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                  <text>Be~gals,

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:~ Wlt.JTHROP

post

ope~g

.THE CR11"\DCON716T
I

SA'r'6 }II'/

LITTL6 ''
C$RL'i.t?N'r NS'E'G ~

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~AFTERA~L ...

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· Cross soldier ·
wiDs nee~s finances

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at y

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at World's Fair

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Riggs' Range~ettes

Browns

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en tine

'VoUI ,No.91
C.,.,• htod 1912

1 Sec:llon, 12 Pogea
U C.nt1
A. Multimedia '"'· New1paper

21 die
•
In Ohio ·
wrecks
By The Associated Press
Four motorcycle riders and three
pedestrians were among the 21 people killed In traffic accidents
around Ohio over the weekend, the
Highway Patrol said. There were
two double-fatality crashes.
The patrol counts·fa talities from
6 p.m. Friday to midnight Sunday.
The dead:

Gusty Winds thwart
. firefi8hlers .
CAL!m'OGA, Callt. - Em~Uc, gusty wtnds whipped a 3,fiDacre
.

wlldtlre back up the flank of Mount St. Helena above Napa Valley's
northernmost vineyards SUnday as tlreflghters conta!Md 75 perrent
. of the blaze.
·
•'The flames keep shifting back and forth, and with those erratic .
winds, It's hard tosay.ttnellre'sgolng)odo," saldBobMacleaJi,
a state Department of Fo~ ~Uon officer. .
·
By SUnday night the fire, fanned by Jl mph wll¥ls, was working Ita
way up the mountainside. The flaqles were moving to the north,
away from developed areas, said Dave Drennan, another departmllnt spokesman.

SUNDAY

Mi.s s America cho~n Saturday

Pri.scill-a 's Po
tM SICK OF

Eel Sullivan
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Dl

MY U

OF MY MINt::'.'

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OUIT

IT.' SHE'S

GeNNA GET A PIECE
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A1LANTIC CITY, N.J.- Miss America 1983, a blue-eyed blrn\de
wbo lett a Job making doughnuts In a small
town to seek a
s~I~glngjcareer, says sbe wW reign with ~ 'noblesse oblige."
"I wtil spend this whole year giving of Debbie, " Debra Sue Maf.
tett, of Anaheim. Call!;, said Sunday,-appearing fresh and vivacious
aiter only one hOur's sleep.
.
The neWly crow!led Miss Amertca, formerly Miss Callfomla, said
sbe wants to be active tn community and charity work, especially on
behalf of crippled children and cancer victims.
Miss Maffett wore ber rhinestOne-studded crown as sbe received
reporters SUnday morning, after being crowned Saturday night.

MASON FATAL- Point Ple••ant and emergeuey 1be wrecllage was discovered 810Ulid 2 p.m. by Mr.
medical perBonnel helped remove the body of Tho- and Mrs. Henry Rollins, IU. 2, Leon, wbo were pass. mas G. Busli1 25, Rt. 2, Leon~ from acarwldch appar- lng by. lnvellllgatlng olftcers said Bush apparently
enlly lest oontro1 and went off W.Va. 2 at W.Va. 62 died Instantly In tbecrash. Bush's body was removed
• nearKrodeiParkshoril)'after2a.m. Sundily,crash- to the West VIrginia medical emmlner's olftce In
lng t.hnluJh a guardrail and strlldng several lreeJ. Soulh Charleston. (Pholo by Larry Ewing).

Reagan will campaign _in Ohio ·

200 escape fiery

COLUMBUS, Oblo ....,. Pres!4ent Reagan may travel to Ohio for a
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... LIKE'

~NG-

600KS I HATE
WA'TCHING TV

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S~THAT

MAKE ME. '$1CK"'

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,Sept 2!,) lc:!\-'Ordtng to Ohio Republican Chairman
....1~-~
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· .-.rA~o..~-.&amp;oCM:
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· The GOP Ieeder said Saturday the visit bas been tentatlely sche.duled and Reugan may come to Columbus or Cincinnati; or both.
Plans.for the ,vtstt lll'e expected to be·tinned up early this week
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Jet crash today

with the White House, Colley Said.
''The date ts not conflimed," he said. "It Is In the planning stage."
· Colley said Reagan's vtslt would prol)ably Include a public tuncUon and a tUnd:raiBer.
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WELL, I · DID IT."
! ,GAVE HERA

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CHAMPAIGN, ID. - Referee Richard McV.ay ot Westerville, .
Ohio, died of lin apparent massive heart attack Saturday after col- ·
lapsllig during the Michigan State-Dllnols Big Ten football Contest,

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• hospital oftletals·said. -- · --- - ·
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1be 56-year old suburban Columbus man fell suddenly to the turf

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mld·fleld,. just· setonds after· a play wllh about 10 minutes .

rernatnlng In the first half..

were
tnJIIfl!d.·
The Spanish charter company

, · · .Several doctors and trainers from both squads worked on McVay
·• for about 10 rrllnutes before he was rushed to Burnham City Hospital
; : ,fn Champaign, '
:
. · Desplte .effor!S at cardio-pulmonary resuscitation, he was pro- ·
·( - "'oomcei!'.deaqi.sald ():harlotte.Golden.Burnham nursing supervisor.

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DUSTY CHAPS

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Decision

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Spantax said In a statement from
Its headquarters In Palma de Majorca that the plane crashed after
havtng "technical dl1flcultles." ·
· . The news agency EFE, quoting
nillltary sources at the Malaga alr~· said the.right engine faUed on

w on'. railroad issue ·
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WASHINGTON: - A sl!!&amp;le rail system stretching from the_Pa·
clflc NorthWeSt am~ to the Gulf Coast woUld be created If
the goveripnent'~ propcsed merger of three profitable
western rallnlads.
'I,be Intersta.te Cornrn'el'('e Commtsslon, which has been considerIng the merger for two _years, was schedl!lild to vote on the proposal
at a cl05ed meeting today. A news conference was scheduTed .
afterward.
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Industry and government sources say they expected approval of
the new ralltoad, wblcb would Hnk the ~ Pacific, Western
~aciDc and Union Pacific Into a system covertng 21 states.

5an.soin.

HFFe AfTER ·

The plane crashed Into a tree
nursecy shortly after taking off
from this city on Spain's southern
Mediterranean coast, pollee said.
The civil governor's office said
first reports listed 00 passengers as
being evacuated from the plane
and carried to ambulances.
An unldentilled Italian couple
screamed at firemen and crash
crews to rescue their two children
inSide the plane. EFE re(Xlrted.
The agency said the jet was burn·
mg near the airport and alongside
the Cadiz-Ba rcelona highway,
which pollee bloCked off In case of
an explosion. ,

SATURDAY

ELYRIA - Francis and Edith
Mansfield, ages 00 and 61, respectively, of North Royalton, In a twocar accident on Ohio 82 In lorain
· County.
MASSILWN - Linda M. Delble.
16, of North Lawrence, a pedes-

trian, In a car-pedestrian accident
on Ohio 93 In Stark County.
·
MIDDLETOWN - Russell
Smith, 36, of Miamisburg, a motorcycllst In a one-vehicle accident on
Ohio 73 In Mlddlewwn .
MOUNT. Gll..EAD - Bernice
Miller, il, of Fredericktown. In a
two-Car accident on Ohio 3141n Morrow County.
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LEBANON '- Albert J . Boi:fe.
son, 42, of Leesburg, In ·a one-liar
smashup on U.S. 22 in Wmten
County . .
FREMONT - Jesse C. Flores,
18, and Peter J . Rendon, lS, both of
F)'emont, when their car crashed
oft a Sandusky County road.
SANDUSKY- James D. Swne,
19, of Sandusky, when his car le:t an
Erie County road and slammed
Into a pole.
(Continued on page 10)

anything., •

Glenn considers
_,presidential race

a:

'(a) '!Jj; COUPI.~ MVI~ lHf; fa~PT"IQJ
Wlll7

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the takeoff run.
A Spantax official here said earlier that :m of the passengers and
the crew, said to number 13, escaped unburt. Pollee had first reported there were no lnj urtes.
Pilot Juan Perez reported a vi·
bration In the plane after starting
down the runway and said he tried
10 abort the takeoff, the Spantex of·
flclal said.
Angel Fernandez, one of the passengers who escaped, said the
plane did not appear to have the
power to take off, "either that or the
plane was carrying excess
weight.'' He said the plane crashed
so quickly, "there wasn't time for

MALAGA, Spain (AP) -A Span·
Ish c~r jet eiU'OUte to New York
with 3!K) passengers crashed and
burst Into flames shortly after ta·
keoff from the Malaga airport today. Pollce.conflnned at least one
dead and said 12 people were bellev'ed trapped In the flaming
Wreckage.
Authorities also said 100 people

Hear,t
att~~k
cl~s Qhio
official
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DELAWARE ;-Steven R. Mulllns,
26, of Cardington, In a carpedestrlan accident on U.S. 42 In
Delaware County .
GREENVIT.LE - Rafael Garcia, on a Darke County road. No
other details available.
COLUMBUS - Patrick A. Os·
borne, age and hometown unlrnown, In a one&lt;ar accident on I.71
In Franklin County.
'IOLEDO - Unidentified male
pedestrian struck by a car on Oh!o 2
In Lucas County.
CINCINNATI -Ray Kilburn, 36,
of Cincinnati, In a motorcycle accident tn anclnnatl .

GleM said his staff has paid close
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Sen.
attention
to his Impact In recent pol·
John Glenn of OhiO says be Is se!tical
polls.
riously considering seeking the 1004
Democratic pr ~ sldentlal
nonUnation.
·
" ... Without even bavtng a polltl·
"But I have never :Indicated a cal action committee or a nation·
probabUity one way or the other," wide organization In place and
Glenn said Sunday In an Interview working, we continue to keep movfollowing a speech to a political ac- Ing up In the polls and the opinions
'IOKYO- Typ~ Judy, TearEd~ (lePtral Japan &amp;milay,
tion conference of the AmeriCjlll of people," he said .
•' cutting a~ swath with w~-hlgh flooding, landslld'es aild
,,'· 79 mph winds thlitJeft scores 1:.1 peq&gt;fe dead or Injured, thousands
,Federation of State, County and
"We've just about run out of the
Municipal Employees.
little leftover campaign money we
bor))elesa lijid lfiiiiSPOrta1100 ~. ··
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"I'm looking at It very carefully had from i9fll,. so we're going to
Authorities reported at le8st 13 deaths and 116 Injuries. F-Ifteen
and
I'm certainly not happy with have to form an exploratory com·
. people were -~~ feared swept up bi the ~lq~t­
the
way
our economy Is going and mlttee or political action ·corruniters. Downtown TOk:YO was severely.st;rldten!
some
ot
.our foreign policy;" · ihe tee shortly to raise some funding
The NatiOnal POlice Agency said more than 00~ homeS wt'll'e · ·
fonner
astronaut
said. "I have not . just 10 pay tor the travels that we
floOCled ln,21 states llCro\IS central Japait. Three.boats sank and· ~t ;
fueled
speculation
Idly on this. I'm expect to do bl!tWeell now and the
' least 34 bridges were washed out, It sajd.
.;.
looking Into It very sertously.''
end o£ the year.''
·
GleM sald he haS visited about 00
states 'ln the past year to speak at . In a 3:)-mtnute speech totl:le lead·
...:_.L · ~
t
· t · , · statewide DemOcratic · functions eJ1lhip from AFCME IQcal unions In
· '::' and assess ,his personal political cihto Glenn delivered an attack on
~aer
1 •\'· strength
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~~ Reagan's economic poll·
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. Mostlyckqlytolllg1ltWithaOOperoelltcllanCelt~~~~"!• , .-!., "We'Ube-atliandproba- cleS. Hesaldthll&amp;epol!cii!Swllllead
''
~ In ~mid-D. Wll!lls -~ly -5-10 lDIJO. ~· ~ ~'
make · up . my pwn mind, to Democratic viCtories In tbe fall
cloudyandcontlnut!dwannandhumld,wltha:D~ch8nbe\JI&amp;' • ' ·. .Wbether 8lliiOIIIlCed or not, by ~1ectlcJIS. .
~ Hiatl-II!JJO.
·.
· ·
~ · ~atoraf!er,theflnt"'tbl!
·
·
·
Ill I
h111o Fol..ihe $ellator -.a'ld. ''We';.re- • ', "I doli1t tl1tnk peq&gt;le 81'1! going to
·.. I ••• ' 111
1'1~. • · ·
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\ ; $!e'!ved exceuent ~ recepuo11 /, ~~gree that the president's eco.
.a .""•h~;••••l· r I " " ' ·.,.~ ~ · · , ~'tbebappter~ththe~ ' IIOOilc'i&gt;roeramtsvlolt)nglor.that
.'l'lw • 1 -~· 'IW I COM!erd!l llliPiit Ia tPIIi . . W • . •'· . . . we'Ve received '" · ·
· ' It's likely to wodl with tlils huge,
.., . . . . . . . . . . ;I 1lljlll~.JM8li 'IIIW
1·\JJ!!tnnretumedto.ohtotromMia-·~ moourriental,recordfederaldefldt
. . . . . Dw: ' C &amp;ld ~-.
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. . . Where bli spent J'l1daY lll1d be's ruft.up afll!r ~ on
1 lflllll'd&amp;Y~far,~ · ' lryl;ngto'aetabf\lanc'E'fbw:lget_,by
t
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· ~-_ . ~·~"'"":.._~~...._,· _ ~W: 'rirutl ca~-.
1984," he~· • ·. ·

Typhoon Judy leavett .scores dead

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J.Orecas

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IUNGII ·:viCl'ORY BELL - I t had been a Jon&amp;, dry spell but
~ Ducu, allll!lllb\lr It tbe ua Soutbem football teain ~rot the
~lr•••n ol rlniiDI *be vlderJ bel, Frldq Dl&amp;ht folloWing a Sf-211 ~
G111p11 "'• Fedenlllocldll(. II W1!11 ti.e IChool's fin&amp; football victory
· ~ *be eull'ly. weelm of;lhe 1J'lll ~palpl. Scott Wolfe phoQ).

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. F'ornera'f

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Commentary

Yanks. defeat ·B rewers, .KC rips Twins

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What .vacation? ---...;--~-:----__:.J_am.....es..:·. ~J._K__U;:_pa""":'tr:.. . ic. ,. .it

Daily Sentinel

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WASHINGTON - The Labor White House." The ,Inane and pro- .
Mr. Reagan can go to Barbados. vacation?
Day breaks have come and gone, vtnctal notion Is advanced that a He can go to Europe. He can go . Lyndon Johnson· sought escape
but this stw may be an appropriate president Is loafing U he Isn't home to hls ..California ranch. He by driving helter·s_kelter ~ hls.
opportunity to say a few things ".wedded to Washington."
can summon a hellcopter and nee Texas ranch. Richard Nlxiln 'took; ·
about the presldeni and hls supThiS Is hogwash. As the word Is to Camp David tor a weekend. But long·walks.,Gerald Fol'(l sougllt S~·:
cease with a few holes ot golf.
posed ".vacations." Let me raise a
coiiunorily · understood, a "vaca· there Is no escape. A president rhetorical question : What tion"ls,a tlmeofre5pltefromone's any president - Is tied IIi his job as Jimmy Carter played lennta an¢·
ROBERT L. WINGETI
vacations?
labors; It Is a period spent away he Is tied to his own shadoW. He went fishing. Mr. Reagan rides and:·
' ge!'
Puhll~hrr
The press has been having a from horne In rest and relaxation. travels, unavoidably, with a small chpps woods. Let us not begrild.
any
of
them
a
single
passing
hour
....
snide time with the Issue. In "J)oo. Webster's call a vacation period armybeslde 'blm. 'l'hemanwlththe
BOB HOEFLICif
PAT WHITEHEAD
Most
ot
the
time,
ot
course,
·a:
nesbury," satDist Garry Trudeau · ot exemptloq from work." I have football; bearing the day's code for
Gt•ntTttl Mun11~rr
created a White House aide In known the past five presidents well response to nuclear attack, Is never president has to be physically pres- '
charge of presidential holidays. enough to assert tljls as a fact: No more than 00 seconds away. Uke ent In the White Hpuse. TelePhones;
DALE ROTHGEB, -:JR.
Newsweek magazine assigned president. while In office, ever en· Orestes, who was pu,rsued by the are marvelous devices, and a presl·:
Nt'I.U Ellitnr
three reporters to tabulate Mr.
joys as much as an h~ur's . Furies, a president Is pursued by dent's telephones are more marve-;
4
Reagan's time In the hammock.
'vacatl0n."
paperwork. Vacation? What lous than anyone's. .
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A MEMBER uf Tht· AKJ~ut · '- trd Prt"~r; . lnhmd llull)· t•rt·:o.., Asr;udwliun and lht•
"Not sinCe Richard Nixon," said
Aml'rh ·11111 Nr"·lip.llpt·r l'ubli.~ h t'r'li Ali~tM ' hllhtn .
"
Newsweek, " has a chlet executive
I.F:TIF.RS OF OPINif)l\l 1n· "t·kurnt"d. Tbry ~~ ~IULd hr l t"ti~ lhwn 300 "nrds Inn)! .' All
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o( the United States spent so many
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il'!ll'I'S 111 rr !«ihjt&gt;rt tn l:'fiilinjo! anti m m~ t ht• sltnt'fl Ylitb twmr. ~tddrl'l!l ttnd ll•lt•phi.Htt'
• days away from the White House.
numtlt'r. Nu urwii(IW'd 1.-tt.ton ..-·ill bt· publidwd . INitt'N 11hhuld bto in J(uud tll~lt' . .addrMlStrlJ(
i~!lltl"li, ltU\ pt't'IOUillllliti~~ .
When he returns to the capltalatter
the Labor Day· weekend, Reagan
wUl have taken 12 mostly vacation
trtps fn his first 20 months In otllce,
totaling 110 days, or almost ·16
weeks. By contrast, Jimmy Carter
had knocked ott tor orily 62 days,
mainly on weekends, at the' same
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Suppose you're Jewish and a strong supporter of civil rtghts for
point of hls term. Gerald Ford was
. '·
blacks. Then one day you receive - anonymously - a crudely drawn
even more wed&lt;led to Washington:
anti·Semltlc comic book supposedly produced by a black group to which
four vacations, amoimttng to 44
you have made sizable contributions.
days."
Or say you're the publlsher of a newspaper that has always stood for
The Newsweek wrtters ended
equal opportunity. Then you are Informed by a nameless telephone caller
their plec;e with a ·shrewish and
that the most respected figure In black America Is meeting a white woman
sniffy sentence: "Most Americans
tor a sexual tryst at an oot-of·town hotel.
don't have · 100 days every 20
Or you're the head of a mllltant black organization this Is trying to
months to spend In ,any vacation
arrange a cOordinated attack on racism by a number ot black groups.
spot, let alone a 688-acre ranch In
Then you receive In the maO a death threat apparelltly written by the
the sky."
leader ot the group that you met with the nlght·before.
This ldnd of carping tells us more
Or you're the leader of a group that Is planning a demonstration In
about the IgnOrance ot the authors
front of City Hall. A "member'' of the group suggests abandoning non- · tliim · about the pleasures ot :the
violence In favor ot bloody confrontation with the poUce.
. president. weareaskedtodrawthe
Or you're running tor publlc office as a performer. Suddenly your
Inference th11t a president Isn't
opponent released documents that "prove" you belonged to a subversive
working when he Is "away from the
group as a teenager.
These aren't plot lines for the latest Robert Ludlum novel, but real-lite
·
scenarios from the annals of the FBI.
This ldnd of polltlcal harrassment was standard operating procedure
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tor the FBI and many state and local poUce forces untll1976, when public
Ohio's
unemployment
rate
rebenefits
.
.
can'thelp
everybody,"
Ross
said.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) revulsion at the American adoption ot poUce-state tactics normally asso"The biggest thing that I hear mained In the doubiiH!Igtt category
"Another side of that (jobs Issue) •
Ohioans appear to be giving their
ciated with totalitarian regimes Inspired corrective action by Attorney
during
August,
cUm
bing
to
lZ.
7
per·
·
around
here
Is
what
are
we
going
to
Is
a
frustratllxl about having to pay .'
legislators an earful about the
General Edward Levi.
cent
from
the
11.7
perCent
rate
In
do
and
how
are
we
going
to
fund
the
for
welfare
for those woo have not
state's dismal economic climate
The Attorney General's Guldellnes on Domestic Security Investlga·
state
without
Increasing·
taxes
July.
Nationally,
the
jobless
rate
been
wwtng
to work In the past and·
and the jollless~ that goes with
tions - called the Levi Guidelines - restrtct the ability ot the FBI to
when
everybody's
unemployed."
.
was
unchanged
from
9.8
percent.
a
good
bit
of
support for workfare •
it.
•
Investigate lawtul poUttcal activity. They Insure that the agency's Investi"I
would
haye
to
say
11'105t
people
no
question
about
II.'!
so
long
as
It
doesn't
take anybody's
"There's
H a rllndom sampling ot House
gations are •'designed and conducted so as not to Umlt the tun exercise ot
seem
a
Uttle
apprehensive
of
the
Rep
..
Dale
Locker
said
when
asked
job
away
who
currently
has a job," ·
and Senate members Is any Indica·
rights protected by the Constitution and laws of the United States."
what
voters
were
talking
about.
tuturenotonlyln
their
jobnecessar·
Speck
said.
,
tlon, that concern even eclipses any
One ot the most Important protections, or course, Is the freedom frm!1
Uy, but If it's an older person they
The CrooksviUe RepubUcan said ·
resentment over IncreaseS In the '"The job situation."
governmerit·sponsored dlslntormatlon. But before 1976, the FBI freare
worried
about'
their
son
or
·
Locker,
D-Anna,
said
he
has
other
Issues being voiced Include
state sales and 'Income taxes.
quently engaged In the circulation of dlslntormatlon about polltlcal
Rep.
Eugelle
Branstool
daughter,"
sensed
an
almost
"parilcky
feetlng
law
and
order- ''a concern ihat we ·'
"I just talked to a lady In Millers·
dissidents .
ot
where
do
I
turn''
among
people
said.
just
aren't
being tOugh on crlrpl· 1' .
OOrg; she and her llusband are both
Under lis Counterintelligence f'r9gram (COINTELPRO), the na·
"I
think
they're
just
concerned
nals"
and
soariJ\'k' iitiuiY bllll" ''(-·
out
of_
worK,
Including
those
~
to
laid otr," Said Rep. James Ross, R·
tiona! poUce agency consistently engaged In conduct descrlbed ·by a U.S.
about
their
econornlc
weU·being,"
welfare
who
have
found
ellglbillty
Both
candidates
said there has ''
Coshocton.
Senate committee as "a sophisticated vigilante operation aimed sq~ly
the
Utica
Delnocrat
said.
requirements
more
strict·
than
they
been
Uttle
grumbling
about tax In- · .:
The couple had contacted him at·
at preventing the exercise of First Amendment rights of speech and
Sen.
Sam
Speck,
Branstool's
N~
beUeved.
creases
approved
by
the Gene1'al . ter learning they were lnellllble for
association ." ·
·
Locker
said
constituents
gener·
vember
election
oppo~nt,
said
the
Assembly
In
ali
attempt
to~ the ·
~In welfare aid because the jobNow the Levi Guldellnes are facing, revision, as revealed by FBI
BlJy
aie
upset
over
taxes.
"But
I
concern
oyer
jobs
also
sparked
state's
wobblY
budget
In
baiabce.. ·."
less benefits they were receiving
Director Wllllam Webster In June 24 testimony before the Senate Subcom·
not
been
receiving
It
strlctly
comments
about
welfare
and
a
new
have
·
"I've
not
had
any
!lassie
on that," - ·
and other assets e·x ceeded
rnlttee on Security and Terrorism. '!,'hat subcommittee Is chaired by Sen.
on'
what
the
state
has
done,"
he
law
reqUiring.
able-bodied
recipBranstool
said.
·
regUlations.
Jeremiah Denton, R·Aia .. who has urged Increased surveillance of groups
said.
to
work
In
return
for
their
Ients
"I've been able to help some. You
that favor such causes as "clvll·rtghts reform, prison reform or a nuclearweapons freeze."
Webster offered no hint at how the Levi GuldeUnes might be revised.
But he did assure conservative Sen. John East, R·N.C., that he "wUI be
'
pretty much pleasEd" with the revisions.
....
Most clvii·Ubertles organizations believe that the current standards
NEW YORK (AP) - One ot the a .,year weekly · newsletter, told •week's market ·comments Me stW . had much to do with the surge In ,
are too weak and taU tD provide complete protection against the notnrtous lessons of credit and stock market readers In Its Aug. 16 issUe that con· In effect."
stock prtres; couel!ed their ecoFBI abuses of past years.
These two newsletters were not nomic views In essentially bearish
upheavals during the past week Is dltlons were so bad they had •:all
Any dllutlon of Levi's prohibitions against poUtlcally motivated lnves·
terms . •
that you 500uld never try to bet on but ellmlnated any hope for a alone. Some or the best·known econ·
v
tlgatlons would be a step backward, and any revisions that please East and short·tefn\ 1\Vlsts In prk;es. Not summer rally."
oo_¥.!ithad grown Increasingly con.·.
The Dow Jones Industrial aver·
Denton could signal a return to the dlslnformatlon, harassment and disrup- even, the pros or the crapshooters · · The Ruff Times, which publishes cerilt!d i:lurlng the past tew weeks.
age rose more than 00 points on
tion techniques used so widely In the past.
Econon\lsls Albert Wojnllower
· 50 editions a year for $145, carried
are good at that.
both Wednesday and Friday, and •
SlgnUlcantly, no one at the FBI -Including Webster -claims that the
'Just two examples provide an just a brlet section In Its Aug. 13 and Henry Kaufman, whose ac·
ended the week with a gain of 81.?.4 ·
Levi Guidelines have hampered federal law enforcement In any way.
Idea of what can happen: ·
Issue. Beneath the headline '.'Dull, knowledgement that Interest rates
points, by far the·biggest one-week
'
.
· So, why must they be revised?
lntenlatlonal Moneyllne, a $282- Dull, Dull" It said In tull: "Last might continue to tall may have
numerical advance ever.
It the only answer Is to tit the paranoid poUtlcal fantasies ot the
Senate's newly dominant right wtng, then you had better be careful what
you say and do because the FBI may be listening In once again.

