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                  <text>. ·Chiefs sho~k Bengals

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WINTHROP®

Dick Cavalli

Iron ·p oor blood

story, pboeo ... Pap! 3

See Family Medlclne • Page il

Rookie southpaw wins

Execution carried out

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See Bedllltory•Pap4

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· 'vill.34. No.104
Coey;lhted1184

story, pboiDooPage 10

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at y . enttne
_Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio, Monday.
September 10. 19!4
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-coal operators talks may be short-lived

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. lock-a~!.
· CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP~ - ·The Urtlted Mine Joe&lt;;ortOrandeellnedtocmunent.
Both sides have been tight·Upped thro.lghout ~
11\'orkers union and the Bituminous Coal Operators
The contract betweeh the UMW and the BCOA
discuSsions, and on Sunday Brown compllmellted
AliiOCiatlon are back at the bargalnlng table, but expires Sept. :Jl. When III!IPJtlatlons started iii April,
Trumkaforslqlplnguptheleaksthathaveblsforlcally
today's aeutoo Is the only one planned.
. both side&amp; expressed hope that anew agreement cOOid
plagued the union.
· .
. "We have 11? plans beyond t&lt;m:&gt;I'I'OWs ineetlng,.. reached b{the,explratlondate. lfthedeedllnelstobe
''He'sdoneatlne)obofkeeplllgtlllngsqulet." Brown
chief BCOA Jll!gotlator Bobby R. Brown said Sunday met, however, a tentative pactwW have to lie'J'QI'kout
saJd.
.
~hlsPlttsburghmme.
within the next 10 days, beca~ the uall:¥i's
But
nothing
has
squelched
speculation,
and
several
.
The UMW and J:!OOA broke off talks lut !IQith constltutkmrEqulresthatthetankandtllebeglvenl() .
union leadel s say prtvately they think the problem In
.when Brown's teamed walked out of the negotlatlons. days to study the /lih!ement be!orewtlngotllt.
tile talks l8 the U.S. Steel Carp. olrlclal who Is on the
But cin !lunllay, both sides IIIIM.Inoed that talks were
The UMW and the BCOA ha~ not agreed on a new
.BCOA'sm:got!atlngteam.
scheduled today at U a.m. at Washlngtoo~ Shefaton contract wltbout an IndustrY-wide strike In the past~
Tlie Sleel IDdustry, which depends heavtly on
_- Oiri~Hotel.
,
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years, This year, however, union leaders have new
metallurgical coal produced by the UMW, has wrung
· BCOA lll!glltlators walked out ol the tall!$ Aug. .21 powers making It easier· to call a selective strike
considerable C';liiCeSSions !ror:n the United .Steelwith no public explanation other than Brown's · against IndiVIdual corporate holdoots. When that
workers union In recent years. UMW lellders, who
statement that •.•no basis exists tor . pfoductlye strategy was aDilCXIIIOi!d, the BCOA repUecl that a
'· dlscuaalonsto.conllitue." ·
·
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'· : strike .against~ member Wwld be COI1Bidered a 1 · request aJ1911Ymlty, say steelmakers expect ttQuble
from the USW next year If similar concessiOns are not
. · 'W!a :asked
which side
the ~ against the erttlre organization. In et!ect, the
forced (Jft the mlhers.
·l'llSIIlllPtiOnoftalks,
threatened the union with a natlcnwldl! '

WE~L.., TH.ATS

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ALL Over&lt;. FrfOM
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Col· ...
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~Hargreav~s.

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II .;;AY9 H~E THAT
No 1· ONLY.I~ GARLIC
eA~ 10.GROVV _. - _.
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I'T CONTA.INS.
AND E?&gt;ENTIAL' 1\11.1"-1

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Township'J.

Sheriff Protfltt led deputies from
his department as weD as agenis
fnm the Bureau of Crhnlnal
ldentltlcatlon and Investigation and
agen~ fiun the Federal DrUg
Admlnlsti:atlon .
1 A court order to destroy this
-~bane! will be' SO!Igbt today""'
from Meigs County Conunon PleaS
Judge Ou;fles Knight. Upon obtain·
ment of the court order, the
marijuana will be destroyed as 80011
as possible.

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facial cuts.

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WOW!n-1·~~

'A LPT MG&gt;fi$,/~

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GA~LI&lt;:'· ~

MEEI"9

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NC$E 1·.
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© 19J4 Hargr_...llld Sellin
Distrlbuled IJY&gt;NEA.inc.

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PltiNT!D IN CANADA

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Miss Sterling
stemwlieel
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racewmner

· BUSY DAY IN MIDDlEPORT- 'Ole llel"-' •"•ai blodl pari;y
ere W a busy daJ !laiurdiQ' In ~t' 1 4. Ai tap, a pwp of
J'l' 1 ' e • pabmed break dlftdn( IIIUdl to llle delltl'* Ill the
crvwtl. Above, ,...., AnnRcaa ........... At . ~ llrl8ll

Cciade,..
!lflheMelpCoullt)' ,.,..., lloklllhluUpolthe
crowd to 1ft more ..,.,,... ._. p 4111•• e'l •t for the

MARIETI'A, Ohio (AP~ - A
· !i!-year-old riverboat - updated
with a turbocharged diesel engine-·
paddled t6 vlctoly Sunday during
. stemwheel races oo the Ohio River.
1be ·Miss sterling, a renavated
towboat, took uqofllclal t&lt;JP homrs
as the fastest of 23 sternwheel boats
to race here at the ninth annual Ohio
River Sternwheel Festival.
Organizers estimated more than
IOO,OOOjleo!)le attended the weekend
festival, the largest annual event In
this southeast Ohio clly with a
population of only 16.~.
Tom Jones ol Charleston, W.Va.,
the captain of the Miss Sterling;
attributed bls victory to a "modest"
400-horsepower turbocll;lrgl:d diesel engine, which propelled a
~-mounted paddlwheel a
stemwheel-,on the boat. .
Jones said he replaced the
original J5o.horsepower engine last
year with the larger engine, giving
him the most powertul stemwheel
engine at the festival.
.
Stemwheel boats competed In
five races ai the festival, with boats
of slm!W' power competllig against
each other. Jones had only one
competitor In the top class and that
boat, the Bobby c. finished several
hundred feet behind.
The sternwheelers raced approximately one mile, downriver, from
the InterState TI bridge over the
Ohio River, ending at the festival
site, near where the Ohio River
meets the Musklngwn Rive!',
Stemwheelers at the festival
ran~ from spacious, original
towboats like Jones', to ~room
pontoon boats propelled by rnakeshltt stemwheels.

I . . .. ,

developmalt of u -I'OIId io the Ba~mlllld J;Jddte llld the
oitiil 'L"af•-IWIIInlmPcmtiiO lnA'I
"'pppJIIO'Dell
~At~ left, Vllil.r.•• !"'• ....wllllaJI'IIIIPilllled ''LaDe
Waif'' bel¥ Oil the vocall cliirt!llaa lair loaiiJI"OII&amp;D Ia wbldl
Deaver Rice served • anoee,' _. lit baUw; JtPl, Mrl. Ru&amp;b
· Bradford, Raeme,
a wb Ill clllplaf Ill almllllt 10 111ft
IClUipture clolll whldl lllle cr !I *I 'Diere - liKI EII! II the
manber o1 In uta _. «nffll ·.a 1111111 ,.r'a . - . plaa more lood
..... 1n ........,, rnercllaniB w ...,.tabled • ......._ .. nol the party ... otlier llll!l'dllllla .end ..,...... dllriDI the
liauni of the paaty, Dr. Crall ar.a-.llei'Wd u ct I 11111111 of the ·
event, 8f1 lftld by the MJcMlopri CbmJber af CuiiMIW&amp;

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· ThepatrolsaldJudyA.Lamm,27,
went off the right side of the road,
over an. embankment and avertuml:d at 9 p.ni. ·Lamm received
minor lnjw:Jes, but was not treated
aCcQ:dlng to ihe patroL
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·' aE-.~,DQC~i't-115

. C~OCODU..E .· ·
RE.P~I-1-ENI

.Escapees
capture4
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AMILTON, Ohio (AP~ "-Author!·
ties have caught two of tlifee
Inmates who eacaped lmn · a
~tucky jall l)lll'ly Saturday. but
the third l'ell'lllln&amp;at large\
Authorities alilllted Alder DeR- ·
ouett Jr., 18, of Port Royal, Ky..
SundaY aloni lntsst,ate '15 near
Union township, In IIOUtbwestOidD.
Another escapee, 29-year-&lt;dd WallaCe Holme8, ol Dayton. was
IIITI!IIted at a lllhlllll lake near
ftamll~ 00 Saturday rilgbt by
Butler County authorltlel.
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:Mondale'unv
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Since the Democratic National
CoaVeilttoo, Mondale has saki that
whoever Is elected president wiD
have to raise tllliii!S to offset the
federallnCOIDC
tax
rates.
lnatead,
. . . . . 'reducttoos totaling
mushroomlng deficit.
$1'71 billion. and a. "pay as you go" he called l:lr fllrtll!!r delays In the
,requlremlllt that the ' prellldent eff!ci Of a ' CM!I'aU,statfjddes !~~Washington .. The package aJIIIIIUnced today
law protectlng
said
the paclrll'! would cut federal WOUld fall most heavily onwehlthler
taxpayera
lnllattoo.
,comeupwllb III!W ~oriPiftdlllr .
'lbe
money
raised
tlu'culb
defer-·
deflcltsbytwOthlnls, toS86jlllUonln ~· .
.
cut., ID pay far ~ lecleral
Farnllleli earning less than $25,000
b@mllbt piqJCIIO!. ·
raJ ot lndexlnR. as Inflation protec. 1989.

·· PHILA1lELPIDA&lt;~l-Wait8r
. ~. · Mondale tod&amp;YUIM!IIed aderlclt m'rtf?l!!! aftlel'weekaofpreparattoo,
teducttoo Pfo!hle Of tax ~ncrea.a .....ted .., lllm!a-. In 'exlltlni

tlon Is lalown, and otber previously
pr~ tax In~. Wwld be
funnella!' Into a trust fund that by
law would only go, to ofbet the
deftclt.
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MQndale'a neweat lQiael plan,

POll.,..

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to Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Protfltt.
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Both an &amp;irpiane and btiUcopter ·
were used by the department In
locatlng the plants which were
seized from . Columbta, Salem,
Sutton, Sallsbury and Rutland

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· The Ga!Ua-Melgs post olthesta!e
!llghwaypatrol cUed YwngflrDWI
an4 1a11ure to~ atter the 3: ro
a:m. accident. The . patrol said
Young was westl)ound ori 143, when ·
he lostcoatrol of bls car, went off the
right side of the road, struck a ditch
and overt;umed.
A Pomeroy youth w~ cited lor
· impi'Opel' passing following a twocar accident on Ohio 338 Sunday.
The patrol said Brla!t K. Fteeman, 16, was 'eastbound on. 338,
behl!ld a car driven by David M.
Dully, 16, Third Streel, Syracuse.
When Freeman reportedly tried to
pass Duffy, he struck nutty's car In
the rear. No ln)urlell were reported
bi the 12: :Jl am. aCcident.
Meenwhlle, ·a Point Pleasant,
w. Va., woman was cited for assured
clear dls\IJK.'e by the patrol folklw·
ing a two-car accident of Q.S. 35
Sunday.
.
The patrol .said 2Q.year-old
'l'ami11Y J . Durst, was folkiwlllg
Cordon Ha!Tison, 41, Bancroft,
W.Va., when Harrlsoil stopped In
traf!lc. Durst reportedly could not
st&lt;JP In time and struck Harrison
.from behind at 5:45 p.m.
A Rt. 2, Patmt, won'lall escaped
serious Injury when her car went off
the ~t side ol eastboUnd Ohio 554

to¥ ·Of

acconllng

• 'Hospital ofiiCials said David R.
Y~. ~. was being treated for

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netted a

mariJuana plants with an ~ted
street value ol $1 m1Ulon dollars,

A Columbus man Is In fair
OOndltlon at Veterans M~orlal
Hcapltal following a slngle-mr
aocldent on Ohio 143 Sunday

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accident ·

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rrioril1.na'·
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A weekend search and seizure

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Sheriff'leads .
marijuana raid

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follf)wing

and Se..l l,r•
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ever-Increasing practice of sub&lt;Ontracting.
As the cunpetltlon for coal saleBs Increases,
cmripany signatories to the UMW contract are leasing
their operations to IIOII·unlon CMipanles, which often
are able to operate more cheaply. The union miners
often are laid of!, and non·unloit miners wllllngtowlrt
for a smaller wage and fewer benefits are called ln.
The BCOA has similar concerns. At the outset;
JndustrY .negotlators
they neede!l to come out of·
the talks wi!Jt new ways to lmpuve productlvlty and
competitiveness with non-union opi!!'atorS.

man fair ·
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MR. MEN'M AND L.IT1LE MISS'M .

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Trumka has vowed that the union will 1Jl8,ke no

concessions to the BCOA, even though a third Of the
UMW's ltn,ml non·retlred members are out of work.
The UMW's biggest concerns, as eJqXeSSI!d by rank
Md tile miners, don't Include wage hllles, hawelier.
Top-acale union miners already earn more than$100 a
day, but the !Diners say they're losing their Jobs to the

In 1989would receive the full benefits
of Indexing; those earning betwem
$25,(0) and $li,OOJ woold pay an

additional $95 · Wider Mondale's
plan, and those up to $40,ml about
tmmo~;e.

Bowman CUtter, a top budget
offlctalln theCarteradmlnlstratlon,
said famllles earning about $100,(0)

•fJ

would pay $2,9XJ In higher taxes.
The new plan Incorporates an
earlier Mondale proposal anlllUIICed last January under which
he woold raise $tn billion In new
revenues by 1989 by Imposing a 10
percent surcliafge on tOO&amp;e earning
more than $100,ml, and acaponthe
(Continued on page 10)

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Mondly. Sap181nber 10, 1984 .

, Commentar~
lll Court Street

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Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaslstant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB,
News Editor

JR.

A MEMBER ol The Astloelated PreM, Inland DaUy Press Assocla·
lion and lhe An!erlcan Newspaper Publlshen Auoolatlon.
LETI'EIIS OF OPINION are welcome. They """"ld be 1... lhalo -

.......

wonloo

loec· All letter• are tubject toedltiDJad muM be ~lped wit• name, llddrftaaod
. 1&lt;1........... ber. No uDAiped !ellen wUI be published. L&lt;llen """"ld be ..
pod tu&amp;e, ..W....ollls 11..... Dol penonalllleo.

Productivity is
back in town

The big event In Canada reminll&lt;l
us or a number of things, some
gratifying, some sobering. The first
of these Is that In memory there has
not been a more comprehensive
Indictment - this time or the
poHcles or a bright, fiashy socialist
w)Jo, for a while, threatened tel
outlast Canada. Tnldeaumanla,
they called lt.
One wishes one could spealc of the
Canadian development as a clear
Ideological reorientation. The Wall
Street · Journal, 10 days ago, said
that a race between the Uberals'
John Turner and the Conservatives' Brian Mulroney was. on the
order of a race In the United States
between Walter Mondale and Con·
nectlcut Sen. Lowell Welcker. The
suggestion or a contest tbat agonlz·
lng)y pointless talles some of the

Considering the notoriety attending Its departure and prolonged
absence, It Is surprising how tittle atlentlon has been paid to Its returnbut productivity Is back In town.
It may have slipped In quletly, but lt has been observed now for eight
_ straight quarters and It Is beginning to look as If lt wW be around for many
more quarters and maybe for yeats,
·
.
Productivity Is production efficiency. It used to grow at about 3 peicent a
year but then In the 19'71B It became less noticeable and flnaHy It seemed to
bave left town altogether.
•
Between llm and early 1982 It shiM&lt;ed almost no growth, causing
politicians. ecooomlsts, business people and labOr to scratch their heads
and blame each other.
What a shaJ'ne, they saki, that the United States or America, which
showed the world how to :produce, had forgotten Its own lesson. It was
ernbarasstng to the point of maldng Uncle Sam looll soft and pudgy.
ScOres of reasons were offered:
·
Americans put too much emphasis on consuming, tooHttleon producing.
Labor was greedy and lazy. ManagementwasJ1sklessand unllnaginatlve.
Pollution control demands forced money Into non-productive areas. High
energy costs offset attempts to be efficient. And many more
A case can be made that some of the factors tbatdestroyed productivity.
whateVer ihey were, ll!(l to the big recession or 1981 and 1982. ·
Significantly, productivity began rising agalilln the third quarter or 1982,
just before the end or the recession, It has been rising ever sinCe.
WASIDNGTON -Today'syouth
1n Il*'s first quarter- January, February, March- the 3.3 percent race the rriost awesome challenge of
r1se put proouctlvlty gains rlghi bacll where they used to be. Slreptlcs were the ages. They stand on the
many. The gains were, cyctlcal and would fade, they said. The gains threshold of space. Their frontier Is
existed, they explained, because the eco11001y was recovering.
the universe Itself. ·
1n the j)ast couple or w~lls. however, attitudes changed. Atnong other
It Is a vast frontier. yet to he
things, the second-&lt;juarter productivity gain soared to 4.7 petcent.
explored, and they are the ColumReading the figures, Merrill -Lynch's chief economist, Jack Lavery, buses and the Magellans or tomordec\lired tbat "developments beyond the normal cyclical forces are at row. They have whole new worlds
worll." 'Edward Yardenl of Prudential-Bache, saki tbat "there Is a good to dl.scover.
chance tbat productivity Is In the process or major secular rebound."
The way Into space Is through
Robert Barbera ofE.F. Hutton, remarked that "the revised figures ... were high technology. Those who would
uniformly positive!'
.
explore new worlds must begin with
Productivity gains means a. bigger pi~ for everyone, $0 th;lt noboQy the world or electronics.
needs to sneak a slice at their neighbor's expense.
'
They must master the computer,
It ineans more profits for business, more dlsposa,ble Income for the extension o! the human brain.
employees, both or which are conflnned by recent government figures. It ' The nation with the best computer
means less Inflation, to which the official statistics also attest.
technology will gain an erroneous
And It suggests If not assures that the i&gt;conomy or the 199ls may grow head start In the exploration o!
raster and with more sll!bUity than the late and unlamented economy or the space.
19'71B.
·As surely as there are planets and
Welcome home, productivity.
stars as far as the eye can see, there
are also rlches beyond Imagination
and discoveries beyond comprehension waiting for future astronauts to find. The prospects are
breathtaking.
This . Is the thinking ,behind the
Young Astronauts program, \l'hlch
John W. Brlcller, former U.S. 5ell3tor and Ohio governor, revealed what President Reagan has ordered his

CINCINNATI (AP)'·-

conservative majority at 66 percent taldng a ~bllcan vtc1ory In . •:
Welcker were to beat Ml.liiiWe for
to 33 percent. If yoli compare only November for granted. He replied
president, tbe only animation left the Conaervatlves and the Uberals, that In 19'16, when he left K . - . :•;;,
among SOUJid.mlnded people would the winning margin Is 75 percent to City, Mo., as the vice pn!lldentlal ··;•
be that m\ICh necessary to buy 16 percent. Anything more decisive nominee or the ~bllcan Party, :::;
1
tlcllets to go Hve In Brazil unW the !ban that would suggest a Bolshevllc
the Ford· Dole ticket waa '25-!1' ;
madness was over,
or Mexlci!D eJectiOn.
points belllnd" In the coateet ·: ;'
Bur then, bear this. Arter Tru· against Carter-Mondale, the Den1D- .. ~
One clings, therefore, to a belief
that, Mulroney's me-toolsm not· deau stewell down aild John . cratlc challengers. NotWtthltand,' ' "'
withstanding, the vote was more Turner beCame the ll)terlm prime big tbat huae spread, Carter ,won · ,..•.
merely than a repudiation at minister. the polls put the Uberals the election by Jess !ban one pillnt.. ,..,,
Trudeau, that the Canadlins are 10 points above the CoiUiervatlves. . The volat!Hty or the wier had ~
tirEd of the unemployment, lnfla· That means that during an eight· seldom beell more cle~ ex·· '•
tlon and Industrial sclerosis asso- week camJl&amp;llln, the Conservatives p~ - unW In Canada laat. ' ,
elated with the soclallst ~cles or went front lO.polnt UJiderdoes to Tuesday. · .:
the Liberals.
!il-polnt wlrmers. During tbe camAll of which reminds one that In •
But note now two things. Tbertrst palgn, IIi other-words, they moved
Canada when they speak at a
1s that the seats won by the the electorate by an Incredible 60
victory for this party or tbat party, :r!'
CojiSe('Vatlves number 211. The points.
they speall or a comprehellllve · "'
Liberal!! won only -4l, the New
The figure brings us horne. On victory. There you get not oldy a' :'.'
Dell)ocratlc' Party 30. If 'you television last Sunday, Sen. Robert
prime rnlnllter. but also a par11a: ·•"'
combine the opposition, you have a _. Dole was asked why he was not
ment. Here we tend to divide power. ·, -~
· · ·
' Right now the Oerilocrata control' "
the House or RepresentatiVes by too · .:.
votes (267-lai). The ~bHcana· ~~'·
control the Senate by 10votea. Ewn ·~
so, We speall glibly abbut the , ·_. !'
crushing "~bllcan" lNd In the "'"
polls. That lead, and forget for a · ;·-·
moment the ·factor or VOiat!Hty, 1.1 · -~
c;:nflned to the people wm are '
running for president and vke •.• £
. president. There Is very tittle· ·- - ~~
comfort In that fl&amp;\lre ror thole who .;...,
seek thoroughgoing 1eform and · ;..,
know tbat such a thing Cannot·
happen In the absence or a ' v:,;
rongresslonal victory; or If 11Q1 that,' : ~;,;
. a clear coaHtlon between conaerva- .'
tlve Democrats and Republfcans. .:i;
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It Is for !bat reason perJ!Iexlng ~ ~
!bat Mr. Reaian has not, In ldl
recent speeches, stressed the ID~
Important point o( the need for ' .. ,
cornprehenslve 'action by the w- 'U
".'~
l"-1
ters. No ·doubt he Is bel~~!~ told by . ••
some or hiS advisers where app-llp- ""'.'
rtate to Ignore Congre!l!l, ,
;·;~
animation out at wbat b!lppened: If

Veteran

quarterblctKenAildenonrer.hed
another paaslng mllepoet Sw.Jay,
but his pinpoint tosses weren't
I!!IIN8h to ,overcome the big-play
talents ,or youngster 'Todd

•n

81~. .

Blacklljlge, ' a second-year pro
from~ State~ only his

-second ~albia! Football I.e~
start, toJsed two 10\lchdown pa..and _set 'up.' another with a ~yard
tosstor!lUythe~City~ato

F

an

ou·Bobcats~ 43 6

Blaclrled&amp;e's 18oom~ ln35
. attempt.aror:l8lyardllgaveBengals
Head Olach Sam Wyche material
for bad dreams. The Bengals, 0.2,
mred to get on trac11 when
culll!l'backRayHortonplckedotfa
tipped paaa and returned It 48 yards
for 11 second-quarter touchdown.
The8engalsthenroaredtoal7·14
lead In, ·the third q1181'1er on Jim
Breed\'a 48-yard (leld goal, but
Blackledie raWed the Chiefs to the
1!1-yard UQclldoWn pass on their
next p
ton and Nick Lowery
booted a 52-yard field aoalfor a 24-17
lead.
ClnclnnaUhad alastchancetowln
It, bilt upt end M.L. Harris was
sb tppec1 at the ball by safety Deron
(])enV after a 2&amp;-yard pllaccmplelion to the Ollela' 2&amp;-yanl line with .
Jess~ a minute to play.
"I Just tlloU8bt to mylll!lf. seez," ·
HaiTia IIBld. "l couldn't believe lt.lt
lvaa uR belnlln a dream. I'm not

B)'TIM l"UET
,4-ochWPw. Writer

Western Michigan Coach Jack
Halbaugll 90Unded almost apologetic . aOOit winning Saturday's
Mid-American Conterence college
rootball qlellel' against Miami or

Ohio.

scoring~."

m
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"I thought our offense was
prQduct!ve, but we hall m11ta1ces
and pel!llltlea that took away other

oniY

tolietror

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McEnroe, Navratilova _capture U.S. Open titles

.

