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.

,B rowns top Saints,
Bengals lose again

b

• WINTHROP
AME:'RICANS .ARE KNCMN FOR
11-H:tR SPIRIT OF CHARITY
AND qe?'N ER051l'Y, ..

MIND IF I A5K

'PU A QUESTICN 1
WIN"THROP~

Pa,ge4

e
AND 'r'CX..l'RE PI&lt;OUD

TO I3C AN

·:

5Pe;AKIN&lt;:f, \f\.t?WLD 'YOLl .
LEND ME A GIJAR: iER.~ .

. );.MEf&lt;IOIN 1 RiqHT'?

;••• IN THEW

' .

Second body found near campus

I .

CLEVELAND - The body of a black male was found 1rt a pool of
blood at a bus stop near Cleveland State University today, the second
slaying victim found near the urban campus In three days and the
third this year.
Officers riding in a Cleveland police zone car were alerted to the
body by a Regional Transit Authority bus driver. Cleveland State
University spokesman Tom Hallet said today.
•
Pollee found the body of a man, estlma ted to be between 30 and 40,
about 5 a. m. today. The body has been identlfied, but police have not
released the man's name. Five shell casings from a .22·caiiber
weapon were found near the body, Hallet said.

'

Willing to negotiate withdrawal

Priscilla's Po
HAZEL, "rrU
~EEN
T0551NG AND TURNING
FOR t&gt;.N HOUR"'

WHAT'S WRONG~

E·d Sullivan
l"· I CAN'T
TELL YOU .'
'TOU'LL BE

FURIOUS"·
~h'QJ ...

HP\"-I:L,

WELL,

17WEETHE.A:RT.

PLEASE TELL ME.' I
WON'T BE ANGRY :"
HONE$T.' NOTHING
I? THAT SERIOLI$ .'

IF'i=

I CHARGED A
·WHOLE NEW
FALL OUTFIT

TODAY/

•

PROMISE lrQU'LL ·
NEVER KEEP

G:XJDNESS ME,
IS THAT ALL?
WHAT A SILLY
THINGTO BE
UPSET ABOUT.1

ANYTHING F'ROM
. ME AGAIN.'

.r ·· r

WASIDNGTON - Israeli Defense Minister Ariel Sharon says he
is willing to negotiate with the United States on the withdrawal of
Israeli and Syrian troops from Lebanon, but warned his troops will
stay as long as the Syrians do.
Sharon. Interviewed on CBS' "Face The Nation," said Sunday It
would be "very Importa nt that our allies contribute to these negotla·
tions .. .It would be a very good solution."

PROMit;E. I
lio

\

f I

I

Tired American sets world record
FALMOUTH, England - American Bill Dunlop, already nick·
named Small-Boat Bill for his record Atlantic crossing In a 9-foot
sailboat, ate chef-cooked meals, bathed in hot water and slept In a
real bed for the first time In 78 days.
Dunlop, 41, bulky and bearded, staggered when he stepped ashore
on wobbly legs at Custom House Quay at Falmouth Harbor In Com·
wall Sunday, and his wife, Pamela, said after helping him up the
steps, "He is all in."
The former truck driver from Mechanic Falls, Maine, set the
world's record for making the eastward Atlantic Ocean crossing
singlehanded in the smallest boat. He left Portland, Maine June Ll

I'M 'SORRY
AI:30UT THE

Prepares for demonstrations

CAR,TOO .

WARSAW, Poland- The government , preparing for protest dem·
onstratlons on Solidarity's anniversary, today ordered vodka rationIng and newspapers followed up on Premier Gen. Wojciech
Jaruzelskl's plea for Poles not to demonstrate Tuesday.
Newspapers said the Trade Ministry was limiting vodka. Poland's
favorite drink, to a half quart per Pole per month. There was no
Indication of how long the order will be in effect. Liquor rationing had
recently been lifted and Poles who could afford it could buy a ny
amount.

Cop killer remains at large

by Art &amp;. Chi

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

I 6U!;SS '{OU·: ·

MUST KNOW
W~OlNA.

...-...,..-

JM,AHEM,JJ

Sansom

-------.

•

at y

enttne

11\AT'SJJ

I S-ed ion , 10 PagM
1S Cent•
A Mult imedia In c. Newlpaper

CAMP VERDE, Ariz. - A police officer killed a fellow officer.
held up a store, stole a sports car and remained In a rugged camp·
ground where he was qoldlng out today surrounded by dozens of
deputies, a uthorities said.
Phoenix Police Officer Thomas Hernandez, Jr .. 31. calmly con· ·
tinued to hold police and sheriff's deputies at bay under a full moon
85 miles north of Phoenix .
He smoked cigarettes and polished the stolen car with his T-shlrt
before starting negotiations to surrender himself, his semiautomatic weapons and possibly 3,!XXJ rounds of ammunition, pollee
said.
At one point, Hernandez traded 100 rounds of ammunition for a
Coke, then refused to drink the soft drink, pollee said.

capital a long wtth th~ PLO, left
came after a Syrian army garrison.
BEIRUT, Lebanon (API - Pa·
minutes later. The ship, which apwest Beirut by road today .
trapped by Israel In the Lebanese
lestine Liberation Organizallon
peared to be a well-appointed pas·
chairman Yasser Arafat, bound for
senger craft, then set saiL
an undisclosed home In exile,
steamed out of Beirut harbor today
As the ship put to sea, 11 canon
aboard a converted Greek car
salvos boomed In the background
ferry, witnesses said.
and were foUowed by four other
Arafat was seen standing on deck
rounds to salute the departing guerweartng a black-and-white check·
rllla chieftain as he left his Israeli·
ered kufflyeh on his head, smUing
surrounded west Beirut stronghold .
and making a "V" for victory sign
Earlier, Arafat said, "I am leav·
as the Greek ship Atlantis cruised
lng the city, but my heart Is here."
Into the Mediterranean Sea.
Aralat arrived to a scene of chaos
A delegation of Lebanese lefllst
In a black Mercedes at the U.S.
leaders and former Moslem prime
Marlne-controiied port of Beirut ,
ministers boarded the ship with
which Is the disembarking point for
him to say farewell but climbed
thousands of PLO fighters fertied
back down the ramp 15 mlnu tes
to other parts of the Arab world.
later. The ship, which appeared to
As he stepped from the car, he
be a well-appointed passenger
saluted the Palestinian and Lecraft, then set saiL
banses flags held by honor guards,
PLO spokesmen and Lebanon's
but the surging throng of weii·
state radio said Arafat was heading
wishers cut short a planned milfor an official ylslt to Greece at the
Itary ceremony.
Invitation of Socialist Prime Minis·
His limousine was escorted to the
ter Andreas PapandreQu before goport
by French Foreign Legion·
Ing to permanent exile In the
nalres
and stringent secutity preTunisian capital of Tunis.
cautions
were taken at the port,
Arafat's chief spokesman, Mah·
especially
around the boarding
moud Labadi, who left with the
area.
PLO chairman, said earlier the
" I am leaving to conllnue the
ship might stop at Larnaca. Cy·
struggle
so that we can win," he
prus. on its way to Greece.
told
reporters
earlier In a farewell
As the ship put to sea , 11 canon
visit
to
•
leftist
Lebanese leader
salvos boomed in the background
Walid
Jumblatt.
and were followed by four other
Leaving Jumblatt 's house, he
rounds to salute the departing guerwaved
a nd smiled to the crowd and
LAST DAY IN BEIRUT - Chairman of the Palestine Uberation
rilla chieftain as he left his Israeli·
thrust
his
ha
nd
aloft
In
a
victory
Organization
Vasser Arafat salutes as one of his listeners glvea the V-alp
surrounded west Beirut stronghold.
sign
before
being
dri
ven
away
at
Monday
morning
in the bouse of leftist Lebanese leader Walld JllDlblaU,
A delegallon of Lebanese leftist
breakneck
speed
through
the
twist·
where
the
PLO
chief
received reporters just before be beads to the Beirut
leaders and former Moslem prime
port
leaving
lng
streets.
the
country
lor a so far unknown destination. I AP- Laserministers boartl~ the ship with
to
leave
Arafat's
annoucement
Ararat to say farewell and left 15
photo)

Sen. Dole pushes special Social Security session
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Senate
Finance Committe Cha irman Robert Dole wants a special post·
e lection session of Congress to solve
Social Security's fina ncial problems, possibly with a combination
of payroll .t ax Increases and benefit
reductions for future retirees.
Dole, R-Kan .. said his Democratic counterpart in the House,
Ways and Means Committee
Chairman Dan Rostenkowski of Illinois, also likes the Idea of a lame- ·
duck session to deal solely with
Social Security.
The senator. speaking on Cable
News Network's program
"Newsmaker·Sunday," said Pres!·
dent Reagan probably "would look
with favor on getting It (Social Security) out of the political climate."
"I don't know of any time that's
less political than right after a n
election," Dole said . "We could do It

... between the Thanksgiving and
Christmas so-called holidays."
Later. White House deputy press
secretary Larry Speakes said there
are no firm plans for Reagan to con·
vene a special session of Congress.
He said the president will follow ad·
vice from Senate Majority Leader
Howard Baker, Speaker Thomas
P . O'Neill, and House Republican
Leader Robert Bob Michel on the
matter.
Twice within the past two years.
Congress has refused to consider
proposals by Reagan to make the
troubled pension system !!nan·
clally sound by slowing the growth
of benefits In future years. Reagan
Is awaiting the findings this fall of a
Social Security advisory commission before he puts forth any new
proposals.
A post-election session would be

cmCAGO -Overcast skies gave way to a bit of sunshine Sunday
as Archbishop Joseph L. Bernardin delivered a message of unity
and love to a crowd estimated at lOO.!XXJ people who gathered at a
lakefront park to conclude his week-long installation rites.
Clowns, mimes, musicians and people dressed in the native cos·
tume of Vietnam, Lithuania, Poland and other countrtes streamed
into downtown Grant Park for Mass and a picnic with the
archbishop.
'
· Bernardin, In a sermon prepared for the celebration, talked of
bringing lay people Into the 111e of the church and of bringing Christ
· into the lives of everyone.
He called on believers to bring Christ Into their homes and work·
place and to pray for nonbelievers.

Mason chief dies in crash

By The Associated Press
Thunderstorms hovered over southern Kansas and the mid·
Mississippi Valley early today, pelting wide sections with hail a nd
heavy rain.
A violent thunderstorm with high winds pounded the Wichita area
for about I 'h hours Sunday night. Lightning from the storm was
blamed for more than 40 fires, authorities said.
Low-lying areas were flooded, scattered power outages were re· '
ported and some roads were blocked when trees were toppled by
winds gusting to ro mph, officials said.
The storm also knocked out radar at the Wichita National Weather
Service station, and two television Stations were jolted off the air
during the storm, officials said.
Rain also fell heavily In extreme southeastern Arizona and the
southwestern comer of New Mexico, with some widely scatterl'd
showers and thunderstorms over the northern Rockies .

WEATIIER FORECAST- The National Weather Service forecasts
cool weather for Tuesday across lbe oorlbern states. Warm weather is
forecast for the southern baU. Sbowen are expected In lbe western
Plains, western GuU IIJid upper Mississippi VaHey to the mld-Ailantlc
region. ( AP Laserphoto Map)

Weather forecast

mklnight.

Sixty percent chance of showers and thunderstorms tonight and
Tuesday, with some heavy rain. Low'ln the mid.OOS. High In the
mld·70s.
'
I
Exlended Ohio Forecast
WeciDesd~ lbrough Frtday:
Chalice of showers aud llluDdel!l&amp;ornl Wednesday aud Friday,
but fall' weather 011 'lblll'!lday. Laws in lbe mld-liOs to mld-OOs. Hlgbs
In lbe mid-'lllll to mJd.80I.

•

He said the fo rmula by which retirees receive cost-of-living raises
each year might be changed , the
currenct retirement ageof65 might
be raised gradually to 66~ and "If
you're going to retire a t age 62,
maybe your benefits are reduced a
little."
Dole, who authored the newly
enacted $98.3 billion tax increase
bill endorsed by Reagan, said
further "tax reform" may be requi red next year as Congress attempts to na rrow the budget
deficit. " We may be asked by the
administration to close more loopholes," he said.
Dole said next year's scheduled
10 percent cut In personal tax rates
is secure but no program Is Immune to spending reductions, Including the president' s defense
budget.

Violent storm pounds Wichita

MASON , Ohio- Pollee Chief James K. ~der died early Sunday
from injw1es suffered when his car went off the road shortly Iiller
Sgt. W.T. Ar1ss of tbe Ohio State Highway Patrol said it has not
been determined why Arlss's'crulser wentotfthe right side of Mason
Montgomery Road, striking a !fire hydrant and a utility pole near
Wllllain Mason High School.
· ·
Ar1ss said the ~year-old chief was not chasing anyone and no
otbfr veblc~ were tnvolved. A driver who witnessed the accident
said Ar1ss just went otf the road;

unu sual in tha t It would include re·
tiring and defeated lawmakers
whose terms end in January.
Dole. who Is a member of the bi ·
partisan advisory panel, said Con ·
gress should be able to produce a
compromise plan "in two or three
weeks if we put our minds to it."
"We know the system's in great
difficulty In the short run, and if we
don't address It by next July, we' re
going to be in real trouble, " he said,
referring to current estima tes
showing that the system will no
longer be self-support ing by next
summer.
Dole s~ed that one com ·
promise nYghltlnclude moving up
the date of payroll tax increases
that are now set to take effect in
later years, and reducing the
growth of benefits, "not culling
present benefil s."

-------------~eather:-------------

Bernardin appeals for unity

.f&lt;ef\LL'I ~ ~I Pp;j.A,

•

Arafat ~aves Beirut

ToDAY

NOBODY."THROWS A
SLOWCtJRVE:THE
WA'I.TfMMlt: DOE:6 .

WELL, P'ATRIOTIGA LLY

Page 3

Page lO

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 30, 1982

Voi.31 ,No. 82
Copyrighted t982

'

Shoe controversy

Ingrid Bergman
dies from cancer

'

Ohio should get rain tonight
By Associated Pl'ess
A flow of mild, moist air will continue for the next day or so until a
series of fronts moves out of the picture.
A slow moving warm front should be in northern Ohio by late
tonight. As the front moves north, moisture from the Gulf states will
Invade most of Ohio. After the front passes, warmer and more
humid weather Is expected. This should hold sway Into midweek
when a cold front- now only in the Rocky Mountain states- moves
into the Midwest.
·
Temperatures should be a little warmer this afternoon than yesterday with readings around 8:1 degrees or so. It will be a Utile cooler
because of the rain and clouds tomorrow, with readings In the 70s.
However, Wednesday Is shapiJig up as a quite warm day wtth
readings In the 8ls.

�\

Commentary
Ill C'uurl Stn·O'I
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Ut-992-Zl!ii

on:u 'I'll Tilt·: I 'Hf.:Rt~"'Tt WTif,. Mt:u;. . . MMifl'

\Ill·,,\

ROilEHT 1.. WING En
PAT

IIOR HOEFI.I('If

WHITEHEAH

,\ ,:&gt; 1 ~ \&lt; tll l l ' tihlt ~ lw r /f ••ul r ullo ·r

[)Af.F. ROTH[;Eil, JR.

,\ 1\t~ : I\IIIEJ( .,f Tlw th ~ w wh•d l'ro'"'· lulwul ll:tlh l'ro''' '"""" 'ailolll 111111 1h1·
,\rut•rit ·au ~ ' ' "" ·' IJ&lt;tf)o'r l ' uh lbh,·t~ 1\~ _,,wllll'''' ' ·

I .Frli· H."' 1,,. Hl'l~l&lt;l\ :tn· ~d t ' "IIH 'tl . Tin·.' , /iuuhllw 1, -~ , thiltl JOO 11 unh l•m J.: . All
ld!t' r ' an• , uhJ t'' 1 1" t·tti l llll! :wd musl lw ,. ~ ru-tl 1o111h uantt· . ;uhln·s.. urul ll'lt•phuu ..
numiH ·r . -~" unslgnt•tl ktll'r.., "iiiiH· puhltslwtl . Ldh'r~ ~h .. uhl ht· 111 /! ""d lusl.t'. atld rn..,i n~
I ~S IIt'S, II"IJH'P.o&gt;IWiiltt·~ .

Why business
won't spend
While the business sector seems to share President Reagan'sapproach
to economics, It hasn't been doing It with Investment dollars.
For most of 1982, which the administration once had hoped would be a
recovery year, businesses have cut both expenditures and appropriatiOns
for future capital projects, such as new plant and equipment.
The latest evidence or timid behavior comes In the form of a Conference
Board SUIVey that found the natton' S l,(X)) largest manufacturers redUced
appropriations for plant and equipment by 22 percent In the second
quarter.
such behavior Is causing a lot of head scratching, and It has glvenriseto
the crlttclsm that business talks a better game than It play~ . If business
doesn't get on with Its spending, It Is said, things will be In a 'sorry mess.
But It doesn't quite work that way.
Business today doesn't spend until it is certain the market is there. Calli!
timidity. Accuse It of lacking entrepreneurial zeal. The fact is, business
today doesn't spend until It must. And then, sometimes, It can't afford to.
The reasons why are scattered all over the economic landscape.
To begin. less than 70 percent of manufacturing capacity is currently
being utilized. In many areas, factories stand empty, In others, shifts have
been discontinued. Meanwhile, the Idle plant and equipment must be
maintained.
Industrial productton has declined in 10 of the past 11 months, reflecting
a persistent and peiVaslve weakness In retailing. Orders are off. Profits,
too. Between the first quarters of 1981 and 1982 corporate profits fell 33
percent.
Perhaps worst of all, capital has been almost prohlblttvely expensive.
Companies that ordinarily might have offered stock to the public have
had to postpone such plans because of disinterest on the part of the Invest·
tng publlc. And some of the '-'me companies have been blocked !rom
borrowing by rates so high they left llttle opportunity for profits to be
earned.
Many profitless businesses. In fact, report they have been borrowing
simply to remain In existence, a practice that buys time but which could,
unless the economy Improves and rates fall, eventually lead to their doom.
With the recent decline In Interest costs, some of these companies might
have been saved. StU!, they and others have clearly stat&amp;! their priorities
- to retire short·term debt first, and only then consider expansion.

Beyond survival?
What do some Wall Street pundits see on the horizon?
John Wright of Wright Investors Service and Arnold Bernhard of Value
Line, both noted for their research, are convinced the market will rise far
beyond the range that has prevailed over the past 17 years.
But others differ.
·
Merrill Lynch Economics, for example. believes that whatever recovery occursdurtng the rest of the year wUI peter out, and that a sustainable
expansion of the economy can't be expected until mld-1983:It cautions against being too optimistic over the short term. In the
August Issue of Its "Business Outlook" ML offers an article called "A
rr·agile and Short·Lived Recovery."
It comments: "While our expectations for economic activity over the
near term are quite modest,lt should he stressed that the direction of risk
. relative to our forecast is entirely on the side of even weaker
performance."
That isn't a ghost that is seen by Merrill Lynch, and many, many other
forecasters who share the vision. But It isn't a rainbow. And many business
people agree with them. They are digging In their heels, not running
ahead.
Meanwhile. corpora tions are so illiquid they borrow to survive rather
than expa nj. Bankruptcies remain at levels unseen since the 193ls. Banks
hold paper of questtonable value. The International monetary system Is
fragile.
But interest rates are coming down, Wall Street replies. And that, as
much as any reason. may help to explain why the market In a magnificent
spasm of energy and enthusiasm soared more than 100 Dow Jones points
in nine sessions.

Various statistics over the past couple of years document the flight of
investment money Irom equities Into money market funds anddebtsecuri·
ties. driven or attracted there by rising Interest rates.
Those same Interest rates made business almost Impossible to conduct.
When a company must pay 20 percent or so lor money It can't very well
make a profit. It does well to suiVIve without having to borrow more just to
remain open.
With Interest rates falling, Investors are rJ-,eing investments whose
return is based on high rates; and .wt\r rjlll@s falling, businesses can go
beyond mere suiVival and cons!~~ rebuilding.

Today in history
Today Is Monday. Aug. 30, the242nd day of1982. Thereare123daysleft In
the year.
.
Toqay's highlight In history:
On Aug. 30, 30 B.C., Queen Cleopatra of Egypt committed suicide
probably by taking ~!son -although legend says It was by having an
bite her .
On this date:
In 1645, American Indians and Dutch settlers worked out a peace treaty
at New Amsterdam, which is now New York.
In 1730, Benedict Arnold made a secret promise to the British to surrender the American tort at West Point, N.y.
In 1945, Gen. Douglas MacArthur arrived In Japan at the end of World
War II to set up an occupation headquarters.
In 1981, Poland's Communist Party approved agreements between tbe
government and striking workers in a bid to end that nation's deepening
labor crisis.
Ten years ago: President Richard Nixon arrived In Honolulu for two
daYs of-talks.wlth Prime Minister Tanaka of Japan.
Ftveyearsago: New York'saccu!!Cd "Son of Sam" Killer, David Berkowitz, was reported by two court psychlatrtsts to be "mentally un11t" to ,
stand trial.

asp

I wish Nonnan Podhoretz hadn't
done it, but there it is, and he is entitled to a hearing. Why? Because he
is a brilliant man and, as editor of
Commentary, an Important voice in
public affairs. He has suffered considerably in recent years, since spotting and being guided by the ne&lt;r
conservative sta r, and his enemies
are legion. But they are the best to
have: When the left turns against
you, you feel as il you were excreting your sins. The best catharsis
in the medicine chest.
What Podhoretz has done, in an article called "J' Accuse," is to label as
anti-Semitic the cMtics of Israel's
campaign against the Palestine
Liberation Organization in Lebanon.
Now it is important to follow his
reasoning.
He begins by giving examples of
the rhetoric being used against
Israel. He wrote before George Ball
(The New York Times, Aug. 25)
publicly suggested that the government of the United States subtracl
from its annual appropriation for
IsraP.l ($2 billion to $3 billion) the
cost of reparations in Lebanon, on
the grounds that the damage done to
Lebanon could not have been done
except that the United States had
served Israel as arms supplier and
economic patron. But Podhoretz
quotes other passages from Ball's
wMtings severely cMtical of Israel.
He correctly dismisses such leftMght kooks as Alexander Cockbum/Willis Carto, but lands heavily
on Nicholas von Hoffman who wrote
in the (London) Spectator,
"Americans are coming to see the
Israel government as pounding the
star of David into a wastika." Dirty,
dirty pool. Add William Pfaff in the
International Herald Tribune, who
in referring to Israel's deeds in
Lebanon summari,zes, "Hitler's
work goes on." There is Mary
McGrory, who has trouble in handling dimensions, who manag~ in
one column to suggest that

Hiroshima and Nagasaki were
easier to defend than Israel's
Lebanon, for reasons too complicated to transcMbe. And, finally ,
Joseph Harsch of· the Christian
Science Monitor and Anthony Lewis
of The New York Times, who use
emotive language, like "blitzkrieg,"
"carpet-bombing" and the like.
Now Podhoretz is correct in
deeply and bitterly resenting any attempt to descMbe the activity of
Israel, even as dominated by
Messrs. Begin and Sharon, in
metaphors that trace to historic
totalitaManism. If he had rested his
case there, we could all have joined
him. Unhappily, he pursued the

~

~eroy-Middleport, Ohio

avo~d
By AMoclated P..AJJ of Its closest competitors had
already won, so tbe St. LouiS Cardinals couldn't afford to lose a
doubleheader.
The San Diego Padres bombed
the Cards 94 In the first game Sunday, cuUingtheirNatlonaJLeague
East lead to I~ games, but St.
Louts Manager Whitey Herzog was
able to breathe a sigh of relief after
his team won the nightcap !hl to
push Its margin over the Philadelphia Phlllles back to two games.
Doug Bair won the second game
wtth a brilliant relief stint.
Balr pitched 31-3 Innings of hitless relief and Padres third baseman Luis Salazar helped the St.
Louts cause wtth three errors that
led to three unearned runs 1!1 the
second game.
Balr, 4-3, struck out seven In his
short relief stint, a high for a rellevl'r In the NL this season.
The Cards scored twice In the
first Inning of the nightcap on
George Hendrtck's RBI single and
Salazar's first error, on Willie
McGee's grounder.

