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                  <text>Page-1D-The Dally Sentinel

Council moves ahead with housing project

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
.)

f

Cars damaged in

Area deaths

George Hill
Funeral services for George
Albert Hill, 42, Route 2, Racine,
killed in an auto accident Sunday
night will be held at I p.m. Thursday
at the Ewing Funeral Home.
Mr. Hill was a member of the
Letart United Methodist Church,
Racine Masonic Lodge F&amp;AM, Aladdin Temple and Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order of Eagles.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, Jerry and Florence Elliott
Hill, and a brother. James Ray Hill.
Surviving are his wife, Reta Jo ; a

son, Er ic. and two daughters,
Teresa and Mandy. all at home ; two
brothers, Dave and Clarence, both of
Racme ; three nephews and a niece.
Officiatmg at services will be the
Rev . Bill Sullivan. Burial will be in
the Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
rnay cal l at the funeral home
an)1nne after I p.m. Tuesday.

Glenn P. Weaver
Glenn Paul Weaver, 53, New
Haven, died Saturday afternoon.
He was born February 2, 1928 in
New Haven to Luferna Moore
Weaver, New Haven and the late

Char les D. Weaver.
He was employed as a crane
operator at the Kyger Creek Power

1

Plant and a member 0t the Fil'!ll
Church of God, New Haven.
Surviving, in addition to his
mother, are his wife, Hester Ueving
Weaver of New Haven; one
daughter, Mrs. Joe (Jenniferl Cundiff of West Columbia; four sons,
Fred, Jeff, Rodney and Racer of
New Haven; one brother, Charles A.
Weaver, NeW Haven; five sisters,
Mrs. Wyllis (Eleanor I Davis, Jr.,
Mrs. David (0rpha) Fields, Jr.,
Mrs. Dexter (Mary Susan) Erwin,
all of New Haven, Mrs. Robert (Erma) Beach, Allen Park, Mich., and
Mrs. Lester (Vera I Dodson, Mason;
and one granddaughter.
Services will be held at the First
Church of God, New Haven, on
Tuesday al1 :30 p.m. with the Rev .
Robert Ball officiating. Burial will
follow in the Union Cemetery, New
Haven.
Friends may call at the Foglesong
Funeral Home today from 2 p.m. until4 p.m. and from 7 p.m. until9 p.m
The body will be taken to the church
one hour prior to services.

Cathern Ward
Mrs. Cathern Johnson Ward, 61, of
New Cumberland and formerly of
Mason, died Sunday at the Weirton
General Hospital.
She was born April 23, 1920, to the
late Fred C. and Delilah Sue Tate
Johnson.
Surviving are her husband, Ralph
Ward, two children and two grandchildren, all of New Cumberland;
two sisters, Eulah Redman Mason
and Mrs. Frances Gehri~g, Ne,.:
Cumberland; three brothers, Robert
Johnson, Toronto, Ohio, Franklin
and Donald Johnson, Mason.
He was preceded in death by two
brothers Homer Ray and Howard
Johnson.
Services will be held Wednesday
at 2 p.m. at the New Cumberland
Methodist Church. Friends may call
at the Fields Funeral Home in New
Cwnberland on Tuesday from 2 p.m.
until 4 p.m. and from 7 p.m. until 9
p.m.

Announce tractor and
truck pull winners
The annual tractor and truck pull
wrapped up the 118th Meigs County
Fair Saturday night.
Prizes were paid in seven classes

for the modified and in six classes in
field stock tractors.
First through third places in eac h
of the categories went to: 5,000
modified Virgil Kranz, Bethel ;
Harold Ford, Route I, Coolville;
Clarence Bauerback, Brundy ; 7,200
modified,
Charles Milton,
Washington C. H., Virgil Kranz,

Harold Ford, Coolville; 6,000 field,
Robert ELliott, Edison; John S1ouse,
Somerset; Lester St. Clair, Logan;
8,000 field stock, Marty Morarity,
Racine; John Stevens, Point
Pleasant, Huck Wagner, Racine;
9,500 field stock, Don Battrell,
Albany: Charles Mathews, Racine;
Mike McClain, Nelsonville.
The top three winners in the
modified truck division were Jack
Gaston, Stewart; Clayton Johnson,
Coolville, and Randy Stewart,
Wellston.

.fc-q1 rt&gt;CIIVt'rt&gt;d
,, 1980 Jeep Wagoneer reported
stolen Friday at midnight at Meigs
Mine nwnber two was recovered

Saturday afternoon off the Flood
Road, just outside Pomeroy CorporatiOn Limits, the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.
The vehicle, owned by Gary
Basham. Rt. 2, Coolville, had been
stripped.
·

St-eks divorct&gt;
Sara Marie Seyler, Middleport,
flied suit for divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
Richard D. Seyler. II, Pomeroy.
Marriages dissolved were Violet
L., Neff and JackS. Neff; Sheila A.
Birchfiled and James C. Birchfield·
Charles Frederick Sayre and Pa~
Jean Sayre.

Chester Rd. wreck
Three cars were damaged in an
accident on Chester Road at 1 :10
a.m. Sunday Pomeroy Pollee report.
Pollee said that the accident ~
curred when a car driven by Don
Stobart, Jr., Pomeroy, struck a car
driven by Roger B. Dillon, Route 1,
Long Bottom, which in tum struck a
car owned by Thomas Wilson,

Rutland.
The Dillons were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment of minor injuries by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad.
Medium damages were incurred
to all three vehicles. Pollee said that
Stobart left the scene of the accident
on foot and will be charged. Investigation is continuing, pollee concluded.

Eight emergency runs were made
by local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service reports.
At I p.m. Sunday, the Middleport
Unit took Georgia Fraley, S. Fifth
Ave., to Holzer Medical Center; the
Pomeroy Unit at 1:41 a.m. took Tom
Wilson, Ruth Dillon and Roger
Dillon from the scene of an auto accident near the Beacon Service
Station to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland Unit at 8:51 a.m.,
Christine Kirkpatrick from Beech
Grove
Road to Veterans
and Syracuse
at 6:53 Memorial,
p.m. took
Beatrice Blake fr(J'Jl Route 124 to
Veterans Memorial.
On Saturday the Middleport Unit
at 2:04p.m. took Ernest Wells, South
Third Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and at 7:53p.m. took George E.
King, Leading Creek Road, to
Veterans Memorial. Pomeroy at
10:46 p.m. treated Edna Smith at the
Eagles Cl~b and Ruland at 9:43p.m.
took Wendell Barrett from Salem
Center to Veterans Memorial.

SHOW WINNERS- These seven animals
took top honors in their respective classes at Friday's
Melg:I County Fair Pet Show, sponsored by the three
chapters of Meigs FHA. Pictured left to right are
Patricia Cleland, Langsville, with UUie Britches, a
miniature cblmpamee, most unusual; and Amy Rouse,
Shade, with Polka Dot, best cat, in the front row. In the
second row, left to rigbt, are Amy Luckeydoo, Middleport, with Tiffany, most talented, 12 and under
division; Pam Lawrence, Minersville, with Jo Bo,
most talented, over 12 division; Manuel Francis, wttb

best rodent; and Usa Patterson, Pomeroy, with . ·
Snoopy, wbo received honors as best dressed and best
overall pel Twenty participated with plaques awarded ·
to first place winDers, and ribbons golog to second aod
third places. Judge for the contest was Rita Lewis,
Humane Educator for the Humane Society of the
United States, and a charter member of the Meigs
County Humane Society, and Lynn Slater, Pomeroy, of
the Meigs FHA, was announcer.

A meeting for all children of the
Eastern Local School District entering kindergarten this rall wm be
held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Tuppers Plains Elementary School.
Requirements
entering kinwill for
be discussed
and
dergarten
there will be conference time. Baby
sitters will be provided and refreshments will be served.

STURDY CONSTRUCTION
FINI FINISH
BEAUTY AND VALUE
CHOOSI MAPLE OR

EVERY h$SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!
For Just
Dinner
•Dining Room Only

PASADENA, Calif. - Voyager 2, America 's mechanical emissary
to distant worlds, swooped past battered, frozen moons and glimmering rings today as it neared its closest approach to Saturn's pastel
surface.
On the eve of the encounter, the 1-ton Voyager was pronounced "in
excellent health," with everything working smoothly both on the
spaceship and at the Jet Propulsion Lahoratory here, where nearly 500
scientists, engineers and technicians were making final preparations.
Mission director Richard Laeser said last-minute. changes were still
being made Monday in some of Voyager's assignments.
·
The ship cruises just 63,000 miles above Saturn's cloud tops at 11:24
p.m. EDT. l)lews of the fly-by won't reach Earth, however, until the
radio signals arrive at 12:50 a.m·. Wednesday.
Its television eyes shifting frantically from one mystifying sight to
the ne:xt, the robot explorer was giving earthlings their best look at an
exotic kingdom 967 million miles away- a giant, gaseous world swaddled in delicately painted clouds.

On~

Served with:
Whipped
Poatoes, Chicken Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.
Sorry, No Substitutions, Except
which have an additional price.

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f

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.PH. 992-5432

POMEROY, OHIO

rI~~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WASHINGTON - Postal Service employees overwhelmingly
ratified new contracts providing a typical worker with a $2,100 pay
raise over three years plus unlimited cost-of-living increases, union officials announced today.
They said the voting was not influenced by the Reagan administration's tough stance against striking air traffic controllers.
Members of the National Association of Letter Carriers voted
124,316 to 20,856 to ratify the tentative contract reached July 21 after
an all-night bargaining session, said union president Vincent Sombrotto.
The American Postal Workers Union was still counting votes early
today when its president, Moe Biller, left the suburban Maryland
motel where the tally was conducted.

FBI says pair had jewelery
INDIANAPOUS - Arraignment was scheduled today for Drucilla
Merida, 20, Milan, Ind., charged with possession and interstate transportation of property taken from a suburban Cincinnati home in
which a man, his wife, son and brother-in-law were found shot to
death, the FBI said.
Also charged with possessing and taking the stolen property across
a state line was Richard L. Weston, 42, Brookville, Ind.
Miss Merida was scheduled to appear before a U,S. magistrate in Indianapolis today. Weston, who has been in the Marion County Jail since his arrest by the FBI on July 14 for parole violation, is expected to
have ·a hearing later this week.
The bodies of WiUiam F . Stevenson, his wife and son and brother-inlaw Edward Dowell were found in the Stevensous' Bethel, Ohio, home
July 6. The house had been set afire, the FBI said.

A new car loan from
the Farmers Bank
can put you in the
driver's seat.

Students flock to banks for loans
WASIDNGTON- Students are flocking to banks in record numbers
to take out federally subsidized loans for college before a new law
makes them harder to get. Because of that, the administration says it
may need more money for the program it wants to cut back.
Since 1978 the loans have been available to aU coiners, regardless of
their need or family income. But as of. Oct. 1, students from families
with adjusted gross income of $30,000 or more wi)J haveto pass a needs
testto get a loan. ·
Student aid experts say banks and Jendihg agencies have done a
booming business in Guaranteed Shldent Loans this swnmer.
Some 3.&amp; million students are expected to bOrrow ilearly $II billion
uilder the program In the f~l year ending Sept. 30, ujl from $4.8
billion a year ago and S1 .9 bllllon three years ago.

This Week Onlyf

Stop by the Farmers Bank and talk
to us about a new car loan.

Lottery winners

of '149
And Get A

..'

ClEVELAND - T~ wlnnlng ·number drawn Monday. night In the
01\io Lottery's (Ially game "The Number" was 013.
Thillotteey ~ ,earhlngs ,of $489,8811.~on the drawing. The earnihi!S came on sales of $11&amp;1,154, while holders of winning ticketa are
entitled to share ~.266.50, Jottecy officials said.
·
'

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CRIB MATTRESS·
PREEI

Farmers

'

·.ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY

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sections. 16 Pages

1S Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

said appeared to be "abrupt fraud" have been completed, the com·
and asked Secretary of State An· mittee 's validation rate was running
thony J . Celebrezze Jr. to see that at about 84 percent.
the . signatures are scrutinized
The rate was lower in some of the
closely across the state.
big counties, including Franklin at
Riffe said he hoped the apparent 72 percent and Cuyahoga at aimost
fraud in his home county is an 70, Elton said.
isolated case.
Elton said all signatures should be
''If we' re doing 70 percent in the
urban areas and 85 percent in the
checked.
"That's what the local boards of rural areas, I think we're in great
election are now doing," he said. shape," he said.
"Apparently, they are doing a great
The corrunittee needs 284,334 valid
joL in Scioto County."
But most ci FAIR's 439,031 signatures to get Issue 2 certified for
signatures will prove valid, Elton · the ballot. Technically, it needs 10
said. He said he checked with percent of the total vote in the last
Celebrezze's office Friday and found gubernatorial election.
In a Jetter to Celebrezze, Riffe, !).
that in 58 coWJties where the checks
New Boston, said "a number of
petitions circulated in Scioto County
have P.en invalidated due to what
appears to the local board of elections to be forged signatures, including signatures of deceased per-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
spokesman for the group backing
Issue 2 on Ohio's Nov. 3 ballot says
he agrees there should be a thorough
check of the signatures which put it
there.
JD8eph Elton, campaign coordinator for the Ohio Fair and Impartial 'Redistricting Conunittee,
was asked Monday about reports
that some petitions from Scioto
County had been forged, in some
cases with the names of dead people.
Issue 2 would change the method
used to draw new election districts
for the Legislature and. Ohio
congressmen.
Earlier in the day, House Speaker
.Vernal G. Riffe Jr. reported what he

sons."

The speaker did not mention

'

names or indicate if any charg~s
have been filed, although Elton said
each petition is supposed to be
signed by the person who circulated
it
FAIR. a mostly Republican group ,
is seeking a new districtmg system
which would abolish the stale Apportionment Board.
The board currently is controlled
3-2 by Democrats. It will draw new
districts for the OhiO House and
Senate for use throughout the 1980s
unless Issue 2 is approved.
Under Issue 2, all citizens would
have the opportunity to draw the
districts based on 1980 census
figures. The one which best reflected
equality of population, compactness
and other criteria would be chosen.
The same process would be used to
draw new districts for Congress,
redistricted under current law after
each decennial census by the
Legislature.

Dwarf breathes
fire at fair
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Postal workers ratify new contracts
·•-

0

meeting with the Envirorunental
Protection Agency representatives
at 1 p.m. on Sept. 9 at which time a
combined sewage overflow situation
will be discussed.
The mayor also read a letter from
Village Solicitor Bernard Fultz pointing out that the 1980 natural gas contract provides a minimum charge of
$4.6!i a month and that gas used
during a month is added to that
charge. The letter pointed out that a
prior contract provided a $3.75
(Continued on page 10)

•

•

Voyager 2 •in excellent health'

DARK PINE

Buy This Quali~J Crib
at Our Low Regular Price

NEW YORK - Mark David Chapman, sentenced to 20 years to life
in prison for gwming down ex-Beatle John Lennon,!Jias taken a "vow
of silence," his lawyer says.
·
Chapman was sentenced Monday by acting Justice Dennis Edwards, who said he should receive psychiatric treatment during his
imprisonment. Chapman was to be taken tQ!Iay to Sing Sing prison in
Ossining, N.Y., to await a final prison ass.igtunent.
During Monday's senten~ing, Chapman, protected in a bulletproof
vest, read aloud what he called "my final spoken words" - a passage
from J.D. Salinger's book "Catcher In The Rye." Marks said Chapman has taken a "vow of silence."

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Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday
Admissions--Fred
Tuckennan, Pomeroy; Doyle Ord,
Mason; Jerry Runyon, Middleport ;
George King, Middleport.
Saturday
Discharges--Rose
Genheimer, Vona Gillenwater
'
Ralph Ballard.
Sunday
Admissions--Lowell
Collins, Syracuse; Beatrice Blake,
Racine; Sara Jarrell, Langsville.
Sunday Discharges-Bernard Diddle, George King.

LDL
Chapman gets 20 years to life

~Combination

out that the Middleport Church of
the Nazarene had filed an objection
to the transfer at an earlier time and
possibly wo!lld file one thts time
again requesting a hearing. The
church has until Sept. 6 to file an otr
jection with the state.
Mayor Hoffman said that a visit
recently by a flood insurance
representative had disclosed that
many were not informed on the
regulatious. He said that he has a
copy of the rules at this time.
Mayor Hcffman announced a

Elton wants Issue 2 petitions checked

Tina, best dog; Debbie Shrieves, Darwin, with Peter, :

A revival will be held at 7:30 each
evening starting Thursday at the
Keno Church of Christ with George
Pickens speaking. The revival will
continue through next Monday.

and that was action to establish at
village hall a community development office which will have one employe. That office 'will work with tlie
rehabilitation project as well as handle other aspects of the $715,000 HUD
grant. Mayor Hoffman said last
night that an employe has been
secured to staff the new office.
Council went on record as otr
jecting, but not requesting a hearing
for the transfer of a C-2 carry out
liquor license from one location to
another on Locust St. It was pointed

Pomerov-:-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 25, 1981

·'pET

project.
The Akroo firm will inspect the
homes, determine · what improvements are needed, handle the
specifications and assist and award
contracts and will see that uie work
is properly done on the home. The
firm will be responsible to village
council. The contract between the
village and the firm will be for
$18,500.
Council also took another
progressive step in conjunction with
the housing rehabilitation program

'1

Voi.30,No.9l
Copyrighled 1981

Revival scheduled

Meeting set Tuesday

followed In providing the improvements of the homes. Council
members are to study the list of
requirements and at the next
meeting will provide their own input
to the requirement provlsious.
Council authorized Mayor Hoffman to enter into a contract with R.
and R. International, Inc., Akron,
for rehabilitation of the some 20
homes. The firm wiUbe respousible
to council but wlli carry out the
numerous steps which must be
followed in the home rehabilitation

e

Squads make eight
runs over weekend

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
••Beauty
is in the Making
for a safe,
beautiful Nursery'

Middleport Village Council, in
regular session Monday night, took
steps to Initiate a $167,000 housing
rehabilitation program in the community.
The program, which will bring
about the improvement of some 20 to
24 homes in the community, is being
funded as a part of the HUD grant of
$715,000.
Mayor Fred Hoffman distributed
to council members sample forms to
be used in the project as well as
eligibility requirements to be

OUTSTANDING SENIOR CITIZENS - Leooa· Swan Hensley and
Mae McPeak, Long Bottom sister~, have been selected Meigs County's
Outstanding Senior CIUzens and recognized at the Ohio State Fair. Both
members of the Retired Senior Volnnteer Program and active in many
civic and community programs, Mrs. Hensley and Mrs. McPeak were
presented a framed certificate. Attending the presentation from here
were Mrs. Hensley and Mrs. McPeak's sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Bissell, and another sister, Mrs. Leota Ferrell of Dayton. Mrs.
McPeak was the recipient of a similar award from Wood C.ounty, W. Va.
in 1972.

COLUMBUS, Ohio I APl - Pete
Terhune may be only 3-foot-4, but no
matter. He doesn't flinch when it
comes to eating fire .
The dwarf, weighing 116 pounds,
has been performing his fire-eating
act for 27 years.
For the past few weeks, he's been
at the Ohio State Fair, which entered
its 12th day today .
Terhune, 51, places a burning colton swab in front of his mouth and
for a moment, names dance from
his tongue. With a gust of breath, he
blows out the name, closes his
mouth and smiles to the crowd.
The flame act still scares him at
limes, but over the years he's adjusted to the danger, he said.
"Somelin\es I get burned, but only
once in awhile," he said.
He was attra cted to carnival life in
his hometown of Breckenridge,
Minn. When a fair arrived in the
town, Terhune paid 50 cents to get in
and saw his first Ride show in years.
Several days later, he went back
to ask for a job -,. his first. And he' s

kept it ever since.

Terhune travels with four other
sideshow entertainers billed as a
quarter man, lecturer, knife thrower
and human blockhead. They see
about 6,000 miles of countryside
during their annual five or SIXmonth tour, which ends in January.
He resides during winters in Gitr
sonton, Fla.
Monday's fair events were
highlighted by the Sale of Champions, in which younJ,.\sters' winning

animals - junior fair grand and
reserve champion chickens, lambs,
barrows and steers -

were auc..

boned off to such area businesses as
Bob Evans Farm and Wendy's international.
Bob Evans bought the grand
champion barrow from Craig
Meranda, 17, of Georgetown, for
$13,000. Wendy's paid $25,256 for the
grand champion steer. raised by
Rhonda Shane, 9, of Fostoria .
AtJout 3,000 people and a statewide
television audience watched the
proceedings at Cooper Arena .

Brown offers assistance in probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - The
state attorney general today offered
his assistance in the investigation of
$1.3 million in unaccounted for state
funds from the state treasurer's office.
Attorney General William J.
Brown said the Bureau of Criminal
Idlmtification and Investigation and
accountants working for his office
would be available to Franklin County ProsecutorS. Michael Miller.
Miller began a pl'!lbe of state
Treasurer Gertrude Donahey's office after the state auditor last week

reported that Mrs. Donahey's records showed the state had deposited
$1.3 million more money in its al~
count at BancOhio National Bank
than the bank's records showed.
Brown said today he has asked
slate Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson
for any information showing that
public records in the treasurer's office were "removed, destroyed,
mutilated, transferred or otherwise
disposed of" in violation of the law.
The attorney general has legal
power to seek civil penalties of $500
per violation for removed or

destroyed public documents.
·'My uffice is very interested Ill
pursuing this possible violation of
state law," said Brown. "The
examiner's report simply stated
that 56 days of records were
missing, possibly never kept as they
should have been. But if evidence of
tampering e&lt;ists, then that is
something new, and clearly ground,;
for legal action."
Brown said he cannot conduct an
independent investigation, but can
assist the prosecutor if requested.
Dave Johnon, who investigates

white-colla r cmnc for the
prosecutor, said Monday the probe
presented major problems to the office because of its limited staff.
Johnson said he was apprehensive
about his ability to check state
records, because there are millions
of them and he has no experts at his
disposal other than stale auditor's
examiner~.

Meanwhil e. Mrs. Donahey said
Monday she will lure an m-huuse
·auditor tu 111ake sure thal such

discrepancie:-; rl11 not

ti&lt;' Cur aJ!ain .

Legal
clinics
challenging
small
firms
-

.
.
AKRON, Ohio (API - Legal
clinics are giving smaU traditional
law !Inns a run for their mQney,
says the founder of the largest such
cOnic in Ohio.
The cUnles can offer. services lor
lower fees more becauSe they Umit
· themselves to the basic servlees
. ~ by middle-class people, Joel
Hyatt said.
, \') thJijJt lt'_s a. pol!tive ~p
bec:aWJe a lot of people have acres&amp; •
to legal services who never did
. bef~." ~ 31-y~ldHyatt said.
· . Hyatt ·~ 8erVlOes- a chain of
llw '~ !OIIIIdeillil Cleveland by
' ~tt aDd' bued in KlriS!I8 City· Nldll¥ Qnllll, llowevjr,lhl\t It does
ll!it pro;;~~e alepl eurHU. .
'' · ~ lhe ~ ol ~ llaniU.ed

t--..l~~..,...;:;..,;;;:.~~~~-=-----~~,..._-~-' ~ llf•tt \lawyep ..-e. divorce and

.

'

Hyatt has expanded to Toledo,
cases are referred elsewhere. He
Dayton,
Columbus, Cincinnati, Pitcited. a recent adoption of a child
tsburgh
and Philadelphia with 28
from El Salvador.
A standard adoption would be no Hyatt offices and 68 lawyers. Hyatt
problem, Croyle said, but one that expects to to have more than 70 ofinvolved international arrangemen- fices in eight states next year.
That will put Hyatt in the same
ts was more complex than the Hyatt
league as the 8-year-old Legal Clinic
office wished to handle.
Hyatt, son-in-law of U.S. Sen. of Jacoby &amp; Meyers, one of the
Howard M. Metzenhaum, D-Ohio, largest law chains in the country. It
opened his first cllnic office in down- had 49 offices in New York and
The clinics offer legal ~rvlces to town Cleveland in November 1977 af- California in 1980 and plans to ex·
people who previously believed they ter the U.S. Supreme Court ap- . pand to 79 offices this year .
cOii1d not afford legal help, · said proved advertising by lawyers.
The Hyatt expansion is keyed
Hyatt's successful argument
Gary Hunt of .the Ohio State Bar
to a deal with H&amp;R Block
largely
before the Ohio Supreme Court led
Association in Columbus.
Inc.,
reached
in the spring of 19110, (o
"For the first time, you'v~ got nor- the way for Ohio to beCOme the first
open
clinics
nationwide over the
ina!; legal servl~ being :dellvered , state to allow television and radio
next
five
years
and house them ad·
to middle-income people," Hunt advertising by lawyers. Thirty-elg~
jacent
to
Block's
tax preparation ,,f ·
said. . .
.
' states now have approved lawyer
fites.·
Croyle said tf1e tough or compleJ; advertising.

dissolution, wills and estates,
bankruptcies, some criminal cases
and some personal-injury cases,
said Robert Croyle, manager of the
'RolliN! Acres MaD office in Akron.
For the standard services, Hyatt
la!VYers quotes fees tq potential
clients in person or by telephone.
The initial consul\ation cests $15,
whi~ can be applied to the later fee.

