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·Navratilova upset

Wallace in runoff

Page 4

PageS

SVAC coaches seek
additional offense
Page 3

...

•

at y

e

•

·,,

enttne

Voi.31,No.ll

1 Section, 12 Pages
A Multimedia Inc.

1912

15 Cents

Gallia request
being studied
..

Crash investigation continues
BRUNSWICK, Ga. - Authorities Tuesday were continuing an
Investigation of a plane crash near Brunswick which took the lives of
three Ohioans, but they had not determined the cause of the crash.
The bodies of the victims were recovered Sunday momlng after
the plane wreckage was discovered bY a group of hunters, authorities said. They were !dentitled as Leonard E. Heighton, rl, the pllot;
Donna K. Stokes, age about 30; and her son, Jay Stokes, 11, all of

Ironton.
Shipman said it was unlikely that fuel dltflculties led to the crash,
because the plane had refueled In Columbia, S.C., and was able to fly
to the Brunswick area before the accident.

Our Reg_ 5.97

4.47~&gt;44"

OPAC endorses Celeste, Shoemaker
COLUMBUS, Ohio - .The Ohio Political Action Committee for
Mental Retardation has endorsed Democrat Richard Celeste and
his running mate, Rep. Myrl Shoemaker, for governor and lieutenant governor.
"Both candidates have an unquestionable knowledge of and commitment to programs for the mentally retarded aild developmentally disabled," the group said In a statement.

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ADMINISTRATOR - Robert E. Byer, well-known Middleport
resident, Tueschiy began officially his duties as new admlniBtrator of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.

Byer begins duties
as EMS administrator

Innocent by reason of insanity
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Jonathan Backus, 32, has been acquitted of
murder charges In the beating death last May of his 60-year-old
mother.
Franklin County Common Pleas Judge Jay Flowers determined
Tuesday that Backus was Innocent by reason of lnsanlty. Flowers
made the determination after a brlef hearing and scheduled another
hearing for Frtday to determine where and for how long Backus
should be hospitalized.
The body of Marion Backus was found In the farnlly's Upper
Arlington hoow-Wilb a baseball bat beside it.

A well-known Middleport resident,
Robert E. Byer, 125 Fairlane Drive,
officially began his duties Tuesday
as administrator of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Se_rvices.
A 1953 graduate of Middleport
'High School, Byer has served over 23
years as a volunteer with the Middleport Fire Department and
Emergency Unit.
Byer completed work for a
general business degree with Portsmouth Interstate Business College
in 1955 and completed an accounting
course at Ohio University in 1963.
He is a graduate of Dale Carnegie
speaking and public relations courses and is a certified EMTA in Ohio.
He has also been certified in advanced fire training In Ohio.
Byer was employed with Kaiser
Aluminum at Ravenswood from
February, 1967, to January, 1982. He
is a veteran of the U.S. Army and at
one time was employed as advertising manager and a sports
writer with The Daily Sentinel.
Byer is a member of the Ohio State
Firemen's Association, is a past
Middleport fire chief and a past fire
department president. He helped
form the Area Volunteer Fire and
Emergency Assn., and is a past
president of that group, currently
serving as secretary-treasurer.
He has served on the planning

Vote to continue walkout
Our Reg. 14.97

12.97:"

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" "lncludes2plk&gt;wcasea

NORTI:I OLMSI'ED, Ohio - The 273 striking tea.chers of the
5,®pupll North Olmsted School District In northeastern Ohio voted
today to continue their week -old walkout.
Members of the North Olmsted Education Association told adminIstrators shortly before 8 a.r:n. that they had rejected the school
board's latest offer.
That offer Included a $12,400 base salary beginning Jan. 1, said
Paul Wise, director of district administrative services.
The current base pay is $11,920. The teachers are seeking $12,782.

Incident leaves one dead, one shot
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Pollee were Investigating today a shooting
Incident that left an unidentified man dead and a pollee officer
wowided.
According to Sgt. James Dempsey, the gun battle, which Involved
eight pollee narcotics officers and two uniformed officers, broke out
at an ai&gt;artrnent on the city's northeast side at about 10: 15 p.m.
·
Tuesday.
Officers were attempting to serve a search warrant at the apartment when the shooting broke out, Dempsey said. He said officers
had been posled at the front and back doors of the apartment just
before the shooting.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND - The winning number drawn Tuesday nlght In
the Ohio Lottery's dally game ''The Number" was 359.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" game, the winning number was 2700.
The lottery reported earnings of $520,656 on Its dally .game. The
earnings carne on sales ot $933,814.50, whlle holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share $413,158.50, lottery offlctals said.

Clark named chamber
president at Pomeroy

•

Weather forecast
Mostly sunny today. High near~. aear tonlght Low 55 to 60.
Sunny Thur,lday with a high near 82. The chance of rain Is near zero
percent today, ~t and Thursday.
Ohio Extended C)dlook
~ ll1roUp Suaday- Fair Friday and Salurday. A·chance
GI~Mwen Suaday. Srm•U!My mild, with hil!ll80 lo 115. Lows

from lbe upper

•to

lower ...

fte Naa-1 WalllerSemeef..-11 nrm, AJmY f• m.t Gillie
)latllla fw ftwiday.llllowaa are f•eciaat Iaiiie Noclheet, Soallnleit
o.lf - * . Ceel -Iller li foreeat fer tile Grat LUes IIIII New

CAP

board for curriculum of the Ohio
State Fire Academy. Columbus.
Byer is a member of Middleport
Lodge 363, Free and Accepted
Masons, and is a past president of
the Southeastern Ohio Sportswriters
and Broadcasters Assn.
Records of the county's emergency medical services from January,
this year, through July, compiled
Tuesday revealed that units answered 1,062 calls for that period not
counting 408 transfers. Calls answered during the first seven months of the year per unit include: Middleport, 242; Pomeroy, 289; Racine,
135; Syracuse, 92; Rutland, 179, and
Tuppers Plains, 125.
Total volunteer man hours given
to answering the runs by the six
units of the county totaled 6,161. 7. In
addition, the transfer crew logged
2,350.81 hours. Hours of manpower
given by the volunteer units include
Middleport, 846.81; Pomeroy,
944.85; Racine, 831.74; Syracuse,
850.84; Rutland, 808.32; Tuppers
Plains, 1,879.14.
As new administrator, Byer's office will be located in the emergency
service headquarters building,
behind Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Byer is married to the former
'Donna Hildore, and the couple has
three children, Julie, Larry and
Mary.

.

By KATIE CROW
Upon the recommendation of the
board of directors of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce Joe Clark
was elected president and Paul
Simon was chosen vice president at
the chamber's noon luncheon Tuesday at the Meigs Inn.
Jim Frecker, past president, reported that any committee appointments made by him (Frecker)
would be cancelled. New committees would be named by Clark.
Qark reported that the board of
directors would meet next Tues&lt;)ay
at noon at the Meigs Inn.
Rpn Ash read articles of lncorporation for the Pomeroy Chamber
and presented a draft of the new
bylaws.
Ash stated that Pat O'Brten will
serve as agent for the corporation.
A· vpte to Incorporate the chamber
. will be taken. $t the next regular
meeting following' the ri1eeting at
the board ct directors.
; Introduced and welcoriH!d to the
rileetlng were Jeff McDaniel, admlnlstrator ct Pome10y Health
Care Center, Jtin Schlvlnskl, engtneer who Is working on phase p of
the Pomeroy Sewage System ; 8nd
Yvonne Scally, president ot the
Middleport Chamber of ·

Commerce.

Scally suggested that perhaps
some of the members of the Pomeroy Chamber could meet with the
Middleport Chamber for promotiona! purposes.
Scally said the Middleport
Chamber meets the fourth Tuesday
at noon at the LaSalle Restaurant.
The chamber discussed the passlbllty of combining the annual
Christmas parades. However, no
action was taken untll it is discussed with members of the Mlddleport Chamber.
Paul Simon announced that the
Pomeroy Chamber had purchased
a desk for the candy stripers at
Veterans Memortal Hospital and is
3sJting ntep1bers to donate $10 each
toward the cost of the desk.
The chaniber briefly discussed
the possibillty of having boat races
at next year's Regatta. It was sugges~ by Fred Crow that maybe
paddle boat races could be held
Attending the meeting were
Clark, Simon, Frecker, Crow,
Carol Cundiff, secretary, Scally,
TOOl Reed, Ash, Paul Barnett,
Bruce Reed, Bill Quickel, Greg
Gibbs, Bruce Teaford, Billy Joe
Spencer, Schivlnskl, Hank Qeland,
McDaniel, John Koebel, Kermit
Waltonam!'JohnAnderson.

Meigs County Commissioners are studying the recent action of the
Gailla County Commission's withdrawal from the 648 district, the funding
agency for mental health services.
Meeting In regular session Tuesday. Meigs commissioners discussed
the request of the Gallla Board of Commissioners to withdraw from the
Gailla-Jackson-Melgs Community Mental Health Dsltrict, with representatives of the district which Included, Maxine Plummer, executive director of the 648 board, Dan Schwendeman, 648 staff member, Arnold White,
648 attorney along with John Rice and Jim Mourning. Meigs County 648
Board members.
According to the Meigs commissioners approval is needed from the
Meigs and Jackson County Commissioners In order for Gallla County to
withdraw from the district without waiting at least one year.
Plummer pointed out that should Gallla County be allowed to withdraw
from the district it could possibly have an adverse effect on future grants
received from the state and federal government which could lead to
curtailment of some services now being provided.
Commissioners said they were continuing to study the Gallla County
request and would 'be meeting with the Jackson County commissioners
Friday for further dtscusslons.
According' to Atty. White the state law requires that when a withdrawal
Is requested It is necessary that the county making the withdrawal request
also submit a new comprehensive plan to provide health care services to
the county requesting the withdrawal.
White noted," That to the best of his knowledge Gallla County had not
submitted such a plan with Its withdraw! request."
Also discussed at length was the existing conflict between the 648 board
and the center board.
In other business, bids were opened for a new front end loader and
backhoe loader for the county highway department.
Bids on the front end loader were received !rom Dravo-Marks Co .. In the
amount of $45,740 and Southeastern Equipment Co .. In the amount of
$54,955. The bids were tabled and referred to the county engineer for study.
Only one bid was received for a new backhoe. Submitting the bid was
Southeastern Equipment Co., In the amount of $65,210 less trade In of
$40,215 for a net amount of $24,995. The bid was accepted by the board.
Stanley and Larry Hunt of Coal Power'Inc .. met with the board to discuss
the requirements that the county had set forth for the operation of the mine
on Forest Run Road.
It was agreed that the company would meet with county engineer PhU
Roberts and take the necessa1y steps to comply with the board's request.
Attending were Henry Wells, president, Richard Jones and Dave Koblentz, commissioners, Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers.

Pomeroy council
accepts church's
$1.1,000 offer
time.
By KATIE CROW
It was also suggested that the fi A bid on the present city hall
building submitted In 1976 by the nance committee meet prior to the
Pomeroy Methodist Church In the regular meeting to approve payamount of $11,000 was accepted at ment of bllls. Council agreed.
Larry Wehrung reported that the
Tuesday's meeting of Pomeroy
streetdepartmentneeded10gallon
CouncU.
Meeting with council concerning of yellow ·patnt and five gallon of
the bid was the Rev. Robert white paint to be used In traffic
McGee. pastor of the church who areas. Council agreed to the
noted church officials recently purchase.
Wehrung also noted that an autoagreed to purchase the present city
matic valve was need at the lift stabulldlng.
Council, at the time the bid was tion on. New Street rather than a
sumbltted had tabled the bid. How- manuel value. The cost of the autoever. it was brought out last night matic value is m. It was sugthat the bid could be placed before gest ed by Chuck Mann of
council for its consideration once Engineering Associates that it
would be less costly in the long run
again.
Rev. McGee informed council since a manuel valve could cause
that the building would be torn problems. Council agreed to purdown and the area would be used chase the new valve.
It was noted that sewer hookups
for parking. Proceeds from the sale
of the building will be placed In the will go the owners home rather
than just to the owner's property
building fund. council noted.
Mayor Clarence Andrews said line.
Due· to problems at the lntersec·
the village was In the process of
moving from the present city build- lion of Wyliss Hill and Spring Ave ..
ing to the former senior high build· Bill Young suggested that no right
. ing. He said officials had hoped to hand tum be made going off Wyllss
be In the new building by the 15th, Hlll onto Spring St.
Council passed a resolution acbut it would be the end of Sep·iember before au equipment is cepting the budget as submitted
from the budget commission.
moved.
In other business. council agreed
to accept the bid of Shelly Co ..
Thornville, for paving Main Street
up to and including Nye Ave., for
Elson Ray Dailey has been ap$19,964.70. The paving is part of pointed trustee for Lebanon Townphase I and II of the sewer project. ship. He will flU the unexpired term
of Joe Proffitt who resigned earlier.
The final contract with Gheen
Painting was made to paint the waLebanon Township Trustees met
In
regular session Wednesday eventer tower at a cost of $8,850.
Steve Hartenbach, metennan,
Ing with President Denver Curtis
and Trustee Eugene Long attendreported that 761 parking tickets
were issued durlng the month of
Ing. Also present were the Clerk
August and $1,524 was collected
Shirley Johnson and Township emplayee Charles Powell.
from the parking meters. .
Bruce Reed asked that the ordiRoutine business was taken care
nance controlling the parking of
of Including reading of the minutes,
cars ·on ·the streets, cars that are
payment of bllls and condition of
township roads.
Inoperable, be enforced. Council
IW the right to tow cars away that
Dalley will begin his duties as ·
· are lett parked for any length of
trustee Immediately.

Appoint trustee

1\ ..

�'

Wednesday, September 8,1982

..
.

Commentary

SVAC teams· looking for more offense -

Page-2-TM Daily Sentinel :·
PG~Mroy-Miclclleport, Ohio ;1
Wednesday, Se~ber 8,1982~

By DALE RODIGEB, JR.

:;

Reagan and

The Daily Sentinel
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A double whammy
Today's subject is Subsidiary Conununication Authorizatiollll and we'll
start at the very beginning with a definition.
w
A Subsidiary Conununication Authorization - or SCA, as 'II hereafter
will be referred to - is the portion of the frequency channel assigned to an
FM radio station that is not used for the station's own transmission and can
be utilized for specialized progranuning. For exam-ple, the ubiquitous
Muzak, religious and forei gn language prografTI:l, financial reports and services for the blind.
The subject comes up because the Federal Conununicatlons Commission has in the works rule changes that would significantly affect who
uses SCAs, for what purposes and - most significantly - at what price.
The changes apply in general to both conunercial and and public
stations, but it is the effect on Ule latter that is of concern here. Restrictions
on advertising and other remunerative activities in public broadcasting's
regular progranuning already have been loosened, and it is proposed to extend this tilt toward conunercialization to the SCAs.
This development does not distress the public broodcasters, for reasons
to be discussed later, but it greatly alarms various organizations involved
with services for the blind because most utilize public radio SCAs, either as
part of a station's own progranuning or leased. In fact, reading services at
present are by far the largest user of public SCAs.
The fear is that once these are opened to conunercial interests,
escalating rates will make continued use prohibitive for the blind services,
most of which operate on minimal budgets with volunteer staffs and are
already pinched for adequate funding.
"It's like a double whanuny," a spokesman for the American
Association for the Blind says.
Too true. Public radio is also in a financial bind. Federal underwriting,
upon which it has been heavily dependent, is being cut back. In five years, it
will be eliminated entirely.
National Public Radio, with which some 270 of the thousand or so noncorrunercial FM stations in the country are affiliated, is conducting a
vigorous corporate underwriting campaign. But it isn't finding pri-vate enterprise as forthcoming as President Reagan has forecast.
New money has to be found somewhere else. NPR sees cashing in on the
SCAs for, among other uses, a new satellite data transmission service as the
only realistic source.
Not at the expense of the blind services if it can be helped, however. The
stations now participating have indicated they wish to carry on.
There are in the United States a half-million legally blind individuals those with vision that is 10 percent or less of nonnal. But the potential
audience for the service is much larger. Some 3.2 million sufficiently handicapped in reading through poor sight or inability to hold printed material
are also dependent upon radio services.
It is essentially a situation in which both parties are the good guys.
The visually handicapped are dependent upon the radio services and
legitimately concerned about being priced out of the market.
But public radio has to find a replacement for federal dollars that
already are in short supply and will be no!H!xistent in five years.
The most promising potential solution is yet another proposed FCC rule
change that would widen the present frequency bands assigned to FM
stations. This would pennit each FM band to carry two SCAs, one of which
could be revenue producing and the other available for public purposes.
Although there still may be some question as to whether both would be voice
quality and who should have prior access to which.
The proposed rule change on conunercial use of SCAs is titled Docket BC
82-1 and the FCC will announce its decision this fall . lt is now soliciting comments on the proposed expansion oi frequency bands to acconunodate
multiple SCAs - Docket BC 82-536.
Both the radio needs of the blind and financially healthy broadcasting
services are of public interest. And public input can make a difference. The
address is :
Federal Conununications Commission
1919 M St. , N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20554

Letter to the Editor
Who lives, who dies?_ _ _ _ _ __
As the English poet. John MaS&lt;&gt;fleld. In hls poem, ''The Everlasting
Mercy ," has so beautifully put In
these lines:
And he who gives a child a treat
Makes jov bells ring In Heaven's
street
And he who gives a child a home,
Builds palaces in Kingdom come,
And she who gives a baby birth
Brings Saviour Christ again to
F.arth
Abortion is, tragically, not really
about freedom of choice or repor·
ductive rights. It Is about babieswho shall live and who shall die.
Since 1973 there have been lOmll·
lion abortions and this has created
an unmistakable void In our land.
The most common surgical operation used to be tonslllectomy - to-

day It Is abortion.
The U.S. Senate Is going to vote
on two anti-abortion measures in
September. Please send letters,
Mailgrams or phone calls to your
two u.S. senators, John Glenn and
Howard Metzenbaum, urging them
to support these anti-abortion
measures.
The address of·all U.S. senators Is
Senate Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20010. The phone number
of all U.S. senators' Washington offlees Is 202-224-3207. Weste111 Union
Mallgrams are easily sent by calling 1-lro-257-2241.
Please act now to stop !he slaughter of the Innocent. Your letters
really count.
Mr. and Mrs. James L. Davison
Patriot Star Route

the~ Mideast

r '

----------------------------~~.;
take just that final step respecting
the West Bank - clearly in defiance
of the Camp David Accords, as also
of Resolution 242.
Since the government of the
United States Is correctly perceived
by the Arab world as the principal
mediator in the Mideast, it has
l)ecome crucial that a stand be taken
against a unilateral interpretation of

NEW YORK (AP) -Thell-year
mortgage 1s still around !none form
or another- even at fixed Interest
rates for the entire term - In spite
of rumors that It might succumb to
credit-market instablUty.
Long-term loans can be pro!ltable for lenders but costly to
borrowers.
A slinple example, using a race
amount or $24,500 and an Interest
rate of 13.75 percent, demOJllltrates
the point.
On a ll-year amortization the
monthly payments would be
$285.45, for a 360-month total of
$102,762. If the mortgage were for
15 years, the monthly payments
would be $322.18, totaling $57,992.40
at the completion of payments.

duptotaling$529.al, or$467.95more
than that achieved by the longertime borrower.
Impprtant as this Is, It becomes
even more so when you consider
that the average home mortgage at
savings and loan associations lasts
onlyll.5years. Onall-year,schedule, most payments In those 11.5
years would be tor Interest.
In the example used, the borrower on all-year mortgage would
have paid $39,392.10 In 11.5 years,
but still would owe about$23,175.75,
having reduced the debt by only
$1,324.25.
In contrast, the 15-year boiTOwer
would have paid more- $44,460.84
in ll.5 years - but would have reduced the principal owed to

treaty language, to which Mr. Begint
is clearly disposed. No IJ!'bane ob-!
server of the Israeli scene can per-j
suasively argue that a~tlon &lt;i'&lt;
the West Bank is not a design of !he'
Begin government. If the Unltec!:
States is to continue to play a:
decisive role as mediator in the '
Mideast, it has got to assert Itself 8.$ '
to the essential meaning
·

•

•

' Berne Union last week.
OVP news editor .
At .Vinton, Coach Jotm Blake's
As coaches prepare for the seNorth Gallla Pirates battled Huncond week of the 1982 football sea- tlngton Ross to a hard-earned 1~
son In the Sou them Valley Athletic win. 'Il\e Pirates scored In the tina!
Conference more emphasis Is.ex- minutes of the first quarter on a 16
peeled to be placed on offense since yard pass from quarterback Scott
. three teams failed tD score last Frl- Pickens to Ken Neal. Neal caught
day night.
the two point conversion for an 8-0
Shutout were Hannan Trace, lead.
Kyger Creek and Southwestern,
Huntington made a game of It
Southern, In losing Its opener, with a second period score on a five
managed- just one touchdown while yard run by Jason James . North
North Gallla got two In Its 1~ win Gallla got some breathing room In
over Huntington of Ross County. the tina!.minute and one half or the
Eastern, the 1981 defending SVAC third canto when Pickens went over
champ had the only game as the on a 17 yard run. A pass to senior
Eugles dumped Waterford, 25-14.
end Mike Mays gave NG a l~lead
The loop's non-league schedule which stood.
Eric Penick, who Is expected tD
continues this week with Eastern
facing Alexander, Hannan, W.Va. beoneofthepremlerbackthlsseatravels to Hannan Trace, Wahama son In the SVAC had200yards rushIs
at Kyger Creek and North Gallla ing In 28 attempts.
'
goes up SR 160 to McArthur for a
VInton County, the Pirates' oppoclash against VInton County.
nent this week, battled Zane Trace
Last Friday night Coach Arch to a ~61ast Friday night.
Rose's Eagles, after' a slow start,
Federal Hocking, a 14-D winner
got their season's first points on a over Kyger Creek, will seeks Its se-.
fumble recovery In the end zone by cond straight victory at Southern.
Cliff Griffith.
·
The Lancers, winner or just one
\
It followed a fumble by Roger game last year, made two second
period touchdowns stand over a
Bissell on an ,end around play.
Eastern got Its second TD when young, Inexperienced, but detersenior Deron Jewett grabbed a 48 mined Kyger Creek team.
CONCERNED - Head coach Arch Rose, with band over mouth,
yard bomb from quarterback
Federal Hocking's Steve Collins
shows some concern as be watc!bes bls team duriJJg last FriJiay's 2$.14
Bissell.
returned a Bobcat fumble five yards
victory over Waterford. At rtgbt IB assistant coacb George Gagal and Ken
In the third stanza Mark Holter for the first score. Later that period,
Brownlng (32). Scott WoHepboto.
hurled Into the end ~ne capping a quarterback Chuck Richards capfour play, 35 yard drive. 1n the ped a 41-yard drive with a one yard
fourth period, Cliff Grltrlth scored run.
on a seven yard run.
The Lancers added "salt to the
Troy Guthrie, a junior halfback, wound" when they came up with a
Jed Eastern with g; yards 'rushing brilliant goal line stand which
in 14 carries, Griffith had 32 and prevented a Bobcat score.
Holter, 22.
Kyger Creek's 230-pound J. D.
Alexander, Eastern's Friday's Bradbury was stopped just inches
opponent,
was blasted 33-6 by away from the goal by a char~e led
totalM 722 points but trailed No. 7
By HERSCHEL NJSSENSON
Penn State. The Nlttany Lions,
AP Sports Writer
Pitt and Washington, neither of eighthinthepreseasonpoll,moved .
which has played a game yet, held up one position by trouncing TemWASmNGTON (API - Na- waived by the Seahawks Tuesday.
onto the top two spots today In The ple 31-14 and earning 731 points.
Oklahoma and Southern Califor- tional Football League owners are "I can't really comment until! get
Associated Press' first regularprepared to raise the ante one more the complete gist of lt."
season college football poll, while nia held onto ninth and lOth places
time In an effort to have the playMcCullum said western officials
defending national champion Clem- with 593 and 573 points, respecers' union drop Its demard for a oftheNFLPA werecomlngtoSeatson slipped from llth 'to 16th after tively. Both get under way this weewage scale based on a fixed percen- Ue from San Francisco tonight for
kend, Oklahoma against West
dropping Its opener.
tage of gross revenues and avert a discussions.
Pitt. which gets under way VIrginia and Southern Cal against
strike.
The players' union, In response to
Thursday night against fifth · No. 11 Florida.
Sources close to the NFL Man- McCullum being cut, flied unfair laBehind Flortda, the Second Ten
ranked North Carolina In a nation·
agement Council, the owners' bar- bor practice charges Tuesday
ally televised contest, received 33 consists of Michigan, Arkansas,
gaining agent, have told the against the Seattle with the Na State. Clemson.
first ·place votes and 1.~ of a possi- Ohio State,
Associated Press the new offer, tional Labor Relations Board's Reble 1,120 points from a nationwide " Texas, UCLA, Miami and Notre
while
falling to address the players' gion 2 office in New Yark. The
panel of 56 sports writers and Dame.
demand
for salaries to be based on NFLPA has asked the NLRB to go
Florida nipped Miami 17-14,
sportscasters.
a guaranteed percentage or gross to court on behalf of the union In an
Washington, which entertains while Arizona State whipped
revenues, will Include "a substan- effort to obtain an Injunction to
Texas-EI Paso In Its opener Satur- · Oregon 34-3. The others have yet to
tial across-the-board wage hike." have McCullum "re in s tat ed
day, received 16 first-place votes get under way.
The preseason Second Ten con- Detalls of the proposal, the owners' Immediately."
and l,IUl points. Nebraska and Alafirst financial offering s!Qte an earbama traded places from the pre- sisted of Clemson, Michigan, Arlier proposal was rejected by the
season poll. Nebraska, which opens kansas, Ohio State, Miami,
union on July 13, were not made
Saturday against Iowa, ctimbed Florida, Texas, Notre Dame, Ariz·
available.
ona State and UCLA.
from fourth to third with two firstEd GaiVey, executive director ol
place votes and 918 points, while Al·
the
National Football League Playabama, which gets under way
ers
Association, said the owners'
against Georgia Tech, received two
continued
failure to address the
firsts and 916 points.
of gross concept Inpercentage
North Carolina remained In fifth
creases
the
probabUity
or a player
place with two firsts and 825 points
SVAC STANDINGS
strike.
ahd Georgia jumped from seventh
ALL GAMES
There has been talk of a possible
W L T P OP
to sixth with one first and 811 points TEAM
0
strike
25
14
by the Seattle Seahawks be1
0
Eastern
following Monday night's 13-7 trl·
1 0 0 16 6 fore Sunday's game.
North Galli a
umph over Clemson.
0 0 1 0 0
Hannan Trace
"There's nothing I can comment
0 1 0 6 13
So.u thern
Southern Methodist, which opens
on
at this time," said player repre0
0
14
0 1
Kyger Creek
Saturday against Tulane, slipped
0 1 0 0 35
Southwestern
sentative
Sam McCullum, who was
from sixth to eighth. The Mustangs

