<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14368" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/14368?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-10T22:23:08+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45475">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/adebfc52e27bb7342ec18358aba983d4.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4689858aaa7dd7e3fcd2c50cef6e8f86</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44866">
                  <text>'

WINTHROP

.

l

j

'l

'

.,
•,

I~ qQIN~ 1tJ 61T

'

A~ · Ya.J '•

;·TH INI&lt;I(iq-···

HERE AND'"THit\lK

. PLEASANT~.
.

. P~~T
THOW6fi15Z.·

I.

.'·

• •

·-1

~

'

..,

LA Dodge'rs lead
cut to one game...
Page3

l
i

I

'
•'

· NO ... ~!M
1HINKIN&lt;:i" '
A~ .
' BRa ' ·!..(.

James A. Rhodes
StUdent Center...
PagelO

Announce flawer
show winners ...
PageS

.'

e

•

a·I y

•

enttne

; VoUI,No.IOI
; C:nrlpl:tool1912

1 Section, 10 Pagu
15 Cents
A MYitimedla lm;. Newtpaper

~rs
'

plan w~terfront stu~y

·WASHINGTON -The House Public Wmca and 'l'ranapcrtatlon
Commlttee~aBkmtheAnnyO.,.It~tostudyiXUII:JI!!
watertrmt lrilprdvi!rnents oo the .Ohio, Miami and Utili! Miami
Rivers, Rep. BobMcEwtin, R.()blo, Said tod!ly.
. McEwen. ot HJIJsboro,'aald &amp;'llllblln anu will be Included tn the
stuey.
I.
.
'lbe stwly Is to COY!!' floOd protection needs, the use of flood plaln
lands, J'E8IOnal water 111pply needs and ecaon1c and human resource deYeliJpment;
'
·
·
·
McEwen said flood~ and watertrmtlmprovements are
''vltlil to the~ ot tiustQess and lndustey tn !irutbem Ohio." ·

.

.

Priscill~'s

Pop.

TO

c;;Q,

MOM

.

FATAL WRI!XJJ( - JIMI!ph L. Salterlleld, 19, Minersville, died In a
~~tlonU.S.35SUndayevenlng.'The drlverotthecarwas

'I'hrEe double-tatallly accidents lxxllted Ohio's weekend trafftc
death toll to 15, the Highway Patrol said.
'lbepatrol counts weekend fatanlles from 6 p.m. Friday to mid·
night Sunday.
'lbedead:
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Joseph L. S8tterllekl, 19, of Minersville, In a
ooe-earaccldentm U.S. :lilnGaWa CounJy.
Cl.EVELAND - ,AipbOqao Adrlne, 76, hometown unknown, when
struck by a m a CleYellind clly sll'l!l!t
.
ELYRIA -Jerry E. Klng,16, Elyria, Ina one-car accident on Ohio
. 57 In Lorain COUnly.
SA'RJRDAY
JACKSON - Sarah Hale, 17, and Rhooda Bingham, 17, both ot
McAltbur, Ina ~crashori U.S. :liln Jackson County.
,

LIKE THE .TIME I STOLE
SECQND BA~E, .AND l,QJ
MADE
ME ·~lNG .IT
f'ACK·
:·
•
I.,
!

r

.

.

F~een die:on Ohio IJishways

'
/·

, REME;M6ER ALL THE
CUTE ''STUFF r U5Et:'

..

car

not Injured. Satlerlleld Willi the second tramc fatalll) In GaDia County In
two da,ys and the third Ibis year.

Minersville man ·killed in Gallia wreck
A J.!l.year-olcl Minersville man
was killed Ina single-car accident on
U.S. 3&gt; at 7:10 p.m. Sunday, ihe
GaWa·Melgl; pool of the State High·
WilY Patrol reports.
Joseph L. satterfleld was pronounced dead at the scene by Gallla

County Coroner Donald Warehime.
The driver of the vehicle, Jane A.
Amberger, 16, Syracuse. was taken

westbound about two miles east of
Ohio 100 when the accident

to Hol2er Medical Center, where she
was treated and released.
•
The patrol states Amberger was

She reportedly IO!it control of the
vehicle on the wet pavement, slid
Into the median and overturned.

occUJTed.

coming to rest on Its top In the east·
bound lane.
satterffeld was thrown from the
vehicle, according to the patrol.
The highway patrol Is continuing
Investigation of the wreck.

U. S. troops remain offshore in Beirut;

PIQUA-Tmyastevenson,lB,otPiqua,lna~acctdentona

..

t,'OIIJ\tY. road In MWnl County.

'

_, ~-JudllhReed, 25, andJennaRldell, 23,1naone-car
~\~ clly street that landed the car In the Cuyahoga River.

n.

LIS.- Ronald Bartnette,
of Pleaaallts, w.va.,ln a .
one-car'accldi!nt'oo city~ In Gallipolis.
MEDINA .,.. Jaaon M. Taylor, 8, of Lakewood, In a car·traln
accldi!Dt on a Medina Cwnty road.
, URBANA -'James_!obj8S. 26, ofUrbllna, In a one-car accident on
G

a

u.s. 611111 QlampaJgn ~-

COSCHOCI'ON- 'lbomil.s R. Kubn, 43, ot CaibJcton, and Otis D.
Hudscn, 23, of Canal Lewlsvllle, In amotorcycJe.car accident on a city

.
/4

street

~.,'

.,

-

I

11i:

MOUNT VERNON- Richard Bluba)Jgh, 15, Mount Vernon, In a
Ohio 13 tn Knox Counly.
. STREETSBORO ·- James T. Karasek, no age given, from Ra·
verma, In a one-car accldentln Streetsboro, In Portage County.

'i

'•· . ·~ I
i

'~

• •.
'

•

!w().car accident m

t}.
I

'

\

OSU launches acidic pallution study
OOL~.

Ohio {AP) - A team of scientists tram Ohio State

U~llyajldlheObloAgrk!ul~Jb!searehCenterlsundertaklng
a lllr'ee-y~, $1nl,IXX) study the retiSOII for acidic poJJutloo some

ot

ot

lakes In New york 111111 Ontario.
. I Aadtng thti study team win be T.C. Weldensaul, professorofpJl!nt

•

'

CHAPS

'

__.... ........._.

,_

;,;..

,.

.'

pathology.
Wetdellsaul, chairman of the Ohio Governor's Sclentltlc Advisory
Taak ·FOCce oo Acid Rain; disputed contmllolls by ,environmental
grou.. thatsulfutdloxldepollutlmfromObloelectrlcplaJ)Illwasthe
priDcipaJ cause.of acid raln,poiJutloo.
"We don't reeJly know how much oftheaddlf!callollls the result of
naturalcaWII!II whlch,llave beeJI &amp;dngonformllllooiityeai'S.andhow
mucl! can be attributed to Industry and SOCiety,'' he said.
·

Discovers ancient Indian
village
'
.
FAIRPORT HARBOR, Ohio (AP)- Rematnaotanlndlanvlllagl!
llllll'e than 500 yt!!II'S old,lncl~ part It a hUmall sltull, have been
unearthed by a bd!cJau&gt;r qlerator clearing~ from a back lot tn

Falrpcrt ~• .

"Fon minute, It!Wgttt maybe I'd found somebody that had been
murclel-ed,".sald "•IJdo:reo:' operator ~Miles. '"11111a J started find.
lng miJre bones and we lllrUrEd out this was scme sort·ot IIIICient
graveslte."
.
'
·
.
.
"
R. ~ dlJi!ctor It ~ at Cue Western Reserve
UIIMnlly, lll'l'lvaJ at the •stte tci ~ what Miles had

navld

~.

.

'.

'"AI near as We (all teUrlllbtiiiM', this vW8geexi9tedilrQundUJOor
1400," be ald.
.
. '
Bliibhisalratdyflllllldthepartlali'I!IIUilnliotl2bodlell,alongwlth
I'EIIIIIi.it !!!D»ceramlc poaery aDd.~ ill flint lllll!dfcr IIJTOWS,
.' "llllli was a
DOt !I burial ground, .. be Bald. '"lbhhe pegple
burllid'tbelf dead rtcbt !It the vlllait and lbat's wbat we're ftndlilg
rlglit DOW," heAI8Jd.
'
.'
. '

vmeae.

·Memorial services held for slain victims
By 'The AIJII!Ocl••ed Press
Hundreds of weeping women
marched thrOugh Beirut's Chatfila
Palestinian refugee camp today to
pray at a mass grave for victims of
the Sept. 16-18 massacre that has
raised an International furor and
shaken Israel to Its core.
The final units of French and !tal·
ian contingents of the reconstituted
multinational peacekeeping force
also arrived In Beirut today, but
U.S. Marines continued to walt off.
sbore for the departure of Israeli
forces.
The peace keeping force was requested by Lebanoq after dlscov·
.ery that at least Jro Palestinian and
Lebanese civilians were slain by
Israeli-backed Lebanese Chris·
tlans In two refugee camps under
Israeli mllttary control.
The contributing countries, however, say none of the lnternatlonal
troops wDI be deployed untU Israeli
forces are removed from both the
easl and west sectors of Beirut, as
the Unl~ States has demaride!l.

The Tel Aviv mnttary command
announced Sunday that Its forces
would pull out of the capital's Mos·
lem western sector by Wednesday,
but gave no Indication of when the
whole city would be cleared.
Relatlves of the victims gathered
at the mass grave In ChatUJa at a
ceremony marking the Moslem
Feast of sacrifice. A few hundred
women sobbing and carrying
wreaths of nowers and photos of the
dead marched down the main
street and men chanted prayers
from the Koran, Islam's holy book.
Israeli Prime Minister Menecham Begin scheduled an emer·
gency Cabinet meeting for
Tuesday, and Israel radio predicted he wo111d have to concede to
growing pressure from hJs Cabinet
and dissident Israelis for a full·
scale Investigation of the country's
role In the massacre.
The Israeli army's announcement of the pullout date for west
Beirut was made a few hOurs tJe.
fore Israel radio and television

went off the air and public and prl·
vate businesses shut down for Yom
Kippur or the Day of Atonement,
holiest day on the Hebrew calendar. It began at sunset Sunday.
The kUitngs have drawn massive
protest demonstrations In Tel Aviv
and demands for the resignations
of Begin and Defense Minister
Ariel Sharon.
Israel radio said flve of the 20
members of Begin's Cabinet have
decided that the government's
proposal of a limited Inquiry Into
the massacre was not good enough
because It would not let lnvesllga·
tors subpoena witnesses and force
them to testify under oath.
Israeli Justice Minister M~he
Nlsslm was quoted In the dally
newspaper Maarlv as saying a for·
mal judicial Inquiry "now seems
Inevitable."
Relief workers continued digging
through rubble northwest of the Pa·
lestlnlan camps where a grave con·
talnlng 19 bodies was discovered

Friday, raising to320theconflrmed
total reported by the Red Cross.
ClvU defense workers said they suspect more victims may be buried
but the exact number may never be
known.

Lebanese chief prosecutor Ca·
mUle Geagea said 597 bodies had
been found at the camps, but there
has been no explanation for the
discrepancies.
On Saturday 400,1XXl of Israel's 4
mUllan people attended the largest
antl·government rally In Israel's
34-year history to protest Begin's
refusal to probe the massacre, and
they called for full troop wlthdra·
wal from Beirut.
The army's announcement of the
puUout date for west Beirut was
made a few hours before Israel ra·
dlo and television went off the air
and public and private bu'slnesses
shut down for Yom Kippur or the
Day of Atonement, hollesl'day·on
the Hebrew calendar. It began at
sunset Sunday.

Congress rushes toward election .recess
By CLJn' HAAS
A'IIOCie'ed Fr-. Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)
Members of Coogress, eager to recess for the~ elections,
will rush this
keep money
!lowing to the
8J government
while staging Some final preeleCIIon rhetoric on the House and
Senate floors •.
In observance of the Jewish Yom
Kippur holiday, llie House Is out of
• sesalcrl today, and the Senate, aJ.
though achedliled to meet, Wtll not
lake any roll call votes.
But work begins .In i!amest 'I\Jes.
day so that IePJatorB, III!XIous to
campaign full time back home, can
leave town by Friday.
·
·
The IDil'll Important cbore Ibis

week 11\111 he enactment of a stopgap
spending measure to keep money
fiowlng temporartly to the government when the new fiscal year beg·
Ins Friday.
The House already . has passed
such legislation carrying a Dec. 15
expiration date. The Senate Appropriations COOunlttee Is drafting Its
own version which carries a Dec. 22
explratloo date, and action by the
full Senate· Is expected to begin

been signed Into law. Without a stop.
gap measure, the government tech·
nlcally would be without money at
the beginning oflhe new fiscal year.
Congress · ·. 111 continue consider·
lng several ofI be regular approprla·
tlon bllls this week, but work on the
bulk of the money bills will walt for a
post-ejection lame-duck session
that congressional leaders say will
begin In mid-or late-November.
Meanwhile, Democrats and ReTuesdll,y.
I'JbllcaM are expected to snipe at
Negotiators from each chamber each other over President Reagan's
will work out the differences beeconomic program, the condition of
\Ween the two measures.
the economy and which political
Thefundlngbllllsneededbecause party Is to blame for the nation's 9.8
none ot the 13 reglilar approprla· , percent unemployment rate.
lions bllls necessary to provide moReaganhasaskedCongresstoap.
ney for government ~allons has prove a compromise multibillion·

'·

'lbe highest August rate tn tiE
area belonged to Jackson Coonty
with 15.7 of Its populatlm jobless,
down tram 16 percent In July.
'lbe jobless rates In Gallla and
Meigs ~tieS ·were below the
state's 12.5 percent August rate.
lfowev«, lbey were aooye the Ulll·
oted States unemployment' rate
which lttJod at9.6perceJJtlnAugust,

dollar job training bUt to replace the
Comprehensive Employment and
Training Act which expires at the
end of the week.
Democrats ~pport the measure,
but they say It lsnosuhstltutefor a$1
billion measure they are pushing to
create :Dl,OOO temporary public ser·
vlceJohs.

While the Senate works on tbe
stopgap measure and other .Items·
held up during the filibusters over
abortion and school prayer, the
House will:

-Vote Tuesday on legislation to
repeal the Reagan administration's
economic sanctions against the Soviet natural gas pipeline.

�-·-

Commentary

.

.

.

' I'

llll 'tourl Sln•d
l'llllh'(ll\ , llhlll

614-992-t l56
l lH 'UTJ.:U TIITIU.: 1'\'TERfo:.'TIW Till- ,\tFu ;.~ \t.\ .'-41\ \IU \

RflRERT 1.. WINGETT
l'u hlt ~h • · '

I'AT WHIT E HE.~O

ROR HOEF'UCH

\ •:- i:-laut l'uhlisht·r/f ·unlrulkr

(;,. u. •niiM :tll ll l!l't

OALE ROTHr.EB. JR .
~t'\!S

Eclitur

,\ \11-:l\tRER ul l'ht· ,\ :.s•wia lt"fi l 'r~·s~. lula ud ():till l'to ''' ,,,,.,,. i:t li••n Hlltl lht•
\ mt·ri • itlt ,..,. , . .,., l'i j)Mj)l:r l'uhlisht·fli A":o.•~·U.I iun.
.

I Frrt-:KS nt· «WINIO' art· \H·knmt'tl . Tht'.' shuuhiiH· It"!&gt;:- lhau :lt411111unb lurtr.;. All
lo·ll •·rl'o ;in · :o.uhjt'l'l In t•dilin ~ IUKI JllU"t lw ~il( tU'tl •ilh IUinll' . ;ukln'!o:&lt;&gt; 1111d h•lt•pbunt'
ttum l• •r . \lu unsll(twd lt•fh •h 11. ill ht• jKlhlillht•d. l..l ·tlt·n; 11huu ld ht· itt l(t•tKII~t:o.k. addn"MSint.t
t!'o .. UI'II,

1\11(

pt•rJOtllllllilit•s.

Exp~rting energy

••• and taxes
The severance taxes levied by the coal-producing states of the rocky
Mountains have Ignited a political dispute as hot as the !Ires In the Mldw·
estern power plant boUers which use this region's coal and their fuel.
Even though the U.S. Supreme Court presumably resolved the controversy when It ruled In July 1981 that Montana's severance tax was a
constitutional exercise of the state's authority, the debate continues unabated over the legitimacy and equity of the levy In that state and, to a
Jesser extent, similar severance taxes In Wyoming and North 'Dakota.
Members of Congress !rom the Midwestern states which are the
largest consumers ol ·coal from the Nol1hern Rockies repeatedly have
sought (but failed) In recent years to secure passage of federa.lleglslation
which would supersede state laws and require a substantial reduction In
the tax rate.
Although Montana's severance tax rate varies according to the heat
quality of the coal and the manner In which It Is mined, the levy averages
30 percent. The state last year rollected $99.2 mllllon In severance taxes.
Wyoming Imposes a 10.5 percent state severance tax on coal production whlle local governments levy an additional ad valorem tax which
averages 6.5 percent, bringing the total to 17 percent. Severance tax
revenues In 1981 amounted to SJ38.3 million.
North Dakota's coal severance tax Is 85 cents per ton, adjusted to
match changes In the wholesale price Index. Last year's severance tax
collections totaled $103.4 miUion.
Opponents of those taxes argue that the reglon'.,s roal Is a valuable
national resource which belongs to the entire country rather than to the
states where It happens io be located by geologic and geographic
coincidence.
.
In addition, those critics claim that the tax Is Ulegal because It Is not
actually imposed on Individuals and rorporations In the coal-producing
states bu Instead Is "exported" to coal-consuming states elsewhere In the
country.
Those arguments, however, eannot withstand the scrutiny of anobjec·
tive examination of the Issue.
The region's coal may, In theory, be a national resource butthe severe
social, economic and environmental problems caused by theextraordlnar·
lly rapid development ol energy "boom towns" are the responsibility of the
states.
Severance tax revenues are desperately needed by the producing
states to finance those communities' expanded requirements for pollee
and fire protection, educational and health care facilities, water and sewer
systems, roads, housing, social services and land reclamation.
The "exporting" of various state taxes to consumers In other states Is
part of a national pattern. Scores of states and municipalities, lor example,
Impose an occupancy tax on hotel and motel rooms which are used almost
exclusively by travelers from other cities and states.
New York levies a transfer tax on all transactions conducted on the
New York and American Stock Exchanges, even though buyers and
sellers frequently are residents of other states. Nevada's gambling tax Is
imposed on wagers made principally by tourist s from other states.
Although the coal severance tax Is as high as 30 percent ofthevalue of
the luel at the mine. the cost passed along to the consumer Is conslderaby
tower. Montana state Sen. Thomas E. Towe, the architect ol that state's
coal severance tax, estimates that the $359.86 average annual bill paid by
Detroit Edison's residential customers Includes only $1.24 In Montana
production taxes.
Finally, It ought to be noted that the severance taxes collected by the
coal-producing states ol the Northern Rockies are very modest In contrast
with the comparable levies imposed by the country's major oU- and gasproducing states.
Three states In that latter category- Texas, Alaska and Louisianaaccounted for $4.2 billion of the $6.4 bUIIon In state revenues !rom severance taxes last year. almost two-thirds of the entire nationwide total.
Montana. Wyoming and North Dakota collected only $341 million In
1981 severance taxes, 5.3 percent of the national total. That certainly
doesn't constitute an Intolerable burden on other states seeking to share
their energy resources ..

Today in history
Today Is Monday, Sept. 27, the 270th day o!1982. There are 95 days left In .
the year.

Today's highlight In history:
On Sept. 27,1964, the Warren Commission Issued areportconcludlni:that
Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone In assasstnatlttg President John F.
KeMedY 10 months earlier.
Qnl~date:

- '1779, John Adams was named to negotlatetheAmerlcanRevolutlon·
ary W 's peace terms with Britain.
·
-In
, George Stephenson ol Great Britain operated the first locomotive to h • . a passenger train .
-In 1 , a typhoon battered the Japa1Wse Island of Ho~hu, 1dJllng
almOS .~ peq!le.
'
'
-In 1969. the Czechoslovak.governinent resigned In the~ stage of a'
sweeping purge of jlberal elements In that Canmunll;t regime.
·.
Ten years ago: The Nobel Commlt!A!e In Stockholm lliii10UIICf!d It would
not award any peace prize In 197".
"
' ·
Five years ago: Soviet Foretg;.Minlster Andrei Gromykoaddl'esaed the
United Nations General Assembly In Ne\v York, then met with President
Carter In Washington.
One year ago: Several people died and 40 were Injured In a III!W!D-bour
battle between Iranian revolutionary guards and guErrillas~ to the
regime of the Ayatollah Khomelnlln Tehran.
. ·
Today's birthdays: · Sen. Olarles Percy; R·ID, Is 63 yean old. Film

• clb'ector ~Penn Is~. ·

,
. . 'Ibot.lgbt for Today: Morilllndignatblls jealousy with a hakr. - H.G.
Wells, English wrlter·bls~ (~1946).
,

27,1982 '
.. •

•
•'

).

•

Majors

I

,•

England became the cobbler, and
now Korea and Brazll Is the
cobbler. We can't deal with this ·
world by looking back, by harken· ,
log back to simpler days when
problems seemed smallef'."
Then he quoted Satchel Paige. I
then realized that John Glenn, a
real hero of two wars and outer
space, never seems to talk about
the IJIISI. Ronald Reagan, the ceUulold hero, talks ahout almost nothing but the past - In private
conversations about the old days In
Hollywood, In public speeches
about . how great America was
when he was VOIIDI!l~r

I

-w

...""""'

Mlnlrau'JII.ot

92

boil t
Dol roil
o.v.lincl

•
•

L,
61

"'-

~,.. Jff'lenon 16. Bluffton 15
E. Clewland su- ~ Parma 12
E . ~... . l f . - 7

. m2

Ill
1R
76

11)

.Sill

7fi
'!Iii

.!01

Ll~

.~

15\i

--

....... City

011&lt;1110

Oelcland
1\&gt;xa.1 ;
Min~ a

Ali
62

II\

......

111

M
!M
97

z.

:1)

w..tow. Pa .. Z. - · V a l . 14

~m

n

R2
7S

~an lr

Pal1t
:10, RM!rSancUI&lt;V
7
....._
Sl. St. Mary 11
... ~
~(Ill 11. MJdclefown M.tllon 7
LIJI;,to Calh. • Panna Holy Name 0
L1~ew ood Sr. t.dwlnt 27, Tol.
9 . FrlnC1I (]

7

.fHn

•1

R9 67
Ill 11)

EdiDI H. S. Central 7

-

!ll~

1l

Calltirnla

oa

.:liM

~NI

Nf'W York

Toroolo

....

.1~

.529
.fW

L1~

.01

22&amp;.1.:

~ 36. Satatllmatc. 19
It, .........wa F4Jo"""" 0
MalYml 7. St...-bwll: 6
,NOel Ml'Kinlr)o 7, Warren W, Rfterw

&amp;'f:

7.111o

•.1l7 2T
..Ti4 .1l'llJ

PaileiVIIIf HltYfl/ :11. -

NI'W York 6. Bo110112
Dlotrolt &amp;. ~and o
Ou.klaiwl to. Kan.M• 'ary 3
Baltlrntlr't' 7, MUwaukfto 2
CaUIJr,na fl. Tf'Xu 5

SUlltk'rl M. Poland Semmary 7
Sytvanll NontMrw 1), Tot RofJ'n

TQ!. Bowshor 24. ~- _ , .

Wamn O\llr1liOn 41. H.-, W. 11&lt;&gt;

s.&gt;aniP 7 Toronto a

"""""
voa,..

·~aG.nw.

Wlnt1.•rsvllle 13, SttubPnvWe C.th. ' 1
Chaney 15, Clrw. Kennedy 8
Yw,._ Swth Jl, YDW'f«. East 8

C'koveland 4. Detroit :1
Bo&amp;ton ~. Nn.o York 2

2, t:hk~ 1

-"-F--

BahirnO? !i, MUwaukfto 2
~

College results

Kansas CUy 4

Toronto 6. Sfoa!flfo '.1

Texu 1. Callfornla s

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

BJ'ftleA

ltd.,_
£AliT
DaMon ~ 31, Navy 0
f\om St. :rr. ~-kl :II

-N.4.TION.U.1.1'A0\ll!!:

ru.oa

WL
!10 tJi

Sl' . t.ouM t

.m

PhUadol'*'o

114

MOIIII'l'l\
Pllllbu"tl
Cltk.,a

R'l - 7'l
81 74
Ell R7

Nl"W York

62

71

9.,

Weur. 01\tW.

u.
'""""" I
Atlanta

111
A4

111
n

San Fran!"bito
San DlfRO

R4

Hou i"lon

74
:"17

71
77
R1

CIIK'Irmlllll

~

~

s.ht'*''• Oamt~~
Atlanta 12. Soan Dielo 6

.142

6'f:

.~1

R~

....,.