�-

Commentar

Tut$day. August 25. 1981

fi}~__________J_am_es_J._.K_ilpa_tri_ck

•deteriotated. The SIS found itself
locked in combat with its own
Service; it was to do a com- solicitor's office. Things got worse,
not better, as the Carter adprehensive job.
In February of 1976 William Usery ministration brought in Secretary
succeeded Dunlop as Ford 's Ray Marshall: He became "obsecretary of labor. The SIS went to sessed" with a limited civil
work . Investigators focused upon 82• proceeding against the Teamsters.
suspicious loans, amounting to $518 Any thought of crilninal prosecution
million , and began to accumulate was abandoned. In 1977 Marshall
evidence. It protect a frustrating made a five-year deal : He got the
task . The director of SIS was told he resignations of the Central States
could not issue subpoenas without
approval from the department's
solicitor : and the solicitor's office let
it be known that it would issue few
work closely with the Department of
Justice and the Internal Revenue

WASHINGTON - If you want to
read a sad story - indeed, an infuriating story - dip into a report
just filed by the Senate's permanent
subconunittee on investigations.
The report deals with the Department of Labor and the Teamsters
Union.
This is no tight summer reading. It
is a chronicle of misjudgments so
sequential as to raise a question the
subconunittee did not answer: Were
the actions of top Labor bureaucrats
merely misjudgments, or did they
reflect a deliberate unwillingness to
investigate ties between the Team·
sters and the mob'
The story goes hack to February
of 1955, when the Central States Pen-

in benefits. And during most of this
time the trustees were making
questionable loans to persons closely
connected to organized crime.
Nothing much was done about this
- or could have been done about this
- until Congress in 1974 passed the
Employee Retirement Income
Security Act !ERISA ). This vested
authority in the Labor Department

sion Fund came into belng . Twenty-

created. Its broad mission was to

sters

five years later the fund had assets
of $2.2 billion: it had 500,000 active
participants ; it was collecting $586

seize the opportunity provided by
ERISA to attack the involvement of

committee:

wrongdoing on the part of trustees
charged with prudent management
of ERISA lund assets.
In December oll975, while John T.
flunlop was still secretary of labor in
the Ford administration, a Special

lnveshgatwns

Staff

(SIS ) was

organized crime in the Teamsters

mHlion a year from employers, and

lund . The SIS was to have a staff of

it was paying out $323 million a year

45 top-notch investigators; it was to

•

The Daily Sentinel

trustees, but the new trustees
proved as pliable as the old ones. It
was "business as usual."
The SIS is gone now. It never had
more than 28 investigators. Its director and deputy .director docilely accepted a passive role. Next year the
Teamsters will regain full control of
the Central States fund. The opp(Jrtunity for timely reform has been
squandered. The mob still hangs
around.

"That is the situation Teamsters
Union members must tolerate,"
says the committee report. "They
may know or suspect that their
retirement and other benefit plans
are controlled by persons who are
themselves controlled or influenced
by organized criminals ... but they
are unable or unwilling to unseat the
present leadership of their union."
The government that should have
protected them failed to do so.

subpoenas.

This meant that the SIS had to beg
the voluntary assistance of Team-

offic ia ls. Said
"The

the

sub·

investigation

came to depend for its success upon
the c&lt;Mlperation of its target. " After
a while the Central States trustees
reased to cooperate .
Matters were made worse in June
1976 when Secretary Usery made a
fri endl y speech before the Teamsters ' convention in Las Vega.~. " Let
me ass ure you." he sa id, "that even

lll CourtSU'ct&gt;l

Mason Homemakers
meet

though I don 't have a Teamsters
card. I be long to this club because I
ilelJevc in it. " Twelve days later,

Pomeroy, Ohio
614-!t92-:ZI56
DEVOTED TO TilE 11\TEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

For the August meeting of the
homemakers a family potluck din·
ner was held at the Mason County
Farm Museum Tuesday at 6 p.m. AI·
ter dinner the club held the&gt;r
meeting. They opened with prayer
by the president, Catherine Smith.
O.,votions were given by Mrs. Laura
Johnson.
Secretary's report was by Claro
Williams. Treasurer's report was by
Joyce Carson. Committee reports
were given, Cultural Arts by Laura
Johnson. She reported on the bazaar
the club is to have on Sept. 2.&gt;-26 at
Catherine Smith's home.
Hazel Smith reported on Health.
Sarah Spencer reported on International and the stamps she had

without consulting anyone, the In-

terna l Revenue Service abruptly

revoked the Central States Fund's
tax-exe1npt status.

The premature IRS decree
deprived the SIS of its potentially

RORERT l.. WINGETT
Publisher

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

Geuf'rol Mnager

Allsla1aot "-biiJJht&gt;r/Cnolnllll"r

NM~o· s

A MEMBER of Thll' Associated

Editor

Prts ~&gt;.

lnlaud OaUy Pn-ls Anociatluu aod the

Amrricao Ne,..,;paper Publlshers ASliociatlon.
LE1TERS OF OPlNION atf' we lcomed. TIM'y should be less lha11

!etten are Jubjecl to ediUog and must be
btor . No uwlgned letln's wlll bt
'

slgnt'd with

publl.~hnt .

must useful weapon, but there were
other troubles also. Relations between labor and Justice steadily

CIA resumes its forays into

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

:roo words long. All

name, address and

tell"phone num-

slapS tick espionage:-------=-Ja_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n

l.kltf'rs should bt- In good la5te, addrn1lng

luun, not penollBIItie5.

WASHINGTON - Remember the
plut to dose up Cuba n Premier Fidel
Cast ro 'o Ills beard would fall out?
the rontract with Malia hit men to
knuck him oW the CIA agent who
pl ugged in a lie detector machine
;md blew out all the lights in a dingy

What price
indexing?
Unless a wave of mind-changing sweeps Washington in the next four
years, American taxpayers are going to be indexed.

Did someone out there ask what that m eans"? Shame on you. Where was
your attention when President Reagan was extrac ting his tax-bill victor y
from Congress~

All right, all right - so there was a royal wedding. But that was a oneshot deal. Indexing is going to be with us lor a ion~ time (you know what they
say about death and taxes 1 and will affect not only our annual settling of ac·
counts with the IRS but much, much more about the economy in whi ch we

will have to live lor the foreseea ble future and how well most of us will be
able to live in it.
The indexing provision is one of the briefest in the tax bill but the most
far-reaching . It is designed to end bracket creep, that son of inflation that
deducts more and more from paychecks as the effort to keep up with the
climbing cost of living moves a wage-earner up to hi!::!her and highe r lax
rates.

Briefly, .indexing provides for automa\ic adJustment of tax brackets,
based on changes in cons wner price indicators. to offset inflation . As in-

flation continues to cheapen dollars, the wage-earner able to do no better
than keep even with the increase may s\ill pay more of them to the IRS, but
not as many times as before. Rates will be fine-tuned to assure that the loss
in actual purchasing power re mains constant .
The tax bill calls for inde.ing to begin in 1985, following the phased
three-year tax cut ol25 percent. In effect, it will be insti tutionalizing the ef·
fects of that cut.
Sounds great, right' Well , maybe. It will free the taxpayer from bracket
creep and Congress from .he pen odic and sometimes politically unpleasant
necessity of legislating relief in a fashion that does right by the connicting in·
terests of all of its constituencies and also the requirements of the federal
budget.
But also maybe not. It may also institutionalize something else - in·
flatwn itself. Theoretically, if government i' denied the windfall tax
revenues generated by inflation and non-indexed rates, it will have to be accordingly more modest in its expenditures .
But what if it is not, or not enough so? That means continuing and larger
deficits . Since budget deficits are a contributor to inflation, if not actually
the potent one as some economiSts believe, that means accelerated inflation.
And even if not, by makmg it easier for Americans to live with inflation it
may make them less inclined to undertake the sell-denying effort necessary
to control it. Evidence from countries that have experimented with indexing
suggests as much.
Also, there may be some ques\ion whether Congress should be let off the
tax-adjustment book. It can be argued that the problems of the economy and inflation and burdensome taxes are certainly that - are most ef·
fectively dealt with by measures specifically tailored to the conditions of the
time. Politically unpleasant though that may be, it is a responsibility
inherent in the concept if not always the practice of representative government.
We are not without experience in the elfecl• of indexing. It has lor some
years been a feature of the other side of federal financing - the outgo. It is
inde.ing of Soria! Security benefits and related public assistance programs
that has contributed heavily to their present fiscal insecurity. The prospects
that indexing could simultaneously increase outgo and decrease relative income has the makings of a budgetary nightmare.
Congress and the administration have another three years to give
thought to the pros and cons of tax indexing and there may well be some
min&lt;khanging. The tax-bill provision is something of an afterthought; it
was not in the original administration proposals. And what has been
legislated in can later be legislated out.

Singapore hotel ? the clandestine
111ilitary operations that backfired in
Cuba. r k!()S &lt;tnd iraq ?
The James Bonds responsible for
those slJ pstick misadventures are
OOck in business. The trick-or-treat

branch of the Central Intelligence
Agency is now propounding more of

with

a

comparatively

small

populatiOn that ca n be alienated .
The truth is that the CIA plotters
still have Qaddali in their sights. If
this should be denied by a Whitg
House spokesperson, with eyes cast
heave nward. let me clarify: The
White House, though aware of the
Cl A mindset, has not approved any
scheme to overthrow or liquidate the
troublesome Qaddafi .
Meanwhile, back in the protected
corridors of the CIA, there have
been whi!-;pers about slipping an
assassin into Libya to do away with

those hare-brained schemes that
produced such fiascos during the
1960s and 1970,.

Qaddali . One scheme would have the

An yone who has noticed the unlll'rv ing glitter in the eyes of a CIA

Qadda!i's employ.

strategist or has attended a planning

CIA scenario, would carry a deadly
poison that would have a delayed effect. There would be no symptoms at
all for the first 48 hours. Then the unfortunate Qaddafi would come down
with a fever that could not be

sessi on of the covert crowd can only
wonder what new undercover

operation the CIA may be about to
unloose

A fc" weeks ago, lor example, a
report appeared in print that the CJ A
was plotting a multiphase operation
to nd the world of Libya's radical
ru ler. Muanunar Qaddafi. Not so,

protested the Wh1te House.
it wns

ex pl r~ined

in a nother news

leak that the operatwn was targeted

hit man pose as a mercenary and
juin a ring of mercenaries now in
The secret killer. according tu one

distinguis hed from

various

viral

diseases. This would be followed by
~radual

paralysis, a coma and then

death. No trat·c of this poison wuuld
"be left in his system for the coroners
lo find .

CIA

sources have given

my
CJssociale Ron McRae a complete

against Maurilama, not Libya . This
&lt;.: aused
under ~ tandable
con·
slernati un in Mauritania. Still
another leak offered further
clarifi ca t ion : The target was

.Journalistic res ponsibility forbids

Mauntius. not Mauntania. The for·

11\e, therefore, from publishing any

me r is an island in the Indian Ocean

further details.

description of this unpleasant potion
-

d

common derivative that can be

duplicated in any chetmcal lab.

Tv (:;ldmimster the pois11n, the con·
spi wtors at the CIA have considered
using 1::1 tiny dart disJ!uised as u11e uf

the black fli es that infest t11e Libyan
desert. Another pnssibilily would be
to equip the ass&lt;-1ssin with a Rorgii:l
ring. which could squirt till' poison
i ntnQt~dda[i's food urdi"in k.
There is une bugttbou that troubles
the more thoughtful strategists.
Assassination is a gCJ mc that anyone

can play, and the tempestuous Qad·
dafi ha' his own killer squad' that
111ighl ambush Ronald Reagan in
rel.rtlialinn. The greater contribution
lt J world stability might be a solemn
p&lt;id a mong heads uf state that they

won't try to knock each other off.
Fnutnotc : Other plots Hfl' hatching
1he bttckrooms or t11e CIA. ctnci the
puiJiic should be made ay,·arl' of the
1n

on an antitechnology approach," the
memo warned. " The unprovable
assumption - that if the U. S. is
ahead it LS to our advantage to stop
technological improvement - per·
vades arms control policies."
Addressing the other side of the
coin, the memo said: "Equally
without foundation is the notion that
if we are behind, improvement will
'provoke' adversaries to further
their lead, or take "other measures
disadvantageous to us. Of course, i!

Plans lor filling the while cross
quota with the overland to go to
Hamtranch, Mich. Friendship
House, and the overseas to I.M.E.
Hospital in Zaire, were made when
the EJecta Circle of the .B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society of the Mid·
dleport · First Baptist Church met
Ttlesday.
The group met at the homft of Mrs.
Texanna Well lor a picnic. Rhoda
Hall asked the blessing. Prayer by
Mary Brewer opened the meeting
with Katheryn Metzger presiding .
Mrs. Well gave devotions using
"God's Psychiatry" as her topic and
reading the 23rd Psalm. Reports
were given on the trip to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center when
the Children's Choir of the church
sang.
The birthday of Mrs . Dana Hamm
Monday was observed with a visit
and gilts. It was voted to send a gilt
of money to home mission~ry , David
Stone, on h1s birthday, and also to
save "cent..-off" coupons lor his

we are in a situation of ' perceived

examples

where

the

Kremlin has restricted development
of new technology - such as laser ·
weaponry, particle beams, the
Heagan .rtdministralion tries tCJ neutron bomb and other
develop a firm policy un arrn.o.; sophisticated advanced in the
limitation in negotiating with tht• military art.
WATCH ON WASTE: The State
Russians, it has been studying some
Department
apparently pictures it·
highly clas.o.;ified documents fr urn
self as a junior branch of the
the Car.ter era.
One of the most interesting was a National Archives. The trouble is,
st.'Cret Pentagon mcmorandwn war- our bureaucratic squirrels.in Foggy
mng that the United Stat"' should Bottom are peserving documents
stop worrying about the perceived that have limited interest to say the
technological advantage of either least. At a cust of more than $200,000
side as a bargaining chip in the a year, the Passport Office is storing
some 140 million documents that acdi/:;arrnament poker game.
"The rationale underlying U. S. companied passport applications
decisions to undertake arms control over the past 100 years. The stuff
negotiations I is increasingly based l fills more than 7,500 file cabinets.
wildest of them. These will be repor·
ted in ruture columns.
WH0'S ON FIRST? : As t hv

work. Steve Wood was announced as

the scholarship student for the year.
He attends the Northern Baptist
Theological Seminary in Illinois.
Cards were signed for Sadie Turner and Golda Roush . The program

nAM to mett
A special meeting of Radne Lodge
461 , F&amp;AM, will be held at 7:30p.m.
Tuesday with work in the Master
Mason degree . All Master Masons
are invited.

The end.........______________Art_Bu_c_hwa_ld
I've been reading a lot of spy
books this summer and they all

·'Then that means he knew 'R' was
working for us?"

" He actually didn 't know it until
'R 's ' wile revealed it during her
tryst with Dubois of the French
Secret Service, whom we had been
Vorinsky's circus in exchange for a watching for sometime."
" Is that why ' R' killed himself? "
new identity, and a house in
"No, strangely enough 'R' killed
McLean. Virginia ."
" Yes, Savage. But one question. himself when he ran out of cigaret·
How did you know I was ready to tes and couldn't lind a shop that was
come over to your side~"
open at 3 in the morning. Here
comes your plane."
"Maria told us.''
"Maria of the PLO?"
" Will I see you again, Savage'"
··Maria really worked lor Mossad,
"Perhaps someday our paths may
the Israeli intelligence serviee."
cross.
Tell me, Mussolf. What was
" But I thought her father was a
Karnofsky's
connection with the
Nazi criminal hiding in Argentina'"
Friedrichstrasse
gang?"
" That's what we wanted you to
"
Karnofsky's
mother and
think . Maria 's father was actually in
charge ol the St. Tropez History Sec- Friedrichstrasse were all part of the
Bader Meinhof, group. They hoped to
tion of the Library of Congress."

get Ludorf out of jail by selling the
West Germans a list of Parliament

seem to end the same way.

members

"Then, Mussoff, it is agreed. You
will come to the Umted States and
tell uo everything you know about

payroll."
" Then it all fits into place. Ludorf
knew this, and that is why he was
blackmailing the burnt-out Kar·
nofsky."
"You said it, Savage, I didn't.
Well , I guess it's tune to say good-

who

were

on

'R's'

Monday evening, the CHiton
United Methodist Women met at the
home o! Mrs. D. L. 1Ramona)
Sydenstricker with Sarah Spencer
as co-hostess. They selected lesson
leaders and hostesses for the next
three months. Elizabeth Mcintosh
was appointed song leader for the
society. Mrs. Lester (Laura) Johnson, lesson leader, spoke on " A Mat·
ter of Choice."
Attending were Virginia Wilson ,
Helen Williamson, Catherine Smith.
La ura

Johnson,

Laurene

Lewi.s,

Matilda Noble, Joyce Carson, Betty
Cadle, Olive Watkms, Rev. Kenneth
Watkins and the hostesses.

•

by Gwinnie White was a question
and answer period about the concern
or the church in today's world. Judy
Cowan and Kitty Darst were gqests.
A prayer circle closed the meeting
attended by those named and
Clarabelle Riley, Frances Smart,
Ethel ,Hughes, Freda Hood, and
children, Marybeth Brewer, Dodie
Cleland, Sam Cowan, Keith and
Ginger Darst, and Amber Well .

dleport Amateurs at the home of
Miss Smith, Mrs. Nonna Custer,
assisting hostess, new officers will
be installed.
Also announced was the Sept. 21
Meigs County Garden Clubs
.Association meeting to be held at
Trinity Church with the Middleport
Amateurs to have the program. Mrs.
Ruth Powers of the Middleport
Library will present the program
and Mrs. Marjorie Fetty will be installed .as th€ new county contact
chairman.
On Oct. 31, the regional meeting of

Pomeroy personals
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Burge of
Pomeroy, her sister, Sherri Hysell,
and a friend, April King, have returned from a week at Myrtle Beach, S.
C. The trip was Mr. and Mrs.
Burge's graduation gifts to Sherri
and April.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wright and
children have returned from a
week's visit to Clearwater, Fla . with
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs and
family.
Mrs. William Davis and Mrs. Jeff
Pullms, Columbus, were guests of
Mrs. Davis' mother, Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs on her birthday, Aug. 5.
Mrs. John Anderson and infant of
Cambridge have been here visiting
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Wright. They also visited in Lancaster with Mr. and Mrs . William
Ochier.
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs and
Mrs. Rick Ash and daughter were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Frazier, I..akeview.

Mr. and Mrs. David Mills and
daughter, Melinda, Springlield,
visited with' Mrs. Nora Mills for a
week. While there they went to
Hawks Nest and up to see the New
River bridge.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Nease and
granddaughter, Jill , returned from a
fishing trip in Canada Tuesday .
Mr . and Mrs. Arthur Slusher have

the Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs will be held at Eastern High
School with the regional director to
be installed. The Meigs County garden clubs will host the meeting .
The club purchased "The Flower
Grower ' ' for the Middleport Library
for the coming year. The 1981~2
yearbooks are being prepared by
Kathryn Swanson, vice presidentelect. It was decided to tour a candlemaking shop at Lancaster in
November in lieu of the regular

were on the topic, " The Earth and :
Its Uses, Its Projects, Its Workers, ·
Its Beauty , Its . Possessions
Bestowed by the Lord .''
Others attending were Kathryn
Hysell, Clara Conroy, Grace Pratt,
Elizabeth Burkett, Daisy Blakeslee,
Gladys Cumings, Veda Davis, Rose ·
Reynolds , Emogene Crooks, and
guests, Nina Hicks, Morgantown,
Erna Jesse, Charles Blakeslee, Ed .
Burkett, and Ferman Moore . Armand Turley and Lillian Moore
provided entertainment at the

meeting .

Devotions by Mrs. Jean Moore

organ .

In and Around Meigs

Carleton revival

Rummage sole set

To meet Thursday

MIDDLEPORT-Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern Star,
Middleport, will hold a rummage
sate and country store on Sept. 3, 4
and 5 at the Masonic Temple
basement. All members are asked
to donate items. For further information members are asked to
contact Bessie King, 992-3747 or 9223748, Mrs. Kathryn Mitchell,7422544, or Mrs. Euvetta Bechtle, 992·

The Laurel Cliff Better Health
Club will meet at6:30 p.m. Thursday
at the home of Mrs . Marjorie Fetty
for

5383.

TOPS 1456 news ...

ramil y

pi c ni c.

Song/est Saturday

Revival in progress

There will be songfest at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Sunday evening at 7 p.m. The
Colemans from the Gallipolis Church of the Nazarene Church will be
th€ featured singers. Pastor of the
church is the Rev. James Kittle .

A revivalism progress at the Ash
Street Free Will Baptist Church in
Middleport, 7:30p. m. each evening .
Joseph Gwinn of Leon, W.Va. is the
evangelist. and Dan Hayman and
the Country Hymntuners will be
singing all week.

Weight loss techniques as well as
problems encountered during long
term weight loss efforts were
discussed at this week's meeting of
TOPS OH 1456, Rutland.
Donna Fry was the weekly best
loser and was presented a cash gift
and ribbon for her 7.75 pound weight
loss. Belva Schuler was honored as
runner~up .

a

A revival is underway at the
Carleton Church located on the
Kingsbury Road and will continue
through Sa turday at 7:30 p.m . each
evening. Miles Trout of Poplar
Ridge is the evangelist and on
Tuesday evening the special singers
will be the Soul Finders of Cheshire.

WATER
SMOKE
OR
THEFT ..

Members were remin-

ded to take their quilt blocks for Ms .
Davis who has volunteered to set
them up for the club.
Information on the club may be
obtained by calling 742-2171.

Selling flags
The Meigs Athletic Boosters are
selling maroon and gold school flags
at$5 each . Businesses or individuals
de iring to purchase a flag are asked
to contact Mrs. Barbara Murray,
992-2901.

been vacationing in Virginia and

Bradenton and St. Petersburg, Fla .
Mrs. Sandy Darst and children of
Amlin have returned home alter
visiting here several days with Mr .
and Mrs . James Gilmore. Mrs .
Gilmore and Mrs. Janice Haggy and
children went to Columbus lor Mrs .
Darst and children and Mr. and Mrs.

Hurts rent ers just as much as homeowners. Can you af·
tord the loss ot your val uab l es. your furni ture and your
c loth es? A fir e or a thi ef could wipe them out in m inutes .
For a few doll ar s a month. you can protec t all your
belonging s. See us tod ay.

Shrinettes will meet

REUTER-BROGAN INS. SERVICE

The Twin City Shrinettes will meet
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the home of
Mrs.
Walter
Grue se r.

Gilmore returhed them horne
remaining fur a several days' visit.

POMEROY, OH .

992 · 6687

214E.MAtN

Don't miss JOIII'
Dodge dealer's end-of·the·.rear
,.--..

r--.

,....

r,_

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No. 81·302-El·EFC, to
review the fuel procurement practices and policies of The Ohio Power
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com·
ponenl Clause, and related
matters . This hearing is .
scheduled to begin at
1:00 ,P.m. on Monday,
Augusl 31, 1981, at the
City Council Chambers.
218 Clewland Ave , SW..
Canton , Ohio 44702 .
All inlerested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard . Further information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission .
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk,
Secretary

I

....

I I

-- -

r--

I

~

- -

I

We beat selected GM, Ford and
import models bJ $146 to s1736
in base sticker prices~ Now we're out
to beat them in clearance prices, too!

"What is it ?"

bye."

" I'll walk you to the ramp."
"Tell me, Savage. What will you
say to Maria?''

" I'll tell her you didn't mean to hit
her when she wouldn't reveal why
she had shot Vandenwalk at the Cafe
Mozart in Copenhagen."
" Do you think she'll believe you?"
" It doesn't matter. Why is it so important to you?"
'"Maria Is carrying my child."

" It's Balridge's watch. We found il :
on his body after he was pushed in :
front of the Zurich to Munich ex- :
press train.''
.
"No wonder we couldn't locate it ;
when we wearched his lul(gag., at :
the Helsinki airport. Thank · yuu, :
Savage. I guess there is no more to
say."
~
" You're so right, Mussofl. In our ,
business the less said the better."

Aug. 24, 1981 . many near misses with children.
Dear Editor:
Beer bottles are thrown all over it.
The Meigs Local school board
The people of this neighborhood
maintail111 a 'highway through the are tired of it.
plaJIIIl'OUIId at the junior high school · U authorities were wise, they
In Middleport. This road Is · from would barricade the Pearl St. enSouth Fourth St. to Pearl St.
trance.
· It 1.1 a place lor reckless driving,
c.W. Edwards
and Ia a dust hazard. I have seen so
Middl!!port

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Many imports and light trucks. Che\lettes
extra. Parts and ac,lditi'O,na~ services extra .·
if needed.
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FRONT END ALIGN.MENT

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Neitfhborhood 'tired of it'

•.

