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Presi ·e nt exten s
3 p.m.
Lewis empllaslzed that any controller who does not
report for his shift after 11 a.m. EDT today would be
out of a job.
'
Lewis said the decision to give controllers who worll
the day shift more time to report "Is positively not
changing one iota the president's position." He
acknowledged, however, that the move does
technically extend the deadline.

'WASHJNGTON (AP) - The Reagan administration,
citing technical problelrui, gave striking alr !raffle controllers an additional four hours to report for worll

today. But officials said the president's position on
firing striking controllers had not weakened.
Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis told reporters
a half hour before the dismissal deadline that some
confusion had developed over whether controllers were
required to report to their 7 a.m. day shift today to
avoid being fired.
He said day-shift controllers would be given until 7
a.m . Thursday to report. That means the first controllers to whom the president's worll-or-be-fired order
applies will be afternoon shift workers due to report at

Transportation Department lawyers said notices of
dismissal would be sent to any controllers who do not
report for their shift later today by supervisors at the
towers and control centers where they work.

•

FAA Administrator J . Lynn Helms, meanwhile , conceded that nearly all of the striking controllers were
still staying off the job despite Reagan's ultimatum. He
said about 70 percent of the controllers remained on
strike early today- not much cbange from Tuesday.

•

Reagan, talking to reporters while posing for photos
with visiting Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, said he
still hoped the controllers would bow to his ultimatum.
"H ever we feel that our oath of office need not be
kept , how long would we have this society'" he asked .
He bas been arguing all along that the controllers took
a oath not to strike when they went to work for the
federal government.

The 21 airports are those at which the FAA continues
to limit takeoffs to 5V percent of the normal number . He
sa id two airports, at Seattle and San Diego, had that
restriction lifted during the night and were operating
at 100 percent of their normal traffic.

en tine

at

e

Helms said the ability of the controllers working to
handle the nation's air traffic "continues to expand"
and that nearly three-fourths of the regularly
scheduled fli ghts were operating, about the same per·
centage as Tuesday.
He said that, except for 21 of the country's largest
airports, the volume of traffic was at normal levels,
but that airlines continued to have empty seats.

TRY IT! SPECIAL PRICE
DAWN
DISHWASHING
DETERGENT

R~~.o~z~"

Leaders will continue movement
(

LA PAZ, Bolivia - Leaders of the rebellion to overthrow President
Luis Garcia Meza took a skeptical view· of the general's resignation
today and vowed their movement would continue. Sources in Santa
Cruz said the rebels may demand the three-man junta step down as
well.
Sources in Lima, P,eru, said Garcia Meza was en route to Miami
aboard a Braniff airliner that stopped in the Peruvian capital in the
middle of the night. But his departure could not confirmed in La Paz.

$1 .39

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DuPont wins control of Conoco
NEW YORK - Du Pont Co. apparently won control of Conoco Inc.
today for $7 .4 billion in stock and cash after the biggest takeover battle
in U.S. corporate history.
The victory for DuPont, the No. 1 chemical company in the nation,
came after competing bidder Mobil Corp. failed to persuade a federal
appeals' court judge to block the Du Pont offer for Conoco, the No. 9 oil
company.
Although there was no irrunediate official word, Du Pont apparently
won control of a majority of Conoco's 86 million outstanding shares of
stock when shareholders' tenderings- offers to sell their stock to Du
Pont- became irrevocable at midnight Tuesday.

Police check slaying·similarities
TOLEDO, Ohio - A string of similarities in the deaths of two young
Toledo an!a -~les, including the· fact that the male victinu were
acquainted, is being called coincidence by police.
Officers said Tuesday that the bodies of Stacey Lynn Balonek, 21, of
Toledo, and Daryl Cole, 21, of Maumee, were found Monday. night
locked in the trunk of Cole's car. Missing since a Saturday night date,
the two had been beaten to death.
The bodies of two other 21 year olds, Scott Moulton and Denise
Siotkowski, were discovered in suburbSn Oregon on April 3, the victims of what police called "execution-style" shootings.

YELLOW
LEAD
PENCILS
No. 2 Lead

Rhodes silent on
COLUMBUS, Ohio iAPI
Democratic state Auditor Thomas
E. Ferguson has had no luck getting
GOP Gov. James A. Rhodes into a
public discussion of a politically hot
November ballot issue.
Rhodes reacted with silence
Tuesday to the auditor's request for
the governor to clarify his intentions
regarding Issue 2, the Fair and Impartial Redistricting proposal.
The plan, backed and financed
mostly by Republicans, changes the
methods used to draw new election
districts for state lawmakers and
Ohio congressmen.
It abolishes the five-member state
Apportionment Board, which
currently draws new districts for the
General Assembly after each
federal census provides new
population data every 10 years.

Brady's brain seizures end

10 Pack

WASI:llNGTON - The series of brain seizures that hit wounded
Presidential press secretary James S. Brady has ended, and doctors
have increased his medication in an attempt to ward off a recurrence,
hospital spokesmen said Tuesday.
Doctors at George Washington University Hospital said Brady was
'"responsive, alert_and in good ~ondition" following a major seizure
and recurrent minor ones on Monday.
Dr. Dennis O'Leary, a hospital spokesman, said Brady would
remain in the post-anesthesia recovery room overnight as a
precaution, and return to his room on Wednesday.

Sadat given cool reception
WASI:llNGTON - Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, meeting with
President Reagan for the first time, is finding a cool U.S. reception to
his proposal that the Palestine Liberation Organization be included in
the Middle East peace pi"OCf\'5.
'"The United States has not changed its position with regard to the
PLO," says White House spokesman David Gergen.
Reagan _was planning red carpet treatment today for Sadat, who will
seek assurances that the new administration is committed to the search for a Middle East peace.

The sponsorship of the Big Bend
Regatta is back in the lap of the
Pomeroy Cbamber of Commerce.
At the noon luncheon mee~ing of
the chamber Tuesday, held at the
Meigs Inn Jim Frecker, president,
annOWlced that the Meigs County
Jaycees. (this year's sponsor) no
longer wished to sponsored the annual Regatta. ·
·
The Jaycees however, will sponsor
the annual"frog jump."

ROME - Pope John Paul II underwent surgery Wednesday to

-- ----

FRUTH PHARMACY
.
'·'

"THE EVERYTHING
STORE"
.

10 1 Sixfh Ave
Huntington, W. Va .

2501 Jackson A11e ..

Point Pleasant, W. Va .

120 W. 2nd St.
Wellston, 0 .

364 Jackson Pike

Gallipolis, 0 .

reverse the intestinal bypass performed after he was shot in St.

· ALL STORES

OPEN' 7. DtYS

AWEEk! '
FREE P.~~IUNG

Peter's Square May 13, the Gemelll Hospital reported.
The pope's doctors said the operation to restore the normal func·Uoning of his lower intestine was oniy a bit more risky than an appendectomy and they anticipated no problems.
'The operation was perfonned by Dr. F,rancesco Cruclttl, who
· headed the team that pefonned the emergency surgery on the 61-year·
old Roman Catholic pontifhfter he was shot.

When the event is sponsored by the
chamber the president of the chamber 'automatically becomes the
general manager.

Winning Ohio lottery number
Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Number" was 524. The Ohio Lottery
reported earnings Tuesday of $822,151 on. the drawing. The earnings
came oo sales of $1,012,442, while holders of winning tickets are entitled to share$390,291,-lottery officials said.

.

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M081ly cloudy tonlgl\t and Thursday ~th seattered showers and
thunclerstOnnS- Lows tllnight around ro: Higbs Thursday in the mid-

Ilia.~ of rain 60 pn:cent tonight Jind Thursday. Winds southerly
}Gtltph~leatonicht•
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Members discuB8ed plans ·for boat
races whiCh they feel are needed
during Reptta and possibly placing
conceulon stands on the ·upper
parting lot. .
'
Bob Miller suggested that a public
~ IYitein tie pllced at lline
cllffenllt leCIItlllnt lD .' 41wtit0fill
Poiwoy w&amp;t-eb)' ·~~j~cem~ng events
~ be lllliQIIDcld a~ INtt OIIIHlllf
hout before the lldleduled hour. .
No ·dillplle actlail nl taken on

Ill the wllitt
howe ...

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pearances at other fair e,·ents.

Ferguson~s

The Legislature draws the
coriJlressional districts but would be
pre-empted from the process by
Issue 2.
Backers of the ballot iss ue sa id the
apportionment board in the past has
gerrymandered. or manipulated
district boundaries. to the ad·
vantage of both parties at one time
or another.
The board 's makeup is J-2
Democratic and unless Issue 2
passes, its new districts will be vir·
tually certain to favor Dcrnocratir
candidates.
One unusual feature of the FAIR
plan is that it allows the governor, if
the amendment is approved. to subdivide big urban areas into
"'building bloCks" that would be
used to fonn the new distri cts. In a
letter to Rhodes. Ferguson s&lt;ud

FAIR would "change the pnii!Jcai
control from thret• Democrats and
two RepublicLW.S un the current apportionment b oard t o o ne
Republkdn governur."

EC:trlier, Rhude ~ sough t ltJf1cad uff
possible charge~ that 1f b :-illl' ~
passes, he might l!lanipula te the ur-

ban building blorks to sa p exi sti ng
Democratic strengtll whik becftn~
up the GOP . Tht&gt; governor t:~ske rl the
Ohio Coa liti on fur Districting

Reform to subdivi de tilL' big city
Hrea!'i a nd pro mJ Sl'd he would accept
their prupusal if cunstslenl 1.-\·ith his
constitutional resptlllSIbi I i li es.
no n - peirti s~:~ n

L'oalition . whi ('h
consist s or such gn1ups as ti lt' Ohiu
Council Of Churl'he...; tl nd the
A.mcrkan Civil I .itw rtil's Union of
Ohio. agreed to the requ est. But it
The

request
stre ss~d

it was not endors ing lssut• 2.

fergu son asked Rhod es in hi s let·
kr to publicly disclose hi s plan by
Od 5, the deadline for the apportioruncnt board to adopt its new

districts. That way. he sa id, voters
would have 30 days to take a look af
iJDih plans
Jack Daly , Rhodes' press
S&lt;'LTcta ry. c·unfinned the receipt of
the iPttcr but said Rhodes " will net
haveacommentonit. ' '
•
Heft.• rring to Rhodes ' promise to
the cu(:I Jitiun, Fergu.son !5aid the
sti pulation inv olving the governor's
t'l lllStituti unal dutie~ nullifi es th~

vow . If Iss ue 2 1s approved by voters,
lhe auditur sa id. It would then be
Hlwd~s·

con!' titu tiona\ duty " lo per-

suna\J y de&lt;'t de how to arrange the

nrhan blocks: 1e . apply partisan
po lillcal mdhods ."

The chamber did decide not to hire
a security guard for the present
time.
A golf tournament I open to the

publil' I will [)e sponsored

[)y l

chamber at .Jay Ma r Golf

Coli!"St:

Tuesda y. Aug. 11 ,

beginn i n~

p.m.

he

at 5

Attending were Fret ker . Susan
llaer . secretary. Bruce Tea ford. Pal
O'H nt•n. Mille r. Thereon Johnson. .
.Jack Balit·s c.t nd Fred Crow .

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PotiJEJOj.

Weather
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crowds attend\n&amp; gn.ndetand events and w\1\ mall~ -nurneroWi 81)-

It was suggested that poaibly the
Regatta will be held next year in
July rather than June as in the past.
Frecker indicated the parade route
would possibly be changed back to
its original route from Middleport to
Pomeroy rather than just In

ClEVELAND - The winning number drawn Tuesday night in the

.

2, Albany. were named king and queen of the Meigs County Junior Fair
Tuesday night al Eastern High School. They will be introduced nightly to

Regatta program put back into chamber~s lap

Pope has reversal surgery
OUR BUSINESS
BEGINS WITH
FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS

TO REIGN - Carla Rife. daughtn of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rife. Route I,
Middleport, and Hobert Jeffers, son of Mr. and Mrs . Gene Jeffers, Route

ROYALTY- Royalty for the annual Meigs Couaty Junior Fair to be
held Aug. 111-22 was named Tuesday night at Eastern High School. Winners are seated, 1 to r, Beth Ritchie, queen first runner-up ; Carla Rife,
queen, and Carolyn BoweD, second runner-up; back, 1 to r, Billy Dyer,
-·kiDI·IIJM.ruD ""PI Rohn Jeften,lllll&amp;,-apdOeaa~el"!elh eee&lt;&gt;nd nsDner-up.

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di~cu~Md,

MUJTARY CONTROIJ.ERS- MUitary alr traffic
CGIIIrollen ..-rive m·aa Army plane at Wasblngtoo
Nalluwal Airport Tueaclay. The Federal Aviation Ad-

ministration Is briefing military controllenJ 1111 IWIIIII'
in for civilian controllers on strike. IAP Laserpllelo).

�•

.Commentar
Lane

Page-2-TII. Daljy

Sentinel

TheDa

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, August 5, lttl

Wrlliam F. Buckley Jr:

Kirkland~s firewor~s_~----------r.
:;.

I have a secret.
If you sit down next to Lane
Kirkland and just talk to him you
will discover that he is a man of
humor. intelligence, reason and ur·
banity. I write these words only after checking with a labor lawyer and
ascertaining that you can use them
to describe the head of the AFLrCIO
without conunittlng a libel or, in the
phrase of the litigators, "injuring an
advantageous commercial
reputation." I was trying to take in
the queen's fireworks at Hyde Park,
but flashed over to Lane Kirkland
delivering, for the benefit of the
uninstructed. the rebuttal to Mr.
Reagan's speech.
I listened to Kirkland for a bit.
then switched back to the fireworks;
but 1 couldn't concentrate, and so
went back to Kirkland, with his
Catherine wheel of objections to the
proposal that Congress reduce taxes
even-har~d• dly at a rate that might
conceivably just outpace inflation
over the next three years. Back to
the fireworks ... Back to Kirkland .
Soon one could not tell the dif·
Ference. By the tune Mr . Kirkland
was through, the bursting stars, the
constellation of flaming furies, was

as great over at CBS-TV as at Hyde
Park, London. If, after listening to
Kirkland, the mobs had gone back
and stormed the Bastille, I wouldn't
have been surprised .
The great discovery of this
historic year, the political skills of
President Reagan apart, is the
Democrats' discovery of people who
make between $30,000 and $50,000
per year. Mind you, their timing was
perfect. First they spent 20 years
during which the man who earned
~.000 traveled from affluence to
relative astringency . The man who
in 1960 earned $30,000 could meet the
mortgage payments. send two or
three children to school, travel to
Yoserrute on his vacation and stash
away a couple of thousand dollars
against the inevitable rain.
Today, the man who earns $30,000
has severe difficulty doing any of the
abOve, let alone all of them. He is
earning the equivalent of $10,8001960
dollars. He is paying taxes of $5,000 ...
He hilS to pay out 20 percent interest
to the banks and mortgage companies. And the school bills are ap·
proximately four times what they
then were.
"Mier the war." Evelyn Waugh

wrote in his little biographical sketch, " Nancy Milford voted Socialist.
Having done her best to make
Britain uninhabitable, she went to
France to live .''
Having done their best to make
life hard for people earning $30,000
1which leaves 90 percent of
American wage earners even worse
off I. Lane Kirkland has decided that
they deserve his consideratioo. It's
just this simple, he told the audience: It's a question of whether you
are in favor of people making $30,000
to $50,000, or whether you are in
favor of people making more than
$50,000.
To which the appropriate comment os that the act of reductionism
os appropriate to a simpleton, rather
than to an analyst seeking simple
breakdowns. One wonders : What
would have happened if, during Mr.
Kirkland's tirade, someone had tapped him on the shoulder and said,
"Er, Mr. Kirkland, are you aware
thai if we taxed 100 percent of all of
the money now made by those who
earn more than $50,000. you wouldn 't
raise enough money to run the
fede ra l government for even one
week ?"
ft is difficult to conceive how Mr.
Kirkland would have emerged from
such an interruption . Ezra Pound
once said of William Ca rlos
Williams, having read his bOok of
poems "Paterson" (N.J ), "This
must be the most incoherent man
who ever gargled." Is Lane
Kirkland
from Paterson, N.J.' AcPolitictans, pundits and pollsters have sought throughout the past three
tua
lly,
Mr
Kirkland hails from
months to elevate special elections to fill vacancies in the House of
Camden.
S.
C.,
a sanctuary of good
.
Representatives into plebiscites on President Reagan's popularity ._
But a retrospective exarrunation of votmg patterns tn the senes of hve
such contests suggests, notwithstanding the efforts to transfonn them into
referendums on the president's job performance, that there's less there than
meets the eye.
Congress now has a full House ! a situation as rare in politics as tn poker I
COlUMBUS Ohio 1API ~ Gov.
but additional strained interpretations can be expected as new vacanctes are Jarne~ A. Rhodes' possible call for a
created in the only two stales scheduled to elect a governor later this year~ new round of temporary taxes to
Virginia and New Jersey .
keep sc hools from closing is solidly
One of the few generally reliable axioms in an era of volatile and un- uppused by Ohit1's big school teacher
predictable politics is that's it's very difficult, of not impossible, tu transfer lobbY .
popularity (or unpopularity I from one politician to another, especoally m offJ ohn Ha ll , c h1ef lobbyist for the
year elections.
B3.000-member Ohio Education
There are, of course, exceptions to that rule, the most recently notable of AssociatiOn. says temporary taxes
which occurred in the midst of the Watergate scandal, when Democrats would be .. just another Band Aid.
were victorious on four of the five 1974 special electJons held in congressional The schools ha ve had all the Band
districts consodered to be bastions ·of Republican strength.
Aids they can stand."
But no similarly unmistakable pattern has emerged this year.
Ha ll was on ,·acalion and not
There has, however, been no Jack of effort to link those races to the available for conunent on late July
president's presumed populanty ! or lack thereof) . Politicians in bOth maJor when Rhod es mentioned the
parties have been anxious to misinterpret a smgle voctory on an ISOlated possibility of enacting tax hikes for
district as a harbinger of a national trend mthe makmg.
one year only .
In fact, oil-year congressional elections are (and probably ought to bel
The governor said this would give
most heavily influenced by the idiosyncracies of the candidates in the race ,
officials and lawmakers time to look
the characteristics of the district and the dynamics of the campaign.
for a perman ent solution to Ohio"s
In addition, this year's results have done little rnore than reinforce the
cntical school and other fiscal
widely accepted theory that the party in control of the White House tends to
problems
fare somewhat poorly in such contests, presumably because of the voters'
proclivity to give the benefit of the doubt to the party out of power.
The GOP was able to retain handily the seat in Michigan's predominanllv rural. overwhelmingly Republican 4th Congressional District.
· But the Republicans were unable to capture the seat in Maryland's 5th
WASHI NGTON API - When
Congressoonal District, in the Washington suburbs, where voters register
Ed
ucation Sec retary T.H. Bell read
Democratic by a l-1 margm .
a
newspaper
arttcle quoting a suborIn Pennsylvania's 3rd Congressional District, located in Philadelphia,
dinate
's
claim
th;,t he was Bell's
the exigencoes of local politics required the winner to run as a Republican ,
special
liaison
officer
for Christian
but he is lifelong Democrat publicly committed to voting with that party in
fundam
en
tali
st
schools,
hl"'was ··ap-the House .
palled
."
The natural antipathy toward those in power was displayed most obvoously in Ohoo' s heavily Republocan . rural and conservative 4th
Congressional District, where the GOP candidate eked out a victory by

maMers, good sense and chivalrous
behavior. Perhaps be made special
arrangements to black out the
broadcast in South Carolina.
The fact of the matter, not once
mentioned by Kirkland (or by
Daniel Patrick Moynihan -and he
truly knows better), is that what
counts is the marginal tax rate.
Nothing else. If there is unemployment, how do you cope? By in-

creasing production. If increased
production is required, how do you
Cllpe? By increasing capitalizaiton.
If that is required, how? By lunng
savings into industry. How do you do
th:!t' By encouraging savings and
productivity. How• By putting a
special premiwn on the earning &lt;i
the top dollar. The best way to help
the man eaming $30,000 is to
decrease his marginal tax rate. And

that is true right up and ~~
scale. True of the man on
q e of
poverty, true of the millionaire. It is
a relief to fondle the statistlca: Last
year, almost one-half of tbl ·peGple
who belong to Lane Kirtland'•
unions had the good sense to vote-for
Reagan for president In doinc 110, among other things they enlwriced
the economic security II Lane
Kirkland.

IJ!e

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.

tTTI\®19QI I'®WO~ S'1lltl-T£t£G~

POMEROY, O.

HU&lt;.ME
N.E.R,

Fernando
leads NL
pitchers
'

Less than
meets the eye

"Could you state it for the record? Is that the device you use to investi.
gate the backgrounds of high-level appointees?"

Teacher lobby opposes temporary
· Hall on his return to Columbus,
said, ,,'it's been our position all along
that we've got to have a permanent
solution to the school funding
problem."
To enact temporary taxes, he said.
as the Legislature did in a six-month
package which expired June 30, "is
only to prolong the problem and
probably make it worse."
Rhodes has been accused by some
of skeptical lawmakers of floating a
trial balloon with his temporary
taxes idea. He stopped short of
making it a formal proposal.
For instance, Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer,
R-Bucyrus, said the ,four-term
governor has a way of putting
pressure on the Legislature.
"He sends us something that won't
work. a"4J we have to find something

·that will work," said Pfeifer, a
n.ember of an 18-member
Republican Senate caucus which hilS
shown almost no interest in the
governor's idea.
.
In fact. Rhodes has recetved hardly any support for it exe&lt;!pt that
HoliSe Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr..
[).New Boston, commented at ~e
point that temporary htkes pending
a search for a permanent solution
might not be a bad way to go:
'The governor says be w1ll stand
alone in a call for higher taxes if the
alternative is to see widespread
closings of schools as they run out of
money, as many are expeeled to do,
this fall.
He has said that when it becomes
necessary to make his move, he will
offer h~ program to a joint session
of the General Assembly.

t~

fewe;~=~~~~~~::~tmwhicheotherpartylostcontrolofaseatoccurredm
Misstsslppo's 4th Congressoonal Dostnct, which mcludes the state capttal of

Jackson In that election, a Republican was replaced by a Democrat.
The Republican in that race, probably more than any of the other GOP
contenders, sought to identify himself with Reagan and his program. The
president even made an amplified telephone call to a campaign rally in
which he told the Republican candidate, " We're waiting for you up here."'
When the dust had settled, one knowledgeable Republican political
operative here concluded that the party lost the seat because "our candidate
failed to establish his own identification apart from being Ronald Reagan's
candidate."
That trenchant observation ought to 1but probably won"tl dispel the
perennial misconception that local elections are somehow disguised
pleboscites on how the president is faring.

Today in history.

• •

On this date :
In 1858, the first Transallanllc cable was completed.
In 1861, the U.S. goverrunent levied an income tax for the first time.
In !118-4, the cornerstone of the Statue cf Liberty was laid at the entrance
to New York HarbOr .

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Coon Sl""'l
Po~ntroy,

Ohtn
l14-ttt.zl51

Of.VfYft:D TOTIIF.INTERFSf OFTHt: Mt:IGS-MASON

ARfo~A

can u.s• a fford
WASHINGTON 1NEAl ~ No
colwrut that I have ever WTitten
generated as much mail as did the
recent one on the worsening underfu nding of the civo l service
retirement system. Those letters almost all of them from federal
retirees - were overwhelmingly
negative.
Some of the correspondents
argued that federal pensions were
not all that lavish, Lhat they got far
less from the goverrunent than their
brother-in-law got from his private
pension plan. But the fact is that the
average federal retiree receives
$959 .39 a month ~ more than twice
the average received by pensioners
who worked the private sector - according to current government
figures.
Many of the wnters conceded that
their pensions were relatively
generous but argued - some quote
vehemently ~ that \he high payments were their reward for putting up
with lower wages and poorer
worktng conditions. I will leave it to
others to debate whether public service is so unpleasant that former
goverrunent employees must be
rewarded with one of the most lavish
pension systems around ..

private schools.
Any effort to establish a fonnal
relationship with the conservattve
Christian schools would anger of.
Cicials from private schools that
would be excluded.

recesse:

Most of the writers defended the
semiannual adjustment of federal
pensions to reflect increases in the
cost of living . This provision which former and current federal
workers insist upon retaining - is
the leading contributor to the rising
cost of the retirement system.
A major study of private pension
plans recently found that only 49 percent of them provided any cost-ofliving indexing and that only a handful provided full automatic indexing
as does Ute federal retirement
system. Another study of 325 private
pl'ans found that only 13 of them offered cost-of-living adjustments
based on the Conswner Price Index
and that nine of these limited the adj ustmenls to 4 percent or less. 'The
federal increase last year was 13.7
percent.
Joseph Oglesby , a spokesman for
the National Association of Retired
Federal Workers, wrote to accuse
me of using "frightening ligures
which ·do not stand up under close
examinatioo." He pointed out - as
did many of the retirees - that the
pension fund's current assets are in
excess of $73 billion and that its
bOard of actuaries determined that
the fund would re!""l'in "solvent" for

the next 100 years, as Oglesby put it,
"'under the present funding
method."
The must exhaustive recent
examination of the federal
retirement system is the ooe
released about six weeks ago by the
Congressional Budget Office. 'The
CBO agreed that the fund's assets
were $73 billion plus- live times it.s
annual outlays - and pointed out
that its annual income from all sources had exceeded outlays in every
year since its establishment.
'The important phrase here is "under the present funding methud."
Current law calls for the generdl
fund of the U. S. treasury to make up
the difference each year bet•een tile
retirement system's outlays to
retirees and its income from employer-employee contributios and in·
terest on assets. 1be CBO found that
the general fund aJIPI:OPrlation
amounted to 45.5 percent ol the total
income received by the pension fund
in 1980.
The CBO Noted that if the federal
pension fund were viewed In the
same way as a private pension fund
- that i•, •• depend_e nt upon employer-employee contributions and
interest income - it •ould be .

P\lbllthrr

BOB HOEFLICH

Aublanl PlbU1hrr/f oatrollrr

Bell said Bernard W. Hite, a midlevel political appointee, apparently
"announced for himself he was the
'Christian school liaison officer' ...
but he hasn't been designated to function in that capacity."

exhausted during 1982 and would
thereafter go into a cash deficit that
would grow to $79.3 billion by 1986.
Here we are talking not about unfunded liability - an actuarial
detennination of the probable future
payout - but about an actual cash
deficit.
.1
This let the CBO to conclude that
"judged in the same terms as ~
private plan, the civil service
retirement system is not actuarially
sound."
'
But the fund is sound as long ~-u.e
taxpayers continue to supplement' ti
with massive appropriatioris~ I l.l!
which totaled $6 .7 billion in 1980 iind
are estimated to increase to $17;3
billion annually 1in 1980 dollars) by
2030. In that year, the system\s int
come from employer-employee contributions and interest is projected
to cover only one-third of ils outlays. '
So, is it fair for the government til
tell Social Security recipients that
they will have ·to make 'do with less l ·
while it appropriates ,billions of
dollars to assure that retired federal
workers Cllfltinue to be silpported in '
the manner to which ·tiJey 'have
become accustomed? This remains r ,
the central question facing the
federal retirement system:

r=====~~

1

I.
(

i

''

*

I.EnERS OF OPINION arr w. . . . .. T1IQ .....W W h!u U..a
wurd1 lo011 . All
~~ .. HIUII&amp; aiNI mut be- slpctiWilll UJH, acldnu lad t.tlepho~ numbr~:~lped Wtkn wiU br pabillllell. Ldkn shteld br ill «CMd Litle, lcldi'HiinK
........ -~UUfl,
ktt

Seaver, on his 12th NL All-Star
team, is 7-1 with a 2.07 ERA for the
Reds and reached the 3,000 career
strikeout plateau on April 18.
Carltoo followed •ith his ),OOOth on
April 29 to become the first NL lefthander to accomplish the feat.
Sutter, 2-3 with a league-leading II
saves, will be malting Ilia fourth consecutive appearance, having victories in the 1978 and 1979 games and
a save last year. He is the only relief
pitcher among the nine,Pitchers.
Ryan. who took over third place on
the all-lime career strikeout list this
season when he whiffed his 3,118th
batter on Aprill5, is 1&gt;-3 and 1.37 for
the Astros, but that ERA is not even
enough to lead his team, with Kne~
per pacing the league at 5-1 and 1.15.
Hooton, overshadowed on the
Dodgers by Valenzuela's five victories and lour shutouts in April, is 7•
3 and2.96.