27\'J

Alabama ~. Vandcrtlllt 21
Auburn Zt, 'fl.&gt;nnmseto 14
ClemiCI1 21. W. Carolina 10

·""
. ~2

-1

. ~2

1
7
11
211

Duke !11, VITPIII 17
E. Carolbla 24. Cent. Mlchta:an 6
f'1oridl 2'7, Mlulll.,_,l Sl . 17

.44:1

.m

.ro.1
.4'77
•.'M

21

""""'"f.:Lamar3
cat u. Oklanoma fl

swthPn'i

Franmro s. t..c:. MRE"k'!'' 4

SwUrrn Mfth. 16. Tf'xaA Chrt.,tlan L1
SW ladllana .n. N. 'I'PUJ St 14

s....... o...

Thxu 71. Mluowi 0
Tt'X81 A&amp;M :1:1. Loublana Tech 2T
FAKMM'
Air Fonr 39, Br1$Ctlam YOUJIR .~

ChiC'~ 6, Sl. Lor.&amp;L&amp; 1

Hou81po 4, Ondnnall 0

Ar1zona·SI. t~ CaiUa'nla 0
Colorado St. 1 Nf'W Mexico St . 17
Fresro St. 25. WebPr St. 9
Hawalll7, '1\'oxu-EI PIUO 10
Iowa 17, Artzooa 14
Montana l6. N. Artuna :r.
Montana St. 11. Nt"Vada·Rml 10
San DQo St. 26. Nf'V.·Las VfS!as 'l1
San Jol(o St 17, 0reRon St 1:1
Utah St 19, Fu.JIC'rtoo Sr. 0

San Frandsco 3, L&lt;l' AnJif'k'l 2

Transactions
Wf'dlt'ftlll ~~~ Truaadklllll

'A8UTIIo\LL

N11lllul a..~~.etball AMed.lell

NEW YORK KNICK~ - Sl~t"d Ernlt'
Gru nflf'ld, forw ard, to a !hrf't'o~ar ronrral't
afrtr K a'n1a~ Cl ly cho:M' not ro mat('h Nt&gt;w
York'&amp; oftrr.

Washlf1«1m

J?. ~ n
Wyomln. ~ . Color"aOO 10

HOCKEY

NaUolllll •ockqo Lupe

•

The same pattern of Israelilnllltratlon that has been seen In the
West Bank territories seems to be ,
evolving In Lebanon. The ultranationalist extremist group, Gush
Emunlrn, Is planning to put Israeli
settlements In southern Lebanon,
acCording to U.S. reports.
U Begin follow~ his past action,
he wW not denounce these ·settlements for lear of criticism from
hardllne Israel factions that are the
bedrock of his political support. Instead, he wtil see that the bootleg
settlements are hooked up to water
and electricity to make them permanently viable.
The Gush Emunlm and the Israell Army's chief rabbi; Gen. Gad
Navon, believe that God. may be
giving them southlirn Lebanon to
compensate for . Israel's wlthdra·
wal from the SinaL The chaplain's
support would be a key element In

'I
I

'

l
''
'

Jack Anderson

SWtll'rn r.tetn. 16. Tl'xa5 Christian L1
SW Louisiana 31, N. 1\&gt;~tas St . 14
'ff'MI_IMfJ_"t Sr: n Trxas Soottl&gt;rn 71. lk'

••

•

All this Is, curiously enough, ' few tedious, day-to-day responslbllprobably, to the good as far as the · Illes, while cllnlng grimly to the
I ,;,
free world Is concerned. Old c;llcta- reality of power.
.;
tors are seldom very venturesome; ·.
In bOth cases, luckily, real
'
their Instinct, naturally enough, Is · cl!ahge- when at last It does rome,
to play It safe. The Soviet,Union imd as II must, thanks l!ll!uman mortal· '
Red China 11ndoubtedly seem lty ,..: Is quite likely to result In ·a
.,
and are --'- Menacing enOugh to lateral .shlft of power, rather than a
their nelghllOrs; but In point of fact .true devolution: I.e., to the nearly ·'
neither onP Is causing anything like contemporai'y cronies of the dead " ".)
the ·trouble It could.
despot, rathei' than to a geitutnely
It Is young dictators that the neW generation. And that, In tum, •
world must look out for - men who wW tend to perpetuate the sort ol
can reasonably look forward to de- . cauitous aggression, often by •·All'·
cadeslnwhlchtoenjoy!hefrultsof proxy, that the Soviet Union has
aggression. Chairman 'Mao was pursued under Brezhnev, and the ,....
only 48 when he completed his con- emphasis on domestic Improve. quest of the Chinese mainland; ments that has characierlz~
Stalin just 44 when Lenin died and Deng' s ~me In Peking. .
.A far more dangerous situation
left ~ussla effectively In his bait~.
Hitler was 43 wheil he became would arise If, In either capital, conchan~llo~ of Germany, and N;apo- trol of the machinery of power were ·~:
leon had barely turned 30 when·he seized by SO(Ilebody quite outside
assumed as, first cilnsuf, the leader- ·- the current ruling circles - a well' ship of France.
.
' COMeCted, young general, lijly, Let
U rumor Is to be belieVed, Leonid such a youthful monster get Ills
BI'ezhnev 'may be planning some , hands flmily on the levers of. state
wort of ~ml-~tlremenrat the end authority and 1te would soOit be
of this year; but you can bet your - loo!llng. like Alexander tile dl-eat
bottom J;Uble that nobOOy In MOB-' for: new worlds to conquet. And
cow Is counting on his SUJTI!I,Iderlttg_ since (here's only one thele days,
real control. Like Deng HsliiQ-pt.ng, . : 1the futUre would be grim tftdeed.
..
Brezhnev wUI probably give up ~
'
·
• •'
1·1 .

..

....

..

.

Texas A&amp;M :It Loublana T('{'h 27
W. 1\&gt;xas St. ~. McN«'M' Sl. 17
FAKMM'
Air FOI"Cl' 39. Briaham YOUnJ! ,'JR

SlrelalrdQ'~tRMuiiM

Akron Blrllt8 G. Youfljl. WIL'IOn li, tk'
Amelia :n, Batavia 0

-.--------.

•

I

I

Cobrado

St . ~

New M('xieo St. 17

F'n'soo St.~. Wl'brr St. 9

Hawa1117. Texas-EI Paso to
Idaho r.&amp;, Ponland St. 0
Iowa 11. Arllala 14
Mmtana :1&amp;. N. Ar111'rla :1!'1

co..
~ "26,· Bubo'non
' 1:1
Cil. SUmnlt
C1n. Acadmly

Montana St. 17, Ntol.·ada·Rem 10

San l&gt;k1to St. 26, Ne'V.-L.as
San Jo.oleo St. 17. Oreaoo St.

Ckw. BlW'dlcflne 14. You~. Hayton 6

Lai«'Y1cw (J
Ck'ov£&gt;. St .kHph 19. Tot. Whltmt'f 7

Ck&gt;v£'. Cmtral Cat h. 37,

Utah Sl. 19, Flllk&gt;non Sr. 0

t.'

WashlnJIIoo .n, Cln.&gt;!iPl U

Ck&gt;vr. South 14 . Oevl'. Eulll
Clf&gt;o.T. Trinl~· ~. Lorain Cath. 1!1

Sports briefs...
By 'lbe Assoclaled Press
GOLF
COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP)- Bobby
Clampett fired a S-under-par 64 to
capture the $250,!KXl Southern Open
golf tournament, l)ls first PGA tour
victory.
Clampett, 22, In only his second
tun year on the Professional Golfers
Association tout, ; overtook .third
round leader George Burns at the
lOth · hole. The former Brigham
Young star began a string of. four
consecutive birdies and won by two
strokes with a 72-hole total of 266,
14-under-par.
Hale Irwin, who shot a courserecord 61 with nine birdies and the
rest pars, finished second at 268,
whUe Burns feU to third at 269.
KENT, Wash. (API - Patty
Sheehan parred the llnal hole and
nipped JoAMe Carner by a single

I

I

14~1,

'! ~-...

,
t

j.

~

1U)

f

... ~

.. fl ~

-~

.-~

mer and added a sacrHicefly, while
Milwaukee's Gorman Thomas
belted his 39th homer, tops In the
majors.

~

·'.

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

'l'EN1'Jti

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - John
McEnroe won a small measure of
revenge for his defeat In the Wimbledon llna1s by thrashing a listless
Jimmy Connors 6-1, 6-3 to capture
the $250,!KXl Transamerica Open
tennis championship.
INGLEWOOD, Calif. lAP) Top-seeded Ivan Lendl of Czechoslovakia overcame a 3-0deflctt In the
first set to defeat seventh-seeded
Kevin Curren of South Africa 7-6,
7-5, 6-1 to win the singles title In the
$.lii,!KXl World Championship Tennis Forum Classic.

All aabooooooard.
Boarding a steam train
or sailing off on a riverboat excursion are two
of the more exciting
ways to see Ohio in
the fall.
For more information on Ohio fall vacations, call toll -free :

1·800·BUCKEYE

Our travel advisers will be there to answer your calls throughout
September. Or, mail this coupon to Ohio, Box 1001,
Columbus, Ohio 43216.

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

Name'--------------------------------------------Address; ___________________________________________

Zip·---------------

City

'\bu haven't seen Ohio until you'Ve seen it all.
------~Some

''

,.

More oom-pah-pah.

shot In the Ladles Professional Golf
Association 's $175,000 Safeco
Classic.
Sheehan, fifth on the money list
this year, toured the6,(1!4.yard, par72 course In 70. Carner, the leading
money winner on the tour, shot 71.

~

...

•

potato festivals during September. It seems like a
harvest festival of some sort or another is cropping up
in almost every town.

Wyominfl 24. Cobrado 10

.....

,,,,

•

Apple polishing. Ohio's loaded with apple, corn,

v~u 23

...

.... \ 'l

.

Fall in love with Ohio.

Alir.ma St. 1~ Callfomia 0
lkMK&gt;St 7l. Paclflt" U. l"i

Avon 17, Luttrran W. 6

&amp;ochwood 47. Nc.&gt;wbwy 6
Bt'l1tslllrf' ll. Rk'tlmooll HD. 6
Bradford 14, Col. St Chirk'l i
Buckfl'Y£' s. l\ Bcllalrl' Sf . John 7
Canton Calh. 77. C1fw&gt;- Collinwood 0
Cantoa 1'\mk.l!q 16. Kent Rot:tac&gt;\'Cir 13

=

~

l

a 4-0 lead, but Oakland rallled as
Dwayne Murphy and Tony Armas
hit solo homers and Mike Davis
belted a two-run double.
Jim Rice's two-out triple gave
Rallget'!'17, Angels 5
Boston a 3-2 lead In the seventh In·
Larry Parrish hit a three-run homer, capping a lour-run first Inning nlng. The Red Sox added two Insurance runs In the eighth. Dwlgllt
to highlight the Texas victory.
California remained 3~ games Evans smacked his 28th homer, a
ahead of Kansas Cl ty In ~he AL two- run shot, olf loser Ron Guidry,
West. Any combination of Califor- 14-8.
Bob Stanley, 12-7, got the victory
nia victories and Kansas City losses
totalling lourwUI give the Angels the after balling outstal1er MlkeToiTeZ
In the sixth.
pennant.
Twbts 2, White Sox 1
Reggie Jackson hit his 36th hoBobby Castillo tossed a five-hitter
mer, while Fred Lynn and Doug
DeCinces also homered for and Gary Gaettl hit his 25th homer
lor the 1\vlns. CastWo,12-ll, won his
California.
fourth straight game while beating
A's 5, Royals 4
Richard Dotson.ll-14.
Mike Heath's run-scoring single
Ron Washington tripled and
with two out In the eighth capped
added three singles for Minnesota.
an Oakland romeback and sent
Indians 4, Tlger!l3
Kansas City to Its ninth loss In 10
Jack Perconte had an RBI double
games.
Jerry Martin and U.L. Washing- as the Indians capitalized on some
ton had homered as the Royals took shabby Detroit fielding.

and the Brewers and Ortolesend the
season with a four-game series In
Baltimore.
In other AL games, Texas beat
West Division-leading California 7·
5; Oakland raUJed past Kansas City
5-4; b.Jston downed New York 5-2;
Cleveland edged Detroit 4-3; Minnesota nipped Chicago 2-1; and Toronto topped Seattle 6-2.
" I knew Shelby had a good arrn,
and I knew we had a chance once I
saw him (Skube) coming In,'.'
Dempsey said.
Orioles starter Dennis Martinez,
15-12, said "that was the play of the
game. U they tied the game, they
might feel completely dltferent."
Skube, a plnch-hltterwhoseslngle
had set up a Milwaukee run In the
eighth, said he gave It his best shot.
"My Instructions were to go and I
went," he said. "I got a real good
jump. U the throw Is off six Inches
one way or the other. I'm safe."
Eddie Murray drilled his 31st ho-

.----....
·-.--::
··---

j

have clinched a tle," said St. Louts
skipper Whitey Herzog. "But It's
good In the fact that we didn't IOSl' ·· -:;
any ground -and that It's aoother •
daygone."
•l
Astros 4, Reels o
~ I
Nolan Ryan, u;.n, struck out 11.
marking the !44th tlme In his career '
the right-hander has faMed 10 or •
••
more batters In a game, and com·
blned with Bert Roberge on a six- '
'I
hitter as Houston beat Cincinnati.
The Astros scored on two-run doubles by Art Howe and Scott LouckS.
Melli 6, Ph1JJies 4
.
New York dampened Philadel•
phia's peMant hopes for the second
•
straight day as Mookie Wilson dell·
''
vered a two-run, pinch-hit single to
I'
cap a three-run seventh-Inning.
I
Pirates 3, Expo8 0
•
Pittsburgh's Lany McWWtams
fired a live-hitter, Jason 1llompson
•
cracked a two-run homer and Jim
••
Morrison added a solo shot as Montrears chances ol repeating as NL
lI
East champions were just about
I
extinguished .
'

ThJW 21, M1Pout1 0

lly'l'hP ..\......edt" Pt'ftlll

The elderly.__d_i_c_ta_l_o_rs_ _____,;_-.-w_u_lia_m_A._~w_h_er ...· ~,
NEW YORK (NEA) - There- pens but hardly the sort you'd want
cent game of musical p~alrs In Pek· to turn a country over to.
lng, and the rumors of Brezhnev's
Worse yet, however, are the·
Impending retirement In Moscow, _shadowy types out on the fringes of
serve to remind us that the world's power - Men perhaps truly capa-.
two leading dictatorships are both ble of supreme rule, but suspect,
gerpntocracles- socletles,ruled by and olt'e!J resentful, for that very
old men - and that major changes reason. So the old tyrants hang on .
arel mpendlng and cannot long de- and on, afraid to relinquish the sulayed In both cases.
preme authority thai they know
Brezhnez Is 75 and In falling very 'weh may subsequently be
health; Doug Hslao-plng, ·the de used against them.
The Soviet rulers, having had a
facto dictator ol Red China whatever his actual title, Is 78 and ap- couple of decades' more expeparently fairly spry, but n!)t (as tbe rlence than their Chinese couQter·
saying goes) getting any younger. parts, have occasionally alowed
Both are surrounded by allies and ' losers In the power ~lruggle to opt
advisers In their 70s, or - In the for what was caned ~·retirement'."
case of Deng, who has just carried tit®gh It has seldom been truly voout a "reforrn"'tntended to rejuven- luntary. OrdlnarUy, as In the cases
ate the leadership - by a ·couple of ~enkov, Molotov (for a time)
spring chickens In their 001. Say and Khrushchev,ltamounted to lit·
what you wtll,lt's an elderly crowd tie more than Internal exUe.
In both cases.
. · In Peking, however, \he Gang of
The reason, of course, ~ that die- Four wUI be lucky Hthey manage to
tatorshlps _find the transfer of settle for life Imprisonment. Thelt
power !rom one generation to nemesis, Hua J{uo-fen~; though.
another the most difficult 9f .aU may be more fortunate. Perhaps
tricl&lt;s to Pui! off. Despots who sur· Deng wUI confer on him ihe sort of
vive toto their &amp;Is and on. have usu- non-per!IOD status that Bfezlmev fl:
ally taken care · to · surround · naUy ' allowed Khrushchev, an-d
themselves with fawning yes-men ' ,thus perrtllt hi~ to die In bed.
. who are adequate to flU 1ountaln·
· ·, .

Bayk!r ,., TPxu 1'K'h 23
Howlton 411. Lamar 3
Swllrm Cal 12, Oklahoma 0

ONo HIP fk:hoool Foott.D

transforming temPorary military the avlor of the Maronlte (Chris•I
governments lritd permanent clv- tian) population.
)
.
"1Hen the Israeli Army ivui enUlan bodies. Sensing an oppottun·
I
I
tty. Isral!ll businessmen ·are ter Lebanon, wUI occupy the rieces••
already beginning to establish sary territory and wUI create a
themselves In occupied ·Lebanon. • {:hrlstlan regime 'fhlch .will ally ItA significant historical note self'with lsrael," Dayan rtWrtedlY
should be mentioned here. It adds · continued. "The. territory !rom the
luel t,p the White House suspicions. .Lltama (River) southward will be
A former Israeli prime minister, totallY. annexed b)Hsrael and evj!r·
'
Moshe Sharett, published an lntrig- ythlng wW be all right."
'
The Dayan scenario was fol- .__.•
ulng account In 1978 of a meeting of
Israeli df"ense and foreign-policy lowed to the letter - even to the
officials. 11te meetmg occurred 27 choice of the cooperative Christian
years ago, and quotes the late leader's military rank. Maj. Saad
Moshe Dayan, then army chief of Haddad, a cashiered Lebanese of·
staff, as saying Lebanon was rlpe fleer, has been acting as Israel's
puppet warlord In the Lltanl River
for the picking.
.
area
for years.
,
"The only thing that's necessary
'The
secr,et
Sept.
15
report
preIs to find an officer, even just a rnadicted
that
Israel
would
try
to
bes·
· .'
jor,''. Dayan said, according to the
tow
legitimacy
on
Haddad,
account. "We would either win his
. ' '
heart or buy him with money, to possibly by Insisting that he be In· "'!
eluded In any future Lebanese rem~ agree !?declare himself
gime.

Art&amp;llSM St. .:P.. S. llllnolo! ll

High school scores

••

, I '

I!OOI1tW!8f
Ardkansas 14, MJII1511ppll2

NEW YORK RANGERS - As."IKlll:"d
Rick Strat'k, aoallt&gt;: ChrLI Rl.'n11ud. Sttvl."
Rkhmond. Grant LfodyardJtndScor Klme-n·
dorsi, dtof('n)Momen and Gt'orJ:f' Mc Phf'(',
.Jim M alont' and Bob Sru rHt&gt;ld, forwards, to
Tul!;a of liM' Cf' ntral H ockty Lfoa~~.

•

a. F1ot1da AAM 'LI

llllVnllmiT
ArUnsas lt, Mlsalsllppt 12
Bl)ior M. Trxu TPch 23

N&lt;'W York 6, PhUadclphla 4
PltrMlu'lth :1.. Mont~al 0
San DWRo :t Allan! a 2

""ANt&gt; SfRONCi
AS ACU&gt;Ht IN LUNiON.
'

By BEN WALKER
AP Sporis Writer
The critical moment of the most
crucial game In the American
League East pennant race this year
came down to a battle ol two
rookies.
With one out In the.eighth Inning
Sunday, Milwaukee's Bob Skube
was perched on third base with his
AL East·leading Brewers trailing
second-place Baltimore 3-2.
CecU Cooper then lifted a soft fly to
center. field. where Orioles rookie
John Shelby caught the ball as
Skube tllgged up.
Shelby's throw home took one hop
to Ortoles catcher Rick Dempsey.
who made the tag just In time to
complete the double play and end
Mtlwaukee's threat. Baltimore
added two Insurance runs In the
ninth for a !&gt;-2 victory, which cut
Milwaukee's lead to just two games
over the Ortoles.
Each team has seven games left.

f1orldl Sl . 11, S. Mlsabs(WJ17

Gramttlna St.

gle off Rick Camp.
"They're all Important now because we've got to win them all,"
said Manager Joe Torre ol the
Braves upcoming series with the
Giants. "I'm pleased we're going
out thereafter a good effort. We just
lost to a good pitcher.··
St.Louis had Its magic number lor
clinching the NL East reduced to
two despite losing to Chicago,
thanks to the Mets' win over secondplace Philadelphia.
Cubs 6, Cards I
St.Louis, which has six games remaining, needs any combination of
wins or Philadelphia losses totaling
two to naU down Its first title since
1968.
Ferguson Jenkins, 13-15, pitched
seven-hit baD for eight Innings to
record his mth career trtumph aM
capped Chicago's two-out, five-run
first Inning outburst with a two-run
double. Jay Johnstone also had a
two-run double In the Inning and
Junior Kennedy added an RB1 single off Eric Rasmussen, 0-2.
"It's bad In the !act that we could

Orioles remain alive after 5-2 victory

Ge&lt;riOI " · s. ca-.. 18
Cifa'ala TK't1 21, ~IU! St II

Nf'W York 2. PhlladPipHa I

~0 1MOU SM.\LT

I

Rul.... l~-7
W. VlrM!ftl.l C. Rkilmond 10

~ ~~

.~1!'1

Montre-al 9, Pfltlbu..,. 4
~ - Loul.ol !\, Chlct.J;O 1
Houston ;t, OndMatl t

San

o

'noolriWU Val. 77, Fd'lell ll

ChlciRO L\ Mlnnrt0t1 1

OUiand

1

Parma Padua 7, Ci&lt;w. Sl. ilooiiiUI ~
..., 21. Clrwo. llawtuon 14
f\!ttnb.lra: Spmg. 41. •Columbiana 0

MIA..,.,.. o..,...

Mln~WWJ~~a

Tommy Lasorda. "I'd father be
where weare than where they are."
The slumping Los Angeles
Burt Hooton, 3-7, who gave up all
DodgerS stDl have. the San Fr!'n·
three San FranciSco runs hi the fifth
cisco Giants and Atlanta Brave$
Inning orl Jack Clark's RBI double
right where they want them - In and Darren Evans' two-run homer,
second.place and one game back In
said Los Angeles Is stw pl\lytng wen
despite the losing streak.
the National League West.
The Dodgers retained a one-game
AI Holland, who picked up his llfth
lead despite a 3-2 loss Sunday to the save with 32-31nnlngs olone-hlt baD
fast.closlngGtants, whomovedlnto In relief of starter Fred Breining,
a second-place tie with Atlanta, disputed Lasorda'scomment.
which dropped a 3-2declslon to San
"I think we're In the driver's seat
Diego. The loss was thellfthstralght now·because we're playing the best
lor the Dodgers and fourth·in a row baSe\lBU In the major leagues," said
by one run.
Holland after the Giants posted
· AU three teams h_ave seven . their lOth win In 12 games·.
games remaining In the regular sea·
The Dodgers scored runs In the
son with the Braves and Giants
sixth and seventh Innings on Steve
meeting tonight and Tuesday In San Garvey's RBI single and Baker's
Francisco, while the Dodgers open run-scoring groundout.
a two-game series at homewlthCin·
Padres 3, Braves 2
clnnatl ionlght.
Joe Pittman singled home the tieIn other games, It was Chicago 6,
St. Louis 1; New York 6, Phtladel- breaking run with one out In the
ninth Inning as San Diego trimmed
phla 4; Pittsburgh 3, Montreal 0;
Atlanta. Tony Gwynn started the
Houston 4, Cincinnati o.
"We're stW In first place,lt's that rally with a walk, was sacrUiced to
simple," said Los Angeles Manager second and scored on Pittman's sin-

0.,_ Z, ,.__ Roi«Tana 1

AIIIIIICAN I.UOVE

••

By'IOMCANAVAN

Aalodated Pre8s Writer

0...... Unlv&lt;niiY 18, Glmlur 7
• Cd. llo!lolet :l1. -.rd Olantl 1!1

., ne A..c.uw rw.

