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                  <text>Thunday, September 1' 1983 .

14-The Daily Sentinel

iPECIAL WEEKEND ·=--~p;;iijiiiiiii~";;j

SAVE ON

SALE PRICES

Baseball roundups

QUALITY FALL

THROUGHOUT
THE STORE

Pap~S-4

MERCHANDISE .
I

Jeans Sale
Qual~

Lee and Wrangler brands in
regular and full cuts. Betted styles, pleated
styles, dress blues. strelch denim and
straight legs Sizes 6 to 18, 32 io 44, Petrte
Sizes 6 lo 18.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

122.00

...... SALE
1 27.00 ........ SALE
132.00 ........ SALE
139.00 ........ SALE

'17.59
'21.59
'25.59
'31.19

at y en tine
e
Soviet missile incident: 'barbaric act'

Casual and Blouson styles, mm1s,
jumpers, long sleeves, 14 sleeves.
corduroys, wool blends, cotton blends
and polyesters.

REG. 120.00 .............. SALE 115.99
REG. 124.00 .............. SALE '19.19
REG. 136.00 ............. SALE '28.79
REG. 145.00 ............. SALE '35.99
REG. 152.00 ............. SALE 141.59

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

Vo1.32,No.101

126.00 ........... SALE 120.79
129.00 .......... SALE '23.19
134.00 ........... SALE 127.19

'40.00 .......... SALE 131.99'

SEOl)L, South Korea (AP)- At
least 51 Arne1caDs were aboard the
South Korean airliner reported
downed by a Soviet jet fighter,
Korean Air Lines said today, and
searchers found a large o11 slick In
waterswhereitwasbelievedtohave

LABOR DAY SALE

LADIES'

GIRLS' COORDINATE

Coat Sale

-:~~: :;~;~~:::: ~m ::t~~
REG. '64.00 ... SALE '51.00
REG. '77.00 ... SALE '62.00
REG. 185.00 ... SALE '68.00

New Fall ..

Sportswear
Sale ·

· Take advantage of Labor Day Sale
prices on new winter coots. Stadium
Coats, Dress Co&lt;ts, Capes, All Weather
Coats and Fun Looks. Misses Sizes 8 to
18, Haff Sizes 14~ to 24~.

crashed.

(. ·"

'.

Presldi!nt Chun Doo-hwan accused !hi! Soviet Union of. "a
:barbaric act."
·
·
At a con1erence room In Seoul, an
empty chair marked the absence of

· ' Sleepwear

'

..

REG.
REG:
REG.
REG.

who are presumed kllled. KAL left
open tbe passlbtllty that more than
51 Americans were aboard by
saying someotberson thefllghtmay
nave beld dual nationality.
KAL Initially reported 269 people
aboard the flight, but said foor crew
.members got off at a retueUng stop
· II) Anchorage, leaving 265. llow'
ever, KAL said today the foor who
got ott Were replaced In Anchorage

All new fall and winter colors and
styles. Brushed tricot, flannels·
thermal, knit, challis and fleece:
Long gown and robes, niteshirts,
.short gowns and robes, pajamas. .
. Complete •range of ladies' and •·
junior sizes.

.,

'6.00 ... ,.. :SALE 14.79 .
'11.00 ..... SALE 18.79
'17.00 ... SALE 113.59
125.00 ... SALE 119.99

SALE! GIRLS'

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

~

18.00 ....... SALE '7.04
110.50 ...... SALE 19.24
116.00 ... SALE '14.04
123.00 ... SALE '20.24

TIMEX

Coats and
Snowsuits

Watch Sale

Pre-season sale prices on warm
winter coats and snowsuits. Corduroy, nylons, quilted styles, fur lined
and pile lined. Sizes NB lo 24 Mos.,
2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14. Reg. $16.00
lo $63.00.

$1279 TO SSQ39
LABOR DAY SALE!
BOYS'

·Denim
.. Jeans
Includes our entire stock ol boys'
denim jeans - Wrangler and Lee.
Regular and Slims. Sizes 8 to 16.
Student Sizes 26 lo 30 waist, lengths
30 to 36. Husky Sizes 10 to 18.

BOYS' 1 14.95 JEANS
BOYS: '16.95 JEANS
BOYS' 11B.95 JEANS
BOYS' 121.95 JEANS

.. 111.66
.. '13.26
.. '14.76
.. 117.16

UTTLE BOYS'

Weekend sale prices on all men's
women's and children's Timex
watches. Many new styles in digitals
self-winding models, quartz and
. electrics.

Coats and
Snowsuits

19.95 ........... SALE

Buntings, Snowsuits, Jackets and
Coats. Sizes: NB to 24 Mos., 2 to 4, 4 to

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

SALE PRICED

'7.96
111.96
'15.96
'24.95 ...... SALE '19.96
134.95 ...... SALE '27.96

114.95 ........ SALE
119.95 ........ SALE

7.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

PRE SEASON SALE!

...... SALE
...... SALE
135.00 ...... SALE
143.00 ...... SALE
123.00

'12.79
'18.39
'27.99
'34.39

LABOR OA Y SALE/
MEN'S

Boys' Jackets

New Fall
Jackets

Special Labor Day savings on all of our
boys' winter jackets. Sizes 8 to 20.
You'll like the colors and styles and the
savings this weekend.

BOYS'
BOYS'
BOYS'
BOYS'

1 16.00

Hurry in and save during the
pre-season jacket sale. Regular and ,
extra large sizes. Excellent style and
color selection. Use our conven~nt
lay-away plan if you like.

122.95

JACKETS '18.35
134.95 JACKETS 127.95
139.95 JACKETS ~31.95
149.95 JACKETS 139.95

MEN'S 129.95 JACKETS ... 123.95
MEN'S 139.95 JACKETS ... '31.95
MEN'S 149.95 JACKETS ... '39.95
MEN'S 179.95 JACKETS ... 163.95

LABOR DAY SALE!

MEN'S WESTERN STYLE

Flannel
Shirts

LABOR DAY SALE/

Colorful plaids, authentic western cui
with pearl snaps, flap pockets, front
and back western yokes. Size S. M. L.
XL, XXL in regular size and M,'L, XL,
XXL in tails.

MEN'S 113.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S 116.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S 119.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S 121.95 SHIRTS

Hanes
lJNDfRWEAR

U.S. Rep. Lawrence,P. McDonald,
one of 269 people aboard the plane

.'f".

New fall colors in skirts, blouses,
knit tops, blazers, vests and slacks.
Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, and 7 to 14.

(""t

MEN'S WRANGLER $22.95

MEN'S AND BOYS'

Denim Jeans

Tube Socks

' Straight Leg or Boot Flare Styles.
.' Pre-washed blue denim. Stock up now ·
at lhis sale price. Sizes 27 to 42 waist.
Lengths 30 to 36.

Our Famous Springfoot Quality. Lots of
sthool colors and many more. Boys'
sizes 7 to 11, Men's 9 to 15.

$}799

110.85
113.20
115.55
117.15

Hanes Underwear
Includes Men's and Boys Cotton Briefs, Tee Shirts, Men's Boxers,
A-Shirts. Big Sizes Included .

SAVE 25%
Sale Ends Sep'-bor 3rd

jusE ouR LAYAWAY PLANI

s1.59 White With
Color Tops .............. :. s1.19

sug Sweatshirt Gray
Color Tops ................ s1.49

SAVE 25%
MEN'S AND BOYS'

SAVf
IABOII DAY WEEKENOI

LABOR DAY 5A1EI

MEN'S LEE DENIM

Basic Jeans
R~gular price '22.95. Genuine . Lee
~1ders, stra1ghlleg, pre-washed. Waist
s1zes 27 to 38. Lengths 30 to 36.

$1799

JUNIOR

Jackets and
Rainwear
Quilt-lined slickers, windbreakers,
ponchos a~d raincoats.

........__--....SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

$399

Handbag
Clearance
Special clearance prices on our
remaining stock of ladies' summer
handbags.

REG. 16.00 .......... SALE
REG. 19.00 .......... SALE
. REG. 112.00 ........ SALE
REG •.115;00 ........ SALE

'1.98
'2.98
'3.98
'4.98

-2· S.tlon1, 12 Pog•• 20 Cent•
A Multimltdia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy· Middlepo~l, Ohio, Friday, September 2, 1983

Copytithtod 1983 .

LAYAWAYS
WELCOME

LADIES' FALL

StoryonP.8

•

NEW FALL COLORS
NEW FALL STYLES

New. Fall and Winter dresses by Joan
Curtis, Better Half and British Lady.
Jacket Dresses. Jacket/Skirt Suits,
Jumpers and Shirtwaist Styles. Petitie,
Misses and Half.Sizes.

producers'

in Rutland

Photo• •.,. Page 5

Dress Sale

Dress Sale
LADIES'

Pap7

Balloon lands

JUNIOR

LADIES'

Weekly sermonette

by four fresh crew members,
bringing the total back up to 269.

Agency patrol boat reported finding
The fishing vesselwas In waters 17 . He questioned whether the Sov!el
a330-foo!-longoUslickl8'hmllesof! mUes west of the Soviet Island of Union "would have dared such a
There were calls for retaliatory the soulhwest coast of the Soviet Moneron, just off Sakhalin's coast, barbarous act If the airliner
belonged to a big power."
.
actions as search boats and planes, Island Sakhalin, where the South the agency said.
Korean Air Lines ordered an
In Seoul, U.S. Sen. Jesse A.
lnclud!Dg two U.S. m1lltary aircraft, Korean jumbo jet Is believed to have
inUn&lt;!d!ate change In Its !light Helms, R-N.C., said he would
hunled for traces of the jumbo jet In gQnedown Thursday.
Agency officials also said Japa· cwrse of! the Soviet Union's easl recommend to President Reagan
frigid Sea of Japan waters. Some
nese fishermen who saw "bright coast. KAL officials said the new "that he expel all Soviet diplomats
wreckage was reporled seen !rom
objects"
maY have witnessed the route Is about llll miles south of with the exception of the ambassa.
the air, l)ut Japan said $ov!et
,·
mtd-alrattack.
· . - .. · · .• - .· · Kl!mchatka,a,peninsulatothl'nortb · dor and a s)leleton s)aff::· ·
. officials had refused to allow search .
Crew
members
of
the
·99:1on
·
of
Slikhal!n.
'the
old
route
was
90
Helms
and
other
congressmen
·
boats Into Soviet waters.
were In South Korea for a conferA Japanese Maritime Safety Chldori Maru No. 58 fishing vessel mUes south of Kamchatka.
ence
to mark the 30th anniversary of
reporled hearing two or three loud
Chun, In his first JXJblic statement
bangs, preceded by !lashes In the on the attack, called It a "barbarous the U.S.-South Korea defense pact.
McDonald, 0-Ga., also was to
skies, at about the time Korean Air act, sinning against god and man."
• •
Lines Flight fiJI disappeared !rom Hesa!d!t"cannotbetoleratedunder have attended. A sign bearing his
amongvrch~ . radar ~ In Soviet air space, any pretext and . deretves the name was placed )&gt;efore an empty
. ·
· . "•'censure,of the entire world." •• . eha!r at!@ conte.Ym;e,laple. . . . .
·• Thi't\E!Oldoans reportedly ~board the Otflcials said.'. ; ..
a Korean Air LineS jetliner that was
shot dOwn by the Soviet Union an
were beading back to their homeland, say frlend9 who expressed
U.S.S.R.
U.S.S.R.
shock at their loss.
The victims were identified
Thursday as Kyoung Hun Min, 26, a
sophomore physics major at Ohio
University In Athens: Dr. Mlng·
Than Weng, 40, a former senior
mechanical engineer at- General
Electrlc-Evendale; and Mason
Chang, 24, a sales trainee at the
S. Korean747 Shot Down
Solon offices of Waxman Industries
10 am EDT -A~rhner d'eparts Anchorage
12 noon - Plane detected by So~let raaar
Inc.
2· 12 pm -Soviet DIIOI makes VISual cohtacl
Another passenger, Alice
2 26 pm -Sov~el piiOIIires miSSile and
Ethraimson·Abt. 23, was Identified
" target (7471 destroyed"
as a former Wittenberg University
2 38 pm - Airline r disappear s from rad ar
student who gradualed this June.
Professor Kw.in Lee, adviser to
the unM!rslty's Korean StudeDt
ibis map !~bows llle Intended and repol1ed route! of 'l'lnlrlldky. Acc:ordlng to the u.s. '!late Deparirnent ..
Association, said Min planned to fly
a SoiJih Korean 74'ljelllner whlcll wu repo~ shot heat se e'inl missile was fired flom an SU-15, one of
back to Seoul with his lather, "but
down by a Soviet miMIIe near Sakhalin Island etpt flghiers tracking the airliner. (AP l.aserphoto).
they couldn't find a seat, so his father
asked him to go first.''

Three Ohioans

Nation's jobless rate remains at 9.5 percent
.

WASHINGTON (AP) -America's c!v!Uan jobless
rate held steady at 9.5 percent last month, the
, government reported today, leaving nearly 10.7
m!lllon people out of work on the eve of the Labor Day
weekend.
About ;m,OOI people fwrxl jobs In August. But the

overall c!villan unemployment rate remained
unchanged because lOO,IXXl other Americans resumed
their search for work, but failed.
' N~. the total number of people with jobs
reached 101.6 mtlllon, an all·time high. Since last
December, when joblessness hit a post-Depression
peak of 10.8 percent and more than l2 million

Americans were out of work, some 2.5 m!lllon have
fotmdjobs.
The jobless rate came as no shock to Reagan
administration ortlc!a!s and private analysts, who said
before today's Labor Department report that the
dramatic 0.5 percentage point plunge In civilian
joblessness from June to July was a one-time
phenomelton.
Another unemployment rate, which Includes more
than L6 million anned services personnel slationed In
the Uniled States, rose mlnlmally !rom 9.4percent to
9.5 pes cent In August.
·
Department analyst Deborah Klein termed that rise
"slatlstlcally Insignificant."

.

Aseparate sutvey of business payrolls showed a net
drop of 410,1ro In employnient last month, due largely
to the strike by three unions against the American
Telephone &amp; Tfi'legraph Co., which Idled more than
675,Jro workers.
.
Altogether, Inial unemployment stood at 10,699,1Xll,
up from 10,590,Jro In July. ·
Unemployment among adult men, the traditional
family bread-winners, remained at 8.8 percent In
August. Amoitg adult women, the rate rose slightly,
from 7.9percent to8percent.
Within the other categories, the rates were:
-Teen-agers, 23.0 percent, up from 22.8.
-Whites, 8.2 percent, unchanged.

Syracuse Council
seeks cruiser bid
By~TmCROW

Syracuse CouncU Thursday night
agreed to advertise for a new pollee
cruiser and 250 tons o1. asphalt for
paving.
· Bids for a cruiser must be
received by the village by 7: Jl p.m.
oo Oct. 6. Bids for 250 ton of asphalt,
more or less, must be received by
noon on Sept. JJ.
. Councn discussed the paving of
College Road from Third Street to
Where the fonner U.B.Church once
stood, Fourth Street, a portion of the
flOOd road and the street leading to
Rustle Hills. The number of streets
could cban8e depending 00 the cost
of the project.
Inolherbuslness,councUgaveth!!
!Ire department approval to advertise fiJI' bldl fir a new fire truck as
8001181 lheyreclvetbelrcommunlty
block grant nmey In the amount of
$28,(Ql.
Maya- Eller Plckefts reported he
had received a letter from the State

Department of Hlghways saying
that the vtllage Is responsible for
Improving the berm above D J's In
upper Syracuse.
Al:cordlna to Pickens, the road Is
1Jrea1c1Da up Where a culYI!I't goes
under the hlgllway causing the road
topveway.
OwnM'fl wiD contact the ooor
reprdlnJthe sltuatloo.
It wu also noted that t1ve
IICCidentaha'lll!occurredlnthe18111e
ipCJt In upper !\vraCue IBr the
LIJrilent J*Upet t.v IIIDce the State

Heart attack kills
Senator Jackson

Hlghway widened the highway In
June.
Last night cwncU hired Or1s
Hubbard to paint a white llhe on the
rlgbt side of the highway where the
accidents have OC!:u!Ted. WUI!e
Guinther suggesled that reflectors
also be placed at the site.
It was suggesled that possibly
Syracuse and Racine could share
the cost In strlplng the skies of the
highway.
Hubbard was also employed to
oversee the general relief workers
scheduled to work In the village.
John Bentley presented the clerktreasurer with jii\Jteedl tntellng
$376 tram the recent tennis tournament, sponsored by Clark's Je.
we!ry. It was placed In the park
fund.
George Holman, pool manager,
suggested that $2,1Ul of the pool
funds be placed In pool repair.
CwncU agreed to malcethe lranller
at the next meeting. Holman staled
that the pool will Close the day after
Labor Day.
Jack Williams 8lll10UJ1CEd that the
pool committee wW meet with
Holman and the llfi!IIIIBI'dlln two
weeks.
In W8l 8IIIIOUIICed that three
memben of COWicil had met with
BIU Wickline, coun1y auditor con·
Ol!l'11llli the I* ml ordinance on
t:rallen.
'Ibe ordinance wW be l'l!fem!d to .
Rick CIOIV ud e l'lllllllr macte:
(Continued on page 12)

EVERE'IT, Wash. (AP) -Sen.
Hemy M. Jackson. the powerful
"~cold

IDtUUSIM"'NDIIIII-II&amp;....,,_.,_.,,DWIIIL,.._.,
lierehlhJIP•wx 1 J«,tlediDitllliamea&amp;EvtnU.W"'*'gtm,
- - iiJIIJQ' Ill ..... I II
1/e Jaft Itt • , . , . . . . Willi of
_...,.U.S. c-z •• ....-- lbe • 1!111....., of a
NIIWDII'Ical Iiili 1 Oinllllll bJ . _ bJ tile Soviet UlliaD.
1

(AP I

s

pbaeo).

.

.,
I

-Blacks, 20.0 percent, up !rom 19.5.
-Hispanics, 12.9 percent, up from 12.3.
Private economists, meanwhile, said they expect
unemployment will decline only gradually In the 11ext ·
few months.
"It's probably going to stay about the same," said
David Ernst of Evans Economics Inc., a forecasting
!irm In Washington.
Nar!man Behravesh of Wharton Econometrtcs In
Philadelphia said "the general trend (In the
unemployment rate) Is downward, but slowly
downward. You've got a combination of growth In the
labor force and slower growth In the economy."

warrior" Democrat who

combined hardllne anti-Soviet
stands with liberal views on social
Issues, ts dead after sut!erlng a
massive heart attack at hJs home.
Hewas71.
Jackson, who failed In two bids at
the presidency but never lost an
election In his home state of
Washington, died Thursday night,
just hours after holding a news
conference to bUster the Soviet
Union for shooting down a Korean
jetliner the day before.
The 45-year congressional veteran died within an hour after being
trough! to Providence Hospital, just
12 blocks from his Everett home.
Jac~n. whoeedeath stunned those
who knew him for his hard-driving
scheduleandenergetlcl!festyle,had
never been In the hospital before,
except to meet with Its board of
direclm's and sip tea with Its
Catholic nuns.
"I always thought he was lndestructable. ... He took exceptional
. care of himself," said fanner Sen.
Warren G. Magnuaon, O-Wash, who
oerved 28 yean In CoiJiress with
Jackson. "I lalt a great persooa1
friend. We were very cloae."'
Denny Miller, Jackson's adm!nJs.
trative assistant, read from a
prepared statement at a hospltal
news caateence. He said Jackson
had been at June with hls wife,
Helen, and collapsed In bed aboot

7:Jlp.m.
"SI!n. Jackson had watched the
evening news on television with
Mrs. Jacksor and, complaining of
not feeling too well, went to bed
early," Miller said.
Soon after her retired, Miller and
a friend of the Jacksons', Or.
Haakon Ragde, came to the house
and found Jackson stricken In bed.
Dr. Kirk Prindle, a cardiologist,
said doctors helleve a massive heart
attack kllled the senator. "Despite
45 minutes of Intensive care, he did
not respond at all," he said.
Jackson, Washington's senior
senator, had been suf!er!ng from a
chest cold. Miller said, but had been
well enrugh to keep appointments
and hold the news conference 1n
Seattle.
"The senator returned from the
Peq&gt;le' s Republic of China last
Sunday," Miller said. "He spent
three days at his Everett home
treating the illneSs ...
At the news conference, Jackson
called the Soviet downing of the
KoteanAirLlnesBoelng747 an "act
of barbarism.''

"Their conduct was absolutely
barbaric," he said, but added that a

response would not be
suitable.
Jackson did not smoke, drank
little and exercise&lt;) reUglously. The
son of Notweglan Immigrants, he
delivered newspapers while tn
school, earning him the niclmame
··~.··

mUltary

�· -- . ·

q

••

·~

Commentary
The Rev. JesseJackson'sevident
intention to seek the Democratic
presidential nomination inevitably
inspires some fascinating specula·
lions. Whatever else he may
accomplish, he has already made
the 1984 battle for the White House
far more Interesting.
His bid comes a t a time when
blacks are acutely conscious of their
growing power in the voting booth.
The recent victory of Harold
Wasington in Chicago's mayoral
election, and the nomination of W.
Wllson Goode by the Democrats In
their primary formayorof Philadelphia, have demonstrated afresh

Ill Co ur1 Slrf'f' l
Poml'roy , Ohio
IIE\'OTED TO T HE IST EHEST OF THE 11EIGS-'l.-\ SOS AREA

l'l~
t!m~ ,....,_.._...,_,~=·t==l

· ~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

BOB HOEFLICH

\ .... i .. ta nt PuhthhPr ('untrolle r

Genera ll\tan a~f'r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
N ew!ll. Edllor

\ :\IE:\mER of The A.-..ociat.NI P~ . Inland Daily Pres,.&lt;.; ~iation and ttx'
\ mt•ri can :"f'W&lt;oipapcr Publb;hers 1\.~iaJ:ion.
·
LE1'TERS OF OPI:\lOS ano Wf'k'Oflll:'d . 1ltey should be~ than 300 words klnR.
•\JI lettt-r.- are s uhjec.t to rdltin,~t and mu.o.t be 11lgned 'A11h namt&gt;, ~and ~tephone
numher. ~o unsilnled letu•rs 'Aill he puhlished. Leucrs should he in good lalik', Hddre;"i"K ioosOO:., not p tTSOna.lilb .

tbat solid black su~rt for black
candidates can, in many areas,
produce Impressive results. Not
unreasonably, may blacl!s are
curtous to see just how far theY can
push their luck.
The first result of a Jackson
campaign In next year's presidential primaries will be a marked
Increase In the number of blacks
who register to vote. That, In fact, Is
one of Jacksoo's major strategic
aims: to increase black voter
registration, and thus black lnflu.
ence, not only in next year's
elections but fgr_ tbe.- .~ese able
future .

Such an Increase will be an
unalloyed boon to the J:lernocratlc
party and a COITeSpondlng b!CM' to
the RepubUcans, since something
over 90 percent of tllese new voters
can probably be oounted on to vote
Democrat.
The GOP's Ukellest strategic
respons.i ts a vigorous bid for a
larger sbare of the Hispanic vote,
which now ts predominantly Democratic and growing fast. The
Republicans belleve, with some
reason, tbat they can atrract a
substantial number of Hispanic
voters especially Cuban·
Americans (who are P06$10nately

Things aren't at all
what they may seem
Sometimes things aren't at all what they seem, no matter how
uncritically they are accepted or how often they are repeated.
There Is nothing new in that observation, as can he attested to by almost
any mJddle-aged person who was taught in a blief brush with high school
economJcs that stocks fluctuate but bonds do not.
,. Any llngerlngfalth In thatoverlysirnpllstlc vtewofthefina.Jlcial markets
was, of eQU~, dispelled ln'thi! past d ecade, perhaps With a ftnililclal sluick.
'Fed up with the almost constant complaints that elecbic rates in Its New
.. York City market had risen and were rtsing at a faster cUp than plices in
general, Consolidated Edison this year sent a little reminder to users.
Not so, it said. While It CQilceded that elecbic bills bad lisen 391 percent
: since 1953 it reminded customers that the maximum amount deducted
:- from the;; paychecks for Social Seculity had exploded by 4,329 percent.
:.. When you can find percentages such
that a. lllere :m perce11t ~ms
small: Con Ed. found many qlg·ones; like the New York State budget, up
2.858 percent; the New York City budget, up (023, and heating oU, up 7'ifl
percent.
. At WIUiam M. Mercer Inc., the big employee benefits consulting fum ,
they are seeking to put tntoperspectlveapercentagetbat Is as Important to
them as tbat 391 percent figure ~ for Con Ed.
.
Why, they ask, are there reports tbat employee benefits make up 00
. :: percent ;o 50 percent of payrolls? They claim the true figure Isn't anything
like that.
·: . "The selective use of statistics as a smokescreen to hide the real.truth
:: has become an art form ," says the company's Barnet Belin.
·.
Contrary to the conventional wisdom, Belin states, employee benefits as
: · a percentage of wages and salalies average 9 percent to 12 percent,
: . "exclusive of legally· required payments and taxable benefits."
,
He blames politics, especially as practiced In a p~lectlon year, for the
: : variation. referling to "the current misuse of statistics to validate a
:. Political point-of·view."

&gt;

:~ Not enougi1 incent~v~
ihe-

.
President Reagan says he isn't abandoning his peace plan lor
Mtddie
: · East, but even a change In .I,sraelt leadership probably won't salvage the
· .:year-old proposal for Palestinian seH·rule.
;·,. '· ·
·
Not only is the slnunertng war in Lebanon a deadly obstacle, but there
;;. simply Isn't enough Incentive for the parties- Arabs or Israelis- to give
;~ Reagan's most ambitious foreign policy initiative a chance to work.
/. · Israel, which rejected the proposal Immediately after It was announced
: Jast Sept. 1, Is reluctant to take the rtsk that the Palestinian entity proposed
:·'by Reagan will evolve Into a hostile, unstable state controlled by the
· Palestine Liberation Organization.
; : The fighting in Lebanon heightens the insecwity In the region, making
. Iisk·taking a more dangerous proposition for Jerusalem.
:;: : The Impending departure of Menachern Begin as Israel's prime
·: tflinister is unlikely to ease anxieties over the upsurge in radicalism, and
. ··the administration Is not lncllned to pressure Its jittery a lly at this violent
· 1irne.
.
:· The fighting in Lebanon, and the Syrians' beachhead there, also are
. bound to make Jordan more jumpy.
.: : King Hussein's conservattve regime, which wonies about the ambitions
·: Oi Syria, had already all but closed the door on the Reagan Initiative before
:· tensions rose in Lebanon.
. : The king yielded his claim to represent the Palesllnlans at the 1974 Arab
· surrunlt meeting and Is unwllllng to assume the burden of negotiating for
them without a green Ught from the PLO .
And Yasser Arafat's organization, which will settle for nothing less than
a state, refuses to go along with an Amelican president who has assured
the Israelis he Isn't calllng for one.
·
Begin's leave-taking does not alter Israel's determination to protect Its
flanks, nor does It mean the Arabs can expect a pllant negotiating partner
in Jerusalem - especially with Lebanon.reellng.
Reagan tried not to sound discouraged in reafflnning his Mideast plan In
his weekly radio address last Saturday. He said he remains committed to
fin ding "a compassionate, fair and practical resolution to the Palestinian
problem."
The Begin government wanted to deal with the problem through the 1978
Camp David agreement, which provides for five years of Palestinian
a utonomy under Israeli control to he followed bY negotiations on a
permanent settlement.
That approach still has widespread support, in Israel, even though there .
are factions who would take a chance on a Palestinlanstateandotherswho
would simply a nnex the West Bank and close the door on the Palestlnlans.

·Today in history
Today is Fliday, Sept. 2, the 2&lt;15th day of 1!&amp;. There are Ul days left In
the year.
Today's highlight in history:
. On Sept. 2,1864, Union forces under Gen. William Shennan occupied the
· city of Atlanta duling the Civil War.
On this date:
In 31 B.C., Mark Antony and Cleopatra were defeated by Octavius
Caesar in the battle of Actlum .
In 1666, the Great .Fire of London started, virtually destroying the city In
fi ve days.
In 1901. in a speech at the Minnesota state fair, VIce President Theodore
Roosevelt uftered his famous Une aboul American foreign pollcy: "Speak
softly and carry a big stick."
In 1979, a hunicane bauered the Bahamas, leaving 640 people dead.
Ten years ago: Inmates seized control of three cellblocks at the state.
plison in Michigan City, Ind., and took three officers hootage.
Five years ago: A member of the President's Council of EconomJc
.,. Advisers Indicated the administration might opt for wage-price guidelines
In the fight against Inflation.
One year ago: In response to the growing populality of hang.gllding and
ultralight powered aircraft, the federal aviation administration Issued the
first federal guldellnes tor their operation.
Today's birthdays: Author Allen Drury Is 65. Dancer and choreographer
Marge Champion is 60. Tennis star Jimmy Connors Is 31.
Thought for today: "Martyrdom Is the only way In whlch man can .
become famous without ability." - George Bernard Shaw, Irlsh·born
playwright (JJl$.1950).

anti-Communist) and Mexican·
Americans. President Reagan's
recent speeches to Hispanic audlen.
ces make It plain tbathelsawareof
this posslbiUty - and also ot the
dangers posed by higher black
participation.
But how ts Jesse Jackson's
presencelntheDemocratlcprJmar.
tes going to affectthosecontests? He .
will unctoobtedly win · some delegates In areas of dominant black
influence, but In most places he will
probably come in second, or third, or
last, winning few votes beyond his
Intensely loyal black base. The key
point however Is tbat almost every
vote Jackson gets will he one that
othelwlse would go to one ot the
more Uberal whlte candidates, such
as Mondale or Cranston. The net
effect of Jackson's candidacy,
therefore, will be to help the most
conservative Democrat: John
Glenn.
Picture · now the Democraitc
convention. Mondale anives, per.
haps still sllghtly ahead of Glenn In
total delegates but Indirectly dam·
aged by the Jackson candidacy.
Jackson has a fairly small but loyal
and vocal bloc of delegates and ts
clearly ready to wheel and deal.
. Is l! poostbte, Ill such a sltuaUon,
tliat one' or another Of the Ieadtni
contenders might offer Jackson the
vice presidential slot on his ticket? It
would he a terrtbly dangerous thing
to do- not only because It has lleVI!I'
been tiied and we therefore cannot
be certain how American ·voters
WOUld react to the pi'ospect
a
black vice ·president, but bel:ause .
many voters, black and whiteaUke,
have resevatlons about Jackson as
a persooaUty.