Oh dea.._r___~________w_il_lia_m_F_._B_uc_k_ley__.__Jr.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill· \

Monday, August 30, 1982

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel '•.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,
Monday, August 30, 1982 ~

point '10 far as to discover: " ... The pretty conventional war for survival
answer, of course, is that we are against its manifest enemies and tO
dealing here with an eruption of anti- got hot and bothered all of a suddeh
Semitism." Now Podhoret2 is too about Israell-infiicted casualties
resourceful to assume that his when similar casualties inflicted 'by
readers will believe that suddenly non-Israelis go relatively unnoticed
George Ball, Mary McGrory, Joseph (for instance, Lebanese casualties
Harsch- all of them children of an- from 1975 to 1982), is to engage in the
ti-defamation - are suddenly going kind of anti-Semitism he is here
to turn out to be KKK-style anti- defining.
Now what is strange is that
Semites. So he expands on the
Podhoret2
then goes on to speak the
definition of anti-Semitism. An antiexact
truth
about a terrible liberal
Semite, he says, is someone who
disease,
namely
its incapacity to
ascMbes to Jews characteristics
condone
the
exertion
of the national
uniquely Jewish, or, correlatively,
will
even
if
for
a
highly
defensible
DENIES TO JEWS RIGHTS
cause.
ACKNOWLEDGED IN OTHERS.
His point is that Israel is fighting a

:A.C::U"''S)\ ~Colt,..,.

twin loss, Phils beat Reds

In the second, loser Andy Haw·
Pete Rose walked with the bases
klns, 2·5, was victimized by Salaz· loaded and Manlly Trillo followed
ar's throwing error before LoMie with an RBI groundout to give the
Smith hit an RBI single.
Phlllles two runs In the third. and
The Padres made It 3-2 with runs they scored again in the sixth on a
In the second and third Innings on single by Gary Matthews.
RBI doubles by Salazar and Kurt
Braves 9, Meta t
Bevacqua, but Salazar's third error
Atlanta !IHlved Into first place In
and a pinch-hit single by David ,, the West, one percentage point
Green gave the Cards a 4-2 lead in ahead of the Dodgers, by winning
the seventh and they held on for the Its ninth game In 10 outings. New
victory.
York, on the other hand,lost Its 13th
In the opener, the Padres col· straight as Glenn Hubbard, Oaulected 15 hits, Including a three-run dell Washington and Rafael Radouble by Rick Lancellottl, his first mirez each drove In two runs for the
major-league hit, capping a flv.,. Braves.
run third truiJng rally. San Diego
Phil Nlekro, 13-3, worked six Inhad six straight hits off Bob Forsch, nlngs for his seventh victory In a
13-8, during the uprising.
row, with Steve Bedrosian getting
PhiUies 3, Reds l
his eighth save.
Steve Carlton, after three dismal
Cubs 7, Dodgers 2
starts In a row, returned to form
Bump Wills led a 13-hlt Chicago
with a three-hitter and 11 strikeouts attack against Los Angeles by
to lead Phlfadelphla.
knocking In two runs with three sinCarlton, 17-9, who was ().1 with an gles and a sacrifice fly.
8.10 earned run average In his preFerguson Jenkins, 10.13, posted
vlous three outings, lost his shutout his fourth straight viCtory and274th
bid when pinch-hitter Rafael Lan- of his career. He allowed four hits in
destoy hit his first home run of the six Innings.
Jody Davis slugged his ninth hoseason In the eighth Inning.

By AMoclated Preso
The way Bob McOure was pitchIng, you could have knocked the

timlstic over the short term. In the
August Issue of Its "Business Outlook'· ML offers an article called '·A
Fragile and Short -Lived
1
Recovery."
It comments: "While our expec·
tatlons for economic activity over
the near term are quite modest, It
should be stressed that the dlrec·
lion of rtsk relative to our forecast is
entirely on the side of even weaker
performance."

Oakland A's over with a featheror a fastball.
The Milwaukee left-bander Is

That Isn't a ghost that Is seen by
Merrill Lynch, and many, many
other forecasters who share the vision. But tt Isn't a rainbow . And

many business people agree with
them. They are digging In their
heels, not running ahead.

Various statistics over the past
couple of years document the flight
of Investment money from equities
Into money l)larket funds and debt
Meanwhile, corpora!Ions are so securities, driven or attracted there
llllquld they bprrow to survive
by rising Interest rates.
rather than expand. Bankruptcies ·
Those same Interest rates made
remain at levels unseen .since the
business almost Impossible to con1930s. Banks hold paper of questionduct. When a company must pay 20
able value. The International mon.,.
percent or so for money It can't
tary system is fragile.
very well make a profit. It does well
But Interest rates are coming
to survive without having to borrow
down, Wall Street replies. And that.
more just to remain open.
as much as any reason, may help to
With Interest rates falling, Invesexplain why the market In a magtors are fleeing Investments whose
nltlcent spasm of energy and enthureturn Is based on high rates; and
siasm soared more than 100 Dow
wtth rates falling, businesses can
Jones points In nine sessions.
go beyond mere survival and consider rebullding.

Stock market rally
I hope the stock market rally last
week didn't convinte you we have
turned that corner just around which
is prosperity. It's kind of like sayhng.
the economy is good in Ohio because
a man from Youngstown hit it big in
the state lottery.
When anything unusual happens
such as the stock market gaining
over a hundred points in a few days,
I try to do a lot of reading to find out
why. I have never believed the stock
market is a barometer of our financial health anymore than the gambling tables of Las Vegas or Atlantic
City point the way to fiscal happiness. But there are those who look
on the daily sales of stocks and bonds as an indicator of our national
prosperity or poverty. They could do
just as well reading the Fanner's
Almanac or their horoscope.
The stock market rise added not
one whit to the overall health of our
economy. It made the paper value of
a few corporations worth a few
million or a few bllllon more but it
did not produce one more car, one
more washer or anythinf1 else. For
every gambler who bought on an
ascending market, there was
another who sold and lost. As far .as.
the general economy of the country
is concerned, nothing has changed.
The market rose on the forecast d
Wall Street geru, Henry Kaufman,

known primarily as a breaking-ball Los Angeles' Fernando Valenzuela
pitcher- so It was a surpMse to the and Phlladelphta' s Steve Carlton
A's to see so many hard tosseS from for the major-league lead with his
him. For lnstance,ln a 5-3 defeat to 17th victory In 25 decisions. He gave
Ca!Uornla last time out, McClure .up nine hits In 8 2-31nnlngs, striking
threw only 34 fastballs in 120 out five and walking just one before
pitches. Sunday, he threw 86 last- needing last-out rellef from Dan
balls among 125 pitches.
Quisenberry, who gained his 31st
McClure, 10.6, struck out six as save.
.,
the Brewers took their eighth vicThe victory Improved the Roytory In their last 10 games and kept als' lead In the AL West to two
5~-games ahead of second·place
games over CaiUornla.
Boston In the American League
TwiDs 8, lndlan!l 3
East. The Red Sox kept pace with a
Randy Bush drove In two runs to
9-3 decision over California.
lead Minnesota over Oeveland and
Cecil Cooper drove In three runs a sweep of their three-game series.
with his 26th homer and a single
Bobby Castillo, S.lO, earned the
and Roy Howell lined two RBI sin- victory. He gave up lour hits in the
gles lor the Brewers. Mike Norris, first Inning and did not give up
&amp;-9, was the loser.
another hit until the ninth, striking
Red Sox 9, Angels 3
out six. It was CastUio's third comWade Boggs, Jim Rice and plete game of the season.
Dwight Evans hit home runs to acDan Spillner, 10-8. took the loss
count for eight runs and power Bos- lor Cleveland after relieving starton over California.
·
ter Ed Whitson In the eighth.
Boggs, a rookie hlttlng over .362
Orioles 3, Rangers 2
In part-time play, put Boston In
Eddie Murray drove In two runs,
front to stay with his third homer of Including the sixth-inning liethe season, a two-run shot off Steve breaker, as Baltimore defeated
Renko In the second Inning.
Texas behind Mike Flanagan's sixRice, who returned Saturday hitter. The victory was Baltimore's
from a week of traction In a hospital ninth In 10 games, while the
for back muscle spasms, shelled Rangers have lost nine of their last
Renko, 10-6, with a three-run blast, 11.
his 19th, In the third. Evans walMurray, who had threeofthefive
loped a three-run homer, his 23rd. hits off Texas starter Frank Tain the seventh.
nana, &amp;-15, singled home a run In
Dennis Eckersley, 12-10, was the the fourth. With the score tied 1-lln
wtnner while allowing six hits and the sixth, Murray singled home
two runs In six Innings. Bob Stanley another run.
relieved for his lith save.
Flanagan Improved his record to
Royals 7. While Sol&lt; 4
11-10.
Amos Otis' tw&lt;rrun double keyed
Yankees 8, Blue Jays 2
a four-run first Inning and Larry
Dave Winfield drove In four runs
Gura gained his 17th victory as with two homers and Lee Mazzllll
Kansas City heat Chicago for Its belted a solo shot to back the threesixth straight victory and Its ninth hit performance of left -bander
In 11 games.
Tommy John as New York
whipped Toronto.
Gura moved Into a tie with the

YOU'RE IT - Mbmesota Twios first baseman Kent Hrbek ( 14) tags
Cleveland IDdlaos Rick MaDDIDg In fourth iDDing action Sunday oo a rundown. 1beTwlnswent on to beat tbe Iodlaos &amp;-;~. (AP Laserpboto)

Lowell Wingett

Scoreboard ...

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

who predicted that interest rates hangs. Two or three months ago I
would come down. It rose when by would have been extremely skeprighls it should have fallen, for Kauf- tical that the Federal Reserve Board
man's prediction was based on the could be influenced by politics. Now
continued decline in the economy I am not so sure. I have read that
and not any healthy optimism for a Chairman Paul Volcker and the
pennanent drop In Interest rates or Federal Reserve Board have been
improvement in the business or ern- under increasing pressure by the
ployment picture. But interest rates Reagan administration to ease,Jip on
have fallen three times which was interest rates these last weeks
enough to start the bullish boom. before the Congressional electioll'i
Don't be surprised if what goes up so November 2. The Fed has lowered
quickly comes down with equal the rates it charges member banks
haste.
three times in the last month or so
The peritxl ahead is by no flight of which is ·enough to arouse suspicion.
the imagination one I would say is A president and a Republican Senate
conducive to a sustained Mse in can exert some heavy pressure instock prices. We have the highest deed!
rate of unemployment since World
Again I agree with my friend, Rich
War II with no relief in sight and the Jones. There is nothing wrong with
greatest number of bankruptcies this country that 10 percent interest
and business failures in history. We wouldn't cure now that the nonsense
have the highest budget deficit ever of supply-side economics seems to
with prospects for more of the same be behind us. The recent tax riSe in
In the future. The government will depressed times will cause hardship
borrow about UOO billion dollars to the people who can least afford it
before the first of the year which wiD but I suspect we could stand that if it
shoot up another round of high in- would bring interest rates down a
terest rates as the government sops start a market for those durable
up
availa~le capital. Don't think goods which will pul people back to
·the b1g ~ys tn t~ market who !Jan. . .work. Now if lhe president could be
die pen:noQ and IIISurance funds and convinced to cancel the 10 percent
flank trusts accounts don't know tax cut next July, which will mainly
this.
benefit the rich, and to lower the exInterest rates seem to be the bran- cessive budget to the Pentagon 1
ch on which the economy of America would expect tile' country to be ~n-

a!!

Ohio
Sportligh.t

joying a reasonable prosperity by
the 1984 election. President Reagan,
please note!
Only about a month ref113ins
before a new round of budget cuts
begins October 1. That is the date the
budget roUbacks take effect.
Millions of Americans of all ages
will see a change in their living standard. The poor will find it harder to
qualify for welfare and food stamps.
The elderly, the disabled and the
poor will pay more for health care.
Many federal retirees will get only
part of future pension inceases. All
this comes as the result of budget
rollbacks voted by Congress and
signed by the president shortly
before they began their Labor Day
vacation. These and other cuts in
social pr.ograms are sure to be bitterly resented by the voters at tile
election November 2. Social
~uMty, which so far has escaped
the budget cutters' tax, will be taken
up by lame duck Congress after the
election, it is expected. It is' Imperative th;lt all Social SecuMty
recipients know how their
Congresional candidates stand on
that issue by the November eleetion.
Be si1re and ask them wl)en they
come electioneering.
PeMious times are ahead. Protect
'
yourself with your vote!

Majors
W

By George Strode
CINCINNATI (AP) - ReUef pitcher Jim Kern and his beard are no
longer with the Cinclnna tl Reds, but another challenge to the club's conservative reputallon might be brewing.
Some players aren't happy that they must wear aU-black shoes, with all
ldentlfylng marks painted out. The players lose out on lucrative contracts
with shoe manufacturers because they can't publicly display the brand of
shoe they wear.
"One day we're going to get everybody together and everybody will
wear the same colored shoe out there," Reds pitcher Joe Price said. "What
It'll come to Is everybody will be fined and then there'll be .a grievance."
Players say they are losing thousands of dollars because they can't
advertise shoes for shoe companies. The younger players, many of whom
!flllke less than the veterans, say they lose a largt! percentage of their
potentlallncymie because of the club policy.
"It's been brought up a couple different times," Price said. "Everybody
talked alx!ut doing It two years ago,ln spring tralniDg: I don't think they
(the Reds) are totally opposed to having us change the shoe. But unless we
Cqrce the Issue, why shQuld they?"
·Unlike the un•poken and unwritten but well-known policy against facta!
hair on the club, the shoe policy is described In the Reds' 1982 Rules and
Regulations.
"Players shall wear solid black shoes wblle on the field or In the dugout,"
It states, Ustlng a $100 fine for each Infraction. "If they do It, they fine
themselves,'' Reds President Dick Wagner said.
"It's not Uke brealdog the colo\ ~ In baseball," Price said. "N&lt;r
body else does this (requires an all-black shoe). It Is part of your unlfonn.
You shouldn't have to pay for them•
,
.
"This Is part of the message that Kern lstrylngtogetacross. Sometimes
you feel a little suppressed IJi this organJzaUpn. You ·shouldn't be made to
feel that way," Price said.
,
.
, Kern was traded to the Chicago White Sox on August 231n exchangt' for ·
two yet-tcrbe Identified minor league players.
·
·
·
"Everybody thinks we're maJdng so much niciney," Price said.
a
lot of rookies are maJdng tbe ll)lnlmum ($33,500). There are a Jot of rookies
on this.team (seven). Vou have to scrape tllld BCUtfle to getsboes. For a big '
league ballplayer, that's kind r1 ridiculous. \Yhat's toujlllll a guy IJkll
(rookie) Brad Lesley. People don~t carry around size 14 shoes." ·
Lesley admitted It's been hard gettlngsboes. but It's been eaaJersloce be
,jJI.Rlped from Cl1lclnnatl's Class AM Indianapolis team to tbe big-league
Reds this season.
.''I bave,a coatract with Mizuno (a IIUIIIufacturer) and when I wu In,
. Indy, they~ very alack In their responae, When I got called up, ihey
ca~Ject me· rlg!Jt away," Lesley said. .
:
.

...'

.,

'

San Francbro

Ill

8

61

66
RJ

.SMi

Houstoo

.469

11 1~

Ctnctnnali

~

Ill

.1!5

221 ~

AGAINST THE WALL - Philadelphia Phlllles left fielder Gary
Mathews watches as ClnclDDBtl Reds pltc:her Brad Lesley reacbt!ll for a
homerun hit by teammate Rafael Landestoy Into tbe Reds' warmup pen
In tbe eighth Inning of play at Veterans Stadium In Philadelphia Sunday.
Landestoy, who was pinch hitting for pltc:her Bruce Berenyl, scored the
Reds' ooly run. (AP Laserphoto)

Coal Grove tops
Marauders, 7-0
By KEITH WISECUP
Marauders' forte in the upcoming
IRONTON - The I982 edition of year. A hard-nosed middle guard,
Meigs Marauder football gave lunt Dave Innarelli , could be the stalwart
of a successful year despite a 7-0 loss among the defenders.
to Coal Grove's Hornests here SaturTailback Mike Jackson might be
day night.
the most explosive weapon Coach
The evening's second game saw Charley Chancey's crew has had in
host Ironton pounding an inex- past years.
perienced South Point crew 33-8.
Ironton's Mark Snyder rambled 65
Both games were twe}.(juarter af- yards for a touchdown on the Tigers'
fairs with actual game action.
first play to begin the barrage in the
Coal Grove tallied the opening second game. The defending SEOAL
game's only points the first time it champs rolled to a 27-0 lead four
had the ball, marching 69 yards on minutes into the second stanza.
nine plays.
Tiger subs finished from there.
Quarterback Steve Murphy hit
In first week action this Friday,
fullback Jim Perry from 12 yards on Me1gs hosts Belpre, Ironton is home
fourth down for the score. Bill againts Wheelersburg, Coal Grove
Rigsby booted the extra point.
hosts Greenup CoUilty, and South
Meigs' deepest penetralion ended Point travels to Buffal&lt;rWayne.
on downs at the Hornet37. Moments
MEIGS -COAL GROVE
STATISTICS
earlier, tailback Shawn Eads
M CG
galloped 38 yards to the Coal Grove First Downs
1
6
10 only to have it nullified by clij&gt;' Yards Rushing
18
102
Yards Passing
19
ping.
t)
Yards
37
119
Last year only a last-second Total
Passes Att. ·
missed field goal kept Coal Grove
Comp.·lnt .
6).1
8·4·0
from advancing to the second round Fumbtes :. Lost
J.O
00
Penalties
1-10
n
o
in state division IV playoff action.
Punts
nr
J.BO
The Hornesls lost that game 14-12
Score by quarters :
to eventual state champ Nelsonville- Meigs
0 0 0
)
0 0
York. That wa'i;, the Buckeyes' Coal Grove
narrowest win.
Sou fh Point
0 8 8
Defense would appear to be the 1ron ton
10 13 JJ

Americans upset Taiwan team

Eutffn DM11I0n
Mllwauk.Pe

,.,

LEr\GU~

.WI!JliCAN

L

Boston

7b
71

P(S.

!12

GB

.594
.7JO

~

Ol&gt;trolt

6'i

63

.~

II

lli
61

6J
61

.SJII

11

.41!8

1J~

Toronto

61

70

.466

16•-7

WM&amp;em Dtvhkln
76
54
.~
74 56
$..C!
66 62
.5Hi
fit
AA
.473

Kansas City
California

Oiicll8o
SP:t.ttiP
Oaldand
T{'xas
Mlnlll':'iOia

:'il

Phlladf&gt;lphla 7. Clncinna!ll
Atlanta 4, New York 3.
l..ol; An~ 7. Chlca~ 1
On ly litilllll"li sdlt'dull'U.
S..nda,y'w. Gamf'!ll
Munt~111 ~. Houston 3
Atlanta 9, New York 4

Philadelphia 3, Cincinnati I
OUcaRQ 7. los Angelec 2
Siin DleKO 9. 51. Louis~ . l.s l game
St . Louis a t San OteRo. llld Rame

2
9

73
..WJ
7R
.D)
47 82
.3&amp;4
Saturday' I GamM
Toronto 3, NI:'W York 2. 11 lnn!JIIi:S
Boiton 7. Ca lifornia 6. 10 ftnlngs
Baltimore 8. Texas 3
Oakland 7, Mllwaulu!P 6
Karuas Clly 10. Chicago 1
Mlnnes&lt;lla 10 , Ck&gt;veiM d 0
Seank&gt; 4. [)(ofni t J
Sundq11GamM
New York 8, Toronto 2
~

Hou-'ilon 2. MnnlrPAI 0
San F' randaco 4. Pllt9bur!idl 2

:-.1"J

New York
Ot."veland

14 ._,
Ull,oj
2"i

Plttsbl.lrjith 4, San Yranclllro 3
MondQ'~~oGama

Atlanta t Pf&gt;rez ().2 and Mahler &amp;-9t at
PhlladP!phla tRuthvm 9-10 and By strom

:il'l'j

&gt;~ 1.

~a0amftll

Ctnc1nnat a t Montreal, 1n1
Houston at Ne-w York. 1n1
AU.utta at PhUadelpl\la, ln l
Plttsb.trgh at San Diego. tnl
St. Louis at Los An~le5, 1n 1
Chicqo at~ Frant.1sro. 1n 1

Mllwauket- 8. Oakland 1
Dl'lroU 6. Seattle 2
Monda,Y1 Gamet~

BAltimore fDavlflt-31 al Toronto !Gou

NFL results

HOt. jRJ

Oaldand

jKerugh
In!

11 -161

at

Sl&gt;attk&gt; / Stoddard ().IJ at

BDBIDII

Mllwau~

Natt.nal Football Leque

1Vuckovldll5-4J, tnJ

Cleveland rWalu
!On

8-U 1.