I

year and 70 percent next year. We lstratioil, "have a totally different
could save $5 billion of the money Idea of what America stands for.
being spent on the Rapid Deploy- America should stand for giving evment Force. We only graduated . ery idd a cll,ance. a good chance."
58,!KXl engineers, to 74,!KXl from Ja·
Then he went back to the presl·
pan and :IJO,!KXl for Russia. "The dent's remark about the Great Sohearing this morning ..." "Stock· ciety hurting blackS: "Re~an Is
man's testimony ... " "Hollings' bW just preposterous. I can:t believe a
president of the United States be... " Enough. I got it.
·
. Then, somehow, we got on the lieves that."
His voice stW did not change. I'm
subject of the reduction last year of
the number of lower-Income child- not sure It does. But the Democrat
ren applying to colleges. Glen be- from Ohio continued: "When Reagan using the word "opportunity" gan was a kid and I was ~ kid,
over an&lt;) over again. "These peo- America was a little vUlage with a
ple," he ~ld of the Reagan admln· CObbler down the road. 'fhen New

LA D~dgers lead reduced to one game

Scoreboard ...

)

Annexing S. Lebanon
WASHJNGTON - White House
suspicion of Israel has become so
Intense thjlt President Reagan's
top advisers are now wondering
whether Prime Mlntstei' Mena·
chem Begin Is pijlllning the eventual annexation of southern
Lebanon.
Secret reports shown to my associates Dale Van Alta and Ron
McRae Indicate why the White
House Is disturbed.
· One secret State Department report, for example, had this to say on
Sept. 15, as the Israeli lltvaslon of
West Beirut was proceeding apace:
There Is a danger that Israel's "logistical operations wtl~ evolve Into
permanent administrative
agencies."
In other words, the suspicion Is
that Israelis In the process of buDdIng a mllltary.clvUian government
for Israeli-occupied Lebanon.

!

Rrchard Reeves •,

Glenn for president?·
WASHIN.GTON - John Glenn
and I talked for more than an hour
the other day before I thought I had
the beginning ol a sense of what lie .
Is about and how he might become
the next president of the United
States. "I'm like Satchel Paige,' he
said. "I re2Uy do believe you should
never look . back, because they
might be gaining on you."
That may not sound like much,
but Senator GleM doesn't give an
lntervlew!!f a lot to work with. It's
even worse If the Interviewer Is prepared - because then you know
that you're hearing, word for word,
what 'he told the last two. dazen
Interviewers.
The mail doesn't raise bls voice,
move his body ol- use his hands - at
least not very much.
Are you going to run for pres!·
dent? I asked - knowing that he Is.
"I don't rule It out," he said.
Why would you want to be
president?
"I don't like ~he way the country
Is going." .
W_h y dl~ you become a
Democrat?
"My parents were."
What would the country be like
now If Jimmy Carter had been reelected In 1~
"Probably better."
How 'do :You react to President
Reagan's statement that the Great
Society hurt black people?
''Disagree."
The answer to any of these questons was hardly critical to me. I
was searching, a little desperately
after a whUe, for a subject that
would start. him talking ahout his
own public passions, his vision of
America, Reagan, himself - anything but the statistics and
Washlngton-speak he was giving
me.
OK. OK. Record deficits wtll take
53% of national savings this

;M~•:.a:;r:·~~::·:'~a-=·~2=7~,1~9~82~::::::::::::::::::~--~~;--;~~~m:~~~~:;r~:!M:~~~~P:~~·~Oh~~~--~~----~--------;-----------~~~!Da~~~~~h~·~~~~~a~·~f ~

Page '2-~
Swnt~llll ·,. ,
~Ov Midllip~, 0Ho
Monday, $wptwrt1IMr
1·

.

The Daily Sentinel

.•'-.

'

Daily

t

GOOD CATai-JfftJBI ..... ,..._ .. a I

rt ..._.....,_

4111 ev.... INm IIIIIIJ, llldL, ............... , . . lllllalillr .u.
. . . . , lilollll &amp;Wo "'
Pi - ........,Ill ....

* .....
, _......_ .... ~eaee
,.. · .......... a.,.a
.........
-

lilda'~"

I!Jailt • • ,....._ '

~

.,

...

na'tllil*.._aM~•••U 1 rilewilla~.,..
"'~ wlllcb
; •
' . :j

... IIPII• fb' ..
J
lair;*.,..
..................
.... far

American· Soya Festival.
Amanda.
Firemen's Festival, downtown
DeGraff.
·
Willard Oktoberfest, downtown
Willard.
.
·
. Hiahland Fling, Bl'uahcreek
. Vineyards,
. Qear Peebles.
. .

. ..

fall ho:.IV

Ohio Swiss Festival, Sugarcreelr..
Paul Bunyan Show,
Hocking Technical College,
Nelsonville.
Johnny Appleseed Festival,
AuGlaize Villaae. Defiance.
Ohio Caverns~ West Liberty;

Lincoln Park Railway Exhiliit, Williams County Historical
Lima.
Complex, Montpelier.
Ohfo River Museum, Marietta. Marblehead Lighthouse,
Bob Evans Farms,'Rio Grande.
Port Ointon.
Mohican State Park,
Hocking Valley Scenic Railway
Nelsonville.
'
Loudonville.
Schoenbrumf Village,
New Philadelphia .
Ohi,o Dtoartment of Development,
Off1ct of Travel and Touri$m.
·
Ohio ia an Equal Opportunity Employer.

I, .

.

-·

' •

• ').f'i
•

I

�"•

~!day. Septerftber 27,1982,

~. Septemb,r 27,1982

P,lge 4 The Daily Sentinel

Variety show set
for this Saturday
: A varlety show will ~ presented
at 8 p.m. Saturday night at the Rutland Civil Center under the direction of Chuck and Vera Holliday.
Holllday was director of the
shows at Kings Island lor a time.
a,IXOrdlng to Janet Bolin, who Is co'1tal~lng the show with Judy
Snowden and Joan Stewart. Jennifer Sheets wUI be accompanist
and Joe Struble wUI be the emcee.
Proceeds from the show. with admission set at $2 lor adults, and $1
fOr studen~wUI go Into the repair
and maintenance lund for the Rutland Civil Center operation.
: Several numbers . wUl be presented by students of Carpenter's
Dance Studio Including Stacie Davis, solo; Tony a Davis, Shirley Carpenter and David Gaul, and several
tap lines. The Kenneth Ward lam·
tly, state dulcimer champions. will

Pat Holter won the best of sllow
with Eva Rob5on taking reserve
best of show In the artistic arrangements classes, and Reva Snowden,
the horticulture sweepstakes
award at the recent fiower sbow,
'"The Moods of Nature" staged by
Rutland Garden Club at Rutland
United Methodist Church.
In the show, chaired by Mrs. Robson, ribbons were awarded In four
places In each class by the judge,
Mrs. Janet Bolin, accredited by the
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs.
Winners tn
artistic arrangements classes, listed first through
fourth, respectively, were:
"Spring Showers," water ·showIng as part of the design: Paullne
Atkins, Eva Robson, Neva Nicholson, and OCta Ward.
"Ughtnlng Strikes,'' Including
weathered wood: Paullne Atkins,

perform on the program as will
Tony Van Meter on his 12 string
guitar.
Soloists will include Ed Harkless,
Tammy Black, Allee Nease, Peggy
Brickles. and Ron Ash. The Ru·
!land Branch Bank One girls wlU
have a "Hee Haw" skit, and several clown routines have been Included. There will also be a comedy
style review, a performance by
Christl Maidens, seven-year-old
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Maidens. Racine, Little Miss Amer·
lea and the holder of two world
champions and several state cham·
pions In strutting and twirling. She
Is a student of Judy Riggs.
Floyd and Don Harrison will also
be presenting Instrumental music
to round out the program .
A rehearsal has been set for Man·
day night at 7: 30 at the Center.

the

QUARTET- 'lbeotJhrl« BrothenQwlrtet ofChllllcothewWpre&amp; ,
ent a program of gospel miUIIc at Long Bottom United Methodist
Church on Sunday at 7 p.m. Rev. Richard Thomas, pastor, lnvlles the

POMEROY - OH Kan Coin
Club wlU conduct a regular business meeting on Monday at 8
p.m. In the Riverboat room, Diamond Savings and Loan q,: A
social hour and trading sesston ·
will precede the meeting. Out-of-.
town coin deters will be available for tradlnJ(. A 32-lot coin
auction will follow the event and
refreshments will be servPil
New memberships are being solIcited. Oub president Edward
Burkett Invites those Interested
In coins, or paper currency to
attend.

public to aUend the conceri by the Ubrlg BrotherS, who have been
singing gospel mlllilc for abnost a quarter of a century.

Helen help us
I

His sudden ~religion' makes her suspicious
•

J i\ZZ ROUTINE - Shirley Carpenter and Tonya Davis wDI pre&amp;
ent a jazz routine during the Rutland Civic Center variety show to be
staged Oct. 3attheCenter. ProceedswWbeusedtorepatrand maintain
the Center.

Church marks 152 years
"Homecoming Day," Oct. 3, at finished.) Stained glass windows In
Cootvute United Methodist Church the church were bought from the
will mark 152 years of Christian First Methodist Church In Athens.
worship In the same location. The "Epworth League" room, enEvents of the day wUl Include a trance, and bell tower were added.
prayer break(ilst. 8 a.m .. morning The large front window. was Inworship and church school, 9·11 scribed by donors as follows: S. M.
a.m., potluck dinner. 12: 30 p.m. Colley, Heman Cooley, Abigail Cooand singing and visiting, 2 p.m. on. ley. A. C. Wedge, Caroline Shanks,
A. S. Ttdd, J. L. WHite, C. G. DinsAil are cordially Invited.
In her "History of Coolville, more, M. Laurence, Wllllam Aiken,
Ohio" (1968). Agnes Hut states that and Eva Davis McBride.
Available names of ministers
the church was established In 18:xl.
It was then a Methodist Episcopal and lay preachers Include: Cum·
Church, In the Marietta District, mlns (1862), Baker (1863), Stivers,
and on a circuit with Bethel, Hock- Horlocker, Spahr, Kelly (1864),
Ingport. Torch, and Little Hocking . Gibbons (1880), McCuskey (1883),
churches. For 10 years. meetings Patterson, Parkins (1906), Boso,
were held In homes or In the log Humes (1915), · Moyer, Po".:ll,
school house. The first church Such, Dye (1924), Hoover, Wllllbuilding was erected In 18:1l, on the ams, Runnels, Thompson (19~).
.site reserved for churches by the Hoover, Derrick (1934), Lockwood
(1939). Deam (1940), Clark (1941),
Coqley family In their 1818 plat of
CoolvUie. When fire destroyed the Dennis (1942), Radcliffe, Cunsecond · building, the present one ningham (1954), Black, Hugus,
was built In 1859, at the cost of Fiddler (1959). Weaver (1962).
$2,00l. Brown's History olthe Hock- Boggs (1963), Russell (19651. Rose,
Ing Valley (1883) lists Coolville Hugus, Fiddler (1959). Weaver
church membership at 50, Sunday I 19621, Boggs 11963). Russell
. School attendance, 130, and Rev. (1965), Rose, Harrah, Vermillion
(1967). Thatcher, Snyder. Peck,
Joseph H. McCuskey, pastor. (His
grandson. Scott McCuskey, Clear- Starr 119821. All possible have been
water, Fla., will attend the Home- Invited by the Rev. Eric Starr to
coming. ) A kerosene lamp used by attend the homecoming·.
Committee chairpersons for the
Rev. McCuskey to light the pulpit
event are Marilyn Padgitt, Carolyn
has been preserved by the family.
In 190G-8, the church building was Rader, and Marjorte_Malone. The
United Methodist Women will suremodeled. The Rev. J . H. (Frank)
pervise the potluck dinner and furParkins, who was also a carpenter,
built a new pulpit and altar rail. nish ham and beverages. Those
Henry H. Parrish built the pews. attending should bring a covered
(All are still in use and recently re- dish and table service.

-

'

',,,

"'" --·

-,

·~~
"·" .
'
'

,,

~"'

Eva Robson, Anna Turner, Binda·
Dlelil.
'
·
"Haze .of Indian ' Summer,'' hogarfh featuring warm colors: Pau- .
llne Atklnll, Binda Diehl, Octa
Ward, and Eva Robson.
"Snow Flurries," mass featuring
white: Ruby Diehl; Rev a Snowden,
Binda Diehl, and Octa Ward:
"·Black as the Night," modern design featuring lilack: Pat Hotter,
Octa Ward, Eva Robson, Anna
Turner.
"'When the Frost Is on the Pumpkin," Interpretive: Eva Robson,
Pauline Atkins, Pat ·Holter, and
Anna Turner.
"Harvest 'Nme,'' Including fruits
and-qr vegetables: (Junior class),
Melinda Smith, Micky Ste-.vart, Sabrina Wilson, and Robin Smith and
Sherry, tie for fourth.
"Summer Eventpg,'' a favorite

Calendar
MONDAY

'/ '

Pometoy--.Middleport ' Oh'10

By HELEN BOTI'EL
I'm 43 and expecting our fb·st
come his cllents, and they might
tuatlon with him. - H.
DEAR HELEN:
chlld. We're both ecstatic. We'd
lose a lot of money.
I went to college with 1I'll call
stopped hoping long ago. So this is
I can't prove he's a shyster but I · DEAR HELEN:
him) John. Even then he was a con
have "educated suspicions" based
We've been manied over 50 ye- . almost a mb·acle.
attlst. He soft-soaped female In·
Our offspring will never say such
on his tt·ack record - he swings ars and every year my husband
structors out of good grades and
from one shaky company to talks more. In a gathering, no one things about us, as we plan to be the
also fooled some of the males.
another, and I know his only real can get a word In edgewise. What world's youngest- feeling and actWe've been In touch off and on
Ing - 60lsh parents of a teenager.
rellgion Is selling; his God, the he says Isn't really Important.
these last 22 years, and I have no
mighty buck!
I telllllm to give others a chance - HAPPILY EXPECTING
reason to think he's changed. He's
and he gets hut1 . What can I do? I'm supposed to be his friend very personable. but Is the type
FRUSTRATED .
Got a problem? An adult subject
he capitalizes on that It seel)'ls who would sell hls grandmother a · and I hesitate to say anything DEAR FRUSTRATED:
for discussion? You can talk It over
lakefront home on the Sahara Debecause I'm only guessing. Besides
As long as people listen, your In her column If you wtite to Helen
set1 If she had the money.
the ladies might not belleve me, be- compulsive talker will perform. Bottel, care of this newspaper.
He recently moved to our city
Ing very taken'wlth this handsome,. When they stat1 drifting away, he . - - - - - - - - - - - - - and Is worklng for a mortgage In· attentive fellow.
may hear your reasons why. But
vestment company. It may be legit,
Should I try to blow the whistle, don't expect w·eat changes: an old
The Doily Sentinel
. but these Investments are chancy or walt and hope he has reformed? dog doesn't easily swltclt tricks. and elderly people often get hooked
H.
- DECISIONS, DECISIONS!
!USPS 115-110&gt;
by offers of high Interest - which
DEARD.D.:
A Dlvblon ul MuiUmrd•. lar.
stop when either the company or
Talk to reputable stock brokers
DEAR HELEN:
Pu_bli.t~lk!d evt!ry ufit.&gt;moun, Mootluy lhroo!,!h
the bormwer goes bankrupt.
about your friend's Investment
I found your column, dated J11ne
Fn~)'. _ J II Court St~d. by the Ohio Vallt•y
Here's the problem: John claims company. If It's shaky - and he's
Publlshm.l! Cornp.t~ny - MultimOOUt. 11'14.·..
Pumt.&gt;roy, Ohio 45769, 992-2156. &amp;..&gt;t.-ood das.s
he's a ·strong Christian and has promoting sales within the church 3, 1900. on the garage "shelf paper"
pu~Ltll-{1!' p.~itJ ul PlNrlt'ruy, Ohio.
started attending our church regu: - members should be warned. But at our newly purchased home. It
larly. Many fairly well-off widows your minister might be more eflec· canied the letter from "Ashamed
Mernbcr: The ~ucl11led Prt:S1, lnhtnd o~u­
ly PreS!~ Msuciation ~md tht Amerit·un
are m~mbers, and he's their spe- tlve here than you. Discuss the sl· of Mom." the teen whose mother
Nt!wspMper PubliJJhers AuiJl•ialion National
was neruing age 60.
cial pet. I'm afraid they'll soon beAdvertisln.11 Rt!pioeo~~enlalive, 8ranhu1n

MIDDLEPORT -The Meigs
County Jaycees will hold a work
session on the haunted house
Monday night In place of the regular meeting. at Jaycee quarters
at 7 p.m. For further details,
contact Bruce Reed at the
Farmers Bank.
MIDDLEPORT PTA will
meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at the
school. Get-acquainted with
principal and leachers .
Refreshments.
POMEROY - Auxlllary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
will meet at 7: ~ p.m. In cafeteria. New officers to be elected.
Board members will serve.
POMEROY - New local camera club will meet at '7:30p.m.
Monday at Meigs Museum,
Po..,eroy. A prize will be
awarded the winner of a select a
name contest .for the club. A
slide preserttatlon In photographer composition will be l!eld
and members are to take slides
and prints for discussion; also
members are to take loaded cameras for portrait techniques
session.

Newsptlpt!r Salt'S, 733 ThirtJ Avenue, Nl'w
Vorl! , Nt.&gt;w York IOOJ7.

Meigs County meeting notes
Beta Sigma
Carol Jean Adams was selected
Valentine Queen at the Sept. 21
meeting of the XI Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
at a meeting held at the Middleport
Fire Sta lion.
Carolyn Grueser presided at the
meeting with Lynn Shuler and
Maurisha Nelson, service chairmen, reporting on several projects
planned for the year. Debbie Finlaw, ways and means chairman;
discussed a holiday gift shop to ~
held Nov. 6 at the former Warner
Insurance buDding In Pomeroy. A
workshop In preparation for the holIday event was held following the
meeting.
Martha Mcl'hall and Jennifer
Anderson served refreshments.
Earlier this month, the group enjoyed a progressive dinner with the
appetizer being served at the hpme
of Martha McPhail, the salad at the
Adams residence. and the main
course at the home of Betty Fultz
hosted by Donna Byer, with the dessert and meeting being held at the
home of Mrs. Nelson.
Mrs. Grueser Introduced the
committee chairmen, Donna Byer
and Carol McCullough, social; and
Mrs. Flnlaw and Betty Jean
Krawsczyn, ways and meaits.

Kathryn Evans.
Plans were discussed for the Oct.
19 annual banquet to be held at the
church at 6:.30 p.m. and served by
the Phllathea Women. Committees
Include ·Colleen Van Meter, Farle
Cole, tickets; Mary Martin, Dorothy Roach, Wutard Boyer, program; and Clarice Erwin,
· Margaret Kincaid, decorations.
It was noted truit Lee Roush, Charles Riffle, and Iris Wllllams. are
hospitalized, and Mlllard Wildermuth Is Improving from a recent
heart attack.
Devotions Included "This Is the
Kind of Church You Want," by
Mary Hysell; "A Model for Good
[)ee9," Flora Dell Grueser, with a
closing prayer and food blessing by
Bud Wilson.
Hostesses were Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Grueser and Mrs. Mary Hysell. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Cole, ·Miss Thelma
Boyer, Mrs. Van/ Meter. Edna
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. WUiard
Boyer, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Wllson,
Mrs. Dorothy Roach, and Mrs.
Evans.

'I

One Month . . . . . .. .. . . .. . . . .. .. . . $4.40
Onto Vt•Hr . .... . .... . ..••.......... $52.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE~

......

Correction
Omitted from a llst of those attending a reunion of the family of
Mr. and Mrs. William F . Smith Sr.,
!amlly, at thehom~ofMr.andMrs.
Eug~ne Smith. Middleport, were
Mrs. Robin Hawk and Stacey,
Mltl&lt;jleport .
Missing frpm the family ga !her·
lng w~re John Smith, stationed In
Colorado Springs, Colo. and his
wife, Kathy.
'

I$Ccut.~

SubstTillt·rs not tll'siting lu PHY the l'otrricr
lllCIY. rl!luit !II cuiYctnt't' dirt"l'l lu Tht· DH il)'
S!·utuwlun H .1. 6 tlf 12munth basis. Crl•tHI
wil l ht• 1-dvt•nt·arril'r t•at·h month.

POMEROY Chapter ro, RAM
meeting 7 p.m. Monday with
work tn mark master aod past
master degree.

Nu sub.~: riptiun'f by lrutil l)l•nniUt'tl m town.~
Wht•rt• rulllll'l'HI'rit•r St!n' it'l' is .IIVIIil.ubll'.

MAILSUBSCRIPriONS
lruildt' Ohi11

TIJFSDAY

ll Wcck.'i . . .. .. . .. .. . . .
. $14 .04
2fiWt•t•k." ........................ $2UCI
52 \Vt•t•kl' . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .... . $5U8
Oubldt• Ohltt
llWt't'kS
... $15.21
~ Wt•t•ks
1:19.6&lt;
:i2 Wn~ks
.. s:ili.21

MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363 wlll hold Its father and
·son banquet at 6: ~ p.m. Tues·
day with .tickets at $3.50 each;
·Earl Gifford and Robert Morris
will be speakers.

'tr'HI.Y SAY IJJ£ CAN 8011..061 UP fO
$30,000 OR. ft/01.£ ON OUI HOUSEl'.

Mrs. Moore's open\Jig poem was
"It's Hauoween Twlck or TWeet "
' '
'
and ,'~I'm Fine," followed by the
Lord's Prayer.

lfyoil own you.r hpme,
'
,you could.. get a large loan, too.
.
'

HOW DO YO&lt;I APPLY?
Just fh'»•· When,.~ for Yc;MIIIelihow fas~ we say

.,..10

..,.., you'l wonder~ JOU
klngl Call to Ibid
r out how low your~ payment could be.
·,',

.~

'

'

.

,

I

, . .In Gallipolis:
602 Secorid Street ·

Plloae 44&amp;-.a.ua

POMEROY - Middleport
Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American Association of Unl·
verslty Women wlU hold a meetIng on Tuesday at 7: ~ p.m. at
the Meigs Inn.

'

BEST OF SHOW - Mrs. Pat Holler, member of the Chester
Garden Club and the Council of Floral Arts, w1111 the winner of the best of
show award In the Invitational artistic class at the Rudand Garden
Club's annual fall Dower show.

POMEROY - Women's Association will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday; Group 1 o have the
program; Group 2 to be hostesses. Devotions by Mrs. Paul
Haptonstall.
RUTLAND Clvlc Center skat·
lng, Tuesday, 7 to 9 p.m. Child·
ren $!, adults, $2. Take your own
skates.
MEIGS COUNTY Holiness
Association, 20th anniversary,
Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. at the Ru_tland Church of the Nazarene.
Rev. R. D. Brdwn to speak. Public Invited.
POMEROY - Past Matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter 1&amp;i, O.E.S.,
home of Dorothy WOodard, 7: 30
p.m. Tuesday.

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW - Eva Robson Is plctufed here with
her reserve best of show award In artistic arrangements selected by the
judge, Janet Bolin, In the Rutland, Club's Dower show.

HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTAKES - Reva Snowden received
the horticulture sweepstakes award at the fall Dower show of the Rutland Garden Club. The rosette winner was selected on the hasls of
points IU'cumulated with exhibits winning ribbons.

Senior volunteers recognized at dinner

POMEROY- OAPSE, Chapter 17. Meigs Local School District, regular meeting, Tuesday,
. 7: ~ p.m. Meigs Junior High
School.

---·

RUTLAND Garden Club will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Stella Atkins. Dues
payable, $4 for active members,
$6 for associate me~T~bers. Program books will be available,
bakeless bake sate to be held.
The tbrf .e-month birthday cetebraton of Harrisonville Senior Citizens CenterwlU beheld Tuesday at6
p.m. at the townhouse. TheclubwlU
furnish meat and beverages. All
O•Jbmernbers are to take their own
table service.