GRADE A

a:~~~~~................ ~~.$ I 09
$} 99

USDA CHOICE

Sandwich Spread

Round Steak ........ ~8~
USDA CHOICE

Round Tip Steak.~2
BUCKET

.

'

69

. $229

Cube Steak..........L~

.•

SOUTHERN

Peaches............. ~ 2

Ruthven, 8-3 and 4.03, will be appearing on his second team,
although he did not play in the 1976
game.
Top pitchers not included on the
team were reliever Rick Camp bf
Atlanta, 5-1 and 1.40; Jerry Reuss of
Los Angeles, 5-2, 1.90, and Scott Sanderson of Montreal, 6-2 and ·2.17.
Charlie Lea of the Expos, who no-hit
the San Franci!ICO Glanta on May 10,
also did not mae the team with a 4-3
recurd and 3.91 ERA.

DARI FRESH

2% Milk.......... ~!~~~~ 1
.

69

g

FlAVORITE

$} Qg

~

BORDEN'S ELSIE

$ 29

iracle Whip.... !~~~~ 1 Cottage Cheese.~·.~.
2

CHICKEN.OF THE SEA
POSTMASTF.R : knd lltkln.,_'\ lu Tht U..tty ·
St'ftlin••l. •V&lt;'~tUr1 ~ Puna&gt;nt)'. c;Mliu~789.

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4 MEMBER Df ~ AIIOt'.. lrd Prru, lala.. O.UJ Pftn AUD['i,a;llaa 11IKI lhr

HOMEMADE

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Amt'rk-aa Nf'Wt~prr Publbben AN«iaU..

Green also named Vida Blue of the
San Francisco Giants, Burt Hooton
of the Dodgers, Dick Ruthvea of the
Phillies, Bob Knepper and Nolan
Ryan of the Houston Astros, Tom .
Seaver of the Cincillllllti Reds and
Bruce Sutter of the St. Louis Cardinals to the NL team for Sunday's
'game in Cleveland.

j:

I ,

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

Whole Fryers....... ~5

Valenzuela, 9-4 with a 2.45 earned
. run average, and Carlton, 9-1 and
2.80, lead the league in victories and
are 1·2 in the majors in strikeouts
with. !OJ and 94, respectively.
Hooton, Knepper and Valenzuela
were named to the All-Star team for
the first time, and while Ryan has
played in four All-Star games for the
· American League, this was the first
time he has been named to the NL
squad.
.
Blue, 5-.s and 2.22, is the only pitcher to start an All-Star game for
bOth leagues, having started for the
NL in 1978 and the AL in 1971, ear·
ning that league's only victory in ihe
last 18 years.

The Senate and House
full working sessions on July 2 unt ,
a time uncertam. . .
·
Leaders have ondocated the two
houses ma y reconven~ after Labor
Day. but that, too, nught be up to
Rhodes to dectde.
.
.
Senate Prestdent Paul E . Glllmor\
R-Port Clmton, as much as satda~
far as he 1s concerned, the declSlon
will be left to Rhodes. He sa1d be
thinks the governor could L'llll ~
LegJslature back ID late August. . ·
Meanwhile, state . Instruction
Superintendent Frankhn B..V:alter
says as many as half of Oh1o s 61~
school districts will be broke and
have to close by late thiS year unless
they can gel new levoes approved ~y
voters or bOrrow from the stales
emergency school loan fund .

•
?
Bob Wagman
pensions'------------------

r-------.,

ROBERT L. WINGETr
PAT WHITEHEAD

The job, says Bell, doesn't exist.
The situation is touchy. Bell recently hored .a former Moral Majority
leader to a top department post and
deflected his efforts to take charge
of department relations with au

NEW YORK !AP) - Rookie sensation Fernando Valenzuela of the
Los Angeles Dodgers and tw~time
Cy Young Award winner Steve
Carlton of the Philadelphia Philiies
lead a squad of nine pitchers named
today to the National League All·
Star teaf11 by Manager Dallas
Green.

.

Liaison officer claim appalls Bell
1

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SAT., AUG. 8, 1981

.

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MNf.i.it'OOPY ...... .

Oik• Yt•ltr . ·r·

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nwy n•mi\ ~ ~~ dlnlt1 to ·.-~.:-w •
Stnllll\'1 . . . 1. •• tJ """"" • ·llllk• ~ivt.ru·ll'l"'llta'tt•~h.

Nu "•""•ril'lk"" l!r'il!lil ......""In

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whm•IH»&gt;I'!'t'~...-~~---bW. '

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Ice Cream ........~.G!~ ••

£hunk luna .....6~5.~l.
l lll)P1 1 r-,

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FLAVORITE

SUGAR

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3 LB.

CAN

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5 LB.

BAG

$}49

Limit One Per customer
Good
at Powell's

Offer

8, 1981

3LB.
CAN
Limit One Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
Offer Expires Aug . B, 1981

�Wednesday : Autust s, 1981
Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday,

SYRACt;SE MINOR LEAGUE -

For the first

timr this year SyracUSl' had a minor leagut&gt; baseball
squad. Making up the squad were. first row. l· r. Chris
Ebersbach, Scott Lisle . Hill)' Davis, Jamil' Anderso n.

Lopes told a Los Angeles
newspaper he appreciated the votes
and recognized other players had
had better records. He a4;o sa id he
remembered being passed over in
his early years, too, in favor of a
veteran player.
Lopes' closest vote competitor
was Philadelphia's Manny Trillo,
who was hitting .292, like Oester,
when the strike started June 12.

Mark Bcarhs, Eric Lawson ; second row, Andy Baer,
Michael Russell , Chris Weaver, Jason Arnott, Travis
l'iease. Chris Wolle. Mark Taylor ; third row. Larry
Ebers bach and Bill Davis. coaches.

'

1 ,,

P1

-

Afll'r tr;.·uuh

with nearly half uf the teams in the
Na ti onal Football League, multitale nted Joe Resti c is ta ki ng Cl fin&lt;:Jl
sUtb a t a futu re in prn football '-Uth
the Cle\·e land Browns.
A 2:J-yea r-old free agenl, Rt•s t! c

IS

knuw n as a jack-of-all - trcni l'~ wilh
thf Browns. Though spec1altzatwn LS
t ht• rult• in the NF L nov:, Ht• stil'
rerna ms as one pla ye r !o \.•.;hom
dtver~ity' Is key He ran and has
pl &lt;:~yed
ddensi\'t' bctrk , punte r,
holder on ki ckin g com·erswns &lt;l lltl as
a melllber uf punt &lt;llld k1ck c·uvt.Tagt•
trm n.':i

pa\·~.:.-·d

with frustration a nd disap-

poin tment.

He was drafted Ill the lOth round
b1 the Chicago Bears in 1979. but
wa s released at the end of training
camp after suffering the aftert:ffecl':i of mononucleosis . He then
tried out fur 12 differen t tra ms
dun ng the 1979 season cmd WC! S a n
unsiH'vessful fr ee agent with the! .os
Angeles RanL" 111 the sununer of
1980 .

·I :--..aw

a lot

nf a irports a nd had

rnt sses "·ith several
lP&lt;:~lllS . It seemed I was never in the
lot of

rlt'tJr

tim ~,"

n r! ht pla ce at the right

·J dlln't ihink Jt':i fatr In .'i it~ l' rn a
jack·llf-all-trades &lt;-tnt! /lla Stl' r of
none . I thmk I c-an punt i-ind play
ddens1ve Wck m tl1is league .
Developi ng In to a pro qu&lt;J rt erback
rni/.;ht lake a whi le, but I' rn willing to
try ... Hestt c s;.~I d
.. My best het IS tu try tu llltJkt• the
team at a combina tion of positions
su I can help out anywhere m :-1 pinch_ l th ink if a tea m ha s a guy who
can play back up in seve ral pust ttuns.
he IS a va lui:lbk m &lt;:1n to keep"
Ttw 6-f out-3 , 205-puund Not rl'
Dame ~rad u ate ha s a football
hi story Ht :-:; fath er i:-; he&lt;HJ foo tbal l
coat 'h al Harvard Uni\'Crst ty . The
youn gt.•r He.st1c 's pat.h through the
i--:F !. tn Jale . hUWPVt' r . ha~ been

a

Rest ic

Si.lld .

une point last year. l was so
frust ra ted I S&lt;Ji d I wuuld never try to
lllak c• 1t in the NFL agatn . llul my
fat her and I talked to 1Browns'
Coach 1 Sam Rutigl iano and I
decided tu give it one more try. This
·· J\t

or 45th playe r . well have to dec ide ."
Still , if Resltc doesn·t latch on wtth
the Browns. he won 't be destitute.

the ·Reds after this season. He said
that a contract proposal by his
agent, Rich Bry, was rejected by
Reds President Dick Wagner.
" Wagner told Rlchie he didn't

not going to cheat my family."
Collins took the Reds to arbitration two years ago and won ; he
went to arbitration again last year
and lost. More than the money involved in the contract, its the lack of
respect he gets from the National
League club's management that
rankles him.

doubt that we'd get what we asked in
the market but he said to get It from
the market, .not from him," Collins
said. :•1 want to stay here, but I'm

.AYI Ult TO eO% ON
100•1• COlT CUTTI8S

'•

. ••.

COIPAIED TO OTHEIIUIIDS" AT KROGER.

"fll .liiiPU COST CITTliS, 10 OTill

t:.tl&gt;II'T

GRADED CHCilCE,

Center Blade Cut
Chuck Roast

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
thM let&lt;rMliwcl 11en. •• r~C~utrld to Dt
rtiCiir ~tillbl. for .... •n
Kroger Stol't.
~ ~ n trW .S H WI do run OIJ: of., . , . . . . .

*"

EM:h , of

JONES MEAT PACKING

,,ap, ..

·---30do. .

.illm. wt ~ ~- '(Ou yOur choice of 1 COI'ftiiMibNJ item.
V11Nn -..a., r.tlecting the ume uvinp or t r~
'~~~Net! Will ent~dl you to purcn.. the ~ item 1t tM

•

$ S9

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

Evr(fhlng you buy II Kroger

II

gwttnteed fOt yOur IO"I

UtitfM:hOfl"r9'~ of mtnuiKtur..- . (1 you tre not 11111·
tied, Kro;et will rep6.tce yOyr •tem With the Mmt brtnd Ot 1
~ebNJ bflnd Of refund 'f()Uf purt:Nse pnc.e

He is nearly halfway through dental
school a t the Univers1ty of Pennsylvania.

IJ,ooo SUNDAY AUGUST 2 THtiU SATUIDAY AUGUST I
••11M· POMEI&lt;i O'r AND GALliPOLIS!&gt; town

FREEZER MEAT FOR SALE

•Horse Shoes
•Horse Shoe Nai
•Bridals

..

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

'

·'

WE WILL TAKE YOUR HOME-KILLED
ANIMAL.
BEEF MUST BE QUARTERED,

'

"•
'

•'•.

I :
1J
I If

II

1-lb.
Pk
g.
LIMIT li'ICS. WITH COUPON

30'
, I'll"''·
I

..

ALL ANIMALS MUST BE FREE OF
EXCESS BLOOD &amp; ALL DIRT.

I

WHOLE FRESH IOSTON IUn
SLICED INTO

KROGER

OLE CAROLINA

Sliced Bacon ........ ~~=:

ggc

..., "--.! 1111t lltell lUIS

I

··--··-··-·-·······
$299
'~
lWJ ·1-SSliver
·I.
!

FRESH (FARM RAISED)

C~TFISM

F1Uets ...........
lb.
RAISED)

$3.69

Valvoline

10

w 40

gg~l

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

PLUS I
•1.50 REFUND
CHECK
BUY FIVE QUARTS
VAL VOLINE MOTOII
OIL AND GET A·
$1.50 CHECK FRDM
VALVOLINE

..,•

......
..

~ 2%

Gal.$ .

Milk

68

Paper

'" Lo c.l tc d .lt t he E nd o f t he P omeroy M.Hon Bnd9c· ·

Avondal1
Gelatin

$ 19

3-cn .
.. 'kg.

Hot Dog

1-0 .

BURI .

LIMIJ 4 ftUASI

49

"•·

C

MIL .
IDOCI IRAND HllN(H OR
IT AllAN liQ UID

Kroger
......
Dressing ... ,,,

95

C
CLO~,'ll

$129

HOLLY PARMS , II';$. D. A. GRADE A

Pick Of The Chlx ..... lb.

U.S.D.A. INSPECTED . FROZEN 10-IHB. AVG.
ROYAL ROCK OR ROASTRITE

Young Turkeys ... ...... lb. 69

8

Motaroi1
$36.99 each

nterjr•l &amp;

Bread

Bv

Exchtn(IO

MONROE

'Oi-.,J..A.,-.,

,•.•,.- 66°
,•...:-'1"

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T&lt;&gt; f o' ..,gJT v(,.•C.U

Gal.

Ctn.

$288

6
Orange Juice ...... .. .

$299

Pak

COUNTR Y OVE N

Angel Food
Ploi
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C

ICIOGU

Flake
Coconut

TRWE~;~~~"P~;;,

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SEAL
SHINGLE

6.4·aa.S241
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VALVES · LIFTERS · PISTONS . RINGS
OIL PUMPS · CAM SHAFTS
"Talk To U1 Before You Atbuild"

M-OGIR LARGI

Grade A Eggs ......... ..oaa.
QUAIITIH MH. PILIIRT'S
Margarine .. ......

MOST

$2490

S2?,!,

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CA.~S

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69 C
59

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RITUIINAILI•ri,~l

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

8$

7'"'

f.!

Pale

Sill
Wattilllllonllch
·
590
Pears ................. ·''·
"""
81ueurrles
...... 99~
Sw11t Corn .. ... .., 150
390
!quash ................
', Muihro••• .'~~ SJ 71
hdllpe

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Pint ·

INlHI HUIIC PIUH
YIUOW

lb.

144 w . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone; 992-2139

Country Ovan
Prtllela . . ~:;

AVAILAILI ONLY IN
ITOIISWnH
DILIDII'TI.
HOTPOODI
AYAILAILI I lo111
TIL

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G&amp; J AUTO PARTS

Sandwich or
Wiener Buns

Pear

IAmln

FILTER

lA

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Fried
$411
Chicken ...... tuck•t
ILiaD 01 IY THI PII.CI
DOMISTIC NATIIIAL

o•

"•

Marshmallow
Creme . I JJa01r

KROGEI

.

Pkg.
,
'CHillY . . ,a;" . _

INTRODUCES THE

VALLIY

Corn Oil
Margarine .

GOlD CRUT

Country Club
lc·e Cream .... .

ggc

lOLLI AYAILAILI ONlY AT YOUI SILYlR
-·~Y ..OOII
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. . $149
sgc
•• •••
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11·1111

1-lb

Hllvaa .. .. c.,

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von a e

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f\ 74 Ol . CANI STER

s2••

Swl11 Ch•ise ........ lb.
AMIIICAN 01 MUITAID
87'
(
;
Potato Salad .......... lb.
'IISHIAICIDCHOCOLATICHir
$111
Cooklei ......... ....... ooa.
ftiiSHIAKIO
I C
Sandwich Rolls .. Pir~:

69c

$159

HILLCIIIt

Maraschino
Ch errI•• ... •·••
,.,
AYOHOALI

Mandarin
Orang11 . . '•"

II · 01

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Yl1nna
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&amp;·ol

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ICROOIIII

I WI fH O&amp;f l OW f' Hlt:l

Lima
IIana

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Coo

DAYIIMI

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D.rt ... .
KIOOII

... S479
(, .

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W.C.IItlnhlrl
S.C.
,..••.
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KIOOll

Sftllt
SauCl ······ ·'tf'.

age
ggc

r;~·",.~·· S1 09
110 VALUI

Vanilla
Wafers

12 ·('11

•••

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Tamato
hat• ..

• 01 .

Coo

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.

59t
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.... Parts Plus autnstor•s ... Thert.'s 11111-. you!

63c
49c
43c
39c

!WI IIIII LIWI'IICI

Route~~

Mason, W . Va .
Phone ! 304 · 773 -SSll

ggc

SUN GOLD SANDWICH 01

AVONDALI

S121

32 -o• .
Jo•

Slice~

$149

25 c
44

Fryer Parts ..... ... lb .

.

0.5'o LOWFAT MILK
} GAL . PLASTIC CTN. ; . $1.49

.

AVAILABLE IN ASPHALT &amp; FIBERGLASS

@mm~.,..~

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Ham

K~OGER

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Ctn.

Pomeroy . OH

100(&gt;

KIOC.Er. HAMIURG-U

Mi;;;r "····· ·~•m• 49 c

$299

lb.$2 18

CHICKEN &amp;CHEESE····&amp;9e
WITH FRIES .•••.•.•..•.• $1 29

SQUARE

Tea
. Bags

Baking

Kroger
Sugar

s·

ll · o1

EMBA ~~'r

...... ... lb. Sl99

LIMIT 12

IKO INDUSTRIES, INC.

lila . ... "•

JiffY

LIMIT ONE COUPON PERF AMIL Y.
, ,.
•
- - -.1111-IIUK.I. IKt

'/ SILVER
a mon
.... lb.
SALMON STEAK ... LI.

P•

I

,.....--;;,;;iO\ W~OLE ALAS~AN

WEDS. thru SAT. 9 to 5
CLOSED TUES. &amp; SUN.

$129

Pork Steaks .... ......... lb .
IN THE I'IECE
99
C
Meat Bologna ........... lb.

FRESH • ·6-LI. AVG.

HOURS: MONDAY 9 to 8

MASON, W. VA.

SAVE

~

'··

PICKENS HARDWARE

I
I
I
I
I

.

HOGS CUT IN HALF.

:a1

Ht

Gwaltney
Great

Fox De Luxe

9c
9

Kroger's Pro
Beef Patty Mix. lb.

.,

flO .UN

A ILEND OF IEEF I HYDRATED TEXTUUD
VEGETABLE rROTEIN

.IGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIIS, NONI SOLD

SMALL QUANTITIES: lA OR 1f2
CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING &amp; PROCESSING

Hlllcr"t

BBQ Sauce . 1~;r'

USDA
CHOICE

t:OIIYRtGHT lt11 - JHI KltOGII CO . ITIMI ANO P.ICII

GET READY FOR THE FAIR!

*2699

All

IEEFCHUCK

·· There art' millions of wctys fur
thmgs to go wi th Joe." Ow fourth\'ea r coach !:ia id . '" He could make 1l
:1s a punte r, or if we kee p three quart erb;.~ck s. he nug ht even mi:l ke it as a
fret.' saft• ty or as a :ojpecial teams'
playt.'r Wtwn 1t gt't..s duwn to the Hth

·.1 ~56

going to use him.
" I'm not going to make it hard for
Mac because he gave me a chance to
play. But I don't think Mac would
want me to like it.
·· 1 just know when the game's on
the !me, I'm not gomg to hurt us.
even though J' m not known for my
defense."

the Reds like to substitute Sam
Mejias for late-inning defense. It's a
sore point with Collins.
"It kills me when they take me out
with the game on the line," he said.
"It eats at me . I try not to make
waves about it. Sammy's a grea t
defensive player and I know Mac
!Manager John McNamara) is

..••

TODAY

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

P h 99 7.

" When last season got over, I told
my agent there were three things I
wanted when I sign a new cbntract, "
Collins said. "No.I, l ' didn't like
coming out early in the game. No.2,
if the contract was long term, it
would have te be guaranteed. No.3
was the money."
Collins has speed and hustle, but

..•

fROIIN UOGIR NATURAL 01
SWEITINED (6·«?1· CANS)

S70 W M a 1n

5

STOP IN

ts my last tune . t hnug h." he said .

Ruti);ltano 1s looking at a lot of
rookies and free agents at the
Browns' preseason trai ni ng camp at
Kent State Universit)·. Su far. he is
impressed with Restic .

Page

Pomeroy

PHONE : 667 ·6133
Take St. Rt. 555 AI Little Hocking
3 Mil es, Turn left on Co. 'R oad 248
Follow Signs

I~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~J

The Oaily Sentinel

'

Is Meigs County's
Only
SINGER APPROVED
DEALER.

Restic takes final stab at future
KENT. Ohw

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Even
as the Cincinnati Reds work them-selves back into shape for the
;resumption of the major league
·baseball season; several players are
thinking ' ahead to contract
:Ueg!ltiailons for next year - ind uding'right fielder Dave Colllns.
Collins doesn't expect to be with

THE FABRIC
SHOP
115 W. 2nd

Middleport, Ohio

It appears Collins is all but gone from Cincinnati

Au.e st 5,1981

Oester not disappointed
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) - Even
though Ron Oester was on a hitting
streak and had a better batting
average than Davey Lopes, the Cincinnati Reds' second baseman is
delighted Lopes was selected for the
National League All..Star team
" I think I've had as good a year as
anybody else but I'm not really
disappointed by what happened. I'll
make it someday . I'm not worried
about it," said Oester, 20, in his
second season.
Lopes, the veteran Los Angeles
Dodgers second baseman, tallied
more than 500,000 fan votes for Sunday 's Ali..Star game in Cleveland
agamst the American League.
Lopes , however, had a pre-strike
batting average of .169 and had not
played because of injury since May
16.

Pomeroy

......d

T I

•'

.....
''"'·

�Wednesda

rt Ohio

Pomero

Pa e-6- The Dail Sentinel

t'e~:zzlzes throughout county hold get-togethers--.
-_

-By Assodated Preas

Major league baseball players are
overwhelmingly supporting the
agreement that ended their sevenweek strike as they go on with the
business of getting ready to take the
fi eld again.
The 26 player representatives
voted unanimously last Saturday to
accept the agreement, and club
owners, who had planned a
ratification vote in Chicago
Tuesday , rescheduled their meeting
for Thursday because of the air controllers' strike.
Ten teams released ratification

vote results Tuesday, with the
players supporting the settlement
agreement 24:'&gt;-12. Six of the 10 - the
Milwaukee Brewers, Kansa s City
Royals , Baltimore Orioles, Houston
Astros, St. Louis Cardinals and
Atlanta Braves
reported
unanimous votes.

Eligible to vote are the 650 players
"" major league rosters. plus those
on the disabled list. A simple
majority is needed for ratification.
Don Fehr, general counsel of the
players association, was not sur-

prised the agreement is bemg
ratifi ed easi ly.
" The day we make an agreement

we can't get ratified, we all ought to
be fired ," Fehr sa1d.
In other results, the New York
Mets approved the contract 24-1,
whi le the Seattle Manners voted 2.13, the San Francisco

Gian~

23-2 and

the Mmnrsota Tw1ns 21-6 tn favor o!

the agreement. Phil Gamer, player
rep for the Pittsburgh Pirates, said
his teammates ratified the
agreement, but declined to announce the vote.
The player voting is supposed to
end by Thursday, when the owners
also hope to take a ratification vote
and decide on the format for the rest
of the season, which resumes Monday after the All..Star game in
Cleveland Sunday night. Among the
opti ons

are

a

spli t

season,

multiliered playoffs and continuing
the standings they way they were
when the strike started June 12.
If the controllers' strike makes io
impossible for the owners to meet in
Chicago, their Player Relations
Committee will set up a conference
ca ll so all the executives can vote.
Should the controllers' strike continue, a spokesman for Com·
rruss10ner Bowie Kuhn said, ne1ther
the Ali..Slar game nor Monday 's
Reopening Day will be affected.
" We could resort to using trains,

as teams used to do before there
were planes,·· the spokesman said.
Despite their support and the
detailed explanations of player
representatives. many players ex·
pressed

con fu sion

about

the

agreement, which deals primarily
with a new system of compensation
for learns losing lop-night players to
free agency.
.. I d1dn 't understand one thing we
were ta lking about ," satd pitcher
Ne il Allen aft er listening to Mets

player rep Rusty Staub.
will be played Thursday through
" It took an hour and a ball to sim- Saturday.
plify it," said Brewers player rep
0n Thursday, Albuquerque of !he
Ted Simmons: "We went over it Pacific coast League will meet its
word for word, paragraph by parent club, the Los Angeles
paragraph, frombeginningtoend." Dodgers; Baltimore is at
Overhearing Simmons, pitcher Philadelphia, Oakland at San Diego,
Mike Caldwell asked, "If it was so Pittsburgh at Cleveland and
simple, why did it take 50 days to get Houston at Texas.
it? "
Perhaps the most important of the
Pittsburgh player rep Phil Garner
said several players were concerned 1I ;
about performance clauses in their
contracts. For example, players can
be paid bonuses for the number of
For All Occasions
starts, number of at-bats, number of
hits and so on.
" That's been a big issue," said
AROUSEL CONFECTIONERY
Garner. "A lot of people have performance bonuses, and those will be
Ph . 992·6342
pr&lt;&gt;-rated. "
317 N . 2nd
Middlepor.
Dan Quisenberry of Kansas City
said his teammates had similar
questions.
.. A couple of guys with bonus
clauses based on service time were
concerned and a couple of people
wanted to know why we have to play
so many games in the second half to
make up for the first half," Quisen531 JACKSON PIKE -At . 35 WEST
berry said.
Phone 446· 4524
The Royals played only 50 games
before the strike, 10 fewer than the
Oakland A's.
Mea nwhile,,all the teams continued workouts or played intrasquad games Tuesday in an effort
to get their eyes, arms and legs
ready after the long layoff.
Three da ys of exhibition games

Syrac use 13, Charleston 7
Marv Thompson drove in the g&lt;&gt;-

twv-run homer in the seventh inning

ahead run in the fourth inn ing to

geve the Tidewater Tides a f&gt;-3 victory and a split uf their doubleheader agamst the Toledo Mud Hens
in lnternatoonall.eague basebal l.
The Mud Hens claimed the fir st
game 4-3. ending a ni ne-game losi ng
streak.

bt·eak a:;.:, tie and spark Syracuse to
its victory over Charleston.
Hamone Lora led the 15-hit
Syrac use attack with three h1ts. The
Chiefs got horne runs from Charlie
Beamon . Greg Wells and J.J. Ca nnun.

1n other II.edged
ac twn Colun1bus
Toesda y 111 gHl,
ht.
Rochester
Syracuse pounded Charleston 13-7
an1 Pawtucket duwned Riclunond 6-

2

Vega, a former Mud Hen, blasted
h1s homer to end a game highlighted
by three hofne runs by Tidewater
catcher Bruce Bochy. The home
runs grwr:' Bochy a total of nine on
the seaso n.
Terry I .each ~vened his record &lt;i l

:l-:t w1lh a victory in the second
garne, IJe a tin~ Steve Mapel , now 2-4 .
ln \he hrst game, Kurt Siebert's
suicide squeeze bunt drove home
K .C. Chauncey With the wmning run

for the Mud H"ns.
Rocheslerl ,Columbus O
De llas Wtlliams flew home on
Tu~ker Ashford' s bilses-loaded
throwmg error IJl th e lOth inntng to

The Month of August

13.80/o INTEREST

Oecoiated Cakes

2ndWf!f!k

&lt;:Jfi:

and

AT:

I 00&amp;.9 IS PM

&amp; SU N ~ATl fi [( S I : 00 &amp; J : lS

Simmons Olds.-Cad.-Chev.
"You're Only Minutes Away
From the Best Deill Anywhere."

SIMMONS
OLDS.-CAD.-CHEV.
1

omcroy. OH .
PH . 992 -6614
B A.M. to 8 P.M. Mon .-Fri . 9 A.M. Io 5 P .M. Sat.

Going
Somewhere?

CALL (614) 992 2104
•
•
(304)-675 1244

or
lead Rochester to ib tdo ry over the ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~i
lrague-- lea ding Colum lms Clippers .
Brooks Carey. 9-9, threw 10 in-

mng s of fi ve-htt bCJ sebaU, receiving

ttght

d e fet ;~ ive

support from his

mates. Clipper starter John Pacella.
lt.-9, stru c k nut 11 ahd allowed on ly

two hits. but could not survive the
fini-1 1 inning, l osing on an unea rned
run .

After pitchmg two balls to Cal
Rtpken. Pa cella left fo r Jun Lew1s.
who gave Ripken a paS!i t o first.

HAVE YOU SEEN
THE COST OF
KIDS' CLOTHES LATELY?

Chns Bourges fi ll ed the bases by
reaching nn a fi elders rhoire bunt

and Dan Logan slapped the fata l
grounder to Ashford , sending
Williams home .

List Jaymar
golf winners
Winners of the rcfent ladies gul f
assnciation L'O lllpeti twn at Jayme~r

Golf Club were .
.J uly 14
l.ow gross, Margaret
Fo llrod: low net, Nancy Heed: low
putts. Nancy Reed.
July 21 - Low gross. Nancy Reed
and

M ar~aret

BETTER GET
SEWING

Ct'lll'ral Exrhangt• IPl'CO
Tariff
!\o. ~ I

~

Model 6136

14 buoll·tn stitches.
F ree arm sewing pane I.
6uitt·in button-holer and
front drop-in bobbin .

