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2 Sections, 14 Pages

VOl.)O,No.l4

Crewmen
die in
collision

Reagan gains strength

Controllers
end boycOtt
,.

Replace honl broke pods
True rotors
In spect ca lipers
RetiU hydraulic system
Repack inner and o u t er beouno s
Inspect Iron! or ease sea ts
Inspect master cylinder
tn sp~cl rear linings tor wear
(additional cost II repairs on rear
brakes ore need e d )

Sale
Price

$18

Sale
Pnce

Arrestor Plus · H.D. Muffler Installed

Front only Light trucks and Imports higher. Addt ttonal parts and serv1ces at extra co st

Double-wrapped. and Zinc -coated to guard
oga1nst rust -out. Stzes for many U.S c ars, light
trucks.
Singl•unil welded eyst•m• ucluded . Addit1on•l pt~rts , Mrvlces extr•

SHOP
HOURS

DAILY 9-6
TUES. &amp; SAT. 9-7
CLOSED SUNDAY

21.97

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Our Reg. 68.88

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Sale Price

$3

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No Trade-in Re~u~red
All T11es Plus F.E.. Ea .

49 88
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1 3' .,"piston . tnple-welded mounts and 'h " shaft
All -weather fluid . For many U.S cars . and light truc ks

78 Serie s
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Destgn

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Sale Price

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For Many U.S. Cars ...... ~1

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miles northeast of Boston .
Meta l expl oded . Th e

.

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on
Ttfe commuter ~io~ w~~
filled with homeward-bound sunbathers. There were
several deaths and 27 injured in the crash. I AP Laser·
photo)

pass enger

ca r,

its

cr ew

lead
com-

partment shredded, reared atop th e
locomotive.
It wasn't clear how last the trains

were going when they hit.
The freight train " was on the
tracks at the wrong time, " said
Gloria Stone , a spokeswoman for the
Boston x Maine Rai lroad . " The
reason why is under mvesti gat1on ."

Llll Higher utility bills coming

IN THEW

WASHINGTON - The United States has sent 21 military trainers to
Honduras to assi.st that country in bolstering security along its border
with El Salvador, the State Department said Tuesday .
Deputy spokesman Alan Romberg said the U.S. personnel are
training Honduran servicemen in such activities as helicopter main·
tenance, air operations and small unit tactics.
Some of the Americans come from the Anny' s elite Special F~rces,
otherwise known as the Green Berets.

Don't blame American workers
WASHINGTON - Don't blame the American worker for the past
decade's slowdown in national productivity growth, a Brookings Institution economist says. He puts much of the blame on changing
world economic conditions - including soaring oil prices - that ·
quick!&gt;· made expensive plants and equipment obsolete.
The nation's productivity growth - as measured in nonfarm
business - declined from an annual rate of 2.77 percent in the J!lli7-68
period to 1.89 percent in 1968-73 and finally to 0.64 percent in 1973-79,
economist Martin Baily reported in the newest edition of Brookings
Papers on Economic Activity .
Causes of the slowdown, which has worried several U.S. presidents
as well as numerous company executives, have remained "largely a
mystery".

Solidarity comes under attack

40 watt, 12-volt bboster

Crossin g section of Beverl y. about 17

.

21 trainers sent to Honduras

4·ply Polyester
Cord Blackwalls

locomotive at the rear, was moving

along an eight-1rule section of rail
that had been reduced to a single
track for more than a year because
of railroad construction , officials
sa1d.
The two Boston &amp; Maine Railroad
trains collided 200 yards from a
station m the wealthy Prides

CRASH SCENE - The front car of a commuter
train points skyward as it lies on top of the wreckage of
a freight train locomotive after the two collided head·

m••

Our 34 .88

BEVERLY, Mass. !API - A
freight train that was struck head-on
by a whistle-blowing, braking commuter train, killing four crewmen,
wasn 't supposed to be on the tra ck a t
the time, a railroad official says.
Many of the 27 people who were injured in the crash Tuesday afternoon had been headed hack to
Boston from a day at the beach.
Cranes separated the wreckage
early toda y so tbe mangl ed bodies of
victims could be removed .
The commuter train, with a
passenger car and crew compartment in the lead and a

men! agency that operates Canadian
WASJflNGTON (AP) The
airports, said air traffic controllen;
Reagan administration, bolstered
in Gander, Newfoundland, would
by the support of airlines and an
resume handling trans-Atlantic
agreement from Canadian air traf·
flights at6:30 a.m. EDT today.
fie controllers to end their boycott of
The end of the Canadian boycott
U.S. flights, appears to be
and of one in New Zealand leaves
strengthening its hand in a strike by
only Spanish controUen; refusing to
12,000U.S. controllers.
handle flights to the United States in
Officials sought to restore air traffic between Europe and the United ' support of the American strikers.
But action by controllen; in other
States to near-normal levels today
foreign
countries sympathetic to
after Canadian controllers agreed to
their American counterparts could
end a two-day boycott that had cut
still create havoc for international
trans-Atlantic flights to a trickle.
travelen;.
Airline executives, after meeting
Australian controllers, saying
Tuesday with Transportation
U.S.
skies are not safe because of the
Secretary Drew Lewis, said they
strike, were seeking a court instaunchly support
President
junction to stop flights between
Reagan's handling of the crisis and
Australia and the United States.
his decision to fire the striking con11lat same safety argument was
trollers.
used by the Canadian controllers in
But the executives said the strike ,
their boycott.
now in its loth day, will have far·
Portuguese controllers have voted
reaching effects on their industry,
a boycott beginning Saturday and
forcing layoffs, pay cuts and scrajr
the· international federation of conping of marginal routes. Some com·
trollers' unions meets Thursday in
panies may have to be restructured,
Amsterdam to discuss joint in·
they said.
ternational•action.
Transport Canada, the govern-

Disc Brake Special For Many U.S. Cars

15 Cent S

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Copyrighted 1911

WARSAW, Poland- The Conununist Party Central Conunittee ended an emergency meeting today with a sharp attack on the Solidarity
labor federation and a demand for an end to the spreading wave of
strikes and demonstrations protestingfood shortages and proposed in·
creases in food prices.
· The 200-member committee, meeting for the first time since its election at the party congress in July, blamed "irresponsible Solidarity
advisers and activists" for the nationwide wave of protests.
It called tor "firm" government action to stop the strikes, street
demonstrations and "political marches which are a great danger to
social peace."

Puerto Rico gets first Haitians
\
JUANA DIAZ, Puerto Rico - Ten months and more than $10 million
after plans were first made to divert some of the refugee flood to Puer·
to Rico, a former Navy base called Fort Allen receives its first
Haitians today.
· A planeload of 125 men was to be flown to the airport at Ponce, on
Puerto Rico's south coast, from the overcrowded Florida reception
center known as Krome North . Thgn the men were to be bused to Fort
Allen.
.
A chain-link fence topped by barbed wire divides the camp into three
sections - for single men, single women and married couples - and
another fence topped by barbed wire and razor wire encloses the entire camp.

Winning Ohio .lottery number

.

.

COLUMBUS, Oh1o 1AP 1 - With
winter heating season approaching.
many Ohio consumers are about to
be hit with higher utility bills.
Consumers ' Counsel William A.
Spratley said Tuesday that fairly
stable utility costs over the past s1x
months are eKpected to be scuttled
by higher costs of some natural gas
flowing int&lt;&gt; .Qhio and pending rate
hike requests.
A chief culprit is a boost in prices
which Columbia Gas Transmission
Corp. charges for natural gas sujr
plied to Colwnbia Ga~ of Ohio, Cincin nati Gas and Electi'ic and Dayton
Power and Light companies .
Spratley said the pipeline supplier
is raising the prices it charges
utilities - who re-sell the fuel to
customers - by at least 23 percent.
Utilities recover the added expense by tacking equal amounts onto
their customers' bills, although the

New residents
should obtain
house numbers
Roger A. Michael, Meigs County
House Numbering Project, announces thst anyone living in a rural
area who is planning to, or has just
construted a new house, purchased a
mobile home, or moved into a home
formerly owned or rented should
contact him to receive a five digit
house number .
These nwnbers are to be used as a
mailing address and are required by
the phone company·, electric company, and even some insurance
agencies before services can be obtained.
Michael also urges residents to
place their name, five digit nwnber,
and road name on their mailbox as
this will aid operators of emergency
vehicles, utility company officials,
etc. In locating their residences.
Those living in any of the five in·
corporated villages !Syracuse,
Racine, Rutland, Midd.l eport,
Pomeroy) are eKcluded and should
contact their respective post office
to receive a new address as the
(Continued on page 10)

pass-through provision doesn't add
to the Ohio firm's profits, Spratley
sat d.
Colwnbia Gas of Ohio. w1th 975.000
customers in all or part of 56 of
Ohio's 88 counties, said the higher
supply cost will hike the monthly
bills of average customers in its
Columbus service area by $10.90
each.
Colwnbia spokeswoman Carol McBurney said customers on the finn 's
budget payment plan will note the
increase in their August bills. Others
will observe the hike on their September statements.
The effect of increased costs
sought by Colum bia Transm isSIOn
wasn't calculated by Cincinnati Gas
and Electric or Dayton Power and
Light, Spra tley said.
Spratley asked the federal
Energy Regulatory Couunis::;ion to

hold a publi c heanng on the Iran·
s mission corporation pric~ hike. The
chances of convincing the commission to lim it the increase , tra ced
to national deregula tion of natural

gas priC€s. are slim, he said.
In addition to the Columbia transmission hike, consumers may be affecl&lt;l!l. J/Y. . ~Jp~ rate hiJ!es from
elecfrfc, natural gas and telephOne
companies pendmg before the
Public Utilities Corrunission of Ohio.
Spratley sa id state utilit y
regulators have approved $548.7
million in rate increases this year, 86

percent of what the firms sought.
The Ohio Power Co. is seeking a
$177 million mcrease. Ohw Bell has
asked for a $124.3 million hike, and
Cleveland Electric lllwninating is
requestmg $111.3 millwn .
A study of utility rates in Ohio's
eight major metropolitan areas .

meanwhile , shuws Toledo and
Cleveland reSid ents pay the highest
combined costs for electric , phone

and natu ral gas se rvice. Spratl ey
said. Utility costs as of .July I were
compared to those of Janua ry .
Cleveland conswners pay $75 to
$163 for monthly gas. electnc and
telephone servi ct' depending on how

much they use. Toledo customers
have rates of$75 to$16Z ior the same
service.
Canton res idents pay the lowest
rr~te.s.

Customers who consume
below-average amounts pe~y $63

monthly; those w1th h1gh use pay
$125 .
Other rates IJy Cit y, dCJ"'Ilding 00
usage . are : Columbus, $68.36 to
$147.34 : Dayton. $70.99 to $139.94 ;
Akr o n,
$70 05 to $13!i .05 ;
Youngstown, $69.7 0 to $1:14.70: Cincmnati. $68.511 to $1:!7.7!!.

Report no major problems
•
at Gallia-Meigs azr facility
By KEVIN KELLY
So how 1s the national arr controllers strike affecting this area '
Not at all , according to Larry
Beaver, manager of the GalliaMeigs Regional Airport. who said
private fliers can "go at any time ."
Although the strike - considered
settled by the federal government 1f
not by rank-and-fi:e strikers who
were fired from their JObs last week
- affects airlines primarily, some
concern was raised on the impact it
would have on small county airports
like the Upper River Road facility .
"General aviation is right on
schedule," Beaver said , since his
airport only handles private craft
and corporate planes.
But if private fliers were headed
for any of the larger airports , they
would have to file their clearance to
land there early, because schedules

are lighter due to the filling of slot'
when controllers walked off the JOb
Aug . 3.

flut the stnke is having " Very Ill·
tic" effect around here. and as
Beaver put it, everythin g is
·· business a s us ual .· ·
No problems were re ported last

week a t Jackson County's James A.
Rhodes Airport. Manager Jack
Stone told the Jackson Journal·
Herald all instrument night reference I IFR 1 flights to his facility ·were
prohibited for planes weighing more
than 12,500 pounds. Those planes
were advised to fly on visual flight
reference !VF'R J.
The strik e has not hurt the travel
business either, and Karen Rathburn. manager of the Gallipolis
Automobile Association of America
Club of Southeastern Ohio ( AAA) oflice said her phones have been
" ringing off the hook."

The office is the only travel
bookin g agency in the immed iate
area .
" I thmk peopl e a rc a little more

skeptical about Oi ghl safety ," s he
se~id,

but business ha s {'ontinued to

be bri sk
She said she and her staff " an·
ticipated much worse" before the
strike as far as cancelled nights
were concerned. but felt people
knew ahead of tune what to expect
and understood .
" There were a few trate people,
but that's to be expected, " Rathburn
noted. "We 've been fortunate in that
there have been very few people mconvenienced , and we 've still bee n

able to get them on other flights .
" It's kept us busy ," s he said .
In the week since the strike beglin ,

traffic at Columbus, Charleston and
Huntington airports have reportedl y
returned toaboui80 percent nonnal.

ClEVELAND - The winning number drawn Tuesday night in the
'Ohio Lottery's daily game "The Nwnber" w8ll233.
The lottery reported earnings of $542,534 on ita daily game. The earnings came J)n sales of $901,700, while holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $359,166, lottery officials said.

Weather
~Y

todaY and agalrj Thursday. Clear tonight. Highs today and

'111ursday In~ mid 80s and lo\lrtorilght lmrtomid60s. Chance of rain,
.-r zero today, tonight and Thunday. .
.

·

OldeEslelldeliP:oneut

.

,

.

, ''E,I hHneut fw Frldll' tkGiqb llaadly- Fllr Frkl8y. A
ellllieefll ak:wi!ll 111111 liN dentormslla&amp;lmla)' udll!millly.lflcbllll
die ... trtdly UdllalllriiiY ud die ...._., 'Ill te ' - ... ....,,.
, . . .. tile ..... iDW . . Frtdll)' ud llalliiiiiY ud tile apper ... tO

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1•

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·

•

."r

FINISHING - Workmen are pattlq tbe llalsbilll IOIIeb. oa Ml~
dlepor&amp;'• - • boulillg de~elomeat,_a 31 oae-bedroom apartment
~

faeUlty, oa Powell Sl Work on the modular IIJiits, built by Cardinal In·
· dustrlel, Is expected to be completed by this weekeod.

.

'

�Wednesday. August 12,1981

Commentar
Strike's

roots~----------------~R~o:::,:he:::.:rt:..=;J.~.W.~agma~
· _n

WASHJNG TON - The real issues
behind the strike of the nation's air
traffic controllers have become lost
in the emotional discusion of court
orders, multi-milliorHiollar demands and inconveniences to the
traveling public. The Reagan administration says that the walkout
was motivated by money; the controllers, on the other hand, insist
that their chief concern was air

safety.
The controllers say that no work with the possible exception of bomb
disposal - is as stressful as theirs .
They note that a controller holds
thousands of lives in his hands
during virtually every moment on
the job.
The controllers want the Federal
Aviation Administration to establish

Spirit of Cal
For guidance in dealing with striking air traffic controllers. President
Reagan had to look no further than the portrait of Calvin Coolidge hanging
on the C.bmet Room wall.
It was Coolidge, as governor of Massachusetts, who broke the Boston
police strike in 1919, and it was Cooli dge's message to Samuel Gompers, the
first president of the Amen can Federation of Labor, that Reagan thought of
using as he delivered an ultimatwn to the striking workers :
"There 1s no nght to strike against the public safety by anybody,
anywhere, anytime."
In the end , Reagan did not repeat Cooli dge's words as he stood as the Rose
Ga rden last week and told the controllers, through the news media, that they
had 48 hours to return to work . But the idea was the same .
If Reagan's tough words we r e not enough, a senior White House official
made sure that his mood was portrayed. The president's aides wanted no
doubt in the public rrund that Reagan was taking a f1rm stand on the issue .
Late in the afternoon, a sma ll group of re(l(lrters, including representatives of the news agencies a nd television networks, was swnmoned to a
briefing at which Reagan was descnbed as bemg " tough as nails" on this
issue.
Taking an adamant stand aga inst unions may not always be a wise
pohlical decisiOn - the 15,000-member Professional Air Tra ffic Contr~llers
Organization endorsed Heaga n for preSident last Octobe r. But Reagan sac·
tion last week was not much of a gamble.

Economic luck
When it comes to the state of the economy. President Reagan has been
pretty lucky.
lnflalion IS cm mng down. oil supplies are plentiful, food prices have
sta bilized , the economy has not collapsed under the we1ght of record tnlerest
rates . the dollar is aiimghtly overseas once again. and - at least for now even unemployment is on the wane.
The new president ca nnot c laim much credi t for these trends. which began
before he moved mto the Wh1te House las t January . But he certainly can
take polillcal advantage of them.
When his presidency began. Reagan said the economy was in a mess.
Seven monttu&gt; later, he has noted the improvement'i
The economic fortune already has helped Reagan sell hiS controversial
budget and tax cuts to Congress . The recedmg inflation rate made it easier
· for members of Cong ress to vote for a tax cut that opponents labeled as inflationary Stmilarly, 1t was eas ier to vote fo r cuts in food stamps and unemployment benefits wht:n the jobless 1·a te was declining, rather than rlsing as
widely predicted.
The lack of an economic crisjs also has spared Reagan a major distraction
at a time when he was concentrating on winning enactment of his economic
proposa ls
The most e ncouraging economic development s ince Reagan took office
ha s been a steady decline in the mflation rate to less than 10 percent for the
first time in more than two years. Econorrusts attnbute the drop, which
began last year, almost exc lusively to the stablization of energy and food
price s.
The current oil glut is mainly due to a combination of energy conservation
by the maJOr consuming nat1ons and the decision by Saudi Arabia , the
world' s largest oil exporter. to keep production up so that prices would not
fi SC .

Reagan's economic adv1sers, who estimate it will take at least a year for
the president's bud~et and tax cuts to produce positive results, acknowledge
their man has benefited from some good luck thus far .
" The good Lord has smiled on the American people since Ronald Reagan
took offi ce," the president's chief economic adviser, Murray L. Weidenbawn, told a Senate rommittee seekmg explanations for why inflation has
· been mode ra tlng.
Bot Reagan's adviSers say the president has enhanced his breaks by
making right decis ions earl y on and spurring the public to adopt an optimJstic economi c outlook .
F or example, the administration contends Reagan's dectsion in January
to hasten the removal of federa l price controls from domestic crude oil has
helped sustain the oil surplus

The Daily Sentinel
I ll CGurt Strl"l"t
Pnmrrn)·. Ohlu
614·992-ZISi

UE\'C)TF.D T() TifF. INTEREST OF THF. MF.IGS-MASON AREA

Publishl·r

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
hbllthf'r/C'nllt rnllf•r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nnn F:dilflr

A MEMBER of 11M' Assodakd Prm. Inland Daily PrMis Asu)('l.ation and lht'
Amf'rtcan Nf'W8paJM'r PubU~ht"rs Associallutl.
LETTERS OF OPINION art" wtolrumtd. Tht')' should 1M' less tbanlOO ~·ords loot:. All
k't~n are subjtc-1 lo ~ling and must bt' s i~tntd wlt.b namr. addrrss and ttl,..phont our.
bfor . Nn unstgntd ltlll'n will br publishl'il. l...t'tlE'r!i 'hould bfo In fliood tasll!. addrtssln!i:
ls~ut"s , not pt"rsonalllif's.

·Today in history. · ·
Today is Wednesday, Aug . 12, the 224th day of 1981. There are 141 days
left in the year.
Today' s highlight in history:
On Aug. 12, !898, the peace protocol ending the Spanish-American War
was signed.
On this dale :
In J8lil. Isaac Singer of Pittstown, N.Y., wM granred a patent on his
sewing machine.
In J8!l8, the Hawaiian Islands in the Pacific were transferred to the
United States.
In 1914; Britain declared war on Austria-Hungary at the start of World
· War!.
And in )972, _the last American ground combat unit in South Vietnam
was de-activared .

t,

•

new work rules recognizing the extraordinary mental and physical
demands of their occupation. For instance, they have asked that their
work week be decreased from 40
hours to 32 hours. Controllers in
many other Western countries work
substantially fewer hours ; some put
in only 20 or 24 hours a week.
Then there is the question of staffing. Controllers say that they have
to spend too many hours of each shift
in front of their radar screens before
being relieved. They want more controllers on each shift so that each
will have to spend less time in front
of a screen.
Controllers, like other federal
workers, receive 13 days of sick
leave a year. A bureaucrat suffering
from a cold can stumble into Lhe offlee and spend the day blowing his
nose and taking decongesants. But
controller must stay off the job thus using up sick day - if he is
taking any kind of medicine. that is
why the controllers are asking or 26
sick days a year.
A federal employee must work for
20 years to qualify for a fulfpension.
The controllers contend that stress
forces many of their number to
retire before putting in that amount
of time.
This appears to be true. Figures
reluctantly released by the FF A
show that more than 80 percent of
the controllers who retired between
1975 and the end of 1979 had been on
the job for fewer than 20 years and,
therefore , did not qualify for full
pens1ons. The controllers want the
pension system revised so that those
who retire early for medical reasons
can receive full benefil5.
The cash value of the controllers'
demands has been estimated at $630
million annually by the FAA and a t
$490 million annually by the
Professional Air Traffic Controllers
Organization . The administration
has offered $40 million that can be

used by the controllers in any way
that they want - increased staffer,
more sick days, more lenient pension rules or whatever.
This strike did not catch the
Reagan administration unaware. In
fact, its Transportation Department
transition team reported bluntly
that the FAA was the department's
biggest problem and that the controllers were the FFA's biggest
problem.
The Carter administration
foresaw the strike threat and included additional funds in its budget
tor the controllers and for other airsafety matters. These funds were
eliminated by the Reagan administration.
It is widely believed that hi~h-

( TTA i) ol ~~

o:o~

level advisers to Ronald Reagan
decided even before hi s
inauguration to adopt a hard line
toward the controllers as a warning
to other federal employees' unions
whose contracts would soon expire.
In addition, publiC:Opinion polls by
the Transportation Department
found that the public would Jlpplaud
a get-tough policy .
.
A source within · the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Service
who is familiar with the bargaining
likens the unyielding attitude of the
Reagan administration to that of the
club owners during the recently ended baseball strike . "( Transportation Secretary Drew ) Lewis
put his offer on the table and
wouldn't move except to say that

PATCO could say where it wanred
the dollars applied," he recalled. "I
had to look twice to see whether it
was Lewis talking or Ray Grebey
(the negotiator for the owners)."
So is the controllers' job as
stre~sful and as ultimately
debilitating as they say it is? Or are
they, as the govenunent contends,
simply using the stress ISSUe as a
smokescreen to win an unconscionably large settlement?
Both sides are able to supply
detailed medical studies to justify
their possitions. At some point, after
the discussions of court orders and
no-strike clauses, the stress question
will have to be addressed directly if
there is to be peace in the control
towers .

woi'T&gt;&lt; 5rAI&lt;-11CLf 62'•~

1-\ ULME
N.E,I\,

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Scott
Brown, a &amp;-foot~ Cajun from
DeQuincy, La., surveyed the large
crowd of 45,817 at Dodger Stadium
Tuesday night.
. The Cincinnati rigHt-hander, in his
first major league appearance,
remarked, III've never even seen
45,1100 people.It was pure terror."
His terror did not hamper his pitching, however, as the 24-year-old
rookie stymied Looi Angeles as the
Reds edged the Dodgers 7~.
Dan Driessen slammed a threerWJ homer in the seventh inning to
lift the Reds to the comeback victory.
Brown, summoned from Indianapolis of the International
League only hours after the baseball
strike was settled, pitched 2 J-3 innings and gave up only two hits and
no runs to pick up the victory,
" He was outstanding," said Cincinnati Manager John McNamara.
" We wanred only one inning out of
him but he was so sharp we stayed
with him. The Dodgers aren't the
easiest lineup to face in your major
league debut."
The big crowd, which matched the
Dodgers' season average, was a

By Alsoclated Pl'ess

"Put those corporate deals on hold. I've landed the ultimate account.
The White House wants to take over Congress."

Vivid language ________'Do_nG_,.,___
aff
If there is one thing you can count
on from Washington's periodic attempts to address the immigration
problem, it is vivid language .
A select corrunisswn report on the
subject earlier this year, a Carter
administration legacy to its successor, warned that failure to them
the flow of illegal aliens into the
United States was creating "an underclass of workers ... at the mercy
of unscrupulous employers and
coyotes who smuggle them across
the border ... Not only do they suffer,
but so does U.S. society."
Now the Reagan team follows up
with its own analysil! and the alarming word that "wehave lost control of our borders" because of
unrealistic policies and failure to enforce laws effectively.
There can be no serious argument
with either statement - or with the
magnitude of the problem addressed . Consider the basic
statistics . Legal immigration, including refugees, is currently running at an annual rate of some
800,000. Illegal border-crossers may
number almost as many - nobody
knows for sure because nobody is
able to count them
Nor for the same reason is it
known how many Illegal aliens are
now resident in the United States.
Estunates run from less than 4
million to as high as 12 million. The
influx is completely out of the control of a woefully inadequate lmrrugration and Naturalization Ser-

Driessen paces Reds
past Dodgers, 7-6
result of Fernando Valenzuela's bid
for a loth victory. But Valenzuela
gave up two runs in the first inning
and a home run to Dave Concepcion
in the third.
The rookie, who started for the
National League in last Sunday
night's All-star Game, eventually
was knocked out in the fifth Inning.
"I threw some good pitches but
they hit them,'' said the 20-year-old
lelt-hander. "I had problems with
my control (he walked four) because
I didn't throw much during the
strike. When I pitch regularly again,
I'm sure it will come back."
The Dodgers had broken a 3-3 tie
with three runs in the fifth on a walk,
a single by Steve Garvey, doubles l)y
Ron Cey and Pedro Guerrero and a
wild pitch.
Reliever Terry Forster, winless
lor two years and ().J this season, appeared in command, pitching oqt of
a jam in the fifth when he took over
for Valenzuela, getting the side in order in the sixth and retiring the first
two Reds in the seventh.
But then he gave up successive
singles to Ken Griffey, Concepcion
(his 1,500\h big league hit) and
George Foster. Driessen followed

with his homer down The right field
line.
"I've never seen lightning strike
so last," said Looi Angeles Manager
Tom Lasorda.
Driessen said, "I hit a mean
slider. I was just looking to make
contact and when I hit it, I was
hoping it would not go foul ."
The Reds managed only three
singles the previous evening in a M
loss to the Dodgers and took extra
batting practice before Tuesday
night's game.
"We were just feeling for the baD
Monday night," said Driessen, who
has six homers on the year. "In ~
couple more games, we'll be at mit
season fonn ."
After the Reds took a 2-0 lead in
the top of the first, Dusty Baker tied
the score with a two-run homer in
the bottom of the Inning, his fifth.
Concepcion homered off Valenzuela
to lead off the third, his fifth, and
doubles by Guerrero and Bill Russell
tied the game in the fourth.
In the concluding game of the
three-game series tonight, Tom
Seaver, 7-1, will start for the Reds
against Bob Welch, 4-3.

,,

' 1)4

,

,)~j

vice, understaffed, underfunded and
operating under outdate and often
arbitrary laws.
The Carter comrrussion was
precise in defining the problem, but
considerably less so in suggesting
solutiOns other than the expenditure
of unspecified additional funds to
strengthen border control.
The Reagan administration, to
give it credit at least for the effort,
has come up with some specifics.
But that's about all that ca n be said
for the results. Briefly, it would
legalize lllegals now in the country ,
admit an annual quota of " guest
workers, " increase the immigration
control budget by $40 million and the
fine American employ~rs caught
hiring illegal aliens.
The objections are, again briefly,
that an amnesty for millions of
illegals, while recognizmg a fact,
would in effect be giving up on the
past and setting a precedent for the
futgure. The guest quota - 100,000
Mexicans in two years - is woefully
inadequate in light of the numbers
mvolved in Illegal immigration. The
additional funds proposed are only
about half of what the budget-cutters
earlier took away from the immigration service. The threat of
hiring fines - up to $1,000 - could
act as an encouragement to ethnic
discrimination in employment yet
not deter unscrupulous employers
for whom the profits from exploiting
cheap illegal labor would be well
worth the cost of occasional fines .

The basic objection to the current
plan, as to il5 recent predecessors, is
not, however, in the specifics but in
the focus. The problemcannot be
dealt with on the borders. They cannot be effectively controlled short of
manning them with millions of immigrali~¥&gt; agents standing shoulder
to shoulder. And that would still
leave the seacoasts.
Internal control is, however,
another matter. While aliens cannot
be kept out of the country, they could
be. monitored more effectively once
inside. But that implies a system of
fool-proof identification for all legal
residents, citizens and aliens alike.
And that in turn raises fears in some
quarters of internal passports and
increased government control over
individuals. There is also the cost.
The administration, which rejected
the idea, puts it at $2 billion.
And beyond that, there is the fundamental contradiction between
illegal immigration as a legal
problem and an economic fact . The
law says the illegals are not wanted
because they take jobs from
citizens, burden social services and
undermine respect for he law itself
- " illegality breeds illegality," in
the vivid langauge of the Carter
conunission.
The economy, however, continues
to invite them in to fill jobs that are
either rejected by resident workers
or might not excist if they had to be
filled at the higher wages required
by residenl•.

