<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14777" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14777?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T01:29:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="46976">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/54eea5898921b5850b7388e112c9f3b8.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b98f7c212b3164709a0913d1ae38d756</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="46996">
                  <text>.·
'
\

•

.

.

•

at y enttne
e
President ·a t victory crossroads

VOI.JO, No.l38

2 Sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 28, 1981

Copyrighted 1911

15 cents .

A Multimedill Inc. Newspaper ·

..

AWACS sale showdown set for 5 p.m. today ··

.....

~-The Saving Place"'

WED •.Thru SAT·
OPEN OAIL y 10-9
SUNDAY 1-6
.

MONTH·
·.END
I

SAV~~1

6

EACHGal.

Our
96

10.96

•

Latex
Flat

~-

7. 960ur
1835)

11.96

•

Satin
Lustre

Interior Paints With S•yr. Durability
We've' got your painting needs covered with 1-caat. washable ·
latex wall paint ard scrubbable, satin-lustre latex enamel.
Fade-and spOt-resistant. convenient soap-and -water clean up.

While And Qolo"

0~ AGAINST AWACS- Sen. Howell T. Heflla, J).Aia., speab to
reporten oullide tbe White House Tueoday, after • meeliDg wltb
President Reapa to dlseuss tbe propooed 88le of AWACS radar planes to
Sawli Arabia. Hefllll'a JMl8ltion oppoaed to the sale Is nncllanged. (AP

WASjDNGTON .(AP) - President ·
~gan, confident that a suddenly
shiftUlg Senate will approve his
AWACS sale to Saudi Arabia, stOOd
at the crossroads today of a
dramatic come-from-behind victory
or defeat in his first major foreign
policy battle in Coojlr&lt;SS. . .
Reagan still needed two or three
votes before today's Senate
showdown. But a leading opponent,
Senate Democratic Whip Alan Cranslon, who boasted of support to spare
just a day before, said .Tuesday:
"The odds have shifted in favor of
the White House. We may welllose."
At issue in what Reagan called a
test of his conunand of American
foreign policy was the biggest al'llls
·sale in U.S. history, an $8.5 billion
package of five Airborne Warning
and Control Syatem planes plus I ,177
Sidewinder missiles and fuel ptids
and flying tankers to enhance the
range and firepower of Saudi F-15
jets.
At stake, the president said, was
·Saudi cooperation in the Middle East
peace process and his strategic
defense plan lor the oil-rich region.
A 5().50 tie was possible. That
would be enough for Reagan since
opponents needed a majority for a
first-ever cOngressional veto of a
U.S. anns sale. The House overwhelmingly rejected It earlier.
The president converted three OJ&gt;ponents and six uncommitted
senators in a flurry of lobbying'
Tuesday, whittling the lineup against him to 52-47 with only Louisiana
Democrat Russell Long uncommitted, according to The
· Associated Press count.
Reagan, who cleared his calendar
for one last push of presidential per-

suasion today, would only say "it were John Melcher, !).Mont.; Bob Israel, will fuel a Middle East anns
Dole, R-Kan.; Harrison Sclunitt, [). race and may fall into Soviet or
looka gOOd" on the eve of the vote.
His forces at the White House and N.M.; Walter D. Huddleston, [).Ky.;
radical Arab hands if the Saudi
DavidL. Boren, [).()kla.; and Frank monarchy is overthrown.
on Capitol Hill were less restrained.
"It will pass by one vote, probably H. Murkowskl, R-Aiaska.
•
At the White House, Reagan told
not more t\l&amp;n that. That's the
political reality," said a senior reporters as he left for a political aJ&gt;. How 100.Senators
Republican ·senator close to the ad- pearance in Richmond, . Va., late
Tuesday
afternoon
:
"
I
think
it
looks
Stand On AWACS
ministration, who asked · noi to ·be
Identified. "We're planning a vic- gOOd." He refused, however, to
Sale·
claiffi victory, saying only that he
tory party."
Reagan waited until today to was "cautiously optimistic."
,Against
When a reporter said •'you;ve won
deliver a letter outlining terms of the
(). :fl .. )( :J:t t :;
37 .
sale, strongly opposed by the for· this one," Reagan replied: " I don't
H.:p11l&gt;lu :: u" .
1~
midable Israeli lobby as a threat to · really know. You couldn't get me to
l&gt;t•IIIOC f;lf : , I , ~ .lfllllq
1;
say that if you threw a bomb at me."
the Jewish state.
Asked what he was telling
Senate Republican leaders were
R&lt;•pllhlu :;,m; L," uuno_ l_
confidenl tbat at least two opponents senators in his down-to-the-wire lolr
r o l&lt;tl 55
bying blitz, the president replied:
would switch to support Reagan.
•••••••••••••••••••
They refused to name them, but "It's gOOd for the United States. It's . 'for
speculation·centered on Republicans gOOd for peace in the Middle East.
Ht·pttl&gt;hc: tn :;
32
Slade Gorton of Washington state It's good for the security of Israel."
If the sale is vetoed, Reagan said,
0diiOCI:t! S
5
and Mark Andrews of North Dakota.
he
"seriously"
doubted
he
would
try
Gorton, a prime target of adHt:IHthhcan:; L. ::uunq._ l
ministration lobbying, said he would to bypass Congress and send the airl olal 38
answer no questions until he made a craft to Saudi Arabia by declaring it
•••••••••••••••••••
.speech on the Senate floor today. An· . necessary for national security .
Uncommitted
He
also
said
he
had
made
no
deals
drews refused to rule out voting for
to
secure
support.
the sale and said ''I'll take another
Ot'rnocr ;tl s
'4
In his Richmond speech, Reagan
look at it" today.
3·
Rt 'I lttl&gt;h&lt; ;; Ill S
Their defection could leave Long said rejection of the sale would unTot;,l 1
dennine chances for Saudi in·
with the decisive vote.
Most congressional sources have volvement in the Middle East peace51 Votes Needed for
expected Long to vote for the sale, making process.
Passage
"We need the g~ will of the
but he said Tuesday that he would
&gt;&lt; IIIIo 1 · 1\ • ,', l ti 1. ilo ·1 l l'!o •·,•, 4 ,&lt; t1Uif
wait until listening to today's debate Saudis," Reagan said. ''They
represent a moderate force in the
before making a decision ..
Switching in favor of the sale Middle East. Rejection ... I'm
Tuesday were Sen. Roger W. JeP-- afraid, will be a step toward closing
SENATE AWACS SURVEY sen, R-lowa, who bad been il them out of any peace Initiative.' •
Thls chart shows, according to an
The AWACS planes are to watch AP survey, bow tbe 100 .U. S.
declared'" opponent, and Sens.
for
attacks on Saudi oil fields and the senatora stand oo President
Charles E. Grassley, R-lowa, and J.
jet
weaponry is to defend against an Reagan's proposed sale of
James Exon, D-Neb., both of whom
invasion.
had been leaning against it.
AWACS radar planes to Saudi
But opponents say the high- Arabia. (APLaseprbolol .
Uncommitted senators who announced their support for the sale technology planes are a threat to

••

()il industry tax breaks under review

Luerphoto).

WIISimiGTON ( AP'), - New l.n&lt; - - u iJ_ . _ l i ! . _ _ Y opo "'·WI!if 'It ' -cvtll!'i''""'" Stadlo \be "•a- - ~.,, ahllti!j]' a7 'ili01iibo.T-~

LD
Teachers end long walkout
PHILADEL!'IDA - Public school teachers ~nded a 5(Miay strike
today, averting a one-day general walkout called by sympathetic
unions, after a panel of judges ordered the city to rehire about 3,5110 .
teachers.
·
The head of the teachers' union was elated Tues~y night when the
group's executive board voted unaninoously to end the strike. But the
superintendent of schools ssid the ruling meant the system would end
the year in the red.
Teachers planned to be back at school today, although it will be a
day or two before all of the 200,000 students affected by .the strike go
back to classes.
Aboul17,00o students have goi~g to class for several weeks as about
1,000 teachers crossed picket lines.

Double
lnaulaled

7901

(840)

(841)

9.96

7%" Circular Saw

Handy IJ.'' lleclrlc Dltl
General purpose. With
speed. safety locking butlon

1-1/3 HP doUble-insulated
Complete with '71f•" comblna·

tion blade.

27.88(842) 111.88

· venatll4t a•~ench lrlnder

General-purpose grinder can
slde-grl~ loriger objects.

7104

Arrest ties group to attack
'
NEW YORK - The arrest of a woman in a Mississippi
farmhouse
has tied another radical terror1st group to an attack on a Brink's truck
and officers said a man wanted in the cold-blooded killing of a
policeman has been linked to the holdup by witnesses.
The arrest of Cynthia Priscilla Boston in Gallman, Miss., was one of
two In the case on Tuesd&amp;y. In addition, a federal complaint was unsealed that identified two others wanted in the robbery in suburban
Nanuet, in which a Brink's guard and two pollee officers were killed.
Before dawn Tueoday, 100 FBI agents and police officers with ar·
mored personnel carriers, helicopters and camouflage outfits
surrounded a tin-roofed farmhouse in Gallman and apprehended Ms.
Boston,33.
'

leneral purpo• Jig laW
For stralglt. curved. ICIOII
cuts. Wood cu111n; bl_
aoe.

"Thank You" For Shopping At K marf

Young wins runoff election
•

breaks for the oll industry and other
features added to the tax cut enacted
by Congress last summer may be
open for review as legislators try to
control the federal deficit, House
Republican leader Robert H. Michel
says.
Senate Republicans are Stud)'ing
between $50 billion and flO billion in
tax incre!llles as part of a GOP
strategy ainoed at slicing budget
deficits by about $115 billion over
three years.
However, Republicans in the
House, where Democrats hold the
majority, have made no commitment to push for a tax cut pi any
given size.
Michel, though, indicated in an interview Tuesday that he believes
tugher taxes are necessary to help
reduce budget deficits.

poses tampering with the three-step
reduction in individual income tax
rates and speeded-up tax writeoffs
for businesses.
" When we campaigned (last fall),
we campaigned on (personal) rate
reductions and accelerated
depreciation," Michel said.
But he noted that other parts of the
$748.8 billion bill that Reagan signed
-about $32 billion in tax breaks for
the oil industry, estate tax reduclions and ddded incentives for Individual Retirement Accounts were oot part of the · president's
original proposal to Congress. ,
He spoke as the chief
congressional economist predicted
that federal spending will continue
outstripping revenues by a wide
margin lor the riext three years,

ditional budget cuts President Federal Reserve's board of goverReagan wants by 11184.
nors, told the Banking sub"Even if the president does get committee thai "to achieve a balanthrough the Congress the cuts he's ced budget by 1984, we will probably
asked for, deficits will remain in the need reductions in outlays in fiscal
range of $65 billion in 1982, falling to 1984 of somewhere in the neigh$50 billion by 1984," Alice Rivlin,
bo~hoodof$100billlon."
directoroflheCongressionalBudget
He added, "If cuts of that
Office, said Tuesday.
magnitude are not feasible, or are
She told a House Banking sub- deemed by ~ongress to be unwise,
committee on domestic monetary the only alternative is to restore
policy that without the additional sorr.e of the cuts in revenues"
cuts, "even with the optimistic authorized by the tax-cut package
(economic) scenario, you're talking that Congress approved last sumin the range of $120 billion (for the mer.
federal deficit) by 1984."
The Reagan adminislration'
Reagan had promised a balanced
budget by 1984, but his top economic estimates that without further aC:.
advisers, including budget director lion to shrink the deficit, the budget
'David A. Stockman, have conceded deficit will be $59.1 billion this year,
the goal may be slipping out &lt;i. $62.9 billion in 1983 and $58.8 billion .
.in!984.
.
reach.

Commission .holds hearing on road petition .
A hearing was held Tuesday when
the Meigs County Commissioners
met concerning a petition submitted
by Junius and Josephine Marks
regarding vacating and abandoning
a township road in section 30 in
Scipio Township.
,
The. road in question separates
property owned by Marks and
James P. Richards.

Wreck causes
power outage

Some 100 customers of the Ohio.
Power Co. in the Lincoln HiU area o(
. Pomeroy were out of service lo~ four
hours Tuesday night , when an
automobile struck a utillfy pole near
the A. R. Knight home.
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven
by Dale Dutton, Middleport,
traveling down Uncoln Hill struck
the pole which fell across the road.
Tralflc was blocked for a period and
I
· homes on the hill were thrown into
darkness.
Besides the 100 customers of the
company that were wilhout service
CLEVELAND- The winning ~ drawn'l'u&lt;isday night in the
fnm 8 p.m. to mightnlght, 10 others
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Nwnber" was 537.
were without service from I p.m. unThe lottery reported eernlngs of t210,147 .10 on the drawing. The eartil5 a.m. Wednesday.
nings Cllllll on salea of tl28;144, while holden of winning tickets are
Pollee said that Dutton has been
entitled to ahare. .,81.50, lottery.offlcl81a said.
cited
on a·charge of exC\l!181ve speed.
•
There were heavy damages to the
front of the Dutton car, pollee reported.
Clear tonJgbt wltb Jllllcbel of dlrtae ground fcig. Lows In upper 30s to
•Pomeroy Police alao reported a
low toa. Sunny 'I'hurldlly. Hl&amp;hi.IMD. a..nce of rain 111!11' zero perleCOIIdaccldenlat7:Mp.m. Monday
, •
tonight and 'l'!lundlt. Wlndnartable-. than 10 mpiJ tonJchl.
on Lincoln Helgbta when a car
.
Btl I U*le J'wnut
driven by Wll1lml E. Mattox, Salem,
Prilll7dlaiiPI S r1
bacldng from I driveway lllruck a
IWI'ItdiJ.a.ellnlltS.IIIII..,_,• 'J.Own!IPtl..,.la
parked car owned by Robert
die MI. 1111111! Frfdll1 . . Ill .., ..a, ........ JIIPIIIimiiiJ
Foreman, Pcmeroy. There were
medlwn dlmq111 to the Foreman
1---.
-' -----'-~·-:----:-------'f'-----' · car&amp;J1!1llght to the MaUonehlcle.

Abandoning would also affect
George Green's property located al
lhe end· of the road. If the road is
abandoned without giving Green a
right-of-way, he would not have access to his property.
Meeting with the Commissioners
concerning the hearing were Mr.
and Mrs. Marks, their attorney,
Patrick O'Brien, Richards, Mr. and
Mrs. Green and county assistant
prosecutor Carson Crow.
After a lenghty discussion, which

at times became heated, the hoard
determined that sufficiently wide
right-of-way would have to be given
to Green before action could be
taken to abandon the road.
It was understood that the trustees
would be consulted and a second
meeting will be held at a later date
concerning the issue.
Warden Ours, Chester Township
Trustee, met with the board to
discuss the problem on Horse Cave
Road (township 126) regarding a

a

beaverdam.
Ours suggested that the road ·
elevation could possibly be raised:
and the water level be maintained m:
order to prevent flooding.
· ::
Ours was advised . to contact the
prosecutor and engine!er concernina
the necessary •'leps to be taken.
,.
Ric bard Jones, commissioner;:
reported that a meeting will be held·
in Logan on Friday, Nov. 6, with the:
Ohio E.P.A. concerning approval :of:
a new county wndfill site.

.·
.·..

ATLANTA- Andrew Young, fresh from a convincing victory in a
mayoral runoff election punctuated by racial atlacl\8, declared today
that Atlanta's blacks and whites survived the strain of the campaign
''with "o broken relationships."
The Conner Untied Nations ambassador, congressman and civil
rights leader captured 5U percent of the vote Tuesday t~ become the
city's second black nuiyor. He defeated state Rep. Sidney Marcus, a
liberal white businessman who two days earUer said Young was
"willing to destroy our city" to win the election.
Turnout was heavy and the voting appeared to follow racial lines.

Winning Ohio lottery number

Weather forecast

/

.._ ... ,w .............. ...,

.\

DEDICATION- Tbe fll mlllioa dollar lleeliJIIID
,...,._..,,..., Melp C..ty· wllll Rav_.ood, W. VL,
rillle alfieii1Jy dedleated ell! e.m. Satard8y. Tbe
brldp rillle opoato Oldo trafftc llllllrdiJ - ferlllole-- to attead tbe cmomoatea aU! It a.m.

~

•

Tbe bridle wllllbetllle clOHd prepanltory to tbe dl&gt;- :::.
baa catUac IICMdaled fer 11 a.m. Tbe Rav_.,....
Cbamber of c - ee Is In clllrle ol tile dedlcalloa
ud ofber lctivltiell wldcll ril folltnr Ia I pmlllelr lhe

brtllp llllllrdly IIIOIDial.

'

~

~

I

'

�".

'
\

Pag-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 21, 1981

I

Commentary

Wednesday, October 21, 1911

William F. Buckley Jr.

ReflectionsonC~cu.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~p ulleys and the uses of lire and about
agricultural finesse. Looking out
over Acapulco one sees a city of
700,000 peoplla where, when I was a
schoolboy, there were fewer than
10,000. The bulldup of Acapulco
required a great deal of foreign
capital - but it was not made 811 a
gift. It did have huge returns for the
Mexican people.
All the talk at Cancum is about the
"hopefulness" of the conference,
about how illlportant it is that the
deciBlons taken should be "con-

. where he had repaired to rest, and about as close as any &lt;:fiunlry ever
. ACAPULCO - (Oct. 22) The 'tables are substantially turned .
Every schoolhoy knows that the perhaps to atone. Frldr Andres de has in Its Marshall Plan, described
president of M_etdco Will address'! the
CancUn Conference at 10 o'clock this two great engines behind Spanish Urdaneta consented to act as chief by Chlirchillas the most remarkable
momtng, imd if it is true that the colonization were the Jove of geld navigator for a fleet of three ship11. act of corporate generosity in world
participants will limit themselves to and the love of God. The latter did He lost two of them, but with the history. But the malllhall Plan soon
began to recede, Ushering in Point
10 minutes, a record will be little to interfere with the fonner. third discovered how to do'it.
Four,
which was aid primarily in the
He
set
out
from
the
Philippines
establisbed in the annals of Mexican · When the readily discovered su~
fonn
of
technical advice: teaching
north
to
ahout
where
San
Francisco
eratory. Pending the president's plies of gold in Latin America were
those
who
did not know what 11 was
·
is.
Then
you
grab
wutherly
winds
Wk. the television has given us wall· exhausted, the explorers faDQed out,
that
the
developed
nationa did know.
and
currents
and
reach
Acapulco.
:to-wall oratory from commentators looking for booty to the west. The
That,
after
all,
was.the
reciprocity
Nothing
to
it
a
m~re
seven
mon':and newsmen, most of it directed to Philippine Islands, and of course
finally
engaged
in
by
Spain.
The
ths.
:.mat it is hoped will come of the Can· China, were succulent objectives,
·
Fllipinos
and
the'
Mexicans
learned
Arriving
in
Acapulco
with
great
and Magellan having established
;cum Conference.
•
· Hereabouts in Acapulco lives that it was possible to cir· jubilation, the goods were carted about such things as wheels and
&amp;oane Simp&lt;lOn, once married to the cwnnavigate the globe, ship&lt;l set out back across Mexico to· Vera Cruz,
late William O'Dwyer, the urbane from Acapulco - shjps built fn thence sailed to Spain. This bustling
:ex-mayor of New York who was ap- Acapulco from native wood, the fit- trade was substantially vitiated by
pointed ambassador to Mexico by tings transported largely on the pirates, bucacarie~rs and
-President Truman. Mrs, Simpson backs of human beings across the privateers, who would hang about in
'recently delivered an engaging ad- width of Mexico from the Atlantic to their' sleek and laat little ships and
·(lress on the history of Acapulco the Pacific. Tile vessels would set prey on the hounty or the king and .
:before a ladies' executive group. She out for the Philippines, a voyage the noblemen of Seville. It was not
:reminded her audience that easily transacted in about three for a very long lime that it occurred
:Acapulco, to be sure forgotten for months, and there they would load to.the colonizers that they might ex·
·over a centurY until it began to hum up with gold and jewels and head change goods with the Indians of
Mexico or the Malays of the Phili~
;in the mid '50s, had been an im· back.
.
pines with reference ·to a price
:portant base of colonial and corn·
1\ut
this
was
a
consider~ble
system.
It was all supposed to be
·mercia! operations dating back to
problem
because
the
winds
and
hounty:
_
capttal
value from th~ havelhe time of the legendary Hernan
currents
were
westerly,
and
Philip
not
naltons,
to
the ncb nattons of
Cortes. On reading Mrs. Simpson's
II
himself
was
summoned
to
break
yore.
speech one remarks sadly that not w
It is nowadays supposed to go the
very much is new, 400 years after the impasse. He did it by rousing a
retired
mariner
from
a
monastery
.
other
way . around. The talk on
the discovery of Mexico; although
·
·
television reflects the talk of the
United Nations. It is talk about the
"debt" that the developed countries
. , _ __1
have to the undeveloped countries.
As regards Sain vis-a-vis Mexico, it
l
111 Coort Street
isn't
hard to make such a historical
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-tn-% ~
claim, the trouble with historical
DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
ctaims being that they end up sounding like American Indians who
want to buy Manhattan for $24.
~lb
As a practical matter, nations are
~m~ r""'r"L... -r- 1~d·~
not given to extravagant, sustained
~v
..
"This is what the American Congress
The
United
States,
af·
philanthropy.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
buy 300,000 of them from Detroit_
."
~ ter the Second World War,- came
Publi sher

crete." That means that IIIey want
- money. What they ' - ' is
avalliible in a lew books - of which
the library at MIT is merely a ~
jugation. And thoee who wllh tbe undeveloped nati111111 well~ pause
to remind themaelvea that the
pirates, buccaneera and privateen
of yesteryear have llt'tlve counterparts in the 20th century, the dlf.
ferent being that In 0.. daya the
predatoro defied the government,
wbereas oowadays, IIIey are, in
most cases. the govenunent Itself.

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

B~~:2,~~;:;H

1

' ,:_·

-News Edllor
A MEMBER of The Associated Press. luland Daily Pre11s Association and the
American New!lpaper Publishers Anorlatlon.

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be less than 300 word11 loag. All
leUen are subj~t to editing and must be signed with ume, address and telephoae hUmber. No urudgnfd leUers will be publl&amp;lted. LetterR &amp;hould be in good taslt:, addre11~ing
lllliues, nol personalities.

Letter to the editor
Candidate speaks

Let's keep clinic

As a candidate for Middleport
I am writing in regard to the
Village Council, I would appreciate
Meigs
County Tuberculosis Clinic. I
the opportunity to air these otr
want
to
express my thanks for the
servations.
wonderful
services that I received
As a young man, I was forced to
this
past
year
and the warm responleave Middleport in order to support
se
I
received
on
the phone when they
my family. Jobs were more scarce
would
call
to
see
if I had enough
then than now. The ensuing 30 years
medicine
or
lime
for
my blood-test.
have seen the power plants move into the area, the coal mines become
organized and enlarged, many new
And now that I no longer need the
corporations move into the valley medical treatment, I would. cer·
and a general upturn in the local tainly like to take the opportumty tu
economy.
...say to all the people of Meigs County
I am impressed with the way or to anyone ~ho llllght .some day
Pomeroy Gallipolis and Point need the servtces of thts fme toPleasant' have res~nded to and stitution, that we should keep the
grown with this economic potential. Me•gs County Tuberculosis Chmc m
I wish I could say the same for Mid· our area. - Faith Hayman.
dleport. When I left, there were.two
movie theaters, two taxicab companies, a bakery. a sknting rink, and
four restaurants.
Upon my return last year, I found
On November 3, Meigs County
a ghost town; the afore-mentioned citizens will be asked to renew a twobusinesses are gone, and in the past tenths of a· mill levy for mental
year I've seen five more small health services. Although the word
business concerns fold or·move from renewal does not appear on the
our village. I'm persuaded that this ballot, this is a renewal levy.
This is the !irst lime the Galliaregressive trend can be reversed.
But only if the Village leadership Jackson-Meigs Mental Health Board
wants it to he reversed. The has exercised its right as a taxing
operation of a village must be authority. The wording "an adpredicated upon sound business ditional tax" is standard legal wording for any levy placed on the ballot
practices.
Like it or not, it is a business and by a taxing authority. But, in this in·
will succeed or fail by the same stance, it is misleading. This will
criterion that dictates success or NOT .-nslltute an additional tax.
failure of the local merchants. We The two-tenths mill levy is the same
need to promote Middleport. We amount that has been in effect for
need to create an atmosphere con· the past ten years.
ducive to growth; to provide the
necessary incentives for keeping our
Your yes vote )¥ill not increase
youth happy and secure right here in your taxes, but show a vote of con·
Middleport. We need to put Mid· lidence for your -Mental Health
dleport back on the map. - Robert Clinic in Meigs County. - John C.
Gilmore.
Rice.

Confidence vote

Today in l,.istory
Today is· Wednesday, Oct. 28, the 30lst day of 1981. There are 64 days
left in the year.
.
In 1866, the Stadie of Uberlf was dedicated in New York City harhor.
In 1922, !lenito Mussolini marched on Rome.
And in 1977, the U.N. General Allaembly censured Israel for
establlshlng settlements in oo:upied Arab territories, calling the action
illegal and damaging to peace efforbj.
.
· Ten years ago: By a three-vote margln, the Senate rejected a propctoed
measure that said the president could not uae lunda in Indochina acept to
withdraw all American forces.
Five years ago: President Ford approved the sale to China of a computer gystem capable ot mllltary u well aa lndustrlal uses.
One year ago: An Auoclated Pm&amp;-NBC poD said Americans' growing
anUelpllloa that Inn would free the U.S 11C11taps had not raised public
opinion ot Prelldent Carter's handllnll f1l the crlala.
Today's birthday~: Jonaa Silk, the inventor ot lhe Silk vaccine against
poUo, is trl. 'Placll: 111at Jim BeaUy is 47. Bueblll Comml.;aioner Bowie
Kuhn is 17. And Britlah-born actress Ella Lanchester is 79.'

finally agreed on... And you mus_t

These are the days that ·try souls •• ~

.,

'

NEW YORK (AP) - These are the
days that try supply-sider souls,
testing whether they have courage
sufficient to stay the course in the
face of terrible economic news.
These are days also that could
provide millions of Americans with
an Indelible lesson - that the
economic future isn't always a siJn..
ple projection of the present,
because great changes may be un.derway.
Supply-siding is a long-term
theory in which money is steered intil investments that make the
production side of the economy more
efficient - so efficient, it is said.

that the bounty can be shared by all.
In the short term, however, It has
at least one undeniable consumer
consequence: It means tougher
times, times such as these, when
mndest atiempts to buy cars and
houses and good vacations are
fru!llrated. (
In the short term It also means
political problems, such as those
President Reagan may soon be en·
countering from automobile
workers, homemakers and others
who feel they are getting a bad deal
from the administration.
And so it is a time, therefore, when
political realities may intrude on

economic convictions. A time when liaveinsiSht iirto the future. It is ll1SO
the most convinced supply-siders the biggest advisory service, having
may, in the forest of details, lose won that status over 50 years.
courage in reaching the goo!.
In the midst of the wont JllldIt is in this setting that a forecast October car sales period in 23 y~
of boom for automakers produces a (lr&lt;IIl Oct. 11 to Oct. :Ill), during
feeling of disbelief. But there it is, an which sales fell to a 5.1 million uhit
announcement from Value Line, the annUIII rate, the advisory serYtse
biggest investment adviSor of all, talks about 12 million units by 1914,
that its analysts expect the U.s. auto
Between then and 19116, It declares,
Industry, which lost nearly $4 billion General Motors stock, now senihg
last year, to earn $3.6 million next
around '$40 a share, coqld sell fljjn
year, and nearly double that in the between $145 to $175. Ford, now iJn.
years 1984-1986.
· der $:Ill a share, might reach $81i·to
Value Line makes mistakes, $00. Chrysler, under $5, could reach
although probably far fewer than the $16, and American Motors, now ltngreat majority of those who claim to der $3, could·reacb $12.

