·
·
·
' .

- 3 ANTENNAS IN

EnJOY tn e new Fall TV season and football act1on with a vivid color pictureat low cost' Replace your indoor or worn-out outdoor antenna with our SuperColor Spec1al and see the s harp picture and brilliant color you r sel was
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range . Gold Aiod ized ' finish fights corros1on. Preassembled- install it yourself and save! #15·1710

easing
.

8 Sedionl, 68

·I ncumben·ts WI·11
'seek re-electl.•on
·
a
rd
.
'o n School bo

Veterans Memorial
Admitted:
Karen Harman,
Reedsville; Sharon Caughey,
Pomeroy; Eva Stout, West Columbia; Cecil Karman, Pomeroy;
Silbrlna Drake, Long Bottom; Della ·
Pro!fltt, Portland; Mona Sorden,
Long Bottom; Iris Roush, Middlepart; Martha Roush, Rutland.
Discharged:
Robert Bowen,
Gladys Thomas, Chester Mundry,
Curtis, Nancy Patterso.n,
Homer Graham, and Isabelle

~-~~~

unba

FAI·R DAYS SALE

.

B~ptcy problem

PRICES APP LY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEALER S

I

\

'

facllltles,"hesald. "It'smynurnber
'
to -'tlngbtvolved."
. ooereason r.,~.
· OVer the next few months, Deei
: said he btleuda to plug .the 4-mill
. liDndlssuethedlstrlctwillputOnthe
Novemberbellot.
·
"I'll tell you If I have a choice o!
· beln&amp; · re 111 ~. or getting the
bond 1s1ue ptisaed, I'll opt for the
; ............_"he said "It's'~"""'·"t
""""_,....,
••;.- - ·
to the fUture of our students.
Bllley L. Halley, who was also

f=t:::.!o==="F==-.:=-.,- --

need
,
wtthwhatwe'redolng."
Mrs. Lyon, i. felllslerl!d nune,
said the bond lsstle's pa'llgP.Is her
malnpr1or!ty;
.

In

I

II
ReAaan p·tits best ·face on srae 1 pu · out
~·
8)'MAUBIZN8IlHI'INI
Ae•l
._Wdter
12
SANT'• .,. •••• .,. • Calif. !AP)

"~-

~~cn:~==energy eaaern;:~;;:IIIBttaceposatbleOD

WWlam D. Conley hal a11o Israel s wltllhWal fnm the
•
the trrubledChOafnpaofLellancm,ll
annoonced plans to_J:IIII •OI'~tzlngfW Y.Uhittheacttaa
county bolrd. ~ ~
_ _.....___.
8
coach 1n the r.alllpoll• and Wester- wU1 ~..., u.....__
ville school S)'llelnl. Conley Is '
n.
'
./
.
presen~ anatuner In GaDtpolls.
In another
• -poucydevelap''My main rea1011 for

I'IIJIIIIna'ls

!hall baW mowd Into thedlmict."
lleexpl•toed.''lllawtllrwcldldrell.
r m In'""
..... the ....... educatton
- - 111
.._.
(CQntlnued oa paae A3)

1•

men!, a spolaman tor Prellldl!lll
Reagan said Friday be bu decldlt!

Larry Speakes, the deputy White
House preu secretary. Issued a
wrttlm statement saying the withdrawal of laraell ~rceS from the
Chouf area would gtve Lebanon a
chance to reassert Its authority over
a wider aree.
''ThlslllOW by Israel ill the flrat In
a ~ rl. withdrawal
in the May 17 agreement" between
Israel and Lt!banon,
statement
said.
.

envuaro

t1Je

"In receat weeks, some bave
questllllltl lhe motives UDderlylng
thll wllldawal by llrael •ytqthat It prwages a permanent
partWon or.Lebanon," t11r atate-

tile number rl.
tn El SalviiiiDr
beyond the ltlilllllllltratlon's . . .
~ MllniiL
·

ml to lou

~ IIIIYIIIi'l

mett continiHIL ''Weare convinced
. that the Israeli IIOYefiiiYielll Is
cunmttted to U. toll withdrawal of
lts torees In Leta ,._..
The United Slates orlgtDally
oppoeed Israe1'1 redeployment out
of fear that
COUld lead to a
J*'IIWielll jJiii tPikm of Lebanon .
'11lough die
aovernment now

a

u.a.

aaysltbelleve~tbewlthdrawalfrom

llleareaslsOCCUITinglnthecontext
of the May 17 qreement, that
lllftl€111€llt hal DeVI!1' 'been l!nple~. It WIMIIJ camm1t Israel Ill
wtllldrawtng • 44J)etely tram Le. _ over • eight-to 10-month

promjlted his statement, except to
say that It underscores the U.S.
belief that the Israeli withdrawal Is
part of a total withdrawal.
On El Salvador, Speakes said
Reagan made the decision on
Tbunday not to expand the number
of military advisers, but that be has
yet to deckle whether to send
perhaps a dozen additional U.S.
pel'Silllllel to ftiie war-torn nation.
Tile added po1nonnel might be U!ed
to beet up embassy securlty,liBid an
admlnlltratton otnclal, speaking on
• theCIOIIdltlonbenotbenamed.

period.

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