....

as

..

fuel Phils ·victory;
Atlanta, Dodgers, Reds lose

The Jackson factor ______Wi_illur_·m_A_~_Rus_he_r

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD

The

Ohio

at

c.

~

...

Fronts for the CIA. ___:_____Ja_ck_And_e_rs_on
WASHINGTON- A Utile noticed
Item In the financial pages recently
reported the purchase of Tom
Peppas's oll company , Esso Pap.
pas, bY the Greek govenunent.
There's a fascinating story behind
the $15 million deal.
Pappas was a major fund· raiser
and contrtbutor to the 1968 cam.
palgn ol Richard Nixon and his
running mate, SpiroT. Agnew, who
was .to become the highest official
elected official of Greek·Arnerican
background. The Esso works In
Greece was just one of . the
multlrniUionalre's holdings, which
also Included shipping and soft drink
companies.
The Peppas enterprises were
alleged to be fronts for CIA
operations In Greece duling the
period when the mJlltary junta was
in power. More selious were
charges that CIA funds found their
way through Pappas back to the
United States Into the Nixon-Agnew
campaign ftind. If Nixon got his
hands on U. S. Treasury money
Indirectly through the CIA, It Is a
scandal of first magnitude.
An Investigation Into the Nixon·

Pappas CIA connection was begun
bY the Senate InteUigence Commit·
tee In 1975. But It was dropped at the
personal request of then Secretary
ot State Heruy Kissinger.
The money traU led from the CIA
to Its Greek counterpart, the KYP.
then to Pappas and back tiJ me
United States and Into the Nixon·
Agnew campaign. Pappas veh&amp;
mently denied the charges, which
had cOme frorri Elias Demetraropouloo, a respected Greek journalist
who had fled his homeland after the
junta took over In 1967.
A few weeks before the 1968
election, Demetracopouloo took his
charges to Lawrence O'Biien, then .
chairman of the Democratic Na·
tiona! Committee. O'Brten Issued a
pressreleasedemandlngthatNixon
and Agnew explain their relation·
ship to Pappas, but It drew Uttle
attention in the final days of tile
campaign.
It Is conceivable tbat H the truthy
about Nixon's secret funding by the
CIA had come out, he might have
loot the exltemely close election to
Hubert Humphrey. As things turned
out, though, the Greek exile leader's

charges have have played an
0\lrglary was authorized. Nixon
• unwitting part In Nixon's ultimate
wanted to ·know what ammunition
downfall. Here's how:
Demelracopoulos had supplied to
In 1971, Demetracopoulos laid his
the Democrats.
explootve charges before a HOI.ISe
The "smoking guo" 1n the Greek
Foreign Affairs Cormnitiee, and
connection was eventually provided
was asked to submit details In a by the late Henry Tasca, In 1§16
memoranctwn. Before he COUld do
testbnony to the House JntellilgBice
so, Nixon's longtime advisor, Mur·
Committee. Tasca previously had
ray Chotiner, told Demetraccpoubeen U. S. ambassador to Greece,
loo: "Lay off Pappas. It's not smart
and his sworn testimony "'as kept
politics. You know Tom Pappas Is a
secret at his Insistence. He COil·
triend of the president's."
firmed the tunriellng of money !rom
Then Attorney General John
the Greek junta top the Nixoo
Mitchell got Into the act. At a party,
campaign.
he confronted aRepubtlcantriendof
The eminent Investigative reporthe Greek joumaitst, Louise Gore,
ter Seymour Hersh, in his book
then ambassador .to UNESCO. She. about Henry Kissinger, has written
wrote""Dem,etracopouios: ("Mit·
tbat Tasca's testimony "raises the
chell) Is furious at you -and your
question whether the CIA. .. was
testimony against Pappas. He kept
aware tbat sopme of Its funds were
threatening to bave you deported."
being returned to the United Statres
Demetracopouloo submJt!Ed his ·for use In a presidential election."
memo to the HOU9e subcommittee
As for the Senate Investigation of
anyway - dtsclooing that he had
1975, Hersh declaeres: "Sources
documentary evidence to support
close to the committee jhave said
his charges. The White House was
tbat Its Investigation was abrubtly
obviously Worried about.Demetra·
cimceled at Kissinger's direct
copoulos' evidence- and., accordrequest.'~
Ing to competent sources, that may
Footnote:· Nixon, Kissinger and
have been one reason the Watergate
Pappas were either unavailable or
refused to comment.

Who runs the U.S.
AgroupofellteEasternestabllsh·
rnmt government watchers was
having lunch the other day, discuss·
lng one of our favorite subjects:
"Who Is really In charge of U.S.
foreign policy?".
It was of particular concern to all
of us, because the odds of President
Reagan rurintng again look better
all the time.
. We decided to do It by process of
ellnnlnatton.
"We know It Isn't anyone In the
State Department," Bramhall saki.
"State's been out of It since
Reagan rroved Into the White
House."
Haig was fired because he trted to
Interfere In foreign affairs, and
George Shultz usually gets his
lnfonnatton as to what the U.S. has
done !rom the Washington Post."
"WhatabpltSecretaryotDetense
Capar Weinberger? He's an old Pal
ot the !ftSident and has a tremend·
OilS Input In foreign policy."
"We can't discount him," Healy
saki. "But! don't thlnkhe'sMr. Big.
I belleve he is more coocemed with
getttngasmuchmJlltaryequipment
as possible for the Defense Depart·
rnml But he cloesn 't really care
where we use It."
un doesn't have to be a man,"
Zetgfrjed said. " It COUld be a

woman.''

"You mmn Nancy Reagan?"
"Not nep:essari1y, though she
certainly bas the .e ar of the
president
.
I was thinking of United Nations
Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick.
The president Is very taken with all
her kjeas. Wouldn't It be w1k1 If a
woman was In charge of lorefln
policy?"
"Kirkpatrick COUld be the power
behind the throne,'' Christmas said.

••

"Yet I believe It's someone rtght In
the White House. "
"What about VIce-President
George Bush?".
"Let's be selious, guys. When has
a vice president ever had anything
to say about foreign policy?"
Cannon said.
I ·
"There's Jim Baker, Mike
Deaver
Ed Meese...
They're too busy worrying about
thepresldentgettingreelectedtoget
Involved In foreign affairs. The only
time theY mix In Is If theY think a
policy is going to affect votes In the
U.S."
''Well, that leaves the president's
National Securtty Adviser Wuuam
Clark. He'sahardllneron the Soviet
Unioo. "
"He's too obvious," Trenchant
said. "Besides, I just bave a gut

aoo

'

•••

· ~

t

..'
•

Art Buchwald
Jeellng he doesn't have the smarts to
concep~ foreign policy. His
strength Is cariy oot orders."
tjBut whose orders?'' I asked.
Everyone bied to think hard.
''BID Casey of the CIA?" Vagrant
suggested. We ignored him.
"Is there someone In the kitchen
cabinet that could be running
things?"
"The kitchen cabinet doesn'textst
anymore. They aU went back to
Cal!tomla after the election. Look,
the foreign policy of the U.S., as It
stands now, Is to blame the Soviets
for everything, but stiU seD them
wheat. Show American power
aroUnd the world, frut don't get
Arnelican soldiers Involved. Give a
blOOdy nose to 'Kaddafl, reward all
our friends with military equipment
by claiming theY are not violating

•
~

•

;.

•

human lights, stall the anns talks
until we get the Persbaing missiles
placed in Europe, make Castro the
biggest threat to worldwide peace,
and consult with our alllesonly (Ita!)
after (unital) we've decided to do
something that they might object to.
Now who Is behind all that?"
" This is just a crazy Idea,"
Trenchant said. "But could Reagan
himself be Mr. Big?"
"Yoo mean the jpresldent ol the
Untied States?:' I asked,
Oaggergasted.
"Why not? He's got the author·
lty." Bramhall said, " Reagan
doesn't know anything about foreign
affaln.''
The throoght was so mind·
boggllng none of us could finish our
salads.

By BEN WALKER
at·bats. And with other Phillles'
AP Sports Writer
veterans having trouble this year,
On a team knoll-:~ fbr Its veterans, the big out1lelder wants to make his
a pair of rookl~ tewned up to boost presence felt during .the stretch
the Philadelp•d'l Phlllles Into a drive.
share of first place In the National
The Philadelphia rally pinned the
League East.
. loos on Atlee Hammaker, 10-8, who
AI Sanchez, promoted from loot for the fourth straight time since
Triple-A just hours earUer, big· coming off the disabled Ust.
gered a three-run fifth Inning with a
Alter the Phlllles went ahead,
plnch·slngle . to give Tony Ghelfl, WIUie Hernandez pitched three
called up from Double-A the same scoreless Innings and AI Holland
day, the victory as the Philadelphia pitched the ninth for his 17th save.
downed the San Francisco Giants
4-2 Thursday night.
San Francisco Manager Frank
With the PhiUies trailing 2·1, Robinson was not In a taiklng mood
Sanchez was sent up to pinch hit for after the game. He only said that his
Ghelft to start the hotlom of thefl1th. team failed to take advantage of Its·
Sanchez promptly singled, as did opportunities.
Juan Samuel. Gary Matthews then
Expos 8, Dodgers 3
doubled Into the left•fleld comer to
Montreal jumped on Rick Honey·
.drive In both runners and later cutt early and dealt the left·hander
his first NL defeat.
scoredonTonyPerez'ssacrlflcefly,
making It 4-2.
GaryCarter'sRBislnglegavethe
In other NL games, Montreal Expos a 1.0 lead in the first inning
bipped Los Angeles 8-3, St. Louis and Montreal scored three more
bounced Atlanta 8-3 and Chicago runs In the third.
beat Clnclnnati3-1.
Manny Trillo singled home one of
Matthews' double accounted for the runs, AI Ollver doubled home
his first game-winning RBI of the another and Carter's groundout
season. Last year, he was thirdln the pfO\luced another.
NLwtth17.
Honeycutt had won his first two
Matthews has raised his average games for the Dodgers sinc;e being
to .273 with 19 hits In his last 55 acquired from Texas Aug.19.

Los Angeles pulled within 4·2 in
the sixth against Charlie Lea, 13-8,
before reliever Bob James pitched
out of a bases-loaded, none-out jam
to preserve the lead.
Dusty Baker'.s 14th homermadelt
4·3 In the top of the eighth, but the
Expos scored four runs In the
bottom of the inning, three of then\
Baker dropped Calier' s two-out fly
ball with the bases loaded for a
two-base error.
Cardinals 8, Braves 3
Darrell Porter belted three doubles and one of them drove in a run
duling St. Louts' six·run fourth
Inning.
The visiting Cardinals jol((&gt;d
Pascual Perez, 1}6, a nd relievers
'
Rick Camp and Pete Falcone for 14
hits aS Atlanta lost for the fourth
straight time .
Seven of those hits came duling
the blginntng, which included David
Green's two-run single, an RBI
double by Dane Iorg and a
run·scoling single by WIUie McGee.
Doubles by Porter a nd pinch
hitter Bill Lyons accounted for
another run in the fifth .
Bob Forsch, 8·11, the third St.
Louts pitcher, got the victory.
Astros 3, Pirates 0
Nolan Ryan went seven shutout
IN FOR A lANDING-CblcagoCubsoulflelder BW the outfield, which WD8 cut by ll!lck Esaslcy Is catcher. .
Innings, giytng· up three hits while
'·
·· strlking outlO.
·
.
. BuclmersUdesheadflrslbllo~platilsalelydilrmg: :. · J)ann . Bllar&lt;lello: ·ChiCago Woll, Its first game at .
· , the. sevmlh Inning of Thunday's Nattoital Leape IU~eob'OiltStadlmnthlssea&amp;on,:J.l.
.
· The gamewas stlllsc(lreless~en
· gariie aga111st CtDctnnatl. Walling ~or the throw from
Ryan, 1.3-6, left In the bottom of the
. .
seventh for pinch hitler Kevin Bass,
ho belted
bases I ded bi I
FARGO, N.D. (AP) - It took record to 14 2
ark
Hertel
w tw
Pe
Second baseman M
nearly a year of waiting, but Edina,
with
tsaott K t· Toakul
0 ou
Minn., has finally gained revenge lipped three hit• In four bips to the
en e ve.
H
Houston had loaded the bases as
for a 4-1 defeat at the hands ?f plate for .the winners. Jay am· relieverCecWoGuante,2-2, gaveup
-Boyet:(own,. Pa. ; . 1!1 last :years .·. mond punched a tw&lt;rrun homer in ,. ·aslpgletoJoseCruzahdwalkedRay
American I;egiqn V{orld Series.
the sixth inning. .
·
•• : Knight. Rod Scurry· caine orl and:•
'
E(ijna
·knocked
off
the
defending
·
Don
Hutchinson
rapped
a
pair
of
walked Denny Walling. Tekulvegot
'
NEW YORK (AP) - Jimmy TeUscher ellminattng Sammy Gl·
national champions .4-0 Thursday singles for Natick.
two forceouts at the plate before
Barbara Potter, beaten by Lisa
ntght 1n the 1!&amp; Legion Sertes at
In the tournament opener, short· Bas , bi
Connors led the seeded players' ammalva 6-2,6-3, 5-7,4-6, 6-2.
Bonder 7·5, 6-7, 7-6, and No. 13
1
parade Into the third round of the
Jack WUllams Stadium here.
stop Greg Jefflies and Scott
~ankp ~Wino pitched the final
'
Claudia Kohde of West Germany,
United States Open and continues to
John Uoyd of Great Britlan, who bowed to Bonnie Gadusek 5·7,
The Central Plains regional Delucchi hit back-to-back home two Innings for his 14th save.
Dourtsh at the National Tennis
husband of Chrts Evert Uoyd, 6-1,6-2.
champs
night's 8:05
earned
p.m. agame
berthwith
1n Chico, Mateo
runslnthefourthinningtosparkSan
to an 8·2 victory over New
Center, a setting many players lind
posted the tournament's biggest
Connors, the defending cham·
Calif.
Orleans.
'nightmarish .
upset so far, stunning No. 10 Jose pion, Is seeking a fifth U.S. Open
· Other pairingS Friday were New .--------------1
Planes from nearby LaGuardia Higueras of Spain 6-3, 64, 7·5.
crown. NQ man in the last. half
Orleans
vs. Natick, Mass., at 10:05
Alrport soar nolslly overhead. The
'Among the women, top-ranked century ' hlls won the title m&lt;;&gt;re
a.m.,
followed
by Boyetrtown and
fans are boisterous, frequently
Martina Navrattlova started frequently and the ones who did It
Hamlet,
N.C
.SanMateo,CaUf.,was
amblvllous to the pleas for sllence another quest for herfirst-ever Open before him had more serene
WARNING: These
expected to meet Worthington,
from the chalr umpire. The wind Is crown with a 6-1, 6-0 destruction of surroundings In which to play.
531 JACKSON PIKE · RT.35 WEST
Shoes May Be Habit
Ohio, at 5:05 p.m. in the other
capricious.
Phone 446 ·4524
Argentine Emllse Rapont Longo.
"Here you must put up wtth the
Forming.
winners' 'Jracket contest.
BARGAIN MAnNEES SAT &amp; SUN
But Connors ignored the dlstrac·
Third-seeded Andrea Jaeger conditions," he said. "I just hapPen
ALt SEATS $2.00
Edina "rupted for three runs In the
lions Thursday and dispatched
downed Elise Burgin 6-2, 6-3; No. 6 to love the atmosphere and I always
ADMISSION EVEffY TUESOAY $2.00
eighth Inning to break open a close
Sweden's Thomas HogstedtG-1, 6-2,
Wendy Turnbull of Australia dehave.
1-0
game. Doubles by Dan Carroll
· 6-3, advancing along with No. 6 feated Sharon Walsh 6-3, 6-3: No. 7
"Here you have the planes flying
2
and Rob WasSenaar and Mike
GuWermo Vllas of Argentina, No.11 SyMa Hanlka of West Germany over and 20,fXXJ people crowded In
FRIDAY lllru THURSDAY I
Halloran's
second
biple of the game
Gene , Mayer and No. 14 Eliot
heat Peruvian Laura Arraya 6-1,
antmaUsttc style," said Connors.
accounted for the runs.
Teltscher.
6-3; No. 9 Andrea Temesvart of
How does he view the competition
Vilas outlasted Tom Cain 6-7, 6-3,
Hungary downed Virginia Wade Of this time?
Wassenaar, a rangy rlghtbander,
6-3, 2-6, 6-2. Mayer and TeUscher
Britain 6-2, &amp;.3; and No. 12 Kathy
"A lot of guys are playing good
held Boyertown to one single
also survived five-set tests, M~yer
Rinaldi defeated VIckie Nelson 4-6,
tennis," Connors noted. "But there
through the first seven Innings and
defeating Cristo Steyn of SOuth
64,6-3.
are not a lot of guys who can wln this
finished with a four·hitter In upping
Africa J.G, 6-1, 2·6, 64, 6-2 and
Seeded women losers were No. 11 tournament."
his season record to 12-0.
Earlier ThUrsday night, Todd
Raine scored on a passed ball in the
lOth Inning as Chico slipped by
Hamlet2·1.
Raine scored from third when a
Pitcher Lary Sorensen says
OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) "Thennostimpresstvethingabouf pitch from Hamlet starter Bud
There's no hedging now on the part Franco reminds him of Roblil
Julio is his makeup;" the coach
Loving appeared to glance off the
of Cleveland Indians' shortstopJullo Yount, with whom Sorensen played
added. "Itlsllkehehasbeenupfor20
bat of Brtan Keyser. It was ruled a
Franco - he comes right out and while with the Milwaukee Brewers.
years.Nothingfazeshim.Abadday
passed baD, however, and the run
"They are a lOt alike, but I think
says he's going to be Rookie'of the
doesn't get him down. He ts
allowed.
.
Jullo Is stronger tban Robin was at
Year In the American League.
confident. When he makes up his
In another first round game,
MIDDLEPORT
21," Sorensen said. "Both have
mind, he can do anything."
David Mumaw hurled a five-hitter
For much of the season, the great range and fine anns. Both can
Sorensen put It another way,
to lead Worthington to a 4-1 victory
argument has been whether the turn the double play. Both can really
terming Franco cocky, and adding,
over Natick.
post·season honor wlll go to Franco htt."
''The only thing tbat might prevent
Mumaw went the distance for
or to Ron Kittle, the powerful
him from doing well would he If he
Worthington, striking out three and
Chicago White Sox slugger.
" Julio has to be the ROokie of the
Batting .276 with eight homers, 73
runs batted in and 28 steals going Year," hesatd. "He helps a team In
,----------'-----------------.
Into the series tbat opens tonight more ways than Kittle. When Kittle
slumpsatbat.llelsn'tworthmuch.
with the Oakland A's, Franco · But
Julio can make a super play at
exudes confidence.
short If he's not hitting. He'll also
steal a base and slap .a hit to the
"Hey, I gotKtttlenow,''hesaid. ''I
opposite field. I'd love to have his
Sponsorer;l By:
got more hits, more stolen bases,
future."
John Goryl, a coach with the
more RBI, more runs scored . The
only thing he has Is homeruns.More
Indians, figures It will he an Injustice
people know him because he plays
H Franco ISn't named the league's
top rookie.
for a winner, but I got the better

legion teain avenges' loss' .. ·.

Connors ignors distractions
posts victory .o¥er ·HogSted-t .·

Frld~y

fjra~~~~~~U,~

~PTEMBER thr~

Franco confident about MVP honor

rldloesn;;;,t;k;ee~p;his;h;ea~d;o;n;s;tr;a;ig;h;t.;";;walkln;;~g;o;ne;.;H;e;;ra;lsed;;;his;;;se;aso~n~

1------------.....J.------------

CHICKEN BARBECUE

stats.''
But Franco said he's not paying
that much attention to the statistics
of his !ivai, whots batting .252 with27
home runs and 71 RBI going Into
- Thursday night's game.
"I don't watch what he's doing,"
he said. "He better watch me
because
I am going to be the Rookie
of
the Year."
Franco's teamma•es think a lot of
his prospects to win the award.
"He Is an outstanding young
player who has the posstblltty of
becoming a tremendous player,"
said slugger Andre Thornton. It Is a
matter of consistency, putting
together five-six good years. As he
matures, I don't think he will let
OOWil thosewhohavepredtctedgood
things for him."

"Home runs are great, "

s8id

gives
everything.
He But
produces
Goryl.you
"You
need them.
Julio
runs, steals bases and plays a great
shortstop.
may be
the best
all·around Heyoung
player
In
baseball,"

THE POMEROY VOLUNTEER FIRE .
DEPARTMENT BEGINNING AT
11:00 A.M. SUNDAY, SEPT. 4

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

r-;:::=========:::;;1

SEED AND MILLIN. G
HEADQUARTERS
I

·

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Hamburgers

NEW SPRING HOURS

Mon.-Fri. 9:00 to 5:00
Saturday 9:00 to 1:00 ·
~THE

Nowhere else

.

GRAVELY
SVBTEIVI

It these BuriJir Che fs

Mont-"'

South Charleston
North Chlrlnton

OLD &amp; NEW SPORTS

813 WASHINGTON ST.

304-273-5855

OPEN SUN. 12·5

RAVENSWOOD

Ra-.wood

III,GUllill...._•• ~

Summersville
Riplly ,

@naUon @mpany

SEPTEMBER 1 THRU SEPTEMBER 4
Save on Convene, Bows, Rods, R~ls, Weights,
Be1w:hes, Tents, Tennis Rackets, Guns and Scopes.
THESE 2 WEEKS WE WILL "DICKER" ON ANY NEW
OR USED GUN IN THE STORE.
' •

LIMIT

10:30 a.m. till Close

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
Phone 992-2975

4TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

IANY RED

LABOR DAY
SPECIAL
25¢10

\.

TAG ITEMS

OPEN 'TIL 8
TONIGHT!

Pomeroy
Pt. "'-ant

MILliNG DIVISION

Seeds . Bird seeds -·Oyster Shells and Grit - Fertilizers · .Li.me · Ce·
mcnt and Mort•r . Stock Silt · Witer SoftenC!r · Re!'led•es · Sal~
t 1tters . vaccine - Rooting - Paints· Red Brand Fencmg • Baler a

Binder Twine · Spr,ays · Gates· Hay · Straw

SUGAR RUN MILLS
Mulberry

Ave.

992·2119

./-

P,merov ·

�·Bengals want to put
troubles behind in '83
CINCINNATI (AP ) -TheCincln·
nat! Bengals players would just as

soon forget about last year's players
strike whUe they try to regain the
momentum from their 1981 Super
Bowl season.
The National Football League
season was cuttoninegames in 1982.
The Bengals, who were In the
playoffs, were defeated In the first
round by the New York Jets.
Running back Archie Griffin says
the long layoff did not directly affect
on the players as a tea,m.
"It affected our timing on offense,
hot being able to run the plays as
well, not getting hit, andgettlngused
to that," Griffin said. "But when we
got back to work finally, we were
gung ho ... ready to go."
The strike Is almost forgotten by
the team whlcl! has been wracked
by the defection and later trading of
quarterback Jack Thompson, the
·temporary contract holdout of
tffenslve. tackle Anthony Munoz,
and the drug suspensions of Pete
Johnson and Ross Browner.
"There's been so much new
material to talk about lately the
strike has almost dropped from the
eonversatlon;" said linebacker Reg·
gle Williams.
"We played goOd both before and

:;, • · MajorS
'

·~

•·
•1 ·'
•'

MfERIQlN LEAGUE
EAST DIVEJON
W L Pet.
T1 ' .5J . . .59'1
Bl!.ltlrrierf'
75 - 57
.568
·Mllwau~
1557
-~
Oel:rolt
13 58
.:::iJ7
New York
Tomoto
73 62
.54:'1
&amp;I
70
.478
58 76
.43.1
ClevelaOO

.rr """'"
'••.
...
. ..
,
...
•
..
...
'• ..

~~

'

lllunda)''l GIUDe!il

Houston J, Ptttsburl!tl 0

,. "
"66 'lu

T....

•"
•

..

8)

6lfi

Los Angeles (Reuss 9-10) at Mo ntreal
!RoSWS 16-8), lnl
Pittsburgh (Candelaria U-3) at AtJanta •
!Dayley HJ. tnl
San otero ISOOW 13-91 at New York

15

71

"Games
"

.571 ,41f)

11 Y.!

,41J;

lllh

('J'E'rrell 5-6). tn)
San Francl50:1 !Martin 24 1 at P h!Jadelphla (Dt;&gt;nny 13-61, rnl
C!nclnnatl 1Pastore 6-l:l 1 at St Lools
rsruper MIJ , 1n1

.459 lS

.455 Hilf.t
.Ql 19

.:183 "

Sllalrday's G&amp;mf'A
at Atlanta
Hwstoo at Otlcago

Pltt~b.trgh

San Diego at New York, fnl
Los A~lf's at MontrMI. In)
ctncinnati at St. Loob, I n \

Gai'IW

Transactions

~Bel'ffiguer

...,,.,..........
BASEIWJ.

DE:rn.OIT TIGERS-Signed Bob Moll·
naro, wtfleldf'r.
KANSAS crt'Y ROYAl.S-CaUed up
Roo Jomson, ttrst ,baseman. Blldcly
Blancalano, lntleldcr, and Danny Jackson, pllchct, from Omaha of t!r Amerl·
can Assoc!at!CI'I, 'and Daryl Motley, rutfielder, from EvansvillE' of tiE American .
A.ssoc!atloo .
MILWAUKEE
BREWERS-Acllvatcel
Rldt Watts. pl!dler, and In! Mooey,

~lllias Clly (Spllltorfl' J{).GJ at Texas
(Hough ll-12), (n)

-',.·• .
.. ,..

~

.,,.,......

..
•

i ·
(

I

· Milwaukee 1Pon£&gt;r ~~ at CaUfomla
(F(X'Sd\ lHIJ. lnl
Of'11cland t S:.rensen 8-9J at Dakland
(Helmuei.Jer 3-31. (n)
~cw York (Footenot 4-21 at Seattle
(Youns,: 10-12), (nl
Salurday's Game~
Drtrolt at Toronto
Ba\11more at Mlnnt'SO!a
Chicago a t Ba;ton

third bl!.sf'!Tlan.

~f'W York at

•

•

.'• .
~

EASTDJVfiiON
W L Pc\, GB
68 64
.515 Plttshlrgh

...

,., ,

PhDadelphla

fB

64

67 ~
66 65
61 73
!'6 78
WFNI' DIVISION
Los Ar~R!:!Ie5
T1 ~
AUont.a
76 58
Hoostoo
n 6:l
San Dlt&gt;go
66 69
' San Francisro
6J 71
Cincinnati
61 74
St. Lo.liS
OJugo
Nf'W York

I

I
I

'
,.•

•
'•

!:

Morris, Hoyt join
18th victory club &lt;·

'jjiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..iiiliiiiiii..

R
. IGG
· S USED· · ·cARS

Auto., PS, PB, 6 cyl. Take your pick.
1977 CHEV. LUV PICKUP ............................... '1695
Runs good, 50,000 miles.

"He looked Ukea Hall-of-Farner,"
Kansas City Manager Dick Howser

NEW YORK YANKEES-Recalied Juan
Nlllmlal~

Seattle, (n)

.515 .511

~·

IJ'h

.579 !£7 I~

.534 ' 6
.. . 12
.470 l4 lfi .
. ~2

YORK METS-Purd\ased ttv!
oJ Roo Darling, pitcher, from
Tidewater d. thf' lntm'!.atklnal ~ague.
1\-"EW

rontract

FOOmAIJ.

1!.)
8!.)

.fA)j

.4.'11
.414

.,

CINCINNATI REDS-Renc!lvated Jcxo
F"ril:l-1", pltch£'1'

17

'

Natlooal Football l..eque,
CLEVELAND

BROWNS-Cut

Dave
Reed . dcfens\\1(' end. Sl('\1(' Schafer. dgtu
end, and Vk: tiaiTbon. wide M:elver.
SAN FRANCISffi 49ERS-PIIK'f'd Gory
Mo ten, Dnebacker, on tt..&gt; lnjurei:l resel"\\~
!hit. Rl•tunll'\1 Carl Monroe, Unt.&gt;bock~r.
from waivers.

~ · ~----------------------------------------~~

BEND AREA
OPTOMETRIC
CENTER
Richard H. Billman II, O.D.

