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                  <text>H.,ople .picks

Princess Grace
dies .o f injuries .

against Meigs
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Page' lO

Page8

·Page 6

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New financial deal
may retain plant

entine
1 Section , 14 Pagel
15 C.ntt
A Multimedia Inc. Ntwtpaper

)'oU1,No.93
Copyrighlod 1912

Meigs commission may allow
Gallia 648 board pullout if
.
·. local services ·aren't affected
.

"

Marcos arrives in Honolulu
HONOLULU - Friendly flag-waving Filipinos and a handful of
protesters greeted Phlllpplnes President Ferdinand E. ~·
making his first- offlclal llip to America In 16 years.
Marcos arrived here after an all-night tllght from the Philippines
and spent seven hours In,a hotel after an alport ,greeting before
boarding a plane Tuesday eVe'nmg for Wasl$gton. D.C.
Marcos Is to l'l!l1(lezvous with his wife, Imelda, who new separately to New York City, and both are to meet ?resilient and Mrs.

&lt;:;aUla must walt one year before
In this deCision." Jones said.
dissolving
Its association.
He said state o!ficlals may be
County
Prosecutor Joseph
Gallla
able to help form a solution which
Cain,
who
also
attended
the meet:
will keep Gallla In the district.
lng,
said
"We're
willing
to
workout
"I :hlnk It would be tragic to
relative
to
your
concerns.
anything
break up this district without explortng any possibility to hold It to- But we do intend to remove ourReagan on Thursday;
gether." Jones said. "I'm not selves from the (648 board) district.
"We:re not trying to jepomdlze
saying It's possible. But I think we
·selvlces
you may receive," Cain
owe It to ourselves and our constltu·
told
the
Meigs
officials. "We just
OO~UMBUS, Ohio- Drought has reduced Ohio's 1982 estimates
entS to try."
think
we
can
provide
better selVI" for com and soybean crops, while' the national crop estimate reThe Gallla Commissioners said
mains huge, acconllng to the U.S. Department of Agrtculture.
they would be willing to discuss a ces for ourselves."
Cain said Gallla County would alThe USDA Is estimating a 475 rilllllon·bushel corn ci-op In Ohlo,
possible compromise, but Indicated
low
the Gallla-Jackson-Meigs Mendown from a 500 mllllon-bushel estimate In August. Ohio soybeans
they were not optimistic.
tal
liealth
Center to operate In Its
were estimated at 141.7 mllllon bushels, down from a 145 mllllon"I would certainly listen to any
present building, which Is owned by
bushel estimate last month.
compromise, but I've had It with
Gallla
County.
Nationally, estimates are for 8.3 bliUon bushels of corn and 2.3 ·
the preseht set up," Gallla CommisThe
center could continue ·to
blll1on bushels of soybeans.
sioner Paul Niday said.
serve
Meigs
County, Cain said.
Jones said the Meigs commissioners would make a declson reThe commissioners discussed 'at
garding Gallla 's request as soon as lenglh TUesday bids they had reCINCINNATI - A federal appeals court has declined to rule In a
possible after their meeting with ceived last week for a front end ·
lawsuit filed by the Cleveland Electric Dlumlnatlng Co. over asbesstate officials.
loader. Bids were received from ·
tos InspectiOns at Its Ashtabula, Ohio, plant.
"We don't want to run your bust- Dravo-Marks Co., In the amount of ·
The utlllty had appealed a lower court order permitting the fed·
ness," Jones said. "But we want to $15,740 arxl Southeastern Equip- :
era! Occupational Safety and Health Admlnlstmtion to attach airmake sure it (Gallla 's proposed ment Co., In the amount of $54,955.
cated that action will be taken at a
The
resignation
of
COI!IIcll
person
sampling devices to employees ar the plant to see 11 asbestos fibers
withdrawal)
doesn't have an ad- The bids were tabled.
Jeanette Lawrence, effective Sept. later date.
were prl!sent.
·
'·
·
verse affect on services In our
Mayor Charles Pyles Informed
The board recessed until Friday
14 was accepted at Monday's meetThe utlllty argued !hat the air samplers violated a company safety
county."
council that the Ohio Department
at
9: ll a.m. Next TUesday the comIng
of
Racine
VIllage
Council.
No
"'""· ~i lt
lbe·tests.after·appeallng the lower-court
By state law, the two counties missioners will meet withStateofttof Transportation has advised that .
'
··reason·
·was
·
given
for
the
·
• ~-=.~~ atf'tt&amp;;
1n connecrtori with'the testing. ·
must approve Gallla' s proposed clals In Columbus. The next regular
the Dasher lights at Southern High
. .
'
.•
.
i ~
resignation.
withdrawal for It to become e~­ meeting will be Wednesday at 1:lJ
Frank Deland, finance commit- School ts the responslbUity of the
tlve Immediately. If they do not, p.m.
tee chatnnan, reported the neces· village since the school Is now losary fonns to place the 1.7 mill cated within the village.
, W¥ffiNcr&lt;&gt;N- Fj!deral ~lion of auto emissions Is reducIn other business, permission
renewal opemtlng expense levy on
llit pOllulton.- but the Control
are costing consumers more
the November ballot have been was granted to Robert Johnson,
lhah ·they're W!lrth; according to a report sponsored tiy a conservafire chief and David Nelgler, firecompleted.
tive thlllk tank.
· · .
Deland stressed the Importance man. who were present at the meet-lAwrence i White, an economics professor at New York Univer• •
of passing the renewal because It Is Ing, to purchase additional fire
sity who condli&lt;:ted the study for the Amertcan Enterprise lnstltute,
needed to offset an Increase In ex- hose, six helmets and a tire for the
saki .It Is costing bllUons of dollars each year to cleap up the
pumper.
penses for street lighting.
er$5lons . .
Council agreed to sell the old poWhite's report, released TUesday, says the 14-year program to
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
llee cruiser, 1971 Ford, and stipuV.' s In the large veins In the ·
Bob Beegle, councilman. rereduce auto emissions now adds $1,400 to the cost of each car,
Brenda Yardlc. R.N., of Point
lated a mlnlmumbldof$400.Sealed ported he requested a representachest and neck on critical paaveraged over the Ute of the car. Pleasant, W. Va .. and Angela
bids are to mailed to the village tive of Cablentertalnment attend a .,
tients, along with providing speRicha rds, R.N., Mason, W.Va.,
cial services services to the
clerk with the envelope marked, council meeting. Beegle said ~e has
an Intravenous therapy team,
cruiser bid. Bids will be opened Oct. had no response to his request
emergency room, the Intensive
has been added to the service
care
unit, and x - ray
4, at 7 p.m.
Council renewed fire contracts
specialities at Veterans Memor· WASHINGTON -Americans believe buying a home Is getting
department.
Meeting with council was Jerry with Letart, Lebanon and Sutton
Ia I Hospital.
tougher aU the~. but they Intend to keep trying, anew~rrlspoll
The team provides seven day
Brems of the Ohio Department of Townships.
The hospital has contracted
coverage,
says.
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.,
Natural Resources who explained
Glen Rizer, street commissioner.
for the service from Hospital
The poll, conduCted by Louis Harris &amp; Assoclates,tor the Fedeml
and
Is
on
call.
Besides actually
the NatiOnal Flood Insurance ~ was Instructed to purchase a load of
Pharmacies, Inc .. which has I.
National Mortgage Association, found that n percent of ~ld
starting
I.
V.'s
and supervising
garm. Council must pass an ordl· coal mix for street repair.
V. teams across the country.
heads polled said they would buy ,a home 11 they mov~ from their
the
administration
of fluids and
·nance governing nood Insurance to
CouncU discussed the cutting of
According to Ms. Yardlc, the
,present residence.
,
.
•
medications,
they
are
updating
enable residents to purchase the ne- weeds on vacant lots. Owners of
tea m offers expertise to the hos· "Owning ;t home Is stlll part of the Ameflcpn llream (alti\OUgh)
all
policies
and
procedures
cessary Insurance. Council lndl- lots will be notified by mall.
pital staff In the use of Intravenhouse prl~ and lr\terest rates have made the dreiun less attainable
within the hospital, Including
ous fluids and medication ,
for many people," Humphrey Taylor, presldi!nt of Louis Harris, said
new techniques, and conducting
Including needle Insertion, moni - lnselVlce classes for the nursing
during a brleflng for reporters TUesday.
·
toring the Insertion stte for any
Among non-homeowners, primary reasons for ]lOt buying w(!re
staff and other related hospital
complications, thus relieving
lack of money for down payments and the high level of home loan
personnel.
the regular floor nurses to permtes, the po)l found,
Ms. YardlC Is also trained In
form other duties.
arterial blood and
Ms. Yardlc advises that thE
chemotherapy.
team Is also available to place I.
other than that "It's a political
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) United Mine Workers President dispute." ,
a statement . Esselstyn said the statement
CLEVEI,.AND - The winning number dmwn Tuesday night In . Sam Church has
maintaining
that
the
UMW
will not shows that Church "doesn't know
the Ohlo Lottery.'s ClaliY game "The Num.ber" was 501.
lay
aft
employees
because
of a ft- what the hell he's talking about."
.In the semiweekly ''Pick f' gami!, the winning number was 2729.
'
!IBIIClal
crunch,
but
then
contra. The lottery reported earnings of $586,6'20.50 on IIi dally game. The
dicted himself by saying the union
Church Is seeking election this
earnings came cin salelj ~ $1£16,575, willie holders of w,tnntng tickets
may
nave
ill
do just that
year
to the union presidency. a post
are entitled to share $:1E9,954.50, lottecy officials said.
Church's statement was highly
heassumedbYsuccesslonwhenAr.'
crjtlcal of UMW Secretary- nold Miller resigned In 1979. And
Trea.surei' Willard Esselstyn, who
although hJs stateme!lt Tuesday
was tssuep .under a UMW mther
provoked the union president's
anger this month by making public than campaign letterhead, the dis. .
. · the union's recent financial
Variable cloodlneSs tonight. I.AJW al'!imd 60. Winds northwesterly
Plll;e ""th 1ifsselstyn Is deeply
rooted b) w&amp;n foUtlcs. ·
·
10-15 mph. Thursday, vailable cloUdiness with a high of 70-75.
·
Exteo!ded Oblo Fotecast
. .
pr:!:t).n responded by saying
ChllfChdll! , not,~illt~eES5etstyn
Chtircb doeSn't kiww what he's on his ~~tgrj ~te this year,
Frida,y ~.!Jundt¥: " ..
•
' ·'
•• ,......., ibou'
tiOna!
leavlnil the ~-treasurer to
Fllr ........ will ~~~t~~~a-15. Lows In the till.
~
~
tlind
that
a
"func
seek
r . 'i!lectloh as an Independent
:r ,rnoroo" could have figured out the
·
,
~
· - 't ' '
~
imlon's financial proble!l'lS·
Church's 'preferred candidate for
•u !.....
••
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ln a 51atement Issued TUesday,
the' Job IS Marty 'Connors, an Interstoners met In Pomeroy TUesday
The Meigs County Commission- afternoon to discuss Gallla's recent
ers said TUesday they stlli hope a request , to withdraw fJ"9m the
compromise can be reached which district .
Meigs Commissioner Richard
will keep Gallla County In the .
Jones
said he hopes state officials
Gallla-Jackson-Melgs Mental
can
answer
questions regarding
Health '648' Board .
the
effects
of
Gallla's proposed
However, 11 a compromise Is not
pullout.
poSsible, the Meigs commissioners
Commissioners of the three counIndicated they would allow Gallla to
ties
Involved will meet with Ohio
leave the 648 board, providing the
Department
of Mental Health offl·
pullout would not hurt the delivery
clals
In
Columbus
next Tuesday.
of .mental health selvlces In Meigs
"We feel the state should put
County . .
The Gallla and Meigs commls- some Input and give some direction
By JEFF GRABMEIER

Drought reduces iwo Ohio crops

Council person resigns

·c ::ll

The Saving Place •

Court declines to rule on case

Renewal levy fonns .
completed in Racine

........,,tted

were--lsSiiM
Emfssion controls not worth cost

aevtces

Intravenous therapy
team JOlns VMH staff

A"!-ericans to keep trying anywqy

Church's statement
appears contradictory

Winning Ohio lottery number

tssuoo

Weather foreeost

...

. i•:u ng gtven·.. appc}IQ~~·
•

l

..

..

..

•

Vlrlll KlDg, Kt,.nuy,
•.-..~-was apto IW the,_,......,...~ of

1 pill1ted
•

• Cleot'ge Perry 011 the Mef&amp;B Cwnty
! Board of Education~ the board's
: replar ~ n-lay
. nlglit.
•
. . KlDg fonnerly II!I'Yed 011 the
~ Me1p Local Sdiool District Board

~ ofEducatloaforalililllberof~
f.time, wters wUllelect a ~

~ HewiJiaervetbroulhJJ13atwblch

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

~n:llll ~ ....._.~

~of Ge:arle- Pel'iY. "!Jii

:'nonal~:::.a~0::~6:

Church haaald ''diVisive and false
!WIIOI'S ve been ·circulated that
trlct S. .
.
.. ,,
l'l!llpedreoentlyatlermanyyears the lnterila"--'
may
hav-e
to
lay
...,.,...
Church did not dispute' Esse!- ,
.d
df IOIIle _ ......__ This Is simply
· The ~ . oo.l'd ' 118ued bUS not the c:Je~J,~G·
s!Yn's statement Sept. 4 that the
~ i:allflcates to f)on 'Sriillll..
Blit In tlie'next '
Ch · h UMW lost ~.IXll in Juty·ii!MJ.AuCordelia Brolni, WDlJam Ca!T, aalil that ''beca sen •••• .:.. urc
gust. But he said the UMW;II flnan.
use ..._.es are , c•&lt;~• ,__.'lion . "ls~ln .. and
Carol ~ Tommy Dooley, paJd by ludon cjuis', 11 the employ....,. ~~
·
~ Powell, Jaria E.' MDJer, mllitplcturedoelm'tlniprovelnthe ~ore m~ bll,
t!811'
~Wood. Rolil'ld Wood IIIIi l"tt!lf!e!de, the ·lllternatlonal un1oo arinedHec~wlth~:: ~~.
N811111floyd. Plaal..-madtfor may Jieed ... •~-of its
- ...~
.. uoc - ·
IMiiben to atten&amp;l the ........__,
::',- ""' some '
1011's' tlnaliclal Prd&gt;tems'irught try·
.
........__:-- eiiiPklieeL
to fortbeUMW' 9 "J'""d·~~"
11'11111!tbcoftbeOhlollaiUUI...,.
AIP+8m•fortbeunlonpresl- - ~ .
· ..j
-~JIOII to be ~ld ln,A'*
. ,ll!l· ·deal .........___, tha -~tP.At... while tbe llidon W'In ~·'Wellllened

·

.

III!I'VIc;e
,
• •

·

,

•

· •.

•

tenre'

...

~ a,

,

-·. -

~.

.~,

. '
'
SPECIAUI'Y SERVICE ADDED- An Intravenous therapy team
ball beell..scted 1o the Veteral\1! Mim10rli1J H011PlW sWI. Here Brenda
Yanlle; .llN., IIIIJuia.ut. V. C.be lor F111111Y Hale of Pomeroy.1be
~ of ~ Yanile and Anpla rlcl1ard8, R.N., provides expertlle In ·
the ldrriiJilt1tiol and fllllll!rvlsloll of lntrave110118 fluld11 U1d
'rnedk!atiGne fi,

~.a:i\:rilo..,.~";'i''"""\1
(Conttnued'Oil
pige ~4).. --~ .......__--......-.;._ _~~~...;...-.-.J
..
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Commentary

I·

llll "uurl Slrt'o'l
l ' o•nll"f n, , Cihin

RUB E RT 1.. WINGETT

1108 HOF.FLI('H

P \ T WHITEH E AD
' ' ~h l il l l ll ' u hl i.~ h tT/I "o outr ulh -r

·

DALE ROTHG E II, Jll.

,\

,\nwru

\W\!Ht:R "' Thl· ,\ 1'&lt;." wiutrtl l ' rn ~"&lt;. Inland [)ail ~ l'r,....., ,\ ~Mwiallun liiMI lht·
: 111 \' o · &gt;~ !llf)lllll ' r 11uhli -.ho •r!ll A!ll" '' ·btll&lt;tll.

1

I I n· F K ~ II .. 111 '1 \ '111\ :•r•· \l o·lt ••nll'd l"h•'.\ .o. hutJid ht· h~\ !hun :IH \l ~&lt; l'd ~ hm c . All
h·Hn ' ;~ n · ~ uhj t· r l '" t'llol!tiJ! 1:111tl n oud hi· ~ il( uo ·d "Ailh IIOtnll', udd rt.... ~ !Inti ••·h •l)!'" llt'
mm ol11•r "'" un,;lfo(rll•ol lt•lh·n "ill h.• fKihll ~ h. · tl . l o~• llr r'M ~ huuld til • Ill )!null 1m.. II' . nddrt.,.)l hll!
i!II ~ UI' ~ . lllll[ll"rMomtlil in •.

1

The endless road
Call It a Polish standoff.

Poles by the hundreds of thousands made their statement In tbe
streets of Warsaw, Lubin, Wroclaw and Gdans.k.
Riot pollee kept control, at the cost of several deaths and more than
4,&lt;00 arrested.
'
So Solklartty's anniversary that had ~widely foreseen as a show·
down between people and government ended In a draw. Tile aovenuneat
held firm and still gOverns - without open Intervention of the Soviet
enforcer. But the people left the government, the Soviets and the world In
no doubt that IIley have not been ~ will not be reconctled to the brutal
status quo.
And the Pollsh problem Ill no nearer soluUon.
The disturbances wel'l!n't !be only news to rome out of Poland In the
first days of September. Wladyslaw Gomulka died of cancer at the age of

n.

. ' '.

Willia~
F.-. fl~kley
.
..
. Jr. ;~,,. ·
\.

1
l'lous disease that causeS him to say subsidies to Cambodia? Does tbe suggested th~t Mr. Re~doeSR't
show host Bryant Gum~J!!I ~~ striluge things on tbe "Today" woni "war" mean anything to tbe really care ·about the future of · '
' '·"
Democratic ~rlty leader? Or 1• America.
In the Democratic maJo!'ity l!!ader show. Strange things like What?
. ' ·,, •I
of the. HoWJe of RA!pl'l!ll!lltaUvet;•
"(Tile prestdeftt has !.'One) out of ·· the JIYjlerbole of politics so much In
I havelnmymallaninvltatlonby : '.~
Jim Wright of Fort Worth, ,Teicaa. hl8 way )0 pick a tight with the Con· command thst his rhetorical lm·
some
jerk~rowdtoattend !be open· · ;-'1•
Mr. Wright Is a gentleman ol coun· lll'eSS again, to ren.:w hl8 war precision matches his analytical
Jng
of
a film or documentary or '
~ benign; hl8 face that or
agaiJ!st the elderly and asatnst the ImpreciSion?
whatever
entitled, "From Hitler to :;.~
Remember that Mr. Reagan ts
your favortte uncle. He was quesll· students and agBinst the' hand!·
Reagan."
Are we moving back to- ': ;
oned by Mr. Gumbel about Mr.
capped." Leaping llzartll! Mr. not asking for any reduction that
ward
the
excess
of 1!1 years ago, · " :
Reagan'svetooftbel14 biluonsup- Reagan's "war" against the el· would take us below the level offed·
when
appa~ntly
civilized people
. plementary approprtaUons bill.
derly? We are to 'suppose that we · eral subSidies considered ,entirely
were
attending
Broadway
plays 1 ,.
·acceptable·
as
recently
as
two
or
~an, for good reason, had to
are directed by Mr. Reqan jo find
aJ)I)Iy ~ strtct standards on old people and shoOt then\. And ot three years ago, back when Mr. such as "Macblrd!" the tbesls of , "
"supplerne!Jtary approprtaUons." course, shoot the stUdents and tbe Wright was not accusing Mr. Car· which was that Lyndon Johnson
Remember, In the course of mobll· handicapped, tnasmueh as that Is ter of haVIng declared war against contrived the assassination of Joh11
. students and tbe elderly, Mr. Car· Kennedy? There are always Wild-· ,
_lzlilg pi'essute to pa8s hl8 $88 billlon what war tnvcilves, right?
U the majority l~aderwere asked ter preferring to wage war against talkers 1n town. but really, we oUght · .;
supplementary tax bW, he prom·
to declare war against those who ·' '
to vote on a declaration of wat common 11ense: ,
tsed the people that for every doUar
But It was not a sUp of the tongue. elect them majority leader ol the · , ..
of add!Uonal taxe8, there would be aga1nst Cambodia, would he under·
'"•·
stand this as a measUre to reduce ~a use In the next breath, Wright House of Represe~taUves.
~ dollars cut trpm projected
• ' •J
appropriations.
Even then, Mr. Reagan's crttlcs
claiJried that hls artthmetlc was romantic. lndeed, Rep. Philip Crane,
. ' R:ID., said that ·hls prtvate ca'lculauons wtre that Mr. Reagan would .
end up with the figures exactly rev·
ersed, I.e., thathewouldendbytaxlng an extra three dollars for el!ei-y
dollar.he cut from tbe bloated appropriations. So ~t when thls par·
tlcular bill came around,
notwithstanding that a largeplural·
tty of Republicans voted for It, Re.gan acted ..After the ecumenical
high foQQwlng .tbe Dole-O'NeiD )!l!
billion bW,.Mr. Reagan wlahed to
reprtstlnate hls 14ei&gt;loglcal rompass; l!nd he did thls by vetoing.
So how did Uncle Jim answer Mr.
Gumbel's quesUonlng about that
.
veto •.
Well,. without changing hl8 ex·
pression once or tlghtenlng hls fa·
tberly .smlle, he spoke as lt Ronald
Reagan had gone quite berserk. 1
hope thls Isn't tnle, Inasmuch as
Mr. Reagan Is going 10 be present
!Q~~c:~_ 11 1f~
for a few years yet, unless he sends
a Watergate team to Jim Wright's
"Of course It's a cruel sport- but you should take Into account they're :·::
office to ascertain whether . Mr.
born and bred.for this single moment-of glory."
: ::
Wright Is suffering from a myste-

Tile oilier day on the ."Today"

114-!t!I'Z· l l51
I IF \ jl'rt:U Til fil E INTt:H EST IW Tflt" 1\tfo:lt ~S.. MM\U~ \H F .\

• ' 1

PAUL HARRIS
175 pOund
.Junlot end

I .
.

=
.

One minute man8ger noW at bookstores .: :
suggests that precious universal
Most best sellers run their course truths are . conveyed. It Is told
simply, clearly. And briefly - In
In a year's time: The authors of
about 90 pages of text, some pages
''The One Minute Manager" becontaining
just a few words.
lieve tbelrs Is a classic that will sell
Managel'lle!lt
of thls prod1,1C!Ion Is
for many years. ''We·thlnk It Is tbe
a
story
In
lllelf.
Copies ol tbe orlgi·
jonathan LIVIngston '&amp;!egull ol
nal manuscript were given to 250 ·
management," s8id Johnson.
·
In subject matter It Is unlike Rl· exECUtives attending Blanchani's
management seminars. Each wa:s
chard Bach's gull. This book Is
given
the S8lrll! assignment: .What
abou\ the three "secrets" of man·
would make this tbe best rnailageagement establish and cmununl·
cate management goals, tben keep Jl11!11t book ever? Thi! reSponses
on course toward tbem through were noted; bnprovements were
one-minute reprtmands· and one- made.
minute pralstngs, -whichever apply, That's what We can wrttlng for !be
of those you expect to carry out market place," said JoliJiso!l. '1 ·
Though not directly Involved In
vour orders.
Physically, It doeS resemble business, the authors, both 43, are
Bach's book. The allegorical fonn . men of business acilmen. Btan·
year.''

(

SEE US FOR
EVERYTHING
YOU NEED IN
' 91'ffi'm"ru'*' ~HUNTING
SUPPLIES
.
. . . ' .

