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                  <text>Prep season openers

BrQwn bagging it!

&amp;onesi'. 3

Wbat's Cooking? P .6
~

.

Bench, Reds' hero

Property transfers

NL roundup P. ~

P.B

•

•

at y

e
' Voi.32,Ho.IOO
Copyltthtod 1913

Pomero

Middle

enttne
2 Secriont, 14 Pag..
20 C:.nb
A Multlmtdia Inc. Newapapet ·

rt, Ohio, Thunda , September 1, 1983

, 269 people presumed dead
··~-

Wilson feels Wildcats will have versatility
CUne and Gary Kirk, and

He agreed

On hls non-league achedule,
Wilson expects Scioto Cwnty
K)'Ke" Creek w1ll be strong schools ~ and Lucasville to,
for football, · 8lld a balanced new, and Wllson has a gmerous. ~ts. .
.
· . . .· be "prettY.too,Jgb" due toil \alp!
prqp-IIJ\'l im ~ Jllld defense canpllment 'If ' llllderclassmm • "North ·G8DJa · and Kyger liUinbei' of ....;;~.,... 1et1erinen·
w1ll milke Hannan Trace a team to work wlih. · ·
·
·~- ·-...
to watx:h wt ior this season.
"We had a blgfreslunanclass, ~ ~.'!...lllec!:c
and larger teams. .
Wll! • ..,.,.~
The Wildcats acrtnun.aced
Although size has been a so we pulled a Iot of kids wt of ontv one kid 111 Roger Stroud," Aug. 211 with PortJmouth East
concern tor the Wildcats for that, plus some sophomores who Wllson cmnmented. ' 'North Gal- · and with Berne Unlonm Aur:. 2&lt;1
some tlme, Olach Brett WUson hadn't played," he said.
11a loll llll1ll! ~-·
~, perDillel on prior 1D their·preview matcbup
lh1llks this year's aquad
Part of ll1e size problem has ~. tJut 111ey'Ye aot (Eric) wit!!· Nol1b ~ ca. Aur:.
members
have versatUity work; .. of
been ~with
the addltlm )&gt;i!nk:k a.ck. S!Ju
• .them OO!Jd be ..,.,_
that· a '-•--~
.
.
__ ..._ ltudenls
" ....... wm
-r.........
tng In their favor.
· . • ·
two,...._,.
. on1Dthe another.po Nllly."
proaram 011 ~and c11!fen8e
BY KEVIN IJEI.I ·Y

sq&gt;mrrnres Delee Barnes and
Bet1er-than-aVI!I"BIIe turnout PhU Bailey - many names are
0VP stllft

with other league

reacbes that North Gallla and

ra::

•

..

2
.
6.

"Overall,
We'D
be smaU
ln
size,
but we're
qulclrer
than last
year," he said. " I lost tour good
starters last year, but at this
mcment, I . feel we have the
talent 1D replace them." .
The diversity provided ·1D
Wllson comes !nm a list of 31
players who turned wt tor
practice In August, and the
teturn of hls let1ermen, making
up a sizable chunk d. the ieam's
expe!'lence.

Back

this year

are Jeff

Barnes, a 19l-pwnd taUback,
and Alan Bailey, a back also
weighing In at 160 pounds, who
are expected to inake things
happen on the WUdcat offense.
Melvin Clagg, a 15().pound back,
wiU also play a blg part ln the
team's plans.
Although many have retUrned
thlsyear-amongthemjunlors
Jamie Montgomery, Terry

team - :JBO.pound
Unemah
C.A.
Thornpsoo,
tonnerly
of Fair-land, and Kenny Feustel,
another llnernan who, at llfi
pwnds, Is a fonner student at
Gallla Academy. 1bey w1ll join
2J.O.pound Mimtgomery on the
line, with~~ being used
to lUI In some
and Feustel
to serve as a tight end
With thiS kind of lineup, Wllson
hopes 1D Improve the team's
3-5-2 ovemll record In 19tfl. 'The
seasm began with ICOn!iess ties
with Symmes Valley and Green
and a ~ win over· Hannan,
W.Va., before ll1e Wildcats
encountered a shunp. The team
puUed out 1DWard the end; and
posted league victories over
Eastern and ~thwestern 1Je.
fore the seasons finale.
"I feel that at this moment,
we'D be a lot better," Wilson
said.

Kyger Creek
Hannan '!)'ace - "The WIJd.
cats have several returning
Iettennen too. Any tune they can
generate as many points as they
did In the final half last year,
they must have some talent."
Southwestern - "The Highlanders are a young baD club
and have several returnees.
Coach Jack JameS does a good
job. Any team that takes
Southwestern lightly may flnd
themselves on ll1e wrong end of
the scoreblard.''
Assisting Hartman again this

=

1MNNAN ftACIIICIBIIl1l&amp;

o

2: S)i.i....:v.~~ey ...........~
SO!&gt;I• 9, llaJuwl, w. Va................ Away
SO!&gt;I. II. c.- ...........................A-

s.,t. l3. Valley ............. - ........... Home
SO!&gt;I.
i l l , - St. Joe .............. Home
Oct. 7 , - .......................... lbno
Oct. 1._ tc:YIIOr O'eell .................. .Away .
Oct. 21. !loullloni·.............: ........... AWOY. •
Oct. II,- Gallla ................ _, NOY. l - - . o ..." ............... A..y

rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==~

HIGH. SCHOOL

'83

Oct. U, Haman Trace .. .............. Home
Oct. 21, Eastern .................. " .. ... Home
Oct. 2l!, Soutllern .......... .. .. ... ...... ..Away
Nov. 4, N'ortll Gallla .... ...... .... .. ....Away

You'll like the lndltnduollzed.oitentlon you
you gef your sen/or porlralf mocM.

·,....,"when
of THf PHOTO PLACE..

.

Eoeh prevl- set Includes 10· 12 dlff.,.ent .
poses 'before frodlflonol oil backdrops ond In ·

'

BEST WISHES
FOR A SUCCESSFUL YEAR TO ALL AREA
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAMS,
MARCHING 'BANDS AND
CHEERLEADERS.
•

You'll also ·like our rwosonoble prices.

The
For Appointment or More 1nformatlon Call

·-

Alters p.m. or Weellends

Bob I Charlene Hoeflich

THE PHOTO PLACE.
109 Hig~ St.
.... • '," Potne!_or

'•

I

''

,

OVP ltallf

:m

'.

Community

Owned
Bank

Fs
VNI'tl:s

Bank

.........

..~..~~--....~~~~~~~~--. ·.•. •.....' ' ·.~. ~&gt;~.-..~....~..~--~..~..~-·...••.~................, ..............

President Reagan had been Informed.
Shultz sal&lt;l.the United States had caDed ln theSovil!t
charge5 overnight to "express our grave concern" ·
and to "demattd an explanation."
He also said there was no evidence the Soviets had'
warned the plane, although he said the plane that
fired the mlssUe "was close enough for a visual
Inspection."
He also saki, "As far as we C(Juid see, there was 111&gt;
communication between the ptanes." .·
The·plline carried 200 people, InCluding Rep. Lany
Mciionald. D-Ga.
Japanese defense radar llldlcated a large number
of Soviet aircraft appeared to be flying over llleJapan
Sea south of Sakhalin today, possibly searching for
Survivors.

200 laid off employes
protest overtime hours
~Vi;I'IswOOD, WNa. - AP'

off• odlve outdoor settlltfiS.

•

Shultz said the aircraft strayed Into Soviet aJ.rspace
and was tracked by the Soviets for more than 2~
hours. He said that as many as eight Soviet fighters
were Involved In the ~air.
"At 1826 ' hOurs,- the Sqvlet pllot'' of one· plane
''rep!)!ted that he fired a mtsSue and the ')aFget was
destroyed.''
Shullz saki a Soviet pUot had reported seeing
kerosene near the surface where the plane went down
about an hwr later. He said there was "no excuse
.whatsoever for thiS appalling act;"
Shullz told reporters at ll1e State Department that

, .

season are Mike Mulford, enterIng hls 12th campaign and Jake
Bapst, now In his second.
The Bobcats open their 1!Wl3
season Sept. 2 agalnst Federal
Hocklng.
BOBCAT 8a!EDVLE
Sept. 2, Federal Hocking .. ......... .. Home
Sept. 9, Wahama .... ....... ....... .... ...Away
Sept. 16, Water!crd .... .... ....... ....... Away
Sept. 23, MlnlonL .... ...... ... ...... .. .. Away
Sept. 30 ............ .................... ... .. Open
Oct. 7, Southwestern ...... ... .... ...... Horne

WASHINGI'ON (AP) - SecretaryofStateGeorge

·. P. Shulti accused the SOVIet-Union today« shooting
dOWn an \marril~ Sooth Korean alrllnet with a
mlssUe. He said the United States "reacts with
revulskm" and has demanded an explanation.

By ERIC .JENNING$

eonttnuedfromP.lS

InGH SCHOOL SENIORS
.

w111 be the key w11en HI' bosts
Symmee Valley 111 the opeaer
Friday. wu.. Ji!IIPi!Cb to 11911
slot Ifotmlitlolls Iii hiS &lt;dfesue.

Soviet fighters
down airliner

proximately
laid off employees
of the Kaiser Aluminum and
Olenllcal Corp.'s Ravenswood
Works banded together this mornIng and exhibited a show of
solidarity to protest excessive
overtime for present employees.
EugeneRichards, presldentofthe
local chapter of the United Steel·
workers 'If America said, "Many of
the present workers are being
forced toendureexcesslveovertlme
work.''
Richards saki the protest organized by the laid off employees
"'- was necessary to draw attention
1D the company so that more call
backs can occur.
In soote casa;, workers are
working 10 to 12 days In a row
without any break, he said.
The peace!ul protest occurred as
themornlngshlftchangewas taking
place at the plant. U.S. Rep. Bob
Wise, D-W.Va attended theraUy.
Bob Irelan, a spokesperson lor the
~t's management, said, "We
have had a grmter than normal
numberofovertbnelnsomeareasof
the plant due to plant and customer

. problmtS that we

tenn."

.

see as short

..However, Richards said he Jeels
that excessive overtlme Is not a
tempoiary problem at the plant.
"In May of 1982, they had workers
going six and seven days a week,"
he saki.
"They (management) can say
what they want, but the record
shows otherwise. I'm a finn
beUever In judging the future by the
past, and If that's the case, then the
excessive overtime will continue,"
Richards said.
The union leader said the protest
was done for two major reasons
Including getting the company's
attention and also lndlrectly convlnlclngworklngemployees toprotest
excessive overtime.
The main thrustotthecompany's
objections was directed toward the
people working ln production, he
said.
"There was a guy who worked a
double shift for five days and was
brought In on his day off," Richards
pointed out
Richards said that under the
present system, the employee has
little choice
about working
schedules.

Management had Indicated that
they were upset about the protest
raDy, II@. said. .ijfld!I!K !hat. ".They
told us oo Tuesday night to s1Dp lt."
. The first domestic pi&gt;tllne was
reopened at ll1e Ravenswood plant
on Aug. 13. Jobs have been
combined to help sa~ the company
money, Irelan said.
"We knew some overtime wwld
occur because of the Une start-up,"
Richards said. ·
However, Richards said nothing
ln the agreement between the union
and management provided for
allowing excessive overtime.
A laid off worker from Cottage.
ville, W.Va., said, " I've heard that
some people are working Ill to 100
hours a week." and added that, "I
think It's a sonuwtul situation some people have lost homes and
are practlcaDy starving."
An Inspection and labor worker
that Is presently employed said he
belleves "the people working Inside
ll1e plaqtsupportthesepeople- I've
worked seven day weeks."
There presently are 1,664 hwrly
and479salarledpersonsattheplant,
Ireland said, adding that 1,(113
hourly workers and 81 salaried
employees are laid off.

Protest rally
lAID OFF RALLY -

proximately 200 laid oft Kaiser
plaot Elllployees held a peaceful
raDy bt front of the corporate

buDding d. the Kaher plant.
Eugene Richards, local pl'l!fli.
deut of the United Steelwol1lers
d. America, said the protest was
held because the wtlon bas been
unable to get anywhere bt
illsctwons with ~
At bottom right, a lldd elf . .
worker of the Kal!ier Alwnlnum
and Chemical Corp.'s Ravenswood Works grabs a sign at the
union ball prior to a rally at the
plant. 'The raDy was held this
momliJg to protest excessive
overtime hours for present
employees.

Elderly, children said ·•
'butchered' in Lebanon
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) - The
rlghtlst-controUed VolceofLebanon
radio today charged that leftist
Druse milltiamen "butchered:' 40
Chrlsllan villagers In retaliation for
a Lebanese anny sweep of Moslem
Shiite and Druse militia strongholds
ln west Beirut.

PUCO issues
new cutoff order
man Stu Vosler.
The original repayment plan was ·
Instituted . after the end of ~
state-ordered moratoriwn on c:utorrs during the fwr-month winter
heating season. The winter heating
...._ 1.
season resumes"""'·
Figures compiled by the Ohio
Consumers' Counsel office show
that about 2.'1!,1Dl customers lost
their service between June 1982and
the end of last May. Disconnections
November.
'
1Dtaled 'lSI ,IDJ the year before. The
The ortglnal order tor reconnecsays the drop Is due to the
tlon was Issued Ill the spring and moratorium.
·
aUowed reconnectlon If a customer
"Some customers have made
agreed to repay an eighth of the aiTIIng5Tiellts to have service
amount In arrears each month tor restoredundertheone-fourthplan,"
eight moot11,9.
the order noted. "Other customers,
· A modification In July aUowed
however, remain without service.
repayment of a quarter; of the
We do not believe thete customers
past-due amount each month for
shwld be penalized sbnply becaWII!
fwrmooths,startlnglnAugust
theyfalledtornake~tsln
ThenewSeptemberpi8nprovldes
August. We also continue 1D believe
tor repayment of one-third of the that aU arrearages should be
amount Ill arrears each IID1th tor
ellmlnated prlol' 1D December 1,
three moollla. A plan tor Octobei
1983.''
allow&amp; payment ~ cme-118lf each
Toreconnectservlceunderanyof
month tor two months. Or people
the plai1S. customers must also pay
can pay the full past-due amount In
a reconnect1on charge and krep up
~\
- withthelrcurreatmonthlybllll.
''We'A! trylna 1D cll!en people's
The cornm1ss1m Is still looking
slatl!ll, If you will, before ll1e next Into lon&amp;-tenn aa1ut1ona to the
beetlng~~e~UKX~, "saldPUCOspokesproblem~w!nterdllallmectlons.

Ap-

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Peopie who want to have their gas or
electricity reconnected before the
winter heating season begins writ
have a ~ qJPOriunlty to repay
past-due biDs.
The Public Utilltles.Commlsslon
of Ohio on Wednesday revised the
reconnectlon plans for people wantlng to restore service. The order
aUows repayment plans that can
start ln September, October and

occ

The allegation came as the
Lebanese anny mopped up scat·
tered pockets of mill!Ia resistance In
west Beirut after the sweep, which
the goverrunent viewed as a crucial
test oflts strength.
The Voice of Lebanon, operated
by the Christian Phalange Party,
said the "horrible massacre" took
place ln the village of Bl)larlam, ln
the Syrtan-controUed Upper Metn
mountains 19 mUes east of Beirut.
The broadcast said the Druse
milltlamen s1Dnned the homes of
the village's few remallllng Christians and "butchered about 40
elderly persons and children with
knives, Including the town's priest,
Gergls El-Ral." It said ·only one
resident survived.
In the capital, sporadic rlfle shots
echoed Ill ll1e streets as the
U.S.·tralned anny troops flushed
out a few remallllng rebelllws
mUillamen from hideouts In residential neighborhoods .
However, the city was generally
quiet just a day after 10,()X) troops
with tank and artillery support
moved through Druse and Shlite
strongholds In house-to-house
fighting.
Residents were wtdoors after a

24-hour curlew , taking stock of the'
destruction caused by four days
fighting and heavy bombardment'
that left at least 94 dead, lnclud!Qg
two U.S. Marines on Monday , five
French soldiers, and 42 Lebanese
troops. At least 413 people were
Injured.
. Marines and clvlllans at tbe U.S.
Embassy overlooking the Medlter·
ranean Sea said they had no trouble ,
during the nlght, arid all was ;
reported peaceful at Belrut'sclosell'
International allport, the base of the.
U.S. Martne contingent ot 111e
multinational peacekeeping force. ~

or:

•

"It's great, quiet. Had a night!
sleep and washed for the fi rst time in ·
three days," said Maline spok~;: ;
m an Ma j. Rohert Jordan, 45,
Shenandoah, Ga .
' ~:
The state radio repeatedly said i
·the sweep was 11 crucial test
whether PresldentAmln Gemayei:S !
government was "tobeornot tobli.' t ;
Senior Lebanese officials, pleafled ·
by the perfonnance of the &amp;nnY. llt~
west Beirut, said they now felt ~ :
force could move Into Lebanoo'a ·
contested central mountains a.lld'
establish order when Israeli troops ;
pullback.
· -:.

at:

ot•

HEAP income limit increasedi

•

•

WRilCK. CAVSil:S OVlAGE -A _.whlcle accldea&amp; 011 Oblo 124 at

'\&gt;a-lua .. ...,.,..~w.,.ww~ay
n1pt - · power 111 be all Ill 1,18'1 Mlllenvtl8 and~ area
, 'L• •11MI'I:F
'Dieveblde,drlwiiiJJ Allie E.~.
17, Rn ! , lllndl avl.ajpale n&amp;t:•p.m. derlweatallllle rtahlllde
d. 1M. Ma1oae .,. died lar DWIIJJ IIIII lillie blflliwiiY pUol. ·
llleJ!•ttt•1als.~tmTw'

ane.....,

CoLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)- The
state has raised the Income limits
tor people who need help with their
heating bills this year, officials said
Wednesday.
Gov. Richard Celeste allliOUJICed
that a famllyoffwrcan make up to
$14,850 a year 1D qualify for the
Horne Energy Asalstance Program
-$!OJ more than laat year.
·'The HEAP prcwam pays a
portion ot a hwsellold's heating cost

.
ana:
.'

during December, January
February. AppUcatlons will lJi. ;f
taken beginning Thursday at ioc¢
welfare offices, agencies on aglnjt: :
and community action agencies;.:
o!flctals said.
.·
Accordlng to the governor's :
aJUIOUncement, ll1e annual ~::
limits wUl be $7.200 for one pe1'9011;·:
$9,810 for two people, $14,850 fOl' (i.·
tamUy of four and $19,1190 . lor, I(
family of six.
: ,.

�I

Commentary

Meigs op~J.l~ on road; ,
against Marietta teant

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel

PomeiOt--Middleport, Ohio
Thunday, ~ 1, 1983 "
•

Blockheadedness.~

The Daily Sentinel
Ill ('o urt Stret&gt;l

nt:\ OT Eil

Ponwr o}', Ohi o
TO TH E 1.'\'TER EST OF THE

~I E Jf, S · i'ii.\ SOS

-\ Ht: \

lllb

' C!fn~ f'""T"'1,.,~-.-t~dt~

.·

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubliJ1iiht-r

P.-\T II IIITEHE.-\D

BOB HOEFLICH

\ "- .. i .. ta nl P uhli-. he r Coni r olle r

G r-n,•ral

~l a not.~;:t• r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Nt'w,. Editor

\ MDm ER of nw ,\S!oiOCia.ted P~. Inland Dall\' p res,.., :\.&lt;r;.'O()('lalion and tht&gt;
A nl'!ftc ur ~per Puhll-.hen 1\.'fiOCiaUon.
·

' OPI:\lOS ar.&gt; wek:omed . 'lllt·y &lt;JtouJd he lEos.;;; than 300 words lon~.
LETfERS OF

i\JJ lctU'"' UN' ~ uh.ie t:t . to Pdilin~ and mll'it be siKflt•d with niUTle. ad~'i and lelephvlw
num ht ·r . ~o u~igned Wtters ""iU t.. puhflo;h('d. I.Rtlef'fii should ht&gt; In l!'ood taste, addres..;inJt ~ !iiJj '!., not pt,-~nalitleo. .

Good for Zblg. He said exactly the He went·on to say that the decision In
right thing, commenting onAgricul· 19lll by President carter to retaUate
rure Secretary John Block's ogean·
against the lnvasion of Afghanistan
ious performance in Moscow . Block by suspending grain sales had been
was over there to sign one more of a " Distasteful chapter."
those U.S. agreements that confirm
One wonders whether he found the
the old Lenin saw that capitalists suspension of grain sales more
wlii end upselllngtothecommunists distasteful than the Soviet tanks and
the rope with which to hang us.
torturers who were, and are, killing
Equally distressing as the grain deal
Afghans who don't want to live
and its terms was the manner of Mr.
Under Soviet rule. And one gathers
Block, who must be presumed to that by the moral calculus of Sec.
represent the administration, un· Block it is distasteful to kill people
less In thenextdayortwotheground only because if they were alive, they
under his desk opens up and he slips might buy grain from American
down the memory hole as a
farmers. Mr. Brzezinskl'scomment
regrettable mistalue.
was, "What is really distasteful is
What Block said to the Soviet Sec. Block crawling on his latees to
officials at the signing ceremony . Moscow. ''
was that the grain pact was "an
This is some pact the Reagan
early building block in the effort to admlnistratlon has engineered. The
build a more stable and constructive U.S. promtses not to interrupt the
relationship" between us and them. flow of grain totheSovietUnlon- a

A summit with a
popular mandate
Recalling his own sessions at the summit, Richard M. Nixon has
suggested an agend'! and a timetable for a meeting between President
Reagan and Soviet leader Yurt V. Andropov.
He thinks the KremUn will want a summit conference before next year's
pre sidential el~tion, lest AndrQ(l!?v !ace a tougher American Pf\!Sident. :
. ;inned with a .new mandate from the·voters: ·
·
And he believes that handled correctly, such a conierencl! would serve
the cause of "Real Peace." the title of his new book on East-West relations.
He is publishing it privately, and said he plans to 5~;nd copies to government
leade rs here and abroad when It comes off the presses In 10 days.
In it. tlle former president advocates a policy of "hard-headed detente,"
in which bargaining with Moscow would be coupled with a strengthening of
U.S. mli.i tary .power.
.. .
Nixon cails summit diplomacy an indispejl5ab)e part of that process. "It
is at the ·Summit that we bring together the various strands o( hardheaded
detente," be says. "This is" a delicate exercise ·that we should undertake
only If progress on resolving substantive issues is assured. No American
pi"E'5ident should go to the summit unless he lrnowswhat is on the other side
of the mountaln. "
Reagan· s spokesmen have saki the president would be willing to go to the
suinmlt, but only with careful preparation, clear purpose, and a likelihood
of :Success. William Clark, Reagan's national security adviser, insists that
any such conference should be structured in advance to assure agreement.
Nixon proposes intense, secret negotlatjons prior to a Reagan·Andropov
summit conference to determine what progress the two leaders could
make on major issues in contention.
''Rushing into a quickie summit just so the leaders of the superpowers
can get acquainted would be a stupid and devastating mistake," he says.
Btit he thinks a face-to-face meeting before the next election could work to
U.S. advantage.
"Andropov is understandably reluctant to schedule a summit at a tbne
when It might help President Reagan win re-election." he writes, "but with
the resurgence of the American economy and the president's rise in the
polls, Andropov is caught between a rock and a hard place.
''If he deliberately delays a summit until after the election, he will find
hl!iJsell facing a president with a new mandate and a stronger bargaining
poMtion," says Nixon, assuming a Republican outcome although Reagan
hasn't yet said he will run again. "Andropov needs a summit before the
American election more than President Reagan does.
"We should not give it to him on the cheap," Nixon says. "Unless
substantial progress is assured on arms control and on reducing Soviet
adventurism in Central America. we should not agree to hold a summit."

Letter·to the editor
Tlwnks from Jerry's kids
We had a GREAT DAY at the
MDA motorcycle run last Sunday
afternoon. It was our second annual
run and the crowd at the American
Leglon Farm on Bailey Run Road
was enthusiastic in its support of the
activities. The screaming dirt bikes
turned out in large numbers as did
the sleek, shiny street bikes. The
riders' expertise was evidenced by
the lack of any serious lnjuries, and
the weatherman cooperated
throughout the day.
The Jaycees dilly-dunker helped
. to train our future baseball pltchers,
to the chagrin of the "Volunteers"
seated ailiwe the water. Our
"Marshal" Frog Wayland kept the
honor system jail filled aU afternoon
and collected $55 in 25 cent fines.
Even George Stltt and Bill Miller
were not immune to his vigilance.
No one went hungry as meats,
buns, pastries , ice cream and
beve rages donated by local firms
were in ple ntiful supoly. Also
donated were all of the beautiful
trophies. The t;:rossover Band
donated its services and did a fine
job of entertaining. Dozens of
Individuals helped to keep the day
Interesting , and profitable for
M.D.A. We would like to acknowi·
edge everyone who dona ted goods

and services and labor for the event.
Thank you. We do want to say that '
the businesses and Individuals of
Meigs County, even through we are
in one of the most econlmlcally
depressed areas in the country. with
unemployment running rampant,
are the most generous that you will ·
find anywhere.
We couldn't believe that amount
of support we received. We're
grateful and on behalf of Jeny's
Kids and the innocent young lives
you're helping to save, WE THANK
YOU!!!!! .
Next Sun~y afternoon, Sept. 4,
we will be conducting a house to
house canvass of Middleport and
Pomeroy. Then on Monday, Sept. 5,
at 11:15 a.m. we are scheduled to be
on the Jeny Lewis Telethon on
ChannelS. Colwnbus, to present the
Meigs County collection. Our bike
run netted $70l and we'll report the
results of the canvass on the
telethon. Anyone who would like to
help us door to door please let us
irnow as soon as possible. Our
headqua rters is the Lazy Day Cafe.
Thanks again.
Bob and Jean Gilmore, cochairpersons, Meigs County M.D.A.
Lanny a nd Becky Tyree, mem·
bership ronunlttee.

Today in history
Today is Thursday. Sept. l , the 244th day of1983. There are 121 days left in
ele year.
Tooay's highlight In his tory:
On Sept. l, 1945, World War II officially ended when the Japanese
sun·e ndered aboard the battleship USS Missouri.
On this date:
In 1682, 100 English Quakers, led by William Penn, sailed tor America.
In 1lm, a court In Riclunond, Va .• acqultled former Vice President
Aaron Burr of treason.
In 1862, liquor rations were aboUshed in the U.S. Navy.
In 19ll, Germany Invaded Poland, leading to the start of World War 11.
Ten years ago: ~ Americans were among 35 people killed in a fire at a
hotel in Copenhagen. Derunark.
Five years ago: The federal government, fearing an autumn gasoline·
shortage, asked on companies to Increase gas production.

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h.
minimum of 9 mlllion tons a year, a
maximum (at the election of the
Soviets) o!l2 million tons -for five
years. A solemn promise.
Here is an interesting hypotheti·
cal situation. Suppose that some
time between now and 1989, !hi!
Soviet Union decides to send its
armies into West Germany. Will we
sbnultaneously instruct our troops
In West Germany to fire at
oncoming Russian tanks. and our
navy to fire at support shipping but to beveoycarefulnottointerrupt
our shipments of grain to the
Soviets, as we would not want the
Soviet army to go hllnglj'? The
terms of the pact are that there is to
be no discontinuation of shipments
unless tJie Soviet Union and the U.S.
agree to suspend. There is no
reference in the language to ·the
Soviet Union's agreeing to suspend

\Ill€ CALLEPTI\15 MEeT11"16 ~5E

50ME Of U~ Tl\OIJ6HT WE SHOULP

6ET 'f06Elli~ AN~ ~\SE. SOME.
MONEY TO~ TO EI.ECTEV
OFFICIAl-~ WHO 'NILL WORK TO

WIFE OUT POLITICAL ACTION
COMMITTE~ ....