Haroau&amp;tt.-ldor

the BI'OIICOiJ'17-13 victory. "There's
a lot or reasons "" sl!Ould bave lest
this game, but I'm prowtofmyteam
for winning."
Steve Hoffman's 1~yard touch·
down pass to Cliff Reed proved to be
the declstve play. OtiB Cheathem
ran tor219yards m39carrtes rorthe

BJmCOS.
''l..oiJing bas beell very fustratlng," said Miami Coach Tim Rose,
wholli! team w~ 4-7last year. ' 'We.
just bave to ftnd a way to go out and
win, and the 1aat 12 ballgameS l!ave
been very toogb for tis at Miami."
Toledo took advantage or 10 Ball
State turnovers for a :»2 victory
wer the Cardinals In Sall,lrday'a
only-other conference game. Conference members were 1-3 In
nonleagueplay, wltbBowUngGreen
the only wlm\er, !55-28 over

Rlchmolld.

l..oiJing on the road were Ncrthern
llllnols, which ·suffered a 27-14
setbacll agalnat Wisconsin; Kent
State, blanked 42-Q by Kentucky;
aJid Ohio University, pounded 43-6
by North Carolina State.

us."

a

John W. Bricker.
.didn't like Dewey

may bave been one or the best kept secrets of the century In Qbservlng his
9lst birthday.
1n an Interview lasi weell with WBNS radio In Columbus, Brlcller said he
didn't bave a very high opinion of the late Thomas E. Dewey, the 1944
Repl,lbUcan presidential candidate who lost the first of hiS two bids for the
White House that year.
. Brlcller, at the time governor of Ohio, was on the ticket as the former
· New York governor's running mate.
· But be saki of Dewey: "We didn't get along very weD_. He was always '
wanting to condemn somebody. I told him to lay o!f that stuff."
,ln '1948, Dewey again was the GOP candidate for the nation's highest
office but was defeated that time by Harry S. Truman.
BrlcllersaklhelllledTruman. "lwascaHeddowlltothe(Truman)Whlte
House to get a special hoi!Or.or some kind. I forget what It was now."
Bricker saki he had his first brush with a well-known politician when he
was 3 years old. He saki he saw Wllllam McKlnley, then an Ohio governor
who later bec!JIYie president, at a social gathering.
.
·
Referring to himself as "we," Bricller said, "We'were 3¥., years old. He .
(McKinley) plclled us up In his anns."
But Bricker said It was his father who Influenced him the most In his
decision to go Into politics. "He was very Interested In politics," he saki. .
although he couldn't remember If his father ever held public otrlce. ·
"I'm ·more than 90 years old, you !mow," said Brtcller, who turned 91
· Thursday.
Bricker bad these observations on other former politicians:
-Former President Dwight EisEnhower: "I Hked Ike EisEnhower. He
was a very capable irian. He didn't llnow (alter his long miU~ career)
whether he was a Republican. He had to be tallied Into it.''
-Former President Richard Nixon: "I always Hked Dick. I thlnll he was
a great president .... I thlnll he was a gieat patriot."
-FormerOhloStateUnlversltyfootbaUcoachWoodyHayes: "Hedlda
great job. I brought him here (to Columbus), In f~.' ' (Brlclcer did not
elaborate except to say that Hayes came to Ohio Stale from' Miami
University at Oxford, Ohio).
-Former Gov. c. Wllllam O'Neill, a reuow Republican: "He moved out
orthegovemor'smanslon tosomeplaceoutlnthecountry.1batwa8asllly
thing."
-PresldentRDnaldReagan: "HewWwln(hlsbklforre-electlon)unless
he makes some awful mistake."
,
·-His wife, Harriett: "She's still Hvlng, you know.... We've always
enjoyed life. We still do.''
··
Bricker said that In aU of his political Hfe, he enjoyed being governor
rncst. He held the o!flce from 1939 to 19l5.
'· ·
"You had friends, and they were there every day.''

m,

.

Steve Morgan rushed for 132 .
'.'
yards for Toledo against Ball State. Reserves to
y
Dan Slmrell, the RDckets' coach,
said, "Our defense had to set the
Tbe 1 \ l e l p - . . . . . , . _ c • . •
tempo, be aggressive and get the wll play Trimble'• rll1..- •
., · t
ball, and they did.''
evflllllc lit 1: 1111
II&amp; Mal 1
His Ball State . eounterpart, sta•m.

pi

p.m.

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Youth in space_·~--_.:_'______;.___.J_ac_k...,-A.,...,..nde_-_r.:._sO_n•.~. N..:
subordinates to develop. He.knows
how 'rasc!iulled young people are
With space. They 8warm to movie
theaters to watch lntel])lailetary
adventure; they play space games
on videO sets.
(
The president hopes to 11ft their
gaze from videO games and movie
screens to the heavens themselves.
He wants to stir their Imaginations,
stimulate their spirit of adventure
and prepire them for the greatest
of all adventures- the conquest o(
space.
This Is also the reason why
Reagan decided to choose a teacher
as the public's first representative
to ride the space shuttle. The
president recognized that teachers
must point the way Into space If
today's children are to master the necessary technology and become
tomorrow's space explorers. ·
How do I llnow the president bad
such lofty motives? WhO am I to say
he dldn 't select a teacher as the first
passenger just to get the teachers'
vote In November,_as some have
charged.
As It happened; I proposed the

·.

NC State pound

a 27·22 ;vlc\OrY over the ClnclnnaU
· BengalS and 112-Q 1ecord.
\IYhlle o\lldenOft was climbing
wer the 2,!iOO«mpletton mark,
alaclded&amp;ewasplllln&amp;offbl&amp;pllly&amp;.
He hit Anjbony Hancock With a
4&amp;-yard ~b fu,ll!t up the Chlefl'
flrst ~· a ~yard run by
Theotla ~- He 'tlll!n tlllled
ariother ~yai'der to Hancock. this
One In the
814-() teed.
Wilen the
~tolll7-14
lead'tnthe
q~.BlacJrlecV' . llll!dtDtumbllltillleball."
·
res~ ,..th llx ~for ,. AlideJIIJII, COIII(llet.ed 24 or :r1
but IW!) Y~, IIi ' a '15-yard
:no~ io become
touchdown llrlve' tq. J'f!KIIIn .the lead •the fourth quarterback' In NFL
one last tlqle. 'lbe,decldlna paWs · hlltorytOreacb!he2.500-completlon
Came 011 II{&amp; '1!1-yai'll toes to Carlol. llllll'k. lfe joined F'ran Tarlrl!ntoll,
~· J L '
JohnJ\YUIIitaaandJimHartwithhls
"UDeiiiJVeiY• Wf're not conalitent jreci,epau~n&amp;, but tailed tothrow a
yet," saki~~ Coach John ~ paas lor the aecond
•
'Madwvlc. ';.What we seem to do Is
straiPt week.· .
BIG PlAY - "•mnc .cttr ~ fteelver ~ H._..,..
· ldtnJ...
•nre,
,,;..Plays
''_SoOIIIW•hereft"'ft~
I""'""'
.......,...
"'lr• "'r
""'
"""'"' the Hnewe've ' c......, a •yU'd ....... __ .._. CbM!II# Br 1Gb' defellller Ray
.... to cdne up with the b"•
..-and move """"'
...,.,.... the field~·""'"'.''
~
""''
'"' pjay· to
Barta (left) durta1
ant- -qwuier
IICUoa ol lbelr NFL 1ame ..
"Weha;vethe,klnllo(offellletbat ll!l!tlntbeendzone," Alldenonsald.
HhedijiUI !It·&amp; 11 S.nday afterllooll. 'l1le CIJief8 tJClilred their 11n1t
gives ~·""""' ".'""'"'•-:~ Blac· ' "Noboily'acuneupwlththeblgplay
·
.._,.......,~saki"'~".....
_ '·~-·-. ..... ~."
•
........._.aathe.-iplayandweallllltodefeaUhe-plllf7·.Z2.(•AP
,........~
"''""
I uerphoto).'

:eo·

3:.

Pegl

Chiefs' big plays.
top.Bengals, 27-22

Is Canada talking____~w_al_iam_F._._Buc_k_ley,;..._l_r. ··:r

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

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Young Astronauts program to the
young astronaut. Never
the ~ '"
White Rouse, and I have been In on
backstage dlscusslons was politics , :;::
the plami/ng from the beginning.
given any precedence.
• ,;,,..
1
A full year ago, the National
Af, a rou~ or the forthcoqllng ';;;
Aeronautics and Space Admlnlstra·
Young Astronaut movement, I was ., ..
tlon flll1Jled a task force to consider . Invited to the launching or .the .'· .:;,;
ways to stimulate young Amerl·
D1scoveJy space shuttle. I can fell -;,.
cans to prepare for the space
young spac;e falls !bat no movie, no :; . ,
challenge. Its first meeting was
videotape can match the real. ;, ·;;
experience. .
.• v
held on ·Aug. 23, 1983, and one
reconunendatlon was to tnylte a
- The stght or the spaceship, ~ ,.,
clinging Hke a huge papoose to the ~··~
teacher to Dy on the space s~ttle.
About the same time, I began
monstrous rocllet, was Inspiring IIi
:
m~lng With NASA officials, Inthe morning Hght. In the full SWI, _ ·~
cluding Administrator James
the rays reflected off Dlacovery~s
Beggs, about the Young Astronauts
gray tiles, projecting a look of pilre
Idea. I presented It to Reagan on
whiteness.
•••
Oct. 14, 1983.
Then the monster came to life
••
· . •Meanwblle; an executive com· witH a . sudden shudder, blew a
mlttee was assigned to recommend
volcanic cloud out or Its laU and, as
:
who should represent the pubHc on
If In a terrible rage, rose agonlz!
future space filghts. Its final report,
lngly oft the ground. For several
'
dated April 4, 1984, listed a teacher
seconds, the taU looked Hke an
l~
first.
Inverted volcano blowing out Ojune, .
On June 19, 1!*, Reagan authoThen It lunged lrito the s11y and
rized the Young Astronauts prodisappeared llke 'a retreating blow·
:
gram, On l\.ug. 27, he agreed With torch Into the stratosphere.
•
the recommendation-that a teacher
For the teacher who rides this
l
shllulc;l be the first civilian In space, monster, 'It should be a · trip to
'
perhaps followed eventually by a · remember.

"EnroU.tl IQ

Pr.a;e• fl-fon Th•'

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. 'IIICXNNIY

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111t1111a .

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We don't need you

l

Art Buchwald
•

"Mr. McTavish, your father tells ballpeen hammer for $900 although more from the weapon than It can
me you would like to work for the It only costs him $7.50. He mllht deliver. Would you be comfortable
Defense Department. In what consider that a fl\lr marllup, and blowing the whistle on our braye
capacity may I ask?"
you would have to take his word ro.r generals and admirals In uniform,
"I'd lllce to be a whistle )llower. lt. But If you had someone to blow many who planned the Invasion of
When I was a little llld all my pals the whistle on him the departmeiJt Grenada?"
"No, sir. But 10011 at It thiS way. If
wanted to Dy an airplane, but my could save a hecll or a tot or
dream was to figure out what one · money.''
we could save billions or dollars on
the junk they're working
re~Uy costs. Any Idiot can drive a · "McTavish, I'm oldy spending
oilr the department could use the
jet fighter, but It really takes brains· ttrrie with you becaUS'e I'm a friend
to find out how a defense contractor o! your father's. But I believe yau
money for somethln~ that works. If
you just _give me a chance I'H earn
ts screwing the pubHc.''
ought to undenii!Dd the facts o(Hfe.
' "You · mean you want to be a We're caHecl' the Defense Depart·
. snitch?"
ment becaUBe we· have to defend
· "No, sir. I want to blow the every cent we aall for our weapons
whistle on the mllliary lnduslrlal systems; Some of !hem work, many
complex and malle sure that t~ others don't. It's nobody's fault. But
taxpayer Is getting true dollar for In order to protect ourselves from
the weapons he Is paying for . I'm people wtio want to e11danger our
prepared to attend the Defense national securitY, we can't have
Department's Whltle Blower's anyone dlalnll for waate and fraud
SchoO! If that Is required of me.''
In our !1¥get. it l'l18lles us lOok •H
"McTavish, would It surprise~ou we don't ltnow what We're dolna."
to know that the Defense Depart"I understand that, alt. But ' I
ment does not have a school for dOn't want to be a publiC whistle
whistle blowers?"
blower. I wo\ildn't run to the press
'"You could bowl me over. I · With an overcharge o( a few bllUon
figured with the biUions or dollars dollars. I woulclj~t report It to the
you people spend every day a lot secrer,ary o( clefe~~~e and then he
must fall thrOUgh the craclls. How could deal with the nwtterthrouilh
do you train YIJW' people to report the oJustlce D!partrnllnt."
someone who Is stlcldng It to the
''The secretary bates wlllstle
government?"
.
blowers.''
"We worll on the !Jonor system
"Wby'r"
over here. Before n!Cetvlng an
"lietause they're not team play·
order ,a . defense contractor must era. A team player never quea~
take an oath tl!at he wW not He, steal the declllonl or t11011e above him'.
or cheat In fulfilling hiS contract and When IOrl'li!one blowl thewhlltleaa
must report anyone wm does, To somethllla tbat'1 WI'OIIIll·reflecta
our llnoWledge no one baa ever ontheentlfedepaJbnentrtctrtupto
.
!1rollen the code."
the secretary himself. If a
"That's .very good, sir. But It's multlbllllon-doUar aystern tbat •
TodayiiMMday,Sept. lD, !he254thdayofl9M. 'lberearell2daysleftln quite possible that lying, steallng · we've lOki the country doesn't pan
thl ,_..
and cheaUngmayncit be defined !he out, It llllot neceuart1y the fault or
JD ]M, Vldlam QullllnB was aentenced to death In Norway for . samewayothefpe&lt;iplethlnkoflt.A the coatriiCtor.ln many caaa the
A ' nllonwlth~.
personlngoodfalthcouldseUyoua ~mDitarylatoblamefordemandlng
41

some or

my lleep In one hour,"
"I'm sorry, McTavish. YOU're a
vary Impressive young man, but we
don't have any positions open right

..

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now.
.. Why not?"

i
"We're bavlng an economy drive
and we're not taldng on any new
whistle bl~rs. As a maiterortact,
to save money we've bet'n ordelecl
to lay off the rats we have now:"

Berry's World

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COmpare CENTURYs 225·per carton
·to the 200 you .get with other brands.
'

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·' ay I·n hI•story
Toa

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Warning: Th.e Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Heahh.

'

FILTER: 15 mg. "tar". 1.1mg. n~ot~e av. per cigarette by FTC method.
&lt;i/1

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• Recently 36local softball players
and families of the Baron softball
team, sponsored b}r Dr. Dwight
'Pugh of Baron's Men's Shop In
Athens, loaded three vans enroute
. to the Amateur Softball Assoctstlon
National Tournament In Overland
Park,Kansas.Theresullwasaflrlt
In area softball as the local men
·Played the best ball of their Uves
which left them as a national power
In 1984.
Baron ttntshed with an 8-2 record,
good for fourth place national

.
and Dutton. IIIey al.lo·IJCOJ't!d two In
the !ourth and one In the Mh on.a
solo home f'\111 by Turrill.
Mule's scored OD!! In the top ol
.the seventh and Baron enlet'ed the
bottom ot the seventh tied 5-5. But
with twooot Gene Wtsedrovehome
RtckAshfromsecondbasewlththe
winning run and a &amp;-5 wtn&gt;

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third to put Baron up 5-4. Lefty's
scored ftve In the fourth to talu! a S-5

Jea4 but the Baronscamel)ackwlth
one In the sixth onJames'll1pleand
a sacr111ce Oy by TurrUJ. Dan
GIIIJsple led of! the sixth with a
dOUble and with one out seven
straight bits by Jeff Swisher, Ed
Baer, Dutton, Jamet!, Turrtll,.Gene
Wise, and Ron Jackson plated
seven runs to give Barons a 13-9

AI!Mber VIctory
Baron erupted tor eight runs In

the Mh 1nn1na to beat Vocke's of
Hamllton, Ohio 12-8 a.s the local
men ~ out seven extra base
hits on doubles by Baer. 'furrtll al1d
Gllllsple, triples by Dutton; James
and Wile, and long home run by
Mike Tun11J,
Featuring a ~hit attack and
major league fleldlnii by second
baseman Mlck Davenport, who

stopped early threats, Baron used
17 players to stop powerfUl Dante
!rom Cincinnati, Ohio 21·7 for their
eighth straight wtn and a spot In the
!Uition's elite flnal four.
After an 18 hour drtve, two short
nights, and nine games In 11 hours,
the powerful Baron engine ttnaUy
ran out of fuel as It left six
b8serunners In the first three
Innings arid feU to Herm and Ray's

win.

·

Before leaving. tournament dl·
rector Elliott Hawke, ' lnfmned
Baron lllllnager Gene Wile that
Mike Turrill was le~ the
tournament In ~~-~
will be presented a_.
t
plaque If his number of
bold up. Baron's record now
at112·:.l.

hom=

· Reds' rookie pitcher.
.i:: defeats Dodgers, 5-1
.

.

Payton said. "It means more to
chase the l'OO&gt;rd than to have It."

The·'Chlcago Bears runner, who
together power and speed In a
rare combination, did some record·
chasing and 110111e Jecutt!-settlng
Sunday In a 27~ Nalklnal Football
League romp cr.ter the Denver
pitll

Broncos.

.

yan!sclosertoJimBrown'sau.~~me

NFL ruablng record of 12,312 yards
and surpassed Brown's mark In a
lesser-known categmy, combined
I'\ISillni and receiving. '
Payton now baa 15,517 total yards,
bettering Brown's15,459. Payton Is
447 yai'lq behind ihe career rushing
l'OO&gt;rd.
Also "f"''"' of Payton In the

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Pomeroy-Midd~ Ohio

rushing Yan:taie derby Is Franco
Harris, M, will made his Seattle
debut with 46 yards on 14 canies,
giving him 11,996 In his 13-year

daSh or his »year career, Which
came off the wl'llllg fonnatlon.
Payton, whosaldhis.ulllmateaoaJ
Is to gain ll5,(XX) yards rush!J1g,
career,l31aheed o!Payton,
Invited Brown to .,e In altelldance
In othel' NFL games Sunday, ·It shoold Payton break his recoccL
Another record was lll!t when
was Miami 28, New England 7;
Chicago 27, Denver 0; St. Louts :n, . Chicago placeldcker Bob Tbomas
Burrato 1: Detroit 21. Atlanta :u 1n kicked a Oeldgoal and his lint extra
overtime; Kansas City 27, Clncln· point. ThefooqX&gt;IntsgaveblmM21n
natl22; New0rleansl7, TamPa. Bay his Chicago career, SIIJliii8IIIDK
13; and Philadelphia 19, MinneSOta George Blanda's team recortlof5U.
17; LoiiAngeleBRams~.Clevelan~ .
GlluU28,~7
17; ,Indianapolis 35, I:Jouslon 21; Los
Phil Simms had his Aeallld
Angeles Ralden28. GreenBay7 and stralgl!t si!'OOg performance at
quarterback and got plenty of help
Seattle31, SanDiego17.
Wasblngton Is at San Francisco from the Giants defense.
Simms flral three twchdown
tonight.
passes,
giving him aeven In
The · Bears, 2-C, dominated
York's
two vtctorle,s, while his
DenveF, 1-1. In all aspects of the
game, ootgalnlng . the Broncos teammates sacked ~ Cowboys'
' 40&amp;-100. Denver tUrned the ball (111er Gary
five times and
four times en route to Us llrstslwtout roroeci tour turnovers. ,Linebacker
loss In 85 regulaNJellllOII games, Lawrence Taylor had three or the
sacks.
_
dating back to 1978._
Pafton Wal! referring fo his Wllh the score 14-0 and Dallas 011
72-yard run, the IOI!gll!llt touchOOwn the Giants' 61n the secom quarter,

New

"*boom

Taylor sacked IJoflelxKmandmade
him tumllle. ~ ball was picked up
by linebacker Andy Headen, will
raced 81 yards tor a touchdown.
'
Bei1Nt28,Padrenl1
Los Aneeles klllcked Green Bay
quarlertlack Lynn Dickey out of the
gamewi!Jt a bnllaed back In theftrsl
two minutes, then shut down the
Packenl' passing attack the rest of
the game.
~ Raney Wright took over
tor Dickey and the Ralden' .
~ry.ledbycornerbacksM!ke .
HaYJ&amp; and Lester Hayes, held blm
to 10 IUllpletlons m 23 passes tor67
yards and two Interceptions.
Jim Plunkett bad a lllUclltbVn
pasa· and Marcus .AIIen a 7·Yard
scoring run to lead -the Raiders'
otfense.
I .
...... ,. . . . Pa&amp;rloU 7
Dan Marino Increased IIIII two- ,
. game kltal to sevm11&gt;passes as he
tolaed a pair of scoring stt1kes to
Mark Clayton within a. 1: 36 span of
tbl! third quarter to lead Miami.
'l1le Dolplins, will bave won 17
stralght.aames over the Patriots In
the Oranse Bowl, broke away !rom
a 7·7 balftlme tie as Marton bit
Clllyton on , a 38-yard play and
coonected with him again 011 a
15-)'arder after a Patriots' tumble.
Miami Intercepted tour pa • et by
Steve Grogan, Including two by
Glenn Blackwool. Mike Kozlowski
returned another Interception 26
yards, thelt lateraled to WIWam
Judsm, will ramllled another 00
yards tor a toucbdown.
i
Cw
"17, 8111'7
Nell Lomax pa ed for two
· IOUCilciOwns imd Ottls Anderson
. IIC01'Ild twice as St. Lools buUt a 31~

NO STOPJ'ING .WALTEB- Chicago Bean' rllllllinrbad! Walter
Pa)'ton slep8 IIIIo acUon Sunday bt Chlcap during tbe Bean-Deaver
BI'OIICOB' prne. Tile Bean went on towlnthe game 27-0al'ayCqa bro1re

5

Jim Brown's Nlldonal Footbllll League combiaf!d yan!age ~ . ol
JS,Q8 by gaining 188 ·plllllllac and rushing yards for 1J total ot 15,517
yardl. Payton IA447yardssbort at Brown's rushlns record ofl%,312. (AP

rpldo).
Dickerson, who gained 102 yards

. Ia

lead.
BARON 80II'l'BAU TEAM- Memllen .. tile lourill piiMle Buua
te.n were, fnlllt row J.r - CcNidl o.e \\'lie, M1lle .Jc' 011, Billy
l'c"·-1, Rick AM, .,._,. o.pe, Georp ...... - . Sam Roi:JbGu.
SeooM row l.r - Tam WoodB, ,Jerry ~Dean)' DuUon, Gft!l

