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                  <text>Florida man killed
•
ID Meigs plane crash

A~

WIN~

From AP lllllldaff repot11
Collier County, Fla., to help raise
A wealthy Naples, Fla., investor money for charity, accordln8 to the
was killed when the twiiHngine Fort Myers Ne-Preu.
Cessna aircraft be was piloting
"Stoney was the_ldnd of guy that
crashed and bumed near the Salem everybody knew," aald Sue Reuter,
Center area of Meigs Cowity Sunday a .F!oridf! Democratic Party comafternoon, tbe Ohio State Highway . nutteewoman, "and the kind of guy
Patrol said.
that it was good to know."
Donald L. Stoneburner, 55, who
In 19'19, Stoneburner purchased
was known for hill relationship with the five-acre Naples estate formerly
the Carter famUy while Jlrruny Car- owned by Stephen F. Briggs, coter was president, departed from an founder of the Briggs and Stratton
airport in Hickory, N.C., Sunday af- Corp., for $2.1 million.
ternoon, troopers said. ile was
Stoneburner reportedly made hill
reportedly en route to Colwnbus.
fortune as a Cadillac dealer In
The plane burst Into flames after Michigan before moving with hts
the crash Sunclay, near Ohio 124. He family to Naples, where he owned
was alone In the plane when the Stoney's Citrus Inn and Stoney's
crash occurred.
Citrus Groves in Naples.
Stoneburner, known as "Stoney"
The Federal Aviation AdIn hill plllitical and financial circles, n_Unistration is investigating the ~c­
was a Republican most of hill life, CJdent.
but switched to Democrat after CarMeanwhile, a Point Pleasant
ter became president In 197&amp;:
woman was killed wben the motorDuring the Carter presidency, cycle on which she was a passenger
StonebUrnei'"played host to Carter's was hit by a truck on Secondary 12
wife, mother and brother when they near the Mason County Fairgrounds
visited Naples. In 1977, he paid Billy at approximately g·p.m. Saturclay.
Carter $10,000 to make a visit to
Dead is Lorraine Mae (Red)

15ANE6KINOWHO

.AN AIR- CONDIIIONiiR

ON ""THE ~ICC IS ~1c5Hf.•-

Fielder, 25, Sixth St., Point
Pleasant.
Offlclala at CabeiiHuntlngton Hospital In Huntington,
where the victim was taken by a
Point Pleasant Emergency Medical
Service ambulance following initial
treatment at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, say she died at 3:55 a.m.
Sunclay in the · hospital's intensive
care unit.
'Ibe driver of the motorcycle,
Tracy Simpkins, 35, Point Pleasant,
is ll8ted in critical condition at
Cabeii·Huntlngton Hospital where
he is being treated for bead injuries.
He, too, was transported from PVH
to Cabeii·Huntington by the Point
Pleasant EMS.
According to the Mason County
Sheriff's Department, the accident
occurred when Simpkins, driving
west on Secondary 12, attempted to
made a right-hand turn and was
struck by a 1970 Ford pick-up truck
driven by Michael D. Price, 22, Point
Pleasant.
According to the sheriff's depart·
ment, Price was apparenUy unable
(Continued on page 10)

PLANE-Donald SlonebUrner, 55, prominent Naples,
Fla., millionaire, died Sunclay afternoon when his
plane crashed Into a beavlly wooded area off County
Road 1, near Salem Center In Meigs County. The plane
Is piCIUred as It burned on the hillside of the wooded
area. A wllness IIBid that the plane seemed to explode
before II went down and pat11 of the plane were scattered about the hlghslde and were caught In trees. At

•

•

a1 y

e
Voi.30.No.97
Copyri9hlecl1981

first, It was beUeved that the pilot bad balled out.
However, when the fire subsided It was discovered that
be had. gone down with the plane. ldentHicatlon was
made by Mr. Stoneburner's widow who was traveling
In another plane. In Columbus, her party reported her
husband's plane missing and Sunday night she
traveled from Columbus lo the Salem Center area 1o
make positive ldentHication.

enttne
1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 31, 1981

15 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Bomb kills Iranian leaders
Priscilla's Pop...---::::-:--:----...=

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - A
powerful expl05ion ripped through
the prime ministry in Tehran Sunclay, killing Iran's president and
prime minister, Tehran Radio announced Monclay.
Five other people were killed in
the explosion, and 13 others were
wounded, the official Iranian news
agency Pars reported.
Tehran Radio reported first that
President Mohanunad All Raja! and
the prime minister, Hojatoleslam
Mohammad Javad Bahonar, had
been taken to a hospital. Hours Ja~r

OLIWR.'
GIVE

OSU feels decisions beneficial

it~~dead. -·

The Times of London correspondent in Tehran, Tony Alloway, said
he was told "Mr. Rajai had lost hill
legs."
Pars said three of the bodies were
"burned beyond recoRnition" in the

Strike vote may come tonight
coli'uMBUS, Ohio - The cjty's teachers planned to meet tonight,
when their ~a~ w_!th the school system expired, to decide whether
to strike.
Negotiations were planned through the weekend, but unexpectedly
recessed Saturday afternoon.
John Grossman, president of the Colwnbus Education Association,
said late Saturclay that talks "have not been completely broken off."
But he said he didn't know when they would reswne.
ClaBses In the dl!trict are to begin Tuesday for high school students
and Wednesday for elementary and middle schools students.

';

OSP checks
four wrecks
A Northup !!feB woman was not
seriously Injured In a one-car accident in Gallla County late Satur·
clay night, according to the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the state highway
patrol.
Zorra K. Randolph, 24, Rt. I, Northup, was treated and released from
Holzer Medical Center with a
shoulder Injury.
The report said Randolph was
southbound on Rt. 160, two miles
south of U.S. 35, at 10:30 p.m. when
she welit off the road to avoid
collision with an oncoming car.
Randolph's vehicle was not
damaged In the accident, and she
drove herself to the hospital, the
report aald.
Two persons were cited In Saturclay accidents, the patrol aald.
Larry E. Stewart, 42, Rt. 1, Bidwell, was westbound on Rt. 160 at 2
p.m. when he turned left onto
Bulavllle Road and collided with a
vehicle driven by Shirley M. KcUy,
35, Point Pleaasnt.
Sl.l,ght damage was done to both
vehiCles and Stewart was cited for

Protesters outnumber marchers
COL_UMBUS. Ohio - Protesters outnwnbered participants when the
l"r81JklinCounty Moral Majority met over the weekend.
Ajlout l!O people showed up at the Columbus Baptist Temple to hear
the Rev. Rick Stone, chairman of the Franklin County group, talk
about what be called a moral decline In America.
Outside the temple, meanwhile, about 100 demonstrators carried
signa and chanted In opposition to the organization.
During hill address Saturclay, Stone said there have been et million
abortions sin~ 1m. "Only God knows how many Einsteins and
Beethovens were murdered because of abortion," he said.

Fair closes under major cloud
OOWMBUS, Ohio - The O~o State Fair drew to a close as officlala
continUed to Investigate the death of a 21-year-old Ohio nian killed
when thrOwri from a malfunctioning roller coaster.
~rs were not lmmedla~Jy able to say how the accident ooRonafd Edwards of_Dublin clied early Sunday from Injuries he
SU8talned the night before on the Flying Coaster, aald an lnv~tor
With the Ohio Department of "Agricuiture. The agency is responsible
for the safety of rides at the fair.
.
.
·

failure to yield.

:rwo cars, one driven by Sylvan J.

Qeland, 25, Lancaster, and the other
by ' Cora A. L\lf'tis, 36, Rt. f,
PomerOf, were both westbound on
'· '
'
.
·
'
·
·
Rt.-1241n Meigs County at 5:28 p.m.
TRJPOU, Ubya ..;.. Ubya expeCts an lnV¥ioil by llnel and~ ·
whei! 1Aiftll ~ and was struck
with U.S. help and WQIIld accept mUitaey 8ld trOin the Soviet Union
In the r.t !iY the Qeland v~cle.
Other ScPt-bl® natiOns ,to protect Itself, a 1811!1ln« Ubyan dtpJomat , .'. Modiltate ~ W8ll reported to
Ufdsuncia . ~·~· · ··''
,. •
·· ' ' ·. '\
bqtbYehlcleUJ'idCielandwasclted
·· Almld ~tl aliiO .aCCu.ed the United ~tes of ~Wr ~ ' ' ror.u.urede&amp;eu:~. '
ctng&lt;thllliGrtll Mic8ft natlan' cloeer to MG.biw. l.lbrll'• ~
A Jllinllr twodr Wl'edi on PeiTy
le,~cl;r, .Col. .Mo.m.nat ·~. has ~ an ' ~t!ld ~10
Twp. Rd. I. ~ of."*· ia, was also
biiUOil wort11 of So\lli!t amlllllilce ~ to pO.er J!t a roup In 1111, . : inveltlptec!fil: ~~tnll'Sa~y.
-bUt hU~ lie lrlirta to~ independestt of IIJIY ~ llllaD· "" , ••tio.H auto cdrmn by ,
cell itth the llllpel'jiOWi!i&amp;. '
·
'
Madl!n K. Killr, U, kt. I, Patriot, .
• n: 11 ··~ :&lt; ·1 1 • ' · • .
·
•
• "'"''lllt a, wt.ttb&lt;Juild· auto· driven by
H i;J: .• '
,' . ·
'.'~j: MeG~, II, lit 2, Patriot,

Lib
• ya expects major invasi9n

or

·

WeaiH.e r torecast
·

• , ,~

· .

·

'. .

~~n~cune.tt:illl.m.lnll.~.
~·dalnlleto~cara.

varitble cloudllielis,'~:lhd ~ thfG!iiJ! Tueaday With scat- . Probe thefts- .
· ·
.
tend llbowei'll ar ~ Loon ~ llllilld to IIIII*' • ·
·
1 '
Hlilll 'flllllll11n tile loW to lllld6. a.Dce Ill niD li
Melli eouftty llherifr dejlutlea are
~- J*t• ~. ~ "¥¥11 t.o,~ Doll qlb ,
btu Jlll•:f.ltle ¥ ,Of ~~~~
.....
•
'
, ~J -T'\'T"f
fr'llln I doler on. Owl
,
,~

,..eent-- ··

•

. ,
c

1

....,... ~ A t:epolt llled bJ' Bob '
·~ 'af Nurpl)y 011, Rilclne,
,... that · between ~turila)' l'fealill _... I a.m.
k,JcH
. _.. pried rlf two ~ ·at a well
•
Gil tile ~ about twOJilllel rlf .
' ,· ·~ 7. 'h!O bltterles were ·
...-ouftllu
the tools.
,.

Sw!daY',

.

explosion and fire that followed .
In a broadcast interview, Iran's
Perliamel)t speaker condemned the
explosion as a "last-{(ltch effort by
American hirelings," a term used by
the clergy-led regime to describe its
opponents . The speaker,
Hojatoleslam Ali Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani, also said the two leaders
were together in the room where the
explosion took place.
''Just as our evening session was
due to start ... we heard the sound of
an explosion, followed by a thick
column of smoke rising from the
prime ministet's -offlee ·building,"
the Parliament speaker said on the
broadcast monitored in Beirut and
London. "The session began, and it
was only later that we learned that
the explosion had occurred in a room
in which President Rajai and
Premier Dr. Bahonar were gathered

•

FIRST - Dave Dftes, ABC
spilrtl lelevlsion spot11 commentator In Detroit, formerly of
Mlddleport, Saturday afternoop
became the first honorary member Of tbe Muon, w. Va., Fire
Deparlnienl Presenting one~~
with n official fire deJ11U1ment 1shlrt piDI an official membership
c8rcl are, I lo r, Richard Seines,
secretary; Chuck Blake,
president and Fire Chief llGA
a-11. Tbe lloJior wu bestowed
ill appnclatlon to Diles for the
n&amp;ve Dnes Celebrity Golf
Toarnalimtl frem which
proceed~ are 'lllnled over to 1lle
erplllaillolll lleaelittlnc .the Big
· Jieild .area. 'I1Ie Ml!soli Fire '
-~· bu received t'IA
from the tauname11t , ever 1lle
put
~ At bottem, lJfto ·
dl BlUe, Hel'etar:r of,the Muon,
W. Va., Emertene:r" 'Sqaad,
Sa.J llfterMoo lll86e J)lve
QIIel, ABC lelevliiOa lpettl-eem·
laentater, l1i1 llone!v:r member
ot tile Muen Ull!tbl ~tlon

anmw

#ee

for moneY. neetved tnm 111e
lljud ,fnm 1lle aJ!!11181 ~
Cel~ Golf

Tollnwa- Mn.

Blake Ia prdelltlng Dllea "' ol·
ftelal membenblp- Cllrd In 1lle

with several others."
Executive AUairs Minister Beh·
zad Nabavi told Tehran RBdio some
of the "14 or 15" people walked out or
the room after the explosion. "But
the rest suffered severe injuries and
were taken to the hospital. Un·
rortunately, the president and the
prime minister were among the !at·
tergroup."
Pars said ambulances and a
helicopter were used to transport the
injured and dead.
The explosion at 3 p.m. - 7:30
a.m. EDT - in the stone-and-glass
building touched off a fire, but Pars
said the blaze was "fully under control" within 2t hours after the ex·
plosion.
Although no group claimed
responsibility for the blast, the ex·
plosion highlighted the urban
guerrilla campaign that secular Jer-

tist roes or the Islamic rundarnentalist regime have been
waging for the past two months.
Iran has been rocked by political
violence since the June ouster of
moderate President Abolhassan
Bani-Sadr.
On June 28, an explosion at the
ruling Islamic Revolutionary Party
headquarters in Tehran killed more
than 70 political leaders, including
Ayatollah Mohanunad Beheshti,
considered the second-most power·
rui figure in Iran after revolutionary
patriarch Ayatollah Ruhollah
Tehran Radio said the Iranian
Cabinet was called into an extraordinary session at sundown by
Rafsanjani to discuss "important
matters of state, including the ex·
plosion at the prime minister's office.''

-

'

First honorary member

�',\

'·'li

Monday, August 31, 1981

Commentar

Pag-2-The Daily Sentin.el
Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh1o
Monday, August31,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Patsy Cubs becoming tigers
By Associated Press

Garry Wills

The mythical windo
The "window of vulnerability" is

the "missile gap" of the '80s. Jolm F.
Kennedy campaigned in 1960 on the
assertion that President Eisenhower
had allowed the Russians to surpass
us in nuclear dellvery systems. Once
J\.eMedy was in office, his secretary
or defense, Robert McNamara, learned there was no such Russian
superiority - and, to the embarrassment of the White House,
openly admitted that fact.
Twenty · years later, Ronald
Reagan campaigned on the assertion that President Carter had
allowed the Russians a lead that
would give them a "window" of opportunity to knock out our landbased missiles, sometime in the
mid-19808, before we could close the
window with our Trident subs and
MX missiles.
The first question, of course, is
this: What good would it do Russia to
knock out our land missiles, so long
as the airborne and submarine
missiles were left to retaliate' The
answer to this involves the kinds of
hypotheses loved by war-garners.
Suppose I) that the Russians hit only
our military installations with the
first barrage of missiles, but 2)

threatened to hit our cities if we
should retaliate from airplanes to
submarines, thus 3) forcing us to
capitulate.
These hopotheses themselves rest
on a number of assumptions- that a
first strike could be powerful and al'curate enough to take out aU our
missiles, while leaving Russia an
equally powerful stock of secondstrike weapons. It assumes that the
heavy first strike, spreading
radiation from multiple points on
our continent, would be so accurate
as to concentrate its effects, clearly
marking it a "military" attack, not
an urban one.
It assumes that Americans, in the
first shock of mass destruction,
would be able to make the cool
distinction between kinds of nuclear
attack and to resist the emotional
urge to retaliate at whatever cost. It
assumes that the Russians could
make the distinction in terms clear
to American leaders in this time of
crisis, and that Americans would
believe the Russians - believe they
had the force for a second strike;
believe our subs and planes could
not cripple or counter that second

•

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomf'rCI)', Ohio
&amp;14-99'!-2151

DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

a~

cs:m~ ~~.-..,....~d·~==~
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

GeMral Maaager

Assistant Publisher/Controller

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.
Ne-ws Edllor
A ME MBER of The AssociaLed Press. Inland Dally Pre'!l8 Assodatlou aOO the
American Newspapn Publl!ihen As..~ioclallon .
LETTERS OF OPINION art' welcomed. Tbe)' should be Jess tbaa 300 words long. AU
letters are subject to editing and must be- s l~~:ned wltll t~ame, addresa altcf ttleplloDe aumullllign~

!etten will

~ publb;~ .

Utters ahould be In good taste. addrnslag

'

Setback for
crime fighters
The Justice Department and the FBI may have lost what they have considered a vital new tool in the fight against organized crime. This tactic is
the bugging of offices and the wiretapping of telephones belonging to
lawyers who represent crime figures.
Justice Department sources told us that such eavesdropping had
become necessary because mobsters, having realized that the government
was listening to their home and office conversations, were borrowing their
lawyers' offices to conduct business as usual.
Now a federal court has held the new tactic to be unconstitutional.
One of those bugged was John Cicilline, a Providence, R. 1., lawyer
whose clients include Raymond Patriarca, a reputed New England crime
boss. Cicillinc retained William Kunstler, the New York constitutional
lawyer, to sue the Justice Department on his behaU.
Kunstler argued that the bugging was "an outrageous violation of
lawyer·dient confidentiality'' He sought to have the buggng declared unconstitutional, to prevent future bugging, to require the department to turn
over to Cicilline any tapes made of conversations in his office and to quash
any indictments based on information acquired in the bugging.
The Justice Department tried to show that the bugging had been
properly sanctioned by Judge Raymond Pettine after he had reviewed a 64page application in which the department requested permission to plant the
bug. The department contended that Cicilline's office was being used to "fur·
ther an enterprise to conduct gambling, robbery, murder and theft from in·
terstate shipment and other criminal activity."
Edwin Gale, a lawyer with the Organized Crime Strike Force, argued
that the bugging was " not indiscriminate" and was limited to conversations
involving "six suspected criminals believed to be conunitting serious
felonies."

He said that the conversations were monitored only when one of the six
had been observed going into the office and that the recording was stopped
when any portion of the conversation appeared to be privileged. He also
alleged that a man who worked as a paralegal for Cicilline was actually a top
aide to Patriarca.
U.S. District Judge Martin Loughlin agreed at least in part with Kunstler. He ruled the bugging unconstitutional and ordered it stopped.
'.'It is universally accepted that effective representation caMot be had
unless a defendant has the right to confer with counsel in private," said
Loughlin. This right is violated, he said, if the lawyer's office is bugged.
A ruling on whether the tapes of the bugged conversations should be turned over to Cicilline was put off until the judge found time to listen to them.
Loughlin said that the request to quash indictments resulting from the bugs
was premature because no indictments had yet been issued.
Justice Department officials have declined to comment on Loughlin's
decision. Department sources say, however, that the breadth of the ruling
and the use of the tactic in other cases makes it likely that tbe decision will
be appealed.
Tbe ruling may also have an impact on the legal battle in Kansas City
over the release of transcripts of wiretapped conversations involving Teamster President Roy Williams, other Teamster off!~ and Nick Civella, the
reputed Kansas City crime boss.
Tbe transcripts were filed with the federal court and uilder court rules
should have becOme part of the publlc record. But their release Is being
fought by Wllllama' lawyers. At least some of the convel'!latlons ~
took place at the olfices of Quinn and Peebles, the law finn that l'epl rots
Civella. lt ia known that the Justice Department bugged those offices.
U. S. Di.strict Jqe Scott Wright in~ City ordered the transcripts
released but dela,..S ·the order to give Williams tbne to appeal, Lawyers for
wllllalns refuse to comment on their appeal, which will not be fUed for at
least 60 days. It Is liliely, however, that the Rhode Island decision will figure
in their arguments.
·

The window of vulnerability is a
myth,
then; just like the missile gap.
"capitulate" mean In the warEven
the
hard-line journal Strategic
garners' scenario? Give over our
Review
has
admitted as much. But,
nuclear subs and airplanes.
so
far,
Secretary
Weinberger Promiae never to use them? Abanunlike
Secretary
McNamara
- has
don allies? Most of these acts would
tried
to
maintain
the
fiction
as
a way
be considered unacceptable, if not
of
promoting
even
more
weaponry
irrelevant, even under the conat ever higher costs.
ditions presumed by the scenarists.

secure. What, for instance, does

missiles, now, to throw two or three

at one site. These are needed, according to tests under optimum conditions, to guarantee a close enough
hit. But these missiles, even if launched at the same time and flying
almost the same route, would undergo minute differences in
pressure and in adjustments to their
flight irregularities. Yet if they do
not land simultaneously, the explosion of the first one would ward
off or abort the second one's landing.

