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'

.· 'faga ' 14-The
. Daily
.. Sentinel

PcPol~nm'MIMII't'CIO"'''f-NMIIcilldcllclleport; Ohio

~.

Bomb blast claims Gema
Israeli l~ops, enter : B.e~~ .~- :·. ~· .

-' Industrial output
~Qps ,i n A0;guist .
By A.oclated PreM
Ove~ ' U.s: Industrial output
moppeii·o.5 percent In August from
July, te11ect1ng a decline In auto·
~ business equipment productlon, the governmenthreported
,toeay,
The decline was the Uth monthly
slump In 13-months.
The report, by the Federal Re,SI!rve Board, said August auto prod\ICtiOO was cut back more than 16
percent to an annual rate of 5.5 mll·
lion units.
Production of equipment which
WOUld be used In the fabrication of
other goods has fallen 18 percent
$Ce Its peak In July 1981, the hoard
S!lidToday' s report followed signs
Tuesday that a consumer-led reco.vegy from recesulon Is still elusive.
U.S. automakers ported early September sales ot new cars fell to the
,lowest dally rate In~ years and the
:Contereilce Board, a business•llnanced study group, said consu!mer ron!ldence. In the economy
,clecUned In August after rising In
previous months.
' Meanwhile, Chrysler Corp. and
Jihe United Auto Workers faUed to
•

month ·fell 29.3 percent from the
same 1981 periOd, with tile ,dally
511les rate of 13,61 vehicles dropping to Its lowest level since the
·12,'187 of September 196'1,
So far this year, domestic automakers have sold 3.9 miUlon cars,
down almost 15 percent !rom the4.6
mllUon sold In the same period last
year.
The Conference Board, a private
business study group, Sllltl Its Con·
sumer Contldence Index fell to 53.7
In August froJll61.61n July, reverslng four straight months of rising
confidence In the nation's ec.&gt;nomy.
The Index, which averaged 100 In
the baSI! years of 1969 and 1970, Is a
barometer of trends In consumer
S!!ntlment about current and tuture
eco)lomic conditions and Is based
on a survey of 5,mJ households
around the nation.
The August survey also said 58.3
percent of the families complained
about dlf!lculty of finding jobs, up
from 56.6 percent ln. July and the
highest figure recorded In the 15year history of the monthly studies.
The Labor DeparOnent said that
19 states and the District of Columhla had double-digit unemployment rates In July, more than stx
times the number of July 1981,
when the latest recession began.
• Another poll of consumer a ttl·
tudes said AmeriCans believe It Is
getting tougher to buy a home. The
survey of heads of bouS!!holds was
. conducted for the Federal National
Mortgage Association· arid said 91
percent of those questioned said
they agteed wtth the statement:
"These days It takes a two-Income
household to afford a mortgage."
Meanwhile, the Treasury announced plans to sell nearly $23 bll·
lion In bUls, notes and bonds next
week to redeem old debts and raise
more than $11 bUUon In new cash
for the government .

1

:tour

!reach~tonanewcontract

illy a midnight Tuesday deadline. A

l

atrlke was averted when the two
aides agreed to a :If-hour extension
!ot the current contract.
I UbUI consumer spending picks
;up,IIPW'flng orders to manufactur·
ters for new goods, Industrial productlon wW remain sluggish and
manufacturers wiU be unable to recall Idled workers.
:: 1be 10 percent cut 1n personal In·
.come tax rates 1n July was aimed
,at stimulating the economy. But so
,
!the
...,..,,nn
a
~tar,
ne r a 5""'-'"' spree nor
strong recovery has materialized.
U.S. automakers said Tuesday
' that sales 1n the first 10 days of this
;

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·.Church's

(Continued from page 11

poaltlon.,
Easelstyn scoffed at the
cootentlon.
."A functional moron can figure
oUt that U tbe miners aren't workIng, the union's dues are going togo
down," be sald. ''I~ve \leell wilmlng
Sam Church since March that we
were beading for trouble round
about August. But Sam Church

didn't want this out"
Church did acknowledge that
there Is "a potential for a cash Dow
problem" In the union, which reported this month that 41,534 of Its
150,mJ llctlve members were
unemployed.
But he maintained that "con·
trary to some claims, the union Is In
a sound tlnanclal.condltlon."

I

Hospital News

Area death

I

Admitted--Phillip Donovan, Syracuse; Ira Amott, Racine; Howard
il\leshlre, Pomeroy; Mary Stewart,
Letart, W. Va.; Kenneth Romine,
Pomeroy; •Helene Sayre, Racine.
Five calls were answered by Io- · Dlsl;h~-Ray Ungaro, Cha·
cal units Tuesday, the Meigs .. rle$ Bush; Goldie Holman, George
Q,unty Emergency Medical Ser' Molden, Jay Harper, Delores
v!cn-eports.
Aelker, Hazel DUes, Freda Carpen1\t 9:1M a.m., the Syracuse Unit ter, Anise Greenlee.
toQk lola
to veterans
Memorial Hopsltal; the Syracuse
Unit at 10:43 a.m. took Lawrence
· qtne Welshtown Hill to Veterans ·
M~rlal; Middleport at 6:03p.m. Ask to wed
. took HaiTy Stover to Veterans
A lli8J'lllage license was Issued In
·Memorial; Pc:meroy at 9:27 p.m.
' took Helene Sayre trom Five Polhts Meigs cOunty probate Court to
' to Veterans Memorial and at 11: ll Janies Eugene Haley, ll, Middle' p.m., Pomeroy took Etta Mae Ellie port, and Angela Marte Fisher, 18,
froin the county Infirmary to Vete- Middleport.
rans MemoriaL

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Damewooo

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TEL AYIV, Israel (AP) .:. IsuieU
troops entered Mllslem west Beirut :
today "to pre-vent fighting and 5ec:ure peace" less than one ~Y atijli'
atxmhkilledpl'()-lstaeliPri!Stdl!ltt..
elect Bashlr Gemayei, the military

Command said.

,

The command gave no details on

how many troops went Into west

LEADER KDJ.ED - Bashlr
Gemt!Jel, Presklent-eled of Le-

Beirut, or exactly what parts of the
district they took.
It said there was no fighting 1lS
the Israelis entered the Moslem
haU of the Lebanese capital for·
·merly held by Plilestlne Uberatlon
· Organization guen1llas unUI they
ev~~Ct~ated thecltytwoweeksagoln
the face of an Israeli siege. ·
Begin
sent Minister
a telegramMenachem
ot support
Prime

banon wu klled Tul!llday In a
bomb blast a&amp; an offtoo of his
Pha1angllt Party In Chrl8tlan
easa Beirut. Gemayel was 34.
( AP Laserphoto).

after Gemayel's assasslnatlorl, and
the Israell troop movements In Bel-

~~a:e=::=!t: ·
:e~:mn;~a::-:r~ar-otd Leba-

10-year old
found guilty
•
rn
rape case
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A 10year-old boy has been tried and
found gullty of rape In a juvenile
court case.
1be verdict was rendered Tuesday after three other11 boys waived
.....
14Is and pleaded ~· ty to charges
u
"~
o f rape an d gross sexua I
Imposition.
The four, and another whoSe case
Tuesday was continued, were
ch•--' wtth 27 delinquency counts
·~

The latest llevelopments came as
President Reagan's 'new Middle
East ""ace envoy Morris Draper
,....
arrived In "'el
more talks
1'
•' Avfv •or
aimed at withdrawal of all foreign
to
from Lebanon He met with

rces

·

Foreign Minister Yltzhak Shamlr
In Jerusalem and was to meet
Begin later.
Gemayel's slaying could se·
Verety hamper nraper's efforts .to
peacefully resolve Lebanese poUtlcs- It could also make Gemayel's

"=

Including rape, assault and gross

~:~tta~~!tlt':o ~ys~::::e::r~ .

Aug 25
J~~ John HUI In Franklin

County Juvenile Court postponed .
sentencing pending the undecided

case
psychologists' exa'lllnatlon ofand
all five.
The defendants were being held
In county custody. The oldest Is 15.

I

:~:..os~a~~::~:~:::.~
., u...