Pitt, Washington
I
,hold
top
two
spots
Long-term loans, still costly to borrowers
The difference, $44;769.60 Is
Interest.
In the early }'ears, payments on a
30-year mortgage are almost entlrely for Interest. In this Instance,
although $3,425.40 would have been
paid after one year, the amount
owedwouldbe$24,438.75-areductlon of only $61.25.
In contrast, the borrower on the
15-year mortgage would have repaid $529.20 or principal after the
first year. Instead or having a balance owed of $24,438.75, the bcirrower would have reduced It to
$23,970.00.
True, In that year's time the l5year borrower has to pay $!140.76
more than the JO-year borrower,
but offsetting this Is an equity bull-

I

$12,882.10. That Is, the borrower
would have repaid ~.617.\().
The gap becomes even more P~
nounCEd if the homeowner sells lill;
house and retireS the mortgage ·
even earlier, and jn more normal ,
times that Is a dlstlnct possibility.
Less than a decade ago homeowners sold and retired mortgages In about seven years. In part,
the time span has grown since then .
because owners have been unable ,
tosell,orreluctanttopartwithrela- •.
lively low-cost mortgages.
When better times return to the
housing markets, It seems likely :
that many current owners will be .
selling their homes. Others will
seek to remortgage, hoping to .
lower the relatively l!Jgh Interest ·
rates they are now paying.

Businesses picking up state's litter
CXJLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A survey scheduled to be conducted next
year should show Ohioans how business has been picking up the tab
for the state's litter control
program.
.
Enacted In 1900, the litter control
and recycling act authorized the
first statewide study of the problem
which was conducted in the
summer of 1981.
It also provided for a follow·up
survey in the summer of 1983 that Is
expected to demonstrate the de-

gree or progress that has been

think people are feeling very postmade.
.live and upbeat about that," Ms.
Denise King, chief or the office of King said.
Results of the original survey
litter control in the natural resour·
ces department, Is confident the showed there was an average of199
program has shown results.
pounds of litter for each mile of
"We know from personal testlrn· roadway In Ohio. with 1,815ltems or
ony we've received from literally litter every rnlle.
That would be enough to ftll 151
hundreds of people and our own observations ... there Is a difference," boxcars of a train -1.5 miles long.
she said.
A total of 83 communities and
"They have seen a reduction; I state agencies have been awarded
would not say the reduction was about $5.6 million in two rounds of
drastic, but It's noticeable and I funding since the program began In

0 wners prepared to ratse
• ante

t~b .~

DOONESBURY

President Reagan decides not to
run. No one with an eye on the oval
office wants to incur the ill will of 30
million Security Security recipients
who have the best voting record of
any age group In the United States.
Dole seems to be the most likely candictate for the nomination as he is
well known in Republican national ··
politics, having been Gerald Ford's
running mate in 1976'/
I will wait until the presidential
conunission makes its report before
having any conunent on the Social
Security reforms but like most
recipients, I will be glad when some.
pennanent solution is found . The
constant prophecies of doom. and
gloom for the Social Security system
keep us worried. For many, it is the
difference between self-respect and
abject poverty. No wonder we
worry. It Is obvious to all of us who
have been to a dqclor or a hospitalin .
the last few years that Medicare and
Medicaid must be ~. ~ these
two programs ,presently operate,
they seem to be for the benefit of the
hospitalsanddoctorsratherUumthe
patients!
The Medicare and Medicaid
programs bec&amp;me law back in the
Great Society days of President Lyndon Johnson. They are distinctly dif-

BASED ON-SURVEY
OF COMMON ClASSIFIED
USERS NOV.Il-FEB. 82.

lf'

BAR-B-QUE
99~

With Fries.... 11.39

Adolph's Dairy Valley
PH. 992-2556
170 W.Matn

"localed allhe End ol the
Pomeror·Mason Br1dge.''

Pomero1. OH.

OF ALL COMMON
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mann ~fihnne

The Daily Sentinel

Joint Jltasant l\tgisttr
A COMMON CLASSIFIED AD GETS YOUR MESSAGE
TO OVER 11,000 READERS, IN 3 COUNTIES.

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TREASURE CHEST
OF VALUES.

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1\YIN SIZE
Rq. '251•

129110

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Rq. 13!19" •

199110

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Rq..1499" •
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ferent prografTI:l. Medicare includes mit more conunon sense and ef- \
separate Social Security hospital ficient management of the two •~
and medical insurance programs programs but we can hope. First,
administered by the Health Care there is conunon sense. For exam- •
Financing Administration of the ple, under the present Medicare law, :
Department of Health and Human a patient cllanot get out-patient :
Services. Medicaid, on the other treatment. In order to qualify for '
hand, is a health'assistance program Medicare payment, a patient must ;l
· forlow-income people, especlallyfor be admitted to a hospital. There he
those receiving welfare of Sup- damn well better get better within 60 •
plementary Security Income. It is days or go through a lot of ••I
administered jointly by federal- bureauc~atic red tape for further •
•
state programs.
treatmentj. Space prohibits further •
Since lV/5, spending for the two explanation but just hope you don't
programs has more than doubled. have to stay too long.
'ntis year the total outlay for both is
To requlre admission to il'hOspital I
estimated at $68 billion dollars, a for treatment that can be giveri on •
14.5 percent increase over 1981. an out-patient status is silly but if. ••
••
While the consumer price index has that is the only way Medicare will
increased at a rate of5.4 percent, the pay the bill, most patients elect ad'
;'
costs of medical care have soared by mission.
~
11.3 percent, more than double ·the
Medicare will not pay for such
~
increased costs of everything else. preventative treatment as flu shots,
Hospital costs alone rose 17.5 per- etc. It IS much cheaper to prevent
cent in 1981, amounting to more than disease than to treat it in the
•••
40 percent of Ute nation's health bill. hospital; They will not pay for nur•
•
In view of the rapid increase ill sing home care. The only way a
•
health costs, there is nothing left but Medicare patient may enter a nur•to overhaul both Medicare and . sing home with government help is
Medicaid to get the most from the by profess!ng poverty and entering .
dollars s\lent, not tor the doctors and as a Medicaid p{ltient which pays
~
half the bill.
.
tliehospitalsbut'forthereclpients.
It is too much to hope that
Medicare's message to the
Congr~ will' revise the laws to per- patient, 'Get well fast or getlost!" ' =

aN/J!ifP.
ai4R.
I

Today in history

..

SV AC standings

Law revision necessary________Low_e_ll_W_in_.;..g_et~t
Robert Dole, R-Kan., chainnan of
the Senate Finance Conunittee, is
seeking legislation on Social
Security during a lame duck session
of Congress after the Nov. 2 election,
he ]las announced. Sen. Dole· seems
to be getting his priorities mixed!
Social Security, Medicare and
Medicaid are too important issues to
be Jl)essed with by a bunch of sor&amp;head duck congressmen. Let them
take care of Sen. Jesse Helm's abortion bill, school prayer and the like
where they are unlikely to do much
damage. Let's hope they keep hands
off the social programs until the new
98th Congress takes its seat. Then,
when the study of Social Security
reforms, which a presidential commission Is now preparing, has been
thoroughly studied and debated, is
time enough for Congress to act in a
deliberate manner not only on SOcial
Security but its two companion
measures, Medicare and Medicaid.
Sen. Dole claims that no present
Social Security payments will be affected. I believe him because he is
grooming himself for a run for the
White House in 1984. After his
masterly handling of the huge tax
bill just before the Labor Day
recess, Dole figures he Is a s~in
for the Republican nomination if

by ~pound linebacker Kevin
Coach Jack James' Highlanders
Hysell. Senior tailback Randy 'will also seek improvement this
Russell led the Lancers with 125 yar- . week at Southeastern of Ross.
ds in 17 carries.
A determined Wahama defense
Two costly fumbles proved to be held the Highlanders to just lfl yarda
the downfall of Coaches Bill Porter
in the season opener.
and Darrell Dugan's Tornadoes last
Coach Brett Wilson is also looking
weekend.
for offense as his team prepared for
Southeaster? scored its first six- its home opener agallllll Hannan, w.,
pomter followmg a Tornado fumble Va. The Wildcats and Synuncs
at the 21. Four plays later, Bill Yates Valley battled to a (}.0 tie last Friday
ramb~ed mto th~ end zone w1th the
night.
game s 1mllal pomts.
. - - - - - - -- - - - In the second period, Southeastern
completed a 24 yard march in four
plays following another Southern
fumble.
A seven yard pass from Junior
Scagg to Ed Yates completed the
SJ I JACKSON PI(E · Rt . 35 WEST
night's scoring for the Ross ConnPhone 448-4 524
tiallll. Southern got its TD in the
BARGAIN MAriNEES ON SAr &amp; SUN
second stanza when Wade Connolly
ALL SEATS JUST S 1.00
ADMISSION EVE RY TUESDAY $2 00
pounced on a Panther fumble in the
FRIDAY rttru THURSDAY !
end zone. The Tornadoes domnated
the second half, but were unable to
SEPT 3thru
push across the winning points.
Both Kyger Creek and Southwestern will be out to break into the
scoring column Friday. The Bobcats
face a very rugged opponent in
Wahama .
The White Falcons blasted Southwestern in the first half last Friday
in taking a 3!Hl victory. Junior running back Donnie Van Meter scored
three touchdowns, while Steve
Lyons had two and fullback Todd
Troy shocked the Highlander defense with his bull-like runs up the middie.
Ky ger Creek's fr es hmen~· \1\t
1111t H'\
sophomore dominated team will be
, ,,~~~
out to improve upon some of its
I' / '11, \
opening night jitters. Chuck Vogel, a
Jf(;
/11 ld '1.1 II
....
.
sophomore running back, and freshman Shane Stover were the leading
gainers last week at Federal

Arizona

an attempt to attack the problem.' •'
Applications have been received ·'
from throughout the :state for a •·
third round of grants worth $7.5m11: ..
lion. The first of them Is to be · '
awarded in October, with the bulk
or the l)10ney to be distributed 1n :~
December.
Just over $1.8 million of the •
grants to local communities so fa~ •
have gone for various litter collec- "'
tlon or cleanup activities. AnOther
$781,!XXJ was for Increased enforce- . ment of anti· littering laws.

t11~~

Today Is Wednesday, Sept. 8, the251Stdayof1982. Thereare114daysle!t
In the year.
..
Today's highlight In history:
On Sept. 8, 1565, a Spanish expedition land~ at what Is now St. Augustlhe, Fla., and founded the first permanent European settlement In North
America.
On this date:
In 1934, a fire aboard the lux'ury liner Morro Castle off the New Jersey ·
coast took 134 lives.
, ·

'

William F. Bucklej;

Here are the reasollll to applaud of the area by Israelis.
Moreover, Israeli settlements in
Mr. Regan's initiatives in the
·the area have been accompanied by
Mideast:
I. The meaning of Camp David. unpleasant deposals of local
The agreement in 1978 is the only Palestinian officials whp have been
document since United Nations careful not to link up with the
Resolution 242, e~ecuted in 1967, that Palestine Liberation Organization.
has been signed between contending The sudden annexation of the Golan
powers in the Mideast. Israel lived Heights' suggested to the Arab world
up honorably to its conunitment to the likelihood that Mr. Begin would
qult the Sinai. But Israel's governmept (not here to be confused with
"Israel" any more than Mr.
Reagan's government is to be confused with "the United States") contends that it was not implicit in the
Camp David Accords that settlements in the West Bank by
Israelis were to freeze at the then
present level.
Now a clarification of this dispute
is quite simply necessary. Because
the Arabs, most conspicuously the
Egyptians, as also the United States
negotiators, have flatly asserted
that Camp David makes no sense in
the absence of such an understanding. If the design of Camp
David was to tum the West Bank
over to the Palestinians after a fiveyear period during which
negotiations would go forward on the
emct character of the evolving entity, then no sense a.t all could be
made of any continulng colonization

The Doily Sentinei-Page-3

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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wedna1day, September 8, 1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Baltimore still hot,
Sutton tops Tigers
By Associated Press
As the Baltimore Orioles charge
towards the top of the American
League East, they may lind an unexpected obstacle in their way:
Don Sutton.
Sutton, who won 251 games In the
National League during 15 years
with the Dodgers and just less than
two with Houston. joined the MU·
waukee Brewers last week. The
trade began to pay dividends for
the East leaders Tuesday night as
Sutton threw a seven-hitter and
struck out nine In shutting out ])e.
troll 4·0.
The victory kept the Brewers
three games In !root of streaking
BaltimQre In the AL East. The Orl·
oles won their lOth straight game
and 17th In 18 with a 7·2 decision
over the New York Yankees.
The victory enabled the Brewers
to stay a lew steps in front of the
opposition, most notably Baltl·
. :more. which hasn't lost since Aug.
·21. 1be only other East challenger,
the Boston Red Sox, lost 5-4 in 10
Innings tD Cleveland.
Orioles 7, Yankees Z

It for Cleveland, which tted the
game with two outs in the ninth on
Toby Harrah's RBI single. The In·
dlans rally came off Red Sox' relief
ace Mark Clear.
Jim Rice and Dwight Evans homered for Boston. Carl Yast·
rzemskl doubled following Rice's
homer in the seventh, tytng him
with Jlmmy Foxx and Ted WUIJams for ninth place on the all-time
list for extra-base hits with 1,117.
Mariners 5, Royals 2
Bruce Bochte and Riehle Zlsk
clouted two-run homers, Mike
Moore threw a six-hitter for el~:ht
lnnlngs and Blll Caudlll fanned the
sld~ in the ninth to earn Ills 24th

save.
White Sox 7, Angel!! 4
Chicago edged within 4% games
of the Royals In the West as Tony
Bernazard had three hits -lnclud·
ing a homer. Left-bander Tommy
John made his ttrst start In Anahelm since being acquired from the
Yankees but was knocked out by a
pair of drives off his light leg in the
third Inning. Chicago lefty Britt
Bums made Ills third start since
being disabled with a sore shoulder
but had to leave after a recurrence
of the Injury In the fifth .
, Blue Jays Z, i\'s I
Uoyd Moseby's run-scoring sin·
gle with one out In the eighth provided the decisive run. Jim Clancy,
:W agatnst the A's this season, scattered six hits before yielding tD
Dale Murray with one out In tbe
ninth. Murray registered his seventh save.

Mike F1anagan won his tlfth
straight game and John Lowen. stein hit his 22nd homer to pace the
:ortoles.
: "A month ago we weren't sure of
ourselves," saki F1anagan, who
combined with reliever Tippy Martinez to subdue the Yankees. "Now
things are tlnaUy corning together.
. Now we're steamrolllng."
: "Our pitchers are finally doing
;what we felt they were capable of
doing and we can't run them out
Twins 8, Rangers I
there fast enough," Manager Earl
Randy Bush and Kent Hrbek hoWeaver said. "AU of them are do- mered to spark a five-run fifth and
ing well. That's what we missed the Gary Ward had four hits for MJnne.
.early part of the year."
sota. Hrbek homered for the third
time in three games against Texas
: Indians 5, Red Sox 4
: Alan Bannister's bases-loaded this week, whlle Bush got his se·single with two outs In the lOth won cond homer in as many games.

:Dodgers retake first
·with 8-4 win at Cincy
By i\ssociated Press
As Dusty Baker goes, so go the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
Baker drllled a two-run homer
·and two-run double Tuesday night
as the Dodgers downed the Cincinnati Reds 8-4 and reclaimed first
place in the National League West.
The Los Angeles victory, coupled
with Atlanta's 3-2 loss to the San
Francisco Giants, put the Dodgers
one-half game ahead of the Braves.
Baker's double keyed a five-run
third Inning as the Dodgers erased
a :l-0 Cinclnna tl lead. A short time
later, Baker and Ills Los Angeles
teammates saw the Atlanta loss
posted on the scoreboard.
Tonight, all eyes will be on the
scoreboard in Atlanta, where the
Braves play host to Los Angeles in
the opener of a crucial two-game
sertes.
"They call the game hardball in
Atlanta, and that's what wewlll be
playing," Baker said.
The Dodgers, who beaten Atlanta
nine times in a row this season, plan
to throw Bob Welch and Fernando
Valenzuela against the Braves,
who wlll go with veteran Phll
Nle¥&lt;J tonight.
Giants 3, Braves 2

San Francisco won its fifth In a
row and pulled within 5',1 games of
the NL West lead as Chili Davis
opened the game with a homer and
Reggie Smith added a two-run blast
in the fourth.
It was the Giants' seventh
straight victory over Atlanta in lit·
tie over a month. Jim Barr, 4-3, got
eighth-inning help from Greg Minton, who recorded his 26th save.
Dale Murphy cracked his 33rd ho- mer for Atlanta, tying him with
· New York's Dave Kingman for the
: league lead. The homer boosted
: Murphy's league-leading RBI total
to 100.
Expos 7, Cardlrlati 4

· Montreal had only six hits, but
: those Included two-run homers by

Navratilova .upset

Tim Wallach and Andre Dawson.
The loss reduced St. Louis lead In
the NL East tD one-half game over
Philadelphia and 3~ games over
both Montreal and Pittsburgh.
Montreal snapped a 3-3 tie in the
tltth by scoring two runs without a
hit. Three walks loaded the bases
and one run sconed on a wild pitch
by JlrnKaat, whlletheotherscored
on AI Oliver's groundout.
l'hll1les 7' Cubs 5
· Garry Maddox singled in two
runs with two outs In the ninth In·
nlng for the Phillles.
Maddox had doubled and scored
on a run-scoring single by pinch·
hitter Greg Gross tD give Philadelphia a 5-4 lead In the eighth. But
Leon Durham's ~ homer of the
season tied It for Chicago in the bot·
tom of the Inning.
Mike Schmidt cracked his 31st
homer for the Phillles and Tug
McCraw, 3-3, pitched the final two
innings for the victory.
Pirates 9, Melli 5

Jason Thompson, who became a
father earlier in the day, became
only the eighth player to hit 30 home
runs in a season In both leagues.
Thompson, who hit 31 homers for
Detroit in 1977, hammered his 30th
bomer In the first Inning, a two-run
blow, and had an RBI single in the
eighth.
Mike Easler and Riehle Hebner
also homered for the Pirates.
Mookle Wilson had four hits for
the Mets.
i\stros 4, Padres 3
Frank DlPlno, acquired by Hous·

ton from Milwaukee in the Don Sut·
ton deal last week, made an
Impressive major league debut by
striking out 10 in five Innings while
getting the win.
He struck out the first four hitters
he faced, and allowed seven hits
and no walks. Dan Boone pitched
four Innings of one-hit relief for his
second save.
Dickie Thon knocked In two
HoustDn runs with a double and
single.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D., INC.
·VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

STILL FRIENDS - Pam Shriver, rlgbt. aad Martllla 'NavraUiova
off the court at the U.S. Open Tennis IGUrnament 1u New York
Tuesday after Shriver her doubles partner 1.., 7.., &amp;-2. Shriver said she
apologized to NavraWova wbo In tum said, "We were both ready to cry."
walk

(AP Laserpholo).