Housing industry very disillusioned
NEW YORK (AP) - Faced with
perhaps its biggest challenge ever,
larger even than the job of housing
new families fonned after World
War II, the American housing in·
dustry is disillusioned and
weakened.
-Unless matters change, it seems
unlikely it will he able to supply
Americans with affordable, commodious homes in the style to which
they had become accustomed during

much of the past three decades.
At today's 17.5 percent mortgage
interest rate, the payment on a
modest $00,000 mortgage loan is $880
a month, almost double the payment
of two years ago. It requires an annual income of almost$40,000.
That means "virtually no first·
time buyers qualify," said Herman
Smith, National Association of
Home Builders president. U interest
rates don't come down, he said, 110Ur

Kuhn ordered the game caUed off at daf'a....t to.Hootlln and Jcilli and to
about 4 p.m. EST Tuelday. "No the oppoolng third buemen, both of
player or manager ilkM to hang whom were douiJUu1 starters for the
around and walt. But unforlwlateiy, game ~Y night. The Yankees'
we have no C\llllrOI over the Gralg Nettles millaed all three
weather."
g8mes in !A Angelea with a
Bill Murray, Kuhn's ad· oprainedleftthumbandRonCeyof
mlniatrator, and umpires Dick Stello the Dodgers was recovering from a
and Larry Barnett spent the day un; frightening beaning after being hit
der leaden lkiea at Yankee Stadium, in the hliad by a Goo8e ~ge fastinspecting the soaked lleld.
ball in the eighth inning ot Sunday's
"There waa a poor forecast wil)l flflbgame.
Ughl rain at the stadium this af.
"I've seen replays·of !land lipce I
temoon and no poulbllity of playing krtowthe outcome, Hell better about
thekindofgameyouwouldallliketo seeing them," said Cey. "Ifeel ex·
see," said Commlasioner Kuhn. · tremely fortunate to be standil)g
chers.
"The wet field conditiona were not here.'!
·
·
John beat Hooton 1&gt;-3 in Game 2 of getting any better because of the
But Cey still wasn't sure be could
the Series, the last contest the perststentfog and high hwnldity .''
play.
Yankees woo. Los Angeles has taken - So, the cOmmiaslo~r ordered the
"I felt good this morning and I waa
the next three in the best-of-sevent postponement, the . 2Sth in World optimistic about playing, but this afSeries and is anllous to nail down its Series history and the first since 1979 temoon changed my mind," be said
first world championahip since 1985. when the opener between the "There was some dlzzlness .and
Lasorda wasn't thrilled about being • Baltimore Orioles and Pittsburgh lightheadednes8. 1 was not in good
pisced oa hold for 24 hours at this Pli'ateli waa a caaualty of snow. It shape."
.
point. j
· means the longest season in baseball Cey W\llwork out before tonight's
. ''II does disappoint me," said historywillgoatleastonedaymore. game and then decide oo his
Lasorda 8fter Commissioner Bowie
The rainout afforded · an extra avallablllty. . .
NEW YORK (AP).- II rained on
Tommy Luorda'a World Seriea
parade, and now the Los Angeles
Dodger ,manager will lry again
tonight to nall down the championship which has · eluded the Californlateamforl6years.
Day-long showers, fog and wet
grounds forced postponement
1uesday of the sixth game of the 1!181 Series ~ween the Dodgers and the
New York Yankees. That dela;ved ~
the conf,-ontatioo between former ·
roonunatea Burt HoOOHI ot the
Dodgers and Tommy John ot the
Yankees, the scheduled starting pit·

concl~de

"I haw· my 11p1 and downs," be
said. "I'm told tbat is a normal"""
perlence. U it pen11ts oo a periodic
l:.ula, I'm not allowed to take the
field. U I caa'tiiUsllln myaelf in a
workout,I'mnotgollletoenclanl!er
myselfplaylng.Tbedoctorll!ldmeif
there's ont·lota of doubt you can't do
it, doo'l It's your life and that's
more important than one game."
Cey remembered the beaning
"It's pretty difficult to get out ot
the way ot a ball that takes off and
that's going IK miles per hour," be
said. "Whenl decldedltwastimeto
get out of the way, the ball followed
lllllllke a magnet.
"I rememlier hitting the ground in
slow motion. ltfelt like slow motion.
I don't remember a lot but I do
remember saying, 'Am I all right?
What do I look lilie?' Everything was
blurry.''
·
Lasorda recalled the horror of the
moment.
"I can .remember saying, 'Oh,
God, No!"' the Dodger manager
said. "To see a guy hit with a pitch
thrown that hard scared me to

perfect -season

death. 'lbat bell was thrown p hard
88 8 human being can thrown a
bueball."
G&lt;uage and Yanl&lt;ee Manager
Bob Lemon both visited Cey in the
tralner'sroomandweregratefulthe
Dodger third baseman seell)ed in
good shape.
Lemon hoped John could force the
Series to a deciBlve seventh game.
Asked for a probable pltche~ lor thai
one, Lemon grinned, "I got rune pit·
chers," he said, "and you nught see
allot them 1n a seventh game."

Tbe manager

said George stein-"

brenner's elevator epilode, frml
which the Yankee owner trnerl~ ..
with a cast oo his l'!ft band, bad
.lOOIIelled up hia team.
·
"He took a lot of~ ani!;
abuseontheplaneride~, ~

moo said. "An&lt;! be handled it weU.
Lemon smiled wben someone
asked wbether the owner' a adventure would affect. the play of hla ·
team.
"If we win, you know that will be
the reason," he said.
·

,....;;====--..::.--------------~

..

.RENEWAL
TUBERCULOSIS LEVY

Meigs County provided 11,509 services
last year to help keep tuberclosis under
control.
There were 28 active cases treated in
Meigs County.
There is an annual case load of 408
persons seen in the clinic. As of July 1,
1981, there are 46 patients on preventive
medication.

The Southern Tornadoettes NorthGallia winnerat12noonfora Creek plays Eastern at 1:30 p.m. will meet at 5:30 for the second spot
Paid tor by Concerned Citizens
.volleyball squad ended.their regular trip to the district.
and Miller goes against Federal in the district. Admission price for
and
adults
is
U.50.
students
season with a non-leagne win over
In other sectional nuitchea Kyger Hocking at 3 p.m. These two winners
t)lehostVintonCountyVildngsMon· ....~.:::.:..:.:.:.::_ _ _ _...:._:_ _ __:_;___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~------1----...:...-------'------'-----..:.~
day evening.
Southern's varsity finished the
year wil\1 a perfect 22-0 record
overall and reigned aa the SVAC
champs with a~ mark .
In the first game the Tornadoettes
went allead 5-3, with four poin_ts ser·
ved by Cindy Evans. Laren Wolle in·
creased the winners' lead to 7-4, but
Vinton came back to within one point
at 7-fi on two points by Michelle
LeMaster.
These were lbe Vikings' final poin·
Is of the first game as the Tor·
nadoettes went on to win 1~. Mel .
Weese added the game-winning
lnarglh for the whmers.
The second game was much closer
a8 the lead changed hands several
times. After the score was tied at 1·1,
•
Cindy Evans put Southern ahead 4-1.
Vinton went ahead 5-4 on two poin·
ts each by Michelle McKibben at:td
u.s Woods. Southern regained the
lead at 6-5 on two serves by Mic.belle
Jolutson.
Vinton's first server, Lorie Castor,
put the vikings back on top 7-G
before Mel Weese gave her club the
one point advantage. Regina Wells
put VC in ~root with six serves to
BANK ONE can now offer ttle new Tax Free All-Savers
give the hosts a convincing J3.3lead,
Certificate that will earn t8x free Interest* with a minimum of
Following, a lime-out, Southero
only $500 and 1 one-year maturity. The program provides
came back strong to take the lead at
Individuals up to $1,000 and thole filing a joint rekm up to
14-13 on six ilervlng points by Cindy
·If you have nioney in a money market lund you should probably
$2,000
In tax free ililerelt. Saver&amp; have rever had this
Evans. .
shift at least a portion of your investment to a Tax Free All-Savers
opportunity before. OUr 1WW Tax FIW All-Savers Cetrtltiflli&lt;ICI.....,te
VC lOst its next serve arid Unda
Certificate
at BANK ONE, since your interest will be tax free, rather
· could give you the hlg'-1 after-tax yield you've ever earned,
O'Brien served the winning point to
!han taxable. The rate is fixed for a lull year. and insured by
make the "final,1(;.13.
and It's insured by an agency of the federal government
an agency of the federal govemmenl. If you have a maturing
Southern was led in serving by
Cindy Evans with 13 points and Mel
six-month money market certificate at a savings and loan or
Weese with 11. Regina Wells led the
other financial institution; bring !he funds to BANK O!'JE to
Vikings with seven.
lake advantage of our Tax Free All-Savers Certificate.
The SHS reserves finished their
season on a wiMing nOte with a 11&gt;-8,
15-12 win over the Viking reserve
squad. The young Whirlwinds were
led in serving by Karen Hemsley
with 12 and "Tina Hill with eight.
Because.interest you're now earning on other savings is taxable,
Jamie Miller led the Vikings with
If you eam taxable interest on any savings or inveslments you will
eight. The feS!!rves closed out a sucyou would have to earn much higher rates on those saiiiiiQS to
likely benefit from the AU-Savers program, because the interest is
cessful1().1 campaign.
better the net interest you wiN earn from an All-Savers Certificate.
tax free. Stop by any BANK ONE office and we will help you
Southern now prepares for the
For instance, your tax rate is 22"/o, you would need to earn '
delennine
if All-Savers is for you.
Clsss A sectional tournament at
15.56% annual interest to better the All-Savers net interest:• The
Nelsonville-York High School on
·Ta~t !rae means tree !rom Federal &amp;nd Ohio Slate Income Tax .
higher your tax bracket, the more interest you would have to _earn
.. Based on an All-Savers rat e ot 12 14%.
Saturday, Oct 31. Soulhern'will play
There is a substantial Interest penalty lor ea rly withdrawal.
on an altemative investment. The chart below will be helpful in
Trimble at 10:30 a.m. The wiMer ot
delennining
aHemative
rates
that
would
have
to
be
earned
to
·. this match will olav the Crook•vm~

members will break with any elec- such conditions, · contends Jack
ted official who doesn't cooperate in Carlson, executive vice president of
trying to get them down."
the National Association of Realtors.
Homebuilding appears to have left "It's a smoldering issue. It could be
the mass market for the luxury a bomb."
'market, sail Robert McNeil, chair·
man, and Allen Cymrot, president of
The housing situation has vast imRobert McNeil Corp., a large West plications for social, economic,
Coast housing finn.
. political and busidess goals and
The seeds of a populist move111ent, customs.
centered on the Idea of the home
family castle, could germinate from

as'a.

this far almost solely as a result of
the will of Sadat. And they doubt that
Mubarak's government will be the
one-man operation that Sadat's was.
Neverlhel..., Mubarak is seen as
the key to the new peace equation.
The former head of the Egyptian air
force is viewed in Israel as a
follower of few deep convictions.
The Israelis suggest that he will be
much more susceptible to political
pressure - most of which will be
urging him to abandon Camp David.
The Israelis think that it will take
time - probably a year or so - to
II8SeiiS the strength and intentions of
the new Egyptian government. But
time is one thing that they lack with
the April 28 return of the Sinei
quickly approaching.
What the Israelis fear mOll! is that
the Egyptians will continue to say all
the right things and to Uve up to
Camp David only unW they have the
Sinal back. Afterward, the Israelis
say, the Egyptian~ may abrogate
the agreement, Jll!rh!lps uain8 u an
em11e the ~ck !If a 'lina! .--ltiion

EARN

......--... •.

You can

Hard choices for lsrae.l. . .-_ ___&amp;_b__,_w._Bgmiii(
__-_,_·
WASHINGTON (NEA) - As the · of our leader and our constitution,
Israelis contemplate the completion we will abide by all treaties and
conunitmen~ made," said Hosni
of the Camp David peace process
without its principal architect, their Mubarak, the Egyptian vice
foremost question is whether they president, when be went on
signed a treaty with Egypt or simply television to announce the death of
Sadat.
with Anwar Sadat.
"As President Sadat would have
The 1979 Camp David agreement
is entering its final and most crucial wished, it (the peace process) will
phase. Next April the Israelis are continue despite the efforts of the
scheduled to turn over to Egypt the enemies of peace," echoed
portions of the Sinai Peninsula that Menachem Begin, the Israel! prime
lbey have occupied since the 1967 Six
minillter.
But others in Israel are expressing
Day War. The land to be returned includes air bases and producing oil a lot lellB optimism and a lot more
caution. As former Foreign Minister
wells.
In exchange, the Israelis are to Moshe Dayan noted, "The
get what they have wanted so badly: assassination put a very big question
the complete nonnalization of mark about the continuation ot the
relatlona with Egypt. But Sadat's peace process.''
The Israelis know that the new
death will force them to face some
Egyptian
government under
hard deciBlons.
Mubarak
will
be under tremendous
In the hours immedla tely
pr
...
ure
both
from within Egypt
following'the assassination, leaders
and
!lUll
other
Middle Eaatem
in both Israel and Efl)'pt said the kinds rl. tblnp that could be expected states - to abandoo Israel and
rejoin the Arab fold. Tiley 1mow that
Wldertbe~
"In the name ot the spirit and soul the peaee process has ptq~nued

The Daily Senlinei-Page-3

AT

L._

Aulstant PubllsberiContrnller

Ohio

· Rain delays sixth game ·o f World Series ,

Tornadoettes

The Daily Sentinel _

PAT WHITEHEAD

Pomeroy-~lddleport,

of the · ' 1Palestlnian auestion" ·......, '
'!lie·~. . '-'• - .
This ·poses a dllenuna for ·the
Israelis. They will seem to ·be
backing down if they try to delay the
final steps of the Camp David
cord. This could lead to the~
unraveling ot II¥! peace pn~Ce~~J. 1
But if they go ahead before being
8SSJ1red of the long-range intentions
and survivability of the Muberak
government, they may end up
relinquishing the Staal and getting
little or nothing in retum.

ac-

Thua, Begin Will be under almost
as much PIUSW'8 aa Mubarak in the
months ahead. Most of Israel's
ultra-traditionalist Part1ea view the
Camp David agreement with
suspicion and will use the
••••nation to try to halt IIIIi peace
proceu. Gi~en the fraUty ot Begin's
majority In the Kneuet, this
pi
II"! will be hard for the prime
miDlster to withstand now that be
does not have Sadat to fill back

from an

AII·Saven program
the tu rate on r.:r .

yo_u are~~~~ tams on any
Interest 1n a savings plan.

.

n

better !he All-Savers interest.

Lebanon results
LEBANON, Ohio (AP)- Frisky
Coffee led aU the way and hung on to ,
win the $1,oo0 featured claiming ,
pace mile rue$day night in a photo '
finish at Lebanon.
The winner paid $16.80, $8.40 and
f4.3l. Flying Kelly T linlahed a close
second to return $4.10 and $3.80. .

a six-111011th
CD.

If you have a BANK ONE six-month SuperT
,
certificate of DepOSit, you can mosllikely convert · ·
your investment to a BANK ONE Tax Free All-savers
Certificate without any iriterest oena!ty. You can earn ·
!aX free rather than taxable interest on yot,Jr
Investment. Bring your Certificate to any BANK
ONE Olfice and we willlnmediately oonvert ~ to
.!he Tax.Free AI~Savers Program. ·
~
IF YOU ARE A MARRIED TAXPAYER
FILING A JOINT RETURN:
The
muat urn
To-

awKW11i M117WIA ON UTA SUW
AU. KA13 JW1 I 1.10
AOMJ SON!ftiWT'LIIESEMflf.IO

r:::r

1/ru THIIIISDAY I

~lOBER

:1

23thru ~

I

r:-.e.u

-t

·TI•
"':'Ct

$16,01J0.20.200

22%

15.5e%

$29.1100-35,200

. 33%

18.12%

seo.ooo-as.soo

49%

23.110%

on 1 I

''

'

lnVHtm.nt

,,

upon.

J

BANK ONE,M -- ®

Wblnua you think .
of s.wii111110111Y. our name

comcsupflnt.

Member FDIC
•

'
·;

'

•

J

i

. r,

r'
:'
·'

�WednesdaY, October 21, 1911

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

The Daily Sentinet-Page--5

Miami will upset Penn State--Hoople
By Majcw Amot B. Hoeple
Peer!- ProcUeter
Egad, friends, thla weell's card Ia
being played oo HaUoween. And the
Hobgoblins, those mischievous
sprites who cavort on their special
day, are going to - beh-heh - do
some "TrickorTreat"·lng.
The first Inkling we'll get of their
mystery spell will be In sunny Miami
where the home' team Hurricanea
jolt the favored Penn State Nittany
Lions. Um-kwnph! Yaa, dear
readen, Howard SclmeUenberger's
Miami lads will prove their right to
move up In the ranldngs with an impressive 24-20 win over Joe Paler·
no's classy aggregation.
Just to prove they are not partial
to any section of the country, the
Hobgoblins will flit out to SeatUe to
help the invading Stanford Cardinals
In their batUe with Waahlngton's
Huskies. And then to College Station
Texas, where the Texas AlcM Aggies'
host the Mustangs of Southern
Methodist.
·
·
·
In a pair of shockers, the Stanford
eleven, living up to their pre-eeaaon
promise, will surprise the Huskies
as they wln a high-scoring fray, :J&amp;.
28. And the hard'hitUac Aggies will
upsetSMU, 21).22. Har-rwnph!
Hopscotchlng around the country,
here is how we are calltng some of
the other very important Halloween
matchups this Saturday :
Hayden Fry's Iowa club, the sur·
prise of the Big Ten, will continue its
drive for its. first Rose Bowl appesrance since 1959 as it outscores a
good Dlinola team. It will be Iowa 33,
Dlinois 2'1.
other Big Ten contests will go
.

. ROOKIE ACE DOF.'!N'T COME CHEAP - Rookie Los . ADCeles
DOOger plrehfng sensation Fernaodo Valeuzuela, sealed, and his
agent/manager Antonlo De Marco relax in New York Tuesday after lhe
siiih World Series game was postponed due to rain. Reporta are lhal
Valenzuela will hank close to$2 mliUon Ibis year on endorsements, pobUc
appearances and commercial Ue-ius. (AP Laserphoto).

,

Sullivan

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grllluley
AP Correspondent

NEW YORK (AP) - Would you
like to talk business with Fernando
Valenzllela, the fat kid who pitches
for baseball's Los Angeles Dodgers?
Okay, bring along a Spanish in·
terpreter and a fat checkbook.
Especially the checkbook.
"Fernando doesn't come cheap,"
says Antonio DeMarco of Los
Angeles, the Mexican-born TV and
public relations executive who is
guiding the yoonpter'a busineaa af-

fairs.
"Our base scale for endorsements
is $50,000. Some of our agreements
are in the six-figure range. If charity
,, is 'involved, that's different. It's
free."
Reports are that Fernando will
bank close to $2 million this year -'his rookie year with the Dodgers on

endorsements,

public

ap-

pearances and conunercial tie-ins.
"That may be a little high, but it's
close/' says DeMarco. "We are very
cautious with the corrunitments we
make . They are carefully
scrutinized, made generaUy on a
long-tenn basis. Our purpose is to
see that this young man is not overly
, exploited."

Fernando, a chubby peasant from
the remote Mexican province of
Sonora, is perhapa the .most exciting
pitching personality since raw·
boned Bob Feller came out of Van
Meter, Iowa, at age 18 in 1936 to daz·
zle batters with his blazing fast ball.
The game has produced its Vida
Blues, Tom Seavers, Mark
Fidryches and Jim Palmers but
none - with the possible exception
of Fidrych, a one-year wonder
whose weird mannerisms tickled a
nation's funnybone - has been such
an instantaneous attraction.

Fernando, nickmimed "El Toro"
("The Bull"), won't be 21 until next
Sunday. He is a most implausible
athlete - 5 feet, 11 inches with the
bulk his 180 poWids rolled around his
midsection. He has a round baby
face with pimples and throws a
screwball that completely mystifies
batters.
"Can you imagine a guy as young
as that who has mastered ·the

CINCINNATI (AP) - Coach
Forrest Gregg is warning the Cin·
cinoati Bengals it is time to stop
crying in their beer over the upset
loss to the New Orleans Saints and
get ready for a very tough second
half National Footboll League
season.
The Bengals, 5-3, are tied with the
Pittsburgh Steelers for the Central
Division lead in the American Foot•
ball Conference. '
"We've got another game against
the Houston Oilers Sunday," said
Gregg, who watched the Steelers
·· beat the Oilers on Monday night
television. The Oilers beat the
Bengals In their first meeting at
Houston.
The Cincinnati Bengals disclosed
,. Tilesdsy that only 200 tickets
remaiped for Sunday's game here.
They must be sold by Friday for the
game to be televised locally.
."Most of the tickets are singles,"
said the Bengals' four-line
statement.
Gregg said quarterback Ken An- .
derson, who was knocked out during
·· the New Orlaans game, is ellpeeled ·
to be ready for Houston.
"Kenny's aU tight," said Gregg.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Gerry
Sullivan's usual National Football
League role is to wait in the wings on
the Cleveland Browns' bench. Sunday his role will he much more vital.
The &amp;-foot~. Bpound Sullivan
will start at center in place of injured Tom DeLeone, when the
. go to Buffa] o to take on the
Browns
Bills. .

1~8.