Among the economic miracles or force participation has held steady ,
accidents of the first few months of the percentage of the population emthe Reagan administration is a ployed has increased and the unemdecline in the nation's jobless rate . ployment rate has declined."
Having read and digested that
But, some say, the President's luck
material, however, economists are
may be running out.
First, some news about the im- now looking for the worst. The rate
shouldn't be that low, they are
provement.
One year ago, the rate stood at 7.6 saying . They are looking for flukes .
percent, with ~lose to B million They are forecasting higher rates to
people unemployed. In the latest come.
The flukist.. look for a major
completed survey, for July, the rate
dropped to 7 percent, with about 7.~ revision in the figures . They are
million workers idle.
always looking, and frequently they
To be sure, a year ago the find what they are looking for.
economy was in a recession. But to Revisions are not unconunon, a conbe fair, it should be noted that some sequence in part of the speed with
non-job measures suggest that the which the figures are initially comeconomy has not improved much piled and released. July's rate was
since then and that it may soon released Aug. 9.
return to recession.
There is also the matter of
But the job situation has seasonal adjusting, the purpose of
brightened decidedly . In a which is to remove from the figures
statement accorrunpanying the July any strengths or weaknesses
figures, Janet L. Norwood, com- resulting solely from seasonal inmissioner of the Bureau of Labor fluences. Miscalculations do occur
Statistics, provided this swrunary:
in such adjustments.
"Since the recession low of July a
Another group tends to accept the
year ago, employment has risen in . figures as accurate but claims the
all major industries except for con- rate is ~ow too low to be maintained.
struction and government. Labor

Typical of their statements is that
the economy isn 't strong enough to ·
support so low a rate. !Note : Low is
relative. In July 1979, the jobless rate was only 5.6 percent).
E~onomists at one of the nation's
largest banks, for e~ample, maintain that '' there doesn't appear to be
any fundamental strength in
demand from which rehiring could
start." They argue that "employment growth is g.;eater than the
economy's current strength warran-

Until illegal immigration is addressed realistically in these terns
there is little hope of effective
response. Until plans for dealing
with it recognize and attempt to
reconcile the contradictions, they
will remain only so much talk.

When you're 42 years old and
closing in on baseball history, two
months must seem like an eternity.
Unlike Pete Rose, who got the one
mt he needed to break the all-time
National League hit record on the
first day after the 50-day players'
strike, Gaylord Perry still needs five
more victories to reach the
milestone he dearly wants - 300
career pitching victories.
"I think I have a pretty good shot
at 300 wins," the Atlanta Braves
right-hander said after collecting his
295th triumph Tuesday night. "If I
pitch the way I pitched tonight, I'm
going to be tough to beat."
Actually, his :.-1 decision over the
San Diego Padres must have been
one of the easiest victories of his
career.

nl\i

;.,~

.
GAME-WINNER- A dlscoosolate Mike Scloscla
stands by as Clncbmatl Reds' Dan Driessen crosses
home plate after •lugging a three-run, game-wlnulng
homer In the seventh Inning Tuesday against the

PHILADELPHIA (API - Pete
Rose said he had no afterthoughts
the day after.
" I'm just happy all those people
didn't get disappointed," said Rose
Tuesday night before the
Philadelphia Phillies met the St.
Louis Cardinals, and a day after he
became the National League's alltime hit leader before 60,561 fans .
Rose erased Stan Musial's
National League career hit mark

I

Musial's record, had 60,000 Monday
night and a more nearly normal
24,649 Tuesday night.
The Braves got a run in the first on
Bob Horner's RBI single and took a
~ lead in the next inning on a tworun triple by rookie left-fielder
Rufino Linares.
Perry, 6-4, coasted through the first first four innings before being
touched for a run in the fifth on pinch-hitter Broderick Perkins' runscoring single.
Perry, who won Cy Young awards
in 1978 with the Padres and in !972
with Cleveland, said he stayed in
shape during the strike by working
hard on his peanut farm in South
Carolina, "playing some catch and
just having fun."
Perry said he figures to get 10
more starts before this season ends .

Monday night with an eighth-inning
single off Cards' reliever Mark Littell, giving Rose a career total of
3,631 hits. On Tuesday night, he added another single to the growing
total.
Next in line tor Rose on the alltime hit parade is Hank Aaron, who
has 3,771 . Then, if the 41l-year-old
Rose can play long enough he'll try
to pass Ty Cobb's all-time major
league record of 4,191.
What was the day after like?
"I was up at 6:30 (A.M. I and in a
television studio for an appearance
on ·Good Morning America,' said
Rose who didn't get to bed until after
2A .M.
Rose said he remained in the

/JiiENIER .,

studio to do a tape for a local show
with Janet Davies, who comes from
the Phillies ' first baseman's home
town of Cincinnati.
"I was ba ck in bed by 9:30 and
sleptuntilitwastimetocometothe
ball park," Rose said.
He insisted that there was no
pressure on him to get the recordbreaking .hit Monday
mght. He went
th
hit!ess m
ree at-bats before
delivering the shot that created

OHIO VALlEY
PLUMBING
And
HEATING
WIU BE
CLOSED
We d ., Th urs . &amp; F n · .
Aug. 12 . 13 . 14
For Vacation

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Dodgers. Driessen's bias I, which lefllhe final score 7-6
Reds, scored teammates Davey Concepcion, rtght and
George Fosler, third from right. Also awalling
Drtessen's return is on-deck batter Ray Knight. ( AP
Laserphoto I

Rose had no after thoughts

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ts."
Some even claim that the economy
has never really emerged from the
recessioio of 1980, except in the eyes
of academic ·analysts. They add that
hiring in anticipation of the
president's economic program
paSsing was done more in· enthusiasm lhan in recognition of
economic realities. ·
And so there is a widespread
feeling among the professionals that
those July jobless figures aren't
going to be repeated in the
remaining months of the year. The
job market is headed lower, they
·say.

He had to go only the required five
innings, allowing five hits and one
run before leaving the game with a
4-Jlea.
In other NL games, the New York
Mets beat the Chicago Cubs 4-2, Pittsburgh rallied to beat Montreal 6-3,
Philadelphia outlasted St. Louis 6-:i
in 10 innings, Cincinnati tripped Los
Angeles 7~ and San Francisco trimmed Houston 3-2.
Crowds throughout the league
were near average, although
Philadelphia and San Diego had
much smaller turnouts than they
had Monday for the reopening of the
major leaggue baseball season.
The Padres drew only 5,300 after
Monday night's game in which all
seats were free and a record 52,603
showed up. Philadelphia, attracted
by Rose's attempt to break Stan

'

&lt;

Perry wins 295th contest

Whither the job market ?

ROBERT L. WINGETI

A~~I~Lanl

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, August 12,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�Wednesday, August 12,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Hot Cooper leads Brewers
to sweep over Cleveland

For the
record. • •
.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

By Associated Press
Cecil Cooper is ready, which
means bombs away for the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Cooper was a one-man hitting
machine for the Brewers Tuesday
night, going 7-for-9 with three
doubles, two horrl(rs and two
singles, boosting his batting average
19 points and leading Milwaukee to a
doubleheader sweep of Cleveland, 65 and 6-1. Milwaukee has won all
three of its games since the season
resumed after a 59-day interruption
that included a :;(klay players'
strike, while Cleveland is I}.J, extending its losing streak to seven
games.
"Once you get one or two hits, you
feel confident," said Cooper, who hit
.350 last year and was at .270 when
the strike began. " I've been feeling
really good at the plate these three
games and even before , when we
were practicing. I worked out during
the strike about three times a week
with !Brewers pitchers) Jerry
Augustine and Pete Vuckovich and
Ri cky Keeton. We did that for about

fi vc weeks or so."
Cooper hardly was happy with his
pre-strike production, but after
blasti ng a pair of solo homers in the
nightcap - in wh1ch he was f&gt;-for-5 he was thmking positively .
" I was rea lly s winging the bat
terrible then," he reca lled . "The fir·
st couple of days back I felt bad, but
then 1l was just there. I swung the
bat good in exhibition games. I hope
tt keeps up ."
So does Brewers Ma nage r Buck

r

Rodgers.
"You see guys that have good first
halves or good second halves but at
the end they're always within about
15 points of where they belong,"
Rodgers said. " The cream is going
to rise to the top . A lot of people
forget that he hit .350 last year."
In the first game, Robin Yount and
Roy Howell hit solo homers to pace a
14-hit Milwaukee attack .
In other games, Toronto snapped a
12-game losing string with a 6-4 verdict over Detroit ; the Chicago White
Sox topped Boston 4-2; Oakland
edged Minnesota 6-5; Texas took the
New York Yankees HJ; Seattle beat
California 4-1, and the Kansas City
Royals' game at Baltimore was
rained out.
Blue Jays 6, Tigers 4
Toronto struck for six runs and six
hits in the first inning , with a ll the
tallies coming on three-run homers
by otto Velez a nd Buck Martinez,
who is batting .195.
The Tigers got a three-run homer
from Lance Parrish in the first.
White Sox t , Red Sox Z
Greg Luzinski had two d oubles
and a triple as the White Sox contmued to pound Boston pitching. Bill
Aimon also had three hits, including

a solo home run.
Ross Baumgarten, Steve Trout
and Ed Farmer held Boston to five
hits .
A's 6, Twins 5
A's reliever Jeff Jones preserved
the A's victory with 22-3 innings of
scoreless relief.
Oakland, led by speedsters Rickey

Today's

Sports World
By WW GrlmJiey
AP Correspondent

Big Dave Winfield doesn't care
about bein~ the r ic hest baseball
player in the world - he just wants
tube the best The best poss ible, that
1s. with the skills a t hand .
" I'm not one to think about the fir·
st and 15th 1paydays , I" says the
New York Yankees' $24 rnillion out·
fielder . "That's not why I go out
there . I go out there always to d o my
best.
"Take the All-Star Game in
Clevela nd Sunday. ! didn't look at it
as ent ertaimnent. I wa nted to win. I
was very unhappy when we didn 't. ·'
Highest paid perionner in the
maJors, the 6-foot~ . 221}-pound
athletic m arvel is an emgma to the
skeptics who watch a nd report the
game . Why is he a lways so cha rged
up' Why does he continually knock
himself nut as would some ra w
rookie struggling to make tile

squad'?
Why i s he so n1ce to k rds and fans ?
Why " he always so readtly
e~va il ab l e
and ame nable to
newsmen " Where are the prima donna qu ali ties, arrogance a nd don'tboth e r- m e bru s hoff s often
associated With highly paid super
stars?
Wmf1cld IS a lmost too ~ood to be
true . In the 1920s , he would be a
black Frank Mernwell , a faul tless
hero. In the 1980s. tile age of
egotism, cormnerdalism a nd cyncism . he is an anH chronistr c puzz le.

In the All-Star Game, marked by
c.n explosion of home runs 1 none by

EASl'

Henderson and Dwayne Murphy,
grabbed a 6-0 lead after two innings.
The Twins came back within one run
before Jones stopped them cold.
Hend~rson and Murphy each had

two singles!

scored

Milwauk~

Baltimore
llelnill
1:-New Yoril
Toronl&lt;l

&amp;oloo
aeveland

twice and

knocked in a run for the A's, champions of the West for the first ~If of
the season.
Danny Goodwin doubled twice and
scored three t imes for the Twins and
and Pete Mackanin blasted a pinc hhit homer for Minnesota.
Rangers I, Yankees 0
Rick Honeycutt, Jim Kern, John
Henry J ohnson a nd Dave Schmidt
combined for a four-hitter. Consecutive first-inning singles by
Bump Wills, AI Oliver and Buddy
Bell produced the game's only run .
" The biggest problem (following
the 5(}-day players' strike) is getting
command of all my pitches, " said
Honeycutt, 7-1. "I had trouble getting my breaking pitches across the
pia te tonight."
Mariners t, Angels I
Jim Beattie threw eight innings of
five- hit ball , Tom Paciorek had a
tw&lt;&gt;-run double and Richie Zisk
homered for Seattle.
Beatlle, Hl, was 6-9 with Spoka ne
of the Pacific Coast League before
being recalled Sunday. In three
early-season appearances with Seattle, he posted a 16.62 ea rned r un
average. He was relieved by Larry

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a nd 16 RBI.
He was optioned to the Indians'
Class AAA affiliate Charleston
Cha rlies on Tuesday .
" We told him we were sending him
to Charleston beca use then he can
play every day," said Indians
Manage r Dave Garcia . "They'll
play 20 g"mes, so he can get 80 a t
bats, ma ybe find his stroke and
rome back and help us."

He hit .313 with 10 home runs, 71
runs batted in and 34 stolen bases ai
back up. I'm not bitter about it, and · Charleston, whe re he was the InI'm not going to say anything about ternational League's second-leading
the Indians."
hitter. He was with the Indians at the
Charboneau sai d he did not con- start of the season , but they returned
sider the demotion a punishment for him to Charleston before he had
his weight, which was reportedly a been to the plate.
bone of contention with the club
"It I the hit) was a little bit off the
when he returned from the strike end of the bat, but I'll take it," said
layoff.
Hayes , 22, a third baseman who bats
" What's going to be hard for me is left- handed and throws rightleaving my t eanunates here," he handed. " I think I'm basically up
said.
here to swing the bat and maybe add
Hayes, meanwhile, joined the In- some punch to the lineup."
dians Tuesday night and promptly
big

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he

said.

" There's no promise:) about coming

stroked
firstsecond
Major at
League
singling his
in his
bat ashita,
designated hitter during the nightcap of a double-header ve rsus
Milwaukee.

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HARDWARE
Ph .

~

.........,

BROOKE
S HIELDS

BUCKET

·

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

RED

SOX- Recalled

Julio

Charli~.

Recalled Von Hayes, infielder.
TEXAS RANGERS-Aqllln!d T11111 Poquette, ouUielder, on wtivm from the
Red Sox.

No_._

CU8S-Retctlv11ted
Steve
outfielder. Optioned Willie
Hernandez , pitcher, to Iowa of the American Au«iatioo .
NEW
YORK
METS-Piooce&lt;l
Cnig
Swan, pitcher, on lhe %1-day . disabled list,
~troactiv~ to Aul( .l . RecaUed Ed I.)'Jdl,
prtcher, from the Tidewtter Tides ol the
CHICAGO

H~ndefson,

Iague.

,

Cabbage..............~.12~

•

PITTSBURGH
PIRATES - Pur~ ~aed
Luis Tiant. pikher, from Portland of the
PIK'i(ic Cua.st

l.t!agu~.

FOOI'BALL

Pomeroy, Oh .

N•tlaul F..._IIL.up
DENVER BRONCOS-CUI Maurice Harny, defensive back .
NEW ORLEANS SAINTS- Cut Charles
Philyaw, defensive ~ntmln ; F.d Bums,

JONES MEAT PACKING

FREEZER MEAT FOR SALE
SMAll QUANTITIES: % OR 1h
CUSTOM SlAUGHTERING &amp; PROCESSING

GeorMe Woodard, running
YOW\K, tight end; Darren
Terrell,
wide
te&lt;'tiver,
and SearnuaSmyth. placekicker. Placed Tom Keams.
t(Uitd, on the inJured tHerve list
NEW YORK Jf:TS---CUt Wesley Roberls
~tnd Chri!i Godfrey, defensive, ends, and
Midt:ey Barilla, pllicekicker. Placed on ln'ured re:wrve Tlm Cottoo, wide
.eRoid Jones, runnilll: back,
lllllli, light end. Placed on ~~~~rl

DAR I FRESH•

2% MIlk ..........G.A~l~~

l

to

.~:.~·
. .._, . ~!!~ .

I USPS l.W.I
A. DlvWoa.oiMultbnnUa, lw.

PubliJthed every aflt!moon. Mondlly lh~~~h.l
Fridlly, Ill Cuurt Stretl, by the Ohio
Publl.!!hin!il Cumpm~y • Multimedia,
Pumeruy, Ohiu 4$7e9. 992-2156. Sel'und •
poHtal(e paid at Pornerl))' , Ohio.

HOGS CUT IN HALF.

'

ARMOU TREET .

Lunch Meat.... .t;.o;••

$ 79

HEINZ

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By &lt;!arrtertrMIUr Ra.tt

!lnew...Jt . . .. .. , ...... . " ,,,,, .... .
OneMOOih ... .... ..... ..... ..
OneYetr . . , .... . ....... .... . .. .. .

. ~inegar.. ...........~~.. l
'

Doily ..

~

CLOSED

\

l SUN.

'

OXYDOL
..1'

.DETERG.ENT.

'

'

FLAVORITE

Margarine .. ~ ....... ~~-.
TOTINO

Pizza ............... !~5• ~z~.

'

84 oz

UIL~

'

$279

llllloliOIIWIItV.......

!iix!IIOiilli.:::::: :L:::: :::::::::

JY..,. .. .... . . ...... , . ...• ..... ..
•' '
'1111101 - l l l l l o

........ v.......

..au::r.: 1.,,
· ~·· ...
..,. ..' . ......
._...' .........
' .... ....'·~·~- •
' . ' •• ...

'

Limit One Per customer
Good onlv at.Poweli's · .
Offer Expires Aug. 15, 1911,

MAXWEU HOUSE

•

SUGAR
5 LB.

BAG

$139

COUPO N

COUPON

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

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

1! HOUISI
MONDAY 9 to 8
'
r... WEDS. thru SAT. 9 to 5
·.

$}19

'

••

'

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

$} 69

quarterback ;
back; .bve

CALL FOR APPOINTMENT

'

$
229

.

\Ia&amp;, . shortstop lrorn Pawucket II the
lntemattonal l.t'!ague.
CI.EVEI.AND INDIANS- Optiuned Jue
Cbarboneau, outfielder, 1o the Charkslon

Jnt~matiooal

992-2848

'

29

Slab

NOTE : Wo11-lm1 r~urds art' t~ after
AU,.:Wit 9. N~w Yoril and Oakland in the
American Leiigue .illn:l _IJ.JJ A~eles and
PhtU.delphia in tM .National l.Cai!Uf have
qwdified for ~limltlary pla y~fs against
secood-half division winners. If ooe team
wiw both ha.lv~ . it will meet the division
t~pp00ent with the ne1t best overall !IE!8soo percenltiwe.

BOOTON

SALE DATES
Aug . 3-Aug , s. 1981

'

e••••••l8.7

BASEBALL

Lay-Away for Christmas

~

Sau~~

SUPERIOR

The Daily Sentinel

AM ARMOUR f
SEAL ASPHALT f
.

L

Athmbl
2 0 1.000 x-I.Mi Angeles
l
1
.5011
HOWiton
I
1
.5011
San Francisco
1 1
.5011
t'indMati
l
I
San Otego
0 2
.OliO
x-FirMl·half divbion winner
n.tldly's pmta
N~w York 4, O.icago 2
Pittsbqh 6, Montreal 3
Pltilade.lpbUI 6, St.I...oois 5, JO innings
AUanta S, Sin Otego I
Cincinnati 7, Lo3 Angeles 6
S..n FnulCisco 3, Houston 2
Weae.dly'1 Game.
New York !Lynch J--3) at ChicaWJ rKravec G-31
HOU5too IRya n ~I at San Fraocisco
18lue &gt;51
St. Louis IMtrtlnez 2-41 111 Philadelphia

~~haJ:~Ie

NEW IKO

2
I

$} 67

Amt'tku Le.p

OFF

IKO INDUSTRIES, INC.

w

New York
st. LouiS
Mootrral
Pitlai&gt;Lif'Mh
x-Philadelphia
Chicago

Transactions

PHONE: 667·6133
Take St. Rt. SSS AI Little Hocking
J Miles, Turn Left on co. Road 248
Follow Signs

Introduces The

Boneless Hams ....l~·
SUPERIOR
oz.
.
Fran k1es..............~K=~-

EAST

10%

w. Main

SUPERIOR E-Z-CARVE

NATIONAL LEAGUE

All 20" Bicycles

124

SAT., AUG. 15, 1981

by

Tuesday
the Indians front office. The popular Chat"boneau, last year's American League Rookie of the
Year, bas hll poorly all season after last year's steller
performance. I AP Laserphoto I

"SUPER" JOE DEMOTED - Cleveland ladlans
outfielder Joe Charooneau, shown here signing
au togra phs earlier in the season, was sent back to the
minor lea2ue Cha rleston Charlies It was announced

CLEVELAND I API - Outfielder
Joe Charboneau , one of the mo;i
popular baseball players to hit
Cleveland in decades, has been sent
back t o the m inors.
Ironica lly, he's betng replaced on
the Indians' roster by Von Hayes whom ma ny have considered the
··nex t Joe Charboneau ."
The 1980 American League Rook1e
of the Year, Charbonea u hit .289 with
23 horn e runs a nd 87 runs batted last
season . Some of his home runs , incl uding one 1n Yankee Stadiwn,
were conside red among the longest
in recent years.
But the 26-yea r-old was bothered
by injunes in the closing weeks of
the season, a nd he struggled a t the
plate during the ear ly months of this
season. hitting .206 with four homers

't

I
I
0

STOR.E HOURS:

·*
·*
·*
.OliO

11aelday'•Guael

Winfield 1 and won by the National
It was a disappointing turnaround
League 5-4, it was th e long- legged,
fur a player who had captiva ted the
graceful Winfield who elicited the
c1ty. Dubbed ··super Joe" by a local
loudest exclamatiOns from NBC's
writ er. he co -aut hore d an
broadcasting team of J oe Garagiola,
au tobiography with two repo rters
Tony Ku bek and Brya nt Gumbel.
describing his coloriul climb to the
In the seventh innmg, he raced to
majors, and he was featured on
the wall, leaped and tilrew himself
severa l local TV conunercials.
aga inst the barrier in a n effort t o
"I' m just going t o go down and do
snare Gary Carter's second home
my best. a nd hopefull y ma ke it to the
run, which barely eluded him.
An mning later. he made a stmilar
raci ng, wall-banging effort to in- 7\.
tercept Mike Schmidt's blast that J.
~~art,
proved the winning shot of the game.
WETH~RSFI ELD, Conn. I AP 1 Three alternates have been chosen
He showed little rega rd for George
Steinbrenner's $24 m illion piece of Thursdays openmg of the Sammy
to replace F'loyd, McGee and
baseball bric a brae.
DaviS Jr .-G reat er Hartford Open
Macomber.
These were the k ind of h ta nic
Golf Tournament , may be more
Among this yea r 's top 10 moneyblow s tha t most outfielders would
nota bl e fo r who I S ri I there mstead of
winners, unly two will enter the G HO
stop and gaze at c uriously as they
who IS.
. .
Craig Stadle r 1eighth w1th
might a wmgmg bird .
Tourna me nt ofhcial s ha d been ex$179,1451 "nd Curtis Strange I lOth
Not Winfield.
peeling Larry Nelson, winner of last
with $176,531).
Asifthisw e ren ' tsuffie~enteviden- ~ec k end 's PGA Cha mpi ons hip .
In past years. the GHO had alec of h1s old college try spi nt. the 1 hey even promoted Nelson as a n tracted golf gr~ats suc h as Lee
rangy outfielder returned to New entry because they thought he ha d
Trevino , who won lt in 1972 in a s udYork and repealed hts he roics in
made a verbal eonunitment to play
de n-d ea th playoff, a nd Arnold
here
.
Pa lmer.
Yankee Stadiu m in Monday night 's
Nels
on
,
however,
had
not
made
Lesser-known golfe rs, however,
2-0 victory over the Texas Rangers.
that conunitment and, when he
are looki ng at the relative absence of
In the seco nd inntng, Texas· Leon
the greats as a blessing with some of
Roberts slashed a hooking line drive failed to put it in writing Sunday, he
was officia lly out.
them say ing they won't feel as
tha t had " double " or " triple" writ·
There a re other prominent n&lt;&gt;pressured knowing the better golfers
te n all over it. W1nheld made a
aren't here .
leap ing backhand stab a nd took a shows Raymond Floyd, a threeOne reason the greaL• are not
tumble , the ba ll stashed awy in h1s ti me titlist on the PGA tour th1s year
coming to Wethersfield could be the
glove . In the seventh. Buddy Bell a nd the second leading money·
the Wethersfield Country Clu b courpuled one of Tonuny Jo hn 's pitches winner, withdre w because o( an
se. In past yea rs, wincrs have been
to deep left. W1th s peed a nd perieel a iiment. And the 1979 cha mpion,
corning in well unde r par 71. InMontirmng , Winfield made a catch tha t 'Jerry McGee, will pass up t his
yea r 's tourna m ent because of the
day's qualifytng rounds , comkept the ba II out of the stands .
dea th of his fa ther. Ma rk Macompetitof8 needed 69 or better to
ber, a relatively new na me on the
qua lify The course record is 60 set
PGA tour, withdre w Tuesday
by Tonuny Bolt in 1954 .
because of back
cordmg to the Sandus ky Sa iling
Club. which is organ izmg the event.
The Thistle is a 17-foot , slooprigged, open deck sa!lboat desig ned
in the 1940s. It was first manufactu red in k1t fom1 by Douglass and
McCleod in Gra nt R1ver, Ohio.

I

Milwtldlee fl. Cleveland $ lst game
Mi~waukee 6, Cleveland 1: 2nd game
Oricqo t , Boston 2
Kansas City at Baltimore, ppd., rain
Tens 1, New Yort 0
Torooto 6, Detroit f
O.kl&amp;nd '· Mlnneooc.a s
Seattle f , California 1
Wedaeldly's GliDes
Texas IMaUack s.i) at New York
IReu.schel 6-0)
California fFrost 1-11 at StatUe (Clay Go
41
Chic¥ IBurns 8-2) at Bostm /Ojeda Go
OJ, lnJ
Karl.'laS City (Gura W and Splittorff 3·
41 at
Bllti.Jnore
/Palmer 3-4 11nd
McGn!gor 6-2) , 2
MilwaWI:ee
I Hats $-4 J at
Oevel.alld
!Barker WI , fn)
Toronto Ileal WJ at Detroit IMonis t31. lnJ
Oakland
fKeough 6-JJ at Minneaota
IRedfem l-71, CnJ
'I'IMandaJ'I Gtmet
Chi~ago at 8ostoa
Kansu Cily at Baltim.ft, (R)
Milwaukee at Cleveland, In)
Seattle at Minnesota , (n)
New York at Detroit, {n J
Only games :JChedliled

Sailing championships set
SANDUSKY, Ohio 1 API - About
90 sailors from across the country
will compete next wee k in the 1961
Th1stle class nationa l sa iling champions hips.
The 36th national championships,
a seven-race series, be~ins Monday
a nd will run th rough Friday, ac-

I

TeJW
I
I
Kansas City
0
I
Califomit
0 2
t·Firat-hall divbloo wiMer

Charboneau sent back to Charleston

. ln
.
lfe l SOn not

Pel GB
1.0110
0
1.0110

0

WEST

Oticago
Sea ttl•
x-Oak:Jand
Minn.....

Ander sen in the ninth .

r

L

3
I

FAYGO

INSJANT.COFFEi
10

oz.

JAR

$339

Limit One Per Customer
Good only at Powell's
otter
· 1s, 1981

16 oz.
BOmES
Limit One Per customer
Good only at Powell's
,_Offer Expires Aug. 1 . 1981

~

· - •",' ,' ' ' ' "..! "'; •

.

.

'

�'

Wednesday, Aupust 12, 19!1

.... .

.r~

~..

·"1:

Families gather for reunions

..

•

... . .

•

..,1 {f\ ',

•

AN EM BETTY - Betty Fultz, known for her ineras a tribute to Mrs. Fultz, whose birthday Is Saturday,
national hospitality, w., . greeted Tuesday with the · and in recognition of her work with international
garage sign, " Happy llirthday to the U1tited Nations
students. The Fultz family has hosted sludents from
EmBetty" and an array of maps and pictures carrying
around the world, many of whom allended either Rio
out the international theme. The displa y was prepared
Grande College or Ohio University.
by Sabra Morrison, Phyllis Hackel1 and Mary Powell

Chester UMW discusses what
'
the club means to them
'Tt•lltng Our Stury" w"s the ttlk
~,f th e rrugram r1t o recent 111t'et1n g
uf t Itt· Chesler Un1led Methodist
\\- um ~·n i-lt the ('hur ch. Leoders wen•
Mrs. MJ!dn:d ( ;cml and Mrs
Da_viL'Ill' Hahr
Mr s_ (;&lt;-wl askt'd the llll.' Jllbt_•r s to
n•c;!ll when they had jo1ned thl·

Wurnt·n·s Sottety and wllilt
has

jU!llllll-.!

tu tht•rn _ S he opened tht•
prtll~ram Wllh prayer followt•d b~
llll'f-:1/ll

singing uf " I Love To Te ll till'
Si&lt;wy' led bv Mrs. B"hr 1\ilh Mr'
('Ja nn• Allen (:ll the picmu .
Sn1pture wa:; by th e Ht'\'. Rlchrtrd
~ ruup

Thuma s who used Luke 24. verse:-; J:lJS, fD I\ nwed by int er pr ~ lC:llio n of th L·
p&lt;:~ssdgt• by th L• leader . Mrs. AI tuna
h.arT ~ave em outl me of the WSCS
wluch in tht• beg inning was rl'ft'ITt'd
1u as ··L&lt;HJl i:'S A1d" &lt;Hi d ' Mtssionarv

So('Jdy . ·· Mrs. (;au! l'unduct ed ~
qtu-stwn ctnJ ~HI SWL' f perwd t·onIT I'Illllg j oining lh\· Wum L'Jl 's Soc lt' l\'
and th l' tnflue nn _· tl has had in th~
rm·mbers ' lives.
/\dditlonal readmg:; from "Apples

of

(~o ld"

and wntings of He len
Ste nwr Hiee were given by the

SOCIAL CALENDAR
WEDNESDAY
MIIJIJI.EPOHT Ama teur

Gar·

dener.s. annua l pi cnic. Wedn esday,
6 30 pIll " I the home of Mr s. Fer·

man Moure .
SPECIAl. MEETING, Eastern
Lueal Board of f.duca lt on. 7 :30 p rn .
Wednesday at high sc hool ; e m-

ployment

or personr wl ctnd bu.s

routes to be discvssed .

r-nr.E BLOOD P r essun· C lir~i c
W L' dn~sday from noon unti l I p.m . C:l t
Hutlcmd Sen ior Ci ti z.Pns Center. Hill
Street. Publie in vtl ed .
BLOODMOBilE Wednesd"r a t
Pomeroy Semor Citizens C~ ntcr
from! :30 p.m. to 6 p.m.
PAST
CO UNCILOR S Club,
Chester Couneil 323, D of .4 . Heedsv ill e Locks a nd Dam. 6 p.m . Wed·
nesday. Each member may t&lt;lke a

of Jerusa lem. 8 p rn Friday "l the
Pomeroy Ma!::ionic Temple. Pot luck
refrestune nts Will be served. Pracli cc for reremonial wi ll tx· held Monday at 7:30p.m .
SATU RDAY
ICE CHEAM Socia l, 4 p.m. w1lh
songfest a t 7 p.m. "l the Chesh1re
Untied Methodist Church, S&lt;l turday.
Heirs of Christ, Maranalha Singers,
"nd Chuck McPherson to be
fea tured . Public welcome.
St:NDAY
REUNION of J ohn and Johanna
Batley descenda nts. Sunday. Twin
City Shrine Park, Racine. Basket
dinner a t noun.
ANNUAL CALA WAY Family
reunton Sunday "I Heedsvt ll e Locks
a nd DAm .
SOUTHEAST

guest.