Hostesses , Lesson
Leaders selected

Several fall county and regional
meetings were announced wflen the
Middleport Amateur Gardeners met
for a covered dish dinner at the
home of Mn. Lillian Moore.
Miss Erma Smith, president, announced that on Aug. 31 there will be
an open meeting of the Rutland Garden Club and on Sept. 12 and 13, a
flower sbow by the Rutland Club at
the Rutland United Methodist Church. Invitational classes for that show
will be "Sunrise; Sunset" and " In·
dian Summer.''
At the Sept. 9 meeting of the Mid-

" I see. That ex plains the business .
with Zupel. "
.
"Zupei wa s just a pawn we ·
sacrificed alter Appel was found red··
handed with the coded message ·
from Tarhouse."
"Well. here we are at the ramp. I
guess this is it, Mussofl. Here is a
package fur you."

Letter to the Editor I

I

turned in to the co-chairman. Joyce
Carson reported on Public
Relations. The community outreach
chairman, Lea Belcher, reported on
the two flags the clubs got for the
Historical Home, and the flowers
she and Ahna Marshall planted
there .
The committees reported the all
West Virginia sign that was made
lor the community project of 1981
was up but they sWl have a flower
box to put under the sign.
The county coinmittees reports
were all filled out ready to send to
the c&lt;rchairman.
The members are to make crafts
for the bazaar in September and to
be thinking of a conununity project
lor 1982.
The September lesson on Jamaica
will be given by Lee Belcher on the
15th at noon at the home of Laura
Johnson with Ramona Sidenstricker
as co-hostess .
Those attending the potluck dinner
were Rev. and Mrs. Kenneth
Watkins, Mr. and Mrs. Landon
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Laurence
Bucher, Mrs. Joyce Carson, Mrs .
Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Matilda Noble,
Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Mrs. Mary Capehart.

Electa Circle meets

equivalence,' any proposed activity
on the U. S. side becomes
destabliizing.' "
The secret memo notes that the
Russians don't seem to be bothered
by competitive edges. It lists
nw11erous

Amateur Gardeners meet for fall dinner

Mason news notes
For Alma ManhaU
By Elsie Roach
Gueslcorreop&lt;Nldent
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. T. R.
Davis and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Davis and sons, Chris and Stevie
vacationed recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Glen Thompson and
cta.ughter, Kenuny of Winchester ,
WIS. They also visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Nonnan Shoaf and
family at Palatine, Ill. Mrs.
Thelma Johnson and Mrs. Betty
Shoaf are daughters of Mr. and
Mrs. T. R. Davis and sisters of
Harold Davis.
Mr. and Mrs. J . Robert Roach,
Larry and Roger, visited recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Burton Webb
of Mansfield. Mrs. Beulah Webb
is a sister of Mrs. Elsie Roach.
Mrs. Webb is recuperating at
home. She appreciated the many
get well cards she has received
from friendS and relatives, she
indicated.
The 33rd James Wolfe reunion
was held August 9 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wolfe of
Racine . Plans were made to have
the reunion there next year.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh10

Failing the rank and

to investigate both civil a nd criminal

Tuesday, August 25, 1981

Page-2-The Daily Senti~el

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E"rJ '81 Cll' lllMI truck illaltck Ia
clt1111nct priottl to ...,.! c.t tile
dul of Jhe ,_ •• •lliP MINce,
fnlllt .... " " Dll'l ,..hlp St.
llecia', •••• ~.111m Touch
,iok ..l IM Yllll.

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SliCker price exc:Juding ltlle. I 111ft$. lnd OPliOMI
equtpment. LevelS ot stanaara equtpment va~

'B~&amp;e

" "Ptice comparisons based on comparably equipped pdoups
!UseE~

est mpg number! l or compar1S011_Your mtleage mav ~af'f
depending on speed, weathel' and tfiD lenofh. Hiahwo~ mtleaoe
ptobably k&gt;wer

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Paqe- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, August 25,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Joppa Women make contributions
Several contributions were made
when the Joppa United Methodist
Women met recently at the church.
The UMW voted to contribute $25
to the medical fund for Kathy Spen·
· cer, granddaughter of a member,
Helen Kibble, .and to send $10 for the
mission box which Torch is mailing
to missionaries, Marshall and Sandy
Ruth. It was also voted to pay for the
church piano tuning and the electric
bill for the church.

TOPS news ...
Recognition of KOPS (Keep Off
Pounds Sensibly ) in .. candlelight
ceremony highlighted last week's
meellng of TOPS 570, Pomeroy.
Delores Long, leader, gave a poem
of inspiration and presented
necklaces a nd long stenuned yellow
roses to the 10 KOPS. Each one also
received a gold trophy.

EDGA.R VA.NINWAGEN,
Pomeroy, who recently attended
the 65th birthday anniversary of
the Shanghai bowl held at Ft.
Ord, Calif. , is shown with the
bowl that was made out of 1,600
sil ver dollars. The bowl is valued
at one-hail million dollars .

VIEWED MORTA.R GUN- Edgar Vanlnwagen, Pomeroy, while at·
tending the 65th birthday anniversary of the Shanghai bowl toured Ft.
Ord and viewed the field mortar guns that contain electronic night and
day finders.

Vanlnwagen returns from Bowl
Edgar
who

vN ts

VLJ nlnwagen.

Pomeroy.

in the Rataan dea th march

durlllK Worl d War II , just returned
[ollowmg the celebrallon or the 65th
bi rt hday ~Jn !! J v e rs ary uf t he
Shang h"1 bnw l held a t Ft Ord.

Am eri can forces during World War
II Following the war the government brought the bowl ba ck and it 1s
prt!senlly kept in Ko rea under guard
24 hours a day The bowl be longed to

Calif.. by members of t htt J i st Infan try Ui VL':i JU!l .

V&lt;mlm\·ugc n se rved with the :l ist
Jnfc:Hitry div1sion durin g World War

II and wa s a pn::;oner of war for
threr aud one-half years on Bataan.
He lost his left leg m a cuF!l mine accident in Japan.

The Shang hat bow l, V&lt;i ued at un~·
half million d oll ars. was made out of
1,600 sil ve r do llars donated by
Am en can Soldiers dur ing the
Siberian Wa r in the early 1900s .
The bowl was buried on Rat.aan
bef ure th e su r re nd er of the

New arrival

High school orientation
The annua l ori entati on meeti ng
fur Meigs high school s emor girls
lllterested 111 enteri ng the 1982
Meigs Count y Jun ior Mi ss
pru~ ra m will bt• held at 3 p.m
Sunda y at the Mei gs Inn banqu et

j. ( roOJning, carria ge and pe rsona l
evening gown. a nd
a jud ges· interVIew. 35 percent .
scored on mental a lertness, per·
sonCJ hty, sense of val ues and
darily of express ion . During Sun-

ruurn.

day' s m eetin g r ule s and
regulations of the Juni or Miss
Progr am will be explained .
The wi1mer nf the Meigs Count y
program will r e pn~sent the county 11 t the Oh1u Junior Miss fina ls
111 Mount Vernun. the first week
of February . ne xt year . Speaking
on the state program at S und&lt;ty's
meetmg wi ll be Sonja Hill. 1981
Meigs C11Unty Junior Miss.
Anymw unn ble to a ttend Sun·
d&lt;ty's sess ion should con test
Southe &lt;:~s t Ohru Junior Miss. Inc ..
P 0 . Bu.&lt; 10~ . Pomeroy. Ohi o
457n9 . or ca ll 949-2708 or 949-283 7

Janis Carna han a nd Bobbi Hill .
co-cha irpersons for the program ,
announced that contestants wi ll
Ut- jutlged in severa l a reas which
co unt differe nt pe rcen tage
f i~ur·es in t he1r tota l scores .
The s e inc l ud e s chola s ti c
!:lc hi evement. 15 percen t. based
un ACT scores. na tional me rit
testing, class rankmg C~nd 3\\·a. rUs; crea.tive ami perfurn ung (:lrts.
20 pe rcent. judged on or igina lity .
l t.•c hni ca l
accuracy.
&lt;tp prupnateness of selection and
cost um~ ; yout h fitne ss . 15 peri'cnt. scored Dn coordinati on , dexterity . stamina, postu re and appedrance ; poise a nd appearCinte.
15 pe rcent. rdted on ~ race .

SOCIAL

CALENDAR
ln;:mt ld cFarkmd
McFarla nd
\ 1r &lt;iiHl Mrs. Hi ck McFarland .
l .oga n. a re a nnoun cmg the blrth of a
U o u ~ h t c r . Cassancl:·&lt;-t Da wn. She
w e 1 ~h ed s ix pounds . 11 ounces and
\ \ 'aS 19 inches I nn ~
Materna l g r&lt;tndparcnt.-; are Mr
ami Mrs. Dal e C'&lt;-t rpent er. Logi.l n.
etnd tlw p&lt;lk r nal grandp&lt;:trents ar e
Mr. and Mrs Ph1llip McFarland.
Muldlcpurt. a nd James Custer.
Columbus .\1r . ;wei Mrs. McFarla nrt
ha w a _.; im . f\"; Ja!l lt-tn . a ge 1w o .

Ice cr e am

social Saturday
An Jet' c rea m .soc ial Will be held
Satunldy fr om 4 tu 9 p.m . 1n front of

t he Fowle r Grocery. West Col umbia.
W Va . by the Wesl Columbia
Un1tcd Me thodist Church. Besides
humc111ade ice cream the re will be
r H~s. cakes. coffee. soft drinks. soup.
hnt dugs a nd sloppy joes a vai lable

the membars of the 31 st Infan try
division .
Vanlnwagen received a citation
fo :- outstcmJing demonstration or
loya lty to the :11 st divisi on.

TUESDAY
ON E-WON-ONE class of t he
Pomeroy First Baptist Ch urch will
hold a meeting at 7: :!0 Tuesday night
"t the church.
LADIES AUXIIJA RY . Drew We bster Post 39, American Legion, 7: 30
p.m . Tuesda y a t post home .
AMERI CA N
LEGION
AUXILIARY. Racine Post 602. annual picnic Tuesday at 6 :30p.m . at
the Shrine Pa rk in Ra c in~ . Dues a re
now pay(jble .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT LIONS CLUB, regular meeting, Wednesday noon at the Melgs Inn. Zone
chAtnna n wi ll visit.
TIIURSDAY
TWIN CITY SHRlNETTES. 7:30
p. m Thursday. horne of Mrs Mary
Grueser.
LAUREL CUFF Better Hea lth
Club, fami ly picni c, home of Mrs.
Ma rjorie F etty, Pomeroy, 6:30p.m.

::~ppe&lt;:-~rancc Jll

for further

info n ll&lt;:~tion.

The 1982 county ev ent will be
held at 8:10 p.m. on Oct. 24 at
Southern High School in Raci ne.

In the honor ed group were Linnie
Bell Aleshire, six year KOPS, lost
16 ¥• poun ds in 25 days ; Betty Sayre,
five year KOPS, lost 24¥, pounds in
two months, 12 days ; Imogene Dean,
4\2 year KOPS, lost IB'h pounds in
three months, six da ys ; Nellie
Grover. lour year KOPS, lost 22
pounds in six months, seven days;
Jul ia Hyse ll , two year KOPS,lost 30
pounds in six months, seven days ;
Bonnie Johnston, two year KOPS,
lost 31 pounds in 14 months.
Ola St. Clair, one year KOPS, lost
13 pounds in five months ; Maida
Long, one year KOPS , lost 251; pounds in five months, 24 days; Mary
Roush, one year KOPS, lost 12'h
pounds in three months , six days;
Virginia Smith, one year KOPS, lost
31 ' • pounds in five months, six days.
Of the 24 members weighing in at
the meeting, there was a total loss of
15 pounds. It was noted that the funny money a uction will take place at
the Sept. I meeting with members to
take gifts. Quilt blocks are also to be
turned in at that meeting, and a new
contest will begin called " Pee l a
Pound' ' Each member is to bring a
gilt wr a pped six times and as members lose weight, they will peel off
one of the wr appings .
Members a re also given points for
taking in calorie charts, attending
meetmgs, losing weight, staying for
the meeting and staying the same
weight. Each member is to take two
gifts to the Sept. I meeting, one for
the a uction and one' lor the contest.

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CUSTOMERS
YOU CAN NOW PAY YOUR
GAS BILL QUICKLY AND
EFFICIENTLY AT:

THE SHOE BOX

:

Reunion Saturday

Families visit

The family reunion of the descendants of James and Bertha
Cremeans will be held Saturday at
Forked Run Lake, Long Bottom ,
with a basket dinner to be served at
12:30p.m .

Mr. and Mrs. William Nease, Jr.
and son, Travis, and Mrs. James Anderson, Jamie and Brian, Minersville ; Mrs. Ruth Powers, Richard
and Susan, G rove City, were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Nease and son, Stanley. The bil'
thdays of Mrs. William Nease and
Brian Anderson were observed.
Susan Powers will return to Humboll College in Arcata, Calif., this
month to complete work on her
master's degree in speech and
hearing therapy .

School reunion Saturday
The annual Swartz and Carr
School Reunion will be held Sunday
at the fonner Woode Grove at
Alfred. There will be a basket dinner
at noon. All interested persons are
inv ited .

~' c,~6
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TOMORROW!

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AN IMPORTANT MESSAGE
FROM COLUMBIA GAS:

If you're disabled
or a senior citizen,
make sure
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you deserve.

·

"' LARRY'S WAYSIDE
FURNITURE

w

Atlanta
x-~ Angell!s

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Cincinnati
7
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San Francisco
7
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San Diego
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K1:1ns&amp;s City !Leonard 7-ill at Detroit
rMorrh; 9-4 1). t nl
Minnesota i Ja dt~on 1-21 a t New York

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Chicy,go 9, San Diego 8, 11 innings
Philadelphia 7, AUaQta :i, ll innings
Ia Angeles J, Plll3buJ1!h 0
Ci.ncfnnali 2, ~w York 0
St.Louis 2. San Francisco I. 10 i n"nin g~.
01ly ,..... liCheduled
Tuesday 's Games

Sar1 Diego (Mura 3--10 or l..ollitr 1_.1 al
Chicqo CKravec D-3 1
Cincinnati (La COS.'I 2-61 at Montreal,(Sanderson 6-41, 1r1 1
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mavis t).C) J, 1n1
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fPem 2-41 , ( nl
Hwslm IRyan 7-31 al New YOrk (Ha r-

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San Fr~ IGriflin ~ I at St.Louis

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Bnoie Hutller, Uritbocker, I"'"' the 0.1·
las c:...IJoya and Thomas B.....,, defensive end, trom the PhiliKieiDhia Eagles
ror undllcaed future draft choices.
.
DALLAS OOW»QYS-Relused Curt ea.•
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By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
To Milwaukee's Cecil Cooper, it
was just another night's work .
For Minnesota's Kent Hrbek, it
was his grea test evening as a major
leaguer. It also was his first. ..and
one he' ll have to go along way to top.
While Cooper, one of the American
League's best hitters, finally dim·
bed over the .300 mark - he hit .352
last season, second best in the
majors - with a 3-lor-4 night as the
Brewers edged the Chicago White
Sox 5-4, the night r ea lly belonged to
Hrbek . He was one or the best hitters
in the California League until Monda y.
Hrbek, the Most Valuable Player
in the Class A circuit with a .380
. average, 112 RBI and 2:1 homers, had
been told Saturday by Visalia
Manager Dick Phillips that the
Twins had called him up . Hrbek
grew up near the Twins' home
stadium in Bloomington, Minn.
But the 21-year-old first baseman
wasn't going to make his de but
before fri ends and family at Met
· Stadium. Instead, he joined the
Twins in New York to play the
Yankees.
" Jus\ walking down the runway .
and into the dugout and seeing
Yankee Stadium was a big thrill,"
said Hrbek after his 12th-inning
home run bad lifted the Twiris over
New York 3-2. He also knocked In the
first Minnesota run with an infield
single in the fifth inning. " I was

for an undisclosed ruturt draft choice.
Wa ived ' Alvin LewiJ.
. DETROIT lJON5-Cut Andy . CaMavtno, - . . - ; . Curley j:Uip, defensive
tackle; Eddie Lewil, and Slm Johnaon.

{stieb

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Ooldllld

and John

Ror Wll-

UOmii, llldi - · co . lht ...,.footbiU
iniUIY lllt: ·
GREEN BAY
PAatEIIS-CIJt Tim
- . . . todlla; &lt;Lo"ll'
llnelllcter;
Doylol_ Petway, l!l!i!Y; Rode Savtdl,
~er..... Melvin Hoovet: and En•ft .

w-.

brnJ, Wide ri&lt;elven.

shaking a little bit but the guys sa id
to stay cool. I thought, ' Hey if I go
. out ther e scared. I could get hurt. "'
The only ones tu get hurt wer e the
Yankees, as Hrbek wrote his own
storybook ending to his memorable
ni ght.
" I knew they were gonna throw
me fast balls because they had no
book on m e." Hrbek sa id . "He
(reliever George Frazier, who
hadn 't given up a run in 13 innings
since bei ng called up from the
mino" by the Yanks! got the ball up
a lillie bit and I happened to get
around on it a nd it went. I knew I hit
it good but I didn't start jogging
right away . I started running like a
ra bbit."
Another Twins rookie who will
remem ber Monday's game was Lenny Faedo, a 21-year-old s hortstop
also brought up from the minors on
Monday . Faedo singled in the
eighth. took second on an infield out
and scored on a single by Dave
E ngle
tie the game2-2.
J errytoMumphrey
opened the game
with a double for New York and
scored on a single by Larry Milbour·
ne, then singled home Graig Nettles
in the seventh .
It was the Yanks' first extra·
inning loss after six wins this year .
Elsewhere, it was Kansas City 4,
Detroit 2, s napping the Tigers' ninegame winning streak; Texas 3,
Toronto 0; California 8, Boston 6;
Oakland 16, Cleveland 4, and
Baltimore 12, Seattle 8.

inning as th~ Padres rallied from
fiv e-ru n deficit.

Cardina ls 2. Giants l
Tummy He rr 's lOth-inning s ingh:
scored Tit o Lcmdrum to ~ i ve St.
Louis ils victory over San Fran cisL'U
Landrum beat out a une-o ut infield
hit , stole second and adva nced tu
third when t he throw (rom ca tcher
Bub Brenly bounced into center
f1 cld With the infteld dra wn in , Hen·
hounred hi s s inglr up the middle .

Candidates lu report
for tryout s Wt·dnesday
Southern Hi gh Schu ol g irls 111terestcd in becomin ~ cht.•erleaders
ijfe ask ed to report t D lhe junwr h1gh
buildin g a t 7:30 p.m . Wedn esday.

The Daih Se n! incl
PulJIL, IwJ l'\'l' l')' &lt;rftl'nl' " ''l . M"'' lh&gt;~ t111· u u ~ h
F rrrJcn , 11 1 Cou r1 St rl'l' i. h1 Iht· Oh .,. V &lt;J llr: r
Pu bh.~h1111: Cu111p&lt;~ n :&gt;
Mull lll ll 'rh&lt;r. lnr.-: ,
Pu11wro.1. Olu u ~5;G'J. 9'J ~· U 5fl . .StT un d d eL~.,
1)1 1~ 1.i:1 1! t ' ]l&lt;l rd ;~ \ Pollll'f"'' · Ohru

531 JACKSON ptK E Rl.35 WEST
Phone 446- 4524
BARGAIN MAri/IIEES ON SAT &amp; SU/11

ALL SEAiS J USr S /.50
ADMISSION EVERY W ESDAY S /,50

Mt• rrlbt•r Till· A .~s ul' l&lt;ll l'd P rl'""· )111&lt;1 111 ( rr;~ r.
II P r~ :- A""''n .1lroor1 .o rod •lot· Al l ll' l"l(';rn
Nl'l• :- pe~ po · r Prr h l t~ ht · r.~ \ ,.._,,,, l. lli ' 'n . Nntr ollil l
Atl l"t"rll ., rn g H t' [ lrt·.v· nl&lt;~ l l\ &lt; " . Hr,.nh&lt;~r n
r\r·WSJl&lt;J [}l'f Sil l•··' · 7:1:1 Thrrd /\ l t'lll!l' :.; ,."
Ytwk . Nt•w Y11rk IOfll l

GE:T

POSTMASTEH St•ml addn ·"' ' " Tht· D;11h
St•ntmr•l . llll"ourl .'11 . Pull ot ·rn:•. Otwr ~ 5i6 !1

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ONIT•
SL:R..'iffllr'T ION IL\TES

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SIN( ; IJ·: COP\'
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&amp;.·n t uw l nn ._. J . 6 vr 12 rrwrr th lJ;~,., , ~ . Crcdrl
wt l l tw ~ ·ve n l "arn•·r caelr rr lttnlh

2ndW E[r' 7· 1Q &amp; 9 00PM
SAT &amp; SUli MA TINE ES 1: 10 &amp; 3 : 00

Nu ~ u b.~n r p l wm by rnn r( pt'nllJI I •·d 111 lu ~~o rr ~
wlwrt· hurm· l·ornl.' r serv rn · rs o vo li t~ !&gt;It·
MA II .SU HS C RIPT IO ~ S

Ohio ar1rl Wes t \ 'irglnia

3 Mun th

. $1C.50
$1 ;. 51]
$.1:1 ()()

S1x 11101 11 h

1 v..... ,.

llalt" ~

Cltt l..li idt· ()hin
and WL·s l \' 1 r ~ inia
$11 .oo

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6 Mun\11

$20 00

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$:re:rn.

~-,;~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~

REMINGTON
•

STEEL AIRE IV
Th e a l1 purpo se st ee l be lted rad ia l .
th e t ir e to r toda y . Va lue. Per
torman ce and Radial Fue1 Econom y
In any kind ol w ea t her , on a ny ca r
- REM I N G TON St eel A ire IV

P205/ 75R 14
P215/75R 14

For H~aring Aid
Se lection ~ St~n·ict!~ or Co nlilultntion .
Bn •~d On 32 \'ears Ex r~erien r•·-

And/Ur R eferral To Appropriale
Medical S[l&lt;'ciali•ts:
0

Phone {614) 594·3571
We Serve Meill", G~ilia and 1\lason Counties
'
On ~ Regular Basis
·

•

.I

1)(1

M o\tl
S52 110

P215/7SR15
P225/7SRIS
P235/7SR15

$68 .50

$2 . 34

sn.so

$2 .62
$2 .79
$2.95

$77 .00
$80.00

INSTALLED AND BALANCED FREE '

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
606 E. Main
Ph. 992·2094
Pomeroy, Ohio
Front End Alignmen1-S12.SO Most Passenger Cars
Brake Set vice

-

.,

nr l\1 u1or Kou t •·

Ura· 1w c k
Urw Mon\11

P. M

Hearing Aid Center
444 W. Union St.- Athens-, Oh.

i1

Dodgerl&gt;i 3, Piratt's 0
Solo home runs by Dust) Baker
and Steve Yeager ba cked Rur1
Hooton's four-hitter as Los Angeles
bl anked P itt, burgh. It """' the
second straight complet e- ga ml'
shutout for Hnoton, 9-4 . who h t-~s not
given up an ea rned run in 23 inn1ngs
and three post-strike starts .
Baker , who clouted his s1xth
homer of the season in the t h1rd.
na rrowl y missed a se&lt;"ond hmner in
the fifth when his line dn ve hit a [uut
from the top or the wa ll But left
fi elder Mike Easle r gra bbed !he
carom and threw R&lt;tk er out ctt
secnnrt ba se.