. .......

THE FABRIC SHOP

Follrod ; low net . .Joan

Ch ilds: low putts, Nancy Reed.
.J uly 'l/ -- Low gross. Margaret
Fullrod : low net, Garren Snyder:
low putts. Garren Snyder.
Invitational Tournament w1ll be
Sept. J.

The afkrted Ohio Bell Telephone Company tariffs art• :
F.xchangt• Rate
iPlJCO
Tariff
1\:o. :11

•sooo· Off Reg. Price / '
.-f:&lt;·
Meigs County ' s Only Service Approved Dealer
115 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
992 ·2284

' Data11ltont· Digital
Servict· T;oriff

IPl'CO
:'\o. I I

Mobile Tclephont·
Service Tariff

IPl 'CO
:'\o. 21

Facilities lor
Olher Common
Carriers Tariff

!Pl 1CO
l"o. I I

When you leave on your vacation, let us pack
a pak for you. Let us save your newspapers
for you until you return home and at 'that
time we will deliver every back issue so that
you can catch up on the news that you
missed while you were away .
If you p~efer . to take your paper with you on
your vacation, we can arrange that too .
Call our circulation department or mail this
handy coupon to our circul.;tion department
today.
·

The Uaily Sentinel

·------------------ -----o~

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turmngon _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.___ __
I_ would like to take my paper with, 11!"'

'•

..,

Ple~se save my papers in a handy vacation pak and
delt~er them to me when I return from my 11aca(ion.
and . reI wo~l be leaving

.

·· ~ ;

my

vac~·

4

'iv
''
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'

toon. Please transfer my subscription to
,,~;!
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., _ _ _ __
Please resume my home delivery ---~--~-­

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NAME:

ADDRESS~,--~------~~~~--~

TOWN

•• ZIP_ _ __

lam now receiving the .----''----,.-.,.-+-~',., by

-NEWSPAPER CkRRIER
,1 '

'.

"'

~

_

1 ·,

'

'

'

.~Otolt ROUTE
'

•

t~

'

'

.,

,...
.

J;

!Pl'CO
:'lil1. I I

Privalt• !.inc·
Sen·it-e Tariff

!Pl 1CO
:'\o. 21

Any ~rson. firm. &lt;~wpc~ration
or asstK'iotion mi•Y file•. pursu·
ani to Section -1!109.19 of the
Ohio Revlst•d Code. objtlc:lions
to th~ pwpost'd inl'reases and
adjustments in r11tes and charf(•
es. and In the propost.od changes
in r'cigulalinns and practices
affedillll the same. The objK·
lions may allei!e that such
Apl'1icahon contaio)S proposals
that are unjust and disc:rimina·
tory ' or unreasonable. RI.'Ctlnl·
me!illations which differ from
the J\pplkld!111 may !If ll1l!lle by
the ~ Of lhe Public: Utilllii.-.s
Commlsiloll nf Ohio or . by
inlcl"V"Ina parties· and may

. ..

..

Wide Art• a Tt•lt•·
rommunical1ons
Servict Tariff

I

Ill! ~~~ b, the ('AIIIII(IIsl!uli. '
'·'·'!!;
~~
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Tau!or, aU lqcal.
· Attendhll from out of town were
Mr. and Mrs. Rldlard Nelaon, Mr.
and Mn. Walter Ray Nelaon, Mn.
Pauline Nelaoo, Mr. and Mn. Buck
Stewart, Bucky, Carol ud Troy
Stewart, Tim and Cbarlene stewart,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Vt1111111811, Vince
and Morgan, Mr. and Mn. Jack
Nelson, Ll.la, Cara, Barry and ·
Brian, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bl018er,
Mrs. Joanle Chandler, Jeff, Sharon,
Bill, Wes, and Cindy Chandler, Oils
Nelaon and Marilyn.
The 1912 reunion will be held at the
Forest Acres Park on July 2!1 at the
No. 2 shelter house.

Miller, Sid Taylor, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Leacfl, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Smith and Carla, David Iannarelll
and Eddie Blabop, Mr. and Mra.
Danny Walker and Shannon, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Andreoni and Rhonda,
Mr. and Mrs. Tmy Pickens, Jill and
Terry, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller,
T1111111lY and Mlclde, Mr. and Mrs.

Tcm Schoonover and Tommy,

Ben

Cottrell, Charles Smith, Marjorie
Bank and Don, Mr. and Mrs. Steve

Farrar

Stewart, the most children present;
and Mr. and Mrs. Don Clark, the firstan1vala.
During a short business meeting,
Francia Farrar was ell!fld president
and his wife, Midge, secretary-

Currently basic exchange
service includes the line and one
standard set. Ohio BeU proposes
that se parate monthly rates be
identified for the line and for
each telephone set leased from
Jhe Company. The monthly rate
would be $1.50 for a standard
set," $2.85 for a Princess® phone
and $3.25 for a Trimlin e~
phone, all with rotary dial. The
monthly rate for a standard set
would be subject to the Co mpany 's Minimum Level Pricing
Plan. The monthl~ rate for a
telephone set would replace the
current monthly rate for an extension. Customers who provide
their own telephones would not
pay the monthly rate for a set.
(Customers providing their own
telephones currently rece ive a
monthlv credit of 90 cents for
each sel. This credit would be
discontinued.) For Tou ch-Tone~
se rvice th e re would be an
additional monthly rate of $1. 50
for a resid ence lin e ($2.75 for
non-residence) and an ad di ti onal monthly rale of $ 1 lor
each Touch-Tone set.

1-party
2-pa·rty
1-party
message
flat
flat
$ 9.50
s 5.70
s 7.50
Present
12 .75'
Proposed
8.20'
10.60'
43.9
34.2
41.3
%increase
9.50
5.70
Washington
7.50
Present
2
C. H.
Proposed
1
12.75'
10.60'
8.20'
34.2
43.9
41.3
%increase
5.70
Zanesville
3
9.50
7.50
Present
1
12.75'
8.20'
10.60'
Proposed
34.2
439
41 .3
% increase
5 70
Springfield
4
9.50
7.50
Present
12.75'
8 .20'
10.60'
Proposed
1
43 .9
34.2
41 .3
% increase
10.15
635
8.10
Massillon.
Present
5
12 .75'
10.60'
Youngstown
1
8.20'
Proposed
25.6
29 1
309
%increase
10.50
6.70
8.35
Akron. Canton. Present
6
Proposed
12 .75'
10.60'
Toledo
8.20'
2 1.4
22 .4
26 .9
% increase
8.50
7
10.70
690
Dayton
Present
12.95'
10.75'
Proposed
2
B 40'
2 1.0
21 .7
% increase
26 .5
11.25
7 45
8.90
Present
8
Columbus
13.50'
Proposed
8
.95'
t
1 15'
3
25 .3
% increase
20.0
20.1
Present
9
11 .95
8 15
9.40
Chesterland
4
14.20'
9.65'
11.65'
Proposed
%increase
18.6
16.4
23 .9
Cleveland
Present
10
12 .65
875
1005
Proposed
5
14 .90'
10.25'
12.30"
%increase
17.8
171
22 .4
!'For comparison purposes. proposed monthly rates shown include a
monthly rate of $1 .50 .tor a standard rotary-dial telephone set leased
from Ohio Bell 1
·

INSTALLATION ,
M0VE AND CHANGE
CHARGES
Some dement s of lh c basic
charges to in slall . more anrl
change serriee and equipment
would be increast-d si)!;Ililicanlly
to corer the cos ts involved
For example. the Iot a I ch argL·s
to inslall a lin e and a td ephnne
would increase from S ~ S.9 'i In
$83.30 for rcsirlc11 rL' cuslom ers.
(However. many rL·s iderKL' rus-

lome rs wou ld he abl e In :tmirl
$27.60 of the proJKISed cha rges
hy obtaining tlw tr cq11ipm ent
at a PhoncCcnter StorL' or Bell

NON-RESIDENCE SERVICE
The ave rage percentage incre:\SL's proposL·d in monthly rate s for non rcsident'L' customers lor !-line messa~t·. 1-line mt•ss:1ge rntar'}·. message PBX
trunk SL'rvi ct• and sem ipublic roiu "'"ire in represenlative communities
arc shown below. i\lonthk " "l~ t· allm\;IIJn• s' and the charge for additional
local nwss:lgt•s mw !Ill' all11\\ :tnn•s "ould not be changed .)

Cusloml'r SL't"\ in.· Ce n ll' r or ll\
prmiding their O\\ nl'qnipmc nl .l

OPTIONAL
EQUIPMENT AND
SERVICES

1·1ine Message Semi·
PBX public
Rate 1-line message
Typical
coin
trunk
Band message rotary
Community
$20.00
$22.85 $!3 .95
1 s17 .85
Aberdeen
Present
!7 05
23.75
22 .45'
25.25'
1
Proposed
22
.2
3.9
26 2
25 8
% 1ncrease
13 95
22. 85
17 .85
2000
2
Present
~ashington
17 .05
23.75
22.45'
25 25'
1
Proposed
CH
22 2
26.2
39
25 .8
%increase
13.95
22.85
17 .85
20.00
Zanesville
Present
3
17 05
25 25'
23.75
1
22 .45"
Proposed
22 2
39
25 .8
26.2
%increase
13 .95
22 .85
17,85
20.00
Spnngheld
4
Present
17 05
25.25'
23 75
22 .45'
1
Proposed
22 .2
' 25 .8
26.2
39
%increase
14 .60
18.50
20 75
23.50
Massillon.
Present
5
17 05
22 45'
25.25'
23.75
Youngstown Proposed
1
16.8
%increase
21 .4
21 7
11
'
Akrbn.Canton. Present
6
18.75
21 05
23.75
14 .85
Toledo
Proposed
1
22 .45'
25.25'
23.75
17 05
%increase
19.7
20.0
0
14 .8
.
Present
7
1910
21.45
2410
15 .20
Dayton
Proposed
2
22 8o·
25 so•
24 10
17 40
%increase
19.4
193
0
14 .5
22 20
24 .75
15.85
Present
8
19.75
Columbus
Proposed
3
2345'
26 .25'
24 75
1805
% increase
18.7
18.2
0
13.9
22 .85
25.35
16.45
Chesterland
Present
9
20 .35
Proposed
4
24 .05'
26 .85'
25 .35
18.65
% increase
18.2
17 .5
0
13.4
Present
10
21.45
24 1.5
26.45
17 55
Cleveland
Proposed
5
25 .t5•
27 .9S'
26.45
19.75
%increase
17 .2
157
0
125
1•For comparison purposes. proposed monthly rates shown lor 1-line
message service and message rotary service include the monthly rate of
$1 .50 lor a standard rotary-dial telephone set leased from Ohio Bell. I

\ 'af} 1ng

\"ll't.'"' .

CENTREX
Chan ges inmonlhl ; line :tnd
st:ttion ral c•s for Ct• ntn·s "'r ·
1·in· arc :Jso pro[Nist'd . Sep:tr:ttt•
nwnlhiv r: til'S WIIIIIO :t)l)lh In
th e anT&lt;s linn :tnd In the
' !at ion '

MINIMUM LEVEL
PRICING FOR
COMMUNICATIOfli S
SYSTEMS AND
TERMINAL
EQUIPMENT
For Cl'rlain rommunirati oll'
..,~'!v iii .\ :tiHI equipnll'nl tiH ·
ralvs :tnd dlargt•s in ( &gt;hio Bell ·,
tariff, are minim11111 le\:cl"i .
PritTS charged may vary up In
a m:txinHim lnl'l whid1 is two
times till' minirmun lewl H:tlt·s
and dwrAt'S run,titutinA lh v
prin·s at ~ "lY gin·n tinll' an·
mn-recl iupriring lisis l"urnisht·cl
tn the PUCO hy thL· Comp:tny.
:'\nl less than 20 day s wiur lo
till' cffl'Ciive dale nf any tkmgt•
the Company must furni sh to
the PUCO a new list rcUecting
\uch chan~l-d rates ;unrl ch:\fi(CS.
In addition to l""lxosing ne11
minim,um levels for certain
systems and ettuipmenl. the
Company pro1mscs 1hal the
maximum level be removed .

Monthly ra!t•s fnr lllll'·wa)· uplion"l Exlended i\rt•a Servin• would
·gencr:ony be ch:lhJtl'l"l in line with rdaled ba~ic l'xchangt• st•rvice .
Servil-e rates not protposed to be changed indmll• :
• Rail'S for intrast:oll' lull mes.~ages (lung disl:ml·e within Ohio).
· • Moothly us:ljt\) alk1w:uK'l.'S for local calls uNk·r fllt'ssap;c ralr scrvit:t•
al\d, the-charge .for additional local calls ovt·r the ullowunces .
• Monthly 'uliowances' for ,i:alls .to' Pin'Ctory · Assistance and the
'·
chu..Res for ildditioriul calls owr tlic nlk1wanccs.
·
rule for lot::,l coioi tr i,.I!!Jom· calk (H(Iwcver. the charge for
. 1111 bVC~r'utot-hundl\od locuiL'Ilin cull wcluld inc,rcl!-'IC lrom 35 to

..,

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,,._:·~· ~J'hl! r11tc for (lhid Bell's "Dilll·h·" Public AnnC!Un~"C.nlentScrvlcc.
.

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incrl'a.\L'' al,o \\ (ndd

afkrl s11rh options'" .uld itio n:tl
rlirl'r! llf\ lis tings. IHIII-pll hli shl'd
servirl' atHI Cus111111 C:Jiin g sl'r·

GENERAL

)

Mrs. Enuna Farrar, Mrs. Lynn
Malone, and Mr. and Mrs. Nick
Bobo, Oak Hill; Mrs. Martina
Farrar, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Farrar,
Jr., Ernie and Elaine Perry; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Byrd, Mr. and Mrs.
David Emerson and Davey, Mr. and
Mrs. Francis Farrar, Scott and
Michele, Logan.
Mrs. Leila Farrar, Virginia
Beach, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Farrar, Circleville; Mr. and Mrs .
William Bobo, Doug and Susie,

SEPARATION OF LINE
AND SET CHARGES

Rate
Band
1
1

··'f.be
.ao cehts ,

Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
James W. Farrar, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Clark, Bruet' and Greg, Randy Farrar, Wallace and Ellen
Hillman, Jeff Farrar, Jessica Siders
and her guest, David Steward, aU of
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Farrar, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Farrar,

Mn.David~rson.~,the
~est; Gary and Mary Jane

The average percentage increases ·proposed in monthly rates for residence customers for l-party flat, 2·party flat and 1-party message exchange
service in representative communities are shown below. (Monthly usage
allowances and the charge for additional local messages over the allowances
for message service would not be changed.) Two-party service (including
2-party message rate service, available only in the Cleveland exchange)
would be limited to existing subscribers at their present locations. No new
installation would be made .
Typical
Community
Aberdeen

·

The lOth annual Farrar family
reunion wu held July 2t1 at Gold
CUff Park, near Circleville. A buket
dinner waa enjoyed and the day was
spent visiting with family members
and friends.
. Glflll were presented to Lelia
Farrar, the oldest present; David
Robert Emerson, son of Mr. and

RESIDENCE SER~CE

P ; Jt to tjle requirements
of Secll 4909.19 of the Ohio
Revise Code, the Ohio Bell
Telephone Company hereby
0ves notice that on July 21 1981 ,
it filed with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio an Application (PUCO Docket No. 81-436TP-AIR) for authority to increase
and adjust its rates and charges
for tclccommwlications services
an d to change its regulations
and practices affecting the same.
This notice contains Ihe substan ce and pra)·er of the Application. However, any interested
party desiring complete detailed
informal ion with respect to all
affected rates, charges, regulalions and practi ces should
inspect a copy of the Application
a nd all attached schedules
at the office of th e Commission, 375 South High Street,
Co lumbus, Ohio. A copy of the
Application and lh e proposed
tariff sheet s is also available
for inspection durinp; normal
busi ness hours :tl any public
business oHice or PhoncCenter
Store of Ohio Bell . In addilion.
the pro1xosed tariHs were mailed to the mayors and legislative
aulhoritics of all municipalities
in Ohio on April 3. 19HI. as
part of the Company 's notilica·
lion of its intenl to fil e.
This Applicalion affecl s rates
anrl charges for tclemmmunic:t·
tiorl\ ~t'rvire~ to all tustomers
of th e Ohio Bell Telephone
Com pany and . in :trldition .
affects Ihe rates :md charges for
Wide Area Telet~ •mmunication s
Service iWATS and 800 Ser-•
'1cc I and ce rtain other stniccs
J!.O Vt'Tnl'd by l:tllll'tl TTl'l1fL'~ of
olher lcl c phonc companies
st·r~in!( all olher suhscrihers in
the State of Ohio.

discount on 60 new cars &amp;
trucks in stock.

Mrs. Bob Miller and jeu, FlGMie
Nelaoo and Jolumy, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard DW and Tanya, Mr. and
Mrs. Rid! Yost and ~tid~)', Mr. and
Mrs. Don Yost and Donule, Bonnie

LOCALEXCHANGESER~CE
. Specific rates depend on the rate band applicable to a specific location .
It 1s proposed that the rates for rate bands 1 through 6 be consOlidated
into one band in order to simplify the overall rate band structure.

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION
Of THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
FOR INCREASES AND
ADJUSTMENTS IN
RATES AND CHARGES

along with our generous

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Office Hours by Appointment Only

were

Your average savings on
Cadillac.Oid..Chev. will be
approximately .~oo.oo.
You pay sales tax only on
the difference, another
savings of approximately
'200.00. A total of '900.00

Pawtucket 6, Richmond 2
Pa wtucket was held to five hits,
but took advantage of three Richrnund errors, as the Red Sox
defeated the Braves .

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

children attending.
Attending
Mr. and Mrs. Jbn
Miller, Jlnuny, Sally and Charlie
Mr. and Mrs. John Yost, Tina•
Retha, and Cluistine Riggs, Mr.

With Approved Credits

The winner in relief was Phil Huffman. f&gt;-7. Ken Scrom picked up his
sixth save . Bob Cuellar , 5-5, was ·
tagged for the loss.

JOHN A. WADE, M. 0., INC.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

The Nebon reunion waa held
recenUy at Forest Acres Park near
Rutland. Grace preceedlng dinner
was given by Walter Ray Nelson.
Games were played during the af.
temoon.
Glflll were presented to Sid
Taylor, the oldest attending; Mr.
and Mrs. Jbn Vanaman, the ones
traveling the most miles to the
reunon; and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Nelson, the ~le with the most

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Mud Hens split twinbill
By The Associated Press
Designated hitter Jesus Vega's

exhibitions will be Texas-Houston on
Friday, when J .R. Richard, the
As(ros' ace pitcher before he was
_fe_l_led_b_y_a_s_tr_ok_e_a_y,...e_a_r_a_g_o~_m_a_k_es__t_w_o_.

treasurer.

'·

WATSAND
800 SERVICE
(INWARD WATS)
The Com pany proposes to
restructure rates for Wide Area
Telecommunications Service to
more closelv conform to the
interstate schedule. The proposed change woul d produce
significant in creases for some
customers and decreases for
others. Custpmers would pay
a monthly rate for th e access
line and an additional rate lor
each hour of usage. with the
hourly rate varying accordinl(
to calling volumes each month.

MOBILE TELEPHONE
SERVICE
The exchange access line for
Mohil e Telephon e Serv ice
would receive the same increase
as the non-residence individual
line rale in the appropriate rat e
band .

The Daily Sentinel Page-7
Westerville; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Mlller and Michael Rogj!f'!l of Dun- •
dee, Mich.; Dennie Mlller
Springfield; Mr. and Mrs. Iva~
Farrar, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Greg Hayes and Amber, Midleport;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Stewart, Gret·
chen, Joel, Ben, Greg and Josh,
Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Stewart, Medway; Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Chapin and Kevin Trenton·
Mr. and Mrs. Lauren::., Wolfe',
Newark; Mr. and Mn. Lonnie Smith
and Scott, VIcksburg, Miss.; and
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Farrar,
Columbus.

Name omitted
The name of Barbara Matthews,
Pomeroy, was not listed by Ohio
University for the spring quarter
dean's list.

• Sepa rat e char~e s would
apply to the lines and sets
ossoc iated with Dialog•
Intercom System, Horizon®
Communications System,
lnterphone System, Exhibition Hall Service and Airport Service.
• In creases would apply to
Direct In ward Di alin!( Service and Special Recording
Trunks.
' For Telephone An swering
Ser vice subscrib er s. in ·
creases would apply to nonrecurr in g charges and
monthly rates for conce ntrator -identifier svst ems
and various other f~ci li tics
and eq uipment
• Rates for fa cilities for Oth er
Common Carriers tOCCI
would be increaS&lt;.'&lt;i Ia coincid e with incr eases for
special circu it s. Also ~ ro ­
posed is a new rate element
th e Fac ilit y Equi pm e nt
Pa cka~t· . for lh c tran srn i~ s ion . ~ i gn.tling

PRIVATE LINE
SERVICES
(SPECIAL CIRCUITS)
Su.bstanti:J mcrmses an· proposed in the -;ervin .! connectio11
charges and monthly rales for
special ci rcuil s furni sherl for
conlinuous anrl non-continuous
property. foreign exchangt• and
foreign centra l offict· se rvice "·'
well as lo r pri va te lint• ch,mm·ls
and

a~ ~ot: i ated

eq uipm e nt.

R3te s wo uld be res tructurt•r\
and a ne,,· rat l' L'lt'llH.'IIL thl'
"St-rY icc..· An•a Function:· \\uuld
lw tn!rodur ed fnr the lr:msmi ,.
.'\ion L't)llipml' ll l nl'l'dl'd to t'll -

ahll' th l' circuit lo pe rform it.s
inknd l'rl fnncti on.

KEY TELEPHONE
SYSTE:\1S AND
EQUIPMENT
lu :ulditinn to propO'.; ing l ll'll
111111imum kn·l ' for \:lri&lt;lll\ kt' \
lt ·lt'ph ont · \ t ' l'i ;md kc..·~· '~ 'll'111 ~
lht· Co mpany propow' to rt··
. . tru cl nrl' lh l'.'\l' r;lll'~ . ln ..,IL'acl ul
hasin g the ratt• 11 11 th e• Jllll lt ll&lt;' r
ot' k~y.'\ i11 ll ~l'. thl' r;ti L'" \\otdd
lw bawd t lll lh l' !~ pt· ul ,~._ ·t 111
ll\L'. wlwtlwr or nul IIH· 'l' l 1..,
llst'd In ih ful l r ap:tr itl Tlw
Co mpa ny ;do;o propo\t'' o.,l'p;tra lc..· rhar)!l'S fnr tht' r ollll ll(l ll
l'qll ip nwn l which co11 tt1tl s llw
kc.. •y \~\ It' ll I :111d l"Oilll tT I &lt;.. liu ·
\t.' h \\ ith !lw .trrc..·..,, lin v' Tht·
prnJMl\l.'d rhan).!t'\ \\ otdd l ··,td l
in inLTL' a\t'"i for \Oilll' ru,t&lt; 111wr..,
and d l'lT\'; 1.\ t'' for ot ht ·r'

MISCEI.LA NEOUS
PRODUCTS AND
SERVICES
"lh· lollowing itcm.s art: ill11s
tr:ttill' of rh:tnges in r:t lc•s aud
rh argL'' lor so mt• of till· mi m· l·
bm·ou\ prod tit.·!.; and \l' n ·ires .
Thl' ' Pt·ri fir ralt.'"i and charge..·'
for lht·sL' ilt ·ms :tnd lor other
prod11rh and '"rvin •.s ta n bt•
found in th l' pm powd tariff
shel'l ' .
• Thl' ll:tt r:t lc for intn ·
rO Til H' rlillg e;trh mohil t·
• 1mit ol ~li,ct·llant'fHI\ Cmn·
n1on Carril'rs with ilw ll'i v·
nun m11 nir a til 10~ ne t W(Jr k
lmllld incrc:lSL' to $2A'i per
lllOJl t h.

a nd

termi nati o n rl'fJLme d to
pe rform th e f un ciions necessan lor an OCC to pro'ide it s end -to-end se rvice .
The prayer of the Applitatiun
refJue sts tiH' Public Utilili es
Commission of Ohio to do the
following :
(:t ' Find that lhL' Cnmpanv·s
present ralcs and clw~es a~d
the rcgul:ttinn s and pr:tc ti ces
affec tinl!, the .\ amc are unju!&gt;l,
unre asonable am\ insullicient
to yic·lrl '"""""'hie compensatio n for Ihe services rt•nrlcred :
\ h i Fin d that lhl' rates and
ch arge~ amf rl'g ulations and
pr:td i n·~ r-tr o po~l'd arc ju.st and
rl'a:-.onahl c ~1 nd will prnvirlt• not
more than

fa ir .md reasonable
r:t!l' of return 0 11 the v:J ue of th,·
;1

C""'l''"" ·, prn pL·rlv actuall y
and u:-.clul for 1he co n\t'llit:ncc of th L· puhli c;
lr l .·\pp rm t· th e Iding of lht·
propo~cd . . dwdtdt.· 'ihl'l'ls nmtaitwd in Schl'dnk E-1 of lhl'
.\pplw:ttl!lll , nllHiifi c·d lo rdlect
\ tlch rt '\ j,i u ll\ th t.' rtol as m ay
lx·n t~nt· dkdnt· . pursu;Jnt to
ordt·r, ol th e Cnmm1ssiu n .
d1Jrilll! lht' 1111t'rim bdwl'cn the
liling ol th l' c\pplwalion anrl th e
d:tit' 11)111 11 which the .sc hcdult·
11 \l' d

' ltt' t' h

fH't"t iii W

l'l lcrfl\" L' :

id l l lroit-r th:ot til\' )JJ"OJM ISL'd
lll'Ullllt' t•fft.rtivc fo rt h" ilIt :
ll' l ,\pp ro•ll· !Ill' wilhdr:t w:t l
nl Ilit· prl'sc nt sdi L'dull' ' heels
' ""l:tilll'ol in Sc hedule E-2 ol
th ,· .\pphcatioo .
il l ,\pprm l' th e undl'rtaki ng
su hmilt l'rl hy the Compa ny
which W1111ld lll'mnw effective
sho11 ld the Company elec t t11
pl:tcc the proposed ral e.s into
dft·c l witho11t C:o mmis., i on
order . pt n ~ ua11l to SL'dion
~ g ll9 . 4 2 of th e Ohio lk viwrl
Code :
(g ) Cra nt suc h oth er and
fu rther rl'lid :Ls the Company is
re:tsnnahly c ntill cd to in the
~ IHTh

prl' Tlll \t'' ·

The form 11l thi s nolice lws
hl'en :tpprmed hy lhc Puhlic
Utilities Commi"ion of Ohio .
"l r." ], .,.,,.,l, •• I .q f.ol

THE 01110 BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
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�Page--a

The Daily Sentinel

.

Wednesday. Augusts, 1981

Portland School-some 60 years ago

GRAND CHAMPS - These gtr~ are pari of the
graod cbampioos named at the annual Meigs County 4H Style Revue held Tuesday night at Eastern Hlgb
School iD preparation lor the annual Meigs County
Fair. From the left are Crystal Kaylor, total look

Portland School in 1934

Mason Area News
Va . and Forked Run Lake. After
returning to their home in Mason,

Trustees to meet

Celebrating birthday

The Carleton Buarll uf Trustees
will meet in s pecial session Friday
at 7 p.m. All members arc ur~ed to
attend the all important rneetm~ .