"a

ninth

Listening in

RI!'.CI!:JVE8 BIG BUG- Dave Tlllbott (3!) wbohelpedleadSoutbem to Ill t1r1t victory Gil the pldlrollln lbree -recel\'es a big hur
lrom 1111IIIJIIft!CIMive flllldllrllla &amp;he wllllln&amp; m1Dutes of Friday'a~­
win over FederaiiJoc:lrln«. Tlllbott nl8bed for 172 yards while scoring
tliree touclldowns.
.

Revived Montreal
back in east race

a

By Allocl••ecl PrMs
For five months, they had been
11M! waliDowers ot the National
l,.eague East, standing Idly by
"hlle guys from St. Louis and Phi·
lildelphla took turns IIi first place.
But now, three weeks from sea·
son's end, the Montreal Expos are
tlnally flexing their muscles. Just
at the right time.
"We haven't reached our poten·
tlal," said Warren Cromartie.
"Now's the time we're going to
have to do It, In September. I love
September, I've always done well
In September...
The rest of the Expos are finding
It most agreeable, too. A1ter falling
to seven gaines back as latea8Aug.
20, thi!,.Expos moved to within 2~
games nt first-place St. Louts with
an U.J thraShing ot the ChlcagoCUbs .S!,mday. The victory, which
Improved the Expos' September
record to 7.J, completed a threegame sweep In which Montreal out·
scored the CUbs 28-11.
Meis 4, Cards 1
Pete Falcone, 8-9, fired a threehitter. at the Cardinals and was
backed by Dave Kingman's two
RBI and consecutive fourth· inning
home runs by Brtan Giles and
Bruce Bochy.
Pirates 4, Phlllles 2
Dale Berra drove In three nins
with a bases·loaded double In the
slxth-lnrilng as the Pirates moved to
within 3~ games of the pacesetting Cardinals.
Pirate rtghtftelder Dave Parker,
on the disabled list since July 29
with an Injured right ·thumb, re-

Ec900_m ic climate cau.s es many CODCerilS

Credit
. lesson, never bet .on short-terni twists .
.

The paper chain of credit agreements that links developed and under·
developed ecOnomies Is being put tD a stress test these days, and neither
.borrower nor tender can say when one more tug might rip It all apart.
Already a few s!IQnds In the chain have nearly given way. Bolivia has
defaulted on payments due to U.S. commercial banks, and Mexico remains solvent only through an aid package hastily contrived In Washing·
ton and ·Basel. Switzerland.
Argentina Is over Its head In debt, owing about $40 bUiton, some otwhlch
must lle paid before the end of the year. And since some ot that money Is
owed to British banks, which aren't In a mood to refinance, a crisis Is at
hand.

Not helping at aU, of course, Is thepoorcondltlonoflenders. They too are
experiencing financial problems, along with tnnatlon, a consequence of
which Is the feellng they must run their own economies at reduced levels.
'Tills In turn makes the situation worse In the .underdeveloped nations,
some whjch depend on sales ot raw materials to the developed nations.
SinCe their sales are down, some of these less developed nations are
growing even pooer.
.
· For them to borrow more would, as you might surmise, make their
conditiOn even worse, because loans today are at very high rates, so high
that .an Industry must operate extremely etflclently simply to pay the
IntereSt due.
' '
H the world economy doesn't get moving soon, a potentially long line ot
defaulters could develop, and there is really very Uttle that any lending
nation or gl-oup of them CGU\1 do about it. That Is, except' to ~·
RetJnancing, as anyone who ever borrowed i1 dollar knows, usually add&lt;i
to costs. Moreover, the repayment,terms are irladeon the@S8Ullllltlonthat
the ~~ wUl be better able to )'llall8ge his flnapces Ba'I)(!When! dQwll
the ltnl!. But' when? there.is verr·llttle PfOIIPI!CI for quick ·tumarouJicls
among borrOWing nations. It takes Iinne - and pi'Qbably a few nn1racle8.as
weD
'
.•
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' '
~eait.ig matters 1s uae Ulldertytng hlicdillty ct natkma. Many borml'ers blame the t)ntted States b' .tbelrCOIIIIt~ inalstln&amp;that 111gb u.s.
IntereSt rate. pn!llel!llmpoulble oblltacles to de\'el
.An4 that boatUlly Jin•t 11mlted to lencler·lxiJ IOWI!I', Developed natkma 100 are ~at

ot

There Is a lot plea bargalrilng Miami."
going on In our courts ~ days.
The Justice Department has '
The .prosecutors keep saying they been after Sharkey tor years, so
have to deal with criJnlnillS to avoid .they say, "You've got a deal."
expensive trials and also to get the
Sharkey Is ·arrested on Macker..little fish to testlfy against the big el's testimony and held on $10 mUfish.
· lion ball.
The only problem with tl)e second
A1ter a week In the slammer, ,
argument Is that so many Uttle fish Sharkey tells a government a.ttor·
get off .the hook to catch ·a big fish,
ney, ".I was just a courier In the
that many times no one Is caught. · dope business. H you really want
This Is how It works.
·
some big fish, lower my ball to
"AU right; Trout, We !mow you $5,000 and I'D deliver whOever you
blew off Barracuda's head In New want."
·
Jersey, because he wasn't klcldng
"Qin you gtve us Bass?" the go.
back on the guns he sold 'to Llbya.'U vernment attornt!y asks.
you testlfy against Mackerel to the
"I'D hand you hls hl:ad on a
Grand Jury we'D drop your murder platter.''
·
charge down to diivlng without a
TlieJusticepeoplegotothejudge
llceiue."
'·
' ' and tell him Sharkey Is alley Wtt·
Trout goes for the otter, and the ·ness· In a- case they're building
prosecutors soon get a visit from
against Bass, and has to be balled
Mackerel's attonieys. '.'H you let aut.
.
sure enough, two months later '·
Mackerel ott," hili attorneys say,
"on a vagrancy charge, he'D be the Justice has~ nailed to the wall
star witness againSt Sharkey, who tor ruJI!llng the largest white slav··
. Is the biggest dope dealer south,'!f ely bu51liess In America. But he's
•

'"'lieat.

eechother. .
.
What 1s pnjved, 8ITIOilg other ttdnp, ts that nations are dependent upm
·l!lldl other'- that there II Indeed a world ecanuy that transceMI aeo- •
IP'Bphy ecooomJcs and politics, and that no!JOdY really can puD ialt d.tl
. . 11 ~ 'cbOI;IIe to be Vf!lY cyDical about It you ml&amp;llt MY- It Is unewhat .
11m11at to the depelldeDcy fA the bank oiDcer and IIIII blgtst ~
. i.ccouDL 'lbey need I!IICh other, much.u they dlllDre admlttina lt·
.

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turned to the starting lineup and
contributed three hits and two runs.
Rick Rhoden, 1~12, picked up the
victory, with Kent Tekulve ptcldng
up his 19th save.
Braves 4, Reds 3
ClaudeII Washlngton lined a tw~
out, two-run single ott reliever Ben
Hayes to cap a nlnth·lnrilng Atlanta
comeback, enabling the first-place
Braves to remain one-hall game
aheM of Los Angeles In the NL
West.
With the baseS loaded, Washing· '
ton lined a 1·1 pitch Into right field,
ball landing at the feet of on·
rushing right fielder Eddie Milner
as pinCh· ruMer Albert Hall and
·Jerry Royster scored to end the

me

game.

ReUever Steve Bedrosian, 8-6,
picked up the victory. Atlanta's
Bob Homer had a solo homer, his
31st of the year, while Johnny
Bene)! belted his 12th homer ot the
year for the Reds.
Dodgers 7' Alilnl8 3
Steve Garvey knocked In three
runs with a pair or singles as the
Dodgers stayed one-hall game lJe.
hind the Braves.
"We haven't taken advantage of
playing at home, but we're hopeful
of buDding a Dodger·type streak,"
said Garvey. "The schedule Is definitely more favorable to us than
Atlanta."
The Dodgers wUl finish the sea·
son playing entirely on the West
Coast.
Dave Stewart, ~7. pitched 3 2-3
Innings In reUef of starter Ricky
Wright for the victory.

FREE

Eastern volleyball
team has first win
EAST MEIGS -The Eastern
Eagle volleyball team got otr to a
rocky start but has rebounded In
league play tor a 1.0 league mark
and 1-3 overall record.
Eastenr's first game came with
powerful Meigs, where the Ma·
rauders overpowered a nervous
Eastern crew In the nrst game of
the season. Meigs scored 15-11, J.5.6
victories over Eastern who had
serving difficulties In their first
outing.
Eastern varsity players are Dee
BaUey, Janelle Ely, Krlstl Gaddis,
Lea Ann Gaul, Tara Guthrie,
Jackie Rapp, and Kelly Whitlatch.
Scoring for Eastern were Gaddis
with four, Guthrie three, Rapp two
and Ely two. The Eagles are
coached by Coach Pam DOuthitt.
Against Alexander, Eastern
played a great first game but
dropped the match In three sets,
13-15, llHI, and 15-10.
Eastern played an outstanding
first game, both offensively and
defensively. In the latter two sets
Eastern again had serving woes.
Serving points for Eastern wereJa·
neUe Ely with 12, Lea Ann Gaul
seven, Krtsti Gaddis with two, Dee
Dalley four, and Kelly Whitlatch
two.

dropping the 154 6pener.
A1ter Its victory over North Gal·
lla, Eastern suffered a big letdown
against Federal Hocking, dropping
two straight tilts 15-1 and !M. East··
ern faced se'veral problems and
was unable to return serves with
the Intensity It had the night before.
J aneUe Ely had four points In the
match, Gaddis two, and Gaul one.
In the preUmlnary contest with
Alexander, Eastern split In two
games with the Spartans 12·15 and

Learn all
about one of
America 's lastest
gr'owing sports.
This clinic
designed and endorsed by
Fred Bear. World Famous Archer.

Ui-9.

Overall, Eastern played a very
good match as only one reserve

player had seen action before on
the young team. Pam Riebel Is the
veteran on the club, while all the
other girls are In their first year.
Joy Brannon led the way with 13
points, Terre Wood had eight, rue.
bel one, Michelle Wilson two, Aleshla Holsinger two, and Kim Dent
one.
Eastern reserve players are Joy
Brannon, Kim Dent, Aleshla Hoi·
singer, Pam Riebel, Michelle wu.
son, and Terre Wood.
The young Eastern gals dropped
their second tnt with Federal Hock·
Ing In two tilts 15-7 and 15-13.
Eastern played wen, but Inexperience In setting up the ball proved
to be a problem. Scoring were Hoi·
singer with six, Wood with four,
WUson five, Riebel three, Dent two.

Sunday, September 19, 1982
12:00 noon To 6:00p.m.
CLINIC SPECIALISTS
Larry Farley &amp; Mary Farley • Bear Archery
Ed Bryant • Outdoor Sports

MEMBERS OF THE MASON COUNTY FIELD ARCHERS WILL
HOLD A NOVELTY SHOOT FOR PRIZES, SUNDAY, SEPT. IPTH,
NOON TO 6 P.M. THEY WILL ALSO HAVE HOT OOGS AND PLATE
LUNCHES FOR SALE.

WATCH FRIDAY'S PAPER
FOR CLINIC SPECIALS!!!

In the first league game of the
season Eastern dropped the open·
tng game, 'but came back to win the
match on Improved serving and
team play. Despite ~lng somewhat Inconsistent Eastern returned
the ball much better than
previously.
Janelle Ely led Eastern point
servlng with 11 markers, Tara
Guthrie had eight, Whitlatch seven,
Gaddis five. and Gaul three as EHS
rolled up 15-2 and 15-11 w1ns after

Copping a plea -----.-o--:---~----::----A_rt_B_uc_h_;:.:uia:,:;:..::.::.ld 3~ Toledo posts Seventh
ot
~-

Dependence stress

·''

since'bemg acq~ by the Angels
and outlasted Jim Palmer and
By KEN &amp;\PPOI'ORT
from the New York Yankees Aug. . - - - - - - - - - - - ·Mike
Flschlln's
run-scoring
single
AP Sporia Wrtler
In
the
eighth
Inning
lroke
a
gcore.
31.
· 'lbe!llewYorkYankeesaremak·
A's 4, WbUe Sox 2
lng a race aut ot the Annerlcan less tie. Sutcutte, 12-6, struck out six
Kelvin Moore, Mike Heath and
League East- they're just not In it. In pitching the low·hlt game ot hls
Jimmy Sexton drove In runs In the
VIrtually out of contentloll - 10 career.
second Inning tD pace Oakland.
games back In fourth place - the
def~dlng AL c11amp1oos are play·
Palmer started for Baltimore
Chicago starter LaMarr Hoyt,l.S531 ~PI&lt;£ ·At .3S WEST
14, allowed just six hits, but four ot
ing the role ot spoilers these d8ys. and held Cleveland scoreless over
•
Sunday, they continued to hurt the seven Innings. But the Indians · those carne In Oakland's three-run
second as the A's ended Chlcagn's
Mllwaukee Brewers with a 9-8 vtc- greeted reliever Tippy Martinez, Story OVEI' the East leeders.
, 7, with three straight singles start·
winning streak at four games. Hoyt
It was the third time that theYan- lng the eighth, InCluding Flschlln's
also lll!ve up Dwayne MUJllhy's
24th ~r In the eighth.
kees beat the Brewers In their four; RBI hit. Andre Thornton capped
game series at Yankee Stadlwn the nUJ;y with a two-run single.
Red Sox 10, 'ngers 7
Dwight Evans and Gary Allenand prevented Harvey Kuenn's
Royal&amp; 18, Twtna 7
son drove In three runs each to lead
team fron\ lmpwing Its three-.
AmOS Otis drllle!;l a two-run ,sin·
a 15-hlt attack that powered Boston
game lead ovEr· the second-place gle and Hal McRae added a sacrl·
over Detroit.
Balttmore olioies, woo lost 3.() to ftce t1y during a three-run sixth and
Cleveland~
Kaqsas City went on to batter Min·
TraWng 3-2, Boston erupted tor
The Kansas City Royals mean· nesota behind a 20-hlt attack. The
five runs In the second Inning when
they chased Detroit starter Dave
whUe,lleattheMtnnesotai\msl&amp; Royals' barrage InCluded four
Toblk, 3-8. Evans drove In two runs
7 and held onto first place·tn the AL home runs, two by WUUe Aikens,
with a bases-loaded single In the
West by one game over the Callfot- llJI!I seven doubles.
rally and the Red Sox never trailed.
nla Angels, who defeated Toronto
Luckless Terry Felton dropped to
3-2. Elsewhere, Boston autscored ().13, continuing his record tor the
Mal'iDen I, llangerll 0
Bob Stoddard and Bill Caudill
Detroit 1().7, Oakland trlnuned Chi· worst start at the beginning ot a
combined on a four·hltter and Dave
cago 4-2 and Seattle edged Texas major leagUe career. Dating back
HI.
to last year, he Is 0.16.
Revering's tlrst·lnnlng double produced
the only run as Seattle beat
Roy Smalley's one-out basesADpls S, Bkae .J~ 2
Texas.
loaded single In the
Inning
Doug DeCtnces' two RBI doubles
Stoddard, 1-1, allowed a runner to
soared the winning run and y allkee and TmliTIY John earned hls first
third
only once, In the fourth Inning,
rookie Curt Kaufman turned 1n a wtnnlng start at Anall$n Stadium
but
left
In the ninth with a man on
strong relief stint for hls nrst major
since 1971 as Cautornla beat
second
and
one out. Caudill got the
league victory.
Toronto.
last
two
outs
for his 25th save.
Kaufman went two Innings,
Jobn, J.2.11, walked one and
yielding only one hit. Jamie East· struck out one In his Drst winning
erly, ~2. was the loser.
start a !'Anaheim Stadlwnstnce Au·
Tndl-.s, 0rto1ea 0
gust,l971, when he was pltchlngfor
Rick Sutclltte fired a thfee.hltter the Chlca20 White Sox. John Is 2-1

--·-

Ill Cuurt Strtt·l
l'nml'm.v. llhin
Ut-HMISC
J) E\' IITI.:U TO TIIF.INTERf..~T HF TilE MEIGS-MASON AHfo:A

.

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Mi dllepon, Ohio

'

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.•

hiding In BrazU. He sends word that ·
he's w1Uing to come back and blow
the whlstti! on Whaie, the most n~
torioos labor racketeer In thecoun· ·
try, but only U they drop the felony
charges, and prosecute blm for
spitting In the subway.

· JusUcesayst,heycan't~that
kiJid ot deal. Bid If Bass Is w1U1ng to

a new Identity, a job and a condom!·
nllim In Palm Beacb, Florida.
Whale starts singing 8Jid the u.s. . :.:;
congressman !sa dead duck. So the . •
&lt;'ongressman otters to · testlf:Y
against one ot the "highest" ottl·
clals JnAmerlca, who has been get·
ting regular pay\)ffs from Fidel

Castro.