Bengals announce final roster
CINCINNATI (AP) - Coach
Forrest Gregg announced a list of
players whO will be backups to star·
ters when the Cincinnati. Bengals
ope~ their regular season this week
with the HoustDn Oilers.
The backup slots were announced after the Bengals waived
nine players, added one and put
three on the injured-reserve list tD
make the National Football Leaue
roster llmlt of 49.
Gregg said Jack Thompson wlll
be the No. 2 quaterback behind Ken
Anderson. Turk Schonert will be
No.3.
Gary Burley wlll be the backup
nose tackle behind Wllson Whitley;
Charles Alexander Is backup ful·
!back to Pete Johnson, and Mike

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

' upset of Navra·
NEW YORK (AP) - Martina ShriVer's shocking
Navratllova's dream of a tennis Wova, the world's ·No. 1 l'llllked
Grand Slam lies In rulns, smashed player who was a step away tmn a
to bits by ber doubles partner, Pam Grand Slam alter~ the AIIIShrlver, and an ailment called trallan, French and Wimbledon U...
toxoplasmosis.
ties In the laSt 10 months.
. .
Navratllova, playing the hottest
"It was the most dlsappolntlne
hand in tennis with victories' In 68of loss, but not the most bitter," Nav-1
69 matches, came up short again$! raWova saki of her match· with
Shriver In the U.S. Open, losing loti, Slll'IWr. "I'm glad It was Pam and
l-6 (7·5), 6-21n an erpotlonal, pulsat· not anybody el$e.lt I have to lose, t
lng quarterfinal.
prefer that It be to Pam. I wish she
Then the two women1 turned the could be more happy about it. It
center court at the National Tennis was llkeshewassorrythatshebeat
Center over to a pair of old adver- me."
sarles, Jlmmy Coqnors and rue
. Shriver said the · victory was
Nastase. Connors prevailed 6-3, 6-3, ,..:;..so~mew=:.::ha::::..tbl=tte:.::rswee.:...._u_or_her
__. _
6-4 and Nastase wound up with a
$1,!XX) tine lor his night's work.
In the quarters, Connors goes
The Daily Sentinel
against Rodney Harmon, a 6-4, 4-6,
6-3, 3-6, 7-6 (7-1) upset winner over
IUSP81-I
,
AIMvllloatiMIIItlnledla,lw.
eighth-seeded Eliot Teltscher.
The other men's quarterfinal
PubliMht!d every a~:rtemoon.. Mondlty ~h
Frllltty. 111 Court Sltwt, by lilt 0111u v.n.,
matches Argentina's Guillermo VIPublilhinK Con1p1ny • M:uJtilnedill, Inc:.,
las against Tom Gullikson. Both adPom.roy. Ohio ~7111. vtz.llll: S...•ontfcluto
potda~t ptt!d 11t Pomeroy, OhJ11.
vanced Tuesday, VUas recovering
after dropping the first two sets tor
Memll&lt;r: Th! Autllilled Pr.,., lnlllnd Dill·
ly Preus AuoclaUon and lht Amfric11n
a 3-6, 4-6, 6-3, 7-6 (7-4), 6-3 victory
New!papt::r Publlfh.:ra Auociltioo, Nllillfllll
over 12th-seeded Steve DentDn, and
Advertl1in~ Rt!:pretent•tive. Branhlm
Nenpapcr S.lt:t~, 733 Tttird Avenut, New
GuUikson with a 6-4, 6-3, 6-3declsion
York, New Yurk IOU7.
over Chile's Jamie Flllol.
P06TMASTER, S.nd add,... to1!te DMIIy
In women's play, second-seeded
Sfnlinel, 111 ~rtSt . , Purncruy, Ohlo0769.
Chrts Evert Lloyd advanced tD the
SUBSCRIPTION RATEII
quarterfinals with a 6-4, 6-3 victDry
By Carrier or Mvtor llolte
over No. 16 Zlna Garrlson. But that
Ont! wet!k .. .. .. .. . . . . .. .. .. .. . .. . $1.00
On&lt; Monlh .............. .. ...... . $Mil
match was almost forgotten in

·'
I

Greg Taylor W8J named player of
week by the Melp Conaty
Jaycees. Greg II a member of the
Meigs Marauder Foott.111141uad.
Meigs played at bome agaiDit
Belpre Friday DlgbL Belpre woo
ZlloD.

.

Lol Anadtl
AU.nlll '·
San Dlrgo
Sin FranciJco
OocinnaU

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PltlllKITJh 9, New York 5
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San Fn.ncllco 3. AUanta 2
Mootrftl 7, St. LoWs 4
HotutmlSan.,....l

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Phllldtlp!.W. !Carlton 18-91 at Chicago
INoles 8-111
New York IOwnbey B-2 1 at PittsbuTRh
IRoblniOn 15-81. tnl
San Deto !Show 11).41 al Ctnclnnatl
/Past~ 8-IOt, 1n1

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IFonch 13-8) , lnl

San Franclaco at Hcwton
San 01tt1o at Cincinnati, tnl

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78 8l
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Olkaao

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9-8

19~

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29

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Whole Fryers.......l!~
BOCKU
_ $
49
Cube Steak....•...t!~ ••

USDA CHOICE

ROUND STEAK ..••.•...•••.•..•... ;~~.S1.99
SLICED

PORK STEAK ........................~·.!-1.39
CHOPPED

SIRLOIN PATTIES .•..•....•••••.••L~~.~1.79

at C'l('yeland !Whit-

tWhin MI. tnl

Kan&amp;U City tBhat "-U·91 at seattle
t8eeltie 8-10l,lnt
1'11nda1'• GIUllft
Bait~

·

at Cleveland. tnl

M.Uwaukee at New York. til \
Only games K'hedllltd

Transactions

_._..
IIASEILUL

MILWAUKEE

HARTLEY SHOES

¢

Baltl11'1!ft IPalmPI' 12-31 at New York

:= R.e&lt;..
•.." ... f'lclllc
"•

Hartley Shoes l.ocafad In the ·
Upper lfoclr In Pomeroy

GRADE A

tHO"'o'f'U 1).1), (Ill
MlnnetOta !Casttlk. 8-U! at Texas
lHone)'CUtt S.Bi, In)
Detroit tUJdW' 9-71 at MilwaukeE'
tMcClurt 10.71. tnl
CNcago !Dotson 11).11 ) at California

*

1 u\.SA

1~91

Boston (1\ldor

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12~

.474

.&lt;14

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Jon 2·21. fnl

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!Corli'O)I 0-{)J

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•••

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12
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83
IB

MilllEWta 8, Texas 1
Milwaukee 4. Detroit 0
Chicago T, Callfornla 4
Toronto l, Oakland 1
Seat~ 5. Kansas City 2
W......,..aGames
Toronto tE~tnn Ml at Oakland

~

•

1

•v..

.m

Clevfland 5, Boston 4, 10 Innings
Baltimore 7, New York~

..••

!

6

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•••
•
business. All are easv to operate.
smokeless and oelorless In
aperatton,satetv·testeG and llstEa
bV Underwrtters LabOratories.
Get a 99.9% return on your heating
Investment see all Of our Kero-sun•
omn1 portable heaters toc:tav.

"'
!!&amp;

MJilMS)(a

3
:•..
•

-

m

Seattle
Ooldand
Texas

~

OUALITY NEVI: Ill OOE8 OUT OF STYLE.

n 64

MIXED

Fryer -Parts ......... ~ ..

Game~

WLN.GB

I

inch Full Grain
Ll!ather Boot, Double Out·
sole, Stacked Heel.
Available in Tan Smooth.

at Allanla

AMERICAN LEAGUE

•

14

~101

tNiekro 14..31, tnl
Sail Frandloo Hlaltdaker 9-71 at
HO\lSton !Nk!lao 14·91, In I
Mcntreal (l..N 11-Bl ilt St. LouLs

Loll Angelei at Atlanta, In I
OnJy pmes !CI'IedWed

••

MASON, W.VA.

78
113

-·-

Houstoa

••
••
•••

STORE HOURS
Mon.-thurs., Sit. 9·5

,._,

Pc!LGB
..562 -

-6l
"

New Yon

l

PICKENS
HARDWARE .

Simply punch out lhe pertorated pOrtions
• on the game ticket to reveal your game
markers. Match the mari&lt;ers to the squares on your
collector card and you could be a winner. Some
markers say "You Qualify for Grand Prize
Drawing(s).' If you oblaln one ol these markers.
you are eligible to enter the Grand Prize
Drawlng(s). For more details. see the back of your
collector card .

.

TJ6l.a\il
1'4 &amp;f
.M8
311..
74 "
.SJI
3~

Plttlburah
ClUe. .

... j.

•

2

~

'nd ..,._

I

n eo

PIUiad&lt;lpiUa
Montl'ftl

13Weeks .. ... . .... . ... •. ' T .. .. $14.04
26 Wc(•k.'l . . . .. . .... . 1 ~~ , : .. . . . . . $27,30
$2Wt't'k.'i . . .... . ..... "· .1 ...... .. . $51.48
Oulsldt Ohln
J ~Wt 'l 'b ..... . ... . ....... . .... . , $15.21
2fi Wt•ck.'l .
. . . ..... . . .. , . . . . . $29.64
52Wt•t•k." .
. .... . .. •, : ... ... . . $56 .21

KERO-SUN"HEATERS SN1! YOO
MONEYWHUTHEYKIIPYOOWARM.

•

WL

99.9% RETURN
ON INVESTMENT

liT 99.9% RIEL EFFICIENCY,
KERO-SUN° OMN PORTIIBLE
HEATUS COST '100 JUST PENNIES
PER HOUR TO OPERATE.
ObVIouslv, vou don't like to see vour
neattno dollars wasted. so get a
heater that's VIrtually waste·free-a
99.9% fUel·eflldent Kero-sun•
omnl pOrtable heater. lllearJy all ttle
monev vou Spend on fUel returns to
you as heat. Ana It costs just pennies
per hour to operate.
Tllere are omnl portable kerosene
heaters tor I!Very kind 01 home and

--

St. Loulo

MAILSU~~
h•W!.OIIAD ;, I

A name you can trusl
At a price you can believe.

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SEPT. 11. 1982

'

·~..

No ~ut»k· riptions by ll\fl}l ~niUtXHn toWI\IJ

PH. 992-2342

Plclt up a FREE game ticket and collector
• card at Super Vatu. (lllo Purchase
Necessary.) You can aiSG get a free game ticket
ancllor collector card (please specify) by mailing a
self·addressed, ·slamped envelope to Fabulous
Fortl.ole ol Prtzas, Free C&amp;rd and Ticket Request.
P.O. Box 26272, Birmingham, AL 35226. Use this
address for tlcl&lt;el and card requesls only. Limit one
tld&lt;et per requast, one request per person per day.
Each request must be mailed separately.

THE ODDS ...

Majon

wht-rt home nt:rit:r :~e[Y'jl.~t~vallt~ble.

Middleport, OH.

1

Scoreboard

Sub:«:ribtn not \.lt!:iirinl( to' PlY Ow carrh.'f'
nwy rt:mil in atlv"nt.'t' diret.'l \t) The '[)MIJy
S.·ntint•l IJil 111 3, 6 ot U monlh biiUdJ. Cr:~it
will bt· ~iv~:n l'tmier et~l:h mynlh. I ~·

liS N. 2nd Ave.

We'll probably play both of them.
If you sit one guy dawn completely,
especially an offensive llnennan, be
loses Ills edge," said Gregg.
The cuts included nine-year veteran defensive back Dick Jauron,
two second-year men and six rookies. Jauron missed aU of last sea·
son and halt of the ll9J season with
a knee Injury. He had joined the
Bengals In 197ll after playing five
seasons with the Detroit Lions and
led Cincinnati in Interceptions in
1979, when he fiad six. '

HERE'S HOW TO PLAY

NA'nON,\L LEAGUE

BREWERS-

Bob·SkubE', oultle'del'. from VaN.'OJV('f fl
Cout l . r -.
NEW
YORK
YANKEESR.e&lt;atled
Stew Balboni. nrst bumlan; r.:u. Mat·

tlrst b&amp;llemaii.()UtftMder. Mlkt&gt;
Patwnon. outndder; and Cur1 Kaulrnall.

tllgl:y.

pkher:

ftCin Colurnbul

ct

tile lntl.'r·

nattonali..Hglle.
N-lap

...

ATLANTA

BRAVES-Purchast"d

rontnll1 d Crall{ McMIU'tl"y, pi1Cher.
trun Rlct\n'YJnd at the Jnternauonat

'-""·
CINCINNATI

NEW!

•·

·

·

.......- . f&gt;un « ...
~· .I.JiodaUCJn. •
· NEW YORK METS-Act:tvated Walty
a.dunan. lnftelder, and Jolin Sleerm,

cafdw.

,

·

'

PITTS.IlURGH
PIRATESActivated •
O.w Parter. outfleklft'.
M8EftiAIL

·Dinner $3.49

~

..
__._

~·,

IirnloJT

.

~ Et«ar

Jones. cenler to a ont-)181' CCiltncf.
•
fOOIIW.L
ATLANTA
l3l1an

Twenty tender shrimjr-served chilled ·
In the shell-with fresh cole slaw · . · ·

;

CHICKEN of the SEA

¢

Chunk Tuna ••••••••••

WHITE

SEEDLESS GRAPES ••••••••..•... ~~-. 69e

6.50Z.CAN

BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK .................... ~~~T!~:~~·.. $1.59

•

FALCONS-Walv~d

-Jefl,l&lt;anlo.- - OJid
.. "'
~
f &gt;un

end creckers. It's e cool and

KRAFT

PARKAY MARGARINE ..•.• ~~-. 2/$1

.

Macaroni &amp;Cheese::·.

SILVER BRIDGE
SHOPPING
PLAZA
.

.

~~liner

Wade -

caao White SOl to compliN' thf, tmde for
Jim Ktm. pUctwor. CaUed,up BW Sdlfr.

20-Pc. Boiled ShrimP.

---=--:--,-;---~!
..... ~,.,. •

REDS-Retetwd

INn! bulomalt.
ud Leo Garda. outllelder. from ~ Cbl·
-

refreshing summertime treat.

EAR, NOSE &amp;·THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

PlAYER OF, '11IE WEEK-

PRICES
Dai ly .... . .. .... ..... ..... . ... U Cents

'

IN OUR GRAND PRIZE DRAWINGS!

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY•.0.

SINGLECOPV

DOWNING.CHILDS
INSURANCE
AGENCY

•3,000 CASH!

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Ont!Yt'"r ... . ..... . .. .... . . ...... . $)2.80

Obrovac wlll shift back from guard
to tackle as a backup.
Gregg, however, bas not decided
who wlll be the regular left guard:
Dave Lapham or Glenn Bujnoch.

OR

STORE HOURS:
Mon.·Sal 8 am-10 pm

FLA VORITE ICE CREAM ... ~~~~-. $1 19

I
I

OHice Hours by Appointment Only
I

'"t"' ~ ~

'

CALL (614) 992-2104
or (304) 675·1244

r
I

1

'

.DOG FOOD

3~

. 25LB. ~AG .$

Limit One Per customer
Good On At Powell'.s
ofter
11; 19&amp;2

FLAVORITE

W!AXWELL HOUSE .

NORTHERN

INSTANT COFFEE

TOILET TISSUE

lOOZ.

$399

4 ROLL PKG.

- Limit One Per customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer
•11, 1982

••

•

• ••

.

99¢

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Rowell's,
Offer EJ~pires Sept. 11,1982

•••••

SUGAR
SLBS.

$}59

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's.
Offer Expires Sept. 11, 1982
•

•••

�Page

6

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport church plans revival
Revival services will be held at
Middleport Church of the Nazarene
beginning Sunday and continuing
through Sept. 19. The services wiU
begin Sunday morning at 10:30 and
each evening at 7. Rev. Jay B. Budd

Budd

will be the special speaker.
Extensive education . and el·
perience have prepared Rev, Jay B:
Budd for a ministry in full-time
evangelism. Budd was born near
Parsons, Ka11811B, but spent most of
his youth on the fann near Twin
Falls, Idaho. After accepting a call
to preach, be went to Northwest
Nazarene College, where ·· he
graduated in 1944 with a major in
religion. Mr. Budd continued ~1119
preparation of ministry at Cenllial
Baptist Seminary. When Nazarene
Theological Seminary operied in
1945, he transferred and r~elved the
Bachelor of Divinity degree from
N'l'Sinl948.
·
Rev. Budd pastored Nazarene
churches In Cheney, Washington,
and Lebanon, Celina, Williamsburg
and Johnstown.
Rev. Budd and his wife, Lorene,
reside in Reynoldsburg, Ohio. They
have four children, ail serving in
some type of mlnistry. Rev. Jim ·
Broome, pastor of the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene at liM Beech
Street, invites the public.

Missionaries speak at churches
Rev. and Mrs. Dale Stotler,
•• . • .missionaries to the Republic of
•• $outh Africa, currently on furlough
· • And holding services in churches
•• • :tcross the United States and
•.; • ;91nada, will be at the Chester Chur·
ch of the Nazarene Friday at 7:30
p;ro. and at the Middleport Church
Oi"the Nazarene at 7 p.m. today.
: Rev. StoUer is a graduate of
Jtastern Nazarene College where he
~ed an A.B. Degree. He also
l'(ceived an M.Dlv. Degree from
lfazarene Theological Seminary in
·~nsas City. Patricia StoUer earned
ali R.N. Degree from Indiana School
cil:Nurslng and an A.B. from Eastern
5azarene College. Before
Qiissionary appointment, the
stoUers pastored in Upstate New
York and Pennsylvania.
:The Stotlers were the first
Nazarene missionaries to work
among the Venda tribe near the nor·
them border of the Republic of South
:; • tJricJ!. Rev. StoUer has had the
· ¥' responsibility of planting churches
. and giving organizational direction
• • • • fer his pioneer work. Other duties
• • liave included field S~day School
:Curriculwn, supervisi&amp;l\ of the Nor·

WEDNESDAY
DUNCAN Family, Gospel
. singers from Tampa, Fla., will he
· featured at the Long Bottom
·United Methodist Church, Long
Bottom, Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
There will be no admision charge
but a freewill offering will be
taken. The pubic is cordially invited to attend. For additional in. formation contact th Rev .
Richard Thomas at 667-3960.
. - MIDDLEPORT Amateur Gardeners Club will meet Wednesday
at 6:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
. David Cwrunins for a picnic.
. Family and guests are welcome.
: PAST Councilors Club will
· meet Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the
lodge hail not at the home of Betty Roush. Mrs. Roush and Marcia
Keller will serve as hostesses.
; A meeting will be held in the
. · Southern Elementary Schoollun- ch room 3:30 p.m. Wednesday,
: Sept. 8, for girls in the first,
second and third grades, interested in becoming a Brownie
scout. Girls from Southern and
. Letart grade schools and their
parents are encouraged to attend. Forrns should be returned
at thattime.
SYRACUSE Church of the
Nazarene monthly missionary
meeting will be held Wednesday
at 7 p.m. A film on life in Mexico
will be shown. Four members
will go to Mexico to help build a
new church . Every one is
welcome to attend.

thwest District, and book sales
manager. This past tenn Rev .
Stotler served as District Superintendent of the Venda Pioneer
District, as well as missionary advisor for the two other districts.
The Stotlers have three chlldren,
Christy, Heidi and Jonathan.

Calendar
POMEROY - Rita Cloyse will be
the guest speaker at the Sept. 9
meeting of the Women's Aglow
Fellowhip meeting to be held at the
Meigs IM. Dinner will be served at
7 p.m., followed by the speaker at 8
p.m.
A PRECEPT A Beta Beta
meeting will be held Thrusday,
Sept. 9, at 6:30p.m.
POMEROY - Southern Band
organizational meeting at 7 p.m.
Thursday at Southern High band
room; all interested studenta and
their parents are Invited. Those
who cannot attend should call
Director Van Reethat949-2600.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Weekend
revival at Nease Settlement
Church Friday, Saturday and
Sunday. W. T. Smith will be the
evangelist. Services will he at
7:30p.m. nighUy. The public is invited to attend.
POMEROY - Mary Shrine 37;
Order of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, Friday, 8 p.m.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Refreslunents will be poUuck.

SATURDAY

LAUREL CLIFF Free
Methodist Church, nMual Sunday school picnic, Royal oak
Park, Saturday, with games to
begin at 4 p.m. and dinner at 6
p.m.
LONG BO'I'rOM Conununity
· Association will hold a bake and . . - - - - - - - - - -......--1
rwnrnage sale Wednesday at the
Long Bottom Community
Building beginning at 10 a.m.

TIIURSDAY
SYRACUSE -' Workshop for
all township clerks will be held
Thursday at Syracuse Municipal
Building beginning at 9:30 a.m.
Reservations may be made by
calling Mrs. Shirley Johnson at
843-2105.
RUTLAND - Skating Thursday from 7:30 p~.to 10:30 p.m.
ter. Children
11t Rutland Civic
$1 and adults
your own
skates.

,2. ,.

MEIGS Band Boosters will
meet Thursday in the band room
at the high school.
ROCK .SPRINGS Grange, 8
·. p.m. ThursdaY at the hall. !
· H!lrrisonville to vlait. ElediOII ~
officers.

- ·

Meigs County organizations hold meetings
Aqult Bible Class
Adult Bible Class of St. Pa,)ll
United Methodist Church met Aug.
31 at the church In Tuppers Plains
with 1&amp; persons attending.
Rev. Richard 'lbomaa conducted a
lesson on I Samuel:U and 25. Group
singing was led by Mrs. Betty
Chevalier. Songs Included "The Old
Fashioned Meeting,'' "I Know I
Know," "I'll Be Listening," .and
"Victory in Jesus."
Mrs. Evelyn Spencer, class
president, conducted the ~usiness
session. The purcha11e of lirilestone
for the church parking lot was
discussed. James Stout, trustee
chairman, aMounced that the debt
on the building fund has been
reduCed to $7,900 with hopes for
erasing all indebtedness by the church hornecornlng in October, 1983.
The U.M.W. has disposable dust
cloths for sale at '1.25 for 50 cloths.
The September meeting will be a
hayride and wiener roast at the
home of JQhn and Unda Damewood
on Sept. 28.' It will be open to the entire church. The Thanksgiving dinner was tentatively dlscuased for
Nov.9.
Following entertslnment led by
Mrs. Unda Oam~wood. refreshmenta were served by Mrs.
Chevalier assisted by Mrs. Hazel
Barnhill and James Stout. Grace
was offered by Rev. Thomas.
Present were Mrs. Mildred
Brooks, Mr. and MrS. Chester
Gorrell, Miss Unda Gorrell, Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Stout, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer, Mrs. John Damewood, Mr.
James Stout, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhill, Mrs. Edna Hannon, Mrs.
Edith Harper, Mrs. Betty Chevalier
and Rev. Richard Thomas.