"He's got a little headache but he'll
be all right."
. Several, Bengals were hanged up
m Sundays contest. Receiver David
Verser suffered a strained knee and
end Dan Ross has a sore foot.
Receiver Isaac Curtis suffered a
broken' bone in his little finger and
offensive guard Anthony. Munoz had
a strained chest muscle.
Free safety Mike Fuller reinjured
a hamstring muscle. However none
of the injuries are e&lt;peeted ..; keep
them out of Sunday's game.
·
Cincinnati's remaining NFL
games are aU with teams with at
least .500 records. They include
Houston, San Diego, los Angeles,
Denver, Cleveland, San Francisco
Pittsburgh and Atlanta.
'
One final word on SWJday's loss to
New Orleans came · from wide
receiver-punter Pat Mcinally ·who
denied the Bengals were upaet.'
"If we did anything It waa overplaying. Everybody - the coaches
the players, everybody - w~
telling us to watcb out for a letdown.
"I think were heard It so many
times we started to believe were
were going to have one and we did "
Mdnally said.
'

u-•

1...,•

Cornhulllten '""l'"'"i the K8MU Mlmpllll 51. 21 V..dsrtiUI14
Milml IF II.) 24 P - Sl. 21
Jayhawb, Sl-25, in I real thrllllr.
Miclllgln II MlouieHII II
Tbe rat of the Big Eight looks this Miclllt•• st. u 1not110111
Mluour121 01118....,.• St. 6
way to the Hoople lorecaating team:
_,lnl 20 MMta,.. Sl. 10
the atrong Mlllourl 'ngen 21,
Ntllrllk131 Ka ....IU • ,
• "Oklilhoma "St.Bte a; 1m State 421 · N. c:•retln• u ·Maryilnll17
Kansas stale 20; and Oklahoma 35,
ilotrt Dame Jl NIJY 16 •
Oldllloml J5 C:olorldo 14
Colorado 14.
PIH35 Boston Coli... 21
The Southwest loop this week
Princeton 2l Pennsylvlnll 14
featured mighty Tesas vs; TeUil
Purdue 21 Olllo Sfltel4
51nDIIIOSt.JSUtah27
·
Tecl1- with the Longhorns notddng
5041lhln1 Col30 Wll"""""' St. 21
a 31H3 vlctol'y. Also In the SWC,
s. corollno J7 N. Clrelllll St. 14
Arkansaa will tate "Rice, lt-10; and
5. Misslsslppl21 N. TIXII St. 7
Sllnford :U Wlllll ...... 21
HOUflon will defeat TCU, 21-15.
syrocuse 21 Colli II 21
Southem Califomla'a Trojans will
Ttxosll Texas Tech IJ
snbdue Washington State; 31).28, in a
Toledo 15 Mllml (Ohlll IJ
'
UCJ,.A26ar-U
pretty much to form aa Wlconsin v~ry important Pac-10 couft 011t.ltioo
Uilh
St.
11
Frnno
St.
15
whlle
Califomla
wins
a
close
dumps Northwestern, 41·14·
VMI32 Vlrtlnil 16 ·
Michigan edges Mlnneaota, 31·28; decision over Oregon State, 21·20,
w. Mlchlgln 26 N. Illinois 6
w. Vlrtlni12910. Coroll.. 24
Purdue pulls a mild IIDI'prise by tur· and UCLA doublea the score on
Wichita St. 24.Illinois St. 12
nlng back Ohio State, 211-24; and oregon, 211-13.
Wisconsin 42 Nortllwostorn 14
On the independent front, I!D'ee of
Michigan State trtwnpha over Jn..
Wm. 1nd Miry 37 Jamll Medlson
the· top 20 teams: Pittsburgh, 14
diana, 211-13.
Wyoming 34 Colorodo 51. 10
Looking to the South, the Florida State and Georgia - will
Vole Jl Dlrtmouth 21
powerhouses representing North continue their winning ways with
FridiY'S Hlgtl School Games
Carolina and Clemson In the Atlsntic fairly eaay victories.
Eastem 15 Nortll Gollll14
Your- ahem- Peerless PredicSOUIIIwtstem 23 Southern 6
Coast Conference will acore eaay
Kyger CrHk I H•n1111n Trace 7
wins. We see North Carolina top- tor sees Pitt a 36-21 winner over
Walllmo 22 Buf11lo-Pulnom I
pling Maryland, 35-17, and Clemson Boston College, Florida State having
Athlns24 Waverly 11
boving no problem with Wake an eaay time with Western Carolina,
II'OfltonSSL-n 19 ·
Meigs 22Jacksan 14
Forest as it wins handily, a&amp;-7. Kaff. 38-13; and Georgia taking Temple,
O.llpoills 22 Wellston I
35-14.
kafl!
LotiO 33 Pt. Pleaunl 14
In the Western Athletic ConDeeper In the South, Alabama will
Coal Grove 22 Rock Hill 14
be out to setUe a score with ference, BYU will saU past New
MlasissiiJpi State, which dealt the M~xiCll, 32-7; San Diego State will.-------~--Crimoon Tide a stunning IJ.3 defeat take a ha!'d-won decision over Utah,
last season. This week Bear 35-27;· and Wyoming will take the
Bryant's 'Barna Boys will get even meaaure of Colorado State, 34-10.
The Hoople nod goes to Idaho State
as .theY record a 17-io victory. In
other SEC clashes, Florida will to turn back Big Sky foe Idaho, 2'1·14,
...
and the. Montana· Grlzzlles to outscratch - heh-heh - the Montana
State Bobcats, 211-10. And )!olse State
will defeat Nevada-Reno, 3)-14. .
adjusbnents to make, and I've gotto
The VMI Keydets, meanwhlle, apwork on my techniques because I'll pesr to have two many guns for the
LeVIS
he playing against an All-Pro Virginin CavaUen and will win
n011etackle.
decisively, 32-16- har-nunph.
"But I don't took for any major
Now go on with my forecast:
problems. I can handle the job."
Coach Sam Rutigliano said that,
Army 21 Air·Force 14
based bn past p~rformances,
Alaboma17 Mississippi st. 10
Sullivan, a seven!b round droft
Arizona
Arkanus3519UTEP
Rice 6to
FlARES
choice out of Illinois in 1974, should Arkonsas St. 53 Texas· Arlington 13
be able to do weU the Browns' of·
Ball St. 14 E. Mlchigon 6
STRAIGHT LEG
fensive line.
Boise St. 3;1 Nevada·Reno14
luckMII21 Cornell14
"Naturally, Sullivan isn't as good
BYU 32 New Mexico 1
as DeLeone," Rutigliano said. . Callfamla 21 Oregon St. 20
"Sully is strong and competitive: Control Michigan 21 Ohio u 12
.J'm sure we won't fall off much with
~~~~!!'~~::•::~~~:;
· NOW
him in there.'·'
COMecticut 17 MaH.IchuseHs 15
Rutigliano recalled the two games Drake 24 Tulsa I
Also Student SiZe$
Sullivan started for the Browns In
~.~1J! :o.r.::.•r~~~h 11
1978.
Florldi-St. 31 Western taraflna '13
"Sillivan played right guard
Fullerton St. 17 Poclflc 1
21 Manhall6
againstNewOrleansandthenhadto Georgia
Furm•• 35
Templo14
take over at center against Los Grambling':It r ..u southern 20
Angeles later that season" Horvard24 Brown9
Rutiglisnosnld. "Heplayedwellan'd HolyCross35COiumblo7
Houston 21 TCU IS
we won both Kames."
Idaho st. 21 ldaho14

will start

DeLeone, an All-Pro last season
•.,
suffered a chip fracture on his left
ankle in last Sunday's 42-28 victory
over the Baltimore Colts, and
Sullivan filled in.
The Browns are hoping DeLeone
will be ready by a Nov. 29 game with
Cincinnati. Until then, il will be
Sullivan
snapping to Brian Sipe.
ISCI'eWball?" says· Dodger manage-.;:
The
Browns
are expected to sign a
Tom L.asorda. "Usually pitchers
temporary
fill·in
this week to back
. cultivate it late in their careers. This
up
Sullivan.
kid is amazing. I never saw a player
Sullivan has been the Browns'
.
with more poise."
regular
snapper on kicks, but the
Fernando won his first eight starts ·
last
time
he started a game was in
of the season, all complete games
with five shutouts and an earned run
average of 0.50. His rhythm was
Sunday, he will take on nosetackle
broken by the midsummer strike yet Fred Smerlas, who at 6-foot-3 and
he finished with a 13-7 mark and an 270 pounds is an All·Pro for Bnffalo.
ERAof2.48.
"I'm excited, I'm looking forward
Should ValellZuela win the clin· to starting against Buffalo,"
ching game for the Dodgers, he Sullivan said. "I know I've got some
would be a virtual cinch to win the
Series' Most Valuable Player •
Award, a prize which would add to
his value.
Fernando is a national nero in
Mexico and a Dodger idol whose
unique personality and remarkable
skill have made him more than a
sports figure.
Fernando has a one-year contract
for $50,000 which will be
NEW YORK (AP)- Bobby Unser
· renegotiated for 19112 with Dick will be back for another Indianapolis
Moss, the , well-known . player's 500, but car owner Roger Penske will
agent, representing Fernando at the team Rick Mean and newcomer
table.
Kevin Cogan for the bulk of the 1982
"We would like a single year con- Indy car racing season.
tract for 1982 and then see what's
ahead from there,'' said DeMarco.
Unser, a 47-year-old veteran and
Maybe $2 . million a year, as
winner of three Indy 50118, will spend
rwnoi"ed? Don't count it out.
most of his season acting as team
manager for youthful Mexican
driver Josele Garza.

.Gregg warns Bengals
to forget last week

I OWl UllllnoiU7

pnval1 over Auburn, :a.J7; and UIU
st. 42
St. •
Ktnt St. 25 -Illite,_ 10
will defeat Ml•" _.,., 21-SI.
24 Vl1'1111111 Toch 17
Tbe N~ cluh will . Ktntvcky
Lollltft15 DIVidlaolll
lqhlighl Big El3ltt I!Ctlvlty with the LSU 2'1 Mlllllll... 21 .

r----~r:====================================~==~;;~~:;~====~

Sunday lO.am-10 pm

.

'

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

PRICES GOOD lHRU OCTOBER 31, 1981
PlAYER OF WEEK- Meigs'
· Gary Nlkamoto, senlor on-lve
taclde aod defe111ive ead, ball
been . cllolen u tbe Meigs
Jaycees1 Player o( lhe Week.
Nllbmoto was honored lor h1a
,play-in last week's Ironton game.

Players of week

$}29

Ground Beef...... ;~·.. ,

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP)
Tailback Jay Pelei'son, whose
rilng helped lift Miami into sole
JlOOII"''mon of the teague lead, has
been named Offensive Player of the
Week In Mid-American Conference

fOillball ..

Peterson, a &gt;-foot-7, lll().pound
sophomore from Hopedale, Ohio,
scored four touchdowns and accounledfor 174 yards in eight' carries
in the Redskins' 41H4 romp over
Ohio University Saturday.
The victory gave Miami a 441
record In the Mid-American.
Defensive hack Shawn Simms, aIll, 2110-pound freshman from
Fremont, Ohio, earned the league's
weekly defensive laure'ls for his part
in Bowllni Green's ~ trtwnph
over Toledo, the previous league
lead~r.
·
Sinuns, making his first collegiate
start, intercepted three passes,
returnJac one for a touchdown. He
a1ao knjlcked down another pass and
was in on six tackles.
stllleof Ollll, Ot?lrtll'lelll o! lr~S~JIIfiCt, Ceftilltlte o!Complrlf'lte - The
~ : . - : :· Suptnntl!ndent ollm~~t.,ce oltlw St.te ol Oh.O, hr~tby

· " AITM CAMLTY •tu..-rr CG ol Ha111orll. S1m of Canlllttl, c;t~lJ\es'C:cllfljed Mtllltlt ....s of tllil Stilt tpplgble toil llld is ·~ ­
~

.

fiZ~ 11111111 till! amen! '~ ~ l!nnd iri lhrs stlta rls IPPJupnlb!
buml&amp;llf Nn~~~te. Its fiJIIICII.I t.llfldrtJan Is shDwn b1 Its aMu ..

.,, P,itmtnt lo hue been 115 lolkm on Dlttnlbet 31 1980: o\dmined

, lUlls. ti.SI9.S5765t.OO; lraWiW$, SS.297,56Z 719.00; SurpM,
U.J9Ut4.115.00: 11come. $3.471.060 222.00· EJpenditures.
m.'&amp;im~3. 00:_ Net mets. $1.22i.t9U15.00; Capital,

)~

IN-Wi)NESS .aRI', I hi~ ~rllo subo.tribed mr Nlme tnd
ciiiSid.. IIYHIIIObtlfflleclltCG~mbus, DIIWI.Ihr! ~,arw:ldale. R~rt
... l tclbd Jr., Supl. o!IIISI.I'""' tl OhiO. • ~
(Sel l ~~
I.
. •
~

1

'

I

..

.

$}59

Ground Chuck ... ~~· ..

$

FRESH PORK

Fryer Parts .........~;A

29

Butt Steaks ........ ~~..1

GRADE A

Wh.ole
"

·..

Chicken
Breast or

. $}! 9

Drumsticks.!~.

Recognizing

Unser will

Emotional

Eve..Yone

coach driver

Needs

Vote

FRESH

Y.s

Encourages

And ·

An lcklltlonal tu lor the benefit of. tho GalllaJackoon-Melgo Mentll Health Board lor the purpose
ol CURRENT OI'EFIATING EXPENSES lor aald Board
at a rote not IXMdlng twO:tantho (0.2) mill for each
one dollar (11.001 of vllu•Uon which amounla to two
cents (10.02) lor nch one hundrocl ($101l.ClO)doiiara of
valuation, lor llvo (5)
comrnen~lng 11182.

-·
-

FOil THE TAX LEVY

The decision by Unser, who has
been Penske's No.I driver for the
past three yeara, came several
weeks after a special U.S. Auto Club
appeal panel gave him back h1a third
Indy victory several weeki ago.
That foDowad a bitter legal bulle
during whil!b the Albaq~~~~q~~e
N.M., driver laid he wu
ql!ltUac driving completely.

ACJAINBT THE TAX LEVY

0

0

0

UP

Biscuits...........:::-.. 7

A Mljorllr Afflnt:clw Yell II tl1 c llllrJ For ........._

v-•

AND

PILLSBURY

IIENEWAL
PIIOI'OSED T~X LEVY
GALLIA.JACKSON·MEIQS
MENTAL HEALTH IOAA~

-

e

Pumpkins........... .

Weu betng
Lve

Penske, In New Yo'l-k Tueaday to
announce his raciDC plans for the
coming year, said Unser will drive
one of the new Penske PC-10 racen
at Indy and "possibly in selected
races" after that "based.... on his
conunilments to Garza Raciac.

I

Sunday

NEW YORK
ClDTHING HOUSE

STORE HOURS:
Mon.-Sit. 8 am-10 pm

0

ZESTA

5

·

1

.NU-MAIO

•

.

Marganne .......~; 2I

$}

Crackers............. ~l!·~
CARNATION
$ 09 ODE-IDA CRINKLE CUT FROZEN
.
12-l~L 1
.
M.
F
h
F
.
Hot Coca 11.• ~~... . . rene r1es..... :. ~.
'

0

Ctlllldderlni

3 0

Ull8el', wllo wu nat at the conference, wcm the race oo the
tnck 1aat ..., 24, but houri later
was penelilad a lap lor IUegal
~ ullek;r 1 caution flag.

OXYDOL
DETERGENT
'

25 LB.
BAG

171

Llmlt One Per Customer
GIIIICI c nly At.Jiowell's
Offtr Expires Oct. 31, 1911

oz.

ss99

Limit One Per customer·
Goad Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 31, 1981

GOLD MEDAL

CORONET

FLOUR

PAPER TOWELS

~~· 89~

JUMBO
ROLL

'

2/$}09

Limit One Per customer
Goad Only At Powell's
Offer
res Oct. 31, 1981

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires Oct. 31, 1981

,. '
.,.,
r

•

"

,
•

J

...

�•
I

Page-6-The Ciaily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 28, 1981

Porm!roy-Middleport, Ohio

SVAC championship g~me set.for this Friday night
An overflow crowd is expected
Friday night for the championship
game in the Southem Valley Athletic
Conference between two state rated
Qass A teams, North Gallis and
ElasWm.
According to Tuesday's AP
ratings, Eastern was ranked seven· ·

DATE: OCT. 26 .thru 30

14K Gold Bl'llceleta end Chll111
From 25"

•

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GE~ERAL AU.ERG.IST

Office Hours by Appointment Only

'

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

Thursday

. ~~r.:u:~gs:~~:,:~

in

TRICK OR TREAT night in
Chester will be held Thursday
from ap.m. to 7 p.m.
TRICK OR tREAT in Bashan
(Eagle Ridge), Keno, will be held
Thursday from 6:30p.m. to 7:30
p.m.
(I&lt;

-

Enterprise Methodist Youth meet
r

A Halloween party at the home of
their leader, Joyce Davis, was enjoyed by the . Enterprise United
Methodist Youth Saturday evening.

The youth had a pizza scavenger
hunt in the neighborhood which was
followed by pizza and son drinks at
the Davis home, through the

i~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll
Ch ~C k Th ese Spee Ia IS:

VERMEER· ROU ND BALERS

SAVE '998.00 .• 0 •1 ,270.00

One Day Sale Oct. 31, 1981
JIVIDEN FARM EQUIPMENT

Friday
614·446·1675
A ROUND AND SQUA&amp;E dan·
ce will be held Friday, 8 to 11 p.m.
at the Senior Citizens Center in
the multipurpose building on
Mulberry Heighta. The pubtic is
invited. Music will be provided by
the Stringdusters.

Must cut squad
RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) - .The
Cleveland Cavaliers have untn
Thursday at 6 p.m. to find a way to
reduce the rosier by two to the
National · Basketball Association
limit of 12, even thougn 13 of 14
players still in camp have guaran·
teed contracts.

.

992·2462

It's a fundamental marketing concept
that people with money .make better
customers than people without money.
The newspaper audience is upscale, so
adverti!!ing in .a newspaper reaches the
better prospects for any product.

.

POMEROY, OHIO

r

Saturday
A SHOOTING MATCH will be

On the average almost 70%. of all adults read a
newspaper on the average weekday. Tha*'s
almost 106,000,000 consumers.

•
•

held Satw'llay at Hannan Trace
High School from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. The event is sponsored by

the boosters association.

Is

But readership even higher among the well to·
do- those with higher incomes, more education,
beHer jobs.

Wood and ,Coal

generosity offriends and neighbors.
During the evening, a Bible quiz
and a Bible drill were conducted by
the leader, Bill Crane, with Art Hun-

BIG l·DAY SALE

-992-2342

on looks. But good looks aren't
the whole story when we talk
about Kero~S un Portable Heaters.
They keep fuel costs downno contest!
The Kero·Sun~ Radiant 10 is
the most popular radiant kero·

FREE DOOR PRIZES
$7,441
48.5 H.P.
4X4

$9,449

64. H.P.

$8,904
$10,799

PLUS FREIGHT
Plus M1ny MoN 8/Q S.v/ngt/

JIVIDEN FARM EQUIPMENT
Ingalls Road, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446·1675
I
Rt. 7 soulh of Galllp,olls. Turn right on Rt. 218, go 2111 miles
.to Ingalls Road.

,

sene heater in America. Rated at D•cauM you don f
9,600 BTUs per hour. U.L Usted. hav• mon•y fO bum.

PICKENS HARDWARE
W.Va.

•

I

ANNOUNCING
1 0% PRICE REBA YES

The Long line of affordable farm equipment is now even
more affordable during our " Big One·Day sale. You can save
up to 25% or more over our normally low prices .

4X4

It's obvious why we call this
See a demonstratioO today.
heater a Radiant lO.'M We think
the Kero-Sun'"' Radiant 10 is a" lO"

MIDDLEPORT

TRACTORS&amp; .
IMPLEMENTS

$5,124
24 H.t:'.
SS,SSI
4X4
$6,969
35 H.P.
$6,74;1'
41.94 H.P. $7,036
4X4
$9,194

cuffing hom• h•ating costs.

DOWNING-CHILDS
INSURANCE.AGENCY

OF-

24 H.P.

And It Wins top priz• in

115 N. 2nd AVE.

OPEN HOUSE

CHECK THESE SPECIALS:

This heat.r rates
a''10:'

nel and Darrin Warth being the winners.
Team captains for the scavenger
hunt were Art Hunnel, Valerie Sim·
pson, and Donia Crane. Others at·
tending were Joan Simpson, Chris
Davis, Amy Wartn, Jo Ellen Crane,
Danny Hall, Kristin King, Traci
Casto,andKevinKing.

AT YOUR

AMC•JEEP•RENAUI.T
DEALER
American Motors is giving rebates
dlrectly to you off the base sticker price
(optional equipment and fleet vehicles e&gt;:·
eluded) on 1981 and 1982 Concords, Eagles,
Jeeps CJs, Jeep Scrambler, ahd 1981 Renaults

ordered now thru Oct. 29. Get a check dlrectly
from American Motors or apply it to your downpayment. Either way, it makes these automobiles bigger values than ever.

RENAVLT 18i

EAGl.E

4·door Sedan &amp; Sportswagon

· ~136

.•·

2 &amp; 4'door Sedans &amp; Wag o ns

Vpto

37'" [M]6 "'.
HWY ~

f ST

.
3,.. "' ~3 "'
"'G
~

$1.001

"""

HWY

EST

Rellate

Rellate

Read a newspaper
yesterday

Burning Stove

Household Income $35,000 &amp; over
Own home valued at 575,000 or.·more
Own cl\111 municipal or state bonds
Country club members
Telephone credit card holders
·

t
t

!'

,.'
t

·2.900

•

VIDEO SEMINAR featuring
Kenneth Copeland Friday at 7
p.m. at Christian Fellowship of
BeUevers, Middleport. Topic is
tesching through the word of
faith of Bible College.

Gallipolis, Ohio
pi•Js many more BIG savings!

OCTOBER 31, 1981

FREE CLOTHING DAY for
low Income fam!Ues Friday from
· 9 a.m. until noon at old high
: school building in Cheshire. Spon·
· sored by Gallia-MeigS Com·
munity Action Agency.
PJ.ANNING SESSION for community day Friday at I :30 p.m. at
Forest Run United Methodist
Church by Meigs County Church
Women United.

-

rather tbaD wearlug a maall:. Here MarDyn Meler,lelt,
ud s-a llaker, right, PTO mothers, demoaslrlte
their lace palnUng talent using, Ito r, Becky Meier,
Ryan fl:aker and Robbie Baker. Tbe paint-a-face
project will be done at the elementary ~chool.

PAINT·A;FACE - Members of the MldciJepon
Elementary Sebool PTO wiD be painting faces lor
cblldren of tbe community from 4 to 8 p.m. Thursday
preceding trlcll or treat night wblcb beglas at 8:30 P·ID·
Cost to Clllilomen Is 50 cents a lace but PTO members
slreos tbe safety factor In bavina a face painted on .

FREE CUJTHING day at the
Salvation Army, 115 Butternut
Ave.; Porneroy, 10 a.m. untn noon

.CUSTOM PRINT SHOP

t
t

\

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

, TRICK OR TREAT NIGHT in
the village of Chester will be held
Thursday, Oct. 29, from 6 p.m. to
7p.m.

Receive 10% of Total Sales, 5% for 1st book·
ing and 8% for 2nd booking and a FREE T·
Shirt for each additional booking.

t

'

appreciate hearing from friends.

JOHN .A. WADE, M. D., INC.

WILDWOOD Garden Club,
,Wedneactay, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Evelyn Hollon with
May Holter as clio-hostess.

And receive a FREE T·Shirt and receive
10% Off in Merchandise on Sales. Contact Jo
Ann Newsome, 992·3382 or Cathie Wood,
949·2358.

-

r

re~.

HAVE AT-SHIRT PARTY!

'
'
'
''
,'

Marty Cline is In Room 508 at
Holzer Medical Center and would

OHIO VAlLEY CGmmandery
24 Wednesday, 7:30 p.m., at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple; of.
fleers, lake swords, belts and
chapeaux for full form opening

EACH EVENING AT 7:30
Sunday Se.rvices: Morning10:00, Evening 6:00
Evangelist: Paul Keller
Paragould, Ark;U!Sas.

..

Ho~itwa~Jizu£d~~-------------------

• ..
ANNUAL VISITATION
District Governor Leland E. Bur·
ba, Gahanna, when Pomeroy- ·
Middleport Lions Club meets at ,
noon Wednesday at Meigs Inn.

CHURCH OF CHRIST

"

The Oaily sentinei-Pag&amp;-7

•

Wednesday

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Toledo
city schools are conducting an ifi.

234MAIN

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.
.
OHIO V AILEY Commandery
24 will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Officers are to take their
swords, belts and chapeaux for
lull form opening rehearsal .

200WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

rebowided to whip Woodmore 29-12.
Passing - Jon Thomas has the
Washington Court House single'""""l'' -in&amp; record oil,203 yorda
with two games left. The old mark of
1,175 yards was set by Mark Heiny in
1976. Doug Rutan, Urbana, 14-of-17
for ,269 yards in a 35-7 romp over

••

Social
Calendar

th while North Gallis was In a 'four
way lie for 20th.
Coach John Blake's Pirates go Into
the contest with a 7,._1 record IJI.
eluding six straight shutoull. Coach
Arch Role's Eagles are~ having
disposed of such non-league foes as
Belpre. and Frontier jllus league opponents, Kyger Creek, Southwestern

By George Strode

only 26 points in six losses, then

...•

Wednesday, October 28, 1981

Ohio .
.Sportlight
vestigation into circumstances that
led to the. premature ending of the
Central Catholic at DeVilbiss high
school football game last week.
Officials stopped the game with
more than seven minutes to play for
what they called "a violent, inflammable situation." They awar·
ded a victory to visiting Central
Catholic, leadin~ 19:'1 at the time.
Referee Mike Yeager warned both
coaches to stop flagrant fouls and
called off the contest after the fouls
continued. A DeVilbiss assistant
coach was ejected, and eyewitnesses
said there were fistfights among the
competing players.
· "Disciptinary action .will be taken
at some level," said Hugh Caumar·
lin, superintendent of Toledo city
schools. A three-man committee a.,.
pointed by the city's Athletic Board
of Control is conducting the in·
vestigation, expected to be finished
by this weekend.
Around Ohio: Toronto discovered
a way to beai Cadiz: hold Cadiz'
Mike Brooks to fewer than 100 yards
rushing. Brooks settled for 83 yards.
Gates Mills Hawken snapped
Cleveland University School's 17·
game winning spell with a 26,21 vic·
tory. Chillicothe Huntington ended
its 18-game losing streak, 20-&lt;! again·
st Pikelon.
Massillon Tuslaw's current sevengame winning streak Is a school
record. Former Ohio State tackle
Jim Reichenbach coaches Tuslaw, 7·
I this season. Kansas Lakota scored

,,

'

•

WITH

I.

...

t

CONCORD

2 &amp; 4-door Sedans &amp; Wagons

V.]! to

$/96 .

HWY

.

,,..

..

[SJ

""'

'118 '" g

~~

•

'alliplt; lBaUu ltilmu ~

JEEP SCRAMBLER

V,P. to

$/59

Rell~te

28 '"

H)'W'f

ua """'.'.
£51

..

ES T

""'

.·
.·

.,... AMC IJeep.IRENAULTO

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP·RENAULT

.•'·

-

195 Upper River Rd.

Ph. 446-9800

...·

..

,,..

• With optlanel 5·~ to tick on J"p CJ •nd $(r•mblu,
Concord •nlit Eege.. Flgurtllrtfor c=om,..rlson. Your
mll&lt;uie mew- diN.r due to driving IJ)Hd, we•tMr conditions,
Mel trip length . Actual hlgttw•y m!l,..ge will bill en.
MMutet:t!Jrtl"l condition of Healer contribution m1y
.tt.ct 1;onsumer cost.

\

Nutnber One fw a lot of JIOd

"'WY

Jeep Corporation is also offering $750 rebates
on '82 Cherokees &amp;Wagqneers. And a
$500 rebate on Jeep pickups ordered
now thru October 29. Get a check or a(ip)y it
to yoru down payment.
More lood news. Renault Le,Car the world' s
best-aellinll front-wheel drive car is now one of
the lowest priced cars In America .

~

~~~~------~--~--~~------~--~--------------~-------1
'

II'
37 "' ~s

Rellate

No matter what you market, it's better
for your ad.v ertlslng to reach peopie with ,
money, rather tJ'Ian lust people.
•
•

BLOWER

f ,PH.m·f!'ATEIIALSMA~P.~vA.

•

Obviously, If you're selling big ticket or luxury
Items your·natural target audience Is people with
larger disposable Incomes. But even lower
priced products and staples sell easier to people
with means. Also, the Upscates are innovators,
the lint to try new things and set the pace In
style and lifestyle.
.

.,,

·--.
·-' HOGG and ZUSPAN f

79%
76%
85%
82%
12%

'
J

'

.

'

•

•

�.·

••.-4
,.,
. ..

...

· ~

. ..