~

September 28, 19112
This coming year wlU be a very busy and Important one for you
where your social interests are concerned. You'llllave many friends,
but you'd be wise not to mbl business with pleasure.
LIBRA (Sept.~- 23) Normally you're rather sharpatdlscoverlng the true worth of things. However, today your judgment may lead
,
·
you Into making expensive miscalculations.
SCORPIO (Oct. :U.Nov. 22) Be appreciative of what others do for
you today without trying to do tWice as much for them In return. It
might make them feel t!telr gestures were Insignificant.
,
~GrrrARIUS (Nov.23-Dec.21) Becare!urtodaynot toswlngtbo
quickly Into action based upon your Initial observations. For safety's
sake, take a second look.
'
CAPRICORN (Dec. 21-Jaa. 19) If you have a llttle nest egg tucked
·a way, It would be prudent, not to talk aboUt It today to a friend who Is
rways, a tr1f1e short and IIi need of a loan. ·
, ,
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2&amp;-Feb. 19) Even though your better judgil'tent
llUIY dictate otherwise, there·ls a posslblllty you could do something
.
. foollsh tqday which might re1lec!t unfavorably _o n your Image.
PISCES (Feb. :.Marcil 28) Though It may cause you .some Inconvenience, take planS to dig out all the facts before rnal&lt;lng an tmportarit
,
· ' -'
'
decjslon today. .
ABIES (March Zl-Aprl It) Subdue temptations to share too liberally coD11dentlal U!torfu8tlon today. Instead, talk to your friends about
topics of mutuallllterests:
•
. ' 'JAURUS (Apdi2JD.May·•&gt; You'll know what types of productive
.things you should be doing~. ~t tazy,urge&amp; may tempt you to
postpone theJru Doll't yield to the "manana" syndrome.
GEMINI (ill., U..J- II) U you hope to make today count for
~· It's !rJ_Ipc\rtant to keep yolir prior{ttes In order. Put llnportant matters t1r1t on your agenda; not ·last. · ·
CANCER (1- h..Jub' Ill When proiJing for Information today,
don't get hlllll
Ul. lnBJgnltiCl!Jit factora to the point that you may
obBcure tbe mNor premlle: .
.
.
.
LBO (laiJ D-Alla. !I) A Ileal wblcb you put IDgether today wOI
COIItaiJ! prcllllile, but perbaPB not 'Oil as grand a acale as you envision.
'Come down to eerth.
'
.
. '
\'11100
D8
D) Material condltloaa tend to favor you
today, butJOUI' piDa mJabt not be uployourexpectatlma. Bec:ontent
Wltb lillytbllla 011 the plulllde.
'

uP

&lt;Ali.

Snowden.
Chrysanthemums: Eva Robso;._
Neva Nicholson, Reva Snowden,
and Octa Ward.
Potted Plants: Reva Snowden,
Roberta Wllson, Eva Robson, and
Ruth Erlewlne, fern; Ruth Eriewine, Reva Snowden, Binda Diehl,
and Reva Snowden, foliage; and
Reva Snowden, Anna Turner,
Emma Leadlle, and Binda Diehl,
blooming plants.
VIolets: Ruby Diehl, Ruth Eriewine, second and third, and Binda
Diehl.
Junior Horticulture
Cacti: Cheryl Jewell, Sherry Wllson, Owen Wiseman, third and
fourth, with tbree "fourths" to
Sherry WUson.
Succulents: Sabrina Wlson, first,
third and fourth, with Robin Smith,
second. Fourth place, also to Angela Elllott, Micky Stewart, Sherry
Wilson, and Melinda Smith.
Educational Display
"Welcome Fall" door decorations: Neva Nicholson, Sharon Jewell, Pauline Atkins, and Margaret
Ella Lewis.
Special displays featured methods of drying material for use In
arrangements, fiower and garden
Insecticides, publlcatlons, and arranging books and magazines.

I'OMEROY - American Legion Auxutary, both jqnlor and
senior members, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the halt. Dorothy
Jenkins, music chairman, will
have the program.

Astrograph

Final plans· tor a ·vtstt of Thea
Court 5, Columbus,.ori Oct. 19 were
made when Twin City Shrlnettes
·mel 'l'hursday ·nlght'at the home of
·
Mrs. ·Grace Elch. .

A case of face SOI!P to be.,.ent to
Grundy Mountain MlssiDn Scboolln
Grundy, Va., was purchased by the
HoiriebuUders Class of lhe Middle- · Rl:freslune!!ts were served by
port Church of Olrlst.
Mrs, Elch and Donna Morris to
· · A fi!IIOrl on the proJect was given thoae named tmd Maey ~
at recent meeting of the class held • Emma K. Clatworthy, Edna
at the church and presided rNttr by Sl\!Bher, UUJan Moore, Cora ~

a

gle, Mary Hughes, Gertrude Mitchell, Shirley Beegle, and a guest,
Catherine Hysell.
·

SUBSCRIPTION RA'ml
By Carrier ur M•lor Rut~k
Ont•wt·ck ., ... . ........ . ....... . . . $1 .00

Shrinetres

"" antique display was a feature
of the rush party of theOhloEta Phi'
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi SOrority
'J ean Moore presided at the meetheld at the Pomeroy United MethoIng. It was ·noted, that Louise Watdist ChW'Ch.
ters, high priestess,. and her court ·
The old-fashioned theme was car• and the ladles of the French City
ried out In the costumes worn by the
ShrlnetteS wUI attend the 6: 30 p:m.
members with ·prizes going to
:dinner to' be served by Ev.Jlllgellne
Brenda Hut, prettiest;· Jellelle HapCh'pter at t~ Middleport Masonic
tonstall, most original; and Sonya
Temple. Reservations are to be
Wolfe, the~est.
·made with Mrs. Moore by Oct. 15.
Garnes were played and prizes
The fall ceremonial was an·
awarded to Shirley Carpenter~ Mrs.
nounced for 'Nov. 6 at Colll)!ibus.
Haptonstall, Kaye Walker, Rhonda
' Thailk you note was read from Ca·
Reuter, Debbie Hauber, and Dinah
rotyn Robertson, secqnd ce1 emonGryszka.
.
lal lady, thanking members for
Vegetable soup, soupbeans, corn·
purchasing the b8ll tickets for
bread, apple pie were served by the
members of a nursing home.
social colnml!tee.

Homebuilders

POS~ASTER : Send addre~;s to The Daily
Sentmt.'l, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohiu f5769.

MIDDLEPORT Chamber of
Commerce meeting, 12: 15 p.m .
Tuesday at lobby or LaSalle
Hotel.

design: Robin Smith, Micky Stewart, Sabrina Wllson, Mellnda
Smith and Sherry Wllson, tie for
fourth.
• Horticulture
In the horticulture division, the
winners were:
Hybrid tea roses: Ruby Diehl,
Pat Holter, Ruby Diehl and Eva
Robson, for yellow; RevaSnowden,
Pat Holter, Ruby Diehl and Eva
Robson, for red; Emma Ledlle,
Eva Robson, second and third, and
Pat Holter, for pink; Pat Holter,
Ruby Diehl, and Binda Diehl, for
orange; and Ruby Diehl, Eva Robson, Pat Holter, and Emma Ledlle,
for blend colors.
Other roses: Pat Holter, first and
third; Reva Snowden, second.
Dahlias, cactus: Reva Snowden,
Eva Robson, Octa Ward, and Ruby
Diehl.
Dahlia, other: Eva Robson, Reva
Snowden, Octa Ward, and Binda
Diehl.
Zinnia, cactus: Octa Ward, Eva
Robson, and Reva Snowden.
Zinnia: Emma Ledlle, first and
second, Reva Snowden, and Eva
Robson.
Marigold: Binda Diehl, Reva
Snowden, second and third.
Celosia: Ruth Erlewlne, Octa
Ward, Reva Snowden, and Eva

vt

'U.

',;,...: .

SPECIAL RECOGNmON - These RSVP volunteers, e~U'h with over iiOO hours and enroUed In the
program since 1973, were given special recognition
and presented pols of mllllll! at Thursday's Melgll
County Retired Senior Volunteer Program recogn~
Nearly 200 attended the annual
recognition dinner for senior volunteers enrolled In the Meigs County
Retired. Senior Volunteer Program
held Thursday at the Multipurpose
Senior Center.
It was noted that 242 volunteers
are enrolled In R,SVP at the present
time and during 198~ they donated
53,215 hours of volunteer service to
the community while 30,878 hours
of volunteer service was recorded
at the end of August, 1982. ,
Prior to the dinner a plano med·
ley of songs of yesteryear was !1fes·
ented by Mrs. Violet Grate,
Rutland. Following the dinner
served by the~nior Nutrition Pro'g ram, a program was given by
staff and members of the Meigs
County Councll on Aging.
RSVP pins were presented to Senior Volunteers enrolled durlng the

lion dinner. They are, seated, left to right, Mae
Weber, Jestle Molden, and Nett.le Hayes, and standIng, Dayton McElroy, Carol Taylor, DareD Taylor,
and C. E. Blakeslee.

past years Including Lillian Gress.
Willie Davis, Daisy Saunders, Middleport; Llnnle Crary, Harley
Linthicum, Reedsville; Erma
Yoho, Kathryn Robson, Faye
Schultz, Philomena Follrod, Dorothy Downie, Polly Eichinger,
Faye Wlldermuth, Genevieve
Melnhart, Albert Schultz, Lawrenee
Helen
Carper,
Audra Stewart,
Well, Marion
Ebersbach,
Pomeroy; Faye Harper, Mildred
lhle, Racine, and Annie Wllllams,
Harrisonvllle.
Potted chrysanthemums, used
for table decorations, were given to
'J:7 senior volunteers who have donated over 500 hours of service In
1981. They were Mary Frances
Baumgardner, Reva Beach, C. E.
Blakeslee, · Betty Christopherson,
Irene Christy, Mae Crouser, Dorothy Davis, Goldie Dlll, Clara GU-

SUNDEREUA· DIET QASSES ,
CALL: JOANN NEWSOME. -992-3382
MONDAY NIGHT - 7:30 - Five Points
TUESDAY MORNING - 10:30 - Mason, W. Va.
TUEDAY NIGHT - 1:30 - Five Points
THURSDAY MORNING - 10:30 - Five Points

..~-· N1lN MIMrfms·AiwAYs
wa&lt;:OME - - - •
\

key, Vida Green, L. D. Hartinger,
Nettie Hayes, Eula Jeffers. Margaret Johnson, Dayton McElroy,
Minnie McGrath. Beatrice May,
Catherine Mees. Jestle Molden,
Wllllam Quivey. Nonga Roberts.
Edna Schaefer. Erma Smith, Ferndora Story, Carol and Darell Taylor, and Mae Weber. The 'J:7

,..~v:o~lu~n:tee:rs:d:on:a~ted~~J8~.4~60~h:ou:r:s~o:!J~~~~~~~~~~~~
volunteer service In 1981.

SOME
ITEMS
..
-.
GOING AT

?:~ICE

COST

�Page

~The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

.

Ohio

Monday, September

r.

27!.'1982'.'

·~:-~~~~:M~~~~~D~D~~~,QN~·o~-----r~~======~~"r::::::::::Th;:e~Dai~~~--==~·==~~-·~-=-7==· :
-~~··-~·~,~·~
...7~!!.!~~~~~·~2~7~,1~9~82~----~~·--~------------~----~~~
• ..·s· se~Tllc·es
BUsmes

IMeigs and regional happenings ICounty records brrths . and birthdays
HERO car wash
f.ielgs High School H.E.R.O.
Club members will sponsor a car
wash Saturday at the Burger Chef,
West Main Street, Pomeroy, from
10 a .m. to 4 p.m. Customers wUI
receive a certl!lca te for a free top
shef sandwich from Burger Chef.
Cost per car Is $3, outside only: $5,
Inside and out.

Apple butter sale
Racine Wesleyan Methodist
Church will make and sell apple
butter on Oct. 13 and 14 at the
church. Advance orders will not be
taken. Apple butter may be pur·
chased at the church from 5 p.m. to
7 p.m. on Wednesday, Oct. 13, and

from 1 p.m . to 5 p.m. on Thursday,
Oct. 14, and from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
on Friday, Oct.15. CostwUlbe$3.25
per quBJ1 with the jar furnished,
and $1.75 per pint with the jar fur-·
nlshed. Those taking Mtber Kerr,
Mason or Ball jars may have them
filled for $3 per quart and $150 per
pint.

Meigs County correspondence
Frances Ihleof ~y, Calif. has
spent the past week ere visiting
trtends, Including Mr. a Mrs. Pa·
trlck Lochary. Another guest of the
Locharys has been their granddaughter, Susie of Newark, N.J.
While here Susie and her grandpar. ents visited Mr. and Mrs. James
"J..ochary of near Dayton.

lumn, please write Box 7,
Long Bottom, Ohio or cal19854275.
Robbie Hawk and Flash
spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Hauber and
Melody.
Nell Groce has been 111. She
would enjoy receiving get·
wel1 cards.

Laurel Cliff
News Notes

·

Mr. :and Mrs. John Dean, Juanita
·, Terrell, Anita Dean and c~~n. '
' Jerl!m}l, James, and Shara; Pau·
line Mayer, Beth Mayer, Mike •
Mayer, Kim Burton, Chad Burton, ,
BI1an Molden and James Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell, Ber- .
tha Conde, and Mr. and Mrs. Elza
Larkins sent gifts.

Rose

Mr. and Mrs. Archie Rose, Route
1, Long Bottom, are annoWIClng Ule
birth ot a· daughter, Alison Nicole,
born on Sept. is at the Holzer Medl·
cal Center, GaWpolls.
The Infant weighed fl~e pounds,
n1ne ounces and was 20 Inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Rose have a ·son, Ty·
son Eric, six.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond J , Smlti!, Route
4, Pomeroy,andthepaternalgrand·
parents are Mr. and MI;s. John J .
Rose, Route 1, Long Bottom.

• IIESID£NTS
IIEWSEWER

INSURED
FIIEE ESDIIATES

Ebet and Bill
Backhoe SeiVice
I

"'· 9tz.7111
•949-211%

~

.ll_
··-·. ....

•·•-·o...·. .··
n-.,.~

,_,..., ~

I I MOi f W jlll .....

..

......... .•

tN II- 1 101'1""'

.•..-

Spaun

.............._
l f ( I, TY I. • .....

.

_,

~

--

-·-___
---·...

··-·-. -·.

.....

uol&lt;ll\oootft

..

UW., i. ~f&lt;hl o iP&lt;

Ouick Crochet!

..

• Free estlmotes
e20Yrs.eKperltnce

•see lng an r•c a m1ng
•Racine and Syracuse
.oewerhookup
Work Insured and
Guaranteed
PH . JIM CliFFORD

:~~:::!Jellng

-JO.MHOSKINS

Teachers ,
Seoul
Leaden and Organiia·
lions, Come In and
Take A Look At Our
Package Deals. Discounts Available.
LESSONS STARTING ~
CALL or STOP IN ~I;
TO SIGN UP.
SALE ON
ORNAMENTS

~OOFING

'

· 1

...

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

'
11

7· 14 He '

. BARBARA'S SCHOOL
OF DANCE

Ladies Jazzerc:ise
8-2~1

mo.

N«;»W'16fl

!'
:

!

GARAGE
St. Rt.

12~

Pomeroy, OH

AUTO&amp; TRUCK

CARPENTER
SERVICE

...

'Adoloooo 11111 rwHo~l•a

::'1
_,...,.. -:rill! IlOilo
V. C. YOUNG Ill

Complete Remodelln&amp;.
of .n types:

CALL 843-3322
9· 17-2 mo. Pd

.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 985..-269 or 985-4382

·

mlk•Ant-•
lnlltolotion
Houoe colo ond

ohop

1111Vice ev!lilllbte

1

9. - - - - - 10. - - - - - !1 . - - - - - -

We Specialize In

12. - - -- - 13. ______ .......;·:....

Raci11e &amp; Syracuse
Sewer Hookups

~f ~VI C f

F rf'm

t-tc.1tcr

. HOUSE COAL .

. • S&amp;W
ANp CUSTOMIZING

Larqest Radiator .
P.ldi,l tor Specirtlis l

. PH. 992·7656

35 Y rs . E )I' pcnence

Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, Parts, Elc.

NA 1 Hll N 1HGf ,,

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS; INC.

HUNTING II TRAPPING

SUPPLIES

Ph. 992·2174
2·26·tfc '

•,

9·!·1 mo.

•~

'4
•ol

: , \(INYL liJ A,LUMINUM SIDING

: '•Sttlrm
J VVirldGwl
elnUetlon eS&amp;olm Doors
eReiMe Ml8r'lt Windows
l '
•

.

REWORKED •

efWw RoOting

Free

&amp;ti

- ·

James 1c':..

[ il

~

BUILT AND.·

Ph. 992
, ·21'72

I
I

I .

CALL AL .
742-2328 ,
9/ 24/ 1 mo.

9-22·1 mo

OLD &amp;

-:;;;t'&amp;llftln'C_
~5n ·~--·•

'·

I f
eu waahlngton St.• llavenswDOCI, w. Vo. 26144
·• ' ·
Pholla (3041271-1155
' '
MONTHOFSEPTEMIEII '

.

· '
ANN. IVEISA.Y SALE

,.

.

,

Guns

"•

For all your ·wiring
needs; furnaces
'~repair service and
-.
·.

I

'

::::.;:u:!t.-18• .;. BooiS Flailing supplies\,

i

Tlllb ·
·;

•

~l..,ches

t·

.

~~:~·
:lkle~ - .

MUCH,MUCH~OREI··· ,j.

.
·

~·-·~~!llru~ntay f.)-\,;.,

II....,.~

ELECT
. RI'c
.
' SERVICE .·
·

·

Mill ~D

.

. " &amp; ,.;._,

. -eali

'1

-~~;·tfc

Martin guitar triple 0 - 18.

$360. 304-875·1761 .
2 Bundy flutoo, 1 lor $60.
ohd 1 for $30. 304·8823674.
Holton trumpet. caae and

otand $100 . 304-676 6743 .
4 family pore"- sale Wed.

Sept. 29, 9 o.m. 2 beds.

I

I
I
I
I

complete. chord organ,
children and adult clothing,
fabric, books. toys. Roger
Kerr's, near Chester. Follow

aigno. 614-985-3909 .
One mila from stop light on

Send Hill Rd. Pt. Pl. 2 cook
thru Fri. Sept. 28-0co . 1.

'\llt1QQ11Qptllpll II

2

In Memoriam

IN Memory of Fr11land S.
Norris who peiSed away one

year ago today.
"The one we love i1 with

tho Lord, imd tho lord hu
promised lo be with us.
If he is with him and he is
wrth u1 ... he cannot be far

away.
Sadly

mi~ted

by: Wife

Lucille; Son, Charlea:

Daughter, lucille end
grandchildren.

Now thru Oct. 4, Rt. 36. 9
mi. from Henderson, 'h mi.
south of Beech Hill church.
1100 Suzuki, I.H. cub trac tor, 16' boet, roto tiller, air
drill. air sander croubow,
hand grinder. Avon, Iota of
misc.
Fir•t time ever, big yard sale
Tuesday only. below post of-

fice. Galllpollo Ferry, WV. 10
ill 1 Diahea, other misc.
items. Watch for tigna.

8

Public Notice
F"ROBATE COURT·
• Of MEIGS COUNTY.
0

EsTATE

OF ~~ ARCHER.

g:.~e::.:~1 OF

APPOINTMENT
OF RDUCIARV

SWEEPER and oewlng ma·
chine repair. part1. and
oupplloo. Plclo up ond dellv·
ery, Devil Vacuum CIHner.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

:

-..

Auction e\lery Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads Of new
marchendiea avery week.
Consigmentt of new and
uud marchendise always

9

Wanted To Buy

.

ASCP registered. lnteretted
persons may call Personnel

Dept . at 304-372-2731

•soo-

want to earn between

ond $60,000 monthly

through this .. naweat and
fastest growing compeny in

tho nation ". Cell :104-676·
1293.
Dairy Freeze for lepe. No. 1 ,

Garfield Ave. , Galllpollo . _

Equipment may be pur- -'

chased. Call 446-8684.
1980 Pontiac Sunblrd, '\
cyl .,

auto,

AM-FM , air

conrl ., 28-32 MPG . Co"
446-6812 .
Conveniently type etore
wlth gasoline storage tanke, •·
gnaoline pumps, commar·
cial air compre11or, tire .
changers, and etc. Will accept any reasonable offer."

1304) 676-3364 or 871·
2661 .

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 14% fl•ed
rate. Leader Mortgage. Ohlri
only 1-800 -341 -16&amp;4 ,.
WVo . 814·692·3051
Business

•&amp;-

loans

100,000. Equ~y Rooourceo.
Dayton, Ohio. Coli collect
613·268-0112.
.
Buslne11 loan tor · t10 to
$60 Thouaand. No front money . Sand inquires · td

C.P.H.C .. Bo• 1 Country
Line. Shade, Oh 46778.

23

·,

Professional
Services
C&amp;l Bookkooping

·

Need baby sit1er in Racine,
MinaJsville area, 2 children,
1 school age, 1-2 yr. old .

·Bookkeeping &amp; tu service
for all typea of busin11111.

mediately .

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Coli Bill Ward for appoint·

6!4-949-2624. Need im·

Carol Neal 446-3862

JUST graduated &amp; unsure ment, Ward·s Keyboard,
about your future? The West 448-4372.
Virginia Army National
Guard can help you decide.
We are looking for high
school seniors 8t graduates
to train in communications, 31 Homes for Sale
administration, supply, mechanics, &amp; many other
fields. If you qualify you may In ground concrete pool on 2
be eligible for an enlistment acre lot . Alto hat a 3 bdr. air
bonus and college or Vo - conditioned house with full
Tech assistance. Be one of basement. 2 we fireplaces.
West Virginias best . For new carpet. Would consider
mora informatton, call 304- lower valued propeny In
675-3960 or toll free 1. trade or w~l finance with ·
800-642-3619 .
low down payment and 10%
interest. Located 123 Gar-

~······

Hair otyliot with following . field Ave. Call 446-1646.

or booth rental . Ask for Sue,

614·446 -3703.

Lend contract. $36,000
Cheohiro Village. Coli 614W.T. Row leigh &amp; Mr . Groom 367· 7653 .
Diotrlbutors . Dale and - - - - - - - -Wilma Wood, 2213 Mt. Vor·
non A,vo. 304-676· t 090 .
House for ule 150 Second
Job Overseas. Big money
feu . Job offers guaranteed,

12

Situations
Wanted

3 People to sell Avon . Call

446-3358 .

ave ., Gallipolis. Call 448 ~
7605 or inquire at Bob·a
Carryout. Eastern A\1&amp; . ,
Gallipolis.

Majeetic home for ule . Rio
Grande overlooking college ,
green . Newly rano\lated. 3
bdr., family rm. , modern kit·
chen, formal dining rm .. 1
acre lot. Will consider rent - ·
buy option, auumable men-

gage. Call 446-8090 or
RN available lor qualified 448·4897.

dependable child care. Sate.
inst~uctive play situation. Offered by the board of TrusReasonable rates . Referen - tee•. Rio Grande College,

Rio Grande. Ohio. Houoe
known u BOHN HOUSE,Io·
Tree trimming 8t refno\lal . coted II 221 Weal College
614 · 949 -2129 or 614- St .. Rio Grande. Ohio.
Seeled bids will be accepted
992·604Q:

ces. Coli 448·2881 .

in the office of the Business
Manager, Allen Hall, Rio
Grande College until

sitting or groceery shopping. 614-992-6048 ond 2:00PM, October 1. 1982
ask tor Meline.