~ - 121

EllhlbiUon Stuot!

at Chicago lOot·

FridA)'. AUIUit t7
Bulh.lo 20, Wuhinrto n 14
Atlanta 24 , Phlladelptua2l
8ahrd!Q', Auruli !i
Plllsburgh 37, Baltimore 15

jn \

New York rRawlfoy 8-81 at Mlnne!lllla
~VIol11

t ·•h , !nl

Tex.u !Butcher 1·31 at Kansas City
!Leonard 8-JJ, (n l
&lt;Ally games schedu lfd

Detroit 2"1,,Cindnnall23
St.Loula 10 C hl ~aa:o J
New Yor k Ctlllltl 22, New York Jeu 10
Cleve! aDd 20. New Orleans 17

~·Gamm

Balttmote at 'I'oronto

Mlamll7, KansuCityl7,0T

OUJand ar Bolton 1n1
c.u.,ma at Detroit. 1n1

Denver27, Mlnne-sotal7
Dallu 36 , f"ew En II and 21
San Dlega23, San F'"ranclsro9

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

Sea.n )e at MUwauH. ln l
Cleveland at Chicaao. In)
New York at Mlnnes«U.tnl
TexM at Kansa1 City, {pi

--

Houston 21, Tampa Bay 6

.Loa Angeles Rams 13, Seattle 13
LOI Angelet Ralclers 24, Green Bay 3

·

NM'IONAL LEAGUE
WL

St. Louis
ptllladelph\a

~-

Mlntral
Plttlbu!Jb
C!lk!.qo
New York
Atlanta

u. Anlf!lti

Son DleaO

73
12
fll

.:Fro
.SI58

Ql

58
50

74 ,
7B

.4)9
.»1

--

sn

.527

1~

5~

72 S1
!68
1J 5ti . ' .'t/J7

6&gt;

.IS

s.t.....,'aOamea
GrftnBay atNewEnlland
Dt'troll at Buffalo, tnl
Philadelphia at Plttsbi.lrgtl, tnl

:i
17
23

0\1

Frl.a.J'• Gamea

Atlanta at Tampa Bay, Cnl
Wuhlneton at Cindnruttl. !nl
New YorlcGiantsatMiaml, !n)
N"" Orltoauat Minnesota, cnJ
San FranclJCO at Sealtlfo, 1n)

Pd.GB

511
57
&amp;J
61

1;7

f.-91 a t Mon treal

Houston !Sutton ll-81 at NN" York
!Swan 7-~1. 1nt
PlttsOOrjth IMC'W1lllam.s 7-71 a t San
Diego rWeJsh 7 -~1. tnt
St. Louis tSi upl'T ~~ at l..cl6 Angeles
tValrozuela 17-91. 1n1
Only games scheduJtod

Baltimore J. Tex~ 2
Minnesota 6, Cleveland 3
Kansas City 7. Cllk'afi:O t

!Hunt~) .

2. ll·nl

Ctnctnnall t Shlr W,..
!Rogers 14·1J.tnl

Bo&amp;ton 9, cal ifornia 3

"But

•1

tili

Brewers continue hot streak with win over A's

Economists' views differ on recovery
NEW YORK (AP ) - What do
some Wall Street pundits see on the
horizOn?
John Wright of Wright Investors
Service and Arnold Bernhard of
Value Line, both noted for their research, are convinced the market
will Mse far beyond the range that
has prevalled over the past 17
years.
But others differ.
Merrill Lynch Economics, for example, believes that whatever rec·
avery occurs during the rest of the
year will peter out, and that a sustainable expansion of the economy
can't be expected until mld-1983.
It cautions against betng too op-

mer and Larry Bowa had three sin·
gles as the Cubs snapped the
Dodgers' lour-game winning
streak and khocked them out of
first place. Bob Welch, 15-9, who
had lost only one of his previous
seven decisions, took the loss.
Ex[108 ~. A811'08 3
Andre Dawson knocked in three
runs with a groundout and a tworun homer to lead Montreal.
Dawson capped the Expos' threerun second Inning wtth his 18th homer, victimizing Bob Knepper,
5-L'l, after a sacrifice fly by Joel
Youngblood gave th~ Expos a 2-1
lead.
Tim Wallach knocked In Mont·
real's final run with his 19th homer
helping Scott Sanderson wln
eighth game In 19 decisions .
Plrales t, Giants 3
Jim Morrison and Jason Thompson accounted for Pittsburgh's runs
with a two-run single and a tw&lt;rrun
homer, respectively.
John Candelaria, 12·5, allowed 10
hils In 71-3 lnnlngs although he ran
Into trouble In the eighth, when the
Giants scored two runs. Rod Scurry
got his 12th save.

(

Batumort at Cttleaao. cnl
Kan... Clty at St.Loula, fnl
OH'I.-er at N~ YorkJttt1, (nl
Houaton at oanu. (fU
CIII!Yeland at Los A•Jel.• Ralclert, Cnl

San Dleao at LottAnplrs Rami, (n)

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. lAP) For the first time stnce 1975, an
American team left here as the new
Little League world champion.
The surprising team !rom Kirk·
land, Wash., headed for home and
was greeted by a rousing welcome
Sunday after winning the title In a
stunning upset over Pu·Tzu of
Taiwan.
Ta iwan had dominated the series
since 1969, winning 10 overall and
the last five In a row. The only
American victory In the period was 0
ln 1975. when foreign teams were
temporarily barred.
"His (Webster's) cuiVes and fast
balls were very good, and he mixed
them up very well," said Taiwan
coach Chang Teln-chueng, adding:
·'We will come back, we will try our
best to come back."
Washington coach Pat Downs
said, "I don't think we ever played
a better ballgame."
"Our bunting game surprised
them . They didn't make the play on
the bunt and that opened It up for a
couple base hits for a couple runs,"
he said.
Arriving In Kirkland, the champions were welcomed by tens of
thousands of fans, including Washington Gov. John Spellman and
Seattle Mariners manager Rene
Lachemann.
Webster, 12, a ~foot-8, 174-pound
rlghthande~. looked tired but was
smlllng, ,

..

"I'm glad all the fans came out."
Lachemann, 37, youngest manager In the major leagues, said
Kirkland's victory was even bigger
than the U.S . hockey triumphatthe
1981 Olympics.
Spellman greeted the Little Leaguers at the city's Marina Park
next to Lake Washington . Fans listened to rock and western music lor
nearly two hours while waiting for
the team to arrive from Seattl.,.
Tacoma International Airport.
-------------

.

"I'm looking for a rest," he said.
't

,. . ET

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Ill ' I

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•

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•

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'

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•
Stahler tough In
Saint debut;
•
Browns Jtold on, WID
20-17
NEW ORLEANS iAPl - The
game probably didn't do much to
change the quarterback picture for
the Cleveland Browns, but Kenny
Stabler's first appearance In black
and gold sure changed things for
the New Orleans Sillnts.

Brian Slpe, the nine-year veteran
who goes Into his seventh season as
Cleveland 's starter, was 8-18 for 113
yards and a touchdown In a 20-17
victory over th e Saint s on
Sa turday .
Paul McDonald . Sipe's talented

Helen help us

Another reason exotic trips tire

backup for his three seasons In the
National Football Lea~ue, hit 6ol 12
attempts for '147 y~rds and a
touchdown.
Neither threw an Interception.
Each was sacked once In the exhlbl·
tlon gamr.

Lions upend Bengals, 27-23
CINONNA11 (AP 1 - II Detroit
Lions Coach Monte Clark Is fretting
over his quarterback sit uation, he' s
not letting on.
When starter Eric Hipple was
hurt In the second quarter Sat urday
nig ht, backup Gary Danielson
came on to prove himself worthy of
a starting ' role. He threw three
touchdown passes and led the Lions
to a come-from-behind 27-23 victory
over the defending American Con·
terence champion Cincinnati
Bengals.
"We're pleased we have that kind
or a problem. We've got two excel·
lent quarterbacks," Clark said. "I
wtsh we had more problems like
that."
Hippie climbed !rom thlrd·strlng
quarterback to starter last season
and le&lt;l the Lions to six victories In
their last 10 games. Clark sa id he
remains the star!Pr, despite Daniel·
son's showing Saturday.
"We're not going to cha nge quar·
terbacks on a day-today basi s, "
Clark said.
When Hipple took a blow to the
head and was rendered temporar·
lly groggy in the second quarter.

Danielson ca me in to toss the first
Danielson accepted Clark's deciof two touchdown passes to light sion to keep him In a backup role.
end Da vid Hill.
"I try not to think about it.
Trailing 20·10 at hal!time. Daniel· Monte's going with Eric. That's the
son started the second-half comE" way It's going to stay, " Danielson
back with an 18-yard TO pass to said. adding jokJngly, "Eric gets
Hill. He completed the effort by hit· hurt every game, so I've got to be
ling Robbie Martin with a 6-yard ready."
Cincinnati Coach Forrest Gregg
scoring toss for the winning touch·
down with just 3: 41 remaining.
made tlls displeasure known after
his club dropped Its third straight
"lt was enjoyable," said Daniel·
preseason game, this one before a
son, who completed 9 of 19 passes
home crowd or 45,365.
for 138 yards. "It was a fun way to
''I'm not at all where I'd like to
play, coming off the bench when
be," Gregg said. "I'm not happy
you're behind and you get to throw
wtth this at all. We're Q.3."
a lot, to move the team . I was gam·
Ken And!'rson directed th!' of·
bUng a lot tonight. "
tense for the first half, hitting 5 of 10
The winning touchdown pass was
passes lor 115 yards, on!' touchone o! those chances. Danielson
saw that the Bengals were slow set- down and the lQ.polnt halftime
lead.
ting up their defense, and he de"Preseason games ar!' a chance
cided to throw to Martin after a
to
let the young people have a
quick count.
chance
to make the team," said
"They were coming out of huddle
wtde
rec!'tver
Crts Collinsworth,
la te. Robbie wasn 't the intended rE"
to
downplay
th!' loss. "While
trying
celver on the play. I was just hoping
you'd
like
to
go
ahead
and win, you
he'd turn around and look, and he
know
the
young
peopll'
have to gl't a
did," Danielson said. "Ray (Gril·
chance.
That's
wha
t
preseason
Is
!In, cornerback) was kind of trotlor."
ting to his position. I don't think
they were really ready ."

NFL reps could put heat on owners
CHICAGO tAPl - Representa·
lives o! the Na tional Football
League Players Association could
put the hea I on league owners In
their contract negotiations today by
setting a strike date.
Player reps and the NFLPA
gather here to discuss the lack o!
bargaining progress a nd to decide
What they want to do about it.
"1 think there Is a pretty good
chance a strike date will beset," Ed
Garvey. executive director of the
NFLPA, said Sunday In a telephone
Interview from tlls Chevy Chase,
Md., home. He said the most likely
tim!' for any walkout would be between now and the fourth or filth
game or the regular season. which
starts Sept. 12.
'
The Association has aske&lt;l for 55
percent of the gross receipts

brought In by the 28 teams. Jnclud·
lng television revenue anticipated
from a lucrative contract recently
signed.
"We know the owners are about
to put an offer on the table," Garvey said . "They've been talking to
some o! the players Individually
about it."
But. he sa id, some of·the player
representatives have been dlssatls·
!Jed with the owners' refusal to
barga in .
"They want to see what steps we
ca n take to force bargaining," Garvey said.
Garvey discounted rumors that
the Players Association may adopt
some strategy aimed at forcing the
owners Into lockJng out the players.
"At this stage we're more Inter·

Leaders
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Mo nl tl'&lt;ll. It\. l'lilrk. Sil n F r&lt;t ndst.'U. lf1

ested In a conventional approach,"
he said. "II we go out, we'll shut It
down.''

·

There has been some talk of a
more selective action, one or two
teams going out or a half-dozen or
so top players !rom each team ref·
using to suit up.
"These alternative approaches
put too much pressure on a small
group of people," Garvey said. "We
believe It's a responsibility everyone should bear."
II the owners locked the players
out, It would give the players clear
legal freedom to set up an alternate
schedule of games outside the con·
trol of the owners, Garvey
conceded.
The assoctatJon already has an
agreement with Ted Turner's
Atlanta-based SuperStatlon,
WI'BS, to broadcast an alternative
sche&lt;l~le of games 11 It comes to
that.
"We'd be ready to go within two
weeks of a strike," Garvey said.
But he said, It 's the association's
position that the owners already
have been guilty of unfair labor
practices - refusing to bargain
and other alleged Infractions - so
that 1111 comes to a strike, the association can argue It was lanced to
take that action.

sl-quarter progress Saturday In Chicago. The Cardinals won the pre-season game, 1~. (AP Laserpboto)

ZEROING IN- St. Louis Cardinals' halfback Ottll;
Andel'!lon watches as Chlugo Bears' defenders Gary
Fenclk ( 45) and OU. Wilson (55) prepare to stop his fir·

Bengals picked to win AFC
But look lor David Verser to conBy BRUCE WWITI'
AP Sports Writer
tribute more as a receiver and Cha·
You may wonder If Ken Ander· , rles Alexander as a runner.
son can have In 19!2 the kind of sea- Besides, the Bengals are knee-deep
son he had In 1981, If Crls In talent. with receivers Isaac CurColllnswoi-th Is a one-year wonder. Us and Steve Kreider, young-yetIf Pete Johnson can keep taking the
awesome offensive linemen like
punishment, It Cincinnati's defense Anthony Munoz, Blair Bush and
Max Montoya, and an up-front decan stop the pass.
But one thing you need nm fense controlled by Eddie Ed·
wonder about : wht&gt;ther tht&gt; Ben· wards. Wilson Whitley and 'Ross
·
gals will fal l v ict im to Browner.
complacency.
. What you shouldn'tlook lor Is the
"We made progress last year, rest of the Central Division. Not too
but we failed to achieve our uJtJ. closely, anyway.
mate goat," Coach Forrest Gregg
Cleveland, which won several
said of the Bengals' one-year jump gam!'S In the final minutes In 1980,
!rom worst to first In the American couldn't come up with the lightning
Football Conference's Central Dlv· bolts last year, even though the
lston. and o! their 26-21 loss to San Browns were third In AFC passing.
Francisco In the Super Bowl.
The problem was a poor running
You can bet Gregg, Cincinnati's game. Even II it Improves, Cleveresident drill sergeant, won't let up land won't be much more than a
on tlls troops until they capture that .500 club- unless linebackers Chip
ultimate objective.
Banks and Tom Couslneaucan turn
And you can rest assured they'll around a dismal defense. The
be on target when the National Browns' seco nd a ry needs an
Football League playoffs begin In ovf! rh ~ll l
January. The Bengals should have
Joe Greene's departure from
no trouble repeating as division Pittsburgh could change the Steel·
champions. San Diego and Miami ers. So many of the great names
also havt&gt; the look of repeat are gone. Likewise, Houston' s
wtnners.
once -fe rocio us defense has
Here's how the AFC standings slumped badly. And wtll the Oilers
!lgure to look at the end of the try aga in to rely on Earl Campbell
season:
or take the ball away from the
CENTRAL DIVISION
game's premier runner and give It
Cincinnati Bengals
to quarterback Gifford Nielsen?
Cleveland Browns
II the Chargers can come up with
Pittsburgh Steelers
a decent defense they'll be unstopHouston Oilers
pable. The Chargers averaged
WEST DIVISION
nearly 30 points a game. Dan Fouts
San Diego Chargers
routinely breaks NFL passing rt&gt;x-Kansas City Chiefs
cords and In Kellen Winslow, Wes
Los Angeles Raiders
Chandler and Charlie Joiner, he
Denver Broncos
has a trio o! 1,00Q.yard receivers.
Seattle Seahawks
Even the running game is sound
EAST DIVISION
wtth Chuck Muncie (If he can cut
Miami Dolphins
down on his fumbling ), James
•·New York Jets
Brooks and newcomer Ricky Bell.
Buffalo BU!s
Kansas City Is closer to respecta·
billty under a ground-oriented atNew England PatJiots
Baltimore Colts
tack whlch started with Coach
Marv Levy's Wlng·T. Now the
x-probable wild-cards
Anderson and Collinsworth may
Chiefs have a bonafide deep-threat
not be quite as spectacular as they receiver In rookie Anthony
were a year ago and Cincinnati's
Hancock.
defense may still be victimized
The Raiders are tough to !lgure.
through the air.
Injuries flattene&lt;l them In 198l and

"Ray had chances every hole,"
Stadler said. "I didn't play very
well In the playoff. My short game
came through. He made the first
mistake."
It marked the third straight
playoff hole. Stadler had missed the
green, only to chip to wtttlln a few
feet of the hole to stay wtth Floyd.
"Those chips get a little easier
whe you have Wt three of them that
close to the hole," Stadler. "Be-,

sides, Ray had a d!Hlcult , little
chip. He caught too much o! the
ball."
Stadler fonced the playoff with a
5-blrdle regulation round of 65.
Floyd matched par of 70. They
were tied after 72 holes at 278, two
strokes below Firestone South's
par.
Floyd's $55,000 second· place
check dropped him to second place
tnlthe money derby at $386,w.l.

r-------------

mo wer IS ')'Ours at no f'Kir a COS I.

be." .

Power Ktng tS::. great "bLg tawc. '·

Stadler conceded he was fortu·
nate to win. He missed three of ihe
four greens In the playoff whlle
Floyd missed just one, the faiaJ
17th.
At 17, they were In the same area,
nestle&lt;lln the high rough to the left
of the green. Stadler knocked his
chip shot to within four feet ot the
cup.

l!uua, left, IIIII !be truplly lifter bls ·!RIIIdeD death playoff wiD over
JtaymODCI Floyd In the World Serlea of Golf Swlday at tlie Flreatoile CG11J1.

.tty Club bl ~ ·Oblo. Aloag with the .trophy went a ~heck for $100,000.
1AI' Laserphoto)

Floyd, wilh a tOugher Ue, chipped
12 f~t past ~ hole. He misSed the
downtilll, sldeh!U putt to save par.
Stadler thi!ll tapped his In for ~
first World Sllrles triumph.

tam P. r and w tth ti S power lul an~gciu

Urtve SYSiem and broad ver sat• hty .
Power K•ng handles all kLnds of tougn ·
tobs arrOund yOU/ place Come get
a great deal on a greattraclor 1
and a free mo~Ner . too!

But don / delay .. the oflet
IS lOr a lrmrterl t1me Only/

POWER ·KINQ
REEDS COUNTRY STORE

.

. IE!EDSVILLI, OHIO

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The Daily Sentinel
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.

'

County Fair. The outrider leads horses takJng part In
the several day race program to the grandstand area.

OUTRIDER - Nine-year-old Mica Jones,
daughter of Debbie Jones and Mike Jones, served as
outri~er on her horse, Smoke, during the recent Meigs ·

By HELEN BOTIEL
DEAR HELEN :
Must we give up the foreign trips
my husband and I love because
they're too tiri ng' I don't mean
"tiring" adventures, but tiring in
that we spend so much time on
requests! Whenever we announce a
planned visit to exotic places, our
fri ends and relatives ask us to shop
for them. This means spending days
of our precious time looking for
items we care nothing about. These
people want bargains in things like
jade, silk, cameras, perfume. Not
only do the hunts consume hours but
they sometimes short us on money,
as payment comes after we return
home.
Also the gift search for chldrcn
and grandchildren wears us down .
We're expected to bring everyone
mementos.
It means an extra suitcase just to
store all the stuff, not to speak of
possible duty on expensive purchases, plus all that bookkeeping.
Since this shopping is now expected of us, how do we politely
renege - or must we forego our
retirement travel? - SllOPPED

OUT
DEARS.O. :
Tell fri ends and relatives the
truth : You hate shopping, you
haven't time to field every request,
so you must turn down all, rather
than " play favor ites."
Gifts for chldren and grand·
children? f suspect they're already
bored by fore ign mementos. Expla in
and I let's hopei lhey'll understand.
- H.

DEAR HE LEN:
Rcadmg the letter asking how
gallon plastic jugs of water on the
lawn t.lt:scourage dogs, my answer
is: It works because dogs, by in·
stinct, will no! defecate near fresh
water. - STAN lEY
DEAR STANLEY :
If you're nght. then dugs who
1'\)C:llll ctroum1 uur Juctd mounta in
la kes have d•fccti ve instincts ! - H.
DEAHH ELEN •
About the budding actress who lost
her l e~ in an i:I CciLlcnt and fears her

cct n:e r is ove r: Ha:m't .she heard of
Sa ra h Bernhardt and Suzan Ball
whu

r e~umcd

thd r fin e

actin ~

work

after each suffered an amputation'
We personally know three women
with a total of three leg s between
them. All arc high in their careers,
active in sport:; such as golf and dancing, and very mueh involved in

community service.
If one-legged people can down-hill
ski, they can certainly perform on
the stage. - STAN AND COMPANY
DEAR HELEN:
I'm another who ha s always
thoul(ht sex is the best way to express fiendship. If I like a man, we
end up in bed , no long-lasting commitement:; or "forsaking all others"
- it's just , well, friendly .
But now I'm engaged, and my
future husband doesn't see things
my way . I'll try to be true, but I may
backslide (no pun intended). I really
adore this uptight man, but I know
me , I'm a - PUSHOVER FOR
" LOVE"
P.S. How do I change'
Cha nge isn't easy for someone
who likes the way she is. If you can't
develop a rnorc upriKhl attitude (no
pun intended) then don't marry an
·· uptight" rnan.· H.

.

.Meigs County area organizations' members gather for meetings
Meigs Women's
Fellowship
A donation of $25 tow~rd the pur·
chase of silverware for the Ohio
Valley Christian Camp was made
during the recent meeting of the
Meigs County Women's Fellowship
of the Churches of Christ.
Meeting at Hemlock Grove, mem·
bers were reminded of the Women 's
Retreat to be held at the camp, Sept.
16 and 17, with registration to be in
by Sept. 6. Dedication of the new
Bradford Church of Christ was an·
nounced for Sept. 26 with Clifford
Smith to be the speaker. It was also
reported that a revival will take
place at the Bradford Church, Sept.
12-17 with Julian Rodrigous as the
speaker.
·
Members were asked to save bot·
tie caps which can be redeemed.
Charles nd Melva Russell were
reported as Improving. Ruth Un~
derwood had charge of the song ser·
·vice which opened the meeting with
officers' reports being given.
Eleanor Hoover gave devotions
using scripture from Proverbs 23
and a poem, " A Prayerful
Hwnility." Marg Purtell •and Ann
Lambert sang "I Asked the Lord."
Pat Hall will be the speaker at the
fall revival to be held at the
Pomeroy Church, Sept. 19-24. It was
noted that Peggy Rusell of the
Mexican Children's Home is home
from her mission work there. Norma
Russell commented on her work
there.
Eleanor Hoover talked on the Dexter mission project of assisting the
Charles Russell family who serves
at the New Hope Missions in Cincinnati and Kentucky. A report on
the Hemlock Grove missionary work
through Peggy Russell, the Kentucky Christian College and the
Christian Mission Fellowship was
given by Helen Quivey.