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,!~

, _ _, · &lt;• •

,
'
"" ~- J\ad tra'lil!""' fO'&gt; llll_, 1J1!V I
.
state.
.
.,-;~I . · L' jVjth Iatuti!
1
The "(raglc event" In J3ii~! ~Uimei fy.rr~ i-riJiiiQM ~
."CC?uld change\hewhOiesl~tllln,
, leaders and J;eCe,;Ja i, ,
' .
Israeu paruament Speake!' I'd~· dollar8 In ~tar.i 1 ·~ .eli!Cled/
chemSavldortoldreporterseerlter
~n
ye the first tDrelgr(
In San Juan, F'uerto .!:~-~v:h· :.fl~'onepu
'
h~IY·
congral\118te:
was In San .Juan ,for """'wqp
government o~ls.and leaders of him.
the Jewish community.
·
_ _ _ _..:..__ _- - : - --:.
Gemayel was elected by Parlta· .
ment Aug. m In a special session
boycotted by many Moslem~·
tors. He was supposed to succeed
President Elias Sarkis on Sept :1.3.
foR AU.. ()tCASIOIIS
Gemayel's links with the Israelis
dated back to the 1975-76 clvU war
1
between Lebanese Christians alld
an alliance of Moslems alld Palestl·
.
, . '\

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.e

't

· Israeli press- ~~;·
.
said '-""
r~ni;an;gue~rrlltas~~
~~,..;-~E~~~P~h-~99~2~
:6~34;'2~~~~
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VoUt,No.t

'1 st Year Free Tank Rental
'400 Gallon Plus lnstallatoon 5334
' Di s cou ~t on First Fill

A meeting of the Southern High
School Band Boosters wW be beld
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the band
room. AU Interested parents are Invited to attend.
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f

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en tine

1 S.C.tion, 14 Pogu 15 Cents
A
In&lt; . Newspaper

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NICOSIA, Cyprus (AP) - Sadegh Ghotbzadeh, the former lranlan
foreign minister who fell from favor after opposing spy trials for .the
American hostages In Tehran, was executed by a tiring squad for plotting
· to topple Ayatollah Rullollah Khomelnl' s government. the ottlclallrantan
. news agency reported today . .
· . The news agency IRNA said the execution was carried out In Tehran
Wednesday night on the basi$ of a verdict Issued by the Army Revolutionary Tribunal and approved by the High Judicial Court. IRNA gave no
other details of the execution.
Ghotbzadeh, 48, was arrested early In April and charged with master·
minding a plot to .overthroW the Islamic government and assassinate
Khomelnl, his one-time mentor and lran's supreme revolutionary leader.
His close ties to Khomelnl were evident In 1979 when Ghotbzadeh returned hon,e after ~ years aboard on the same airplane as the exiled
rellglous leader and promptly emerged as one of the most powertul men In
lran. He had been one of Khomelnl's closest confldents ever since the
ayatollah was exUed by the tl'le late Shah of lran, Mohammlld Reza
Pahlavf, In 1963. o
Ghotbzadeh was named toretgn minister a few days after student radl·
cals seized the U.S. Embassy, taking Americans hostage In November
1979. After 444 days In captivity, the 52 hostages were released Jan. :b:J, 1981
- the day President Reagan took office. ·
During the early months ot the hostage crtsts, Ghotbzadeh' s face be-

Buc"eye Gas Products Company will redeem HH S
" only when used toward the 1~rst 111
coupon
• oI 400
Doxoi
Pro"'"e
syslem
gallons of prppane 1n a new
- ·•
.
1'nstalled belween Augusl 20 thru November·17 l982

RIDENOUR G
, AS ·SERVICE
·
·

985-3307
·

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BUCKEYE GAS :PRODUCTS
992-5o97
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a·

Q'VftL ~ PRD~. lNE
~U

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OHOO'BZADEH EXECUTED - Fonner Iranian Forelp Mlnl&amp;ler Sa4eP. Gbotbzadeh, -here a&amp; the last -.ion of bill trial aoou8ed
of JIIOUIIII the o~ of the ~· Oovenulteat 811111188118111nadol
of Iranian leader AyalQUah Khomelnl. Ghottrz.adeh was executed by
· · fb1ng ~~quad ~ Tehrall durla1 lite nipt the official Iranian News

.

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l.

JRNA. reporied 'l'hunday: (AP y.e~),
'{'

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·• ..1....,..."-•1. w.r:

t "':t-·,fil'

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Buckeye briefs

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Springer
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say., press good to him

dNCINN:ATI - Gerald N. Springer, the former CIIiclnnatl city
: councilman ,who pnishec;i third In the · Democratic gubernatorial
: primary, says thi! press was good to him djlrlng his campaign.
· "'I)le press coverage at till; primary was not very objective. It was
· overly tavorl!hle to me," Springer told a Society of Professional
· Journallsts dinner Wednesday night.
Springer, who wiU beCome a local television news commentator In
November, said lie beUeves the press gave him favorable treatment
bee&amp;US!! he was ~thi! new kid on the block."
.By contrast,_.hoth his opponents - former Lt. Gov. Richard C.
Celeste lind Attorney General wnuam J . Brown- were well known
to polltlca) 'reporters •.

,...

SAVE FROM S230°0 TO 5°0 ON
QUALITY KROEH LER 2 Pc~ LIY.I NG ROOM
.
· ·c'.
SUITES
,
.
LARGE SE~ECTION . OF STYLES
&amp; ~ FABRICS
.

Citizens question plant's safety

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WASHINGTON- Representatives ot ·acitizens' group say they
question wllether the Nuclear Regulatory ConUn!Sslon can ensure
the safe C011Structlon of the Zimmer nuclear power pbint In southw·
estern Olilo.
·
·
.
Vlckt Mayer, a leader ot the Zimmer /l,rea Citizens ot Ohio and
Ken~. accused the NRC Wednesday bf c6mpllclty Wtth the Cln·
·clnnatl Gas a. Electric Co., which wants to put the Zimmer plant In
operati011 next year.
Memberll ct. the citizens' group attended a House subcommittee
bearing TjleldaY which reviewed what Is being done by the NRC to
assure tile qwiljty of construction at the plant

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Met~~baum
'gears .up'. campaign
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came a nightly feature on American television screens as he answered
questions and gave his government's position on tbe hostages.
In June 198), he openly opposed spy trials for the hostages that were
being demanded by Iran's Moslem mUltants. At one point, GhQtbzadell
hatl supported such trials, hut later moderated his stance to say only the
United States - not the hostages themselves - should stand trial for
alleged crimes against Iran.
Ghotbzadeh's opposition to the spy trials put him on a collision course
with the rnllltants holding the Americans and the Moslem extremists
running the Parliament
Later he was arrested by Islamic revolutionary guards and charged
with criticizing government officials hut was treed. He was stJ1ppe(j of his
position In August 198! and kept a law profUe after leaving office.
He apparently made no attempt to leave Iran asdld he fellow moderate,
former President Aholhassan Bani·Sadr, who fled to France In 1981 after
being ousted from power by Moslem fundamentalists In the regime.
Shortly after his April arrest, Ghothzadeh appeared on Iran's state
television and admitted he had conspired IQ blow up Khomelnl' s residence
and to overthrow the government
However, when his trial began last month, Ghotbzadeh pleaded Innocent
to the charge of plotting to assassinate Khomelnl. He dkl admit to plotting
against the government, !RNA reported at the time.

l4"bids ·
received
for PVH
structure
ByJDIIYOwen
A new medical oftlce building
for Pleasant Valley Hospital
neared reality ~ednesday wlth
the opening of bids, all In excesS
of $1.4 mllllon.
•
Fourteen companies are vying
for the contract on tbe PVH exten·
slon, which Executive Director Robert Carper says may be awarded
within the next few weeks.
Clint Bryan, of Clint Bryan Associates of Charleston, the architect
for tbe project, says was pleased
wtth the bids - ranging !rom
$1,795,mJ to $1,412,700 - which he
terms "good competitive bids"
very close to his original estimate.
Low bidder on the project was
Southern Construction of St. Albans
which submitted the $1,412,700 figure and a construction calendar of
450 days. Three other ftnns were
under the $1.5 mllHon mark, lnclud·
lng Meigs County company, Karr
Construction of Chester, submitted
· a $1,'493,1ffi base bid and a 365 day
construction schedule whUe Den·
ral, Inc. of Ashland, submitted a
$1,497,mJ baSe hid for 300 days and
Dlnlaco and Sons, Huntington, submitted a bid of $1.496,900 and 300
days .
Carper cautions, however, that
there are a number of factors, In
·addition 'to the base bid, which a
hulldlng committee will be looking
af before awa~dlng the final
.•'
conltjlct.
_
The 111€1\lcal office buDding wiU
be corinected to the existing hospital structure on the lower and mid·
die levels and wiU provide capacity
.... fonuq~v,entual 21 office. suites.
Parking reiwvatlons wtil ~rovfde 72

a

HEALTH LEVY PROM!JI'ION -'- These Meigs
tlounly citizens concerned about further decreases In
services of the Meigs County Health Department met
Wednesday morning at Velerans Memorial Hospital
to dlscU!iS promotion lor the one mUilevy to be voted

on In the November election.