1

OHIO

Junior

M1ss, Inc., invites a ll Meigs Coun-

THURSDAY
ME IGS MAHAUDER Band
Boostr r .s meetin g at Rork
Spri n g~
Fairgrounds. 1 p.rn .
Thursrl::~y fur cleaning f;air bn(Jth:
a ll m rmbcrs e~skcd tu att end rtnd
tak e buekets and &lt;:lea mng rag s.
FRIDAY
MARY

SHHI.~J&lt;

J7. Whtlt• Shrt&lt;H'

Serve i ce cream
POMEROY--Homemade
rce
cream and cake were served lL' the
32 persons a ttenrli ng lht• Tuesday
mee ting uf thl' HJ rr Jsu nv11le Senior
Citizens Cl ub "I the townhouse .

ty high school senior girls to in formal get-together . 2 p m Sunday at Meigs Inn .

lc" der. The program closed with
prayer a nd sin ging uf " For God So
J.uvl'd the World ."
Mrs. Charles Machir was a gues t
at the meeting conducted by Mrs.
Hut h Karr. The West Ohw Conft·rcnre
UMW Membershtp
Works hop was announced for Aug.
15 at the Glenwood Untied Melhodi't
Churc h in Cnlumbus. A report was
gi\'en on the lighting for the S&lt;:l llclua ry fu nd . The lights have been
selt•cted ctnd &lt;:tre in the process of
betng ordered. Dunallons to the fu nd
lll etY bt• me~ de t o any member of the
Society A discussion wcts held runterni ng the lxlzaar schedule d for
Nm· l Nl·xt m eeting will be at I he
church nn Sept. :L

Tlw !lev. Rnoe rt Rider, Jr ., Iu s
wt fe, " nd chi ld ren . Hobbt e and
Angie. wt'rt' offinallv wel comed cts
the pastoral fa 111i ly ~f the Rutland,
Sa lem Ce nter . Pea rl Ch"pel ""d
Snowville Untied Methodis t Churches, at a ectrr)&gt;in dinner he ld Sunday at the Hutland Church.
The ne w minister hctd the b lessing
preceding the dinner and welcoming
remarks were given by Way ne
Clwsc. I"Y leader of the Snowville
Church: f. dilh Talbert, lay leader.
and Cat henne Shenefield. Salem
Center: Harold Riec, Sunday School
superintendent of the Hutland Chur·
ch whu s poke on behalf of the Sunday
School " nd the church trustees, a nd
F"y Sa uer. la y lea der, Rutland
Church. on be half of the church and
the Un ited Met hod iS t Women. Both
the Rev . and Mrs. Kidrr spoke in
respon se to the wt'lcurncs.

Needles. Mr. and Ml'll. Gary Bryant ,
Kim and Toby, Jr., Marion ; Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Huber and Michelle
Rowland, Mr. and Ml'll. Dave Fields
and Chad, Marion.
Othel'll a l the reunion were Erwin
Meredith, Westerville; Earl Smith,
Waldo ; Mrs . Clara Hull, Waldo ; Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Wa lker, grandchildren,
Tony and Erica Kelder of Houston,
Texas.

I

!

·:.·

I
I'

LEO ( Jutv

VIRGO

221 The

(Aug . 13-Sept.

citing could cross your path to
make it a ll happen .
LIBR~
!Sept . noct . 221
Someth ing you've been wanting,
poss{bly for a long time. will be
made available to you today from
out of the blue. Treat yourself to
this golden moment .
~CORP IO

(Oct .

74 · Nov

~A.G I T TARIU S
J 11 A c~ndltion

today behind the scenes that will

eq ually

hav e a
d i rect
ef f ect
in
brightening the pic lure tor you
mr'lteria l ly tt may be sma l l. but
you' ll like it
CAPR ICORN (Dec. 12· Jan . Jq )
You cou ld receiv e an invilation

t texib te 5c hedule is necessary
today . Your plans are l ikely to
chclnQe quite suddenl y . Oon'1
Your
impromptu
1n
1r e i
volv e nwn ts will turn out to b e

.C.OUAR1US (J&lt;ln

touch Wit h you today . Just
anot he r ordinary day will sud
dcn ly become s pe c ial.

211

. Ibt Dally Sentlnei-Pa...-7;

lun
APifS (Mi4rch 2 1· Apni1Y) Be

on yo ur toes tod a y . Someth1ng
unusua l may pop up. par ti cu lar ly
1n your carc t&gt;r area , which could

70 · F eb . 1'1)

tJc quite beneflc1a\ If YI(U ' II take

You cou lrl be the 1nstrument tor
br1ng1ng gr ea t lOY into another's
l1fc t'oday
The big surpr1sc,
hOwever, i s that you' ll shar e

(Nov. 14 ·Dec .

is developinQ

The romance department today .
If may not be an enormous spec
t acular , but it will be something
Qllite pleasant
GEMINI (May 2l ·June 20)
Ther e cou ld be some ex tra
bf'n ef lts coming your way tOday
whi c h you ' ll be able to share with
your mate or loved one . It' s a
bonus you d·dn ' t expect
CA NC ER (Jun e 21 -Julv 12)
Although nothing was planned. a
cwt together wil l turn out more
tun Than an y thtng you cou ld have
o r gnn1Zf"d
It's your day to

the benefits .

10

PI SCES (Feb. 20 - M-1r~h 10) A

today for a "fun" even t coming
up soon . Being 1ncluded in Th1S
qnln is some lhing you mny not
hfl v c ex pee I ed

77)

Someone with whOm you sh are
much in . common m(ly gel in

Today should turn out to be far
more interest1ng an d fun than
usual. Someon e unique and ex ·

'
1::

I,

n~ug .

pressures of the workaday wor ld
wi ll be off y-our back to day . You' ll
l ind yourself able to indulge in a
la bor of love instead .

.O.ugust 13, l'ltil

,Pomeroy~ldcti!!IOI1, 0hlo

--------------r ----- -t--i-·--- ---- --··

1n the year following vour b i r · · .
thday you will be given several
opportunities to further vovr lot
in life. You' 11 now be able to
acquire lit tle things which you
may not have been able to afford
before.

GRAPH

"•'

1 ..- ,

rldViiO f dCJ(' Of 1 f

rAURUS

Look tor

cl

(Apnl

10· M.ly

20)

surprise encounter in

SOCI&lt;'IIIZC

.~~==============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~

''

Roush reunion - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The annual family reunion of Arthur and Sadie Roush was held Aug.
2 at Portland Park .
E ulogy for Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Roush and prayer were given by
Harold Roush preceding dinner,
Attending the reunion were Mr.
and Ml'll. Garen Roush, Piqua ; Mr.

Group holds surprise
birthday celebration

was bakedbyby
Glenna
decorated
Judy
Jones.Comer and
Those present were Besste Comer,
Mr . and Mrs. Tom R. Comer and
family, Ta nuny and Matt ; Alma
Comer, Patty S&lt;lunders and son
Tmuny,a ll of Gallipolis .
The Rev. and Mrs. Warren E.
Cmner and Glenna Comer of Ironton, Karen P owers, Mark Wil fong ,
Crai g Bickers, eo-host, and Toria
Comer, hostess, assisted by Mr. a nd
Mrs . Ted Comer.

Decorated Cakes

was collected

the Ohio River bank by members of the Shade Valley Council of
F lural Arts followin g a recent outing
a t Forked Ru n Park

i\'

AROUSEl CONFECTIONERY

;·'
;.~-........
[1;
'

Ph . 992 · 6342
317 (lj , 2nd
Middlepor.

r~9!12=..'i: :56: :7: :o: :r~9 2~-26;38.;:::;:;=;;;~~===========~
LOW PRICES - LOW PRICES

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10

the ad... en•sed

!llittOillOW PiiCI

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BBQ Sauce

N GUARANTEE

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bu\1

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KrOI,)I!I I§

... 111 replace vour •tem

fo, "ow total
11 yo,_, alf! no ! ro.~t•s

guaranteed

reg~rd l-.. Of ro"nutacl u rer
w•l~'~

the same

br;~nd

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Fo1 De LuuI I 01
Pina

1!11 -- THl KROCII CO . ITIMS AND PRICES
S.UNOA't' AUGUST. THIU SAYUIDAV AUGUST IS

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"tt

Tyson
Fried Chicken

II'

I

.-LOW
PRICES - LOW PRICES- LOW PRICES'

1 --'j..--.,
I

I-

&lt;Onr•

Whole
Fryers ........... .

:U ·o1

,., $149

,.,

, lb •
BOI

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I 12 ·

Pork Roast ........... . lb.sgc
ggc
•
Mea t W1eners
... 12-oz
Pkg.'

FROZEN

USDA
CHOICE

I

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u~~ ~~~:C~~i:,~ ~t::~~L Y
" • I
mncm am1mu nana1ocn mn
1

Boneless Bottom $
Round Roast ..... lb .

·~~---·············
HORMEL
'' .

Canned
Ham ...... ...

SS!·~

Can

Chicken Livers .
.

-...

Beef Patty Mix .... lb .

5-lb s199
aox

FRESH FARM RAISED

OLE CAROLINA

Sliced Bacon ..

S2 99

/~t.~· Catfish Fillets lb.
7t;;;. '
5199
.-::1.·. _:~ · Catfish......... lb.
FRESH FARM RAISED

DRESSED

199

A BLEND OF BEEF &amp; HYDRATED TEXTUREO
VEGETAILE ·PROTEIN KROGER 'S PRO

nu

U.S .D.A . INSPECTED FROZEN

J · Ol

"•

44C
... ,,. 89 c

Hot Dog
Buns

MEAT CASE

LIMIT 2 BOXES WITH COUPON

1 DF,,I

COVER GIRL SHOES

ggc

SUN GOlD SANDWICH 0 1

KROGER

&lt;N THE

.

Avonclole
Gelotin .

FRESH PICNIC

2$239
~

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Going
Somewhere?

HOLLY FARMS.
GRADE A

FROZEN

n
m •

Middleport, Ohio

"'

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18 01

FROZEN

or a

br•nd 01 rei unll vow ourctlils.e proee

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THE SEWING CENTER

IS

each K f~• Store . ucepl "
""" do 1'\Jh out of .,., ac:Mirtlled
cho1ce ot a comparable •tern.
same sa ... mgs or a ramcheclt

.o1f
~~

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~

20% OFF McCALL'S PAITERNS
50% OFF SIMPLICITY PAITERNS
20% OFF NEW FALL MERCHANDISE

"'I

ItemS

'·

Mixed Fryer
Parts

•·" .'· .~=~;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:~

,...

OUR REGULAR LOW PRICES

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~

20 • 30 ·50% OFF

"0
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LOW PRICES

BACK TO SCHOOL SALE

,...I

~

Driftwood to be used in arltSlic
e~rrangem ents

Carissa Hill, Letart Falls; Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Roush, Mr. Pamala Roush ,
Granen and Chad, Mr. and Mrs.
Orion Roush, Racine; Mrs. Larry
Fisher and Jenny, Pomeroy , and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sargent, Middleport.

For All Occasions

Syracuse conununity vacation
Bible school will be held Monday
through Friday, at the Presbyterian
Church, 9 to 11 :30 a.m . To register,
those planning to attend s hould call

r
0

Collect driftwood
flower

and Mrs. Thomas Hart, Plano, Tex. ;
Mr. and Mrs. David Rivel'll and
Tasia, Houston, Tex.; Mr. and Mrs.
RobeWest Jefferson; Mr. and Mrs.
Oris Roush, Langsville.
Mr. and Ml'll . Nonnan Roush,
Robey and Garen, Charleston, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Euler,
Lori and Michael, Elkview, W, Va.;
Leota Birch, Portland ; Heath and

Plan VBS

Severa l members of the Comer
family met Sunday afternoon at the
Come r residence at Rt. 1, Vinton, for
a picnic dinner. The occasion was a
s urpnse birthday celebra tion for
Bessie Comer of Gallipolis. A cake

e~lung

Honor minister

M!'ll. Paul Meredith, Westerville ;
the descendants of Harry Pickens,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. William
Mesredith, Beverly; Mr. and Mrs.
Ernes t Whitehead and Mr. and Mrs.
Denver Weber, Reedsville.
Descendants of Clyde Pickens attending were Mr. a nd Mrs. Toby
Bryant, Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Needles. Jimmy Lin&lt;l and Shawn

:I .·---

ASTRO

Pickens r e u n i o n - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - The third annual reunioo of the
descendants of Harris Warren and
Josephine Pickens, Reedsville, was
held recently at the home of
Josephine Pickens Hull of Waldo.
At the reunion were the descendants of Frank Pickens, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Brown, Reedsville:
David Brown, Newark: Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Thomas, Matthew, Mara ,
and Devin, Springfield: Mr . and

,.

. .:: "4""'tc!•x,Aupust12,1911

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Baking
Mix

1000 I SLA N D fRENCH OR
ITALIAN li QUI D

Kroger
Dressing

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-Corn Oil
Morgorine

• ·lb .

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COU Nllb ' O v EN

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Angel Food
·
Cake
"'
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Pkg.

J!.IIUL. i ll

Flake
Coconut
C.Ot l l ( llf ', 1

AMERICAN OR PIMENTO

Marshmallow

Kraft Cheese
Sing Ies .... .

Creme

l .l U /

Jn •

6·oz .
Pkg.

Velveeta. ········ ~k':: S329
5 $189
Frerich Fries ......... a~~·
16 ·01 . 66C
Wheat Bl"ea d.... ...... Loaf

Country Ovt;n"'
Pretzels

FRO EN AVONDALE

Cover Girl's "Warrior"
transforms a concrete sidewalk
into a forest path.

C

CLOVER VAlLIV

KRAFT CHEESE SPREAD

The Next Best Thing To
Walking Barefoot

g5

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6g

C

KEllOGG S

Special K
Cereol

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KRO.GERHONEY

CO LO

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Marsh ·
mallows

'lb
Roq

AVO N DAlf

AVAILABlE ONI Y IN
&gt;TO RES WITH
OELI DEPTS .
HOT FOODS

In hospital
R.C. 100,

Mrs . Bess te Ashley of Mtddleport
1s a patie nt at tht Holzer Mcd1cal
Cente r, Ga lliplllis. Her ro1Hn number is 405 .

Service se t

New Fall Lines Arriving Daily

A special service will be he ld at

th e
Middleport
In dependent
Holiness Church, Pearl St., Middleport. at 7 · 30 p.m . this evening to
celeBrate the second anntversa ry in
the new church. There will be a
speaker an d special vocal mu3ic.
The Rev . O'Dell Manley invites the
public.

((i;;de
A
.;.Large Eggs .. .

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 prefer 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 circulation department
today.

Rust Suede

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
M 1ddle ot Upper B loc t-. , Pomeroy
Open 9· 5 D.1 11y, Fri . 9·8

YOU NEED TO SEE AN

INSUnANCE PRO A

... rube
Pak

:·Biscuits ... ..... .
:Super II Bkldes ;i.e;:
I '

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I

=-~--=-

•

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S499

Maraschino
Cherries ',::
AVQNOA l l

Mandarin
Oranges

Fried Chicken Bucket
5199
Chopped Ham .. .... . lb.
$299
Longhorn Cheese ..lb .

Vienna
'Sausage
KAOCIR

Lima
Beans

COllY .

PAGE,I~ST-RITE

·

IN THE HUSK YELLOW
ORWHITl

Pie

,

5139

(o n

DAYTIME

Comfort
Diapers

60 ·(1

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SUCIO OR 1Y lHE PIECE

l -Inch

Sweet
Corn ,.....__ ._....

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$479

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Worcestershire
...
Sau~e
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Steak
Sauce

10·01

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09
Ice Cream '"'" . , :

COUNTitl OVEN

Cups .... . .. ,.,

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Va,nilla
W1fers
Tomato

hate .

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· -------------­
L________________________________________:_~~~--~··~

H ill CREST

-~OGEI

lam now receiving the - - - - - - - - - - - . , . - by
•I

(Oil

CHIP

.

.

ZIP·_ ___;,.___

l.J

PLUS DIPOSIY

ggc

vacatio~ pak and

NAME:~-------------------------ADDRESS:
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...,......~--

-NEWSPAPER CARRIER

'

C•ntaloupe
.. .. .... each 99
.
.
FR~SH l ·
Blueberries
. ,, ......... Pint
NI~CROI'
3-l
b
$129
Red Apples..... aa 9 ' . ,
JUMIO~o•l
.
69c..
·Blue 'P.Iums ......... :.lb .

I would like to take my paper with me on my vlllcation. Please transfer my subscription to - - - - - ' - on the day of _ _ _ ____.,._ __
Please resume my home delivery - - - - - - - - - -

TOWN

8 Pieces

$ 29

JU~~O 1~ SIZE

I w1ll· be leaving
end returning on __________________________.:____

•

READY TO EAT . WISHBONE

'

For

deh~er them to me when I return frpm my vacation,

'\~
c;_]

~ -b ~c '.....=-(

in a handy

95c

2
.
$1
:l.heme Book .. .... .

: 100

eo...n

Ple~se save my papers

,

I b '"

AVAILABLE 11om
TIL 7pm

. , SCHICK·

·------------------------

n~1n, s.oN. HE
~ "iS INSURiiN:f

·

: IN THE DAIRY DEPT .. PILLSBURY COUNTRY ~lYLE.
• BUTTERMILK OR BUTTER
.
: (7.5·0Z. TUBES)

The Daily Sentinel
INSURA~[ . OH I WELL

ooz.

75·C

Diet Rite
or R.C.• Cola

Pear
Halves

'

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'

.

Onion Rings ~::

ICJOGllfiOZIN

Wlllpped

T,Dpping
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�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Syracuse Nazarene
reaches ~wall offame'

..,....

c~o-1

L
I
B

1\

~· ·:

A
The month of July was a highligl..
for the ending of an outstanding year
for the people of the Nazarene Church. District Assembly and Camp
meeting was well attended at
Colwnbus. The church met new
goals and became a "Wall of Fame"
church.
The following new members were
received into the fellowship on June
21: Willie Guinther, Beverly Guinther, James Miller, Chris Grindley.
Bernard Cook, Mary Winebrenner,
Paula Winebrenner and Beckie
Winebrenner.
The Sunday School had another

month with an average of 94. Mary
Winebrenner was presented a gift
for a fine job she has done touring
with the District "Impact Team" for
the year. On Aug. 2, a baptismal service was held at the Racine river
bank. The following were baptized :
Willie and Beverly Guinther, Chris
Guinther, Beckie La vender, Paula
Winebrenner, Beverly Dowell, Bernard Cook, Butch Arms, Jim Miller,
Chris Grindley and Leonard Bass.
We are looking for another great
year which we have accepted with
faith new challenges and goals for
the church and the people.

Area brides-to-be
honorees of showers
Marcy Sexson -------------------A bridal shower honoring Marcy
Sexson, bride-elect of Jeff Hedrick.
was held July 11 at the Mt. Hermon
Church Fellowship Hall. The shower
as hosted by Kim Reed and Kathy
Pooler. A blue and white color
served to those attending. Prizes

elect. Karen Lehman, Wilhelmina
Thoma, Gladys Wolfe. Judy Wolfe ,
Alisha Keney, Betty Donovan.
Juamta Will , Darlene Buckley,
Nina. Debbie, Deedra h, and DeLeah
Sanders, Lillian Nappt'r. Ba rbara
and Debbie Roush, Elma Epple.
Delores Holter. Carol and Ann Diddle.

were won by Debbie Sanders. Lisa
Pooler, and Mary Saddler.
Those attending were Jean Sexson, mother of the bride-elect, Nancy Arnold, Virginia . Kathy and Lisa
Pooler, Phyllis and Kim Reed, Vicki
Woods. Ca ryl Pooler, Gay le Leach.
mother of the groom-elect, Mary
Saddler, grandmother of the groom-

Sending gifts were Lucille Clay ,
Susie Karr, Margaret Dutton, Dutton Drug Store c&lt;rworkers, Jul ia
Will, Faye Wolfe, Lena and Sally
Pooler, Viola Teegarden. Maxine
Pooler, Elsie and Cheryl Folmer,
Clara Lightfoot. Juanita Spencer
and IRna Belle Pullins.

scheme was carried out.

Cake, punch, mints and nuts were

R

•'

Your
Libraries

A brid~ l showe r was held recent!}

cy Stone, Wi lda Wi seman, Margaret

honoring Rena Lefebre. bride-elect
of Lanny Longstreth.
Hosting the shower were Cheryl
Miller, Sadie Carr and Donna Spencer who made the doll cake

Ncel, Tana Burbndge, Peg Douglas,
Donna Spencer. Julie Spencer, Lola
Clark. Leah Williams. Rachael
Lefebre , Crystal and Robin
Donohu e. Betty and Mi ssy
Longstreth.
Sendmg gifts were F.rma Bales.
H"zel McKelvey, Joyce Mills and
Letha Proffitt .

Attending were Laura Brown. Linda Donohue, Betsy Newman, Bren-

da Newman , LoUise Burbridge. Nan-

Rita Balle)' -------------------------A bridal shower honoring Rita
Bailey, bride-elect of Larry Ball ,
was held recently at the Meigs Inn of
Pomeroy. Hostesses were Becki
Ball and Cheryl Barnhart.
A color scheme of green a nd

yellow was carried oot in the
decorations cmd refreshments of
cake, made and decorated by Libby
F isher. were served with mints. nuts

and punch. Games were played with
prizes going to Donna Boyd, Carolyn
Thomas, Pam Diddle. and Joan Hoffma n.
J\ttenrling were Ruth and Che ryl

•

Barnhart, Carolyn Thomas. Mary

flail. Bonn ie White , Naomi Kmg,
Debbie Fl nlaw , .Jane Sisson.Joan
Hoffman , Anna Nnnnan, Peggy and

Missy Trussel l, Dorothy Bailey,
Rcxanna Knighhng, Rayanna Cole,
Pam Diddle. Dolores Bailey, Lucille
Dill, Carolyn Adams. Mrs. Fisher,
Vel ve t

Swisher.

Donnna

Boyd,

Shei la Crouch, and Becki Ball.
Sending gifts were Martha Fry,
Madelyn Pa inter. Becky Amberger ,
Diane Bing, Janet Murris, Yvonnt.•

Sellers. Betty Hobstelter. Arizona
Stewart, Letla Spencer, Gloria
Michael. F'arie Cole. Gladys Davis,
F. Iea nor Robson. Debra Greuser.
Nina Cum in ~=:s. Marlene Harrison,
Dian~

Gheen. Carolyn Bartels, June

Eichnger. Edna and Peggy Neigler,
Manlyn

Wilcox

a nd

Bt!v ,

a nd

Wilovene Bailey.

Mrs. Williamson------------------ a brida l shower honnring Darla

Wilcox Williamson was held recently at the Rutland United Methodi st
Church social room . Mrs. Williamson's wedding color scheme of green

and white was carried out in the
decoration:i .

Hostesses for

th~

shower were

Weight loss
club news
Graduation for KOPS !Keep Off
Pounds Sensibly 1 of the Rutland
TOPS Club OH 1456 will be held
Tuesday.
Members were reminded to take a
gift to the meeting. Best loser of the
week was Sandy Sergent with Cindy
Harienbach as the runner-up. Ms.
Sergent was preented a dolla r and a
ribbon and members sa ng in her
honor.

A new contest, " How Does Your
Garden Grow?" is in progress with

members to be awarded vegetables
or weeds for their weight gains,
weight losses, calorie charts, and attendance. Information on the club
may be obtained from 742-2171.

Janet Will!a rnson, Marjorie Rice ,

Margaret Parsons. Grace Colwell,
and Fay Sauer. Games ware played
with prizes going lu Janet Nakamoto
and Marcia Demson who also won
the dour prize .

Others attending were Ruth
Erlewine, Edith Williamson. Diana
Wi lliamson. Marsgaret Edwards.
Janet Morris, Mae Weber, Catherine
and Mary Colwell, Minnie Thornton.
Adria Wilcox , Iva Howell, Rosa
Nichmls. Mrs. John Jacobs, Norma
Wilcox, Beatrice Rinehart, Joy
Sauer. Mrs. Fred Wihamson, Mrs.
Robe rt Williamson, Jamie and
Stacey . Marie Bishop. Jane
Wiseman , Ethel Chapma n, Ann
Webster, Barbara Rider. and Angie
Rider.

By Ellen Ball
Librarian
Today, my mind is on jobs.
All we've said before, there are
Adult Basic Education learning
centers at Pomeroy and Middleport Public Libraries. Part of
their task has been to help people
learn more so they can get jobs.
Right now, however, the Middleport learning center t-ots
something better to offer - a job
opening.
In the last school year, Lucy
Xmsbary, who was an instructor
at Middleport center, resigned.
Because it was near the end of the
school year and there were some
changes in Galli a CoWlty, Linda
Stanley, from a Gallia center ,
replaced Lucy. This year, Linda
would like to stay closer to home ,
so the position of teacher's aide is
Opt'n.
This is a very challenging job.
It requires a high school diploma
or G.E.D. and a love· of people.
Our learning centers attract
pt'Ople who want to improve their
math, English, and/or reading
sk ills. They are adults who don't
have time to waste and who know
the value of an education. They
want people who can help them
understand what they don 't know
and care about whether they do
welL
An Adult Basic Education aide

is paid $3 .75 an hour. (The
paycheck comes from the Scioto
Valley School District, which
supervises Adult Ba sic
Education in an eight-county
area.) The aides at Middleport
Public Ubrary work Tuesday,
Wednesday and Thursday from
10 a.m. to 2 p.m., a total of 12
hours a week, between September 8 and the end of May.
There are two aides at Middleport learning center - Pat
Neece, who was once an Adult
Basic Education student, and
some lucky person who cares
enough to call me and make an
appointment for an interview and ,
test.
Test?~ Yes, anyone who wants

to teach at the learning centers
will have to take one of the learning center tests to show that he
or she understands what the
students will have to learn (i.e.,
math, English. and reading). The
tests are not very difficult for
people who have not used their
math and reading skills since
they left high school, so there
should not be a reason for not applying.
If you are interested in a parttime job with lots of rewards in
terms of how you fee l about yourself. check out the job opening at
your libraries.

Child's Name . ...... .. ........... . · · · · ·
Birth Date . .. . .. .
. .... ...... ' ... ... .

Parents ......... .

. ... .. ....

Phone ........ ..

•••••••••

••

•

0

••••

0

•••

What's
Cooking?
By Dale M. Sloll
Meigs County Exlcnsion
Home Ecouomist

''''

.. ....... . .

IN TV SHOW - Bettie Capehart Knouu (foregroundlsupervilleslaplng of the venlon of '20-ZO'
wblcb wW feature ber work Aug. ZO or Z11b.
- ...:......,.
::...,

A public fWld drive to aid Kathy
Spencer, Chester, a victim of kidney
failure due to lupus, has been opened
Wlder the sponsorship of the United
Friendship Organization.
Mrs. Spencer has been a victim of
lupus for the past seven years. All a
result her kidneys have become affected and she is having to make
three trips to Colwnbus, Ohio State
University Cline, each week for
dialysis. Money to be raised through
the fund drive will help with travel
expenses and required medication.
Mrs. Spencer is being taken to the
Colwnbus cline by relatives at the
present time . Checks are to be made
payable to the Kathy Spencer Kidney Fund and may be sent to Esther
Mayes, Box 21, Chesler, Ohio or Linda Well, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, Ohio.
Cannisters are also being placed in
business houses as part of the fund
drive. A kidney transplant is expected to take place later.
Mrs. Spencer and her husband,

NOTICE OF
APPI JCATION
OF THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
FOR INCREASES AND
• ADJUSTMENTS IN
RATES AND CHARGES

RECEIVES LICENSE - Carla
Rile, Route I, Middleport, has
successfully passed the slate
ell8mioatiou of Ohio State Board
of Cosmetology and received her
llceuse. She is a 1981 graduate of
Meigs High School and Is now employed at Brenda's Boutique in
Middleport.

r:;::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;
POMEROY
PASTRY SHOP

Cor wash

set Saturday
The Meigs High School Wrestling
Matmaids will hold a car wash from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the
Sugar RWl Ashland Station. Cars wil
be $3 and vans and trucks, $5.
Customers are to take their vehicles
to the station during the designated

cup frankfurters , ground bologna, or
cooked ham . In place of the 2 eggs
and tuna, use 6 hard-cooked eggs
plus '•• teaspoon salt. The fillin gs
can be spread on buttered bread for
sandwiches.