Anna Alkire, for the Middleport
Church, showed several items from
India while Charldene Alkire
displayed items and talked of their
missionary family, Walter and Mary
Maxey, in Japan, at the Kagoshima
Christian Mission.
For the Zion Church. there was a
display o! pictures of the Grundy
• Mountain Mission School in Virginia
with a commentary on Sam Hurley,
its founder.
Mrs. Underwood for the Rutland
Church reported on mission held to
the Grundy Mountain Mission school
and also talked about the work of
Donald and Marianne 13oughman of
Nigeria, West Africa.
Next meeting of the fellowship will
be at the Middleport Church with
youth talent to be presented for the
program.

Wildwood
Garden Club
Best of show awards went to Ada
Holter and Kathryn Miller at the annual flower show of Wildwood Ga rden Club held at the Forest- Run
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Bunny Kuhl judged the show
which included arrangements in 14
classes as well as many specimens.
The classes and exhibitors were
Dorothy Smith in "Vacations" using
canna flowers and leaves with sea
shells and sand before a driftwood
background; Evelyn Hollon, ·"Ice
Cream Social" using zinnias in ice
cream cones highlighted with pine
and willow in a synunetrical white
and gold base; and Mary Nease with
"Swinging In the Breeze", a cluster
of purple chrysanthemums,
honeysuckle, vine, euonymus in a
black footed container.
Jennifer Arnold's theme was
"Cook Out", and she used different
colors of zinnias and dahlias accented with grilling and utensils on a

wicker late, while Ada Holter
carried out "Thermometer Rising"
with re&lt;l and pink roses in a vertical
design featuring asparagus fern on a
wood base. She also had an
arrangement of "Hand Made" using
red dahlias with elephant ear leaves
in front of a large wheel on a wooden
base entwined with honeysuckle
vine.
For "Solitude at the Chapel ", May
Holter displayed a white madonna
filled with pink zinnias and boxwood .
Jane Harris used zinnias with
mwns, globe amaranth, baby breath
and a variety of garden vegetables
in a round wicker basket for her
"Surruner Time" arrangement ;
while Hilda Yeauger used a large
sunflower and canna leaf in a tall
glass conta iner for "Mountain
Peak. "
In the class "Dry as a Desert",
Mrs. Carrie Greuser displayed a
dish garden filled with various cacti,
hens and chickens and rocks. Marcia Arnold presented "Sunset" with
ye llow mums and marigolds,
euonymus, with a background of a
snake plant in a round green pottery
container.
For "Cute as Button", Betty
Milhoan used red celosia and yew in
a small china hand and also showed
a miniature of dried flowers in a
small clay pitcher. Peggy Moore
gave "Gift of Summer" using a
mass arrangement of yellow daisies,
marigolds, golden rod, ilnd cattails
in a black teapot. ·
"Cool of the Evening" was the
theme used by Kathryn Miller for
her arrangement of purple chrysa nthemums and petunias in a tall cut
glass vase. Evelyn Hollon for the
class "Camp Out" used nut gass,
ca ttails, honeysuckle vine and
weathered wood in a black container.
During a brief business meeting
an invitation was read from the
Rutland Ga rden Club regarding ' a
fall fl ower show members are

having on Sept. 11 and 12 at the
Rutland United Methodist Church.
State and regional dues are payable
it was noted. Refreshments of
cookies and punch were ~erved to
the members.

Long Bottom
Community
Association
A report on const ruction progress for the new building was
given by Tom Hayman at the rt&gt;cent meeting o! the Long Bottom
Community Association.
Hayman noted that the trusses
for the roo! and the plumbing wtll
get underway soon. It was reported
that Harold Brewer and Ha rlan
Ballard will install a new dusk to
dawn light at the new building. The
light was purchased by Brewer for
$35. Mrs. Ernestine Hayman noted
that she had paid two elect ric bills
lor the club along with $1,271 .52 to
the Forest Run Block Co.. for
blocks and mortar. Unused materials were purchased by Ballard for
$75. Dale Barr donated gas to fuel
some o! the dump trucks used In the
work. Meetings of the building
committee were changed !rom
Wednesdays to Mondays.
It was also reported tha t Brewer
has received an eight loot flag
which flew over the White House
fro m Cong ress ma n Clare nce
Miller. A state fl ag wtll be obtained
through Oakley Collins by Mae
McPeek.
A report was given on the recent
ice cream social and Hayman was
paid $25 lor use or the building.
A bake sale was scheduled for
Sept. 8 at the commu nity building
beginning at lO a. m. At that sale
wttl be crafts. clot hing and ot her

miscella neous items . Pla ns wcrr

Ba rber. Pea rt Powell , and Ruby

made for a pie auction at the next
regular m&lt;'&lt;'ting of I hi' group with
Brewe r to be the aucl ionC&lt;'r.
Scripture from Ma tthew ;, and
the Lord's P rayer and pledge
opened the meeting. Hostesses
were Ada Bissell , Mac MeP('('i&lt; ,
Leona Hensley, and Melody flo·
berts who baked a birthday cake
for Sammy Ralrden whose 90th
birthday wa s observed . The cake
walk netted $34 .20 with Mrs. Ernes·
tine Hayman providing the cake
and Sandy Deems wtnn ing it . En·
tertainment was provided by Fra n·
cis Andrew. Ml'. and Mrs. Bill
Thurston, Mr . and Mrs. Albert

Brewer .

i\t the meeting were Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Ncut zllng, Francis Andrew, Ernestine Hayman , Mae
McPeek. Leona Hensley, Mrs.
Mary Andrews. Tom Hayma n,
Pea rl Powell. Ml'. and Mrs. Harlan
Ballard . Mr. and Mrs. Martin Nesscl road. Sa ndy Deem, Mr . and
Mrs. Ha rold Brewer. Janie Fitch,
Sa mmy Ra irden, Mr . and Mrs.
Stantev Wells. Mr . and Mrs. Albert
Barber. Mrs. Ada Bissell, Jennl
:--tewlun . Mr. and Mrs. Bill Thur·
stan. Mr. and Mr s. Dorsel Larkins,
Ml'. a nd Mr s. Paul Hauber. Melody
Hoberts.

Meigs County area happenings and events

lsao Aoki of Japan closed with a
67 for a third place at 28), He earned
$34,500.
Australia Bob Shearer, after recovering from a severe nose-bleed In
Ws early holes, shot 73 and tied Curtis Strange lor fourth at 282.
Strange had 68.

sa The
id. pudgy 29-year-old Califor- r--------------~-------------------------------4
nian now has more victories, four,
and more money, $428,101, than
anyone on the PGA Tour this year
following his $100,tnl payday.
F1oyd, the PGA champion who
surrendere&lt;l his money-leading position In this elite event, did not take
tlls dramatic loss lightly.
"You're suppo~ to be happy
with second place," said Floyd,
wl\o started the cool day wtth a 5stroke lead. "I am -very unhappy
Now whP.n vou buy the toug hest,
wtth second.
most versatile tractUI •n town . you also
qel a fre-e '-48'' rotary mower' Just buy
"I played my best golf In the
any new Powe1 Ktng tractor and the
playoff. I guess It was not meant to

: wORLD SERIES·WINNER - Craig Stadler; right, ·boldl 1111 wile

major personnel cha\'ges this year
should keep them just shy of con·
tending. A big key Is whether quar·
terback Jim Plunkett rebounds or whether Mane Wilson Is ready to
take the reins.
Some&lt;lay, Mark Herrmann or
Steve DeBerg wtll have to run
Denver's offense - or can Craig
Morton go on forever? Doubtful.
Seattle's tans are still waiting lor
the Seahawks to repeat - or Improve on - those deceptive 9· 7 records In 1978 and 1979. Keep
waiting. The ground game Is paperthin and the defense needsstabtuty .
Coach Don Shula somehow
guided Miami's patchwork Dol·
phlns of'last year to a division title
- and nearly Into the AFC title
game.
David Woodley Is due to become
a full-game, take-charge quarterback, Shula juggles hi.\ backfield of
no-names superbly, Miami Is deep
In receivers, and rookie guard Roy
Foster could muscle tlls way Into an
already ou~ndlng offensive line.
Only the sec'o11dary Is keeping the
Dolphins from putting together one
of the conference's best defenses.
It'll be Interesting to see If the
New York Sack Exchange remains
the team's blue-chlp commodity.
lt's unlikely the unit wUI match Its
66 sacks o! last year 140J.S or them
by ends Mark Gastineau and Joe
Klecko), but If the secondary can
stabilize, the lront four won't have
to shoulder all the work. The Jets'
passing game could be the best
si nce the Jo!' Namath-Don
Maynard.
Offensively, the Bills appear
solid, particularly wlth a line wtllch
·kept quarterback Joe Ferguson'$
uniforms nearly spotless, but the
Buffalo ktckJng game and secondary could use revamping.
The AFC's two new head
coaches, New England's Ron
Meyer and Baltimore's Frank
Kush, have a lot· o! work ahead of
them , Meyer tess so because the
Patriot's offensive line Is still potent
and the draft (Ken Sims, etc.) res·
locked the defense. The Colts need
rebuilding.

Stadler captures World Series of Golf
AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Craig
Stadler describes his year, laced
wilh victories In the Masters and
World Series o( Golf and two other
American titles, ln one word:
fantastic.
"This Is very fitting to my year,"
Stadler said Sunday of tlls 4-hole,
sudden death triumph over Ray
Floyd tn the $400,1XXJ World Series.
"I figured II I won here, It would
make a fantastic year. It has," he

The Daily Sentinel-Page-'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

..

Slide show
"Proud of the Past - Looking to
the Future" is the title of the newest
historical slide show which was
previewed on Aug. 26 by the trustees
of the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society. Ron Ash,
manager of the Ohio Power Co., is
narrator of this ~minute presentation which is available for presentation by contacting the Ohio,Power
C&lt;J. office.
This production has brought out
many Interesting and not readily
available pictures which are a
delight for both young and old. The
shows relateS how the electric power
Industry has belped the community
develop and how the needs of the
.Community have helped shape
. power production and distribution.
In other business, the trustees set
the cut-off date for ordering the
reprints of the Hardesty 1883 History
of Meigs Cowtty and !he 1908
Larkins Pioneer History of Meigs
C&lt;Junty at Sept. 15. Up to that date,
the books can be ordered at the prepublleatioo price of f20 and $16
respecively. After Sepl15· the price
• will go to $25 for the Hardesty
History and f20 for the Larkin
History.
Checks for the books should ,be
sent to History Reprints, Pomeroy
' 45769. Bookstobelnalledare$2each
higher. Only 250 copies of the Larkin
book and 500 of the fian!esty are to
be lll'dered. The books will be he.r e In
~r or Novem.ller In ample time ·

Farewell dinner
A farewell dinner honorng Gfen

and Madeline McClung was held recently at Pomeroy Nazarene
Chunch. McClung has accepted the
pastorate of Point Roek Chuncli.
Raymond Walburn had the bless~
lng preceding the dinner held In the
recreation bulldlng.
At the dinner were Rev. and Mrs.
VIrgil Byer, Sharrell and Richard,
Mr. and Mrs. McClung, Missle
J14aynard, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
WalbUrn, Tammy Johnson, Shari
Blackwell, Amber and Arica, Mr.
and Mrs. Jer ry Colmer, Billy and
Timmy, Nancy Aelker, Dorothy
Bentz, Nancy WhlttJ!kind, Shawn
and Daniel, Anita Van CQoney, Lonnie and Tom, Lora Hall, Robin Hall,
Mam ie Stephenson, Jimmie
Snider, Randy Snider, Jell
Guinther, Raymond · Landers
Lucky Landers and Tony Hudson.'

Film Wednesday

crime.
Telling their stories in the 44rninute film are George Meyer, AI
Capone's favorite driver; Floyd
Hamilton, the last of the Bonnie and
Clyde Gang; Jerry Graham, the
" robber king" of California; and
Ted Jefferson, convicted of crimes
from drugs and robbery to murder.
Also featured is "Chaplain Ray ,"
whose Dallas-based international
Prison Ministry has changed the
lives of thousands of inmates over
the past 18 years.
Rev. Jim Broome is pastor of the
church. The public is invited to at·
tend.

Layette shower
Mrs. Kim Wilt and daughter,
Gilliam, were honored recently with
a layette shower at th~ home of Mrs.
Mark Clay, Syracuse.
Hostesses for the shower were
Doris Wilt, Linda Hubbard; and Don·
na Clay. A heart-shaped cake baked
by Mrs. Clay was served with ice
cream, coffee and punch to Mrs.
Betty Glass, Mrs. Dottie Jon~s.
Cheryl Pierce, Trish Davis, Mrs .
Kathryn Hysell, Mrs. Marcella Our·
st, Mrs. Deloris Whitlock, Lynn and
Amber Perkins, Mrs. Rosemary
Pierce, Alberta Hubbard, Mrs.
Doris Wilt, Mrs. Linda Hubbard,
Donna and Jerrod Clay.

"God's Prison Gang," a newly
released film featuring AI Capone's
getljway driver, the last membi!r of
Bonnie and Clyde's gang and two
other notorioWI criminals who have
become Christians will be shown at
the Cltw:ch of the Nazarene, 580
Beech st., Middlefi10rt, on. Wellnesday at-7 p.m.
.
The film, shot behind the walla of
New York's Attica ~. iB hosted
by Art Linkletter. It !ella the sto\-Y of ·
Prizes were won by Rosemary
how the work of International Prison
Miiuatry ls aCCiinlpliBhlng what Pierce1 Alberta Hubbard and Betty
for ~vtng :
, -, .
niore guards, 'higher Pflion IYalla ·G4tss with the door prize going to
The trustees set SWiday, Oct: 3 at · and greater financial expenditures· Marcella DUrst.
Sending gifts were Elsie Jones and
the Meigs Mllllt!wn at 1 p.m., as ~ have failed to do -keep released In,, datefortheaMualmeetlng.
mates from returning to lives of ' Donna Davls .

'

Correspondence
POMEROY - A family picnic
was hosted by Dorothy Dandakis
on the patio o! her home In Athens.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell , Racine; Mr. a nd Mrs.
Floyd T. Chapman and daughter.
Kimberly, Pickerlnglon ; Marine
Capt. and Mrs. Karl Russell and
children, Melissa and Kenneth,
Scotts Depot, W.Va.; Mrs. Aleta
Lynn Burton and daughters, Lisa
Anne a nd Erika Lynn, Orlando,
Fla.; Emerson Jones. Middleport;
Mr . and Mrs. Lee Davidson, Anne,
John and Charles, London. Eng·
land ; Mr. and Mrs. Frank David·
son, Fairborn; and Lynn Davidson,
Cincinnati.

LARGE- Freda Durham, Middleport, holds a two and three quarter
pound potato which was among her crop this year. Gardeners report that
'82 has been a great potato year not only In size but In quantity.

"4f
POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ritchie have returned from
Denmark, Maine, where they went
to the funeral o! Mrs. Harry Keller,
a former Meigs County resident.
The RJtchles went to Pataskla
where they were joined by Mrs.
Darrell Chevalier and Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Barber for the trip to
Maine.
POMEROY - Willis •(Pete)
Bearhs of Suffolk, V,a ., recently visited his sister, Mrs. Robert Rlt·
chle, Pomeroy.

Clarification

3 PC. Bedroom Suite

$59995

Reg. ·

$810.00

SAVE
$210

Nighlstand Must Bo

$}}995

USED FURNITURE
1-Rocker Recliner, like new
1-Bedroom Suite ,
1-Swlvel Patch Rocker

The full name of the son born to
Patrick and Joyce Medley on Aug. 12
at St. Joseph Hospital is Patrick
David Lowell, not just Patrick David
as was listed In a recent birth announcement.

'

•

~~i~~hl With

�,.
Page-6-The Doily Sentinel

Monday, August 30,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Hill and
Duncan wed
in Clifton ·

County and area service notes
Richard A. Gibbs, son of Russell
W. and Opal J . Boyce of Rt. 2, Pt .
Pleasant, W. Va ., receivd practical
work in miliary leadership at the Army ROTC advanced camp at Fort
Riley, Kan.
The six-week training includes in·struction in first aid , communications, markmanship, orienteering, weapons systelllll, defensive
and offensive ta cti cs, reconnaissance techniques and other
areas.
Most cadets fulfill their advanced
camp requirement during the summer between their junior and senio r
· ye11rs in college. The su ccessful
completion of the advanced camp
and graduation from their respective college or university will result
in the student's being commissioned
a second lieutenant in the active Army or the U.S. Anny Reserve or
National Guard.
Gibbs is a student at Marshall
University , Huntington, W. Va .
Jeffrey T. Fowler, son of Okey D.
and Ramona J .R. Fowler of Rt. 11
West Columbia, W. Va., received
practical work in military leadership at the Army ROTC advanced
camp at Fort Riley, Kan.
The six-week training instruction
in first aid, communicatinos, markmanship, orienteering, weapons
systems, defensive and offensive
tactics, reconnaissance techniques
and other areas.

Most cadets fulfill their advance
camp requirement during the summer between their junior and senior
years in college. The successful
completion of the advanced camp
and graduation from their respecive
college or university will n ·Jult in
the student's being commissioned a
second lieutenant in the active Army
or the U.S. Army Reserve or
National Guard .
Fowler is a student at Marshall
University, Huntington, W. Va.
Troy 0 . Brooks, a local Ches hire
resident , has returned home from
training at Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Pa rri s Island , South
Carolma.
Son of Elbert B. Brooks who Jives
at Rt. 1. Cheshire, calls Meigs Higl1
School his alma mater.
Pvt. Brooks will report to Camp
Lejeune, N.C. for special training at
infantry fi eld upon completion of
boot leave.

Jack M. Braley, son of Mrs. Mary
K. Braley of 1561'.! Pearl St., Mid·
dleport, has enlisted in the U.S. Air
Force, according to S..llgt. Michael
Stormer, Air Force recruiter in
Athens.
Upon graduation from the Air Force's six-week basic military training
course at Lackland AFB, Texas, he
will receive training in the security
specialty.

He is a 1982 graduate of Meigs
High School and will earn credits
towards an associate degree through
the Community College of the Air
Force while attending basic and
other Air Force teclmical training
schools.

__

"--·

.......
' ........... . . . . ..,.
I ~-• A&lt;l\

-.

~

."'""''"" "'""'

Leslie Roberts, Letart Falls, Gene Wolfe, Hebron; Sid and Marge Carand Linda Jewell and Barbie and penter, Salemville; Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby, Letart, W. Va. ; Lewis and David Carpenter and Michelle, East
Ruth Ours, Racine; Virgil Ours and Liverpool.
Donald and Jean Carpenter and
Teresa , New Philadelphia; William
and Virginia Huffman and Louis and Chad, Hoobstown, Pa.; Milo and
Milly Jalch1ck, Salem ; Thomas and Gladys Richardson, Port Huron,
Isabel Edwards, Kimberly and Mich.; Mr. and Mrs. Eric RicharShawn, Kettering; Harry and Vera dson, Bruce and Michele, Utica,
Hayman, Pomeroy; Waid and Don- Mich.; Doris Rogers, Columbus;
na Hayman, Racine; Beryl and Dan and Donna Sayre, Danny, Dina
Ruby Wolfe, Racine; Rhonda Wolfe and Brian, Jackson; Dan and Faith
and Kindra and Jennifer; Gary and Hayman and Tamara, Syracuse;
Vicky Dean, Brandy, Linka and Cindy Smith, Chris and Kelly
Jason Brill; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Racine, and April Hayman, Racine.

~· ··

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Public Notice
NOTICE 0~
PUBLIC SALE
The following described

refrigerator

reject any and all bids.
Prior t,o the date of sale,

mediate openings' for mature, professional salesoriented women and men that need to earn

made to inspect this mer-

Saro coventry, telephone sales helpful. For personollnterview call John c. Hall TOLL FREE at 1100·71 ·St03 or CALL COLLECT 1-l13-323·SS28 or
323-s: . . •.~.nday tnrougn Thursday, between 9:00
a.m. · 4: JO p.m. ONLY!
E.O.E.M/F·

18)30, He
Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

The following descr ibed
items wi II be offered tor
public sale on the premised

Reel E1tete - Ganerel

of BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, NA, Court &amp;
Second Streets. Pomeroy.
Ohio, on the 7th day of Sep·
!ember, 1982, at 10 :00 A.M.
Eastern Standard Time.
Terms of sale : Cash .
One lady's diamond
engagement ring, and
double guard diamo~d
ring . Items may be sold '"
units or parcels and the
seller reserves the right to
reject any and all bids.

PUBLIC NOTIC

Calendar

·,

\

MONDAY
POMEROY- Eastern Athletic
Booster will meet Monday at the
high school at 8 p.m. to discuss
the athletic building and food concession for the first football

gwne.

R.JESDAY
RUTLAND Civic Center will
hold skating Tuesday from 7:30 to
10:30 p.m. and Thursday from
7:30 to 10:30 p.m. Children, $1;
adults, $2. Take your own skates.

WEDNESDAY
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
Trustees will meet Wednesday at
the township garage at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPOI\T
The
aultiliary ~ Middleport F~
. Department will meet Wednesday at 7:3(! p.m. at the fire
station.

Printed Pattern 4981: Misses
Sizes 8. 10, 11, 14, 16. 18. Size
11 (bust 34) takes 111 yards
60-inch fab1ic.
$2.25 for udt pattem. Add 50(
for uc:h )llltem for postar:e
and handline- Send to:
Annt Adams
t "' 1
Pattern Dtpt.
·•

East Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 :
1979 Chevrolet •;, -ton
Pick-up
Terms of sale are cash .
Seller reserves the right
to bid and the right to

500

(8) 29 . 30. 31 , (9)

large lots, four or five bedrooms, basement, could
be a real nice home for S20,.500.

Call 843-3322
7·16-2 mo. pd .

Jean-Trussell. .. .. .. .. . .. ... . ...
Dottie S. Turner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

24l West 17 SL, New Yort, NY
10011. Print NAME, AllOtiESS.
ZIP, SJZ[, 111( STYU NUMBU.
Be smart. be successful, sew a
new wardrobe with our NEW

Office '. .

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

FALL-WINTER PATIERNCATALOG.

Misc. Merchandice'

CARPET SALE

. ... 992·22S9

rn

Jumbo Bob White
QUAIL

I

LaBONTE'S
QUAIL FARM
Quail
of
all ages
available up to 9 weeks,
in any quantity.
Mature Quail Available
Ready to Turn Out

NOW $J1H5 SQ. YD. WITH
.
L PAD,INSTAU.£0
AVA.ILABLE IN GEM BLUE, AMBER, RUST AND
WOODLAND BROWN.