Shown from the left, .
Edison Hobstetter, Nonna TOrTes, R.N., Frank P~ •
trie, Health Depariment administrator, Dr. James
WltheraD, Eleanor Thomas, Susan OBver and Homer ·

Baxter.

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CLEVELAND : Howard Metzlenbaum appears to be loaded for
bear 111 hll campaign for re-election to the u.s. Senate. The problem
Is th8t Congress w011't Operf bunttitg seasOn.
. Roy Meyers, who oVersees Metz.enbaum's Itinerary, says the Democratic senator's ~1!11&amp;1 duties have put his schedule up lh
the air dod his campatp .,atitst RepuhUcan challenger , Paul.
Pfeifer on a hall and chaln.
·
. . Meyers :said It looks aa If weekends will be about the only time
Met7Jenbaum will be able to spend In Ohio unUI Oct. 2, when It Is
hoped tbe Senate will· adjourn.

·Winning. Ohio ,lottery number

of

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Committee hears report .on
·importance of health measure
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
"If this one mUI health levy
doesn't pass, then what we are look
lng at fn,a few years from now Is a
health department with a sanlta·
lion · administrative person. one
nurse and one clerk with a lot less

setvtce.··

for five years would bring In
$147,0)) which would decrease ·the

amount needed from the county
budget commission, thereby allowIng the townships and vtllages to
retain more funds for road and
cemetery work, It was pointed out.
" I don't know how we'U keep goIng without a le\IY," was Norma
Torres' appraisal of the situation.
Mrs. Torres, R.N., nursing supervisor for the health department, expressed regret over losing two
programs already - the hypertension control cllnic and the pre-natal
program.
She exlalned that when the levy Is
passed, giving the department additional operating tunds, there Is a
distinct possibility that the minimal
charges now made for lmmunlzatlons, lirlne culture, blood work,
blood press'ure, .nu shots, iutd wellchild cllnic visits (r~JI~glng from $2
to $6) wtll he decre&amp;SI!d or
eliminated.
These, by necessity, .were put

That was Frank Pelrte's description of the Meigs County Health Department's finances without funds
from the levy to come before the
voters In the November general
election.
The health department adminisaatitlooal !paces.
I .
trator
was speaking to a group of
'
·In May, when the West. VIrginia
concerned
residents Wednesday at
· · Health Qepartment awarded a Cer·
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
~te ~eed ioPVH to allow for
Petrie reported the department
the' cooatructton, Carper ~tlmaled
Is now operating on $65,!0l a year
the proJect cost would be $2$3,855.
'·.
(the 10 rnlU llmltatlon collected by
In addition to the base bids for tbe
the Meigs County Commissioners
med1cal office building, ~of which ·
were 't ar under that estlinate, t1rms from the tOwnships and communia''ll1g with state and federal
were aalr£d to submit bids on four ties)
CLEVELAJilD - The wlnntng numiJer dntwit Wednesday night In
do~ wblch he · said are slowly
alternate JtemS. · Alternate 1 was
.the Ohio Lottery's 'ciaUy gaiTII! ''The Number" was ~ ; .
,
"d.tylng up."
doctor suite Interiors: alternate
}or
nte lottery reported earnlngs.of U8'7,ll5t from the wqerjng 011 !te
The one .mDI levy to be In effect
2. ti new stortn. drainage system for
dally game. The'earnln~cameonulelofSIII5.m while holden of
the' IDpltal gJ'OII1Jds; alternate 3,
winning tickets are entitled tO share W1 .2'1llr...iottei'Y &lt;f!lclals ~
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' relocatkm ohome Items and I!QulpI
merrt wttl,dn tbe lnplfal; and alter- 4, lliP"...., of tile klblly, walk· COLUMl3US, Ohio (AP) - A · statewide level, hundreds of thoudta• 1 and a neiv canapy for the
for~t .
newly formed organization called smls Qt people wltbholdlng tbelr
PVHeateslor.
Solidarity Ohio Is urging the state's payments In escyow accounts,"
Clear 81111 cool tonight. Low fl-52. Winds llgbt 81111 northerlY. Frl- ,
.coa.tnlellan fl ezpected to begin residents to wlillbold payment 011 Keller told a news conference.
. .... time tldl falL .
day, paftly cloudy. Hlallt »15.
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their natural gas bills to j»''test In·
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,: I 1 t Oltlo Fw ec:u*
FDurteeD ~~~nt~' IUbmltted bids creasing energy ~.
Keller ~ ~ a boycott would
W""""ilay 0111ht llltjiQIEd medi"We just can't afford this any- force Columbia Gas of Ohio "to sit
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down and ...........
al ofllce boJ!ldlne to be added to more,'' Gi!orae Keller, the groups
"1 11 af lllawen Sal tk;. hlr ud clocllSaltdaJ Md ....,.,.
,...,..,_te" with consy·
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., Pleaent Valley ibpltaL In add!· .fliuMel', said Wednesday night . · ~~said the boycott Idea was
. .•: tk)n to bue bMe, tile COI!IIJ8nles
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"The - ·
J'eJiei fee , U"¥'"" liy court decisions allow•
· ...
_.. COJI1PI!I1Yi
~ · r · ing .renieri 10 withhold rent pay- ·
c..;;-------~~,;.;.---~ ~;..;,;,;,;,;o,;...~
(Collllnued 01 Pile 14) .
~~ ~ almle. We hope to get, 011 a
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The Village of Middleport is ~~~~ application~ _fo~
. the pre-quelification of contractors in t!Mtr ho.usma rahabll~:. tlQII I)I'OPm, funded by the _Departmen~ of Houslna and Urbin , ,
Development. Contractors l~te(est~ 1n blc~ina a ~- .,
to.- in this prOIJ'im are asked to contact the Middleport Office
of 'c0m1111111ty ~IOJ!IIIIflt. 237 Rice Street. Middleport.
OhiO 45760 or phone 992-6782 for further infol'!llltion. eon-·
•• tnletors who 11M ill'lldy bl;ln,qu1lified In the propm ..., ·not rHpply as they will still be eli&amp;ible to bid Ollllomll bel~
rehabbed. Applications will be accepted on 1 continual bls1s ·
' , u this is a contimli111 pr0111m of the Vlllct.
· ·.
Fled Hoffmln. Mayor
- - of licfdleP,ort

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ELB.
E
RFElD.
S
IN
POMEROY
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. Former Iranian ·leader
executed by firing squad

SEPTEMBER ,

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Pomeroy-Mi.ddleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 16,1982

•

It was testified that the victims
were threatened with a Wrench; ,

meetirig set

at y

4

:

You Get Value and Price
at.Doxol Propane

The victims, ll·and 12-year-old
boys al)d a 13-year-old girl, testltled
that they were In a park when the
five boys approached their
bicycles.

~tel'!l

•

Muhi
m
odl
a
; ~~~~~h~tod~·:··~2--------~----------------------------~~~----~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~;_--------------~==----------~~------~~---

reports

Defense lawyer Doug Maser said
the crime were "revolting," hut
that the 10-year-old should not be
made to pay for the "tull sweep" of

that at least one victim was kicked,
punched and hlt·wllh a stick; and
that all three were ordered to
undress.
The boys were ordered to per·
form sexual acts with the girl, then
with each other, It was testltled,
and the boys were ordered to perform sexual acts.on the attackers.
All five of the accused attempted
Intercourse with the girl, according
to victims' testimony.
The boys were arrested the following day after a parent of a vfc·
tim spotted them at the scene.