"New In the Area"
·· 9 Years Experience

Special lntroduc.t ory
Rates

113 Court Street

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

ACCENT
FENCE
Pomeroy, OH.

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

PH. 992·6931

TAKE THE LABOR OUT OF

·.debuts in MAC
''~

·.

-

•' .
'

Scioto Downs results

•
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - O's
•• Gold, driven by John Barnes, went
&lt;
~· Jhe mlle1J11:59J.5Thursdaynlghtto
:. win the featured eighth race at
,. Scioto Downs and pay $13.00, $4.8&gt;
; .and$4.

9 Piece Family Dinner 18.15
Save 11.34

Get 9-pliiC8a of the Colonel'• Origlnll Recipe or Extra Criopy. 4
buttermilk biocultt, 1 large calli olow ond 1 Iorge maahed potato
end arovy far only 18.1-5. Umlt one coupon per cuotomer.
Coupon good only far comblnotlon white/dark ordero.
Cuotarnero PlY ollappllcolble ulaatox. OFFER EX ·
1 PIRES SEPT. 11. 1183. (Thlo coupon good only at
1 Kentucky Fried Chicken...,_ Hilled in this ad.)

Brill! the kids to Ponderosa for fm: your coupons, hecal !5P you can still

"Kid's burgers and flies."
take Cklvantage of our special ~
You can pick up any meal on the
on any cdult meal.
But hurry. Our free meal deal is
menu. YOlD' kids 12 and under will eat
"Kid's burgers and fries" absolutely
only 3JOd ~ September 22,
1983.
free. And don't forget to ~along
· Start taking advantage of this money-saving offer todDy

228 WEST lAIN

at any ofthese area locntioTI5:

POMEROY
992-5432

. . DaCJI•h• "'"'"

Upper River Roed
(Acton fro111 tilt Airport)

.Lucky l'riecl
•

balloon was apparently one of a
number of helium filled balloons
released on Aug. 27by a group called
Renew of the St. Alexander Church,
300 S. ComeU, VIlla Park, Ill. A tag
attached to the deflated balloon Is
Imprinted with a prayer and a
message urges the reader to "please
pray for us" .
Danny Is the son of Judy and
Danny McDoruild and Phllllp Is the
son of Everett and Sherry Smith.

Woodland Centers Inc., will
have Ilml\ed services on Mon·
day, Sept 5, In observance of the
Labor Day bollday.
Serylces are available to those
In need by contacting the
Crlslsllne In Meigs county at
992-5554.

The 25th annual Weaver reunion Ritter, Galllpolls; Mr. and Mrs.
wu held Sunday at the Union Bernard Ledlle, Langsville; Mar·
cus and Dora Weaver, Alton and
Campground, Letart, W. Va.
Owen Weaver had prayer before Inez Roush, Aaron, Evelyn, Bran·
the basket dinner. Of! leers elected don, and Jill Weaver, Letart. W.
for the 19&amp;1 reunion were Owen Va.; Owen and VIrginia Weaver,
Weaver, Nashville, Tenn., presi- Nashville, Tenn.; Mary Brown,
dent; H. MarcusWeaver,I..etart, W. Lena Mae and Carrel Cox, Brarry,
Va.; and Maxine Rose, Racine, Debbie, Kimberly, and Timothy
Cox, Point Pleasant, W. Va.;
secretary·treasurer.
Gilts were presented to the oldest ·George Weaver, and Frank
attending, George Weaver, Colum· Weaver, Columbus; and Maxine,
bus; the y~t, Tara Beth Rose, Brent, Jeffery and Tara, Racine.
Racine; and the ones traveling the
farthest, Mr. and Mrs. Owen
Weaver, Nashville, Tenn.
Mrs. Catherine All&lt;;e Holman of
Attending were Tommy Weaver, Racine Is a paUentatDoctor'sNorth
Susie Wolle, Daisy Weaver, Marie, Hospital where she underwent
Lee and Keith Weaver, New Haven, surgery Thursday morning. Cards
W.Va .; Dick, Carol, Julie, and Jodi may be sent to her at Room 90&lt;1.

In.the hospital

MEET ME AT THE MEIGS INN .
Luncheon Special Every Day 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.
New Dinner Special Every Evening 5 P.M. to 9
P.M.
Lounge Open Daily 11 A.M. to 1A.M. (Closed sundays)
- Live Entertainment Nightly 8-12
Jal!lie S.hooter. At The Piano

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

Tu .c:OO
Brian Conde, president, and Tim In the country.
bt-Jutiful!y &lt;k~ •11flhl
Faulk and Ray Willford, recruit· . The Meigs County Jaycees Is an
JW-11 (~ fl " ' \' 1!11
ment directors, attended the Ohio Individual development organlza·
POMEROY
Jaycees All-State meeting at the lion with a community action
.·
.fLOWER
SHOP
.
Sheraton Hotel In downtown Colum. program obj~tlv.e . · Their !flllin
wn... w••. ........ i&lt;'f ·" ''"''•)-•;, ., ...
" .,
,., ~2- !11'39 ~ "'·5721 '
bus: ·Aug. l2·14:
·
· JlU11lOSI! Is to develop leaders io help
Many distinguished persons Were
the conununlty.
~the guest speakersalongr---~----------------~-----------------------+----------------------------------------------~---------------------·
with Ertc Chambers, the presictent
of the Ohio Jaycees, Dr. Glenn
Swearingen, current chairman of
the Board of the Ohio Jaycees, and
Tommy Todd, vice president o( the
United states Jaycees.
Todd joined the Byron Jaycees In
1976, held several local and state
' offices before being elected to the
national office. As regional director,
.he won a Cllnt Dunagan MemortaJ
Award from the U.S. Jaycees and as
state president last year won a
·Clayton Erost Memorial Award as
OR!' of the five best stale presidents
~

r-r~t ~ 11•!'1/&lt;~m··nl ,

lba

Date changed for
,Christian program
Free Spirit, a group of coUege
age Cluistlan musicians, will
present a program In testimony
and song at the Laural Cliff Free
Methodist Church, on Thursday,
Sept. 8 at 7: :ll p.m., rather than
on Monday as previously

announced.
•

School lunch
menu set

Monday - no school.
Tuesday - toasted cheese sand·
·Wich, potato rounds, buttered peas,
mUk.
Wednesday - beefaronl, creamy
Cole slaw, mixed fruit, bread and
butter, milk.
Thursday-chlckenpattle,sweet
potato fMf with marshmallow,
pears, milk.
Friday- cooks' choice.

Women's
Aglow sets
speaker .

~

l'

Local Jaycees attend st~te meet

Weaver reunion held at Letart

vines" then they spotted In a tree a
deflated balloon from which was
hanging a tag.
b!Vestigatlng they found that the

vma Park. m.

Schools, the menu for next week Is
' announced.

.

J.

FIND - »-)' McDonald, left, and PhllUp Smith, Rutland, display
lbe balloon and aa accompanying lag which they found In a woods near
Beech Grove Road, Rutland area. 'lbe balloon traveled to Rutland from

In accordance with the unform

i

By'lbe Associated Press
· Two pew coaches In the Mid~ · American Conference, trying to
1 . revive programs at Eastern Michl·
• gao and Kent State, make their
: debuts on an abbreviated opening
·• footbaU schedule Saturday.
Jim Harkema, who led Grand
'' Valleystatetoa68-29-lrecordlnone
~ coacl!lng decade at the Michigan
' scl!ool, has moved to Eastern
• Michigan. TheHuronspostedal·!l-1
,.' mark last fall . ·
Dick Scesnlak left as an asslslant
, coach at the University ofWlsoonsln
1 ·to takeover at Kent State, which lost
· all 11 games in 1982.
;
The third new head coach In the
' Mid-American, TirnRoseofMlaml.
. Saturday, Sept. 10, to
'' , waits until
: .. make his debut. The Redsklns start
~. •at South Carolina next week.
~ ·. ·Saturday's schedule calls for
i ·Eastern Michigan .to entertain
; Marshall and Kent State to visit
Akron, both ai night.
In afternoon games, Ball State
awaits Rhode Island, Northern
• nunols plays at Kansas, Central
: Mlcl!igan at Kentucky and Ohio
University at West Virginia.
,
Also maklng their debuts next
~ ' week will be defending champion
~ · Bowling Green, at Fresno State;
• Western Michigan, at Texas·
:. Arlington; and Toledo, at home for
; · •the University of Massachussetts.

Woodland limits
services for holiday

luncl! program at all Meigs Local

~ Twocoachesrnaker---------------~--------------~--------------~

.

balloon rues, Isn't bad.
Two Rutland youngsters, Danny
McDonald and Phllllp Smith, fourth
graders at the Rutland Elementary
School, were walking in the woods
near the Beech Grove Road
Tuesruiy to "swing on the grape-

· NEW YORK (AP) - Don't know about the rest of you tennis fans, but

International League.

N"110NM.. LFAGUE

~

From VIlla Park, Ill., to Rutland
In Meigs County In four days as the

we've had It up to here with John McEnroe.
'
No more apologies. No more rationalization for his actions. None of that
stu1! aboutwhataper!ectlonlstbe Is, wbata nice kldo!tthecourt. No more
excuses that he Is a hlgh·strung genius who needs to be treated with care.
Just a big, rnlsuDderstool boy.
Forget 11. He stopped being a boy five or six yearsago ..He is now 24 years
old. Other guys his age are married and trying to eke out a living forthewlfe
and kids.
M8c the Strife Is a man who hasn't followed the BlbUcal precept to put
away chlldlsh things. He Is a sniveling whiner. Jthecan'thaveeverythlnghis
.· way, he throWs a tantnun. He Is, as the Brltlsh have labeled him, a spoUed
!rat- a Superbrat- but he has even outgrown that label.
Helsa nasty, wlgarman. His father, John Sr., sbluld take him -even at
his age- across his knees and give him a good spanking. His mom ought to
send him to bed without supper. His brothers ought to boycott him until he
can learn to act like an adult.
McEnroe's antics In hls opening U.S. Open match here against Trey
Waltkeweredesplcable. Hegotprovokedataspectatorwhowasrootl!ig!or
'.
the other guy (a ticket holder's privilege). He cursed the fan with every
obscenity
In his vocabulary.
I
Most of them were words you only see on the walls of a latrine.
1bat wasn't enough, He reached In his pocket and threw sawdust at his
WZINSKJ: BACK IN 11IE F1ELD - adcago While Sox hlWng ·
tonnentor.
'!ben he proceeded to berate a Jlneswoman and the umpire.
specialist Greg Llzlnsld will soon he playing flrsl base - somelhlng he
In
a
loud
voice, carried over cable 1V by HBO and heard by possibly by
hasn't done In a d"""" years. It's pari of Jl18118ger Tony l..aRlBa's
mtlllons,
he
called the officials "stupid" and, yelling and ranting, said they
strategy If the Sox make It Into the World Series. Playlnf by Nllllonal
should be thrown off the court.
League ndes this year, there wiD be no deslgnahod hllters. CAP
This Is just one of a series oflong.runnJng offenses that know no boundary.
Laserphoto ).
McEnroe has Insulted and embarrassed these conscientious court servants
on five COI$tents.
· It's sirnllar to the arrogant person who trles to throw his weight around by
belittling a lowly store clerk or a walter In front of a lot of people.
John McEnroe Is a mlll)onalre many times aver. He!fiakesmoremoney
· thail tile bOai'd chairman of General MotOrs or A'J;&amp;lr. He Is the best temns
player In the world. He Is one of America's sports heroes. He Is a champion
whose victories will be carved in stone for lmmortallty.
saldofHoyt. "In fact, they all looked
Yet, no matter how many Wimbledonsorhowmany U.S. Opens he puts
By KEN RAPPOPORT
Uke Hall-of·Famers."
into the record book, posterity will never remember him as a a great
AP Sports Writer
In other AL action, Toronto beat
champion.
WhUe teams are Involved In their
respective pennant races, Detroit's
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!i~iiiij
Baltimore 5-3, Minnesota routed
Jack Morris and Chicago's Y,IYiarr Ba;ton 11.0 · In the opener of a I
· Hoyt are staging a personal race of douolel)eader · before .Jo51lig the
.
: their own for most victories in the nlglitcap 9-3 and Oakland stopped
New York2.0.
American League.
Thursday night, Morris got to the
Morris, 18.8, struck out five to
winner's circle just about one hour
1975 FORD F-150 ............................................ 11695
boost
his
league-leading
total
to
194.
ahead of Hoyt.
Auto. PS, Club Cab.
Morris, the major leagues' hottest The 18 victories represent a career
1977 GRAND PRIX .......................................... '2495
pitcher, won his lOth straight game high for Morris, who twice has won
17.
and 18th of the year with a slx·hlt, 5-0
Fully Equipped.
.
1
Tom Brookens and Chet Lemon
victory over the Texas Rangers .
1976 PONTI AC LeMANS ................................. '1395
Shortly thereafter, Hoyt tied him for backed the Tiger right-hander with
4 dr., auto., PB, PS, Air.
wins by pitching a four·hlt, 12.0 l)omeruns.
1976 DODGE PICKUP ................................... 11295
beauty over the Kansas Cit)' Royals.
Ironically, ltwasthefirstshutoutfor r-------------f
Shortbed, standard, 6 cyl.
each this season.
1978 MERC. COUGAR XR7 2 Dr ...................... '2695
"It's that time of year, I guess,
AM·FM·Tape, speed control.
whereyouhavetoreachdownlnslde
yourself and get the job done, " said
1978 FORD FAIRMONT 4 Dr ........................... '1995
Morris, whose victory pulled the
Automatic, power steering, 6 cyl:
Tigers within three games of the AL
1974 VW STATIONWAGON ................................ 1995
East·leadlng Baltimore Orioles.
1976 AMC PACER ......................................... '1095
Meanwhile, Thursday night's
victory was Hoyt's seventh straight
Auto., PS, glass all around. You'll like it.
and ninth In his last 10 starts.
1976 FORD GRANADAS 4 Dr.......................... '1095

The Daily Sentinel- Page 5

Rutland boys discover
long distance balloon

Sports World

Espino, catcher, trom ColumtJJs of the-

Oe\li'land a t O!lkland
Kansas Clly at Texas. ln l
Mllw a~ at California , In )

'

\'

San Fran~l5ro at Ptl.llade~hla , rn t

5, Texas 0
Chlcago ~ . Kansas City 0
Qak.land 2, New York 0
Only games schcdllk.&gt;d

/VIola 7-11), (n )

•

'

3
· 3
4 ¥.~

7-4 and Wll('()l( Mll
at Toronto (12&lt;~1 U-10 and Acker 3-lJ. 121
0\leago IKoosmM 10-6) at Ba;ton
/Boyd 3-41 . (n)
Baltimorf&gt; (Flanagan S.J) at Minnesota

"'' .

'

73
Tl

'lburlday'1

F'rldly'~

~ ·

'

-

Toronto 5, Baltimore 3
Mlnne9Jta U·3, Bofitoo 0.9

Detroit

•'•· .
I

?l

"'

}; ..· """"'
Detroit
,'

....

..

61
61

. Minnl;'50ta

.

GB

WEST DIVISION

California

·:

Chk'ago J. Ctnctnnau 1
Montreal 8. Los Angeles J
Phll&amp;delphlll 4. San f'!'andsro 2
St. Louts 8, AUanta 3
· Only.gaJJJI!5 sduldull'd···
•.. hlday'a Gam&amp;~
· Hooston !Scon IHJ at Chicago (Noles 5-

Pamaray-Midcllep:rt, Ohio

Today~

after the strike, but laded down the
stretcl!. I can't say definitely the
strike was at fault , but we'd all have
been better off If there had been no
strike. E0ough things have happened lately that have affected our
situation now. The strike Is behind
us, and that lends credence to forget
It."
Veteran linebacker Jim LeClair
doesn't talk about the strike. It 's
more important to get ready for this
season, he said.
"I just want to get back to the
Super Bowl," LeClair said.
"There !!lay be some lingering
effects, " said kicker Jim Breech,
"money, etc. It just seems Uke it's
something that happened, It's over
and let's forget it:"
"It won't be forgotten easily,''
said cornerback Louis Breeden.
"But It's not brought up tbat much
now. Lastyear,everyonetrledhard
to get ltoutoftheirsystems. It'shard
to do, but time he~ Is all wounds. ''
Offensive guard Dave Lapham
says It's all over untll the next time.
"The next thought the guys will
have to give to the National Football
League Players Assoolatlon Is when
new executive Gene Upshaw comes
to visit us. He's been toabouthalfthe
teams now," Lapham said.

Scoreboard ...
' ·
:-.,... ...
....
.
. .,...

Friday, Sep ..liobar 2, 1983

Friday, Septe,.,..: 2, 1983

4- The Daily Sentinel

Page

•

Mary Hinton of Ironton will be the
speaker at the Thursday meeting of
the Pomeroy Chapter of Women's
Aglow Fellowship to be held at
Duff's Smorgasbord, 6: :ll p.m.
A member of the First Presbyter·
ian Church In Ironton, Mrs. HUton Is
a member of the Cllapter there and
the Southeastern Ohln Area Board
of which she Is treasurer.
An advanced leadership training
sessloo will be held Sept. 24 at the
Metbodlst Campground In Lancu·
ter. Reglstratloo Is $5. The training
Is for all executlw officers and
ministry CllaJrman, advisors, and
othenl from the chapters lnle!'eSted
In attending.

aoNUS
d
litter Include

SignaI Sp

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Father-son banquet
MIDDLEPORT- 'lbeannual
falle'·IDI baDguet of Middleport
Masoolc I.oclai! 363, F&amp;AM, has
~ set for '1\aesday, Sept. :11,
with members of the Order of
DeMolay ICheduled to be pests
of the Jodae. The blllquet will be
II!Md at 6: I) p.m. by Evange- .
line ..,..,....., Order of Eastern
Star. Tlcllela areSt ..m andean
be obtained by ClllltaCIIIIg Paul
Damell. 9II'J.3.m; Robert King,
!IID37ff, or Jaml!l Buchanan at

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..
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'

--- -:

�Pag&amp;-6- The Daily Sentinel

raising dinner and songfest,
Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., at
the Meigs County Fair Grounds.

FRIDAY
SALISBURY - The regular
meeting of the Salisbury Township Trustees• will be held ·
Friday, 7 p.m., at Wanda Eblin's
home 9n Laurel Cli!f Road. The
meetmg is open to the public.

SUNDAY

POMEROY - Star 'Grange
meeting Saturday for its annual ·
hay ride and wiener roast
beginning at 7 p.m. There will be
a business meeting betwen the
hayride and wiener roast with
election of offi~s to be held.

POMEROY- A dante will be
held at the Pomeroy Senior
Citizens Center Friday fiom 8
p.m. to 11 p.m. Music by thhe
String Dusters. Public is Invited.

RACINE - Chicken barbecue
and homemade Ice cream social,
beginning at 11 a.m. Sll!ldaY at
Racine Fire Statton by fire
department and its auxUiary;
pies and cakes also avallable.

SATURDAY
HARRISONVll..LE - The
Harrisonville Lodge 411, F. and
A. M., will meet In regular
session Saturday, 7: :ll p.m.
Work In the entered apprentice
degree will be exemplllled and
all masons are Invited to attend.

PatHolterwaslheguestarranger
for tbe open meeting of tbe Rutland
Garden Club held at tbe United
Methodist Church of Rutland Monday night.

POMEROY - Meigs CoUnty
Fox Chasers Association meetIng, 7::1l p.m. Frlday.

SCIPIO TWP - Scipio Township trustees will meet Friday at
7 p.m. at Pageville Town Hall.

Introduced by Mrs. Marvin Wilson, Mrs. Holter brought roses,
gladioli, fern and greenery along
·with twisted grapevine and containers for demonstrating arrangementswhlch would fit Intotbeclub's
flower show theme, "Festivals of
Southeastern Ohio," to be staged
Sept. 9 and 10.
Mrs. Holter made artistic arrangements using modern, motion,
Interpretive, and mass designs for
of the seven classes. Aquestion
each
0
and answer period followed her
demonstration.

It was noted.that the Rutland Club
received three awards at the state
convention Including the flower
show award, publicity and program

CouncU of Floral Arts, VInton
FrlendshlD. and .Otle!l£ate oilllo book.
Grande. Other guests were Mrs.
Arrangements were made to set
Steve Jenkins and Mrs. Dancy up for the fall flower show on
Rubenktng, Rutland.
Wednesday beginning at 1p.m.
Devotions were given by Mrs.
Members winning ribbons at the
Carl DenisOn who read poems of· Meigs County Fair flower shows
friendship, "Proof of Eternity" and were Mrs. Chris Diehl, red; Mrs.
had prayer. Mrs. Harvey Erlewlne Vinzll Atkins, blue; Mrs. Charles
gave hints on bringing In plants from -Lewts, b}ur,Mrs. N lcholson, red, In
the outdoors and on transplanting artistic design; an(! ~- , Vln:fl
Auans,- wrote ana red; and .Mrs.
and care of roses. .
LewiS,
blue, in the educational and
Mrs. James Nicholson, president,
announced a change of date for the horticultural classes.
Refreshments were served from
Shade Valley Council's open meetIng to Sept. 20 at the Chester a table centered with an arrangement by Mrs. Ralph Turner. Favors
Methodist Church.

were made by Mrs. Lewis, and Mr:;.
Rubenktng, wife of, the Rutla.~
Church's ll!IStor, had prayer.
Hostessl!s were Mrs. Jack Robson, Mrs. Emest Ward, Mrs. Lewis,
Miss Edna Mae Swick, Mrs. C. E.
Bisoop, Mrs. Everett Colwell. Mrs.
Harry Williamson was the
regiStrar.

Warner reunion
LAKE ':ROPE - The Blrda
Warner famlly reunion will be

held at Lake Hope, Sept. 11, at
noon. For additional Information
relatives are asked to COIItaet
Donna Warner Brown, 99'U637.

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has oet
for public hearing Case
No. 83-32-EL·EFC, to
review the fuel procure·
ment
practices
and
policies of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Elec·
trlc Company, the operation of Its Eluctric Fuel
Component, and related
matters. This hearing Is
scheduled to begin at
6:30 p.m . on Thursday,
September 8, 1983 allhe
offices ol the Public
Ulllllies Commission of
Ohio, 375 South High
Street, Columbus, Ohlo
43215. The session will
end at 7:30 p.m. or such ·
later time as Is required
In order to accommodate
those waiting to testify.

AU Interested parties wilt
be gl\len an opportunity
to be heard . Further In·
formation may be obtained by contacting the
Commission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: MARY ANN ORLIN·
SKI, Secretary

.

(I U
·

. .

.

_,;

e-non, S. S. Supt .. Sunday S&lt;;OOol, 9 : ~ a.m.:

morning wcnldp 10:.)) a.m.; evening servtce
6p.m.; mld-weekservk.'e, Wednesday, 7p.m.
. GRACE Efi!;COPAL CHURCH - J2fi E.
. Main st., PomeroY.. Sunday services Holy .
Communion on the tt.rst Sunday of each
m011th, and combined wUh momtngprayeron
the third Sunday. Morning prayer andserriloo
on all other Sundays d. the month. Church
School and nursery care provided. Coffee
hoW' In the Partsh HaU lmmedlatelylollowlng
· the sen1ce.

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Main St., Nell Proudfoot, pastor. BtbleschooJ,
9: :rt a.m.; momJng worship, lO:ll a.m.;
Youth meetings, 6:::.:1 p.m.; evening worship,
7: lJ p.m. Wednesday night prayer meeting
lnd Bible study, 7: ;'K) p.m.

Bible Study and Prayer meeting, open to the

PRI~ES

public.
BUID.INGTON . SOlfi'HERN BAPT'IST

Subscrlbl'rs not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In 8d11an c~ direct to
The- Dally Se ntinel on 3. 6 or 12 month
bas is. Credit will be given carrier each
m onth.

· CHURCH, Route 1, Shade. Bible School7 p.m.
Th~y; worship service 8 p.m.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 3.12)) Children's Home Road
(County Road 16) 992·5235. Vocal musk.
Sunday worshlp 10 a.m.; Bible study ll a.m.;
WOJ\Cihlp, ~ p.m. Wednesday Blbl~ study, 7
p.m.
OLD DEXTER B1BLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH - Qtrton Lucas. pastor. Sunday
School 9:~ · a.m. Mrs. Worley Francis, sup!.
PI'Hchlng !'letvlces ftnlt and third Sundays

No subscriptions by mall permltted In

•owns where home car rier service Is
available.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Ohio
13 Weeks ................. ... ,.......... .. $14.04
26 Wee ks ................................. S27.30
52 W('eks ................................. .,1.48

foUowl.ng Sunday School. Youth meeting
every Sunday, 7::rl p.m.

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9::l&gt; a.m.. first and second
Sundays of each month; third and fourth
Sundays eech month, worship services at 7 ;~
p.m. Wednesday evenlnp at 7: l:l p.m.,
Prayer and Bible Study,

•

13 Weeks .................. .... ........... $15.21
26 Weeks ..... ............................ $29.64

.. .............. ........... $56.21

1975 VOLKSWAGEN
RABBIT

1978 BUICK REGAL
Black with red cloth Interior VI
engine, power steering and
br~kn, automatic transmission,
AM-FM stereo, till -.t, cruise
control.
WAS
NOW

2 - · ~ cyl, engine. ~ speed
transmission, local c11r, AM
radio. Will make good work car.
WAS
NOW

s5995

'895

977 MONTE CARLO

OUTRIGHT.. OD_OR ELIMINATOR
GET RID OF PROBLEM
CARPET ODORS
Pel Waste, sewage Back-Up,
Spilled Food, Etc., with

THE OUTRIGHT..
·METHOD OF
ODOR
ELIMINATION
Alf-naturalenryme

process

1979 CHEVROLET
CHEVETIE

V-a engine, power steering and
brakes, automatic trans., air
conditioning, AM-FM radio.
WAS
NOW

•

Middleport·
Pomeroy , 0 .

4 d-. 4 cyl. engine. automatic

tranomlsslon. air conditioning,
AM-FM radio, white well tires.
WAS
NOW

'2595

1979 FORD AlTURA

I Ton with 12 foot mid west bed,
VI engine, power steering and
brokes, 4 speed transmission,
dual wheels.
WAS
NOW

6

cyl. engine, power steering and

br•kes,

•utom~~tlc:

friMmlsslon,

air conditioning, AM radio, good
tires.
WAS
SPECIAL

'1995

S2995

1979 VOLKSWAGEN
4 door, diesel, 4 spead tronsmission, air conditioning, AM
radio. Local car, 36.000 miles.
WAS
NOW

'1895

Work1 on water-sate
upholstery

Nonstaining;
biodegradable

PHOENIX

2 door,

va engine, power steering
and brakes, automatic transmission, air conditioning, good
tires.
WAS
NOW

'1995

1978 CHEVROLET
.CARGO VAN

VI engine, automatic transmission, pow.r steering and
brakes, AM radio.
SPECIAL'

. '1695

4 cyl. engine, 4 speed transmission, AM rodio. Good tires.
WAS
NOW

4 - · dark groen with pin
stripes, 4 cyl. engine, automatic,
AM rodlo, whiteside walls,. Loc.ol
- · A-t condition.
WAS

'795 '5295

302 engine, power steering and

brakH. autom.tic lr•nsmlsskln,

1981 DODGE MIES

'1095

carpets. drapes and

1977 PONITAC

1974 VOLKSWAGEN
BEmE

'4295

1978 FORD LTD II

'2695' S2995

$3295

1978 CHEVROLET

'5195

air condltlonlng, AM-FM radio,
lilt stHrlng wheel, cruise control.
WAS

·

s3995

NOW

'3595

1982 FORD ESCORT
4 cyl. · engine, 4 speed transmission, AM radio, 1100c1 tires.
9000 mlln.
WAS
NOW

s4995

'4495

1973 CHEVROLET
MALIBU
4 door VI engine, poftr ste.,rlna '
and brakes, automatic

smlssion. Good running condillon.
SPECIAL

'495

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mulberry
Heights Road, Pomeroy. Michael Plan.
kow!kl. pastel'; Marte Spires, Sabbath School
&amp;.!pt. Sabbath School ts at 2 p.m. on Saturclay
with worsldp services following at 3:15p.m.
RUTJ..AND FIRST BAPl'1ST CHURCH Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday·School,
9:3l a.m .; momlng worship. 10:45 a.m.
POMEROY FIRST BAPftST, David
Mann, minister; WUllam Snouffer, Sunday
School supt . Sunday School, 9:~ a.m.:
Mornllli' worship 10: :J&gt; .m.
· FIRST 50lTI11ERN BAP'I'IST, Pomeroy
Plke. David Hunt, pastor; Roger 1\imer,
Sunday School Superintendent. Sunday
!IChool, 9:30a.m.; morning worship, 10:»,
evening W(J'shlp, 7: 30 p.m. Mldweel prayer
meeting, 7: ll p.m.
.
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH, Old
Dexter Rd., Dtxter. Past(J' Woody Call. Jr.
Paster. Sunday School 10 a.m. Sunday
""""ng """'""· 7 p.m.: Thursday evening
service, 7 p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bailey
Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pester.
Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday school, 10 a.m.
Sllnday evening 91!1'Ylce 7::ll p.m.: Bible
teaching, 7:30p.m..Thursday.
SYRACUSE MlSSION, Cherry Sl., Syra·
cuse. Ser-Acet. 10 a .m. Sunday, Evening
services, Sunday and Wedneiday, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF QIRIS'I' IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Lawrence Manley,
pester; Mn. R\llsell Young, Sundly School
Supl. Sunday School 9: ll a.m. Evening
wcnhtp7:llp.m. Wrdneldayprayermeetlng
7::D p.m .
MT. MORIAII CHURCH OF GOD, Racine
- Rev. James Sattedleld, pastor. Morning
W(J'IhJp9:4!5 a.m.; SundaySc00ol10;45a.m.;
evening w«:nhlp 7 p.m. Tuesday, 7::1l p.m.,
ladlm prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7::1Jp.m.
YPE.
MIDDLEPORT FJRsr BAPI'IST, CnrJ&gt;er
Sixth and Palmer, the Rev. Mark McClung.
Sunday sclml9:15 a.m.; Dan White, SUnday
School sup! .. John ~bel. Sr.. asst. oupt.