Wednesday, September 8,1982

Various events planned for September at Meigs churches

The schedule wlll be Monday night Historical Society and partially sup- cates from the Cincinnati conven·
at Five Points at 7:30, Tuesday mor- . ported from tbe interest received tlon they attended recently.
They are Unit 39 Pomeroy, cit·
ning st Mason at 10:30, Tuesday from O.A.G.C. Contributions are for
atlon
for promoting unit history;
night at 7:30, and Thursday morning educational purposes.
citation
and second place for public
Victor H. Rice Fellowship Fund at
at Five Poinla at 10:30.
relations;
citation and third place
Ohio State University - the interest
for
poppy
pubUcity
scrapbook; .!$
from this fund is used by worthy
ation
for
contributions
made to
graduate students for further
Eluwa
School
for
'Deaf
and
Blind; '
Chester Garden Club met at the education in the botany field.
cert11lcate
and
second
place
for
junOhio
State
University
Horticulture
home of Mrs. Phil Kelly Sept. I with
ior
book
or
prayllrs;
award
for
17 members attending. Roll call was Scholarship - This was set up fi~e j
promoting
unlt
history;
and
ell·
answered with members showing a years ago so the interest. from this
flower from her garden in Butterfly would provide scholarships to two atlon for unit activities.
·Mrs. Chester Wella won third
colors. Devotions were presented by third year horticulture students.
place
for the poppy scrapbook; J)o.
fund
Public
Beautlfication
a
Macel Barton with a message from
rothy
S. McCullough won the
used
to
promote
beautification
of
the book of Helen Steiner Rice.
trophy
lor best junior activities in
plantings
at
various
·
locations
A report on the State convention
the
Americanism
program and sewhich was held In Colwnbus in throughout the state.
cond
place
for
the
press book.
Thank
you
card
for
sunshine
gift
August was given by Betty Dean.
Unpaid
membership
dues should
which
was
taken
to
Ralph
Frank
was
Clubs in the area were responsible
be
paid.
read by Betty Dean.
for the centerpieces on the tables in
Refreshments were served.
the dining area at the convention.
Small wooden milk stools were
Hostesses were Lois Kelly, Janet r.:==========~
Koblentz and Clarice Krautter.
made with arrangements of flowers
on each. These were also sold to
member.i attending tbe affair.
Several of the members of Chester
Garden Club were awarded blue ribbons. Members attending were
Pauline Ridenour, Virginia Chadwell, Janet Koblentz, Pat Holter,
American Legion Auxiliary Post
Betty Dean and Sheila Curtis.
39
members met Aug. 24 at the post
A detailed and informative
home.
The auxUiary presented a
program was presented by Mrs.
nag
to
the Chrtsttan School in
Harold Knight. One of the many hobCheshire.
bles of Eleanor, retired teacher
Veda Davts read seconll reading
from the Meigs and Chester schools
or
the budget, the third to be read at
area, is the study of butterflies. She
the
September meeting.
presented this in a way that took the
The
post wUl hold a picnic Sept. 1.2
group through a visual journey of
at
1
p.m.
at Middleport Park. Those
the Monarch butterfly. She
attending
should take a covered
displayed aU four stages of developdish
and
table
service.
ment from the minute egg found
Rought
and Catherine
Ellen
only on leaves of the milkweed plant,
Welsh
brought
citations
and certifl·
to the UIUe white caterpillar and to
• Cake DeCorating
the final emergency from the
• Instructions And Recipes
chrysallls which Ia green with tiny
• New, Exciting Products
gold specks to the Monarch which is
196 ful~color pegM. See many new
JOld and brown In color.
Yearbook Item• In otock no.wt ·
Eleanor spent hours capturing all
Only ·
of this procedure on camera and she
BASHAN - A tool and
Get Yours
presented each ol the details in
miscellaneous auction will be
Today!
~~~-l
slides to the group. Specimens of
held at 7 p.m. Saturday at the
each development from the egg to
Bashan Fire House under the
sponsorship of the Bashan Fire
the butterfly was shown in jars.
Twlla Buckleye, president, read a
Department. The ladles aUJtiliary
communication regarding special
will sell homemade lee cream,
funds sponsored by Garden clubs.
cakes, pies, hot dogs, sloppy joes,
Members are being urged to donate.
soft drinks and coffee beginning
',
There are four special funds which
at 6:30p.m.
Rl. 7, Tuppen Plains,' Oil.

Chester Garden Club

The Duncan F&amp;nliy, Gos~l
musicians from Tampa, Fla. will
sing Sept I at long Batt~ United
Methodist Church at 7:30p.m.
"Rally Day" will be observed at
Chester United Methodist Church on
Sept. 12. A church-wide potluck dinner is set for 12:30 p.m. The af-

ternoon service will begin at I :30
p.m. and will feature music by
"Russ and tbe Gospel Tones." Tlie
public is invited.
The monthly meeting of Meigs
County Council on Ministries of
Meigs United Methodist Churches
will be Monday, Sept. 13, at the Mor-

se Chapel United Methodist Church
near Racine at 7:30p.m. The County
Youth Council wiD also meet at that
time.
The aMual homecoming of AHred
United Methodist Church is set for
Sunday, Sept. 12. A basket dinner is
planned for noon with an aftern_oon

program at I :30 p.m. featuring
"Harmony" from Racine.
The "Bible Bowl" for Meigs Youth
is set for Sept. 26 at 2 p.m. at the
Flatwoods United Methodist Church. The quiz will cover I and II
Corinthians. For quiz sheets, youth
leaders may contact County Youth

Coordinator, Rev. Mark Flynn, at Paul's United Methodist Church,
94&amp;-2895 or Mrs. Fay Sauer, parish Tuppers Plains, will be Oct. 10. A
director, at 992-7400.
fellowship dinner is plaMed for
The Uhrig Brothers Quartet from 12 :30 p.m. and the Service of praise
Chillicothe is scheduled to sing Oct. 3 is set for 2 p.m. Guest musicians will
at Long Bottom United Methodist be "The Angelaires" from LaoChurch at 7 p.m.
easter.
The annual homecoming of St.

American Legion
Auxiliary

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY
Lll' t1

•ead•l\

~

•tem
~

\nc\ud\R9

o! 11'\es.f adver1Ji«l ·•ems ·,s •eQu••ed 10 be
a.. a.tatHe I O&lt; wle "' .,acn K. •ove• Store e~cep1 as
no18d "' lt'lll ~ .. -M no rl.ln Out of at1 ac1Yertlloe(1

...,,u otte- vOu .,.our cha&lt;e ot , comp.a,eble .tern
available relteclrg ~'}8 ~~ w"•ng' o• a •••nchec•

......,,,1'1 ...,,11 tnl•lle yCiu to purcl'\ne lt'le advert•sed •tern at the
P'tt:f' ""'' "'' ~" l) d41'1'J

., . .~.*'

fOf

. COP'YIIGHT 1912 · THE KIOGU CO . ITEMS AND P'ltiCES
GOOD·SUNDAV . SEttT . 5. THilOUGH SATURDAY , SEI'T .

II . 1912.fjoj GALLIPOLIS AND POMEROY .
SOLD TO DEAUIS.

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Boneless Bottom
Round ·Roast

The PUblic Utilities Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No . 82-162-EL -EFC , to
review the fuel procure- ·
ment
practices
and
policies of the Columbus
~ Southern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent. ana relats&lt;l mat·
tare . This hearing Is
schedule&lt;l to begin at
9:30a.m. on 8eptsmber
13, 1982 at the offices of
the Public Utilities Cominlaslon, or Ohio. 375
South High Street. Col·
umbus , Ohio 43215 .

ANTIQUITY - A songfest with
the Old Time Religion Gospel
Singers, Springfield, will be held
at Faith Fellowship Crusade for
Christ, Rt. 338, at 7:30 p.m. Satur·
day. Everyone welcome. Pastor
is Rev. Franklin Dickens.

All intsreste&lt;l parties
w111 be given an opportunity to 'Qe hear&lt;l. Further Information may be
obtained by contacting
the Commission.

CAKES
FOR AU oCcAsiONS

CAROUSEL
CONFECTIONERY

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: David M. Polk .
Secretary.

Ph. 992·6342

CAKE DECORATING
SUPPLIES.

lb.

443-C Locust St., Middleport
MON.
VISION EXAMINATIONS
TUIS.
lHURS.
CONTACT LENSES
••••
t.12
CHILDREN'S VISION
,.,
Examinations br Apt.
PH. 992-6545

Kroger
White

' .

Fresh
Cauliflower

20-oz.

Lvs.

, Eckrich Jumbo 1·Lb. Pkg .

FRANKS ••••••••••••••••••••••• :.k~;.s1.89
Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••~~~.s1.49

Head

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE

Eckrich

Sprite, Tab
or Coca Cola

SMOKED SAUSAGE ••••••••• :~~ ••$2.09
Ohio Colby Longhorn

CHEESE .••••.•.•••• ~~:. '1.97

ONIONS .............~~~ 49'

Hb. Blue Bonnet

16 01 . Cello Pack

MARGARINE... ?.~~~'.e:~. 79•
CHEESE......... ~~.~- •• 11.89

~ Thompson White
··~ Seedless Grapes

3lb.

.

08

. JUMBO 12 SIZE

CARROTS....... .':~~~~. 2/49'

2·Ltr.
Btl.

4Lb. Red or Golden Delicious

APPLES .......... ~.~~. 11.19

6 Oz.

", .. ·'
~

.

DONALD DUCK ORANGE JUICE._ ........... 2/89'
16 Oz •.Booth's

BREADED FANTAIL SHRIMP............ ~?~.. '4.95
10112 Oz. Campbell's With Rice Soup

·CHICK_
EN, ••••••••••••••••• ~:::~ •.2/79'
ORANGE DRINK ••••••••••••••••••• 694
15 Oz.
DELMONTE SPINACH ••'.a.~s. 2/$1.19
14314

oz. Franco

.013

regu~r

4
AMERICAN SPAGHETTI
••••••
~.a.~
39
.

CHEESE, PEPPERONI,
MUSHROOM, SAUSAGE OR

20% OFF
SALAD SALE

Springdale
2% Milk

Fresh Made
Deluxe Pizzas

•

•American Potato Salad
•Mustard Potato Salad
•Creamy Shredded or
Sweet Cole Slaw
•Macaroni Salad

48

so

2$
12-lnch
Pizzas

'

New and used Band Instruments for rent' Full
time Band Instrument Repair Department.

KOOL AID •••••••••••••••••••• ;. ••• 6/994
.APRICOt HALVES ••••••••••••• ~.a:.89'

TOILET TISSUE········~··; ••• ::~~·. 89' ·
0

BRUNICARDJ MUSIC, INC.

Kroger DIHere

17 oz~ Del Monte

4 Roll Charm in

OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 1:00 P.M.
0

~.-d-r Ice Cream ........ . 'I,(~~ I.

USDA
CHOICE
$129

~t- .. ·

32 Oz. Wagner's

Join The Band

·4Country Club

\:. .
j,tt

12 or. I&lt; raft American
Singles Sliced Processed

JAMES L SCHMOLL, O.D.
Doctor of Optometry .

18

$

------------1~~~~~==~~==~

MIDDLEPORT - A flea'
market will be held at the Middleport Legion Park Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. under sponsorship of Middleport Boy Scouts.
Splices are for rent for $3 each
and anyone interested should call
992-3169.

Full Cut \
Round Stea~,

WE RESEIVI THE !tiGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIIS. NONE

ANN'S

LEGAL NOTICE

thepr\ce\

~

$3 '.

In the Aug. 31 Mason Sllnderella
cl8S8, six new members were taken
in and Pat Mossman received her 35
pound weight 101111 ribbon and cer·
tlficate.
·
A runner-up ribbon was given to
Barbara Roush. There was a tie for .
most weight lOIII between Jane John.
son and Shirley Tucker.
New fall classes begin next week
and Information may be obtained by
State ofNature
Preserve Wahkeena
- property
Ohio ,..
calling JoAnn Newsome at 992-3382. include

WED•
1·5

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Announcement

Slinderella

Stotler

Wednesday, Swplwmber 8,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.'

·1SOZ. Amour With 7c0ft

CORNED'BEEF HASH•••••••~~:. s1.09

•c:on c:mEtlla•s

low prices on quol.ty ·guoronteed prod1.,1~ti.' day-in bnd day--out . Over 100
d ifferent •lems. Produc;ts ~ith o nome you con trust and a quality grode
you con count on . ProducJs you cah depend on every day and priced os low
or lower than . "no nom&amp; 1oodS:;Jo~t Krover you know exactly what you' re
getltng when you buy''· not Whe~ yOu open it . And each and every "Cost
Cuuer .. item isOocked by Krogef~a. Sotiifoction Guarantee.

•SRYICI
It's Krover tt)at serv~s you· with a sPecial "customer-comes-first" pride in .
every employee, from coshiet to chairman of \he, board . Our ~ew .
el-.otronic. checkouts ore designed 10 make your shopping quick &amp; hassle· ·
free . ·And in every .deportmenl you'll lind, cour!li.~ us &amp; frle~dty. people
eaget' to ost,tSI you .
.
.
·
.· .;. ,,

.

0

t

•

•EYDYIAY LOW PIICIS
Kroger . stocks a complete selection of notional and reg•onol brand! at
everyday law price!, comparable to any supermarket in this area .

•sotfD C:IST c:IIIDi
Everyday low Prices on pantry staples. Save up to .tOo/o on Sooper Co!l
Cutters compared to other brand1 ot Kroger. (For some Sooper Cost Cutters
no olher comporoble brands oro slacked, ) Check the yellow P&lt;ite list of the
over .4CK) Sooper Co!t Cutter pantry staples. only ot Kroger .

•111-Sf... SIIf.liil
' You'll.fi.nd a wide selection Of household items in our general ! rutrchandise
'd~m-ent . No need to make special trips. to a hardware or deportment' ·

store-:
.~·

·

·

r

•TOTAL SATISFAc:TIOIIIIAIAIIIEE
Everything you buy at Kroger is guaranteed for your total soll.tfocllon
regardless of manufacturer. If you ore not soti!fied , Kroger _
w dl rep lace
your i1em with the some brand or o comparable brand or refund your
purchase price.

•YAIIITY
In Every Department. You con select from oYer 10,(0) •tems and OYer 200
kinds and_ cuts of rt:~eat, i_
n cludinglomb, Veal. Fresh Seafood and 7 lunds of
Ground Meo\ . You will olso'f[nd one of the widesl selections of fresh fruols
and vegetables, plus a Delicatessen . international foods section . gourmet
and diet foods, instiluflohol sires and more .

'

�- ----·
""Sentinel

Alabam a Democ ra ts forced
former Gov. George C. Wallace
Into a runoff with the lieutenant
governor In his bid for a record
fourth term, but the one-time segre.
gationlst said he was ready for a
tough !lght and pledged to serve
"the average citizen of both races."
In other primary elections Tuesday, F1ortda Republicans picked
II• e -term congressman L .A.
"Skip" Bafall.s, who drew campaign support !rom Vice President
George Bush, to lace Democratic
Gov. Bob Graham In November.
In the Republican contest to oppose F1ortda's Democratic Sen.
Lawton Chiles - targeted as
vulnerable by the Republican National Committee - state Sen. Van
Poole was forced Into an Oct. 5 runofi against Palm Beach County
Prosecutor David Bludworth.
Arlzona Republicans nomina ted
state Rep. Pete Dunn to oppose Dernpcratic Sen. Dennis DeConclnl,
and state Senate President Leo
Corbet to take on Gov. Bruce Babbitt. DeConcln! had token opposition, and Babbitt's only rtval was a
dead man whose name stayed on
the ballot - and who still managed
to poll 14 percent of the vote.
Connecticut's only statewide
primary was an unprecedented Democratic battle for the secretary of
state nomination . Patricia Hendel,
who claimed she was denied party
backing because she is Jewish, lost
to Julie Tashjian.
1n Alabama, wtth 74 percent of
4,U4 precincts counted, Wallace
had 316,138 votes or 41.2 percent;
Lt. Gov. George McMillan had
232,716 votes or 313 percent; House
Speaker Joe McCorquodale had
197,299 votes or 25.7 percent, and
former Gov. James E . "Big Jim"

Local units answered five calls
Tuesday, the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 1:01 a.m., Middleport went to
County Road 1 for Robert Molden
who was taken to Holrer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 6: eM a.m . went
to 5 ~ Liberty Lane for Albert Keeton who was taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital. Syracuse at
10: 24 a.m. took WIWe MWer !rom
Brown's Trailer Court to Veterans
Memorlal Hospital; at 12: 32 p.m.,
Middleport went to Park St. for
Barbara Smith who was taken to
Veterans Memorlal. At 10: 13 p.m.,
Middleport firemen went to Storys
Run where the trailer home of Eldon Stover was on fire and extensiVe damageS were Incurred to the
residence-

Two forfeit bonds

I

1982 '

Folsom and · retired attorney
Reuben McKinley divided the
remainder.
Although the 63-year·&lt;&gt;ld Wallace
faUed to get the majortty that would
have avoided a runoff, he drew surprtstng support among blacks, who
make up 25 percent of Alabama's
population. Wallace led McMillan,
a 38-year-old moderate who had
key black endorsements, In Macon
and Lowndes counties, both of
which have predominantly black
populations.
"I've never won an easy campaign In my life ... because I have
stood against special moneyed interests of th1.s state," Wallace told
300 cheertng campaign workers as
he and hl.s wile, Ll.sa, made a mid·
night appearance at a Montgomery
motel.
Wallace, first elected In 1962 as a
violent foe of Integration, told hl.s
supporters that ''Wbeniwasgover·
nor, I was governor of the average
citizen of both races," and said he
would play the same role again.
"We're going to have to fight to
wtn the runoff and we're going to
have to light to win In November,"
said Wallace, who 1.s paralyzed
below the waist !rom a 1972 assassination attempt and who has
seemed to most observers to lack
the lire he brought to previous
campaigns.
The winner ot the runoff will compete In November against M9ntgomery Mayor Emory Fobnar, a
hard·llne conservative who seeks to
he Alabama's llrst Republican governor th1.s century. The Incumbent
governor, Democrat Fob James,
did not run lor a second term.
In Flortda, Graham easily overcame two rivals In the Democratic
primary. W1h96percentofthevote
ln. the incumbent had 765,681 votes

where they "engaged In romantic
embraces for approximately 15 to
~minutes, after which they began
travelling toward the bedroom

area.''

.

F1em!ng reportedly told Investigators that as he walked In front of
Mrs. Fleming, he heard her
scream. He saw her taU to the floor
and then he was struck on the side
of the head wtth an unknown object.
He attempted to get up, but was
struck a second time, lmocklng him
unconscious for 15-30 minutes.
When he awoke, he found Mrs.
Fleming lying face down In a pool of
blood. He called the police and then
ran onto the apartment balcony,
calling for help.
Nothing was reported missing
from the apartment, although
Fleming's 1977 Toyota was gone. It
was located five days later In a supermarket parking lot In the Fort
Myers area.
Pollee said there were "23 major
discrepancies" In Fleming's story.
He cited eight Impact areas In the
apartment where Aurda F1emlng,
36, had been struck, presumably
wtth a frying pan, and the fact her
blood was aU over the apartment.
"If hl.s story was consl.stent wtth
the evidence and he had been
knocked down where he claims he
was, hl.s clothes would have been
soaked with her blood," Wallace
told the Fort Myers News-Press.
There was aLso evidence to show
F1emtng allegedly tried to clean up
the crtme scene. lnvest!gators
found men's undershorts similar to

,. Improper passing charge.
Fined $250 and costs and given
three day jaU sentences on charges
of drtvtng while Intoxicated were
James 0 . Sturgeon, South Point.
Sturgeon was aLso lined $100 and
costs on charges of drtvtng while
under suspension. Fined $10 and
costs on an Improper backing
charge was David L. Chase,
Middleport.

Bafalls drew 296,710 votes or ~
percent, to 46,395 votes or 14 percent lor laWYer Vernon Davids.
1n the Republican Senate race,
Poole had 142,035 votes or 42 percent; Bludworth had 100,482 votes
or 31 percent, and George Snyder, a
Sarasota businessman and former
Maryland state senate pi-esldent
had 90,'778 votes or 27 percent.
In Arlzona, wtth 73 percent of
1,350 precincts reporting, DeConclnl had 1CM,175 votes or 83 percent
to 19,956 votes or 16 percent for Car·
oline Kllleen, a conservationist
whose nickname 1.s the "bicycling
and recyllng lady."
DuM, a moderate backed by
most party regulars, had 65,770
votes or 56 percent of the total, to
defeat Dean Sellers, a conservative
Mesa real estate developer, wtth
49,392 votes or 43 percent.
1n the gubernatorial primaries,
Babbitt had 104,428 votes or 115 percent, but Steve Jancek, who died
last month, drew 17,839 votes or 14
percent.
Corbet took the GOP primary
wtth 72,023 votes or 62 percent to
43,390 votes or :rT percent for Glen·
dale auto dealer Evan Mecham.
Cormecticut's gubernatorlal and
senate candidates were decided In
party conventions. Democrat wnIIam O'Neill, who took otflce on the
death of Ella Grasso and Is seeking
hl.s llrst full term, will face RepubU·
can Lewis Rome, a former state
senator, In November.
Sen. Lowell Welcker, a R.epubUcan, will be opposed by Democratic
Rep. Toby Moffett.

those worn by F1eming In the trash
In the apartment, and a blood·
stained hand towel which they believe was consistent wtth a cleanup
attempt.
!nvest!gators aLso scotched part
of F1ernlng's story In which he said
he tried to defend himself. The arrest warrant said the tJuw wounds
on hl.s arms, for which he was later
treated for, appeared self-lnfilcted
and ''were not consiStent wtth defensive actions."
Police believe Mrs. Fleming,
who reportedly was visiting FlemIng's apartment for the llrst time
since their separation, was trying
to escape when It's believed Flem·
lng struck her several times on the
skull wtth a !rying pan and then
stabbed her repeatedly In the back.
According to court records, the
Flemings' separation was rife wtth
acrtmony ~d dl.sagreements over
custody of their two sons, Paul and
Clu1stopher. Disputes over property settlements and other details
prevented a final divorce decree
!rom being granted.
F1emtng, 58, practiced obstetrics
and gynecology at Holrer Hospital
In Gallipolis In 1953-ffl. He suffered
a stroke In the late 1960s and later
relocated to Flortda, where after
hl.s recovery, he received certification as a practicing psychlatrkt.
Aurda McKinney F1eming was a
1963 HarrtsonvWe High School
graduate who attended the Holrer
School of Nursing. A week alter the
murder, her body was returned to
Gallipolis and she was burled In
Pine Street Cemetery.

- --y--:

.,.-.......... -...... ···-o..-·
, ...-- •. ...·
..'"--"
. __

or 84 percent; Fred Kuhn, a Homestead businessman. had ~.626 votes
or 10 percent; and Bob Kunst, self·
styled spokesman for Flortda ho:
mosexuals, had 57,138 votes or 6
percent.

,,...

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~'""''- "

Registration for real estate prtn·
c!ples and practices classes given
through Rio Grande College In
Meigs County wW be held at 7 this
evening at the Meigs High School.
Realtor Hank Qeland wW serve 'as
Instructor for the course. · Anyone .
wtth questions may call 992-2259. ·

Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM will
hold a family picnlc Sunday, Sept.
12, starting at 2 p.m. at' the Racllle
Locks and Dam Park oil the West
VIrginia sicJe.
Meat wW be provided and thpee
attending _are to bring a covered
dish. All Pomeroy Lodge members
and their famllJes are Invited.

Memorial

Admitted-Charles Mash, Pmleroy; A1vlra Biqor, Syracuse; Jolm
Hale, J)ex1er; Linda Lute, Pmleroy; Barbara Smith, Pumetoy.

'

__ __-·- . . .

ORNAMENTS
SALE ON

.. .

LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has scheduled
for hearing Case No. 81-1433-TP-AIR, being In the
Matter of the Application of The Ohio Bell Telephone
Company for Authority to Amend Certai~ of its · . l
Intrastate Tariffs to Increas.. and Adjust tts Rates .
and Charges and to Change its Regulations and Practices Affecting the Same. Public hearings will be
held in Cleveland, Ohio on September 28, 1982 at
1:30 P.M . in the State Office Building, 615 West
Superior Avenue; in Toledo, Ohio on October 1. 1982,
at 1:30 P. M. in City Council Chambers, .3 17 Safety
Building, 525 North Erie Street; and in Columbus,
Ohio on October 4, 1982 at 1:30 P.M ., in the offtces
of the Commission 375 South High Street, Columbus,
Ohio. At those hearings, interested parties wil.l be
afforded an opportunity to present public tesltmony.

'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215or992·7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30-lfc

S&amp;W
G
UN,SMITHING

7571
Plan now to trim 10ur tree with
m~knit miniatures.
f1ll the branches of a
Christmas tree with impish dolls
and pets in many colo~. Knit
them of acrylic wo~t~ and stuff
lightly. fun lor a child! Pattern
7571 : easy directions.
$2.25 for each pattern. Add
504 each pattein lor pcmage
and handling . Sud to:
Allee ....
lnllc1alt Dept.
3t 7
The Daily Sentinel
(l..t " ,... - '
a. 1&amp;3, 114 a...
sta.; 11..
Yarl, IIY 10113. Prlllt 11Mdlw, Zlp, Pllllnl lito• •
Yes! Iwanttoseei!Miftcrafts, seed
me your new 1983 NEEDLECRAFT
CATALOG. 150 designs, 3 free
pattern1 On]yJ1.. 50
AU CWT lOOKS. .$2.00 udl
All ... lid
511$
. . Ill ,....
......

CARPET

NOW

Vinyl I Aluminum
Complete ouHer WO!k,
•·
complete remodelinr. fOOl.
inl at all types. Worlled in
• - l l l l 20 JllfS.

'""'"'

S~J~y~,oi,s.:rl~~~o~~fate
penalties and
:~~e~~~:r:J~ nor yel due
(9) 1, 8, 15, 22, 4tc
Misc. Merchandice

And Home Malnlenance
e Roofing of all types
es~i~
• Remodeling
• Free esllmates
e20 Yrs. experience
Ph. 94-9·2160 or 949·231-2
09,·1fc

au

f,.....

Call Barbara
Lawrence
992·3282
8·11·1mo.

1- Good Used Sears
Dryer Only SilO.

CENTRAL REALTY

We

tully equipped including dishwasher. Asking
·$32,000 .
3 TRAILERS - Can be used as add·ons, small

Kerosene .

Heaters '(9,300

1-Toot Bo• lor Pickup
Only $99.00

woodburning fireplace, Ph bath, hardwood floors,
well constructed nad insulated . Asking SJS.OOO.

Ph. 985-4269 or 985-082
Dewaynellvittiams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All makes and models

POf,1EROY
· LANDMARK
'V'o':

~·

Needs Mndymon. Asking $25,000.
3 FLAT ACRES - In Racine, Ohio. Owner Will help
finance . Asking $16,500.

'
RENTALS:
Brick home for rent in Letarl, Ohio, $275.00 a month .

Have

Room

The third is 10K35 (asking $35001 with 2 rooms, fur ·

Name _' _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE
Chester, Ohio

BTU) Only $162.95

business, or construction off ice. 2 trailers (asking
$4500 &amp; S55001 are lOx 50 with 3 rooms each. Furnace
&amp; central air. One has If, bath &amp; hoi water heater.

Ridge.

Trailer

Underpinning"

,.'

dining room and kitchen are spacious, k itchen is

nace, ce ntral air, 1h bath &amp; hot water heater .
HOME on approx . 2 acres. Basham &amp; Eagle

Have

~t' We

NEW LISTING - Located in Syracuse. This home
has an extra large tot and 5 possible bedrooms . The

Wrlle your own ad and order by mall with this
I coupon
. cancel your ad by phone when you get

,.

~·

•

NEW LISTING- MIDDLEPORT - ThiS 1'12 Slory

frame~home1 has been insulated, storms, and some

21. - - - - - 22.
23.
24. ·_ _ _ _ __

6.
7.

25. - - - - - 26. _ _;___......__

B.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
14.
15.

27 .
28.
29.
30.
. 31.
32.
33.
34.

16.

35. - - - -- - -

-------...:...........,._ _
-----,--;.._
----------''-----:---'-- · - ---..;.....:._

Mall This Coupon with Remltte._ce
The Dilly Sentinel
1f1 Court.St.
Pomeroy,

Oh. •s7"

For all your wiring
d
f
nee s;
urnaces
repair service and
Installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742·3195

remodelinA. Great potentlall Level tot, new ad·
dillon, great nelghb.orhooct . $19.900.00.
NEW LISTING-' F/IRM- NEAR POMEROY - A .
seclude~ 110. acre farm. Home ha,s had e•tenslve
remodeling •nslde, with huge living room, family
room, 4 bedrooms, 2 new fireplaces. Larg.- barn, 2
c~rgarage with workshop, 2 ponds, appro• . 30 ~cres ·
tillable. No neighbors. 564.'100.00.
·

I·

1
I

Oh . Rain or sh ine.
Garage sale by So H io
St atio n on Rt .7 Tup ·
persPiains _ Wardrobe, kit·
chen tabl e, 2 ca meras,
heatolator for fireplace . .40
channel CB , TV antenna ·
rotor, ca nn ister set and
clothes . Sept. 9 and 10. A lso
other arficles.

Par1 Beagle puppies .

repa ired.614·9'12·3955.
6 w eek. old kittens . Litter

1rained .614992·7406.

Por c h
sa l e Maxin e
M ic ha £&gt; 1s. L aure l Cli ft .
Sept . 9 and 10. Nice clean
baby clothing and m•sc.

ONE large box of misc .
items. mostly clothing, 304·

es~

m~

CHARLIE HATFtELo
Puppy 6 mos. old, male
Ge rm an Shepherd . Ca ll

9

HOUSE COAL
Pittsburgh No. 8 A

NEW liSTING~ OFF RT, 33 - Appro•. 11 acres,
moslly bottom land, house has had some
remodeling, 4 bedrooms. Barn, olher oul buildings.
Make us an offer!
RUTLAND~ Nice ranch with large living room, 3·4
bedrooms. equipped kitchen, full basement, large
back porch, and nice taying 2.29 ~cres of 'ground.
Can buy home completely furnished lor $.43,500 or
unfurnished lor $.10,000.
LETART- PRICE REDUCED S10;000t 'App~o•. is
'acres of beaulllut land. Approx. 20 acres tillable, 55
acres wooded .PIIsture, approx . 600 ft. river frontage, oreal river view! 3 bedroom house, new bath
and carp.llng. Barn, outbuildings: Oil and gas
nghls. . OWNER · MUST SELL I Reduced to
S52.000.00.

Mine Run (Strip)
Delivered Price:
POMEROY-SJI.OO 'Ion
MIDDLEPORT
AToNnD RACINE - $32.00
Meigs Co.-$31.00 Ton
(Plus Delivery)
4 Ton Minimum
~
c .o.D.
PH. 992·2280 or ~
992·2618
.;,

by ROBERTS

Starts Thurs. at 9 a.m . f ill 5
p .m .
Beh i nd
Rutland
Grade Sch. in white t railer .
Larg e- c lothes,
!l owers,
shoes.

Par1 Beagle puppies, 304·
675 5702.

u5 clean your
carpet or furniture .
*No soaking
*No Scrubbing
•NoShrinkage
Duractean gels your

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

Sizes start from 30x:24"

Utility Buildings
Sires from 4 to 6 and all
wood buildings 24K36.
lnsutaled Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rf. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph . 614·843·2591
6·15·

calls and snop

ice available.

8·13·1 mo. Pd .

614-992·2181

deep

GREEN couch, needs
upholstering, phone 30&lt;1 ·

down

thoroughly clean .

GREEN couc h , nee d s
upholstering , phone 304·

Yard sale Sept. 8·9 · 10. 24J
Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy .

Lost and Found

family . Baby c lothes. adult
clothes, playpens, &amp; lots
m orP. 9 :00.

675·7632.

Home or Business
CALL TODAY
· For Free Eslimate

6

1•7 67-3361

::::oo

-

C1lllill Ward

Ward's Ktybolrtl

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd~!·
Phone
1-(614)-992·3325

~37~

Visa

LISTING
home with extra
bedrooms, 1'12

Master c. 5·9·11&lt;

for a garden.
market lor

Between Cheshire &amp;
Middleport, Ohio

lNG - 7
ranch . Cryslal
large fishing lake .
of nearly level
family room, mod .
2 balhs, dining,
garage, city wafer, and
t more. $50,000.
NEW LISTNG - New
' kif., with dining and
· , bar. 2 bedrooms, balh,
gas circulator, clly
oul of all flOOds.

PRESENTS
Tucs.-Udils Nip!
All Oriou Rtdoctd to&lt; Wolltft

Lost · Red Irish Setter . Has

lags, Meigs Co. 25105. The

word diamond on tag .
Own er may c laim by
calling · Ph i l Fourney ·
Ravenswood News·304·273·

9333 .

304·675· 1640 or 675 ·5164 .

Sat. &amp; Sun. 4:00 p.m.-2:30 Lm.

Rent one,
' occupy the other · free.
Utilities are separale,
conveniently located .
Use as a tax shelter.
.Level lot only S27,000.
COUNTRY - 24 acres
91 fenced land wilh 2
bedroom paneled home.
. Modern balh and kit·
chen. Will take a !iood
offer.
1 ROOMS - 3 or 4 years
old, 2 tols, T.j:&gt;. wafer:
modern kitchen, . dbl.
pane wlndo'!'s, and
really nice and clean for
nuiPLEX -

PHONE 992·9~13
9·2· 1 mo.

A . . . . . . . . .. .··-

vrs., truck topper $25, fuel

men

misc.

women

&amp;

SALES &amp; SERVICE
u.s. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio

Authorited John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog

Deater
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·1fc

H. L WHITESEL
• Gutters
e Downspout ~
eNeworRepair

• Painting

FREE ESTIMATES

m isc. rain or shine, 4117
miles out Sandhil l Rd . Pt .

YARD sale, Thursday. 2627
Linco ln, Pt. Pl easant. rain
or shine .

Patio Sale Fri. sept.

101h.
Ex tra good clothes, also
childrens &amp; misc . 1097

Garage

ROOFING

Or .,

YARD sa le, Thursday,
Friday &amp; Saturday. 0 ·4.
2415 Li ncol n Ave . P t.
Pl easant . Good cn ildrens
clothing, &amp; mi sc.

Gallipolis,

Sale, Sept.

9 ~ 10

11.

9 10 5. BidWell Rodney Rd .,
second house on right off

Rt. 35. Ruth Circle esiden·
8
ce.

..

-- -·

- ·P ublic- Sale
&amp; Auction

Garage Sate women stacks Rick P ea rson , Ex ·
sizes 8-12, 10 gal. aquarium perienced AUCTIONEER .
Estatps, antiques, farm,
household. Li ce nsed Ohio·
WV . Buying anfiques. 304·

w ith · accessories, tovs.
Thurs ., Fri. &amp; Sal. Me

Cormick Rd.

713·5185, 773.-9185 .

Ph. 992-2791

Moving Yard Sale Metal
deleclor, golf clubs &amp; balls.
or949-2263
7·14-tlc dishes, clothes. toots, prom
dresses. 19() Brentwood
.L.;______...;;;;:;~jDr., Gallipolis 1 112 mites
from Jones BQYS. Friday
and Sat . Rain or shine .
,

Rocking

Ill waslltngt~ st:. Ravenswood, w. va. 26164
· Phone (304) 273-5855
•
MONTH OF SEPTEMBER

·
I

.

.

chair,

room

Golf Lessons. John div ider, curtains, bed·
spreads, quills, Avon,
Teaford . Chesler, 9hio.
tools, clolhlng, chain saw,

Finally Opening-Capco.
Anliques, collectables,
used furniture &amp; ap·
.
. Guns '
pllances. Something tor.
·Golf Clubs
Fishing Supplies\ everyone. 9:30 a.m.-4:30
~olden Retriever Boots scopes
p.ni , Mon.. Wed., Fri.
Till~
.
Traps
Other limes by ·apWeights
Boots
pointment. Buy-sell:Trade.
Weight
Benches
·
.
.
.
.
527 Fifth St.. Ivan . Powell
Res., Racine, Oh. 614·949·
. · , MUGH, MUCH ,ORE!
. .
2-485.
• Open t to•Monday lh'l-v Saturday

ANNIVERSARY SALE

chen cubbards of all types.
T abies, round or square.
Wood ice boxe s. Old desks
and bookcases. Wi ll buy
compl ete household . Gold,
silver, old money, pocket
watches, chains, rings, and
et c. Indian Artifac ts of all
types . Also buying baseball
ca r ds. Osby Martin 992

6370.

lS

fishing s~pplies, misc .

1

AIJcr.,on every Fri. night at
tt'le
rtford Commun ity
Center . Truck loads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
wel c ome .
Richard
Reynolds Auctioneer . 275 -

i. -= wi~ii!i:r• Bur=.:::.

WANTED TO BUY Old fur·

niture and Antiques of all

kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
446·3159 or 256·1967 in the

Yard Sale Sepl., 9, 10, 11. evenings.
Clothes. knick · knacks,
fishing -reels . Fairview
Ev•rgreen Rd . 1/2 mile out
of Evergreen .

~

School s Instru cti on

Kara te the ultimate in se lf
defence all private lessons,
M en, women, &amp; children .
Instru c tion thr u black belt.
Also avai l able Karate
uniforms puching and
k icki ng bags, and protec ·
fiv e equipmen t. Jerry
Lowery
&amp;
Associa t es
Karate
Studio,
143
Burlingt on Rd ., Jackso n,

Oh. Ca ll6 14·286·3074 .

W11nted to Do

18

L awn Mowing no yard to
big or smal l. Reliable and
.~~pen d ab le . For es timate

ca ll 446·3159 alter 6PM 256·
1967.
Trash co ll ectio n &amp; hauling .

WANTED to buy Winni e
the Pooh 1tems. Cu rfi ans,
quilts, shee ts, etc. phone

304·895·3456.

- Eftii«wment===_
----seJ'"Itps

Child Care in my
weekdays
unt i l
Ac r oss from Vinton
sc hoo l. Ref erence.

home
5PM .
grade
Vicke

Diddle, 61088·8832.
· - - - T - . - - -- - - -·

House Painting &amp; all types
of constru ction wo rk . Ca ll

446· 7783 .

II

Cle rk · typist · r ecep tion ist
for Doctors office. Part
ti me (27 hrs). Startin g at
$3 .40 hr. Send r esu me &amp;
ref eren ces to P. 0 . Box 909,
Gal l ipoli s. Oh 45631 No
calls.
Need

Ca ll446·4480.

3

people

to

Babysitting i n my home.
prefer days, Rodney area .

Call alter 5PM. 614-245 ·
9252 .

se ll

AVO N. Call4463358.
POSIT ION

Babysitting in my home .

446·0390 .

BABYSI TT1 NG in
home. 304-675 5479.

my

AVA IL ABLE

Fo s t er
G randp a r e nt .
Qualifications over 60
yea r s of age and annual in·
c om~
level below 5,390
Resonsibilities to assist in
teac hing and training of
handi ca pped children (~0
hours per week) . Contact
Guil ding Hand Sc hoo l (for

WILL do body work

&amp; odd
jobs. F or fr ee estimate ca l l

Jell's Body Shop. 304·675·
7995 days . 675 · 2207
eve nings.
CHILD care in my hom e,
full or pa rt time, behind

schoo l. 304-675·278&lt; .

Flnantlal

Adkins. 614·256·1650.
Inves t in the futu re, Invest
in y oursel f . Pinewood In ·
co m e expansion . For in·
for ma ti on ca ll J im, 446 ·

1343 .

21

Bu siness
O_p~o!J~I'!if~ .

LOOKING for people who
want to earn betwee n $500

a nd

$50 ,000

monthly

through thi s "newest and
fa st est growing company
in th e nation" . Ca ll 304·675·

1293.
22

HOME LOANS 1.4% f ixed
rate . Leade r Mortgage, 1·

S00·34 16554.

Attention

RN 'S ·Pomeroy

H.C.C . now has opening for
ful l and pa rt tim e RN for 3
to 11 and 11 to 7 shifts.
Upgraded salary and shift
differentiaL Cont ac t Nancy
VanMeter direc tor of Nur

sing. 614 ·992-6606.

Electronic Tech for TV
r epai r . Experienced only .
Part or possibly full time.

23

Profess ional
Services

C&amp; L Bookkeeping
Bookk eepi ng &amp; f ax service
f or all types of businesses.

Caro l Neal

446·3867

PIANO TUNING 8.
REPAIR Ca ll Bill Ward lor
appoi ntm en t ,
Ward's
Keyboard, 446·4371.

- =amWare ___

614 992 6259.

on right.

Teodora

BOGGS

clothes

Pleasan1 .
Yard Sale 6th thru ll1h .
Turn left off 35 on to 325. 1 I(,ARD sale Friday 10,
mile tu r n right on to Gar· .'~~turday 11. 10 ti ll .4 . •11
ner Ford Rd, second house mile out J er ic ho R d .

~.

Pomeroy·, oh.
Ph. 9'12·2174
7·26·11c

&amp; childrens clothing size 2·
3. Furniture and lots of

4 FamilY Yard Sate Fri . &amp; 3069.
Sat. 1 1/2 mile from
Cheshire on Rt. 554, 9·5.

Ht,,,,,.,r1r,,
ft.' I'&gt;

IGC

at
Birch
Ave
in
Meadowbrook Addition .

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

I

I{, ',i&lt;l&lt;i"·"

t.l

8 to 4: 30p .m . Follow signs

Oil turn. &amp; lank $100, some

P.ldiator SpeCiilh st
NA ·1 HAN

THUR SDAY September 9.

·

-- . Yard Sale
-- --- - - -·-·

II~~~=======::1;========~ Oh .

•

REMODELING - on
thiS house with new
cntmnev for 2 WOod·.
burners. New 2 rooms ·
with lull basement end
not too far from town on
. hwd rotld lor $30,GCI!I.

REALTORS!
11enry E. poland, Jr., GAl ........ , : . .. ., ttt-6191
Jean Trussell ........... , ........... , . , 949·2MO
Dottie S. Turner ·: , ..................... tf2·5m

Phone 949·2293
8·30·1 mo.

Farm Equipment

2:f)l) , ....-2:30 .....

l r~rqest Ri1dii1tor .

family . Baby c lothes, adult
c lothes, playpens, &amp; lots
more. 9:00.

Yard Sale Sept. 4·12. 9·5.
Juct . 554 &amp; 160 at Por1er. BIG yard sale Thursday
Girts clothes size intantto 8 September 9. Lots of adult

the

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Orlok I Drowo bch
Optnlloft •.fli.

to

We Specialize. In
Racine &amp; Syracuse
Sewer Hookups

g D\afiBetl II P1ict

Niall! of thailand.
C.., oot boot &amp;wlet milable.

Core

YARD sale 160 Park Dr .. 3

LOST · small short legs,
Poodl e dog , grayish bla c k,
chi lds pet, long hair , phone

35 Y rs. F. 11 pcncnn·

Wtt-Draft NtcM

All Orinu 11 P1ico
1111$ 11011111'$ BAND
1.-WolfiMid

Hea ter

ber Shop, Middleport 9923476.

Mother! Earn ex tr a money
by demonstrating our toy s
BIG yard sale Thursday·
&amp; gifts . No cash in·
September 9 . Lots of adult
vestmen1. No co llecting or
&amp; childrens c lothing size 2· d
eliv er ing . No se riv e
3. Furniture and lots of
cha rg e, no e&gt;Cperience
1
m isc. r ain or shine, 4 17
necessa ry . Call Fri endly
miles out Sandh ill Rd . Pt .
Toy Parties Now . Also
Pl easant .
bookin g pa rti es. Vickie

2589.

t&gt;~DI~TOI&gt;
Sf RVIU.
fr om th e Sm f' ll ('s t

Gold, silver, s ter ling ,
iewelry, r ings , old coi ns &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar·

379-2204.

M eadowbrook Addition .

Fou nd: Irish Setter, M id ·
dleport area, phone 992-

8·20·

--·--

applica1io'nl, P.O. Box 14,
Cheshire,
Oh 45670, 61067
8 to 4: 30p .m . Follow sig ns
at
Birch
Ave .
in 0102.

Reward SIOO. 61&lt;·742·2548.

Custom kitchens and
balhrooms. Remodeling,
add-ons, new homes,
plumbing, electric, siding.

-~--~- -~--

THUR SDAY September 9,

Run &amp; Beech Grove Rd .
Thursday, corner Gr ass

CONSTRUCTION

Dozer &amp; Backhoe Sl!rvice,
water, sewers, ponds;
foundations, reclamations.

CANDLELIGHT INN

all .city utilities.

S3J,50C),

NJRACTI NG.

REPAIR ,

YARD sa le 160 Par&lt; Dr .. 3

Lost Red Dachshund, 3
yea rsold, male. Last seen

8·ll ·lmo . pd:

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

ning of 51. Rl.l43. 614992
3859.

675·7632.

COMrLFH

~~.0::-'5 TUN&amp;ING

Yard sa l e Thur s. and
Frida y. Norm a n Hum ·
phreys r esidence. Begi n·

Let

carper

..

~-·

Richard Spencers, Tup
persPia ins, Sept . 9 and 10 .
9·5. Lava t or y, chair and
drapes. Also Macrame,
clothing.

Ml XE D Pekapoo &amp; Beagle
puppies. 304·675·3811 .