Defective
WASHJNGI'ON - An appaillng
number of American chidlren are
suffering from mental and physical
disorders caused by a blunder in the
manofacture of their baby formula.
Some of them might have been
spared if the formula maker had
heeded an early warning that Its
product lacked an essential ingredient. Here's the shocking story:
In March, 1978, Syntex Laboratories Inc., ofPall5Alto, Calif.• decided
to lower the sodium chloride.
But this also removed the
chloride, an essential nutrient in
babies diets. With only six measurements of chloride per liter, NeoMull
Soy was already low in the vital
ingredient. The American
. Academy of Pediatrics recom·
mends a chloride level of 11 to 29
measurements per· llter for infant
formula, wlilch may be the baby's
only food during the early months of
life.
Thecompanywasn'tawareofthe

Th~

its ongoing attempt to spread
revolution and haired and tunnoilln
the Middle East, Africa, Europe,
Asia and Latin America.
If a Democratic president had
engineered this pact, sending over to
sign It a!uilctlonacywhoselanguage
ts indistlngulshable from what one
would expect from Benjamin Speck
or Jane Fonda or Andy Young,
there'd have been blood In the
streets of the American conserva·
tlve community. The value of the
grain to American farmers is
approximatley $2 blll1on per year.
The value of the grain to the Soviets
could be marginal. That is to say. if
the Soviets were required to produce
an extra 10 blll1on tons ot wheat per
year. that would soak up the energy
of a lot of people otherwise engaged
In making tanks and polson gas.
They could getlt from AustraUa and
Canada and Argentina? So could we
buy It from them.
We are spending in rough figures
blll1on per year to maintain our
defense against the Soviets. One
percent ofthatcostwould be needed
to compensate American fanners
for special sacrifices. What to do
with the grain? There are a lot of
hllnglj' people In the world wbo are
not engaged in the largest aggres·
sive enterprise In the htstory of the
world: theSoylet enterprise against
the free, andseml-freeworld. Gi\reit
to them.
Mr. Reagan makes himself a
laughingstock in those chanceries In
the world where, fromtimetotlme,
he ts pleading for anti-Soviet
COlJWatlon, as when he ·asked
Englanci and Fiance that they pot
sell U.S. compressor technology to
the Soviets for its monster gas
pipeline, which will bring to the
Soviets four time the hard currency
It needs to buy American grain.

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form~la ________J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
chloride problem; it had stopped
testing for Ita few months before the
change in formula. Pediatricians
across · he country were also
Ignorant of the problem, relying on a
reference guide that put the chloride
level of Neo Mull Soy still at six
measurements.
The result was that ~.000 to 50,000
babies each day were being weaned
on a product that was vtrtuaily
without a trace of a vital nutrient. In
effect, they were being starved.
Lack of chloride in the diet can
cause a condition known as meta·
bolic alkalnsis; which brings on a
variety of leming disabilities and
growth disorders. Teeth may crum·
ble. the child's growth may be
stunted, there ts a hlgher·lhan·
average . incidence of conwlsions
and many vic,tims have problems
with speech, memory and attentlon
Span.
No one Iatows how many babies

who took Neo Muil Soy have
experienced these disorders in later
years,but one parent, Lynne Pilorof
Arlington, Va.•. has reason to be
particularly bitter. Her infant son
went on the formula in June, 1979,
andbecameillaftertaklngNeoMull
Soy for only one month. The product
was recalled in August, 1979 ·- too
late to bene!lt her son, who has been
In theraPY !or learning problems.
Snytex executives Insisted the
company didn't learn of the chloride
problem untu July 2,1979.
But on May 15,1979, Dr. Neil Buist
of the University of Oregon sent a
letter to Syntexasldng "If there have
been any reports of electrolyte
disturbances using Neo Mull Soy as
a result of the low chlorldecontentin
this Infant !011TU1la ...
On May .ll, Dr. John Ingram,
director of medical services at
Syntex, replied tersely: "In the 10
years that Neo Mull Soy has been on
the market, we have no reports lot

electrolyte imbalances, specificaily
regarding chloride."
A Syntex spokesman admitted to
my associate Vicki WaJTen that
Ingram never actuaily checked the
chloride level but believed it to be9.7
measurements. 1
Rep. John Dingell, D-Mich.,
chainnan of the Energy and
ComrneTce Committee, wrote to
·Syntex President Paul Frelman last
July and demanded to 1atow why
Frelman had said the company first
learned of the chloride problem on
July 2, 1979- and falled to mention
the Buist letter.
Freiman wrote back that Buist's
letier "was purely an inqui·
ry ... (and) dld not indicate that he
had any cases or 1mew of any
patients wlth problms."
Footnote: Syntex reformulated
Neo Mull Soy and reintroduced It In
~ptember,l979. But due tp lagging
sales, the company ceased produc·
tion In the fall of 19lll.

'gender gap'________Ja_m_es_J_.K_i...:...lpa_t_ric_k

WASHJNGI'ON - August is the
duilest rponth in our town. The
Congress has gone home; the
Suphme Court is shut down; the
president is somewhere riding a
horse, God bless him, and by our
parochial standards absolutely no. thing is going on. When nothing is
going on, something must be made
to go on. And this August, in the
midst of truly dreadful doldrums,
what we contrived was: the Gender
Gap!
The gender gap. We have had
several overblown stories in recent
months. There was the whole
business of the Carter debate
briefing papers of l9llJ- the papers
that wound up in the hands of aides to
Ronald Reagan; most of the hot air
has seeped out of the balloon. Then
we had the story of the la\vyer In
California who professed to have
some dirty movies of high Republicans whooping It up; the story mad.e
the evening network news. but tl)e
dirty movies somehow disappeared, and this was a great
disappointment, for it would have
been a great novelty tD see,even a
low Republican thus whooping it up.
The surruner's moot overblown
story. in my own view,ls the story of
Ronald Reagan and the gender gap.
By some regrettable foul·up in
White House log1stics, several bus
loads otvtsilingwomen were turned
away from the White House. The
president apologm!d profusely, but
some of the women didn't like his
apology. Then a 35-year.oJd aide in
the Justice Department, Barbara
Honegger by name, leaped Into
print with char!l"" that Mr. Rea·
gan'sef!orts to rid the federal code of
dlscrlmlnatory statutes were a

bunny suit. I kid you not. At the
Justice Department, press chiefTom DeCair recklessly described
Ms. Honegger as a "low-level
munchkin." and so passed another
day and night in solemn discourse
upon the meaning of "munchldn."
At the White House, acting press
secretary · Larry Speakes was
questioned about theperceptlonof a
gender gap: "I think we bave to
articulate the agenda," Speakes
replied. AU the reporters wrote this
on their slates.
Pful! I see no reason to doubt the .
raw figures pubUshed by the
pollsters. The data show that fewer
women than men voted for Reagan
In 198J, and there is some indlcatlon
that the gap ls growing. But I hiive
not seen a poll Umited to women who
actually voted for Reagan In 191ll,
and this I would like to see. How
many such women have firmly
changed their minds? I suspect the
number is exceedingly few. Wha·

tever the reasons may have been
that motivated large numbers of
women to oppose Reagan in 19lll,
those reasons stlll exist. The.
president still regards the Equal
Rights Amendment as unwise; the·
president still believes In upgrading
ournatlonaldefenses; thepresident
stlU belleves that bDUons of dollars
can be cut from entitlement
programs without significant harm
to the poor.
What offended the impatient Ms.
Honegger was thatnothlnghadbeen
done In the 98th Congress toward
repealoramendmentofdlscrimina·
tory statutes now on the books. But
something had been done. At the
administration's request, Sen. Bob
Dole ot Kansas introduced a bill to
deal with roughly 100 such statutes.
The bW has been languishing In a
subcommittee of the Judiciary
Conunittee, but you can bet your
bestbunnysultthatltwillbehopplng
toward the Door this month.

This ts the kind of thing the bill

would correct: More!hanahundred
years ago, Congress passed a law
dealing wlth the Southern Ute
Indians. These Indians could be
removed from their tribal lands
"with consent of the majority of the
adult tribal members.'' The compu·
ters of the Justice Department
searcbed and found that offending
word, " male," and thus thedtscrbn·
lnatory statute was kiCked out for
review. The Dole bill would repeal
that law.
Now this may come as a terrible
blow to the Barbara Honeggers ot
this world, but honestly, ma'am, the
possibility should be considered that
the president of the United States
andthechainnanofSenateFlnance
have had more important issues on ·
their minds these past six months
than the disfranchisement of female
Utes a century ago. It is hard t:O
conceive that possibility, Ilatow, but
letustry.
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B)' KEITH WISECUP
A pair of schools wltll simllar
expectations for the new season
kickoff the 1983 grid year Friday '
night at Marietta when the host
:J:Igers take on Meigs in tile first
meeting ever between the two.
·B o th teams went . through re·
building years in 1982 and hath
are .count ed on h av Ing better
times this go-round. Marietta
was 2·8 while Meigs had a 3·7
ledger last year.
"They're a strong team. I've
been impressed by their defense,
" said Meigs coach Charley
Ch ancey, now 1n hi s 20th year of
coaching and 17th at Marauder·
land.
The Tigers, led by first-year
head coach Jim Spence. have six
returnl~g starters among 10 let·
termen from last year. Most lm·
press1veIy a bo u t th e Ti gers Is
their quantity of seniors. Ot the
~2 starting positions, 19 are
manned by seniors.
1n three pre-season scrim·
I t ta h as not bee n
mages, M are
scored upon. Tiley battled to sco·
reless ties with "AAA" schools
Wintersville and Meigs' Tri-Val·
ley Conference toe Warren Lo·
cal. The Tigers whipped a re·
building Morgan eleven four
touchdowns to none.
As impressive as the Tigers
. sound, they.hold a great deal o!
· respect tor Meigs, ai.so:
·

"I watched !bern against Athens
and our coaches scouted them
against Frontier. we were very im·
pressed wlth their middle defensive
strength, espectally Chris Burdette
at llnebaker. They have strongs kid
on offense and we were bnpressed
. with Shawn Eads," commenled
Coach Spence.
In those pre-season scrbnmages.
Meigs defeated Athens two TO's to
none while rolling over Frontier 14·
3 (actual score). ,
Marietta, wbo has all tour of their
linebackers as returning starters,
will ou(weigh the Marauders cons!·
derably. On the offensive line, the
Tigers average a whopping 196
~mpared to Meigs' l?J. Both
'-'"'
. teams average 161 In their often·
slve backfields.
The Marauders put together
consecutive drives against Fron·
tier in the Meigs preview last
Friday, raising a few eyebrows
with their flawless play· .
Fans are reminded that ail
tickets purcllased in advance at
the high school not only saves
you 50 cents a ticket ($2.00). but
ail proceeds go to the Meigs ath·
letic fund . Tickets at the gate will
be $2.50.
Directions to the Marietta Col·
lege field are to stay on U.S.
Route 7 and turn right at the se·
cond red light after crossing the ,
ne.w bridge over the Musklngum .
· ·
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River.
PROBABLE STARTING UNEVPS

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NAME

P08.
TE
OT

~f::~~=k1n 1 :~1JI

Bobby Beek..- 111151
Scott Blair 117~1
Mar.k Warden 1185~ .
Mike Lazear12201
Jay Hetss 117!1
J. D. Ka.rtacer (1651
Mtke Walsh 11001
Fronk Blair 11601
Kevin Crock ~ :~tFENSEl
Hetss
warden
Mike Palmerter (225 )
Goddard
Crock
Stu Warner (175)
walsh
Mark Carmontsco 117!1
Jim Benneu 11851
Brian Long 11501
Todd Heinz 0601

~

SG

rr
SE

~~

TB

WR
E
E

T
T

OLB
OLB
JLB

n.B

DB
DB

s

MEIGS

.
!OFFENSE)
Scou Gheen 0181
and Mike Chancey 11731
Butch
Stiles (1761
Jay
Whlttln
111.., 1m 1
Jay Evant 11~61
Davollorr 11781
Tony Welch CUO)
Dan Thomas 11!161
Nick Rlgp 11401
Chrts Burdette (175t
Dave Follrod (1511)
Jon Perrin 11741
and Shawn Eads 11611
!DEFENSE)
Andy lannarelll o~~~

LE
LT
LG

c

RG
RT
RE
QB
FB
WB
TB
MG

~el~h

T
T

Perrtn
Evans

E

E

~~';te~!mmond• 11621

Follrod and Mike wmrord (1671
JaoldeWelker 11501
~~:!n · · · ·
·

LB
LB
CB

· en
· FS

ss

Eastern, Southern on road -Friday.
By S«nT WOLFE

top defensive teams.
Ten returning lettennen form the
foundation for a compeUtlve South·
Southern Valley Athletic Confer· lnterceptkm thwarted a KCdrlve as
ence teams kick off theinespectlve dill other Tornado defensive stands: e~ teem: Co8ches Bill Porter and
1983 football ~ainpalgns, Including . With its size and .experience, · Dam!U Dugan will again guide the
·the Eastern Eagles and Southern's Southern could be oneofthe leagues
Tornadoes as volunteers:
TornadOes. Eastern travels to
Waterford for an early 5::llcontest,
whlle Southern travels to R1cl1nxin·
dale for a bout wlth Ross·
Southeastern.
ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) _; Add
Sutcliffe ts completing ~ !lfth
Both Meigs county schools hope to
the
name of Rick Sutcliffe to the Ust year in the major leagues, and thus
rebound this season after InJury·
marred rebuUdlng campaigns dur· of Cleveland Indians' pitchers willbavetherlghttodemandthatbe
thinking about seeking employment be traded.
ing 1982 Eastern posted a 4·5-1
elsewhere.
"I bave to tell the Indians by Oct.
overall slate dlld Southern a U
Len
Barker
made
It
known
last
1,"
he said. "If I do, they ltave to
ledger. In loop play EHS was 2·2·1
week fl!.at he. didn't plan tO stick trade me by March 15 or I'm a free
and Southern 2-3.
around, and · already he's gone, agent. Right now I can'tsay tor&amp;ure
Eastern glides Into the '83 season
traded during the weekend to the exactly whatl'Udo, but asking fora
wlth eleven returning lettennen
trade ts a disllnct possfblllty."
h'Q!II which third-year mentor Arch Atlanta Braves.
Then
Lary
Sorensen,
who
!Uied
in
The Indians are mired In the
Rose Wtn tnold a strong foundation
for Barker at Seattle Sunday after ceUarofthe~ricanLeagueEast,
tor Frlday'~wener. Heading the list
the abrupt trade, announced that he and SutcUffe, 27, is Interest"!~ In
ofretilniees is hard-charging senior
planning to test the free agent playing on a winning team.
was
tailback Troy Guthrie, who gained
market
next season and that
''Let'sput it this way,'' he said. ''I
ill yards in just two quarters of the
Cleveland
would
probablY
not
be
his
want
to be on a team that has a
SVACpreviewlast~. Overall,
top
choice
when It comes to making chance to win. That's what's
Eastern gained 119 yards rushing
important to me."
and were 1-4 passing. Eastern won a deal. ·
Now
comes
Sutcliffe,
With
a
14-9
SutcUffe says he doesn't under·
6-0.
'
record
and
3.75
earned
run
average
stand
some of the things the Indians
Offensively, Eastern is potent
this
season.
saying
he
may
demand
have
been
doing In trading estabfrom its I-fonnatton and could be
a trade ..
lished,
experienced
players for
Ep&lt;tremely tough wlth a ll!..tle polish
overall, but did galn 8 first downs in

This Friday eVening ali five : two quarters of play. A Southern

MARAUDER CIIEERLii:ADij:RS - Qleerlng the on the aquad. ,l::heerleaders include, Debbie werrr'
Marauder~ leArn ciil Friday idghl w~ Melgs lront; Chad Wlll1arns, ClleryiiUJfle, LynnEppl!', Lisa
pla,ys MarieUa wiD ; be_ ihe Me1p ltlgb .Sehool · Ashley, Marie Averiqn, and Bob Geyer, left to right,
cheerleadlng aquad, For the lli"St lbne, two hays are with Sonia Wise
Duff:v.

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Sutcliffe may join mate in trade deman
minor leaguers.
TheBarker!\ealwithAtlantawas
!or three players to be named later,
reportedly Brett Butler, Brook
Jacoby and Steve Behenna.
"Supposeclly, we are getting
Butler because he can run and play
the outfield," said Sutcliffe. "We had
a guy like that in Rick Manning.
Instead of trading Manning to
Milwaukee for Gorman Thomas,
maybe we should have traded·
Barker to Milwaukee. Then we

JUST ARRIVED/

Friday's
grid picks·

BETTER WOVEN FLANNEL,

SVAC teams open Friday
With high hopes for an injury free
championship season, all six SVAC
schools open their 1983 high school
football season Friday night.
With theexceptionofKygerCreek
and Hannan Trace. all other schools
are on tile road Friday.
Coach Mark Hartman's Bobcats
will host Federal Hocking while
Coach Brett Wilson's Wildcats play
Symmes Valley. In other engage.
ments, defending champion North
Gauta plays Huntington of Ross at6
p.m. Friday; Southwestern goes to
Portsmouth East and Southern
visits Southeastern of Ross.
North , Gallia won the loop
championship last !ali for tthe first
time since 1959. Coach John Blake's
Pirates posted a 9-1 overall record
and 5-0 against league toes.
' North Gallla wlth 11 returning
lettermen is expected to be the team
to beat again this season. however,
the Pirates are expected to get
plenty of competition !roo\ at least
three other league sehoqls. Kyger·
Crrek, Southern, and Eastern have

A fearless forecaster has
suddenly found his crystal
ball and decided to predict tbe
outcome of weekly football
games In the trl·county area
for the Daily Sentinel.
Witll tile exception of the fa .
mous Major Amos B. Hoople
has such a task been underta·
ken since the days of Col. Lee
Mole and Sgt. Swammi back
In the mid 70's. Let's see how
things go for the next 10 weeks
for our lateslrf~ognostlcator.

531 JACKSON PIKE - RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446-4524
BARGAIN "ATINEES SAT &amp; SUN
AlL SEATS $2.00
ADIIIISS!ON EVERV TUESDAY S2.0&lt;:f

~~
Dt.'l11.tK.tJON Of ~A.uo-SYJij

EEK~9'00 aP~

SAT &amp; SUN MATINEES 1:00

3: 00

EXT~A HEAVY

by Dee Cee

ali been rated as title contenders
while Southwestern and Hannan
Trace are believed to be bnproved
clubs.
Finishing hl:hlnd the Pirates last
season were Kyger Creek; second;
Eastern, third; Hannan Traee and
Southern, fourth and Southwestern,
fltth.
Each team will play at least !our
non-league opponents suneltve.
League actlon does not begin lllltD
the first week In October.
Middleport resident Jolm Blake
continues as the 'dean of football
coaches' in the SVAC. Blake, a
Marsball graduate, is entering his
12th campatp at North Galll8
following an asslstantsltlp at
Southern.
Jack James. a Miainl Trace High
School graduate, enters his fourth
year at Southwestern; volunteer
coaches Bill Porter and Da!Teii
Dltgan are In their fourth year at
Southern While KC's Hartman and
liT's Wilson enter their second

NOW

$2}99
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Benches, Tents, Tennis Rackets, Guns C!nd Scapee.

I , •o

THESE 2 WEEKS WE WILL "DICKER" ON ANY NEW
OR USED GUN IN THE STORE.

rmr:~~ OLD &amp; NEW SPORTS
813 WASHINGTON Sl

• 304-273·5155

-~

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Save on ConverSe, Bows, Rods, Reels, Weights,

.
'·

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OPEl SUN. 12·5

RAVENSWOOD

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1:1

Brq the kids to Ponderosa for free your coupons. because you can still
"Kid's llii)Jer'S and fries."
take advantage of our special savings
You can pick up any meal on the
on any adult meal.
menu. Your kids 12 and under wiD eat
But hurty. Our&amp;re
deal is
"Kid's buJgers and &amp;ies" absolutely
only IJxxl through September 22,
1983.
free. AOO don't~ to IJtq along
Stmt taking advcmlii(Je ofINs money-saving offer today
at cmy of IJrese area loaJtions:

HEAR IT
EVERY
FRIDAY
MORNING

8110AL

Ironton 38 WhePief'tiburt 14

Logan 12 New Lexlnaton 8
JackloD. 19 Wellston 1
Nelsonville-York tO Athens 0

SVAC

Symmes Valley 12 Ha1Uian .Trace.&amp;
Ky1er Creek :18 Fedenl HO&lt;Icl. . 8
Ponsmouth 1Eut 30 Southwestern 13
southern 13 Soutbellllero 12
Eaatent U Watmord 0
North GaUia ~C:;'i!!fCII RDII 6

..

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.·..
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9 A.M.-1

NOON ·

Pt. Plebant 17Borl!l&gt;unvtlle It
RaWIIIwoodlt Wtdlama 13
COtll Grove 20 Greonup 18

oak Hill 20 Port1mou.t11 Notre Dame 7

•

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SE6800.

4TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
SEPTEMBER 1 THRU SEPTEMBER 4

Rock Hill :Ill Galllpotlo 14

'f

'·

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Trlmble 14 Fairland 13
Zane Trace 16 Vinton County 0
warren l.ocal21 f"ort Frye 7

the way. A three-day battle erupted
In the local press over when and
where, and under What circumstan·
ces, Ms. Honegger .had worn a

,,

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Northrtdae U Mtller 12

"shaln. 11
Since !ben it has been downhill ali

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.......

Beme Union 20 AleuntWT 0

28 Caldwell

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·. I ,

Meigs 21 Marietta 20
~lpre

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MEN'S WESTERN
FLANNEL SHIRTS

..,

on Its other runners to complement
Gutluie. The EHS offense will
ll!le-up against a tough Waterford
·
defensive unit.
AltOOugll Waterford has shown a
visible strength defensively, it lacks
an effective offense at this point in
p1eseason play. It has gone scoreless to this point ln scrimmages.
Meanwhile, Eastern Daunts a fairly
tough defense with Rob Malson and
Allen Jacks as Its anchors.
Iii what could be a close and
grueling contest at Southeastern the
Southern Tornadoes hope to uncork
Its potentially tough offensive unit.
Southern's offense has been a
'sleeper' but Is not far froiD a
possible eruption. A matter of
timing has made the difference
between Tornado scores and shutOOts. Southern battled Kyger Creek
to a().() tie in the SVAC grid preview
at Cheshire.
• Southern rushed for just 59 yards

would have had Thomas and
Manning In the same outfield."
"I understand this Jacoby is a
third baseman," Sutcliffe said.
"Wby are we getting another third
baseman? We have Toby Harrah
there and he's one of the positive
things on this team."
In his last outing, Sutcliffe was
ejected Tuesday night In the fourth
inning of the 10-6 loss to the
California Angels, accused of throw·
at hitters.

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Upper River Road
(Across from the Airport)

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�Page

The Daily Sentinel

4

Thunday, Seplember I, 1983

Old form returns
to Pete Vuckovich
By BEN WALKER
homertocapaseven-runfirst inning
AP Sports Writer
as visiting Baltimore won its eighth
To the Seattle Mariners and to hls straight game.
Milwaukee teamrnatPS. Pete VuckThe Orioles victimizro Jim Got!,
ovich looked like tile same pitcher 7-12, and reliever Mike Morgan in
who won the 19&amp;! Ame ric~. n League their uprising. Gott pitched to six
Cy Young Award.
batters, retired none of them, and
Vuckovich, sidelined the entire left with the bases loaded and down
year with rotator cuff problems, J..O after . RBI slngle!J by Eddie
made his .first appearance of the Murray, John Lowenstein and Ken
season Wednesday and went five Singleton.
·
fairly strong innings.
Morgan gave up Rich Dauer's
Yet he got saddled with the loss as run-scoring groundout before Cruz
. Milwaukee fell 4-1. raising the blasted his lOth home run of the
question of whether vuckovich's season.
Rookie Mike 800dicker,l2-6, held
return will be too llttle and too late
lor the Brewers.
Toronto to four hits In seven Innings.
The right-hander threw four He has won six of his last seven
scoreless innings before Pat Put- decisions.
nam doubled home two runs In the
Baltimore has now won i6 of its
fifth.
last 18 and outscored its opponents
Overall, Vuckovich allowed four 56-151n the last three gafn!!S.
hlts, struck out four, walkro two and
hlt a batter In throwing 85 pitches.
Rangers 11, Tigers 1
Milwaukee's loss, however,
Dave Hostetler belted a solo
dropped the Brewers 3% games homer, his lOth, and added a
behind Baltimore- who clobbered run-scoring double to pace visiting
Toronto 10-2 - in the American Texas.
George Wright also hlt a solo
League East
In other AL games, Chicago homer, his 15th, for the Rangers.
whipped Kansas City 7-3, Texas
The home runs gave Texas an
downed Detroit 5-1, Cleveland early lead and Mickey Rivers made
topped CaUfornJa 7-5, New York ltJ..Ointheflfthwbenhescoredfrom
beat Oakland 6-4 and Minnesota at second on Buddy Bell's Infield
Boston was r;ained out.
single.
John Butcher, 5-5, gave up six hits
Vuckovich, for his part, remained
In the shOwers after the game and and one run In 6 2·3 Innings for the
did not talk to reporters.
victory.
Simmons' ninth home run · acGlenn Abbott, 54, . making ,. his
·. counted (or the Milwaukeenin·ln the · 5econd start since betng· acqlilfi..d
seventh Inning off Bob Stoddard, from Seattle, took the loss.
Yankees6, A's4
7-14. Mike Stanton wentthefinail2-3
innings for his sixth save.
Don Baylor and Rick Cerone each
White Sox 7, Royals 3
drove In two runs and Shane Rawley
RookJe Ron Klttle blasted a won his fourth consecutive game.
three-run homer, his 27th of the
Rawley,14-10, wasglve.n a6-llead
season,asChlcagoextendedltslead after 2'h Innings as the Yank¥
In the AL West to lO'h games oyer scored·four times in the third inning.
. visiting Kansas City.
Cerone, Baylor, Don Mattingly
The White Sox margin Is the and Omar Moreno singled home
largPSt they've ever had since the those third-Inning runs in Oakland.
Indians 1, Angels5
team began keeplngdailyrecordsln
1948.
George Vukovich, who entered
Chicago won for the filth straight the game In the eighth inning for
timewhileKansasCitylostltsfourth defensive purposes, singled home
In a row.
two runs with two outs In the 10tll
Kittle's seventh-inning blast Inning In CaUfornia.
The Angels had tied it in the ninth
snapped a 2-2 tie and came off Dan
Quisenberry, who came Into the on doubles by Daryl Sconiers and
game a lot earlier than usual.
Rob WUfong off reliever Rick
Quisenberry replaced Larry SutcUffe.
Gura,l0-16, after a walkandaslngle
Sutcliffe, who was ejected from
1n the seventh. Floyd Bannister, Tuesday night's game against the
13-10, won his lOth game in 11 starts Angels after throwing brushback
since the All-Star break.
pitches, upped his record to 15-9 In
Orioles 10, Blue Jays 2
hls first relief appearance of the
Todd Cruz hammered a three-run season.

Scoreboard ...
AMFJUC-'N LEAGUE
EAST DIVtiiON

Majors

·w

E o\ST

~2

OM roil

75
7-1

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64

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71 y, . .58:1 .571 1~~
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Nt"'&gt;' YOlk 7. !,or;; An~k's 1
C'r11"tnrul11 6, Ch!('a.£0 ~
Phlladl'lphia 4. San ~ :1

t'J\mnell 7-51

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.&lt;A81 11 ~
....'":19 141.1
.459 141,1z
.U9 181,1z
241,1z

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Bal!lmOr(' 10. Toronto 2
Mln~11 at Boston. ppd .. rain
Tl'xas 5. DMroll l
011c8Wl 7. Kansas City :1
C'k-..·pJand 7, California~ . 10 lnninRS
Nt&gt;w York 6, OakiMd &lt;l
&amp;&gt;at1k' 4. Mllwaui«&lt; 1

DeprummentofNarural~~

says these are some good fishing
spots tot this time o!,Y&lt;!ar:
'••
NORTHWEST
'
LakeLaConte-Goodperchflshlng .
In this reservoir near Fostoria. Dlift ,,
fishing with minnows or soft craws ,1
Is recommended and can also
produce walleye.
Bresler Reservoir - Good night ,
fishing for channel cats In thlsAllen
Countyreservoir.Alsogoodcatches ·
of bluegllls along the shoreline anq ,;
near the sunken Island.
·
"

SOU'DIEAST

RACINE AT-BALLTEAM-The Racine AT·balltearn
had an excellent season which was completed

recently. Team members were first row, left to right,
Ryan Holter, Ryan Adams, Jlnuny Counts, Amy

Justis, Aimee Manuel, Kevin Turley, Chris Statts,

Dillon Reservoir - This Musklngum County lake Is a hot spot tor
channel catfish. Best action at night
during cloudy and rainy weather. ··
Excellent for brown bullhead, too.
HocklngRiver-Avarietyofflsh,
Including bass, bluegill, crappie and
catfish.