Morning Worship 10 : 1~ a.m . Youth meeting

· 7:ll ,p.m. Wedneodayt11ncludlng wee lots,
eaeer beavers, junior astroa.nuts, and Junlor
and Ienior hlibBYF; cholr pract1Cf'8::J1p.m.
Wemeoday; prayer meeting andBtblesludy.
Wmesda}', 7:!) p.m .
CHURCH OF CHRlS'I', Middleport, 5th and
Maln, Bob Mehm, mlntster; AJ Hartaon,
auoctate mlnllter; Mike Gerlach, Sunday
School Superllllelldent. Bible School, 9:ll
a.m.; rnomlng wonhlp. lO:lJ a.m.; everUna
worship 7 p.in. Wedneoday Bible Study and
)'OUCh groop meetlnp, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Co-putors, Rev. Olarlel ~and
Rev. Naacy Coyle. BID While, Sunday achool
sup!. Sunday !IChool, 9: ~ a.m.; momlng
worship, 10::rt a.m.; Sunday ~Uitlc
m..,lllg, 7 p.m. Prayer meoting Wedneoday 7
1!N1'1ED PRESBYTERIAN MINiln'RY

OF MEIGS COUNTY, Rev. Wanda Joln10II,
1W'cld

Jo.._,

-loll.
HARRISONVILLE

AVAILABLE FROM

Won~Semce. 9a.rn.:

MODERN SUPPLY

dlre&lt;lcr

ol

PRESBY11:R1AN,
ClllrchSchool, Jl::ll

Lm.
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN,
&lt;llurch Sohool, 9 a.m.: MornlntJ wcnhlp,

992-2164
. Pomeroy, Ohio
The Store Wit~ "All Kinds of Stuff"
For-Pets, Stables, Llrp &amp; Smsll Animols,
· Llwns &amp; G1rdtns .

10:15. Bible SI1IIY

~-

llllldy, ~- 7::ll p.m.

10 a.m.; Bible

SYRACUSE FIRST l/NlTED PRESIIYTERlAN ONrcb. ClNrdiSchool,lD: ~ a.m.;
'111111'111111 W1nlllp, 11:30 'a.m.: - - Study.

.. ,

···

~~-. 1D Lnl.; J - llld SoniCt Hill!
Yo llh Group. Sunday, 6 p.m.

.··

Wed!lllsday

~ -

HAZEL OOMMUNITY CHURCII, Near
lAng Bottom, Ediet Hart. paslot. Sunday
school, 9:lla.m. ; Worship lO:lla.m.; Prayer
meeting 7:ll p.m . Thw'Sday.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL IIAPTIST,
Corner Ash and Plum. LesiJe Hayman,
past(J'. Surday school 10 a.m.; Momlng
Worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday and Saturday
Evening services, 7 : ~ p.m. .
MEIGS
COOPEIIA"m'E PAIIJ8H
UNlTED ME'mOIIIliT CHUliCH

Fa,y_,_

Rev. J - E. CorbKt, _ ,
NOR'OII!A8T CW!iTEJI
Rev. IJoo Areber
Rev. R o y -

___,_

ALFRED - Clturoh School 9:ll a.m.:
Worship, n a.m .;, UMYF, 6:3) p.m.; UMW,
Third Tuesday. 7: ll p.m. Community ftrst
Sunday. (Areher)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Ch1B'Ch
School10 a.m .; Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.m.
UMW, first Thunday, 1 p.m.; Communion
tirst Sunday. fArt:her J

JOPPA - WOI'!Jhip, 9: !Jl a.m.; Church
School, 10: l) a.m. Blbl.e Study, Wednesday,
7:ll p.m. (Johnson)
LONG BOTI'OM - Church School, 9: ll
a.m.; Worship, 7 p.m.; Bible Study, Wednes·
day, 7::f) p.m.; UMYF, Wedne!day, 6 p.m.;
Commw\lon nntt Sunday. (Areherl
REEIJSVILLE - Chureh School, 9: ll
a .m .; Worship 11 a.m. (Deeter)
TIJPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL -Church
School, 9a.m.; Wol'!lhlp, 10 a.m.; Bible Study,
Tuesday, 7::Jl p.m.: UMW. Third Tuesday,
7:.)) p.m.; Communion first Sunday.
!Archer)

~~IAJ­

E.-

Rn. J ...... E. CorbMt
Stev.. N.ftev, Rlcbard Pd' iiikli
Rev. Robert
Rev. "-lNwllobealtlltl
ASBURY i~acuse) - worship, iJ a.m.;
ChW'i:h School, 9:45 a.m.; c:'barJe Blble

Rev.

ISillah

41 1·20
ThLJr5day

2 Corinthians
4·t·15

e.

Wednesday evening yourig ladiES auxiliary, 6
p.m. Wemeoday lomlly w&lt;rhsli&gt; ..7 p.m.

Study, Wednesday, 7:ll p.m.; UMW, ftnt

Tuesday, 7 : ~ p.m.; lOOtr Rehearsal, Wednesday, 6:ll p.m.; UMW, fourth Sunday, 6::tl
o.m. r~1son1 ·
EN'IERPRISE- WCI'shlp 9 a.m.: Ctun-ch
School, 10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:Jl

p.m.; UMW. Flrst Monday, 7:.Jl p.m.;
UMYF , Sunday, 6 p.m. Cliolr rehearsal, 6:ll
p.m . Wednesday. (Rothemlcb )
FLATWOODS - Cblll"eh School, 10 a.m.;
Worship, U a.m .: Bible Study, Thursclay, 7
-p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (Rllt-..n)
FOREST RUN -Worshlp,9 a.m.; Chw-ch
School, lOa.m.; Choir Practice, Tuesday,6::tl
p.m.; UMW, first Tuesday, 7:.Jl p.m.
(Nelson)

HEATH ,(Middlep&lt;rl ) - Chw-ch School,
a.m.; Worship, 10:XI a.m.; Bible Study,
TUesday, 10 a.m .: UMW, JaeCOnd Monday,
7:00 p.m.; UMM, third Monday, 7:3) p.m.
9; ~

(Robinson)

MINERSVILLE - . Worship Service, 10
a.m.; Chw-ch SchooJ. 11 a.m.; UMW, third
Wednesday, I p.ll'i.: Clxltr practice, Monday,
7:ll p.m. (Nellon)
PEARL OIAPEL - Wol"!!hlp Service, 9
a .m.; OIW"Ch School, 11 a.m.; UMW, IICOnd
TUesday, 7:XIp.m.; UMYFlast'Flaesday,7:XI
p.m. (Rubenldng)
POMEROY - Church School, 9:1S a.m.:
WonhJpserv:tce, lO:lla.m.; Chdrr?heArsal,
W - y . 7::ll p.m.: UMW. IOtVnd Tuoo·
day , 7:30 p.m .; UMYF, Suaday, 6
p.m.(Corbttt)
ROO&lt; SPRINGS - Ch"""' School, 9: l'l
a.m.; Wcrlhlp, lO a.m.; Bible Study,
w~. 7:30p.m.; UMYF i9enlon),
Sunday. 6 p.m .; (Junior&gt;), ....-y oilier
Sunday. 6p.m. IRolhemlch l
R~D - Church School, 9:45 a.m.;
Worship. 10: XI a.m.; UMW (EveningClrcle),
second Wednesday, 7: J) p.m.; UMW, second
Thunday, 1 p.m . (Rubenldnal
SALEM CENTER - Church School, 10
a .m.; Wonhl.p, 9:45a.m. (Ru~)
SNOWVILLE - Wonhlp, 8:30 a.m.:
Chureh SchOol 10 a.m. (RubPnklnJ)
IIOU'l1IERN &lt;LVIII'EII
Rn. ,..,.. M. Dark
Rn.l'liiiiMcOtdoe

Rev.--.-

APPLE GROVE- ChW'Ch School, 9 a.m .;
Wonhlp, 10 a.m. (lint and lhlnl Sundays):
UMW. O«&lt;nd '1\IOiday, 7:ll p.m.: Prayer
...-..,, Wedneoday, 7 p.m. iClaritJ

Wonhlp, 9 a.m.; Church
School, 10 a.m.: Bible Study, w~. 10
BETHANY -

a.m : D:rtu Women's Fellowlhlp, WedraeB-dtty, U a.m. (M&lt;Gulrol
CARMEL - Churcll School, 9:30 a.m.:
Worship, 11):45 a.m.: ISocoDII and Fow1h
Sundays); FeUIJIVI)IIp dinner wtlh Suttoo,
lltlrd 'lhlnday, 6::ll p.m. IMcGuire)
EAST lEI'ART- Chur&lt;b Sc11001, 9 a.m.:
Wonhlp,IOa.m.("""'ndandl'ourthSUndays;
UMW,Iln1 Tueoday, 7:ll p.m. &lt;Clarki
lEI'AIIT FALLS - Wonhlp, 9 a.m.;
C1wrdt 9cllool.l0 a.m. (Clarki
MORNIIIG STAR - Wonltlp, 9:45 a.m.;
aturc1t - . 10:30 a.m: l!lblo Study,
'l'llundly, T::ll p.m. (Wltlto)
.
MOR5E CHAPEL - C111rc11 Scltool, !1: 30
a.m.; Wonblp, 11 a .m. (Wbl-.)
POR'I1A!ID 6:ll p.m.;
WGraNp. 7:30p.m.: UMYF, Wt4i I~. T:30

Clurcb-.

p.m.(~)

RACINE WEILEYAN- Clturobldtooi,IO

a.m.; Wcnlllp, 11 LIIL! UMW, y.T:30p.m.;
Wf!dSM1')',
7a.m. -··~--.
(Clark)

WAID CROSS

SONS SIDRE
Groc e r iesGenerdl Merch nnd• se
Rac•n e 949· 2550

PomerO}' bypass. ~ - Hooer1 :-:.mhn. Sr ..
pastc:r. Rev. James Cundiff, assis ta nt pas tor .
sunday Scrool, 9::1) a.m.: morning wm; h!p,
10:30 a.m.; evening w &lt;:rshlp. 7: :ll p.m .

women's Fellowship, Tuesdays, 10 a.m.
Wednesday night prayer sei'\1C"C. 7:ll p.m.
FAITH 8API'IST CHURCH , Ma.&lt;;Orl , meet
at United Sleel Workers Union Hall, R,a llroad
Street, Mas~t. Mornlng worsh!p ~ : .'ll n.m.
Sunday School tO:)) a.m. Ev(mlng Sen.1ce, 7
p.m. Prayer meetlng Wednesday. 7:l:l p.m.
CHRIST CHURCH . Rev . Rober1 Sanders,
Midweek Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.
pasttr. Don Will, lay leader. Located in Texas
FQitE5IT RUN· BAPTIST - Rev: Nyh.'
Commu!i.ty off CR 82. Sunday school, 9:lt
.a.m.; Mornin.g wcnhlp service, 10:45- a.m,:; · · Borden; pastor. Cor_nellus BUnch;· ~~perlrt·
tendent. Sunday 5('hooi9:j}a.rir.; S.econd and
· evening preaching scn1cc second and fourth
fow1h SurrlayS: worship service at 2: .J) p.m.
Sundays, 7:31p.m.; Ouistlan EndMvor, ftrst
MT. MORIAH BAPTISI' - Fourth and
and third Surllays. 7: lJ p.m . Wednesday
Ma in Sts., Middleport . Rev. Calvin Minnis,
prayer meeting and Bible study, 7::1&gt; p.m.
pastoc, Mrs. Elvln Bumgardner. .supt .
JEHOVAH'S WITNESS. 37319 Stat(' Route
Sunday school, 9:33 a. m.; wcrshlp servlre,
124 (One mile east ofRutlandl . Sunday, Bible
10:45 a.m.
lectw'e 9::JJ a.m.; WalchtCM'ei' study, IO:at
BURLINGHAM SOI.I'mERN BAPTIST
a.m.: Tuesday, Bible shliy, 7:.'1) p.m.;
CHURCH , Route l, Shade. Pastor. DonJ31Q.Ck.
lbul"!!day, Theocratic School, 7:.)) p.m.:
AffUIIited with Souther,n Baptist convention.
Stjrvlre Meeting, 8: :l:l p.m.
Sunday school, 1: ll p.r'n .; SuiKiaY won;h\p,
CHURCH .OF GOD · 0~ PRO)'HECY.
2: :II p.m. 1'hursday everilng Blbl"' study, 7
J..t:x&lt;ated on the o. J. White Road oft' highway
p.m.
1fil.' Pal llellson, ""''"'· SurK!ay School 10
PENTECOSI'AL ASSEMBLY. Racine,
a.m. Classes fer all ages. Junior Church
Route 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
11:00; Momine Worship, 11:00; Adult Cholr
school, 10 a.m.; Sunday evening servtce. 7
practice 6:00 p.m. SUnday. Young People's.
p.m. Wednesday eVenlng service 7 p.ni.
llildren's Church and Adult Bible Study,
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Don Che&amp;dle,
Wedneiday at T::J) p.m.
SUpt. Sunday School 9:00 a.m. Morning
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL- 570Grant Sl.,
Worshlp,lO::Il a.m. Prayer Service. al ternate
MIMJeport; Sunday School, 10 a.m. ; morning
Sundays.
wcrhslp, 11 a.m.: evcnlng wol'!lhlp, 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE F1RS1' CHURCH OF GOD Llark, pastor, Worship' servlce Sunday,
10:00 a.m.; Surday sctnol, 11 a.m.; worship
service, 7:ll p.m. WM!ffiday prayer meet·
lng, 7 : ~ p.m.
.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETIIREN IN
Joy

K&amp;C JEWELERS

p.m.

dlr&lt;ctor;

Henry EbHn, Jr., Sunday &amp;hool Sup!. Sunday
School 9: J) a.m.; Morning Wors hip U a.m.;
5i.lnd.ay evening service. 7:Xl p.m.: Prayer
Meeting, Wednesday, 7::JJ p.m.

Middleport, Ohio

RU'I1.AND OIURCH OF GOD. Pastoc,
Rev. Jotm Evans.. SUnday school., 10 a.m.;
Sunday W(J'Shlp, 11 a.m.; Children's churth,
11 a.m.; Sunday .even~ Ae!'\'k'e, 'l p.m.;

THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut

A\1!'., PorQI!fOY. Mrs. Dora Wining in charge.
Sunday holiness meeting, 10 a.m.; Sunday
School, 10:ll a.m. Sunday Schoo~ YPSM
Elolse Adams, leader. 7: l:l p.m.. salvadon
meeting, vamus speakers and music specials. Thursday- U: l)a.m. to2p.m., Ladies
HOlT~@ League, . membel'!l In charge, all
women Invited; 6:45 p.m. Thursday, Corps
Cadet Class (Young Propi~Bible ). 7: :.1 p.m.

Dally .. :.............................. 20 Cents

and Gravy , CAirn, Hoi Roll &amp; 8evttago ........... . .......... .

~

.~~~~~:i];:'t!ol . U

,
'Illoma.s Glen McClung, pastor. Oyde Hend·

SINGLE~OPV

•Only 8 Miln from Pom.roy Bridge

SENTINEL

Pomeroy

212 Main street ·
·
·
992· 3785, Pomeroy
·:;.-;:.:---~:, ..~:;;· NAZA·"'""::-:------------1
Union and Mulberry, Rev.

One We-e-k ................................. $1.00
One Month ................ , .. ,............ $4.40
One Year .............. .................. $52.80

HOURS : Mon .-Sit. Ooen at 5. Sun. II am tn' o.m.
SPECIAl THIS SUNDAY: Choico ol Baked Stoak "'Veal Cutt.t, Maohod Pololon :

lHE DAILY

lFAANKLIN"

~

SUBSCRIPI'ION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

*Elegant Dining At A Family Resteur..t
Rl. 62
Ph. 304-676-8276

985-3944

Pn. 992-2101

l

5

..

'

Ohio 45769.

•Restaurant Hn Moved from the Dome to the Main Building

If

216 S. Second
Pom eroy
992· 3325

,R:t. 1, Reedsville, Oh.

8EN

·.

POSTMASTE R: Send address to The
Dally ~ ntlne \ , 111 Court St. , Pomeroy,

RESTAURANT

·

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.

~ 'For A Real Auction
}ca ll the Real McCoy''
I . 0. "Mac" McCoy

,4\ MEIGS nRE
\ ~ CENTER, INC.
fti)-( iohn F. Ful!l, Mgr.

992-3978

Ford .·v.w. ·AMC ·Jeep· Renault~

1295

399 W. Main St.

. ~~ '.1 1('\ t\ f't

svracuse

MembE&gt;r: The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Assoclaton and the
American NewspaJM!r Pu.bllshers As! ;Oclatlon. National Advertising RepreSt.&gt; ntatlve, Branham Newspaper Sales,
733 Third Ave nue. N~w York, New
York 10017.

52 Weeks .

The

~9;9:2·:•;•2:1~~~~~~:;:;~-~~9;9~2-~2!95~5~--------~P!o:m~e:ro~v~~
Bro,ll(an-VwcJr· t i

Mill Work·
Cabinet Making

1984 Cars Arriving Dai , A
We 'M ust Move .our 1983 Models
To Make Room•.Check -These .4
Specla.ls And Come In Today for
~r:eat S~vi.~gs On~ New J983

5

•

Prescriptions

·RAU'S

afternoon, Monday
th"rou~h Ft!day, 111 Court Streef. by the .
Ohio Valley Publishing Company- Mul·
tlmedla , Inc. , Pomeror. Ohlo45700, 99'.!·
2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

Public hearings will be held at 7:30 p.m. on Monday, September 12.
1983 and Monday, September 19, 1983 at the Villa&amp;e Council chambers,
237 Race Street, Middleport.
Purpose of the hearings is to allow lor public input reference to the
filing of an economic development application lor funds under procrams
authorized by the recently enacted Jobs Bill. Interested residents are
invited to attend.
Written comments and suaestions m~y be made by address in&amp; your
replies to Mayor Fred HoHman, 237 Race St., Middleport, Ohio 45760.
Fred Hollman, llayor
Yilla&amp;e ollliddleport

•

Doctors'

Locust &amp; Beech .. __ c.--

992·2311 Pomeroy

E
_
v

Outside Ohio

Kingsbury Home Sales
&amp; Service : , :

Sf. kV

PUBUC NOTICE

•

SWISHER &amp;
PHARMACY
-~We Fill
ru:

A~~:~~~~~.
service

Nationwide Ins. co.
of Columbus, o.
•04 W. Main

Publi~hed , ~very

LEGAL NOTICE

WJS &amp; SONS SOHIO

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

bringing the most guests and
person traveling the most distance. Portion of proceeds to
Brlan Walls, muscular dystrophy victim, grandson of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Gilmore, Mld. dlepc;n;!.
e_ryon.e_.welcome__.

., .

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested 'Businesses Listed On This Page.

991·5130 Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT - Annual
yard party at Red Stewart
resldence, side ·af Betty's Carryout, 3 miles south of Middleport
' lc '
on oM-te 7..5.p m "unday Mus
by ·~
the Crossover Band;
~ .all other 1r'· ~====================~
musicians Invited. No charge.
eating and dancing; bring someThe Daily Sentin~l
thing for the picnic table and your
own chair. Prizes and money to
(USPS 145-1160)
A Division of Multlmedla,Jnc.
the youngest, eldest, persons

.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

. 214 E . Main

Happenings

, ..

Guests at the meeting were from
the Rutland Friendly Gardeners,
the Chester Club, Shade Valley

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department will
hold a chicken barbecue Sunday
at the !Ire station beginning at 11
a.m. Dinners are $3 and chicken
only $2.50.

ANTIQUITY -Faith Fellowship Crusade for Christ at
Antiquity, will have a fund

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rutland Garden Club has guest arranger

Calendar

yard party set

friday, Seplember 2, 1983

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

THE POWER ABOVE
In the days wt1en we took energ~ lor grlt'lted those hlgl't-tensio n lines were,tn

eyesore. Now U they SWftll " ross oor hills and valleys they somehow SefTl

less intrusive, . .

_

.

Let the energy 6n.m~h remind yo1.1 that ther.e is anolh,r So1.1rce of POwer upon
w~l ch life dapend~. God ' s. ~;Cncern lot numanl~ did norcQol alter our'Crea11on
Virtuatr~ all the WOfld's religions stress the belief thai HI! c;ont!ouis to provide
tor our iieeds-sl)irilual and phy5 ical.
Tl]ere Is then no !.hDrtage of me Power Above. Our c~u rc hes and s~nagogues
str~e to bring us ll'ld our !amities mto close artd continuiog.·contact with it
Religious wcrshlp aoo rne study of spiritual truth are as essoo11al to the

Friday
James

,
&gt;

1'12·27
•

Saturday ·

1 Peter
3:8·22

character ol humanicy as power lines are to our in dustries.
... ......,"' n. ......_a.~

~ere~~

Wednesday evening Bible study a nd prayer

Church School, 9: 30 a.m.;
morning wa-ship. 10;45 a.m. tflrst and tt\lrd
Suncla:r.t) : fellowship dinner ,W1tb Carmel,
third :!'I!!J.rsday, 6:ll p.m.&lt;McGulrei
KENO CHURCH Ot' CJIRlST, Oliver
Swain, Superintendent. Sunday SC'hool. 9: ~
a.m. every week.
HOBSON CHRlSTIAN UNION, Wllllarn
Crabtree, past(J', Sunday SchOol, 9:.Jl a.m.;
evening servlre, 7: llp.m . Weclneoday Jrayer
meeting, 7::JJ p.m.
BEARWAU.OW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST', Duane Warden, minlstef'. Bible
cla&amp;l, 9: :II a.m.; mocnlng wcrs~. IO:.l)
a·.m.: cverdngwcnh1p. 6: lJ p.m. Wedne&amp;day
Bible study; 6::11 p.m.
NEW :rrJVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH, Sunday School service, 9:4S a.m.:
strrrON -

Worship service, 10::11 a .m .; Evangell.sllc
Servlre, 7:ll p.m. Weiln..Oay; Prayer
meeting, 7::ll p.m., Thursday.

ZION CHURCH OF CHRlST, Po,...oy.
Robert Purtell, minister;
Steve Stanley, Sunday school supt. Sunday
school, 9:30a.m.: wocshlp service 10;3) a.m.;
Evening wcrshlp SUnday, 7 p.m. and
Wtmasday, 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Gi'O'/e. The Rev. WUUam Mlddleswar,th,
Past«. Church servk.'es 9: XI a.m. Sunday
School10: :Jl a.m.
llRADBURY CHURCH OF CHR1ST. Paul
Prat1, pastor. Sunday sch::lol, 9:lla .m., LaiTy
Haynes. S. S. Sup..; morning wc:rsh1p, ·lO:ll
a.m.
RACINE CHVRC11 OFTHE NAZARENE,
H~trrtsonvWe Rd.;

Rl!v. Thomas H. ColUft', paslcr, Martha
Wolfe, ataJnnan of the BJard of Christian

Life. Sunday Sctm, 9:XI a.m.; morning
wcrship,JO::lla.m.; Sundayeventngwa-ship,
7:30p.m. Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7::KJ

p.m.

RACINE FIRSf BAPI'ISl', Don L. Walker,
Pastil', Rober! Smtih, Sunday School supl.:
Sunday Schad, 9:3) a.m.; morning wcrshlp,

10:40 a.m.; Sunday e\'enlng W(Ohlp, 7:ll
p.m.; Wednmda)' evening Blbl~ study, 7:lJ
p.m.
DANVILLE WESLEYAN. Sunday School,
9:lla.m.; momtngw&lt;rShip10:45 8.m .; ywlh
JE!I'Vice, 6:45 p.m .; t"Vening wcrshlp, 7::l1
p.m.: WcDleaday, 7::Kl p.m. Prayer and
Praise.

DANVILLE HOLINESS CHURCH, lo&lt;al&gt;d
on Route ~ between Vlntm and LanwwWe.
Rev. Ben Watts, pasta. SundaY Scrool, 9::ll
a.m., 1!olql Lambert S. s. Supt.; Morning
Worship, lO:XIa.m.; Children's Happy Hoor
6:45p.m. Prayer i Bible Study, 1:Xl p.m. 1
Missionary meeting t1rs1 Wednesday of each
month. 7:Xl p.m. For lnformatbn call
311&amp;11467.
CHRlSTIAN FEU.OWSHIP CHURCH, 383
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sulllay School, 10
a.m. Sunday and Wednesday Evening
Services 7::JJ p.m.
CitES till CHURCH OF GOD, Rev. R. E .
IIOOWon. )IIISI&lt;r. Sunday schoo~ 9::ll a.m.;
wcnhlp servtce, 11 a.m.; evening 5ei'Vlce. 7
p.m.; youth aervtce, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRlSTIAN CHURCH.
Robert E . M.,..., pasl&lt;r. Sunday""hool, 9:ll
a.m.: Paul MUSIB', supt.; mornlng wcnhlp,
10: ~ a.m .; Sunday evening ser.ice, 7 p.rri.;
mld·IW!ek service, Wedneiday, 7 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF '!liE NAZA·

RENE . - Rev. James B. KJttle, pastcr.
She'man CundUI, superiDtendent. Sunday

School, 9::ll a.m.; Morning W&lt;nhlp lD:ll
a.m.: EvangeUstlcserv1ce, &amp;p.m. Prayer and
ll'fllle w-~. 7 p.m.; youth meeting. 7
p.m.

EDEN UNI'1'EDBRE'111REN IN CHRIS'l',
Elden R. Blako, pu1&lt;r. Sunday School 10

a.m.; Rob!rt Reed, s'CJf_.;

Morning sermoo.,

11 a.m.; Sunday nlgltt !t'r'Vk:eS, Christian
~.... 7: ~ p.m.: Song ...-vice, 8 p.m.;
f'rttaddn&amp; 8:ll p.m. Mid-week Prayer
7 p.m., Alvin Reed, lay

·-·

........... w-...

HEMLOCK. GROVE CHRISTIAN, R"'"'
Watam, poslll'; CreniKJn Pratt, Sunday
Schoc:i supt. Morntna w(J'Shlp1 9: :J) a.m.;
!ltnday orlmol, IO:ll a.m.: evening ...-vice,
7:~p .m.

lin'. UNION BAPTIS'l', Rev. Tom Dooley;
Joe Sayre, Sunday School Superintendent.
Sunday achooi,' 9:C a.m.: evening wonhlp,

7:30 p.m. Pnyer meellna. T::ll p.m.
W-Ol'·
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CIIRSl', Vllla!nt
WaiB'I.
rnlrdotor:
HermaD a.ck, MijJil batendent. Sunday
Sclld 1:3) a.m.: ewsdnl .-vice, 7 p.m.;
lllllloSrltool. 1 p.m.
I
OIUROf OF 'L1IE NAZA·
Gntto, out&lt;r. Frank
RENE. Rev. R!llle,lfllll. SUndl,y S&lt;ll&lt;a. 9::Jia.m. Woroltlp
- · 11 a.m. and 7:ll p.m. Pnyer
rneet1o1. w-.,y, 7:30 p.m.

c.

m.

wg;;¥..

LAUREL CIJIIT FREE ME'l'HODlST .
aruRCH. Rev.- MIDor,- Llo)oi

=
10:~

a..- -

Olrl&lt;'lllr "'
9cll&gt;ol,!l:30a.m.:
Momln&amp;Wonltlp,
C1ar Pnctlco, Sunday, 6;))

a.m.:

p.m .; Evenlng:Worsh1p, ·l :11p.m . Wednesday

Prayer and Bible Study, 7:30p.m.
, DEXTER CHUROI OF CHRISI'. Charles
Russell, Sr.. rrtln1ster; Rick Macomber, supt.
Sunday school. 9::ll a.m.; W(Ohlp service,
10:~ a.m. Bilje Study, Tuesday, 7;XI p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH ' OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA'L'TER DAY SAllmi,
Portland·Ractne Road. WUilam Roush, pas.
toc. Linda Evans, church schOOl director.
chun:h .school, 9: .D a.m.; mom!ng wcnhlp,
· lO::JJ a.m.: Wednesday evenlng prayer
servkB. 7i:ll p.m.

BE:l'HLEHEM

BAPTIST.

Rev. Earl

Shu\8', pastcr. Worship service, 9:.'II a.m .
Sunday school. 10::.1 a.m. Bible Study and
prayer sen.rtce Thursday, 7: 3) p.m.

meeting, 7 p.m . AtfiUated ' with Southern
Baptist Convention.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIS'l' State Route 124 and County Road 5. Mark
Seevers, minister; Sunday SchOol Supt., Steve
Pickens. Sunday !iiChool. 9:00a.m.; morning
wcnhip, lD : ~ a.m.; evening worship, 7 p.m.
Wedn£5day wocshlp, 7 p.m.
.nlBILEE CHRlSTIAN CENTER George's Creek ROad. Rev. C. J . Lemley,
pastcr; Paul Poar. Chureh School Supertnt~ndent. Chun-h sctro, 9:.)} a.m.; morning
w&lt;J'shlp, 10:ll a.m; evenin!Z servlre, 7 p.m.
Bible Study, Wednesday, 7:00p.m. CISSSl'S for
all ages.