Virgie Mora. Box 64, Roseville,
Ohw. will celebrate h ~r birthday un
Aug. 9. Cards may be sent tu her at
the above address.

were passable during the spri nJ;; and

sununer season
Various peddlers carne through.
One of these was a German dry·
guuds
man who 1jokingly 1

Recenl guests uf Mr . and Mrs.
Curtis McDaniel were their
dau~hters and families , Mr. and
Mrs. James Loyd and Greg of Nash·
port; Mr. and Mrs. Stan Saunders,
Cameron. Amber and Melanie or
Culwnbus : Mr . and Mrs. Calvin Me·
Daniel. Christine and C. R. uf Pl.
Pleasant.
Visitors at the home uf Mr. and
Mrs. Sherman Ford were her
brother, John Hughes of Russell, Ky.
and h1s grandson, Randy Moore. Mr .
Hu~hes and Randy were enruute to
Washington. D. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Ford
visited recently with her ni ece, Mrs.
Patricia Fulmer, a patient at St.
Mary ·s Hosp1tal.

threatened to swi tch his wnrnen
customers. Tu me, then, that was a

real poss1bi11ty. An eye-g lasses
salesman was suspected of being a
German spy . World War I was on at
that time . The Ra wleigh man was
anxiously a nticipated and welcomed

tu stay a ll night He was guud at
human nature - he always had a
full pack uf gum fur the children.
Now fur the purpose of this ae~
count. It is to tell a ltttle about the
ativ1ties in the Portland Schools
some 60 years ago. At that tunc
Portland operated its newly
organized indepe ndent schoo l
system . They called it the Cen~
tralized SehouL
Pupils tuuk the1r uwn lunche s to
sehoul. sang reltg10us and patriotic
son~s and uttered prayers to dose
the day sometimes. Teachers were
plentiful and chosen for ability and
character by local board". Parents
tuld their children to behave and if
they gut into sehoul trouble 1hey
could expect more trouble for them-

MORE GRAND CHAMPS- Also named grand
champions In their respective categories Tuesday
' night when the annual Meigs County Style Revue was
) held at Eas~m High School in preparation for the
: Meigs County Fair were I tor. Melanie Mankin, joyful

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.

A$14.00 Value

Low Calorie Cookbook

~~ bersbach

I J..iiW~Calorien 200 pages of smart recipies

The north ruum wa s for grades 1-4
The south ruorn, called the J.!,nmunar
rourn . wa.s for ~rades 5-8 . T he we~1
or Uack room was util ized fur awhill'

..,._,OX&gt;&lt;,.... ,
· .,..

:~

as Port la nd Hi gh SchoDI. In later
years it was unust·d ln 1922 Roy
Bosley, Deotna Br()wning, Creed
Ji:lnes, Louis Lee , Er1s P rll'l'. Harry
PriCl' . Ruth Rruwnmg . F cmnit• Hendl'rson and T tll'hlltj Mon'lll'ad ,.,.l'rl'

A:4 ' · A $14.00 Value

•

just 4 minutes without oil,

';Social
Calendar
•

stirring or shaking.

A$29.00 Value

·?WEDNESDAY
~ EASTERN BAND BooSters ways
t,anct means committee meetin~. 7:30
~p.m. Wednesday at Robert Elberfeld
• residence, Five Points. A discussion
~ will be held on a food booth to be
~"operated at the county fair in ad·
;':dition to other band booster matters.
~Parents or all band members are in;~ vited.
~ REVIVAL THROUGH Sunday at
"' Middleport Independent Holiness
:!Church, Pearl St., 7:30 each evening
;: with the Rev. David Light and
~Family as evangelist and singers;
~public. welcome.

A-•••

Candymaker

Purtlanll Hi~h Sehoul.
In Septembt·r i92fl. :15 stullents
wert..' l' nrolletl in thl' Gr;;~rnml:lr
ruum . They were Ph1l1p Banks.
Danet Browning, 0&lt;-t lt• Browning,
Roy Bosley. Ralph Henderson,
Creed Janes. Raymond Johnson.
Louis Lel' . Gilbert McDade. John
Morehead, Gayle Price. Harry
Price, Lester Pncc . Car l S laught~ r .
Earl Welb. Cm l Cux, Willie Cornell.
Charles Ward. Hollie Talbott.
William Morris. Huth Rrown111g .

Cooks Jellies and Jams
to perfection - everytime

,4,,,•.

tJ,,,,,

R~~

A $29.00 Value

..

p~
microwave convection oven

the upenin~ song led by Catherine
Russell . Anna Davidson had the
worship service in the evening.

.. Standin~ on the Promises" was
opening prayer . and Muriel Johnson
for the Rutland Church gave
devotions . Her meditation theme
was entitled "Duty," and her scri]T
lure was taken from Luke 15.
The offering was received by
Charldine Alk1re and Anna Davidson
with MarJOrie Purtell ~iving the
prayer.
Pe~gy Russell had the program
usmg as her topic , " Nobody Has
Time fur Me ... She talked on the zest
fur liCe. the zest which comes lrum
rea ching out to others , and the zest
ror living which is gained through
helping others.
The next meeting will be held at
the Bradbury Church of Christ on
Aug . 27 . Zion members will have the
devotions.

a.m . with workshops in the morning

ar.d recreation in the afternoon. It
will be an all-day program with a

A $14.00 Value

Holter. Alit'l' Jewett. A~usta Johnson, Ella Mae McKL• h-'l'Y. Wyne111a
Sivert, Fi:Hlnie HendersDn, I .ydia

Talbott. Everett Burner. l'l1 nton
Johnson, Floyd Tolbntt . Fr&lt;lllk
Talbott and Elw Birch
A news item appearing in ;.1
Porncru)· paper dated Jurll' 23. 1!120.
illu!ltrated lhl• inh.'rL'SI twld un

Country Cooker
Savory slow-cooked flavor
with microwave speed.

A $19.00 Value

etlucatiom11111atlers in Portland .

The headline read ... Annual Exercises Held In Portland : Supt. G. W.
Crow De live" Address ... Tht• writL~

Young appointed position in
West Virginia police academy
and Mrs . Albur-

Marshall University C01rununity
College and Marshall University

ti&lt;'e Young, ul Clifton, W. Va ., was
appointed chief or the planning.

grctduate school.
Youn~ is an eighteen-year veteran

research. and training division and

uf the state police. His wife is the Cormer Audrey Goff or Pt. Pleasant.
They are the parents uf three sons,
Richard Lee. Mason. and Michael
Scutt and Matthew Allen, af home.

Coffee· Tea Maker
Fresh brewed taste, lNithout
waste at microwave speed.

A$29.00 Value

Exclusive '' ROTAWAVE' '
COOKING SYSTEM
l m.tioc ...... tf tNt .........
'""" old 1ools 11011 fatds faster IN1
"" Mft~t! 700 Wills of ceoUII power.

The Rotawave Antenna
"llOADClSTS" ...r&amp;J 11 food io
1 lllifn rtllltirc potten.
El1mrnates 'Turnl abiP ~o motor reqmred
ICI turn a table Thtrtfore I~ H semce •

A11m is the only microwave
oven manufacturer to earn a
U.S. Government exemption
from displaJing a wamin&amp;laltel.

welcome. For directions to the camp
phone Jim Bush at :J8&amp;.81103.

IT GIVES YOU RADARAIGE OVEN SPEED
PLUS "CONVECnOI" OVEN IIORIIG
AND CRISPIIIG. IT CAll DEIIIIIAlt T,i!.
AIAZIICLY IT DOES IT AU 011 0111·
NAil 120 VOLT IOUSEHOLD CUIIENT.
NOW

en.

]IIIII, ]lill, .... hill • • ...
Ollltiea- MW"IIMiolnR,_~

SUMMER:SALE

,

JANE

S ug~r and

fainily histo~l. . &lt;
All
lives ar'e 11111ed to • !iehd ino,

•

imlly ~union, Melp County•.
ll.iltol'!l,:al Soc:l~y, Pomeroy, 45188.

urnm.2..'1~·In . hospital
'

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'

· '
"•

. JIIII'IIIY .PottJICloy, li' I

let.

.,
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199

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CHAPMAN, SHOES

"fiPt to £lberfekfs .In Pomw' ·
'--~~w-------.................,...._.......... ,.
·

and

an

llw area . The Gilmores are former
l"l'Sldl•nts of Meigs Count y. He is a
stlf-ti:lught mu!iician and has writhm
ti\" L'r 200 songs. Mrs . Gilmore is a

dt'rlt·al s upervisor at the College of
Oslt'opathic Med icine uC Ohio
Uni\"l~ rsity cmd is a lso ~ self-taught
, 1\IUSiciOil .

Tht• r u bli(" is lfi Vlll'd to attend the
pr11~ram

fl eun ion Sunda y
The annut:tl Curtis farnily reunion

w11l be held Sunday at Parker Park,
Alexandna. Ohw with a basket dm fllT to b~ ht&gt;ld &lt;Jt noon. The hosts will
bl' Water and Dale Curtis. All

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BAMA GRAPE JELL'Y

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SPI&lt;;e and lots o f enerQY

that' s what lillie grrl s a re made ol . Hush
Pupp,es • CilSun ls loofw ear IS mad e for
havmg fun And they've got !he grow n
. up took k1d slove But Wifho ul the grown ·
.,. ~p pnce .
'

onnatlon.concenilng births, deaths
~rriaea, whetller or nlit ~
·· · - j!llenl! the teun.klrl, to RBrktr

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'Aahley as agreed to act as ·

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~·'~'""'

A.D. CHILDREN'S
CHEWABLE
~
VITAMINS-I

'nle'amual Parlier reunion.will be
ld at the Tlippen Plains Elemenry 'School Sunday with a basket
· r atl2:30·p.ril. ·
· ·•·

WHI~E , THEY lAST Ill

60 l
] ! ,"

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Keith

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LIGHTWEIGHT HAIR DRYER

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I

arker reunion

AMANA MICROWAVE AS LOW AS '21'tts

fiddle

&lt;J ut uhurp to emphasize the lore of

August 5·11, 1981

0-TIPS ••• u~.u

PUP_9i.•~ ,

"'

the presentation will

CAN COUNT

1.37

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dulcimer,

~A SALE YOU

other

'~~\" ' ...~~00o'""'

: \
ij
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Ft•iitured

l!t· a

rTI;Il ives a nd friends are invited.

Hush

.,' The Happy Harvesters Class will
•' neet at . l:30 p.m . ' Friday at the
~Trinity Church. • The.~e . will be a
coven.-.! disb dinner following the
ntoetinic. .
'

JUST IIAGIIE

and

media includin~ pencil, pen and ink ,
pastel or crayon . are landscape
from nature , portrait from life, still
life, marine· study, flower study,
animal study, and modern art.
A best of show will be selected in
modern art, oil painting, acrylic
painting, water, ink or other media ,
and the premiwn will be $3.
In the other div1s1ons, one blue and
one red ribbon with premiums
ranging from $2 to 75 cents, will be
awarded to each of the 28 classes in
the show.
The rules specify that all entries
must be the work of the exhibitor. No
tube or number painting will be at•
cepted. and the fair corrunittee will
not be responsible Cor loss or
da1mge. An exhibitor is limited to
une entry per class.
All entries must be registered
before ~ p.m . on Aug. 14 in the office
of the Fair Board secretary on the
Rock Sprin~s Fairgrounds.
Exhibits are to be placed between
8 a.m. and 12:30 p.m . on Monday,
Aug. 17. Judging will begin at I p.m.

'

soliu
spunk

L 1 br~ry at 7 p.m . Monday evening

by Ru ger and Milry Gilmore.

from your nelllhiiiJNDI ASSOCIATED

I
.

Customs, superstitions and tall
tales uf the Appala chian Region will
tw th e theme of a pro~ram tu be condueled at the Middleport Publie

Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her

STAY FREE
MAXI PADS

::Class to meet

OMit clicMI .. 111111 "crist •
11M ........ .at' .. jticy . . . . .
!We". It's ..,. fir lim IM! '

watercolnrs,

Appalachia to be
theme of program

column . Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of thi s newspaper

·~

,.,

,.. Ill

acrylics,

minutes.
The best way to clean your tank of
algae is to keep fish that eat it. Ask
at your aquarium store for a couple
of fish known as algae eaters. The
Latin names for two types or algae
eaters are Gyrinocheilus and Otocinclus. The Plecostomus is another
type that will keep your tank clean uf
algae. Snails will also help.
Your aquariwn store probably
also sells rubber sponges on long
tu.ndles that are ~oud for wiping
soft, green algae off the sides uf the
tank. If you follow these sug~eslions
and keep :·our tank and water very
clea n, I'm sure you'll have no mnre
problems with algae. Have fun! POLLY
DEAR POLLY - One uf the han~
diesl cleantn~ tools in my home is a
box of cotton swabs . These are wonderful for cleaning cracks and corners in furniture and for wipin~ dirt
and bugs uut of the tracks in windows. They're also ~oud for cleaning
the tracks of shower stall doors. JEAN
Polly will send you one of he r
signed thank~you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite

BACK TO SCHOOl

;. MEIGS ASSociATION Cor Retar'·Hed Citi~ens will hold its monthly
k.eetil)g at 7:30 p.m. at the Meigs
::Community Class Building. All
~reot8 and interested perso~ are
•invlted.to attend.

a! tbe Holzer Medlcal ·Cen.
I

..

::dresses.

Gooch reunion Aug. 9
The 60th amual Gooch reunion
will be held at Gooch Camp,
Fostoria, on Sunday, with a basket
dimer at noon. Everyone is

By Polly Fisher
Speclai correspondent
DEAR POLLY . - I have an
aquarium and algae grows in it. I
have tried the
commerrial algae
destroyer sold in
aquarium stores,
but it doesn't help.
Do you have any
ideas on how to
kill the algae
without removing
or hanning the
fish? - S. S.
Polly
DEAR S. S. - Algae occurs
naturally in an aquariwn, but if
· there is too much coating the sides or
the tank and covering the rocks and
plants, you should certainly try to
control it. Your tank might be
receivin~ light that is too strong . If
you have a regular aquarium lamp
and the tank is also standing in the
sun, this may be the cause of the ex·
cessive algae. Move the tank out of
the sun and leave the light turned on
only eight or nine hours a day.
You might also be over-feeding
your Cish. Excess food in the water
will give algae the extra nutrients it
needs to flourish . Try cutting down
un the amount of Cuod you give your
fish. Feed them only as much as
they can eat completely in 15

,-----------------------------1

:'t HuRSDAY
•JtOCK SPRINGS GRANGE will
:-meet at 8 p.m. Thursday at the hall
::11t which ·time the hall will be
::Vacated forth~ Meigs County Fair .
· ' EVANGEUNE CHAPTER 172,
~Order of the Eastern Star, 7:30p.m.
··Thursday at the Masonic Temple.
..::OCCicers are to wear chapter

Perfect for grease free
or juice free cooking

Cornell . Ge nevit'\"l'

commandant uf the West Virginia
State Police Academy, Institute, W.
Va . un August l, 1981, by Colonel
John W. O'Rourke, superintendent
of the Department of Public Safety.
Young is a 1957 graduate of
Wah4ma High School, Mason, W.
Va., a graduate of Parkersburg
Community College, A.A.S., Marshall University, B.A. and M.S.
degrees, the FBI National Academy,
Quantico. Va., and the N'ational
Training Institute, Washington, D.
C. He ia an adjutant professor to

1

Popper
Pops corn fluffy light in

BOTH GIFTS WHEN YOU. BUY AN
RR-10~, RRL·10A, RR·9TA
or RMC·30 "'COMBINATION" CONVECTION MICROWAVE.

attendm~

or Mr.

.... _

that make sense, even if
you aren't on a diet.

jumper; Susan Danner, lounging clothes; April
Parker, spectator sportswear; Beth Ritchie, dress up
daywear; Lisa Collins, active sportswear, and Angie
Spencer. clothes Cor school.

Photos must have been taken withm
the last year and must be the work of
the exhibitor.
The show is limited to ·amateurs,
she stresses. noting that any person
who charges Cor any of their work is
considered professional and is not
eligible to exhibit in the amateur
show.
The classes in snapshot size or 8. x
10 enlargements, either black and
white or color, are scenery, animals,
portraits and/or personalities, pic·
turial, local interest, insects. and
marine .
A first and second in the four
categories or black and white snapshots, color snapshots, black and
white 8 x lO's and color 8 x IO 's will
be selected with a single picture to
be selected as the best uf all in the
display .
The best of show premiums are $3
and tbe other winners, range Crum $2
for first places, to 75 cents for second
places. The entry fee is the purchase
or a membership ticket.
In the amateur painting division,
classes in each division or oils .

Amateur photography as well as
; ~mateur painting have been in~ eluded in cla~es Cor exhibit at the
{ 1981 M~i!!S County Fair to be staged
jtAug. 111'22 on the Rock Springs
i Fairgroimds.
~ Mrs. Pat Thoma is chainnan of
· both divisions and has announced
•' rules ·for the first-time photography
~show as well as the classes for
~"exhibit. ·
~ She notes that any size photo must
~J&gt;e mounted at least three inches on
~ all sides and must be ready to hang.

This Portland school had three

Young, sun

will be held. A letter was read from
the Men 's Fellowship thanking the
group lor helping obtain the paint for
the assembly room at the camp .
Other needs uf the camp were
discussed .
Youth Action Day was announced
Cur Sept. 12 at the Pomeroy Church
of Christ. Activities will begin at 9

Strong light can cause
algae in aquariums

(Fair to exhibit photos, paintings

Perfect for frying .
' Searing and more .

selves when they got hornl' .

CLIFTON - Caplin G. R 1Dick I

category; Tract Casto, skirt and tole; Usa CoUios,
dress-up formal; Susan Danner, coats and jackets;
Laura Cobb, lopping your outfit, and Krist! Haynes,
clothing complements.

·they then went tu Howland Corners,
Ohio, where they visited Mr.
Capehart's sister and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Krauss and Mrs.
Krauss' daughter and family , Mr .
and Mrs. Rubert Powell and
dau~hters at Vienna, Ohio.

ruom.s and the strudun• has recently been remode led inlo a hornp ftlr

Page-9

Group discusses Christian assembly

And su he did - went all the way up
tu Portland Landing and walked
back home .
Wardie McDade and Fagin Price
had open ~(l ir Chevies with ex hau.-;t
whistles. They tuuk passengers to
Pomeroy fur a dollar when the roads

Ell&lt;~

The Daily Sentinel

Polly's Pointers

going to get my mone,Y '!) worth."

Ruth Cox.

Middleport, Ohio

Activities to take place at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly campsite
at Darwin were amounced during
the recent meeting of the Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ meeting at the
Zion Church.
It was noted that a county-wide
revival is being held this week at the
camp. A women's retreat will be
held there on Sept. 18 and 19. and on
Sept. 25, 26 and 'll, a family camp

By Gayle Prtee
A few years before and up into the
1920s Portland was more than a
name beside the road as it seems to
be considered nowadays.
In those times gypsies riding in
their rwnbling wagons and on their
hack-amored horses made their last
camp at Hickory Bridge above town
before retracing from their fortune
telling and horse-trading tr~ps .
There were only dirt roads with
sharp right-angled bends on which
an occasional automobtle or Stanley
Steamer dusted the air and scared
the horses. Travel tn and out of town
was largely by trains running on the
West Virgima side uf the river.
Usually a crowd of people got on and
off these accommodating trains over
there at the Portland Station. Little
packet boats chugged up and down
the river operated by Jim Slaughter,
Bill Wells and Frank Coates.
Jim Slaughter charged 25 cents fur
a round trip !rum Portland tu Ravenswood on his little boat the Excel.
One day on a return trip he offered to
let a patron off at his home a lung the
way. He sa1d, ·· No. you don 't. I am

Mr . and Mrs. Howard

Pomeroy

.

y,,,,,.

,.,.... . . ·179 . . .
·,.,., . t29 :, ~-rt~-a

FOILLE

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VILLAGE PHARMACY
·N. 2nil AVE .
These are

PH. 992-6669
A.O prices and products optional with

•

MIDDLEPORT, Oli.
stores.

...

'

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�'

•

Pa e-10-The Daoly Sentonel

Pomero1
WASHINGTON (AP)
In
dications are growing that the Sovoel
Uruon s 1981 gram harvest may be
smaller than descrobed by offocoal
U S estunateo
The Agnculture Department os
scheduled to release tts ne\\
estlJilllte of Sovtet gram productoon
a week from today and some trade
people are suggestmg ot probably
wtll show a further reductoon
For example
US
Wheat
Assocoates - a market development
orga mzatoon supported b} wheat

Harvest
may he

fanners

Facthty saod Tuesday
The dry conditions were not qwte
as extreme as the prevtous week
but they covered a broader area and
persosted longer the report satd
Excesstvely wet weather on the
western Ukrame caused subtanttal
problems for harvestmg wmter
gram tt satd The report covered the
week of July 27 Aug 2
But on the Untied States the report
satd unseasonably coot weather
spread over the central portiOns of
the country the East Coast and
Pactftc Northwest dunng the week
Tune ly ram fell over most crop
regwns
1mprovmg conditiOns
espectally on many areas of the Corn
Bell tt saod
No yteld estimates arc oncluded m
the weekly reports which are tssued
b} the facohty operated b} the
departments of Commerce a nd
Agnculture
The Agnculture Department os
scheduled to announce a new
esttmate of the 1981 Sovtcl gram har
vest on Aug 12 a long woth updated

savs m 1ts current

newsletter that most observers
now peg the 1981 Sovoet graon har
vest on the 180 mllhon to 185 mtlloon
metroc ton range
because of
weather problems m recent months
That would be down 15 nullo on tons
or more from USDA s current
estuna te of Sovtel gram productoon
Meanwhile a hot dry spell that
has threatened much of the Sovoet
Uno on s sprmg planted gra on area os
s toll hangmg on the govern
ment sJoont Agncultural Weather

smaller

Moddleport Ohoo

Wednesday, Augu5t 5,1981

ftgures for U S wheat corn and
other crops
Last month, the department
esttmated Soviet gram Otltput at 200
nullion metric tons this year com·
pared to 189 2 million tn IMI
Moscow's production target this
Jear IS 236 million mebic tons
A mebic ton IS about 2,205 pounds
and os equal to 36 7 bushels of wheat
or 39 4 bushels of com
Annual harvests m the Sovtet
Umon are watched closely for any
ondicatoon of how much gram
Moscow nught seek on the tn·
ternatoonal market m the conung
yea r Tha lis espectally unportant to
Amencan farmers whose pnces
depend to a great degree on the
volume of gram needed for export
The Sovtel crop s1tuatoon os even
more unportant at this tune because
of l'!lks gomg on this week m VIenna
with U S representabves on the
posstbthty of workmg o,ut a new
agreement - or the extension of the
current one - for sale of U S gram
to Russia

The

tor of FmHA as the agency calls it
self from 1971 to 1977 He also was a
member of the mvestment
brokerage firm of Blunt Ellos x
Loewt, Decatur Ill
WASHINGTON (AP)
An
Agnculture IJepartment task force
has recommended several changes
that would ease the regulatory bur
den on meat packers and others
regulated by the Packers and
Stockyards Adminostrabon
James L Snuth acting adrrurustrator of the agency, said
Tuesday that the reconunendations
are the first phase of an overall
revtew of regulations and polictes
relabng to the Packers and
Stockyards Act a fatr trade practices law to promote fair and open
compettl!on m the marketmg of
livestock meat ahd poultry
Srruth satd the agency wtU make
s trong efforts to get corrunents on
the task force s recommendations
from livestock producer groups, af
fected tndustnes state departments
of agnculture and others before for
maily proposong changes

The current ftve-year asreement
expll'WJ on Sept 30
WASHINGTON (AF!
Tbe
Agriculture Department has completed the official paperwork on two
more seruor offtc!als
John V Graz1ano was sworn m
Tuesday as the department s tn·
spector general and Charles W
Shuman as adminostrator of the Fa!'
iners Home Administration The
)Ybs pay $52 750 and $50 112 a year
respectively
Graziano a nattve of Brooklyn
N Y was asststant mspector
general for mvesttgations at the
Department of Corrunerce from !979
until he was norrunated for the
Agnculture post
Prior to that he served m a number of federal and state securtty and
mvesttgative Jobs
mcludmg a
penod from 1974 to 1979 as dtrector
of the Agrtculture Pepartment s of
!tee of mvesttgatton
Shuman who operated a cattle
and gram farm wtth two brothers m
Sulltvan Ill was llhnots state direr-

Business
Services
-::::::::::~::::::~::::::::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::~'

r

Vtnyl &amp; Atummum
S 1Dl NG

BISSELL
SIDING CO,
Beautiful custom
BUilt Gara ges
Call for free std ng
estimates
949 2801 or

949

• Backhoe
Excavalmg
• Seploc Syslems

•

- Porlralls
- Weddrngs
- Annlversaroes

ewater, Sewer&amp;
Gasl1nes
• Dump Truck

- and

• Trencher

ol

Licensed &amp; Bonded

n•versa r y 1nv•tations
and
accessories

~ 860

Pubftc Noh ce

bor1Novenbe 1st 1967 at
h e co nse n of Joh n L Dod
Co umbus
Oh o
Sad
derer s not requ red tom s
MON PLEAS
MEIGS Pf' oner seeks n chnnge adopt on by rea son of he
COUNTY
OH 10
a t the name ot sad c h ld tact hat the sad John L
PROBATE D I V I SION
from John Jay Dodderer to Dod dc r c
h as
f&lt;1 l ed
No 232 10
John Cly Pro I t
w th our 1ust I ab c cause ro
Sa d Pet 1 oner fu rt her commun cat e w lh the
IN TH E MATTER OF
sta tes nat he wa s 1 arr d m no o to prov de t r It c
THE ADOPTION OF
to ArdPth Kay Prof! tt lor
ma ni Pnance and su ppo t
JO HN JAY PROFF I TT
ot th e m nor as eou red by
rncrly Arde th Kay Dod
OHN L DODDERER
Ia"' or ud (_ a l decr('c tor 1
whose lns t known addres s dcrc on Sep tember 30th
1972 and sa d c ll ld has p e r od
of
o n e year
"'15 524 8 own Aven ue
oe cn v ng
th e home of pr tcteC nq th e t I nq ot rnc
Harvey Lou s ani! 70058
sa o Pe 1 on cr s nee Sc p
1oopt on pe
o 1 or
ne
t.dherw s~
r~ ::. d1:2n c c
t f' llbf'r 30t h 1972 and tha
plnc e me n t of hf' m nor n
nknown "'1 l'lk P not ce
sa d m nor s n th e per
th e ho nc at he pet t oner
th n on lhe 6th d a y of Oc
Tober
19!:1 0
Jo se ph manen r cu sr ooy at Ardeth John Joseph Pratt tt
KayProt! I
RouTe J
Raymond
Pra tt 1
You ar c requ eo to an
Rae n Oh o 45 771
swer w th n twe y t gt I
Pf I I o 10
ld n Pl I I on
Scl d Pet t onf'r urt her dn(S
nttrr ..
he
las
to r Adopt on pe to n ng to
i'l leqe
n h s Pe
on that pubt cat on wh ch w II be
John Ja( Oodder [' r n ch lrt
on t ile 5111 dw ot A ugusl
198 1
Fu rtncrmor e
th e
t ear nq on sad aaop on s
( l~•~~~fu d l'df.(f \:tor f r tllf
sched u ka to h..: 9th day of
Sr p c nbcr 198
n l 10 DO
}111/1&gt;11 lfl!t /r •/tflhOIII I rt h.lllf.:l'
o ( loc k AM bctorr the
Honor db ( Robe t E Bu k
Prob'!te Judqc
at lhf'
G lll 1 Co Are~ code
Mp q &lt;,( o O.rel(Octe
M q c; Cou y Cour r House
6 '
Pnn f' Of 0 1 o
..l40 Gl llp oh s
Y"~ l
M dd le port
J OSE PH RAY MOND
HI Ches h re
Pom eroy
PROFFITT
Jt:it! - v nton
Ytj~
( h('S fC'r
Pe l
14':1 R o G r.H dt
J4J Port ! md
'l6Gy nD sr
LC'I1fFllh
o..l J An b 'O tst
'~ J'I
R 1c ne
l/ Ru tl ln d

_ __!P Ublic N0t1ce

LEGAL NO TICE
IN THE COURT OF COM

D r ec tor rev ses or w th
draws the proposed ac t on
As co ncer ns ac t ons orner
th an f nal ac t. ons w th n 30
days of th e da te nd l a ted
any person m ay subm t
co 1 ments an d or reques t
n meet nq It s qn f can t
pub l c n ..: res ex sts
c1
mC'et ng may be h e l ~ As
conce r s any ac t on any
person may ( 1) Request
no t ce co ncern ng f urther
&lt;'~&lt; ton s and or
2) Obta n
'l dd t anal
nformaf on
Unless
o thcrw se
SpPC I a I y
p Ov ded
he r e n or n the t-~art cu l ar
not c cs
all
com
1 un c :t t ons sha ll be ad
oressed to Hear ng Clerk
OE P A
P 0
Box 1049
Co l um b us
Oh o 43 16
phom: (614~ 466 60]7 Con
suit RC Chapter 3745 and
OAC Chapt er 37 45 47 and
J/ 46 5
for
app l ca bl e
rq un:

M l';on Co

Arc

1

W V~

7) 1

Cod e J0-1
PI C l S 1nf

6/'J

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ssunncc o
not c e of
rf'q s tr at on
~o u'fhern Oh o Coa Com
plny
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Nf'Ml'l qsv lc OH E t
tccr v e da tc 07 J 1 8 !
N o( s
A pp cal on