Wednesday, October 28, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 28, 1981

'Pomeroy~iddleport, Ohio

1\strogr~ph----------~------~------------------------~~--~Fo-n~--,h~-g~"'~oda-y~~-~~m1981
October29.
You ShOUld be luckier than
usual this coming year ~lth en·
terprises or ventures Which ~re

cerned.
SAGITTARIUS CNov. 23-Dec.
2U You have many splendid
qualities; one of them vour desire
to do for others without · being
T
bl
it Ill
asked . Oday this no e tra w
-be emphasized .
CAPRICORN
22-Jan. 19)
This should be a pleasurable day
tor you as well as for those with
wh'om you'll be involved, You
have the knac~ of bringing out
the best in others .
. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 19)
Take advantage of anv op·

met
h
od.
could

creative and utilize progressive
and techniques... This
f
b ld
be the year or Ul IRQ .a
22 )
better mousetrap.
SCORPIO (o·c t., 2
1141· Nov.
1
conditfons are a r e unusua
loday,butyou'llbequtck tograsp
the trend of events and know. ~ow
to develoo small opportunities.
espec ially' where money is .' con ·

portunltles today to help 'booSt

friends up the ladder. Your en·
joyment will be derived from

selflessness.
PISCES (Feb. 2G-March 20)
You're ~if ted with a marvelous
d lod
an
lmagina ion an
ay you c
put this talent to work to achieve
an elusive goal. Have faith In
Yourideasendconcepts.
ARIES
21· April 19)
Someone quite knowledgeable In
an area new to you may offer
guidance today. You'll deem this
a great kindness on
or her

(~c.

(March

nls

peTrAt. URUS (April 2G-May 201
lbillh
There is a strang ' poss
could receive a windfall t ay:.
The unique conditions which
make this possible actually
comes through an associate.
GE-MINI (May 21·June 201
Bring to the attention of those In
charge today the better methods
you envision where your work Is
y
t lb tf
concerned . . our con r u on
won' t go unrewarded.
CANCER (June 21· JUIV 2~)

Take advantage of

oppdrtunrtles

favorable and lasting. Solicl
relationships can result.
~
LEO (July 23·Avo. 22) One uw
the reasons you're apt to be sue·
cessful todaY' is because you're
not Intimidated by the- difficult.
Challen?lng situations awaken
d
luln-s
yourw 1 an resource
..... •
VIRGO CAug. 23·5eDt. 22,

..·,

The Dally Sentinel-Pal-' :;:

passionate impulses to do
ft1ounhtful things tor thOSe vou
love.• Your actS will be very effectlve since they're spon·

tOday to meet new people. Tne
impression you malte ·will be

Uou

•

FRESH

or urges

tanloousl
BRA
. (Stpl. 23·0ct.' 23) Don't
h
hes or Intuitive
Ignore unc
.
today in business
financ•al
maHers. Your Insights may show
you ways to make the cash
re:olsterrlng ..

liROUID

BEEF
WIIILE
OIED

PICIIIC

for the best of :everything .::::::~=~·
including the ce I•
COIII'IIED TO mEIIIAIIDS~ IT IIIICEI.

'FIIIIIE IOIPO COlT CITTIII, IIITIEIIUI. All STICKEl.

I

PRICE

lUSTER
SPECIAL

JOlES BOYS
WHITE BREAD

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
theM advertiSed 1tems IS requ•red to be
readily a.,ailable for .sale in each KrOOGf Store, ercept n
~ no1ed 11'1 ttM&amp; ad It wre dO run out Of an ~ltd
,em, we Will offllf 'f'OU vour cho+ce of a comparable 1tem,

EM:h of

~

a11ailable, reflecting trte same sav•nos. 01 a, ra1nchedt

wtlich will entitJ. V01J to purchase the ad11ert1$Bd 11em at the
ldvertll8d pliCa -Mih1n lJ d&amp;vs"

flUIDAl LIW PIICI

'

TOTAL SATISFACTION GUARANTEE

KIOGEI

Ev8fYihi"Q vou buy at Kroger IS guaranteed lor your total
u!Jiftcllon reoardiiiSS ol manufacturer II you are not sa11s·
r.d , Kroger w~l rlfPiattt your rtem w1th the :iilme brand or a
compet11bte bfand ()( refund vour purchaM prrce .

Instant ·
ID·o• .
H ......
Coee
,

$

379
.

89 C

flO ZEN

COPYRIGHT 1911 - THE KROOER CO . IYEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY OCT . 75 THRU SATURDAY OCT. 31 . 19111N
POMEROY ANDGAlUPOll$ ~rowe 5
.

WE RESERVE THIIUGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD
TO DEALERS.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

·~ F~x De Lux'•·••·
1P11z1 .. ..... "•·

$299

~~~r.vi;~;EDCHOICE

J:"v

T·Bone Steak . lb.
·Pork Steaks ... lb.

C~untry Style.

Sliced Bacon ... lb.

$J49

RUFFLES
POTATO
CHIPS

Polar Pale 'o ·Goi.S J29
Ice Cream . c1n.

FRESH WHOLE

~:~!~on Butt

IDO.Ct

Bags .... ....,.

•

$129

~mDA!LOW~

v

·

25t
I::::o ~::· 69C
::C!"'e '~::· 33c
c,
33c

110Z

Avondale .....
Gelatin..... "'•·

$129

$151

AVONDAU

AVONDALE

KROGER

J89

Whoi;':aoneless $
Smoked Ham .. lb.
Mea t BoIogna ... 8·oz.
Pkg.
KAHN 'S SLICED

~

{?W,tf i C~TFISH
~_;~

A BLEND OF BEEF &amp; HYDRATED

TEXTUREDVEGETAILE~ROTEIN.

Brown 'N'
Serve Rolls .

K,roger's Pro · ·

·Beef·Patty Mix 1b'.-

3$ 29

99 C

Young Turkeys ....... lb.

DRESSED

Catfish ..... .

lb.

$199

•

IN THE DAIRY DEPT ..
KROGER CHILLED

Orange
Juice .. . .... . '/,-Gal.
Ctn.
.

320·oz.$J29

·

Wh1te Bread .. ,

Homogenized
Milk
Gal.

Sausage .......... ..

KROG~R

KROGER

Plastic
Ctnr.

Lvs.

l·lb
Pkg:

PARKAYQUAR:ERS •

99

$

AU VARIETIES. BALLARD'S FARM

$299

FRUH FARM RAISED

1·1b.

59c

WHOLE KEINEL

Avondale
COrn

1•.5-0J

Con

Ron

M1,:h:::;.llow, .••.
C

Margar1ne .........
SJ2 5 .
ll·Ol.
Party P1na ... .. Pkg.
•

rtlll .. " ' ,.,

CUEAL

29

$

39

C

Avondale
$J29
Sllortening . ·~~·;·

SJ39 .

aoo-Ft .

59c

Kroger

5~:~~~

Cereal.. ..

o

·

83C
s1
't.•:·

Glazed

·01.
Danuta ..... '""•·

Listerine
·Mouthwash 3i.t'1.

1

79c

·

KROGER GRADE

A Large Eggs .. .. . Doz.
$199
.
15·01 ..
Sham Po o.. .. .... .. a11.
SILKIENCE CONDITIONER OR

.

Dry-Idea .... .... '~ir~Daffy Apples ... ·~k~: .
2

AVAILABLE ONLY IN
STOHSWITH
DELl DEI'TS.
HOTFOOOS '
AVAILAeLE 11om
TIL 7pm

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

a$

!!_,...

$J99

99 c

Iceberg
Head Lettuce

NEW CROP. •o

5 $1

INDIAN RIVER

Pil* or White
Grapefruit ......

For ·

WASHINGTON STATE EXTRA
FANCYREDOIGOLDI!N

•

Delicious Apples :Eoch

$TAYMAN

Apples ... .. ... .. ..

Kiwi Fruit .... ,.

lSC

S-Ib. SJ39
aag

3
2 51
1-oz. age
·$1
For

Avocados .. .. .
For
. 2
Pean uts ..........
"'•·

IOASTID

Pear
....
...lv.. ..... ......
c.,.

12

oz

Maraachlna
L-rrlII ... l·o•.
CIIW
Jor

fRESH lAKED

'

0

DZ

'

71&lt;

Mandarin
0.......... 11-ol.
c..

'39c.
59c

Coat Cutter
M....,-lne
·~~ ·
.

.

$219
r:t
n=u=TOI:::~:7L'r.IW~PII=!::=~IJ

2

.Coat Cutter
Cake Mix .. '~':'·
.

lLB$
ROLL
........................

FREIICH CITY

AVONDAU

REGULAR. SLICED TO OIIDER

IRISH .AKED0

327

•

Fried
$899
Chicken ..... Each
$349
Hard Salami .... .... lb.
Hoop Cheese ... lb. ··
A-oz.$J29
Pumpkin P1e .... Pi•
2A
SJ39
Apple Pie .. ... .. . ;~.··

SAUl

HIUCit:Sl

INCLUDES: 16-PIECIS FRIED CHICKEN, I·LI.
POTATO SALAD &amp; I ROLLS JUMIO PAK

SLICED OR 1Y THE PliO
CHEDDAR DAISEY

BOUITY

DIRT SLICED
BICOII

fiOZIN kiOGIIt

RETURNABLE BOTTLES

MIRACLE WHIP

·-

AYONDALI
'DII•T

POPS RITE
POPCORI

SPECIAL

SPECIAL

Ill

Ss e
89 C

Cam Rakea't':·

FROZEN TOTINO'S

·lUSTER

PI ICE

lUSTER

.;, •

Country Club
Ice Cream

SPEIIIL

. PIICE
IUSTEJ

PillE

. . . loll

,.

ROLL·ON DEODORANT

·

·~·~

KTogPier
Pot 11 ... '••
Pi.,:

FROZEN U.S .D.A. INSPECTED , 16-LBS. AND UP,
ROYALROCK

FRESH FARM R"ISED

F1llets ....... lb.

99

,

WI
1J;LI Sill

........ .
~

SWIISII

1

CHUII WHITE CHIC lEI .. '~-

SWin CHICKEI I PORK

12

EOI IEAT ;...........~z.

II(

::a·

58

•.OZIN cost cuna

'~;:~· age
s:.:h,ld.
· SJ19
Cooldea ... . A1~·
·
1

1cosT ama

$ 49

: ::·~·~~·. ~· 1'

;; ... 65 c
.......... Ill.'

........•. • • • •2~
•••• •••

�WedneSday, October 28&lt;1981

What's

.

'

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 21, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

By DALE M. STOlL
Melp Ceuty ExteMioa

Othersattendingthe&amp;are~oo.-----------------------------------------

as representatives from Meigs
County Included Bill Dyer, Meigs
County Grange Prince and Mr. and
Mr. Mendal Jordan, Deputy Masrer
and Junior Deputy.
National Grange representatives
present at the Ohio State Grange
~on were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Hall from West Virginia. Mr. Hall is
past West Virginia Stare Master and
Mrs. Hall is serving as National
Grange Flora. She was speaker for
the youth bsnquet.

l!ome Eeonomist

Your Vote and Influence Appreciated

This Halloween, try hot spiced
cider 81ld pwnpldn doouts for a
wholesome treat for · yOur huncrY
goblins.
,When buying canned pompkln,
check the label8 carefully. It's so
frustrating to discover that you have
purchaaed canned pumpkin pie
fiWng when wbst you needed was
canned pumpkin.
(
The following recipe is especially
easy because the bsttet is dropped
Into the hot fat. Atrer the donuts are
cooked and drained, shake them In a
bsg with sugar In it. Shake off excess.

"Bob~'Pickett

R. G.

-candidite For-

Bedford Township Trustee

•

ELECTION- NOV. 3, 19,81
Pd. Pol. Adv.

Yonker, Lawrence wed

ANN'S CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

•

50716 Osborn Rd.
Reedsville, Oh.

667~485

·~.

..t
..

In December, Mrs. Clara Williams ,
will' host the Christmas meeting at
her home In Clifton. Everyone is
requested to bring a reading or a
poem pertaining to the holidays and
a$5exchangegift.
Mrs. Cedi Smith presented tbe
club lesson, "A Winning Wardrobe."
Those 2ttending the meeting in·
eluded Mrs. Landon Smith, Mrs. J.
Marshall, Mrs. Lawrence Belcher, ·
Mrs. Gloria Chapman, Mrs. Cecil
Smith, Mrs. sarah Spencer, Mrs.
&amp;mona .Sydenstricker, Mrs. Kennet h Watk'tns, Mrs. Joyce Carson,
Mrs. Laurene Lewis. Mrs. Dennis
Harris and children ate lunch with
the club members.

I

\,

•
''

f'08111ASTER' -

.Solltinel. Ill.

addrea to Tho Dally

IIVI18CIID"'11 RATEll

.Olle-IIJConlo&lt; .. - -..
Olle Mlll1tll
011e Year

SING..=PY \

fi .OO
.....

151.10

,lllflf ...... ,. ,. .. ,. ....... : .. .. 15 Cents

S70

'

.

.l

w. Main

Ph. 992-2556

'

Pomeroy, OH.

Mr: and Mrs. Lawrence
RACINE _ Mr. and Mrs. George
Yonker Rae'•• are anno i th
'
u~, of their unc
ng e
recent marriage
daughter,
::;ggy' ;"Jry"&lt;'!t Lawrence, son of
Porir
. laannd. rs. arence Lawrence,

•

The double-ring ceremony was
performed at the Asbury u ·nited
Methodist Church by the Rev.
Stanley Merrifield September 4 at
7:30p.m.
The couple resides in Racine.

3 AGE GROUPS:

3·5

-

STORES AT 5:00 P.M.

6-8
HAM &amp;CHEESE·LOAE .......~b:.s2.29

9-12
4 CATEGORIES FOR EACH
AGE GROUP.

Eckrich 1 lb.

Homemade

HAM SALAD ................... ~~~.s1.39

.EVERYONE'S
A' WINN·ER!·

'·

•
1 lb. Blue Bo~;net
Quarters

Sib. Bog While

1. UGLIEST

2. SCARIEST
3. PRETTIEST 4. FUNNIEST

0

GRAPEFRUit.. .. 51.19

MARGARINE

I lb. Cello Pack

CAR ROTS ...... :.... 29'

16 oz. Kraft American
Sliced Individual

.s2.49

Head

$1()00 ·Prize For Each

LmUCE ....... ~.·.·.~. 49'

Category In Each Age Group.

12 oz.

WELCH'S GRAPE JUICE •••••••••• 9a'
30

12 TOTAL CASH PRIZES

oz. Libby's

PUMPKIN PIE MIX,...........~~~.8f

Heres Why its better than what youte using nOw.
Our new Dutch Frye. has a special kind of breading
rhat seals in the natuml juices and makes it crispier.
and crunchier.
B~t when y~ buy Weaver fried Chicken you're
g~nmg a lot more than jq;;IB new coat.ing. Yoo're
g~:ntngourplumpcst, ho'fuegrownchtck.ens. wtthout

bony chu.:kcn backs. And you're getting rhem fresh
because every package IS double wrapped .
The trut)ll of the maner ts 1har you just can't buy a
bencr chicken than new Weaver
\
Dutch Fryeo for any amoun1
Ot~ea"er.

ofmone).

Wt!

W'

1
•

Weaver. Good enough to pass for homemade. .

~~ie--~~~-~~~~=-~
1

nght hand side of the b.ck panel from two packages of Weaver !)
Frozen Fricd,Chlr;kcn. Please send me two
slon: courons.
WEAVER REFUND OFFER

I
so;
::=_=.-t.'=:::::r:::.~= 1
P.O. Box NB006
•tccGI'OinctWIIhl'ltt~~~trstn-....~owon~,,
I
EIPaso Th.as79911
1'111,_.
'
llflblll tiDI:i ..
_
_
..
____
..
I
N'""'-------------------'--, . . . CaiDnw ,._..,a. Colfon
................
.:......
,.
..
,....,111111111101
~ .... I Addresis_.:;.
1/ZOOOh._ .... ....,. .. ..,_.,..
- ' ----------------I
~~~~~~~~
"'
''"'·"""'.-...
..-.....
..,. ...._,.oe. I C-i t y ' - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ' - - - ll ~ Tills CIIJPDII Ill gooll ~ ~

Pllf•
dlntotlll~lllliCIItll•rsr~~~t~nt~rJIIil

..
..........--=-.
.
.
.
..
_.,fi'CIIIMIIIIYI:tlff . . .. IIIC
11M _.., ~

,_

IIIII

..

~,

$11.10
fl7 ..

..••••
=

COME TO THE PARKING
LOT BETINEEN THESE

CONTEST RULES

FRESH ROLL SAUSAGE.~~~~.o~~ s2~09

1WL IIUMCIUP'I'IONB

-IY•

VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL AND
ACE HARDWARE'S
ANNUAL HALLOWEEN
COSTUME CONTEST
IS THURSDAY NIGHT!!!

"Located at the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

onWeavers new improved,
crispier, Dutch Frye.

will bell•.. - - month.
No
1;: ltJal by mail permitted iD townl
_ . . - (Orl'lor- II POI!oble.

_......v_

KIDDIEEES,

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

S~e$1.50

'Sentinel on • I, I or l2 month bal&amp;l. Qedll

.,_
• -

LISTEN, MY

,----------------------- ---------------------------------1--1
~

:a.-bm
not dollrinC to 1101' the curter
...., nmllln-- .. Tho Dolly'

*

.

•.•

$13000 WORTH OF PRIZES
•'

BEAN W/BACON SOUP. ••••~~~ 2/79t

Court St., """"""', Ohio 4;769.

.

Sirloin Steak Sandwich *1 29
WITH FRIES •••••••••••••• ;*1 69

(U8P811Hetl

.Yirl; New Yort 10017.

.

-·

A. Dl\rtiJoa ol Maltlmedla, IDe.

NewJpaper Pubu.btrs Aalocialton, National
Advert.i.aiq Representative, Branham
~per SU., 733 1blnl Avenue, New

'

SPECIAL OF THE WEEKI

The Daily Sentinel

Member: t1te APOeiated Press, Inland Dal ly Prell Aaocl8tion and the American

·v AUGHAN. 15
CARDINAL

~------------------~ ·

·'

~"'!"""'"' and money.

.

ONLY

~.

"

I

Mr. Johnson received many cards,

Tbcse preaent were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Rickard, Sr., and Mrs. Betty
Call, all 0( Clifton; Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Jobnaon, Metropolis, IU.; Mr."
and Mrs. Rolla King, New Haven;
John Call, John, Jr. and Kimberly of
The honoree also received a bJr. Ona, W.Va.; Mrs. John MlDer, John
tbday card and letter from his gran- • Stephen and Mellasa, Long Bottom;
ddaughter, Mrs. Dale (Unda Call) Mrs. Danny Rickard, Ken and RodRolllna of New Orleans, informing ney, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
that she and her children would be Robert Roush, Bobby Joe and
home for Thanlttglvlng to visit with Christina, Letart; Mrs. Kenneth
her mother, Mrs. Betty Call, Cli(ton, Ault, New Albany, Ohio; Mr. and
and Dale's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Lester Johnson, CliftGq,
Kenneth Rollins and family. Letart,
Those unable to attend were Mr.
W.Va.
A turkey-ham dinner with all the and Mrs. Steve HolsClaw, Pitt&amp;-.
trimmings was enjoyed by all. Birth- burgh, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
day cake and ice cream were served King and danghter, Kendra, Fairmont, W.Va.
Jarer In the atremoon.

WITCH PAN
~

I

•

11'12 oz. Campbell's

Friday, 111 Court S!ree~ by the Ohio Volley
~~ Compony • Multimedia, Inc. ,
, Ohio t51Q, tf2.2156. Second CiaSB
postap~at Pomeroy, Ohio.

are

Other happy eventa Included a
telephone call from his danghler.
Duma Gavirl, st. Petersburg, Fla.,
wishing her dad a happy birthday
and informing him that she and her
family would be spending lbLI
coming Thanksgiving holiday with
him.

Wilton New

Fire prevention tips from
Mason Homemakers

Published every afternoon, Monday through

Try lbLI recipe I I made it for a when half done. 'Remove from fat.
group of really llnlcky eatera and Drain on paper towels.
they loved them I
Hot mulled elder lla reelly unique
,.. /'• DG.!Drupl
uperlence.lt'siiDQ,I!Iicy and abs CllpiDour
oolutely deliciaaa. n•a for ldda and . CLIFTON - ~family of later
3 t•apooos baking powder
adulls! Try putting a cinnamon llicll Johnaoo gathered at IU borne In
'AI cup non-fat dry rnillt:
in the cup ol warm cider for an extra CliftGq on Sunday, October 11, to
celebrare hla IOtb blrtliday. Other
'AI!Mapomaalt,
special touch.
... !Mapom cinnamon .
members having birthdays In ()c.
MaJlod ewer
Iober were hla daughter, Margie
'AI IMapom nutmeg
Makel It HrWip
Rlclrard, hla granddaughter, Debbie
2egp
I galloR ol elder
King Roush, daugbtefoin.law, Cecll
2 tablespoons shortening
4 whole allapice
Johnson, 11011-ln-law, Rolla King,
I 'AI cups sugar
4 whole cloves
I cup pumpkin
. grea'"granllson, Kent Rickard and
4 stocks cinnamon
another grea'"grandaon, BObby Joe
I teaspoon vanilla
I 'AI cupa sugar
•
. .
Boll cider with spices five Roush.
'Aicup7·Up
Sift dry lngredlelits together. In minutea. Add sugar and Jloil live
·large bowl, beat eggs well, beat in minutes. Keep hot for aei'VIng.
sborteolng, 1J188r, pumpkin and
Other Ideas for Halloween:
treat time. TblS•Wrn curb their apvanilla. A,dd dry inllredlenta alter- Place pieces of c8ndy corn or petite for the sweet treats.
nately with 7-Up, beat nnt11 smooth. candy pumpkins In iCI! cube tray sec- Remember tooth brushing at
Refrll!erare one hour or looger.
tioos. Fill with water and freeze. Halloween! Cavities
real monFry doout drops In 2% to 3 Inches Pop the "special ice cubes" into ap- stersat·Halloween Ume!
ol salad oil or fat heated to 365 ple juice or other cold beverage for a
- Have fun and safe Halloween!
·degrees F. With rubber scraper'push super treat.
For your free copy of "Melt in
:.... Be sure tbst children have Your Mouth" Mnfflna, caD the Counteaapoonfuls of dqugh Into hot fat.
Drops wiD turn themselves over ·eaten a good supper before Irick or ty Extensioo Office at 992-8696.

FOR HALLOWEEN

SINGER - Bruce Stablaker Stone, formerly of Pomeroy, now a
protesstonal gospel singer, wiD present a concert at 7 p.m. Sunday at the
new Racine Wesleyan United Methodist Church. The son of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Stalnaker of near Pomeroy, Stone performed In night clubs for
some 18 years before tnrnlng to gospel music. Ills program consists of not
only old lavorit.,. but original compositions. Stone and his family reside
at Port Cbsrlottl, Fla., and he last appeared here as an attraction at the
Meigs County Fair In AugnsL The public is Invited to Sunday's concert. A
free wiU offer!~ will he taken.

MASON - In keeping with Fire
Prevention Month, . Mrs. Gloria
Chapman, safety cbsirpersonfor the
Mason Extension Homemakers
Qub, reported on Helpful Hints for
Fire Prevention when the.
Homemakers met at the home of
Mrs. Cecil Smith with Mrs. Lou Car-·
penter,, co-hostess. Mrs. Chapman
· pointed out that many fires start
from smoking, . electric wiring,
Mating and cooking, children
playing with matches. She spoke on
family escape planning and means
whereby lives could be saved. In
CQnclUBion she gave each person
Home Fire Check instructions )Vhich
were prepared by the National Fire
, .
P'J'otection Assomatwn.
:Other club committee chair·
persons reported on their plans for
!98!-82 were Mrs. D. L. Sydenstricker, Mrs. Lawrence Belcher,
tofrs. Cecil Smith and Mrs. J. MarshaD.
. Mrs. Landon Smith, president of
tl)e club, opened · the meeting
following lunch with devotionals by
Mrs. Sarah Spencer, using an October theme and scripture, Psalms
4:5, and closed with prayer.
Following the Pledge of Allegiance,
each member told of an important
eyent that took place in her life this
past swruner.
·The president thanked Mrs. Lester
Johnson and Mrs. Laurene Lewis for
assisting with the Achievement Day
favors and committee chairpersons
for atrending a county meeting.
:she announced that the Cherokee
Club has eXtended an Invitation for
the club to attend a workshop on
Nov. 16 of dried flowers which are
used on pictures, and in
arrangements. The place will be announced later. Those attending are
Bilked to bring a sack lunch.
·A tetter of thanks was extended to
Russell Capehart for his assistance
it\ erecting the sign in lower Mason
indicating Mason as an All West
Virginia City.
The Mason club will hold its next
meeting Nov. 23 at the home of Mrs.
Landon Smith. The potluck meal will
~served at noon.

The Daily Sentinei-Pag-11

Johnson celebrates 80th year

Cooking?

Meigs patrons at state grange session
Mr. and Mrs. Roland E. Eastman
bsve returned from Cleveland
where they represented'Meigs CoWJ, ty as delegates to the 109th annual
session of the Ohio State Grange
from Sunday until Wednesday.
One hundred · seventy-nine
resolutions were received for cOn·
sideration by variollii conunittees
·• and those approved by the delegate
body wiU be recommended as the
policy of the State Grange.
The Easbnans served on the
Taxation committee.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ISS.GI

11:00

~

il; IOd

1G0~66 ~

_2q0 !;t.

"
'

PUFF FACIAL TISSUES••••••• :::•. 89t

t

•

.

~

FREE! Donuts and Coffee or Cider
COME JOIN THE FUN!

5oz. Armour

.'

VIENNA SAUSAGE •••• ~ •• ~:~.2/sl.09
I

10 oz. Instant

NO ONE WALKS AWAY EMPTY HANDED.

NESCAFE COFFEE•••••••••• ~:~. $4.89

.

.

)5 .oz.

SPINACH.~:~:.2/s1.19

DEL MONTE
21 oz. Teen Queen

TEEN QUEEN TOMATOES••• ~.a.~ sgc
30 oz. Del ~te

•

'
'
•'

••

S4lURD~Y~ OCT08E_
R. 3.1.
. .

EE

;.;;.P...-,.;---.....J

'

•

RUIT COCKTAIL •••••••••••••• ~:~.sl.09
'

46oz. Golden Isle

TOMATO JUICE ................ ~:!'.. 89'
••

•'

•

.....