Sam Shain, Betb Clark, Robert Reiber, Coach Sharon
Johll'lon and Gary Johnson.

Rocky Fork Lake -

Wood, Jlnuny Randolph, Kelly Hensler, Eddie WUils
and J"""lca Covert. Second RA&gt;w, left to righl, Bryan

but he handled It well.
In the first inning Ryne Sandber·g
tried lo steal seco~d. Bench, as he
had done so many times before,
gunn&lt;'&lt;i down the runner. The crowd
erupted and gave him a standing
ovation.
"Sure 1 was pumped up, " said
'Bench. " I didn 't want to look bad
back there. "
In the seventh, it didn't matt~r
whal position Bench was playing.
His bat was needed as the game was
tied 4-4 and there was a runner at
second with twa out s.
·
Paul Householder started the
rally with a one-oot double off Rich
Bordi. 0-2. Warren Brusstar rc·
placed Bordi and one out later,
Bench singled to center for the
go-ahead run.
Kelly Paris ran for Bench, who
received another standing ovation
from the crowd of 17,474.
Cinciiinati Manager Russ Nixon
compared the night to a Hollywood
movie.
"It was almost as though Johnny
wrote the script," he said.

Cardlnals6, Bnives 3
The NL debut of Len Barker was
less than successful as Ken Oberktell and Dane Jorg led a 14-hlt St,
Louis assaull. Oberkfell had four
hils and three RBI and Iorg had
three hits as the Braves lost their
thtrd straight at homP and the slxtll
of seven.
Barker, whowasobtalnedSunday
from Cleveland, len in the fifth
inning after allowing 10 hits and
three runs . Joaquin Andujar, 6-13,
was the winner and Bruce Sutter
picked up his loth ~ave.
Expos4,01ants3
Bill Gullickson won his careerhigh 13th. as the Expos scored the
winning run on a throwlng_eppr by
Giants' second baseman Joel
Youngblood as he tried to complete
a double play In hottom ofthelourill
inning.
Gu!Uckson allowed six hits in 81-3
innings and struck out five. Jeff
Reardon got his 19th save.
Trailing 3-2 In the bottom of the
fourth, the Expos loaded tbe bases
on a single by AI Oliver, a double by

Tim Wallach and an intentional
walk to Warren Cromartie. Doug
Flynn hit a grounder to shortstop
Darrell Evans, who flipped to
Youngblood for the force at second.
Youngblood threw into the Expos'
dugout, allowing the winning run to
scon&gt;.

;t

tl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

MEET ME AT THE MEIGS INN
Luncheon Special Every Day 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.
New Dinner Special Every Evening 5 P~M. to 9
P.M.
Lounge Open Daily 11 A.M. to 1A.M. (Closed Sundays)
.Live Entertainment Nightly 8-12
Jamie Shooter At The Piano

SOU'l11WEST

Good lateswnmer fishing for muskellunge In
this Highland County lake. which is
also good at nlghtfor catfish.
Eagle Creek -Good fishing In this
small
Ohio River tributary for
are expecting another record deer what we've enjoyed the past several
shovelhead
and channel eat,flsh .....
kill, perhaps as many as 58,!XXJ years. However, wewllldoonemore
b,ank llnesaregoodfor ·
.
Trotlinesand
·
~whlte\ail, · because Of the ' extra · survey."
big
shovelhead.
·
hunting days in certain counties.

TRADE-IN.
.

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r-r===~===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;w

Overall, the mild winterofl9112-83
was a boon to forest and upland
game, but the drought In Canada
means waterfowl hunting will not
improve.
. .

slumpwlthasing~overadrawn-in

outfield in the bottom of the ninth to
lift thePhiiUesoverthePadres. With
one out, Ivan DeJesus singled and
Joe Lefebvre doubled. Rose was
sent up to hit for AlHoUand, S-2. San
Diego Manager · Dick Wllllams

decided to go against the percentages and allowed left-hander Gary
Lucas to face the switc~tU::~
Rose Instead of walking
a
pitching to left -handed Joe Morgf;
Rose lined a 1-llpitch lnto=r
the victory that movedP~ dlvl!'to a
to within one game 0
nleading Pittsburgh.

I

Deer hunters can expect good year
By 1be Associated Press
A state game biologlst says it
Joqks like another g009 year for Ohio
· deer hunters. ·
· ·
Bob Donohoe, who concentrates
on forest . game at the Waterloo
w!ldUfe station In Athens County,
said the herd statewide. has In·
creased to 125,000 this year from
. 115,000 last y.ear, even though Ohio
htniters set a rec¢rd.by killing 53,00)
deer In 1982. ·
.. ·•.
However, that lncreaselsconcen- ·
trated In certain counties. Donohoe
said an effort Is ~lng made to
manage the deer on a county-bycounty basis through antierless
permits.
"Most counties that have populations needing' management are
located in the southeastern and
northeastern parts of the state," he
said, "That Is why they have three
extra hunting days this year.
"And that Is why we are urging
hunters that want antlerless permits to concentrate on certain
counties - Muskingum, Harrison,
Tuscarawas, Meigs, Washington,
Athens, Monroe, Jefferson, Gailia,
Fairfield, Belmont, Hocking, Delaware, Ashland, Richland, Union and
Morrow.''
He said people should get their
antlerless applications In early for
those counties.
State Wildlife Division officials

.
PhiiUes 4, Padres 3
Pete Rose snapped an 0-for-20

~

. "Therruld\vinterwehadlastye&lt;ir'
.had to be belll!ficlal to ail animals
and birds," said Dick Ramsey,
game biologist for the WildUfe
Division's District 3. "But lack of
rain this summer wtll hurt some of
the species."
Moderate temperatures last winter allowed animals to be In better
physical condition (or reproduction,
said Wildlife Division game man:
agement head Pat Ruble.
"U the reproduction was hamperedinanywaythlsyear,ltwasby ·
the heavy rainfall we bad this
spring. But that does not seem to
have affected population," Ruble
sald.
Donohoe said the number of
sq ulrrels and rurkeys in Ohio has
grown, But the grouse flock has

'

CLOSE-OUT!!
..-_ BOYS'-WESTERN -BOOTS
1/2 OFF
No Payments For 90 Days

WHILE SUPPLY LASTS

WITH APPROVED CREDIT

•

(Broken Sizes)

90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

,.'"

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

..

MIOULEPOH I

1------------------------

"

TV

shrunk.

RCA COLOR
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"A survey we conducted this
spring showed grouse were down 17
percent," Donohoe said. "We believe they won't be as plenutul as

Three farmhands will j~in Cincinnati
CINCINNATJ lAP)- TheCincin·
natl Reds now have three Cincinnati
natives on the team - second
baseman Ron Oester, pitcher Jeff
Russell and William "Skeeter"
Barnes.
Barnes, 26, an Infielder, was
among three minor leaguers called
up and slated to report to the Reds
today.

Wllllinnsand Steve Christmas.
Williams, 25, an outfielder, averaged .329 with 11 home runs and 79
runs batted In this season at
IndianapOlis.
Christmas, 25, a catcher, hit .2871n
49 gam~ for Tucson.
Barnes, a former Infielder with
the University of Cincinnati, hit .337
at Indianapolis.

The other two were Dallas

~;;;;;;=====~;;;;;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;==;;~
I

Reg. S699

Reg. S749
Trade-In SlOO

Trade-In S1 00

SALE

SALE

. REGULAR .s399.00
. TRADE IN
50.00

SALE

$

~~

l-iou.sloo

TPX!IIi tThnana 7-51 at [)(_.froif (Monis' •
lnl
Mln1K'90ta tY.'tlllams 9-t! and Lysanctrr

17~1.

An~·if'll

4·101 at Boston 1Ed«'rsle)· 7-lll and Oj«&lt;a

1 ~- M l.

tHoiK•y('Uif 2-0t ill Mont nl

San F'rai'K"isro

tHammal«:'r

1().71 111

Phli!Kk'lphin 1Ght•IH 1).(11. 1n 1
Sr. l.oul~ 1AIII'Il \1-12\ at AllruUa IPI'IW.
1:1-61, 111 I

Onlv
·

~

By 'lbe ABsociated Press
'
The Dlvlsiono!Wildllle In the Ohio •

By The Associated Press
..
For the next-to-last time, Johnny
Benchwaswherepeoplehavecome
to expect him to be - crouching
behind home. plate at Riverfront
Stadium. And for the umpteenth
time, Bench did what was expected
of him~ he dl'livered.
Benchwascatchlnghis6rslhome
game since April 29, 1981, in
preparation for Sept. 17, wh~n the
Reds will honor him for his
outstanding 17-year career in which
he caught 1,741 games, the fourth
hlghPSt total In mat or league ·
history.
That the Reds beat the Chicago
Cubs 6-4 Wednesday night hardly
seemed to matter. Foronenight , the
clock had been turned back to the
Reds' glory days of the 1970s.
In other NL games, St. Louts beat
Atlanta 6-J, Montreal edged San
Francisco 4-3, Philadelphia nipped
San Diego 4-3, New York battered
Los Angeles 7-1 and Houston
defeated Pittsburgh 4-l.
Bench caught one game in 1982
and one otber this season. The area
rrwst have seemed strange to him,

lldlllrnon-o tP3.1mt't" 3-:11 ill Toronto tAl·

C'hlr.:¥:0 IRUihvt'!'l 10.1111 al Cln('lnna!l

tn•al tl.t.':t

"

•

'•

f':J.ancl.&gt;l-1~1

t8c'm~Y I 6-i:l ), 10 1

tn.

69
~
76
wmrf DI\I'ISION
Chlf'llli(O
1!i 57
Kansa.c:; C'Hy
64 bi
Ollie land
flo 70
Calltcmla
61 '12
til 7'1
~
7G
~1
82

.561}
.$2
5.17

Weekend·_
...... Bench hero behind the plate, at bat, in Reds' victory
fishin-g
outlook

'111uNkJ'11 G.mM

Hwstm t Pl!1s00!'2h 1
'ltlunod.,y'" Own.,.

Pln!bur¢1
tUyan 1:!-61

L Pct... GB
.:'87 :-:.7
.Mia Jl~!

11

lla.ltlfJI{)I"('
Mllwaukel&gt;

NATM)N,\L U ; i\GUE

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thul'5day, September 1, 1983

