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• *;

Livestock report

TYPING
PAPER

WRITIIG
TABLET

' ••

* • .,. "' •••

NFL union group
could call strike

Big Bend All Stars
lose championship
Page 4

Page 3

Page 10

100 Shaah
Writing tablet
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with new
VELCRO" lab

.

closure!

Fine point or m.dlum

Both

are

dispoaable and
eratable Ink.

point.

hove

6"

Ptennt"f I. Piling IInder

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9"

Nation's economic index up again
WASHINGTON (AP) - In an encouraging new
sign of economic recovery, the government reported
today that Its main gauge of future ecanomlc activity
jumped 1.3 percent last month, the fourth monthly
gain 1n a row.
Private economists had anticipated the latest Increase In the Index of Leading Indicators, and said In
advance that It would signal at least a modest recov·
ery from the recession that has lasted for about a
year.
Today' s Commerce Department report said the
July gain In the Index followed Increases of 1.4 percent 1n April, 0.7 percent In May and 0.3 percent In
June. The Index had fallen forll consecuUve months
before AprU.
'
The Index, which Includes statistics from 10 separate categories, is Intended to forecast future ~
nomic trends. It often begins to rise several months
before the economy pulls out of a recession.
Meanwhlle,Mondaythestockmarketrallledtothe

320z.

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WAHI;
Deluxe Home
Hair Cutting

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SCDTCHIUIRD·FDR CARPETS
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32•0z.

11.5 Oz.

CO,n centrate

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NEL~'S REO. '

liSlEI

PEIQI~ CIP

Your Cost

i.

After Rebate

Deaths rising in Saviet Union

·--···········

CLICKS

YOUR CHOICE

YOUR
CHOICE

NILSON'S RIO. 37'
'.

Scatcli ...

WOODBRIDGE QUART%

MAYWOOD QUART%

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8AANO

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&amp;iiiliiiim ·WOODMERE QUARTZ

TRII$PARE.T TIPE
, •Moisture Rfllstant.

•Won'l

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normcl cOnditions.
•Permanent Adhesive.

•

WASIDNGTON - Influenza, alcoholism and limited medical care
are combining to cause a rising death rate In the Soviet Union, an
unprecedented trend In peacetime, according to a private study.
Mun-ay Feshbach of Georgetown University, a leading authority
on the Soviet population, also reports a drop In male life expectancy
since 1964 In the Soviet Union.
The declines In Soviet population growth cou1d lead to shortages of
workers and soldiers In that country by the tum of the century, the
study said.

BEIRUT, Lebanon - Israeli jets shot down a Syrian MIG-23
fighter· bomber east of Beirut today In the first air battle between the
two Middle East foes since mid-June, the Voice of Lebanon radio
reported.
The radio, tun by Lebanon's pro-Israeli right-wing Christian Pha·
lange Party, sald the downed MIG crasbfd Into a two-story bull'dlng
In the town of Rableh, seven miles northeast the Lebanese capital.
It said a forest fire broke out as a result of the crash.

or

Winning Ohio lottery number .

$21''

NILSON'S RIO. l29.95

CLEVELAND- The winning number drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 295.
The lottezy reported earnings ofS628,159.00on the wagering on Its
dally game. the i!arnlngs came on sales !1$!M8,929, whl)e holders of
winning tickets are entitled to sjlare SDJ;769.!50, Iotter:v ~clals said.

. '

'

Weather forecast
Cloudy tonight with a 50 percent chance of showers and tbuflderLow 65-70. Winds southerly to southwesterly 8I'OWid 10 mph. .
Wednesday, 70 percentcbanceofshowen and thUDde.ttRI:a'ma. flllh
~JOrms.

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'

tlon Is running at more than 60 per·
cent annually.
More than 17,400 Mexicans were
caught trying to enter the United
States Ulegally In August In the
West Texas-southern New Mexico
sector. The exact number was to be
totaled today. The aU· time monthly
high was about 19,(XXl arrested In
July 197!!.
Tom Collier, of the Border Patrol
In Nogales, Ariz., said there has
been a slight Increase In arrests In
hhls sector. "I understand that In
other places they are noticing a

.

months of last year. And 1981 ended with only 436,(XXl
sales, the lowest since the government began keeping
such figures In 1963.
The Federal Home Loan Bank Board said the aver·
age rate for home loans rose to 17.22 percent In early
July. However, rates In various parts of the nation
now have fallen to the 14 percent to 16 percent range.
In other economic news:
-Gold prices gained $6.40 a troy ounce In New
York to $409.50.
-Three-month Treasury bllls rate gained about
one-quarter a percentage point to 8.14 percent.
-Ford Motor Co. said It will partially reopen a
suburban Detroit valve plant closed last December
due to slack demand. The plant now wUI be used to
make fuel tallks and repair shipping racks.
-Mart in Marietta Corp., the target of a $1.5 billion
takeover a n empt by Bendlx Corp., countered with Its
own $15 billion offer to buy Bendix. Both companies
make aerospace products.

An allegation of contempt of
court has been tiled against the Gallipolis Developmental Center,
charging that officials have at·
tempted to hinder union
organizing.
The Ohio Public Workers Union
filed the action recently In U.S. District Court for the Southern District, eastern division.
The suit claims GDC officials
hav'li refused to accept OPWU
merl!bershlp autborlzatlon cards
by certWed mall, stating they must
be brought In personally.
.
A representative allegedly wrote
to the OPWU that the mall was re.fused because the unJon has 11ot
been officially recogn!zed.
According to the suit, this ls In
violation of a permanent Injunction
·Issued by the district court In 19'19
which states that GDC cannot prohibit. the union frQm soUcltlng

members.
In a stroai!Y·worded news re
leue, Mike Clifford, executive dl·
rector of the OPWU, said "It

rapid Increase In apprehensions ,
but we haven't noticed It yet," he
said.
"The devaluation Ls the straw
that broke the camel's back," said
Alan Eliason, Border Patrol chief
agent In El Paso. ... A lot of aliens
have been struggling to get by, try·
Ing to make a living In Juarez. Or.
they would come through from
time to time to earn some money on
the U.S. side and then go back .
"Now, It appears large numbers
of them are saying, 'I just can't
take It aeymore and I'm going

WAITING FOR A CHANCE TO COME NORTHMexlcallll to both sides of the Rio Grande as they wail
for an opportune moment to dash north Into El Paso
and the relatively good economic climate of the United

Contempt action
•
filed by UniOn
in federal court

Israeli jets shoot down f~hter

'
NILSON'S RIO. 39'

Robbery, kidnapping charges filed
WU..LIAMSPORT, 'Ohio - A Mansfield man has been charged
with aggravated robbery and kldnapplng In connection with the
alleged abduction of a female worker at a Mansfield restaurant
about 12 hours earller.
Pickaway County Sheriff Dwight Radcliff said today the charges
were flied against Roger E. Ward, 25, In connection wlth .the Inc!·
dent, which began In Mansfield about 3 a.m . Monday:
Radcliff said the unldentWed woman was driVen from the restaurant to Plckaway County, where her car ran out of gasollneabout 1
p.m. north of WUitamsport. The woman said she told the man she
was Ill and had him get her a drink of water from a nearby farm·
house, Radcliff said.
'

l1111UOII
OILIIEI WI

scouNr

COLUMBUS, Ohio - Just over half the Ohio women surveyed by
they favor a woman's right to have an
abortion If she wishes.
That was the result of a Family Circle magazine survey conducted
from a two-page questionnaire published In the magazine's Feb. 2
edition, Family Circle reported Monday.
According to the magazine, the percentage of Ohio women favor·
lng abortion ranked lower than the national results.
Nationally, 62.1 percent favored the right to an abortion and 64.9
percent sald government shouldn't play a role In such decisions.

. a,national magazine say

Regular Price ............ $16.99
Ad Price ....... , ............ $12.99
len Mfg. Rebate .. ..... ..... $ 3.00

PEICIL
.· SHUPEIER

EliSEIS

50 percent favor right to decide

Regular •. 100 Cou-nt ·
Security • to Count ,

• Lightweight clipper with powerful motor and
adjustable-length cutting blades
• Cool-running and quiet In operation
• Four attachment combs lor different cutting
lengths
• Includes clipper, blade guard, attachment combs,
barber comb, scissors, oil and Instruction booklet

NILSON'S RIG.
S2.49

13.49,

&amp;-3/.4"

based steel Institute. He said no weekly figures were
kept then.
Steel production so far thls year has used 51.7 per·
cent of capacity, compared with B3 percent a year
ago. The number of tons produced so far this year Is
off 37.8 percent, and employment has fallen to 62
percent of Its level durtng the late 1970s.
The National Machine Tool BuDders Association,
meanwhile, said orders for new Industrial tools fell14
percent In July from the month before. The trade
group said foreign and domestic orders fell to $107.7
million from $125.9 million In June.
In Washington. the Commerce Department and the
Department of Housing and Urban Development
said sales of new single-family houSes fe114 .9 percent
In ~uly to the third-lowest rate In at least two decades .
Meanwhile, the median prtce of new houses rose to a
record $73,tro.
Through July, just 226,(XX) new houses had been sold
for the year, down 22 percent from the same seven

Mexico's bad economy forces mass exit
ELPASO, Texas (AP) -Thepeso's falling value and a rise In unemployment has sent near-record
levels of job-hungry Mexicans scalIng fences, swimming rivers and
crossing deserts Into the United
States this month, Immigration of·
fleers say.
"It's worth the risk," said Jesus
Gonzalez, 21. "The mostl can make
In Juarez Is 580 pesos a day. If I get
$100 a week In the United States,
that's 10,(XX) pesos."
For the Mexicans, It Is a race
against poverty . against an economic upheaval that threatens
their day-to-day existence. But It's
also a race against the "mlgre" as the Mexicans call the U.S.
Border Patrol along the 1,!0J.mlle
trmtler.
"More people are coming to the
United States now because the dollar's worth 100 pesos," said Arturo
Mendez, '1:/. "We are looklng for
work- any klnd of work."
Mendez Is a carpenter, but has
been unemployed In Ciudad Juarez
for some time. He SEeS the dash
across the Rio Grande Into El Paso
as a matter or necessity, not or
choice.
"I have a wile and two children,"
he said.
The number of Illegal aliens
caught trying to get Into the United
, States has soared near El Paso
since the Mexican government allowed the peso to float on International markets Aug. 5. It has
plunged from a rate or about 49 to
the dollar to 124.5 to the dollar as of
Monday.
Unemployment south of the
border Ls about 40 percent and lnfia·

••

Everything
you need to
cut hair at home

NILSON'S RIO •• 1.69

year's highest mark despite news that the proportion
of steel plants working was at a post-Depression low,
new tool orders were off sharply and sales of new
homes plummeted.
A late buying spree yesterday lifted the Dow Jones
lndustl1allndex to 893.30, an advance of 9.83 points. It
continued the rally that has lifted the Dow more than
100 pblnts since Aug. 12, largely In response to declln·
lng Interest rates.
Trading volume, however, fell short of last week's
reCord level, and eight stocks declined for every nine
that advanced on the New York Stock Exchange.
The American Iron and Steel Institute, the Industry's chief lobby group, reported steel production In
the week ending Aug. 28 sank to 39.9 percent of capaclty from the previous week' s 40.5 percent. which had
been the year's low.
The capacity figure was the lowest since 1938, when
the yearly average was 39.6 percent, according to
Sheldon Wesson, a spokesman for the New York-

~----~----------------~

Kit

Cleani and Protects,

1 Se(llon, 10 Pagts
IS Centl
A Muhimed io Inc . Newspaper

•

.•

PIIS FEET

''
·~ C!Jrpet~ stay clean

enttne

YOUR CHOICE

nneu

.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 31,1982

Copyrlghled t912

N4~!G.I9'

"

•

at

VoL31 ,No .l3

Ruled or Unruled

YOUR CHOICE

'Oz.

'

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'

appears (GDC) Is fearful oft he employees being organized In an effec·
tlve labor union.
"The leadership of the Institution
Is undertralned and undereducated
to provide the responsible leadership required by a mental retarda·
tlon faclllty. Gallipolis seems to
have become the dumping ground
for questionable management per·
sonnet within the Department of
Mental Retardation," Clifford said.
GDC Su~rlntendent Robert
Zlmmennan could not be reached
for comment this morning.
Membership cards for' lour em·
ployees have been refused .so far,
according to Clifford.
The suit asks that GDC be forced
to pay to OPWU lost membership
dues for every month It fl$ses to
process the membership ' cards In
question and any future member·
ship cards.
GDC should also agree to process ·
future membership cardS sent by
mall for dues deduction purposes,
till! suit states.

north."'
At age 21, Antonio Fierro Is an
experienced runner In the race with
the Border Pa trot. He boasts he has
been crossing the river regularly
for "six or seven years" and knows
what he Is doing .
"But las t week. they got me five
Urnes," he said.
Usuall y, the Mexicans volunteer
to be deported ra ther than go
through lengthy hearings. They
then are treed from Border Patrol
paddy wagons at the International
bridges. They often return.

States. Residents of border cities like Cludad Juarez
lin background) are finding It had to make end~ meet
as Mexico faces its worst economic crisis In 50 years.
(AP Laserphoto)

Station won't close,
report scares couple
By JULIE BRIENZA
Sandra and George A. MU!er where scrubbing up their newly
acquired Exxon service station last week when news came over the
radio about the mammoth oU company closing down about lBO shops
In the state.
"I told George, 'I quit, I quit,' "Sandra remembered saying, while
the pair wondered what the announcement could mean to them.
The couple had just entered the service station business last wpek
- only days before they heard that startling message.
But, as It turned out. Miller's new station and nearly a ll Exxon
stations In the area wUI remain open.
"Only company-run stations were affected," said Art Har tley Sr.
· or City Ice and Fuel Co. tn Point Pleasant, W.Va. His company is the
area's dlstrlbutl;lr of Exxon products.
Exxon officials have notlfled 'selected station operators In Ohio.
Vermont, Kentucky, Massachusetts and New York of the clos ings,
and all stations have personnel who receive salaries directly from
the company.
Area stations won't be closed down for two reasons, Hartley
explained.
Although Miller's station and GUberl's Exxon on State Route? are
located In Ohio, they buy their petroleum products from the West
VIrginia fuel company. That state was not Included In Exxon's
target group.
·
. Additionally, salaries at the three stations are not paid by the
Exxon company directly , and only company-salaried operations
were closed.
"I was ready to pack it all up,'' Sandra said ~opday as she
covered a spare on drum with a sUck, new coat ofgraY'P8Jri~. But She
added, "I'd hl\le to stop something before we even gdf started."
Initially, she and George really weren't sure whether they were In
or out of business, but they have continued to ready their station for
Its planned opening In September.

�-

·-----

-~-

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

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Reagan soaring
...for now
What apparently has just occurrep to both the nation's economy and
President Reagan's popularity is the political equivalent of a breathtaking
maneuver regularly perfonned by stunt pilots at air shows.
After gaining altitude, the pilot forces the plane into a terrifying steep
dive. Just as the aircraft appears to be irrevocably destined to plunge to the
ground, it dramatically levels off and surges skyward again.
During the past year, the president's "economic recovery program" often
had the appearance of a plane plummeting to its doom. The innocent victims
of the presumably imminent crash included countless Republican candidates in this November's elections.
Now that plane has miraculously (if only temporarily) turned Its nose up
again, possibly requiring a drastic revision of the conventional wisdom that
holds the Repubicans probably will suffer a net lClS:l of 15 to 20 seats in the Ul}coming elections for the House ofRepresentatives.
Interest rates are dropping precipitously. The major commercial banks'
"prime rate" fell 3 percentage points, from 16.5 percent to 13.5 percent, in
the month between July 20 and Aug. 20. That rate now is a full 7 percentage
points below where it stood one year ago.
The stock market, in a turly dazzling performacne, staged a rally of unprecedented proportions in only six business days, beginning on Friday.
Aug. 13 when the Dow Jones Industrial Average stood at a dismal 776.92 as
the market opened.
When the market closed on Friday, Aug. 20, the index stood at 869.9,
representing a phenomenal increase of more than 92 points. More than 500
million shares of stock, a record-breaking total, were traded during the
period.
Business failures, climbing almost steadily since last autumn and peaking
at a post-Depression record high of 65.9 per 1,000 in June, dropped sharply to
53.3 per 1,000 in July.
Personal income increased 1.0 percent in July compared with the previous
month, the largest gain achieved in almost a year. New housing starts
surged in July to a level unmatched since he spring of 1981 and 33.7 percent
higher than in June.
Reagan enhanced his prestige when he gained a hard-fought battle in his
campaign to secure congressional approval of a tax bill providing the
revenues necessary to reduce the huge deficits forecast for future fiscal
years.
For the frosting on the president's cake, he scored a significant foreign
policy coup when his personal emissary, Philip C. Habib, negotiated a
disengagement of military forces in Beirut, thus defusing a potentially explosive situation.
Reagan's problems have hardly disappeared, however. There is, for
example, the special irony in the fact that the economic forecast widely
credited with touching off the frenzied stock market rally and accelerating
the deeline of interest rates was actually very pessimistic about the prospects for recovery from the country's deep recession.
" The present decline in interest rates will continue" because of "generally
poor economic prospects," predicted Henry Kaufman, chief economist for
the investment finn of Salomon Brothers. " A smart recovery in economic
activity in the second half of this year is not likely to materialize.
The improvements in personal income, housing starts and blll!iness failure
rates represented only modest advances following months of dismal performance. Unemployment still hovers near the very unhealthy level of 10
percent.
The president's congressional success in the struggle over the tax bill may
come at a very high price to him - the alienation of the hard-core conservatives who long have been the most fervent and loyal political supporters.
For the moment, however, Reagan look!; very good. He has repeatedly al}pealed for time to allow his economic program to take effect, voters (many
of whom have suffered) generally have been patient- and how there are the
first signs of at least a modest payoff.
The timing of that payoff is especially importsnt because the crucial midtenn elections are only slightly more than two months away- and momentum and appearance invariably overwhelm substance and content in the
political forum .

Berry's World
. .,
~

~

&lt;

!

. I

Page-2-The Daily Senti,.j;.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, A\igust 31,lf82

•
il
G "Charlie, I told you not to jump, that the market
would have Its biggest day ever In August, but
NO -you wouldn't believe me."

·Today in history
Today Is TueSday, Aug. 31, the 243rd day of 1982. There are 122 dQys left
tn the year.
Today's highlight in history:
. On Aug. 31, 1954, Humcane Carol hit the United States, killing 68 people
and causing several millions of dollars in damage.
On this date:
In 12 A.)J., Roman emperor Callgula was born.
· Ill 1881, tlietlrst u.~. tennis championships wereplayedtn Newport, R.I.
In 196'.!, Trinidad and Tobago became an indeperldent nation within the
Brttlsh Commonwealth.