By'l'he 4 m.d "*edPtw.
'lbeNewYorkMetswontwoofthe
three pmes IIIey played against the
Chicago Cubs this weekend. It may
not have been good elloUgh.
Wben the series between the top
two teams In the National League
East began, Chicago had a sevengame lead. When II was over, the
bllngtearnlneachgamewaselther
shut out or held to one run and the
Mets were within six games.
That doeSn't SJUnd that bad untO
you realize each team has but 19
games to play.
"They ueeded a sweep and they

Pbllllel8, ExpJs 5

~~;~

~~~:.:::e~:

'1:

Ord

l

\

Diet.Pill Sw..plng U.S, "

'New Grapeftutt
Pill' Gives·.

Fast

.o arnn .,
Proven DietJablat

-·__.

""'_.,

.,
' '
lNTEBCEPnON - New York Gleelll' Terr)'
: ' Klurd,,rtpt,lleplln front of Ron
IBp
aUbe
. . Dallu c-bap to b!&amp;eroept lbe baD In tile ftnl
' quarter·af !lundaJ'•III-'7 Glelltwln ·~leiiii.Stl"'lnm

.'· .

..

Majol'8

-c.u.·-·

f"

---

r-------------------------1 -·

NOTICE

•w-.-.:::.=
. ...................... . . . . ...
•:w

--

m

,• ..,. u

S..ertl

'

1

12·91, !nl

-

"" "'67

.

"

'

58

M~a
-: ' . cauroma
' . O!k:BRO

13
12

1

IB
10
10
76
18

n

66

e.;
63

Olltland
St'llnlr 1'Pxas

Kl

.~14

Top

-

'"'

1

.460

T

_,

1~

""'

. 441 10\l.t
A40 10\1

No.. 1. Miami , F'la .. c2-1...01 b.\1 to Mkit·
taan :U-14 . N&lt;'Kf: at Purdue. Saturdi~-No.. 2. N('l)raska 11.0.01 brat Y..~

MIMt'IOta !\., ~ 4

r.-trou 10. Tcnlto 4

q-7, ~ :

Olki.S 9, C'k'Ydand 5
NfW York ~. 8ot10116
Callfoml1 ~ Chlci~~jt~ !I
O.JUroon&gt; !S, Mltwauk«&gt; :\
l&lt;ana.u Cl~· ~ ~Hie&gt; 4

No. 3. C1emaon i:l:-0-0) beel Vlr'R'\11 ~
0. Nmt : 11 CirorJ(II, ~ . :12.
No. 4., UCLA tl-60) bl'al " San ~
Stl!ll.' 18-L'i. N"t l..&lt;qc:. Beech Stale, S.t '

CJrwland tf. Olkland 5
7, 'I'tlulto ~
BllllmDI"&lt;' t. MIIWI\Ikft' 0
Bolton J(l,' NPW \'cl'k 1
1'rlcu I, Mlrlnola .1

"""·"'-·

Detro!'

'

..
• •
•' I

• • •'
, ,·

C)ty l

urooy.

""'"~ &gt;

' No. 7, Notll' o.m.- t0-1-0J on to Purdulo 23-21 . N.&gt;xl: ai Mldltpn g.~. Sllhlrdl.y.
, No. ~ "ub.lm tG-l-01

'IO&gt;i..........,..

, NrN Ylri: t~ 1-3) ot Toronto
tStlfob tf-51, tnt

Kania

' Ct~·

tCubba lO.llt

at

No. 9, Al.ilt.ma to-1.01 loll lo IU1m
38-.11 . N('Xt: at C'oEOr~ Tt'Ch. Sat·

unloy.

No. 10. Iowa 11-&lt;1·01 beat Iowa Sta~ •

n . Next : Penrl Satre. Sat\ll'dll'.
No. U. Penn !IlK' !1..0.01 beet RutR"'"!

Min-

tSmJftllorl13-l2J. 'till
!
Tf!xu tllrllrwll R-91 al St-ettlt tl3rank'
1CHl!l. tnl

lH2 . Ntx'l t at Iowa,~ No. 12. ~ Stare 10.1...01 bit to 011: ·. •
llhDml Stat(&gt; 6-3.. Nel{t: S.n. .bt&gt; Sta~.
&amp;1\int.y .
No. tl. Br~atMn v~ t2.00l nt
Blylor 17·13. Nrxt: 'l'llkY. Satw'dly.

...

Cl\lc~RCh cDotam ·t:J.tH at Oakland

cnl

JOWTiil12-71,

'

........,._OIIDM

.. .

-

..
..

•

!II
Ill

Nl"W York
&amp; . Louis

• •
t ~) •

'

'

,,'

..
I'

'11
..

67

ll!
,.
.. Ill
WllllfOIVPIN
8J c
""'DI&lt;IO

·~

-.A-

7J

n n

lbiMCII

...lAo

Ill T•
b, • 1t

'

~

. fll1 ll '

. !'i9
-~

.:t:IJ
.48:1

11

11 ~
1~%

... "

81

11

11

.01

-. •,

w. \llrFI! !0. ............. .

-c....,. .. ,._,. :n
~ II&amp;. VlrP"• 0
o.... :ll,lndluall
F1orldo 21, LIIU 21, dr

......... .. S.i\1-lt

....,..a,...

Qldooad ll,oo A - I

...;

-Ctltoe--

-··~0 ·

..,,_&amp;A-·

lpl! c.£.:-:.11 ) 11 Chi·
,.ffJJ tTru.tt SUI
N

'

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-U.H,C...._SI.9
A!lllt so. IS, IW!..... 12

~""""vcroo
....
_ , CI!&lt;Oonlll ,

!I. Laulll,-1
!'I'" Yn ~ ~ I
lllillli!IO &amp; 4

WIIS

Colle@e scores

"'"""""'2

~~-~~.u....,.,

M••.

Nrat: at "-'-. Saturoay.

11~

~--

17.

No. 1), Florida Slalf (1-(l.O\

.... f'Jon&lt;llal ,, A - 0

!II. ........

If Pltub&amp;rgh. Saharday.

Plt1.Wrych tfH.(h wu Mllto .
Oklahoma. S.turday.
18. Bollm c~ 12-0·01 1:11'11 All·
s:Jl. Ntxt : N&lt;r1h ClldiMI 11 FOX·
tlDro,
sept. Zl.
No. 19. Wu~ U.(J..Ol beat North&gt;
wt"SSem ll&amp;O. Ntxt : '" Mld1!«.,, Satu r• day.
'
'

.rm
"
.48:1 tl

..

Nrxt :

No.
Nt&gt;xt:
No..
bam11

.!86 -

.til\ 14%
.m ZJ

-·-

lin ,.. wta:o
Cb:lnnoH

No. tft Oklahoma tl-0-01 ~at Sllnford

1~7 .

W L I'd. riB

,.
74

...........

.....

No. 14, M~ cl-O·Ih bftl Mwnl ,
Fla. 7Ht. NfX1: WI"*'~ S.IW'diY·
No. ~ blll.'n\ MethOcllt ' (00.0\ Wll5
Wt'. Nt'xt ; II LOuiSVIllt, S.n.day.

NNo York at Toronto. tnt
Oriroll at Balllm:~re, tnt .
MllwauW t,llblm, (nl
l&lt;anu~ City 11 Mln~a . t nl
C'ko\..,.land .t C111llomla, tn )
Ttxu 11 Srtttk. tnt
' Oil(• II OikiMd. 111 1.
NA'I'IONAL LEAGUE
EMil' DMIION

Chlr...,

w• klk&gt;. Next : at

Colk'f.cl'

Detroll 1~r 8-91 at Ballirnol'(l_
1FJan.aan 11·01, II)
Mllwl~ tSunon lHH 11 BoRton
tBuyd 11).91. '"'

Mmtsotn, SaNniay.

No. i. Ohio Stall.' llWI belt Or\1lOft
&amp;Iff ZZ-14. Ncxc: Was,Nn~ Slitlt'. Sal ·

..

or... •o.-2
......o.....
-

~.

unloy.
No. ~ Tc-x.u 10-001 was kilo. Nc&gt;xt : Au·

...,.,.OIIIVII

"

Fared

col~

!Wu*T" GII'RM

•'

Tw~ty

How thl&gt; Associall!'d Pn-ss: Top ~ty
bo4bllill I('Ml..&lt;i (al'l'd In tlo..• pllS:I

... '

'19

li2

.......

··~~

.Ill! "~

1M

,_..G_

Pl'lbdP!phia al ~
St . Louis at ~- York. IR l

Montmal at Plfl~llth- 1n1
, San ' Frant'i..ovo al Cincinnati, tnl
Allantil at Hwston; In I
,
l4i A~ at san o~. '"'

,'ll8

M!BI' DIVJjlfJN

Kansas OIY ,

.

( ,u&gt; • PTe~).

,
OnlY l(arrK'S SC"ttfduuc'd

..

Mllwaulft

.

tot~eiHiowD.

St Lo.ds: (LaPoirlt S.lOI al Np,r.• York
lf'l'mandN. f-41. jnl
MlnfrMI IPalm:!r &amp;..11 .al Pltuburgh
1Ciftdl!tm1a 12-101. lnl
Atlanta ISrnlln 0-{J) at Houston IRyaD

. . -.~·nod~d~d ~
AMBIIG\N U!'AGUE .
EMil' OIYIIION
W L I'd. 01
ll«roll
.613 9'.2 ~
Toronto
.!163 II ~
a........
11 .. -* 14 '
N~~W York
5391&gt;
~

',

.In Eaot Ba&amp;berford, N..J; K'-t~Mia I d lbe bel.
yard!! to the 16 yard be to set up lbe _...... Gleet

Scoreboard ...

•

-·-·

nn.c.....,~~,~.....,..

&lt;•&gt;

!\a

r;:====::;:=====:;i

mannan",

-.....a.aowwl1

'-

as

U...I'J,....._.

ooacluded with Ed Murray's win·
nlng 48-yard tleld goal.
' 'l1le big play In the drive was
Danlelsm's :n.yan1 pass to David
Lewis down the middle for a first
down at the Atlantll 34. A J!IOITII'III
later, Murray booted the gamewtnner.5: 06lnto the extra period.

......

''

Interception
the'Rams. run
. for a touchdown for
Eaglesl9, Vlldngs 17
Ron Jaworski threw a 1-yard
touchdown pass to tight end John
Spagnola with two seconds left to
give Philadelphia - Its narrow
victory.
.
'l1le Eagles llrove 59 yards on 11
j:iays for the winning score, which
came after the VIkings appeared to
. stopPhlladelphla'sWUbertMontgo. men' short of the goal Hne. But a
face-mask penalty gave Jaworski
another chance.
.
JaW(I'Skl said ;dter Montgomery
was stopped. , "I was already
walking olf the field dejected. I was
headed for the bench thlnklng we
were0-2. ThenlheardabouttheOag.

Cary Danielson conipleted 22of31
passes for Detroit and Ellglneel ed a
51-yard drtve In overtime that

•

"

yards on Six carrtes In the drtve that
saw the Rams march 61 yards to the
Cleveland 9.
Leroy Initn bad an 81-yard

In the opening 14 minutes and
Anderson al.lo IIXll1ld !rom the 2 to
belp the Cardinals · !Julld a 2W
halftime lead.
Stump Mllchell set up two~
with a J9,.yard kickoff return and a
3&amp;-yard punt return.

.

Loss

U..U.

I just prayed ·tt would be agatDst
thm~."
'
··
Colts 35, Oilers %1
Mike Pagel threw three touch·
down passes and scored once
himself to rally Indianapolis.

LDmax delivered 4-yard soorlng
passes to Roy Green and Anden!on 01127carrteslnthegame,got48ofhls

1111111!11, Bay Van Maire, Ba.Jie .Jeebon, Ed Baer, '11m Hood. Third
,. row J.r- .Jaell .JW!Uoe, Ed Kllleekl, Mille TurreQ, Glendon Vlnlon, &amp;Jick '
Davenpori, .Jell Swlllnr, Rex Cummlnp.
I

Mets .still need ·sweep this weekend;
Padres dump second. place Astros

:m~·~(U=-~~Kel: ~=~~~~~

u••,...

.

'

High school results

Meigs captures
three
meet ·

.

"..

.

Browillng sald he felt relaxed
from the first Inning, expla1nlng his
strategy this. way: "They told me
Just to tbrow my oormal pme, todo

;

••

series !rom Atlanta but were still
Plncb-bllte!" John Russell lofted a mathEmatically eUmlnated !rom
sacrUicefl;ywlththebasesloadedln NL West p~nnant contention hethe 11th Inning to snap the Phlllles' cause or sau Diego's vtctoJy.' San
six-game losl!l8 streak. Rich Scbu Francisco broke a 44 tle In, the
what! cando."
singled with one out In the top ot the bottom of the seventh inning as
II' Isn't the first lime loa An&amp;eles
11th oft reliever Joe Hesketh, 1-1. Maney Trillo drove home one run
baa been victimized by a newcuner
Glenn Wilson doubled him to third, ·with a sacrifice tJ;y and Bob Brenly
No D'-Ung - Ell AH You W1nf
to the league.
chas!ng
Hesketh.
Dick
Grapenthln
knock€(~
In
the
other
with
a
slngle.
.
PIH Don All till Wotlr ,
"We've had trouble with unproven plicbers all year," said
walked plnch·hltter Slxto Iereano . - ' - - - - - - ' - - -'---t BEVERLY HILlS, CA. (Special) .
Dodger' siD'tstop Dave Anderson.
Intentionally, setting the stage for
An am8zina new "super" grapd'rult
''W~'venever seen Browning before
Russell.
pill has recently been dev~oped and·
and It takes time to find a pitcher's
pcrfeaed that reportedly "suaran·
~.
Cardinals 2, Plntes 1
tees" that you will easily lose at least
- ~·He went 3-2 to me In the first
·to pounds in 10 days. Best uf all, it
Danny Cox and Bruce Sutter
Inning, - and then came with a
allows you to "eat as much as you
combined on a seven·hltter and
screwball. He's oot bad.'' want of your favorite foods and still
The Reds took a 2-ll lead In the
lose a j)Ound a day or more stadina
from the ;very flrSI daY until you
!ourth 011 RoaOester'aiDtleldslngle,
achieve the ideal weight .a nd fiiUfC
Eric Davia' double, an RBI·
·; Dodgers.
Ron
you desire."
·
: . "We trted to get him that shutout, grounder by Cesar. Cedeno, and a
In other NL games. Sunday, extended his National League save
This
"super"
arapcffjlit
pill is-a
:·..but he was about out of gas." said sacrUice fl;y by Alan·Knlcely.
Philadelphia needed 11 lnnllqpl to record with his 40th of tbe serum.
~ Rew/D
dramatic:ally
iinproved
version
ofthe.
Orel Henbtser, &amp;8, took the loss,
':- ,Reds player-manager Pete Rolle.
defeatMoolmll ~5. St.I.oulsedged Jose Del EOII, ~13, hasn'twon slJlo!
'Nithuut Dieting
world
famous
srapcfruit
diet.
It
is far
• ··"He was very relaxed out there. . his fourth In a row.
Plttsburgti2-1,SanDiegoclobbeied Julyl2,aspanol11stai1slnWhlcb SANTA BARBARA, CA (NTP
effective
than
the
orisinal
and·
more
Hershlser gave up two more runs Houston 8-4, Clnctnnatl downed Los the Pirates have scored 17 runs and News ScrVi&lt;:e)-A revolutionary diet
: He'saUttleUkeFernando (Valenzu·
eliminates
''them~.
fuss,
and
hiah
•
: :eta). He throws screwbaUs even In theetgllthwhen RataeiLandestoy Angeles5-1,andSimFranclscobeat been shutout twice.
tablci-NUTRI-THIN-thatlels you
cost
of
eating
half
a
fresh
grapefruit
booted a doobJe.play gmmd ball Atlanta6-4.
Pllllres8,AIItros4 ·
. cal what you want, when you want,
.·. 'When he's behind In the count."
at every meal."
'lbeCubll' maglcniDDberillldsat
ThePadreslncreasedthelrleadln is takina the c:ountry by storm.
:; • · . Browning, who gave up 10 hits, with tlie bases loaded.
"N Doel AU tile WOrk"
14 becauseoftheloss;buttollstento the NL Wesl 10 nllll! games over the
This amazing formula lets you lose
· ·•• wa8 within two outs ol becmllng the
According
. to the manufacturer, ·
Chicago Manager Jim Frey you Astros and reduced their magic
weight withour aaonizlna · emcise,
·: • 1!rst National Leaguer Ina decade to
"the
pill
itself
does .all the work while
would think It was just the opposite. number to 11. Mark Thunnond and calorie countina or tssteless powdered
:• : :pitch a shutout In his first big-league
you
quickly
lose
weight with NO star•
•• •-start.
"""""'
a. c..... .,.., 0
Tm days !rom now, the NL East
G
supplements.
O.la'(la 7, Qt. Counlry Dly 1
Rich J&lt;ll&amp;age allowed elgiii.Jiits as
Poundl Fade QU:kly, Easily
vation "diet menus" to follow, NO
BnAlidlfW 7, GariPid Ht&amp;. I
• ~ But three straight singles, capped
race cculd. weD be over If past San Diego Jllll)ped ·to an W lead
According to reports throughout calorie oounting, NO exercise, an~
. byGregBrock'srun·scortngllnerto
1eaxds hold up.
after two Innings. Steve Garvey and the country, Nutri.Thin users have NO hunger pangs." !tis IOO'Itll!lfe.
........ N . I I . - - 1 3
canton Cltll. z. Ntw ftt r IPtil 13
right, spoiled his bid and knocked
NextWft'kend,theMetswUlvtslt CllnneloMarttnezeachdrovelntwo lost 10, 20, 30 pounds or more In .You simply take th~ pill with a aJiss' ·
Caa1on ~ ll. v-.. Cllrtlf• ll
·&gt;: him out olthe game.
Chicago's Wrigley Field for three runs for the Padres IIIey battered
surprisina!Y short time by takq one of water before each meal and the
Ot. Mo!Ow a. Mllml ,.,.,, CaUntu
games. So far tbla year the Cube Mike LaO., 7-4, whostartedtorthe tablet with a slass of water before amazing oombination of powuful in-.
:: . : Former Dodger Ted Power got 0 co.. ,.,.,. Ed !13. !loy.- 0
each meal.
have won !Ill six Jiames pla)'e!lln vtsitors.
pedients are so effeaive they ~
ct.. Pla'·M•r 13, 0.)'. PI II ct.Jt. 0
• - -the ttnal two outs for his seventh
en. !MIImlt tt, w~ Bn:Jwn o
Chicago, a fact the Mets are well
·Gianllle, Bravea4
"Pounds and fatty tiS;Sue seem to over and you start losing wC:iJbt im•
·:save,
a.. ...- ... _
..
awareof.
TheGiantsSWI!ptthethree-game fade away," says a satisfied user, mediately.
"
0.. HolY - I I . Voloy F - I
: The iast NatiOnal League pitcher • a..
'Mo.... _ .
What
theCubllcouldn'tdolnShea
"and
I
can
eat
decent
mcals
...
with
Pll a. ALL Dally l'ltlmllll "
to burl a slutout In his first start was
c...-..~,
The powerful and unique combinaCd. Wantnon U. Wftl«vUUt, s. 12
Stadium Sunday was come up with
no hunser panp!
.
St. Louts' Harry Rasmussen on July
solid relief for starter Scott Sander·
Ull1111t F...Ja Melts Body Fit
Gnnd Vat lt, C.,.._ 1
tion of Ingredients are what Jlllke this
21, 1975.
lfamll1oa 11!0~ 13, C... Wlbd lllllo 0
son,
will
pitched
five
scoreless
The
Dally
Sentinel
The keys to Nutri-Thln's proven a "super-pill". It oontaina hiahlY poThe last . Cincinnati hurler to
"'""'"'w. -..31,-lloood'
lea
and tested formula are alucomannan
umo Co111..2 1 . - • ..- 1
accomplish the feat was Wayne
lnnllqpl before being forced to
ve
(USPB 1 - )
and papain. Oluoomannan Is an as· tent papcfruit ooncentrate and a dilll"'
....... ,.~hi
with back,spasms, a conditiOn that
"Dl•llloe or MIIMIIMIIa. lac.
toundina fiber derived from I he .etic to help eliminate l!loat ~ puffi•
SlmpsmmAprl19,1970,a.Wvtctory
M.llwm U. Ncemmu MOW'I D
put
him
oo
the
disabled
list
for
a
KonJ·rooc. It_.,_
tn·-~e ness. No need to take any vitamins to
at Dodger Stadium. There have
Published every arternOOn. Monday
•w- cal-'·
ua-.; ....,
--!1,-Mtoml•
month
earlier
In
the
season.
lhroutlfl
Friday,
m
Court
St
..
y
the
an~
works
wonders
upon
the
dises· maintain )'Our aood health and tina'·
rwwart C.-ll. Z. Jo1 I . . lb111't11111P
been 69 pitchers In the majors will
0
Ge&lt;qe
Frazier,
5-3,
started
the
.
~hl~au~y
Pu~shln«
Coo'
:
:&amp;""l{!;:'
•
l·
tive
tnltt,
speeillng
up
tlie
burning
cif BY. The pill is fortified with ~L
-opened their careers with slwtouts.
Nllo!~IT,CIP. Eoool
..
o..nyleldedonly
~
1
m
a,
nc..
moroy.
o
4.
~.
h
.
· - - · fat.
(IOO'Tt) of the U.S. Government cllily
Inning
sixth
ha ... ,.._...
"""lll!;
992·2156. Second c-last postage paid at
...~-Browning, who burled a seven·
Oak H a - I L - 1r.-., 7
vitamin requirements.
'
"--31. ·N.~7
earned·runbthislast191nnlllPOYer
Pomeroy.
Ohto.
Papain
is
the
natural
enzymt
of
Inning no-hitter for Wichita, has
J\oi........ _ ! I I . E . - 0
('eet.,. ,...,.._ ·~· . , .••
eight appearances. Mookle Wilson
Member: The As... lated Press. ln· . papaya, which peatly accelerates the
RlduYatd Ha. 7, lndiPlllftft« 1
pitched protessiOnaily only since
Each pill also «intains an amu·
tripled
011
Frazier's
first
pitch
and
land
Dally
Press
Auoclallon
and
the
I
cfi&amp;estion
of
food.
In
addl~on,
Nutrl:
RDdoy 14, llnJoOiyo •
1982.
Suldu!IQo !IJ.IIt)' 14. ......... !ll. PaUl
Keith
Hernandez
doubled
for
a
HI
American Newsptper Publlohors AI·
Thin
contairtJ
e
diuretic:
whl~h
help!
inaly
effective , amowrt of "&amp;luoo"I was more thrilled today than I 0
"""lalton: Nauonal AdWri!Aing RA!pro·
eliminate body ftUlcl, a primary con,
,..... lila. II. a.. .,_ w_a
the remarkable 'natural
lead.
. teattllvt, Brailllam Newapopet Salet,
. tributor 10 ='--lty.
was with the no-hitter at Wichita,"
,__,struck
t
but
733
.
T
itlnl
Av
..
OI*, New YoriO, New
.,.....
dietlry
fiber
dlsoovery from JI!IJ&amp;ll
Darryl S~.,
Browning said. "This Is the lllghtest
00
~~
~ ~~~~
(llled IWBBfuUy
over · IDJ
'l'riONn1y N. II. N - Tn11 0
1
level.' ~
reached first and Hernandez third
Nutri-Thin ~ automatk:ally ysn) that expands In your stonlach
n.c.I'IM'u Cant. -. ldll Vile)' s. o
w..,.. W. -.e 22, a . . "It woold have been niCe to have
011 a third-strike ,...od pitch. GeorJ!e
~~~~":~
In the aystell(. The uier's ''biological and alvea you a fuU lnd satisfied feel·
•
.
. the shutout, but you can't have 12 Y(lU"'· ......... !ll.l:rtt
FoeterchasedFrazlef~
·
a
nRBI'
meroy.
OIIIo-.
clod"
tells It when to work its Ina IIJ day Jona,
tPa.) Prtp 0
I
•
everything," be said. "It's pretty
single and that bi'OUillrt on Warren
,
IUI8Call"nON RATICII
wei&amp;ht·reduclng mqlc.
' The super-pill illlmdy sweeolna
Brusstar, wham Broo1cs greeted
1r contor.,. • - ..,.
All Nutrl·Thin lnaredients ere the oountry with alowina reporti o'f
hard to flU Solo's sooes."
with a three-run blast 10 i1gllt, his
One w........................................uo
IOO'Vt naturel-110 drop, preser,ve· euy and fast welaJtt loss from for·
Tl'llll88ctions
15th heme!' of the year.
One Monlh .................................suo
tlvea or caffeine. It contalna all the
167
10
Darling, 12-6, illlowed five hits
One Year " jjjj:iiji:j'Ci)Pii"""" ' '
USROA minimum dally vitamin re- merly overweJabt mle In all ~ka
of Hfe who III'C now slim, trim ,'and
M 0 NT REAL £ICPil
Nle111ed BID
tbrcalghetglltlnnlnpandwaaUtted
PJUCD
qulrementa. Look aood and feel
I
lnfavtroiJeseeOroecoafterOary
Dolly ............. ...................... l5C.nll
.aoodl Oct in lhape ancllote thote lltJ'III:II~ qaln.
way
-- . . - . fll - · .,. .
Now Aftllable to Public .
- · - led oft the ninth with his
S.bo&lt;rlbon not dellrlaa to PlY tlweor·
· unatptly, unattractive 'n tra pounds
NEWYaui-Ma.u..,,..
You can .order yow; supply of
The M'elgs crOss coUntry team
r1er m~y mnl1 ta t&lt;lvonoe illne11o
quli:kly and aatly. Order , Nutri·
J!l!al--.
12tblmlerun
oi~IMIIOO.
11te0oll)'
Saodnel
on
oUor
Umoa1h
Tbln
today.
· 1'- hiah!f.' succ:easfUl ''IIIP!II'"
won a three-way meet In both the
, · . No....,.,._.:..__.
__
nlontb.Crodl1
' will be "wneorrierft&lt;h
.
_.._.._
arapefrult pllll (now available dil'ect·
boys and girls «&lt;lvv5klns, defeating
· Send Sll for a IS_.y supply, S20 Jy from the manufiiCtuter by flllll
Alexander and VInton Coonty.
No IUblerlpiiOOI ..,. maU pOrmltlod In
for a 01\.Aan. --au or~ Mil order only) by sendina $12 for 1 .
Melgs'RexHaggywasthesecoad .
lowal whore home eorrltr ........,. II
- • .......,.
-·
"-~
I+day supply (or Sl(), lor s JO!daY ·
avollabl•.
. wl!h 1 .o.day iuPPIJ for only S3S,
overall In the bays followed by Dave '
supply,
oi S3S for a 60-day sui!Piy) .
plus Sl for p as1111 and ltaildltiiJ.
Hendricks, lowth. Dave Warth,
Tht Syracust·locil• Regional Sewlr District
cub,
check,
or money order' to: ·
Send - · dleok or IIICiitey order to
sixth, Eric Johnson, ninth, Cbrta
Citrus
Industries,
9903 Suta
13 WO,Oitl ,............. , .......... ........ hUI
Nl111U·nDN PllODUCI!,
w.
Will • Smoke Tllti.. All Sewer lines
Kennedy, 111h, James SJIYdf/r, 12th.
12
~
Coca Si.• Dept. ... ,!lanta .... Monica Bl., Dept. 705,
:~tWoeu ..................................
Chris Shank, 14th. Jeff Nellcln, 18th,
In
SJr•ust
and
laclnt.
,Nra, CA HIOJ, VISA OR MAS- Hilla, Calif. !lOUZ. (U~
G1'1!i Fields, 19th. and Chip Werry, .
llfJf . . . . '
13 w........................................ I!UO
TllRCARD O.K. Said card number, ~
Tllti.. Will lttln In SJFICUit On
1111 Woeu ........................... ....... $31.20
m.
expiration
date
and
atanature.
FOR
/lid.)
Vila,
Mutercud,
and
Apr.
52 W........................................ ISUO
·
In the glrlsdlvtslon. Meigs Wencly_
f'ASTBR
sBRVICB,
CALl
TOLLExpreu
OK.
(Send
ClrCI
numblt\
exTuesdaJ, S.ttmber II, 1914
' II you how '
: • Kloeli .... first overall while Erin
FRI!I! I..IOI).Gt.7aa, OPBRATOR llirldoa dille. llld IIIDitura.l ,For
otoblerN eall our
Finllhlnt up Ill ltJCine.
- - a1 1112·f15e before 8:00 P.
~ (For cndlt card orden onl)'). U,_
futllt IIII'VIce for cradlt Cll'd arden
- AIJdeiUIWBI third.
M. Moodoy lhru friday .
.COIIdlllotlli , . , b«k /IIUIIYIIIt«.
ONLY
c111 toll frw 1-(~
1be next Melp ~ Is qalnlt
The T•lillfWIII Tab
DaJI .To Complete. ~.
e•*
6762t
ut.
7111. • = 51 o~a~~~ -.
Federai..JioM!ilhli~·
' : LOS ANGELES (AP) - Clncln·
.: nail's T&lt;m Browning, a 24-year-old
: left-bander fresh up !rom the
.. mlnOfll, learned on Friday that he
; . would pitch In his first big-league
. game because schetluled starter
Marlo Soto bad to .be with his
expectant wife.
"It didn't hit me at first, but ahaU
.- hour.later,I reaDy started thlnldng
•'- about It and had butterflles," said
&lt; Browning, who was toldofhlsdebut
· - Friday after runtng ul;l from
· Wichita of the American
Assoclatkln.
He didn't have any butterflies on
Sunday, coming within two outs ol
• Pitching a slwtout and settling tor a
• }1 victory over the Loll Angeles