..

Page 5

•

r~lng~a~pe~ace~pa~c~t:wt~th~the~.J~ewlsh~~~::::;;~~~~;::;;:;:;:;:~~E~;;~:;;

Prosecutor David Bosley said In
the juvenue court that the 10-yearold was an active participant In the
crimes.

·NFL players call
.strike for Tuesday

Page 6 ·

CONfECTIQN[DY

I '•

'

· Oood Samaritan:s
fina~e voyage

Meigs teams hit
week
road this
,

CAKES
CAROUSEL

Begin's telegram to Pierre Gemayel, father of the slain presidentelect and founder of the rightist
Phalange Party, saki: "I am
shocked to the depths of my soul by
the criminal assassiiUitlon of Bashlr, a great patriot andacoura~
ous tighter tor the freedom and
Independence of Lebanon. May
God comfort yoli.

'•

NOTI·CE TO CONTRACTORS.
A

,

crimes comml~.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES SEPI'. 14
Joyce I. Nonis
Mrs. Robert Bauman and son,
Floyd Bennett, Mrs. Wllllam Bird
·:Joyce l ' staiic.ey Norris, 25, Le- and son, Artie Bond, Thomas Crow,
. wtsfm, Maine, (!led Sept. llln Le- Paul Finley, Kendall Fisher, Mrs.
wtstoo Hospital.
James Gartner and daughter, Myr·
Born Feb. 26, ~1,1n Washington tie Goble, Aaron Grady, Mrs. PhU·
Court House, she was the daughter · lip HoU~nbaugh and dau~ter,
Cll Earl and Thelma Starkey, who Elaine Holley, Mrs. James Large,
bo'th survive In Galllpolls Ferry.
Jeffrey Leming, Charles Lu&lt;;as.
''Also surviving Is her husband, H. ·Frances McCain, Addle McFann,
&lt;;arro11 Norris Jr.; a son, Chatl; Pauline Moore, Tamara Nibert,
tour brothers, James of Washing· Mary Phillips, WUllam Poling Jr.,
ton Court HOUSI!, Earl Jr. of Galli- Kathryn Potts, Marsha Ratliff,
polis, WUbert of Ashland, Ky., and , Van Robbins, George Saunders,
'lbomaS of VIrginia Beach,. Va.;
Jack Smith, Charlene Thacker.
lhfee sisters, Dorothy A)lhrlght of
BIR'mS
Plain CitY, Joan Atkins of ColumMr. and Mrs. Earl Ramsburg,
bUs, and Helen Starkey of Florida; son, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
IIIII a grandmother, DorQthy Pen· ward Vaughn, son, Wellston.
Well of WaShll)gton Court House.
· Burial wW be at Album Ceme.lefY In Album, Maine.
Veterans Memorial

Emergency runs

,

Into effect after a .5 levy taUed In
May.
The Importance ot low-cost
health services, Mrs. Torres explained, has been emphasized by
the latest statistics from the Ohio
Department of Health which show
that 58 percent · of Meigs County
marriages end In divorce leaving
many single parents sjruggllng ori
small incomes.
Those attending the steering
committee meeting for the levy
promotion, Including Edison Hobstetter, Dr. James WltlleraH, Homer Baxter, Susan Oliver, Leo
Vaughan, and Charlene Hoentch,
discussed various approaches toward educating the public on the
services of the Meigs County
Health Department and the financial needs of the agency.
Dr. Witherall wUI serve as honorary chairman for the levy promotion wlth other chairmen . and
committees to he named.

c 'roup urges user.s .to hold payments

Weather

'

t

• l

....

~.~~ '

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

.

...

ments for redress of grievanCes

trom their landlords.
. Utility officials ha~ said they
are only passing through their own
Increased•cos~ for gas supplies.
Keller said the utility .Is locked
. Into long-term contracts with gas
SI!Wllers In ,the So~thwest ft)r l)l&amp;h- 1
priced gas, when lower-priced gas
Is avallahle ~ Ohio ·wells.

�.,

Commentary

Down Mexico wayeL______:'-...--w_u_liam----.-.F_.8--:uc_k:-:ley:-:-·=-Jr. :·::

l'nnwrm. Hhie~

ll+oft·I IM

IW\·on:u Ttl ntlr: I ~ Tt: H t}iT nt· TltF l\l f:U I."'-MMO
O\ ~Ht ,\

ROBERT 1.. WINGF.TI
ROB HOEF'l.lfH
'\l;ollltl!t'r

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR .
i'\ ~1t:MH•:R uf TIM.• ,, ,..,"·illlt'CI 1'1'1"!1;"· ll1b11d O.Jh l'r' '"!lo ·' ""' " l;Hu•n 11 ud 1Jk ·
,\nwr it·uu Nt•'AIIplpt'f l"uhlisht•n1 A t~lri l't ' bl l lutl .
·

•••rtl..

hiltI!. ,\II
I .Fnf.R" Uf' fWINII•~ an"""•l'lrumrd . Thr~ llh41Uid ~· lt •M lhun :J1111
ll•llt't'!i .un • MUhj~·l Itt rdiltnlt IJitl ftiUlll bl· siiUM'fl wllh u~o~nu·. :~tldrt'\11 11111! lt•lt• rh""''
lllftlhl•r. Nu UIII~UWCilrUrr11 • ·ill hr.• puhll~hl'd. IA•Ilt•fll Ktk!Uid bt· itl ~m·d tlt~ LI' . udtlrl'~o~&gt;int:
lsoour11. n111 PI'I'Mnlllillt'fl,

Nothing succeeds
like ambiguity
Some days, notl)lng succeeds Uke ambiguity. Any poUUclan.can testify
to that, of any diplomat.
So political Judgment guided the Reagan administration's diplomatic
spokesmen Into an artful dodge on the nuclear weapons freeze proposal
that was overwhelmingly approved by Wisconsin voters In 'IUesday's
primary election.

Since It was a fOregone conclusion that the freeze measure would be
approved, there was nothing to be gained by denouncing lt. So the State
Department sugested the administration might not object to It, dependIng 011 how the language Is Interpreted.
President Reagan opposes a freeze at CUITent weapons levels, saying
that V(ilWd leave the United States at a dangerous disadvantage to the
Soviet Unloo, and argues tjlat polltlcal pressure tor such a move would
undercut American anns reduction negotiators.
The poUtlcal problem Is that freeze propositions keep getting approved.
It's happened In more than 400 clUes, towns and counties, lncllldlng Brat·
Ueboro, Vt., which a1sa voted on the question Tuesday.
It bl.ppened In Wisconsin by a lopsided margin. 76 percent lor the freeze
propoeltlon, 24 percent against. That was the first statewide vote, with
eight more to follow on Nov. 2. Freeze prqJOSals wtU be 011 the ballots then
In Artlooa, California, Michigan, Montana, New Jersey, North Dakota,
Oreilllll and Rhode Island.
~ advocates have an appeaUng argwnent: they say they want a
mutllal. veriftedstlllldstWln thenuclearannsrace, and contend that !I one
side 1n111sts on buDding more weapons the other side w!U, too,ln a new anns
race aplral. .
The administration has a moredltflcultcase to make, since It Insists that
current levels won't do; that tllere must be cuts on the Sovletsldeorrnore
weapo1111 to detend the United Slates.
Wlllconsln voters decided that their state "should Inform the president
and O:IJgress Of the United States that It Is the deSire o! the people of
Wlsc&lt;inlln to have the government of the United States work vigorously to
negotiate a mutual nuclear weapOns moratorium and reduction, with
appropriate verlflcatlon, with the Soviet Union and other nations."
A~ error dropped the word "weapons" trcm some ballots. And
there II nothing binding about any of thenuclear,freeZevotes.But there Is a
politiCal m!ssage In them, whatever the wordlni. and the administration
cloesn't'want MOI!COW thlnldng that Reagan confronts a political groundswell In favor of the freeze Idea.
'
'