ST. PAUL L1.TI'IIERAN CHURCH , Co-

ot Sycamore and Serond Sts.., Pomeroy. The
'Rev . WUUam MhJdle.warth, PasiU' . Sunday
Scb:x'ti at 9:45a.m . and Church Services 11

·p.m.
.
SACRED HEART, Msgr. Antll&gt;ny Gianna·
more, Ph. 992-5898. Saturday evening Mass,
LONG Bo'IToM CHRISTlAN, Ken Keifer,
7::f) p.m.: Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m.
pa.!lt&lt;l'. WaUa~ Darhewood, Sunday SchOO
Confessklm one-half hour before each Mass.
Supt. Worship serviceat9a.m. BJbleSchoollO,
CCD Clase. 11 a.m. Sunday.
VICTORY BAPTIST - 5?1 N. 2rid St.,
a.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLIN~OIURCH , Rev.
Middleport. James E. Keesee, pasta-. Sunday
ThEn'On Durham, pastor. 'Sunday School at
morTling W(f'Shlp, 10 a.m.; evening se!VIce, 1
9:XI a. m.: Mcrnlng W(J"Shlp at 10::11 a. m.
p.m.; Wednesday f'Venlng wt:rShlp, 7 p.m.:
Sunday evening service at 7:.'II p.m.;
VIsitation. Thursday, 6:JJ p.m.
llmrsday sen.·ires at 7: ~ p.m.
.
1RINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBLY. Cool·
FREEOOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
vllle - GUbert Spencer, pastcx-. SUnday
Knob. located on County Road 31. Rev.
scliOol, 9::rt a.m.: mornlng service, U a.m.
Lawrence GltH'SC'ncamp, pastcr: Rev. Roger
Surday e-vening service, 7: :tl p.m.; midweek
WUUord, aSsistant past«. PreaChing servirrayer service Wednesday, 7::ll p.m.
ces, Sunday 7:.l1 p.m . Prayer meeting
MOUNT OLIVE OOMMUNITY CHURCH.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; Gary GriffUh. leadl'r
Lawrence Bush. past&lt;r. Max Folmer, Sr.
Youth grwpr;. Sunday evening, 6:lJp.m. with
Superint~~t. SuJiiay ScOOol and mornln~
Roger and VIolet Willford as leadc!rs.
wocshlp, 9:JJ a.m. Sunday f'Venlng ser-tlce. 7
Communion service tlrst ~OOay each rnooth.
p.m.; Youth meeting and Bible study,
WHITI':'S CHAPEL, CoolvUie RD. Rev.
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday school9::J:la .m.;
UNITED FAI'lli CHU~ .- !Wil~~ 7 on
wen hip service. 10: ll a.m. Bible study and
prayer service Wednesday. 7: .ll p.m.
. Rt.m.AND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Dan
Monlux, pastcr; BW Nlcholscn, SUnday
school supt. Sunc:h\Y school, 9:3J a.m.;
morntngwtrShlp and rommurWn. 10: J) a.m.
RU'I1.AND BIBLE MErnODJST- AmM
TUUs, pasttr. SOnny Hudson, supt. Sunday
school, 9:lJ a.m. Momlngworship, 10: :It a.m.
SurK!ay evening service, 7:00. WeilniOday
evening sei'vlce 7:00p.m.; WMPO ~am.
9:00 a.m. each Sunday morning.

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL,

Th ~d

Ave., the Rev. Clark Ba ker. pa••tor. Carl
Nottlngham, SuOOay Sctool Supt. Sunday

SchoollO a.m. - classes for all ages. Evening
services, 6 p.m. Wednesday, Study, 7::ll p.m.
Youth services, 7:JJ p.m. Friday.
ECCLESlA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill Sl.,
Mlddlepor1. Pasta Is BreCher chuck McPha-·
.sm . suooay School n1 10 a.m. Services
Sunday evening a t7 p.m. and Wednesday at7
p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev. Earl ShUler,
pastoc. Sunday school 9:lJ a.m .; Churt'h
service, 7 p.m.; you Th meeting, 6 p.m.
Tuesday Blbl.e Study, 7 p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTIIOUSE. :rot'
HUand Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pastcr.
Daney Lambert , Sunday School Superintend·
ent. Sunday Morning service, IO:OO a.m.;
Sunday evening service 7:3} p.m. Services
TUesday and Thursday evenings at 7::1) p.m.
WORD OF FAITH, 93 Mill Sl., Mlckllep&lt;rt;

Richard Stewart, pasta-. Sunday morning,
10:00- Sun:tay evening. 7::JJ. Tuesday momln~ Bible Study, 10:00; Wednesday evening,
7::1): Thursday morning video with Kcnnf&gt;th
Cofl£'1and. 10:00: Friday evening video with
Kenneth Copeland, 7:.'1).
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF' THE NAZA·

RENE , Rev. GlenOOn Stroud, pastor. Surx:lay
School. 9::1) a.m.: Wo~hlp Servtce, 10::11
a.m.; Youth Service, Sunday, 6:15 p.m.;
Surxlay evening seiVIce, 7:00p.m. Wl'dnes·
day Prayer Meeting and Bible Study 7:00p.m
NEASE SE'ITLEMENT CHURCH. IJo.
nald R. Karr, Sr., pastor. Su nday afTI"rnoon
services, 2: :JJ; Thursday ev~ning wrvice,
7:ll.
F1RSTBAPTISTCHURCH , Mason, W.Va.
PastCI', Bill Murphy. Sunday &amp;tDol. 10 a. m.;
Sunday (.'Venlng service, 7:lJ p.m .; Prayer
meeting and Bible Study Wednesduy, 7:·l:l

p.m. Everyone welcome.

Sennonette

Rt.m.AND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, Rev. Uoyd D.' Grimm, Jr., pastor.
Sunday School, 9:lJ a.m.: wcrshlp service,
10:30 a.m.; y wng people's service, 6 p.m .
Evangelistic service, 6:ll p.m. WednESdaY
Sll'f'VIce, 1 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRlST, Miller Sl ..
Mason.
Va. Eugene L. Conger, minister.
Sunday Bible Study, 10 a.m.; Wtrshlp ll a.m.
and 7 p.m. w~ay Bible Study, vocal
music, 7 p.m.
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudding
Lane, Mascn,. W. Va. Rev. Ronnie B. Rase,
PastCI'. Sunday ScbJol 9:45a.m.: Momlna
Worship 11 a:m . Evening Service 7::1) p.m .
Wednesday Women's Mlnlstr1es 9 a.m.
(meeting and pray~). Prayer and Bible
Sludy 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISl'IAN UNION, The Rev. WOllam
CampbeU, past..-. Sunday School, 9:lla.m.:
James Hughes, supl.; eVening sevtce, 7::rl
p.m . Wednesday evening prayer meetlng,
7: .ll p.m. Yooth prayerservkeeachTuesday.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart, W.
Va., Rt. 1, Mark lrwtn, pasta-. Worship
services, 9:ll a.m.; Sunday Sctoo.. U a.m.:
eYenina wcnhlp, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday rottago
prayer m~g and Bible study, 9::11 a.m.
Worship service, Wednesd.r, 7:lJ p.m,
OUR SAVIOUR LtmiERAN CHURCH Walnut and Heruy Sts., Ravenswood, W. Va.
The Rev. Ge&lt;ri!O C. Wolrtck, pasi&lt;J'. Sunday
Schopl, !r.ll a.m .; SUnday w«Mip, 11 a.m.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, now locat.d
on ~ Pike, County Road Zi neo.r
Flatwo:d&amp;. Rev. Blackwood, putcr. Service •
. on SUnday at 10:ll a.m. and 7:Xl p.m. with
&amp;tnday scMol, 9 :ll a.m. bible study,
W.atiOday, 7::ll p.m .
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIS'l'- Sl. Rl.l'II,Anllqulty. Pu1..-, Rev.
Franldtn Dtclo&gt;ns. Sunday rnornlng. 10 a.m.
Sunday evening. 7: :ll p.m. Thunday ...ntng.
7:30p.m.
SL'tVERSVU..LE COMMUNI'l'Y BAPl'IST
CHURCH, P.. t..- Rd8t B}'Ofll. Sunday
SChOOl lO a.m.: Wonhlp Service 11 a.m.:
Sunday evening .....,.ce, 7: ll p.m.; Wodnel111,)1 evenlna oervlce, 7:30p.m.

w.

JNDEPDIDENT HOLINESS CHURCH,

Inc. - Paul Sl., Mkldl_.. Rev. O'DeU

Manl~. poster. SUnday School, 9:ll a.m.:
- - W&lt;l'l~ IO:ll a.m.; eveniDit wor·

ship, 7:llpm. 'l'uooday,l2:ll p.m. Women's
prayer rneettna: Prayer and Jratse ...-vtce,
9/e&lt;tMottay, 7:~ p.m.

Rtm.AND APOSTOUC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIIIT, Eldts- Jlllllfll M-. Bible
atudy, w~. 7:llp.m.; !!undaySchooi,
10 Lm. a..Jay nltlhloervlce, 7: :ll p.m.
l'OMDioY wEsLEYAN HOLINESS Road . ..Earl .F!eto!': jlOIIIJ',

'

Recently prior to a seminar at write seven columns a week, 52
which she was to deliver an weeks a year, people get to know
address, I had the opportunity to you ... My column reflectssomeof
visit a few minutes with columthis country's greatest mindsnist, Ann Landers.
this country's foremost
With the credentials of being
authorities- who are my perthe most widely syndicated
sonal friends, upon whom I can
columnist in the world and one of
callatanytlme ... " shesaldwhlle
the most tnnuentlal wilmen In the . giving me that are-you-trying-toUnited States, Ann Landers
trip-me- up look.
cannot be taken llghtly. Tbe
I wasn't. I couldn't help but
absolute devotion of her readers
wonder what great mind sugbas continued to amaze me, so
gested she tell her readers to Iron
the question was directed from
their towels and bed linens but I
slncerepuzzlement. " What's the
decided to change the subject.
charl,sma you've managed to
I continued to toy with that
acquire ... Why do so many people
question? Why do people write to
trust your answered for Just
an Ann Landers or a Dear Abby?
. about an~?".
Why did they wrlte to Dorothy
Perhaps, sensing that I was not
Dlx? Why does anyone write to a
her biggest fan, Miss Landers
perfect stranger seeking advice
·approached the answer with a
on any subject under the sun.?
caUtioUs note, "I don't know
Could It ,be because the
· whether It's chlUismatlc.. that I
stranger not onlyl seems to listen
don't know ..! wouldn't use that
but also to hear? Coould It be
word In connection with myselfbecause the answers seem to
... that word is reserved for the
swell from neutral ground rather
· Kennedys, you see. I think It is
than personal interest? Could It
perhaps, the fact that they
be the stranger always has the
believe me ... they ldentlty...they
lime?
Those qualities are
see themselves In my column ... "
seldom found In "friends".
In times of desperation, most
"Okay, that accounts for the
reader," I responded, "but what
folk are not as concerned about
about those who write to Ann · the quality of the advice as about
the fact that someone Is actually
Landers?. Those letters are real,
aren't they?"
taking time to lister... to hear ... and hopefully, to care.
. '"Ibe letters are tor real, and
' they come from people who
By Lee Miller, Rector, Grace
~mae I'm for real. When you
Episcopal Church.

�Page-8-The Daily

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Dairy refund
program goes
into effect

'

Meigs County dairy producers
who wish a refund of their second
51kent per cwt. deduction for milk
marketings should establish their
base marketings at their county
ASCS office, said David Fox, county
executive director of the USDA's
Agricultural Stabilization and Conse!Vation Service.
The dairy refund program went
Into effect Sept. 1 wtth Implementation of the second 50 cent milk
marketing deduction. To be eligible
for a 1982-83 marketing year refund,
producers must reduce their commercial milk marketings forSept:1,
1983 through Sept. a&gt;, 1983 by 8.4
percent from the September aver·
age of the two marketing years
which begari Oct. 1, 1911l. To be

1983

Products ln the year ending Sept. a&gt;
and mqre than 15 billion pomwls
during the 1983-8!lllllll;ketln,s( year.

·wtsh, producers may request an
ellglble for a l98J.84 markei:tng year the milk support program.
refund, producersmustreducethelr
Producers who sell milk directly advance of 60 percent of the
commertclal milk marketings by to consumers should provide the refundable deduction paid during
8.4 percent for the period Oct.1, 1983 county of!lcewtth sales records and . the flrnt 6 months of the J983.8C
· to Sept. :D, 1984. Average annual cancelled checks as proof of marketing year any time on or after
m arketings between Oct. 1, 1911) marketings and the amounts pald to April 1, 1984. Producers requesting
through Sept. 00, 1982 wW be the CCC.
this advance must furnish pertinent
producer's base marketings, Fox
Fox said that producers may milk marketing records and certify
said.
establish their hases at ASCS offices that the required 8.4 percent
Acceptable documentation of anytlmedurtngthemarketingyear. reduction In marketings wW be
milk marketings are payment 'llley may rue applications for madefortheentlremarketingyear.
receipts or statements from milk 1982-83marketingrefundsfrom0ct.
Both .the milk marketing deduc·
handlers that show both the amount 1, 1983 through Dec. 31, 1983. lions and dairy refund program are
or milk sold each month during the Applications for the full 1983-84 authorized by the Omnibus Budget
base period and the upcoming marketing year may be flied Reconciliation Act of 1982. These
refund period. · Receipts for the between Oct. 1, 1984 and Dec. 31, actions have been tal!en to reduce
refund period should also show the 1984. The amount refunded wW be milk production and to reduce CO$!
amount of money deducted for the amount the producers paid to of the dairy price support program,
USDA's Commodity Credit Corpo- CCC In excess of the first, nonre!un- Fox said. CCC expects to purchase
ration (CCC) to helpoffsetthecostof dable, 51kent deduction. It they more than 16 billion pounds of dairy

8

Business Services'
&amp;

Vinyl

Will enforoe law

Aluminum

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

JOHN'S AUTO

a

•

BOGGS

Call for free siding estimates, 949-2801 or

SALES &amp; SEJNICE

.

We pay c,•h for lata model
clean UMd care.
Jim Mink .Chev.-Oidl Inc .
Bill Gene John1on
446-31172

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

No 'Sunday

Authorized John Deer.
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

STRIP
COAL

PHONE
992-2156
Or
Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.

Auctioneer
Service. Estate. Farm. Antique &amp; liquidation sales.
licen11d • bonded in Ohio
WVe. 304- 773-5786 Of
304-773·91 86 .

~~w:w:~tyu ~·,Lr.~

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"

949-2860.

every Tu .. d•v
night, Pt. Plo. .ont. WVo.
Auct. Lonnie Ntal. Farm,
houoohold. oototo. otc. Cell
614·367-7101 .

ARROW FLASHING
SIGNS
FOR SALE OR RENT
6" &amp; 8"
Replocemont Lettera

SIDING

Heavy. enforcement at all stop
signs lnthevillagewtll be carried out
effective at once In Pomeroy, Pollee
Chief George Stitt warned today.
There are too many violations and
too many near accidents taklng
place as a result, Chief Stitt said.
· Pollee wW observe stop signs and
violators will be cited. Chief Stitt
particularly called attention to the
Mulberry Heights area where
violations are taklng place.

Wanted to buy u11d coal •
wood heaters. Swain Furniture, 448· 3159, 3rd . &amp;
Olive St .. Gelllpollo. Oh .

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Will pay good price for u1ed
mobile homaa, travel trailan
&amp; compero. Cell 614-4480176 .

1-J.tlc'

SJ()OO A TON.

Writ~

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

PH. 992-2280

3

Standing timber wanted .
Top prices paid . Call after 6
P. M. Lorry Strickland, 81 4682· 7832.

Announcements

2 2J He

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

LOOKING FOR AN ALMOST NEW
THEN LOOK NO FARTHER.

lAFF-A-DAY

OWN YOUR

Public Notice

FOR

OWN CAMPSITE

On August 25. 1983 . m the
Case No 24210. Robert E
Russell. 3 5200 . Wolfe Pen

sell, deceased late of R D 4 .
,PQmer oy. Oh1o 4 5769
Robert E Buck
_ •
Probate Judge /C lerk

191 2. 9. 16 3tc

· •·

Public Notice

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF HAROLD L
PROFFITT. DECEASED
Case No. 24207
·
NOTICE OF
APPOIIIITMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On August 23 rd . 1983 1n th e
'Me1gs County Probate Court.
'Cae No 24207, Eula P Proff1n
,JQ359 Trouble Creek Road.
·Portland. Oh1o 45770 was
appomted Adm1n1stra tm: of the
Efstate of Harold L Proflm.
deceased. late of 30359 Trou -

ble C1eek Road. Portland. Oh10

45770

Raben E Buck
Probar e Judge/

AL TROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•Lowest Rates

Misc. Merchandise

LARIAT

Around

""w

BIG FOOT PARK

.. Roaa. Pomeroy: Oh10 45 769
Was appo r-nted Adr:r~r. rJrstrator
_of th e esrate of Earl E. Rus -

BRONCO · XLT

AM-fM.SfeNo, air, CNi• control, rKiining captain's
chai11, flip fold back -t, puH.down arm rem, aide
doM poucheo, nmninsi boardo, NOr air deflector, front
bug shield, Ziolbalt life~me ruotp-' wananty can
be lnlnsfe,.. ta
o -; Only 8,700 miles and
can you· belitYe it, it's stil ~. manufacturer'a
wamonty. Go Ia a carlot and it will-' You betw....
$11,800 and $12,500. Got it from. us for lhe
incredible low price of $11,200. Can be..., 1/2
milo off Rt. 7 on Rt. 124, or call 992-7532 or

AT

Me1 gs Coun ty Probate Court.

SAI.E-1982

54

•Dump Truck

· ··Service .

CARPET
$1295

992-3509.

*WATER
*GOOD FISHING
*ELECTRIC
*GOOD BOATING
·- *~ATH HOI.JSE
. *BOAT D_OCK·
*PRIVATE·
*BOAT RAMP .

8 . . Public Sale
···
. Ill Auction.

3 Announcements .

RAINBOW
INN

SHADED WATERFRONT LOTS

NO MONEY DOWN ...... .
NO PAYMENTS TILL 1984

GOLD SEAL
CONGOlEUM

PUBLIC AUCTION

UNDER NE.W

SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

STARTING AT
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

742-2328
4·21-ttc

113.95
Sq. Yd. lntlalled

ANSO IV NYLON
115.95
Sq. Yd. lnotallod

SAT., SEPT. 3 AT 2:00P.M.

RUBBER-BACK TWEED

Rodney Grange Hall, Rodney, Oh.
Oak and walnut antiq.- furniture, old dishes, stone jars,

$399 ~AlrRRY

primitives, linens, old tools,
numerous household items.

MANAGEMENT

DIRECTIONS: South on Rt. 7 - 5
Miles below Gallipolis, to Raccoon
Creek Bridge and follow signa.

..
Good Selection Of

new

"licensed &amp; Inspected"

PH. 992-3047
8·1·1 mo

MYRON "Bud" McGHEE, AUCTIONEER
(Ucensed &amp; Bonded in W. Va. and Ohio)

WELCOME!

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers

SHOW: SAT.-SUN.-MON.

Business .senices

Clerk

(81 26. (9) 2. 9. 3tc

- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks

- Lo-Boy
- Trencher

Real Estate General

- Water

Public Notice
PUDUC NOTICE
·· Not1ce 1s herebv g1ven that
Dark 01amond Coat Corpora;IIOn of 23878 Rosehill Rd ..
Pomeroy. Oh10 45769 1S applyIng for adjacent area perm1t to
~x1St1ng

perm1t D -0 111

The
proposed m1mng opera!IOns. to
1nclude both stnp mmmg and
underground m1nmg, IS located
1n frac t1on 2 lrachOn 3. and
lractiOn 12 of Salisbury Town -

.sh1p, Me1gs County. and Nonh
.of State Route 7. East of State
Route 7. 33. and 124 and
South of County Road 25 and
West of TownshiP AoOCI 204
The property IS located on !he
Pomeroy Quad rangle at the 7 5
m1nute U S G,S. Topo Map A
· copy of th e appi1Cat10n 1S on file
m the Me1gs County Recorder's
OffiCe. Me1gs County Counhouse. Pomeroy. Oh10. for

Public lnspec110n Wrntr.n co m. ment. ob]echon s or requests lor
1nformal co nferences on thiS
apphcat1on m ay be sent to the
DIVISIOn of Recl amatiOn. Foun tatn Square. BtHid1ng D· 3.
Columbus Oh10 43224
181 26 (9) 2. 9. I 2 4tc

NEAR DEXTER - 30 acr.S o1
land with approx. 7 acres
tillable. Gas and oil rigli~ gp
wnh the lard. Asking $15.000.
EASTERN DISTRICT -A neat
bHevel home wilh 3 bedrooms,
fami~ room, ~rge utility, I~
baths, back deck, garage, over
an aCre lot fully furnished.
$43,000. Wnhout furnnure
$40,000.

NEW

LISTING PORT - Spacious
sl01'1
home wrth 3 bedrooms, ~rge
living room, formal diling
room, knchen and 11/ 3 baths.
Has a full basement front and
rear porches and a nice
backyard wilh storage buildin&amp;
$26,500.

MIDDlEPORT - Beautifully
remodei..J 2-3 bedroom home
wnh full basement ~rport,
rear porch. central air, 1 ~
baths and over 3 acra
REDUCI:D TO $35.000.

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF BOBBY E.
MOLDEN, DECEASED
Coso No. 24208
NOTICE OF
APPOIIIITMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
ON August 23rd, 1983. 1n
th e Me1gs County Proba te
Court Case No 242 08. Raben
B M olden. A 0 1. De,.ter. Oh10
45 726 was appOinted Admin-

istrator o f the estate of Bobby E
Molden. deceased . late of A D
4. Pomeroy Oh10 45769
Robert E Buck
Pro bate Judge/

Clerk
181 26. (91 2. 9. 3tc

NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- Older home that needs
some war~ but has much
remodeling completed. ~re­
place, 7 rooms. 3 bedrooms,
Ioyer, ori~nal woodwork and
front sitting porch. Bargain at
$15,000.
.
N£W LIST! NG - POMEROY
- House full of expensive
features, ceiling fa n, woodburning st011e and · Ande~
windows are a few. Full
basement nice large kt

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

ing and painting, stonn
dooo and windows.

NEW LISTING -Nice looking
modern 2 bedroom home.
Bath. gas furance, level lot and

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

$28.900.

NEAR POMEROY - 1'Jj acres
of level ground for a big garden
and yard. Plus a n~e 3
bedroom ranch with new
carpet, equipped kitchen.
woodburner, storage building
and a patio. Just $36.900.
REALTORS

Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
GRI 992-6191
.leln Truuell 94'-2660
Dottie Tu- 992-5692
Jo Hill 98S-4466
Office !!92·2259

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
lone Bonom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992·3067

or 949-309~_ 10 _,,

l

NEW liSTING - 2 bedroom
home in Middleport Lot .
45xl90 and should~ with the
above for on~ $16,000.

9 ACRES -

3 bedroom
country home. Bath. lP. water,

lH!J.IIc

...---------'J&amp;F

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTUU USE"

•DOZER
.
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•liMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WOIIt
.
•LAND CLEARING.
CONCRETE WORK
BONII(D &amp; IIOIIf( GUAIWIIUD
PHONE Jill CliFFORD
992-7201
JJ.tk

985-3561
All Make1

•Walhen •Diahwaahere
R•n.,.•

WOODS - 18 acres fenced,
pasture, garden and 2 bedroom home near Portland.

•Refrigeratora

•Dryers •Freezer•
PARTS ond SERVICE

SPLENDID - Br~k veneer 3
bedroomer, 2 fireplaces,
equipped kilchen; f/111\ily rm ..
dbl. garage on nite landscaped
lit

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

2 APTS. - Level lot in
Middleport Both rented.

On
and Rooting,
Gutter and Downspouts.
"F-Eoti-"
"12 y..,. Ellll•ieia"
''Work Gu•••II!W!Id"

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

SJXt

Also Transmlulon

NEAR POMEROY- On 3 sttte
I \i acres level, 3
bedrooms, bath, furnace and
equipped kilchen.
·

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

3 APT. HOUSES - 11 rentals,
all in good condition. Only
$85.000.00, can ~ beat that

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

RUTLAND - 6 nn house and
fum~hed trailer lor only
$25,900.

Sizes start lrdm 12'x16'

Ills.

Arbaugh's Archery
&amp; Hunting Supply

R. E. HOME

TUPPERS PLAINS. OH.

PLUMBING and
HEATING

'Bows &amp; Accessori·.•
'Guns &amp; Ammo.

•Experienced

'live Bait, Fishing
Tackle
'Huntina &amp; Fishing
License
'Doc Supplies
Hrs.: Weekdays 10-6
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10-8
Closed Tues. &amp; Wed.

•R-oble
•WorkGuaraJOB - BIG OR SMALL

992-6030
Minersville, OH .

8/19/ 1 100. pd..

8·1·1· mo.

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

RADIATOR
SERVICE
recorendri..,.ondheet11r corea. We Clll1 111to

acid boll IIIII rad out ,._
dlrrtorl. We rUo r1!plir

WOOD
WORLD

G•Tenb.

PAT HILL

FORD

992-2196
Middlopart, Ohio

2506 Grand Cenlral Ave.
Vien111, W. Va.
8·J.l-mo pd.

lnsulatd Do1 Houses

P&amp;S

OVER 300 ACRES - 10 rm.
home, free gas. Wjl ~I any
palt

BUILDINGS

heine, 011. &lt;'r
Ph.-614ifHIIJ ,

IO~tft

TRAILER AND 2 lOTS - On
State Rt. wrth city water.

I'
I

A-FRAME - In the country.
1\! acres near 5 apts,
10 ACRES - Minerals just off
33 11e111 Darwin.
·
COllE SEE THEM, GM US AN
OFFER.
I .

Phone:

15

-Addanl ond ....

1-304-675-1

--ngand-and
........._..
I

.,.

-Gmack wodt
.-fllumblng

(F•oo Eotimat.. )

V. C_ YOUNG Ill

For ell your wiring
needa; furnace• re-'
Pllr aervlce end lnatallatlon.

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless Steel

Pomeroy, Ohio
ll -26-t!c

USED
APPLIANCES
Air Conditioners · ·'
WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS
742-2362

Years Experience
Jll:l./8/ 12

Mason, W. Va.
C. L._Kitchen

742-3185

'

.alff

Anythinc
nythinc

CUSTOM PRINT

949-2358
CUSToM WORK -AIR BRUSH
CAPS
JACKETS
UNIFORMS
T-SHIRTS
TROPHIES
QUANTITY SPECIALS
TRANSFERS-LETTERING

8-22:1 ""' pd.

Route

4,

Pomeroy

1 · 1~11110.

M.L
CONTRACT! NG -

RECLAMATION
'Excavating
'Ponds
'Septic Tanks
'Hauling
949-2293
11·1·!1C

"FREE ESTIMATES"

·'* CHAIN LINK
FENCING

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'Sid inc
'Roofina

Installed And
W1rr1ntld by Sears

'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts

For

'Remodflinl

5 Years.

20

Yurs Experience
In Home Aru
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 843-5425
H ·Z mo. pd ..

MERCHANT

Will do bebyo~tlng In my
home. Uva in Mlddlepor1
oroo. Cell 61•·992-113•9.
Will ca're for elderly In pur
home. trained a expe~
rlancad. LPN cera given.
614-992-731 4.

'

-----·Ga iiipoiiii· .... -··

Will do babysitting anytime
day or evanir,g. Cell 992·
6630.
Mala atudent would like to
ahara ride to Hocking Tech.
992·3573 .
RETIRED ohoet motal
worker &amp; plumber aeaka pan
limo job. Will do onythlng.
Write: Box C-1 Pt. Plaestnt
Regist,r, Pt. Ple..ant, WV
26660.
13

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
aurance Co . h11 offered
aervlcee fof. tire lneurenca
coverage in Gallia County
for almo1t a century . Farm,
home end par1onal pror.ny
coverage• are availab • to
meet individual need•. Contact Kail Burleson, agent.
Phone 4•6-2921 .

Community Patio Sale
2.3.4 . 9 to dark on Rt . 141
&amp; Vicinity
[411:1 milee out) . Winter
ewaatenm baby
··········--···--···----··-··· coaum
cloth11. play pen, young
Traders Day and large Yard girls school clothea. aduhe
dishes and much
Solo St . Rt. 141 to St . Rt. clothtt.
233,1 mllaontherrt. Lot1of more.
itema to numarou• to Yord Sole Sept . 1-4 . Monomention ..
womana-chlldten clothing,
Church Yard S1la Fri. -Sat. furniture, nlc neca. farm
Sept 2·3. 10to4. Ro1idence equipment, 1110 tor sate
Tom Kelly. 681 Chootnut 1974 Cedlllac. 31h mila~ out
St., Middleport, Oh . Coli 776 . Watch 1or the eign1.
992-3807.
Rummage S1la Corner Jrd.
&amp; Olivo St.. Golllpollo.
2 Garage S•lil 7 Family. Clothes
all sizet, cash regisSept. 1·2·3, 2 mllea from
ter,
counter
top g11 range &amp;
Rt . 141 on Noighbarhood
Rd. Antique furnltu·r e, other mlac. Items .
carpet, lote of clothing, end
Sole O .J . White Rd.
much much more . Rain or Yard
Friday, 9 to 1
ehlne.
Yord Sole Sept. 1 thru 6.
Clothes, knick knacks and
other ham1 . Fairview Evargre~n Rd.