DILES

. ToyJOr, l"llllllinC
........; u,tlt eild. '
. .
DENVER BRONCOS- Acquired Wlide
MimninJI. wide ' receiVer-kick return speo
d.alilt, lrom the Buft'alo 81\JJ in eachange

Fred Kirkland , wide I' tecelver,
~. .--cter. l'to&lt;ed

II lmlnp

.... Clevtllnd •
1t

PHILLIES- Recalled

defensive becq; , Bob NWolek, l!Mht end ;

. . - . . • • a.tcqo.
I

NaUonal League

teammates a nd the other umpires as
Valentine in the fo urth.
he tried to get at Fields a second
Bercnyi retired 26 of the la s t 28
time .
batters who fac ed him. striking nut a
"I e jected Dallas because he
career-high 12, mcludmg slu gge r
threw his hat and threw m y hat,"
Dave Kingman four strC~ i ght times
Fields said .
- the last time to end the game .
In other NL games Monday, the
It was Hereny1 's third complete·
Chicago Cubs nipped San Dieg o 9-8
ga rn e s hutout or the season . He
in II tnnings, Los Angeles bla nked
hurled a one-hitter - an infield
Pittsburgh ~. Cincinnati shutout
single - aga inst the Montreal Expos
the New York Mets 2.{) a nd St. Louis
on June 7 and a tw~hitter against
needed 10 innings to get past San
the San Diego Padres on Plprill4
Francisco 2-L
"I've been in the game 25 years
Cubs9, Padres 8
and seen that play 10,000 times ,"
Pinch-batter Mike Tyson, after
Green said of Bowa 's " phantom
failin g to bunt in two attempts.
tag" at second. "Five tho usand
doubled home Ivan DeJesus in the
limes he l the fielder) touches the
l ith inning to boost Chicago past San
bag. Five thousand times he doesn ' t.
Diego.
!lut 10,000 times the runner is out.
DeJes us, who had doubled home
"Bow a touched the base ."
three runs in the firs t innmg, walked
The shortstop later described
to open the lith. Tyson then batted
Fields as incompetent.
for winmng p1tcher Lee Sm ith . 2-5.
"I hit the hag with my heel," Bow a
ctntl di.:!livered his game-winnin g
sa1d . " If I didn't think I hit the bag, ! · bl ow.
wouldn't argue. I've never seen that
The Cubs had lied the score 8-8 in
ra il ever ."
the nmth on Bill Buckner's twv-out .
The Phillies came back to tie the
twr.rrun s ingle. Earlier , .J erry Turgame in the bottom of the ninth and
ner's pinch three-run home r a nd a
send the game into extr a innings ,
two-run single by Ruppert Jo nes
setting the stage for Trillo's heroics .
fe at ured a five-run San Diego fifth
Another argument broke out after
the game in the tunnel leading to the
Eastern Junior High
umpires' dressing room . Nick
Colost , the umpire-in-chief, t urned
gridders to meet
on a television commentator , cussed
him out a nd reportedly sma shed
EAST MI::iGS - Eastern J unior
what the comme ntator said was ;;~
High football participants will m eet
$40,000 camer a.
at the high se ho ul at 6 p.rn. Wed ·
Reds 2, Mets 0
rresday .
Rookie Cincinnati r ight-hander
Bruce Berenyi stopped New York on
just two hits - a leadoff infield
single by Mookie Wilson to start the
gam e and a tw&lt;&gt;-single · by E llis

Brewers edge Chisox

CIUCAGO BEARS-Cut Frank
Ditta,
guard: Jeff Lee and Tom DOnovan, wide
recelven; Lonnie Johnson,
back;
JOfl Najarion and Bob Sh
, iinebllcten ; Jon Hoke, quarter ck, and
ily•n Mullaney, defer\J.Ive end.
CLEVELANb
" BROWNS- Acquired

.714

.1011
.IlliG
.at

I

Lea~ue .

By BOB GREENE
AP Sports Writer
Manager Dallas Green was long
g9ne when Manny Trillo slammed a
tw(H)ut, tw&lt;&gt;-run homer tbat boosted
the Philadelphia Phillies1 to a 13inning 7-f&gt; victory· over the Atlanta
Braves. How long Green will be gone
may be up to National League
President Chub Feeney .
Green and Philadelphia shortstop
Larry Bow a were ejected in the nin·
th inning from Monday night's game
after what a t first appeared to be an
inning-ending double play.
Bowa grabbed Dale Murphy' s
grounder , ran to second base, then
threw to firs\. As the Phillies sta rted
to leave the field, thinking they were
going into the bottom of the ninth
with a 4-4 tie, second base umpire
Steve Fields ruled runner Chris
Chambliss was sa fe at second as
Atlanta's fifth run crossed home
plate.
" He IBowa) wasn't even close to
tagging the base," Fields said . " The
only thing I can te ll you is he s trad·
died the bag ... He just flat missed it
by six inches.''
Bowa charged Fields, yelling at
the umpire, waved his glove and
slanuned his hat to the ground. ·
"I ran Bow a for throwing the
glove," Fields said.
Green raced from t he dugout, put
himself between Bowa and the umpire, scr eamed a\ Fields, bumped
him several times and grabbed the
umpire's hat, knocking it off his
head. Philadelphia players finally
restr a ine d Green fin a lly was
restrained by his players after he
bumped Fields several times.
Bowa also was restrained by his

!if..

•.as

WEBT

'I'Cloldlnd

BASEBALL
'
Amerltan League
MINNESOTA TWJN&amp;-Called up Kent
HrbH, first baseman and Lenny f'aedo,
shurtst.up .
NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed
lAlu
Piniella, ootrielder, oo theaUI!ll up Kent
Hrbek, first baseman and Lenny Faedu,
shortstop.
NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed Lou
Pinlella. I)UUielder. on the I~y disabled
list. Recalled Bobby Brown, outfielder.
from
Columbus uf
the
Ir~tema ti onal

·

Pd.GB

t
•
I

Transactions

release.

AMERICAN LEAGUE 1
EAST
10
10
I

AI.-

•

purpu~~e

Houlton at New York. 1n1

L

1

Mark Davia, pitcher, from Oklahoma City
uf the · American Association. Asked waiv·
m1 oo John Vukovich, Infie lder. fur the

Philadelphia, lnl

W

011 1 Ci:i li£urnia

S.S 1

Minnesola at New York. i n 1
Kansa.:l City al Detroil, 1n 1
Chi cago at Milwaukee, In f
Only ll:ames schlduied

PHILADELPHIA

WedDetd.ly's Games
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
San Franciaco at St.l...ouis
San Diego at Chicago
ctnctnnaU at Montreal, In l

'

1 Sla-

Wednesday 'sG am~s

17

M~fsGame~

Atlanta at

at Milw&lt;Jukee

Baltimore r Palmer 4-51 a t Sea li lt&gt;
bolt 2..f,J , In\

-

.200

- ..rlrl&gt;holf dl'lillco wtMer
I 10

COLUMBIA GAS

school at Miami Trace, where he
was a teammate of the Buckeye's
quarterback Art Schlichter .
Cobb places a greater responsibility on the Buckeye defense this
season, "because we will be lacing
more teams with outstanding
passers. We will have to have near·
perfect pass coverage. I think that is
the biggest challenge lacing this
team .' '
Cobb also feel s the Buckeyes face
a tougher schedule this year, star·
ting with the season opener Sept. 12
against Duke in Ohio Stadium.
" Every team on our schedule is
improved over last year and that
should tell us something," he said .
"We just have to take each one of
them as they come .''
As for his own physical condition,
he sa id he' s near 100 percent.
" I followed a prescribed physical
exercise program in the off-season
a nd particularly through the s ummer and my leg feels fine, " he sa id.
Cobb's No. I goal with the
Buckeyes is another trip to the Rose
Bowl where OSU lost to Southern
California in 1980. " Tha t 's what you
dream about when you come to Ohio
State and run out into the stadium
before that huge crowd," )le said.
Cobb is confident the 1981
Buckeyes can make the postseason
trip.
"The Big Ten will be tough, but we
could win it all," he said. " I just
hope our game with Michigan will be
for the championship again."
If the preseason pollsters are
right, there' s every likelihood the
OSU·Michigan s hootout, Nov. 21 a t
Ann Arbor, could settle the conference championship and the Big
Ten's representative in the Rose
Bowl.

1McCatty 8-51

P et.

•

t)Teul lleMIM

"\

L

8

Houston

Pick up your application fonn now.
Just to be sure you get all the credit
you deserve.

'

•

St. L»uis
NewYftrk
Chicago
Montreal
x-Philadelphi.a
Pltbburt:h

Rought, and Teresa Pratt. Back row - Coach Tom
Grueser, Andrea Riggs , Angela Hatfield, Denise
Stegall, Lori Pickett, Paula Swindell, Beth Gloeckne r ,
Barb Grueser, and Coach Wallace Hatfield.

Phillies outlast Braves In 13 innings

By GeurgeStrode
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -G lenn
Cobb's quiet enthusiasm, along with
his outstanding ability, reflects
{&gt;osltively for the future of Ohio
.State's football defensive forces .
~ The 6-foot-3 , 21G-pound inside
~inebacker and defensive captain of
"the 1981 Buckeyes has a single
prescription for success for himsell
and his teammates this season hard work.
"We know we lost a lot of fine lootball.players from last year's team,"
Cobb said as he relaxed after a prac·
lice at Ohio State. "But we have a lot
of eager sophomores and juniors
who bave already shown they are
prepared to go the extra mile to
make up for our lack of experience."
Cobb, who looks and talks more
like an economics major than a
student of wildlife management in
the College of Agriculture, said the
Buckeyes will '"come together
slowly and we can be a very good
:foot boll team.''
He sees himself in a dual role.
, "Yes, I know that being elected
.defensive captain puts another
:responsilbity on me, one of leader·
-!Ship," he said. "But L think my
•response to that is to do by example
:and work a bit harder each day ."
. Cobb, from Washington Court
·House, is aware of the task ahead of
·him as a player. He and other
veteran linemen, like Marcus
Marek, Jerome Foster and Chris
Rielun, must provide the starch for
the OsU defense.
Cobb isn't without proper credentials. He has outstanding speed 0:04.6 in the 40-yard dash - a nd
ranks at the top in linemen's agility
tests. He played much of last season
with a painful thigh bruise, but was
credited with 56 tackles.
Cobb played lineback in high

SENIOR LEAGUE CHAMPS - Pomeroy woo the
~M Senior softball championship and placed
second in the league tournament. Team members are
Jenny Bentley, Mary Moore, Angle Pratt, Kellie

•

Ohio
'
Sportlight

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

r&lt;---

*House Bill 657 , passed by the General
Assembly and signed by the Governor.
Progr~ to be entirely administered by
the Ohm Department of Taxation.
Eligibility requirements for homeown~
ers, renters, and housetrailer residents:
• Annua11btal Income $9,000 or less for
1980, and
• Head of Household, or Spouse and
• Age 65 or older in 1981, or '
• Pennanently and 1btally Disabled
(any age)
·

Snowden. Second row - Mike Miller, assistant
coaeb; Paula Horton, April King, Jenny Meadows,
Beth Bartram, and Coact. Ray Willford. Absent were
Vickie Bayles and Joyce Stewart.

For the record ...

Application forms for the Ohio Energy
Credits program* are now available at
your nearest Columbia Gas office.
If you have not already done so we
ur~e you to apply ~or this program. 'The
Ohio Energy Credits program provides
for up to a 30% Utility Service Heating
Discount for low-income elderly and
disabled renters and homeowners.
Every qualified citizen who wants to
partiCipate and has not yet signed up
for the 1981-82 heating season lllU§1
CQmp~te and file an GJlPlication by_&amp;n.

temb!!_ 1.

CLAIM SECOND PLACE - The Middleport
Superslars claimed S"!'ond plll.ce In the overall point
standings, in the senior softball league. Kneeling, 1-r,
are Pam Crooks, Paula Swisher, Cindy Crooks, and

LEAVE

•

•: DUTTON DRUG CO. :•
:
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
:
••••••••••_.._...............

TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY ONLY

2 OFF

presldd over the bUBiness meeting.
Margaret Grossnickle was the acting treasurer in the absence of Opal
Harris who is vacationing in
Florida. others attending were
Elizabeth
Brooks,
Madeline
Buchanan , Glenda Benedum,
Gladys Dillon, Pat Grossnickle, a~d
Helen Kibble.
·

Program topic, "Endurance,"
was given by Margaret Grossnickle.
Get well cards were signed. Fund
raising activities to support UMW
projects were discussed. It was
noted that Seldon Johnson is the
pastor and besides the Sunday mol'
ning worship at 9:30 a.m. and Sun·
day school at !0:30a.m., there is a
Saturday evening service. A revival
is being planned lor September.

ATTENTION
:COLUMBIA GAS CO.~t.=~~~~~~~
:

HALF /PRICE SALE

1

•

starting in September the UMW

will move to the bomes of members
for the meellngs. Lavina Brannon

•

�p

The Dail

p

Sentinel

Cheshire Garden Club holds picnic
Cheshire Garden Club held ots annual pocnoc on the covered patoo on
the lawn at the home of Mrs
Michael Fry Thursday evening,
Aug. 13 The members toured the
beautoful landscaped grounds and
watched boats passmg on the rover.
After a picnic donner, Ms. Allee
Thompson, Pomeroy, demonstrated
The Soolfree Deco Plant system
whoch grows plants on water and
nutrunents She exhoboted a number
of plants grown by this method. Af.
tcr the demonstration a short
busmess sessiOn was he ld w1th the
presodenl. Ms Louose McCarty
presodong. Ms. Lucoe Marton presented devotoons She read the !21st

Psalm then read severa l short
storoes from a book tolled "Between
An Atom and a Star" by Rev .
Reynolds W. Geer, Jr .. a household
word on Georgoa Methodism . He IS a
rrunoster. an author, a columno st and
a college professor.
Roll call was answered by naming
a coloma! flower or vegetable. No
meeting was held on June or July so
the president thanked members for
makong arrangements for the band
boosters banquet and the alumno
banquet on May
She also thanked rnemben; for furmshong poes whoch were sold at the
Roo Grande Bean Donner to raose
mon ey for the count) clubs She and

I 25, 1981 .

Ohod

Small investment; large

Ms. Hawley attended
The chaorman of the nominatmg
corrunittee presented a new slate of
offocers for the ensuong year. Mrs.
Paul Shoemaker. president, Mrs .
Lee Rowland , voce prestdent, Ms.
Helen Preston, secretary, Ms.
Jewell Marton, treasurer. They wtll
be installed at the September
meetong Ms Helen Preston rea d the
secretary's report and Ms . Jewell
Marton gave the treasurer's report.
Katoe Shoemaker . chaorman
therapy commottee, reported she ,
Ms . Marton and Ms Fry attended
the J une meehng of the garden club
of the G.D C Theyf'Showed slides
and served refreshments to those
oresent

Present were Rev . B L Darst ,
Rev W E and Kahe E. Curfman of
Cheshire ; Burdell and Dorothy Role ,
Rodgeway , Roy and Anme Lemley,
Rodney. Elmer and Mary Sogman,
Cheshore, Dayton and Sarrah Spencer, Chester ; Wolliam, Jr. and Ruth
Ann Curfman and choldren, Kom and
Rtchte, Columbus; Rev Davod and
Freda Curfman and children, Dave

r

or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
1 11 Courl St., Pomerov, 0 ., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

!.aura Ha rrison , Pomeroy

I ANNOUNCEMENTS
l - c 01 rd ot 'rnanN.s

By ELLEN BALL
Librarian

Last week's column told you
about a JOb openmg Ill the Adult
Basoc Ed ucatoon learnong center
at M1ddleport Public lJbrary
Here s the latest news up to the
lime I sot down to wnte
Lots of folks were onterested on
e&lt;Jrnmg money, but unly seven
got as far as takong the requored
lest uf readmg , math. and
Engltsh langua ge skolls Of those
seven, onl y one, Susan Pullins.
eC:~rned the htghest possible score
At that ~oont, Pat Neece ca lled
to .say that for per sonal reasnns.
havong nothong tu do wtth Adult
Basoc Education nr the Moddleport Library lea rnong center.
she had to resogn Tha t left two
posotoons open
Smce Sus1e Pulhns had a n unbeatabl e score. she earned one of
the two JOb opemngs
The learmng center os mostly
one room on Moddleport Public
Lobrary . The two atues must
work sode by sode wothout any
froctoon of the center os to be a
comfortable pl ace for learners
So ot seems logical to have Suste
talk with the person who Wlll
share the work space Three

fonaltsts \\Ill talk woth Susoe on
August 'l.ii . By Sept 8, both Susie
and the other a ode woll be traoned
a nd ready to work
That bnngs up the next subject
\'Illy dod I say Sept 8( Beca use
that' s the day, International
Lotera cy Day, when the learnong
centers wtll reopen at Moddleport
and Pomeroy Public L.Jbran es
The Middleport Ltbrary Adult
Basac Educa t1on lea rning center
wtll be open every Tuesda). Wednesday, and Thursday from 10
a.m . to 2 p m begonnong Sept. 8.
PomerO) Lobrary's Adult Basoc
Education learnong center woll be
open every Tuesday and Wednesday from 6 p m. to 9 p.m
What os a learnong center? Why
not constde r thts your personal
mvatalion to vastl lhe learmng
centers. one or both . on Sept 8
and fond out We woll have open
house, w1th coffee a nd conkaes,

and mv1le everyone to come Jn
and browse a round
Vosot the learnong centers at
your hbranes on Sept 8 Meet
Susoe Pulhns, Kath&gt; Manocke and
our mystery JDb Y..mner - and
fond out what Adult Baso c
F:ducatwn can rnedn to you

Garden Club meets
at Barnhill home
TIIPPERS PLAJ N5-A " green
thumb" question box was presented
by Mrs. Mary Jane Goebel at the
August meetong of the Rose Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs . Carl
Barnholl
Timely gardemng ttps were gtven
by Mrs. James Stout and Mrs. Vercia Stout read the verse of the month. It was reported that the flower
plantmg at the Tuppers Plaons
School is doong well .
Mrs
Hubal Caldwell had
devotions reading scripture from

Ecclesoastes and a poem, ''Flower of
Frtendship" by Helen Stemer Rtce
followed by members reciting " The
Lord's Prayer " For roll call members told how they cope woth summer pests. The gardener's creed
was read
The travelmg pnze donated by
Mrs Caldwell was won by Mrs
Stout. The pnze was won by Mrs
Phylhs Roce. Refreshments were
served by the hostess to none mennbers and two guests

4l - H0UIII f!W Rent
42- Mobile Homes

2--ln .femonam

tor Rent
44- Apartmtnls tor Rent
U - Furnlshed Rooms

1---Announcements

Juloe, Jackson , Gene and Lmda
Jewell, Letart, W. Va ; Steve and
Ktm Young, Manella . Ketth
Hayman and Lesley Roberts ,
Racone , Lewos and Ruth Ours.
Rae me, Vtrgtl and Delores Ours,
Theresa and Boll Lawver, New
Phtladelphoa , Vorgll and Delores
Ours, Theresa and BtU Lawver, New
Pho ladelphoa , Vorgmoa Huffman ,
Lewoe and Doane, Salem; Tom and
Isabel Edwards, Knnberly and
Shawn, and Heodo Nygren, Kettenng, Dan and Faoth Hayman and
Tamara. Syracuse. and Kun and
Apnl Hayman, Racwc.

GIY@iiWil'f

Alhson Hart, Wheeling, W. Va ;
Sam, Jane and Carole Jane
Foglesong, Mullens, W. Va.; BtU,
Nina, Bobby and Greg Foglesong,
Parkersburg , W. Va. ; Cinda
Foglesong, Kingsport, Tenn.; Kathy
Conner, Chattanooga, Tenn.; Bob,
Sally, Julie, Rob and Greg McBride,
Michigan City, Ind.; and Lester and
Lilah Zerkle, Don and Jeanne
Foglesong, Jim and Carol Proffitt,
and Ray, Evelyn and Nancy Proffitt,
all of Mason

I

EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

Sl- CB, TV, R01d10 Equ•pment
Sl- Antlquts

S4- M•sc Merc h•ncllse

11- HeiP Wan!HI

SS- Butld•ng Suppttes

17- SIIU;JiiiHI WilniiHI

i6- Petstor 5.ale

ll- lnsurance
••- B.nmen Tr01 omng•
15- Schools tnstruc110n
I6-Ro~d1o, TV

6 ' - Filrm Equipment
U - Wo~nt!Mt ID Buy
1l- Trucks tor Sale

FINANCIAl

1

1 1- Bu 5 ,nesu

Opportumly

S4

I TRANSPORTATION
71 - AutOS torS;,Ie
11- Vans &amp; 4 W 0
14- Motorcvc les
H - Aulo P.,ts
&amp; Acceucnes

11 _ Homes lOr sale
)1- Mob•le Hom es

lor So~ I"
3) - Farms for Sale

71- Aulo Repolir

Buildings
JS- Lots &amp; Acruge
34 - Bu~•ness

36-Rul Estate wanted
J1 - lleoilllton

1

SERVICES

81 - Hcme Improvem ents
U - Piumb•ng &amp; Ek UYa l •ng
83- EHGYa llng

Want· Ad Advertising
Dead l •nes

14- Eteclriul

MOntloiiiY 2 lOon Saturday
Tuuctavthru Frldo~v 2 34l PM

&amp; Relr •geratiOn

l l -Genenl Haul1ng

~tore

pub'•cat•on
Sunday 2 JO PM Fnday

N - M H

w e. days H1Serhon
Avt~rilgl!

4 ~orcts per hne)

....'""""

r---------------------Curb Inflation.
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
Savell I

Wnte your own ad and order by mall w1th thts
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refvndabl~

II
i

INarn•--------------------!Address_____________
1

Phon•----------

1

BIG TIRE
SALE

NEW

Yes, We Maunt
and Balance.
Buy Now &amp; Save.

N f.. W

cy's Ceramic Shop, Clifton,
wv ' 304-773· 5989.

We are new taking orders
for pole beans and half run·

ners. 675 5723

4

Beagle pup, to good home
675·6205.

Call,coat cat. Call «6·1216
4 KITTENS 304·675·2665

kt•

) Wantea
1 For Sale
) Announcement

I
1 IForRent•
I
I
I
I
I 2
3

•

5.
6.

15 Years
Experience
Reasonable Rates

to._._ _ _ __

17

18.
19
20
21

Fairview

men.

Rd .

women

clothing &amp; Jeans.

Aug 26, 9-5 at Spencer's,
corner of Broadway·Mainl
Ra c ine
Clothing,
household tlems. TV, fur·
niture, misc .

furntture

&amp;

mise

For all of your wiring needs .

A huge

LI S riNG

-

Let
George Mtller
check your present elec·
tncal system.
Res•denttal
&amp; Com mereta I

....l.~~~~C!!!~~-.:_J~~JI

Help Wanted
$180 per week part time af
home. Webster, Amenca,s
foremost dictionary com
pant needs home workers
to update local mailing
lists . All ages, experience

6000 Ext . 6423 .
Kentucky Fr1ed Ch1cken
Will be accept• ng ap
plicatl(:ons on Thursday,

Yard Sale. 118 Englosh
Road, Pt . Pl . Monday and
Tuesday August 24 and 25 9
to 4 Children's cloth mg .
398,

Bidwell,

Oh

45614

Buckeye Commun1ty Ser
vices is an equal op
portunt ty employer

GET VALUABLE trainmg

Custom kttchens and ap-pliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodehng,
plumb.n, electnc, and
heating.

2156or992·2151

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

Neals

Auct1on

'

NGLISH I'UDOR -

Hogsett,

WVA Rt 2 Every Sal. 7:00
PM .
(Cons i gnments
taken). (will buy furniture)

lonnie Neal367 1101

The Me1gs County Board of
Mental Retardat ton is now
accepting applications for
a f ull t1me Teacher/ home
tra 1ner Qua li fications for
this pos1t1on •nclude a
Bachelor Degree m Spec1a l
Education and must be
eltg ible for M S P R cer
t1f1cation w1th Department
of Educat1on All resumes
will be accepted unti l
August 31, at 346 East Main

Sf. Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769

Free Estimates
Reasonable Pnces
Call Howard

SOMEONE to do fall house
c1ea111ng 304 615 4596

949·2862
949-2160

SOMEONE to livE" i n &amp; be
housekeeper,
need
to
re locate, salary negottable.

PRICE

REDUCED

Cou n
tr y home of 3 bedroom s,
full base m enT, mOdern
b ath , F A
furnace ,
slor m drs . &amp; wtndows
Large lot for a garden or
children Ask1ng $30,000

Fu ll y car pe ted a nd
paneled, central a 1r , tu l l
ba se ment, and n1 ce k1t
chen tS the r eal way to
desc rK&gt;e th 1S 3 bedr oom
h ome
A
REAL

SPANISH DESIGN -

BARGAIN $18,900 00

Stucco 3 bedroom home
1'12 ba th s, panel mg . ca r
pef1ng, large l tv1ng wllh
woodburmng f1replace
Full basement, 2 lots
and 3 ca r gara ges Only

ONE

FLOOR

304-615 1209
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
•Backhoe
• Excavating

Utility Buildings

PLAN

Stzes

HOME IN rHE COUN
rR Y - H as a b1g lot ,
W1lh a shed
and
workshop
Th e 1
bedroo m h om e ha s
beautiful knotty p1ne
w all s m the ktt chen adn
l1 vmg room, and th er e 15
a full base ment wtth a
w oodburner Rea uced to

r D - N1 ce 7 r oom fra me
w1fh 4 bedroom s, 2 full
baths, nat gas F A fur
nace, full base m ent,
pat1o, 2 porches and
lar ge leve l lot

L t:. r
PAY

farm Large barn for
pack1ng and storage
MOdern 7 room home
Large fam 1ly room, mce
k 1tchen with stove and
dtshwasher $.43 ,000

•Dump Truck

• Trencher
L tcensed &amp; Bonded

Ph. 992·7201

*'II

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

rH E
RENTER
FOR rHIS 2

bedroom home W• th a
la r ge Uftl1ty room
d1n1ng room, front par'
ch garage, and approx
1 1 o~
ac r es ot leve l
gro und
R(AL

eWater, Sewer&amp;
Gas Lines

from b6 to 12x40

$18,900 00

2.65 ACRES - Of lruck

• Septic Syslems

Gold,

silver, ster l ing,
1ewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar

ber Shop, Middleport . 992·
3476

metals, baHeries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering. Harper-Halste·

ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street 675·5868.
Also Flea Market open
dai ly. Open Monday Friday 1-5 pm .

ro~

Henry 1:.· . Clcl.lnd, Jr
9~1

6191
AS SOC I Art ~
Je;\n rru ssc ii949 · 2660
OotTiC'

Housing
Headquarters

THE PHOTO
PLACE
-Ann•versartes
-Passports

- and

Now.

an

1m~

pressive, compiP.te line

24 .
25
26.
27.

remodeling

• Roofing of all types
eslding

-Roofing 1nd gutter

• Remodeling

-concrete wqrk
-Piumblnglnd
eleclri•l work
I
( Fr" Estirnii4\Sl

work'

• Free estimates
120 Yrs. experience

of wedding and anniver·

sary invitations and ac-

ceuarles.