E~

sc&gt;hf'duiN

t"rtdM)r·~ u~

Hoosrm of C'hic'aRO
l m Anfil'k-s at Moolroa.l . tnl
PITI~r!o!D lll Atlatlla. 1n1
Sin 0\ctAO at Nf'W York. 1n1
~~~ F'rall&lt;isro at Phll~h.la. Ihi
Olk'innatl ar St Loul&lt;;. tnl

•

SALE STARTS SATURDAY, SEPT. 3RD

6-71. ~- tl·nl
Kansas City I Biadl R-41 at Chlcajl;o

. HI DRI

iH0)-'117-101. t nl
f\:py.· York tRlgbr!tl 14-41 at DaKJa11d
tCodlroll t1 -9t, tnl
QnlY gnm{'5 scM:tulro
~'11Gam~

DPtrnit at Toronto. 2. ti-n \
Chlc¥0 at Bo!!ton. tnt ·
&amp;It~ at MW!nl'!lllfa, ml
Kansas Cit)• at Tt?;as, m 1
MlhvaWIIPl&gt; at Caltfornla. jn)
~ al oakland. !ft l
New YOT1l al ~lltllfo, {n\

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39¢

KODAK FILM
110 OR 135

AND CORDUROY

R. CRAIG MATHEWS, DDS .
IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT

*LARRY D. KENNEDY DDS*
WILL BE ASSOCIATED WITH HIM IN THE PRACTICE OF

GENERAL DENTISTRY
Beginning July 20
OFFICE HOURS WILL BE EXPANDED TO MONDAY THRU
SATURDAY BY APPOINTMENT.
Both Doctors Are Now Welcoming New Patients.

PHONE 992-6658
Middleport, OH.
205 N. Second Ave.

Rev up for fun In
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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel:

By The Bend

.

6;

By BOBSANSEVERE
left off to deter vandals.
. A••ocje!ed J&gt;reo1i Writer
"It looks like a regular car. It has
LINDEN, N.J. (AP) -A 36-ton Windshield wiP.,rs, a name on the
granite replica of a 1982 Mercedes- license plale. It's better than a
Benz limousine has found Its final
regular Mercedes," said Tern
parking space- In a graveyard by Nuzw, a secretary atthecernetery.
the tomb of the boy to whom It Is
The name on the license plate Is
dedlcaled.
Ray Tse, who died in 1981 at the age
"It looks like somelhlng Leonardo of15. .
da Vinci would do," said Marton
The monument w..,; commissiBrozowski, secretary·treasurer at oned by Tse' s brother, David, aNew
Rosedale Memorial Park. "It's · Yo: '&lt; City businessman who reportmagnificent workmanship. The edt:, paldfrom$120,CXXJto$250,0Xlfor
detall Is phenomenal."
thr , nemorial.
The monument, which took three
stonecutters 17 monthS to complete,
The granite Mercedes arrived
1s an lnch·for-lnch reproduction of Tuesday on a flat·bed truck from a
the elegant limousine, right down to Vermont manufacturer and was
the distinctive Mercedes Benz . lowered on!o a 17-ton slab amid the
Insignia on the hubcaps. There are trees and traditional headstones at
only a few things missing, including the sprawling 120-acre cemetery In
a Mercedes ornament on the hood this northern New Jersey
and a side-view mirror- purposely community.

.'

What's Cookin'?
'•

Good for you lunches to take to work, school
ByDALE M. STOlL
Meigs County Extension Agent
School bells are ringing and
hoards of children are eagerly
awaiting their two favorite subjects
at school, recess and lunch.
If you or your chlld takes a lunch
each day, make a firm resolution to
pep up lunches with foods that are
inlerestlng as well as good for you .
Most moms or dads view the
lunch-making task as Incredibly
boring, rating right down there with
sorting the socks. However, packed
lunches can be a real challenge. The
old formulas for lunches still apply,
but the reqtrements are filled with
new and exciting foods.
The mainstay of any lunch Is the
protein food. It used to be this meant
peanut butter tucked between two
slices of bread. But now, the protein
food can be chickpea spread on a
whole wheat roll. Chickpeas are

consumed here. Lately, however, and freeze. The cold liquid wlll keep
high in protein.
these nat rounds of bread have
the perishable food cold.
Chickpea Spread
A chunk of cheese, an apple and a
1 ~ cups cooked chickpeas or become very popular . The bread ·
has a pocket inside, and when cut, whole grain muffin would be a
garball2o l)o:&gt;ans . Save liquid.
. forms a perfect place for fillings or simple lunch. Add some zucchini
2 tablespoons lemon juice
salads.
sticks and a thermosofhotsoupand
1 tablespoon mayonnaise
'1i teaspoon garlic powder
Pita bread Is usually found In the you have a creative lunch. Combine
cheese and apples, plus some nuts
(For variation, beans in the deli or bll!ad section of grocery
and mayonnaise for a super salad.
recipes can be canned or cooked stores or you can make UyourseH. I
Therearemanywaystomakelunch
from dry beans. To cook dry beans,
like to stuff pita with tuna salad
less boring.
cover them with two lo three times topped with lots of sprouts. A tossed
Most peoplereallzethatbreakfast
as much water as beans. Soak salad. packedlnaplastlcbag,canbe ·
and lunch are critical meals for
overnight and add water and then placed In a pita pocket at lunchtime
children and adults alike. Breakfast
cook 1\!, to 2 hours.)
and dressing added. Pack dressing
helps get you going In the morning
1. Drain chickpeas, saving liquid.
In small jars such as baby food jars
andprovidesenergyforbetterWO(k
2. Mash and blend chickpeas. Add or small plastic containers.
and play. Children do better In
I tablespoon chickpea liquid and the
If you're planning to send a
school
when they have ealen
lemon juice, mayonnaise and garlic perishable protein food for lunches,
breakfast.
A good lunch Is Imporpowder. Mix until smooth.
be sure to Include enough Ice to keep
tant,
too.
Kids
needgoodfood to keep
3. If too thick, add a little more the food cold. Fill empty plastic
them going.
chickpea liquid or water.
containers with a tight fitting lid
Here !sa reclpeuiatcould be used
Makes six se"-'ings.
almost to the
with water or juice
Not too long ago, pita bread was
strictly an ethnic food, rarely

as a quick breakfast, a part ol a
lucnch or an afternoon snack. I have
made these bars many times, and
they are a moist treat.

2eggs

'

:

.

One-third cupoll
cupmUk

POMEROY - Special meeting, Meigs Local Board of
Education, 7 this evening to
discuss contract negollat Ions.

FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - All state
conlests, which Include baking,
sewing, phOtography, needlework, crocheting, will be held
when Meigs Coonty Pomona
Grange meets Friday evening a I
the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Harrisonville Grange will be the
host unit and all members are
asked to atlend.
POMEROY - Star Grange
will meet Friday evening at 7
p.m. for the annual hay ride and
wiener roast. There will be a
business meeting between the
hayride and wiener roast. Eleetlon of o!!lcers will be held.

RACINE - Chicken barbecue
and homemade Ice cream social,
beginning at 11 a.m. Sunday at
Racine Fire Station by fire
department and its auxU!ary;
pies and .c akes also avaliable.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department will
hold a chicken barbecue Sunday
· at the fire station beginning at11
a.m. Dinners are $3 and chicken
only $2.50.
PORTLAND - Blue Grass
Festival will be held Sunday at
Portland Park Sunday at I p.m.
Music will be provided by Sbade
Valley Boys and Tom Ewing and
the All ' American Blue Grass
Boys. There will be a flea
market, pony rides and refresh. ments. Spnsored by Proffitt
Grocery. Admission Is free.

Happemngs
Rwnmage sale

Dance set

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
First Church of God rummage
sale being held In the Masonic
Temple at Middleport will continue through Friday.

Rl!I'LAND - Dance at the
Rutland Civic Center Friday, 7
to 11 p.m. with music by Music
Unlimited and Itomlc Sounds.

If you would like additional Ideas
for packed lunches, please contact
Dale Stoll, Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769, or call 992-6696.
·

Jerry Swain, son of Lawrence .
Swain, 54342 Eden Ridge, Reeds· ·
ville,
been named to the .
·Presidential Honor Soc_lety at the ·.
DeVry InStitUte of Technology In · ··

nas

. SCIPIO 1WP ,:.__ Scipio ToWJ1•
'•
.
ship trustees will.meet Friday-at
MIDDLEPORT - Evange- · 7 p.m. at Pageville Town Hall.
line Chapter, Middleport, will
meet Thursday, 7:30 p.m. MaPOMEROY- A dance will be
sons wlll be honored.
held at the PomeroY Senior

Columbus.

'

i•
;

.

. I.

~

'i

l

\

To be eligible for the honor, :
students must have a cumulative
grade point average of at least 3.5
out of a possible 4. afler two 1erms of .
study. Sw!iln,' a snmt In the . • .
electronics lechnlclan program has:
a 3.5 grade point average.
DeVry Institute of Technology Is a :
part of the DeVry Inc., network of :
nine campuses that specialize In·
electronics lechnology and compu-.
ler science for business.
·

r ,~.

/

'

\

Professional Counseling

\

and

Family Services

Woodlond Centers

IDC:EN1'El'OOI'il~

Pomeroy
992·2192

.-

PROClAMATION -A proclamatloa deslp•
lng Sa&amp;unlay as Peace and lndependencej)ayiD celeiJratlon ofthe2001h
anniversary of the signing of the Treat ot1&gt;aris, was slgDed by Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews, Thunclay. With hbn are Mn. Pearl Mora,
chalnnan, and Mrs. Robert Ashley ,regent of ReWm J-u.an Meigs
Chapter of the llaugltters fo the Arnerlcaa Revolution.

Area DAR celebrates
Treaty anniversary ··
A proclamation designating Sai·
urday as Peace and Independence
Day in observance of the 200th
anniversary of the slglilng of the
Treaty of Paris was signed by
PomeroY Mayor Clarence Andrews
Thursday.
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the American
Revolution Is joining with the

be guests at the event.
The Society wlll also dedicate a
bronze tablet In memory of the
American Peacemakers woo negotlated and signed the deflilltlve
treaty of Sept. 3, 1783. It will be
placed In Yorktown Square near the
tablet placed there by the DAR In
1932listlnglheFrenchmenwhodled
at Yorktown.

JUST ARRIVED/

KANGAROOS
NOW

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Fresh Whole

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September 2-5, Take Out Only
Make...}'Oll!" holida:y celebration special with our famoUs strawbeny
pies!"llley're a deliCious. easy way to satisfy your family and friends.

e Pies made fresh daily
e Plump, fresh stra...tlenies

e Delicious strawberry ~!We
• lfte 8 oz. ran of lopping

• Serves 8or more people

I For maximum enjujmenl, this pit should be eaten the same day it's purchaS&lt;d. I

992-2641

r

Carpenter area happenings ... ·

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monument company and members
ol the Tse family who were at the
·graveyard Wednesday declined to
discuss the monument or release
any infonnation; Including where
the family Is from.
But according to those Involved In
the project, theolderTseapparently
bad once promised to buy his
brother a car but never got the
chance to do so.
Koch Monument Co. of Hacken· ·
sack hired the Rock of Ages granite
company to sculpt the car !rom a
~ton granlle block cut In a quarry
In Barre, Vt., which Is known as the
granite capital of the \vorld. The
stonecutters used blueprints of the
model and a real-life Mercedes .to
dupllcale the car In granite.
"It was the hardest jobihavedone
In my life," sa(d Dante Rossi, one of
the stonecutters whO worked on the
car.

.'

•
•

Pomeroy personals .

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burton of
Florida were Tuesday. guests of
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs.
Saucedo, 27, might just do lt. He
might tum In his bell-bottoms and
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Nelson and
try his own rock band, Redwtng. The
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Burnem, Robin
and Carol, spent Friday visiting In
Chicago native has been letting his
Colwnbus.
hair grow p3st his cottar, and got his
Mr. and Mrs. Cllfford Jacobs and
ear pierced.
their grandchildren, Sean and
Will his fans - or Elvis's - let
. CbrJsty .Jacobs, and Mrs. Ann Mash
ll!m?
·. Members of Sauctido's .three fan ' ··vacationed Iii Myrtle Eeach, s. c. ·.
cllibs folloW him everYwhere. Sue . recently. Mis.Mashstayedwlthher
Galek, president of the Chicago
sonandhlsfamlly,Mr.andMrs.Bob
Mash,andtbeJacobswerejolnedby
chapter, drove 6\-2 hours with three
other fans to see him In Ohio, then
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs and Mr.
and Mrs. Gary Mcintosh, Clearturned around and drove home after
water, Fla. The children returned
the show.
:·111~ ones tb;lt are ~eally Elv!ssy,
.home to,FJorkla wlth..lhelr-parents
they'll be upset he'schangmg," said . after spending·a. month with their
grandparents here.
Kathy McClelland, president ol his
Mrs. Ernest Van Inwagen and
Indiana club. "But. the real Rick
Mrs. Keith Van Inwagen and son,
Saucedo fans, and there are plenty,
were Tuesday v isitors In
love him for him."
Powhatten.

Bike-a-thon chairwoman
named
'
.
in St. Jude event in Hartford

OVERSTOCKED AT
MIDDLEPORT STORE
WE NEED ROOM ...

"I knew It woold come out goocl,
but It went beyond our own
expectations," said Mike D!Ptazza,
owner of Koch Monument, which
sold the Mercedesmerruirlal and the
mausoleum to the Tse family.
"The only thing that could affectlt
Is vandalism. Otherwise, It shoUld
be there a thousand years:"
DIPiazza added.

Officials of the cemelery, the

The Daily Sentinel
I USPS 145·9601
A Dh•l!tlon of MuJUmcdla, Inc.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Valley Publlshln)! Company - Multimedia, Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769, 992215.6. SE-cond c lass poStage paid at Pomeroy. Ohio.
.,....

ON THE ''T" IN MIDDLEPORT

STORE HOURS·.
9;30 A.M. TO 1:00 P.M.
• FRI. 10:00 A.M TO 8:00P.M .

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sociatlon, N~~:t lor:'al AdyerUsJng ~.,.pr.e- ·

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'

combat castastrophlc diseases
which afflict children. The hospital
provides total medical care to over
4ll:XJ palien ts.
Funds raised In the bike-a-thon
this fall will help assure the
continuation of the hospital's work.

Your "Ea:tra Touch"
Flarist Since 1957

~i4-o
FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Floria!

No sub!&gt;erlpll ons by mall permitted In
towns where hom(' rarrler serv ice Is

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13 WE'eks .. .. ....1. ...... ........... , .. .... SU.O'iJ ~
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MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
MIDDLEPORT

CINCINNATI (AP) - At the
Hearthslde Lounge 45 miles .nor·
theast of Cincinnati, Rick Saucedo
breaks away from the avid fans who
think he's the grand master of Elvis
Presley Impersonators.
Then he admits lt. He's sick of
· being Elvis.
· · He warits .to shave the bushy,
:. "Rev. and Mrs, Afthur Crabtree Hamon Birchf!~(d; whose husband, · liunbchop sldebtirns arid hllilg up
attended activities at the United Paul, died as a result of Injuries . the black "Heartbreak Hotel" duds
Methodist Church Conference at
received In a fall. Others from the
he's worn for 10 years. He wants to
community who ·attended the serLakeside recently.
do his own music, sing In his own
Mrs. Walter Jordan attended the vice In Dade City were Noble
voice, hear applause that's for
,Conference at Lakeside as delegate
Hamon and Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Saucedo, not ElVIs.
irom the Albany Charge. Waiter
Hamon and child.
"If they like me for what I am,
. ,Jordan · an!l ·sons. JO"stiua . anli : '' Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, " they'll ~Y. around: And, well, If a
Jeremy joined her. there and ·they
Sarah Faye anti Keith, ·Mk'belle
woman . Is looklrtg for the Elvis
,spent · a . day at Cedar Point
Ketler and Mr. a nd Mrs. Bryan
Image, there'll be another one
Amusement Park before returning
Jordan have returned from a l&lt;klay
coming around soon enough," he
trip which took them to Perry, Ga.,
·l)ome.
said.
to the home of a brother· In-law and
. Freda Smith and Madge Dye
spent a weekend at the hOme of
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred' Rice
Mrs. Smith's son·ln·law and daughand then to Satsuma, Fla., to visit
ter,Mr. andMrs.LarryStanleyand
Mrs. Jordan's parents, Mr . .and
Anna, Edison. They visited an herb
Mrs. William Culwell. They enfarm near Delaware and stopped
joYed the beach at Orlando, Fla.
The central regional office of .St.
enroute home to call on Clemma
several days and went deep sea
Jude Chlldren's Research Hospital
Vale at Cardington. Miss Vale
fishing.
announces that Mrs. Sharon Ander·
formerly lived In this area.
son will chair a hospital bike-a-thon
Mrs. Rex Cheadle, local , went to
Mrs. Oma S.t arkey received word
Columbus and she and her sister,
that her brother, A. R. Caster of
In Hartford.
The hospital was founded by
Doris Hamon Spelgle, new to
Charleston, W. Va. had fallen and
entertainer Danny Thomas to
fractured a hlp.
Florida to be with their sister, Mona

LOVE 'SEAT ONLY
REGULAR '399.95
NOW ONLY

Strawberry Pie

We Have Sunday
School Commentary
Lesson Books
In Evangelical and
Standard, Plus
Teachers' Guide.

DWARFED-IIaaTy Roush, Maaon, Is dwlll'fed by the 9 loot 8 Inch
cherry lomato plllnl that Is growing alongside his front porch. The plant
was purchased by Mr and Mrs. Row!b at Slobaat's Fruit stand at
Antiquity. The plant Is loaded with the "bite" size tomales. The small
tomatoes are In clustes with four to live to a duster.

$3)29

National Society In promoting the
As a part of the local ollservance, r;p;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ij!i::ii;iiiiiiiii~
celebratlonofSept.3,1783wbenthe
the Sept. 10 meeting of Return 1
American Peace Comm!ssoners
JonalhanMelgsCbapterwlllbeheld
John Adams, Benjamlri Franklin:
on Blennerhasset Island. The proand John Jay, signed a Definitive
gram to commemorate the :nJth
TreatyofPeacewithDavldHartley,
anniversary of the Signing of the
Treaty of Paris will be given by Mrs.
the representa tlve of King George
Pearl Mora.
the Third of Great Brittan, in Paris.
The National Society DAR will
Melgsllbrartesarebelngaskedto
hostamldnlghtsupperatthePalace · have special books about the treaty
of Versailles on Friday to be
andtheslgnersondlsplaythlsweek,
followedbyasoundandllghtshowto
and churches have been asked to
feature fireworks and lighted founrlngthelrbellsatnoonSaturdayand
talns. Dignitaries from France,
topartlclpatebyhavlngaPrayerfor
England, and the United Sates wDI
Peace at their Sunday servk,'es.

ATTENTION, SUNDAY
SCHOOL TEACHERS._.....--

MILL ST.

•

CHILDREN'S, AND BIG BOYS' TENNIS SHOES
MEN'S AND BIG BOYS' LEATHER HIGH TOPS

REG.

Presley imitators want
applause of their own

too.

Reedsville man
named to society

THURSDAY
..
.
... •··.·

Citizens Center Friday from 8
POMEROY- There will be a p.m. to 11 p.m. Muslc by thhe
. missionary meet.lng .of Hysell String Dusters. Public Is Invited.
. Rwr Holiness. Ch1J!Ch wlll be .· . ..- - · .
·
held Thursd~. 7:30 p.m. BenJamin Salvant of Haiti wm
SATURDAY
speak. The public Is Invited to
ANTIQUITY - Faith FellowBlteod.
ship Crusade for Christ at
POMEROY - Cong. Clar- Antiquity, wlll have a fund
ence Miller will CQnduct an open raising dinner and songfest,
door session from 3 to 4 p.m. Saturday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., at
Thursday In the law library of the Meigs County Fair Grounds. ·
the Meigs · County Common Singing will be by the Old Time
Religion Singers and the United
Pleas Court.
Gospel Singers. Everyone wei·
POMEROY - Meet the team come to attend.
night the Southern Tornado
SUNDAY
Football Team will be held at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the field.
POMEROY - Meigs County
The public Is Invited. Southern
Fox Chasers Association meetopens away at Ross Southeast·
ing, 7:30p.m. Friday.
ern Friday night.
POMEROY - Star Grange
POMEROY - The regular meeting Saturday for Its annual
missionary meeting of the Hy- hay ride and wiener roast
sell Run Holiness Churcxh will beginning at 7 p.m. There will be
be held at 7:30 this evening with
a business meeting betwen the
Benjamin Salvant of Haiti as bayride and wiener roast with
speaker. The public Is Invited.
election of officers to be held.

Spread In greases 9 x l3 pan. Bakeat
350 degrees for 25 minutes. Cool and
cut Into bars.
:·
When packing lunches, be!(urethe
lunch boxandvacuumcontalner are
very clean. Rlnsewlthootsoapy and
baking soda occasionally.
·
Keep In mind food safety at tall
times when packing lunches. Hot
foods should be kept oot and cold
foods, cold. Keeping lunch bags out
of the sun or warm areas will help;

'

Calendar
..

Make a well In the dry Ingredients:

Add liquid. Stir until just blended. ,

CamJt Yoguri Bars
Sift together the following
Ingredients:
2 cups wheat fiour
1cupfiour
2 teaspoons soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Blend together these ingredients: .
8 ounces lemon or orange peel
1 cup grated carrot
',4cuphoney
1-2 cup nuts
1 cup raisins

Sentinei-Page-7

Granite Mercedes in cemetery as monument

Thursday,
September 1, 1983
.
Pag~

The

253 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT PHONE 992-3307

�Page"-B-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Thursday,

r-----------People in the news------------..---,
No need

to

panic turning 40-years old

NEW YORK tAP) - Lind" Evans and .Joan Collins may be
archrivals on the tPirvlsion series "Dynasty," but on tho topic of
what il' s likr io tum 40 both agree there's no nero to panic.
The ac1rcsS£&gt;S we!'c rwo of 10 Wcll ·known women ag£' 40 or ow' r

interviewed by Bazaar magazine in the September issue on thei r
views of " life, love and the pursuit of happiness. "
On the subject of SC'X, moviP star Carroll Baker . ~2 . .said it only gf'tS
better.
"A healthy sexua l relationship can be a source of great joy at "ny
age, right? And doesn't the sexual experienc&lt;&gt; start to improve from.
lei's say, age30? U you agree, let m e be bold enough to suggest that it
ca n be better after 40 .... "
Michelle Lee of "Knots Landing" said if anyt hing sh&lt;' looks "better
P\Jt together" now then whPn shP wa s youngPr .
.
"Lei's face it, you don't wake up a t 40 with your arms suddenly
sagging or a drooping fanny. Bodily changes are goi ng on all the time
so when you finally hit 40, it' s no big deal," she said.
Others included " Dallas" sta r Linda Gray, Stephanie Powers of
"Hart to Hart ," singer Diahann Carroll, and actresses Dyan Cannon.
Mariette Hartley and Elizabeth Taylor .

Early morning surprise with paper
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (API -The father of actress Kate Jackson

got a surprise in his morning newspaper - a message fi'om the
former ':Charlie's Angel" a nd her husband, David Greenwald.
As usual, Howard Jackson J r. arose early Wednesday to put out
the dogs and brin~ in the newspaper. As he thumbed through The .
Bltmlngham Post -Herald. he found a full-page ad on the back of the
first Sfft ion.

It read; " Happy Birt hday, Daddy. Love Katie and David." It was
.Jackson's 71lth birlhday Wednesday.
"That's someth in~. ll's something, isn't It ?" Jackson said after
seeing the ad. " I ra n't get over it. "
Glancing a t his wife. he sa id , "Mother said she knew It was going to
happen. But I didn 't have any idea."

Philanthropist rateS as art collector
NEW YOFtK tAl' t- Philanthropist Paul Mellon has been given a
double rating among America's greatest art collectors by
Connoisseur magazine, which also ranked "the late actor Edward G.
Robinson "way up there."
In its September issue, the magazine put Mellon, 76, atthetopoflts
list of the 10 lead in~ Jiving American art eollectors while he and his
father and sister top I he Jist of 101 foremost American art collectors
of the 20th century.
·
Concerning Hollywood bad·guy Robinson, whosenameappearson
Connoisseur's all-time list, editor Thomas Hoving, former director of
the Metropolitan Museum Art, noted that the actor sold his collection

in a divorce settlement.
'
However, he wrote that "Edwand G. ranks way up there ... a movie
actor playing against the big boys in the collecting racket, he started
out with some strikes against him."
Criteria considered by Connoisseur included a collector's
. dlscrlmlnallon, vision and scope.
·

NEW YORK (API -Actress Farrah Fawcett broke her wrist in
. an off-Broadway play caUed "Extremities," but the play's press
agent says she's determined to be back on the stage tonight.
Agent Milly Schoenbaum says the 36-year·old star broke the wrist
In two places Tuesday night during a scene in which she takes a !aU.
"Sbe had taken the same fall at every performance of the play,'' Ms.
Schoenbaum said Wednesday.
Although the wrist hurt, Miss Fawcett continued to perform. When
she got home, the wrist swelled, and at 1 a.m. she went to a hcspltal
where X -rays revealed It was broken.
Miss Fawcett was determined to return tonight and play the part
with her arm In a cast, the agent said.
"Extremities," at the West Side Arts Theater, deals with a woman
who captures and Imprisons a man who attempted to rape her.

: ;.Festivals of Southeast em Ohio" Festival," a modern design , and
The horticulture classes in the
Is tile theme of the Rutland Garden "Rio Grande Bob Eva ns' Farm adult division .are hybrid tea a nd
Clilb flower show to be staged at the Festival" interpretive.
other roses, cactus and other
Rutland United Methodist Church,
dahlias, cactus and other ty~
There are also two classes In zinnias, large and small marigolds.
gept. lOand 11.
Allclassesoftheshow areopenfor arlistic arrangements for juniors
Classes for potted plants are cacti
pU)ll!c exhibit except five in the and they are " Pomeroy Regatta or sueculants, collection ·of five or ·
artistic .arrangements odivision .Frog . .Jijmp.'' .includi!\g a . .frog inoreinmiecontainer, follageofany ·
· wlilch are· reStricted to .' Rutland· · figurine; and "ROsevUle Pottery · variety, blooming plants, and Afr!, ·
FestiVal," an arrangement In a
Garden Club members only.
can violets.
'fhose classes are "Circleville pottery cont a iner.
In the junior division the horticulPtlmpkln Festival," a mass arranThe educational class which is ture classes are cactus or succulant ,
geinent; "Jackson Apple F estival. " competitive Is " Bainbridge Festival
and wayside flowers, five, one In
fe~turlng red, shades and tints of
of Leaves," an a rrangemenllnclud- each rontainer.
recl; "New Stra!tsvUle Moonshine ing fall foliage In a home made
Oral judging of the show by Janet
.. Festival;" interpretive; Ne)sonv!lle container, not ceramic. ·
Bolm ..-·an accredited Judge of thl'
· Parat,Je Qf ihe Hills," 'Showing :~ Tllere · are· also . three special OAGC, wUibegln at 1 p.m. a nd on
motion and "Reynoldsburg Tomato displays - plarit · related crafts,
Sept. 10 the show will remain open
Fli;tival," a modern arrangement.
pubicatlons, and materials for
for public viewing until 6 p.m. The
Artistic arrangements open to flower arrangements by Pauline Sunday hours will be from 1 to4 p.m.
Atkins.
pu)lllcexhiblt are " Millersport Corn

A public flower show ·wm be
staged by the Sbade Valley Council
of F1oral Arts at the Chester United
Methodist Church on Sept'. 2(), 7: 30

p.m.
. " Fa ith with Flowers" will be the
theme of the shoW. In the ·artistic
design dasses :will ' tie . spru;g,
summer, fall and winter altar
arrangements. ·
Thehortlculture sect!onwlllcarry
out thethemeoflsaiah35, " ... andthe
desert shaD rejoice and blossom ~
the rose:"
· .
·
Educational exhibits·will be Bible ·
school crafts and there will be
handouts for Mother a.nd Father's
Day and wedding designs.

"'(4f,

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1"~1"1~

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'-

,,,,

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Door prizes will be given and
refreshments served. Crafts and

handmade !terns of club members
'"
will be on sale.

Adult Education sponsors classes

·;.r;

Meigs County has a unique 6:30to9p.m. atthePomeroyPubllc ,:;;
program designed to benefit adults
Library.
·
wanting to Improve their education.
Instruction in the Adult Basic ·
The Meigs County Adult 8aslc Education progr~ is indlv!dual- ... ·
Education program Is sp&lt;msoring lzed and no 'g rades are given. · ..
free day and evening classes for Students work at their own speed in
anyoneovertheageof16.Aeconding materials designed especiaUy for ···
to Kath~ Manicke; program coond!- adult&amp;.
nator, classes wlll be at the
Anyone Interested in more InferMiddleport Public Library from 10 mation may call the Pomeroy ...
a .m. · to 2 p.m. . on Tuesday, · Library at 992-5813. Both learning ''"
· Wednesdays and Thursdays. Even- centers wlll hold an O!ien.house on
. ing classes wlll ~ on Tuesdays, Tuesday, Sept. 6, to register both
Wednesdays and Thursdays frorv new and returning students.

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THESE
THIRD PARTY PROGRAMS:

" ..,

' .

•
'

q.

'

Iii W""',

1!:.::~1~-

*PCS ,.. --·-- -·- ----·- ---·---...,
I
I
SWI~HER

I

Pharmacy

Krnn~&gt;lh
school building. As these students proclaimed their di•••Hsf..ctloo with
heat, some rural sc:hools Ia the area were dismissing children early
heeause of the' higlt .temperature. (AP Laserphoto)

I

"

..

.'
...

"
'•'

!

LOHSE

McCullou1h, R. Ptl.
C."-rles Altl&amp;., R.Ph .
Ron•IO H•ntng, R . Pfl ,
Mon . thru S.at . 1: ttO • .rn . to 9 p .m .
Suod.t¥ lti : JO to 12: ](lo~nd S tot .m .
PlilE5C.IUPTIONS
PH . HHUS
Fritftdly Srrv•c:~
.
E M;lln
Pom•roy, 0 .

By SUE CROSS

l
~

!_ __._.___ 0PI':. :~:'.:: __._:_ __ j
"-----------~

I~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;.;·"
r.,

• Assoclaled Press Writer
CINCINNATI (AP) - If an
embryo transfer produces a Bongo
antelope, the experiment could lead
to ; Increasing the numbers 'or a
variety of rare animals, a reseJ.reher says.
f1te Cinclnnat I Zoo made the first
t.aplantatlon of a rare Bongo
antelope embryo Into a surrogate
Eland antelope on Monday, but no
one will know for about 100 days If
1M Eland's body wUI accept the
embryo, said Betsy Dresser, director of the Cincinnati Wlldllfe
Research Federation, who directed
th~ transplant.
''I think we have a fairly decent
chance of success, but this hasn't
be!!n done, so It's still experimental" Ms. Dresser said.
~bout 60 Bongo antelopes live in
captivity in the United States, and
Ms. Dresser said scientists guess
there are about severa I hundred left
In their native East Africa .
the wild we're not sure,
beCause they're a very secretive
animal," she said: ....It is a

. H&amp;R BLOCK
TO OFFER TAX SCHOOL
IN YOUR LOCAL AREA

compariilvely rare animal and
that's why I think this research Is
important."
Ms. Dresser said the San Diego,
Bron.~ and Louisville zoos also have
tried embryo !ranters in exotic
species, but that the Cincinnati
experiment is the first of Its kind.
'!

. Thousands of people are eaming money in their spare time
as tncome tax preparers.
~&amp;R_ Block,. the world's largest income tax preparation
seMCe, os off.enng a
income tax course starting in
September with momtng, afternoon and evening classes
plamed.
, During the 14 ~course, students will study all phases
of ~~. ~. preparation and receive actual experience in
pnlpanng tndividual returns. Experienced Block personnel will
teach current laws, theory and application 81 practiced in Block
offices nationwide. Thera is a claiiSIOom lecture on each subject
and practice problems at every level. Courses are programmed
to teach students lnc~slngly complex tax problems as study
progre-. Students woll find the course both interesting and
challenging.
·
.A~ne may enroll: There are no restrictions or
qualifications. Courses are ideally suited for housewives, retired
penons, teachers or persons wanting to increase their tax

'

__ ,

The Cincinnati Zoo successfully
ronducted the first tranplant between exotic species this year,
resulting in an Eland antelope born
In June.

':N'*

Slinderella Club
meets in Meigs
Genevieve Richard and Renee
Richard were the top losers in the
Monday night Five Points exercise
class Slinderella last week with
Judy Laudermilt and Rhonda
Roush' losing the most weight this
week. At the Mason class, Grace
Welch. Juanita Sayre, and Kelly
Hawkins lost the most weight. A
Wednesday morning class wlll
begin next week at Five Points.

Heavy-duty traction
for pickups, vans, RVs!
Dayton Thorobred" Interurban
Super ~action Duoload'
• ~ · ~flng ITeod 101' PQ\Io'9ff'UI
dfllle .......rtoel fTOCIIOf\
• Wide.llal treo&lt;1 for ~lobrl rty. mobilrly

• Strong nylon CO'd body

GENERAL TIRE SALES
"Where The Rubber Meets the Road" .
992-7161

Middleport, OH .

knowledge.

SAVE '140
New E.A.
~in&amp;

Suite .

Room

... $299.

Sl9995
SAVE S100

------------------------------~
9:36-5:00

Closed ·Thurs.

446-9523

Qualified course graduates may be offered job Interviews
for pollitiona with ~lock. M~nv accept employment with Block
bece~
flextble hours 11118ilable. However. Block ia under
no ~blig- to offer employment, nor are graduattis under any
obligation to accept employment wiih H&amp;R Block.
The modest cou11e fee includes all textbooks, supplies and
tax fonns nee~ 1~ ry for co~pletion of Che school. Certificates
and 7.5 continutng education units will be awarded upon
MJccanful completion of the courae. The co..-se is liceilsed b
the Ohio Board of Education.
Y
Registration fonns and brochures for the income tax
couna may be obtained by contacting the H&amp;R Block office

"!the

R. Scarberiy, Wilda Scarberry, Mildred Mae ScarbeJTy,
Allee Faye Kinney, Darwin Kinney
to ' E. R. Scarberry, Wllda Scar~rry, Parse!, Letart.
Louise V. Gibbs to Richard W.
Vaughn, Ruby A. Vaughn, Parcel,
Sa!lsbucy.
Wllllam N. Snowden to Curly G. ·
Snowden, 3 A., Rutland.
VIcky KosU, Ed Dabaj a, Salah .
All, Ed Datlaja, Gene Chaney,
Grace Chaney, David Hysell, Victor, Hysell, Mary May .Hysell, Janet
L. Hysell, John W. Hysell, Judith A
Hysell to James E. Diddle, Right of
Way, Sutton.
·James Stark Russell, Trustee, to
Carroll Johnson, Mildred Johnson,
Tracts, Pomeroy Vlllage.
S.:muel J. Crow, Judith Crow to
Thomas R. Hams, SheUa M.
Harris, .63 acre, Salisbury.
Edward Anthony Russell, Sharon
R. Russell to Clarence J . Williams,
Catherine Jlll WUI!ams, Parcels,
'

...
11 11

' '

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-....

CLEVELAND (AP) The
wlnn!ngnumberdrawnWednesday
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally
. game, 04 The Number," was 570.
In the "Pick 4" game, played five
limes a week, the winning number
was5704.
The lottery reported earnings of
$614,065 from the wagering on the
. dally game.
The earnings came on sales of
$&amp;12,®, while bolders of winning
tickets are entitled toshare$'.ll8,0l6,
lottery otflclals said.
In the parimutuel "Plck4" game,
sales totaled $115,982. Holders of
winning tickets are entitled to 45
percent, or $52,252. Any winning $1
straight tiCket earns $5,736, and any
winning $1 boxed ticket ea= $236.

419 MAIN ST., PT. PlEASANT, W. VA.

V2

RAPE VICI'IM - Penny
life has changed drastically since she was raped Ia July,
1980. Mrs. WoUe, shown at her
Colwnbus home Tuesday, lest~
Oed thai Dr. Edward Jackso!l Is
the man who raped her. ( AP
Laserphoto ),
~oUe's

PH. 992-3795
PH. 4464303
PH. 675·1632
#71-I 00636M

DAN'S BOOT SHOP

.------------------------__J---------------=====::::

GaDipollo, 01*&gt;
Augull n, lt8S
Veal Calve!! steady, Ft!f'der Cattle 1-2.50
lower, Cows steady.
Feeder Steers: Good&amp;Civllef' , ~to:lllbs.
5058.50, :m to400Jbo. 48-58. ;(l)to5001bs. 49-57,
500toPllbs. 50-56. ~.600to700lbs.47-5!'.i, 700to

9Il lbs. 48--52.:10, SXJ to over 47-5.1.
Feeder HeHers: GoOO It Choice, ::;() to DJ
lbs. 6.53, 3JO to «XX lbs. 46-51, 400 to 500 lbs.
44-50, 500 to 600 lbs. 43.50-51,00lto7001bs. 44-49.

700 to mo lbs. 42.!'J0-54, MD to over 4().48.

Feeder BullS: Good 8r Choice, 250to:i))lbs .·
11-!16, :110 to400lbo. ~·56 , IOOtoSOOibo. 41;-54.50,
. 500 to QJJ lbs. 43-52, 9ll to 700 41-50, 700 to ro:&gt;

10 DAY SALE
·STARTS T.ODAY

•
•

CHECK oR MONEY ORDER FEES

•

:PAY .THE FOLLOWING BILLS:

.•

Peanut Butter .
Plain Oatmeal
or Sugar

·*Columbia Gas
*Columbus &amp; So. Ohio Electric
*Cable T.V.
.--•General Telephone

MURINE

THERMOMETER

lOflif'f
v«THffl

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100 +
30 Free

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Insoles _

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AIR-PILLO
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A"ortod
MEN'S &amp;

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21 11.59

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25' OFF
LABEL

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FOAM
BATII

AU Types

7oz.

18oz.
JOHNSON'S

DENTAL
FLOSS

~ LADY'S

Waxed, UnwBICtd,
Extra Fine or

MtntWoxed

50Yds.

CHOICE

ANTIPERSPIRANT
unscented

DUTTON DRUG
Middleport

TIN ACTIN
ANTIFUNGAL
AEROSOL
POWDER

Fresh,

Regular,

AT

DUTTON
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6.4 oz. Regular

SCHOLL'S

MULTI·
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BALLO ORAL FEVER

1 oz.

50 Count
OUR LOW COST •• • 3/12.77 .
LESS MFR. REBATE .. ·'1.00

TOOTHPASTE

YOUR FINAL COST
WHEN YOU BUY 3

CENTRUM

ACNE
MEDICINE

SANDWICH BAGS

3/$177
gc 66¢

77¢
88¢

CREST

ZIPLOC

10.5 oz. pkg.

175 Count

100Count

Bulls l,tm lbo . &amp; up 4447.
Slaughter Cow!!, utilities 37.50-42.25.
cannen1 &amp;: cutters 37-00wn.
Veal Calws (choice &amp; prlme )190 to 3:lJ lbs.
57.fJ6.,;), Baby Calves :J).Q), Springer Canle
310..00wn.
COY/sA Calves combination 485-down.
Top 11J&gt;19 210 to :1.10 lbo. 47.!!1H9.M, Boars
28-32.50, Sows ;oo lbo. &amp; up36.5fl.38.'15, Pigs by
the head 10-21. .

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NORWICH KLEENEX COOKIES
SOFnguE.
ASPIRIN
FACIAL Tl UE
5 Grain

Holstein Steen and Bulls Dl to fiX) \bs .

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37.50-42~

..•

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.etm
OATMEAt

ltl'l. 38-46. 8)) to over ¥.5044.50.

AND

·=
•
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OFF

liST PRICE THRU
SATURDAY, SEPT. 5TH

omo vALLEY LIVI!lii'OCK co.

SAVE POST AGE

level of gasoline in the burning U.nk
prompted the evacuation, McDoupllsaW.
A deputy said there were fears
that if the walls should collapse, It
would send a surge of burning
gasoline flowing over the area.

WESTERN BOOT SALE

Sallsbury.
Steven A. Giglio, Christine G .
Giglio to Kathryn Becker, Right of
Way Easement, Columbia.
Dan Howerton to Kathryn
BecJ(er to Mildred LucUie Smith,
Elma Smith to James L. Ridenour,
.52 acre, Chester.
David K. Hysell, Janet. K. Hysell
to James E . Diddle, Right of Way,
Chester.
Paul E. Davis, deceased, Dorothy J. Davis, Affidavit,
Middleport.
Central Coal Co. to James E .
Diddle, Rei. of Right of Way
Easement, Meigs .
Helen Hemsley to Ralston Hemsley, 7 acres, Bedfond.
Roger W. Davis, Iris J. Davis,
Edwand Bartels aka WUI!am E .
Bartels, Diane Bartels to VIs-Tel ,
Partnership, Pl. Lot 4, Letart.
Corabelle Russell, deceased,
James Stark Russell, Trustee, Cert.
of Trans., Pomeroy VU!age.

..•

River was pumping water into
Tenneco's water system because
electricity was lost at the refinery to
run its purnps channeling water
from the river, McDougall said.
Concern thai the tank's walls
might collapse as crews lowered the

•

:
:
·

Firefighters were trying to drain r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~
the blazing tank at the Tenneco Oil
refinery, which officials estimate
contained about 3.78 million gallons
of fuel.
Beside the two workers who
suffered undisclosed Injuries in the
blast, six firefighters were treated
for smoke inhalation.
The explosion Wednesday night
occurred in a .l ank yard next to the
refinery. Firefighters feared
nearby tanks filled_with propane
and butane nnlght also explode,
Sherlff'Ralph J. McDougall said.
The cause of the explosion, which
WHILE SUPPLIES LAST
happened about 9:35 p.m. , wa~ not
immediately known.
The explosion sentl.21J-foot flames
into the sky and could be felt up to a
.'
mlleaway. ·
MIDDLEPORT
A fireboat on the Mlsslss!ppl

TIIIN MAXI PADS

•
••

lt....

618 E. MAIN, POMEROY, OH.
27 SYCAMORE ST., GAWPOUS, OH.

CHALMEIIE , La. CAP) - A
gasoline tank burned au I rlf control
today, threatening propane and
butane stocks at a sprawling
refinery and forcing thousands of
peopl~ to evacuate, alter an
explosion that injured two people,
authorities said .

Ohio lottery winner Market report

. . . on

attempts transplant

AKRON, Ohio CAP) -A woman 38 rapes that took place over seven
has testified in the trial of a · years.Asecondtr!alisscheduledfor
physician charged wtfh a series of
the other rapes .
rapes that she was left in a car trunk
He has pleaded innocent by
after being assaulteil and that her reason of insanity and his attorneys
attacker latercalledlnquiringabout
admit he attacked the women. The
her condition.
trial was moved to Akron because of
The 25-year-old woman testified publlclty in Colitmbus.
Prosectors say Jackson's victims
Wednesday that she was driven
from het apartment in the trunk of were listed on Index cards found in
her car alter she was raped in June his car after his arrest Sept. 5. Each
198l.Shesa!dshewaslnthetrunkfor of the wltne!&gt;3es has been asked to
more than three hours ' before a
find her name on the list for jurors.
passerbyheardhermutlledcryand
The victims who have testified
alerted firefighters .
thus far have all related slmllar
Later that day, she said, a m an detaUs of their early-morning at ·
called her on the phone and asked .t acks. A man broke into their
her If sbe was all right. She said she apartments while they were s!eeprecognlzedtheman's voice.
· !ng, blindfolded, gagged and tied
"It was the attacker," slie said.
them, using clothesline ropes,
Another rape victim who tesllf!ed pantyhose and p!Uowcases.
The 27-year-old woman testified
in the trial of Dr. Edward Franklin
Jackson J r . said she had l;leenraped she tried to lOOsen ropes tied at her
twice - once In connection with · wrtsts. "Thatmadehlmveryangry,
charges against Jackson and once andheputaplllowovermyfaceand
eight months earlier.
tried to suffocate me; and I · just
The 27-year-old Columbus woman screamed,'' she said.
said that when attacked Feb. 24,
Also testifying Wednesday was a
1981, "I told him 1 had been raped 25-year-old nurse who said a man
before." She said the second rape brokelntoherapartmentinOctober
occurred anyway.
li8l, tied and bUndfolded her and
Prosecutor Al White said the said: "Uyouseeme,I'llhavetohurt
woman was llvlng In an apartment you."
ontheeasts!deo!Columbuswhenan
Her attacker lied her, in the
Intruder raped her ' In June 198:1. basement after raping · her, the
White '!;aid authorities believe she woman said. She wastound there by
was a victim of a man. dubbed the her sister l'h hours later. . .
"Route 33 RapiSt" after·!be are!! JD . . . The woman tried ' to direct a
which a series of rapes occurred.
comment to Jackson, but was
'I'hewomanmovedtoanorthslde stopped by Judge Fredertck T .
apartment where tbe second rape Williams. "I wanted to tell him I've
occurred, White said.
relived this nightmare for three
Jaekson,39,1sontrlalfor22rapes years and I hope his Is just
and 38 related crimes for attacks . begjnnlng," she saiel outside the
occulTing sinneNov.1,1!178.
.
·Summit County . Common Pleas
He has been charged with a total of Court.

!'·

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Page-9

Explosion forces major evacuation

Meigs County
properly transfers ...

";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~

*Ohio
Welfare
*Compensations
*United Mine
..
Workers
*Medimet
*Paid Prescriptions,=======~
*Blue Cross
*Nationwide Prescription Plans
(Boilermakers)

:;,;.

:·m

,.,

~ ~·_t_"

t·-

~

••

,

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

Rape victim received
call from assailant

.

Farrah Fawcett breaks wrist in play

Pomeroy

~~~~~----------------~=c==~~----------------~~~~~ -

-

Public flower show set by Shade Valley Council

Rutland flower show scheduled
...