'41

chard Is a professor and consultant .. ·
'
1 r'
Johnson' a phys!c!an whq prefers, ·
~ says, to Jle4l·pe&lt;lple through tbe '
written woni. ~~ lll!.s written many .1 ' ' 1
Qthersrnallvo~,mostdrawlng ll w
morals . from the' .lives of great kw
peop)e•.,.....
~
.
•·"'\

oreafus of a .h'irge . bilsi seller ··~
were roused after tbous8nds of co- •··
p1es - ~.&lt;OO 1n
hlid beeii plib- ·t'f

GUNS-KNIVES-SHELLS- ETC.

an -

llshed and sold by the authors ~"l

. th!mseJves, generally to seriitnar

1

PICKEN$ HARDWARE

;

attendees who , 9gllght to ·share ' '''
' knowledge with erhp~oyees:
lo1
-. In fact, ~~ttq~oraled. Into the Jil'.
book Is the 'message that a man: ~1
ager who uses Its teclmkJues should ~ ~
· be oortaln that underlings under· · ·-&gt;
stand wha~ he Is about. And tbe beSt '
way to do that, ot cOunle,ts wllh a
copy of the book.

MASON, W.VA.

The robots are cominll....,lg_
:! ____Lowe_ll_w;_in8__;.e--"'tt ',

One evening last week, I dusted
all my crystal balf 8fld prepared to
spe!ld a few Idle hoUrs looking Into
the future. But the ball only
groaned. rolled Over and played
dead. I knew right then that things

weren't aooil!

"For heaven's sake, David, don't
enough of a credibility problem? "

. So, I spent the evening reading
tbe September 131ssue of the u. s.
News and WO!'kl Report. Their
crystal ball seems to be made of
sturdier stuff than mine. SoiJ!elt Its
predictions were absolutely
ghastly .• For ~~!stance. their fore.
cast a world wide recession, that a
million jobs wW never come beck
even when tbe recesl!kln ends and
more tax tncreues ar&amp;on the way

we have

In :1983. EncouragiDg?

It was tbe lefaence to a 1flllllon
jobs that will never return. that
alanned me most. We ,Ullderstand
bani times, even a depreulon, but
tbe permament kiss to theecooono,y
oll,~,IXXljdlsls eiiOUCh to shock
81zy00e. 'lbe reuon ·Is adtomatlon.
Rolxlts tO yru NJ ·. Who watch
space llla.vaoo 'cy'. ~Oiiillcl I lcnc1.y
tbe robots as aen4J ~tile creaturj)s
who ciO tn~te naliiPtlalial Jl!'l)l&gt; .
~ .J1! an !JiatPt and ~ the

·•

Today in History
Today Is Wednesday, Sept. 15, the 2!l8th day of1982.1bereare 107
days left In the year.
·
Today's highlight In history:
On Sept. 15, 1T16, British trQops occupied New York City during the
American Revolution.
On thls date:
In 1917, the Russian republic was proclaimed under Alexander
Kerensky.
. Inl935, the NurenberglawsoutlawedJewsandmadetheswastlka
the official flag of Germany.
·
·
·
In 1942, German arintes attacked the Russian city of S~grad 1n
durtng World War U.
' In; 1974, 71 people wel'l! killed when an ~ VIetnam plane was
bJown.up by a hijacker demanding to go to Hanoi.
..
ren years ago: Seven men, Including two former White House l .
aides, were Indicted by a federal grand jury In coilnectlon with the
Watergate break-In three months earlier. · .
·.

. ltOPoUud .
Sophomore ~nd ·

.

Some may lind the coincidence symbolic.
Gomulka was the leading figure In an earlier posing of the problem
with which tbe present situation displays some markell slmllarltles as well
as grim differences.
That was bsck In 1956 and Poznan, not Gdansk, was the focus of
Poland's rejection of the rulers of Poland. Riots bom of economic mlaman·
agement and political repression threatened tbe conapee' of the Commu·
~t regime and Soviet Intervention.
·
:· Gomulka, recently released from priSOn and wltll a reputaUon as an
tnjjependent pragmatist lt not exactly a nberal, was called back tO power,
facing down a belligerent Nlklta Khrushchev and starttngthecountryona
"Poush road to soctallsm."
.
;: The PoUsh upheaval of 1956 had more than a little to do wllh the
H(ingarlan revoluUon of the same year, and the conventional wisdom ol
!he time was that the Poles- that Is, Gomulka- knewhowfartbeycoold
gl);with tbe Soviets and where they must stop, whlle the Hungarians did
nOt.
NEW YORK (AP) - With one
:: As It turned out, Gomulka did not have a clear enough knowledge !be IJiaeSt hypes ot the tan season,
either. he did loosen Internal control ~bly and made peace with ''The One Minute Manager'' hasar·
POJand's Roman Catholic hierarchy. ~ for a time was the least rived at bookstores, a parable prorepressive society In East Europe. But economiC problems continued, and clalmi!d In advance by Its authors
Jn)968 he joined In the Soviet suppression of the 9:zech rtslng- the brief but as a sure best seller and hailed on ·
gi,Orious "Prague spring."
.
.,
.
·the jacket as "a gem."
.: In 1970, worker riots sparked·by food sho~ and spreading from
What boqk l'I!VIewers and profesGjlansk drove him from office. Party-liners took con!ro\. and another
sional managers think of It rnl9ht
cycle of misgovernment and mtsmailapment began, building to another be less glittering, but tbe authors
popular explosion - the 1980 upheaval that produced Solidarity.
say they aren't very concerned
:. Whether the Solidarity movement went too far In trying to extend, ()J' about that. They have finally man·
chilnge the dlrectlon, of !be Polish road Is proba~ an academic qUI!Itlon. aged production ol the producl
What It represented - represents, as the myilversary demonstrations They've dellgned It to sen.
vlyldzy demonstrate- Is ~caDy Incompatible wl.th the auti!Orltarian
"Real well - !IOO,IXXI hardback
Cbmmuntst state. Even a tempered move toward 11tternal autonomy Is a copies at a minimum," saki Kencl)8uenge to their hegemony that the Soviets In tbe long run will not neth Blancha!J), Ph.D., OQe of tbe
tolerate, as the Gomulka experience suggests -although post-revol11tloo authors. "Bigger than that." hls coHitngary Is to date proving an exception,
·
.
author, ·Dr. Spencer Johnson, cor1
,. But the Gomulka story, the Solidarity tragedy and the anniversary rected. "In tbe first calendar
explosion also suggest something else: that tbe Poles' will to go their own
way cAl never be completely crushed.

: Berry's World

.

·.

Reagari's 'war'

The Daily Sentinel

'

-WSWd

8II8Wtri In ~'bOIIdW.
YOIce. But 111 the.faCioiY. wckbr who
bas been~ 011 tbelll!lli!mbiY

UnebyarobOt-~dOII't~nlilm ·

youthlnkrobotsarecute.
lng gradually and has been wor·
usrlghthereJnthell.S.A.~ ·'
Automation In lndusiry Is nothing
sened by tbe recession and tbe ts rtght now In tbe (lnlCeSS ot raising '
new. Years ago, Henry Foni was -groivlng demand for foreign lm· the debt ceiling for tbe second time &gt;
sliowlng Walter Reuther, head of
ports which are produced mainlY above !be 11 trillion maiit. The 19113 '&gt;
tbe'auto workers union, thrOUgh the
by cheap iabor or 'by automation as · deficit ts now estimated at $lS5 bll· )
·glimt Ford. plant at Dearborn;
Is tbe ~ .of textile products In lion, even as • PreSident ~ ~
Mich. They passed an autollllited
So!lth Korea or Taiwan or aut.omo- barastonns tbe country p~ ;..
drill press and Ford saki, "Let's see
biles In JI!Pan: In order to survive,
the balanced buciget
Most all ~
You sen It a union card, Walter." thelncreasedWJeofautornatedma· the ·other countries In hl8 ~ )
Reutber replied, "Let's see yoo sell
chlnery Ill being forcfd on tbe phere lire In even WOJ'!Ie ahape. &gt;
It an automobile." That Dlustrates
American COOlpiUlles.
Banks In Mexico have leOpefted_af. ,'
tbe Interdependent relationship be- .
We are now seetng only tbe van- ter. goverllmeat P1'0Cla411e4 nat!- ,'
tw~ tbe manufacturers and labor
guam of tbe robqt anny which will nallzatlon while the folks ·below tJwi )
over. the years. The workers detake over our ~!ants, perfonnlng · border seek some way out ·ot tbek&lt; \
pe~ on thefactortes for jobs; the
tirelessly day and nlgl!t wllh nary a . $1!5 billlon debi. ,
:: ',
factories depended on tbe.workers
~ee or cigarette break. What few
PracUcaUy au tbe South Ameri· I '
as custtmers. This. relatklnshlp
worlcersneededln !be plants will be, can cciuntrletr are 1n troubli! ove~ i.
worked nicely for a halt t'elltury or
thli ·technicians to keep the robot their heads, Argentina 1~ !hi! •,
mae un~ •.foreign competition machinery In repair and operatbig pack with a giant clebt.and raging ~
reared lts.ugbl head .and both lost!
siroothly. There wW be factories Inflation. In Europe,;' ll,U{ . NATO
From paw on, manutacturtng In·
wherl! robots WW be bulldlilg other . partners are all feeli!lil the pinch
dustrles such as steel, automobiles,
roiJOts to ~ •those already wltli West Germany, usually with
n1bber and . textiles wW ~
Wolll out or~ unulable,jle- stable economy, tbe 'latest to ' ~' 1
more oo automation and ~ . cause ot nmel or deslan chaiie. tbe slump.
·
·· •1
1
~ workers. These l¢ustrles · The future Is en11ess and spine Ctlll- . . J:fo selr' respecting i:r»ta1
1
havetoryears~tbebulwarkof
llng.Whatwllibe&amp;meoftholle.un· can be blamed for'~ awaY,
the.natlon's ecQ\iimy. In recent yeo ' · ion mllrnbers Wbo' have· 'made . fronl taxes. Have ·you notlcecl bY~
ars there has been a shit\~~- · cooa!S!IIoos to lreep their Jobs? the now the taxes rajsed ~astcmontJI tali ·
can tactmes toward au.tomatlon of
respite will only be temporilry ·as where IIley i.tsusUy tali- on peopt.i ~,
the more tedious jobs or j)I:'OilQclng : moreimd more·.I.'0!11P8nles feel tbe • who can't afloni theql whllethetaX 'l.
more -~=ed, ~the · ~ot~ampetltlon~ cut that be!Jeflts tbe riel) Is still In
· more
. ,nen1a1 jObs to , go to automation. Scary?
place.
·.
.
,
•.
~ oountrlei wbere .Ja!xl' ' iS
The olbei'
scared bell
That'sRobln~~gan.Tallle""
cbeeper.Thlstrelidhas~.~·out of my
was the state from tbe poor ind glvetothertcll!·1•i
f'
&gt;
"
I
•
I ~· r
I
J

Roberto

Clemente·

Hush PupRies'
EIAANO~ S

FOR THE FAMILY

seam.

a"

biiif

I

~

' 11

.--....;.---...:...-~

FOR HIM

' f

I

(,

-. ·'
'UNVEILED -'lblaltamp 110iiOrlnc bluieball .· ~ .Bo. ~~mo Clemimte:wm J.e·lllued by

FOR HER

•11M!.u. s. Pocltal !lei tiOe In :Ilk

( tbe I!Ump, di:ript~

......

·6; 't- ' .

t;cipeZ.~-·-·~
.; IIIJie!l· a deaolt•!o•en:-. u
1

.~

1 (AP h.ser11Jl1oto);.
~·

. .

.

.

.Play~r8~of'
·.·
.
.
...

yd..
'' · , .,

!

,,

~

.

~~'&lt;.

..

Five yean
ago: Budget
Director
Bert~~:=~~:::=::.,:
Senate
Governmental
Affairs
Conunittee
to
dealfnp.
.
.
.
.
'•,'
One year ago: AlludlngtotbesoCtaluJ)heavellnbluatlve~ •
Pope Jobll P~ n declared In a ~llfll eacyc11ca1 ~t labor 111111a
are an "lndtspenMble" element ot modem ·~

. 'fOday'Jblrtbdays: ~-planlJtBobbySbortlaSasanier~ .
NIJI'IIIAD Is 37.
·
•
' . ·
'
Tbougbt tor toclaY; We must beware of I1'YI1II to build a ~ 1n • •
w111c11 nobody COODta for~ except apo!lllci.a ot ill nlliCiaJ - ~ ·
Sir Wtnaton Cln•~NII. Brltlslutateemali (l87f.IJI5),

.

~

'

....

/ ~.HAPMAN SHOES
.'
..,. ---- .

Nextto Elberfelds in.Pomeroy
'

t

~

'

.. '

�Ohio'·.

··

.

S1pteu
... L~r 15,1982 ·
~

resume
.
hi NFL piayer.;o,w~~r, f:lis}l~t~;J
•

'

I • ,"

.•

'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Itmliht . was pteseiltl!d the union had re- thepf.Ayefslndlvll!uallY~t'ecl! '
jectl!d lt.
contract.
''
. '
be the most Important weekend of
Friday's
negotladng~nwtll
.
'lbe~A\sd·biC~'
~
the. National Football League-sea·
son - PlaYed out In New York hotel precede by 72 hoUrs a meeting of In mlillnium ·~~1! ~~
rooms. with representatives·of the the union's executive ' committee, .,. creases In~. ~'''"''...."' ,
also to he held In New York, at per·dletn 'expenses,
·
•'
players and ·c:Jub owners making
which
QaJ'\11!)1
said
a
strike
dead·
·
'
·.
,
declskns that oould affect DOt only
line will be set. · ' · "
·'
this season but may alter the flnan.
~
Earlier, ·Qarvey said the·strike
clal structure of the game.
. The O.ily Senti~J •
Contract talks will resume Frl· deadline WIAIId be either the thlid
day wkh union dlssecdng the offer or fourth weekend at the iJeaionl. .
Sept, 26-27 ex' ();;,'t, J-4, &gt; •r' ''
I
made by -the owners' negotiators
Tunllng.
to'tbe
reliumptloll
of
the
when the two sldes last met one
collective bilrgalnlng talks, GaNey
week ago.
said
union uegoUators are anxiouS
"We wtll respond to the offer they
to
dlscllss
a number of Issues.
made to us on a point-by-point ba·
'
'Obvkiusly
we have a whole
·sis," said Ed Garvey, executive dl·
Jli..ber, ,., Aui&gt;&lt;lot&lt;od PnM,Inloild Do~
launc!IY
Ust
of
Items that mll,lt be
IY .,._ AIIIOCiiUoll 11111 1!1&lt; ~nerj&lt;'ln .
rector, of the NFLPA. "We would •
considered by management. They
li&lt;lnPoP" l'llbllohm ~-. Nallonol ' 1
expect dlscusslon of the flindamen·
AdverU• In" · RepnHn:liUve,_ Bnnham
have yet .to conilder ·the ·major
tal Issues to the players, namely a
N.W...J)I!t' IIIIa, 733. Nnl Av•-· New
Vort. N"' Vot1t IIID17.
'
IssuEs. We have yet to have a redecent wage package for the vast
sponse
to
our
pereentage
of
gross
majority of players In the league.
i&gt;osnwn:R: .Send ...wr..:. to 111e Dolly
Sentlnol, Iii O&gt;ur1St .. Pomervy, OhloC711.
piq)OSiil, OUl'l wage scale, our fund
"We are ~ to listen to·any
to establish thatscali!, !he Incentive
Ideas that wtll solVe the concerns of
. , IVIIIICIIIMION IIATES
we have put on the table, thePJayol.f
ByConierir-Rooto '
the players."
One ...... . . .. . . . . ....... .. . ......... .fUll ·
money and IssueS that affect the
GaJWY made It clear, though,
One
$4.411
One v.or ... .. .':... ... .. ... :...... 1$2.111
safety of the players," he said.. .·
that the union will continue to Insist
· ·SINGLE OOPY
,.
The league's tonnet contract
on what has been the centerpost-of
'
PRICES
with the NFLPA expired on July 15.
Daily ........ .. ...... :' .. ... .... tS'Ct:nf;i ,
Its demands - a proposal to guarantee the j;J'Ayers a fixed percen· No progress lias. been repOrted In . SubHt.'1'\hl&gt;l'l nol' ~lrinJit t.u JI!IIY the c~er
may remll in advant.-e dim;i ~ ~ Daily
tage of the team's gross revenues .. the sporadic negoUatiOIIs-· which
Scnlifk•l 0(1 1 3, 6 or IIINNIUl liUb. a-.dlt
"We are not abandoning perc:en: •. have'tala!n place In New York and
will bt•Jtivtn carrie! each 11101'1lh;
w~ since the expiration
tage of gross but are tlyfng to form
NtJ sublil:rlpliOO!I b). 111M II penniUed in towns ·
•
a basts for continlJ!ng negotla· date: .
wht.•re tone L'.!rrler iervlce ll,.vatllbfe. . .
..
he
Oft...
I
'
'
'
lions
'. ~ Ia~, flnat!Cilll· package
"
.
IIAILSUti8CaiPTION8
~ NFL~t·Co\mCU, presenteil by the owners and subs!!l•ldt Olllo
the owners' bargaining agents,
quently rej~ 'by the NFLPA
13 w..~ts ............... .. ....... . 114.114
28W,.,ks ................. ..... ... 127.»
agreed Tuesday to a union request
would give each player $10,0XI In
52 Wl'lit.'l . ............ . .... . . .. . . , ~J.41
for reaumptl9n of the .talks~
bonus lllCliiE!)r for1~ ~ar:of serOo""*&lt;*~&lt;•
' ' '
"Depeildlng on how serious they. vice ~ II!!! l'jFL tetroactiVe to lim '
:::~: :&gt;:·:::::::'"::::·
:.:::: ::: : :~.: :::~
·-weare -·dy togo through the and continuing through 1986. The
52 Wl-tok.'l .
. . . ...... . . .. 1511.21
-~
·bonus would he paid In addition to
weekend," saldmanagementcoun·
I

•:(

game agaiMt SeaUJe. MaUbewa, a ljve-yearvetenn,
will probably be out for t h e - . (AP Lallerpholo).

LAID-UP I.JNEBACKER- aeveland Browns'
linebacker aay MaWiewlllaysln a hospital bed alter
having a cast put on his left ankle alter breaking Ilin a

, .

I

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The 209
yards rushing picked up by Mike
Pruitt and · Charles White In the
Cleveland Browns' victory at Seat·
tle may be ·an Indicator of things to
come, says Coach Sam Rutigliano.
"We know that (quarterback)
Brian Slpe doesn't have to throw for
4,0XI y8fds for us to win," Rutlgll·
ano said. "Both of theni blocked
vecy well .tor each .other and they
ooih rart ~
weu.
which·!$. a; tan·
'
• '
t
:dern we've been
looking for." •
· Pruitt carried the ball 00 times
'tor 136 yards In the2l·7vlctory tluit
opened the Browns' National Foot·
ball League season. He said he felt
$Ore after the game, but no more
'l&lt;IISua).
: "I would havethoughtl'dhetlred
at the end of the game, but I
wasn't," Pruitt said. "I felt like I
could carry the balllO more times.
t felt like I was back In high school
or college,"
His yardage total ranked him second In theleaguejJehlndNewEngland'sTony Collins, who ran for 137
• ·

'I

I • '•' '

1

;

SJORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sat 8 am-10 pm
Suncla110 am-10 pm

•

298 SECOND ST.
,. POMEROY, 0.
I

PRICES EFFECJIV£ THROUGH'SEPT. 18, 1982
'

anCEd offense after ~lying on
Slpe'spassmgthepasttwoseasons.
"I think the game plan for the
w110le year Is running the ball more
than before, especially more than
last year, to take the pressure oft
Brian," Pnlltt saki.
White ran the ball14 times for73
yards
and added five pass recep- cU spokesman Jill\ ~r.
"I would like to win a rushing
tlons
for
66 yards.
The OWl)el'!i last Wednesday of·
crown at least once before I retire.
"
AU
Cllarles
needed
was
the
OJl'
fered
a financial -package that In·
11 you get enough carries, It'll
portunlty,"
Ru!lgllano
sald,
·~and
I
eluded
caSh bonuses based on
come. But lt's·,not a goal. It's not
think
he
came
of
age
against
the
service
In
the league. Four' hours
something I'm planning this year
We
knoW
that
we
can't
after
the
comprehensive
proposal·
Seahawks.
or next year.''
Pruitt, a six-year veteran who use him like a hockey player. He's ...·- - - - - - ' - : - --:::-.,..'· ·- · -.:-1
was Cleveland's No.1 draf1 pick out got to be out there all the time, and
of Purdue In 1976, has rushed for that's our plan."
Rutlgllano credited Slpe for recmore than l.OXI yards each of the
ognizing
the effectiveness of the
past three seasons. His 1,294 yards :
rushing
attack
and keeping the ball
on the ground In 1979.were the most
on
the
ground.
by a Cleveland running back since
"Now we have an opportunity to
Jim Brown~ 1,5441n 1965, and ,
have
· a . little more sense of bal·
he stands fourth on the team's all·
ance,"
the coach said. "We'VEil
time rushing Ust ~Brown, Le115 N. 2nd Ave.
never had that before, and you have
roy Kelly and Greg Pruitt.
He said he .expects the Browns to to have respect for Brian becau,se
MiddlepOrt, OH.
run more often this year, since they he ltnew lt."
.t
aooejll' to be seeking a more bal·
yarqs In the Patriots' victory over ,
Baltimore.
"But I've got 15 more games to
go," Pruitt sald. "I've got to keep
guys like (Chicago's) Walter Payton and (Houston's) Earl Campbell
off my back.

DOWNING-CHILDS
fNSUR~NCE ..

AGENCY

. PH. 992-2342

. SPECIAL OF THE WEEK! ..

~

'

,

j&amp;

Atlllftta

443-C Locust St., Middleport
VISION EXAMINATIONS
CONTACT LENSES·
CHILDREN'S VtSION

.

. '

' .