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Public N0t1ce

)653000050 FOO

Ap pr ovnl ot pletns

n d

'&gt; PC&lt; I U ti ons
Mayor n
Counc 1
Pum c r oy OH Ettect ve

d11c07 JO 8 1
Th s f n a ac t on no
preceded b y pr opOS(d ac
han nna '&gt; appe.=tlab c to
I::BR
Fluo rcJ 'l l on
I lC

4.. ~

H6 - /\ pple Grove
/7] -

HHl 8t,lS

MilWn
New H [IVC'Il

PubliC NOTICE'
~~~ Not•ce

CO UNTY MEIGS
PUB LI C NOTICE

fO PLACE AN AD CA LL

tn G 111 1 County

tn Me tgs Coun t y
1

Public Not•ce
PUBLIC AUC TION
F day Augus t 7 at 10 00
AM M e gs Loca l Schoo s
w 11 ott er l or sal e the old
ch u c h property on Pea rt
~ r eel n M dd epor t Oh o
TPrm s of sa le w 11 be 10
perce nt down
ba la nn"
pan de l vuy of It e deed
A lso nt 10 30 A M on
Augus t 7 It e Mt gs Local
Schools w II otter to r sate
sevNn l od bus s h ~ lls t a t
eas t 10
two 1969 b uses
hat run sevNa l o d tru ck
s c1 5
and one m otor
home These feme, w II be
sold at the Bus Garage n
Ru t land Oh o
Tc r ns ot sa le w I be
c 1sh or c heck w th pas t vc
D
Auc t oneer
J m Ca
ill An

Letar'

'-IJf - t'&gt;u tt ~ lo

446 2342

PUB LI C NOfiC E
Howard E Frank Cler k
o thP M e 9s Coun t y Budge t
Cumm ss on
has
an
nounced fhN e w 11 be- a
Budget Mee t ng F r day
Auous t 7 198 1 i'!l 10 oo
n m n th e Aud tor sOft ce
a t th e Me gs Cou 11v Court
house
IO Org :1n Zf'
th e
Budget Com n ss on tor
~8 1982
h s mf'f't nq s r com
p i 'llCc w th ~ec t on 5705 '17
o th e Oh o Rev sed Co&lt;fc
I dd le w
be set later to
ell!
Sub d v son
r v ew
8 gets
HOWilrd E Fran!&lt;.
Me Q~ County
Bu dq et Comm ss on
Clerk
H S 6 l tc

M

\o

Cou nt y

992 2156

675 1333

L&lt;'IS I we-ek the foll ow ng
documen t s w e re rece ved
or prepar ed by l he Oh o
Env ro nmen ta l P o ect on
Aut c y
OE PA J The et
teet ve da te of eac t f nat
n 1 on and th e
ssuoncf'
l1t c o cn(h pr oposed ac
r on s ~ta t r d F na t ac t ons
1 e lppel fnbfe n wr 1 g
w h
30 &lt;ln ,.'S ot the f' l
l&lt;'c t ve d'll{' to the Er
v n nl n
Boa d of
Rrv rv. Room 101 ?50 E
rown St Columbus Oh o
..t]/1.'&gt; Not cc of such 'l ppeal
shn
be t td w th the
0 r ec o r w th n J days
lt nf'1
A p opo5ed &lt;~cion
w
bNo mc f,nal unlf'S&lt;&gt;
I A wr !len ad ud CCl l on
n
q reques t s sub
1 !led w H n 30 days ot lh ('
s ~ u nee en P
or
th r

n

PROHAT E
COURT
OF MF I GS
COU Nf Y OHIO
f~TA TE
OF
DAl E
RACHNER DEC EA~EO

( l Se No ]]J89

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS

OF F I DUCIARY
On July lO
'7'81
n the
\"pq,;;
( OU1V
POb lf&lt;
Court Cn&lt;&gt;c No 73 489 G 'lr
ne
Bn chncr
Box
V)
8 Khner Rd
~ flilnd
0 1 o 45775 WClS appo nled
Ex cc utr x of he f'Stnt c ol
Dnlc Bil e ! ner decc~ s cd
I H f' ot Box 19
B ach nrr
R
Ru l and
Oh o
Rut11nd I ownsh p
Robert E Bu ck
Prob r Judqc
Clerk
8 S 17 19 31 c

e A NNOUNCEMENTS
1 nMI'mD o1m
l Anno&lt;~rl&lt;l'ml'nl\
• G vuwav
~
Holppy Ad
• Lo\ 1 a nd l'ound

~

HOU\(' 1 0

H

Mob t' Homr
o lilf!nl
Apa mr n h lo lill'n
Fu n hed Room1

44

H
~

R r nt

wo~n f!d to Ren
E qu l)mt'nl o Rrnl

eMERCHANDIS E

•EMPLOYM E NT

SERVICES
Ht p 'lhnll!'(!

l

S t uo1

tdWo~n

t&gt;d

Bu' n u1 Trol 1"1 119
n11 U( Qn
1•- R.ad o TV
&amp; Cflliltpol
I Wo~ntrd fo Do

~

HoV\f!t1Qid Good1
S2 C B TV lilo1C1o Equ pm pnt
ll - An qur
S~ - M H Mt" Choil nd ~P
S5- Bu d ng !&gt;upp es
s•- Peh or S• f

4

I)

17

16
19
11

l1

22
13
24

n

Opportun ly
Monry to Loo1n
P ro t s o no~
Serv cu

eREAL ESTATE

25

J 1 Homp' l or s• r
l1 Motl t Homes
Q 5• e
l l Fo1 rm 1 1o ~~If

16
27

]4 Bu i Mf U 811 ld M9S
JS-Lo ts &amp; Acre•9e
J• llu E11o111 Wanlt'il
JJ - A•• ton

28
:19

JO

31 -

S&lt;ll(]D I ~

e FINANCIAl

1n

-- --

32
33

Want Ad Advertutng
Deadlines
MOrHflr l Jo on s.uu doly
Tuesdly ttlru Fr d•r 1 Jt p M
the d1y btlore publ ut on

Sund•r 1 JO P M Fr d•r

o FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCk
' U
n U
u U

Fo1rm Equ pm rnl
to Bu~
Tructos o 5• e
l Vt"S ock
M•r &amp; G ro1 n
Sttd &amp; F t&gt;rl nr
Wo~nlt&gt;d

e TRANSPORTATION

- Auto' lor s~te
n - vo~ns &amp; 4 w o
14 Motorcrr .,,
I)- Auto P1rh

1

I Accenor e~
n - auto 'i!ep•,

eSERVICES
I UU14-

Hom e lmoroYem t nts
Piume Mf &amp; E•C,I YII M!l
E-•c:•Yihn!l
l:lectr.c•t
I Relr 91ro11 on
U -Gtnl'tll H•u nt
..- M H Rl'l)l r
11- Uphlll,ttry

34 - - -35 -

Rates and Other lnformatton
UflltO !5 wOrd I
• Up ta 11 worc11
Up fG U wonh

Mae I ThiS Coupon w1th Rem 1ttance
The Da 1'y Sent' nel

ont d•v nu rttDfl
ll'lree G• v "'"' on
• •• c~ .. ,, n1er11on

....
....

729

vs

HAROLD N HUDN E LL et

11

De f endants

CA SE NO 1774tl
NOTI CE
PI 1 n t It F rs l Ba nk at
Ma e a has brough t tht s
act on n !he above court
nan ng yo u as one at the
rs
de fendant s by I 1 ng
Com pf a nt n Fore c lose on
Febru Jry ~ 19S 1 and a F .r
st Amended Comp la nt n
Forec losure on J uly 9 1981
You r ast known address s
Route ~ Pomeroy Qh o

Deed Book No 222 Page
No 189, Deed Records ol

M etgs t..ounty Ohto and a
potnt 12 feet at rtQht angles
from the centerl1ne of State

""

cA ...er••••word•perl ne •
.,:*:~Home ••ttl lrHI Y1rt1 ••In 1re lcc.,teCI ontv "'""' u 111 wun
r
cent cll•rt• tor ICIJ carry nt lo• ,...,,...,. 111 Clr• ol Tho
• enttnel
Ttle Pul!ll stter reservtslflt rr9flt to ectlf or ,.11ct .ttty ltlldHmlll
Oblettlon•t The Publtstter w n not IN rttPOntible t•r ,...,. tfl
ncorrect nsertton
1ft ctnl

l----0.-----------------.J ,_________________
Bow

Pomeroy OhtO 4 5769

COURTHOUSE

POMEROY OHIO
FIRST
BANK
OF
MARIETTA
Pia tnt If

!Udgment 1ga nst you and
c:er ta n o th er de fendan ts
to fo r ec lose a mor tg agl
aq a nst
he
f ollow n q
oescr bed rea l cs late
S tuill ed n the Town sh p
of Sc P•O Coun t y of M e qs
a nd StaTe of Oh o a w •t
P.uce l No 1
S tuate
n Sec on 7
Sc p o Townsh p
Me gs.
Townsh p
Oh o
be ng
more
part cu larl y
descr bf' d
&lt;JS
f o ll ows
Beg nn 1q
at
th e
n
tersc c 1 on ot thf' enst ne of
'~ I 45 dcrE l ot at me m
Tcrse c t on ot thP east nea t
a 1 .:15 acre tot recoroco n
Volume 22'1.
Pa9e 189
Mf' qs County Deed Rccor
ds a nd a pon t 17 feet a t
r oht anq es from the cen
ter ne of State Route No
l4J lhf'nce Sou th 83 dcg
40 east 100 leer to a potn1
thenc e South 81 deg 50
ecs f 175 feet to a pot nl
hence Sou th 78 deg 00
cast 208 2 fell o a pomt n
lh€ cent er of th e South con
cr el e br dqe rn I ng ( 12 feN
oft th e ce nter 1 ne of State
Ro ute No 143 at nght
ang les)
thence south 67
deg 13 '1 0 cast I. 54 05 feet
the tr ue po nt of be\1\nn ng
for th e lo ltow ng tract
8£!~ nn ng South 38 deg 05
40 Wes t 100 fee t thence
South 67 d eg 13 20 eas t 25
fee t the nce south 57 deg
20 20 easl175 feet thence
north 38 deg 05 40 east
100 f ee t thence north 57
deg 20 20 west 175 feet
thence north 67 deg 13 20
east 25 fee t to the po nt of
beg1nn1ng contan')1ng o 46
acre more or less Deed
Reference
Volume 253
Page 449 Metgs County
Deed Record s
Parcel No 2
S tuated 1n Sec tton No 7
SCtPIO Townshtp
Metgs
County Ohto and be1no
mor e
part•cularly
de sc nbed as
follows
Begtnntng at the
m
tersect on of the east 1 ne ot
a 1 45 acre lot recorded •n

RENTALS

H

w anreo
For Sal e
J Announcement
l For Rent ~

MEIGS COUNTY

The Ob tec t of th e com

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

J

OHIO

p" nt 5 to obt a m a money

or Wrote Daoty Sentonel Classohed Dept
111 Court Sl Pomeroy 0 45769

J

MEIGS COUNTY

~5769

PHONE 992-2156

Pr nt one word n ea cn
spa ce below E: ac h n
r al or Qroup of t gures
co unt s as a word Coun t

A ND
WHEREABOUTS
ARE UNKNOWN

NOTI CE OF
AP POINTM ENl

WANT AD INFORMATION

Wr te your own ad and order by ma w th h ~
coupon Cance l yo ur ad by phone when you get
results Money not relu ndab le

~ bile N.co"l"oc,_,e'----TO DEF ENDANT GWEN
OOLYN F
HUDNELL
RESIDENCE
WHOSE

Roule No 143 ,,Jhence soulh
83 deg 40 easr 200 feello a
poont !hence soulh 81 deg

l

Public Not1ce

Pubhc Nohce

off the cen terl•ne of s R
143 at r g ht a ngles) ana the
true POtnt of beg1nn ng lor
the follow ng descnbed
tra c t Th ence south 67 deg
13 20
eas t 254 05 feet
thence south 38 deg os 40
wesl 100 feet !he nce south
67 deg 13 20 east 25 fee t
thence south 57 deg 20 '10
east 175 fee t thence soulh
Jtl deg
05
.:10
west
(pass ng an r on p n at S9 46
feet l for a tot a l d sl ance of
1.25 68 fe et to a n r on p n
thence north 73 deg 56 40
west 246 01 teet to an .ron
P n th e nce nor th 21 deg
16 10 eas t 222 88 feet to an
ron P n thence north 44
deg .:10 west 90 0 fee t to an
ron P•n thence north 44
deg dO west 90 0 fee t to a n
ro n p.n thence north 07
deg 15 eas t 120 0 fee t to
the po nt of be g .nn ng co n
ta.n ng 2 192 ac r es Deed
r efere nce
Vo l u m e 252
Pa ae 811
Me g
Of'Prt
Recor ds

delivered to Pia nt ff thai
the named defe ndants be
r equ.red to se t up the r n
terest n fhe real estate or
be foreve r barred th a t the
ens be m a r shall ed
that
th e rea l property be so ld
accord ng to law fha l t he
I tt e to th e r ea l esta te be
qv1eted n the pur chaser
a nd for rea sonable a
to rney s tees and costs
You are requ•red to an
swer th e F1rst A m en ded
Co mpla nt w thm twenty
e•ght days after Th e las t
pub I ca t on of fht s n ot ce
wh1ch w•ll be pub! shed on
ce eac h week for s x sue
cess ve weeks and th e last
oubltcat on will be m.1de on
Septem ber 2 198 t
tn case ot yo ur ta lu re to
a n swer
or
otherwiSe
respond as perm1tt ed by
th e Oh o Rules of c v 1
Procedure w t h10 th e t• me
sta ted
!Udg m enl
by
default w I be rende r ed
Real Estate- General

aga nsl you for the relief
dema nded
n the com
pla1nt
L arry E Spencer
Clerk of Court
of Common Pleas
Me gs County Oh10
M e gs County
Courthouse
Oh o 45769
Pomer o y

an d to term na te any r ghts
you and cer ta1 1 other
defendants na y have or
eta m n a 1970 R cl ard son
Mob le Hom e ser al num
ber 4071 3 wht c h s th e sub
tee t of th• s act on and !hat
Detendant w II a m M M t
chell be fou nd to ow n th e
enl re nterest •n Parr e l
No
I
of
the
above
descr bed r eal es tat e
The prayer o f the F r st
A mended Compla nt a lso
pray s for the foreclosure of
P ta•nt ff s m ortg aqe on the
abov e desc nbed property
Parce l No 2 h av n q bee n
tran sferred to you and
Defend a nt Haro ld N Hud
nell by d ee d dated MMch
31 1975 for a term nat on
ot any nghts you or ce r a n
other n amed defendants
m ay have or eta m n a 1970
Rtehardson M ob•le Hone
ser al number 40713 tor a
court or der th at possess on
01 sa d mob te home be
Real Estt~te- General

·Housing
Headquarters

T

FAFORDm

"R 'IJ.~

VIRG IL A
'1 6 F ..,ccun ct '-.lr e t

WANTING TO BUY
SCRAP

NEW liSTING -

N

large o lder home 4
bedrooms w tth c losets
baTh dm ng ca r pet a
nat gas F A furna ce tu 1
basem e nt 2 c ar gar qc
w th 2 bf.: d roo m &lt;tp
over Level to $8 5 000
o w I tr ade
liSTING
Remode led 9 r m older
home w lh
to t s at
cM pt:. t ng panel ng J 4
bedr m s
2 cera m c
bnths na t 9tlS FA tur
nc'ICe J car garage A lso
l bedrm apt
sw 1mm
ng pool and 6 ilcres ..
NEW

Free F &lt;&gt; t1mr1fcs
&lt; 111 Co ll ec t
Ph ti4J 3322
/ I J'lmo pd

S zes
From 30xJO

Utility Buddmgs
Stzes from 4:.14 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt J Bo x S4
Racme Oh
Ph 614 843 2591
6 15 l c

'

TO TOWN

cc start u home 5
room h ouse '1 bedroo m
b~ se m c nt
b 1Q
y r~rd
$10 000 00
N

RfALrOR
6191

BRICK RANCH

..L

ASSOCIATES
J c m r ru ss~ ll 949 2660
Do ttte Turner 992 5691
R~r rurner 991 S6Y2

No Wa1st Seam

BRAND NEW -

Fur

n shed 3 bedroom home
Form1ca bath
stove
refngerator c arpeting
and Plentv of closets
Lovely ktt on 1 acre
S35 000

$1~

53 acres In Olive Twp
near Forked Run 7 rm
house screened porch l
water
wells
sma 11
stream and lots Gf young

All

Brown
Green

yd

Blu e

fS!i '' yd

~~~~ !~JOa:o"wn~r•ss

1 minerals

&lt;Ewrra

Good 1

R eq S16 95 s'q
Installed vd

:

•

KITTENS304 6751138

4

th

For all of your wor
tng needs

6

Lost and Found

man Shepherd Please help
us find our tamoty pel ne s
been gone since July 23
He s brown w1th some
black and has tt small scar
Call992 2382 af

Found set of keys tn town
Call 992 6009 or check w1th

Cleland Realty
hound

tratn

PUANCE SERVICE
Call Ken Young

PARtS AND 5EifVICE
ALl MAKE S

• 0 \ pD$.15
eO Slhiit.tl,..r'

• """"(!'

• Hot Wo'lt~r

I""" ~

~~=~~~~~~~~

ONE MORE WEEK

custom t&lt; ttcttens A p
pltances
Custom
aathroom' Rcmodehn
CJ Plumbmv, Electnc
Heahng

C. R: Mash

Cor.muctiarr

12 (bust 34) takes I 718 yards
60. nch labr~
$2 00 ftr •• ,.etern AU 504
"" ... Jllllni Iii 11111111