�---~--Pag~12-The

Daily Sentinel

-

~--~----- ....,._

Wednesday, October 21, 191t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

Bu8iness Services

Agriculture·Secretary has new organizational chart
WASHINGTON (AP)
Agriculture Secretary John R. Block
is drawing a .new «ganizatlonal
. chart to put rural development under one roof and give it added
prestige.
The action includes a new Office of
Rural Development Policy and an
actvisory council, but there is virtually no chance of any significant
new funds lor development projects.
Although the action directly af·
feels only those programs handled
by the Agriculture Department,
Block said Tuesday that it "should

also facilitate close cooperation and derstand that the actual ~ ol

coordination" with other depart·
· ments of the government.
The improved lntegratioo of
"agricultural concems and rural
development" will be one of the ob)ectives in the new organizational
structure, he said.
··' 'You can't separate agriculture
!ron;~ rural . development," Block
. said."Nearly 700 counties (out of
more Ulan 3,000 in the nation) continue to hilve agriculture as a principal source. of personal income. At
the same time, we have to un-

fanning does not dootinete every
rural conununlty In thia country."
. For years, even before the llndmark Agricultural Act ol1970, wblch
made it a major million ol the
Agriculture Department, rural
development has been one of the
most persistent and complex
problems of e.ach new administration.
Massive amounts of public money
have been funneled into rural
development projects, ranging from
outright grants to long-tenn, low-

lnlerlltlOBIII and laml ~.
The budgekonlcloua Requ administration and Congre11,
howevl!!', have cracked down on
mudJ of thia spendi"8, and the goal
now includes gettlnJ more
cooperation and finandaJ .W from
local and private lntereata.
Block, In explaln~Qs hla Strategy
at a briefing for C&amp;pllol .Hill aides,
!ann · representativea and olhera,
said the rural lhlvelopmeot effort
will "pay particular attention to
strengthening , local economic
viablllty and llnproytnl( community

·"Finiany, we want a llnltegy for
encouraging the private aector to

lake up the challence ol rural
develGpnent," he said.

The new office wt11 be overseen
Block said an advllory C0J111E11 wt11
directly by Frank Naylor, unbe
set np at the naUonal leYel to
cler8ecretacy for IIDall community
"helP
identify ruratroncerna and .••
and rural development, an office
adviae me . on rural development
created by Coogreaa lui year. It will · issues." It wt1l e&lt;me from the
be beaded by John c. Mccarthy,
private sector and fnlm ltate and
moat recently 8JI aide to Naylor and
local
govenunent, he said.
fonnerly chief clerk ol the Senate
Agriculture Committee.

From

Small investment, large
returns, Sentinel Want Ads:
·r.

Pu~!Tc Notice

te

lito

DEAN'S AUTOMATIC

. RtdiiiOr Spocllf!ll
NATHAN 11005
IS Yra. EXP*J'IIIIct

JIM LUCAS
Ph. 742..Z753

Ph. 992-2174

- ·10·12·1 mQ, .

J&amp;F
CONlRACTING

·APPLIANCE
.SERVICE ·
For Foot Service

•w

1

PARTS AND S::E::RV-::f:::CE::--1
ALL MAKES

eTrencher

·ewashen

Licensed-&amp; Bonded

•PFY••

Ph. 992·7201 II.

•R~t..

9-5-tfc

MIU1R
SERVICE
For all ol your wiring needs.

eBeckhoe
• bcavatfng
• SepTic Systems
ator, Sewer &amp;
Gas Lines
eDumpTruek

Call Ken Yaung

985-

Transmission Specillisf
RebUilt5-Repairs
.
Seal Jobs
Open Sat. &amp; Sundays,
LOCilted 5 miles north of
Albany on 11 681, on the ·
Dale 5cot1 Farm.
664-6370
If no Ans. calf 742-2070
10·8·1 mo . pd.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS
INC.
Pomeroy, Ob.

Gas&amp;

•DiapoiCIIa
· •Dithwathen
•Hot Water Tonka

Public NOIICt

St1'1111est

Core

American and Most
Foreign Cal's
Transmission EKchange

Let
George
Miller
check vour present electrical system.
Resldentllf
&amp; Commercial

Ca11742-3195

commence on th8t date.
In ease of your failure to
answer or otherwise

respond as required by lhe
Ohio
Rule' ol Civil •
Procedure( judgment by
qefauft w I! be re~
against you for the relief
demanded In the Com·
plaint.

Larry E. SP-_encer

Clertc of Courls
Mellis County
Common Pleas Court

t R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

James Rhodes, left, in Clevelaod. Rhodes aJIIIOUIICed

PARTIC!PANTS- Eastern Hlgb School, Reedlvllle, was among 1141111e
450 blgb scbools ln Oblo partlcipatlnJ Ia lbe 181h AnnuarYoulb and Science Coulerence held at tbe Oblo Union on tbe ObloState Uulvenity campus, Saturday, October 10 Those attending from Meigs Cowlty were, left
lo rigb~ Richard Roberts, JeH Shriven, and Tim Roberts. Host for the
group was tbe Soil and Water COJIServaiiOJfDislrlct from Melga Cwnty.
The more thao1,000 youtha atteDCIInc tbe couference played lhe part of a
college student lor one day and beard mini-lectures on a wide varelty of
topics that focused upon basic principles of ..,fence and the challenge of
cbange• .

"He who gets there first gets served first," Rhodes said.
"Cleveland's !leen the only large
city dealing with them and we'D be
the first one they allot any excess
powerto.n
Ohio is one of three states now
sharing the 180 megawatts. The
Public Service Board of Vennont
has a contract lor 50 megawatts and
Allegheny Electric Cooperative gets
the other 107 megawatts.
Pofok said other states near New
York plus msny of Ohio's 83
municipalities are interested in getting a share of the relatively cheap
power. He said Ohio is seeking between 35 and 38 megawatts.
The PASNY power, which costs
about 1.5 cents per kilowatt hour, is
far cheaper than the 3.9 cents per
kilowatt hour charged the city by the
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co,
Pofoksaid.
Getting the power from New York
to Cleveland and other points involves wheeling It across investor. owned utility lines. Cleveland woo
that right in federal court after CEI
refused to sign a contract with the
city to wheel the power.
·
Other Ohio conununlties are
negotiating contracts with invest..-owned companies in their areas,
Poloksaid.
Cleveland Utilities Director Ed
Richard said because some of the
water generated at Niagra Falls
comes from the Grest Lakes,
Cleveland was the right choice as
bargaining agent.
"Right now, we're saving about $2
million ·a yesr with this power," he
said. "If you factor that out over the
yesra between 1985 and 1990, It Is a
saving uf about $15 mtllion."

.'

3·11-ttc

·- ....,... Soorllo:
AHt AMI •I .1 ,
Plllrlll o.,t.
• •
The Daily Sentinel
2U llost 17 st,_llft W, NY
10011. Plfot NAill aJliiiUS,
ZIP, SIZE, 1H STYli - · L
Busy wom•? Worlina
Oms r. lesi, spend loss time.
work-choose 1 wardrobe from
;OI!r NEW FAU·WINTER PATIERN
CATALOG. CoUpon fOf Free S2
pattern 1nside. Sene! $1.50

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop
FALL CARPET SALE
3 Rolls to
Pick From

'12"

.,.

cash-n-carrv

1 Green Tweed
1 Rust Tweed

sq. Vd. installfd

-- .

sq. yd.

STANDARD
OIL CO.
, tSOHIO)

...,..?

GET READY FOR WINTER
SHAG CARPE UBBER BAC
3 ROLLS
1 Blue Frost
1 creek Bed

We are now serving all •
of Meigs co. with
Heating 011, Olestl' suPreme,
Gasoline,
comlete
line
of
Lubricants. for the
farms&amp; ·Industry.
Pll. 992·3460
If long distance, call cal -

M1 ~ 11101$ •• $2.00 ...
135·11 IIIII 1141 Clltlill
134-14 Cilia Qlllll

'-12~.yd.

For October
Good selection of carpet thru the 30th of October.

lett:
Lury E. Miller, Dealer
8-30·1 mo.

13U. . . 111111 tllllilr
l»Swulsts 'iza-JI.Sf
llooils one! Catalar - ldd 50 1
each fOf postap and handling.

Buy Now &amp; Save $2-$6 Per Yard
25 rolls carpet in stock to pick from.
Regular backed, carpet installed free
with pad. Good selection Roll Ends Remnants $2.50 up.

(Free Estimates)

MOD,4010 Diesel J . D. tractor
MOD,I2J 1 Row New idea corn
Picker

V. C. YOUNG Ill
m -6215or992·731•
Pom•roy. Ohio
9 -30-tfc.

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
Nail
OPEN
Used Color TV · Sets for
sale.
NEW PHONE NO.

SC~val _ l(

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Nam•-------------------

eANNOUNCEMENTS
1_-card al Th1n111
~In

Addreu------~--~----

• 1-Hou ... lor • .,.,
U-MobAte Hemet
forll ... f ,

.._,.,.,tm_..t•lor REnt

, 5-HI,)' Ad1

•s-,urnllfttel Rooms

.,_,..,_.lc:Uie
IAuc:flon
t-WIIIIIdt•IU'f

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
11-Hif(IIIWiniM

12-Situtlotl wanttd

IJ--Insuranct
14--lllllntn Trlinlnt

15-SdtOOII i111truct1on
,..,_RHio,Tv.
a Cllt•JNir
l._W•ntH Te Do

e FINAII!CIAL
11-lusin111
OPPOrtvnlty

U- MIII'IeyloLMn
21-Prot.-111... 1

StrYIUI

e REAL ESTATE

t-"'""'
u-,.,.... for ....

3
tor Sale
lJ-M*iiH.,..II

.....

~

M-IUIIMIIIui......

u--Lett a Acr ....

3t-·llf'll Estate Wanted
31-IIHIWI

_,....

Wlni·Ad Ad¥trtlofng
Maftdayt:•DI'IIaturd•y ~
T.,.._., .... ,, ... ,I:Det',M,
......, ..........latlell
.-.,rr•I'.M,PriUy

A

.._s,.c• for 11m
0-WantM fl RNt

....... &amp;4ttri,...... ,.......,
.,_florLNst
51-H.-...hoiGIOOMh
51-CI, TV, ...... E . .Ipm ...l
D-AIItktUn

Ph. 949-2160 or 949-2412
lo-2Hfc

11-MuslcaiiMin~mtttt

eFARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

1

,,_Farm Equl,.,enf
62-W•ntH to 8uy

.

63-LIWtltocll

( , )Wanled
( IForSafe
.
( )Announcement
( )For Rent

·-------

17
18.
19, _ _ _ _ __

........r&amp;Graln
61-SHd &amp; F•rtllller

I. _ _ _ __

20. _ _ _ __

eTRANSPORTATION

2. _ _ _ __

21. _ _ _ __

3.
-_
' -_
-4. _-_
_-

22.-----23. _ _ _ _ __

rt-Truc~Uorlell

. ..,.lr...

73-VMIIo. W.D.

,....._..,c:rc... .

,..._...... Meters
7..,_AateParlllo

6.

7.

77-Avtt

71-C'"'""' • ..,.,...,,

a•-.._., •..,.."'"'"'b
n-fl""'*"t &amp;

..,,...,......

MHtlnt

D-11011.....

1

M-l*trlut•

____

··----'· _......_

SERVICES

10. - - - - - - ' 11. - - - " - - - - - -

12. - - ' - - - - 13. -~----

n-oe.rttMiul...
M-M.M ..... Ir

Call After 4 P.M.
992-7654

10-9-1 mo.

PRICE RE.DUCEDI 1
familY or duplex 7 room
hOme with J bedrQOms.
Good street In Mid·
dleport. Good rental Investment,

NEW HOME - Small
down payment Will han·
d,e. 4.8 acres on two
ral!ds. New 3 bedroom
a'l electric home. Room
for several" homeS or
trailers. Only $39,000.
TRAILER Family
·rooms, equipped kif·
chen and air condl·
tioner. All city. utilities
on a SOxlOO le\lel lot for
only $9,600.
NEW LISTING -Two
nic:e wooded building
lots near Rock Springs .
T. P. water available,

ENTERPRISE ROAD!
A 4 bedroom house
that's just right for your
family , Nice front
porch, fully Insulated.
good condition. Approx .
31.. acre lot. Just $28,500.·
PRICE IS RIGHT l,acation
Greatl
Original woodwork and
hardwood floors makes
this 3 bedroom home
something
special.
Blown Insulation makes
It energy efficient. Mid·
dleport location makes
· it convenient. Aluminum siding makes it
maintenance free. All
for$2'1,500.
SYRACUSE
BAR·
GAIN! Approx. SO'x100'
lot with 2 · bedroom
frame home. Equipped
kitchen. Utility room.
Neat_! $24,900.
·
NEAR
POMEROY·!
This 3 bedroom home
has a private locatiOJ1.
Excellent condition with
fireplace. full base ·
ment, garage. $34,500.
PRICE REDUCED! In
Pomeroy I A 3 bedroom
home with full basement. Central
air,
carpeted, patio with
sliding glass doors. Now
only $17,500.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Roger T.urner 992-5692

A'".

elnsul•tlon·
• Starm Doors
• Storm Win~ows
• Replacement
·Wirtdows

Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772
' 10+1 mo.

D&amp;M

1
'

CONTRACTORS
• ·Remodeling
eAiuminum &amp;
Vinyl Siding
e Kitchen Cabinets
eAwning
• Roofing
• Painting

Ph. 304-773-5131

Mason, w. va.
10-8-1 mo . pd.

Housing

Headquarters

992-5692

3

CONSJRUCTION
New Homes --' ex·
~emodet­

tensive

. Public Notice
IN THE'
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
PROBATE DIVISION
RUTI4 SCHARTIGER, Ad·
minislratrlx of .the Estate
of Howard L. Searls,
Deceased
Plilinlift,

•••

CHARLES
WILLIAM
SEARLS, ET AL
Defendants.

Now picking up junk
auto bodies. ' Top prices
paid for auto bodies.
scrap iran and metals.
1 mile west of Fairgrounds on Old Rt. 3~.
Mon.·Frl. 8:30 to4:00
After Aug. 3
Ph. 992-6564
10·12-tfc

REESE
TRENCHING
·sERVICE

......... u ""' .......... u ...................
, ......
.

,... ...................... ,..... . . . . rttect_ .... ......
..... ,.

lallfw-. ..... _

.

--

WatercSewer- Electric
Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
Septic Tanks
County Certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 36HS60

Farm Buildings
Sizes
"From 30xlon
SMALL
.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3,

BOK 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
6·15-lfc

31. ---.:.....-H.
_ _,_ __

13. _ _ _ __
~&lt;~.

_ _ _ __

35. _ _ _ __

Mil II Tllll COU!IIft Wltll fl-tllll..

..

~13
IO&lt;J.I3

JOHNSON has
returned to work at Kay's
Beautv Salon, Middleport.
Phone 99 2·'2725 1or an ap·
pointment.

1
·· Yard Sale
2 Family Yard Sale across
from cent~rvrne school .
oct 29 &amp; Oct. 30 . Myrtle
Kuhn house .

Widower retired, average
income, jogs, hunts, fishes,
gardens, hoping to contact
healthy
non -smoking
woman under sixty five,
who likes outdoors. Replys
please give address, phone
number. and perti nent in·
formation . Send to P.O.
Box 102, Albany, Oh io
45710.

Moving out Sale. 41 Nei r
A\le., Gallipolis .

NO ·hunting &amp;. tre;spassing
on Bright McCau.sland
Farm operated by Wool han
Farms :

9

October Special. Furniture
Upholstering ·25 percent of.f
on labor. 1 month only.
Mowrey's
Upholstery.
Phone 1-304-675-4154.
No Hunting or Trespassing
on Kenneth watson farm,
without
written
per mission . Kenneth (Butch)
Watson.

ALSO
"Interior Remodeling''
FREE ESTIMATES
Phono"2-2nr
or"2·7093

Gallia Co. Area Code
614
446-Gallipolis
367- Cheshire
388- VInton
245-Rio Grande
256---'Guyan Oist.
· 643-Arabia Dist.

10·28·1 mo.

1G-21·1 mo.

Meigs Ca. Area Codl:f614
992- Middleport
Pomeroy
98S-C heSter
J4J-P.orttand

247-Letart Falls
949-Racine
742-Rutland

61Ht2-2111:
For Farm and
NNtlntOII.

-~
"'

In GaiUa County

. Oforft HuHon, 'f"k

!'1'.:

. Rt, {~"12
Albany, OhfU5710
CIOI 28, 1tc

D

~-

WANT TO BUY Of&lt;! fur ·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds, can Kenneth Swain,
256·1967 rn the evenings.
CASH PAID for clean, late
model used cars. Smith
Bulck·Pontlac. GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call446·2282.

992-2156
In Mason County

(101 28, lie

.

'~

GET VALUABLE train ing
as a young business oe1rso1n I
and earn good money plus
some great gifts as- a Sen·
tlnel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
!he elfglbUIIy llsl at 992·
2156 or 992·2157.

lnMeigsCounry ·

446-2342

Hotch
ar

Baby sitter needed, part·
time In Bidwell area , Call
388-9783 .

BABY sitter In my home.
Monday through , Friday.
Reference required. 304·
675·5623.
•

TO PLACE AN AO CALL

Colum~

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
· surance Co. has offered

.
.~

"

12

for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available "' to meet in ·
dividual needs. Contact
Harry P. itchford, agent.
46 1 27
f\hone-4 - .t ,

AUTOMOBILE
IN ·,
SURANCE
been
can ·
celled?
Lost
your
operator' s License? Phone
992-2143

18

Wanted to Do .

Will do baby sitting in my
home , near HMC . Call 446·
6247 .
wanted tQ Co sand blasting.
Old cars, trailers an!=!
smaller items. Cai1""'6·8274
after 5.

Wanted to Buy

We are now :aking ap'plications
for
bu$
mechanics, Applications
will only be aeeepted at
Meigs 'Local Bus Garage,
Rutland, Ohla.

Mason Co .• w. Va.
Ate~ Code 304
675-Pt. Pleasant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
173-Mason
•
882-Ntw Haven
89S-Letart
937-Buflofo

POMEROY
· lMDM.UK
Home Dellverv of
Gal
DieHl

Fr iday Oct 30, 9'to 3 at the
Highway Inn Truck Stop.
Blue ieans, tops, baby
clothes, &amp; misc .
4· Family Yard Sale Thurs.
&amp; . Frr. Just below Clay
School on rt . 7. 9:00·?

Cl11.,si{ied Page~ cover the
fulluwing tefephune exchanges--.

PAINTERS

... .....,.

Garage Sale on 160. 1 112
miles from Hollers on left.
Wed. &amp; ThUrs.

NO hunting &amp; , no
trespassing without wri tten
permission on Woolhan
~arms at Apple Grove:.

Public Notice

Tilt Dally ll!lflntl ,,
111 Clurt lt.
...'"....,, 011. 417"
\

WILSON
BUILDERS
AND

21. __
__27.
-_
--

29. _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ __

Will do babysltt iog weekly ·
in my home at Torch. Ohio.
Call614-667-64-48.

•

Sizes from 4d to 12x40

111-2•1 mo..

Elim Resthome. Care for
hand icapped, aged, or bed
patient. Tempor~ry or
limited care. or continuous
home with us . Equ ipped for
wheel chair, 742·.2266,

BUYING GOLD 8. SILVER
paying cash for anything
stamped 10K, 14K, 18K and
dental gold. crass rings,
Stolen Proper,t y. Antique wedding rings, silver coins
anything stamped
kitchen safe, Antique ·or
sterling.
Clarks Jewelry
dining room cabinet. Two.
rocking chairs. Other Store. Gallipolis 446·'2691 or
items. Anyone knowing or 992·205.4 in Pomeroy.
ATTENTION DEER HUN - seeing this furniture being
Gold,
Silver,
TERS . Came in and hauled In the vicinity of Buying
register now for our Big Flatrock, WV on October 10 Platinum. old coins. scrap
Buck Contest, Spring or later , a liberal reward Is rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available. Also
Valley Trad ing Co., Spring offered. 675·1302.
coins &amp; coin suppl ies tor
Valley Plaza , 446-8025.
POSITIVI L Y no hunting on sale. 446-8025. 446·8026.
TRAPPER We ha\le a com - the ·old H, C, Brown Farm
plete line of trapping sup- opposite Racine locks BEDS-IRON, BRASS, ol&lt;l
pi ies. Traps, dye, wa)(, and Letart, WV, Signed Bill Me· furniture, gold, silver
dollars, wood Ice bolCes,
lures,
Spring
Valley Dan iel.
stone jars. antiques, etc.,
Trading Co., Spring Vatl~y
Complete
households .
Plaza, 446-8025.
4
Giveaway
Write : M .O, . Miller. Rt. 4,
Pomeroy, Oh. Or 992· 7760.
EARLY
SEASON ANY PERSON who has
to
give
away
and
anything
SPECIAL Oeel- slugs, rem,
12 gauge, 25 per box, $9.97. · does not offer or .attempt to CHIP WOOD . Pol~s max ,
Spring Valley Trading Co,, offer any other thing for diame1er 10" on largest
Spring Valley Plaza, 446- sale may place an ad in this end . $12 .50 per ten . Bun91ed
coluinn. There will be no slab . $10 ,50 per ton .
8025 .
charge to the advertiser,
Del iverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Rock
Springs
Rd .•
$100 .00 REWARD IO · the
Pomeroy . 992·2689 .
5 mixed
puppies
to
person furnishing 1nformation leading to the g 1'o'eaway . 1·614·682-6010.
Gold, s ilver, sterling,
arrest and conviction of the
person shooting the Ford Upright piano. call .446· jewelry, ring s, old coins &amp;
c urrency , Ed Burkett Bar·
automobi re that waS for 2310.
ber Shop; Middleport . 992·
sale on St. Rt. 218 In the
3476.
.
month of October, David 3 kittens. Ca l l 446·3479.
Culpepper~ P,O, Box 131,
NEED MONEY? I need
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.
Hunting dogs ~ 112 Beegle, 4 furn itur e. New. used or anmonths old . Call 9.49·2333 tique . Also buylng glass,
after 5 :30,
china, gold, silver. coins,
For bulk delivery of
watches , cha i ns, etc. Margasoline, heating oil and
diesel fuel. call Landmark, 3 pups, 8 weeks old, Half tin' s General Store, Mid·
dt eport, Oh io. 992-6370.
German Shepherd , part St
992·2181, Pomeroy, Oh.
Bernard and Collie. 675·
1385.
Sc rap metals, batteries.
Horses, por,.ies, horse
radiators, ginseng, yellow
trailer, rid ing lessons. Hoof
root, and merchandise
Hollow 61.4·698·3290.
Lost and Found
6
brokering . Yarper ·Halste·
ad Salvage Company, 300
GUn Shoot Racine Gun Found male Great Dane in E1eventh Street. 675·5868.
Club. Every Sun. startir1g Eureka area . Call 256·1786 Also F lea Market open
identify &amp; pay for ad .
at 1 p,m, Factory
daily .
Open Monday guns only .
Friday 1·5 pm .
LOST .. 1 dog, black and
TRAPS and TRAPPING brown spots With greyish
supplies , Gene Hines, tinT, answers to the name
Amesville, Ohio. 614·448· Misty. Missing around the
Freindly Ridge area . If
6747. Daily after 1 p.m.
found, please call 256 ·1434
11
·cc...__H
=
el"'p"W
~•~n~t~
ed=--or 256·6030 .
RaCine Vol. Fire Dept.
Baby sitter in my home
sponsors a Shotgun &amp; rifle
match every Sat. night at LOST·2 Walker coon houn, Plantz Subdivision. Call
6: 30 p,m. at their building ds In TNT area, phone 304- 446·0043 or 446-4442 ,
i}t Bashan. Factory choke 675·1598.
12 guage shotgun &amp; open
RN or LPN tired of hospital
sight22 rifles .
schedules?
Schedule your
7
Yard Sale
own hours. Preform life In·
surance
medical
Apples, Honey and Sweet
Cider. Grimes. Romes, YARD sale, Friday Oc · evaluations. Ideal part
GaL. . and Red Delicious, tober 30, 10-4 Saturday 10·1 t i me job for Gallipolis/Pt.
Staymen Winesap. $5.25 if weather fitting. 2 Miles Pleasant nurse not working
per bushel and up. Cheaper out Jericho Rd. TV, knives, full time . Call 304-346-5916
rn vo~ume. Fitzpatrick Or- bOOks, clothes, electric (Charleston) .
chard, SR689. Phone 614- bO)(, wire. tile for road, ect.
Not respossible for ac- Why settle for less. Self the
669-3785.
cidents, 304-675· 114-4.
best. Sell Avon. For more
information cdll 742·2354 or
446·3358.

Utility Buildings

ing.

•Electrical work
•Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583

Announcements

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·0294 ..

ALL STEEL

ROUSH

·,
Sitootions Wonted

2~~~=~~~~~~==-r;:::;;;~~;:::tservices
insurance
coveragefor
In fire
Gallia
County

BARGAIN frame
Good
bedroom
home.
w ifh bath, coal furnace,
basemen.!, and 3 lots for
just$17·000.
HOME AND BUSINESS
BLDG
Nice
renoy.ted 4 bedroom
home. Nat . gas F. A.
furnace, new carpeting
and modern equipped
kitchen waiting for you .
Hobby or business bldg,
All in e)(te11ent conc:fi·
lion. Only $31 ,OO(L
EXCELLENT
Modern Jlh stories, 3 or
can be 4 nice bedrooms
with lots of large
storage closets, 2 baths,
hot water heat, dry full
basement, apartment
with garage. In nice
condition for you to buy .
Asking 169.900. Make offer.
ASSOCIATES: GOR·
DON ·a. TEAFORD,
HELEN L. TEAFORD
&amp;SUE P.MURPHY

MCtllllfV, fl-mtyKUf·lt-KUrt

25.
26. _ _ _ __

'

................................................g ...

..

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS

SCRAP

Aluminum Siding

..,,...........

24. _ _ _ __

5. - - - - . , . . - - -

._

.............
U.MII ........ ,~.............................. ,.,,,, .,..

•

ANO CUSTOMIZING
Re-Biue and Re-Fin·ish
Restock, parts. etc.
Buy Guns 10%
Above Wholesale

1-( 6)41-992-3325

(Pomeroy Scrap
Iron
&amp; Metal)

New Hours:
Mon.ll:Ofl-7:00
Tues. 1I:Ofl-5:00
Wtdl. 10:0H:OO
Tflun.11:011-I:OO
Fri. 10:10-S:IH!
Union A••·
Pomeroy, Ofllo
PHONE 992-:1021

i

71-AutltfDr Sa..

,.,,,,.,,,,,,,

..

GUNSMitHING

.WANTED TO BUY

Styffsls: -Mark Mora
tnd Cindy Cuthbertson.