: WEA111ER REPORT - Members of Leo Helmer'• sixth-grade .
-home room class at Cohunbla School in Champaign, m., have practices
lhelr lettering with a wealher·relaled message on the south side of the

Thursday, September 1, 1983

September ( 1983 -:-

100grams

�10-The

Sentinel

Shamir, Levy prime leaders
to succeed Menachem Begin
TEL AVJV, Israel (AP) - Party
colleagues of resigning Prime
Minister Menachem Begin meet
to night to elect a new leader, but the
wmner of the closely contested
two-man race is not expect&lt;?d to veer
from Begin's policies
The9ll-member central committee of the governingHerut Party will
cast secret ballots in choosing
between Foreign Minister Yltzhak
Shamir and Deputy Prime Minister
David Levy. The new leader would
then be In position to s ucceed Begin
as prime minister, if Herut can
maintain Its coalition in Parliament.
Defense Minister Moshe Arens
said that no matter who won the
ballot, " we will continue the policies
that have been followed under Mr.
Begin.''
A key to theoutcomewl)swhether
Begin, 70, would endorse either
candidate. In the past, he has
preferred Shamir, 68, who was a
comrade of Begin's in the underground light lor a Jewish state.
The leadership race was set in
motion Tuesday when Begin said he

CLEVELAND iAP) - Ohio Sen.
John H. Glenn, whoearned$17,115a
year as a Marine lieutenant colonel
in 1962 when he became the first
American ' to orbit the earth, has
since parlayed business deals and
invesbnents into a fortune.
Glenn was worih $6,835,402 as of
Jan. 1, according to a financial
statement prepared bY hts accountants, Arihur Anctersen &amp; Co., and
made avallable to The Plain Dealer
by Glenn. He also provided copies of
his federal Income tax returns since

1965.
The Cleveland newspaper said
financial statements from other
candidates for the Democratic
nomJnaUon lor president indicate
that Glenn leads the pack in net
worth. Hts ' closest rival Is Sen.
Ernest F. Hollings, D-S.C., with an
estimated net worih of between $1.6
mllllon and $2 million.
"The Plain Dealer reported that
G.enn has owned or currently owns
a porttonoftwomotels in Florida, oil
and gas wells tn eastern Ohio,
timber in Florida and upstate_New
Y11rk, olftce buildings in New Jersey
and Massachusetts, orange groves
in Florida, rallroad cars In New
York, blue-chip stocks, and residences tn three cltles.

Seven cases end
in MiddlepQrt Court
Three defendants forfeited bonds
and four others were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Wedinesday night.
Forleltlng bonds of $450 each, all
posted on cha1"ges of drlvtng whlle
intoxicated, were James D. Riley,
Clltton, W. Va.; Orland J . Laudermilt, Pomeroy, and Tom Walters,
Middleport.
Fined were Tim Coates, Pomeroy; Rlcbard T. Friley, Pomeroy,
and Daniel R. Stone,Middleport,$25
and costs each, ali on disorderly
manner charges. Placed on 30 days
probation on disorderly manner
charges was Charles W. Thomas,
Middleport.

Plan mixed foursome
A mJxed Scotch foursome wW be
held a t4p.m . Sunday attbeJayMar
Golf Course. Chef· j3o Brown will
prepare barbecued ribs and women
are asked to take a covered dish lor
dinner. Ali those attending are to
take their own table service.

Weather forecast
Clear tonight. Low 00-65. Winds
light a nd easterly to southeasterly.
Sunny on Friday. High near 85.
, Extended Ohio Forecast
Satunlay through Monday: Fair
and hot through the hollday wee. kend. Hicm tn the 908. Lows mthe
60s Salunlay and Sunday and In the
low '708 Monday.

•

Lost end Found

PHONE
992-2156
Write Dailly Sttlllltl
o.,t.
Or

;=========:z=========::;1

ClmifiM

111 COlli Sl., ,...,,, llllio 45761

and led an extremist movement
I
f ln ~~•fw•l ,,..~,·~ '"'' ,., rlu·
'11 AuiOO te• loll
11 a. •..-.. o-"u"''W
called "Freedom Fighters of Is1l .. l....,loLn ,,....,.• ., •••
U Cl TVI.flo4"E•"'-"'
Jl "'•'-•....... c. .. ., ••
BlA&lt;II-&gt;
nv... •••wo
j ..JI,,wit/fl ''' ' ''' ' '" ""' •·whtu•,.·~ ..
rael" which fought the British in the
14
• G'""'" "'
,. _,
,
"'
.......
~ llopp. ·"·
.._c •....,
~
...
,.
.
~'""''"
19Ws, assassinating diplomats a nd
Jl M-n• .. s••
Jl "'"'• P..... Acno..•••
I l ••• l .... l .... otlol
5l'Muooe.al.,...,,_,.
A ... C. . . $04
32
loiiGC&gt;~oH....,nl"'
'"''
..I&gt;... II ... .
71
, .....
..,. "····
!
l
fowi0·\1-1
.....
1
nc
.,.t
....
_...
3)
F.,,.,
too'"''
bombing British and Arab targets
!Ill .... .._ ... ,, ....
It! - , . _ . . .
••
a..._...
· ~ - "" ,.._,
31 lu"'MIII""""'•
,w &amp;..............
,.., a.
.....
owl~ l ou &amp; .,CtHIO
Shamlr served 10yearsin Israel's
Ill -~
- C.,._
:111 v ... ton
.1W ...... a..~' lt... h• •"W•~Begin has delayed sumbitting his secret service, entered politics in
:ra - ftiooo. ...•
2 47
F..,
:tM Ciu,•nOtol
INNno~~j_f~
116 ........
IU - ,.,_Dool
resignation to President Chaim 1970 and was appointed foreign
4 1 ,. ....... .... .. .
U1 ...,._
Hl
ltulllln.,.
11 .. -.~ ..................
371 w.......
II ... lp
•1 F•"'l'l"_..,,
•2 · -· ......... h• ~ ... l
U w...wdool"'
Herzog, apparently to glve his party minister in 19lll. His hardllne vlews
11
IJ
12·"'""'"'
.... """""
''' c-•
ll lounung
1
U ·LII'I I I ................... lo•ltefol
•• t_l, •• lt..._ .......
• • .,.... . o.....
time pick a successor, although were underscored bY his abstalnlng
14 ......... ''"''"""'I
41 , ......""-•
u,,
..
,._.
uoo
..
a..
....
..
..-.
USdo' ' ktd . F••~l o ..
• • IIMtOIOt ...,
u, to n - • Tll.oM_,__
u 00
41 . . . . . .,, ... _
Ulllltll-•
llillodlo
Aren s said Begin did not indicate in the 1978 vote on the Camp Davlcl
u,oonw-• • .,., ........,
noo
11 u............
,.,......
to&lt;"·~·
ltfvolooNI
how long he would postpone the peace accords because he opposed
'"w"""'"'"o"
~--- 4---~
move. Begin a nd his Cabinet remain returning the Sinai peninsula to
Public Notice
as a caretaker government until the · Egypt.
Public Notice
new Herut leader - or Labor
Levy, 45, immigrated to Israel
NOTICE OF PUBUC
ehgtble acrtvttres and 'program
Lead er Shimon Peres - puts from Morocco 26yearsagoandwas
HEARING #1
reQutremen ts
together a coalition
a construction worker who cllmbed
The Township of Sc•p•o
The COBG program ca n fund
Under the law, w hen Begin the party ranks through labortmlon m!ends to apply to the Oh1o a broad range of actiVItieS
submlts his resignation, Herzog politics. He has se!Ved in Begin's Department of Developmenl •ncludtng economtc developfor lund1ng un der the Com - ment projects. water supply
must ask the parliamentary faction Cabinet since 1917 and was ap- mun •tv Development Block dra•nage and santtary sewer
considered most likely to muster a pointed deputy prime minister in Grant (COBG) Small C•lles Improvements· park acqUtsruon
Program a federally- funded and tmprovements, demol1tton
majority to form a governing 1981.
prog1 am admtnlstered by the of unsafe structures rehabill ta coalition. His resignation aiso
Levy is regarded a pragmlatlc State The TownShip can apply tton of hous•ng. and neighborm eans the entire Cabinet is consi- hawk expected to locus on healing fo r an EconomiC Development hood faciht tes
Competttlve Grant under the
The act1vt!tes must be dedered to have resigned.
the nationa l split over the Lebanon F1scal
Year 1983
CDI3G stgned to pnmanly beneftl lowShamlr, 68, immlgra ted to Israel war. If elected, he would be Israel's fundmg , prov1dmg the Town- and
moderate·tncome persons.
from Poland when he was 20 and youngest prime minister and the ship mee1s applicable program to a•d rn the preventton or
*WATER
*GOOD FISHING
.eltmlnat ton of slums an d blight.
fou ght in Begins'slrgunZvaiLeuml first from the Oriental community, requ•rement s
*ELECTRIC
The f1rst of two public or to meet an urgent need olthe
*GOOD BOATING
underground. He later broke away which is 65 percentoftbepopulatton. hearmgs
wrll be held Sept 12. commu nity
*BATH HOUSE

--

C:o'~ " lh.,,.llll"'~'"~•u""wl
! InlpOidlft ... YIIOUI

.

od,U[ ~ l

~~

A~Chcn

11 Mou-.o&amp;o~G&lt;&gt;Mo

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

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

.........

MDIDIC,.C:~

.. .,_
~Men

~~

Wo~1od

"FREE
ESTIMATES"
'

ho-~otl..,t

SIILMII O(IWiflniU

"j ...........,.

oo....,_

...........

~~~-

.1

~

till--··

rv•c•~~·

Installed And
·' Warranted by Sears
For 5 Years.

OWN YOUR
OWN CAMPSITE

House, faDed to yield right of way,
$10andcosts; HarryBailey,Athens,
,speed, $23 and costs; . Donald
Lambert', Wellston, 'overlaod, $280 ·
and costs; Thomas Eakins, Racine.
speed, $27 a nd costs.
Also John Stephens, Bellaire,
Texas, speed,$25andcosts; Charles
Splurlock, Tuppers Plains, DWI,
$200 and costs,]lcense suspendedJiO
days, tllree" days confinement: if
attend residential driving school
confinement and $100 of line will he
suspended; Wllliam King, Pomeroy, hit-skip, restitution, $50 and
costs, fine suspended; Tony Gilkey,
Sbade, receiving stolen property,
$25 and costs, restitution, one year
probation; Wllllam Cross, Racine,

DWI, 10days confinement, $250and
costs, license suspended slx
months; Paul Schuler, Langsvllle,
assault,' "$30 and costs, jllle year
probation, barred from Rutland
Leglon, disorderly conduct, $20 and
costs; P a trickMahaffey, Ewlngton,
DWI, $50 and costs, three days
$:Onllnement, fine and jall sentence
wlll he suspended if attend resldentiaJ driving school, · Uc.mse suspended60days. · .
'
Forfeiting bonds were Brenda

Ct!t zens are encouraged to
attend th1s m'eettng to provtde
thetr 1nput on the Townshtp's
COBG program
(8)30. 3 1. (9)1

FOR AN ALMOST NEW BRONCO?
THEN
.FOR

LOOK

SAI.E-.- 1982

NO FARTHER.

BRONOO

lCLT

lARIAT AM-fM-sle....,, air, cruhio' mnlnll, NCIInlng· caplaln'a
chal 11, flip fold back-~. pull down ann,...., aide
door pouches, running baaods, ~Hr a~ dollechlr, lrent
bug lhield, Zieba!! lifetime I'UIIpnlol wananly can
be ttonlfened 1o new _,_, Only 8,700 mit.. and
can Y"" bellewe It, it'• llill undor manufactuter'a
warranly. Go 1o a car lol and it will cost Y"" betw...,
$11,800 and $1.2,500. Gel It fro111 ua fer the
incredible low price of $11,200. Con be~ i/2
mile off Rt. 7 on Rt. 124, ., call 992-7532 .,

Elsworth L. "Pete" Staats, 65,
New Haven, died Wednesday in the
Veteran' s Hospital, Huntlngfun.
Born Sept.19,1917in New Haven,
he was the son of the late James
Luther and Margaret Jane Balser
Staats.
Preceding hll)'l in death In
addition to his parents were three
brothers, Robert, Delmar and
Edward, and one sister, Mrs.
Geraldine Hoffman.
He was a retired cook from the
M&amp;G Transport, a World War
veteran, having served in the U.S.
Army, a member of American
Leglon Smith-Capehari Post 140,
New Haven, and tbe VFW P ost 9926,
Mason.
Surviving are a daughter, Brenda
L. Landeros, Tuscon, Arizona; two
sons, Norman Douglas, Pomeroy,
and John David, Middleport; two
sisters, Mrs. Walter (Pauline)
Grinstead, New Haven, and Mrs.
Frances . Goodnite, Cincinnati, a
brother, James H ., Point Pleasant;
three grandchildren and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wlll he held at 1
p.m. Frlday at the Foglesong
Funeral Horne, Mason, wltb the
Rev. John Campbell officiating.
Burial will follow in Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call a t the funeral

Sheryl Brackenburg, Chesapeake,
and Ronald Rickard, Jr., New
Haven, speed, $50 each; Keith
Bentz, Racine, reckless operation,

1 B •
usmess

Gerald Joseph Rice, 74, Oklahoma, former Middleport resident
died Saturday, Aug. 27 at Mercy
Hospital, Oklahoma City. ,
Mr. Rice was bomAug. 24,l!Kl9ln
Middleport. He was preceded In
death bY his wile, June Dllgard Rice
in 1978. He was aiso preceded In
death by his father, Daniel Russell
Rice, and one brother, Cecll Rice.
He had resided In Oklahoma lor
several years.
He was a member of the
Middleport Masonic Lodge since
1946. He was •aiso a member o!
Scottish RlteofToledo. He retired in
19741rom the retaU shoe business.
He Is survived by his mother ,Mrs.
Ora Rice, Racine; three sons,
Michael J . Rice, Lansing, Mlch.;
StepbenD.Rlce,OklahomaCityand
Dr. John F . Rice, Traverse City,
Mich; one brother, Gene Rice, St.
Petersburg, Fla.; slxgrandchlklren
and several nleces and nephews.
Graveside rites wereheldtodayat
10: :.&gt;a.m. at Gravel HlU Cemetery,
Cheshire, conducted bY Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363 F&amp;AM of Ohio.
Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Homels lnchargeolarrangements.

Five calls were answered Wednesday and on Thursday morning,
tbe Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reporis.
Thursday morning at 2: Ill, the
P omeroy Unit went to 106CondorSt.
for Brenda Templeton who was
taken to Ve terans Memorial Hospital and tjte Pomeroy Unit went to301
Wright St. at 8: 46 a.m. for Gladys
Moore, who was also taken to
Veterans MeJOorlal.
Wednesday calls included: 12:43
p.m ., Syracuse, to Snowball Hill for
Alice Freeland, later taken to Holzer
Medical Center by the transfer unit;
9:40 p.m., Syracuse, to Route 124
and Snowball Hlll wherea n accident
had occurred with Arlie Malone
being treated, and at 11: 49 p.m .,
Syracuse went to Dusky St. for
Dlllord Ferrell who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

End marriages
A sulttor divorce and a dissolution
of rnatrlage were flied In Meigs
County Common Pleas Couri.
Belinda S. McClure, Mlddlepori,
filed for divorce against Eddie R.
McClure, Letart, W. Va. Shella
Irene Demosky, Langsv111e ·and
Davlcl Matthew Demosky, Middleport, filed for dissolution of

•

marriage.
In the same court, two divorces
were granted and another was
dissolved.
Granted divorces were Connie
Moyer from Michael L. Moyer on
charges of gross neglect of duty;
Anna Marie Nalstetler from Garland Kent Natstetler on charges of
gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

Ladies golf results
Fourieen ladles attended "ladies
day" at Jay Mar Golf Course
Tuesday.
It was announced that a Scotch
foursome and potluck dinner will be
held Sunday, Sept. 4, at4p.m. at the
golf course with meat to be
provided.
Eighteen hole winners Tuesday
were Norma Custer ,low gross, and
Joan Chllds, low net. Ntne hole
wtnner was Pandora Collins who
bad low gross. Collllns was presented a prize as was TeeTeatordfor
chipping In on number nine. Ladles
of the area are Invited to attend
ladles day every Tuesday at8a.m.

Velerans Memorial

SIDING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

semces

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Dter,
New Holland. Bush Hoc

Authorized John

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garac1s"
Call for frea sidin&amp;estimates, 949-2801 or
949-2860.

Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Ports &amp; Service

home from 6-9 p.m Thursday,
Milltary graveside rite wfll
conducted by the American Leglon
andVFW.

Gerald J, Rice

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

BOGGS

•

$70.

Meigs County happenings •.
Emergency runs

DIRECTIONS: South on Rt. 1 - 6
Miles below Gallipolis, to Raccoon
Creek Bridge and foRow ~gns.

No Sunday Calls

1-3-ttt

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Doz. .
- Backhoes

-DumpTruc:lro
- lo-lloy .

TERESA'S
CAKE
DECORATING
Waddi~

Cakes and
All Oc:casion Cakes

· - Tnou:her
-Water
-Sewer

-Ga•Un•

"Licensed &amp; Inspected"

-Sepllc Systema

LAROE 011 SMALl JOBS

PH. 99:l-2jl78

PH. 992-3047
B.J.I mo

3-lt.ttc

ALTROMM'S
BACKHOE
SERVICE
•lowettR11111tr
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

PH. 992-2178

Trophy
Manufacturers
' PLAQUES
ENGRAVING

CUSTOM PRINT
949-2358

*Vinyl Liner *Fiberglass
*Stainless. -Steel
.

PH: 1-304-773-5634

Mason, W. Va.
C. L. Kitchen

CUSTOII WORK - AIR BRUSH

I -

'·

Racine, OH.

1

8-22-t

CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING
DEEP CLEANED- SHORT DRYING TIME
USE SAME OAY- ANTl-RESOIL DETERGENTS
COMMERCIALS. RESIDENTIAL
• Professional Spot Removal Service
• Wall &amp; Ceiline Cle1nine
"Insurance Work Welcome"
'
James
Knight-273-5388
1
•
1
In RIVenswood
r Rick Hovatter-992-2606
~
In Middleport
~ "F11e Estimates On All Services"
8·3·1 mo

WORI
BOIIOED I -

ATDN

Call 843-5425
752ma. 1111-

•. .
OAK
FURNITURE
*Tables &amp; Chairs
*Comer Cupboards
*Buffet, etc.

WOOD
WORLD

2506 Grand Central
Vienna, W. V1.

Ave.

RADIATOR

SERVICE
We CM l'8pllir end .._
and ' - ·
tar CGrel. We CM . ,
edd bol end rod out ...
~. W!~ .._, l'8pllir
G•Tinka.

core

rad...,..

PAT HILL FORD '
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
l-13-Ht

1·3 1-mo. pd

IHchen Cebinets - Roofinc - Sldlnc - Concrete
P1tios - Sldewtlks hw Construction - Rt·
modelina - Custom Pole

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ltms.

-Addona ... ......dalint

..... .... "'""wwk
.:....C.wele Willi

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

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

Plu:u . . . W

Roofi~

(Preo hlimaln)

&amp; Siding Co.

Route I
lona Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 or 99:1-7:114
Pomenty,

~~~~~§
In Memoriam

992-7201

3711c

TUPPUS PLAINS, OH.
'Bows &amp; Accessories
'Guns &amp; Ammo.
'li" Bait, Fishine
Tackle
'Huntinc &amp; Fishine

license

'Doe Supplies
Hrs. : WetkdiY,$ 10-6
S1t. &amp; Sun. 10-8
Closed Tues. &amp; Wtd.

II + mt

" CUT OUT
FOR· FUTURE USE"

· KEN'S
APPLIANa
SERVICE

~85-3561
Admitted--Freda Russell, PomeAll
Makes
roy; Mlldred Hawley, Middleport;
•W81hera •D..,.wtt•Mra
Betty Friend. Long Bottom; Harold
Aongeo
Je!!ers, Pone oy.
•A.trill•llloro
•D.,.,. •FNI•ra
Dtscbarged-lrls Roush, PhWp . '
PARTI
1nd IEAVICE
Donovan, Carne Osborne.
•·&gt;tte

JEWELL'S
PLUMBING and
HEATING

..._..

•Expert.IGBd

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
All types of root wort, new
or IIPiil, autters and

New Homes - Extonsive
Remodtlina.
el nsurenct Work
oCusto111 Pole Bldas.

downspouts, autter clelnint and Plinti~t, storm

&amp; G111111

•Work G-.anteecl

JOB - BIG OR SMALL
992-6030
Minersville, OH.
8/t9/1 "" pd.

doors

•Roolina Work
&lt;Mininllll &amp; '""' Silinp
15 Yeart Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7513
.. 992-2212

II l l·rlc

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

51. Rt. 124, P-IOJ, OH .

UTILITY BUILDINGS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Yin!' :i14Jifll &amp;
Roofinc

. DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% DR IIORE
On Sidi,. and Roofine.
Guttw and Downspouts.
"Free Esdmlllel"

"1 2 y..,. E,...,.iaa"
"Warlt GUI:aneed"

R.l HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 9\2in~~ nd.

_______,
G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply
·water Pipe

A lao Tran1mlslian

PH. 992-5612
or 992·7121
l-24*

lnsalatd Do&amp; Houses
P&amp;s Rlc!nt,
BUILDINGS
1111.
-..
· • .i. ,._-lti:t~Hifl'

IU!Ic

windows.

Call: 949-226:l
or 949-309 1•

Mlu.ER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Silt1 fro111 I'll&amp;' Up

1

9

Wanted To Buy

clean uaed cara.
Jim Mink Chev .·Oidalnc .
Bill Gene Johnson

4411-3672

Wanted to buy used coal S.
wood heatera. Swain Furni-

ture,

448-31 &amp;9, 3rd. S.

Olive St., Gallipolis. Oh .

Announcement•

chine repair. partt. and
supp1ie1.
Pick up and
delivery. Divis Vacuum
Cl ..ner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call

448-0294.
Balloons for Birthdeys. Get
Well, Annivertarya. SwH·

•Reculators
•Fittings .
Phone:
Residence: 985-3837
Warehouse: 985-3509
1·&lt;·1 mo 0&lt;1

New craft 1hop opening.
Taking craft• an conaignment . For more lnformadon

•PIInifW
1rNew Construction
•Remodeling
· 15 Years Experience

992-3987
I

mo 1)(1.11112

For ell your wiring
n8tldll: fumtteet re- ·
pelr 1ervlce and In- ··'
ltellltlon,
Rnldential
• Commercfel

Catl 742-3181

l-'l·tk

USED
APPLIANCES
....... Dlyers

..... Alhfs;JJtors
Air ConditiolltfJ
. WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CAW

742-23152

lotte 4, l'llllllfl,.,

1- - - - - - -- -

wANTEo· part time book keeping assistant for medical office . MJJat have e~pe­
rience in collections and
insurance billing . Send reaume to Box C-30, Pt.
P4easan1 Ragiater. 200 Main
St.. Point Pletaant . WV

I·

12

·--·--· -·-· ··- .. ····-·-·-·····

Yard Sale Thurs. &amp; Fri .
Sala St. Rt . 141 to St . Rt . Women,
children clothing ,
233, 1 mila on ther rt.lotsof
items to numerous to
mention .

SALE September 1 ,2,3. 9to
6 on Rt . 7, 2 mllea northv of
Crown City . S1ove, ref., end
tables, dlahes, pans, bed,
chest. dreaser. Clothes ell
sizes. Call 614-266 -8206 or
614·256 -1 117 . Come and
188 .

Yard Sale.
girls'
band jacke1,
girls'
teenage
clothes.
jeans.
fuse bona. 110 Chillicothe
~d., 10- ?. Sept. 1

A. Monln 1114-992-6370.

rency. Top prlcea. Ed. Bur·
hn Barbet' Shop. 2nd. Ave.

W1nted : Emergency Relief
Community Services
Workers for an intermediate

4

Giveaway

achool diploma and Ohio
For
funher Information contact

Oerman Pollee dog. ameli

Lori Borron ot 448-1142.

St., Middleport, Oh . Colt
992-3507.
Bid tard Sale Thura.- Fri., 9

to. 5. 204 Ridge Ave., Rio

1---------1·

Grande. Sea signa. Preaaed
glau . depr11aion glaas.
croc~a. , tina. old bot1l11,
IJ'Bny pieces o~k *urnitur~.

SANPY AND BEAVEA InsUrance Co . •:_~••

and dependable. Call 4463169 between 9 and 6.
lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small. Reliable and dependable. For estimate call
448-3169,9 to 5 .
Experienced mature women

will do babyalttlng In my

home by the week or by the
hour. Dey shift only. e40
week or •2.00 an hour at

Conlonory. 446-7749 .
Will do babysitting S. house
cleaning Call 614 -367-

0282.
Care for elderly lady in my

614-992-5868.
PAINT metal roofs, barns.
hou11 exteriors. odd jobs,
farm work. Quality work
guaranteed rates . 304-468-

1618.
Will do houtework In Point
Pleannt or 0•11. Ferry area.

304-675-6329 . Aak for
Botly.
Ma1ure Christian woman to

references.
in home,
Leon area.
babYsit In mv
have

304 895 3828
•
•
·
BABYSITTING In my homo.

full or pert lime. fenced yard.
behind school. 304 -8762784.

Three

Family

Yard

Sale

Sepl. 1, 2 l!o 3. From 9 to 1
! .

Quail Creek Lot 86 Rodney,
?h . Orapea, bedspreads.
ruga, patio table, mobrle
home anchor~ . clothing
from newborns to adults,
baby items, dishes. and
much more.
Yard Sale 50 Neil Ave.,
Gallipolis. 8 10 ? Wednesday
thru Saturday. Knives, gun a,
furn ., depression glass. car·
nival glaaa , oil lamp, ltoneware , clothes. much more.
Yard Sale Thurs. &amp; Fri. Sept .
1 l!o 2. 9 to 6, Rain or shlna.
821 Carman Drive at Tara in

Addison

IAdklnsj .

Bed,

chaira, cabinets, carpets,
small appliances. lamps.
dishea, old bottles, color TV.
dog house and cage , rug
shampooer and much more.

Yard Sole Sopt. 1 &amp; 2. 9AM
to &amp;PM . Childrans clothtng,
jeans, women's large aizea.
books , patterns, playpen,
strollur, double youth bed.

dilver'alic~~nae required.

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. rocommenda
that you do buaineas with

Buclceye Community Servl·
c.. Ia an equal opportunity
employer.

to aend monev through the
mail until you have investigated the offering .

1 amoll f - puppy to

lebysltter In my home
needed for 8 WMkl. Mon •

glvo eway. Coli 448-8372 .

general houn cleaning re-

Profilallle buainatlll for
ule--Beer &amp; Wine Carry-out
and B•r Drive·thru . Ranked
in the top five In legal
beverage Alea for Meiga
County. BusinetMI end «NNl
ntete both for aale . Contact
Gukfo at 1600 Nye Ave. or
8015 W. Main St ., Pomeroy,

908, Golllpolla, 011 415131 .

Fri. 9AM to &amp;PM. With

aponalbllltlos. E....,.,..,o IP·
preciated. Reference re·
2 pupplea 14 wk. old, Cell qulrod.
Coli 4411-15401 ook
441-4123.
lor Ollne.
Kitten . Coll441-7739 .
Lldloa needod lo good poy·
Tjuck toad of ldnling wood. 1ng temporery office like
waite, no • ...,...,ce neoeaColi 441-21015.
Oiry, 1110 niiOd Iodin with
Whltl New Z....nd 111110 GOr lor light dlllvlry work,
robblt. Vert gently. Pet ges ellowonoe. Apply In
poreon only (lboolutoly no
Only. 814-378-11349.
phone collet to Mra. Conor,
3 ,.... lrittena, 2 ldult Room 111, Econo Lodge,
fomoln, 1 oculi oet, Ill litter T-. morning, 9 to l :lO
AM. Sept. 8.
trolned. 814-992-21140 .
Tlk1ng oppllcotlona fo• dell·
era &amp; Fn.ndly Horne portlll.
Up to lopt, 11. Elm t20. to
180. In one ..,.nlng holding
toyl &amp; gift poniH. Alao
holding toy portiM 1111 Nov.
d "14 992
28. Interest• v •
•
31511.
l-1:_n:_d:_lvkl,;_uo_l____dll_d_t_o_po_r·
form houM cllenlng-eo.
Mutt have own tranapon•~
don. t3.50 porloour. AllerenoH req., eQUII opponun1ty -Ioyer• ..,d reply to
lox 722,
Pomeroy. OH
.
411781

Yard Sale Sept. 1 thru 6 .
Clothes, knick knacks and
other Items. Fairview Evergreen Rd .
Garage Safe Friday 9 to6.
601 Jay Or . Infant. girls.
men, women• clothing .
Toys &amp; misc .
Alley Sale Thurs .. Fri .• 8t Sat.
632 Second Ave . Gallipolis.
8

-pie you know, ond NOT

Ohio.