Wlll do babyaitting in my

at "which time bida will be
opened, read. and evalu·
ated. low minimal accepta -

homo. Coli 614-949·2736 . ble bid is $14,000 {Fourteen
Thousand Dollaro) .
Exp. automobile painter, 5 All bids should be dirocted tQ
yeora uperlence. 304-876- Rio Grande College, Rio
Grenda , Ohio 46874
3373.
Insurance ''

Merked to AnN: Busine11
Manager.
Houae mey be viewed by appointment only-contact

614·246·5363, ut. 217 .

iron. braaa. or wood. Kit- SANDY AND B.EAVER In·
chen cubbordo of oil typeo . surance Co. haa offered serTobin, round or I!Juero. vlcoo for fire lnourence
Wood Ice bo•oo. Old dooko covoroao In Golllo CountY
ond bookoooeo: Will buy ·for elmo at • century. Farm,
complete hou•hotd. Gold, home an" pereonal property
olver, old money, pocket covoragoo oro ovolloblo to
.~~tch•. cholne, rlnga, end
m.-t lndlvkluol n'!"ds. Con·
•••· Indian Artlfecto of oil tact Foater Lew1s. a~ent .
typu. Aloo buying beoebell Phono 379-2204.
cardl. Oaby' Mertln B92·
U70.
Mobile Home fnaurence ·

~~~~~~~Lo-o:~o:"!
·••I~B:uy:•:r~.~~~11.

Business

0 pportunity

ity Employer., M-F-H.

OLD FURNITURE, beds.

,~v..-

21

Monday-Fridey for more informetlon . Equal Opponun-

13

Vetley houra:
Pli11, Monday
4411-2134.
Winter
thru

Court Case No. 2388 1: Aus· frldoy 10 to I, Soturdoy 10'
sell Archer, Aouoe 2. Box 7, tooi.AIIcrooolltlchoupplleti,
GU)Isville. Ohio 4573~ was ap· D.M.C.
po!Ated EKecu1or of ohe est81e - - - - - - - - of Eva Archer. deceased. lale of GoH ~oons. John Telford.
Route t. Racine, Ohio 45771
Chooter, Ohio .
Robeot E. il'uck
i
'
Probate JydgeCierk
Flnelty Openlng-Copco. Arr·
·tlqillo, colloctabl'oo. uMCI
•'(91 20. 27 1101 4. 31C
furniture • 'opplloncoo.
.
Something . for everyone.
1
!~··
·~-~
'9:30
o.m.-4:30 p.m. Mon .•
, \IIIII'.
1111' Wed.,fri.Ot...,tl,...byoppoioltoo••t. luy-Sel• Trodo.
. .
. . 1127 Fifth St .. lvon Po-H .
R• .. Roolno, Oh. 814·848·
r
.
24111.

will require ability to work in
ell areas of the lab, achedul·
ing &amp; training. eaaiat &amp; writing procedure manuals,
maintaining quality control
record , maintenance of
equipment Including min·
imal repair 8t calibration and
some weekend work.. Quali fied person will have 2 years
of experience in a medlcallabratory, have a B.S. degree

Will do houae clea.,ing. baby

one holt milt up Georges welcome. Richard Reynolds
Creek Rd. Cott 448-0294 .. Auctioneer. 276· 3089.

• Dl'o Croft Supply, Spring

glot for tho lobretory. Job

1-716-842-6000.

3 Announcements

4==~~~~~3~?.~~~~~~=~~==;:;:;:~~~~~l' theOn Meigs
Seplembe•
13. 1982.
on
County
Probate
•

and Fri .. Sopo. 30, Oct. 1.

64 Miac. Merchendiae

,

·J&amp;LBLOWN
'
INSULATION

Kuhn "1 acro11 from Centerville Grade School . Thurs.

stove1, dishwas"-ar, pic tures, car parts, tires. Tues.

.

·FIREPLACES
&amp;·
CHIMNEYS

YARD SALE: At Myrllo

~----------------------·

Meigs Co.-531.00 Ton
(Plus Delivery)
!i
~Ton Minimum
t:
C.O.D.
~
PH. 992·2280 or g
992·2618
..

STUART WAYNE
PUlliNS

· · PORitirov , ofi.

L

Pittsburgh No.8 A
MineRun (Strip)
Detivereil Price:
POMEROY-531.00 Ton
MIDDLEPORT
AND RACINE-$32.00
Ton

GUMSMITHING

the
Smilii('St
Core to
the .

Fourtll Ave .• Gallipolis .
Swing set. misc. childrenteen -adult clothing, toys.

ter clothea. glattware, &amp;
misc.

-----

IS.
3• . . - - - - - - -16. - 35 . - - - - -Mail This Coupon with RemiHance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

.
COMPLF Tf
RllDIIl TOP

33 .

Yard Solo Wed. &amp; Thurs.
Sept. 29-30, 9 to 6. 641

Yard Sale 2018% rear Eut-

--

an a11istant Chief Technolo-

in Medical Technology &amp; be

Yard Sale

ern Ave .. Golllpollo. Sept ..
27 &amp; 28 . Bikea. Avon. win·

32. --- - - - -

H.

Phone 949·2293
or 949-2575
8·30·1 mo.
'

7

304-676-3691.

Gonorol Hoopltol, Rlplay,
W.V. it now interviewing for

Reward. 304-676-1894 or
304-676-6748.

23. - - - - -24. - -- -- -25.
26.
27 .
28.
29.
30. - - - - - 31 . - -- - - - - -

7. - - - - - 8. - - - - - -

Dom &amp;'Baclihoe Senice,
Water, Sewers, Ponds

3·11·1fc

9-20-1 mo Pd.

22. - - --

6. -- - - --

foundations, Reclamations
"FREE ESTIMATES"

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call lor free siding
estimates, 949·2801 .,.:
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls

Deweyno Wiliams
&amp; Soott1e Smith
AI
models

3. - - - - - -

4. - - - -- 5. _ _ _ __

ML
CONTRACT! NG

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

I

2.

AVON . Need extra money?
Set your own hours. Sell
Avon. (Must be 18 or O\ler) .

A11iatant Chief Technologist labratory. Jackson

Black and rust Doberman
Pincer, loat area GeH. Ferry.
Answers to name of ' 'Blue".

17. - - - - --

19, - - -- -- - 20. - - - - - 21. - - - - - - -

nary. Cell 448-0492 afoer
7PM .

LOST Block &amp;tan fomole

Caooie. REWARD . Ca\1614·
246·6188 or 446-8002 .

18. ._____.::...__ _

1.

Babysitter wanted for kin dergarden child in Cente-

6 lost and Found

call614· 266-1314.

Wanted to do, winterisinO
homes, mobile homes and ·
automobiles, free ettlmatea .•

...

Ucenaed Adminiatrator for
100 bed nursing home.
Watt Union Ohio. Pleaae
send resume to Kim Nye,

collect .

Doberman with white spot
on cheat. If anyone aeet her

space below. Each in·
Iiiia\ or group of figures
counts as a word. count
name and address or .....~. 1
6 1.. ~~.
phone nymber If used ..... ••
· 3
Yru'll oet beller results --+-d-'Y+d...,;,ay!+-d"...;Y...;S;I-·_r•i
If vou describe .fully,
give price.the
Theright
Senllnei~T~o~1~5+--~~
.. ~~
7.0Cj--~
reserves
to .

{ )Wanted
{ ) For Sale
{ ) Announcemenl
! l For Renl

Help Wanted

Coli now 614 · 698· 7111

classify, edll or reject_t..:...o:25~-+"-'"-t~"-1-I.OCI+--!
any ad. Your ad wll be
.....
00j
pYI In the properTl~0~3:5L_j~"~'~
Mit~,,.~·~
Mt"~''~
classification If you'll These cash roles
chec,k the proper box
Include discount
below.

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

FREE ESTIMATES

S&amp;WTV
.AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE

.

brown collar. Brown wi1h
white marking, anawers to

)'!Ill'S.

992-6215 orHN314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·1fc

304-676-4382 .

Print one word· in each

Custom ~ilchens and I
bathrooms. Remodeling,
'add·ons, new homes, /
plumbing, electric, siding.

I~

aurate with &amp;lllperience.

Pon Collie and Shepperd.

Tree Removal Service. Call
for free estimate, 814· 3877267, eveninga.
··

LOOKING for people who

4 kittene-2 yellow, 2 calico a.

Loyal. obedient end good
with children, needs good
home wtth room to run .

house cleenlng

weekly . Call 676·5393.

2072 .

P.O. 8o• 1088. Golllpollo .
Oh 46631 . Solory common-

8 weoks old. 614·992 ·
7406.

Will do

engine. good cond . 446·

614· 742-2893 .

Phon•--------------

Worked in home area 20

oloctriaiiiOIIo
lfroo fsli..lll)

Refrigeretor end hide-a-bed.

I

LOST 1 Cocker Spaniol
puppy, 6 moa. old, wearing a

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

· ·Rootina

114-388-8449.

Also Transmission
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.
'
, VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
COmplete Gutter Work,

Faw sacks of clothes. Call

I
I

84.00 par hr . Coll814-387·
0398 .

Shop, Middleport . 992·
3476.

2 bo••• of clothing lor Vord 11
Soletoglveowoy. Mullttako
both bo•eo. Call 446-9804.

Address--------

3 ~ 24-lfc

Gold. silver, sterling, je·
welry, ringa . old coins &amp; cur·
rency . Ed Burkett Barber

lwr.l111

REPAIR

· --------+----------1!
- --.1...-------f.....

YOUNG'S

Gallipolis, Oh .

Nam•-----------

1

lara , wood Ice boKet. atone

6 kitten, 88 Chillicothe Rd .•

Write your own ad and order oy mall with this
coypon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

Roger Hysell

FALL GOLF TOUR
Beglnlng or Inter.
ALL AGeS
TRIPS WEEKLY
Beautiful Golf Courses
Driving Ranges
Call John Teaford
Chester
Also
PRO SHOP
CLUB liE PAIR
Open Year Round
9·10· 1 mo.

JAZZ
.
JAP '7 AGES 3 &amp; UP
Call Barbara
Lawrence
"2·3282

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

Standing Umber . Cell 814·
No
my Hill
land.
Ge· 3!18-9908 .
roldhunting
Hodgea .onSend
Rood.
BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
4
Giveaway
furniture, gold, sHver dol-

448-7764.

Curb lnflatlon ·
Pay Cash for .
Classlfleds and
Savell I

cletes Karole Studio, 143
Burlington· Rd .. Jockoon:
Oh . Cell 81 4· 288-3074. .

Would like to do houMworll

1 female Chihuahua. Prefer
home without children . Call

I

\

ment. Jerry Lowery • AtaQ;

Bill Gene Johnson
448-0089

about 8 wko. old . Call 446·
4027.
Wan1od 1970 to 1974 VW

.
I
-----------------~

- Water
-Sewer
-Gas lines
- Septic Systems

18 Wanted to Do

clean used can. b
Frenchtown ., Co.

1 kitten yellow and white,

PHONE 992-9913
9·2·1 mo.

-Dump Trucks

THE
KOUNTRY KLUB

SIGII UP NOW FOR
fAll EIIROLLIIEIIT ·

Carmel News,
Bythe~ay

r.allloolls

2:00 p.m.·2:30 1.m.
Sal. &amp; S.n. 4:00 p.m.-2:30a.m.

-Lo-Boy
-Trencher

Profeuional Electrolyaia

ANY PERSON who hoo any· plola houooholdo. Wolte:
M.D. Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy,
Oh . Or 992-7760 .

--:•.; .. ·-9-T6-1 mo.

·,

Karate tho u~lmoto In Hlf '
defence oil prlveto lueone,
Men, women, &amp;children. In·
structlon thru bleck belt.
Alao ovollobto Koroto unl,
forma puchlng end klclol~g ·
bago. and protective equllr-

thing to give away and doea
not offer or anempt to offer
any other thing for ule may
place an ad in this column .
There will be no charge to
the ad\lertisar.

t.oWIIUiod

-Dozers .
-Backhoes

of all

klndo, coli ..K• " ". Swoln,
448·3169 or 268· · 967 In
McDaniel Cuotom Butcher· ,_th
_ o _..,_._n_ln_s_•· - - - - lng. Wut Columblo.W.VA . , 304·882-3224.
Buying Gold, Sliver, Platl·
Cake decorating cla11•1 num, old colno, ocrap rlngo
otarting Oct. 4. Coli now for &amp; eilverw•re. D1lly quote•
Information or to reglater . ovalloble. Aloo cotna &amp; coin
Caroueel Confectionery. oupplies for ule. Spring Vol·
Middleport, Ohlo .46760 . loy Trodlng Co .. Spring Volloy · Plaza, 448-B026 or
614-992-8342 .
446-8026.
PERMANENT
We pay ceth for late mod81
HAIR REMOVAL

jan, enUquet, etc.. Com·

Drlnl&amp;tlruwnExh
Nialltofthttlotld.
C.O~ 0111 btof&amp; Iiiii 1111~1111 .

PUUINS
EXCAVATING

U.S. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorlred John Deere,
New Hottand, !lush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equijlment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3·«c

e Nl!w or Q('p.1ir
• r11inting

PH.992·2259

A

I

ture and

mont only. 304-876-6234.

~Y.wf~~"·:_":qo ..

61' """'
' .-·-·,
'
'

16
School•
;
'""v.
lnstruc1ion
;
WANTED T~ ~:"' • Old furnl · - - - -- - - - - ,
Wanted To Buy

Ooe1or referals, by appoint·

you . :i;~·~· on
new y·-.. - or

!'!efV1een Cheshlre.f..
Middleport, Ohio

PRESENTS
Tun.-UdiaNipl
All DrlnuRidllctolttr llooMn
WH.-DroUIIhl
All Droft llttr \1 Prke
AIIDrioui\Prict
THIS IIOflllfSBAND

Route I
Long Bo«om , Oh. 4S743
91S·419l
9- 1 ~1 mo.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

I

• Do'wnspouts

an.

m- -

I

CHARLES SAYRE

BOGGS

H. L. WRITESEL --. ·
e Gutters
·.
!

E.

..SIIIs."

I

9

Center. A.M .A. approved.

~Mon.-fri.

::t::"..CCt. ~

'I

Ceramic Bisque

CHARLIE HATFIELD
OPERATOR
PH ·' 742·2903
9·3·1 mo. Pd.

AND SON
R00fi R£ &amp; S'd'
Co
I IRJ '

992-7101 . . ·__
9 3 1' 'uu.

•

.. "',......a ...
:~r.:..~

·

•dumdptruckdser~l~e

Ph. 742·2134,. 949-2160
4·20·Hc

rou

f

992-2663

POMEROY, OHIO .
PlasterCraft and

eSewer
eGas
• Water Lines

Custom _!'o!e_ Barn~.

•backhoe.
•eKcava 1ong
•septic systems

-·- ....

SHOP LOCALLY

.... the_,

LongBottom
News Notes

r»Aftii SHOP

J.A.R.
CONSTRUCTiON
COMPANY

walks · New Conslruc·
ton . Remodeling ·

.

A"" Home Molntenance
·R~~00II 0 f 1 Ill
•
ng
ypes

COMMUNITY SHO.PPING
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!

Wolf Pen
News Notes

CONTRACTING

t.;_fl NG
KW

~

...._,_
__ ..._
oll -

~Hom.e~s.l:fiO~x-

FOR&amp;~~:

.·

r-========::;jj===::::=::===;-1r======::==iitt=========~t=======~
J&amp;F
''
Kitchen Cabinets ·
. OHIO VAUEY
Rooting · Siding · Con·
CANDLELIGHT INN
~;;_will
M.Eif} -~r
crete . Patios · Side·
n .. !~Y

lo ..............

)0 • •• •

·I

9-20·1 mo pd.

Alfred
Social Notes

__

·-·

3 Announcemenl8
Gun ohoot. Recine Gun
Club. Evory Sundo'y lltortlng
\ p.m. Foctory choked guno
only.

'

•

~ 'Y I

tensiv4! remodeling
' • Electric work
• Custom Pole Bldg•. &amp;
Geraees
• Reollng Work , .
eAiumlnum &amp; Vinyl
Sidings
• washers · • Dish·
15 Years Experience
wuhers
Greg Roush
'Renges ellefrlgeral· ,
on
•
Ph. 992·7583
• Dry en e F rttttrs
or992·2282
PARTS and SEII~~~~c
8-2~1 mo.

HOOIIUPS

On Aug. 29, 115 perople attended
services at the Free Methodist
Church. Twelve choir members
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Spauh enter·
were present. Steve Eblin and his
talned
recently with a party honor·
daughter sang a duet.
Bruce R.Carman of Saugerties,
lng their daughter, Julle Ann, -on
Mrs. Roy Howell, visited Mr. and
A Yoga Bear cake was served h{'r first birthday.
N.Y. wbere he has been employed
Mrs. Faye Countryman In Green·
wltli Ice cream and drinks. Attend·
with IBM since graduating from the
A number "I" birthday cake
vUle during the weekend.
tng were Judy Laudermllt and JesOhio Institute of Technology In CoMrs. Della Stahl is now living In sie, Missy Wolfe and Jared, Todd baked by JuUe's aunt, Juanita Ter·
lumbus, visited here over the Labor
rell, and another baked by a neigh·
her new traDer on the Bowing
Johnson, Brenda Templeton, Jay bor, PauUne Mayer, was served
Day weekend with his mother, Syl·
· Alfred Sunday school attendance
place.
Cremeens, Ray Tryall, and Lisa
via Carman, his brother, Dan, Long
Aug. 15 was 35; Aug. 22, 36. Church .
Roy Howell and several other Baxter. The Benny Ewing fall!ilY with Ice cream, chips and punch.
HolloW Road, and his father, Ivan
attendance Aug. 22 was 1~. On Aug.
Attending were Shannon Spaun,
men are In Canada on a fishing t11p.
and Mrs. Ada Van.Meter sent gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Markins,
~n, Peach Fork Road.
IS, Rev. Thomas christened Richard
Mrs. Audra Hayes and Mrs.
Spaun
Anthony, son of Cindy and Rlckey
Grace Henderson of Athens visited
Dillinger. Out-of-town guests were
Mrs: Raymond Russell has reMrs. Della Stahl Saturday.
,-------------------------------:,_Don and Nancy Kern, NelaonviUe,
turned from Kentucky where she
Mrs. KatyPulllnsfellatthe home
and Doug Jackson, Columbus.
attended the wedding of her daugh·
of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin 'Martin
The Daily Sentinel
Alfred 4-H clubs, Alfred Angels
tei·, Cathy Jones, to Timothy
and broke her foot.
PHONE ~2-2156
and Alfred Uvestock, were busy at
Bailer. The couple wUl reside In
Sonja Spiess! has returned to her
the Meigs County Fair last week.
Beaver Dam, Ky.
home In StrauUng, West Germany.
Or Wrttl Dlily SltltiMI Cl• n •I+MI Dtpl.
111 Ctourt Sl., PtmfOI'y, 01\otU"'
Nina Robinson, Clara Follrod, and
Genevieve Meinhart and Erma
She stayed at the home of'Dale Col·
Thelma Henderson attended the burn. Sonja Is Mrs. Colburn's niece.
sintth have returned trom a ·visit
Meigs County Fair opening service
with Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ,
Sonja visited Washlligton D.C., the
Cleveland. They went especially conducted by the Meigs County
World's Fair, the Grand Ole Opry
for an open house observance of Ministerial Association. Thelma ser·
and The Smoky Mountains. She
m
E7:::o
Cluoljiool,.... ,_. ...
their 25th wedding anniversary. vl'd in the association's booth Wed•t•lotl,_,, ..... ......... ..
\III_G_
also visited a cousin In PennsylvaI! lt.w-. 101 WHo
••
..............
"'.'
r...,_..,o
n..,OI.. .... ...
.
,__
..
nesday afternoon.
f
o l - r.l•pllo•• ....._
•.
VIsiting here Monday with Mrs.
,
..
"''""''''"'""""
IIVoM lOW O
nia and she visited her aunt and
.,I H.....~·'G•..,twl!
•
!o&lt;_l _
,,_
...........
._........
"-"'""
Aaron Williams, Belpre, spent last
. ~-!!!=~
. !!'
Meinhart and Miss Smith wa~ their
,. ..... ... n&amp;. ... ,,.....,._
uncle, Ernie and Erika Bowen In
,
..
l foflklttM&gt;t "' ""'-" '
-C•-""""
n
..........
..
, ___
llf&lt; ..... .. .. _ , _
""-C . . MI
"
_ ... b ..,.. \.&gt; ,.
- c -...
week with his grandparents, Mr. and
nephew, Arthur Smith, Chauncey.
.,.._.,,
,_....
"c-""t•·-•
Columbus . .
l'lf.,\.ooo•••.................
' """'....
ll ,.-,..,. ... , ...
Mrs. Clarence Henderson, and at·
,..._.......
......
.
.
.
__
...,.
Attendance at all services Sept.
liUI'\ l -.:o.
,01..... . ....
,,
·~
Alma Johnson, Springfield, Is vis- tended Meigs County Fair.
---12 at the Free Methodist church
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz at·
~;
en:-;
Iting Metgs County her sister and
!
riP+•-'""
' .... "''...
was 124. Pastor MUler sang a solo
--. .........
l llo&lt; ... l""''
11\. tuot_'ll'.,.....,
'"'""·-·
tended the outside wedding of
I&lt;Eif'(&lt;o&lt;OI I. JI.-,,..,.., _
oi W.oot,...,...,,
,,,_,_,
llrother·ln·law, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
\
I&gt;Gonr&lt;ol,. ..., _
o... ... , - •1.:1.,
u . ....... .
at the morning service.
.
.
.................
............
....
._.. ' .
..ll .. &amp; !&gt;r o.o
::,• t".:'...~n':,::':l.
..... .. I t - A T ...... ..., ·u•
u,....,.,,
Davis. Enroute to Pomeroy, Mrs. Tamala Kuhn, daughter of Dale and
,,,
...............
.
r.
• _.,. lV I. CI I -of
Mrs. Mary Mlller, wife of Pastor
...• loN&lt;•
. IIIf'O"'I
.,. "- '- ·•·
""'•W:rll_.
•
Johnson visited Ferne Harris who Janice Swartz Kuhn, and Terry Vin· Miller, has been reported Ul.
,
.,
.................
.
••
,.
cent at Utile Hocking.
h{IS been 111 and hospitalized with a
Charles Mash Is a patient In
Sunday guests at the Parker· Poole
'•
heart ailment. Shelsnow recuperatVMH.
The longer len(lh i4cket is just
home were Yula De Lae, Colwnbus,
ingathome.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs has returned
right to swing O¥er everything.
and RuthKarr, Chester.
home from a two weeks visit with
Quick crochet made in all one
•
Robert S. Burke is recovering
Hllda Chalker and daughter,
flat piece-use synthetic knittin1
relativeS tn Columbus.
from an injury received while
Jemmie Davis, Akron, were recent
worsted. Snap it up with contrasl
Mrs. Geraldyne Ferguson and
trim, crochet pompon cap and
loading cattle.
visitors ot Mrs. Lllllan Napper.
son, James Ferguson, Columbus,
lone scarl to match . !'altern
Charlotte Van Meter remains a
P~YS
Mrs. Raymond Russell has re- patient at St. Joseph Hospital, visited Sunday with Mrs. Bertha
7090: Sizes 2·12 included.
$2.25
tor
each
pattern.
Add
parker.
turned from Kentucky where she
Parkersburg, W. Va.
501 each pattern for . postace
Sixty-seven persons attended the
attended the wedding of her daugh·
Weekend visitors of Genevieve
and handlin1 . Sud lo:
.
'
Sunday
school
picnic
which
was
ter, Cathy Jones, to Timothy
Guthrie were Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
a,
ahoppln&amp; In rour home e1'81JOU
on
Allee
....
:.~
'\
7
held at the Royal Oak Park Satur·
Bauer. The couple will reside In
.....~rill illpL
Yost, Lancaster RFD.
end
ttlrcin
rour
Clf end nold
day evening, Sept. 11.
Beaver Dam, Ky.
Bobby and David Robson are pain·
The Daily Sentinel
the hlllnll of hipWIJ end frHwer
Mrs. Kathy Pullens was able to
ting roofs for Clair E. Follrod.
..
IU,
Old
CIMisU
Sta.',
fltw
lrrlellnc. 1t 111111 to 111op wh11ve1
attend ehurch Sunday.
POMEROY--Spending Sunday
l-', Ill 10111. p~ ....
Mr.
VanMeter
and
Lewis
Peters,
with Guy and Hope Harper, PomeAM-, Zip, Pllllnl 11..11er.
Sunday School attendance Sept.
West VIrginia, Arnold Snowden,
Yes! Iwanttosee more crafts. send
roy, Route 4, were their son and
me your new 1983 NEEOLECRAFT
Middleport, Edward Archer, Rosedaughter-In-law. Guy and Carroll 12 was 42; Sept. 19, 47.
CATALOG. 150 designs, 3 free
Real Estate • General
Alfred
Church
administrative
vllle,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Wllllam
Perry,
Harper and children, Ryan and
patternt 0~ .50
board
met
Sept.
7
with
Rev.
ThoAthens,
caUed
on
Mr.
and
Mrs.
('lorErin, Middleport; their daugher,
W. CIWT
S. .$2.00 lldl
man Schaefer a recent Sunday.
Jallet Kronenbltter and her daugh- mas In charge. Bob Pullins was
All ... •d Cltlfol-lldd 5tM
l...
ter, Julie, Mrs. Drew (Opal) Wal· elected chairman: Florence Ann
lls.o.tls I CllitiMIIIII Pllldl
Spencer,
lay
leader.
The
board
lace and daughter. Katrina, Mr:and
134-14 Qllct .....int Qlllll
608 MAIN
voted to have Bible study on Wed·
Mrs. Ricky Schaeffer, all of Zanes·
133-f..W'IIIIIIt QllillitW
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Tony Kerr, nesday nights. 7: :D-9 p.m .. and In·
POMEROY, OHIO
vlte Alfred Youth to join them.
Cambridge; Mr. and Mrs. Frank
121-E...... Plldnloll Qlilts
Vancooney, aJid Mr. and Mrs. Ern· Everyone is welcome. Revival was
127-AIIUD 'ri-Dalllls
1-6,
starting
at7:
~p.
m.
set
for
Nov.
Mrs.
J.
R.
Murphy
spent
Labor
est Vancooney and daughter, Jes·
125-Pilal Qliltl
NEW USTING - RUTlAND - I 17 story frame home with 2·3
Clara Follrod, Nlita Robinson, Day weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
sica, Blue ROck.
124-EIII811b 'a' .Orwt.ns
bedrooms,
aluminum sidin&amp; woodbumer set up and a garage.
Ruth Brooks, Florence Ann John Downs and famlly ot Jackson·
123-Stttcfl '1' Patdl ()lilts
MostlY
paneled and carpeted. $24.9Q9.
Spencer, and Nellie Parker, UMW ville. While there they attended Old
IU·Stlll 'I"Ptff O.illl
lm..dii!YM .....
members, accompanied Rev. Tho- Time Settlers Reunion.
NEW USTING - POMEROY - Next to nature. Close in- ~x
'UHlir All II FIDINr C!odMI
mas to the Arcadia Nursing Center
acres nice ·11'1 story ~ame, three bedniOIIlS, equipjled new krt·
Peggy Murphy Is visiting In
chen.' famiy room. storage building, garden SJllte, gas hot water
Sept. 14 for his monthly .service. Texas with her friend, Drema War.
heater. $29,500.
Rev. Thomas read scripture from
113-CMlplllllilll ...
Mrs. Joseph Evans and Tyson
1119-SN
+
llil(lllslctiallllnct)
Mark and Corinthians 11 and a are visiting In Malden, Mass. with
By MELODY ROBERTS
NEW USTING- POMEROY- Two story, three bedroom, storm~
IIJS.IIIIIII CIIICilll
poem, "Sharing." He closed with her husband, Joseph Evans where
The Long Bottom Communelec. baseboard heat bath. $13,000.
102·11Ql1lb
pl'Dyer and group singing of "What he IS working.
Ity Association will hold a
101-QIII Ill* C.U1I:till I .
I
a F1iend."
NEW USTING - POiliEIIOY- Six room house oolour ~. three
Helen Johnson spent Sunday with
"Pie Auction" to fund a new
bedrooms,
·bath, garage, gas space heaters. Rental · Building lots!
buDding for the community .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
Grover
and
Real
Estate
•
General
Visitors of Mrs. Annie Thompson
$6.500..
Everyone Is asked to bring a
Jenlfer
at
Long
Bottom.
Also
visit·
were Kate Rode haver, Green
pte. The event will be held
lngwereMr. and Mrs. Earl MournAcres, Fla .. and Carolyn Sidwell,
NEW LISTING- POIEIIOY- Three bedroom house, lwo siDfY,
Sept. 29 at 8 p.m. In the ComIng of Elyria.
Fort Myers, Fla.
firejtlce, ba!h, g3s hot water·heal $8,000.
. ''
munity building.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Lambert vi·
Mr . and Mrs. Garland Caldwell
Mrs. Ernestine Hayman re·
sited with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
NEW LISTING - SYRACUSE- Energy efficient 2-3 bedrooms,
ente11alned a family dinner Sept.
VIRGIL B. SR.
cently returned home from at·
.
new
carpet remodeled bath, level ~ assumable low interest loan
Grover,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl
Mourn·
216
E.
~nd
~i.
19. Present were ' M•·· and Mrs.
tending the wedding of her
available.
$25,000.
•
lng
and
Helen
Johnson
Sunday
at
Mike Kestner, Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Phone
granddaughter, Kathy FitzpaGrover home In Long Bottom.
IlEAL TORS!
Ewing , Beth, Kim and Benny , Mr.
1-(614)·992-3325
trick to David Bitler. Kathy Is
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mourning of
Henry£ . Cleland, Jr. ~ Gil I . : . ......... : . 992-6191
Charles
Ritchie
and
and
Mrs.
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
QUALITl - Brick veneer with
Jean Trussell . . .. .. . . .... ..... . .. .. .... 949·26611 ·
Elyria, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Larry, all local: and Mr. and Mrs.
Elbert Fitzpatrick,
about 4,000 sq. ft. CCYered pa. DollieS . Turner ........... .. ......... . ~92 · 5692
Grover and Jenlfer ot Long Bot·
Charles Caldwell, Carrie and
tio, landscaped yard, 3 bed·
Oltice . .. ... .. . .. .... . ... ·· . . ... . .. ... . 992-22S9
Lancaster.
tom, and Helen Johnson, local, vi·
rooms (one enonnousJ, 2~
Crlssy, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Warns·
sited Sunday afternoon with Mr.
baths. family room, 2 ~~­
Alfred Homecoming was ·Sept. 19
ley, Cheshire, spent a weeces,
carpetin&amp; 2 car &amp;IIJIII!S
CecD
Gillogly
and
famlly
and
Mrs.
with basket dinner at 12: ~ p.m.
kend recently with their
and only ll yrs. old: Excelent
of
Albany.
and afternoon service at 1: ~ p.m.
daughter and family, the Dor·
oondition.
. QTQII
I
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Mourning of
Harmond were the featured sin·
sel Larkins .
Elyria spent weekend with his
Mrs. Carrie Countess.
gers. Local singers were Bonnie
NICE - 2 bedroom country
mother lind other relatives, Mrs.
Pound , Va. Is visiting her
home. Balh, aUtoolatic heat,
Thomas, Florence Ann Spencer,
Goldla Mourning of Middleport.
daughter and family, the To_m
T.P. water, &amp;~rage and 2 acres
Alfred Youth chorus.
on hard road. $45,000. ·
Hay mans. Carrie will be stayand
Kevin
Knapp
spent
Charles
Nine churches were represented
Ing for about a month before
Monday
night
recentlY,
with
Mr.
In the gl\est list. Included In the out·
COIMIItENT -' One floof
returning home.
and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and KaJl ot
of-county visitors were Mr. and
CM~bedroom home. ~
AVAILABLE IN GEM BLUE, 'AMBER, RUST AND
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Fitch
Langsvtlle.
ciy · ..
rage, carport,
Mrs. Clarence Warner, Athens;
WOODLAND BROWN. · ' ,...---·. .__ _..__.,..._ _
h4ve- been called on by Mr.
Gary and Keith V'{arner, Columand large 'l!vellot. Ju.sl
and Mrs. Eddie Bigley and
$27,000.
bus; Elea1)0r Walters, · Mt·. and ·
sons,' Reedsville.
Mrs. Otto SWartz, Shade; EleanQr
The builders committee of
IIINEIIALS - Near HarrisonBoyles and friend, Belpre: Mr. and
the Long Bottom Community
ville, 66 acres fenced and opeti
Mrs. Warren Bentz, I.ancaster;
Association meets every Montor ~ Ill hlrd road.
Mr. and Mt·s. Gerald Swartz, Debday . Ill 7: 30 p.m. In the ComMr. and ~.. Emest . JohnsoJ! . . BNIGAIN - 2 houses with
bie and VIcki, Marietta; KateRodemunity building.
and
Mrs. Phyllis Balley of Belpre,
bitlis, ... ciy . . . . . ..
haver, Green Acres, Fla.; Mrs.
Long Bottom will mourn the
Ohio
visited
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Douglas
111!1 IMI!m b only ~1.000.
. 6 ROlli 01 AMO IV Ellrl
.10i's of Joe Bissell who re- , Nita Dillinger, Guysville; Mr. and Circle a recent Monday.
•
\ S YNr P,_iclentlal WHr
,. ~
Mrs. Dale Wlndland, Gallipolis.
cently passed away. He wlll be
AVAIIMU In amry ~a
~wn
Carelton
d.
Racliie
·
sadly missed by all who knew
: ... 'I~
IQ. YD. INITALL~D .
home site. lnes and fresh llir
Alfred ChurCh , annouilced that
visited Wtth Sheryl Johnson on Sat·
him.
.
·~I
6 ROlli 01 511 Nylon
00 Pdlllld.
their Inside restrooms ar~ now fin·
urday arternoon.' .
Reminder - The Long Bot·
I
Susan and Kevin SheppardofRu·
l
tom Senior Citizens meet the . !shed. They sent thank·you canis !0
Bill Robinson and Clarence Heftd.. t1and were dinner guests d. Mr. Uld
IM!COnd and fourth ,Tuesdays In
erson
for their contrlbtulons, aspeMrs. Carl Clrc1e on Sunday.
tlie baSement of the Methodist
eta!
vote
of
thanks
to
Janlce
and
Mrs. San) Bartnlg 8J1d famlly d.
Churcb. Free blood preseure
1'
!
011
Pullins
for
their
~
In
·
Lanp,
Ohio viSited With Lu1a and
clinics are .li~ld · tbe fourth
,
the
project,
and
extel)ded
thanks
to
.
Verna
Cli'cle
recently.
Tuesday from 9 a.m. · to 12
all
who
helped.
-Mrs.
WUber
(Nel·.
'l1le
Moore
n!wJlon Wu held at
noon.
• the Sutton Chureb on Auat 19.
To contribute to : tbls· co- . lie) Parker.
l&lt;••ot • ~-

-

SYUCUSE·RM:ili'E

Naistetler
The first birthday of Charles Rl·
chard Nalstetler, son of Curt and
Anna Nalstetler, Pomeroy, was observed Thursday evening with a
party held at the home or his grand·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Baxter.

..

1
'

The college reserves the
right to reject any and an·

bldo.

/Story ond half house com-· •·
remodeled with new

1 ~!!!.~~

thermal pane wlndowa, new
vinyl siding with nlcevelw of

river. 3 bedroomo, 1 beth
n.,.; ' ...
D·W. gor'!"g• diopoool, , _.:.

new kitchen cabin eta;
[le:'(cleaneng oven,

new ret .... :..'-