WASHJNGTON - Mr. Reagan's
ears have been ringing In recent
weeks from the mils of thunder that
cont inue to reve1·berate from Ihe
far conse~ative right . Thl' rum·
bling Is to this e!lect - that Mr.
Reagan has abandoned his princl·
pies, neglected his friends. be·
trayE.'d his party platform and
failed to honor his campaign
pledges.
In the .July Issue of Conservative
Digest. publisher Richard Vlguerie
complains bitterly of "a keen and
growing feeling of disappointment
among the conservatives of all
kinds all over America." The sad
truth. he says. " Is that disenchant·
ment with the Reagan presidency
Is now real a nd widespread." Our·
lng the recent debate on the tax bUl,
we heard some of these same howls
of denunciation and despair.
There Is something curiously
naive In this fu rious fluttering of the
far right -something almost juvenile In Its nature. Vlguerte Is the
greatest dlrect·mall political fund·
raiser who ever licked a stamp; his
disgruntled colleagues Include
grown men who have demon·
strated a formidable mastery of
political action In repeated cam·
palgns. But they evidence a ktnd of
SJXlllE.'d-child Immaturity tn their
tantrums against Mr. Reagan.
By way of example, It appears
fro'!' Conservative Digest that con·
servatlves are disappointed and
disenchanted because Mr. Reagan
hold your breath Mr. Reagan actu·
ally Invited the presidents of Notre
Dame University and Howard Unl·
verslty to dinner at the White
House. He dld! Think of It! The per·
fldy of the man! Theodore Hes·
burgh and James Cheek! Aargh!
And David Rockefeller , too'
Choke! Gasp! Ugh!
Well, fiddlesticks . Reading Con·
servatlv!' Digest's blll of Indict·
ment, I am reminded of nothing so
much as my 6-year-old grand·
daughter, who recentiy wept because . she couldn't play all nine
parts In a neighborhood play. It Is
all or nothing with my brothers.
They sometimes seem to have no

th~

James]. Kilpatrick'

right

more understanding of the re
~al~-::cse::a:-::s-."'th"'e"'y-,-kil""o"'w::-::;th=-=a7t ""th""e,--,ve"'ry-es:-.--va;-,in,--,~:-o-r-recogn--:-:ltl:-o-n-o-:f~w-.:-ha-:t-M::-:::r.
world of governm Pnt than a
sence of effective leadership lies In
Reagan has accoJTlpiiShed.
groundhog has of the rules of
the judicious swap of the quid for
Under the president's leadership,
cricket. They seem actually to bethe quo.
the rate of lnfiatlon has dropped
lieve that Mr. Reagan has only to
These elementary precepts are
precipitately; · the rate of increase
snap hls fingers to make the Con·
lost on my brothers. They arewhlnIn taxation has slowed; the burden
gress ro.ll over. They have rooted
lng that Mr. Reagan hasn't bal·
of federal regulation has eased. An
from their polltlcal vocabulary
anced the budget or abolished the . encouraging start has been made
such nouns as "compromise" and
departments of educa tion and
toward beefing up the national de"conciliation." Their rump army
energy.He hasn'tpushedlorrepeal
fense: New policies at the Justice
marches und.er a banner that bears
of the Davis· Bacon Act. He hasn't
Department now argue against the
a be Ill g ere n 1 de v 1 c e: . dissolved the Legal Services Corp.
excesses of raclal·balance busing
"Confrontation!"
And so on, and so on.
and affirmative action. The Ust
Those who have outgrown their
In all of this one sees the eternal
could be much extended.
political diapers know that, yes, of
pessimist: His glass Is never .half·
In Mr. Reagan conservatives
course there are times when a pres·
full; It Is always half·empty. :.1y
have a principled conservatlvewho
!dent must go eyebail·to-eyeball
brothers don't want to govern; they
Is doing an admirable job In the
with a recalcitrant Congress. But
wanl to gripe. They are soldom
toughest job on earth. He needs the
they also know that confrontation
happier than when their cream Is
far right's advice and understand·
hasltsUinlts. They knowthatblpar·
sour. In the Digest's 50-page ca·
lng, but this bellyaching Is no help
tlsan coalitions are tcr on summer
talog of misery, one searches In
at all.

lEA/~~ ~'lM
tl'lta. ~.

Small business wins big victory recently
NEW YORK (AP) -Small busl·
ness recently won a big victory In
Congress, but Milton Stewart, who
had something to do with It, remains restless, wary, ready to
tight.
Winning Isn't enough. You must
preserve the wtn too, he says.
The win followro a battll' with

Strike authority given
• •
•
negotiating committee
CHICAGO (API- Union reprewho were here today wm go back to
sentatives from the 28 National
their teams to rep011 the actions
Football League teams have given
taken. II the negotiating comm ittee
the au thority to call a strike to their
decides to call a strike, the players
nlne · m e mber bargaining
will walk."
committee.
"I know management wUI make
But after 10 hours of meetings
a n offer ... then wlll expect eveMonday, thestrikedatethat theN a·
ryone to jump," Garvey said.
tiona! Football League Players As"That won't happen. They (the
sociation had threatened was not
owners) now know they face a
produced. NFLPA President Gene
strike."
Upshaw of the Los Angeles Raiders
The NFLPA has asked lor 55 per·
said that would be giving away the
cent of the gross receipts brought In
"game plan."
by the 28 teams, Including televl·
After the meeting, the union deslon revenue anticipated ·, from a
ma nded that owners begin
lucrative contract recently signed
negotiating.
with two of the three major net .
"There should be people at the
works. Garvey said he expects the
bargaining table with authority and
owners to offer 20 percent; Ul}resjXlnslblllty to bargain," Upshaw
shaw, who announced In April that
said. "We have not yet seen the
the percent of gross was ·'etched In
owners or the commissioner. We
stone," said the players have not
-~ncluded our meetings today and
alterE.'d their demand.
· have 1,300 players who have signed
. "We are still seeking that 55 per~
a strike authorization.
cent of the gross; It has not been
"The player reps have given the
modified," Upshaw said. "I would
executive committee the authority
say the preseason games wUI be
lo call a strike at their discretion, "
played. As tor a strike? That's up to
Upshaw said.
Ihe discretion of the executive com·
Jack Donlan, who heads the
mlttee. We're optimistic we can get
NFL's Management Council. has
a settlement, but reallstlcaily we
been the owners' repreSentative at
will strike If the owners don't slt
negotiating sessions. The players
down with us."
have maintained he has no
Pressed as to when a strike could
be called, Upshaw said, "That's our
authority.
Ed Garvey, executive director of game plan. We will determine It
the NFLPA. said lhe meetings . when the ttrne comes. We dld nol
•'demonstrate to the owners our se. discuss when to strike. We don't
riousness. AU 28 representatives wantlo put pressure on our people.

publlc·seclor bureaucracies, big
business, universities, the defense
establlshment and others for a
share of the billions of federal government dollars spent each year
on research and development .
Sma II business wanted a share of
those dollars. At the same time.
customary recipients of R&amp;D

grants sought to preserve their
stake, which was threatened by cut·
backs In government spending.
The fight was bitter.
According to Stewart, editor of
Inc. magazine, Congress passed
the Small Business Development
Act only after the defeat of "Iron
triangles" of career bureaucrats In

By Associated Press
The last time he faced the Cincin·
nat! Reds, Montreal's Steve Rogers
lost a tough 1-0 decision.
He was prepared for another
heart·breaker Monday night when
he walked off the mound after thl'
seventh Inning los ing by another Hl
score.
But this time, Rogers' team·
p1ates not only got him off the hook
- but won the game lor him 3-1
with the help of a two-run rally In
thl' seventh capped by Tim Raines'
RBI single. Rogers, who dld not
walk a batter, lowered his National
'.I;;eague-leadlng earned run aver·
~ge to 2.30, but was not especially

federal agencies; lobbyists, anq,
congressional committee
members and staffs assigned to the
agencies.
Now that the law has been
passed, he and many others tn the'
small·buslness community are core
cerned the same triangle will
thwart the will of Congress.

Democrat O'Neill coached freshmen Republicans
WASHINGTON lAP) - There
stood Tip O'Nelll, the head Demo·
crat, lecturing freshman Republl·
can House members on loyalty to
the president whose coattails
helped carry them to Congress.
"Are you going to follow the
leader that brought yo~ here, or are
you going to run? " the speaker of
the House asked as he urged approval of the $1)8.3 billion, three-year
tax Increase President Reagan
wanted and got.
O'Neill does not customartly

coach Republicans, but he made an
exception. It took an unlikely, onetime-only alliance, with Democrats
supplying the votes that overrode
conservative Republican opposl·
tlon, Ia push the blll through
Congress.
Thl' speaker was careful to em·
phastze the Reagan Imprint on the
polltlcaliy troublesome measure.
" ... Only the president of the United
States and the full support of hls
office can pass a tax blll," he said.
That goes double for a tax In-

That Is proving a popular desert!&gt;'
tlon among campaigning Republl·
cans who backed the Increase,
with some of the Democrats wno.
voted tor tt. But the Democrats~­
!In!' reform In this Instance af'
changes to undo excesses that w~
built Into the three-year tax
Reagan pushed through ConIn 1981. They also said that Reagai
had reversed course. The presldern
Insisted he had done no such ~
- although he had said In the State
of the Union message that.hewoul~
seek no tax Increases In 1982.

crease blll10 weeks before congressional elections. That usually Is the
season for tax cuts, not Increases.
But Reagan and majorities in
'"~·wess had to swallow this one as
a • Jeflclt·curblng measure. They
did. and now head Into the cam·
palgn with varying accounts of
what was done and why.
Reagan said It was more reform
than. increase, although the dlstlnc·
tion doesn'l mean much to the lndl·
victuals and corporations that wlll
be paying more taxes as a result.

ana
M

Abarreloflaug~h_s~·____________A_rt_Bu_ch_~_td
People are constantly asking me,
"Who is the man with the most
humor in the Reagan administration ?" They are surprised
when my response is " Cap" Weinberger, our Secretary of Defense.
"Cap" says things with a straight
face that make you want to roll on
the floor.
Just the other day he told
newspapennen he is for a "protected nuclear war." He doesn't want
one of these hair-trigger wars which
last 30 or 40 minutes. "Cap" said he
has ordered everyone at the Pentagon to figure not only how to keep
a nuclear war going, but how to
make sure the U.S. wins one when
the missiles start flying.
Half the people in the Pentagon
took "Cap" seriously. But those who
knew what a deadpan comic "Cap"
is just laughed and went back to
doing the crossword piiWe.

We want the pressure on them."
Executive committee member
Dan Jlggel1s of the Chicago Bears
said the committee "had to hold the
reins on some teams who want to go
out now." Neither he. Garvey nor
Upshaw 1\'0Uld say which teams.
The players have been without a
contract since July 15, when the
previous agreement expired.
In a written statement, player representatives said they want to dis·
cuss live major points with tlie
owners at the bargaining table .
The five points are: -Immediate
subStantial wage hikes for virtually
all players.
-A guaranteed fair share of fu ·
lure NFL revenues for all players.
-Removal of wage Inequ ities.
-Elimination, In order to produce longer careers, of Incentives
to cut older players for financial

reasons.
-Rewarding of performance
through slgnlflcanl Incentives
The owners recently ask I'd for a
federal mediator, but Detroit linebacker Stan White, a noth e r
member of the executive commit·
tee, said players wUl decline a mediator until owners join them In
discussion of the five points.
Garvey had said before the meet·
ings that the most probable time for
a ny walkout would be bel ween now
and the fourth or fifth game of the
regular season. which begins Sept.
12.

Reds lose third straight, 3-1

"What's this I hear about you leaning to the right?"

The material for "Cap 's"
their turf," and even aler AI Haig
''proloned nuclear war" came out of tried to explain to the Europeans
a routine he did when he first took
"Cap" was only joking, they still
charge of the. Defense Department
didn't lind the secretary of Defenand came up :Vith a comic routine on
se's war routi~e very funny.
"limited nuClear war ."
So Cap got his writers together
He tried this one out in front of an
and said, "I think my jokes are
armed service committee last year · losing something in the translation.
We're going to have to come up with
and had . everyone in stitches.
"Cap, .. without cracking a smile,
a new monologue, and throw the
said he thought a "limited nuclear
'limited nuclear war' stuff out."
war" with the Soviets was not only
One of the writers said, "I got it!
feasible, but essential so the U.S.
What if you just stand up at the
would have time to fight a conmicrophone and say you're no
ventional war.
long~r for a 'limited nuclear war,'
Cap said if we let the Russians
but you're opted for a 'protracted'
know that we were only going to one instead? Say we're going to
fight a "limited nuclear war" then
build offensive weapons that . will
they would agree not to use their big .make the U.S. prevail no matter
stuff to attack us.
what the Russians throw at us."
The only ones who didn 'I laugh
"That's pretty fUMy,'' Cap said.
were our NATO allies who figured
"Let's work on it. But keep it quiet
out if a "limited nuclear war was
or Johnny Carson will hear about it,
going to be. waged it would be on
and use It on his 'Tonight' S~ow first.

.....

,;.;.___....

SUTTON TRADED
Veteran right-hander Don Sutton
was traded Monday by the
Houaton Astros to tbe Milwaukee
Brewers for three undisclosed
players, tbe Astros announced
while In New York during their
game wltb tbe Mets. (AP Lase"
photo)

The writers all went to work and
came up with some memorable lines
One was " you show me a
secretary of Defense who is not
preparing to win a nuclear war, and
I'll show you a secretary of Defense
who should be impeached."
Another one which as. a real crowd
pleaser: When he was asked if a
nuclear war was winnable, Cap
replied, again with the straight face ;
"I just don't have any idea; I don't
know that anybody has any idea. But
we're certainly going to give the armed forces everything they need to
winone."

Transactions
..... EMLL

.brlerlc• LPqur
Cl.EVE:LAND

ry OytJzLnskl and Kf&gt;VIn Rhomllt'rg. lnh'om Chari~ ICI\ Of lhP lniPr-

flr!dl'r~

natklnaJ ~lli!:\N' MILWAUKEE

These are just a few samples of

__....,

7NAT'5MJF.Jt115E. I ~~~~~~
II' D1 6()N; JJ h

BOCAWW6NJ_

~JJIIffre

/

,..

I NDIANS-Reca lled

.lft"-

·

"Cap" Wienberger's hwnor. They
may not sound as f·mny on )iaper,
. but when you see hiin standing up if!
front of the mike, looking like Woody
Allen, delivering !hem, you could di~
laughing. ·

fb&gt;&lt;alled

BREWERS-

__

Mart Brouhard ooltk&gt;ldl'r. !rom Van·
rouwr ollhr Paclfk Coasl League.
,.

TORONTO BLUE JAYs-Desl~aiE'd
Km Schrom. Ptcher. for assignment. and
calll!d up Mark E:k.-1\horn, ptkher, from
Syrat uw of lht Jnternatbnal l..eatCUt".

...

ATLANTA BRA VECi-.o\sktod waivers on
AI Hrabollky, pUcher, and reactlvaled
, I TOmfl\Y BoRKJ, pitcher ~ I lie disabled

•

list
HOU STON
ASTROS-Re~alled
J .R.
Rld\IU'd, Dan Boone, Mark Rcu aDd
lack Parlt, pttiC'hers: BUI Doran, fn.
fteldl'r; Scott J...wckJ and Larry Ray, outBeldm, rrom TucloD ct thP PactDr Coul
(.equ(',

M01fl'REAL EXPC&amp;-Purdlased Ke.J
Phetpe. lint t.eman. and MIR PllJWJ»,
tnr~e~cttr, rrom Wlchtta or lilt AJntrTan
AIIOdalbn. Recalled WallaoP .Jotmm,

"

~.

and Tom Wiett.R. cateber,

ft'Om Wkftlll.

I
,•1

PITTSBURGH

"

PJRATES-

~haled
·- , atmt·
u..
~racu or Nelson Norman.
atcp; LH 1\uwll, pitcher 1r&lt;m Portla'J,d
ol tt. Plrlftc Colli Leq~~e. and Rafael
EWard. slatltOp from B.J:Iffakl ol the

'

EutomLI!-·
.•

l

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuitsday, August 31,1982

J'

I'

Braves' rally with a one-out single
and reached third on a single by
Bruce Benedict.
After Mall Sinatra ran for Benedict, Pgillles reliever Tug McGraw,
2·3. gol two quick strikes on Wat·
son, who batted for winning pitcher
Steve Bedrosian, 7·6. Watson drove
the next pitch oul of the ballpark to
spoil McGraw's 38th birthday.
Padres 2, Pirates I
Joe Lefebvre socked a one-out
solo hom!' run In lhe botlom of the
13th Inning to lead San Dl.,go over
Pittsburgh. Lefebvre belted a 2·1 of·
ferlng from Kent Tekulve, 10-7, Into
the right field bleachers for his se.
cond homer of the year a nd first at
Jack Murphy Stadium since joining
the Padres last year.
Luis DeLeon worked the final two
innings for San Diego to raise his
record to 6-4.
Dave Dravecky, making only his
fifth major league start held the
Pirates 10 just two hits before Brian ·
Harper. pinch·hltling for Pilts·
burgh starter Larry McWilliams.
slugged the flrst pitch of the ninth
Inning for his first major league
home run to tie the score 1·1.
Astros t, Mets 2
Ray Knight's tie-breaking, tworun single capped a three- run rally
In the eighth inning as Houston beat
New York for the Mets' 14th
stralg ht.loss.
Art Howe slngiE.'d with on!' out in
the eighth for the third hit of the
game off Craig Swan, 7·6. Pinch·
hitter Harry Spilman then singled
pinch· runner Craig Reynolds to second. One out later, Tony Scotl's
RBI single tied the score, with Spil·
man taking third and Scotl reach·
lng second on the play.
Knight then followed with a line
drive to left for two more runs.
Reliever Frank LaCorte worked
two Innings for his first win of the
season against four losses. Dave
Smith pitched the final two Innings
lor his lOth save.

Impressed with his effort.
Second baseman Doug Flynn
made a pair of superb fielding
plays, while Raines, the lefl fielder,
and third baseman Tim Wallach.
also produced defensive gems.
Besides his game-winning hit,
Raines stole his 6lst and 62nd
bases.
The loss was Cincinnati's thfrd In
a row on Its current road trip.
The Expos are currently In third
place In the National League East,
5 ~ games behind the division·
leading St. Louis Cardinals, 3·2
winners over Ihe Los Angeles
Dodgers Monday night.
Cardinals 3, Dodgers 2
John Stuper and Bruce Sutter
combined to scatter eight hits as St.
Louis defeated Los Angeles and ace
left-hander Fernando Valenzuela.
Valenzuela, 17-10, who had allowed
only one run his previous 18 innings,
took the loss despite yielding only
six hits.
After the Dodgers took a 1·0 lead
II' the second, St. Lquls scored twice
In the fourth when Keith Hernandez
doubled home Lonnie Smith, and
then scored from third on George
Hendrick's sacrifice fly . The Cards
scored their eventual winning run
In the eighth on Smith's RBI single.
Stuper, 6-4, pitched Into the
eighth before SuIter took over and
recorded his 30th save.
PhiDies 6-9, Braves I-ll
Dick Ruthven pitched a threehitter witHe Mike Schmidt belted
three hits, knocked In two runs and
scored one as Philadelphia beat
Atlanta In the tlrst game of their
doubleheader.
Ruthven struck out three and
walked two as he evened his record
at 1().10 In the Phlllles' third straight
victory. The loss snapped a threegame Braves' winning streak.
The Braves won the nightcap as
pinch-hitter Bob Watson slammed
a three-run homer In the 12th.
Terry Harper triggered the

PRESSURING THE NFL - Gene Upshaw, l ei~
member of the Los Angeles Raiders and president of
the executive committee of the National Football
League Players Association, holds a press conference
during a NFLPA meeting In the Chicago suburb of

Schlller Park Monday. Upshaw, joined by NFLPA
members Stan White, center, of the Detroit Lions and
Jell Van Note of the Atlanta Falcons, continued to
threaten strike action In response to stalled contract
negotiations with league owners. ( AP Laserphoto)

Seeing additional players has hurt
Bengal chances during preseason
"It certainly was n't planned to where wP want to be." sa id Gregg.
CINCINNAT I !API - Coach
In each of the presmson losses.
lose
three games. And you never
Forrest Gregg says the Bengals'
the
Bengals had been winning when
r!'ally
know
whal
you'vl'
accompwinless showing In three exhibition
the
regulars departed and rookies
lished
unlll
you
get
int
o
league
games Is due partly to the coaches
came
into the game.
gam
es.
giving so many players a chance to
Cincinnati
was ahead of the Kan·
"We've
definitely
cva
lualed
our
play.
sas
City
Chiefs
10·9 ix'fon• losing
personnel
and
we're
about
on
sche"We've had more play!'rs than
2621.
dule
with
what
we've
put
ln.
I'm
we usually have. We've had more
The Bmgals led the Gre&lt;'n Bay
taking the X's and O's," he said.
people wl' needed 10 look at, and
Packers
27·17 at the half only to lose
"As
far
as
the
production
of
our
we've takl'n the opportunity to look
41
-27.
veteran
players,
we're
obviously
at them. a good look," Gregg said
Monday .
,--------------------------------------------Cincinnati's ros ter has been cut
to 60 and must be down to 49 by next
Monday. This is more than the Na- ·
tiona! Football Leaue has a llowed ·
In previous years.
When the season . opens, the
teams can have 45 players. Four of
them must be consld!'red Inactive
bul the teams will be allow!'d 10 call
them up and shutne the roster.
"You go into the exhlbitons with
two Ideas . One Is to evaluate lhe
players. The other is having them
ready to play when the games
start," Gregg said .