Cleii 'LaBonte
36061 Bosnan Rd.
Long Bottom, Oh. 4S631
614-98S-434S
•
7-28-1.mo.

$1495 '

NOW

SJrs

ILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Nylon

S Yur Presidential Wear Warranty •.

NOW'1695
sa. v~. 1NSTALLEO
'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•

'
'

For all your wirll)g
needs; furnaces
repair service and
Installation.
Resldentlil
&amp; Commercial
Call

·.II

3 family yard sale . 11h mil .

S. Portland Park on 124.
Mon., Tues .• Wed. Em er ·
son Johnson .

lNG
Dozer &amp; Backhoe service,
water, sewm, ponds,
loundalions, reclamations.

NEW LISTING brick

veneer

••

niture, small appliances,
dishes, clothing , drapes,
curtains, bedding , linens.
Silverstone pans, toys,
knives. tools, lamps. misc .

Monday, Aug . 30, 9 a.m. to
2 p.m. 510 29th St. Point
I Pleasant.

0 II

•

loO

home .

with lots of shrubbery . 3

good sized bedrooms.
air

and heat. 2 car garage. 2
patios, equipped kitchen
and large family room
with
woodburning
fireplace . Only 30 years

Lot

SWEEPER

I

or . o

and

120 feel deep tust out of
Middleport . Water. gas

Pittsburgh No.8 A
Mine Run (Strip)

and electr ic ava ilable

for only $3,800.
NEW LISTING -

Delivered Price:

POME ROY-$31.00 Ton
MIDDLEPORT
AND RACINE- $32.00
Ton

Call tor free siding
estimates, 949·2801 or l
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls
3-I l-Ife

I

I

I

66

acres of minerals not
leased. Pasture, some
timber, storage bu i lding
and fenced on blacktop
road . Good · investment

Meigs Co.-531.00 Ton

for $45,000.
NEW LIKE

1Plus Delivery)

4 Ton Minimum

2

bedroom frame home in
the country on hard
road . Front and back
porches .
basement.
garage and 2 acres ·of
nice laying land for

C.O.D.
PH. 992-2280 or
992-2618

On Rl.

124, a 3 bedroom ranch
with carpeting , range,
dbl . sink, nat. gas F .A .
furnace and large level

Syracuse -Racine
RESIDENTS
New Sewer Hookups
Being Scheduled

lot for only $27,000.
STORAGE BUILDINGS

-

Good

for

garage,

workshop , etc . One has

"FREE ESTIMATES"
Expert • Insured
Workmen
BOBCAMPBEU
PH. 949-2460
9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Mon. thru Sat.

·floor . Plenty ot parking.
$23.000.
s ACRES in !he country.
Some

level ,

some

woods. dug well and
utilities available.

CAR WASH - All equipment, 2 rooms and land
for only $15.000.
SOME ARE SELLING,
TRY US.

Housing
Headquartets

DAN'S
AUTO TRIM
11

302 Methanic -St.
Pomeroy, OH.
PH. 99HS06

Help wanted

eSEAT COVERS
eVINYL TOPS
eCONVERTIBLE TOPS
eCAR .PETS
• A complete Line of
Automobile Upholstery
8·4-1 mo. pd .

RADIOLOGICAL
TECHNICIAN
lmmedlllt Openina lor
Radiolorical Technician.
Full or Part Time.
Send resume to:

LAFF-A-DAY

.PULLINS
EXCAVATING

GCHKI frlnte benellh. Equl Op·

portuntty Employtr.

_:_DOzers

-Backhoes
-Dump trucks
·-Lo-Boy
-Trencher

-water
•
-Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
Large or Small Jobs
PH. 992-2471
8-1·tmo.

Veterans Memorial
Hospital
115 East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, OH .
Pn. 614-992-2104

only thillll yl!u make
my mother used to make Is
argument."

·

·

Salary negotibl e. Available

immediatelY . conla ct Mr .
James Holley, Vi ce Chair ·

man. Gallia Counly Board

P 0 . Box 14, Cheshire, Oh

45620. Appli cants should in·
elud e work
history ,
philosophi c al
r esume .
statem ent , trans cript and
copies of certification .

Call

The Birds are Coming,
The Birds are Coming .
Keep watching this paper
for opening date .

come in and Register for
Squirrel Tail Contest .

Spring Valley Trading Co .
Spring Valley Plaza, 4468025.

Rick

AVON . Need ex tra m oney?
Set your own hours..Sell
Avon . (Mu sTbe 18 or overJ .

Call

now

614 ·698 -7111

collec 1.
Earn $195. 75 wee kly , wh ile
working in your home . Pan
time or full tim e, no ex ·
perienc e necessar y. Com ·
plete de tai ls and ap·
plication sent on reques t .

Auction every Fri. night at
the HarHord Commun ity
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
used merchandise always
wel c ome .
Richard
Reynolds Auctioneer 275-

3069.
9
Wanted To Buy
Call Balloons &amp; Co .. 446 · WANTED TO BUY Old fur·
niture and Antiques of all
k inds, call Kenneth Swain,

Lessons .

John

294 .

be over 18. Call alter 9 p.m.
or

before

4.

Middleport

area . 614·992-6233.
Sales Counter man for
Home Center. Must have
experience in hardware
and building materials. Ap·
ply in person at Valley
Lumber and Supply in Mid·

al 797·4168 . Monday or

wv 2S106.

Distributors Needed : Aloe
Vera
Forever Living

JOBS Overseas . Big money
fast . Job offers guaranteed

1 716·842-6000. Ext. 2843

12 -

Situations Wanted

Charolias Hil ls Lake. house
Trimmed in pink by lake.

S and E Gift Shop. All
prices cut through Sept .

446-0069

furn iture

pliances.

&amp; ap -

S.o mething

for

everyone. 9:30 a.m.-4:30
p.m .

Mon .,

Wed.,

Fri.

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars .
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson

WHITE RO , go 1 mile to

Will do babys itting in my
home .
R e f e renc es
ava il abl e. Middleport area .

Call992-6349.
wou ld l ike to do house
cleilning . Will do baby sit·
ting in my home. Have
good refer ences . 614·992·

Syracuse, Oh .

Wanted to Buy : Good used
PERMANENT
canning jars, all sizes. Call
HAIR REMOVAL
655.\.
PrOfessional Electrolysis 614-388·9354.
Center. A.M.A. approved,
Doctor referals, by ap· Wanted Hunting Bird dog.
pointment only. 304-675- Puppy preferred, but will
consider
full
grown l3
6234.
REDUCE safe &amp; fast with
GoBese Table!S &amp; E·Vap

"water pi lis", Fruth Phar·

macy :
Giveaway

ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and

does not offer or attempt to
offer any other thing for
sale may place an ad in this

column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser .

Registered
or
non
registered, muM be good

with children. Call 446·7541

Insurance
·~---'-"-~==-~

Professional
Services

C&amp;L Bookkeeping
Bookkeep,ng &amp; tax service
446·3862

PIANO RUNING ·&amp;
REPAIR Call Bill Ward for
Ward ' s

Keyboard, 446·4372 .

Real Estate
ll

Homes tor Sale

In ground concrete pool on

2 acre lot. Also has a 3 bdr.
air conditioned house w ith

ful l basement,

2 WB

fireplaces, new carpet.
Would c on s ider lower
valued property in trade or
will finance with low down ·
payment and 10% interest.
Located 123 Garfield Ave.

MOOERN

3

bed room

house . Patr iot Star Rt.,
Gr ee n
Sc hool .
Full
basement. Call 4..46·3040 .
·~ 7 acres with house near·

Vinton tor sale or trade .

MAKE US AN OFFER .
Call446·861 5
Will trade my equity in a 4
unit apt . bldg .. for a trailer
&amp; lot or a house &amp; lot .
Balance can be paid by
land contr ac t. Call for

delaiIs 44.1·3937.
Thr ee bedroo m home, ap·
pr ox . 3 acr es in Mer·
cervill e. Call.t-46-7"28 .
Newer 3 bedroom home, 2
acres, city schools, patio,
woodburner , basement ,

nice porch. Call446·2663 .

House 13.0 acreage &amp;. 76
Massie Ferguson 230 ahd

'Gallipolis .

216 734 -3734

Evenings .
House and 10 acres olland .
Sale or rent
N ewley
remodeled . 2 rooms and

down. New gas furnace and
hot water heater .

Located Mulberry Hgts.,
Pomeroy . 614·992·2508 or

call collect, Columbus, 444·

8601.
3 bed . room bri ck home,
garage, full basement .
Fenced in back yard in
Tuppers Plains. 614-667·

3288

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad·
dition. 3 bedrooms, family
room w i th firepalce, cen·
tral air, basement, phone

304-675· 1542.
Lovely
remodeled
J
bedroom home. basement.
fenced backyard, carpeted,
sided, storm windows. near

schools. 304-675 4338.

SALE or rent , 4 room
house, bath, utility room .

$175.00 month, Henderson.
Deposit, 304-675-43S9.
4 room house, large lot.
minor repairs needed .

$18.0000. Call after 3 p.m.
SANDY AND BEAVER In· 304-675·7689.

surance Co. has offered
servi ces for fire insurance
coverage in Gallla County
BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old for almost a century.
furn;ture, Qold , silver Farm. home and personal
dollars, wood ice boxes. property coverages are
stone ;ars, antiques, etc ., available · to meet inComplete
households . dividual needs. Contact
Write: M.D . Miller, Rt 4, Foster Lewis. agent. Phone
if no answer keep trying .

Pomeroy. Oh . Or 992· 7760.

23

gas

Co .. Spring Valley Plaza.
44.\·8025 or 446 8026.

used

collectables,

Morlgage, 77 E. State 51 ..
Athens. Oh. 614·592·3051.

Produ cts . 304·675·5.\81 after bath up, 4 rooms and bath

9ther times by ap ·
pointment. Buy·Sell·Trade.
527 Fiftn St., Ivan Powell
Res., Ra cine, Oh. 61H49·
2485.

Antiques ,

Money to Loan_

R E F I NAN CE or purch ase
your home . 30 year fi &gt;&lt;ed
rate . wva . &amp; Ohio. Leader

J
Bedrm ..
'h
a c re ,
basement, city schools,
county water . 10 min. to

tenders &amp; clerks Wdnted.
Write qual if ication &amp; phone
number to : Job Placement,
P .0 . Bo)l 102, Henderson,

Will take care of elderly
person in our home on
farm , good
country
cooking. Go ouf 160, turn on
second road on right ·O.J .

Opening -Capco .

22

WAITRESS. ma ids. bar·

Buying
Gold,
Silver ,
Platinum , old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
quotes available . Also
coins &amp;. coin supplies tor
sale. Spring Valley Trad ing

Finally

304 S25 30S5 or 523 7277 .

equipment. Call 614-367·
0194.

446-3159 or 256· 1967 in the
evenings .

reasonabl e down payment
for · ag i ng downtown
r e staurant ·ni ce
at ·
mosph er e, good lease
agreement, super loc ati on
w ith par ki ng unlimited
potential. need to sell immediately as owner has
other bu siness inter es ts.
nice di scount tor cash
buyer, tor information call

Tuesday . 9-10 a .m . for in·
terview .

4 p. m .

Get Well , Anniversar ies.
sweet Hearts or Parties .

Teaford. Chester, Ohio.

Box

Pearson,

Balloons for Birthdays &amp;

.013.

Office

benefits .
Excellent
training . Cal l Cliff Myers

773-5785. 773-9185.

OWNER FINANCING with

Call &gt;146·154.1.

D irec t Sales . Athens and

Estates, anfiques. farm ,
household. Licensed Ohio·
WV . Buying antiques. 304·

Business

-~ portunity

-~-

Me igs Co. High pay and
Ex ·

21

--------~-

Att ention R N' S· Pomeroy
H.C.C. now has opening for
full and part time RN for 3
to 11 and 11 to 7 shifts .
Upgr aded salary and shift
diff erent ia l. Conta ct Nancy
VanMet er dir ector of Nur·

&amp; Auction

perienced AUCTIONEER .

in the nation" . Call304·675· ..
1293.

appointment ,

dleport, Oh .

Public Sale

monthly

SSO.OOO

throlJgh this " newest and '
fastest growing company ·

Position Av ail abl e C.L .T .
and Medica l Tec hn . Apply
in person , M edi cal Plaza,
203
Ja c kson
Pike,
Ga llipolis, Oh ..

Babysitter in my home.
References required . Must

8

and

for all types of businesses .

YARD sale, first lane on
left past Gallipolis Ferry
Post
Office .
Mens.
womens ,
chitdrens
clothing, mosc. Monday
Aug 30· ?. from 9·?

Lincoln Ave.

want to earn between S500 ,

Carol Neal

Coolville, Oh .

sewing

Buslneu
Opportunity
LOOKING for people who

Wanted some one to stay
with elderly lady , 6 nights a
week . Ca 11446· 3548 .

School.

Rt. 2, Apple Grove.

~ '

Georges Creek Rd.
446-0294 ..

4

HELP WANTED

Retardation and Develop·
ment
Disabilit i es .
Qualification : Meet cer·
tification standards for
Superintendent.
Ohio
Department of Mental
Retardation and Develop·
mental
Disabilities .
(Master degree essential) .
Responsibilit i es :
Ad ·
minster
day
To
day
operation of
services

Post

Five family yard sale Sept.
3 and 4. Nibert 's Grocery ,

machine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Golf

County Board of Menial

I
I Yard sale Fri. 27th, 5 to 9;
28th. 9 to 9; Gallipolis Please send a SA SE toJ .T.
I Sat.
Ferry across from Beale

Yard sale Tuesday at 230S

Nice

2lf2 baths, central

I

Gallia

~-----

3,_~A~n~n~o~u~n~
ce~m~en~t~
s __

Large landscaped yard

We Specialize In
1 Racine &amp; Syracuse

0

AVAILABLE

810 S. Second. Middleport . sing . 614-992·6606 .
July 30 thru Sept . 4. Fur

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

_,,,

elec . water and concrete

"Beautiful, custom .
Built Garages"

Also Transmission
Plt. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-ttc

. . . 949·2660
. .. 992 -5692

REM.TOR

S4

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
, SIDING

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

REALTORS!
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .. GRI ....... . ...... 992-6191

R" 'It"
6 Rolls ol sot Nylon
'17"

Vinyl &amp;Aluminum
CGmplete gutter work,
complete remodeling, roofing of all types. Worked in
home area 20 years.
Free estimales

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OHI

nice front porch. 532,000 .

Yard Sa le, 641 Filth Ave ..
Friday , Sept. 3, 12-3:30.

WMTAI£

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E. 2nd ~t .
PhOne
1-(614) -992-3325

Phone 949-2293
8·30-1 mo.

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

seven rooms. equipped kitchen, full basement, and

6 Rolls of Anso IV Extra

ML

Church.

Real Eltate - General

TEAFOR
-

Rd. Follow

signs. Proceeds go to
Westerman
M ethod ist

~----------------------·

$45,000 .
SYRACUSE -

RIVER VIEW - A two story frame home with

23.
24. - - - - - - 25. - - - - - 26. - - - - - 27. -~~~~28. -~~~~29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35. - - - - - - - -

Mail This Coupon with Remittance
The Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Sewer Hookups

8-15-1 mo.

above and on a good street in Middleport. $29.900.

OLDER HOME - Needs some repair but has two

INSTAIUD

REPAIR .
Call Bill Ward
Word's Keyt»wrd
444-4372
Visa
Masterc. s-9-*

O.J. White

160 on blacktop road and

l'h story frame home with
three bedrooms, family room, garage with storage

1, 2. 5tc

-~-~~-

16.

8-15·1mo

Call Barbara
Lawrence
992-3282

LONG BOTTOM - Approx imately 71

reject any and all bids.

CARPn

15.

ASSUMABLE LOAN -

The Dailv Sentioel

Over 100 easy styles' Plus free
coupon for any $2.15 pattern.
Cataloe.Jl50
AU CRAFT BOOKS .. $2.00 udt
ll~Rlpple C!othll
117-Easy Art of NIICitpoint
123-Stitch 'n' Petdl Quilts
129-Quick 'n' £asy Transftn
Books and Catalog - add 501
each for postage and handling.
Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set !he
public hearing Case No. 8283-GA- &gt;C R to review the
gas cost recovery rates of
Columbia Gas of Ohio, the
operation of its Purchased
Gas AdJustment ' Clause
and related matters. This
hearing Is schtlluled to
begin at 10:00 a.!l'l. on
Tueseay, September 21,
1982; at the offices of the
Commission, 375 South
High Street, Columbus,
Ohio. 43215.
·
.
All . Jnterested persons
will be given an QP·
portunity to be heard. Further lnforamtlon may be
obtained by contacting he
Commlssl.on. ,
· THE
· PUBLIC
UTILITIES COMMISSION
OF 'OHIO
BY: Davld.M. Polk,
Secretary
!8) 30, ltc

14.

8-1-1 mo.

~

Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
or 992-2282

Ladies Jauercise

wooded acres w/newly remodeled three bedroom
home. new vinyl siding, insulated, new two car
garge. Asking $55,000 or owner will sell house,
garage and small acreage seperate.

place on the premises of
Smith Nelson Motors, Inc .,

12 . - -- -13.

~~TUNING
.,
&amp;

Garages
• Roofing Work
• Aluminum &amp; Vinyl
Sidings
15 Years Experience

~:7 AGESJ&amp;UP

off bypass, two minutes to Pomeroy. owner asking
$62.000.
FARM -

11 .

PIANO

eCustom Pole Bldgs. &amp;

BARBARA'S SCHOOL
OF DANCE

wood burner, two car garage with attic storage, just

by BANK ONE OF
POMEROY, N.A. to the
highest bidder on Saturday, September 4th. 1982,
at 10 :00 A.M. Sale will take

Open Mon.·fti.
1:00 p.m.·1:30 a.m.
Sal. &amp;Sun. 4:00 p.m.·2:30 a.m.

• -E lectric work

FAU ~NROLLMENT

style with upper desk off main bedroom. Large
foyer wit~ sunken planters, lots of closet space,

The following vehicle will
be offered for public sale

10. - - - - - -

SIGN UP NOW fOR

for hunting and ,firewood and a new three bedroom
home with unusual design then here it is. Rustic

Public Notice

tiny out bttf &amp; wine awlil1ble.

old. Wanl$125.000.
NEW LISTING -

NEW LISTING- HERE IT IS! If you have been
looking for approximately 20 acres of elbow room

(8) 29, 30, 31. (9) 1. 2. 5tc

9. _ _ _ __

NIJhlor tho Band .

New
- eKtensive remodeling

8·13-1 mo. Pd.

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

8 . ~----

Wed.-S.t.-Mmhlll Tenn1nt
O.ink &amp; Drown Each

Aug. 31st to Sept Slh. 9 lo
SPM. First Road right on

18.
19. - -- - - - 10. - - - -- 21. - - - - - - 22. - - - - - - -

5 -~~~~6. -~~~~7. -~~~~-

All Drinb 'h Price
11US MONTH'S 8ANO

HI~ N t iiGC~

Pomeroy, Oh .
Ph. 992·2174
2·26 tfc

Oewayne Williams
&amp; Scottie Smith
All makes and models
Antenna Installation
House calls and shop
service available.

V inton ~ull Gospel Chur ch
Rummage Sal e Sept. 1·2·3.
Clothes , furniture, odd s
and ends .

S pec•t~l! s t

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Ph . 985-4269 or 985-4382

_~~~~

4. -~~~~-

PHONE 992-9913

35 Yrs. f ll pen encr

S&amp;WTV
AND
APPLIANCE SERVICE
Chester, Ohio

3.

Wod.-OraH NiJM

S F. R V I( f

8 20 -llc

-~~~~-

2.

All Drinks Reduced f01 Women

from
th e
\ m.lll ec;. t
H e.1t cr Co r e t o th e
l.Hqes t J;t.;~di01tor

N.A l

I.

All Dr1ft Betr 1/r Price

COMPLF TF
RADIATOR

Yard Sale

446·4676.

17. - - - - - - -

POSITION

Superintendent.

of M ental Retardati on and
Development Disabi lities,

These cash rates

) For Ren.t

work , gas al lowance. Apply
in person only &lt;no phone
calls) to Mrs. Carter room

provided by tne Board.

Bundy Cl ar inet, S150. Ca ll

Fri. &amp;Sal. I P.M .• JO P.M .

Racine. Oh .
Ph. 614 ·843-2591
6· 15-lfc

P,1 d1.ltnr

7

PRESENTS
Tues.-I.Jdies Nijht

Rt. 3, Box 54

I

value. 985·3839.

Billfold · lost at Hecks Aug .
25th . Eugene Donigan .
Summersvill e, S.C.
·

Between Cheshire &amp;
Middleport, Ohio

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

!

B~acon

5829.

CANDLELIGHT INN

1nsutated Dog Houses

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

training with motel expenses, car allOwance a!'d
corp. benefits. experience in teachng, costnettc,
jewelry-retail sales such as: Avon. Tupperware,

benNeen the hours of 9:00
a .m. and 5:00p.m.
-~Public

Custom kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
add·ons, new homes,
plumbing, eleclric, siding.

Sll,OOO.OO and up per year. $174.80 per week while in

chandise by calling 992 -2171

long-waisted lme is newest of the
new! Sew 1t now.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

Business

Opportunity

the

named Pee· We e, lost early
Thursday morning 22nd St.
Jer ico Rd . area. 304·67.5·

&gt;Announcemen t

Sires from 4 tot. and all
wood buildings 24x36.

992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomeroy, Onio
9-30-lfc

Addren---------------Phone--------------

Include discount

Utility Buildings

V.C. YOUNG Ill

LOST -- AI

Station in Pomeroy, Oh .
Tan Ladies purse with
black wallet belong ing to a
man ins ide. Reward If
found or any of the con·
tents . No questions asked .
Contents are of sent imental

Nam•----------

Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1·3-lfc

Sizes start from 30x24"

- Piumbinf and
electricl wen
If roo Eslimalnl

Z. Nut App11rantt/HIGHLY MOTIVATED
3. Aprts1in with outr.oin&amp; personality
4. Over 251or maturt) 'SELJ STARTER

be

ALL STEEL
BUILDINGS

-tontrtte wM

mal e in the Spring Valley

!Wonted
l For Sale

""

Ohio.
Terms of Sale : Cash
Seller reserves the right

may

7· 14 tic

'Addons and rtmodelina
-Roofin11nd auttlf work

Llama

Farm Equipment

FREE ESTIMATES
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

CARPENTER
SERVICE

""
""

5. Hip SciMtol craduate minimum wilh working
e1pe1ience or colltl' decree
·
6. can be out of town 5 ni&amp;hts per week
OLAN MILLS PORTRAIT STUDIOS has im·

arrangements

Gutt~r s

Golden

Ladies needed for plellsant
good paying temp. office
like work . No experience
necessary . Also need ladles

are. Call Animal Shelter. 18, Econo· Travel Motel. 99:30AM , Tues. Aug . 31sl. .
614-245·5880.