Decorated Cakes Our
Specialty
We Sell Baker's Yeast
By The Pound
We

A~o:ept

Food Stamps

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT

do you eat?
l've chosen a few recipes from
For a cheese flavored tuna boat,
some of the f-H foods projects to add •; cup grated cheese to the tuna
share with you. These are excellent, mixture.

wh olesome recipes that you can
Granola
prepa re in advance. The tuna salad
3 cups rolled oats
submannes can be wrapped and
I cup wheat flakes
chilled until eating time. The
1 cup sunflower seeds, hulled, or
granola IS a hearty breakfast cereal chopped nuts
as well as a good snack.
1cup coconut
Tuna Salad Submarines
'•cup oil
I Makes 6 to 8 sandwiches 1
1
'2 cup honey or r orn syrup
Ingredients :
1 teaspoon vanilla
16-7 ounce can tuna
dash of salt
2 hard-cooked eggs, chopped
Pre-heat oven to 250 deg. F.
' , cup chopped celery
Measure oats, wheat flakes, sun1
1 cup c~.appcd sweet pickle or
flower seeds and cocrynut into
relish
mixing bowl. Stir to mix . Add oil.
1
2 cup salad dressing or rnayonhoney, vanilla and salt. Mix well.
na l.&lt;;c
Spread
·~ " deep on cookie sheet.
1
, teaspoon prepared mustard
Bake at 250 deg. F. until toasted and
6-a hotdog buns
~olden brown - about 45 minutes to
soft butter or margarine
one hour. rStir occasionally, as sides
Place tuna 10 mixing bow l. Brea k brown fi rst.) Let cool. Store in jars.
up any ch unks with a fork . Add chop- Serve with milk.
ped eggs, celery , pickle, sa lad
Here are some other suggestions
dreS!iing and mustard. If using for food to carry with you to the fair :
pickle relish. drain it well before ad- - sliced carrots, green pepper
ding or the filling will he "soupy." stnps, cucwnber slices or cherry
TOS!i with fork to mix well.
tomatoes packed in 1ce i~ leak-proof
If the buns are not already split, bags. These vegg1es make great
cut thern in half lengthwise. Spread finger-food snacks.
buns with softened butter or
- Celery stuffed with peanut butmargarine. Then stuff with filling.
ter put two stuffed stalks together
Tuna sa lad submarines are also making a "sandwich." This makes it
good warmed . You may even like easy to pack and eat.
them better this way ! Wrap them in
-Fruit Kebobs - place wedges or
fOil and heat for 15 minutes in a chunks of fruit on a tooth pick. Pack
moderate i350deg. F. 1oven.
in individual plastic bags and chill.
Variations: Instead of tuna, use I

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

Fund drive
underway

hours.

Good grief! The Meigs County
Fair is almost here' At the fair you
will be wanting to see the animals,
wa tch the sales, check oot the
exhibits, ride the rides ... but when

'. '

(Send $1 for each child and completed application to Mrs. Alwilda
Werner, 915 Park St., Middleport, Ohio 45760)

Tom, have two children, Jarod,
eight , and Janelle, two.

STORE
Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru Saturda , Aug. 15th
Homemade

HAM SALAO •••••••••••••••.•••L.b~. s1.39
12 oz. French Citv

PACKAGED WIENERS ••••••• :. ~.k.~~~. 95~
1Lb. Vacuum Packed French City

1 lb. NuMaid Cincinati
Reds' Tumbler

OLEO ••••••••••

79

10 lb. Homegrown
~

2 lb. Shedd's
A Box

CHE~E .....~ 1 . 39

POTATOES

A Baq

sl.69

Golden Ripe Chiquita

BANANAS 2 LBS. 7CJ
FOR

New

Caaade~t-

9arl\_

MINUTE MAID LEMONADE········ •••~;:~ 8CJ
2 LB. BANOUET SUPPERS ••••••••••~~~: s1.99
and Gravy

POTTED
MEAT
•••••••••••••••
2/59~
12 oz. Armour Canned Tree!
16 oz. Del Monte Cut

GREEN BEANS, ................ 2/99~
16 oz.

CRISCO SHORTENING ........... 89'
oz . Swjlnson

CHICKEN

BROTH~ ............. 217fl

WILL BE
4 oz. Taster'_$ Choice ,F reeze Dried

CLOSED AFTER 4:00 P.M.

ON THU~., AUG. 13th

&gt;n w alfedcd Ohio Bell Tc·le Jiboru: Com pan~ lariH.., :trt·:
F:$chan ~e Rak

TJriH

,INSTANT COFfEE~ ....... :.~:~·. sz~s,;

i Pl'CO
:\o :11

Ci.• rwral F.xch: JJlW'

I PU :O

T:irifl

'" 41
IPl'CO
:\o. I I

'
Diol;~phonc·

12 oz.

l] J,.

Pursuant to the requirements
of Section 4909.19 of the Ohio
Revised Code, the O hio Bell
Telephone Co mpany he re by
gives notice that on July 2, 1981,
it fil ed with the Public Ul ililies
Commission uf Ohio an AppLcaliun (PUCO Docket No. 81-436TP -AIR ) fur authority to increase
and adjusl ils rates and c har~es
for lelecommunicaliuns .services
and to cha nge ils regulations
and practices affecting the same.
Thi s notice contains the substance and prayer of the Application . However, any inlercsted
party desiring complete detaikd
information with respec t to all
affected rates, charges, regulation s and pr ac ti ces s hould
inspecl a mpy of the Application
and all al la chc d sche dul c.s
al th e office of the Co mmi ssion . 375 South High Stree t,
Columh us . Oh io. A copy of the
Application and the proposed
tariff shc cls is also available
for in spection during no rmal
h;1sin e" hours al any public
h;sines.s ollice or PhoneC:cn!cr
S(ure of Ohio Be ll . In addilion .
tfte pro(X&gt;Scd tarills wert• mail ed to the mavors and legislative
authorities o-f all municipalities
in Ohio on April .3 . 19HI. as
p~ rt of Ihe Com pany\ nolilicati lm of its intenl lo lik .
' This Appliration allects ra! t•s
ancl cha r~es fur lek-romm unira·
ti(m.., \t' TYice.., to all ru\IOilll'r:-.
o( lh c· Ohio Bell Teleph o ne
O&gt; mpan,· and. in addilion .
:dled s lhe r: Ih.'' ;uHI c har~es lor
Wide An.·a TelecomnHmications
s.:n ·irc· 11\'ATS and SOO Ser";l:e l and rertain ulhl'r ...,en·in·..,
)...!.0\'l'Till'~~ hy CO IIl' llrr i..'Jll' l'~ ol
ot:h l'r te lcphnnl' L'o mpani L''sc""· in~ :d lolh er \IIhscrihrrs in
Ihe Stall' of Ohin .

'

With15c0ff ~Can $129
LUNCH ·MEAT ••••••••••••••••••
•

JOHN A. WADE, M. D., INC.
·vETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Oigil:d

S~ n· ict· T;Irill
'

:\o ~I

'
Ful'ilities
lor
Ollwr Com moo
C;~rricrs T:lfilf

I PU :0
:\o. I I

•

I Pl"(

:c l

tviohi le 'l"c· lc·ph, ,n,·
S~r vi t·e Tariff

Wiele Armli·lc··
mmmuniral1on.,
S(.'rvi&lt;:t' Tarill

I l'l '(:()
:\o. I I

Pri' ah • Line
S~r,· in· l:iriH

t l'l'CO
:\o. 21

, ,\ny p&lt;.'rson. firm. corp&lt;.or:rliun
or assndation m:ty file . pur~u ~
ant to St•ction 4909.19 ol lh"
()hin Hl'visl'd Cud.,, objc&gt;Clions
1&lt;; th" pruposl'd incrl'aS&lt;•s and
a~juslmt•nts in miL's and char~­
&lt;'!\',:md lu th&lt;' prop&lt;.&amp;&gt;d chot~~'"
irj rl'gulalions lind ~rotdr.cl!s
a'fclin,~t lh&lt;' saml'. 1 he obJL'C·
lip ns may ulll'~e thai such
Applicohon contains proposals
tlf.~l ar~ unjust and discr, mina. t.{ry or unrl'!lsonabl~- R«t&gt;mnlendaiions which differ from

OHice Hours by Appointment Only

~ Applicati4111 may ~ m~~ .by
t~ci staff of lhl' Pubhc Uhhhl's

. CALL (614)-992·2104
'
-

Conimbsion' of Ohio or l)y
irjter~enlng p~rlles and tno:bf .adopted by the f.ornmis$km .
(
'

or (304~75-1244

"20-211" with anchorman, Hugh
Downs, will feature the work of Bettie Capehart Krauss, a graduate of
Wahama and a past resident of
Mason, and now of Howland Corners, Oh. on Aug. 20 or '!I allO p.m.
fot her dedication of helping the
people of the remote hills of A[)palachia.
Fifteen years ago Bettie read a
magazine story that touched her
heart. It was about the poverty in the
"dirt poor" moUntainous area of
Kentucky . Determined to do
something about helping the people
in those remote hills, she fonned
what is known as Aid to Appalachia.
ATA was incorporated in 1969. The
aid program she conceived, Bettie

Address .. . ......... ..... · · . ... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · • · · · ·

Mason Personals
Mrs. Sarah Spencer visited her
daughter and son-in-law. Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Pierson at Poughkeepsie,
N.Y. and while there they went to
Paramus. N.J . and to Albany , N.Y.
where Mrs. Pierson attends school.
Stacey Reed. daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. George Reed , is a patient at
Holzer Medical Center.

'20-20' to feature former resident

MEIGS FAIR
PRE'M'V BABY CONTESf

y

Rena Lefeb~---------------------------

decorated in lavender .

wednesday. August 12,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

"

I

·v

'

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

SEPARATION OF LINE
AND SET CHARGES
Currently basic exchange
service ipdudes the line and one
standard set. Ohio BeU proposes
that separate monthly rates be
identified for the line and for
each telephone se l leased from
the o,mpany. The monthly rate
would be $1.50 for a standard
set, $2.85 for a Princess® phone
and $3 .25 for a Trimline®
phone, aiT with rolary dial. The
monthly rate lor a standard set
would be subj ecl lo the Company's Minimum Level Pricing
Plan. The monthly rate for a
telephone set would replace the
currenl monthly rate lor an exlension. Customers who provide
their own te lephones would not
pay Ihe mon thly rate for a set.
(Cuslomers providinp; their own
tclephunes currentl y receive a
mon th ly credit of 90 cents for
each se t. This cred it would be
discontinued.) For Touch-Tono;•
serv ice th e re would be an
additional monlldy rate of $1. 50
for a reside nce line ( $2.7 5 lor
no n-resid ence ) and an additio nal mo nthl y r:1l c of $ 1 for
each To uch-Tone sci .

SER~CE
The average percentage increases proposed in monthly rates for residence customers for ! -party fl at, 2-party flat and ! -party message exchange
service in representative communities are shown below. (Monthly usap;e
allowances and the charge for additional local messages over the allowances
for messap;e service_ would not be changed.) Two-party service (including
2-party message rate se rvice, avail able only in the Cleveland exchange)
would be limit ed to existing subscribers at !he ir present loca tions. No new
install ation would be made.

RESIDENCE

1-party
2-party
1-party
flat
flat
message
Present
I
$ 7 .50
$ 9.50
$ 5.70
Proposed
1
12.75'
8 .20*
10.60'
34 .2
41 .3
% inc rease
43.9
2
7 50
Washington
Present
9 .50
5.70
I
I 2.75'
8.20*
10.60'
C.H .
Proposed
41 .3
34 .2
43.9
% increase
•
9 .50
5.70
7.50
Zanesville
3
Present
I
12.75'
8.20'
10.60'
Proposed
34.2
43 .9
41 .3
% increase
5.70
7.50
Springfield
4
9.50
Present
I 2 75*
8.20*
10.60*
Proposed
34.2
43.9
41 .3
% increase
Massil lon,
10.15
6 35
8.10
Present
5
Youngstown
Proposed
1
12.75'
8.20'
10.60'
% inc rease
25.6
29. 1
30.9
6
10 .50
6 70
8 .35
Akron. Canton . Present
Proposed
t
12.75'
8.20'
10.60'
Toledo
% inc rease
2 t .4
22 .4
26.9
7
10.70
6 .90
8 .50
Present
Dayton
Proposed
2
12.95'
8.40'
tO 75'
% inc rease
. 21 o
21 7
26.5
Present
8
11.25
7.45
8.90
Columbus
Proposed
3
13 50'
8 95'
11 15'
% increase
20.0
20.1
25.3
Present
9
11 .95
8 15
9.40
Chesterland
Proposed
4
14 .20'
9 .65'
1 1.65'
% increase
t 8.8
18 .4
23.9
Present
10
12.65
8.75
1005
Cleveland
Proposed '
5
14.90'
10.25'
1230'
% increase
t 7.8
17 1
22.4
("For comparison purposes proposed monthly rales s hown In clu de a
monthly rate of $ t .50 for a sta nd ard rotary-dia l te le phone set lea se d
from Ohio Be ll I
Typical
Community
Aberdeen

Krauss said, I• " not just me, I could
never do it. It's churches, clubs, and
individuals who are doing it, and the
people it's done for know that."
Recently aided by her husband,
township clerk G. Lee Kra118S and
her daughter's family, her brother
and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Capehart, she supervised the
loading of the 122nd semi-trailer
load of goods destined for the poor of
Appalachia - "my people" she
called them in a Cleveland Plain
Dealer story. McLean Trucking of
West Middlesex, Pa. and Smith
Transit of YoWlgstown did the transporting as a public service.
Publicity helped Mrs. Krauss
establish a network of volunteers

Rate
Band

INSTALLATION.
MOVE AND CHANCE
CHARGES
Some ck menls of lhc· ha sir
c har~ c' to insLdl. mor e anrl
~: h angc ser1icc and equip ment
would be increased signifir&lt;mtly
lo CO\l'f Ihe cosh inroh cd .
For ..xample. th e total cha rges
to ins! all a line a11d a ide phone
\\'o uld increa 'il' lrom B-IH .!-1.) I n
~H:) . 30 fll T TL'"icicm·•· c u-, lo mc r..,
( IIO \\'l'\'l' T.

ma nr rl' . . id l' llf.'l' l' ll ... ·

lom L' r'' would hl' ~thlc lo :1 \Hi d
~17. 60 uf Ihe proposed cha r~c'

NON-RESIDENCE SERVICE

hv obtaininJ!, their cqt tipnll'n l
ai a Phmll'Cc· nll' r Siorc· llf Brll
C: u:-.tomcr Scrvicl' ( ~ c nll' r or h~
prmiding their O\\ n eq tt ipmcnt ·~

The a\'l'T:li!L' perce ntt).!l' innl':l 't'' propo,cd in rwlllthl y raiL' ' for nnnrt•..., id ~..· ru:v

rus tonH..'T" Io r 1-lim: lll l'''al!,l' . l-liuc lll l'\\agt· rola l) . flll' "'a_gt..· PB.\
trunk ..,t..•rv ite ~md .,c mipuhli c coin . . en il.'l' in rl' pn;\l'ntativL' com munitit..·..,
arc shown bc Jm, _I \lonthl ) u ' a ~c allm"IIH'l'' an d llw c har~e for additional
local Jl\ l'\\a~c· s 11\l'r lhl' allo\\:11KL'S 1\lluld not hl' c h : m~cd .\
1-line Message Semipublic
1-line
message
PBX
Typical
Rate
coin
trunk
Band message rotary
Community
$20 00
$22 85 $13 .95
$1785
Present
Aberdee n
17 .05
25.25'
23 .75
Proposed
22 .45'
22 2
26 2
3.9
25 8
%i ncrease
13.95
20.00
22 .85
Washi ngton
Present
17 .85
2
17 05
25 25"
23 75
22 45'
I
C.H .
Proposed
22
.2
26
2
3
9
25
8
% mcrease
13 95
20 00
22 85
17.85
Zanesv ille
Present
3
17 05
23 75
25 25'
1
22 .45'
Proposed
22
2
26.2
3 .9
25 8
%i ncrease
13 95
20.00
22 85
4
17 .B5
Spnngf&gt;e ld
Presen t
17 05
23.75
25.25'
22 .45'
Proposed
1
22 .2
39
26.2
25 .8
% mcre ase
14 60
18 50
20 .75
23 50
Present
Ma ssillon .
5
17
05
22.45'
25.25'
23.75
Youngstown Proposed
1
16 8
21.4
21.7
11
% mcrease
'
Akron . Canton. Present
6
18 75
2 1 05
23 .75
14 .85
Toledo
Proposed
1
22 .45'
25.25'
23 75
17 05
% mcrease
19 7
20 0
0
14 .8
•Present
7
19 tO
21.45
24.10
1520
Dayto n
Proposed
2
22 .80'
25 60'
24 10
1740
% mcrease
19 .4
19 .3
0
14 .5
Present
8
19 75
22.20
24.75
15.85
Columbus
Proposed
3
23.45'
26.25'
24 .75
1805
% increase
t 8.7
18.2
0
13 9
Present
9
20 .35
22 .85
25 .35
16.45
Chesterland
Proposed
4
24 .05'
26.B5'
25 35
18 65
182
17 .5
0
134
%i ncrease
Present
10
2145
24
.15
26
.45
1755
Cleveland
Prop9sed
5
25 15'
27.95'
26 .45
19 75
12.5
157
172
0
%increase
.
·
("For comparison purposes. proposed monthly rates shown for 1-line
message service and message rotary service lllclude the monthly rate of
$1.50 for a standard rotary-dial telephone set leased from Oh10 Bell)

GENERAL
Monthly rates' for cllll'- ll'a) oplional Extcnclccl Area Sen in· \\IJUicl
l(t•ncrally he chanl(ccl in line wilh related bask cxdum~:t• service
Service rates not projKlscd to be chilnl(cd include :
• 'Rafcs for intraslale loll mc~sal(t'S (long distance within Ohio\.
• Monlhl}' usage ;d)ow;mn:s for local call.s nnrler mcs"tl(e rate service
and the charl(c for addiliomd local calls o\'l'r Ihe allowances.
• Monthlv allowunccs for culls to Directory Assistance and lhc
char~~:o; lor udditi1mal calls over the ullowanccs.
• The mlc• for local coin tclel)honl' calls. (Howeve r. the charl(e for
:m operator-hmiclled local coin call would increase from 35 to
40 cents: I
• The nilc,lnr Ohio Bell's "Dial-If' Public Announcement
Service.
.

'

OPTIONAL
EQU IPMENT AND
SERVICES
\'an illJ.,!. I HlTL':I &lt;,L'&lt;, ;d\o \\'Hdd
alll'd ·, uch option., a' ~tddition~tl
dirvclo~ lL\II H,l!.\. rw n-pullli"hL·d
\l'l\ ice and ( :u. . tnlll ( ::ll li ng 'v r-

CENTREX
( :h:nt_gl'' in month\ ~ lint.· :nHi
,t;dinn r: tl l'\ lnr CL· nlrc \ '-~t' T ­
\·in· , ITL' :d \4 t propo..,ed . Sl'pa rat t·
tllonth h rain \\c~tdd : tppl ~ to
th L' ;tl'~'l'"'' lim·.., a nd to tlll·

WATS AND
800 SER~CE
(INWARD WATS)
The Company proposes lo
restructure rates for Wide Area
Telecommunications Service to
more closely conform to th e
interstate schedule . The proposed change would prod uce
significant increases for some
custom ers and dec reases fo r
others. Customers would pay
a monthly rat e for the access
linl .md an additio nal rate for
each hour of usage . wit h the
hourly ra te va rying according
lo calling volumes each month .

MOBILE TELEPHONE
SERVICE
The exchange access line lor
Mobil e Te lep ho ne Se r vice
woulrl receive the same increase
as the non-resirlence indi,1dual
line rate in the appropri ate rate
band.

PRIVATE LIN E
SERVICES
(SPEC IAL CIRC UITS )
Substantial tncn·aSt'"i :trL' pmposeci in the -;e rvin• ron nt·dinn
chuges and monthly ru lc·s for
spec ial circui ts furni shed for
co ntinunu ~ and non -eonlinuou. .
proper lv. foreign exch:&gt;ngc and
foreign cen tral offin· .,crvil'L' :1..,
we ll as lor pri vall' line ch:umd_,
and :t,~ ociated t' (jllipmen l
Ra iL'\ woulrl hl' rt.''i lr ur tu rl'd
and a new rate cl e men l. lht·
"Se rvice An•a Fu nclion:· would
he introduo.:d fo r th l.' lransmi.., \ion l'l]llipiiiL:Jlt nt..·cd t·d to t' ll ·
;thlc tlw rtrru it h1 pl'rlu nn 1h

intl' ndl'd function

For cer ta in comrmtnic:tlion . .
..,\,ll'lll\ anclequipmL'Ill lh ('
r;ilc·, :mel charges in ( lhio I\v ii's
tar iff , arc minimum lc\T l"i.
Prit:c' dwr~cd 111ay \'ary np to
a ma:ximnm lc\'l·l "hirli i . . two
limc·s the minimnm lerd Hatt·s
aiHI chaq..!,l'\ rnn\lilulinJ!. thl'
pric.-c' al any J!.i\'en time.· an·
rowred in priri n~ lists fumi sh.-cl
In !he PlCO hy the Com pall) .
' :\ot less than 211 days prior to
the effective dale of any chang&lt;'
the Company must furnish to
the PUCO a new list reflct!ing
sud1 chan~-d r.tlt.'S and charges.
In addition tu pn&gt;j)()sinl( new
minimum levels fur certain
syste ms and cqi1ipmenl . th e
Company protloscs that the
m;Iximum JcvcJ he rcmovcn .

addition to propn..,ing IH'\\
minm1u111 k·' l' l" for \ aritHI \ k l'~
lt..·ll' ph(lnt' 'ch .md kt· ~ ..,~ " ' l' lll " .
the Co mp an y prnpo&lt;,{' " !o l l' ·
'' ruclurc the'l' r:dl'" . ln . . te:td ol
ha -. in g th e rate on tl w llltl! d)(' r
of key.-., in ll .\ t' . the r;II L' ' \\ o tdd
hl' h:l\cd on lh t. · ty pe td \ t ' l in
tl...,t'. " lw tiJt..'r or rtol th ~· "l'l j..,
H ... t.:d ,,, ih ftd l l' : tp : tt - il~ . TluCwnp :lll\' al"' propti\l'" '''lt;t r:tlt..· rh. n gt·~ lo r .tlw co n u tttJIJ
equ lpllll ' tli \\ hi ch Cllttlr1d ... llll'

tlw

"t'h "r th t hl' acn.•., . . lint'" Tl w
propO'il'd ckt ll)!.t'" \\IHJid l•'"td!
nt .., ll lllll'T "

:u1d dct·re:t\4..'\ lor 1d llt'T \.

.

MISCELLANEOUS
PRODUCTS AND
SERVICES
Till' lnllowin~ ii L'nl\ :IrL' illu stra tive or chan!!,l'" in rail '\ and
&lt; har~es lor so me ol the· mi sccl lancou-' produrts and .\e rvirL'\.
The specific ra te\ and rha r~cs
fo r llll' se item s and lor olhcr
prndutl s a nd Sl'T\ in·.. can bl'
fo un&lt;l in th e propo.SL·d I:niff
sheets
• Tlw flal rode for inter co nn l'c t ing eac h mohilL'
unit of \1 i.srellaneous (AJnlmon Caniers with lhe id ecom munira Iion s nefvvnrk
would incre;tsc lo ~2.45 per
monlh .
1

l o ll ow in ~

::1' Fi nd th a l ihc•Compan y's
;,t nclrhar).!cs an d
lhe rc·~ui;I Ii OIIs and prarli ces
:dk ctinl,!. th L' ;-,a11w arL' 1mj u ~ t.
unreasonahlc a 11 rl insulfieii&gt;n!
to ~' ield r t..~ a ~o n ah le compensation for the se rvices rendercfL
(h i Find that the rates a nd
rh;,r g,t..") :1nd rt..·gulaliun s anrl
prt''-.(' 111 ral t~

praclict''- propn..,t·d ;m· ju ... t and

fl';l\nlla hk and w ill prm·irlc not
lllllft' th ,tn.t Lur ;t nd f{':I"Jmable

u-.t·d and

. _ t&lt;t!ltHl .\ .

MINIMUM LEVEL
PRICING FOR
COMMUNICATIONS
SYSTEMS AND
TERMINAL
EQUIPMENT

• Sepa ralt: charQes would
apply lo the lin es and se ts
;, ssociated with Dialog'
lnl ercnm Syste m, Horizon"Com munical io ns Syste m .
lnterphone System, Exhibition Hall Service and Air~
port Service .
• In creases wo uld ap ply to
Direct Inward Dialing Service and Special Recording
Trunk s.
• For Te lephon e Answering·.
Se rv ice s ub sc ribers , in creases would apply to non-.
recurri ng ch arge s and
rnon lh ls· rat es for CIIIIL'I'n1rator -idcnt i fier sys tems
and ,·ariou' olher fa cililies
and e~ uip men t
• Rates for faciliti es for Other
Common Carr iers 1.0CC )
would be incrL•;csc-d Io coincid e w1th increase s for
special circuils. Also f.HO posed is a new ralc clement ,
l hc Fa cilit y Equipment
Pa c ka~c· . fur lhe lrans rn iss io n . s igna ling and
tl'rmination n·quir ed to
periorm th e funciions ncccssar) for a11 OCC Io pro,·ide il s end -to-e nd se rvice.
The pr:I) l'f of till' Applical ion
request s ilw Pub li c Uii liii es
C&gt; mmi 'lion of O hi o to rio I he

u -,l' lltl lnr

lht· c on·~

H 'llit ·nn· nllh l' puhlir:

l11

in innt'a\t'" lor \O !IJt '

clubs and individuals have taken on
her charity as their projects, too, so
the nearly 30 trips she and her
hUBband have made to Appalachia
have been boWltiful.
Her reward for all this? To hearher people say again, " We're so glad .
~"
you've come uvme.
_
Her sister-in-law, Mrs. Capehartreports the Governor of Kentucky .
bas honored her with the tiUe Ken-_
lucky Colonel; Admiral by the
police, and has been made Shepherd
of Hills.
She is the sister of Mrs. Louise
Rosenbawn, Pomeroy and Mrs. Lee Richardson of Mason.
.

rai l' ol rv tu m on Ilk v; dul· ollh&lt;!
( : om p ; tn~ ·.._ prtqH'rty :lrlu:tl lv

KEY TELEPHONE
SYSTEMS AND
EQUIPMENT

h·~· 1\\\ l\' 111 :11td l'Oilll t'l'h

-

acnlllB two counties,and she still can
count on most of them. Olurches,

lr &gt;.\pprll\t' tlw li l in ~ of the
-.('hl.'dll lt' "illt'l'l\ t'OII ;
I01illl 'd in Sdll'du le F- 1 of llw
,\ppJi, alion . modili,·o '" reflt-ct
\ll rh rt'\'1\io n-, tlwreol a~ m. ty
lwcotnc l'lh.: l'livl' . pm.., na nt to
or dl' r'- 11! till' Cillllmi..,s ion .
du ring I ill' in lerim between the
lil&gt; ng ol !hi' ,\ppliralion and th~
d.,l ,· ilpon whi ch ih l' srhc·dult
propO&lt;,L'd

-. llt 'l' h IH'UIIlll' l' l l e(' l ivc :

1d &gt;Onlt-r 1h:11 Ilw proposed
'h""" ill 't'll llll' L'ih-rl ive forth " iII&gt;.
ll'l Appro\l' the wilhd rawal
nl I he prt'senl sc hcd&gt;de ' hecl.s
roiiia111ed in S&lt;" hcdul• · E-2 ol
Iill' /\jl(diralion :
111,\pproVL' !he u nrl er t akm~
suhmilll'd by !he Company
wh ich would ill'mme dfcc li vc
should Ihe Co mpany elect lo
place lhc proposed ral es into
dfl'cl with oul Co mmi ss ion
ord e r . [lll r'il lanl to Sl' c lio rl
4~119 . 4 2 nf the Ohio Hc·v ised

Code :
(g' C. ra nt su ch olhn a nd
further relil'f OLS Ihe Company is
reaso nahly e nti ll ed lo in th e
prt..' n11'.t'\ .
Till' fom &gt;ol this notice has
heen apprll\ ecl by lhe Puhlic
Uti li lies C:omm iS\ion of O hio.