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�Page-4. The Daily Sentinel
31 1982

Ohio

Clutch hitting Perez does it again!
By Associated Press
When Oakland took a 7-41ead Into
the bottom of the eighth tnnlng
against Boston, the Red Sox had the
A's right where they wanted them.
"When you're coming from behind like tha t time after time, It' s
contagious,·· sa id Tony Perez, who
hit the second of a palr of two-run
homers in Boston's flve.run"elghth
lnnlng, llftlng the Red Sox to a 9-7
victory Monday night. "This team
reminds me of when I was with the
fu&gt;ds . We keep coming back. We
have this feellng In the dugout that
we can always come back."
The Red Sox have now won 11
games In which they trailed In the
seventh Inning. They have done II
twice in the last three days, IncludIng a 7-6 triumph over Calllomla
Saturday tha t followed a 5-0 deficit.
On the other hand, the A's have
lost 15 games after leadlng In the
seventh Inning. although Manager
Billy Martin says II feels Uke more
tlian that.
Boston's victory cut Milwaukee's
lead In the East Division to 4~
games over the Red Sox, who
pounded ,14 hits, Including nine
extra-base hits and five homers .
Mar k Clear pitched the last two
Innings lor Boston to Improve his
record to 12-7.
Royals 8, Rangers 3
Wlllle Wilson Improved his AL·
leading batting average to .348 with

four hits as Kansas City extended
Its West Division lead to 2 ~ games
over Idle California with Its seventh
consecutive victory .
Wilson also scored twice and
knocked In two runs In support of
Dennis Leonard, who won his seventh straight game and third in a
row over Texas, which committed
three errors.
George Brett hit his 19th homer
for the Royals and Buddy Bell his
12th for the Rangers.
Mariners 3, Brewers
Bob Stoddard and Ed Vande
Berg held Milwaukee to six hits for
10 Innings and John Moses scored
the winning run for Seattle on a
throwing error by center fielder
Gorman Thomas.
Loser Jim Slaton, 10-5, who relieved starter Pete Vuckovlch to
start the ninth, walked Dave ReverIng with two outs In the lOth and
Moses was Inserted as a pinchrunner. Rick Sweet followed with a
single to ~enter, and Thomas'
ttu·ow to third sailed over the bag
and bounced Into the Mariners dugout as Moses raced home with the
game-winner.
Vande Berg, 7-4, who allowed one
hit over the last 22-3 Innings, was
the winner.
Orioles 6, Blue Jays 3
Rich Dauer hit a two-run double,
John Lowenstein belted his 21st homer and roolde Storm Davis scattered seven hits In 72-3 Innings to

lead Baltimore past Toronto.
The Orioles, winners In 10 of their
last 11 games, pounced on Toronto
right-hander Mark Eichhorn, 0-1,
lor live runs on six hits over 42-3
lnnlngs.
Lloyd Moseby homered for the
Blue Jays.
White Sox 4, Indians 1
Greg Luzlnsld hit two doubles
and knocked In two runs, Tony Bernazard homered and Rich Dotson
continued hi9 strong pitching for
Chicago after a poor start.
Dotson, who was 3-11 on July 28
and Is 9-11 now, pitched seven Innings of shutout ball, but was replaced with one out In the eighth
after Alan Bannister doubled home
Cleveland's only run.
The victory snapped a threegame losing streak for Chicago and
extended the Indians' loslng streak
to five.
Yankees 8, Twins 2
Dave Winfield hit a three-run homer In the flrst Inning and Grafg
Nettles and Jerry Mumphrey completed New York's rout of Minnesota with a homer and a two- run
single, respectively.
Shane Rawley, 9-8, gave up eight
hits, stru~k out four and walked two
en route to his second complete
game of the year.
The Yankees vlctlmlzed Twins
roolde Frank VIola, who had shut
them out last week In New York.

Pryor-Arguello battle slated Nov. 12
MIAMI IAP) - World Boxing
Association junior-welterweight
champion Aaron Pryor says his upcoming "Battle of The Champions"
with World Boxing Council lightweight titllst Alexis Arguello wUI be
a war of contrasting styles that he' ll
wln In free-swinging fashion.
"He's a cautious ffghter, and I'm
a fighter who likes the challenge of
going out and getting a guy," Pryor
said Monday following a news conference to formally announce he
will put his WBA title on the Une
Nov. 12 In Miami's Orange BowL
Arguello, the former WBA fea therweigh t and WBC juniorlightweight champion, is hoping to
becQme the llrst man to win titles In
four weight divisions.
"I think it's going to be a challenge tor him to see 11 he can fight a
guy llke me with his cautious style,
because I don'teven know what I'm
going to throw until I throw It,"
added Pryor. "It will be a testfor
me too, but I like a challenge."
Pryor has won his last 23 fights by
knockout and has compiled a 31-0
record with 29 KOs. But the26-yearo!Cl boxer repeatedly has had to

ward of! criticism that he hasn't
faced top-notch opponents.
"People have said that, but they
·can't sai It anymore. This (Arguello) Is somebody," said Pryor,
who wUI be making his sixth title
defense since winning the juniorwelterweight crown with a fourthround knockout of Antonio
Cervantes on Aug . 2. 19&amp;!.
"This will be the most outstandIng boxing match of the year, II not
many years," promoter Bob Arum
said. "It's not allen that two reignIng champions meet. ..
Pryor, of Cincinnati, reportedly
wtll be paid $1.6 mUUon, whlle Arguello, a 30-year-old Nicaraguan
who makes his home In South MIami, wlll receive $15 million.
Arguello wlll be only the second
fighter In history to seek a fourth
title. Former llghtwelght great
Henry Armstrong was the other,
but was unsuccessfuL
"He was a great fighter, the only
other man to try," said Arguello,
who added he wtll dedicate the
Pryor light to Armstrong. "He lost
In a draw decision. It won't be easy,

By 11\t' ,\fROC!a&amp;~ Prou
AMERICAN l.EAGUI'.:
·~~ m Dlvkilon
W I.
Pct.

M/lwaul\(&gt;(&gt;
Boston
Blllttmol'('

76

n

53

.$

~

.~

4~
~

71
ffi
ffi

to
JOI'J

1.1!.s
16',&lt;)

21-'1
9
14
19~
~

291,

47
R.1
.J62
MonciMY'• GIUtll'l'l

8.1ltlmort• 6, Toronto 3
Boston 9. Onkland i
3, MJiwa ulwl.• 2. 10 LnnlnJ;~;~

l hkago ~ . C1wPiand I
New York K. Mlnllf'S(Ita 2
Kansas City S, TPu5 3
Only games schedulro.
'I'IHwday'" G..... "'
Baltlmorf' 1PalmR" 11 ~1t a t Torooto
IL..ea19-ll t
Oakland JKlniOTirut .l- JUI at Boston
tR.olnt•y tl&gt;-·11. 1n1
:

Ca 1Hornla17.a hn IH•lat !Jf&gt;trol t IMorJ4. JJI. ! AI

n..

Sr&gt;allll' ! Moore 6- 10\ 111 Ml\wallkw
tCa ldwcll 1:.!.111. I n !
( )('Vp]and !Barker 12-91 a t ChlcaRO
JSlwyl. tnf
Nf'W Vflf"k .r.uJdry 1'1 -51 at Mlnfi('S()ta
t Hil vt:'OS 8- 11J). Hll
TNR~ I Hough 11 -11 1 111 K;m~ru; Clly
' 1BhK'k 441 . tnt
·
Wftdnada,y'• GarnEill

Ba!tlmort' .11 1 Toronto
Oakland nt Roston. tnt
Calltorn.la at DMrolt . m t
S.Oattle at Mllw~~oukl&gt;f&gt;. In \
Clt"Ycland at Chicago. In)
New York at Mlnn~Oifl . lr'll
Trxas at Kan!lal'i City. tr.l
N.4.TION.U. LEAGUE

E.a.tum Dll'Won
W L
ra. GB
· St. l..oub
~
55
-~
1.1 ~
.!'17
2'h
• PfllladPi pi\Ja
7{]
61
.!'»4
~I,'J
' Montreal
lfl 62
.m 6Jn
Plttsbulllh
58 74
.-&amp;.19 18
Chicago
~
19
.:till 241h
NPW York
\\-'es&amp;e m Division

73

AUanta

AnxeJes

5H
73

.~i

~

:San Francisco

~

59
64

-:55.1
.515

51-'J

G5

66

.496

8

• Houston

62

69

.473

11

l...o:§

• San Diego

• Onclnnall
50 81
..1!2 23
•
Monda,f'• Gams
• • PhilAdelphia ft-9, Atlanta 1-11 , 2nd game

: 12 Innings

" - " "·
.. Only galneoTue~N~qs
oam ..

•

• CtnctruultJ IHarrts 2-fl at Montreal
• IGuUlck.IOn 1().10) , (n)
: Houeton (Ryan 12·91 at New Yol1t

(Lynch 2-51. (n)

Atlanta

Boat 1.41 at

Philadelphia

: tnrmer 2.f), (al

~

Pitt~ (Sarmiento S-31 at San oqo

· .. Po{DntlfUICo g.8J, tn)
..- , •
St. 1.A;Ju1J (Mu,.. U--8) at Lol Anze!m

• (Hootonl-!Ji). tnJ
• ·Chk:qo (Martz 8-8) al San FrancUco
•(Steinlftl' 7.-fl. 1111

.

........... o....

: ChlctiO at San Fral\diOl

AMERICAN I...EAGUt:
BATTING t:W. a t bats ]: W.WIIson, Kan sas City, .."\48: Yount, Mllwaukft&gt;. ..l~ : Har-

mh . C'tt&gt;VPiand, .l24: Cooper, Mllwauket&gt;,
.3111: Garda, TOJ'Qnto. .Jlll.
RUNS: R . Hm ck-~n. Oakland 1(ll; Moll·
tor. Mllwaukf'f. lo.l: Yount Mllwaukl:ot&gt; . 100:
D.Evaru. Boston. 97: llarTUI\, Clt'Yf'land, !10,
DtiWnlnlt. CallfOrnl a. ~RBI : McRae . Kansas City, 114: Thornton.
Cll'Vc&gt;la nd , I[IJ: [OQpt'f". Mllwauk('('. 96:
G.Thoma.s, Mllwaui!N', ~ : Yount, Mlt~· au ·
kl'(',

Sept . 7

Away
Away
Away
Away

Federal Hocking

Sept. 9
Sept. 14
Sept. t6
Sept . 21
Sept . 22
Sept . 23
Sept . 28
Sept . 30
Oct . .S
Oct. 7
Oct. II

1!7.

HITS: r.art'la, Toronto. lffi: Yount . Mil·
wa uKff', 166; COOJ)l'r. MllwaukP(I , 164;
W Wilson, Kansas City. 161. Harrah, Clt'\-'f'·
land. 1~. Mc Har. Kan~~ City . 1%
DOUBLES: While. 1-\nnSH s City. :¥.1:
Ywnt. Mlh.,'I!LlkN ..11: Mcllar. Kansas City.
.Y,: Lynn, Ca lllornla. 34 ; Cowen.~. Seattlr.ll
TR ! P l.J~ : W.Wtl§OO. Kanu.s City, 13;
Hcrndln , l)('ttUt . ll : Yount, Mllwauk£ot&gt;.IO:
Hll't t. Kansa.~ City . 9: Whitake r . Detrott , 7:
Mumphry. Nt'W York, 7: Wlnnt'!d. Nf&gt;w
York. 7: BPrruv.ar'd. Oalr aJIO, 7
IIOMF. RUNS: G.Thoma.s. fttllwaukt!t'.
:M : Rr-.J ark.'illn, Ca)lfornla. Jl : 1lK&gt;rnton.
&lt;1t'Yt'land, :!I. Cuopt'T". Mllwauker-, 26 : OA'Il ·

Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace

Southern
Southwestern

Meigs
North Gallia
Southern
Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace

Southwester n

Alexander
Miller
Oct. t8
Mi l ler
Oct . 20
Federal Hocking
JUNIOR HIGH
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Sept. to-Southwestern
A
Sept. 23- Federal Hock ing
A
Sejpt _23- Kyger Creek
H
Oct . 7--VVaterford
A

Oct. 14

v i&gt;. Mltwaukw. 26.

Oct. 14- Aiexander
Oct. 21 - Hannan Tra ce

STO LE N BA S ES : R.Jiendl'r501'1.
Oakland. 123: Gart'ta. Toror.lo, 47; J.Cruz.
St-attle. .ti; Molitor. Mltwaukef. JI: Wathan .
K.1ns1u City. 31
PITCHING t ~ ~l s kln, l : Vurkovtch .
Milwaukl_&gt;{&gt;, 1$---.1, .789, 3.22; BW""II..,, Chlc&amp;,llO.
13--:1. .
3.61: Guidry. Nrw 't'ork. 12-~. .700.
.1.7 1; Zahn, California , 1H . .700, :1.11): Sutr iiNe, Clrveland, 11 -!'1, .lilt. .1)t6: Gura. Kan.
sas City. 17-11. .00. 3.~: PM I)' , Dl-trult . 14 -i .
.667, 2.!J9: Slaton, Mllwaukff&gt;. 1(}.5_.f67 .lf'9
STRtKEOUTS; F .BannlstPI'. St•all lr&gt;. 1~7
Barkw. CJpveland. 140; Guidry . Nf'w York.
L1I : Beattie. S(&gt;a ttll&gt;. lJ I: Rlf!hM!I, Nt&gt;U.•
Vork, 126.
NA.TION.-\1. LEA.GUE
BATTING !345 at ba!s l: Oltva--. MontJTal ,
.n 'i: Madlock. PltL~!'"Rh. .314: Lo.Smtth.
S!. Loul.'i, ..114: Durham. Otlcago, ..114:
Knight . Hw~ton.•112
RUI'o"S. J..o.Smlth. St.Louis. 106; Schmidt .
Phlladfolphla. !ll Murph)·. Atlanta. 93; Daw son. Montn.•al, fB; Sandberg Chicago, 87 .

Oct . 28- North Gallia

H
A
H

ZUSPAN'S
______,

WELlSTON - Mter losing an
early game in the Wellston Little
League Tournament the local Big
Bend all-stars fought their way back
to the championship game of the
double elemination affair only to
drop the tilt 4-1.
Earlier in a semi-final game the
Big Benders took a 4.J triumph from
Athens.
While fighting back through the
loser's bracket the Big Bend team
defeated the winner's bracket winner, Portsmouth Clay, 4-3. This forced a second game between the two
powerhouses and Clay outlasted its
tough competitor 4-1.
In Sunday's first championship
game the Big Bend all-stars came
out of the block fast, scoring three
big runs in the top of the first inning.
Robbie Grimm led off the inning
with a single, Brian Tannehill
walked, and J.R. Kitchen slammed
a three run home run to right center.
With the score 3-1 going to the hottom of the sixth inning Clay sent the
game into extra innings, scoring two
runs. Billy Marshall scored the winning run for the locals on a wild pit'ch.
Matt Fisher and John Sisson had
the other hits for Big Bend, both
singles. Michael Bartrum started on
the mound for Big Bend, workin~ the

first six innings. He was relieved by
Bdan Decker in the seventh frame .
The duo allowed four hits, 16
strikeouts and eight walks. Clay pitching allowed four hits , 17
strikeouts, and five walks.
In the season championship finale
Big Bend scored their only run of the
game in the first inning on a John
Sisson triple and a wild pitch. Clay
scored two markers in the first, one
in the fourth and sixth inning to win,

and Seott Williams strted the inning
off with walks followed by Robbie
Grimm's RBI single. Jeff Nelson
had an RBI slngle, Michael Bartrwn
had a single, and Matt Fisher rapped a single to end the local scoring
attack.
Big Bend had nine hits, all of
which were singles. Michael Bartrum led the way with three, Tannehill two, and one each by Nelson,
Fisher, Brian Decker, Robbie
H
Grimm.
Big Bend had four hits with John
Robbie Grimm started for Big
Sisson's triple being the big blow.
Bend on the mound and was relieved
Brian Tannehill, Matt Fisher and
by Brian Decker in the second inBill Marshal had singles.
ning. The duo allowed just one hit,
striking out eight, and walked five
Billy Marshall pitched a fine game . batters. Athens pitching allowed 9
for Big Bend. Jeff Nelson came on to big hits, 7K's, and 7walks.
strike out the last hatter in the sixth
The Big Bend all-stars finished
inning. Marshall allowed four hits, 1 their season with a fine 10-4 won-lost
strikeouts and 7 walks. Clay pitchers record. The Big Beod team finished
allowed 4 hits, 13 strikeouts and 5 second in the 16 team Belpre Tourwalks.
nament and second in the 24 team
In Saturday's prelimmary hout Wellston Tournament. Big Bend was
Big Bend edged Athens 4.J after managed by Weldon Bartrum a
Athens jumped to a 2-0 lead in the assisted by Mark TannehiL
first inning. Athens score don two
walks, a hit batsman, and two Big
Bend errors . .Athens upped their
The Daily Sentinel
lead to 3-0 in the second Inning on
two alks and their lone hit of the day.
!USPSHS.!IIGJ
Big Bend scored aU of their four
A Dlvltdun of Mulllmtclia, lor.
runs in the fourth frame. Marshall
Publisht!tl enry afternoon. Mond8y-lh~h • 1

Fiberglass
and
Asphalt

ROOF COATINGS
5Gallon

POSTMASTER: &amp;nd

By wm Grlmlley
AP CorrtiiJOIIIienl

addr~ss

to The

ROOF COATINGS
5 Gallon

watching
Braves
up trying
on the
team
that his
a year
ago beat
he was
to pull out of the catacombs-of National League East - an effort he

Mur~ . Atlanta.ll: Klllf

Su~l'l'lbt•rs _not de~r'!1t; \O pay the car ril'l"
H\l:lY remit m 11t.lviuk:C \~iret.'l to The Dilily
S..'nlint•l on H 3, 6 or 12 ~lh ~sis. Crt!dlt
will b.· ~: iven car'ritreat:hrrwnlh.

But aon -, aetay .. me o"eJ
is lor

...

PrrcHING 115 Dedslons): P.Niekro,
Atlanta. lJ.-3, .813, 3.~ CamPlarla, Pittsburgh. 12-~..106. 2.64; Rogers, Montlftl, lS7, .682, 2.D; tarltm, PhUidelptua. 17·9, .6M,
3.4&amp;; O.RoblriSOI.'I. Plttaburgh, 1-U, .636, 3.87:
KntkOW, Philadelphia, 12·7, .&amp;12, 2.jl8: Valent ue-la, Loe: ~. 17-10, .6.'1), 2.81; Weld\,

r

a llmrtftd lrme only!

1'1' :

.POif/£R KINQ ·

'l'lt!\111.

MAILSU~'W:riONS

. _Ide
__,· ~ '
.. '."'
t3 Wl&gt;ck...; .
. .. ... $14.64
26Wwk.'i . ......... :'! . ., . :.
.. SZ7 ..10
1
!i2W,&gt;ck...; .... {JU~~l~ .
. . $5oH8
13 w. . •ks . . . . .
26 W" •ks
!i2 w-.. ·ks

. im"
. .. '. '·~r. . .

CEILING TILE

. . $15.21

129.64
. . $$6.21

C.rlcn. PhUidelPhia. ill: Ryan. Houston.
191; Va&amp;enzuela. LOI Angeles, 1M: Welch.

STOCK
#260

.'

'

.

&amp;06LIIIin .

OWENS - CORNING'S

Foil-Faced
Fiberglass

STOCK
11275

Square
Foot

~

30¢

Square

Foot

SHEATHING
lfz''x4'x8'
A
SHEET

EXTERIOR-INTERIOR

LAT.EX .PAINT
WOOD AND MASONRY SURFACE

COLORS
White
or
Ranch Red

WAFERBOARD
%"x4'x8'

.

$57 5

PER SHEET••••••••• •••. ••
A
GALLON

'I

'

.,

. ,.....,, 011,•).

Filii EH Allp•lllllost Can .

_. . Senlct

MORT AR ..~9.~~: ......... ~3 8~AG

CELOTEX

. Mounted and Balanced
1
• • Free

PIL 112-21114

28¢

3112I "X 1S"• ••88.12
so. FT.
16e so . FT •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••
48.96 SQ. FT.
26e SQ.FT .
6" X 15" •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
7S.05 SQ. FT.
26e SO.FT.
6" X 23"•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

CEILING TILE

PRICES
'31.110

.

J

SINGLE GLAZE- MILL FINISH
2'x2·••••••.••••••••••. '25°0 Each
3'x2~ •••••••••••••••••• '3000 Each
3'x3••••••••••••••••••••'400° Each
4 1x3'••••••••••••••••••• '4~ 00_ .E ach

BAHIA

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO
'

•EDSYILU,·OHIO

STRIKEOUTS: Soto. Qndnnati, 22.1;

SLIDING

CEMENT
94 LBS.
$495
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BAG

MAYFAIR

I

REEDS COUNTRY STORE

La! Ange!ef, lH, .62:1, 3..19.

Per 1,000 BOARD FEET

1

'

TREADWEAR
RATINGIOO ·

$27500

Nn subs..-riptiuns bY\~nl.if nnill.ltd in towns
wlwrr hnllll'l'arrtt•r~rvic ili: .IIVIIilllbh--'.

F.LT.
11.59
A18x13
1171x13
34.00
1.71
D78d4
38.00
1.92
£78114
39.00
2.01
.41.00 '
F71x14
2.12
G71x14
43.00
2.26
600115
39.00 . . . 1.72
G78d5
43.00
~-35
H78d5 " 45.QO
2.54
L71x15
4?.00
2.79

and a free movror. too 1

PER
SHEET

MORTAR

15 Cents

END OF SUMMER
SAVINGS

Power Kmg IS a Qreal "'b•g lawn'"
lamer. and wtth 1t 5 powerful all-gear
drtve system and broad versahhty.
Power K1ng handles all k•nds ol Iough
JObs around your place. Come gel
a great deal on a great tractor -

95 8

AND

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

,.