.

Payton, In only ~carries, gpt 179

run

'

B)' WilLIAM B. BARNARD
AP 8parte Wrler
, For Walter PaYton, chasing a
record Is more fun than ac~
gettlngm~e.
' .
"Grola Into the game I really
didn't think about the record,"

•

Soortngelghtrunsln theftnalfour
1nnlngs Baron coasted to a 1().4 win
~anking.
over Sportsworld or Des M'Oines,
• Baron got a quick taste ot Iowa. HlghUgbtlng the game were
·national competition as Maxie's ol two long solO home runs by Jeff
·Kansas City, Mo., scored 12 runs In Swlsber and G1'1!i James and two,
ihe first Inning: Maxie's then held · two run, two out pinch hit singles by
·ott acomebackbyBaronwhichsaw Rick Ash and Ed Kincade.
them score 11 runs sparked by
Danny Dutton and Greg James'
Playing their fifth straight game
three hits apt~. l:&gt;lltton also Sept. 2 ag$81 tournament favortte
homered twice and James once, but Budweiser ot. Hooston, Texas,
It wasn'tenougb as Baronfell,12·11. which bad been averaging .25 i'UnS
The second game pitted Baron over their last three games the
against Wll~ Horses ol K.C. The Baron put them on their airplane
Barons battled back after being early by winning ~11.
down 84 and were paced to a 12·9
The Baron broke open a one run
win by Dutton, James, and Gene game In the slicth by !ICirlng 11 runs
Wise who totaled 10 hits In 11 at In the sixth and seventh Innings.
bats. Dutton and James also ad&amp;id The Innings were highlighted by
a bQme
apiece.
home runs by Dutton, Turrill and
In game 3, the Baron and OuUaws Kincade, triples by nm Hood and
from K. C. play with a ~ mph wind Rick l,.sh, a double by Mlck
blowing Into their faces - traWng Davenport .and singles by Baer,
8-61n the fifth Inning. Baron erupted James, Jackson, Gllltsple and Mike
for five runs In I~ sixth Inning with JohnSOn. The victory was cost,ly as
Jerry Daveliport scoring the win· Baron lost the services ot outfielder
ntng run on Mike Turrtll's single to Bill Holland with a sprallied ankle
rtght. Davenport escaped the tag at after going two for two.
home plate with a tremendous hook
Baron's net oppouet~l was Max·
slide to give Baron an 11·9 win.
te's, the K,C. team which had
· 'l1ne boae 1'111111
handed them their only lois In the
Trailing .W after one-half \Jlnlng . first game of the lounlamelll. After
to Lefty's of South Dakota, Danny falling behind .w In the first, the
Dutton, Greg James and Mike Baron scored one In the secon&lt;l on a
Turrill hit three straight home runs home run by TurrtU and one In the
to knot the score at three all. Turrill third as Tom Woods singled and
added another solo home run In the tater scored after singles by Baer

.

Bears' Payton passes Br~wn's record.

'

ol Masalllon 1~ encllnlla •b"'na of
victories.

..

M~y. September 10, 1984

:. Baron softball team finishes fourth in·National Tourney.
~

~-

-·~

Monday, Saptanber 10, 1884

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

; Paga 4 The Deily Sentinel

......

•

";

Kat-&amp;Ketllt.O .
HI , Ul2a. Mlmpbll St. &amp;
t;l 91. 14. ~St . 9

'?

N. C - !ll. G. 01*' ,U. 0 '
5. C.IVUM 31, C11tdel :X ~
!IN Lou1o1on! IT, ....lol!na Tech 11
~ 21, Mil)'.... 7
,.,.... 11, E. ConliN 0
V..-tlllt S. Jc..u 9:. 14

-

Eric Dickerson carried the load
011 Los Angleles' final drllle that
endedwtthMikei.ansford's27-yard
tleld aoaJ with 1:25 to play.

Royals move into
first ln AL West
By'llle .• ••l 'ed .._.
At various times this season, the
Kansas City Royals have occupied
every positiOn In the Amel'lcan
League West standings. Now,
they're where tbey want to be -on
top.
For the first time au year, the
Royals secured sole possessllm of
• first place In the West with a
comeback ~5 vtctory Sunday aver
Seattle. They'll have to protect that•
sUm margin beginning tonight In
Mlt1nesota, where they play the first
of three games wtth tbe ~1ns.
Minnesota, which had been In 'fll:st
since Aug. 4, leU a game In aJTeiii'S
byloslng·9-3toTexas.
'
The Callfomla Angels blew an
opportUnity to Jump past the Twins

r~~~~~~jiiiiai

~(,\ t.LIJIIcfl

~ . YIDI:II :f

STA.Till.•

RENT MOVIES AT
THE MOVIE PlACfS

Hill and Vance Law's two-run
single. Oreg Walker bCmered tor
the lllst Sox. Both CaUtomla i'UnS

ALL FRUTH PtiAIIIIACIES
ALCOVE-GAlliPOLIS.

were uneemed.
Tll'f!rl7,11111e.Jais2

Detroit concluded a sweep In
Toronto that cbql!X'd the Tigers'
magic Rlllllber for cUncblng the
East to nine as Kirk GlbsQD
Slammed a rnanuiloth homer and
JllhNIY Grubb a1so CODDected. The
Blue Jays are 11 ~ games back.
· • Ortaled,lkewasO
Mike Boddlcker, who won 16
games as a roolde last year, earned ·
Ids league-leading 18th victory on a
seven·hllte!" tor his fourth shutout·
.Cal RlpkBI Jr. clouted a two-run
homer Jn support of Boddk:ker, 8-1
since July 23.
andfell1~gamesolfthepacewhen
RedSax1t.Y•I e1I
Tim Seaver four·hlt them IIi an &amp;2
Wade Boas continued his hot
Chic.go vlctoiy.
·
streak at Boston 'With tour hits In the East, Detroit cunpleted a . Including a pair of run-scoring
three-game sweep of second-place doubles - and AI Nipper threw a
Toronto alld dfi:Wed Its magic five-bitter for his fifth straight
numbertorcUncblngthedlvtslonto victory. Jim Rice contrtbuted his
nine Wllh a 7·2 decLslon. The Tigers 25th homer.
lead the Blue Jays .,Y 11% games.
Boggs, the AL batting champ last
In Otber games, It was Baltimore · year, went 11·for·1S In the three4, Milwaukee O; Boston 10, New game series to raise his batting
York 1· am Cleveland 7, Oakland5. average fmn .:116 to .318.
' Kenpn t, Twln.S
Dave Wlntlf:ld. the AL's leading
Knuckleballer 01ar11e UOUih hitter, wasO.tOt-4ashls:»gamehlt
continued his mastery of 1111! holt streak was snapped.
Twins. throwing a nine-hitter and
· """I- '7, A'• 5
strtklng out eight. Hough baa an W
Chrts Banda and Joe Carter each
careermarkagalri$1Minne80ta. ·
homeled, doubled an~ singled at
He was aided by home runs from Cleveland. OOland's Rick Lang·
Donnie Scott, Gary Ward and Buddy toni made his first start of the year
Bell.
, after aperidlng most oltii!!IMIIOO 011
Minnesota now must regroup tor , the disabled Ust because of elbow
tlie series with the Royals.
11\u'gery last summer.
Whlte8ax8,AIIpld
Dave Klnginan hit his 34th home
. ~aver tlln!w a tour-hitter .6:lr his .run for Qakland and raised his RBI
28Tth major-league wtn. and was · totaltortheseasontoll3,topslnthe
helped by a two-run
Marc major leagues.
. '

JOHN A~ 'WADE, M.D._, Inc.