From AP Wires

'

Watt orders probe into the case
Of the StOlen Oi.
J_ac_k_A_nck_rs_o_n
WASHINGTON
Interior
Secretary James Watt has appointed a special conunission to investigate the theft of oil from wells
and storage facilities on Indian lands, as well as the general problem of
royalty collection on governmentowned oil wells.
It was a step in the right direction.
Internal Interior Department survey reports indicate that the theft
problem may be a lot more serious
than has been acknowledged offi cially.
Until recently, Interior officials
have been reluctant to admit there
even was much of a theft problem,
despite numerous General Accounting Office reports dating back
nearly 30 years, which indicated that
the collection process was slipshod.
And the amount of money involved
is substantial. Last year, total
royalties from oil and gas produced
on federal and Indian lands came to·
$2.7 billion. Oil prices have now been
decontrolled completely, and if
Secretary Watt's plans to open up
more federal land to drilling are approved, the royalties are expected to
nse to nearly $23 billion a year by
1990.

This makes it all the more important to strengthen the royalty
collection system and to prevent
theft; obviously, Uncle 'Sam gets no
royalties on stolen petroleum.
Records of the U. S. Geological
Survey contain evidence of 13 actual
or suspected thelts in the period between October 1900 and last April.
For example, 1,743 barrels of oil or
natural gas condensate were either

_____,_ _ _ _ _

stolen or lost in the Rock Springs,
Wyo., drilling district alone.
Other thefts - or unexplained
losses - were indicated at Bakersfield, Calif. (422 barrels) and Farmington, N. M. (66 barrels).
Leading the number of violations
during the October-April period
were the Casper and Newcastle
districts in Wyoming, with a combined total of 675 noncompliance instances out of 3,809 wells inspected.
Another USGS document shows
that between October 1980 and last
June 15, a total of 38,000 well inspections had been made. The
federal inspectors reported 4,453 instances of noncompliance with
government regulations.
The bulk of these compliance
failures involved trouble with seals
and valves. "We're looking for
broken seals," a veteran USGS official told my associate Tony Capaccia. He explained that broken or
missing seals, and valves that have
been tampered with, are persuasive
evidence that thefts may have occurred.
The Interior Department claims
that the theft problem wasn't
brought to its attention until the late
1970s. But internal memos from inspectors in the field warned of the
problem at least as far back as 1972
- and offered documented evidence
of theft.
One glaring weakness in the
royalty system has been pointed out
by investigators for Rep. Ben Rosenthai, [).N.Y.: Tbe Geological Survey
relies almost entirely on production
and sales data provided by the oil

and gas companies to compute
royalties that are owed to the
government. To check on these foxy
guardians of the taxpayers' oilproducing chicken coops, the USGS
audited only five percent of its

leases last year.
More and better audits would undoubtedly make it tougher on oil
thieves, the congressional investigators concluded.

-Berry's Worldl---..

season -

scored on Derrel Thamas' Infield
out. Dick Tidrow, earning his seventh save, took over in the eighth.
Dave Goltz, 2-2, took the loss.
Glanll5, Pirates 0

Right-hander Tom Griffin scattered six hits and Jack Clark belted
a pair of doubles as San Francisco
downed Pittsburgh for a sweep of
their four-game series.
Tbe sweep was the first this year
for the Giants, who finished 10
games behind in the West In the First Season, and the Pirates reeled to
their seventh consecutive loss. Tbe
victory moved the Giants into a firstplace tie in the West with a lU
record.
Griffin, 7-6, worked out of trouble
in the early Innings whlle posting his
thitd victory in four second-half
decisions. He struck out seven and
walked four.
Braves 5, Expos C
A throoring error by second
baseman Rodney Scott with two outs
in the 12th inning allowed Eddie
Miller to race home with the wiMing
nm as Atlanta edged Montreal and
snapped a five-~ame wiMing streak

bomb?"
The question doesn't deserve a

response, but I'll give one anyway.
We need one if we hope to fight an integrated war on foreign soil.
Tbe U. S. military's new strategy
is to prepare itaelf for conventional
nuclear and chemical war battles.
Because the Soviets outnumber the
NATO forces, the neutron bomb will
give us the parity we need to deter
the Russians from attacking the
West.
You would think the Europeans
would be overjoyed that we were
going ahead with an enhanced bomb
which might kill them but preserve
all their beautiful palaces and churches.
Tbe reaction has been just the opposite. Instead of saying "Thank
you, Uncle Sam," they have in-

For Seattle Manager Rene
Lachemann, although his team
scored 11 runs and collected 20 hits,
it was possibly the worst day of his
baseball career.
"I believe it's the biggest embarassment I've had as a manager
and maybe as a player," he said. "I
take the blame. I made the changes
and they didn't work out."
What made LachemaM want to
put a sack over his head were the 13
runs the Cleveland Indians scored in
their last two at-bats, including 10 in
the eighth irining, as they outlasted
Seattle 17-11 Sunday. To add salt to
the wound, the Mariners were trying
to break a nine-game losing_ streak.
LachemaM, who has seen his
Mariners fall to a 7-13 record after
being in first place with a 7-3 mark
earlier in the second season, had a
!~minute meeting with his players
after the game.
In other American League games,
Oakland defeated Boston 5-3,
California whipped Baltimore 7·1,
New York tripped Chicago f&gt;.l ,
Detroit beat MiMesota 6-J and

Milwaukee stopped Texas 6-2. Kansas·at Toronto was rained out.
Rookie catcher Chris Sando,
younger brother of veteran Sal Bando, knocked in four runs, including
the g&lt;rahead run in the eighth, to
lead a 16-hit Cleveland attack against the Mariners.
The Indians scored three runs in
the seventh, but the Mariners made
it 11-7 in the eighth before things
went haywire for them in the bottom
of the inning.
Consecutive pinch-doubles by
Duane Kuiper and Pat Kelly
sparked the winning rally for the Indians, chasing reliever Dick Drago,
the second of five Seattle pitchers.
After Miguel Dilone singled in
Kelly to make the score 11-9,
Cleveland loaded the bases and Bo
Diaz - out since Aug. 11 with an injury - stroked a tw&lt;&gt;-run pinchsingle off loser Shane Rawley, 2-5, to
tie the game 11-11.
Baudo's bases-loaded grounder,
following an intentional walk to
Toby Harrah, put Cleveland ahead.
Kuiper's second double of the inning
brought in two more runs and an

error by first bsseman Bruce Boehle
on a grounder by Kelly tallied two
more. Kelly moved to third on a
Dilone single and scored on Jorge
Orta's grounder.
Bando had a sacrifice fly in the
second inning and RBI singles in the
fourth and seventh before his g&lt;r
ahead groundout in the eighth.
Joe Simpson collected four hits, including a tw&lt;rrun homer, and drove
in four runs to pace Seattle's attack,
but it was not enough to counter the
Cleveland onslaught.
Jack Morris, 10-4, beld MiMesota
to three hits for his first victory in
four starts during the . Second
Season, and Detroit moved back into
first place in the AL East whlle snapping a four-game losing streak.
Kirk Gibson and Lou Whitaker had
three hits apiece for the Tigers, who
lead Baltimore and Milwaukee by
one-half game.
In other games, the Brewers
defeated Tell8s, 6-2; New York dwnped Chicago, f&gt;.l; Oakland dropped
Boston, &gt;a and California stopped
the Orioles, 7-1.

NEW YORK (AP) - Cincinnati
Reds Manager John McNamara
used two experiments in beating the
New York Mets - but only the
second one worked.
His first experiment Sunday in the
Reds' 6-3 victo~ was to pull Paul
•~
Moskau, 2-1 and two saves, out of the
bullpen and use him as a starter,
despite the fact that Moskau had not
started a game all season. But after
the tall right-hander was knocked
around for four innings and touched
for two runs, McNamara conceded
thatitdidn'tworkandrelievedhim
with Mike LaCoss, who has not
relieved a pme this season and only
nine tirpes in hi:! career.
"Mike did what he 11811 to do," said
the Reds' ski·pper...He did a very
good job

"I csn 't come out and play now. I've got to work

BASEBALL

I don't want anyone to get the idea
that the neutron bomb Is our
ultimate weapon and that we can
relax after we get enough stockpiled. The bomb, for all its publicity,
is just a nice little o~on a field commander has at his disj)osal when the
going geta tougl!. It's not the end-aU
for killing large segments of uK.
population, tiut if we can save pieces
of valuable real estate ,frcim being
destroyed it will pay for itself in no
time at all.

ofth&lt;!nlemiUonilLeaaoe.
SEA'!TLE MARINERS-R.caUed Bob Stoddanl and Bud Bleck1 Dll&lt;ben; Don Fln&gt;va, cat·
cher; Jim Maier aoo Paul Serna, Jnlle!tlers· and
Oave Henderson and Kim Allen, outfielden~;

from ~ of ' tho Padllc Coasl Iague.
AsiiJsne&lt;l~re
,Blercovtcz and Rick Anderson,
pite~,to

pe.
OAK
A'S...Reaolled Do.. Beanl, pit·
cher, from Tacom1 of the Pacific Coast Leaglle.

Assigned Dave Heaverlo, pitcher, to Tacoma.

Na-!.eape

HOUS!'ON
AS!'ROS-Reactlvated JaRodney Richa~ildle&lt;, and Mike !vie, lint

~ki"aEii!i" lioooERS-RecaUed a.n

ootfleitltr effective Aug.lll. Un-

conditio'nally
Infielder. '

refeaaed

Pepe

Frlaa,

.
'

·COlLEGE
NORTHWEST M!l!SOUR! STATE-Leooanl
OrT.~!'.!.bukotbaii&lt;OOo:h, ....il(ll&lt;d.
FMntu.m COlLEGE-Him! Leonanl Orr,
held buketbaU cooch.

Rogers posts victory

.
AKRON, Ohio
'• ,

(Ali')· Bill Rogers
dropped In a 12-foot birdl!! J!jltll!ll
the fi!W hole ~break a .tie with TD\)1 ,
Kite and score a tliiHtroke victory
, in the ·rich and presttglous World
ISeriesofGolf.1 · '·
. Rogers finished off with·a 3-uildei'- ;

·par fi and a '12-!tol.e total oJ 275, five
llholl under par on the Fifestone

CountrY Club.
·
prOvided Roge~ ' with the

· It

East
16 6 .007
11 7 .611 1
ll 9 .!100 2
ll il .~ 2

6 13 .333 61&gt;
6 IS .Z&amp;4 7 "'.~:

w....

U

I .600

Cincinnatr-

San Dlet~o
x- First half division wtMer

12 8 .600
9 10 .474
e·-n .190

2~
s~

Milwaukee

-on

10 9
10 10 .500 2
10 11 .476 2lrz

it·Nt!w York

Cleveland

8104443

Toronto

10 9 .526
10 10 _:;(1()

Cindnnati S, New Vorl&lt; 3
Chicago 2, LosAngeletl
s.nDiego9,SI.
Louis&amp;
SanFrancbco5,PIU..burgh0

HOWitoo 5, Philadelphla t, tO Innings

Moudoy
PfU!adelphiB ICilrilltenson ,.., at AUanta
Cincinnati ISoto ._ 71 ·

New York (Zachry 6-9 ) lit Houston (Sutton 6-

J;;'!~~~Martz 4&lt;11 al San Diego IMura HOI,

iO,Q6p.m.

PittsburMhiRhoden 7•2 latLosAngeles(Rell&amp;S
1-3), 10:3Sp.m .

Sept . 15, Trimble, Away
Sept 17, Warren, Away
Se pt . 21, Waverly - wi th We llston
and Athens , at Waverly
Sept. 22 , A lexander, Away
Sept _24. Belpre, Home
Sep t .
28,
Loga n ,
Waverly,
Jackson, Home

Oct. 1, Warren, Away
Oc t 5, Logan - with Wellston and
1ron ton, at Logan
Oc1. 7, Gal l ipo lis, Away
Oct . 9· 10, Boys' Sect ional Go lf
Oc t. 16· 17, Boy s' Dist rict Golf
Oct. 23 14, Boys' Sta te Golf

9 12

MinnesoLB

. ~29

2

7 13 .350 3l.:z
sunday
KansasCilyatToronto,ppd.,rain
Oakland 5, Boston 3
Calilomia 1, &amp;llimore 1
Cleveland 17, Seattle II
New York 5, Chicago I
o.troitG.Minnesolal
Miiwaukee6, TexaMs2onday
s.atUeiCiay.,.latBallimoreCFianaga,a.&gt;•.
7'1Jl.fi ';;';,ia IFrosll· i at Booton !Eckersley ..
2
1
"·NO p.m
d
Oakland ILanglord 7 ~ 1 at Clevelan
18~1~~~~;'i;:/ ~:x":S:";t Chicago IBawngarten
1

/Righetti J--2)

Publi~ lwd every afternoon , Monday throu~h
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~1meruy. Ohi o 4)769, 992-21J6 St&gt;cond e tas.-.

at

pmd 01 \ Pomeroy, OhiU.

Ml'lllhN · Th t' As!'iOCiated Press. lnlantl Da1·
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Newspa~r Publi shers 1\ssocwllOtl, Nalmnal

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Seattle

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Detroit
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Sept . 14, Jackson -

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Sept. 8, Trimble , Home

Sept. 9. Gallipoli s, Home

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A Ut\·Jsioll of Mul11mrdta, Inc .

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W. L. PctGB

GOLF SCHEDULE
Sept . 3. Alexa nder, Home

The IJJih Scnlincl

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
NaUoaal Leape
Easl

presses thanks to all who have con·
tributed to their season.

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AN EVENING WI111
''THE KINGSMEN"
Also Appearing "LIGHT"

A-~

MINNESOTA
TWINS- Traded
Jerry
Koosman, pltc~ to the Chicago White Sok for
Ivan Mesa and Kon Perry, Infielders; an undisclosed amount of cull; and a player to be
named Ieier. Aaaillned Meaa aiMI Perry lo Toledo

Roenlcke

Meigs High School goUers, Mike
Kennedy , Bryan Will, Scott
Harrison, J. R. Wamsley, and Fred
Young, are looking forward to the
upcoming goU season which begins
September 3 against Alexander. The
team opens the SEOAL season at
home on September 9 with
Gallipolis. Tee off time is 4 p.m.
Mick Childs will coach this year's
club, his first year as goU instructor.
The Meigs swingers have been
working out daily in preparation for
the season at Jaymar Golf Club in
Pomeroy.
Bryan Will has been named the
captain for this year's club.
Coach Childs and the team ex·

••••• •• •••

Pittsburgh

Transactions
.

their own.
By this time we should have our
own laser death beam weapon in
production, which will deter the
Soviets from starting anything with
their enhanced weapons.
In an arnns war the trick is always
to stay one step allead of the other
guy.

Meigs golf team
to open season

•••
•• •• •••••••

Montreal
aucag(l
New York
X· Philadelphia

In the Meti' half of the fifth inning,
Lee Mazzilli led off with a triple off
Moskau, followed by Frank
Taveras' run-scoring bunt single.
Enter LaCoss. Hubie Brooks, the first batter he faced, siJ18led to center
but he then got Dave Kingman on a
forceout and got Ellis Vallentine to
hit into a 6-4-J double play.
"If I'm going to stay here (in the
bullpen)," said LaCoss. "It's
.
T
something I'll haveto adJust to. O
be a reliever, you have to know what
your job is. W\Jen ~ went out today
my job was to get the double play
and end the inning. That's just what
I did.''
LaCoss feels that he hasn't pitched
that badly this season despite what
his record shows.

1981 MEIGS GOLF TEAM - Memben of the 1981 Meigo golf team of
Coach Mlck Chllds are anxioUBly awaiting the start ol the 1981 campaign.
Memben of the team, l·r, pictured with Its new equipment are Mike Kennedy, Bryan Will, captain; Scon Harrison, J. R. Wamsley, and Fred
Young.

~nd may have worked his .~d:ec:is:io:ns::_·"----------------:-------T_:On:iy~s~•m=es="'=hed=wed========'':"':P=·m::.==========~========~-­

•or a couple of hours. "

formed us to stuff our neutron bombs in the ground.
I say if that's the way they feel
about it we should keep our bombs in
Utah and see what kind of conventional nuclear war they can fight
without them. If they want to use the
second-rate low-yield atomic
weapons they now 'have at their
disposal, good luck to them. But
when they start crying for the highyield mini-nukes that can really do a
man's job, we'll remind them of the
fuss they made when we offered to
place the neutron weapon on their
soil.
Tbe point that opponents keep
missing Is that we are not building
the bomb to start a war, but to stop
one. If.tile Soviets know we have a
neutron bomb ,ready, they're not
going to attack the West, qnleas, of
course, they have a neutron bmlb of

way back into the rotation."
LaCoss won his fourth game of the
season, pitching the last five innings
and yielding just five hits and one
run.
LaCoss had been the fifth starter,
but with a 3-7 record and a bloated
6.90 earned nm average, McNamara
decided to move the " struggling"
pitcher to the bullpen.
.
"Rig·ht now Moskau is my fifth
starter but he had that shoulder
surgery and I don't know if he can go
very long.
"Mike hasn't pitched ve~ effectively so I switched to M~kau.
But there's a lot going on and we'll
see what happens."
LaCoss prefers the start but said
he has "no control over those

lor the Expos.
The Braves had taken a 4-3 lead in
the top of the ninth on Claudell
Washington's run-scoring single, but
the Expoe pulled into a 4-4 tie in the
bottom of the inning on an RBI baae
hit by John MUner.
Gene Garber, 3-3, the third Atlanta
pitcher, was the winner while Bill
Lee, 2-3, took the loss.
The Braves, four games below .500
and 9'k games off the pace before
the strike, pulled into a tie for first in
the West with their victory.
Astrue 5, Phlllles 4
Jose Cruz's RBI single in the lOth
inning lifted Houston over
Philadelphia . Craig Reynolds
opened the lOth with a single off
loser Sparky Lyle, 6-4, and Denny
Walling sacrificed him to second
before Cruz canle through with his
hit IQ8de a wilmer of rellever Dave
Smith, :l-3.
Pete Rose's third hit of the game,
an RBI double, tied the score at 4-4
in the ninth.
The victory capped a four-game
sweep by Houston, the first time the
Astros have beaten the Phillies four
straight times since 1972.
The ·Astros, eight games behind
the West leader at the time of the
strike, also moved into a first-place
tie.
Padres 9, Cardloals 6
Juan Bonilla and Luis Salazar
scored three runs each and Ruppert
Jones had three hits as San Diego
snapped a seven-game losing streak.
Padre reliever Gary Lucas, 4-7, pitched the final 21-3 iMings to get the
victory.
"Today was not an instructional
film on how to play baseball," said
St. Louis Manager Whitey Herzog.
The Cardinals had three runners
thrown out at the plate and committed three errors, a wild pitch and
a passed ball.
"We played worse than they did.
We did about everything today that
you could do wrong," added Herzog.

St. Louis

LaCas.
s .leads Reds past Mets
.

You 'lllove this bomb,az_____Art_B_uc_hwa_ld
Despite constant assurances of
people very high in the government,
there are still some skeptics in this
country and Western Europe who
are not sold on the argument we
need to build a neutron bomb. Tbe
fact of the matter is that the United
States not only needs it- but it's inconceivable that we could have ever
llved without it.
The neutron bomb is the greatest
thing to come along since white
bread. When set off it produces high
levels of radiation, cooking people,
but leaving structures and buildings
standing. Unllke present atomic
weapons where blast and heat do
most of the damage the neutron
bomb actually penetrates its target,
frying anyone inside.
Tbe same people who are always
standing In the way of progress are
asking "Why do we need a neutron

the baseball strike.
Suddenly the Cubs are acting like
tigers.
. "We just could't get a break,"
says rookie catcher Jody Davis.
"Now we're getting a few."
They're also making their own
4'breaks - as Davis did Sunday whlle
collecting three singles and
knocking In two runs as the suddenly
revitalized Cubs beat the Los
Angeles Dodgers 2-1.
"It seems like the first half was a
hundred years ago," said Chicago
Manager Joe AmaUitano.
Before the strike, the Cubs had
won only 15 of 52 games, the least
amount of victories in major league
baseball, and finished last in the
National League East, 17'k games
behind. Starting over with the split
season, they're now only two games
out of first place in the National
League East with an 11-9 record,
tied for third with the New York
Mets.
Meanwhlle, the San Francisco

Giimta, Atlanta Braves and HOW!ton
Astros - three other teams benefitting from the spilt
all continued to play well, too. The Giants
beat Pittsburgh 5-0, the araves
edged Montreal 5-4 In 12 innings and
the Asttos stopped Philadelphia 5-4
in 10. In the other NL games, San
Diego whipped st. Louis ~ and Cincinnati defeated "'ew York 6-3.
Tbe Cubs earned a spllt in their
four-game series with the Dodgers
despite relatively low run totals in
the last two games. On Saturday
night, they beat the first-half NL
West champs ~1.
" Who would've thought a club
would've scored five runs in two
games and win both games?" asked
Dodger outfielder Dusty Baker.
Tbe Cubs took a I~ lead in the
fourth when BtU Buckner walked
and Leon Durham singled. After
Bobby Bonds hit into a double play,
Davis singled home Buckner. In the
sixth, Durham doubled and Davis
knocked him in with a single.
Winner DOug Bird, 3-1, lost his
shutout when Ron Cey led off the
Dodger seventh with a triple and

Cleveland rally defeats Mariners

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD

issiiH, not pen~ooalllleli.