23

Professional
Services

PIANO TUNING-LANE DANIELS . Reliable service

alnce 1966. A11oclate of
Brunicardi Music Co. Phone

SUBKEN SERVICE CO .
Locksmith tervice. tool sharpening , screen &amp; glaaa in-

llallod. Call 034-676-3694.

Home Interior &amp; Tupperware. Old 160 at Evergreen .
linda Cells.
.

·----·rioiliiirov --·----··
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

---- --- -· ···········---·······

Starcher Rd. beside Beech
Yard Sale 644 51h Ave ., Grove Cemetery , rear gate
Gallipolla . Good clothing, Mulberry Hgta. Pomerov .
BW TV, number household Follow 11gna Glettware,
clothes. car atereoa. and car
ltema . Saturday Sept 3.
parts 1988 Mustang faa1
3 Family clothing , various back. simplicity roto-tlllar
aizea, dlahea, curtains . etc . Something ior everyone . ,
Thurs., Fri. 9 Sat . 43 Vinton August 30 thru September

~ -S~~·
·~~~~!~~~~
Garage
Sale
~fur nlture, bedroom
clothing. Items too numerous to mention 8ulavllle
Porter Rd. Y• mile from
BulavilleTownhouse1oward
Poner. Sale suns Thursday
9 :00AM until 1

~ ~:r;:"' ~ :1.\\ u/ . . -.:

10

614 -992 -7 611 lor

funher information.

Jamet Teaford residence in
Syracuse, Ohio . Large clothing, deprenion era lamp ,
girls 20 inch bicycle.

''"" ""

Thursday, Fridav, and Saturday . Corner ol 6th and Vine .
Racine .
Yard 11le Sept 2.3. Salem
St., Rutland. betide Pen nzoll Station . Orapea, beda preadt . ttareo. c .a ...
clothll, junior 1iz:es 6 -7 .
boya alzBI 12-1 4 .

31 Homes for Sale
Attractive 3 yr. old ranch
ttyle home with cathedral
living •rea, 3 bdr .• 2 bath, 2
car garage, air con d., large
level lot. Mull aell ownara

moving . Call 446 -8587 after 6.

t5 room house &amp; bath,
county 8t well water on VJ
acre lot, rul nice on Floyd
Clork Ad, off Sl. At. 1 110. 8
miles from Holzer hoap . Call

Canter, Mason, WV, 3 baya,
2 hollta, excellent location.
eucceaaful buaine11 for over
30 y.ra, avall•bla after

3 bedroom houae wtth flraplace, central air, 2 full
bath a, in ciry llmfla. Imme·
dille poaaeaalon. Call 448·

22 Money to Loen

Located in Syracuse-Near
school It awlmmlng pool. 3
bedroom attuetad on one-

Aug. 9, 1983. Coli oltor 8 2599 .
p.m., 1-304-87&amp;-2982.
1 - - - - - -- - - -

lhlld ocro lot. f24,600 . or
will ,., for f276 mo.
304-81515 -3834.

HO!IIE LOANS Low fixed
me. Loodor Mortgoge, 77 E.
Btlll, Athona, Ohlo.1 -614- 2 Houeea for Mia~ 1 In
1192-3051.
Pomeroy. 3 bedrooms. 1
bath . Alao 1 In SyrecuN, 3
bedrooma. 1'"" bath. Both Jn
23 Profaalonel
nice .,.., . A..onable term a.
Service•
Cell: 111 4-992-2136 bo.
tween 9 • .m. and 3 p.m.

1----------

3 bedroom houae with bath,
gor-, outbuilding, fenced-

In y1rd, orchard, pool, over

ecre. Very lovly ond eflordoble. Coli 742-3080 .

'

Yard aale. Sept 6 .6.7. Mul berry Ave .. trailer behind
veterinary clinic . Men's clo ttl ing, man' a watch, kitchen
etectrlcel appliances. electri o broom . portable dis·
hw11her. toola, ahoea.
At. 124. acroaa hom old
Racine locka Ia Damt .
Thun -Sat . Clothe1, dinette
1e1, a1ereo, uercise bike.
2 big Yard Sales on Plum St ..
Middleport. lota of items,
depre11ion gla11.lampt, clo· '
thing all kinds plus lot more .. '
Sept. 1. 1hrough 6.

Richard Spencer· Tuppers
Plains. Rt7. Sept. 1 - 2-3 9
till 6 p.m . lou of nice 2 family rummage sale.
Yard Sale Sept. ht-3rd. merchandiae .
Sept. 1 ,2,3 . In the Pat
9Am-? Bladen Mercerville
o·~rlen building. W Main. ,
Rd. off 21 8. first hou1e on Moving sale-2 mile a off At. 7 St., former Dale Warner Ina.
.
left hems-babyatroller , on SA 124 . September 3 -4 . office 10-3.
1ova. glanware, clothes. Furniture , Iota of
jewelery, and many other merchandise .
Syracuu.·Aaron Sayre reai-:
items .
dence baaide Dairy Queen .
Thursday, Friday. Saturday'. _s_e~pt_._2_S._3_
. _ _ _ __
Big Yard Sale 3 Family 1 9-5 . 3 familiea . Rain or
.
mile from Rodney on ah 1ne. 706 Broadway Ra· · 1 6.41 &amp; 1643 lrncoln.,
Bidwaii ~RodOey Rd. · ~hat cin&amp;: .Qh. Back to- sChool
Hetghts, . Pom~roy. Labor.•
nota, bedding, drapea , -pic· clothes Boys and girl s sizes 1. f?av. Sept. ~- Btcy~le , 11eln~
turea, baakets, clothing, 2T-16. Ladles 3-14. An- less steel ••n~. oli:t boulea.
some furniture, antiquea, tiques Mrsc. Different mer- magazlnat, d11hea, Chriatplaypen. car teat. ltero'a, chandlse everyday.
mas decorations.. draperlea.
diahea, tools, plua much
&amp; bedspread a m11c ,
more. 9-1 Sept. 1 ·2 ·3. No Thursday. Frrday, Saturday.
juck.
2nd . St . n Syracuse . Near Community 1 yard aale . At
trailer park 9-6. lots of baby leaat 10. 1 1'4 mile north,·
New lima Rd., Rutland .
Yard_ Bakery . Gooda Sala items.
Thurs . 8o Fri. 9 -1
"
Wed . thru Fri. 10 til 6~
Apoitllc Church, 1812 East- Fri ., SUpt. 2nd. Clothing.
ern Ave. next to Willis Tire . lamps, plant light, stroller. Fri ·Sat Furriitur~. mise; .
still life pictures. stereo turn houaehold hema . men '•·
Yard Sale Sept . 3 and Sept. table, 8 track tape. toys, women 'a &amp; baby's clothing,
6 . 649 Hilda Dr. Girla jeans. baby clothes and spoked wheal a. At . 124,,
clothing size 0 -4, 60 minute much more . 8th St .. Middle· Syracuse.
baby awing, electric steril- pon , Rollers.
izer, other baby equipment.
Seigler oil heater .
Yard sale Thursday and
Friday, 8 :30a.m.·4 p . m. and
Vicinity
.
Big Garage Sale 9 to 6 . Saturday till noon . 641 High
September 1 .2.3. 2 houaea I,Str8ei. Middleport. Thelma
2 miles off R1. 87 on
below bowling alley, ladlea !'Collins.
Leon-Baden . September 1shoes size 4 Yz and 6.
~--------:-:-Gigantic yard sale at Mary 10. Tool a, qutlts, anliquea. ~
3 Family Sale Baby items, Lavne'a, Cheshire, Ohio . atone jars.
little bov• to adult, stero. September 1,2,3.
Yard Sale. September 1 1( ·
garage opener. auto it:ema.
jeans, etc. 1 1 09 Sunset Or. 810 South Second, Middle- and 2nd at 202 High Street,.. '
Fri. &amp; Sat. 2nd &amp; 3rd ..
port. Sept . 1 through 10. Point Ple11an1. 9 :00a .m. to
Knives. furniture, diahea, 6:00p .m.
Garage Sale Worth the Tripi llnena, bedding. clothing.
Sept. 2 &amp;. 3. 8 -8:00 . Baby appliances. tools, drapes, THREE family yard lale,
and children clothet, toys, silverstone pans, jewelry. September 2 &amp; 3 . 9 till 7
electric range w -hood. too Ia 1oys, lamps, Avon , lots misc. Guna, 1oolt, Iota of miac .
Sandhill Road next to Laten
plua more. 3 miles from city
to Crouaebeck Rd then Sept . 1,2.3 . 9 ·1. Main 81. School .
follow signa.
Rutland. Baby rtama. adult
clothing, small aPpliances. YARD 11le, September 1, 2,
3. 9 o.m.-8 p.m. 2405
Yard Sale 1 at,' ·2nd, &amp; 3rd. books, Iota of misc .
South 4th St. , Chaahlre, Dh. 1 --------~­ Monroe Ave. Pt. Plaaaant.
Ciothes, typ-.writera, record Wolfe Drive. Pomeroy . Sept.
player.
1,2,3. Winter clothes . Lots YARD ule, 243&amp; lincoln
Ave. Pt . Pleasant , 9 -7 Child··
of miac.
ran• clothea. adults larg•
Yard Sale on Raccoon Rd.
between At. 7 &amp;: At. 218 . Five family. August 31 to clothea, September 2nd. &amp;
Basil Holley, Fri.&amp;: Sat .
Sept . 3 . 889 South Second. 3rd, .. ....~ . ~ r...:~ / a
Middleport, 9 -7 Good school
. Community Patio Sale clothes, Iota of miac .. and YARD aala. Friday a. Satur"' ·
day, 2110 Madison Ave. Pt. ·
2 .3.4. 9 to dark on Rt. 141 Avon .
.t"4Y2 miles out) . Winter 1- - - - - - - -- - Pleatant. 9-7.
coatam aweatersm baby 3-family garage aale. Thuractothea, play pen, young day and Friday, Sept. 1 &amp; 2 , YARD-moved ln-aale , Satgirl• school clothes, adults 9-4 . Mulberry Helghta, 6th urdly II Sunday . Electrk:
clothes, diahea and much house on right from town. kitchen range, with hood
more.
Desk , 2 bicycles. bowling fan. 1raah compector, elec:=t ..
ball. small 1. v ., recliner. men ric yard edger. toaal malt.;
Yard Sale Sept 1· 4 . Mens- and women 's clothea'. girls oven broiler, 3 oil paintinga, .,
3 7
from Philllpinea. 76 Ford
1
womana·chlldren clothing.
1 0 ·14, boya 1 zea · • LTD. puzzles. gamea, books;
furniture, nic naca, farm aizet
equipment. alao for sale baby clothes. Rain or ahlne. clock radio, handcrafted.
1974 Cadillac. 3 % miles out Sept . 2 8t 3 . Bottom of Items. Chrlatmaa decor•·
Hartford Hill. 10-4 .
tiona. Take Rt. 35 South
7715. Watch for the signa
through Henderaon l,.i mil•
463 Grant St.. Mlddlepon. from Blue Bridge on the..
Yard Sale Thurs &amp; Fri. on Sept 1 &amp; 2 9 -6 . Clothing, right . Follow aigna.
the parking lot back of fumitura, Lawnboy, misc .
. ld Ava..
YARD sale. Saturderbealdi
church . 109 G a rf1e
d .
Gallipoha. 8-6 o 'clock each Sept . 1 ,2 ,3 . Beh1n 11cenae Beale School, Gallipolis
bureau in Pomeroy . Lota of Ferry .

------ P-i"Pi&amp;iiiia·rli" ·· --

s.

31 Homes for Sale

31 Homes for Seta

For aale in Syracuse on 100
Newly remodeled 2 a1ory x 200 lot. 2 outbuildings,
frame, 1 'h bath. 3Y2 acres, room for large garden. 3 or4
city achoola , riverview. bedroom oklar home. need1

$32,000 . Call 446-4222 repair. $10,000 . 614-992 between 9 &amp; 6.
6068.
4 bdr. ranch home, large LA,
full ba1ament. with garage,
wood burner included, city
achoola, 2 mHea from 1own.

Colt 446-0276.
In Middleport, newly remo·

For leon. Auto Servlco _6 _14_-_3_8_8_·8_ 2_ 8_2_·_ _ __
1

PIANO TUNING Sock to
School 8Pe!!IOI U&amp; normol
tunlr),a, Sopllmber only.
Word 1 Koyboord, 304-1175·
.3824.

l

f~1~0~t~o~~·=~~=:;:==-~d~ay~.~~~~~~~~1~Ie~a~n~a~n~d~b~o~b~y~c~lo~the~s~.;:::'~~~~~~~~~:::

614-742 -2951 .

e111t. 332, or wrtte P.O. Bo•

FEW pupplel, mutt give
IWIY lmmodlllloly, I W . . .O
old, holf Trh Wol. . ,
Coonhounci·TMnel. . MI.
Korr,
304-871-31112
p.m.
• ml11 whltl pupo,
F0 Un
'104-171-7430.

Sept 2 ·3. tOtO 4. R81ldence
Tom Kelly, 681 Cha.tnut

Garage Sale Thurs. &amp; Fri .
Sept. 1 &amp; 2. 9to6 . Corner of
At. 141 and Lincoln Pike.

304-1575-2879.

TEN \&gt;1 Slo,... •ltteno, 11
--~111 1 ~-~
- k l 0 ld • I wn ' _R,
304-1715-81411, 1171-31114.

Chu rch Yard Sale Fri.-Sot.

Water hauling. Will do ciat·
erna or 1wimming paola.

GOre f10lllty for the ""'nlllly
retordlld In Gellipolla. High

Mother cot ond 3 kltteno,
r-llow ond white ttrlpld,
304-875-1111.

Yard Sale Sat. Sept . 3 a1 30
l!o 32 Chillicothe Rd 9:00 to
6. Lots of nice hems.

~=1=3==1:n:su:r:a:n:c:a===

TERRY'S Sorber Shop at
Alhton, WV. Holr cuto, 11 Help Wanted
t2.00. Mondey-Frlday. - - - - - - - - - - I =
4:30 to 8:30p.m.
~~

good home. Moving muat

Rummage Sale Senior Citl~
zena Community Building,
Meadowbrook Manor. Wed.
1hru Sunday .

Wented to buy. New. uaed &amp;
•tlque furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete hautehold•. Alto comptate Auctl·
on..rlng aervice. Call Oeby

LETART MACHINE SHOP 3698.
Flowera -304-89&amp; -3351.
.
Chorlea Thomii·B9S-3122, ~=-..:....,=-=
Jim Young-304-8a2-3333. '~

mixed briiOd dog. Coli 4483171.

2 Family Yerd Sale Sept.
1-2. 9 :00 . 636 Third Ave..
Gallipolis. TV. lawnmower.
bihe, ladder, books. clothes,
8. Iota of other things.

Will dO bebvaitting in my
home . live in Middleport
oroo. Call 814-992 -8349.

General Hauling and Traah
removal Service . Reliable

.~

, r

large Sal a Centenary Town- Yard Sale Saturday 9 :00house . Fri. Ia Sat. Sept . 2 &amp; 6:00. Clo1hea, toys, screen
3. Dlahea. small appliances. do or. ete Aero•• from
jewelery, bedapreada . cur- Debby Or . on Rt. 141 .
talna, clothes .

Traders Day and large Yard

home. Call614-256-1615.

and engine repair. Marvin

f=.

Gaii!P.OI!S
&amp; VICinity

Rouonoble Call992 ·8022.

18 Wan1ed to Do

•

Yffl\w "

-· ........ ---.- ·····: .. ·--. .. . .

Room. board and care for an
elderly person in my home.

Are you paying to much for
your hospital-health inaurant&lt;e . Call Carroll
Snowden, 446-4290.

Garage

'
,,..,

1----------

Pirone 446-2921 ,

'

"';._ .

Situations
Wanted

11rvlcea for nre
coverage in G~IUa
'
for elmolt a · : ~: Farm,
home and
property
coveragaa era available to
meet individual needs. Contact K•il Burleson. agent.

,. /

~N~~-~

Oh. Or 992 -7780.

furniture. gold, allver dol·
lart. wood Ice boxu. atone
jara, antiques, etc.. Complete houaeholda. Write:
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.

blower, Phone 304-876-

1 beoutHul 12 wk. old white

•Shop Work

Melg a

County . 614 - 367 -7770
Oallla County.

s a\es

2 Garage Sales 7 Family .
Sept . 1- 2-3, 2 miles from
At. 1'4 1 on Neighborhood
Rd . Antique furniture,
carpet, lots of clothing . and
much much more. Raio or
ahine.

M1ddlopon, oh. 814 -9923478.
ple01a call 614-992-3568
or 814-992-2903 .
Wood and coal furnace with

&amp; bleck pen BNglo leiNIIe

Custom
Sawmill Work

compera. Coli 814-446-

Buying delly gold. silver
theona, ponlu Coli Bel- coina,
rlnga, jewelry. t1erllng
loons &amp; Co., 446-4313.
were. old colna. large cur~

1,000 Hondlt generator. removed from my ahop. Phone

*Gas Pipe

Will pay good price for uaed
mobile homea. travel trallera

BEDS-IRON. BRASS, old

3

614-992 -6 591

We pay cuh for late model

682-7832.

REWARD e200 . return of

:Ho.t1c

Stm 111rt fro• lrxl&amp;'

'IG 24'x31'

and

All Wo1k Gutrlntetd
"f•H Estlmetes"
I

AuctlonMr. 275-3089 .

So very sadly mlaaed by
the family.

SWEEPER and -lng mo-

l2-20.tfc

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Auction every Fri. night 11
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckload a of new
merchandlll every w..k.
Conalgmenta of new and
u11d mMchandill: always
welcome. Richerd Reynolds

1982.

puppy. Colll1 4-317-7743.

Albaugh's Archery
&amp; Hunting Supply

Rid Pearaon Auctioneer
Service. Eltate. Farm, Antlque &amp; liquidation aalea.
Ucensed &amp; bonded in Ohio •

a.

GUARANllED

PHONE Jill ,CLIFFORD

Ho1p1tal , Lakin, WV 25260.
81 ,000 by Christmas. turn
spare time into money by
demona1raiing 1oy1 &amp; gifts.
now until O&amp;ee mber. FREE
t300. kit. NO collection.
NO deliwery, NO ex perienc,
needed. Fun fob with &amp;Kcei lent pay Call 304 -773 6224 for Mason County,

'(ard

Will cere for elderly In our
home. trained • expe ·
rlenced. LPN care given.
6
, Auctlon ov ory · Tuead oy 1- _14_._9..c9_2_·7..c3_1_4_·--'--·.c.__
I flight, Pt. Pleasant, WVe.
b 1 •
1
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Farm, Will do ba va1tmg anyt me
houaehold, estate, etc. Call day or evening. Call 992 6530 ·
814-367-7101.

COAL

8-1 rlt

100. pel

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•lAND CLEARING,
CONCRETE WORK

'Sidine
'Roofinc
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodelinc
20 Years Experience
In Hollie A111
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2293

320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT W.

e

Reward

WYo. ' 304-773-6786 or
~04- 773-91 815.
'

ULTRA CLEAN
DAY FOAM EXTRACTION METHOD

J&amp;F
~·
CONTRACTING

information .
offered .

STRIP

EUGENE LONG
SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING

•Excavating
•ponds
'Septic Tanks
•Hauling

8.29_1 mo.

3009 or 676-&amp;628 with any

In loving memory of our dear 01715.
wife. mother, and grandmother, Ann1 Mae Martin, Stltndlng timber wanted.
who left ua ao tuddenly one Top prlcea paid. Colloher e
year ago, Septiiftbef , 1. P.M. Lorry Stricklond, 814-

4-21-ttc

REClAMATION

1 S t1ct

675 -5164.

•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEIIS
•LIIIESTOIIE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LINES ,
•PONDS, REClAMATION

2-23·tk

CONTRACTING

Found - 2poodles,blackand
white, female. 304-773 ·

man Pinscher, phone 304-

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

PH. 992-2280

M.L

Set of keys found 29th &amp;
ChandlerOriwe . Owner must
pay for ad, 304-675-4302.

LOST: in vicinity of Silver
Brldge Plaza . Mana brown
wallet with important documents. Pteaae cell304-676 ·

SALE

THE
TROPHY
KING

Nurses, L P.N .t. Extensive
employee benefit programs
Contect Personnel Office
304 -676-3230 or Lak1n

2

$3(JJO

742-2328

POSITIONS
now:l
for
licen seavailable
d Practh:a

•DillER

MINE RUN

Around
•Dump Truck

LOST--amatl dog,
bla ck m
and Bald
lin
be1gle-type
knob area. Children 's pat.
Wearing collar with name
Harry Richa rds . It found,

,...

255&amp;0 .
FOUND: black dog, Dober- I:;:=;:======

Gregg &amp; Patty Gibbs-Owners

SHADED WATERFRONT LOTS

NO MONEY
DOWN ....... .
.
NO PAYMENTS 'TILL 1984

446-3368 or 446-2156.

PET raccoon , reward for hla
return. lost in Maaon area.
Call 304-773-5462

MERCHANT

*PRIVATE

.SHOW: SAT .-SUN~ -MON'.
Windland,
Marys, Parkersburg,
W. Va.,speed, 1-~=~:2;-3:5:09:·====;:;i;;;=======4!::=======F=======·
$45;
SherriSt.
Chaffins,

Area deaths
Elsworth Staats

*BOAT DOCK
*BOAT RAMP

aroo. Cal1448 -7313.

colt 304-678 -2363.

CATALOG

BIG FOOT PARK

1983 at 7 p m at the Sc•p•o
Townsh1p Hall to provt de Clll·
ze ns W1th perttnent tnformatron
about the CDBG program
rncludtng an explanatton of

AVON now, AVON wowl

Sell
AVON
Christmas,
buy yours
at afor
discount.
Call

lOST: car tail light at
Sandhill Road intersection ,

AT

Help Wanted

brown Brrrtany

5684.

v,

11

Spaniel.
Whitawlthbrown&amp;.
blttek.
Found
dog l.n Rodney

FOUND

please phone 843 ·5163.
and help this beloved animal
coma home .
FOUND--sma ll black and
white snub-nosed female
dog. Rutland area. Phone
742-2249 it tht s ia your pet.

*CHAIN LINK
FENCING

"'-

3 4:1 - ~

'

Glenn worth
$6.8 million

The Daily Sentinel

was resigning the post he has held
since 1977. He announc'l.'&lt;l his
decision to his Cabinet on Sunday,
but gave his backers time to try to
talk him out of his decision.