THIS WEEK'S REL~SES

HOTDOG•
WHERE THE
BOYS ARE

~~~~~~20%
II
ZWEEKS!!
1

Now:,you can di~~eover the

wonden of QUICK START'"
rharmtkeslool111 welaht Iuter
and eMier than rnr bd'ore. And
you uri do It 1t 1 price that may
never be offered opln.
lf you ever conAklered joining
Weicht Watchert ... there's never
been o better dme than ri&amp;hl NOW!!

--·-

-·• J'F•••hs _..........
....,
.... •u.oo
¥• I

.VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

-.. .

,,._

'l'ODL 17••
1IU N1' 011.1 ...... '7....
1

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST '

NIW •

•

MEETING SCHEDULE:
'
'

JUUS&amp;VI '11.10

GALLIPOLIS

ST. PETER'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 Second Avenue
Tue: 7p.m.
Wed: 9:30a.m.

•: ...._ antv1 ont hour before 1t8rt of meeting lor new program ortlnlatlou:

~W!:!§B't~liiW!
IIIAA) 512•1599 '

· =::z:.::;~•.,.,.':/::.0:.:',:::::."':'""
, ,.,..~....,....

Todll!;,w... f'oftllll

--c...."''~·

.....,.

. . . . . twnt!"otlht

........ ...,...,~ .;;,'*";.,~

'

'

FREE

w.w-•

t

&amp;one.AufuM•Co ... 1114

.,

�•

•

Monday, September 10, 1984

Psg

I

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 10, 1984

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

f:lospital 'unsung hero' honored by.Emergency Medicine Week
Tllere Ia an unsung hero In your
loell bolilltal's ertii!!'JII'IIC roorri, a

~ wbodaUy saves the Uves
of )'IIIII' Detlllboi'S and who could
pw!bly, one day, save your life.
- 'lllat hero - the emergency
~~ physician - WID be
' • led during "Emergency Medi~ Week." !!epl. 16-22, according In
lbe Amerlcan College of Emer-taey Physicians.
~ ~ 111ft than 82 mliUon people
¥lilted hospital emergency room
Jut year, and this numbel' Is
•i,ni!Mg. And, as Americans con.•
to be a transient group, people

' ,,

Medicine ·
.Family
..

..

are relying more frequently on
their local emergency department
for many of their health care needs.

sor, the American College of administers a comprehensive cerdEmergency Physicians.
fylng examlnadon to emergency
As the newest medical specialty, physicians who are adequately
emergency medicine Is the practice trained and prepared to enter t1,1e
of treadng Ufe- or Umb;threatenlng tteld of emergency medicine.
Ulnessed and. Injuries requtrtng
The examination was first. ofImmediate attention. Emergency fered In M, and there are
physicians are speclaUsts who Cllrrently nearly 2,000 boa rdprovide this treatment, as well as certified emergency physicians ·
aiding all other padents who seek practicing In this country.
mediCal ca"' In an emergency
"For many years, hospital emerdepartment
gency facUlties were not staffed by
Emergency physicians under- speclaUsts, simply because there
take extensive training In emer· · were no speclaUsts," said Dr. Paul
gency. medical care. The American T, Brtzendlne, founder of Acute
Board of Emergency Medicine

Many of those who use the
services of a hospital emergency
department are untamtllarwlth the
scope and depth of both the services
th;lt . the emergency department
offers and wttll the training and
expertise th;lt an emergency physician possesses.
Emergency MediCine Wl!j!k provides an opportunity for the pubUc
to learn more about emergeno/
medicine services, according to
Emergency Medicine Week's spon-

Iron deficiency in blood not limited to the elderly

BJ Edw1ll'cl Scbreck, D.O.

de!tclency at about age .one or two
PI-DC 01'
when they give up formulas or
of F....u, Medldae
breast milk and rely on table !ods
OIIAo tllllveriltJ Ccille&amp;e
tor nutrition.
.., O.elltW""l MedlciDe
Frequently very young children
QUESTION: The doctor says my dislike a balanced diet of vegeta.little gnmddaughter has Iron de!t- bles, meats and cereals, and
deacy anemia. I thought only old consume large amounts of cow's
.JI!Iillle had Iron-poor blood.
mUk Instead. Although inllk Is
' ANSWER:
.
''
Important In a child's diet, It does
.Jl.On deficiency
not contain enough Iron for the child
IIMmla, known
to . l)ulld strong red blood cells.
·~umy­
Additionally, In some· children,
.Q'ocytlc hypoch- '
cow's milk causes a reaction In the
f'l1l'llc anemia, Is
- lining of the small Intestine making
tile moat com- \
Iron absorption very dtfttcult.
mon anemia bt ciilldren,
may
QUESTION: How does a doctor
.occur In as many as 60 percent or diagnose anemia In a child?
Anlerlcan cblldren under age two.
ANSWER: Anemic •children are
YOUI!illers usually suffer this frequently fussy and cranky. They
..

I

parents about a diet with more
cereals and meats to lnc~se her
Iron Intake_
QUE~ON: Is Iron deficiency
anemia slmJJar to other diseases?
ANSWER: Yes. Lead poisoning
causes an aneinla that has symp-

, ...

toms much like Iron c!eftdency child may be obtained from the
anemia. Another disease ptocess history of the parents, who usually
ihat can mlmlc an Iron de!tclency also have·chronic anemias. Doctors
anemia Is a hereditary disorder of also check to make sure a child wtth
blood hemoglobin called ; symptoms of anemia Is not losing
,
thalassemia.
blood, either through the urinary
A clue to this type of anemia In the system Qr the bowels.

~ Girl Scout adl!lts and
.it!is lf 01' older.
president, Sally Roberts
.of Wheeling, W.Va., wt11 be the
,~e speaker and Dr. Lois
·VIDea, professor at OhiO University,
Aibena, wtll be the Saturday night
biDquet speaker.
. .
· Workabops and workshop leaders
·are: "How to Motivate" and
"Mm'ketlng the Girl Scout Pro-ll'ml In Your Community" ReslnJa Sneed, American Red
&lt;:i'ols, Winston Salem, N.C.; "Findq and Ualng Conununlty Resour. . . -Nancy Icard, West VIrginia
. HII!Ran Resources Auoclatlon,
.Ciw1ellton, W.Va.; "Understandbig Brownie and Junior Girls" .Dr. atm Geise, Salem College,
•Salem, W. Va.; "How 'Do Girls
·Learn Values" - Dr. LaRee
Navlaux Psychologist, Charleston,
.W·.Va.; "Nature" - Richard
. ~ Doddridge County Board of
·EdloicaUon, West Union, W.Va.
·· ·Problem Solving'' - Delores
,f'!dlllpa, West VIrginia Department
,Ill , Human Services, Charles.ton,
·w~va.; "Training" - Dr. Carol
~· School of Social Work, )Vest
VJi'llnla University; ; "Disaster
llurvlval" - Ileen Rlftle, PUtnam
Cou,niy Red Cross, Winfield,
,W.V•.; "Women'S Roles" - Bar·
.blla Metz, West VIrginia Women's
QlnmJaslon, Charleston, W.Va.;
~ndlng Cadette and Se.•
Girls" - Ann Chopyak,
Appalachian Mental Health Center,
BuCkluuinon, W.Va.; "Gold Award
and Senior Opportunldes" - Ca·
.rale Bacon, Huntington, w. V a.
"Silver Award and Cadette Op~~" - Sandy Webb, Mtd·dlelloume, W.Va.; "Coping wtth
Coid1Jct and Running Effecdve
,Meetings" - Pat Fraze, Ohio
University, Athens; "Girl-Leader
PI&amp;Jm!ng'' - Martan Cox, Hunting.ton. W.Va.; Margy Barrett, Hun·
tlngton, W.Va.; "Service Projects"

&lt;Council

Or W.itt DIHIJ 111tiM1 Clluittttf Dtpl,
111 CtvrtSt .. p_,JO:J, Ollio .t57&amp;9

t .c .... ,......., • ..._.,

tt.- -.....

r:t~/lttrl ~·ntl't'r ,,.,.

=_
==

Sc ip io,
·

C~itwnly

MI'ISIONARY - 'lbe Rev.
and Mnl. Wl!lldell WOOIII, .a..
slllllarlelllo ......... wll C""'kt
11e1 o1ce8 u 7:• p.m. Tii!u'qU
lbe Racl'lle Cbureh of &amp;he
Nne
Woodll Mil 1.- wife,
have
I rtv' • :rears Ill
ml I !l.!ftelwtllei'II.JIIJMMII

Off•ce.
W•lhAm A. W•ckhne
Meigs Co unty Auditor

(9[ 10. ltc

·i

- Clll'l'lllll7 ._ ..........

awt

~-.-...c•

at, -

riDCI!Iba

Taqo. Woodl Plio

eervee • mllllua cllredor.

PH.

Clllllt*lo Gutter Work
Complote Remod....,.
Roofing of eM Tv- ,
Workld In home oree
20yura ·
"'F- Eottmetas" .

*AWARDS
c,...atlvlty lo Our
s.,....iahy

EUGENE LONG
7/9/2 mo.

Bob • Jean Gilmore
50 Riverview Dr.
Middleport, Oh.

..

.

~

LAFF-A·DAY

•Wrll&lt;'

W.I LL HAUL

H2-6931

BOGGS

SALES &amp;' SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Parts

&amp; Service

CONTRACTING
•DOZER - BACKHOE
•RECLAMATION WORk
'OIL FIELD SERVICES

'DUMP TRUcK SERVICE
' CONCRETE WORK
'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES
'WATER, GAS &amp;
OIL LINES

.... "' ...

laurel Cliff community news

11111. I&amp;OifiiUifOI •

recently.
· Attendanc:l1 at all lti'VIcel Sun-

day, Sept 2, WPI

Di. Tbere WM a

duet by Anita Smith.
Mr. and Mn. Gene Alldre and ·

Real E1tata

JIM

CLIFFORD

PH.

992· 7201

PH. 742-2328

3-S·lfc

114 Misc . Merchandlae

____
-------.._

ALL STEEL &amp;

i POLE BUILDINGS
~

_____

31
....,._
_
J1.• -_
-_
-

JJ. - - - - -

c.,,

111c.tlt.
,__,, OIL 411,1f

992~5682

3305 JACKIOII AVl.

992·7121

SMALL Alii MAL HOURS

llondly 3 P-•.-5 p.11.

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

•Wuhorw•Diohwowrw

•Drv-n •Freuen

UTJpn BU.ILDINGS

SWEEPER ond -lng mo..,...,. pem. end
Pick up oncl

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
614·843-5191
1 0.6 -~c

WHITESEL
ROOFING CO.
NEW-REPAIR
Guttera

Davia Vacuum

CONSTRUCTION
.

BACKHOE
DUMP TRUCK
COIICIETE WOIIIt
tREIICIIER
SEPTIC TANK
COAL &amp; LIMESTOIIE
Coli For Frao Eotlmote

742-2167 or
~,- ..... 25

Downspout•

Gutters Clea~d·
Painting
· Storm Doors
8t Windows

949·2969--949-2263

8-10-1 mo.

LANGSVILLE
GROCERY
&amp; GARAGE

,

'

-.,.Ft/1 T..,.u, S,...,
Check Anti·Free1e,
8elta; Ho-. Pluga

lime.At
St.a

*1495
'

PH. 742·9070

9-4-lMO.

Announcem11nt1

H -lte

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
lnsulattd Dot.Houses

Ph.

mo.

rlfl/1[11//ll I l[[i 'l ll c

•R•nt• ,
•Rofrigorotora

PARTS •nd SERVICE

Racino, Oh.

JO&lt;t-o:r :&gt;·'Z4'11

.KEN'S
APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
· All Mnkes

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Major &amp; Minor
Mechanical
... Work

:Ill.----,.,
u· .- ----

Mall Tllll
an wHit Remittance
. Tile Deily .......

PK.

CIN-. hoff milo up
0 - C - Rd. Colt
114-ot41-0294.
Control hunger ond lou
weight with .... ,.. eliot
pion ond Hvctrw•
PHio
ot Frvth Phonnocy, JockPIIIo.

w-

loton ct.- ofletldto II
. . - l n . - K-1 . Join
Storlltll Twtrloro. lnlormotion cttll Julio Sl-ert. 4411·
71411.

4

'MILLER
.C
EL II:CTRI
0,
SERVICE

Residentlll
&amp; Commtrcill .
...,
C. ,
Or 992

74·2•3195
·5875

2 yr. old Colllo·lrloh S mole. 4 mo. old CollieShl!'honl pur· lomolo. Coli
.
114 •3 s 1 .s8 1 . .

I' 1·---:-.....---:----:--:-::

C - TV W ~ 1 nood Coli
441-71132. "'~ •
'

Mlxoc Coon pui&gt;JIIoo. I
- k l old. 241-llitil. ·

Long hotrod motller cot.

I

SIDING

BISSELL

.SIDING CO.

"Beautiful, Cu1tom

a.,.......

Call for fret sidilll es·
limates, 949·2801 or
949-2860
No 8undlly .C alli
HI·Wt

8t Vicin;ty

--------~-~-----·····--- - ---··

Porson to IUiy with elderly
lody. Woge .,d hourw - • ·
loblo. c.tlaolloctll4-7724117 -1:00 p.m. Rotor. , _ required.

Ooltlpollo Fill Morket Fri ..
Sot. &amp; Sun. Indoor-outdoor.
Now Frldey Night Morket
otorto 3PM till ' Rt. 311 •
1110. Coli 441-7037. .

SoiH Monogor' needed for

-------p·ome;ov·--------

Molgo Co. 8 - ptuo commlttolon. Muot hove uloe
experience. c1n mM1 upwordo to 1411,000. Col JHk
cot~t~~:t ot lr4-112·t11Hor
opt.
2 loungo &amp; 1 reoturent
wett,...., and 1 c'-anlng
poroon. Apply I n - ot

tho uBolle Lounge. No
phone collo for oddhloMI
lnfonnotlon .,. oPpllcotlono.

Auction ovory Pridoy night It
lhl Hontord Community
Center. Truckloodo ol n - . unit
Cantor. Muotbol
""""'
morchondl11 o
Conol-to
f - ·&amp;- uold· · nu,... with va&amp;ld
_,...ndloo olwoyo wei· conu. For moio inf&lt;lrm•ocomld . Rlchlrd 'lloynoldo,
tlon, contoct Juonlto Atho,
Auction-. Coli 304·271·
P~raonnel Admlnlatrator,
3019.
Woodland Centera, Inc . •
41 2 Yin- P.o. Oolllpollo,
For your next .... cell Emrn~~ Ohio 45831 Phone II 1 4·
.... ouctlon-. llcon- 441-15100 Wooclond Conond bonded Wool Yirglnl8 tar, Inc., Ia an equal oppor.,d Ohio. 4288tn.
tunity affirmative action
employer.

Middleport
8t Vicinity
·····-·-------------------····
Porch • vord ..... 238
Condor St.. Pomerov. behind Landmerk. 10 to 15.
lleptombor 12. 1 3 , &amp; 1 4
eoch doy.

31

Homes for Sale

---------1

Middleport '"::
&amp; Vicinity ,..,_~:

.. ------------------- ·-- ~ ~ - --

Polio 1111- or C.....
• Stowort In llutlond. U..,
doy &amp; Tuwdov. Coli 8;\4;
742-2233.
• •

•

a,

Yord Sole-Sept. 12, 1 4.
14. Antlqueo. toolo, t;lothlnQ'
• mloe. merchlndiH.' liubw
B~•. long Bottom. .••::1,

.

.

Largo yard ule Tu~
Wondoldoy • Thurlda'{ ~
Emerton John1on'a, 'fllt".1
124. Porttond. 8 to 11. J11no,
Knick-Knocko, lot,

c"-"

Big 3 fomlly vonl oolo,.
chlldren' o cloJh••· ontlqun,
uobleo, .dloheo on lit. 1 24 4
mu.. from Racine.

32 Mobile Ho'mea , 1·

for S•le
,; 1
1
3 bdr. home with both &amp; ~.
-~· YJ
!ergo utility room. ol olectrlc, hlo own woll. eKtrl lot NEW AND USEO M081Ui
ovolleblo If lntoreotld. Lo- HOMES KESSEL'S QUAt"
cotod on 8-1 Crook Ad In ITY MOilLE HOME SAL!S,
Crown City, Oh. oppro•. ~ 4 MI. WEST, OAWPOiola.!
mi. off St . . Rt. 7 . Coli If AT 31. PHONE '14·4fl;;
lntorioted 1114-211-1541 7274.
~:!'or 1114·218-11100. Will toke
, 981 Noohuo 2-3 biCI"
Port-time pooltlon In public trwdo or wtll finance .
9 WantQCI To
roomo. Muit nil, ••troo, !I.WIII,
ogoncy providing hoolth - · 2 .tory houM, 8 room ... two nogotloto. Coli 1114-241t_•
We pey celh far loto model vtco. Muot h - hoolth ro- 1nd
~
I
two tentha acrwa, 2Y.I 5602.
loted oducotlon oi oxpedNn uNd cers.
miloo
from
town.
city
----:--:--'""':'::'-:-"..,,
rlonce . Send reply by Sept.
Jim Mink Chlv.-Olclo Inc.
Wonted to buv mobile hoow,,
14. 1884 to Bo• 722. ochoolo. Coli 4411-S147.
IHI 0 - Johnoon
Will pev cooh. C.U,I14-2~·
Pomeroy,
Ohio
417119
.
441·3872
7019.
.
. . . ,. ;
1
.
y
r.
old
o,.,gy
efficient
E.O.E.
homo- utility blllo. 3 bdr ..
Wonted to buy uHCI coal •
2 botho, utility room. large Mobile Home far •'wood hlltont. Swoln Fumlkitcho, .Iorge yord w!th wooded lot ot Tvc;0011 u
12
Situations
turo, 441·31 Ill, '3rd. •
otorogo bldg. o-n Twp. with fomly roorn olll~- C
Wanted
Oltv. St .. Oollpolio, Oh .
citY oehool dlottict. Yo milo 441-0701 or 44e.8H2- '
from
hoopltol . . Co)l 4411Wanted- Jur* auto• any
2 bdr. troller 1 2•51.1n Ky
8472.
.condition. Col 114·388· Cuot-. far tho Colico 1--------~ Crook School Dlotclct.
8303 .
Cupboonl. At. 180&amp;Port•. Chlopl 3 bdr .. 3 full olze 448-40011 . .
Hours: 1 0-IPM, Mon.-Bot. botho, olmoet 2,400 oq. ft ..
Good uHCI upright or choot Co11114-388-8008.
llvtng ·-otTo,. Eototoo.
froozor, not to wide. About
Coli 1-111 4 -387-7311B.
21 lnchn. Aok for RIUI. Trw trimming ond iomovol. 1-----~--­
814-218-1307.
Frw ootlrnotoo .. CoU 982- Orwn Twp. 3 bdr. with
11040 « 948-2128.
plenty of room. excellent
Wontld to buy good peor'o.
·fermo ovoHoble. Coil 4411-·
Coli oftor 8 :00PM. Coli Wil care for the .Warty in our 1293.
304-458-1818.
homo. LPN core given. 16
uporionco. Coli 1114-982- 8 room, full booomen1 &amp; 2 .
81i' ,Skyline 1 4•70. -3
Cooh pold far foncy iron or 7314,
Clr garage. Allen Dr . • room, dolux oppllonceo., ~
heavy Iron - · t180 ond
up for cortain Molgo Co. Room • board • loundry. 129,000. Coli oftor 15PM, olectrlc, colhldrol cllllngi)
bov wlndow,gordon ttib,
otone joro. Old tlmo cup- Re_,blo In Pomeroy. Coli 114-31S-8411.
boord . co)l 1-304-182- 111 4·992·11022 or 981- 28•42 1117. oq.ft.j bo... only 114,410. 81' Ro..,loiot,
14•703bedrooin.1Y.~ ·
2711
4418.
tne"nt, and eubftoor com- plvwood floO&lt;o, delu• . ,;;•
on
1
ocre
pleted.
Locoted
COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS Chriotionlody will do bobvo- pluolot. quill country, oloct- pllon-; only 112;tiO.'ttr.'
FURNITURE. Badt. Iron. lttlng In - n homo. 304- rlc to houM. Rural wet• Skyline 1 4al0 2 bllclroorll'al'_
g o - tub,
oppl'"""
- · c..,-nlo. choiro, 171-15121.
ovolloblo . tl 0.000 C.oil ces, Qal, furniahed, ·o "ly '
cheats, baeket:J, dlahea,
Wl•men ,Rut Eaate, 446- •11.4110. Oono'o McJiile
otono joro, ontlqun, gold
3843.
Homoolocotod 2 miiHond lilver. Wrlto-M . D .
18 Wanted to Do
Ro~nowood Bridge et ·lu"P"
Miller, 111.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
Nice 2 boldroom homo on tion of 1-77 • Rt. 2.
41789 or coli 1114·892lorgo lot ..., College Com- 304-273-11315. Froo .,..,.,.
7780.
puo ot 108 College Avo .. llio
.. .......::
Would fike to pt!int troller o-de, Oh. Shown by ery a set-up. Buying dolly gold. oliver roofo. Coli 114-211-11521. .,polntmont
onlv. Colll14- Lnvtng Stoto,. nit~Jt.·,
col no, rlnao, jewelry, lllrli"'
182-7424. Priced to oeil.
nil booutlful 3 bedroolfl"
wora. old oolno. 1orvo cur- N- help ot your - 1 - - - - - - : - - · l c - home. Family room It*'
· Tap ,..-. Ed. Sur- Wll oily with chllc!Nn -or 1 yro. old. 3 bllclrm. 2 botho . 20ft. of wlnclowo far .,..;.
kott Iorber Shop, 2nd. A-- elderly _ , . ., doy or nigtlt tomlly room with wood
Micldloport. Oh . 1114-992- lhlft. WHI do light hou- t;u,_, Singlecorgorogo,on torol view. flnlohod -I:tl'\
gar..•~ fireplace, ~~r:'
3471.
- · 11-nc• - o · 1 flot
with otocked
lOft. - ·
' " li
blo. Col 1114-311-8871
pond. City woter In Recine. porch,
privocy, noor Royal Ollli:
Portoble Coment ml•or. CoH 114-388-9314.
Coll814-848-2841 .
•
Pork. rlduoodto 118,9110.....
814-112-2211 .
lobyoltting In my l)omo In 1 room houoe, 1 Y.t both. ~percent ouumoblllty. C!il('
.:"~:
K.MRiilrolld-peyiiO RloGrondi. Howup.• rwf. carport, b111ment, ell utHI· 814-9112-11420. '
up for
ltomo, Colt
241-1511112.
- · Lorge yord. t27,600. 1881 Kirkwood 14•7Q. ;t;
- h locke, • koyo. Cell - - - - - - : - - l e - Collll14-892-2102.
w.... Wolle, drilled • _ ,
114-317·0104.
boldroom, 1 ~ beth.
wood burner. -., h
- . F r o o -. c.tl 3 bedroom briclc home. 11h with
,
Wonted to buy: lnvootment 1114-982-10011 or 111 4· 742· bolth. fuM - . . . 1 . 2 cor refrigorotor, WIIIIH. d
112.1100. Call 114-843- ·
property. Coli 814-992- 3147.
go._, Iorge lot. Coli 814- 6244.
;, 15S68.
d. :
892-51:13, College Rd ..
SyriCUIO,
Ohio.
1981
Schult&gt;
Ltd.
3
br
1'l!.;.
OINSENO ROOT. Top qual f lll.llli.l ,II
both, totol oloc. control '"""
Ity and s1z.e graded . select ed
Two-otory. flnilhed boloo- microwave, dllhWII~~~ ;.
S 200.00 lb. Ordmarvsmaller
mMit, 3 bedroom•. family
· roo1- Less! All o1her kmdSof l-:c::---=--:.....,--- room. firepl1ce. dining novo. rofrlg. undorplnnlrl •
-ood porch. 304·8· ri
root also purchased . Call 21
BuaineSa
room. 2~ botho, !ergo kit- 6048.
i .mf;..;
' Rober t Harpe r. 304-675Opportunity
- : :104-882 -2096.
7977.
I yr old 3 bllclroom ronch, 7
ml111 from Holzer Hoop on 33
Farms fqr Sal~,~
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO YAUEY PUI- lit. 180. No do- pevrnent .
U8HINO CO. raco""'*'dl Coli 304-171-7741 or 871- 40 aere farm. tobacco bUt:
4 bedr .• remo.led ttom4.~· ·
thot you do buotn... with 2113.
fonn equipment, Col Mil!l.
poaplo y6u kn-. ond NOT
to and monoy through the I roome, 2 full b1th1, 268-11790.
'N~
moll until you hove lnv-· eppro•l""otoly 1 ocro bolhlnd
11
Help Wanted
.l
_ _ _ _ _ _•:..__ __
Jllltld tho offering.
· Junior High School. greonhouHo, 304-875-3934 ol- 36 Lota • Acreage ~ .....
tor4:30.
.:.
Merri -Mac Homemaken 22 Money to Loan
Mm 1xatra Income. W. need
lot for Nle in Mtrcervl•--e ~
..wral rep; ...ntativn in
32 Mobile Homes
troller hookupo, olectrlc. riM;
thlo 8rell Porty pion ..p. o HOME LOANS FIXED
ral water, aeptic t•rt11:t.
for Sale
pluo. Olfto, tDyo. homo do- RATeS lolow morkit rotn.
•s.ooo. con 814-2""1,
cor. No ln•wtmont. Car &amp; Fl•od convontlonol FHA8611.
!.
phone-. Cellfroot-9()0. YA.Leodor Mortgogo, 1871 12•10 Liberty treMor
'
lti3-90n. Aloo -lng Athono. cotloct 114·1192· with wood heater. AC. Building lot NllghborhObif;,'
pertln.ll14·448-3043
3011.
waah• • dryer • awning. Rd. 11•1 &amp;0. ' te,OOO. ~·
14,000.
Coli 1114·379· 441-3844 oftor 7PM.
. ., .'
_:::_:__Mdb'Els~' l
.u \Ji j
2111.
AH 111"1 Including childran
1 . 14 oc. level lot wjtj,l!
23 Prole11ional
1977 mobile home 14•70 3 baeement, alec. • · water.
over - 1. FO&lt; cotolog
Services
typo onlgnmonto. Inter·
bdr.. nice corpot, wolh-ln Locoted In OrHn Twp. Cli1 ~
viewing In Col..,.buo the
cloMt. CA. exc. cond., '448-3044.
:
cl.. n. Can be moved or left
of &amp;opt. 23. For on
oppolntmont col1412-8111· Plano Tuning ond Ropolr. on nice country lot 1 acre. lot on Tim~r Ridge Like. :
lrunlcordl Muolc Co .. 441- Collll14-388-9717 ..
9192 .
Rt. 775. 262Jt110', ooptic 1
0117. Twontloth yoor of
tonk. 13,200. Cal 1-114- l!
quoUty
oorvlco.
Lano
OoElectronic -hnicon with
1871 Richwood 2 BR mo- 143-0118 or 1-1114-143-•,
ox......,nco In homo.,....,, nlllo. 114-742-2951 .
bile home. Bought n-, 0228 oftor 2.
.
~· ll
owned bV olnglo girl, In good
Cll'o, ••• otoreoo. wey
I
condition, hoi 2 botho, lorgo
,.clio. • - •-me to P.O :
•
Relll.iiS
.
lox 21. Oolllpollo, Oh
living room end soma furniI,
ture. IS,ODD.OO. Con bol
1 4_1_8_3_1._ _ _ _ __
IMR
on
Bulavlle,
naxt
to
tW
·
•·
Sell AVON moke 45"'. Col
llyne'a Furniture. Cell 44e- 7:--:-:----:--:l:'
· •-:&gt;~·~· ! :
.448-3311.
31 Homes for Sale
2&amp;72. .
41 Houses for Rent ,

d•••

oc,..

,..,Old

•nvti-.

;j

.'

N•d qultor or pifor CoW~by blind . Coll814·
387-0213.
lobyolttlng In my ilome.
Ret.ren..o ovolloblo. Coli
441-0380.

doel-ed. ond 1 fluflv kitton. litter trolned . 4411· SocNIIIriol Polltlon: Lopl
0021.
oxportonco roqulr8d 1 to 2
yeera mlnlmUIJ1. Bhorthond
Yel- tiger klnon. femolo. • typing rwqulracl. SMd
to good ho-. uno. ll'llnod -ume to P.o. BOlt 111.
• -mod. 448·11471.
Pomeroy, bhlo 41718.

-:--....:.---:---:-::

~~"' ouumoble loan on 13
yr. old brick ronch otvlo
houao. tlectudod on 2.9
••- of lend. 3 BR. Iorge
DR., nlco kitchen, Iorge
utility room. Flreploco In
living room. 1493 mo. poymont. n. 710 - · · Locotod ..., Contorvllle. 379·
2 I 0 3 • ft • r II P · m ·
-doyo.

Mlddlopcirt. r&lt;imodoled one
pion . Owner muot 0111
lmmodlotllyl Collll14-982-

Tiger otrlppod ldttMI, to
good hoona. I wko. old. Colt

8141 .

1114-149-2814.

Priced reduced on 11111 thrH

Throe female pu,loo·
,mother pen .....-o-boo ond
torrtor. 3 moutho old . Call
,; 4-1112··113.
-

""':!
'

.

---------.1

VInyl • Aluminum

Built

Giveaway

3 yr. old Amertcon Cocker
Sponiel full blooded, ioJood
homo. CoH 114-378-2 78.

Open 7:00-7:00 D1ily

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

Q..,.rll

Phone 742·3171

.I nsured

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8
' PT. PLEASANT OFFICE

Also Transmission
•.

lutnacts repair
&amp;erv!celtld installation.

··-----

'"-=~=-""':"----·
~·II.~L.~~--~-.
~·
"lud'' McGHEE
'R•c«~

&amp;'

. IN Ml DDLEPOIT
PAUL E.' SIIOCI£Y, D.V.II.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

For all your w!rin1

27. _ _ _ _.-,

un

:a~~-==t;=..
M~GHEE llolp
Brok~~:m:t:.Vtca
Mr. end Mrs. Pearl Gilkey and
t•\
County Anoclllt

Mrll. Della Stahl were In GaWpo!JJ
Sixty-five peope attended tbe Jce · ahnppJ.. recently.
cream IOCial at the lOcal church

' .

'25.
26. _ _ _ _...._

DIRECliONS: 8 mills below Otillipolls Oft Rt. 7, ina RICCOOn Bridge,
~m right llld fallow litfta.

GARAGE

------------------ -"",
------Gaiiipoiii___ ------ ----- ---Pomeroy
:·

c.-

TOWN &amp;
VETERINARY
CLINIC

Roger Hysell

Wetlnudly 3 p.ll.-5 p.11.
Thursdly 3 p.m.-5 p.m.
fridly 1 p.ll.-2 -p.m.
Sltutdlr 10 1.11!.·11:30 .....
lAIICI AIIIIAL A~D.
SURGIIT .T API'OIIITIUr

17.-.-----11. ....._ _ _ __

23.

•

7111 / ttn

SEWAGE LINES

19, - - - - - -·

FIEE_sws ~ITOU1K tonOLJ.Mat fAllS

Gallipolis, Ohio

9-4-1 mo.

Tuad1y 6:30 p.111.-l p.11.

·8/13/1 mo.

. J&amp;F

.SEPTIC SYSTEMS

22.

St. Rt•. 160 Harth \

TOP SOIL-FILL DIRT

WATER LINES

773-5839 or
773-5'7 88

Farm Equipment

•lAND CLEARED

• 211.
21.

GRAVEL· SAND

FREE E~TIMATES

Dealer

.

TROMM ~

$599.

LIMESTONE

lnllil.-...

'*'"'

U-SAVE
AUTO .
RENTAL ·

843-5424

or

GAS LINES

Aulhorized John Deere.
New Holland. Bush Hoc·
farm Equipment

'

11G. Itt!

All memljers are
UI'Jed.to attend. .

DITCH WITCH
SERVICE

P~•~----------------

C IFarlate
I IAnnDunc:emetlt
I IFarRent

446-4522
"We Rent Fot 1••"

Itt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Addnt~~--------~-----

WOtll 01 10M

·I!Wikc.

DOORS ............ •149.95
HOODS ............ •174.95
IUM.PERS .......... S69.95
GRILL ................. 142.50
R. SUPPORT.. ..... •84.95

Also Some Car
Fende(t Available

Narn•·~----------------~

fiiEPLACE INSERT
-

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS
PH. 992-7013
New Chevy Truck ....
FENDER ............. '76.95

BUMPER ............ '69.95

1111 . , . ; bV mall wllft lftls
. coupon. cancet your 8d bV pllclne when you get
, results. Money IIDf r.lundlble.

•

CAU

JUST CALL!

TAIL GATE ......... l85.00

VDIIt' """':

I IWIIIIflld

R

DENNY CONGO

uporlenco ptolwrrad. Appicant mult demonltrat• •
. . , - oblllty to toke th.,~ end typo II 1Mot 10
WPM. Ful bonoftto. l.,d
- t o lo• 4040 In ..,.
of tho Gollpollo Dolly Tribune, 121 3rd. Avo., OoiNpo·
Ito. oh 41131 .

$

Ph. (614) 843·5425

MIDDLEPORT
.PLASTIC ARTS

FOlD FENDER .... •69.95

II ·Curb lnflatl.o n II
I -Pay .Cash for 1
I1 Claulflecls and
Savelll

'· HEAT YOUR
ENTIRE HOUSE.

of Burger
· ·Qet, wtll be guats at the

.

1

FENa &amp; SUPPLY

Bonded

afllllates

. ll!miOIII.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

*PLAQUES

22o I . ""'In, .........., .

r---~-----------------,

21.'

Attendance at aU services Aug. 26
at the Free Methodist Church wu
138. Special IOJlil were ISIIIIi by
Steve. EbUn and daughter, Miss
Becky EbUn, Rich Frtl!nd, Mr. and
Mi'l. Franklin Martin and Mrs.
Shirley Friend. Putor Miller delivered morning a11d evening

Phone
446-211&amp;2

-~rTROPHIES

ACCENT

If interested contact The
Home National Bank in
• llcine, 949-2210.
,.

IHtk

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO~

FOR SALE .

.

'*''

Memorial HolpltaJ. waaner and

9-4-1 mo.

Experi~nce

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-71183
or 992·2282

CHESTER-985·3307

SWIIp

•GRAVEL HAULED

WOI hold Its 111011thly meeting at
.JKDI on 'l'uelday at Vefenms

.

County Auditor's

lo~fl';iiToitr
Aluminum It Vinyl S14inp

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

·

Pot . Shorldon AuctiOn-.
EK--In Form &amp; homo
ouctlon . l;oll et 4-1924:110 .

R-dtlin1
lniiiiiiCellork
Cultp~BWp.

111 Ylira

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

llhllmrock Auction Sorvtco.

llew Ho-~btenlin

RIDENOUR

Help Wanted

local bueln••• covering

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

AfiD SERVICE

992·3410
or

Three acres with a nicely constructed concrete
block home 26x30, 3bedrooms, one bath, 12x15
39 01 ,percent. · s4 7,333.95:
Rac •ne .' ' 5 . 79 pe r ce nl .
f111ily room . Partially
57.025.47: Rul1aod. 793 percarpetld, fuel oi furnace
cent. S9.622 .10: Syracuse. .
with
fKilities for· wood8 47 percent. S 10.277.32.
burner. 12115 blodt storWtlham A. Wt c kllne
Me tgs COunty Auditor
ale bulldin1, 20li30 block
(91 10. lie
prqe. Ri1ht off Rt. 248•
country settifil. 11 mile
eest
of Chester. ·Ohio.
Public Notice
(2) TWO STORY HOU_S~
.IN· R~C I NE: Downstairs
PIJIUC NOTICE
Follow1ng section 57 1 5 16
equipped with kitchen,
ot the Oh•o RP.VJsed Code. the
liYin1 room. dininc room
c han~es '" valuahons have
and
den ; upstairs has two
been completed.for th e tax year .
bedrooms and one bath;
~ 1 9 8~
.
The changeS '" val u&lt;\t•on will
house also hu basement.
re flect only the n~ constru ct In
Lot size epprox. 4B'x308'.
for the tax year of 198 4.
Needs work.
Valu es may be Yfewed now at

Loet white •nd t•n pup.
oround Appoloohlon P - .
304-875-7823.

l · 11·ttl

an Duty

446-2062

2 L--

for foster Sifvico
C1ll 614-388·9003

Middleport, Ohio

•ZIIIITH
•Sft.VAIIIA
•Sl'££0 QUEfll lAUNDRY
•GIIIOII IEFIIGIIATOR
We Have A 1'1111 Time
Sli!OP T..tlnldan

Chimney
Care

work
!Free Eotimateo)

Woodbuming

.Area Chamber of Ccmme!-ce

99.2 -2198

bl110k end white
uddle-le.
botok
lat.
miNI"'.
uon moottv on
boxey - · Toller. bit type
IM91e- Laot- Aug 14th
.In I mile. oru. REWARO.
Buah 304-171-4101.
LOST _ , cuotolon end voot

..:::.,••:;j•·

11

The Daily Sentinei- Page--7

locreuortol polltlon. 14e1

: : :.
Ch:,;;
lullh 304-17&amp;-aon.

Gallipo~i~ &amp;r. 45631

PAT HILL FORD

You Were Going To Call Us?

- Concrete work
- Piumbinv end ...ctrk:el

(1) HOUSE IN CHESTER:

Lolt end Found

ut.

No Down PQmtnt ·
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;

TRUCK LEASING

HEADQUARTERS FOR-

- Addons •nd remodeling
- Roofing end guner work

Amou nt~ VIllag e~ ,Will receiVe
tn clude; M.tddleport. 38 80 per·
ce nt. $471.079.14: Pomerov.

the M ei~s

•~oleo.

T1nks.

WE ARE YOUR SALES

EXCAVATING

· , . POMEROY - The Plmeroy

Han1pvllle Senior Citizens wtll have
blood Pi l•l u.re day on n-Jay
lram IOa.m. tiD noon. Reptered
Milne Fandaa Story WW be In
dlqe of tbe clinic.

percent.

$9.694.90: Sutton. 6, 79 per·
cent. S8 23985.

A·

TUESDAY

. :IIARRISONVJLLE -

7. 99

GIS

repair

Pomeroy, Ohio

percent. $ 12.364.34; Sciii S·
bury. 599 ~ercent. 57 268 .14:

rt·

. core r1d11tors 1nd
he1t1r cores . We ctn
llso 1cld boil1nd rod
out r1di1tors. We 11so

992-6215 or 992·7314

w•

,.

CIR rtflllr I

Why Wait Till Winter to Re~nember

V. C. YOUNG liT

Indian Summer Fes(lval wt11
Solomon Is the rhythm wtth his
present-"Stark Raven" on Sept. 16 self-taught techniques on the hamat the Washington County Fair- mered dulcimer and John Kessler
grounds In Manetta.
·
playing electrtc and stand-up bass.
FIX IT UP - Owner ready to
The music of Stark Raven can
In addition to Stark Raven, the
~and has red~ the price
best be described as " Hot Rhythm
· on this older two slllry hOme. ft
festival wt11 Include performanCes
needs some repair, but has
and Roll," a sound th;lt ranges Jrom
by the Ross Cpunty Ramblers, a
·
near classical to southern swing
traditional folk band and the · potential. Wants $11,900.00.
entertain a reaSonable
with lntluences .of blues, country
McCumber Brothers and Connie, a
offer.
and jazz.
bluegrass band.
The stx-plece · West VIrginia
The Indian Summer Arls and
IIIDDLEPOirr - fifth S1rMt
group mixed their original material
- ·Colonial with all modem
Crafts Festival wUJ celebrate Its
lealures. pool, fireplace, amlral
with blues and vintage rock.
25th anniversary on Sept. 14-16. The
air and more. $49,900.00.
In their first two years together, · festival wUI feature the jurted
Stark Raven has performed at
wotks of 82 artists and crafters, 16
IIINERSVIL1E - U.rge two
fairs, festivals· and colleges Marietta Art League bootha, eontln·
$lu'j house with 4 bedoroms.
throughout the east. They have just uous demonstradons of traditional
dining room, storqe lluiklna.
completed their 1984 tour which crafts, a wtde variety d workshops,
part basement, plus another
house that ~ be a rental
took them through Georgia, North
a supervised children's acdvlty
unit Owner Wll!lid sell 6 r
Carolina, South Carolina and VIrgi- area and a diverse array of food
separate. Just $18,900.(W!.
nia. Last year the band was coilcesstons. Through the Ohio Arts
spotlighted In a one hour television
REALTORS
CouncU, the festival wiiJ present -an
Henry E. Clellnd.
"Stark Raven Special" and they exhibition of traditional music;
Jr ................ . 992-6191
have just completed filming a new dan~. Instrument making and
Jean Trussell ... .. 949-2&amp;60
TV special "Stark Raven and
storytelling.
Dottie Turner .. .. . 992-5692
Frtends" which wUI air In early tall.
For • more Information concernJo Hjll . .. ............ 915-U66.
The members of Stark Raven
Ing the festival and workshop
Include Ron Sowell on acoustic and
schedules wrtte Indian . Summer
electric guitar; Julie Adams, lead
Festival, P.O. Box 266, Marietta,
vocaUst; Bob Webb playing man- Ohio 45750 or call (614) 373-lWT.
dolin, guitar, lap dUlcimer and · Festival location Is accessible to the I ~-----­
cello; Den! Bonett on VOcals, elderly and handicapped.
mandolin and plano; Ammed

&amp;:!~,p.m.

RADf \TOR
SERVICE
· nc1

IIITEIESTED IN A
IIEW VEHICLE
........,
t
..'d 11•• 1 to lnuvooiCI
JOI 0
Et~t~P"A-tll. t11o _ , . R1
to drlvo 111o volllclo of roor

8

SERVICE

..,

Indian ·summe( Festival
set at Marietta location

wt11 allo be held beginning at

WI

·

8113/Hn

CARPENTER

__
.:::.if.... ....,··,,._
..."-__
__........

Ron and Ruth Whittaker, Ohio
University, Athens; "Crafts" Jean Hodges, Randleman, N.C.;
"'l'roop Camping" - Judy Bos)lan
and Jada HUl, Charleston, W.Va.
Informal discussion on vartous
topics will be held by Sue At)dnson,
Beckley, W.Va.; Helen Musgrave,
St Alblms, W.Va.; Betty Barrett,
Princeton, W.Va.; Melissa Geiger,
Athens, W.Va.
Regtstradon Is limited and Is due
by Sept 15. For further lnformadon
or for a registration form, contact
your tocal Girl Scout Service
Center.

~ p.m. An otrlce!s meeting

.

_
..
___

..... Ca . WV

W.Va.; ..Games arid Dances" -

fOMER9Y - The Pomeroy
.Elementary P.T.O. wt11 lx&gt;ld a
imeetll11r1tt the achool Monday at

~tes.

(614) 446· 7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Bo• 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

YOUNG'S I

....
::-.:...;.
,._
...,... ,,,._. .......,

MONDAY

: ··

LISA M. KOCH. M .S.
Licensed Clinical Audioloaist

Roy Bickle

- Jane Sheppard, Mmeral Wells,

',

."

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Computerized Hurina Aid Selection
Dependable Hurin1 Aid Strvlct

Certified

Calendar

.. ..

·

•complete Chimney Cle•nlng ,
•certified Chimney Relining &amp; Repair
"Experienced end Insured

PHONE 992-2156

8

-========r=======:lr::=======:t;::::;;;;;;;;;:;;:;:~ IM9Ie.IIIIIs -

'

Girl Scout program
conference to be held:;''Black Dtarnond.Girl Scout Coun.ctl, of which Melp County Is a part,
.will hold Its second program
.qlllfeieace, ''Passport to SUccess1UI SCOutlna(' Oct.13-14atJackson's
·MID. The COI)ference Is open to

Business Senices

r-

Eleven years later, the American
Care America, a regional emergency medical group based In Board of Meatcal Specialties recogLouisa, Ky., and providing sWIIng nized emergency medicine 115 a
and management to h06pltal emer- specialty. Today. there are 70
gency departmentS! n the Central approved medical residency . programs for emergency medicine.
and Eastern United States.
The Amertcan College of Emer- Tiley !lave graduated 1.100 emergency Phyilclans was found In 1968 gency physicians and are currently
when . those physicians working : training an additional 700 emerexclusively In emergency depart- gency health care.
Veterans Memortal Hospital Is
ments decided they needed a
formal way of exchanging knowl- joining wtlh the Amertcan College
edge about ~ency medical of Emergency Physicians In obcare In order to Improve patlent serving Emergepcy Medicine
Week 1!1!4.
care, Brizendine explained.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

boldroom ronch otyle hol'(lo.
ou won't botlevo It untH you
lt . Woll kl!'t. llnced In
bolck vord, control olr, po
hoot with tow hooting bltlo.
ge,.91 with oloctrlc apon•.
R~v to mow Into. Nice
Mlllhborhood. Prlood to ooll.
Cot 441-0108 lifter 11::10.

.

!i

2 bodroom Hlllcroot totol
1
aloctrlc. Oood condition. 3 bdr. houoo far ,.,t •31o 1,,
Corpon, porch. 1 ocre. good mo. Coli 304- 1171 - 1104~.., •
locotlon, 110,5DO. Call 3D4-8711-1381.
".It
992-2811.
•
'
Smoll furnlohod " hou'..... ;
1980 luddy ·14•7D. 3 bold- odulto only. Coll441· 03ft. ;
roomo, 1 ~both. gordon tub,
"· , 011
boy windows. flreploco, cttll- 5 room houn. 2 bdr .. 1
i1
lng fon. Exc. con. 113,1500. LR . DR . K. E•collont
-~
Con 114·112·111113.
tion. Ref. • dl!'ooh.~~ ,
qulrod. Coli 448-1 ;170 llf'!or ,
1883 Schultz limited edl- 11:00.
;
'
lion. 14•70 with 7x1 1 ••poneto, 3 bllclroom. 1~ ~ houoe on St . AI. 141 r•
botho, ol oloc, control olr, reforonceo required . C'.lill
flrepl-. utro lnoulotlon, 441-4940.
' I"! ,•
built In oteroo . .. 304-4158- - - - - - - - - . . . , . . •'
11584.
Houoo far r11nt on At. 218'. ·~~·
Coli 448-721)8 onytlme. : ' 1
1878 Ullorty, 12•10. otovo.
•1
refrlgerotor. Iorge motor 3 Bedroom hou11 within qlty 11
boa, two porchea. un;cler· limtl. e221 • utHtttee. CaR •:
•:
penning, with 4 ocru. eftor 5:00, 245·81.41.
1
drlllocl woll with PU!"P.
.
~
motol bldg . , 304·175· 3 bllclroom houa, I ~ ~
7321 .
.oportmont. 304-87B-1110)1. ~~

:

1

•

w ill.

'·

··--.A.

�I

64 Misc. Merchandl" 56

Pet• for Sale

81

state 1p."
proved. plaotlc oaptlc tanka,
plaotlc cul\rort. metal culvarto. RON EVANS ENTER PRISES, Jackoon, Oh 1114286-6930.
.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Cu1 up oloba. 111i PIJ
,,.,.,..,. . load,larger loodo delivered.
Call for prlceo. Coll614245-6804.

Morcum Roofing &amp; SpoutIng . Now lnotolllng rubbe,...
roofa. 30 yaors alpOriiiiOI
opoclallzlng In built up roof
Call 1114-388-98117.
"r.

For ula fill dirt, end top ooil.
Call Call I 14-2116-1427.

Nice 3 bdr. mobile home.
with refrigerator 8t stove,
furnished. water paid. with

~t;;;::~::~:::;~::::r;;;.;:::;::;:;:;:::;J ---------

Mobile home Upper River
Rd. Call 446-1609 or 4460508
·
2 bdr. trailer in Kyger
1 Creek 44
School Diotrlct,
child
ac
c eptable . 1160
mo ..
1100
446 4006
dep . Call
"
·
. 2 bdr. mobile home, adults,

·~~ 6 _'~t"~~B . rofernace s.

Call

2 bedroom fully furn . all

utlliti8s paid except for elec .

Convenient location . Coli
446 -8568 .
1 2 60
C.ll.nt Condltl·on
ad~lts 0~~y. 1 below Eureh:

;;'!:r=~~~~!3~;~4~1!06';'::

Apartment

t 2x80 2 bedroom trailer
furnished , gas &amp;: water pd .

Furnished efficiency $146
utilties paid. single. share
bath, 807 2nd. Ava .. Gallipollo. Call 446-¢418 ofter
9PM .

Mobile Home&amp;. lot for rant.

ouse

h ld G 00d 1

P

County Appliance. Int .
Good uoad oppllanceo ond
TV oeto. Open BAM to 8PM .
JACKS 0 N ESTATES Mon thru Sat. 446-1699.
APARTMENTS (Equal &amp;'27 3rd. Ave. Gallipolis,
Housing Opportunltyl hu OH.
one and two bedrooms. rant 1- - - - - - ----aterting at 8163 for one Whv pay more Trade Center
bedroom lnd 8198 per Furniture Outlot, Kanaugo;
month for two bedroom, Ohio. Open 9-7 PM .
with 1200
F00dl. depooit
d
d located
s pr1ng 1~---------:--:-:neer
an an
Pickens uHd furniture. 304·
Valley Plaza. pool and TV 67S-6483or676-1460.
ant. Call446-2746 or leave
meuaga.
Soars waohor ond dryer
$276.00 . Complete baby
furnished apt. 919 2nd.. bad $36.00. Victorian living
delllpolla. $176. Men only. room au it half price
Call446-4416aftar9PM.
81 , 000 . 00 . 304 - 675 7746.
2 bdr. apt . newly decorated. ~----.,-----:---:---:
860 to $146 per mo. utiltloa 1
part. paid.Call675-5104or Johnsonwoodandcoaladd
676•6386.
, on iurnece. $300 .00. Call
304-8B2-2247.

1---=-------

1260 mo. and $100depooit.
~all 446-6583

51 H

for Rent

43 2916
·
3 bdr. mobile home total
~lee . 8176. Addison. Ohio.
tall 614-446-0175.
~ bdr mobile home. s 150
mo.. 850 dep, on Rt. 160.
·Call 614-3BB-8711.
•
~ 4 70 3 bd r., P&amp;•rtlY fur~ • •
,,.ished, free water sewage
t275 mo. plus deposit. Call
,46-9204 or 446-2851 .

1'

Nicely furniohed mobile
home in city, CA. 1 or 2
adults only, no pats. Call
446-0338.
.

Call 446-1052.

82" round dining roomtsble
h'
h · Phil
with mate '"II c a•rs.
~~~~~~~~~ahogany. 304-