THE OHIO BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY:

�"

Page--10

The DallY Sentmel

Meigs County happenings.
Ont&gt; hurl in acciddent

Disorderly manner leads July arr~st list in Middleport

• •

Flfty-f1ve arrests were made by
the Middleport Pollee Department

Vt&gt;teran"' Memorial

Medium damage was mcurred to
two vehJcles and a passenger m one
was m1ured man accident Tuesday
on West Mam St
Accordmg to the Pomeroy Police
Department
E\Cn Plantz of
Chesh1re barked mto a parked
\Chicle owned b} Howard L Rupert
Hartford ~ Va A passenger m the
Plantz veh1cle Nancy Plantz wa s

Admitted
Harold
Hudnell
Pomeroy, Donna G1lhlan Chester
Gertrude Bellegnno Middleport
Discharged
Hazel McCallum
Rudolph Gordon, Tarruny Cleland,
and Juan1ta Chapman

58 firP l'all"
The Middleport Fife Department
answer ed 58 calls dunng July 44
emergency runs and 14 fire ca lls, ac·
cordm g to the monthly report of ~ 1re
lh1ef Jeff Darst All vehJcles of the
department were dnve n a total of
1 317 5 1111les dunng the month

tnjured 111 the Lmpact and \\as transported by the Pom!ruv Emergt.!ru.:y
Sq u ad t o Veterans Mem onal
Hosp11&lt;1l She wos not adimtted
Polle e reported that the brake s
went out on the P lantz 'eh1cle :-l o
ntat1ons w~re 1ssued

Wedn

Wednesday, August12, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o

dunng July, according to the report
of Pollee Chief J J Cremeans

Village funds at $428,769
All Middleport V1llage funds as of
July 31 totaled $428,769 08, Villa ge
Clerk Treasurer Jon Buck reports
Rece~pts disbursements and the
end of the month balance of each
fund, respectively, mclude general,
$10 307 33,
$15,948 65,
$10,338 65,
street light
$767 01 , $1 028 76
$10,055 55,
cemetery, $1,216 15,
$1 001 54 $196 23 fire equipment ,
$150 $3,589 10 $3,860 U
defiCit,
swunrrung pool $2 958 10 $3 978 71,
$3,653 60, fife truck, $576 97, nu
disbursements $23 306 64 plannmg
comrrusswn
no receapt.s $14 48

$217 51,

street

mawtenance,
$3,094 94 $4,49!i 94 $88906, def1c1t ,
street levy, $767 02, no dis bur
sements, $17,812 77, samtary sewer,
$8,245 36
$7 '766 32, $8,662 75
samtary sewer escrow, no receipts,
no disbursements , $149,030 15
wa t er,
$9,197 44,
$10,575 61 ,
$42,002 95, water meter trusts, $200,
$21i0, $7,916 57 water tank, $1,000, no
disbursements, $142,483 25
Rece1pts for the month t otal ed
$71 253 15 wh1le disbursements
amount ed t o $81 ,834 94

Of the total arrests, 14 were on

Pybllc Nohce

New residents ••
(Continued from page I)
villages have the1r own numbenng
systems
Anyone movmg mto a home that
has the f1 ve d1g1t number already on
the home or ma1lbux should also contact M 1chaelm order to keep records
up to date
To rece1ve a five dig1t house number stop by the Meigs County Tax
Map OffiCe located m the Masomc
Temple on Mulberry Ave
m
Pomeroy or phone 992·2994 anyt1me
between 8 30 a m · 4 30 p m Mon
day through Fn day

luruts no operator's license and
speedmg

Real Estat e

Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savel II

:

1

:

!

!
:

I

•

results M oney not rctundabte

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
I

P r n t On( wo r d n l &lt;'!C h
"&gt;P l e-t belo w
F nc h n

l.i

cu 1s
'f

(!

~

l h&lt;

I

0 I

111

1 "'-

tJ

I
I

(
(

1

I !
I
I
I
I '
I 2
I J
I '

I

n

l ':&gt; I

l ht

lf

{I

10

1

n

pr Op l r To 3S$700 1ftlr.ti•JrtnrqCJ.,Ot

I

f llU

P r

ll

"'·v~

!)o )l

wan ec

1

For Sctl e
1 Ann ounce me nt
1 For Ren t •

18
19
70

1

71
27

lJ
24
"5
76
77
28

I ,
I
l 8
I 9
l 10
J

I)

!

nc luce Llis.cour l

j 0

II

•&lt;&gt; . \a "" · V lf

These cash rates

5

I

!

- -+--+"-' -+--r--~1

25
t r Yuo ut rt ~our will
r c,Lc
.0~0t&gt;l~ll~~
nr~&lt;~"IA~.~
nnll
Ut t _lT~o~~+'~'~0~0+S7:_:,"

put

(

lh

'-.

)'I

30
_ _ _ _ __

31
3)
33

l
I I'
I "
I Is

34

3'

I~&gt;

I
l

I

Ma1 l Tn1s Co upon W1lh Rem1ttance
T he Daily Sent1ne l

:

Bo• 12?

L---- P~_:'~o_::_o~~~S~6~------.J
H. L WRITESEL

I

OFFICE 742 2003
George Hobstetter J r
Brok er
NEW LISTING -S pac.
ous two story home
large ltv1ng room wrth
frreplac e formal dtnt ng
room
J bed r ooms
equtpped k rtchen ful l
basement fenced back
yard exce llent locatron
tn
Mtddleport
$43 000 00
NEW LISTING- M 1n1
t arm 4 acres w rth a
bea ut1f ul
ten roo m
hom e
L rvrng room
features a sunny bay
w1ndow and a fr re p lace
lorma l dtntng room W1th
sl d1ng doors to patto
arge modern k. rtchen 5
bedrooms ut ltty r oom
3 miles f rom Harnson
v d le $50 000 00
NEW
LISTING
Rut l and E:xcell ent
r ental or start er hom e
Two story 3 bedroom
bath l tV ng room large
k it c h e n
w th
n1 ce
bJckyard
On l y
$1000000
BRAD BURY RDA'D Chorc e &lt;~e r e tor - Good
locatton f or trad er- o r
butld tng S1 te S5 500 00
INVESTME N T PROP
ER TY Two stor y
homo
has 2 apart
m ents nl?xt to Burger
Chel SJ7 500 00
COUN rRY LIVING - 1
r~cres w1lh a lovely 3
bedroom home 2 baths
lrvtng room
drntng
room
lu ll basemen t
car po rt and ut•lrty and
s t o r age
burld ng
$45 000 00
Velm a Ntcm sky"""'- A s soc
Phone 742 :nJ92
Cheryl Lemley As soc
Phon e742 3171

All

typ (' ~

O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

quft er

c!( 1 n1nq 1nd p.1 nt nq .
A1lworkqu1r1nteed
Fr t r"'E. s. ttmlll
Pnfr . ,

Rt t \ O llblc

___
L-

I

'------------+------------i
r
S11es 8 10 I ' 14 16 18 20

S ze 11 tbust 14) lakes 3 yards
54 nch labnc

$2 00 lor each pattern Add 50(
for each pat1em fiX IJDStage

and handling Send lo
Anne Adams
Pattern O.pl

1'

The DallY Sentmel

143 West 17 St New York NY
toOll Prml NAME, ADDRESS
ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER

Busy woman 7 Work ng ... oman
Dress lo less spend less 11me
work- dloose a wardrobe hom

ou&lt; N[W FAll WIN I[R PAn eRN
CATALOG Coupon l01 f 1ee $1
patle~n nSJde Send $1 50

I,

All CRAFT BOOKS $1 00 tach
135 16 Dolls and Clothes
134-14 Qlnck Qu1lts
133 Fash10n Home Qu1lt1ng

-o

J l 1915 for a term•nat1Qfl
of any nghts you or certarn
other named defendants
mr~y have or clarm 1n a 19 70
R 1ch ardso n Mobile Home
sena t nu mber 40713 for it
cour t order that possess1on
of sa•d mob1 te hom e be
del vered to P lat nfrff that
the named defenda nls be
requ .r ed to se t up the1 r tn
tere st tn th e real es ta te o r
be forev er barred th at t he
tens be marsha ll ed that
the rea l property be so ld
accordtng to la w that t he
tt t le to the rea l esta te be
qu tE' fF:d tn the purchaser
a nd for reasonab le at
torn eys tees and cos ts
You ar e rcqutrcd to a n
swcr the Ftrs t Amended
Compl
l h tn the
lwenty
etg ht ntnl
days Wt
after
last
pub I teat on of lhts not1 ce
whtc h wdt be publ rshed on
cc eac h week for SI X sue
cess tvf&gt; week~ and th e l ast
oub lr cat ton w1 t1 be made on
Scptcmbe r 2 198 1
1n case 0 1 your ta lu re to
answer
or
otherw se
res pond a ~ permtlled by
the Oh1o Rules of Ctvrt
Procedure wrth1n the ttm c
st ated
IUd gme nt
by
de l au lt wtl l be renderf"r1
agatnsl you f or th e rei ef
demanded tn th e co m
pia nt
LM rv E Spen cer
c erk of Cou rt
at Common Pl eas
M crqs Coun t y OhtO
M CtQS Co unl y
Courthouse
r=' O IIIL r oy
Oh to
45769

Rea l Estc1te - General

· Housing,
Headquarters

l Note
Thrs Not ce IS
tss ued nnd pu blt shed 8ur
sua nt to Ru le 4 4 of the h o
Rullsof Ctvtl Prouo•dure)

130-Sweate"-Sizes 38 56

(7)

Books and Cmlog - add 50t
eac h for poslage and handltng

l9

(B) 5

ll

19.,26

l::~~~w

(9) 2

61c

Rutiand Furniture Carpet Shop
SUMMER CARPET SALE

216

ALL CARPET IS MARKED DOWN

RUBBERBACK MclG~~~~;pet

CARPET

Cash n Carr- y
1 Rolf Each
Brown
Blue
Gree n

W/ Paddmg
I nstalled
Sta rtmg

$12~~

1 E )( tJ a Good)
Reg S 16 95 sq

Installed

SS

95 sq yd

yd

d

Yl .

Now$13!lisq .

LI V ING Fit rts bes t tn tht s 3 yr
old 3 bedroom br. ck
rC~n c h 11 7 b ath s central
iltr &amp; hea t d rshwasher
stove &amp; r efrr gera tor 3
acres J.J ius $57 000

GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now &amp; Save $2·$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpel '" slack to p1ck from
Regular backed, carpet mstalled tree
w1lh pad Good selectiOn Roll Ends Rem·
n a nls $2 SO up Grass carpet $4 99 yd
Green and Brown
Dnve A L11tle- Save A Lot

Pu Hed shoulders e~ t end the
nteres! uf the cu ved
yoke - so soft femtntne abo~e
slender coaldress I nes Bell
or wear tn1s tree Sew now'
p,, nl ed Pattern 4669 M1sses

NEAR NEW BRIDGE
Hawkeyes vrew of th e
Ohr o rtver 3 bedroom s
stove refrtgerator rn
tht s lovely b tr ch k1t
chen Hot wa ter heat
w th woodbu r n er
3
ilcr€-S S65 000

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Mam St.

Yl 91 86 1

c_._
"_'_'o
_160
w
_ ,,_,"_ _ ___,
Yol9
7

REESE~
TRENCHING
SERVICE

15 Yenr s
Ex penence
Reaso n a bl e Rat es

W.1ter Sewer E lcctr c
G l S L m e Dtl chc o;,
W:1tcr Ltn c Hook up s
Septr c T &lt;Jnk s
Cou nty Ccrt •lr cd
Rou ~ h Lane
Chc shtre Oh
Ph 167 7S 60

! ; " •

ALSO ALARM WORK
[ PH. 247 3534

All S l E EL

Farm 8UIIdtngs

l

8 6 l mo

------'1.!....7.'.C.I11"-l
'

') I 1 ('&lt;;

VINYL
SIDING

0 tf1tf
G u ti er
K'ooflnq Remodel1
·1q
Ro'lm
Ad ·
dill O il S
Dryw .lll

SUPERIOR
VINYL
PRODUCTS

c

742 · 2211
MOBIL E HOM E - 1978
Ht ll crest
l 4x70 wrth
storage J1 1 baths o•
furn ace used on ly 300
qals
las t y ear
J
bedrooms Onl y Sl 2 000

~ t

,lnd Rcp.llr

dtnq
k'ooltnQ I C.u fh r
Remodc lrn q
rv rnq You r An 1 to r
10 Yelr S

ROBERT MASH
991 6373

/ltlmo p&lt;l -

• F1berglass
• Stamless St ee l

1

1

C. L KITCHEN
Mason

992 5682

w

Va

.a6

10 7 tf&lt;

mrl1
wr'l t
of
urqr ou nd s on Old Rf .

JJ
Mo n

mo

f rt !J J O to 4 00
tll t cr A uq J
l'h '11J'l b564
7 26 l mo pel

Housing
Headquarters

Frorn JOxJO
SMALL

Ut1hty Butldmgs
S tlL O:. I rom -h"b

to l h40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

PERM SALE
NOW T HRU AUG 31

'i.WOO

Now 1&gt;21 50
"&gt;30 oo
Now \17 SO
GW E N S SPEC IAL
w w e L('ngfh Perm
For Lonq('r HatrS29 SO
Ph 991 172S

'"9 needs
~

11

lt I Geor ge M rll u C~t2ck
y our present " lc&lt; fr c 11
o; y ') t c m

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

Res td &lt;:ntt,l l
&amp;Co mm ~.:rc t l l

THE PHOm

Ca ll74 2 3195

PLACE

I " It '

- Port rtufs
- W eddtngs
- Ann1 versa nes
- Passports
- and Now
an 1m
press1ve complete lin e
of w edd1ng and an
n1v ersa ry
1nvrfatron s
and
accessorre s
Rea sonabl y
pnc ed
qutck servr ce
- LOO~
w!fhout
obl1g.:1tron
Bob, Charlene
and Jayne
Hoeflich
109 H 1gh st , Pomeroy
6 28 I m o.

,

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

.

us Rt so E.as r
Guys1nlle OH
Phone614 662 1821
Aut horrzed John Deer
New Holland Bush Hog
F.u m EQu tpm ent Dealer
FA RM EOUIPMEN r
PARTS/SE RVJC E
U SED EQUIPMENT
1- No 86-00 D•ese l F~&gt;rd
Tr;~ctorw/C.r~b

J- Modei17S Dtesel M F
J- Model479 Hay B1rd
N H

Now\17~0

'!.?S 00

Fo r all of your w.r ·

Rt J Bo:.S4
R Htn c Oh
Ph bt4 INJ 1S91
6 l

MILlER ELECTRIC
SERVICE

7 3 ff c

I

169 N 2nd
M rddl eport Oh10
B 6 1 mo

DOZER WORK
CAT D-6-C
Farm Pond s Land
Cteanng Read s
Call

PULLINS
EXVACATING
992 2478
or
Blame M1lhoan
985· 3965
7 15 1 mo pd

L&amp;M
Maintenance
and Demolition

Kcc p

Tho~

Ad 101

Fulur~

Relrrtnct

APPLIANCE SERVICE

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Call Ken Young

I '" ""'""" II
985· 3561

PA ~TSA'-/O SE R V ICE

• Bu1ldmg
Ma .ntenance
• Removal ol
Old BUIIdmgs
Free Esttmates
Ph 247 3534
8 6 1 mo

Ji l l MAkES
~J]O,ii l ~

e W&lt;!\I'ICF\

e 0

• Drycn
eR .~nqe~

• 0 \ hWd ) htr '
eH o iW &lt;~ ter r.ul k'&gt;

Rep~rr•n!J !i. m ct· t~SJ

Con L.1 undr l'~
Rent~ P'rop.:rt t',
Apt Hou\e Own, 1,

COMPLETE
RADIATOR'
SERVICE
FrOm th e Smallest
Heater Core to the
Largest Radtalor

V

~ ---~
- ·M~ob~""~'~Ho~m~e~P~·~·~··~----:

• Bac~hoe
• Excavatmg
• Sephc Systems
• Water , Sewer &amp;
Gas Lrnes
• Dump Truck
• rrencher
L1censed &amp; Bonded

Rad1ator Spectahs1
NATHAN BIGGS
35 ~rs EJCper!ence

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

PH. 992-7201

Pomeroy, OH
992 2174

Ph ,
5 7 ftc

5·21 lfc

BY PAS S -

3

BAUMS SUB DIV
V1ew of Rt 7 L arge
enoug h tor children or
garde n 3 bedroom s 2
ful l baths fam1 l y rm
wr th W B
fireplace
~~ntshed
garage wrth
Gen te control Central
atr &amp; heat Really m ce
"' $75 000

m&lt; 111&lt;.

Ph ( 304) 773 5634

9 a m S 30 p m

rr r t r ~ t tn l.lh...,
&lt; til Co ll ect
th Ill] ])7
I I J l m o pd

( Pomeory Scrap
Iron &amp; Metal)
1 op prtc f &lt;; p.11d l or .1uto
hndH o; -.c r.lp tr on .1 nd

e V1nyl

7

bedroom ranch wrth
carport bath gas hea t
crstern
L C
water
ava tlable 11 2 acres of
land $?4 000

WANTING TO BUY
SCRAP

POOLS

- Auto and Truck
Rep a 1r
- Transm 1ss1on
Repa.r
Hrs Man Fn

EUGENE LONG

C.l ll

PERSONALIZED

ROGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE

~

second Street

COUNTRY

L-----~~~--------~-------Yd,.

!ashton

e

Phone
1 (614)·992 3325
RETIREMENT
1
ACRES - 3 bedrooms
1 1
baths
sundeck
some lurntture drrll ed
well ots of shru bber y
r ghl on the Oht o Rrver
on ly$13500

RT

ot tool WOO&lt; ,
gutter s

11 w or r Lp 11r
1 u1 dow 1 ~ p o ut

Pu bhc N otc1c_,e,___ _

·
Publtc Nottce
and to term ma te any rights
you and certarn oth er
defendants ma~ have or
cl a tm tn a 1970 Richardson
Mobtlt.: Home se rt al num ·
ber tJ0713 wht ch s th e sub ·
ec t of thts ac t ron and that
Defendant W dlt am M M t
chell be found to ow n th e
ent rr e ntl?r est n Parce l
No
I of th e above
descrrbed rea l esta te
The pr ayer of the Ftrst
Amended Compla nt also
prays tor the foreclosure of
Pia nttff s mort gaqe on th e
above descrtbed property
Parce No 2 havtng been
tran sterred to you and
Defendant Huro d N Hud
nell bv deed dated March

Business Services

ROOFING

I

Public Not•ce
67 deg 13 ' 20" east 25 teet ;
the nce south 57 deg 20 20:,
east 175 teet thence sou th
38 deg
05
40
we~t
(passtngan r onp n al89 46
feet) for a tot a l d1stance of
ns 68 feet to an 1ron p 1n
th ence north 73 deg 56 40
west 246 0 1 fee t to a n tron
ptn t hence north 21 deg
16 10 ea~ t 222 88 fl?e tt o an
tr on ptn · thence north 44
dl?g 40 west 90 0 feet to an
tron p n thence north 44
deg 40 w es t 90 0 teet l oan
tron pm th ence norfh 07
deg l5 east 120 o tee t to
the potnt of beg nntn Q con
tiitntng 2 192 ac r es Deed
re fere nce
Volume 252
P~g e
8 11
Metgs Deed
Records
.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

Phone~------------------

I I 5l

Public Noflce
nam rng you as one of th e
defendants by ftltng rts
Com platnt tn Foreclose on
VS
Feb rua ry 4 198 1 a nd a F tr ·
HAROLD N HUDNELL et st Amended Con pl atnt tn
al
Forec l osureonJu ly 9 1981
Defendants
Your last known add ress tS
CASE NO 17748
Route 4 Pomeroy Oh o
45769
NOTICE
Pl a tnl tf f Ft r st Bank of
Thf" ob,ect of the com
Martetta has brough l lil tS plarnt ~ ~ t o obla tn a money
COURT H OUSE
ac tton tn tne above cou rt
POMEROY OHIO
1udgment agat n st you and
certa n other defenda nts~
to for ec lose a mortgage
aga nst
!h e
foltowrng
d(Strtbed real es tate
S1tua ted n th e To wnsh p
of Sc pro Coun ty of M etgs
~1nd State of Ohto lo Vl.tt
Parce l No 1
S• tu aiL tn Sec rr on ?.:
Sctp to Townshtp
Me1gs
or Wnte Da1ly Sent.nel Ctass1f1ed Dept
Tow n sh tp Ohro
ber ng
Ill Cour t Sl, Pomeroy, 0, 45769
more
part•c ular l y
descrtbed as
f o llow s
BPgtn n tng at
t he 1n
ters ec t ton ot th e east It ne of
a 1 45 acrP lot a t th e 1n
t er scc lton ot th e eas t ltne of
a 1 45 Ctcre lot rec orded n
e AN NOUNCEMENT5
RENTALS
Vo l ume 222
Page 189
t
CardOI fl"o.lrl~~
~~ _ HOu~e\ fOr Rent
Me gs County Deed Recor
1
nMt' no r a n
~1 - Mub lr Homes
ds and a pornt 12 fee t at
tor Rent
J .O.nnourut&gt;ment ~
r rght angles from the cen
44
Apilrtm
e
n
ls
torRent
~ - G H ' iJW&lt;IV
ter ltne of State Rout e No
4~ - l= urn shed Room s
143 thence Sou lh 83 deQ
~
fi;~ppy Ad\
~b - S&gt;la(e for Rent
40 eas t 200 feet to a po nl :, ,
~
Lo~ r and Fovm;l
~7 - Wan t eO to Rent
t hence South 8 1 deg 50
I V arl:l S.:~ I'
4B - E t~u pmenl lor Ren
eas t 175 tee t to a pont
II Putlll S~ t ~
t hence South 78 deg 00
8. A LOCI on
ertst 208 2 fee t to ct potnt tn
e
MERCHANDISE
~ - Wnn ld to 6uv
!h e ce nt er of th e Sou lft con
Sr - ,.. 0 useho ld Goods
cret e br dge r a tltng ( 12 fee t
oft th e center lrnc ot Slate
S7- C B TV R.td10 Equ pment
e EMPLOYMENT
~)
An t que~
Rout e No 143 at rrght
SERVICES
~0 - M I H Mercl'l &lt;~ntlo ~e
ang les) thf'ncc south 67
I t He iPW&lt;Inl('d
\~ - Bu ld ng Supp l es
de q 13 20 e CJ~ t 254 05 !tel
11 \ tu.:~t e d Wanti!O
~b - Pel\ lor Sale
the t rue po tnt ot bcgtnntng
t or th e tollowtng tra ct
, _ RLO ~ nc~~ l &lt;1 n n9
Beq nn nq Sou t h JS deq 05
~
\(hOO\ I n lr u(lo n
40 r W e~ ! 100 fee t lhf' nc:e
e FAR M SUPPLIES
6 - W.HI n tv
Soulll67dcq 13 20 tas 115
&amp; LIVE STOCK
&amp; c 8 Ill! pol
t eet then ce south 57 deg
41
8 W.Jntcd To Do
- F.:~rm Equ pm el"lt
20 20 eas1 175 tee t !hence
&amp;1 - Wo~n le-d to Buy
north 38 deQ 05 40 east
71 - T r uck~ lor S" te
e F INAN CI AL
100 fee t th ence nor th 57
61 - l vn tock
dey 20 ?0 west 175 ff::et
64
Ha
v
&amp;
G
ra
n
Opponun tv
thence north 67 deg 13 20
•H 5eed &amp; Fer! hrer
H - Monev t o L().Jn
eas t 25 teet to th e p o nt of
1l P o!eH on~
bcQtnntng conl a tntng 0 46
Suv CC\
ac re more or less Deed
eTRANSPORTATlON
Rcfter~n c t::
Volurtt c 253
71 - AutoltorSafe
• REAL ESTATE
Page 449 Mergs Cou nt{
73 - llan\&amp;4W D
Deed Records
11 Hom e~ t o 5o11~
74 - Moto r cvc tes
PMcel No 1
J2 Mob t ~ Hume ~
H - Auro PArts
ror Sil e
S• tua ted ' " Sectt on No 7
&amp; Acceuor es t
Me tQS
Sctpro Townsh 1p
JJ FA r m~ to r :!&gt;all•
11 - ALOIO Rep• r
Count y Ohro rlnd Ur HIQ
H flu\ nen Buo ld "9\
more
partrcu l arly
H
l o t \ &amp; A cr eAge
descrtbed as
f ollows
J~
I&lt; tal E\ t at e Want~
e SE RVICES
B c qtnntnq a l
th e ttl
l1 ReAltor~
8
Home mprov e menl ~
tersectton ot th e eas lltne of
81 - Piumbtng &amp; Extil\1&lt;11 ng
a I 45 acre lot re corded tn
Want Ad Advertisrng
ll - EHil~~ lng
Deed Book No 222 Page
D ead lines
14 - E ec tr cal
No 139 Deed Records of
MO nday 1 lO em Sa turd~ y
&amp; Relr g t' at on
MetQS
Coun ty Oht O Jnd a
l ur~dar lhru Fpd&lt;tv 1 JO PM
I~
Gene a H~ul ng
potn l 12 feet a t rtgh t angles
11 t dav bt'l u re oubl c~t on
h - M H Reoa r
f r om t he cen terlt ne ot SICtfL
Suntl., y 7 JO f' M Fr rby
Ruu l e No l 4J th ence so ultt
81 - Uol"lo ' '~' 'V
83 deg 40 Past 200 feet to a
pont fh er.ce south 81 deq
Rates and Other lnformat1on
50 eas t 1 7~ feet to a po nt
thencf' soulh 78 df'q 00
Uptot~wO r tl ~
on{'tlily n~erton
SJ 00
eas t 208 2 fee t to a pornt tn
~U p to l~wo r tl ~
thn&gt;e dav n \11 1 on
'~ 00
the ce nter ol th e south con
Up l oiSwcHtl&gt;
~~ d1ys nser !oo
cre t e brt dgc ra1 ilnq ( 12 fee t
" 00
I A v~ r ~qf 4 worth per I 11
off th e cen terlin e of S R
Mo• If H omt ~~If\ lnd 'f lrdaiU •rt I CCf Pi tO on tv Wllll CIHI wIll .
1-1 3 at r gilt ang l es) and th e
o dN Bun cn~rqt to •d1 (u r v 119 Bo~ "''vmb•r In C• t ol Tilt
t rue potnt ot bcq•n nr ng for
Sent net
th e follow nq descrrbed
The PLObl ~her r e ~rr v e~ thr r qht toed t ()r rt' t!.'CI anv iltl ~ nremed
tra c t Thenc e sout h 67 deg
ob tec ttonal The Pub o\her w n no t be re~pon~ o lll@ t or more l h~n o n e
13 20 easl 254 05 fee t
II( OII I'C I ln~ t' rl Oil
Hl t nu sou l II 38 deg 05 40
west 100 feet then ce sou th

PHONE 992-2156

Name ____________________

il1d o r q r oup o t I gurc~
c o u n t "&gt; il 5 d wor o Cc un l
n &lt;'l m c and a d d r ess o r
ph Orlf n n nl.Jt I
I &lt;,!-'d wl'!.rrt&lt;:.
1
J
6
10
YOL l ~ ~ t br tf cr r c~ u t ~ 'V'"' " day day s days d ay
rl v u Ct c, r t-11 tu y
q
P r
rh
L nt 1 (
To 16 SJ .OO u nn '1.7 nn

__P_u_b_hc_
No.~
t ,I.C"'e_ __
F lf( S T
BANI&lt;
OF
MARIETTA
Pl.ltnfdt

WANl AD INFORMATION

Wr rte your own ad and order bY ma I wrth lhr '::!
coupon Canc.el your ad by phon e v.hen you get

1

Publtc Nottc e
TO DEFENDANT GWE N·
DOLYN F
HUDNEL~
WHOSE
RES I DE N CE
AND
WHEREABOUTS
ARE UNKNOWN
COURT OF
COMMO N PL E AS
MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
ME IG S COUNTY

General

HOBSTETTER RE:ALTY

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
r----------------------~

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
The Publrc Ut1lt1les Com
mrss1on of Oh10 has set for
public heartng case No 81
14 GA GCR to rev1ew the
gas cos t recove r y rates of
the Cor\.Jmbus Gas of Oh10
lnc
the operatton of 1ts
Purchased
Gas
Ad
1ustment
Clause
and
related mi'ltters
Th •s
hear tng tS scheduled to
begm at 10 00 a m on
Tuesday
September 8
1981 at t he offtces of the
CommtSS ron
375 So uth
H1 ~ h
Str eet
Col umbus
Ohto 43215
All 1nteres ted persons

The pollee Crulllel'5 were driven
5,127 rrules and 564 parking meter
viOlation tickets were written

disorderly manner charges, mne on
charges of dnvmg wh1ie m·
toX!cated, five on destructiOn of
property charges and four, assault
Three persons were charged with
driving while under suspens1on and
two each on char ges of res1stmg
arrest reckless operation httermg
and fa1lure to pay old fmes There
was one arr est each for fleemg an of·
fleer, possession of mar11uana , otr
structwn of off1c1al busmess
trespassmg dischargmg fireworks ,
runnmg a stop s1gn consurrung beer
m a moklr veh1de, aggravated
menacmg, failure to y 1eld rrght of
way d1schargmg gun tn the "llage

Ohio

V1nyl &amp; Alum mum·
SIDING

Will be g1ven an op
portunlty to be heard Fur
ther mformatlon may be
obta1ned by contacting the
Comm1ssaon
(8)

Trash P1ckup I n
' of
The V1llage
Middleport, Oh.
Ph 992·5016
or 992· 7505
~ 17 tf c

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

OHIO VAu.EY
ROOFING

Now Takrng
Enrollment For
September Classes rn ,
Ractne and Mtddleport
Ages J and Up
Adult Classes Offered

and Home Mamtenance
• Rooftng of all types
• S1d1ng
• Remodeling
• Freeest1mates
• 20 vrs expenence

For Information Call '
949 271 Dor 949 2106
81 2 1 mo

TOM HOSKINS

BARNEll'S
WELD SHOP
•Steel • Alummum

•
Castmg • Trruler Hrt~
ches
•
Metal
Fabrtcat1ons
Monday Frtday
4pm~ to11pm

All Day Saturday

•

PH. 949-2285
Located at MaplewoOd
La~e 1n Racme
7-17-1 niO

Ph 949 216D
7-Sifc

(

614

446-Ga lhpolr s
367-Cheshtre
368- Vtnton
14S-RIO Grande
256- Guyan 01st
643- Arabla Otst

PROOATE
COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHJO
ESTATE
OF
DALE
BACHNER, DECEASED
Case No 23489
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On July 30 198 1 .n the
Me tgs County Probate
Court Case No 23489 Gar
net Bach ner
Bo x 195
Bachner Rd
Rutland
Oh10 45775 was appotnted
Executri X of the estate of
Date Bachner deceased
late of Bo)( 195 Bac hner
Rd
Rutland
OhtO
Rutland Townshrp
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge/
Cler k
181 5 12 19 J tc

Y92 - Middleport
Pomer-oy
'HI5- Chester
343- Portland
247- Letart Fa.lls
'i49- Racme
742-R utland

Mason Co W Va
Area Code 304
67S- Pt Pleasant
45t:I-Leon
Sf6-A pple Grove
!73-Mason
IHJ1- N ew Hav en
1:195- Letart
937-B uffa lo

In Gafha County

446-2342

In M etgs County
ln Mason County

992-2156

7.____Y._a
,"-rd
" -"'
5a:.:.:
le'--Large Carport Sale ,.9 rear
Spruce St.
Gall1polls
Wed , Thurs , Frl , 3. Sat
12 13,U ,&amp;15

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

_

••

3

NEW LJSTJNG FARM
- Approx 201 acres 1' 1
story J bedrooms
l
bat h house wtth base
m ent for ced arr fu el 011
hea t 7 brtrns chtck en
hou se
and garage
Tillable acreage plus
past ure trmber Owner
w1 lf frn ance l2°o w tth ' J
down
pa y m e nt
$90 000 00
NEW LISTING - Brad
bury
Mobile home
wrth ex pa ndo bay wrn
dow centra l arr condr
tronrng front porch 2
ca r garage wtth 2
room s and I 115 ac re
lot Comes completely
turn1 shed wrth go rgeous
Qualrtv furnttur e
tn
cl udtng washer an d
dryer $19 999 00
NEW LISTING - M1d
dleport Nt ce Str eet
w tth 50x200 lot and a 4
r oo m home w1 th a
garden spac e front and
r ea r porch 2 storage
butldtngs g arage car
port a nd a ftr epla ce
$1490000
INVESTMENT PRO
PE RTY
or ..1 nt ce
home f or what would
pay tor rent I I rs a f atr
1y new 3 bedroom one
floor plan home wtth a
large k1t ch en The walls
are panel ed and mostl y
ca rpeted $19 500 00
FIVE
BEAUTIFUL
ACRES w1th part Of tf
fenced wrth a board
fence A Iso an 80 foot
long one )'car old ranch
home w rth a large fam •
ly room
huge l1vrng
room 3 bedrooms f rant
porch large older barn
an d
cor n
cr 1b
$61 000 00
REALTOR
Henry E Cleland Jr
992 6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell949 266()
Ootf1e Turner 992 569'2
Roger Turner 992 5692

A rH
.