·

:~:=to about four &lt;Jays a week next month, leading up to the

"

enough tlll'letoeet !heeconomystralghtand hedeservesmoreofachance,
Reagan himself Is focusing on the Issues that worked tor him two years
ago, In relaxed settings that provide perfect backdrops lor his tarn111ar
message.

a

Today in History
1

_ Today 1s Thursday, Sept. 16, the 259th day of·1982. There are 101
d8ys left In the year.
'
·
, Toclay's highlight In history:
On Sept. 16, 1&amp;'50, the slave trade was forbidden In the District of
Columbia.
Qn this &lt;late:
.
In 00, Japan surrelldered Hong Kong at the end of World warn.
Jn,1963, Malaya, N&lt;rth Bomeo, Sarawak and Singapore tormed
the Federation Cif Malaysia.
.
.
.
IJI1971, Look magazine aimounced It would fold due to~
.~ (, ' ~costs and decllnln&amp; revenues. ,
.
, ' ,. ·Iii 191ll, South KoreaD .dt.ideni leilder'Klm ~was lll!bteac*' to death on cllarp!S of attempting to CMl1hrow the. ~
'

,

.·

,

f,

•'

TMAl REASC&gt;tl 'NO\!I.P
FREVAIC. ...
)

.
.,•
' .•.
•r

·,

..

.....'•,.
'

'
.

.......

MEET TOUGH WAHAMA SQUAD -Coaches Wahama. Southern, H, wiU face '1111 unbeaten WlWe
Frank l'orier Ul!l Darrell Dqau, far- right, ahowll 'Falcoa team which has reeonlecl baek-to-back, shudlrectlni their team last ~ Digiti aplnlt Fed- tout wins over Soulhwetltem and Kyser Creek.
eral Hocking face a tough chore this Friday alghl at

many mUUon dollarS In commtsstons - a figure hard to estlmBte
now that cornmlaslons .are nego- ·
Uated rather than fixed.
It also takes a while to dream of

yachts again, which brokers
thought had saDed beyood the horlzon of their hopes. And, as If anybody need be reminded, It talles time
to spend that money.
It Is understandable then, rela·
tlvely speaking, wbyyruCliJiheara
penny drop on Wall Street of late.
On til\! first day of trading this week
volwne totaled only 59.5 rnDUon
shares, compared with the record
of 137 miUlon.

SQ.u,tb~~' W ahama ma~ch-up

The Internat1011al Monetary world monetarysltuatlon.thatlooks ,...;
Fund metitlng In Toconto made a
moreandmoreUkeanlgh~,ln :~- ~
bid to take up the Slack, but mone- that some of tile born:MoJng nations
tary ·abstractions such as the de- simply cannot ~ their loanS
cline ·In ~ of the:Meidcan peso _ and In scxne cases even the Interest. • ~
lack the apeclflc l\'ll!llnllig of a $5 on them.
.
· {_
Jump In UJe prlce ft. a ~. . .
'lbere are 900le ~and oth, Besides, the news trom TQ!'OIIto ers who seek to ~vtnce file wcrld.
was very dllcouraglng, and people · that the danger Of this situation Is .: ·•.~
havehadthelr&amp;hareofbadnews- exaggerated"~~ ~~ the prob- ! -1
unemployment; hl&amp;b Interest rates,
tans can be re9olved Simply by re- "" !
tnrlation the lnabllity of .people to . negotiating loans as they become ..
' .........
or tallaey
overdue.In thla ''financing Is , "
buy a new
......... 9r.evenanau•--.......,. due
The
bDe for thatmatter.
.
• rever''
tis that good
...
argumen
mo-. '
But the tough reellty of tile ttrnes .o
1s that the discusSions 1n Toronto Dey can be sent af)er bad, with the .!
probably haJ more to do with the borrowing nation becoming less . .
pUght of local ecoiDTlles than did able to repay because of Its low ..·
the situation on Wall Street.
credit rating and hlgb' Interest .. ,
In Toronto they dealt with a rates.

may become very interesting

..

culp
'_ n·ts

William A. Rusher . ·,
.L.----------------------------- . '
. ~

ones, and accordingly he deCUned
up a g l· life long or hard enough there was a teacher; or..._.hers, ,., ,
to register hls·nanie for ready refer·
yet to d elop his own dents and who taught Benjamin Sasway to ; ,1 ,
ence If Congress ever decides toredlmp . ) There was an older man , IQOk at American SOCiety as a hypo- vlve tile draft.
being. tntei'vtewed on TV,· too, critical, exploitative, materlallstlc . _
Now, everybodylnthlscountryls
whomHI,lOktobe~ay'sfather. roadblOck on UJe path of human ';
entitled to his or her oplnlori of Its
This gent ~ terribly broken up progress.
·•
policies, but It Is quite another thing
oVer the very Idea that aU 12 of the
Tile generatlop of tile Yletpam
.
to say that once Congress .has dejurorscould~tllemselvestore- prptesters ~ IIOW,1In ,I~A •. ;
tined these by law,. we can each
gard .Benjamin as "a crlmlnal."
and the acadernkl~ . .
them
pick and choose which of~ we
Though the
probably re- are 8lteadY ~lit t{lt·~·
wiU consent . to support . with our
hllpself as the pi-ectse re- lies ~ the coun~'• Jd&amp;!l ·ICbools -:r.
taxes (or our miUtary. service, If - verse of class-conscious, his and colleges. ~ ~¥' he lew ;..
that Is what Is reqUired). Nonadon
comment reeked of class superior· sweeter forms of ~ upon .a :"
could possibly lillow Its Citizens that ' lly: · "Crlrnlnllla," you see are peo- hated society than lO
lis child· .•••
sort of latitude; It would be a. pres- pie who break the law tor venal ren.agalnst lt.
::
.
·; t
crlptlon for pure
motlws. Hlgh-mlllded ·types Uke
:nte members ,
the post· ·• ....
Qoes young $asway riallze 11111s? ·. , ~arniJ.l, who break It for~ .· ~ genera~UI be sure, are •
Igotthelmpresalol)that, If he does, of ~pie. aren't really "criJhl. 110 easy pickings J!. thla regard.
he doesn't 'mdch 'care. He ~ l!Ris" at 'Bll. On the con~. they 'n1eY lulve.showtl a ~blede- · . ·-'
to consider himSelf . only very ~respectaspeoplewtlllilgto 1$'mlnatlon, ~,uve ~'and t'I?D' ' '
~ related to this country BRY:·
suffer ~or their convtcijons. ·lltnict1ve ll1iS In a ~ wlllile "'
way- rafher Uke a ~·~t'' : ('I'bouihltlaunclearJuat'~ttiM!Y !llllltyandimral·hei!ltbbavebeen ''' ''1
~In the klungeof~lnter· ':'are. ~ to •Idler, ·Uide from. lartlelY restored. JIU~:atremiQua '"'
nattO!!&amp;tii\I'Pbrt. 8e·ts,' Ill tad,' 'a' TV ·Interviews;. appareritly It effilrtwWalwaysnil t·lrlatli!Uta r
perfect exallllll\! of~~~: doesn't Include ,JaU·J
.
few v1c1or1es. and
tb!1 pera- ,_ :
· ~ 'UI&amp;t Toynbee
U the man was IJideea BenJam- pect1ve of hll proud
ben, Ben- ;r .~
wollkl Join the lntemal ~t In's f4ther, tjlls attitude~ ~ . Jamln Salway Is no
one·of ' "
~Western ~ikii li!ttytngto clous condescension was · those viCtories: a !Jan\ai) torpedo "'
~It- 'he Is "In tbe.socli!ty unquesttonably one ~ tb!1lnfluen- a~ ~quarety at the\ Amerlci.m ·
but not of 1t." '
ces ihat shaped his son's course to- ship of state.
1r
How cid be~tbat.way? (For of ward a federal penitentiary.
What a pJIJi our JurtSpnaleuce
course a teeDaier jl very larp!ly,
.But one aeaaes other, probably doesn't allow us to reacb mid penal- ,. ':
for better
wOne, l(lll'll!body even stroilger lnf1uences In tile l2le the real architects of this 11011 ~ •
elae's ~ ·
·
nabbed · background. Almost certainly cle8tnlctloll! ,

anarcey.

man

1

4oubt

«

.