U.S. Rt. lO East
Guysville. Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holl•nd, Busn Hog

Rrp.1i"r
• f'i'linting

YOUNG'S

If you want an lllfporlunity that comes rarely in a pei'SGII's
lifetime then JOU owe it to yoursell to investieate.
I. If JOIIIrl abGve neraeetCAREER MINDED

E. Main Street , Pomeroy,

ease and mot1on to the sk1rt. ThiS

--

SALES &amp;SERVICE

8·11 1 mo . pd.

ATIENTION: WOMEN AND MEN

premises of The City Loan
and Savings Company, 125

SLIM A~D SMOOTH TO THE
HIP. then genlle gathers giVe

~ .... ,

H. l. WRITESEL
e Oownspolrts

1-767-3361

~·­
n•
--•

·-

BOGGS

e New or

CALL TODAY

FOUNO

21
Help Wanted

11

with car for tight delivery

Lost and Found

6

7 week old Beag le puppy

ROOFING
•

For Free estimate

,~-

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

P.ARTS and SERVIC

Let us clean your
carpet or furniture .
• No Soaking '
• No Scrubbing
• No Shrinkage
Duraclean gets your
carpet · deep
down
thoroughly clean .
Home or Business

1

Ser. No. 90AG9528
Sale of the security listed
above will be held on the

SIZES 8-18

IIOIIII-111

21

bidder on the 13th day of
September. 1982. at 10

4982

Oolo000

\&lt;ptO!! - f t T,..N ... o -

" U-"•'•

~

item will be offered for
public sale to the highest

./j

U~ I OI!-11

. ... .. Q_,.

TOM HOSKINS

Pn. 949-2160 or 949-2322
4·20-lfc

• Dryers • Freezers

by ROBERTS

uo-•,...co.-

·~­
~·­

ors

Puppies. part Beegle. 304·
675·5702.

results. Money not refundable .

e20 Yrs. experience

DURA CLEAN

111-Pt.PIN-

M1-L..., f o ...

• Remodeling

The Daily

5 wh ite kittens. 61H492732 .

Write your own ad and order by mall with this
coupon. Cancel your .ad by phone when you get

• Free estimates

• Ranges • Refrigerat·

J.29·ttc

,

"""(_,,.
,_.,

llfl- ~

ll

~

o'clock a .m.
Frigidaire

,,.._,_

,,,_,....,._........
~'"""'"'"
... ,.,
.' ~ ~·' '""
.............
,..,

,,, .. ..,r..,,_,,

.,. ~

to bid and the right to

TROPHY WINNER
Tbe American Legion received a certificate in recognition of contributloWi tG
Junior AllXIllary of Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, the Eluwa School for the Deaf and Blind In Namibia,
was awarded the Dorothy McCullough Americanism Southwest Africa. Laura Smith's book of prayers
trophy, displayed here, at the 62nd aon~al department received a certificate and pin at the convention. Ofconvention of the auxlUary held In Cmcinoatl. Mrs. fleers pictured with the trophey are Lorette Tiemeyer,
Kate Welsh and Mrs. Ellen Jane Rought were there to left seated, president; Mrs. Davis, junior activities
receive the awards. A certificate for outstanding con- chairman lor the past 16 years ; and back left to right,
tribution tG the Americanism program was awarded to . Robin Campbell, Laney Hankie, and Kim Patterson,
Mrs. Veda Davis, seated right. The juniors also junior unit officers.

-- ~ ..,...

~c OO. I .O.,• o ­

Long-Waisted Une

-

••-c- ..
••••(-111

IIAuiOII-"

· ·~·" ·

• Rooting ot all types
eSidlng

• Disn·

washers

PH. 992-7201

..... ....
-·-·-·-·- -·11)--11·-·..c,, ....,c_

,. Auto Pt&lt; h I "' ' ' ' ""'"'

.. . . _ ..... 4 ..

• wasners

licen~d &amp; Bonded

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for .
Classlfleds and
Savell I

And Home Ma lntenance

All Makes

lines

• dump truck
• limestone

___ (O _JII _

"''~'""'

1t)&lt;nou
)\o!••'•"""'"'""'
""
rtnto
~

,,IIMaoolf
.._.. """"''""'•"
,...

lJ . ...... . ... \ ...

&lt;I Ho&lt;oWont O&lt;I

"~~

August 31, 1982
Your greatest opportunities this coming year will come from things
in which you are already involved. Instead of looking for greener
pastures make the most of where you are.
VIRGo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) In financial and career matters today
you'll be alert for small benefits, but you could Jet the larger opportunities slip past you. Think "big" as well.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You're good at managing situations for
·others today, but you may not be _as wise in handling your own resources
·and other personalinterests.
'
'
:
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your common sense will direct you as to
how to handle tricky situations today. However, to keep up appearances
you may ignore your insignts and do otherwise.
.
.
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) If you have a venture m which you
are trying to Interest others today, it'~ _best to underplay it rather than to
·exaggerate its potential. .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Be optimistic and posltivet~y, but
' also be realistic regarding your expectations. Your ~ibilities look
good However they might be as rewarding as you envisiOn.
AQUARruS (Jail. 20-Feb. 19) Luck and cMnce should not be used as
aubstitutes for common sense and logic today. Fate could be fickle, but
your r~nlng won't let you down.
PISCES (Feb. 20-Matcb 211) Do not make change for the sake of
change today lf tl)lngs are running smoothly. Your twists and turns could
" lead you to a dead end instead of to an open road.
. ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) 'Be careful in your involvements with
others today. You could be drawn into something in a small way and then
..suddenly discOver It's quite complex.
.

&amp; g~s

...... \410

.

a

• excavating
• sepfic · system~
• A water, sewer

-.....................
........... ...

~- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - --~---. 4,__ _,G_,iv'-'e_,a_,w"'a_._y_ __

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

• backhoe

(,_

I ) . . ... . . . . 0

FOR F•UTURE US E"

CONTRACTING

== --=--=

II( I 111 1 llodoo(&lt;&gt;ull"'f"N
l ) ht o_,

11 .................... . .. . .

• (; . . . . d ,

Hayman clan gathers for reunion

Astrograph

J&amp;F

Tech. Sgt. William D. Clark, son of
Carmin E. Clark of Pomeroy, and
Evelyn Clark at 106 Pleasant Ridge,
Pomeroy, has participated in an Air
Force Strategic Air Conunand
(SAC ) exercise called Global Shield
82.
Clark , a missile system analysis
technician with the 91st Strategic
Miss1le Wing at Minot Air Force
Base, N.D., joined others from all
SAC units in the United States and
selected Air Force Reserve and Air
National Guard units to take part in
command post and field training
Mr. and Mrs. Duncan
exercises. Global Shield 82 was the
fourth such exercise held by the . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - command in as many years. It as
designed to enhance readiness and
the ability of the conunand to carry
The Daily Sentinel
PHilliE 992-2156
out orders which support U.S.
national policy, should deterrence
Or Wro te O.olr t.eoo...,... ca.ud..,. O..t.
fail.
11 1 c-rt u , P-""Y · ON&lt;t411M
Components of the U.S. Navy and
Marine Corps, as well as elements of
the Canadian forces, also participated in the exercise.
-.-- - Clu•i.fied 1M1fM COW!t' the
His wife, Diana, Is the daughter of
,, ..
llht•nn• tl- ' ""' ' '
'c...... , ......... _d
"·~·
l( • ••oll,... ..... . ,... ........ . ,., • •
Donald D. and Julia B. Rapp of 11950
...
~111
'
""
"
'
00~.,.
followi"( telephOAfl u-rlutlllf~ ·
,..-... ...........
,,. _...... .....
.,
...
.
...
.......... . ...
Case Road, Bellevue, Mich.
,"
....................
,., ,.......
.ft . . . . .... ~.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business senrices

The Aug. 20 wedding of Regina
Hill, Clifton, W. Va., and Cecil R.
(Bud) Dunean,Jr. of New Haven, W.
Va ., is being announced.
The bride is the daughter of Julia
Darst, Clifton, and Homer S. Hill,
Sr., New Haven. · The groom is the
son of &lt;(ceil R. Duncan, Sr., New
Haven, apd Donna Jean Guinther,
Syracuse.
·
The couple were married at 10:30
a.m. in First United Methodist Church in Pembroke, Va., by Rev.
,. Raymond S. Kelly.

• •'&gt;.b•.........
·· .. ..

The annual reunion of the late
George and Mae Hayman, of Apple
Giove, was held Aug. 21 at the Portland Park.
The group enjoyed baseball. Waid
Hayman gave the blessing for the
dinner.
Attending were Gerald and Facie
Hayman, and Keith, Racine ; Don
and Donna Hayman, Laurel, Md.;
Lillie Hart, Brice and Beth and Greg
O'Brien, Racine ; Ted Hayman, Edie
Hayman, Pete Perry , Shaun Perry.
Tim, Terry, Kim and Tara Huber ,
Mike and Terry Skipkowski, Colum·bUS.

Monday, August 30,1982

379·2204.

'----------------Gold, silver, sterling,

'tewetry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency. Ed Burkett Bar- •~s-=s~ch~o,_o~ls'-'J~n"'s,_,tr_,u~c,_,ti.,-on"-­
Two black part Border ber Shop, Middleport. 992· Karate the ultimate in self
Collie pups, 3 months old, 3476.
defence all private lessons,
very pretty and make good
women, &amp; children.
pets. Call379·2134.
OLD FURNITURE, beds, Men,
Instruction thru black bell.
iron, brass, or wood. Klt· Also available Karate
1 German Shepher.d 8 chen cubbards of all types . uniforms puching and
Tables, round or square. kicking bags. and protec·
weeks, malt!, 1 female
Cookapoo &amp; 5pupples about Wood ice boKes. Old desks tlve equipment. Jerry
and bookcases. Will buy Lowery &amp; Associates
6 weeks old. Call446·0770.
complete household. Gold, Karate Studio , 143
sliver,
money, pocket Burlington Rd .• Jackson.
Puppies, mother part watches,oldchains,
rings, and
Alaskan Mallmule. Call etc.
Indian Artifacts of all Oh. Call614'286·3074.
256·1932.
types. Also buying baseball
cards. Osby Marlin 992- · '"8!__~w!!:a!!!n!!.!t'!;ed~to,_D=o__
Part Beagle puppies. 675· 6370.
5702. .
Trash collettion &amp; hauling.
Want to b~y a good 318 lir Call 446·4480.
Light colored ElkhotJnd. 1 ' J4tl DOdge molor. Must be .
year old, gentle. Make good in good running condition. ROOFING job-carpentry.
night huntirig dog. 614·992- Call 6U·992·7880 or 992· etc. Reasonable rates, 304·
7650.
882·2374.
7165.

TWO story brick . 6 rooms.
fireplace &amp; basemenT, new
gas furnace . 1211 Main St .

304-675 23_111 .

32 - --Mobiie -HOmes
for Sale

·- --TRI -STATE MOBILE
HOME S. USEOMOBILE
HOMES, CARS. TRUCKS
GALLI POLl S CHECK
OUR PRICE S. CALL 44.1·

7572.

CLEAN USED MOBILE :
HOMES
KES S EL ' S.
QUALI TY MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST , GALLIPOLIS , RT
35. PHONE 446-3868.
1980 Windsor 14x70. new
cond . Deluxe kitchen, large :
living room &amp; bath, 2 ,
bedrm . Hidden uti! . room.·

379-2310.

Kirkwood 12x60 mobile .
home. 2 bdr., new carpet.
Caii61A-367-0327.
1977 Windsor 14x70 all elec· ·
lrlc. Call446·9681 .
'

�Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

They'll Do It Every Time

Mobi le Homes

for Sa te

s1_

Sof a, · chai r,

/NOUS7RI£S--·
t:JES/tJI'/ING
HARP·10-&lt;JPEI/

5PM

as ad ditional bedroom . Ca tl

446 3547 .

pc. dinettes f rom $79., to

12x2 1 ft . add -a -room .
Bayview window infront,
new
ca rpet ,
dry wa ll
baseboa rd heat. Can be
used for a fami l y room or
lar ge bedroom, or div ided

S385 . 7 pc..

12x65 Champion 2 bdr ., new
carpet. ai r cond., reconditioned &amp; cleaned. par -

la rge

Ca ll 446 7065 alter 4PM or
61n45·5324. As k tor St eve.

Sign a year lease a! $450 pe r
month . 304 675-6276.

1971 Rebel 12x60, $3,750 .00.
Phone 446·0692 eve nings.
USE D MOBILE
576 ·27 11 .

HOME .

MOB ILE HOMES MOVED
Licensed &amp; insured . Ca ll
304·576 2711 .

4 room house, Camp Con ley

$140 . month . 304-675 1371 or
304·675·3812 .
Located in Oak Hill. a
r emodeled 2 BR home . Ca ll

682 ·6010.

r e loca tin g . S5500 . 304-576-

clean, Riverview . Call 446

2154.

1602 .

8x25

cxpando . Anten na
&amp; other ex·

system, stereo

tra s. $1 1,500 or bes t offer .

Call Rich 9·6 a t 614·267 ·
4948
TWO

mobi le

hom es

f or

sa le, 304-675 -65 12.
1973 HOLL Y Pari&lt; , 14x68, 2
bedrooms, ce ntra l a ir. a ll
electri c, se t on half acr e,

304-675-3025.
77 12x55 -mobil e home with
bui lt on ra mp and back por·
c h, no furniture . $2000. 304-

675·5492 or 304·675-5763.

------2 bdr . trail er in country .

Ca ll614·256 ·6813

-------2 bdr. mobile home in city,

ref. &amp; dep . req . Ca ll614·256·
1922 .
2 bdr . mobil e home for
r ent. Ca ll446 4292.
12K 60 2 bedr oo m un ·
furni shed mobile home in
Ct1eshire . Water. gas fur ·
nished, hea ted by N. gas,

5200 pe r month . Call 446·
4229.
12K60 2 bed r oo m un ·
furni shed mobile home .
New carpet, ce ntral ai r , on

Rt . 35 . N. gas . Call446·4229 .
33

Eureka : 1 BR turn .• river ·
fro nt lot, 1100 . Ret . &amp;

Farms for Sale

40 ac res, 6 rm . house and
barn, toba cco base on St.
Rt. 218, 7 112 miles f rom

ci ty Call614·245-9222.
207 ac r e f arm in M e igs
County for sa le. La nd contr act avai l able $16,000
dow n ,
12%
int e re s t.
mineral rites inc luded, no

hou se . Call614·388·9346.
For sale Farm, 207 ac res
on Park er Run Rd . Land
con tr act avai lable . $16,000.

down , 12 percent interest.
Miner al

rights

inc.

No

house. Ca ll 388 ·9346.
142 acre farm nea r Rio
Grande , house, buildings,
m ineral rig hts, with or
wi tho ut l ivestock a nd
equipment, 614-446 -2599 .

deposit. adu lts. Call 1·643·
2644 .

2 bedroom

trail er . Real
nice, adults only . Brown' s
Trailer Park, Minersville .

614-992·3324 .
Furnished
2 bd . room
mobile home , utilities inc .

Adults only or family with 1
ch ild . 2 miles out St. Rt. 143
Pom eroy . Call after 5 -614 992·3647 .
2 trail er s in Tuppers
Plai ns. $160. montt1. You
pay utilities. 614·667·3487 .

buil dings, $8,500. Call 304·
675 685 1.
Min i tarm in Letart, Wv . 14
ac res M · L, 2 story , 3 br .
fr ame home. vi nyl sid in g,
storm windows, all elec tr ic, who le house ca rpeL
f irep l ace
with
wood burning, capab le of hea ting
t.. .ll ire home, rural wa ter ,
garage, ou t building, Farm a ll Cub t rac tor with
equipment. 304 -895·3652 .

APARTMENT S
rent s tart s at
per

m onth .

Equal

ng opportunily . Call
446·2745 .
3 room furnished apt . $250 .
montt1 includes utilities.
InQuire at M eigs Inn in
Pomeroy.

Apt.

Suitable

fo r 1 or 2 people. Cheshire,

Oh . 304-773·5882 .
1 bed, furnished Apt . 992·
5434 o r 992 · 5914 or 304-882·
2564.
Nice 2 bd. furnished Apt.

614·992 ·5434, 992·5914 or 30A·
882·2564.

APARTMENTS ,
hom es.
Pleasa nt

mobil e

ho uses .
Pt
and Gallipolis.

Lot s_ ~

Acreage

2 ac res . Panora m ic top of
the hill view of Big Bend of
Ohio R iver in Pom eroy
Ut ilities, new 2 ca r garage

Ex tras. Wi ll consider l and

cont ract. 614-992 -6254 .
Bui l dinQ lots. Racine . 614

949·2571.
fr ontage,

ci t y

water,

beh1nd 84 Lumber . Ca ll 304

675 6873 or 675·3618 .
CHOICE lot for sale, Tri p le
T Esta tes, New Haven. ca ll

304-882·2657 .

RPRI315
4-1 --- HOu SeS -for Rent
2 or 3 bdr . house in E ure ka.

oep. required. Call614·256·
141 3.

5 rm s. &amp; bath. adu lts only ,
no pets, Bob M cC ormick

Rd . Ca ll 446·2650.

'

Attracti ve 4 .bdr . home in

112 ac r e, three bedr home,
basement. ci ty school,

county water . Call 216·13A·
3834.
Country
settin g, c ity
util iti es.
Be aut i lul
3
bd.room with fir e-place,
tully carpeted. Just off
Rt.7. Pine Tree Drive, Tup-

pers Plains, Ohio, $300. per
mo, plus utilities, deposit ,
614-667·3085.

May ta g All 30 day guaran ·
teed , Ca ll614·256 1207.

675·2A53
THREE room furnished
cottage, uti lities furni shed,

adults, no pe ts , 304-675·2812
or 675·1580 .
UNFURNISHED apart ·
men!. ca ll 30H75·2218, 8·6.
675·6753, 6· 10.
Nice furni shed effi c iency
apart ment for 1 adult,
pri va te, utilities pa id, no
pets, ref. requi red. 304 ·675·

2083.
ONE bedroom furni shed,
new apartment. washer &amp;
dryer furnished, $200 a

month, 304-675 -9760.
FURNISHED

apartment,

675·2482 .
Nice furnished 3 room apt.
private entrance, adults,

Clifton. J{)A-675· 1044 .

furnish ed

304-675·6512 .

2 apartments for r ent in

304·882· 3356 .

304-67 5·3812 .

304·516·9073 or 304· 576· 2441.
-

--·----·----

On e bedr oom f urni shed, ai r
co nd , on private lot. all
ut i liti es pd. Outsk irt s Hen·

Call614·388·9803 .

Grandfather Clock, antiQue
weight driven Clock. 388·

Couch , chair, coffee tabl e,
c lea n, in good condition .

$75.00. After 2:30p. m . call
388·87Al.

54

Misc. Merchandice

Plastic Septic Tan Ks. State
and county approved . 1,000
sizes in stock , haul in your

1975 Case 450, dozer
tractor, 1,800 hrs .. very
good cond ., $14,900. Call
446·4537 .
RATLIFF'S POOL CEN ·
TER Pools s ale, supplies&amp;.
insta llation. 403 2nd. Ave.,
Ga llipolis, Oh . Call 446·
6579 . In ground-Ablove
ground.
ADDIT IONAL OISCOUN·
T!
L IMITED
TIME
ONLY! THE BIG , NEW
AMAZING 1982 FAMILY·
SIZE POOLS WHICH IN·
CLUOE DECK , FENCE,
FILTER &amp; WARRANTY
ARE NOW AVAILABLE
FOR ONLY $999 . IN ·
STALLATION &amp;. FINAN ·
CING AVAILABLE . FIR·
ST COME, FIRST SERVE ,
CALL 1·800-624-8511 (Ohio),
1·800·642·3053 (WV) .
Wood burning add on furnance. Still In factory

Furnished R:ooms

Slee ping

room .

$100,

utilities paid. Single male,
share bath . 919 Second Ave,

Gallipolis
7PM .

4464416

Circle ' s Motel.

after

telephone

446·2501. For Rent, Weekly ,

46

Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pari&lt; , Route 33, North of
Pomeroy . Large lots . Call

992 7479 .

d_e_rson~230_._
30~~5-·6_7_3o_._ ~eli4~7~~W~atn\ted~tfam
~o~R~e~n~t!~:
ily of 4

Pion eer

Speakers, sony receiver
and Zenith turntabl e. $650.

New bulbs, letters. Hale
Signs. 1·800·227·1617, Ext.
667 .
BABY bed, co mpl ete, new,

$75 , Call after 4, 3(14-5762780 .
girls size 34. Never been

worn . 304-675·1480.

55

Building Supplies

dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 ,
Call 614·245·5121.

dep . req . Call446-1519.

Build your own garage or
barn 24x2 4. All lumber fur·
nished, $700 . Other sizes

HUO

av ailabl e

2

bdr.

deluxe , kitch en furnished ,
good location, utilities par·

tially paid. 5 rm house for

Estates, Carol Yeager,
Realtor. Call304·67_5:5104 or
675-5386.
Bath

&amp; 1/ 2, furnished&amp;. un·

furnished, 2 bdr., swim·

mi ng pool, basketball court
&amp;. playg rou nd. Ca ll 61067·
7850.
2 bdr , downtown, all car·
pel, complete kitchen, all
electric . heat-air cond .,
Washer-dryer, Call 446-.(183
days, 444·0139 eve.

box spring and mattress,

$100 .
Firm, Sl20, ;
recliners, $80.; 9 x 12
linoleum rugs, 122,; maple

now

available while the supply
lasts , BOBS MARKET -Mason W .VA. 773 _5721 open
7 days a week .

61

Farm Equipment

John
Deere 40 self propelled combine, both
heads. Grain fed freerer
beet , Caii614·245·518L

Metal

sheets

for

all

building purposes. Flat
porc elian enamel coated.
4x8 thru 4 x 12 . Prices, 17.00

1974 John Deere Dorer, 6
way blade, heavy duty
wenc h, ex , cond, Call 614·
682·6263 ,

Himalayan . Persian and
Siamese kittens. Call 446·
3844 afler A p .m .

HILLCREST

$8,000. Also discs, plows &amp;.
accessories. 30-4 -458·1656 or

304-675·7541.