"l'he first trlfecta e&lt;mblnatloo of
10-9-5 reWmed ~. .
· ~ . of 2,482 wagered

~~~·~·~~~;~~~~~~~~;~~~$~~~~~~

62

83

.GI

19

56

m

.3!t7

23

-

Ill

&amp;4

6:1

.!62

75
Tt

69

"
5I

78

.sn
.!10
.C2
.372

(I)

. ~2

n

91

• .....,•• o.nw.

..••'

1-1) , In)
Sln DWgo ILOUIIr lt-81 a t 1.01

•

/Hootr:rtUI; (nl
ClndnDIIU (Shlrlty 6-121 at Sara Fraft..
ctaco !Martin WI , fntlbunday's Gamt'l

NN Yft at Montral fnl ~
S.. Diao ot Son l'nocloc:o,
Ooll'Gomlo~

I

AnaNs

IO)

N--Lt-

EDMONTON OILERS--SI1ntd Dave St&gt;menko lo • loni·ltnn contract .
,
COI..LZGE
.
LOYOLA

COLLEGE-Named Mark
Amatvccl, heat! basketball coach and U ·

(/

OM

,. ,., '"••
"'

...,

Oddt

•

87%

,

·OF ALL COMMON
.

' ,

.

CLASSIFI.
. . .. . ED ADS
GETRE.SULTS

. $ 29

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~ G roun
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.••

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WHOLE CHICKEN ..................... ~ ~.53~
COUNTRY STYLE

SPARE
RIBSoo••························~ ~. $1.39
FRESH
PORK STEAK ......................... ~~-.\ $1.39
8

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Due-.

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St.Louls, 113; Selmk!t,
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Loo -Lo.8mlth.
· .3W.
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M._, Atlanta, !II;

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PI- Ptt-

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112: Lo.!imlth, St.LoWo,
161;

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ton, 9: Moren PlttJblrgh, 8; Lo. Smith.
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RBI: M._,Aillnta,ll»; 81dmor,Ciil·
cqo, !B: OUwr, Montn!el, 99: J .'lbomplon.
96( Ctatk. Son F"roocttro, 90.
11m: """""'· Cltlcqo. 183; Oliva',

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Examina.tions bj Apt.

toii!OW;

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and'or collectof Clld (please apecify) by mailing a
Nlf-eddreued; stllllped envelope to Fabulous
Foltul)e of PriDe, Free Card lllld Ticl&lt;et Request.

P.O. Box 26272, Birmingham, Al 36226. Use this
ldclreu fer tlclcal and C8llf requests only. Um~ one
tlclcal I* request, one requtat per person per day.
Each NqUMt muat be mailed separately.
$Imply punch out tile perfotaled polllons
• on tile game ticket 10 reveal your game
mancm. Matl:lt tl)e marl&lt;e~ to lhe squares on your
collector card and you cculd be a wtnner. Some
lllllke~ say "You Qua,llfy for Grand P~ze
Drawtng(a).' Hyou obtain one of these maiko~.
you are eligible to enter lhe Grlllld Prize
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collector card, •

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Pld&lt;

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With Fries . . . . . ... • sti29 :
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HERE'S HOW TO PLAY

NlTION.U.l&amp;\QlJE

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...

JAMES L SCHMOLL, O.D.
Doctor of Optometry

CoLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
. . SWitch Hitch, driven by Don Irvine
Jr., won the eighth feature race at
SCioto DownS TheSday night.
SWitch Hitch turned the mile In
1: 594-5 to pay $7.20, $3.!l) and $3.
Face tlrdshed second to return $5
atld $4 while Herltage Chris paid $3

•

INOURGRANDPRIZEDRA.WINGS!

GRADE A

By GE9RGE STRODE
phon~ from the Athens, Ohio,
time situation. We'll have to evalu·
i\P Sport8 W~r ·
sehool's camp\ls, said he's been lm· ate It afterward."
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ..:.. The
pressed with the cooperation from
McElhaney said about 10,0XI
imallestcrowdevertoseeacollege ·· Ohio State, particularly AthletlcDI· tickets had been sold Wednesday
rector Hugh Hindman.
and he Is hoping tor a ·crowd of
game 1n Ohio Stadium does not dis·
turb Ohio University Athletlt: Dl·
"Hugh has bent over backward 20,0XI to li;OXI. ' 'The day of the
to rnake,.J!verythlng conventlenttor game we could have a good gate
rector Harol(l McElhaney, whose
IChoOI faces Rlchl'nond Saturday In Chlldre~'s HOspital. He's whittled sale It the sun comes out. But let's
the giant horseshoe.
·
the stadium's operating costs. to a face It, we're not going to pull the
. 'A crowd of 20,0XI or less Is ex· minimum. He gave every break to guy off the street like Ohio State
jlectl!d to see the nonconference ~game," McElhaney said.
WQUld," he said.
charity game for Children's Hospl· . Hindman, however, refuses to
A relay team from an Athens
tal In Columbus, a week after more ·speculate ll such a game will be- joggers group, .the Hocking Track
than 88,0XI jammed Into Ohio Sta·
come an annual fixture when the Club, will run·the game llau tO Codlum to h host Ohio State heat Buckeyes are on the road. They llunbus, each·runner traveling five
Bilylor.
play at Michigan State Saturday.
miles of the 75-mlle trlt). ''They've
McElhaney admits the financial
"I think they (Children's Hospl· raised $1,500 to $2,0XI (or the benefit ·
package - Children's Hospital tal) would like to do It, but It's hard of Children's Hospital, too," he
pays Rlcllmond's $25,00J guarantee r-to...;p;...red_lc_t._"_he_sa_l_d._'_'It_w_as_a.:...o_n
e-__sa1_d._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-l
7
and Ohio's $6,0XI travel expenseswas attractive.
"But even more Importantly; we
wanted to support Children's Hospl·
tal. A lot of our fans In southeastern
Ohio use the facUlty every day, It's
good for them. too."
· It will mark the first time any
state college other than Ohio State
has served as the host In the 60year-old stadium..
MON.
Bob Rles, Ohio State ticket dlrec·
TUES.
'tor who has been on the school's
THURS.
athletic staff since 1949, says the
FRI.
smallest crowd to watch Ohio State
9·12
In his tenure was the 50,535 who
1·5
.watched the 1950 Snow Bowl with
WED.
PH. 992-6545
Michigan.
l·S
~

Scioto results

'

_•3,000 CASH!

2

Small ·crowd expected at_OU

In "Even
1922." Rles
"we had opened
bigger
whensaid,
the stadium
crowds than they will have
Saturday."
The stadium also has served as
the · site for three Cincinnati
aengals.Cleveland Browns exhlbf.'.
dbns that drew near sellouts In the
1970;.
· The horseshoe also was used for
(lass AAA high school football
playoff doublehea&lt;!ers In 1972 and
1974 and two high school all-star
contests In 1975 and 1976,
·' None of the high school crowds
. $Jl'II8SSed 17,00J.
', McEihalleY, speaking by tele-

I.

OR

•

,..,.til .. "'.. .... "... "".. '

Browns' coach feels Pruitt's
perfonnance very good s~gh

The

Ohio

.JIF

Reanut

•

'

REDorWHlTE

GRAPES ...............·.... :•.•.............. ~~~·. 69~
VALLEY BELL

'2 0//0 MILK •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. PLASTIC GAL. • $1 • 59
PARKAY MARGARINE ••.. o.. ~.~~·...2/$1
DINING TREAT

POT PIES ..................................~~;; 5/'1
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AR~OUR tREET

FLAVORITE

LUNCH ·.MEAT

SUGAR

$}09.

120z.
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Ljmit ~Please
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GOod Only At.Powell's
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18, 1982

.... •·

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o •

$}59 '

Limit One Per Customer ,
Good Only At.Powell's
offer Expir!!s Sept. 18, 1982

•••••••

�''

Page ~The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-MJt:ldleport, .Ohio

===O=h=io=====-;n:-"T

Weclne1day,

By George Strode

By Major AlDOl! B. Hoople

ac~ording to The Maj~r,

.

Pipkin PropiJe(

So what!
We've missed on blggtes before.
CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati Moeller, which boasts several Ohio We never dreamed Ironton was 25
high school football crowns, Is having trouble scheduling games because ot points better than that team from
the computer ranklngs system of determining playoff teams, according to southwestern Ohio (Cincllinatl
Crusader Athletic Director Mike Cameron.
McNicholas ). And that was kind of
"I sent out 60letterslnJune withdatesavaUable and baste Information," a surprise at Coal Grove where Gal·
Cameron said. "I got zero response. One athletic director I talked to just llpolls pulled ou• 'll two-point
laughed."
.
victory.
: Cameron said since two teams from each region quallty for the playoffs,
You win some and you lose some.
);Orne schools wUI avoid playing powerhouse Moeller during the regular
OVerall, your fearless forecaster
~,ason because they can earn more computer points by beating a weak
did a little better his second week
schooL
out ·Picking 10 out of 16 area high
"First, we don't ltke to play them the lOth and lith games of the season," school games correctly. One, Soli·
said Princeton Coach Pat Mancuso, who may not renew that school's theastern's 14-6 win over Southw·
contract with Moeller beyond the·l983 season. "Second, with two teams estern, was "right on the nose."
coming out of the region, there's no advantage to playing them."
After two weeks, your pigskin
Mancuso noted that Princeton went Into Its game with Moeller last year
prophet has complled an 18-11·1 rewith an lH record. Princeton lost, and missed making the playoffs by four cord for a .621 average. We hope to
computer points.
Improve with age.
"If we h;id played, any team that had won just one game and beaten . Sixteen more area prep games
them, we would have made the playoffs," Mancuso said. "That means we are on tap this Friday. Big contest
could have played the Utile Sisters of the Poor. You have to look at It Is at Galllpolls between Galllpolls '
reallstlcally; do we need to play Moeller to get In the playoffs?"
and Pt. Pleasant. TheyteUmelfthe
For several years, Moeller has played teams from outside Ohio to build weather's good, 6,l0lfans will biJ on
Its national reputation. This weekend, for example, a team from Anaheim, hand to view this old rtver rtvalry.
Callf., will make a 4,400-mUe round trip to play Moeller In 10,®seat Har-rumph!
Galbreath Field at the College Football Hall of Fame.
11 our 'ole crystal ball Is correct,
"In a way, good schools are getting punished for their excellence," the Galllpolls·Pt. Pleasant battle
which causes scheduling problems, Cameron said.
should be another tuxxlk-rtown, .
Fred Daner, associate commissioner of the Ohio High SChool Athletic drag-out affair. It appears Pt. Plea·
AsSociation, said Cameron's view surprised him.
sant has the edge In size and expe"It's the first time I've ever heard of this ... no one foresaw thatlt would rience. But so did Coal Grove. '1'he
result In scheduling problem," Dafier said. "It's hard for us to recom· West Vlrglnlans could be In for a
mend a solution If we don't see It as a problem; we need a reconimendatJOn surprise If they aren't ready.ln the
· from those who do see It as a problem."
"game of the week," we'll go with
Pt. Pleasant, 15-14.
We've really got some dandy
"firsts" lor you around the nation
this week. Topping the list Is the
first-ever night game played at Notre Dame Stadium. And- kaff-kaff
-get this! The Irtsh face old nemesis Michigan on prime-time TV.
: CINCINNATI (AP) - Cincinnati the AFC, giving up 00.
Har-rumph!
'
=coach Forrest Gregg, who owns
But the Steelers were last, giving
Michigan, which holds an 11-4
loUr victories In two years over the up 436 yards In the offensive shoo- lead In this series. has Its usual
Pittsburgh Steelers, expects a tout with Dallas.
strong team. The high-powered of·
tough time Sunday when he takes
Gregg dismissed the statistics, tense features QB Steve Smith and
hJs Bengals Into Three Rivers however, remembering that the
Incomparable wide receiver An·
Stadium.
· Steelers had beat him five out of six ·thony Carter. So, the Irish have
.. 'They looked awesome," Gregg glimes In hJs three years as coach of their work cut out for them.
;~ld of Pittsburgh watching the
Last year, N.D. Coach Gerry
the Browns.
:steeters defeat the Dallas Cowboys
Faust got a rude reception tp col"Pittsburgh almost shut them
•3'6-28 In a nationally televised game (Dallas) doWn In the second half, "
lege football, Including 25-7 pasting
Gregg said. ''They've helped them- at the hands or Michigan. His Irish
•!.&gt;ionday.
· : "Their orfense was outstanding," selves with young people In the del·
team finished 5-6 In the first losing
:Gregg said. "They passed and ran enstve line who are producing, and
season for Notre Dame since 1963.
·on Dallas, and Dallas had no pass It showed, They've mixed thQSe
Um-kumph!
; rush on (quarterback) Terry Brad· · young ones with a lot of experience
Wtth a year of the Faust System
;$haw at all."
at linebacker and In the secondary.
In place, It should be full-steam
;. The Bengals lead the American
"Last week's game Is past and
·Football Conference In hoth most out of our minds," he said, lndlcat·
· yards gained and fewest allowed tng that Pittsburgh's showing
{ollowing their season-opening vic- might be sobering to the Bengals
• tory Sunday over the Houston 011- players as they prepare for this
· ers, 27-6.
.
week's game.
; : Cincinnati gained 419 yards In
"All I'm going to ao Is point out
: that game. The San Diego the job we have In front of us. It's a
Chargers were second In the AFC tough chore," Gregg said.
with 393 yards after the ·first wee"One thing about Bradshaw,
kend of the season, and the Steelers there's nothing wrong with his
were third with 388.
arm," Gregg added. Bradshaw
On defense, the Bengals gave up completed 17 of 28 passes with no ·
only 175 yards to the Oilers. The Interceptions, for 241 yards and
develand Browns were SI;'C!lnd In three touchdowns.

a

:_Bengal coach feels
;;Steelers tough foe

-

ahead for the Irish, with practically
every starting iJO!iltion on offense
and defense manned by a veteran.
In a cUff-hanger, the Hoople 5).'&amp;tem sees Faust recording hJs
"first" victory.over the Wolverines
- as the N.D. offense, featurlpgTB
PhU Carter, outscores Michigan's
Carter, 24-21. (And please, dear
readers, don't 6al1 me Saturday evening, I'll be too busy watchtng the
magic lantern. Um-kumph! )
Another "first" Involving an lndl·
· ana team will be the Indiana Hoosl·
ers' attempt to defeat' the Southern
California TroJans.

Ml••lulppt 14
Arkansas 33 Navy J4
Af!t')' tp Llfayett• 7'
· DoiH St. 17 Nev1da·Reno 1&amp;

Y1le :n Brown 21

•

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
bch of tr.e ~ ''"'"' tl
reQuiUKI to be fMdily avoiiiAble for 1111

Duke 29 South Ca roiiM 10

E.'Car,olllla 31 E. Tennesset" Sl. H
F,..1no St. 1{) Ore,on 7

., each K ' ogtr St04"e, except •

Houlton 21 Arizo na St. 19
ldsllo S l. 35 PorUi nd St. 1fo
llllnoll 25 Syracuse 18
Iowa 23 Iowa St. 12
;

Kroger

Welcomes

Mia mi IOhlol 1'1 Nor-thwestern 14
McNeeR St. 2G In!lla u St . '5
Mllll!!lppl s,. 36 t,~emphll Sl . I~
Montana 16 Pullet SOund 13

Your

Federal
Food
Stamps

ltftbraska 49 Nt w Me xico St . 12

v.,..

Nevodo·La•
36 New M
'"lro 2G
Ntw Hampshire ~ Boston 9
N. Carolina St. 21 Wake Fo rH t R
No rth Carpllnt 3~ Va nder bilt 28
Not re Dame 21 Michigan 21

o nto Sl.lt. M~nl .. , 51. 10

COI'UICiHT 191Z • THl KIOCill CO. ITIMS AND PIJCU
GOOD SUNDAY , SIPT . 12 . THIOUGH SATUIDA.Y . SlPT .

Oklahomo 311 Kenlutky13

• Cake Decorating Ideas.
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HAM SALAD

"One of these days I'd Itke to see
our best 11 players on the field after
the game rather than just the
start," said Green. "Usually there
are lour or five starters on the sldeUnes at the end of the game lor one
reason or another."
Green made a· switch In his of·
tense lor the Indiana game by play·
lng freshman Sandy ·Schwab at
quarterback and shifting Kevin VUIars to flanker. Schwab completed
22 of 43 passes for 242 yards.agalnst
the Hoosiers.

18

0

Homemade

Quarter~

Tail-Less
T·Bone Steak

Fresh

PORK·SAUSAGE

lib. Kr•lf

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Diet· Rite
or R.c·. Cola

Easl ern Z6 Federal· HOC'kl na 2U

lib.

Mixed Fryer Parts

,,,ce!

corner of Main &amp;B'utternut Ave.
POMEROY, OHIO

. Ironton 40 Pcrl"mouth 8
Cird evllll' 20 Athens 6
Grf'E'nup 8 Rock Hill 0

o!!~L~~~!~x~~r~o

t"e

Bag

- Ar-

HOLLY FARMS, U.S.D.A.
GRADE A

tnctuclin9

10

pEL MEET. INGS

PRIDAV , Sept. 11
Pt . PleaSa nt HI Ga llipolis 14
JackSon 14 We llst on 7
Warrt"n Local hi Me igs 6
WhetlersburJ 22 Waverl y 20
Nelso nviiii.. York 16 Lo~a n T

•

9

CAKE DECORATING
SUPPLIES

Toledo 33 Ma rahall 23

Wic hita St. 11 Bell St . 17

the
best of ..

fOI

•

$3· =-=·~;;__--t:•
25

Get Yours

Southern Mt'thodlt t42 UT£P 7
Tuu 38 Uta h 20 · .

w... ,n,lon "' . ...... . 11

II . lfi2 .1N GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY .

at-lr~w~..~·~ n·~..~s~~·~M~·••ry~t~an~•;i;ii~~~;· R~t.~7i,T~u;ppei•s;P;Ia;in;s,;O;H.;;,~~:

"Miami will be sky high, they a!·
ways are against a Big Ten (Con·
terence) opponent," said Green.
"But so will we. We have to have
the same approach ....
Despite a JO.O loss to Indiana last
Saturday, Green felt "we made a
lot of progress. We played much
better than we did against illinois
but we did not take advantage of
our opportunities and we have not
played up to our potentlal."

you yOut choice of a compar~ 1tem,
~ avHtble, rtftec;:tinv the lfl"'"'t
llvinQt 01' 1 r••ncntcll. wt'lteh wll em ide
vou to putchue the adver1118d Item
II the ldvertiMd PfiCO with1n :JJ daW"'

Kan!aJil Texao Chrllllanlfi ••
Kanm St. 36 Soulh Ookot~ 10
Loullli u St. %2 O~on ,SL 12
Miami 1Fia.t18 VII'Jinlo Ttch 21

.

IC)eel·

r.c.lly noted 10 1M .a. If wo do run
out ol an advtrt..-1 itefn. we will offer

'S

Gfotlf!a Trch ~ Cltadel ll
Gra mbllnJ 25 Alco rn St. 9
Hirvard 27 Columbia 10
H1wa ll 42 Colorado St. ~ 1
Holy Croat 1'7 Ma iHfhusttll 14

ter
38-211 defeat.
backq. home
licking their wounds
In an Inter-sectional clash that
has pr9Ciuced a lot of fireworkS tn
the past, the UCLA Bruins and the
Wisconsin Badgers ~tage a
crowd-pleasing lollapalooza .
They'll battle It out down to the last
whistle ·- with the Badgers claim·
lng.,a J0.28 triumph. Har·rumph!
Nowgoonwithmy rorecast:

AT-HOME FOOTWEAR

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Board of Trustees of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art recently eleQted Julian Ganz Jr. as
president and Cam1l1a . Frost as
chairman ot the board .
Other new officers Included: Nor·
man Barker Jr. and Eric Udow as
vice presidents; Charles E. Ducom·
mun as treasurer, and Mrs. Harry
Wetzel as secretary.

Drok• 24 Southem 111\nola 8

In the southwest, Houston will
. te, ~1-19·, the Okla·
edge. Arizona Sta
f'
homa Sooners will~.e little dlffl·
1ru •• .t .... I"'"'SS.13•
CUIty with Ke ntu CnJ, nuu~'6
°
and Texas will sci t11e Utlb Utes

Ev~ns

POMEROY - Meigs County Genealoslcal Society will meet
Sunday at Meigs Museum. This will
be the opening meeting for the new
1982-&amp;1 year; Sylvia Hargrove, covice president for this district of the

Officers named

Ohio Genealogical Society will be
guest speaker. Election of officers
will be held . There will be a pro~ posed by-laws change for the chapter to consider. Discussion lor this
meeting will Include the upcoming
Lar~'s and Hardesty's reprints
and ptogress on county cemeteries.
The corresponding secretary will
have coptes of 8111982 Issues of the
newsletter avallable for those who
have not received them so lar.

Dflaware 11 Ttm!Hf U

•

CHICAGO (AP) -Coach Dennis
{:;reen knows Northwestern's opponents are playing against "The
Streak" and he hOpes to use It to the
WUdcats' advantage.
" "Teams are definitely high for
us, " Green told a meeting of the
Chicago Football Writers Tuesday,
carefully avoiding mention of "The
Streak" which now Is an NCAA·
rECOrd 33 straight ·defeats.
"Nobody wants to lose to us,"
said Green. "But If they feel they
have to do something, there Is always anxiety. And If we can apply
. pressure to that anxiety, we can
r;rack 'em. We'll make It work In
our favor. We're playing to win
whUe they're playing not to lose.
· "I'm looking for my first win as a
head coach," said Green, whose
Wildcats face Miami of Ohio Saturday. Green Is In his second year at
Northwestern and Is responsible
for only 13 of the tosses. including
two this year, 1o Illinois and
Indiana.

The annual reunion of the ~es­
cendants of Gideon and Artlmesa

Wolf Rouah will 'be held Sunday at
the Portland Park. The pptluck
dinner wiU be at 1 p.m. All relatives
ana trlenda of the famUy are Invited
to attend.

D.rtmouth 17 Penn1y lvanla 6

'

Northwestern losing
.
streak reaches 33
;

7;8 ;

RUTLAND - A county-wide
prayer meeting wiU be held at 2
p.m. Sunday at Rutland !Jible
MetiKxllst Olurch with Glen Bissell
as class leader.

Bowllna G reen 22 Crnl. Mlchllt'ln 20

eM~

o:MC ""

happenings

POMEROY - Wesley Chapel
Homecoming will be held Sunday.
Sunday School II at 10 a.m. Basket
lunch Is at 12: 00 p.m. Aftemoon services wiU begin at 1: 00 p.m. Special
singers will be !he Paul Anderson
group and Rev. Chester Lemley
win be 1111est speaker. Everyone 1s·
welcome to attend.

California 1~ Su DIPJO St. 14
ClMnaon 33 Botton Coli• 20
Crlp le :u Lthlt h 21
ConiU!Ctlcut 23 Nortt1ea1tern 7
Cor nell12 Princeton 1 •

Looking tO the east, PeM State

00Ies, ~~.

MIDDLEPORT - The Perry
Sisters will be the special singers of
!he Ash Street Freew1U Baptist
Cl!urch Sl!rvlce on Sept. 18 aU: 00
p.m.

.·County

The Daily Sentinel Page 7 ·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
•

Wyomlnt 30 Long ~ h. :;t 24

Al a bama~

_ re on Rutgers,
wiU double tiKi ICO
28-14. In a 1illl-slate In the Ivy
league, we see Comell taJdni
,
Prin·
ceton, 12-7; Dartmouth conquering
P
17 • Ha • ...a Ding over

-v;
rv~uu 1'0 ·
Columbia, 2'7·10, ~ Xale;pipplng
27 21
~
'
Brown,
. '
Down SOUth, Southern MJsS~
Auburri• 24-s IppI will squeeze past ' l
19; AJaban\ll will Whip Mississippi,
JB.14; North caroUna w111 take vanderbUt, 35-28; Mtaml of Florida will
nip Vlrglnl
'
a ·Tech, 28-21; Clemson
will take the measure of Boston Col·
.,., ""
d In At ...... Pitt w111
Iege, ,.....,;
aJ!
va.....,.
knock d1 the Florida State Semi·

Wlscon• ln 30 UCLA

8ATUao.Av , Sepl. 11

"

Wednetday, September 15,1982

5wp1..,;\,., 15,

will edge Gallip~lis in 'Game of Week'

Sportlight

' ' ,..I

- PJif.

~

)t

$1.29

Everyday Low Prices on
pantry stopl!tS.. Save I Oo/o to
40o/o on Sooper Cost Cutters
compared 'to other bronds
at Kr09er. (For some Sooper
Cost Cullers no
other
comparable brands. are
stocked.) Check the yellow
pr.lce list of the over 400
Sooper C:oat Cutter. pantry
staples, only c;.t Kroger .

'

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Everything you buy of Kroger is guoranieed for your lola I sol is·
. faclion regardless of manufacturer . If you ore not satisfied,
Kroger will replace your item with the same brand or a comparable brand or refund your pur chose price .

•YAIIITY
In Every deparlmenl . You can selecl from over 10,000 items and
1 over 200 kinds al'ld cuts of meal, including Lamb, Veal, Fresh
Seafood and 7 kinds of Ground Meal. You will also find one of
the widest seleciions of fresh fruits and vegelables, plus a
· Delicatealen, international ,foods section, gourmel and diet
foods, inatlt,utionalaizes and 'l'C?re. ·

•COSI CIIITII I l l Low ·prices an ·couality guaronleed producl s, doy·in and doy ·oul.
Over 100 different items. Producls with a nam e you con 1l'usl ond
a quality grade you can counl on . Products you can depend on
every day and pri,ced as low or lower thon, " no name food s" . AI
Kroger you know exo~ly what you 're gelling when you buy it,
not wh'n you open il. And each and every "Cosl Cutler " ilem is
backed by Kroger's Total Salisfaction Guaronfee.

•'

�Poge-8- The Daily Sentinel

Wednetday, September 15,1982 • ·

PameiOy-Middleport, Ohio

Meigs.- County· regional service news notes

·'

Grace Kelly dies from auto accident injuries

' PRINCDS GRACE -

Tills Is a ltii61Ue photO of the formerGraoe
Kelly, Princess Grace of Monaco who died Tuesday oiiD,Iunee llllffered
In a Clll' aceldeot, and Gary CooperID ascene of the ftlm "111gb Noon."

(AP LaserphotAI).

PRINCDS GRACE - In this JlNI61Ue pllotO Prince RaiDier m of
Monaco, places a rlug on the fluger of American movie 1tar Grace
Kelly of PhDadelpbla during tbelr wedding ceremG1Q' In Monaeo
Cathedral on April 19, 19G6. Prlucess Grace died Tueeda.Y nlgla Ia a
Monaco hospital of ID,Iurles suffered ID a road accident Monday ID
Monaco. She was ~2. (AP LaserpiMKo).

MONTE CARLO. Monaco (AP)
- The death or Princess Grace
brought grief OOday to the sunny
seaside principality she helped rule
and stunned American tans who
lli!Ver stopped laving the Oscarwinning actress even after she left
them for a prince.
)'he fonner Grace Kelly died In a
Monaco hospital Tuesday at the
age of 52 from a cerebral hemorrhage, about 36 hours after her car
somersaulled ~ feet dolvn a
mountainside, trapping the princess inside.
Flags flew at half staff today atop
the royal palace overlooking the
MedlteiTIUiean and at banks along
the Boulevard des MouUns.
"It's shocking," said Hen-e Flolet, a hotel bell captain. ''She was a
grande dame. She had an the
qualiUes."
Prlnce Rainier was at his wife's
bedside "practically Without Interruption," a palace spokesman laid
without specifying whether he was
actually there when she died.
One French report quoted . witnesses as saying Rainier quietly
left about :Jl minutes before Grace
died at 10: :Jl p.m. (4::Jl p.m. EDT)
In the haipltal bearing her name.
The youngest of the couple's
three chlldren, 17-year-old Stephanie - the only other person In
the car - suffered what a medical
bulletin described as severe bruisIng and remained ''under obeervatlon" In the same hospital.
Grace's other children, PJ1ncess
Caroline, 26, and Crown Prlnce Albert, 24, were In Monaco, a palace
oftlclal confirmed.
A palace spokesman said It was
still too early to say when funeral
services would be held. "We are
still an 1n astateofshock," he said.
The tiny principality on a rocky
slice of the French Rlvlera Iring casino that made Monaco famow; In
Edwardian times, roulette wheels
were brought to a stop and . the
blackjack cards packed away. The
Doodllghts M!re turned of! and the
doors quietly closed. Across Casino
Square, the gaudy Cafe de Paris
closed, as· did an the restaurants,
cafes, bars and nlghtsJDis. The usu-

of Inez W. Garrison of Route I,
Point Pleasant, w. va., has been
assigned to SHeppard Air Force
Base, Texas, after completing Air
Force basic .training.
During the six weeks at Lackland
Air Foret: Base, Texas, the airman
studied the Air Force mission, organization and customs and received special training In human
relations.
In addition, airmen who complete basic iralnlng earn credits towar&lt;j an assocla te degree In
applied science through the Community College of the Air Force.
The airman will now receive speclallzed lnstructton In the aircraft
maintenance field.
He· Is a 1l8l graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.
.

ally lively streets \W!re deserted.
Across the yacht-filled harbor,

the usually Doodllt royal palace on
the "Rock of Monaco" stood In darkneSS. Pollee allowed only official
cars to drive up to the stately Grimaldi tamUy home.
Tributes to the champagnehatred Philadelphia native began
pouring In from thestarsofherHollywood past Including President
Reagan and Frank Sinatra.
Reagan praised her "character
and elegance," saying In a statement from Washington that she
was remembered as "a compas-

Her condition "worsened during ':
slonate and gentle lady who had a ·
deep and abiding affection for her .the night" and an avenues of treat- , "
ment had been exhausted by !ale · •
adopted country and people." ·
Tuesday, when she died of "an
Sinatra l1lOllml!d the II&amp; of "a Intra-cerebral vascular hemorgracious, wonderfUl woman who rhage," the palace said.
was a prlucess from the moment
she was born."
Rumors. had rtppled through
The ~ce had given no clue that Monte Carlo earlier that Grace had
Princess Grace was on her sllpped Into a coma but the palace
deathbed.
did not mention this.
Earlier unconflnned reports had
. "It was very surprising til us,"
said she suffered two broken l'lbs
fonner Pllllal!elphla city counciland a fractured collartxme, but the man Jack Kelly said of his sister's ·;
palace Insisted It was only a broken death. "I was led to believe that she
right leg.
was out of danger."

Family medicine

UMW

Broken bone answers

Meigs Association
for Retarded Citizens

•

Dedication ceremonies for the
new Carlson School In Syracuse
were announced for December at
the Thursday night meeting of the
Meigs Association for Retarded CItizenS held at the school.
Pat Carson presided at the meetIng during which time It was noted
that equipment Is needed for the
kitchen and the Uvlng skills room as
well as the playground.
Carol Layh and Janice Deem
were appointed hike bike chairmen
for the school.
The group voted to send Carol
Layh as delegate and Rhonda
Stockwell as representative to the
Ohio Association or Retarded Citizens meeting, Sept. 18, Columbus.
1'he group will also pay the registration tees for nine teachers to attend the Professional Association
tor Retarded Qtlzens convention to
be held Nov. 11-13 In Columbus.

Meigs
Cooperative Parish

planned for Nov. w at the Asbury Opal Grueser lady assistant ste- .
United Methodist Church to be con- ward; Loulae Radford, pianist; LuQUESTION: How can a doctor tell
dueled by Bob Story·
cOle Leifheit, youth chalnnan;
when you have a broken bone?
It was noted by Rev· Mr · Robin· Susie -Pullins, juvenile chalnnan·
ANSWER: Although most broken
son that the food co-op Is function- Barbara Fry CWA chatrrnan; Pa't
bones (d--'-rs usually call them
In
a1n H led that the j t
' ,
""w
gag · e no
pro ec
Holter, legislative agent.
fractures) are
of providing nutritious low costrood
Fay Sauer was accepted Into fairly easy to
to the people of Meigs County re- membership by reinstatement. It recognize on
gardless of age, race, sex, marital was noled that the meeting time physical examinstatus, religion or Income, was will change to 7:30p.m. In October. a!ion by feetlng
started by the Unlled Methodist Betty Conkle was the first place the affected part,
Churches of Meigs County.
winner 1n the ·county contest with
X-ray studies are
An "ashram" has been sche- her stuffed toy entry. It will be sent
usually used to
duled for the Pomeroy United to the Ohio State Grange session In con f I r m
the
Methodist Church for Oct 28-:Jl October for competition
diagnosis. Often
SCHRECK
with the Rev. Clarence Hunter as
Han'lsonvWe Grange ~!ted and
the patient reports an Injury that
the evangelist.
Nonna Lee, lecturer, had the proresulted in sudden pain and also