53

Antiques

1--------'---

Furnished Rooms

l!/lcCormick Rd . Call 4-t6• For rent Sleeping Rooms

Other antiquas. Call 4462192.

bdr.

mobile

home. 46

eompletely furnished on Bob

and light housa keeping

il669 .

~ bdr mobile home. Call
~46-0390.

furnished mobile home. 3
bedroom. washer and dryer.

No pats. Call 949-2263.

T ' bedroom . furnished ,
washer and dryer, air condl·
tion. 1175.00 plus utilities

rooms. Park Cel:\tral Hotel.

Call 614-448-0758 .

2 bedroom furnished. AC .

child. No pats. New Haven.

Call 304-882-2466.

46

Top soil and fill dirt dellverod. 304-875-7771 .

Space for Rent

on E. Main St. Call 614992-7314 or 992-6216 .
2 bedroom unfurniahed mo-

bile home , private lot .
Burdana Addn, $176.00
plus deposit. references,
utilities. 304-676-2464.

. Apartment
for Rent

Office space for rent. Call
446-7672 or 446-1980.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, ·Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large loti. Call
614-992-7479 .
Merr.haml1 se

51 Household Goods

Furnished aipt .• 2 rooms S.
bath, clean, no pat,, adultl
only Deposit 8t reference

required . Call 614-446 1519.
Furished

Mobile home lot Addison
Twp. Nex:t to Addaville
School . Water ·a ewage,
garden apace. furnished.

Discount from Mfg . Pricea

on union tabelled adveniling
spacia!tleo. H. 0 . Somerville
(sinco 1 964} Phone 304675-3334.

Call 614-36?-7746.

2 b8droom furnished . Above
Kawasaki shop in Pomeroy

44

64 Misc. Merchandise
Tobacco stick• 62 in long .
Both endo ohorpanad, 17
centt each or 16 cents per
1.000 or mora. 304-9372530.

992-7479 .
clean. Employ·ad adults, 1

1----------

Sleeping room 8125. utilities paid. Share bath, mate
only. Range &amp; refrlg. 919
2nd. Ave .• Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 altar 9 PM.

and deposit. No pats. Call

garage apt. , 4

rooms &amp;. bath, adults only .

Call 446-9279 after 4PM .
Garage apt. unfurnished. 2

bdr's, 322 3rd. Ave .. adults
only, _no pets. Call 4463748 or 614-256-1903 .
Modern 1 bdr. apt. quiet
location between Gallipolis

&amp; holzar. No pets, security
deposit. Coli 446-2055.

1 bdr unfurnished apt.. 6
mo. lease, $190 mo ., utilitiel paid, no children, no
pats, $50 deposit. Call 4463667 altar 5PM .
Riverside Aptl. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens. 8130 . Equal Housing Opportunities. 814992-7721 .
Newly redecorated, 1 bedroom, partially furnished ,
8226. Deposit required . Call
614-992- 5319 or 9922815.
- -------lcFurnished 2 bedroom apartments in Middleport. Adults.
no pets. security deposit.

4 :00 Call448-7009
or 448-7121 1after
cond.
:304PM
.
8 " snow blade with hydraulie attachment. Interior controio &amp; lighto. Coli 4483344or448-1134.

Julie bo• stereo with 8 -track
AM -FM radio, record player
&amp; colored llghta . Call 614379-2116.
Rock hard maple dinetteaet
includH oval ahape table
with divider and 6 chalro.
Coli 1114-379-21 115.
Better ' N Ben woodburning

firaplaceinaert. Uudpartof
3 yearo. 1560. Coli 4463723 or 448-2338.
Couch.

end tabla, swag
la.m p, curtalna. bookcaH.
dlohwaoher,waightbanch,
piano, clorlnat. Call 4461683.
Avon coll.acto·o·n take all or
port. Call448-7334.
Firawood-Seuoned hordwood 120 pick
lo d
s
up • '
you haul h. CoH 448 -2683.
General Electric automatic
washer. t30. 4 46-8132 .

Antique cherry clothes
press. exc . cond., •400.

Two

1--------Mualcal
lnatrumenta

Surplus Army Camouflage,
Leather comb.t boots. Denim, aH siJea. Unlimited

quantitioa 1 :00-7:00 PM,
Fri, Sat, Sun, Sam Somerville'&amp;, Eoot Ravenawood. 7
miles tNew Era) Large white
building South West aide
street. free parking. Rental
surpluo clothing.

Indian Stocker Compound
Bow, 4&amp;-lilllbo. pull, new In
bo• · • 66 · 2 45 -9 1 117 ·
---------lcCountry Crafto Oak producto. daolor of aolid oak
reproductionfumlture. Conkle's, Tuppers Plaino, O~io.
Alsn open Sundaya.
Double keyboard, full foot
pedal Hammond organ with
largl apeaker. Suiteble for
church or home. 11100. C.
Hoeflich. Call 1114-9926292.

Bundy trumpet. good cond..
1150. Call 114-388-8867

drum oat t280. con 614:
367-7826.
1
d B dy t
pat
un
~
.
Good condition. CoH 614992-3901.
For aale Bundy trumpet, Uka
new.I250.304-67&amp;-4B28.

