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•,

WINTHROP .

GALIJPOUS - In an apparent reversal of a
staled ''sympathy" for hla 8lrildng
deputies, Gallla ·County Sheriff James M: Montgomery
has reportedly issued verbal ffrings to several employeeul hla department. ·.
•
Striking offlceri aatd this lnorning the sheriff called
a aped•! meeting of department pel'l101111el at rnlGnlgbt Saturday. Accornpanyins tbe annOWICIIlenl of the
meeting waa a wamlng that any employee who did not
· attend the aeaat011 WOUld be fired.
·
striking member estimated this morning that

CINDY! WAIT
A .MiNUTE
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HeY, CINOY.

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Voi.30;Na.121
· Copyrighted 191.1

we HAD A c~ e:t..ECF~C:N

ANP I DIDN'T
\lOr&amp; FU&lt; HIM! .

iD ~THE.
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MSA.Nesr f!O'/IN TMe CLAM...
FRI~Y,

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Poll says contact missing
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NEW YORK - American labor leaders have l&lt;Mt touch with the
needs and desires of the workers they represent, accordlng to an overwhehnlng majority of the respondents in the latest Associaled PressNBC News poll. . .
.·
A strong majority of those polled from households with at least one
union member agree that labor leaders are out of touch with their constltoents.
Overall, only 1 in 5 people believes the labor movement Ia gaining
strength and 1ln 3 said no workers, either public or private, should be
allowed to strike.
The poll was taken of1,601 adults who were,contacted at random by
telephone Sept. 2&amp;-29 in a scientifically selected nationwide sample.

····THEN

TWITCHED' HIS NOSE
AND HIPPITV-HOPP'EC' INTO
THE FADING UGHT..f

CLEVELAND - Federal investigators have been provided Teamsters union records Involving a public relations agency accused of
paylng caah kickbacks to Teamsters Vice President" Jackie Presser,
according to a newspaper report.
·The material may soon be presented to a grand jury, The
(Cleveland) Plain Dealer reported Sunday. The newspaper ran a
series of stories in August quoting ex-convict Harry Haler as saying he
was the conduit through which Presser waa paid about PGO,OOO in kickb&amp;cks from Hoover-Gorin x Associates. Haler worked as a consultant
for Hoover-Gorin, which was hired by the Teamsters ln 1972 under a
multirnlllion-&lt;lollar contract tO improve the union's image.

HOMECOMING - One of these senior girls wW reign u homecoming queen at \he Soothem High School game Friday night. The caodidates, selected by the senior class, Include: front, lto r, MIDdy Morris,
Bev Roush; back, I tor, Cindy CI'OIB, Sh"""" Beegle, and Amber Warner.
The qu- Will be selected this week by popular vote among aU otudenlll
of the hlgllscboolin Racine.

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·, Slx people were injured in a rash
of traffic accidents Investigated
over the weekend by the Gailia·
Meigs Post State Highway Patrol,.. · ·'..
Four -were hurt in a two vehicle aCcident at 12:05 p.m. Saturday on SR
218 at the junction of SR 7. State
troopers said a vehicle driven by
. Dora M. Salisbury, 55, Ulwer River
Rd., Gallipolis, going north and turn
left, failed to stop and slide acrosss
the highway striking a southbound
vehicle driven by Bealrie H. Ran. dolph, 73, Rt.l, Northup, and a car
siopped at the intersection owned by

COWMBUS, Ohio- Albert Lewis, who was seriously injured after
falling 3,SCMHeet when his parachute failed to open, is already plannlng
the dateof hla next jump.
·
The 33-year-old electrician at Ohio State University had been
parachuting near Carlton on June 28 when the accident occurred. His
main chute failed to open, and his reserve chute became entangled
with the main chute as he fell to a soybean field.
He spent!&amp; days, four in Intensive care, in Canton's Timken Mercy
Medical Center before being transferred to Riverside HoSpital in July,
wbere he continued his recovery froln a shattered right ankle, a
broken left thigh bone, two broken vertebrae and a generally bruiSed
body. He was released Tuesday after tru;ee mooths of hospitalization.

'"AND I
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LEARNED A LOT

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'TOOK
PRAMA.TIC? IN

COLLEGE.'

Urges Dems to stick together
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio - In a fund-raising speech for the Mahoning
County Democratic Party on Sunday night, Sen, Edward M. Kennedy,
0-MasB., said Ohio Democrats can capture the governorship in 198211
they pull together.
Kennedy made his r~marks in a 15-rnlnute speech at a $50-per,plate
~ramer.
,
Kennedy also rejected the Reagan administration's latest round of
budget cuts and attacked military spendlng.
The speech wrapped up a two-day meeting by Democratic chainnen
of tbe 10 most populous Ohio counties. The meeting was called to map
campaign strategy in an effort to avert in-party fighting ln the 1982
election.
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Conference
unites pjll1y

High pay lures controllers ..
DAYTON: Ohio - Bombarded by ,aggressive FAA fecrui~g Glo~s
and the allure of beftier salaries, at least 90 percent of the mill ry s
air traffic controllers wouldn 'I re-enlist If their separation occurred
within the next 12 months, according to an Air Force report.
The unclasalfled report wis obtained by The Dayton Daily News
through Profesalonal Air Traffic Controllers Organlzatloo sources and
reporled in ito Sunday editions.
The Air Force hu since revlaed the estimate, saying about 75 percent plMn to leave. . .
·
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The report also lndlcaled that the continued use of military controllers to replace the 12,000 clvUlan contrOllers who .went oo strike
Aug. 3 could hurt military installations acroas the country.

Buses blocked from depots

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were

ClEVELAND- Sehool buses
blocked from leaving two of four
achool bus depots today by parents protesting a desegregation poUcy
requiring aome children to lake public trsnsportation to achool.
School board officials said about half of the 420 buses assigned to
pick up children under the city'a desegregation plan
not nl1111il!K·
About 30 parents were preventing buies from lesvlng the Todd depot ·on the east side, although some buses had left about 5:45 ·a.m. But
buies also were not leaving the X·ray depot, wbere @bout 10 paren~
blocked two gates. Bus drivers refwJed to drive psst t)le parento.

were

Three weekend accidents were investigated by Meigs County sherlfrs
department.
At 3:15 a.m: Sunday on State
Route 124, north of Reedsville, a car
driven by Th&lt;!rill Randolph, Jr., 24,
Reedsville, headed . upriver,
received mlnor damages when it
struck a deer. The deer was killed,
At 10:30 p.m. Saturday, Claud
Humphreys, 19, Route 2, Pomeroy,

was hacking out of a private
driveway when his foot slipped from
the clutch and the vehicle, owned by
Stepben Henderson, Middleport,
struck a car owned by VIctor McClood, Cheshire. There were Ught
damages and no Injuries.
At 10:50 a.m. Satl/rday at the Intersection of State/ Route 2~ and
Success Road, a car driven by Deb(Continue&lt;! on page 10)

Six p~ople h.ur~_ i~ w~ekend ~eck~

Lewis says he 'l! try again
,,

permanent and be asks uie $100,000
plus $1,932.96 in medical billll. Hl8
wife, Judy, asked $10,000 for the
losses of services of ber husband as
a result of the accident.
In the same court, ·an entry has
been flied ordering Clyde J. and
Ethel M. Morlan to pay $26,249.01"
plus 12 percent interest from July 25,
1980, to the Commercial Banking
and Trust Co. on a mortgage note.
The defendants have five days to
pay the amount '}I foreclosure actiurl
will be taken, a!!"Cordlng to tbe court
entry.

Deputies check wrecks

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Investigators obtain records

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1 sectioo, 10 Pages
15 centJ .
A Multi medii Inc. News_,aptr

Action for $111,932.96- has been
filed in the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Charles G. Lee and
Judy Lee against the Kroger Co.,
Pomeroy.
Lee charges that he was shopping
at the Kroger Store on Oct. 6, 19110
when he slipped and feU on .a wet.
surface receiving back, neck and
otiler injuries,
He charges that the defendant was
negligent in maintaining a sale ctllldllion and pennitted water and
debris on the floor causing the plaintiff to fall. ·
He charges that his injulres are

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enttne

Couple files
$111,932 ·suit

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were verbal and that no written notification of termination had been given to the personnel who vlolaled
the meeting mandate, or the order to return to work.
A number of employees, however, prepared formal
appeals to the National J.abor Relations Board
protesting the firings over the weekend. ·
As the strike entered Its 14th day, today, a certified
letter from Michael Hunter, District Represenlatlve
for AFSCME, waa received this morning in the offices
of the cOunty conu'nlsaioners requesting a Taesday
meeting with the board.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 5, 1981

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MY FATHER WA$
A

through to the end ofthlsyear.
During the special lllidnJ8ht meeUng, accordlnfl to
officers ln attendance, tbe aheriff advised the.eight employees not affected by the layoffs that a work schedule
for them had been aet, and, If they did "IJOri for duty,
they too would be fired.
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Although the information could not be dl'rectly confinned, striking deputies said this morning, no more
than three employees reporied for work on the shifts
· sdl!'duled.
Those employees stressed that the alleged " firings"

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Priscilla's Pop;

zres employees

appl'Old.malely 15 of the department's 't1 employees attendi!d the I'I\OOUng.
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On Sept. 22, the sheriff's department persq1111el, Including ;leputles, dispatchers and jailers, walked off
the job over grievances centering on union represen.atlor. and layoffs.
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Tole deputies voted Sept. 8 to organize under the
A.neTican Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees. The vote preceded lliyoffs issu~ when the
board of county commissioners refused to grant a supplemental approprlillion to the sheriff for operations

prevloUaJr

Dick

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DAVIS , W.Va. (AP)
Democratic senators left a West
Virginia mountain resort Sunday
speaking of unity and a readiness to
do hattie with a powerful Republican
president.
"We found much more unity than
we anticipated," said Senate
Minority Whip Alan Cranston of
California. "The main consequence
is we are comrnltled to searchlng for
issues where we can stand
together."
But the senators acknowledged
that their meeting had not led to a
Democratic strategy.
"We didn't make an effort to get
together a unified agenda," said
New Jersey Sen. Bill Bradley. He
and others expect that to come from
more Democratic retreats to be held
before the 1982 elections.
,
Forty-one of the Senate's 46
·Democrats attended the opening of ·
the thre&lt;Hiay conference at.Canaan
Valley State Park In Davis. They
listened to panel discussions on
energy, • the economy, defense,
foreign policy and political
demogrsphy.
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But more imporiant, said Senate
Minority Leader Robert C. Byrd of
west Virginia, "We're meeting
among. ourselves and we've grown

Thebna L. Barcus, Oak Hill.
Both drivers were Injured as were
two passengers ill the Randolph
vehicle, A.l ma B. White, 72,
Gallipolis, and Charles 0. Randolph,
77, Rt.l, Northup.
They were taken to the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment of
minor injuries and released.
Salisbury was charged with ,
failure to yield the right of way.
Stanley R. Starcher, Tl , Coiwnbus, was injured ,but not treated in

an accfdent at 3:30 p.m. Sunday on
· New Lima Road in Rutland Twp.
Accordlng to investigating of·
fleers, the accident occurred one
and three tentha miles north of
Rutland when Starcher lost control
of his northbound vehicle which slid
off the right side of the highway
striking. a parked car owned by
Richard E. Searles, 36, Waynesville,
knocking it into a mobile home.
Starcher's car was demolished
while Searles' vehicle had severe

damage. No charges were filed.
A second Meigs .County accident
OCCUlTed at I p.m. Sunday on SR 7
where William E. Morris, 33, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, lost control of his vehicle
which ran off the highway striltlng
an embankment. Morris who had
visible injuries was charged with
DWI. There was slight damage to his
car.
Another Meigs County accident
occurred on SR 681 in Bedford Twp, ,
(Continued on page 10)

13 die on Ohio highways
McGlone, 29, Furnace, in a one-&lt;:ar County.
crash' on Ohio 140 lnScioto County.
YOUNGSTOWN
Delores
CLEVELAND- Dolores Butcber, . ProkOP. 55, of Youngstown, in a two17, of Cleveland, in a two-car crash car accident on U.S. 224 in Mahoning
on a Cleveland city street.
·
County. · ,
SATURDAY
INDEPENDENCE - James
CHARDON - Barbara A. Winzer, Doriis, age and address unknown, In
a one-&lt;:ar crash ·1n Interstate '71 In
24, of Middlefield ln a one-car crash
Cuyahoga County,
on Ohio If/In Geauga County.
SOUTH VIENNA - David Dove, ·
TOLEDO - James E. Moreau, 23,
19,
of Sputh Vienna, a pedestrian
in a motorcycle crash on a Toledo ci·
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struck
by a car on Ohio 54 in Clark
ty street.
CLEVELAND
Sophia County.
Malynowsld, 68, of Panna, In a twoFRIDAY NIGHT
car a~ident on a Cuyahoga County · SPRINGFIELD - Joseph Ebbing,
road.
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\14, of New Carlisle, in a one-car
BOWUNG GREEN - Elizabeth
crash on Ohio 235 in Clark County.
WESTERVILlE - William Ar·
C. Strausbaugh, 40, of Fostoria, in a
one-car crash on Ohio 199 in Wood
trip, no age given, of Delaware, In a
one-car accident on a city street.

By Tbe Assoc:laled Press
Traffic accidents around Ohio
over the wee~end killed 13 people,
including a pedestrian and two
motorcyclists, the Highway Patrol
said.
The patrol counts traffic. deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
DELAWARE- DonaldJ. Johnston,
38, of Columbus, in a motorcycle accident on Ohio 315 in' Delaware Coun·
ty.
CINCINNATI - Michael A.
Beaver, 27, in a one-car crash on a
Hamilton County road.
PORTSMOUTH
Jerry D.

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closer." ·

Weather forecast

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In the 19110 Reagan landslide, the

· Democrats lost control of the Senate
for. the first time since the early
196011. Although their opposition to
Reagan admlnlatration tax and
budget cull has been weak, there
were Indications this weekend that
they had perceived chinks ln
the Republican annor.
SelL Alan Dixon of Illinois said one
reuon senators convened was they
~ belleved President Reagan's
e(:CIIIOIOic pollcial had~~- them an
opportunity tO coni!: out him for the
flntllme.
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PARTING WOIIII8 - M I M S..ter llu
llallCIII, left, 1111111 .. palltlal apert , _ _ . . . _
befare' • . . _ . tile 11M t.: tile trip llact to

.

w..--.ner tbe Demoeratk ae•ton l:GIIfereilte

ot C•eon Valley, W. Va. Mallll WU OM. of the .
.,eaken,atllM; weelleadCGilfemace.

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�Monc!eyr October 5, ltti

Commentary

Pege-2-,The belly sentinel
Pomeroy-MiclcllepOI't. Ohla
Monday, October 5, 1911

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Kick the machine?__._ .____________Wi_U_lia--'-m_F._.B___uc_k_ler_Jr.
The «!istlnction is appealing. There
are revolutionaries about, though
not as abundant here.asln England, ·
where Tony BeM labors,. quite sbnply, to strip English citizens of fundamental freedoms (e.g., to send
children to private schools). But the
voices one hears in America aren't
those of revolutionists. T[ley are the
voices of rediBtributionlsts. Whether
the engine that drives them on is envy or philanthropy isn't as easy to
say as we should like. But their attitude toward affluence defies
rational analysis.

The ongoing rhetoric about
•¥'Reagan's "favoring" of the rich
reminds me of envy, which r~minds
me that Ludwig· von Mlses would
hav~ been 100 years old this month,
which reminds me that von Mises
wrOO! a book about envy, which
reminds me that Whittaker Chambers wrote me a letter denoucning
his thesis. "Von Mlses' pQint is that
the anti-capitalist mentality is .the
product of envy. Hitler explainM It
differently. He said the devil In
history is the Jew. Envy is von
Mises' Jew. It is always more painful to lhink than to use stencils. II is
extremely difficult for conservatives to think. Who does not
suspect that everyone is envious?
There is something we can deal wi!h
- the veritable Jew. Only, it isn't
true. "
Chambers went on to distinguish
the revolutionary from the class of
the envious. "The class struggle is
rancid with envy. No, that is wrong,
too- the masses are rancid with envy. But it is not the fruit of what von
Mises supposed. It is the fruit of a

Do wealthy people denounce poor
pepple? Not in any room I'd consent
to stay ln. But such as Vernon Jordan or Alberi Shanker or Jerry Wurf
or Lane Kirkland br Walter Mondale
speak of "the rich" in terms terribly
difficultto understand, unless it is so
that that cultivation of envy of which
Chambers speai&lt;, is the animating
motive, because such men as
Kirkland are far from being
revolutionaries.
Suppose that one were to devise a

materialism which, to prosper, must

remarkable machine . You feed it a

deepen and widen mass appetites.
.Envy -begins .where the Cadillac
dangles : always just out of reach at
the end of the stick. Since the
revolu!jonist cares_li~!!e__or nothing
for such materialism, he stands ,
abnost wholly outside von Mises'

dime, it wheezes and chugs and
makes smoke and staiic- and suddenly 18 nickels drop out of the
machine, which however hangs on to
the dime. This you see sliding along
under glass until it falls over into a
coffer, inside the machine. Startled,
you come up with another dime -

equation. "

The Daily Sentinel
Ill CourtStrett
Pomeroy, Obio
'14-992-2154i ' '

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DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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~m~ rT"l,..._,,...:.__,..-1 ~d·~

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publlsbrr

BOB HOEFLICH

PAT WHITEHEAD
Afislstant PubllsMr/Con\roller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
"News EcUtor
A. Ml:! MBER nf The Asaoclated Press, Inlaod Dally Preas Asaoe'laUon and lhe
Ameri~aa· N~ws(JB~r Publishers

It is fooltah, of course, to kick
and ~he proc~ss is repeated. You are
wild with pleasure, go out to the machines. Rather like kicking your
bank, bMng out your savings all in television set because you don't like
llkeiit bits, antl settle doWn with"the the program. But the difference, of
JJiachine. ·
.
But after a few days, although y.ou_ ~·~ ·
are now knee-.deep in nickels, you
begin idly calculating the nwnber of
dimes you have stuck into the
nnachine. Hm. Is there ... a way to

Social Security check
Social Security's computers have $69 billion - yep, billion - wQrth of
earnings records that can't be credited to anyone.

Some of those earnings might he yours, and that's why you should check
periodically to see that your earnings are being posted correclly, says Social
Security Corrunissioner Jack Svahn. He thinks a check once every three
years will do it nicely.
But let's start at the beginning.
If you're one of the 115 million persons paying into Social Security
through your job or self-employment, you have an individual earnings
record at the Social Security Administration's Baltbnore headquaters. Year
after year, as long as you work, reports of your earnings are added to your
record.
Your earnings are posted under your name and Social Security number,

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CINCINNATI (AP) - The best · Mike O'Berry .sald after the Reds. abandoned hll low-key rnannir to
record _in majot league basebaU eliminated themselves by lOlling lash out at buebail leadership for
faileil to eanr them a playoff. berth; Saturday. "lt'a tough to . . when lnaUtutlng the spill-season playoff
so the .Cinc1nati Reds gave them-. you think you're the best team and system.
"I hope he sleeps well with hll forselves a pennant. .
when the playoffs start, you sit at
mat, he and whoever dreamed the
Before defeating the .Atlanta hoine watching ·it."
Braves in their final game Suqday,
Still, the eds blamed themselves .thing up/' McNamarra said, not
•. ~eds players were introduced in- for losing two of three to the Braves Jlle1ltioning a name but apparef!(ly
div1duaily by broadcaster Marty when they could 'have taken over fir- referring to Corrunisslt)ller Bowie
Kuhn.
Brennaman to a crowd of 31 1746.place by winning,
He later added, "I hope this thing
a large, rectangular "pen- · "It's sure .frustrating when you
nant was presented on the field winyourleague(overall)anditisn't goes on till Halloween sb he can
declaring, "Baseball's Best Record good enough," said third baseman wear a mask or something for the
1981."
Ray Knight. "It's frustrating bUt final game of the World Series."
Now )bat the club is eliminated,
"It's the first lbne In basebaU's heck, we knew we had II&gt; best
the Reds organizatiocl can tum more
112-year history that the team. with guys."
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the best record won't be involved In
One of the most agitated in the attealion towards its starting lineup.
post-season play.'j,Brennaman said. silent clubhouse Saturday was Outfielders Ken Grilfey and Dave
"It does seem fitting that there be Manager John ·McNamara, who Collins and shortstop Dave Consome k1nd of reminder to aU. of described the playoff system as a cepcion are unslgn~ lor next year
and eligible to leave as free agents.
baseball of the kind of team we put m-,s.
together - the team with the best
"To get cheated out of It (the . · The three players walked arm-ln
overall record In baseball."
playoffs) be somebody'slame-braln ann Uirongh the Reds' clubhouse afBut it was a hoUow reward for the idea is Mdiculous," McNamara ter the game Sunday.
"I'd like to see them all back In
team that finished second twice this funned.
CinCinnati
unifonns next year,'' McIn a ])IISI-game interview with a
year in the National Leagne WEst
Namara
said.
despl\Oits66-12overallmark.
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group of sports writers, McNamara
"This is touh to swallow," catcher
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retrieve- the dimes? There are an

awful lot of them there. You bring
out a screwdriver ... And you make a
speech, denouncing the avarice of
your bloated 'machine, which has
been taking dimes from you without
pause ever since you came upn it.
You mak~ wisecrack~ about it. The
only thing you don't do is stop
feeding it dimes ...
Isn't this something of a parable?
If someone were to strike oil once in

~Montreol

NAnONAL LEAGUE
EAST
w L Pet.

x~Phllade\phia

New York
Chicago
PittabW'gh

AmericaD industry has been too fat ,
NEW YORK (AP) -TIII!re was no world trade in 1960, only 15 percent Baldrige worked for Scovill Inc., sales too, American companies inmisunderstanding
·Malcolm In 1970, and a mere 121n 1980.
becoming chalnnan, diversifying . creasingly are aware of fat
So ominous a trend, especially In and expanding the COIII1IIner and in- management, of the stockpiling of
Baldrige. The Commert:e Secretary;
who built a troubled Waterbury, view of the Japanese propensity to dustrial products company until it executives around the middle
Conn., brass mill into a profitable in- succeed where Americana fall - in . qow has 81 manufacturing sites in
management &amp;levels. Xerox Is
ternational manufacturer, put it erq&gt;Ortlng cars, conswner elec- the United States and in 22 foreign
reducing its management girth
right on the line.
tronics,optics- and in marketS that countries.
because of competition from
American industry, he told a small Americans buill - copiers and comIn other words, he has credentials
Japanese !inns. In fact, "reslzlng"
group of exporters, has been too puters - must evenluaUy deserve a to speak about fat management and haS become a new nnanagement
"fat, dumb and ·happy" to compete verbal kick in the pants. Baldrige skinny exports - about executives word.
with foreign competition, especially gave it.
who exploit companies for peraonal
The focus on management as a
in overseas markets. It won't take
"I don't think It's Ia:bor produc- profit rather than eliJ)loit markets
source of problems has grown Intivity thai's a problem," he said. "I for shareholder goods; who work the
risks. It lets opportunity pass by.
tenae.
Whatever the reason - some say think it's management, and I speak domestic market to death but ignore
In the past, seekers of greater
U.S. regulations and protectionism aS a fonner manager."
the birth of new markets abrolid.
productivity have looked into blue
have something to do with it - ·u.S.
From 1962 until he joined
Under pressure of declining
coUar habits and production line efexports accounted for 18 percent of President Reagan's cabinet, proflts, and sometimes . declining
ficiency.