Vernon Nease noted that the graq~ 011 the theme "Keep the says that a snap was heard at the
Methodist men now have five food Faith... It Included a'hymn readtime of the accident. 1bls snap Is
banks established In Meigs County. lngs, "The Beauty of the F~" by
produced by the actual cracking of
Lynn Slater reporting for the . Mary Diehl; "Suddenly Sep- the bone material. Your physician's
youth armounced a convention to be tember" Stella Atkins· "The Mas- efforts will be directed not only to
held In Racine. A Bible quiz and ter's ~t" No~ Will· "A
reallgningthebonesthatarebroken
youth retreat were also announced
•
•
but also to restoring the function of
Child's
Description of Anatomy"
the injured hone once it Is healed.
forMrs
Nov.Sauer
6 and 7QUESTION: Is there more than
expressed pleasure Francis Shaeffer; "Laundry Ad:
.
vice" Helen Blackston· and "IReone kind of broken bone?
about the booth at the Meigs County solve ' to Have", RoWn Radford.
ANSWER: Yes( there are several
Fair thanking Rev· Flynn espe- There was a humorous game and a
conunon types of fractures - simcially for his work.
candlellghtlng ceremony
pie, compound, greenstick and
The host pastor, Hilton Wolfe,
Refreshments were ~ by
pathological. I often hear my patten-welcomed the church representa- Mr: and Mrs. WUllam Radford and
ts use these terms but frequently
tlves at the meeting. Kermit Wal- Mr. and Mrs. Rollin Radford.
they use them Incorrectly. Here in
ton, chairman, presided with
simple language Is what they acofficers' reports being given by
tually mean. A simple fracture Is
Rev. Florence Smith and Mrs. Doone In which the sharp edge of the
rothy Smith. HUton Wolfe, pastor or
brdren bone has not pierced the sill'·the host church, welcomed the .
face of the skin and there Is no other
group. Refreshments were served.
external wound leading to the break.

Ch h . .
urc ptcntc

Church junior class
The junior class or the Middleport Church of the Nazarene met
recently at the home of Doris
Carder, teacher, for a creative
workshop on absentee and get-well
cards. Refreshments were served.
Attending were Heidi Caruthers,
Debbie Blake, Amber Eblin, Brian
Broome, Mark Taylor and Judy
Eblin.

Plans tor a school or religion to he
held at the Chester United Methodist Church, Sept. 30, Oct. 7, 14 and
21, were armounced by Rev. James
Clark, education chairman, at the
Monday night meeting of the Meigs
County Cooperative Parish held at
Morris Chapel.
Registrations are currently belng taken for the school. The
,
·
courses to be offered are Unlled
Wllllam Radford was re-elecled
Methodist history taught by Rev. master of the Rock Springs Grange
Mark Flynn; lay leaders by Rev. at a meeting he»&gt; recently at the
Robert McGee; coonc11 on minis- hall.
tries by the Rev. Bob Robinson;
Other Qfflcers elected were WUevangellsm by Rev. Richard Uam Grueser, · overseer; Ethel
RothemlcJ!; parables by Fay Grueser, lecturer; Roy Holter, steSauer, the book of discipline, Rev. ward; Roy Grueser, assistant steF1orence Smith: Revelations by ward; Beuna Gmeset, chaplain;
Rev. Richard Thomas.
Luctlle Leifheit, f:l'easurer; FnuJ.
Rev. Rothemlcb announced that ces Goegletn, secretacy; HarOld
Rev. Ray Price, a missionary Blackstm, ptela!epe!, BaltJara•
speaker, wtll be held Nov.14-16for · Fry,Ceres; Helei!BIIckston,Pom-'
speclalservk:es.LioydDilllnaerb' ooa; NancyMirrii,Fkra; Harold·
the communlcatlohs committee Blacutoo, RoDin. Radloi-d; Roy
noted that a workshop hall been Grueser, executive committee;

Rock Springs Grange

congregation
and friends
of
theThe
Middleport
Imependent
Hollness Church enjoyed a picnic and
fellowshlp recently at the Kanauga
Roadside Park.
There was special music along
wtth lrcle
c
prayers. Attencllngwere
the pastor and his wife, the Rev.
and Mrs. Odell Manley, Mr. and
Mrs Wendell George ..... Brenda· ,
.,.~

·

•

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Barr, Tina
and Jonda Man1ey, Margaret
McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs. RObert
Manley, Crystal and Tracy, Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Searles, Mrs. Helen
Jeffers, Roberta Georae, Lee Ann
George. Roeer Manley, DrlDnll and
Roger, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. steve
Manley and Steve, Jr., Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Jeffers, Charlene c,die, WendY Clark, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene GUmore, JEallllle and Jay,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard George.
Naomi and Wendell, Mr. and Mrs.

Hudson,Mary and Klm. Mr. Ud
Mrs. Older Dorothy Jimmy and
'

_,
"
••

..,.
••
:~
••

' I

••

•

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·

SmllceB at the cl!urch are held at

9: 00 a.m. SWiday acboo1; U: OOa.m

worsblp aerv:lce; wltb Sunday and
Wed!W'ay eYI!I!IDa lll!l'\llees - at
7: :ll p.m. eacl! .week. 1be pailor
IDvltee the public to attelld the

aervlces.
'l

•
•

DBCORATillG
PRODUCTS
AVAILABLE llOWI

·'

SUPPLIES

'

WEDNESDAY

, POMEROY - Revival at the
Carleton Church, Kingsbury
·Road, Wednesday through Sunday at 7: 30 p.m. nightly. Evan~list will be Herman Jordon of
Leo n, W. Va. Jlmmy E vanS,
Pa-stor, Invites the publlc to attend. There will be special
singing.

when the Meigs County Democratlc Committee meets at 8
p.m. at Carpenter's Hall on E.
Main St., Pomeroy. Past county
officials from the party will be
on hand for the program pres.enled by E. A. Wingett, tong.,
time party leader. Among those
· to be on hand will be Don Mullen,
a former county commissioner;
MOdred Fowler, representing
the late Roscoe Filwler, Meigs
County's first Democratic sheriff; . Gordon Caldwell, who
seiVed as county auditor; Cart
ortuttandOscarWeberwhoformerly served as ·head or the
State Highway Department In
Meigs County:

,

Jllllltlve ...

.'

CANClD (,_......,IIi) The lmple d'nyou malletodaywlll be
both fiMiralllli Ulllutlq. Yourcbarrm;apturesa!te~Jt~op. but It's your
ltDcel1loY tbauconl. ·
· '
·
• .. . (11111 D-Aij&amp;. II) QJodltlq111 J!a~ an Inn._,. 1111 your ,
•

'.

Marine Pvt. Terry L. Jewell, son
of Pearlle F. Jewell Jr. of Route 1,
Box !ll, Rutland, b3s compleled a
Motor Vehicle Operator's &lt;;ourse.
During the seven-week skill
graining at Marine Corps Service
Support Schools, Marine Corps
Base, Camp Lejeune, N.C.. students received classroom and

Lt. Woodgerd graduated from
West Point on May 26 and received
a Bachelor of Science degree and
commission as a second lieutenant
In tile regular army. Early next
year he will go to the Third Infantry
Division in Germany for three
years.

Medal for Moffo

. Woodgerd

Schmucker
Marine Staff Sgt. Steve G.
Schmucker, son of Clarence and
Wenola Schmucker of Route 1, Box
190A, Long Bottom, has been promoted to his present rank while
serving with 3rd Light AntiAircraft MlssUe Battalon, Marine
Corps Air Station, Cherry Point,
N.C.

PHILADELPHIA lAP) - The
Philadelphia Art Alliance will presents Its 1982 Medal o! Achievement
to soprano Anna Moffo. Sept 28.
She'll rccieve the award at a
dinner held In conjunction with the
celehratlon of the "City or Brotherly Love's" 300th anniversary.
The Art Alliance was founded In
1915 to promote cultural activities
in .the region, and each year It honors an outstanding Philadelphian
for his or her contribution to the
arts.

•

Adventists agree with N AS diet, cancer connection
1'he lifestyle or Seventh-day Adventists may give confirmation to
what the National Academy of
Science says concerning a connection between diet and cancer. The
results of a two-year study released
recently by NAS revealed that one
may reduce the risk of cancer by
·making certain changes In his dietary habits.
Michael Plonkowskl, pastor of
the Pomeroy Adventist church,
said the findings came as no surprise and produced no new lnformaUon. Changes In diet the study
recommends are similar to those
Adventists made more than a cen-

tury ago. "Eating largely of fruits,
whole grains, vegetables. and reducing consumption of fats, sugar
and salt, Is somethin g most
members still practice," Pionkowski said.

also made In 1896. "The diet designed for us by our Creator, consisting of grains, fruit, nuts and
vegetables, Is truly the most health·
ful and nourishing," Pionkowski
added.
Studies conducted In three counStatements made as early as 1854 tries - the United States, the Neby Adventist pioneer, Ellen White, therlands and Norway - indicate
strongly recommend the eating of Adventists in these countries llve
foods free of grease, salt, condl· six to eight years longer than the
ments and spices. As early as 1872 average population. Since findings
members were encouraged to not of health scientists in the United
use tobacco, liquor, tea, coffee or States conlirm that Adventists
eat flesh foods. That malignancies have less cancer, hear1 disease, hyare largely caused by eating flesh pertension, strke and diabetes, it
foocls Is a statement Mrs. White appears that the counsel they r&lt;&gt;-

ceived &lt;Wei' a hundred years ago
has paid off.

Birth announcement ·
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Wilt, Minersville, are announcing the birth of
their first chUd, GUUan Nlchole,
born on Aug. 11 at the Pleasant Valley Hospital. The Infant weighed
seven pounds, seven ounces and
was 19 Inches long.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Wut, Syracuse, and Mr. ·
and Mrs. Earl Glass, Middleport.
Mrs. Floyd Arnold of Greenfield Is
a great grandmother.

with Ohio.

Fall in

Apple polishing. Ohio's loaded with apple, corn,
potato festivals during September. It seems like a
harvest festival of some sort or another is cropping up
in almost every town .

More oom·pah-pah.
Attend one of the ethnic festivals
in the state. There
are so many:
Oktoberfests,
Greek festivals,
Polish festivals. Listen to
the music, eat and enjoy.

All aabooooooard.
Boarding a steam train
or sailing off on a riverboat excursion are two
of the more exciting
ways to see Ohio in
the fall.

I'

.

,,

Jewell

Astrograph

m•111f •~IIMIIIIftldiDyourfavoct!ldaY. MerePIIItbaD ·
~-- )'Gill'~

ot • l!n*tD

Second Lieutenant Michael
Wooclgard, son of~. and Mrs. Arthur Woodgerd ,of Mli.rielta, and
grandson of Mrs. Alma WoodS of
Raclile, recently compleled the US
Army Alrbome course at Ft. Benning, Ga.
The course consists of three
weeks or Intensive physical trainIng which culminates In five para- ·
chute jumps. Michaelis now at Ft.
Knox, Ky., where he Is attending
the armor officer basic course for
training on the new M2 main battle
tank.

: SYRACUSE-ThlrdWednesliay Homemakers Club will
hleet at the Syracuse Qty bUDdlng on Wednesday atlOa.m. FolJowlng a business meetlng 'the
rnembers will go the Roote 33
roadside P&lt;lrk for a . picntc at
noon. For roll call members are
-~ked to take a ·favorite recipe to
' lhare. ,A dlscusslon ·wlli- be&lt;tleld ~ ·
~bn rllaklng a quilt ~ the projeCt '
MIDDLEPORT ChUd Conser· ~ year. GueSts are welcome
vation League meeting, 7:30
· ~drive~
. are need~ to transp.m. Thursday at home of Mrs.
rt the memhers .
Helen Blackston; devoUons by
:,
1HURSDAY
Eloise White and the program
J ROCK SPRINGS J:letter will be a review of the leagu/
:&lt;Health Oilb wtn meet at 1:15 p.
by-laws. ·
ThursdayatthehomeofMrs.
I Ethel GnjeSI!J'.
'
"•
i
·'
•
'; POMEROY Cllapter !ll Royal
NEW HAYEN -Wrestling at
' 'ArCh Masons wtn meet Thurs8 p.m. Thursday at New Haven
day at 7 p.m. Work will he In the
Community Center.
.:mark master and past master
degrees. All companions are ln..vi ted to attel)d.
SATIJRDAY
J
. ~ -~:
: ~')
111
l"' r ., . - - RlJI'LAND - A dance will be
. ROCK SPRINGS Better
held Saturday night at _Rutland
. Health Ouh, 1: 15 p.m. Thursday
Civic Center from 8 p.m. to 11: 30
the home of Ethel Grueser.
p.m. The charge Is singles, $2,
couples, $3. Music will be by the
POMEROY - Old Timers
.,.,,_~.will beobsen-ed Thursday
Itomic Sounds.

September 16, 19112
Projects comprised of artistic elements should go very well for you
~ coming Yl!ar. Th.ere Is a market for what you have to offer, so don't
~ afraid to express your talents.
•
ii
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) This is a good day to try to cement
) tronger_honds with one you'd like to know better. Don't walt for him or
.,her to mak~ the Initial gestures. '
·~
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. 23) You may question whether kindnesses
Jyou extend to others today are fully appreciated. Be assured that aHyo1,1
fdo will be carefully miled.
·
'- :
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-!'lov. 22) A breakaway from mundane routines
~would do you good today. Select something fun to do, l!Ut be sure to
; incllide enjoyable pcmpanlons.
·
·
-~
SAGJTrARIUS (Nov. 23-Dee. Zl-) You llave the ability today to
·'make so~ethlng worthwhUe from situations which offer meager prom"'lse: Lotik for Opportunities. Ydu'll figure O!lt11aw to expanil them.
• CAPRICORN (Dee. z.t.Jaa.1t) This Is a gooddllytOstudysubjects
' which cowd be of practical value. You assbnllate knowledge eastly.
What's more Important, you'll know where to use It later.
• AQVABiljli,(Jao. 20-Feh.,19) Listen carefully_to any p~
"today made by perso:ns you trust and respeCt. ~are Indications you
. may beaeftt from ~nfldentiallnlormation. .
"
PISCES-(I,I'ell~ ll-March20) Yourcorrtpanloqshlpwlllbedeslredby
others today. You'll know how to make all your associates feel they are
'VIli'Y speclallo you.
.
.
,- ,
AJUl!:S,(March !1-Aprll 19) Large strides can lie made OOday If you
really put your'!iearllnto your work. Look at each las/&lt; which confronts
you as a labor ot love.
.
TAURUI (~s-May20) Thls could bean exciting day romantically ,for uilattidled :l'aureans. Someone In whom you are IDterested
may send out oi&amp;Mll that he or she feels ~-same way. '
·
GEMINI ( - ·-~--•&gt; It looks Ulre a matter you're concerned
abOut II golllf lit~ out to your satisfaction. Keep plugging lllm8

Paul A. Sprague, a lOcal Pomeroy
resident, has returned home from
training at Marine Corps Recruit ·
. Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
Son of Mrs, · Hilzel Sprague .who
lives at RFD 3, Pomeroy, calls
Eastern High Shcool for his alma
mater.
Sprague will report to camp
Lejeune, N.C. for special training in
the infantry field upon completion of
boot leave.
For more infonnation on Marine
Corps opportunities contact G./Sgt.
Knapp at 374-2624 in Marietta and
' please call collect.

Woodgerd

:J
,,

Rt. l, Tuppers Plain~ Oh. :

~-~~~-in~

I

.:

.."

CAKE DECORATING

up~

"'•IPM!I'•

frtends and relatives.
Coming from out-of-town were
Mrs. Roy Tillis, mother of Amos,
Chillicothe; Sis and Meredith Ratcllft, sister and brother-in-law, Circleville; and WUda Awman, sister
of Mrs. Tillis, Morgantown, W.Va.
Telephoning congratulations
were Shirley uvengood and Allan
Gallimore, Oak Hill, maid of honor,
and best man ~t the wedding or the
Rev. and Mrs. Tillis.
Rev. Mr. Tillis Is pastor of Rutland Bible Methodist Church.

Calendar

.,,,
"..•

ANN'S

are

tenlatiyt

•

••••

liEwWILTOH

Conversely'
compound
fractures
are r-r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ji
lhllse in which
an open wound
mak~
the break vlalble from the outalde.
When one side of a: bone Is broken
and the other Ill just bent, ,u
'
sometimes happelllln children, It Ia
'
called a greenstick fracture. A
patholcglc fractur'e Ia lllle I'CIIIItecl
fnm a diseased-Weakened bone that
f ra,.....
_ under condlttona ·...........
.... ..,.
,.,.,..,
would not break a healthy bone. ·
, Commoncausesofsilcbpatholcglcal ·
breaks are various lonna ot cancer
and a disease called aeteopo1'1181a. ·
QUESTION: What's the most
TM
common bone that peqde'break?
ANSWER: The mOlt common
fracture Is ot the Collarbme. 'Ibllla
not too surprlalng since the .collarbone, )that pbyliclanl call the
PAC·MAN AND MS. PAC.MAN SHOES.
clavicle, Ia the ~ bmy connection
between the aboulder and the rest of
the body. n Ia -very ClliJIIDon lor the
·clavicle to brealnrben a~ lalla
'
'
on au oulltretclled ann«recelvela
l!low apinlt the shoulder. The
clavicle acts aa a lind wNeb belpe
hold the sboul4er in Ill 1!C1C11111
pOiitiOJL When a Pllient -Into
an emergency rocm or 1!1flce • 1
broken cla\'lcle he or - IIIIIIUIII)'
holdlni the imn lllinlt the ebelt.
Tile pbJdd8ll will have to llll1liDe
thepltiellt carefl!ll1 to llllb -an
elboW Cll' um IDJ1dJ !not pr r 111t IIi

eddltloa to. or lillfead ct, 1 )lralrla
c1a'ricle. Neverthlle., the aetaal

Mr. and Mrs. Tillis, 25th

Sprague

behlnd·the-wheellnstructlon on the
operation and capabilities of Marine Corps vehicles; defensive drivIng techniques; "rules Of the road"
and user -level preventive
maintenance.

:m.

CHAPMAN SHOES

Roger Snyder, Debble, Ltsa aixJ
Roger, Jr., Mi. ·and MI'S. Berl!ard'

Ricky

collarbone is :Sther simple. your
physician will run his or her fingers
over the collarbone looking for a ten-de
r spot. A characteristic reddened,
tender spot with a bumpy feeling Is a
good Indication that a broken collar·
bone may be present.
QUESTION: How Is a broken
collarbone treated?,
ANSWER: Initial therapy involves a brace or strap which looks
Uke the nwnber eight. 1bls device
wrap11 aroWid the back of the neck
and underneath both armpits and Is
fastened between the shoulder
blades. It is sometimes called a
"figure-of-eight'.' brace and help~~ to
reaHgn the collarbone by pulling the
shoulders back and out. -l bls bra~
,Is kept on for about six weeka unW
the bones heal together. Frequently,
afteralractureofthecollarbonethe
patient notices 8 bump over the
region of the break. This Is due to lhrl
new bone fonnatton and the overlapping of the broken ends. In children
thla bump will frequently disappear,
but in adults it may continue
tlu:oughout life. Although most
collarbone ,fractures heal easily,
your doctor will be:aiert for certain
complicatlona.. For· Instance, In a
severe fracture the broken ends can
sometlmell puncture the lining of the
cheat cavity as well as injure the
blood vessels or nerves thai go into
the ann.

I

•';l'he chlldren or Rev. and Mrs.
A;mos (Ruth) Tillis, Route 1, Rutl!l'ld• recently honored their par·
ents with a surprise 25th wedding
aimlversary reception held at the
Langsville Christian Church reception hall.
:;.ttendlng the observance were
Sue, Don, Beckl·and Joey Tillis, the
fQrmer Barbara Tillis and her husband, Richard Williams, who
-' the affair, along with the
hosted
Rev. and Mrs. Tillis' first grandc)llldren, Brooke, and many local

craah, the olllclal pvemment pre~~ aervlee aoIIOIIIIIll!d. (AP Ia p11c:M),

Meigs County area meeting notes
Mrs. Elsie Mallett, Athens, vice
president of the District United
Methodist Women's Society, spoke
to the more than 20 women who attended a picnic at Temple Church
Grove.
Members of the Albany United
Methodist Women's group were guests of the Temple group for this
gathering. Mrs. Mallett used the
topic, "Habits" tor a very Inspiring
message.

Belcher
Airman Charles W. Belcher, son

PRINCESSGRACEDEAD-PrlneellaGraceof
Mouaco, tbe former Grace llelly, dJecl Tuelda,y nlgiS
In a Monaco hcllpltal of ID,Iurle8 llllffered In a Clll'

The Daily Sentinei- Pag-9

Porne.:ov-Midclleport,,Ohio

'· •

'"'l~soo:aucr&lt;m
Our travel advisers will be there to answer your calls throughoul
September. Or. mail this co upon to~Ohio, Box 1001,
Columbus, Ohio 43216.

----------------------------Yes, please send me more information.

Nam• ----------------------------------------

Address ______________~------------------

City

Zip _ _ _ _ _ __

•

\bu haven't seen·Ohio until you've seen it ali.
'
·: ...,........--------1
Some fall
. ..
Old Tin\ers Day Feslival, Peebles.
Draft Horse Show &amp;t Field Day,
Russellville.
'Poor Farmers Antique Gas &amp;t
Steam Show &amp;t Flea Market,
.
, l'letcher.
Music Festival, Sauder Museum
·Farm &amp;t Craft Village, Archbold.
\ '

Tiffin-Seneca Heritage Festival,
-•'Tiffin.
Pioneer Days,. Hardin Co.
. Fairgrounds, Kenton.
Traditional Country Music
Gathering, Brulc.ner Nature
Center, Trcw

Gingerbread House,
Bellefontaine.
Ashland County Historical
Museum, Ashland. ·
Wagnalls Memorial, Lithopolis.
William P, Snyder,
.
Jr. Steamboat, Marietra.

"Tecumseh!" Outdoor Drama,
Chillicothe.
Ghostown Museum Park,
Findlay.
Seneca·Caverns, Bellevue.
•Piatt Castles, West Liberty.
Burr Oak State Park, Glouster.

Ohio Dtpartmenr of Development.

'

Office of Travel and Tourism.
·
Ohio is an Equal Opportunity Employer. . ·

�.'

..

;

.

'

Pomeroy=Midclleport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

Weduuday.

.

....~ .·'
'

., .. ~ . '

Gallia teac·hers, ~oard f~~I ··, . ·
to reach contract agreement
.
.

. .

l.!'r

·'·

·.

-

. ' .~ ..•.. 'fl l

!'1 ..

nee

.\ : ' . '

\ .$1

.

'

. Lawrence .

992-3282

(OMf'l. F TE
RI'DIATOR
• s f RvI CF.
' ro m !he s molles!
tte,11cr Core to lhe ;
l orqcsl Radiator.

•

CONSJ.RUCJION
co·MPANY

P.1diator Spcciill 15 t

P&amp;S BlJILDI.NGS

Gun ohoQt. Recine Gun
Club. Evwy Sunder .oterting
' 1 p.m. Fectory cholctd guno
1 only.

KOUNTRY KLUB

SMITH NELSON ' ·
RS, INC.

• MOTO

CHARLIE HATFIELD
OPERATOR
PH • 742 •2"03
'
9-3·1 mo. pd.

Pomeroy', Oh.
Ph. 992·2174
•
2·26·1fc •

TRIPSWEEKLY
8tautltut Golf c 011 rses
Driving Ranges
CaiiJohnTealord
Chester
Also
CLPURBO !HE OPAPIR
" Round
Open Year

CONTRACTING
.

ANNIVERSARY SALE
· Gall·Clubs
Golden Retriever Boots
Tents
Weigh"
Weight Benches

Wlllr,Sews.PIIIIis

Faundllllns,
_ R-'-tions

Guns

·
~lshlng Supplies\
copes
Traps
Boots

'MM1141111111dal'•l
-lllfiiii11411111W liOrl

-==

''FREE ESTIIIATts"

...c.-11""'

WeSpeclellze In
Racine &amp; Syratuse
sewer Hookups
Phone 949·2293
or 949·2575
8·30·1 mo.

MUCH, MUCH MORE!
Open 9 to6 Monday thru Saturday
9·3-1 mo.

Ill '""''' Sl , Petn..,r 'l'. Oho a 41Ut

CARPENTER
SERVICE

olloar&amp;.....,.Sinlai

lfrw bllolllal

V. C. YOUNG Ill

99H215 or992-7m
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-lfc

•'

i

·I

I

', 'CO[,.UMBUS, Ohio (API -State
officials competing with Indiana
fl)r the favors of International HarYI!Sier Corp. have revised a flnan·
cia! deal aimed at keeping a
~ringfleld plant open.
·• However, officials said Tuesday
Yrat lntefJiatlonal Harvester still
Isn't saying whether it wlll keep
open the Springfield plant or one in
.Iildlana.
. The Springfield Community lm·

provement Corp. IS trying .to keep,
an International Harvester truck
assembly plant in Springfield operating. The plant employs 3,400
workers and officials say it is vital
to Springfield's economy.
At the Springfield group's request, the Ohio Development Advl·
sory Committee and the state
Contrulllng Board made some tech·
nlcal changes Monday in a statelocal !lnanclallncentlve package.

Springfield IS competing with
Fort Wayne, Ind.•. where another
Harvester plant IS located, to be the
site of a single taclllty which will
remain after the financially
troubled company executes Its plan
to close one of the plants.
Walter Shaeffer, deputy director
of the state Economic and Com·
munlty Development Department,
said revisions In the proposal were
purely technical.

___-·.,

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farm pond clinic set
..Meigs
.

: .Are you bothered by unwanted Water Conservation District
bunters, trappers, or fishermen on · (SWCD) and Ohio Department of
y6ur property?
·
Natural Resources Division of.
Would you like to learn more WUdllfe (ODNR) on Saturday,
Sept. 18, at 10 a .m . at Royal Qak
-~J;M&gt;ut wUdllfe control around a
farm pond? How about vegetation
Park In Chester Township.
:Q.,ntrol and what chemicals are
Resource personnel from SoU
silfe to use In your pond?
Conservation Service, Cooperative
· To get answers to these questions Extension Service and Ohio De.alld more, come to the pond clinic partment of Natural Resources wlU
·splnsored by the Meigs Soil and
be on hand to discuss matters COil·
cernlng
pond construction, man.

..

agement, and control around a
pond. ODNR personnel wU1 do a
seining demonstration to find out
the kind and number of fish in the
pond.
The Meigs SoU and Water Con·
servatlon DIAtrtct l..adleA Awdllary
wU1 be serving lunch following the
clinic.
For more information concern·
ing the clinic or how to get there caD
the Meigs SWCD Office at 992~7.

· yslCtan
• • sued JOr
/
ll
d
Ph
a ege rapes

\lP!IDII

raped

t

ro

~rted-

'

.

Patrlrla SturgUI said she was at·
tacked Oct. 1, 198l, at her home,

·
and Judith A. Ktng said she was
County Municipal Court.
attacked Jan. 25, 1981, at her home.
The Columbus news media have
Each woman saki her house was
reporyed that efforts to reac)l JftCk·
broken into, that she was threa- son for comment have faDed.
tened, tllat a rope was wrapped
He could not be reached Tuesday
around her neck In an attempt to evening for comment about the
choke her, that her hands were · suits. Anansweringservlcesaldhis
bound and thatshewasgaggedand patienls were being referred to
raped. ·
another doctor and would not give
Each woman seeks $1 mllllon hlshornetelephonenumher,saytng
compensatory damagesa ndSlmll· it was unliSted.
lion punitive damages.
Jackson, since the arrest, reJ ac kson, 38. an internist • IS tree signed from the St. Anthony ijospl·
on $25,000 bond In connection with tal board of trustees and was
the burglary ch·~.
He waived suspended "-m
·~.,~
uv the medical staff.
preliminary hearing in Frankltn

r----------------------ls
h day
k
Qtll

JJ icia

pus

tric Or treat

COLUMBUS, Ohio - City officials, cOncerned over possible traffic
accidents and conflicts wltl! church activities, hope to persuade
chUdren to do their Halloween trlck-&lt;&gt;r-treatlng in the afternoon .
. rather thlin the dark of night on Sunday, Oct. 31.
The Columbus Board of Education, the pollee department and the
parks and recreation department are suggesting that parents send
their children out from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
"We're not saying 'shaU' or 'wlll.' This is a suggested time,"
Dodge said.
·
Dodge said celebrating the holiday at that time wouJi:t cut down on
the chances of traffic accidents involving chUdren and avoid con·
filets with evening church activities.

Toy executive pleads guilty

Re~l

Announcements

PUBLIC NOTICE .
NOTICE OF SALE': By
virtue of an Order for Sale
lsoued on the lOth day of
August, 1982, by the United
Slates DIS!ricl Court lor
!he Southern District of
Ohio, Easlern Oivision, at
Columbus, Ohio, in Civil

No.. C2·82,59, UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA ·
vs· Nancy L. Pope, el al., 1
will after for sa le lo !he
highest bidder on · Sep·
!ember l9, ·1982 al 11:00
A.M. at the front door of !he
Meigs County Courthouse,
Pomeroy . ·Ohio, the
following described real
prof&gt;!!rly :
Sotuated in Lower

~o~~~:t~Ji"'~~'fl~.g~~i

!·.

,·
i . COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - · A
physician charged with aggravated burglary IS being sued by two
'Women whose clvU suits contend he
and
them.
Thesults,tnedTuesdayinFranklin County Common Pleas Court,
are against Dr. Edward Franklin
~Jackson Jr.
•
JacksonwasarrestedAug. 5ina
woman •s apartment • pollee said·
,The woman was not in the
apa rtme n t ·
·· .'Pollee said that when Jackson
,Was ar.rested .on the burglary
.charge, theyfoundasldmask,sur·
al gloves, a plastic bag, a rope
rid a flashlight.
Pollee have been investigating a
series of rapes since 19'75 In which
the rapist wore a ski mask and sur·
glcal gloves and shined a flashlight
ttri the victims' eyes and In which
· the victims were tled.
Pollee say " the Grandview ra·
piSI" may be responsible for
or
IJlOre rapes In the ~st four years.
Grandview Is a Columbus suburb.
The Columbus Citizen-Journal
reported today that a lawyer for the
·tWo women flllng suit against Jack. son, Anthony Delllgattl Jr .. said the
women visited the law office of
'TYack, Delligatti &amp; Kirby at separ·
§te times with allegations against
llackson. The two women did not
' know each other, he was reported
as saytng.
· He said both had reported being
attacked to pollee and had been in
eontact with pollee since Jackson
was charged with burglary.
:.,,,He said descriptions of their a.t·
.1(ckS were similar, the newspaper

Public Notice

Syracuse · Racine
RESIDENTS
New Sewer HOOkups
Being Scheduled
-J~

•

•

Elpert'lnsured

Wollmen

BOB CAMPBELL
PH. 94~·2460

9a.m. to 2 p.m.
Mon. thru Sat.

.
'
kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodelinc •
add-ons, new hDmes,
plul!lbint. electric, siding.

CusiDm

• E led ric work

• Custom Pole Bldgs. &amp;
.Garages
• Roofing Work
• Aluminum &amp; VInyl
Sidings
15 Years Experience
Greg Roush .
Ph. 992-7583
or 992· 2282
8-15·1 mo.

8·20·Ifc

"'Twenty-six persons were
• charged with driving whUe lnlbxl·
cated in Mldclleport during the
month of August, according to the
repo~t of •Pollee Chief J. J.
Cremeans.
·
.
· There were 83
arrests made hy
' .
,1!Je po~ department during AU·
ptwtth 13 penma be;lng charged
With dllorderly manner;, eight tor

, . _~. ''"'"" with comer lot

.

HOI\IIE

VACANT 3
- living room has
MD!Illming firellll!ce. 1~
.,;1 and
imulaled. Astling $35,000.
NICE FlAT LOT IN RACINE·- Good deiln 1roa One 3 bedlliom
molile home rented and seanllrailer spot Asking $(7.000.
RENTALS: $220 to $2SO price range~~~~ deposit in f'!lmeroy, letart
and Ra~ne.
.
·
CALL US TO RUY OR SFLL
Nancv Jaspers- Associate
PH. l43-l07S'

•r

•

•

'

'

ri!d ·llihl, tres-

passing at mar1J1a, expired,

tap,
'.

1be depaiiment biYei!IPII!d 'ilx '

acc1dl!n1J and t.siued'.~ parking .
~eter vJolat!OP. tiClcell.,, . '

..

3 klttono pluo mother-ell
white. Approx . 2 month•
old. 814-742·3081.
1 on groy kitten. 614-742·
2480.
White PHk· o·Poo. 9 woeko
old. Hat ahote aterted and
h11 bun warmed . 814·
992·5332.
Klttono, 8 wooko old, Coil
304-1176-1045 efter 5 p.m.

LOOKING for people who

Mole beljJil puppy, 304·
875-511111.

want to eern bltWMn

through thla "newett end

feottst growing campony In
Grill for 1963 Ford cor . tho net ion" . Call 304-87111304·675·1899.
1293.

Lo1t and Found

Lang Bottom, Oh. 45743
915·4193
'
9-16-1 mo.

VenMeter director of Nun·

lng. 814-992-6808.
AVON . Nood e•tre monoy7

Aolan. IMuot be 18 or over).
Cell now 614-698-7111
collect.

7,;

.

(9) 1, 8. 15, 22. 4tc

1-----___:_ __,

608 E. MAIN

Electronic Tech . for TV

POMEROY, OHIO

repeir. Experienced only.
Part or po11ibly futi time.

PH.992-2259

614·992·6269 .

NEW USnNG - Crew Rood- AnicO three bedroom lone with

· two bath~ famiy room. h.l basement two Vt1l firetJaces, on awoximalely
'one acre kt Gara!ll, dec~ ma.Y IJiher leotvres. $36.900.
'

MINI FARM rarch l)ouse, pond,

t

~ma!By len

·' •

acres land with. !tree bedroom

Olibuidn' Good ploc:e lor hones! ~~ $35,000.

CANDLELIGHT INN
1