$

CEMENT

On., week . .
. .. 11.00
On~ Month
... . ... IHO
One Yci:lr ....... , ............... $5o2.80
Daily

SHEATHING

WINDOWS

D&lt;:~ily

r;::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;~~==========g

Now when you buy the toughest
most versa hle tractor 10 town . you also
ge l a free 48" rotary mower• JusiiJI,IY
any new Power Ktng tractor and !he
mower IS yours at no extra cost.

miUI, N~ York. 31; Schmkfl . Phnadelp~a.
28: Carter, Montreal, 71': Homer. Atlanta,
'17; Guerrero. Las AngelES, 'Z7.
STOLEN BASES: RainM., Montl'f!al., 62:
Lo-Smlth, Sl.Lout.s, ~; Moreno, Pltlabur&amp;fl,
!6: Wilson, New York, 49: Sax, Lol A¥18,

$999

St!ntincl,lll Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio ~769.

had pursued futllely for five years.
"Give him the gate," screamed
disappointed Mets fans. On Oet 5,
the reorganized Mets fired him.
Three weeks later, the former Cardinal and Braves slugger was hired
by the Atlanta Braves, one of the
few teams as cloddish and uninspired as the Mets.
Now, almost another year has
rolled around and here are the
Braves, despite a near calamitous
midseason slump, battllng It out
with the World Champion Los Angeles Dodgers for the division
championship.

l"xl2" NO.4 COMMON

WITH SCREEN

--

:11: Madlock. Pl!tsbU!lrh. :11.
TRIPLES: Thol\ Hou.stoo, 9: McGee,
St.LOI.IIs. 8: Garner. Houstcn. 8; 6 Tied With
7.
'

~ ALUMINUM

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carriu or Mutur Route

The series between the Atlanta
Braves and New York Mets last
weekend provided an excellent tableau on the lrony of baseball In relation to managers.
It's a cardinal rule that the manager Is always the game's whipping
boy. The buck stops at his dugout
seat. A dozen or his high-priced
mlnlons may commit endless sins
of Incompetence and Indifference,
but It Is 01' Skip who must take the
rap. The rope falls on his neck.
There was Joe Torre sitting ln the
dugout of the Braves, a dark, sullen
man chewing on a match sUck,

A
CARTON

PURE &amp; FIBER

M~mber : Tht! Ass.udated Pr~. lnhmtl Dai·
ly . Prt:l.'l A:uociation ~tOO tilt Amerkcm
New!paJll'f' Publislwrs Association, No~~ tiona!
Adverlillil'll\ Represent~ttive, Brcmham
Newspaper Sa&amp;les, 733 Third Avenul!, New
York , New York 10017.

Sports World

ROOF NAILS

SHEATHING

$2395

Fridlly, Ill Court Strtt:t, by tht Ohio V~tlh.·:f
Publishin~t Cornpany • Mullitnt!tlia , In~ ..
Puml!roy , Obio 45769, 992·2156. Sl&gt;t:ont.l d11ss
po!d.il~e paitl'at Poml-'rO)'. Ohio.

Today's

Metric
and
Standard

lf2" CDX 3 PLY

ALUMINUM FIBERED

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

SIZE

».

COLORS:
Dual Black
Dual Brown
Rainbow Green
White

SHINGLES
100

PLYWOOD

BLACK WALL PRICES

Oliver, Montreal, 33; KniRhl. Houstoo, J2:
Durham, Chicago,
Dawson, Montreal,

~=-------------------~

FING

4 PLY POLY WHITE STRIPES

HITS: OliVer, MonU't'al, 1~ Bucknl'r,
Chicago, 164; Sax, Lot Angple~ , 159; Knl,tlt.
Houston, 156; Lo.Smlth, St.Louis, 1M.
DOUBL~ : T.Kennedy, San Otego, l6:

m.

Per Roll
.108 Sq. Ft. Roll
COLORS: White, Green, Brown lf2 Black

Big Bend All Stars beaten
•
tn tournament championship

RBI :. Mull&gt;!\)', Atlanta,

1.01 o\nreiet.

$1099

held recently In Middleport. Pictured are R. Gilkey,
Ron Ferguson, Roo Drexler, Rusty Bookman, B. Dodson, and M. Kennedy.

CHAMPIONS- Village Pharmacy took the championship honors In the Hartinger Park Tonrnament

DEAN TIRES

96: BuckM!I", 0\1eago, te; Oliver, Moot real, liB; Carter, Mont·
real. !Ill: Oark. San Fr-anci9co, 8'7

ROLL
ROOFING

--

90 LB. MINERAL SURFACE

m.

HOMERUN'S:

Montreal 3, Ondnnatl 1

.Houetcwl 4, New York 2
San DleiO %. PlltlbUrgh I, 13 hnJngs
St. Loub 3, Lol Angeles 2

~

Lt&gt;~ders

-

!\R
-~
NN• Yor k
6.1
.m
[)('froJI
6.1
n!
Cleve&gt;! and
61 ti.'i
4R.4
Toro nto
61 71
41!2
M'fllllk&gt;m Dlvillkln
Kansas City
"n ~
.W
Gallfomla
74 !'16
~9
C'hkago
G7 !lt
.519
St&gt;allk'
~
fill
4n
Oakllllld
~
H
.&lt;l19
Tf'xa~
~
711
:~

St&gt;~ttlt•

Sept . 24- Wahama

Place
Home
Away

Oct . 2- Cadiz
Oct. 8- North Galli a
Oct . ls-KygerCreek
Home
Oc t . 22- Southwestern
Away
Oct . 29-Hannan Tra ce
Home
Nov . 6--Southern
Home
t982 Gl R LS VOLLEY BALl..
(AIIGames.a16 : 00 P.M .)
Aug . 30
Meigs
Aug . 31
Alexand er
Sept. 2
North Gallia

Ctnc!Matl at Mont~al . (n l
Hooston at Nev.r York. (nl
Atlanta at Phlladc!lphla. 1nt
PlllsllUrlth at San DII."(!Q. tnt
St. Louisa! Los Angrics, I r'll
GB

Eastern
schedules
VARSITY FOOTBALL
Date-Opponent
Sept. 3- Waterford
Sept . IG-Aiexander
Sept . 17- Federal Hocking

Scoreboard ...
Majors

but I hope I'll do better."
Arguello, who wlll retain his lightweight championship even II he
loses, last fought July 31 when he
knocked out Kevin Rooney ln a nontitle bout which ran his career
mark to 7&amp;4 with 61 KOs.
His last title defense was a fifthround knockout of Andrew Ganlgan
on May 22.
Local Investors were Instrumental In attracting the fight to Miami
and are hoping Arguello's appeal In
Latin America wlll bring In thousands of fans from outside the Un~
ted States. Arum said he wl1l put
together an International undercard to help the gate as well.
The match, agreed upon by the
fighters several weeks ago, will be
the most slgnHlcant bout held In
South Florida since Cassius Clay,
now known as Muhammad All,
wrested the heavyweight cham pionship away from Sonny Liston
on Feb. 25, 19&amp;1.

The

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&lt;

-~-l'
,.J.

All Prices Are CASH-N-CA~RY While

ntities Last

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THROUGH SATURDAY

�Sentinel

ust 31,1982

Friends, families are reunited
fami ly, and Keith Johnson, o(
Langsville; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Sellers
and family, Hillsboro, Missouri ; Mr.
and Mrs. L. B. Grimes and family,
Victor Gotschall , Bradenton, Fla .;
Mrs. Virginia Kessenger, Melbour·
ne, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Jacks and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Junior Jacks and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Dana Jacks, Mrs. Becky
Warren and family, Paul Moore,
David Jacks, Donald Jacks, of
Springfield ; Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Jacks and family , Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Eckard and family, Richard Jacks
and family, Mrs. Lillie McMillin, of
Marion; Mr. and Mrs. Billy Jacks
and family, Urbana ; Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Rife and family, and Ed
Rife, Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Hurley
Rife and family, Colton; Mr. and
Mo:s. Kenny Hurst and family, Sugar
Grove; Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Hutchinson and family, of Columbus.
The invocation ws given before the
bullet luncheon by William VanMeter. Next year the Jacks reunion
will be held on ,Sunday, July 31st, at
the Royal Oak Park.

Jacks

character mural. The mural was designed by Mrs. Hill
and Margaret Johnson, bottom, DPPF librarian aide.
Murals wlll also be added to the wall in the haU area.

Meigs County area

h~ppenings

parents and sisters, Mrs. Melanie
Thomas, Spnngfoeld, and Mrs. Lin·
da Cowdery and sons, Christopher,
Jason ·md Bradley , Chillicothe.
Brown graduated from Eastern
HighSchool on 1978.

Wolfe birthday

Heather Michelle on Aug. S, at
Holzer Medical Center.
The infant weighed seven pounds
and measured 20 inches in length.
Maternal grandparents are Mr .
and Mrs. Hennan Grate, Rutland.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Ferrell, Charleston. Paternal great-grandmother is Eva
Graves, Alloy, W. Va.

The l&gt;aily Sentinel

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1I

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.,

KEN'S

992·2663

OHIO VALLEY

R.

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TUESDAY
RUTLAND Civic Center will
hold skating Tuesday from 7:3Q to
10:30 p.m. and Thursday from
7:3() to 10·3() p.m. Children, $1;
adults, $2. Take your own skates.

WEDNESDAY
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
the township garage at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
The
auxiliary of Middleport Fire
Department will meet Wednesday at 7:3() p.m. at the fire
station.

·ton.
Pick -up
Terms of sale are cash.
Seller reserves the right
to bid and the right to
reject any and all bids.
(81 29, 30, 31, (9)1 , 2, Stc

1----- -----+--- ------- -i

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
Chapter of Middleport wiU meet
Thursday at 7:3() p.m. Officers
are to wear chapter dresses and
dues may now be paid in advance
or the first meeting in October.
Twenty-five year pins wiD be
presented.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Jaycees will meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. Plans for the annual
haunted house will he dlscus.sed.
.Those interested are Invited to attenet "
~~·n ~'
···l• ~ · ~ ·

.
'

PO~!l~Y, -; ..~~ ~~ry
service will he hew 7:30 p.m.
ThurSday at -the Hysell -Rnn
•

· Holiness•CinlrchAJpeak!!i"will'he
Rev. and ··Mrs. R. ~!·r ,:JI....,;,.
, .
1 •
• ~ \'1\1•1: •
' cPutor Theron Durham Invites
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Roger Hysell