O'Brien ends 25 court cases
Twenty defendants were lined
and five others forfeited bonds In
Meigs County Couri.. . . .
Fined bY.Judge Patrie)&lt; O'Brien
were Forrest King, Beverly, speed,
$ll and costs; Brian Well , Pomeroy,
speed, $23 and costs; Willlam L.
George, Cheshlre,insecure load,$15
and costs; Robert Sheppard, Reedsvllle, speed,, $21 and costs; Wlllle
Fox, W'lllston, failed todlsplayvalld
registration, $lO and costs; Forest
Ramsey, Cheshire, driving under
suspension, $:m and costs, three
days confinement; Edwin Oberholzer, Albany, failure to yield, $10
and c6sts; Francis Farrar, Logan,
speed, $21 andcosts; RalphStewari,
Pomeroy, speed, $20 and costs;
Lawrence Ellls, Washington Court

~~~~~~~-~~~~lr,,~l!9~~~~~~~~
Business Services 6~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~··~0h~io:::::::::::;=;~----~------~~~~~~ily~~~~~~ll•_

I, I

3 bedroom home. Glassed in
front porch. Screened in
back porch. Aluminum aid ·
lng. new chimney, wood
burner, 9 ioada cui wood,

carpon. 814-992-7286 .

deled home with fireplace. FOR SALE OR RENT 3
poaalble woodburner, clo11 bedroom. aplit foyer. 1 'h:
to achoola end shopping. batht. centnll heat 6 air.
Call 814-992-6941 .
1780 sq. ft. double car
garage. located on Mayo
Extra nice house on At. 664 Drive. New Haven. Owner
appro)C. 3 mi . East of Porter. financing available. Call col·
Priced reduced. Shown by loct 1-803-781 -8601 efter
appointment only . 446· 6 :00p .m.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

'.

1979 Sterling 14x70. 2

bdr .• total electric, central.
air, ea: . cond .. can be left on·
rented lot. French City Brokerlng SeNice, 448-9340.
1 4x70 Kirkwood, 2 BR;
unfurnished mobile home.
Central air, carpet stove.
rafrlger1tor. calling fan, underpinning. •1 1,000 firm.

Coli 1114-268-8035 or otter
7 PM 614-266-1672.
··
8K3&amp; damaged houae trailer.

Call 446-3656.

12K68 Vlndale mobile
home. 8' BKpando living
room, all electrtc with wood
burning stove. large con 9340, 446-7901 or 814/
crate patio including 1 room268-6413.
remodeled school buildrng
1 .with wood burning ttove. '
32 Mobile Homes
By owner Houae with 2
for Sale
carport &amp; wood storage
acres more or le11, been 1 - - - - - - - - - - building on 2 acrea . Hem remodeled, orchard. 87 ft. 1·
lock Grove 614-949· 3059
will, 122,000 Coli 614after 6 for more info .

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED- CARS,
OPEN HOUSE : dolly 10 TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
a.m . -1 p.m. Sunday 1 :00· CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
3 :00 . Newly remodeled, 448-7572.
nice. quilt 8o boautllulloco- 1-C-L_E_A_N__
U_S_E_D__
M_O_B_IL-E
tion. Immediate poaaeulon. HOMES KESSEL'S QUALTurn oil Rt. 315 In Honder- tTY MOBILE HOME SALES,
aon, WV. on Hendaraon St.
Go oway 1Iom the river, t!oo 4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
loot houao on Henderson Sl. RT 35. PHONE 4411-7274.

3BB-9063.

e rooma with new ~II to For ••I• by owner . 1981
w•ll cer~lng. Priced In klngaly all electric mobile

no·..

homo, 1 4x70 with 7x24

2 BR home for aale on land expando, 2 bdr., 1 YJ beth,
contract. 12000 down, bal- utility room , central air.

1976 Holly Pork deluxe With '
7K24 expando, total elect ric, 2 bedrooms, central air,
F.F. refrigerator, stove, underpinning Exc. cond . On

renled tot. 614-992-7424 .
811,500.

___:__-----:-------:-'
24x40 double-wtde build· .
ing, insulated. penaled, alec ~ ·
tricity. Would make nice
home. on one acre lot with '
aep1ic tank All for $7,600.

992 -3460
USEO Mobile Homes, 304-

once Ilk• rent. Coli 441- flrepf-. awning &amp; undllr-

576 -271 t .

UppOf River Rd. Houae a.
bam on 4 loti, 200 ft. rood
frontoge. Coli 1514·258·
1988 or 114-2611-83118 .

1978

0924 ,

pinning. Reaaon tor telling
muat relocate . Price

120,000. Coli 614 -2451::5::87:_2:.7-:-::-:-:--:::::--:;-;-:;:1'1978 Schuha 14x70. 2 bdr.,
2 both, ••· cond., total

Mult 1111, 2 bedroom, all atactric.. central air, aaaumeelectrlc cottage on like. ble loan with • 1.000 down,
*100 clown &amp; uauma mort· e~~n .tay on ranted lot.

gogp•
•-_ Call 441-7901 1tte1 French Cl1y Brolrerlng SorISPM
l.v~l~~·-4~4~8-_9_34_0_. _______
I

t4x70 BAYVIEW"

7~24 a~~: pando,

3 bedroom a,·
1% bath a, wood burning
fireplace , 8x30 awning ,
window awning excellent
condition . 304· 773 -6817.
Mike Roach.
1981 Shultz. 2 bedroom,
eKceltent condi1ion. Phone

304-676-6 375.

"

.

�12 The
35

lots

llo

Sentinel

Acreage

They'll Do It Every Time

35 acres at Rodn ey on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ ·

ing available. Ca.11448-8221
attar 6 weekday1.

.'
22 acrea of land, located OIJ

56

Cushman golf
&amp; 4 new
446 · 3258 or
2 141 .

Siam11e kittens. One mel•
Seal Point, four female
chocol•te Polnt1. one male
chocolate Points, S 50 ea .
Cell 814- 388-8253.

New Oak F.u rnlture. tables.
chairs-, cupboards, pie safe,
dry sinks. Paul Conkels
Antiquaa. Tuppers Plains.

Hannan Trace Rd., off Rf. 7.
Coll814-256-1905.
FOR SALE-15 acres outside
of Rutland, has hand du'g
walland capped Off 9as well .

Antiqu e schOol desks .
$25. 00 each. 814-949 3059 .

Good timber land . All mineral rights . Very secluded .
. e15,000. &amp;14 -992-3901 .

Reese hitch with all accenorles for towing large camper.
$150. 614-949-3059.

FIVE acres with basement,
city water. Pt. Pleasanl, call

Pets for Sale

54 Misc. Merchandise

CB radio Winct-eater 30-30
12 gauge shotgun, fishing
equipment. truck topper. Do
babysitting. Call 446-9636.

1 acre off Rt. 160, on Floyd
Clerk Rd . 84,250 . Call8751631 .
.

304-773- 5713 alter 7 :00
p.m.
HALF acre, ideal home or
trailer aha, good wefl with
pump &amp; aeptic system,
$10,500. 304-937- 2686 or
304-675-3575 .

67

In town, 3 bedroom house,
no peu. Inquire at Sheppard
Sales
Service, First &amp;
OliVe
.
'
. St ., Gallipolis,
. .
' .Oh
..

a.

'

· ' Houae for Hie or rBnt 3 bdr.:
11f.z bath, living room, FP,
aquiped kitchen. dining
area, family room, wood burner, city schools. fenced
bllck yard . Call446-2003 or
446-4489. Must rent or sell

2' bdr. trailer located on
Opper River Rd . ell utilities
peld eKcept electric. Dep.
r~. Call 446- 9659.
Centenary : 2 bedroom ,
fum., private. 8180 . Eureka:
1 :bedroom, fum., riverfront,
•100 . Ref. &amp; dep. 1-614·
ep-2644.
2 ·bdr. trailer, large lots &amp;
01.4tbuildings In country .
•tso month plua depoait.
Coli 513-962-4515 .
3 bdr. turn . trailer $160 plua
1ecurity depoait, reference
req. 1 child accepted, no
Coli 446-1728.

poll.

2 bdr. trailer on Clark Chapel
Rd . at Porter. Call 4480167 .

Fruit
Vegetables

bdr . apt ., 2nd Ave.,
tiallipolis. $190 mo. Call
446-4222 between 9 S. 6 .
3 room apt ., unfurnished, at
1 14 State St.. GalliPolis.
.Private, c!ose · tO schools.
Call 445- 3356' '
·
U ntu'rnished, downstairs, 3
room apt ., 1 bdr., no pats.
Inquire at 87 Vine St .,
Gallipolis.

ONE bedroom apanment,
$22&amp; month. all utilities
paid, 304-676-2696 .
TWIN - RIVERS TOWER.
Apartments now available to
elderly S. disabled with an
income of less than
$12.300 . Renting for 30
percent of adjusted income·
.Phona 304-675-6679. · ·
FURNISHED apartment,
adult&amp;, no pets, phone 304·
675-1453.
2 bedroom apt . in Mason.
Aduhs only. No pets . 304676-1452 after 5.
FURNISHED apartment,
adults, close to ho1pital. no
pets, 304-675-2257.
TWO apartments. unfurnished, near town, ground
floor . suitable for single or
couple. Dr. Slack, 304-6765267.
45

3 bdr. trailer 1 Y2 baths in

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call 446-0768 .

i~x50,

t150 per month
plus utilities. t 100 dep. No
pets. In Syracuse . 992 e284 or 992-5732.
12x60. $1 66 per mo. plus
utilities. $100 deposit. No
pttf:l. In Syracuae . 9926264 or 992-5732 .
1 , bedroom mobile home.
304-676-4164.
Two bedroom trailer, 81 &amp;0
month. plus deposit. all
eloctric, 304-676-4088.
TWO bedroom mobile
home, 1 mila out Sandhill
Rd . 304- 876-4045.
44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. Regency ln·c . Apartments Utiltles partly turn.,
apartmentt available now . .
$ 200 par mo. A-One Real
Eatatea. Carol Yeager, Real tor. Coli 304-675-6104 or
304-675· 7388 .
Furniohed apt . 2 bdr. t196 ,
weter paid 1 1 36 2nd. Galli·
polio . 446 -4416 olter7p .m.
Furnished upataira apt. 2
rooma • beth, clean, eduhe
onl'y, no pets, ref. req. Call
446 -1619.
Unfurnithed apt., 4 room• &amp;
. bath. Ref. &amp;: aacurlty dep.
req. Call 446-0444.

•

WHY tT'5 PRiiC:tsE&amp;..Y
T&gt;&lt;E! SAM!&lt; N&gt; 1¥1&gt;«!1

MORrAL!

Furnished Rooms

Sleeping room $116, utilities paid, range &amp; retrig.
Shere bath. Man only. 4464416 alter 7 p.m .
46 Space for Rent
Trailer lot located on
Addison - Buleville Rd.
Adults only. Call 614-3677438 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- WBJban, deyen, .ra~ri~era:,.

tors •. ·ranges. Skaggs AP·
plisnces, Upper FJiVer Rd.,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446-7398 .

YEILLOW freestone canning
peachaa now available, reat·
onable pricee. Pleate bring
your own bushel containera·.
14th year of serving the
ern. Bob's Market. M11on,
2hivesofbaaswlth2super, 304 • 77 3- 6 72 1 . Open 7
· _tll_l_d_•r_k_. _ _ _ _ _
each lull honey. 304 -982- o.d_•~Y_0_
2708 .
,-

1

1----------

a.

1- - -- - - - - --

81

71

Autos for Sale

1979 Fairmont Fordttatlon·
wagon, eut o. , real clean •
$2,996. John's Auto Sale.
8ulovlllo Rd. Coli 446-

~-~~~~~9~t':_o_:7~----

Plows. disc. layoff plow.
Call 446·3163, oltar 6
446-3336.

1977 Pontiac Sunblrd, excallant condition. Cell448ils95.
81 Chevy Impala white-red
int., 283 engine, under
69,000 mi.. Keyaton8a.
1harp, t2,&amp;00 . See to appreci•te at O'dell Lumber.
Contttet Rita Corlill 12SPM.

1OFT J 0 groin drill, f760.
Allis Chalmera E combine,
corn &amp; grain head, •2600.
304-876 - 8180 or 176 3383.

s:0o

63

livestock

Young ducks White-Mallard
cross. · $2.50 each. Call
614-388-8710.
2 sows for sale, due to have
pigs. Cell 446-8516.
1968 or newer Ma11ey
Ferguson 50 gaa trector
1600 hrs:. goo~ tires, power
ataerlng, live power; 3 point
disc. 511. bruoh hog. 2 12ft.
plows, $2,500. Call 614·
245-5007.
3 yr. old flegiatered 'Chix'
p,.lameno gueldlng . GrMn
broke. Vary gentle. JH)4489278 IWI 441· 1!00.
Border Collie puppies from
working parenta. Call 1 ·
6_14-286-2496.
10 wk. old pullets. I difter·
ent brHdo. Coli 614-266·
1615.
Appaloosa mere . Good trail
and chikla horM. $800.
614-742-3085 or 614-922708.

Vans

&amp;

4

W.O.

1978 ford van customized,
n!ce . t3.8_0 0.' . Call , 4488681 .
. • ·1979 jeep CJ-7 R111eg~de
.power steering. tilt wheel,
hardtop, quedra tree. auto·
matlc tranamlssion,
miles. Excellent cohditlon.
Call 448· 7196 or 448·
9364 · Aolclng • 4 · 995 · Will
l_co_n_o_ld_•_r_o_lfe_r._ _ _ __

eo.ooo

72 CJ Jeep many new partl,
good wood trall•r , all
$1 , 100 firm . Coli 446·
8002.
1979 Jeep CJ5 6 cyt .. 3
spd ., new top, AM-FM tape,
exc. cond. Coll446-0615 .

-=-::---:---:----:------11948 Jeep good condition,
73 Ford Galaxia 600 ex. completely rebuitt engine.
cond. Call448-9416.
new brakes, brand new
winch, mud tlret. Call 4481977 Toyota Celica GT .. 17!9.
liftt..ck. 5 tpeed, air cond .,
new brak11 • batter.y. Call 1974 CJ5 J&amp;ep. Mog
446-2042.
wheelt. low mileage. blue
with bleck lop . Good cond.
75 Dodge Dart . Call 441- 614-992-5015.
3718.
'1979 CJ&amp;. nHdl new top,
1983 Chovetto oporty, 4 $2900 or belt offer. Call
cyl., 4 opd.. good MPG. Barbaro, 304-175-2779.
9 ,900 mile1. Perfect cond.,
••king payoff. Call 4487904.
74
Motorcycles
19.73 Monte Carlo, new
tirea. and wire rime. Rune
good. UOO. 614-7422813.
Muot ooll. 1975 Cutlaos
Supreme. AM-FM 8 track .
Air. 14,000 mileo. t11 00.
614· 992·2102.
1972 Oldo Delta 89. PB, PS,
AC . Motor excellent condition. t400 . (814) 9925720.

we .wtL-t.we "' tL\...

WE''VE GOT TO
SI!E WMc~e THE
Gi.JA~D TAKE-5THAT ME55A6E .

llme1tone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason. Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son. Call446-7785 .

1974 Hondo 350, 7,400
aotuol mil OJ. Coli 61 4-3889755 .

RCA
TV,
25 814ln ..
•175. cabinet
axe. cond
. Call
388·8253 . .

Wl-lAT'L.L I

•

00 ~

,./.&gt;lt--r

I

;
I

ANNIE

MAlliA !_YOU
SHOULON'T
BE OOIN'
\HAT/

Roofing end Carpent (Y
work, genar•l rtpain. call
Anthony Wllll•m•on. 614:
367- 0194. .
...THAT
SMELI:S LIKE ...
BREAI&lt;FASTI

Excavating

1978 Ford Fefrmontstatlonwegon, low mllea. air condition, AM·FM tope, • tlroo, 82700 . 304· 676·
4338.

1978 KZ 780 K-ooakl
MotOrcycle. Ha1 wlndahield.
tiny bar, cruise control,
lugg•g• reck, beck raat. new
chain •nd. sprooketa. AUing
t1,000. firm. SM or coli
Gory F. HyMII ot 814-992·
8388 or 614-992-88110 .

J.A.R. Conatructlon Co.
W•ter Lines. Footen,
Drolno. All klndo ofDhchlng.
~B~~-nd , Oh. 114-742· ,

USED 1972 Toyoto cor, 4
cyl., good ~ondltlon, 30417!·10!7.
1971 CUTLASS Supremo,
Dido, loodod, A-1 aondltlon,
phone 304-17!·

78 Taylor let boot,
Lincoln, twin tur
ch•rgan, n11d1 rudder.
82, 800 . Coli 4411-1892.

78

Junie is
tal~inQ

What doe» it

say?

p1.1'se!

to Rover!

C•t 211 hoe, .oz••· cr•ne.
lo•deu, dump_ truck. Cell
814-441-1142 between
7:00AM • 1:00PM.

Dozer Wqrk, ground cle•n·
lng • exca'v etlng, •21 hour.
Call 441-9138 .

Boats and
Motor~ for Sale

I foun'
anote
in her

Lonnie Bogge Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe. dumptruck.
Work by hour or job. Call
441-7903.

1974 Hondo Chopper 30 in.
over front encf.. CB 710 F.
Call 114-949-2737.

. WINNIE
WaL, B£551E AND
ORVILLE LEAVE FOR

TOUR

BARNEY

WHAT'S
SNUFFY'S

ABSOLUTE

NET WORTH?

ZERO

--AN' HIS FISHIIIJ'
POLE AIN'T WOIU'H

MUCH NEITHER ·

SEWING Macrtine rapalr•.
urvice. Authorlaad Singer
Sale• • Service Sherpan
Scinon . F1brlc Shop,
Pomeroy . 992·2284 .

86

Gener1l Hauling

JONESIIOY8111(ATER SERVICE. Call 114· 317· 7471
or 114-317-0191 .

PEANUTS

Auto

llo

Accenorles

I I-lATE EVERVTI-IING!
I HATE TI-lE
WORLD!

1972
parte. Call

1171 NOV... II cyl. olr,
p - otoorlng • power
304-1178-3384 or
175·4437.

br-.

87

1981 CHEVROLET
Corvette. 11000 mllee.
t14.100. 304-17!-1122.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY IHOI'
1113 8oa. Aw., GolllpOIIo,
441-7U3 or 448· 1133.

Upholltery·

rJ I I

I I I_J

BRIDGE

and Rick Simon try to re cover a valuable artifact
but find themselves in con·
f ilet with Magnum and a
socialite. (R) (60 min .)
(]) Sneak Pre..,iaw• ·CO·
hosts Neal Gebler and Jeffrey Lyons take a look at
what's happening at the
mo&gt;Jies.
(i]) Sneak Previews
fJ) MOVIE: 'Sheila Levina
Is Dead end Living In New
York'
8 :30 [J) ill) llll Too Close For
Comfort Henry's guilt over
causing an injury to Mon·
roe leads to a bizarre chain
of events . (A)
® Up Pompeii
(]]) Hitch-hiker's Guida
9:00 (]) 700 Club Today's program features ' America 's
Meanest Man,· Mr . T. Part
one of a two part series.
!]) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic Clty.MO live cov·
arage of the 10 round Ju.
nior M iddleweight Championship between Buster
Drayton anc;l Mario Maldonado is presented. (2
hrs., 30 min .)
[J) ill) llll Reggie
Ill ([) ® Simon &amp; Simon·
The Simons try to br ing a
socialite to just ice after
she has left the country. (R}
J60 min )
(1) Flickers from Maeterplec:e Theatre
[I) Flickers from Master·
piece Theatre Arnie tries to
battle all odds to complete
his movie . (FI) (60 min .)
9:30 C2J MOVIE: 'Tho Spirit of St.
Louis'
[J) Ill llll It Takes Two
Sam upstages a comedian
at a hospital benefit performance . (R]
10:00 [J) 81 illl 20/ 20
Ill [I)® Knots Landing Cij!'s body is found washed
onto tl'le beach and Gary
awakens from a drunken
stupor nearby. (R) (60 min .)

GASOLINE AL.LEY

a.

NAPCI

in Concert This rock star
1
performs her b iggest hits.
(]) Tic Tee Dough
!]) ESPN Spo,.week
!Ill
of Jeannie
COULD l·l ' BE
(() (lJI High Foethor
A PLACE 'TO
8 Wild, Wild Woot
LIVE IF YOU'VE
8 :30 D C2J (1) NBC Nowo
(]) Lova That Bob
G&lt;O'T TIME"!'
!]) Bill Donao Outdoors
III Good Nowo
Now arrange the cirded teners to
[J) . . il]) ABC Nowl
form the t urprite answer, as sugIIJ ([) ® CBS N-o
gested by the above cartoon.
(()Dr. Who
(lJI Ovor Euy
7:00 Ill]) PM Mogezlno
Print answer here:
(])
American · Family
(Answers tomorrow)
Revisited 'The Louds-Ten
Years Later: Pas1. and preyeslerelav·s Jumbles: MIRTH CRANK THRESH UNFAIR
sent footage shows the
I Answer: His " position" in FRANCE gi11es him the
changes in this family'•
right to •ota-"F RANC-HI S-E"
life .
(]) Bur.no • Allen
J.-.. laM No. 14, COfttllnlfiCI 110 puzrlel, ll •veiJilMI tor $1.15 piUI Sit pcMt. . .
!]) SportoContor
lnll hlnlllng from .lumbll, olo ttlll MWIPII*'• Bolt 34, NOtWood, N.J. 07141.
tnoiudeJOUJMIM, MidrQI , IIpoodelndmak•chM:IIs~. . toN...,.~s.
{)) GrHn Acres
Cl) Entertainment Tonight
(1) Chartle'l Angelo
IIJ [J) Tic T ac Dough
(() llll MecNoii-Lehror
Rapon
®New•
Olllll People'a Court
fl) Stor Trok
7:30 II C2J Lie Detector
Oswald Jacoby snd Jamss Jacoby
&lt;IJ Scrn Legenda: James
Stewort
(]) Doble Gillio
. !]) PKA ·- Full Cooteot·.
Karite: World Lightweight
dummy hold more trumps
Championship
from
El
than he does. Here is a super
Paso. TX Coverage of tl'le
dummy-reversal combined
12 Round m8tch featur ing
Tony Rosser vs. Cliff ThoNORTH
ll· l ·U
with the losing of two tricks
+9H4
mas is presented . (90 min .)
at one time to bring home a
.Q 10 9
major suit game.
III Major
Baaaboll:
tJ98Z
South's two clubs was arti·
I
St.Loult at
.
+9
5
.·•
Hcial
and forcing , a'nd
... [I) IIJ ([) Family~-=··~ '~-!"
E[} "Business Report
· North's two diamonds was a ·
WEST
· EAST
... 10 8 6 3
® You Ao~ed For It
AKQ ·
negrluVe reSponse. If South
.6532 .
(fiJ This Old House
84
had rebid two no-trump as
II)
(H)
Entertainment
tK
Q 10 7 6 4
he should have, North would
Tonli_ht
10 6 3
+a 14 2
have raised to three, and
8 :00 II IJ.) (1) MOVIE: ' Merlo
there would have been nine
soutH
Puzo'a The Godfather: Tl'la
easy tricks, but South ~ecid·
• J2
Complete
Novel
for
etl to bid two hearts.
• A KJ 7
Television' Part 4
North didn't think much of
t
A 53
• C2J MOVIE: ' Reds'
his raise, but he did have
+AKQ J
C2J MOVIE: 'Things Are
three trumps to the queen,
Tough All Ova(
Vulnerable: BOth
and South continued to the
(]) I Spy
Dealer: South
heart game.
[J) ill) llll
Eyo
on

Holly_wood
CICll® Magnum. P.l. A.J.

Painting. Interior end exterior. Spray painting. Cell
304-875-1128 , l. M .
Johnson.

DOZER WORK By Tad
11ann•. ponde. I ditches.
baeements, ate . Call 4484907. C•rter
Ev•n•
Tran1portatlon.

r tJ

•

·.

Super dummy..:reversat

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece cutt:om fit your home.
Guarantaed. Advanced Gutter, JDoy 814-592-4018,)
Jnlght 114-198-820!.)

Good- 1 Excev•tlng, baaementt, footers, drlvewava.
septi~ tenka. lendscaping.
Call anytime 446 · 4537,
J•m•• l. D•vlton, Jr.
owner.

715

Stero, Aeallatlc, AM -FM
cassette player, with speak·
oro, 190. Call 814-245 A nice home. ~an be an older · 9397 .
one. muat have et le11t 8 1- - - - - - ' - - - - roons, etc. located in city of 10 HP Bolen• lawn tractor,
Gallipolis, preferably down- mower deck and •now
Excellent care will be blower Included. Will lrade.
retpontible lady Cell 446· 9265.
old son. Cell l - - - - - - - - - -

1/Ja&lt;G~! I CAI-I'T EIJEI.I FIJT
W~~IT!

E • R Tr" Service, fully
Insured, free enimatea.
Phone 114-317-0131, aoU
after 5.

1972 Suzuki CIT 750, low
miiHgo, good cond .. •890.
wUI consider trade for wook
working equip. Call 814388-87t0.

1974 HONOA 7110, full
· · - d . t1100. 304-87!1122.

47 Wanted to Rent

'

Water Walla. .Commarciel
•nd Domaatlc . Teat holM.
Pumps S•lea •nd Service.
304-88!-3802 .
•

1977 HARLEY Dovldaon,
Electrical
excellent condition, 11, 000 84
mllet. lot of chrome, mu11:
o. R f 1g
1
- t o opproclljl•· 304-773- _ _
"'_ _
•_r_a_r_at_on
__
1013.
.
-

fir.ewood cut' up slabs l1s
pickup load . Call 614 -2465804.

Mobile Home lots for ·rent ·
water and aewer furnished,
1 •mall child accepted.
304-875-1076.

,
1

RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
riancad roofing, Including
hot t•r eppllcatlon, carpenter, electrician. ma1on. Call
304- 878· 2088 or 875·
456():
"

83

I

DKIIll

F • K TrN Trimming, stump
removal. Call 875-1331 .

Get your cerpet In •hip
ehape. Waterremovet. FREE
ESTIMATES. FU_
R NITURE
CLEANING . CAPTAI.N STEA!IIER 114-448-~107 . .

I'm In no hurry Mlgtn
11 we ll enjoy mysett

IKANTLEj
I I r

&amp;UT FIR'i&gt;T-

l

RON'S Talevillon Service.
Speci11i1ing in Zenith and
Motorola. Ouuer. and
houoo colla. Col 576-2398'
or 446·24!4.
·

Meigl Exc.vatlng. Bulldozer
&amp; backhoe MrVIce . Baaementt, footera, l•nda011plng,
1980 Kowoookl KZ1300, drlvewaya. farm ponda.
12,700 mHat, wind jemmer 114-742-2407 orl14-742·
boorlng. KO lunogo rock. 2011 .
Adju .. eble tiNY bar, angina
guarda, new tlret, very good BACKHOE, dozor, dump
condition. Serktua inquirle1 truclf,. licensed uptic •Y•·
only. 114-992·7110 otter . tem lnltallment &amp;. repair.
p.m.
304- 675-7686 .

Knauff Coal &amp; Firewood Buy
now for seasoned wood ttl is
winter. Coll814-251 -!245.

p.m .
21' cqlor Zenith TV. 100 yr.
old rocker. Compton encyc lopedia. Horner accordlan,
punch bowl &amp;. cups. Call
614-245-5274.

M•rcum Rooting • Spout·
lng. 30 yooro oxperl..,...
epecializlng in bulb up roof.
Colll14-388-81!7"

11 m [J) m m [J) ® m

o-m

CAPTAIN EASY

81 Monte Carlo, 16.000
miles, loaded. $7,000. Call
'446-7399.

64 Misc. Merchandise

Girl 's or boy' 1 bike . 20''.
840 . Call •48-0196 after 4

I I

1ll1 Nowo
C2J HBO Roc:k: Stevie Nlcko

Attax 600 Superchlef. all
terrain recreational vehicle.
6 wheels. 304-773-9555 .

.

Trailer Iota in New Haven.
304-875-1452 alter 5 .

It Olear's

73

·1 976 Cho\ty '30', box von
350, V·8. new AT, dual rear
wheels, rollup rear door,
new battery. PS. PB.
82,760 . Call 446-0940.

Two large trailer lots for rent
In Middleport. Near 1tores.
Nice neighborhood . Adults
only. Call 992- 2101 or
992-2319 ,

l~~~~:4~4:6:·:2~5:4:8:o~r

for ·Sale

TOP CASH paid lor late 1971. Ford Ranchero. 8 c:yl.,
modll uHd c•fl· Smith PS, axe. ahape, $900 . Call
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eaat- 446-8263 .
ern Ava.. Gallipolis, 4482282 .
1978 GMC truck, 4 whHI
drive. Call, after 6PM , 448·
1978 Dodge Aspen atation- 0108.
wogon . Call
14 - 3999755.
1979 Plymouth Arrow
pickup. Topper, 4 ~peed,
1980 2 dr. Dodge Aopon, new tires. b.ttery, aun roof.
auto. PS, PB. kJw mileage. Sharp. e3,600. 614-985·
real nice, •2.796 . John's 3585.
Auto Sale, Bulavllle Rd. Call
446-4792, open 9 to 7.
1964 Ford "h: ton truck. V-8,
auto. runt goqd . .Body r.esHf79 'IW Rabbit, 4 opd., air ~orable; •400. or bell1 offer.
con~ .. AM - FM. r•d 'l o . 814-985·4225 .
$2,996. John' a Auto· Sale.
Bulavllle Rd. Call 446· 1974 GMC , oil huvy duty,
4782, open 9 to 7.
$1600 . 304-176-6461.

1976 Flat X·19 , removable
-t op, excellent condition. Call
446-6595 .

Farmall 460 tractor diesel
with 3 14 in. plows. 7 ft.
mower. 10ft. transport disc.
Call614-245·5096 alter 5 .

Unscramb'e these four Jumbln ,
one letter to each square, to form
fou r Of'dinary words.

EVENING

Home
Improvement•

STUCCO PLASTERING
teJltuNd calllnge commercial end ntlldenlial. frH
ootlmotoo. Coli 814·281·
1182.
.

2-Gehl forage waGons. Call
614-379-2582 alter &amp;PM .

Used Ford mounted picker,
excellent condition . Call
446 -2&amp;91.

ftjl\JN} fj}ll ~THAT 8CRAM81.E1! WORD Or\ME
~\!:!I~~ "
byHenriAmoldond!lobLH

THURSDAY

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

1877'Granada 2dr., 6cyl.,4
opd., · 82,000. Call 4467629.

12FT open cooler. in good
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker, otto- working condition, make
man , 3 tables, {extra heavy offar. 304-576-2221 .
by Fron1:ier), 8686. Sofa ,
chair and lovesaat, 8276 . 30 INCH electric range,
Sofas and chairs priced from $100.00 . Dining room table
8285. to 8895 . Tables, $46 &amp; 4 chairs. ' $360.00. Sofa
and up to $125 . Hide-a- and 2 chairs. $200 .00 . All
beds ,$ 440 . and up to excellent condition. Call
$626., Recliners, 8175. to 304-675-3756.
$360., lamps from 828 . to
$76. 6 pc . dinettes from FLEXSTEEL couch. green,
&amp;99., to $436. 7 pc .. $189. good condition, $50 . 304and up . Wood table with six 675-4072 .
~hairs 8426. to $746. Desk
8110 up to $225 . Hutches, TWO 5,000 BTU , one
$550 . and up, maple or pine 1 1 ,500 STU lir conditionfinish. Bunk bed complete ers. Phone 304·676-2267
with mattresses, $250. and
up to 8396. Baby beds,
$110. Mattresses or box 55 Building Supplies
springs, full or twin, 868 ..
firm, $68 . and 878 . Queen
sets, $195 . 4 dr . chesta.
Building materials
842 . 6 dr. ~hasts. $64. Bed block, brick, sewer pipes,
frames, S20.a nd $26 ., 10 windows . lintels, etc .
gun - Gun cabinets, 8360., Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
dinette chsirs $20 . and 826. 0 . Cell 61,4·246-6121 .
Gas or electric ranges, S3261:;;==::;=::;:=;::;=:
uptoS375. 8abymatraosas, 56
Pets for Sale
825 &amp; t35. badliameo$20,
926, &amp;830, kingfremet50.
Good selection of bedroom
suites, cedar chests. HILLCREST KENNELS
rockers, metal cabinets. Barding all breeds . Sailing
swivel rockers.
Happy Jack Dog Food .
Used Furniture .. bookcase. Doberman puppies; Stud
r•ngee. chairs. dinnett set, Service. Call 446-7795 .
wood 1:able and chairs, dry·
ers. refrigerators and TV 'a. 3 lg . AKC Great ·o.ne pup1
miles out Bulavilla Rd . Open First deworming, dm . injec9am to 8pm , Mon. thru Fri ., tion, du claws removed,
9em to 6pm. Sat .
$250. Call 304-782-2431 .
446-0322
Doberman pups. AKC Reo.·
3 matched G E washer &amp; iotered. t125. Call 814dryer pairs, 2 white pair, 1 68Z,7959.