'DOONESIUY-~:
. ..

.~o)J , I .

f

aa_. ' ,-·
'

·'

on the ground and galnted 64 yards
In the air for 326 total yards.
Falcon Donnie VanMeter led the
running parade with three touchdowns whDe fullback Todd Troy
and halfback Steve Lyons pitched
In another large chunk of yardage.
In two games the White Falcon
backtleld has hit the endzone tor 80
points, whDe the defense has been
flawless.
Thus far In the 1982 campaign no
one, has had the honor of scoring
against the Falcon defense .
Another outlook, however, 'reveals
that the Falcon defense hasn't been
on the lleld that much, too. This
week the West VIrginian's Iron curtain will get Its biggest test. ·
Southern's · defense has been
strong overall, but a bit Inconsistent. Last week though, when . the
going got tough, It buckled down for
a strong llntsh and several crucial
fOUrth down Stands.

Marauders meet unbeaten
Warren Local club Friday
By KEml WJSECUP

For the third straight week, the
Meigs Marauders seek their ttfst
win of this young 1982 season
against the host Warren Local Warriors In the first-ever regular season meeting between the schools.
And also lor the third straight
week, the Marauders wiU be lacing
stiff opposition. The warriors,
coached lor the las.t lour years by
Robert HOI, are 2-0 wlth Impressive
wins over Fori Frye, 29-0, and Caldwell, li-S.
Warren Local has six returning
starters and 10 lettermen among
their ot!enslve positions. The War·
rlor~ are coming ott their shoot's
best record In history at 9-1.
Playing top-notch teams appears
to be synonymous with the Marauders schedule this season. Meigs' opponents for the l().game year have
pdsted to date, a 14-4-1 slate. Seven
of the opposition have unblemished
records, Including Waverly, Ironton, GallipoUs, JackSon, Belpre,
Huntington VInson and Warren
local.
By all means don't count this Marauder bunch out. They may be
winless, but showed what they were
made of against ft. Pleasant, arls.Ing time and again to the occasIon.
And this has Warren Coach Htll

·,

.

•

,. Toejo!lollor

Southwestern's top sarver was Mel :wKlm Jeffers with 8. 'lb1s Wtn
. ~~
t1ie Tor.nadoettel SVAC Jeque re- Mll'llll!l
cord to 3-0. Southern's .nextlelqrue • Loloa! wo11o
. pla'l'burlday eveu1!Ji at llo!JI!· Till Bill'
. apiDit EastenL
'SoDIIJ a.w~ a11emo011 Sou~ "-.......,

Me18s

~ tile
Maniadetettesla aa ~ matcllllefire the ~ts at RaciDe.
santber~~i~OII ,the rn,atcll In tWo
11VR R .llHI aad :1114. The :rorna.

i(ll'(

;,ftC,
~ ~ ·~

''

.,

illell;y .....

~­

=t.J:.
Gino

.'

Jr.
ScipiL

......
. rr.
Fr.
' Fr.

......

.-lllritl

·

•.•

·•

RT
RG

or

c

LG

Dave Barr 11&amp;'i I

LT
LE
QB

To ny Welch (2l21

Rick Edwards

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

11101

Nick Riggs (!till

Mikeo Jackson (171)
Chris Buroelte (179)

TB

Jon Perrtn !1761

WB

F1l

(Defenoe l

LE
LT
MG
RT
RE

Stewart or Pickens

Bill Holcomb 12121
Andy lannarelll {155 1
Welch
Jackson

LCB
RCB

LB
LB

s
s

Riggs
Edwards
Wo\RREN LOCAL
(011..... )

POS

RG

c

Crt&gt;t Tayb' 0 681

Dave Birr lim I

LG

Tony WeiCh 12121

LT

Nk.'k Riggs 11401
Mi ke Jackson 11n 1
Chris Burdette (1 7!1)

QB

ruck Edwards 11601

LE

·-)

TB

f'B
WB
LE

LT
MG
RT

!1~1

RE

LCB
RCB

9.udl'ttP ·

1.8
LB

Taylor

s
s

Rl~

Edwards
WUREN LOCAL
(Offenle}

POl!

Tom Gesstl ll851

TE

Mi ke PahJ I Ill\ I
Mi ke Lanlrlp il65 l
Scott WOO&lt;lbum 1215)

RT
RG

Ou'l! Menefee 11001

LG

Tom Gessel (1&amp;5J

TE

Mike P ahl (1851
Mike Lanlrtp (lllil

RG

Scott Woodburn (2151
Chris Menefee (1101
E:d Miller fl!li I

LG

RT

c

LT
SE
QB

Undecided
1\ndy Sll&lt;rt (1501
Andy .llllfle tlffi 1
Ron Rllfle 1110)
Kevin Searle« (156)

TB
F1l

WB

(Defense )

liT
liT

Pahl

Miller

DE
DE

Roy Kunsman (llli 1
Undecided
Mark MIUer ll&amp;'il
A. Rllfle
R. Rllfle

LB
LB

Menefee

CB
CB

Brtan Benson (150)
Short

HB

HB

s

Sca rlett

c

Ed Millin' llilil

LT

Undecided
AIXIy Sbon 11501

SE

QB

Andy Ritfle (~I
Ron Rllne 11001
Kevin Scar~n 05111

TB
F'B
WB
(Defeote)

.....

Pall)

Roy Kunsman OElil
UndeciDed

D'l'
D'l'
DE
DE

Mark MIUer llftH
A. Rltfle
R. Rlrfle

.........

Brtan Benson 11501

Short
Scar lett

LB
LB
CB
CB
HB
HB

s

NOVEMBER
2G·ENERAL ELECTION
.
.
'

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY

OCTOBER 4TH

•'•
iF YOU ' ARE NOT REGISTERED: ·VISIT
THE BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON- OR
- P-HONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS OR..:...M~IL THE BOARDACARD.

Also, if you move you must notify the coun·
ty office. Or if you are in doubt as to whether
you. are properly registered~ phone the board.
'

Fr.
Fr.
Fr..

A Bank
acrount II
the

-or

IMit PIIJinl
andufnt

ln¥ntaMnb
011 the martet

today.
0p1BOM!

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD

.·

OF ELECTIONS

Sr•

Sr .
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.
Jr.

...,.. ·

11«~)

Randy Stewart (16.'&gt;)
Gret T aylor (1QI)

R'l'

Randy SflwiU'I (165)

Sl\awn Eads (!56)

Brian Spencer

· IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

RACINE - Arter an opening cloettes were led In ' serving by
ga!Rf! loss .to Class ~'AAA" . A,tlle~ Cindy Evans wltlr~Oservtngpolnts.
· High ~ho91. the !&gt;outhern ·~ ' Mel Weese hid six points and ,
' doette varsity ~ 1$1!1 has~ · '{\niy Littlefield added tlv.e. Meigs,'
, · ~ ~th flve '~h\ ~ , was~ bY JennyMeaclpwswlthstx
~
tor. aflne~,.record. · · ·
· ' • marliersaDdCathyDeanwithfour.
These viCtories lulve been OVl!l' ' · Soutllern's reserve squad de- ,
league opponents ·HaJman· Trace, ·. leated the Meigs reserves In three ··
North GaUla, and Southwestern. games 15-9,. 9-15,- and 15-10 to lm·
with non!Jea~ \'llna .oomlog over prove· Its overall record to 3 wins 1
·Coes Federal Hoc1dng-yd tdelga. ' and -two IOIIseS. The leading SHS
, 1'\lesday night the Tornadcll!ttes . server was Sandy Harden with 14 ·'
varsity club defe4!ted the' pre- Points, whfle Jody, Harrison led ·
vlously unbeaten Southwestern . 11fe1i1 with eight.
Htghlandrs 16-14 and J.5.8at P'airtot · · I;letoW Ia a Ust of Southern's 1!Rl
In a ·hlgbly conteated SVAC game. varsity and reserve volleyball
· · Def81dlni champkBt Sou~ ~· ~ •. ,.
&gt;f .
was,led In eerVin&amp; by Mel W- ' ' • 4 VAII!Ift'Y ~
Sr.,
with'l2servtnapolnts,wlille~ ~
1
Sr.
Michael and cri!II!W Bl:ntleY eacb Ullda o-Bnea
Sr.'
had6.