turn state's evidence they might reThe Justice Department lets the
duce the 100 white slavery counts to congressman plea bargain hls way .
one count of selllnk Uquor to ·a · down to ".malicious jlarldng," and • ;::
start their c~ against the "high" • ,
Bass goes for It and lo and behold government officiaL
· . ,. ,
Whale has been arrested for the · But just before they're ready to .'.. ,
first time In bls lite.
. go Into court they get a vtslt tronl '
JusUcels'prepartngtliepi'OSfiCu· the CIA, who tells them .the high ·.::
tlon when Whale drops a bom!S on government otflctal really wop(s · ~~
them. H they overlook tlil! labor tor them. They wam the Justice '"
racket and extortion 'charges, people thatlfthe,Ottlctallstrted, the .,,,.
WhalesaysbecanlmpUcateaUIII· enttreU.S.esplonaaeettortagatnst·:- ; ·
ted States congri!ssman lit a Brinks CUba wUl be destroyed.
·
_;,:
robbery. ·
', · Justice drops .the case, and with ,;,;
.raJ checks out 'yvhale's no big tlsh to try, they ao liack to ' ~
story and ~ out It's true. They flndinJ out If they can get a better - ·
p~ Whale U Ill: testltles to ev- · deal from the,COt!l'la tor brealdng ... : , ·
erytllln,g he knows, they'll gtve hll)1 up the ti!lepbone compllny.
~~~

mlnar.

·

··

:'f!le

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··''

straight MAC victory Thi!!tledown resulll!
By A.We*e!l Pret18
notil Smiley with 78 rushing yards.
NORTII RANDALL, Ohio (AP)
The UnlverilltyofToledomaynot CapusRoblnson caught four passes -Western Series, a 3-year-old colt
get the attention ot such schjlols as for 136 yards.
ridden by Homero HUdalgo, went
Alabama or Ohio State when It ·
the six furlongs Sunday In 1: 11 2·5
comes to ranking the natton's big·
On other games Involving MAC for a victory In the Forest City Han·
gest football ~· But these teams, conference favorite Miami dlcap at Thistledown.
days, the defendlhg Mid-American
drubbed Wtwam &amp; Mary 35-17,
Western Series, the pre-race fa·
Conference Champlals boast a re- ' Minnesota burled Ohio Urilverstty vorlte, paid $3.20 to win. $3 to place
cord for which those other teams
57-3, Western Michigan routed Mar· and $2.40 to show. Son Crystal ran
shall 34.() and Akron beat Eastern second and paid $6.40and$3.!ll. The
only
hope
can
.
,
d$320
Toledo's3H4MACvtctorySatur·
Michigan 14-7.
third horse, Chief Joy, pal
. ·
day over Ball State gave the
The best return for a $2 wager
Rockets a seven-game winning
Steve Fitzhugh scored on the op- was $2,335.20 and came of the third·
streak _ longest 1n the natiOn · enlng klckol! tor Miami, and the
race trlfecta 2-7-8 combination of
amqng NCAA Dlvlsloo 1·A teams. 1 Redsldns added a pair or touch· New Money, Rain Tree Lady and
Toledo, 2.0 this seasoo, had been doWns ·tn the second quarter en Fastlmer. . .
•tied with Brigham Young for the
route to their victory.
The Sunday crowd ot 4,966 bet
honor until Brigham Young lost ,_...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _S629_._782_on_the_da_Y_
's_rsces
__. _ _-l
SatUrday.
''We felt they were a tough team
coming In," said Toledo Coach Dan
Slmre11 cl Ball State. ''We went up
7.0, and then gave them some brea·
YoN'II like the.individtlaiized attention yoN receive when
thing l'!ml· I told them (his play·
ers), 'You're not the '81 champs.
yoN get your fenior portrait made at THE PHOTO PLACE..
1bla Is '82."'
Each preview sit, indlllies JQ.I2 different poses before
Regardless' cl what the Rockets
traditional oil badxlrops and in attractive outdoor settings.
were,BallstateCilacbDwlghtWal·
laCe ~ they :were good ent!lai,b .
Yotill also like oNr Te4.Irmahle pnces.
' '.
"Our-team made 11:10 ~tint·
pme mlstakel," be sald. "I
For Appointment or More Information Call
tbaulbt we Wlllbd tbl!m out the
lint bait, but we didn't. It m ned
After 5 p.m. or Weekends
..
tbatwe~ ballllnl oltelllliYel;y In
Bob
&amp;
Charlene
Hoeflich
tile.eecond belf. We )list ..!lW' ldll8r
bdlet''
THE PHOTO PLACE

DON'T LET YOUR
SON OR DAUGHTER
GO BACK TO SCHOOl
WITHOUT TAKING
THE NEWS FROM
HOME WITH THEM.
ONLY
. $33.15
.
FOR 9 MONTHS

I-UGH SCHOOL SENIORS

.

Toledo wu pll!.'ed by ThGY Ia,
who ldclfll!d a »Yard field PI and ,

.

lo9 High St.

The Oaily Sentinel
f.

!•

·fllur au. points, and .taiDJvk #.r'

•,

'

------- ---

"WE ·DELIVER''

..
'

�.

Pslge-4- The Daily Sentinel

MonCiay,

Panwoy Middllpolt, Ohio

:n, 01Jen17

Ken Anderson, the Cincinnati
quarterback and last year's NFL
Most Valuable Player, passed for
two touchdowns and 354 yards and
ran for another score for the defending American Football Conference champions. Houston fullback
Earl Campbell was the workhorse
for the oners, NShlng a~ times for
82 yards and catching tour passes

Scoreboard ...

-·-

Majors

_..._ .......

St. U:tWs at Pl\llad!lphla, lnl
OUcaao at Plttaburah. (Ill
Nt-w York at Montreal, (n)

B1De~l"raa

..........w

L

Pel.

~

Milwaukee

1M

BaiUmott'

Booton

Ill &amp;1
7962

New York

7J

81

Gl

Ill

62

0\lcaRO

76

0

Seattle
08ltlarx1
Texas

S1
00

14
113
8:1
!12

~

5)

10

.486

u~
H~

-~

It

.S70

Beach~ 18,

CSeove. RhcxiH L5
Beratob: Sprfn&amp;. a, Buckeyr N. 6

4~
13 ~
21 ~

.401

-~

-·-

Alllai'ICf' 2. can1011 'I'lmlcert o

Bltavll 26. an. Cowttry o.y o

J

"'· Slw!lMIIo. Pa. 12
Elroc*lyn lt, Rocky Rlwr H. tie

24

&amp;\wwlck 14, Panna NonnaDtty 0
Cantoo Trtnny lt, Cln. Landmark 12

31

C.rdlnal 7, GraM Val. 6

Balttroore 8, Oevetand 1

an. MOO~ 43, Canton McKinley 10

&amp;!ton 13. DPtrolt 3

On. PurceU.Martan 22. Trenton Edlf- .

ChlcaRO 2, Oakland 0

""''"
an. Surnmtt f7, Dayton, K.y. o

NN&gt; York 14, M.llwuuktoe 'l
Teus 5, Seatlle 2

(,"koye, ~ntral Cath ~. ~. Italy 6
Cot Wattti'ICil 10, Dublin 6
Cblumblana 6, UJbm 0
Delphol St. Johna 14, Tol. ~VUbiu 12
Detrott cranl:lr'u»t 7, Clfw. untverslty 6
E. Palelllnr ~. Pw!ten.b.tra Sprina. 22
Edllon 'II, Marprftta 1t
Ez1to (Pa.) Tech 7, YwJII. South J

Kansas C1ty 9, Minnesota 3
Callfomla 4, Toronto t
!Wnda,y'a G&amp;mflll

New York 9, Milwaukee 8
C!oewland 3, Baltimore ()
Boston 10, DE&gt;I:rolt 1

Kansas Oty 18. Mlllt'le!Ota

1

California 3, Toronto 2
Oo khm:l 4, Chlcai(O 2

Gilmour 28, Lutheran W. 0
Hamilton Badin 28, Cln. Walnut HUh 6
l~ndmce ~. 1\Jchrnood Htl. 16
Lllte cau.. 52. Cltvf. Collinwood o
LedRfft'IOIII 29, Hud1011 W. RHtrw 8
I..oudonvtJJe :n. Tllftn c.tvm n. tie-

Seattle 1, Texas 0
Mood~'•

GamM
New York !Howodl 1-11 at B.IIUnlOn'
(D. Martlne'.z J.. Jl) . (nl
Cll'vPland I WhlliOn 3.2 and Andenon J.
Jl 111 Boeton !Boyd 0.0 and Rainey Hl , 2.

Mal'm'll 17,

Milwaukee IHaas ll-8) 111 Detroit tUJ·
dur 9-8\, (nl
California !Will S.5l a t ChicMgO tDouoo
ll·ll!. l nl
Thus ! MillOn 0.0\ llt MlnOO!JOta !WU.
Uarns 7·71. on

LJ. lie
Panna Holy Namt 13, Panna Valley
Fo~O

Ptqua a, LJma C.th. 12
Prltand Seminal)' %J. Youre.

8eattle tMOOrt' HOI Ill Kansas L1ty
tBiul&gt; 12-!IUnt
Only game~ scheduled

T!nni.'S!Ief

Tuslaw ~. Fairless 19
1Wtn Valley N. t2, Nallonll Trail 7

Qakland at Toronto. lnl
New York at Baltimore, tn I
M.llw&amp;uktoe at Detroit, tnt

warren

"

at Bo&amp;too, in1

L

79

Plllsbu!"Rh

O.k....

76
61

New York

:)6

""'-

79

.,

Sa n Francisco

Clnclnnatt

.~

3~

82
fM

.426
.tJJ

'l2 ~

..

...

WN&amp;rm Dlvtdon

.,

14

6J

68

74

69

·""

.Sll
.517

"' 111
·"
.37()'
"
00
~y'aG&amp;mN

BASEBALL
lmerleaal...,..
CLEVELAND INDJANS-P\.t rch&amp;Md th~
contract of SaDdy Wlhtol , pitcher, from

19

Char lE-ston of the- lnlt'rnatlonal IAall~ ·
Traded John Denny, pltchrr, to the Phlla ·

Clel))hla Phlllles tor Jtrry Rftd, pitcher,
and Roy Smith, pitcher, from Readlna of
the Eutern Leapt and Wtl CulrnPr , flnt

51,ip~
6

b.alf!man-oulfiPidPr . from'Oklahoma City
thl" American Asaoelatlon.

of

NEW YORK YANKEES-Purchaaed the

contract ot StPfan Wewr, pltclwr, from
Nashville, of the Southern i.(IKW.
Nalloul IAape

1!&gt;
r1

Cincinnati 4, Atlanta J

NEW

YORK

METS-Recalled SCott

Holman, Walt Terrell , Tom Gorman and

Montreal 10. Clllcago 6
Los AnRt'it&gt;s ~. Hounoo 3
F'tttsburgh 10. P hiladelphia 9
Sl. LouiS 6, New York 3
San F ranclsoo R. San DII!(IO J

Terry Leac h, pitchers. P\lrchaiH the
contrat't of Rutty T:lllmaa, outfleldfr,
!rom Tidewater ol tbe lnternatlon.l

Lu~.W.

~·•Game.

~llleooiY-IDIA-

F'tnSilii'Rh 4, Phii•~Etphta 2
Atlanta 4. QnciMati 3
New York 4. St. L.ool.l 1
Montreal U , Chicago 3
Los Anrelel 7. Houston J

NEW YORK GJANTS-Plact'd Joe
Mcl.aulfhlln, linebacker; Rlch Balcllnatr.

ottens!ve tackle: Mark Reed. quarttr·
hack. and Bill Nelli , defeasive taclde, on
their lna('llve Jist.
ROCJlBY

Only lf&amp;mt'S ll'hOOull'd

NMieMl 8.eke7 IAape
NE W · JERSEY DEVILs-Gary Stott

MoDd!Q'a Gamte.
Louis (R Forsell 14·81 at PhiJa·
dflphia (Carlton 19-91. tnl
Otkago !Ripley H) a t fllttbul"8h
!OR.obtniOn ~1. tnt
Houston fJ. Nlekro HdOJ at Atlanta (P.
Ntekro Jf.l) , tnJ
su Dit'gO /EkhelberJ('r H2J at Loa
AJ!eeles (Welcttl5-IOI. 1n1
Clnclnnati(PII!IIO~ S.l()l at San Fran·
cUco !Barr ~I. (nt

sl.

and Rr mo DISalvator1, paltn; Don Ja ·

r obs and Wayne Blthop,, dtfeftlm'len:
Paul Fenton and Paul Harmon, left
wtn1s, and Ken Latta . Paul O.rerdon and
Mille LaBiant'a , rllht whtp.
MONTREAL C4NADIENS-

.6.Anounced

!hat Cuy LaOeW', rtabt wlnJ, and;-~
Robln•on, delenseman, haove a
to
terma.
WASHINGTON
CAPITALSSilrnf'd

Only aames !Cht'du~

Scott Stevens. defenaeman.

CAROL OSBORNE

tNc. c011necttonr-c2T!f~de

t til official no.t lce
.&amp;Syrecuie-laclne

_ Farm Animals, Horses, end Pets

. , APPOINTMINT

. ----· -...·

•

·

·..

-~"-·..

·
.

;•

Funds· sought for ttip

.... .,
~··

.. _.

,

JUaa ~Baton Corpa memben"were .-&amp;peat perfonnen aUhe 118!WOiid'1FalratKnoxvme, Tam. They were selected
oa the IJII* .af ~ O'Ver llle p111t aevenl yean, which
llldudea b!Jidllll the West V1qlll1a SWe Champlonlldp for the put
three yean. The RanpreUee perfonned 1wo clip and were preaented
a Ol!l'llflcate from S. B. RGberCs .Jr., prealdeat c4 the World's Fair. The

Cremeans
The descendants of James and
Bertha Cremeans held a reunloo

Saturday at the Forked Run Lake,
Long Bottom.
A basket dinner was served at
l2::Kip.m.
Attending were Theodore Cremeans, Maude Smith, Shirley Slm·
mons, Luther and Mary Smith and
grandchildren, Randall and Brian

Smith, Wesley and Muriel Young,
Charles and Linda Boyles, Dorls
Rlchmotid and son, Robbie, Mary
and Mary Richmond and son,
Andy, Carroll and Barbara Smith,
all of Middleport.
· JudY McDonald and children,
Mindy, Angle and Danny Jr.,
DBMY and Barbara Cremeans and
sons, DaiTin and Derek. BasU and
Kathleen Cremeans, Paul Musser
and son, Kevin, Florence Stearns
pm:t sons, Tlmmy and Albert,
Roma Cremeans, Mr. and Mrs. Ar·
thur Musser, Rutland. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Cremeans
and Amy Chamberlin, WheelersINrg; Ron Rickard, New Haven,
W.Va.; Kathy Yarbrough, Shade;
Melanie and David Dudding,
Athens; Delores Rodgers, Kathy
Herron, Carol, Craig, and Michelle
Lucas, Middletown; Doug and
,Anne GolDey and daughter, An·
'gellt,•uV~ky and Jamie Holliday,
-BOlle Taublee, Marshall; Nat .and
Kin Tucker, Eloise Carson, Elaine
Musser and son, Greg, Lebanon.

Published everyafttmoon, Monday throuMh
Friday, Ill Court Street, by the Ohio VMIIey
PublishinM Company • MII.IUmfdia, Inc.,
Pom~roy. Ohio 45761. 992--215fl. Sa_'Ufltl ciiJII
~l(e PMid11l Pomtlroy, Ohiu.
Member: ~ As»ocillled Preu, Inland Dai·
ly Ptws Auoclation and Uw Ameri~.·an
Newspaper Publlalkn Aaaociltlon, Nat1u011l
• Repre~etltative,

NeWMpaper S.les, 733 Third
York, New York 10017.

•Branham

Aven~~t, N~w

·

ton..

Pa&gt;TMASTER : S.rd adclro!ooo
Daily .
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomerey, Ohio41170 ..

Grover

SUBSCRIPI10N RATES
By Canitr tr Me&amp;er Ro.ate

The annual Grover reunion wai
held Sunday at the Route 33 Road·
side Park.
AtteOOlng were Greg Grover,
Dee Grover, Mrytle Grover, Terri

~~::ui··:·:•••:••:••••:•••••··:~.s

SINGLE CoPY
PRICES
Da ily . ..... ........ ....... ..... IS Ct!nLH

Su!).';lTibtn nul Llcsirin)l lu PMY lht! l.'arrict'
may remit in atlvwnt.-e dira1. to The D~t~~ily ·

S.•nlint•l ufl a 3, 6 l)r J2 month betsia. Credit '
will bt·~o:iven ca rrier c.ath moot h.

MEIGS COUNTY Salon no,
Eight and F 0 ...., will meet Mon
33.
day at 6 p.m.
'"'at the -Route
.
roadside park for a picnic.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
hwki&lt;Ohlu
13 Weeks ........ ................ $1464

. $27,30
. $$1.41

Oulll.ldi'Ohill
13 Wt•t•k:.'i
.. .. ... . ............ tiS.21
26 Wt•t•lts ........ ... . .........• . . t29.&amp;4
52 Wt•t•ks . . . . . ....... . • ... . . . . , 1:16.21

POMEROY - Eastern At·
hletlc BOOsters will meet at 7: 30
p.m. Monday at the high school.
·
·
POMEROY - Gospel meet:
lng at Church ot Christ, comer. of
main and Butternut, Pomeroy,
will continue through Sept. 19 at
7: :.1 each evening. Paul Casebolt, Paden ·City, W. Va. Is
evangelist.

.

_.

POMEROY PTA will meet at
7:00p.m. at tile school for "Meet
, the Teachers Night."
POMEROY - Southern Local Junior .High Athletic Boosters will meet at 7 p.m. Monday
at scbool. AU parents are welcome to attend.

/

11JESDAY

\Ytth us, you dOn't have

.

to wait ·weeks for a loan ,
committee to meet.
.HOW DO YOO APPLY?

,

Juat phone. When you see for yourself boW rut

monthly~

~

press~

- Free

cllnlc Tuesday

from 10 a.m. to noon at HalT!·
, "11011vtlle Senior attzena Club

• ' with Mtll. Femdonl Story, R.N.,
lin charge. The JlUbllc Is Invited
· to attelld.

;.e..,

10

- POMEROY - Eastern Band·

• ·Boosters wm ililet:ia'f T:'SJ p.m:
..~
pi.

In GallipoUa:

.

602 Secoad Street
fhooe U8 U18 ,

~

_.l il,!o~~~~.....,.-.......~~~.....l'L
·- ·

\

''

- .•' HARRISOl'fVILLE

TheldaY ·m hilb ldiDo1 band
'room. All peJ'I!IIts c4 junior and

1

'

RUTLAND Skating tram 7 to
.9 p.m. at Rutland Civic Center
'both Tuesday 8JIIi ThllfiiCiay.
Chlldreli. $1 and adults, $2. Take
:Your own skates. ·

.blood

wonder-. JOUw;rhu could1ong1be.c:.11 tolncl·
out how bwyour

'lea." you'l

t
un- t
t·
t·

~. .. - ~--··
..

"If SAYS 1H£Y'I.L APPROV£ A
H0~£0(JJN£R LOAN UP ro $3qooo
IN JIJST A MAff£/l. OF DAYS t•

.

Lynn Grover, Karen Grover, Genla
Grover ,Randy Hysell, Rachel Hysell, Vlrglnla Gl"'\W McClelland,
Bessie Grover Wade ,Vlrgtnla
West, Kenny West, Mildred Grover
Asbcraft, Bob Houdashelt, Marcia
GroVer Hoodashelt, Brian Houda·
shelt, Bob Venoy, Loraine Grover
Venoy, Robyn Venoy, Mark Venoy,Todci West, Randy Atkinson,
Teresa Atkinson, Jill Atkinson, Joy
Atklnsoo, Roger McClelland, Patty
McClelland, Dale McClelland,
Amber McCieland, Debbie Collins,
Bransoo Collins, Becky Blanken·
ship, Tracy Blankenship, LIM
Keller, Ro6alee Keller, Nancy Gilkey, ChuckGUkey, Jerry Eads, and
Louse Eads.

phanle and Robby, Chester: Mr.
and MrsArthur Barr, Mrs.Mar·
garet McDaniel, Mlddleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Ralph Ballard and David,
Mrs. D. MorriSOn, Long Bouom:
Mr.and Mrs. Robert Parker.
Bobby and Kelly, Miss Angle Barn·
hart, Marietta; Paul McDaniel, Debra, Joe· and Brenda Brown,
Middleport. Afternoon callers were
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Hollon, Erlc,
Rickie and Chasatle, Davisville, W.
Va .; and Mrs.Conlta Duncan,
Nashville.
The next reunion will be held at
the same place on the last Sunday
of August, 1983.

Hollon

Descendants of AI and Rose
Priddy Jeffers was held recently at
the Route 33 Roodslde Park.
The blessing ·,;u given by Mrs.
Bob Jeffers preceding the plcnlc.
Attending were Des! and Jon!
Jeffers. The Plains; Melissa and
Mandy Hubbard, Mrs. Delores
Beach. Xenia; !3ernlce Jeffers,
Lyle France, Michael Jetfers, Ron·
nle, Susie and Ronne Lee Casto,
Ti!na Bachtel, Roger, Janet,
Bobby, and Rhonda Jeffers, Mike
Wallace, Tara Wolfe, Wendell,
Thelma, Tim, John and Michael
Jetfers, all of Pomeroy. Dorothy
Jetfers, Gallipolis; Jim and Brenda
Jeffers, Cheshire; Mike, Tracey
and Tamra O'Dell , Rutland ;
Kenny, Brenda, Scott and Jason
Nelgler, Middleport; Edna Ralph,
Jr. , Peggy Sue and Jennlfer
Nelgler, Racine; Bob and Helen
Jeffers, Syracuse; Mike, Patti,
Mandi, Mike II Van Matre. West
Columbia, W. Va.: John W.• Linda
·and Dorothy Jeffers, Risingsun,

The annual Hollon reunion was
held Alig. 29 at the Daughters of
Amerk:a hall In Chester. Thomas
Hamm had grace preceding the
dinner. Gifts were presented to
Linda Otterbein, Edison Hollon,
Stephanie Hoffman, and Philip
Hamm.
Attending were Vl.rglnla and Bill
Hollon, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
James Hollon and Shannon, Parkmburg, W.Va.; Mary and Melissa Dempsey; Mr . and
Mrs.Wlll1am Krackomberger and
Billy, Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Hollon,
Mrs. Opal Halloo, Chester; Mr. and
Mrs.Gerald Hollon, Tammy and
Scott, Linda Otterbein, Mrs.
Gladys McCauley, Brenda and
David McDaniel, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Hollon, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Hamm, Chris and
PhJlllp, Minersville; Mrs. Iva Pearl
Rayburn and Sammy. Long Bottom. Mrs.Steve Hottman, Ste-

Jeffers

Ohio.
The youngest attending was
Tamra Lee O'Dell, and the oldest,
Bob Jetfers, son of the late Jim

Jetters.
The 1983 reunion will be held on
the last Sunday In August at the
park.

Swartz-Carr
The Swartz and Carr School
reunion was held at Carr Grove,
Alfred, Aug:29, with ba.sket dinner at
12:30. All enjoyed horseshoe plt·
chlng in the afternoon.
Attending were Katie Swartz, lhla
Fae Kimes, Dana Swartz, Thebna
Mannis, John Van Meter, Athens;
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz, Hazel
Creamer. Lura Hawk, Martin,
Gracie and Craig Dorst, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Foster and Shane,
Shade; Janice Kuhn VIncent, Little
Hocking; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Swartz, Emma Swartz, Canal Winchester; Mabel Lehman, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Swartz, Helen
DUey, Pickerington; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Swartz, Marietta; Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Swartz, Lori and Jeff,
Teresa and Randy Wagoner,
Williamstown, W. Va .~ Harry and
Marilyn Ross, Terry and Donna
Jean Ogg, Albany; Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Carr, Amy, Ann, and Jeremy,
Stewart; Mr. and Mrs. John Court·
ney, Nelsonvile; Charles Woode and
his neighbor, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart Swartz, Clara Follrod, Nina
Robinson, Charles and Rose Carr',
local.

Calendar

MONDAY

Nn sub:k.Tiptions by llllil pcnniUed in towru
whl·re htn'll! earricr servil-e is available.

26 Wet•ks .. . . . . . . . . . . ..
52 Wt•t•k." . . . . . . . .. . . . .. .

groop Is lnetnided by Jud.v Rlns. Cheater. Memben from the area
selected tAl perfonn are Cbrllll M•!cJenA, feature twirler, corp~~ leader
Veronica Provo, Valerie~• .Jemdfer 0111111'00, April Hudson,
Karen Monis, Shannon Colmta, Anpe Blael1, Cheryl and Missy Stev·
eJU1, Stephanie Jarvl8, Patricia Fore, Tr1na Null, Missy Kelly, Tammy
Randolph, April Smith and Sheni Deeter.

Meigs area families and friends gather for reunions

IUSPSJU.. . J
ADld11lua oiMuiUmectla.IDC.

Advertl,lnM

I

t

to the

Is given by the
Regional . Sewer ·
Dlstr,d. It I• antlcl,.tec~ that ,this
~-will lie g l - ...,...... the ond of
September. .
.

t
6tl-'m . , , . .

BRIARHILL VETERINARY QINIC' ,,

· •..,.,.,.,,oH.

'

--

....., .system In sY....... or Racine

. y· MEDI
' a ·NE
ERINAR
VET
, ·. .. - . .
HAS OPENED

~

-

.DOCTOR OF ·.

_

The Steelers will be operating
without defensive standout Jack
Lambert. The middle linebacker
has not recovered from a knee
sprain he suttered In practice and
did not make the trip to Dallas for
thegame.
'
Second year linebacker David
Uttle, making the first start of hiS
pro career, will replace Lambert.
Dallas was a five-point favortte
over the Steelers In the nationally
televised game.
The Cowboys have won 17 con·
secutlve opening day games, but
they've la!t the last tour times
they've played Pittsburgh, lricludlng two cloile Super Bowl defeats.
Dallas hasn't lost at Texas Sta·
dlum In a regular season or playoff
game since Roger Staubach retired
as quarterback In 1979.
Over the past five )11!81'!1 Dallas Is
35-4 In Texas Stadium.
Not since 1964 when St. L6uls beat
them 16-6 have thto Cowboys failed .
to wtn their first game of the year.
Plttlburgh haS an 11·10 all-time
ecJ&amp;e an the Cowboys.
A aellout crowd of 65,000 was assured, the 45th In a row for the Cow·
bOYs In Texas Stadium.

The Steelers no longer have the
likes of Joe Greene, and Dwight
White, and L.C. Greenwood and
have dropped the 4-3defense for the
J.4 which accentuates the play of
the linebackers.
The Cowboys still nm Coach Tom
Landry's IntriCate "Flex" with the
tour-man line. However,3'01J've got
to have veteran players to man the
poslttoos and starting left defensive
tackle John Duttools all!ng.
He missed practice last week un·
til Saturday with a font Injured In
the final presellllln game and
whether he starts will be In doubt
until the 8 p.m. klckotf.
Without Dutton against San
Francisco In last year's National
Conference title pine, the Dallas
pass rush suffered.
SbouldDuttonnotplay,defenslve
coach Ernie Stautiler wl1l choolle
Dan Smerek.
Smerek has fully recovered from
being shot and wounded outalde a
Dallas nightclub last ~ and
missing an entire aeuon. ·
"Duttal 1111»' be. able to play

Transactions

GB

.5611 .r..&amp;
~
.542
2'h

63
65
66

n

Atlanta

San Dk'go
Hoosoon

Pet.
62

I'

start.''

opener.

NATION.U LEAGUE
F...ulemiMvilim

W

some but I doubt he can play the full
game,'' said Landry. "If Dutlon Is
able to play at all he probably will

the Dallas "Illxxruiday Defense"
may have a blg hole In It tonight
when the two teams clash In a National Football League season

w. Rner.-e 21. YOI.IJil. Rayen

Warrt'Nv!Ut 26, Hawn 0

Ca lifornia 111 Ollcago, tnl
Tt'xas at Mlnncsota, (nl
Sl&gt;a ttle at Kansas llty, tnl

St . Louis
PhllatJelJ:tllll
Mont11.'al

IRVING, Texas (AP)· The Pitts.
· burgh "Steel Curtain" Is gone and

Thscarawu C&amp;th. 27. Ind.lan Valleys. o

~'IIGIUTIN

Clt'Vfland

wu.on 13

:n. Col. St. Ctlartes 0
DeeJ 40, an. st Rna &amp;

Sl~ben'li!Je C.th.

•

The Daily Sentinel

like job on Lend!, baffling and bef·
uddllng his younger opponent with
an assortment of shots that time
and again landed just Inside the
white lines.
Connors, who celebrated his 30th
birthday during the Open, had
dipped In the world ranklngs the
last couple of years, passed by
younger players like John McEn·
roe and Bjorn Borg. "I wanted to
get back to No. 1," he said. "I liked
the view from up there."
So he set out on that quest and
took a giant step In that direction
when he beat McEnroe at Wimbledon, wiM!ng that crown for the
third time. ''That was my goal," he
said, "to win Wimbledon once
more, and I did lt."
Coming Into the Open, McEnroe
remained No. 1 In the world, followed by CoMers and Lend!, who
had won 44 consecutive matches af·
ter last year's Open but sat out
Wimbledon. AU threesalledlntothe
semifinals of the tournament along
with No. 4 Guillermo Vilas of Argentina. CoMOts eliminated VIlas
and Lend! defeated McEnroe, setting up the final.

New look Steelers
face Cowboys tonight

Newtomemown lll

Manstleld 21. Cot Ulrlfan-McKlnley 8
NUN McKWey 3!1, Cit've. Eut 6
NOfWatk St. Paul 13. S.IIJu!Jcy Sr. Mary

U·nl

COnnors, who Is also the reigning
Wimbledon champion, and solidifled his statusasNo. 11nthecompu·
ter ranklngs of the world's players.
"When I won before, everybody
thought I could," Connors said.
"When I won now, everybody
thought I couldn't. That's pretty
satisfying."
Connors·sald he may cut back on
his tennis now that he's No.1 again.
"I'm at a crossroads," Connors
said, who also won the Open In 1974,
1976 and 1978. "I have to think It out.
My whole life haS been dedicated to
tennis. I've got a wife and famlly
and a lot of businesses I'd like to get
Into. I may be cutting back my
schedule."
The left-bander did a workman-

NEW YORK (AP) -For Jimmy
CoMOrs, king again of the U.S.
Open and all of tennis, the trtp back
to the top Is more satisfying. And
now that may be enough.
Connors, as precise and emotional at 30 as he was at 26, used his
entire repertoire of pinpoint shots,
bouncing them off the boundartes
time and again to wipe out stonyfaced Ivan Lend! of Czechoslovakia
6-3, G-2, 4-6, 6-41n the u.s.Open final
at the National Tennis Center
Sunday.
Tile women's crown at the Open
was won Saturday by Chris Evert
Lloyd, who played textbook tennis
beating Czechoslovakia's Hana
Mandllkova, 6-3, G-1.
It was the fourth Open crown for

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Connors ·regains tennis title

Houttm at Atlant.. IR )
San~ at Lot Anplft, (nJ
ClndnniU 11 San F'ranctlco, (Ill

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Monday, S•F'•' bu 13,1982

for23more.
threw flrst·halt touchdown passes passing pertonnance by Tampa
onwalversbyMinnellota.'Jbeplay.•
F..._ 18, GluiB 14
to Frank Lewis aJ1d Jeny Butler Bay's Doug WWlams.
ers voted Friday nliht to play the
Bob Glazebrook's91·yard tumble for all the scoring that Buffalo
Bl'OWIIII Zl., Seahawks 7
game.
Patrie* ft, Cola Q
return for a touchdown provided lii!Eded. Three Nick Lowery tleld
Cleveland'sdefensesackedquarTony Collins ran · for 137 Ylrcls
the spark and a 29-yard tleld goal goals were all thescor!ngtheChlefs terbaclt Dave Krieg eight times byMickLuckhurstwlth58seconds could muster.
a Seattle record - and Browns
and caught ooe c4 Matt Cavaleft In the game was the dltterence
fullback Mike Pruitt led theotrense
naugh's two ~ pjii!JI!S as
the Patriots woo thelrqJenerllllder
In Atlanta's victory aver the errorVlldnp 17, Bucculeer8 10
with 30 carries for 130 yards and
prone Giants. Those Individual ef.
Tommy Kramer passed for 131 two touchdowns. Theplaytngofthe new head coach Ron Meyer. Cdtl
forts spolled a career-high 3l0-yard yards and ooe touchdown and Rick game was 1n doubt after all 54.Seat· rookie quarterback Mike Page~
scored on a 1·yard run for Baltipassing pertormance by New York Danmeler kick a field goal to lead
tie players signed a petition Tues·
quarterback Scott Brunner, which M!Mesota. Three Interceptions day caUlng for the reinStatement of more before being knocked out the
Included a piur of IICOr!ng passes to and a fumble spoiled a IDyard McCullum, who haS been picked up game wW!a cmcussloo.
Earnest Gray.
Clwpn 23, BJ'CJIICOB 3
Rolf Benlrschke kicked three
fleldgoalsandDanFoutsthrewan
lli-yard touchdown pass to Scott
Fitzkee In San Diego's victory. The
BroiiCOIS corrunltted six turnovers,
fourofthemlnSanDiegoterrttory'.
Dolpl. . 45, leta 28
Miami ended four years of frus.
tratlon, getting Its first victory over
theJetsafterlostngsevenandtylng
Clle In the eight previous meetings.
Tlllllli1Y VIgorito's !19-yard punt return. for a touchdown sparked the
Dolphins and lnterceptloo returns
for touchdowns by Doo McNeal and
Glerm Blackwood turned It Into a