avacado pair, 12-15 other
good waahera &amp; dryers to Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
choose from Guaranteed 30 614-387-7220.
days. Call614-266 -1 207.
3 yr. old mala English
G.E. washer A -1 cond., cocker, AKC Regietered .
$175. Call614-367-0560 .
Good watchdog. Not goOd
with children. $60 . Call
Early American green &amp; rust 446-0304.
floral couch, exc . cond.,
green recliner . Call 448- AKC Doberman Pinscher
1288 after 6.
pup. Black tan, 8 wka. old .
S1 00. Call 448 -3834 doyo.
Sell cheap. Old -fashioned
dining room aat--6 chairs. AkC regi81ared Cocker Spa table, china clo1et. Call niel puppies. 4 males. 1
742-2405.
female. Phone 614 -7422901 or 614-992 -7406 .
For sale-- Liberty dining
room au it, consists Of hutch Pedigreed checkered giant
table and 6 chairs, like new rabbits, young stock, pats.
condition . $450. Middle- reasonably priced ,· 304 port. 992-2822 .
675-6704.

Television
Viewing
9/1/83

e

3

2 bdr mobile home. Cell
446-9580 .
e;.rgreen, $176 mo., plus
d&lt;!p., wetar paid. Call 614246 -9170.
.

DO YOU KION WHAT IT
MEANS "10 BE ALMOST
IMMOR'!11L' Fi!ICHARP?

Good - · 1971 18 ft.
Rober c.amper. Self contained, oloopo' I, corptrtod,
range, refrlgeretor (gaa or
electric), and tumice. Call
114-992· 33·3 or 81 4 -98!4317.

Ma rt in Acouulc Gulur.
Heavy duty c11e, euperior
cond. After 7 p.m. call
814-449-7221 .

Mercerville 1 or 2 bedroom
8176 mo. Call 446-1157,
8 · 6 Monday-Friday.

1 bad room Apt . $196. mo.
including utilities ." Equal
houaing opportunity. '€on'·
6 roqf!"' house on'farm, near laot Village Ml!!n'or Apts.
Crown City. Call 814-.258- · _61 4 -992 -7787.
6484.
1 bedroom apt in Pt. PleaThree bedroom brick home sant. 304-675-5354.
with large extra lot, located
just outside New Haven . Throe bedroom unfurnished
City water. central air and upstairs apartment in Mid·
heat plus fireplace . $300. dleport . 11'160 mo. 161,!11
per .month . ' Comp . fur - 992-6692 .
nlahed. For more information call aher 6 :00; 304- 1 and 2 bedroom apts. 161 4)
675-3996.
992-5914 or 1304) 882·
2566 .
1 bedroom house, ·2327'/:z
Lincoin. 8136 mo. 304- Furnished one &amp; two bed·
676-3669 after 6 p.m.
room apt . Middleport.
Adults, no pets. Month rent
plus $100 . security . 614Full baaement, 1 1f.z story,
with city water, double 992-3874.
garage, garden. 1 small child
6 room apt. fully carpeted.
accepted, 304-675-1076.
In country near parks on Rt.
2 bedroom cottage, pan Iaiiy 33 north. Adults, no pets.
References. Call 614-992furnished, $176 . monthly,
3201 .
8100 . deposit . 3412 %
Mossman Ave·n ue, Point
Apt. in Pomeroy. 3 rooms &amp;
Plea~ant, 304·675 · 7634 .
bath. 614-992-6621 .
All electric home with full
size basement and garage. Apartments . 304 · 675 ·
5548 .
Call after 6 p.m., 304·6763217.
APARTMENTS. mobile
THREE bedroom house tor homes, houses. Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614 -446 rent in Mason, WV. 3048221 .
773-5440 .
Mobile Homes
for Rent

DICK TRACY

Moto.. Homes
llo Campara

PAINTING • Interior •nd ' ,
exterior, plumbing. roofing,
.ame remodeling. 20 yrs.
up. Call !14-388·9152.

~m~adiately.

42

Ohio

e.

Flute, like new. 82:00, 614985·42799.

lr-..llli•

1' 1983

1, 1983

1973 23ft, Concord travel
tr•itar. 1elf contained. air
cond.. oleopo
• ·2.000.
Colll14- 367-7898.

Old HamiltOn pieno. Call
614·389-9864 oltor 4 .

4 bdr. house 6 acres of land

6 rm. houSe at 60 Olive St ..
Gallipolis. Inquire at William
Ann Motel. Gallipolit, Oh .

79

CARLYLE~

Musical
Instruments

&amp;

ref. Call 446-3175 .

KIT

POMERANIAI\IS, Poodloa&amp;
D•chshund puppies. •II AkC
Registered . Phone 304895-3968 .

58

on Rt. 180 in Vinton. Central
air, $360 mo .• sac. dep. lk

Thunday,

Ohio

I Tl-l01161-1T VOU I-lAD
INNER PEACE

BUT I STILL !-lAVE
08NOXIOUSNE55!

IOO

ll'.lrr~:"

j

I

!
g

'

(]) Avengers
lJ] News
fi)INN News
10:30 (]) Star Time
III TIS Evening Nowa
!I]) Tony Brown's Journal
' Herpes ~ Is There Hope?'
First of 2 parts.
fJIIn Search of....
11 :00 D C2J [1)(1) Cl CIJ ®Ill
llll News
[J) Monty Python
fJI Bonny_Hill Show
11:30 D C2J CD Tonight Show
Johnny's guests are Lionel
Ritc hie and restaurant critic Karen Salkin. (60 min .)
(I) MOVIE: 'Lett American
Virgin'
C2J Another Lifo
!]) SportiiConter
[J) Cadlno
[J) loop
11J [J) U.S. Open Highlight•
Tonight'• program presanto highlightl of the
day'• tennis action from
tho USTA National Tennis
Center, Flushing Meadow·
Corona Park. NY .
[J) PBS Lito Night
llO All In tho Femlly
1D1 Nlghtllno
•ounomoko
1 1 :481]) MOVIE: 'Fallon Angol'
!]) NFL'o Oreo,olt Momonta
N FL'o . G roo toot
Momenm pfesents 'le·
(!IIndo of tho Foil .'
12:00 C2J lumo • Allen
[J) MOVIE: 'Tho Howard•
of Vlrvlnlo'
[J) Nlghlllno

Wesc

Norcb

Pass

The defense started with
three rounds of spades.
South ruffed with his ace of
trumps, led the seven of

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

trumps ·to dummy's nine and

ruffed the last spade with
lhe trump king. The jack of
trumps was taken by
dummy's queen, and the 10
was cashed to give South a
diamond trick.
Now South ran lour clubs
and the ace of diamonds.
The last Irick was lost to

Opening lead: •K

- By Oswald Jacoby
end Ja11101 Jacoby

The dummy-reversal play
usually takes place when West's queen of diamonds
declarer holds live trumps and East's last trump.
and dummy just three . . South's rabbit's fool had
Declarer ruffs three of come through for him .
dummy's losers to make (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.

'•

..
·,

l~Htr·
".by THOMAS
JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 "-Someone

Happy"
(1980 song I
5 Saucy
10 Landed
ll Old-time
warrior
13 Location
If Put up with
15 - and Fox

U Minimal

u Greek peak
DOWN
1 Italian cily

2 Asswned

moniker
3 Anny duty
f French
sununer
5 Indistinct
6 Wordy outcry
11 R8tter
7 Coojunction
17 Toss
8 Oarsman
18 Building
9 Brave
stone
behavior
20 Other
12 Partial
matters (Lat.) refund
%1 Simple
18 Spanish house
Z2 Religious
19 Draw toward
night
offshoot
Z3 North Pole .,...~;;;,.,....,.,...

28 Italian

city
Z3 Splinter
%4 Uke
tbedawn
Z5 Wicket
%7Earth
30Servants

31 Australian·
soprano :
32 Stage pla)l'
34 Without ;:

(Fr, )
•
37 Byway of
38 Piotis
(Ita I. )

VIP

%5 Uppizaner,
e.g.
M-Velez
!'7 City Hall
stalwart
(sl.)

Zllnflexible
:II Was
imminent
33 TeMes-

seean
34

Weaken

35 Swiss river
31Annenian

capital
31Arizona
Indian
French
dramatist
The same
(Lat.)

q,
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work lt:
II

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another.

rn

...

this sample A Is

used for the three L 's, X for the two O'!S. etc. Single l etters. •,"
apoatrophet. the length and formation of the words a r c all ··..

hints. Each day the code leiters are dif!ercnt.

iiD

..

CRYPTOQUOO'ES
UJ

DBO

CB

LMMH

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DBOK

EUFV

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Yesterday's Cryptoqaote: OH TilE SUMMER NIGHT HAS A -~
SMILE OF UGH'!' AND SHE SITS ON A SAPPHIRE "'
THRONE.- B.W.PROCTER

,

�Thunday, September 1' 1983 .

14-The Daily Sentinel

iPECIAL WEEKEND ·=--~p;;iijiiiiiii~";;j

SAVE ON

SALE PRICES

Baseball roundups

QUALITY FALL

THROUGHOUT
THE STORE

Pap~S-4

MERCHANDISE .
I

Jeans Sale
Qual~

Lee and Wrangler brands in
regular and full cuts. Betted styles, pleated
styles, dress blues. strelch denim and
straight legs Sizes 6 to 18, 32 io 44, Petrte
Sizes 6 lo 18.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

122.00

...... SALE
1 27.00 ........ SALE
132.00 ........ SALE
139.00 ........ SALE

'17.59
'21.59
'25.59
'31.19

at y en tine
e
Soviet missile incident: 'barbaric act'

Casual and Blouson styles, mm1s,
jumpers, long sleeves, 14 sleeves.
corduroys, wool blends, cotton blends
and polyesters.

REG. 120.00 .............. SALE 115.99
REG. 124.00 .............. SALE '19.19
REG. 136.00 ............. SALE '28.79
REG. 145.00 ............. SALE '35.99
REG. 152.00 ............. SALE 141.59

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

Vo1.32,No.101

126.00 ........... SALE 120.79
129.00 .......... SALE '23.19
134.00 ........... SALE 127.19

'40.00 .......... SALE 131.99'

SEOl)L, South Korea (AP)- At
least 51 Arne1caDs were aboard the
South Korean airliner reported
downed by a Soviet jet fighter,
Korean Air Lines said today, and
searchers found a large o11 slick In
waterswhereitwasbelievedtohave

LABOR DAY SALE

LADIES'

GIRLS' COORDINATE

Coat Sale

-:~~: :;~;~~:::: ~m ::t~~
REG. '64.00 ... SALE '51.00
REG. '77.00 ... SALE '62.00
REG. 185.00 ... SALE '68.00

New Fall ..

Sportswear
Sale ·

· Take advantage of Labor Day Sale
prices on new winter coots. Stadium
Coats, Dress Co&lt;ts, Capes, All Weather
Coats and Fun Looks. Misses Sizes 8 to
18, Haff Sizes 14~ to 24~.

crashed.

(. ·"

'.

Presldi!nt Chun Doo-hwan accused !hi! Soviet Union of. "a
:barbaric act."
·
·
At a con1erence room In Seoul, an
empty chair marked the absence of

· ' Sleepwear

'

..

REG.
REG:
REG.
REG.

who are presumed kllled. KAL left
open tbe passlbtllty that more than
51 Americans were aboard by
saying someotberson thefllghtmay
nave beld dual nationality.
KAL Initially reported 269 people
aboard the flight, but said foor crew
.members got off at a retueUng stop
· II) Anchorage, leaving 265. llow'
ever, KAL said today the foor who
got ott Were replaced In Anchorage

All new fall and winter colors and
styles. Brushed tricot, flannels·
thermal, knit, challis and fleece:
Long gown and robes, niteshirts,
.short gowns and robes, pajamas. .
. Complete •range of ladies' and •·
junior sizes.

.,

'6.00 ... ,.. :SALE 14.79 .
'11.00 ..... SALE 18.79
'17.00 ... SALE 113.59
125.00 ... SALE 119.99

SALE! GIRLS'

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

~

18.00 ....... SALE '7.04
110.50 ...... SALE 19.24
116.00 ... SALE '14.04
123.00 ... SALE '20.24

TIMEX

Coats and
Snowsuits

Watch Sale

Pre-season sale prices on warm
winter coats and snowsuits. Corduroy, nylons, quilted styles, fur lined
and pile lined. Sizes NB lo 24 Mos.,
2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14. Reg. $16.00
lo $63.00.

$1279 TO SSQ39
LABOR DAY SALE!
BOYS'

·Denim
.. Jeans
Includes our entire stock ol boys'
denim jeans - Wrangler and Lee.
Regular and Slims. Sizes 8 to 16.
Student Sizes 26 lo 30 waist, lengths
30 to 36. Husky Sizes 10 to 18.

BOYS' 1 14.95 JEANS
BOYS: '16.95 JEANS
BOYS' 11B.95 JEANS
BOYS' 121.95 JEANS

.. 111.66
.. '13.26
.. '14.76
.. 117.16

UTTLE BOYS'

Weekend sale prices on all men's
women's and children's Timex
watches. Many new styles in digitals
self-winding models, quartz and
. electrics.

Coats and
Snowsuits

19.95 ........... SALE

Buntings, Snowsuits, Jackets and
Coats. Sizes: NB to 24 Mos., 2 to 4, 4 to

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

SALE PRICED

'7.96
111.96
'15.96
'24.95 ...... SALE '19.96
134.95 ...... SALE '27.96

114.95 ........ SALE
119.95 ........ SALE

7.

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

PRE SEASON SALE!

...... SALE
...... SALE
135.00 ...... SALE
143.00 ...... SALE
123.00

'12.79
'18.39
'27.99
'34.39

LABOR OA Y SALE/
MEN'S

Boys' Jackets

New Fall
Jackets

Special Labor Day savings on all of our
boys' winter jackets. Sizes 8 to 20.
You'll like the colors and styles and the
savings this weekend.

BOYS'
BOYS'
BOYS'
BOYS'

1 16.00

Hurry in and save during the
pre-season jacket sale. Regular and ,
extra large sizes. Excellent style and
color selection. Use our conven~nt
lay-away plan if you like.

122.95

JACKETS '18.35
134.95 JACKETS 127.95
139.95 JACKETS ~31.95
149.95 JACKETS 139.95

MEN'S 129.95 JACKETS ... 123.95
MEN'S 139.95 JACKETS ... '31.95
MEN'S 149.95 JACKETS ... '39.95
MEN'S 179.95 JACKETS ... 163.95

LABOR DAY SALE!

MEN'S WESTERN STYLE

Flannel
Shirts

LABOR DAY SALE/

Colorful plaids, authentic western cui
with pearl snaps, flap pockets, front
and back western yokes. Size S. M. L.
XL, XXL in regular size and M,'L, XL,
XXL in tails.

MEN'S 113.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S 116.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S 119.95 SHIRTS
MEN'S 121.95 SHIRTS

Hanes
lJNDfRWEAR

U.S. Rep. Lawrence,P. McDonald,
one of 269 people aboard the plane

.'f".

New fall colors in skirts, blouses,
knit tops, blazers, vests and slacks.
Sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, and 7 to 14.

(""t

MEN'S WRANGLER $22.95

MEN'S AND BOYS'

Denim Jeans

Tube Socks

' Straight Leg or Boot Flare Styles.
.' Pre-washed blue denim. Stock up now ·
at lhis sale price. Sizes 27 to 42 waist.
Lengths 30 to 36.

Our Famous Springfoot Quality. Lots of
sthool colors and many more. Boys'
sizes 7 to 11, Men's 9 to 15.

$}799

110.85
113.20
115.55
117.15

Hanes Underwear
Includes Men's and Boys Cotton Briefs, Tee Shirts, Men's Boxers,
A-Shirts. Big Sizes Included .

SAVE 25%
Sale Ends Sep'-bor 3rd

jusE ouR LAYAWAY PLANI

s1.59 White With
Color Tops .............. :. s1.19

sug Sweatshirt Gray
Color Tops ................ s1.49

SAVE 25%
MEN'S AND BOYS'

SAVf
IABOII DAY WEEKENOI

LABOR DAY 5A1EI

MEN'S LEE DENIM

Basic Jeans
R~gular price '22.95. Genuine . Lee
~1ders, stra1ghlleg, pre-washed. Waist
s1zes 27 to 38. Lengths 30 to 36.

$1799

JUNIOR

Jackets and
Rainwear
Quilt-lined slickers, windbreakers,
ponchos a~d raincoats.

........__--....SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

$399

Handbag
Clearance
Special clearance prices on our
remaining stock of ladies' summer
handbags.

REG. 16.00 .......... SALE
REG. 19.00 .......... SALE
. REG. 112.00 ........ SALE
REG •.115;00 ........ SALE

'1.98
'2.98
'3.98
'4.98

-2· S.tlon1, 12 Pog•• 20 Cent•
A Multimltdia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy· Middlepo~l, Ohio, Friday, September 2, 1983

Copytithtod 1983 .

LAYAWAYS
WELCOME

LADIES' FALL

StoryonP.8

•

NEW FALL COLORS
NEW FALL STYLES

New. Fall and Winter dresses by Joan
Curtis, Better Half and British Lady.
Jacket Dresses. Jacket/Skirt Suits,
Jumpers and Shirtwaist Styles. Petitie,
Misses and Half.Sizes.

producers'

in Rutland

Photo• •.,. Page 5

Dress Sale

Dress Sale
LADIES'

Pap7

Balloon lands

JUNIOR

LADIES'

Weekly sermonette

by four fresh crew members,
bringing the total back up to 269.

Agency patrol boat reported finding
The fishing vesselwas In waters 17 . He questioned whether the Sov!el
a330-foo!-longoUslickl8'hmllesof! mUes west of the Soviet Island of Union "would have dared such a
There were calls for retaliatory the soulhwest coast of the Soviet Moneron, just off Sakhalin's coast, barbarous act If the airliner
belonged to a big power."
.
actions as search boats and planes, Island Sakhalin, where the South the agency said.
Korean Air Lines ordered an
In Seoul, U.S. Sen. Jesse A.
lnclud!Dg two U.S. m1lltary aircraft, Korean jumbo jet Is believed to have
inUn&lt;!d!ate change In Its !light Helms, R-N.C., said he would
hunled for traces of the jumbo jet In gQnedown Thursday.
Agency officials also said Japa· cwrse of! the Soviet Union's easl recommend to President Reagan
frigid Sea of Japan waters. Some
nese fishermen who saw "bright coast. KAL officials said the new "that he expel all Soviet diplomats
wreckage was reporled seen !rom
objects"
maY have witnessed the route Is about llll miles south of with the exception of the ambassa.
the air, l)ut Japan said $ov!et
,·
mtd-alrattack.
· . - .. · · .• - .· · Kl!mchatka,a,peninsulatothl'nortb · dor and a s)leleton s)aff::· ·
. officials had refused to allow search .
Crew
members
of
the
·99:1on
·
of
Slikhal!n.
'the
old
route
was
90
Helms
and
other
congressmen
·
boats Into Soviet waters.
were In South Korea for a conferA Japanese Maritime Safety Chldori Maru No. 58 fishing vessel mUes south of Kamchatka.
ence
to mark the 30th anniversary of
reporled hearing two or three loud
Chun, In his first JXJblic statement
bangs, preceded by !lashes In the on the attack, called It a "barbarous the U.S.-South Korea defense pact.
McDonald, 0-Ga., also was to
skies, at about the time Korean Air act, sinning against god and man."
• •
Lines Flight fiJI disappeared !rom Hesa!d!t"cannotbetoleratedunder have attended. A sign bearing his
amongvrch~ . radar ~ In Soviet air space, any pretext and . deretves the name was placed )&gt;efore an empty
. ·
· . "•'censure,of the entire world." •• . eha!r at!@ conte.Ym;e,laple. . . . .
·• Thi't\E!Oldoans reportedly ~board the Otflcials said.'. ; ..
a Korean Air LineS jetliner that was
shot dOwn by the Soviet Union an
were beading back to their homeland, say frlend9 who expressed
U.S.S.R.
U.S.S.R.
shock at their loss.
The victims were identified
Thursday as Kyoung Hun Min, 26, a
sophomore physics major at Ohio
University In Athens: Dr. Mlng·
Than Weng, 40, a former senior
mechanical engineer at- General
Electrlc-Evendale; and Mason
Chang, 24, a sales trainee at the
S. Korean747 Shot Down
Solon offices of Waxman Industries
10 am EDT -A~rhner d'eparts Anchorage
12 noon - Plane detected by So~let raaar
Inc.
2· 12 pm -Soviet DIIOI makes VISual cohtacl
Another passenger, Alice
2 26 pm -Sov~el piiOIIires miSSile and
Ethraimson·Abt. 23, was Identified
" target (7471 destroyed"
as a former Wittenberg University
2 38 pm - Airline r disappear s from rad ar
student who gradualed this June.
Professor Kw.in Lee, adviser to
the unM!rslty's Korean StudeDt
ibis map !~bows llle Intended and repol1ed route! of 'l'lnlrlldky. Acc:ordlng to the u.s. '!late Deparirnent ..
Association, said Min planned to fly
a SoiJih Korean 74'ljelllner whlcll wu repo~ shot heat se e'inl missile was fired flom an SU-15, one of
back to Seoul with his lather, "but
down by a Soviet miMIIe near Sakhalin Island etpt flghiers tracking the airliner. (AP l.aserphoto).
they couldn't find a seat, so his father
asked him to go first.''

Three Ohioans

Nation's jobless rate remains at 9.5 percent
.

WASHINGTON (AP) -America's c!v!Uan jobless
rate held steady at 9.5 percent last month, the
, government reported today, leaving nearly 10.7
m!lllon people out of work on the eve of the Labor Day
weekend.
About ;m,OOI people fwrxl jobs In August. But the

overall c!villan unemployment rate remained
unchanged because lOO,IXXl other Americans resumed
their search for work, but failed.
' N~. the total number of people with jobs
reached 101.6 mtlllon, an all·time high. Since last
December, when joblessness hit a post-Depression
peak of 10.8 percent and more than l2 million

Americans were out of work, some 2.5 m!lllon have
fotmdjobs.
The jobless rate came as no shock to Reagan
administration ortlc!a!s and private analysts, who said
before today's Labor Department report that the
dramatic 0.5 percentage point plunge In civilian
joblessness from June to July was a one-time
phenomelton.
Another unemployment rate, which Includes more
than L6 million anned services personnel slationed In
the Uniled States, rose mlnlmally !rom 9.4percent to
9.5 pes cent In August.
·
Department analyst Deborah Klein termed that rise
"slatlstlcally Insignificant."

.

Aseparate sutvey of business payrolls showed a net
drop of 410,1ro In employnient last month, due largely
to the strike by three unions against the American
Telephone &amp; Tfi'legraph Co., which Idled more than
675,Jro workers.
.
Altogether, Inial unemployment stood at 10,699,1Xll,
up from 10,590,Jro In July. ·
Unemployment among adult men, the traditional
family bread-winners, remained at 8.8 percent In
August. Amoitg adult women, the rate rose slightly,
from 7.9percent to8percent.
Within the other categories, the rates were:
-Teen-agers, 23.0 percent, up from 22.8.
-Whites, 8.2 percent, unchanged.

Syracuse Council
seeks cruiser bid
By~TmCROW

Syracuse CouncU Thursday night
agreed to advertise for a new pollee
cruiser and 250 tons o1. asphalt for
paving.
· Bids for a cruiser must be
received by the village by 7: Jl p.m.
oo Oct. 6. Bids for 250 ton of asphalt,
more or less, must be received by
noon on Sept. JJ.
. Councn discussed the paving of
College Road from Third Street to
Where the fonner U.B.Church once
stood, Fourth Street, a portion of the
flOOd road and the street leading to
Rustle Hills. The number of streets
could cban8e depending 00 the cost
of the project.
Inolherbuslness,councUgaveth!!
!Ire department approval to advertise fiJI' bldl fir a new fire truck as
8001181 lheyreclvetbelrcommunlty
block grant nmey In the amount of
$28,(Ql.
Maya- Eller Plckefts reported he
had received a letter from the State

Department of Hlghways saying
that the vtllage Is responsible for
Improving the berm above D J's In
upper Syracuse.
Al:cordlna to Pickens, the road Is
1Jrea1c1Da up Where a culYI!I't goes
under the hlgllway causing the road
topveway.
OwnM'fl wiD contact the ooor
reprdlnJthe sltuatloo.
It wu also noted that t1ve
IICCidentaha'lll!occurredlnthe18111e
ipCJt In upper !\vraCue IBr the
LIJrilent J*Upet t.v IIIDce the State

Heart attack kills
Senator Jackson

Hlghway widened the highway In
June.
Last night cwncU hired Or1s
Hubbard to paint a white llhe on the
rlgbt side of the highway where the
accidents have OC!:u!Ted. WUI!e
Guinther suggesled that reflectors
also be placed at the site.
It was suggesled that possibly
Syracuse and Racine could share
the cost In strlplng the skies of the
highway.
Hubbard was also employed to
oversee the general relief workers
scheduled to work In the village.
John Bentley presented the clerktreasurer with jii\Jteedl tntellng
$376 tram the recent tennis tournament, sponsored by Clark's Je.
we!ry. It was placed In the park
fund.
George Holman, pool manager,
suggested that $2,1Ul of the pool
funds be placed In pool repair.
CwncU agreed to malcethe lranller
at the next meeting. Holman staled
that the pool will Close the day after
Labor Day.
Jack Williams 8lll10UJ1CEd that the
pool committee wW meet with
Holman and the llfi!IIIIBI'dlln two
weeks.
In W8l 8IIIIOUIICed that three
memben of COWicil had met with
BIU Wickline, coun1y auditor con·
Ol!l'11llli the I* ml ordinance on
t:rallen.
'Ibe ordinance wW be l'l!fem!d to .
Rick CIOIV ud e l'lllllllr macte:
(Continued on page 12)

EVERE'IT, Wash. (AP) -Sen.
Hemy M. Jackson. the powerful
"~cold

IDtUUSIM"'NDIIIII-II&amp;....,,_.,_.,,DWIIIL,.._.,
lierehlhJIP•wx 1 J«,tlediDitllliamea&amp;EvtnU.W"'*'gtm,
- - iiJIIJQ' Ill ..... I II
1/e Jaft Itt • , . , . . . . Willi of
_...,.U.S. c-z •• ....-- lbe • 1!111....., of a
NIIWDII'Ical Iiili 1 Oinllllll bJ . _ bJ tile Soviet UlliaD.
1

(AP I

s

pbaeo).

.

.,
I

-Blacks, 20.0 percent, up !rom 19.5.
-Hispanics, 12.9 percent, up from 12.3.
Private economists, meanwhile, said they expect
unemployment will decline only gradually In the 11ext ·
few months.
"It's probably going to stay about the same," said
David Ernst of Evans Economics Inc., a forecasting
!irm In Washington.
Nar!man Behravesh of Wharton Econometrtcs In
Philadelphia said "the general trend (In the
unemployment rate) Is downward, but slowly
downward. You've got a combination of growth In the
labor force and slower growth In the economy."

warrior" Democrat who

combined hardllne anti-Soviet
stands with liberal views on social
Issues, ts dead after sut!erlng a
massive heart attack at hJs home.
Hewas71.
Jackson, who failed In two bids at
the presidency but never lost an
election In his home state of
Washington, died Thursday night,
just hours after holding a news
conference to bUster the Soviet
Union for shooting down a Korean
jetliner the day before.
The 45-year congressional veteran died within an hour after being
trough! to Providence Hospital, just
12 blocks from his Everett home.
Jac~n. whoeedeath stunned those
who knew him for his hard-driving
scheduleandenergetlcl!festyle,had
never been In the hospital before,
except to meet with Its board of
direclm's and sip tea with Its
Catholic nuns.
"I always thought he was lndestructable. ... He took exceptional
. care of himself," said fanner Sen.
Warren G. Magnuaon, O-Wash, who
oerved 28 yean In CoiJiress with
Jackson. "I lalt a great persooa1
friend. We were very cloae."'
Denny Miller, Jackson's adm!nJs.
trative assistant, read from a
prepared statement at a hospltal
news caateence. He said Jackson
had been at June with hls wife,
Helen, and collapsed In bed aboot

7:Jlp.m.
"SI!n. Jackson had watched the
evening news on television with
Mrs. Jacksor and, complaining of
not feeling too well, went to bed
early," Miller said.
Soon after her retired, Miller and
a friend of the Jacksons', Or.
Haakon Ragde, came to the house
and found Jackson stricken In bed.
Dr. Kirk Prindle, a cardiologist,
said doctors helleve a massive heart
attack kllled the senator. "Despite
45 minutes of Intensive care, he did
not respond at all," he said.
Jackson, Washington's senior
senator, had been suf!er!ng from a
chest cold. Miller said, but had been
well enrugh to keep appointments
and hold the news conference 1n
Seattle.
"The senator returned from the
Peq&gt;le' s Republic of China last
Sunday," Miller said. "He spent
three days at his Everett home
treating the illneSs ...
At the news conference, Jackson
called the Soviet downing of the
KoteanAirLlnesBoelng747 an "act
of barbarism.''

"Their conduct was absolutely
barbaric," he said, but added that a

response would not be
suitable.
Jackson did not smoke, drank
little and exercise&lt;) reUglously. The
son of Notweglan Immigrants, he
delivered newspapers while tn
school, earning him the niclmame
··~.··

mUltary

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