&lt;

I, I lo

Announcements

Amway

NEW LISTING - Spit!
leve l lux ur y tn thrs 5
bedroom tota l elec trr c
hom e
rn
Eastern
D1stnct Whole hou se
atr
21 2 baths rec
room
utt11ty 2 car
ga r age toyer 12x24 sun
dec k Approx I acre
$63 000 00

'

r • ' • " ' . ' ..~., . ·•·• · ••

SWEEPER and sew1ng
machtne repatr parts and
supplies
P1ck up and
delivery. Dav1s Vacuum
Cleaner, one half m11e up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
446 0294

992·2259

L

Real Estale - General

St!auttful Custom
Butlt Garages
Call for fr ee Sldtng
es t•mat es 949 2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday Calfs
J l l li e

New drstnbutor
Platns area Wtll
del rver- Call667 3323
Tup~r

For buld delrvery of
gasotrne heattng oil and
dtesel fue l, ca ll Landmark,
992 2181, Pomecov Oh

4 Fam1ly Y~rd Sale at Ruth
Ann
Ham11ton s
1050
Second Ave
Gi'llllpol1s
Frl &amp; Sat Good port
sewtng machrne stero w
AM FM, blue 1eans s1ze 7
to 11 Spreads drapes, 1 set
of 14 and one set of 15'
snowt1res, and four 15'
chevy wheels
6 Fam1ly Yard Sale Aug
12 14
24
Grape
Sf ,
Gallipolis School clothes,
1eans, too ls furn tture, and
mtsc
Garage Sale Frrday and
Saturday 351 Debby Dr
McGu1re SubdtVISOn Fur
n1ture v1olets, and ladles
clothes

Anyone
knowtng
the YARD SALE Bradbury
whereabouts of DeU M Ar 8u1ld1ng In Cheshtre Aug
cher, Verna M Archer 14&amp; 15 9 SPM Bunkbeds
Ray Archer Geraldme Ar bar stools end tables and
cher, or any of th~r mrsc ttems
descendants call 992 7883
after 4 pm
Add1son
Yard
Sale
First In
Bulavtlle Rd
AMWAY diSinbulor For tersect1on turn nght, 2
the wonderful products of houses
13 14,&amp; 15
Aug
Amway call304 773 5040
Lots of mtsc
NO huntrng or trespl!lsstng
w tthouf wrtften permiSSIOn
on
Harry
McComas
1
Randal Brumfteld farm
Ashton WV
4

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who ha$
anythmg to g 1vK aWay and
does not offer or attempt to
offer anv other thmg for
~ale may place an ad tn thts
column There Will be no
charge to the advertrser
,. k1ttens one black, litter
box tra1ned Call446 0675 or
see at J Garf1eld Ave
GallipOliS
G1ve to good hOme only, 3
beaut1ful part S1mese Itt
ter tra1ned 6 wks old ~~t
tens Call446 7432

2 krttens 2 ca ts 1 yr

Garage Sale Thurs Fn
Fancy dtShes , furn1ture
antrques 2 m1les West of
GallipoliS on Rt 141 Y 110
500

Da I mat 100,
Female
registered 2 vr old Call
446 8635

·R.C.S. REALTY, INC.lB
BILL CHILDS, Mgr,
Phone 992·6312
Pomeroy, 01110

V. C. YOUNG II
I

·,

•'

"'"

DOWN'

House with acrreege for
sale, 3 or ~ bdrs , fully car
peted 2 barns, 379 2123

New 3 bdr house with
garage and full basement
000 Call 446 0390

«s

BY OWNER 4 bdr, split
level, living room &amp; dining
room comb1natlon, eat In
k1tchen lg family rm , 2
112 baths, located In Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
f~rm Kyger Creek School
~~tJI 01stnct Shown by appt
only ca ll ol46 9403

sizes

Pupp1es 6 wks old, h~lf
bOrder collie half sheperd
Call 379 2784

Lap stze puppies to g1ve
away to good home Part
poodle, I male , t female
9927054

Five Family Aug 13, u, 15
Gallipolis Ferry, wv, right
down from Stauffer Plant
Turn nght cross ra•lroad
track then watch for s•gns
Clothes, diShes furnature,
and many other items
Cheap 10 til &gt;

B

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctton

Neals AUCtiOn
Hogsett,
WVA Rt 2 Every Sal 7 00
PM
1cons1gnments
taken) (will buv furniture)
Lonn1e Neal367 7101
AUCTION Thursday 7 pm
Mt Alto Auct •on and Sales
Thrs week we have fur
n•ture and appl1ances
tools, electrrc motor, and
other mrsc Ken Cole, Auc
t1oneer
9

Wanted to Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur
mture and Antiques of all
ktnds, call Kenneth swatn,
256 1967 1n the evenings
FEATHER BEDS WAN
TED ANY CONDITION
MISC BOX 65, AURORA,
IND 47001 GIVE DIREC
TJON WILL CALL SOON
CASH PAl D tor clean late
model used cars Smrth
Bu1ck Pont1ac GAllipolis
Oh10 Call «4 2282
WANTED to buy Junk
cars, scrap metal, and bat
tenes Call388 9303
Wanted to buy standrng
pulpwood Call 446 9638
WE BUY FURNITURE
We sell furn1ture Sagraves
Furntture 446 4775

CHIP WOOD Poles max
d1ameter 14
on largest
end $12 SO per ton Bundled
slab
SlO 50 per ton
Dehverd to Ohto Pallet Co
Rock
Spnngs
Rd
Pomeroy 992 2689

4 Famtly Yard Sale Frtday
&amp; Saturday Laroe assort
ment of diShes, antiques
and Xmas
decorattons
Cook res and refreshments
on old Rt 35 1 mtle E of
R10 Grande
Mov1ng Sale Thurs &amp; Fn
9AM till 6PM Lots of An
t1que furntture, glassware
stoneware, baskets, lots of
mise 1/4 m1le off Bulavllle
on Georges Creek Rd

608 First Ave Papasan
chrur, glass coffe table
small refng , couch, pic
tures and frames scuba
gear,
Or1ental
lamp
camera gear, snow ttres
clothes mtsc ttems Aug
13 14 15 lOAM 6PM Call
ol46 7541

Yard Sale Thurs &amp; Fn
9 00 6 00 0 J White Rd ,
Movrng can not take our 2 5th house sweeper elec
house dogs
Peek a poo weed eater, refr~g, clothes
Pek r neese
good
w1th andm1sc
Children
G1ve to good
home
Yard Sale August 13 14 Yto
S Baum Addrton near
2 male dogs apparent State H1ghway Garage
strays
One black w1th NIce cloth1ng, books
brown, one whtte w1th games, can 1ster sets, golf
brown ears and black and clubs, and masc Items
brown spots
Medtum
SJzed, 9~9 2678
Waller
5 fam11y garage sale Aug
Voss, SR 124
13 14 South of Tuppers
Pla1ns on CR28 Lyle Swain
To good home, three male res1dence
k11tens, lD weeks old, have
been wormed Half Persian
~
family carport sale
and
half
S1amese
Browntsh black '" color Aug 14 15, 10 to 5 Fur
n1ture, dashes, clothes
Healthy, lovable pets
Next to Slate Highway
Phone 30~ 773 5859
Garage
Lostand Found

Yard Sale 125 S Park
Dr1ve, Pt Pleasant School
clothes, boys, girls, baby,
mens, womens c lothing
N1c nacs and much more
Auguslll &gt;

Garage Sate Frtday and
Saturday Patr&lt;ot Cadmus
Rd off w Clothes tools
t!lnttque Furn , horse collar
w1th m 1rror, baby turn
lawn mowers, b1cycles
sk1llets and pans

Yard sale, Thur Aug 13 9
&gt; Reed residence SR33 '~•
mi le past Beacon Clothing,
baby furniture, dishes. and
bedding

LOST Tiny
off
While
poodle Jerrlcho Rood Rt 2
orea Pleose call675 3558

Addons and
remodeling
Roof1ng and gutter
work
- Concrete work
- Piumb•ngand
electncal work
(Free Eshmates)

all

Yord Sale Thul"$day &amp;
Fnday, 9 00 5 00,80 Locust
St Console TV diShes,
throw rugs what not etc

2 k1ttens call ol46 4999

LOST
Siamese
Cat,
female, has ~&gt;&amp;en spayed,
name Lynn Lost in 18 Por
tsmouth Rd area Reward
PhOne ol46 8060

Real nice home
on corner
Second and
Hudson Sl 1n Middleport Good view of the Oh10
R lver Former home ol our Stat~ Representative
worth much more than asktng pnce of S30,000 J
owner will help hnance or take a land contract with
nght party

f!ROI'.EN

Six family yard sale8 m1les
out Rt 2 near Forest Hills
Cemetary
Clothes tor

BEDS IRON BRASS old
furmture
gold, sliver
dol tars, wood Ice boxes,
stone 1ars, antiques, etc ,
Complete
households
Wrrte M D M1ller, Rt .c,
Pomeroy Oh Or 992 7760

old

and S mos Call ol46 4027

6

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

BA.GK'

HIS r::.AR
HAD

Basement Se le
Wed
Thurs. Fn 411 Lewis St ,
PI
Pleasant
Curtains,
diShes, clothing, and mise

YARD SALE Quail Creek
Mob1te Home Commumty
1 1n Rodney Weds through
Sat start1ng at 12 noon CB
L..-·- - -,.- - :-::--:-"" I rad1os and test equ1pment,
I m not sellmg Garl SCout Spalding Golf clubs and
cook1es I m selling I ve-aot bag G 1rls clothtng !Ule 5
two k1ds m-c::ollege cook1es
and 7, dtshes, and mise
household goods

General

608
E Matn
POMEROY,O.

TOOl'. IT

Household Items, fur
nlture, books Wed, Thur.
Fn 8 30to4 30

- """J

Real Estate

Thursday end
Friday
August 13 and 14 Fourth
and Horton Streets, Mason,
wv 9 30 to 3 Boy 's
cloth tog

ro PLACE AN AD CALL

""'.:.L::.A.:.:F~F'--·~A'-=·-D
=A_Y_11

ARENTIOI

Yard sale Thur and J'rl

96.1 S 3rd Ave, Middleport

everyone,

675-1333

GEl

Yard Sale

Metgs Co A rea Code

614

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

992 6215 or 99 2 731 i
Pomeroy, Oh

Galha Co Area code

Pubhc Notice

7

Items to numerous to list
Rain cancels

I

12 ltc

'

J&amp;C
SANITATION
SERVICE

l.lass•fied Page11 cover the
follou•mg telephone exchanges . ..

Gold, Sliver
sterlrng
1ewe1ry, nnos, old cams &amp;
currency Ed Burkett Bar
ber Shop, Middleport 992
3476

26 m g1rls b1ke
d1tton 949 2801

m good con

GINSENG call collect 1f
you have ready to sell 1 303
762 25111
STANDING hay 304 458
1524 or 304 675 3024
Scrap metals battenes
rad1ators, ginseng yellow
root, and merchandrse
brokenng Harper Ha lste
ad Salv~oe companv. 300
E levenlh Street 675 5868
Also Flea Market open
dallY
Open
Monday
Fnday 1 5 pm
Rem1ngton Thunderbolt
22LR Ammo, $1 J&lt;l per bOx,
$13 00 per carton Spnng
Valley Trading Co , Spr1ng
Val ley Plara 446 8025

EMII•rment
11

Help wanted

INFORMATION
on
Alaskan &amp; overseas em
ployment, excellent m
ceme, call l12 741 9780 ex
tent1on 917
Homemakers WIth sma II
children vou can earn up to
S100 a week For 1ntervlew
call 882 3433 or 6U '192 J&lt;/~1
~&gt;&amp;tween hours9 6
MOTHERS do you have
time while the children are
In school? Let us help you
make SSS For Interview
304 882 3433 or 614 992 39~1
~&gt;&amp;-.. 9 6 Dn l~th only
304 675-6276

YaniSIIt

Back to schoOl yard sale
Girl• chubby 11ze, coats,
boys, and Infants clotheS
Man• lar.u e tile, also
m l - cto~~~lno Nlllny ex
trill. Hutchinson Sub·
~lvlslon Vt mile on New
Lima. Rd Aug 12·15

••

Reliable Child care 1n my
home across from Vmton
grade school Expenecned
references Call 388 8832

Part t1me
Posit ro n
Ava i lable Craft Instructor
Must have expenence 10
making crafts and m
structino parttc1pants 'how
to ' Re5ponsible for pre
class
preparat1on
teach1ng, worktng
w1th
volunteers and ass1stmg
with craft displays Craft
tnstructor pos1tron Will be 4
hours per week 2 hours 1n
struct1on 2 hours related
act1V1f1eS Hourly wage w1ll
be S5 25 per hour Send
resume to Gallla County
Council on Ao1no P 0 Box
441, 220 Jackson P1ke
Galllpolts Oh 4.5631 or call
~ 7000 for an appllcatron
Appllcatto-ns
must be
recetved
by
Monday,
August 17, 1981 4 PM An
Afflrmat1ve Act1on Equal
Opportuntty Employer

WILL do housecl eaning rn
Pt Pleasant area P hone
304 458 1835

Experrenced bodv man and
expenenced mechanic
Contact Harold Dav1s at
Gal l ipolis Motor Co
TURN vour hv1ng room rn
to a Greenhouse Poss1ble
to tncrease all plant
production 91 pet Free
report M Burnet Rt 4
Box 490, Gallipolis
Reliable babysitter Mer
cervllle area School hours
good pay Call 256 1300 at
ter-4 PM
LPN apply 1n person to
Jeante S1ms
Med 1ca 1
Plaza, 203 Jackson Prke
Gallipolis Between 8 30
and5 OOPM
$185 00 to SSOO weekly domg
malltno work
No ex
penence requtred
AP
PLY C.rcle Sales, P 0
Box 224 D, RIChmond Ht l l
NY 11418
GET VALUABLE tra1n 1ng
as a young buStness person
and earn good money plus
some great g1Us as a Sen
t 1nel route earner Phone
us rrght away. and get on
the el1g1b1hty hst at 992
215Hr 91&gt;2 2157
lnformatton on ALASKAN
and
OVERSEAS
em
ployment
Excellent tn
come 312 741 97SO
Ext
4061

1.~2'--_:-.
SI..t,_
ua
= h:::o"n.::
s_,W
,_a
=-n
, "t ed
""-AttentiOn mothers and
house w1ves, have a fnen
dly home toy party and
earn free g1fts for Chrtst
mas
Cont.:~ct
Vl ck •e
Adk1ns 256 1650

Mother w1th nur-s1ng ex
penence w1ll babystt tn my
home Prefer tnfants M7
3323
Have va c ancy tor an
elderly person
room
board, and laundry 9'12
6
0
2
2
1l

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In
surc"Jnce Co has offered
services for ftre Insurance
coverage In Galha County
for almost a century
Farm. home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet 1n
dlvldual needs
Contact
Foster LewiS, ag&lt;!nl Phone
3792~

wanted to Do

BABYSITTING In my
home, close to schoOl, 304
675-2784.
Physician' s office
PINW write PO Box 276,
PI Pleosant, wv 25550

WILL DO babySitting m
my home B rdwell Por-ter
area References Ca ll 388
8565
Wa l l papenno and pcun
f1ng 10S1de and out Also
mowmg grass or- house
cleanmg Call446 9623
TV serv1ce ca lls Call 992
6776 or 992 2034 Also used
color TV tor sale

1nane1a1
21

Bus1ness
Opportu ntty

DO YOU NEED MONEY'
OR DO YOU BELONG TO
ORGANIZATION THAT
NEEDS FUNDS EVERY
MONTH' To learn more
about the most e)(Cittng and
unrque
fund
ratsrng
program available today
call 614 743 2712 between
3 00to7 OOp m
Pr-of1table muffl er dealer
shtp available H1gh career
1ncome Busmess mc ludes
equ1pment, stock warran
ty
program
factory
rratn1ng advenstng sup
port Total pnce $14 250
Over 300 shops coast to
coast
F or
more
m
tormat1on call toll free 1
800 336 6014
2••2'----'M
= o,n =ey,_,_to:...=
L:::
o=a,n _ _
FHA VA Convent1al Home
Loans, Columbus F~rst
Mortgage Co 463 Second
Ave , Gallipolis, Oh , 446
7172

Will fiX or build blk&lt;!S Aak

for Hermon R Phone 304
675 1179

29 ac r es, 7 rm house all
m 1ner al rite s
Ernest
Woodruff Rd , Al1ce, Oh
Call614 299 0890 after 5
For sale trade or rent 80
acre farm , 3 bedrooms,
carpet atr Ben Franklin
woodburner total electrrc
la rge barn out buildtngs,
2 000 lbs tobacco • base
m 1ner-a I r 1tes
Sco«own
area 5 m1les from Crown
Crty Se lling prtce $4 SOQ,
rent $200 00 ( depo5Jf and
references Call446 2002
Small f arm 6 acres more
or less Hou se w1th 3 bdrbarn and 2 burldrng on
Cargo Rd Ca ll 256 9344
House w1th 7 rms ba t h
carpeted on 6 acres more
or tess. Wtth barn 4ft x
15ft swtmmmg pool lots of
frurt tr ees and toba cc o
base Call256 93«
3 bedrroms 2 fireplaces,
famrlv room large ltv1ng
room 1 full 2 half baths,
wall to wall carpet
full
basement
central a1r,
sw1mm1ng pool 1/2 acr-e
lot CITY SCHOOLS «6
1731 after 6PM

32

Mob1le Homes
lor Sate

1978 70xl4 2 bdr 1 1/ 2
bath front den w tth wOOd
burn.ng frreptace
patro
awtng
skrrtrng
ap
pl (ances dtnmg room table
and cha1rs No other ltke
new furntfure
SlO 000
John son Mobt le Home
Brokers new hstrng 44t6
3547
1975 Cameron 12x60 2 bdr
front krtchen refng and
range gas fur-nance, extr-a
door off k1tchen, carpet
S.S 995
Johnson MObile
Homes Brokers 446 3547
1971

12x65 Mastercraft
le
home
ask mg
SI"SO Call 367 7533
~b t

23

Professtonal
Servtces

COMMERCIAL and Ill
dustrtal
photography
Phone 446 2909 or 446 7226
after 4 p m
P1ano tunmg and repatr
Love your nerghbor tune
your F'1ano
Btll Ward
Wards Keyboard 446 4372
GallipoliS
GALLIA Cleantng
Rent A Ma1d Servrce Inc
Free Esttmates bonded
1nsured
phone 245 9234
Cleanrng by the week, man
thor contractual
Your Ptano rust1ng m sum
mer Hum1d1ty? Free In
spect1on wtth tuntng Lane
oan 1els 742 2951 or 992
2tlll2
INTERIOR &amp; exte n or
pa1nt1ng call 304 675 1339
PROFESSIONAL carpet
tnsta11at1on
free
est1mates ca ll446 3'253
Wallpaperrng
mt ertor
parnttng
reparr 304 576
25111 or 675 2519

12x65 Mobr le Home total
eleclrtc
turn
lot
available Call675 4087
New Moon mobrle home
10 x47 S2 900 Call 388 9004
after 7 PM
1978 mobrle home 3bdr 2
baths ex cond Call 446
0544 between 5 15 and
7 OOPM
1973 Schult z mob ile home
14)(70 par-t furntshed very
n1ce Call 367 7822 or 367
7689

1973 Crown Haven hbr.65
thr ee bedroom, new car
pet 1971 Cameron 1b6~
two bedroom new carpet
1972 Champron 12x60 two
bedroom new carpet 1976
Cameron
l2 x60
two
bedrooms bath &amp; 112 new
carpet 1970 PMC 12x60
two bedroom new carpet,
8 &amp; S Sales In c 2nd and
Vtand Street Pt Pleasant
WV Phone 675 .4424
USE D M obtle Home
2711

576

tral arr large famrty room
w 1th stone fireplace EJC
cellent ne1ghborhood 50 s
Call ol46 1898

1971 Danan 12 x 65, 3
bedr-oom s
1972 Crown
Haven, 14 )( 65 w1fh 8 x 10
expando 3 bedrooms 1973
Utop1a 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms
1972 Invader- U x 70 l
bedroom s 1972 Nashau, 14
JC 60 2 bedrocms B 11.. S
Sales, Inc 2nd and Vrand
Sts Pt
Pleasant wv
Phone 67s-4424

Ltfe Estate Cons1stmo of
farmhouse wtth acreage
Further rnformatron call
992 6747 after 4 00 p m

Mobtl e home located rn
Camp Conl ey Extra n1ce
and clea n Phone 304 895
3967

21/l year old rustic home, 8
acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths
carpet
t1mber pnvate
992 7741

1971 OAR IA N 2 bedroom
furn1 she d $6 800
Un
furn1shed S5 800 Call 304
773 5600 after 5 p m

8 room
house
F u II
basement ,
alumtnum
stdtng storm windows l!lnd
doors Btg lot Sell or trade
for house 10 countrv 992

MOBILE home &amp; lot 10
Mason Lot ts 50xl00 w1th
chatn ltnk fence. ntce
park 1r\g area Mob1le home
12x65 w1th expando on
llvmg room, all electriC 3
bedroom, central heat &amp;
a1r condtttomng
com
pletelv underpenned 304
773 5096

Homes tor Sale

3 bedroom I 112 baths, cen

11

Yon! salt Thur Aug 13, 9
4. 205 Lalley St., Pomeroy
Boob, btdsprtllds, drapes.
and nurnerou• lltms

Unemployed 18 months
truck drtver rx ma.n
tenance man Call 379 2217
anyttme

Turn your llvtng room tnto
a Greenhouse Possrble to
1ncrease ALL plant prOduc
tton 91% Free repot B
31
DeVau lt , Rt 2 Box 87 Vm
ton, Oh

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
be&lt;!n
can
celled?
Lost
your
operator's License? Phone
992 2143

LOST while poodle l n New
Haven area Reward 304·
882-3596
7

Part time
Pos1tlon
A'llailable Ceram1cs tn
structor Must be certified
1n ceramic art and able to
mstruct a class Respon
sible for
pr-e class
preparatton, teach1 ng , and
working wrth volunteers
Cermam1c
tnstrucror
poslt1on wtll be~ hours per
week two
hours
10
structton t1rne and 2 hours
related actlv1t1es hourly
wages will be $5 25 per
hour
Send resume to
Gallla County Council on
Ag1ng
P 0
Box 22D
Jackson Prke, Gallrpolts
Oh 45631 or call-446 7000 lor
an appltcaflon Applt ca tlon
must be receaved by Mon
day
August 17, 1981
o4 OOPM
An Afftrmat1ve
Act1on Equal Opportun ity
Employer

7453
House for sale In M1d
dleport
Ownerw i ll
sacrlf1ce 992 2917 or 9'12

2606
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad
dillon, 3 bedroom, fam1ly
room wtfh fireplace , cen
tral a.r, basement, 304 675
1542
FOR sale by owner, 2 story
13 room house, Ideal tor
large family, or 2 apart
ment rental, needs some
repair, In low 30's as Is, 304
675 2046 after 5 30 p m

1965 Liberty Mob1le home,
2 bedrooms
completell
furnrshed, extra mce, on
owner Cheap 1974 Schult
u x65 , 2 bedrooms, llv.ng
room 14'x20 New carpe1.
range and refirgerator
Need an offer On rented
lot
1972 Schultz,
3
bedrooms, Iaroe hvlng,
d1n1ng and kitchen GOOd
condition Need an offer on
rented toi can 675 Ull
evenings or 675 3030 day

�12,1981
Moll! It Homes
torRent

Mobile Homes
for Stlt
PrlcH reduced on all
mobile homes and travel
trailers .
TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES .
GallipoliS. CALL 4-46· 7572 .

2 bdr. trailer Roush Lone,
Cheshire, Oh. Phone 1-J().j·
n3-5882.

2 bdr. mobile home near
Porter, Furn . Call367· 7101.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL ' S
QUALITY
MOBI L E
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLI S, RT .
35. PHONE 4-46·3808 or 4-46·

7274
2 year old . 3 beedroom
home with basement, appro)(. 2 acres . .4 miles from

town, city schools, $42,500.
446-2663 .

llS acre farm, for more in
formation c all256-6560 .
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS - Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities available, SJOO .
down, owner will finance ,
call after 3 p.m ., 256·6413 .
2

Apartment
for Rent

REGENCY APT . INC . 2
bedroom ,
kit ·
chenfurnished, · carpeted,
bills partially pa ld . $200
mo.
Ex c ellent
neigh borhood, 675·6122 or 615·
510-4 .

....

Farms tor Sale

33

acres on Floyd -Clark Rd

close to Rt . 160, $.4,000 .
Phone 446· 0390 .
Lots by Owner . I 1/ 4 A to5

acres, leveL rural water.
city schools, 10 per cent
down . Call 379 2196 .
10 acres near Portor on old
160. Ideal for homes or
home sites. Road frontage,

assumable mortgage, tow
interest . Call3889060 .

3 bdr . house for rent and 3
rm. apt. utilities paid. Call
675·5104 or 675 ·5386.
Garage apartment. 3 room
and bath, washer -dryer,
clean, no pets, dep req .•
adults only . Call-1-46·1519.

SENIOR CITIZENS One
bedroom , ground floor
apartment, low rent, near
Foodland and shopping
area. Call ~ - 2745 .
Apartment for rent 3
rooms, furnished, utilities
paid, adults only, $i95.00
per month, $60.00 deposit.
94 Locust, Gallipolis . Call
4-46·1340 or 4-46 3870 .
2 bdr . unturn. , apt. in
Crown City, Oh . Call 256·
6474 .

2 bdr. apartment, partly
furn., 5175 mo .. close to
park, dep. req . Call 446 ·
3919

66

acres -m1neral rites some new fencing -tillable.
pasture and woodland. All
tor 118,000 cash . Call 256
6681 , no sunday
calls
please .
111~ acre ground tor home,
modular, or doublew1de .
$8000
10% down . Five
Points. Paul Simon . f/92 ·
2571

Lot in Syracuse on Main St.
50 by 100 . Old house, needs
torn down or fixed up .
Would make n1ce trailer
lot . Just $5000 R . C S
Realty Co, Bil l Childs mgr .
Phone 9'12·6312 .

3•/-. acre on L 1nco1n Hts. 10
Pomeroy . $7500 . Beautiful
bU1I8 1ng S1te or trailer lots .
R.C.S . Realty Co. Bdl
Chi lds mgr . Phone 992·6312
BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approK . 1 acre .
Live'" one, rent others to
make your payment Can
be converted s.ngle home .
C1ty water, will consider
land contract 675·1883 9r5
p.m .