~~~~~:lce moker living room ,,,,
room ~ith bar _

•

Knew_.,

1-F1ron•:h Cfty Mobile Home In~~ throughout
ou.ronco Agency . Coli
:!.'
School Syu~':'""
448·9340.
*38,000. Co11448-8274. ' ·

I
.I

�The Daily Sentinel Po!ll 9
Poge-8 The Daily Sentinel
31 Homes for Sale

Ohio

They'll Do It Every Time

room, and a larga 1 -car garage. Central air. gas fur·

nance , di s hwaahor and
diapoaal. Very eaay to main ·
tain on a almost Y2 acre level
lot. located on Rt. 36 close
to Holzer Ho spital . With an
8 '/o~

64 Misc.

SWAIN
Plullc Soptlc Tonka. Sioto
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE end county opprovod. 1.000
STORE 82 Olive St .• Galli, gal. link. prlco 1340. Other
polls. Couch. lovootot ond alz.. In llook. haul In your
chair. 1199.: wellhuggera plcllup truck. Cell 814-218·
1126.: bunk bedowMh bun· 6830. Jookaon. Oh . RON
kl ... 1170.: box opring end EVANS"ENTERPRISES .
0\lttreu. 1100.
Firm.
1120.: recllnaro. 180.: 9 •
12 linoleum ruga, $22.: mo- Wood burning edd on fur·
plo rookero. 148 .• w,-tnger nonce. Still in factory erato.
washers, refrigerators, 1460 . Cali 1-814-268·
dlnlhte atrta, cheat, drntert, 1218.
bunkie mottrou. 140. Coli
448-3188.

Nice 3 or 4 bedroom l aheped home, fully ca rpeted. bath and a half. utility

assumable

51 Household Good•

"

loan ,

847,000. Cell675 -7647 after 6PM .
3 bedroom hou se . Full baae-

ment. 1 ca r garage, central
he et S. ai r. good lo cat ion.
614-992-36 86 .

.
•

'

STUCCO PLASTERING . ·.1 j
toxturocl colllngo commor...,...
clot and ,..ldontloh lrM "
ootl(notao. Coli 514· 2118· ~-1
1182.
' '

House. two Iota. 680 South
House or trailer lot in Brad-

bury. Call 614-992-2602.

(I) Nowooontot
ID MOVIE: 'Breaker
Morant'
(() Corol Burnett
(() Tolelhon Contlnuoo
(I) Newa/Sporta/Woathor
()D • &lt;lJ Newt

11:00 •

tt

cine. 614-992-6949.
House a. lot. 54x111 ft. 2
roomswith
up lo shower.
both. Full836
basement
E.
Main . Pomeroy. After 4.
614-992-6347 .
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dltion. 3 bedrooms. family
room with firapalce, centrel

air, basement phone 304676-1642 .
B&amp;autifully restored Victorian. 6 bedrooms, 4 firepla -

ces . ornata carved
woodwork, air conditioned,
lnaulated owner financing .
304-876-6999 .

THREE bedroom houo. Crab
Creek Rd.. Meson Co. All
electric. 304-676-3329 .
She room house, 1 acre
along Kanawha River. 304-

676-7641 , evenings.

For sale or rent. Immediately. House in Clifton. All
appllancea, large lot. 304676-2699.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. choir. rookor, onomon. 3 11bl... (exlra heavy
1+40 ~v.
by Frontlorl. 1886. Sofa.
New ~,II·Y·
choir end loveaoo1. 1278.
r~~~~~~~~~;:::=:::;;;;====~ Sot..
cholralobi
priced
12811.end
10 t898.
...from
138
and up to 1125. Hldo·l·
36 Lots 8&amp; Acreage
44 Apartment
boda.l440 . and up to
•ezs.. queen size. 1380.
f or R ent
Rocllnora, •1111. to 1325 .•
Lompa from 118. to 186. 6
26 acres. 614-887-3609.
pc. dlnotteo from •79 .• to
Two acre lott-1 60 ft. road HUD ovollobla 2 bdr. deluxe. *386. 7 pc .• t189. and up.
frontage. clly woter. behind kltchan furnlahod. good lo- Wood 1oblo with alx cholro
84 lumber. C•il 304-876- cation. utllilioa ponlolly *396. to 1850. Desk 1110.
pold. 6 rm houoo for rent. Hutch... 1300. ond •880 .•
6B73 or 875-3818.
Realdentlal and commerciel maple or pine finish . Bedpropertlet for ule or Jeaaa. room eultes • B•atett
1 acre lot. 3 miles from A-One Reol Estotoa, Corol Cherry. 1795. Bunk bod
Yoogo" Rooltor. Coil 304- complllo with motlretNI.
1own. 304-876-1564.
878-8104 or 876-8388.
12110. end up1o t396. Baby
beda. •sa. Mottru"" or
box aprlnge. tun or twin.
2 bdr. downtown. all corpot. •sa., firm, UB. and 178.
36 Real Estate
complete kilchon. ail elect- Qulin oota. 1195. 4 dr .
Wanted
ric hoot-air cond .. Wuher- choala, 142. 6 dr. cholla,
dryor. Coil 448-4383 daya. 154. Bod fromu. 120.ond
448-0139 lVI.
126 .• 10 gun- Gun coblnota,
1360 .• dlnltle cholra no.
Wantod: ou1 of 11ato buyer
and 126. G.u or olectrlc
neoda house or opt. building
whh owner financing. Wrllo Furnlohed Apt .• 1 BR . 243 rangn. *325. Boby . m•
8ox10081n core of Tho Gal· Jackson Pika. 1236. Utili· trnon. *26 &amp; 136. bed
lipolia Dolly Tribuna. 828 tl" paid. 448-4418 after 7 from.. 120. Uli. &amp; 130.
Used Furniture ... bookclle,
3rd. Ava .• Gallipolis. DhP. _.m
_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
r•nget, chairs, end t•bln,
48631 .
racllnen 1nd TV's. 3 mllel
Furnished 3 r. private bath, out Bulavlle Rd. Open 9om
846 2nd. Ava.. Gallipolis. to 7pm. Mon. thru Fri .• 9am
Ref. preferred. Coil 448- 10 8pm. Sot.
2218 .
446-0322

--~----~·~-------- ·-

(ft)

1----------

3 bdr homo. B1 Locuot St.
Call 448-4110 before 5 or 2nd floor furnished effl·
446-1164 otter 6.
clency apt. Apt. 4. 729 2nd
Avo. Adults only . , 448 ·
3.bdr. bl-lovel . family room. 0967.
CLEAN USED MOBILE fireplace, Dt~rage, gas furHOMES KESSEL'S QUAL· nanca, l1rge y1rd . city Deluxe garage apartment, 1
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES. tchool. Possible rental pur- bdr.,
central air, First Ava .•
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS. chose .. Cai1446-7438 .
no
pots.
ref. required. Cell
AT 36. PHONE 446-7274.
Pomeroy-2 bd.room unfur- 614-268-8608.
nished houoo. 1196. mo.
E.llatoa Aport;
1980 Redman sectional Security deposit. 8100. plus Jacklon
636
Jockaon Pike.
menta.
After
8-coll
814·
utllilioa.
homo. 2Bx70. 3 bdr.. 2
Galllpollo . Equal houalng opbaths. FR . FP and wood 992-2288.
portunity hoa 1 bedroom
stove. Appliances including
apartment•.
rent 1tart1 at
diawaohor. 446-6630. ·
6 bd. room house. good •152 per monlh . Coil 4481980 Kirkwood 14x70. 4 neighborhood . Fully 2746 or leave menage wa
bdr ., on nice rented lot In equlped kitchen. Lincoln will call you bock.
Cheshire area. Low utllitlea, HUI, Pomaroy. Oh. 614- Furnlohod opt.. no pots.
built to FHA ttandards and 992-3489 after 6 p.m.
odulla, 3 rma .• and beth. Coli
FHA loan available. Nice
446-0171 or 446-3733.
Houae
for
rent.
3
bedroom
a,
porch, underpinning, like
103
Blh
Slroat.
Poin1
Pleanew. Call 614-388-9776 .
sent. 1250 monthly. dopoah Avoiioble Oct. 1 . Nice 2 bdr.
at Kenauga. fuHy carRichardson 10x41 mobile required, new furnace with ap1.
with atove lo refrlg.
peted
gat
saving
feature&amp;.
Can
be
home, 2 bdr, partially fur&amp; dryar hookup.
nished, carpeted. gas fur- seen. 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. dally Waaher
Coil colleet evonlngo
nonce. Cai1614-266-1413 . except Sunday, Phone 614- •196.
446-8398 between 11 o.m. 1-304-273-9745.
and
9 p.m.
10x60 mobile home .
3 room furniahed opt. 1280.
t1.BOO . Call 614 -388·
House, references needed, month lncludH utllltlto. In8647.
quire at Meigs Inn In
304-675-4684.
Pomeroy .
1 Ox44 mobile home,
$1.200 . Call 614 -246 - 3 .bdr country home. mOdern
kitchen, basement. carpet6064.
Ing. Off Sandhill Rd. 304· 3 bd.room ap1. in Middle·
port. Equip. kitchen. '160.
1972 Lancer mobile home. 882-2096 after 4 p.m.
mo. plus aecurity deposit.
12x66. good cond. Coli
814-992-6692 .
446-4113.
42 Mobile Homes
Furnished apt. Adulto only.
for Rant
14x64, 1981 Oekbrook. ges
no pots. Middleport. 4 room
hoot. 88,996. Coli 446houM·Lincoln Hgtt., unfur4089.
niohed. 814-992-3874.
Two· 2 bdr. trailers com·
1971 Forest Park. 12x60. 3 pletely furnished. Call 446- Apartments . 304 -676·
bdr .. total electric, excellent 9669.
564B.
condition. (on rent lot) . Call
446-9340 .
2 bdr. mobile home. Call APARTMENTS. mobile
1982 Cloylon 14x65. 2bdr .. 446-0390.
.
homea, houses. Pt. Pleasant
2 full baths, 3 ton, central
air, delivered and set . Call 2 bdr mobile home for rent end Galllpolio. 614-44&amp;8221 or 614-246-9484.
446-9340.
ou1160 2 Y, milao from hot·
p~ol, child acceptod. Call
1973 12x60 Beron . 446-0167.
Three room furnished apart$8,600. Must sell . Moving.
Cell Andy Vaughan . 614- 12x66 2 bdr. mobile homo. ment. odullo. no poll. Pqlnt
Ploooent. Call 304-67&amp;742-2897.
new carpet. clean, security 2453.
dep . and ref. req . Bob
1974 12 x 60 Kirkwood mo- McCormick Rd. No pets,
bile · home. Underpinning, water paid. $165 per. mo.
fuel ·oil drum. air-cond . Vrny plus utllltioa . Call 448- Unfurnlahed Apartments.
call Automotive Supply.
clean inside. large closet. 4491.
304-676-2218. 8-8 p.m .•
Lou of atorage . 86,200.
304-676-8763. 8· 10 p.m.
614· 992-3041 more info.
For sale or rent unfurnished
81 N11huo 14x70 mobllo
Trailer and two lots owned home. 3 bedrooms, front TWIN Rivera Tower now
by the late Zuelelia Smith. dad. off kitchen, wood renting to qualified appll272 W. Main Street, Pome- burner, gaa heat. stove end conto 50 or older. 304·117&amp;·
roy, Oh. For information. refrigerator included. Call 6678. HUD oaaioledproject.
call Lula Belle Hampton, 614-246-9226 after 8.
New Haven. 3 bedroom un101 Kerr St .. Pomeroy.
Ohio . 614-992-2021 or 2 bdr. mobile home in city. furn op1. 304-882·3356.
Fred W. Crow. Attorney. Rei. and dop . Cai1614-2&amp;eThree room furn. 1pt.
Pomeroy. Ohio . Call 614- 1922.
ground floor. private en992-6132.
outtkins Henderaon.
14x70 3 bdr. mobile home. trance,
utilities
furnlahed. 1226.
USED MOBILE HOME . Call 446-2192 .
monlh. 304·875-8730.
676 -2711 .
2 BR MOBILE Homo for
rant. Fumiohed. Coil 4461968 'Homtlllt 12x66 mo- 4226
bile home. 2 br, clean, good
cond., includes underpin· 2 bedroom troll or. Raal nice.
ning and wheels. Mutt sell, adutta only·, Brown's Trailer
call 304-882-2246.
Park. Mlnerovllle. 814·992·
3324.

'
Cll ,50l,o Pyramid

34

Business
Buildings

2 bedroom furnlahod. ,
Aduha proferred. No pota.
Oopoall requirod. 814-9922749.

Metal oheoto for all buMdlng
purpo•••· Flot porcellon·
enomol cooted. 4x8 thru 4 x
12. Prlceo. 17.00 to 19.80.
814-887-3086.

DRAGONWYND CATTSRY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow polp·
pial. CFA Hlmoloyon. p...
alan ond SlomHO kltteno.
Call 448-3844 oft• 4 p.m.

For 11le-Uaed Davit
Trencher . 1-814 -8947842.

------------~----- :' :

RON'S Tolovlalon Service.
Specializing In Zonilh and "
Motorola. Quazar. and .• ,
houH coila. Call 578-2398 "• :
or 446-2454.
•, •

-

... --·
... ...
-- ..
-·.... _

-

61

&amp;

•••••

....

&amp;

•

Farm Equipment

Uncoln Continental
cor 84.000 milea.
Olivor corn plclcor Modol732 row 11126. Block choppor
cond, one owner. 3044 row wide. 1800. Com ele· I A'rll.'" 02.
votor 311 ft.tronaport, 1200.
814-8811-31181.
72 Trucks for Sale

duo It Notre Doomo
()) MOVIE: 'Georgy Girt'
())

Pumps Sol" and Service . ~
304-8911-3802.
.. .

I OLJ6HTII. BE ABLE T'GET A
BETTER VIEW FROM UP HERE!

880 Ford tractor 131100. 1 ·
311 M.s. troctor 131500.:
Now II ft . buah he- 1.400.
and a 3-point corry ol 185.
Chevy 3 quortor ton pickup
•1.000. 304-5711-2328 or
304-878-28118.
.