Threat from the heavens. . . __~R_o_he_n_w._a_,,e_r8
chemical reaction with the moisture
in the air turns those emissions into
diluted yet deadly concentrations of
sulphuric ·and nitric acids, which
later return to the earth's surface.
Acid rain has been an episodic and
localized problem ever since man
began using fossil fuels to proYide
heat and power, but it has-attelned
global proportions in recent decades
not only as a result of increased use
of those fuels but also because ·of a
weD-intentioned but ill-conceived atternpt to reduce atmospheric
poUution.
To relieve the burden placed on
communities adjacent to power
plants and other sources of airborne
emissions, environmental officials
have encouraged the constructt.on of
tall smokestacks to widely dllpetse
the poUutants.
Since 1970, more tha11175 stacks
exceeding 500 feel in height have
been constructed in the United
States. The world's tallest stack,
soaring almolt a quarter-mUe Into
the sky, is located at a nickel
smelting plant in SudburY, Ontario.
Emissl0118 that fonnerly returned
quickly to the swface now remain

aloft for day.• and even weeks,
becoming part of a "chemical soup"
that can travel thousands of miles
from its source before falling to the
ground.
·
· The impact of that phenomenon
can be measured on the pH scale,
ranging from extreme acidity at 0 to
high alkalinity· at 14, with seven
representing a neutral or balanced
·
·
state.
Rain nonnally has a pH value of 5,
6, but the rain that now falls on virtually all of the United Slates east of
the Mississippi River has an
average pH value of 4.5- More than
10 times as acidic as in the past.
One rainfall in Wheeling, W. Va.,
was found to have a pH value of 1.5,
more acidic than lemon juice (2.1)
or vinegar (2.3) and only slightly
rnore alkaline than battery acid
(1.01.
lndiv.idual rainstonns with pH
vlllues beloW 3.8 have been reported
in New York, Dli~ois, lndiana 1 New
Haml"'~lre, ·Massachusetts, North
Carolina and other states.
The most severe Initial imj,act of
acid rain in North America has been
felt i~ the continent's lakes and

streams:

- As many as 200 of Ontario's
lakes ar·c already dead - devoid of
all fish and nonnal plant life - and
provindal authorities fear that
'
'
48,000 more
of its 180,000 lakes could
be irreversibly contaminated by the
end of the century.
- Nova ScOtia has lost nine rivers
once·valued for their salmon pr?&lt;~uc­
tion and 22 additional rivers are eqdangered.
- In New York's Adirondack
Mountains, more than ·hall of all
high-altitude takes and ponds are to
acidic for fish to survive and approximately 10 percent of the
region's 2,800 lakes already are
classifiell as dead. ·
,
Also highly susceptible to acid
rain are the lakes throughout most
of New England and those ' in northem Michigan, Wisconsin and Mill"

nesota.

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business entertainment to produce
an extra $700 million In revenues and
would have earmarked the proceeds
for school lunch programs.
There were pro~ to postpone
Reagan's income tax cuts until
deficits come down, or until Interest
rates drop. Another would have Increased taxes on the oil industry and
put the proceeds Into the financially
fragile Social Security fund.
.
Each was debated and dutifully
voted down. But not forgotten.
There's a cainpaign coming, and
Democrats soon will be citing some
of those votes as evidence 1that
RePublicans are more Interested In
three-martini lunches than in
feeding schoolchildren, more concefOOd with breaks for the oil industry than with pensions for the
elderly.

,_,
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. Louis

Trillion--dollar
deht ·dehate hard to match .
.

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31 21

San Francisco
x·Loa Angeles
AUanta
San Diego

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x-Fint-half division winner
y-Second--hall division winner

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Philadelpbla 2, Chlcago 1
St.Louis 4, Pittaburgh 0

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record the best in major league hasehaU. The Redo

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Montreal S, New York t
St.Louis II, Pittsburgh 3

AUant.a t, Cincinnati 3
San Franciaco 3-2. lst
Son Diego

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game IS innin~CJ

AMERICAN LEAGUE

EAST
y-Milwaukee

Boston

Deb"oit
Baltimore
Cleveland

x-New York
Toronto
z-KaruoasCity
x-Oakland

re""'

Minne5Ut.a

Seattle
Chicaw!l
California

1m Anyelea "7, Houston 2
Chic,go 8. Phihtdelphht 4

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CINCINNATI (AP) - Mario
Solo did what the Cincinnati Reds
couldn't - finish the 1981 season

Boston 4, Cleveland 0

strong.
The right-hander, who pulled
the Reds to within reach of first
place by besting the Houston
AstroS last week, spun a onehitter Sunday to let the Reds end
their unusual season with a· ~
victory over the Atlanta Braves.
"It looks better if you win the
last game than If you lose it,''
said Solo, bnprovlng to 12-9.
"Plus, 12-9 is better than 11-10."
The small consolations mattered because the Reds had
played themselves out of bigger
things the day before. Their loss
to the Braves on Saturday had
eliminated them from playoff
contention even though they. had
the best overall record In major
league basebaU for 1981.
"It could have been better if we

Suay'tGIIMI

Baltimore 5, .New York 2
Boston 6, Cleveland 2
Olicaf:O 13, Minnesota 12
Detroit 3, MJiw1ull:ee 1
Oakllnd 4, Kanaaa City 3
California 9, Texas 2
Seattle 2, Toroot.o 0

M-y'IGoooles
Kansas City (Splittorff H and Wright

2-3) at Cleveland lWaits 1-8 and Garland
3-7), 2

REGULARSEASONENDS

WeekeDd Sporb -rr..uae&amp;u

.......

By The Anodak4 Preu
IASEB.\LL

'Mets fire Torre

~

NEW YORK METS-Fired Joe Torre,
manager, and Joe PiRNltano, Rube Walk·
er, Bob Gibson, Deroo Johnsoo and
Chuck Cottier, cO.chel.

liAI&amp;EI1IW.

"! wanted a manager thai would
NEW YORK (AP) - New York
help
us win," he said. "Managing
Mets Manager Joe Torre had just
has
changed
the lasl couple of years
repqrted to work for the last day of ·

the season when general manager
Frank Cashen stepped Into his office.
"Frank said to me, 'This is never
easy,"' Torre recalled. "I sai'd to
hbn, 'Don't worry about it·. "'
With thoae words, Joe Torre
became the severith manager of the
1981 major league basebaU 'season to
fall under the ax. l'orre and Ilia entire coaching ataH were dismissed

Sunday In a general housecleaning
by Mets owner Nelson Doubleday Jr.
The writing had been on the
clubhouse waD. Torre said it came
as no surprise.
"I guess lfelt it," said Torre, Mets
manager lor the past five seasons.
"The man wants to make changes
the way he wants them.
"I talked to him at the beginning
of the second se8"'l'J, and I told him
that being the boss, If he wants to
make a change, that was good
enough reason for me. J'd never ask
forreasons." .
Cashen said he made the decision
about 10 days ago, even before the
Mets were eliminated !run contention for the second-half National
League East title. He began to contemplate a change during tile tw&lt;&gt;month-long players' strike,
howeVer. .
"I want 19 win. I · really
desperately want to win,' 1 said
Cashen, who won four American
League pennants and two world
, championships In his 10 years . as
executive vice president' of the
Baltbnore Orioles.

as ballplayers have changed. Communication has become a big part of

managing."

.

Cashen said he and other frontc
office persOMel would .Interview
candidates to replace Torre during
the league championship series and
World Series, and he hoped to make
a decision before the winter baseball
meetings in early December.
Torre's conlr'lct with the Mets
runs through 1982, and Cashen said It
would be paid. Torre said he would
look for anoth&lt;ir managing job in the
meantime, and he said he did not expect to slay In the Mets organization
in any capacity.

NaUoulllulletbi!D AuoclaU.

SAN

DIEGO p.IPPEIIS-SiKned Myles

Patrick and La~ forwards.

.had won the last two games,"
Solo said of his one-hit effort.
The only hit off Solo was Chris
Chambliss' lead-off single off the .
right fielif'wall in the second inning. Soto allowed 'just two other
Atlanta baserunncrs, issuink two
walks in the fourih inning before
retiring the last 16 batters in order.
His nine strikeouts gave him a
club-leading 151 for the season.
Soto also led the Reds' pitching
staff with 175 innings pitched, 10
complete games - the secondbest total in the National League
- and three shutouts that tied
hbn with Bruce Berenyi.
.Solo, who had a nightmarish
start of the season with little offensive support, ssid he was
satisfied with his efforts.
"When you start Hi and you
finish 12-9, it's a good year," Soto
said. "! never got down on

High school grid scores

Nau.al r..a.n ~ape
LOS
ANGE~
RAMS- Placed
Jeff
Kemp, ~rbick, Oil the lRiw-ed ~
serve U.t. Activaled Jim eoulna, linebacker.
, SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Signed Steve
La'rgent, wide receiver, through the liM

canton McKinley 14, Cl!!ve. St. lgnatiu!i

OWo Hlp. llciMGl Feo&amp;ball
B)' fte AneciakdPrm

7

Akron. Kerunore 41, AAron E•. 0

.......

Bedford Chane! 7, Cleve. Holy Name 0

Beecbwood. 19, Hudson W. Re~rerve '7
B,uckeye W. 6, Bucke'ye N. 0

Cleve. Gilmour 14, V(arrensviUe • 0
Cle'ole. Hawken 38, Ligget, Mich. 0
C1e'ole. Rhodes 21, Cle\le. W. Tech. 0
Ch~\le. st. Joseph 20, Pamw Padua 0

myself."

The Reds scored the only run
they would need off starter Tom
Boggs, l-13, in the first inning.
Dave Collins singled, stole second
base and took third on Paul
Householder's infield single, the
first of his three hits. Collins was
thrown out • at home trying to
score on a wild pitch, but
Householder advanced to second
on the play and scored on Dave
Concepcion's single.
George Foster led off the fourth
irming with a single, advanced on
a ground out and scored on Ray
Knight's double to right field.
Ron Oester walked and Mike
O'Berry delivered an RBI single
to score Knight.
The Reds finished the second
half 31-21 and 112 games behind
the second-half champion Astros.
The Braves finished 2&amp;-2'1 in fifth
place, 7'h games out.

'·

Cleveland Hts. 27, Valley Forge 7
Columbia 20, C\eve . Lutheran W. 0
· Dlly. Dunbar 18, Day. Wright 6
Day. Roth 21, Ull\1:1 Cath. 14
•
Dayton, Ky . 21, Cin. Country D&lt;~ y 7
E. canton 28, Malvenl o
Elyria Cath. 21, Elyria W. 0
Hami!tondJadin 3, Hamilton 0
Lakewood St. Edward 15, Ml'ntor Lake ;

Cath. 7

r----'-------------;-------------.,.----------------------

The Equal Payment Plan.
June July Aug.

Nov.

In his five seasons, Torre never

finished better than .414. He took
over the Mets in sixth place on May
31, 1977. The• club finished that
season with a 64-98 record for .395. In
the next three seasons, the Mets
finished last twice and fifth in 1980 at
67-95 for .414. Torre's overaU record
with New York was 28&amp;-420, a .405
percentage.
Torre, 41, won the National
League batting Iitle with a · .363
average In 1971 while with the St.
Louis Cardit)als. He began his
playing career in the MilwaukeeAtlanta Braves organization, and he
finished it with the Mets in 1975-77.
With his firing, Torre joined
Williams of Montreal, JohMy Goryl
of the Minnesota Twins, Jim Fregosl
of the Calllornia Angels, Maur)'
Wills of the Seattle Mariners, Gene
Michael of the New York Yankees
and Frey of the Royals as this
season's deposed managers.

,.

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.

.

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.A convenient way to budget
for your electric bill.

•

Some h6usehold expenses are fairly steady throughout the year. But
your electric bill varies from month to month bec11use your elecbic usage
fluctuates with the changing seasons. The bill is usually higher in the winter.
It dips a little In the spring months, then, for most people, rises during the 11ir
conditioning season, before dropping again In the fall.
We can~ do anything ebout the weather, but we Clln help yeu smooth ·
out the ups and doWns of your electric biD. And that's by offering you our
Equal Payment Plan.
.
With the Equal Payment Pl&amp;n, we bill you a fixed amount each month
based on your average yearly usage.
.
Yolir account II reviewed every six m.onths to see that your budget
peyment II IIIII as dOH as possible to your. ~verage use. At the end of the
twelfth month you'll receive a settle·up bill or a credit.
.
Ma~ of our cul!omers are ;2edy taktngad~;~antage of the Equal
Payment Plan. HIt sounds bke 1 ~
Idea to you, simply contact us. We11

.

Finally, there is evidence that acid
rain may produce a chemical reaction that releases into the Willer
·table - and then into the public
water supply mercury
manganese, cadmiwn,

L

I

Soto saves best for last

Chicago S, Minnesota 4
Milwaukee Z, Detroit I
Baltimore 3, New York 0
()aldand "II, Kan.ua Glty 4
Texa!l l, C&amp;lllomia 0
Toronto 4, Selttle 3

REGULAR SEASON ENDS

9%

alwninw~

and other to~ic metals.

DOONESBURY

TodJJy in history. • .

,

Reds team members Uae up oo the field priOr to Sunday's game agaillll the AUaata Braves, In Cincbmall,

Salu.y'sGamH

New Yoric 2, Montreal I
CincinnaU 3, Atlanta 0
Houston It, Los Angeles 3
San Francisco 4, San Diego 3

woo the contest agaiDst the Braves; glviDg them a ..
season record of 11HZ, but they flnlsbed both halves of
the season In second place In the National League
West, and they will not he involved in the playoffs. (AP
Laserphoto!.
·· ·

1HEIR OWN KIND OF PENNANT- CincbmaU

a-First-haU d.lvillon winner
)·-Second-haD dl.vlaion witmer

Suda}'l Gu:let

.

Today is Monday, Oct. 5, the 218th day of 1981. There are ff1 days left i·
theyear.
.
Today'l hlgbligbt ill IUtory:
On Oct. 6, 1101, Olriltapher Columlrus dillcovered Colla Rica.
On tbll date:
ID 1'111, Cllrlltlanlty wu abollahed in France.
In 1'111, Splln declared war on Britain.

.,.,...,.;;;.•£

For the record. . .,_________

his lifetime, uncovering a single

1,000-barrel well yielding $411,000, or
$10,000 after costs of extraction and
taxes, such a man would not be particularly obnoxious. But what about
the man who discovers not one, but a
dozen such wells? Does he qualify
for denunciation• How about the
man who builds not just one house in
his lifetltne, but 100 hoilses? Did he
then qualify as a public enemy?

even if you change jobs or change your name. That's why it's vital to give the
correct number. If you've lost your Social Security card, apply for a
duplicate at one of the 1,400 Social Security offices scattered around the
nation.
OTTAWA (NEA)- The corrosion,
Your earnings record is ail-important. When you or someone in your decay and deterioration caused by a
family applies for benefits; your record will he checked to see if you've relatively new phenomenon known
work.ed long enough to qualify and to see how much your monthly henefil will as acid rain already poses a threat to
be.
·
the structural integrity of the
.
That brings us to the $69 billion, the amount of money that Svahn says majestic sandst?ne buildings that
can't be credited to anyone because:
,
house Canada's Parliament.
- Some employers don't report Social Security taxes, though Svahn adThe problem is especially severe
ds that •· the vast majority are honest. "
in Canada, but other architectural
Some earnings have been accumulated by illegal aliens, who used fake victims of acid rain can be found
Social Security cards or non-existent numbers.
around the world- the Colisewn In
- Some earnings were accwnulated by welfare recipients who didn't Rome, the Parihenon in Athens, the
want welfare officials to know tbey were working. They used fake or non- Taj Mahal in India and the Lincoln
existenct nwnbers, too.
Memorial in Washington.
Svahn says there's one other category/If uncredited earnings, "protest"
Acid rain's devastating bnpact exitems from the system's early days, when some businessmen fought the tends far beyomtstructural dannage,
idea. They would report names and numbers that didn't match.
however. It already has killed hunThe problem started in 1931 ," he says, "and continues into 1981. Repor- dreda of lakes, is suspected as a
ting is not done prperly, or non-existent numbers are used or simple errors cause of crop and timber damage
are made. It'~ still a significant problem."
and could present a threat to human
Svahn says SSA "has started a fairly iarge e(fort to go through the ($69 ' health through contamination of
billion worth or) items," to try to identify where tliey can be allocated so that food and water supplies.
people won't lose some benefits. At the same time, he acknowledges, "there
The insidious process begins with
1s no point in carrying $2.37 for a non-&lt;!xlstenl person on our records."
the bilrning of coal, oil or gasoline to
Some errors are plain sloppiness. Some are the result 01 ...intermittent power automobiles and other
workers"- for example, construction workers- failing-tomake sure their vehicles or ..to operate the massive
employers have reported their earnings, presumably because such workers ·' power planls that generate elecdon't think'll few weeks of earnings are importsnt to their records.
tricity.
_. A woman who marries, cha~giilg her name, doesn't have to change her
Released into . the atmosphere
name on SSA's records but should notify the local SSA office of her married dunng combuslion are sulphur
name so that il'can lle cross-referenced in·the Baltbnore computers.
dioxide and nitrogen oxides. A
Svahn says you can write SSA at any time for your earnings record. That
way yoJ1'll be assured your earnings have been posted correctly. But he warns postings are about a year to a year and a 11alf behind, so your very latest
earnings won't be recorded.
Insurance industry actuaries, and folks in similar, occupatiOns, check
their earnings records ''religiously,'' saysSvahn. That's a good Idea for' ~ou,

•

der and -to use a wm-d thalappUes
equaUy to machine and to hwnan
beings - majfunctlon. Worth pbndering.
.

Anotlatloa.

\MSUes, DOl per&amp;ODIIIilfeti,

too.

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - For
But for the latest increase, the the Democrats, Republican mempolitical play-acting, it's hard to top government would have had no bers of Congress did exactly the
a debate like the one on the trillion- borrowing authority after laat Wed- same thing. Then they campaigned
doUar debt ceiling Congress has just nesday, and the Treasury ·would against Democrat8 for vOting to inpassed. Everybody ·knows it has to have run out of money altogether as crease the debt limit.
While the administration had to
pass in the end, so it becomes a of today. Obviously, Congress
vehicle for proposals that don't wasn't going to let that happen.
· hav.e the increase, Reagan called it a
stand a chance but look good on
So the limit was raised, for the warning that should underline the
. paper.
20th time in little · more than a need for approval of'his budget cuts,
· The Congress that is authorizing ·decade. It 'now standa at ' $1.079 so the debt won't keep going up.
more borrowing can bemoan deficit trillion, $94 billion above the old
While Republicans complained ·
·
·about deficits, Democrats forced
spending. The president who asked limit.
But first, Democrats made the them to vote against some politicaUy
for the increase can say he detests
the whole idea but had to do it political record. They proposed an .attractive amendments to the'
because of the deficits he inherited.
assortment of politically em- measure raising the deficit limit.
That's been going on for years.
barrassing amendments. None One would have tied the increase to
Whether Republican or passed, but they didn't expect any bnproYement of school lunch menus.
Democratic, presidentS have to would. When it came time to pass Another would have instructed
propose increases In the debt ceiling the increase, they made sure that • Reagan to press llie Federal Reserbefore the federal debt bumps up Republican votes provided the ve Board for policy changes to lower
interest rates. A third would have
against the old one. otherwise, the majority.
,..... government couldn't borrow money.
When the White House belonged to reduc!'&lt;l the tax deduction for

LETTERS CF OPINibN are we\C(Imtd. They lhould be leu than 301 words loag. AU
lenen~ are subject to edlllogaod mu1t be slgued with n•une, addre.. aod telephone number. No uuslgaed letters will be publi1hed. Letttn Jhoold bt Ia 11ood 181\e, addre1alog

c

course, is that hwnan beiilgs are .
vulnerable, and when you kick them
or feed !hem emetics I&amp;&gt; get thoae
dimes
back,.there is dlslresa, di.sor.
.

Best·
record
doesn't
win';
.
·Reds close, 1981 ~a~paign

take II from there.
0

r

.

We give it ourbest.