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Buyin g Go ld, S1 lv er,
LOST OR Spaniel
STOLEN Black
Cocker
dog. Platinum , old coins. scrap
s om e tim e Sa t urd ll y rings &amp; si lverware. Dall y
POMEROY, OHIO
ROOfiNG
evening in Mills VIllage quotes
ava lia b le Al so
Plaster Craft and
area. Answers to the name coins &amp; coin
APPLIANCE
PUblic NotiCe--supplies for
1
l
AI
rninum
·
of
Qu
incy.
REWARD
.
.
---- -V
lny
u
Cer1mic Bisque
And Home Ma intenance
CALL Mark Harrison . Call sale. Spri ng Vall ey Trading
co , Sprong Valley Plaza.
Complete IUIItl work,
Tea cher s.
Scout
• Roofing of all type s
~-2608 .
4-4&lt;1·8025 or ~ - 602 6
NOTlCE TO
complete remodelin1, 1aof,Leaders and Organlza·
• Sldln•
All
Makes
inc
of
Ill
tyWorked
in
tion
s.
come
tn
and
•
Remodeling
BIDDERS
7 week old Beag le puppy
TWO
PORTABL E
eFreeestimale&gt;
We pay cash for late mode l
e Washers
e Dish·
homtartl 20•·years.
Tak e. A Look At Our
CLASSROOMS
named Pee Wee, lost ea rly clea
e20
Yrs.
exper
ience
.
n used ca rs.
IN
washers
Freentimates
Package D ea ls. D•s·
Thu rsday mornlng.22nd St.
Frenchtown Car co
s c~5b&lt;[.SD~~~:~cT
• Ranges • Ret rigeratClll843-3322
counts Avaota ble.
TOM HOSKINS
Jerico Rd. area. 304-675·
B1ll Gene Johnson
Sea Ied proposals will be Ors
5829
LESSONSSTARTING
Ph. 949·2160or949·2322
CALL STOP IN
4-46·0069
rece ived by the' I Meigs
• Dryers • Freners
7 16 2 mo pd
SolrGN p
.4-20 ttc
Local School Distn ct
PARTS and SERVICE
T0
U ·
Billfold · lost at Hocks Aug
Board· of Education, 621 ~:::======4=· S=·=tt=c~_::::========~
SAL E ON
25th . Eugene Doni gan, Wanted to Buy : Good used
dleport,
Ohio,Avenue,
until 12
:00
South Third
Mid·
~==O:R:N:A:M::E:N:T:S==~Ir========~ summ ersville, S.C.
canning 1ars. a ll sizes Ca ll
N10n on September 23, 1,-- - - -- - ---,
614·388·9354.
1~82 , for two (21 portable
SIGN UP NOW FOR
LOST Gas cap for Gremlin.
ML
BOGGS
on Jefferson or Jackson
classrooms. The bids w ill
be opened and read by the
FALL ENROlLMENT
Ave .. 304-675 5019.
Wanted Hunt1ng Bird dog
Treasurer Imm ediatel y
SCHOO
CJING
Puppy preferred, but wi II
nside r f u ll grow n
~he:;,~:rr,h~~~~a~gd:~~
CONTRACTING
BARBARA's
L CONTRA
sALEs &amp;-sERvicE LOST , strayed or stolen. co
Re gist e r ed or non
said Board al its next
OF DANCE
M ale Dalmation answers to regi stered, must be good
meeting.
*backhoe
U.S. Rt. 50 East
name of Beau mont If with children Ca ll 446 7541
Detailed specifications
*excavating
JW
Dozer l Backhoe unite,
Guysville, Ohio
f ound or any information of
if no answer keep tryi ng.
and instructions to bidders
T"P
~ AG""S 3 &amp; UP
water, sewers, "'"'dl,
Authoriled John Deere,
whereabouts ca ll 304-675·
may be obtained at the Of
* sepjle systems
" '
~
,.....
New Holland, Bush Hog
lice of the Treasury , 621 • Awater, sewer
foundations, reclamations.
Farm Equipment
1961 , Harry N. Rhodea. BED S IRON , BR AS S, old
ChildS pet
~f~~rl~~~o Avenue, Mid • :ug~~ ~:u"~k
Ladies Jazzercise
we Specialize tn
Dealer
furnttur e, gal ', Si lve r
doll ars. wood ice boxes,
All prpposals must be ac
•limestone
C II 8 ba
Racine &amp;Syracuse
Farm Equipment
companied by a bid bond
a
ar ra
sewer Hookups
7 _ __,Yard_,Sc:a._,te'---- stone jars, antiques. etc.,
executed by a Bonding
Licensed &amp; Bonded
Lawrence
Phone 949·2293
Parts &amp;Serv\c:tfc
Vinton Full Gospel Church Co mplete
house holds
Company licensed by the
PH. 992·7201
992· 3282
8·30·1 mo.
Rummage Sale Sept. 1 2 3. wnre · M o Miller, Rt 4.
State of Ohio, or by a cer·
8-2'1 m•
Clothes, fu rntture, odds Pomeroy, Oh Or 992·7760.
solvent
bank
in
the
State
of
and ends
t•f•ed check
drawn upon a
..
Ohoo,
~ayable to the order
- - - - -Gold. s il ve r , sterl ing,
of the Owner, in an amount
A
jewel ry, ri ngs, old coins &amp;
not less than five percent (5
ug. 31s t t o s ept . Sth 9 t o currency.
Ed BurkeH Bar·
gfJ:' of the amount of the
PIAN
ROUSH
HOUSE COAL
ALL STEEL
~~ t:J~f;e Ro:~ "~~:~~; ber ShOp, Moddl eport 992No bidder may withdraw ~~ TUNING
CONSTRUCTION
signs. Proceeds go to 3476.
his bid for a period of thirty :.C"" ; ..
&amp;
Pittsburgh No.8 A
BUILDINGS
Weste rm an Meth odost
!301 days after the opening
New Homes - ex·
Mine Run (Strip)
Church
FURNITUR E. beds,
thereof .
REPAIR
tensive remodeling
___________ OLD
1ron, brass. or wood Kit
Said board of education
Colt Bill Word
Delivered Price:
Sizes start from 30x74"
rese rves the right to waive
Wud'l Keyboard
• Electric work
POMEROY- $31.00 Ton
Yard Sale, 641 F1 fftl Ave . chen cubbards of all types.
Tables, round or square.
informalities, to accept or
44HJ72
eCustom Pole Bldgs. &amp;
MIDDLEPORT
Utility Buildings
Friday , Sep1 .·3, 12·3 30
Wood ice bo xes Old desk s
reject any and all or parts Viu Master c. 5.9·t!C
Garages
AND RACINE- $32.00
Sizes from 4 to 6 and all
of any and ail bids.
• Roofing Work
Ton
and bookcases. Will bu y
Bids and bonds shall be
• Aluminum &amp; vonyl
wood buildings 24xl6.
Yard Sa le at 583 Jay Drive, complete household. Gold,
Thursday &amp; Friday, Sept 2 Silver. old money. pocket
filed in the same sealed en·
Sidings
Meigs Co. -Sll .OO Ton
Insulated Dog Houses
1 3, 9 a.m.· 5 p.m. Ch ildren's watches, chains, r1ngs, and
d~~'r.~d mrci,ked,.:,.,s"ndJ:~e
7L
tl Years Experience
!Plus Delivery) 0
.P&amp;S BUILDINGS
and adul t clothing and etc lnd• an Artifacts of all
Wagner, Treasurer, Meigo
Greg Roush
4Ton Minomum E
Rt 3 a ..
shoes.
• , oxI
S
h
I
D
types Also buy1ng basebal l
C
0
D
Loca
c oo
istrtct
Ph. 992-7583
· · ·
~
Racine, Oh.
cards Osby Martin 992Board
of Education, 621
PH
992
2280
or
·
South Third Avenue, Mid·
IU~Mr
or 992·2282
'
.
g
Ph . 614·843·2591
Carport Sal e, Fnday Sept 6370.
dleport, Ohio45760.
"""''
8-15-t ""'
992·2618
&lt;io
6· 15-lfc
3, 9-4 First n ght off
MEIG S LOCAL
Bulav ill e Rd . Maple
SCHOOL DISTRICT
~---------+---------+----------1 dri!SSing ta ble, pl ant stand.
BOARD OF
Reel Ettate - General
EDUCATION
..------- ---,1 clothes.
Jane Wagner,
------Syracuse
·
Racine
Treasurer
S&amp;WTV
Yard Sale Sept. 3, 4, 6. 5 ~1
(8131 , (9) 7, 14, 21, 4tc
Second , Middl eport
RESIDENTS
CANDLELIGHT INN S.Redovian
AND
. 9x12 braided
Between Cheshrre &amp;
rugs, mens suites. children
New
Sewer
Hookups
Middleport, Ohio
APPLIANCE SERVICE
VIRGIL B. SR. REALTOR
clothes. typewriter
11
· Help waiiied~ - 216 E. 2nd St.
Being
Scheduled
Chester, Ohio
PRESENTS
POSITI ON AVA ILABLE
Phone
s Family Yard Sa le in Mer· Super
lua.-Lidios IteM
•ntend ent. Ga ll 1a
Ph.
985-4269
or
985-4382
cervolle.
Sept.
2
&amp;
3.
"FREE ESTIMATES"
1-(614)· 992·3325
Ill O.tnls Rtdu&lt;td hw Women
County Boa rd of Menta l
Oewayne Williams
lltd.-O.alt Nopr
Elpert • Insured
Retardation and Develop·
&amp; scott• e smrth
NEW LISTING - Nice
111 o.on Bftr \1 P•Ko
Yard Sal e Se pt
2. me nt
DISa b il it ies .
Wort
men
All ma kes and models
bri ck venee'r hom e
fn. &amp;Sot. I P.M. 10 P.M.
Hamilton Rd . off Bladen Quallf tcation . Meet cer
BOB
CAMPBEU
Antenna
In
stallation
Large landscaped yard
Ill Orinb 'h Pnct
Mercerville Rd. Ca ll 614 tifi cation standards lor
House call s and stl op
with lots of shrubbery. 3
PH. 949-2460
IHIS MONIH'S 11.110
256·6316
Sup e r int e nd ent . Ohi o
se r111C e ava•labl e .
good si zed bedrooms.
9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
lltd.·Soi.- M.,oillennont
Department of Mental
8·13·1mo
Pd
.
2'h baths, central air
O.inll &amp; O.own foch
1h mil .
Retardation and Develop·
Mon.
thru
Sat.
3
fam
1
ly
yard
sale.
1
and heat. 2 car garage, 2
NtPI of lho Bond.
DIS abiliti es
S Portland Park on 124 me ntal
patios, equipped kitchen
tarry OUI ttltf I. Wlnt llllllblt
(Maste r degree essential ).
Mon.,
lues
,
Wed
Em
er
and large fam ily room
Open Mon.·fn.
Respons•btlttt es · Ad ·
son Johnson .
W1fh
woodburneng
2:00p.m -2:30 o.m.
mmsfer day to day
C OMI ' l f l f
firepl ace. Only 30 years
Sol &amp; Sun. C·OO pm-2·30 o.m.
of se rvi ces
P/ i/ I J\I OP
PULLINS
old Want$125,000.
810 S. Second, Middleport operat1on
prov1
ded
by
Board .
',f
R
\,
I
I
I
NEW LISTING - Lot
July 30 thru Sept. 4. Fur Salary negot1bl etheAva1lable
PHON E 992-9913
t r f'l m
tn ~&gt;
•. m ,l ll l"'i l
160 on blacktop road and
niture. small appliances, immed1ately . Contact Mr
81 l mo
EXCAVATING
120 feet deep just out of
••t·.l t r r f l" n · t n t he
dishes, clothing, drapes, James
Holley, Vice Cha ir
l .1 rq f&lt; c; t 1-' .l dt.ltnr
- Doters
Middleport. Water , gas
man,
Gallia
County Board
1
=========:=J
curta
ins,
bedding,
linens,
Reel Eat1te - General
Backhoes
and electric available
1-Stlverstone pans, toy s, of Mental Retardat1on
and
- Dump Truc ks
for only $3,800.
1-&lt; .Jdl .!h•r ' pi 'f l.i l •"
knives. tools. lamps. mi se
Development Disabilities.
N / •, ti l t-J I ( I '
- lo-Boy
NEW LISTING - 66 .
P.0 . Box l.t, Cheshire, Oh
- Trencher
J!i 't' r!&gt; I )f)l1ri i'IH I
acres of minerals not
_,.,,,
Sept
1
·
3
6
m1
from
45620
Applicants should In- water
leased. Pasture, some
Ch e st e r on Rt .24 8. c lud e work hi s tory ,
HOBSTETTER REALTY
- sewer
SMITH NELSON
timber, storage building
Household items, books. resume.
philosoph ical
- Ga s Lines
and fenced on blacktop
Geo. S. Hobstetter, Jr .
l
Announcements
encyclopedtas.
clothin
g,
statement,
transc
ript and
MOTORS,
INC
•
sept1c
Systems
road
.
Good
1nvestment
Broker
furniture
.
sewing
machine.
cop1es
of
cert1f
1Cclt10n
Otfoce Ph. 742·200J
for $45.000.
f' omcro v. o n
SWEEPER and sewing
Large or Small Jobs
Ph. 992 -"J 114
NEW LIKE
2
machine repair, parts, and
992-2478
PH.
'l 26 rlr
supplies.
Pick up and 3 rd . St Rt 124, Syr acuse Wanted someone to stay
NEW LISTING
bedroom frame home in
8·1·1 mo. pd
the country on hard
delivery , Davis vacuum Aug. 30·Sept. 3 9.30to??? . with elderly lady , 6 nights a
Lovely three bedroom
week Call ~ - 3 5 48 .
road. Front and back
home in Middleport.
up Sale at Mary Laynes
Large fami ly room
porches ,
basement. 1L=========t==:::======~ Cleaner,
George ~ one
CreekhalfRd.mileCall
garage and 2 acres of
~ - 0294 ..
w1th fireplace Gas fur·
resident, Cheshi re, Oh. E;.:perienced Certift ed Lab
n• ce taymg land tor
na ce . N1c e yard
Everything cheap-mu st Techn and Medtcal Techn
MILLER
·
C.
MASH
$45.000.00
$45.000
Come in and Register for sell -Sept 12·H ·91oll6p m. Appl y 1n person between
SYRACUSE - On Rt .
FARM
PRIC E
8·30 and 4 30. Med1ca1
Squi rre l Tall Contest.
CONSTRUCTION
REDUCED on thos 48
124, a 3 bedroom ranch
ELECTRIC
Spring Valley Trading Co. Starling Massar 2nd. St. Plaza. 203 Ja ckson P1ke,
w1th carpeting, range,
acres m/ 1 w1th m.neral
Spring Valley Plaza, ~- house above Eastern High Gal lipolis, Oh.
rights and large four
dbi sink, nat . gas F.A.
Custom kitchens and
8025.
School. Sept. 1 and 2. 9 5
SERVICE
bedroom home, approx.
furnac e end large level
bathrooms. Remodeling,
p.m. Good used sweeper, Athens Menta.l Health Cen
tot for only S27,000.
51;, yrs. old. Call for
For all your wiring
add-ons, new homes,
ter is ant1spatmg fu ll time
Balloons for Birthdays &amp; ctoth1ng. m•sc
STORAGE BUILDINGS
deta11s
and part t1me open1ng for
needs; · furnaces
Get Well, Anniversaries,
. plumbing, electric, siding.
- Good for garage,
POMEROY PIKE sweet Hearts or Parties. Basement sale·Sept.l thru teachers and teachers aids
workshop, etc. One. has
repair service and
7.60 acres with a
Cal l Balloons &amp; Co., ~- 4. 11S Kerr, Pomeroy 9 till in the Patient Educat1on
elec. water and concrete
beautiful cedar - and
FREE
installation.
Program . Teac her cer·
4313.
s. Bedclothes, fans, tires
floor . Plenty of parking
bnck three bedroom
tifiCCi
tion 1n LOBO IS
Residential
ESTIMATES
$23,000.
home. Full basement, 2
desired but others will be
&amp; Commercial
5 ACRES in the country.
car gar age . Asking
Golf
Leosons
.
John
Garage
sale
Sept.
2·3·4
PH. 992-6011
considered Contac t Ber·
$75,000.00.
Some le ve l, som e
Teaford. Chester, Ohio.
Caii742·319S
Rowleys, Bailey Run Rd nard K1ngsly , Education
woods,
dug
well
and
RUTLAND - Corner
H ·tfc
Furniture, clothing, bed· Di rec tor Ca ll614 592 3031
8 20 tfc
Hill and College Sts.
utilities available.
spreads. curta1ns. and
Two bedroom s, one
CAR WASH - All equip· f
Final
ly ,Open
ing ·Capco. m1sc. Air·cond.
Ant
iques
collectables,
Attent1on RN 'S Pomeroy
t loor .
comfortabl e
ment, 2 rooms and land
used
furniture
&amp; ap·
H c c now has opening for
home situated on large
for only $15.000.
pi iances. Something for 2 family yard sale lst. thru full
YOUNG'S
DAN'S
and part time RN for 3
lot Asking $30,000.00.
SOME ARE SELLING,
everyone. 9:30 a.m - ~ : 30 4th. 9 to ! ! ! Pat Thompson to 11
and 11 to 7 shifts.
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
TRY US .
p.m.
Mon
.,
Wed.,
Fri.
residence Sr. 338 Rac •ne, Upgraded salary and shift
Ph. 742·3092
CARPENTER
AUTO
TRIM
Other
limes
by
ap·
Ohio. 1st yard sa le. Lots of differential . Contact Nanc y
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Housing
pointment. Buy-Sell-Trade. everything
VanMeter d1rector of Nur·
Ph . 742-3171
SERVICE
J02 Mechanic St.
527 Fifth St., Ivan Powell
song. 614·992·6606
Headquartets
Pomeroy,
OH
Res.,
Racine,
Oh
614-949·
'lddoos ond ftiiOGtfinc
Monday, Aug 30, 9 a.m to
PH. 992·6506
-Rootincond ptt"..,.
2485.
2
p.m. 510 29th St. Poont AVON Need ex tra money?
-(om:relt wM
Re•l Estate - General
Pleasant .
Set your own hours Se ll
-Piur~~binaanct
eSEAT COVER S
S and E Gift Shop. All
Avon . (Must be 18 or over)
eleclricaf wDR
eVINYL TOPS
prices
cut
through
Sept.
{F•IIIslimolnl
YARD sate, first lane on Cal l now 614 698 ·7111
eCONVERTIBL E TOPS
Syracuse, Oh.
left past Gallipoli s Ferry collec t.
eCARPETS
V. C. YOUNG Ill
Post Offic e
Mens.
• A complete Lffle of
992-6215 or 992-7314
PERMANENT
womens.
c hi ld re ns Earn $195 75 week ly, whtle
Automobtle Upholstery
608 E. MAIN
Pomeroy, Ohio
HAIR REMOVAL
clothing, mosc. Monday wor king 1n your home. Part
8 4·1 mo. pd.
9·30·tfc
Professional ElectrolySIS Aug 30-? from 9·?
or full t1me. no exPOMEROY, OHIO
Center. A.M.A. approved, - - - -- - - - time
perience necessary ComDoctor referals, by ap· Five famtly yard sa le Sept plete detail s and ap·
PH.992·2259
polntment only . 304-675· 3 and ~ - Nibert's Grocery, pl ication sent on request.
6234.
Please send a SA SE to J .T.
R1 . 2. Apple Grove .
NEW LISTING- HERE IT IS! If you have been
Vinyl_&amp; Aluminum
Post Offic e Bo x 294 .
looking for appro•imalety 20 acres of elbow room
4
Giveaw~y
Coolville,
Oh.
SIDING
YARD
sale,
Thursday,
9-?
for hunting and firewood and a new three bedroom
ROOFING
home with unusual des1gn then here it is. Rustic
ANY PERSON who has 612 4th. St New Ha ven,
Babysitter in my home .
BISSELL
, style with upper desk off main bedroom. Large
anything to give away and wv .
References required . Must
foyer with sunken planters, tots of ctooet space,
does not offer or attempt to
H. L. WRITESEL
be over 18. Call after 9 p.m
wood burner, two car garage with attic storage, just
offer
any
other
thing
for
Yard
Sal
e.
Thursday
,
• (. uft&lt;'rc;
SIDING CO.
off bypass, two minutes to Pomeroy. OWner asking
sate may place an ad in th os · Friday &amp; Saturday , Sep· or before 4. Middleport
e o owh spcu t'
$62,000 .
column. There will be no tember2, 3, 4 12 Moles out area . 614·992·6233.
' 'Belutlful, Custom
e New or R t •p oll l"
charge to the advertiser.
Rt. 2 from Pt Pleasant out
Built Garages"
• r iltnting
FARM - LONG BOTTOM - Appro•lmately 71
past Rollins Station . Pa' t Direct Sales. Athens and
Call
for
free
siding
FREE ESTIMATES
wooded a~ res w/newly remodeled three bedroom
Meigs Co . . High pay and
estimates, 949-210t or : 1 German Shepherd 8 new items.
home. new Vinyl siding, insulated, new two car
benef1ts . Excellent
9~9· 2Ul&gt; .
weeks, male, 1 female
Ph
...
2-2791
garge. Asking S55,000 or owner will sell house,
Cookapoo &amp; 5pupp 1es about Beh1nd Green Serv ice training. Call Cliff Myers
No Sunday Calls
garage and small acreage seperate.
or949-2263
6 week• old. Call446-0770.
Station. Hartford. wva at 797 - ~168 . Monday or
7 U tt r
3·11-tfc
Sept 1, 2. &amp; 3. Everything Tuesday. 9·10 a.m. for in·
1
ASSUMABLE LOAN ~ 1h story frame ~orne with •
terview.
reasonable.
Puppies.
mother
part
three bedrooms, family room, garage woth storage
Alaskan Mallmute. Call
above and on a good street In Middleport. 529,~.
WAITRESS, maids, bar·
256·1932.
Public Sale
8
tenders &amp; clerks ,wanted
&amp; Auction
OLDER HOME - Needs soine repair but has two
-----Write qualif ication a. phone
large tots, four or five bedrooms, basement, could
Part
Beagle
puppies.
675DURACLEAN
Rick Pearson, Ex · number to : Job Placement.
be a real nice home for $20,500.
5702.
AUCTIONEER . P.0. Box t02, Henderson,
perienced
byROIIERTS
Estates, antiques, farm. wv 25106
RIVER VIEW - A two story ' fra'me home.with
Let us clean your
3 male kittens, 1 female kit· housellold. Licensed Ohio· ;:::::::;;:::-:::;::::::::;:;;::::::;:::;==
seven rooms. equipped ~itchen, full basement, and
carpe~ ,or furniture.
ten. Cali614·388·99.56.
GARAGE
I
wv. Buying antiques. 3Q4· 1-2 Situations wanted
nice front port h. S32,00!!.
• NoSoakint
773·5785, 773·9185.
·~___!.====='-• No Scrul!blng
•
REA.LTOI!St
5
white
kiHens.
614-949·
Will
do babysitting in my
• No Shrinkage
st.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., G"l . . ..... .. .. . . . 99H191
2732.
Referen c e s
Auction every Fri. night at home .
Duractean gets your
Jean Trussell . , . . . ...... ... . . .. . .. · · · · · 949·2661
the Hartford Community available. Middleport area .
carpel
deep
down
Dottle s. Tyrner .. ·. ..... .. .... . .. ...... 992·569l
REPAIR · 1 8 mo. old female Border Center. Truckloads of new Call992-63'49.
lhorougllly' clean.
Office , ... .. . . ..... . .... . . . . .... . .. . . .. 992·2259
Home 01' Business
Collie. All shots, wormed. merchandise every week.
Aiso TransmlssiQR
Conslgments of new and would like to do house
614·992-6341.
CALL TODAY
PH. 992-5682
used merchandise always cleaning. Will do babysit·
For FrH' Estil!late
or 992-7121
welcome .
Rlchard , tlng tn my nome. Have
Pupple~, 11&lt;1rl Beegle. 304·
1-7674361
Reynolds
Auctioneer.
275· , good references . 614·992·
3·Z4·tfc
675·5702.
8·11-1 mo. pd .
3069.
i 65.56 .
roR

_..;:________

p..,_ ,,OIIMUJit

c.. ... c-,

r.:~:::::::::r.:=:=:=:=:=~ni~A~B~B~LE~S~HO~P=;r.=:::::::=:=~
,--- ~.~df~~-~~
'" "(t tl OUT

nlture and Antiques of all
kinds. ca ll Kennetn Swain.
4-4&lt;1·3159 or 2.56·1967 In the
evenings.

Sentinei-P

7

12 Situations Wanted
Will take care of elderlv
person in our home on
fa rm , good c ountry
cooki ng Go out 160, turn on
second road on rlght·O.J .
WHIT E RD. go I mile to
Charolias Hf11 s Lake, house
trimmed in pink by lake.

1! __ --~~~r ane e

·- __
SA ND Y AND BEAVE R In·
surance Co. has off ered
services for ftre 1nsurance
coverage in Ga ll 1a Countv
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages ~ r e
availa ble to meet m·
di vidua 1 needs Contact
Fosler Lew1 s, agent . Phone
379·2204.

1 5 -S~Oo1 s ln strUC~on =
Karate the ul timate in self

defence all pnvate lessons,
Men, women, &amp; children.
1nstruct1on thru black belt.
Also ava il ab le Ka rate
uniform s pu ching and
k1cki ng bags, a'ld protec·
fiv e equ1 pment . J err y
Lowery &amp; Assoc iates
Ka r a te Stud io , J.t3
Bur li ngton Rd., Jackson.
Oh Call614 286 3074.
- - - - -

~=

::=-

wanted to Do
Lawn Mowing no yard to
big or small . Rel iable and
dependa ble. For estimate
call 4.46 3159 after 6 PM 256·
1967
18

Trash collection &amp; hauli(lg
Ca ll4o46 4480
---- - - - - ------ Chtld Ca re in m v home
weekdays unt il 5PM.
Ac ross from Vinton grade
sc hool Reference. Vick e
Diddle, 614·386·8632.
ROOFIN G 10b·ca rpenlry.
etc. Reasonable rates. 304882·2374.

"AI£

,_.a r.vwr- tAr

••H&lt;.., oto

ONE small , black, mate
puppy, 304 576·2728

To Buy
'WANTW1nted
ED TO BUY Old fur

B M" ,_

§N,_ ( lut ohM 0..1

.., • tlilnlloro

I I l • lu"' h "'&gt; &amp;. H A l o"'l

.. ' ' " L . .. .,.

PFC Tracy F. Hysell, a local
Pomeroy resident, has returned
home from training at Marine Corps
Recruit Depot, Parris Island, S.C.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Hysell
who hve at 13Q'k Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, calls Meigs High School
his alma mater.
Pvt. Hysell will report to Twenty
Palms, Calif. (or·s~ial trllining in
the corrununicatlons field urx)n completion of boot leave.
For more infonnation on Marine
Corps opportunities contact G./Sgt.
Knapp at 374-~4 in Marietta and
please call

Ao,, ,,.. • • ~

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. . ""' .........
........
,. ...
... . . .....
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oh
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o

II('"'"""' ' ~'"'""

.-

&lt;IH... W\Io&lt;••"'

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

(,l.uifi~

Busine$s services

Glveawar

~::======3=·2=9=-t:fc::~=======~=·=+=========~=========~

I I ....... W \ o l&lt;

lo Au I• P •tlo l
II Aulo llfoa "

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

As~rograph

'

'

•h.oll•'•" &lt;l&lt; ""''"

Ferrell birth

September I, !982
You could do quite well this coming year m ventures or enterprises
where you are able to use your imagmation and art1st1c ab1lit1es. Find the
right outlets for your talents.
YffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You could jeopa rdize a relationship today
and also hurt your image if YoU fa il to sha re something to which another
is entitled.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 2J ) Be a g1ver today if you 're involved with per·
sons who are equally as generous as yourself. However, pull in the rems a
bit if your companions are only takers.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22 ) Your best breaks today are more likely to
come from the efforts of others than from those which you expend your·
self. Try not to scatter your shots.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 23-Der. 211 Success will be demed you today if
your efforts ,are too half-hearted. Once you decide to do something keep
persisting, regardless of the obstacles.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Don't enter into any type of business
arrangement today which requ1res partners 1f you have any doubts about
·what your cohorts can contribute.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Companions or associates who are not
in complete harmony with your aims today could set back, rather than
advance, your cause.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Difficult tasks can be accomplished suc-cessfully today, if you allow yourself adequate time to perform them.
Where you rush too much, you could fall flat.
ARIES (March 21-April!9) There's a possibility that today you will
be more tolerant and considerate of casual acquaintances than you will
be of persons with whom you have strong emotional bonds.
TAURUS (April 20-May 29) Of course it's essential to look out for
your own interests today, but try not to hurt someone else in order to get
, .. what you want.
'
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Be wary of tendencies today to take too
,;seriously things which should be fun, and to treat too lightly those which
·should be taken seriously.
CANCER (Jnne 2l.July 22 ) You'll have an awareness of your finan·
cia) Jlmitations today, yet you could yield to extravagant impulses and
defeat your purpose ..Strive to be prudent.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Others will hold you to your word today regarding commitments to them, so if you say you're going to do something you,
'had better mean it.

\\ h

!Y &amp; ~og.,f q uo&lt;""

... ' '"'"' Ia"'

U - t &lt;&gt;• l • "

H""'n l ow '""
11 . .. ........ , ...

o "' ~"'"" 'O IIuo

" """"'_"'....,,
".,;......,
""" " .........."""