Yard Sale 8ft . truck topper,
riding lawn mower, furni·
ture, antique• &amp; miec. Sept .
3-4·6 on Rt. 7 between Rt .
33 &amp; Pomeroy Golf Course .

Yard Sale 8ft . truck topper,
riding fawn mower. furniture, antiquea &amp; misc. Sept .
3 -4· 6 on Rt. 7 between Rt .
33 &amp;. Pomeroy Golf Course .

Big yerd sa le on Rt . 33 at
Darwin. sat ., Sept. 3 . 9-1 .
l ots of clothu, collectables,
dolls and misc.

---'--~-----

1 641 &amp; 1643 Lincoln
Heights. Po meroy. Labor
Day, Sept. 5 . Bicycle, stain leu steel sink, old bottllfl,
magazines, dishea, Chris~
It!
mes decorations, drlperie»
Starcher Rd . be1ide Beech 1&amp;_b_e_d_•P
_ •_•_•d_&amp;_m_i•_c_
. __
Grove Cemetery, rear gate .
, mi 1c .
Mulberry Hgts . Pomeroy .J ~o,;::~?~l~ items , men 'aFollow slgne. Gl111wara .
baby's clothing.,
clothes, car stereoa. ahd car spoked wheels. Rt . 124,
part1. 1968 Muatang fast s, yracuse .
back, simplicity roto·till8r. _:_:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Something .f or everyone . Sept. 1 .2.3 . Behind license
August 30 thru Septemb{fr bureau in Pomeroy. Lots of
10. 614 -992 · 7611 for
d
1 h
further information.
jean an b.ilby cot es .
Yard Sale Monday Sept .
6th. Water Streat, Syracuse .
Several Families. Bargain
Dava, Jean Hill. Don 't mias

James Teaford residence in
Syracuse, Ohio . Large clothing, depre11ion era ·lamp,
girl• 20 Inch bicycle .

423 S. Front, Middleport .
Friday and Saturday , 9 to 6
both days.

Sept . 6 - 6 - 7 . Florence
SWEEPER and 1ewing maSidders reaidence, Darwin,
chine repair, pans, and
Moving sala· 2 milea off Rt. 7 At. 33. Lots of everything.
supplies.
Pick up and
on SR 124. September 3· 4 .
delivery. Davia Vacuum
Laroe Sale Centenary Town·
Furniture, lots of
Cleaner. one half mila up
hpuoo. Fri. &amp; Sot. Sept. 2 &amp; Garage Sale 194 lower merchandise .
River
Road,
Sept.
6.
Bar
Georgeo Creek Rd .
Celll---------3'. Dlahes, amall eppllances,
446· 0294.
jawelery, bMapraads, cur- ltoola, carpet (new). Fabric Gigantic yard sale at Mary
Wanted to buy, New, ueed&amp;. 18 W
ted t 0 D 0
Store clo•• out remnant 1to layne's , Cheshire , Ohio .
ontique lurnlturo. Will buy 1 ____a_n_ _ __ __ _ tains. clothae.
6 yda. lengthl, priced right .
Balloon• for. Birthdays, Get piece or complete houM· 1r
&amp; Vicinity
Soma furniture, otheu September 1.2. 3.
Wall. Annlveraarys, Swee- holda. Also complete Auctimdee .. etc.
theart&amp;, partlas. Call Bal· oneering aervlce. Call 01by General Hauling and Trash
810 South Second . Middleloono &amp; Co .. 446-4313.
A. Mortln 814-992-6370.
removal 8eJVIce. Reliable
pan, Sept. 1 through . 10. TH~E~ fami!y yard sale,
and dependable. Ca!l 446Knivtts, furrtitura, dishes., ' Sept~m:ber . 2 ~ ·~. 9 till 1·
NBW cr~fr •h.op 'qp,8~i~g. B~ying dolly · go(d •.: oliver 3169 botwoon 9 end 6 . . ·.
lin'a.na, b8dding, _clothiniJ, Guna , tools~· lots of misc .
Taki"O craftl on consign- coin I, ringa.jawelry, eterUng
apP,Iianc~s. tools, drape~; 'Sandhill Road next to ·Letart
ment. For more Information were. old coina, large cur· Lawn' Mowing no yard to big
sllverstone pans, jewelry, School.
.pleue coli 614-992-3666 rancy. Top prlcea. Ed. Bur- or amall. Reliable and depan.
toys, lempa, Avon, lot1 misc.
or 814-992-2903.
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave. dable. For a1timate call
YARD sale, September 1. 2.
Mlddlepon. oh. 614-992· 446-3169, 9 to 5.
3. 9 a .m .- 8 p.m. 2406
3.76.
Monroe Ave. Pt. ptaasant .
Experienced mature woman
will do babysitting In my
YARD .sale, 2436 Lincoln
home· by the WI\Ok 01' by the
Ave. Pt . PI&amp;IJant, 9-1 ChildhoUr. Day shift only', t40
rims clothe·; .-· adults ·large
Weelt or t2.00 an hour at
clothes,
Septemtiet 2nd . &amp;
LETART MACHINE . SHOP
Centenary, 4411-7749 .
3rd.
and engine repair. Marvjn 11
Flowero·304·896-3361. - - - - - - - - - Will do babysitting 6. houM
YARD aala, Fri$fay &amp; SaturCharla• Thomaa-896-3622.
cleaning. Cell 814·387·
day, 2110 Madison Ave . Pt.
Jim Young-304·882-3333. Wanted : Emergency Relief 0262.
3-family garage sale. Thurs- Pleasant, 9· 1.
Garage Sale Uvlngroom fur~
Community Sarvlcai
dey and Frldoy. Sept . 1&amp;2.1------ - - - TERRY'S Barber Shop at Workers for an intermediate Cera for elderly lady in my nitura, bedroom furintura.l - - - -- - - - - - 9-4..Mulberry Heights. 6th YARD-moved in-sale, SatAshton. WV. Hair cuta. care facility for the mentally home: Cell614-268- 1615.
clothing. Items too numer· Mega Yard S1le 8 Family. h~usa on right from town . urday &amp; Sunday . Electric
$2.00. Monday-Friday, retarded In Gallipolil. High
ou1 to mention. Bulaville 1136 Second Ava .• Gallipo- Deak , 2 bicyclea, bowling kitchen range. with hood
4:30 to 8:30p.m.
school diploma and Ohio Water hauling. Will do cl1t· Poner Rd. 1A mile from llo. Sept. 6 .6 8i 7 . 7til 1 Rein ball. amaiii.V., recliner, men fan, trash compactor, electdrlver'allcenaa required. For arns or 1wimmlng poola. Bulaville Townhouee toward or Shine. Wed. everything V2 and women'• clothes. girls ric yard edger, toast maater
Poner. Sale atane Thureday price. Item• offered: an - sizes 10·14, boysalzes3·7 , oven broiler. 3 oil painting•
further Information contact 614-992-5868 .
tique•. 7 piece ·d ining room baby clothe1. Rain or shine . from Phillipinea, 76 Ford
4
Giveaway
9:00AM until 1
Lori Barron at 448-1642,
•uita. high cheat. chest with
Will do hou11work in Point
e~t. 332. or wrtte P.O. BoK
LTD, puules. games. booka,
906. Galli polio. Oh 45631 . Pleetant or Gall. Farry area. Yerd Sale Sept. 1et-3rd. mirror, rocker, dithaa. 1ive T·h ursday, Friday, and Satur· clock radio. handcra1tad
Canning tomatoae. Call Buckeye Community Sarvl· 304-675·6329. Aok for 9Am-1 Bladen Mercerville drawer chest. aecretary day . Corner o1 6th and Vine . items. Christmas decoraRd . off 218, fir~t houee on deak, set of diahea, oak lamp
caa i1 an equal opportunity Dotty.
4·8·2376 .
tlans . Take Rt. 36 South
left. lteme-babyatrollar, table, oak mantel. table, Racine.
employer.
through Henderson 3.4 mila
Mature Chrittlan woman to toys, gle..ware, clothea, Dapra11i0n gl111, occupied Yard sale Saturday, Sept . 3. from Blue Bridge on the
1 beautlful12 wk . old white
It black part Beagle female AVON now. AVON wowl babytit In my home, have jewelery. and many other Japan, chair~. post cards, In front of Rutland Salvage . right. Follow ligna .
78'1, arrowheade . Other Nara Hartman .
puppy. Cell 814·367-7743. Sell AVON for Chri1tm11, reference•. In Leon area. items.
itema: 2 •ewing machines.
buy your• at a diacount. Call 30.·896-3828.
many chairs, small desk, Yard sale Sept 2,3 . Salem YARD aale, Saturday beside
1 •mall female puppy to 446-3368 or U6-2166.
Beale School. Galllpolia
Yard
Bakery
Goods
Sale
books,
paperbacks. maga - St.. Rutland. beside Pen- Ferry.
BABYSITTING in my home, Wed. thru Fri. 10 til 6 .
good, home. Moving must
give away. C~ll 446-8372. ladle• needed fo good pay· full or part time. fenced yard. ApottiiC Church, 1812 Eaat- zine•. meg. rack , TV stand, n:r:oil Station . Drapes, bedling temporary office like 'behind school. 304·876· arn Ave . next to Willis Tire. much · b1by clothea, and preadl, ltere~:L C . B .. GARAGE sale . Boy1 achool
baby ltema. man'a clothing, clqthaa, junior sizes 6 -7,
2 puppiaa 14 wk. old. Call work, no experience necae· 2784.
clothes and women•. mi1c.
~amps, large new rust color
446·4123.
aery, aleo need ladle• whh
boys 1IZ11 12·14..
Crab Creek Rd. Vlo ..t Nl·
Yard
Sale
Sept.
3
end
Sept.
carpet.
dishea,
kitchen
and
car for light delivery work,
bert1. Saturday. 10-3.
6.
649
Hilda
Dr.
Girla
houae
hold
items,
picture
g11 allowance. Apply In
Yard 1ala, Sept 6,6,7. MulKitten. Coli 446-7739 .
clothing
alze
0-4,
80
minute
froms.
all
kinda
o1
odds
and
peraon only (abaolutaly no
berry A\te ., trailer behind
baby awing1 electric ataril- and a. Thia is a very large aaie veterinary clinic . Men'• clo- SATURDAY. 104 Pleooont
Truck to•d of kinling wood. phone cell•) to Mrs. C•rt•.
lzer. other baby equipment. 10 come and bring a friend. thing,· man'e watch. kitchen St. Pt . Pleuant. Baby
Buainess
Cell 446-2606 .
Room 18. Econo Lodge. 21
Seigler
oil heater.
We have eometh! - ~g 1or electricll applianc11. elect- clothea, womens clothal,
Opportunity
Tues. morning, 9 to 9:30
everyone . Do not bl1~k drive ric broom, portable dis· appliances, houaehold
Kitten black &amp; white 1 1 AM. Sept. 6.
item•. Avon bottles.
Yard
Sale
~1t.
2nd.
•
3~d.
way . Not responsible 1or hwaaher, toola, 1hoe1.
weeki. 6 week old 1 black,
South 4th St .. Cheahlre. Oh. c 1·dento
black &amp; white. Call 814· Someone to cut timber e.
I NOTICE I
,
·
TWO family yard tala. Littlo~
Clothe•. typawritera, record a c
367-0614.
firewood. Cell 614-258· THE OHIO VALlEY PUB- player.
2 big Yard Sel11on Plum St., bit of everything, Hendar6689.
LISHING CO. recommends
Middleport:. Lots of items, son, . across 1rom Sidera
3 adorable kitttn1. Call
that you do buslna11 whh Vard Sale on Raccoon Rd.
M"ddl
depreuionglau,lamps,clo- Equipment, Seturdey , 9 -6 .
614-246-6688.
Taking application• for deal- peoplo you know. end NOT betweon Rt . 7 &amp; Rt. 218 .
I
aport
thing Ill kin do plua lot more.
en 6. Friendly Home pertiea. to oend money through tho Beall Holley. Fri. &amp; Sot.
&amp; Vicinity
Sept. 1. through 6.
THREE family ya..r oole.
3 male kittana, 2 adult Up to Sept. 1&amp;. Earn t~O. to mall until you have invfttl·
September 6, 7, 8 . ,...,ilh&amp;l,
females, 1 acuh cat, alllitt• eeo. in one evening holding gated the offering.
·-· · ·-··----·-···--------- · ··· Big yard aale near Meigs &amp; clothes , miscellaneous
uoined. 814-992-2640.
tOyl &amp; gift partlas. Al10
4 Famlty Yard Sale labor Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy, Sept. Galllallne . 3 &amp;. 6 . Glasewere, items. 2629 Mt. Vernon
holding toy partiea till Nov.• Cigarette Diltrlbutoahlp In- Dey Weekend, Sat., S'~J' . a 1,2,3. Winter clothee. Lou hardbound book•. lot1 of Ave . Pt. Pleasant. Rain or
Mother cat and four kitten1. 26. lntereated 814-992- 1t1nt Caeh Flowl We era a Mon. Pine St .. Rio Graride. of misc.
misc .
1hine. 9 · 6 .
Alao one male cat. 992· 3681 .
6740.
panding into the area. If you
bonded
national
firm busllndlvldu•l needed to per- are
1eaklng
1 1 cure
TEN 1h: Siam••• kinena. 8 form hou .. cleaning chorea. neoo opponunil\. Wo pro- 31 Homes for Sale
31. Homes for Sale
32 Mob(le Homes
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
weeka old, 6 white, 6 black. Mun have own trensporta- vida all retell locadone and
for Sale
304-676-6146. 676-3614. tion. t3.50 per hour. Refer- all nacasury training . Full or Newly remodeled 2 etory
Located in Syrecuse· Near
ences req., equal opportun- part-time. lnve.. ment from
1 VI balh. 3V! acres. school It ewlmmlng pool. 3
36 acres at Rodney' on W.T.
FEW puppies, must give Ity employer. Send reply to e2.000 . 00 . Wlnoton - frame.
CLEAN USED MOBILE Watson Ad. Owner 1inanccity achoola, rivetview.
bedroom
aituatad
on
one~
away immediately, 9 w•k• Box 722, Pomeroy, OH
Sotom-Koolo . 1-800-241 - U2.000. Call 446-4222
third acre lot. '24.600 . or HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL· ing available. Call446-8221
old , half Tree Walker 46769.
2268.
MOBILE HOME SALES . after 6 weekdays.
between 9 &amp; 6 .
will rant for e276 mo. 4ITYMI.
Coonhound-Tennenea Mt.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS .
Kerr. pllone 304-675-3662 O.. n Millt needa people to Profitable businal888 for 4 bdr. ranch homa,llrga LR, 304-816 -3934.
RT 35. PHONE 446-7274 .
1 acre off Rt. 160, on Floyd
after 6 p.m.
do light delivery work. Mun sale-· Beer 6 Wine Carry-out full basement, with garage.
provide economical trane- end Beer Drive-thru. Ranked wood burner included, city 2 Hou111 for aale-1 In 1-:-,::9::7::1-:B:-r-oo-d-:-m-o-,-e-1-:-4-:-x-:6::6:-.-:2 Clark Rd . $4,260. Cell676FOUR mala white pup1, portlitlon . Applv to Sheron in the top five in legal 1chools, 2 miles from town . Pomeroy, 3 bedroom•. 1 bdr.. cantral air, fuel oil 1831 .
bath. Aleo 1 In Syracu11. 3 1urnance, ref~ig ., stove . Can
304-676· 7430.
Glttlnga. Melga Inn, Pome- beverage aalas for Malga Call 446-0276.
roy, Ohio. Tuoodoy, Sopt. 6 , County. Buelne1111 and real 1----~----­ bedroome. 1 Y.1 bath. Both in be left on rented lot. •e.ooo. 22 acres o11end, located o.,
Hannen Trace Rd .. off Rt. 7 .
TWO kittens. 1 block. 1 9 a.m. to 12 noon, 7 to 8 lltfte both for 11le. Contact In Middleport, newly remo· nlcearaae. Retonablaterma. Call 448 -8530 .
Coli 814-256-1905 .
black &amp; white. adorable, p.m .
Equal Opportunity Guido at 1600 Nye Ave. or deled home with fireplace. Cell: 614-992- 2136 ba·
Employer.
304·676-4628 oltor 5:00.
606 'W. Main St .. Pomeroy, po11ible woodburner. cioN tween 9 a .m . and 3 p.m .
1 2x68 Vlndale mobile
FOR SALE-16 acr11 outside
Ohio.
to achoola and ahopplng. 3 bedroom houl8 with bath, home. 6' axpando living of Rutland, h11 hand dug
Olan Milia hal HWral imme·
room.
all
electric
with
wood
Coll614·992-6941 . .
gerage, outbuilding. fenced- burning 11ove. large con- well and capped off gaawell.
diate openinga for phone For leaee. Auto . Service
6 · Lost and Found
11lea people. No experience Center, Mason, WV. 3 baya, By owner Hou11 wtth 2 In yard. orchard. pool, over crete patio Including 1 room Good timber land. All min2 hoists. excellent location, acres mora or leea. been ecre. Very lovly and afforda· remodeled school building eral rights. Vary secluded.
FOU~D brown Brittany neceaury, we train. Morn
succesdul
busina11 for over remodeled, orchard. 87 h. blo. Coli 742-3080.
with )!WOOd buming atove, $16 ,000 . 814·992-3901.
Spaniel. White with brown a. ing and evenlngahlfhl hall a·
blo.
Apply to Shoron 30 .,..,., avellable after
carport
wood atorage
black . Found dog in Rodney Glnlnge•. Melga Inn, Pome- Aug. 9, 1983. C~ll eltor 6 well. U2.000. Cell 81 4· For 11le In Syracuse on 100 building on 2 1cres. Hem· FIVE acres with ba111ment,
388-9063 .
oroo. Coli 446· 73 1 3.
water. Pt. Plaas1nt, cell
x
200
lot
.
2
outbuildings.
roy, Ohio, Tueedey, Sept. I ; p.m .. 1-304-676-2982.
lock Orovo. 614 -948 -3019 city
304· 773 -5713 eftar 7:00
room for large garden. 3 or 4 after IIi for mora Info.
LOST··amall bleck end
8 a.m. 10 noon, 7 to 8 p.m.
OPEN HOUSE: G-t buy. bedroom Older home, nHda
p.m.
bea 11 1a-typo dog, in
Equal 0 p port unIty
Newly rwmodoted houoe. ropolr. •10.000. 614-992- I---H-o-lly-P-ork_d_ol_u_x_e_w-~-h
•
Employer.
22
Money to Loan
nice, quiet • baauttfulloca~
Knob area. -Children'• pet. 1-_.;.-...,------e~pando. total elect· HALF acre, ideal home or
tion. Immediate po . . . alon . 6068 .
Waarlng collar with name
trailer site, good wall wtth
Harry Richards. If found, ln1uranc1 carHrl Up to
2 bedroom•. central air, pump &amp;: septic 1y1tam,
Turn oft At. 31 tn Hender· 3 bedroom home. GlaaMd in
.
refrigerator.
1tova.
un
pleaaa phone 843 _5183 • e300 per week while train~
HOME LOANS Low llxod 10n, WV. on H. .dereon St.
front porch . Screened in derplnning. Exc. cond. On &amp;10,500 . 304-937-2666 or
lng llltHn woelto. Unllm~od
and help thie beloved animal eemlnge, Including expenn rate. Leader Mortgage. 77 E. Go away ftom the river. the back porch. Aluminum old· rontod lot. 614·992-74·24. 304-676 -3676 .
Stote, Athena. Ohio. 1·814· l11t houn on Hendereon St. lng. new chldmney, woodd $11,600.
come home.
allowance after training. Ex- 692-3061 .
8 rooma wtth new well 10
burner, 9 1oa 1 cut woo.
.
ceptlonel fringe benaflta 1nd
woll corpetlng. Priced In cerport.
FOUND--small black and good future · management
614-992-7286.
24x40 doublo-wido build·
•20'1. Bob Kioollng, 446whit a tnub- nosed female potential for mature person
2101.
.
FIVE
room
houll
behind
ing.
inaulated, paneled. alec·
23
Professional
dog. Rutland are•. Phone Hlllng and servicing life;
Hertford Grade School. For tricity. Would make nice
Services
742-2249 If thlolo your pot. inouronco. Coli 114·992home, on one acre lot with
2 B R home for Mia on lend more information 'cell Mike eaptic
tank. All for $7,600.
2480
·
t
·
3
p.m.
contract.
•
2000
down,
bel·
LOST: cor toll light ot M d
E0 E
Roach , 304-773- 5817 , 992-3460.
llko rent. Ca(l 446· 773-6007.
Sandhill Road inter..ction. p(io;n;.n°Y ·;j·!;
· ~-;H;;bi.;-;;;;; PiANO TUNING Bock to onco
2_•_·_ _ _ _ _ __
coli 30•·671-2313.
Sohooi"Spoclot
Ul
normoi
_o_B_
1981 Shultz, 2 bedroom.
1
1
excellent
conditlon .Phone
tunin9•·
September
only.
Upper
River
Rd.
HouM
&amp;
PET raccoon. reward for his
304·675-6376.
Word o Koybaord, 304-l78- born a'll • loto, 200 ft. rood 32 Mobile Homes
rltturn. Lott in Maaon er1a.
for Sale
382•.
frontogo. Coli 814-266·
Coli 30•· 773-1462.
LABOR DAY SPECIAL .
PIANO TUNING· LANE DA- 1888 ar 814-216-8388.
NOW THRU SATURDAY , 4 bdr. house 6 acr11 of lend
FOUND: block dog, DoberNIELS. Rolioblo Hrvtco 5 room houn &amp;, beth, TRI-STATE MOBILE SEPTEMBER 10th. INTRO· on Rt . 160 in Vinton . Central
man Pinecher, phone 304·
air, $360 mo., sec . dap. &amp;
Iince 1985. Auoci... of oountv • well W.tor. on 'h HOMES .· USED· CARS . OUCING OUR NEW ref. Coli 446-3175.
171-111•.
Brunlcardl Muatc Co. Phone ecre lot, r. .l nice on Floyd TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS . SCOTT'S HOME, •600.00
111•-742-2911.
Clorl&lt; Rd. aff St. Rt. 180.8 CHECK OUR PR)CEB. CALL ABOVE INVOICE. ALL
STATE MODULAR B rm . house at 60 Oliva St .•
SERVICE CO . miiH from Holzer hoop. Coli 448-7172.
Gallipolia. Inquire at William
HOMES. HALF WAY BE· Ann
Motel, Golllpollo, Oh .
Loa~n,lth oorvloo. toafohor- 1114' 388 ' 8282·
For oolo by owner. 1981 TWEEN POINT PLEASANT
pontng, - - • gl- In- 3 boclroom houoo with flro- Klngoly 111 oloctric mobile AND HUNTINGTON ON ST. In town. 3 bedroom hou•.
...Hod. Coli 034-1711-3884. ploco, contrel olr, 2 full homo, 1•x70 w~h 7x2• RT. 2, 304-1711·2711.
no pets. Inquire at Sheppard
betho. in city llmlto. lmmo- oxpondo. 2 bdr.. 1 'h both, 1 - - - -- - - - - - Sales • Service, Flnt •
dloto poo-elon. Cell ••6- utNity room. control olr. USED MOBILE HOMES, IN Olivo St., Gollipollo, Oh.
.
' ..
' .. "
fl..... ICO. owning &amp; under- GOOD SHAPE, 30•· 5782118.
8
Public Sele
plnnlng. Ruoon lor oelllng l-2=7~11:.::::====::;:::;:: House for Ilia or rent 3 bdr.,
Muot Hll. 2 bodroom. oil· mu1t
relocate. Price l1 '12 bo1h. living room, FP.
&amp; Auctlan
electric cottege on lake.
814 - 2 •e - 33
eq uiped kitchen. dining
==~2~00.
Coli
Farma
for
Sale
tiOO down • oooumo mor1area, 1amily room, woodColi 4·8· 7901 oftor
burner. city achoola. 1enced
Attnotlve 3 yr. old ronoh
315 acre farm. H11 emell back yard . Call448-2003 or
trtylo homo with oothodrol
barn, wem. eleCtricity, lote 446·4469 . Muat rent or aell
living ..... 3 bdr .. 2 beth. 2 of pettura. Some farming, Immediately.
2 btlr.
timber. Ooad plocoto buMd.
gorogo. olr cond .. 1 lovol lot. Muot -'I awnon
Mineral rf9htl go. CaU Ar·
room houae on ferm. near
mGvlng. Coli ~-81117 of·
nold Gr.... 742·22411 or Crown City. Coli e14-251·
tori.
n2-2211.
6484.

...... Pt.Pieiisint··--·

···-·-·p·o-meroy-·----···

•~- t;~~~~~~;~::r.;;~~~~~~=1~~~~~~====r~~=~======-

a

0

.. ·-·-

1----...:______

Gragg &amp; Pmy Glbbi-Ownan

a

PH. 992-2178

•

~ard sa\es .

Room, board end care for en
elderly peraon in my home.
Rouonoblo. Coll992-8022.

rt4::

CATALOG
mo.

Sltu1tlona
Wanted

1----------

. Racine, OH.

PH: 1-304-773.5634

• Commercial

we Print
. On AL

Ranps, Refrigeraton

992-3987

Ulmo.

PERSONAUZED
POOLS

Cell

320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT, W.

Washers, Dtyers

*Pianilll
*Shop Work
dew Construction
*Remodeling

'Gas Pipe
'Regulators
'Fittings

MIU1R
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Residential

Manufacturers

992-6215 or 992-7314

Custom
Sawmill Work

'Water Pipe

1

TRAILER - Furnished, level
lot In Middlepoit

Trophy

ENGRAVING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

1·13·tfc:

CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
DEEP CLEANED- SHORT DRYING nME
USE SAME DAY- AIIITl-REBOIL DETERGENTS
COMMERCIAL. RESIDENTIAL
•Professional Spot RIIIOVII Service
•Wall &amp; Ceilin&amp; Cltlnin&amp;
'
"Insurance Work Welcome"
James Knilht-273-5388
In Ravenswood
Rick Hovatter-992-2606
In Middleport
"Free Estimates On All Services"

to 24'x36'

THE
TROPHY
KING

15 Y•an Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
ar 992-2282

.DRYULTRA
CLEAN
FOAM EKTRACnON METHOD

Siz~s lro11 6'x6' Up

8-18-1100 pd.

oA!tlni111111 &amp; Vinyl Sidinp

YOUNG'S

We can r1!plir end

Residence: 985-3837
Warehouse: 985-3509

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PH. 992,2478

PLAQUES

(11'(1,

town

New Homes - EJrtenslve
Remodel ina.
•Insurance Work
oCusto.m Pole Bides.
&amp; Garaces
•Roofina Work

-Sewer
- Goo Lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE OR SMALL JOBS

11 ·1Hfc

U ·lma. I)CI.

·

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

JEWELL'S

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

St. Rl. 124. PomerOJ, OH.

RACINE - Nice 5 bedroom
older home. Panelin&amp; carpeting, garage, shop &amp; garden

Housing
Headquarters

-·

CONTRACTING

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

pond, etc.

1

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

Call: 949-22~-

NEW' liSTING - 7 rm. home
on Grant SL 2 baths, full
basement 3 bedrooms, and
new garage On~ $21,000.

2 ACRES - Outsde ol
for jusl $2,500.

Kitchen Ca-inets - Rooftnt - Sidina - Concrete
Patios . - Sidewalks New Constroction - Remodelinc - Custom Pole
B1rns.

All types of roof work, new
or repair, ClllleiS and
downspouts; autter clean-

992·2159

NEW LISTING - SYRACUSE
- Motile home wrth 2 room
addition . Nice condition.
Equipped knchen, carpeted.
Woodbumer hookup. Large lot
Only $10,500.

Public Notice

H. L_ Writeser
ROOFING

EAFOR
E . Ma,.nl.l,ll;;ioii......
POMEROY,O .

·TERESA'S
. CAKE
DECORATING
Wedding Cakes and
All Occasion Cakes

1 ROLL ONLY IN BROWN

shutten, plus

12

Public Sale
a. Auction

r==!!!:~~~~~:;''ir=~:7~~====;l A uctlon

'

MINE RUN

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

'·

'

.

,

I

•

�10-The
41

Sentinel

54

They'll Do It Every Time

Houses for Rant

2, 1983

Ohio
Misc.

Boyo' bike, 26 " 3-spood,
Huffy. t70. Call 446·0t96
eher 4 p.m.
·

Nice country home. Free

gea, water. Paved county
roed, Portland. 8260 mo.
plus depoait.

Girl' • or boy '• bike, 20".
840. Coli 446-0,t 95 oltor 4
p .m:

Three bedroom brick home

with large extra lot, louted
Just outside New Haven.
City water, central air and
heet plu s fireplace , $300.

per month .. Comp . furnlihed . For more information call after 6 :00; 304675- 3996 .

1 bedroom house. 2327 Y:I
Uncoln. 8135 mo . 304676-3689 after 6 p.m.