Reasonable
priced, quick Hrvice.

- Look without 01111!11·
lion
·

'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

TOM liOSIINS

ph. 949 -2160

oi Ptl-6125
I

7-S·tf(:

Bob, Charlene

30.
31. _ _ _ __

'Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

. and .,lillY"'

. \ 'IISSEII.
. .
SIOirtG Co;' ·

32. _ _ _ __

th1s old home with 6 rooms plus a .aundry and one

-Auto •I!C! TI'IICk ·'

corr~r lot Located
M~ln and 7th In Middleport Beau I' ul wOOdwork In
11/:z bath on

car garage A bargain al$25,000.

•

R.C.S. REALTY, INC.
BILL CHILDS, Mgr .
Phone 992·6312
POMEROY,OHIO

surance Co. has offered
serv tces for fire 1nsurance
coverage in Gall!a County
tor a l most a century .
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
avai l able to meet in ·
dtVIdual needs
Contact
Foster Lew•s, agent . Phone

319·2204.
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE been

IN
can

your
ce ll ed?
Lost
operator's Ltcense? Phone

RetMir . • •
.,.. Tr•!l•m
. · Re!J:iol~
· Hrs:: Mon.- Fri.
9
p.m.

\ssion.

' ~

l

br I .~J yau

t ,. htr• -·cash

, _,
\

for.
shapp I n1 spnn

.'

u.s. Rt. so E,ast
Guysville;: Oh.
Phone 614-662'3121
Authar..zecl J·qhn Deerl ~
New Holllnd, Bush Hog1
Form
i·pment

'

Guitar
lessons
now
available tn Galltpolls w1th
after
school
hours
available for students Call

TOBACCO st,cks, call 304- 245 9378
675 3456.
18
Wanted to Do

Phone 446· 2909 or 446 7226
after4p m .

Piano tun1ng and repair ,
Love your neighbor tune
your P1ano
B1ll ward,
Wards Keyboard 446 4372,
Gall1po!ts
GALLIA Cleantng and
Rent A Ma1d Serv 1ce Inc,
Free Est1mates. bonded,
1nsured, phone 245 9234 .
Clean.ng by the week, mon·
thor contractual.
Expert Tree &amp; Shrub care .
Firewood del1verect
for
more 1nformat1on call 446·

7807

w

...... . . 0

.. . ...

• ••

.... .

........ .

~

do baby sitting in my home
on Rt. 35 in the R'o Drande
and Thurman area

'

•.m:-s:"

·~·'

Call

245·91 10.

Your Ptano rust tng .n sum ·
mer Hum1d1ty? Free 1n·
spect1on w 1th tun .ng Lane
Dan•els 742 2951 or 992

2082

---

&amp; ex ter 1or
pa1nt.ng , call 304 675 1339

Reat Estate

·I

"Buulllul, custom

, ' aunt Gara~"

Call . for

l

Responsible lady would
like to baby sil in my home
3 112 miles out Bulavi ne
Rd., Close to AddiVille
School. Call «6·7399.
Will take care 01 palents In
tljeir homes. )Nil I live In or
8 hr. shjlts. Call367·0394.

31

Homes for Sale

NEW CABIN or small
home , complete l y fur

Mf-2101 or
Mt-2MO. ,
~-"
' No Sunolay c,tr~ "

House w1th acreage for
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs , fully car
peted, 2 barns, 379 2123

'

Fest1val

furn1shed.

14x10, J bdr , &amp;. 2 baths,
$10,000 Call collecf 614 863
0111.
19 73 Crown Haven . 14x65,
three bedroom. new car
pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x64,
two bedroom , new carpet
1972 Champton, 12x60, two
bedroom , new ca rpet 1976
Cameron,
12x60,
two
bedrooms, bath &amp; 112, new
two bedroom , new carpet ,
B &amp; 5 Sales, Inc , 2nd and
V1and Street. Pt Pleasant.
wv Phone 675 4424

4

1980 24x52 doublew1de .J
bedrooms, 2 baths one w1th
su nken tub, ul 11ity room ,
lots of closet space 2 por
ches 1150 sq . ft of llvmg
space 992 3041
USED Mob1 le Home . 576

2711.

bdr., spl't

level, llvmg room &amp; dmmg
room combination, eat in
k1tchen, lg family rm, 2
112 baths, located m Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
ftrm Kyger Creek School
DISfrtCf Shown by appt
onty call446·9403
29 acres, 7 rm house, all
mmeral n1es , Ernest·
Woodruff Rd , Allee, Oh

3 bedrrams, 2 fireplaces,
family room, large ltv1ng

room, 1 ful l , 2 half baths,

wall to-wall c arpet, full
basement, ce ntral a1r,
sw1mm.ng pool, 1/2 acre
lot. CITY SCHOOLS 446

1731 aller 6PM

For sale on land contract
House and 2 mobile homes
located at Bulavtlle W1l l
sell separately or together

Cal1446·3437
3 bdr , I 1(2 baths, LR Wilh
fireplace, family room with
woodburner, kttchen and
d 1n1ng room C1ty schools

Ca II 446 2003
3 bedroom sect1onal 2 acre
wOOded lot Fam1 1y room ,
woodburner, fully equ1ped
kitchen w1th ISland cookmg
center 2 fvll baths, walk in
closets. 1550 sq ft l1ving
space On State Rt , Green

School Call379·2514
L•fe Estate Cons.sting of
farmhOuse with acreage
Further tnformation call

992-6741 after 4 00 p m

--- ...............

~-

- - - --

1971 Darian 12 x 65, 3
bed rooms
1972 Crown
Haven, 14 x 65 w 1th 8 x 10
expando, 3 bedrooms 1973
Utop1a 12·X 65, 2 bedrooms

1972 Invader 14 x 70, J

bedrooms 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms B If"' S
Sa les, ln'c: 2nd and Viand
Sfs
Pt
P leasant, WV
Phone 675 ·4424
Mobt le home located 1n
Camp Conley, E x tra nt ce
and clean Phone 304 895

3967
l2 x55, 3 bedroom mob1l e

home. 304·895 JB85
1980 12 x 55 all elec tnc, fur
ntshed, $7000 Must sell,
movmg out of state Phone

304 516·2631
- - - - -- --- - -33 _ __F_arm_! fo ~_,Sc:ao:
le'---

Farm For Sa le by Owner
41 acres more or tess
located 4 f/2 mtles out on
Rt 218 Tobacco base . Call

after 6 00 245 9222
Farm for sale
6560

Call 256

J~ ~ }t~-Sin~~B'!.!I~tn9S One bedroom garage apar
tm ent Low ma1ntamc~.
Good tocat1on 514 S. Four-

th Ave , Midd leport, Oh
Ca ll 614 384 6309 lor ap
pom t ment

BUS INESS locatton , 509
Maon 51 Pl . Pleasant, wv
304 882 3356
~s

House for sa le •n M1d
dleport
Owner
will
sacnfice . 992 2917 or 992

_ __L~t!_~

~c!:_e!~ __ _

2 acres on Fl oyd Clark Rd

cl ose to Rl 160, $4,000
Phone 446 0390

IMMEDIATE POSSESSIO· acres, level, rural water .
N. 3 bedroom , stone, two- c1ty schools, 10 per cent
story home w1th large down Call379 2196

walk · tn
dinin g

closets,
room,

formal
newly

kitch~n

with

built 1ns, including dishwasher, basement with
workshop, large garae with
workshop, garden plot, cor·
ner lot Priced to settle
estate $59,500. Ca ll (6141

with experience
and nursing
In my nome.
If _n-d. U7·

twO year old,
nursing experience· babysit
IH,- my r no"'e near Moun:
taineer Plant, 304-882·3-446.

Apart ment for sate, land
contract 9%, 4 units, 2 bdr .
each
Total rent 5740.,

$49,000 Call 446 3931
Lot SOx120 w1th drilled w ell
down &amp; ba lance land

v,

384·6309 for appointment.
5411 Grant St , Middleport,
Oh

contracl 247 2841 after 7
p.m

Nice Inside and out. Two

house on approx 1 acre.
live 1n one, rent others to

BY owner, 3 apartment

burner,

MOr'H~R 01

1975 Cameron 12 x60 . 2 bd r,
front kitchen, ref ng and
range, gas furnance, extra
door off k1tchen, carpet,
$5,995
Johnson Mob1le
Homes B rakers 446 3547

n1shed, $3900 Ca ll446·0390

bedrooll']. bath , carpeted.
Dishwasher, fuel oil furnace. Full basement, wood·

tre. · skiing

HIIIINIIU,

3541

ca rpel 1910 PMC , 12x60.

remodeled

~

\

1978 10x14, 2 bdr , 1 112
bath, front den W1fh wood
burn1ng t1replace, pat10
aw1ng, sk1rt1ng,
ap
pl!ances, d1n1ng room table
and chatrs. No other , l1ke
new furniture
$10,000
Johnson Mobil e Hom e
Brokers. new 1t st1ng 446

Lots by Owner 1 1/ 4 A to5

E)(perlcened mother w111
.....

MOB IL E
HOME S
GalliPOI'S CAll446·7572 .

1978

- -- - -- -

2606

SIDING•,,

. HOefliCh

35 _ _ _ __

SALES &amp;·.SERVICE

· -Adclonuo\d

And Home M~lntenance

- Portraits

BOGGS.

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

OHIO
ROOFING

-weddings

three B@droom -

Insurance ___ _

Schools Instruction

S6~2

:J;l - 34. _ __

11 _ _ _

992 2t43

rurner Y~'l 56n

.,.oqer rurner 9~2

Wt ll care for elderly •n mv
board.ng home
Room,
board,
and
laundry
Reasonable 992 6022 .

SANDY AND BEAVER In·

Scrap

• Vinyl
• Fiberglass
• Stainless Steel

Situations Wanted

end $12.50 per ton Bund led Dependable ride to and
slab $10.50 per ton . from Rio Grande, fa ll
Deltverd to Oh10 Pallet co., quater L1ve 1n town . Ca ll
Rock Spr1ngs Rd., Don after 4PM 446·2627
Pomeroy . 992 2689

PERSONALIZED

POOLS

12

Pnces reduced on all
mobile homes and travel
trailers
TRI · STATE

ClEAN USED MOBILE
KESSEL ' S
HOME S
QUALITY
MOBILE
23
Protess•onal
HOME SALES. 4 Ml
serv1ces
WEST, GAlliPOLIS, RT
COMMERCIAL and 1n 35 PHONE 446 3868 or 44&lt;1
dustr1al
photography . 1214

Cafl614·299·0890 affer 5

14" on largest

dtameter

Mob1le Homes
for Sale

Ave., GallipOliS, Oh , 446

BY OWNER

A

plus Das'efnent. 1

7172

$45,000. Cal l 446-0390 .

$54 900 00

NEW lISTING -

Mortgage Co., 463 Second

New 3 bdr house wttn
garage and full basement

never betor e l 1ved 1n
home w1th a spl1t en try ,
t am dy room , la rg e
l •v 1ng r oom, sep a rate
a 1n1ng
room r
J
bed room s. 2 1 J baths,
an d
a
wo rk s hop

Phone
1-(614)-992-3325

FHA·VA·Conventlal Home
Loans, Columbus First

- - -' - -· - - - -

$15,500 00
f

Money to loan

INTERIOR

NICE PRICf ~- and a
n•ce J room 2 bedroom
home w1th a 2 ca r
ga r age under Ha s a
l eve l
tot
s torag e
bulld •ng, and •s cute &lt;J t

Hous;ng
Headquarters

22

ft

acre, Bll's304 773·5867
12

Flnaeelat

11

Fried Ch1cken Store 1526
Eastern Ave, Gallipolis

Yard Sale Wed and Thu 3
mi les out Sandhi ll Road,
Pt. PI on left. 10 to 4.

sq

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

Aug 27 between BAM and
4PM at the local Kentucky

16

23

t-----~~~:~~~~~~~-----

'·

MASON , 4 bedroom, 2500

Part·time, weekend, reltef
Housemanager for group
home 1n B1dwe11 , OH to
work with persons with
mental retardation A h1gh
school degree 1S requ1red ;
expenence in working wtth
persons hand1capped wittl
menta l retardat1on 1S
preferred Send resume to
John Mercer, Rt 1, Box

eHotW•ItrTo~nlts

House, s rooms, bath. 5
acres more or less. 1 m11e
above Apple Grpve

$18,500. 1 614 247-2245.

unnecessary .Call1 -116·842
Carport sale at 324 Beech
St., Middleport, Oh Rain
or shine. 27 &amp; 28. lots of
nice winter coats, men's

8

22

Mail This Coupon with Remitlance
The Qaoly Sentinel
Bo~ 729

e D ISpGU II
• D•ltlwastll!rl

~"'"lr'i I

cloth1ng.

Evergreen
Children,

Full basement, 2 car
I 1 .)0\ ) ~I

as a young bustness person
and earn good money pl us
some great g1fts as a Sen
tine I route earner. Phone
us nght away and get on
the ei1Q 1b1l•tv ltst at 992

28.
29

7

eWnM"
• Drv•rs
• R•nlileS

lot

garage BeeCh Sl!; Mid·
dleporl . 992·7209.- ,-,

7;===:;;Y=:a::r::d;:S:=a::;le= = =
Garage Sale Aug. 25 &amp; 26th,
9-5. ~14th Ave , Gallipolis.
Bikes~ toys, carpet, and
Yard
Sale August
26,27,&amp;28 9:00 till 4'00,

rJd-'

7 rooms &amp; bath on double

REESE hitch head With
ball . Lost between
Gallipolis Ferry, P.O. &amp; Rl
2 Pt. Pleasant. 304-675·41174.

su.ts, some

------"~--------?r--~~~------~

Raci ne 6 room ,l{ ~,l st6ro;
house. Bath, •garden),.-?stor·
ms Phone 1·235·6569. 1 1 •

$1500000

acres with good hunttng
Lots Of WOOdS, 12 yr Old
3
bedrooms,
full
basement, furna ce and
woOd burner . Mail and
school rts.

...

Giveaway

Total electroc 3 bedroom
home with garage/ 1\[tOity
room, on large l&lt;lt.lll'h'Hou
loan possible. 742·2047:

I'UUNID : Male Blue
least 8 years old. On
Ridge Rd. 742 ·211!.

acres F1ve Po•nls
area, water and electn c
a vailabl e, sm a ll strea m
p ast ure, som e ttmber

$6,500
COUNTRY LAND - 90

15.
16.

classes. Jean' s and Nan·

11v1ng room equ.pped
k1l chen. uttltt y room , 2
bedrooms, centr al cu r
fr on t por ch and a SOx 100
lot
Ver y
n ea t
$14,900 00

AT LANDMARK
SERVICE STATION

all uf thttes Level w1th
V1ew of the Oh10 River

11.
12.
13.

o .t. ~ J

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ¥'

LISTING

SY RACU SE -

TR-AILER LOT - W'f h

8.

f . 110 . 0Jo1 .

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

?R 'iOO

9,

I

4 room house with bath'llnd
furniture . Nice ' lotlTZ992'·
5319
' o1 4 I&lt; '

•

608

OH IO RIVE.R FRONI ·

Ice cream social

Charles Bare, Candice Brewer,
Kathy Carter, Wilham Cooper, Jesta
Diggs, Joe Hall, Tanuny Harris,
James Hively. Lewis Holberg,
Geraldine Leshe, Jonathon Merritt,
Gladys Miller, Lmda Phillips, Karla
Rakes, Roney Ramsey, William
Reynolds, Dolly Robinette, Mrs.
Keith Rolhns, and son, Lloyd
Sergent, Shirley Sh~ets, Carl
Stewart, Jonathon Swindler, Lewos
Thomas, Michael Wooten.

Mtsc Me rc handt ce

11- Upholstery

threedav•nsertiOn
I

DISCHARGES AUG. Z4

••

.... Renl•l Propertte1
..., Apt Houle Own en
.... Mctb11e Home P•rtts

Mob• le Home,,.,., o~nd Y ,r(l ulu an acupleCI only w+fh c•sh Wllh
or!l•r H c•nt Cholrte lor ad1 urrvmlil Bo• Nu mber In Care ol Tnl
Sent+nel
The Publ 1s her r eser ves tl'le r•wht to edt! or retect •nv ads dum eel
otltect•onoll The Publisher Will no! be respons ,bll! for morl! !han on e
lftCOrrKt lftS(!ffiOn

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER

992-2156

"SpKial Rat•• Fc.r

llepa1r

Rates and Other Information

,

__ _

~,

... co'" La~ndr.es

Real Estate - General
Up to 1J wor ds
.. Upto iS worcts
Up to 15 wor d s

______

,I. •

E . Ma1n

6S- Seecl &amp; Fertihrer

REAL ESTATE

trN! d ay

models· salesman samples.

Male · Walker Foxhound,
black, ,white &amp; tan, sso
reward . Call Arnold
Slump;/, Cheshire 367·75~
afler.·6. ;;
J ,.r

675-1333

Real Estate-_Gen~

Easy eflortless wa) to weather
the bm~ chil l !'leather ahead
Layet lhts d r aw st r~n£ necklme
ponc ho over co1 y separates to go
to games or away tor a weekend

U - LiYeStock
64- Hay &amp; Grain

n - Money to Loiln
1l - Prol•suonal
Serv•ces

1

'&lt;-.

)d

SPECIAL SALES New
never been Shot, diSPlay

FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

I

&amp;CBilep.air
18- Wanted To Co

Cynthia J Wonnongs, daughter of
Donna Roush of Poont Pleasant, W
Va ., and Arnold Blankenshtp of
Letart , W Va, receoved practical
work on rruhtary leadership at the
Army ROTC Advanced Camp at
Fort Bragg, N. C
Wonntngs os a student at Faormunt
State, W Va • and ts attendmg
ROTC at West Vorgonoa Unoversity at
Morgantown

The Alfred UMYF wtll have an oce
cream soetal Saturday beginning at
5 p m at the church located love
miles west of Tuppers Plams on
Slate Route 681. They will have four
flavors of homemade ice cream,
homemade fruit pies, cake, hotdogs,
coffee and pop. Special smgers
during the evening will be Livmg by
Faith, Parkersburg, W. Va

446-2342

MERCHANDISE

S! - H0usehold Gooch

I

LAFF· A· DAY

41- Equtpment for R ent

9-WantecJ to Buy

Reunion Sept . I 2

Rece1ves instruction

47- Wanted to A en!

I AuctiOn

TIIESDAY
SPECIAL MEETING , Racmc
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM , 7 30 p.m.
Tuesda) , work m master Mason
degree
WEDNESDAY
SOUTHERN JUNIOR High gorls
mterested on beong cheerleaders
report to JUntor high bwldtng, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday
SPECIAL MEETING, Racine
Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, at Ewong Funeral
Home, 7:30p.m Wednesday to conduct ntes for George Albert Hoi I.
EASTERN .JUNIOR High football
partocopants meetong at htgh school6
p m . Wednesday
WJLDWOOD GARDEN CLUB
Wednesday 7 311 p m. at home of
Mrs. Carne Grueser. Everyone to
brong cookoes
THI JRSDAY
REVIVAL, Keno Church of Chnst,
7·30p m. Thursday through Sunday.

The annual Walter Golmore
reunoon woll be held on Sept 12 at the
Gene Gilmore resodence. Lunch wtll
be served at I p m and those attendong are asked to take a covered
dtsh and thetr own table serv oce
Fnends and relati ves are onvoted to
attend. and are asked to take theor
own lawn cha1rs

16-Spilu tor Rent

..-Lo\1 and Found
1- Yart1 S01te
1-PuDI!c Sale

Social Calendar

Hospital news

Ruttencutters have reunion
The first RuttencQtter reunoon was
held August 8 at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Proffitt, Mason, for the
olescendants of Kathenne R.
Foglesong, Willie R. Brown, and
Lem Ruttencutter
Those present were Lucille
Brown, Jenkintown, Pa .; Becky
Brown, Play a Del Rey, Calif.; ·
Harold and Eloise Brown of
Gallipolis; Gene, Claudia, Robert
and Chris Thomas, New Haven;
Regina! , Jenn\fer, Regina and

RENTALS

Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplle$.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vaouum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
«6·0294 ..
3

Special price on this group ~
.
~
741- Rutland
, ..
Bear Whitetail Hunter,
169.14. Bear LTD Polar "Noah, one of lhe worms 11
$129.95. Brown Bear, mluina "
Mason co., w va .
5149.95. Bear Mini Mag,
Area Cod e 304
$49.95 . Kodiak spelcal, ,.
675- Pt. Pleasant
Giveaway
,.
$99.95 . Spr ing Valley
4SH-Leon
Trading co., Spring Valley ANY PERSON who has
S76-A pple Grove
Plaza. ~-8025
anything to give away and
773-Mason
882- New Haven
does no! offer or attempt to
895- Letart
ATTENTION Come on and offer any other thlitg for
Yl1- Bullalo
r register for our Squirrel sale may place an ad In this
Tall Contest. Longest gray column. There will be no
tall wins 22 rifle. Longest charge to the advertiser
TO PLACE AN AD CALL
red tail wins 22 rifle. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring 3 kittens Call ~- 4173 .
In Gallta County
1n Metgs Countv
Valley Plaza, «6·8025.
a mo. old female, part
In Mason County
586 S &amp; W newest l frame Sheepdog. «6·1316.
now In stock Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley 4 mo. old while rabbit. Call
Plaza, ~- 8025
«6·4659.
For
buld
delivery
of
3
Announcements
~······· · ···
gasoline, healing oil and Puppies. Call245 5626
AMWAY distributor. For diesel fuel, call Landmark,
the wonderful products of 992·2181. Pomeroy, Oh
l
Announcements
K 1ttens, all colors. Call 379·
Amway call 304·773·5040.
2435
Opening August 31 for

Kn tl Crochel EmbrOider $1 50
AU CRAFT BOOKS .. $2.00 uch
All Boob and Cal.llo&amp;-•dd 5!M
each for JIOI!ii• and hondhng
t35·Dolls &amp; Clothes On Parade
134-14 Qul&lt;l Mo&lt;hone ~Ills
13Hashoon Home Quolton&amp;
132·Quoll Oneonals
130-Sweateo fashoOfts Sozes 38-56
128-Enorelope Polchworli Quoits
127-Afpans 'n' Doilies
125-Pel.ll Qooilts
124-Easy Gifts 'n' Omomenb
t2J.Shtch 'n' Patch Quoits
122·Stuff 'n' Puff Quilts
120-Crochel Yout Wardrobe
119 Easy Art ol Rower Crochet
116-Nofly Fifty Quoits
115·EiiSJ Art of ~ipple Crochet
IIJ.(omplete Colt llool
109·S.w + Kn1t (Basic tissueond)
t05-lnstanl C1ochel
t02·Musoum Quoits
101-Quolt llool Collectoon t

PHONE 992-2156

247- Letart Falls
Y4'1- Racine

64J- Ara bttl Oist .

7361 one me ltts 8 to 18
$2.00 lo1 each panern Add
501 each panern lor postage
and ha ndlong Send to
~'" Broob
:&gt; I '
Needlemfl Dept.
The Daily Sentinel
Boa 163, Old Chelsu Sll., New
YO&lt;I, NY 10113. Pnnl Name,
Address, Zip, Pattern Number
-1982 Needlecrall C.llloc; 3

WANT AD INFORMAnON

l4J- Portland

2S6 - Guyan Ot st.

1

}-Happy Ads

Your
Libraries

liU:I- Vtnton

free patterns tns1de 170 best
1ackets dolls Qutlts more

and Devon , Delaware; Moke Lemley
and son, Chns , Donny Lemley, Cantun; Johnnoe Sogrnan, Sr and sons.
Johnnoe. Jr. and Randy, Addtson ,
Lonme and Sharon Darst and
daughter, Ltsa , Rutland ; Pearl and
Patty Srruth and childreQ, Shelly.
Btlly, Budd J ames, Darwm
Vtsttors were Ina Role , Kenton;

614
992- Midclleport
Pomeroy
985- Chester

14S-Rio Grande

!';n1l of synthetiC worsted tn cable
pattern wtth lacy centers Pa t

Put on a Poncho!