"ca

-

4

J&amp;f

PHONE 992-2156
Ill c - 1 11 ,

Service note

~

Morning Star Church reunion

Or Wro ft O. oh

Dav1d Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Walter P. Brown, Reedsv ille,
graduated from Ohio State Unover·
sity on June 10.
Brown rece1ved a bachelor of
science degree in physics grduating
Wolfe
fgrom Ohio State with honors.
Edga 1 Wolfe observed his 92nd
While at Ohio State he served as
president of the Society of Phys1cs birthday on Aug. 10 at h1s home, 5!5
Students and was on the Phys1cs Grant St. , Middleport.
There for the observance were his
Department Advisory Committee
and the Instructional Improvement w1fe , Blanche, 89, and h1s daughters
Corrunittee of the Physics Depart· and the1r husbands, Mr. and Mrs.
ment. He was vice president and a James Haley, Rutland, and their
member of the student council ol the son, Jirruny and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Student Christian Foundation of Marton , Middleport. Wolfe received
g1fts and cards from friends and
Ohio.
The past t;.vo swruners, he has neighbors, along w1th one he
'been a civilian employed at the Air received from Pre~ident and Mrs.
Force Base at the Newark. He has Ronald Reagan.
j)een attending the Newark Branch
of Ohio State University but on September will return to the Columbus
Mr. and Mrs. T.J. (Vicki Grate)
campus to continue h1s education.
Ferrell , Middleport, announce the
· Attending his graduatoon were his birth of the1r first child, a dau ~

11111

The sixth annual jacks reunion
was held Sunday, Aug. 15 at the
American Legion Hall in Rutland,
with approximatley 170 in at·
tendance.
Gifts were presented to the oldest
man and woman, the youngest child
and. to the one traveling the far·
therest. Receiving the gift for the
oldest woman was Mrs. Zena Smith,
age 84, Victor Gotschall, age 78, the
oldest man, Frankle Azbell, age
three months, the youngest child at·
tending, and Mrs. Virginia
Kessenger, Melbourne, Fla., for
traveling the fartherest.
Live music was provided at the
day's festivities by The Blue Grass
Followers. Those attending were
Mr. and Mrs. Roy ·Priddy, Aaron
Acree, and Robert Chapman, Middleport; Mrs. Virgie Hysell and
Lelia, Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Aeiker
and family , Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Gibbs and famoly, Tanuny and
Michelle Capehart, Mr. and Mrs.
Martin Chapman and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Neace and family, all
of Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
A Longsworth reunion was held at
Jacks and family, Mr. and Mrs. the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon
Dannie Jacks and family , and Guy WeSt i!l Racine recently .
Shey, Long Bottom; Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. West were assisted
Russell Mozingo, Bremen ; Mrs. by William and Bea Cornell . They
Lula Jacks, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan hosted the family gathering at the
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Prid- West's new home by the lake.
dy and Bob, Mrs. Rachel Hutton and
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. W.
family , Ms. Rhonda Jones and
family, and Tom Mozingo of
Rutland ; Mr. and Mrs. George Bing
and family , Chris Mager, Mr. and
A Morning Star reunoon was held Grueser, Rev. and Mrs. Earl Shuler,
Mrs. Charles Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Sunday, Aug. 15 at the Mornong Star Susie Fischer, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Jack Azbell and family, Mrs: Church with a potluck dinner at Ihle, Lois, Melissa, Kathy, David
Pamela Wharton, of Lancaster; Mr. noon. The blessing was asked by the and Paul Ihle, Frances Roberts,
Billy Jean, Ronnie and Joey Rice,
and Mrs. Jeff Gray and daughter, pastor, Rev. Florence Smith.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Nor·
Rev. Florence Smith, Mrs. Maria
Jackson ; Jim Wells, VInton ; Mrs.
Zena Smith, Mrs. Virginill' Allen, man Fisher, Senecaville; Mrs. Roseberry, Serita and Crystal,
Mrs. Betty Harrun, of Huntington, · Phyllis Relyea, Flint, Mich. ; Mrs . Mildred Ihle and Shawn Baker,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. William Van verna Rose, Reedsville ; Mrs. Alice local.
Meter and family, Clifton, W. Va.; Wamsley and daughter June Ann ,
A friendship circle with Rev. Earl
Richard Jacks, Gerald Jacks, Mr. Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Dilmar Shuler having prayer closed the day
and Mrs. Chester Johnson and Harrun, South Webster ; Ada Holter, of visiting, reminiscing and hymn
family , Ms. Balinda Lucas and May Holter, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence singing.
,..._ __:__ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....::::::...::.:::=:..:...::.::.:...::.::.::.::.::....:=.:::::.::__...:.....:..________ -;

Longworth

BEAUTIFY LIBRARY - Debra Hlll, top, art In·
·atruelor of the Meigs Local School Dlsbict, has
brightened up Rutland Elementary School Library.
Added to the top wall In the library is a story-book

a:ru

E. Longsworth of Charleston, W.
Va., Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Dobbins of Pawtucket, R.N., Mr. and
Mrs. Paul McSwegin of New Cumberland, W. Va., John Longsworth,
Racine; Esther West of Racine, Mr.
and Mrs. • F rank Longsworth,
Brecksville, Oh.; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Longsworth and daughter
Mary, Winchester, Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Barney Annstrong and sons
Scott and Mike of Cabin Creek, W.
Va., Mr. and Mrs. John McSwegin
and son Allen, New Manchester, V.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Willis,
Cabin Creek, W. Va.; Mrs. Betty
Posey and daughters, Lee and Kathy
of Weirton, W. Va. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Longsworth, New Comerstown,
Oh.; Mrs. Thenna Longsworth
Hickinbottom, New Comerstown ;
Larry Babbit and Miss Debby
Lavall ey , Racine ; Mari ha
Longsworth Williams and children,
Malenda, William and Eric, West
VIrginia; Mrs. Sandra Dobsoo and
children, Sondra, Sharla and Shar·
rna, NewComerstown; Mr. and Mrs.
John West, Racine; James Dobbins,
Greenville, N.C. ; Mrs. William Cornell J r. and daughters Jennefer and
Kimberly, Germany; Lois Ar·
mstrong and children, Mike and
Thresa of West Virginia; Miss
Becky Lemaster, New Cumberland,
W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs . Critt Bradford, Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam
Cornell, Racine, and Mr. and Mrs.
Gordon West and family, Debra,
Rhonda and Melody.

The Dai

Ohio

;liTO &amp;iiuct\

A

W

21

sus.ness
Opportunity_ ___
LOO KIN G tor people who
wa nt to ear n between $500
and $50 ,000 monthly
through thts " newest and
fastest grow.ng company
on the nallon". Call 304-675·
1193
OWNER FI NANCI NG with
reasonable down payment
for agi ng down town
res tau r a nt n1 ce at ·
mosphe re, good lease
agreement, super location
w1th park1ng unlimited
potenttal. need to sell im ·
med iate ly as owner has
other bus1ness interests,
n• ce discoun t for cash
buyer. tor •nt ormat•on call
304 525 3055 or 523 ·7277.
to Loan
REFIN ANCE or purchase
your home 30 yea r f1 xed
rate WVa &amp; Ohio. Leader
Mortgage. 77 E. State St .
Athens, Oh 614-592 3051.

11_ _

Mon ey

Professional
Serv ,i-.c"-:
es,__
C&amp;L Book keeping
Bookkeeping &amp; ta x servtce
for all types of bus inesses.
Ca rol Nea l
~ - 3662
23

P IAN O TUNING &amp;
REPAIR Ca ll Bill Ward for
a ppo1ntm e nt , Ward 's
Key board , 4-4&lt;1·4372.

Real estilte
31
Homes for Sale
In ground concrete pool on
2 ac re tot Also has a 3 bdr.
air cond1t1oned house with
full base ment , 2 WB
f1replaces. new carpet.
would cons1der lower
valued property in trade or
wi ll fina nce with low down
payment and 10% interest.
Located 123 Ga rf1eld Ave .
Ca ll446 1546
MODERN 3 bedroom
house, Pa tr iot Sta r Rt.,
Green Sc hool. Full
basement Caii446·30.W.
27 ac res wi th house near
V1nton for sal e or trade.
MAKE US AN OFFER
Ca ll ~ 6615.
Wdt. trade m y equity '" a 4
unit apt. bldg. for a trader
&amp; lot or a house &amp; lot
Balance can be pa1d by
land contr act. Ca ll for
detaol s&lt;-16·3937.
Three bedroom home, ap
prox. 3 acres '" Mer
cervill e Call446 7428
Newer J bed room home, ·2
acres. city school s, patt o,
woodbu rner , base ment,
nice porch Ca ll446 2663
House 13 0 ac reage &amp; 76
Massie Ferguson 230 and
eQUI Pment Ca ll 614 367
0194 .
3 Bedr m
•12
ac re.
basement. c1ty $C hOOis,
county water. 10 m1 n to
,C; a ll tpO II S 216 734 J734
'!:ven.ngs
La nd con tract. S35.000
Chesh1re V1llage Ca ll 61A·
367 7553
House and 10 ac res of land
Sa le or rent . Newley
remOdeled . 2 rooms and
bath up, 4 rooms and bath
down . New gas furn ace and
gas hof water neater.
Located Mulberry HgtSo. ,
Pomeroy. 614·992·2508 qr
ca ll collect. Columbus, 444·
8601.
3 bed room bn ck home.
gara ge, full basement.
Fenced in back yard in
Tuppers Plains 614·6673288

--------------- ' ---------------

I '

�-~~ -· ~

Sentinel
Jl
Homes lor Sale
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dition , 3 bedrooms, family
room with firepalce, cen·
tr al ai r, ba sement, phone
304-675· 1542.

47

They'll Do It Every Time

Respon sibl e family of 4
needs 2 or 3 bedroom hou se
or tr ai ler in th e Bi dwe ll
Port er Sc hool area . Call
614·245·9414betw een'51!. 7

f'Hit.O ~VcS
ALt. THOSe
J.H,#Qt&lt;TAJ'Ir
~-­
I'AI"ii/t.S ·,. •

L o v e ly
remotl e l e d 3
bedroom home, basement,
fenced backyard, carpeted,
si ded, storm windows. near
schools. 304 675·4338 .

7.bcJ1$ ·
AI. 11/GCI,
098"
I'OOIT-

-~ ercba RdtsF

ICCI ··

4 room hou se. large lot,
minor re pa i r s needed .
$18 ,0000. Ca ll after 3 p.m .
30H75 7689 .

CO&lt;OIW'O

51

Sf'RlHeS ,

cow.

- ---

-

Homes·--

3 2 ~-Mob i le

_, ____ _

--Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION FURN I TUR E &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Ol ive Sf..
Ga ll ipolis . Couc h, lovesea t
a nd
c hair .
$ 199 . ;
wallhuggcrs S1 25 .; bunk
beds with bunkl es, $170. ;
bO)( spring and matt ress.
$100 .
Fir m , Sl 20 .;
recl iner s. S80 _; 9 &gt;C 12
linoleum ru gs, $22 .; m ap le
roc k er s, $49 ., wrin ge r
w a sh er s, r efri ge r a tor s.
din e tt e
se t s,
c hes t ,
dressers, bunki e mattress.
540 . Call446·31 59.

TWO s tor y bri c k, 6 rooms ,
firepla ce &amp; ba sement, new
gas furnace . 1211 Main St .
304 67 5·2381 '

-

wanted to Rent

tor Sale
TRI · ST ATE
MOBILE
HOME S. USED-MOBILE
HOMES, CARS, TRUCKS ,
CHECK
GALLIPOLIS .
OUR PRICES . CALL «6·
7572.

54

Misc . Merchandice

SPECIA L PRICE on wood
8. coa l burners. as long as
supply lasf . Cal l «6-2783 .

76

. 8/31/82

HEAVY duty car hauler,

EVJ:NINO

UOO. 304·458 -1656 or 675-

Kirk wOOd

12)(60

Rd. Call «6·2650.

1977 Windsor 14x70 all elec· 112 acre, three bedr home,
basement, city school.
!r ic . Call «6·9681.
county water. Call 216·734·
3834.
1981 Mobile home 52x1A, all
electr ic, 2 bdr., $8,700. Call
«6·9303, weekdays alter Located in Oak Hill , a
remOdeled 2 BR home . Call
SPM.
682·6010 .
121&lt;12 ft . add·a·room . Car·
pet, bawt&gt;oard heat, closet, 2 or 3 bdr . house in Eureka .
well insulated. Can serve Deposit req . Call 61A ·256·
as additional bedroom . Call 1413,
«6·3547 .
Countrv
setting , city
Beautiful
3
12x21 fl . add ·a ·room , utilities .
Bayview window lnfront, bd .room with lire-place,
new carpet,
dry -wall lully carpeted , Just off
baseboard heat. Can be Rt.7. Pine Tree Drive, Tup·
used for a family room or pers Plains, Ohio. 1300. per
large bedroom, or divided mo. plus utilities, deposit.
to serve as two bedrooms. 614·667·3085.
Call «6·3547 ,
You 'l l love this 14 acre
12x65 Champion 2 bdr., new farm in the country with a
carpet, air cond., recon· pond and •mall barn . This 2
ditioned 1!. cleaned, par· bedroom brick home is
tially furn ., set up on ren · only 2 miles from downted lot, asking $6,500. Cal l to&gt;yn Pt. Pleasant. Will
sign a year lease at S450 per
«6-«91 alter 5.
month . 304·675·6276,
1973 2 bdr,, gas, large
awning, underpinning . Can
stlly at present location.
Call «6·7065 alter 4PM or
614·245-5324. Ask lor Steve.
1971 Rebel 12x60, $3,750.00.
, Phone «6-0692 evenings.
. 1980 Kirkwood 14x70, 4 dr.,
with nice porch &amp; un'(:terpinning, low utilities,
built to FHA standards on
, nice rented lot in Cheshire

low

down

room house, Camp Con lev
S14Q month . 30H75· 1371 or
304-675·3812,

FURNISHED house, 5
m i les from Pt. Pleasant,
304·67S·5884 alter 4 p.m .
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 trailers, nat gas · heat,
clean, Riverview. Call 4461602.

payment, FHA linanclng
available, Caii614·3B8·9776.

2 bdr . trailer in country .

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

2 bdr. mobile home in city,

HOME .

MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Call
304-576·2711 '
Must sell . 12x50 deluxe
Preedom on rented lot. 2

bedrooms,

all

electric,

relocat ing. SS500. 304-576·
2i54.
FAIRMONT mobile home,
in Ravenswood, 14x70 with
8x25 expando . Antenna
system, stereo &amp; other ex tras. Sll ,500 or best offer .
- Call Rich 9·6 at 61A·267 ·
: 4948
: TWO mobile homes for
$ale, 304-675·6512 .

, 1973 HOLLY Park, 14X68, 2
•bedrooms, central air, all
:electric, set on half acre,
·30H75·3025.

77 12&gt;1:55-mobile home with
buill on ramp and back por·
ch, no furniture . $2000. 304675·5492 or 30H75-5763.

33

Estates,

Carol

Yeager,

Realtor. Call 304·675-5104 or
675 5386.

2 bdr . downtown. all car ·

home. 2 bdr., new carpet . no pets. Bob McCormick

very

HUD available 2 bdr .
deluxe, kitchen furnished,
good location, utilities par·
!IailY paid. 5 rm house lor
rent . Residential and com·
mercia I properties tor sale
or lease . A ·One Real

mobile 5 rms . 1!. bath, adulls onlv , , pet, complete k itchen, all

Cai16U·367·0327.

area,

Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath,
clean, no pets, adults only ,
dep. r eq. Call «6·1519.

Farms for Sale

207 acre farm in Meigs
Countv for sale. Land con tract available $16,000
down,
12% interest,
minera l rites included , no
l}o~se . Cal1614-388·9346.
For sale Farm , 207 acres
on Park. er Run Rd . Land
contract available. $16,000.
dowh, 12 percent interest.
Mineral rights Inc. No
,.ouse Call 388-9346.

U2 acre farm near Rio

~rande, house, buildings,

mineral rights, with or
without livestock and
equipment, 614·«6-2599.

2t acres, tobacco allotment, mineral rights, no
buildings, $8,500, Call 3046)5-6851 .
Mini farm In Letart, Wv. 14
acres M -L, 2 story, 3 br.
frame home, vinyl siding,
storm windows, all electric, whole nouse carpet,
fireplace
with
wood bUrning, capable of heating
. entire home, rural water,
garage, out building, Far·rr)all Cub tractor with
eq~lpment. 304-895-3652,

Call614·256·6813 .

ref . &amp; dep . req , Call614·256
1922.

2 bdr . mobile home for
rent. Call «6 ·4292 .
12x60 2 bedroom un ·
furnished mobile hom'e in
Cheshire. Water, gas fur ·
nished, heated by N. gas,
S200 per month. Call 446·
4229.

- -- - -- -

12x60 2 bedroom un ·
furnished mobile home.
New carpet, central air, on
Rl. 35 . N. gas. Call «6·4229
Eureka: 1 BR furn., river·
front lot, SlOO. Ref . &amp;
deposit, adults. Call 1·643·
2644.

2 bedroom trailer . Real
nice, adults only . Brown's
Trailer Park, Minersville.
614-992·3324.
Furnished
2 bd .room
mobile home, utilities inc .
Adults only or family with 1
child . 2 miles out St . Rt. 143
Pomeroy . Call alter 5 ·614·
992·3647 .
2 trailers in Tuppers
Plains. S160. month . You
pay uti I I ties. 614·667·3487.

electric heat·air cond .,
Washer·dryer. Call446·4383
days, 446·0139eve.

Furnished apt. 1136 1/2 2nd .
Ave. Gallipolis. S185 water
paid, 2 bdr . Call «6·4416 al·
fer 7 PM .
APARTMENTS
I
bedroom . rent starts at
1152 per month. Equa l
housing opportunity . Call
«6·27A5 .
Unfurnished apt .· 2 bdr ., no
pets. Call 446 ·1873 between
8 and 5.

2 bdr. downstairs apt .• in
citv . Ref . &amp; dep. required,
adults only, no pets . Call
«6·1359.

- - - - -- Furnished attic apartment .
Men only . $150 utilities
paid, share bath . 446·4416
after 7PM.

2 bedroom unfurnished
mobile, camp conley , S140.
per month. 304·675-1371 or
304-675-3812.

Apartment
lor Renl

4 room unfurnished apt. all
carpeted, utilities paid,
adults on~y no pets. Call
«6·3437,
Elfiency apartments 1st
floor, Call «6-0957, 729 2nd
Ave., Gallipolis.

Boston Rocker and Zenith
Allegro stero . Call446·1190.

2 pc. sofa , olive green with
reversible flower cushions .
Call614·388·9803 .

1 bed, furnished Apl . 992·
5434 or 992 5914 or 304 ·882·
2566.

Couch, chair, coffee table ,
cl ean , in good condition .
575.00. After 2: 30p .m . c all
3888741.

Nice 2 bd .lurnished Apt.
614 -992 -5434, 992·5914 or 304·
882·2566.

7 pc. dinette set, solid
wood, like new, $300. Call
614·367-7553.

- ----·-

~---

2 bedroom upstairs fur ·
nished Apt. 1 child ac·
cepted S150 . mo . S50 .
deposit. 949·2875.

Whirlpool washer &amp; dryer,
nice guaranteed, S225 . Call
446·0181.

Apartments . 304-675·5548 .

S4

APARTMENTS , mobile
homes.
houses .
Pt .
Pleasant and Gallipol is .
6i4·446·8221 or 614·245-9484.

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved . 1,000
gat. tank, price $340. Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck. Call 614·286·
5930, Jackson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

Three room furni shed
apartment, adu Its, no pets,
Point Pleasant. Call 304·
675·2453 .
THREE room furnished
cottage, utilities furn ished,
adults, no pets, 30H75·2812
or 675·1580.

UNFURNISHED apart·
menl, call 304·675·2218, 8·6,
675·6753, 6-10,
Nice furnished efficiency
apartment lor 1 adult,
private, utilities paid, no
pets, ref. required . 304 -67520113 .
.
ONE bedroom furnished.
new apartment, washer &amp;
dryer furnished, $200 a
month, 304·675·9760.

FURNISHED apartment,
clean, 3 rooms"&amp; bath , 304·
675-2482.
Nice furnished 3 room apt.
private entr-ance, adults,
71h Street. 304-675-3811.
2 apartments for rent in
Cllllon. 304-675-10«.

THREE bedroom apartment lor rent, 2 bedrodm
mobile home, 304-675-4045,

78

Gr and fa ther Clock , antique
weight dr iven c l ock . 3888579 after 5:00pm .
Cut our own f ir ewood on
share. Oa l&lt;,
Hi c kory,
Locust, wil d Cherry and
others. Call «6·0721 ask lor

Misc. Merchandice

1975 Case 450 , dozer ·
tractor, 1,800 hrs., very
good cond .. Sl4,900. Call
A-16·4537 .
.
Wood burning add on fur ·
nance. Still in factory
crate, $450. Call 1·614·256·
1216.
HOUSE COAL lor sale
summer rates. Summer
Sale ends Aug. 31 . Mine run
coal Pittsburgh No, 8.
Delivered to Gallipolis S30
a ton . Pl . Pleasant $31 a
ton, C.O.D . Call446 -1488.
Sears self installed fire
place with fire screen &amp;
pipes never used. Complete
$300. Call614-388-8764,
Round steel fireplace , com·
plele with flue 1!. ac·
cessories also includes
hearth &amp; approx. 1/2 cord
of seasoned harwood . Mus!
see to appreciate . Call «6-

79111.

Compound bow sale, Bear
Whitetail hunter $69. Bear
Polar LTD 1139, Spring
Valley T-rading Co., Spring
valley Plaza, «6·8025.