20 ACRES on blac k top
road, t1mber . Phone 1 614
263·8322 or 263 ·2669

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted : Nice 4 bdr . home,
close to town Ca ll 446· 1413

Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

For rent with option to buy .
.4 bdr . home, bath and half,
to. living rm ., fireplace,
basement,
gas
heat ,
oaraoe with auto. opener,
nice vard, good location in
city . see by appointment .
Be vacant Sept. 15. Rent
$375, dep. $200, no pets. Call
4-46·2573 or 4-46· 1171.
House for rent in Eureka
Cal l256-1198.

s rm.

house in Eureka , full
basement Call 256-6547
Small furnished house i n
the city, adults only . Call
&lt;146·0338 .

4 bedroom home, large lot,
close to schools. 992 6309 .
3 bedroom home in country
on blacktop road . Phone
30.1·882·2575 .

4-2-

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

Two, 2 bdr., turn ., mobile
homes . Gas and water
turn .. $225 . mo.. $100
deposit, no pets. Call 4-46·
4145 or 4-46· 1630
2 bedroom mobile home, 1
bedroom apt, no pets,
sleeping
room .
John
Sheets, 31h miles south
Middleport, Rt. 1.
Two ~room house tr,eiler
on Ashton -Upland Road .
$150 plus utilities and
damage deposit. 675·4088.

OR RENT · almost new l h
70, 3 bedroom, 1 1/:z b,eths,
sitting on nice lot, ready to
move into. Phone J().j-576·
2711 .

1'wo bedroom mobile home
in New Haven, adults
only.no pets. 675· 1452 or
675·2996 after 5.
FURNISHED small 2
bedroom trailer, 95 Bur·
detfe Addition. Air con·
dltloned, phone 304·675·4600
be'Meen • a.m. and .4 p .m .
~It required.
S175 plus Utilities and
dtpOIIt. 675·6512 ofler 5 pm .

2 bedroom furnished , S150
plus $50 dtpOIII. Also
8YIIIIIIII August 24, 3
bedroom furnlllled S165
DIUI $50 dtpOSit, Gallipolis
Ferry,
,.._675-6851.

wv.

Space tor Rent
For rent trailer space for
small trailer weekly and
monthly rates, air con·
dltloned rooms by week,
cable TV. Mary R . Trailer
Park, Mason, wv . Phone
304· 773· 5651.
47

44

For rent 2 bdr ., furn . ap1.
Adults only , no pets Call
&lt;146 1945
First floor apt. partially
turn•shed, ref. requtred .
Cal l at 631 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis.
Furnished Apt, S160, water
pd ., 2 bdr., one child ac ceptable . Call446·4416after
7PM .
1 bdr
furn
apt ., no
ch ildren, no pets, $175, uti I.
pd. , dep. Call-1-46 3667.
Furn1stled apt., adults, $190
per mo. Call«6· i615 or &lt;146·
1243.
1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Ca ll
992 7721
Apartment for rent . Ca ll
9'12 5908.

1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apar1ments . 9'92-5434 or 9925914 or 882 -2566.
Unfurnished apartment. 2
bedrooms, carpeted in
Pomeroy. Has stove . $150 .
month
plus
deposit .
Utilities extra. 992·6678.

Apartment for rent in Mid·
dleport 4 rooms and bath.
Avai labl e Sept . 1. Deposit
and reference required .
446·1788.

OPENING SOON . Senior
Citizens &amp; handicapped
apt . community opening .
Featuring 1 bedroom unfurni shed with wall to wall
carpeting, watl -tex walls,
built in bookcase, appliances, smoke detectors,
a1r conditioned, private
patio, storage facilities,
sing le story with no sta irs
to climb, private entrances
with individual laundry
facilities on premises with
recreation &amp;
meeting
rooms .
Professional
resident
manager
on
premises Stonewoods Ap·
ts., Rt . 7, Middleporl . For
rental information phone
614·843 ·2341 .
For rent. 2 bedroom fur ·
nished apartment . All
Utilities paid. $200 a month.
No pets or children. 2
bedroom unfurnished a par·
tment. 51.50 a month Call
Cleland Realty 9'12-2259.
Apartments. 1§75-5548 .

2 BEDROOM, unfurnished
apartment and 2 bedroom
furnished apartment, 304675 ·5571 .
1, 2 IS. 3 bedroom apart
ments now ava liable at Pt .
Pleasant Scottish Inn. A lso
a honeymoon sutie . All
utilities paid . Apartments
as low as S1.W. a week .
Honeymoon sutie $45 a
night . Call304·675·6276
2·bedroom all electric,
Henderson $15() . deposit,
$15(). per month. No Pets.
lnquire6U-367-7257 after s.
2 bedroom apartment, fur ·
nished. 675·6020 or 4-46·2200.
45

Furnished Rooms

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping apt.,
Park Central Hotel .
41

Space for Rent

Mobile home lots, ~ miles
from town. Call 4-46· 4999.

by Larry Wright

Wanted to Rent

Professional couple wants
to rent 2 to 3 bdr home.
Call after 5 : 30PM 4-46-4338.

51

CA~ttl I loU&gt; 'lbV IF 'PJ
WctliA&gt; e£ A6Cd&gt; KITT€N I'D
~lVI::: '100 A CA~ ~ iu N,l,
Wl-\~N

Valley Tradi
Valley Plaza, ...'"""~·

HoME !

\

1-V\VElHE'

'5f~K. YrJJ
~ 1!-IPWI!'V:t
~DINNEJ( .

Now in Stock Silo W
618 newest L frame ~n11r111
in stainless. Spring
I
Trading Co .. Spring Vall
Plaza, 4-46-8025.

Improvements

73

Vans&amp;4W.D.

1979 ~uper Van Econoline
250, e)(. cond. Phone 3792196.
76 Ford Chateau van, a -c,
am-fm radio, deluxe seats
$3600 . Phone 304-675·6429 .

Television
•
•
VIewmg

STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
4-46·4208
CAPTAIN STEE-MER Car· ·.
pet Cleaning featured by
Hattelt Brothers custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Call-1-46·2107 .

74

Motorcycles

76 KAWASAKI KZ 400, 4
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
stroke engine, 4,000 actual
TERY · KENNEL, AKC
miles and 2 helmets, exc .
C how
P u p p i e s . C F A 7::'1====-- =
A u""
to'"""t;o:c::r•s-=
a""le'"""
cond. $850. Call .46·6656 .
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens . New 1973 Buick LaSabre 350 cu.
Siamese are here; Lilaic. in., good cond , need body
Compound Bow Special - blue, and cho Chow pup- work, $500. Call446· 7454 at ·
1975 Honda 750 motorcyc le .
PSE sizzler laminated lim · pies Sept . 1. Call 4-46·3844 ter 5:00.
Windjammer fairing, air
bs. magnesium handle, 50 after 4 p.m .
horns,
luggage
rack .
lb. pull. Special $39.95.
Locally serviced . $1500.
1977 Ply -Volare station·
Spring Valley Trading co., HIL L CREST KENNEL
Chuck Knighl'/'12-2151.
wagon, 6 cyt., power
Spring Valley Plaza, 446Boarding all breeds, clean steering, 4 new tires 8025.
indoor-outdoor fac i 1ities . Dayton, 4 new shocks- 76 Kawasaki, K2.400, must
Also AKC Reg . Dober· Sears easy riders , new clut· sell.make offer. Phone 304·
Wall to wall carpeting, mans . Call446 ·7795.
ch. new Sears 48 month bat - 615 5504 .
12xl2 green plush, $100.
tery, $2,200. firm . Call 367 ·
15x18 green and brown hi - BRIARPATCH KENNELS 0417 .
1980 Kawask i KDX 175
low multi color, $100. Call Boarding and grooming .
$950. Phone 304·675·5350.
388·9807 .
AKC
Gordon
setters, 68 Chrysl er Imperial, 2 dr.,
English Cocker Spaniels. all power, new exhaust,
GOOD
USED
AP ·
1971 350 Honda street bike,
new brakes, and new tires.
PLIANCES
washers, Nice Refrigerator, $90.00. Call446·4191.
excellent condition . $500.
Call446· 1749 .
dryers,
refr igerators, Call &lt;146-818i.
304·882 ·2683.
Reg . Cocker Spaniel pups.
ranges .
Skaggs
Ap ·
1976 Buick Limited fully
pliances, 1918 Eastern 9 pc. Duncan Phyfe style Ca l l446·1262.
Two XR80 Hondas . One
dining room suite, antique
equipped . One owner, low
Ave ., .446·7398
new condition $500 . One
stand table, secretary, AKC registered Doberman mileage, good cond., Sl-495. goOd condition $375.
675·
Call4461546 .
Case Knives -20% oft all solid cedar bedroom suite, pups . Red IS. rust, black &amp;
2622.
case knives. . Spring Valley 2 metal wardrobes . Call rust. Call446 -1562
79 CUTLASS Brougham,
Trading Co ., Spring Valley day or evenings 446·0521 or
1975 650 X5B · chopper,
675 -2()79.
loaded with extras com · Harley. low rider style.
Plaza , 446 -8025
Jeanie's Pet Shop 1 mile
plete
Call675·4087.
West of Gallipolis on Rt.
Paint job in flames . Runs
good. $1200. Phone 304-882
Used sofa, gold &amp; green Kimball artist console, 141. Open Monday thru Sat.
Kenmore dishwasher , and 9· 5. Ca ll 4-46· 7920.
75 Chev. Malibu Classic, 6 2066.
tapestry , Heritage quality
Bundy cornet. Call 256built. Also a pair ot chairs. 6744.
cyl., auto., good cond .,
---=====;;=:=:=;:=:~~==
like new, in rose i1ylon
53,000 miles, all new tires, 75
Boats and
AKC
Dechshund,
damask fabric. Call 446 ·
asking $1.500 Cal l after 5
Motors for Sale
SWIMMING
POOLS: Pomeranian an Poodle 256· 1254.
2419 .
PRE - SEASON
SALE : pups 895·3958 .
Yard sale, Aug . 14-15. Oil
1999.00
INSTALLED!!!
1978 Honda Accord hat · lamps, Depresston glass,
Four used dinette
Black Cocker Spaniel pup· chback. New tires, ex. furniture,lots of other
and 3 used living rm . Above ground pool COM
PLETELY
INSTALLED
pies,
6 weeks old, $60 each. mileage. Call 4-'6·2055 after items . 40 thousand warm
tables. Call 4.46·1423.
starting at $999,00. Price in · Phone675 3123 .
moving heater with fan. Off
6.
eludes pool, deck, fence,
Route 7 on Eagle Ridge Rd,
Household goods. Call 24.5 - filter ,
liner, and
in Basham Rd . Dora Hysell.
1975 Grand Prix mode l L J, 949· 2566 .
5858 .
stallation under normal
MlJsical
57
loaded. Call 446·6313 after
ground condit ion . Free
nstruments
1
4PM.
shop at home service . Call ----'-'~'-"=='--USED brown and
Yard sale . Thur . Aug 13, 9·
1 800-624·8511.
11ving room c ha1r S15.
used cornet, in good cond.
4 . 205 Lasley St., Pomerqy
1979
Thunderbird
loaded
at 769 Brownel l Ave ., Mid ·
Call379·2425.
Books, bedspreads, drapes,
with extras, ex . cond ., and numerous items.
dleport.
EASY credit available now
$5,200. Call245·5077 .
to purchase furniture,
Washer and dryer . $50. 675 - televisions, or appliances. Lowry organ. Like new.
Back to school yard sale.
Village Furniture 2605 Double keyboard . Ful l
2668 :
Girls chubby size, coats,
Jackson Ave., 675 ·1773.
vw Squareback . boys, and infants clothes.
rythm selection . $1500 1971
Clean . $!000 . 446 -2149 Mans large size, also
firm . 985 -4197 .
Automatic washer $50.
evenings, 949 -2504 days .
Electric dryer $50 Large Yellow Freestone canning
misses. clothing . Many ex ·
pe8ches.
Now
thru
Sept.
20
upright freezer $35 . All in
tras . Hutchinson Sub New
Bundy
trumpet.
Any quantity available. si lver, nickel finish. never
good condit ion. 675·6924.
division. 1/ 11 mile on New
Retail &amp; who lesale . Bob's been played . $250. 675 3943 .
1972 Chevy Nova , 6· Lima Rd Aug 12-15.
Market, Mason Phone 773·
cy lind er, 60,000 miles .
52
CB,TV, Radio
5721. Open daily till9 p .m
Good condit ion . Cra i g Yard sa le. Thur and Fri.
Equipment
power play stereo, Jenson-; 964 S. 3rd Ave, Middleport.
58
Fruit
19• Magnavox color TV .
tri axial speakers . $800 . Items to numerous to list.
&amp; Vegetables
Portab le $175 992 ·6196.
992 5740 .
For sale. Used R·40 and R·
Rain ca ncels .
100 Ditch Witch Trencher. Green beans, pick your
own
$6.00
bu.
Tomatoes
by
Calll -614·694·7842 .
53
Antiques
the bushel. Raynor Peach
1 man bass tracker boat
Plymoth
stat1on with motor. 304·576-2013 .
Orchard, 5 miles below 1969
ATTENTION :
liM ·
wagon . Fair condition .
PORTANT TO YOU) Will For the best buy in shoes, Gallipo lis on Rt . 7. 446 4807 . s 15(). 985 4346.
pay cash or cerntied check buy Knapp Shoes. Call 992·
Auto Parts
for antiques and co ller - 3442
Go lden &amp; Silver sweet corn.
&amp; Accessories
1977 Ply moth Volare, 6-cyl.
tibles or entire estates.
Ca ll256·6338 .
PS, PB, Automatic , AC, CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Nothing too large . A lso,
Stereo. Many new parts. Auto parts, auto repair,
guns, pocket wat ches, and Halt runner beans Cecil
Very clean. No rust . $3350 wrecker service,
buy
coin collections. Call 557 - Maynard
residence, CANN IN G tomatoes, $5.00
per bushel, phone 304 -675·
Call after 6 pm week days. automobiles, radiators and
Rac1ne. 949 2602 .
3411 .
6129
9'12 3798 .
batteries. 446 -7717.
For sale, I heavy duty
tomatoes
Misc . Merchandice
S4
675·
1973 Oldsmobile Delta 17
utility trailer. Very good Canning
Auto Repair
Royal. $650. 992·3111 .
condit i on .
Dandy
tor 3308 .
ROBERTS
BROTHERS
Ladies exquisite 1.7 pt. hauling wood . Carl Ktoes
GARAGE. 24 hr . wrecker
wh1te gold diamond pen · 9'12 ·3014 .
Canning
tomatoes
S6
Truck tor sal e. 1980 Toyota service. "Big or small" we
dant. Appraised at $6.49.
bushel. Bring your own
pickup with topper. 5· tow them all! 2332 Eastern
W i ll sacr ifice for $.450
Roadside
speed, customized paint Ave ., Gallipol is, Ohio . Day
Ladies large antique bar containers .
Papers included . 992 3283 .
and
interior.
AM·FM
pin, 14K
yellow gold . stand, 4 houses below post
4-46-2445 or Night · 4-46·
Gallipolis Ferry,
stereo, all -season radial 4792 .
European cut Amethyst office.
wv.
Goosneck. lifestock trailer
natural Pearl ap·
tires . Sharp! $5900. Benny
Wilson, Racine 949-2322.
Complete with truck plate IP'~!'~s~ at 1985. Will sell tor
Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
448·2619 or 448 ·21§12 .
. Papers included . 992·
Canning tomotoes . Eugene
any color,tree pickup
Davis. 247 ·3263.
1975 El Camino Classic SS.
delivery in Gallipoli s
NEED severa l items of fur ·
PS,PB,AC,tllt
wheel,
rea,
Hammond Body
niture,
app li ances.
cruise contro l, air shocks, Shop, 221 M1ll St . 3792782.
televisions. Big discounts
trailer hitch. Very gOOO
for quanity purchase . 55
condition . $2295. 742·2734.
1.~;===~=~::;::=::;===
Building Supplies
Camping
Village Furniture 2605
Equipment
materials,
block,
Bu1ldmg
Jackson Ave . 675 1773 .
1976
Granada 6 · cyl .
brick, sewer pipes, win· 61
Farm Equ!.E'ment
Automatic . Very good con·
&amp; Reel Combo · Zebco
dows,
lintels,
etc.
Claude
s 1G d•scounts for cash and
Pfleuger S-25() rod
dilion . $1895. 742·2734.
Winters,
Rio
Grande,
0
W .C. Allis Chalmers trac ·
carry at Village Furniture
I
$9.9'1 . Spring
tor. For sate or trade. Cal l
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675· Cal l 245· 5121.
MORRISON'S Auto sa les. fV;Olli!Y Trading Co., Spring
379·2761
1773.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675 ·
Plaza, 446·8025.
S6-~-='--=--'=
Pets for Sale
, 1574or675-2881.
1965 MF SO series, new
Encyclopedias for sale.
THE FISH TANK and Pet engine, new holland hay
Call304 615 2699 .
Shop, 2101 Jefferson Ave. bine 7ft ., John Deere 24 T 78 Ford LTD II, air con ·
ditQn, am ·tm radio, low
675 2063, Pt . Pleasant. New hay baler, all equip . in e)(c.
Standing timber . Contact
mileage $4,2.50 . Phone 104·
hours. Now open on Wed . cond . Call388 ·9060.
Ruth Chapman, Rt. 1 on US Open 11 4 Mon . thru Sat
675·6429 .
Timberlake trailer
33 on top of Mt . Alto hill.
Sleeps four . In
Fri. hours 11 -6.
Four 15,000 gallon tank.s
Will sell
located above ground at
6676i64 .
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone 1·304·422·2781.
mobile
1967
They'll Do It Every Time
$2500.
Good
3144.
1 Ford 3 point hayrake .
TNE e;AC/($.450. Call 985·3301 or see at
PACKERS
Baum Lumber, Chester .
1977 Gran Prix, air, cruise,
f"ACK IN ....
8 track, good tires. $2200.
Phone675·5()75 before 5 pm .
1 Ford SOl mower. $550 .
81
Home
~HASS4
Call 985· 3301 or see at
Trucks for Sale
72
Improvements
MATT&amp;R ...
Baum Lumber, Chester.
PIP -.tw~
1967 International 1600 FOR BEST In Carpet
MOVIN(!&gt;
series truck, $500. 1973 1 ton Cleaning - Call SmJ.I tzer's
BACKHOE,
call
alter
5,
VA~
Ford, 25,000 miles, $1.75(). Steamway. Call "1!14·4-46·
Oak Hill, Ohio, 614·682·7332 .
IJR&amp;AI(
Cai1367-7S33.
2096.
•
Cros!man B· B's 'Milk Car·
ton' box of 1500 · Spec ial
$1.09 box . Spring Valley
T r ading Co., Spring Valley
PLaza, 4-46 ·7025.

rI.=========:.L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;_~
r----,

DOWN?

63

Livestock

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992·3954.

Guernsey milk caw and
calf, lust fresh S625. Phone
304·882·3326.

64

Hty&amp;Grain

STRAW FOR SALE Phone
256·1113, Butter Hereford
Farm, Lower River Rd.,
Gattlpotti,

76 Datsun pickup with good
camper top, good radial
tires, excellent cond., 48,00
miles, $3,25().00. Phone 2561113, Butler Hereford
Farm, Lower River Rd,
66
Chevotet 3/4 T,
mechanlcaiy OK, $300. Call
4-46·0939.
1972 El Camino, ex, cond.
1980 1 Ton dump truck Ford
350, ex. cond, Call -446·3100
or AA6·7122 or see at 861
second Ave., Galfl~lls.

. --;-,00 llJG Pll MAGAZINE
(I)
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
(J)\D)Q) FAMILY FEUD
(!) WILD KINGDOM 'Philmont
Trail'
lllliJ T~. TAC DOUGH
()) (fil&gt; :MACNEIL-LEHRER .
REPOI\o'T:

WEATHERALL CON : - :
CRETE · quality and ser·. ·.
vice, call675·1582.

1

NEW'~

liDJ

PAINTING · interior and
exterior ,
plumbing ,
roofing , some remodeling .
20 yrs. exp. Call 388-9652 .

7:05 (J) ALL IN THE FAMILY
7:30 llJG BULLSEYE
(I) ANOTHER LIFE
(!)MOYIE ·!DRAMA) ' "Mid·

THe 80!PS SAY~
SIIOOT FIRST. A!&gt;K
QU&amp;STIOIJS LATER!

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
maintainance
and
remodeling.
Phone 388·
9326 .

BORN LOSER

Al,l. 1 HAIJe 1'0 t::O 15 CUP

11-\E BALL T~~ I
IIJID
111~ PUTL. ;:::'"17'~

Home building, home
remodeling and repair.
Custom work from start to
finish. Call388·8711 .
Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
ieep stream extraction.
Free estimates. reasonable
rates . Scothguard, 992-6309

GEORGE
GUM , SR
Roofing,
painting,
remodeling , experienced,
free estimates. 992·5433.

'"' ~us

ANNIE
LOCKSM I TH
Service.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Call
882· 2079 .

OH, l'lfl U5EP T'
6ETTIN' UP EARLY,
BOT,.. l 6UEGG I
DIDN'T GLEEP W0
NELL LAGT N16HT"'

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house ca ll s. Phone 576·2398
or-1-46· 245".

\'fELL, ANGELA I'IILL BE IXJI'IN

11'1 A GECOND '"YOU'LL HAVE
YOUIt CHAT, AND YOU CAN
GET HOME AHD TAI{E A

NAP··

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675-1331.

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced mason, rooter,
carpenter,
electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling . Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560 .
Dave's Appliance Repair
wash.ers, dryers. plum bing, electric, general han·
dyman. Phone 304-576·2921
or 675· 5689 .
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

12

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone 4_46 3888 or 4-46· 4417
J &amp; P Plumbing IS. Heating,
Rt. 1 Gallipolis, 367· 7853.
D. C. Contractors Plum·
bing, electrica I, heating,
roofing, aluminum, vinyl
siding, and home painting.
615·3376 or 675·1240.

GASOIJNE ALLEY

We qot it! Don'
nobod4 breathe!

Excavating

83

Dozer, loaded, and ditcher
work . Basements, landscaping, gas, electric, and
water lines. Charles R.
Hatfield, Rutland, Ohio.
742·2903.

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank . 6751234.

~, , ,;

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . Larry Siden ·
strick.er , 675-5580.
84

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Fuller EleCtric Co . Com·
plete rewiring, commercial
or residentia l, and etec ·
trical maintainance, also
on call. Ph . 446· 2171,
Gallipolis.

WINNIE

.'

NO PIMPLES,
NO COLI/
SORES ...

GOOP/

E lectrical", Air Conditio!\ ·
,
Heating, Hot water tanks. ... ,
Service all makes., Phone .. • •·
379·2196 . Charles Kiesling. :.
SEWING Machine rl!pairs.
service. Authorized Singer . .
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen . .
Scissors. Fabric Shop; ·
Pomeroy. 992·2284 ..

JACK'S REFRIGERATIO
N. air condition service,
commercia l, industrial. · ·
Phone 882·2079.
85

IS LOWEEZV
HOM~?

General Hauling__ __

JIM'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery ~ Call 256·
9368 anytime. · ·
NOW HAULING hQuse coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call tor estimates 367 ·710i
DILLARDS
'!VATER
DELIVERY SERV IC E .
Call-446·740-4.
JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call 367·7471 or

STUCCO PLASTERING •
textured ceilings, com·
mercia! and residential,
free estimates. Call 2$6·
1182.

8';7==:;:;;;;::;::::=::=
Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOL-STERY SHOP
1163 Sec, Ave., Gallipolis .
&lt;146·7833 or 446·1833.

.

Mobile homes moved,
licensed, and bonded . 5762711 or 675-4398.

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt.
I Bpx 124, Pt, Pleasant 304675-4154,
'

HAFES

rJ

'IEP··SHE'S SETTIN' IN
TH' NO-SMOI&lt;IN' SECTION../,c.~

Pol • '"' 011

(J)g(Il JOKER' S WILD
(!) HOLLVWOOD SQUARES
()) (iJ) DICK CAVETT SHOW
{jD)
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
\DJGI FACE THE MUSIC
7:35 (I) NASL SOCCER Atlanta
Chiefa va Tampa Bay Rowdies
7:58 (I) CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 llJG(!)REALPEOPLEAiook
at a sonball game played in the
en ow end a hockey game
played under water; profiles of
female and ma le belly dancers;
a visit with awomanwhohae 10
· alligators tor pets; snowmoblia
water - skipping races ; ballet
classes for wheel chair bound
senior cif;z:ens and a visit with
one ol !~ ptrongest men in the
world. *eat; 60 mina.)
Cll
. • PROGRAMMING
UNANNOUNCED
(j)IDJQ)CHARLIE'SANGELS
A romantic honeymoon on a
scenic Hawaiian beach is
shattered when a crazed
kidnapper steels the bride to
bramwashherlobeh!eown,and
the ange ls become lileguarde
as bait lor a deadly trap.
(Repeat; 60 mins.)
ClJ liJ ®J THE WHITE
SHADOWAb 1g he or a small one
gets you 1nto trouble as Coach
Reeves finds oul when he tries
to get out of jury duty and one of
hiS players faces a 'shotgun'
wedding. (Repeat; 60 mine.)
()) NATIONAL OEOORAPHlC
'Living Treasures ot J'pan'ln
this lirst National Geographic
documentary devoted to the
arts. nine art•sans and
pE1rforming art1s ts of Japan ere
profiled p~cause at the cultura l
import&amp;flce of their skills wlthm
the strtrotbre of contemporary
societY·: fCio sed · Capt ioned;
U.S .A.) (60 mins.)
(iJ) ALL CREATURES GREAT
AND SMALL
8:68 (I) CBN UPOATE NEWS
9:00 (]) II(!) D1FF'RENT
STROKES Arnold's new friend.
an immigrant baker. has trouble
with American cit izensh 1p while
Arno ld has troub l e with
American History. (Repeat)
(Closed-Captioned)
iil 700CLU8
liJ(!J)Q) VEGAS A murderous
procurer is forcing beautiful
young women recently
released from prison to pose as
teenage call girls to lure men
into a vic1ous blackmail
scheme. (Repeat; so mins .)
8(1) {jD) CBS WEPNESDAY
NiGHT MOVIE 'The Seeding Of
Sarah Burns' 1979 Stare: Cliff
De Young, Cassie Yates .
(J) HITCHCOCK This program
reviews"the career ot the great
Hollywood director Alfred
Hitchco()4(, whose films have
sent chi ll s up the spines ot
m1llions of movie-goers all over
the world for more !hall 50
years. (60 mins .)
ffi) NOVA 'Memories From
Eden' This program looks at the
new roles and responsibilitieS
of zoos 1n today' a world, as
opposed to the common
accepta nce ot ttlem as merely
collect•ons ol animals tor pub li c
display (Closed -Captioned;
U S.A.) {I)() mins.)
ao30 (}]8(!)THEFACTSOFLIFE
The most beautiful girl in the
dorm . Blair, thinks that she is
destined to bees b • gall~rt asher
mother. until Mrs . Garrett tells
her that beaulycan be e~thibited
in many ways. (Repeat)
9o35 (I) LAST OF THE WILD
10:00 (]) 8 (jj) NEWS
(!) NATIONAL COLLEGIATE
BOXING CHAMPIONSHIPS
Spencet'R"oss, Larry Merchant
and SIIVal Ray Leonerd host
thiS unt~e amateur box1ng
e't'ent featuring bouts between
the finest ri sing young bo~ers :
lrom Reno, Nevada
CiJ(!J)III DYNASTY Chaulleur
Michael's bedroom spying
uncovers Fallon's secret deal
to marry Jefl : and Claudia
begins to suspect that
Matthew' s 1nvolvement with
Krystle may be more intimate
than She thooght (Repeat; 60
mins.)
(J) QUINCY Two brothers form
a 'law and order' v•gilantegroup
fort heir crime· beleaguered
neighborhood only to have one
ot the members kill an innocent
man while exchanging gunfire
with a robbery suspect.
(flepeat; 80 muu1.)
(I) MASTERPIECE THEATRE
'Oucheas of Duke Street: No
Lawyers. No Letters ' Some
fascinating facts about
Louisa '6 ~est are brought to
light }W"ftn a n~wspaper
publishff.runs e h•ghly sp•ced
account of life at the Bentinck
Hotel. (60mlns.)
t0:05 (I) TBS EVENING NEWS
Atlanta Braves vs San Diego
Padres (If players' strike
continues " alternate program·
ming will be aired.)
10:28 (J) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 (J). BASEBALL Cincinnati
Rede ve Loa Angelee Dodgers
(If players' strlkecontinuea,
alternate programming will be
tired.)
(J) LARRY JONES
® OUTER UMITS
. 10:118 .CIJ CBNUPDATENEWS
t1:00
THIIILTHI! LtFE t
(!). CIJ&lt;!IJIIJ). NEWS
DAVI! ALU!N AT LARGE
11:011
'litlOHT OALL!RY ·
C111t UPDATI! NEWS
11:28
11:30"
"ANoMR UFE
~0 -VIE ·(COMEDY) ••
11

81'0fioQ···r.·::\,

· TH.,tJ)NtlltjT SHOW
(I) QWU.ATI! MOYIE 'Fear
The Key' 197~ Store: Borry_
Newman, Suzy Kenctall. ~:
'
()) ABC CAPTIOHID NE~8 ,

r•

,J

'

lllli .