Multiply these problems a thousand
times, ·and the certitude of
destroying our missile sites - and
nothing else - disappears .
If that first certitude is
unestabllsbed, nothing else matters
in the chain of hypotheses ; whlle, on
the contrary, even if this assumption
were granted, none of the others is

.L)_

Publisher

btor. Nu

strike; belleve the Russians would
refrain from the strike if we
capitulated.
Every one of these assumptions is
faulty , yet every one of them must
be maintained if a first-strike
scenario is to make sense. Begin
with the first assumption, the certainty that a first strike could take
out our land-based missiles. A number of analysts have recently
challenged the idea that missile al'curacy, untested in war conditions,
can be presumed great enough to
knock out, in one attack, over a
thousand of our hardened silos.
Missiles crossing the North Pol\\
would be subject to gravitational,
wind and atmospheric conditions
quite different from those undergone
in test flights over Siberia or over
the Pacific.
Besides. even those who believe in
the "window" theory say that it is
opening because Russia has enough

The Chicago Cubs were the tamest
team in the National League before

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gaye,llbP. h!a,I!Urd ~Ill t11e
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FRIDAY, ·sEPT. 4, 1981

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�.Mond1y, August 31, 1981

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Meigs Order of DeMolay meets

THE KINGSMEN, a popular gospel group from
Ashville, N. C., wtU he singing at Meigs High School,
Rock Springs, on Friday, Sept. 4 at 7:30p.m. The event

visit the Bethel this year since youth
is her project In Eastern Star.
Zandra Vaughan reported on the
Schoql of Instruction held at Marietta. It was voted to sen two-year
calettdars for $2 each and to buy
headbands for the Bethel from the
money received for serving the MiddlepQrt Alumni Association banquet.
Meetings were changed from 7:30
to7p.m.
The Job-a-Rama held this
weekend at Akron was announced
and members earlier worked at the

Miller visits

Notes,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Jeff Miller, stationed with the U.
. S. Air F'orce in·England for the past
two years, and his wife, Linda, spent
the past month here visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mick Miller
and other relatives.
From here they went to New
Mexico where Miller is stationed at
the Holloman Air Force Base. Linda, from England, and Jeff were
married in March and it was her first visit here with his relatives.
Miller graduated from Meigs High
School before joining the Air Force
five years ago.

is being sponsored by First Baptist Church of Pomeroy
and Community Church of God in Rodney.

Weaver

Cleland reunion___________

reun1on

The annual Cleland reunion was
held at Forest Acres Park, Rutland ,
Sunday, Aug. 16, with a potluck dinner served at 12 noon.
Attendmg were Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Ba rton and Amy. Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Bohner, Matthew,
Michael and Amy Bohner, Columbus: Mr. and Mrs. F'loyd Cleland.
Dexter : Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Clela nd, daughters Lorie, Annie and
Lalana, Rutland: Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Cleland , Columbus: Mr. and
Mrs. Sylvan Cleland , Middleport :
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleland,
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Cotterill,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Merle
Davis, Rutland: Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dawson, Cortland : Mr. and
Mrs. Dav id Gardner, and Scot Gardner, Rutland : Mr. and Mrs. Marvin

The 23rd annual Weaver reunion

was held Sunday at the Union Campgrounds ncar New Ha ven.
A basket dinner was held at I p.m.
with Marcus Weaver giving the
opening prayer. The group sang
"Happy Birthday" to Suzie Wolle.
Marcus Weaver, vice president, conducted a short business meeting in
which it was decided the 1982
reunion will be held at the same
place on the fourth Sunday in
August. The same officers were
retained and they are Lawrence
Weaver, Columbus, president ; Marcus Weaver. Letart, W. Va .. vice
president; Maxine Rose, Racine .
secreta ry-treasurer.
··
The gift for traveling the farthest
went to Herbert and Ruth Weaver,
Leesburg, Fla . Mrs. Daisy Weaver
,
•' was given the gtft for the el~t person, and Nathan Halfhill, the !!month-old son of Sandra Brown and
· Lawrence Halfhill of Rutland, was
gtven the gift for being the youngest
attending the reunion.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
George Huffman, Benny, Jane, Jenmfer and Joe, Mr. and Mrs. Alton
Roush,Mr . and Mrs. Aaron Weaver,
Brandon and Jill, Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Weaver, all of Letart. W. Va .:
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Cox. Mrs.
Mary Brown, Pont Pleasa nt, W.
Va.; Mr and Mrs. Lawrence
Halfhill and Nathan, Rutland; Mrs.
Lo&lt;s Stover and Angie, Michigan
City , Ind.: Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Weaver, Leesburg, F'la.: Mrs. Daisy
Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Weaver,
Torruny Weaver, Clifford E. Smith,
Mrs . Suzie Wolfe, New Haven, W.
Va : Mr s. Emma Ledlie,
Langsville : Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Dowell. Lee and Shannon , Leon. W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Dick Ritter. Julie
and Jodi, Cheshire: Mr. and Mrs.
Owen Weaver, Nashville. Tenn .:
Mrs. Maxine Rose, Brent and J effcry. Racine.

Gardner, Ewington ; :llr. and Mrs.
Clyde Hampton and Merlin Hampton, Langsville: Mr. and Mrs.
William Meek and Heather Meek,
Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
O'Day. Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs.

Ronald Watkins, Nitro, W. Va.: Mr.
and Mrs. hershel Wheeler, Guysville: Mr. and Mrs. Haflan Wheeler,
Dexter, and Mr. and Mrs. Darrel
Wheeler and Chad Wheeler, Guysville.
The door prize of a daisy afghan
was won by Darrell Wheeler. Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Dawson took the
award for having traveled the farthest (Cortland, Ohio) to attend the
reunion. Little Miss Carrie Redinan
was the youngest present.
The Cleland reunion for 1982 will
be held on Sunday, Aug. 15. All
descendants of the Cleland family
are invited to attend the reunion in
1982. Bring your picnic lunch and
meet old friends and new relatives.
For further inforrilation contact any
of the persons listed above. .

Louis Parsons, Dunbar, W.Va .; Mr.

and Mrs. Joseph Rife, Wellston ; Mr.
and Mrs . Delbert Redman, Minersville; Mr. and Mrs. Hurley Rife,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Redman and Mark Redm an,
Charleston: Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Hedman , Wmfield, W. Va : Mrs.
Helen Riggs, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Stansbury and Robert Stansbury, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Schuller, Jr.; Joe Bob Schuller and
Bobby Joe Schuller, Cheshire : Mrs.
Golden Stansbury, Pomeroy; Ms.
Na ncy Vannattic, Mr. and Mrs.

..

Monitor
1n use
The Tuppers Plains Emergency
Squad , through the help of approximately $4,000 in donations, has
purchased a Lifepak Heart Monitor.
The device measures the rate and
function of the heart and is
especially helpful to squad members
in aiding victims of heart attack or
accidents which could damage the
heart, and people with chronic heart
disease or suspected hea rt
problelll5.
Pictured with the device are
Carolyn Tripp, president of the
· squad, kneelil'g to view the screen :
Helen Newland. seated. hooked up to
the monitor: and Helen Dorst, stan. ding, checking the connection wires.

TOPS 1456 meets
Kathy Stewart was honored as the
weekly best loser at this week 's
meeting of TOPS OR 1456 Club,
Rutland, and was presented a ribbon
· and a cash prize.
Runner-up for the honor was Nancy Vance. The 13 members attending showed a weight loss of eight
ponds for the week . The contest,
how does your garden grow, was
: won by Cindy Hartenbach. ln. ·- fonnation on the club may be ob. tained by telephonlng 742-2171.

. . Knights return
: Mr. and Mrs. Chesler Knight have
· returned from Antioch, Ill., where
they visited Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Knight and Stepbaoie.
Enroute tbere they stopped in.
Marion for Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Knight and son, Steve, who accompanied them to Antioch for a
family gathering.

Glaze shower
A bridal tea. and personal shower
was held Sunday at the home of.Mrs.
Sharon Stewart, Rustic · lUlls,
honoring Cindy Glaze, bride-elect of
DonMachir.
Games ere played and prizes went
to Mrs. Ginger Pratt and Mrs. Jenny
Machir. Refreshments of orange
spice tea, punch, petit-fours, mints
and nuts were served to Mrs. Donna
Glaze, mother of the bride-elect,
Mrs. Leona Machir, mother of the
prospective bridegroom, Mrs. Debbie Glaze, Mrs. Julia Hysell, Mrs.
Charlene Fry, Ms. Diana Carsey,
and those who won the games.
Each guest was given a decorated
jar containing orange spice tea as a
favor .

Birth announcement
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Cross of
Chillicothe, formerly of Letart Falls,
announce the birth of a son, Nicholas
Henderson, born July 27 at
Chillicothe Hospital. The baby
weighed eight and one-hall pounds
and was 22 inches long.
Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Cross of Racine ,
Route 2. Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mcintyre of
Northfield , Ohio, and greatgrandinother is Mrs. Russell.

Birthday
Jamie Broderick, son of Mr. and
Mrs. James Broderick, Route 2,
Pomeroy, recently celebrated his
fourth birthday with two gatherings.
The first was a dillller and birthday cake, served at the home of his
grandmother, Mrs . Erma
Broderick. He was also honored with
a party, having a Bugs Bunny
theme, given by his parents.
Present for the observance were
Emma Broderick, Christina
Grueser, F'ern Morris and Matt
Mary Showalter, Mr. and Mrs:
David Robinette and Nathan, Mr.
and Mrs. Martin Broderick, Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Smith, Sherri and
Michael, Belinda Connolly, Carrie
and Lee.
Sending cards and gills were
Mazie Hannahs, Mrs. Clayton Roush
(great-grandmother), Mary Ann,
Susan and Sarah Beth Grueser, Mr.
and Mrs. F'rank Broderick and Vincent, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Faber and family.

WINS COMPETITION - These three Racine girls,
who are part of the Stylettes Dance Twirl team, recently competed in the Belpre Homecoming competition.
Pictured, left to right, are Kenda Rizer, Kelly Rizer,
and J ennifer Damron. These girls, as members of the

By MRS. FRA NC IS MORRIS
cer, W. Va.
Recent visitors of Bernard and
Mrs. Ura Morris returned home
Opal Diddle were Charles and Irene after a visit in Fayetteville, Ark.
Hayman, Westerville: Kerrnit and with her son-in-law and daughter,
Jean F'isher. Gallipolis; Bill Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Schroeder and
Gallipolis; Bob Miller, New Mexico; Mae F'ern who brought her back due
Lewis and Ruby Miller, Tuppers to the Air Controllers Strike.
Plains: George, Becky, Cynthia and
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart and
Heid, Grove City; Jerry and Marilyn Legina Hart visited Mr. and Mrs.
Powell, Scot and Heather Hill, Oval John Fisher and family at UnionDiddle. local.
town. Twenty-two family members
Steven and Holly Diddle spent two were present for a get-together
weeks visiting their grandparents, while there.
Bernar~ and Opal Diddle.
Mr. David Roush, Lorelei and
Spending the weekend with Mr. Benjarnin of Columbus visited his
and Mrs. Bernard Diddle were their father, Dale Roush, and Mr. and
sons and fami ly, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Linley Hart.
Thomas Diddle, Steven and Holly,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pyles, Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Diddle, Bobby and and Mrs. Liniey Hart, Racine and
Mandy, George and Becky Diddle, Mr. and M.S. Ronald Hart of Little
Cynthia and Reid Nichols, Grove Hocking attended the Hart reunion
City.
at the park at Racine Dam.
Mr. and Mrs. Shaver, Arizona,
Mrs. Mabel Brace visited Mr. and
spent the weekend with Mr .and Mrs. James Snodgrass and family at
Mrs. Bernard Diddle and also Rutland Sunday afternoon.
visited Oval Diddle, Antiquity.
Mrs. Pauline McClintock and her
Mr. Kenneth Turley returned
Mrs. Frank Arnott of Urhome Saturday from Holzer Medical mother,
bana visited Mrs. Mabel Brace
Center where he underwent bone recently.
graft on an injured hand.
A cookout was enjoyed Saturday
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford, Jr. of evening at the home of Mr. amj Mrs.
Worthington spent a recent Ftiday Kenneth Turley and sons. Guests
with Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford, were Mrs . Gladys Turley,
Sr., who have received word that · Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball
Critt, Jr. has re-entered the hospital andfamil) of St. Albans, W. Va., Mr.
for more treatment.
and Mrs. Eddie Turley and family,
. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Howell of Letart Falls.
F1ushing spent several days with his
Sunday guests of Mr. and. Mrs.
sisters, Mrs. Grella Simpson and Roy Riffle were Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Mrs. Mae Cleland. Mr. and Mrs. McKenzie and son, Jeff of Gallipolis,
RoweD lllll Grella spent a day with Mr. and Mrs. Mack Howard and
Mr. and !lt'rs. Solon Butcher at Spen- Helen Riffle of Hartford.
.,
f

Social
calendar
TIJESDAY
MARY LOU Pritchard of
Family Planning will be the
speaker at the Tuesday noon
meeting of the Meigs CoWlty
Hwnan Resource Councll at the
Meigs Inn. The public is invited.
MEIGS· COUNTY SCHOOL
BUS DRIVERS wtU bold a safety
meeting Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at
the Meigs Inn. Richard Green,
Supervisor of Pupil Transportation for the Ohio Department Of Education will speak.
SUTTON
TOWNSHIP
TRUS'IEES will meet Tuesday at
8 p.m. at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.

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--·

Family meets
The children of Lawton and Bettie
Ann Templeton gathered at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Templeton, Bailey Run Road, Sunday,
August23.
Attending were Lawton Templeton, Jr., of Leading Creek; Mrs.
Ben (Daisy) Batey, Jackson ; Mr.
and Mrs. John (Oma Wolfe),
Paleymara, Pa., and Mr. and Mrs.
Vic (Leila) Marchianna, New
Ca;·lisle. Other relatives unable to
attend were Sarah Conway of
Colwnbus, and Ben Batey, Jackson.
Also present were Brenda Ttm:lpleton, Bettie Ann Barnett, and ~
Isaac, all of Pomeroy.
·
Plans were made to hold the
family gathering next year at the
same place, then travel to the Templeton homeplace in Kentucky.

Guests
Mr. and Mrs. James Lewis, the
fonner Ruby Byers of Morningdale,
Fla., were Thursday guests of Mrs.
Dorothy RoUer. Also visiting with
her were Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Byers, Syracuse, and Mrs. laura·
Byers, Racine .. Mrs. Lewis recently
had surgery and the couple have
spent the swomer at Buckeye Lake
and are now returning to Florida.

The spirit of Marlboro in alow tar cigarette.

Revival
Calvary Bible Church is announcing revival meetings begin-•
nin~:t Wednesday, Sept. 2 lhroug~
Sept. 5. Services wiD begin promptly lit 7:30p.m. each evening.
The speaker will be Mike
Christiansen from Oklahoma. He
has been a fanner, a professional
rodeo rider, a drug addict, and a .
drunkard. After his conversion :
and subsequent call to the
ministry, Mr. Christiansen
enrolled in the Marietta Bible ·
College and will be completing
his education in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
The church is located on County Road 25, midway between
Flatwoods Road and Chester.
Rev. Alan Blackwood, pastor, extends a cordial invitation to the
public to attend the services.

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Stylettes, woo first place In their respective dlvlsloos
during the competition. The Styiettes are Instructed by
Mrs. Peggy Gillespie of Point Pleasant. Scott WoHe
photo.

Racine Social Events

-- __ .. ___

home of Twila Childs to make an
olympic flag far the games there.
Members also met at Ewio@
Funeral Home Wednesday night to
pay respects to George Albert Hill,
father of Mandy Hill.
Mrs. Childs, a past honored queen
was presented as was linda Mayer
and Kenneth wtggin!!, !!ethel Gual'
dian and Associate Guardian.
Honored Mason introduced and
presented was James Buchanan,
Knight of the York Cross of Honor.

Several activities, Including a
swinuning party and picnic with
members of the Meigs Chapter, Order of DeMolay, were planned at a
recent meeting of Bethel 62, International Order of Job's
Daughters.
The event will take place on Sept.
13 at 2 p.m. Also planned is a prac~ce and pizza party for Sept. 9 at 6
p.m. and a Masonic-Eastern Star
Night with a dinner on Oct. 12. It was
also decided to ask the worthy grand
matron of Ohio, Corrine Witham, to

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Warrir~gt The $u~geon ·General Has Determined

That "Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to You'r Health.
mg nicotine av. per cigarelte, FTC Report Mar:81

Page-S

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, August 31,1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Farm export· boost plans
draws mixed SCS reaction
WASHINGTON (AP ) - The Soil
Conservation Service , one of the
most professional agencies in the
Agric ulture Department, is having
mixed feelings about the drive to
boost farm exports.
RecenUy, the SCS published a
long-awaited appraisal of the
nation's soil and water resources
through the year 2030. Among its
major points, the report warned that
a ll-out de pendence on exports
without matching conservation ef·
forts could trigger worse erosion and
reduced productivity .
The appraisal report is being used
to d e termin e what r ec ommendations Agric ulture Secretary
John R. Block Will make to
Congress. Another re port, outlining
s pecific; alternatives is expected to
be ready in October.
Block is expected to be leaning
toward more s tate and local involvement, with the possibility of
using federa l grants and lax incenti ves for conserva tion a t those
levels .
Clea r ly, from what Block and

associates ha ve said, he is against

his position on ezports as it relates to
conservation and the chance that
erosion might worsen Wider such a
policy.
" Certalnly, there's greater risk,
but it's a risk we are going to need to
take, " Block told Conunodity News
Service interviewers. "We not only
owe it to our own economy, to our
own people, we owe II to people
around the world who buy our food
products and want to buy our food

inc rea smg the federa l rol e in c on-

tinue "to be sound advice," included:
·
- "There is no blanket, short-cut
method for getting the conservation
job done. There is no quick and easy
way out.
" In order to assure its continued
productiveness, every acre of land
must be scientifically treated which means treatment according to
need and use according to the
capability of the land for producing
the various crops, whether corn,
wheat, grass, timber or wildlife."
- " Since society as a whole depends on the produce of the land for its
present and future existence, society

regula tory m uscle to a ttam the
goals .
Block , who was ra ted highly by
conserv a tio nists whe n he was
Illin 01s' a gri c ulture director ,
repeatedly bas supported conservation s ince joining the Cabmet .
But he also is strongly in favor of
all-Dul U.S. exports as a wa y of
fre e in g fa rm e r. from federal
a creage controls and other restraints. In this, he appea rs to be unremitting, even when the ques tion of conservation is brought up.
Block was asked las t week a bout
'

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Freda 1. . Little, deceased, to
William C. LitUe, Cert. of Trans .,
Salisbury .
Pat Mitc hell, Marcella Sue Mitchell to Ga il A. Anderson, .402 a c re,
Rutland.
Victor Counts , Virginia Counts to
Victor R. Counts, Lura Counts, 1.13
acres, 1.15 acres. 1.14 acres, Sutton .
Laura E . Wood, Affidavit, Orange.
Guy R. Sargent, Sandra Sargent
and Frank Herald , Jr., Right of
Way , Meigs.
Southern Ohio Coal Co. to Lester
P. Shoemaker, Viola B. Shoemaker,
69.445 acres, Rutland.

Public

No.~
l._,
ic"'
e_ _

Public Notice

dra tn1ng a nd pav ing wtfh
as pha lt conc re te on a
bttu m tnous
a ggregate
base .
DEPARTMENT O F
TRANSPORTATION
Pave ment W1dth - 2.t
teet .
Columbus , Oh io
August 14, 1981
Pr o iec t
L e ngth
c ontract Sa les Legal
i ,"100 00 tee t or 0 .416 mi le
Work Le ngth ~ 2,778 .00
Copy No . 81 -7Se
U NIT P~ICE
tee t or 0.526 mile .
The Ohto De partment of
CONTRACT
Tr a ns portittion
hereby
F · 11 ( 30)
notifi es all b idde rs that 11
Sca led pr oposa ls wil t be will
t tve ly insure
rece 1ved a t the off ice ot the that affirma
in a ny contrac t en ·
D~r ec t o r at the Oh10 De pa r·
purs uant to this
tme nt of Transport a tion, te red tnto
tsement, minority
Columbu s, Oh1 0, until 10 00 advert
AM , OtltO Sta nd a r d Ti me, bus tness ent e r p r~ses wil l be
ffor ded full opportunity to
Tuesday , Septem be r 15, saubmit
bids 1n re sponse to
1981. for 1mprove ment s in
this invitation and wi ll not
M e ig s County , Oh io, Sec
be di sc riminated aga1nst
t1on M EG 124 27 .90 , State on
the grounds of race,
Rout e No. 124 in Sutton color
. or na tt ona l or igin in
Tow ns h iJJ . by Qradi nq. cons idera
tion of an award .
NOTI C E TO

CONTRACTOR S
STAT E OF OHIO

r---------------------- •
l Curb Inflation. l

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1

Pay Cash for . !
Classlfleds and !
Savel II
lI

Write your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon . cancel your ad by phone when you get
I results. Money not refundable.