REPOSSESSED SI GN !
Nothing down! Take over
payments $58.50 monthly.
4x8 flashing arrow sign.
New bulbs, letters. Hale
signs. 1·800 227·1617, Ext.
667 .
Cai [ RobertHarperlorGin·
seng
and
Yellowroot
prices. 30H75-1293.

5,~6'--._..cPC'e:.!l.!.
s ,_.fo'!.r~5-'!.a'..'le'-.._

11

Green Parakeets. 304-675·
1693.

81 Pontiac Formula, 4 spd .
transmission, AC. PS, PB,
extra low mileage. Call614·
256·1582.

REGISTERED
Beagle
puppies , phOne 304-A58·
1552.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
57
Musical
Instruments
TRUMPET, used, $50 . Call
alter 4, 304·576·2780.
CLAIRNET, good
dillon, 304-773·5814,

58
18,000 btu air conditioner
$150. 304·675·2835 .

Fruit
&amp; Vegetable&gt;

--· .. --. .......
......
-·····--·

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win · Farm All Super A tractor,
dows, lintels, etc. Claude all the ecuipment. $2,500.
Winters. Rio Grande, o. Call675·6930,
Call614·245·5121.
Traclor lor sale Massey
Build your own garage or Ferguson 4 WD, 220, 4
barn 24x24 . All lumber fur· d iesel, 120 hrs on engine,
nished, S700, Other sizes $4,500. Call614-388·8701.
available. Call614-886·7311.
TRACTOR A·C 200, cab air
Metal sheets for all heater, excellent condition,
building purposes. Flat $8,000. Also discs, plows &amp;
accessories. 304-458-1656 or
parcel ian e~,·~;;~&lt;o~
4xB lhru 4 x 12.
lo$9.60 , 61A-667 ·3085.
U
Livestock
56
Pets lor Sale
REG . QUARTER HORSES
DRAGONWYND
CAT· Training ,
showing,
TERY
KENNEL. AKC breeding, sales and boar·
Chow puppies,
CFA ding, Contact Dan Beam,
Himalayan, Persian and Gallipolis, «6-0183.
Siamese kittens. Call «6·
3844 alter 4 p.m.
For Sale Baby beef, 600·800
lb., extra nice. Call «6·
HILLCREST KENNEL · 0212,
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg , Dobermans pups and 17 Mo. old Reg.' Quarter
Doberman Stud Service. Horse gelding, also 5 yr.old
Call «6·7795,
mare in foal . Call «6·3413.

AKC Regi~tered Poodle
puppies. Call «6·0857 .
Dog Grooming, by appt.
Registered O.E . Sheep dog.
Call anytime, 614·388 -9767.
Grooming services for
pets. Will clip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;
Schnauzer's. Reasonable.
For appt. 614·992-7342.

KC Reg . Col l ie pups . 614·
992·3923 .

5 turtle doves for sale.
Large cage &amp; small cage.
$50, lor aiL 614·992-2969 .
For sale· Rat Terrier Pups.
614-949·2568.

Club
caii · Chianina
Hereford steer, sired by
lgiso &lt;Italy), Chianina bull
wt. 3,050. Call show
promise. Call61079·2605.
2 Regi•tered
polled
Hereford Yearling bulls.
304-675·3030 or 304-675-4232,
64

HAY·Good stand of mixed
clover hay, Second cutting.
Will cut, 1 condition and
bale. You pick it up In the
field. Will show by appointment. $1.75 per bale.
Phone 669·3785.
Hay lor sale. 614·667·6164,
STRAW tor sale, 11 .00 bale,
Morgan Woodlawn Farm,
Pliny 304-675-2275,

.......
. . . ...........
......
. ...• .....
,

,

1977 Camaro LT, 76,000 mi.,
305 engine, AC, PS, PB,
AM·FM 8 track, $2,500, Call
614-388-9783,
1977 Cam·a ro, PS, PB, till
wheel, air, good cond. Call
614·367-0632.

~

76 Ford Mustang good condillon, asking $1,000. 69,000
miles. Call «6 -9570 or 614388 -8246.

45

CAPTAIN EASY

Footbelf "''I 197B Fighting
lrioh va . USC.
Cll My Tlvw Son•

------,

75 Buick Electra Limited,
jet black 1 owner, loaded,
47,000 mi. , new tires &amp; battery, mint. cond. $3,500.
«6·4822 .
1976 Malibu clas.ic, PS,
PB, AC, $525. Call 614-256·
6743 . ~
1955 Chevy stationwagon,
327 auto, ex . cond. Call 614·
245·5832 alter 4.

Autos for Sate

1980 Pontiac Fireblrd. AMFM cassette, air, $6,000
firm. Call614·256-1598.

' 8:30

Home

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceiling• com mercial and residential,
free estimates. Caii6U-2561182.

,,,IT'S ALL~

CIJ Entwiatn~ Tonight

CEH_.,Deya
G (I) Tie Tee Dough
(I) · &lt;ID MacNeil-Lehrer

Mere!&lt; o.ue5
M&amp;I?M!~

ml"

Masonarv work, Logue
Contre.cting,
Rt .
1,
Ewington . Call 614 -388·
9939,

GOEG

HE 15 PHY5fCALLY

011 LIKf

THill'! 1'4H4\T'r;

11/ROHli Willi
Hilt\?

CHRISTIAN'S
CON · ·
STRUCTION.
Constr, .
roofing, siding, spouting,
lenclng, painting, repairs&amp;
cleaning . 446-2000, call
before 8 and alter 5:30.

1973 Buick Riviera, boa!·
tail split rear window, am ·
lm radio, S-track auto
tntns. power steering, win·
dows and seats 38,000- actual miles. S2,795 firm . 304·
675·5084 afer 5 p.m .

ON'S Television Service,
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quarar, and
hous
~ t&lt;tl! .~?6·2J98 ·or
«6·2
,~, ..-'11,

e

ALLEYOOP

1973 Buick Limited, fully
loaded, lull power, 1750 or
best offer. Call alter 5PM,
304· 773-9154,

F 1!. ' K · Tree Trimming,
stump removal. Call 675·
1331.
•
RINGLE ' S SCRVICE ex·
perience&lt;;t mason, rOofing,
carpenter,
electrician,
general repairs and
remodeling, Call 304-675·
2088 or 675-4560.

I thouqht.

Vans&amp; 4W,D,

1981 CHEVROLET Custom
Deluxe 4-wheel drive
pickup, Unico 11ft. disc,
King cutter blade, Farmall
H tractor, Farmall M trac·
tor, 1970 Calillac sedan
Deville, auto, International
2 bollom U" plows, 1969
Chevrolet CST·20 pickup, 1
hay, trailer, International
6S6 D Tractor, Call 304-6753280 and ask lor Ron Hick·
man between 8 a.m .-4: 30
p.m.
1964 VOLKSWAGON van,
good body, $200.00, 30,000
BTU wall furnace, S75.00
David Brown 48 ' HP, good
tires, S1,80D.
Hp
rotollller, new engine,
S75.00. 304·675-2283.

s

Molorcyctes

1974 Yamaha endre, dirt
l)ike. Call 68-1997.
1976 Suzuki 550, road bike.
Call458·1997.
1981 Honda CB fully
dressed, like new cond., 2
helmets. Call614·388 -8764 . .
1979 Tomos Moped, 992-

2530.

'

Furnished Rooms
1980 Surukl 550, 4 cyl, 1500
miles, like new, $1,000. 30-4675-2354.
'

WINNIE

PAINTING interior &amp; exterior, free estimates, 304·
675·1128.

THERE, THERE,

..+\IMI, YOU'RE

GOING TO 6E
STAYING WITH
VtS FOR A

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

12

Jes't' be on
th' safe side,
Rufus, let's
poun' anuther
nail here!

Goin't' be
easier t'
move this
thin' than

Water Wells, Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales arid Service.
1966 GMC Pickup V-6, 4 304·895-3802 ,
speed, positive · traction,
good !ires. $295. Call al.ter 5
ADVANCED
Seamless
p.m. 614-992-2762.
Gutter -Doors.
Offering
guttering,
1974 Jeep CJ5 4 wheel conllnouse
seamle•s siding, roofing,
drive. Wide tires. Hard &amp;
garage
doors,
free
cloth top, $1,200. 614·992·
estimate•, 614·698-8205.
7074.
73

WHILE.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone «6-3888 or «6-«77
Excavating

83

Lawrence Sidenstricker
Backhoe Serive. Call 6755580.

-==~:.=;o=::===

14 -

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sale• &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric ShOp,
Pomeroy . 992-2284.

WHV

HE FELL OUT OF

MIZ

TH' CHINABERRY
TREE AN'BROKE

NOT,

BARLOW?

a]:::= GOiifraiH'auttn 11
JONES BO.YS WATER
SERVICE, Call614 ·367·7471
or 6U-367-0S9t.

SOME FELLERS

HAVE All TH'
LUCI&lt;

HIS LAI6

Need •omething hauled
away or something moved?
We'll do it. Call «6-3159 or
614-256-1967 afler6.

J IMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, 304-675 -7397.

Cll Another Ufe

Upholstery

'' SUPPER DIS~-! .
ABUSE"!

I]} Burne a Allen
(J) l'xhlbltlori llelbtblll:

f '' '

NBA

Furniture repaired, antiques restored, d•stom
ca!&gt;inets, 30-4-675-3671 after :
. p.m.

c~~~neee

i

'

'

(I)

. .,.
l

I '

t

....

'I

All·tt.s

''

,,

va,

Amly T.- from

Slwijjl,.., Clllnl

.l.:m"\ '
.

.

(]) MOVIE: 'AI Mine to
Give'
())After Benny HIA
8
(]) U.S, Open
Highlights
Cll Calltionecl ABC New.
(Jt MOviE:. 'The Idol' ,

e ID Nil1htllne
12:00 Cil MDVI~: 'M.hogany'

MOWREYS Uphotst.ry Rt .
1 Box 124,'1'1. Plota•a..t, 30-4: ·
675·4154. ' .
1976 15 It, MGF Ball boa!,
Johnlon 70 hp, 11101or,
Mtlny ........ asking ,$2,100,
61HG·2152.

e

Part II' .

PEANuTs

.
. TRISTATE
,
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163; sec: Ave., Gallipolis.
«6· 833 or «6·1833, ·

COUNTRY MOHIL.E
Park, Route
Pomeroy, Large
992-7479,

-·

I I I]( I I I

)IN'[I]"·

I

Jumbles ELUDE JOUST MEMBER INJURE
h 1
Answer : What you might see when a big e 1ep an
squirts water from nls trunk-A JUMBO JE:T

BRIDGE
Truck drives point home
By O.wald Jaceby
ud AJaD Soata1

NORTH
U&amp;IZ

WriUn1 In the ABTA
bulletin, Jeanne Truck
dlacuaa the problem of blddlnl a balanced 28 high-card
points with one suit
unstopped,
Jeanne- iays, "I don't
recall ever opening a strong
two bid wUh a four-card
suit, but I think that In this
IDStance the cards dictate
such acUon. If you are playIng standard you open two
diamonds· If playing two
clubs as ihe onl~ forcing bid
you open two clubs. Either
way you shmlld have no
trouble reaching six notrump." (See the bidding in
the bOx.)
A club Is opened. You take
dummy's jack, come to your
band with a diamond, Jose
the heart finesse and claim
six.
In match point duplicate
Eut might duck that first
heart. Then declarer runs off
the clubs, diamonds and two
top spades to come down to
a two-card eodlng, Eut still
holds his alngleton king of
heartl and the Jack of
spades, If West bas kept two
heartl and the game Is
match points we have a real
top or bottom situation. If
South plays safe for six and

1-Sl-81

.AQJH
• 714

+J
EAST

WEST

+J 713

+QIO

•sslz

.K6
• 10 83 2

tD6
+to 1 14 3

+nz

SOUTH

+AK8

••o

1

tAKQJ
+AKQ6

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Wnl

Norlb

Eaot

S.ulb

PUI
Pass

2•
It

Pus
Pass

Pass
Pasa

6+

Pass
Pass

4 NT
SNT
6 NT

Pass

2+

Opening lead: +4
rises with dummy's ace he
makes seven for a top score,
If he tries the finesse be Ia
down one for a bottom score.
A perlect band for an
unlucl&lt;y expert. He could sit .
East and see. his trick disaP: ·
pear. He could be South and
see his slam disappear.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE A&amp;'IN.)

~--------------------­
ACROSS

40 Disreputable
42 Reading
Italian
material (st.)
volcano
43 Genetic
6 Fabulist
material
!abbr.)
I I Boat basin
13 jmparOI of
44 Automotive so- .::1~+
span
ciety (abbr.)
14 Smgar
46 Glacial epoch
Frank•• _ _
12 wds.)
15 Debates .
49 Anasarca
16 Dry,u w1ne
I 7 Electrical unit 52 8 uUdozer
1g Signal
53 Rlltful
.
20 Firmament
54 Moteor?logo22 Thieve
eel deVIce
23 Astronaut's
56 Ignorant
10 Assume an
ferry ,
paople
attitude
24 Sward
12
Soon
DOWN
28 President of
13 Milk gland

the

Confaderacy
28 Pearl
30 Sponiah river
31 Hawaiian
instrument
32 Over there
33 Surfaces
35 Animal's limb
37 Woo
introduced
38 Bitt

34 Moral

transgression
36 Evangelical
37 Large scale ..

18 Concealed
(prefix)
21 Oairy product 39 Mats
23 One of the
4 t Did not e•ist
extension
Roods
Barrymores
jcont)
42 RusSian
Zero
26 Astronaut
planes
Year (Sp.)
----;---- Slayton 4 5 Ogles
Light breeze
27 ,Stringed
4 7 Augment
Heartbeat
Instrument
48 Gosh
chon (abbr.)
29 Wander
50 Near Eaat 888
Gravies
Greek theater 33 Greek sea
5 t Gold (Sp.)

I Love (let)
2 Mansard's
3
4
5
8
7
8
9

e crz

Now Hauling llmestonl!-fill
dirt-top •oil-graveL Free
'estimates . Call 614·3677101.

17

Report
®New.
I)J. Farnlfy Feud
:30 U , Cil Ma)or League
a.eb811: Clnclnnetl at
Monvut
(I) Race for ·the Pennant
Barry T ompltins and Tim
McCarver host this look at
the past waek' s baseboU
action .
(J) Another Ufe
C!l ESPN Spc!IU Center
Cll Andy Orlftith
Cll 8 ()) Family Feud
CD Laveme and Shirley
(I) Bualnna Rapon
® Richerd Simmons
® MOVIE: 'Bird ol
Paradiu'
1D Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 (I)
MOVIE:
'Breakthrough'
(I) MOVIE: 'Shipwreck'
Cll National G-raphic
Special
C!l International Track
and
Flafd• Weltktaatl
Meet
from
Cologne,
West Genmany
(I) MOVIE: 'Tripoli'
(]) g ID Happy Days AI
proposes
to
Chachi's
mother. (R) jCiosed Captioned)
CD Father Murphy Will
leads an expedition to save
an aging horse . (R) 160
min.)
llJ (]) ® Cronkite's
Univerae
(]) National G-raphic
Special 'living Treasures
of Japan.' Tonight's program presents nine differ·
ant workers who display
their own unique culture in
their occllpation. (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned)
B:30 (I) G (lt Laverne &amp;
Sh
~Squiggy becomes
j ' ous wilMl_Len~1 maets
girl at the Le tirea Tar
its. (R) [Closed Captioned)
D (]) &lt;lD One More Try
A couple decides to marry
despke each having had a
bad eJCperience.
9:00 (]) 700 Club
(I)
ID Three's
Company Jack and the
girls spend the weekend
on a farm. (R) )Closed Captionedl
CD MOVIE: 'Freedom
Road' Part 2
llJ (]) ® MOVIE:
'Scavenger Hunt'
(I) Mystery! 'Rumpola of
Bailey.' Rumpole defends a
school teacher accused of
seducing a 16-yaar-old student. (60 min .) !Closed
Captioned)
(fi) National G-raphic
Special 'Living Treasures
of Japan.' Tonight's program presents nine differ·
ant workers who display
their own unique culture in
their occupation . (60 min . ~
)Closed Captioned)
9:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Eye of the
Needle'
(I) g ID Too Close For
Comfort Jackie's polleeman boyfriend changes his
mind about marriage. IRI
10:00 D
Cil MOVIE JIP:
'Freedom Road' Pert 2
(I) MOVIE: 'Honky Tonk
Freeway'
(]) TBS Evening News
Cll G ID Hart to Hart
The Hans lry to lind a kidnapped boy. (R) (60 min .)
!Closed Captioned)
(]) Firing Una
&lt;HI Newawatch
10:30 Cll Sing out America
CD Aft-Star SponaCheltenge
(fi) Hitchcock
11 :00 D (I) Newacant~r
(]) Naahvltfe RFD
CD ESPN Sporta Canter
(]) All tn the Family
Cll D Cll ()it
News
(!) Newa/Sporta/Weother
Cll Dave Atten .c Large
11:30 8 Cil CD Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE: 'The Other
Slda of the Mounuln

e

~'{~

"DilWY" JUST

Carpenter work, Repair or
remodeling, wall paneling,
ceiling tile, floors, doors,
some painting. 614·992-2759.

Now arrange lho circled leiters to
form the surprise answer . as sug·
geated by fho aboVe cartoon .

Yest8fday·s

Yoge llid YO\I

Cll Green Acreo

'IOJ~,THI'5

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting, 30 years ex
perlence, speclallrlng in
bull! up roof. Call 611-388·
9622 or 61088-9857 ,

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West Virgin ia. over
20 less e)Cpenslve cars in
stock .

PROc:&gt;UCE FOR

THEIR OWNERS,

(A.nswers tomorrow)

7 :00 • (f) P.M. M-Ine
(I) Whet ·On e.rtll Orson
Bean hosts this eXploration
of the wodd of science and
hJman behevior,
Cll Buff' a Eye
(!) NASL Weeldy

BORN LOSER

PAl NTI NG - interior and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. Call 614-3889652 .

Gene's Steam carpet
Clean-Scotch Gaurd-Free
estimates-spring specials·
Gene Smith, 992-6309.

XI]
Mswel:"t

(I) f.-..·KIIOWII ae.t
(I) • (IJ ABC News

Improvements ·

1974 Olds. 98 . Regency.
Good running cond, , good
interior, reg . gas. $650. 614·
949-2639.

1974 VEGA GT, low
mileage, air, AM·FM, 304·
67S·4338.

~ Wo~oJt~

® .L)lla,

1978 Thunderbird, AC, PS,
PB, auto,, • AM· FM, very
good COnd,, $4,195, Call 446·
4554.

WHAiSLOT
MA~H/NES

a (()

~~.~BSNewt

BINGS CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION Specializing
in concrete driveways,
sidewalks, floors, patios,
etc. 11 yr, exp. Caii61A-367·
7891,

,_,

(I) Etectrtc: Company
.&lt;HI Over EMv·

ser· lees
81

I KX

(Jt • &lt;lt N.CD New./Spc!IU/Weother
(I)

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car1979 Rabbit -37,000 miles, 4 pet Cleaning featured by
dr ,, good cond., $3,900. Call Halfell Brosthers Cusiom
Carpels. Free estimates.
614-245-9557 .
Call «6-2107.

74
~1

Rabbits , tor sale,' blondeblack aod while bunnies 3
months old $3, each. 304·
675-2887.

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay lor sale. Call «6·0183.

TWO Beagle dogs, 1 male, 1
female, both running, $30.
each, call alter 6: 00, 304·
675·5079,

Autos lor Sate

con ·

GOOD
THINGS
TO
EAT : : :CANNING PEAC·
Pioneer HES. Yellow Freestone
2· HMP · 500
Speakers, Sony receiver canning peaches now
and Zenith turntable. $650. available while the supply
304-675·3994.
lasts. BOBS MARKET-Mason W, VA. 773·5721 open
REPOSSESSED SIGN! 7 days a week .
Nothing down! Take over
payments $58.50 monthly .
4'x8' llashlng arrow sign .
_.
New bulbs, letters. Hale
Signs. 1·800·227·1617, Ext.
607.
61
Farm Equipment
BABY bed, complete, new, John
Deere 40 self·
$75, Call alter 4, 304-576· propelled combine, both
2780.
heads . Grain fed freezer
beef. Call61045 -5181.
Pl . Pl. High School coat,
girls size 34. Never been 1974 John Deere Dozer, 6
worn . 304·675 ·1480.
way blade, heavy duty
wench, ex . cond. Call 614682 ·6263 .
55
Building Supplies

POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 614-3677220 .

Camping
Equipment

aura.
C!l Beat of Notre O.me

Starcrall IOfd·out, used
twice, excellent cond,
S2495. Located Main and
Second, Middleport, Ohio.
61 4-992·2828,

APARTMENTS, clean &amp;
efficient,
reference
required, 304·675·2946.