~~~

A'Cidre·u·-- - - - - - - - - -

Phon, _________________

.

..

IIE'At:TOPS!
Honry f . Clel•nd, Jr., GRI . .. , ... .. . .. : . t9.2·,191 '
l,~~~;~~~sell ' . . . .. . .... . ... ' . . ... . .. : . t49·2660
. Oil' ' . urner .............. . . • . .... . 9t2-S69l

llf~ =:~:o

,·
OHIO VALLE·y

A ····· ···· · · ···· ····· · rg

'

'

•••moe!ollnt ·
· el!r.. estlmates
•20 :Yrs. experl..,.:e '
HOS~INS
•'"
Ph . f49•2l..,cr949·2322 "
- • '• '' W'~·2o-'tfc
'

TOM

1

'

' " .,.

W. L WRiliSEL.
eGuriers , -'
• Downspouts
it NeW or l!epair ·-

•nEEt~SliMA~

•

16.

,

11

.&lt;.

· •· •.•to

Ph.ftl.ftt1 "
·or Mt-HtJ; ;

14·' L- 115. _

.

-!l.ritfi C~ with ~Remltttnc;8· .

... · ·.

'

3 Family Gorage Solo Sopt.
17-18. 2002 Chethem St.,
Gelllpollo. Moped 1978
good con d. , a moll aloe.
kltchon opplloncoo. rodloo.
heir dryou, mlcroocapo,
bedding. tupporwore, Av~n.
clothing, tayo, big wheel •
mloc. itamo.

I.Goo lllolflood
OriiU Dr- Exh
Cony.., IIHf &amp; •1M lllill....
0,.. .....frl.
2:00 , .• ••2:30 o.m. ·
Sol I S,.o. 4j)O p.m.-2:30 uo.

•.... of""......

Yord Selo Thuro NN Fri. 1
mile out Goorgoo Crtek Rd.
tum off on McCully. Metor·
nlty cloth... 16-18. boo·
none. f'll oc.
Yord Sole Seturdoy' Only .
Grlffln"o Goocery. Konouga,
Oh. ,9·1 Rein cenceto.

P'HONE992-991J

Yard8alo;!FemllyYerdSalo

..

JUST greduetod &amp; unoure
ebout your futurt7 The Welt

Vlrglnlo Army Notlonel
Guord con help you docldo.
We oro looking far high
eohool Hnl~a &amp; graduetaa

,

Announcements
'

:awElPE·A end 01wlng
!"Hhln• repolr. peru. and
ouppllu. Pick up end
dellver,y, Dnlo Vocuum
~leon,.., one· holt mile up

Tile .,."' llftflfttl

J '

' lltCOUrtlt. , "!. ..

,.._,., 011. 45769 .

'I

"

~

&lt; r'lf

'

1

7• 1,.~ttc

ill•~-...~..,;..,.;;,;;;...s

. '

·'

•

..

J

/·~··
! 4.J'.I/

.

(

'

,·,\
,,.

....

'
'

.

.\·

'

Six room houoe with 2

.

Bot. Sopt. 18. 1882, 8:30
e.m. to 4:00p.m. etthe Bob
Roy roolde~ce·ll~h 8t.
Recine. sr::,oored ily the
Southern
· bell i'l"stlrl
wfth·..,...,...togo!9Wirdo
!Ootbell biiUdlng ·fund .
hO\'·•....,..vthlftg from A

on loan, no lnveatment.

collecting or dollvory. C~fl
Me CoHect. 614-~92·70415.

Clerk typlit, Umporery
,pooltion 13 to 5 montho), 20
to tn6' plentyoflt.S.,Ing hou ro ~ we,k, Including,
~. -·end oo11eo.
occe~lcnol Beturdey 'f"ork.
Porch ......opt. l7 .. .d 18. Send r"ume end eppllce.
277 Meln Bt. "'11ddloport. tion to lox P-14, c-a. Pol/It
Loot dey, eveoythlng .10 Plueant RljJIIter. Appltc.tlonl wll be oecelved until
cento. Rein C.ncolo.
'
.
-lc- leptemlj* 20, 1912. '
Pol'ch .._...,., 17'tnd 18.
277 Mat~
Mlddloport. ':::;;::::;=::;~~·=
'
Leot 'tley; •v•rythlng .1 o
Situltlon
. I Wented
cento. 111,..·cencota,

I

ar..

.

.

.

'

'

·lc-

yerd lelut 101
In Pomeroy .
'other ml,c.

·niln, '-

!t'l·

:=

Mobile Home•
for Sele
TRI-STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED- MOBILE
HOMES , CAR&amp;. TRUCKB.
GALLIPOLI8 . CHECK OUR
PRICES. CALL 4411-7872.
CLEAN USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME BALES,
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS.
RT 311. PHONE 4411· 7274,.
1980 Wlndoor 14•711,cond. Dolu•• kltch011...,..
living room • both, J ,b tdrm .
Hidden utN. I'OOf"· 3792310.
Very beeutlful12xllll, 1888
Park EotetN with expendO.
undorplnnlng. fully corpotod. gu. U.IIOO. Col!
.
448-9380.

Home•. for Sale
1981 14•611 Venture. 2
bdr .. oxc. cond. , completely
In ground concrete pool on 2 ott up. Call 1114-21511-17811
ecrelot. Alao haa a 3 bcfr. air or 814-268-82811.
·
conditioned hauu wl1h full
booemont, 2 WB tfroplecoo,
new cerp.t. Would contkler 12•86 mobile home. Alrlower valued property in cond .. fire·placo. 814·992tredo or will flnenco with 288B.
l.ow dawn peymont end 10%
lnter .. t. Locoted 123
Gorfleld Avo. Coli 448· Tote! olec. 14 • 70 holiio
1546.
treller. Fully furnloliell.
Mode by Penthouoo. Wuhor
Will tredo my equity In e 4 end dryer. dioh .woohor.
unit ept. bldg .. far 1 treller &amp; ctnbol olr, wood burner. 8
lot or o houoe • lot. Bel.,.. mi. loom Pomeroy . 111 mi.
..n be pold tiY lend contrect. from Athen a. Priced to 11111.
Coli lor detollo 448-3837.
Foomorelnlo. coll814-88211034 etter 5 p.m.
· 3 Bodrm., ~ ocro, ba...
ment. city achool•~ county USED MOBILE HOM • .
water, 10 min. to Gelllpollo. 678-2711.
216 -734-3734 Evonlnlfl.

to train in communicetiona. Land controct, 135,000
odmlnlotrotlon. oupply .. Cheohlre Vlllogo. Coli
m~chenict , &amp; meny other 8, 4-367· 7563.
floldo . If you qualify you may
be eligible foo en onllstmont
bonuo .,d college or Va· Attr•ctive 2 bedroom homt,
Tech 111iet11nce. Be one of locotad In city. Ro..onebly
Weat Virginia• beat. For priced. Shown by oppolnt·
more lnformetlon. call mont. Coli 4411-11337:
304-876-3960 or toll freo
1·800·642·3619.
Fire demoged houu, cen be
WANTEO: Muolciono 8o r..tored, on· 2 Iota, ·lerge out
voceliltl to form eo· •• building, 81dwtU-Rodney
80' 1 plue non rock group. Rd. juot off 6114 In Bidwell.
304·11715·5370.
IB.OOO. coli 448-048B efter
4.
.
LAST CHANCE. I40UU cf
Uoyd. needo flvo demon· Hauu for ule 150 Second
metora to ahow our line of ave. , Gelllpollo . *411·,ooo.
toy•gifta. Our demonatra· Coli 448· 711011 or Inquire 11
tore earn about e&amp; .OO an ,Bob'o Cerryout, Eeotern
hour. paid WHkly. Our kit Ia Ave., Golllpollo:

boby. children end odult
clothing.