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PHONE 992-2156

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or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., PomerO'f, 0., 45769

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
•ANNOUNCEMENTS
1- carel of T~nks
2- ln Memori-am
)-Annovnc:~mt&gt;nfs

lor lltnt
44- Aputments lor Rent
U- F=urnishecllitooms
4t.-Space tor
41- W•nted to Rent
41- Equlpmant for Rent

+-Giveaway
T-Happy Ads
..... lo'st•nd Found
J- Yartl Sale
~Public Sale
&amp; Auction

A'"'

•MERCHANDISE

S1- HoUsellold GIJOds
52- CB, TV, Racti(l Equipment

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

&gt; wanreo

J ForSale
) Announcement
&gt; For Rent f

U - Antlqun
s.t- Misc. Menh•OOile

lt - HeiPWant.a
n - Situatecl W•nted
ll- lnsurance
14-Busineu Tr•ulinfl
15-Sdtoolslnstruclion
1.-Aadlo, TV,
&amp; CB Repatr

17.
18.
19.

!~Wanted

IS- BuiiCUng SuttpiiH
s.- Pets for S.lt

•FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK
41 - F•rm Equil)mltnl

To Do

ECONOMICS LESSONS - Charles Sehultze, left,
former cbalrman of the Council of Economic Advisers
under President Carter gestures prior to his BJI:'
pearance on the CBS Television show "Face the

Nation" and Murray Wel~enbaum the current chall'
ID8D of the Councll of Economic Advisers is shown
before appearing on the NBC Television show "Meet
the Press" Sunday in Washington. ( AP Laserphoto).

r

21- Bus iness'
OppCWhmih
n - Monay fo lo•n
U - Proleulon•t
s...-vius

21.

22 .
23 .

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP) Aerospace workers rolled the space
shuttle Columbia today from the
Vehicle Assembly Building toward
its launch pad for an October lift off .
to become America's first craft to
make a second manned voyage into
space.
The vessel began its snail-like
crawl to the pad at 4:45a.m. EDT, 15
minutes ahead of schedule.
The Columbia and its mobile laun-

cher had been moWlted onto a huge,

thunderstonns which we have been
having lately," said Mark Hess,
spokesman at the Kennedy Space
Center.
Moving at speeds of less than I
mph with frequent stops, the space
shuttle was expected to be locked
qown to the launch pad after noon.
The launch date has been moved
back from Sept. 30 to Oct. 9 because
of technjcal problems, officials
revealed Friday.

tractor·like ''crawler transporter''
for the 3~·mile trip to the same
launch pad where its first historic
mission began last April. The shuttle
will be fitted with new twin solidrocket boosters and a new external
tank.
"Officials wanted to start the
rollout at an early hour in order to
get the space shuttle to the launch
pad and beat the late-afternoon

Public Notice

Public Notice

We w•sh to express our
thanks to all our friends,
relatives ,
and
coworkers who were so
wonderful to us when we
lost our beloved Bess1e
Ashtey .
Your
thoughtfulness
will
never be forgotten, nor
witt the food , flowers ,
and cards . We can't
name you 1nd1Viduat1y
(there were so many) .
Thanks to the special
ones who visited, called,
and helped through the
years she was a shut· in .
Also.
thanks
to
R .lwtings-Coats-Blower
Funera l Home, pall·
bearers,
m"inister ,
Hotzer doctors . God
bless.
Dorothy, Steve, Debra
Ha rrv &amp; Barbara
McGuffin
William &amp; Betty Snow
Tim and Jay Moore
Mrs . Jennie Tiptonsister

Real Estate

puhhciili on of thi s notiCe
fh e r ee~ fter as can
&lt;&gt;Chc du lcd by the Court

o!

or .1s soon
tw

Larry Spencer.
Clerk of Court
at MPigs County, Ohio
10 , II, 2-1 , 31; 19) 7, ld

! BJ

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26 .
27 .
28 .

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30 .
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32 . _

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33 .._ _
34. _ _ __
35. _ __ __

11 - AutoS for S.,a

Jl- Homes lor S&amp;le
U - Mobila Homn
tor Sale
U - F.armt ler Sale
M- Buslnen Bulldlna•
U-lDts &amp; Acrt~ge
u-Real Estetewntect
l1- ltnlfors

73- Vus &amp; • W.O.

I

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Mail This Coupon with Remittance

- ..

Real Estate- General

HOBSTETTER REALTY
OFFICI;' 142·2003
George Hobstetter Jr.
Broker
NEW

LISTING
Love ly 2
s tory remode led home .
4 bedroom s, 2 ba ths,
livtng room , family
room, rec reation room,
new kitchen, big yard .
$32 ,500.00 .
POMEROY
Price
Reduced Nice Aframe bu ilding on Main
Street . $17,500.00 .
LAND CONTRACT $3500 .00 down buys this 5
bedroom
remodeled
home on large lot .
Owne r will finan ce at
10% interest. Call for
more details .
ACRES - Approx . 2 1 '4
with a 3-bedroom home,
1 4 mi le off St . Rt . 7.
$16,000 .00 .
HYSELL RUN RO. Nice 3 bedroom r a nch
home. 2 baths. full
basement, on 1 acre .
Possible loan assump·
tion . S42 ,000 .00
BUILDING LOTS
Very nice 1 ac re lots, ap·
prox 3 miles from
Route 7 on Leading
Creek Rd . Call for info .
FARM 196 acres
m/ less with minerals,
old farm house, 2 barns,
former beef cattle farm .
ASktng $55.000.00.
RJ\ C INE

Velma Nicinsky, Assoc.
Phone 742-3092
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742· 3171
General

'5

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sq. "d.

so . yd.

TM ~vltlllher rnerwn 1M rill" f. lld(t or relect any ads Hem eel
oltfCI...I. , ... Pllbii11Mr will
1M rHPCfltiiUe for more tlt&amp;n one
t~teorrecr lnltrtlen.

'*

I

99

..

R.C.S.

R~LTY,

BILL CHILDS, Mgr.
Phone 992-6312
POMEROY,OHIO

INC.. (B

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all types
•Siding
e Remodeling
• Free estimates
• 20 Yrs. experience

,.

"'!""•

·

HENRY E. CLELA~D, J~ - "2·6191
JEAN TRUSSELL949·2660
DOTTIE TURNER 992&lt;5692
~tllo!rJi!!l
· ROGER TURNER 992·5692

Puppies 7 wks. old. Collie
and Irish Seller mixed.
Call742·2139.
Cats and kittens. Blue·
Gray In color. Lovable.
Good with children. Call
742·2139.

ALSO ALARM WORK
PH • 247•3534

3 kiHens, 3 months old,
good mousers. Call 245·

8·6· 1 mo.

J&amp;L

rl:

N.H .

l THE PftOTO.

1

54

6-21·1

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rl. J, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143·2591
6· 15·tlc

f

.'

t.i/.

sERviCE

·woter-Sewer-Eiectrlc
Gil LIM-'DIIcltes
w•t.r Llne'H-·uPJ
Septic Tanks
coun,., certified
Routh Lane
CINtlllirt, 011.
~II. UHNO
1-7·11fc
Ius-•

21

Jfay ·7,3,1fc
Bind

_Opportu~l~,

....

., .sft' f ,', .·
,

.
I.'AT·~ lMDIARI
,
·"~'ERVICE. St11IIU
.•~,.,

"'.....·-~~
. d
II

BIIIPCt., :

• . , ,. . _. . ..........;
.

IIVW

mo.

1

'·

....._

. ROILB.SR.w
216 E. Second StrMI

l· :r-~B.~IG.......
TI....

lt9 Hltfllt., P-ti'O'f.
.

Sizis from 4x6 to 12x40

•• w••••r •

Portrall&gt; .

.

Huusrru1
Ht •, u /c fll&gt;~ttt•r -~

' YOUNG WOMEN 16-21
.Y ., Can Be...
,
nurs•
·aulttant
• 1 uto .
rittcho•lc esecratary
• teypunc~ · . OPerata~
• • · • ca,..r.r • iltedlcal
R~E'--.,u · i.t•"'
.
,
•
JOICORPI
will telell you tile. sklllt
you need ta 91t • lobi
"'" trainll!f; paid
'
iq ••,...... oriMr

.· PLACE .

•:i "ob' Charlene
. :. •1141 JtiyJI!t
•' 1• Hilefftch .

- RiileState=.
-General
- -- -

REESE
TRENatiNG

nv-

trainltlt ....., avaua~~~e
"' ,..,... n1en and

I

WOIIMft...

\

.

At: ,._..-elY City H1ll1

C-'1 Cltlm-,' ~ .

::";.~.;.':~~:
1.111,·11 N': • 1 p.~.-4

r;m.lepl.l. 1Ml,
'
.,......loniCoolrtoo4PL·CIO

.,,.,••.•• ~llter•u .s.
Olpl I I I .. LpMr.

....

FOR SALE BY OWNER 3
bdr. home located al 123
Garfield Ave . 2 acres runs
from SR 7 lo Oh io River.
Full basement, finished
rec . room, 2 firepla ces, 2
112 baths, In ground con·
crete pool, all new carpet,
new paint insi de a nd out.
Will consider your home or
mobile home In trade.
Owner will consider fina ncing al 10% APR after
reasonable down payment,
if interes1ed c all 446·1546
for an appOintment .

Yard Sale 4960ak Dr. Mon·
day -Tuesday. 9 lo A.
ClotheS and inlsc .
Sepl. 2,3,&amp;A. 2 miles from
Porter, on 55o4 towards
Cheshire. Furn .. clolhlng,
and misc. 9 :00AM lo 3PM.
Yard Sale Wed . &amp; Thurs. 2
mi . N. of Crown Clly, on Rt.
7. 10:00 111 ? Asscorted
llems. Phone 2S.·6206.

House for sale in Middlepor t . Own er wil l
sacrific e 992·2917 or 992·
2606 .
Yard Sole Sepl. I, 9-? Allhe
Corner of S. College &amp; 325,
Rio Grande . Nice Jr.
clothes, cowboy bOOts and
many misc. items.
YARD SALE, Aug. 31,
Sept. 1 and 2, Monday thru
Wed., 9 a .m . til dark. Davis
residence, Rose Hill. Baby,
boys, girls, men and
women's clothing, dishes,
knlck·knacks, odds and en·
ds and many misc. Items.
810 Soulh Second, Mid·
dleport . Aug . 29-Sept. 4.
Col lection salt·peppers,
Silverstone, toys, linens,
bedding,
dishes,
ap·
pliances,
furniture,
clothing, curtains, lots

misc.

Yard Sale. 3 days. Sepl.
3,4,5. Items 10 numerous lo
mention. Some antiques.
Salem 51., Rulland, Oh.
Yard Sale, Sept. 2 &amp; 3. End
Spring Ave.. Haggy
Residence.
Wa!hing
machine, c lothes, !IQme
furniture, lots of misc .
o1

Carport Sale. 918 S. Third,
Middleport. Wed ., Thurs.,
Sepl. 2·3. 10 a.m .

Phone
1-(614)·992·3325

NEW LISl'ING- Large
4 bedroom home wllh
furnace, hoi water heat.
Nice kitchen, fireplace,
2 lull baths, 2 oul·
buildings, and 3 acres of
level land. 532,500.
NEW LISTING- Home
and shop or business
rooms In the country . 4
bedrooms, 2 full baths,
nal. gas f~rnace and
cl\aln ·unk fenced yard.
Only $31,000.
NEW LISnNG
Remodeled 3 bedroom
home In lhe country. t'h
balhJ,
stove,
rtfrlgl!rator, drilled
W.ll, fur!lace IMtal and
large garage. $.19,9011.
NEW LISTING- Clean
· 3 bed.r0C11U home qn lhe
oulsklrtl ol tcr,vn. view
o1 lit: 1. New pam and
(ixturHr l~rve ~lvin!l
and Lea!llng Cr. water.
' Only 111.500. . . '
. NEWLISTING-Smar·
tiy dHignecl 3 bedrootl'l
I, frame home. 2 ' full
· balM. 1101 water neal,
stove, disposal, full
, basement
and
2
· -. bedroOm ·oaraae apt. A
· real QOocl property tor
169,9011. .
WE HAVE MANY
D'HE*S FOR· YOU ·TO
Sll.
. .

CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 14" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
slab . $10 .50 per ton .
Dellverd to Ohio Pal let Co.,
Rock
Springs Rd . ,
Pomeroy . 992·2689.
Gold, silver, sterling ,
iewelrv. rings, old cams &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Barber Shop, Middleport . 992·
3476.
No Item to large or small
will buy 1 piece or complete
household . New, used and
antique . Call992 ·6370.
Scrap metals, batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokerlng . Yarper· Halsle·
ad Salvage Company, 300
Eleventh Street. 675·5868.
Also Flea Markel open
dally.
Open
Monday ·
FrldayHpm.
1975-76·77 Nova, Chevette,
Maverick . .4-6 cylinder,
automatic. Or will take
over payments . 614-4463375.

.... '"
-

I

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

Of

HO

• •l

I

Garage Sale. Aug . 31· Sepl.
4. 9·5. South of Jack's Club

off Rl. 7 bypass on old Rl.
143. Many new Items,
clothing, house paint, paint
supply.
Yard sale. Sepl. 2,3,A. 238
Condor St. Back of Land·
mark, Pomeroy . Each day
9 to?. V!riety of Items.
Garage sale. 178 Midwlly
Or. Sept. 1. 10 till dark.
Yard sale . 75Eim 51. Sepl
1,2.and 3. 9 to ? . Jeans, nice
clean clothing, all sizes.
Garage sale Sepl. 2,3,4.
Herbert Matheny. 3 miles
east of Tupper Plains.
CR319. Follow signs. Lam·
ps, bicycle, furniture,
clothing, and loys.

•

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Neals Auction Hogsell,
WVA. Rt. 2. Every Sat. 7:00
PM .
(Consignments
taken) , ( wi II buy furniture)
Lonnie Neal 367·7101.
9

wan led Ia Buy

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
nllure and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kefnelh Swain,
256· 1967 In lhe evenings.
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Buick· Ponliac, GAllipolis.
Ohio. Call o4-llr2'l82.

. ·--·-----

Utility Buildings

. USED EOUI~MENT
1-No.- DieHl Ford ·
Trackll' w/Call
!;..Model 275 Dlnel
M.F.

1::=======::;-i ~~-M-147f
.- Annlvenarles
;-'Puspclrlt
.
A-anct · Nolot, ari ·lm·
sive, complt~ !irte
wedclillt aild altftiver·
lrlvitotloils a,n d IC·
Hl'iH. RN-1111
!Pfic,ed, quiclo HI'¥~- ,
r.~~ wlt-f . ~ill;

Si1es
"From 30x30"
SMALL

U.S. Rl. 50 Easl
Guysville, .Oft.
·pn-614-662·3121
. Authorized Jolin Ditr,
Now Holland, ,B ush Hot
fa.rln
Equip!ftent
. O..Ier
~
.FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS/SERVICE

10·1-ffc

INDOOR rummage 5ale, 6
miles oul Jerrys Run al Ap·
pie Grove. Clothes,
books,lamps, new bed ·
spreads, new dresses &amp;
tops, dresser with mirror.
All week 91o ?

Farm Buildings

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-5682

7~----~Y~•~rci~Sa~l~e_____

ALL STEEL

BOGGS

Repair
, -Transmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.·Fri.
9 a.m.- 5:30p.m.

Lost and Found

LOST-Camp Conley area .
Small while male dog with
brown spots. Child's pel.
Reward. 675·6217.

Call 742·3195
2·B·tlc

Aluminum Siding
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
8·14·1 mo.

'' -Auto and Truck

6

Let George
Miller
check your present electrical system,
Residential
&amp; Commercial

IIJMN.

Yard Sole Thurs. · Sal. 9-?
554 Jackson
Pike,
Golllpollt . Clothes ,
glassware, and misc.

Free Killens. Call 446-7763.

For all of your wir·
ing needs.

INSULATION
Vinyl &amp;

-

lNI!!Idi ngs

SERVICE

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
5·7·ltc

OGER HYSELl'S
GARAGE
'

~

3 black long-haired klllens
to good home. Call256·6783.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

J· ll ·lfc

'

·

Part Collie gentle male dog
about 1 yr. old . Call 367·
0491.

15 Years
Experience
Reasonable Rates

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
&lt;an lor free siding
::est;mates, 94~·2101 or
.949·2UO.
~ .
No ~unctav Calls

REALTOR .

O'BRIEN
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

s~h:v~~~allesl

•

.
·
A

Ph. 992·7583
8·27·1 mo .

From
Healer Core to · lhe
Largest Radiator.

BISSEU.
SIDING CO.

Winners at our Meigs Co. Fair Booth were E. R. •
Scarberf,Y• Ra~ine ,- Clock R.a dio. Kalh r.v.n Chap· .
man, Ches~lre · Pyrex . G,lenda Beneduin, Reedsvolle • PvreUtl.
·

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does nol offer or allempllo
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad In lhls
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR

OHIO VALLEY
ROOANG

: Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
'
SIDING

RUTLAND r Mobile home wilh two bedrooms; air
. CC!'1!1111oner.: washer. dryer. Nice lol. and one car
g'arage. $13,000.00,
·
·
•