(~!

Jackson
Da vr FoUrod tlflil

RE

M att Van Vrankln (200 1

pear to be on the downhill slide as
only quar terback Rick Chancey
wUI not see action. Chancey suf·
fered a blood clot In his leg against
Belpre.
Fullback and linebacker Chris
Burdette sut!ered a concussion
against the Big Blacks and missed
from early second quarter action
on. He's slated to go Friday and wtU
be counted upon since his ab6ence
was sorely missed last week.
Two-way end Scott Pickens dem·
onstrated courage becoming of a
winner In grabbing four passes last
week after coming ott a neck strain
the week prtor.
Warren fullback. Ron Rl!fle,
leads the Warrtor attack, gaining
139 yards In 18 carries against Cald·
well. Tight end Tom Gessel Is
another Warrior to watch accordIng Coach HID.

-.

f:1;:s:_,

.,

RE

Br1an Spencer tllieJ or

Andy Ianna relll
Welc h

P.OS

Scou Pickens 0 [111

Taylor

Scon Pkkens 11!"61

Jon Perrin 1171i l

(011.... )

Burdetle

MEIGS

Stewar1 or Plcken.ol
an Holcomb 12121

PROBABLE STAIITERS
MEIGS

Dave Follrod (165)
Shawn Eads 11551

PROBAIIU 81'.urmRS

Matt Van Vrankln

aware.
"I wish Meigs had won thelr first
two games because they wouldn't
be SQ tired up to beat us. Meigs has
lots of good, strong country boys
who are physically tough," com·
mented HOI.
Meigs middle guard Andy Ian·
nerelll fits the descrlpt!Qn of ·Hill's
accessment to the hilt. Voted the
Meigs County Jaycee player d the •
week, Iannerelll had six tackles,
recovered a tumble to set up a
Meigs touchdown and clogged the
middle most of the night against Pt.
Pleasant.
The Marauders' nagging Injuries
which slowed them a week ago, ap-

MEIG·s COUNTY VOtERS

•

:T omadoettes ,. capture
fifth str~gh~ victory

tWo
·at

·· •·

In recent years, Coach BID Jewell's White Falcons have dominated the Big Bend Battle against
alllng Southern teams.
Southern' s o!fenslve threat consists olllkey players buD! around a
nne otfenslve line and talented running In the backlleld.' Senior run·
nlng back Dave Talbott led the
churning back field with three
touchdowns and 172 yards rushing,
whDe Wade. ConnoOy added a TO
jaunt and 1212 yards, GrEig Nease
rambled tor 57 yards l!fter taking
hand-otts trom· Quarterback Tony
Rime.
That combination produced
Southern's first victory In several
seasons, and according . to the
Southern team It Isn't going to be
the !list trtumph. Last week Southern prnduced 387 yards, all of which
came 011. the ground.
'The Tornadoes wtU have their
hands full defensively as Wahama
also boasts a sparkling offensive
alignment.
262 yards.
. WHS rambled
.

RACINE -Last week both the
Southern Tornadoes and Wahama
White Falcons unleash explosive of·
!enslve attackS that shook both the
earth and the opposing defenses,
whlle propelUng both clubs to big
victories.
The turf-shaking tremors caused
by blasts on the ot!en5lve lines
opened up holes that netted 387 and
326 yards tor the respective
winners. setting the stage lor this
Frldy' s · meeting between the two
local ot!enslve oriented clubs .
· Wahama, now 2.0, a ~ winner
last week over struggling Kyger
Creek, will host the Tornadoes, w'ho
scored a dramatic 34-:ID win over
Fede!'al ·Hocking last week In R.a·
cine. Southern currently owns a 1-1
mark
The match·up lor this year's
game wtits to be the best In recent·.
years, ' considering the fact tluit
Southern will feature II$ vastly !m·
proved "ot!enslve machine" In this
year's cross-rtver excursion. •

"

Rants

Junior end

POl!

•

July.
It takes time to count that kind of
·money, and Ume too.to add \IP the

GLENN YOUNG
163 pound

(Oflenlf)

,'

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Ia~ ~ ajri: The ~Commlllllat Party ICCIIIed the Sclldar' ·
I

.

.

1 HAP AI..WA'YS HOVE?

IIPPelt ·

Five years ago: Budget Director Bert Lance was confroat84 wtth
eWSence that 1111 Checldni BCCj)UIIt avetdraftl ~ted tJaplrJ!w

!

Is not surprising.

,

,

it)o tabir ~D~Aetl~t~~t ol pnm"W the Jllltloa ~ ~·a new
traac4,"

; __·-.

a

.

~--~·

Tell years ago: It was reporte4 tbat SoUth \1letDan8t IIIIJ'b8
had recaptured the cltadeltn the 1\eBrt of QuanCtrl aty trom Nofth
v~ jroops. .

I FEEL 'SO

tow hoii!'S. which

a,

..

_ _ ••
.NEW YORK (NEA) - It would
be nice If those draft-age males who
haven't registered yet got themes·
sage of the government's recent
prosecutiOns of resisters and declded to obey the law, butlt'sproba·
bly too much to hope that aU of
. theni wm..LuckilY, compUanc:e II)
general haJ been reasonably high,
sa we know 1one thing we badly
needed to know: America's yoang
men aren't Ukely, as a general pro.
posttlon, to but out on thdr CQIIJitry ·
In 8 crisis.
There remains, however, a hard .
core of resisters who mtsaed _the
late 1960s and earty 197IJII.and. are
trying to fan that old&lt;~laze' llaclt to
life here In the 191!0s. It Ia tmporlant
to nip thelf Utile project In the blid
- by prl'son sentences~ · If
' necessary.
.
. ·
Listening to BeilJa'mln SasWay,
the second resister convicted, on
television the other night, It became ·
painfully clear what the controv·
· ersy Is aU about Sasway Insists on
reserving to himself the right to deckle which U.S. poliCies he wiU support and (as a ·corollary to that .
right) whlcb U.S. mDitary ventures
he Will participate ln. He was
pl8liiJy doubtful that he ~faVIJf
any of the clllTI!!)tly ·lmq[Dflble

1bat Is why RepubUcans In Utah got a chance to see him on a hay wagon,
andwhyscxneNewJerseyansw!UlleehlmFrldayataSanCenarofestlval
and a Pollsh·Amerlcan Club, where he w1U swear-In new citizens.
·~ Issues are with us this year," he tol!l House and Senate RepubUClllll at a fund-raising ~r last spring. "U we do our Job betweel) now
and November, voters wtU reconflnn the mandate they gave us In ll81."
He advised them to run on the same Issues that worked In ll8l and
"stand on the record" ot hls administration.
The campaign Idea Is to portray Reagan with Mr. and Mrs. Average
America.
So It was last Friday, when the president campalglled lor Sen. Orrin
Hatch's reelection et!ort In Utah. With shiny machines whliTing and
clan)dng, he Inspected a cannery run by the MQrmoa Ch!Q'Ch. Then, It was
on to a picnic where he perched on the hay wagon. with the Wasatch
MOUi)talns looming In the distance, and cheered up a soggy, rain-soaked
crowd ·1n a ceremony as a posse from the Weber County Sherlfrs Office
p: ell!llted the president with sheriff's badge, and he tunle9 the event Into
a political wisecrack:
·
"With this badge that they gave me, maybe I can stop some of the
hlshWaY robbery that's·going on In Washington."

rneot by force,

I KNOW ... AttQ
HELVLESS ...

;..;..ti•-draft

ftl)

Wb1Ji! RepubUcan advertising stresses the Idea that he hasn't had

I

COULP

and Montgomery and au those
other streets where brokers buy
and sell the shares of American In·
dustry tor wha~ pnce they can
get
It was probably time tor .· a
breather anyway, since the Uklay,
1~lnt gain In the ·Dow Jones InduStrtal average Into early September added more than $100
bl1llal to the value of shares on tlie
New York Stock Exchange.
.
To be specltlc, at the end of August the value of aU Big Boiml
shares was $1,101,!0l,&lt;XXl,!Ol that's 1x1e trtlllon, 101 biDlon- or
$113 biUion ~than the $993 bll·
lion value of shares at the end of

He Ia traveling approximately one &lt;Jay a week this month, and wiU step

•

THE

NEW YORK (AP) - Things are
quiet again down on "the street,"
Wall Street and LaSaDe and State

gan; .out on the J'8llgle or visiting an Italian-American festival
·
ThlllsPresklentReaganlnC8rtlpalgn '82, taklngtlleadvlceofhlsaldes
whosayltlstlmetostayawayfromtheeventsthatassoclatehlmwlthrlch

.