OHIO POWER COMPANY
•

•
II

lj

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•

�Pa!ie-4-T.he Dally sentinel

Ohio

Broricos rip Raiders;
Rams clobber Browns
kick by lbe 11-foot-6 DOYerl by the Uons, who Wire
When the Denver Bl'OilCOI scored .0'~ cllm8Ied a 113-yard st. playing ' without injured lllartlng
· 70 points in two consecutive vic- Louis drive in the game's cfOIIint! quarterback Gary Danielson. ,
torlea, it appeared that they were minutes, hlgbllghted by Jbn Hart·
(,'OUilting' more on their wide-open of. ·passes ·of 20 ylrda to Doug Manb ·
fenae than their traditionaUy tGugh and _JP yards to Roy Green, who · · , J~Uu 11rvno it
Los.Angeles won ill third in a row
defense.
,
earlier caught a 10-yard touchdOWf
after opening with two I~ u Pat
'But the defenders aren't yet ready JIBSS.
.
.
to give up the manUe they acquired
Tony Dorsett scored two touch- Haden completed his first seven
In,197'1 when they Went to the Super downs for the CqwboJr'·
~' propellinll '!le llama to a
pair of touchdowna by Wendell
Bowl known as the Orange tn.sh.
~ Zl, Jell !I
"We're plaxinl now Uke we did in
Mlamllllayed unbeaten, but had to Tyler. ·
Cleveland scored first on a »-yard
'77, but maybe even better becaUie hold off a delennlnedJets' effonled
field. goal by Dave llacobcl, but the
the offense baa been doing 10 weD," byRichardTodcL
said Steve Foley, the free safety who · Todd .threw four touchdown llama came back as Raden gained
ma!lf the moot important of the passes, including a 36-yarder to wide 53 Yards on four straight ComBrooeos' four fwnble recoveries receiver Bobby JO!Iea with . I :09 pletions, with Tyler running the final
Sunday .S they blanked the Oakland , I'I!IIIBinlns in regulation, and c:om- two y•rds for the first touchdown.
Ralders17-G.
pl~:lllof3Uoueafor310yards.
The seeond t.os Angeles score
The RAiders were shill out for the
Pat Leahy mlased a 48-yard field came oo ii !-yard pass from Raden
aeconcl'game in a row after not being goal attempt on the final play of to Tyler early in the second quarter.
· 49ers sa, Redlthw 11
held scoreless since 1966. The defen- overtime for the Jets.
Safety Dwight Hicks scored two
ding Super Bowl champions .were
Nat Moore caught two touclid~
held to 168 yards in total offenae.
passes from Miami quarterback touchdowns while compl1lng 114 yarIn other National Football League Don Strock, .wbo replaced injured ds in returns to pace San Francisco
games, St. Louis upoet Dallas 21H7, starter David Woodley in the first to victory over winless Waahiugton,
Hicks-dashed ., yarda for a loucbthe New York Jets tied the unbeaten period.
·
down after,·recovering a fwnble in
Miami Dolphina 28-21, Buffalo tripCUrgen ZC. Seabawb 10 peel Baltimore 23-17, Mir&amp;iesota
· With WI! running backs Chuck . the first quarter and returned an inedged Chicago 24-21, Green Bay Muncie and James Broolca both in- terception 32 yards lor another score
whipped the New York Giants 27-14, jured, quarterback Dan Fouta went in the 'thtrd period. In bel ween, be
New England defeated Kanaas City to the air even more than usilal, but ran 72 Y&amp;rds with another interception. · . '
33-1'7, Houston clipped Cincinnati 17- not with less success.
10, Pittsburgh beat New Orlean8 ro.
Fouts 'tossed three touchdowti
t.
6, Los Angeles clubbed Cleveland :I- passes and broke his club record for
16, Tampa Bay bombed Detroit 28-10 . completions with 30 In 41 attempta.
BOII23, Col1117
He hit touchdown looses of 1.2 and
andSanDiegotackledSeattle24-IO.
Joe Cribbs ~ed 159 yards in 17
The Philadelphia Eagles, the only -n yards to Charlie Joiner and a ~ carries and , set up both Buffalo
unbeaten team left besides Miami, yarder to tight end Kellen Winslow, touchdowns, and Nick Mike-Mayer
play bost to the AUanta Falcons finishing with 302 yards pauing, kicked three field goala agalnat
tonight.
- none longer than 15 yards.
Baltimore, which lost for the fourth
The victory gave Denver a · 4-1
Buceueen ZB, U-10
lime in a row after an openlnfi victory.
I
record, including two triwnpha over
Doug Williams completed only 13
Oakland. The Raiders, who were of 29 passes for Tampa Bay, but four
Crlbbs.had runs of 28, 30 and 30
sbut out 16-0 by Detroit last week, of them were for touchdowns as the yards that led to the BOla' first 17
dropped to~Bucs defeated Detroit.
Points. Joe Fergusol) passed 18 yarCardlnals zo Cowboys 17
~''illiams twice hit Kevtn House ds to Jerry Butler for the first·touchDallas feU fr~ the unbeaten with scoring looses and he added TD · down and Roosevelt Leaks barged 1
ranks as lanky Neil O'Donoghue passes to James Wilder and .Jim yardlortheotherTD.
. ,
kicked a 37-yard field goal with 23 Obradoylch.
Bert Jonea passed lor 275 yards
'seconds left.
Three of the scores followed tur- and two touchdowns for the Colts.

FrwDAPWinl

Meigs

r,,

. COLLARED - Cillclnnatl Bengals' running back
. Charles Alexander (40) tried to reach left end In the Ill'
:: sl quarter of the NFL game at Hooston and picked up

two yards. Aleunder was first mel by Hooston Oilers'
Gregg Bingham (54) and flnaUy stopped by Greg
Stemrlck (27). lAP Laserpboto).

Campbell, Roaches heroes
in 17-10 Houston victory.
J

HOUSTON (AP) - Carl Roaches
left the Astrodome Sunday night to
celebrate his wedding anniversary,
- whUe 'the rest of the Oilers cheered
another event worth remembering
- the return of Earl Campbell.
Roaches presented his wife with a
96-yard kickoff retum for a touchdown in the third quarter that rallied
the Oilers to a 17-10 victory over Cincinnati.
.~
Campbell, who had not gained 100
yards since the season opener against Los Angeles, presented 44,350 fans
with 182 yards rushing on '¥1 carries
as the Oilers settled back Into the 1fonn.ation that lallnched Campbell
to three NFL rushing titles.
"!feel like the offensive line knew
what they had to do and I was going
to have a chance to run the ball like I
like," Campbell said.
Campbell's tireless efforts accounted for all but nin'e of Houston's
191-yard rilBhing total and his 37
Carries were one short of his team
record.
While Campbell was Houstim's
'bread and butter, Roaches was its
dessert with his exciting kickoff and

punt returns.
offense to Houston's 12 yard tine
In addition to his kickoff return , before missing (our Straight passes,
Roaches put the Oilers into good the last with 52 seconds to play. .
field position throughout the game
The victorJ moved Houston-to a tie
with four punt returns for 93 yards.
with Cincinnat,i for the AFC Central
After Cincinnati took a 3-0 lead on Division lead, each with ~2 records.
Jim Breech's 45-yai"'J field goal, the
"It was just one of those things, we
Oilers came back in the second quar- didn't make the big plays," said An'ler with a 51-yard touchdown drive.
d!'xson, · whose final pass feU inCarrlpbell gained 49 yards in 1 he complete off the fingertips of Cris
drive and scored on a tw&lt;&gt;-yard run, Collinsworth.
trotting into the end zone for a 7-3
"Collinsworth was my man all the
halftime lead.
way on that play. It was just one of
Cincinnati's Ken Anderson filled those passes that was a few inches
the air with 52 passes and put the too long. We had great pass protecBengals ahead 10.7 in the third quar- tion all day and things just
ter oo a 1~yard touchdown pass to developed to where I threw the ball
tight end Dan Ross, who split two over 50 times," he said.
·Oiler defenders at the goalline. .
While the Oilers pointed to their
But on t~ ensuing kickoff, best offensive production of the
Roaches broke to his right, skittered season, Bengals coach Forrest
down the sidelines and escaped the Gregg pointed to missed scoring opgrasp of Mike Fuller, his final ob- portunities.
,
·
stacle, at the goal llne. The Oilers
"We dropped six points on a pass
added a 48-yard field goal 'by Tony and we lust six more points on two
Fritsch with4 :48 to play.
missed field goals," Gregg said.
Anderson, who finished with 30 "Our kick coverage was bad and
completions for 290 yards, had the HoUllton won by getting the ·baD to
Bengals thinking about overtirile in Earl Campbeii. He's a good footbaii
the .final minute when he drove the player and we just couldn't stop
him."

.Southern Varsity Football

.

'

Toledo shares MAC lead
after· win O'f?er~ Bobcats
_By AlsoelBted Press
The fonnula that Ohio University
had used successfully earlier in the
season didn't work Saturday.
The BobCats, who had pulled out
both of their Mid-American Conference triwnpha this year in the
final minutes, abnost did it again,
but lost 21-14 to Toledo to throw the
conference race into a lour-way tie.
Toledo, Wolltern Michigan, Central
Michigan and Mlami.of Ohio share
the top spot with Z.O conference
records.
Elsewhere ill the conference, it
was Westem Michigan 21, Bowllng
Green 7; Miami 20, Kent State 13;
Central Michigan 63, Eaatem
Michigan 14; and BaD State 23, NOI'
them Illinois0.
Quarterback Jim Kelso ran for
. one touchdown and passed lor
another to give Toledo a 21-G lead at
one point, but Ohio' scored with I :46
left in the game to cut the margin to
a touchdown. The Bobcata had one
more shot, moving to Toledo's 34,
but lost the ball on downa.
"Our defense had to come in and
play four good downs, and they did. I

'I

'

I

"'

thitlk that:wasthe' erltical part of the
·· game, "··Toledo Coach Chuck Siobart
said in describing Ohio's ills! drive,

!#·

a

a

Brian Allen
155pouad
Sophomore back

~ Roger~ win~

'

; . SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP)
i "Unbelievable," Bill Rogers said
:: over and over as he shook his head,
:· digesting his sudden death victory
·"over a frustrated Ben Crenshaw for
: hisflntTe'\"SOpen golftiUe.
; Rogers sank a ~foot Jlirdie putt on
• the 18th hole to force the playoff with
:;erensbaw after both golfers finllhed
~ at 14-under-par 26p. The Rogers
1curled In a 1Z.footer on the first hole
&gt;of suddan death.
.
;. Rogers, In his slxth year on the
: Tournament Players Aaaoclation
' tour, became the only golfer to Win
; four evenll thll seuon - the
~;Heritage Claalc:, World Series o1
:Golf, BrWih Open IJ!d Teua Open
:_ and liln his 't!IIJ'W earnings to
I
\
'
)llio,31G.
·

PauiHarril
~pound

Sopnomore Unem..

Texas. Open ,

In addition, he won the Suntory
Open In Japan last month and goes .
to EIIC)and for neJrt week's World
Match PlBy tournament with three
straight victories under his belt.
Rogers also took satllfaction in
winning the ltrst of three playoffs in
which he has been involved, but said
a alight edge waa taken off the victory beCaUSjl he defeated CrenShaw,
one of his best friends.
Crenshaw, wbo had . to roll in a
crucial1&amp;.footer on the final hole to
keep Rogers from winn11J8 outright,
fell one foot short with'a »-footer on
the playoft bole. He collected tr1,000
for1eCGIId place.
The playoff t . wu the lffth for
Crenahaw careet'-lrile against no
Yictorles, and the IOW'Ce of con-

tinuing fnJStration.
Jim Colbert and Craig Stadler,
who ahared the lead after 111, second
and thir!f rounds, managed even-par
70o "!!!r the Oak HfUs Ceuntry Club
course Sunday and fln1lhed In a
tru-way tie with Bob Murpby, tWo
Btrokea behind the co-leadera, for
third place money of t~.ooo apiece. .
Crenlhaw bu won more Uu t1
rnllilon . and nine championlhiJII
beginning with the 18'13 Tau Open.
He hwla playoff to Jolm Cook In the-11181 Bini Crueby, and bu nat wcm
a1nce the 1• ~Buach

name,
Defendlntl champion Lee Trevino,

bt conleallon .. the ~
rounil bagan, ~ with • '1Z ancl ;,.
linllhed In a
tie for lath. tl!;
.
....

who -

faur.."f

•

J.

•

-

,,

Classes in diabetes will be held at
the Meigs MuiU-Purpoee Health

Center cilnference room on live consecutive Moodays beginning Oct. 19.
The classes will be held from 9•30
a.m. to 11:30 a.m. through Nov. 16.
They are being presented by the
Ohio Department of Health and the

This c:omlng year you are likely
breaks than you have In the paat .
Take nothing for granted or you

may fall to act on situations

¥Phich could be fruitful.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0cl. 23) For
the 'sake of expediCIIICY you may
make promises to a family member today which you may not be
obit to fulfill Ieier. Both will be
disappointed.
.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 221
Exoggorotlons or boosts you
make today wltl hove • ~oiiow
ring . No OfW Is likely to believe
them but yourself. Tell It like it 11.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 2:1-Doc.
l11 A well·meonlnv ocquolntoMe
moy give you lips toc!oy on ways
to make or seve money. The In·
, . " lent wltl be wor!hY, but the In·
' lor mellon foUllY .
1
CAPRICORN IDK. 22-Jon. 19J
Allow yourself limo and IPICII to
merwuver In tadoy. ThlnQS which
utuiiiY come -Y tor vou could
hive _ , , unexpected com·

w.......

pJICatiOnl.

AQUARIUS (Jon. 10-l'olt- 191

' Tretl ' ltl''- motlwl wltll lilt

..

a

lillY--~·
become a: : 1• "nt'Don't
..~!"'

-y

•t like thlm tor oro .....

II (PH. It-Mardi Ill

Try 1D be l'ftlllltlc

with ,

whlro

i vtclr " - llld wl- ore con·

..

..

•

Justice" offering. Mustc ia in charge jamin Edwanw, Honorary VIce
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Robinson, President, Athens, will conduct the
Heath United Methodist Churcb, ReCognition Service for retiring of·
Middleport, and Mrs. Merlyn Ross, licers. Mrs. Richard Ward, ConOl'f!anist, GaDipolls. Mrs. Homer ference ·President, New Carlisle,
Matheney, Spiritual Growth chair- will install Distric( officers for .the
p_erson, Chesterhill, will lead in WOI' corning year. Mrs. Clyde CottriU,
ship arid prayer.
· treasurer, Hamden, will lead the
The business meellng, directed by Pledge to MiJsions for 1982. In
Mrs. Evereti McMahon, president, closing, the Rev . James Frazier,
Gallipolis, will include : Secretary's Grace Church, will offer ComHighlights, Mrs. Robert McGee, munion.
Ppmerw; Nominations Cornrillttee
Assisting throughout the day will
Report: Mrs. WDbur Fuller, Logan; be District Mission Team members:
and election of officers. Mrs. Ben· Marjorie Malone, Supportive Com-

Meigs Couniy Health Deparbnent, lists, cookbooks; calculating recipes
with the ln!ltructors to be Christine ' will be the outllne for the Oct. 26
Goodall, R. D. and Nita Wisnlakl, class, whUe on Nov. 2 the subject
R.N. Dr. James WithereD wiU be a will deal with eating out, sick day
guest speaker at the Nov.16 session.
plans, alcohol usage, wlth.indlviduai
At the ftrst class there will be a diet counsellng, as needed.
general Introduction and discussioo
The Nov. 9 class will deal with
on diabetes. Diets and exchange midications and urine and blood

_______,;_ _. . . ;

_ _ _ _ _ _.:___ _--'------

to. oet more opportunities and

TRACTORS

. I

h~lds .

~; Mary O'Brien, opedal
Clllllplilbment of the put year:
eventa. Each., tbesechalrmeD pve r - CGillnl and Bernadette An·
a review of the work accamplfahed - - . , put i*Miclenl awards; ·
by ~ comm1u- clurlnllhe put Clue Lochary, years of service; Dr.
year.
Wilma Manafle1d, apecial award
The tnuurer, MIIIBmllh, npor- ·fmn the Ohio Division.
ted ·a balance of t14,ta. It wu · AppreclaUon awards for aervtce
reported by Delores Ffanlt, """t to the Rev. WUUam Middleexecutive director, lbat the Melga IIWarth; Erma Cleland and Opal
County Unit ranked II!CGI1d In the Hollon. crusadt! chalnnen; Mary
alate (a total of 1111 unlll) lri the ltMI) O'Brien, apeclal events; Miss Smith,
Cancer'Crulade.
office llllilatance; Pat Amold, 'PUblic
Dr. Matthen p!'ftented" the education; Jeanette Lawrence and
program which dellt with facta and
•
figures CCIIICel'lllncl ora1 cancer. The
program lncli&gt;did a brief quealion .
and answer period. Amy Jo Swn'
mers, area director, Athena, was introduced and expressed her appreciation for the excellent work
being l!ccomplisbed bY the Meigs
RIO GRANDE - Mrs. Marvella
Unit.
Derenge,
Conununications Operator
Mrs. Frank concluded the meeting
by presenting the foUowing awards at Rio Grande College and Comof appreciation for ac- munity College the past 10 years,
· was honored recently at a luncheon
in MoUiton Hall on the campus.
Derenge recenUy 81Ulounced her
retirement from her position.
She was bonored Wednesday in a
luncheon by college administrators,
faculty, and staff. She was presented
with a cradle phone wi\h a gold
plated inscription on the front for
her work at .the Rio Granlle switchmunity, Coolville; Mrs. Harry board.
Mock, Social Involvement, Logan ;
Derenge and her husband, Larry 1
Mrs. James Lehman, Prngram reside in Apple Grove, W. Va.
Resources, Logan; Mrs.· Raymond
Willis, · Membership, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Jotm Cady, Public Relations,
Athens; and Resident Conference
Officer, Mrs. Harold Jeffers ,
Principal James Adams ef
Christian Personhood, Chesterhill.
Southern
High School today released
Reservations for the luncheon, $3,
the
name
of a senior who is being
sbould be sent to Mrs. Keith Sniler,
commended
in the 27th aMual
661 Second Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(1982)
NatiOJial
Merit Scholarship
45631. Babysitting ia provided at the
Prngram.
Letters
of Conunendation
church. (Bring sack lunch for
will
be
presented
to Melinda
children.) ·
Salmons, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Dooald E. Sahnons of Racine, who
placed among the top 51,000 participants in the current competition.
· A spokesman for National Merit
home testing. At the final class when Scholarship Corporation (NMSC),
Dr. Witherell will speak, the
which conducts the Merit Program,
discussion wiD be 1m foot care,
stated, "To be designated a Compatient n;sponsibility and tests.
niendect student is an outstanding atAnyone inleesled in attending
tainment, deserving of public
must pre-register througb t,he Meigs
recognition. The nation will benefit
County Health Department at 992from the continued educational and
6626 before Oct. 14.
personal development of students
such as tl!ese, for they have shown
exceptional promise. We sincerely
hope that the able young men and
women being honored will receive
whatever assistance is necessary for
•
them .to ac~eve the high goals they
set for themselves."
ol some 1.2 million &amp;tudents who
entered the 1982 Merit Scbolarship
competitioo by taking a quaUfying
Monday
test in 1960, about 36,000 are being
cQI1llllended
this month, as they
RACINE, Chapter 134, Order of
begin
their
final
year of hiah scbool.
the Eastern Star, will hold its
These
participants
scored high, bul
regular meeting Monday at 7:30
slightly
below
students
in their
p.m. at the Masonic . Temple.
Dues are payable at that Ume.
A REVIVAL will be held at 7
each evening at the Middleport
Edith Strong is in Colwnbus
Church of the Nazarene Mooday
hospital. She has had open heart
through Sunday with John Euton
surgery and is not very weD at this
as evaugellst. The church is
writing.
located at580 Beech St.
Ethel Rife was at Wilkesville
LETART PTO, Monday, 7:30
Senior
Citizens making apple butter.
p.m. at the scbool.
They are selling it at $3 a quart or
$1.50 a pint.
·
Tuesday
Helen Bolen baa been at Point
SUTI'ON Township Trustees, 8
Pleasant consulting a doctor for her
p.m. Tuesday in the Syracuse
back and.is much improved.
Municipal Building.
Bruce Kesseler has been substituting teaching school at WilkesviUe this week.
Wednesday
Vesta Canode is improving from a
broken
ann.
MIDDLEPORT Literary Club, :·
Mrs.
James Rife visited Ethel and
Wednesday, 2 p.m. at the home off
Unda
Rife
Thursday. .
Mrs. Nan Moore. The ~
Etbel Rile went to Scioto
review will be given by Faye
Fairgrounds
with Vinton CQunty
Walisce.
Senior Citizens recenUy.

meet

Jeanie WJtberell, "•d a mou." ;
Mrs. O'Brien, Pat Ingel8, Ralph

Werry, Kennlt Walton, Melp Inn,
~ and wine tasting party;
Gerald Powell, ,loan Anderson,
Royal Oak Park, d8nce; Vaughan's
Cardinal, grocery day; and the
Dally Sentipel, pubDcity. A vote of
appreciation was given by the group ·
to Mrs. Frank, executive director.
Refreshments provided - by
Harless and Delores Frank .were
served.
·

Derenge_
·
honored

•· I

Derenge

Salmons honored for. NMSP

Diabetes classes offered _ _ _ _. ..: :.,_~--------

Octol&gt;er6, 1;11

.

•

the theme for the Eighth Annual
Meeting of Athens District United
' Methodist Women at Grace United
Methodist Church, Ga!llpolis, October . 6, 10 a.m. · to 2:30 p.m.
·Rtglstratioo Is from 9:30a.m. on.
Guest speaker will be MiJs Sachi
.J&lt;ajiwara, United Methodist Global
Ministriea Representative, Dayton;
introduced by Mrs. James Mallett,
vice president, in charge ot
Program, Athens District United
Methodiat Women. Mrs. Everett
Murray, treuurer, Rock Bridge,
,will conduct the "Food, Land, and

and Mrs. Virgil Brown, Mr. and Mra.
Reas, Louisville, Ky.
Mr. and Mrs, Joe Brown and Jac~ Greenaway, Mr. and Mrs. Marf8lllily, Avon; Mrs. Jerri Ball, tin Seelig, Mr. and Mrs. John
Jacksonville, Fla.; Miss Bec!ty Musser, Mr. and Mrs. Charles G.
Tate, New Raven, W. Va.; Mr. and Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Emie MlUer,
Mrs. Thomas Gallagher and family, Mr. and Mrs. P.aul Frick and Della
Panna Heights; Mrs. Edrie Tomlin- Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. BID Pullins and
9Qn, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. family, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hall and
William E. Brown and family, Har- family, and Mr. and Mrs. Tom W.
tsville, s. C.; Mrs. Gloria Brown Bowen.
A gift was presented to Mrs. Elsie
voDe and family , Lakewood; Miss
H.
Brown, the oldest present; Mrs.
Melissa Brown, Vermillion; Miss
Jerri
Ball who traveled the farthest.
.Malea Duncan, Point Pleasant, W.
It
was
decided to make the reunion
va.; and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roush
an annual event. Officers were elecand family, Rutland.
Attending from Pomeroy were ted for the next year. A diMer was
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Young and served at 5 p.m. and theoi!roup enf8lllily, Eddie Young and daughter, joyed singing following the dinner
Mrs. Dorothy Clark and family, Mr. plaMed by Virgil Brown.

G'ary Stewart.
Thoae attending were Helen
Stewart, Ralph Ste;wart, Jim
Stewart, Armond Turley, Geraldine
Greer, Francis Stewart, Carri and
Reaa Harris, Mr. and Mrs. George
Wai!Jier, daughters Beth and Kim,
Joy Fareman, Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Stewart, daughters Tilfany, Missy
and Crystal, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Russell; son Ryan, ·Dorothy J.
Russell, Mr. and Mrs. PhllllpWerry,
daughter Janet, sons, Ray and E~
die, Nancy Turnbull, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Fowler, son·Tony, Usa Crump,
daughter Nikki, Mary Crawford,

Astrograph

DALE HILL

And

, . "Food, Land, and Justice," will be

The Stewart Family reunion was
held Sunday, Sept. 27, at,the Racine
• Locks and Dam above New Haven,
w. Va.
,
A baske~ dinner was served with
Francia Ste.wart giving the prayer.
' Two birthdays were observed,
Shawn Schultz and Mrs.· Tony
· llaiatien.
The afternoon was enjoyed by
playing gamea, visiting and singlng
and dancing to the IJil8ll music
. played by Armond Turley. The
oldest couple attending was Mr. and
Mrs. Lon Roush; the youngest pel'
son was daughter· of Mr. and Mn.