HARTS Used Cars, New
Haven West VIrginia . Over
20 less expensive cars in

1976 Trans Am, excellent

63

1969 Dodge Dart, slant six,
new t ires, muffler sticker,

looks· and runs good $475 .
304·675-673(1,

Livestock

REG . QUARTER HORSES

1973 Buick Riviera , boattail split rear window, am-.
tm rad io, 8-track auto

675·508A afer 5 p.m .

72

Truck's for Sale

For Sale Baby beef, 600,·80,01
lb., extra nice, Call -146· 1978 Chevy one·half ton
0212,
pick up 47,000 miles, 6 cyL
standard
LlUArl'•rl

2

Call446·7795.

3(14·675·3030 or 304-675-4232,

Registered

Hereford

polle

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

VW Dunebuggy. Call
367·0512,

6'!4_ _.:_H~a~y~&amp;
=
G,_,_r,_a,inc.___

R_e_g _is-te_r_e_d __P
_ oo
_ d_le,
A_K
_ C__

Hay for sale . Call 446-0183 .
HAY -Good stand of mixed

Summer

Grooming

services

clover hay . Second cutting.
Will cut, condition

bale, You picl&lt; It up in
f ie ld . Will show. by
pointment, $1.75 per
Phone 669-3785.

Reasonable.

For appt. 614·992·7342.
AKC Reg. Collie pups. 614·
992-3923 .

Round steel fireplace , comple te w ith flue &amp; ac·

5 turtle doves for sale.

hearth &amp; approx, 1/2 cord
ot seasoned harwood. Must
see to appreciate. Call 446·
7918.

TWO Beagle dogs, 1 male, 1

positive

WhitetAil hunter $69, Bear
Polar L TO $139. Spring
Valley Trading co:, Spring
Valley Plaza, 446-8025 .

1974 Jeep CJ5 A wheel
drive. Wide tires. Hard &amp;

Lawrence lead shot $12 .95
per 25 lb . bag. Spring
Valley Trading Co,, Spring
Valley Plaza, 446-8025.

Pliny 304·675·2275.

..••. .•ooro
..................
.
•o•,•• ·•"''''
71

Call 446·2107 ,
Logue

contracting ,
Rt .
t,
Ewington . Call 614·388·
9939,
CHRISTIAN'S CON ·
STRUCTION ,
Constr .,
roofing, · siding, spouting,

in concrete driveways,
sidewalks, floors, plltios,

Deluxe

4·wheel

with orange, AM-FM radio ,
exc. gas mileage, new

tires, Call 614 388-8764 or
Prlce$4,000,

61~· 388 - 8611.

1977 Olds Delta 88 AM-FM
radio, air cond .• velour interior. vinyl top, e&gt;C . cond .

Price SJ,BDO, Call 61088 ·
876-4.

King cutter blade, Farmall
Deville, auto, International

0'

Gene' s Steam Carpet
Clean-Scotc h Gaurd· Freeestimates-spring

specials~

Gene Sm ilh, 992·6309 .
Carpenter work . Repair or

remodeling, wall paneling,
ceiling tile, floors, doors,

some painting, 614·992·2759 ,
Home
repairs ,
im ·
provements, roofing and
painting . Free estimates.,

Call Dennis Harris. 614·992·
7385.
RON ' S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and

F &amp;

K

Tree Trimming,

stump removal. Call 6751331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE

ex·

I was sure ihis was the
road io the dump! They
musi have moved it !

Water We lls . Commercial
and Domestic . Test holes:
Pumps Sales and Service~

30A-895-3802 .
ADVANCED
Seamless
Gutter-Doors . Offering

gutterinQ,
656 D Tractor. Call 30A-675· , continouse
seamless siding, roofing,
3280 and ask for Ron Hick·
garage
doors,
free
man between . 8 a.m .- A:JO
estimates-, 614-698·8205.
p ,m .

1981 Honda CB fully
dressed, like new cond,, 2
helmets. Call61~·388 - 876-4.
1979 XS 1100 YAMAHA.
Fully dressed. AM ·FM
cassette, Cruise ControL
Excellent cond, Extras,
614·992· 2656.
74 HONDA 200 street bike,
$350.
or
trade for
something of ·equal value,

terior, free estimates, 30.4-

WIN NIE

1980 Suzuki S50, 4 cyl . 1500
miles, like new, $1,000, 3(14675 · 235~ .

c=:===:::;:===.=:::::::;===
Boats and
Motors for Sale

1980 1S fl.

B~yllner wit~

C"ONTIN/IESfi/S
WINNIE AN/?

Plumbing
&amp; Healing

FIND OUT WHAT
THEIR SaN IS DUliN(;.}
!&lt;OLINGER/

CARTF,R'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

so

concL sklls and equipment
it'lcluded, Tennesse drive

on trailer Included, $6,000,
Call -446·8385 after 5,

Ew:ca..vating

83

Gallipolis Diversified , Con-

st. Co, custom dozer &amp;.
backhoe wo_rk, Special
farm rates. Call us tor tree
estimates . «6-4440 .
Lawrence

0

15 It, MGF Bass boat.
70 · hp, ll)Oior,
asking $2,800.

1Jcohnson

Cai16U· 367·0490:

Sidenstrlcker

14

PAW··VOUR
HORRVSCOPE
SAVS IT'S A
GOOD DAVTO
CATCH
SOME

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. AuthorizeC Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

Pomeroy , 992 · 228~ .
l5

- -·

General Hauling

•

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

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE , Call614 ·367 · 7~71
or 614·367-0591.

··AN' MINE
SAYS IT'S A
GOOD DAV
TOTIDV UP
TH'HOUSE

Quincy Quincy tn vestigates the death of tt1e
leader of a large evangeli·

cal organizat oon. 'IR)

~..:.JH!LJI6-u_-•_-n_l3-'-.~~~-

HEAVY 'duty car hauler,
304-451· 1656 or 675·

--... .
8 -30

' '

Travel Tips

. !

MOWREYS Upholstery Rt:
1 Box 124, Pt. Pleasant, J04,

Furnllure repaired, , an:
tlqun ri!slored, . custom .
cabinets, 304-675-3671 aitef
5p,m.

'·

. ''

REJUIN

I KJ

Be careful what
you eat.

And stay home.

ELEPHANI 5QU II&lt;:TS
WAlE ~ FR'OM HIS
TRUNK.

!

. I Jumble s
Saturdays

Now arrange the ctrcled 1ene1s to
form the surpnse answer. as sug gested by the above ca rtoon

A[IIXXJKIIJ
(Answe rs tomorrow)

FOI ST

LOFTY

DEF ILE

PICKET

Answer: What tw o words t'1ave the mos t letters In

lhem ?- POST OFFICE
Jumble Boot\ No. 19, containing 110 puzzles , Is evalla ble lor $1 .95 postpaid
from Jumble, do thi s newspaper. Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648 . Include you r
nama, addrus. zip code and make checks payable to Newspaparbooks.

BRIDGE
Mixed-pair gamble wins
By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alao Sootag
Oswald: "Gordon Knoght
is a regular contributor to
the " Am er ica n Bridge
Teache rs' Quarterly ." His
hands always or nearly
always make some important point for players."
Alan: "In today's hand,
Gordon sat East. It was a
mixed pair tourname nt a nd
his partner wa s Myrtle
Jenkins . Gordon's r aise to
three diamonds was a typical male chauvinist mixed
pair raise. When not vulnerable against vulnerable ."
Oswald: " Myrtle took the
raise somewhat seriously
and jumped to live dia monds to crowd the bidding.
She crowded it all right.
North couldn't use Blackwood and finally settled for
six spades, which seemed
sound enou~h to him ."
Alan :
'Gordon was
through. In fact, he would
have been through when he
looked at his hand, and South
had no reason for a further
bid, It was up to Myrtle to
decide whal to do,"
Oswald: "Myrtle rose to
the occasion, That is, she
passed and underled to the

NORTH

+ K 10 8 5

1·10·82

.AQ971

t4

+ K 10 8
EAST
+62
.10 3
86 5
• 10 9 6 3
AKQJ! 72
+J 6 4 32
SOUTH
+ AQ J9 7

WEST

+43

'J
t

. ..

"

.K 2

t 5
+AQ97 5
Vulnerable: North-South
Dea ler : South
North

Weal

Easl

2+

South

1+

4+
Pass

5t

Pa s~

Openin g lead +2

Occasion . When Gordon held
the trick with his nine he led
a club for Myrtle to ru!!."
Alan " Not that Myrtle
could hav e sacrificed at sev·
en diamonds. She had decided to gamble for a top and
the gamble had paid off. "

61tUM~~tllf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

I Ali 5 Bhagavad

41 British
princess

DOWN
I Uncovered
2 Old-womanish
3 Leave

(Hindu
scripture)
9 Indigo plant 4 "Cakes and - "
5 Round Table
10 Stimulate
knight
13 Tease
6 "Good Night
14 Coat
"
16Gennan
or jacket
7 - the line
composer
15 Old note
8 Gennan
19 Friend of
16 Vereen
farewell
C. Brown'
17 One kind
11 The "S" in 22 "I - man
of bride
S ,W,AK
with ... "
.18 Hwniliate
12
Printing
23 Italian
ZO Stevedores
gaffes
union
Zl Cry of pain ,
22 Join
23 Arrest (sL)
25 Tenor,
Nicolai 2G Crooner
Williams
27 French port
28 Crete
mountain
29 Indian city
32 Turf
33 Statute
34 Rest ed
35 Melodic
37 Greek
mountains
3l! Desired
39 Popular
songstress
40 African river

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

160

(]) Captioned ABC News
® MOVIE: 'The Bliss of
Mra. Blossom'
GllW Nightline
11 :45 Cll MOVIE: 'Three Guns
for Texas'
12:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Allen'
(I) Bumo &amp; Allen
@ International Swimming: McDonald's Dual
Meet from Knoxvilla, TN
- USA vs. USSR
(I) Nightllne
(]) PBS Late Night
D lW MOVIE: 'Skatetown U.S.A.'
12:30 IJ Cil (I) Late Night with
Dovld Letterman
Cil MOVIE: 'Goodbyf,
ElllrNIIlualle'

5EE WHEN A SIG

Print answer here :

Ia

min.)

Upholstery

675-4154,

Auto Pam
&amp; Acctuorles

a Divided City.' Tonight' s
program looks at racia l
violence in contemporary

0 (f)

PEANUTS '

1•

armed holdup . {R) (60 min.)
(]) Crisis to Crisis With
Barbara Jordan 'Voices of

In Concert'
Nashville RFD
@ ESPN Sports Center
Clli!J C1J ® liJ (W News
(I) News/Sports/Weather
(]) Dave Allen at Large
® Hitchcock
11 :16 ([) All In the Family
11:30 0 Cil (I) Tonight Show
(I) Another Life
(I) After Benny Hill

J IMS Water Service. Call
Jim Lanier, J(IH75-7397.

TRISTATE
' UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec, Ave .. Gallipolis:
444-7833 or 444· 1833.

a fog . (R)
Cl) ® Lou Grant Lou is

ffi

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

1969,2211. flbreglass, North
American ·c abin cruiser:
Ne trailer, off shore with
options, marine 350 Cu
Buick, outbOard-Inboard
motQ&lt;. 304-755-7545.

7541,

0

Cil MOVIE: 'Richard Pryor

Bacl&lt;hoe Serive, Call 6755580 .

87

UJO,

10:00

(I) ® House Calls
Norman 's ego turns everyone off while Charley's in·
somnia has h1m w alking in

the1r late st
international
tour. this super-platinum
group perform s their greatest hits

f~r 5:3DPM6U·367-~12.

11'77 Ca!Yiaro LT, 76;(!00
305 engine, AC, PS,
AM·FM, 8 track, S2,5DO.

llJ

Boston . {60 min .).
10:15 ([) TBS Evening News
10:30 ffi Sing out America
(j]) News
11 :00 0 Cil Newscenter
Cil Earth, Wind and Fire
In Concen Taped during

11'79 19 112 Baha, ISO Horse
Mercury, stainless steel . Now H'auling limestone-fill
dirt-top soil.-graveL Free
prop, bow seat, top cove-:-s,
estimates. Call 614·3671980 D&lt;&gt;dge Mirada, 31,000 Tenness.. frailer. $4,600 .
7101.
~--.~,.,·.:;.;;;.It mi. Call 614-367-0394 or af- Call 61H8H783.

refrigerators,

YEAH, I
THINK THE
LITTLE LADY
IS UVING IN A
WORLD OF HER
OWN,

Phone 446-3888 or 446·4477

H P Mercury motor, new

M~.rcoJrY Monterey air,
ANI·FIVI radio, 'good cond,,

9 :30

the innocent victim of an

NIY, SHE'S CERTAINLY
BEEN CHEERFUL THE

RARNEY

75

ffi Bull's Eye
@ ESPN's Inside Baseball
CD Green Acres
CJ) Entertainment Tonight
(I) Happy Days
0 (T' Tic Tac Dough
(]) ®
MacNeii-Lehter
Report
®News
GilD Muppet Show
7 :30 IJ I]) You Asked For It
ffi Another Ule
@ ESPN Sports Center
Cll Ancly Griffith
Cl) llJ (I) Family Feud
(I) laverne and Shirley
(]) Business Report
® Richard Simmons
(j]) Were You There?
'Sports Profile. ' Artie W ilson, shortstop in the Negro Baseball League and
Alice Coachman,
1948
Olympic gold medalist, artl
ptofiled .
Ol lW Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 IJ Cil (I) Little House on
the Prairie Charles Ingalls
learns a painfu l lesson
about greed . (AI 160 min .)
ffi National Geographic
Spacial
@ ESPN Special: 1982
College Football Preview
([) MOVIE: 'The Love
Machine'
(I) GilD MOVIE: 'East of
Eden' Part 3
Ill (I) IIQI Privata
Benjamin A missle is
sneaked into the fort causing the town to go into a
uproa!. (R)
(]) Evening at Pops 'Ne ll
Carter and the Abyssinian
Baptist Church Choir.· Nell
Caner and the Abyssinian
Church Choir join John Williams and the Bo ston Pop s
to · present th eir special
brand of music . (60 min .)
® Odyssey
(]) ® WKRP in
B:30 0
Cincinnat1 Momma Carl·
son tries to turn the sta tion 's ratings success into
failure . IRI
g:OO 0
Cil (I) MOVIE :
'Freedom Road' Part 1
(I) MOVIE: 'St, Helens'
Cil MOVIE: 'The Hunter'
ffi 700 Club
@ Exhibition Basketball:
NBA
All -Stars
vs.
Chinese Army Team from
Shanghai, China
0 Cl) @) M•A•S•H An
army psychiatrist visits th e
4077oh . IRI
(]) ® Great Perlormances ·on Giant ·s Shoulders
Tonight' s program
presents the true story of
Leonard and Hazel Wilos
and
Terry .
the
Thalidomide-damaged child
ohey adopted . (90 min .)

PAINTING interior &amp; ex·

Motorcycles

304-576·256-4.
76 Olds Cutlass Supreme,
excellent condition, new
front !Ires, new front
sprlngs &amp; shocks, new air
shocks on back, AM· FM
cassette deck , $2.000 firm.
Call-444·9510 ask for Paul .

K.IHD

NO, IT GUGGEGTG foiOKE
I'IIT5 THAN I GAVE YOU
CREOIT HR YOU ARE RI6HT
TO BE YIAAY OF 1\HYONE
I'IHO COMES THROUGH
THAT DOOR,

drive

p ickup, Unico 11ft. disc ,

1976 Suzuki 550, road bike,
Call 458·1997,
con·

1- l K.HOVI
THI5 LOOK-5

etc. 11 yr , exp, Ca11614·367·
7891.

1981 CHEVROLET Custom

air,

air

loll% MAN!

BINGS CONCRETE CON ·
STRUCTION Specializing

82

drive,

LIZIIIW5! I
8/CII/HEO YOU,

5/LLY,BUT-

FM cassette,

1980 Chevy ·citation, front

ALM~T

cleaning . 446·2000, call
before 8 and alter 5: ~0 .

675·1128.

firm . Cai1614·2S6-1598.

ANN IE

fencing, painting, repairs &amp;

1974 Yamaha endre, dirt
1980 Pontiac Firebird . AM· bil&lt;e, Call458·1997 ,

Rabbits for sale, blonde·

fii'C~V

Carpets. Free estimates.

remodeling . Call 304·675·
2088 or 675-4560.

Autos for Sale

wheel

Green Parakeets . 304-675·
1693.

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
pet Cleaning featured by ,
Haffelt Brosthers Custom

707~ .

cloth top. S1,200. 61A-992·

STRAW tor sale, $1.00 bal

ditioned, PS, PB, 4 spd,,
exc . shape, white trimmed

months old $3 , each . 30A·
675·2887.

ex ·

perience, specializing in
bUill UP rooL Call 61~ ·388·

work ,

Little

Romance '

&amp;

years

perienced mason, roofing,
carpenter,
electrician,
general
repairs and

Morgan Woodlawn Farm , hay trailer, International

female, both running , $30.

black and white bunnies 3

traction,

good tires. 1295. Call afler 5
p, m . 614·992·2762 .

2 bottom W' plows, 1969
Chevrolet CST-20 pickup, 1

each, call after 6:00, 304·
675·5079 .

Compound bow sale, Bear

Margot Kidder.
(I) MOVIE: ' A

1966 GMC Pickup V-6, 4

74
Large cage &amp; small cage .
$50. for aiL 614·992·2969,

in love with a worldly
showgirl Tim M atheson.

house calls. Call576· 2398 or

H tractor, Farmall M !rae·
tor, 1970 Calillac sedan

place with fire screen &amp;

pipes never used. Complete
$300 , Call614-388·8164 ,

61~-

Hay for sale , 614·667-6164.
for

pets, Will c lip English
Sheep dogs, poodles &amp;

IBREEMMj
I KI

m$50,000 Pyramid

Cll Father Knows Best
Cll GilD ABC News

446·245~ .

speed,

for

running

Yearling

POOD LE GROOMING .
Call Judy Taylor a t 614-367·
7220 .

rates,

trans.

boards 13200 304-675-2835 .
73

KENNEL

GOOD · USED
AP ·
PL IAN_C ES · washers,
Skaggs Ap plian~es, Upper, River Rd,,
beside Slone Crest Motel.
-146·7398.

1974 Olds. 98, Regency ,
Good running cond. , good
Interior, reg , gas. $650 . 61~ -

preciate, good tires, 12500,
3{)4·576·2929 after 4:00.

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

pupp ies . Call 446·0857.

30

[j
WHAI 'IOU M 10HT

(j]) Over Eaay
IJ Cil (I) NBC News

Cl) ® CBS Newo
(])Dr. Who
(j]) Ulias, Yoga and You
7 :00 IJ Cil P.M. Magazine
Cil H BO Thaater: Bus
Stop t,\ naive cow boy fall s

Roofing

Spoutin9 .

Masonary

TRACTOR A·C 200, cab a ir

140, Call-446·3159,

ranges ,

75 Buick Electra Limited,
jet black 1 owner, loaded,
Al,OOO mi., new tires &amp; bat·
tery, mint. cond . 13,500.
446·.CS22.

condition, must see to ap·

Bo~rding

COAL

inc ludes

CAPTAIN EASY

BORN LOSER

9622 or 614-388·9857.

Gallipolis, 446-0183 ,

HOUSE

also

6 :30

9652 .

1979 Rabbit 37,000 miles, 4
dr. , good cond., $3,900. Call
61A· 2A5-9557.

56

DRAGONWYNO
CAT·
TERY · KENNEL. AKC
Chow
puppies, CFA

STUJO

D Cil Newacenter
Cll My Three Sons
Cll 0 Cll ® GllW News
(]) Electric Company

STUC:O PLASTERING
textured ceilings com ·
merc ia! and residential,
free estimates. Call 61~·256·
1182 .
- --------PAINTING · interior and
exterior, plumbing ,
root ing, some remodeling.
20 yrs , exp. Call 614·388 -

Marcum

Training,
showing , trans. power steering, winbreeding, sales and boar· dows and seats 38,000 ac·
ding . Contact Dan Beam, tual miles. $2,795 firm , 3(14-

Pels for Sale

0•• ·-~·-·

(I) Newo/Sporta/Weather

Home
Improvements

ditinn, asl&lt;ing $1.000 . 69,000
'
14
miles. Call 446·9570 or 6 ·
388·8246.

Farm All Super A tractor,
all the equipment , $2,500,
Call675 ·6930.

rockers, $49 ., wringer
washers, refrigerators,
dinette
sets,
ches1,
dressers. bunkie mattresS,

dryers,

76 Ford Mustang good con·

to$9 ,60 . 614·667·3085 .

summer

cessories

6 :00

9~9 - 2639 .

ava ilab le. Ca ll 614-886-7311 .

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE&amp;.
PAWN St:iOP 62 Olive St.,
Gallipolis, Couch, loveseat
and
chair,
$199,;
wallhuggers $125, ; bunK
beds with bunkies, $170, ;

cannlng • pea c hes

heater, excellent condition,

suoo.

S1

GOOD
THINGS TO
EAT :; :CANNING PEAC ·
HES . Yellow Freestone

1977 camaro, PS, PB, lilt
wheel,air,goodcond , Call
614·367 -0632 .

stock .

Buildi ng materials block,
brick , sewer pipes, w i n·

2 or 3 bedtoom house
Beagle
REGISTERED
Apartm ent
or tra iler in the Bidwell ·
puppies, phone 304· 458·
for Rent
Porter School area . Call
Firewood, $10 . picKup load, 1552.
4 room unfurnished ap t . all 614·245·9-tl-4 between 5 &amp; 1.
Caii61A·245-5804.
ca rpeted, uti l iti es paid ,
adults only no pet s. Ca ll
Musical
Country home . prefer with Sol id entrance 32 Inch door 57
446·3437 .
Instruments
pasture land . Call 614·245· · &amp; storm door. Ladi es new 3
9133 .
speed bicycle, Call 446· Lowrey electric Organ,
Eff ie nc y apartm ents 1st
7369.
call614·388·8259.
floor . Call 446-0957, 729 2nd Want 6 or 7 room nouse to
Ave .. Gallipolis.
rent in country . Prefer
Langsvi lle area . Call 6141st floor furn ished apart· 992-W/6.
ment, adults preferred . ref .
&amp; dep . requir ed. Call 631
4th Ave .• Gallipolis.

Furni shed 4 room s &amp; bath,
clean, no pet s, adults only ,

&amp; vegetables

4'x8' flashing arrow sign.

Dog Grooming, by appt.
Registered O.E . Sheep dog .
Call anytime, 614·388·9767.

installed fire

58

REPOSSESSED SIGN!
Nothing down I Take over
payments 158.50 month ly.

crate, $450. Call 1-614·256·
1216 .

sears self

c•~-..