~

....--..............,........
...................,
,.........

--

.J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION
Vinyl &amp;

HAIR REMEDIES

lf-FMIItt A V....1111e1
Jt-(lllor S•l•" TriCM

u,MIIw.tll., . . . . .,........_ , .... , , .. , ., • , , . ,. ; , ., ., U •• '

I, Dt ...MI.... -

65, Portland, Oh.
Ph. 843·4912
$5.00 Monlhfy
Serving the following
townships: Lebanon,
Sutton, letart, Olive,
Orange, Salisbury, Bed-·
ford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio,
Rutland,
Harrisonville and Mid- ;
dleport.
111-12-1 mo. ·

Phone

992-2259

H-Mtlc. MircMINIIIM
U-1•11•1111 h,(llllln
M--Patstof'IIM
'

Rates and Otller 1nformatlon

'I 7

·ROOFING

TOM HOSKINS

eMERCHANDISE

11-u.......,,

"-

.OHIO VAU.EY
And Home Maintenance
•Roofing oft!! lypos
•Siding. · ·
·R-oolollno
• llree.ntimltes
•H Yrs. experience

-....

J-Aft..DUIICftnlfttS
- 4-GIIIH!WIY

7-Yer~Sale

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9-21 ·tfc

Phon•------------------

eRENTALS

MtiiiDiilm

...... Lnta!NI FOC.IHI

.
The information sJaould be, mailed.;,
. del.ivered to the Village of Middleport, Office
Community Development, 237 RKe -5tr ,
Middleport, Ohio 45760 by Nov. 2, lNl. .

992-6259

Write your own ad and ordlr by mel! with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by pnone when you gal
rHufls. Money not relundablo.

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

B~x

S&amp;W

POMEROY,O.

12

retired to small
aVerage income.
hunts. fishes. gar·
f' den••· hoping to contact
hy
non · smoking
woma1n under sixty f i ve
who likes outdoors. Reptys
please 9i ve phone no. a.n~
address. Pertinent 1n·
formation to P .0 . Box 102,
Albany, Oh •mo.

E . MIII-

8-20

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlflads and

WANT AD INFORMAnON

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

4958

'

related trades. ·
Contractors shall furnish the following information:
Name and address of firm
Owners
Financial Statement, Credit Reference
·
Bonding Capabilities
Recent Project References

•

work
_ Concret work
_ Plumbing and
elacrriol work

FARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
1-No. 1600 Die1el Ford
fractorwl C;ab

"ltiUIIIuf. Cullom
lultt OlrlgH"
Cllt for lrH lldlng
tsllmttts, 949·~101 or
94t-1160.
No lund1y C11t1

,., ... llllllnl "' ,...

NOTICE TQ CONTRACTORS

lel:'ed over Mnrlllllel.
P a - wbo own land tn the elgl-.
county areiiiDIY order,trees Wider

_ Roofing anC:! gutter

Dei I""

BISSEU
SIDING CO.

The neclline s-ps ail around
in a double cune that's the most
aroceful frame fOf a pretty blou~e
or turtleneck tops. This jumper
doubles as a dress too.
Printed Pattern 4958: Misses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20.
Size 12 (bust 34) jumper 2 1/8
yds. 54": blouse l 118 yds. 45".
$2.00 ,_ _. polln. Md SCM

COLUMBUS - • Landowners in the program by contscting the of- servation Service, Cooperative Exeight southeast Ohio counties will flees of the local service forester, tension Service and the Soil and
get oo free tree for each one they Agricultural Stabilization and Con- Water Consel')lation Dlatrict.
purchase during the 1982
reforestation program of the Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
(ODNR) Division of Forestry.
WESTVACO, Inc., a major
eaatern forest products company,
wt11 pay half the cost of the trees orThe Village of Middleport is receiving apdered by landowners in Athens,
plications for contractors for the remodeling
Gallla, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
and reppir of various properties in accordance
Noble, Vinton, and Washington
with
HUD Grant NO. B-il1-DN-39-G222.
counties.
The counties are in the timberRequired services are.: Carpentry, Painbuying area of the cOmpany's Luke,
ting, Siding, GuHers and Downspouts, InMd., plant. WES1VACO has sporr
sulation, Heating, Plumbing, EleCtrical,
sored the program in Ohio since ·
Masonry, Roofing, Plaster and Dry Wall and
1986. There Is no requirement to sell
Landowners must purchase a
nUJimum ol500 seedllngJ to qualify
for WESTVAOO to match 500. The
· landowller may purchase hardwoods, or pine, but the matching
portlun of the order mlllt be In either
red or white plae. Windbreak stock
la not eligible torlhe program.
With any lndlvldilal landowner,
WESIVACO wW matcb up to 10,000
llldllngl par J'C. LaudowD&amp;iS are
III'Jed to p11nt 110 lhat a- cover 1
CCIIItlpoul and are not at-

remodeling

Farm Equipment

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

Free tree offer given landowners

thema~tlmbertothecompany.

__Addonsand

New HoU.Jnd', 8v5h Hog

8·20·1fc

the City of Cleveland will become the bargalnfn! agent
lor Ohio in bidding lor surplus electric power from New
York's power authority. (AP Laserphoto).

megawatts that PASNY must
allocate to other states.
Cleveland has been purchasinR 23
megawatts of electricity produced
at the Falls since July 19M. The
power represents about 25 percent of
the annual amount sold by the city to
its elecliicity customers. Its contract runs through 1985.
· PASNY recently decided that any
state interested in contracting its
power after 1985 must have a single
bargaining agent. Rhodes said that
by naming Cleveland to the task
now, Ohio has a jump on the com,
petition.

Guy1ville, Ohio
Authoriled John Deere,

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

Printed Patlern

·Cleveland Will bargain for state

'

•9 92-7656

&amp; SERVICE

u.s. Rt. sn East

,FREE
ESTIMATE'S
PH. 992-6011

Most Versatile

CLEVELAND (AP) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes has given the city
of Cleveland the task of arguing
Ohio's case in seeking cheap, Niagra
Falls-generated hydroelectric
power.
Rhodes named Cleveland to han·
·die talks with the Power Authority of
New York Stste primarily because il
has been the only Ohio city to con·
tract power from PASNY.
George Pofok, deputy commissioner of the Cleveland
Municipal Light Plant, said com·
petition will be fierce for the 180

SA~ES

Custom kitchens and appliances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling,
plumbin; electric, anj
heating.

(10) 14, 21, 28, (11) 4, 11, 18,
"6tc

POWER PARTNERS- Cleveland M!lyor George
Volnovich, right, explains how the city gets power from
New York's hydroelectric plants in Niagara Falls
durlog a news couference Tuesday wllh Ohlo Governor

BOGGS

with Major Hoople

EAFORD

22 Yn. Experience

L1rp1t Radiator.

· Keep Thlt Ad for

'

the

Htl,ltr

OUR BOAROIN(J HOU.SE

Guaranteed

COMPL.TE
RADIATOR
SERV!CI

Previoualy, the ct!lce ltaff and Ita
policy -iwictlona were put of the
Fannen Home AdmlnlllnUon, of the agenclea In Naylor'ajurladi.,_
tioo.

reaources. n

The Daily

Situltions Wanted

Room, board, and
Elderly
preferre
Reasonable. Call 614·992·
6022.

Will do housecleaning by
week or day . Cail367-0324,
would like to do baby sit ,
ting in my home, any shift .
Call446-1197.
Babysitting in my home,
Bidwell area. weekdays.
Ca II 388-9783.
TV service calls, Call 992 ·
2034. Also used cotor TV fo(
sale.
Will do house cleaning, 8822571.
-

21

Business
Opportunity

A HI GHLY PROFITABLE
and beauti ful Jean and ·
Sportswear shop of your
own . $12,500. to Sl6,500. Includes inventory, fixtures,
in-shop tra i ning, one paid
airfare to Apparel Center
and more . Over 100·
nationally known brands_
such as Levi, Lee, Chic.
Calvin Klein, Jordache," '
Zena . Call Now! Paceset ·
ter Fashions , In c. 1-800-643·
6305 .
Money to Loan
22
Columbus First MortgageCompany FHA ·VA Finan·:
c iny Loan Rep. Cookie· ·
Krauuer ( 304)675·3473 ,
-~=-=-=-·::;;::::;::::=;:::::';===
23
Professional
Services
Pi ano tuning and repair,
Love your neighbor tune
your -P i ano . Bill Ward. ·
Wards Keyboard. 446-4372, :
Gallipolis .
HARPER Adu lt Care Center -providing the personal
c are your elderl y need in a
home li ke atmos phere .
Vacanc ies now availib le.
c aii304·675· 129J.

31
New J bdr . house with
garage and ful l base m ent
$45,000 . Owner will help ·
finance, Call446·0390 .
·
BY OWNER : 4 b&lt;lr ., spl i t·
level. liv i ng roO m &amp; din ing
room combination, eat·in
kitchen , lg , family rm ,, 2
, 1/ 2 baths. located in Tara ·~
EsTates. Club !house and·:
poor priv i leges, S7s,ooo·
firm . Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt.
only call446·9403 .
'

3 bdr. house in city with
16x32 in ground pooL Fen ·
ced in yard. plus extra' s,
$68,500 or best offer . Call
446-7497 .
Milton Road, Camp Conley .
2 year old, 3 bedroom:
house, fully carpeted , with
1 full and two and a half
baths, yard landscaped
with large utility building ,
Assume 8 112 percent roan , ·
675-6275.

-------

Or rent -3 bedroom fur·
nisht:CI t 1umt' on Bud Chat-'
tin Road on b1g level lot. '
576·2711 .
2 bedroom house on 1 acre, :
2 mile&amp; back qf New Haven
on paved road. fully carpeted, self contained water
and septic system . 882·3267 .
HOUSE;Meadowbrook Ad -'
dition, 3 bedroom, familY ·
room with fireplace, cen- .
tral air. basement 304-675· ,
1542.
By owner, home In Mason,
wv . l 1f2 story, 4 bedroom,·
large living room with
fireplace, dining room, kitChen, large sitting room,
full size basement. all car· •
peted, total electric. sitting .:
on large lot. For more in·
formation call773-5241 .

�•
Pag-14-The Daily Sentinel
31

Homes for Sale

3 bedroom house, 2 acres,-21
baths, family room . Full
basement, garage. 949·
2079.
By owner. Nlc:e 2 bedroom

ranch type over 3 car
garage. $27,!00. 13 pet. in·
terest available. 949-2801 or
9&lt;19· 2~ .

Large historic home on
beautiful corner lot. 6th
and Main, Middleport. 992·
5593.

LAND
CONTRACT · i
bedroom, full basement,
workshop with anached
shed, approxlmatelyL 1h
acre. All excellent condltion. S28,000-$t,OOO down
and 11 percent on unpaid
be lance. S275 a month . !n
Racine area. 614-9..9-2249.
Syracuse. 3 beclrooms,
large living room, fully
carpeted, 2 baThs, 2 car
garage. $38,000. 992·2638.

LAND CONTRACT 10• int .,
small down payment. Pay
S215. 12 per month, nice
starter home with 2 BR ,

Lots &amp; Acrnge

35

LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities available; S300.
down. owner will finance,
call after 3 p.m .• 256·6413 .
Would you like to own a.
home of your own. we
didn' t have $10,000 · for a
down payment nor $5,000
nor even $1,000. Do what we
d id Call513·592-9l75 .

.

.

4..1,_---'H=ou"'s~e,s..cfo,re,R"-"e"nt,__
4...,.bdr. 2 112 bath bi level
w ith POOl off Rt. 35. Call
Wiseman Real
Estate
Agency . 446-3643 .
Small 4 rm . &amp; bath. fur·
nished, located 735 rear Jrd
Ave., Gallipolis. SllO per
mo., $60 deposit. Call 446·
3870 or 446· 1340.
4
bedroom
house
overlooking the Ohio River.
3 mi. from town. Lower
River Rck --- $i275 per mo.
Dep. require"t:t. Inquire at
422 2nd. Ave. or Phone 446·
1615 or 4.46· 1244.

44

Aparlmtmt
lor Rent

51

Furnished apts. nice, 1
bdr., adults, steam heat,
S220 utilities p&lt;l, Call &lt;1&lt;16"
4-416 after 7~M.
2 bdr. apartment unfurn.,
In Crown Ctly, Ohio. Call
256·6520.
Mobile home In city central
air and heat, ·adults only,
dep. 446·0338. .
2 BEDROOM apartment,
HUDaccepted. 67~· 5104.
APARTMENTS
One
bedroom starts at $152.00
per month. Two beclroom
starts at $188.00 per month.
Oeposlt$200. Call &lt;1&lt;16·2745.

APARTMENT
Call «1&gt;·0390.

for

Rent.

3 bdr . apt . in Rio Grande.

Call 1-614-682-7056.

2 bdr . apt. for rent. Call4463937.
bdr . furnished, no
chlldren, ·$50 .00 dep .,
$175.00 per mo., utilities
paid . Call446 -3667 after 5.

Misc. Mtrcnondlct

HOII.-.old GDOcfs

USED REFRIGERATOR.
Corbin and Snyder Fur"·

nlture,

955

KIT'N'CARLYL.f""

1r.:=.:::::-~;=.:..=~-----~;:-::..:;' :...:.;.;,;'""::.:;"

Ratliff Pools &amp;, Sarvlce.
Complete sales, 111rvlce,

pool

covera.

and

• -.. -~

Second, terizaflon kits. Cal1446-132.4

~

Firewood-spill, delivered .
Antique hutch, J shelves, 3 and stacked. Mixed wood
· drawers, no glass, $75.00. $65 per cord or S35 per hall
Call256·1968.
cord. Hardwood S75 per
cord or scr per half cord.
Pair of velvet club chairs, Call for quotes on large
t)tue and green stripe, quanllles. Phone 245·!&gt;178.
newly unholstered, ex·
cellent condition·. S..OO pair. New Woodburnlng ad·on
675-&lt;1692 days, 675-2128 after furnance, still In factory
5pm .
carton, heats large home,
$450. Call256·12l6.
WOOD dining room table
with 6 chairs, good con- Flat Allis model 6E dozer
dition . Hutch, excellent with Cargo wench, Flat
d
" ' 88
Allis model 54.5 ru~ber lire
con Ilion . ..N&lt;OI ' 2·2811 .
endloader 2 1/4 y4. bucket,
completely overhauled
with new .engine, bOth ·
CB,TV, Radio
52
Items ln exc. condition.
Equipment
Blaine King 304-3n·6390,
RiP.Iey, WVA.
PACE 1000 B side band
with D·JO"' mike, Slltronlx
model 90, VFO Black Cal More than 100 pieces of
frequency counter, Hawk brown underpinning for a
Linear, 50 wall, $275. call mobile home, used just one
year. A seven and one half
394-675·2387.
feet by 58 inctt wide oval
Antiques

size 9·10.
after
rug,
andCall.w6·3065
white U(liforms
4:30PM.

It·&gt;'

•

Television

GOING
TO TFIE'AT
THIS L-IKE' A

VIewmg

SCENE-THE

r

,.

FUU.. ROUTINE.

'

WEDNI!IDAY
QI:T. za, IIIII

•

·•

7'00 (I). PM MAGAZINE
(I)
. PROGRAM
\lNANNOUNCED
(I)
ENTERTAINMENT

I~DAYSAClAIN

~

7:05

t.::::::::::::::::::JL:::::::::::::::::::.J

..........
-· ... ·-· ......

sss ..

___ _ _

446·-

til ENTERTAINMENT
NIOHT
7:35
8ANFORD AND SON
7'58
!;BN UPDATE NEWS
8'00
.(!) REALPEOPLE Avia it
to a ghOat town In Naw Mexico
and a haunted church in
Arizona. a report on a flying
saucer lantllng at Mt. Rainier,
Waahihgton, and a look at a
Santa Monica couple who have
turned their home into a wax
muaeum. (80 mlns.) 1
C1J NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

0H (iOj.LY, IT'S
GOOD'TOGE'E

YOU! WE WEI':E
AFIUIID YOU'D

Home Insulation,
Inc. No Job to small or
large. 2 yrs. experience &amp;
training. Work guaran·
teed 1 Save up to 30 to S4l per
cent on heating bills. Free
estirnates. Call 286·7l1l or
286·5740.

0/WWNE().'
8:01

Bill Hawks . Chimney
Sweep. Free est. Call 446·
9531 or 388-8571.

ALLEYOOP

LOCKSMITH • Servlcp,
Residential, automotive.
Eniergency service. cawl
.882-2079.
I
RON'S Tete'v lsion Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
house calls. Phone 576·2398
or &lt;1&lt;16·24.!&gt;1.
F &amp;_ K Tree Trimming,
stump removal. 675·1331.

GASOLINE ALLEY

[

~~:~urn left!

'(ou can G}OI That man

sometimes
theij don't!

""'".. the rect light! He has

to stop!

Are high Interest rates
' keeping you from a new
home? Then put a new look
on your present one. We do
all types of custom building
and
remodeling.
Fo.quality, professional ser·
vices call: Terry Gray 895·
3386 or John Wamsley 773·
5527 .

and

WINNIE
'

Plumbing
&amp; Healing ·

CARTER'S P~UMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone &lt;1&lt;16·3888 or 446·4-477

CONNIE'!&gt; DOING

.Iaf PI&lt;EFI'IRot:&gt;

;,E.TTEI'. .THAN I

TO DO THAT,
~ - SILLMAN.

THOUGHT.
ALTHOUGH 5HE

Wi:'LL TAKE

Tli!INS NURS1N6
HER BACK
"11:l HEALTH.

SrTtL NEECIS
SOMEONE TO LOOI&lt;
AFTER HER .. . FOR
A WHILE.
.

-~

'

Cilll CD

QUINCY Quincy
becomes romantically involved
with an amnesiac and i s
shocked to learn she Ia part ot
the go~ernment'l witneaa
protection program and her lila
Ia in danger. (Season Pr.emlare;
Momlna.)
()) JOHN CALLAWAY INTER·
VIEWS 'Aaron Copland' talks
abouthla ch Udhood, hla at udies
1nParis, and the ~ariou a musical
1lylea which have influenced
him In his tong composing

t0·2~

84

•
BARNEY
-:

LOWEEZY!!
WHAT'S THAT
0~ HEIFER
OOIN'IN MY
STORE?

10:20
10:28
10:30
,

• c··v::::::~:~ NEWS

Genorol Houllnw

JONES BOYS WATER
SERV.I CE. Call 367·7471 or
367-0591.

1~:: &lt;tliWPlt~~w~•

ill

NEWS
NASHVIU.E RFD

Rlc~~~::f:~~~~~:~~~u:! ~

Upl!olstwy_.

446·1133 or 446-1133.

MOWREY$ IJ~ .. Rt
1 8011124, Pl. llllant, 304:
675-41!&gt;1.

I RNP
NH .::~.11:~\l
lllAT HARP BABPOO
~5

IT'S

TRUE

+

• 95 4
• Q 10 8

+96 2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

West

..

,

E11t
Pass
Pass

Sooatb

Pass

North
1+
1 NT

DbL

2+

Pass

Pa~

Pass

Pass
Opening lead:

•K

his ace of diamonds first
then gave the ruff and ruffed '
a diamond In return for down-:
two and a very good score.
Ron wasn't satisfied. tie
said, "II you had cashed' '
ace of diamonds before ~
leading the dub you mlgl\1 :
have scored two dlamond
ruffs." Of course, Ron w~S ;
kidding . If Malcolm had
cashed that ace, South would
surely have played a high ,.
club from dummy and made
his contract.

~~1('-"t,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Tiny brook
5 El&lt;change
9 Venezuelan
copper
·center
10 Old maskr
IS Poet
14 " ~ Green
Apples"
15 Order of
animals

DOWN
I Fanatical
2 Teherao
citizen
3 Nocturnal
lemur
4 Youngster·
5 Deli item
6 Legal
document
7 Lawyer (abbr.)
8 Lend a hand
(suff.)
II Gannent
18 Make lace
feature
17 Passing grade IZ Wobble
18 Render
' 16 Very (Fr.)
powerless
19 Robert
20 Sharpen
and Alan
Zl Wreath
20 Wrest

Yesterday's ADswer
2S Beach
31 Greek
sight
shopping
24 Spellbinder
center
Z5 Letter
32 - to
sign-off
(habituated)
26 Director, 33 Foeman
Fritz 35 Zola novel :
Real
38 Congregated
estate
39 - De Luise

za

Z2 Split
2S Strings

!8 Ship
%'1 Region

28 Sought
the vote
29 Porter's

concern
30 Hire

340ne
-time
35 Horse

~ :=:It Peace
symbol

140 Zealous
, U Utah city
4Z Tarry
43 Numerous

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
lo

how

to work

llt

AXYDLIAAXIl.
LONGFELLOW

One letter oimply otands lor aoother. In thlo sample A 11:
. used lor the three L's, X lor the two O's, ele. Sin1le letters
apoetrophea, the lena:th and formation of the word1 ue ali ·.
htats. Ea&lt;h d•y the eode letters are dlllerent.

Pratendera'lmpreaalonlat
antartllnment from the MGM
Grand Hotel In Lea VegiB; with
Alch Llltla, Thom Brash and

PEANUTS

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTIERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.

1

CBN UPOATE NEWS
SING OUT AMERICA
HBO SNEAK PREVIEW:
NOVEMBER Jarry Stlller and
Anne Meara highlight the
upcoming movlea, sports and
!Q_eclala on HBO In November.
UlJ ALFRED HITCHCOCK

Bridge experts are never
satisfied with anything but
maximum match point
duplicate. ,
Malcolm Brachman of
Dallas declde&lt;l not to double
one spade for takeout . He
might well have remained
silent and simply led against
one no trump, but no one
likes to defend against one no
trump. So Malcolm stuck In
a balancing double. If North
had redoubled Malcolm
would have been most
unhappy while his partner
Ron Anderson strug~led with
two diamonds (probably two
diamonds doubled and down
·at least ·one. )
However, North came to
his rescue by running to two
spades.
Malcolm led his king of
hearts . South had a lot of
ways to play tne hand, but
managed to find one of the
worst lines. He took the ace of
hearts and led a heart right
back . Malcolm cashed his
two heart winners and
shifted fa the three of dubs.
Declarer had a problem
and found the worst solution.
He played a low club from
dummy. Ron produced the 10
and led back his four spot to
get a ruff. Malcolm cashed

~ESENT&amp;

NOW HAULING hOUh coal
&amp; limestone for driveways.
Call for esllmalt1367-710l.

17

•

THE GREATEST
AMERICAN HERO When
Amerlca'anatlonslpeatimeand
national eecurit~ are endangered, FBI agent Bill Maxwell
sends aupereulted pitcher
Ralph Hinkley into the thick of a
major league pennant race to
become bueball'a hottest
overnight sensation . (Seaaon
Premiere; 80 mine.} (May be
pre-empted by coverage ol the
World Series.)
8:05 CilMOVIE ·(DRAMA)"'
11
Murphy't W.r" 1871
8:30 (J) MOVIE ~COMEDYI'" \\
"PrlY.•.!!.BonJomlo" 1981
tiJCIJillll WKRP IN CINCINNA·
Tl Rumors run amock at the
ata'tlon and Balley'athe prime
target when she temporarily
allows Johnny Fever to move in
with her.
'
8'58 CIJ !;BNUPDATENEWS
9:00 CIJIICD THE FACTS OF LIFE
Tootle Learns a Ieason in
growing up when, to show the
other girls aha's just as mature
as they are, she gets drunk on
some wine ahe stole from Blair.
eaaon Premiere)
700CLUB
llJ1 IB THE FALL GUY Lea
MajoiS stars in the role of a
veteran Hollywood stuntman,
Colt Sea~era, who alao works
as a bounty hunterto make ends
meet.ln the opening aeries, Colt
sets out to capture a ball jumper
who just happenatQbethe moat
powerfUl ma.n In a small
southwestern city, and its
eheriflto boot$ (Premiere; 2
hrs.) (May be pre-empted by
coverage of the World
Series.)
II()} 1m SPECIAL MOVIE
PRESENTATION 'Hide In Plain
Slght't980Stars:JameaCaan,
Jill Eikenberry.
illJ 9A.M8LIN'
9:30 ())IIC!JLOVE,SIONEYLaurlo
returns to her role in a New York
based soap opera and Sidney
resumes his role as principal
parent to her daughter, Patti,
but Laurie is wary of resuming
thler life together because
Sidney can't seem to atop
meddling. Stars: Tony Randall,
Swooale Kurtz, Kaleena Kitf.
(f:remlero)
(I) WORLD OF FERNANDO
BOTERO The contemporary
Columbian aurreallat painter,
Fernando Botero, who sa work
has been exhibited throughout
Europe and North and South
America, Is the subject of lhia
10:00

NORTH
to-2B·Ii ~
+QJ4
• AID 6
t K74
+KJ7S
WEST
EAST
+98H
+72
.KQJB
.7 3 2
tA
tJ965ll
+AQ8 3
10 4
SOUTH
+A K 103

· SeHie for the best

~Edi:\

"

•

BACK HOE and Septic tonk
Service. · Larry Siden·
strlcker. 675-5580.

t5

Jumblas: CHAIR BERTH ADDUCE VOLUME
Answer: A decision hom a clever dlctatOr"VERDICT"

By Oswald Jacoby
•and Alan sontag

film .

J./&lt;.5.

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air conJition ser.v lce,
commercial, industrial.
Phone 112·2079.

I

BRIDGE

~

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

. Electrical
&amp; RefriJ!!ra'"t"'lo,n~_
SEWING Machine repairs,
ser·vlce. Authorized Singer
sates &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
·

Yesterday's

GAME' 711 neceaury, ABC
Sport a will pro~ ide coverage ol
Game 7 intfle World Series from
the city of the American League
Champion. If a seventh game is
not needed, alternate programmin!Ufill&amp;ir.
ltliJim MR. MERLIN
C1) PICASSO: A PAINTER'S
DIARY Picauo speaks for
himself, by meana of an actor's
voice·o~er, In this intimate look
at the artist, his family, friends
and work. (90 mins.)
illJ
PUBLIC AFFAIRS

ANNIE

c

Excavating

(Answers tomorrow)

(i] ilJ18) WORLD SERIES,

RINGLES'S SERVICE ex·
perienced mason, roofer,
carpenter, electrician,
general repairs ·and
remodeling. Phone 304·675. 2088 or 675·4560.

Now arrange the cirded laHars to
torm th~ surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the abOve cartoon.