3 bedroom unfurnished Circle's Motel, telephone.
14x70 all elec. mobile home «6·2501 , For Rent, Weekly,
S200 m'o nlhty plus utilities. 1 person $60,00; 2 persons
304-576-9073 or 30H16·2«1, $70.00. Cable T.V., air/o,cond.I
44

D ining room set, 4 cha irs
and
table,
cushioned
chairs. Cal1458·1997.

3 room furnished apt. $250 .
month includes utilities.
Inquire at Meigs lnl') in
·
Pomeroy .

2 bedroom
furnished
mobile home . $185. month.
304-6/S-6512.

TWO bedroom mobile
home, kitchen furnished,
couples only, 304-675-1076.
Also 2 troller lots.

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
Sofa . chair, r oc ker , ot
taman, 3 tables, (extr a
heavy bv Fronti er ). S685.
Sofa, chair and lovese at,
S275 . Sofas and cha i rs
priced from $285 , to $895 .
Tables, SJ8 and up to 5125 .
Hide·a·beds,$440. and up to
$525., queen size , $380 .
Recliners, $175 . 10 $325..
L amps from $18 . to $65 . 5
pc. dinettes from $79., 10
5385 . 7 pc ., Sl89. and up.
Wood table with six chairs
5395 . to 5650 . Desk SllO.
Hutches, S300. and S550 .,
maple or pine fin i sh .
Bedroom suites
Bassett
Cherry, $795.
Bunk bed
complete with mattresses,
S250. and up to 1395. Baby
beds, $99. Mattresses or
box springs, full or twin,
$58., f irm , $68. and $78 .
Queen sets. $195. 4 dr .
chest s, SA2 . 5 dr. c hests,
S5A . Bed frames, S20 .and
$25 ., 10 gun Gun cabinets,
1350., dinette chairs 520.
and $25. Gas or electr ic
ranges ,
S325 .
Baby
matresse s, $25 I S35 , bed
frames $20 , $25, I S30 . Used
Furniture
bookcase,
ranges , chairs, end tables,
recliners and TV ' s. 3 mites
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm , Mon . thru Fr i., 9am
to 5pm , Sal .
446 ·0322

searching an island lor butte&lt;flies, e boy . geta in. voiVed in o hJnt for
Captain Kldd; a buried tore-

Auto Repair

SPE;CIAL
Complete
enamel paint jobs from
S300. Sunroofs Installed
from S225. ·Auto Trim Cen ter, «6· 1968.

stee l tandam a&gt;C ie
iler , 811. wide by 12 II.
long . Heavy duty: Call 61A·
256·1484.
All

2 beds, new mattress, 2
r ec lining chairs . 71 Buick
Convertible -good shape .
Cal l 614-992·7791alter 4.

B:Oo U (Jj Neweceirter
(I) ·The Gold Bug While

. 7541.

~ay~~------------- ~:::::::;::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::~

1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond . Deluxe kitchen, large
living room &amp; bath, 2
bedrm . Hidden ulll. room .
379·2310.
CHOICE lot lor sale, Triple
T Estates, New Haven, call
Finally! A sate lo help wilh 304-882 -2657 '
the down payment! We're
closing out the 82's. $500
rebate on all singles, $1,000
off doublewldes . We' re
Elsea Home Centers on us
23 N Circleville 474·
A tRials
521.jjChilllcothe 772 -1220.
We finance . We set·up &amp;
de I iver free .
41
Houses for Rent

TUESI)AY

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

71

byHen_riArnoklondBoblee

Unscrlmble IIMtse four Jumbles; ·
one tetter fo each oqu_,e, to tonn:
·four ordinary WO&lt;da.
·

Viewing

--·--

Formica top tabl e, blonde
with six chairs, in good
cond. Call 446-1909 or 446·
9160.

~ ~ ~~·

Television

1969, 2211. flbreglas~. Nortl\
American cabin cruiser .
Ne trailer, oil shore with
options, marloe 350 Cu
Bujck, outboard·lnboard
motor. JOi4·755-7545.

F i rewood, S10. pic kup load .
Ca ll614·245·5804 .

ftj'}ftru}fi}lt fjiTHATBCR~ILEDWORDGAME ,

'•-

Motors lor 5I te

L awre nce lead shot S12.95
per 25 lb. ba g. Spring
V all ey Tradi ng Co ., Spring
Valley Pl aza, 446·8025.

-·-- -·----.-.-·--·

-- ~ ·

Ohio

75_,._- tiilaiSand

by Larry Wright.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

·-··-·---·

For Sal e 520 gallons of
heating luet , 1470. Call 614·
256·9303 .

,

31 1982

Ohio

..... .

Niilhtlne

tNEWSPAPEA ENTERPRISE ASSN./

0 111112 blf NEA, Inc,

0302

..

CELEBRITY CIPHER .

Clllldr ~ CISJ . 5 aoc . . Cl'llllld

from....,..

byt.noul people. PM1
... ............... 111 ....,_...,_,.,..,.,._, Tot»y'•CIIW."Jillq&amp;lllllfO .

"PIQLTV QIZ
IXZII

V~ .

KLWZ . XZQSBY

IXZIZ

BXZII

QAAIZHLQBZO." -

QSZ

S.IPZSB

QHTQQQIQ
PREYIOUS 80LUTION: "A hUablnd .II liVIng proof that a
_ , . , .., talle a jolta," - Barbero Stanwyck

• -

blf MEA. lno,

0102

f

,,
'·

'

�Paye-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Reagan staffers reject Israeli plan
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Reagan administration is rejecting
Israel' s strategy lor solving the Palestinian problem, saying it won't
buy the argument that Jordan is a
Palestinian state.
"We do not agree that Jordan Is a
Palestinian state," John Hughes,
the State Department spokesman.
said Monday In the most direct repudlat ion yet of the position put forward by Defense Minister Ar1et
Sharon and other Israeli leaders.
Hughes also denied that the administration has proposed establishment of a demilitarized
Palestinian state on the lsraeiiOC' :Upled West Bank and Gaza
Str1p.
Israeli radio reported that the Israeli cabinet had rejected a u.s.
proposal for a demUltarlzed Palestinian nation, but Hughes told reporters, "We have made no such
proposal."
While the Reagan administration
Is rejecting one key aspect of the
Israeli strategy for dealing with the
Palestinian problem In the wake of
the withdrawal of Palestinian guerrUias from west Beirut, Its own next
moves are unclear.
Official sources say President
Reagan or Secretary of State

Meigs County
happenings
Receives ADC funds
State Auditor Thqmas E. Fergu·
son's office announced today the
Sept. 1981 distribution of $48,925,165
In Aid to Dependent Children
(ADC) to 569,323 recipients in
Ohio's 88 counties.
Meigs County received $163,852
tor Its 2,000 recipients.

Singers announced
The Duncan Family Gospel Singers from Tampa, Fla., will be featured Sept. 8, at 7: lJ p.m. at the
Long Bottom United Methodist
Church, Long Bottom.
There wUI be no admission
charge, but a free-wUI offering wUI
be received . .For additional Information contact the Rev. Richard
Thomas at 667-3960. The public is
cordially invited to attend.

Reunion set
The annual Wood reunion wUI be
held Sept. 12, at Forest Acres Park.
A picnic lunch wUI be served at
noon.

George P. Shultz probably will
make a m ajor speech soon outlinIng U.S. pollcy in the region. Shultz
has .been conducting an intensive
review of U.S. policy in the Middle
East and has hinted that he wants
to expand the Camp David framework for peace negotiations without saying how.
One official, who dldn' t want to
be Identified. said that before outlinIng any new U.S. position. the ad·
ministration wants to see what
emerges from an Ara b League
summit conference scheduled to
open In Morocco on Sept. 6.
Another official said the administration would like to see an Arab
peace plan that would include Arab
recognition of Israel and acceptance of U.N. resolution 242, but
would refr aln from demanding a
separate Palestinian state. The
U.N . resolution essentially recognizes israel's right to exist.
"An eastern Arab proposal llke
that could be part of'Camp David in
no time," said the official, who
didn't want to be identified.
That would leave the question of

Area deaths
.

Hazel D. Clark
Hazel D. Clark, 79, of Columbus,
died in Mount Carmel Hospital
Monday morning.
She was preceded In death by her
husband Howard. She ls survived
by her son. Howard K. Clark, Columbus; a brother, Roy Jordan,
Springfield; and a sister, Ethel
Clark, Pagetown.
She was a school teacher who attended and taught at Whlte, Oak
School and other Meigs County
schools. She graduated from HanisonvUie High School and Ohio
Uittverstty.
She retired !rom Columbus State
School and had worked at Gold Circle stores.
She was a member of West HJll
Church of Christ. She was past
royal matron of Pallas Court No.
13, Order of Amaranth, a member
of the Harrisonville Eastern Star
No. 255, and a member of Mount
Olive Shrine No. 3.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday
at Ewing Funeral Home with Rev.
Dare! Porter. Burial wUl follow In
White Oak Cemetery. Friends may
call 2-4 and 7-9 p.m . Wednesday at
the funeral home.
lr. lieu of nowers, the family requests contr1butions be made to the
American Heart Association or to a
favor1te charity.

Emergency runs

Belinda Norris

The Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service made two runs
Monday.
The Middleport squad answered
a call at 8:14p.m. at Dutton's Drug
Store. Robert Van Meter was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
The squad also answered a call at
8:25a.m. Amber Davis, Ash Street,
was treated at the scene.

Belinda Norr1s, 80, of Rome City,
Ind., died at 10:50 a.m. Monday in
LaGrange (1nd.) Hospital.
She was born Nov. 24, 1901, tn Racine, to Lewis and Luella Custer
Wolf. She had resided in Rome City
for 12 years and prior to that llved in
Decatur, Ind.
She was a former school teacher
at Letart Falls and Junction City.
She earned her teaching degree In
Gallipolis and Athens.
She was a member of the WOOdruff Grove United Methodist
Church.
She was married June 8, 1922, In
Syracuse to Rev. Lawrence T. Norris. He survives In Rome City.
Also surviving are four daughters, Connie Bobbit, Monticello,
Ind., Donna Jehres, Van Wert,
Evelyn Ray, Lancaster, and Linda
Kaehr, Black Creek, Wis. ; three
sons, Rol)ert and Charles, Rome
City, Ind., and Harold Auburn.
Ind.; 22 grandchildren and 12 greatgrandchildren; and a sister, Cressa

Marriage license·
A marriage license was issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to Harold A. Rainer, 65, Racine, and
Blondena M. Hudson, 54, Racine.

Seeks divorce
Lu Ann Evans, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
flied suit for divorce In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
against Terry G. Evans, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy.

Meets Thursday
The Eastern Local Board of Education wtll meet in special session
Thursday Sept. 2, at 8 p.m. In the
high school library to discuss
personnel.

QJU&lt;rsll. ~l . IO.

Sortnoer Cowo: I by the pound) S-39.75, Co.,..
Calll'llfra: ( by the uniti:IOHIO, Veab: (choiceprime) !2. ~0-t~i.
'
Baby Calves: I by the head) 20-1111, (by the
heed)f7-tltl.
.
Hop: INo. I blrrolrt and gllll) :MIII-2!0 lbo.

14.- . Butcher Sows !U7.10.
llutcher Boon - · Ftoder Pigs (by the
heod) 11-fUO.
Feeder!Arraii.IO-*.

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (APIWlth layoffs sweeping the coal industry, miners appear more
concerned with job security than
with job safety, say Unlted Mine
Workers officials.
"If there are a lot of layoffs and
people are faced with a bad econ·
omy, they're more concerned with
keeping their jobs" 'than with
safety, the unlon's chief spokesman, Eldon Callen, said Monday
from his Washington, D.C., office.
The poor economy and reductions In federal Mine Safety and
Health Administration Inspectors
have UMW officials predicting that
1982 work-related deaths will surpass last year's toll of 155.
Through Monday, 89 miners union and non-union - had died on
the job, compared to the deaths of
80 miners a year ago during the
same period, Callen said.

Graveside services were held
Saturday at Union Cemetery, New
Haven, for Amber Louise Nltz inFaye Sauer, director of the Meigs
fant daughter of Pamela and Hoy
County
Cooperative Parrish, anNltz, Pomeroy, who died at birth at
nounced
today that the FOOd Co-op
Holzer Medical Center Friday.
program
is back In business beginIn addition to her parents the in·
ning
Thursday.
·
.
fant is survived by two brothers,
The
Food
Co-op
is
sponsored
by
Shannon Lee and Shawn Allen at
the
Meigs
County
United
Methodist
home; maternal grandparents,
Louise and James Queen, MiddlE." • Parrish and is available to eveport; paternal grandparents, Mag- ryone Sauer stated.
Persons who wish to place an
nolia and Russell Nltz, Pomeroy,
order
are to go to the Senior Cit!·
and several aunts and uncles. The
zens
Center
Thursday, Sept. 26,
Rev. Earl Oller, Hartlord, was In
charge of services.

"MSHA plays a big role in the
effectiveness of our International
safety inspectors and safety
committees."
Uke · Callen, Davidson blamed
the economy for the increase In fa·
tal accidents, saying "there is arE."
!axed attitude toward safety In the
coalflelds due to the tremendous
number otlavofts."

I

Dana V. Canter
Dana V. Canter, 60, Syracuse,
died Monday afternoon at Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Canter was preceded In
death by his parents the late Oral
Raymond and Ollle Eva Hawley
Canter, two sisters and two
brothers.
Mr. Canter was a veteran of
World War II having serving with
the U. S. Navy. He was a retired
employe of the Delco Products Co.,
Dayton. He was a member of the
Veteran of Foreign Wars and tile
member of Disabled American
Veterans. He was also a member of
Local 755 ol1ue.
Pierce
one
survived
bydaughter,
his wife, PamRuth
He isCanter;
ela S. Clark, Racine; three sons,
Danny H. (Rick) Canter,NewCarllsle: Charles M. Canter, Syracuse,
and Raymond L. Canter, Coolvllle;
five grandchildren; one brother,
Michael F . Canter. AmesvUie, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wUI be held
Thursday at 3 p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. David
Mann officiating. Bur1al will be In
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home after 7
p.m. this evening.

ADMISSIONS - MONDAY
Dr. Thomas McGowan, Mason,
W.Va.; Roy Frecker, MeyersvUie;
Neva Grimm, Pomeroy; Judy
?ape, Syracuse; Bertha Zamorano, Shade; WUbur Rowley Sr.,
Pomeroy; Kl!ith White, Racine.
DISCHARGES - MONDAY
Blanche Gibbs.

The Meigs CountY Horse Shoe
Pitching Club wUl hold a tournament Sunday, Sept. 5, beginning at
11 a.m. at the Meigs County Fair
Grounds In the show ring on top of
the hUI.

\ 10 \11

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ver8atillty Plus! Create Incredible, Graph~ and P_rint
Upper _-nd .Lower.Case Straracters ~n Four Co(~! .

ALSO IN STOCK:
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Aladdin 11,300 BTU Heater ' SALE '21 fOG .

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MECHANIC Sf. - 992.J67l

loctl ill AYIIIIDIH In A

Variety Of Charoct.r Motifs

Lunch Tote With hc:elled Handle'
flat
lu1ch

Wiley Lambert,
Pamela Nltz, RE." -~P~ejr~so~ns~in~t~er~es:t:ed:ar:e~t:o:cal:l9:85-JL..._~~~~~~~~~~~
r~ni~m~u:s~,
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4311 or 985-4138.

.:.:..teating capability: 14'x20'
area. .

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE

ThB SavinQ pia~

-

Sunday tournament

HOLZER MEDICt\L CENTER
DISCHARGES AUG. 30
Daniel Bable, Clovis Bailey, Dorls Bailey, Lena Basham. Vicki
Bickle, Virginia Channell, Darlene
Eads, Grover Green, Debr~ Hlero-

~

Limit I

cle Oller, Arlen Owens Sr., Marsha
Pfeifer, William Pierson, Mrs.
Chester Vance and son, . Scotty
Whobrey.
BffiTHS
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Barnes, daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Folden, son, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Preston Mustard, son, Jackson.

Veterans Memorial

Zones1, 21 3

..--.:

•

BTUs per .hour.

SALE

!rom 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. and place their
orders. The orders may be picked
up one week later.
Available are S6 bags which contain fresh fruits and vegatables;
$3.25 bags which contain two loaves
of bread, eight ounces of American
cheese, and one dozen extra large
eggs. Bulk items are also available
such as trozen juices, fish, all-kinds
of nour, dry beans~uts, dry milk,
oleo and a variety of cheese.

open oaliV and sundaY

Callen alSo said he believes
MSHA inspectors let job security
Influence their inspections - and
miners' safety - when the Reagan
administration announced work·
Ioree cutbacks.
"They looked at the potential of
being laid off and they took a more
lenient attitude toward safety" because they might have to ask those
companies they Inspected for jobs,
he said.
Protests by mine workers, however, led to the administration's cJe.
clslon to cancel the MSHA
reductions.
The 155 miners killed in 1981 rE."
presented the highest tolal since
1975, Davidson said. He said 19lKI is
listed as the safest year, with 50
mln~rs killed on the job.
Although the UMW's 72-day
strike last year kept many miners
off the job, the death toll was not
slowed, he said. Even with 2,:nl union mines closed because of the
strike, 19 miners died in accidents
in Aprll1981, compared to nine last
April, Davidson said.
.------------

Hospital news

-Heat output up to 7,800

REG. 1199!5

Danny Davidson, the UMW's
deputy safety director, reiterated
Callen's belief that cuts - through
attrition - In the MSHA workforce
were behind the rise In on-the-job
fatalities .
"Without strong (federal) safety
enforcement, our safety division is
less effective on the distr1ct and local levels, and the result is more
lnjur1es and fatalities," he said In
the August Issue of the United Mine
Workers Journal.

Meigs food co-op back in business

.T '

"

Safety no longer big worry

Quality Aladdin Kerosene Heaters

Market report
A.... tii,IIIZ
CA'M'IE PRICES- Feeder Ste.n: (good,lll&lt;ice) lbo. 17-ttl, 100-7110 lbo. 10.1041 ;
lbo. 4tl' Feodor HeUeno: (goockholce) ili!.ii0,1100-700 Ull. - : Feeder Bulb : (good:dlolce) ~bo. 51-«1:21,100-700 lbo. -.50.
·\ 1 Sla\18ht.r Bulb:, (over ·1,000 lbo.) 42.M.Il-7S;
Slo ......r Cowl : IJtlHti" -.10. Canne""

Amber L. Nilz

A clerk at the government pawn shop, Monte de
Piedad, looks over a waD cl(l(:k wblch Is among several
Items an unidentUled man and wUe are pawning.

KEROSENE HEATERS

The Chester Fire Department
will be holding a barbecue, garden
tractor pull and chain saw contest
on Labor Day, Sept. 6, at the firehouse in Chester.

1

Nease, Vienna, W.Va.
Services will be 11 a.m. Thursday
at Woodruff Grove United Methodist Church. OfflclatlngwUI be Rev.
MUton Beeman, Rev. Paul HUI and
Rev. Barry St. Clair.
Bur1al will be In Letart Falls
Cemetery with graveside services
at -3 p.m. Friday.
Friends may call l!fter 2 p.m .
Wednesday at Hutchins-Wllllarns
Funeral Home in Wolcottville, Ind.

Tltoull&amp;ods of Mexicans, strapped for cash due to
devalued currency and r!Jllng prices, are waiting in
line dally to pawn possessions bought during better
et!onomlc times. (AP Laserphoto)

BUSINESS BOOMING AT POOR MAN'S BANK-

PRE-SEASON SALE

Plan barbecue

ATHENS UVESTOCit SALF.S

a separate Palestinian state in the
Israeli-occupied West Bank and
Gaza Str1p as an issue to be decided
In negotiations. The negotiating
process might be expanded to include Jordan if such an Arab proposal were to emerge, he 'sald.
The official acknowl~ged he
probably was engaging in wishful
thinking, since the Arab nations
weren't even able to agree at their
last summit on a Saudi Arabian
plan which would have traded recognition of Israel for a Palestinian
state.
That plan, known as the Fahd
plan after Saudi King Fahd, wUI
again be on the agenda at the Sept. 6
summit.
The Reagan administration says
the issue of a Palestinian state
should be decided In pegotlations,
although Sharon told reporters last
week thatlsrael "wUl never agree"
to such a state.
Meanwhile, deputy White House
press secretary Larry Speakes said
Reagan was pleased that the eva·
cuation of Palestinian and Syrian
fighters !rom Beirut "Is going
well."

Large capac:Hy Metal Lunch ICII
"Flip 'n Sip" dlspemer bottle. Savel

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