Full basement, 1 '12 atory,
with city water, d~uble
garage. garden. 1 small child
accepted, 304- 675-1076 .

&amp;

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

2-Gehl forage wagons. Call
814-379·2682 otter BPM ·.

FLEX,STEEL couct'l. green,
good condition. $60. 304675· 4072 .

Plows, dl.c, layoff ploW.
Coli 446-3183, alter 5
446 -3338 .

TWO 6 . 000 STU . one
11 ,600 BTU air conditioners. Phone 304-676· 2267

Uaed Ford mounted picker,
excellent condition. Cell
446 ·2596 .

COLORADO Blue Spruce,
304-676-14B4.

Farmall 460 tractor di...l
with 3 14 in . plows. 7 ft .
mower. 10h . tran1port dl.c:.
Call 814-245·5096 alter 5 .

Building Supplies

THREE bedroom house ,for
,.nt in Mea on. WV. 304n3-6440.

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes; houses . Pt. Ple.sant
and Gallipolis . 614 -448 822t .
'

THREE BEDROOM HOUSE
IN COUNTRY ON BUD
CHATTIN ROAD . ONLY
*260.00 PER MONTH.
LESS IF LEASED BY YEAR.
304-676·27tt .

42

ONE bedroom apartment,
8226 month, all utilities
paid. 304· 675-2595.

TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Apartment• now available to
elderly &amp;: disabled with an
Income of leu than
812,300. Renting for 30
percent of adjusted l'ncome.Phono 304·875-8679.

Mobile Homes
· for Rent

2 bdr. trailer located on
Upper River Rd. all utilities

paid ex.capt •'•ctric. Dep.
·roq. Coli 44.6-8668. .

' ·

Centenary: 2 bedroom,
turn., private, 8160. Eureka:
1 bedroom, fum .. riverfront,
f100 . Ref. S. dep. 1-614·
843-2644.

2 bdr. trailer, large lots &amp;
outbuilding• In country .
$160 month phil deposit.
,. C~ll513-882-45t5 . ·
2 bdr mobile home . Call
448-0608.
3 bdr. trailer 1 Y2 baths In
Evergreen, $175 mo .. plus
dep •• weter paid. Call 614245-9170.
3 bdr. home family room,
central air, garage. near
HMC. coity achool, no pets.
Call 448· t299.
12JC60, $150 per month
plua utilities. 1100 dep. No
peta. In Syracuse . 992·
8284 or 992· 5732.
12x60, 1166 per mo. plus
utilities. $100 deposit. No
pats. In Syracuse . 9928284 or 992-5732 .
2 bedroom furnished. a.c.
New Haven. (304) 882·
2466.
1 bedroom mobile home,
304- 675·4t64 .
Two bedroom trailer, 8160
month, plua deposit. all
electric. 304-676-4088.
TWO bedroom mobile
home. 1 mile out Sandhill
Rd. 304-675-4045 .

""'

44

. ..

Apartment
for Rent

.2. bdr. Regency Inc. Apartments Utllties panly furn ..
apartments available now.
•200 par mo. A-One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager. Real·
tor. Call 304-675-5104 or
304-875 · 7386 .
Furnished apt. 2 bdr. 8196,
water paid 1136 2nd . Galli·
.,Giio. 446-44t8altor7p .m .
F"rnished upstairs apt. 2
rooms 8t bath, clean, adults
only, no pats, ref . req. Call
448-t519 .
'
Unfurnished 4 rooms &amp;
bath. no children. no pets.
Coli 446· 3437 or 446·
1637.
Marcervill~ 1 or 2 bedroom
$176 mo . Coli 446· 1157.
8-6 Monday-Friday.

· 3 · bdr. apt. , 2nd Ave ..
Gallipolit. 8190 mo . Call
448-4222 between 9 S. 5.
•Unfurnished. downttairs, 3
·room apt., 1 bdr., no pets.
:tnquire at 87 Vine St.,
-Gallipolis.
·
Downtown furnished apt.,
carpeted, air cond .• $225
·m o. plus utilities. $100
depoait. Coli 446·t788 .
1 bed room Apt . $198. mo .
Including utilities. Equal
flousing opportunity. Con18Ct VIllage Manor Apta .
814·992-77B7.
., bedroom IP' in Pt . Plea·
lent. 304-675·6364 .
Three bedroom unfurnished
upatairs apartment in Mid·
dloport. $150 mo . (6t4)
992-5692.

1 end 2 bedroom apts . (614)
992-5914 or 13041 882·
2566 .

a

Furnished one
two bed·
room apt . Middleport .
)(dutu. no pet1. Month rent
plu1 $100. Jacurlty. 614992- 3874.
6 room apt . Fully carpeted.
In country near parks on Rt.
33 north . Adclts. no pets.
Fteferences. Call 614 -992·
3201 .
Apt. in Pomeroy. 3 rooms &amp;
both. 814-992·5821 '
A.partmanu . 304-676 5548.

FURNISHED apartment,
no pets. Phone·304-·
675·1453 .

· adUita~

FURNISHED apartment,
adults, close to hospital. no
peta. 304-676-2257.
TWO apartments, unfurnithed, near town, .ground
floor, suitable for~ ii.r igli .o r
couple. Dr. Slack. 304-676 ..
5267.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Coli 446·0756.
Sleeping room $115. u1ili·
ties paid, range &amp; refrig .
Share bath . Man only. 446·
4416aher7p .m.

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park. Route 33, Nonh of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992·7479.
Two large trailer lots for rent
in Middleport. Near stores.
Nice neighborhood. Adults
only. Coli 992·2t0t or
992-23t9 .
Trailer lott in New Haven .
304-675· t452 alter 5.

LAYIIIE"S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ottoman, 3 tables. !extra heavy
by Frontier), 6686. Sofa,
chair and loveaeat, 1275.
Sofat and chairt priced from
8286 . to $896 . Tables. 846
and up to $126 . Hide-a·
beds. 8440. aod up to
1626 .. Recliners. $175. to
8350. , Lamps from $28. to•
876 : 6 pc. dinettes from
$99., to $435. 7 pc .. St69.
and up. Wood table with tlx
chairs $425 . to 8746. Desk
$110 up to 8226 . Hutches,
$560. and up, maple or pine
flnlth . Bunk b&amp;d complete
wtth l'rilittresaes; ~$260 . and
up to -8396 . Baby bodo,
8110. Mattresses or box
springs. full or twin, $58 ..
firm, $68 . and 878. Quean
sets. $196. 4 dr. chests,
842. 5 dr. cheats, 864. Bed
frames, 120.and 825., 10
gun • Gun cabinett. $350. ,
dinette chairs 820: and 826.
Gis or electric ran9es, 8326
up to $376 . Baby matresaes,
e26 $35. bod fie mea 820,
•26, &amp; $30. king frame $50 .
Good selection of bedroom
auites. ceder cheat•.
ro&lt;;kers, metal cabinets,
swivel rockers.
Used Furniture .. bookcase,
ranges, chairs, dinnett set,
wood table end chairs, dryerl, re~rigerators and TV' s. 3
miles out Bulaville Rd . Open
9am to
Mon. thru Fri.,

Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNELS
Bordihg all breads. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Doberman puppies : Stud
SllfVico. CoN 4411-7795.
Lg. A.Kc Great Dan8 · pups
First dewormlng, dm. Injection, du clawa removed,
8260 . Coli 304· 762-2431.
Doberman pupt. AKC RegIstered. t126. Call 814·
682·7959.

Siamese kittens. One male
Seal Point, four female
chocolate Points, one mala
chocolate Point1. $50 ea.
Call 614·388-8253.

3 yr. old · male English
cocker. of'_KC Registered.
Good waatchdog. Not good
with children. 850. Call
448-0304 .

a.

AKC Doberman 'Pirlacher
pup. Black &amp; tan, 8 wke. old.
•100. Caii446-3B34 days.
AKC registered Cocker Spa·
. niel puppies . 4 malea, 1
· female . Phone 614- 7422801 or 614-992-7406,.