.

~ECIAL

GENES
CARPET
Cleaning. Special rates for
Nov. and Dec . only: Call
now and save.-61 ..·992-6309.

IHI5.

X) I J
Answarhara{ I XX JKI I XXJ1.

I

H &amp; M CLEANING SER ·
VICE Steam &amp; or pressure
wash trucks, trailers,
mobile homes, farm equip·
ment, etc. Phone 388-9376
or&lt;1&lt;16·3829.

13

tYOGAVEt

MIGHT ~E

lliJ

Call 446-2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomn,

Ashworth
lnsfallement
Service. This week speciil
Armstrong acertone vinyl
57.86 installecl. Phone 446·
8019. All work guaranteed.

II

WHEN A REl"AlR'MAN
Ot.JL.Y GIVJ:S 'IOU A
ROUGH E.6TIMAie,
"THc FINAL- ~IL-1..

~ 0a't.IL TING

BORN LOSER

French City Painting
Residential, commercial,
interior, exterlo.-, paper
. hanging, and texured
ceilings. Ph. 367-n84 or 367·
7160.

A clean furnace saves
money . Have your furnace
cleaned. Call675· 2158.

'llwa
IIUPPET SHOW
CAROL BURNETT AND

FRIENDS
7:30 ~- YOU ASKED FOR 1T
ANOTHERUFE
PAUL SIMON IN CONCERT
One of pop mualc'a Qraateet
auperau.ra, Paul Simon
perform a a variety of hie amash
hill.
.
(I) II()} FIIMILYFEUD
(!) LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
(I)
NIGHTLY BUSINESS
REPORT
ilD&gt;
RICHARD SIMMONS

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SE.RVICE Home
maintainanc-e
and
remodeling. Phone 388·
9326.

12

rJ

TlCTACDOUGH
MACNEIL-lEHRER
REPORT

7891 ·

· Carpentry, building
remodeling, 675·2.«0.

I (I

EVENING

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality a" d ser·
vice. call675·1582.

A &amp;

•

•

MURDER

,•

and etc. Freegarage
estimates.
11
t~==ii~~~~==l~==i~i~~==l
basement,
floors
56
Pets for Sale
71
A:uto for Sale
· years experience. C.all 367·

s

•

The Daily

BING'S CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION · Si&gt;eciallzlng
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,

ssoo.

--·
--·

28, 1981

PAINTING .· Interior and
exterior,
plumbing,
roofing, some remodelinG .
20 yrs. exp. Call388·9652.

.

They'll Do It Every Time

•

CAii'TAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffett Brothers custom
carpets. Free estimateS.
call &lt;1&lt;16·21or..
·

Antique · · square gtand
piano. gOod cond. Call 614·
POODLE GROOMING.
1970 Olds Cutlass, motor In
Call Hobstetter Realty. 742 384·5391 (Wellston).
..MOving. Furniture and ap- Call Judy Taylor at 367· gOod condition, body gOod.
2003.
pUances for sale and Kim· 7220.
Needs transmission. $175.
2 bdr. apf. c lean, modern
ball organ. Call «1&gt;·8169.
Call614·949·2179.
furniture. Ma i n st., s,4,__.M""is.,c". ,M,.e.,_r,cn,a,n,d,_,l,ce,_
FOR LEASE OR RENT·
ORAGONWYND
CAT ·
Modern J bdr . ranch near
Cheshire. Sec . dep. &amp; ref.
Mobile Homes
32
New men's tie shoes, siz~ 19 cubic feet sears gold TERY · KENNEL. AKC MORRISON'S Auto sales.
town . $300 per month,
Call245·5818.
for Sale
10 AA. Gas room heaters. 2 refrigerator
with black Chow puppies. CFA Henderson, WV . Phone 675·
deposit
&amp;
references
pair inside shuMers. Call icemaker, $200. Coleman ·Himalayan, Persian and 1574 or 675-2881 .
requ
i
r~d
.
Call
STROUT
TRI - STATE
MOB I LE
1 bedroom apts. available 675·1051.
presidential electric fur- Siamese kiHens. Call 446HOMES. Gallipolis. Year REAL TV 446·0008.
at Rivers ide Apts. Equal
nance, $125. Call2.6-9508.
38« after 4 p.m.
end sale, price reduced,
Opportunity Housing. Call
1978 Mustang II, 4 cylinder,
Pioneer 650 .receiver ,
used mobile homes. CALL We will be having several
992-7721.
"'
speed, am·fm radio tape
Pioneer PL-400 Quartz trun· For Sale: 750 and 1000 HILLCREST KENNEL ·
«1&gt;·7572 .
homes for rent, lease or
deck, ac. 38,500 miles.
table,
ADC
Mark
II
12
band
gallon
PLASTIC
septic
Boarding all breeds, clean $2!00. 304-937-324-4.
lease with option to buy
Available. I bedroom apt. equalizer, Sanyo fullY tanks. State ancl CoJ.mty apCLEAN USED MOBI'LE within the next few weeks.
for renl. Contact Village automatic cassette deck, 1 proved. Total weight 300 indoor-outdoor facilities.
Also AKC Reg, Dober·
HOMES
KESSEL'S All over $200 per mo. &amp;
Manor Apts .• Middleport. pair
1973 Chrysler Newpaf-t, A
Omega
Z6DOO lbs., Haul in your pick·up mans. Call446·7795.
QUALITY
MOBILE required references &amp;
992-7787.
door,
automatic,
air,
speakers,
25
year
warran·
truck.
Ron
Evans
Backhoe
deposits.
For
more
in·
H(lME SALES, 4 MI.
radials, one owner, $800.
ty . 1 pair Fisher speakers Service, located 3 miles
formation
call
Strout
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
BRIARPATCH KENNELS cau after 5 pm 675·1092.
2 bedroom furnished apt. complete System, 2 months South of JaCkson on St. Rt.
R~alty 446·0008 .
35, PHONE 446·3868.
Boarding
and grooming.
old.
S2000
or
trade
for
992-5434, 992· 5914 or 304-882·
93. 286·5930.
·
A
K
C
Gordon
setters,
vehicle equal value. Two
2566 .
English Cocker Spaniels. 1976 Bronze Maverick,
12x65
Sc:,hultz
two .4 rm . apt. part furnished,
drum sets, good condition.
vinyl top, excellent con·
be:drooms partially fur· adults only. Call 446·3733,
Electric synthesizer. Best For sate wood ~:»urning Call 388·9790.
dillon.
$1900. 675-1636.
3
room
furnished
apart·
stove. like new. $120. Call
nlshed, new carpet. Phone even ing 446·0171.
ment . Adults only, no pets. offer. 1 breakfast set, new, 256·1371.
&lt;1&lt;16·7380.
'$300 . 675-6750 .
1981 GRANO Champion
Phone 614-949-2851 .
3 bdr . unfurnished house,
Con1est
QuarterHorse i977 CAMARO 304-675-2819.
Baseball
Cards·
Sets
ctose
to
town
.
Family
room
Geldlng
c
GOod
wltn kids. 11
TRAILER For Sale. 1977
1 bedroom furnished apart· 6 piece Ludwig drum set, 5 1981 Topps $18.00 726 car· yrs. old. 245·5252.
1977 Camero. 675-2819.
12X60 Elcono $6800. Un- with fireplace, low cost nat.
symbols, all stand, harderpinn i ng and new gas heat . 446-4240 or 446- ment. 614-992-5434.
dware. Phone 675-5295 after &lt;IS.
1981 oonruss$17.50600 ..
9655.
awnings. 446-1548.
5pm.
Have 3 male Cocker 1969 Mercury Montego,
1981 Fleer S17.54l 660 ..
1 bedroom furnished apar·
Spaniels to breed. 2 blonde, 42,000 original miles, 302
1981 Fleer error set $.42.95
temnt
in
Middleport,
l red, gOod blOod line, AKC VB, good tires. battery,
1975 Festival, Jbdr.. 2 For rent located in Oak
8ft. insulated truck topper, 24
utilities
included
.
$185
per
Hil
l.
5
rm
.
house.
Call
after
registered. ~ - 9372 after body damaged. Best offer.
baths, underpir)ning. Call
24 inches high, roll out win·
cards
month plus deposit. No dows. Cheap. 675·2365.
APM 682·6010.
675·3540.
5:30PM.
446-6665 after SPM .
1980 Topps $20.00 726 cards
pets . Call 614-9~2-7177 after
1979
Topps
$28.00
726
..
6p.m.
Female Apricot Poodle 1976 L TO. GOod condition.
12x60 mobile home fur- 3 BR HOUSE. located 125
SEWING for all occasions, 1978 Topps $35.00 726 ..
State
St
.
Sec.
Dep.
and
Ref.
pup. 7 weeks old. $75. Call 675· 1402.
nished. Washer &amp; dryer,
mending and alterations, 1977 Topps S40.00 660 ..
Apartments. 675·5548.
614-992·7102.
central 8ir, $5,500.' Call 367- required . Call 4.46-025.4
macrame . 3301 Jackson 1976Topps SS4l.OO 660 ..
evenings.
0416.
CAR lift S400. 39 Chevy
Ave. Pt. Pleasant. Eleanor· l975Topps S90.00 660 ..
1974Topps $95.00 660 ..
Fish Tank and Pet Shop sedan SlSOO. 304'576·2602.
APARTMENTS, mobile 304-675-4059·alter 6 p.m.
Topps $120.00 660 :.
2413 Jackson Ave.. Pt.
1970
Ritzcraft
12 X 65 2 bedroom house also homes.
houses,
Pt. Debbie 614·«1&gt;·8672-afler 6 1973
1972 Top~s $225.00 660 ..
Pleasant. 675·2063. Mon .• GOVERNMENT
p.m.
mobile 1home. 3 bedroom, mobile home. lawn &amp; gar·
SUR·
1
8
Spring Valley Trading Co.
Thurs., I Fri. 11 to 6. Tues., PLUS
front kitchen, utility room . den. Call after 2 PM 446- r1 !-~-~~21 ~rd614~2,~~~~:1~~·
CARS
AND
Spring
Valley
Plaza.
446·
Wed.,
I
Sal:
11
to
4.
Check
Call 614 ·1192-7313 after 5 0571.
1 USED gas cook stove, 1 8025.
TRUCKS
NOW
our Fish Special
p.m.
AVAILABLE through
Warm
Morning
2 bedroom twin single in used
goVernment sales, under
2 bedroom unfurnished Pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar . heater, 304·675· 1090.
Firewood for sale split,
Stud Service · · AKC Old $300, Call 1-714·569-0241 for
1971 D.a rian 12 x 65. 3 $190 . 1 bedroom furnished Street. $200 month plus
Eng I ish Sheepdog, 895-3624. your directory on how to
bedrooms. 11172 Crown apartemnt. $125. Naylors deposit. 1·614·263·8322 or OPEN ONLY SATUR · stacked, &amp; delivered . S30 a
large pickup load. Call 446·
purchase. Open 24 hours.
Haven, l4 x 65 with 8 x 10 Run. Security deposit.·Call 614·263·2669.
DAYS-SUNDAYS 1:00·7:30 8535 or «&lt;&gt;· 7993 .
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973 614·992·2288 .
p .m. Sam Somerville's
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
3 ROOM apartment, par· Warehouse. 7 miles east of
Frun
1972 Invader 14 x 70, J Large 2 story house in tially furnished, 30.4·675- Ravenswood, (New Era) . G.E. dryer, late mOdel, 58
&amp; Veget•bles
72
Trucks for Sale
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14 Pomeroy . For further in- 5659 . .
Surplus armv field iackets, $90.00. 3D' range hOod, new.
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B v.. S formation c all614·992·2272 .
boots, cotton olive drab, avacoclo, $25. Call «1&gt;·8181 .
APPLES-red &amp; yellow 1976 Chevy 2 112 ton dump
Sftles, Inc . '.lnd and Viand
EfficiencY rooms by the camouflaged, surplus ren·
delicious. S6.00 a bushel . truck, helllvy duty 16 ft.
Sts'. Pt. Pleasant, WV.
No. 1 potatoes $6.110-50 bed, twin holst, well equip·
5 room house, bath , week on Main Street. tal clothing, denim wear.
Phone675-4424.
HOOded zipper sweat shirts
pounds. Rayburns Market, ped, low mileage, ex. cond.
hallway, utility room . Mason, wv. 773·5651.
$10.00
Kanagua, Ohio.
Call 304-372-6390, R lpley,
small apartment. Call 614 ·
TWO repossessed mobile 446·1578 .
WVA.
THREE bedroom apart~
homes, brand new 1 81
ment for rent. in Clifton, Firewood split &amp; delivered. For sale 73 and up
models, (pr~vious dealer
304-675·1044.
$35. truck toad, or $65. a Chevrolet truck parts.
TWO
bedroom,
furnished
75 Chevrolet 112 T PU, 6
lost floorplan money) . Save
f:'ower steering change
cyl., $700 or best offer. Call
1 cord. Call 614-843-2933 or
big$$$$$ . Must sell quickly . cottage at 2103 Jefferson
over, power brakes, etc .
614·843· 2452.
388·9783.
Ave. Deposit required . 304·
Oliver
88 tractor, make
675·4100,
day
.
45
Furnished Rooms
. K &amp; K Mobile Homes
gOOd pulling tractor. Call
1971 pickup truck. First
Pt. Pleasant. WV
61
Farm Equipment
SLEEPING ROOMS and POTATOES. South off 388·9684.
1
$500 gets 11. 675·1302.
2 bedroom house. , ful I light housekeeping apt., SR681 west of ·oarwin. Or
675·3000
Case tractor, ·loader comnorth Of CRlB. Cecil Toban.
I basement on Viand Street. Park Central Hotel.
For sale Quilts hand made pletely rebuilt, new battery
MOBILE home located in 675 ·6803 or 675·3797.
for Christmas gifts. Jewell and good tires. With side 74 FORO half ton, rusty,
Cartlp Conley, extra nice
26'
TROUTWDOO
travel
runs good, 302, standard,
46
Space lor Rent
Niday. 446·3861.
mounted mower. $7.50 or
and clean, phqne 304-895- Nice 3 bed roOm house near
tr a iter and camp site on
overload springs, positive
best offer. Call614-949·2179. traction, $695.00, 304·895·
toWn . Two car garage and COUNTRY MOBILE Home Raccon Creek . Close to
3967.
util ity building. $300. 675- Park, Route 33,· North of Ohio River. S500 down. 4,000 lb. Pneumatic fork liflt
3927.
with side shifter will I row corn picker, pull
4506
.
Owner
will
finance
.
614-256·
Pomeroy
.
Large
lots.
Call
USED MOBILE HOME .
sacrifice. Cali61.,.·423-6873.
type. In working condition . 71 Ford pick up truck, 302
1216.
992 ·7479 .
. 576·2711 .
$125. Call614·949·2179.
NEW Haven, 2 bedroom
engine, good condition,
Freight trailer converted
with
basement,
nice
home
New
Crop
Apples-Red
end
$500.8
ft.truck topper $100.
Trailer
lots.
Call675·1076.
1973 3 bedroom 14 x 70, unlot, good location, $200 a
Golden Dellcious, Winesap, to construction lob trailer, 71 MASSEY Ferguson trac- 304-675·3123.
derpinned. 675-4064.
month . 304-882 ·2.405 or 882- OFFICE space or si-nall Rome Beauty, Grimes good cond. Call 614·423· tor. 135 gas. Bill Baird, Lit·
6873. .
tie Sixteen. Southside, 304·
2447 .
73
business. available Novem- Golden and Johnathan·
Vans&amp;4W.D.
1973 Victorian 14 x 65, extra
675·1100. Call or Sell. before
Retail
and
Wholesale,
any
ber
5th.
1508
Jefferson,
call
nice,
woodburning
9
a.m.
or
after
2
p.m.
quanity
available.
Also
1979
Ford
van 45,000 mlles~
fireplace, ready to move in. FOR rent in Mason, 1 304-675·1435.
fresh Apple Cider, Pum- NICE maternity clothes,
excellent shape, $4,500 or
apartment,
$200
bedroom
Phone 675-4544 for ap·
small sizes, 304·675·4012.
best offer. Phone 379-2196.
per
mon"th,
includes Trailer space on large semi pkin~ homemade Apple
pointment .
Livestock
Butter
and
more
produce
uti lities, 304·882·2405 or 882· private lot, free water and
delights. Bob's Market,
2447 .
Golden
Eagle .
Cows, cows and calves, 1979
sewage in Pt. Pleasant. Mason. WV . Open 7 days. 5.~5'--__,B,u"'il"'d"in,g'-'S~u,.p,.p,ll,.e~s­
1972 Schultz 12 x 65. 304·675·
Cherokee
Jeep,
all
power,
herd
bulls
prospects,
675· 1699.
Phone 773·5721 .
2'107.
Building mate.-ials, block,
yearling heifer~. Sorne radio, tape, new tires, low
brick, sewer pipes, win·
sired by or A. I. to National mileage, excellent con42
Mobil~ Homes
Trailer lot for rent or sale, Discontinued cabinets, top, dows, lintels, etc. Claude
MOBILE home skirting,
for Rent
Champions! Second annual dition . 773·5323.
complete hookup. Mason, stove, hood, sink . $1200. Winters, Rio G.-ande, 0.
70xl4 from $220 . to $495.
sale will be at the Athens
12x50 2bdr. trailer,· ·fur - Second St. 773 ·5751 or 773- Dale's Kitchen Center. 675 - Call245·512l . ·
·• . K &amp; K Mobile Homes
County
Fairgrounds, 2PM, ·74
Motoi'Cy&lt;le•
.
nished, located near North 9520 .
2318.
Pt. Pleasant, WV
October 31. For catalogs
Gallia
HS
.
Caii38B·9692
.
675·3000
contact Arrow Farms. Rt. All used bikes drastically
56
Pels for Sale
4, Athens or Jeffers• Farm, reduced for Immediate
GOLDEN Pheasants and
clearance. Betz Honda
2
BR
House
Trailer
for
Rt. 1, Athens, onio45701..
@81
renanDI!ii
lady
Amherst
Pheasans,
19n Victorian 14 x 70 two
AKC
Dachshund,
Sales,
Upper
Rt . 7,
phone ~-675- 2961 · after
bedroom. family room, all Rent. Call 446-1052.
Pomeranian ,and Poodle
Gallipolis. &lt;1&lt;16·2240.
'
5:00p.m.
electric . Call675-3987 ,
pups, 304·895·3958.
100 Head Polled Hereford
2 bdr. mobile home for rent 51 . Household Goods
Cattle· Cows, cows and
.
SALE or rent-1972 New in town. Call 446-0318.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
1975 CHEVROLET impala, AKC Registered Doberman calves, herd bull prospects, 76
Auto Parts
~oon ,
2 bedroom, fur ·
Sofa, chair, rocker,· ot- good condition. price pups, 9 weeks old, 1 male. 1 yearling heifers. Some
&amp; Acc:essorles
aished, air conditioned, set 2 bdr. furnished mobile toman, 3 Jables,
SOfa, reduced. 36" gas range$30. female, black and rust. sired or bred A. I. to
up in 2 C's Park, Camp home, no pets, on Bob Mc- chair and lo~esea1, $275. 304·675·3763.
$125. 458·1513.
Notional cnamplons. CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Conley, $6,000. Will help Cormick Rd, S160 month, Sofas and chairs priced
Second annual sale will be Auto parts, auto repair.
finance, 304-675-2195.
water furnished . 446-3617.
from S28S. to $795. Tables, .Firewood. S3S truckload.
at · the Athens County wrecker service, buy
$38 and up to $109. Hicle-a· 882·2629.
AKC registered, Slf2 mon· Fairgrounds, 2 pm, Oc· automobiles, radiators and
ths old, male BOxer, real tober 31. For catalogs con· batteries. 446· 7717.
1969 Kirkwood 12 x 65, 2 3 bdr. trailer for rent. Call beds,suo., queen size, $380.
Recliners, $175. to 29s., GO
.
nice, healthy, S200. 304·576- tact Arraw FarmS. R-4,
be.droom, stove, carpeting, 446-3371.
·cart304-882·2424.
2186 ·
· Alhe ns or Je ff ers' F arm,
Lamps from S18. to $65. 5
! ·ir conditioned. very nice
STARVIEW Topfier, In·
condition . Ca ll675·2427.
sulated.
$200,304-675-4365:
dlf
tt
f
S79
R1,
Athens,
Ohio
45701.
Mobile home for ·rent. Call -pc.
e es rom
·• to
Phone6U·s93-8274.
446·9580.
~.~ .
S385. 7 pc., $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
MOBILE home for sale,
77
Auto Repair
S219 up to '495. Desk $110.
304-675-6323.
"
'
24X60 modular hoine for Hutches. $300. and $375.,
'.
FALL SPECIAL Have a
sale or rent. Dep. &amp; ref. maple or pine finish.
machine poliShed &amp; wax
33
Farms for Sale
Call256·9333 or 256·6246.
lob. $54l, wax only S20. Au1o
Bedroom su lies · Bassett
Trim Center, -446·1968.
OaR. $675 .. Bossett Cherry,
71
Aula for Sale
84 ACRE Farm for Sale, 3
BR ~ome. Will take proper- '.l bedroom on sandhill $795. .Bunk be&lt;:l complete
1978 Plymouth Volare,
Road. 675-3834.
with mattresses, S2SO. and
Duality Autobody &amp; Paint
ty in town on trade -in. Free
good cond. Call379·2726.
up
to
$354l.
Captain's
beds,
work.
Insurance work
gas and royalty check . For
$275. complete. Baby beds.
welcome. SunrOOfs In·
appl. call379·2613.
Unfurnished 2 bedroom
S99. Mattresses or box
1966. chevy Impala 8, 2dr. stalled from $200-$230. Auto
_tra iler, married couples, 1 springs, full or twin,
...,...,., •.oDOcf concl., $400. Trim Center, &lt;1&lt;16·19411.
child accepted. 675· 1076.
firm, $68. and S78. Queen
Ca11"&lt;1&lt;16..a~.
Lots &amp; Acreage
35
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, $&lt;19.
11
Compl"'
Two mobile homes. 2 4 dr. cnests, $42. Bed
1971 Dodge Omnl 4 dr., hal·
Equipment
Two 5 acre lots 15,000. One
bedrooms. 2 miles out of frames, S20.and S25., 10 gun
· chback, automatic, pa.yer
5 acre lot 18,000, city
town on Rt. 2. S100 deposit. · Gun cabinets, $350., dlnet·
snasta travel trill.or, S700.
stHrlng, ticcellonl cond.
schools, rural water, ex$175 per month plus te chairs S20 . and $25. Gas
Stove, ref, L sink Included,
Phone2~17.
cellent location. Phone 379utilities. 675·3000 or 675· or electric ranges, $295. Or·
......::....
Call388·9025.
2196.
6277.
thopedlc super firm, $95,
'72
~ONTIA&lt;::,
Exc.
cone.
baby matresses, S25 &amp; $35,
SH on Chillicothe Rd., 1979 Mallard camper, 21 11.
bed frames $20, $25, &amp; $30.
B '1: owner, 3 apartment
Alfrlfd
Holley:s Trollor 11111 contained, Sleepe 6, all
Apartmemt
44
Used,
Ranges,
houH on approx. 1 acre.
In exc. cond. wltn snower.
1
Park.
for Rent
refrigerators, and TV's,
Live In one, rent otners to
Call245·5238.
·
3
miles
out
Bulavllle
Rd.
make your payment. Can
FURNJSHEO apartment, Open 9am to 7pm, Mon.
1976 Mustang 11·, V·8, auto
be converted single nome.
301 Main St. 30H75-9760.
tnru Fri .. 9am to5pm, Sat.
transmission, PS, . PB,
City water, will consider
446·0322
redial tires, 42,100 milts.
land contract. 675· 1883 9·5
$2.600. Call after 5PM, 446·
p.m.
MODERN furnished, 1
4724.
GOOD
USED
AP·
bedroom
apartment.
PLIANCES
washers,
11
Adults
only,oo
pets,
calla!·
By owner. The Bbwser
ter 4:00, 304-&lt;175·3788.
dryers_, . refrigerators,
'45 Bul~k Skylark, A/T, PS,
ester&amp;, Henderson~ WV on
ranges.
S~aggl
Ap·
radio, winter tlrea, reg.
hill overlooking Ohio and
STANLEY STEEMER
gas IIOOCI cond .. 1795 firm.
KaNiwhl RIvers. 25 acres , TWO bedroom . apartment : pllances, 1918 Eastern
Corpet CINnlng
~,C....fll·
Ave.,
&lt;1&lt;16·
7398.
1
Col 416·4365.
and bulldlngs.Call675· 1215.
In Henderson. 30H75-l9n. '

garage, and garden $Pot.

Improvements

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com·
mercia! and reslden"al,
'frH estimates. Call 256;1182.

0

-'

Hamt

JIM MARCUM Roofing ·
spouting al\d siding. 30
years· experience. Free
estimates. Remodeling.
call388-9857.

,8(

win·

Gallipolis. Call &lt;1&lt;16· 1171.

53

by'·-·W....,..

11

.•

•

Wednesday, October 28, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

.11 :D6
11:28
11:30

..,

~OR 1N THI! HOUSE

lN THE FAIIILY
UPDATE NEWS
THI!TOIIlGHTSHOW
Olok ClvtH. (80 mino.)
NOTHI!RUFE
NY HILL IHOW '
C88LATEIIOY11WKRP
In Cincinnati: 'Mommy' a
Review· (Aiipeat) 'TerrorOut Of
Tho Sky' 1878

..

c&amp;YPTOQOOTES
M
FV

BHVFA

HTMEVF

HTMEVF

MY

LE

BVHET

MW -W .

YKMF

A.

...

T :• •

WTEELFA

Ye~te~skS Cryploquote: EVERYBODY HAS TIIEIR TASTES

~~

AS WEU. AS IN OTHE~ MATI'ERS.-:-.IANE

�••

•

•
Page--16-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 28, 1981

Labor unions criticize CPI change
seeklns a new sol utloo- dlange the•

By Aoaoetated PrMa
Labor groupo are criticizing the
government's plan to 'Change the
way it computes tl1e Consumer Priee
Index, saying it would penalize
people whose wages and social
security benefits are pegged lo the
index.
AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland
said the plan would lower the an-

Kirillandaaid'l'lleaday.
The cbange was propoeed by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics which
wants to remove from the index the
cost of buying a boule. That.component would be replaced by a figure
that represents the cost of maintalning a horne or apartment.