~~~~~-~~~

Pomeroy, Oh . Or 992 ·7760.

•

Friday. Sept. 9·10. 10 1o 4 OLD FURNITURE , beds.
p.m. 531 S. 2nd. Middleport. iron, bras s. or wood. Kif·

Electric range . Oven needs

eGas
• water Lines

BEDS· IR ON, BRASS. old
furniture, go ld, silver
dol lar s. wood ice boxes,
stone jars, antiqu es, etc.,
househo lds .
Compl e t e
Wr ite: M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,

Carport sa le Thurs. and

1 Beag le puppy abou1 10
wks. old . Call614·256·1654.

JAR
CONST'R'uc'TION
COMPANY

sma ll dog . Ca ll 614 256
1654.

surance Co . has offer ed
services tor f ire 1nsur ance
cove rag e in Gall ia County
for a lmost a cen tury .
Farm, hom e .Jnd per sonal
property CO\Ierages are
avai l ab le to meet in
dividual needs . Contact
Foster Lewis, agent . Phone

WAITR ESS. maids. bar
tenders &amp; c ler ks wanted.
Write qualifi ca tion &amp; phone
number to : Job Placemen t,
P.O. Box 102, Hender son,

wv 25106 .

JUST graduated &amp; unsure
about your fu tur e? The
Virginia
A rmy
w est
Nationa l GUard ca n help
you deci de. We are looking
for high school senior s &amp;
graduates to train in com·
muni ca tions ,
ad ·
min is tr a tion , s upply,
mechanics, &amp; many other
fi eld s. If you qualify you
may be el igible for an
en li stm ent bonus and
c oll ege
or
Vo · Tech
assistance. Be one of West
Virginia s best . For more
information, call 304·675·

3950 or loll free 1·800·642·
3619.

Jl

Hom es for Saie - -

In gr ound concrete pool on
2 acre lot . Also has a 3 bdr .
air conditi oned hou se with
full base ment , 2 WB
f ir epla ces, new carpet."
Would co nsid er
lowe r
valued property in tr ade or
will t 1nance with low down.
pay m ent and 10% interest .
Loca ted 123 Garfield Ave .

Call 446·1546.

Newer 3 bedroom home. 2
acres, ci ty schoo ls, patio, .
woodburner, bas ement,
nice por ch. Call.t46·2663 .
Bedrm . , •:1 acre.
basement, ci t y schoo l s,
co unty wa fer , 10 min . to

3

Ga llipolis .
Evenings .

216·734 ·3734
·

WANTED : Musicians

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

L a nd contract, $35.000 .
plus non rock group, 304· Cheshire Village Call 614· ·
367·7553.
675·5370.

TEACHING
opening

in

posilion
pre -school

3 bdrm . home 3 miles from
City . A ll ca r pe ted, manY

Must ex tras. $39,500. Cali 446·
Co. 3897.
Degree in early childhOOd
educalion or C. D. A. House and 10 acres of land.
childs

rreside

program .
in

Mason

credentials. Must hae car &amp;

valid driver· license. Apply
bY . Friday September 10.
1982 Child Famil y
Devetopemenl Program,
Southwestern Community
Aclion Council 1nc . .140 5th.
Ave. Hunlinglon, wv 304·
525·51S1.

Sa l e or r en t. New ley
r emodeled . 2 rooms· and
bath up. 4 rooms and bath
down . New gas furna ce and
gas hot wate r hea t er .

Located Mulberry Hg1s:,
Pomeroy . 614-992·2508 or
call collect, Columbus, 444·
8601 .

••

.-.: n __...,____,__::--_ _:._ _;:..,;,;;::=:JLJ

ll··.;.·--·--------~---·-·--·-·--

.....

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

PIANO

Reel Eltllte - General

20. - - - - - -

5 puppies pa rt Norweg ia n
Elkhound . Call ~ · 6632 .
· - - · - ·· - · Good water dog. snepherd
&amp; Collie, very intelligent,
needs good home in coun·
try . Call614·388·8506.

RNI Eltllto - Oonerol

PH. 843·2075

17.

~- -·- - - ·

Custom Pole Bldgs. &amp;
Garages
• Roofing Work
• Aluminum &amp; Vinyl
Sidings
15 y ars E erience
e
xp
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
Or 992·2282
8- 2~ 1""·

in

Yard Sa l e. Thurs. &amp; Fri .,
Sep1 9 &amp; 10. 244 Mulberry
Ave .• Pomeroy . Clothing,
odds &amp; ends; huge selection
paperbacks, Harlequin and
other romances , westerns,
mysteri es and hard back s,
all pr iced to sell .

sa lemayplaceanadin1hi s
column. There will be no
chargelo the advertiser. ,

--~====~~~~1
..- ML

Nancy Jaspers- Associate

NEW LISTING - IN POM!=ROY - Lot wilh oid
house, could be a trailer lot. Electric, gas, water
Sewer In near fulure . Wants $2, 500~00.
·

5.