4-

Cotta gevolle, W Va , Phyllos Young ,
Mondy Seymour and Aaron , Cory
and Juston , Middleport ; Glona
Whotlatch and Derreck, Ashle) and
Jordan, The Plaons; Watd and Donna Hayman , Racme ; Ruby Wolfe,
Racone , Rhonda Wolfe and Kmdra
and Jennofer . Whotehall ; Vocko
Dean, Brandy, Lmka and Jason
Broil, Columbus
Lewos and Ltssa Wolfe . Hebron;
Mtlo and Glad)s Rtchardson , Kurt
and Gary , Lansong , Mtch ; Dons
Rodgers, Colwnbus, Danny and
Donna Sayre, Danny, Racone. Bryce
and Sally Sayre, Bnan, Beth , and

Meigs Co. Area Code

446-Gal ltpolis
167- Cheshire

returns, Sentinel Want Ads

Hayman family also stages reunion
The ann ua l reunoon of the fa mtloes
of the la te George fl and Mae
Crawford Hayman was held Aug. 15
at the Portla nd Park The reumons
started tn !958 The tra dttoonal
baseball game was played despite
some ram.
Waod Hayman hat! the blessmg
befor e the dtnner There were 72
relatives and fn ends ottendmg At
the reumon were Gerald and Forie
Hayman. Rae me, Don and Donna
Hayman. Shan and Broan. John
Wilson, La urel Md , Rub and Lil
Hart and Beth, RRc one, Bl'verly
Cunnongham and Ohvoa and Zab,

Gal Ita Co Ar.ea code

614 '

Darst family holds 22nd reunion
RUTLAND - The 22nd annual
reunoon of the fa mily of Rev B L
Darst and the late Gertoe E Darst
was held at Forest Acres Park back
of Rutland, August 16
Rev . B. L. Darst gave thanks over
the food Poctures were taken and
songs were sung m the afte rnoon and
a good lunch was enJ oyed

Classified Paifes cover the
fr~llowing telephtme exchanges. ·. .

shower,

shelf

space, laundry . Workshop
attached shed. Two miles
from Racine . $28,900 .
Owner woll help finance.
Cleland RealtY 992·2259.
Mason, 4 bedroom , 2,500
square feet plus basement.
1 acre. $80's. 773·5867 after
5p.m.

make your payment. Can
be converted single home.
City water, will consider

land contracl. 675·1883 9·5
p.m . .
20 ACRES on black top
road, timber . Phone ' l -61~263·8322 or 263·2669

------,

7 ACRES of KanaWh!l
River land, 1·61H63·8322.
or 1-614·263·2669.
.•

�25, 1981

TheDa
Lots &amp; Acreage
44
Apartmemt
for Rent
LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek. all 1 &amp; 2 bedr~ furnished
utilities ava ilable, S300. aparlments. 99:1·5-434 or 9'12·
down. owner will finance, 5914or882· 2566.
call after 3 p .m ., 256·6413.

35

--- -

2 'tlery nice 1 bedroom apar·

tments in Middleport. 1 fur ·
nished w ith utilities in·
eluded and 1 unfurnished .

41

'1'12·3190.

Houses for Rent

Small furnished house in
the city , adults onl y . Call
446·0338.

Remode led
I
bedroom
apartment in Middleport .
Utilities i ncluded . $180 plus

deposit. No pets. Call 9'12·

House for r ent on Georges 7177 after 6 p .m .
Creek Rd . 3 bdr , $200 pe r
mo., $100. de posit . Call «0·
NOW REN T IN G : Sen ior
3824.

citizens and hand icapped
apt . commun ity opening .
Featuri ng 1 bedroom undeposit, r easonable rent. furnished with wall to wall
Write to P .O
Box 10, carpeting, waiHex walls,
Gallipoli s, Oh 45631.
built in bookcase, appliances, smoke detectors ,
3 bdr . house in town nice ai r conditioned, private
loca t ion , no pets, dep. pa tio, storage facilities,
single stor y with no stairs
required. Ca ll446-2404 .
to c l imb, private entrances
with undividua 1 laundry
4 bdr . house unfur n ., 1 fa c il iti es on premises with
bl ock. from C it y school. $300
r ec reation and m ee ting
mo ., $100 dep., 6 mo . lease. rooms .
Pr o fessional
4-46·3667 afte r S, ava i labl e
re
s
id
ent
manager
on
Sept I
pre mise s. Stonewoods A p t s., Rf . 7, Mi ddleport . For
9r m ., 2 bath home in renta l i nformation phone
Ga llipolis . Located nea r 614·843·2341.
ci ty sc hool s &amp; park f r ont .
Ca ll 446· 7265 or 446·0644.
2 bedroom apartm ent on
2

bedroom

home,

r ef .,

Unfurni shed 6 room home,
1 1/2 bath, gas furnace .

storm

windows.

garage,

Spring Ave, Pomeroy . Par ti a lly furn ished . $1 70 'fOU
pay ut i liti es. Cal l 992 -2288
after 6 p.m .

adults only . no pets , dep
Apartments. 675·55.48 .

U nfurni shed
house
6
r oom s, Nei ghborhood Rd ,

2 BEDROOM , unfurn ished
apa r tment and 2 bedroo m
furni shed apartm ent , 304 675· 557 1

446 ~ 4416

' a lte r

J B E DROOM house for
re n t $175 . 103 8t h. St . P oi nt
and
P l easa nt . Deposit
r efer ences requ ired Can
be seen evenings6 ro a p .m .
Th rough August 26th

2618 Madi son Avenue , Pt.

Pl. $275 per month plu s
utilities and deposit. No
drinking or indoor pets . Ph ·
bne 30.4-863 ·5995 . No coll ect
call s pl ease .
All elec tr ic home with
g a rag e
a nd
fu l l s i ze

baseme nt . $300 month . 675·
3217 .
42

l , 2 8. 3 bedroom apart ·
m ents now available at Pt .
Pl easant Scotti sh Inn . Also
a honeymoon sutie . A ll
ut i lities paid . A pa r tm ents
as low as $140 . a week .
Hone y moon sutie $45 a

nigh t . Caii30467H276 .
2 bedroom all electric.
Henderson $150. deposit,
$150 . per month . No P£' ts .
Inq uire 614·367 ·7257 after 5.
A PAR TMENT for rent, im·
m ediate possession, no
pets, ground f loor, full size
basement , 304 -675·1198.
Furnished Rooms

SLE EPING

2 bdr ., 3 bdr., m obil e
homes . Ca ll44ir01 75.

J bdr mobile hom e con ·
venient locfltion on Rt . 7
Sec. dep ., no pets. Call 245·
5BIR .
60 x l 2, 2bdr , 1 112 ba th s, in
town, sm a ll deposit r eq .
Ca ll 44tr0318.
Part . f urn ., 2 bdr trailer .
Loc ated on 160, $150 mo.
plu s utilitie s, $100 dep . Ca ll

3BB ·8275.
2 bd r ., furnished trail er ,
gas and water furn , S1"2 5.
per m o., $100 dep ., no pets.
Ca ll 446·.4745 or 446 -1630
l4x 70, J bdr , total electri c
trailer, washer &amp;. dryer in ·
eluded on private lot 5 min .
from town , $200 mo. plu s
deposit &amp; r ef . Cal\ 256· 1393
2 bedroom trailer, f ur ·
n ished, in Chester . Room
for r ent . 985-3839
OR RENT · almost new 14 )(
70, 3 bedroom, 1 1h bath s,
sit1ing on ni ce lot, ready t o
m ove into . Phone 30.4 -576

27 11 .
2 bedroom mobile hom e in
New H aven, WV . Adults
onl y No pets. 675 -1452 or

ROOM S an d

l ight hou se Keeping
Park Central H otel.
46

apt ,

_ Sp"'!_ce for Rent _

-

Park, Route 33, North of
Pom eroy . L arge lots . Call

'1'12 7479

44

-

Apartmemt
for Rent

Furni shed, 2 bdr . apart
ment, deposit &amp; r efer ences
r equired, adults only . pay
elec tri c only . 992·36.47 .
3 room furnished apr .
Ut i liti es pa id, adults only ,

$185 .00 per month, $60.00
deposi1. 94 Locus t St.,
Gallipolis. 446·1340 or 446·

3870

992 3954
T RAILER space J miles
from town jun ction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y , Pt . Pl easant, 675-

3248 .

- - - ------

TRAILER space in coun
fr y, l mile from Mason
with t:ity water , Phone 304·
773 -5825 after 6 p.m .
One trailer spa ce Hen ·
derson Trailer Court 675·

2946 .
47

Oelux 6 rm . house, good

location. Call 675· 5104 or
675·5386 .
REGENCY APT . INC . 2
bedroom , kitchen
fur
nished, carpeted, bills par·

lially paid $200. mo. E x
c ellent neighborhoOd , 675 ·

6722 or 675 5104 .
Furnished apts. 3 bdr .,
$220., water paid, children

acceptable . Call

«0·4416

after7PM .
First floor apt. partially
furnished , ref . reQuired.

Call at 631
Gallipolis .

4th

Ave ..

Apartment for rent 2 bdr .•
water and garage, $175.

Call446·3?37 .
Apartment &amp; house
rent. Country Store

for
for

lease. Call245·?315.
3 bdr . mobile home, com·
pleteiY furnished. Cafl 446·
9669.
1 bedroom apts. available
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing . Call
•
992-n21 .

ONE dlnelte set, 8 chairs,
good condition . 1 bedstead,
good condition. 1 lo'tleseat,
gOOd cond ition . 2 fuel oil
stoves. 3·275 gal fuel oil
tanks . 304·576·2859 .
I OOUBLE bowl kitc hen
sink, 304·675·1198.
L ARGE upright Kenmore
freezer with maintalnance
warrenty , S125. Phone 304·

675·2200.
Frost

free

refrigerator.

Call after 5 pm 675·3954.
S2

CB, TV, Radio
Equipment

Fender
pit i er
speaker
monitor

Super twin am·
with e)(ternal
cabinet, Peavev
system. Call 388·

ATTENTION :
( IM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiQues and collec·
tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large . Also,
guns, pocket watches, and
coin collections. Call 557 ·

3411.
54

Like new, warm morning
auto. 87 Vine St., Galiipolis.
Remington Thunderbolt 22
LR Ammo, $1.39 per box ,
$13 .00 per carton . Spring
Valley Trading Co . Spring

Val ley Plaza , &lt;146·8025.
#6·shot, 20 shells per box,
$3 .95 box . Spring Valley
Plaza , 446 ·8025.

- - -- - - - · --

S1

Household Goods

Trading Co., Sprjng Valley

Plaza,

446 ~ 7025 .

from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to $10?. Hide·a ·
beds,$340 .. queen sire, $380.
Recliners. $175. to $2'15.,
Lamps from $18 . to $65 5
pc . dinelles from $79., to
S3B.I . 7 pc ., $189 . and up.
Woor1 table with 4 chairs,

$219 up to $495 . Hutches,
$300. an~ $375., maple or
Bass•lt Cherry , $795. Bunk
bed complete with mat·

pull.

8025 .
Enclosed utility trailer,
exc cond, will not leak.

.

388-?087 .

Yellow Freestone canning
peaches. Now thru Sept 20 .
Any quant ity available.
Retail 8. wholesale. Bob's

good cond .,

tresses, $250. and up to

Kitchenaid dish washer.
Exc. cond See at Bill
Winebrenner Residence ,
College Rd., Syrac use, Oh .

Beautiful, size 14x16 ladies
clo1hes never worn. Including gray flannel suit,
silk blouses, dresses, all
designer labels, also Estate

Kennabec potatos. 247·2841
after 7 p .m .
Canning tomatoes. Pick
your
own .
S3.50 bu.

Raymond Rowe. 247·21?2.
NEED several items of fur niture,
appl i ances ,
telev isions. Big discounts
for quanity . purc hase .
V i llage Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave . 675·1773 .
BIG discounts for cash and
carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue, 675·
1773 .

collect

if

you have ready to sell. 1-

Air Compressors, new
Ingersoll -Rand 5 hp, single

1 horsepower, brand new,
has never been used. S250 .

Call after 5 pm 304-882·2952 .
Juliette am · fm stereo
rece iver with 8 track recor ·
der-player, record changer

Green Machine . Model
4000 . Attachments : cord,
weed, and grass trimmer,
brush blade and saw blade.
Plus attachment tools.

ss

Building Supplies

Build ing materials, block,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, I intels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .

Pets for Sale

POODLE

GROOMING .

Call Judy Taylor at 367·

7220 .
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL . AKC
black Chow puppies, Sept

Himalayan killens .
446·3844 after 4 p.m

ranges.
Skaggs
Ap ·
pllances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., -4-16·7398.
case Knlves·:zo% off all
case knlv.es. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, 4&lt;16·8025.
USED FURNITURE 36 in.
gas range, Spilt cane chair,
walnut bedroom suite . Corbin &amp; Snyder Furn., 955
Second, Gallipolis, Oh, 614416-1171 .

Jeanie' s Pet Shop 1 mile
West of Gallipolis on Rt.

141. Open Mondav thru Sat.
9·5. Call446 ·7920.

1979

Pontiac

location, same hours.

AKC

an

Poodle

pups 895·3958.
6 weeks old, tai Is bobbed,
wormed, claws removed,
ex guard and shbw QUality .

Black and rust. $150. 304·
576·2738 .
S7

78 Honda 750, 3,900 miles,

Firebird silver and slate,

Call37?·2411 .
1975 Honda Goidwing 1000.
$1,500. Call379·2115.

1978 Honda c R 250, good
condition. 675-1969.
1981

72 Limited Bvick, S.SOO . 72
IH pickup, $200. Call 245·
?241.

and

Blue

Call

L..----------L==========-1
r
They'll Do It Every Time

Yamaha

Midnight

Maxim 650 CC, black and
Caii675·6B71 .
1980 KAWASAKI KOX 175.

Prix, 2'/,000 miles, loaded.

Best offer, phone 30.4-675·

Dunfee

256·627?.

5350.

1?69 Z28. excellent cond.
Call'l'/2·3647.

7S

Dilly trailer $1,500.00
Phone 304-675·2039.

1?77 Plymouth llolare . 6·
cyl. AC, Automatic. Very

Starfire

auto.,

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Tomatoes for canning. Bell
peppers and potatoes .

Phone 388 ·9930.
For Sale or Trade

Winter potatoes, canning
tomatoes, peppers. Charles

R. Harris. Portland, Ohio.
843·2693.

a.c.,

SX,

1979 15 fl . sk'i boat, 70 hp
Mercury outboard , new
sta i nless steel propellers,
all skiing eQuipment in·
eluded. Must sell . 675·5120.

Hat-

1968 Mustang . P.S., auto.,

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE

'tlinyl roof, new paint,
chrome. Exc. cond. Serious
inqu i ries only. 992·3952 .

Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and

balteries. «0-7717.
1976 Olds ?8. 304-173-5013.

17
many

Will trade for smaller car.

Rt. 681 west of Darwin, or

North off Meigs coutv Rd .
18 or Rd. 14. Call 992·5045
after 6PM .

--· . ........ ···-·.....
-·····--·········

Auto Repair

service . "Big or small" we

tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio. Day

MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV. Phone 675-

1574 or

«0 2«5 or Night
4792.

446 ~

1?73 Pinto Runabout. new

Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any color,free pickYp

paint, excellent condition.

&amp;

675~ 1?69 .

delivery in Gallipolis
area , Hammond Body

Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782 .
1?79 Mustang Ghia, 4 cyl,

Farm Equipment

Four 15,000 gallon tanks

located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. $3,000.00
each. Phone 1 · 304 · 422 ~ 2781 .

1?79 CUTLASS Supreme,
PS, PB, air, AM-8-track,
velour interior, 304-675-6643
after 5 :00.

78

Also

fresh

brown

eggs·85 cents dozen . Larry
Sayre . 30&lt;·895·3319 .
H•y &amp; Grain

Rod &amp; Reel Combo· Zebco
600 reel, Pfleuger S·250 rod
Special $9 .99. Spring
Vallev Trading Co., Spring
~.&lt;alley Plaza, «0·8025.
1?7612 fl . Star Craft pop up

1967 DOOGE Dart, 6 cvl.
automatic, SJOQ. good con-

Standing hay, 7 acres, can
be cut on shares. Call ..uil-

20 yrs. ex p. Call388·9652.

(Repeat~O

llJ (I)

maintainance
a nd
remodel ing . Phone 388·

?326.

IF THE FBI FINDS
FUNDS ()fii/NfJLII'fft, TtEM ••00 M' KNOI'I Fffi
GORE WHAT
YOUft ONLY
RECOOI!GE lliAY .-.;:-..:.- PNIIE IF l'lfl!U&lt; PEASE
15 C()JlNEREfJ?!
BE THE FBI

·· I'IITll YOOR.

l'iHY, YE'RE CllEW!

•• AI-¥)

"'AM' A GTUIWY

GI'IAB YE'LL
TOO!

LilTLE

"Pt!D I'LL ~T 'l'OO'R.E tUNE.Itv,
TOO! l'jHEti YOU'VE PUT THIS
AWAY. YOU'LL FIND GOME

WITABLE CLOTHES
ON THE OTHER.
BUN!l. !

SHIRLEY laverne and Shirley
and their friends get the shocks

llie!SO 8E
IT! OKA.Y,

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

MEN .•. READY ..

oft hair lives when they discover
that Carmine's opening night
jokes are on them as he
Iaunches hi a outre geou a act in a
club called the Comedy Jungle.
. (Repeat) (Closed-Captioned;
U.S.A)
llJ (I) ®l RISE AND SHIHE A
young man's Introduction to
romance ia the project of the
students at Buckminater's
Co·Ed Boarding School .

Wf&gt;.IT fl. MINUTE!
MOLl&gt; 'IDUR

FIRI!!

AIM . ..

CARTER ' S PLUMBIN G
AND HEAT ING

J &amp; P Plumbing &amp; Heating ,

D. C. Contractors Plum·

Excavating

Back Hoe &amp; Ditcher Ser ·
vice, water lines, dit c h e ~.
septic systems, footers .

TRANS·AM,

CAMPER , 20 fl ., self con·
rained, call 304·675·2453 at·

T· Top,

I'M GLAD L WAS

Fuller Electric Co . Complete rewiring, commer c iii_l
or residential , and elev
Trical maintainance, also