s

Two treeing Walker coonhouncs. 247-2484 alter 4
p.m .

~~~~t~o~~-~a~t~.::::::::
54

Misc . Merchandise

REGISTERED Beagle pups.
$60. 304-676-6072.

Knauff Coal &amp; Firewood Buv
now for seasoned wood this
winter. Call 614- 256-6246 .

SPECIAL t 0 gallon tonks.
89.99 . Green Parakeets.
89 .99 ea. Finch. 87.99 ea .
Regular prices: Hempsters,
82.99 ea. Gerbils, .99 ea.
Young Coc;katiels. 139.99.
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson
Ave . Pt. Pleasant . 304-676·
2063.

•

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Muon, Meigs.
Gallia or pick up at Richards
11 Son . Call 446-7785 .

J---- - - - - - -

Firewood cut up slabs $16
pickup load . Call 614-246·
5804 .

POMERANIANS . Poodles&amp;
Dachshund puppies, all AKC
Registered . Phone 304895·3958.

Stero, Realistic, AM·FM
Mobile Home lou for rent- cassette player, with speak·
water and sewer furnished, era, $90. Call 614·246·
1 small child accepted , 9397 .
304-676-t076 .
1---------10 HP Bolens lawn tractor.
mower deck and snow
47 Wanted to Rent
blower included . Will trade.
Coli 446·9266 .

THREE male Poodle pupe,
for solo. $85 .00. 304-882·
3672.

57

A nice home . can be an older RCA cabinet TV. 25 in .,
one, must have at least 6 $176, axe. cond . Call 614roons. etc. located in city of 388-8263 .
Gallipolis. preferablv down- 1- - - - - - - - - - town. Excellent eare will be Cushman golf cart, charger
given by responsible lady &amp; 4 new batteries . Cal
and 13 years old ton. Call 446 - 3268 or 614 - 379 ·
446·9645 or 446·2648 or 2t4t .
contact Evelyn at Oscar's I -----~----­
Res1aurant.
CB radio Winchester 30 -30
12 gauge shotgun, fishing
equipment, truck topper. Do
bobyaitting . Coll446-9635 .

·3 matched GE washer &amp;
dryer pain, 2 white pair, 1
avacado pair, '12-15 other
good washers &amp; dryers to
choose from Guaranntead
30 doys. Call 6t4-256·
t207.
G.E. electric retrig. &amp; Saara
Kenmore continuou1 clean
electric range. Both gold
tone, good cond ., 8400 for
..t . Call 6t4· 245-5058 after 6 .
Sell cheap . Old-fashioned
dining room set--6 chairs,
table. china closet. Call
742-2405.
For sale ·- Libertv dining
room suit~ consists of hutch
table and 6 chairs. like new
condition, $460. Middle·
port. 992·2822.

Martin Acouatic _G_,Iu"it"oiorr. l
Heavy duty case, lit'
cond. Aher 7 p.m. call
6t4-446-7221 .

SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITURE
82 Olive St., Gallipolis. 8
place wood living room tuite
with 6 inch rlat erma $399.
bunk beds complete with
bunkies 8199. 2 piece an·
tron livingroom tuitet $199,
antron recliners 899, other
recliners $80. maple dinene
sets 1179. love seat• $70.
hide - a-bed 8 250 , box
aprlngt • mattresa twin or
full 8100 aet regular-firm
•120. maple dinette chairs
•36. wath atandt $34.
maple rocker• •ss, 7 piece
chrome dinette set $149, 6
piece dinette aet
used
bedroom aultet, reflrgera·
tora, rangea. chan. draners,
wringer waahers , TV ' s,
dryeres. 8t ahoes. Call 446·
3159.

•as.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
• waahera. dryers, refrigerator•.
Skluus Ap·
River Rtt .,
Motel.
446-7388.

1------

Woodburnlng Stoves. frees ·
tanding, fireplace inJerts,
mobile home approved, &amp;
furnance ad ·ons . Jivldens
Farm Equipment, 446 1675.
New Oak Furniture, tables,
chairs, cupbo.irda. pie 11fa,
dry sinks. Paul Conkels
Antiques, Tuppert Plaina.
Antique sc;hool desks .
825 .00 each . 614 · 949·
3059 .
Reese hitch with all accauoriea for towing large camper.
$160. 614-949- 3059 .

a.

Wiii · Burt stoker furnance
24', good cond. Call 4481572.
8e1ement &amp; Used furniture
aale. Single &amp; double beds.
mattrassas, chair•. couches,
ole beer c. sea S. pop bon las,
beer tignt, bar ltoolt. Selurday only, Sept. 3rd, 9 a.m.·1
p.m . 132 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy, Oh.
REPOSSESSED SIGNI No·
thing downl Take over pay·
menta t&amp;B.OO monthly.
4'x8' fl11hing arrow sign.
New bulbs, letters . Hale
Signa. Call FREE t -800·
826-7446, onytimo.
12 FT open cooler, In good
working condition~ m11ke
offor. 304-676·2221 .

81-

.l- . *91 _

..

71

c•••n•

1978 Cutlon '8', 4 dr.,ood.,
350, V-a, outo., AC, PS. PB,
radio, all lut.. 8 sport
whMII, good tlrea, $1,500.
Call 446-0940.

t977 Toyoto Colle• GT .,
llftbeck, speed, air cond .•
ntw brekea &amp; battery. Call
4411-2042.

a

75 _Dodge Dort. Coli 4413718.
t983 Chhetto oporty. 4
eyl., 4 opd., good MPG,
8.800 miles. Perfect cond ..
ooklng payoff. Call 448·
7904.

Livestock

t980 Ford Pinto, auto.
1979 Plymouth Arrow auto.
t979 Ford Folrmont Stotlonwagon auto. 1979 VW
Robblt 4 opd. 1971 Ply·
mouth Ouater auto. All good
buyt. John's Auto Selea.
Bulovlllo Rd . Coli 4414782. open 9 to 7 .

Young ducks White-Mallard
croas . $2.&amp;0. each. Call
6t4-38B·B7t0 .
Border Collie puppiea from
working parents. Call 16t4-286-2498.
10 wk . old pullets. 6 different breed · ~ . Call 614-268t616 .

1986 Muttang convertible,

ea,ooo. Coli 448-8239.

74 Monte Carlo. elr cond ..
Appaloou mare. Good trail
and childs horae. 1800.
6t4-742·3086 0&lt; 614-922708 .

74.000 mlloa, noodo . little
wort&lt;. t300. Coll446-0478.
1970 Chav. Nova runs
good•• 160. ht houoe on
right, Touo Rd. Coli 44681 03
·
78 Mercury Morqulo 2 dr.,

~ttention Dog Trainers. Mature Quail available. 10 Of
more 20 percent discount.
Supply limited. 1 8t 2 weeks
old-$1.00 per bird. 3 and 4
weeks old-81 . ~0 pet' bird.
LaBonte's Quail Farm.
36160 Boohon Rd. Long
Bottom. Ohio . 985-4346.

PS,
olr, Strock,
mi., PI,
good
mech. &amp;9,000
cond.,
need• minor body repair.
Asking •1.400arbootoflor.
Coll448-4347.

Mixed calves, Hereford, Hoi·
stein . 843-5185aftar7p .m .
1 registered 'Holstein bull
borfn Feb. 1, 1982, very
gentle. lead-broke. 1 2 year
old Hereford Herd bull. Call
onvtima 814-992-7468.

Autos for Sale

OUR BOAR

DIN

G

o
H USE

1 Maj
1e
wth
orHoop
Nl&amp;f PI.NlNEP
FiVE·,tr\ILE 1\li(f:
&amp;U'T II! LOOK\!.
f~"-1'Te.~ "1HMI "
tiALF""'C"- WHO
1111' 1'1'\E W!rONI!r
HOLE ON A. 60""-

LINE PLUNGrE!

WHY PIPN'T YOU JUfT
ASK THe CHAUFFEUR

I lJE-VEit SMOut.P''WE

WHO HE:'S PASSIN' TH'
INFOftiAATION T01

HIM INVef.TteATE- THIS
GOSSIP &amp;LISINESS...

PROMI~EP

rp H~LP

~

•

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
aome .•modeling. 20 yn.

72

Trucks for Sale

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing . 30 years expedenee,
opeciolizlng In built up roof.
Call 614·388·9867.

fiN HU5BANO KNEW
Tlf' RI5K5. THE 60RDEI!
PATROL, GETTIM~ RIPPEO
OFF BY OUR O~N
COIJNTRYMEN .,

1978 GMC truck, 4 wheel
drive. Coli otter 6PM. 448·
0108.

RON'S Televition Service.
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, end
houoo calla. Call 678-2398
1954 Ford 1h ton truck. V-8, or 4411-2454.
auto. runs good. Body ret· l - - - - - - - - - - torable. t400. or beat offer. F K Tree Trimming. atump
614-9811-4226.
ramavol. Coll875-1331.

73

Vans

l!t 4

W . O.

1978 joop CJ -7 Renegade
power ateering, ttlt wheel,
hardtop, qua~~· tree. autO•
matlc tranaml11lon. 60.000
miles. Excellent condition.
Coli 446-7t96 or 4489364. Aoklng *4.996 . Will
consider offer.
72 CJ Jeep mony now porto.
good wood .trailer. ell
., .1 00 firm. Call 4468002 . .r.
1979 Joop CJ5 6 cyl .. 3
apd., new top. AM-FM tape,
o•c. cond. Coli 448-06t5.
1978 Chevy , '30', box van
360. V-8. now AT. dual roar
wl!oolo. rollup roor door,
new battery , PS , PB
82,760. Coli 446-0940.
78 Chevrolet van , axe. cond.
Coli 876-8217.

E- .a. R Tree Sen/leo. fuHy
Insured, free, ••·t lmetes. "'
Phone 6t~367 - 0636. coli •
alter 6 .
J- - - - - - - - - - SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One
piece cullom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Guttor, (Day 8t4-592-4086,)
!night 814-898-B206.1
'

1948 Jeep good condition,
completely rebuilt engine.
new brakes. brand new
winch. mud tires. Call 446·
1769.

82

1_974 CJ&amp; Jeep. Mag
.whHit, low mileage. blue
with
block top. Good cond.
614-982-6015.

1.==========74

M t

68 MUSTANG, 302 outomotic, ahorp. Rabort Well,
304-578-21162.

Auto Parts
Accauorle1

Auto Repair

Attention Auto Painting
1150 end up. Body wort,
utnJ pen ltrlplng, cuatom
otrlpa.Coll 441,0311.

79

~~

VOIIRSELF,

Tlltlffi RUS5
SOfriE FOUlS Tlf

!

AN6ELA ..

'

IWlY!

Do it
-mean
Miss Effie

Ii says.
"Help me!
Five

ain't

· hoqs"r

Plumbing
Heating

CARTER'S PLUM81NG ·
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3881 •or 446-

•

_4_4_7_7--~---'--- .

a

77

RIGHT

&amp;

.

l!t

T~·

WINNIE
'

1

1972 Ch...rolot Camero
peno. Coll614-21e-1379.

4013.

00

·!

~UM IIIlO TliAT
P'CwAII REOCTIOH

GASOLINE ALILiiiEiiYIIIL._

Roofing and Carpentry
work, general repeirt, call
Anthony Williamson, 614·
367-0194.
Painting, interior and exte·
rlor. Spray paintiru· Call
304-676·t12B, L. M .
Johnaon.

76

Plcll,. '""*·

TI1011~11/Vl7S!

o· r•;

Get your Carpet In ship
ahape. Water remoVal. FREE
ESTIMATES. FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814-446·2t07. • •

60 paueng• achool bus
1962 GMC. ~61 motor. 4
tpd. trent, good body, runs
good. •1.200 or best oHer.
Coli 446-2838.

73 DODGE Poloro, 4 door,
good m•chonlcoi condition,
67,000 mllao, 304-6752365.

1171 Ford
F-tiiO, Rongor XLT. outo,
PI, olr, . _ . cand •• na
ruot, U.410. Coli 441-

HO'Il TRYIN'. T

TIIAT MAKES lll'
/IlEAL. Ll TTLE
LAPY!
+-~~

•• YrJIJ MOST

Water Wells. Commercial
and ·, Domestic. Teat holtft. ·
pu,npi . Sal~• : _and SerVIce.
304-895-3802.

l-----------

esoo.

lliE

TH' COIIIPIIHV

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing. including
hot t8r application. caf'JHin·
tar, electrician. maaon. Call
304 - 675- 2088 or 8754560.

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

Aonohora, 8 eyt.,
ua. " " - ·
co11
441-B213.

I . ~I·!&gt;K&lt;• ... eiY

I I\IN'T TOO
POPULM! FUNNY

MEB6E.-BUT 1r5

If~

JIM'S PLUM81NG S. HEATING. Fomerly Dewitt's '
_ _ _ _o_o_rc_v_c_as
_ _ _ _ Plumbing. Call 614-387- ''
1
0576 .
~1989 Kow01oki 760LTD .
1"973 Monte Cerlo, new Block wlth_floov bor, I Excavating
tirn. and wire rlmt. Runs C8nier. road PlOt. cruise con· 83
good . t&amp;OO. 614-742· 1101 end caoa guards. Elce.
2613.
cond.. B,BOO mllal. $1 .BOO.
R - Abbott. 992·6114 or DOZER WORK By , Ted
Must ooll. t975 Cutlo11 992-23n.
Hanna , ponds. ditches.
Supremo. AM-FM 8 track.
basements. etc . Call 446· •1
Air. 84,000 mlloa . ., 100.
4907. Carter &amp;: Evan• .~·
1974 Hondo 350, 7.400 Tranaportation.
1114-982·21102.
actuel mllaa. Cell814-388t972 Oldo Dolto B8. P8. PS, 9756.
Lonnie Boggs Exca'lfeting.
AC. Motor excellent condi~
Dozer, backhoe, dumptruck .
tlon. e400. 1614) 982- 1872 Suzuki GT 760. low Work by hour or job. Call
mileage. good cond .. t690. 448-7903.
6720.
will con1ider trade for wook
2 carl for ule.' 1970 Ponti- working equip. Call 614- Cat 216 hoe, dozert, crane,
oca . 2 dr. Both run good. 388-8710.
loaders. dump truck . Call·
USO . for both. 304111 1 - - - - - - - - - - 614·446 · 1142 between Spring Ave .• Pomeroy any· 1974 Honda Chopper30in. 7 :00AM S. 6:00PM .
time efter 6 p.m.
over front and. CB 760 F.
CoJI 6t4-949-2737.
Good-1 hcaveting, batet973 2 door Duator, 1 978 2 !-_.:_________
manta, f001en. driveway1,
door Manto CI~D . 986- 1980 KIWIIIkl KZ1300, septic tanks. landscaping.
3839 .12.700 mileo. wind jammer Con . anytime 448·4537 .
boorlng. KG luggogo rack. James l. Daviaon , Jr .
1979 Ford Thunderbird .• Adjullable ainy bar. engine owner.
guerdt. new tirlt, very good
f3.700. 614-949·2890.
condition. Serloua lnqulrle1 Dozer Work, ground clean1978 Pontiac LeMana only. 8t4·992-7t10 alter 6 Ing &amp; excavating. $26 hour.
aporto coupa. •1400. 948- p.m.
Coli 448-98:!8.
2537.
1977 HARLEY Dovldaon, J .A .R . Conttructlon Co .
1
1971 Cuil111 Suprema excellent condition, 6,000 Water Lines, Footara.
•400 . Phone 304-773 - milea. lot ' of chroma•. mutt Drains. AllkindsofDilchlng.
... to appreciate. 304· 773· Rutland, Oh. 814· 742 5474.
6063.
2903 .
t980 PONTIAC Flroblrd,
1974
HONDA
750,
full
..:cellent condition, airMalu• Excavating. Bulldozer
conditioned, power atHf- drooood. lt100: 304-676· &amp;. backhoe servk:e. Ba•alno. power brekea, good 6622.
manta, footers,lanciacaping ,
tlrae. rebulh engine. 304driveways, farm pondt .
773-11063.
614-742-2407 or6t4-742·
19n Suzuki GS760, f750 . 2068 .
•
1879 Ford Mullong Hotch - 892-7447.
bock, 4 · opood, V-B. good
BACKHOE, dozer, dump
lhapo . 11850. 304-773'
truck . licenllld aeptic sys75
Boats
and
HU
tem installment &amp;: repair.
Mo.ors for Sale
304- 675-75116 :
1977 CUTLASS Supreme.
Olds, loaded, A-1 condition,
1 owner, phone 304-871- 78 Taylor jot boot. 460 84
Electrical
377!5.
Lincoln. twin turbo
&amp; Refrigeration
chargers. needt rudder,
t979 NOVA, II cyl . olr, 82.800. Coli 446-t892.
po-.r atMring &amp; power
SEWING Machine repairs,
brM11, 304-171-3354 or 14 ft. Soo Nymph fiohlng
Hrvice.
Authorized Singer
8715-4437.
boat, big wow, ooml V houl,
· Service Sharpen
8 person copoclty, 9.8 HP Salu
1881 C' HEVROLET Mercury troller, .e900. Coli Scisaors . Fabric Shop,
Pomerov . 992-2284,
Corvotto, 16000 mlloo, 441-8183.
'14,900. 304·11711-61122 .

72

LONQ AS PEOPLE NEEO
AND THERE'S ~~ 10
HA17, THEY'Ll T/IHE THOSE

a.

''

I ;;======:;;:;;:;;:;;.J.:==========~
~

Autos for Sale

76 Mullong II hochbock,
V-8, ' 4 apd .• FM
aterq. power ateerlng. Call
8t4·245-9237.
'

At~ex 600 Superchief. ~au
terrain recreational Vehicle,
6 wheels. 304-773-9556.

71

Home
Improvements

~:::::=======~~c~-~"'~""'~'"~-"'~~"·'~"'~-'~"'~"~·ji:""~P~·~C~a~l~l8~t:4~-:.3~8~8~·~9~6~S~2~.~

1OFT J 0 groin drill. •750.
Allis Chalmara E combine,
corn &amp;: grain head. $2600.
304 - 675·6180 or 6753383.

63

DICK TRACY

Motore Homes
&amp; Camper•

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential, frM
ntlmotoo. Coli 614-26811B2.

• poet

TOP CASH paid for late
Flute. like new. $200. 614· model used cars. Smith
Buick-PoQtiac, 1911 Eaat985-4279.
arn Ave., Gallipolis, 4462282.
Reynolds Professional
trumpet. 8350 . 614-742·
19.78 Dodge Aspen slltion3063.
wogon. Call 614 · 3889755 .
Cleveland Saxophone.
.cond. Call evenings .
1980 2 dr. Dodge Aapen.
985-4488.
auto. PS,. PB, low mileage.
real nice. $2, 795. John"t
Auto Solo. Bulovlllo Rd. Coli
448-4782. open 9 to 7 .
58
Fruit
&amp; Vegetables
1979 VW Rabbit, 4 1pd .. air
cond., AM ~ FM · ra.dio.
$2.996. John'o Auto Sola,
Limited quanitias of red 8ulovlllo Rd. Coli 441 rasberries &amp; strawberries. 4782, open 9 to 7.
Pick your own . Call for
picking time. slao canning 1979 Fairmont Ford 11atlontometoa1, bell peppers. Tay· wagon. auto., real clean,
lora Berry Patch. Call 446· $2.996 . John'• Auto Sola,
8892:
8ulavillo Rd. Call 4464782.
..:__9_to_7._ _ __
Canning tomatoes. Davis _ _ _open
farm . Pick your own. 614- 1977Granade2dr.• 6cyl .• 4
247-3283.
opd .• ;f2.000. Coli 44117629.
YELL 0 W frees:tone cann Ing
peachesnowavailable,reaa· 61 Chevy Impale whfte·red
onable prices. Please bring irlt.. 283 engine, und•
your own buthel containers . 69.000 mi .. Keyetonea.
14th year of serving the sharp, $2,600. Sea to ep·
area. Bob's Market, Mason, preelate at O'dell Lumber.
30~ · 773 · 5721 , Open 7 Contoot Rita Corlloo 12daya, till derk .
8PM .

6ft.delimeatcasewith1 HP
copelametic condensing
unit $500. Coli 446 -8267
after 8PM .

FIFE ' S - Guns , ammo ,
archery. BIG WHOLESALE
CLOSEOUT. Stock
con·
signment sale. New. u1ed &amp;
collectible•. You name it. we
probably have it . Resonable
offers will be accepted. We
orequitting. FIFE ' S. 3rd. St.
Middleport . 614 · 992 ·
7494.

1

11

CAPTAIN EASY

o,f.n~•:·~~.cN1~-,H~·:.;~g~r:kln:d;e;r
.. mlxe-:-.
2 a. 3 blllltam

~

ye

Priced rtduced. Muat Hll
nice 26 ft. self contained
camper, air aond., lots of
o•'froo. 885-3988.

Old Hamil1on piano. Call
6t4·388·9854 otter 4 .

2 love seats, chair with
ottoman, 2 tub chairs . Call
448· t160
G.E. washer A -1 cond ..
$176 . Cal16t4· 367·0560.

Musical
Instruments

Check our September Spe446- 1676
cial
prices on all Long
tractora and equipment!
Long trocton. vormeor
round balers, rakes, tedders
&amp; mowers. And a complete
line of tobacco 11 corn
aprayers, wegons, rotary
tillers • rotary cuttera.
blades. cultivators, plowe·
diac: post divers, wood
power washer•.
aatic tanka &amp;
' woodburnersl
Used Equipment
IH hydro 70, 245 Moooey
Ferg ., 36 Malley, 615 Mea·
aey with loader, Ford Jubilee. Farmall C. gravity wag.

n.e Daily Sentinel-!'

pc 1, Ohio

e.

Farm Equipment

"September sa....
Jividen• Farm Equif.!ment

·v ·' II

PonMKar

Good cloon 197t 18 ft .
Rober camper. Self con
Ullned. liMPS
cerpeted,
range, rtfrlgerator fgat or
aloctrlc), ond furnlco . Coli
114-992-3383 or614·98543t7.

Canning tomatoes . New
field . •4.00 bu . You pick.
Clifford Hill. 247- 2063.

61

79

Vegetable•

30 INCH electric range,
$100.00. Dining room table
&amp; 4 chairs, $360.00 . Sofa
and 2 chaira. $200.0d . All
excellent condition . Call
304-675-3766.

55

by Larry Wrlghl

Friday, SoplembeJ 2, 1983

Motor• Homes
l!t Campers

85

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Coli 6t4-367-7471
or 814-367-0591.
Need something hauled
ewey or something moved?
We'll do ~- Coli 446-3169
between 9 end 6.
JIMS WATER SERVICE.
Coli Jim Lonlor, 304-8757397.

87

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 9oc. Ave., Golllpaflo
446-7833 or 446-1833. ·

Evening television listings-------------....;._---------------------:.
fit MOVIE: 'The Day of the

FRIDAY

9/2/83
. EVENING

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(.IJ N•w•
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end the . Curse of the
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(}) L~ That Bob
()) Father Know• Best
()) • 0 ABC N•wt •
0 ()) ID CBS Nowo
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CID Ov. Eaty Alice Faye
joins co-hostt Mary Manin
and Jim Hsnz to talk about
her early days in Hollywood, her 40-year ·marrlege to Phil Harris. end her
role• as wife and mother.
[Closed Captioned)
(I) PM Ml&amp;a:rlne
CD Burnt • Allen

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(I) Entertainment Tonight

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Report
(JJ Nawa
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louis
(]) Swiss Family Robinson
([) Cil (}2) I Do, I Don't A
sc:hedultng miM·UP at a
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9:00 Cil 700 Club Today·s
program features part two
of a close·up look at Mr. T.
husband .
CIJ IB (!JI MOVIE:
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(R)(60 min.)
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riD Six Great Idea&amp;
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,
10:00 CII MOVIE' 'Thank God, I( a
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•
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G C1J (IJ Falcon CI'Mt An·
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(60 min .)
(() Computer Programme
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10:30 (I) Ster Time
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CIJ High Schaal Football
(fi) MaawFPfec• ThHtre
'The Flame Trees of Thike.'
The Grsnts leave Elspsth
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12:00 (l) Bumt • Allen
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12:30 D CD CD Fridey Ni&amp;ht
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1:15 (])
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(]) MOVIE: 'Ent.- 1he
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CIJ NIC N Ov•rnight
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(I) lnhelor Father
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® NCAA Preview: SEC
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8:30 (!) lnwrnetional Track and
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'·

FIRST

KEEP

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•

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•

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

lnpartfromheatdarnagetothecorn
-'The marketbasket bill went up c!ttes and decreased In seven. The
crop - are expected to prompt last month at the checklist stnre In average Increase was 3.7 percent
livestock producers tD sell off their seven cities and went down In six and the average decrease was 3.6
animals rather than pay for
cities. 'Theaveragelncreasewas2.7 percent. When the Increases and
expensive feed . That will mean a percent; theaveragedecreasewas decreases were averaged, the AP
temporary Increase In meat supp- 2.5 percent. Overall, the market- found the marketbasket bill had
Ues this fall- and lower prlces- basket bills rose an average of dropped by' an averageoftwo-tenths
but It will meansrnallersuppUes- three-tenths of 1 percent during ofl percent In the first eight months
and higher prlces- next year.
.... August.
of1983.
Durtng the same perlod of 1982, by
The AP survey covers a randomly
Durtng July, the marketbasket
selected group of 14 food and hill went up at the checklist store In contrast, the marketbaSket biDs
non-food products which were eight cities and down In five, for an rose an average of 4.1 pel'C\'nt.
·The cities checked were: Albuprlcedatonesupermarketlneachof overall average Increase of six. querque, N.M., Atlanta, Boston,
13 cities on March 1, 1973 and have tenths of 1 percent.
beenrechec~edonorabout the start
-Comparing today's prlces with Chicago, Dallas, Detroit, Los An·
of each month since th~n.
those at the start of the year, the AP getes, Mlaml, New York, PhiladelAmong the findings of the latest foundthatthemarketbasketbillhad phia, Providence, R.I., Salt Lake
survey:
lncreasedatthecheckllststorelnslx City and Seattle.

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

Motorists like child restraint, Meigs County happenings••
Express (country) from8:30p.m.tn
helmet laws; dislike belts
Emergency runs
10p.m.
Meigs County motnrists have given "oveiWhelmlng'' support tD
Ohio's child restraint law and to a proposed law requiring helmets
for motnrcyclists and passengers.
However, 69 percent ofMeigsdriverssald they aren't In favor of a
law requiring the driver and passengers to wear safety belts In a car.
Lt. Dan Henderson, corrunander of the patrol's Gallla-Meigs post,
said this was "unfortunate," adding that eight P,_eOPie have died In
Meigs accidents this year.
"Twelve people have been throWn from their vehicles In Meigs
County and five of them were killed," Henderson noted. "None of the
people killed were wearing their safety belts."
But the survey also showed that S7 percent of those quizzed on the
survey -would olley a safety belt law If It was enacted.
Henderson said that nearly half of all traffic deaths could be
prevented U all drivers wore their safety belts. In countries where
. there are mandatory safety belt laws, traffic deaths decreased
.
.
. . . .. ·
stgnlflcantly, he added.
_. Sea.tbelt usage m .Ohio ls ·_ twl\'8.as high a!; ·u is In the nation as a
whoie; HenderSon said, ·and "accordingly; we have one of the ·
country's lowest traffic death rates. We can do belter, however, U
everyone wore their seatbelts. As many as 700 lives could be saved

I

Area Death

p.in. ·sllJlday arthe Ewing Funeral
Home with cremation tD follow the
service. Friends may call at the
funeral home Saturday from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m.

StanJey S. Sleai'ris ..

NO paper Monday
The Dally Sentinel will not he
pi-lnted Monday In ort!er that
employees may obServe the Labor

Veterans Memorial

each year."

I

A horshoe pitching tournarnent
will also be held beginning atlla.m.
Persons must register before 10
a.m. A greased pig contest will be
held for ages 8 to ll and 12 tD 18
beginning at 4 p.m. Registration for
the event must be done prlor to 4
p.m.Adunklngmachlnewlllalsobe
featured, weather J)E1rrnittlng. Smokey the Bear will also be featured.
There will be fun and games for all
ages beginning at 1 p.m.

Four calls were answered by local
units Thursday nd Frlday morning,
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports.
Frlday morning at 12:40 a.m., the
Syracuse Unit went. to Bowman's
Run for Stanley stearns, dead upon
arrival at Veterans Memorlal
Hospital, and at 5:07a.m., Middleport went to Price Hill Road for
Harrison Wilson, taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital. At 11 a.m.
Thursday Middleport went to Custer St. for Mona Uttle, taken tD
Holzer Medical Center, and at 4:01
p.m., Pomeroy took Ora Rice from
the ?omercy He'alih Care Center to ·
Veterans Memorial. .·

Stanley S. Stearns, 70, Route 1,
Racine, died Friday morning at
·veterans Memortal Hospital.
He was a retired mechanic and
aulD bodyman, and was a former
auto race car driver and auto stunt
(Continued from page 1)
man. He attended the Racine United
Methodist and was a veteran of Wickline asked that he be Informed
world War II.
on the ruling.
Born in Carbondale, lll, hewasthe
Williams presented council
son of late Walter and Dollie Stanley members with copies of an ordiStearns.
nance on trailers from the city of
Surviving are his wile, Ruth Gallipolis. Gallipolis allows trailers
Spencer Stearns, Racine; two only In traller parks. Council will
daughters, Ginger Williams, Euc- study the ordinance and discuss the
lid, and Robyn Reiber, Racine; two ls.orueat the next meeting.
sons, Spencer Stearns and Ethan
Stearns, Mansfield; and six grand' Trash collections
Trash collections In the VIllage of
children. Besides his parents, he
was preceded In death by two Racine will be made on Tuesday and
Weqpesda.y due to the Labor Day
broihers and a sister.
Funeral services will be held at 1 . holiday.

Syracuse.••

Day Holiday. PubUcation will
resume on Tuesday.

Admitted--Gladys Moore, Pomeroy; Charles Schoonover, Rutland; To end rnaniages
Ora Rice, Pomeroy; Frances
Roush, Mason; Richard ·· Grant, ... , Patricia i.ee -~ier: ~vlllti
Vlntnn.
.
.
and Phillp Joseph Clliner, MiddleDischarged--Mildred Hawley, port have filed for dissolution of
Walter King, Bertha Brlckles, ~e·
Darrell Dugan.
According to another entry Robin
Bean dinner set
R.HessandParisR.Hesswereeach
awarded a divorce from each other.
· The Rutland Emergency Service
Unit will stage a bean dinner, bake
saleandafleamarketfrom9a.m.to
4 p.m. Saturday at the RullandCivlc Weather forecast
Center.
Clear tonight. Low 00-65. Winds
Chicken barbecue set
Ught and southeasterly. Moslly
sunny Saturday. High 85-90.
. The thltd annual chicken barExtended Ohio Forecast
becue will be held Saturday, Sept. 3,
Sunday lbrllulh 'l'uftlday:
fromnoonuntU10p.m.sponsoredby
Fair on Sullday. Chanoe of
the Olive Township Volunteer Fire showers Moaday lilrOUih 'l'lleadaf.
Department.
Wann wllh hJ&amp;h8 bl the mid~ to
Dinners Ifill be served from noon
mld-!108 Sunday and Monday andthe
unW 7 p.m. with refreshments and
mld-4108 to low 90s Tuesday. r-s
baked goods available all evening.
mosily In the Ills.
Harmonies
from 6:30p.m.
Bands tD (gospel)
be featured
are The
unW 8 p.m. and the Blue Knob

Safe driving Is !hi! Ohio Highway Patrol's main message as Labor
Day weekend begins.
The last big holiday weekend begins at 6 tonight and ends at
midnight Monday.
Col. Jack Walsh, patrol supertntendent, said the patrol will again
be part of Operation CARE (Combined Accident Reduction Effort),
Involving the deployment of as many marked patrol cars on the
highway as possible In order tD deter violations and maintain an
orderly traffic flow.
"Our efforts will again be concentrated on speed enforcement and
apprehending the alcohol-Impaired driver who, so far this year, has
been responsible for more than 40 percent of Ohio's traffic deaths,"
Walsh said. "Removing this deadly menace from oor highways Is
high on our Us! of pr1or1tles durtng the holiday pertod."
Lt. Dan Henderson, commander of the patrcl's Gallla-Meigs post,
said local troopers will be on the road tD assist stranded motorlsts,
remove drunk drivers, arrest speeders "and doing everything In
their power to Insure your safety."
Henderson offered the following tips for a safer holiday:
-Don't drive when tired and reaction time Is slow.
-Don't drive w.hen decis!on-maldng abillty Is Impaired by the use
of alcohol oe drugs.
-Allow sufficient lime and don't exceed the posted limit.
-Wear a seatbelt and Insist that all -passengers wear theirs.
"A person's chances of becoming Involved In an accident are
greatly Increased during a heavy traffic perlod," Walsh noted. "The
most Inexpensive and effective method you have of escaping serlous .
Injury or death is a fastened safety belt. Parents are also reminded
that chlldren under four years of age or 40 pounds are required by
law tD use a federally-approved child restraint system."

Today's
Times-Sentinel
Aloni the River .. ,. ....... 8-1-1
•.• , ······ ................ 0.,
u

Sports ------------.------- ... -C-1-1

Jeans
Dresses
Fall Coats
Sportswear
Sleepwear

Coats and Snowsuits
Timex Watches
Flannel Shirts
Tube Socks
Handbags

l..'

..

~ '

'

NOW

20 o/o

ALL IN STOCK .

Sl29

YELLOW OR WHITE GOLD

FREE SIZING

·%CARAT

95

SAVE $60.00

LAYAWAY NOW

OFF

LAY IT AWAY

BEAUTIFUL 7 DIAMOND
CLUSTER
ONLY

NOW

•

OILY

DIAMOND
SOLITA I
0

S395°

lf6. S5t5.00 SAYE $200.00

MANY STYLES AVAILABLE

.

REGULAR PRICE
WHY PAY MOR~?!

~Staff

GALLIPOLIS Surnrher
beat means sweltering temperatures and lots of sweating for
summer frolickers, but unfortunately, farmers In Meigs and
Gallla counties have not enjoyed
the weather - having been
subjected to terrible conditions
for raising crops.
In an effort b:J rectify some of
the problems that have been
created by the drought conditions, Dave Fox of the Meigs
County Agriculture and Stablllzation Service said he has asked
for feder&amp;l disaster money for
the county's farmers.
-' On Friday, u.s. Agriculture
Secrewy JOhn Black - after
meeting with gowrnors 1&gt;f
drought-etfected states - said
the Farmer's Home Adm!nlstra. tlon, the
determines

I .

¥2

PH. 992-5248

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

been less ·.arrected by the dry

conditiOns since fanner's can
!n1gate thoSe crops, he added.
Rice added that the . bot
temperatures have kllled off a
lot of the grazing land for the
cattle. Consequently, farmers
have had to dip Into their ·hay
supply at an earlier lime tills
war.
"Finailclal)y, the cattle people
.are short .of hay .. " Rice said.

OFF

Regular Price
MEN'S &amp; LADIES'
GREAT GIFTSI!

.....

MEDIUM
·soFT DRINK

!leO......I'Y Jam
Block telh

29
hacht IIUickl!ll ...... thai lhe
pva •• mt II &amp;aldng new and
falter steps to help farmers. (A.P

WITH PURCHASE OF SANDWICH &amp; FRY

I M J)hoio)

story oo Page A-ll

.

•

tmts

ttdittt

had gone to the residence of his father, John Pickens, Sr., who lives close to
John Jr., between 9:30p.m. and 10p.m. and stated that he had kllledSandra
Carter; and, was going tD k1ll himself. He had reportedly been drinking
heavily all day. '
After Pickens Jr. left his father's home, the elder Pickens called the Ohio
State Patrcl who In turn called the sherUr s department.
Deputies Robert Beegle and Jim Soulsby responded and while talklng to
the elder Pickens, the son of
. John Jr., Dan Pickens, 18, a,rr!vedaihisfather's
..
.
'

"Even

though thtnp aren't as

bad for dairy fanners, the
drought will take about a year to
affect them."
Many farmers will have to 00)'
large quantities of corn which
will Increase the price for the
crop, he said.

OfflctalssaidPICswillcontlnueto
organize untO July 1981, when a
GALLIPOLIS- Private Industry permanent program gets going.
oounclll- P!Cs- are looking to the Doug Phllobaun of IrontonLawrence Community Action
~s!ness sector tD make job training
and placement programs soon Agency, the lllcal agent for this
regiOn's PIC, said a comprehensive
aolng lntD effect work.
. In broad tenns, PIC officials In program plan Will be sulmltted to
1100tbeastem Ohio are hoping Indus- the state In the spring.
Unttl then, PIC II qleratlngunder
try's Interest, whetted by economic.
Inducements, will create jobs and an Interim plan the state received
this past~
tinprove regiOnal economy.
To IICh!eve tranlters Into JTPA
· "If ewryooe remains as enthuslutr u they are at the present lime, and other temporary IIC!Mtles,
1 lhlnk we'll be In grand shape," . money has been dlltrbited to
OOIIIIIIfllted Sidney Edwards, exec- coontles within the repm. GaUia
I!IIW direCtor of Gall!a-Melgs Plm- was awarded $S7,506, While Meigs
l'l!celved ~ and L8wrl!lloe,
INIIIIty Action Agency.
CAA will be the agency hanclllng $!!81,362.
Of!!cJa)s said the amount of
!ralllftr of local Corrtpreheaslve
tundb!l
Will buecl 011 tile coonty's
Em~t'l'ralnlng Act (CErA)
population,
eAi Ell of unemployed
walllii! a brtoJobsTrainlngPartnerlblp Ad, PIC's answer b:J the people and the number of out-atplllll!d«it . CErA. Transfer Is Willk people abolle the natloaal
unemployml!nt average,
tlljlt(:teiJ to be complete ~ Oct. 1.
B)' KEVIN KElLY

'l'tlml-8enllnel Stall

BRING THE KIDs TO SE~ THE
QOWN WHICH WILL BE ON HAND
FROM 4 TO 10 FOR THIS OCCASION

Sweaters • Suits
Jackets • Shirts
Coats • Skirts
• Blouses

(FAVORS WILL BE PASSED OUT)

•Ladies' Bend-Over Slacks
•Levi Denims For Men &amp; Women (Junior &amp; Miss•yJ

BEGINNING THIS WEEKEND

BAHR CLOTHIERS

THRU OCTOBER
"NO PURCHASE NECESSAiltY"
10 WINNERS EACH WEik

•

,•

•

•

•

[

.

'

,'.

home and discovered the bodies.
The bodies were on a couch In the living room. Pickens had, acconllng to
the sheriff's department, gone hack to his residence and shot himself In the
head. An automatic weapon was still in his hand.
Pickens Is survived by his parents and five children. Carter was divorced
and was reported to have a flveyearoldsonwho Is In the custody of his fllther.
Also at the scene were Sherl1f James J. Proffitt, Gary Wolfe , Investigator,
___and Dr. Ray ~!ckens, ~ty coroner.

Truck strikes,
kills infant

.

.

.

.

.·

.

In Meigs
SILVER RIDGE-Nineteen
month old Jessica Wilson, daughter
of Rick and Sherry Wilson, Stlver
Ridge In Orange Township was
accidently struck by a truck at 3: 30
p.m. Friday and wasdeadonarrlval
at Veterans Memorlal Hospital, the
Meigs County Sheriffs Department
reported.
According to information received by Deputy Jlmmer Soulsby,
the chlkl's grandfather, James
Donald Eynon, 75, Rt.1, Reedsville,
was backing an Orange Township
dump truck Into his driveway and

..

apparenlly the child ran out to greet
him.
Eynon did notseethechlldand ltls
believed that the front wheel struck
and ran over the child.
The child was taken tD Veterans
Memortal Hospital by the Tuppers
Plains Emergency Squad.
Dr. Ray Pickens, county coroner
was at the scene. No charges were
filed.
The Tuppers Plains ER Squad
was called at ·4: 42 p.m. for Eynon
.. who was treated but not
transported.

"'Incompetent' woman's
sister files lawsuit
against Gallia pastor
(Edltor'sNote: Allllcontalnllthe
· charp!sof one party Iii alepladlon
agabiM another. As areault, the1111t
speclfle8 only the pl•lnllll's allegations agalnslthe deloodant. The salt
does not delall the defendant's
answer to the chal'ges aDflled),
DEPLETED CROP - Ralph Rut. hhw•1 ol Gallipolis 1napects a
poriloli !lillie !Gbooon Cl'Q(I olalann owned by 1rWie FeDure on Eureka
Star Boule. F8lliii!I'B tiJruulhout GaDia and Melp counties have been
eiJilutD&amp;- oflbll ft!!lil ' -IUIW dft!!Jghls Iii a iiiiiilber Of years.
Melp l'mn&amp;y hM III'(I!S far federal d!ee+r money through the

Fumer'sllGme AclmlalllrUioa.
In addition, since profits from
farming will be reduced drastically, fam'lers will be short on

working capital and will have to
borrow money lor capital to

so they can
. survive, he added.
Gall!a County ExtensiOn
Agent Bud Carter said, ''The
tobacco crop has been hurt the
moot," adding that he believes
roughly $1 millkJn worth of
make purclwes

tobacco has been ruined.

Tobacco grows on upland sou
and there Isn't enough moisture

for adequate crop planting, he
said.
Carter said that he has heard

that corn prlces will be IncreasIng as a result of the curtailment
In crop production. "Both corn
and tobacco have been drastically reduced," he added
Dave McKenzie of the Agrlcultural Stabll!zat!on Conservancy
District, said, "At the present
time, we probably won't seek
disaster aid unless . things get
tighter."
Ralph Hutchinson of Gallipolis, who helps harvest · for his
brother-In-law Irvin Fellure,
summed It up best, saying, "No
farmers are getting rlch, but
we're hanging on - hoping
things get better."

PICs.look to industry for program aid

See Our New Fall
Wearing Apparel For
Men &amp;Women

•

!nclud!ilg

tomatoes arid cabbages.;. have

SAT., SUN &amp; MON.

FREE

Story 011

'

which counties are eligible for
low interest dlsatster loans, will
hire more people to speed up the
process.
Officials from the United
States Agricultural Department
said this swnmer's heat wave II
the Worst since the Dust Bowl of .
1936. Approximately $7 bllllon In
crop damage has occurred
natiOnally.
Fox said, "We went with the
recommendations of the Meigs
County Commissioners and requested federal dlsalter money
for the county."
Meigs County has been extremely hard hit this year
because of the heavy early
spring rains and the dry and hot
weather that bas followed thl!
swnmer, he said.
John Rice, extension agent for
Meigs Coonty, estimated that
overall, "The drought has taken
about 25 pel cent at the crops In
the county." He added that If the
area .doesn't receive a substan·
tlal rain In the near future,
"things could be a lot worse."
However; Rice saki he believes Meigs County does not
f~ a disaster the maguJtude of
other countles wilhlillhe state.
Vegetable crops -

WEEKEND SPECIALS

'PRINCE GARDNER
BILLFOLDS
NOW

POMEROY -A murder-suiCide occurred In Meigs County Friday night,
reports the Meigs County SherUf' s Department,
Dead are Sandra K. Carter, 27, former AthensCountyresldent,andJohn
·
Pickens, Jr., 41, Smith Ridge In Lebanon Township.
Carter was kllled' Friday ntght at approximately 9:30p.m. by a gunshot
WOUIIdtothebeadattheresldenceofherboyfrlendJohnPhillpPickensJr.,
according to the sheriff's department.
Acconllng to InformatiOn made available by that deparlment, John Jr.

'

HARTINGER AVE.

Mountaineers
humble Bobcats
Pace e-1
,
State jobless rate up in July ·

Meigs officials probe murder-suicide

By ERIC JENNINGS

' •
dary tsle

20 o/o OFF

·.

Sunlnter heat
.h urts ·area
farlll crops

----~~~&amp;~W~OO~D~~~~
- ~~~
K~
14

GIFTWARE

.

MicWII'f*'iit-llamtei'O'f-'Gallipo.Us--Polnt PleatGtt Sunday, September 4, 1983

I~w:he;;n;;the;;;;car;;;w:as::stru::c:k:ln::t~he:·:re:ar:;:w:as::n:o:ttrea:::ted::.: : : : : : : : : : ;

a· P.M.

~oo~W

Vol. II No. 71

J...ariyD.Levlne,28,Cinclnnall, .w~
sllghlly mjufed In thEi accident but

OPEN FRIDAY '-TIL

Soviets continue Korean jet denial

unba

by Grate's vehicle.
The patrol said Tills' vehicle had
Ught damage and Grate's car had
moderate damage. Tillis was cited
for DWl and driving wilhoot an
operator's license.
A, passenger In Grate's vehicle,

lABOR DAY SALE

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

Take-{)ne -- ---- -- -----.. -- lnoeri

Patrol cites man follawing accident
The Gallla-Meigs post Of the State
Highway Patrol reported a twcrcar
accident Involving vehicles driven
by Michael Tillis of Rulland and
David L. Grate, :rr, Rutland,
occurred on Ohio 7. In Chester
Township of Meigs County. ·
.Tillis' vehicle was stopped as ·he
was travetlng northbound vehicle

c•·;~ .................. D-1-,
llrellth8 ••••••••.
A-I
Editorials .•.•.••..••.•...•..•. A·2
Farm ........................... D-2
locai ............... : ......... A-+8

!•

r~;;~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~::::::==========::;;;;~

EARRINGS

' ..

Friday, Septemb• 2, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Obio

August grocery bills had slight increase Safe driving -urged
Byl.OUI§ECOOK
A...,..•'ed Press Writer
Supermarket biDs Increased
·about one-third of a )lercent last
·month, according to an Associated
Press ·marketbasket survey which
Shows higher prices for eggs and
:_lowerprlcesforsomemeats.
- . · The rate of Increase during
:August was slower than It ·was
: during Juty, and prlces generally
· ·remain lower today than they were
. .at the start of the year, thanks tD
- price decreases early In 1983.
The good news may not last long,
: howev~. The summer heat already
· hascutch!ckenandeggproductlon.
· And r1slng grain prices- resulting

-1

ErneJyn Scarberry, an Ohio already been heard, mainly comBureau of Empl()yment Services paring JTPA to past CETA
tepteiE'IItattve to this region's PIC excesses.
- the region also Includes Perry,
"The criticism we hear Is, what
Hocking, Vinton and Athens coun- are yoo training them for? We're
ties - said that once JTPA gets
looking at an average unemployuncletway, potenllal appllcants will ment rate of 15 percent," he
be Identified, referred to CAA, commented. "It's a legitimate
screened there and selected for concern. Hopefully, we can spur
suitable training.
pr1Vate Investment, brick and
On-tile-job training Is planned, mortar things tnprov!de jobs."
W)th :ITPA contlnuin&amp; a CErA
Phllobaun said PIC can capitalize
program that pays a company half on things now avatlablelnsoutheastof an employee's wage If the
emOhlo.
company will train a penon. A
"I'd like PIC tD look at natural
youth tryout program II also In the resourcE5 and buDd Industries from
works.
It," be said. ''We used to have a huge
''We're looking at JTPA u an furniture buDding industry here,
I!COJIDIIllc develqlment loo!ntlve
and then the steel mU1s came ln.
lor the private sector," said · Whycan'twebavethat?Traveland
Phllobaun. "I think we can ofler the tourism - that can be pulled
sector a fairly compreheaalve
together. This Is all very prellm!Jll'llll'llll OYer a per!ocl of llM!ral nary, IIIII basically how southeastyears."
em Ohio will go, to expand our
Phllobaun said c:rltlclsm has economic base.••
.I

GALLIPOLIS - Charging a
Gallla County pastor used "undue
tnnuence, artifice and fraud," to
transfer "subslantial sums of money" from the assets of two
"Incompetent" Individuals to hlmsel~ his wife, his children and his
church, the alleged 'legal guanllan'
of a woman Involved has filed a $14
mllllon suit In common pleas court.
Grace Gillingham, Eureka Star
Route, Gallipolis, charges that W.
Alfred Holley, pastor of Elizabeth
Chapel Church, - from a perlod
beglnlngln19'76- Ulleda "position of
confidence and trust" to transfer
assets from the accounts of Marie
and John F. Benidge to his own
accounts for " ... the purpose of
retiring... variOus Indebtednesses
and purchasing substantial assets
ln ... (Holley's) ...name."

The suit defines Gillingham as the
"legal guardian of her sister, Marte
Berridge." According to the plaintiff, Marie Berridge and ~r
husband, John - both described as.
Incompetent - jointly and separ-·
ately held "substantial assets" ln.
real and personal property.
.
"Through undue lnfiuence," the"
suit alleges, Holley caused lo .
transfer tD himself from Berrldge's
accounts "substantial sums of
money" for the purchase of "substantial assets," Including a motor
vehicle costing In excess of $7,000.
The legal action further alleges
Holley "Induced" the Berrldges to
create trust funds each "believed to
be In eltcess of $:.Jl,OOO'' for himself
and his wife, his son, his daughter
and Elizabeth Chapel Church.
On Aug. 30, 1979, t)le suit charges,
Holley calilled to be filed for record
In the couilt:y r ecru der's o!flce a
"purported deed" from the Berrldges "conveying valuable real
property for the ultimate benefit
of ... (Holley and his wife) ." That
property carries a fair market value
IContinued on page A3)

City board, teachers
at impasse in talks
GALLIPOLJS - Salary negotiations between the Gallipolis Education Association and thec!tyboardof
educatiOn have reached an Impasse, and GEA expects a federal
mediator tD be brought In to help
reach a settlement.
''The offer of the board is
unacceptable to the associatiOn In
light of·the sound financial conditiOn
of the school system," a brief GEA
statement announced Saturday.
No specifics were released by
GEA or district administration.
Under the terms of their pfu.ent
contract, neither side can discuss
detaUs ~ negotiations publlcly untu
a settlement Is reached.
GEA said the only other development In talks with the board, which
were last held on Aug. 31, was a
briefing the followtng day by Wes
Simms, a research consultant with
OhloEducatkx!Asaoclatlon. Simms

prelented GEA membership with
the city schools' financial statua.

·

Negotiations are presently continuing In the Gall!a County Loclll
School Dlstrlct. A mediator ts
expected to be called In to settle a
dispute between the board of
education and GaU!a County Local
teachers over length of a new
master contract.
The teachers association Is seektog· a one-year contract to allow
negotiations to begin next year after
the collective bargaining law goes
Into effect. The board maintains It
would prefer to walt untll the law's
trial period Is concluded.
Talks are continuing with the
Gallla-Jackson-VInton Joint Vocational School District and Its
teachers association, but both sides
are also bound by a non-disclosure
policy. NegotiatiOns In the Metp
Local School District and Its .
teachers are expected to resume
Wednesday. That district li also
seeking to smooth over an Impasse
declared last week with Its noncertified emplpyees.

•

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