~t;~:;:::::;~~~~
~., .~~~-~'~1~:~~~~C~re~e~k~R~d:·~C:ell
,. _'ROOFING

JJ.

CHRISTMAS IS COMINGSELL AVON NOW end otort
oovlng I I I Earn goOd money
oollln.g booutlful glfto. buy
youro ot dlocount. Coli
89B-7111 IColltctl.

•DMfJNG
9·2·lmo.
Sopt.17-1B. 4ml.out141 .
f"iiV ·
Clothing, bedroom oulto,
Allil.
ffo;;.tMal~f•~•nt~ 'l'~iiiiiiii~ Sopt.
CB,
cu~ln.
more:
•Rooflngofall1ypes
Powell'ollth
St . Recine.
•stdlllll
18. 17. 18. Uh now

, ll&lt; ~ l'Anr!Ourceooeht
);':n:1.
'. (' )F6r Rlint

Middleport, Ohio ·

. PRESENTS
Tua.-Wts Ni&amp;fil
All Drinb ltdu&lt;lld foolhti.-Oolft NiJIII
lUI Draft hor \Hrico

e w ·a shers .• e DIsh·
washers
·
·
oRanges o Refrlgera1·
ors
• Dryers • Freezers
PARTS and SE

RACINE - Anice one IIOOr three bedroon1 IJJuse · double kt cemral
.· ar, realy nice kilchen, lUI bosem!nl,lovely carpeting, formal ilir1ioa room,
· front and re.r pon:h, $29.900.

Between Cheshire &amp;

home. nice rivtr view, 7
roomt, 1 '!\bathe, cell

Jnd •so.ooo monthly

Aoute 11

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

CAPE Cod otyle cottege

lou. 115.000.QO.
esoo odjolnlng
304-nl-8112.

C&amp; L BookkHplng
BooikHpfng• tu oervlca
far ell tvPN of buoinooooo.
Atttntlon RN'S·Pomerov Corol Noel 446-3BII2
H.C.C . now heo -lng for
full and port timeR N for 3 to PIANO TUNING lo REPAIR
11 end 11 to 7 ohlfu. Coli Bill Word for oppolnt·
Upgraded oefory end ohlft ment, W1rd~1 Keyboerd,
dlfferontlol. Contoct Noncy 448-4372.

fOR FUTURE UH".

central air. baaement, phon•

304-875 ·11142.

SALE or rtnt. 4 room houloo,
both, utility room. •175 .
month, Hendoooon. depolllt.
304-875-43118.

appointment, 614 · 2811 ·
7088.

Wrlfe your· Q!Nn .,ad and order by mail with this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when rou get
re~ufls. MoneY not refundable.

HOUSE Mudowbrook
Addition , 3 btdroomo.
fomlly room with fl..,.lce,

!---------

Bog of clothoo. Call 4482804.

Set your own houre. Sell

NEW USTING - RACINE - YOU! own rectealional and campine
park - Can1lli1i · 8laling • fiSiift4 • Huntina! Approximall!ly 11 acres of
beautiful wooded campsil!s with pmale wile!' inlet EJectA: ond Wiler II
campsil!s W~nut. hickory, poplar, II8ICfl. and aptJie trees. Allwee bed·
. room i'ome il excellml &lt;mlilion. free ps, new 2~ car garage, garilen
SjlOCe. $68,500.

248. 144,000. 814-. . 11·
4294.

dollar•. wood lee boxeo,
Wanted to Do
304-773-5712 or 882otoneloro. ontlquu. etc ..
28311. Uppeo 2o·a.
Complete hau01haldo .
Write: M.D. Miller, Rt. 4. Lown Mowing no yord to big BNutHuUy reotored Vlcto·
Pomeroy. Oh . Or 992· or omell. Rellobla ond rltn, II bedroomo, 4 flrople·
7780.
dependeble. Foo totlmoto cea, ornete cerved
cell 4411·31119 efter 8PM woodwork, olr conditioned,
lnaultted own11 financing,
Gold . oliVer, otorllng, 2118-11187.
304·87&amp;·11989.
.
tewelry, rlngo. old colno NN
cuOTOfOcy. Ed Burkett Berber Houu painting • Ill tyJ* of
Shop. Middleport. 992- conatr'uctlon work. Cetl THREE bedroom houo, Crob ·
3476.
Creek Rd .. Muon Co. All
448-7283.
electric, 304·878-33~8.
Will cera for elderly ptrtOn In
their home, deye only . Two bedroom houte for
Phone 304-1175·11123.
ulo, downtown. Call 3Q4·
875-2331 efter II p.m. .

Roo! Estate - .Gonorel

VIRGIL B. SR .
216 E. lnd ~I.
Phone
1-(614)·992-3325
3 ACRES - In Ire COilrllrt
with wile! 111011!!, electric and nat
gas ...ilble. $4,500.
POMEROY - Wanta...,....
ble 3 bedroom holre with bath, all
.-;tities, amnalic ps heal. carpet·
ing. ba!emenl and smal yard lor
$17.500.
POIIEIOY - 2.8 ac;re$ of ~ndlor
trechildren and pets. 3 bedrooms,
bath; llasement and gas lumace.
$25,000. .
.

1-:=;::==:;:=:;:::=:.

demo recording. C1ll ror

).

)

Mole Border Collie, oge '4
moo. Coll814-258-8729.

AffDSOff .
: ..R..ilofini &amp; Siding Co.

''

'

BEDS -IRON. BRASS, old

furniture. gold, allver 1~

Real Ettato - Gon,ral

9 °!

mi. from Ch•ater, on fU .

• Unlblh Homo. Foo defatlo
..n D a. w Hom" 304-1711·
4424 or 814-288-3712.

'

or

1ng tires, rwintng a

8 Puppioo, pert ptek·o-poo
end port onouzeo. 814-379·
2779
.
.
Smell brood puppy. 2
temolo. 2 melo. Coil 1114·
258-1381 .

3 bd. room hou01 on 4 .40
eoroo with loto of ohodo.
cenlrolo-lc3 bd.rilom houoe on 4.40
ocroo wl1h tote of ohede.
·centre! olr. fuel oil fumoco
end wood bumer. olumlnum
oldlng. good ttorm .win·
dow a, double cer gen.ie, ~

LOT OWNERS . If youo
ennu1l Income 11 between
•10.000 end •17,000 you
may qualify for 1 low
interett government loan on

HOME LOANS 14% flud
rete. Leeder Mortgage,
Attention Rock Bene oudl· 1-B00-34 1-11864.
tion now being given lor 7
Professional
county bottle of the bondo.
Services
11100 cooh prlot, muot bo

. . f

a

We pey caill lor Jete modol
uHd Clrl.
Frlllchtown Coo Ca .
Bill Gene Johnoan
448·0089

' CHARLES 'sAYRE ..

hlndymm.

· co:

ciMn

Rpojing · Siding ' Concrete Pallos , Sidei
walks • New Cohslruc·
ton · Remodeling
cusll&gt;in .!!.~!e,Barns.

his expenses.

driving under su.speJ~Sion; ·fow' for Improper starting .~ bac~,
possession
marijuana and fOlll' splnniDg tires, trespurilq, hlirbor·
·for assault TheJ"e ..weJ:e three ar- . tng ,clclp; failure. to maintain con·,
rests on s~g charge&amp; and two trol, 1111 operator' a· ~. failure to
each for 'harassing, reckless opera· pay old · IIDe aDd IJ)Its, failure to
·tlon, drlvtng left of center, expJred yield rleht .of way, destruction of
operator's llceDIIIl- There was one Jail pruperty and
motorcycle
aiTeSt each for·no'taU !!ghts, ~· violation.
·
.r
..._

ANY PERSON who hoo
onythlng to give owoy onci
do" nat offer or _ , . , , to
offer ony ether thing lor ule
moy ploco en ed In thlo
column . There will be nc
c~erge to tho odvertloor.

Kitcllert.,-• .C~~binets '
lone on ex!JJ ilfil! bt 5 bedrooms, dinill(l
Ktchen is fully equipped includill(l
~ · ..•c ·.;cc c "~~~-·-.
,dismiJI&lt;II tvo ;,
· this J'bedrpom,

SANDY AND BEAVER

IAaurence
hal offered
Mrvicea •or fire lntvrtnce

Money to Loan

·n wi cases top Mi4dleport arrests
' 1

Meigs Co.-531 .00 Ton
(Plus Delivery)
4 Ton Minimum .
C.O. D.
PH. 992·2280 or
992·2618

.FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

IIDUOI

CINCINNATI - A former Kel'mer ProduciS Co. executive has ·
pleaded gullty to embezzling more than $870,&lt;XXI from the Cincinnati'
based toy manufacturer.
'
·
,Robert J. Furgeson, 45, of Fair Lawn, N.J., waso$red toretuni
here for sentencing oil Oct. 13.
• ··
· ·
The prosecutor's office conducted an analysis of F'\u'ie~Dn's ·
spending. BU!s included $4l,&lt;XXI to American Express, $12,&lt;XXl tnr a
fur coat, $35,&lt;XXI tO two fOrmer wives, $36,(XX) for a boat and rn0re .
than $.ll,(XX) paid to Cincinnati-area race tracks.
lnl~,.Furgesbnordi!reda$127,000checkmadeoutto~for

Giveaway

.

~~~~!~rg,r'AierQ~ag~~~r:.
Ohio: Being all"ot Lot No.
440 and IS feel a~olning
~f~
~~~t ~·the 1sa"ri:~
real estale cQr~veyed by
i1;~sb~ · 9~s ;~~r':J:J
Deed Book m, Page 65,
g~~~t/J~f~ds of . Mel'gs
PROPERTY ADDRESS :
~~po~~'g~io 4WJ,et, Mid·
Tetms of Sale : cash on
day
reserve
rightoftosale.
rejectI any
and the
all
bids. Roberl w. Foster,
United Slates
Marshal,
Southern
District of
Ohio
Subject to real estate
laKes,
penaflies
assessments
not yet and
due
andpayable .

ex·
tensi~e remodeling

'iq Buy

covoroge In Gelllo Couoty
for •l-ot • cent~. Ferm,
home .end pereonol property
COVtriQII .'If.• .,.ll.ble to
Buying Gold, SUver. Plotl· moot lndhiii!Uol lltitdo .
num, old colna, IOittP rlnge Cpntect Fo!OeriLewh.
• ollverware. Dolly quoteo ogont. Phano 3'18-2204.
ovelloble. Alto colno &amp; coin
ouppllto for oofo . Spring
Schoota·tnatruction
Velley Tredlng Ca., Spring
Vtlley Plezo, 448-8025 or I - - -- - - - -- 448·B02e.

Eatatt - Generel

'

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Pittsburgh No.8 A
'Mine. Run (Strip)
Delivered Prl&lt;e:
POMEROY-$31.00Ton
MIDDLEPORT
AND • RACINE-$3l.Oci
Ton

Homiis-

•backhoe
•excavating
•septl&lt; systems
•dump truck service
••,f!llng and reclaiming
•Ratlne and Syratuse
sewefh!'Okllp
Work Insured and
Guaranteed
PH . JIM CLIFFORD
992-72019·3· I mo.

·-C:-IU

II UfiiDo"" I •••W•'ftl

'""""r
"'"" · .....
~···-.............

""cl9..-_..,
",.,
..........
.,.....,,, "'""
1\loo_,,"""'''''"'
.." -. _._.,,

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

lnturence

E~TO BUY Old
furniture end Antlquoo of ell
kinde,' coli Kennt)h Swo\n.
448 -31119 or 2118-19871n
~ ovenlngo. .
· ·

HAIR REMOVAL
PERMANENT
Pro~ulonel EtHt!olyolt
Cente;. A.M.A. epproved,
Doctor .Nfeoolll. •by eppojolt·
metit only. 304-1'711-1234.

ALL AGE 5 ·

~10~-1~m~o~-~
;~====~~~~~~~~~~~======~~~::~~~~==::~~==~~~~~9~·
OLD &amp; .
.
ML
YOUNG'S
81) Washington Sl., Ravenswood, w. Va. l6164
P~onel304) m-5855
MON'I'HOFSEPTEMBER

Wanted

.

FALL GOLF TOUR
8119lnlng or Inter.

Guysvllle,Ohlo
Authorlred John Deere.
New Holland, luth Hot
Form Equipment
Dleltr .
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;SerVICe ;
I•3• tf C .

li Sewer
• Gas
eWaterlines

'

Sins from 4 to' end all . Powell Reo., lle•clne,
81.4-1149-2481.
ln"'llted Dog Houses

U.S. Rt. 50 EIJf t

NII 'I HMI I&lt;I Cf ,,
Jl'l rs . ~ xpenenr c

'

wOod buildings 24x36.

BOGGS
l'aiES •t. SERVICE
.,.,

•

.

!i&gt;' ppln!l'!_l!n~t:. _.I~!Y··i!tl

i==~~~~~====~====~~~~====~:::::::::::::::::t~====~;,;~~~~
THE
J A.R

Of Wr1ll' D11I WSt!lllnt l (IU ~ II &lt; t'tl 0 (' pl .

t

. . ~lilJ Buildi"p .

3· 11 -lfc

ll-Z$-1 mo.

PHONE 992-2156

. ..,

State revives financial deal

'

"a"iitthit, custom .
Julll O•r•..-:· • ·
can· . far .,,... '.siding
ostlm1tes, 949·2101 or•
f4f-2No.
' I
t.lo Sunder cans

laclies Jaizercise

WAN! ADS

The Uaily Sentinel

.. ' •.

. Call Barba't a

~Il •'

Springfield, Ohio. Company olftclale llllld Tuesday
they liave made no dec181on aboul cloelnglhe plant.
~AP Laserpboto).

.

· ~SIDiNG .co, .

:_~~?:Ai;is l ·· ··;

.

eppfolifmot.o ly•.2\t ••reo,
o!o.•• tci Rutland Grode
8ehool '011 Collegt Ave. Wll
oilr. fu'rnlohed· oo'· unfl.lr·
nlolied. 114·7-4 1· 2e81 or
.1 14-742:21111 ...

ILDINGS ·
·· . .BI$8.EU · :. iI ·.·Sl;BU.
es otorl fro.;, ·H~l4"

. Of~ DANCE
'· .

came

NO DECISION ON CLOSING - JeJTY Henaon
•81ep11 8()1'01111 truck bodies parked outside lhe lntema·uonat Harvester truck manufacturiog plant near

.

. 2 otoiY lllledioom horne on

John Tuford . .

Vinyl'&amp;

or

Answers 36

s,.te

· · Pu,Jic
a. Auction. ·

. ·'

'

decision to institute tuD-day kinder·
maintained that due to a proJected
After two hours In negotiations
revenue !illOrtfaU late neXt year, It garteil as a cost-savtng measure.
late Monday afternoon, teachers
and administrators In the Gallla · and the board cannot commit them- she ilald why the board isn't cutting
tn ~ cen'tral otllce or in other
. ·
selves to \'lslon care! '
County Local School District faDed
areas
IS "beyond -us." ·
"We felt we had to have someto teach a settlement on third-year
The
cuts to. children' s services
thing,"., Mrs. Sauer said this
contract reopening terrllS .
"are
not
necessary," she said. .
morning.
.
Superintendent Gary Toothaker
1
To
COIJIIter
this, Mrs. Sauer said
She said the teachers are hopeful
saJd he and the board of education
the
GCLEA
wU1
ask to see the diJ.
that In llght of ~tie Ga!Ha-Jackson·
are "very disappointed" with the
trlct's
monthly
flnanclalstaterrient
Vinton Jolilt VocatloJUij,.School Disresults, while the Gallla County Loand a i&amp;1ary schedUle di central of• .
trict settling with Its teachers for a
cal Education Association plans to
personnel. ' The ·assocla!IOn
examine the district's ftnilnclal pobase of $12,~ and !he_,~ Ifcal
may
break
into teams to examine ·
sition .further and make future
DIStrict reachtng ~ agx:eerilen!
these
statements
and draw
with its education as~t!On for a
recommendations.
·
conclusions.
·
·
.
Spokesmen for both sides do not $12,:Joo'base, the board may.decide
Asked If the GCLEA• wU1 then
to settle.590n with the GCLEA.
know . when they wUI return to the
make
any recomrriendations to the
table.
The a!isoclatlon J1aS disputed the
bOard,
she replied, "undoubtedly."
Faye Sauer, GCLEA president,
administratiOn's clillins 1!!/verty,
said negotiators for the teachers
and Mrs. Sauer sill!l ~ e'!P.ected $1
and their Ohio Education Assocla·
mlllloil shorifau tor Deceln~,l983
caD8
tlon representative, Don Lloyd,
wU1 actually amount to ~,(XX).
countef]lroposed their counter·
Also, she charged the board has
The Middleport Fire Department
proposal am! a~ to
down
$1\!J mUllon figured into liS budget answered a total of 36 calls during
from $12,100 to a $12,000 base salary
as a carryover at the end of this the month of August including 38
for teachers. They are asking for
year.
emergency' caDs and eight fire and
board-paid vtston care and 2lll ac"When we met on 'J uly 25, we rescue missions, Fire Chief Darst
cumulated days of sick leave. The
presented them with this knowl· reports. AU vehicles were driven a·
counterproposal was turned down
edge," Mrs. Sauer said. "They had total of 1,001..6 miles during the
by the board.
· to admit they had the money to pay
month.
· Toothaker saki the administra- us."
tion's negotiators offered the
Mrs. Sauer said the teachers are
teachers a $12,000 ,base retroactive
concerned about the board's posl·
to July 1, but It was also . turned
t1on 1ri cutting services, particudown. The admlnls\fation has
larly to chUdren. Citing the board's

'

,

'

!wtM!•"- 15,1982

... ·,

'

I,IIOBILE HOMES MOVib
Llcenoed • lnourod. Ctlf
304-678-2711.
19711 ·Cameron molllle
homo 1 4x70. 3 bedtqoill
ono end one-hell 111;-tli;
control olr. utility bltliPil•
eluded. 304-773-5143.

Farma for Sale
For 1111 Ferm, 207 urea on
l'ooller• Run Rd. Lend contrect ovolloblo. 111.000.
down. 12 percent interett.
Mineral rlghtl inc. No

houoe. Coil 3B8-9348.
'

Lot1

lit Acreage

�.Television
Viewing

lleoutlfullloldwln oplnot
plono, perfect condition ,
*1,200. Coli 773·11'8 ~r
Box 1 34, M..on. WV.

EVEN!N(I
8:00 · •&lt;D N - t l r
(!) BMX Bloyole Motoorou from lubbock. TX

'tower·'! Genie olootrlc
organ . Coll448 · 3135
Cell Robert Herper tor evenlnga. •
'
Glnoong ond Yollowroot
,prlcft. 304·11711· 12&amp;3.
8 yr. old ' Spinet plano
' by
Kimball, *8110. Ctll _.48·
8844.
'
Apploo . Rome Buutleo.
Grlmoo Golden, Golden Trumpot lot nle · Exc .
Dellclouo, Mclntooh , Rod oond..t110.00. Coli 114Dollolouo . Jonllhon, 8'82·3713.
oorghum moleo-. pott·
tuo. onlono, red opplo
hou11 At. 35, Hendoroon.

Cl) Clrol Burnett
Cl) • Cl) 1D • (DJ Newt

&lt;ll N.w..tSporu/W..ther
Cl) Ell@lo Compeny
(fil 3-2· '· ~ot
8:30 • &lt;D'&lt;ll NBC N-•
(I) ·A- for the Pennant
. Barry Tornpklnl end Tim
McCervor holt thlt took et
the paot wetk'l booebell
·.
ectlon'
Cil eeo,cioo jiyramld
Cl) Bob
Show
Cl). (lJ ABC Newa
• Cl) 131 CBS N-•
Cl) ·ar. Who
(fil Ullll.· Yoge end You
7:00 0 &lt;D P.M. Meuozlne
(I) Who Are Till Deboltt7
Henry Winkler hosto th io
look It en e&gt;itraordinarv family:
Cll Bulro Eye
C1J ESPN Sporttforum
Cl) Gomer Pyle
Cll Enttrttlnment Tonight
(l) Hoppy Deyt
II Cll Tlo Tac Dough
Cll (fil MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
131 Newo
• (121 People' I Court
7:30 • Cil You Atked For It
Cll Another Lite
C1J ESPN Sportt Conttr
()) Melor Loogue BeMbtll:
Houtton ot Atlonto
CIJD Cll Femlly Feild
(I) laverne ond Shirley
(I) Butlneoo Report
!D Richerd Slmmono
(fil Vlotory Gorden
Ill ti2I Ent-lnment
Tonight
8:00 8 CiJ (I) RNI People TO:

,._,.,rt

AFT11R
~IGIITIIJG

50 MAtoN OF
THE5E, YOU GI1T

THe HAJoJS OF

WHAT'5 WHAT:

4 room houae unfurnlahed I room, unfurnlehed down·

Comp Conley . , 40 . per otolro opt. In city. Juot Hke o
month. Phone 304·8711· houae ; muat be •••n to
1371 or 178,3812.
~pprielot~. Ref. lo dopoolt
required . Adulto only. No
peu. Ctll448· 13119. ·
RlUA room hOUII, ldotl for
oldorly coullle. good loCI· 2nd fi.X.r fumlohed irffl·
clency tp1. ,Apt. 4, 729 2nd
tlon. 304·1111·1302.
Ave. Adulto only. 448·
Hou• for rent, 3 bedrooma. 0967.
103 8th Street , Point
Pluoent;t,300 monthly .
depoolt req ulred, new Unfurnlohtd 1 bdr. oport·
furnoct with g11 IIIVIng mont with otove &amp; refrlg., no
feeturea . O.n be eeen, S poto. Bob McCormick Rd .
p.m. to I p.m. dolly except Coll448·3817.
Suncloy. Phone 1114·4418398 botw11r1 11 o.m. end Dol~ .. gorogo oportment, ~
bdr.. contrel olr, Flrot Ave ..
9 p.m.
no pete, ref. required. Cell
814·218·8508.
Mobile Home•
for Rent
3 room furnlohed opt. 1280.
month lncludoo utllltlto:
Inquire 11 Molgo Inn In
Twil-2 bdr. trolloro com· Pomeroy.
plttlly fll r nlthod. Coli
4411·81119.
2 nice Apt. In Middleport. 1
lurnlohtd with utllltlto. 1
2 bdr. mobile homo, fur' unfurniahtd. you PlY utili·
nlohod, odulto only . c;oll tieo. No potol 814-88;1·
441-4110.
3190 .

Bll

2 bedroom trfllor. Atol nlco, THREE room fur~to~td
ociultl onty: Brown·,, Trailer cottoge, utllitloolurnlohod.
Ptrk, Mlnorovlllo. 814-9112· odultt. no petl. 304·8711·
3324.
2812 or'875-1180.
•.•.