;·'!'

&lt;"

4,

BARN DESTROYED - A ham on the Otis Knopp
property, Dorcas, was destroyed by fire of undetermined origin Sllllday afternoon. Knopp staled
lhat tbe structure expl~J~led and caught fire without any
warning. Damages to the buliding and Its coutents
were estimated at $75,000. There was a small amount
ol insurance. The Racine Fire Deparbnent, 20 men and
lour trucks responded at 4:35 p.m. Sunday. They were
assisted by six men from the Syracuse Fire Dept and

two trucks. Tbe department ill an effort to .Uve ad-·
joiolng bull~ aad to bring the fire under CODtrol
used more than 12,000 gallous of water. The bam bad
partially coDapsed wben the Racine Fire Department
arrived It was reported. Knopp extends bls sineere
thanks to both lire departments for their gallant efforts
In bringing the lire under control and aavlng other
buUdlngs on bls property.

Meigs County happenings ••
Veterans Memorial

Emergency runs

Admilted .. Avan e li Ba ss,
Pomeroy; Ida White, Middleport ;

Six calls were. answered by local
emergency units Tuesday, the Meigs
County Emergency·Medical Service
reports.
The Middleport Unit at 7:29a.m.
took Billy Wallace from Coal St. to
the Holzer Medical Center; at 3:06
p.m. , took Nora Cambron from
Noble Swnmil Road to Holzer
Medical Center; at 6:02 p.m., took

Kenneth Payne, Pomeroy;

Ben-

jamin Fields, Point Pleasant, Keith
Aeiker, Pomeroy; Fred Miller,
Pomeroy.

Discharged-Julian Hoffman.

Practice session set
A special practice of the Voices of
Liberty has be·Jn schedul ed for II

a.m. Saturday at the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church. Following
(he practice, the r,roup will go to
Ravens1wood to participate in ac·

tivities being held

111

conjunction

with the opening of the new bridge
between Meigs County and Ravenswood.

Election day dinner
Women of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church will stage an election day dinner at the church all day
on Tuesday.
Soup, sandwiches, desserts and

beverage will be available.

Marriage license
A marriage license was issued to
Harley R. Swisher. 66, Rt. I, Middleport. and Roberta Maynard, 59,
New Haven.

Area

d~aths

1

Keith Aeiker from Third and Walnut
Sis., to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and · at 9:21 p.m. took Joe Bishop
from his Middleport home to
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Tbe
Rutland Unit at I :20 p.m. took Loretta Maynard from the Salem Center
School to Holzer Medical Center and
Pomeroy at 11 p.m. took Crystal
Cornell from the Pomeroy Cliff
Apartments to Holzer Medical Center.

1 • il •l.ltr&lt;flr- -.

inflation program is clearly not

• .; ._

working,

.;

administration is

&lt;{ "" ,

Jane M. Smith, 98, Route I, Reed;
sville, died Tuesday at the home of a
daughter, Mrs. Richard Barton .
She was a daughter of tho late
Joseph and Matilda Carsey Partlow.
Also preceding her in death were a
son, Alpha ; her husband, Bert; a

Lieutenant E. W. Wigglesworth, gro~J'&gt;s of trick and· treaters around
commander of the Gallia·Meigs Post the Jess densely poulated rural
of the Ohio State Highway Patrol, areas. Even though theae children
requests that the public assist the are usually well supervised and
patrol in its efforts to make this escorted by an adult, there is always
the possibility that one will dart into
Halloween season a safe one.
"There will be, as usual, a great your path before you can take any
number of children.crossing streets kind of evasive action."
Lieutenant Wigglesworth conand walking along our highways,''
continued Lieutenant Wigglesworth!. .cluded by askins that motorists be
"Most of them will be wearing alert for people or vehicles standing
masks that obscure their view of the on highway overpasses. Already this
highway and limit their ability to month, the Patrol has investigate!l
hear approaching vehicles. We two incidents in which bowling baUs
would request tbat motorists slow were thrown into the windshield of
down when they come upon children passing automobiles. "If you should
walking near the highway. Give see someone throw an object at a
them as wide a bertb as you can with motor vehicle from an overhead or
safety."
from a passing car, call the nearest
"Be alert for vehicles parked patrol on CB Channel9. Our call letalongside the pavement. It is now ters are KNN 3083."
ra_ir-ly_c_o_rrun_o_n_fo_r_pa_re_n_ts_t_o_sh_u_tu_e_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--1

Copyrighted 1981

BLACK

HARREY SHOES INC.
FOR atRISTMAS

POMEROY

210 E . MAIN

00

•••

00

00

00

••••••

00

•

•

••

•

•

••••

00

........

••

00

00

.

.

00

•••••••

••••

•

..

...

..

00

•

•

••

••

•

••••••••

•

•

•••••

••

•

00

•••• -

00

..

00

...

••••••

...

00

00

.

..

.... ...

••

•

••

00

.

\

00

.......

00

00

..

.

••

' 223X
State No.

surprise.

.

.

..

00

00

.....

00

00

00

00

.

...

..

.

..

.

,

•

•

00

•

00

.

00

••

rro~~

00

Wlntertong comfort and

1

•

•••••

00

••

•

YOU'Ll LIKE OUR
SELECTION OF

A judgement in the amount of
$30,960.07 was filed in Meigs County
Coqunon Pleas Court by Jackson
Pnlduction Credit jl;ssociation,
Jackson, against Leonard L. Lentz,
Rt. I, Dexter, et al.
Two notlees of appeal were also
filed. Robert Arnott, Rt. 2, Racine,
against Raynlond A. Connor, ad·
minlstrator rl. the Bureau of
Worker's Compensation, et. al;
Harry Jensen, Plain City, against
Hooeler Englneerying Co., Columbus and Raymond A. CoMor, ad- .
minlstrator of Bureau of Worker's
'
Compensation.

WOMEN'S WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

ELBERFELDS

IN

Letter policy

-....' ... .

&lt;I . ..

•

.

•"'"

.....

•

• •

~~

•

POMEROY

00

00

•••••

••

•••

:

oo oo • •

,oo . . . . .

00

•

00

•

•

00

•••••••

EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock:
a. No. shares authorized 16,000
b. No. shares outstanding 16,1100
(par value)
400,000~
Surplus .......... ..
600,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for
contingencies and other capital reserves . •.... .. . , .. . . ........ 1,256,000.00
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. .
2,256,000.0
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND
EQUITY CAPITAL ............ , ...............
3!,721 1000.00
'
'
MEMORANDA
Amounts outstanding as of report date:
b. Time eertificates of deposit in denomination
of $100,000 or more .. .
457,000.00 .
Average for 30 calendar days (or calendar month)
ending with report date:
a. Total deposits .............................
28,401,000.00
00

......

00

00

......

.

..

.

.

.

. . . . . . ..

..

00

....

.... .....

U.S.leads producing nations

..

,

00

•••••

•••

oo

WASHINGTON - The top three producers of energy during 1980 '
were the United States, the Soviet Ualon and Saudi Arabia, according
·to an Energy Deparlnwlt report.
· The report, Llsued Wednesday by the department's Energy Information Administration, said U.S. energy production totaled 64.8
quadriWon Britlsb !henna! units, comjlared to.S4.5 quadrillion Btu for
the Soviet Union.

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

00

00

.

.......

,

I, Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition has been prepared in conformance with the lostructions Llsued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the
State Banking Authority and Ia true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Roger W. Hysell
We, the undersigned dlj'ectors, attest the correctness of this report of condi·
lion and dlclare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief has been prepared in conformance with the lristructions
isaued by' the Board of Governors ol the Federal Reserve System and the Slate
Banking Authority and Ia true and correct.
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
I
R. c. FOlJ.ROO- Directors

FRED W. CROW, JR.

' State of Ohio County of Melp u:' Sworn to and IUbecribed before me this l!th
day of Oclober,1881.
· JoAnnCrilp, NotaryPubBc. MyCGmmllllonExpireiJuly 17,11183.

•

I

WASHINGTON - The House on Wednesday voted to extend
daylight saYings time from six to eight montha a year over objections
lhal the time change would jeopardize the safety of tens of thousands
of school children.
The 243-165 vote came as supporters said the change, ~dding March
and AprU to the daylight savings time months, would save enwgy
because there would be more daylight during the time people are
awake and need it.
Critics, especililly rural congressmen, challenged that, saying
more, not less, energy would be us&lt;fd. That plus the fear that school
children would be loreed lo go to school in the dark could force many
rural states to drop daylight savings time altogether, they argued.

oo' . . . . . . .

oo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

00

Votes to extend DST months

•

oo • • • • • • ' , • • • • • • •

•

0

•••••••

•••••••••••

COLUMBUS, Ohio - A proposed plan to raise the salaries ol some
7,300 state jobs by ari average of 10 percent Is designed to help recruit
and retain qualified workers, says the deputy director of the Department of Administrative SerYi&lt;;es.
.
ruchard w. Siehl said he expects little qpposition to the pian, which
would reclassifY the jobs into higher pay ranges. The increaaes would
be in addition to raises proposed in the pending state budget biU for all
90,000 state employees.

...

.....

••••••

/

Plan designed to help recruit

•

oo oo . . . . . . . oo . . . . . . . .

00

.

DAYTON, Ohio- An Ohio Health Department team has been called
into Montgomery County to. !rack down a rare, penicillin-resistant
strain of venereal disease.
Gregory Rozelle, Montgomery County district personal health
division chief, said Wednesday that 12 cases of penicillin-resistant
neisseria gonorrhea have been reported in the last few weeks.
Rmelle said that while the 12 cases may seem insignificant compared to the 1,647 cases of regular gonorrhea reported in Ohio during
19110, only five other such cases have been reported .in the slate this
year.

00.

oo . . . . . . . . . oo • • • • • • • • • • oo • • • • •

Hibernate In Cotton.
Flannel Gowns

Rare gonorrhf?a strain hits Ohio

••

00

...

•••

..

00

00

.......

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

• ' ••••••••••••

•

•••••••

...

00

00

00

00

.. ..

00

...

00

••••

••••••••

00

THE. 2ND FLOOR

OKLAHOMA CITY • Calling him "guilty as sin," a federal judge
sentenced foirmer Oklahoma County Commissioner J .P. "Die!&lt;"
Richardson to 710 years in prison and a $24,000 fine on his conviction qn
14 counts ofiJl&amp;ll fraud and one count of extortion.
ruchard:ion, 65, was the third person to stand trial in a broad federal
investigation into kickbacks to county conunissioners' in the sale of
road-buliding equipment. Federal officials say 48 more commissioners will enter guilty pleas next week under agreements with
the Justice Department.
Mter Richardson protested his innocence Wednesday, U.S. District
Judge Luther Eubanks said: "You're guilty as sin."

COLUMBUS, Ohio- The stale's new motor fuel tax is raising.more
money, but the amount of fuel sold is dropping, the Ohio Department
of Transportation said Wednesday.
In its first two months, July and August, the new tax raised 43 pereenl more money than during the same period last year. Combined tax
revenue for the two-months was $93.7 million, up from $65.5 million I be
previous year.
·
.
The amount of fuel sold dropped 2. 7 percent, from 961.5 million
gallona last year to 935.3 million. Stale officials expected fuel sales to
drop about 5 percent in the first year of the tax, so the decline wasn't a

.........

......

0 0 .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

00

Voices of Liberty Choral Group fror» Mel~ County, theRavenswood High School Chamber Singers, the
TruetoneJ from Kenna and the Care Galpel Singers.
Also at the park, free hot dogs, coffee and sort drinkll
will be available for bridge day participants. Entertairunent will be presented throughout the day.
The bridge will be open unill!O a.m. Saturday to permit Ohioans to use the facility to cross the river for the
dedication. It wiD be closed at 10 a.m. so that
preparations for the ribbon cutting can be made.
Wingett, who h8s been active in urging for road improvements to the bridge from the Meigs County side,
said be has been informed 1\lal the office of Gov. James
Rhodes had not accepted .an invitation to the
dedication.

Besides Gov. RocteleUer, U. S. Senators Robert C.
Byrd and Jennings Randolpll have been invited to par-

liclpate in eerernoolea Other invited dignatariea in' elude Rep. Mlck Slaton, county officiats, and mayors of
rupley and Ravenswood.
There will· be entertainment at the park and
scheduled to take part are the Sternwheelers Square
Dance Gro~p. the Ravenswood Devilettes Majoretta
Corps; Ra~nswood's ·Paul Moore and Meigs County's
Ernest (Bud) Wingett who will review bridge history,
the Marsha 'Mcintyre School of Dance Jazz Group, the

•

en tine

at y

Pomeroy-Middle_port, Ohio, Thursday, October' 29, 1981

e

00

. '

bmnediately after the ceremony, !he new structure
will be open to traffic and there will be a bridge day
celebration at Riverfront PIU'II: just north of the bridge.

2 s~ctions 1 14 Pages

lS Cents

A Multlmediillttc. Newspaper

·Reagan
claims
LD AWACS
Former commissioner gets term
vzctory

I .

of Pomeroy, Ohio and Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of
business September 30, 1981, a state ballkiDg instllulion organized and
operating under the banking laws of this Slate and a member of the Federal
Reserve System. Publlllbed ill accordance witb a call made by· tbe State
Banking Authorities and by tbe Federal Reserve Bank of this Dllltrict.
ASSETS
Cash and due from depository institutions ................•.•... 2,273,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ... ...... . ..... ....
5,871,000.00
ObDgali?"" of U:!it Gove~ent
·
2,822,000.00
• agenc1es and corporations
Obligations of States and political subdivisions
in the United States ........ ... .
3,336,000.00
All other aecuriries
30,000.00
Federal funds sold and aecurities purchased
1,900,000.00
under agreements to resell .....•
a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) . .. .... .. 14,729,000.00
b. Less: allowance for possible loan losses .......... .... . 96,000.00
c. Loans, net ........... •
14,633,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures , and
otber assets representing bank premises ...... .. .. .. . ..... . .. .. 355,000.00
All other assets .
501,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS
3U21,000.00
LIABILITIES
Demand deposits of individuals,
partnershipa and corporations .
4;057 ,000.00
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnershipa, and corporations ..............•.. . . . ......... 23,272,000.00
Deposits of United States Government ..... . ..
30,000.00
Deposits of Stales and political subdivisions
in the United States ...
1,408,000.00
Certified and officers' checks .....
116,000.00
Total Deposits .......... .. .. .
28,883,000.00
a. Total demand deposits .....
5,521,000.00
b. Total time and saYings deposits ................. 23 1362,000.00
All other liabilities ......................
582,00Q.OO
TOTAL UABIIJTIES (excluding subordinated notes
and debentures) ...........
291465 1000.00

SECOND FLOOR

File court actions ·

•

'Voi .30,No.139

00

·STOP IN ON

e

The lona and the short ol the Great
Western Look. In thoroullhbred
leather and suede, with authentic
Westem detallln&amp; and stacked ·
cowboy heels.·

The Farmers Bank &amp;
. .
Sav'ings Company

LINGERIE DEPT.

warmth in floral figurations.
Small. Medium and La~le Siize,;

Planning Ccmml8slon Monday, a letter 11'0111 the dlrector of the Ohio Dopartment of TranlpqrtaUon was read
incijcating that there are no lunda ad!ab~e for a study
requested by the planning commission on the development of Route 33 from Five Points to the new bridge at
Ravenswood. In fact, · the Jetter Indicated that expendlt~ on projects already planned would exceed
the anticipated income for the next six years.
Meantime, plans progretllled for the official
dedication of !he new Ravenswood bridge at 11 a.m.
Saturday.
West Virginia Governor Jay Rockefeller will cut tbe
ribbon officially opening the $18 mlllloo bridge across
the Ohio ruver at 11a.m. in-the center of the bridge.

/·

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON

ELBERFELDS

Mrs. Smith was a member of the
Chester Church of the Nazarene.
Services ~ill be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev. Herbert Grate officiating. Burial will be in the Silver
rudge Cemetery.
Friends may
call at the funeral home anytime after !p.m. loday. Donations in her
memory may be made to the Meigs
·county Chapter of the American
Cancer Society.

polldel, no !etten ta the edltGr
repn1bt1 .... 1D .lite .-D1
,_.. declloa wiD be .-lnd ,...
paltllt:IUGD after f 'p.!ft. 'l'llanday.

...

; 11t'

00

grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.

v.uey Ppblllbi.a CGoaput• pat

. t1 .Heading Due West:

. :~\ ·

,. ".

Public assistance sought

Surviving are three sons. Russell
Sfnith, Baltimore, Md. ; Henry
Smith, Reedsville, and Herbert
Smith, Columbus; four daughters,
Mrs. Frank (Edna) Clark, Hcmiock
Grove; Mrs. Sam (Jessie) Curtis,
Pomeroy ; Mrs. Charles (Gladys·)
Chaffee, Reedsville, and Mrs.
ruchard . (Mace!) Barton, Reedsville; 21 grandchildren, 35 greatgrandchildren,' five great-great·

In accordance wltb tbe Ohio

.

The Ohio ~ of Transportation announced ·
Wednesday It lias hired a private consulting finn,
Woodruff, 1nc_1 to study the feasibility of a major highway project iJI Mel~ County, a Columbus said this
morning.
·
The finn will recommend what type of improvements sllould be made between State Rou~_?_.north of Pomeroy and the new bridge over tbe Ohio River
at Ravenswood, w.va. .
Ohio bas spent about $1 million to improve the high-'
way system in t11e area, according to the source. The
study will consider various alternatives to improve
serYiee for local traffic. .
• ,
Colnt;identally, at a meeting of the 'Meigs County

Fuel purchases said d:ropping

sister, and four brothers.

t

'
• 'f · .

.

ODOT hires firm for SR 7 project

· t~.:; ;~aturalizer. Sp6rt Boots
' r "~ · in Leather and Suede

A Rt. 2, Pomeroy woman was injured in a two-vehicle accident In
Meigs County Tuesday morning, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of
the state highway patrol.
Shari J . Mitch, 20, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ~y
private vehicle, but the hospital
reported no record of having treated
Mitch this morning.
The patrol said Milch was southbound on Rt. 7 at the inleraection
with Rt. 143 at 9.:15 a.m. when a
vehicle driven by Minnie F. Woolen,
70, Albany, pulled left from 143 into
the path of Mitch's car.
Both vehicles collided, causing
Mitch's car to go lefl and strike a
guardrail. Severe damage w~s
reported to Mitch's vehicle and
moderate to Wooten's car, and
Wooten was cited for failure to yield.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by
Larry W. Lavender, 38, Syracuse,
was slightly damaged when a deer
ran into the path of his vehicle and
struck its rear on Rt. 124 in Meigs
County at 7:55a .m. Tuesday.
Lavender was not injured and tbe
deer was killed, the report said.

__
1

Jane M. Smith

what amounts to an investment •
fund. Offic'-18 have said that the •
twuslng component has been ·
producing an artificially high in- ·
flation rate.

r~~~~;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;~~;;~~~~;;;;;;~~~·

Patrol checks
two accidents
";:;..

of the bureau, uld the plan makea
becauae many people rent and
tbQoe who can afford • home or
already own one are paying into

method of computing the Index,"

nounced
rate without
being anyinflatiOn
real economic
gains. there
"Since the aqmtni.stratloo's antithe

Janet Norwood, the CClllllllialoner

I

Winning Ohio lottery number
•

CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Wednesday night in
the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 1102.
The lottery reported earnings of $61%,242.50 oo the drawing. The earninga came on sales of $1139,flli4.50, while holden of winning tickets are
entitled to share f32'1,822,lottery officials said.
.
'

·weather forecast

Partly cloudy toni&amp;ht and Friday.' Lows twllght 45-50. Hlgbs Friday
near 70. Chanee of rain - r 1ero percent tonight and Friday. W'mds
easterly to southeuter~ 10 mph or 1111 tonl8hl
·
Eal tledl*oFiftCUt
lllllarday tbroqb M ' )':
CJw- olllbowen-* .,. fll&amp;ltlla tile m" • te lew 71111111ar&lt;o
cl.y,CIIGIIqtetbemlll .. _ . • • ';pud.._..y,IAWulllilbl
__ lillie IIIH .. IG lew ... e.rl;p lll1lltrdly udllatldlty, coolbtllte the t. . It ... Ill euly MGIIdaJ.

.

'

i

I

WASHINGTON (AP)- President
Reagan, exulting in a victory that
even his opponents Sflled awesome,
says the·"causi·of"peace is on the
march again in the Middle East"
with Senate approval of his AWACS
arms sale to Saudi Arabia.
With his first major foreign policy
test behind him, Reagan said only a
radical takeover in the Mideast now
could thwart delivery of the Airborne Warning and Control System
planes, the world's most advanced,
in 1!185. The $8.5 billion sale is the
largest arms deal to a foreign nation
in u-.s. history.
,
In the meantime, Reagan reaffirmed the United States' "unshakable commitment" to lsrae~
which had argued that the sale
would threaten its security, as his
administration worked oo compensating arms aid to the Jewish
state. .
The Senate approved the sale 52-48
Wednesday after Reagan converted
seven opponents and won over all .
seven undecided senators in the final
two dsys of an extraordinary lobbying blitz. It was a perfonnanee
that moved House Speaker Thomas
P. O'Neill Jr. to say, "He is showing

awesome power."
The Israeli Cabinet said today that
the approval of the sale of AWACS
planes to Saudi A~abia posed "a
new, serious danger" that Israel

would do evetythlng necessary to
overcome.
Saudi Arabia's goverpment·
controlled newspapers hailed
Reagan as one of the greatest
American leaders in history.
Egypt's Foreign Minister Kamal
HBssan Aly lauded the vote, calling
it a "positive turning point in
relations between the United States
and the Arab nations" that will
enable "Arab countries to defend
themselves against any foreign intervention."
"Thank God!" Reagan exclaimed

FIRST

AID

SKILL - Leaden for the
basic first aid skills given
at the In-service program
for teachers aDd ad·
miuistraton Wednesday
··a, Meigs . High School
were, l·r, Rhonda Dailey
and Teresa ColliDs pf
Veterans Memorial
Hospital. The In-service
activities were designed to
meet . specific needs of
Ul8cbers as determined by1
a system · wide aeeds
assessment. Russell
Moore was the bHervice
coordinator. At bottom,
Dr. H. Stephen Glenn,
~h.D., Lexlngron, S. C.,
keynote speaker, whl used
as his W(&gt;lc "Baste Skills
for Uvlng," is shown
during his talk. The ln.
service program was for
all teachers and administrators of Meigs,
Eastern, and Southern
Local School Dlatrlcts.
The event was well at·
tended.

Health director ~ssues . warning
about LSD laced paper tattoos

(Continued on pagelO)

Group .urges
local support

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
director of the Ohio Department of
Health has issued a warning about
paper tattoo transfers that may
have been laced with the drug LSD.
· Dr. John Ackerman said Wednesday that contaminated paper
transfers bave been found in Ohio
for several years. It isn't know how
many people have been made ill by
the transfers, but reports of LSD
poisoning have been rare, he said.
LSD Is a psychedelic drug that can
cause hallucinations and delusions.
Authorities in northeastern Ohio
recently have been Investigating .
reports that LSD-laced cartoon tat•
too transfers bad been found .
Potential reactions from laking
LSD include disorientation, bick of

Richard L. Roberts, superintendent of the Eastern Local School
District, was in CGiumbus Wednesday where he attended an
emergency aession of the Buckeye
Association of School Administrators.
The group after studying school
funding issued the following
stalement:
"Last summer. wben 220 scbool
boards decided to put Llsues on the
ballot, they realized that while there
would be some additional state funding forthcoming, it would be
inadequate for their needs.
·
"Now both houses of the General
Assembly have acted on a state
budget: · Conferees will soon be
working out details. Although we appreciate the belp !harts being given,
neither venioo will satisfy the needs
of schoola. It has no,w become
crystal clear that those 120 scllool
boards were right. State funding
does not m1i"t the needs of local
school districts.
"The funding of schoola should be
a partnershiP between the state and
tbe local diatrlct. Thia llctloo of the
Jeglodahare doel conllnn that the
leglBlators are not loinC to do II for
local dlstricta. Support ol local
adlool llluea Ia still deaperately

Blood

$18,500 worth of LSD, cocaine,
hashish and marijuana during their
probe.
The suspects, all Athens County

pressure also may · be affected,
Ackerman said.
Thus far, there bas been at least
one confinned report involving a
drug tatoo filed with the Gallipolis
Police Department.
Meanwhile, a three-month investigation bas led to the arrest o!IB
persons in Athens County on drugrelated cbarges. Six more people
were being sought.
Attorney General WiUiam Brown
said the arrests were made Tuesday
night and Wednesday morning. He
said undercover &amp;,a€nts bought

dictments on drug trafficking
charges returned by the Athens
County grand jury.
Brown 8aid the investigation was
carried out by his office, the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal InveStigation,
the Athens Police Department and
Athens County Prosec)ltor Micl~el
Ward. ,
Brown said many of the drug purchases were made in taverns, and
the Ohio Liquor Control· Department
was Llsuing citations to five liquor
permit holders in Athens.

coordination, stiffness of jaw
muscles, emotional upset, rapid
heartbeat, flushing, chest pains,
weakness

and

tremors.

resldents,

were

named

in

in-

Investigators -solve sration case
An alleged armed robbery at the
Save-More Service StaUoo on W.
Main St., Pomeroy, has been solved.
Throul!h Investigative efforta of
Gary Wolfe, investigator for the
Meljp County sherlff'1 depu1menl;
Pomeroy Pollee Cblef Georp Stitt,
and Patrolman Steve Hlrtenbach,
the cue has been cleared.
Officers report that IlaJiny Paul

needed.''

0

BASIC

"

Richards, 24, manager of the
station, is being held in the Meigs
County jail for making a false report
of an armed robbery. They say he
confeaaed to having made a false
report about the armed robbery to
cover his taking the money.
Approximately $2,000 ill involved.
Charles are expected to be filed in
county court today.

The Meigs SHeriff's Department Ja
still seeking the 1969 Ford Torino
stolen Monday evening in Tuppen
Plains. The owner, Steven Baker,
Coshdcton, was selling Insurance
and left the keys in the vehicle
deputies reports.
'
The department Is aJao investigating the damaging ol a nwnber of mailboxes on Be«:h Grove .
Road for the past several nighta.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="195">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2785">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="46999">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="46998">
              <text>October 28, 1981</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4363">
      <name>partlow</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