rout In the third qlllll'tef.
Cardlnllll21, Sa1n1B 7
Quarterback Nell Loolax led the
Cardinals to an easy victory, settlng up one toucllcla.Yn with a 16yard pass to the 1-yard line, then
throw1ng a 12-yard scoring strike to
Pat Tilley. Meanwhile, Ken Stabler
started at Quarterback for New Or·
leans In place of Arcble Manning,
whoplayedonlybrleflylnthethlrd
quarter. It was 12 )11!81'!1 Manning
has been benched by the Saints.
Lloull7,lleln 10
Billy Sims, who ended a slx·week
holdout Friday, gained 33 yards
and scored what turned out to be
the wlnn!ng touchdown oo a 3-yard
run In the fourth quarter despite
playing spariDgJ.y In the defensive
slnlggle. Players from both teams
were booed by the Sllverdome
crowd for taking part In a pregame
IN FOR SIX - Cleveland BroWIIII' nmnlng back 1ame In lhe Klnplome SuDday alterDooa. Trylq to
solldarlty handshake at midfield.
Mike PndU ( 43),laysln the end zone alter a lw~yanl make the stop for SeaU1e and eodln&amp; up lltlindln1 on
llllllllt, .Odeflll
plUJ~~epodforatoucllclownwWtt:36remalnlngln
his head Is safety Kenny Easley (43). (AP
Quarterback Joe Ferguson
the aeoonc1 quarier of the Cleveland-8eaUJe Nn. Laserphoto ).

touchdowns, was the eye c4 a
second-halt Packer hurricane that
brought Bart Starr's team team a
35-23vlctory.
In other games Sunday, Clndn·
. nat! opened wlthaZ7-7vlctoryaver
the Houston Oilers; the Atlanta Fa!cons tipped the New York Giants
16-14; the San Diego Chargers
pounded the Denver Broncos 23-3;
the Miami Dolphins crushed the
New York Jets 45-28, and the New
England Patrtots gave new Coach
Ron Meyer a 24-13 vk:tory over the
Baltimore Colts and their new
coach, Frank Kush.
The St. Lou!s Cardinals trtpped
the New Orleans Saints 21-7; the
Detroit Uons and newly returned
Billy Sims stopped the Chicago
Bears 17-10; the Buttalo Bills got
past the Kansas City Chiefs 14-9, the
Minnesota Vlk!ngs debuted In their
' new domed stadium with a 17-10
vlctoryovertheTampaBayBucca·
neers, and the Cleveland Browns
snutted the hopes of 55,!m Seattle
fans 1n the Klngdome as they beat
the Seahawks 21-7 In a game that
was threatened all week by the passlbUlty of a strike by the Seattle
players over the release of player
representative sam McCullum.
The Pittsburgh Steelers and Dal·
las Cowboys complete the first
weekoftheseasontonlghtlnTexas.
Benpls

.

b,lta2

LA Raiders top 49ers, Bengals, Browns big wfuners · · ~
By MIKE HARRIS
AP Sports Writer
Despite threats of a w!ldcat wal·
kout andthe lackofanewcollectlve
bargalnlng agreement. The Na·
tlonal Football League opened Its
regUlar season on schedule. The Su·
per Bowl champion San Francisco
49ers, thehtghlyregardedPhlladel·
phia Eagles and Bert Jones-led Los
Angeles Rams were surprisingly
left In the starting blocks though.
The 49ers, who lmocked ott the
Cincinnati Bengals last January to
win their flrst NF1.. championship
ever, came out on the short end of a
23-17 score at home against the
transplanted Los Angeles Raiders.
The only thing that really 00.
thered the Raiders, who used to
playacrosstheBaytramSanFrancisco, was when referee Jerry
Markbrelt called them the Oakland
Raiders as he announced a penalty
to the crowd. Jim Plunkett, a
former 49er quarterback, tosssed
the go-ahead touchdowil pass In the
fourth period and rookie Marcus
Allen, the 1981 Helsman Trophy
wiMer tram Southern Cal, opened
his pro career with ll6 yards
rushing.
Mark Moseley's right foot was
the dltterence at Philadelphia,
where the Redsklns' veteran pia·
ceklcker booted a 48-yard gametylng field goal at time ran out In
regulation, then plunked a 26yarder 4:47 Into overtime to upend
the Eagles :rl-34.
At Milwaukee, the Packers'
homeawaytramhome, theLosAn·
geles Rams and Jones soared to a
23.0 halftime lead In Southern
Callfornla· llke sunshine and
temperatures. But Green Bay
quarterback Lynn Dickey, who
passed for 237 yards and three

'

SepNn1ber 1

, 1-el)lor ' hlfh school• band
'memben lboul!l ' lttend. RefrelluileDta will be served.

masons are Invited to attend.

MEIGS High school vocal

Music Boosters will meet Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. In the music
room at lhe high school.

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

A
h
strograp

September 14, 1982
Ventures or projects on which you have expanded diligent effort, yet
not received just rewards, will not be overlooked this coming year. Continue to strive and be patient.
VIRGO (Aug. %3-Sept. 22) Your self-interests can be furthered today
by treating others as you would have them treat you. It's an old formula
whlch never falls.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. Z3) If you need the assistance of friends today,
state your case clearly and briefly. They'll come through as you hope,
provided they don't feed badgered.
SCORPIO · (Oct. U.Nov. 22) Your possibilities for success and
fulf1111ng your ambitions are better than average today. In addition to
your detennlnation,luck will also pull some strings.
SAGrrfARJUS (Nov. %3-Dec. 21) Persons for whom you've done
favors will be going to bat for you today, yet you may not be fully aware of
their efforts In your behalf.
CAPRICORN (Dec. ~an. 19) Stick to proven methods today,
especially where your career objectives are concerned. What worked for
you once may do even better now.
AQUARIUS (Jan. !&amp;-Feb. 19) Your judgment regarding the outcome
of evenp Is very good today, but still it will be wise to have an alternate
plan, even lfyoudOO't use it.
PISCES (Feb. •March zo) If you know of better ways to improve
conditions where you work, this is a good day to bring your ideas to the at·
tent11111 c4 your superiors.
AIUES (Mardi !l·Aprtl Ill) You can reap rewards today by being
·helpful, and managing thlnga for others which they cannot do as ef.
fectlvely as yoil can. ·
.TAURUS (April a-May ZO) This should be a very productive day, .
because you'll be able tb keep everything in perspective. You'll reali2e
the difficult can be adJle\&gt;ed.
GEMINI (May · !l..Jaae ZO) You have good leadership and
organizational qualities today. You'll be able to get others to do your bidding because they'll- you have their interests at heart.
CANCER (JaDe !l..Jaly ZZ) Over-all conditions look rather promising
·today, espeCially If you are Involved In IIOmethlng whlch will enhance
aecurlt)' for you ucl yours.
, LllO (.llllJ D-Aq. ZZ) Put idea! to work for you today whlch you
tblllk llligbt make or uve you mooey. The time is ripe. There's a ·good
chance you could pall-off ~emethlng big.

•

A true soldier of the cross In
Meigs County, Major Glenna Rum·
mel, would !Ike to leave Wednesday
for Bombay, India, to attend the
Centennial CongreSs of the Salva·
tlon Army and then visit In Calcutta
where she was stationed for five years In the 19405.
Major Rummel's life over the
past couple of weeks has been hectic In securing a passport and mak·
lng necessary arrangements for
her return to India. Government officials pushed through her passport
and she received that Saturday
morning.
Dedicated to her church work,
Major Rummel has been unable to
accumulate money over the years
and there Is a shortage of funds for
the trip. The plane fare alone Is
$1,300. Sunday evening a love otferlng was taken for Major Rummel
at special services held at the Salvation Army, U5 Butternut Ave.,ln
Pomeroy. However, she Is still
short on funds.
Residents who would like to help
In some small way with the trtp
may leave the contrtbutlons at The
Dally Sentinel otflce before 5 p.m.
Tuesday or they may contact Ma·
jor Rummel at 992-74110. Those usIng the Sentlnal office as a path to
helping with the trip are asked to
leave their contributions In sealed
envelopes with a notation Inside as
to their names and addresses.
Major Rummel joined the ranks
of the Salvation Army In Pomeroy
In 1941 when she became a soldier
on Pearl Harbor Day. She went
through a complete course of trainIng from torchbearer to officers'
school In New York where she prepared for her missionary duties
and was commissioned a captain.
In India. Major Rummel en·
gaged In the constant battle against
heat, health conditions, Improper
food and the adjustment to every
day life In the overcrowded country. The major found hordes of beggars crying for help and disturbed
greatly by the poverty and want of
these people, Major Rummel dlstrtbuted her small means - many
times money which had been sent
to her for her personal needs .
Major Rummel embarked for India on a Dutch merchant ship, the

I
'

I

Rummel
"Tjlpanas" from New Orleans and '
was on board for some 60 days with
five other passengers who worked
at many of the ship's chores.
She landed In Bombay, Feb. 1.
1949 and after a haiTOW!ng two days
and nights by train, knowing nDthlng of the language and customs,
she arrived In Calcutta.
After five years In India - two
and one-half of which were In aC··
tual preaching ministry - Major
Rummel returned to her Meigs
County home. Since that time she
has been extremely active with the
Salvation Army In Meigs County.
God wlllln' - and U help Is forth·
coming - Major Rummel will get
to make her long dreamed of return
trtp to India.

Stage truck
WINSTON-SALEM, N .C. (AP)
- Scott W. Templin, assistant dean
of the North Carolina School of the
Arts, recently designed a mobile
stage on a standard trailer truck
bed.

The moblle stage was used In a
cross-country tour of a music and
dance production called "Jazz Is."
A ~toot panel on one side of the
trailer folded out to provide room
for the cast of 18 dancers, singers
and musicians to perform.
The show traced the history of
jazz and Its Influence on other
forms of music.
,-----------------------

EASTERN Local Band Boos·
ters will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the high school band
room. Parents of all junior and
senior high school band students
are requested to attend. Re!reshments will be served.

The new
Weight Watchers@
Cookbook is yours
free" with the new you!
Florine Mark, Area Director
··1 found oul how Jo change my life for the better' Sound like somelhing you'd
like Jo do? I lost 50 pounds with Weight Waichers and I've kept tt off lor 16
. The Weigh I Waichers pr091:am worked for me- just as it's worked lor
hundreds of thousands. Our program could be your key to a new you
"You'll learn Jhe secret of losing weight withoul giving up the foods you
love . And '' you join now, I'll see to it that you get our new Cookbook .
It has recipes for chocolate nut cake, Swiss fondue, o,.nge·
ginger chicken and lots more ."
The book is a $13.95 value, and it's yours free' after you attend
16 consccuHve meetings paying the regular weekly ($5.00) fee .
For informahon about the Weight Waichers class near you .
CALL TOLL FREE

1-800-582-1399

WEIGHT
WATCHERS.
The m06t successful weight
loos program in the world .
~ Wtlght Walthefs tntefllltiOOillnt 1982 Ownet cA the
Wetght Watchers T r~

Otter '131id '" a1ta ·~O only "'lou ~~postage and NM!tno

SiJc!ten consecut~ /Neltngs ITVst be betWeen Sept 1. t98~
and.lin 1~ . 1983

�•

I'IPaCICg..
a-6~-· The

• •

••

·-

-··-·-

~-

-..t

' .

•

Meigs County area organization members gat~er for meetings~.· ·· · \
Chatter Oub
lalne

·

~ aS::::~~·a~
t

~ ~ of the Chatter Club

~bane ot Lola Hanison.
were played, and the hoswas i)l'elellted !lifts. The door

tess

=.

prlzewaswmbyDorothyRoach.A
:~a: J:!;r partylnJ~
Polllt Pleasant.

Jay Mar
·~ea Day was observed Tuesday

at tbe Jay Mar Golf Course. After a
short business meeting, 18 holes ~
golf. wu played with prizes going to
Margaret Follrod, low gross; Jane
B• • low net; 'Elizabeth Lohse
aJid Pearl Welker, low putts.

Rutland Garden Club
Rutland Ganten Club's flower

lbilw,

"The Moods of Nature" wiU
be open for publlc viewing Saturday
from I to 8 p.m. and Sunday from 1
to J p.m at the Rutland United
Method1at Church.
The show will include not only
Jllllllei'OWI artistic arrangements,
but ~ns of roses, dahlias, zlnlllllf, marigolds, celosla, and
cbryunlhemwns In the horticulture
dlvlllon, along with potted plants,
both blooming and foliage.
All of the c1assell with the ex·
.ceiJtiOII ol five ln the artistic division
are open to the public for exhibit. No
advance relliltration Is required.
Tbe &amp;how also Includes classes for
junior ezhlbltol'!l in both artistic
arrangement and horticulture.
There w1l1 be educational displays to
ln~lude fall door decorations,
methods ol drying materials, and
flower and garden Insecticides, as
well u an array ot publications on
groWing and showing flowers .
Mn. Jack Robson Is the show
chalnnan. Judging will be by Mrs.
Janet BoUn, an accredited judge ~
the. Oblo Association of Garden
Clubs.

Past activities ot the club were by the grange. These ol'derS wtU be
reviewed durtng the meeting along back In time for Christmas.
with the bylaws of the club. Mrs.
It was decided during the meet·
Bowen 'announced plans for the tng to pledge $5 to the Jerry Lewis
yearbooks, subjects for programs MIIS(:Uiar Dystrophy Telephone ·
were discussed, and hostesses for · and to !live $5 to the county delemeetings were named.
gates and county prince and prln·
Mrs. John Davis presented the cess whowtll be attending the State
club scrapbook for the year.
Grange Convention next months.
Members reviewed activities of the Also the money march taken was
past year. Plans were discussed for dlvtded among the prince and prln·
a spring flower show with the time cess and Keith Ashley. Keith 1s reand place to be announced later.
presenting Ohlo at the National
Forrollcallmemberstoldolthelr Grange Talent Contest In Nofavorite program presented durtng vember In Rhode . Island. The
the past year. Mrs. Wanda Johnson
prince and princess, BW Dyer and
had prayer. .
Carla Rife, are members of Star
Members exchanged flower Grange.
bulbs. Mrs. Dwight Wallace was a
Pat and Roy Holter were present
guest. Mrs. Paul Haptonstall dls·
and presented some historical In·
played an arrangment of dahlias.
formation about Star Grange.
A dessert course was served by
Members present wereJohnHol·
Mrs. Horky. Mrs. Skinner presided llday, Maxine, Opal, Patty and BW
at the coffee service. Roses from
Dyer, Ray and Bernice Midkiff
the garden of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wald Nicholson, Ruby Lambert:
Strauss arranged by Mrs. Skinner Nina Macomber. Dwight Nelson,
centered the table with white tapPauline Rife, Christine Napier,
ers ln crystal holders completing Catherine and Dean Colwell, Joe
the decor.
DennisOn, VIcki, Rick and Chip Macomber, Mary and Jack Nelson,
Ruby, Ben, carla and Becky Rife,
Ann and Alan Halliday, Chatlotte
Roger Randolph was elected
Erlewlne, Kelthel Hatfield, Linda
president of the newly organized
and Larry Montgomery.
camera club durtng a meeting held
VIsitors Included Pat and Rny
Monday night at the Riverboat
Holter, Norman wm, Emma,
Roo~~r officers elected were Greg Keith , Rachel, and Whitney
Ashley.
Gatrell, vice president;. Joe Poole,
Guests were Pam, Bryan and
second vice president; Pat Schaekel, secretary-treasurer; Janet KoScott Colwell, Tina Allen, Kathy
blentz, program activities
Pooler, Dinah, Greg, Cindy and
chairman; Leo H111, creative and
Jonathan Stewart, Melissa Eriecritique chalnnan; VIcki Williams,
wine, Vlrl!lnla, Teresa and Shelly
public relations; Stephanie Yokes,
Nelson, Cindy and Amy Petry,
cathy and Bobby Lambert, Scott
awards chairman; Susan Darling,
and Martlyn Haddox, Gary Rife,
;:s~~s;r~~~=. VIvian, Bradley, Monica, Christa,
phone cbalmlen.
Gregory, Beverly and Beth Ann
Next meeting wm be held MonDlnguss, Crystal and Jim Arnold.
day night, 7:ll to 9: ll p.m. at the
United Faith Church, Route 7 by·

Camera Club

pass with a !ibn presentation on

basic camera operation followed
by discussion to be led by HW.
Those attending are to take a
loaded camera and Instruction
mok
·

Middleport
Garden Club

Star Grange

Installation of officers hlghllgh·
ted'the recent meeting of the Mid·
dleport Garden Club held Tuesday
at ljle home of Ml'!l. Carl Horky.
~by Mrs. ~urSklnner,
outadng president, the new officers
are Mrs. David Bowen, president;
Mn.Dana Kessinger, vice president; Mrs. George Anderson. seMt&amp;ry; Mrs. Paul HaptonstaU,
assistant secretary; and Miss Nel·
lie Zirkle, treas\ll'er'

Star Grange held Its annual hay·
ride and wiener roast with a regu·
Jar meeting Saturday night.
During the meeting, It was announced that Hemlock Grove
Grange wiU visit Star Grange on
Saturday, Oct. 2, at 8 p.m. The
women's activities cbalrman an·
nounced tne winners of the contests
JUdged at the Pomona meeting on
Friday· night. uncotn HOuse products orders are now belnlli taken

1466

~OPS
.l ' '
A surprise dinner party honoring
PhyDJsCiaywhowasobservlngher
second anniversary In the KOPS
(keep off pounds sensibly) Club
h1ghllghted last week's meeting ot
TOPS 1466 of Rutland.
Also recognized during the meet·
lng were Judy EbUn and Melva Eblin, winners of the "Get Slim for
Fall" contest. Each received a cash
gltt. It was noted that the "lett
pound" game will conclude In
another week with the winner to·recelve a charm.
Gloria Oller and Judy EbUn were
honored as the weekly best lasers.
Shorty Wright, leader, dlstriruted
questionnaires on weight problems
for discussion. Dixie Sayre was a

Eligible for federal supplemental compensation
More than 30,(XX) unemployed

wol'leerS In Ohio whO exhausted
their federal-state extended benefIts on or after June 1 of this year
may be ell&amp;lble for 10 weeks of Fed· 1
eraJ. SUpplemental Compensation
(FSC) under legislation passed In
the.98.3 biiiJon dollar tax Increase
by Congress on August 19 and
sliJ.!ed by President Reagan on
September 3, Administrator Gary
E . Stein of the Ohio Bureau of Em·

ployment Services (OBES) announced today.
The first compensable week
under this federally fundeed program Is the week beginning September 12. Unemployed workers In
Ohio, who are eligible. are being
notified by maU to report to the
nearest Job Service office to fW out
an application form for F.S.C.
Ellglble claimants wU1 receive
the same weekly benefit-amount

that they were paid under the regu·
lar Ohio benefits and the federal·
state extended benefits. The new
federal cmpensatlon program,
which ends March 31, 1983, extends
the maximum number of weeks for
unemployment compensation In
Ohio to 49.
The current federal-state extended benefits program In Ohio
trtggered on January 2 of this year,
and the !!sst cmpensable week was
the week ending January 23.

Asbn

UMW.

· ·

guest.
nr
· At Wedneaday's meeting Mrs.
""'"'I
·
'
OUer and Mrs. Sayre were the top
Officers for 1983 were elected at
IORel'!l. Each received a ribbon and the re~;e~~t meeting ot Asbury Unl·
g1tt from the club which also sang . ted Methodist Womeh held at the
In their honor.
home ot Beulah Ward. . •
A new contest "Get On Target"
'llie)l are Opal Kloel, president;
was Introduced. Arrows can be carol CUndiff, vice pi'esldent; April ·
earned In thecontestbykeepll1ga Harmon. secretary; He)en Tea·
calorie chart, having weekly ford, assistant secretary; AJ!Il
ll(elght loss, exercising four Urnes Sauvage, treasurer; Grace Weese.
weekly, and staying for meetings assistant treasurer; Margaret EJ·
W\th bonus points for weight loss.
chlnger, Beulah Ward and Bernice
Mrs. Wrlgllt read "Myths, Winebrenner, ·nomlnatl!lg
Truths, Advantages
Dlsadvan· committee.
tages ot Starch Blockers" and this
Qlalrmall named for the year
was follawed by discussion.
were Mrs. Winebrenner, program
resources; Mary Usle, Christian
personhood; Nora Houdashl!lt, supPQrtive community; lrelle Parker,
The ReedsvUie UMW met In the Christian social Involvement; Mrs.
church basement with Mrs. Erlcka Eichinger, Christian global
Boring and Mrs. Pat Martin, hos· concern.
·
tesses. The meeting opened with
Plans were made to attend the
the Lord's Prayer In unison and district meeting to be held at Cbes-'
scripture reading by Mrs. Marlene terhlll on Sept. 29. A collectloJ1 for
PutmanfromthebookofMatthew. theMcCurdySchoollnNewMexlco
'Thedevotionalprogramwasledby w!Ubetakenatthemeeting.
Mrs. Sand)' Cowdery on faith. The
Mrs. Cundltf · presided at the
group sang several of their !avortte meeting which opened with a read·
nymns and closed with prayer by Ing and devotions by Marcia Karr.
Mrs. SUe Douglas.
Officers' reports were ......... and 78
,... ~,.
Mrs. Dolly Reed conducted the shut·ln visits were reported.
business meeting. There were 46
Sunshine boxes tor residents of
shut-lncallsmadeandcardsslgned the Pomeroy Health care Center
for several friends. District meet· were prepared. Helen Teaford had
lngs were received from the Dis· a reading, "Freedom'ls Something
trlct president. Thanks were More." For the closing, Mrs. Kloes
rece1ved~ a home mlsslnn•"' read "Great Comma"""--ts."
-·-•
"""'""
project.
for a trip In October
Refreshments were served fol.
were made. Games were plliyed lowing the Lord 's Prayer.
and prizes awarded. Refreshments
were served to these members and
guests: Mrs. Vlrl!lnla Walton, Mrs.
Mary B~. Carrie Best, Mrs. Bar·
Plans , for serving the homebara Masters, Mrs. Vema Rose, buDders banquet on Oct· 19 were
Mrs. Mamie Buckley, Ml'!l. Put· made when the PhUathea Wome~
man, Mrs. VIvian Humphrey, Mrs. met at the Middleport Church
Lorraine Wigal, Ml'!l. VIolet Satter· Christ recently.
fiandeld, Mrs. Cowdecy, Mrs. Douglas,
c:~o~
Mrs. LUIIan Pickens. Mrs.
Humphrey was "'ven the door with Clyda Allensworth, Regina
prize. The October"'meeting wiU be Swift· Beulah Roush • a nd Betty
at the Douglas home with Mrs. McKinley to serve on the ki•~!Jen
"'
'"·-~Rose and Mrs . Humphrey comm1~,..,; PhYDJs G""-•
~,. "'""""
assisting.
Stewart, Ella Mae Daugherty,

am

Reedsville UMW

Philathea Women.

ov::

w: :.:;:

MtN~r• S.,t•• lie

-~-~E:t-~~~~~~~~~~·
'1
sm·
es
:
s·e~c·
es
.
·
.
't'.
Bu

MCI&lt;bt-

Martha Odldl, all4 BettY
ley, ciiJIInll .-oom; and· Mildred
Hawley, Grace Hawley, and .~·
c1s Roush, cleanup.
· •· •
A fatller·8011 banq\let to be beld In •
November was cllaculsed. A thank
~ note •was sent to ~ All!!nS- \
worth for use other ~ard tot a plcnlc. Ella Mae Daugherty pve .
deVOtiOns followl the PhUatllea ~
song and Lord's Prayer by the 29 '·
memben and, four guestll .attend· ,
lng. Members answered roll «;¥¥I ~
wlthafavoritesona. ,
'
A demollstratlon .wp ,!llv~ by )
Becky Lovlni on FrenCh crepes .;
and Kevil\ Lovtni soowed how to ;.
cook with a wok- Mitzi Saltaman ;
had the c~ prayer. _ .. ""
'
• A salAd eourse was senred. .by ·
C1yda Allensworth; Regina ~ f.
Gertrude Mlller, Mrs. Daugherty, .'
and PhYllis Glllley.
;1

youth Sunday

t

BARBARA'S setml
OF DANCE

H. L WRITESEL
eGutters

j~

• Downspouts
• New or Repair
• Painting

TAP

Teachers of the primacy depart·
ment a! the Middleport ChurCh of
CJ\rlst hoSted a pre-promotion day
party for the children of the depart.
ment recently.
The group went to the Pizza Hut
1n Gallipolis after which theY returned to the chw-ch social rooms
for games.
On behalf of the department [)o.
rolhy Roach, superintendent, pres·
ented a gltt to Cathy Cooper who
has taught In the department sev·
era! years rut has now resigned her
ciUS. Other teachers attending
were Thelma Boyer, Sherrie Bal·
ley, Kathy Baker, and Debby
Melton.
ChUdren attending were Jared
Stewart. Roxane WUIIams, Court·
ney Knapp. David C&amp;rmlchael,
LISa Hoi1aker, Steven and Stephanie See, Jamie Harris. Brooke
eoates, Tara Gerlach, Sharla
Cooper, Brenda Ash, Adam and
AlrOII Sheets, and Resa Harris.

Out-of-town guests
Many out-d·town guests were
pn!1181t f&lt;r the ~ of Della
Lo!J1Ie JohnsOII, daughter of Mr.
ani1 Mrs. Jerry M . Johnson Sr., Ra·
~. and James ~ oprten,
IOII'of Mr. and Mrs. Larry O'Brien,
Adami Road, Racine.
'
'f1le wt!ddlng took P,1ace on
March 21 at Racine Wesleyan Unl·
~.MethQdlllt Olurch. .
.
Olmlng tram out-bt·kM'n were

Rad!x&gt;r.

Hospitalized
Lawrence Gluesencamp, Jr ..
who Is hospitalized In Cincinnati Is
the son of the Rev. Lawrence Gluesencamp, Sr., and the late Albina
Gluesencamp and the husband of
Patty Gluesencamp.
Friends may sefid cards to V. A.
Hospital, Intensive care, a:ro vtne
St., CinCinnati, Ohio ~.
VIctor Roush, Syracuse, Is under·
going therapy at University Hospl·
ll\1. Columbus. He was Injured In a
motorcycle aCCident on June 22.
cards ~ be sent to Roush at the
Dodd Hall Rehabilitation Center,
Room 4162, University Hoepltal, 4'12
West Eighth Ave., Coltimbus43210.

Mr. and Mrs. Ben DongJu, Colum·
11u1; Mr.and M!B· v~ cady.
Service notes
Wlllit Jerlti 1011, Mr. IIJid Mrs. Torn
Tlykr IIIII ZacharY. Radnor; Mr. r Sgt. Robert M. Rhodes, 1011 of
IIIII Mts. Rex O'Brlen, ~ Robert G. and Lucille M. Rhodell o1.
Mrl. Lowell Tayklr, Terry and Rt. 2, Rlcjne, baa pertidpaled In an
DaVId, Radnor; Ml'!l. Sllaml J)o. Air Force Stratcegtc Air Command
'I '

(SAC) exercise called Global Shield
82.
Rhodes, an aircraft maintenance
specialist at IU. Sawy~r Air Force .
Base, : Mich.,- with th~ UOth
Organizational Main tenailce ~
SQlllldrCifl, jqlned others fran aD
SAC units In the United Slates ·and
selecled Air Force Reserve and Air
National. Guard units to take part ln .
command post and field training
exercise!~. Global Shield 82 was the
fourth such exercise held by the
command .In as many years. It was
d""l-....
·..:;.~-~:...
' . . •li'nd
.,
....,.,,...,-to'~"'u,..R.-.:
J:eadineai
the ability ot the conunand to carry
out orders which support U.S.
natl'onal pollcy. should detefrtnce
fail.
Components of lhe.U.S. Navy and
Marine Corps, as well as &amp;lements of
the canadian forces, also J)Brtlclpated in the ellerclse.
·

years old, male. Last seen

)I ~ES 3'1 UP

Thursday, c9rner Grass
Run &amp; Beec~ Grove Rd.
RewardSIOO. 614-742· 2~.
LO$I· Biack Border Collie,
stub tail, McKenzie Ridge
area . Call 614·949-2009 .
SS.OO reward.

Call Barbi'ra
Lawrence

992-3282

7·1Hfc I
i

&amp;-25-1""'
LOST· l male ·b lue tick and
1 male black and tan coon
dog, Last seen In the Greer
Hollow Rd . area. If found
2185.

·''

·~- -

~ c• . 1114. ...... c .....,.....,
u
......._ ,

. c. ......~.

-

' UU J\&lt;010 •N • ' " - - " 1

.

UMow _ r.._.,,.,.

,, _ , . . w. .

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

11 - l f - 1&lt;10\Aio•'

'

~
}1~ .... .,......

)\ l ... .

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

l'o i ,.IO. ...
~

~ ...

" - -~

= =~~1:t.~

__,,.... ...

........ w .......

cathy Blaettnar.
~
Special music ,was presented by ; ·
the youth choir, Cess Cleland, ~
Chase Cleland, Hank Cleland. 'Jlren· r
ton Cleland, Julie Buck; Tara 'Er• •'
win, Stacy Davis, Michael MaYer, :
Sllannon Spaun, Karen 1'11ornp9011; !·
carolyn Skinner, and JW Kautz. :·
~~~dlreoted the,c~lr. :.
,.~ ....... prayer was ,..ven·l
·by Jon Perrin. Greg 1bomas gave
the messsage and spda!on the~"$·
tionshlp of the scout laws to one's ;·
Chrlstlanute. Organlstfortheser- :
vice was Beth Perrin. ··
;