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

group

UMW meeting
set _ _ _ _- - ' - - - - - - - - - - ,

·stewart _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___:__ _ _ _ _ _ __

ROSEMONT, IU. (AP) - Mike "Tlllis Ia a very good defe1181ve
Weaver atiU baa the ostentatious belt lighter, tQui!her· than I ~bought he
of a heavyweight champion wrapped wail;'
around his svelte waist.' It ia awtcWeaver.said that TIIUs' apeed and
ward, bill it still fila weD.
agility made It difficult "to land a
Weaver successfully defended his solid punch. I'm ncit disappointed I
World Boxing Aasoclatlon tide with didn't ~ him out,.but If he had
a unan1moua 11&gt;-round decision. tried for a·knockout In the late rounSaturday nleht over Jainea "Quick" ds; I probably would have knocked
Tillis after Marvin Hagler had him out."
defended hla undisputed midTlllis' trainer, Angelo Dundee,
dleweight · crown by slopping kept chiding referee Stanley
Mualafa Hamaho at 2:09 in the lith Chriltodoulou about Weaver's low
round of their ICheduled 15-round puhchea, but said "I'm proud of this
' match.
kid. Ever')'body said he couldn't go
1
TIIUs, a 24-year-old wbo had never 15 rounda with the champ. Y011'tl be
before loot in 20 prevt0111 boull, hearing frGm Tll1ia In the future, I'D
rnJchl have been wearing ·the 'belt R1J1R11fee JVU."
I
had he llllt decided to nm rather than
gun, and 10 W.. alCiplllded '-'·
I.
Indeed, It appeared that solrillhe
dllllance agahwt the c1lampion wu a
goal In itlelf for TllUs wbo l...itad,
l t
"I tbougbt I GUipuadJlJtf
Wllvel' tine or four to-· I athe Jllllpl wve~~'t Millis too BGod."
w...., mMi111 btl l1rat riiiiiP"
peafaaeetnMU'lya,_-,admllled,
215
"Tbe lajGft clef1nlta1y burt me.I very
My determlaatiCII pe

mlallas

VeleraniMemortalHOipltal.
Elecled lor the ~ buai.- year
were: prealdent, Joan Andersoil;
vice president, Jeanie Witherell;
aecrelar)', Gloria Jewett; treuurer,
EnnaSmith.
. Pmldent.Andel'ldn noted he.r ippredatlon to Jeanie Witherell, ,\prll
Smith, and Erma Smith for their
help u officers dUring the laat year.
She alao, recognlzed . the following
standing cqmrniltee chalnnen for
their work:
Pat Arnold, public education;
Rhondtl Dalley, professional
.education; Tereaa Colllna, aervice;
Enna Cleland and Opal Hollon, 11181
Crusade Chairman; Sharon
Michael, public infonnation; Dr.
Mansfield, medical supervlsot; .Dr.
Craig Matthews, alternate medical

'

Area meetings· and classes planned

The first reunibl!. of the WiUiam
and·EJIUT18 Jane Brown family was
held Sept. 19 at the Pomeroy Gun
Club.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. JF&amp;rl
Brown, Mrs. Elsie H. Brown,
Prospect, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. John R.
Weeks and family, The P!alns; Mr .
'and Mrs. Albert Brown, Mt. Vernon;
Mrs. Judy Crown Coogle, Fredericktown; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Brown and
family , MI. Vernon; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Brown and family, Port Clinton; Mr. and Mrs. Don Tate, Brook
Park; · Mrs. Emma Burkhard,
Clarksvllle, Ind. ; Mr. and Mrs. E~
ward Uvingston and family , New
Albany, Ind.; Mr. and Mrs. Warren

Weaver StJ.CCessfully
defends his title
Jason Hill
150poond
aophomore lineman

••

~ Brown.:..·~
· ...._.__~

•I

Appold, in his secoild start at/ii\larterback, "Played a very ' fteady
giiJile; much better than last week."
Kent
State mentor Ed Chlebek said,
, Ohio Coach Brian Burke said,
"I was surprised that they (Miami)
•"ol.r.pass defense was good, bu~ moved the ball so weD."
Kelso hurt· us. He is a fine runner
•· Freslunan Curtis Adams SCOI'ed
: •and broke lot of tackles."
two touchdowns, including school
1j liob Phillips caught two scoring , record 87-yarder, for Central
passes from Tom George to lead ' Michigan. The Chippewas ran for
Western Michigan. Altogether, he 417 yards - 170 by Adarna - and
held Eastern Michigan to 4 yards
had nine catches for 139 yards.
·
.
.
"Today was a pt'etty good pel' rushing.
In its first three gam~, Central
fonnance," said Broncos Coacb
Elliot Uzelac. "With the·injurieB we Michigan ha~ 80\le" off to its WOI'
had coming in, we really hung ststart since joining the league in
together." Bowllng Green Coach 1975, so Coach Herb Deromedi was
Denny Stolz said the Broncos "han- pleased with the outcome. "It was
dled us up front as much as anybody our best total performance in the filL
st 30 minutes, both offensively and
in the last few years."
defensively,'' he said.
1
Greg Jones gained 167 yards on 37
"I don't think we're that liad a
carries and scored '!le winning team. We just played a team that
touchdQWII for Miami. Kent State · was really prtmed today," said
picked up only 27 )lards in 36 ruahlng Eastern Michigan Coach Mike
attempts. The crowd of 20,080, a Stock.
, Miami Field record, uw an exciting
Mike Schafer kicked three field
finish, with both_.of Kent State's goals and Ball ~te·~ defense
SCOfellCOming in the final 2: 011.
limited Northern llltnois to 63 yards'
total offense. As Huskies Coach Bill
Mallory put it, "We just got a good,
' ol~fashloned beating."
Ball State Coach Dlrighi Wallace
said, ''It felt great to have the defense out there doing the job. The front
live were active and had pressure on
them all day, and that wu a factor.'.'

...

WlNNER8- Tbe .Jallfer Dace Twirl Teulel llle 81Jietlw TwfriiDI
Coi'P,I el Pegp Gflleaple took flrlt place at tbe llelpn BaeeGIIIIDC
FeaUval. Pletured, left to rilbt, lbey are Kelly Klier, Ktlllda Klier,~
Bayes, Karla Cllclt, al Angle Cllne. Tbe jiiVenfle tam aiao took a first
place tropby aad lhooe memben are Jenulfer llalnron, Amy Warth, Joy ,
Black, and Keith Aim Lee.
'·
·

· Reunion~

Miami Coach Tom Reed sajltJOhil'

Canc~r . Society

AwardJ. _.., PI rtv' and of' flcen elecled when the Meigs eow..
ty Unit of the AmerlcaJr Cancer
Society held ita aDIIUal meellnc at

The

The

.,.

cerne&lt;t If you prime yourself for
something too optimistically you
could be let down.
.
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprii 19)

' ~~~~tt=~ ~~:'ee;~~~:a':b1i1~~~

Ora Higgens, Pearl Fox, Mr. and
Mrs. Lon Roush, Eleanor Lewis, An-

na Lee Douglas, l\1r. and Mrs. Jeff
Halstien, daughters, MiJsy and
Casey, son J.D., Mr. and Mra. Jim
SheD, Brenda Shultz, Robin Kopp 1
Robert Shultz, son Shawn; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Reid, Mr. and Mrs.
RusseU.

Social·
.
Calendar

Drop by your nearest bookmobile
BliwnAcidiuon, 7:m .
Wildnesday, (let, 7 - Torch, Post stop for free entertainment and inOffice, 2:*3:40; Hockingport, Com- fonnation. The boolcmob~s
munity Bldg., 4:115-5 :05; Coolville, paperbacks, . 45 and lp
,
SchoolLot,5:25-8:25'RiggscrestAd- magazines, large print books and
clition, 6:45-7 :25.
how-to-C:Io-it help for everything
1'1\ursday, Oct. 8 - Keno, North of from car repair to dieting.
Keno Bridge, 3:45-4:15; Racine, .-----------~
Horne National Bank, 4:45-5:45;
Syracuse, Pool, 11-7.

you.
TAURUS (April lt-M1y 201
This Is one of thole days when

make

an

agrellment which
benoflts the other perty tor more
thin you.

LB~J:!I: ~Aut. 221 Dulin
and
bllltiH lhould not be

roflona IUd away - • · wnat
you put off now ma, fUrther com·

PliCotewnat you hive tociO later.
VIRGO !Aut-~-. 221 Tim·
pororHy JIGI!pOM lilt purchlse of
luxurv Items If tilly dcln'fflf com· ,
tortably Into your bu&lt;IIIOI. They'll
still be there whln yaur ..,,... 11
fatter .
Ii

Birth announced
POMJ&lt;:HOY-Rub ;uul .Julia C&lt;t; l'·
Van Ka l l ll)l' ll arc a n n uu1 1t: i n~
\IlL' 1Jirtl1 uf a llcrughll•r. H~ ·&lt;~lht• r

tn•n\tT

!h a n. hnl'll 1\ ug. 24. Sht • wei gill•tl
s ix UIJ tlt •l' S (:IIIli Wl-I S 20
ill d lt'S lollJ..:. M r . ;uul Mr . Van K c~ll li­
p {' ll hCI Vt' 11 St 111, Chcu iLI, t wn.
.'

.'\1:\ '1'1 1 JliiUIIti S,

Mc11t·rna l J!r;-uulparPnts - m't.'·· Mr.
&lt;~ llcl Mrs. Nat f' arpcn ter. Chc!'iluiJ,
;~ nd lilt• g rt· ~·•t - gra mlp&lt;:t n•n ls ;-m.~ Mr-.

i.J IUI . Mrs. Paul HtlffJJ JC-l n , Chester:

r.u cy (i;ml of Sun mer is a Jrut lcrna]
)!I' cat -great -J.!I'&lt;tJ Uit r1tltl ll' r . Pa lerna'
grandmother is Sa ll y Wyingardcn ,
Tm·son, Az. T ht&gt; Vow Ka111pen f&lt;imiiy
•·
rcs itlcs in Tue:-;vn.

The l&gt;uil y Scnlincl
lUSPSI...,.I
ADI,Jaloe of MuiUmedll, l11c.

Publlllhed ~"'~ry art~moon , MumiMy lhruuNh
Friday, IU Cuurt Stn!t!t, by the Ohio Vall ey
Publhlhin~ Company • Multimt!dl ¥, In c..
Pumeroy, Ohiu 45769, 992-2151. &amp;lcund l'la1111
pot~Utl(~ p11id Ill Pumeruy, Ohio.
Me1nbt!r : T ~ A.'t.'Wt' illlt!d Pr~M. lnla~11d DaiPM!.~

A:.;suchdion am.l

Ut~t

Ameril'lln

New!!ptper Pu.bli i!her!l M'Wrl:iwll un, Natiomd

Senior citiZens' menu

Adver tillillK
Newsp~per

Repr u ent¥tive , Bnmll11m

Sales. 733 ThinJ Avenue, New
. Yurk, New York J001 7.
POSTMASTER : ~~1d .ttl~~~ to 11'M;! Diily

you are apt to focus on the

smeller picture end obscure the
larger view. Try to kHp per·
spectlvesln proportloo.
GEMINI (MIV 21-Junt 20) You
could experience temptations
today to try your luck In ereos
whlre the odds ore stocked
against you. Heed commoa sen·
te / nothunches.
&lt;
CANCER CJuno 21 -July 221
Normally vou're • p~ shrewd
-rodor, but today you mltlht .

'·

Ora Cottrill went to Columbus
recenUy with R.S.V.P.
Minnie Wooten is· in Athens
bospital with blood clot of tbe lungs.
Bonnie Rife and Pat Brown were
sbopping inGallipolis recently.
.
.:

ly

are concerned. She mar be bet·

tlng ht.•i' chips on one who opposes

respective states who qualified as
Merit Program Semifinalists. Only
the 15,000 Semifinalists, who were
·announced in a national news
release on September l6, wii1
receive fUrther consideration for
Merit Scbolarship5. In the spring of
1982, NMSC will announce the nam.S
of about 5,000 Merit Scholarship winners who wiD receive awards worth
$15 minion for" · collage undergraduate study.

Buckwheat News Notes

Bookmobile schedule for Meigs
Oct. 5 - Darwin, Duncan's Store,
3:35-4&lt;05; 'Harriaonville, Sohlo
Station, 4:~:10; New Uma Road,
one mile South of Fort Meigs, 5:256:05; Rutland, Bank One, 8:211-7;
Rutland,~Street, 7:115-7:45.
Tl!eaday, Oct. 6 - Long Bottom,
Post Office, 3:56-4 :10; Reedavllle,
Reed's Store, 5-6:50; Tup~rs
Plains, Arbaugh Housing, 6:211-7;

Salmons

~nU~I.ll l

COAD Senior Nutrition Proaram · potatoes, leinon pudding, dark
Menu are announced Oct. 8 thtough bread, butter, milk. •
,•
Oct. 9:
Wednesday- atlll eGD carne, cotTuesday - Breaded porli: cbop, tage ~. pear ctalad, arspefrult,
green beans, candled sweet combread, butter, milk.

Correction
Sonn.y Btng, GaWpolia, attended a

uprtae birthday dinner heldtty fa' VemD!• Bini and Mrs. Pea1r
llfeDWL H1l Nllle -

unin-

tenliiW'IIJ llllliu.cl frGm • lfltllll ol

11111111 bt an ...uer kCOWil of the
~. It Mr. and Mn.
'l'rllvia Sayre who .u.ndeci, flllt Mr.
and Mrs. Terry Sayre uliated.

'nturaday ..:_

Hot reut IMlef san-

dwlchlaravy, wblpped potat'oea,
pl111111, cabbqHpple lllw.
Friday - B.ad tllh, vepUible
medley, bn. noocllal, apricot halvea,
bread, butter' m111t.

Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk or buttermilk ..vee~ dally.
1'1.- reatster in advant:e fa' your
lunch.

At ·Baker Furniture

,soFA
SED

.S138oo

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Ry Carrtl' r or Motor Route
OQew~k , ... , ......•.. . .• , .• , , ..• $1.00
Orw Month .... . ........... .. , ..... $4.40

One Yl'ilr , .. , .............. . , .. . , . I$2.1J
SING I.E COPY
PRICE." •
Dllily ············· · ·· · ·'··· ···· lliCe nt11

Sut..:ribc~ nul de~iftn" to PIIY the CMrri~r
'uwy remit in Hdvanre dir~t to The ~II)'

Senllnt!l on 11 3, 6 ur 12 munUJ blltd!i.' Cl't!dll
will bt! lliYI!ll carrier e11ch month .

Nn llqb4criptlons by li\1111 pennilled in townM
where honw ct~rri t!r ~ rv ice i llt~VMilll bl t!.

BAKER
FURNITURE
992-3307
Middleport, Ohio

Court St., Pumeruy, Ohl u4S769.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Ohio and Wrtt Vlr gtnt.

·3 Munth .•.. , , . .... .. ... .. •.•..• . • &amp;IC.&amp;o
Six munth .............. , ......... $1':' .50
IYt-ar ,,,,,, ... . ....... . ..•.. .. . &amp;3.1 00
Ra\tiOUtlldtOhM
ud Weal Vltlla..
3 Mnn\h , .. . .... . ....... .. . , ...... $11.00
1

1Munth .. . ......•... . , .. -. ..... . .. . ..00
.I Year ....... ... . ,,. ...... :· ; ····· 138.011.

•

�.

October

Ohio

.Small .investment, large
returns, Sentinel Warit' Ads
•

No Waist Seam
Printed Pattern

Bu$iness ·Services

ORDINANCE
N0.111H1

tank

Ord. No. 1103-10, •n Ordln•nce to est11bllsh Vlllap

tank

at

Horner · Hilt

An Orllin•nce to Amend location.
!tern 2: water storage
at

location. •
iQbs and waif rates. and . Item 3: Water storage
tank
at belt line location.
establishing 1...1hollda,s.
Item

vacation and sick l"ve.

· Be II ordained bY the
ot 111e VIllage of

Attorneys,

110112

By JOHN C. RICE
to he used as silage. U it is frosted
Exlensl011 Agent
while still very . immature. the
Agriculture, Mellis Conoly
moisture content is probably too
POMEROY - Delayed planting lligh for successful ensiling. Let it
last spring resulted in considerable . dry to at least 30 percent dry matter .
acreage of inunature com as bar- (70 percent moisture).
vest season approaches: Stage of
Your immature com may bave
maturity varies from no ear more nutrient value for Cjjlttie
development, small ears wii!J ker- feeding I!Jan you might think. Con• nels in I!Je blister stage, kernels in sider thefollowing:
I!Je milk stage and full or normal
1 - The protein will be within 60 to
maturity. What are the potentials of 70 percent of mature com silage
I!Jese various stages? All except I!Je (7.5-8.0 percent protein on a dry .
full maturity probably bave no alter· basis).
native oi!Jer I!Jan cattle or sheep
2 - The energy will vary wii!J I!Je .
feed. The potential here may be con· amount of ear and kerneL developsiderable.
ment, but not in a direct ratio. ·A
· · Yield and Feeding Value of lm·
Michigan study showed I!Jat I!Je
· mature Corn - Yield of dry matter
energy value of com silage made
per acre increases with maturity,
from 25 bu./acre com was~ perreaching a maximwn at I!Je late
cent of tbat from 100 bu./fann corn.
dent stage. Thus com harvested for
3 - When you start to feed the
silage at various times before full
silage we recommend an analysis
dent results in proportionate
(including ADF or acid detergent
decrease in yield. For tiJls reason it
fiber) at REAL (our Research Exis recommended I!Jat I!Je inunature
tension Analytical Laboratory,
com be left in I!Je field as long as
O.A.R.D.C.) in Wooster. We can
possible. Frost will not hurt the com
I!Jen evaluate the energy content
and
recommend I!Je amount of corn
.

.

necessary to increase tiJe feed value
to normal com silage; or for a given
gain desired.
·
4 - You might consider adding
,ground shelled eom (!50 to 200 lb.
per ton qf fresh silage). This will
help decrease tiJe moisture of very
immature corn and increase I!Je
energy. Urea or some other NPN additive will incease the protein and
will not increase I!Je nitrate
problem.
·
Relationship To A Nitrate
Problem - The possibility of a
nitrate problem wii!J immatute corn
harvested for silage is not very
likely. This Is particularly true If I!Je
com · has not been stressed from
drought. Even if some accwnulation
of nitrate occurs, from 40 to 60 percent will be lost during fermentation. if a problem is suspecled
wheqlbe silo is opened for feeding, a
nitrate analysis can be obtained at
REAL in Wooster:
For furi!Jer information on nitrate
see Ohio ·Beef Industry Handbook
Leaflet BIH-ll16 and the Ohio Dairy
Leaflet DG Ill.

Rotarians will hold observance ·
Vocational Servke Week will . be
observed by I!Je Rotary Club of Mid·
dleport-Pomeroy during October 11·
17 as . part of the worldwide observance by Rotary International.
Vocational service in Rotary stands for service to society through
ethical drawings in business with

is an organization

or business and

professional men who bave joined
together in service to the com-.

munity, to world understanding, and
to high ethical standards in business
and the professions.

Property Transfers
Timothy Conner, Thelma Conner

customers, einployees, ·competitors, . to Michael S. Ward, Rebecca S.
and supplies. It bas been a part of
'Rotary since the organization was
founded 7 years ago.
For more. · tban three decades
Rotarians bave been using as a practical standard for actions in tl\eir
business,. community and personal
affairs the simple :!a-word statement
known as The Four-Way Test.
(I) - Is is I!Je Truth?
(2) - Is it Fair to all concerned?
(3) -WiD it build Good Will and
Better Friendships?
(4) - Will it be Beneficial to all ,
ccmcerned?
The Four-Way Test was conceived
in !932 by Herbert J . Taylor, a
Chicago Rotarian, who served as
president of Rotary International in
195+55. Taylor applied the test in his
own business, and, in 1943, Rotary
International adopled the Four-Way
Test as a part of its vocational service ideal.
Starting wii!J four members who
attended the first meeting of the first
club in Chicago, Iilinois, Rotary International has grown to some 19,000
clubs with approximately· 900,000
members worldwide.
According to the president of I!Je
local club, James R. Sheets; Rotary .

Ward, 1.25 acres, Letart.
William R. Swartz, Doris J. Swartz to Uberty Oil and Gas Corporation, Right of Way, Orange.
Vernon Swartz, Sharon Swartz to
Liberty Oil and Gas Corpora.tion,
Right of Way, Orange.
Warren Elliott, Martha Elliott to
Liberty Oil and Gas Corporation,
Right of Way, Orange.
Harold L. Henderson, Wilma Henderson to Liberty Oil and Gas Corporation, Right of Way, Orange,
Arthur C. Atherton, ODie AI!Jerton
to Liberty Oil and Gas Corporation,
Right of Way, Orange.
Nancy Reed aka Nancy C. Reed to

'
Robert R. Kim, Cert. of Transfer,
Rutland.
Lovell Leroy Hite, Artie Wilma
Hite to Jay Hall,. Jr., Bernard V.
FUltz, 40 acres, Salisbury.
Lillie M. Hauck to Ricky W.
Icenhower, Jackie L. Icenhower,
Parcel, Pwneroy.
Myrtle L. Abels, Extrx., Louis A.
DeLuz, dec. to Helen L. Prater,
Johnny M. Prater, 22.07 acres,
Lebanon.
Edith E. Burton to Robert
Grayson Ashley, 5\'.! Lot 269, Middleport.
Everett F. Steveils to William
Ralph Hart, Jacqueline Ann Hart,
·
Parcel, Bedford.

ATTEST:

Jon Buck

Clerk

4663
SIZES
&amp;-11

61-/h.- -/1.1-$
Th~ soft style (no waist seam)
has 1raceful lathers rediatini

out (rom string-tied neckline to

shoulders. Wear it belted or1~ee.

sew it in a few hours. ,

.

Pnnted Patte&lt;n 4663: M1sses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16. 18. Size
12 (bust 34) takes 2 5/8 11rds
45-inch fabric.
$2.• '"' ..... polllm. Add •
,. ..... polllm,. .......