All Makes

Antenna Installation

CALL US TO BUY OR SELL

18. - - - ' - - - 19, - - - - --

does not offer or attempt to
otter any other thing tor

eEiettricwork

Yard Sale. Sept. 10·11 . Ke n·
ny Rus.ell's, St. Rt. 338.

To give t o a good home one
bla ck pup py mixed breed.
about 9 wks . old. Wi ll be

Yard Sa le. Wed . &amp; Thurs. 9·
4. Rain Cancels. Eldon
Morris, Bai ley Run Rd.,
Pomer oy .

4

New
_extensive remodeling

niture, clothes. &amp; toy s.

Wanted Hunti ng Bird dog . Will do baby sitti ng in my
Pu pp y preferred, but w il l home . 614·667 ·6329 or 6U·
co n sider
full
gro wn 667 3402 .
Reg ist e r e d
or
n on
registe-red , must be good
Insurance
with ch ildren. Ca ll 446·754 1 13
if no answer keep trying .
SANDY AND BEAV ER In·

Syracuse, Oh . Inside
case ra in. 614-949·2522 .

Phone after 5 p.m. 304-675·
2143 .

~=:::~~=====~t===~====~t~~;:;::;;;;::j

·!-Used Refrigeralor
$100

3 BEDROOM BRICK HOME - · Living room has

4.

:"""AGES 3 &amp;UP

ladies JazzerCise

1-Good Used Gibson
Refrigerator ldbl.
door) Only S27S.

These cnh rates
Include discount

to

Hock ing Tech . College
tra m Pt. Pleasan t area .

8

e WISherl
e Dl•h·
washers
eRanges eRefrlgerat·
ors
' eDryers eFreezers
PARTS and SERVICE

EUNPROI.NOWLMFOENRT

TAP .,

Addre••--------Phone-------------------

carpool

6022 .

1/ 4 mi . out
Bulaville Rd. Westbrook
Sub. Thurs . &amp; Fri . 9·5. Fur·

Phone alter 5 p.m. 304-675·
2143 .

Roo m
and board for
elderly . Resonab le. 614·992·

446·0069

Num er iou s

1 Families

from Pt . Pleasant area .

WANTED :

Sal e

items. Thursday Sep1. 9, if
rainy Friday Sept . 10. 1982.
tAM, 402 3rd. St., Kanauga ,
Oh .

Flowers. 304-675·5349.

1

JAZZ

results. Money not refundable.

Yard

~=~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~3~·7~-~tl~c~~~~~~~~·3~·l~m~o.~p=d=.~ 304· 675·1128.
SCHOOL
Of DANCE

!

2.
3.

Freeeslimlln
.,
_
- 1143 3322
7·16·7mo. pd.

-

IIDI'4:

Curb Inflation · I
1
I
1
1 Pay Cash for .
Classlfleds a nCI
II
Savelll

Bill Gene Johnson

Center.
A.M.A.Electrolysis
approved,
Professional
Doctor relerats. by ap·
pointment only·. 30H7S·
6234.
WANTED : carpool to
Hocking Tec h. College

USE "

K£N'S .
APPLIANCE

OHIO'VALLEY
ROOFING

ta&gt;&lt;es,

NOW'16•s so. Yo. INsuu•o
6 Rolls oiSOl Nylon

!

Need a ride to and from RIO
Thursday 9th and Friday 9
Wanted To Buy
10th, 9 l ilt ? Second trailer ·--==~~~~­ Grande College from down·
on tell on Lincoln Pike, juS! We pay casn for la te model town area. Will help with
gas. Ca ll446·2629.
off 1.41 at Centenary . If r ain clean used cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
back patio.

PERMANENT
HAIR REMOVAL

~~==~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t~~~;~~~~~~

W. Foster,
United Robert
Stat~ Marshal,

Rar.•n•

r----------------------1

'· - - - - -

FO~ FUTU~E

bids.

'1295

used end collectors items.

on my property. Hartwell
Curd . Ball Run Rd.

Large or small Jobs
PH. 992·2478
9·3·1 mo. pd.

3·ll-tlc

eo:

6 Rolls of Anso IV E•tra Good Nylon
5 Year Presidential wear warran~y .

135-011111 Cllilllll 011 , .....
134-14 ~~~~ lladllM Qoollts
133-FIIII. . liiiM Qlllfll&amp;
132-Gillt OriiiUI
131-AU • llllcl Qlllls
lztQikl 'ri (IIJ Tlllllflls

3 Family Yard Sale New &amp;

'- Dozers
- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
=~~~~~~er
- Waler
-sewer
-Gas Lines
- SeplicSystems

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for tree siding
esllmates, 949-2111 or •
949·2160.
No Sunday Calls

EUGENE !."
1nNG
Super1ar Siding

in Lower
now In·

Ohio: Being all of Lot No.
+40 and 15 feel adlolnlng
part of Lol No. .Ul and
being a part of the same
real eSiate conveyed by
James R. EadsloJames H.
Allen by deed recorded In
Deed Book 197, Page 65,
Deed Records of Meigs
County Ohio.
PROPERTY AOORESS :
760 Laurel Street, Mid·
dteport. Ohio 45760
day of sale. I reserve the
rtghl
to relecl
anyCash
and all
Terms
of Sale:
on

"':J ...

)Wanted
) For Sale
( )Announcement
( ) For Renl

BISSELL
SIDING CO,

Set your own hours. Se ll
Avon . )Mu s! be 18 or over).
Call now 614698·7111
collect.

----- - .... -- ·- --- -·

No hunting or trespassing

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

1~1,....,..__...,!-'
H_,
et'l:p--'w'-"a"'n"'
ted,_--,

LAFF·A·DAY

lrr.'*-'===-=.-- -- 11AVON . Need e• tra money?

musch more.

~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~f.::::~;~~~~~~ anything
ANY PER
to SON
give away
who and
has

TOM HOSKINS
INSTAIUD

Also Transmission'·
PH 992 5682
·
•
Or992·7121
3·2Hic

AND CUSTOMIZING

PH 992 7656
. •
•
Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, Pal'ls, Etc.
STUART WAYNE
PUUINS
HUNTING UC£NSE
•v•t"D'E
~ ~ '-"""
9·1·1 mo.

Township. Meigs County.

AVAILABLE IN GEM BLUE, AMBER, RUST AND
WOODLAND BROWN .

.t,Aec.~

··

~rggr:~"c::t 'h"s~~,t~:g~~~

NOW $}1J95 SQ. YD. WITH
L -- PMI, INSTAllED

REG.'l5'1

PubtlcNollce
PUBLICNOTICE '
NOTICE OF SALE : By
virtue of an Order lor Sale
Issued on lhe lOih day of
August. 1982, br tiM! United
Stales Dlstrlc Court for
the Southern District of
Ohio. EaSiern Division, al
Columbus, Ohio, in Civil
No . C2 ·B2·59, UNITED
.STATES OF AMERICA ·
vs· Nancy L. Pope, et,al. 1 I
will offer for sale to tne
highest bidder on Sep: ,
!ember 29, 1982 at 11 :00

property :
Situated
.Pomer.oy,

CARPET SALE

ro::t:•.

and

Classes. Sept. 9 &amp; u. 6 p.m.
at the Carleton School gym
In Syracuse. 614·992·5421 or
614-992·5896.

•ba.ckhoe
•excavating
•sepficsystems
•dump !ruck service
•seeding and reclaiming
•Racine and Syracuse
sewer hookup
work Insured and
Guar•nteed
PH. JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201

~~=======::j;::==~~~==~t=====~~~~~

tl&gt;
;:;

Meigs
A.M.
atCounty
thefronldoor
Courthouse,
of the
the
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
following described real

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259 •

There will be a meeting Thursday, Sept. 9, at6 p.m. at the football
field house at Southern High School
for those adults interested in helpIng with a 5th and 6th grade touch
football program for boys who nve
In the Southern Local School
Dlstrtct.

Dlscllar!led-None.

Ult

Toyland Knits

Meeting set Thursday

V~rans

_,_

l,tp•••·· - ,......... -·"' .... --.,, . ..., .,.._,

608 L MAIN

Plan 'family picnic

Two defendants forfeited bonds
and three others were fined In the
court of MIO.Ileport Mayor Fred port, and Kimberly .Anne WelsHdtman Tue.ldaY night.
mann,19, Mlddleport; John Wesley.
RObert L. Belcher, New Haven, Roush, 22. Rutland, and Linda Lee
tOdeited a $375 bond posted on .a Keeler, 31, Rutland; Albert LA!w1s
charJie of driving while Intoxicated, DettwWer. 22, PortspiOUth, and.
and Olai-Jes L. Kitchen, GaWpolls, Kimberly Kay wlimer, II, Rt. 4,
flrlelted a ~ bond~ on an Paneroy.

,,,.,,_.. a.. ..~

11 c-oal "••h"''

~

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

tltclrlcaf""'
lf~~tbtillattll

~.-

'•

Marriage Ucer\ses were Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Ricky Lane McClellan. 22, MldcDe-

Ut~ ••

st. Rt. 124Pomtroy, oH)

'AIWool IOd ro•tltlfot
:t:'"'::.rlttnloot
-11o.::l:.aod

:reachers,
Scout
Leaders and Organtralions, Come In lind
:rake A Look At Our
Package Deals. DIS·
counts Available.
;
. LESSONS stARTING o 1
CALl or STOP IN E ·
TO SIGN UP.
- 1I

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

..Uloc•••'"".......... .
.. ,1«....... ".. '·-·'""
.,u_,
...... ·-·.. ,·

'

SERVICE

Ceramic Bisque

-c.. ...

(_

.....

_

--

,,~- ••w o

,,_........ . .
,..... ,_..,.,..,
,~ ... ··"·-

..........
,,, __ _

, _ ,.,.pltoa.

·· -·,_.
-

,,,..,..... w..

~

7
Yard Sate
sewing Basement Sate Sept. 10·11,
machine repair, parts, and 9 lo 5, 212 Jackson P;ke.
supplies.
Pick up and Clothes for 141o 16 yr. girls,
delivery, Davis Vacuum dress lorm, bed clothes,
lamps &amp; appliances, gar·
Cleaner,
hallRdmile
·up den toots , har d back
Georges one
Creek
. Call
nov els , kn ic k k na cks,
446 ·0294 .
SWEEPER

::··r:~;;~~~~~~~Tr~:::=======;r;:========:;'lr;:========~1
· D BBL£ SHOP
YOU.NG'S
J&amp;F
n ZH3
Roger Hysell
---- ··-- --~~1'011£~'· OHIO
CARPENTER
·GARAGE
CONTRACTING Fall beg inners Karate

992-2156

'
a...i/Nd-- ...l'

" ........... 14..

·- ·-Announcements
- -·-----·

J

Business senices
Plaster Craft and

Registration set

MIU'J'iaMelicelll!ftl

PHONE

Or Wro,_ D•l l y SHihNI (IIUif~Oe,l.
111 C.vr t n , 1"-~., , 0tii•IJ' ..

I

Ohio

'

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County happenings ...
Emergency runs

.

Ohio

'Discrepancies' led to arrest
A sertes of "major diScrepancies" In hl.s alibi led to Dr. Arthur
Fleming being charged with
second-degree murder In connection with the death of hl.s second
wile, Aurda McKinney Fleming, a
former resident of the MeigsMason area.
F1emlng was cited Aag. 26 by the
Lee County (Fla.) Shertff's Depart·
ment In Fort Myef!! In the July 3
Incident, In which Mrs. Fleming
was beaten and stabbed.
The former Holrer Hospital phy·
s!c!an Is presently free on $50,!XXl
bond. which he posted Immediately
on hl.s booking. He has since been
unavailable for comment and no
court appearance date has been
set.
F1ernlng claimed In hl.s statement to pollee after the murder
that be was knocked unconscious
by a. stranger In hiS Fort Myers
apartment while Mrs. F1emtng,
from whOm he'd been separated lor
the past two years, was visiting.
Wben he awoke, he found Mrs.
F1emlng lying on the Door, dead,
presumably murdered by the
stranger.
"F1emlng's statement alter the
murder had too many holes In it,"
said Lt. Tom Wa.llace of the shertff's department. "HIS statements
were totally lnconsl.stent wtth the
evidence and the crtme scene."
The warrant for F1emlng' s arrest
alleges that after Mrs. Fleming arrived around 8: 30 p.m. at FlemIJ!g's apartment, they travelled to
an area by the counter area adjoinIng the kitchen and dining room

----

.
••

Black su-p port puts Wallace
in runoff against McMillan
By MIKE SJLVERMAN
A8soclaled l'reB8 Writer

-;"

.,,

,.

�They'll Do It Every Time

Homes for Sale

31

51

Will trade mv eQuity in a 4
un i t apt. bldg .. for a trail er
&amp; tot or a house &amp; lot .
Balance ca n be paid by
tnnd contr act . Ca ll for

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Hide·a·beds,$440. and up to
$525 ., queen size, $380.
Recliners, S175 to S32S..
Lamps from S18. to S65. 5
pc . dinettes from S79., to
S385. 7 pc , $189. and up.
Wood table with silc cha irs
S395. to $650. Desk SllO.
Hutches, $300. and $550.,

1h
3 b d . ro om
hou se,
basement, dr illed well. 3

acres, sma ll ga r age. Dar·
cas, Appl e Grove Rd Ca ll

247 2753
3 bd room. Brownell Ave ..
M 1dd lcport Fu ll b ase ment,
1 cr1r ga rage . Resonable
pr1 cc. (iltl any t ime 614·

maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites
Bassett

992 3586

Cherry. $795.

Bunk bed

comp lete with mattresses.

Reduced 8 r oom hou se, 2

S250. and up to 5395. Baby

tots double ga rage. corner

beds, $99. Mattresses or
box springs, fu ll or tw in.

tot, ve r y good location . 680
S Ln d . Ave Middleport.
$14,900 About one acre lot
'" Bradbury T r ailer hook ·
up. wilfer . Qas , electric
septi c t,1nk . ca ll 614·992

S4

by Larry Wright

'N' CARLYLE"'

Misc. Merchllndlce

AIAKI nome video c:om ·
puter system, practically

Queen se ts. 5195. 4 dr
chests, $42 . S dr. chests.

$54. Bed frames, S20.and
S2S .. 10 gun · Gun cabinets,

..

Fire wood $25.00 big pick
up load, at Farm. S35.00
delivered . 304-895·3395 .

di Vi de tnt o lots. 2 story 33
Farms for Sale
house, aluminum sidi ng, 6
rooms, bath, elec tric cou n- Mini farm in Le tart, Wv . 14
tc r top stove. double ovens, ac res M ·L , 2 story, 3 br .
di Shwasher , di sposal , ca r · fr ame hom e, v iny l si ding,
peting, ccn t_r al ai r con · storm windows, all elec·
dtt1oner. gas furnace . near tri c, who le house carpet.
sc hools, sto res, chur ches. f i r eplace
with
wood ·
bank and post offiC e 1n burn ing, ca pable of hea ting
Ra cine on Elm St . beside ent ire home, rur al water,
Gulf Gas Sta tion. $35,000
garage, out building, Far ·
Ca ll614·949·2491 .
mall Cub tracto r w i th

equipment. 304·895-3652.

-Apirfm-erlt
for Rent

44

1st floor furnished apar t·
ment, adults prefe r red . ref .
&amp; dep. r equired . Call 631
4th Ave .. Gallipolis.
2 bdr . downtown, all car ·
pet. comp lete kitchen. all
electri c heat·air cond .,
Washer ·dryer. Call446-4383

0

tral air, basement , phone

304-675· 1542 .
TWO story brick . 6 rooms.
fireplace &amp; basem ent, new
gas furnac e 1211 Main Sf .
304·675·2361.

LOT OWNER S. If yo ur a n·
income

is between

$10,000 a nd $17,000 you may
qualify for a low interest
government loan on a
unibilf Home. For detai ls
call D &amp; W Homes 304-6754424 or 614·166 ·37 52 .

CAPE Cod s tyl e cottage
home. nice river view. 7
room s, Jl/ 1 baths. calf 304·

673 ·57 12 or 881·2636 . Upper
20's.

Mm1 ·tarm in Letart. WV . Furnished apt. 11361 /2 2nd .
14 acr es M L , 2 story , 3 Ave . Ga llipolis. 5185 water
bedroom fr ame home, paid, 2 bdr . Call 446·4416 af ·
vinyl sid ing , storm w in- ter 7 PM.
dows, all elvclassified ads
34 . ~u~ines~ ~~il_di~g~ __
Furnished attic apartment.
- -- - - - -- -. - --35 . _L.c?ts ~- ~c!:e~~e __
Men only S150 utilities
For sa le one and half acres
more or less, ap ·
prox imately 600 ft road
frontag e
on
Cora ·
Centerpoint Rd . near Centerpoint. $3,000.00 Phone

682·6944 .
Two ac r e lots· ISO ft . road
f r ontage , city
water,

behind 84 Lumber. Call 304·
675·6673 or 675·3618 .
ONE acre lot 3 miles from
town .
rural
wat e r

available, 304·675·1564.

paid, share bath . 446·4416
after /PM.
Furnished 3 r . private bath,
845 2nd Ave .• Gallipolis.
Ref . pre ferred . Call 446·
22 15.

enamel

$2495. Located Main and
Second, Middleport, Ohio.
614·992-2828.

twice,

Wednesday, Thur&gt;day at
Lucy Wrights, Gallipolis
Ferry , W. Va .

304 675·6999 .

32

Real Estate

36

Wilnted
Wanted : Block house with
basement, minimum 6 inch
roof overhang . Cash if

reasonable, 304·757·9504.

Mobile Hom es
for Sa le

n entals

TRISTATE
MOBILE
HOME S. USED -MOBILE
HOME S, CARS, TRUCKS.
GALLIPOLIS .
C H ECK
OUR PRICES. CALL 446·
7572.

1/ 2 acre, three bedr home,
ba se ment. ci ty school,
county wate r . Call 216-734·

3834 .
CLEA N USED MOBILE
HOME S
KESSEL'"S
QUALITY
MOB I LE
HOM E SALES , 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT
35 . PHONE 446 3666.
1980 Windsor 14x70, new
cond . Deluxe kitchen, large
living room &amp; bath , 2
bedrm . H1dden util. room .

379·23 10.
MOVING MU ST SELL
12x60 Kirkwood mobi le
home. 2 bdr , new carpet.

Call 614 ·367 0327 or 614·256·
6750
12&gt;c12 ft . add a·room Car pet, baseboard hea t, c loset.
wel l insulated . Can serve
as additional bed room . Ca ll

Apartments. 304 -675·5548 .

533·3884 .
5 rms . &amp; bath , l chi ld ac
ce ptable, no pets, Bob M e·

Cormick Rd . Call 446·2650 .
5 room house with bath .

large lot . Rac ine area . 614-

446·3547 .

992-5658 .

12x 21 ft.
add a r oom .
Bayview w1ndow mt ront.
new car pet,
dry wa l l
baseboard hea t Can be
used for a family room or
la r ge bedroom. or divided
to serv e as two bedroom s

One
bedroom
house .
avai lable Sept . 18th , 304·

mobil e

hou ses .
Pt .
and Gallipo li s.

very bea utiful 12X65, 1968
Park Esta tes with ex ·
pando. underpinning , fully

675·2973.
42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

l 2x60 2 bdr mobile home,
furnished . adult Call 446 ·

2701.

Three room furnished
apartment, adults, no pets,

Po.nt Pleasant . Call 304·
675·2453 .
THREE room furni shed
cottage, utilities furnished,

adu lts, no pets, 304-675·28 12
or 675·1580 .
Garage apt . New Haven, 3
bedrooms , unfurnished
S200. month, plus utilities .

tr ai ler edge

c arpeted, gas, $6,500. Call
446·9380

c ity , adul ts, no pets. Call
446·0958 .

Richardson Mobile hom e
10 x 55 furni shed Can be
seen at 42635·Gi bson Rd . J
miles S. of Albany . Rea l

Two·2 bdr trailers com ·
ple tely furni shed. Cal l 446

9669

good buy . S3000
3055 or 592 ·6060.

12 x60
bedroom un ·
furn ished mobile home.
New ca rpet, central air, on

614-992·

USED MOBILE
576·2711.

HOME

MOBILE HOME S MOVED
L icensed &amp; insured . Ca l l

304 ·576·271 1
1971 F lam ingo, plus un
derpenning and blocks

$6.000 304-895·3617
--•·--• L • •

Rt 35. N. yas . Call 446·4229
12x60 2
furni shed

,..

A

Ref &amp; dep Call 446·4229, in
Cheshire area .

•-

773·5143 .
1973 Marion mobile home,

a ll e lectric. price $4,500.
304·675·7365 .

JJ ---== =i~ ~~ f~~S~ I~ = =---------

2~ acre farm , pond, fe nced,

Home

46 ___Spa_c~ f~r- ~_en.! _ ~
large Private mobile
home lot in Centenary Call
446 4053.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots. Call
992·7479 ,

==:MerebcJAdlse

No

nouse , Call388·9346.

--- - - - - -·u2 acre farm near Rio

Grande, nouse, buildings,
or

without li vestock and
equipment, 614·446·2599.

bales, hay equipment, bale
mmovers
&amp;
feeders,
wagons. rotary tillers, disc .
seeders, rotary cutters,
blades, gates&amp; cultivators.

For sal e
Res taurant
Carryout equipment. used ,

lowest prices . RADCO , 304·
523·1378 .
Brown reupholstered chair
like new $45, 26' girls
bicycle with ca rri ers $20,
heavy duty Acme supreme
1uicerator with citrus at·
tachm en t sl ightly used
...

-

- __,__-

Hawkins .50 ca l iber muzzel
loader with 1000 lead balls.
Darton compound bow adi

45·651bs. Call 446·2316

Pureb re d

G e rman

We buy Used Equipment

directory that shows you
how 'o purchase. 24 hours.

ONE New Holland NO. 8
Forage box, 3 beater, ext
side. roof , with 12 ton tan -

1965 Mustang, fas tback
2+2. 289 Automati c, see or
trade. 304-675·4181.

no

papers,

5

Grooming services. Will
c lip Schnauzers and etc.

614·992·7342 .
One male beagle, partly
trained,

0212 .

lb., extra nice. Call 446·

-

--

new. Call 446·9412
Beautiful Baldwin spinet
piano, perfect condition,

$1 ,200. Call 773·9158 or Box
134, Mason, WV .

Also Meigs school jacket
with leather sleeves. 525.00.

614·949·2732 .
Firewood·$35. load . $45.
delivered . 614-949·2542 .
Call Robert Harper tor Ginse ng
and
Yellowroot

ANTIQUE mirror, cherry
wood, 6ft. tall, 304-675·7632.

Signet E alto

saxaphone, excellent con·

dition . $350.00. 304·882·3369.
BUNDY alto sax, ex ·
eel lent, S350. 304-675·1504 .
CONN Trombone in case,
excehent condition . $125.00,

304·67S·3A52.

304·675·3452 .
BUNDY flute, good con·
dition, 304-675·6489 .

sa

Fruit
. ____ &amp;_V!' g_!'l~~ ~s ___ .

GOOD THINGS TO
EAT :: :CA NNING PEAC·
HES . Yellow Freestone
ca nning

peaches

now

available while the supply
lasts. BOBS MARKET· ·
Mason W.VA. 773·5721 open
7 days a week.

Kennebec potatoes. STO.OO ·
100 lb., $5 .50(50 lb. 667·3974.
APPLES several varietys
of available. Hours 9 to 6,
Fitzpatrick Orchards, St.
Rt. 689, Wllksville, Oh, 669·
3785.

in

Racine.