II CS Yt II

((DRAMA-WESTERN) ••~
"~Eyed JIJck•"•4lMI1
(}J). A8CNEWSNIQHTUNE

r

1

••

"THE. HO~:SE TRAIIIIEFC:
HA V' IIJO IR'OU6LE
6ETTIN6 A 13ANK
LOAN

!3ECAU:S.E

HE HAV'THI5.
Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon

0

I Xl l I

A[

Answerhera:

I.

[j

I BELU'fj
,

I XJ

J[

(Answers tomorrow)
Vester d ay.s

I Jumbles TIGER

FOI ST BEHAVE HAND LE
Less than twenty kid s are In this THEIR TEENS

An swer

BRIDGE
Fast play, quick reward
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

NORTH

H I L KI

• Q .I 10 7
• 10 4

• to a 6 ~

West was lhe late Mike
Gottlieb, one of the all-time
great players and noted for
his brilliant defense
South was the late Charles
Lochridge. Charley was not
quite the player Mtke was,
but ht s man y tnumph ~
included th e 1937 and 19:1~
Vanderbilt cups Ht s fo r t e

.K

+ "']

\\EST

EAST
.H 2

. AKQ9R 'i
• Q 7 :1 2
+A 4

• 71 2
+J 9 4
9A7 2

+

SOUTH
. A !:I86 J

• J5

was quick but ex cepttunall y

+AK

+ KQ.IJO

good dummy play
The play at lour spddes
was really fa st
Mike opened the k1ng o f
hearts and continu ed ·wtth
t he ace and queen after East
played th~ aeuce ctnd then
lhe trev.
Charl e y ruffed with
dummy 's. 10 and led the

Vulnerable Neither
Dea ler South

West

North

hesitation .

East

,.

East

2.4.
••

Pa:&gt;:-;

South

I' ass
I' ass

3+
Pass

Pass

queen Without a moment s
fo llowed

Openmg lead

small and Charley went up
with his ace and dropped
Mike"s kmg. He conceded a
trick to the ace of dubs and

•K

scored his game.
"Well -played, as always ...

said Mike. ''You 're too tough
for me."
"A cinch," said Charley .
"You found the only way to
get me to dummy . Obviously, you wanted me there ."
The whole play IS not too

these two made all

their

plays instantaneously . We
don't know why Mtke didn 't
lead ace and another club
and hope to get a trick in
dtamonds, but the real credit
~oes to Charley who knew

unusual. It pays declarer to
beware when an expert
gives him a present. The

mstantaneously what Mike
was doing.
.,

anteresting feature is that

!IMJ,..., .. ,

\

lly THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Shelly Duvall
ACROSS
I Joseph's film role
5 Plowed ground 3 ocsananas"
10 Jar

star

II Parting

4 Fonner chess

champion
words
13 Reduce
5 Free from
to powder
doubt
14 Dip the colors 6 Horse
7 "Is That
Yesterday's Answer
15 Night before
16 Paronomasia
- There Is'" 20 Incline
31 Papal
17 - vivant
8 Renaissance 23 Delibercrown
18 Compassionjacket
alive
32 Proclama9 Frenchman's
body
tion
ate
20 Slipped
name
24 Keep going l3 Type of race
21 Mining find
12 Grammatical 25 Roof sight 35 Ananias
tenn
26 "West Side 38 Prefix
22 Consonant
23 Chastise
16 Make lively
Story" star
for chief
a tyke
19 Bequest
28 CurrenUy
and plunk
26 Dilute
recipient
fashionable 39 Mr. Thwnb
27 Irish river
28 Fashion
29 Write down
30 Blackguard
34 Inn order
35 Went
ahead
36 Small fish
37 Vietnam's

GuH of

39 FoUow
40 Set of nine
41 Richard
Harris film
42- Moore
43 Indian

servant
DOWN
I Heavenly
body

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

work It:

to

AXYDLBAAXR

Ia

LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. Ill this sample A Ia ·•
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. .Single letters, •
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hinll. Each day the code letters
different.

•re

CRYPI'OQUOTES

BOABOH
KQ

TF

DL

OFOBAU;
DH;

~ ~JFLQDOZR

TIITZZDFA

UKV

D H' L

ETZZKEDFA

WTF

KFZU

'H

ETLHO
PVDZR

AKKR

QKB

D F . - N T H I&gt; 0 B D Fi,O
\dl

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.

.~-i1ay'i Cryploquole: MAN CAN BELIEVE 'l1IE IMI'OBSI·i
BIJ::, Btrr -~NEVER BELIEVE 'l'Hi · ~~~

•
'

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. 0 I

, KF

' IAFUI1UNMY

I

IGATHUCf

••L:.. 1St7&amp;

Hoover sweepers repaired
at Empire Furniture, 842
Second Ave, Gallipolis, OH .

JIM . MARCUM Roofing ·
spouting and siding, 30
years expertencit, Free
estimates . Remodeling.
caum-9857 .

,

DyHtnriArnoidtndBoblH

EVENING
WOODS HOP · Cabinets, . ·
picn i c
tables,
porcf"! .:
swings, most wood produc: ~ .
ts. 101 Court St., Gallipolis. •
·
Call-446· 2512 .

¥7-0591.

SANDERS
CON·
TRACTING, Carpentry
work &amp; ~lnllng, concrete,
landscaping, AA6·2787.

it!}~N}fB}'\l ~THAT8CRAIIBLEDWOADQAME

' ~~~~ IS
', Unscramble theaa tour Jumbiee,
· one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words .·

AUG. 12, UNit

BING'S CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · Specializing
in concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367·
7891 .

Cross bred milk cow just
fresh, -v ery gentle, $625. In·
eluding pasteurizer. Call
-446·6305.

324.

1979 Ford pickup, half ton,
exc ellent condition. Call at
ter 5 pm 304·895·3378 .

,.

Ohio

Home .

197-9 JEEP truck, nice, low
mileage, $.4900 . 1977 XS750
Yamaha, low mileage,
$1000 . call304·675-3436 .

1975 VOLKSWAGEN Van, 7
passenger, Interior and
body in good condition,
runs well,new heater boxes
and exhaust system, new
clutch, $2500. 30-4 -895·3652.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479.

TRAILER space 3 miiH
from town luncllon 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y, Pt. Pleasant, 675-

~ICED

I 'D~

Like new, warm
gas heater, with Dtowe•r,
auto . 81 Vine St.,

Household Goods

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rock.er, ottoman, 3 fables, SSOO. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, $275.
Sofas and chairs priced
from $275. to $695. Table!,
$38 and up to $109 . Hlde·a·
beds,$340. , queen size, $380.
Recliners, $165 , $295 .,
Lamps from $18 . to $65. 5
IX- dinettes from $79 ., to
$365. 1 pc.. $189 . and up.
Wood table and ~ chairs,
$350 up to $495 . Hutches,
$300. and $375., maple or
pine finish . Bedroom suites
· Bassett Oak., 5649 .,
Bassett Cherry, $765. Bunk
bed complete with mi!lt·
tresses, $250 . and up to
$35(). Captain's beds, $275.
complete . Baby beds, $89.
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin , $58 , firm, $68.
and 178. Queen sets, $195. 5
dr . chests, $49. 4 dr. chests,
$.42 . Bed frames, S20.and
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., dinette chairs $20.
and $25 . Tappan gas or
electric ranges, $285. Orthopedic super firm, 595.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bu laville Rd
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon .
thru Fri , 9am to5pm, Sat.
446 0322

I

T'=
ru::c:;::
ks"'foor
::-=-s
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�Area deaths
Helen Jeffers
Helen Jeffers. 69, Rt. 2, Albany,
died Tuesday morning at Camden
Clark Memorial Hospital Parkersburg.
She was born at Waverly the
daughter of the late Lester and
Beulah Hibbs Cordray. She was also
preceded in death by two brothers,
Herman and Cliffton Cordray, two
sJsters, Pauline and Ethel Cordray,
three grandchildren .&lt;~nd one great
grandchild .
Mrs. Jeffers was a housewife and
former school teacher . She began
her teaching at the age of 17 and was
one of the last teachers at the Center
Stake one room school. She also
taught in the Columbia School and
Albany School systems. She was a
member of the Carpenter Baptist
Church and Columbia Grange 2435.
She was a fonner advisor of the
Columbia Make-It Gir ls 4-H Club.
She is survived by her husband,
Reed Jeffers; three sons, Gene Jeffers, Albany, Lee Jeffers, Waterford, Calif., and Richard Jeffers.
New Boston, Ill.; two daughters,
Mrs. Lavern (Mary i Jordan,
Albany, and Mrs. John (Janetl
Dunaham, New Boston, Ill. ; 24 grandchildren, and 20 great grandchildren; two brothers, Robert Cor·
dray, Westerville, and John Cordray, Fullerton, Calif.; one sister-Inlaw , Leola Cordray, Athens.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the BigunyJordan Funeral Home, Albany, w1th
the Rev . Cecil Cox officiatmg . Bun a I
will be in Alexander Cemetery
friends may ca ll at the fun eral
home at anyti me.

Wednesday, Auaust 12,1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pape-14-The Dally Sentinel

Reunion set

Will meet Thursday

Friday deadline

The annual Jacks reWlion will be
held SWlday, Aug. 16, at Rutland
American Legion Hall. All relatives
and friend!! are invited to attend .

Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will
meet Thursday, Aug. 13, at 8 p.m. at
the lodge in Chester.

Residents are remiJided that the
deadline for open cl!las entries ol the
Meigs County Fair Is at 4 p.m.

1

Center.
Mr. YoWlg was the son of the late
Joseph and Dessie Stewart Young.
He was also preceded in death by a
sister, Venedia Knight in March of
this year.
Mr. Young was a veteran of World
War II.
He is survived by his wife, Rose
Young; five daughters, Floretta
Barton, Syracuse; Helen Heaton,
Chester ; Vinedia Kearns , Mason;
Sharon Roseberry, flashan, and fjn da Powell, Pomeroy; three sons,
James R. Young, Rutland ; John
Young, and Bryant Young, both of
Mason; 14 grandchildren; four
brothers, Charles Young, Cheshire;
Darrell Young, Port Williams, Ohio;
George Young, Delaware, and
Dallas Young, South Charleston,
Ohio.
Funeral serv ices will be held
Friday at I p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev . W. E.
Curfman officiating. Bunal will be
in Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call a t the funera l home after 7

,-.

SUPPLIES

nt'\'l'r

CRAYONS
PENCILS
BINDEJtS
NOTEIOOU
SCHOOl BOXES

• YDur first nallH' ·\'our init ial ur srhoolmonog-ralll
t•nnu,.lt'd in rlw ~ lorw • Ynur inir i;d . mttS«.'O I or b\'fwitt'
s_\1llhol scr hc ·nc ·a rh t/J(' srone ·\'our fiJI! na m e t'llhi'T'tln'd
insidt• tlw ring· \'o ur choicl' of'f"irt'hursl o r su nlill ' storw

RULERS

Brlnl( in 1hls ad for chis sp&lt;'&lt;'i"l ofler.

21 l E

MAIN . POMEROY

SCISSORS
PENS
GLUE
PENCIL SHARPENERS
PORTFOLIOS
MARKERS
PAPER CLIPS
CLIP BOARDS
TYPING PAPER

AND MANY, MANY MORE

1/ - ,'\ ~. l

~

\

1

\t1 L'i l'l 'l'li (_' /us .~

Kiug,\ , / t i C.

3
BIG

I

~OMEROY

BIG

DAYS

Freddie G. Plott, 58, Rt. I.
Guysville. d1 ed Tuesday a t
O'Bleness Hos pital Hosp1ta l.
Athens, following a brief illness
Mr. Plott was the son of the late
Wallace and Lake Erie Plott He wa s
also preceded in death by his wife.
Sharon in 1980.

t

LAYAWAY

NOW

t

t
t
t
_t

DAYS

STARTS , •t 6
URSDAY ·~~~~~
AUGUST

Freddie G. Plott

t

YOUR EASY SELECTIQN

'
'
'
'
' ELBERFELDS IN
'-

losl'!&lt;o irs lusler.

Free custom features
included:

@1!~

NGED P:OR

NOTEBOOK fllP£Jt
SCHOOL IIIGS

(hi sode. SIL\1Jil 1;'\l"' dass rings. T raditional s tylin g'.
f :rtlfi t•c ) fi·cnJI _ j~·\\'t'lt • r's fim • Sla illll'SS flll'l:tJ . :'\JCH'l'

't

SU OUI NEW SELECTION

.t

p.m . this evening.

\

ELBERFELD$

t

d urable rh;m !-{old . T lw finish

Friday.
.
The fair board. office, located ~
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds, will
be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. both
Thursday and Friday to receive entries.

e
vol.l(), No.85
Copyrighted 1981

Coast guard recovers bodies
CINCINNAT.l.- The Coast Guard recovered three bodies from the
Ohio River by Cincinnati Wednesday. All were presumed drowned af·
ter the small aluminum boat they were riding in was hit lly a tow of
barges early Tuesday.
The body of 19-year-old Linda Messer of Cincinnati was f011nd near
the Suspension Bridge Wednesday night by pleasure boaters, the
Coast Guard said.
A Hamilton County Sheriff's Department spokesman said 48-yearold Douglas A. Moore of Cincinnati was found in midstream near North Bend. The body of 21-year-old John Donald Sizemore of Cincinnati
was found floating across from the Licking River.

ASHION JEA

KNIT SLACKS
r ''"'

c: ~ o o ce

ol soi•O las hoon colo•s

on po lye s ler

m·~ se s 01n&lt;J liiO&lt;f!S srzes
8 ..,.; ~ to SC h OOl S ale '

Stewart. Friends may call at the
funera l humeafter3 p.m. today .

Officials seek collision cause

Speciill group of IMiiea ' popul•r blue denim lashron

)eans m a11oned alzM ar~d styles Sl•ghl 1ttegutars
values to S12.9ll. SIOCk up no. •nd sa~e dur•ng Stil
Iter 's Back to School Solie!

d o ull lf'kfl ll S I!'I C k S Wtlll e lii S II (; wa• S I Go od r ange Ol

wiiJ be in Wye rs Cemetery near

Spec r111 ro w P" Ce 101 o ur

BEVERLY, Mass. - Officials studied records from a demolished
freight train Wednesday, hoping to learn why it collided with a commuter railroad, leaving four men dead and 27 people injured.
"Somebody got the wrong train orders," said Roger Bergeron, a
Federal Railroad Administration inspector. "One of those trains was
given the wrong information."
Boston &amp; Maine officials and state and federal investigators were at
the crash site Wednesday and were studying dispatch records to deter·
mine how the two trains operated by B&amp;M wound up on the ~me
track.

Jamt';; H. YoungJames H. Young, 58, Mason , died
Tuesday evening at Holze r Medical

GetAnA+Q
In Savings
Sew Your Back-to School Fashion s
with il Singer'''

-8AtK TO StHOOL-

TO SHtOOL-

FANCY COTTON
BLEND CALICO

MEN 'S &amp; BOY'S
CANVAS GYM

PRINTS
~~~;~:~~:·~.~ :;,: -~ ·:·:~~~
fl l flndPCl

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n to..., l o o 1 ;~ 1 1

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(1.17 A

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Cilnv•s uo

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Machinleil•••

~~y~es~a/~o~.~~~ arnJAs~~~~~
15

50

(l3

FALL SKIRTS
fJ
00

Spec•al purc tlase o l Mo ~s es

"''"~:;.,
so!es and

..,

-BACK TO SCHOOLVALUES T0$3.89

SPECIAL PURCHASE
MISSES NEW STYLE

SN~AK~RS

Pr.

.____

ASSORTED
JUMBO SPOOLS

36 INCH WIDE
QUALITY BLEACHED

Elaborate cleanup effort begins
PENINSULA, Ohio - As an elaborate cleanup of a massive oil spill
oozing from a pile of burning scrap tires proceeded, city officials in
nearby Akron took steps to prevent similar fires from erupting
elsewhere.
The fire , which began early Aug . :; at Parker Tire Co. near Peninsula, resulted in the release of about 10,000 ~allons of oil. It was still
.
ablaze Wednesday and was expected to burn for weeks.
The three-acre lot is in a rural area between Cleveland and Akron
near the Cuyahoga Valley National Recreation Area.

' ""''""""'' "'50

srll'!aker s m whrte
and colors. Sturdy
uppers
lc;,;h ~n rn soles

-~~~i'ii

3' X 5' SIZE
BROADLOOM

THR£AO
a n&lt;1

Values to
Specfal
clean -up group of Girl!.'
Better Tops . Wide asst. of

$}99

-8AtK TO StHOOL-

C o .11 s

SPECIAL- LADIES
CANVAS SPORT

styles and colors .

Each

'" " "

SPECIAL GROUP

GIRLS'$3."TOPS
.

FANCY PRINTED
VELOUR KITCHEN

TOW~LS

•

BERUN - "Do you remember•" says the TV announcer's voice.
Shadowy l(lm clips show thin, elderly women leaping from secondstory windows to the upstreched anns of a crowd below.
With such programs and with speeches, parades and memorial se,...
vices, Gennans both east and west of the Berlin Wall observed the 20th
anniversary today of the communist barrier.
As they do every year, thousands of workers were to parade in East
Berlin and hear a celebratory address by Communist Party chief
ErichHonnecker, who supervised the construction of the wall .

Cla r~

8

p o 11 eS i e r

FOR
StHOOLMT. MIST 81"x96"
QUALITY COTTON

Leaders call for end to strikes

POSTURE FOAM
NON-ALLERGIC

WARSAW, Poland - Heeding the Communist Party's back-to-work
call, national leaders of Solidarity called for an end to strikes and
street nulrches protesting Poland's food crisis.
They also urged the workers to improve the economy by working a
six-day week for Ule next two months, giving up the Saturday holidays
they won through strikes six months ago.
But the independent labor federation threatened to call out its 10
million members if the goverrunent doesn't stop trying to blame it for
the wave of demonstrations against the reduced meat ration, food
shortages and the govenunent's proposal to hike the prices of staple
fcixls as much as 400 percent.

60" WIDE MILL ASS 'l
TERRY DRESS

Winning Ohio lottery number
.

-IACI Te SCIIIII.,MILL LENGTHS
ASSORTED KNIT

·•A Tnulem.11rk 1•f The S•nMer

C(lfllJIIlftY. CM t-.inct~tOO Uf'I"Yifll(

.:.w c.ln on •II

~'dtl1 .

NCER

welt;~ "it . '
ilJ, II cnol•·ce ol cotors. .

8LANK,TS

MILL ASSORTMENT
PIEC~ GPOD

FABRICS
R~MNANTS
~·.~~_1;;:~:·tW5 ') f E~~.~.~~-.~~.~~~·e·.
f

tom

'SPARTA' FULL BED SIZE
SOLID COLOR .NEEDLEWOVEN

'

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1'5

f.

to··
a.., •nylon.
• '"11

polyetter
Dll~
bod ' ' " .,..
'

Dltnlltts in rovr ctlolct ot
colors. Stock up now tl this

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I

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..
ASSORTED
· , MILTON BR.,.DLEY

I ,.
'

.

·

·

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tow price.

' •

,

.

CLEVELAND - The wltming nwnber dral\'11 Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's daily gwhe "The Nwnber" was 730.
The lottery reported earnings of $461,582 on the drawing. The earnings came on sales of $876,438, while holciers ·of winning tickets are
entitled to share $414,856, lottery oHicials said.

Weather

GAM£S.

,

· •

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.1$~~~~~~ .I_
I]~

·

Proceeds from the Dave Diles Golf
Classic totaled $a,909.89 Tom Wolfe,
chairman, announced today.
Wolfe pointed out that expenses
were up this year but the entry fee of
$12:&gt; remained the same. In 1979
profit totaled $6,000. In 1980 there
was a $9,000 profit. Proceeds from
the events are donated to non-profit
organizations in Meig.-; and Mason
County.
Serving on the committee for fund
distribution were Wolfe, Ted Reed
and Paul Burnett.
Money this year was distributed
as follows; Dave Diles Ohio University Scholarhsip FWld, $1,000, (any
student from ·lhe ·MeipMaion ~~~
who ·wisbes to attend O.U. in the
school of communictions may apply
for a scholarship by contacting Tom
Wolfe at the Racine Horne National
Bank, Racine); Wahama Golf and
Meigs Golf Teams $200 each; Meigs
Boxing Club and Big Brothers, $300
each; fire departments at Middleport, Racine, Syracuse, Rutland,
Tuppers Plains, Bashan, Sal,m Center, Chester, Mason and New Haven,
$1:&gt;0 each; emergency squads at
Racine, Mason , Syracuse, Pomeroy,
Middleport, New Haven, Tuppers
Plains and Point Pleasant, $150
each; Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club, 200.
Next year the event will be held
June 9-10. The golf classic will be
played on the lOth at Riverside Golf
Course in Mason.

,

. ~

. ..
~

~~/

'

'

.

DEDICATED - The new Middleport Community
Park ball field lights and an electric scoreboard were
dedicated Wednesday night. Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman turned on the field llghts provided by the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. and the Unlted Mine Worikers of
the Southern Ohio Coal Co. Lights and scoreboard are
valued at approximately $80,1100. However, the 1mprovement cost Middleport Village nothing. L.abor was

donated by miners and volunteer laborers. Turning on
the lights from the left were David Baker, Southern
Ohio Coal; Gene Oiler, Southern Ohio United Mine
Workers; Mayor Hoffman; John Hood, president of the
Middleport Youth League ; Benney Denl. who wired in
the lights, and Charles Cassell, president of the Middleport Recreation Commission.

SCOREBOARD - A modern, electric scoreboard
featured at the Middleport Community Park for the first lime, was dedicated Wednesday night. The im·
provemenl was donated by The Farmers Bank and

Savings Co. and the Vinton County Bank at Wilkesville.
Shown with the new scoreboard are Don Roush, left,
and Harry Roush, right, who donated endless hours of
labor towards the park projel'l which also ineludes
lights for the ball diamonds.

.

New teachers and other personnel
were employed and the resignations
of several people were accepted at
Wednesday's meeting of the Eastern
I..ocal School Board.
Employed were Wendy Haller,
head teacher at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary School; Scott Wolfe,
assistant football coach and
assistant basketball coach; Donald
Eichinger. assistant basketball
coach and high school EMR
leacher; Jan Eichinger, elementary
teacher, and Carolyn Tripp,
cheerleader advisor.
Accepted were the resignations of
Michael Abraham as high school
special education teacher, Ralph
Wigal as athletic directdr, Suzy Car·

.

,~

penter as elementary teacher, Donna Chadwell as art teacher, and
Leonard Gwiazdowsky as head
teacher and fifth grade teacher at
the Chester Elementary School.
Other personnel hired included
substitute teachers, teacher aides ,
study hall rnoniters, secret.Hries, and

cooks.
Substitute teachers are John Coffman, Helen Caldwell, Betty Roush,
Kathryn Bawn, Nathan Robinette,
Martha Graves, Pauline Mye~s.
Robert Shaver, Mildred Hite,
Lavonia Brannon, Linda Brock,
.Tames Wright, Kathleen ManicKe ,
Joseph Myers, Barbara Mathews,
D-dvid Weber, and Kathy Simpson.
Aides employed were Dorothy

Ca laway , J iII Holter , Nan cy
Mornssey. and Pat Martin. Hired as
study hall moniters ' were Dorothy
Ca laway and Barbara Young.
Employed as secretaries were
Martha Durst, Donna Reed, E leanor
Leonard, Barbara Young and
Dorothy Calaway; as cooks.
Dorothy Ca laway, Shirley Johnson,
Eileen Swain, Mamie Headley,
Elizabeth Lyons, Joan Scarbro~~gh,
Nettie Young, Mrs. Emmell Hemey ,
and Fonda Ritne; bus drivers , Gary
Dill, Archie Rose , Darlene Cassady,
Donna Jean Ritchie, Ruth Masters,
Flossie Dill, Angel Ruck er, and Nick
Leonard; and custodians, Grace
Chevalier,

Mary Keste rso n . and

Sylvia Causey.

Changes tn job descnpt1ons fo r the
lunch room !-iupcrv isor , lleC:Id cook,
bus mechanic and custodians wer e

adopted.
Approval was given ln making

a~

plica tion fo r new school buses and
changes in bus routes we r e ap-

proved.
The Board C:t pproved six se niors
for mid-term ~raduation . T hey were
Alison Ca ut ho r n, Carrie Cheva lie r ,

Wendy Elkms. Crysta l Jacobs, Debbie Pooler, and Renee Heibel.
Next meeting of the Board will be
on Aug 25, 7::10 p. m. Board members present at thl· meeting wcrr
Ruger Gaul. [")residen t, Dorsal
Larkms, Dcryl Well. Rc rnurd
Shive rs, and .hnnes Caldwell .

Commissioners sign option agreement
wedliesctay the Meigs Col!lliY
" Of all the land we have looked al
Conunissioncrs signed an option to
this is the only one that EPA will
purchase approximately 114acres of · consider and by taking this option
· landinSallsburyTownshipforanew
the county can begin to take core
drilling samples and hopefully gain
county landfill.
The option w~ . signed with final approvalfrom EPA.
Olarles, Avery,and Albert Goeglein
"U approved this area will serve
at 8 purchase price of~ per acre.
Meigs County's solid waste problem
Henr)' Wells, president at the
for many years" Wells concluded.
board lilted, " The licnlnl ol this
Charles Blakeslee, executive
aptlcilll the flnlt 11ep In the developdirector, of the Meigs County Planment qf 1 new .ianclf!ll for lbls CUUD- nlng Commission and James Jenty At p1etelt we have ap- nlnga dlsw88ed the possibillty of the ·
· ~Y 30 dlya left at the f c&lt;mmi,alon hiring Jennings as a
pr It lite.
cotutty _planner f_o r Meigs County . .
· "The land on which·we are taking
Jenrungs outltned ways m which
an · tfP.llG!I Ia located IIGI1beut of he felt his services could be of value
Hon'n Hill' Ctillttety, · ap- to the eouilty such as writing grants
il'ilP!IIlllltei1 mile fram ,.lind ~ slate and federal
Pi a ent laht!fi!l.llte.
,,
~ !~· The board agreed to
'

·· ~

lS Ce nts
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Board· employs, accepts resignations

Berlin crisis 20 years ago

Tru Se ,... 225 ya•d
SP OO l

Announce
classic
proceeds

mm.IN THEW

-IACII Tt SCIIML SAL£SCHOOL DAYS SPECIAL
MISSES BLUE DENIM

-8Atll TO StHOOL SAL£LADlES NEW FALL
PULL-ON POL VESTER

'J Section s, 14 Pag e~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, Augustl3, 1981

TooAY

Y·FRIDAY

He is survived by one .son. Bria n

en tine

By Associated Press
the lanes stay open, we should be U.S. air traffic system unsafe. Many
Overnight flights to Europe went
down to a nonnal schedule" across flights were canceled and there were
off close to schedule from New York
the North Atlantic, U.S. Tran- lengthy delays on others.
after Canadian air controllers retursportation Secretary Drew Lewis
The Canadian controllers agreed
ned to work and officials on both • said Wednesday. He said delays of on Wednesday to end the boycott, in
sides of the Atlantic predicted a
only a half-hour are foreseen today.
return for an inquiry into the safety
"normal schedule" today .
The flight zone "has opened up question. U.S. authorities deny that
Meanwhile, members of the Inagain and it is our feeling that we the system is unsafe .
ternational Federation of Air Traffic
will be getting things back to norJean·Luc
Pepin, · Ca nada 's
Controllers Associations were
mal ," said Gerald Fil2gerald, minister of transport, had begun acmeeting in Amsterdam to discuss
operations manager at Kennedy In- tions that could have led to $a,OOO
whether action should be taken to
ternational Airport, the nation's fines, job suspensions and firings
support striking controllers in the
busiest handler of international against the Canadian controllers.
United States.
nights. On a normal day, 120 jets More than 2S controllers were
There were some delays Wed·
depart over the North Atlantic from suspended.
nesday on flights from Europe to the
the airport.
Lewis said domestic air service
United States and hundreds of
Trans-Atlantic travel was thrown remained at about three-fourths of
would-be travelers spent the night
into havoc Monday and thousands of nonnal as the strike by members of
sleeping where they could at Lon· passengers were stranded when the Professional Air Traffic Condon's Heathrow Airport, but the
Canadian controllers refused to han· trollers Organization over wages
problems were expected to clear up die flights to or from the United 'and working conditions entered its
·quickly.
State•, claiming that a strike by llthdaytoday.
' 'By tomorrow morning, asswning
America n controllers had made the

13th

Ke1th Plott, Colu mbu s ; two
daughters, Valerie Lake Plott and
Pavlo Lynn Plott, both at horne.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with the
Rev . David Lyons officiating. Burial

at

Travelers face
normal schedule

He wa s a painter e~ n d uni on
representative for the P a int ers

Union, a former maintenance man
for the Federal Hoc king School
District and a farmer.

•

\

study the proposal.
Phi l Roberts, county engineer,
presented specifications for a new
dwnp truck. The board agreed to advertise by bids.
Roberts reported on brush cutting
and patch work presently being

done.
It was announced that the 1982
budget is avatlable and may be in·
spected at anytime during regular
working hours at the office of the
commissioners

'M' motorists may get tags
Sarah Gibbs, deputy registrar for
Meigs Couhty, reminds the public
whose last name starts with " M~ ',
that they have the month of August
to obtain their new stickers for their
vehicles.
To obtain their stickes they must
take their vehicle title and
registration. Also whoever owns the
vehicle must sign for the new license

or have someone stop in and get a
power of attorney slip to sign the application.
The office on Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, is open on Friday
evenings between 5;3ll and 7 p.m.
and also on Saturday mornings as
extra hours to accommodate the
public.

I}

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