.... handli•l- Send Ill:
AIIMAUIM
· ·1 !t\
~1111111 Dlpl
The Daily Sentinel·
243 llosl 17 SL1 .~1ir Yllk, NY
10011. Print NAME. ADDlES$,
Zl~, SIZE, and S1YLE NUMIIU.

Busy woman? Working woman?
C
Dress for less, spen~ less time,
work-choose a wardrobe from

oor NEW FAll-WINTER PATTERN
CATALOG. Coupon for Free $2
pattern inside. Send $1.50
MI. CUFI' 1001$ . . $Z.IIIIIdl
135·11 Dolls lid CIGCIMo
134-14
Qlollla
131-fllhlon """' Qlolltioa
130-S-Iat-Sial 31-!if
Books 1nd Calaloi - add 501
eacll for poStage .nd handlin1.

.icll

POMEROY
LANDMARK
614-,2:2181
For Farm and
Horne Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil.

e, 9, 6tc

PRICED RIGHT.

uss
IIIAII
5110HS
IP 10
IS ,
IIOII.DS

·Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
Savell
·--I

3

liAr

DAYS

'3

'

'

DAYS

•

• Ci'I Sftng

ttOn s. ·
.Mon~av -

'4

'7

'11

FRAN'S
CERAMICS
Now Taking En·
rollment For Fall
0.1 y or Evening
Clases.

FRANCES HEWETSON
307 Wetzgall St.
Pomero~. Ohio
9- ~· l

Phone 614·662·3821

N .H.

These cash roles
Include discount
I )Wanted
I )For S•le

Caii .Ken Young
For F~&gt;SI Service
985 -3561 .
PARTS AND SERVICE
All MAkES
•Washers
•Dryers
•Ranges
•Disposals
•Dishwashers
•Hot Water Tonks 9-S·· tfc

2. ~·--------~---

High scoring individuals were .
Greg Bolen, first place, from Meigs
FFA, Mike Goeglein and Bill
Hol!!OJilb tieing for secoud place,
both from Meigs FFA and Mike
· Henry, tpird place, from Soui!Jern
FFA.

• S!ding

• FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

14-luSIMII l•llcll•tl '
U-Litt&amp;Aci'HII
:16- · ~t.-1 Ellll'l Wanted
17-RNitln

Wani·Ad Advertising
Dtadll~t•

llo\Ondaiy 2;0001'1 S.turct•Y
TWIMIY ftM'II Prll_, 1:10 ..-.M,
tMcllr ....... ,...ICIHen

S'""'y 1t.,P'~M. Prllly

H ·tfc

FRANCE.
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES

"_parm EqWiPme•t

.-z.-wanted to 8uy
•J-LIYestoc~

't'.Telavlslons

*•Mostlng
Alleenncs
(b~th

S•le

..._H•Y I Gnln
65- SIIICI.&amp; F.rtililtr

telescoping &amp; 19wer)
•ComP.Onenl ~stems
*P9rtable
!:lod,os ,
Automobil.e Radios
*Tape Decks
*Tubes &amp; Simi·
conduclon
All types of baHerles &amp;
Chargers. ~
PRONE "2·2276 9·24
8rodbury Rood I mo.

e TR,ANSPORTATION

11 - AutoSfclrSIII
12-Truc... lorS•I•

*

.

n-v•nsi4W.O.
74-Motercycltl
7s-B01t\ I Moton
71-Awto Plrtl&amp;

1

Acc..wles

n-Awtca Repair,
71-Cimplnt Equipment

growing. Nice large a
room · home with hot ·
water tteat. 2 full baths,
carpeting and on St. Rt:
338.
.
TRAILER LOT- Level
land, river view' and all
utilities for only $6,500.
3 ACRES.,.. In Rutland
Township on good coun·
tv road with water and
eleC. avai Iable. No zon·
lng. GOOd site for house
or trailer.
ASSOCIATES: Helen,
Gordon, and sue Mur·
phy.

George Miller
your present elec·

trlcal system. • '
Residential
&amp; Commercial

Call 742·3195

STANDARD
OIL CO.
ISOHIO)

Housiny
Hl!.lcf{/u.lr ters

we are now serving all
of Meigs Co. with
corT;~Iete

Diesel
Gasoline,

Oil.

lit'!~

NEW. liSTING- MID·
OLE PORT- One story
frame home- with 5
rooms. Two bedrooms,
la.rge bath, built· in'
cl:lina cabinet in dlnlg
room, part basement,
garage and a nice 'ot.

NO hunting II. no
trespassing without written
permission on Woolhan

S

Farms.

I

9

, .7

5

0

ONE HOOR . ..::. And a
large kitchen, · 3
bedrooms, porch, cOuld
have full basement and
is approx. 6 yrs. old.
$19,500..
REALTQR
Henry E. Cleland, J r,
99%-4191

ASSOCIATES
Roger Tu.rner 992·S692
DoHit Turner 992-5692
Jean Trussedll949·2660
Office 992·2259

A

PLEASANT VAllEY HOSPITAL

lee':

Larry E. Miller, Dealer
8·30·1 mo.

is currently seeking
qualified

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest
Heater Core to the

for
Nursing Care Unit
(primarily geriatrics)
.
and
Acute Care Nursing Units
including full and part-time
positions
for
0. B.
IC/CCU
Medical/Surgical
EXCELLENT SALARY AND
,
BENEFITS.
Contact: Director of Nursing
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Valley Drive
·
Point Pleasant, wv 25550

Lariest Radiator.

Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph. 992-2174
5·7·11c

ALL STEEL

An equal opportunity employer ·

Farm Buildings
Silts

"From l0x30''
SMALL

Utility Buildinp
· Slzeslrom 4x4 to 12x40

• LARG~

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
111.3, Box 54

Racine, Oh.

THE STANDARD

11-llCIYIHIII
,.._,Iii *'"CIII
lafrlfHIII'cM'I

OIL CO.

eF-GtMrll MIWiint

16-M.H. II!Yir
17-Upltlls..rr

(SOHIO)
. we

are now delivering
home heating oil in att
parts ol fMigs Co. We
want new customer~ .
'Lal-rv E. Mlller· Oealer

992-3460

by Robert ,
\.

..

ti Long otstpnce,
Clll Collect
9·2Hmo.

Cai'Pel.

S::r.fNa~cl R!:~ANTS ,/·

' CARPET

Ph. 614-143·2591
6o15·Hc

W/Padcllng
tns1alltcl
Starling ' .
~-.- · ·

RUBBER BACK MC~~~~~pe1
Cash-n·Carry
1 Roll Each
Brawn, Bluo,
Green ·

Farms ot Apple Grove.

NO hunting a. trespassing
on· Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Wool hen
trespassing on Brvan's
property ·. In Henderson.
Violators
wHI
be
prosecuted.
ScQttv
Soladean.

NO

4

VInyl I Aluminum
SIDING

Glveliw•y

home

par ·t

Women, men, c:hlldren MANA.G EMENT OP·
clothes, misc. Items. co. PORTI:INITY. We ore
Rd . 10-Dexter Rd . seeking qualified lh·
dlvlduels to · train . for
Tuesday· Sat. ,)0·? .
t'flanagement positions In
Hard mans Home Centers if
Yard sale, Oct. 6 9 lo 5. you
are highly motivated,
Leaf machine, camp cot, de&gt;lre responsibility, per·
clothing In good cor\dlllon. sonal
growth,
womens size 20112. 18.5 s. professionalism, and are
Front St., Middleport.
wiiUng to re·IOc:ate, send
your resume In confidence
to Stan Hardman, Hard·
9
Wanttcllo Buy
man's Home Center, Gen
WANT TO BUY Old fur· Office, PO Box 1-40, Spennlture and Antiques of all cer, WV 25276.
kinds, cell Kenneth
·
256·19671n the e•enlngs.
DISTRIBUTOR
RAND McNally Maps·Up
CASH PAl D for clean, late to 150% Profll·nci sel!lng.
mOdel used cars. Smith Sei"vlce pre·estal:)llshed ac·
Bulck·Ponllac, GAllipolis, counts, mlnlmun In·
vestment S3,97S. Securetj
Onlo. Call446·2282.
bY Inventory and equip·
mont. Call toll free HIOO·
Junk cars with or with out 835-2246.. ext. 112, or write
motorS, . scrap metal, and S.E.I . ,Inc ., 811 A.tlanta
batteries. Call388·9303.
Road, Cumming, Ga . 30130

682·69411.

5 pups, part German
shepherd. Also mother dog.
Mole dog-blakk a. brown.
949·2402.
1 black a. white, 3 while
long haired · kittens. 949·
2270.

8UYING GOLD II. SILVER
paying. cash for anythl,ng
stamped 10K, UK, 18K and
dental gold. Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything stamped
sterling. Clerks Jewelry
Sto~. Gallipolis 446-2691 or
992·205A In Pomeroy.

SMALL female pup, has
had all shots, ~- t511 · 1552.

Lostand Found
car keys at
Holzer Hosp. Ca1.1446·8523.

'

~

Los,t set of

FOUND In · Allred area .
Bleck dog, port poodwe.
985·4189.
Lost·Foxhound White with
black spojs, about 26 ln.
tall, brown . -head, S25.
Reward, Ruuel Barr C11ll
3G4-895-3323.

6FAMILYgara~tsote,Oc·

' Iober 5,6,7-9 to • · 3010
Ko1hnor Lane, Pl.
Pleaaant. Adults, children,
baby clolllea, ell sizes,
mostly new Items,

1Exira G~l
11 . 116.95 111 •
fnstollt4 y~.
-

••llmttu, Nf-1101 or

f4f.IUO.

..

No lundtY Ctlll

3•11·Hc

'

·.• I

Group Medical Coverage
for small busrne,s, as well
an Individuals. Motor
medical, basic 1\ofpltal, a.
group Jife Insurance com·
blned to give you one of,the
best ptngrams evelllble.
Very competatlve rates.
For: more Information:
Steve McGhee, 446-0818 or
446·0552.

'

'

Clns.~ified Pages cover the

followinl( telephone exchanges ...

-

Ga Ilia Co. Ar"ea Code

Meigs Co. •rea Code
614
992-Middleport
Pomeroy
985-Chester
34j-Portland
247-Letarl Falls
949-uRacine

614
44•-G•IIipOiis
367-Cheshire.

l88-Vinton
245-R io Grande
256-Guyan Dist.
643-Arabla Dist.

742-Rutland

.

Mason Co., W.Va.
Artl CIJ!Ie304
67.5-Pt. Pleasant
112-New Haven

TO PlACE AN AD CALL
In Melts County
In Galllo county

441-2342

992·2156
In Ma"!" county

Syr~.

Main st.

i

/

I

care your elderly need In a
home like atmosphere.
Vacancies now availlble.
call J(JH75·1293,

11

·

..,
~ .1

'

ii«al estall!
3"1, - -'"'H::-am
':c-es'"t"o""r-=s"'
al,-e- k

New

,

'

3

-

brick, 994 Fourth . ,.Ave.. Gallipolis. Fully ·
equipped kitchen, •formol
dining, 2 ro 3 bedrooms, ,
carpeting, storm wil'ldows, ~·.
central air. S.S,OOO down.

..

Assume loan of S31,000 at 9
112% 446·7448.
,

For sale or rent house, 6
rms .• with bath, carpeted, 5
112 acres, 5 mi. from park
front. Call 446·6697 or 4116-.
2516. • •
• •

.-.
--5 rrn. house on Ct!illcothe
Rd., SJ,OOO. Coli 446·4038 or
4116-1615 or 44612&gt;43.

t

o-!"

Life Estate. Farm, proper- .. ".j

ty

195--Ltltr1
931-Butialo

lfe&lt;Drllions.
Tun. 1~&gt;1.

HARPER Adult Care Cen· , ~~
ter·providlng the personal · :·

2 story

4S8-Leon
576- Apple Grove
773-Mason ·

Hlll-n

·· ·

_
.,.

-===::;;;;~~;;;;
Insurance

11
Htlp Wanted .
IN ·
Telephone Soles. sa to S16 AUTOMOBILE
per hour. Work from your SURANCE been can·
Lost your
home parf.tlme·no ex· celled?
perlence. For lf'!'lmediate operator's License? Phone
employment
call .u6-1371.
'!92·2143.
,•
.

Family Gar- Salt
&amp; Wed, H, Mllthtll

RUTI.AND ~FURNITUR~

your Piano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 446·A372,
Gallipolis.

· vacancy In b~rding
home for el~erly.
Reasonable 614-992·6022.
~----==="---

6

.:Ons

"ltiUtllul, Custom
lullt IUrttH"
Call lor lrtl lldlnt

'

repair,

bedroom house, ~ ,.·-·
family room, H4 bat~, 2 . ,;
car garage. Cent'r~l heat ·
and air. 2 miles from · ·
Holzer Hospital. Rt. 35.446- ,. ,
3617 .

13

... " ...
----. . . .' . .' .. .
~

Plano.

Love your neighbor tune '

388·9692.

Will do day work or cleat
ofllces. 742·2297:

WANT to buy standing tim·
ber, 5 acres or more. Rocky
Wooldridge, 614-289·2476 or
614-493·2591.

Services
-----===c...
____ .,. .
tuning and

-·

No item to large or small
wi II buy 1 piece or complete
household. Now, used and
antique. Cell992·6370.

Also Flea Market open
dally.
Open Monday ·
Friday 1-5 pm.

c===;;o:::::=:=,;o~;==
Professional
23

I

6 kl"ens, 3 yellow, 1 grey, 2
mixed. 6 woeks old. Part
Slamoese. Ceii61H92-6505.
PUPPIES pertlrlsh Se"er
P!lrl Cocker SP!Inlei,SSOI
Burd.ette, Pt. Pleasant, 304·
675·6311 .

.

2020c__:.:M:::on:::e:Jyc:t:=o_,Lo:aa=n.:.·__ '•
FHA·VA-Convential Home •.
Loans, Columbus First
MOrtgage CO., A63 Second ·•
Ave., GallipoliS, Oh., 446·
.,
7172

;;::_=;:;:;:::;;:;:::;:;:;::::;=

Gold, silver, sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
(Urrency. Ed Bur_kett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport. '!92·
J.C76.

a.

$180. PER Week Pari Time
at ho·me-. Webster,
America's foremost due·
tlonary company needs
home workers to update
local mailing lists. All ""
ages,
experlefce un·
necessary. Call 1-716·1142·
6000. Ext. 6671.

New
. ~...._3 bdr. house with L.
garave and full basement
.KETA training program $45,000. Call446·0390.
now seeking eligible applicants to be trained In lhe av OWNER: 4 bdr., split·
following areas. L.lbrarv level, living room &amp; dining .; ;
Aides, Psychiatric aides. room combination, eat· in
Clerk typist, Dl.s trlct' ki.tchen, ·lg. family rm., 2
Assistant. To be eleglble 112 baths, located in Tara · -...
you must be unemploy~, Estates, Club house and
eConomically dls·advanta· pool prlvHeges, $75,000 ' •
Qed or under·employed. firm. Kyger Creek School
Take proof Of Income for District. Shown by appt.
put 6 months, date of last only call446-9..03.
.employment, birth cer·
tlflcate, address, number FOR SALE BY OWNER 3 ..
In family &amp; DO 214 to your bdr.
home located at 123 ...
Employment Security of· Garfield
Ave . 2 acres runs
flee tor certification to the from S.R 7 to Ohio River.
OTP Program. Equal Op- Full . basement, finished · -,
portunity Employeer.
rec. room, 2 fireplaces, 2 .
112 baths, In grouhd con·
1••2_~S,_II,.,u,e"'tl"'on"-s'-W!!"a,.n,ttcl,__ crete pool, all new carpet,
new paint Inside and out.
Someone to care for me In Will consider your home or
rnv home. 992-2686.
mobile · home in trade.
Owner will consider flnan ·
Elim Resthome. Cai"e tor cing at 10% APR after
hafdlcapped, aged; or bed reasonable down payment, ,
patient. Terllporary or if interested call 446-1.546 .
llmlled care. Or continuous for an appointment.
home with us. Equipped for
wheel chair. 742·2266.
· House for rent o? sale on
land contract or' rent wllh
Nur54t5 ald . Day time. Ex· option to buy. HCJme in 1· ,
:
perienced. Good referen· Eureka on State Rt. 7 on
Rl•erfronl. Call 388-8711 or ·
ces. Call742·2288.

German

· Shepherd &amp; Doberman.
Female 2 months old. Call

~OODSELECI~~-REMNANTS '
au~M·ow'&amp; ·save
PerYard
·
25 .
ca'i'pet ln. stock to pick from:·
Regular backed, cerpet lnstelled free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Rtlll·
nants $2.50 ·up. Grau carpet $4.99 ~Green and Brown. .
'·
· ·. • Drive A UHie..;.. Save ALGJ
:· ·•

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

GET VALUABLE training
as • young buSiness person
Old Rt. 1&gt;43 off Rt, 7 bYP!ISS. and earn gOOd money plus
some great gifts as e Sen·
Point supply, follow signs .
... t/nel route carrier. Phone
us right away and g;e-t on
Yard Sale. Wed .. Oct. 7. 1D- the eligibilitY list at 992· .
5. Drapes, bedspread, 2156 or 992·2157.
dishes, children's a. adults
winter coats, sweaters,
misc . Items. ~ Main St., c - wanted. Apply In per·
son Crows Steakhouse.
Racine. Carroll Teaford's.
Gareue Sole. Oct. H. Open

.9·5. South of Jack's Club on

ANY. PERSON .who has
anything to giVe away and BEDS·IRON, BRASS, old
does not oflef or a"empt to
gold, sliver
offer ony othar thing tor , furniture,
dollars, wOOd ll;e bOxes,
sale may place en odIn this stone
Iars, antiques, etc.,
column. There will be no Complete
households.
charge to the advertiser.
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt, 4,
Pomeroy,Oh. Or~·7760.
While a. ~lack, calico kll·
tons. Caii24S-5Ut.
CH 1P WOOO. Poles max.
ctlameter 14" on largest
6 Slmease kittens to give end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
away to gOOd home. Call slab. SI0.50 per . ton.
·388-8420.
Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock Springs Rd.,
give away to a GOOd Pomeroy, "2·m9.

"'~ ·:.:Y.:;d·~.:::~~~~~::·:-:Yd::':.
~
1&gt;iowSlJ'· yd111•
·l....~~;.:Mt::_"
~==

a1-H1 ,...tmprovemtnll
IJ-PIUialkfttl Heatint

Fe~rniture

,,

.

LAND CONTRACT Approx. 5 acres with a
12x70 mobile hom&amp; with
an addition built on,
small. Pond, redwood
rorch, central air and
many more extras. Ask·
ing $26,900.

II

of

Lubricants for the
farms &amp; inctUstry ,
PH. 992·3460
11 long distance, call col-

Racine Voluntary Fire
Dept. sponaors a sho1gun
and rifle match every
Soturdey nlghtet6:30 p.m .
S1ertlng Oct, 10. II will be
ot their building In
Basham. Factory choke 12
gouge shotgun end open
slght22 rifles only.

Dl's Crall Supply, Spring
Valley Plezo .. Just west of
Holzer Hospital. counted
cross sllch, .· DMC floss
NEW LISTING~ Close AIDA cloth In all i:olors,
to stores and Middleport
call tor tree lessons. 61.4Park. This-two bedrOom · 446·213-C
home wou·td make a
QOOd rental. fin: home,
clean furoace · saves
or just right for retired A
money.
your furnace
· persons. Neat interior cleaned.Have
Coll675·2158.
and on a 100'x111' lot.
117,000.
.
THERE will be no hunting
NEW LISTING - A or trespassing on Ap·
palochlen Power Co111panv
12x60 mobile home with
properly ediocent to Rt. 33
an 8x12 expando and all
North of New Haven, WV.
und~.rpinning . , Home
This area, known as Sleepy·
has 2·3 bedrooms, huge
Hollow, Is for Phillip Sporn
living room, equipped
kitche.n, window air Plant employees only.
VIolators
will be
cond., 2 porches and
pr~cuted.
Qther extras. $9,000.

land, ldecll for vegetable

For a II .o f your wirIng needs.

SERVICES ·

Special thanks go to Bob Jeffers
Escavatlni for digging the pill for
the eonkrt and to Torn liamm for let-

'

SERVICE

SI-Frulh&amp; Vetelollles

Rates end O"'er 1nformation

I

9·2l :tfc

S6-Peh for Sole

s•-FurS•ttorTr•••

D-F1r1111o tor S•lt

Ph. 949·2160 or 992·6125

SS - 8Ui1dlrti hppliu

1t--Wonr.ct To Oo

tor,•••

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio

Supreme,

NEW LISTING ·- 1974
home and approx. :zv, acres. Two
bedrooms, garage and
porid. Southern district.
$11,000.
n;'IObile

hot water heat, nice
carpeting, dishwasher,
disposal and 3 bedrooms
in Middleport. .
·
REALLY LII(E NEWLarge famlly .room with
woodbUrning fireplace
on a level lot In the coun·
try. Kttchen has range
and refrigerator. 2 full
baths, 3 bedrooms, lots
of closets in this r~tnch
home. Obi. garage.
TRUCK Lo!-ND - 3
· acres of level fertile

992-6259

Heating

NEW LISTING- Hun·
ting acreage or rustle
homesite. Appro~ . ' 13
acres, gas, electric at
site. Southern district.

large hobby or" shop,
garden, full basement,

35 Yn. Experience

TOM HOSKINS

Sl--'.t.ntiqUII
S4-Misc. MerctHindtse

16-ltodto; TV,
&amp; Cl Repelr

:12-Mabi.. H..,..

• Remodeling

n-ee. TV, R•ttio E.,tpment

57-MustcAttnsfrumut

•REAL ESTATE .

In the contest, four 48 inch pits
were dug in different blC&amp;tfQIIS
within walking distance. Site and
11011 are examined by C!lllteltants to
detennlne lllope, eroalon and needed
conservation pnctlces for each pit.

And Home Mail)tenance
e Roofing on111 types
e2Q Yrs. experience

14--luliftntTrolnlnl
U-IChOoll ln1truction

11-Hotnll tor Sill

4.' ----''----

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
• Free estimates

St-HgUIIhold Gooct1

1·---~~

OPEN

Used Color TV Sets for
Sale.
NEW PHONE NO.

check

Racine Gun Club Dues Ire
due. S25. Must be pold
belore1·1-12.

REGISTERm NURSES

49-ForLeiU

·eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

:n-&amp;utllttn
QHGrtunlty
22-MoMytoLHn .
U-PNienlcanal
s...vlct•

1. )For Renl

Future Reference

47-Wontecl to Rent
~t--Equ1pm1nt for Rent

eMERCHANDISE

eFINANCIAL

NOW

7-3,tfc

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

19

,_Wint.d 16 luy

( ),Announcement

.