Completely

Reg. Duroc boars. Cal1614·
379·2145 .
Reg. Polled Hereford bull,
3 yrs. old S750. 2 ponies,
$125 ea. Open Jersey
heiters, SJOO. Call 61A·256·
9346.
Feeder calves, 500 to 600
lbs. all shots &amp; wormeal

farm raised. Call 614·3792590.
Fresh

and

springing

Holstein heifers, also a few
choice Holstein bulls, out of

high producing dams. Call
614·286·2496.
2 yearling herefords for

sale. 614-992 ·7696.
742·2776.
-·

-- -. -

Hay for sale. Call 446·7838
or 256·9325
Hay &amp; Straw. $1.25 bale.
614·949·2388.

Monte

Carlo, most reasonable of -

fer . Call after 4 p.m ., 304·
675·6456.
1969 Dodge Dart, 1974
Plymouth Gold Ouster,
good tires and good shape,
$475.00, 304-675·6730.
1976 Jeep CJ 5, V-8, four
speed, headers, 1200·15 in·
ch,

tires,

wheels,
1641.

white

$2400 .00

spoke

304·458·

75 CHEVY Malibu, PS, PB ,
AC, AM-FM radio, call304·
675·6905 after 4 p.m .
1980 OLDS Omega, 2 door,

. ..... ·- .

.

Truck's for Sale

12

TransplflatJIHJ
7_.! ___ ~U!OS

lor~~l! ___

76 Chevy PU truck, PS, PB,
AM - FM cassette, low
mileage, ex c. _ cond. Call
614·256·9353.
1974 Chevy truck, 6 cyl.,
S/00. or best offer . Seen at
245 Mulberry Ave .
Pomeroy .

dryers.

refrigerators.

Furnished 4 room~ &amp; bath, ranges .
Skaggs
Ap·
clean, no pets, adults only, pliances, Upper River Rd ,
dep. req . Ca11446-1519.
beside Stone Crest Motel.
A-46·7398.
HUD available 2 bdr.
deluxe, kitchen furnished,
good location, utilities par- Whirlpool washer &amp; dryer,
tia lly paid: 5 rm house for nice guaranteed, S2:i5. Call
rent. Residential and com· 446·8181.

free estimates. Call614·256·

1182.

Dick Cavett hosts this look

exterior, plumbing.
roofing, some remOdeling.

ANNIE

Marcum
Roofing
&amp;
Spouting . 30 years ex·
perience.

specializing

ll HHH ~ SUilE FEEL5

in

GOOD m GET

bui lt up roof . Call 614·388·
9622 or 614-386·9857.

8Ait8ED WlltE

Carpets . Free estimates.

Masonary

work,

•

I

Richard Simmons
(j)) Victory Garden
G)
fll)
Entertainment

Tonight
0 (J) Real People To·

8 :00

night' s program features a
visit to a kiss1ng contest a
pair of gas-powered roller
skates and a trip to the
sixth annual Otymp1c Mud

Logue

Bowl. IRI (60 min .)
(J) MOVIE : 'Glass Bottom

Boat'

CHRISTIAN'S CON ·
STRUCTTON .
Constr . ,

CIJ

roofing, sidinQ, spouting.
fencing , painting, repairs &amp; .

National Geographic
Special
ffi ESPN Sportsforum
C1J 1il (j]) Pho!lnix Bennu

ALLEYQOP

cleaning . 446·2000, call
before 8 and after 5:30.
·- . . -- . . -·' --·· ·- -----Bl NGS CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION SPecializing

roams

'I'OU WERE RlGlfT,
THE PLACE
1S CRAWLING WITH
. MI~ITIAMENI

1979 Chevy Blazer. Am· Fm
stereo, air, p.s., p.b .. 350
automatic, 33,000 miles.
614·992·6771 .

CD Billy Graham Crusade
CIJ ®I MOVIE:
'Scruples' Part 2
Cil (j)) Hunter and the

Hunted This documentary
focuses on the continuing
search for Nazi war crimin-

Gene's Steam Carpet
Clean-Scotch Gaurd·Free

als. lA) (60 min.)
8 :30

estimates-spring specials-

(2) MOVIE: 'Canto Annie

and little Britches '
@
Auto Racing '82 :
NHAA Drag Racing North

Gene Smith, 992·6309.
RON'S Television Service.
Specializing 1n Zen1th and
Motorola, Quazar, and

Star Nationals f/ Brai-

Goo-L.
9 ·8

house calls. Call 576·2396 or
446·2454.

nerd, MN
(J) Panther on Kennisor
Mt.
9:00 0 (J) CD Facts of Life

GASOLINE ALLEY

It happen

Look like we
qoin •t' need
Becky an'th'
cart. RLlfus

ex·

perienced mason, roofing,
ca rpenter , electrician,
general repairs and

Eastland School becomes
involved in the issue or
banning book s at the li-

t' be wher·
th'j~;~q is!

brary . (AI

Cil 700 Club
CIJ lil (Ui Fall

1979 Dodge van. P .S.. p.b.,

ters. IA I (60 min .)
(j)) Doomsayers The
possible end of Western

CIJ

Water Wells. Commercial

ADVANCED
Seamless
Gutter -Doors . Offering

®.

9 :30

civilization is explored . (60
min .)
0 (J) CD Love. Sidney
Laurie and Patti are arre sted at an anu-nuclear

WINNIE

10:00

0

weapons rally.
(2) CD Quincy Quincy

befriends a nurse who is
suffering from after-effects

SHE. Ml6SE6 US, BUT
5HE'5 FINALLY GfTIING

estimates, 614·698·8205..

of The Vietnam War . (A)
(60 min .)
(J) MOVIE: 'Back Roads '
ffi Best of Notre Dame
Football 1979 Fightong Ir-

TO .KNOW HER REAl.

PAl NTI NG interior &amp; ex·
terior, free estimates, 304·

MOTHER.

675· 1128.

ish

MIChigan
(Ui Dynasty Blake
blames Alex1s for Krystle' s
mtscarriage and a hitchhiker claims that he had an

... .

CARTER'S PLUMBING '
AND HEATING

affair with Steven . (R) 160

Cor. Fourth and Pine

min.)

Phone 446·3686 or 446·4477

CIJ

614·992-6330.

i;·- " " :-: ·-M~i~r~y~t~s"
:· :~
-- --- - ---·-~ -

---~

·· · · Eleciricai
&amp; ~-e.~r!9~-r~.f!~t:l
SEWING Machine repairs:
serv•ce. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Fabric

m

Shop,

I WISH WE COULD
GIT ONE OF THEM

-

85 ~. ~: ~~~~~-~.~~~~i~-· - -- -· ·- - . -

1976 Suzuki 550, road bike.
Call456·1997.

T979- Su~-ukl- PE1J5.. $600.

We'll do it. Call «6-3159 or
614·256·1967 after 6.

2789.
--------

__ _______ _
__,

2 Honda 350 S( &amp; CL S200.
for CL &amp; $150. for SL. 1973
models. 614-1115·35117.
1973 HARLEY . DavidsOn .
sporster, $1800. 304-6~$·

7586.

found in Ethiopia. 160 min.)
(j)) Newswatch
10:15 !Il HBO Theater: Bus
Stop A naive cowboy falls

BARNEY

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE . Call614·367·7471
or614-367-0591.
.
. -·
.. ·-· ·· _, __ .
Need something hauled '·

1974 Yaniaha endre, dirt
bike. Call456-1997.

--AN' GIT RID
OF THAT

10:30

NOT·SO·HOT
TUB

J r;.:::~

1

!~..e!--7

lump or stOker up to 8 ton.
Limestone, top soli, fill
Caii61A·367·7101 . .,

-- -·- -

love w1th
showgirl. Tim
Margot K1dder.

J

away or something mOved"

.. -· ·- ·· -· -- -

1

~
i
HOT TUBS, ~
PAW
i

NEW-FANGLED

--

N~;.,· H~ulin~--h~·,;.; · ~.;i 1 ,

lucy in Disguise To-

night's program focuses on
a 3.5 million· year-old fossi l

84

Pomeroy . 992-2284.

VS

Cll lil

Plumbing
___&amp; _H!!&gt;!i'!9.. ____ •

Sc1ssors .

Guy Colt,

How1e and Jody become
babysitters for a 11 -yearold girl wanted by mobs·

remodeling. Call 30.4-675·
2068 or 675·4560.

.. -

in

Ill

etc . 11 yr . exp. Caii61A-367·
7891.

82

America

m1n .)

in concrete driveways,
sidewalks, floors, patios,

RINGLE'S SERVICE

Nonh

search of Mira . (A) 160

I!D~,

~.::::::::._:J:.:::.:~~~

~
G L..--

PEANUTS

·.-

'? =- :.:::.:Yitibiii!r.f =:: =

I'M PRACTICING
Mf ''CARET$''

. TRT STAT~
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec . Ave .. Gal.lipolls. ,
~-7833 or'446-1833, 1
,

-· ---·--

~OWREYS

Upllotstery Rt.
1 Box 124, PI, Pleasant,"JIM·
675-~154. '
.
' •• •
'

A CARET IS AN INVERTED

\1-SAAf'EQ MAA.K USED 10
SHCIWlliM" SOMETHIN6
.8ETWEEN UN£5 SltOULD BE
ADmiiJ 1lf fOIHT INI'IcRto

VERY

I'MA6LAfJ TO HEAR THAT

SHOIJLD
WELL, IAI·IOPE SO!
0

I

I

I

I
J

;. ,.

-··- -

a

worldly
Matheson,

CIJ Sing

[J I

IBASHUM!
[J I

I I

IDAGAPOt

I I I IJ

Answer here :
Yesterday's

Now arrange the circled leHers to
form the surpnse answer. as sug gested by the aoove cartoon

n wAs"(

I Jumbles

xI I I xr
(Answers tomorrow)

MOUNT

WAKEN

ESTATE

SOLACE

Answer · What th e very busy doctor sa id to the

Invisible man - 1 CAN'T SEE YOU NOW
Jumble BOOk No. 19, contalnlno 110 puzzles, tsavallablelor $1 .95 postpaid
from Jumb ... do this newspaper. Boll 3A. Norwood, N.J. 07648 . lnclud• your

name, addrHI, zip code 1nd make checks payable to Newspaperbooks .

By Oswald Jacoby
and

Alaa Soatog

"Another day, another
dollar," remarked West.
"You're talking pre-war
dollars," growned South.
"You had nothing to do with
setting me, other than to get
off to your normal opening
lead . It was East who put his
hand in my pocket."
East had made a mighty
good defensive play. It was
one that any expert would
feel rather proud of, not that
an expert would think he had
done anything sensationaL It
was merely that he had
played well as experts are
supposed to and usually do.
East carefully played his
ace of hearts on bis partner's
king and returned h1s single·
ton club. South won in dum my and led the deuce of
trumps. However , East
hopped up with his ace and
was now ready to return a
heart. West was in with the
ack and led a club for East
o ruff for the setting trick.
It's nothing to ring bells
about or to put East in the
hall of fame, but the sort of
fine defensive play that
saves many a game for the
olayers good enough to

t

WEST
• 863
"KQJ
• J8 2
• 963

NORTH
9·8-82
• 10 7 2
"8 4
+K 9 3
+AKQ102
EAST
+AI
6
"A 10 7 32
t107654
48
SOUTII
+KQJ94
"9 5
+AQ
4J754

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

North

East

Pa8S
Pass

3+

24

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pa"'

Pass

Opening lead:

•K

inake it.
For those readers who
think that four spades was a
poor bid, we must point out
that only super defense plus
the 3·1 club break led to its
defeat.

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

~..ttHd'
by THOMAS 'JOSEPH

ACROSS
41 Elbe
I - it
tributary
5 Western
DOWN
dwellings
I Bench11 Dog; food
wanner
12 ~mall brook 2 Tara family
13 Uncommon 3 Judy Holliday
14 City in Calif.
film
15 Coffee holder 4 Sheep
Yesterday's
16 Mountain
5 Milit.
pass
building
16 Buffalo Blll 26
17 Olivier's
&amp;.Tune in
19 Latvians
27
title
7 Venerable
20 Spanish
28
18 Univ . in
8 New
province
31
Waco, Texas
arrivals
24 City on
33
20 Jacob's son 9 More weird
the Orne
36
21 Shabby
10 Like a
22 Extremely
23 Eyelid ailment r,--,.::---,.,-r.,-24 Spanish hero
25 American
suffragist
27 Biblical

~ -&amp;

answers.
Dawn goddess
Coffers
Tongue-lash
Wiser
F rost
Poet's

warrior
29 Outcries

30 Lifts
with effort
32 Nobel
physiologist
33 Brooder
34 Equality
initials
35 Western
competitions
37 Problem
38 Ark s ite
39 Feminine
suffix
40 Strata

out America
Evening News
(j)) Lawmakers
1 1 :00 1J CIJ Newscentor
CIJ Nashville RFD
ffi ESPN Sports Center
C1J IJ, !II ® Iii (Ui News
CD News/Sports/Weather DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
CIJ Dave Allen Ill Large
AXYDLBAAXR
1 1 :30 0 !Il CD Tonight. Show
Is LONGFELLOW
CIJ Another Ufe
IIJ All In tho Family
One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A b
. Cll Bonny Hill Show
U
!II U.S. Open used lor the three L's, X for th e two O's, e to. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and !ormation of the words are all
Highlights
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
({) Captioned ABC News
()J MOVIE: 'The Guru '
lil iDI Nlghtline
1 1 :45 CI) MOVIE: 'Flash Gor·
CRYPTOQUOTES
don'
1 2:00 CIJ Bums &amp; Allen
ffi CFL Football: Edmon· W Q
ZQQF
NBWNAPUB
~QXHAWZ
ton Ill Calgary
CIJ MOVIE: ' HammerPBB
UANCBWN
head'
CQ
CDB
GFOAJB
CIJ NiJihtline
0 C1J MOVIE: 'I Never . Q V G
PBFPSZ
QW
COB
NSPMBJC
Pmmlaed You a Roaa
Garden'
QV
PSNAWBNN. - BUPBXC
DSPPGXF
CIJ PBS Late Night
I.
Ill &lt;121 The Love Boat Julio
falls in love, a IJ!IWiy di·
·'
voroed couple has to share
Yestenlay:s Cryptoquote: WITII A UTILE PRACfiCE ANY
a cabin and Vicki becomes

Cil TBS

a stand-in for a TV star.

(R) (I

I·
'f

Gal

- •-·-- --- ·- - ----·--

.

·· ....---- ·-~" ----.·,...

I

MDftDVY"! IT'6
8UZZft('-

Contracting ,
Rt .
1.
Ewington. Call 614·3889939.

Sp.m.

675·5386.

1 THINK 50,

1 ,FOUtO GOME CLOT!iE5
d YOUR6 IH ~ SUIT·
CASE, ~o~OOY"~ 1 I'IA5
A!ILE T' WAGH THEM,
SO THEY'RE NICE 'II'
CLEAN, &amp;UT ..

Ca11446·2107 .

Furniture repaired, , an·
tlq,H restored, \ CUStO!JI .
ceblnets, 30«75-3671 •~

or lease, A-One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager,
Realtor. Call 30~ · 675 · 5104 or

THAT
OFF!

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by
Haffelt Brosthers Custom

mere Ia I properties for sale

28 acres, tobacco allot·
ment, mineral rights, no
buildings, $7,500. Call 30A·
675-6851.

at the events of 1969.
CIJ Another life
ffi ESPN Sports Center
CIJ Major league Baseball: Los Angelos at
Atlanta
CIJ Ill !II Family Feud
CD leverne and Shirley
Cl) Business Report

20 yrs. ,e xp. Call 614·3889652.

73 . _ ~ li_a~s:~~4 ~ ~D_, ~ :_
77 CJ-5 Jeep, 4 wheel drive,
$1,500, with headers. Call
614·367-0212.

FOUR wheel drive K5
Blazer, 1973, $1,095.00. 304·
675· 1560.

1979 V·6 Monte Carlo, ian·
dau top, a.c., am -fm, stereo
and sun roof. $4,795. Call
675·-4,S95 or 446·7295.

Home

continuse
gut.tering,
seamle~s siding, ""r-oofing,
garage
doors . ' free

Honda 450 S350. 614·742·

GOOD
USED
AP ·
PLIANCES
washers,

Bull' a Eye
Special: 1982 NFC
Preview
IIJ Gomer Pyle
IIJ Entertainment Tonight
CD Happy Days
Ill !II Tic Tac Dough
CIJ (j)) MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
(JOl News
lil CBI Muppet Show
7:30 0 Cll You Asked For It
(J) Vesteryear... 1969

__ _..!!"_p!:_o~e.!!'_e_'!!_~-· __

304-895·3802.

1978 Thunderbird, AC, PS ,
PB, auto., AM· FM, very
good cond., ~3,595. Call «6·
4554.

65 Corvair, asking $1,AOO.
Call A46·8011 .

81

JEGUD

CIJ
ffi

Spr 'IERS

1980 Dodge D150 half ton
pickup, 6 cyl, 3-speed, over
drive. SA,500. 614·247-4555:

FOUR wheel drive K5
Blazer, 1973, Sl ,095.00. 304·
675·1560.

1950 2 dr. Ford, one owner.

BORN LOSER

Pumps Sales and Service.

1980 Pontiac Firebird. AM·
FM casse»e, air, $6,000
firm . Call614·256·1598.

Ca1161A·379·21A5.

61~ -

and Domestic. Test holes.

"·000
miles. $5,600. or best offer.

_

stove, good cond. Call
245·9153 after S.

Barry Tompkins and Tim
McCarver host this look at
the past week 's baseball
action .

For sale or trade 79 Datsun' I'
pickup, 49,000 miles.
F &amp; K Tree Tri'mming,
F -250 ford pickup . Cal1614· stump removal. Call 675·
388-8769.
1331.

automatic transmission,
l!ir, cruise, am·fm , par·
tially customized,

Wanted to buy- 1978 or 1979
or 1980 used car, gOOd condillon, Call
A46·4782
Gallipolis.
'

3

Apartment
for Rent

Chevrolet

battery .

4~ _ ·- _ !:.t"!.Y. ~. ~-~a_i~

SlOO.

furnished

new

2580.

1 Hereford cow and calf .

CONN Trombone in case,
excellent condition . $125.00,

standard,

automatic, ex:tras. 304·675·

·.;.

SELMER

62 GMC V6, 4 speed, $600.

breeding, sales and boar·
ding . Contact Dan Beam,
Gallipolis. 446·0183.

Musical
- ·- Instruments
.... -- - -- -·
Lowrey electric organ. like

Ga llipolis. Call 446·9516 .

u sed V-30 Ditch WiTch tren·
cher. 1 614·694·7842.

showing,

For Sale Baby beef, 600·800

For Sale Rawleigh Products, 1924 Eastern Ave.,

Thaxton .

Training,

$30.00, phone 304·675·4154 .

Key Board plus. Phone 614·
992·3096 day or 614·742·2184
night. $700.

Call 614-388·6742, Charles

63... -- - Livestock
- -- -- -· ·- .
REG . QUARTER HORSES

siK months old,

S7

74 PLYMOUTH Duster, 316

1972

S250 . ea . 304-863·6378 .

SilverTone Organ. Double

Markel electric
base~oard heaters. S30 ea.

CARS $200! Trucks $150!
Available at local gov't
sales. Call (refundable) 1·
714·569·02A1 ext. 1655 for

ted, good condit ion,
$1,800.00. Sit up for a super
deal on any Allis Chalmers
tractor from 40 HP to 170

bridge. Phone 30A·895·3874.

up, sleeps 6, furnance and

PA INTING · interior and

2A76 .

ter, St. Rt. 87, 13 miles

31 Ft. ca mper fully oon·
tal ned, 28 ft. awning, e•·
cell. cond . Caii614-J68·9331.

stock.

chopper 1 row head, pain-

Keefers Service Cen·

~~!"!.e.~s_. ____

HARTS Used Cars, New

manure spreader .

HP

_ -·-

STUCCO PLASTERING ·

blower.
special
price $350. Phone304-675·5187 .
$2,000.00. 1 Used model 718 .
chopper, 1 row head $3,AOO.
choOO. 1 Used Super 717 1979 SILVER VW Rabbit, L
chopper, 1 row head Series. Very cle~n. and
S, 1200.00. 1 Used Super 717 good condition phone 882-

Al l Breed Grooming, 7 days
a week . Pick up and
delivery . Call 614·367·7877 .

cond .

textured ceilings com mercial and residential ,

Haven west Virginia. Over
20 less expensive cars in

ning gear. $6,600.00. 1 New
Holland no. 28 forage

excelle nt

YOU Wfllf 9-ICYPTVINI!I. 'I'OU Fl!UOUT OF THE&lt; P~AN!&lt;, YOUR CHUTE;
DIDN'T OPE-N •. AT ~E-A5•T THAT'5
WHAT YOU TO~P It\&amp;,

used

collectable vehicle. 614·992·
7211.

Call446·7795.

446·0620 a fter 3:30p.m .

8ft .

1966 Chevy Chevelle con·
vertible. No rust, sharp

dem axel elect wheel run·

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

the Outer Umlto'
MOVIE: 'How 1 Won
the War
CD Unlimited Hydroplene
Racing The Columbia Cup
from Tri Cities, Washing·
ton .
IIJ Carol Bumen
CIJ U CIJ ~ • CBI News
CD News/Sporto/Welllher
(I) Electric Company
(j)) Over Easy
6 :30 II CIJ CD NBC News
CIJ $60,000 Pyramid
IIJ Bob Newhart
CIJ • CB1 ABC News
Ill !II !D CBS News
CIJ Dr. Who
(j)) Uliaa, Yoga and You
7:00 II CIJ P.M. Magazine
!Il Race fo• the Pennant

CIJ

1974 Apache fiberglass pop
Foremans Used Cars. 1980
Pinto, 4 cyl., ~ speed, 1976
Chevy Nova, 6 cyl. auto.,
1976 Mercury Comet 6 cyl.
auto., 1975 l'ord Elite . 614·
742·2734.

Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Dobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service .

Air Compressor, $200 . Call

Now
and
afordable
Security Alarms for home,
Business. Phone tap alerts
to close circuit . Save 100 to
400% on perimeter alarms,
100% warranty . Call Jim,

7.~t_ __._A,_.u"-to"'s~f,_,o,__r_,S,_o,le.___

And See Us To Get Your
Pairs &amp; COMPLETE SER ·
VICE .
Used Equipment
IH Hydro 70, Ford Jub ilee,
135 MF , 600 Ford, Massey
Harris pony, 70 Oliver, 8· N
Ford, Plows, disc, J D

i9B2 Stihl Chain saw .015,
$150. 304-675·1560.

conditioner

prices. 304-675-1293 .

bedroom . Total electric,
nice location . S250. month
plus deposit &amp; electric.

contract available. $16,000.

down, 12 percent interest.

Vermeer

Doberman pups. Female.
re d &amp; rust, $125. 3 fawn &amp;
rust females. B weeks old .

air

Call 614·985·3656.
Tra i ler Space, Plantz Sub ·
division, exce llent location .

tractors,

Central

King coal &amp; woOd heater

deposit, 5200. monthly plus
uti IIties. Call 614·949-2726.

44

with

tel ephone

446·2501. For Rent. We ek ly,
1 person $60.00 ; 2 person s
S/0.00. Cable T.V., air ~o nd .

Long

2 bedroom Schultz Mobile

For sale Farm, 207 acres

mineral · rights,

- --- -·

FALL TRACTOR SALE
JIVIDE NS FARM EQUIP·
MENT
446·1675

deposit req . 614 ·949·2253.

992-3955.

inc .

- - -- -

350 B·John Deere dozer, 6·
way blade, new paint,
$7,200. Call after 5 week·
days, 446·4237 .

below the new Ravenswood

Bread Guilts for sa le. Call
Furnished Rooms

Furnished
2 bd . room
mobile home on private lot.
No pets, no c hildren,

1260 lb. toba cco base, 1980
Windsor trail er, $26,900.
Ca II 446·0844.

on Parker Run Rd. Land ·

--

_ .. - - - - - - - - - - 6) _ __F or'!!_ E ~l.!&gt;onen_t_ __

mos . Male, beautiful.
Housebroken . S.SO. 446-4576 .