,&gt;

't7•

~~~~~==~==~~;::~~::~~~~~
63

Livestock

Bundy clarinet, good condltlon, Call ~04- 8711- 21 12.

2 pure F.....,h Alpine d08f.
0 ,. 7lpor .oen.t Aiplnadoa.
One purl French Alpine doe
ldd. Qne grade LIMonche
dOll kid. ·304-171-4243.

58

84 !tey It Grain

_ Fruit
&amp; Vegetablal

Dunrovin Fruit Form Jonathan ond Rombo epplao.
Concord grapea. you pick or
buy at aalla room. St . Rt.
881 SE. of Alb•ny. Coli
814-898-62981PM-7PM .

Largo round belao for hay for
aala 120 ... Cal 4411-10112.

Atfatfaand mixed hly. paved
loading area . 304-11712028.

BarryPatch. Coll448-8892.
Conning tomatoaa . 'Pick 71
Autoa for Sale
your own, bring contolnero.
Eugene Davia. CaR 1114- - - - - - - - - - - 247'- 3263.
TOP CASH paid for '80
Concord Grapao, 10 lb. 14: modal and - - . 1 cere.
40 lb. 11 4 ,. 2 'h mllao aaoton Smith Bulcii-Pontlac, 1111
Sand Hill Road. 304-175- Eutam Ave.• Glllpolla. CaH
2879. No Sunday Salaa.
814-448-22S2.

·59

For Sale or Trade

Sarvlco ototicn for laaaa
downtown Point Plo-nt,
Convenient otore, Dell mar·
chondiling pooaibillty. Coli
614-373-8411 aok for
Devid.·

59·109 lntarn•tion .. dozer.
d con d • 16 •liDO · DO ·
goo
304-11,76-6823.

fm11 Supplll''
~ LIVI~:.ttll'

61

Farm Equipment

For ule or trade 130 Farmall
cultivaton. in exc.
cond. Will trade for good
pickup truck. Alao 2 bo•
tobacco pren with air cyl.
Coli 448-7838 - r II.
You build ~or wo will24•48 I - -- - - - - - - 4 car goroga kit. 12,495. Fm aale or trade a Badger
Coii1 -614-B88-7311 .
Silage wagoll for a good
grain drill . Call 4ot6-01157.
Now. opttn for buainesa,
Mountain Stlte Block. At. New Idea corn picker. good
33. New Haven. Complete cond., 1700. Call6t4-3B8•
masonry suppliea. 4". 8". 8701.
12" block. Delivery aarvlca.
Phone day 304-B82-2222. N- Holland 717 ChOpper,
evening 882-3239 .
corn and graes head . P.T.O.
Fo• Blower. . Call 1-304474-3317,
with

TNCkl for
1912 S-10 Chevrolet V-11,
14,898. 1879 Chevy Luv
with 10ppor U,718. Joh"' s
Auto lala, · Sulavlla Rd.
GalllpoiiL. Oh. 446-4782.
TRUCK TOPPERS Moot
llreo. dllt.ront colora, maotor card acoeptad. John' a
Auto 811e. BUiaville Rd .. Call
441-4792, GaHipoUa, Oh.
1 9S2 lcotodala holt lon,
atandard with overdrive.
would trade for lata model
car. Coll14-379-2116.
1177 Chevrolet truck. Call
114-371-288B.

Red rupb.errleo . Taylon

66 Building Supplies
Building ·Motarlolo
Block. , brick. aewer pipes,
windows . lintels . etc .
Cloude Wintaro. Rio Gronda.
o. Call614-246-6121 .

1882ToyotaTruck,7ft. bed
w/matchlng camjlar top
AMIFM cuatta. 18,600.
Cell
_
, aak for
448 3738
Charlie.
1 97S Dataun PU 4 apd.,
rodlo. topper. t2. 188.
John'l Auto 8-'•· Bu'·vUia
...,., ,.
Ad. Call448-4712. .

118 Mun- 74,000 mil... 198S GMC, 4000 aarlaa. 2
289 outo.. factory olr, 10n dump truall with h..,Y
12.1100. Call I14-3S8- duty t r - hitch, 11,600.
9B78 oftar IIPM.
Col 448-1173.
1972CaciiHaaCoupeDevlle
d
d
fuH
goo con "
-··
;~;~&amp;0 .. Call 114·2111.-

9
ck 11
d
1 7&amp;Toyotatru • • - .
88.000 mllal, good cond.
11110.00. 304-11711-7241
bafure 10 pm.

~---------~

74 Dodge Swinger.. 75 • ·
Ply'mouth. 76 Plymouth.
alon1 II, runo good. Call 73
4411-2817- II.
t 874 CoeChinan 0111 cornlonad fifth wheal 111.000.
19S1 Robblt dloasl *3,1100.
Cell 1114-3117-71011.
1882 Ford Eocor1 13,4118.
t9S2 Ford EXP 13,4811.
11182 Ford Futuro Fairmont
t3.499. John'• Au10 S.Oie.
BulaviHe Rd. Galllpollo, Oh.
446-4712.
1973 Dodge Chorgor; 1800
or bast offer. Call814-2668417.
1977 Mercury Monarch.
good tond. Coli 814-26111812.
1917 Corvette Roadster
327· 300, 4 opel.. aide ••heuo:t. llitvO&lt;-bloc!&lt; to •
Interior. Rootorad in 19B2.
19,100. Call 114-31170324 after II.
1981 Grand Pri•. good
.,..,., fully equipped, belt
offer ovO&lt; t6,000. Call after
4PM, 4411-41611.
.

· Van1 8t 4 W.D.

1 9B8 lntornotloilol Seoul
1600. 1979 XL 18&amp; Honda
1&amp;00. Large fuel oil 110ve
11110. Call 614-378-2820.

parking .
6738.

opts for rant. Coll614-9925434 or 992-6914 or 304882-2666.
2 Bedroom apt. in Middleport . Utilitiea included.

'f21 0 a month pluo dopoolt.
Call614-992-7177 .
APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houaea. Pt. Ple111nt

and Golllpollo. 814-4488221,
Nice

1 and 2 bedroom

\

())

(]) n

()) CII'OI

i

I
7:30

1977 Suzuki · AM 110
t200.00. Runo good, 3041711-4072.

1873 8tarcraft Soat Chlaf10n Mark IV 21 ft. cabin
crul- .,d 1177 Titan 3S ft.
Pork Moclol Camper. Both
na..lent condition. Call tSI6-31SO after II P.M . 0!
anyt- .........d • •

1877 Rlnlcorbalt Trl Hull,
1fllo\. tt 711 hp OUtboard, boat
offer. 304-6711-4437 or
1'711- 33114.
.

78

8t

Auto P•n•
Acceaaorlea

Roll Iter and tOJ1118f for ehart
wheel beM plall up. 304. 178·S739 otter 11:00.

79

Motor~ Homea
• C1mp1r1

1179 Wlldornaa oompet:,

aa ft. -... eight. cai1

441-1111.

New Noone Tlwt

MOVIE:

IOUI'II

••

~ltJIUI4

'c.:tAit7
•• AU

VuiDerable: Nortb..SOUtb

w......

. DNier: Soontb /

• Cll (JIB • - - and

Mre.
Kino Amlnda il - ·
prilad wherl Lao quits tho
Agency to wort. for ., ••-

field ...... lumed de...._ " (80 mln.l
(I) lBI
'Tho Csnadlan ...... Tho
Cenadiln .... ·-lillie

e--. .. .....

Now,
let's

join
John
- Olchllbl
- for.
tho
Bolton
Pope
opec:ial ~ perfonn...... 1111 (110 mln.l
• MOVIE:
8:30 (J) AI: W.,...,
()) NFl'1 Supr • - 'The
Men Who Played 'the
Gllna.'
(I)MIIjorh...........

what

9:00 •

'

GASOLINE ALLEY

'"-l,t;::;''

"...... .......

see

I

AND HEATING
Cor. Founh end Pine .,N ,
Golllpollo, Ohio
,
Phone 814-4415-3B88 or I
. ~ 1I.
614-4411-4477

(I) MOYIE: 'Gandhi'

()) e

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

lit

...

Fr•eclaco

..

.(J)(JJKabt . . . . . .
Kate's blind date tumo inlo a
dioootet wt.. liar guy falls
for the don1811ic A•- 1R1
(J) (BJ .............. .

WINNIE

I · "f

'Oenca in Anwlca: Bournonvii!OI Dancaa.' .Tho ·Now
y ort.' Oty llllat interprets
tho aldlerlnt c:hooaognphw
of August lloumoolvlle in a
performeroca of 'Boumonville ~tl .' "
(60 ...... 1
8:30 • ()) t11 filowlwlt Ste- phanie ;. lhockld - - lhe

!

~

-------------------&lt;- .'r
Good~ 1 ExcaVating. b11eJ! :

ment1. footara. drivewey ~~·
aaptlc tonka. landocaplnd.• ~
Call anytime 814-448"-•
•&amp;37, J1m11 L. Davison, Jr.~ ~

~

owner.

cllcovera ihat her old boyfrilnd ... her high
odtaolnv.l . 1111
10:00 (J) MOVIE: 'My Fav.tao

~~

Dozer Work by Tad Honna. 1
Dltcheo, pondo, roodo, land - t
clearing, etc. Call Motor Car
Brokero, 4411-81192.
~

v...

-·

.CilCJJC uwv•~
Cltrie and Mary lelh lull for
a poallble murder IUapect

' at a malo atrip-jolni . 1R1 160
min.j

'
1

())Anwaarlaaalw•wfth
llllyT...... Ranowned pion-

1st onc1. oompo- lilly

1
~

.,anged ..laclitJioo inckld-

'
•

claelcl by George
Gerohwin and Ouke Elling- ·
ing

-- ~1 .

lOri. (80 ......,

®

I

An

o...-

of

Nawa/lpartaiWMtlwr

Dad'•~

'

leat

Jomao Boyo water hrvlca .
Al10 poolo flAacl. Cell 114
2111-1141 or lf4-44i 117B or 1114·441-7111 .
I

.(I)

Well~,

JIMS WAT!R BERVIct':l
CaH Jim Lenle.r, 304-17~ ·
7397.
'
I

I
I

\

UPHOUTIIIY SHOP
,
leo. A..... Glll!lala

' nu

r
i

Gootlotoo

~inlll

· 0iJ11 011

20'•'•

ol the

...,_Rick

oome friende from
the undao -'d to help him
ond A.J . recover a atolon
CIF. IRI (80 min.) -

K811' a Wotar Barvlco.
01-nl, poolo fl"ad. Phone
IS'7-0S23 or 367-7741
night • doy.
•.
• •_

PEANUTS

QUESTION NUMB
ONE ...

I

Eqdnr-

d..

Freeman

(JCJIIien

DOWN
I Lna I

Ie:~

IA:U tl;ht America

"

12:00

nlan

eoo-t

wu taPed

:.n:·n

eniaugles

·--v

Londan'l

Royol Albert IW.
(1) ........ -

we &lt;IlNaM
Ill MOVII: 'On I Cia!
o.,. vouc.n ... Fuo .. .,

.01

Wilko

.
..
'

,

. ~~

II Inilect
ltOneldnd

-~

lt7 clervmaa
Eye pllt 1:7-il-t-

IIGennln
•

autbar
D 'ftda (Sp. )

•ruten

'

•

..

II P.l.

people .

.Bibllral
IIIDUIIfaln
II Alllelclpe
tlllappenlng

41 Funeral

hr+-HH-

.,

IIIIIIIc

DAILYCRYP'I'CiqUal'E8-Here1allowloworkit:

.

-··~

AXYDLBA~R

IILONGFI!Li.OW

i.u.r .......

One
for''IIIIOiber. fu tiU lllllple A Ia tiled
for tile line L'1, X for' tile two O'a, etc. Single leU.en,
1111 t ..... the ~and formetlon olthe wordl are all
...._ EacbdiJihe code lettenare different.
' CRYP'I'OQOO'I'I!'
PDGMCTI

BE OUI

OBZIQ OUCO

()) - - lporliLnok

Yesterday's Alllwer

JA.ctuguard t Leavillga II '"est
".- ...
U -118d"
_.. t EcJplian
valid will Sl River
II 87 'ftY ol
~
II D1athat
IJ
Wilt
Stanley
s .._
17 Suffix
explored
(abbr.)
IIIIM! on! " 11 Billiard Sll Hell
II True
1 Bullring
shot
.J1 Mercy
Amerieans c:beet
n Emisllary 11 Collection
~~~
rcau111e fire hGratlfled st-Fall
fi1!Mn
II Unndy
(CI'Oirlling
11::
INanlVJ.P. IIcar-I
stone)

Rau-

Thll rpeclal

It

.,

CGIIDIIIII

ZF1•odl
, river

~':..rt
.._
Albwtlona

11 :30

114-......7131 or.,ot:441~']

*'"Pot,_.
Newa

11~~w~,.._
lrwlda .......
.

, SNAKE!!

General Haulln~

-=a=1-. ...,.u~p~holaterv-,---___:_-

$1

PICtaudon

I

\

.'

I~ t

•

10:30 (J) . l l a t .

.-

I Rn lwl
Jl m-y
fiDIIer
II Docile
1J ~
. H "-ol

JIFavorlte
SIMaiiiii-

&lt;QIN-tclo

Electrical
.Refrlgeretion

!

r..,.

lor perfount oome MW!y-

I

SEWING . Mlthlna ropolr,,
oorvlca. Authorized Singer '
&amp;olea • Sorvloo ShlriH!~ .
Sciaoon . Fabric Shop, '
Po-roy. 114-991 · 2284 .· ~ 1

•

·'

tHOf!IIAS J011PH
AOI08(I
a MorltcJrium
1 11a1n1 a Rdefor ·

It~

(J)JOOC...
())Auto ...... 'M: CAIIT ,
........ lndr flam MantNai. Oort
(JI NFL F II ':

toda\lt ·

SHULAW'S Plumbing and
Heating, 211 Sl•th St.:
Point Pleaunt."W. Vo. 30•·
876-11420. Licensed and
.
.
inaured.

~

(J) Cil MOVIE: 'Marco
, . . Pan2

we've
learned

JIM'S PLUMBING. HEATING. Rt. 1, Bo• 365, Golli~ ~
polio. Cell 614-367-0&amp;711 . . ~·

~

ttU2 ' .

willi

(110 ......1 (Cioaad
Cljniaowdl
.

Ramodallglnterlor end ••to.....,

~

.

•.uu s
•n
.,

'viawl.

tJon, door-window fremlna. ~ i

1833.
.

• Jlt.
.ltQJlot
,. J:AIT

llpeclll ~I t I ' a.bora Waltera celnt,_ liar
.,... of r,tillrdwil••ooapeclnl by praaerwing
-able
momenta from poilt inllr-

Building-Remodeling. con. .;
crate. drywoll. elactrlcal' 1' •
roofing, flooring, frllmlng,..,.
kitchen-bathroom lnotolla•~.

Till ITATE

.7i

.,... 'olr«&lt;ited
••,.-conaaaa
featuring tlw bOlt .etchea
of the ............_
(J) Clloo Kid
(I) '1 • • Nlgllt lllltultUp wwi•IQIOI'I Rldlllins
VI. San FI'WICilco 48er' I.

!·

86

NOIITB
•ltn

(J) ICTY: lr llld Cemlnll
·Tho ......... conllnue

Metal buildlngo. dtoignad·• ~
and b\lllt any olze, In ~aloro:• 1
(cheapl 304-1175 -3981 . '

•

Cutting n·nes ·
of communicatiOn

'lb-

Namedo.h'

Rotary or cable tool
Moot waHo completed
cllly. Pump. 11leiJ end nrv~ :f-.
cea. 304-895-3802.

84

JamesJ~oby

ttw

( I ) . Ill .....

J .A.R.Conotructlon Co .Ru,
tlond, Oh.I14-.7 42-29D3:
B~11manto, Footero. Cancr'lte work, B•c:khoe'a,
Dozer &amp; Dltchor, Dump
trucka. &amp; water·gaa·sewerllectrlcalllnoo.

-

'

(60 mln.l

(J)

l

Boat• and
Motor~ for Sale

·1"-

.

JtMwa••
(J) Tic TIIC Dotlgh

• Wit•

Dozer work. ground clurlng, ••coveting, 121 Iii !
hour. Call448-9&amp;38.
76

'

In Cluallwlllli
8 :00 • (J) CD 'TV' I II aar rre
and l'rladael .laMe Jerry
l.awil and Dick Clerk ... victime of practical jatH' ond
Raben
Klein
pron nt1
'Streota of New York.' 1R1

parlonCed carpenter.
olon. maoon.

.

.....

==-·=··

"' .

~----~------------·
83
Excavating
~

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

-.

lftl~

IT...Ill .

'

.

Cll WhMI, .........

'

.

........
-.a~ ................. l1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......
_.........................
, 11.0. . . Itt,,...,., NJ. - .

.......

(!J . . ,
WIIMifllfF'orUW

BASEMENT
·WATERPROOFING ':1 t
Uncondltlon•lllfe11ma gua-,~ I
franlt. .ad
. Lofcolraferloncao . !
urn ah . rH elt mateo. - '
Ca.ll collect 1 ' 1~4- 237'f
04118, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
·,
R 0 e ro B a 1 amen t '
11
j
Waterproofing.
. ,~
RINGLES'S SERVICE,
'i

.

thlo-"CU9TAAOY'' (cuatodyl

CllllltJioctnp nill
Cll. (I) ,....., Feud

74

1982 Harley Davldoon
Sport- 211th onniv-ry.
t3200 ,firm, Call 1114-114112162 altar 1:30. NatrldH;

I .

WIIMifllfForUW

Nuuuwll aw

RON'S Talavlalbn Service .
Specializing In Zenith o~d
Motorola, Quazar. on~
houll cello. Call 304-6782388 or 114-446-2414.
·
~
F.tty Tr.. Trimming, stump l o
removal. Coli 304-8711·- ~
•'
1331 .
---------- •
GET your carpet SHIP ~
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN \
STEAMER . Water removalj
fumltura cloonlng, frH ootl .
matea. 304-876-2291.
.,

-C
--'A-R-T-ER_'_S_P_L_U_M_B-IN-G
---:: j

1 8SO Kawaookl 440 LTO
whh e11tra1. aloo 4 111 Inch
otaal baltajl radlala, good
u - tlrao lind P206-711.
Celll14-ll2-311111.

I

&lt;II ...........111.1. ........"
T-'llld

tlon, deodorlzaro. FREE ootl~
nie~•- Roooonabla rota•
Gone Smith, 992-8309. : :

----------~-------"'
'.-'
82
Pl1,1mbing
8t Heating
.1

1 811 K-aoald 3011 SnHt
Bike. N- concltlon 1 200
mHao.IIIIIO. or ,b elt offer.
Phone 882-74B3.

(-biiOIIOWI

. .rllldel!l'll ...,._, MOUTH TACKY DRAGON MYSELF
8
8111
=' : The mu wtoo IlOilo pUdding woa token Into

lp I CaMa
(J)Ga!MtPwle

J

1979 Chevy Beauvllla van.
14.660.00. 304176-77411.

i 87S , XL360 Honda, good
cond. Will taka 1400. (61 41
3117-"11147 or (3041 896311011 oftlf II p.m.

I .-c-......
(J) PM ....

.

-.:rr~o t,.,.....IP""'IIF""''a7I-.I~Ir!I:I"'"VI'""""l,..,..I~1'

Time

7:00

ll:el'AUII:ANT THI!Y
OP'!NEt:' UP' ON
THI! MOON?

- anonoa lhl--. 10
[) 101m
Illb
IUipttoa
IOIIUfl•
glltld
yih
l -·
-.

() (

II

896-3426 or 895-3384. •

111711 Yamaha YX 400 dirt
bike 1410. 1871 Honda C8
360T strait bike 16110.
11173Y,IftllhaDT2110straat
• trail bike t400. Call
614-216-68311.

ITROSEHj

euni.a .

'Cil!l==
.
I"-PortNljllidt
-. I'
'II
. . ' ,. '
e 1. · , •
l One.De; ...

rlor. Freo, eotlmateo.l 30

Motorcycle•

lr , ......

1•r

~I!Jl.c WI'TH iii!

()

~

(I) .•

304-675 -2218 bafora 6
p.m .

'

tj:30

GENE'S DEEP STEAM
c A R p ET c L E A N ,.

unfurnished apartments .

5 room apartment, 3 bed·
room houoa. 304- 676 11104.

.

1 9711 CJ 7 hardtop, auto,
PS, low mllaaga. CoR 4461800.

Call 614-992-

1 &amp; 2 bedroom tUrniahed

tho Mimi .

e

acotchgulrd·weter ax:trac :

WUA"TWA51'HE

())Dr. Who

304-11715-2440.
'.
_________
...:r

Lo-.

1
v.,... ,
I .........Nac: ,._ .

•

Luayee-

vinyl aiding, rooting, room 'I
addition. norm wln~owai :
otona. Coli 1114-367·0401! ,
or614-387-7244.
••
------------~-1
BASEMENT
~
WATEAPROO"NG
1
Uncondltlonolllfotlme guo- 1
rant•. local reference•
r
furnlahad . Fr.. altlmatao. J
C..l collect 1-114-237- ' l
04 Ba. a.m. to 11 p.m . • 1
Waterproofing.
F! o ge ro B a 1 em ant~:'d~',
,_

w H&gt;

(!J Newe/8partiiW........

1979 Ford Bronco XLT. Call
446-2177.

Call 614-992-3874.
small furnished apartment
for one on ground floor.
Private entrance and free

We MOVIE: 'AI:pl
=-·1141'
Hot.......,

:

For sale: Royol blue fokelur, -----'-~---coffee table ••c. cond •35. 4 pc. racloparlde drum mate

~~§~~~~2§~~~~b~~~~~:-.114 pair of mono ohoee good

.,

(I) (I)

~

PAINTING· Interior ond ••f' ~
torlor, plumbing, roofing,
lOme ramodallng. ao vr•
.. p. Call 114-388-98&amp;2.
_:H:.::,•_a_:_H_o_m_a_l_m_p_ro_v_a_m_o_n-to \

-----------'1after &amp;PM.

conveqient location on Rt.

7 , 614-246-5818.

1:00 •

-=:...:..:..:....::.:.:.----.·-

Brlorpa10h Kennell Profoellonll Al-b . - grooming.
Indoor-out- boarding 111cllltiea. English Cocker Sponlel puplliaa. con 8 t 4-3889790.

57

_........,9/10184_ _
(

Judy Taylor Grooming. Coli
1114-3117-7220.
Plt~•tlc clat•nl

ti
:8

Home
Improvement•

The Deily Se 11iuei-Page 8

Television
Viewing.

KIT 'N' CAN.YLI &lt;!:tt, L8lrJ Wrtehl

HILLCREST KENNUS
Boording all b..-o. H..lad
Indoor- outdoor focllltleo .
AKC Dob8rinan pupple•:
Stud Service. Call 814-448779&amp; .

~

Ohio

September 10, 1984

Monday, September 10, 1984':

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

..

•

'

CMYJA

TGCMAE

BZZDPIZPI • CZA

EIZ.

QBJIMOS,

M B T ·U 0 .

P. P.

I

' JCQALBZ

Yntor..,'l Ct=llle: TilE NA'l'lJRAL FUGHTS OF
111E HUMAN
ARE NOT FROM PLEASURE TO
PLEASURE, BOT FROM HOPE TO HOPE. -SAMUEL
JOHNSON
.

•
"'

.'

�Page 10-The DaHy Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Convicted slayer
el~ctr,ocuted today

Mondale unveils

(Continued from page 1)
final year of President Reagan's tax
cuts for those earnlngabove$60,®,
and a 15 _pet cent mlnlrimrn tax on
COlJXlratlons.
Mondale's spending cuts would
'

lnclude$25 b1111on less for defense by
JiQ!, $12 . billion less tor health
programs, $f bllllon lesS for
agrjculture and $5 billion In savingS
by running the government more
efficiently.

ANGOLA, La. (AP) - TlmoiiiY
Bllldwln, convicted of bludgeoning
todeathanll)-year-oldbllndw&lt;man
who was godmotherto.!qs youngest
son, was executed In Loulsilula's
electric chair ~ly Monday.
Baldwfn. ' 46, was pronounced
deadat12:13a.m. CIYr,saldC. Paul
Phelps.~ of Public Safety

.

Council president resigns post
Oris Hubbard resigned as pres!·
dent of Syracuse Village Council at
· the regular meeting held last
Thursday.
Elected to the office vacated by
Hubb;lrd was Kenneth Cundiff.
Hubbard will continue to serve on
thecouncU.
.
A letter will be wrttten by council
· to the Meigs County Board of
Elections as!ddg that the Syracuse
voting polls be brought back to
vUiage hall. The polls wereiiiOVW to
the Carleton School for the last
election, but council feels the move
Is unsatisfactory.