Keep This Ad tar

4t-$poce for Rent

'

TV SERVICE

Let

LISTING

Garage/apartment with
stove and refrigerator,
bath, natural gas fur·
nace and double garage.
Near school and stores.
Only S11,soo to se"le
estate.
NICE &amp; LARGE - 'QI
heat budget · $88.00.
Large front and back
porches .. 3 car garage

HARRISON

1- Model479 Hay Bind

1

•U-Purnlsltld Room 1

..,.

John 0Mr,

New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
·
FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
. USED EQUIPMENT
l .....,No. 8600 Diesel Ford
Troctar w/Cab ' ... .,

16

J-Happy.t.ds

,,_, ....,,

Phone

1

for Rent
44- Apertmnn for REnt

12-SI,Atton Wlrtlfll

B. SR.
216 E ..Second Street

H 6i 4 )·992-3325

U.S. Rt. 50 East

Guysville. Ohio·

10

1-AM'tOU•celritnts
.-GIWIWIY

..........., 5111
&amp; AIKIIon

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
992-7656

M .F.

41 -Hovt.Sior Rent
42-Moblte Homes

&amp;-Loll nd Found
7-Y.rciSOII

'\,

mo.

No ~untlng or trespe1$1ng
on the following properties,
R.H. Boalrlg~t. Gary Dill,
and Jr. Hunt, Keith
Ridenour and John . GinIller. Chester Township.

General

?"
.

p.

SALES&amp;SERVICE

eRt;NTALS

•-cord of Tt•onks

Real Estate

kitchens and ap·
pliances, custom
bathrooms, remOdeling,
lumbi.n, electric,
h~ating .
·
c;u~tom

BOGGS

1

1-IR MlmOrl.lm

Yle.

Responsible mother will do.
babySinlng In tho Hen· .
derson area. 675-53%4.

se,ooo.

NEW

PHONE 992-2156

ti-HetpWont.cl

Friduy _

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION·

· 9 2 1 rno .

. DAYS

16

eANNOUNCEMENTS

Ph. 367-1560

L n k c in. Racine.

10

1

TV service ca111. Call '!92·
2034. Also used color TV for

'

New Homes - extensive rem!ldeling.
•Electrical work
• Roofing work
14 Years
·Experience
· Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
10·2·1 mo. ·

Cheshire, Oh.

Lo cat ed at ' Maplewood

•

'7 '9

grace ·our dayS and
our peflls, Whtrtvet'
...,_ ....,, go.

OONSTRUCIION .·

Water line Hook·ups
SeptiC Tanks
county Certified
· Roush Line

Ph •.949-22~5

WANT .AD INFORMATION

GIT
AMIIIIOI

Hit-

4 p. m . fo Hp.m .
All Da y s·aturday

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX.

program.

eTrailer

ches • Metnl Fabrica.-

.O r Write Daily Sentioel Classified Dept.
111Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Eastern respectively.
The Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District s[IO!I8ored the contest as part of lbeir educaUonal

~ r e el

1-Model '275 Diesel

'4 '?

UP lU
35
IIOIIDS

'• ·

First, SCS District Conservativnists
and Reid Young, SCS Technician.
They were assisted by Everette
Holcomb, Aaron Sayre and Danny
Dewhurst from Meiga, .Southern and

BARNETrS
WELD•Aluminum
SHOP

Authori:~el;l

3-. _.,....._ __

tbiC•blafaml.
,,Tbe contetttwu Judged

Dump Truck

5·2Hfc

Executrix of the estate of

I

:-:-----:===-='=---- ·

I:.::I_____::W:.::I,:;nltcl=.:.:to'-'D"'O'---- :
Brick and Block laying, •
fireplaces. oil . work
gueranlted. Caii37N123.

ROUSH .

SERVICE

Ph. 992·7201-.

Ed9ar Van lnwagen,
deceased, late of ·Lincoln
Conserv"ncy District. The Heights, Pomeroy, OhiO ~
right is reserved to reject 45769.
any and all bids.
l;'idders required to Qive
Robert E. Buck
Probate Judge/
a .9~ an~ approved. b·ond
Clerk
with ample security con·
ditioned the tarrying out of 19) 21.28 110) 5. 3tc
the contract, and to give a
o®d and approVed proof of
coverage of Workmen's
Public Notice
compensation.
Bids will be .opened at the.
ORDINANCE
office of the Leading Creek
NO. 1113·81
Conser''vancv District at An Ordinance
to Increase
above address on Noon,
2:00 on the 6th day of Oc-· Appropriation in the HUD
Fund.
Iober, 1981.
LEADING CREEK
Sec. L That additional
CONSERVANCY funds of $712,000 be ap·
DISTRICT propriated in the HUD
Fund for 1981. '
19) 21, 28 110) 5, 3tc
SEC. II. That this or·
dinance is declared to be an ,·
Public Notice
emergency in that 1981 ap·
NOTICEOF .
.proprl.ations in the ."HU 0
PUBLIC SALE
fund are inadequate and
Notice Is hereby gl•en funds
are available .•-·
lhot on OCTOBER 15, 1981
Sec. Ill. This Ordinance
at 10 ANJ a public sale will
be held at tile offices of The shall take eff·e ct and be In
Central Trust Co., NA of force from and after SepMiddleport, Ohio to sell for tember 14, 1981 ,
cuh the following
FJassed the 14th day · of
coUateraltowlt:
.
1 1976 Ford F 350 1 ton September 1981
truck
Ser.
No. Attest:
F37MUA52372
The Central Trust Co., Jon Buck
NA Mlddlepqrt, Ohio reser· Clerk
ves the right to bid at this
M. L: Kel ly
sale.
President
Qf touncil
(10} 5, 6, 1, 3tc
191 28. 1101 5, 2tc

-

9·20·1 mo.

Water·Sewer·Eiectric
Gas Line· Ditches

. 1 Trencher"
· License.q 8r Bonded

OHio 45769, was appointed

!lORDS

RIVerside Gun $hop St. Rl.
That wt carry In our 7 Athelia, Oh. Gun rajoalr
hearts~
and hot tonk reblulng. Coli
Nor
"""
dim
the
shining
614-116·5194.
llloughiS,
.

Still cast lhtlr gentle

Middlpport, OhiO .

9- ~ · 11'10 .

REESE
TRENCHING

• E&gt;c , _
avatlng
• Septic Systems
1 Water, Sewer &amp;
Gas Liri'es .

Couro, Case No. 23534,
Phyllis L. . Van I nwagen,
Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy.

c"ouncil

191 28, 1101 s. 2tc
PubliC' Notice
ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
8 ids wi II be received at
the office of th~ Leading
Creek Conservancy
District. S. R. 124, Rutland,
Ohio, unti 1 12 :_-oo Noon on
Ihe 61h day of October,
1981, for the following:
Painting the following

.

cannot stool tile

ones we've loved,

169 N. %ncl

.

• Backhoe .

On September 11, 1981, in .
the ~eigs County Probate

M. L. Kelly
President ol

Write your own ed and order by mall with thiS
coupon. Cancel your ad by PhOne when you get
results. Monev not refundable.

The Meigs Future Fanners of
America (FF M were team winners
with Southern placing second and
Eastern placing third.

•

No oWcMn1R'Iel'lt•' net.;IOr'(. ~
rnerly l&lt;u1 ·n ·l(url a.Guty ~hop .

J&amp;f
.CONTRACTING

Court "

PRO BAT!' COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF EDGAR VAN
INWAGEN, DECEASED
Case No. 23534
·
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Announce contest winners.
POMEROY- The Meigs County's
FFA Land Judging Contest was held
last week on tiJe Tom Hamm fann in
SuttonTwp.

W-!·6215oi 992 - 731~

I

day of.

Pomfiroy, Oh,io.

Tl~

treasutft,

y

Public Notice

.Meigs County agent's corner

urs

BEAUTY
SALON
PH.992·2125

PHONE '!92·3021

October 5, 1919.

Our cherished pest lm·
l)!lrts,
And memories of the

Lan..r"air

Uniq_n Ave.

.

I

ClG) 4, 5,6, 7,

'

WIIVI Lenttlt flor

V. C. YOUNG Ill
Pom·eroy . Oh io

10. Fvr further in·
~!j~~;~~ ca II "2-2720 . or

church, lmowli aalbe "Hardly Able CoaalrucUOII C~." .
The cbu,rcb 18 expecled lo be completely finllhell by
December. Laod for l!te building wu dciaaled ·by Mr.
aud Mrs. E. A. WiD«elt, Racine.

Tues. II :00-5:00
Thurs. 11 :·8:00
Fri. 10:00-5:00

Weds. 10:00-8:00

(Free Estimate~,} .

Street, PDm~roy, Ohio at
a.m .• Saturday, Oc·

LANDSCAPED- A considerable 8100UDI of IJwd.
scapiDI luis been completed al lhe new Racine
Wesleyan Unlled Melhodlsl Cburb. T)te new structure
bas been primarily buill by volnnleer bt.!&gt;Or from lbe

' SEPT. 21 tftru OCT. 24
·520.00 • Now S17.50
525.00 , Now 522.50
$30.00 • Now S27.50
535.00 • Now 12;.50

Cindy Culh·

N.wHoura:
Mon. 11:007:00

_ Pivmbiag and
electriol work

$25 000.00. The real estate
be offered for Hie IIi Its
Water stor,oe will
entirely and also by parcel,
the highest price ob·
talnoble provided II Is fJOI
less than thP. appraised
value, will be acci!P~ ,
Said sale will be at tlie of·
flee of O'Brien a. 0'8rleno

~:

bOrtson.

work
·
_ Conc ret work

consisting of IOi acres, n
five parCels, with house
and barn, for not less than
the ·appraised value · of

Wilkesville

C~thbertson ,

--Addons o~d
:
remode ling
.-:Rpofing ani;j guHer

FOR SALE
The James H. Lawrence
real estate lri Lebanon ·
Township, Meigs County,,

water stoiaoe tanks:
Item 1: water storagt!

Stylist: Mark Mora, Dew•

·The Dally Sentlnet-Page-7

PER allll -Inti
rtl)ll!r, parts, llld
PICk up lnd
DIIYII VtcUUm
one llelf milt up
Crwk Rd. Call

Jn-wtam

In l~lng ~mMY ~ our
falhtr, David Alexander
· Smllll, who Pllltcl away

HAIR REMEDIES

CARPENTER
SERVICE" .

Pulillc Notlco

Public Notfct

Pomeroy......,lddleport, Ohio

_..,.____..;.~..,.---------.,.._....__;,:,.,:__-lz

"YOUNG'S

.

.

Monda y, October 5, 19111

velue,S-45,250.00. · Life

estate value $8,101.58. Call • ·(

·

992·6747 evenings

: - - - -- -- ··

3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2 . , .

baths, family room. Full ..
basement, garage. 949· r ,
~ ...

2079.

I

'•

FOr sale or. 'trade, hou"' •
and business building on ~ : ...
two lots. also 2 vacant lots --.·-~
with well and septic. Phone ·. •
614·378-6339,
.
, '" ~

,j

Need more room-? But ""''
afr'aid you· cannot afford . , ,,
-the- Inter-est. "This brand .t
!lew bi'ick and Wood .C
bedroom; 2 baftl, bl;level..
home can bt yours at only a
pet. intElrest with no money .., ,.,
down If you have enough •' ::&lt;
equity lfl your" e&gt;clsting .• ...
home, have· s or· more • _. ~
family members and earn
from 124,500 to 127,500. For • ·•
further Information call
614·593·5511 or614·,2·6312. ..
-------"'"--"'""~~- . '·
HDUSE·Meadowbrook Ad· ..
dltlon. 3 bedroom, family .• ..
room with . flreplac!, c:en- · ··
frat olr, basement. 304-675· •.
1542.

,,

�,,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Dally Sentinel
31

Houses for Rllftt44
Aportonemt
for Rlllll
6 .Room House, 1200 un·
furnished except r•nge and Furnished opts. 2 &amp;dr.,
relrlg. Neighborhood 1230., utilities pold, I)Hr
Road. 4o46-.U16 after 7 p.m.
HMC, adults. Call ,j,j6-ol416
affer7PM.
2 BR house, Stole Rl. 7.
6520, .u6·4292.

PI

Pleasant, 3 bedrooms, l'h
baths,

do~ble

garage

Oviner will finance. I m
mediate occupancy. 304
675·5811.

MII!OII Road, Camp COIIJey
House
mile below
2 vear old, 3 bedroom
Eureka, 2 bdr., bath.
house, fully carpeted. wltn
1 full and two and 1 ha If garage, yard, $150 per mo.
baths, yard landscaped •S100 dep. and rf!f. Call 614613·2916 ..
with large utility building
Assume 8 'h percent t·oan
Belutlful water front
675·6275.
home, dishwasher~ carport, sun deck, shelter
house, adults Qnly, S:Z25.
32 ··
Mobile Homes ·
Deposit req, 256·6472.

tor Sale

TRI -STATE MOBIL E
HOMES. Gallipolis. Yea r
end sale. price reduced •
used mObile hOmes. CAL L
4-46· 7572.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL' s
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 M I.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS; RT
35. PHONE 4-46·3868 or 4461274.

14x70 mobile home fur .

nlshed, 3 bdr., 2 bath, sklr.
ilng included, $9,500. Ca II
614·882·8205.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

· _vu:,;..
· -"'-r----..;by:..l.any_.:,_W_rt..:WJ:..,t
1 rKIT_'_N_'CARL_.;.

Sofa, chair, rocker, ot· 11

taman, 3 tables. S500. Sola,
chair and loveMal,' S215.
Sofas and chain prlcad
from 1285. to 1195. Tables,
S3l and up to $109. Hide-a·
bld$,$340., queen alze, 1310.
Recliners. 1175. to 11295.,
~amps from 111. to
5
pc. dlfettes from s7'1.. to
$315. 7 pc., 1119. and up.
Wood table with .4 chain,
$219 up to $-495. Dnk SilO.
Hutches. $300. and 1375.,
mal)le or pine finish .
Bedroom suites · Banell
Oak. $675., Bossett Cherry,
$795. Bunk bed cQmplele
with mattresses, · S250. and
up to $350. Captain's beds,
·$275. complete. Baby beds,
$99. Mattresses or bOX
springs, full or twin, $58.,
llrm, $68. and S71. Queen
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests.
4 dr. chests, 142. Bed
frames, S20.ond S25 .• 10 gun
- Gun cabinets, $350., dlnet·
te chairs 120. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·
thopedlc super firm, S95,
baby matresses, S25 &amp; $35,

1971 Cemero. GOOd running
conct., good bOdY. 992·6309.

-.s.

3 rm. opt, utilities paid.
Coll675-5104 or 675-5316. •
Unfllm. 4 rm. apartment,
S250 mo., $100 dep., utilities
Pd., no children, no pets.
Call4o46-:J.437.

Deluxe furnished apart·
·ment -central air and heat,
Small 3 bdr. house located excellent location, adults
In Gallipolis. Oep. &amp; ref. only, tease, dep., upper
.•eq. Coll4o46-0254 after 5.
bracket, reference. .u6' 1. \
0338.
2 · bedroom unfurnished
Sl90. 1 bedroom furnished MObile home In city control
apartemnt. 1125. Naylors air an&lt;t heat. adults only,
Run. Seourlty deposit. Call dep. 4-46·0338.
614·992·2218.
2 BEDROOM apartment,
2 bedroom house In HUD accepted. 675·511).4.
Pomeroy ~with new kitchen
Used,
Ranges,
bedtramesS20.
$25,
&amp; $30.
&amp; bath. Fully carpeted.
APARTMENTS
One refrigerators, and TV's,
Close in. 992.:2918.
3
miles
out
Bulovllle
Rd.
bedroom starts at $152.00
per month. Two bedroom. Open 9am . to 7pm, Mon.
5 room house near Dan- starts at $1 aa..oo per month.
thru Fri., 9om to5pm. Sal.
4-46·0322
·
ville: 1350 per month. 614· Oeposll$200. Ca1.14o46·2745.
742·3143.
Upstairs deplux 2bdr., dep .
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, tully &amp; ref. req. For 1 or 2 SERTA box springs &amp; mot·
carpeted, 1 year'- lease, people. Call 446·3949 or 446- tress sso. 304-675·4014.
deposit sames as first mon- 2419.
ths rent, married working
ca. ~v. Radio
couple, others need not ap- 2 bdr. apt., unfurnlshe.d, ex- sz
Equipment
ply, natural gas heat, cept range &amp; refrlg ,
Meigs
Local School Deposit requl red. Call 446· 19" RCA block &amp; While TV,
District. 614-593-3507, 614·
excellent condition, $75.
4303.
698·4040.
Call otter 4:00, .304·675·5434.

w.

by owner. Call 388·9949.

For sale on land contract o r
· rent with option to bUV . 2
mobile homes on separate
lots at Tycoon Lake. 1 with
large family room, with
fireplace . Call 388·8711 or

388-9692.
Kirkwood 2 bedroom
Rutland . Furnished, al r'
conditioned, large porch
underpinnin.o. Very good
cond. Phone 992-2490.

4 bedroom house on Jef·
ferson Avenue. $350 month.
675-3177.

1 duplex 74 Court St. In·
eludes range &amp; refrlg.
Fully carpeted off street
parking. Can be shown
anytime by calling 4-46·4428
or 4-46·2605.