Black

whole

female

waterloo

Road

Phone 304 458 1083 or 458
1687

'""d

our NEW FALL WINIER PAmRN

~~~~~~~--------~-!·~2~·2~2~11~
7

t •

' 111111)
Thos soft ltyle (~~ ~1ost
hiS pllCIIIII plltert r~C¥••1

our lrom slrlntliW

~,..

10 ,

CATALOG Coullllll fur Fr.et $2
$150

••••••nu

.....

Sr1dle tO 12 14 16 18 Soze

NCh ftr

. Pintllll f'lltern 4663 Moues

•• •

:·~~.... :;.w

!Nuldets Wilt olllet"" • flee
- ol oft 1 11!111 llour~

~

Cllllpr - lldd

Church rummage sale F r

st Church of God 2-101 Jef
ferson Ave Large men and
womens clothes clothes all
stzes what nots etc Wed

Complete Auct1on Serv1ce
stock reduct1on close outs
estates farm equrpment It
vestock real estate Ltcen
sed and bonded tn Oh10
and West WV Bud McGhee
Auct.on and Real Estate
Co Call for terms .u6 0552

Buock Ponloac GAII1pol s
Ohlo Call416 2282

Yard Sale Ratn or Shine
Woodward s must sell
house and 3 plus acres
Tools furniture and mise

Sal Aug 8 9 00 lo 6 00
Sun 10 00 10 ?&gt; 2 moles oul
Neighborhood Rd roghl of
Kllcker
3 Famoly Yard Sale Frt &amp;
Sal 1837 Chalham Ave
Gallipolis

soc

P111J11 lllld llllttllmc.

Caslont • Trailot HI!
~hes
•
Mohl
FlbriCIIIOIII1 •
M-ay Frlclly
4P!l' tollpm
AU D&lt;ly Sato.nNy

PH. :MNZIS .
LICitecll
:::~~~:~-~~~
U~eln~

245 5285

BEDS I RON

BRA SS old

turn1ture
gold
Stiver
doltars wood tce boxes
stone 1ars anttques etc
Complete
household s
Wnte M D M1ller Rt 4

Pomeroy on Or 992 7760
Gold
sliver
sterl1ng
1ewelry nngs old coms &amp;
currency Ed Burke" Bar

Thursday &amp;

Glassware

clothtno &amp; mtsc ttems

Mr Donut and Soup x
Scoop Day and even ng
sh1ft Cook and counter
help
baker
Part f1me
n1ght shtft counter help
Apply 1n person at e1ther
shop between 9 a m and 4

CAII675 51168

Hogsett

8253rd Ave Gall pol s Oh
babys ller

1n my hom e 4 11

days a week call 304 675
2601

Help Wanlecl

Cook wanted for new area
restaurant
Except onal
opportun ty for qualified
person
Wr te Box 316
Gall1pohs

and earn good money plus
some great g fts as a Sen
t1nel route earner Phone
us right away and get on
the ehOtbtllty list at 992

Need expenenced babysit
ter weekdays
8 00 3 .45
begtnn•ng August 24 for 3
years old son
Addtson
Galltpol s area
Good
references requ1red Call

4A63412
CENTER teacher tor Pre
school handtcap tn Pt
Pleasant D A 1n etemen
tary w th spec1al or early
chttdhOOd
Send resume
transcnpts 3 letters to
Reg on Ill Ch1ld DeveJop
ment Serv ces
805 Hal
Greer Blvd Huntmgton

WV 25703

Phone 304 523

3-417 DeadlmeAugust lOth

11

Sttuahons Want@d

Room board for elderly
Reasonable 992 6022

Opportumty s yours 1ust
for the ask1ng Ask your
Beeline styl stand she wtll
be happy 10 help you toln
the Beeltne world of
faShion and success Phone
m 39.41 between the hours
of9 6

tlon &amp; Sales every Thur
sday 1 p m Anttque auc
t1on first Sundav each mon
th 1 p m Constgnments ac

LPN 11 7 shofl Compelolove
wages &amp; excellent beneftts
Call Arcadia Nurstng Cen
ter Coolvtlle 607 3196

cepled each Wednesday 6
10 p m Thursday 12 noon lo
6 p m Ken Cole Auc

INFORMATION

ttoneer

Wanted full t1me rehable
s1tter for loddler and school
age chtld
Must have
references and l•ve 1n c 1ty
school
d1stnct
If 1n
terested wnte Box 301
Gall poliS Daily Tnbune

RELIABLE

2156 or 992 2157

Auctton

pm

needed

GET VALUABLE lraon ng
GARAGE sale 162 M dway as a young bus1ness person

Neals

Babys1t1er 1n L eon area

&lt;56.11

Monroe Ave

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auct1on

Augusl 17 1981 4 PM An
Afftrmat ve Act1on Equal

V1and Street now buytng
metals (c opper
brass
alummum lead sta nless
steel
battertes
and
radtators g1nseng yellow
root catn1p and sassafras)
10 am to 6 pm da ly Also
Flea Market on Saturdays

YARD sale 61h 7th 81h II
raon tOih lllh 121h 2311 NY 11418

a

resume to Galha County
Counc ton Aging P 0 Box
441
220 Jackson P ke
Gallipolis Oh 45631 or call
446 7000 for an apphcatton
Appllcattons
must be
recetved
by
Monday

Call after 7 304456 1598

mailing work
No ex
penence required
AP
PLY
C 1rcle Sales P 0
Box 224 0 RIChmond Htll

Or New Haven Thursday
&amp; Fnday M chelle wren

Send

HARPER
HALSTEAD
SALVAGE CD llth and

MOVING sale Augusl 6 7
8 9 110 &gt; 114 H ghland Ave S165 00 10 SSOO week IV doo ng
Pt Pleasant In case of
rain held 1ns de house

be $5 25 per hour

Opportun ty Employer

11

10 5

Part ttme
Pos 1t on
Ava•lable Craft Instructor
Must have expertence tn
maktng crafts and tn
structlng participants how
to
Respons1ble for pre
c lass
preparat1on
teachrng
work ng
wtth
volunteers and ass1Sftng
w th craft dtsplavs Craft
nstructor pos1tton w II be 4
hours per week 2 hours tn
struct•on 2 hours related
act vtt1es Hourly wage wtl l

ber Shop M ddleporl 992
3476

ttems

DON T moss lhls Thursday
noghls AUCTION al Ml
Allo Aucllon and Sales

GIGANTIC BarnYard Sale

Truckload
new
mer
chand1se tncludlno dishes
glassware household fur

Aug 3Vinton
4 5 6off7325
8 2onmiles
!rom
Roy
Holcomb Rd

nl!hohgs fools &amp; pollerv
pius other second hand

Yard Sate 45 Loncotn,
Gallipolis
Mon Thurs
Guns, boa! molor sewing
mach

usea

furniture

Alaskan &amp; overseas
ployment
excellent

on

em

1n

Con

•-per

YARD work

call 30.4 675

4097

neat estate
31

Homes for Sale

NEW CABIN or small
completely fur
nome
mshed S3900 Call 4A6 0390
House w th acreage for
sale 3 or 4 bdrs fully car
peted 2 barns 379 2123

New 3 bdr house w th
garage and ful l basem en t
$45 000 Call 446 0390

BY OWNER 4 bdr

splol

level ltv ng room &amp; dtntng
room comb1nat on eat tn
kttchen lg family rm 2
112 baths located 10 Tara
Estates Club house and
pool pnv leges
S7S 000
firm Kyger Creek School
Dis tnct Shown by appt
only ca ll446 9403
By owner m town One mile
from school school bu s 3
bdr bath eat 1n k1tchen
LR on mam floor
full
fmtshed basement
w1th
family room 4 bdr and
bath Carefree steel s•d ng
nat gas 2 c ar detached
garage Near golf course
Call
446 1223 for
ap
potntment
4 bdr Trt lev el l1v ng room
w1th wood burner d n ng
room k tchen 1 1/2 bath s
1ar9e utility room 2 car
garage well msu/ated mce
landscaped lot n exce llent
ne1ghborhood c•tv school
Will ftnance tor Qualified
buyer Phone 446 4167
House and 73 Schultz
Mobile home on 1 acre 10
mm from town on Jackson
P1ke or trade for property
10 c1ty of equal value Ca ll
446 4063

29 acres 7 rm house all
mtneral nfes
Ernest

WOOdruff Rd Aloce Oh
Call614 199 0890 after 5
L fe Estate Cons stt ng of
farmhouse w1th acreage
Further nformat on call
992 6747 afler4 00 p m
Large 2 story stone nome
well tnsullated wtth 3 large
bedrooms one full bath
21 1 baths formal d•nmg
room newly remodeled k t
chen bUilT 10 mclud1ng d stl
washer
basement
wtth
work shop 2 car gar age
wtfh work shop large gar
den 2 porches 5.48 Grant

St

Moddleporl

$5'1 500

WanttnQ Qurck sale to settle

estale Call 614 384 6309 for
appomtment after 1 p m

1l

Insurance

---

SANOY AND BEAVER In
sur an ce Co has offered
serv1ces tor f1re nsurance
coverage tn Gall a County
tor almost a
century
Farm home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet m
d vtdual needs
Contact
Lew1s
Hughes
agent
Phone .4.46 3318

a.

m

Garege
• behind

~lng

aftd -.Frl ,

AUO H Baby
and IMn clblllts

TRAINED

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been
med cal

secret8ry local PhYStcan s

offoce P 0 Box 276
Pteasenl wv 25550

PI

BABYSITTER references

Cole Auctioneer

9

carport Sate Frl a. Sal
e
Klneon
Auousr 1
Dr • Gallipolis

tent1on 917

accepled A 6 prefer m my home Phone
p m Sate lim• 7 p m Ken 304 675 2275

stero and vacumm

992-1011

WElD.AtUIIIIIJUIII
SHOP~
•

STORAGE

YARD sale Thursday
Augusl 6 &amp; Fr day August
7 9 00 4 00 Gold house
besode Mason Bowttng
Ctolhes and lots of orner

New Haven

2082

3 bedrooms full basement
&amp; garage
Su table for
bus1ness on 31• acre w1th
pool fenced yard &amp; gar
den In Mtddt eport $45 000

992 7370
2

Iaro e
bed ro om s
remod el ed new chtmney
Located 1n HarnsonvUie

S8 000 992 6145 after 5 p m

come call 312 741 9780 ex

Free Estimates

•StNI •

METAL

cab net w1th shelves a nd a
(toy) doll cr b or cradle

762 2581

71h Slreel

Your Plano rustm g 1n sum
mer Hum dtty? Free •n
spection w th tuntno Lane
Dantels 742 2951 or 992

CASH PAt D for clean late
model used cars ~ mtth

Old furntture stone 1ars
copper kettles and other
types of ant•ques Phone
6 Miles out Jerrys Run 4A6 3925
Road at Apple Grove Wed
nesday
Thursday
and GINSENG call collect 1f
you have ready to sell l 303
Frlday9,

YARD sale

or .u6 0816 426 second
Ave GallopoliS OH 45631

FEATHER BEDS WAN
TEO ANY CONDITION
MISC BOX 65 AURORA
IND 47001 GIVE OIREC
TION WILL CALL SOON

93

T~ursday

AUCTION al Mt Allo Auc

1

••u

;ffitr"'o.'r 11

,

Lonnoe Neal367 7101

243 ._.17 ~ . Yft.· NY
l'riit
MIDIISS.
ZIP, SIZE...
...._
Busy woillan1 lllbrkona WGmln'
Dress fur Ita
lea hme
wor•-c"- 1 walclllllll Iron!

carpet S4 99 Vd

Mov ng out sele August 6
and 7
Thursday
and
Fr1day 3212 ROUSh Ave
Fresh green geans

no

walker

The DatiY Senttnel

'

Turn left ftrst ro.a.d after
passmg
Roll ns
Gulf
Slaloon on Go It R dge Waf
ch tor stgns Not respon
stble for accidents Cancel
If ram

Friday

Large male Ger

coon

PI Pleasanl on Norlh Rl 2

PM
tconstgnments
taken) (Will buy furntture)

ConL~unar •\
RentAl Prot~l'rl es
Apr HOu\t&gt;Own""

~

6 MALE part German
Shepherd 304 882 20-10

LOST

LANDMARK
FREEZER SALE
CONTINUES

.........

"owS}31!sq

RUTlAND FU~NR'URE '

Main St.

H. L WRITESEL

10 m les from

evervthtng

WVA Rl 2 Every Sal 7 00

Mtsc Merchandtse

......... 51114 lo: 1
PlllnO.

Drive A Little- Save A Lot

•

Ht .&gt; .ulc/lld r Ct· r:·.

1 Roll E~ch

McGee Carpet

vr

Free to good home 4 pup
poes 3 male 1 female Woll
be sma 11 dogs 992 3702

Call742 3195

POMEROY

'

2 kittens and 2 cats t l l

57 tfc

.w.u ht&gt;

JROLL5

GOOD SELECTION OF R EMI\IANTSv~
Buy Now &amp; Save U·$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet tn stock to prck from
Regular backed, carptt mstalrecs frl!e
wtth p;~d. GOOd selection Roll E,nds Rem

IN THE ' COUNTRV -

limber
S2i 500

Cash n carry

Ph

5 famoly yard sale 5 6 7
ctolhes shoes rovs what
nols a Jollie bol of

nesday and

old and !he other 5 mo 1
Call- 4027

eOrrtr~

ALL CARPE'T IS MARKED DOWN
WIPoddmg
Ins lolled
Slarling

416 0595

l e t George M1tler check
your pres ent ctectncrtl
sys tem
Rf&gt; std ent1nl
&amp;Comm£&gt;rc•al

949 2710 or 949 2806
8 2 1 mo

Rutland FurnHure Carpet stq,
SUMMER CARPET SALE
RUBBERBACK

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.
Pomeroy OH
992 2114

1

male
mother and 3 ktttens Call

For lnformat.on Call

MISe MerchandiSe

CARPET

Movmg Cats

- - - --

Now Takmg
Enrollment For
September Classes tn
R o1c1ne and Middleport
Ages 3 and Up
Adult Classes Offered

S4

Lovable 8 wk Old yellow
female kollen Call416 0696

FOUND Rong Moddleporl
Park area Call992 3158

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

I, rmled Pallern

Bag of Yard Sale stuff Call
388 8«9

hos nose
r;I~===~===~~~ on
ter5p
m

7 511 c

Po meroy Oh

I

W th

FrOm the
Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Rad1ator

2

Ph 949 2160

992 6215 or 992 7J1i

24551119

To giveaway kollens Call
379 2211

949 2862
949 2160

TOM HOSKINS

Entry level pos1tron wtth m
dustnal dtstnbutor We wtll fur·
ntsh both sales and technical tram
mg. College degree preferred. Ex·
cellent opportunrty for career
mtnded person
Send Resume to
P 0 Box 230
Worthmgton, OH , 43085

full basement and-tam.
ly room 2 baths b~rch
k1tchen
dishwasher
dtsposal and range 'l
ca r garagf!' af'¥t lg lot
V ew Of Rt 7 Askt ng
$75 000

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

Free Est• mates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard

and Home Mamtenrtnce
• Roof1ng of all type s
e S1d1ng
• R&lt;'modet.ng
• Frceest1m&lt;t1es
• 10 yrs e• pencnce

LOCAL TERRITORY

S4

column There will be no
charge to the advert ser

A 11 types of root work
new or repa1r gutters
and downspouts gutter
clean1ng and patnt1ng
All work guaranteed

OHIO VALLEY
ROORNG

NEW li STING -

Large br1 ck 4 bedrms
d n1ng gas f r eplac es
l 1 1 baths central a.r
a nd heat sf drs and
w1ndows
2 porches
garage wtth room over
N•ce corne r lot $59 900

ANY PERSON who has
anylhlng 10 give away and
does nor offer or allempffo
offer any olher !hong for
sale may place an ad In !his

ROOFING

7141mopd

V C YOUNG II

tt cnry E: Clcldnd Jr

Cleanmg by the week m on
th or contr actua I

Moddleport Fro and Sal 7 WANTED to buy Junk
9 4 Sal everylhong c8rs scrap metal and bat
8
leroes Call 388 9303
$10 00

4 FAMILY yard sate 41
Burdelle
PI
Pleasanl
Tuesday
Wednesday &amp;
Thursday

35 Y rs Ex pertence

992 6323

Addons a nd
remodeling
Root ng a nd gutter
work
Concrete work
Plumb1ng and
elt:!ctncal work
(Free Esflmates)

Free Eslomfles.._ bonded
onsured phone 145m~

7.77 Ma1n St

Middleport
cloth1ng and

and

CleanonQ

Rent A Matd Service Inc

pm

NATHAN BIGGS

ROBERT MASH

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

GALLIA

evenongs from 1 30 to 10 30

~~==;;;;;;;;==~MALE KITTENS

..,ollttl,
Gutter
Roofmg Remodelo
nq
RoQm
Ad
dotoons
Drywall
.1nd Repaor
Cilll

SMALL

Gallopolls

Study

.4 17 tfc

VINYL
SIDING

Farm Burldmgs

Love your netghbor tune
your P ano
8111 Wara
wards Keyboard 4A6 .012

LOIS of School CIOiheS all
stzes Prlceclto sell

Porch sale

on

P1ano tun no and repair

ce Portland Rd in Rac1ne

Yard sate 9 5 Aug 5
as a fashion styhst
Earn S8 00 to SlO 00 per Matdens residence Broad
hour profll
Idee! lor way 51 Racine
homemaker wllh familY
Call992 39~1 from 9 6
Garage sale Rain or shtne
Aug 4 7 Ross Scorberrv
AMWAY dlslrlbulor For residence Mole Hill Rd
lhe wonderlul producls of back of Racine Hog Ieeder
roots furnllure other
Amway calt:l().j 713 5040
Items loam 6pm Walch
for signs 949 2212

and

photography

Phone 416 2909 or 416 7226
affer&lt; p m

Wed
Thurs
Fri liH
Depot 51
Rutland 1st
trailer on left Household
goods clothing sewing
supplies

household goods

Trash Ptckup In
The \11llage of
Mtddleport, Oh
Ph 992·5016
or 992·7505

r

COMMERCIAL

Recycling 1-10 Columbus 3 femilv yerd sate lhrough
Rd Alhens Oh 45701 Call Sal Charles Baker reslden

sclenc:e

F lrst

Profes11onel
Services

dustnal

Rosenberg

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

10 7 ti c

21

MIDOLEPORT

tocellon end

Carport sale 2 family
Thur Aug 6, B30-? Ed 11'--..-- ~-r--?1
Nelsons Main Sl Rulland
Oh

Yard sale Aug 6 7 8 175 N A

992 5682

ALL STEEL

Yelmo1 Ntcmsky A ss oc
Phone 742 1092
Ch eryl L e mley Assoc
Phone 742 3171

'J yr
Old rnnch 3 bedrooms '1.
ba th s knotty p nc k t
( hen w tth r efr g sto ve
nnd ba k e untts Lot s ot
n ce
carpet n g a nd
close ts lam ly rm w th
woodburn ng f rep ace
por ch pat•o an d over an
iiCrP $59 900
BUILDING lOT S - J l
on watf'r
I ne and
black lop road Slop ng
wei
dra ned
and
reasonable

for

23

3rd
Ave
Ch•ldrens

Rad1ator Spec1ahst

LISfiNG

yy~

paper

No 8600 Dtesel FtJrd
frr1ctor w/ Cab
JI - Modei17S D1esel M F
I Model 479 Hav Bird
N H
7 3 lfc

- Auto and Truck
Repaor
- Transmossoon
Repaor
Hrs Man Fro
9am530pm

EUGENE LONG

SALES &amp; SERVICE

USED EQUIPMENT

ROGER HYSEll'S
GARAGE

S1dmg
Roofing I Gutter
Remodeling
)cnn nq Your Are~ tor
10 Y (!.US

~ o u th~rn

CLO~E

radiators, and
auto batteries Watch thts

Columbus

Mortgall@ co 463 Second
Ave Galtlpolos Oh 4467172

Pomeroy

A u1honzed John Deer
New Holland Bush Hog
F~rm Equtpment Dealer

6 3 1 mo

0

east 208 2 feet to a po1nt 10
the center of the south con
crete br•dge ra ling C12 feet

1\

or
Blame Mothoan
985 3965

$45 000 00

SA7 500

Houo;inq

00

c

992 2478

p('rS P a ns
Need a
bu l d ng 5tte or lot for
mob le hom e Arbaugh
Add fto n
A ll Uf1ht1 E'S
p lus sept c $6 000 00
N EI/oo
LISTING
Tra e r s te close to
H 'lrr so nv tc
t
acre
" 000 00

HRADBURY ROAD Chol((' ac r e tot
Good
loca on fo r trail er or
bu tld ng stl c $5 500 00
INV E~T MENT
PROP
E RTY Tw o story
no m e
has 2 apart
m cnrs ne~ t 10 Burger
Chcl SJI 500 00
C OUN fRY liVING - 2
ac res w th a love ly 3
bedroom home 2 ba th 5
ltv ng ro o m
d 1 1g
room
fu ll basem ent
c arport and ut 1 ly and
s tor age
bU1Id1ng

wire, brass,

relig1ous

FARM EOUIPMENT
PARTS/SERVICE

tenstve remodel
mg
• E lectncal work
• R oofong work
13 Years
Expenence
Greg Roush
Ph 992 7583

PULLINS
EXVACATING

POMEROY,O
992 2259
NEW LISTI~G - Tup

NEW liSfiN G
M n
I arm 4 acres w th a
beaut tut
l"'n r oo m
h om £
Lt VI nQ
r oom
teatures a sunn y b~y
w.ndow a nd a I r epl ace
l o r met l d nt ng r oom w th
slid nq doors to Od l o
li'!rge modern k tc hen 5
bedrooms ur 1 t y r oom
3 mtles from Harr son
v li e $50 000 DO
NEW
LI ST ING
Ru tla nd
E)lcr ll ent
r ental or s L1rtcr home
Two story 3 bedroom
balh t v ng room 1etrgc
k tc h e r
wt h
n ee
b ~H~ynrrl
O nl y

w '' h o u 1

Guysv111e OH

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes
ex

Farm Ponds Land
Clearong Roads
Call

E

$43 000 00

ROSEN II ERG RECYCLI
NG
Opening
soon
speclallz:lng In aluminum
cans, aluminum siding
Sheel a. cast a tum copper

grand opening

Phone614 662 3821

1 7 1 tf c

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

Dnanct
Ou tsta nd.nQ co nd ton
sp nc ous 3 bedrooms I.
s tory
pertnaston e
hou se on 1 120)( 110 lot
F;.~m ty r oom 1. b a th s
Love l y
Y&lt;'lrd
2 car
q nr 1L
In s h ed
ba se ment $58 900 00
~ OU fH£ RN
SCHOOL
Dl ) f
l 'l5Amobtl c
home s l e l n nd scC~ped
ONLY ~3 000 00
F DGE OF fOWN
Ap
pro)(
.=tere lot w tr 1
&lt;&gt; l or y J bed r oom house
por ( h lu ll nsu ta lton
51H 500 00
r'f A h'l
~f R EE r
Outst.'lnd nq ho me w th
J bed roo m s sunn y k•t
LhC'n I nn tiV room atr
cond t oncd
nsul ated
lnre lot SJL 600 00

proced

U S Rl 50 Easl

Ph !67 7560

CAT D-6 C

608

1-

Water Sewer Electnc
Gas L ne O•tches
Water ltne Hook ups
Septtc Tanks
County cert1fi'ed
Roush Lane
Chesh•re Oh

1 15 1 m o pd

Nr W

an

qutck servtce

1Q9 High St

DOZER WORK

()) 29 181 5 12 19 26 (9) 2

N EW li ~T IN G - ~pac t
ous two sto ry home
l arge v 1n g r oom v.nlh
f repli! Cf' forma l d1n ng
room
J be dr ooms
eq u ppe d k. tcnen
tull
base m ent fen ced ba c k
yard eHellont locat an
tn
M dd l eport

and

Reasonably

An~neMnenb

tnleresled In Metaphylcs
REESE~
group forming Life can be
beller Conlact 416 0975 of
TRENDfiNG
fer 5
6 28 1 mo
SERVICE
r===jii~i===~ ATTENTION
Help pay off LADIES"'
!hose un
wanted bills working

1 op pr ces patd for auto
bod cs sc rap 1ron and
mctl l s
1
mtl c
west
of
r ~ rgro unds on Old R I
J3
Man Fr1 tl Jll to 4 Oll
After A ug 3

61C

OFFIC E 7422003
Georg e Hobstett er Jr
Bro ker

•m

Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoefhch

( Pomeory Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)

8ur

HOBSTETTER REALTY

an

Loans

593 14n

Note
ThtS Not ce IS
.ss ued an d pub I shed
sua nt to Rul e 4 4 of the h10
Rues of C vI Procedure)

$1000000

Phon e
(614) 992 3325

50' east 175 feet to a po1nf

!hence soulh 78 deg

_j

Public Nottce

wecldlng

-L ook
oblogol1on

7 26 1 mo pd

c Nott ce

Now

press•ve, complete line

3 11 ti c

Ph Y91 6564

Publ

- Passports

PH. 992·1201

No Su nday Call s

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public No11ce

PlACE•

Monoy lo Loan
FHA VA Convenllal Home

22

YaniSalo

1

SWEEPER lnd sewing
machine repair. pam, and
supplln
Pick up and
delivery Devts vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges creek Rd
C:ell
-4

lHE PH010

J&amp;f
CONTRACTING

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

~

wanted 10 Buy

CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 14 on larll@st
end 112 50 per ron Bundled
Slab SIO 50 per !on
Dellverd to Ohio Patte! co
Rock Springs
Rd
Pomeroy 992 268t

MAJOR Insurance com
pany has openmg 10 Tn
County area for sales
representative
Send
resume to P 0 Box 689
V1ennaWV
Part time
Pos1t1on
Avatlable Ceramtcs In

slructor Mus! be cerllflecl
In cerami c art and able to

lnslrucl a class Respon
slble lor pre class
preparation. leaching, and
working wolh volunteers
cermamlc Instructor
poaltlon will be 4 hours per
week two hours tn
slructlon ttme and 2 hours
retelecl ecltviliH hourly
wages wilt be $5 25 per
hour Send resume to
Gallla County Council on
Agl ng, P 0
Box 220
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis,
Oh 45631 or call 446 7o0o tor
an eppllcellon Applicalion
must be recootvecl bV II.1C!n
day, Auoust 17. 1911,
4 OOPM An Afformatlve
Jonathan you n&lt;ecl a hobby ActiOn Equal Opporllintlt
Why don 1 you tok• up hc!we Employer

cleanu11•

IN
can

celled?
Lost
your
operator s License? Phone

992 2143
16

RadiO TV

&amp; CB Re,.tr

RON S TV SERVICE
Spec tallzlng
n Zenith
House Calls Now serv1c1ng
Motorola Quazar Call 1

304 576 23'18 or 416 2454

11
Wanlecllo Do
0 J s LAWN MOWER
REPAIR
On Neogh
bOrhood Rd all makes ser
vlcecl Speclallzlng In Lawn
Bov Blldes sharpened
Call 446 ~25 offer 5 p m
Pick UR and delivery
available
Will do housekeeping or
babysllllng or sil wllh
elderly In hospllal or home
call 446 9623 offer 5 30
TV service coils Call 992
6776 or 992 2014 Also used
color Tv for sate
WILL do housecleaning In
PI Pleasa~l area Phone
304 4511 1835
'
BABYSITTING In my
110me close 10 school 304
675 2784

Older home 1n country on
2 3 acres
4 bedr oom~
bath
garage
centrally
located to all J m nes W1ll
consrder land contract 1f
sold wrthtn next 2 w eeks
17 500 742 2502

s

2v2 year old rust•c home 8
acres J bedrooms 2 b a th s
carpet
ttmber
pnvate
992 7741
New3bedroomhouse fully
carpeted
ca rport
ru ral
water Near M e1gs mtne 1

742 2746
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
dttton J bedroom fam1ly
room wtth f•replace cen
tral a r basement 30.4 675

1.542
r--

HOUSE for sate on Red
mond Rodge 304 675 3648

4

BEDROOM

Tro level

house large tam•lv room
dlnnmg froom Iaroe llvtng

room new kllchen
lull
basemen!
2h
baths
garage patio large tol
Priced on tnspecllon only
304 675 2634
FOR sale by owner 2 Slory
13 room house Ideal tor
tar!!@ famoty or 2 apart
ment renlal needs some .
repaor In tow JO s as is JQ4 •
675 2046 alter 5 30 p m (

!

•

�Ohio

Mobile HOIIIIS
for S.le

32

Prices

reduced

on

all

mobile homes and travel
trailer! .
TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES .
Gallipolis. CALL «0 7572 .
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST , GALLIPOLIS, RT .
35 . PHONE «0 3868 or 4.167274.
1978 70K14, 2 bdr .• 1 1/ 2
bath, fronr den with wOOd ·
burning

fireplace,

Lolli Acnap

JS

patio

awing , skirting, ap ·
pliances, dining room table
and cha1rs. No other, like
new furniture . S10,000 .

44

By owner, choice lot In
Racine. 60 x 150. Utility
building. S5.QCO.OO. 949-2801.

51

2 be&lt;lroom apt. Adulls only .
No pets. Deposit &amp; referen·

ces required. 2 miles on
S.R. 14l. 992 3647 .

mllke your payment. Cen
be converted single horne.
City water. w in consldtr

Unfurnished apartment . 2

bedrooms.

carpeted

in

town. Has stove. $150. mon·

land contr..:t. 675-1183 9-5
p.m .
20 ACRES en black top
road. limber . Phone H1.._
263-8322 or 263-2669.

apdrl

2 BEDROOM. unfurnished

1975 Cameron 12x60, 2 bdr .,
front kitchen , refriQ . and
range, gas furnance, e•tra
door off kitchen, carpet,
$5 ,995 . Johnson Mobile
Homes Brokers 446·3547 .
73 Sct1ultz 2 bdr, 12x 60 ,
tota l electri c central air ,

S7,000 Call 256 1265 or 379 ·
2250
Pr.ced for qu1ck sale 1.4x70
Windsor , central air . and
underpinn ing . $8,000 . Call
446 6641 .

--- -12x60 Monark , air cond .,
S5.000 Call &lt;WI 6642

1971

Rebe~

carpel 1970 PMC, 12x60,
two bedroom , new carpet,
B &amp; S Sa les. Inc., 2nd and
V1and Street , Pt Pleasant,

wv Phone 675 «24

USE 0 Mobile Home . 576·

2711
1971

Danan

12

)(

J

65,

bedrooms
19 72 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 w1th 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
Utop1a 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau , 14

x 60, 2 bedrooms. B

1
·•

S

Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sis
PI
Pleasant, WV .
Phone 675 4424.
\979 L I BERTY
mobile
home, H t1" . wide , total
electri c . 304 675 -5444 .
Mobile home located 1n
Camp Conley, Extra nice
and clean . Phone 304·895·

3967
1974

.,OUie on · Jay Dr.
1350 montlfly pltl!l d.,.,.it

12K60

KIRKWOOD

mobile home, all electnc.
excel lenr cond 1tion, $7,500 .

304 675 5544
f urn i shed $6 , 800
Un
furnished $5,800 . Call 304·
773 5600 after 5 p m
MOBILE home &amp; ,lot in
Mason. Lot IS .SOX 100 WIth
c ha1n l1nk
fence , nice
parking area Mobile home
12x65 with expando on
11v1ng room , all electric, 3
bedroom , central hear &amp;
a ir conditioning , com
plete ly underpenned 304

77 3 5096 .
1977 Mobile
home , 2
bedroom , den, can remain
on pr esent tocat1on . Phone

304 458 1854
64 Camper Holiday Ram ·
bier , 18 ff sleeps 8, s~lf con·
fained Phone 576 2321.

69 BUDDY 12x60, 30.-675
6322 .

Phone 304·675·1658 .

ment, 304-675·3000.
1, 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apart ·
ments now available at Pt.
Pleasant Scoff ish Inn Also
a honeymoon sutie . All
uti lities pa id Apa r tments
as tow as $140 . a week .
Honeymoon sut 1e S45 a
n1ght . Call304·675·6276 .
Furnished Rooms

SLEEP! NG

ROOMS

l ight housekeeping
Park. Central Hotel.

and
apt .,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

Space for Rent

Park, Route 33 , North of
Pomeroy . Large tots. Call

3 BEDROOM house, no
children,
references
required , 304·675 · 3318

992 7479 .
TRA I LER spaces for rent .
Southern Valley Mobi le
Home Park, Ch esh~re . Oh

6 room hovse, 2 acres
suitable for 1 or 2 chi ldren.
S200. month and deposit.
Call 304·773 ·9176. Built in
kitchen

992 ·3954 .
TRA IL ER space 3 miles
from town 1uncf10n 2 &amp; 62 at
1
old Y, Pt . Pleasant, 675

Mobile Homes

tor Rent

3248

----"-'-'-="-----~

2 bdr . trader Roush Lane,
Cheshire, Oh . Phone 1·304·

-- --~~-~-·

For rent trailer space tor
small trailer weekly and
monthly rates, a1r con
ditioned rooms by week,
cable TV Mary R . Trailer
Park , Mason , WV . Phone

773-5882 .
--

2 bdr rrafler furn. , gas and
water furn , S225 per mo ,
5100 dep., no pets . Call 446

304· 773 5651

4745 .
1 BEDROOM Mobile home ,
6 miles from HMC on Rt

160. 446·0157 .
2 bdr trailer. furn Ca ll 44.6·

Sl

3522 .

Household Goods

Sofa, chair, rocker, at
taman, 3 fab les, SSOO Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275 .
Sofas and chairs priced

2 bdr . mob1 te home W1fh air
cond, J mites from Portor .
Call 367 ·7101

- - - - - - --

from S275 to S69S . T abies.
S38 and up to SJ69 Hide· a ·

2 bdr . Air . Cond., adults
only Call 446 ·4110.

beds,S3.CO., queen s1ze, $380 .

S295 .,
Lamps from Sl8 ro S65. 5

24x60 sectional home, 3
bdr . . 2 baths, carpet
throughout . 1400 sq. ft .
l1ving space . Call367 0478

$165.

pc. dinettes from S79 ., to
$365. 7 pc ., $189 and up .
Wood table and 4 chairs,
S3SO up to $495 . Hutches,
$300 and SJ75 ., mapl e or
pine f1nish . Bedroom su1tes
Bassett Oak , S649 . ,
Bassett Cherry, S765 Bunk
bed complere w1th mat ·
tresses. S250 and up to
SJSO. Captain's beds, S275.