Council also passed two resolutions during the meeting, one to
accept lbe sale of C!lble Entertain·
ment to Consolklated Communlca·
tions Group or West VIrginia. and
the other to accept tbe amounts and
rates . determined by the budget
commission.
Present at tbe meeting were
Mayor Eber Pickens, council
members Glen Cundiff, William E.
Gulntber, Jack Williams, Orts
Hubbard and Kenneth CUndiff,
Village Marshall Milton Varian and
Janice LaW!lOn, secretary.

Meigs County happenings
Open house lonight

Meels tonight

Chester Elementary will be
holding an open house this evening
at 7 p.m. APl'O meeting will follow.
All Interested parents and the pubUc
are Invited to meet the staff and
admlitlstratlon.

• The Pomeroy Elementary PrO
will hold a meeting at the school this
everung at 7: :JJ p.m. An officers
meeting will held at 6: ~p.m.

Tuesday meetings
The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
hold a meeilng tomorrow at 7: :JJ
p.m. In tl)ebandroom. Agame fUm
may be shown.

Meigs County EMS squads made
a total o( seven runs over the
weekend.
At9: 54 p.m. on Saturday, TUppers
Plains went to Reedsville for Fred
Flowers to Veterans Memorial. At
10: 56 p.m. Tuppers PlaliiS returned
to Reedsville for Cllfford Roc\thold,
also to Veterans Memorial.
On Sunday, 3: 15 a.m., Pomeroy
was called to a motorcycle accident
on S.R. 143 and transported David
Young to Veterans Memorial. At
1: 45 p.m. Tuppers Plains was called
mS.R. 00 West for Jane Eichinger
to St. Joseph's. Raciriewas called to
S.R. 124 at 6:55 p.m. for John
Longsworth to Veterans Memorial.
At 8:35p.m. TUppers Plain~ went to
S.R. 124 at Long Bottom for Leona
Hensley to Veterans Memorial. At
9:42p.m. Pomeroy was called to the ·
Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Goldie Cremeans to Hol2er Medical
Center.

Veterans 1\femorial
Saturday Admissions- .. none.
Saturday Dlscharges-·--Andy
Cross, Kenneth Cremeans, Hobart
Cozart, Mary Andrews. \
Sunday Admlsslons----'Jennlfer
Foreman, Pomeroy; David Young,
Columbus; Media Schoonover, Rutland; John Longsworth, Racine;
Leona Hensley, Long Bottom.
Sund.ay Discharges----Randy
.Smith, Edward Bush.

Meels lonighl
The Meigs County Jaycees will
meet tonight at 8 p.m. at the Jaycee
quartet'S.
'

No1 on welfare

account of problems encountered by Richard and Zelma
Gilmore of the Pomeroy area with
water service being discontinued at
·their home In which resides a child
who Is ill was meant In no way to
Indicate that the Gllrnores are
welfare recipients. The family Is not
Q11 welfare rolls.
An

Hoosiers lo meet
The Soutbern Junior High At·
hletlc Boosters will meet tonight at
7: ~ p.m. at the junior high school.
Parents with children participating
In any school sport should attend lbe
meettog.
..

To anend session

Litter projects
booklets now due

49ers dump Redskins

seory. P~MMo oa PIIP a

death penalty In 19'16.
' ,-, .
Baldwin, whO ate a last nal •
two b8cOn and tomato~
and french bies, was led ~=
CP.Il precisely at midnight,
down aM-root hall to tbe eXecu
chamber, and 'strapped Into thl
chair.
AnodfroinLoutslanaStatePrllon
Warden· Frank BlackbUrn and thl ·
first c!Wge of 2,1m volta ,IIIIJ'i'!Cl
tllrooil1 Baldwin's body, folkJweCI

dlsgU.stw\ththesocletythatnctused bychal'gesof500,2,1m,and500~j ·
toacceptl*iJUlOCence. ·
Baldwin stiffened atf.er..!he unt _.
"I'm&amp;Wlgw~I'vegot to atone dJ8tae and showed no lipli ot
for lbe tlllngs I did In thlllllfe, and I breathing. ThethlrdchiiJ'IIf!tmiPt
pulled some escapes,'' he said In a smoke ~lng from his left hlp, IIW1
~ ~tement. "Yw are aolna to therewasUttlereactlontolbeblrtll
chartle. A COJ'OIII!1" cleclated 111m
havetogothere, too."
He was then admlnlstered four deadat12:13a.m.
jolts of electricity In all- first 2,1m
Baldwin's mother, Barbara~
volts, then 500, then 2,&lt;Dl, and then win, said he was an altar boy Ill
another 500 volts, said Frank Wlllowlck,Ohlo,wherehewasbom.
Black'bum. wardenoftheLouls.lana He said he was 46.1 His mother,
State P-rison at 1\ngola.
however, said he was 42.
Baldwin was tbe fourth person
Members of tbe victim's famtly .
executedlnLoulslanaandthe24thln said In Interviews that they ha!1 ,
the Uhlted States since the U.S. · waited for the execution.
Supreme
Court reinstituted lbe
"I'm not pleased with anything. I
BALDWIN EXECVftON - Convicted JcWer '11nlcKby Baldwin II
death
penalty
In
19'16.
just
feel justice has finally beep
IIUlTOIIJided by liM!!e!•na state Penllemlary guards as he eaters a
Baldwin
went
throogh
a
succes·
done,
or Is going to be done, but it
secured area for IIlii appearance before the SWe Pardon Boanl In
slon
of
lawyers
as
be
took
his
case
took
an
awful lot of doing all around
. August at the s.\ale ptiloo at Angola, La. ·Baldwbt was executed early
through eight appeals and eight on (Joi Ofpeople's part," saldFra.DJ[
this momlng. (AP La8erphoto).
execution dates In six years, but tbe T Lll'Jt, a~~t·Of Mn. Peten' 801ii. . :'
U.S. SUprerrie Court rejected his last
As tbe executkln was carried oiat,
attempt 7·2 on Sunday.
a groupo!ptoieiitershelda "vlgiUot
He was thefourth person executed Ufe" outside the prison gates 11ft$'
The Eastern High School band is and the leadership being exhibited
lnLoulsianaandthe24thexecutedln an earllerdEmonsti'atlonOI!~the
l()o)klng forward to a busy fall by upper class memberS.
This year's field commander Is the tJnlted States .since the U.s. guvemor's mana!On Ill Bakm
season,
Following a successful band Jennifer Grover. Krlstl Sheppard, Supreme Court reinStituted .the ~- ·
TwodernonstratorslnfawroflJie
camp, the musicians had the Robyn Barnett, Amy Louks and
death
penalty were at the prison opportunity to appear at the Ohio Ertc KesSinger are til!! majorettes Weather forecasl
the
step-parents
of a teen-aged girl
State Fair, the Belpre Homecoming and Oag corps members are Donna
whose
killer,
Robert
LeeWDUe, allio
Parade, the Chester Labor Day Curtis, Tarn! Wells, Terri Stout,
Mostly cloudy tonight wlthasllgh_t
Is
on
Deatl!
Row.
·
festMtles and at the Eastern· Tracy Ireland, Michelle Sisson, chance · of showers. Low ~.
Amy Ritchie and Connie Hendrix. Southerly winds lesS than 10 mph~
Waterford game.
With 57 members In the band this Seniors are Jennifer Grover, Krist! Tuesday, variable cloudiness with a r-----------+
year, the enrolbnent Is one of the Sheppard. Taml Wells, Tracy chance of showers and thunder·
------------~· ,.
largest for the school. Band Director lrelend, Connie Helu!rlx, Tina '- storms.High!D35.pumceof~aln30
.I.
. LEGAL NOTICE
James Wilhelm Indicates he IS Hupp, Angie Spencer, MarkShriev- percent tonight lind 40 percent
The Public Ulilities Commia·
'
pleased with the _splrll of the band ers and Keith Stout.
·
Tuesday. ·
sion of Ohio t\as set for public

EHS band has busy schedule

Emergency squads
make7runs ·

The Syracuse PTO will meet
TUesday at 7 p.m. at the school.

and~ 1!1 Bilton Rouge.
Before he was put to death, a
grim-faced Baldwin expre&amp;Sed his

,-

.

.

~Forecatit

Recyclirlg project is open to public
Special bags to promote recycling
ate being distributed through the
Meigs County Extension Office and
local merchants. Residents are
urged to save their glass, aluminum
and newspapers. They can obtain
more Information on area recyclers
froin the Extension Office.
Due to great response, the Special
Olympic · Recycling Drive will
continue through September 29.
Materials can be brought to the
Meigs Conly Fairgrounds of) Saturday, Sep~ber 29, from 9 a.m. until
3 p.m. To date, over 3,00J pounds of
paper have been recycled. Aluminum ' and glass have also been
recycled.
Klla .Young, . Litter Program
AssiStant, iscomplllngadlrectoryof

Individuals, organizations and char·
ltles recycling. Individuals who
would like to donate matertals will
bereferredtothesegroups.Persons
who would like to receive tjonatlons
for their recycling drive or would
like to donate materials, inay do sb
by contac.ttng the Extension Office
at 992-6696.

Ohio lollo winners
· CLEVElAND (AP)-~oldersor
eight wlnnlng tickets will share an
"Ohio Lotto" jackpot of $2,465,637,
Ohio Loitery officials say.
The eight tickets listed all slx
numbers selected In the latest
week)y lotto drawing Satufllay
night
The wtnnlng numbers were 2, 6,
11, 13, 39 and 40.

Wednesday lltroup Friday. ·
Fair on ~ and nrursday. Chalice of II!MMtn ~­
mps u GJe S.. WeiJNwlay and u
lhemld-. .tortlltHIOI~and .
. ~- 1.-s In the~ to

mld-81111.

rr=========::;i
IN SUNDAY'S PAPER

1981 CHEVROLET
CHEVEnE
Should Have Itt!!
Prind

53,900 • .

·Mot S2,900 •

MOTOR CAR BROKERS
Middltpoit, Ohio

l,'ll

.

tiearing Case No. 84·12·EL· ''
EFC, to review tne luel procurement
practices
antt
policies of Columbus lind
Southern Ohio Electric Com·
pany, the operalion of its Electric Fuel Componenl, and
related matters. This hearing
is scheduled to begin at 10:00
a.m. on-Wednesday, October
3 . 1984 at Jhe offices of lhe
Public' Utilities Commission.
'180 East Broad Street. Colum,;
bus. Ohio 43215.
,:
All interested parties will be
given an opportunity to be
heard. Further information
may b'! obtainOI&lt;J by contact·
ing the Commission. •
THE PUBLIC Ul'ILITIES 'CQM·
(
MISSION OF OHIO
,
, ,. By: MARY ANN ORLINSKI,
Secretary

are

t
t
t

·

t

·c,.,.,....;oe.
""'
VoU4, No.

FALL
:HUNTING
: CLINIC

:Sunday, Sept. 1A.....
t 12 noon· 6 p.m.
t'
tf Manufacturer's Representatives from the
companies will be f
on hand- Marlin
Darton Archery, Bear
Jennings • l
Archery,
P.S.E.
Archery,·
.
PennwOOds
Calls,
Outdoor
tI. HeadQuarters, Sandy Distributors, Mason County Field Archers.Sports 'f
Fire~rms.

Arche~y.

Archery Clinic Specialist and former W. Va. State Champion 'Larry
Farley wilfbe here to talk wllll yciu. Door Prizes will be glvlfl away
every half-hour, Grand Prize - Bear Whitetail Hunter will be given
away at 6 p. m . sunday. No Purchase Necessary, Need Not Be Proslflt ·
To Win, Novelty Shoots for D&lt;&gt;or Prizes. Fred Be.or Bow Hunting Film.

f
f
f

t
f
f
.
t
SN Friday's Po,-r For
Details J Specials
tt
t "New" P•ll Store Houri Open Sunciay ·,
12 noon to 5:00 p.m.
.
t
f
Gunomilh !it,.l... 111d HOI Bluet.., A•ollohh! " fiWII' f
AutlooriiA'CIIIow W'tornlll)' Conter
... f
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:
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t
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STOlE HC:lWS: Man. thrv Sat. 9:30 .......a100 p.m..
·f
More

'

0p1n ~ 12 . -

'

NatTo-CJ

ID S. ,p.a

.. _

''FREE CHEC ING''-----m
· ~a--u'
IS NOW AVAILABLE . TO ALL STUDENT
NO MINIMUM BALANCE NECES'SARY.

Being a sludenl is _nolan easy task. h requires a greal deal of lime and . efforl.
To help you wilh your financial reaponsibil.l lies, lhe Farmers Bank Ia offering
'"F~EE (:HECK lNG" to .all sludenls wilh no minimum balance required.
·

•

Farmers

8ank

I

..

. . . . I fDI('

•
·:
't- .,~--~~~~~~-~~~~==~t~=~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~l
Y. .'C•••••kJ Owrl. Ink
' · -- ~~~ ~~ *f''•bfs
-·~·-&amp;•

. 1-----~---~----~--~ -

enttne

·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue~ay. September 11, . 1984

1 Section, 10 ..._

211

eem..

A Muttimect&amp;llnc. Naw..,.. .

.

'

singled out~ tq&gt; priortty. Of those six. Route33, from
Pmteroy to Ra~ Is a petfectexampleofhOW
~a modem road would lmpmYe our area and
actually link tl\ls region with an Interstate highway

By NAj'IICY YOAOIAM

8 1'1 ...........
"I can't make a .conllllllmllrt today,". lltat
~ WWI delivered by 01t1o Department of
Tran.lportatlon Director Warren Smith to aPlJIU(I-

system."

"U an the,construction money In tbe state was
earmatked tor Sou~ Ohio, constnlctloncould
not begin because of wtdated plans. BUt It Is a
polltlcal declsim 11 111 whose IIJihways get planned
and It Is another political decl8lon as to how ~ It
takes to do the planning. We, In Southeastern Ohio,
have been 'planned to death.' 1be time ~come to
letdeadlhw for plannlngorwe'll- another decade
· 1M a half of no progresS," declared Bush.
"We are a neglected comer of tbe stall!. We have
· been told over and over by dlffes mt amnJnlstratloQS
. tl),at the state has no money. We've.oontlnuall): been·
. shortchanged by_both parties.'' Bush continued.

mately«lpeopleattendlngas~meettngMonday

concel'lllal • .area's tranlp&gt;rtatlon problems.

Chantber of. CoiJUJII!IOE! J'l!P~tat!ves from
·I..ancaste!o, Locan, Atliens, Poineroy, Middleport and
·Portamol.tth Joined Melp .county aoverarnent
otfldals, Pomes.oy city ""'rl•l•,local polltlcalleaders
.and private citizens were In attendance.
·
Southeastern Ohio~ Cowtcl1 Pn!sldent BOb
Evans, as well as ·variOus inembers of the
SoulbeasternOIIIoHIRitwayUaencmunlttee,wason
hand 1D dllcuss tbe area's 1ransportatlon problems
with Smith, otlia' ODOT ojllclals, State Re!)11!11Bltalives Jo1Y.n11 Boster, Paul Mechling and Steve
Wllllaml~ State Senlttor Qakley PlUins and other

Ulllletleflad

Ron Ash, presldetlt of tbe Potiii!IO)' Area Cbamber

~

lO officials.
·
. ' Ot*"tMic~
Kenner .Buab, whO served as chairman ror the

that the SEORC Is a regional
_Chamber Of t.orrunerq! type OI'ganlzatlon and that lt
W!JSfpunded over a ~ade ago with tbe objecUve,to ·
Baltbe completion of the Awl!lachlan Hlgltway from
· .Cincinnati to Parketsburg. SEORC efforts were
session,

explained

expanded · several yearS ago to Include maJor
lmth-UJth routes ¢roBslng lbe Appdachlan alllh-

way. "&lt;\ year ago,latter 18 n¥.WJths ot !WB, much
research, l'liiiiiY ~· and real£i'qr !ll@t 'We"
.can't meet every 11eiit; wr~upWftll.ait1iV&amp;an
ess ~Of Southeastern Ohlo'sblghway lil!l!ds."
'Commented ~ "Highway Improvement .Is
absolutely necesiary to open the .region 111 jobs ~
Industry. !Att of 17 critical txittlenecks; six were
.

t

Co~

'

·-..... -

.......

bllks

ot Canmeroe, pointed IN! that aver the years,
COiies.&gt;ottlettce from state nftlclals OOIIOI!I'IIjJ!g the
.~r road. cllallen&amp;et' ~Cdunty to •'p~Uvtde a

unified frOnt" .In showing the need for highway
Improvement. Accw " 1 to Alb, ''Will *&lt;9*
Ia'
livs frGin one enl of 111e Oll'lttlar llllid to 111e aliter OD
'-dtor~sme 1. . MelpbM&amp;Mallle!Ute
wW I&amp; ................ frliaal."
Added Busb, ''We're wtlqlle down here In lbe hills. .
AI ot the peqlle ben! today fnm the dllleiatt areas

. l~?&amp;t~Z,~~=~-=

tl'tlngs 'on the back bUnter~ and banned lq¢tlter to
support what we feel IS of the greatest regional ·

irnportance. ,,
'

.··

.

.(Continued on page ~0)

ac~eierate

wMb eadt tiiJI!I' •IIIey tila•n~ the
nlt«n Oblo. AUeft
ll~red!rN,I'.l• dWIIIpJt&amp;:.
·

-

M

~

pa••-••ot""'•

M
·
ld
d
·
=ld~~~.a: · :~~~=:= . a.y or to
to pr_o ce.e . ~:
~~7:;~::.=-a ~E:r'¥..5 with HUD ·a pplication .-;_·.

.

•

•

No ·colnmitment
. gi~en on ar~a's
h · way problems

. '

·I

-Miss America pageant_

at y

I

;

t
t
t

. Seegarden

•

e

ces offered by the compimy.

FREE

·

l!ltory GCl P~~&amp;e4

r----------~------1

t

Herb vinegar

AL West race tightens

John Musser of lbe Downing·
Childs Insurance Agency Inc.,
Pomeroy, will attend a Ufe Insurance education and tl;llnlng program In Columbus from Tuesday
through Thursday this week.
The marketing school Is spon·
sored by Auto-Owners Insurance
Co_ of Lansing, Mich., and emphas·
1zes . Jl!!rSOnal life Insurance
planning, business life Insurance
artd other speclftc Insurance servi-

4-H clubs In Meigs County are
reminded that their Utter project
booklets
due at 4: ~ p.m. on
Wednesday at the Meigs County
Extension Office.
Clubs are competing for county,
state and ,d!Stt1Ct awards. The top
three clubs In the county wm receive
$25, $15 and $10, respectively. The
Utter packets are available through
the Meigs County Extension Office.

'

· The current 40-month pact be-

~.

tbesoftOOilllndulbyexptresat12:01

met,however,atentatlvepaclmust

dlffti:uJt In recent · we'eks. The
lndllstiy bargainers w~ wt of

before voting on lt..

~:

both sides exp-essed hope

'
' The UMW has a long hlsiDI}' of no
.
By BOB HOEFLICH
.
.........,otJonsAug
:n
saytngthey
contract,
ooworlt.
SaCIJJOI
~Writer
'
the
•· '
The ..·-sides' havefatledtoreach
did uq~
not think oontlnulng aess1q11s
n•u
Middleport Mayor Fred Hotp:nan
woold prqve productive. •
a strike-tree contract settlement In
was authorl:l.ed to pi'OCEed with tbe
Tnlrnka. according to swrces every barplnlng year since 196&amp;. HUD application fOr clearing some
cloleto'thetalks,hadbeenwalttng ThelongestiJirllcetook~lnthe $57,1m for tbe purchase of land
for-lbe managanent team to s1g11a1 winter It llm-'l8, and It lasted more which might be used for housing
a~ 111 return to the table . thanlOO~.
when Middleport Village Council
for new talks.
,
.--~---.-------------..,
TheFedera!MedlatlonandConcl- .
liltdon ServiCe, WtrJae It(ll : 1 etla'
ttves often take' part In last-gasp
colleciiVe&amp;rplniatg,hadnomedla·
us .at tile talks Monday, said the
IWI'Cel, whO declined to ~ named
\:!UbiiCly.
.
.•.
When· nego\latlons started In

•.

_

met In

regular session Monday
night.
,
Council voted unantmouslytorlbe
mayor to pi'OCEed with the appllcatkln, after It was reported that lbe
$57,1mlsavailablethroughthelfl.JD
grant for lbe purchase of such

.

leglsllltlon ivm provide fOr spec~a~::
burning """"'its to be •·-"-" at the:

.......,., Ftt1i
discretion........
of the. Middleport
Department. CwnCIIman Wlll1lim
Walters abstained from voting and
Councllnien Bob Gilmore, Dewey
Horton, Carl Horicy arid Jack
propet1y.
Satterfield approved tbe second
MayorHoffmanreeormnendslbe reading.
.
village proceed In negotlattog for
Surve.Jor.._'tflllpUL' •
four lots at the corner of Park and
A delegation from Hudson,~
Page Sts. with the Idea that 1be dlscuslled tQe village's hlr1rtg of a
PJqJertycouldbeusedbythelow!t. surveyor to detennlne jllopeal'y
Mayor Hottman said that the ttnes · .on lbe street. An · AlbeRs
property would be a valuable asset surveyor who had been employed
· tothetownandcanbepurcllasedfor . months ago to do lbe work had
between $35,im and Hl,OOJ.
Indicated that he would attend the
IAdpa objel6la
last several cwncU meetings to
A resident was present toexpJ,'CSS outlllle the work he has 'done,
herobjectlonstoanordlnance\Yhlch However, lie had been given an
prohlb!tsburnlnglnthecornmunlty. ultlrnatumthatheattendlastnlght's
The ordinance was earlier given the meeting or he would receive no pay
first ofthreerequlredreadlngs. The for work done t'tus far. He did not
resident said that she understood attend therefore, Mayor Hoffman
that the village had to take action said the surveyor will not receive
beca!ISI! stme people do bUm things any money from ·the village. Ii was
other than paper and as a result, Indicated thattbesurveyorhaddone
have fire smoldering for long title search work at the courtltou9e
periOds of time. HoWever, she said In relatlon.lo the project.
she seldom has . trash pickup
It was agreed to attempt 111 hire ·
services because collectors do not anotber surveyor to handle :tbe . '. · '
come to bel'):ll'opet:ty very often and project , with Mayor Hottman to ·
that' the ordinance would create a make contacts on the matter.
'
problem forher·ln that papetwould
Ret!uelltilllteed buit.,.
oollectovertoncperkldsoftlme.Sile
The Hudson St. group also asked
al!o cited lbe additional expense of tor more speed · bumps on 'their ~ •
traSh balls and tbe large amount of street. more fill dirt, complained ·
accumulation
several weeks agalnst barking dogs, speedlltg and
1whlcl! will happen U she Is not ot.lter problems on lbe street arid
allowed to burn paper. She saki that about a resident on the street whO
she felt tbe ordinance Is unfair.
says she owns property but mes nOt
Several councU members ex- keep It clear of brush. Council
plalned that they had received more referred the request tor more speed
favocable than l,llifavorable com- ~piS and the clearing of the
menta, from res~ts on 'the new hillside property to the street
ordinance. Burning has been the di;ntmlttee. The group was told to ·
subject of many canplalnts lodged sign CQmPialnts against barking
at village hall over lbe years and . dogs.
·
particularly by people having
Council approved lbe report of
brellthlliR problems, they said.
Mayor Hoffman showtngrecelptslif
Following the dlscul8lon, councll $926'l.51 In fines and fees for tbe
approved a secood reading of lbe month of August as presented by
non-burning ordinance. The new
(Continued on page 6)

over

t'

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="42455">
              <text>September 10, 1984</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