r

C•n•JCA.~

~~~~~~~~~~r;=:=;:;=:;~~
h nell

sc~_.....!CM~I~sc,.-"M"'e"r_,c!!ho,n,d,lc,e,_

54 Misc. Marc a
co
Ratliff Pools &amp; 5ervlce.
complete sales, service.
pool covers, and win·
terlzatlon kits. Call ~- 1324

Restaur.ant equipment
reconditioned by RAOCO.
Call 304·523·1378. Hgtn ..
WVA.
Squires Bingham 22· L.R.
ammo $1.19 per box. Eclipse 12 gage game loades, 6
shot, 20 shells per box 13.95.
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley Plaza, 446·

S4

Pets for Sole

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judv Taylor at 367·
7220.
ORAGONWYND
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
black ChOW puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Slameoe kittens. Call 446·
31.« after 4 p.m.
HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding all breeds, clean
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg. Dober·
mans. Call4o46·7795.

8025.
Trailer awning, t2x5, $75. Firewood-spill, delivered
Call a tier 3: 30 PM. 44o· and
3 ROOM house for rent, fur·
stacked. Mixed wOod .-;
1658 . .
57;----:::==---'
MUSICII
nlshed, In the heart of
$65 per cor d or $35 per h a If
Instruments
Mason. $150'. per month.
cord.
Hardwood
$75
per
1 bedroom apts. available
New air conditioner, 2 cord or $40 per half CIM'd. SPINET
· 1980 doublewide 24X52. 4 614·992·7352.
CONSOLE
at Riverside Apts. Equal frtt!'Zers
with food, -2 Call for quotes on Iorge PIANO FOR SALE Wan·
year warranty, A-1 cond
Opportunltv Housing. Call
sweepers new, 'dryer, an· quanllles. Phone 24.5-5471.
992·31).41 , $19,500.
House for rent l.S min. from 992·7721.
ted: Responsible party to
tique dining room suite, an·
Gallipolis on Rt. 7. Call256·
take over plano. can be
tlque plano, &amp; cornish
1971 Darian 12 x 65. 3 1198.
For sale House coal pickup seen locally. Write Mr.
2 bedroom apartmenLDn.. chickens. Phone "-'6·.46.56.
Powers, Box 327. Carlyle,
bedrooms. 1972 Crown
or delivered. Call256·6816.
spring Ave, Pomeroy. Par·
111. 6ml.
Haven, 1~ x 6S with 8 x 10 42
Mobile Homes
!lolly furnished. $170 you
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
for Rent
pay uti lilies. Call 992·2288 Spill hickory firewOOd, So40 1979 Chevv'camaro. 212x60
a load. Coll245·9443.
Utopia 12 x 65. 2 bedrooms
Fruit
after6p. m.
used mobile homes. Call 5I
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3 2 bdr ., 3 bdr ., mobile
&amp; Vegetables
4-46·1552
otter
5.
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14 homes. Call446·0175.
Available. 1 bedroom apt. Portable sewing machine,
Apples, Honey and sweet
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B ~~~ S
for
rent, contact Village like new. Call379·2728.
New 1981 model sewing elder. Grimes Golden
Sales, Inc. 2nd and VIand 70X14 new mobile home. 3
machines. · Zig
Zags, Delicious and Red
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, WV
bdr .• partly furnished, ·8 Manor Apts.. Middleport. For sale
Kenmore monograms, sews on but· Delicious. Fll'!palrlck . Or·
Phone 675·4424.
mi. from Holzef Hasp. ·on . 992·7717.
automatic washer, like tons, makes button holes. chard, S.R. 689. 614·669·
north 160. Call 388-8711 or
new, guaranteed, $110. -"6· darns, mends. fancy stitch. 378~,
2 bedroom furnished ~pt. 8181
1974 12 x 60, in Camp 388·9692.
or 388·9794.
regular 5249.95. Now $99.50.
992·5434, 992·5914 or 304·882·
Conley, air conditioning
Free phone call. Call John Cleek, Portland, 843·
2566.
'
•
Carpet, stove, gOOd shape
2 bdr. mobile home deposit
colleci1·30H36·'1241.
For
sale
beige
sofa,
exc.
2285. Turnips 13.00 bushel.
675·2560.
&amp; reference. Clill256·1922.
condition. Call 446·4303 .
Brlnil'contalner. You pull .
1 bedroom furnished apart·
Wood for · sale. Call J.J.
In
Middleport.
14 x 70 mobile home, un· 2 \ldr. trailer in vincinlty of ment
FirewOOd. 130 load. Call Justice 388·8246.
Centennial Sweetpotatoes
derpinned. 675·4064.
Evergreen, 1150. a month Utilities Included. $115 per- 992·5126
or 992·3941.
month,
plus
deposit,
no
.25, Pontiac Potatoes .15,
pius dep. all electric. Call
pels. Call 614·992·7177 after
Firewood Oak, Hickory small potatoes .07, Cecil
245·197().
6p.m.
New electric dryef, $165. mixed, delivered . Call Toben. '1'12·5045afler6p.m.
1966 New Moon 12 x 52, fur .
Jamie at 245·'1264.
614-667·3566.
nished, vinyl underpinning • 14x70 Winsor modern.
must be moved. USOO. 685- clean. 1 112 bath, 2 bdr .. Apartments. 675·5548.
..,_ ,
''"
,,, ..
6036 or 675-1843.
Blonde Duncan Phyfe Used furniture;2 pc. Living
convenient location, sec.
..
--.
,
dep. and ref., no pets. Call APARTMENTS, mobile dlnlfg table with matching room suites, electric ranoe
homes,
houses,
Pt. chairs &amp; buffet. May be top, card tables, 9X12 rug.
Two·-repossessed mobile 245·5818.
Pleasant and Gallipolis. seen at 121 7th Ave., Mid- Call 446·.11 71. ~
hOmes, brand· new 1· Btl
61
Farm Equipment
614·-8221
or 614·245-9484. dleport, Ohio.
models, (previous dealerj l l4x.70 3 bdr. total electric
lost floorplan money). Save trailer 10 minutes fro m
New WOOdburnlng
John Deer• 3300 combine.
big SSSSS. Must sell quicklY
3 room furnished cottage, 26' TROUTWOOD travel furnance, still In ••&lt;·i&lt;&gt;f'v Massie Ferguson 300 com·
rown on private lot. S200
month plus deposit &amp; utilities furnished, adults. trailer and camp site on carton, heats Iaroe no1me .• 1 blne. New ldea·2 row
K &amp; K MObile Homes
picker, Oliver 2 row picker.
Raccon Creek. Close to $450. Call256· 1216.
_ulllllles. Ref. required. Cal I 675-2812 or 675·1580..
Pt. Pleasant, WV
Ohio River. S500 down.
New Idea 1 row picker.
256·1393.
675·3000
O~wllt finance. 614-256·
Super
M Farmall and 2 row
t.arge 3 bedroom epar:t·
Control hunger and ldse mounted
picker : Russ
12x60 mobile home 3 mile s ment, furnished, In Pt. 1216.
weight with New Shape Brothers
Farm Machinery.
MOBILE home located in south of Gallipolis. Adults
Pleasant. 675·6020.
Diet Plan and .Hydrex st. Rt. 139,
6 miles South bf
Camp Conley, extra nice ref. and dep. required
Firewood-Delivered
Wahlr Pills. For Weight
and clean, phone 304·895
Call and .place your order control spirulina now Jackson. Call216·2731.
Phone 446· 7326.
3967.
now. 304-675·6662.
available at Fruth Phar·
Maney Ferguson M·.SO
macy.
Furnished Rooms
For rent nice furnished 2 45
tractor, pDW"er steering,
Firewood
at
..
yard
or
34
Business Buildings
bdr. frailer. Private lot
SLEEPING ROOMS and dellver~d.
disk, bush hog, plows,
675 · 1932
Bob McCormick Rd. S195.
Building If Syracuse, can
harrow boom, must sell
month plus utilities. Wate r light housekeeping apt.,
be used as church, storage,
Park
Central
Hotel.
due
to heath. For cash only
paid. Call 4-46·4491 afte r
Building Supplies
Hoover portaQie washer. 55
store, etc. Custer Manning
price 14,500. Coll245-9105.
5PM.
675·6504.
992·5249.
Building materla1s. block,
46
Space for Rent
brick, sewer pip&amp;~, win·
12x60 2 bedroom propan e COUNTRY MOBILE Home Alto $aXaphone . .$150. Hon· dows, lintels, etc. Clauctt For sale Oliver 88 rr&gt;w crop
35
Lots &amp; 'Acruge
gas heat, S m!les from elf y Park, Route 33, North of d.a mini-trail $300, Phone Winters, Rio Grande,· 0 : tractor Independent Live
PTO. Call 388·9684 after
on
R.accoon Creek Rd. N0 Pomeroy. Large lots. Call 675·41134.
LOTS · Real nice campsite
Call245·5121.
6PM.
pets,
reference
required
on Raccoon Creek, all
992·7479.
utilities available, $300. , $165. per month plu
Two 10 ln. H·beams, 31 fl. Twenv gauge mild steel Transport discs, 3 bottom
deposit. No utilities paid
down, owner will fl nance,
Now aallable for rent. In- long, Hy-Dynamlc Dyna· sheeting.
Enamel, plows, cultivators, J.D.
4-46·0822.
May
rent
with
·op
call alter 3 p.m .. 256·6·113.
door flea market · spaces. Hoe, lliO Series B. Phone procelaln coaled. Many corn
planter, wagon, hay
tion to buy.
Marlin General Store, Mid· 675·3762 or 4-46·8247.
building uses. Will not rust. rake, M.F. No. 9 baler; 5'
dleport. Phone 992·6370.AII
2 lots In Ohio Valley
Sizes 4 fl. by 8 fl.. $5.60. 4 fl. brush hog, N.H. 7' mowing
For sale or rent 1979 Ux70 · tree gas. water and elec·
Memory Gardens, $600. Ph.
by 101!., $7.00. HI. by 1211.. machine, 3 pt. hitch. post
68
CAMARO.
engine.
fuel
3bdr., located In Mid
triC, piUs advertisement.
4-46· 1628.
SI.OO. Tuppers Plains. hole digger, 3 pt. hitch
heater. 304·675-5125.
dleport on large lot, AC •
Ohio. 614·667·3085 or 614· blade, New Idee No. 9 corn
range, refrigerator, $250
plcker,1974 166 M.F. dleoel
3 flat, 5 acre lots. 15,000 &amp; per mo. plus utilities, $250 1 FULL size lot for frailer, GAS healing stove, 55,000 667·3074.
tractor. Coll742·2965.
18.000. City schbols. Call dep. req. or owner will hel p In Henderson, WV. ~II BTU, propane. $75. Robyn
379·2196 after 4:30.
finance wlftl suitable dow n hool&lt;ups. 304-675·3216.
CB radio $25.00, phone 304·
Pets tor Sole
payment. &lt;;:all 992·6173 o r
458·1042.
.
2 block sawmill, o48 Inch
Would you like to own a 4-46·0963.
:.:.~~-:.~.:.: ::..~
BRIARPATCH KEN.NELS saw blade. $900. firm. 992·
home of your own. we
16'Xl6' wool rug, :KM-675· Boarding and grooming. 6035.
didn't hove $10,000 for a 2 bedroom trailer. adul Is
1198.
AKC Gordon setters, -;:==:;;;~~~=
down payment nor S5,00 only. Browns Trailer cour
I
51
Household
Goods
.
English Cocker Spaniels. 63
Livestock •
nor even$1,000. Do what we 992·3324.
'
Call446·4191..
did call513·592·9175.
GOOD
USED
AP· Professional meat. slicer,
Horse for aale. Call256·6505
PLIANCES · washers, fancy show cases with Jeanie's Pet Shop Ney; after 7PM.
Partially furnisheq, trailer
BY owner, 3 apartment $150. a month, deposit $100
dryers,
refrigerators, light, I yr. old Na!l011al
hOuse on approx. 1 ·acre
11·5, closed Wad. •
-;;;;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;~;;::;;;;;;:
ranges.
Skaggs Ap · Cash Register can be hours
You pay utilities. Mid
sun. Call 446·7'120.
:
Live in one, rent others to dleport, 992-27/2.
'
. , . , ...
count~
pllances, 1918 Eastern programmed,
,.,_
make your payment. Can
change &amp;'numbers light up,
Ave., 4-46·7398.
be converted single home
model 97 Winchester CFA Registered Flame
City water, will consider 12x60 trailer with expand0
shotgun. 12 gage 32' barrel Point Himalayan kiHens.
USED FUR· full chol&lt;e. mOdel 700 27Q Coll304·523·7749.
71
Auto for Sole
land contract. 675-1883 9-5 living room. Located o n RAY'S
large corner lot in a nlc e NITURE WOOd &amp; coal cool&lt; delu~e Remington riffle.
p.m.
1971 Dodge omnl 4 dr., hot·
neighborhood In Mid
stove, electric heaters, fuel llHP Murry riding mower.
o oil heaters, coal heat.rs, Waterbury antique clock, AKC Oobermans, male cnback, automatic, power
dler.'rt.
Adults
only,
n
Jlh J •cres on river In Hen
pe s.
Available
lm
hOspital bed, electric oak cabinet, I reg. quarter proven, $200. Female 2 yrs. sllorlng, excellent • conct .
derson, 614-992-5264.
brad, 1300. Call4o46-1.!42.
Ph. 24.5-5617 after 5PM.
mediately. Call 992·2101 or dryer. Coll367·0637.
horN fillY 3 yrs. old brOke,
992·2319.
1 reg. Appalossa 3 yrs. old
36
RHI Estate
PORTABLE washer, $100. gelding broke ex. good sad· 1 walker coon Dog male, 3 1971 Buick Electra very
Wonted
yrs. old. Call614·388·9109.
low miles, full power fully
12X60 mobile home. · 2 304-675·5510.
die &amp; bridle. Call256-6413.
t&lt;JIIIped.
GOOd conct. Inside
Wanted to buv. rent, or ren I bedroom, bath and half
and out, S1,300:-cau- ;j46' With option to buy. 3 or 4 Approximately 5 mile s
4630•
.
Available
AdOption.
·
Small Benll for
type temele,
7·
bedroom
house
with from Pomeroy and Mid
dleport on Rl. 143. Coll614
basement In Pl. Pleasant
They'll Do ·It Every Time
month old female mixedbreed . gently.
Meigs FOR SALE: 1976 Chevrolet
992·5858.
675-7264.
Humane SOCiety 992·65q5. . . Malibu tlaulc Eatate
Wagon. PS, PB, crUIM COli·
Mobllt: Home, . small, ·
Fish Tonk oncl Pet Shop trol, air condltlotUng,
mile out Sandhill ROod
real
window
2413 Jock- Ave., Pl. radio,
Adults only. No pets. 675
3834• •
Pleaaant. 615-2063. New ~. complatev Nil·
hours-Man., Thurs., • Fri. proar • • rww cer, r,lus
41
Houses tor Rent
11-6. Tua., Wild •• Sat. 11· more extrn. Extra c eon
end In ltJICeltent conctlflon.
Small furnished hOuse In 44
4.
Apartmeml
sl.CIIIO. 65.000 miles: Call
the city, adults OIIIV. Cal I
for Rllftt
216-1016- 6PM.
4-46·0338.
AKC ,
Dachshund,
apartment
Porner•nl•n · en POOdl•
Efflency
79 Clltvetfe 26,000 mi. · 4
good
304-195-3951.
For Rent With Option To mature pe""" with
IPd., 4 dr., IIICC. CGI1d.,
references.
All
utllhe
I
Buvl ' bed., 2 112 baths, paid. .175 m011th. Han
$3MO.
71 Ford Mustang.
UKC Raglatertd American
llvlngroom, family room, 2
mi., 4 IPCf., exc.
derson.
wv.
615·2946.
w.b.. flreplacea, 2~ car
Pitt Bull - · Phone 773- cancl., 1:1,5'95. 73 POIItlac
IW/7.
garage, city ac:llooll. ~.
.
Vtntvr• $1,000 mi., auto
I Furnlahad
efflency apt
ctep. &amp; ref. C.lllL.W·.aG6.
trane, exc. conct., Sl.2"'·
Down Pt. Pleaaant.
Australl•n lllue Heeler &amp;urell Auto Soln c...,..
Rf. 5$1. 160. Hn.
1 fellNIIe, 3 months
4 bdr. 2 112 bath bl level ' All utilities ~d. dtp. req.
.
old. 615--.
'
with pool off Rl. :15. Call ' Call30ol-195Wiseman Real !!state
Available modem 1 bdr
Agencv. ,j,j6-J643,
Muateng. eutomeflc,
R-lf dOg&amp;. I! Imer Kapp
apt. COIIVtnlent to - n
mi.. IIICC. conct.,
llthlncl K..- P1rk.
HMC. Call,j,j6-2055,
best offer. Call .tSmall 4 rm. • ba!ll. fur·
612-7252.
IOcalad 735 rear 3rd
Ave., Gallipolis.
per 3 ROOM fumllhed apart·
mo.• N5 de!IOIII. Call 446- ment, also 1 farm house
ln. V-1,
JIJU or ,..._1S«&lt;.
. not furnloyad, 30.1-675-1302.

.

.

.

..........
- __
·-··. ..

.........

•

•

•

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

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

-

.

~========:J..:=======::..j

.

Cabinets,
WOOOSHOP
picnic
tables,
porch
swings, most wOOd prOduc·
Is. 101 Court St .. Gallipolis.
COII446·2572.

-y.

n1-.

•

suo

I
'

..,_of
•.

.

WEATHERALL CON '
CRETE · quality and ser·
vlcit, call675-15112.

GAPTAINEASY
DON'T WORRY. l.AM.,ERT.

Wlli'LL •• IMCK 1

French City Pointing
Residential, commercial,
Interior, exterior, paper
hanging. and texured
1979 FORO Zepher, gOOd ceilings. Ph. 367·7784 or 367·
conditiorl, n~;~ rust, ~ir, AM· 7160 . .
FM, R·DEF, new radial
tires, .U,OOO miles, $4,100. Call 446·2801 · for termite,
Call 31).4·675·1213 between roach, bird, rodent, spider,
8:00a.m. ·9:00a.m.
and fleas control. Free
estimat~s. Bill Thomas.
'
73
Vena • 4 W.D.
75 4-wheei drive, In· H &amp; M CLEANING SER ·
ternatlonal Scout, 11.500. VICE Steam &amp; or pressure
call256·1427.
wash trucks, trailers,
mobile homes, farm equip·
ment, etc. Phone 381-9376
72
Trucks for ble
or 446·3829.
72 Chevv pickup for sale
$800 or trade for small car.
Call after 4 PM 446·4730.
Wallpaper,
painting.
general carpenter work. AI
1974 Datsun pickup truck Tromm, 614-742· 2~21with topper. Call after 4:30.
992-5085. .
LOCKSMITH
Service.
Residential, automotive .
1976 Ford Courier pickup, 4 Emergency service. Cawl
cylinder, rebuilt motor.
882·W79.
675-6958.
RON'S Television Service.
1970 Chevy Blazer, 6 cyl, Specializing In Zenith and
52,000 miles, new clutch Motorola, Quazar, and
and front axle, 4 Inch 1111 house calls. Phone 576·2398
kit, 14·35 tires. Have $1300 or 4-46·2454 .
In II. $900. 675·4610 after 5
pm . .
F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675·1331.
. 1970 Chevy Blazer, 6 cyl,
52,000 miles, new clutch Dave's Appliance Repair.
and front axle, 4 Inch lift Washers, dryers, plumkit, 14·:15 tires. Hove $1300 bing, elecf~;"lc, general han·
In II. $900. 675·4610 after 5 dyman. Phone 304·576·2921
pm.
or 675o5689.

1969 Chevrolet V. ton
pickup truck, new tires,
good COIIdltlon. t82·2969 or
882·2953.
1974 Jeep CJ5, o1 wheel
drive, wide tires, runs
gOOd. $2,000. 992-707 4.

19n Ford van, cuStomized,
49,000 mites, excellent con·
dillon. 614-742·2.878.
74

Motorcycles

Kawasaki KOXo400. 325
miles, like new. 11,100. 992·
7191.
.
1972 Harley Davidson, 1200
super glide. $2000. 675-6823.
Bootsond
Motors for Sole

75

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

197919112 fl. Bala ski boat.
150 Mercury with stainless
s!HI prop, lrallir · and
ocessor .. payoff. Call 675·
7392 offer 5PM.
20 fl. pontoon cabin board,
trailer &amp; motor &amp; acr
cessorleo, Cheap. Call 367·

7533.
76

Auto Ports
• ACCOIIWIH

CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto ports, auto repair.
wrecker service, buv
automObiles, radiators and
batteries. 446-7717.
71

Complq
l!qulpmeot

1975 Chateau 21 fl. self·
c011111ned travel troller
with air anct awning. 1979
Ford super cab pickup,
22,000 miles, a.c., trailer
package. Both $9,5110.
May !Je - n allot 14 Royal
Oek Park or 992·3700.
Tlmbll'leke troller cam·
per, 14 ft. 5 1 - 4. Good
concti!IOII. S600. Call . 614·
667·6164.

PROQRAM
'
C!J REMEMBER WHEN: GO,
~ANNOUNCED

TEAM, GOI Americana have an
enduring lOY&amp; altair with the
sporting world; this spe c ial
looks at the superstars, super
team! -- and their dedicated
fans .

C1J iW m THill'S INCREDI·

ANNIE
HO~'?·· UM- YES, HOO'?
~ JUGT ALliCk.Y &lt;SUE%,

EK- YlE DIDII'T
{)ECI{)E

T'-

L GOPPOGE"'

01\!•1 GI'OOLO
IMTR'DIJCE_Y:_'_::1'0::.··~1!2.!-~·~,';

ORE AT MOVIE

LOST ARK"liarriaon Ford, who
stars a a the swashbuckling
hero Indiana Jones In the
adventure thriller 'Aalders of
the Lost Ark ,' stars and hosts
this special that provides a
behind the acenealook at that
film's moat astonishing stunts
and pays tribute to a coiiecUon
of the world's great movie
stunts and atuntmen. (60

mina .L
Cl) llJ)

-~-'!"!!•el!!w!•!illli!!tn!!!II!L'-­
STAMLEY STEIMER
CarpetCINfllllll
-4101

JIM MARCUM Roolung •
" " 'oper._,
anct aicllnt.,.,..
30
yean
eatlm•t...

Call~.

RemOdeling.

CARPENTRY,
ftome
bulldiiiQ'• remodeling. 304"5-2440.

l .

GREAT

PERFO~·

MANCES 'Ormandy Conducts:
Pictures afftn~'EKhib l tlon'
Maestro Eugene Ormandy
returne to the Fhiladelptlia
Academy oi Music to conduct
the Philadelphia Orchestra in
Wolf ·Ferrarl 'a 'Secret of
Susanna· and Mussorgaky ' a
'Fictures at an EKhibHion'. (60
mins.)
8:05 (I) MOYIE ·I MUSICAL)".'

''CelamllyJtne'' 1053
8:30 ()) NEW BIBLE BAFFLE
SHOW

'

GASOUNE ALLEY

... Rover is
tn.Jinq to
catch it!

Get the
ball,
Rover!

Git it
L!erself!
You threw

.

8:88 ()) C8N UPOA TE.NEWS
g,oo CIJG&lt;IJ MONDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOVIES 'Sidney Shorr '
1981 Stars : Tonv Rantfall.
Lorna Fattarson, Kaleena Kif!.

Isn't it nice? He's
behavinq just like a
normal little bol.)!

I'tl•

()) JOOCLUB
(])MOVIE ·(ROMANCE)"'
"It'• Mt!urn" 1880

CIJII2lm MONDAYNIQHT

Plumbing

EXCIVatinp

damage , and eventually
re·ce lved England ' s Victoria
Awa r d as the world's moat
courageous athlete. (2 hrs.)

C1J NON-FICTION
••• WE'LL TELL THE

:SHE'5 COMING
HOME WITH U5.1
ANP IF YOU

Dozer work. Mobile home
sites an~;tdr!veways. Smatl
lobs a specialty. Phone 742·
2753.

REAlLY 601N6
ON AT '!OUR
AGENCY/

Tf{()(J8lf ...

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
In septic lank. 675·1234.

TELEV~

SION 'Pesticides and Pilla: For
E11.port Only ' Part 1. The
indis c riminate marketing ot
pest icides In Third World
countries Is the subJect ol this
film which notes that the farm
chemicals In question are not
only a hazard to the health of
thoee using the product, but
also to people In the vicinity and
eventually even to people in the
u.s.. (60 mine..)

WORLP WHAT~

MAKE ANY

(jJ) DISCOVE~ING THE ART
OFKOREA
10:00 @ T8S EVENIN(\ NEWS
C1J RETU~N TO SPACE

BACKHOE and 5eptlc tank
Service. Larry Siden ·
strlcker. 67~·5580.

Astronuat Rusty.S ch we ickart
hosts this sur11ey of America's
return to manned space flight
arter six years. The sl1ow looks
back t'o the apace shultle'a
debut 1881 s pring and ahead1.fo
its aacond mlasion this
October. (EIO mlnS,)

10-5

Eloctrlcol
&amp; Rllfrlptrotlon

BARNEY

SEWING Machine repairs,
Hrvlce. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
PomerOI'. 992·2214.

PURTY FOR •.
TH' CAMERA"BOX,
TATER

SMILE

lllJ NEWS
10:28 ()) CBN UPDATE NEWS
10:30 ()) THIS IS THE LIFE
ffi HBO SNEAK PREVIEW:
OCTOBER Jerry Stiller and

JACK'S RF.FRIGERATIO·
N. air condition MrVIce,
commercial, lndu~trlal.
Phohe 812·2079.

Anne Meara highlight the
upcoming movies, sports and
~clals on HBO In October.

UlJ ALFRED HITCHCOCK

ll

,,oo

General HIUIInt

memaCIJ®l NEws

())
PRIORITY
ONE
INTERNATIONAL
(])MOYIE ·(COMEDY)"
''Where The Bulfalo Roem' '

C1J DOCTOR IN THE H!)USE
1i:D5 ~LLINTHE FAMILY
11:18
NUPQATENEW8
THI!TONIGHTSHOW
11:30

M.H.Rep~lr

MOBI~E