2 bedroom trat ler for rent .
Brown ' s Trailer Park ~1

3324
Small trailer in country .

$50 .00

complete. Baby beds. S89 .

cleaning depl:'Sit 9_.9·1328

Mattresses or bO)( springs,
tull or twin, S55, firm, $65 .
and S7S. Queen sets, S185. 5
ctr. chests, $49 . 4 dr . chests,
$.42 Bed frames , S20 .and
$25, 10 gun · Gun cab i nets,
$.350., dinette chairs S20
and S2S. Tappan gas or
electric ranges. S285

Two bedroom r"louse tr&amp;iler
on Ashton· Uptand Road.
Sl.SO plus utilities and
damage deposit. 67S~ ae .
OR RENT atmostnew14x
70, 3 bedroom, 1 111 baths,
sitting on nice lot, ready to
move into Phone 304· 516·

USED

Ranges .

refrigerators, and TV ' s,
3 mites out Bulaville Rd .
Open 9am to 7pm , Mon .
thru Fri ., 9am to Spm , Sat .

7711 .
Apa&lt;Hnent
for Rettt

446-0322
~t

GOOD
USED
AP
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers,
ranges .
pliances,

APT . lltC . 2
kit
carpeti!d,

refrigerators,
Skaggs
Ap
1918 Eastern

Ave., «0 7390

1'100

Sears window air con
ditioner . 8,000 btu 992 5877 .

5104.

2 acres on F loyd Clark Rd .
close to Rt . 160, S.C,OOO .

Phone «6·0390 .
o acres w1th well between
Rio Grande and Vinton.

S5,400. Call 388 ·8139.
Lofs by Owner 1 1/ 4 A toS
acres. level, rural water,
city schools. 10 per cent

down . Call379·2196.
For sale by owner 112 acre

lol Clark · Evans Rd . Water
and electric available . Ter·
ms possible or trade for

camper. Phone I 304-755·
2318.
11 you would be interested
in a 2 acre mobile home tot

in a subdivision for mobile
homes and double wldes
only, wlln Gallla County
rural water. Caii«&lt;· 7901.

u

acres pa!Hir WOO&lt;I . Call
367·7634.
Lots for NOie ·In :2 ·new sub·
dlvlsiOMin RICI'l8 VIllage.
On Vine St. &amp; YeiiCIW BuSh
Rd. 949·2340.
.

3 bdr . house

tor

MAPLE bunk beds with
mattresses, $60 . 304·675

rent ahd 3

rm . apt uHiities paid Call

675· S104 or 675·5386.

4042 .

2nd floor furniShed et
·
1 7''9
d
f .ocoency
ap . •
econ ,
Gatlipol1s. Adults only, no

SMALL
refrigerator ,
asking $45. call 304·882
269-i .

s

pets. Available

«o~ - 09S7 .

now.

Misc. Merchandise

54

Misc . MerchandiSe

Control Hunger and lose
we1ght w1th New Shape
Diet Plan and Hvdrex
water Pil ls . Fru th Phar ·
macv .

SWIMMING
POOLS :
PRE SEASON SALE :
$999 .00 I NSTALLEO!!!
Above g r ound pool COM-

PLE TELY

IN STALLED

starting af$999 00 Pri c e in ·
eludes pool , deck , fen ce,
filter,
liner , and
tn
sta l lation under normal
ground condition
Free
shop at home serv1ce Call

slallation . 446-1324.
'HAY

HOME
remedy, tradition for cen ·

Gallipolis on Rt . 7. 446·4807.

turies, it works. For com ·
plete into and receipt send
tOday self addressed stam

SILVER Queen this week
only Happy Hollow Farm,

FEVER'

Lowest prices on Bemco
bedding in the ar~a . Cal l
for pr1ces. Villiage Fur·
ni t ure, 2605 Jackson Ave,

•

K itchenete, coffee &amp; e nd
tables, ·bedroom suite ,
sfereo &amp; stand. 1 buffets,
etc. Ca ll 992 ·6709 after 6

"

Real nice Remington 8DL
25 06 nfle, model 700 with
12 power Weave scope .

S275 00. 949 1145.

Big mens clothes some
new , trousers 50 30, shirts
x:x I, sweaters, underwear ,
etc . Phone 985 4150 .
Freez,ng

corn

Don

Houdashel t 992 7451.
26'

TROUTWOOO

trave l

1216.
N EEO seve ral If ems of fur
niture ,
dppltan c es .
1e1ev1S10ns. B1g discounts
for quanity pur c hase
V1H age F urn1ture 2605
Jackson Ave 675 1773 .
BIG discoun ts lor cash and
carry at V1llage Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue , 675

1773
Guns of all kinds and gun
cabmet, Will se l l cheap .
Phone 675 2663, call affer 5

pm
White spool bed . J C Pen
ny , BerkShire wood s1ove

Phone675·1039
GYM se t , $40 . 304 675 5571
for

304-675 ·6205
KE L VINATOR air con
ditioner
20,000 BTU . 2
Lawn
mowers 1 sell

propelled . 304-6751623 .

They'll Do It Every Time

TH!Ol\1 THiY
IIJJfiCT YOU
WITH ~1\\!·
THIN0

WMEN YOU WAKe
UP you·~ TWO
fNCJIU 7l4U1

WHY DO YOU
THINK I WANTI?O
TO Hf:~P YOU FIND
THf: TANKER,EA~Y'
VOU'R~

NOT TH11T

Servi c e .

upstairs. $200 plus utilities,
SlOO dep .. lease. and ref .
req. Call&lt;146-4993 .
For rent 2 bdr . turn. apt.
Adulls only, no pelS . Call

«0· 1945.

hay

Phone 304 67S·

HAY tor sale , 304·67S 1254
1!.675 1302 .

Rt 7 across from Holiday

Inn

Auto Rep•ir

77

ROBERTS

SOMERVILLE'S Army ·su ·
rptus -rental
c l othing,
Rt .21N ., Ripley, 7 miles,

(New

Efal

Saturdays·

Sundays 1· 00 ·7 :00 p. m .
S~

__ _!_u.ildinjJ Supplies__

Building matenals, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win ·
dows, lintels, etc . craude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .

4792 .
Auto Paint1ng &amp; Sanding
$175, any color ,free pickup
&amp; dei!Yery 1n GallipOliS
area , Hammond
Body

Shop, 121 Mill 51 . 379·2782 .

GROOMING .

7220

78

1975 Mustang 11 harchback .
4 sp. 25mpg, red with black
inter1or. New radials, AM ·
FM Cra1g cas~ette. Sun
roof , runs good . $1900 .00 .

Hoi 1day Rambler Camper
20 U, self ·contain ed . Call
388 835 I.

992 7897
1979

Z28

Camaro. 350
automatic, T Top, Power
Windows, Rear Defogger ,
AM FMradio 992· 7570

MORRISON'S Auto sales .

1977 COLEMAN told oul
camper, sleeps 6, excell ent
condition,
$1500
or
reasonable offer, 304 675·
5544 .
1978 Palomino pop·up cam
per, sleeps 6 . Pnone 773

5846 or 882 3525 .

1978 KING Cobra, 302 cu .
eng . automatic. air con
dition1ng, stereo, AM ·FM 8
track, one of a kind, 34.000
miles, 304·67.5·6373 .

675 · 1707 .

HILLCREST

1974 DART , good condit ion ,
low mile~ . c heap, ·304 458

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

Highland
White
W e sl
T e rrier AKC
puppies .
Small, smart, and VERY
RARE M S250, F . $350 .

Call367-0624

sale

or

or 30056· 1715 .
1969 18 II. CAMPER, self

trade· 1973

Ford L TO, AC , PB, PS,
AM· FM stereo radio, 304

serv•rer

1728.

81

1972 Delta 88, Good eng.ne
S250. Phone 304 675 154S .

Cleaning

1976 Ford Mustang . GHIA
ac, ps, pb, 49,000 miles, ex
tra sharp$2650 firm Phone

304·675 2571 .
1974 CAT ALl NA , Pontiac, 4
doors, PS, PB. AC AM FM
radio, A 1 condition, $1,000 .

Call after 5 p m
3731

J04-67S ·

FOR

BEST

Two 2 bdr. II)IS. in Vinton,
r.t . and dep. Call388·8368.
1 bedroom apts. avalia~Jiot
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call .
992-n21.
Apartment for rent. Coli ·
992·-"01.

... ~ ........

In

Sleamway.
2096.

1980 PONTIAC Phoenix .
loaded wittl extras , ex
cellent condit ion , $5.800

2474

Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave.

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
446·4208

197f Chevy 3/ 4 T truck with
bed, good runnmg
cond • $700. Call 446 2544

1974 Chevorlel 112 T, S850

Calll6T·OS.41.

pups
895·3958_
_______

2 Silver male poodles, 10
weeks old, all shots. Call

882·3596.

·-Australian
--

Purebred
blue
heeler puppies, excellent

cattle dog, 8 weekes, S75.
Phone 304-675-3832.
AKC ma le Engllsn Sheepdog, 2 veors old, 304·67556118.

Dave's Appliance Repair .
Washers. dryers, plum ·
bing, electric, g~neral han
dyman Phone 304 576 292 1

•

6EEN AN ACTIVIST . HEY"' !/HAT
AS La-lt. AG YOU HAVE, l'lEHT ON
MAiti!.!--BUT iN THIS
CASE I'JE BEHAVED
01BifONOR.II8LY WITH
AN HOfOil.IIBLE ~ !

'Naltonf'll Parka: Playground or

Paradlu?' For years Amer·
1ca's parka have been the
crowning jewel a or nature' a
girts to the Umted States . But
our nation's parks are chang ·
1no. and. the National Park
Service has begun to restrict
the public's access to these
areas The question seems to
be : Can we have our park:.. ana
use them, too? (60 mins.)
(j]) ALL CREATURES GREAT

BETWEEN

'IOU ANO,
WAR.BUCH$,

I

AND SMALL

11:00

CARTER'S PLUMB ING
'
AND HEATING

CIJ 8 ffi

D IF F ' A E NT

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
Rt 1 G alliPOl iS , 367 7853 .

-- - - - - ---

...

_________ .... - ,·- ··
n f

..

We ain't pay you good

money jes' t' set liere!

-~-- - - -

s.
-

JIM MARCUM Roofing
spouting and s•ding. 30
ye11rs experience . Free
est1mates . Remodeling .

·-

down an'

connec"er.
Rufus!

8:30 CIJ8(J 1THEFACTSOFLIF£

in septic ta.nk . 675 ·1234

Busy end popular B l air .
assigned to write a poem .
subm1ta a p1ag1artzed work and
1ncurs tt!e wrath of her
schoolmates . (Repeal)

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Larry

Siden

E lectrical
~ ~e!_r~!_!"at~on

WINNIE

\

CON ·
Carpentry

work &amp; painting, concrete,

Quaitly

Cooling

ani:t . I

Heating Service Call 388-'
9698 .
.

1

WOODSHOP

Cabinets,

p1cn1c
tables ,
porch
swings, most wood prOOuc ·
ts . 101 Court St ., Gallipolis .

Call 4.16·2572 .

roofing, some remOdeling .
20 yrs. exp. Caii388·96S2.
BING'S CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION · Specialltlng
in concrete
sidewalks,

basement,

driveways,
patio,

garage floors

·'·-·

.,

.

.'
,,
•

OH. DfAR

·.' .'

JIM ' S

DEPENDABLE _ ,

Jones Boys Water Servi ce.

.

SAKES ALIVE!! I GOT -

tO:ZII
10:30

.~·

Gu•el : ShHna Eaaton. (60
mina.)

.. '
'

(lJ ANOTHEII llfl!
I() BENNY KILLIHOW
•
• (J) CIS II!POIITI: THE
DEFENSE OF THI! UNITED
STATESCBSNewacorr.-.pondent Dan Rather anchors this
epecialnewaaeriea focusing on
U.S. defense and the comtngol
ageolthe nuclear era .Rather 11
joined by Special Correapon·
dent Walter Cronkite , end
correepondenta Ed Bradley .
Harry Reaaoner, Bob Schieffer,
Richard Threlkeld and Ike
Pappaa . (Part Three ot a
live·part eeriea; 70 mine.)

&lt;;all367 7471 or 367 ·0591.
DllLARDS
DELIVERY
Ca II 446 7404.

WAT E R ,
SERV ICE : . '
~

'

~

,.

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or
367·0591 .
'

.•., .

-

roots.

-·--

10:0S
10:11

11

uphoiSiery
~-- ·

-...jl

'.

.\
I

(I) AIC CA~D llfWI
®lMOVII! •(COMEDY) •••
'.'TlloMIIItnlf!CI...t oteo In
t-P1..... 11ec-"11111
ABC IIEWB NIGHTUNE
'
Anohoriod by' T•d Kopi&gt;OI.
; 11:311 (I)MOVII·IWI!STI!IIN) •••
· •·POrt~•" 1MI
·
1 1:00 (I) IIOil iiAGLn lltOW
' .'
(]) ABC NI!WI iiiGNTLINE
Anchoi'ed by Ted
LOVIBOAT

lftle

(JI).

:•

1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant 30; .I
"
' • •
675·4154.

'.

,

'I'·

· TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
•
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis )
«6· 7833 or &lt;46· 1833.
· 1

-- --- .
MOWREY$ \.!PhoiStery RJ

®NEWS
(J1 TIIS EVENING NEWS
ffi
RACE FOil THE
PENNANT
(ll CBN UPDATE NEWS
( J) ~ARRY JONES
[ffi OUTER LIMITS
rlJ CBN UPDATE NEWS

m

TO DO SOMEIHIN' ABOUT
THIS DRY SKIN OF MINE ·

Hoover Sweepers repaired

~--

I

10·158
11;oo memmDm&lt;!tl~v•
NEW&amp;
l1J THIS IS THE ~IFE
(l) MOVIE ·(DRAMA) ••"'
"GrNI lanllnl" 111711
(I) DAVE ALLI!N ATLAIIGE
NIGHT GALLI!IIY
11 :015
11 , 11 (lJ CINUI'DATENI!WS
11 :30 m.&lt;!JTHI!TDNIGHTSitOW

BARNEY

.''

1

E!IILLY'S lt/&amp;HT.
SHE'S BEGINNING
TO

Phone 882 2079 .
General Hau_ling

' Duchess ot Oufol." e Straat
lottie's Boy· On the eve of the
ann ual servants " ballet the
Bentinck Hotel , a handsome
young fmanciar arr 1Y88 and
charms bott1 Lou1aa and Mary.
In no time. he persuades LOUIII
to 1nvest her sav1nfa 1n •
chamond mm1nr;;J company. (60
m1na .)

SEWING Machine repairs, : · !
service. Authorized Singer ll
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen .~
Sc1ssors. Fabric Sho!5, ...·,·
Pomeroy . 992· 2284.
• ~

N . air condition service ,
commercial,
industria'! ·

rJ1 MASTERPIECE THI!ATR£

MATTER WHAr. 1

&lt;~! Empire Fur~lture, 8.42 · Mobile homes
moved, ~
Second Ave. ~•Ill polls, OH . licensed, and bonded. 576 '
'
1
•
J
2711 or 675; 4398·.
:
•
.... -,-.T .... - ~ ,-

WINNIE/ HOW
LC!IIG HAVE YOt/
8EEN WAITING
HERf 7

I

and etc. Free estimates. 11

years experience . Call 367·
7891 .

EVEN

PRAISE FROM MARINI&lt;A
MAKES ME FEElGOOt:''' l
I 'LL STICK TO MY
OWN DIET .. . NO

,
''

Electrical, Air Condition,
Heating, Hot water tanks .
Service all makes. Phone
379 ·2196. Charles Kiesling

85

plumbing,

c;,ETTi~G

MUCH BETTER THAN
THE iAST SE T
VOU TOO,.; .

·-'

landscaping, 446 2797 .
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car
pet Cleaning featured by

THESE PROOFS ARE

m .. m QUINCY Ouoncy

rushes to an Ar~zana Indian
re servat 10n where his faster
aon and two otttars are stricken
by bubon1c plague. and efforts
to control the dtsease's spread
are hampered by greedy resor1
owners. (Repeat, 60 mins .)

-...

Fuller Electric Co . Com
p lete rew 1ring, commercial
or residential , and elec .
trical ma 1ntainance, also ~
on ca ll
Ph
446 2171 ,
Ga ll 1potis.

. ''

textured
ceilings, com ·
merc1a l and residential,
free estimates. Call 256 ·

---- .

r---··-

Jump

10:00

'FoR l&lt;iie -lssull)e loan, 79
Jeep Cherokee. catl•ner
· Interior •11&lt;1 ~xt~rior pain·
304-773·91$.4.
ling, frailor
,,nd dry
.
-·
·'
wall Ill a~d up, 1S yrs. ex ·
'
7Y
DODGE
Vaon, . perlence. Freeelt ,. c:,all'446·
57
Music.!
, ..
customized,
very low 1562. •
Instru menls
' -~~- --· . . .. ""
miles, phone after 5, 304(
Console plano. Exc . cond . 675·4283.
FERRELl'S ' WINDON
JoAnn Kautz. 98S· 3~31.
GlASS SERVICE Home
19n . CHEVY .van.. com· malntaln•nc·e , anct
SElMAR Paris Clarinet 1pletely cuslom(ze&lt;l; phone remodellne. """"" ' 318·
9326 . . •
5110., :104-882·2821 aner 4.
30&lt;1-675·3675.

4 GU IN~·;.--:.;;~-;-, 1;;-n~ hair,
SS. a piece, 304·882·2602.

Gste Murders' 1979 Stars .
David Janssen, Sus·annah
York
(f1 HENRY MOORE Thil!l fi l m
portrayal of the internationally
acclaimed sculptor reviews h1a
llfelongdedicaiiOntotusarl (80
m1ns)
(ft) NOVA 'The Bus1ness or
Ex unction' explores the huge
mternallona l trade Hl ammals.
pene 1r ates I he lh rivin 0
1.1nderworld of the an 1mel
sm1.1gglers and assesses the
elfecls on van iShing wildlife
spec1es {Closed Capt 1oned .
U S A l (60 mms )

GASOIJNE AI.LEY

PAINTING · interior and

pm.

lllJI(I.I ill! CBS WEDNESDAY
NIGHT MOVIE 'The Golden

BACKHOE Complete ser
vice French C1ty Mobile ·
Homes Inc call 446-9340 .

exterior.

$6,500. Call 742-3117 offer 5

-·

E~ca~!!_~_

83

1979 JEEP truck , nice, low

--

;...:~·~ ~rl;:-;

·

miloage, S4900.00 call 304·
675·3436.

73
.D.
- - ·- Vansi4W
.... .
1979 Jeep Wagoneer 4 dr .
Full equipped. auto tran .
Built in CB. Cruise control.

dmner part~ ihrown lor Blake
Carrington, Matthew ' s
shockmg adm1SS1on to Krystle
that he &amp;!Ill loves her is
overheard by Fa l lon. who
contronts Kryslle with her
knowledge afler being ordered
to stop skinny d1ppmg w1th Jeff
Colby 1n 1he pool duong tl'\11
e!.l"1l.:.. (Repeal; 2 hre )

NOW LISTEN 10 ME , II.LL
OF YC\J! HERE'S MY
Plt\N ....

... .

D . C. Conrractors Plum : ·
bir1g, elec trical, he"ating·, ...
roofing. alumtnum, Yinyl ..siding. and horhe painting.-::

NOW HA U L1 NG housocoa 1
&amp; limestone tor. driveways
Call tor estimates 367 7101

1979 FORD truck, AC, PS,
PB, carpeted topper, call
30H7S·U66.

Cll&lt;l1JID DYNASTY At ala,sh

THEN MAvm; THAT'S
TH' K~ TO C"'lt:HING
THE CREATURE!

water deliverv . Call 256
9368 anytime

Call 367·0478.

Drummond dis·
covers that l and he and his
s1ater ha-.elnhented was
acquired through slave trad1ng.
(Repeat) (Closed-Captioned)
(ll 700CLUB

ALI.EYOOP

Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 446· 3888 or 446· 4477

WEATHERAlL
CON ·
CRETE · qua lify and ser·
vice. call675·1582.

1978 Ford • wheel driYe.

broken, good with children,

2088 or 675-4560.

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO

Open 11 4 Mon . lhru Sal . 'ftet'

house

10 SOOHD

erienced mason, roofer ,
carpenter ,
electric tan ,
general repa i rs
and
remode l ing . Phone 304 675

Ca ll 446 2107 .

Trucks for Sale

hours

Alphso·

BE51HNIH6

YOO'R.E

RINGLE'S SERVICE exp

B4

Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates .

77

each, 614·446 ·9720.

~HOW'-

(I) NA TIOHAL GEOGRAPHIC

.~I'VE

stric ker. 675 5580 .

STUCCO PLASTERING

675 2063, PI Pleasant New

LLASHA

614 ·446 ·

72 NOVA S350 . 67S 4365 .

5 p .m . 304·S76·2490 or 675·

$30 .

YOU

5304

Serv1ce

1977 CORDOBA S3200 . or

kittens.

-.

EDWARD' S Backhoe •nd
Dozer Serv1ce. Specializing

Carpel

Call

best offer, C)(Cellent ocn
dition,
leather
interior,
e lectric w1ndow, ~eats,
AM · FM radio, tilt wheel,
air and new tires Call after

SIAMESE

WONOERFU~

ANIMALS A ca~alcade ol
Hol l ywood "s moat famous
anima l stars d11play1nQ the1r
ta lents and com1c foible• in
e.~~.cerpta from a collectiOn of
their memorable screen and
te levisiOn perl ormancea will be
teat ured (60mina.)

Call Smeltzer' s

2042 .

AK c
0 achshund ,
Pomeranian an PoOdle

T
and
R
building ,
remodeling , also papering,
carpet 1nstaltat10n, and
genera l
home
im
provements. 675·5689, 675

min a .)

WORLD OF THOSE CRAZY

Dozer work . Small jobs a
spec ialty 742 2753

Home
~!!l~~!~!!l_ents

SANDERS
TRACT I NG,

Fri hours 11 ·6 .

llllllllll

F &amp; K Tree
stump removal. 675 1331 .

DITCHER Complete ser

AKC Great Dane black,
female , 1 112 years old,
need5 room to run. Call 446·

Now open on Wed

(Re~e11~0

-.
Trimming ,

vice . Water and sewer
lines, drainage
ditches.
French City Mobile Homes,
Inc . call446 9340 .

304-675·2517 .

THE FISH TANK and Pel

wv :·-:

5134.

1182

Registered
Palamino
Stallion .
Tennessee

Ser· ·-'

contained, steeps 6, 304 773 ·

Call 388 9857

For Sa le AKC Registered
Doberman pups Red and
rust , black and rust. $150.

"

675·3376 or 675 1240 .

1977 PROWLER c amper,

Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese k1ttens. Call 446
3844 after 4 p m

Board i ng and groom1ng .
AKC
Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spanie ls
Call 446 ·4191 .

The tranquil paradis a of the
tropic iatanda and 1 awlnging
einglea tour become the co~er
tor a terronat group the Angela
must lind before ita members
cart} out a plan to aaaaaalnate
an internetionel Peace leader.

~ ~ QU:.ST~G1J\

p

21 fl., self contained , very
good cond1t1on, 304·075 · 1623

FOR

KENNEL

'b.J ~~ A. ~ES!lOi.J

·&gt;

r)

1\_..

1

IMEAFEDh. II I_)

NO EL-M CAfoJ

~ODUC.S /HI~

KIND OF Flli:UIT.

IYANAWYI
[) I

Now .-range the ctrclld tenere 10
form the lurpriH anawer. as sug gested by !he above cartoon

XI 1 I)"

Printanswerhete: " (
Yesterday 1

I

• Jumbles ACRID

(Ans...,.lomorrow )
SICKEN UNLESS

POPPY

Answet' : What that nch Englishman had -

POUNDS TO SPARE

(]) PUBLIC ENEMIES
C!J MOVIE -(DI'IAMA)"
''OUIIawJoeteW... a''
(J)(lJI. CHARLIE'SANGELS

IT'S ~I-ll~ 1J.I~W-''1'.,.

RON'S Telev1sion Service
Specializing 1n Zenith and ··~:
Motorola, Quazar , and ·.
house calls Phone 576· 2398
or 446·2454.
·

IlEAl PEOPLE A
profile ot the emallelt man in
America, a ~iait with a group of
female atev-edorea , and a
segment on 1 baseball game
played on mules are featured
(Bepeat; 60 mina.)

82
Plumbing
--~--- _!~eating _ ~­

1574 or 675 2881.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY
KENNEL , AKC
Chow puppoes
CFA

Board1ng a ll breeds, clean
indoor outdoor facilities .
Also AKC Reg
Dober
mans. Call -446 7795 .

BORN LOSER

Clle (!)

STROKES

Camping
_Equ·•P!!'en!

69 Z18. 992 3647 .

Pets for Sale

POODLE

7:0&amp; ~- ALLINTHE~AMILY
7:30
• BULLSEYE
ANOTHEII UFE
• (J) JOK!II'I WILD
C!J KOLLYWOOD IOUARe&amp;
(J) (j]) DICK CAVI!TT IHOW
ill! RICKARO SIMMONS
IHOW
(lJI. FACE THI! MUSIC

1:00

or 675 5689 .

Henderson , WV . Phone 67.5

Caii145 ·S121 .
56

BROTHERS

GARAGE. 24 hr wrecker
service. "Big or small" we
tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day
«6 2445 or Night · 446-

AC. ~ e.:tra tires on rim .

1 bdr .. SITS ·per mo., no
children or pets. Coli «&lt;·
3667 alter 5.

(1) (j]) MACNEIL.UHIIEA
IIEPOIIT
&lt;BJ NEWS

7:158 (1) CIIN UPDATE NEWS

HARPER Halstead, lawn

COOK ' S Television
vice.
Henderson ,

Wild

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

~Grlr

7:38 (I) BASEBAL~Pawtucloet Red
SOx"' Richmond Bra vee

mower repatr and shar
pening service, 10 a .m ·6

PhOne 675·2250

«6 4060

BICYCLE S30. 30H95 3420.

First Ave. location, fur ·
bdr . down stairs or 2 bdr .

baled

3384

Walker S750. 992·6102.
AUTOMATIC
wa s her ,
riding mower. 26" bike,
lawn
mower,
se wing
machine, 5 HP rota t i ller ,

First cutting

and saddle $65 . Cal l 3-79
2211

sal e .

92 and one·hall form 1ca
countertop, double bOwl
s1nk,
faucet,
s pray,
avacado S50 2303 Mt . ver ·
non Ave

Hay &amp; Grain

1971 Chevrolet 4 dr .. good
cond., one ovVner . Call 446 ·

Ca l l4~ · 1 562 .

EncyclopediaS

Farm Equipment

For sale flute $100, pony

c a 11 Judy Taylor ar 361 ·

trailer and camp S1le on
Raccon Creek Close to
Ohio R1Yer. S500 down
Owner wilt finan ce. 614· 256

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

Free Est imates
24HR Towing

St . Rt . 93. Call 286·S930 .

--~ ---

pm

61

Sl.OO bale
1«5.

750 &amp; 1,000 gallon pl astic
sept 1c tanKs . State and
county approved , total
weight JOO tbs. , haul in
pi c kup truck. . Ron Evans
Back Hoe Service, located
3 miles back of Jackson on

Auto P~rts
&amp; Accessories

the

elll TICTACOOUOH

p .m . 675·5868.

BAIRDS BODY SHOP

64

$50 . Cal l 446·0087

miles 54500. Phone 304·882·
2356.

Auto parts, auto repa 1r ,
wrecker
service ,
buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 446·7717

13.000.00
5 tt sliding patio d()()(, Athens, Ohio
each . Phone 1·304· 422 2781.
standard height Call 3677657.
Orange floral lounger, new

Yellow Freestone cann ing
pea ches. Now t11ru Sept 20
Any quant 1ty availab le
Refa 11 &amp; wholesale . Bob ' s
Market, Mason . Phone 773 ·
5721 Open daily flll9 p .m .

304-576·2016.

Four 15.000 gallon tanks
located above ground at

675· 1773.

Harley Davidson, low rider
1980, under warranty, 3,000

J(t

ped envelope pius $1.00 to
S. R A. Co., P .O. Box 284,
Gallipolis, OH -15631.

I 800 614 8511.
EASY cred1t availab le now
to purchase furniture .
te l eviSions, or appliances .
Village Furn 1ture 2605
JacKson Av e ., 675 1773 .

Frui1
&amp; Vegetables

and

Kln~om'

estimates, call ADVANCE
SEAMLESS GUTTER
AND DOOR . 614·698·8205 .

Green beans, pick your
own $6.00 bu . Tomatoes by
the bushel. Raynor Peach
Orchard, 5 mites below

135.00, 304-675 1758.
one

58

CIJe PM MAGAZII4E

Scouting

George Gum, Sr. Roofing,
painting, remodeling . Ex·
perienced. free estimates.

LOCKSMITH

VICE, Complete sales, ser
v1ce, supplies and in·

._-.--.--.--.---.-----'"'"-----------l

and batn, waSiler· dr~r.
clean. no l)&lt;!la, dtp roq .•
adullsonly. CoH 446·1119.
Apartments,

.~::~
......

Gene' s Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free estimates, reasonable

' HANDSOME I

RATLIFF POOLS &amp; SER ·

call r

Garaoe apartment. l room

nished

=~

1

::..=...~~-

(1)
NEW IIIBLI! IIAFFU!
SHOW
(f)(IJJ. FAMILY FEUD
C!J WILD KINGDOM ' G irl

tering, custom made tor :
your home. ·For free ·

Cal l 304-675 2697

_

LOTS Rea l nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek , all
utilities available, $301).
down, owner wi II finance ,
call after 3 p m . 256 · ~ 13.

.,..,

882 ·2079 .

LAYNE ' S F,URNITURE

bfdroom,
cltetfturnistiN,

7:00

~

Residential, automotive .
Emergency service. Call

Siegler Fuel bil hea ting
srove . $50 992 7285 .

mo .
exc•henf ! Aei9h ·
llorhoolj, 67Hn2 or ~n

&amp; ~c~eav~-

Camp Cant ey .

2597

~EG.ENCY

, r''

guaranteed. Call «6-8019 .

r1

EVENING

992·51133.

742·2137

ro

only,

46

c.u ..:om.

pm. Helmet includ~d .

rent,

Small home for rent Fur
n1shed, 2 bedrooms in
Rac1ne . Adults only. 949

bills pertlti!Y ll"d

Jl = - -Lots

adults

For rent,

45

t bdr.

Price

Ouotherm fuel oil furnace,
$10 .00. Gas stove, $10 00.

pels, 304-675· 1452 or 675·
7996after 3.

Chapel Hill, NC 27514 or
Ph . 919-933-4390

new

condition.

negotiable. 992·5816 afler 5

or unfurnished,
reasonable, 304·882

Mason,

11 miles south of Gall ipofis,
$200 mo ., write : Willard
Bontz , Rl. 6 Box 494,

44

cellent

I

54

2 bdr .. I balh, on 3' acres,

For rent

NEW Moon trailer Approx .
8x38 . ASking Sl.SOO . WI·
ctud1ng oil
tank
and
washer ca/1304 882 ·2694.

992·7252 .

2 BEDROOM apartment in

&lt;146-2565 .

monlh,

Ashworth Installment Ser
vice . Carpet,
vinyl ,
cerami c tile, floor tile, for
mica counter tops, all work

byHentf Arnold.,., Bob lee

DOXIE

WIDNEBDAY
AUG. II, 1881

1977 Suzuki GS 400. Ex ·

3356 .

4 bdr . , 1 112 bath 1n
Evergreen . 3 bdr on Cen·
tral Ave ., GallipoNs. Call

SlOO .OO

f inish . Call388-8711

·"":£
· .,....,..
......-,

rates. Scothguard. 992-6309 .

furni~hed

very

Rec.liners.

1971 DARIAN, 1 bedroom ,

lor

1 or 2 person, 4 room apart ·

--~--~-

btlweon 4-10 p .m 84J-2971.

VIewmg

'

.

Home building.
hom e
~~(
remodeling and repair
Custom work from start tQ ·:~

flfl~~jl mfl ~THAT BCII-.1 ED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~·
Unocrombfe llleN lOur Jumbles.
one letter to eech aquare, to form
four ordinary words .

•

•

CONTINIOUS no leak gut
APARTMENT

ener

For rent Wit!\ opf!OIIto buy .
4 llldr . heme, b)lh lind haH.
Ig. I iVIflll till.·, . fifep!ace,
bawment,
gas
~•t.
gara~ Willi . euto. Olll!fttr,
nice yard, toOl! recafiGn ln
city . See br apj&gt;oln-t.
Be vacant 'Sept : 15. ~~
S375, dep. slOII. no ~ts. Call
&lt;146-2573 or 446· 1171 .

42

Serious inquiries only. Call

Home
Improvements

&amp;75-5571 .

bar .

5 room house near mtne no.
1 446· 3037 after 6 p .m

1973 Crown Ha'olen, 14x65,
three bedroom, new car
pet, 1971 Cameron, 1Ax64,
two bedroom , new carpet .
1972 Champion , 12x60, two
bedroom , new carpet 1976
Cameron ,
12x60 .
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new

A i r conditioner . 1 yr old .

Good shape . S200. 992 ·3379.

apartment end 2 bedroom
furnif.hed apartment, 30.4·

Heuse! tor Renl

12x65. S6.000

f.rm . Call 2.56 -6486 .

1966 Triumph Bonneville
motorcycle, completely
chopped . Custom paint.

dleport.

Apartments. 675-5548 .

3547

an&lt;1 n.tere~~ee11. Call
4:00 446-'3S4!1.

1980 Honda 650 custom .
$1895. Call 4411·0972. ,.

6,000 btu air con·
ditioner Used 2 months.

required, 304 67S· 1365.

above Henderson , WVA . on
Rt. 35 . Will sell together of
separate Phone 675·.4310
at ter 6PM

1979 Honda CB 750· K. Call
4411-2714.

USED brown and white
living room c hai r $15 . See
at 769 Brownell A11e , Mid·

GE

ment, no pets, references

3

For sale
16 cu. ; t.
refrigerator -freezer. S17S.

Conrad Ohlinger .

SMALl furnished

41

table

Call «6·3737.

th plws deposit . Utilities ex
Ira . 992·6&lt;177.

Johnson Mobile Ho'me
Brokers, new tiS1ing 4-46·

For sale 1974 Freedom
mobrle home and lot
110K250. Located 2 mi.

coffee

11

Motorcycles

1980 Kawaskl KE · lOO ex.
cond ., 500 miles. $.499. Call
4.16·7381 .

Call156·1327.

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. 992·5434 or 992·
5914 or 882·2S66.

BY owner. 3 apartment
house on approx . 1 KY'e.
live In one. rent olllers 1o

74

Household Goods

Dryer and

Rd.

2 acres FlalwOIICIS
110.000. 992-5361.

Apartment
lor Rent

Television

Wednesday, August 5, 198l

Pomeroy-Middle ort, Ohio

Page--12-The Daily Sentinel

13

BRIDGE
Sure thing wins for declarer
By O.walll J.eoby
aod Also S..la«
NORTH

Those

nine

• 10 816
• K 54
• A 9 72

major-suit

WEST

cards made his bid virtually
automatic . North's passed
hand jump to 1hree hearts
With four trumps and a good

.J84