4

~~~~~~~~~~~
MILLER ElECTRIC ------

POMEROY, OHIO

APPLE GROVE - Appx . 37 acres wilh one story
home which has five rooms. two bedrooms, en·
closed porch . Also renta l house barn, ceUar,
workshop, two garages . $26,900 .00.

ing.
e Electrical work
e Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush

For Information Call
949-2710 or 949·2106
8·2· 1 mo.

TOM HOSKINS

ORIGINAL WOODWORK - HardWOOd floors. large
rooms. Three bedrooms. 1112 bath , famiy room . Middleport . $29,500.00.

DEE'S Child Care Center
in Mason opening Sep·
!ember lsi. Hours·7 : 30
a.m.-6:00 p.m. Monday
through Friday . Weekly
rates. J0.4·773·5302. Call for
reservations.

New Homes · ex ·
tensive
remodel·

Now Taking
Enrollment For
· r ~eplem.,.r Classes in
Raclneand'Mtddtepol'l
Ages 3 and Up
Adult Classes Ollered

215
Pomeroy, Oh.

STOLEN·New
molor
driven
Murphy
lawn
· mower. Molar black, red
body, Reward . 30&lt;1-675·1302.

CONSTRUCTION

pd.·

over$20. 61nch rlngworms,
assorted colors $.5 each.
Assorted marlbou I lgs,
$1.00 for 12. IO%u off crafl
Items. Tackle Box, SR124,
Syracuse, Ohio. Monday
through Saturday 9 to 5.
REDUCE safe &amp; fasl wilh
GoBese Tablets or'capsules
&amp; E·Vap "wafer Pills".
Frulh Pharmacy.

iS·ffc

CARPENTER
DANCE STUDIO

t ·h. 949· 2160 or 992-6125
7·5-ttc

TUPPERS ,PLAINS - Building site or r.nobile home
site. All utilities plus septic. $6,000.00.

Thr.,;, Bedroom - lV• bath on ·c~r lot. Located •·
Main and 7111 In Mlddlepcirl. Beiulllul woodWork in
this old home wlth .6 rooms plus a laundry and one
car garage. A bargain al$25,000. ·• ,

Free Estimates
Call Collect
Pll. 143-3322
7·13·2 mo.

F=

608 E. MAIN

RACINE - One ac re bu ilding lots . All uti lities
available, wi th road frontage . $6,500.00 ,

oa

EUGENE LONG

: V. 2-6
C. YOUNG
Ill
or "HJH

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

TUPPERS PLAINS- Room Unlimited - You Will ;
think you're half way to heaven when you move into
this luxurious colonia l home. The inte rcom system · Will be used quite frequently, trying to locate your
kids in one of the five bedrooms or in the large
recreation room. There is not only spar e in the
house, but outside as well, approximately one a cre
of space. Total elec . with low bills . $63,000.00.

Oh"

Roofing/Guller
Remodeling
Serving Your Area for
20Years

· -Addonsand
. remodelin~
-Rooting an guHer
work
i -concrete w.or~&lt; 1
, -P lumbing and
,
electrial work
(Free Estimates)

Real Estate- General

PH. 992-2259

\

"S,.c:,allt•tes Fer
.,.Coin L•urHirlas
, Otnlol P•o-lto
,.. Apt . House Dw~~o~n
.,.Mobile Heme Parks

VJNYL
CTS
PRODU
Siding

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICES"

742-2211
.

Middleport,

Mason, W . Va.
8-6· 1 mo.

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Main St.

ALL MAKES
• Dispowts
• Olsttw.lstlerl
elt.1n9ft
• Hot Wattr Tanks

• wuften
• Dryers

169 N, 2 nd

eVinyl
• Fiberglass
• Stainless Steel

1395•0·

GOOD SELECTION OF REMNANTS
Buy Now &amp; Save$2·$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with, pad . Good selection Roll Ends Rem·
nants $2.50 up. Grass carpet $4.99 yd.
Green and Brown.
Drive A Little- Save A Lot

I Sale of fishing tackle. Store

•••n••osu•oc•

KAY'$
BEAUTY SALON

POOLS

Now 5

BRADBURY - Mobile home with expando, two
bedrooms, central air, completely furn ished, large
lot, two car garage, with all utilities. $29,000 .00.

l~erat Hauling
N-M,tt . Rt,..lr
17-Upftoll.. ry

.
.
•
McMtile HOIIIINift OIMI Y.1rlll h ..IOtteCC ...ti'CI ortly Wlftl Caltl Wltft
.,....., 2S cent c,..,. . fer HI cerry1111 lox NumMr 111 Care et TM

.......

95

lltlfrl...-•tiDn

,~.,· .. ~--'~!~':!!'!"' littw)

. 1 Far buld delivery of
1 gasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,

Hames for Sale

3 bedroom sectional. 2 acre
Wooded lot. Family room ,
woodburner, fully equlped
kllchen wllh island cooking
center. 2 full baths, walk·ln
closel!i . 1550 sq . fl. living
space. On Stale Rl., Green
School. Call 379·2514 .

Yard Sale at McCormick
Retldence In Bidwell near
P.O. Tues., Wecl., &amp; Thurs.
Westerman Church.

L frame

SERVIC~ ~~ng~r::.e~~ ~ ~~

-PPLiAfiCE

PERSONALIZED

(Extra Goocl)
Reg . 516.95 sq.
vd
lnsta lied
.·

POMEROY - Two bedroom house close in. Neat in·
side.l20,000,QO.

Utt tt II WOf'd~.. ........ ~y inMf'tkn . , . · .... ... - .. . . . . ..... . lUG
Uttft1Swordt,, .alx hyllnArtiOII .. . . . . , . . , . , , , . , , , ; . . , . , . S1.GG

~ --

Cash-n-Carrv
I Roll Each
Brown, Blue,
Green

12--Ptumbint &amp; l!ua.,.tlng
D-iuev1tlnt
M-EIKtricel

Up fOJJwanfl .- :.e dly llllertklft " • .. ; . .• .. . . . . . .. .... .. . . IUt

- ........

' W I Padding

PERM SALE
NOWTHRU AUG.JI
no.oo
Now Sf 7.!0
525.00
Now 522.!0
UO.OO
Now $27.!0
GWEN'S SPECIAL .
Wave Length Perm
For Longer Hair $29.50
Ph. 992·2725

C. L KITCHEN

I t- Home Impro vements

Rates and Other Information

s &amp; w newest

31

Yard Sale

Trading co. , Spring Valley
Plaza, 446·8025.

k..,Ttlil Ad tor Fu0'Jr!.!!!t.'!t!.••ce

Ph. (304) 773 · 5634

POMEROY - Appx . '1.. acre lot, with 1'12 story, four
bedroom house. Fully insulated . $28,500 oo.

I

4. 17 .ffc

· ·

LARGE SELECTION OF REMNANTS
'4800 and up
CARPET
RUBBER BACK Mc~~~~~~pet

$J2

e SERVICES

Mctnct.'l· 2: lf on Satuntey
TueiMiay tf'lnl Frldey 1: ll P.M.
the Clay befare putnlc.tlOII
Sunct.yt:JtP.M. FrfUy

PH. 992·6011
992·7656
8 . 2Q· tfc

586

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

' now In slock. Spring Valley

~1~m~o~·~t;::::=i~~~~~~~
~::::::::::::~~2~1~~~~~==~~~~~8~-6~·
SUPERIOR
ROUSH

L----'=':......o.-------4----·Yd.

1•-Motorcycles
75- Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuorlet
17- Auto Ra,.lr

Want-Ad Advertising
Deadlines

bathrooms, remodeling,
ptumbin, electric, and
·
-healrng .
FREE
ESTIMATES

or 992·7505

Ph. 992-7201

&lt;

eREAL ESTATE

call

SPECIAL SALES New
· never been shot, display
models-salesman samples.
Special price on this group
· Bear Whitetail Hunter,
$69.14. Bear LTO Polar
$129 .95 .
Brown Bear,
Sl-49. 95 . Bear Mini Mag,
•$.19.95. Kodiak speuca~
$99 .95.
Spring Valley
: Trading co .. Spring Valley

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph 992 3282
•
•

Trash Pickup In
t he Village of
Middleport, Oh.
Ph. 992·5016

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop

Installed
starting

•TRANSPORTATION

24 .

Old Buildings
Free Estimates
Ph. 247·3534

Rd.

4&lt;16·0294 ..

SIGNUProR
r
hll Cl. .ltlln:
•TAP
•JAZZ
•LADIES JAZZERCISE

Maintenance
e Removal of

eBackhoe
• Excavating
• Septic Systems
• water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
eoump Truck
• Trencher
Licensed &amp; Bonded

Workers roll shuul~ toward pad

•2- W•ntecl to 8uy
11- lrucks for Sale
•l- Livettock
M - H•y&amp; Gnln
tiS- SHe! &amp; Fart1111er

• FINANCIAL

20.

7

~;;;;;;~8~·~30~·~1~m~o~.pd~.~~~~~~~~~==~t.~;;~~~~~~;~. 992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh .

RENTALS
41 _ H0USftjOr Rtnf
41- Mol:,ult Homes

G-oes crHk

OF Uftl1\l
Miu-E

e Building

Top prices paid for auto
bodies, scrap Iron and
metals.
1 mile
wesl
of
Fairgrounds an Old Rl.
33
ivlon.· Fri . 8:30 lo4:00
Aller Aug. 3
Ph. "HS.4

THANKS

lI

.... .. ,

~====~8~-3~0-~t~m~o~.~~======B=·=Ir:l:m:o:.~~====~8=·1=4~-l~.m~o~.~~~ Plaza, 446·8025.
~
ATTENTION Come In and
tor our Squirrel
WANTED To Buy
J&amp;c
c. R• ' MASH ' Talltallregisterwins
Contest. Longest gray
22 rifle. Longest
.SCRAP
SANITATION
CONSTRUCTION Valley
red tall wins22 rifle. Spring
Trading Co., Spring
(Pomeroy Scrap
SERVICE
custom kitchens and apValley Plaza, 4&lt;16·8025.
Iron &amp; Metal)
pliances,
custom

CARD OF

I

,

~!=l: ~a~1:1, ~"i'i~u_:::

~

anct Delnolition

We are now serving all
of Meigs Co . wllh
Healing Oil. Diesel
S
e
Gasoll
uprem ,
ne,
c omlete
line
of
Lubricants for lhe
farms&amp; industry.
PH. "2-3-uo
If long distance, call col·
lecl :
Larry E . Miller, Deater

IN THE COURT OF
c ont ra ct bet wee n the pM
COMMON PLEAS,
T1 c&gt;S, nn d the se ttle ment a t
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
t he property r ights of the
William R . Wtlson ,
parttcs
Pl a in tiff ,
You Me req uired to an
vs
swe r th e compl a 1n1 with1n
Sharon K Wli son form e rly
lCJ day s afte r the l r~st
Sharon K Mount.
pu blicatiOn of th ts nott ce,
Defendant .
wh tc h will be publi shed on
Case No . 17938 cc ea ch wee k for six sue
NOTICE SV
c css 1ve week s . The last
P UBLICATION
T O : Sharon K . Wti SOn publiCa lion wil l b e ma de on
form e rly Sha ron K Mount, Sc ptembC' r 4 , 1981 , a nd the
la st known address 1100 :.:01:1 day s lo r it nswer wi 11
South Oakwood Avenue , comme nce on tha t date .
1n ca se of yo ur fa ilure to
Detro it, Mic higan, present
n n sw c r o r
o the r wt se
address unknown :
You are he reby notified respond as requ.r ed bv th e
tha t you have been named Oh1 0 Rul es a t Civtl
P r oc ed ur e ,
th e
IIO t"ll
a defendant in a lega l a c
tton e nttllc d Willia m R . hc a r1n q on th1 s m atte r w ill
Wil son.
Plaintiff , vs b C' t1c ld ,1ttc r htc ex ptrati on
Shar on K Wilson for me rly ol 'l B diiy S nftcr the las t dtly
Sharon K . Mount. Defe n·
dan t. Th1s a ction has bee n
Card of Thanks
ass 1gned Case No. 17938
nnd tS pend ing in the Court
of Com mon P leas at Me igs
County , Pa meory , Ohto
45769
The obt ect of the com
plaint is the obtaining of a
d 1vor c e and the ter
mtnat ton of a marri a ge

WANl AD INFORMATION

I

1

I

18124.31.21c

aMIARA'
S
ll.tftJftftl

M~Y~IInce
••••

STANDARD
OIL CO.
(SOHIO)

Public Notice

" Minimum wage rates
tor this project have been
predetermined a s· required
by law and are set forth in
the bid proposal .''
" The date set tor com·
pletion of this ·.vork sha ll be
set forth 1n the bidding
proposa I.' '
Each bidder s hall be
requ1red to tile w1th his bid
a certified check or
cash ier'!; check tor an
amount equal to five per
cent of his bid, but in no
e vent more than fifTy
thousand do ll ars, or a bond
tor ten per cent of his bid,
payable to the Director
Bidders must apply, on
the
proper forms, for
qualificat ion at least ten
da ys pr10r to the date set
tor opening bids in a ccordancee with Chapter
5525 Ohio Rev1sed Code
Plans and spec ifications
are on file in the Depart·
ment of Transportation and
the office of the District
Deputy Dire ctor .
The D1rector re serves
the right to re1ect any and
a ll bids
DAV ID L. WEIR
DIRECTOR
Rev . 8· 17·73

"

'

r~~~WJir,

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
Public Notice

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

machine
and
SWEEPER
· anclpal'll,
Iewing
~====::::===::~::========~;::=:::;===~=~ IUPPIIH.
Pick uP and

sibility and costs of maintaining
land in a productive state.
"The individual landowner or
operator has neither the resources
nor the ability to carry the burden
alone, and moreover he has control
only for 8 lifetime."
With
WASHINGTON (AP) peanut output scheduled for a major
rebound from last year's drought·
reduced harvest, a producers' group
says conswnen can expect some
relief in peanut butter prices after
the first of the year.
The Peanut Advisory Board in Til·
ton, Ga . , says manufacturers
probably will pay an average of
about 50 cents a poWld for shelled
peanuts, 7 cents less than last year.

The current issue d "Soil and
Water
Conservation
News,"
published by the SCS, includes an article about the late Hugh Hanunond
Bennett, the first chief of the agency
and regarded as the father of soil
conservation in this COWllry. He held
that post from 1935, when the agency
was born, Wltll his retirement in late
1951.
The article consists almost entirely of excerpts from a speech Bennett made to students at North
Carolina State University, Raleigh,
in June 1959, a year before he died.
Some of Hanunond's remarks,
many of which the article said con-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business·Services

as a wbole must share in the respon-

products."

servation, at least in tenns of using

Monday, August 31, 1981

WE BUY FURNITURE
We sell furnllure, Sagraves
Furniture. 4&lt;16·4775.
Buying Gold . Paying cash
for anything stamped IOK,
14K, IBK, and dental gold.
Class ring, wedding rings,
watches. Clarks' Jewelry
Store, Gallipolis, 4&lt;16·2691,
Pomeroy, 992·25(&gt; I.
75 or up Suburban good
cond., AC, PS, PB . Call 446·
2712 afler 5.

TOV TRAINS lionel,
American Flyer, and lves.
Also metal figurines. Call
Sept. 5 &amp; 6 4&lt;16·0668.

Need sitter &amp; housekeeper .
7 :30 to 4:30. Call 446·7038
after 4PM weekdays and
anytime weekends.

National Cosmetic Company is looking for interested people to leach
sk in care , glamour ,
average $10 per hour.
unlimited earning poten ·
1ial, opportunity to own
your own business . Send
resume to Brenda Young,
Box 106 Rt. 1, Thurman, Oh
45685.
'GET VALUABLE training
as a young business person
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sen ·
tlnel route carr ier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at '1'12·
21S.or"2·2157 .
Needed 1 babysitter in mv
home . Call afler 6:30p.m .
9'12-6233. Middleport area .
Part time Employment .
Person with car wanted for
1 hour daily lo pick up lab
specimens at local doctors
office , In late afternoon .
Must be neat a nd reliable .
Write: Bill Brown, P .O .
Box 506, Columbus, Ohio
433d6.
Information on ALASKAN
and OVERSEAS em ·
ployment. Excellent in·
come potential . Call 312·
741 ·9780ext . 4061.
JOBS Overseas· Big money
fast . $20,000 lo $50,000 plu s
per year. Ca111 ·716·842·6000
ext. l594.
12

Situations Wanted

Dependable ride to and
from Rio Grande, fall
quater. Live in town. Call
Don afler 4PM 4411·2629.
Insurance

IJ

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SURANCE
been can ·
ce lled ?
Lost
your
operator' s License? Phone
992·2143

Meigs Co. A rea Code
614
YY2- Middleport
Pomerov
985- Chesler
343-Portland
147-letart Falls
949- Raclne
742- Rulland

~81- Vinlon

I

Mason Co., W. Va .
MeaCode304
67s-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
516-Apple Grove
773-Mason
1112-New'Haven
19s-Lelart
ni-Bullato
TO
In Gill II county

~2M2

"'''"""'

PL~CE.

,,

Guitar
lessons
now
available in Gallipolis with
after school
h o urs
avaitable for studefts. Call
24H376 .
18

House, 5 room s, bat h. 5
acres more or les s 1 rnile
above Apple Gr ove, OH .
$18,500. 1-614-247 22d5.
24 acres, 4 room house with
300ft . r iver fro ntage . 5 mile
from Ravenswood Br idge .
Kall Victor Wolfe 614 949
2286 after 5 p .m .
4 rooms, bath, La ngsville .
John Sheets J1f2 m il es south
Middleport Rt . 7 .

wanted to Do

MASON , 4 bedroom, 2500
Wanted lo do general sq ft plus basement, 1
housework, haYe referen- a cre, 80's 304·773 5867.
ces . Call 446·9279, between
lOam and Jpm .
2 BEDROOM house, full
basement on two ac res
Mother of two little girls more
or less, 304·516·2372.
wi ll baby sit part time or
full time. Prefer little girl .
THIS handyman's dream
Ca II 4411·0696 .
sets on over 2 acres . House
located on hill side with a
TV service c alls. Call 992 · lovely view, on Sandhil l
2034 . Also used color TV for Rd . in Letart . Owner will
sale.
be al site Septembe r 5 &amp; 6.
Will help finance .

In Meigs Coualy
In Mason County

COMPLETELY remode le·
d, 4 bedroom, 2 s torv house.
21
Business
1.2 acres, locate d oft Rl. 2.
Opportunity
I mile up Thomas Ridg e
$180 Per Week Pari Time Rd. Call304 ·895·3672.
at
Home .
Webster ,
America's foremost die - 32
Mobile Homes
tionary company needs _ _ _....'!
fo!'.r_;S._,a'!Cie
~--home workers to update Prices re du ced on all
local ma iling lists. All mobile homes and travel
ages , exper ience un - trailers
.
TRI · STATE
necessary. Call 1·716·842· MOBILE
HOMES .
6000 ext .6671 .
Gallipolis. CALL 4d6·7572.
2&lt;_,2&lt;___..:M~a~n~eO!y'..'l~o~L~a~a'!Cn'--

FHA-VA -Convential Home
Loans, Columbus First
Mortgage Co., d63 Second
Ave ., Gallipolis, Oh ., 446·
7172

-=====;;=:::;::::====:::::;===

23

Professional
Services

COMMERCIAL and in ·
dustrial
photography .
Phone 4d6·2909 or 446·7226
after 4 p.m .
Piano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your P iano. Sill Ward,
wards Keyboard . 446·4372,
Ga llipolis.
GALLIA Cleaning and
Rent-A·Maid Serv ice Inc.,
Free Estimates, bonded,
insured , phone 245·9234
Cleaning by the week, man·
thor contractual .
Your Piano rusting .i.rl sum ·
mer Humid ity? Free in spection with tuning. Lane
Dan1els. 742·2951 or 9n
2082 .

992-2156

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBI L E
HOME SALES. 4 MI .
WEST, GALLI POLIS, RT .
35. PHONE 446·3868 or 446·
727d .
12x65 mobile home, total
e lect r i c, turn ., lot
available. Call675·4087.
For sale 1976 12x60
Freedom mobile home, 2
bd r ., washer &amp; dry er area,
carpeted, underpinned, set
up on large rental lot, lot is
aYailable, good cond ., close
to school. located an Ad·
dison· Bulaville Rd. Call
367·0455.
1974 2bdr. mobi le home.
14x65, central aire, new
shag carpet. Call afte r
6PM, I 7d2·2040 .
1976 mobile home 12xSO, 2
bdr ., exc. cond ., $4,800 . Call
446·0234.

1973 Crown Have n, 14x65,
three bedroom. new car·
pet, 1971 Cameron, 14x64,
two bedroom, new carpet.
1972 Champion, 12x60, two
bedroom , new carpet. 1976
Cameron ,
12x60 , two
31
Homes lor Sale
bedrooms, bath &amp; 1/2, new
NEW CABIN or small carpet . 1970 PMC, 12x60,
home, completely fur · two bedroom, new carpet,
nished, 53900. Call4411·0390. B &amp; S Sales. Inc., 2nd and ·
Viand Slreel. Pl. Pleasant,
House with acreage for WV Phone 675·4424.
sale, 3 or 4 bdrs., fully car peted, 2 barns, 379 ·2123 .
1980 44x52 doublewide.
Cat~edral ceiling, 2 por·
New 3 bdr. house with ches, underpinning, 4 years ·
garage and full basement warranty, A-1 cond. 992·
3041 or 965 Ash St., Mid·
$45,000. Call 446·0390.
dteport .

BY OWNER : 4 bdr., spill·
level. living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat·ln
kitchen, lg . family rm., 2
112 baths, located In Tara
Est ales. club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
Dislricl. Shown by appl.
only call 4&lt;16·9.f03 .
29 acres, 7 rm . house, all
mineral rites, Ernest·
Woodruff Rd., Allee, Oh.
Call614·299·0890 after 5.

3 bedrroms, 2 fireplaces,
family room, large living
room. 1 full • 2 half baths,
wall·lo-wall carpel, full
basement, central air,
swimming pool, 1/2 acre
lol. CITY SCHOOLS . 4&lt;16·
1731 afler 6PM .
For sale on land contract
House and 2 mobile homes
localecl at Bulavllle. Will
sell separately or together.
Call 4&lt;16·3.437.

AN AD CALL

'67S.1333 .

lfr ,llltfll,lf(t'l\

Schools Instruction

SPECIAl J OB SKILLS
TRAINING PROGRAM for
housewives and those who
are unemployed and need
jOb skills in order to get a
job .
CALL
446 · 4367
TODAY . GAll. Bus. Coli.
Reg No. 75·02 ·04726 .

7 rooms &amp; bat h on double
lot . Full base m e nt, 2 car
ga rage. Beech St., Middle port. 992-7209 .

1nane1a1

Pa/(e8 cover the
{t~ltowing telephone exchanges . ..

24s-RioGrande
2~-Guyan Dlst.
643-;lrabla Dlst.

15

II

fla.~sified

Gallia co. Area ccicle
614
446-Gallipolis
367- Cheshlre

Mason, 4 bedroom, 2,500
square feet plus b a semen t .
l acre. $80's . 773-5867 af ter
5p.m .

New Moon trai l•! r . .
12 X70, 3 bedroom . CR.l, 1112
oul of Salem Center . Good :
condition. 669-5092 .
1972

USED Mobil e Home . 576·
2711 .
1971 Oarian 12 x 65, 3 :
bedrooms. 1972 Crown .
Haven, 14 x 65 with 8 x 10 ·
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973 :
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
t972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B "' S
Sales, Inc. 2nd and VIand
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, WV.
Phone 675 ·4424.

Mobile. home located In :
Camp Conley, Extra nice ·
and clean. Phone 304-895- ..
3967 .
1976 KIRK WOOD, 'custOIT\
built, t4x70, washer, dryer,
air conditioner, porch out '
building, $9,000. · 30-4-773· :

a.

5572.

3 bclr., I 112 balhs, LR wllh
fireplace. family room with
woodburner, kitchen and
dining room. Clly schools.
Call 4&lt;16·2003.

•.

BY owner, 3 beCirOom, •
brick, basement, large,r ,
corner lol, central air · &amp; ·
heal. Phone304·~75-116o4.
1

.,I

�Page-:~:rhe Daily sentinel
12

Mobile Homes
lor Salt

Aportmemt
for Rent

12x60 trailer with 3 acres.
30H73-5156.
Farms for Sale

33

Farm for sale. Call 256·

6560.
34

Business Buildings

BUSINESS location, S09
Main St. Pt . Pleasant. WV
30•·882·3356.
35

Lots &amp; Acreage

LOTS · Real nice camqsite

on

Raccoon Creek,

all

SJOO.
down, owner will finance,

utilities

3 room furnished apt.
Utilities paid, adults only,
$185.00 per month, $60.00
deposit. U L'ocust St.,
GalliPOliS. «6·13-10 or «6·
3870.
REGENCY APT . INC . 2
bedroom , kitchen Jur·
nished, carpeted, bills par·
tial ly paid . $200. mo. Ex·
ce llent neighborhood, 675·
6722 or 675·5104.

2 acres on Floyd· Clark Rd .
close to Rt. 160, $.1,000.
Phone ~ - 0390 .
Lots by Owner. 1 11• A to5
acres, level , rural water,
city schools, 10 per cen t
down. Call379·2196.
Apartment for sale, land
con tjact 9%, 4 units, 2 bdr.
each. Total rent $740.,
$.19,000. Call ~ - 3937 .
Lot 50x120 with drilled well .
1/J down &amp; balance land
con tract 2•7 ·28•1 after 7
p.m

Houses for Rent

Small furnished house in
the city, adults only Call
~ - 0338

3 rm . apt. utilities paid .
Ca ll675· 510• or 675·5386 .
1 bedroom apts . ava ilable
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing . Call
992·7721.
1 &amp; 2 bedroom furnished
apartments. 992·W• or 992·
5914 or 882·2566.

2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Par·
t ially furnished . $170 you
pay utilities. Call 992·2288
after 6 p .m

3 bdr . home in country. city 2 BEDROOM, unfurnished
schools. $250 mo. plus dep . apartment and 2 bedroom
Call256·9363 .
furnished apartment, 304675·5571.
4 roomss &amp; bath . No inside
pets. Deposit required . 992 - 2-bedroom all electri c,
3090.
Henderson SlSO. deposit ,
$150. per month . No Pets .
Outside Che ste r . Far - lnquire6l4·367 ·7257 after 5
mhouse w ith land . $250
month
plus damage
deposit . Farmhouse, could
be used for hunting . $100 4
•.5._~F_,u"-r,_n,,_,
·s,_,
hed
~~
Rc!oo=m,_,s'-­
month . Contact Walter J . ~
SLEEPING
ROOMS
and
M cCa rthy,
Realtor,
light
housekeeping
apt.,
Marietta, 373· 1523 . Ask tor
Park central Hotel .
Mike.

room house, Neal Road,
Pt . Pleasan t . 675·6832 after
5pm .
2 bedroom house in coun -

try , Ga ll ipolis Ferry, WV
area . On l y responsible
people need cal l675·123• .
1 bedroom cottage, suitable

for 1 or 2, air conditioned.
off street parking, stove
and refrigerator furnished .
$225 month i ncluding
utilties. Apply at 2509 Jef
ferson
Avenue,
Pt.
Pleasant.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 trailers adults only,
Riverview, air cond . Call
~ - ~2

2 bdr ., 3 bdr.. mobile
homes. Call 4.46·0175 .
2 bedroom trailer. fut ·
nished, in Chester . Room
for rent . 985·3839

Modern office suite for
rent, downtown, Business
and Professional Building .
Call or see Morris Haskins .
46

COUNTRY MOBI LE Home
Park , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call
992 7479
TRAILER spaces for rent.
Southern Valley Mobile
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh .
992 ·3954 .
TRAILER space 3 miles
from town i unction 2 &amp; 62 at
old Y , Pt . PleaSant, 675·
32.S .
One trailer space . Hen·
den.on Trailer Court. 675·
2946 .
R.D. Mobile Home Park,
Rt . 33 between Rt . 2 &amp; Cot
tageville, WV . Lots for sale
or rent . New park with
future plans. Phone 304·372·
8.05 between 5&amp; 7 p.m .

Mobile home . 1 child ac·
cepted . No pets. John
Sheets, J1f2 miles south
Middleport, Rt . 7.

*"ereba no lse
51

OR RENT · almost new 14 x
70, 3 bedroom, 1 1/ 2 baths,
sitting on nice lot, ready to
move into. Phone 304 576·
2711.

2 BEDROOM house trailer,
S1.SO. a month plus deposit
&amp; util ities, 304-675·4088 .
TWO bedroom fra iler, fur ·
nished, 11• mile out Sandhill
Rd . air conditioned, carpet,
washer and dryer, $200. a
month, $100. deposit. 30•·
675·2195.
2 TRAILERS for rent. 2
bedroom furnished . J
bedroom
furnished .
Gallipolis Ferry, WV 304·
675·6851.
Trailer, partially fur nished . $175 per month.
675-172 •.
SMALL, 2 bedroom, fur·
nlshed trailer, 95 Burdette,
air conditioned, $150 month
plus utilities, 304-675·-1600
between 9:00 a.m.
.,00
p .m. Deposit required.

a.

44

Aputmemt
for Rent

FURNISHED, I bedroom
apartment In pt, Pleasant.
Extra nice, ·pt!One ~-675·

1386.

Space for Rent

Household Goods

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, ot·
loman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and loveseat, S27S.
Sofas and chaurs priced
from $285. to $795. Tables,
$38 and up to S109 . Hide· a·
beds,$340., Queen size, $380.
Recliners, S175. to S295.,
Lamps
from from
$18 . to$79.,
$65 . to5
pc.
difettes
$385. 7 pc., $189. and up.
Wood fable with .4 chairs,
$219 up to "95 . Hutches,
$300. and $375 ., maple or
pine finish. Bedroom suites
Bassett Oak, $675.,
Bassett Cherry, $795. Bunk
bed complete with mat·
tresses. $250. and up to
$350. Captain's beds, $275.
complete. Baby beds, $99.
Mattresses or box springs,
full or twin, $58., firm, $68.
and $78. Queen sets. $195. 5
dr. chests, $.19. 4 dr. chests,
~2. Bed frames, S20.and
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets,
$350., dinette chairs $20.
and $25. Gos or electric
ranges, $295. Orthopedic
super firm, $95, sofa bed
with chair, $165., baby
matresses. $25 &amp; $35, bed
frames $20, $25, &amp; SJO.
Used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, and TV's,
3 miles out Bulavllle Rd.
Open 9am to. 7pm, Mon.
thru Fri., 9am tp5pm, Set.
446-0322
.
DINNETTE set, table With
6 chairs, call304·67.5-«l14. I

ATTENTION :
l iM ·
PORTANT TO YOU) Will
pay cash or certified check
for antiques and collec tibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
guns, pocket wat ches, and
coin collections. Catl 557 ·
3.11 .

3
KEG, draft
30.-773-9527
. beer cooter,
KOEHLER Wheatlights.
leather leads, leather
collars with free brass
nameplate. Breaking seen·
ts. training scents,
dogfeed . Phone 304·675·
2098.

Misc . Merchandice
White metal detectors ·
Opening Special 20• off on
all white metal detectors.
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, 4468025.

Septic tank cleaning truck,
2000 gal . capacity, good
shape, ready to go. Michael
Biankenship, Rockport,
wv . 304-474·3537.
JC Penny glass door
firescreen . Color: Black
and polished-brass-plated
finish. Overall size: 43 :v..
in . x 28 31• in. high . Fits
openings : 36 7/8 in. to 42 3.4
in . width, and 261/B i n. to 28
in . height . Price :S.SO. Also
Basset baby bed, e&gt;eellent
condition . Price : S75 .
Phone 304 576·2028.

10• off Buck Knives. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza. ~ - 8025 .
Remington Thunderbolt 22
LR Ammo, $1.39 per box,
S13 .00 per carton . Spring
Valley Trading Ca . Spring
Valley Plaza , «6·8025 .
Eclipse 12 ga . game loads
#6 -shot, 20 shells per box,
$3.95 box . Spring Valley
Traind Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, ~ - 8025 .

50.000 BTU floor furnace,
$50 . 2300 Jefferson Ave. 30•·
675·2396 .
Air conditioner. 1 year old .
Never been used . Sl7S. 992 3379.

Crossman B· B's 'Milk Carton ' box of 1500
Spec ial
S1.09 box . Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
PLaza , -w.\·7025 .

FirewOOd, split, stacked 1
delivered . Mixed wood $65
per cord, $35 one-half cord .
Green or seasoned . All har·
dwood S5.00 more. Also will
buy stafding wood . Ca ll US·
5.78 .
For Sale 8 yr . old gent le
pony, sadd le, briddle, and
everything, $170. Also com ·
pound bow equ1pped with
sights, quickie quiver, and
arrows, $160 . Call after 5
«6·9744.
Bxl4 flat bed frailer Tan ·
tam w i th 10 ply tires, four
12x16.5 super mud tuggers
on white spoke, 8 holes .
Call «63m .
SWIMMING
POOLS :
PRE · SEASON
SALE·
$999 .00 I NSTALLED!!!
Above ground pool COM·
PLETELY INSTALLED
starting at $999.00 . Price in·
eludes pobl, decK, fence,
filter , liner , and in·
stallation under normal
ground condition . Free
shop at home service . Call
1·800·62H511.
EASY credit ava i lable now
to purchase furniture,
telev isions, or appliances.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave., 675· 1773.
Yellow Freestone canning
peaches. Now thru Sept . 20.
Any quantity , available .
Retail &amp; who lesale . Bob's
Market, Mason . Phone 773·
5721 . Open daily ti II 9 p.m.
Kennabec potatos. 247 ·2841
after 7 p.m .
Maternity tops
$5.00,
dresses·$10·., Jeans and
slacks $10. and up. Boys
shirts and jeans to size 18 at
outlet prices. The Water·
melon Patch, New Haven .

For
sale
motorc.y cte
trailer, wired for turn
si gnals and stop light with
hitch . Call ~- 1578.
Rock bOttom clearance
prices on selected 1981
Suzuki's, good sellectlon of
used bikes, parts, and ac·
ces. Suzuki of Jackson, Rt.
35 North Jackson, Oh, 286·
4956.

Ceramic kiln's for sale. Fif ·
ty dollars ($50) each. Need
some repair. Call Gallco
Sheltered Workshop at 307·
0102 between 8:00a .m . and
4:00 p.m . Monday through
Friday .

Antiques

Ratliff Pools I Service.
Complete sa les, service,
pool covers, and win·
terization kits. Call ~ - 1324

\

55
Building Supplies
Bu i 1d i ng materia 1s, b 1oc k,
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dews, lintels, etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Call2•5 ·5121.
LOGS and Log siding for
log
homes,
cabins,
buildings or commercial
buildings.Lannes William ·
son Pallets, Southside, WV.
Phone 304·675·2727. Phone
304-675· 2098 .
ROUGH, cherry lumber,
SlOO. per thousand, 304-675·
2845.
-56
c:__--'-P-'e"-ts,_f,_,o,_r_,S,ae:le,___
POODLE GROOMING.
Cal l Judy Tay lor at 307·
7220.
DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
black Chow puppies, Sept.
1. CFA Himalayan, Per·
sian and Siamese kittens.
New Li l ac, blue, and cho.
Siamese
and
Blue
Humalayan kittens . Call
446·3844 after 4 p.m .
HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding all breeds, clean
indoor-outdoor faci I ities.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
mans. Call.w.\·7795.

78 Honda 750, 9,00 mites,
windshield, saddle bags,
and saddle seat. $1,600.00.
Call 388· 7800.

t"ii~~~;i;~~~::::::-r-;~~7.~~;;;;~:::~
Pets for Sole

56

Available for adoption
long · h a i red
miniature
collie type, female, black·
and-white chest lab type,
male black·and-tan coon
dog type, male . Meigs
County Humane Society.
992·6505 .
Fish Tank and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave., Pt.
Pleasallf. 675·2063. Special
fre-e gerbil or mouse with
purchase of food and bed·
ding .

~=====.::.::.::.::J.:.::=======:.J
They'll Do It

Every

Time

7-1 -

~ - 675·3639 .

Auto tor Sale

AKC
Dachshund,
Pomeranian an Poodle
pups 30•·895·3958 .

For sale 1978 Honda Accord
exc. milage, new radial
tires. Call ~-2055 alter 6.

AKC Boston Terrier, 12
weeks old, female, shots &amp;
wormed, 30073·5125.

1971 vw square back, 4
spd., sun roof, clean. Must
sell. Call4.46·2149.

75

One owner 1977 Buick
,,,------;-;;=:-:-:--:---- Saber , 4 dr., sale due to
57
death, ",000. Call379·2461.
Musical
Instruments
Trumpet, $175.00 . Call 388· For sale 68 Chevy Impala
in good cond ., 327 motor,
9689 after 4:00.
great work car, $325. Call
Magic Genie organ would 614· 2-45·5-422.
like for someone to take
over payments. $250 kit, 1979 Pontiac Grand Prix,
bench, and earphones. Call electric moon roof. posi fraction, heavy duty police
6U -4.46·9461.
suspension. AM· FM 8·
New clarinet for sale. Call track, AC, AT, PW, PS, PB ,
&amp; more. $5,300 . Call 379·
«6·0157.
2449 .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

14FT. Lowe Line Lake Jon,
Swivel seats, depth finder,
Evinrude trolling motor, 15
HP Evinrude motor and
Dilly trailer $1,500 .00
Phone 304·675·2039 .
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

CHARLI~S

SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto repair,
wre cke r service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. 4.46· 7717.
77

1971 Chevelle Malibu, 307
automatic with cragers &amp;
headers, runs good. 1973
Ford Pinto, good cond . &amp;
gas mileage . 992-7029.

Auto Painting &amp; Sanding
$175, any color.free pickup
&amp; Oelivery In Gallipolis
area. Hammond Body
Shop, 221 Mill St. 379·2782.

1978 Ford Fiesta Ghia, sun
roof, am·fm stereo radio
with CB. $3,500. 9•9·2•93.

78

6.cl~--'-F-'a"-r-"m'-=
E-"q"'u"ip,_,m=en,_t: ..._
Gehl insulage wagon, S500.
Grain drill , $300. Call ~ 7322.
Gravely tractor &amp; hog,
rebuilt motor. Phone 446·
325•.
Four 15,000 gallon tanks
located above ground at
Athens, Ohio. $3,000 .00
each. Phone 1·30•·•22·2781.
Minneapolis Moline tractor
with Shermon bockhoe and
loader . $800. 667·3974.

1976 Olds 98. 304·773·5013 .

1979 Mercury Capri. Looks
like a Mustang. 3,200 miles,
lots of extras. New tires,
good gas mileage . $4,300.
992·2803.
197• Olds. 98 Regency .
Regular gas, cruise con·
trot, air, full power. Good
cond. Does not use oil. $750.
985·~95.

1 Ford 3 point hayrake.
$450. Cal l 985·3301 or see at
Baum Lumber. Chester.

1976 Mustang. Very good
cond . Uses no oil . 30 m.p .g .
$2,500 firm . Leonard Bass,
Syracuse, 992·5006.

1 Ford 501 mower . $550.
Call 985·3301 or see at
Baum Lumber, Chester.

1980 Toyota Celica. A.C .,
auto. 992 ·5-45• or 992·7356.

GRAVELY tractor, brush
hog, snow blade &amp; sulky,
phone 30•·458· 185•.
1973 JOHN Deere, 450 B
Bulldozer G. C with 6 way
blade, $9300. 304·675·2786.
Backhoe, lowboys, dump
truck , excavating business
for sale. 675· 123•.

~

Hay&amp; Grain

HAY for sale, 30•·675·2254
&amp; 675· 1302.
6.~s'--__.s..,e.,ed
,_,&amp;"F'-e"'r"t~il~lz~e'!.r__

2,000 bushel ear corn. 8822662.

...... ... ..···•·. . . ......
.........

SALE OR TRADE. 1976
Olds 98 Regency AM· FM 8
track, cruise control, tilt &amp;
telescopic wheel, all power,
new tires. Runs good . 7735013 anytime .
MORRISON 'S Auto sa les.
Henderson, WV . Phone 675·
15H or 675·2881 .
1973 PONTIAC Venturi hat·
chback, very good con·
dition, a bargain at $695.
30.·675·4656.
1978 CHRYSLER Cordoba,
excellent condition, air,
power steering, power
brakes, electric seats &amp;
windows, tilt wheel, S3,000 .
30•·675·2474. 304·576·2.W at·
ter 5.
1971 MAVERICK. excellent
work car, $350. 30H75·3.S9 .
1978 HONDA Civic, brown,
good condition, $2,300. 304 ·
675·3781.
78 FORD Fairmont, good
condition, good mileage,
reasonable, 30•·882·31-45.
1973 Volkswagen Super
Beetle, sun roof. $1400. Call
after 5 pm 67 5· 5859.

~···

71

Auto for Sate

1979 Dodge Omni. 4 door,
hatchback, am·fm radio,
rear defroster and rear
wipers. ~- 576 ·2653.

1976 Buick Limited fully
equipped. One owner, low 75TRIUMPH TR7, 4speed ;
mileage, good cond., $3,1?5. 4 cyt., good tires, good
Call ~ - 1546 .
body, ~ - 773 · 5351.
1971 Corvette convertible, 1966 396 CID $250., 1967 SS
white with red Interior. In· Nova, $1,000. Call 304·675·
eluding white hardtop, 350 238lafter 5 p.m.
engine, ralley wheels. Call
73 Chevortet Malibu hard·
top, 2 dr., 8 cyt., auto. Call
«6· 1-452.
79 CUTLASS Brougham,
loaded with extras ·com·
plete. Call675·«l87.
73 Ford L TO, 2 dr., Hard·
top, good cond.. 351 eng.
and 73 Plymouth Fury 318
engine . Call 4.46·7572 or «6·
1522.
For sale 1975 Camer9, .6
cyl., exc. cond. Call 367·
7723.
1979 Fori! Granada 6 cyl.,
fully equipped. ·Si!e at 19
Mill Cr"k or 4.46·2432 : .
1976 P011t1ac Venture, 2 dr.
coupe, PS, PB, AC, cruise,
exc. cond., $1,950. Call J88·
8769.
'

72

Trucks tor Sale

1978 Chevorlet 112 T
pickup, 6 cyl., auto •• 53,000
miles, $2,875. Cell~- 7322.
1965 Dodge 314 ton pickup
tr.uck, slant 6, 4 spd., flat·
bed, exc . cond., $.400 firm .
Call446·7697.
1968 GMC Tractor Semi,
cab over, 238 Detroit diesel,
10 speed Road Ranger tran·
smlisl&lt;ll). 985·3.547,d _
73
vans&amp;4W.D.
1977 Dodge Maxie Van.
Cost $1_4,000 will sell lot
$4,~. Call 446-6642.

1972 Jeep S.w. 4x4. Low

m.IIHge. Excellent, tond.

985·-®9197:1 Jeep S1.800. Michael
Lambert. 742·2452.

-

Q&lt;
........
. ,... .'

,AUG. :n, 11181

())

Camping
Equipment

Rod &amp; Reel Combo · Zebco
600 ree l, Pfleuger S-250 roc
· Special . $9.99. Spring
Valley Trading Co., Spring
Valley Plaza, .j46·8025.

Gene's Carpet Cleaning,
deep stream extraction.
Free estimates, reasonable
rates . Scothguard, 992·6309 .
Will do carpentry work,
painting, general house
repair. 992·5126 or 992·3941.
Will do all kinds of car·
penter work, paint jobs,
anything. 992·6293.

BORN LOSER

S\PI.li..D'&gt;l'T

~ 6lJ'(

FL\6KT ii-lSLlRA\.IC.8

10:50 P--T G,b..n:; 23.

V /&gt;RS YoU KIDDII.J0~ 160U61-1T11W
5ll.li=F FOR 'C'eA5 f&gt;.J::O ~~::::::-;:1
ll~R

owce ca..~J::L.ltD

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, . · "
removal. 675· 1331.

··.
ANNIE

MARU,! WE'RE
R.tl5f!T BETI&lt;E€N
Ttl' W/IIILES

'

&gt;~ULPC -

THAT'S TliE
ANYWAY-

AN' TliAT

HMPOOH!!

+' .
,.,.. '
;..·

.

HOME
building
&amp;
remodeling, 304·675·2440.

.. .

.,.•

~­

-"

Plumbing

.

· ~··

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Phone «6·3888 or ~- 4477

AIJ.EYOOP
•

MISS WUNCH, HOW
DID 'IOU KNOW THE

&gt;

a.

.,

·•

-·•
i

i

•

1976 21' Starcraft Wonder
EKcavating
Star travel trailer, self con- 83
tained, exc. cond. Price Back Hoe &amp; Dltcher Ser·
reduced . Phone 992·2963. vice, water lines, ditches,
Located · at Royal Oak septic systems, footers.
Park.
Call ~ -93-«1 or 675·6898 .

1977 18 ft . Nomad travel
trailer, sleeps 6, self con tained, awning, TV an ·
tenna , very good condition,
phone 30•·675·6489.

81

Home
Improvements

FOR BEST In Carpet
Cleaning · Call Smeltzer's
Steamway. Call 614 · ~·
2096.
STANLEY STEEMER
Carpet Cleaning
~-4208

JIM MARCUM Roofung
spouting and siding. 30
years experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling .
Call388·9857.
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, corn ·
mercial and residential,
free estimates. Call 256·
1182.
SANDERS
CON ·
TRACTING, Carpentry
work &amp; painting, concrete,
landscaping, ~ - 2787 .
CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Ca ll ~- 2107.
WOODSHOP · Cabinets,
picnic
tables,
porch
swings, most wood produc·
ts. 101 Court St., Gallipolis.
Cell4.46·2572 .
.

Dozer, loaded, and ditcher
work. Basements, Jan·
dscaping, gas, electric, and
water lines. Charles R.
Hatfield. Rutland, Ohio.
742·29()3.

He does lqnore it and
ittoqet
it will qo
attent1on!

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank. 675· 1234.
BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service. Larry Slden·
stricker. 675·5580 .
. ~

84

a.

I

Electrical
Refrigeration

Fuller Electric Co. Com·
plete rewiring, commercial
or residential, and elec·
trical maintainance, also
on call . Ph. 446·2171.
Gallipolis .

WINNIE
MAYSE IT IS TIME
TO 6ET SOUP

Electrical, Air Condition,
Heating, Hot water tanks.
Service all makes. Phone
379·2196. Charles Kieslln9.

'·

'·

7HI6 Pf£TIN6 HAS

KEPT ME ON EOISE.
MAYEJE I. 5HOULD
'mY saMETHIIVG
ELSE, LIKE ...

FOOt7 INTO MY

AFTeR I?INING
WITH BILLY

GY5TCM.I'f~

CONNIE
PECI(l/Hi TIIAT

HEAlTHIER WAY TO

1115 APV.Ce
SeeMS

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer.
Sates &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2284 .

IHERE./6 A

6HEI7 POUNr;&gt;S...

PI~STIVE

AF7'El? ALL ...

I

Mark's Appliance Service.
Speciali zing In Frigidaire ·
products . Backed by ex·
perience. 667·3323. save
thiS ad.

Ge~eral

J

•.•

..

Hauling

-~

J 1M'S
DEPENDABLE
water delivery. Call 256·
9368 anytime.
.,

.

i

BARNEY

-JACK'S REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commerdel, Industrial.
Phone882·2079.
85

I'LL

IT BACK

BY SUNDOWN

IT ALL WEEK IF YOU
WANT TO··MAW'S OFF

VISITIN: HER SISTER

FER SHORE

~--~

•

4

. NOW HAULING house coal
'
&amp; limestone tor driveways. ·•··•
WEATHERALL CON· Call for estimates 307·7101
.
1""CRETE · quality and serJ-O
~N
-E_S__B
_O
_Y
_S__W
___ATER ~
vice, call675· 1582.
·
SERVICE. Call 367-7471 or:
..
• 1»•
PAINTING • Interior and 367-0591 . •
.uterlor, p1Ur11blhg,
rOOfing, some remCidellttg, Mobile homes moved.'':'4 • ·
.20 yn. exp, Call 381'9652.
. .
licensed, and bonded. 576·
2711 or 675-4398.
BING'S CONCRETE CON' · '~
STAUCTION - SDecla!lzlng ' IN
M; H. AeD.alr
.• ~
l.n concrete ·driveways,
"-"
., ,.
~ldewalk.~, .
flallo, 117
. : Upl!olstery
•. ,, ,.
, basement, ·t gerage• 1floora !.
,
.
.
.... &lt;... .•
end etc. Freenllmaleti. ll · ~ , · TftiSTATE &lt;•
·&gt;• : · ~
' years experJIHICe. Cl,l\ 367·
};!~HOLSTEAY SHOP • ,J_,•
7791. . "
... Sec. Ave.; GalliPOlis: •
.,
•
.
.
. 44_fc7133 01' 446· 1833. ' • • .::
; Hoover SWiepers repaired
· ,
· ' · '·'.;
at Empire . Fumlture., t-42. , ~W~EY~IJ~stery Rt. ~ ·~
1
Second Ave, GafiiPOIII, OH.
5-~~~· · t'easant, 30+ :" ;:

11

.

.

I

7o3!1 (I) BASEBALL Atlanta Braveo
va Philadelphia Philliea
7:118 Cil CBN UPDATE NEWS
BoOO IIJD (I) LITTLE HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE Carollnelngallo
and her daughter Laura bring
joy to theirhuebandewhen they
simultaneously announce that
each is pregnant; but, Caroline
learns some shattering newe
following her medical examina tion . (Repeat; 60 mina . )
(Closed-Captioned; U.S.A.)
Cil AIIERICANCATHOUC
I]) MOVIE ·(COMEDY) "I&gt;
"There Goee The Bride"
11180
(I) lfJJ Gl THAT'S lNCRED~
BLE A daring West German who
made headlines by flying the
Atlantic at rapped to the top of
an airplane ,a tope tunt pilot who
performs the world'allrat
upalde down loop a mere 5 teet
lrom the ground. an a railroad
disaaterthat waa seemingly
averted by a premonition .
(B:e__2!tat · 60 mins.)
IIJllJ WKRP IN CINCIHNA·
Tl Lee Nessman' a !.arm new a
reporting on station WKRPwins
him the coveted Sllvef Sow
Award from the prestigious
PeterPiperPorkPackersGuild,
but Lea nee dee date tor the
banquet. (Repeat)
()) ()))
GREAT PERFORMANCES 'A life in the Theatre'
This two character play by
David Mamet centers on two
actors: one a seaeoned
veteran, the other a neophyte.
Ellis Aabb a net Pater Evans
re -create their off-Broadway
roles. (90 mine.)
Bo30 ())
NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW
0 ())Gal THE TIM CONWAY
SHOWComedyandvafietywith
Tim Conway, Harvey Korman,
Maggie Roswell, Miriam Flynn.
Bert Berdis and Dick Orkin ; plus
a surpflseappearancebyCarol
Burne«. (Repeat)
8:58 ()) CBN UPDATE NEWS
g,oo CIJ8(I) MONDAY NIGHT AT
THEMOV1ES'Airport'77' 1977
Stars: Jack Lemmon, Brenda
Vaccaro.
CIJ 700CLUB
(I) lfJJ. MONDAY NIGHT
MOVIE 'Annie Hall' 1977 Stars:
Woody Allen. Diane Keaton .
0 ()) ®J M.A.S.H. While the
4077 th plots a surprise to cheer
up homesick B . J . on h la
wedding anniversary , a fearful
Charles ia sent on an inspection
tour to the front linea.
(8epeat)
g,30 I]) MOVIE ·(SUSPENSE) ••
"Hunter"' 1i71
O(J)®J HOUSE CALLS When
the beat applicant to lilt the
vacancy for a surgeon at
Kensington turns out to be a
beautiful woman, it creates
various reactions from the real
of the ataff. (Repeat)
()) GEORGE SHEARING AT
THE CARLYSLE Set In an
intimatecafe, George Shearing
and bassist BrianTorff perform
a program of vintage Shearing,
including such favorites a a
·ThlaCan't Belove', 'My Funny
Valentine' and 'Lullab y of
Birdland'.
(j]) A DAY TO REMEMBERo
AUGUST2S, tiMI3.
tO:OO • ()) ®J LOU GRANT When
Crusher Carter, a hard ·hltllng
pro football star, ia sued for
injuring an opponent, it raises
questions at tha Tribune over
how well it covers the touchy
subject of violence in sparta .
(Repeat; 60 mine.)
()) EXCHANGI! 'Threat to the
Rain Forest' Filmed entirely on
location, this programexplorea
the dangers of the ongoing
destruction of the world 'a
tropical rain toreate. (80

f.

I'

J$.

~

. ~ :a.~! ..

mine.)

(j]) NEWS
10:0&amp; (I) TBS EVENING NEWS
10:28 ()) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10o30 Cil PUBLIC ENEMIES
(j]) GREATEST ADVENTURE
'The Story of Man's Voyage to
the Moon· On July U5, t989,
three men began a tour-day
journey that would forever
change man' eperception of I he
unlver8e as, three days later.
two of the three aet toot on the
, moon. This apeclal recapturea
the axe Ita ment;re,._ ultatlon ,
dang ere, follies and ahear
beauty of the United Statea •
program whi&lt;lh culminated in
thie dramatic million.
11:00 (J).(J)(I).(J)®JIDJ.

Now arrange the clrded letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as aug·
gested by the above cartoon.

XI I ) r I I I X )

A(

Answer here:

(Answers tomorrow)
Saturday·s l Jumbles : JINGO OCT ET LAYOFF TYRANT
Answer : The best way to tell a woman's age is this
-NOT TO

BRIDGE
Notrump openers beware
By Oowald Jacoby
8Dd AlaD Sonlag

Wi-IAT IF X FoRGET
.MY LUNCH?

IF I (AN'T
WIIO MAARIED
MILUONTH1

LOUIS n!E
.MILLIONTH 1

=---

1t:OI MUIITHI!FAMILY
1 t:ll
UPOATI! NI!WI
11:30
THETOIItGHTIHOW
'The B11t Of Carton' Gueote:
Bo DerK, Pete Fount~ln. Joton
E!RberY. IR-t: eo mine.)
()) ANOTHEIIUFI!
•
I]) IIOYI! ·(COII!DYl ••

"hltle ...-

, . .......

8-11·81

• 10 7

+QJ 10 2
WEST

EAST
•J9732

•K8
•Qt064

.J95

+652

tAO

+A943

+76
SOUTH

.Q64
• A2

tKQJ98
+K85
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Wett

Nortb

East

Pass

2+
3 NT

Pass
Pass

~=

South
I NT

2t

Pass

Opening lead: 94

two."
Oswald: "He bad been
unlucky, but be bad thrown
away a cinch game. All be
had to do was to win the first
heart in dummy to keep his
ace as an entry for

diamonds."

tiM'A-ot.l"
by

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS

40 Certain

I Kiddies'
swruner
place
5 l118dequate
11 To shelter
1% Smitten
13 Put to
the sword
It Meshlike
15 Antonym
of fast
16 Theol. sch .
17 Florentine
gold
18 Drizzling

n

20- green
21 Insects
22 Office
fixture

23 Sepulchral

25

tablet
New Orleans

metais
Katherine
- Porter

DOWN
1 "Trying"
experiences
2 Moslem
deity
Yesterday's

3 Pass on
t Seal of the
faithful
5 UndergroWld
workers
6 Adversary

7 Hgt.

Answer

16 French

29Where

comrnWle
19 Artifice
22 Pul to
the

Valparaiso
is
30 Neil or

Paul
31 Noted

sword

8 Not make

billiards

23 Call

Heaven
9 HiUaryNorgay
conquest
10 North

names
24 Land
cultivation

American

trees

and Newport, .,..'"Tl'-.,.:--,.-e.g.
26 Sapient
21 Military
tactic
28 Genus

player

36 Endless
time
37 Shinto

25 Trim
27 Fight
units

temple

Ulmus
tree

28 One type

32

of hen
Between
Ga. and Miss.

b-+-+--lf--

33 Shade
34 Uncle (Sp.)
35 Do a croupIer's job
37 Silly one,
for short
38FromUme
mrunemorial