home skirting.
70X14 from $220. to 1495.
K • 1&lt; Mabile HOllies
Pt. Plnsent, WV
675-3000

'The Beet Of Carton' Gueeta:
Bob Hop a, RaqueiWelch, Carol
• ~len. (Repeat: 60 mtns.)
·

PEANUTS

I SEE .. NO, Tl-lAT'S
ALL RIGHT... I
UNDERSTANr;&gt;...

I.J,_ _..!!U~pi!O!!=~I!!'y!!.L_ _
TRISTATE
.U PHOLSTI!RY SHOP
116:.1
Avt .. Gallipolis"
,j,j6-JI33or-1133.
1

sec.

MOWREYS UPhOiatery Rt.
11oxl2ot Pt. ii'IHUn!,304·
675-4154.

I JUST THOUGHT IT
WOUW 6E A 6000 .
PLACE TO START

~OTHER LIFE

Quincy, M.E .; 'For The Benefit
01 My Parente' Two patient I dla
while betng transferred from 1
private to a countvhoapltaland
Quincy suapecte the hospi~at
admlnlttrttor of putting money
before hla pet!aftta' well baing.

0 : '&lt;lenrude' A

woman hlree Harry to rtalp Mr
brother, an AWOL .t ailor mllllad
up tn 1 ~~muggllng caper.
(Reoeat)

.,.

'

I

;

"-ITILE~ BO-PEEP

..

LOS! HER SHEEP
SJ;;CAUGE SHE
HADIH16.

tJ
Answer:

Now arrange the circled tatters to :
form the surprise answer, a.s su g- ..
gested by the above ca r1oon .
-.

'T I XrD"

A

.

Saturday's

I· Answer· What

Jumbles : WAGON

.

n:

I

WITH [

(Answer s 10/'flOrrow)
ENTIRE IGUA NA
·

NEWS'"(

lhfll attr active lady gambler had-

WINNI NG WAYS

•.

Jumble Book No. 17; contaimng I HI puntt~. is avai lable lor$1.95 postpai d
hom Jumble, c/o this now sp&lt;~ p er, BoK 34, Norwuod, N.J, 07648,1ncludeyour
name, address , zip code 11nd mak e ohe~;;~J&gt; payable to Now.s aperbooks.

BRIDGE

'

Part-score bidding

..

By Oswald Jacoby
aad AIBll Sontag
NORTH
•• 2

Alan: "!ha ve noticed that .
bridge writers don 't spend
any ·ume discussing part'
score bidding. I guess the
subject Is too tough, but why

lO·HI

•• •

*KJ911l
+AQJ8
wF.ST
EAST
+AQ108!!
+J9 7
'f K&lt;;
. IG8761!2

cant we use an occasional
h,and where there is a part

••

score?"

t3

+ 9 7 54

Oswald: " Here 's one fr om

a recent rubber bridge game

• 10 3
SOU Til

+K 5

at New York's Cavendish
Club. I was Nor th and Paul
Trent South. Both sides were
vulnerable and we tta d a
part score ol 40."
Alan: "I see you have
written down the bidd ing. It
looks as il tha t 40 pa r t score
actually helped you bid the

.J 9 4
tA Q10 15

+K 6 2

Vulnerable: Both&gt;
(North-South ,40 part score).
Dealer: South
•
West

slam."

1•

Oswald: " It certainly did .
After . Paul's diamond openmg and the spa de overcall I
was worried a bout two los·
ing spades, but Paul is a

Pass

North

s•

Pass

Ea11t

S.th

Pass

It
6t

PaS$

Opening lead: •K

really fine player and 1 had
just the bid to leave the slam
decision up to him. I jumped
to five diamonds ."
Alan: "The bid ha d to have
a clear meaning In that it
told your partne r that your

hold the king of clubs, the
club fmesse was more tha n
likely to be a winner. West
had overcalled."

only worries were about

Alan: "You were a trifle'
lucky. Give Paul one more

spades and r eally dem anded
that he bid six if he could
handle the second round of
spad~. "

s pade and one less heart a..W.
the sla m might ha ve betln'
set. Still, fo rlune seems to

·

Oswald: "There was a llftle more 10 it. If he didn't

favor the brave in war and
almost everything else!"

t!le11• ~. ,(
lot' THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

.·

38SmaU ·

beU sound

!Colombian

39 Was heard

city

sleeping

50rcbestru

40 American
playwright

41 "Blues'·'

with

beforehand

composer
tZ Nasty glance ·

d. muses

-

DOWN

I% Number

I Decree

Yesterday's Answer

9 Meandered 24 ElizabeU•

2 Food acid.'l II Any flat
3 Ocean
sUrface
14 " - smaU
crosser
15 Take on
step
4 Fish
car~o
fqraman"
Engender
181.&lt;&gt;n·o
role
5
J!iNew Guinea
6
Agcy.
that
21
Urge
011
!Dwn
electrilied 22 Overly
1&amp; Brazilian
rural USA
studious
tree
7 Zulu's spear23 Roof
17 A ChapUn
8 Loss by oozing sight
co-star
UTenant

Cady 25 Penalty
%7 Challenged
29 Dull
:ro Think
31 Scope
Int-cnse
37 Suffix
lor cow
:tl! Sesnme

az

19 Writer

Talese
!tPoem
nGeraldine
or Patti
ZZ Moisten

the

mast

Z5 Cooked,
as eggs
!S Wise about
%7 God (lt.)

Z8Japanese
river
!t -'s box
33 Barbie's
boyfriend

M Mining find I::::--!--!-~-!-+35Csmera

JOOVement

b--1--4-+-+--

JI!Typeof
valve

(0 ~ •

.,.,•s how

DAILY CRYPTOQ UOTEIa

to work it:

A XYDL BAAXR
LONGF ELLOW

One letter simply stands (or an other. In lhis sample A ·io
used ' for the three L's. X lor the two O's, ole. Single teller~
apoetrophel, the length and (orma ti on of the word1 are a n
hiata. Etdl doy the code leiters are dilferent.
'

C1J C'l LATE MOVIE

(Ropt~ll Harry

&gt;·

· KJ I

UAiTanged

teenager who overcame
massive brain and physical

~~
. ,,r '-r-t..-...:

'ISYrHAN

(Ciosed-Oaptioned)

Helen Hunt Thedramaiabased
on the true story of an Arizona --

SO ... )OU 1R'E
WA.tKII.t; our
ON ME, EH?

the m...

rJ r

section'
II Mingled

PRESENTATION 'The Mira c le
01 Kathy Miller' ~981 Stars:
SharonGieaa, Frank Converse,

750 and 1000 gallon
PLASTIC septic tanks.
Stale and County op·
proved. Total weight 300
lb5. Haul In your pickup
truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
Service, located 3 miles
South of Jackson· on St. Rl.
93. 216· 5930.

who toolot

KEROP l

FOOTBALL ABC Spprts will
provide coverage of the game
between the Atlanta Falcons at
the Philadelptlla
Eagles.

Ill(]) iJD) SPECIAL MOVIE

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AN.O HEATING I
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446·3888 or 4-46·4477

M
H-•

BLE An amazing look at an
ingeniously equipped car ttl at
was driv e n non -atop t"rom
Anchorage, Alaska, to Mexico
Cily; the story of how unau·
specting t rl pi et brothers,
ra ised apart. were reunited
after 19 years; and a medical
miracle that changed the life or
a two headed Chinese man . &lt;so

rcJJ
®I
STUNTS:JIAIDERS OF THE ..

ALLEYOOP

I wonder

four Ordinary words.

,.

7:00 (I). PM MAGAZINE
(I)
A 'QREAT DAY TO
REMEMBER
C1J
ENTERTAINMENT .
TONIGHT
(lJ HAPPY DAYS AQAIN
• C1J nc TAC DOUQH
C1J ilD MACN!IL·L!HRER
REPORT
CSJ NEWS
••
1m• IIUPPET SHOW
. 7:01 C1J CAROL BURNETT AND
FRIEND I
7:30 m · ·YOUABKEDFORIT
ANOTHER LIFE
eCIJ FAMILY FEUD
LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
' .AND COMPANY
C1J DICK CAVETT SHOW
CSJ
RICHARD SIMMONS

&amp; Heating _ __

14

'.

THE PRAIRIE Shattered b)" the
newa that her daughter Nellie
haa gone to tlve in New York.
Mrs. Oleson selects an orphan
substitute: theglrl ahe chOoses
is a nasty, chealing , brawling
reincarnat i on of tl'l e young
Nellie . (Part one of a two-part
episode.) (Season Premiere :
80 mins.) (Cioaed·Caplioned;

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 367-7471 or
367-1)5'91.
II

:

WOODHOUSE WAY
ENTERtAINMENT
TONIGHT
7:35 C1J SANFORD AND SON
7:88 ()) CBN UPDATE NEWS
B:OO CIJeCIJ LITTLE HOUSE ON

BORN LOSER

Stark's Tree Trimming, In·
sured. 304·576·2010.

13

Unscramble these four Jurnb1es,
one leHer to each squar e. to form

EVENING

.

U.S.A.)
())

Water wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304·895·3802.

'flfljiruffi;}1} ~ THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAME '
r:!J. ~ ~ ~·
byH~m.iArnoldandBoOL.._ ··,

!DJ Ill

RINGLES'S SERVICE-experienced mason, roofer.
carpenter, electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304-615·
2088 or 67H560.

82

•

SHOW
.
llJ) TRAINING DOGS THE

1970 VOLKSWAGEN 1051·
back, goclf condition. call
after 5, 304·675·5152.

1979 Ford F250, '14 ton, 4
speed, 300 engine, lock out
hubs, 36,000 miles, 1 owner.
S4000flrm. 675·6252.

The Daily Sentinei-P ag e - 9

MONDAY
OCT. 8. tee1

SURPLUS J EI!PS, CARS.
TRUCKS, Car·lnv. value
121.0 aold for $1110. For In· PAIN.TING · Interior and
formation on purchasing exterior, plumbing,
similar bargains, Call 602· roofing, sOme remodeling.
941·81114 Ext. 9765, Phone 20 yrs. exp.'Call388·9652.
call refundable.
BING'S CONCRETE CON. ,
1972
Chevelle,
307, STIWCTION ·Specializing
automatic·, ps, pb, am tape In concrete driveways,
player. S800 or trade. Call S'ldewalks,
• polio,
67.5-4111 after 4 pm. ... ·
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11 Ad
1979 Camara, 350 engine, vears e)(perlence. Call 367· ~
..
47,000 miles. light blue 7891 .
melollc, slightly damaged
front end. Colt 675-1655 FERRELL's . WINDON
anytime, 675·6633 after 5 GLASS SERVICE Home
pm.
.maintalnance
and
remodeling. Phone 388·
19n Volkswagen Rabbit, 9326.
fuel Injection, excellent
,condition, 1 owner, 2 new Home building, home
Michllan tires. engine just remodeling and repair.
overhauled, $2600. 614·992· Custom work from start to
757Ufler 5 pm.
finish . can 388·8711 .

pu"'

•.eoo

0

MORRISON'S Auto sal-..
HendOI'IOII, WV. Phone 6751574 or 675·2811.

v

Television
VIewmg

WHAT'S

1112.
CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning fnturad by
Haffelt Brothera Custom
Carpets. Free tsllmotn.
Call446·2107.
'

.- '.

DICK TRACY

STUCCO PLASTERING' •
textured celll-. com·
merclal and residential,
frM estimates. Cell 256- ·

1977 Doctoe Aspen atatiOII
wagon, Speclol llditlon.
AUtomatic, AC,PS,PB, low
mile-. Will accept trade.
Sharp. Call 614-992-3517 or
61U.M0042.

.1972 Volkeswagen. 675-2864
or 112·2947.

-

74 trailer &amp; '10 acres for sal e

'

Monday, October 5, 1981

41

Homes for Sale

SAN.OHILL ' Road,

Monday, october s, I till

tyaYPTOQUOTES

O!WL
VTSSL Z
TS

OR L
I SV

V T S

GH '

ZLDOI HZISO . -

U H 0

uRI.

HL SZX

UK

ZLDQ
D GU U Sl,.

KI.NDNESS IS LOVING PEOPLE
MORETHANTIIEYDESERVE. - JOUBERT

Yesterday's Cryptoquote:
1

,

�.'

.·
Monday. October 5, 1911

Ohio

Pathology team declares
body ill gray~ wa:s Os·wald
DALLAS (AP) - 'lWo decades ~ about Oswald, lncludJnc Eddowel'.
theories about at 1eut ooe upect of
Yearo ~ court baUiellllld bitter
the 8111l88Sination of President John {amlly quarreling ended Sundly
F. Kennedy apparently have been- morning at 7 un., 81 gravedlgel'l
disproved with a finding "beyond worked quickly to Hbume Oswald' a
any doubt" that Lee ~Y Oswald body at Mrs. Porter'sillsls!ence.
was burled In the grave marked .tith
1be final hurdle wu removed
his name.
when Oswald's brother, Robert,
''ThereiBnoreason to ever disturb removed his legal oppooltion to the
that body again. Ever," said Dr. e•humatlon. A temporary
Undo Norton, .the head of a restraining order iBsued by a federal
pathology team that announced Sun- judge at Robert Oswald's requeat
day that the exbwned body was in- e&gt;&lt;pired at rnidnlchl Saturday,
deed Oswald, identified by the ···' prompting negotiations between atWarren Commlasion as the man who torneys for Mrs. Porter and her
killed Kennedy on Nov. 22, 1963.
brother-in-law.
British author and •f!M•slnation
As a ring of security guarda and
theorist Michael Eddliwes, who several attorneys looked on, the conagreed to pay lor the exhumation,
had contended the body In Oswald's
grave was that ol II Russian Imposter who replaced Oswald when he
defected to the Soviet Urdon In 1959.
Eddowes, who wrote ''1be Oswald
Files," said Sunday he was "surVAN HEUSEN
prised, but in no way disappointed"
at the findings.
Oswald was shot to death two days
alter the Kennedy shooting by rdghtciub owner Jack Ruby. Since then
there have been several books
propounding the idea that more than
one person was Involved in the
assassination and several theories

crete vault Clllllainq Olnrald'a
caaket was lifted frmllbe ~ve.
Offlclala said molat11re bad
deteriorated the COllin, which partially coliapeed onto the body 81 the
vault wu opened.
'l1le -eutet wu reinforced with
cardboard and wood, cov&amp;n!d with a
sheet and taken by heane to Baylor
University Medlc81 Center In Dllllaa.
1be body wu eornined by Ms. Norton, br. Vincent DIMaio, Beur
County medical eumlner, Dr.
James A. ccttone, wbe !lpiCiaUzea in
denllslry, and Dr. Irvin Sopher, a
West Virginia slate medical
examiner who has written aeverah
books on forensic den!fslrY.
-

ELBERFELD$

BURIED AGAIN -

Officials at Rose Hill
Cemetery in Ft. Worth, Texas use a fr.oni-loader Sunday to lower the vQult contalnlng the coffin and
rema ia&lt; of accused presidential assassin l .ee.Harvey

· Oswald. The jlody bad been exhumed earUer In the day
lrom the same plol for verification. Pathologjsls euded
IS years of speculation by ldentUylng the body as that
of Oswald. (AP Laserpholo),
.
' ·

~~ Meigs C~unty happenings•.•

Middleport, and Maxine (Bobby )
Hobstetter, Pomeroy.
Several
Word has been received of the . nieces and nephews also survive.
Mrs. Burns was a member of
dc,th of Forrest (Frosty) Cassady,
Belpre, widely known in District 25 Pomeroy Chapter, Order of Eastern
o,·,Jrr of Eastern Star Circles, on .Star; Trinity Church in Pomeroy,
and she was a retired employe of the
S:Jturday night.
OES Chapters of Meigs County are Star·k Drug Store. She also had served as a Western Union operator
·a pai1 of District25.
The body is at the Spencer Funeral during her career.
Servic;es will be held at 2 p.m.
Bomc in Belpre where OES services
will he held at 3 this evening . Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
Masonic rites will be held at 8 p.m: Home where friends may call after 7
this evening . Burial will be in Beech
Tue~day and funeral services will be
at the funeral home at II a.m. on Grove Cemetery. Eastern Star services wiil be held at 7 Tuesday
Wednesday.

:ForJ't'Rt Cassady

evening.

Lena M. Fox
Lena M. Fox, 85 , CJifton , died
Saturda ~' in Veterans Memorial

Hospital, Pomeroy.
She was born October II, 1985 in
clifton to the late George and Laura
~t-J nMeler

Fox.

ShP was prec~ded in death by
thnce brothers, Hoy , Ray and

Six people
I Continued from page I)

where a vehicle driven by Terry G.
Ev(:lns, 31 , Pomeroy, went' left of the
center striking a car operated by
John D. Gray, 31, Cheshire. There
was moderate damage.

Smnue1 Fox; three sisters, Mrs.

Evans was cited for driving left of

Ethel E lias, Mrs. Mamie Nease and

the cente1·.
A car was demoli shed in a single

Meets Tuesday

I

Dismisses defendant

'

Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
Eastern Star, will hold a regular
meeting at 7:45p.m. Tuesday. Dues
lor the year are payable at the
meeting.
Chester Council 323, Daughll!rs of
America, will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. All. officers are asked to be
present to practice lor inspection.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Gladys
Cuckler, Pomeroy: Gertrude
Pellegrino, Middleport; Woodrow
Kuhn, Pomeroy; Brian Holley, Middleport.
Saturdsy Discharges-Clarence
Norris, carl Hubbard, William
Weaver. Thelma Garrett, Ruth Ann
Mulford.
'""
Sunday_Admissions-Julian Hoffman, Pomeroy; Carl A.utherson,
Syracuse.
Sunday Discharges-Harry Wyatt,
Tammy Bable, Daniel Young.

SEE OUR NEW
FAll SELECTION

An entry In Meigs COunty Com-

mon Pleas Court has also been filed
in the court dismissir\g the ilBIIng of
Robert Thompson from the . defendants in the action by Hugh Mitchell
versus Robert Thompson, FultonThompson Tractor Sales, Inc., F""'
Thompson and George Thompson.
The action, filed earlier, is lor
$152,698.34 and other monles.

•Solid Colors
•Tone on Tone

Ask towed

SELECT WHAT YOU
NEED NOW

•Super Silks
•Splendor Knits

'

(Continued from page I)
bie F . Daile)', 17, Route I, Reedsville, traveling on the Success
Road, skidded in gravel, and went
onto · Route 241! into the path of a
pickup truck driven by Johnny R.
Newlun , Long Bottom. Three
children in the pickup truck received
minor injuries but were not im-

m ediat ely

tr eated.

damages were incurred.

Medium

St):led in the colonial tradition , but
molded in durable polypropylene that
won't ctlip, crock or fade with normal

e LIFT UP LID WITH MIRROR -

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·

use . Brews 4-8 cups of coffee to flavor

e PLUSI+LINED INTERIOR

peak , then keeps it hot, automatically .
lock-on cover and extra wide, dark
brown base to insure stability. Detachable cord. 490 woth, 120 volts, AC

e SECTIONS FOR

RINGS AND EARRINGS

r=::::_:::::::______j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

•10.00
VALUE

•.'.

•s••
.

'

,

only .

No. M-0199-43

.

10%

10%

DOWN

DOWN
'
HOLDS
YOUR
SELECTION!
($1.00 Minimum)
DOWN PAYMENT
FORFEITED IF
LAYAWAY NOT
COMPLETED

HOLDS YOUR
SELECTION!
($1.00 Minimum)
DOWN PAYMENT
FORFEITED IF
LAYAWAY NOT
COMPLETED

ELGIN
DECORATOR
WALL CLOCKS

7'12" HIGH

.PLUSH

Two accidents were investigated
over the weekend by Pomeroy

••

COLONIAL STYLE
PERCOLATOR

WALNUT
JEWEL BOX

•Quianas

Steven Paul Coffman, 19, Mason,
W. Va._,and Derdse Lynn Manuel, !8,
Route 1, Racine.

MIRRO

BEAUTIFUL

Police check
two accidents

Deputies.

PHARMACY

I

Sleeve Length
32 to 35 Inches

Miss Louise Fox..
Sl1C was a sales clerk in the area vehicle accident at 2:10p.m. Sunday Water to be off
ancl was a member of the Clifton. on High St. in Vinton. The patrol said
Ronnie C. Wellington, 23 , Vinton,
Residents ol Lincoln Heights and
United Methodist Churcjr.
Surviving are one brother, Elver lost control of his car which ran o(f . Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, are reminFox, of Clifton, several nieces and the highway.striking and severiqg a ded that they will be without water
utility pole.
service beginrdng this evening.
nephews.
There .were no injuries or
Services will be held Tuesday at
On Lincoln Heights water service
1:30 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral citations.
will be off f~om this evening until
Another single car mishap oc- Wednesday mornlng. On Lincoln
Home in Mason. Rev. Kenneth
Watkins will officiate with burial in ·curred Saturday at 7:05p.m. on Bob Hili Road, service will be off from
McConnick Rd., in Galli a County, this evening toTuesday morning.
Gmhnm Cemetery.
one
tenth of a mile west of SR 160
Friends may call at the Junenll
where
a vehicle driven by Cindy L.
home today 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. and 7
Simpkins,
23, Point Pleasant, ran off
p.m. until9 p.m.
the roadway and struck a tree.
There was moderate damage and
ldn E. Burns
· no citation was issu.ed.

Mrs. Ida E. Burns, 76, Pomeroy,
died Sunday evening at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Burns was a daughter of the
lote Adam and Bernice Sponagel
Ebersbach. She was also pre&lt;:!'ded
in death by her husband, Clyde Mar·
sh; a ~ister, Marguerite Durst; a
br9ther, Edwin Ebersbach, and a
daughter, Jeannie Marsh.
·
Surviving are two daughters , Mrs.
DonHld (Pat) Houdashelt, Syracuse,
and Mrs. Melvin (Nancy) Van
Meter. Pomeroy; six grandchildren,
one great-grandchild; four sisters,
Eve lyn Gaul, Chester; Irene Powell ,
Parkersburg, Eloise (Kate) Wilson .

:NEVER
TOO EARLY .
TO SHOP

Neck Sizes
U'h to 17'12

1

Area deaths

.FRUTH.

NEVER
TOO EARLY
TO SHOP

DRESS
SHIRTS

.

THUMB SUCKING

Police.
At 2:55 p.m. Saturday, a car
driven by Margaret Eynon, Racine,
backed from a parking space on the
lower parking lot into the left side of
a car driven by Diana Bachtel,
Pomeroy. There were medium
da!)'lages to· the Bachtel car and
minor to the Eynon vehicle.
Police · ·report that Donna R.
Knapp, Syracuse, is chirrged with
reckless operation and hit skip. Officers charge that a car driven by
Knapp struck a parked car at the
Lawrence Morarity home, Lincoln
Heights, on Friday.

•
•
•
•

GORILLA

:~:~E ·2~·

It's time for the Farmers Bank's
Dress-A-Doll, Design-A-Toy
Contest.
'

CORDLESS ELECTRIC
BEAUTIFUL FOREST SCENES
WOODGRAIN FRAMESIMILAR TO PICTURE

•35.00
VALUE

-•1999

FRUTH PHARMACY
'

I

The Farmers Bank'.s
Contest is no·w open. If you'd like to enter, stop by
th~ Farmers Bank and pick up your materials and
inrormation.

All The Kentucky Fried Chicken ·You Can ·Eat!
•

For Just . $325
~Combination

-

Dress-A·D~li,; Design-A-Toy

EVERY tu~SDA Y NIGHT AT CROW'S

'

The winners will be 01'! display in the Farmers
Bank lobby berore Christmas; All dolls ·and t~ys
will .go to deserving area children at Christlnas . .

Dinner On~

• Dining Room On~
Served with:
Whipped
Poatoes, Chicken -Gravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, Butter and
Coffee.

Farn1ers

Sorry, No Substitutions, txcept Beverages

Bank

which have an additional price.

Crow's Family
Restdurant
-.
.

228 W. MAIN

PH. 992-5432

Your Communih·
Owned Bank
•

OHIO
•

I

· .\ l&lt;•mh••r I'J)I(."

1/

c

•

,j

.

I I

f f I

.' ... , ..

l

"TH·E .EVERYTHING STORE'?.·· ·

1

'

.

&lt; &lt;

I

j.

0

0

'

.,....,.,

'

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

••

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