Roger Hysell
GARAGE r

EUGENE LoNG
SUperior Sidin&amp; Co'.
•'

VIIIJI &amp;Alullltl••

Coltlplett ~~~~~~ ....;
COIIIpllll IIIIMIIIq, ,..,,
,.. rl all IJpeL 1w.ut~ iii

llatne - 20 ,.an.
Fr•llll•lll

I

,. ,

1110·
... · · - - . .....
Il l - -~

ll\o&lt; - 1 1........ 1...

......... . .. .. c........

U M o.. N -1
If W~- hOO

:::-.:~~-

.

. . . . _ . , . . _ . ........ 1

, ~ --~~-·

•~.N&lt;•

........ '

....

~ ..,Ol ...... ... .

....... . c......
It"""''

h . .... ,...

s&amp;w TV

~2-2156

OHIO VALLEY
ROOANG
And Rome Maintenance

CARPENTER
SERVICE

oewayneWIIIIams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All makesand models

H:u~t:n~:~:~st:.::t"":~op

TOM HOSKINS

service available.
8·13·1 mo. Pd.

Ph. f4f•21H or Mf·l322 4·20-tfc

·,.-..... . .···.......'""

1-AUIII~M ... , Ioc l ~ ....

·PULLI
EXCAVATING

.. c........ ....,.....,

.

.......
_
u-•t-•

fW• ~M 6 11 1'1 • ·- ~ •­
I&amp;~Itl-ooq

10

.... . . ll_.,.

a... ...

-·-

-·-

. . .. ,~-"' ,''"'"
llll·"-""
....,...' _,...,

v

•

==~"*'

All Driobl...... for-

lloctotclf..,.
IF,.llliluloll

Ill D11tt ._ IHrict

..,......~ .

OrioliO...oEac~

••
••

.,.

R .. Biueancl Re-Finish
Restock, Parts, Etc.

·,"r y\

SJUMT !aYIIE
PUWIIS
HUIITIIC UCEIISE

~!il '

~'r

c.oP~ . 992-2280 or

Call.W.·9465 .

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

'

"

~~ · .

5ave I I I

.

-

NoSunclayCalls

'•

'

Let us clean . y.our :
carpet or furniture.
•No Soaking
*No Scrublllnl'
No Shrinkage
Duractean gets
carpet deep down 'll
thoroughlY clean.
Home or Business
CALL TODAY
For FrH Eslim.ate

*

,.,.
'

"••
.,,
,,'
•I

'

, I

~-767-3361

Addren•---------------Phone·------------------

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U.S. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
AutflorlzeCI J011n Deere,
New Hoflencl, Buill Hog
l'arm l!quipment

527 Filth St., Ivan Powell
Res., Ra c ine, Oh . 614-949·
2485

~- -· --·-

-·

•- -:-·-G iveaVi"iV ---·-

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for

3 female kittens 10 wks.
old, extra fuzzy, 2 all black;
1 while paws. Call 614-367·
0482.

F•rm Equipmtlllt
&amp;Service

t·3·tfc

information, call 304-675·
3950 or toll free J.B00·642·

3619.

-

A ffr~c-ti~;

Cnttai kl~t-eit - •••

batltltOIIlL ..........

dd-tiS.

... ......
.l,pluilli'ltllq, ~ p-

. FREE .
,· ESTIMATES
PH. 992.6011
. '

One small dog . Will trade
for a small pup. Call .W.·

.OONTRACTING

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

......... snce.

. F••• litn. hI IliAd
"flEE ~IIAlES:' '
We SMclilllH Ill "
RUIM &amp; Syrecuw

s-Hoehps
Phone 949:!1293

or949·2575 .

I

~129 .

- ----·- - -

C .IWanted
c !For Sale
C )Announcement
( )For R•nt

17, -

-

----

18._-19,
_____

1. _ _ _ _ __

20, _ __ __;

2. _ _ _ __

21 . _ _ __

3. _ __

22. _ _ _ _ __

_

_

- -----,--

~.
5. r --"-oo-

--

··7. -----_ _ _ __

..
~

--:--

-r-....:;_

..:.....-

_ __

23. _
2~.

_

-

WANTED :

Music ians

&amp;
vocalists to form SO's &amp; 60' s

plus non rock group, 304·

wanted RN medi cal coor·

vision and contractual ser·
vies. team approach. Con·

tact Ohio Bureau of Em·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction -·- ..
.. ·- ·- -Rick
Pearson , Ex ·

8

-

-

perienced AUCTIONE E R.

Auction every Fri. night at

the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
wel c ome .
R i chard
Reynolds Auct ioneer . 275·

3069.

- -··-

....
- -· . ·- .
~~ nt~ ! ~

St .. Gallipolis, Oh-45631 .

BuL

_

sale. Spring Valley Trading
Co., Spring Valley Plaza,
446·8025 or &lt;146·8026.
We pay cash lor late model
clean used cars.

Frenc htown car co.
Bill Gene Johnson

Situations Wanted

12

---·-·-- ----·----

Need a ride to R lo Grande
from Gall ipolis. Call Rio
Grande Element ary 245·

-

~
'

to

buy

toba cco

poundage. Call &lt;146·1437.
BEDS· IRON . BRASS. old
furniture, gold, silver
dollars, Wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiques, etc .,
Complete
househo l ds.

Write : M.D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy. Oh . Or 99H760 .
Gold , silver . slerling ,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currenc y. Ed Burkett Bar·

ber Shop, Middleport. 992·
3476.

gas hot waler heater . Located Mulberry HQts .•
Pomeroy . 614·992·2508 C&gt;r.;
call collect, Columbus,

8601.

- - ----- - - "
1979 Sectional house, Buck ··
stove. fully carpeted, total •
e lec.. 1,400 sq. ft . living .•
space . Moved from my lot.

S28,000. 6l06J.047B or 614· ·•
367 ·7534.
'
- - -- ·- - ---· _ _ .l)
For sale or tr ade·2 acr es., 3
bd .room , lar ge garage, · 2
bd.room renta l. Call

..

other pi eces of property for ,
sale.

- ·~ - -- - ----L

2 stor y 5 bedroom home on
appro~ i m ?t te ly 211, ac res,
close to Rutland Grade .·
School on College Ave. Will
sel l furn ished or un:·
furnished . 61042-2661 or
61042·2511 .

REDUCED·&amp; room house,' .
two lois, double gar&amp;ge,
corner lot, v ery
Jo c ati~n . 680 S.

Ave.M&gt;ddleporl .

15.

1..

watches, chains, rings, and

_ _ __

32. _ _ _ __._ _

32. -· -- - ' - - -

:14.
35. •:----,~ -""'7'...,..._

Mllll Tllll COull DR wlfll Rtmltt•net
Tile DillY ltntlntl
• 111 .,,Ott. 45769
........

Court''·

.

cood
2nd . '

Sl4.90o'.

About one acre lot In Bradbury . T railer hook·up 1,.
water, gas, electric, septic '

lank . Call614·992·2602. ,

6 lHA9·2129 or 614·992·6041 .

304-675~ 154~ _ _ -

- -- ... Insurance
--- --· -SANDY AND BEAVER In·

nual

1l

surance Co . has offered
services tor fire insurance
coverage in Gal lia County
for almost a century .
Farm . hOme and personal
:property coverages are
1available to meet in·
'dividual needs. Contact
Foster Lewis, agent . Phone

379·2204.

J · .·

LOT OWNERS. If your an·
income is between ..

SIO,OOO and $17,000 YOU may

qualify for a low Interest ~
government loan on a

----------

·-.

-~·

--. --- --··

Oh . Call614-286·3074 .

'· .....

-

--·~· - - -

I'

Beautifully restored Vic·
torian, s bedrooms. 4
fireplaces, ornate ca'r ved ,
wOOdwork , air conditioned ·,
insulated owner financing ' ,.

I ·•

304-675·6999.
- - - -· .. -- --------·
THREE bedroom lhoue
Crab Creek Rd .• Masbn co' ;
All electri.c, 304-675·3329. ·

. --- - - - - + 6 room house, 1 acre along
Kanawha River. Cap ·
evenings 304·675- 75~1 .
· '

18
Wanted to Do
---·- - ·-· - - - - - - Trash collection &amp; hauling .

Cat1446·4480.

R~;,-;,;;;i;,d'3 -;;;;;;-;~ :· .
home. Siding, carpet, in·

sulated , full basement lOW

Ch ild Care in my home

weekdays

'

CAPE Cod style COllage :'
home, nice r i\Jer virw, 7 ,.
rooms, l lf2 baths, ca 1 30..· .-.
77J.5712 or 882·2836. pper '

Schools Instruction

Karate the ultimate in self
defence all private lessons,
Men, women. &amp; children.
Instruction thru bleck belt.
Also availab l e Karate
uniforms puching and
kick ing bags, t!lnd protec·
tive equipment. J erry
Lowery &amp; Asso ciates
Karat e Studio,
143
Burlington Rd. , Jackson,

I

Unib ill Home. For details .
call D a. W Homes 30H75· '
4424 or 614·286·3752.
· ,.

2()'s.

lS

until

5PM .

Across from Vinton grade
school. Reference. Vicke

Diddle, 614-388·8832 .
DOZER

WORK

land

clear i ng ,

special

farm

rates . Call61079·2340.
Would like to do house
cleaning $.4,00 per hr. Call

utilities,

-- - --""""-·---do house cleaning of

- -·--

Housework . Phone 3~·675·
1237.

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

priced

on ' In· ·

spection . 304 ·675· ~338 .

· ·

3 bedroom house. large en·
try hall, two baths, suo·
porch, garage rd out·
building S39.000. 304-675·

'

~208 .

-· -

~.-

-··--

- - -- -··

Two bedroom

.

house for .

sale. downtown. Call lOA·
675-2331alter 5 p.m .
''

61~ · 367 · 0396 .

Wood ice boxes. Old desks Will
and bOOkcases. Will buy any kind. Phone 304-675·
complete household. Gold, 2028.
silver, old money, pocket
elc . Indian Artifacts of all
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Martin 992·
6370.

6/·,:.