,41

)

Lerge 3 bedroom trailer . . Gerege ept. New Heven,' 3
Completely lurnlohod . bodroomo. unfurnlohod
1200. pluo Utilltlto . Muot 1200. month, pluo utilitlet.
poy dtpoolt . No peta . 304. 882 •3358 .
.1114-882·11111 1.
APARTMENTS lor ront.
Furn!thed. ~ · bd. room mobilo unfumlohtij, coli 304·67il·
homo. Adulto only . . 814- ,2218
botwton 8 .lo 8 and
949.225.
871-8713 between 8 &amp; 10.
1 4x70, thr10 l!edroom, oil
tloctrlc, u~f. t200. monthly
_pluo electric . Glenwood,
W.Vo . 304·578 - 2441 or
304·1178-8073.

Mt. Vernon Avenue· two
bedroOm epertltlent, newly
polhtod. excellent condition,
.r eference required. 304·
875-181!2.

Unfu rnlohld Z bedroom
· •1110 . per mnth . Comp
Can~'!:· 304·875·-137 1 or
175·3812.

Three large rooma , eir
condition, private entrence,
everything furnlohed.
ground ftoor, 12ZB month,
'3 04·875-8730 . '

Ap1rtment
for Rent
Fumlohtd 4 roomo &amp; both,
cloon, no peto. edulto only,
dep. riq. Coil 448-1 II 19,
HUD ovolloble 2 bdr. deluxe.
kitchen furnl•hed, good
tocotlon~ utllltl11 portltlly
poldl 8 rm houoe for rent.
R11ldorltlll •nd commerol•l
propertlot for 11ie or 11111.
A·Ont Rl'tl Eetotn, Corol
Rtoltor. Ctll 304·
8711·11104 or 875·5388,

y-.

2 bdr. downtown. oil cerptt.
complete kitchen, ·4111 tloct·
ric htot·elr cond.. Wtoher·
dryer. Coli 448-4383 doyo,
44$·01 38 eve.

Two oponmonto tor rtnt In
Clifton.. . 304-87&amp;-1044.
.

.

Furnished· Roome
Circle' t Motel, telephone
448 · 2501 . For Rent, ·
Weekly, 1 peroon 180.00; 2
poroono •10.00. Coble T.V.,
olr f10nd.
Fu.rnlohtd room . ., 111.
utllltlt~ pd, 01nglt molt,
thort both. 819. 2nd. Ave ..
Golllpollo. Coli 448· 4418
oftor 7 PM.

CARRYIN6 A 80l1Y

launch his own rockatehlp,

. DCJ\IjH THAT AlLEY!

a champion Wheelchair ra~

cer and the annual Mr. Gay
U.S.A. contaat in San Francico, CA. (RI (80 min.)
CIJ MOVIE: 'Which Way lo
L!_p7'
C2J MOVIE: 'Bioodbrothtro'
Cll Netlonol Geographic
~lei

..

•

Auto Rtcing '82:
NASCAA Wrangler 400
from Richmond, VA ·
CIJII)(I21 Phoenl• Bennu is
stalked by en archaeolog ist who leedo him to
Mira' s time capsule. (A) (60

(!)

. I

:
Gourd ,. Froe . ,
eotlmolei·oprlng IA!t,c l•tl; .. ·. '
. Gene Smith. 992·8~~ Sc, ~tc~

'

'

Corpen\fY.replolr &amp; remodel· .. lng, well ponellng, ceiling · · •
tilt lo tiding . 814-992· · - · 1
2758.
..
"'
l''?
., ,

model, oxtro nice, ., 20.
Wtotlnghouu dryer, f90 .
OE tnd Whlri!IOOioloo. Ctll Build your own goroge
814-2118· 1207. '
24•24' olllu'J'bor fumlthed.
11110. Cell 1f1vtlmo, 1-814A • M Fumlturt lt. Rt. 7. ,8 88·7311 .
Crown City, Dh, 814·211·
1170 . Stlt o.n •II toll,
chljrt, hldt I bed, iovt INti Met,ol oi)Mto for oil building
end upho!lter.y ' lobrlc In purpoott. Flot 1 porcellon
atoclt. low low prlctl on ono,mtl coated. 4•8 thru 4 •
cuttom made fumlturt and 12, Prlcet. n .oo to te.8o.
.
reupholetery. Pltotlng you 814-887-3081.
pletoto uo. Mon. Wed. &amp;
Thuo. 7 :30 to 4, Tut. • Fri.
Pet• fer Sale
.7 :30 to 8 , Bot. 1 to I .
1 Ken'mora Wllher . 1
Whirlpool dryer, 1 Whirlpool
Wither. •All In mint thope ""
guoront11d. Coil448-8181.

i

.

Maytag waaher deluxe

Motorcycle 4 -Stlo. 1979
KTM 420cc. •Extremely
meny .now ptrtl wlth
reoolpto. teOO. 814-882·
3082.
'

d-.

RON.:.S f.eltvlllon Service.
Spec'lell•lng 1ft ~lth ond
Motorolo, · qoliber ; ond
houtoi _cello. Clll ,ll?t·23tl
or 4'48·2454. .
.·'' '
.

,

"'

" '

, ,
'·F~·
,., .-~'1
{ •

t

I

.1

I'

. ,.

1

rlenced .m•..•Dn.'. rqaflng. '

DRAGONWVND CATTERY ·
· KENNEL. AKC Chow
pupplto, CFA Hlf!1oloyo~.
Porolln end Slom- kit·
tono. Coli 448·3844 titer 4
p.m.

1978 PIE . 176 Suzuki,
.t
ucollent condition, 30471 Mercury Comet perfect · 875-7245.
'
Burgondy motchlng couch &amp;
tim.
•5oo.
----,,
.
-- -condtlon,
good
ch1ir euede materiel good
Coli 814-388-1328.
cond. 1100, gGUI love IMt
4882 Hondo tso Night
velvfsmaterla' revenlble
o..Vo1y troctor 1ttctrlc oton
blue. 1&amp;00 mllto.
very od cond: f100 . Coli HILLCREST KENNEL. with rottry mo-r. cuitlvo- 1878 Cutlooo Supreme Htwk,
helmet,
engine guo'rd,
814- 88-8783.
8oordlng oil brl!ldo . AltC tor, plow end oulky . Coli burgondy with whit~. vinyl . 1~400. ttxcolllnt condition.
Reg. Doberm,ne pupe end 441·4148 .
top, 1-C, · PI, · A~·FM 304-8711·5585.
Glrlo twin bod with mottrNo D'pbormon Stud'8orvlce .
Cllllttt, In dlth rtdlo. '280
ond bo• oprlngo, '375. Coli Ctll 448· 7785.
2 row Oliver c • rnllckor . llnull V·B. new tlrti on
448·41i,81i.
•
o
n - brok*' • ohocko;
Auto Parte
Coli 814-..79-243 • otter
gu mlleoge. 12;000
11o Acceeeorlea
Dining ;oom 111. wood ovel · POOD,!.E GROO~ING . 'Coli IPM .
I
Coli 9112-7201 morn·
ttble, 8 chtlro end buffet. Judy Teylor ot 8·1 4-387·
lnge or 448-9510 ofter1300. 814· 992-8537.
Woodo corn picker, 13001 ~oon, oak lor Poul. · ;
?220 .
·1974 Toyott Coroita 1800
Co11'814·2118-1038; tftor
oc Motor 11 SO. Tronomlt·
4PM . No SoturdiY CllftJ. ,
1174
lntornttlontl
trevtloll
Misc . Merchendlce
· olon •111. Reor tnd tliO.
All BrHd Grooming, 7 doyo
ototlonwogon; good cond ..
.
t week. Pick up end dtUvory. lniern1tlon1l corn ph;:ker 1810. Coli 814-2411-5017 . 814-9811·3833.
w ith old wooan . G'ood
Colll!14-3,7-7877.
Plootlc Septic Tonkt. Stott
working i:ond. 1800-both: '111 Pontiac Grind loMano; 2
•nd county epprovod. 1.000
Coli ,Citrenct! Wlckl!oe. d;., tutli, . P8,. PB, AM-FM .USED tlroo, Honoiu.w o
goi .Ltonk, price •340. Olhtr ACK Reg . . Dobtrmon Roclnt, Oh . 814 -848- otero, AC,. cnrllt, tilt whtol, Tlru, Lucu Lone, Pt.
Pleooont, phbne 304-878·
olzoo In otock, houl In your Plncher '1'up end tdult 2918.
cloth Interior. 1pprox . 7380.
pickup truck, Co11814-2BI· fomolo. · Coli 814 -387 53,000 mllot,..H ;800. CtU
15830. Jockton, Dh . RON 05118.
.
304·175-1 llll'f.
EVA~S ENTEI!PRISES
For oil~- Walker 4 poet
"
tloctrlc holot, 1 hp • .!"otor. 1974 Dl,ioun 280Z. 1988 Dodge Ptrto. ·304AKC Poodltt: Cell 814- 7.800' lb. qaptclty . .814· 12, 100. l,,S:oll 8 14-UI- .8 95-3488.
Wood burning odd cri 248-9184tftor4PM.
-~82- 1048.
. '
1788.
• '
. . . ; _ - - - - , - - --lefurnonce . Still In hc,t ory
Auto Repair
crate. 1480. Coil 1-IU·
For otle· Wol ker 4 poot 18 eo Dodae Doh1~ door
268-1218. .
Anierlc, _n !'It Bull pupplto. tloctrlc holot. 1 hp. motor. lldon. G!IOoLorlgln.. J)Ond.,
Coli· 81'4 ·388·8147.
7,500 lb. copoclty. 814- excellent Interior; •800 .
' '
982·5048.
\·.'
Negotiable. !11 4-848·2183
For Sole Rowlelgh Product•.
or 814-981-3114.2. • ..~· '
1924 Eootorn Avo. , Golllpo· ,Dtlm~tibn pup, prue bred,
Uveatoc;k
llo. Coli 448-851-8.
Cll) !! tlllllttrld, 125 tl.
•
Cili 814-.8 82-7872.

.

6 - ben Huotler vertlcol GroOming ttrVIcft. Wlli clip
ontonno ond 3 whNI bicy- Schnou-• end etc. 81 4·
cle . Coli 448-3935 882·7342. ' . .

c,mplng
Equipment

ev~ninga .

AKC Aog. 'CoRle pupt. Hevo
Control hunger end loot been wormed· by. Vet. ·814·
weight with New Shope 992-3823.
Dlot Pion ind Hydr~~ ~oter
J, ' ;
Plitt. Fruth Phtrii11CV.

I.ASOI.INE AI.I.F.Y

.. '

"

'FI~wor'

. , ., r

9!30 BCiJ&lt;lllove, Sidney Leu·
ria and Sidney discover the

identity of Patti's adult admirer. (R)
10:00 B Cil &lt;ll Quincy Quincy

~~

ADVA,;CED . : . mluo
Gutter-Doort . ' Offering

provide• evidence againat

a mob leader for 'frighten·
ing a victim to death.' (RI
(60 min.)
Cil Teddy Pendergraoo In
Concert Teddy performs
his biggest hits.
Cil MOVIE: 'Mod Max'
Cll Ill (121 Dyneaty Blake
threatens to bulldoze AI·
axis' itudio and Steven re)actl Blake's offer for bail.
(AI (80 min.)
(I) On Stoge with . J .
Somogl Tonight's program

t'lil

contlnu• tutteriftt, ... m.

...,, lidlnt. rooftQg, goroge :

' !'!

do ora, frt~e eetlmat.ee, ~

814·888' 82011.

.

,_..,......-----,---'-.
,.
'

-~

~

"

:.-~·'li

PAl NTING 1-lor- &amp; extt- • ·"
rlor, frte ootlmetH, 304- :.~· '
878-1128.
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WINNIE
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profiles the conductor at

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work and at home .
(fil N-ewotch
10:30 Cil Sing out America
Cll 'I'BB Evening News
(I) lloord end Ctre This

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CARTER'S PLUMBING
.J
AND HEAJINQ
.'
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Cor. Founh end Pine
&gt; 'I
Phone 448-3888 or "448- 1 ;,
4477 '
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tempts to track down the
manager of a ladies' wres·
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end Domo0tlc .. Ttot hol,o.' .:..-•
Pumpt &amp;tleo ond Ser.vloo.
304-8111-3802. .. .•• •

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telie gets even with Blair
by arranging a date for her.

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8:30 Cl) Panther on Konnlton
Mt.

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some selections in this spe-

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' Live From Lincoln Center.'
Zubin Mehta conducts tho
New York Philharmonic

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Refr~eretlon,

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lEWlNG ~eohlqe repolro,
•rv.lct. AutllorlncUinger
Sol-. ~ ' ler.,_I,., Biierptn
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Pomeroy. 811.?·2284. , ,

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STRAWBERRIES
PLUMS AN'
CHERRieS ALL
OVER IT
IT'S

WAIT TILL 'IOU SEE M"/ · · .
PEACHY NEw'DRESS, ELVINEY

I

Spec• (Qr Rent

night' a program featuree 1
man who waa planning to

Oti, GeE!

Geno' olteomCo~91~·

2 bdr. mobile homo In city, Furnlahed epartmenta for
ret. &amp; dtf. required . Coli rent. 814-882-5434, 81481 4-2114· 1122.
992·11914 or 304·882·
2118.
2 troller, not goo hut, doon,
riverview. Coli 4411·1102 .
2 upotolroApto. No children,
1 cor. Arnold Grote- 814·
2 bdr. trelltr out Rt. 180, 2 742-2248 .
'AI miiH fr.om hoopltol. Coli
448·0117!.
Aptrtmtnto . 304 -875 ·
U48.
Furnlohod. ldool for couple.
No lntldt peto. ·Prhlott lot.
ytrd . 4 mlltt out. AP.ARTMENTS. mobile
44 ·3818.
homot, houHo. Pt. Plotoont
ond Gelllpollo. 81 4-448·
8221 or 814·245-8484.
2 bJ r. mobllt home now
c.lrpet, olean, on Bob
McCormlckm Rd. Adulto Three room furnhhed
only, no·p·ete, eec. dep ""• tponment. edulto, no peto,
ref. rtqulrtd, wotor pol d. Point Pleo11nt. Coli 304f1 80 per mo. Coli 448- 8711·24&amp;3.
4491 .

COUNTRY MOBILE .Homt
'l 'or.k, Route 33, Nor1h ·of
. P~meroy . · L•rge loto . Cell
'
.
Furniahed Apt .. 1 BR. 243 182· 74~8 .
Jeckoon Plko, t235, ,UtMI·
pold. 448·44111 titer 7
p.m.

DEE· LICIOUS !!

841 2nd. Ave .•• Golllpollo.
Ref. p...,.,red. ~I :f48·
22111.

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(I) PBS toM Night
• (DJ The love loot Julie
ond Gopher fall in love,
thr.. tX· U..,icoman Itt up
their oorgoent for romance
end o women Iindt tho man
of herdrumo. (AI (1 hr., 10
min.)
1 2:30 • Cil &lt;lllotl Night with
. Devlil ~nnen .
' &lt;D MOVIE: 'NIItlng'
(]) Jack Benny Show
(J) Till LC1ft liNt Julie and
Gopher fell In love, thrM
.....rvtcemen Mt up their
llfljltnt for romence end
1 women Iindt the men of
her dreemo. (RI (1 hr., 10

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tally handicapped young
people and tho problems
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11 :00 U CI&gt; N-tcenter
Cil MOVIE: 'Agency'
Cll Neahvlllt RFD
Cll ESPN ~ Canter
CIJB Cll (!D Ill (121 Newt
&lt;ll Newi/Sportt/Weether
(I) Deve Allen at Large
11:30 • Cil &lt;ll Tonight Show
Cil MOVIE: 'Brian's Song'
(ill Another Ufe
Cl) All In the Femily
Cll Benny Hill Show
• C1J Archle't Place Archlo takes on a new pannor In hit bar business. (RI
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lorm the ourprl11 -wer, 11 sug·

gosted by lhe -

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(Answers tomorrow)

1

Jumbles: PAGAN FAIRY OPAQUE BEHIND
Answer: What the judge said after sentencing a
record number of traffic violators -

IT'S BEEN A "FINE" DAY
Jumble Book No. 1t, contlllnlng 110 puutu,l11'1'11 1ble lor$1 .16 poetplild
front Jumble , Clo 1hla niWIPII)tr, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07&amp;41. 1nctudl your
n1nw, lddr'Ha, Dp code •nd make cMcU
ebtt to N....,.perll aale

BRIDGE
Teacher lends a hand
By Onr.Jd Jacally
ad Alii Solllll
Here II a teachlDc band
used by muter teacher Sal·
~~~DJOn 1D advenced

NORTH

+AS

.QJtU
+H2

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Eut'a jwnp to four apadel
11 one of thole lll·JJ1111101e
prHmptlve jumpi. Eut
Jtllt doan't know wllo CID
mate wbat. It glvea South a
real problem. For Ill be
kllon there II a eiDcll alam,
but South aettlea for merely
blddiDa five ad become~
decilrer at that contract.
West ope111 the kiD&amp; of

apadelad riFt here It Tl up
to decilrer to make an unu·
aual play. He must duck that
•Jlllde and cn-nt a club!

EAST
+tUTIU

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SOVTB

•utena
• o\Jiot

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Vulaerable: Both
Nll'llt

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P. .

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Dealer: South

,.

Weal leads a second

spade, not that bll play at
thll poiDt metten. South II
sure to mate bll five-heart

contract.
A second club II clllcerded
on the ace of IJ)Idel. Tile ace
of clul11 II cubed and a club
ruffed. Then It's back to the
queen of bearta for a IIICODd
club ruff. Now South 1011
back to the jack of hearll to
lead a dlamoacl and f ' hla DIDe, 10 or jack. Wilt
wlnl and II ead·JIIayed. He
mUJt either lead back a
spade to give South a dla·

' '

.

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Opentng lead: tK

riload d1lcerd 1D dummy or a
dlamoDd to live South ID

utra diamoDcT trick.

Note that lf Wilt bad aeeo
all the cardl he could have
opened a club to apoU
SOuth's play.

.,

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i by

THOMAS JOSEI'H

ACROSS
1 Pickling
· item
5 Neckwear

10 Grecian

3 Church
season
4 Stripling
5 Set straight
I Salt (Fr.)

...

theaters
7 Sunburn
11 Split
lotion
12 "Pygmalion " 8 Go off the diet

actress
9 Fear
14 Cole of song 11 - reaction
15 Face (sl.)
13 W.W.I baWe
II Hockey

great 17 Abject

17 French

19 Table of
cheese
20 " Victory"
18 Fanner
heroine
in India
19 French city 21 Ice cream
20 Prevaricator

Yestenlay's

auwen.

'

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Z% Medl\. fruit
30 Artbur
'
Z3 JaU (sl.)
or Steven · "I
24 Richard, Pat 31 Towarda .
or Debbie
shelter
'

2t WIUt tresses
snipped

zt Fountain

33Gennen
article

~~~~ ~~r-~r.M~~~fit~

21 Baseball

throw
22 Coin
Z3 Volcanic apex b-+-+-1124 Woe
25 Scrap
28 Rail bird
27 Resident
(suffix)

28 Owl sound
29 Shinto temple

32 Steak
35 Wbole
31 Unemployed

37 Up above
38 Outburst
DOWN
1 " - Went
McGinty"
2 Concept

1

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :

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AXYDLIIAAXa
Ia

LON~P. BLLOW

One letter tlmplr ltandl for another. In this oomple A II
used for the titne' L'a, X for the two o·s. etc. Single letters.
apqttrophet, the ·lftllh 1nd ,formotlon of the words are all
, llinta. Eech day tilt eode !etten ore dllferent.

·

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caYnOQUOTBS
'

BK

8 K N.

~MBTN

AB Y M.

l ON,

ABG
UON

FIT Y

XBK

ZIKMG . - IPQ

ZWL

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L B G W K D•

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Ysteruy'l Cryptoql~Gte: HE WHO FORESEF.S CALAMITIES
SQFFEIISTHEMTWICEOVER.-PORTEUS

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.· 'faga ' 14-The
. Daily
.. Sentinel

PcPol~nm'MIMII't'CIO"'''f-NMIIcilldcllclleport; Ohio

~.

Bomb blast claims Gema
Israeli l~ops, enter : B.e~~ .~- :·. ~· .

-' Industrial output
~Qps ,i n A0;guist .
By A.oclated PreM
Ove~ ' U.s: Industrial output
moppeii·o.5 percent In August from
July, te11ect1ng a decline In auto·
~ business equipment productlon, the governmenthreported
,toeay,
The decline was the Uth monthly
slump In 13-months.
The report, by the Federal Re,SI!rve Board, said August auto prod\ICtiOO was cut back more than 16
percent to an annual rate of 5.5 mll·
lion units.
Production of equipment which
WOUld be used In the fabrication of
other goods has fallen 18 percent
$Ce Its peak In July 1981, the hoard
S!lidToday' s report followed signs
Tuesday that a consumer-led reco.vegy from recesulon Is still elusive.
U.S. automakers ported early September sales ot new cars fell to the
,lowest dally rate In~ years and the
:Contereilce Board, a business•llnanced study group, said consu!mer ron!ldence. In the economy
,clecUned In August after rising In
previous months.
' Meanwhile, Chrysler Corp. and
Jihe United Auto Workers faUed to
•

month ·fell 29.3 percent from the
same 1981 periOd, with tile ,dally
511les rate of 13,61 vehicles dropping to Its lowest level since the
·12,'187 of September 196'1,
So far this year, domestic automakers have sold 3.9 miUlon cars,
down almost 15 percent !rom the4.6
mllUon sold In the same period last
year.
The Conference Board, a private
business study group, Sllltl Its Con·
sumer Contldence Index fell to 53.7
In August froJll61.61n July, reverslng four straight months of rising
confidence In the nation's ec.&gt;nomy.
The Index, which averaged 100 In
the baSI! years of 1969 and 1970, Is a
barometer of trends In consumer
S!!ntlment about current and tuture
eco)lomic conditions and Is based
on a survey of 5,mJ households
around the nation.
The August survey also said 58.3
percent of the families complained
about dlf!lculty of finding jobs, up
from 56.6 percent ln. July and the
highest figure recorded In the 15year history of the monthly studies.
The Labor DeparOnent said that
19 states and the District of Columhla had double-digit unemployment rates In July, more than stx
times the number of July 1981,
when the latest recession began.
• Another poll of consumer a ttl·
tudes said AmeriCans believe It Is
getting tougher to buy a home. The
survey of heads of bouS!!holds was
. conducted for the Federal National
Mortgage Association· arid said 91
percent of those questioned said
they agteed wtth the statement:
"These days It takes a two-Income
household to afford a mortgage."
Meanwhile, the Treasury announced plans to sell nearly $23 bll·
lion In bUls, notes and bonds next
week to redeem old debts and raise
more than $11 bUUon In new cash
for the government .

1

:tour

!reach~tonanewcontract

illy a midnight Tuesday deadline. A

l

atrlke was averted when the two
aides agreed to a :If-hour extension
!ot the current contract.
I UbUI consumer spending picks
;up,IIPW'flng orders to manufactur·
ters for new goods, Industrial productlon wW remain sluggish and
manufacturers wiU be unable to recall Idled workers.
:: 1be 10 percent cut 1n personal In·
.come tax rates 1n July was aimed
,at stimulating the economy. But so
,
!the
...,..,,nn
a
~tar,
ne r a 5""'-'"' spree nor
strong recovery has materialized.
U.S. automakers said Tuesday
' that sales 1n the first 10 days of this
;

l
l

·.Church's

(Continued from page 11

poaltlon.,
Easelstyn scoffed at the
cootentlon.
."A functional moron can figure
oUt that U tbe miners aren't workIng, the union's dues are going togo
down," be sald. ''I~ve \leell wilmlng
Sam Church since March that we
were beading for trouble round
about August. But Sam Church

didn't want this out"
Church did acknowledge that
there Is "a potential for a cash Dow
problem" In the union, which reported this month that 41,534 of Its
150,mJ llctlve members were
unemployed.
But he maintained that "con·
trary to some claims, the union Is In
a sound tlnanclal.condltlon."