PAINTING interior &amp; exte- ~ ~
rior, froo ootimelos. 304- ,. ..
876-1128.
•
• .:.

63

87 Ford. · haH ton pickup
*200. .304-1176-4436 after
5:00p .m.
W .O.

Uvastock

Pord Econollno 300.
12 ft. cube vori. outo. good
cond. Call 814-248-9448.

I

•·

. ._1
SAVE 1\IOWI Cu1 win!er
'
billa. lnaultlto. your homo. ,j
For Int. call Paul 1·626- :J
4404 for frH oatlmotoa.
"l
PAINTING. Interior or exte:
rlor, building and remodel- ..
ing. replace or lnatell aiding. .. '"',
•nd roofing. ·experienced' • .!104-876-2440.
:

46

Joel!
we

''.
.
I

~houqht

•

~01.1
were~

I

POODLE GROOMING . Coli
Judy Taylor at 614-387·
7220.

64

All Breed Grooming, 7 doyo
• week. Pick up and delivery.
Call 814-387-7877.

800 bu. of old com In fino
condition. Butler · Hereford
Form, Lo- Rl- Rd. Coil
814·218-1113 or 1114·
258-81118.

Hay llo Grain

1979 Jeep CJ-7. ,QuedraTrok. 'brM1d now whlte •con·
vwtlbio doth top wilh tinted
wlndowo. while apokt
· · now . rodlol
lncloor·outdpor
corpot,tlrei.
NO
rust. D -· on hiahwey
only. '40.000 mi., 111,000.
can 448•0888 oftori5JIM.

1. 000 buahol oar corn. 1878 Kow-1 IIIlO. Beat
12.70 bu. Old com. 814· otter. Mull 1111. 814-742:
28&amp;7.
992-7468.

r=========
....-. .... -." .... .. ....'. '

1810 Pontiac Flr8blrd. AM·
FOR SALE: 2 Fomolo rogl•
FM
- . air, te.ooc
torod Pit Bull Pupplol. *100 firm. ...
Coli 81&lt;~·2511·11181 .
ooch .. Ph. 448· 7504.

7l

11181 KIW-I 1000 LTD.
4,000 mllaa, oxcollont condition. 304-8711·1 028 ofter

6.

Auto1 for Sale

1---------

76

'

,•, I
"'n I

-~-------

4477

\.. i

I

----~------ l d

t

Grooming oervlceo. Will clip WINDOW TINTING AutoSchnouzera end otc. 814- Homo-Comniorc:lol. Cut
982·7342.
high onorgy coot. profeo.
alontily lnallllod. Coli 448·
78 Auto Pirta
3100.
67
Musical
llo Acce~~ritl .
Instruments
' '
1850 Olde 88 okk orglnol
1850. ooio. Col 448-0188. · USED tlroo, Honohowe
Tlroo, luCII Ll .... PJ, PIN·
1-874 Triumph TAll good unt. phono 304-8711-7310.
oond .. llhlrp. Coll448·2050 1--------:-Uk for Mr. loit.
·
•
Co• P.,a, 1974 · Z·door
18'7i DodGe Colt *2.1100. AMC wrockod for perto,
Coli 441-4110 """ 4, • •
· tronamlallon.
boatoflw. 304or 304-8711·

-=-::--;:c--'-:---:---8~
Excavatin11

',...

.

Electrical
llo Refrigeration

.

.

WINNIE

'

.J' l.
( I

--11

~

!A'
(ll

I

"' I

'

'

SEWING Machine repairs. .. · ,....;:{
MfVIce. Authorized lljngar · 1

:

Solll &amp; . Sorvico Sh4rpen _.,. .
Sc!uoro. Fabric Shop.
Pomoroy. 992-2284.

815

General Ha1.11ing

·... -

..

BARNEY

I;

JONES' BOYS WATER SERVICE. Call, 814-367-7471
Of' 814·387·0881 .

I

TH' PARSON'S
WIFE--UH··

I
f

,

l

Space for Rent

2 bedroom trailer on Greer
Road. $176 month pluo utll•;
For tale one and half acres itiel. portlolly furnlohed ., ADortlmeo•t a!zo Whirlpool
Woattng(louoo
mora or Ins, approximately 304-875-1724.
other Kenlrioro.
800 It rood front- on·
Whirlpool • Q.E.
Cora-Centerpoint Rd. • - 2 bedroom troller, kilchort
.dryoro: CoU 114Centerpoint. u.ooo.oo· furnlohod. couploa only.
304-875-1078.
Phone 882· 8844.

xJ r
M:

lDJil!df .....

.a

MldtfiiiDrt. Ohio.

TRI ITATI! •
~~
UIIHOLITERY~OP
1113 ..... ,.....
ipoll••
441-7133' or441- IU.
MOWREVI ~f Ri.
1 ... 1:18, . Ploaaant• .
1114-871-8118.

!FIIIIIIIuN r

·

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
goaled by 1118 a!JOve cartoon.

INTO (

I I X) ( I XI I )

(Answers tomorrow)
SatunJoy'sl Jumbl.. : QUAKE IRATE LAWFUL MUFFIN
An-; He bought his wife a mink to keep her thisWARM-&amp; QUIET
Jumble Book No. tt, cont.lnlng 1~o puzztn, It lfalltble for 11 .85 pottplkt
trom Jumblt, Clo tNI ntWIPIPif', Box 34. NorwOOd, N.J. 07648.1ncfudt your
name, lddrM.a,
code 1nd meke chloka
abtt to Newsp.tpetbocQ.

BRIDGE
Suit 'preference misread
By Oswald Jacoby
ud Alu Soatag
Alan: "Here 18 a hand that
can do a lot of bridge teachForget the bidding since
al roatla should lead to the
final heart contract."
Oswald: "We'll start with
West's opening lead. Hlll
hand Is most ijnattractive
and a rubber brld«e plaver
is likely not to bother think·
lng at all. This time the
game was duplicate and II is
Important to try to save
overtricks."
Alan: "West did lead a
heart. He should have led
one of the minor suits, but he
did try a trump."
Oswald: "South won in his
hand and led the jack of
spades. West took his ace
while East followed with the
four spot. West looked at
that lowly four spot and led
the low· ranklng club sull."
Alan: "South got greedy.
He won In dummy, led the
five of clubs to bis ace,
ruffed his last club, drew
trumps, diJcarded his three
dlamonda on good spades
and made two overtricks."
Oswald : "West knew
enough about the game to
understand suit preference
signals. He didn't knowenough to realize that Ibis
four of spades was a high
. card, not a low one. The
seven, three and two were
missing and South surely did

NORTH
t -27 -11
+KQ!OtiS
• A83
t Kl 2

lnf.

+Ks
WEST

EAST
+432
.765
+1713
tAQ 10
97I 3
+QJ 108
SOUTH
+J 7
.KQJI2
• J 86
+A62

+A98
10 9

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
Wnt

Pass
Pass

North
1+

East
Pass

Pass

Pass

3•

Pass

Soutb

2•

1•

Opening lead : •10

not ha-ve all three. Hence,
East was calling for a
diamond."
Alan: "Note that if West
had opened a diamond at
trick one he would have had
no later problems. While if
be had opened a club he
would have known enough to
lead a diamond at !rick
three."

tlw.1.ft='
lily THOMAS JOSEPH
4% Hlgb-schooler
ACROSS
I Canaanite
DOWN
deity

I Foundation

5 Constructed ! "Blue Gown"
9 Cohort
girl
10 Speechify
3 Modify
1% Location
4 Caustic
13 Least
substance
available

5 Rotund
Yesterday's 8Diwen.
British
covering
actor
16 Price paid
27 Idaho
16 Canadian
6 Steed
18 Grape disease
specialty
province
7 Challenge
21 Merriment
30 Ghost
17 Placid
8 Perpetual
22 "-, I'm
31 Fabric
19 "Brandy-" 11 Third or
Adam"
32 Noted forest
28 Eyelid
real
23 Paradoxical 34 Mud
problem
14 American
24 Titular
35 So be it!
21 Stadium
jurist
26 Assistant
J8 T0 this da
entrance
,._.,.,....,.,,.......,.,......
~Tl"""'T-:...,.._
Y
22 Chop

15 Rink

Z5 "Allen's -"
28 Venezuelan
copper
center
27 Baker's
offering
Zll Monk's title
%9 Texas city
33 l.Jvlng
36 Pronoun
37 Least
amounts
J8 Scotland

:19 Editor's
mark
40 Advantage
41 Cotton

Tonight's . show features
Bobby Czyz end Norberta
Sabater in a ten round mid·
fabric
dleweight bout from the
Americana Hotel. Great
Gorge. NJ. (2 hrs.. 30
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
mjn.)
AXYDLBAAXR
Newa
II
LONGFELLOW
())' PaS Late Night
® MOVIE: 'l/lctqrf at . One letter almpl)- atencb for .another. In lhia aample A 11
Emebbe'
used for the thre, L'l, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
12:30 • (I) (!) Lite Night with I IJIOIIrophea, the lenllh and fonnetlon of the worda are ell
08vld Llttormtln
I billto. Eoth de, lhe eode letten ore dltrerent.
(I) MOVIE: 'Roliercoll:
caYri'OQUOTBS
tor' . J..
.
I]) Jock llennY Show
()) 11etv1y HIU Show
FDOWYPW
DF
GUW
0 R Y 1M E R M W
• ()) MOVIE: 'Columbo:

HEY,QIOcK!llW WEIRD ,
006 OF~ IS SOirr
OF A ~ISN't 1-lEJ

Flllle lntD Murder'

• Ill Nlulrtli,.

,1 :00 (J) I Monled ~
()) Nlghtllt18
• . • ()Illig Valley

1:30 .•

.
F I ... . . . . _ . f-"

od. ....... Olllltioto.
,ICM-171oM71 ...., II p.m.
IIIII

T-·
Cll Bumo &amp; Allen

G-OT.

()) •()J

1

.

MIZ TUTILE

employees. (R) 160 min.)
(J) Coptionad ABC Nowa
I)D All In tho Family
12:00 ID MOVIE: 'The Hanging

day Nlgl\t It tho Flghll

"'
· ' .'
•
"'

,~Q

COME -ON IN;

Cll ESPN Preoonto 8otur-

Now 'HouKng houoo cool. , J
lump or lloltor up to 8 ton.
1
Umoetono. top· ooll. fill dirt. :")
can 814-387-7101-.
1

_a_,___u_Phollt-:--·_erv_.;..·__- ;·~--~ 1

nance man who became an
overnight millionaire . 160
min .)
8 ()) &lt;m Square Page
(PREMIERE) The giris
launch their plans to ·click
with the right clique:
()) Special: Charleston
Ballet
(jJ) Baltimore Symphony
and
Leon
Fleloher/
Concort Tony
Randall
hosts this special on the
opening of the new Joseph
Meyerhoff Symphony Hall
in Bahimore. MD. (2 ln.)
8:30 Ill
(()
&lt;m Private
Benjamin Season Pre·
miere . Benjamin c·oncocts a
plan to have one of the
U.S. astronauts visit Ft.
Bradley but 1he astronaut
turns out to be a chimpanzee.
9 :00 1J (I) (IJ MOVIE: 'On the
Road Ageln'
I]) 700 Club
(jJ NFL Footbell:
Cincinnati at Cleveland
Cl ()) &lt;lD MOVIE: 'Drop·
Out Fllher'
()) Great·Performances
1 0 :00 (I) MOVIE: 'The Pilot'
(() TBS Evening News
(J) Crlola to Criola With
Barbara Jordan 'Outskirts
of Hope.' Past and present
economic policies are examined. (60 min .)
(jJ) Nawawatch
10:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Mod Max'
I]) Sing out Americo .
(jJ) Common Thread
11 :00 IJ (I) Newac:enter
(I) Noahvllla RFD
Cll ESPN SIIOr18 Center
I]) All In the Family
(IJ Newa/Spor18/Weather
Ill (J) 1)1 News
()) O.Vo Allen at Lorge
11 :30 D (I) (I) Tonight Show
(I) Teddy Pondorgroao in ·
Concert Teddy performs
his biggest hila.
I]) Another uta
(() MOVIE: ·Julson Slnga
Ageln'
Ill (()Trapper John M.D.
The hospitalization of a nuclear power plant technician convinces Gonzo that
the plant is exposing its

VONDER COMES

. I:
I

'Eblin

ftlld·Out. ltoocl

.·-·

'

-,~\

That' s

()) a

qoner! "''\,.

I 'Ill

Bockhoe end Dltchor Work.
Free t!ltimatea. French City · .:~·
Mobile Homos. Inc. Coil ·... ,,
.448-9340.

Trooh Hauiln;.
Harley
Plok upoln Choohlq, Porter
end BldMIIole11. Cioil 114317-7287wenlnga. .

excellent oond,

ihrotile!

I

.... . ~

84

nlbeuf
soon's
fiK -this
fool

t •. •

----------

fl....,.._•

I

•_j

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
•
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
~ ~",.
Phbna 448·3888 or 446'· · ·•1•,

Boats and
Motora for S'e!a ·

12'·
row • boll.
with tit troller. oloctric motor. 3'11 HP goo lngino,
1200. Coli 814-246-11870.

PERFECT! IT'LL GIVE 'I1)U MEW A
COMMANDING VIEW OF ll;E ROII.OI

tlnu• guttering, aeamleaa . ,

1982 Chevy' S1 0 with
to-. 15900 .• 304!87511884.

(jJ

buried ali\le under snow for
five days and a mainte-

~YOOP

ADVANCED Soamlou · ;
Gut:ter· Doora. Offering con- •· ~

.

•

lncrodlblel Season Pre·
miare. T«:»night's program
feeturea a race between a
men and a thoroughbred
horae. a woman who was

,,

aiding. roofing. garage · ~
doon. free eatlmatea, 614- : ~1
888-8205..
.

I

AKC Regilltred Poodlo pup-

Speqlol
(J) NCAA Football: Pur-

1980 ~ ton Chovy plclcup,
one owner, low mileage.
Coli 448-4782, Goillpola.

HILLCREST KENNEL
Boardlhg oil brlltlda. AKC
Reg. Dobermano pupa and
Dobermon Stud Service.
Coil 448-7795.

For ula: Roglatored Goldon
Ratrivor pupploo. 2V. mo.
old. 1125. Coli McArthur.
698-4447 .

boy'
I]) Nltlonlll Geogrophlc

THE HISTOftV OF TliE

Formoll Super A troctor, •11
equipment 12.1100. 3048711-6930 or 304-8753348.

Snow blade for Gravely tree~
tor. Novar. uood. CB redio lo
Unuor. Browning Mart 4.
0-104 mike, stock 3 high
goln beamo. 60 ft. tower.
ground plene antenna &amp;
Bolin tractor porta. 814949-2722 . .

Coli Ro!Mn Harper for Ginung ond Vollowroot prlcoa.
304-8711-1293.

..

I
'
Water Welli. Commerci.el '} i1
and Domeotlc. Teat holta.:J.; i •

pleo. Coil 448·0857.
AKC 8rltony Sponlel pupplea. 1125 oo. Coil 8143711·2830.

Clipper auporrria1ic maaonry
IIW. vary good cond. 38 ln.
4 blodo · Goldblot1 trowling
mochlno. Uke now. both at 'II
price eech. 814-982-2805
preferobly after 4.

Hff.' TIE Wllt-COI(TfHEHTIIL &amp;UT-I'*IAT
ALL/MICE iS PROBA8LV TIE 110 THEY
WEIILTIIEIT- A/0 IIEta
I'W(f FROII
1HE MOST POWEfU'UL !«))t
YOU,
l'lO'IEitMIEifTAl BOUt' IH
'OODOY"?.'

1

F &amp; K,Tree Trimming. llump • ·
romovel. Coll876-1331 .
.•• :
/.
•RINGLE'S S~RVICE expe-~ 4
rlonced mooon. roofing. car··~
pentor. oloctrlclon. gonirol , ••
repairs ond remodeling. Call ·
304-876 -2088 or 876- ·• ;
41180.
'• I.

- - - - - - - - -·

e&amp;.OOO BTU Circulating goa
heater. Warm Morning. Call
814-992-7022 or 814·
982-7476.

Electrolux ohompooor with
bruihet. Uke now *178.
814-892-15293 oftor 8 p.m.

1972 Comoro 360 oulomotlc. UOO. 304·876·
1028 ofter 5.

ANNIE

.

.

1----------

Uprigh1 freezor. opprox. 8
months. 1400. 304-676·
5068

Fire wood for Nit. 130. aplh
lo delivered. 814-992-7237
or 814-992-871B.
·

·• !

Gono· a Steam CarpetiCI11n- '
Scotch Gaurd - Free 1 ' .
•tlmateJ·sprlng apeciala- ; .i :·
Gene Smllh, 992-8309.
• ·' 1

Trombone t75. 7ft. poolloble t76. 304-896-3999.

66 Pat1 for Sale

T1ble and eix chairs. hutch,
304-876-3478

.I

Antlqu ... Imports. fino cluolcol reproduCllon ook fuml·
ture In atock. Poul Conkol.
Tupperoplolna. Oh. Rt. 7 .
North End .
'

Loll Chonce. Get 1100. off
Now binding ARISTOCRAT
World Book Encyclopedia.
Coli Margaret Pierce. local
ochool oervlce roprHentatlve. 304-876-3776.

largest Buck ttove made.
uood 3 monlha. 304-8751070.

11o Vegetebltl

FOR SALE: Soloflek Weight
llfll~g mochlne. 1360. Ph.
448-1241 .

888-7311.

()) Ent_.nment Tonight
(!) Chlrlle'o Angela
• ()) Tic: Toe Dough
()) (fi) Mt~c:Naii - Lihrar
RePort
()D Nowo
• at People'o Court
;7:30 • (I) ® ' You Aokad For
It .
'
()) Another uta
(J) ESPN 8por11 Center
Cll Amorlcon Profouionolo
.
()) • ()) Ft1mlly Foud
()) Buolneu Report
(fi) Advontu- lri Art
•
(jJ
Emertainment
T~ht
·
8 :00 . • (I) (!) Little Houaa: A
New lloglnnlng Season
Premiere. Charles lngaUs
bids farewell 10 his doughlor after oalling the farm to
John and Sarah Caner. 160·
min .)
ID MOVIE: 'N•ting•
ClJ MOVIE: 'Urban Cow-

BINGS CONCRETE CON·
SJRUCTION Speclollzlng In · •
concrete drlvewaya, 1 aide· ·T :
wo,ka. floors. potioa. otc. 11 • •
yr. exp. CIIii514·387·7B91. l

Fruit

soora 11blo aow. heavy duty
Clllirontoble. 10' blodo.18
molding hoeda. 1260. call
448-8884.

24x24 all lumber tumlohed.

W. T. Rowloigh &amp; Mr.
Groom Products. 304-8761090. 2213 Mt. Vernon
Ave. Point Pleasant.

68

JIMS Water ....,iool Cell
J m Lanier, ~4-8715- 7397.

BuainoOI for Nlo. D6 Night
Club licence. equlpmen1 &amp; l\lobilo Homo. 2 bedroom
Inventory. Proaontly In oper- · pertillly furnlahed. 11&amp;&amp;.
ation. Roaaonable ront on month pluo utilities &amp; dop.
building. Locoted In Molga No pots. 814-882-7478, .
co. Ohio. $26.000 or belt
offer. 814-992-8185 · ba- 2 bodroom mobllo -'homo.
tween 2pm 6 2:30am.
UtRillol pold. BooutHuiiOCI·
lion on tho rivot. 814-192·
11949.

r

Firewood . Slobs UO
pickup. cut up alobe· 116,
round wood 120. Rio
Orondo area. Call 114-248·
6804.

64 Mi1c. Merchandise •850. Call anytime. 1-814·

1ob1cco baling boxes, order
now for Oclober delivery
U6. eoch delivered. 304676-7241 .

&amp;I~L.

Cll Gomer Pyla

Build your own g1rage

Couch and dining room autt.
304-875-3346.

WHAi iHE e7UY

WHO MAC'!: A PA~6
Ai 'THe W~'N~

For LM

Early American conaole color tolevlalon. 2 oorly Ameri- 65 Building Supplla•
can wingback cholro and 1
living room couch. Allexcellen1 condition. lnqulro ot
Building materials block.
818 2nd. Avo .• Golllpolla.
brick, aewer pipea, win·
Furniture for ule. Selling dowo. llntela. otc. Claude
cheap. Couchea. end table. Winlere. Rio Grande. 0. Coli
814-246-8121 .
otc. Call 448-3937.

Firewood IZB .plckup iood.
Aak for Tim. 304 -8983989.

3-2·1. Comac:t

()) Bob Newlllort Show
())News
• ()) I» CBS Newt
(J) Dr. Who
(ft) Ullll. Yoga and You
•at ABC Nowa
7:00 • (I) P.M. Magazine
(I) Teddy Pendergroaa In
Concert Teddy performs
his biggest hits.
()) Bull' a Eyo
(J) ESPN' o lnolde Baaabllll

I

r

i'r

(I) (!) NBC Nowa
Cll MOVIE: . 'Pardon Me

_,_.."

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES .
CALL 446 -7672.

()

I KX

1 :30 •

~ MEI.T791,

1----------

. ·:.!::--

e()) ())
Eloctric Company

Sale or rent. 2 bedroom
home on the river; route 124
between Syracuse &amp; Ra -

I IJ IJ

EYENING

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
• Wllhera, dryera, refrlgera·
tore. rongeo. Skogga Appllon.... Upper Rlvor Rd .•
beolde Stone Cretl Molol.
,448-7398.

2nd. Middleport . $14,600.

TeleViSion
VieWing
9/27/82

PAINTING· Interior ond ox· 1•
t.eflor. plumblflg. · rooting, ~
tomo remodeling. 20 yra. •
exp. Coll814-388-98112. : ;

..

''

ID

:NBC ' N-

Overnight
I]) Mv ~· Mloglo
Cll MOVIE: 'Tho llrolller-

'-cl'
(!)~SiGn~ .

QC

ROO

OQKW,
-

FGNQYM

RYMWN,

MDRPQAQ

HRFFDQYF :

FENHNDFW ,

CWRN

OWQHRNJD

-..'
.

�'I

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

I Meigs County happenings... l
Emergency runs

..

car owned by Sherry Buskirk oil the
Elberfeld parking lot and on Saturday a car driven by Jewel Curtis
backed Into a parked car owned by
Carl W. Neutzling, Newark.

Local emergency units were kept
on the move answering calls over
the weekend, the Meigs County
Emergency Med ica l Service
reports.
Saturday calls Included: 11: 34
'a.m., Pomeroy Unit to Wright St ..
for Gladys Moore, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport, 2:00 p.m. to 125 Coal St. for
Paul Saunders, taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital; Rutland at 2:55
p.m. to New Lima Road for Robert
Snowden, taken to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 5: 22 p.m. for
238 Lincoln Hill for Mrs. Dorothy
Kimes, Injured In a fall; Pomeroy at
10:18 p.m., to the Pomeroy Health
Care Center for Blanche Gibbs.
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Sunday calls Included 9: 16 a.m ..
the Mlddlepo~42ParkSt. for
t.ucille Lewts taken'«!,. Veterans
Memorial; 2:02 p.m. the Racine
Unit to County Road 35, the scene of
an accident treating Charles Boso,
David Talbott and Tim Jenkins for
injuries and taking Cella Jenkins
and Rita Hill to Veterans MemorIal; 12:46 p.m., Pomeroy, to Rock
SprlngRoadforGraceGlaze, taken
to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
at 3: 50 p.m. to Second St. for Darra
Warth, takentoHolzerMedlcalCenter; Pomeroy at 5:51p.m. to Collins
Road for WUIIarn Morris, taken to
Veterans Memorial; 6:39p.m., Middleport to 'm Main St. for Edith
Spencer, taken to Veterans
Memorial.

A revival will be held at the Asbury United Methodist Church, Syracuse, from Oct. 3throughthe9, not
Oct. 3 and 4 as was reported.
On Sunday, Oct. 3, the Gospel
Crown Singers from the church of
the Rev. JolmSauvage, LeSage, W.
Va .. will be featured. Rev. Sauvage
will be the evangei!St.

Probe accidents

Board to meet

Pomeroy Pollee Investigated
three minor weekend accidents.
F1iday at car driven by Edward G,
Moore, Route 1, Middleport, backed
Into the left side door or a car owned
by Sandra Parsons, MasJn; Saturday a van driven by Ralph E. Ours,
Pennsylvania, backed Into a parked

The Eastern Board of Education
willmeetWednesdayat7:llp.m. to
discuss bus routes and personnel.
·On Thursday an open forum will
be held at Chester Elementary at 8
p.m. to discuss the five mill levy to
be voted on In the Nov. ek.&gt;cUon. The
!XIbtlc Is Invited.