I have seve al ···

room with firepalce, cen· ,
tral air: •. basement, phone ~

Iron, brass, or wood . Kit· Babysitting in my home.
chen cubbards of all types. Call &lt;146·0390.
Tables, round or square.

AJJ .

....., ;•

Tree tri mming &amp; removal.

446·0069
Wanted

'

Sale or r e nt. Newlef
remodeled . 2 rooms aridbath up, 4 rooms and bath ..

HOUSE Meadowbrook ·Ad·'
dillon, 3 bedrooms, family

Mobile -Hotn·e·s
-· _l~r_s~ !'

!_.

TRI ~ STATE
MOBI L E .
HOMES . USED·MOBt LE·.
HOMES, CARS . TRU CKS
GALLIPOLI S. CHECK•
OUR PRI CE S CALL 446·
7572.

CLEAN USE D MOBILE HOME S
KE 'ss EL ' S
QUALITY
MOBI L ii ,
HOME SALE S, 4 Ml : •
WE ST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
'35 . PHONE 4-16·7274.

.

~

'

'

1980 Winds or 14x70, new' ·

2m.

cond . Delu xe k itchen, large ....
living room &amp; bath, 7. '
bedrm. H•dden utiL room. ·

379·2310.

2 female half doberman.
half shepherd puppies. 6U·
99H458c ·

. pando. underpinning, fully

Attention
Rock
audition nOw being given
for 7 county battle of tile
, bands, S500 cash
must be ·~~emo recording.
3 kittens plus mofher·all Call for appointment, 6l~·
white, Ap~rpx. 2 mopths
. 2N-7061.
61:'"742-3065.
sized

____ _J _____ _

v ery beautiful q x65, 196e'
Park Estates )'lith ex· ·•,

28. - -- - --

30·----~
31.
_ __ _ _

14.

6 PupPies, part peek·a· poo
and part snauzer. 6U·379·

.

.

--·----- ~

5333.

25. - - -- -26. - -- - -27. _ _ _ _ __

29. _

13.

Good waf~h dog Shepherd
and Collie, very smart,
need good home in country .
Call61~· 388 · 8500 .

_ __ __

----,,..--

Mother cat a. 4 kittens.
Please call446· 1552, after 5.

'

bedro~~

6337.

OLD FURNITURE , hods,

ML

'..

367·0611.

ployment Services, 45 Olive

304·675-

sale may place an ad in this
column . There will be no
charge to the advertiser .

Dealer

·"•rts

item s.

Lesson s .

polnlment only .
6234.
- ---· - -

enlistment bonus and
c olle ge
or
V o · Tech
assistance. Be one of West
Virglnias . best. For more

adults group
homes.
Responsible for super·

9___

1
I - - ~-- --- - - -PERMANENT
I
HAIR REMOVAL
I Professional
1 Center. A.M.A.Electrolysis
approved,
I Doctor referals. by ap·

Nam•--------------------1I

'

BOGGS
1

.

fields . If you qualify you
may be eligible for an

The Length of Vine St.,
Rac ine. Wed .. Sept. 15,
from 8: 30·3:30. Numerous

1 ~n:.r M~r.;;e.wegy ~~:

Wrlle your own ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you gel
results. Money not refundable.

for high school se niors &amp;
graduates to train in com·
munic a tions ,
ad ·
ministration. supp l y ,
mechanics, &amp; many other

dinator programmer for
private corporation, new

I ~e~f~r-d.Che~t~~-0-h~o~--

I

WAITRE SS. maids, bar·

Rutland . 61H~ 2 · 2233 .

1

pay Cash for
Classlfle-ds and

BISSELL
SIDING co.

Golf

2
...
home, located i n city .:,
Reasonably priced. Showf' ·
by appointment. Call 446 ·,~·

Patio Sa le· Sept. 13 ·14 . Cor·
nerof College and Locust in

John 1 WAN TED TO BUY Old fur ·
niture and Antiques of all
kinds. call Kenneth Swain.
Finally Open ing·Capco . &lt;146·3159 or 156·1967 in the
I Antiques. collectables, evenings .
used furniture &amp; apSilver,
.1 pllances. Something for Buying . Gold,
1 everyone. 9:30 a .m .·4:30 Platinutn. old coins. scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
1
quotes available . Also
pointment. Buy·Sell· Trade. coins &amp; coin supplies for

D

SIDING

"Beautiful, Custom
llulltGerages"
Call for frH siding
estimates. 94HHI or

____ "-""

614·99H2S9.

367·7553 .

National Guard can help
you decide. We are looking

WV . Buy ing antiques. 304·
773·5785. 773-9185.

Girl th is Chirstmas with
there very own Broomstick
Horse. Made of cal ico or
denim . Place your order
now in 1ime for Christmas .

S35.o'oo&lt;'

Garage Sale Sept . 14 and 15
on G'e oroes Creek Rd. 2 112
mile from Rt. 7. Res. of
Becky Lane.

Balloons tor Birthdays, Get
Anniversaries,

co ntrac t ,

down. New gas furnace and

Estates, antiques, farm ,
household. Licensed Ohio·

Delight that little Boy or

WAifl ADS

Land

"

JU ST graduated &amp; unsure
about your future? The
West
Virginia
Army

making .

~13 .

Meigs Qo.-131 .OG Ton
(Plus Delivery I
4 Ton Minimum

AVAILMU

•excavating
•septic systems
•dump truck service
•seeding and reclaiming
•Racine and Syracuse
sewer hookup
Work Insured and
Guaranteed .
PH. JIM CLIFFORD

WVa .

operating, Flea
Markets, music, mol assess

I'L---------'· Call
Sweethearts or Parties .
Balloons and Co .• 4-16 ·

Delivered Price:
POMEROY-$31.0G Ton 1
MIDDLEPORT
AND RACINE-S32.0G
Ton

PH. H2·715&amp;

CONTRACTING

Botton

Engines

Wells,

~-~-;;..

'

Frasier

PHONE 992-9913
9-2·1 mo.

a

~~~·~r.:::::::::::'9:·1=·l~m~o·~r=~==99~2=·2~6:18~:=~~
;======~~~3-~t~m~o·
' ' J&amp;F
CurL Inflatlon

•

.,
'•
::

·

2:00 jl.lft.·!l3G Lm.
Sal l Suo. 4:00 p.01.·2:3G 1.m.

AND'C:USTOMIZING

Lar'-"H~rJ~:~;~obs

:

ANTIQUE STEAM-GAS
ENGINE ,
TRACTOR
SHOW Sept. 17, 18, 19, 1982.

ll&amp;flt "tH ..~.

Plhsburgh No. A
Mine Run (Strip)

sewing

machine repair, parts, and

Ill Driob \Hrict
lliiS IIC!ImrS WD
L.tllllt loool

HH2t5 or H2·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-tfc

ond

supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Oavls Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446·0294 ..

IOC.-Gnftll&amp;fll

V. C. 'YOUNG Ill

GUNSMITHING
.

-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
- La-Boy
-Trencher
-W1ter:
-Sewer
-Gas Lines
-Septic Systems

••

·,POMEROY.. OHIO
' '
.PH.992·2259

llan. tin Sll.

T-.-~He lll&amp;llt

Evenings.

Cheshire Village . Call 6,.,._,~,

~7 5·5370 .

~nnoun(ementl

ba~.m e nr,

House and 10 acres of Ia net'.

Yard Sa/e. Fri. &amp; Sat .•
Sept . 17 a. 18 . Rain or &gt;hine.
Bill Robinson 's , Alfred , Oh .

'SWEEPER

----"·l~

'h
acre~
c ity schools1
county water . 10 m in. to '..
Gallipoli s . 216 · 734· 373.j. ·
Bedrm . ,

Electronic Tech . for TV
repair . Experienced only.
Part or possibly full tim ~ .

tenders &amp; clerks wanted.
Write qua l ification &amp; phone
number to: Job Placement,

"
'

for

P .O. Box 102, Henderson,
wv 25106.

12·13· 1~. 9·3. Rt. 12~ just in·
side Rutland Corp. limits .

-

PRESENTS

'UMIIMNm1hN11

S&amp;W..

-Diners

608 E. MJIN

PH. 949-2410
9 1.11.10 2 p.ll.

BeiV[een Cheshire &amp;
Middleport, Ohio ·"

Avon . (Mus1 beiB or overt .
Call · now 614 ·698 · 7111

Call

Yard Sale 1 mi. out
Georges Creek Rd . from
Rf. 7, Sept. Wh. Winle r
clothing and more, 9AM to
5PM.

Moving Sale, Furniture,
clothing, household items.

CANDLELIGHT INN

ntoo"'l. ~

I

BOB CAIIPIW.

Rt. 3, Box 54
Rlcine,Oh.
Ph. 614-143·2591

n , ,.,.. ,,.. w...
'' .,.... t..wo

u , ...........

collec t .

5 Family, boys &amp; girls
cothlng, all sizes, rocker,
home Inter ior a. m isc. uth
and 15th, 9·4. Rt. 588 in Rod·
ney .

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

1

ConyootO,O.IIoo..fri.
1Mof ' .... -

. , , . _, ......1_

Diamond necklace in Point
Pleasant area Thursday .

Sires from 4 to • and all

buildings 24x3•.
I wood
lnsutated Dog Houses

YOUNG'S

eRoofingofalltypes
eSiding
'
eRemoeltllng
• FrH estimates
e20 Yn. txPIIrlence

Ph. ,.5-4H9ar985-CIZ

------- - - - - -·.
I

' lliiPiii :

I

Utility Buildinas

-----1 r-;;;;;;;;;;-lrlt-~-.....,.....---J

AND
APPLIANCE ~ERVI
.
ChesterI OhiO

- ---- - - - - - - - ··
Reel Estate - General

"FREE ESTIII~T£5"
Ell*! • l11111red

1

Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
3·24·ttc

7·16·2 mo. pd.

1---------.o:...,
·· ' 1

•.. FfOWl-·""
....._
'
_ _ _..........:.;:.::......._
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___J ,,1'
.. l ""'

New Sewer HGollups
Beina Scheduled

Sizesstert from 30K24"

AUTO &amp; TRUCK ·

I I AviOI W .....

oi WM IH IO II ..,I

Travel The Seasons

51. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, 0~

&amp;-25-1 mo.

.,.._ ,..............,

··' '"'"'f........_.

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

REPAIR

'

CIIIW.33ZZ

·or 992·2282

.... _

• • - . . . ....... 1

Set your own hours. Sell

Flea Market open· air ,
Chillicothe Mall Shopping
Center, Chillicothe, Sept.
17· 18· 19.

H0111es - Ill·
tensive remodeling
• Electric work
• Custom Pole Bldgs. &amp;
Garages
• Roofing Work
• Aluminum a. Vinyl
Sidings
IS Veart E•perlence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

A VON . Need extrll money?

Young brown puppy found
near 22nd St. 304-675·2104.

7~~-==v~~=s~~ ~~=-

· ,
•
otfertocy prayer was given ' by l

contrac t .

sing. 614-992-6606.

Reward . Phone 30H75· )960
after 5PM .

::

ll ....1. ...... """''""

land

de tai ls 446·3937 .
3

C'-i(W,.,... _ , . _
1 A- -\

II
HelpWonted
TEACHING ASSISTANT •
preschool pt09ram at New
Haven, must have car and '
W.Va. Orlvlng license . Ap· I,, Ca;roiNe;ol
ply by Sept. l~th . Child and
Family Development
program ,
Community
5th A"e Huntington wv
25701 . 3o~·525·5151.
'
31
Homes lor Sa le
, •
In ground concrete pool ~~;
LAST CHANCE , House of 2 acre lot. Also has a 3 ~r ..
Lloyd, needs five demon: air conditioned house with ·
strators to show our line of full ba s ement, 2 WB,'
toys-gifts.
Our demoo· fireplaces, new carpet. ,
strators earn about $5.00 an Would c onsider lower•
. hour, pa id weekly . Our kit valued property In trade of:
is on loan. no Investment, will finance with low down
collecting or del ivery. Call payment and Ia% Interest,
Located 123 Garfield Avid
Me Collect. 61 ~ -992· 7046.
• '"''
Call446·15-16 .
- - ---·~
WiU trade my equity in ~ . t~
umt apt. bldQ .. for a trailerr
7 shifts . &amp; lot or a hou~ &amp; loti'
and shift Balance can be pa id b.,-..

or have any ·info. please
Nancy
call 614·UH588 or 61~- 7~2· rvanJ'J\elter director of Nur·

Meigs County and regional happenings
nahue and Angle, Marlon; Mrs.
Nancy Barnhart. Kim and Keith,
Stewart; Mr. al)d Mrs. Mike Oman,
Mr. and ~ . Tony Adkins, Sandusky; Molly Fisher, Ran·
tovWe, Dl.; MarkKruezer,Parma;
Mr. and Mrs. Kennet)l Bl1!&amp;i. A!)sted. w, ·Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Deroulnandson,MWvale,Pa.; Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Manges; and Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Klose and children,
Saxsonburg, Pa.; Mr. and Mrs.
James Freeman and family,
Janette, Pa.; Lois Boyd, Mlm Du·
nlevy, Wade J)unlevy, Shipping·
port. Pa ; Mildred Ripley,
Charleston, W. Va.; Pam Epling,
Doug Cowles, Jolynn Boster, and
Mr .and Mrs . Tim Godwin,
Gallipolis.

Lost : Red Dachshund, 3

'

Lldies JIZZI!'cise

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. H2-27t1
orM9·22N ·

•bac~hoe

Promotion party

.

·

LOST 6 mO$, old black
Doberman In lhe vicinity of
Bidwell . Caii61~· 38B· B15.5 or
«6-6610.

. 00. EIIOUIIEIII' ·

ROOFING

·

1( .... . , ,. . _,, . ... .~--~1
J ( ao-&lt;101 1. . - . l . .......... . ... . l

LOstanii- F'Diiilii-

,-·

Or Wr ote llil oly SHIIiM I Clnll lift Dt.l,
I I I Cwrt St., , _
, , Ott ~ U i tl

- - EZ

half German
hair and half Collie.
. l04·773·5403 alter 5 p.
m._ .

•

A

._..

PHONE

Ohio

.s·

·
Youth Sunday was observed at :;
Trlntty Church with the full wor· ·
ship service being presented by the :
boys and l!lrls of the church&lt;!!&gt;.~
the direction ot Ml'!l. Debbl Dlf'k, "
SUnday school superintendent. ·
·
Planlstf the~·"" tlmemedlta
or ..- .
·,
Uon was Beth Mayer, with Steve . 1
Musser gMng the Introit and '""""
'- l
ley Carr the --' "·- A,..,;;.t- ·
•
"""p'"'"· ~vvwere Michael Mayer and Trenton •
Cleland. The offering was n!CeiVed •
by """"'"'
n..w.o.. ....,.,.., Edw--' Holter •
.. ~•• , •
ouu,
• •
Nick o1- and Lesley Carr 'lbe '

The Daily Sentinel

....'"_,_
,_._
·-...,_,_.. ""'......

--·

Mol!(iay, Seplamber 13,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Daily sentinel

carpeted, gas. 56.500. Call • ·.
446·9380,
:
Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 14% fixed -- - ·--·--- - - - - - ; ,
rate. Leader Mortgage, 1· 1981 14x65 Ventura, 2 bdr :, ~
1100-3~1 ·6554.
exc . cond .• completely ~t •
' up. Call 614·256·1785 or 614· ' .
lii3-Pi:ofo:s.;:iin.~256·6265.
:' '
service1

.
·
Bab · ltti · ·
• P 1AN 0
TUN I N G a.
Y s ng In my · home REPAIR Call Bill Ward tor
Beagle puppy. 30H7S-' Mon.•Ffi. Call614·388·8101, appointment.
Ward's
leave name a. number.
Keyboard, 446·~72 ,

==~
·,r
· ~~~~JL-~.~------~ .
•·1 . f

~

I

.

·

·

-

' "'• .

Mob tie home ~·lth land ·• ·
Near Jeno•s, J kson and '
Gall Ia County II e. Cash or '' ·
terms cheap. c 11 614·384·
52-40. '

---.-·- - - - - -

�~- --·

".i' - · · 1

•'

Page . 8-The Daily Sentinel

MOIIC!Qy, ~., 13,1982

Monday, Septet•"* 13,19~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, Ohio

~~~~~~~~~CR~~~~~~~~~
J~
Th ey 'II Do It EVery T'1me
~1
'N' CARLYLE"'
'·
u,ry
76
AUto
"
_,&amp;'-"Ac:"'C~IIMI'~.!:lies:!-Mobile Homes
lor Sale

Household Goods

Richa r dson Mobile home.
10 x 55 furnished . Can be
seen at ~2635 - Gibson Rd . 3
mi les S. of Albany. Rei!l

Good
range$25,
modelGEAM·
FM radcabinet
io and
record player $20 . call 446·
0676after4 :30PM .

A1"75R liKJfV
WlieKEI'OAT H

~fJDW(.(JU)NV

ltJST OFFICI! •.••

good buy. S3000. 614·992·
JOSS or S92·6060.

~

Sealy luxury guard mat·
tress &amp; box sprl ngs. Head·
board &amp; frame. 5100. Call
614-367-0172 .

'1011

HIWEAIIO
eHVSL.OPE

12x65 mobile home. A ir ·

cond .. ti re -place. 614·992 ·
2898 .

1H.4rtL IIOUI
lH&amp;CID!HU

54

~QUIOST

USED MOBILE
576 ·27 11

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved. 1.000
gal. tank, pri ce $340. Other

W11'

HOME .

Misc. Merchandice

sizes in stock, haul In your

pickup truck. Call 614-286·
5930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

MOBI LE HOMES MOVED '
Licensed &amp; insured . Call '

304 576·2711.

-- - - - -

Wood burning a dd on furnDnce. Still in fa ctory

1975 Camer"on mobile home
14x70, 3 bedroom, one and
one:halt bath . central air .
utility bldg .included. 30.4·

crate. S450. Call 1·614·256·
1216.

by

Building materials block,
brick, sewer PIpes, w In·
dows. lintels,• etc. Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
call614·245·5121 .

·:a.-.,.u.

Saw Mill Lumber Com·
puler mill wlfl cut &amp;
deliver. Call anytime. 1·
614-886·7311 .

0

_ ,_... ~ •.._ ;~ ....
~
'"' 1 , _ " , .11"'""' 1,
wrft&amp; ~ ~

.MA-11te
A~~ Off'1kt Pi-. t

tlo

Wright

78
Clmplng
---=E qulpm!!!!_ _

Starcralt . fol&lt;l-01,11,
twice,

Trailer for safe, 1980 Oak·
wood, J bedrooms, 2 baths.
all electric, $1,000 down
and take over payments .

Call 304·576·2221 in Glen·
wood .

JT

2 bdr. mobile home, fur -

nished, adults only . Call
446·4110.

---Fa·r-riis iOrs-a~-.-­

For safe Farm, 207 acres
on Parker Run Rd. Land
contract available. $16,000.

down. 12 percent interest.
Mineral rights Inc . No
house. Calf 388·9346.
28

THREE

acres.

tobacco allot·

ment, mineral rights. no

2 bdr. mobile home in city,

ref . &amp; dep. reQUired . Call
614·256· 1922.
2 trailer , nat gas heat,
clean, riverview. Ca ll .«6·

1602.
12•65 2 bdr. mobile home
on Sob McCormick Rd,

buildings. S7,500. Call 304·
675-6851 .

new carpet, clean &amp; recon -

Farm for Sale , West
Columbia. 62 acres, 6 room
house in gOOd condition.
Plus A·C tractor and implements and~ wheel drive

per mo. plus utilities, water
pd . Call446·4491.

suburban . Mineral rights
Included. $20,000. for alt .
Phone 304-773·5936.

ditioned . Adults only, no
pets. sec. dep &amp; ref .. $180

bd.room,

furnished .

total

3

elec .,nice

location. $250. mo. plus
deposit and electric. 61A·

992·3955.
3~ - _!!~s&amp; Acrea~­

For sale one and half acres
more or
less. ap ·
pro~&lt;imately 6qD ft road
frontage
on
Cora Centerp~int Rd . near Cen·

terpoint. S3,000.00
682·6944.

Phone

Two acre lols·150 ft. road
frontage,

city

water,

lsi floor furnished apart·
men!. adults preferred. ref.
&amp; dep. required. Call 631
4th Ave .• Gallipolis.
Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath.
clean, no pets, adults only,

20 Acres, Greer Road area .

HUD

wanted: Block house wilh
reasonable, 304·757·9504 .

AeRtals

4l~~ _.tt!!.U~~.!. torR~!!! __ =._
112 acre. three bedr home.
basement,

city

school,

county water. Call 216·734·
3834.
5 rms. &amp; bath. ,1 child ac·
ceptabfe. no pets, Bob Me ·
Cormick Rd . Call446·2650 .
3 bdr. house 1 block from
grade school. Call446·4110.
A r . house renovated &amp; in·

sulated on 1 113 acre lot
with garage, adults on ly, 8
mi. South on Rt . 7. Calf 614·
256·1113.
2 bdr. house Lower Rt. 7 &amp;
a

s room

house in Eureka .

Call 614 ~ 256 · 1413 .
Pomeroy -2

bd .room

un-

furnished house. S195 . mo.
Security deposit. $100. plus
utilities. After 6-call 614·
992'2288.
One

bedroom

hou se ,

available Sept. 18th. 304 ·
675-2973 .

One bedroom furnished
apartment. Point Pleasant,
Deposit required. Phone
304·675·9760 or614·446·4229.
Mt . Vernon Avenue two

bedroom apartment, newly
painted , excellent condition, reference required .

304-675· 1962.
Furnished Rooms

Circle's Motel, telephone
446·2501 . For Rent, Weekly,
1 person $60.00; 2 persons
$70.00. Cable T.v ., air cond.
room .

S115 .

Gallipolis. Call 446·4416 af·
fer 7 PM.
46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large tots. Calf
992-7419 .

dep. req . Call446·1519.
available

2

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

bdr.

delu)(e, kitchen furnished,

good location, ulflllfes par·
tially paid. 5 rm house for

s..I_

_,_,
H"o"'us.,_,e"'h"o"'ld:.::G.,_,o,od=•-

5-ban Hustler vertical an·
tenna and 3 wheel bicycle.
Cafl446·3935 evenings.
Control hunger and lose
weight with New Shape
Diet Plan and Hydrex
Water Pills. Fruth Pharmacy .

Air tight wood burning
stove, $350. Calf 614·388·
9667.
Kelvfnator · frost free
refrigerator, GE frost free
refrigerator, Gibson frost
free 15 cu .fl. chest freezer.
Call446·4818.
P ittsburgh Number 8 house
coat. Mine run. 80% lump.
S35 a ton DELIVERED to
Gallipolis. $37 • ton to Point
Pleasant. wv .
Gas stove $35, side by side
refrigerator freezer $125,
air conditioner $50. Call
614·388-9793 .
Used Bassett pecon dining
suite, 6 chairs. table.
custom table pad .
446·0765.
Used V-30 Ditch Witch tren·
cher. 1·614·694-7842.
Firewood·S35. load. $45 .
delivered . 614-949·2542 .
Set of wedding rings, size 5,
approx. 115 karat. Wide
wedding band. 5500. 614·
992·2874.

0

Fold

Six room house, four miles

4 room house unfurnished

camp Conley S140. per
month. Phone 304-675·1371
or 675·3812 .
42

Mobile Homes

for Rent

2 bdr. trailer out Rt . 160, 2
112 miles from hospital.
Call446·0157 .