tQJ0983
.KJ54

10 points is a routine game

SOUTH
• 76 32
.AK943

t A6

••o

3
Vulnerablo : Both
Dealer · West

make ll tricks on the com ·
boned holdmgs.
But this wasn't a good day
and North-South were only

in three hearts and not fnur

udon

trump lea

EAST
.AQI0 5
•Qs2
tJ72
.Q86

•J

invitation. Of course, declar er declined the invitation .
On a good day, however,
North-South miRhl even

West hit

85A

• K9

Although South had only
11 high-card points , ho prop·
erly opened in fourth posi tion.

an exce llent

w...

North

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

391"

Pass

Easot

Pa ss

which declarer

won. South hopefully led a
spade toward dummy 's kmg
East won and returned a low

Opening lead • J

trump .
What should South play'

Declarer was

suspactous

of

West's openmg lead . It is a

the sure-thing play of a
trump finesse . He didn't

well-known falsecard to lead
the /·ack from queen-Jack
doub eton of trumps and
dec larer didn 'l want lo fall
for it. but if Wesl's lead is a

care if 1t won or

lost. It d1d

wm and eventually East got
to lead a third trump, but
South lost just three of his
small spades (dummy's
fourth trump took care of

singleton and declarer rises
with the ace he will go down
in his part score When East
later gets on play with his
spade queen. he wall draw a
third round a( trumps wath
his established queen of
trumps and declarer will

the

other one) and a club.

Suppose

that

trump

hnesse \ost to the queen. All

defenders' trumps would be
gone and South would ruff
his last two spades to wiod
up losing two spades. a
trump and a club.

lose one heart. one club and
three spade tncks
Therefore, declarer made

t~~IW'WJtr
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Hanuner part
I Canaanite
DOWN
deity
1 Intolerant
5 "Mr. Deeds"
one
director
2 Spanish
10 Out of u..,
bnck
11 Reddish·
J 1980
brown
sci-fi f1irn
1% Letting
4 Man's
Yesterday's Allswer
oneself go
nickname
19 Type ol cake
14 Greek clan
5 Olester%6 Spigot
22 " .. .to the
division
field. e.g .
Z!l Glorify
snores of
15 Slower ( mus.l 6 Linkletter
JOAia ~
11 Sea I Fr. I
7 Archbishop
31 Marriage
23 Showed
17 Got nervous
8 Daydream
god
indecision
19 Pungent
9 Warnings
l3 Evaluate
24 Calumet
Z8 U!ughmg
11 Malicious
:s&amp; Children's
and others
sound
13 Bid hello
game
%5 Vociferate
21 Big name
18 Contour
r/ Knock
in elevators

%% "All - Jau"
%4 Unpaid for
t5 Harvest;

yield
%5 Perched
%7 Subsist
%II Sennonize

:IZ Imitate
33 Border

:14 "Pajoma

Gune"
film star

35 SullavanStewart

movie (1939)
38 Acid salt
39 Johnson

of comedy
Ill Mountain

crest
DAILY CRYPTO&lt;lUOTE- lli!re's
Ia

how to
AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

work it:

one letter eimply stands for another. In this sample A ts
used for the three L's , X for 1he 1wo O's. etc Single letlors,
apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hin1s. Each day the code letlers are diflcrent.
CRVPTOQUOTES
GBOCJS
SG M T

CM

I CHS

SYUPFR

BDSGBNPI

EU

PYSGMT

JGMEUD

UCI ,

. FCOS,

WPE

EU

EG HS.

.·'
•\

V ·U M R

W C I I C Y F' M

Yesterday's Cryplequole: WE MUST NEVER FORGET THAT
ART IS NOT A FORM OF PROPAGANDA, IT IS A FORM OF
TRurH.-JOHN F. KENNEDY
. '

1

•'

�I

The Da

Pom

Sentinel

Meigs County
Seven defendants forfeited bonds
and two others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred HoifmanTuesdaynight.
Forfeiting were Jerry A. Carbaugh, of
New
Haven, $500,
posted
on
charge
possessing
firearms
while
under the influence of intoxicants;
Jerry Mullins, Bidwell, $350, driving
while intoxicated; Randall Osborne,
Route I, Middleport, $30, improper
backing ; Iris Thomas, Middleport,
$100, disorderly manner; David
Ridgway, Pomeroy, $27, speeding;
Sherry Roush, Syracuse, $32,
speeding; Virgil Peck, Bidwell, $50,
Jittering . Fined in the court were
Steven Hall, St. Albans, W. Va., $350
and costs, discharging fireanns in
the village while under the influence
of intoxicants; Bill Reeves, Mid-

Four defendants were fined in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
They are Arthur Petrie, Middleport, $150 and costs, reckless
operation; $50 and costs, no
operator's license and $250 and
costs. leaving the scene of an accident; Doy Jones, Rutland; Rick
Pridemore, Rutland; Kenneth ·
White, Pomeroy, $200 and costs each
on charges of trepassing. Forfeiting
bonds were Joel Stout, Vienna, W.
Va., $28, and David Walkins, Middleport, $31. both posted on speeding
charges ; Steven Hill. Racine, $50,
open flask .
PREPARING FOR TilE PULL - Oleryl Folmer of
tractor pull Tuesday at the f.allia County Junior Fair.
The event, sponsored by the Gallipolis Rotary Club.

drew entries from all over southern Ohio. Folmer Is
seen on her tractor during the l.lOO.pound class of the
pull.

A Mason County petit jury late this
morning returned a verdlcl of guilty
of first degree I\)urder In the case of

~:l~~~y;:~ever. re.ummended

WASHI NGTON 1 API - President
Reagan . wmmng congresstonal approval of hts tax ·cut in bs lha n "'

The bill gives added relief to 17
mil lion couples in whtch both
spouses work, and who pay more

Mayes had beeu charged willl
murder in the shooting death last
Oct. 14 of John Wamsley, a former

ta xes than if they were single.
It a lso eliminates estate taxes for
all but 0.3 percent of the wealthiest

restaurant operator
Pleasant.
The jury received

months, needsonl y to .sign Ius na me
to give Amen cans the Ja r/;!est ta x
reducll on lll U.S. htstor,· .
T he
H" u' e
co m pleted
con~ ress i u nal actwn T uesday on the
t.a x·cut bill . and Wh1te House a ldC:-i
said Reaga n will sig n 1t a~ sun11 as 1t
reaches Ius desk. That could be as
la te as next week , but reg C~ rdl es.s of
when the president affi xes hi.s
signature. the indi vidual kt x re lief

will begin Oct. I.
The 282-95 House vote was considera bly more lopSi ded than the
two-thirds ma jority needed to keep a

$1.549
A si ngil' person t.: &lt;.~ rn in g $~l0,000
now pays $5.71 8 tn ta xes. Ttlii t wo uld
be cut $71 till s year, $566 111 1982.
$1,081 in i9A3 and $1.333 in 1984 .
The more a person pay.s w tax es.
the bi,l:!gl' r the ta x cut . This is a
reversal of reduc tions passed in

Ameri ca ns, increases incentives for
sewings. liberalizes tax-free treat·
rnent nf money put aside for
retirement, fattens Lax credits for

recent yea rs atmed al raJStng the

child-care expenses and establishes

bu rde n on uppt•r · ln corne
Aln erica ns to help lessen the load un
th ust· al thL• buttum of the economic

a specia l deduction for charitable

scale .
Heagan's bill woul d give :12 pern•n t of il' benefits lo pcupl e with incomes above $50.000 . Those people

The tax relief for business will
total an estimated $152 .8 billion from
1981 through 1986, chiefly by

ta x

cunlribulions made by people who
du not itemize.

allowmg fa ster recovery through the

protest over tax relief for the uti m-

nuw pay one-third of a ll income

dustry from delaying fina l acti on on
the bill.
Rep. James Shannon, D-Mass. ,
sought unsuccessfull y to trim the $12
billi on that the legislalt on would gtve

Lixcs

ta x system of money spent for
machinery and buildings. The aim is

Seve ral other provis iOns we re adas the package made il&lt;l way
th rough Congress. Man v nl them mcludtog the special t•~ breaks for

to rnodcrmze the natiOn 's industrial
capacity so that production can be
increased without raising prices.
During the final debate before

producers and owners of oil·
producing lands over the next six

t h~ oil md ustry ~ represent com·

promises by Rcag(:l n to win a pprova l

Co ngress bega n a five· week
va cat ion. some House members

ded

years.

of

hi' ba"r bill. Others are tdea s

deerit&gt;d the bill for giving the oil in-

The bil l, wh ich n e~g&lt;Hl pruposed
Feb. 18 as a curnerstonp uf his
econom.i c recove ry program . w1 U
eut tndiv Jdual and bu.sines.s taxes b\
$749 billion through 1986 . The he • ~t
of the pac kage is a pe n mment l' Ut m
persona l lax rat es a \·craging .Jbuu f
25 percent O\'er the next thn·e H' a r~
The fa rthest-reac hing part · of thf'
bill is one that Reagan dtd rwt .sl'r k.
but has embraced a nyw;n The ·· Indexing" provisio11 ,;_,ill .r ut L&lt;Jxes
autorna tt cally ea ch yc&lt;J r, start1 nt.: 1n
1935. to offse t sornt• of ttw trtfla t1nn uf
the prev ious year
A typ1ral four-membe r, oneearner family w1th $20.000 1nC"lilllt.'
and currenl ta x ltability of $2.01 3 will
get a $25 tax eu t lhts yea r, $228 in
19112, $27 1 111 198" ond $464 tn 191l4 .

th;lt the administration fa vors but
wcmtcd to put una back burner untli
the economy is in bl'lter shapt•.

dustr y so much tax rt&gt;lief at a time
wht·n federal programs for the poor
a nd elderly a re being reduced .

Patrol rt&gt;ports
two accidents

Voter .., defeat operating levy
I{F ADI W;, Oht o - Voter' "' the Reading School Dtstrict defeated
an 8.9- nul\

(l(H' r atllll!

kn· by .s ix votes Tuesday . The nega tive vote was

Veterans Memorilil

'
.
A marriage license was issued m
Probate Court to James Wesley
Perkins, 19, Pomeroy, and Judith

sv~e; ·NonnaGreer,Syracuse.

Di!c~~~· RotMl.,;

in

Point

the case
Tuesday afternoon following final instructions and arguments.

r:;;;;;iiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiil

BICYCLE
SALE

JUMBO BOLOGNA •• • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • •Lb.
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Eckrich

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Homemade

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1 lb. Blue Bonnet Quarter;

PEAatES •••••• !-.b•·

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ORANGES······· 6/&amp;f:

Ohio Colby Longhorn

CHEESE .~~-~1.95

BA

ET CHICKEN DINNER

IOoz . Vienna

BEEF BARBECUE •••••••••:a.:}l.39
10 oz. Vienna

PORK BARBECUE ..••••••~~~ •• $1.29
VIENNA SAUSAGE. •••••••• 3/$1.69

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE .•••:~: •• 7~ ..
~

•

15 oz . Showboat

Lay -Away for Christmas

-·

'

••• IN THEW
/,

indicted by a federal grand jury on charges of copyright infringement
and mall fraud in a scheme to illegally duplicate and sell videotape
cassettes of motion pi~.
Tbe indictments resulted from an 1&amp;-month FBI investigation in
which undercover agents bought hundreds of bootleg films, said
Ronald J. Stidham, assistant U.S. attorney in Cleveland.
Among the films copied were "Star Wars," "The Empire Strikes
Back," "The · China Syndrome,"" Apocalypse Now" and "Urban
Cowboy," authorities said.

16 oz. Golden Isle

MOORE'S
AMERICAN
HARDWARE

46 oz. Dole

PINEAPPLE JUICE ......~:: •• $1.19
200 Count

PUFF'S FACIAL TISSUE ·····2/$1.79··

Murders puzzle couples' friends
TOLEDO, Ohio - A3 police continued digging into the brutal murders Qf a young Toledo couple, friends and relatives of the victims
were asking the same question- "Wby?."
"Myself, I'm just puzzled . They were . both good kids . They never
caused anybody any problems," said James Cole, father of Daryle
Cole, 21, of Maumee, whose body was found Monday night with that of
his 21-year.old girlfriend, Stacy Balonek of Toledo.
The bodies were found Monday night locked in the trunk of Cole's
car. Lucas County Coroner Henry Mignerey said Wednesday that they
died from repeated blows to the head, possibly from one of the
baseball bats found in the car.

1. ; oJ- J. o9;

Thl' l&gt;o.:-1rd uf educa tiOn s.cud that. i:I S &lt;:1 r csull. schuuls will open later
lh1:-&gt; mnnth 111 th1!-: Cin('tnnati suburban distri ct with no sports, band,
drama. Ju nl' h prug r;n n ur any extracurri cular activiti es.

Demolition derby slated Aug. 18
One nf ltw most popu lar e\'ent.s of

I hL' Metg:-&gt; County Fa1r - tht•
dl' moll tion dt::' rb y - w1ll be held at J
p.lll . on Tuesday. Aug. 18 as the
gr CJndst&lt;'tnd a tt r&lt;:~d t nn . There wlll be
se\'e ral he&lt;:~ts to srlect the partu: Jp~m t.s in the fl'a ture event. Prize

money and trophies will be awarded.
Those interested m participating
ma y pick up derby applications at
Jim 's Gulf Station, Fleetwing ServiC'e Stati on, Meigs Auto Parts,
Sugar Run Flour Mill and the G and
J . Auto Parts.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
00

SAVE UP TO '300
LIVING ROOM SUITES

Government has shaky start
TEL AVIV, Israel - Ptime Minister Menachem Begin's shaky new
government went to work today after receiving parliamentary confinnation by only three votes. It already faced a scandal that could
brlnfl it down.
Labor and Immigration Minister Aharon Abu-Hatzeira was
scheduled to go on tnal today in a Tel Aviv district court, only one day
after Begin's govenunent won its slim parliamentary mandate.
Abu-Hatzeira, the 42-year.old religloua affairs minister in Begin's
previous govenunent, is accused of misappropriating money from a
charity fund during the mid-1970's when he waa mayor of Ramie, a
townsouthofTelAviv_'
.
,
.

•

T wO rlllnur arc1den b in the a rea
were in ves tigated Tuesday by the

Special group ·of 12 .

Gallia-Metgs Post of the state highway patrol.

.t~-•

The p&lt;~lrul sai d a vehi cle dn ve n by
Ernest 1.. Rtchmond, 31. Dexter.

.,

living room suites. ·

wa s eastbound on M e i g~ County Rd
lA at A 45 a.tn when he reported ly
madl' a ldt turn Ill fron t uf a vehicle

.

stripes, prints, solids

dri ven by Larry E. Cox. :14. Nort on.
Moderate da;n ag t· wa.s reported tu
both vehicles and there were no
citations issuPti .
An auto driven by Ba sil QuL•en. 46 .

Northu p. wa s slt ghtl y damaged

~KR-OEHLER.

when coal from a loa ded coal truck

fell on the wtndshid d of Queen 's

Leader8 defy junta control
LA PAZ, Boll:via - Rebel leaders in southeast Bolivia defied the
military junta controlling La Paz and 9!1id they were pn~partng for an
attack by ground and air forces. But nQ bloodlhec! had been feported
Yet in tlie three-day-old ittempt to chan,le'the leacjersblp of the Andean country's year-old military regime. .
, .
Garcia Meza resigned Tuesday, handing over the government to the
junta made up of the three anned forces conunander!l he appointed
earlier this year.

and plaids.

ve hiCle whlll' northbound on Rt. 218

atiO : 10 a.m.
The report said

Top grade nylon and herculon covers.

Queen wa'

following thr trur k while dri ving

uphill.

Monc·v

a&lt;"tiun~

Two suits for money were filed in

Meigs County Common Pleas Court
against Southeastern Fuel Inc., Rt.
I, Langsville.
Filing against Southeastern Fuel
Inc. , were Commonwealth Equipment Inc .. Callell&lt;lburg, Ky .. in the
amount of $1,960.44 and Stockdale
Mine Supply Inc., South Charleston .
Both sulls were for money due on
merchandise.
JoaM Denice Freeman and county of Los Angeles, CaW., filed for
support qnder the Reciprocal
Agree1114!11t Act. against Ronald Edward Freeman.

i

Winning Ohio lottery number

Early American aod Contemporary .styling. -

filc·d

The LTD. CHARTER
by R. Johns, Ltd.
says more about
you than you'd
ever say yourself.

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212 E. Main. Pomeroy

clEVELAND -1be wilmlnl number-drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's dally ' ~ "The Number" waa tTl. 1be lottery
· ~ eamlnp of $712,399 on the drawing. The eamlngname on
salel of . . . . ., ,.lille·bolders of winning tickets are entitled to Share ·
l·fl'll.-.~olriclaia ..ld. " . ,.
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CLE~LAND - Eight people, three of them from Ohio, have been

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picket lines.
The natibn's air traffic, meanwhile, cdnttnued to operate
S!lloothly, ~Ithough on a reduced
scale, J . Lynn Hehns, admtnlstrator ·
of the Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration, told reporters. He 'sald
about three-fourths of the regularly
scheduled fliRhts were operating,
but with some delays.
~·The emphasiS r\ght · now... is to
figure out how we man thiS system
and how we rebUild the system in the
next six, eight, nine, 10 months,"
Lewis told reporters.
Although he hoped additional controllers would return to work, he
said he considered the strike at an
erid, with anyone who not working by
today's 11 a.m. EDT ·deadline to be
fired with no opportunity for amnesty.
As the govenunent began firing
controllers Wednesday, federal
judges in Kansas and Virginia ordered the first arrests on charges of
disobeying court orders against the
strike. Sleven L. Wallaert of Norfolk, Va., was sentenced to60days in
jail, and four union officials in Kansas were jailed until they promise to
stop picketing or are fired by tbe
government.
Poli, accused the administration
of "the most blatant fonn of union
busting I have ever seen " and told
reporters the government tactic
(Continued o"llllge 12)

lOJJAY. .

20 oz. Del Monte

OFF

WASIUNGTON (AP) - The
government, Its purge of striking air
traffic controllers underway, says it
now wants to begin "rebuilding the
air traffic system." But the controllers believe time is on their side
and vow not to give in.
The Reagan ·administration and·
the controllers union differed sharply on how many strikers have
returned to work and what effect the
walkout is having on air traffic and
safety.
Determined to stick to Its hard
line, the govenunent Wednesday
began to fire those who had not
returned to work. The deadline for
dismissing the last of the 13,000
strikers was 11 a.m. EDT today as
controllers report to their day shifts
across the country.
Transportation Secretary Drew
Lewis said he expected to have a
clearer indication later today of how
many controllers remained on
strike. He said at least 471 strikel's
returned to work Wednesday. While
providing no actual figures he said
38 percent to 40 percent of the work
force was on the job, including both
union and non-union controllers.
Robert E. Poll, president of the
Professional Air Traffic Controllers
Orgaruzation, said the controllers
remained united in their determination to continue the strike and
said only about 3 percent of _those
who struck Monday had crossed

s oz . Armour

NESCAFE COFFEE •••••• !~~ .... $4.39

10%

•

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1 Sectien , 12 Pages 15 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newsp1per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Aug . 6,1981

Urges
course
change

471 strikers
back to work

10 oz. Instant

All 20" Bicycles

Voi .30,No.IO

~oeyrlphted

-

at

e

dml"--' Rl hard Stevens ".eili£:
A .....,..... c
•"

Maye s found guilty

Tax cut awaits signature
Thus, when fu lly effective. the btll
wi ll reduce the fa mily's tax bite to

Marriage license

~~L~ynniliW~es~t,~l9~,~P~ome~~roy~,i;iiillilijjiChane
..~y~,·j· iiii.iii

d.leport . $100 and costs . disorderly
manner .

Pomero)' was one of the entries in the a nnual ~::arden

happenbtgs· ~ •. ~

.
enttne

•

.

Weath~
.

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.

.

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WASHINGTON (AP) - Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat, urging
President Reagan to open a dialogue
with the Palestine Uberation
Organization, says a separate
Palestinian nation should be created
as part of the Middle East peace

process. '

PATCO PICKETS- A large group of air traffic
controllers walk lhe Uoe outside Miami's regional cootrol center Wednesday. PATCO members were joined
by their lamllleo in tbe third day of the walk-out. The

U.S. Attorney's office in Miami filed criminal chargeo
Wednesday in District Court against lhree strike
leaders for "willfully and unlawfully particiaptlag in a
strike against the United States." (AP Laserphoto)

Reagan was reported to have
li£lened to Sadat's ideas for bringing
about an Arab-Israeli peace without
agreeing with them.
Sadat said he told Reagan on Wednesday that he thinks the United
States should reverse past policies
and include the PLO in discusstons
aimed at a comprehensive Middle
East peace.
The Egyptian leader is understood
to have also told Reagan that there
should be a separate Palestinian
(Continued on page 12)

Strikers unite
despite firings
By The Associated Press
Officers of the striking
Professional Air Traffic Controllers
Organization in Oberlin, the largest
PATCO local in the state, expect any
minute to be subpoenaed into federal
court and charged with felony .
But they're not worried.
"When they (U.S. marshals)
come, we'll receive them on a friendly basis," said Tom Stephens,
secretary of PATCO Local 203 at the
Cleveland Air Route Traffic Control
Center in Oberlin. "I have never
seen the resolve of the local as
strong as it is right now."
Aboul4!0 air traffic controllers at
the Oberlin center, a regional
facility for the Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration, joined their colleagues
a~'I'OSS the''llatlon In· walking off the
job Monday morning in an effort to
obtain higher wages and shorter
work weeks . And though President
Reagan kept his vow to fire controllers refusing to return to work
Wednesday, only 10 were back on the
job in Oberlin by evening. Another
five retired.
The Oberlin center is operating
with about 30 percent of its nonnal
workforce, according to an FAA official. The facility monitors 69,000

square miles of air space from
Detroit to Pittsburgh, northward to
Canada and southward to Kentucky .
Strikers from among 12 air control
towers in Ohio, in addition to the
Oberlin center, demonstrated their
unity by rallying across the state
Wednesday in protest of the
presidenl's back-to-work mandate.
They were adamant in their decision
to stay on strike.
"We are resolved ," said Pat
Cleary, president of PATCO Local
223 at Port Columbu.s International
Airport. He was among more than
100 people at the Colwnbus rally who
helped set up a picket line at Port
Columbus, the state's second busiest
airport.
In Lorain, several hundred air
traffic controllers, family members
and friends jammed a union hall to
show their defiance of Reagan's order. An estimated 500 people
cheered when Edwin Zacovic,
president of PATCO Local 203, said
members would stay off their jobs_
Controllers at the Greater Cincinnati International Airport in northern Kentucky rallied at a motel in
Fort Mitchell, Ky. They were told
that 30 of the 38 controllers employed at the airport were off the
job.

Two issues on Ohio ballot
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APJ Ohioans will vote on two ballot
issues in the Nov . 3 election,
asswning Ballot Issue 2, the latest
filed with the secretary of state, is
certified fonnally.
The filing deadline for issues was 4
p.m. Wednesday. 90 days before the
election.
Issue I, which allows pl'ivate insurance companies to sell workers'
compensation insurance in competition with the state, officially was
certified earlier. Issue 2, dealing
with legislative and congressional
rediltricting, was filed last week
with 452,000 voters' names.
Secretary or State Anthony J.
Celebrezze Jr.'s office said there appears little doubt Issue 2 will be certified. Though 285,000 signatures are
required, they must be c.hecked to

ensure they come from registered.
qualified voters.
Another group had hoped to
qualify an initiated proposal that
would require the direct election by
the state's voters of members of the
Public Utilities Conunission of Ohio.
But Henry W. Eckhart, a Colufl\bus attorney and co-chairman of the
Committee for Direct Election of .
PUCO Commissioners, said
Tuesday that the group collected
about half the required signatures.
Eckhart, a Democratic chairman of
the PUCO from 1971-1973, vowed the
petition drive will continue in order
for the issue to go on next year's
ballot.
Each November issue is expected
to touch off major controversy, with
millions of dollars probably spent
for both support and opposition.

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SHERIFF I&gt;EPT. STRIKE - Carl Williams, Atheos County
Sheriff l&gt;cputy. shows his discontent wltb low wages at the sheriff
department. Deputies, dispatchers and jailers went on strike Wednesday alter negotiators failed to reach agreement on a new contract.
1AP Laserphoto I

Deputy strike
•

zn second day
ATHENS, Ohio I API - Pickets
marched outside the Athens County
sheriff's department today, as a
strike by 26 of the department's 29
employees moved into its second
day .
According to Maj. Robert
Daugherty . two supervisors .were
manning the office this morning. But
Daugherty said calls had been light,
and there were no problems.
1
Sheriff Robert Allen kept his
department operating at a reduced
level of service Wednesday after the
union employees went on strike in a
dispute over salaries and benefits.
Prisoners were transferred from
the county jail, and Allen said the
department would screen telephone
calls and respond only in cases of an
emergency.
The strike against the department
began about 12 :30 a .m. Wednesday
after members of Local 103 of the
American Federation of State, County and Municipai"Employees rejec.ted 2 final contract offer to increase
wages by 60 cents an hour over 17
months.
Allen said that the average pay under the old contract, which expired
aboutaweekaflo,waaf5.tlllanh0ur.
Union officials said all but one
worker voted to reject the final offer . Deputies, jailers, dispatchers
and other workers set up picket lines
outside the courthouse and sherifrs
office.
Allen stopped accepting prisoners
at the county jail Tuesday night, and
on Wednesday nine inmates were
transferred to the Washington County Jail in Marietta.

Three trusties remained at the Jail
here, and other prisoners who were
being held on minor offenses were
set free .
The strike had been delayed
Tuesday afternoon when negotiators
agreed to return to the table, but six
hours of talks failed to produce an
agreement acceptable to the union .
No new ne gotiations were
scheduled, and both sides said the
other would have to make concessions before they would reswne.
"The membership is not going to
vote again on the same offer," Fred
Haynes, regional chief of AFSCME .
Pete Lowe, a labor consultant
representing the county commissioners In the talks, said it will
lake " substantial movement by the
union's part" to bring the
bargainers ba ck tu the table_
Lowe said that the count)' offer
would have increased pay by !iO ceoIs an hour Jan. I and another 10 cenIs next August.
Haynes said the union proposed !iO
cents in January and 55 cents next
July. He said it also proposed a oneyear pact with al) 8().cent raise, and
1 tw~year package hiking pay by !iO
cenll in January and 60 cents one
)'l!8l' laterThe two-year plan also called for
the county to pick up the full cost of
family health insurance coverage by
the end of the contract period, and to
participate in the union's health and
welfare plan.
"Money and benefits, that's what
it's •11 about," said Deputy George
McClain, one of the picketers. ·
,_

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