~~~~+--t--f--

3t Child's toy

.·

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

to

work It:

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

One letter simp!)' atands lor another. In this sample A II
used for the three L's, X for the two o·s, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wordo are all
biots. Each day the code letters are dllferent .

c&amp;YPTOQUOTES

QNPPV

~FTI!R

MFDNJV

t•••

DJNYYNOU

HNNY .
• ()) Cl8 L.A T! IIOVII
'QUINCY, M.E.: SpMd Trap' A
car driver dlttln 1 fiery
erath, but Qul~cy euopeoto
homlcldeWhenlte oondiiCit en
1utoroy. (Ropeot) 'HARRYO:
Ire I Gamoo' A dlltreught
at 'lr hires Harry to find her
_ ;· addictoddauol\terbefore
a worse fate bef~lla her.

NORTH

• A 10 S
.K I 7 3

Alan: "Is it true that your
son Jim's present on his
twelfth birthday was that be
was then allowed to bid
notrump?"
Oowald: "It mil!ht have
been a good birthday present
if be bad played bridge then.
He didn't learn until be
reached Notre Dame some
four years later. Today's
hand is a good example of
why beginners should not
open notrump."
Alan: "I take it that South
was a weak player who
opened one notrump with
the South hand and then
failed to make game"
Oswald: "Exactly so• He
ducked the first lteart in
both hands and had to win
t.h.e second. Then he led his
king of diamonds. East
ducked, but won the second
and led a third heart."
Alan: 'Til continue with
what must have happened.
He won in dummy and
played lbe gueen of clubs.
West ducked, but won the
second club with the ace
over South's killg. Then he
cashed his last heart and got
out with a club. South led a
spade to his queen. West
took his king and led a spade
back and South was down to

III!WS

(J) DAVI!ALLENATL.ARGI!

t

67

xJ r

iiD\

Wallpapering . lnterior· Ex·
terior painting . Ex perienced. Free estimates.
675·5211 .

1976 Fleetwing truck cam
per. 11 ~_t :, · self-contained, J P Plumbing &amp; Heating,
exc. c:ond: Information 614- Rt . 1 Gallipolis, 307·7853.
7•2·2586.
D. C. Contractors Plum·
1973 25' Troutwood Camper bing, electrical, heating,
trailer. AC·perfect for roofing, aluminum, vinyl
river bank. $1.800. 992-7727. siding, and home painting .
675-3376 or 675· 1240.

CAMPER. 20 ft ., self con ·
ta ined, call 304·675·2453 at ·
ter 5.

DIFFICULTie:::;.

IDJID FACE THE MUSIC

RON'S Television Service. .
Specializing In Zenith and : ·
Motorola, Quazar, and .....
house calls. Phone 576·2398. ·:;
or 446·2454.
~·,

&amp; Heating

For Sale ManSfield R:. V .,
toilet, used, S-45.00. 12 ft.
awning and poles, $20.00.
Evening 388·9335.

HE lAKE~ 6R'EAT
1Ni'ER'E5T IN ONE'5

Mo~Henaon .

'1bJR BOlRD\1-lb TIME

LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl
882·2079.

82

SALlE

Eb~enatarlnthlaaerteaabouta

VOLJ I&lt;NOW• JU5T 8&amp;CAU6E YOU OM '/I;AH, EA5YIF
MAVI! TH05e .1/IIS Polli-N'i 'iOU @OT 90Mt:THI~'
MeAN THil FI6HT 15 OVI;R!
BETTER. THAN
8LJU.Ei5f

..

.

REIIE1181!R

CAPTAIN EASY

Lucas Builder's. Room ad·
ditions,
garages,
remodeling, and cement
work. 675·5022.

b
I KJ _
b
I I r

PIIIIAGAZINE
A GRI!AT DAY TO

rugged Tenneaaee back·
woodaman who bland a trail of civilization thr0110h aavage
Indian territory and eetabliahed
the lndian'a rtghtaln America.
CIJIJZGI FAIIILYFEUD
(I) NASHVILLE ON THE
ROAD
• ()) TIC TAC DOUGH
()) &lt;Dl MACNEIL-LEHRER
RI!PORT
iiaJ NEWS
7oD!I (I) CAIIOL BURNETT AND
FRli!NDI
7o30 CllD BULLSEYI!
()) ANOTHER LIFE
(I) D ()) JOKER'S WILD
(I) HOLLYWOOD SQUARES
()) DICK CAVETT SHOW
®J
RICHARD SIMMONS
SHOW
(j]) DICKCAVETTSHOW .Ride
'Em Cowboys, Part I' Gueete:
Larry Mahan, Don Gay and

by Henri Arnold and Bob Let

I TORNS

I]) DAVVCROCKI!TT AT THE
AL.AIIOFtiiParl&lt;erandBudcty

..

French City
Painting
Residential, commercial,
interior. exterior, paper
hanging, and texured
ceilings. Ph. 307·77114 or 307·
7160 .

Dave's Appliance Repair. ·
Washers, dryers, plum·
bing, electric, general handyman. Phone 304·576·2921
or 675·5689.

.

• 7:00 Cll.

•

I

I!VI!N111G

.

....
. ...

DOBBINS &amp; SONS CON ·
TRACTORS Remodeling·
Inside and out·electrial
work·heatlng·plumbing·sidin·
g-room additions. (ex·
perienced carpenter ·28
years) Serving southern
OhiO &amp; Western W.VA. Call
David Dobbins Sr., 388·
9856 . If no answer ca ll 388 ·
996&lt;1 .

~ ~ ~~-

Unacramble theN tour Jumbtell,
one '-r to each oquare, to form
tour Oldlrwy WOlds.

•
•
VIewmg

.......
-'

Home building,
remodeling and repa ir .
Custom work from start to
finish. Call 388·8711 .

. ftfl\JNl ID'il fil THATSCAAIIBLEDWORDGAIIE

Television

NEVER I-IE:'AAI' OF
L-IKE!

%·

Auto Repair

Winter potatoes, ca nning 1975 Thunderbird, many
tomatoes, peppers . Charles extras, good cond. $2,000.
R. Harris, Portland, Ohio. Will trade lor smal ler car.
8~ · 2693 .
9·9·2025.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home :-~!:-:
malntatnance
and ~,...;p-_
remodeling . Phone 388· •
. ........
9326
~~
home .

TheDa

Ohio

slum~

ROBERTS BROTHERS
GARAGE. 24 hr. wrecker
service. "Big or small" we
tow them all! 2332 Eastern
Ave .• Gallipolis, Ohio. Oay
.w.\·2«5 or Night · «6·
4792.

~- 9692.

,

KAWASAKI, 175 motor ·
cycle, 3300 miles. 55 mpg,
1980 750K HONDA motor·
cycle, travel trunks and
saddle bags. 2146 miles,
$1500.00, 614·-w.\·9254 after
6:00p.m.

BRIAR PATCH KEN N E LS6,:l;:::==~L~iv;e~s;to~c=.k===
Boarding and grooming.
AKC
Gordon
setters, 3 Hereford cows &amp; calves.
English Cocker Spaniels. 247·21141 after 7 p.m .
Call446 ·4191.
registered
1
male
Jeanie's Pet Shop 1 mile Yorkshire Hoo. 61.·698·
West of Gallipolis on Rt. 6896.
141 . Open Monday thru Sat.
9·5. Call «6 7920.
TENNESEE
Walking
Mare, 3()4·675·2098 .
For sale • months old, AKC
registered Cocker Spaniel . 3 GOATS, phone 3a..458 .
Call ~ - 7903 or ~-2 13• .
1882.
Pomeran ia
puppies,
parrots and other birds.
Call286·1429.

Motorcycles

1975 Honda Gotdwlng 1000.
$1 ,500 . Call379·2115.

Air Compressors, new
Ingersoll · Rand 5 hp, single
and 3 phase, truck load
sale. From $1.2-45.00. Call
collect 30•·766·6244.

1973 Montery Zenith color
TV, 21' , 2 yr . old . Call .w.l·
6324 anytime .

Enclosed utility trailer,
exc. cond. willsnot leak.
Call388 ·8436.

74

carry at Village Furniture
2605 Jackson Avenue. 675·
1773.

Super twin am ·
with
external
cabinet, Peavey
system . Call 388-

...
.·.

Home
tmpro.vements

11

.

0\RJ..Vt£ ....

BIG discounts for cash and

Vans&amp;4W.D.

1976 GMC Van . Insulated,
paneled, carpeted, 2 bunks,
covered foam mattress.
)2,150. 992-7207 after S.

I NIW6R m:w'{oO
W~SI..t.H A
~FM.

NEED several items of fur·
ntture ,
applla nces ,
televisions. Big discounts
tor quanlty purchase.
Village Furniture 2605
Jackson Ave . 675-1773.

CB,TV,IIadio
Equipment

Compound Bow Special
PSE suzzler laminated lim ·
bs, magnesium handle. so
lb. pull. Special $39 .95 .
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446 ·
8025 .

73

by Larry Wright

a.

Full size couch and chair,
plaid . Call ~ - 5118 or no
ans «6·6677 .

53

KIT 'N' CARLYLE "'

1·3 pc . bedroom suite w ith
mattress
bOX springs.
S17S. 1 stereo stand. $35.
H2·2491 .

Case Knlves-20% off all
case knives. Spring Valley
Trading Co., Spring Valley
Plaza, «6·8025 .

2 bdr. apartment unfurn .,
in Crown City, Ohio . Call
256·6&lt;174.
2 bdr . upstairs apt.,
utilities paid . Adults and no
pets . Call «6· U57 .

Misc. Merchandlce

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,
dryers;
refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
Pllances, 1918 Eastern
Ave., «6·7398.

Fender
pifier
speaker
monitor
8-436.

2 bedroom furnished apart·
3 bdr . house in town ni ce ment in Middleport. S175
locafion, no pets, dep. month, plus utilities. 992·
r equired . Ca ll 446· 240 4.
5545, Mon .- Fri., between
7a .m .- 3 p.m.
Unfurnished house
6
rooms, Neighborhood Rd. , 1 bedroom apartment in
$225. Call 4~ «16 after Middleport_ $180 ut ilities
7PM .
included . Deposit, no pets.
992· 7177 after 6 p.m .
6 rm house in country, ref
&amp; dep . req . Call388-9756 .
Apartments. 675 ·554B .

4

Household~~

52

NOW RENTING : Senior
citizens and handucapped
BY owner, 3 apartment apt. community opening .
house on approx. 1 acre. Featuring 1 bedroom unLive in one, rent othe rs to furnished with wall to wall
make your payment. Can carpeting, wall ·tex walls,
be converted single home. built
in bookcase, ap·
City water, will consider pliances, smoke detectors,
land contract . 675-1883 9-5 air conditioned, private
p.m.
patio, storage facilities,
single story with no stairs
20 ACRES on black top to climb, private entrances
road, timber . Phone 1-614- with undividuat laundry
fakilities on premises with
263·8322 or 263 ·2669.
recreation and meeting
Profe ssional
7 ACRES of Kanawha rooms .
re~ident
manager
on
River land , 16142638322
premises . Stonewoods Ap·
or 1·614·263·2669.
ts., Rt. 7, Middleport. For
rental information phone
614·843·2341.
Reatals
41

51

Furnished apts. 3 bdr.,
$220., water paid, chi ldren
acceptable . Call 446· 4416
after 7PM.

available,

call after 3 p.m., 256·6&lt;113.