···- -- - - - - - Laroe 3 bedroom trailer .
completely furnished . S200.
ptus utilities . Must pa~
deposit. No pets. 614·992 ·
5511.

-------wao. three bedroom, all

electric. unf. S200. monthly
plus electric . Glenwood,
W.Va . 304·576·2441 or 304·
576·9073.
.. __ _ _
.. - - -Unfurnished 2 bedroom
$150. per mnth. Camp
Conley. 304·675·1371 or 6753812.

-- -------

Furnished.
Ideal
for
couple. No inside pets.
Private lot. Big yard. 4
miles out. 446-3918.

..

_
used ·

-~

cond. ...

down

camper,

73

'~

-

••

,

Lark,
sleeps
6, '
refrigerator, stove and fur·
"'
#'&lt;

f~~~~~~~~~~f~~~~~~e~w;;";,....~'"- nace.
.. -·- Phone304·458·1825.
- - - - - --·

All Breed Grooming, 7 days
a week. Pick up and
del ivery . Calf 614·367·7877.

FALL TRACTOR SALE
JfVfDENS FARM EQUIP·
MENT
446·1675

ACK Reg. Doberman Pin·
cher Pup and adult female.
Calf 614·367·0556.

Long

AKC Poodles. Calf 614·2-tS·
9184 alter 4PM.
American Pit Bull puppies.
Call614·388·8547.'
Grooming services. Will
clip Schnauzers and etc.
614·992·7342.
AKC Reg. Collie pups.
Have been wormed by Vet.
614·992·3923 .

tractors,

Vermeer

t bal
batH. hay equ pmen •
e
mmovers &amp; feeders,
wagons. rotary tillers, disc,
seeders, rotary cutters.
blades, gates &amp; cultivators.
And See us To Get Yoor
Pairs &amp; COMPLETE SER·
VICE .
Used Equipment
IH Hydro 70, Ford Jubilee,
135 MF, 600 Ford, Massey
Harris pony, 70 Oliver, B·N
Ford, Plows, disc, JD
manure spreader:
we buy Used Equipment
1

2010 John · Deere tractor
wide front end, 7 lt. bush
MALE Boxer for stud ser· hog mower·John Deere,
vtce. 304·576·2919 call afl..- post holer digger 2 augers,
4:00.
3 hitch tog splitter, scrapper blade, sickle bar
Registered Beagle puppies mower. $6,500 Calf 1-614·
for sate. 304·458·1552.
875-6009 or 614-388·9667.
Musical
Instruments

8eautlfuf Baldwin spinet
plano, perfect condition,
$1, 200. Calf 773·9158 or Bo•
134, Mason, WV.

1

61_-_-~rtil~~!J!m!!'f_l_ _

.
1973 Ford custom 500, good
mechanical cond.. good
tires. $600. Calf 44f·7649.
----

1980 VW Rabbit, ·4 Spd. ,
AM·FM stero, air cond.,
fog lights. Calf 446-7021 .
1960 Dodge Dart 4 door
sedan. Good ortgtnat cond.,
excellent Interior. S800.
Negotiable. 614-949·2693 or
614-985·3542.

19T6 Plymouth Vofare
wagon. Wilt consldef' older
car or truck on partial trde.
985--1335. $1380.
1977 Maverick, 2 dr., p.s.,
p.b .• A·1 cond. $1 ,795. 614·
667·3085.
1976 Ford LTO, 2 dr. hdtp.,
p.s .• p.b .• air. Low mileage,
exc. cond. $1,69S. 614·667·

VW Dasher. 4 dr .
Heavv duty trailer 3 axte, I wa9on. Good cond. $1,195.
ply rated tires, all brakes 614·667·3085.
are hooked up. Call614·256·
1975 Ford Granada. 6 cyt .•
12011.
stick shill, good cond., good
tires. $995. 614-742·2352.

Gravely fracto~ etectrtc
Lowery Genie electric start with rotary mower.
organ . Calf 446 · 3935 cultivator, plow and sulky.
evenings.
Calf 446·4149.
Bundy clarinet with case, International corn picker
like new. Martin electric with old wagon. Good
steele guitar, 10 string, working cond. S500-b01h.
with crate 11R amp. Calf Call Clarence Wickline,
614·379·2340.
Racine, Oh. 614-949·2916.

1974 Ford Pinto. 614-949·
21149 .

7t

'

Motor Home

":

1 Campers

1974 Apache fiberglass pop
up, 'S leeps 6, furnance and
stove. good cond. Colt 614·

'
RORN

2.t5-9153 after 5.

....... ···•· ...

'

..L.O

1.0

0

,_..._La

1-KJAAM-11

Home
Improvements

81

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential,
tree esttmates. Call6t•· 256·
1182.

---·-------

PAINTING · lntei'ior and
exterlo·r, plumbing,
roofing , some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Calf 614·388·
96r.Z .
Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouttng . 30 ye~rs ex·
perlence, specializing In
built up roof. Calf 614·388·
9622 or614·388·9857.

~

..

1967
Dodge Charger . CHRISTIAN'S CON ·
Almost !lhow condition. STRUCTION .
Constr. ,
Body Immaculate. Rebuff! roofing, siding, spouting.
318, Hottey 4 barrel. fencing, painting, repairs&amp;
headers. Must see to ap- . cleaning. 446·2000. call
preciate. No cheap. Call before land afler5 :30.
614·992·6569 after 12 noon .

I

,.,ner,

_,.~u

Three room furnished
apartment. adults, no pets,·
Point Pleasant. Calf 304·
675·2453.

1•

.

-~-

---.

______ _

.,

Garage apt. New Haven, 3
bedrooms, unfurntthed
~- month, 'p lus utilities.
304-882·3356.

I I K J

Saturday's

work of the inhabitants of

Chaco Canyon, NM .is analyzed. (Rj (60 min.) [Closed
Captioned]
8:30 1iJ Cil WKRP in Cincinnati
A fire in the building leads
to Jennifer and Herb get-

ting stuck in an ale;vatortoQ!Ithar. (Rj
i
9:00 U (I) (!) MOVIE: 'Murder
In Texaa' Part 1
Cll700 Club
()) • IDl NFL Football:
Pfttaburgh at Dallas
II ()) (10 M'A'S'H Colo-

ther" ·
with
th'

nel Potter tries to cheer up

cart?

Christmas by letting the officers and the enlisted men

switch places. IRI
()) [)) Tonight Scendlnevlal
Tonight's concert

.'

... ,,

'

marks the official opening

':P';'l

of the 18-month cefebra·

WiNNIE

tion of Scandinavia today

in tho United States. (90
min.)
9:30 (%) MOVIE: 'Tribute'
CJ ()) IIJ House Calla Or.
Solomon

recruits

HE

IF I CATCH Ot: BULLET
ON ·MY BED
'IN, i'LL

FINALLY
GOTTH'
WORD

WRING HIS
.

. NECK!!

·c.

__; ~,

•

PE(\NUTS

IF '(OtmE Nor FEEuN6 ·
wa.L. THAT'$ CERTAINLY ,

AettParts ·

• • Ctlll!rill

- ~ ~ EXC~SE·

PROBABLY
WISE JUST10
,5TAy IN 6ft'

I AAVE A KNOT IN ONE
OF MV SHOELACES ...

..,.

I ·'

.,

••

.'

BROOK GUTIER

CORNEA

To make this, the farmer wore a shoe that

was too tight - HIS CORN GROW

Jumble Book No. 1S, containing 110 puultt, ll available tor S1 .95 postpaid
lrom Jumble, c/o this news~per, 8011 34, Norwood, N.J . 07848. 1nclude your
name, addrnt, zip c:ode and mskt c:hKka payeblt to Newspaperbookt.

BRIDGE
Sound contract holds
By Oswald Jacoby
ud AID Sotlllg
NORTH
1-11-ll
+AQ32
.A3
.QJ
.AQ9S4

Alan: "Most of Paul
Lukacs' Bridge World magazine problems concern ways
to make uoaoUDd contracts.
Here Is a very sound one ."

EAST
+H 7 6

WEST
+108 4
.QH62
• A 10 8 6

Oswald: "In match point
. • play South sbould go right
after dlamon~. The suit will
break S-2 some 68 percent of
the time whereupon South
will be aure of at least 11
tricks. If diamonds don't
break he will still be able to
get Dine tricks by means of a
succeuflil club flneue."
Alan: "Paul says that the
correct rubber bridge play is
to lay down dwnmy's ace of
clubs at trick two. Then
UD!eu clubs break S·O, which
11 leu than a 4 percent
chance, be can lead a second
club toward bll jack. If clu~
break 3·2 he Is sure of four
club tricks. If West bas four
to the king he II also sure of
four club tricks. If Eut bas
four to the king he will duck ·
the second club. South will
now turn to diamonds and
get his nine tricks against
any diamond break. Also, II
the ace play dlsc:losed a 5·0
club break South could still
~~:_.~orne If diamonds were

•s

••o
s
u

74

• K 10 8 7
SOUTH
+K!
•Ks
+171412

.J

32

Vulnerable: Both .
Dealer: North
East

Weal

Pass

Pau

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

,.

Soot
l NT

Pass

Opening lead: •Q

Oswald: "Here is the hand
as shown in Bridge World.
Only Paul's super-safety
play would bring home the
contract since East holds the
klng of clubs and West four
diamonds to the ace."

6iHM~n{
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Spanish lady 1 Prank
5 Popular
2 Russian city
street name
3 For good

9 One of

4 .. _

the Ages
Wednesday"
10 To go (Fr.)
5 Get down pat
i2 Moist
6 Pacify
13 Serfs
7 Stevedores'
15 Palm leal
union
18 Actress Hagen 8 Mercouri
17 Holiday
film
brink
11 R~taliation
18 Officious
14 Poet,
28 King (Lat.)
Anne 21 "The Rose" 16 Utilities
star
customer
23 Presley's

19 Olive genus
21 Blundered
22 Respile
23 - Spenlow
25 To package
27 Rich
in comedy

29 Korean .
seaport
33 Monster
34 Serve · .
:IS Brigitte's
sununer
37 Sheep

"-Be Cruel"
24 Construe
26 Portico

27 "The Sea
Wolf"

28 Gennan
article
29 Rice dish
aci Wrath
31 Colorado
brave
32
Negative
gfem examines the con35
Strip
of
troversial and growing
str4ggle over book censor- 31 Precipice
.
ship in America. (60 min.)
.38 Elementary
10:15 (I) TBS E"l"'ing News
· substance
10:30 (]) Sing ·out America
liD Nawa
:19 Forebode
1 1:00 • (%) New..,.nter
40- Coty
Cil Naahvilfa RFD
UObserved
(]) ESPN Sporta Center
ffi Newa/Sportatweather
D(J)® Newa
11:16 (I) All .In the Family
11:3 0 . (I) ffi Tonight Show
· (I)
MOVIE:
-'Student
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
Bod lea'
AXYD.LBAAXR
(I) MOVIE: 'Honky Tonk
II
LONGFELLOW
Ft'uway
(I) Another Life
01111 letter aimply atands for another. In this sample A· is
D ()) Trap""r John M.D. used for the tllree L's X for the- two O's, etc. Single letters,
Dr. Gonzo Gateo applies for
apoetroph• the length and formation of the words are an·
a surgical poll and provea
hlnll. Eatb ·:Say the code lett en are different.
'
.
his worth to Trapper. (fl)
(~0 min.)
([) CaptiOned ABC Newe
IIJ MOVIE: 'A Thouoand
CRYPTOQUOTES
CIOWIII'
· 1 1:46 (I) MOVIE: 'Enter Laugh-

~au~•

12:00
• Allen
• .. (I) ES"!II 1!-nta a.tur.
clay Nltht ~t thli Flghtl
G~rrla Coetzee va. ' Stan
Ward.
(J)e«&lt;!Newa
(() PIS 1.818 Ntuht
.
12:30 e W &lt;D 1»18 Nitht with .
Dmd~

__ _____

~ Answer:

Jumbles: WAGON

Or. 25Drwn

Weatherby and Charley to
help him cut him away
·
from hill' mother. (AI
10:00 Cil MOVIE: 'St. Heltina'
•([)@ Lou Grant Charlie
fHis put down when Mrs.
Pyncbon overrules him and
D.onovarr· · wants advice
abouthialove tiff. (60 min.)
([) Crltla to Crlafa with
Berbara Jorden 'Books Under Fire.' Tonight's pro-

.,,

I I I xI r

AN"K

(Answers tomorrow) , .

(RJ (60 min.) [Closed Captioned]
IIJ Dlocover: Tho World of
Science
liD Odyauy 'Tho Chaco Le· ·
gacy.' Tho 900-year-old

otfo'

Now arrange the circled loners to
form lhe surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the &amp;bo'Ye cartoon.

Print answer here:

night's story involves a pair
of Irish inaLirgents and
their two British hostages.

pull th'
enqine

TOWER'.

1

'Guests of a Nation· To-

Goin' t'

WHAT HE SAW
FR'OM THE' EIFFEL

ISNORPE!
rJ

and Benjamin . (RJ

· 2 bedroom trailer. Real
nice, adults onty .. Brown's
Trailer Park, Mlnersviffe.
614-992·3324.
.
Completetv hJrntshed 3
bedroom. Total electric.
nice location. S250. month
plus deposit~ electric. 614·
992·3955._ . .
!

1-REFIHE.±

1IJ Great Perlormanceo

'
.

-..

I K]

an Army exercise, 'terrorists' kidnap Captain Lewis

inte~l~ex·

- .

World llerlee'
(I) Carol Burnett
()) Telethon Continual
(I) Newtl~rta/WHther
D ()) 1IJ G1 (JZ Newa
()) EIOCJ!rla Company
liD 3-2-1, Contaat
8:30 8 Cll (I) NBC Newa
I]) 160,000 Pyromld
Cil Bob Newhart Show
()) Newo
• (I)IIJ CBS Newt
([)Dr. Who
I
liD Ullet. Yoga ani! You
.IDJABC New.
7:00 8 (%)P.M. Magazine
(]) Bulr. Eye
(I) ESPN'e lnalde Baaeball
(I) Gomer Pylaill Entertainment Tonight
(!) Happy Daya
II ()) Tic Tee Dough
Ill liD MacNell-Lehror
Report
IIJ Newa
• (JZ People' a Court
7:30 8 (%) You Atked For It
(I) Conoumer Reporll 'The
Fullng Fine Show: Fit·
neat and heelth-related
products ore examined .
(I) Another Ute
(I) ESPN Sporta Canter
Cil And_y_ Griffith
()) • (I) F.amlly Feud
(!) L a - and Shirley
()) Bull,... Fleport
IIJ RIOhlirtl Simmon•
liD Jeo!l ~on wl W.
Devane William Devane .
portray• Jack london in •
profile of one bf America's
i!.••t writert.
•
IDJ
Entertainment
Tonltht :
'
·
8:00 • W (!) little Houae on
the Pt'llrie Char1os Ingalls
undergoeo a deep religiouo
that Jal)lel will soon die.
{Rj {80 min .)
(I) MOVIE: 'The Thlr,, ·
Ninell8fll'
(%) MOVIE: 'Suplrflv'
(]) Cllcutta'l Other Angel
(I) NCAA Football: Tulu It
Arkanoaa
())MOVIE: 'Any WednOI·
dav'
()) •IDl That'a lnorecllblel
Tonight's progrem fee·
tureo the U.S. Rubik's Cube
Championship, a legless
high achool athlete and a
13-year-ofd magician . (RI
(60 min .)
II()) Private Benjamin In

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hallett erosthers custom
Carpets. Free estimates.
Cafl446-2107.
Masonary work. Logue
c_ontl"octlng,
Rt.
1,
Ewlngton. )Calf 614· 388·
9939.

LIFUD

Movie'

experience when he learnt

.........
.... ...
__ ...... ....
..

.

. H6'1,~ 1 DlH 1 KID
00\AAT 'KJU'Re
Bi)511N' HIM'?

Ctll'T 'Wf&lt;R'I, ~'1. IOO'LL RW 'bJR

ser •ees

__

•

from Pt. Pleasant. 304·675·
1741 after 5.

1!91• Bunny

S2495. located Main and
'
Second, Middleport, Ohio . ... :
614·992-2828.
.,
,:~

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boarding aft breeds. AKC
Reg. Dobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service.
Call446·7795 .

57

Cll N-nter
(I) MOVIE: 'The Loon1y

11:00 •

W MOVIE: 'Murder at the

SINGS 'CONCRETE CON·
Trumpet for safe· Exc .
HARTS Used Cars, New STRUCTION
cond.·$150.00.
Call
614·992·
:=----,
l
-,lv-e-s"'toc-:-k-SWAIN
Haven West Virginia. Over in concrete Specializing
mercia I properties for sale
63
driveways,
Sale. Macrame cord
3753.
20 tess expensive can In sidewalks, floors. patios,
or lease . A-One Real AUCTION FURNITURE &amp; For
(Christmas
colors)
beads.
PAWN
SHOP
62
Olive
St.,
Super
Chlx
colt,
Super
81
stock
..
Estates, Carol Yeager,
eta. 11 yr . exp. Call614·367·
book . Good prices. Phone FOR sale. Spinet console oullded, 17 months otd,
Realtor . Calf 304·675·5104 or Gall ipolis. Couch, loveseat 614·992·
3436.
Ask
for
and
chair.
S199 .;
Plano Bargain. Wanted: brlllant
conformation, CARS $2001 Trucks $150! 7891.
675·5386.
·
walfhuggers $125.; bunk Rhojean.
Responsible party totake blaze face, 1 while sock. Available et . focal gov•t
beds with bunkles, $170.;
low month IV paymen· Exceffent temper men!, sales. Call (refundable) l · Gene's Steam Carpet '
2 bdr. downtown, all car· box spring and mattrMs, 8ollns lL horse lawn &amp; over
Clean-Scotch Gaurd·Free
ts
on
Spinet plano, Can be S800 f)rm . Call 992·7205
ext. 1855 for estimates-spring specials·
pet. complete kitchen. all $100 .
Firm, $120. ; garden tractor. Exc. cond.' seep focally . Write Credit mornings or 446-9510 af· 714·569·0241
directory that shows you Gene Smith, 992·6309.
electric heat-air cond ., recliners. sao.; 9 x 12
mower deck. snow
Manager. : ~ P. o. Box 33 ternoon. ask for Paul.
how to purchase. 24 hours.
Washer-dryer. Call446-4383 linoleum rugs, S22.; maple with
blade,
turnout
plow,
util
ity
Friedens, PA 15541.
·- :-· - -- ..-----days. 446·0139 eve.
rockers, $~9 . , wringer wagon &amp; chain . 614·985·
Bred Gilts for safe. Call 1980.0LDS Omega, 2 door, Carpentry repair /!.
washers. refrigerators, 4346.
remodeling, wall paneling,
Bundy alto sax, excell. con· 614·256·1353.
automatic. extras. 304·675· ceiling tile &amp; siding. 614·
Fu rnis hed Apt., 1 BR, 243 dinette
sets, chest,
dillon.
case,
nb.
Band
2580.
Jackson
Pike, $235 . dressers, bunkie mattress. Calf Robert Harper for Gin·
992·2759 .
.
Today book, music stand 1 Nubian bffly goats. 1 112
Utilities paid. ~-.4415 after $40. Calf 446·3159.
seng
and
Yellowroot
incl
.
$250.
firm
.
304·675·
old.
Call614·256·6041.
7 p .m .
· 1972 Chrysler Newport. 304· RON'S Tefevi!lon Service .
prices. 304·675·1293.
3591.
. 675·5072.
GOOD
USED
AP'·
Specializing In Zentth and
Good family milk caw, Jer·
Furni shed Jr. private bath, PLIANCES · washers,
Motorola. Quazar. and
Warm
Morning
wood
bur·
Clarinet,
Selmer
Paris,
sey
and
Gurnsev.
very
oen·
B•S 2nd . Ave. Gallipolis. dryers,
refrigerators,
. - - .., . - - ----· house calls. Call 576·2398 or
with
blower.
304·
shape.
Model
9.
Good
tie
for
sale.
2-15·5844
or
446·
R!'l . preferred . Calf 446· ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
7] ___ _!ru~k's for Sole
446·2.154.
5.
severalyears old, asking .4J4.4.
n 1s.
plfances. Upper River Rd .•
SJOO. 304·882·2822.
82 chevrolet 1/2 Tpn PU. 6
beside Stone Crest Motel.
Yearbooks, 1971 thru 1980.
Reglsterd Appaloosa Mare. cyl., stand. trans., ralley · F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
T;.ri'l Townhouse Apart- 446·7398 .
removal. Calf 675·
1977
Atlas
$10
..
set
of
used
trombone.
good
con•
Wood
burning stove. 304· wheels &amp; radials, 25 MPG. stump
mrots . 2 bdr . 1 1/2 baths,
1331.
8.700
mites.
Calf
446·0043
af·
Book
dictionaries
dillon
.
304·675·4090.
882·3242.
(!tc:;hwasher. disPOsal, cenLAYNE'S FURNITURE
fer 5.
set of Medica I En·
tral air , pool. party house. Sofa, chair, rocker, otRINGLE'S SERVICE ex·
basketball
court, toman, 3 tables, (extra cyclopedias S30 . 304·882·
58
Fruit
64
Hay &amp; Grain
:1654.
1966 GMC 1/2 ton flatbed, perienced mason, roofing,
n l r:~y qround. laundra mat, heavy by Frontier&gt;. $685.
&amp; Vegetables
For safe Hay. Calf 61-4-379· extra springs, 4 speed, V-6, carpenter, electrician,
f ishi ng pond, funrished &amp; Sofa, chair and foveseat,
GOOD THINGS TO 2157.
first S200 takes It, Call 614· general repairs and
LJnlurnished. Call 614-367· $275 . Sofas and chairs New maple bed with mat·
EAT :: : CANNING PEAC·
256·1919.
remodeling . Calf 304·675·
7R50
priced from S285. to S89S . tress and box springs. S150.
HES. Yellaw Freestone
2088
or 675·4560.
Tables. S38 and up to $125. 304-675·6922 after 7: 30p.m .
canning peaches now Hay, square or round
Hlde·a·beds,$440.
and
up
to
Smo ll furni shed effiency, 1
available white the supply bates. starting at $1.00 in Luv 4x4, toi.Y. mites. gOOd Water Wells. C'IITfmerclal
cond. Calf 446· 2706.
pro fessional type male S525., queen size, S380. Apples. Rome Beauties,
fasts. BOBS MARKET-- bale. 446·6566, 446·4036.
and Domestic. Test holes.
on l y Center' air &amp; heat. Recliners. $115. to $325., Grimes Golden , Golden
Mason
W.VA.
773·5721
open
·Lamps from S18. to $65 . 5 Delicious, Mcintosh, Red
Pumps Sales ai)CI·1SJr,vlce.
Co II 446·0338
1974
F
350
Ford
1
ton
truck.
7 days a week . .
EAR corn for sale. calf 304·
pc . dinettes from $79., to Delicious,
304·895·3802 .
..'
Jonathan.
$1000.
614-985·3373
days.
675--1308.
$385. 7 pc .• S189. and up.
molasses,
- -· ···- - · -~-+-:--614·985·4115
eve.
and
week·
3 rms. &amp; bath. furnished, Wood table with six chairs sorghum
APPLES several varletys
ADVANCED ,;·seamless
. rld ults, no pets. Call .of-46- $395. to $650. Desk S110. potatoes. onions. red apple
of available. Hours 9 to 6, HAY for safe, $1.75 for ends.
house
Rt.
35.
Henderson
.
Gl(tter·
Doors ; , ·Ofiering
3733 or 446·0171 .
Orchards, St. bale, In barn at first cut,
Hutches. SJOO. and ssso ..
.v uttoii;lng,
- - - - - - - Fitzpatrick
Pickup, con-tln·use
1977 Chevy
Rt. 689, Wlfksvfffe, Oh, 669· 304·895·3666.
maple or pine finish .
PB,PS,AC, Aut.o matic, seamless siding, ·.1'99flng, • ·
BasSett Firewcdt SJO. pickup toad; 3785.
1 BR furni shed apt., car· Bedroom suites
door~;
free
with topj)er. new tires, garage
pctPd and AC. $200 .00. plus Cherry, $795 . Bunk bed mostly Oak and Ash.
estimates.
614·698-11205.
Already
spilt.
304-675-2571
sharp. Phone 304·675·5281.
utilities . No pets or complete with maHresses,
59
For Sale or Trade
S250 . and up to S395. Baby
,
"
children . Phone446·1788.
PAiN:UNG
beds, S99 . . Mattresse' or Sears best '4 deep well 2 ton wrecker 5 15 Holms
7~ .. _ __ Vans &amp; 4'!!.:9_
•_
terior,
free estimates, 304- •·
box
springs,
full
or.
twin,
pump
with
35
gat.
6 room, unfurnished downwench $2900.. 1979 Flat
67S·1128.
·. ( ;:
.•
International
Scoot
4
cyt.,
J
S58..
firm,
S68.
and
$78.
71
Autos
lor
Sale
tank.
Phone
304·675·3538.
$2800., 1954 Ford 43,000 ac·
stairs apt. in city. Just like
4·WD, runs exc .. boclv .._ :: ==::·=.=:=-::_._ ___ :..._
Queen sets, $195. 4 dr .
:
;·
)
tuat miles $1200. Will sell or 1980 Pontiac Flrebird. AM· spd.,
£1 house. must be seen to apPluml!ing • i
prec ia te. Ref. &amp; deposit chests, S42. 5 dr. chests, Wedding dress and vall, trade all for a four wheel FM cassette, air, $6,000 good, big tires, good shape. 12
New batterv. S750 or trade
requ ired . Adults only. No $5.1. Bed frames. $20.and size 6 SSO.OO Phone 304·675· drive truck. See at Ed· firm . Calf 614-256· 159,8.
$25., 10 gun · Gun cabinets, 5829.
for auto. car of equal value. ... - - ~ .!:'!.~~ -:,.,;...:
monds Grocery. Jerrys
p• ts Call446·1359.
Rt. 4 Box 25 Texas Rd. on
CARTER'S PLUMBfNG
S350.. dinette chairs S20.
Run Road.
and $25. Gas or electric
AND HEATJNG ·
1978 Thunderbird, AC, PS, HilL
2nd floor furn ished ef- ranges ,
PB, auto., AM·FM, • very
$325.
Baby King wood burning stove,
Cor . Fo~.f'!,\l&lt;~lne
firit·ncy ap t. Apt. 4, 729 2nd matresses, $25 I $35, bed with blower, 304·675·6328.
....... '
good cond., $3,295. Call 446·
' '
Van 35ll'englne. p~~~~·~.t:44!7
Ave. Adults only . 446·0957.
frames $20, $25, I SJO. Used
4554.
, , ,
days.
•
•
..,
•
•
-r••
....
'\ ~:.
Furniture -- bookcase. New 25 HP rotary screw air
eve. and week· f4
--Ei..irlcil ____ _
3 room fu rn ished apt. $250. ranges, chairs. end tables, compressor. $3,995, 304·766·
WINDOW TINTING Auto- ends. ·
.. .. _ &amp; ~•!f'!Jer'atiOI_:I__ _
monTh inc ludes utilities. recliners a)1d TV's. 3 mites 6241.
Home-Commercial. Cut
Inqu ire at Meigs Inn in out Bulavllfe Rd. Open 9am
high
energy
cost, 74-- Moiarcycles-- ~Machine repairs. ·,
SEWING
to 7pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am
Pomeroy .
professionally Installed .
Fuel
oil
furnace,
never
John
Deere
dozer,
model
·.s.rvice.
Authorized
Singer.
to5pm, Sat.
·
1974 Yamaha endre, dirt Sales- &amp; , Service Sharpen
Calf 446·3100.
been
used,
304·576·2026
af·
450B,
6
way
blade.
Call614·
446·0322
bike. &lt;;all Gl-1997.
2 n1 ce Apt. in Middleport. 1
ter6p.m.
379-2340.
. SclsMr~. , Fabric . Shdp,
i
furnish ed with utilities. 1
Pomeroy. 992· 2284.
unfurni shed, you pay
::::;.:..:.. :;: c: :.=:. =~ - :-r :-. ::. =.
uti I ities No pets! 6 U-992•.L .. ~!"!!'~l!f!f1Ji'!!l. _
3190.
'·
JONES BOYS WATER
·SERVICE. Ca1161-t-367-7~71
Furnished . apartments for
or 61-t-367-G~l.
rent. 614·992·5434. 614·992·
5914 or 304·882·2566.
Now- Haulfno ."..IUse cO.t;
1978 Ford Fairmont. 4 dr ..
lump
or stoker up to 8 ton.
ex.
clean,
$2,200.
Call
446INti
allll
Apartments. 304-675-5548 .
Limestone, · top , sou, ffll
4782, Gallipolis, OH.
MetWs fer S.la
''·
. Cltrt. catt 614·367-rlot.
---- --------- 14 lt. Stllf'Craft aiUril. semi ..
...-........,.
..
71 Mercury Comet P.rtect V·hUif 10• ltp.,J~ out
J IMS Water Ser\ilce. Cail
condtl9fl, 900d ·fl...., 151111. board. tilt
,_con- Jim Lanier, 304·675-7397:
Ca1161~·31f-9321.
_
Clition 11200. 3DW7$-HSI.
. _..._.
'
rent. Residential and com -