ter 5.

~~~§S~e~r~\l~le~e~s~~~

Electrical. Air Condition
Heating, Hot water tanks:
Service all makes . Phone ·

: ..
. ..............
_., ..,
.. .. .....

..

'•

•

' ·.

50MEWO¥EN
::iEEM
10 I
.

UNPERSTAND.

446·2 17 1.. · ·

I'll TAI&lt;E

HE~ 10 DINNER
MAYBE WITH A
UNI7E~

ee

--- -- -------

SE":I NG Machine repairs ,servlce . Authorized Singer
Sa~es &amp; Service. Sharpen
SCISSors. Fabric Shop,

Pomeroy . 992 ·2284.

- --

- - -·- - - ·-·

JACK ' S REFRIGERATIO ·
N. ai r condition servic e_commercial , industricil ~
Phone 882· 2079 .

- - --- ---

- ·- ·-

---

-aS -- Gineri}H~Uii~g - ~~
JIM' S

DEPENDABLE

water delivery. Call 256·
.9368 anytime.

---. NOW I:IAULING house coal

CONSENIAL!
1g:OO

BARNEY

VOU'RE A LAZY,

GPOD-FER-NOTHIN:

CHICKEN-STEALIN~

CARD·CHEATIN~
MOONSHININ:
SHif'I,ES~

homes

moved

llcen~d. and bonded. 57.6:

2711 or 675·4398.

1,7_ _:_~U"'p'!ho~l~st!!o:!:.rYL_
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 63 Sec . Ave., Gallipoli s
~· 7833 or 446·1833.
;

ili

WRONG WITH

.,,

killed when her husband's car

37 Jaunty
38 Main course

Weot

Nortb

Pass

Pass
Pass

,.

Soal.b

trumps. Finally, he led a dia·
mood to dummy's king and
discarded his last diamond
on the queen of clubs.

DOWN
I Friend
of Socrates
2 Of the ear

Yesterdax's Allswer
22 Function
%3 Scrape
24 AIUee ·
25 Walrus
feature
27 Uke
some
tomatoes
for sauce

29 Pay-dirt
seeker
30 Succinct
31 Rose
extract
36 Son of
Bela
37 Luau

goody

39Greek
mountain

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

.

Ia

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to

work

it:

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc. Single letters,
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

UPDATI!

UNANNOUIICID

(I) U.l.cllftONICLI!II'ACoal
Oporalor'·• Tom' ,.. profile of o
coal operator c:oPing With, and
o ooa tl o nelly tIght I ng,
envlronmenlol rogulellont that
he believe• prevent him from
i!glng IMitllltiM ofleo1~.

.'

. MV FURLOU6H IS ,
ALMOST OYER

~

CllYPTOQUOTES
KY

.
tt:U
1 t:IO

TQAFYKDZ

FUYVZP

TWti.IONT ZOIII ,

,. ~c:::: Cllm~TI!~c:-(!1).
1 t:q&amp;

MOWREYS Upholstery R'i •
1 Bm&lt;'124, Pt. Pleasant JO&lt;!
675·4154 .
'
.

3H'mthe
limits of

N!RO WOLFE The
wile of a former prosecutor Ia

(I) SHI!RLOCK HOLMEB AHD
DR.WATION
®NEWS
10:011 ~ TSSI!YI!NINO NEWS
10:18
C!IN
NI!WS
10:30
PROGRAM

i

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

rail

BO mlna.l (Cioaod-Capllonod;

IJ

t A73

ti Czech river

lli•2!•!l

CIJ• Cl)

U.S.A.)

.....

"zebra"

Believing that he haa been
ttucceas1u1 m n11 putn to murder
Jonathan Hart , the Haru·
lawyer puts the aacond phase
of his evil echemelnt o action· to
acquire Jonathan'amaselva
wealth and his beautiful wife,
Jennifer, for hlmaelf. (Repeat

vou

4AKQJ!06

.K 161

29 "La llpiM!me"
role
3% Friend,
to Fifi
33 Annoy
34 Gain above
expenses

oxplodoa. (Repeal; BO mlna.l
(]) (JJ). HART TO HART

FIND NOTHfN'

I

SKONK !! ---~ ~

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call367·7471 or
367'0591 .
Mobile

I

OUTSIDE OF
THAT·· I CAN'T

I

&amp; limestone for driveways
Call for estimates 367 ·7101 ·

---~ - ·-- - -

HER

+to 8

+AJ52
SOUTH

dog

return home u ne Kpe cted ly
when their skiing trip is ruined,
and find an unwanted hou·
segueat in klutz:y Monroe, who
he a riotoualy turned their
apartment Into a shambles.

SELT SHE'LL
MORE

.AQt08ll

• QJ 96
+9864

2S Football

(Qioaad ·Captlonod ; U.S.A.)
8:30 (I) (JJ). TOO CLOSE FOR
COMFORT Henry and Mutlel

P&amp;C817MEAL

379·21?6. Charles Kiesling . . · .

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

,.

1HA1'5 THE

••

.9

2&amp; Extorted
money from
21 Hungarian

Cribb: Swing , Swing Together'
Elfrida College In 1889
demands the highest atarl·
d arda of behavior from it a young
ladies . When Harriet Shaw
breaks those rules to take a
midnight dip In the Th8mea, she
becomes a witness to murder.

ONLY LANGUAGE

EAST

for one

lll ® MYSTERY! 'Sergeant

FIRM WITH CONNIE

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

on call. Ph .
Gall ipolis.

Phone 675·2247 or 675·5995.
1971 SUPER Beetle, gOOd
Home
Fresh eggs and grain feed . . condition, S1100: 304·882· 81
1mprovements
Beef caltle for sale at 2019 or 882·2326 .
Michaels. Call 985·4237 or
985· 3956.
1969 Volkswagen Beetle. DOBBINS &amp; SONS CON·
TRACTORS Remod~ling ·
304-576·2578.
Inside and out-electriol
HAY for sale, 3().4·675·225-4
work·heatlng·piumbing·sldin·
1975
Camero,
350
engine,
3
&amp; 675·1302.
g· room · additions . (ex·
new tires, no rust, perlenced carpenter· 28
~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;~ speed,
runs good. S2000. 304·895- years). Serving Southern
,.
,
365.4•
Ohio&amp; Western w:vA. Call
Dav[d Dobbins Sr., 388·
1971 Olds Delta 88, 4 door 9856. If no answer c·all 388·
71
Auto for Sale
sedan, 455 engine, good ~.
1976 Buick Limited fully condition. $795. 675·2847.
equipped . One owner. low
Gene's Carpel Cleaning,
mileage, good cond., Sl,-495. 72
Trucks for Sale
deep stream !extraction.
Call «0·1546.
estimates, reasonable
1tBO Toyota, long bed, s Free
rates. scothguard, '192 ·15309.
spd., Pioneer AM · FM
For sale 1979 Buick Rivera cassette deck, new topper,
completely loaded. Call 22,000 mi.. 15,800. Call 416- LOCKSMITH
Service..
446-7497.
Residential, automotive.
7~.
'
Eme'rgency service. Call
1977 Olds cutlass S. Call 1973 1 ton Ford, 25,000 88~·2079 .
256-1421.
miles, no rust, $2,200. Call
RON'S Televlslbn Service.
361-7533.
.
S~lallzlng In Zenith and
1.975 Dodge Dart, low
mileage, standard, 6 cyl., 1974 GMC 3/4 T truck With MOfOr.ol"a/ Quazar, lind
house cells. Phone 576-2398
S1,095. Caii256· 1HI.
Insulated camper lop on or 0146' 261,
.
, truck, auto, PS, PB, gOOd 8
ply tires with spare, heavy
1980 Chevette. A·1
dillon. Can be seen across duty, good .cond., S2, 100. Dave's Appliance Repair.
Washers, ' CII'Yera, plum·
from Gallle Academy on Call4&lt;16-&lt;1630. ·
~ln,g, electrtc. general han·
State Street.
..
dyman. fhone 30,H76·2921
Brand new 1980 and 1981 Oi'675·5689 .
·
19l1 Corvette convertible, Ford pickup. Ml!ll bejl
,·
White "'llh red lnt.rlor. In· Only. 7.12·2211.
'L uc-. .llullders. Rpam oil·
ciUCIIng White hlfdlap, 350
g ·erages,
""glne, ralle)i wheels. Cafl 1976· Chevy 1.uv. S«&lt;I. or. · ditlona,
rernoclellng,
and
• cement
. . parts. 9'12·2nl.
416-96'12.
work. 67H022.
'
710? after9PM .

Siden -

WINNIE

WEST

+973%

10 Quiet time
11 Wise one
3 Refuse
13 Region
to answer
It "Streetcar"
4 - Newburg
wife
5 Agreemen(
15 Chinese pagoda
6 Lost, as a
16 ltsy-bitsy
chess game
17 Sanction
7 "- been had ! "
18 Veteran ( sl. )
8 Swear in
%0 Work
9 Away
on edging
from camp
21 Oxygen or pup 12 Shred
22 Nomadize
16 Scepter
23 Was sore
19 Be aware
25 Eiffel,

Promised You A Rose Garden'
1977 Stare : Bibi Andersson,
Kathleen Quinlan . A 16-yearold
schizophrenic confined In a
psychiatric hospital etrugglea
to free herself from the grip of
her hallucinatory peychqtic
fantasies with the help of her
gentle, understanding
~ychiatriat . (2 hrs.)

EDWARO'S Backhoe and

tK542
4KQ!073

4() Degree or

5 Mascagni's
.. L , _ Fril:2..

NIGHT MOVIE ' I Never

Ohio .

Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank . 675-1234.

1976 Fleetwing truck cam·

exc .

742·2586 .

priced to sell, will consider
trade, low mileage, sharp.

Dozer, loaded , and di tch er
work . Basements, lan dscaping, gas, electri c, and
water lines . Charles R .

84

6,

per. 11 ft., self -contained,
exc. cond. Information 6U-

tires. Two · dogs to give
away , Come see . Richard
Husse/1, Rayburn Road.

Want To Do Backhoe work .

Service . Larry
stricker. 675·5580 .

sleeps

ACROSS
- 1 Family
member

Detective Washington
unearths evidence that a
bigoted white cop may not be
reaponaible tor a series of
racially motivated shootings;
and Captain Fur111o and public
defender Joyce Davenport are
forced to postpone their plana
fora rom'antlctryst In a faraway
~W~ce . (Repeat; 80 mina.}
llJ (I) ®J CBS TUESDAY

Call379 ·2.468 or 37?·2411.

•• J&gt;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(!)HILL STREET BLUES

Call446 9340 or 67H898.

8-Z~- 81

·~.,

Jack gets a preview of the great
hereafter when Larry hatches
an outrageous plan to save the
terrified Tripper from the .
murderously jealous boyfriend
of a gorgeous girl who is after
(Closed·
Jack. (Repeat)
Captioned ; U.S.A.)

bing, electrical , heating,
roofing , aluminum , vinyl
siding, and home painting .

NORTH
•• 81

.. ,.,16. r

8:58 ()) CBNUPDATEHEWS
ji:OO OD 71CLUB
.
' (J)il!&gt; TiD!EE 1SCOMPANY

Rl. I Gallipolis, 367 ·7853. ·

BACKHOE and Septic tank

mins.)

lliEY'VE KILLED PRESIDENT LINCOLN
8:30 (]) GOOD NEWS
(J)(JJ)8 LAVERNEAHD

2088 or 675·4560 .

Rutland,

By Oswald Jacoby
aud Alan Sontag
South was temrted to
duck the queen o hearts
when East led it at trick
two. But he would have felt
rather silly if East had only
been deall a five-card suit,
so East played his king and
West ruffed.
Now West led the queen of
diamonds to South's ace.
South's first thought was to
run off trumps and pray for
rain in the form of some
really bad discarding by
East and West. Then South
decided that wouldn't work.
As he explained later on,
he looked at the players and
they didn't look like they
were unable to play cards.
Now South worked out a
sure-thing play. That is, it
would be a sure thing as long
as East held the ace of clubs.
South led another heart.
West ruffed with the nine
and led a trump. South won
and ruffed his last heart
with dummy's eight.
Next came the king of
clubs play . Easl played his
ace. South ruffed and drew

(ll)

RINGLE 'S SERVI CE ·ex p ·

Hatfield,
742· 2903 .

Sure-thing play works

Special Correspondent Walter
Cronkite anchors this science
magazine aeries that examinee
the lull scope of scientific
activity involving the widest
possible range or human
curiosity.
(J) NOVA 'Resolution on
Saturn' On Tuesday, August 25,
the apacecralt Voyager II will
encounter Saturn . To com·
memorate this event, Nova
presents en update on the
information gathered by
Voyager I during its fly· by of the
majestic ringed planet in 1979.
(Closed -Captioned; U.S.A.)

ANNIE

erienc ed mason, roof er ,
elec tri c i an ,
c arpenter,
genera l repair s and ·
remod eling . Phone 304-675·

83

1 XJ"K I I I I J"

BRIDGE

IJlfJ WALTER CRONKITE'S UNIVERSE CBS Nowo

Home bu i lding , ho m e
re modeling and r epa ir .
custom work from start to
finish . Call388·8711.

82

Print answer here: [

the court . (Repeat)

7891.

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home

· XJ I

(l) LOBO Lobo, Perkins and
Hawk Ina find themaalves
ducking to avoid wild karate
chops when a aquad of black
belt &amp;)(pert a attempt a to foil
th air in&gt;J ea tlga t ion Into the
shady financial dealinge of a
beautiful Or i ental woman .

STRUCTION · Specializin Q
in concr ete drivew a y s,
sidew a lks,
patio,
basement, garage floor s
and el c. Free estimates. 11
year s experi ence . Call 367·

cond., $1,600. Call «0·3192 .

camper ,

1972 CHRYSLER Newport,
20· HT, fair condition. new

1978

Camping
Equipment

dilion . Phone 304-675·1175.

Hogs for sale. 992· 6713 after
4p.m.

64

mileage, $5300. CAll 675·
«SS ext . 71 or67H528.

Livestock

247·2841 after 7 p. m .

when Chachl discovers a
potential alar in John Barnett,
but the joy Ia ahort·livad when
John's father hauls the boy off

675 ~ 2881 .

. sun roof, silver, ac, low
til

PAINTING
interior ar"d
e xte r ior ,
plumbin g ,
roofing , some remod el i ng

675· 3376 or 675· 1240.

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE . 2&lt; hr . wrecker

e&lt;tras, good cond. $2,000 .
94?·2025.

Toban, turn south off St .

Auto ~arts
&amp; Accessories

$5,650 . 992-705-4.

Thunderbird,

vice, call675 1562.

Hoover Sweeper s r epa ired
at Emp ire Furn i tu re, 842
Second Ave , Gallipoli s, 0~ .

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprtse answer, u suggostod by the above car100n.

"Godf•ther, P•rt II" 1074

(J)(JJ)eHAPPYDAYSThara 'a
cauae for celebration on th•
Jefferson High basketball team

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

18,000 miles.

16

1975

BORN LOSER

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump r em oval 675·1331 .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

14FT. Lowe Line Lake Jon ,
Swivel seats, depth finder ,
Evinrude trolling motor, 15
HP Evinrude motor and

1971 vw Squareback . 4 sp,
sun roof, clean. 446·214?
evenings, ?49·2504 davs.

1980

CON ·

quality and ser ·

e

(JJ). FACE THE MUSIC
7:311 (J) BASEBALL Atlanta Braves
va Phllldelphlo Phlllloa
7:118 0D CBN UPDATE NEWS
8:00 (]) H!RITAGE SINGERS
(])MOVIE ·(DRAMAI••••

Call446~ 2 572.

WEATHER A LL

WHA"T ~E DH7N'I
L.IKE ABOUT1HE
PEEF"IN6 'TOM .

actor.

Cabine ts,

silver, 1600 mites. S2200.

1977 Pontiac silver Grand

chback . Black on black, V·6

S9

only 1,800 miles. $2,5?5. '1'12
6130 after 6 p .m .

77 Monte Carlo 62,000
miles, AC, PS, PB, new
tires, and new paint . Call
388·8769.

Call 304-773-5969 Mason .
S8

1981 Yamaha 650 Maxim,

«6·2075.

Baldwin Acrosonic piano.

WOODSHOP

CRETE

excellent conditon, $1,600.

clean . Call ?92·3798 after 5
p.m .

Musical
Instruments

Call446·2107 .

75 Harley Davidson Super
Glide, low miles, exc .
cond .. belt drive, $2,.500 or
will trade for touring bike.

Dachshund,

Pomeranian

THI5o MI:SS. I tffON'T D!iPEWD
ON 'lt)U TO SET ME OUT OF li

81 NG ' S CONCRE TE CON ·

Formula

Rodney

:t CAN HIIL.Pf

~I&amp;TEll. EA~Y! IT WA~ YOUI't.
I'AU~i I GOT MIXED UP IN

exc . cond . Call446·6656.

T·top, $6,000. Coli 446·9228
alter 4PM.

Contact

I'VE! &amp;i:EtJ CAU6HT IN
WOR!rE- TRAfl!r THAN· THilii&gt;•.

work &amp; pa inting, concrete,

picn i c
table s,
por ch
swings, most wood produc ·
ts. 101 Court St ., Gallipol is.

76 Kawasaki KZ400, 4
stroke engine, 4,000 orginal
miles and 1 helmet, both in

exc . cond. Call evenings

MOVING
TO
NEW
LOCATION . Fish Tank and
Pet Shop 2&lt;13 Jackson
Ave ., Pl. Pleasant. Across
f~om Western Auto. Call
675·2063. Closed Friday and
Saturday . Open Mondav
August 17th
at new

CAPI'AIN EASY

CO N
Carpe ntry

'
New mopeds,
last years
model, 5% over cost, 150
MPG . Ideal tor college
student. Call446· 4626.

I I

(])(JJ). FAMILY FEUD
· Cl) OHIO STAT!! FAIR
e(JJ TlCTACDOUOH
(]) G)) MACNEIL-LEHRER
REPORT
®J NEWS
7i011 (]) AUfNTHEFAMILY
·
7:30 ())
BASEBALL Cincinnati
Reda v1 Montreal Expoe
(]) ANOTHER UFI!
(])
RACE FOR THE
PENNANT
(]).(])JOKER'S WILD
Cl) HOUYWOODSOUARE8
(]) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®l
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
()))DICK CAVETT SHOW
Guest: Christopher Reave ,

Call 256· 1295.

63 Corvet Roadster, 4 spd .,

AKC Registered Doberman
pups, 3 months old. Red
and rust, $150 .00 Call «&lt;·
1562.

Pigs.

Siamese

c hair,

1?76 Dodge Slationwagon
Cornelle, 3 seats, good
tires, no rust, exc . cond .
Call446·0519 or 446·0181 .
73 Malibu 2 dr. hardtop,
$550 . Call «0· 2459.

Call245·5121.

Electri c stove, good cond.,

refrigerators,

sellers ,

3 Hereford cows &amp; calves .

$150 . Call 379·2411.

dryers,

Gordon

Cal l «0·4191.

63

Mattresses. or box springs,
full or twin, $58., firm, $68.

GOOD . USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,

grooming .

H AMC Sport about Station·
wagon. 6 cyl., auto., good
cond., will trade. Call «0·
1452.

Potatoes 15 cents lbs. Cecil

New Lilac, blue, and cho.

3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri., 9am to5pm, Sat.
«0·0322

Dober ~

Also AKC Reg.
mans . Call446·7795.

304·762 2581.

rocker, good cond, $150 .

used,
Ranges, ·
refrigerators, and TV's,

KENNEL

Registered Cocker Spaniel

complete . Baby beds, S9'1 .

ranges, $295. Orthopedic
super firm, $95, SOfa bed
with chair, $165., baby
matresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20,$25, &amp; $30.

H ILLCREST

Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor facilities .

Auto for Sale

71

English Cocker Spaniels.

1. CFA Himalayan, Per·
sian and Siamese kittens.

electric

Pels for Sale

A KC

wooden

or

56

Call'l'/2 ~ 3647 .

Couch,

and $25 . Gas

tric glide, like new, $4 ,000.

Boarding and

$200 .

Call44&lt;1· 1425 before 2 PMor
446·1764

Motorcycles

~==========;:=========~ Call alter 5446-0122 .

Round oak table &amp; 6 chairs.

56

10,000 BTU Admiral air

74

pet Cleaning fea tured by
Hltffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets . Free es timates.

245·5478 .

cond .,

1182.

1978 Harley Davison elec -

Firewood, split, stacked &amp;
deli'tlered . Mixed wood S65
ft . patio door with screen,
per cord, $35 one· half cord .
Green or seasoned . All har - needs lock . $60. Call after 5
dwood $5 .00 more . Also will pm675·1?74.
buy standing wood . Call

Sofa and chair, boys 20 in .
bi cycle . Call446-4134,

can 256· 1427.

1·800·624·8511.

carat, $175 . 675-6535 after 5
pm .

RESTAURANT &amp; STORE
EQU 1P . Ex c . cond . Call
RADCO 304·523·1378 .

textured cei li ngs, com · .••
mercia 1 •t~ nd res idential. . ::
free estimates. Call 2.56 ·

j
r

SILLE

SHOW

"'

CAPTAIN ST EEMER Ca r ·

Ratl iff Pools &amp; Service.
Complete sales, service,
pool covers, and win - Ladies size five , 14 K . white
terization kits . Call446·1324 gold diamond ring , 1;,.

S25 load . Call446· 4851 .

vans &amp; 4 W. O.

co =::;..~- · - - -

7:00 (1)'. PMMAGAZIM!
0D
JOHN ANKERIERO

-;:,:

bigger bike. $500.00 firm .
446·0022 .

$300. 675·2979 .

Good top or fill dirt, will
deliver
anywhere
in
Gallipolis or Bidwell area,

Call388-9857 .

landscaping , 446 ·2787 .

to purchase furniture ,
televisions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
J ac kson Ave ., 675· 1773.

!VI!NING

.

spouting and sidi ng . 39 ~
years experienc e. t=: r~e ..,.
estimates . Remode ling . ··~

bike. (dirt and street) like
new. owner purchased

and speakers . Call675·4546 .

14ft. fishing boat &amp; trailer,
S400 .00 . 22 fl . ·camper
trailer , $2000 . Electric
guitar &amp; amp, $190. Phone

. , AUG. Ill, 1881

JIM MARCUM Rooting

r J

I I

'

446· 4208

1979 Model Kawasaki 125

$39.95. Myers Submersible pump,

Spec ial

c arpet Cleani ng

STUCCO PLAST ER ING .· ~·~

.c-wheel drive, International Scout, S1 ,500.

EASY credit available now 1
~

•
•
VIewmg

STAN LEY STEEMER

eludes pool, deck, fence,
filter , liner , and In ·
stallation under normal
ground· condition . Free
shop at home service . Call

so

Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446-

miles,

Television

1

•.

SANDER S
TRACT I NG ,

$350. Captain's beds, $275.

and $78 . Q"een sets, $195 . s
h
h t $49 d
d
r. c Bed
es s , frames,
. • r. $20.and
c ests,
$42.
$25 ., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350 .• dinene chairs s20.

73

SWIMMING
POOLS :
PR E · SEASON SALE :
$??9 .00 INSTALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at $999.00. Price In·

and 3 phase. truck load
sale . From $1 ,245 .00. Call
Compound Bow Special - collect 304~ 766·62«.
PSE sizzler laminated lim bs, magnesium handle,

20,000

75

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker , ottoman, 3 tables, S500 . Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S27S.
Sofas and chairs priced

l!lutomatic,

$45,000 . Excellent con·
dltion. Call J04·675·before4 p.m.

board gOOd cond. 379·2435 .

GINSENG ·call

Crossman B·B ' s ' Mi lk Car ton' box of 1500 - Special

Wanted to Rent

Res ponsib le
married
co uple wan t s ro r ent 2 t o 3
bdr . hom e. Preferably in
Count ry . Call 446·4338 .

1979 FORD long bed, 6 cyl.

3 AKC Doberman puppies;

Eclipse 12 ga . game loads

lb .

\

Jewelry, 14k gold . ?92 ·3283 .

8025 .

2096.

smission . J04·773·5170.

-:.~.

pups. Call446·1262 .

10% off
Buck
Kn ives.
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spr ing Valley Plaza , 446·

't

has ps, pb, automatic tran·

cond., and 1 skate

2602 .

8025.

FOR BEST In CarpeP '&lt;
Cleon lng · Call Smeltzer·~
Steamway. Cali 6U·«&lt;·: .

1973 '14 ton Chevy pickup

gOOd cond., one 24 ln. bike

runner green beans.
Pick your own . Rac ine 949-

White metal detectorsOpen i ng Special 20% off on
all white metal detectors.
Spring Valley Trading Co. ,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446·

5971.

For sale one 10 speed very

1h

Misc . Merchandice

Home
1mprovements

IT

Trucks for Salt

1973 Chevy pickup, 350
engine, flat bed. Runs
good . $400. Call 30H73·

oor

BRIARPATCH KENNELS

Antiques

72

Ul\"".~
Of Milt..
(I) Bel ft£
~rJK&gt;Ittt:

Warm morlng heofer with
blower, $350 . Call379·2435.

Market, Mason . Phone 773·
5721 . Open daily lili9 p.m .

8436.

Call388·8436 .

St udent teac her seek ing
bdr ..
pr e ferably
un·
furnished for fall of 1981 .
Call collec t L aura 592 ·6198

Misc. Merchandlce

In fair

$1 .0? bow . Spring Valley

pine fin ish. Bedroom suites
Ba,.cll Oak, $675 . ,

Second floor effienc y apt .,
adults only, no pets, 729
Second Av e. Call4A6·0957 .

Sansul reclever G901, 160
watts RMS and 2 SPX 9700
speakers, 280 watts, $1 ,000.
Cail379·2115.

Traind Co., Spring Valley

T R A ILER spaces for r ent .
Sou t hern V all ey Mobile
Home Park , Cheshi r e, Oh .

- -- -

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USED brown and white
li ving room chair S15. See
at 769 Brownell Ave., Mid·
dleporl .

COUN T R Y MOBILE Home

675 ·29'16
2 bedroom tjailer. fur
ni shed, fr ee water .) nd gar ·
den. 2 miles out of Pt
Plea sant . 675·2894 .

Velvet living room furn .• 1
full size &amp; 1 twin size bed, 2
desk, and retrlg. Cell 4&lt;16·
1316.

gas heater. with blower, all
4S

Mobile Homes
for Rent

For sale 2 piece living room
suite and 1 chair with ot·
loman. Call 446-«101 after
5 :00PM.

Sl

r eq Per sonal and financial
ref . r eq ui red . Call446-2543 .

$225 . Ca ll
7PM .

54

Hotpo l nt
stove
and
refrlgator. 2 single beds, 2
dressers, stereo, gi rls bike,
kitchen table, and stroller .
992-7805.

by Lany Wright

KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

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THITONIOHTIHOW

Guoathoot:IIIICoeby. O.oata:
Norm' Croaby, Richerd Slrll:

mone, Carmen McRae.

·

·· Ye.teay'a CryptGqaote: MALICE IS PLEASURE DERIVED .
FROM ANO'l'HER'S EVIL WHICH BRINGS NO ADVANTAGE~

TOON&amp;'lELF.-CICERO

�Tuesday, August 25, 1981

Sadat wants Israel to
• •
lift more restrzctzons
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt ( AP) Meeting with Prime Minister
Menachem Begin today for a twoday swrunit, President Anwar Sadat
wants Israel to lilt more restrictions
on the Palestinians in the occupied
territories. Begin wants Sadat to accelerate the improvement 'ot
relations between their two countries.
Egyptian sources said they expected little or nothing in the way of
concrete action to be announced alter the talks at Sadat's summer
capital on the Mediterranean. They
said even if anything was agreed to,
details would probably be kept
secret until after Begin meets with
President Reagan in Washington
next month.
Israeli officials said Begin is
seeking revival of the talks with
Egypt and the United States, which
Sadat suspended last sununer, on
Palestinian sell-rule in the West
Bank of the Jordan River and the
Gaza Strip.
Sources close to Sadat said his
price would be more "confidenceSwam, Pomeroy; Steve Nelson, Pomeroy Route 3; 5.6
and up, Don Lambert, Route 2, Pomeroy; Ross Wei~
Chesler; T. R . Cullams, Hemlock Grove. ·Open stock
winners, first lbrougb third, respectively, were: to 4.5,
Cecil Midkiff, Hemlock Grove ; John Ridenour, Route
3, Pomeroy; Kenny Hupp, Woodsfield; 4.6 and up,
Ralph Stewart, Pomeroy, both first and ,..,and places;
Don Collums, Hemlock Grove; modUied, Don Collums,
Ralph Stewart and T. R. Collums. Photo was Ia ken
during Saturday's artivilies.

ANNOUNCE WINNERS - WIDDers of lbe power
saw contest held Salllnlay afteraoon as a feature of the
Meigs County Fair were annouuced today. First
through third plate wbmer, respectively, indude In the
stock classes: Q.2, Re1111y Hupp, Woodsfield; T. R.
Cullums, Hemlodt Greve; Lowell Ridenour, Chester:
2.1 to 3.5, Lowell Ride-.; Rodney Chevalier, Route 3,
Pomeroy; Bruce Myers, Chester; 3.6 to 4.5, Cedi
Midkiff. Hemlock Grvve; Tony Carnahan, Racine;
Roberta Ridenour, Roate l, Pomeroy; 4.6 to 5.5, John

Units answer four calls on Monday
Four ca lb were ansnred by local
unit.&lt;; un Munday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services reports . The Middleport Unit at I: 18 a.m.
took Jessie Kuhn from Route 7 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
6:28p.m . look Gina Pellegrino, S.

Council

0 0.

Second Ave., to Veterans Memorial;
Pomeroy at 6:37 p.m . took Penny
Hensley from Royal Oak Park to
Veterans Memorial, and at 2:30a.m.
the Tuppers Plains Unit took Evelyn
Sedwick from her horne to CamdenClark Hospital in Parkersburg .

----~c_o_n_tin_u_e_d_fr_o_m_:pa__::_ge_l_:_)_ _ __

minimum but customer.-; were
allowed to use that much gas before
any other c harges were added.
Council members indicated that
they drd not catch that chan~e in
billing when they approved the contract and it was agreed to contact
Fultz to see what can he done about
the matter.
Council voiced no objection towards the transfer o{ a low powered beer
permit to the Sure Stop Station un
Ntn1h.Seeond Ave.

The mayor reported that a lot next
to the fire station is now for sale and
two rr1embcrs of the fire department
were called to discus. the possible
purchase of the lot owned by Mrs.
Cass Hindy . The lot is 50 by 56 feet.
Clerk Jnn Buck read two letters

Southern hoard
approves items
In recessed session Monday night
the Southern Local Board of
E•cation adopted prices fur breakfast and lunches and named the
Racrne Home National Bank as
depository for school funds lor the
next two years.
School lunc h prices in the elementary schools will be 90 cents; junior
and senior high, $1 : re&lt;tuced price
lunches. 40 cents and adult lunches
without milk , $1.25.
Paid breakfast will be 50 cents:
reduced breakfast, :ro cents; adult
breakfast with milk, 75 cents;
student milk 20 cents and adult milk
25 cents
Attending were Sue Grueser, Don
Smith and Shirley Johnson, board
members, Bobby · Ord, superintendent, and Nancy Carnahan,
treasure r .

from Ashland Oil announcing
decreases of .7 rents and .5 rents a
gallon on all grades of gasoline. A
complamt against one garbage
collection firm allegedly soliciting
busmess was heard and Mayor Huffman will look into the matter.
Councilman Marvin Kelly complained against weeds growing and
trash collections behind two properties on S. Third Ave ., and Mayor

Hoffman sa id lhat corrections will
be made. He also said that weeds on
another lot will be c ut in the near
future.
Attendmg were M"yur Huffman,
Clerk Buck, and Cuuncihnen Ke lly,
Wrllram Walters. Dewey Horton .
Jack Satterfield and Carl Hork y.

In a poll conducted by lOth Drs tnct
Congressman Clarence Miller at last
week's Mei gs County Fair. fairgoers
expreosed strong support for
President Reagan's efforts to reduce
federal spending. By a percentage of
79 to 21. area residents indicated
their approval' of the budget reduc·
trons berng proposed by the Ad-

rninistra t1 on.
In the area uf energy , fairgoers
defeated by a margin of 55 percent to
45 percent the lnlenor Department's
plan to open up national park lands
to increased energy and mineral
devolopment.
On the manpower front , Meigs
Cuuntians strongly favored
requiring a ll Americans between the
ages of 18 and 25 to perform oome
form of serviC€ for their country . By

Athtoru LIH·!i tock 5alr~

DAMASCUS, Syria ( AP)
Libyan strongman Col. Moamunar
Khadafy is trying to add his troubles
with the United States to the agenda
for the proposed Arab emergency
swrunit on Israel and Lebanon.
Khadaly arrived in Damascus
Monday for the last stop on a fenceClinic Thursday
mending tour in preparation fur
The August blood pressure clinic becoming
president of
the
wrll be held at the Senior Citizens Organization of African Unity next
Center, Mulberry heights, Pomeroy , year. While he was in Aden last
Thursday from 10 a.m. to 12 noon.
week. two U.S. Navy F-14 jets shot
At the clinic residents may have down two Libyan fighters that attheir blood pressure checked free of tacked them during American
charge.
maneuvers in Mediterranean waters
On Friday there will be an evening claimed by Libya.
social at the center with a covered
Lebanese President Elias Sarkis
dish dinner to be served at~: 30 p.m . is trying to arrange a special Arab
Those attending are to take their sununit meeting that would either
own table service, a covered dish curb the Palestinian guerrillas using
and are asked to pay 50 cents towar- southern Lebanon as a base for at·
ds the costs of meat and . the tacks on Israel or asswne responbeverage . Following supper a sibility for the defense of Lebanon
musical program will be presented against Israeli attack.
by Joan and Bob Robinson of the
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport. The social is open to the
~~~Ill' lirPnsc·~
public.
Marriage licenses were issued to
Gary Edwards Freeman, 40,
Pomeroy, and Betty Lou Gilmore,
30,
Middleport; James Elsworth An( :orrt'ction
derson. 23. Rutland, and 'carol
Winner in the boy division of the Elaine Murris, 17, Pomeroy; Larry
Meigs County Fair pretty baby con- Ray Patterson, 19, Pomeroy, and
test was Donald Goheen, Mid- Kathleen Sue Parker, 17, Pomeruv·
dleport, three to four year old class,
Larry Lee Cundiff, 24. Middlepo~t·.
who was pictured with his mother. and Geurgann Knapp, 17, · MidTerry Laudermrlt.
dleport.