I

Hospital News

Area death

I

Admitted--Phillip Donovan, Syracuse; Ira Amott, Racine; Howard
il\leshlre, Pomeroy; Mary Stewart,
Letart, W. Va.; Kenneth Romine,
Pomeroy; •Helene Sayre, Racine.
Five calls were answered by Io- · Dlsl;h~-Ray Ungaro, Cha·
cal units Tuesday, the Meigs .. rle$ Bush; Goldie Holman, George
Q,unty Emergency Medical Ser' Molden, Jay Harper, Delores
v!cn-eports.
Aelker, Hazel DUes, Freda Carpen1\t 9:1M a.m., the Syracuse Unit ter, Anise Greenlee.
toQk lola
to veterans
Memorial Hopsltal; the Syracuse
Unit at 10:43 a.m. took Lawrence
· qtne Welshtown Hill to Veterans ·
M~rlal; Middleport at 6:03p.m. Ask to wed
. took HaiTy Stover to Veterans
A lli8J'lllage license was Issued In
·Memorial; Pc:meroy at 9:27 p.m.
' took Helene Sayre trom Five Polhts Meigs cOunty probate Court to
' to Veterans Memorial and at 11: ll Janies Eugene Haley, ll, Middle' p.m., Pomeroy took Etta Mae Ellie port, and Angela Marte Fisher, 18,
froin the county Infirmary to Vete- Middleport.
rans MemoriaL

.

Damewooo

'

'

.
"

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,

.

,'
TEL AYIV, Israel (AP) .:. IsuieU
troops entered Mllslem west Beirut :
today "to pre-vent fighting and 5ec:ure peace" less than one ~Y atijli'
atxmhkilledpl'()-lstaeliPri!Stdl!ltt..
elect Bashlr Gemayei, the military

Command said.

,

The command gave no details on

how many troops went Into west

LEADER KDJ.ED - Bashlr
Gemt!Jel, Presklent-eled of Le-

Beirut, or exactly what parts of the
district they took.
It said there was no fighting 1lS
the Israelis entered the Moslem
haU of the Lebanese capital for·
·merly held by Plilestlne Uberatlon
· Organization guen1llas unUI they
ev~~Ct~ated thecltytwoweeksagoln
the face of an Israeli siege. ·
Begin
sent Minister
a telegramMenachem
ot support
Prime

banon wu klled Tul!llday In a
bomb blast a&amp; an offtoo of his
Pha1angllt Party In Chrl8tlan
easa Beirut. Gemayel was 34.
( AP Laserphoto).

after Gemayel's assasslnatlorl, and
the Israell troop movements In Bel-

~~a:e=::=!t: ·
:e~:mn;~a::-:r~ar-otd Leba-

10-year old
found guilty
•
rn
rape case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A 10year-old boy has been tried and
found gullty of rape In a juvenile
court case.
1be verdict was rendered Tuesday after three other11 boys waived
.....
14Is and pleaded ~· ty to charges
u
"~
o f rape an d gross sexua I
Imposition.
The four, and another whoSe case
Tuesday was continued, were
ch•--' wtth 27 delinquency counts
·~

The latest llevelopments came as
President Reagan's 'new Middle
East ""ace envoy Morris Draper
,....
arrived In "'el
more talks
1'
•' Avfv •or
aimed at withdrawal of all foreign
to
from Lebanon He met with

rces

·

Foreign Minister Yltzhak Shamlr
In Jerusalem and was to meet
Begin later.
Gemayel's slaying could se·
Verety hamper nraper's efforts .to
peacefully resolve Lebanese poUtlcs- It could also make Gemayel's

"=

Including rape, assault and gross

~:~tta~~!tlt':o ~ys~::::e::r~ .

Aug 25
J~~ John HUI In Franklin

County Juvenile Court postponed .
sentencing pending the undecided

case
psychologists' exa'lllnatlon ofand
all five.
The defendants were being held
In county custody. The oldest Is 15.

I

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., u...

.

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, _ _, · &lt;• •

,
'
"" ~- J\ad tra'lil!""' fO'&gt; llll_, 1J1!V I
.
state.
.
.,-;~I . · L' jVjth Iatuti!
1
The "(raglc event" In J3ii~! ~Uimei fy.rr~ i-riJiiiQM ~
."CC?uld change\hewhOiesl~tllln,
, leaders and J;eCe,;Ja i, ,
' .
Israeu paruament Speake!' I'd~· dollar8 In ~tar.i 1 ·~ .eli!Cled/
chemSavldortoldreporterseerlter
~n
ye the first tDrelgr(
In San Juan, F'uerto .!:~-~v:h· :.fl~'onepu
'
h~IY·
congral\118te:
was In San .Juan ,for """'wqp
government o~ls.and leaders of him.
the Jewish community.
·
_ _ _ _..:..__ _- - : - --:.
Gemayel was elected by Parlta· .
ment Aug. m In a special session
boycotted by many Moslem~·
tors. He was supposed to succeed
President Elias Sarkis on Sept :1.3.
foR AU.. ()tCASIOIIS
Gemayel's links with the Israelis
dated back to the 1975-76 clvU war
1
between Lebanese Christians alld
an alliance of Moslems alld Palestl·
.
, . '\

I

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't

· Israeli press- ~~;·
.
said '-""
r~ni;an;gue~rrlltas~~
~~,..;-~E~~~P~h-~99~2~
:6~34;'2~~~~
'

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'1 st Year Free Tank Rental
'400 Gallon Plus lnstallatoon 5334
' Di s cou ~t on First Fill

A meeting of the Southern High
School Band Boosters wW be beld
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the band
room. AU Interested parents are Invited to attend.
·

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en tine

1 S.C.tion, 14 Pogu 15 Cents
A
In&lt; . Newspaper

•

NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, the former lranlan
foreign minister who fell from favor after opposing spy trials for .the
American hostages In Tehran, was executed by a tiring squad for plotting
· to topple Ayatollah Rullollah Khomelnl' s government. the ottlclallrantan
. news agency reported today . .
· . The news agency IRNA said the execution was carried out In Tehran
Wednesday night on the basi$ of a verdict Issued by the Army Revolutionary Tribunal and approved by the High Judicial Court. IRNA gave no
other details of the execution.
Ghotbzadeh, 48, was arrested early In April and charged with master·
minding a plot to .overthroW the Islamic government and assassinate
Khomelnl, his one-time mentor and lran's supreme revolutionary leader.
His close ties to Khomelnl were evident In 1979 when Ghotbzadeh returned hon,e after ~ years aboard on the same airplane as the exiled
rellglous leader and promptly emerged as one of the most powertul men In
lran. He had been one of Khomelnl's closest confldents ever since the
ayatollah was exUed by the tl'le late Shah of lran, Mohammlld Reza
Pahlavf, In 1963. o
Ghotbzadeh was named toretgn minister a few days after student radl·
cals seized the U.S. Embassy, taking Americans hostage In November
1979. After 444 days In captivity, the 52 hostages were released Jan. :b:J, 1981
- the day President Reagan took office. ·
During the early months ot the hostage crtsts, Ghotbzadeh' s face be-

Buc"eye Gas Products Company will redeem HH S
" only when used toward the 1~rst 111
coupon
• oI 400
Doxoi
Pro"'"e
syslem
gallons of prppane 1n a new
- ·•
.
1'nstalled belween Augusl 20 thru November·17 l982

RIDENOUR G
, AS ·SERVICE
·
·

985-3307
·

'

BUCKEYE GAS :PRODUCTS
992-5o97
·•

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Q'VftL ~ PRD~. lNE
~U

.'

OHOO'BZADEH EXECUTED - Fonner Iranian Forelp Mlnl&amp;ler Sa4eP. Gbotbzadeh, -here a&amp; the last -.ion of bill trial aoou8ed
of JIIOUIIII the o~ of the ~· Oovenulteat 811111188118111nadol
of Iranian leader AyalQUah Khomelnl. Ghottrz.adeh was executed by
· · fb1ng ~~quad ~ Tehrall durla1 lite nipt the official Iranian News

.

~.

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JRNA. reporied 'l'hunday: (AP y.e~),
'{'

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t "':t-·,fil'

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Buckeye briefs

1

'

Springer
.'

say., press good to him

dNCINN:ATI - Gerald N. Springer, the former CIIiclnnatl city
: councilman ,who pnishec;i third In the · Democratic gubernatorial
: primary, says thi! press was good to him djlrlng his campaign.
· "'I)le press coverage at till; primary was not very objective. It was
· overly tavorl!hle to me," Springer told a Society of Professional
· Journallsts dinner Wednesday night.
Springer, who wiU beCome a local television news commentator In
November, said lie beUeves the press gave him favorable treatment
bee&amp;US!! he was ~thi! new kid on the block."
.By contrast,_.hoth his opponents - former Lt. Gov. Richard C.
Celeste lind Attorney General wnuam J . Brown- were well known
to polltlca) 'reporters •.

,...

SAVE FROM S230°0 TO 5°0 ON
QUALITY KROEH LER 2 Pc~ LIY.I NG ROOM
.
· ·c'.
SUITES
,
.
LARGE SE~ECTION . OF STYLES
&amp; ~ FABRICS
.

Citizens question plant's safety

.•

.,

.

•'

I

WASHINGTON- Representatives ot ·acitizens' group say they
question wllether the Nuclear Regulatory ConUn!Sslon can ensure
the safe C011Structlon of the Zimmer nuclear power pbint In southw·
estern Olilo.
·
·
.
Vlckt Mayer, a leader ot the Zimmer /l,rea Citizens ot Ohio and
Ken~. accused the NRC Wednesday bf c6mpllclty Wtth the Cln·
·clnnatl Gas a. Electric Co., which wants to put the Zimmer plant In
operati011 next year.
Memberll ct. the citizens' group attended a House subcommittee
bearing TjleldaY which reviewed what Is being done by the NRC to
assure tile qwiljty of construction at the plant

.'

, I ~(

'

Met~~baum
'gears .up'. campaign
. .
•~

I '

•

came a nightly feature on American television screens as he answered
questions and gave his government's position on tbe hostages.
In June 198), he openly opposed spy trials for the hostages that were
being demanded by Iran's Moslem mUltants. At one point, GhQtbzadell
hatl supported such trials, hut later moderated his stance to say only the
United States - not the hostages themselves - should stand trial for
alleged crimes against Iran.
Ghotbzadeh's opposition to the spy trials put him on a collision course
with the rnllltants holding the Americans and the Moslem extremists
running the Parliament
Later he was arrested by Islamic revolutionary guards and charged
with criticizing government officials hut was treed. He was stJ1ppe(j of his
position In August 198! and kept a law profUe after leaving office.
He apparently made no attempt to leave Iran asdld he fellow moderate,
former President Aholhassan Bani·Sadr, who fled to France In 1981 after
being ousted from power by Moslem fundamentalists In the regime.
Shortly after his April arrest, Ghothzadeh appeared on Iran's state
television and admitted he had conspired IQ blow up Khomelnl' s residence
and to overthrow the government
However, when his trial began last month, Ghotbzadeh pleaded Innocent
to the charge of plotting to assassinate Khomelnl. He dkl admit to plotting
against the government, !RNA reported at the time.

l4"bids ·
received
for PVH
structure
ByJDIIYOwen
A new medical oftlce building
for Pleasant Valley Hospital
neared reality ~ednesday wlth
the opening of bids, all In excesS
of $1.4 mllllon.
•
Fourteen companies are vying
for the contract on tbe PVH exten·
slon, which Executive Director Robert Carper says may be awarded
within the next few weeks.
Clint Bryan, of Clint Bryan Associates of Charleston, the architect
for tbe project, says was pleased
wtth the bids - ranging !rom
$1,795,mJ to $1,412,700 - which he
terms "good competitive bids"
very close to his original estimate.
Low bidder on the project was
Southern Construction of St. Albans
which submitted the $1,412,700 figure and a construction calendar of
450 days. Three other ftnns were
under the $1.5 mllHon mark, lnclud·
lng Meigs County company, Karr
Construction of Chester, submitted
· a $1,'493,1ffi base bid and a 365 day
construction schedule whUe Den·
ral, Inc. of Ashland, submitted a
$1,497,mJ baSe hid for 300 days and
Dlnlaco and Sons, Huntington, submitted a bid of $1.496,900 and 300
days .
Carper cautions, however, that
there are a number of factors, In
·addition 'to the base bid, which a
hulldlng committee will be looking
af before awa~dlng the final
.•'
conltjlct.
_
The 111€1\lcal office buDding wiU
be corinected to the existing hospital structure on the lower and mid·
die levels and wiU provide capacity
.... fonuq~v,entual 21 office. suites.
Parking reiwvatlons wtil ~rovfde 72

a

HEALTH LEVY PROM!JI'ION -'- These Meigs
tlounly citizens concerned about further decreases In
services of the Meigs County Health Department met
Wednesday morning at Velerans Memorial Hospital
to dlscU!iS promotion lor the one mUilevy to be voted

on In the November election.

Shown from the left, .
Edison Hobstetter, Nonna TOrTes, R.N., Frank P~ •
trie, Health Depariment administrator, Dr. James
WltheraD, Eleanor Thomas, Susan OBver and Homer ·

Baxter.

~

'

CLEVELAND : Howard Metzlenbaum appears to be loaded for
bear 111 hll campaign for re-election to the u.s. Senate. The problem
Is th8t Congress w011't Operf bunttitg seasOn.
. Roy Meyers, who oVersees Metz.enbaum's Itinerary, says the Democratic senator's ~1!11&amp;1 duties have put his schedule up lh
the air dod his campatp .,atitst RepuhUcan challenger , Paul.
Pfeifer on a hall and chaln.
·
. . Meyers :said It looks aa If weekends will be about the only time
Met7Jenbaum will be able to spend In Ohio unUI Oct. 2, when It Is
hoped tbe Senate will· adjourn.

·Winning. Ohio ,lottery number

of

·

Committee hears report .on
·importance of health measure
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
"If this one mUI health levy
doesn't pass, then what we are look
lng at fn,a few years from now Is a
health department with a sanlta·
lion · administrative person. one
nurse and one clerk with a lot less

setvtce.··

for five years would bring In
$147,0)) which would decrease ·the

amount needed from the county
budget commission, thereby allowIng the townships and vtllages to
retain more funds for road and
cemetery work, It was pointed out.
" I don't know how we'U keep goIng without a le\IY," was Norma
Torres' appraisal of the situation.
Mrs. Torres, R.N., nursing supervisor for the health department, expressed regret over losing two
programs already - the hypertension control cllnic and the pre-natal
program.
She exlalned that when the levy Is
passed, giving the department additional operating tunds, there Is a
distinct possibility that the minimal
charges now made for lmmunlzatlons, lirlne culture, blood work,
blood press'ure, .nu shots, iutd wellchild cllnic visits (r~JI~glng from $2
to $6) wtll he decre&amp;SI!d or
eliminated.
These, by necessity, .were put

That was Frank Pelrte's description of the Meigs County Health Department's finances without funds
from the levy to come before the
voters In the November general
election.
The health department adminisaatitlooal !paces.
I .
trator
was speaking to a group of
'
·In May, when the West. VIrginia
concerned
residents Wednesday at
· · Health Qepartment awarded a Cer·
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
~te ~eed ioPVH to allow for
Petrie reported the department
the' cooatructton, Carper ~tlmaled
Is now operating on $65,!0l a year
the proJect cost would be $2$3,855.
'·.
(the 10 rnlU llmltatlon collected by
In addition to the base bids for tbe
the Meigs County Commissioners
med1cal office building, ~of which ·
were 't ar under that estlinate, t1rms from the tOwnships and communia''ll1g with state and federal
were aalr£d to submit bids on four ties)
CLEVELAJilD - The wlnntng numiJer dntwit Wednesday night In
do~ wblch he · said are slowly
alternate JtemS. · Alternate 1 was
.the Ohio Lottery's 'ciaUy gaiTII! ''The Number" was ~ ; .
,
"d.tylng up."
doctor suite Interiors: alternate
}or
nte lottery reported earnlngs.of U8'7,ll5t from the wqerjng 011 !te
The one .mDI levy to be In effect
2. ti new stortn. drainage system for
dally game. The'earnln~cameonulelofSIII5.m while holden of
the' IDpltal gJ'OII1Jds; alternate 3,
winning tickets are entitled tO share W1 .2'1llr...iottei'Y &lt;f!lclals ~
'
I
.
' relocatkm ohome Items and I!QulpI
merrt wttl,dn tbe lnplfal; and alter- 4, lliP"...., of tile klblly, walk· COLUMl3US, Ohio (AP) - A · statewide level, hundreds of thoudta• 1 and a neiv canapy for the
for~t .
newly formed organization called smls Qt people wltbholdlng tbelr
PVHeateslor.
Solidarity Ohio Is urging the state's payments In escyow accounts,"
Clear 81111 cool tonight. Low fl-52. Winds llgbt 81111 northerlY. Frl- ,
.coa.tnlellan fl ezpected to begin residents to wlillbold payment 011 Keller told a news conference.
. .... time tldl falL .
day, paftly cloudy. Hlallt »15.
· '
·
their natural gas bills to j»''test In·
'
,: I 1 t Oltlo Fw ec:u*
FDurteeD ~~~nt~' IUbmltted bids creasing energy ~.
Keller ~ ~ a boycott would
W""""ilay 0111ht llltjiQIEd medi"We just can't afford this any- force Columbia Gas of Ohio "to sit
,, .......... 'r:
'
.
•
down and ...........
al ofllce boJ!ldlne to be added to more,'' Gi!orae Keller, the groups
"1 11 af lllawen Sal tk;. hlr ud clocllSaltdaJ Md ....,.,.
,...,..,_te" with consy·
•'
., Pleaent Valley ibpltaL In add!· .fliuMel', said Wednesday night . · ~~said the boycott Idea was
. .•: tk)n to bue bMe, tile COI!IIJ8nles
'·
'
"The - ·
J'eJiei fee , U"¥'"" liy court decisions allow•
· ...
_.. COJI1PI!I1Yi
~ · r · ing .renieri 10 withhold rent pay- ·
c..;;-------~~,;.;.---~ ~;..;,;,;,;,;o,;...~
(Collllnued 01 Pile 14) .
~~ ~ almle. We hope to get, 011 a
.
, , f; .
. . .
'

'

The Village of Middleport is ~~~~ application~ _fo~
. the pre-quelification of contractors in t!Mtr ho.usma rahabll~:. tlQII I)I'OPm, funded by the _Departmen~ of Houslna and Urbin , ,
Development. Contractors l~te(est~ 1n blc~ina a ~- .,
to.- in this prOIJ'im are asked to contact the Middleport Office
of 'c0m1111111ty ~IOJ!IIIIflt. 237 Rice Street. Middleport.
OhiO 45760 or phone 992-6782 for further infol'!llltion. eon-·
•• tnletors who 11M ill'lldy bl;ln,qu1lified In the propm ..., ·not rHpply as they will still be eli&amp;ible to bid Ollllomll bel~
rehabbed. Applications will be accepted on 1 continual bls1s ·
' , u this is a contimli111 pr0111m of the Vlllct.
· ·.
Fled Hoffmln. Mayor
- - of licfdleP,ort

*",

...

••

ELB.
E
RFElD.
S
IN
POMEROY
.....---~-~~~~~~'~
· ~~·~
o ~:'

·

•

. Former Iranian ·leader
executed by firing squad

SEPTEMBER ,

~

n

Pomeroy-Mi.ddleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 16,1982

•

It was testified that the victims
were threatened with a Wrench; ,

meetirig set

at y

4

:

You Get Value and Price
at.Doxol Propane

The victims, ll·and 12-year-old
boys al)d a 13-year-old girl, testltled
that they were In a park when the
five boys approached their
bicycles.

~tel'!l

•

Muhi
m
odl
a
; ~~~~~h~tod~·:··~2--------~----------------------------~~~----~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~;_--------------~==----------~~------~~---

reports

Defense lawyer Doug Maser said
the crime were "revolting," hut
that the 10-year-old should not be
made to pay for the "tull sweep" of

that at least one victim was kicked,
punched and hlt·wllh a stick; and
that all three were ordered to
undress.
The boys were ordered to per·
form sexual acts with the girl, then
with each other, It was testltled,
and the boys were ordered to perform sexual acts.on the attackers.
All five of the accused attempted
Intercourse with the girl, according
to victims' testimony.
The boys were arrested the following day after a parent of a vfc·
tim spotted them at the scene.

..

Page 5

•

r~lng~a~pe~ace~pa~c~t:wt~th~the~.J~ewlsh~~~::::;;~~~~;::;;:;:;:;:~~E~;;~:;;

Prosecutor David Bosley said In
the juvenue court that the 10-yearold was an active participant In the
crimes.

·NFL players call
.strike for Tuesday

Page 6 ·

CONfECTIQN[DY

I '•

'

· Oood Samaritan:s
fina~e voyage

Meigs teams hit
week
road this
,

CAKES
CAROUSEL

Begin's telegram to Pierre Gemayel, father of the slain presidentelect and founder of the rightist
Phalange Party, saki: "I am
shocked to the depths of my soul by
the criminal assassiiUitlon of Bashlr, a great patriot andacoura~
ous tighter tor the freedom and
Independence of Lebanon. May
God comfort yoli.

'•

NOTI·CE TO CONTRACTORS.
A

,

crimes comml~.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES SEPI'. 14
Joyce I. Nonis
Mrs. Robert Bauman and son,
Floyd Bennett, Mrs. Wllllam Bird
·:Joyce l ' staiic.ey Norris, 25, Le- and son, Artie Bond, Thomas Crow,
. wtsfm, Maine, (!led Sept. llln Le- Paul Finley, Kendall Fisher, Mrs.
wtstoo Hospital.
James Gartner and daughter, Myr·
Born Feb. 26, ~1,1n Washington tie Goble, Aaron Grady, Mrs. PhU·
Court House, she was the daughter · lip HoU~nbaugh and dau~ter,
Cll Earl and Thelma Starkey, who Elaine Holley, Mrs. James Large,
bo'th survive In Galllpolls Ferry.
Jeffrey Leming, Charles Lu&lt;;as.
''Also surviving Is her husband, H. ·Frances McCain, Addle McFann,
&lt;;arro11 Norris Jr.; a son, Chatl; Pauline Moore, Tamara Nibert,
tour brothers, James of Washing· Mary Phillips, WUllam Poling Jr.,
ton Court HOUSI!, Earl Jr. of Galli- Kathryn Potts, Marsha Ratliff,
polis, WUbert of Ashland, Ky., and , Van Robbins, George Saunders,
'lbomaS of VIrginia Beach,. Va.;
Jack Smith, Charlene Thacker.
lhfee sisters, Dorothy A)lhrlght of
BIR'mS
Plain CitY, Joan Atkins of ColumMr. and Mrs. Earl Ramsburg,
bUs, and Helen Starkey of Florida; son, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
IIIII a grandmother, DorQthy Pen· ward Vaughn, son, Wellston.
Well of WaShll)gton Court House.
· Burial wW be at Album Ceme.lefY In Album, Maine.
Veterans Memorial

Emergency runs

,

Into effect after a .5 levy taUed In
May.
The Importance ot low-cost
health services, Mrs. Torres explained, has been emphasized by
the latest statistics from the Ohio
Department of Health which show
that 58 percent · of Meigs County
marriages end In divorce leaving
many single parents sjruggllng ori
small incomes.
Those attending the steering
committee meeting for the levy
promotion, Including Edison Hobstetter, Dr. James WltlleraH, Homer Baxter, Susan Oliver, Leo
Vaughan, and Charlene Hoentch,
discussed various approaches toward educating the public on the
services of the Meigs County
Health Department and the financial needs of the agency.
Dr. Witherall wUI serve as honorary chairman for the levy promotion wlth other chairmen . and
committees to he named.

c 'roup urges user.s .to hold payments

Weather

'

t

• l

....

~.~~ '

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

.

...

ments for redress of grievanCes

trom their landlords.
. Utility officials ha~ said they
are only passing through their own
Increased•cos~ for gas supplies.
Keller said the utility .Is locked
. Into long-term contracts with gas
SI!Wllers In ,the So~thwest ft)r l)l&amp;h- 1
priced gas, when lower-priced gas
Is avallahle ~ Ohio ·wells.

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