614·256 ·1353 .

2 bedroom trailer. Real
nice, adults only . Brown's
Trai ler Park , Minersville.

-

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

Shepherd,

4S

.

___ !'eJs_fl!! iaJe__ _

!Il MOVIE: 'Journey to

7~ :: ::.::: M~t~rH~~e::: =·=·

~,..,...._.,..

Call 614·245·5604.

446·1343 .

Reasonable. 446·4344

bedroom un mobile home .

Firewood. $10 pick up load .

nished, $225 .00 month. 304 ·
675·6730.

614·992·3314 .

1975 Cameron mobile home
. 14x70, 3 bedroom, one and
one·half bath , cen tral air,
utility b.ldg .inc luded. 304·

rights

THREE room furn 1shed
apartment ground floor,
private entrance, outskirts
Henderson, utili ties fur ·

Circle's Motet.
Re nt 2 bdr

-

5250. Call 614·256·6538 .

304-862·3356.

Call 446-3547 .

Mineral

APARTMENTS ,
homes ,
Pleasant

614 446·6221 or614·245 9464 .

Wenesday, after Wen. 61-4

DRAGONWYND
CAT ·
TERY · KENNEL . AKC
Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 4-'6 ·
3844 after 4 p .m .
. - .. ·- - -·
" -. HILLCREST KENNEL ·

Excellent condition, all
3 room furnished apt . $250 . plumbing &amp; wiring in·
month includes utilities. eluded, S400 . Ca ll 614-669·
Inquire at Mei gs Inn in 6J11
Pomeroy .

681·6010.

per mo., STOO dep. Call 446·
0830 after 5PM on

MAPLE dresser and chest

s~

35,000 BTU Williamson 230 .

Oh . 304·773·5882 .

65 Garfie ld Ave . 3 rooms &amp;
bath , parking in r ea r , $125

4x8 thru 4 x 12 . Prices, $7 .00
to S9 .60. 614·667·3085.

Call 446-0338 .

Located in Oak. Hill. a
remode led 2 B R home. Call

4535.

of drawe rs . $50.00. Dinette
set, 6 chairs and 2 extra
leafs. $75 .00 Ladies 26 inch
bicycle. $45 .00. 304-675·3452.

WOOd burning add on fur ·
Small furnished effi ency . 1 nance. Still in factory
professional type mal e cra te, 5450. Call 1·614-256·
only . Center a1r &amp; hea t . 1216.

Eflec ie ncy Apt. Sui table
for 1 or 2 peopl e. Cheshire .

3 bdr . house, garage, Rod·
ney Villag e 11 . Ca ll 446 ·

Metal shee ts for all
building purposes. Flat
porcel ian enamel coated .

.

245·5818 .

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win dows, l inte ls, etc . Claude
w .. 1rers. Rio Grande, 0 .

S175. 446·6382 after 5 p .m .

,,,0

Downstairs apt . in Vinton .
Unfurnished, cleaned , con·
ve nient loca tion . Call 614·

-- -

8:00 IJ CIJ Ne-center

. - - - ~'!"If&gt;'!!~!... --­
fold·out,

·~

EVENING

CAPTAIN EASY

-. . . tJ

I I

9/~/82

---------7e ===-~ ~.-m;;ini ---

Tuesday ,

ONE 17" GE black &amp; wh ite
portable TV with stand, 1
19" admiral color TV . 30.4 ·
675·2815.
-- - . - .. ·- ..
-ss __ Bullct_I'![I_~'!J'J&gt;l~e~ _

WEDNESDAY

iobs from

Flower

Call614·245·5121.

of drawers . $50.00. Dinette
set. 6 chairs and 2 extra

paint

Starcraft

3 Pc. living rm . set $375;
r efrige rator S75 ; stove

MAPLE dresser and chest

-------

- -

1975 Chevy Monza S/50.
Call 308·895·3m.

delivered, S50.00 Pickup
load, Phone 304·675·3030 or
675·3431 .

Dining room set. 4 chairs
and
table ,
c ushioned
chairs. Call458-1997.

- -- - -·

S300. Sunroofs installed
from $225. Auto Trim Cen· ,
ter, A-46-1968.

7ft . pool table, gOOd cond .,
$100 . Conn trombone $75 .

Sa le :

Television
Viewing

- ----

30~ -

S325I . $35,Baby
S25
bed
frarT\es $20, 525. I $30. Used
Furniture
book case,
ranges, chairs, end tables,
recliners and TV ' s. 3 miles
out Bu la vi lle Rd. Open 9am
to7pm , Mon . thru Fr i .. 9am
to5pm , Sat .
446-0322

leafs. $75.00 Ladies 26 inc h
bicyc le . $45.00 . 304-675·3452 .
-- - --.
- ----· --- -.. -- --..
- . - -. Merchandice
Tara Townhouse Apar1 - 54- - -Misc
---·
----m"ents. 2 bdr. 1 1/2 baths , Plastic Septi c Tanks. State
dishwasher. disposal. cen · and oounty approved . 1,000
tra{ air, pool, party house. gal. tank, price $340. Other
basketball
c 4urt , sizes in stock, haul in your
playground , laundra ·mat, pickup truck . Call 614-286·
f 1s hmg pond. funnshed &amp; 5930, Jackson, Oh . RON
\jr]jurnishe d . Call 614-367· EVANS ENTERPRISES

d

Beautifu lly r es tored ViC·
torian , 5 bedroom s, 4
firepla ces , orna te carved
woodwork. air conditioned,
i nsulated owner fin anci ng,

DICK TRACY

Auto Ports

-- -·- - - - -SPEC'AL
Complete

0

KIMBALL console piano, 1
yea r old, SlSOO . dining

Firewood , split, seasoned,

days, 446·0139 eve.

HOU SE Meadowbrook Ad

room with firepalce. cen

_!&amp;~A~c~cH~so~r_,IH:::__ _

The Daily Sentinel-Page- II

rt, Ohio

11 = = = {.;j~Re~'f;.=-===-

IJ

and S25 . Gas or electric

~~~~~~~~~;~~~==~~:;;;;:;::::==-~ranges,
matresses.

_

September 8,1982.

THREE Firestone white.·
wall tires, R78x15, steel.
belted radials. •;, of tread
remaining . sa.oo each or 3 ·
for S20.00. 304-675·1531 .

695·3347 .

room hutch, S300. 00
675 1462 .

76

7360.

$350 .• dinette chairs S20.

dition, J bedrooms, fam1 ly

Wed~y,

USED tires, Hanshaws'
Tires, Lucas Lane, PL
Pleasant, phone 304·675· :

$58 ., firm , $68 . and SIB .

2607

nual

Housenotd Good•

Sofa, chair, rocker, ot· new, $100.00 call 304-675·
taman . 3 tabl es, (ex tr a 1654.
heavy by Frontier), $685.,
Sofli , chair and loveseat.
$275 . Sofas and chairs ALUMINUM storm win·
priced from $285. to S895. dows, 34x63 triple track
Tables, $36 and up to $125. with screens, phone 304-

detail s 446 3937

.1cl cres
05dcres.
approx1
ly 3
tillab
le ormatc
could

1982

Ohio

Sentinel

10-The

~r . ,

10 min.)

WOMAN CAN REMAIN TIURTY YEARS OLD.-SOURCE

UNKNOWN

_i

�Pomeroy~iddleport,

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Reagan, Habib review peace agreement
• WASffiNGTON (AP) - Pres!·
dent Reagan Is conferring on his
Middle East peace plan with Phutp
C. Habib, who received the Medal
of Freedom lor Ills negotiations ln a
region where he says the sltua tlon
remains "extremely tenuous."
The president presented Habib
!he nation's highest clvlltan award
Tuesday, wtthln an hour of return·
lng to the White House after a 17day CaUfornla vacation.
Before a scheduled meeting wtth
the ambassador later today, Rea·
gan planned to host a luncheon In
honor of Icelandic President Vtgdls
Flnnbogadottir, who Is taking part
In a Washington celebration of

Scandinavia .
Although Habib and the president saw each other briefly at the
White House Tuesday afternoon,
the meeting today provided their
first opportunity to confer tn person
alter the envoy's recent threemonth negotiating trip to the Mid·
dte East. During that time, Habib
negotiated a cease-lire ln Lebanon
and the departure of Palestinian
guerrillas from west Beirut.
The 62-year-&lt;&gt;ld Habib, a retired
career diplomat who was called
back to service ln 1981, told Reagan
and a White House audience that
lncluiled Cabinet members, senior
White House staff members, and

Two cited following accidents
Two drivers were cited by the
Gallla-Metgs post of the Ohio Highway Patrol In a two-vehicle accl~nt ln Meigs County Tuesday.
The patrol said a van driven by
R.L. Manley, 38, Rt. 1, Middleport.
was southbound on Ohio 7, fourtenths of a mile from the Middleport ex.lt, at 7: 39 a.m. and was
being followed by a pickup truck
driven by Wendell W. Hoover Jr.,
53, Pomeroy.
Manley then attempted to turn
fett, and when Hoover pulled out to
pass Manley, Manley's vehicle
turned back Into the path of Hoover's truck, causing moderate damage to the van and slight damage to
!he truck.

Manley was ticketed for !allure
to signal whlle turning, and Hoover
received a citation lor lmproper
passing.
The patrol also cited a Jackson
County man lor following too
closely In a tw()ovehlcle accident on
U.S. 35 near Rio Grande.
According to the report, Bill F .
Dowler, 61, Gallipolis, slowed to
make a rlght turn at 6 p.m. Tuesday
and was struck In the rear by a veh·
lcle driven by Blaine E. Lemay, 23,
Ray.
Lemay had reportedly been following closely and was unable to
stop In time when Dowler began
slowing. Moderate damage was
listed to Dowler's vehicle.

Market report ·
ObJo YaUey lJvettuck Co.
Market Report
S.le every Satunt.y at 12 noon. Prirell are
tlken from the auctJon of Saturday, Sept. 4.
TN!nd.M: Veal Cllves steady ; rows $3 higher;

Ieeder cattle steady.

Fetder Sleel'l: Good and Choice 2$0 to 300 lbfl.
DHI: 3011 to 400 lb:i . li.~.IO : 400 to 500 lbo .
11 . ~ .10: 500 to eoo lbo . SUl.IO; eoo to 700 lbo .
II . IH2 . ~: 700 to 100 lbo. ~1.10: eoo lbo. and
over 53.»-eo.
Feeder Helfen : Good and Cllolce 250 to 300 Ibe.
47-411.10: 300 to 400 lbo. 47 .~; lOll to 500 lb.l. 4611.10: 1100 to 100 1b.l. 411-51; 1100 10 700 lbo. 47.- ;
700 to 110 lbl. 48.5CI-53.50; 100 lbs. and over 45.56&amp;4,
Feeder Bulls: Good arid Choice 250 to 300 lbs.

diplomats, that "there st111 Is a · focils ·attention on the Middle East
peace Initiative that the president
great deal to do" In the Middle
announced
last week.
East.
~plte Israel's rejection of the
"The situation remains explan and Its defiance of Reagan's
tremely tenuous," he said. "So far,
we'reon track. I'machronlcoptlm- call for a freeze on new Jewish set·
tlements In the occupied West Bank
lst and I'm convinced It's going to
and Gaza strip, the adrnln1stratlon
stay on track."
held out hope that Israel eventually
Deputy White House press secrewould soften Its position.
tary Larry Speakes said no further
John Hughes, the State Depart·
travel plans for Habib have been
ment spokesman, said Tuesday
set.
4« 7
that the United States does not re"He'll report today and give Ills
GIFT FOR NEG&lt;mATOR- Prealdeat Re8pa preMIIIII die Medal
perspective," Speakes sat d . gard Israel's rejection of Reagan's
Middle East peace proposal as final
of Freedom to Ambuiador Pb!Up C. Habib Tuadlly Ia 1¥ Eut a- Ill
"They'll discuss what Habib can
and plans to apply "proper preslbe White H0111e. The )ll'ftlclent, returnlag mlllntel
tram a lq-day
do."
sure"
on
Israel
and
other
parties
to
Calllorula vacatioa, preaealed Habib lbe aatloa's blgbelt clvillaB award
He said the ambassador would
for JU. work towanl peace Ia tbe Micldle Eul (AP ~).
continue to play a role In the Middle get the Initiative moving.
East peace efforts, although Hab- , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - -.......
lb's next tasks have not been
determined.
The spokesman said that further
meetings are planned for Habib at
the State Department and that the
envoy will also take some time off.
Reagan's presentation of the Medal or Freedom to Habib and today's meellngs were Intended to

Banged up Meigs
team plays at
Point Pleasant

Vol.l1,No.l9
Copyrighlod 1912

doo't miss

ooce-in-a-

20% OFF
.

IHetime
chancel

Page 7

•

•

at y en.ttne
Syrian -m issiles targets

I

S2.5&amp;·6UO; 300 to tOO lbe. Sl-61 ; 400 to 500 lbs. $362.$(1 ; 500 to 600 lb5. $3 . ~; 600 to 700 lba. $056.5o; 700 toaoo lb!l. tfl.43.~; aoo lbl. and over 4t!i2.
Hobteln Steen and Bulb :J:lO to 100 lbs. 43.50il.
Bul~ 1,1100 lbo up ~i .7i .
Slau~hter Cow1, utllltie! 32.50-40.50; cutters
and canners 31~ .00 .
cows lll1d eau ComblnaUon-.

Sortng.r Cow• ~~-

Veal Calves, ChoiceandPrlme&amp;a-7$.

Blby Ca lves~TopHI&gt;JI!IIO lo 130 lbo . !2.i6-63.25.
Boars tOO Jbe. up 6-47.50.
Pigs by lhe head ZHI.
Soln400lbo. up-.

YOU
ARE
GUARANTEED a big 12% every
6·Month or 14% on 2'12

AT

INGELS INVESTMENT CO.
INGELS FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY

year certificates. No ups
and downs. just 12 or 14%
each year. You can bank
on Ingels. We have been
here over 20 years. Come
in and let us talk to you
about our investments.

"Every mlssUe battery like this
that Is brought ln (to Lebanon) will
be destroyed. I hope this warning Is
heard ln Damascus (the Syrian
capital). We want no fighting with
the Syrian army," Begin satd.
Israel Insists on complete control
of Lebanese skies as a deterrent to
Syrian and Palestinian guerrtlla activity ln that country.
The latest attacks came amid a
rise In Syrtan-Israell tension follow·

It's now up to a federal mediator
to get talks going again 1n the eight·
day strike by North OlmSted school
district teachers, where less than
half of the 5,100 pupils have been
attending clasS€5.

I

~~.~!~.t:

The 273 members of the North
Olmsted Education Association on
Wednesday rejected the school
board's latest offer, whlch Included
a $12,400 base salary beginning
Jan. 1, said Paul Wise, director of
district administrative services.
He said 2,727 students attended
classes Wednesday.
Currently, the base pay ls$11,9'!1.
Teachers, who have been on strike
slnce Sept. 1, have been seeking
$12,782. Several non-economic mat·
tel'S are yet to be resolved.

SHADOW

CHAPMAN
SHOES

en .I
1

-Pomeroy

NEXT TO ELB£RFELDS
IN POMEROY

--~~

lng the abduction of eight Israeli
soldiers from their forward obser·
vatlon post on the Lebanon ceasefire line last Saturday. The
Palestine Liberation Organization
said It grabbed the soldiers, but Is·
rae! has warned It holdS Syria responsible for their release.
Syria, which maintains an estimated 25,00l trOJps In eastern Lebanon as "peacekeepers" following
the 197:&gt;-76 Lebanese civil war,
started moving mtssnes Into the Bekaa Valley last year. Israeli warplanes attacked the batteries ln
June a t the s!Jirt of the Lebanese
Invasion.
The concentration of Syrian and
Israeli forces In Lebanon carries
the potential of a major new outbreak of fighting, although at the
Arab summit In Fez, Morocco.
there were Indications the Syrians
might withdraw their forces from
Lebanon.

ATfACK - This map locates
the area where Israeli warplanes
knocked out four mobUe batteries
of Syrian SA-9 mlssUes ln
Lebanon Thul'!iday In the second
sucb attack on Syria's surface-toair mlssUes In two dats, lbe
Israeli mJIJtary commar*l said.

(AP Laserpboto)

Mediator enters Ohio teachers~ strike;
walkouts continue over 5 states

MIDDLEPORT Ott.

PH.

Israeli mllltary Chief of Staff Lt.
Gen. Raphael Eytan said In an Interview with Israel army radio recorded before the latest attack that
Israel would continue to hll Syrian
mlssUes brought Into Lebanon.
He said the policy had been formulated by the Israeli Cabinet after more than a year of discussion.
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin sounded the same theme atter announcing the earlier raid durIng a parliamentary debate
Wednesday.

By 1be Associated Press

Bring in this ad to get super savings on your ArtCarvad gold
class ring. Every ring Is baekad by the Ar1Cjlrvad Fuii.Jte·
lima W8tr8111)1 This offer expires November 30. 1982 and Is
to be used only for the purchase ol ArtCarvad Class Rings.

l S8ction. I 'l Pages
1S Cent1
A Muhimedia Int. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 9,1982

TEL AVIV, Israel (AP)- Israeli
warplanes knocked out four mobile
batteries of Syrilln SA-9 mlssUes In
Lebanon today In the second such
attack on Syria's surface-to-air
mtssnes In two days, the mllltary
command said.
A Syrian muttary spokesman In
Damascus said the jets hit "three
atr defense vehicles" In the attack,
but gave no other details.
Israeli jets carried out a slmllar
attack on a single battery of the
Soviet-buUt SA-9s In the same area
Wednesday, the mllltary said.
The communique repeated the
standard statement accompanying
raidS on Syrian missiles: ''The
state of Israelis flrm In Its decision
not to permit the Syrians to move
ground-to-air mlssUe batteries Into
the Lebanon area."
The heat-seeking SA-9 Is consldred one of the most effectlv~ In
the Syrian arsenal. Each battery
usually carries four missiles
mounted on a truck.

-~

106 N. 2nd

Page 5

Auditor Frank
explains. laws
on farm property

for latest Israeli attack

'ALL DRESS SHOES

~LMONO

Page 4

e

- - - - - - - - - - - - - -T -..--,r

THURSDAY, FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY

Watching beavers

Page3

eulltf

SPECIAL

Major Hoople's
football picks••

Wise said the district's nine
schools continued to operate Wed·
nesday with a teaching staff of 141,
tncludlng substitutes and admlnls·
trators. Normally, the district has
'1!.17 teachers.
In Mentor, about l.Xlchlldrenand
adults were kept away from their
clasS€5 Wednesday by a bus drlvers' strike at two centers at the
Lake County Board of Mental
Retardation.
About 80 employees, members of
the Ohio Public Service Employees
Association, went on strike Wed·
nesday. About half of them are bus
drivers, while the rest are clerical.
housekeeping and maintenance
employees at the Deepwood Center
and the Broadmore School.
The board Is offering the workers

a 6!,-S percent wage hike. while the
non-teaching employees want 10
percent, said Deepwood Superln·
tendent Donald Hartley . The
workers' contract expired Aug. 31.
In Newlon Falls, teachers auth()o
rlzed a strike Tuesday night. The
101 teachers have been without a
contract since Aug. 31. Tentative
agreement had been worked out by
the school board attorney and an
arbitrator. It was accepted by
teachers but rejected by the board.
In Elyria, teachers and board negotlators recessed a l&gt;-hour bargaining session Tuesday . The
Elyria Education Association, representing 480 of the district's 100
teachers, said It no agreement Is
reached by Tuesday, a strike will
be considered.
Meanwhile, a tentative contract

agreement was reached early today to end a week-long strike by 325
teachers In a suburban Chicago
school district, but thousands of
ot' er teachers continued walkouts
In five states.
In Detroit, meanwhlle, about
ll,&lt;XXl teachers continued to work In
hopes that a contract agreement
could be reached by week's end.
'The teachers have called a strike If
a settlement Is not reached by Frlday afternoon.
More than 6, 700 teachers are on
strike nationwide, affecting about
124,00) students .
Most of the strikes involve economic Issues. Many teachers face
pay cuts because of high unemployment and federal educa tton cut.
backs that have depleted school budgets.

Swiss police stonn embassy, rescue hostages
SEPTEMBER

*DESKS*GUN CABINETS
*BEDROOM SUITES *RECLINERS
*LAMPS *DINING ROOMS
*LIVING ROOM SUITES *CURIO
CABINETS *CEDAR CHESTS
*WOOD ROCKERS LOVESEATS
*SLEEPER/SOFAS

·*

.

BERN, Switzerland (AP) Swiss pollee stonned the Polish
Embassy today and rescued five
h9stages, tricking the four gunmen
.Inside by blowing down the door
with a remole'COntrolled bomb hldden ln a food container.
They arrested the four raiders
who had held the captives under
threat of death slnce Monday, demanding that Communist Poland
Uft martial law, tree Internees and
end repression.
Poland's official PAP news
agency said Swiss pollee used "paralyzing gas" during the bloodiess
operation, which lasted less than an
hour.
Swiss Justice Minister Kurt
Furgler said the tour gunmen, who
clalmed theY would blow up the embassy Friday unless their conditions were met, also had demanded
$1.45 mllllon and tree passage to
China or Albania.
"Switzerland wlll never accept
blackmail," he said alter the
rescue operation. "The decision to
stonn the embassy was taken durIng the night alter It was determined there was no room for
further negotiation."
Furgler said tour· gunmen,
drEssed In camouflage suits, were
arrested. He Identified the leader
as Florian Kruszyk, a 42-year-&lt;&gt;ld
former conviCt from Poland He
said Kru.szyk claimed he had
worked lor the Polish secret ser- ·
vice. Kru.szyk walJ sentenced to
ntne years In prison In 1969 for a
Vienna, Austria, Jewelry store
I'Qbbeiy In which ~
taken. He servEd four~~ his
term before being releasEd.
The dramatic rescue operation
begaJI at 10:42 a.m. and flided less

•

'

3 RD FLOOR- FURNITURE DEPT.

....

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
. ...
r

•

...

·t

• •

~

'

~

.·

were

•
'

,\..

- ---

'QO.

than an hour later.
Witnesses said a white van pulled
up ln front of the embassy and a
man dressed In a delivery suit took
a small white object up to the front
door of the embassy.
The man returned to the van and
made a second trip to the front door
with an a luminum case that usually

contained food lor the gunmen and
hostages. This time It was packed
with explosives.
When the man got back to the
van, the driver Jumped out and both
men ducked and ran off, witnesses
said . They said the container than
exploded, blowing In the door.
About 20 rtot pollee wearing

TI!JlRORIST8 ARE SUBDUED - Tw• Swill riot

polke, Jeft aad ceattr, lleld two tenw,lltl, Olle G.. lbe ·
I"UIId aad oae at npt, oallllcle tile Polllll Emtw•IY 1D
~

Swlturlud 'l'lnlnclay. The gaamea lleld fov

Pea,le boltage 'Ill lbe ·-he•y for tile put four dajl

-

;

"!

helmets, bullet-proof vests and gas
masks then charged into the tw()o
story building. Witnesses said they
he a rd about 10 additional
explosions.
There were reports of brief lighting between the terrorists and rtot
police when they spread throughout the embassy to search all of Its

rooms.

denwndtgg 1111 end to martial law Ia Pola111l- AU
boltaiel wen freed uharmed. Black, Image obICIIltq oae Ill tile riot pallcemeo Is 1111 out-Gf·fOC!Dll
polkueareblldit. (AP IAaerpboto)
·

.~

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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <elementText elementTextId="44820">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44819">
              <text>September 8, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