e~ 72 to 28 percentage, resondents indi cated their support for requiring
all young Amerieans tu put in a set
periOd of time fur Uncle Sam, be it
as" hospital orderly, social worker,
serviceman. etc.
In the area u( foreign affairs ,
respondents indicated their strung
opposition to providing or expanding
military weapons sales tu the countries of El Salvador 182 percent to 18
percent I, China 173 percent tu 27
percent 1. Guatenllila &lt;87 percent to
13 percent 1. Is rael i 60 percent tu 40
percent), Egypt o72 percent to 28
perccntl . and Saudi Arabia r73 per-

Frl'l' clothin~. da'J
Free clothing day will be held at
The Salvation Army, Pomeroy,
Thursday, Aug. 27, from 10 a.m. until noon. All are residents in need of
clothmg are welcome.

feedu Slet"rs 1m500 1C1HIIl't.' 544iJ.5C : :MJ0-700
lbs. Choice 4&amp;61 .5(] .
fet..'der

H ei f er.;~~ lb.~ 1

The Rev. _
Ciilhfd ,;r.t.on, 11,
Parkersburg, a Ml Q . with the
r.hurch of God for Q, Jill'S and . a
native Meigs Coalltilll, died late
Sunday In ParkmburJ.
.
Mr. Watson Wll barn at Long Botloin, a son of th,i late Nelaon .00
Charity Hyselt Wabiaa. He is survived by his wife, Anlla; a son,

ClltJin : .f3 .!il).{,t·

500-700 lbs. Chtlll"1'41 .5().G2.
· .
Feedf&gt;r Bulls. IJOO..lOO lb."'.l Ch01n.• 52 . ~ 1.75·
500-700 lbti . ChOil'e t.J-57.::,0,
Slau~hter

Sbmghtt"r Cows: UlilitiL•s 41 5()....«, Cannt•rs
and Cutlers 30-40.7)
Vettla 1 Cht lict• an(t Pnmt' 1fi0.4l9.

&amp;b)· Ca ln•.s 1 bytlw he&lt;~d 1 2.'.-117 50.
HOJ!:S

Burruws untl Gills, :ZOO..Z.10

I~ .

I

50.25-Sl.
Sows 35-45.75
Boars 38-4 UO.
PiK-S • by the head 118-38 .
l.ambtc

Slaujolhter l..arnb.~ )3..59.

a

..,..,lltl

tis iltlll COIItthbiDfl• ' ' .
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The banli's closing will cie'afu prolilems f&lt;ir custoiners In the nor-

them part of the county, WilkesVille and Rutland, The bank was a center of activity in the village and the place where bills were paid.

Man drowns in Ohio River
PROCTORVILLE - · Lawrence County authorities recovered the
body of a 49-year-old Huntington, W.Va., man from the Ohio River on
Tuesday, the county sheriff's office said.
Jimmie Lee Adkins disappeared Sunday night when he tried to owim
across the Ohio River to Huntington, according to Opal Estep, a
dispatcher.
Dragging operations began Sunday night, she said, and Adkins'
body was found Tuesday morning by two fishermen who notified the
sheriff's office.

Teen-ager admits prank
-

cOVINGTON, Ky. - Police say a Covington teen-ager has admitted
writing "you're next" on the window of a person who may be a witness
in a murder trial.
The warning, ~Titten in what appeared to be blood, was meant to be
a prank, the youth to1d police. He has been released to his parents'
custody while the Kenton County attorney's office decides whether to
·
prosecute him.
Police did not identifiy the prankster or the alleged witness, who
they said is scheduled to testify before the Hamilton County, Ohio,
Grand Jury in connection with the slaying Aug. 17 of advertising
executive Donald Cemiak, 33, in his Cincinnati home.
An unemployed Covington man, 1bomas Turner, )9, i5 acensed of'
fatally beating and stabbing Cerniak, and is being held in Cincinnati
under $2110,000 bond.
Turner pleaded innocent to the aggravated murder charge at his
arraignment last week.

Everything about this cardigan Is elegant. Begtn
with the French loop neckline, then glory In the
sunburst knit design. Llum knit Pointelle-ol
100% Orion'" Winluk acrylic. White, bone, light
blue, red, navy.

Slzes34-40

'2800

SEE lHIS AND lD1S OF OlHER
GREAT FAll FASHIONS AT

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY .

Huntington airport manager quits

Dining R~ On~

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may have caused problem

A platform carrying Voyager's
cameras apparently got stuck,
limiting the cameras' aim, and
project controllers could not fully
analyze the problems until they
receive crucial tape recordings at
tnid-morning, a spokes1nan said.
Controllers noticed the problem
shortly after 2 a.m. EDT '" soon as
radio signals with the craft were
reacquired once Voyager passed
from behind Saturn as seen from
earth, project spokesman Alan
Wood said.
Scientists had said that passing
through Saturn's rings posed a
danger of collision for Voyager with
ring particles. A pathfinder
spaceship, Pioneer 11, followed the
same route safely in 1979 and scienlists were confident Voyager would
make it too.
Whether Voyager did indeed
collide with ring particles had yet to
be determined, but Wood said, "We
know at least it wasn't a strong hit if
there was a hit. We got the radio
signal back perfectly on time " once
Voyager passed from behind Saturn.
He said the platform is designed to
move both vertically and horizontal)y,
.
'
"Until we understand the problem
better," Wood said, " we won't know
what the effects will be on the con·
tinuation of the Saturn mission and
the possible future of (the) Uranus
(mission) ... Probably in midmorning · we should have more
details about the problem."
The project at first appeared to be
proceedin~ without a hitch.
" l think it is t~e most flawless,
perfecl encounter I've ever been
through, and I've been through a lot
of them." said Voyager project
manager Esker D1vis alter the
spaceship made its closest approach
to Saturn Tuesday night.
After traveling across nearly I';
billion miles of space since it left
Earth Aug. 20, 1977, the ship arrived
within 30 miles of the bullseye just
3.1 seconds early, Davis said.
At 11:58 p.m. f PDT) Tuesday,
Voyager conunentatur AI Hibbs announced, "All is well ."
The encounter left scientists overwhelmed by a flood of data and pictures of sights no hwnan had ever
seen from the exotic planet.
"The closer we look, the more puzzling things are," said chief scientiot
Edward Stone.

MONITORING VOYAGER - A monitor at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory In Pasadena displays a
photograph of Tuesday's Norlb-polar scan of Saturn
from a distance of 317,000 miles (510,000 kilometers).
'

For weeks, NASA's scientists have labored io front of
these monitors, reeording each minute detail of
Voyag••r II's exploration of the planet. !AP LaserphOto).

..

Columbia unregUlated --Spratley
COLUMBUS, Ohio i AP) - Consumers' Counsel Wrllram A.
Spratley says government has failed
to re~ulate the Columbia Gas
System.
"No single public official or agency - state, federal or local - fully
regulates the Columbia Gas
System," Spratley said Tuesday. He
responded to a request by Gov.
James A. Rhodes lor his office and
the Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio to jointly investigate the linn's
gas purchasing and pricing policies .
Figures furnished by the gas
system forecast a 47 percent rate increase fur the company's residential
customers in Ohio by March, according to Spratley.
The counsel said regulation has
failed in its three chief goals preventing excess monopoly profits .
prohibiting price diocrimination and
assuring adequate service.
Columbia Gas of Ohio had profits

of 28.4 percent in 1979 and 19.J percent in 1980, larger than any other
utility in Ohio, Including three other
gas suppliers , Spratley said. Those
figures represented the largest rate
of profit among the seven states in
which the firm distributes ~as . he
said.
"Ohio Is clearly a profit center uf
the seven-slate diotributiun area,"
he said.
While other states require uniform
rates, Ohio allows Columbia tu set
different rates in separate service
areas. Spratley said. The result is
more than 700 tariff rates in the 54
counties served in Ohio, he said.
Columbia negotiates 360 of those
rates directly with incorporated
conununitres without gomg through
the PUCO, he said.
Spratley urged Rhodes to support
a cooperative program on federal,
state and local levels to enforce
existing reKulations and require
full er disclosure of Columbia profits .

The counsel's proposals included :
consolidating all Colwnbia gas rate
rases, sayrng they comprise 44 of the
i7 pendmg rate cases before the
PUCO: ordering a management
audit ul the firm ; restricting passthrough costs of gas purchases and
administrative costs; and enacting
proposals in Congress which oppose
a speed· up of deregulation under the
1978 Natural Gas Policy Act.
Luter in the day , Rhodes said he
agreed WJth Spratley's recom·
mendations lor stronger regulation
of Columbia Gas. The governor said
he asked the counsel to prepare
remedial legislation lor the Ohio
I ,egislature.
"I also urge the Consumer's Counsel and the Public Utilities Commission to proceed with their investigations ... to prevent the threat
of gas prices going up by 40 percent
this winter and eventually tripling,"
Rhodes said.

Hire firm
for project

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,.,..

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1 ~ecfion. 14 Pages
t5 Cents
A Multimedi,a lnc . Newspaper

HuNTINGTON, W.Va. - William Mays cited personal reasons in a
The Meigs County Comletter of resignation from his position as manager of the Tri-state AirmtssJOners, in regular session
port, officials said. ·
Tuesday, entered into an agreement
The letter. was J!lven to the airport's board of directors on Tuesday,
with John Davjd Jones Assoriates
,board President EdWard.A. King said.
for engineering work on a new coun· Mays' reslgna\iO'} came one ilay l!(tilr a closed, three-.hour board
ty.,Jandfill.
meet)ng in wliJch the. directors discussed "personnel matters,'' King
·Conunlssioners r~ntly acquired
said. Mays appea'r ed befoie the boa~ for abou~ 45 lninutes to answer
land to be used in the landfill and ·
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questions; King said .'
Joqes Associates will outline plans
Mays c'oilld not be reached tmrriediately to comment about' the
for the development ¢ the facility.
resignation. 00 Monday; howe.;.er, he told repOrters qe was not sure he
The cost for the se~jces Is not to exwould be returnillg to I)Js job after ·a one-month leave of absence,
ceed $5,000.
which bi!gan Aug. l8. '
·
County Engineer Phil Roberts
Mays was bifed as the airport's rnatiager·ln July 1972, after serving
reporlelj hi1l department has comas acting manager and associate rnanllger for about a year. He
pleted sealing two miles of county
previQUSly '!ad Ser1{ed as tiMi f~Jcility's di~or of operations.
road 18 and is In jhe PtoCess of
Larry Salyers, assiStant manager of Tri-state Airport, will serve a,s ; ~ . sealing portiOI!, of county ,J'Oild 10
· !Cling manager until a replacernlmt for Ma)'lris hil;ed, King ~d. , .
near Uie Mt. Union Ch~h., . , , . · ,
The board will begin ilea~· for i\.~. manager at I~ Sept. 10 . . . ~ county ~r~s Qoo!! of.
"
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. .; ·
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Septenlber ' were awarded ,to ~'tie ,
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fartiY clo.\dy tonlgllt. Low'. in t)le lolr
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council. But they could not agree on
the extent of the council's powers,
whether East Jerusalem Arabs
could vote for It or how to apportion
sovereignty over the territories.
The Israelis say that following
their destruction of the Iraqi nuclear
reactor in June, Egypt halted
progress toward lull normalization
of relations. They maintain Sadat
should not allow such "outside con·
siderations" to affect the IsraeliEgyptian relationship.

success."

VINTON - The Vinton branch of the Central Trust Co. will be
. closing in a few months, and the decision is not being met with enthustasm by tts customers in the area.
But ~~officials feel the Qct. 14 closing is necessary.
Jun Wtlhams, Central Trost president, said the branch has not been
able to sup.port illielf and transportation of cash and other negotiables
between Vlllton and the main bank in GallipoliS became increasingly
prohibitive and risky.
"It. was not a decision made tightly," Williams said. " The branch
was also in a high-risk location, and you don't have to read between the
lines to know what that means."
Williams was referring to three armed robberies at the bank in the
1'8'1t. IO, Y"''~· the last one just before opening on June 'J:l. More than
.~000
re~rledly taken in t~e robbery, and the investigation into

The Great Lady Look

Sadat broke off the autonomy
talks after the Israeli Parliament
declared all of Jerusalem, including
the Arab sector taken from Jordan
in the 1967 Arab-Israeli War, to be
Israel's eternal capital. But even
before then, the negotiations had
been deadlocked lor months.
Egypt and Israel agreed an
autonomous local administration lor
the West Bank and Gaza would be
headed by an elected Palestinian

PASADENA, Calif. (AP)
Mechanical trouble aboard Voyager
2, perhaps caused by a collision with
particles from Saturn's rings, interrupted the flow of stunning and
revealing photographs from the
planet today, but scientists said the
mission was still a "high-percentage

Vinton Bank to close Oct. 14

COTTY MANN

this month.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, August 26, 1981

a

SERVED WITH MASHED POTATOES, CHOICE OF SALAD, ROLL AND DRINK.

228 W. Main

at y

GALUPOUS- Voters in Gallia County defeated Tuesday levy to
build a new wing for the county courthouse.
The vote was 4,35!Hl58 against the-measure.
The 2\'z-mill property tax would have paid for part of the $3.5 million
construction cost of the planned four-story structure. The addition
would have replaced a 101-year-illd wing that bumed down Jan. 8.
Paul Niday, president of the county board of conunlssioners, said he
was surprised at the voting outc,ome.
Niday said the board has three alternatives - putting the issue on
the ballot again, adopting a 0.5 percent surcharge to the state sales lax
or continuing to use the modular buildings put up after the fire . ..
The surtax is the most likely of the three to be approved; he said.

BAKED STEAK DINNER

Marriage licenses
Wilbur, Parkersburg, three grandchildren and lour great-grandMarriage licenses were issued to
Children. Besides his parents he was
James Albert Alley, 22, Rt. 2,
i*eceded in death by three brothers.
Racine, and Ann Marie Craft, 18, Rt
Services will be beld at 2::ro p.m.
2, Racine; Robert Lee James, 21
Wednesday at the Kimes Funeral · Clifton, and Bonnie Ardena Fran:
Home, 521 Fifth St., in Parkersburg,
cisco, 17, Mason; Charles Kevin
with the Rev. D. Dengiss officiating.
Hall, 22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, and Angela
Burial will be in the Christian ChurKay Keesee, 19, Middleport; John
ch Cemetery at Tuppers Plains. David Causey, 22, Rt. I, Reedsville,
Friends may call at the funeral
and Tanunl Darlene Cazart, Long
home after 4 p.m. today.
Bottom.

•

Gallia courthouse levy defeated

CROW;S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted--Rudolph
Gordon,
Gallipolis; Dessie Kuhn Cheshire·
Eulalie Webster, Pomer~y; Marvi~
Randolph, Pomeroy; Eva Conkle,
Pomeroy:
Patricia
Cleland
Langsville ; Debora Drake'
Pomeroy; Gary Sellers, Racine;
Mary Childers, Hartford; Ray
Ungaro, Letart, W. Va.; Clyde
Ferrell, Middleport.
Discharged-Henrietta Jenkins .

Egyptilln and IBrileli sources, who
asked not to be identified, said the
two leaders believed It would be better .to discuss their differences after
the talks get underway again.
Before the autonomy talks ·start,
Begin is to Oy to Washlngton for
talks next month with · President
Reagan. He came to Egypt seeking
Sadat's agreement to reswne the
talks on autonomy for the

since Israel's devasla.t ing air strikes
in Iraq and Lebanon, the two leaders
held each other at arm's length in
contrast to· the hugs, smiles and
joking camaraderie of their
'previous meetings.
Egyptian sources said Sadat was
asking Begin to "show the world, by
some sort&lt;Qf act," that Israel is sincere about giving the Palestinians
seH-rule. They suggested further
gestures like the lifting of security
roadblocks in the Gaza Strip earlier

Palestinians of the occupied West
Bank and Gaza Strip, which the
Egyptian president suspended last
summer.
nie prime minister also contends
tlujt J!;gypt is lagging on the process
of nonnalizing relations with Israel
in accordance with the Ciunp David
peace treaty. He wants this speeded
up, with implementation of cultural
and economic agreements as the first step.
Meeting Tuesday for the first time

Collisi~n

Ivery Wednesday Night At

nt'W!il

foreign

l;

Genius at work

•

Bull:; 1Over 1.000 lbs. 1 ~~ . 75-50

H~JW&gt; 1 No. I ,

Hu~pital

that

Voi.30,No.94
Copyrighted 1981

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

cent to 27 percentl .
Lastly, 35 percent of the people
parlrctpating in the Congressman's
poll favored making the Postal Ser·
vrce a totally private enterprise, 32
percent favored putting it back the
way it was previously as a totally
governmental agency, and 33 percent favored keeping rt the way it is
presently.

STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP)
Srinivasa Ramanujan, who died
some 60 years ago when he was 32, is
considered to be one of the giants of
20th-century mathematics, said Dr.
George E. Andrews of Penn State
University.
Ramanujan, a poor Indian,
created his own math formulas. In
college, he was so single-minded
toward math that he failed other
subjects. He dropped out to take a
clerk's job.
·

added

e

broke diplomatic relations with him
last year.
Yasser Arafat, the chief of the
Palestine Liberation Organization,
arrived in Damascus several hours
after Khadaly to discuss Palestinian
defense• against Israeli attacks, the
Libyan aide said.
U.S. Ambassador Talcott W.
Seelye declined Syrian Presiqent
Halez Assad's invitation to a dinner
honoring Khadafy Munday night,
member of Seelye's staff reported.
"We don't need to go hear Assad
and Khadafy attacking the U.S.,''
the American said.
Seelye also was not among those
welcoming Khadafy at the airport.

An aide accompanying Khadaly
said he wants the swronit to take up
· 'AJnerican aggressive schemes in
addition to oil, the Middle East in
general and Lebanon."
The aide said the ruling sheiks of
the United Arab Emirates and
Kuwait agreed to Khadaly's summit
proposal during meetings he had
with them Sunday and Monday.
Syria, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia
have announced their support for the
Lebanese proposal. But Saudi
Arabia's ambassador to Syria did
not accompany other members c:t
the diplomatic curpo tu the airport
Monday for Khadafy's arrival
because the Saudi government

Begin

ministers of the two countries had
set Sept. ·23-24 as the starting date.

Prime Minister Menacbem Begin
announced today they will reswne
the deadlocked negotiations on
Palestinian autonomy on Sept. 23.
Tiley spoke at Sadat's summer
home in a news conference broadcast live by Israel Radio:
Sildat opened the news-conference
by saying he and Begin had reached
"agreement that we resume the
talks for the full autonomy issue ...
In the second baH of September."

Cattlt'
Sla ~hLer Skt:rs : Grade 56.25-fi$.20

Area deaths
Rev. Clifford Wilson

AlEXANDRIA, -E~ (AP) President Anwar Sadat and Israeli

Khadafy seeking spot on agenda

Satuntay. Au~ . Z2. 1981

A judgment suit lor money was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Charles E. Whitehouse,
Ravenswood, agairut Doug's Marine
Sales and Service, Pomeroy and
John Douglas, Guysville.
The plaintiff (Whilehouse) is
asking lor $10,000 in compensatory
damages, $40,tnl punitive damages
and attorney fees and cGsts.
In event plaintiff is not entitiled to
above the plaintiff asks for
rescission of the contract of sale and
restitution of $6,000, plUII interest.

.
•,

Release Meigs fair poll results

Market report
Suit fil .. d

''

Israeli officials said Begin woulil
also demand that Sadat, to resuffii
the normalization of relalio~
promised by the Camp David pea~
treaty, put into effect cultural and
commercial agreements already
signed.
Sadat halted tlie nonnalizatlon
process after the Israeli destruction
of the Iraqi nuclear reactor June 7 to
try to minimize the fallout on hbn of
Arab reaction. His anger was
heightened by the Israeli air raid oo
Beirut in July in which more than
300 Lebanese and Palestinians, most
of them non-combatants, were
reported killed.
" We have not been happy with
Israel's recent behavior," said one
Egyptian diplomat.
But David Kimche, directorgeneral of the Israeli Foreign
Ministry , !old reporters in
Jerusalem : "Normalization isn't a
subject that can be tumed off and on
at will because of some political action." Begin will tell Sadat to "stop
playing with the switch," Kimche
said.

building measures" by Israel, like
the removal of security roadblocks
in the Gaza Strip earlier this month.
The Egyptians believe more such
action might help convince
moderate Palestinians they have a
chance of getting genuine autonomy
from the negotiations.
Israel and Egypt agreed in two
years of talking, with the United
States as mediator, that a
Palestinian council would be elected
to head the govenunent in the West
Bank and Gaza. But they have been
unable tq agree on how much power
the council would have, whether the
Arabs of East Jerusalem coulll vote
in the election for the c&lt;iuncil, or a
formula for ultimate disposition of
sovereignty over the territories.
A leading West Bank Palestinian,
Mayor Hibni Hanoun of Tulkarm,
said in a radio interview Monday
that the 1.2 million Palestinians in
the occupied territorieswant total independence and are interested in
nothing less. Begin and many
Israelis are adamantly opposed to
that.

Sadat, ·Begin will resume talks Sept. 23

•

,'

'

.

t'Oid bet\lre!!n ·Union Avt., and

.

Mlliberi'Y He~. ~i!Ji!roY.

Gil)' HYAll, of the Meigs County
RE;ACl''. :ream prlllated • ~

millltlla•apeclal recop!Uon award
fO!' Ita ~nee to ihe tesni:''
''

' 'PREPARE FOR SOIOOL OPENING - 'Workers
.Ill the' Me,lp l.Oeal Schoo! Dllitrtct ~!'ll carrylq ~JUt a
umller'' of .pnljeeta In prepanitloa for tbe opelilDg of
JiCtiMot .W week. GOrdon ·WJaellrenaer, Bob Moore
•nd Jolin Atootf lire shown setting poles for a new

chaiD llllk fence at lbe Pomeroy El'emen~ ~~ool, A
wooden teoce wblch had rotten out was toni dowu.,T)M;.
new leoee. wfll fUD between tbe ilcbool and,,tile .. .
joiDIDI property ot Aaroa Zabl.

·

:·

', ·• . , . ~ .

•I

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