Monday, August 31, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

FXM

DFVNOUD

JEDP

FD

RXEB

DPXNOU.- U.

A .

FD

PGM

YM F XJ·D

F

IXESMO

YXMOPNDD

Yesterdly'a Cryp&amp;oquote: IF THERE'S ANYrtlltiG A PUBLIC
SERVANT HATES TO DO IT'S SOMETHING FOR THE '

:PUBLJC.-80URCEOBSCURE

.

�.

'

&lt;

•

'' .

Monday, August 31, 1981· ~

Eight die
on Ohio
highways

STUCK- This bulldozer, owned by the Three R's Indusl11es of Langsville, Carl Shenefield, pres ident, was
moved to a wooded area near the scene

or a plane {'rash

near Salem Center Sunday . However, the equipmrnt
became hogged down in quicksand and Rex Shenefield,
pictured with the equipment, said thai other heavy

equipment had to be secured to free it. The department
of Sheriff James J. Proffitt, the Slate Highway Palrol,
the Salem Township Volunteer Fire Department, and
the Middleport Fire Department and Emergency
Squad was on the scene for hours as the plane burned ·
killing its pilot, Donald Stoneburner, 55, Naples, Fla.

By The Alsoclloled PreA
At least eight people were killed in
traffic accidents In Ohio during the
weekend, including three In a on&amp;car crash In Fulton County on Satur·
day , according to the Highway
PatroL
Troopers counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
PIQUA - Joan M. Spillers, 25, of
Piqua, In a tw~r crash on Ohio 48
in Miami County.
CINCINNATI - Paul F. Sabo, 47,
of Fairfax, In a one-car accident on a
city street.
XEmA - David A. Hornick, 24, of
Xenia, In a one-car crash on a rural
road in Greene County.
AKRON - John M. Roth, 31, of
Akron, in a motorcyle accident on
Ohio619in Summit County.
SATURDAY
TOLEDO - John M. Bach, 20, of
Morenci, Mich.; Steven R. Hart, 20,
or Uberty Center, and James H. Tippy, 20, of Wauseon, in a one-car accident U.S. 20 In Fulton County.
WOOSTER - James E. Hut·
chison, 23, of Wooster, in a two-car
collision on U.S. 250 In Wayne Coun·
ty.

Florida
(Continued from paRe I l
to stop in time to avoid the collision.
While no arrests have been made
in conjunction with the accident at
this time, charges are pending.
Damage to Price's truck was
estimated at $800; Simpkins' 1971
Harley-Davidson motorcycle was
declared a total loss.

Revival continues

SEARCH PARTY-This truckload of volunteers including two State Highway Patrolmen was organized
Sunday afternoon near the site of the crash of a Cessan
421 Golden Eagle twin engine plane, off County Road 1,
near Salem Center in Meigs County to search for the

pilot who was believed at flnil to have bailed out of the
plane. The truck was taking the volunteers to various
sections around the crash where they combed the
heavily wooded area looking for the pilot, Donald
Stoneburner, 55, who died In the crash.

A revival is continuing this week
at the Ash St. Freewill Baptist Chur·
ch in Middleport with services at
7:30 each evening.
Evangelist is Joseph Gwinn, Leon,
W. Va. Special vocal music is
featured each evening. Appearing
tonight through Thursday will be the
Joint Aires and on Friday the Gospel .
Messengers will be on hand to
present the musical program.

Area deaths

·:

Hennan H. London, 68, widely
known Syracuse resident and mayor
of that community for over 18 years,
died Saturday evening at the Lancaster-Fairfield Hospital In Lan-

Kennedy wa s treated on the sce ne.
Middleport was called out again at
Meet the team night will be nl&gt;- 5:37p.m., to transport Isa bel Powell
served by Sou them High School at 7 from her residence to Veterans
p.m. Thursday at the Southern fi eld. Memoria l.
The public is invited.
ill 6:36 p.m., the Syracuse squad
look Ricky Se llers to Pleasant
Va ll ey: 7 02 p.m ., Pomeroy,
Henrietta Jenkins to Veterans
Memorial from Pomeroy Health
The Meigs County Em ergency Care Center and 9:5() J~hn Cook
Medical Service re port~ nine runs
from PHCC to Veterans Memoria l.

Emergency runs

made ove r t he wee kend by area

squads. Saturday , three ca lis were
answered . Rutland unit al 8:24 a.m.,
transported Evelyn Maynard from
her La ngsville residence to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At II :57 a.m ,
the M1ddlepnrt squad look Eleanor
Zeiher from her homee to Holzer
Medica l Ce nter, and at 9:37 p.m ,
was smnmoned to the city jail to
transport Frank !Ieiker to Veterans
Memorial.
Sunday at 1:20 p.m., the Rutland
Emergency Squad took Mark Salt-

Mr. London waa a 11011 of the late
Jooeph and Mollie Hall London. He
waa abo preceded In death by two
brothers, Joseph London and Fred
Quillen, and four sisters, Iva Roush
Winnie Hood, Lola Blrtcher and
Nina Slaugeribaut.
Mr. London had served the
Syracuse conununity In various
capacities for 31 years. He was
mayor lor 18\lo years. The swimming pool in the community, London
Pool, was named in his honor. He
was an honorary member of both the
Syracuse Fire Department and
Emergency Squad and was a member of the Syracuse Presbyterian
Church.
Surviving are his wife, Naomi K.;
three daughters, Mrs. James
(Mary) Guinther, Syracuse; Mrs.
Douglas (Sandra) Moore, Lan·
caster, and Mrs. Jack (Patricia )
Koeller, West Alexandria; six gran·
dchildren, Lori, Carrie, Christy,
Briton, Toby and Jana; three
sisters, Mary EUen Dye, New
Haven; Annie Stillwagner. Wooster.

LOS ANGELES (AP)- President palatable.
,
programs wOuld leave $44 billion
Reaga.n will slice up to $30 .billion off
AdrniniBtration officials have said more to be found In social programs.
his military spending buildup and ' Reagan must find at least $74 billion
Bater said Reagan would propose
may have to go even deeper to in savings in fiscal 1983 and 1984 to $20 billion to $30 billion in defense
balance the budget by 1984, a top fuHill his pledge of balancing the · cuts In 1983 and 1984 - between 4
White House aide says.
budget within three years task percent and 7 percent - and could
White House chief of !!laff James already made harder by record in- seek more reductions.
A. Bater III said In an ·Interview terest rates that are driving up
Bater gave no Indication what
Monday that the cuts in planned in· govenunent spending and by a programs would be affected by the
creases In the defenl!l! budget are sluggish economy that could cut cuts and deputy White House press
necessary ~roUe additional reduc- revenues.
secretary Lorry Speakes said
tion.s m socilll programs polilically
Cutting $30 billion from defense separately that Reagan will get fur·
!her information on the defense
budget later this week.
Reagan has called for spending
more than $1.6 trillion over the next
five years, the largest military
buildup in U.S. history. The administration's most recent plans call
for defense outlays of $225 billion In
fiscali983 and $254 billion in 1984.
Baker said Reagan's 1962 defense
budget Is $48 billion higher than former President Carter's fiscal 1981
defense proposal, a difference or 19
percent after adjusting for inflation.
Using that 1981 budget proposal
DENVER - A lightning bolt knocked out electrical power Monday
for
comparison, Baker said he
to more than 150,000 customers in most of Montana, southern Idaho,
believes
Reagan will be able to fuHill
northern Wyoming and one Colorado town, utility spokesmen said.
his
commitment
to increase defense
An estimated 150,000 Montana Power Co. customers east of the Con·
spending
by
7
percent
.:.. even after
tinental Divide lost electricity when lightning hit a 34().kllovolt line bet·
the
cuts.
ween Four Comers, N.M., .and Pinto, Utah, ·Montana Power
The Washington Post, meanwhile,
spokesman Russ Cox said.
reported
today that Defense
The blackout just after midnight also affected I ,800 people in
Secretary
Caspar
W. Weinberger,
southern Idaho and 1100 In southwestern Colorado. An undetennined
has
ordered
the
military
services to ·
number were affected In Wyoming's Big Horn Basin.
prepare detailed lists of programs
that would be delayed, forces that
· would be cut and purchases that
would be stretched out if Reagan's
flv&amp;-year defense spending program
COLUMBUS, Ohio- The city's public teachers voted Monday night
is cut.
to extend their current master agreement on a day·t&lt;Hiay basis, a'lerQuoting Pentagon sources, the
ting a strike for Tue$day's start of classes.
newspaper said the Defense ResourBetw~n 2,100 and 2,200 teachers attended the meeting at Veterans'
ces Board met Monday to compile
Memorial in Columbus, standing to register their votes. The tally was
the lists into one that could serve as
nearly unanimous, said John Grossman, president or the Columbus
a
guide In any presidential budget
Education Association.
decision.
The teachers agreed to a four-day notice of tennination of talks by
The Air Force said it would have ·
either party. The membership also empowered the CEA's leaders to
to phase.out old B-li2D bombers and
cau a strike, if necessary.
close two Sli'l!~ic Air Conunand
bases if its planned 1983 budget were
cut by more than $3 billion, according to the Post.
The newspaper also said the Air
WASHINGTON - The Internal Revenue Service is looking at the
(Continued on page 12)
lull range of investment programs tied to the new tax-free All Savers
Certificates to detennine whether they skirt congressional guidelines.
Officials said there is no indication when the IRS will issue a final
ruling on the tax consequences of the advance Investments programs,
which 'offer high Interest rates or cash bonuses for money put into an
institution prior to establishment of the savings certificate on Oct. I.

Herman H. London

a

and Josephine Rickie, Meadeville,
Pa ., and several nieces and
nephews.
Services wiU be held at 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Wanda Johnson
officiating. Burial will be In Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home anytime.

Meets Tuesday
Meets Tuesday
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, will met Tuesday at 8 p.m.
at the legion hall.

A regular meeting of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will be
held at 7:30p.m. Tuesday. Refreslf.
ments will be served following the
meeting.
..

150,000 without electricity

ELBERFELD$
CLOSE-OUT SALE!

TAPES • TRIMS • BRAID
BINDING • THREAD

Teachers vote to extend pact

J and P COATES - STRETCH LACE - BIAS TAPE
KNIT BRAID - SEAM BINDING, ETC. PLUS COATS
AND CLARK SEWING THREAD.

6

FOR

$}00

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT., 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

IRS checks investment plans

curing in the area, acco rding to Lt.

E. W. Wigglesworth , corrunander of
the Ga llia-Meigs Post of the state
highway patrol.
Last week , the patrol investigated
sma n frum his residence on County two fatality accidents. Whil e one is
Road 55 to O'B ienness Hospi tal. and still under investigation, both show
the Middleport unit was called to an sca tbelt s were no t used,
auto accident at Cooks Ga p Hill, Wigglesworth said.
Rutland. at 2:40 p.m. , where Vick i
In fact, in all of the area fatalities

Family hit by second tragedy
TOLEDO, Ohio - The shooting death of an unanned 1!0-year-old
grocery store guard is the second tragedy to befall his family , whic~
saw a daughter murdered In 1969, relatives said Monday.
Scott Simpson of Toledo was shot in the chest about 5:30 p.m. Sunday
In a scuffle with a man SUSJ&gt;I!Cted of shoplifting a bottle of wine, i
package of cl\ewing gwn and a pair or sunglasses.
Simpson allegedly was shot by a man presumed to be the accomplice or the shoplifter, said Detective William Knapp. '

'

I!

Ir

U.S. vetoes resolution
UNITED NATIONS - Thirteen members of the Security Council
voted to condemn South Africa's Invasion of Angola, but the Unitect
States vetoed the resolution because it did not blame the Cubans and
Soviets also.
·
Ambassador Charles M. Uchenstem, the deputy American
representative at the United Nations, told the council the United States
could not support a resolution that pisces "blame solely on ·South
Africa for the escalation of violence."

Keep your savings
•
In a safe place.

continue to be our nwnber one enforcement priority, " he said.

Students occupy Iranian office
·ROME,,... Several Iranian student~~ ·occupied a COIIBuiar office today

EVERY tU~SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'$

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can Eat!~

In the bulldiqg housing Iran's embassy to the Vatican and demanded
to meet with the Italian press, police reported.
Pollee BUITOunded the building In the Parloll section of Rome.
The ltali8n news agency ANSA said pollee believed the group might
be anned. ·But a man identifying ·himself as orie of the students called
The AiiBOciated Press to IU1IIOIIIICe "a peaceful occupation" to protest
executions of political prisoners In Irim.
·
·

The Farmers Bank is the safest place for your
savings. Your savings is insured up to $100,000, and
you'll also earn high interest.
Put your savings in a safe place, a savings account
at the Farmers Bank ....

For Just

Winning Ohio ·tottery n,umber
·'I

.

••Combination Dinner Only
•Dining Room Only

Sorry, No Substitutions, Except
which have an additional price.

Beverages

PH. 992·5432

.,

'

Farmers

Bank

•

Crow's Family Restaurant
228 W. MAIN

. -'

POMEROY, O.HIO

t • •e•a~
Your Comrnunit)· Owned Bank

.,.

.\h·mht·r I Ull'

.

'·

• CIEVEL.AND - The winning number drawn Monday nlilbt In the
Ob(o ~·a dally game "The Number'"was'91i.
.
·
':file'~ reported ~ of $4&amp;,766 ·on the draivlng. The eaJV
· nings cama on ~esof. ~0,234.50, while boldersofwinillhg tickets are
'

Served
with:
Whipped
Poatoes, Chicken Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.

Pupils
return
to classes
THOSE DEAR OLD
GOWEN RULE DAYS
are In session once again,
marking an end to the funfilled, carefree days of
summer recess. Scenes
such as this were repeated
all over Meigs County
today as another school
year got underway. At hot·
tom, Uttle MeUssa Neut·
zllng was alltsmlles this
morning as she thought
about second grade.
·Ardy,lng .a Uttle early thil!
first clay of s~hool, she en·
joyed a twirl around on the
merry-go-round.

Controlling .board okays school loan

Saturday
Admissions--John
Aeiker, Cheshire : Charles Humphrey, New Haven.
Sat urday
Discharges--Terry
Barrett , Hilah Jones, Beatrice
Blake, Floyd Williams.
Sunday Admissions-Carl Antherson, Syracuse; Isabella Powell, Middl eport;
Henrietta
Jenkins
Pomeroy; George Knapp, Mid:
dleport ; John Cook, Mason.
Sunday Discharged-Doyle Ord,
Jolm McDaniel, April Smith.

- four in Gallia, two in Meigs seatbelts were not being used, he ad·
vised.
Wigglesworth said drinking was a
factor in some of the accidents, and
he asked residents to use their belts
and to curb alcohol consumption and
driving for safety's sake.
" Driving under the influence will

3 Sections, 16 Pages
15 C-ents
· A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 1, 1981

Reagan slices
military budget

Drinking, non-seat belt usage
leads to GalliR-Meigs fatalities
Fatal accidents involving drinkmg
and non-use of scatbell• are still or-

en tine

caster.

Velt'rans Memorial

m et'! team

at y

VOI.30,N0.91 ·
Copyrighted 1981

Meigs County happenings
Will

•

e

--·I·

; ~lttdto~t406.488.50,l~offlclafs~d.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - For the
second time since the new fiscal
year began July I, the state Con·
trolling Board has approved a loan
to help keep a money-short Ohio
school district open.
Controllers approved a $597,000
loan Monday t.o the Paulding Exem·
pted Village School District. The
system Is to repay the borrowed
money starting Jan. 30, 1982, at a 10
percent Interest rate.
Herbert D. Brum, director of the
division of school finance in the state
Department of Education, said
payments will he deducted from the
district's monthly state aid allot·
ment.
Conlrollers released $394,198 In
loan funds to the Port Clinton City
School District on July 2».
The controlling board, meanwhile,
was told Ohio's fiscal picture did not
brighten in August, with tax

revenues lagging behind expectations.
William D. Keip, head of the Office
of Budget and Management, said
final figures for August were
unavailable. But preliminary
estimates show the month's revenue
shortfall may total $45 million, he
said.
Keip said an early review of
August reports showed the corporate and personal income- taxes
were "pretty close" to what they
were expected to produce under the
state's current interim budget. He
traced much of the shortfall to lessthan-expected revenue from the
sales tax .
The net shortfall to date would
total about $30 million because the
state took in $16 million more than
expected during July, the finil month of the new fiscal year, he said.
The state's temporary spending

plan expires Oct. 31. Gov. James A.
Rhodes is expected to present a tax
increase proposal to the General
Assembly on Sept. 8.
In other action Monday, the con·
trolling board:
- Approved spending $927 ,li91 for
the Stilwell Hall Renovation Project
at Cleveland State University.
-Transferred $li20, 396 In
emergency funds to the crime victim compensation program to cover
higher-than-expected costs.
- Released $399,312 to the Ohio
Exposition Commission to repair the
almost 411-year-old grand.•tand roof
at the state fairgrounds .
- Approved an education depart·
ment request to approve $1.1 million
in pacts with non-profit educationw
television corporations in Ohio. The
money will cover the costs of transmitting instructional television
programs to school districts.

- Approved an economic and community development department
contract, not to exceed $36,600, with
Frederick A. Sexton. Sexton, fonner
head of the agency's international
trade division , will act as a consultant on trade bet)"een Ohio companies and China.
- Released $42,000 to the Department of Natural Resources to buy 16
acres of land in Wood County from
Allyn and Beverly Euler.
- Approved the natural resources
department's purchase or 29.9 acres
of land in Wayne County from Dean
and Verena Bricker for $35,987.
- Approved a Department. of
Transportation consultant pact
totaling $105,076 with El'il&lt;&amp;'lon
Engineering Limited of Columbus.
The finn is to prepare designs for
the replacement or two deficient
bridges on Ohio 122 in Butler and
Preble counties.

State auditor welcomes firm's probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson says
he welcomes a private accounting
finn's iitvestigatlon into a $1.3
million discrepancy In Ohio's main
checking account, !Nt predicts It
won't produee much~
The state Controllll)g Board ap.proved Monday a f55,000 contract
l'ith Price Waterhoule &amp;: Co. to
lea!'ll why recor;dS kept by Ohio
· TreasUrer Gertrude vi. Donahey
and BancOhto National Bank could
not !iii l)alanced.

"I welcome a second opinion on Patrol to spend $19,200 to look into
the quality and integrity of our any possible Indication of criminal
audit," Ferguson said. But an in- impropriety in the case. Minority
dependent audit only will confirm Democrats called the patrol's infindings in his office's earlier report, volvement premature.
Both the hiring of Price
he said.
"And for the private accounting Waterhouse and the use of the patrol
finn, Price Waterhouse &amp;: Co., to were requested by Gov. James A.
reach that conclusion, It will have Rhodes. The Franklin County
spent additional tboilsands of dollars prosecutor's office also is probing
of taxpayers' money," Ferguson the $1.3 million discrepancy at
Rhodes' request.
said.
The investigations stem from
The board voted 4-3 along party
lines to allow the Ohio Highway Ferguson's earlier report that his

examiners could not account for · a ·
$1.3 million difference between the
treasurer's daily report and the
balance in the state's regular account at BancOhio as of June 30,.
1900.

Complicating matters was of:
ficials' inability to locate key recOI'-' .
ds from t!te office of treasurer'• · ·
cashier .Elizabeth J . Boerger. Mlsa
Boerger, directly responsible for the : ·
records, reportedly has suffered
from amnesia since she came out of
·a 11).daycomaJan. l7, 1980.

F61 arrests 'two,- seeks two in area robbery
aiTest of Issac E. Hoyd, 31, and
Lorett8 Glbbll, 31, both of 80 ~ - Burton st., Manllfleld.
·
Alfred Sl!lith, special FBI ag~t in
charge of lnvestlgatiort in Clnclmai,
said Pritt and Gillenwater will appear1hi!loril a magistrate in Columbua today for al!ol)d hearing.
''
fi!oyd and Gibbs remain at large
and · a fugitive from jtlstice lnve.tlgattun Is continuing, Smith
~d.
.
Two l!'llled bandits robbed the
VintOn bank just before It opened at

9a.m. onJune27.
One man pulled a handgun on the
two tellers in the bank, while the
other took an undisclosed amount of
cash from the bank vault.

ch of the FBI assisted in the in· ·
vestigation.
Sheriff's deputies found a bag of: . :
money and a pistol reportedly used .
In the crjme on SR 325, about two · ...
rnilelllrom the bank on the day of the :
robbery .

After locking the tellers In the
vault, the men reportedly ran on foot
down Main Street before escaping In
Officials of the Central Trust Co. : '
a getaway car.
aMounced recenUy the Vinton bran- .'~:t
The tellers called the Gallia Coun· ch will' be closing in a few months, ,...: '
ty Sheriff's .Department from a partly because It Is In a "high-risk ·
phone In the vault.
.
·location~ " •
Officers from the Ohio State , Tbe.baJJt has.been rObbed twice in
.Hlgway Patrol. and the Athena bran-. ~ .~ -le!Jyears • .
I

·

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