,·

Special meeting

Church celebrates
Heri~·age Sunday.:

Page 3

Page 5

A special meeting of the Meigs
County Budget Commission has
been set for9 a.m. Wednesday atthe
office of Meigs County Audltor Howard Frank.

Veterans Memorial

Announce revival

State forecast
Qoudy tonight with a D ~rrent chance of rain early tonlgllt. Low
50-55. Winds variable less than 10 mph. Tuesday, cloudy ·In the
morning, becoming parity sunny In the after.100n. High 65-70.

COl"*'""'

GALLIPOLIS (AP) - Em·
travel expenses of about $11,000
ployees of the Gallla-Jackson· yearly.
Meigs Mental Health Board
Meigs County auditor's records
charged taxpayers more than sho!" that Ms. Plummer and her
$24,000 for travel expenses last year staff on several occasions visited
and on two occasions rented tuxe- the same city on the same day, yet
dos at taxpayer expense, records traveled In separate cars and
show.
turned In separate expense
The board's annual report shows vouchers.
'
that six employees of the board
For example, records show that
charged taxpayers $21,360 tn travel on Dec. 3, 1981, Ms. Plummer and
expenses In the 1981·82 fiscal year. three staff members went to CoAnother $ll, 745,was spent on meet· lumbus. All said they took their prl·
lngs, workshops and conferences.
vale cars and all turned In travel
On one trip to New York Qty for
vouchers for the trips. Each rethe World Psychiatric Conference,
two' board employees rented tuxedos for more than $50 each and
charged taxpayers for the rentals. . FORT WAYNE, Ind. (~) Maxine Plummer. director of the Mayor Winfield M~ Jr. said to648 board, told The Columbus Dis· day International Harvester has
patch that she thought the em- decided to close Its Fort Wayne
ployees had patd for the rentals truck plant and keep open the one In
themselves. But Ms. Plummer de- Sprlnfleld, Ohio.
fended the board's other travel
The announcement came at a
expenses.
news conference held by Moses and
Ms. Plummer's board serves Harvester officials.
'
Gallla, Jackson and Meigs counties
Indlana has been vying with Ohio
with their combined population of since August, When Haryester anabout 85,000, By compariSon, the riounced It would close either lhe
Scioto-Paint Valley Mental Health · Fort Wayne or Springfield truck
Board serving five counties with a
plant and consolldate operationS at
combined population or 190.000 has the surviving plant.

Area deaths
Joseph Satterfield
Funeral services for Josei&gt;h Lee
Satterfield, 19, Route 1, Minersville,
killed In an auto accident In Gallia
County Sunday evening, will be held
at 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Horne.
Born In Pomeroy, Joseph was the
!iOfl of James and YolanSattertleld,
Route 1, Minersville. He Is also survived by three brothers, Dennis,
Wayne and Greg, all at home, and
his grandmother, Marie Satterfield,
Oregon. He was afflllated with the

Mt. Moriah Church of God.
Officiating at services will be Mr.
Donald Sheets and burial will be In
the Letart Falls Cemtery. Friends
may call at the Ewing F)meral
Home after 1 p.m. on Tuesday.

'

.

DINNER .SERVED

6:00-S:30

Wayne and save some 4,!iXI au
working jobs.
:·
Under Indiana's pial), Harve$tel'
would !lave sold lhe plantto theft~~
· and then leaSed lhe plant back. . , •
Ohio's $lJ mtlllon package pro-:
vlded a sale-leasebaCk arrange- .
rnent similar to IJidlana's.
As tensions mounted last week, :
Moses announced an t~dditiollal Sfr
mUllen would be avallable to lfM: •
A suit for divorce, and a disSOlu- vester In clty money, Including $1'.
tion of marriage were filed In Meigs mUUon fulow Interest loans from the- '
;.~
County Common Pleas Court and a city lltlllty fund.
••
.,
a dlvorce was granted.
· Kathie Klrkeodall, Albany, filed
suit for divorce against John L. Klr·
kendall, Alhens: Dale Wilfong,
The Me~ Athletic Boosters will .
Reedsville, and Robin Wilfong,
Reedsville, filed for dissolution of meet Tueiday a\· 7: ll p.m. at tile:·
high school. 1be boosters encourmarriage.
Norma D. Cassady was granted a age all those who have school ~,..
·1
dlvorcefromRaymondC.Cassady. to ny them on Fridays.

Boosters .plan meel

By 'lbe .411001

__

~

THE LaSALLE

By CHARLENE HOEFIJCH
W. H. "An!)y" Anderson, an
artist of renown whose;;favorlte

bankment and overturned.
'lbecar sustained heavy damage.
Jenkins was cited for excessive
speed and for not having a driver's
llcense.
At 12: D a.m. Sunday, Gregory S.
Cole, 18, Tuppers Plains was northbound on Ohio 7 In Meigs County
when he struck a deer, the patrol
reports.
His car received moderate
damage.

From Wrangle... Juniors,
prep for fashion • .. in our
action sportswear of

poly/cotton and poly/acrylic
fleece. Drawstri11g waist '
sweat pant with hooded
sweat jacket sport seagull
logos and come in bright .
and basic color5. Eas'(. care.

,.I size&gt; s-M·L.

OelivetY) ·

·Mictde!Jort OH.

an('~ departed

the Beirut port area at ,
about 12:15 p.m. (6:15a.m. EM) .
bne laughing Israeli soldleJ! threw a
green smoke bomb at.tlie Lebanese
as be drove off, shouting, "We're
going back to Israel."
Lebanese army units and
members of lhe Itallan peacekeepIng force iookchargeoftheport. The
Itallans also were deployed In the
Clui~ refugee camp and at lhe
neilf!JY Kuwaiti Em_bassy and airport•tra1flc cltcle. French peackeepets were deployed at lhe Sabra
camp and the municipal stadium.
The 1,:ax:IU.S. Marines In the multinational-peacekeeping force are
refusing to land until all Israell units
evacuate west Beirut.
The Israeli cabinet's decision to

open an inquiry intothernassacreat
the Sabra and ChatWa camps was
repol'ted by Deputy Prllne Minister
David Levy, who told reporters In
Jerusalem: '"'be government set
no '!Imitations. In any area. Every·
thlng Is 'open to examination - the
pollti: al level and also the other
level," meaning the army.
,Under Israell law, a Judicia\ In·
quiry commission Is empowered to
subpoena any wllness, take testlm·
ony under oath and penalize perjurors. 1be declslon to open a probe
followed unprecedented publlc outrage In Israel over Prllne Minister
Menachem Begin's earller refusal
to set up a full-scale Inquiry Into the
killing of hundreds of Palestinians
at the camps last week.

pastime Is golfing andwhose fa·
vorite professional actlvtty ts
painting portraits of golfers,

spent several days doing just
that at the Jaymar Golf Course
near Pomeroy last week.
The 74-year-old graduate of
the Institute of Fine Arts of
Brooklyn, N.Y., and his wife re~lde at Pinehurst. N.C., home of
the World Golf HaU of Fame
where several of his portraits
hang.
Anderson Is a free-lance artist
whose works Include portraits of
nearly all the famous golfers Gary Player, Jack Nicklaus,
Sam Snead, etc.
He spent 15 years at the
Greenbrier In Whllf: Sulphur
Springs where at 59, he captured
the title of West VIrginia State
Senior Champion. His work has
taken him back and forth across
the country capturing on canvas
Important people, even pres!·
dents. To his credit
portraits
of three presidents, Richard
Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, and
Jimmy Carter, the latter which
noW hangs In the library at
Plains, Gii.
.
'llme changes things, An«!erson commentE1d. and no longer
wll! many "sit" for a portrait.
He now dOes most of his work
from photographs.
'
. ' Ills procedure Is to do a series
· , c1 pictures and then let the person commlsslonllig him to do the .
Jl!1111'81t' make the selection· of
eqaEiilon.
' ~f:lll an earller visit to lhe

are

~

HEAVY DUTY

.,

·.

.

#26£61801 .

· s~·
·nnn=~
~:"' : tteny Duty . •
'

''24C)DO '

.

.

ISe&amp;rs-l .~,:,:!~ti
101 W. MAIN ST.,' POMEROY, OH, • '

··

.

Relea51! of the area from Meigs Local can only be
acrompUShed through a special election, and accord·
lngtothelaw,ltcanonlybedohelnaneven-nunnbered
year -leaving July 1984 as the earllest date.
'"'be laws are not In our favor,'' Aspin said.

Golf artist. visits. JayMar Course

the left side of the road, hit an en-

5 Water temperature
I
. . '

PHONE:
(01110) "2-2178
(VI(. va.) 773-9577

!PresS

of QeJI"Ut tddlly, and the cabinet 1n
Jerusafem approved.a full-scale judicial Inquiry Into the conduct of the
Jsraell ~nt aild army durIng the massacre at two Palestinian
refugee ·camps In lhe Lebanese
capital. · ·
·
.
lit another development, the Pa·
lestlne Uberatlon Organization's
top mWtary ~r. Brig.
Saad Sayel, was reported killed by
up to ll men flrlilg automatic rtfies
and rocket-propelled grenades In an
ambuSh In eastern Lebahon's Bekaa Yaney, the Clu:lstilii) V.olce of
Lebanon Radlo said.
AboutlOOisraelltroopsandseven
armored vehicles fanned a column

6 Cycle .·
5·Water LeVels .

.

t

tol'QI!I evacilated the port

KENMORE .
.WASHER

MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY-Charlie Ully
WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY-Roeer Elliott
FRIDAY - Billy Lee &amp;So~u~s of Counby
.SATURDAY - Ropr Elliott

ter bulldlng.

Israeli forces· leave Beirut

ON KENMORE LARGE CAPACITY LAUNDRY PAIR

UVE ENTERTAINMENT
IN THE LOUNGE NIGHTLY

ApermanentstructureatSalemCenter,lnsurlnglts
future In Its pre;ent location, Is preferred by the committee and by parents.
"We ai-e firmly coounltted lo .the stabillty of our
school, and not having our klds bused alluver the
county," Aspin said.
·
. Should the Northwestern section -Including Salem
' Center, the Danville area and pari c1 Rutland Twp. lea:o-e Meigs Local and Join another school distriCt, It
offers a tax base of $551,000, from Meigs Mlnesland2
and lndlvidual taxpayers, an('l a positive response to
passing levies.
The canrnlttee has also met with the Alexander
School District In Athens County to detennlne row It
feels 41bout absorbing the area. No declslon bas been
made.
Gallla board member Daryl Sallsbury said he was
unsure North Gallla High School, the nearest secondary facUlty, would he abletoaccommodate55addl·
tlonal students from the Northwestern area.
He asked Ailpln If Rutland Elemenary could handle
thelncreasedstudentloadtromSalemCeriter,bulwas
Informed the section of Rutlaild designated for the
Salem Center students was older than the Salem Cen-

do, " Aspln said.

Court news .

SAVE $20000

NEW MENU ITEMS

Ph. 992-9917

A third truck plant In Chatham,
Ontario. Is expected to stay open
because of the threat of Increased
tariffs If the canadian plant closes.
Mll6e5 worked with Lt. Gov. Jolm
M. Mutz on a $31 mtlllon package of
low-cost loans and olher concessions to keep Harvester at Fort

LeroY Donohew, formerly of
Meigs County, died , Monday at
Circleville.
1\JTangements are being made by
the Ewing Funeral Home,

·(In Stock and

LUNCH SERVED
11:30-2:00
DAILY SPECIALS

~

leroy Donohew

TwopersonsweretreatedatVeterans Memorial Hospital for Injuries
they received In a single-car accident on Meigs County Road 35 s,unday afternoon.
Injured were Rita J. Hill, 38, and
Cela Jenkins, 21, Racine.
:•
ThecarwasdrlvenbyTimotl!YA.
Jenkins, 24, Pomeroy. •
According 10 the Gallla-Me!gs
IXlSI of lhe State Highway Patrol,
Jenkins was eastbound on CR35 at2
p.m. when he lost control, went off

THE LaSALLE

vesttgatlon and audlt of the IW&amp;"
Board's books. He bas askl!d I .
Ohio Department of Mental Hel!ll
and the prosecutors of all thi-cli':'
counties Involved to Investigate ui£·
activities of the 648 Board.
'"'
Ms. Plummer has also been crl
cal of Nlehm.
·:
She said $750,853 of the center'!:
more than $3 mtlUon budget and 5(:
of Its 131 employees are Involved till
administration and support serviO
·ces rather than direct lnvolvemen'
with patlents.
:Z

Harvester will keep Ohio plant ope~

Extended Ohio Forecast- Wednesday through Friday: Fair Wed·
nesday and a chance of rain Thursday and Friday. Warmer with
highs In the mid to upper 70s and lows mostly In the 50s.

Rain luis fallen somewhere In Ohio for the last elglltdays,lncludlng
today, as the result of low pressure moving north along the eastern .
states combined with a weak low over Ohio.
The low will move northeast by tonight and drier air will begin
spreading Into Ohio. Rain will continue over the state today but by
tonight It should be confined to the eastern third.
Tuesday should be dry with some sunshlnebrealdngthrough. highs
will be mostly In the 60s today an('l tomorrow, but there Is some
warming coming our way aftertllat.
Southerly winds will help raise temperatures back Into the 70s for
Wednesday through Friday although scatteredsh&lt;:M'ers are foreseen
for Thursday and Friday.

celved about $50 in reimbursement.
Ms. Plummer said SEparate trips
are sometimes necessary because
staff members often leave at differ·
ent times and make addltlonal
stops that require travel in separate cars.
Her explanations, however, have
not 'satisfied the dlrector and board
members of the Gallla-JacksonMeigs Community Mental Health
Center,whichrecelvesltsmoneyto
operate from the 6oJ8 Board.
Dr. Bernard F. Nlehm·, the center's director, has called for an In·

ByiUMNKELLY
·'
·,
' OVPDeMI&amp;isfl .
A illtlzen's conunlttee,IEI!klng lhe reorganization of
lhll. Old Northwesteni ·lAJcal School District In Metis
County told the Gallla County Local Board of E;ducatton lhe cOmmittee Is dedicated to keepiJ!g Salem
Center Elementary School open.
•
Gary A!ipln, lhe committee president, met with the
boarddurlngltsMondaynJehtmeetlngtoseei!Gallia
County Is J'EC!!Ptlve to Northwestern becoming a part
of the coonty school system - when - and It -It Is
able to leave lhe Mellis Local SchOQI District.
,
Northwelitem, wide!! Originally consisted ofSalem
Center, Harri9onvllle and Rutland schools, joined
Meigs t.ocaJin the 1966-67 COIIAoudation. .
•
·
"My oWilfeelb!g Is, we don't want to close any doors
to you," board president Fred Dee! said.
•
' 1be committee's main concern centers Oil Salem
Center, whose bu1ldllig popUlation bas undergone a
hllge Increase In lhe pasttew)'ears. matnlyduetolhe
developmentoflhepowerplantsandlheMe!gsloflnes.
To relleve' an o,yerctolvdlilg problem )here, the
Meigs board has recommended busing students to
Rutland Elementary. This Is believed )ly COOlrnlttee
members to be amove toward closing Salem Center.
· In August, the Meigsboardaifeed tosollcltbldlion
portable classrooms to be placed at Salem Center.
Thale bids are to be reviewed by the boa,rd at a
meeting later this week.
"We want to sit tlgllt and see what Meigs Locill will

~....

Question mental health expenses .

Two injured in Meigs auto accident

By Tbe Assoclaled Press

Page 2

Page 8

•

enttne

ideas .to Gallia board

lltudy, recreation, ooadnulng educatloll, the office ·ol !ilidenl hedh,
s&amp;udeal adlvllle8 oftlcel, &amp;be
Cl!lder and a lllllCk blr. ~ ;;'
facllltyhaneolel&amp;fltbulldlnpthathavebeea~oatbecampus
smce 1M. Six CJtbel'll have llilderpne ~ dunlg that !!me· 'C

DEDICATION - Tbe S2 million Student-Comrnlllllty Center, named
after Oblo Govemor James A. Rllode8, at JUo Grailde CGIJe&amp;e 8lld
Commun~Q'Collegewasdedlcatedlncerernonle8111f&amp;be~Sa&amp;llrday. 'lbe 30,000 8qllllre-foot lltnlcture wOI provide 1111 area for diDiog,

Extended forecast

Rain continues around Ohio

Property transfers

S~em committee gives

,.

WEATHER FORECAST - Rain and llbowen are forecaat for
mosl of the Rockies, extending acroM the Dakotas to the Great Lakee
and ln&amp;o the Great l'1aln8 lor Tueadlly, accordblg to the Nailonal
Weather Service. Showen are aiiJo due for part ol Texas and Louhlula
and lor mosl of the NortheBIII. Snow 18 expected lor Montana and
Wyoming. (AP Laserpho&amp;o).

a1 y

Letters to editor

2 Section•. 14 Pages
15 Cents
A M"ltlmedla Inc. N•w•pap:

. .

••

•

e

Veteraos MemorlalllollpUal

Saturday Admissions-- Paul
King, Ractne; Te~ Day U, Pomeroy; Bonnie Dally, Pomeroy; Wll·
lard Lucas, Pomeroy; Dorothy
Kimes, Pomeroy; Evelyn Watson,
Pomeroy; Blanche Glbb~.
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges--A nn
McFarland, Donald Smith, Mariba
Searles, Geneva Young.
Sunday Admissions--Lucille Lewis, Pomeroy; Wllllam Morris,
Langsville.
· Sunday Discharges--None.

For 8 a.m. EDT
28

13'7 N. Second Ave.

Cardinals clinch .
NL -Easi pennant

•

HOURS: '
MOll.•Tu...·Wtds.·Frl. 9 to~

Thura.9tol2 '
Sat. 9.to2

I

J.

f. .
.
. ' .
i ."
10.011- ' .
'
.
. '
"
I
- • • .:.............._..:.............................................
$7.W
I lDO 1IJP ......,.................................................... ,......,.... ~
... PAll' .................................,.................................. *I
$17.811 !'.!!.;;-·····:....................:...................................

1

wu
~to dO a pastel ot
.Jeile aild RtlSII Brown. He dell'

• ~ Courle, Anderosn

W!l'ed It CJ1 hla visit last week,
here did a French ·
~ drlwine ol Bill Childs,

$li.OD 1111111&amp;11 PULLOVER ......;.....................:.......,..........

aDt While

.... Zl~ JACIET ··············~·········.:···· .. ·•••.. ····:··~~

ELBERFELD$ .IN

·-····-.

"· .

...,_, ~ COurle Jllllla&amp;el'.
~

.

CitiZENS' COMMI'l'TEE Pa!D'ION -Gary Allpin, Mandlnl at rf&amp;ht, ml011118 membei'S of the GaiDa
County lAK:al Boaa-d ol Education Monday ollht the
Salem Center cltbens wnunlttee 18 dedlca 1ed to pres-

ervatlon of the bulldlng. Llslenbig at left are Superintendent Gary Toothaker, Assl&lt;ltant Superintendent
David CampbeO and Judy Saunders, the board's
clerk-treeasurer.

Athens firm prepares
for .Middleport project
By BOB HOEFUCH

Reiser Architectural Company of
Alhenswill begin workthlsweekon
a renovation study of the Middleport
business section. This was one of
several Items announced at Monday's bi-monthly meetlngofMiddleport Council.
Council gave final approval to two
ordinances which will Increase water and sewage rates, effective Nov.
1.

Mayor Fred Hoffman said theordlnances provide for a three percent
Increase In water rates and a 12
percent Increase In sewage rates .
Elmer Woodside of F1oyd G.
Brown Associates, engineering
firm for the village, gave a progress
report on the new HUD water tank
project and the accompanying wa·
ter lines. He said water lines are
about lf7 percent complete and the
tank projectlsabout 95percent complete with an Oct. 7 deadline. However, Woodside noted equipment
needed so that water highs and lows
at lhe tank can be monitored at the
police station will not be arriving for
some time. It might be December
before that monitoring process can
be !XII Into working order. Woodside

said that overall both contractors,
Natgun and the Holly Brothers, bad
done a good job on the project.
Col!ncll approved the !'EPQrtofthe
county budget commission on the
new budget and the tax rate, hath
the same as submitted with an In·
crease of two mlUs In the tax rate
due to the fire station addition tax
measure approve&lt;1 by voters this
year.
Mayor Hoffman reported that he
bas received word that resurfacing
of some of lhe village streets and
alleys as planned by councU may
begin the latter .pari of this week. A
letter was read from Congressman
Clarence Miller stating he has Introduced legislation which would provide U. S. Corps of Engineers
technical aid for pr!va te property
owners when damage to their properties Is caused by river and stream
erosion.
Councilman Robert Gilmore reported that he had been In touch with
Imperial ElectriC Co. officials about
the posslbllltles of using the edge of
the company's property for parking
along Ash St. and that officials said
they would need a letter of request
and possibly a drawing showing
what property would be used.

MayorHoffmansaldthematterbad ·
been referred totherecreatloncommlsslon which should come up with
the neeiled lnfonnatlon.
Razing of the Ohio Hotel was
dlscussed.

Mayor Hoffman satd his letter to
the owner of the property has been
returned and It will require a time
passageof60daysbeforethevlllage
could proceed and the owner probably has D more days to file an appeal in the matter. Mayor Hoffman
said that he bad talked to the owner
sometime ago, however, and that
the owner of the structure dtd lndl·
cate at that time, he was trying to
find someone to tear It down.
Progress on the cutting of weeds
on lots In the community was discussed along with a couple of
locations--Ash and Second Sts.-whlch need patching due to bad
spots In the roads. Plans were made
for the utilltles committee to meet
before the next regular meeting and
discuss a new rate contract wtth
Columbia Gas of Ohio.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman and council
members, Gllroore, Dewey Horton,
WOllam Walters, Jack Satterfield
and carl Horky.

Does deficit .----Weather--signal possible
buying spree?
· By'lbe Asooclated Prei8
Some economists say the government's repOrt of a big surge In the
U.S. trade deficit last month might
be a sign that businesses are expect·
lng a COiljlunner buying spree to lead
the natlm\ out of recession.
1be Commerce Department reported Monday the trade deficit, not

counting financial transactions, hit
a one-mOIIth record of $7.1 bWlon In
August. Exports fell sUghtiy.
The biggest reason Cor the deficit
growth- from $2.4 bllllon In Julywas a aJ.2 percent August Increase
In Imports, the biggest jump Commerce Department analysts could
remember ill recent years. Exports
declined sllghtJY In lhe month.
David Lund, a Commerce Department economist, saki ~ figures were a signal that C(JI!lp811ies
,my be llteWIJig up their pureha!es.
~foreign aoods lil anticipation of a
.Jump In U.S. COIISUl1'H spending.
·~ · niere -li!ss!lltlmlsticsigna)s
lit lhe bustneas Wllllld, llowiM!f.
. Tel(as (¥trUments ~•• a lar~
electrCillleS company baled In 00'
JM.,IIId It w~ ~ olf2,axlolltl
tlWioxllillte!Y lll,ID) wwllen ~
tween now !:"1d the end at the year.

. WEATHER .FORECAST- 'Die National Weather Service predlded .OOWers WMJ!elday over the Great Lakes region reaching
IIOUtll In a band Into eutem Oldabotna, Showen also are ex~
over mucll of the Northweat dlpplns down Into Colorado and Utah.
More IOOwen were predlded In IIOUIIIen! Florida. Flumes were
expeded In pari&amp; .t weMenl Montana 1111d Idaho. (AP Laserphoto) .

Weather forecast
Clear tonight with (.'(JIISlderable early morning fog. Low around 50.
Winds Ughtandvlu1able. Wednesday, mostly sunny. High 74-79.
Extei.Jed-OIIIo Forecast
~ &amp;IJrGu&amp;tJ Slfurda.y:

Fair '111unda.J, ~of "-en or tlaandenJtonns Friday and
IWurllaJ, ,WiftllllrouP u.e period. llfPi mmid-1GB to ~
._. .. Jnld . . . mJd.40L
. '

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="186">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2776">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <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>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44868">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44867">
              <text>September 27, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1087">
      <name>donohew</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3168">
      <name>satterfield</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