basement, minimum 6 inch
root overhang. Cash if

APARTMENTS for rent,
unfurnished, call 304·675·
2218 between 8 &amp; 6 and 675·
6753 between 6 &amp; 10.

utilities pd, single male,
share bath. 919 2nd. Ave .,

Apartment
for Rent

behind 8'4 Lumber. Call304·
675·6873 or 675·3618 .
Call evenings 304-675·7541 .

nlsoed, S225.00 month. 304·
67!&gt;-6730 .

Furnished
44

furn ished

apartm 1.mt ground floor ,
priv a t ~ entrance, outskirts
Henderson , utilities fur-

45

Completley

room

excellent

0
·-·--·.
.
.
.
---

I ()

EVENING

..."

SPECIAL .Complete
enamel paint lobs from
$300. Sunroofs Installed
from $225. Auto Trim Center. 446-1968.

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow puppies. CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Calf 446·
3844alter4p.m .

UPPYP

9/13/82

Auto R!p.olr

A,

Unacranibte theM four Jumbles.
one letter to afiCh oquare, to fo&lt;m
four ordinary WOlds.

Viewing

~-

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ftJ}~~fj}"· j'jl THATSCFIAIIIILEDWOFIDOAIIIE ~ ~· ~~~
byHennAmoldandBoblee

'

1974 Toyota Carolla 1600 cc
Motor ·S150. 'Transmission
$75. Rear end sso. 614-985-

Metal sheets for all
building purposes. Flat
,porceflan enamel coated.
4X8 thru 4 x 12. Prices, $7.00
to $9.60. 614-667·3085.
56
Pets for Sate

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 614·367·
7220.

6

73,10.

773·5143 .
For Safe Row lelgh P•oduc·
ts. 1924 Eastern Ave .•
Gallipolis. Call 446·9516 .

.

Television

Parts

_
USEI) It-,
Ha-h•ws
•••
.. .....
Tires, • Lucas !Cane, Pt.
P!l!asant; phone 304-675·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9 : •

w Jeok lel!ny lhow
Ill n=.~um~:
iruapnnt tor Murder' ·

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. Yatmlay'a Cry)itoquole: SAY NOT YOU KNOW ANOTHER ·.,;;
ENTIRELY, TilL YOU HAVE DMDED AN INHERITANCE ·.':)

• WITHIUM.-LAVATER

• .

.

�.• SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMEROV SENTINEL
Page-l 0-- The Daily Sentinel

Detriot teachers may· strike.
By The Associated Press
troll Federation of Teachers Pres!·
Public schOOl teachers ln Detroit dent John Elliott said Sunday. "I
vowed to strike today unless they don't see a settlement 1101y unle'IS
got a new contract as negotiators the board comes up with some fanstalled over the school board's de- tastic offer, and they haven't done
mand for a pay cut to ease a budget that all summer." He said the
defi cit ln the 200,000-student teachers' refusal to work without a
district.
contract was "Irreversible."
"It looks like a strike right now ."
Michigan Federation of Teachers
The school board wants the ll,&lt;XXl
President Hugh Jarvis said Sunday teache1'6 , who earn between $15,00J
before negotiators for the district's and $30,&lt;XXl a year, to take an 8 perll,&lt;XXl teachers went back to the cent cut In pay because.of a $23mll·
bargaining table.
llon budget deflclt. Elllott said the
Talks In the state's largest school deficit Issue was being "over· ·
district continued early today.
played" and called for a commlttee
About 73,500 students were due · to determine the extent of the
back In school as teacher walkouts deficit.
ended In two other Michigan dis·
Elsewhere In Michigan, about 700
Uicts over the weekend, and strikes teachers In Waterford voted SunIn Pennsylvania, Illinois and Ohio
day to approve a new contract, endwere settled Sunday.
Ing a strike that began last Tuesday
But more than 6,&lt;XXl teachers re- and affected 14,&lt;XXl students. And
mained on strike In Illinois, Pen· negot!a tors tpr Dl teachers In
nsylvanla and New Jersey, keeping Ferndale reached a tentative
125,&lt;XXl pupils m.1t of class.
agreement with the school board
Detroit's teachers agreed last over the weekend and were set to
week to a three-day·contract exten- vote today on the proposed consion allowing school to open Wed· tract. If the contract is approved,
nesday. The extension expired classes would start Tuesday for
Friday, and 'teachers said they 5,&lt;XXJ studeniS.
Strikes by about 2,070 teachers
would strike at 7: :D a.m. .today
continued In the Michigan districts
without a new contract.
"Both sides are far apart," De- or Troy, Soothfleid, Novl, Traverse

-

SILE

City, Lake City, Suttons Bay and
Fenton, affecting nearly 40,!m
students.
In Pennsylvania, meanwhile, 755
teachers ended a 1!klay strike af·
fecting 17,500 handicapped students
In the Allegheny Intermediate Unit
Classes were to resume today.
But 16 Pennsylvania school dis·
trlcts remained paralyzed by
strikes Involving about 2,500
teachers and 46,00J students. And
about Dl teachers In the Greater
Johnstown School District rejected
a proposed contract Sunday and
vowed to strike the 4,9()()-student
district today.
But 16 Pennsylvania school dlstrlcts remained paralyzed by
strikes Involving about 2,500
.teachers and 46,00J studen!f. And
about Dl teachers In the Greater
Johnstown School District rejected
a proposed contract Sunday and
vowed to strike the 4,900-student
district today.•
'In Illinois, a tentative agreement
was reached Sunday night In the
northwest Chicago suburbsofPala·
tine, Rolllng Meadows and Hot·
fman Estates, where 550 te~hers
have been on strike since Aug. :D,
and classes for about 10,500 students were to resume today.

•

STARTS
TDDIY
hH tlu•eq• le,t. 1..., 1NZ.
Willi• lflutltlll ···~· ..."'"'
riiM•
"""'·· Wt . . 1tf
rtiJIIII"I for .,.....,.lui
errora. StiTJ lo Dllltl'l.

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Rece~sion affects river traffic too
CINCINNATI (AP) - Qfflclals

everybody else."
tracts wlih customers. officials
According to the Corps of Eng!· · saki.
neers, fewer barges probably will
· Geary said, however, It's been ·
the recession's grip on the pass through the Meldahl Locks dltflcult to pick up any non·
econoft!y.
and Dam 35 miles upstream from contractual business.
Barge line operators and federal Cincinnati. Last year, 43,402 barges
Bill Plettner, president of M.G. :
officials say the financial problems passect through Meldahl, compared Transport Service Inc. 1D Clncln· :
of Industries that transport goods with 19,418 In the ttrst slx monthS of nat!, said an -expected Increase In .
by water have put a noticeable dent
this year.
business llllsn't inaterlallzed. His
In liver traffic this year.
At the Markland Locks and Darn firm has about 350 barges on the ·
"Barge traffic definitely ls down near Warsaw, Ky., 19,'332 barges liver.
.
from last year," said Sam French, have passed by, compared with
"We were expecting tAl Increase .
assistant chlet ot ope~atlons tor the 44,693 for all of 1981, the corps said. the .amount of toMpge ~ trans· '
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers In Markland is 62 miles downstream port," Plettnet said. "But we ha· .
Huntington, W.Va. "lnso~eplaces from Cincinnati.
ven't enjoyed that. Inciease. The;
on the liver, we're running about
Business hasn't dropped lor'the utlllty plants aren't burning as;
one-third less than what we nor· Ohio River Co. , the nation's largest much COli! and there's not as much.
mally get."
barge line, because many of the coal being shipped to New Orleans;
Business lor some ot the larger company's appfOXImately· 1,700 for export to Taiwan, Japan and:
barge companies Is comparable to barges are under long-term con· other Asiatic coun~." , ·
.~
a year ago, but ·spokesmen said ·. . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.....---.,...,.--__.
they had expected Increases ~
year. Companlesattrlbutetheoverall drop In shipping to the financial
.
.
problems In the steel and automotive Industries, the grain market
anct·many utllltles.
"All those Industries are supported by other lndustlies," said
John -Geary, president of Midland
Afflllated Co., which owns the Ohio
RIVer Co. ba~ line In Cincinnati.
"When one ~Is the pinch, It goes
all the way down the line. We're
Place Near A · Wall to
sl!ffertng from the recession Uke
Direct Heat Toward the
.Center of your Activity
Area.

are lnter,pretlni a decline In barge
tratflc on the Ohio River as a sign of

'

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story

Jxrlld'nr

~ Wm InclUde a larle fellowlhlp

Meigs County happenings...
Emergency runs

tJeing recruited and attendance at
the meeting by all disabled veterans ls urged.

Four calls were answered by loRevival scheduled
cal units Sunday, the Meigs County
E mergency· Medical Service
A revival will be held at the Careports.
rleton Church, Kingsbury Road,
At just a few minutes past mid·
weruiesday, Sept: 15, through Sunnight, the Pomeroy Unit went to
day, Sept. 19, at 7:30p.m. nightly.
Wippel Road for Fannie Phllllps
who was taken to Veterans Memor- Herman Jordon, Leon, W. Va., will
be the evangelist. Jimmy Evans, ·
Ial Hospital; at 1:04 a.m., the Mld·
pastor Invites the public to attend.
dlejJort unlt went to the Stonewood
There will be special singing.
Apartments and provided treat·
ment for Eden Smith; Middleport ·
at 9:43a.m. went to County Road 3 Meets Tuesday
and provided treatment for Sheila
Harrtsonvllle OES will meet
and Michelle Cundiff who received
Tuesday
at 7: ll p.m. Past rnatl'ons
minor Injuries In an accident.
and
past
patrons will be honored.
Tuppers Plains at 8: 18 p.m. took
Sally Pooler to Veterans Memolial
Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Saturday at 4: 44 p.m., Rutland
Saturday Admissions·-Charlotte
took John Young from Meigs Mine
1 to Holzer Medical Center and Ra- Eakins, Racine; Hazel DUes,
cine at 11: 50 p.m. took Robert Gra- Pomeroy; Eva Lawson, Racine;
ham from Ailtlqulty to Veterans Ray Ungaro, Letart, W. Va.
Memorial.

DA V meets tonight

Hut1 in accident

Saturday Dlscharges .. John
Hale, Kenneth Imboden, Roland
Morris, Clara Shuster, Connie
Manley.
Sunday Admlsslons-HomerGra·
ham, Racine; Fannie Phillips,
Pomeroy; Carolyn Russell,
Racine.
Sunday Dllicharges--Alvtra Barr,
Kevin Wolfe, Charlotte Eakins.

A Middleport man received rnl· ·
nor Injuries In a single-vehicle colll·
slon on Meigs County Rd. 3 Sunday
morning, the Gallla·Melgs post of
the State Highway Patrol reports.
According to the patrol, Ralph E .
Cundiff Jr., 21, was eastbOund on
CR 3 at 9:4li a.m. whenhe 'lost con·
trol of his vehicle and went off the
right .side of the road and
overturned.
· He had minor visible Injuries, but
w.a s not .treated, the patrol states.
His vehicle received heavy

Free clothing day
The tree clothing day of the
Gallla·Meigs Community Action
Agency will be held from 9 a.m. to
12 noon, Wednesday, Sept. 1!i,.
rather than Wednesday, Sept. 22 as
announced earUer. The day Is for
low Income Pers&lt;&gt;ns and ~ agency's clothing bank Is located In the
former high school at Cheshire.

ONLY

, n. .'l ~
~ $111.1111·1111$ IIRIVIEI
.

•Sro,.;.n Gra.,Y

•Chicken Gravy
•Turkey Grevy

•Mushroom Gravy
•Sloppy Joe Mix
•Chlli·O·Mix
•.Taco Mix

21 die
(Continued from page ])
NORWALK- Gary J. Pepon, 29,
of Marblehead, when his m&lt;itorcycle crashed off a Huron County
road.
COLUMBUS- Jack R. West, 53,
of Columbus, In a one-car accident
on a city street In Columbus.
FRIDAY NIGHT

J E F F E R S0 N - F r a n k
McMannes, 20, or Jefferson, In a
one-car accident on Ohio 461n Ash·
tabula County.
COURTLAND - Jennifer Mar·
tin, 6, a pedestrian, of Courtland, on
Ohio 46ln Trumbull County.
MASSJLL6N - Gregory R: Sel·
del, 16, of MassUlon, ln a one-car
accident on Ohio 241 In Stark
I
'
County.
NEW PHILADELPHIA - Ar·
·thur E. McAfee. 29, of Newcomerstown, In a one-car acclpent In
Tuscarawas County.
WR.AlN- Harold Maspln, 49, of
lnraln, ln one-&lt;:ar accident on a
cl~

a

street.

·'

YOUR
Ct40ICI

29~
'

ln~fu~es

Sh1ppmg

. PLUSTAX

Authorized Catalog Merchants
· Gregg &amp; Patty Gibbs

.·I Sears I

108 W. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OH.
HOURS:
.
PHO~E :
Mon.·Tues.-Weds.-Fri. 9 to 5 '
(Ohio) 992-2178
Tt~urs. 9 to 12
(W. va.l 773-9517
Sat. 9 til 2

r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;::;::;::;:;:;;;;
"

?

Yellpw

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' 8%''

SPECIAL·
SALE
-~:LEES .
.iC

Meets Wednesday ·
The Area Volunteer Fire Associ·
at!on will meet Wednesday evening
at the fire house 'tn Tuppers Plains:

Area deaths

X

14"

1--

-

10 %'' 'X !I"
80 Pages

tread

legal pad

4 subject
divided
notebook

..

William S. Phillips

p.m..

· .EL MEETINGS
-Af-

•

.'

•

CHURCH OF OfRIST
DATE: SEPT~ 13 THRU 19
EVA"GELIST: .
' .

'Paden

' ..,
' uca

' .

..

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'

rtliuRE

,, CARvED
ACCENTs ,THE DEPTH.AND ·RicHNESS oF .·
/· ·' THE 100% ·ANTRON NYLON PILE. A VERY DURABlE. LONG
· WEARING FIBER THAT RESISTS sOIUNG~ CHOOSE FROM·li
BEAUTIFUl:&lt;.COLORS•.REG. -~20;0(J'SQ. YD. .
-

. '

'

I

.

·.,.

f

~

~~·

.S~--:

Corner of Main &amp; BuHernut Ave:
POMEROY,OHIO '

SERVICES EACH EVINI._ AT 7:30

A R r.; p E T S

'

'-.

'

.

.

·

damage.

He was a Navy veteran, a
member of the Tabernacle Baptist
.William S. Phillips, 65, of Frank· Church, Chillicothe, Amectcan Lefort, formerly of Meigs County, gtijn 62, Scioto Lo&lt;!ge 6, A. and A.
died Sunday at the Medical Center M., and Scottish Rite Valley of
Hospital in ChUllcothe.
Columbus.
.
Born on May 31,1917, In Poca, W.
Fl!neral services will be held at
Va., he was thesonofJosephC. and 1:30 p.m, · Wednesday at the
Della J. Graham Phillips. He was .Fawcett-Ollver-Glass Funeral
married on April 17, 1940 to the H9me In Chillicothe. Rev. Wllliani
former Georgia N. Radekln, who 'llirrns and the Rev. Charles Lusher '
survlves alongwlthoneslster, Mrs. will officiate. Burial will be ln the'
War.ren (Adria) Wilcox, Langs. Freemon! Cemetery at Frankfort.
ville, and a brother, Howard E. Friends .may call at -the fu11eral
Phllllps, Rutland.
hoine ·4 to ~ p.m. on 'l'\1El5day with
A therapy assistant at the Chilli· Ma1!9.1!Jc services to be held atl7:ll
cothe Veterans Administration ·
·Qraveside services will be
Medical Center. with 32 years ser· conducted by the Amelican Legion
vice, he retired 1n 1973.
Post 62.
·
, - - - - - . : . - - - - - . : . - - -'_· --------~

·~

9,300 . BTU-Hea~er

· ·$13304

The Meigs County Chapter 53,

Disabled· American Veterans, will
meet at 6: :D p.m. tonight (Monday)
at the chapter hOme on Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. New members are

T

"f

PORTABLE
KEROSENE
REFLECTION
·HEATER

room downlltaln and Jarae s.m.t.y Schoo( roomaupstairs. 'l1te new lr shaped, 30xal addKioo wDI C111!t
approximately S'lO,OOO. GnJUDIIbrealdng for the i1ew
addition wiD be held !IORll!dme lD Oct., 8MJI'dlng to
the Rev. Don Wallcer.

•

.

..

·"· $·}.
6
$.8 sQ. ·Yo.··
:
WITH
I~SrAill:D

I

'

·' •

PAD :.,

HEHHEI'S
FROSTIII'

•SII"owberry

•Cherry

•Peanut Buller

~6

•Chocolate
•Vanilla

•Milk Chocolale

~Orang-e

Oz, Each
. 11.00
.... '
When
,_
I

'

NILSON'$ 110. 11 Sf

ALMOST

MAKING WAY FOR PROGRESS.-1be fotmel'
home of the late James Edwanl aud UDian Simpson,
grandparents of Mrs. Wllllam (UDian) Haynwt, Racine, Is belDg razed to make way for an addition to the
Racine Flnit Bapjht Clwrch. 1be home was most
recently OWDed by Mae Cleland. The First Baptist
Church purcllased the home IAl make room for a two

•

.

... .

~ :,.:::~~·~

_....,_4'

16'/, Oz.

YOUR CHOICE

99~

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