304·675·3994 .

Beagle puppies. Call 614·
2A5-5614 or 61A·245-5597 .

sale

81

__________ I.~':':::::::;::-:::::=T;:::::~~~~~::::1
Ca ll Robert Harper tor G1n· I
Fruft
71
Autos tor Sale

2 · HMP · SOO

I........I- r . . . [)

0

30 in , electr ic range.
Roper. Us..d 11 yrs. 575.
843·2105, Don Johnson.

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

tour ordinary words.

EVENING

Camping
Equipment

\9

un-scramble lt\888 lour Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form

8/30/82

Starcrafl fold·out, used
twice, excellent cond ,
$2495. Located Main and
Second, Middleport: Ohio,
614·992·2828,

Good c ond . for $575, 2472192 .

se ng
and
Yellowroot
prices. 304·675·12'13.

~

MONDAY

John Deere A Tractor. 71
Pinto 4 c yl. automatic.

Pt. P l. High School coat,

a ton. Pt. Pleasant $31 a
ton, C.O. 0 . Call -146·1488.

1 person $60.00: 2 persons

3 bedroom unfurni shed
14x70 all elec. mobile l1ome
$200 monthly plus util iti es .

78

Schnauzer's.
4S

2 bedroom unfurn ished
mobil e, Camp Conley . $140.
per month . 304·675 -1371 or

reversible flower cush ions.

Garage apt . New Haven, 3 Sale ends Aug . 31 , Mine run
bedrooms , unfurnishe"d
coal Pittsburgh No, 8.
$200. month, plus util it ies. Delivered to Gallipolis $30

2 bed room house tr ai ler
$150. month plu s uti l ities.
304-675·4088.
TWO bedroom mob i le
home. kilchen f urni shed,
coupl es only , 304·675· 1076 .
Also 2 tra iler lots.

2 pc. sofa. olive green with

Auto Repair

SPECIAL
Complete
enamel pain! jobs from
$300. Sunroofs Installed
from $225. Auto Trim Cen- ·
ter, «6- 1968 ,

All st ee l tandam aKie
trai ler . 8ft. wide by 12 ft .
long . Heavy duty . Call 614·
256·1484.

Allegro stero . Call446-7190.

Thre e room furnished
apartment. adults. no pets.
Poin t Pleasant . Ca ll J04-

derson. 304-675·6730.
bedroom

Boston Rock er and Zenith

p ickup truck. Call 614·286·
5930, JacKson, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

7th Street. 304·675-3811 .

rent . Residenti~ l and comr.ttY , full basement, fully , merclaJ properties for sale
carpeted, S300 per mo . Call or lease . A ·One Real

446· 1323.

washers - K en m ore,
Whir lpool &amp; GE . 5 dryers·
Ke nmore, Whir l poo l &amp;

gal. tank, price $340, Other

44

1wo acre lots -150 ft . roa d

7

614·446 ·8221 or614·US·9484 .

170.00 . Cable T.v ., air cond .

JS

Dining r oom set , 4 chairs
and
t able,
cu shion ed
cha i rs. Call 458·1997.

77

cond. Ca ll 446·1909 or 4469160 .

~fl\irutfii&gt;1} ~ THUSCRAMBLEDWDRDGAME
~~ ~
byHenriArnoldondBobLee

·Television
Viewing

top t a ble, blonde

Convertible-good s hape .
Call614·992·7791 after 4.

Apartments. 304-675-5548.

1 bedroom mobile home,
ai r condition, all utilities
furn ished , outskirts of Hen·

acres, tob acco all ot- mobil e hom e. $185 . month .

ment , mi neral rights, no

7'12
SIJ5
Ne il , Ga llip o l is.
uti lities, one per son. 4-46 4416 after 7 PM .

clean. J rooms &amp; bath . 304-

2
2R

effi ency,

DICK TRACY

six c hairs, in good

1250. a nd up to $395. Baby

------~-

Must se ll . 12x50 de lu xe
tor Rent
Freedom on ren ted lot . 2
bed rooms, all electri c. 3 t raile r s, nat gas heat .

FAIRMONT mobile home,

Furni shed

Ettecl ency

42-- - Mobile Homes

in Ravenswood, 14x70 with

---~'o~r Rent ____

""'' m; r•

r ec lining chairs. 71 Bui.c k

ranges
$325or. electric
Baby
and
$25 ,. Gas
matresses. $25 1 $35, bed
frames S20, $25, 1 $30. Used
F urni ture
bookcase,
ranges , chairs, end tables,
r ecli ners and TV's. 3 miles
t Bul a"v 'oll e Rd · Open9am
ou
to7pm, Mon. thru F r i. , 9am
to5pm, Sa t.
446 ·0322

7-'-~~~~:J!!__

The Daily Sentinel--fage- 9

Pamero -Middleport, Ohio

74()6,

2 beds, new mattress, 2

$350., dinette cha irs $20.

Monday, August 30,1982

Newly built single axle, low
buoy car frailer. with
lounge I ack, $450, Ca II 444· •

supply last. Ca ll 4&lt;46·2783,

Bunl&lt; bed

lir m, $68 . a nd $78 .

by Larry Wright

coal burners, as long as

co mplete wit h mattresses,

$54. Bed frames, $20 ,and
S2L 10 g un · Gun c abinets,

44

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

SPEC IAL PRI CE on Wood

Che r ry, 1795.

Que en se1s, $195. 4 dr .
chests, $42 . 5 dr. chests,

41
Houses for R:ent
You 'l l l ove thi s 14 acre
farm in the country wi th a
pond and sma ll barn . This 2
bedroom brick home is
only 2 miles from down·
town Pt. Pl easant . Will

Misc. Mercll_a_ll_dice

8579 after 5:00 p.m .

sse.,

~~~~~~~~~~;~;~::::~~~~~~~~

54

map le or p i ne finish .
Bed r oom suites
Bassett

beds, $99 . Mattresses or
box spr ings. full or twin,

tiat:y turn ., se t Up on re n·
led lot , aski ng $6,500 . Ca ll
446· 4491 after 5.

2 bdr ., gas,

and up.

Wood tab le with six chairs

Ca/1446 3547 .

1973

s 189 .

1395. to $650. Des k $110.
Hutc hes, 1300. and 1550 .,

to se rve as two bedrooms .

awning, underpinning . Can
stay at pre sent loca t ion.

{extr a

$275 . . Sofas a nd c hairs
priced from $285. to $895.
Tab les, $38 a nd up to $125.
Hlde ·a· beds,$440. and up to
1525 " queen size, $380 .
Rec liners, 1175, to $325 .,
Lamps tram $18 . t o $65 . 5

well insulated . Can serv e

and
dryer , ce ntra l air, awning ,
underpi nn ing , prac ti ca ll y
new c arpet though , one
owner . Call 446·4192 .

ot·

heavy by Fronti er), S685.
Sofa . chair and loveseat,

J/x 11 tt . add ·a·room . Car·
·pe t . baseboard hea t, c loset,

2 bedroom, washer

rocker,

toman , 3 tables,

CEREAL lJQJt&amp;S·"

1973 Ba ron 12x60 total elec..

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LAYN E' S FURNITURE

LITTLE·KJIOWII

198 1 Mobil e nome 52X l 4, a ll
clcc tn c, 2 bdr ., $8,700. Ca ll
4.46 9303, weekdays after

Monday, August 30,1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

24 Indian city
25 Classy feUow
27 Withdraw
29 Swiss c ity
30 Consumed
31 Gawk
36 Poem

8·

Here's how
-'XYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

lo work il :

One letter simply stands lor another. In thi s sample A io
used for the three L's, X for lhe two O's, e tc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the length and formation of th e words a re all
hiDIJ. Each day the code letters are dilferent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
GAfN

ODJT

LAK

DUT

LKUWCP

RWKUZKEP

W K P G

ZI

PAZHLUTXJ
PTTJZIR

WTPPZIR

Cll Jack Benny Show

(I) Solid ,Gold
(I) MOVIE: 'lost
Treuure of the Concepcion'

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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ACTIONS OF MEN ARE THE
BEST INTERPRETERS OF THEIR THOUGHTS,-LOCKE

�Monday, August 30,1982

Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel

SUPPLEMENT TO: THE POMEROY SENTINEL

Cancer claims
Ingrid Bergman

Meigs County happenings
Veterans Memorial

LONDON lAP) - Academy
Miss Bergman llved In Cheyne
Award -winnin g actress Ingrid
Gardens, In London' s Chelsea
Bergman. whose roles ranged from
district.
Humphrey Bogart's lover In "CaLooking back on the strtng of brtlsablanca" to the tough-minded
lia nt !Urns that brought her three
Oscars, her three marriages, three
prim e minister of Israe l In
divorces and her fight with cancer,
"Golda," has died after an eight ·
Miss Bergman wrote In her 1900au·
year battle with cancer . She died on
toblogra phy, " I have a lways
her 67th birthday.
thought that I will go on acting and
One of the last of Hollywood 's 1,._
acting
and acting .. .. You need
gendary figures, the Swedish-born
never
give
up."
Miss Bergman died here Sunda y,
her daughter, Pia Lindstrom, said
Miss Bergman's Academy
In New York.
Awards were for best actress In
Miss Lindstrom, a journalist, "Gaslight " with Charles Boyer In
said she was flying to London to- 1944 a nd "Anastasia" In 1956, and
day . Miss Bergman's three other
for best supporting actress for
children also were reported en
"Murder on the Orient Express" In
route here.
1974.
Funeral arrangemenis were beLooking back on the strtngof brilIng handled by Harrods. "It will be
liant films that brought her three
a very quiet, family affair," said
Oscars, her three marriages, three
Alfred Jackman, Harrods' funeral
divorces and her fight with cancer,
director. "After cremation her
Miss Bergman wrote In her 1900 'Ill·
ashes may be taken back to tob\ograph y, "I ha ve always
Sweden."
thought that I will go on acting and
Miss Bergman rocketed to fa me acting and acting .... You need
as Humphrey Bogart's co-star In
never give up."
the movie "Casablanca" In 1943
She and Katherine Hepburn were
and made a stunning Hollywood
the only actresses to win three
comeback after quitting the movie Academy Awards. Miss Bergcapital In the late 1940s because of man's prizes were for best actress
crtticlsm over a Jove affair with a n in "Gaslight" with Charles Boyer In
Italian tum director .
1944 and "Anastasia" In 1956, and
She had been suffering from for best s upporting actress for
cancer since 1974 and had under- "Murder on the Orient Express" In
. gone two mastectomy operations.
1974.
Her former hu sband Lars
She was born in Stockholm on
Schmidt, last of her three hu s- - Aug. 29. 1915. Both her parents had
bands, was with her when she died , died by the time she was 12 and she
said London theatrical agent Sue went to live with an uncle and spoke
Hyman , who made the announce- la ter or how her lonely childhood
ment of her death here today.
led her to acting.

16 die on Ohio roads
By The Associated Press
Traffic accidents in Ohio over the
weekend killed 16 people, Including
two of three University of Michiga n
students who were driving home a f.
ter attending a fraternity brother's
wedding .
Pollee In Mentor, where the accident occurred, said the students'
car was struck broadside by a truck
while attempting to turn off Ohio
306 onto the entrance ramp of Interstate 90 .
The Highway Patrol said victin'•
of weekend accidents a lso Included
three motorcyclists and two pedestrtans. There were three doubt,._
fatality smashups.
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight
Sunday.
The dead :
SUNDAY
MENTOR - Timothy Girardot.
20, of Birmingham, Mich ., and Thomas Craven, 20, of Evanston, Ill., in
a car-truck accident on Ohio 306 In
Mentor. A third University of MichIgan student was Injured seriously.
MANSFIELD - Thomas L.
Woodhull. 20, of Ashland. a passenger, In a one-car accident on a
Richland County road.
SANDUSKY - Glenn A. Davis.
22. of Sandusky, when his motorcycle crashed on a Sandusky city
street.
BELLEFONTAINE - Allen
White. 20. and Marvin S. Mummey,
20. a passenger, both of Bellefon-

ta tne, tn a on,..ca r accident on a
Logan County road.
LE BANON - Pollee Chief
James K. Elder, 53, of Mason, in a
one-car accident on a Warren
County road.
SATURDAY
COLUMBUS - Ronald Earl
Fosco, 22, of Plano, Tex ., of Injuries
suffered Saturday In a motorcycle
accident on a Columbus street.
PORT CLINTON - An unidentified person In a two-car accident on
an Ottawa County road.
DEFIANCE - Orodflo Villarreal, 27, of Corpus Christl. Texas. In
a on,..car accident on Ohio 2 In Defiance County .
WILMINGTON - J ack Rittenhouse, 33, of Greenfield, In a onecar accident on a Highland County
road.
ASHTABULA - Percy L.
Brown, .38, of Asbtabula. a pedestrtan struck by a ca r on an Ashtabula city street.
NEW LEXINGTON - Gary L.
Bennett Jr., 15, of Somerset, in a
car-motorcycle accident on a
Perry County road.
BRYAN - Eugene P . Melnick,
ol, of Farmington. Mich., and Ann
C. Lee. 51, of Pioneer. In a two-car
accident on U.S. 20 in Willia ms
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
LEBANON - Tlmberly Kay Saw·
yer, 20, of Morrow, a pedestrian
struck by a vehicle· on U.S. 22 in
Warren County.

Dance cancelled
A dance to be held at the Rutland
Civic Center on Frtday, Sept. 3, ha s
been ca ncelled .

ADMISSIONS ON SATURDAY--Hubert Wolse. Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES ON SATURDAY --·
Helen Icenhower, Hilliard Conley ,
Dorothy Baker, Vana Whaley, Beatrtce Rarden, George Greene, Joseph Blssel, Elmer Pickens and
Maxine Phillips.
ADMISSIONS SUNDAY ---Saille
Kadle. Pomeroy: Rachel Myers,
Racine; Michael Gilmore. Ru ·
tland; Pearl Ash , Pomeroy, Diana
Tlllis, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGES SUNDAY ...
Tammy Bable

The Ours reunion will be held
Sunday, Sept. 5, at Rock Springs
FairgrOunds.
Dinner wlll be served at 1 p.m.All
relatives and friends are lnvlted to
attend.

..,~

t~ro111h

SALE STARTS TODAY

le,t. I, 11U, ..111 11111tltl11 llat....tltJ rilllh
""'"'~· Wt 11'1 not rtiiiOialllle for IJII•I"•IIIIIolltrron. loiTJ, 10

ll11l1n.

LOOK WHAT YOU CANDO WITH

0

PRIICE
ELBOW llCIRDII

.....

UJESTBENO.
--.

a

BERGMAN DEAD - Actress Ingrid Bergman died al her London
home after a long battle against cancer the Brttlsh news ageney Press
Assoclallon reported Monday. Photo of Miss Bergman was Dill de In Llls
Angeles, Oetober, 1980. lAP Laserpboto}

Area deaths
Clarence M. Johnson
Clarence Milton J ohnson, 74 .
Polnt Pleasant, died on Saturday at
his home.
Born March 14, 19&lt;:8. Millwood.
he was the son of the la te Simon H.
and Sarah E. Biggs Johnsen.
He was a farmer and worked for
Bartow Jones for many years .
Surviving are his wife, Mary
Keller Johnson . Point Pleasant:
three daughters. Virginia Bland.
West Columbia. Sarah Gleason,
Point Pleasa nt and Marceline Danleis, Petersburg, Va.; three sons,
Simon Johnson, Pomeroy, Edward
and William Johnson, Point Plea·
sant: 21 grandchildren a nd 20
great-grandchild ren.
Funera l services will be held a t
11 a.m. on Tuesday at the Fog!,._
with Burial
Rev.
song
neral Home
GeorgeFuHoschar
officiating.
will be a t Zerkle Cemetery, Leta rt.
Friends may call the funeral home
be'tween 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. today.

Mary Ellen Dye
Mary Ellen Dye, 71. New Haven,
died Sunday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Born Jan . 28. 1911 in Syracuse,
she was the daughter of the late
Joseph and Mollie Hall London.
Preceding her In death were her
first husband , Lortn L. Roush who
died in 196:1. two brothers, Joseph
a nd Herman London, a sister. Iva
Roush, a grandson , Wesley Gerlach, two half-sisters. Mrs. George
Hood a nd Mrs. J.W. Birtcher and a
half-brother , Fred Quillen.

'

AT
CROW'S
FAMILY

Seeks divorce
Debra J. Begley. C"!lett sburg.
Ky .. fUed suit for divorce In Meigs
County Common Pleas Cou rt
against James W. Begley, Long
Bottom.

Five runs were made by the
Meigs County Emergency Squad
Saturday.
AI 6:06 a.m. the Middleport
Squad answered a call at 150 S.
Third St., for Linda Baker who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center:
10:37 a.m., Middleport Squad to
Frtendly Tavern, lor Hubert Wolse
who was taken to Veterans Memor·
tal Hospital; 11:05 a .m. the Pomeroy Squad was called to Sycamore
and Locust Streets for Becky
Ebersbach who was taken to Vete-rans Memortal Hospital; 11: 18
p.m. Pomeroy was called to 39300
Gold Ridge Road, lor Sallie Kad1e
who was taken to Veterans Memor·
lal Hosplial; 11:29 p.m. Middleport
Squad to Race St., lor Juanita Ra·
tllff who taken to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.
Two runs were made by the EMS
Sunday.
At 9: 35a.m . the Pomeroy Squad
answered a call a t VIllage Green
Apartments, Pearl Ash was taken
to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
2:34p.m ., Tuppers Plains Squad to
Hawk's .Station for Jim Wingrove
who was treated at the scene.

Reunion planned

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

TUES . &amp; WED. NIGHT SPECIALS

~ RESTAURANT

Emergency runs

Two rnarrtage licenses were
Issued In Probate Court to WWard
Ernest Miller, Jr., 21, Pomeroy,
and Judith Lynn Hawk, 21, Athens;
Gregory Lee Stamper, 20, Gyandott, W. Va .. andSandyKayMethe-ney, 21, Rt. 1, Ewlngton.
·

Every Tuesday Night

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

FOR JUST

$325

with Whipped Pautoes.
Chicken Gravy, Cole Slaw. Hot
Roll. Butter and Coffee.
Sony. No substitutes except bevM'IIIS which 11M an additiOilli

Served

She was a member of the New
Haven United Methodist Church
and belonged to the American Leglon Auxiliary of Post 140 of New
Haven.
Survtvlng are her husband, Wllllam M. Dye, New Haven: two
daughters, Mrs. Franklin Rldao,
Petersburg, Ind . and Mrs. Gerald
Gerlach, Lakemore, Ohio: one son,
Robert J. Roush, New Haven: one
stepson, Robert "Bob" Dye, New
Haven: one half-sister, Mrs. Annie
Sl\llwagner. Wooster. Ohio: seven
gra ndchildren and three greatgra ndchildren.
Funeral services will be on T'uesday at 1:30 p.m. at Fogelsong Fune ra! Home with Rev. John
Ca mpbell officiating. Burtai will be
at the Graham Cemetery. Calling
hours are 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at the

rHERM
s®
·scHOOL
LUICH KITS
•Smurfs
•Miss Piggy
•Garfield
•GI Joe
•Mr. Merlin
•Shirt Tail•

HEATING BASE

MINI·GRJDDLE
Separate
Non-Stick
base

BAKING/ROASTING RACK
turns pot into

a small oven

for rolls.
roasts. Cools
foods, too

for eggs,

bacon,
burgers

~nother

versatile work
saver from

YOUI CHOICI

_J(

.,,...

11 Oz.

•
El berfelds In Pomero,

.

'

N.ILSON'S IIG. n,l9

.

IYLO.I ROLL Ill

HILSON'S 111,0. 11.19

'

For Athl.e tea; Exerclt!l, Swlmml!lg or overnight. Auorted
colort.

r~fu;n~e~ra:l:h:om=e·::::::::===::==:::===================~

I

INTRODUCING OUR NEW SHORT
TERM MONEY MARKEt ACCOUNT••.•.

. -'

EFFECTIVE 9/1/82
Ap,Je'

'.

•• 45 Pl. Oz. ',

.

· · YOUR c:tfOIQ
.\

IF YOUR OLD SAVINGS PLAN ISN'T DOING
THE JOB••• YOUR WISH HAS FINALLY COME
TRUEII!
For as short as 7 days you can earn high
money mark"flt rates and still have the comfort of easy access to your money.
Our new certificate requires a minimum
deposit of $20,000 which allows you to earn
high Interest over a short term. The rate of
Interest earned Is related to the ·rate paid
on the 91 day U. S. Treasury Bill. For your
benefit, this rate changes weekly so you will
always earn the most recent money market
rate. All of this, with the confidence of
knowing your deposit Is Insured by the
F.D.I.C.
Also, for your convenience you can elect
to let your certificate grow automatically or
you can come In to withdraw your deposit or
lust the Interest. ·
DON'T WAIT •••• th~ sooner you open a
new short term Money Market Account, the
sooner you'll start earning high short term
Interest.

.

,,•

NILSON'S 110, 14."

fl'eOd

Gariield

·.

@

•

Memheo FDIC

Crow's Family Restaurant
PH. 992-6432

OH.

.The ··Community Owned Bank
.,, '------~~~-----~....;._---...:....,;J
"

'

.

.

•
•

l 7.0 Page•

,Spiral ·
,
Auorted Otlslgn.s

'

CRIYOLI
CRIYOIS

r;:: ::

'i ..

24 Ccllort .

'

t,

_

..

. ..

~·

a' Oz.
' '.
HRAND

•Tuna, 6 Oz .
•Turkey &amp; Giblets, 6'1• Oz.
•Liver &amp; Chicken, 6'/• Oz.

,~

Ca t Food

YOUR CHOICE

3 I 79"

•

N~'IIIO.

•' 11.49

'I'

J

~ -Tender
Purin8

Farmers
Bank ·

'

.
·~'- ~

Every Wednesday Night
DINING ROOM ONLY

'3''

. I

24 Oz.

BAKED STEAK DINNER-

''

"

SUBSTANTIAL PENALTY FOR EARLY WITHDRAWAL

$335

$597

I U.s.

J

HOUSEWARES DEPT.
1st FLOOR

wesrBeiiD.

•Regular
•Automatic Drip
•Drip

pria.

SeiVtd wllh Mashed Polltoa.
Choice ofJI!ad, Roll. and Drink.

IIIWELL HDUSE
·COFFEE

.~

'

0
'

VittleS.
BRAND

•Tuna
•Beef
•Gourmet

lllEBOOI
FI.LLER PIPER

YOUR CHOICE

tat Food

200 lh••••
.

('

•
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