Uf'WtT. ..

but the privUeged caste of leaders, . · ·.
poUI1ctanland functionaries.
"The JIOYemment of Mexico Is
maldng Investments In the petroleUin lndllltry as If the~t hllh '"
prices of petroleum would be eterJIII]. Thole projects, If caniecl out,
wiU produCe tnrJation and devalUa·
Uons worse than those of earUer
years."
.
No scrllle ever prophesied more , "
accurately than Luis Pazos. As "1,
thlniS stlllld It Is lmp08sible topolpt ..,,
to a single benefit that haJ ln)lred to
the average Mexican as a result~
the natlnallzation of the MexiCAn
econorey.
' "
Last week President Lopez Por•'
Wlo delivered his final address to ,,,
the MexiCAn Assembly. It lasted

Things quiet ·once more on· Wall Street ·

Gone are the black-tie fund-raising parties. Now, It's good ol' Ron~-

I

we

EASTMEIGS ~ Last~tast·
1982 sea101L
scoreboard.
em, .pM:l!eiJ as a favorlte over Alex· 1 Despite rr yards In penalties,
A hungry Eagle offense, which
ander, ilutfered a blg•let clown and
three fumblel, and au Interception hadn't been shutout. for a long
~a 7.0 tDt to the SpartaJIIln · l\lexandel' overcame. lts offensive · whlle, Is ~t It won't happen
a game that proved to be au olfen. ·woes to acore on a broken play nga!Q for a long Ulne.'
·
slve struggle for both sides.
•
~ ihe ~· ·'
Last Week Troy Guthrie led EastThe I1SIIII)ly tough Ea'gles had,the ·
COmpared !(),Eastern's offensive em- with 45 yards fiiShlng. The Ea·
biggest struggle of $11. managing display Al,eDndel' had big illght gles started slow In both Its opening
orlJy 53 yards, while' snaw~ a 14 with 187 total yards. OVeraU the 25-lA win over Waterford andln last
game wtnntng· streak that yvent Eastetn , ~nse . contained ' the week's game; the dltterence being
back to the 1!81 cluu1ipi0(\Shlp Spartans when It bad to, hokllngthe a strong finish In the opening, Guth·
season.
..; .'" ho6ts lor three sCoreless quarters. rle again [ll'OV¥Ied the punch In that
Federal HQCklng churned out 263 game wtth 95 hard-fought yards.
This week, the Eagles are looking
lor ·a ·cam'llete ,-ecovery and a retotal,yards .last week In Its loss to
Defen51vely, the Eagles are statum to win collimnln Friday even· Southern. The Lancers currently tistically .superior to Friday's. foe
lnl(s ·COilteS~ w1~· ·the Federal own a H mark as dO the Eagles,
both In total yards given up and In
Hocktllg Lancers In Stewart.
The ,difference In this *eek•s turnovers.'
AhardweekofpracUce,determl· gamecouldveryweUdeveloplnthe
Roger BlseD stabllll.es the de!en·
natiOn, and · valuable experience
batt!~ qn the Une of scrimmage.
slve backfield with his sure-handed
JJI the l;lBSt the Eagles have had . wit and qu\ckness that earned him
gained !rom last week's miscues
huge success cOntrolling the the honor of having. the most lntehave made the local Easterners
that much liungrter tor
big ' scrimmage.
ceptlo¥ s.tatewtde last season.
victory.
. This week the Easterners will try
Rob Malson was credlll!d with an
Lastweek'slossmayhavebeenthe .to prove themselves In the outsandlng game last week, whlle
perfect pteserlptlon the Eagles
trenches, control the line, apd In re- Mark .Holter had a good defensive
needed for aperfect ending to the
tum celebrate the end result on trhe game.

Spanish.

'It's good ol' Ron
ReiJubllcims.

of the prophets, the Idea of soclaU·
zation meant giving everyone an
equal share.
Here Is how the economist aDd
joumallst Luis Paz.os d_escrlbed the
socialized oD Industry In his book.
"Myths and ReaUtles of MexiCAn
Petroleum," published - bear thla
In mind.- In February 19'18.
"PEMEX" - the abbreviation
tor the state-owned CUJip&amp;ny " and aU the' state-owned businesS
enterprises are the private property of a group of government off!·
clals and (labor union) leaders who
In addition to running them badly
try to make us beUeve thatsald enterprises belong to the Mexican
nation.
.
" ... The beneftclarlesofthepetio.
teum Industry for almost 40 years
have not been the Mexican people

So? During the first two weekS of
August, rigid exchange controls
were 1mpolled. And the ilol1ar took
another dip, down to an oftlclal
69.50-t.o-1. But on tlie black market,
you couid (and can) get 100 pesoe
for the dollar. U Mr. de Ia Madrid,
who wiU be Inaugurated In lJe.
cember, Is fall!lfUI to his word,
whlcll one devuutly .hopes he wiU
not be, WhY. he,Ia Pjl!dRed to con·
Unue with the' programs of Mr.
Echeverria and LOpez PorWJo.
Which Is to say, to get on with the
socialization ot Mexico, whose
economy In 1970 was :Ill percent go.
vemment operated, and Is now 60
percent operated. Mostly lolling
money.
What does socialization mean•to
Mexico? Long, long ago, when the
Idea was merely a gleam In the eye

Local hysteria about our 10 per·
cent employment and JJ percent In·
terest rates Sllollldn't sa absorb us
as not to noUce what Is happening to
the south.
In Mexico the situation Is grave.
Although everyone knows that democracy In Mexico has always
been something of a farce, and that
the hard muscle of the government
Is always nexed so that unpleasant
things can and Indeed do happen to
critics of the government, nevertheless there Is free speech In MexIco If you can get away with lt. And
thla tree speech pennltstlleventDa·
tlon of a true rrustratlon with the
habits of Mexico's rulers.
The week before last some newspapers even felt obliged to pu\lllsh
atflrmatlon by Mexican generals of
loyalty to the government, so wi·
despread was the rumor that a
coup was In the making.
,
The trouble Is that pubUC prQCla·
matlons are not taken very seriously and not without reasan.
UntO recently, one would not have
gathered from any offtclal announcement that there was anything to worry about In Mexico.
True, In Jllld.February there was
that embarrassing devaluation.
But repeatedly the preSident. Mr.
Lopez PortDio, and !lie finance min·
lster, Jesus Silva Herzog, and the
former head of the Bank of Mexico,
Miguel Mancera Aguayo, told Mex·
leans that pi'OIIperity was around
tile comer.
It Is now known that during that
period they were trying desper·
ately to see where they could get $15
bllUon with which to pay maturing
obligations. Early In the summer,
Mancera said that exchange con·
trois (unknown In Mexican history
and now demanded by the doml·
nant party's lett wing) were un·
wise, unworkable, unthinkable and
repugnant - lour disavowals that
chew up a lot of syllables ·In

llll 'nuri Sir.-.·1

(~• · tw· nll

Meet Southern's Tornadoes

{or Feder~l Ht.ckilig.contest

The Daily Sentinel

P.H WHITEHEAD

Sh~cked Easte~ ..prep~es

..

Tha Daily Sentinel Page 3

Pumeror Middlepo.t, Ohio

Thunday, Septomher 16,1982

·'

•

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· MASONIC TEMPLE BU.ILPING
P·. o. Box 488, Pomeroy, Ohlo·45769
PHONE 992·2697

J~egula;H·ours: 8:30.4.:30 ~ondays thro~gh· Fridays

ADDITIOJ1AL .HOURS FOR REGISJ~ATION
Prlclay Evenlnts,' Sept. 11, 24, '6- p.m. to 9 p.m.; Oct. 1
from • to 9; sets., Sepi; 11 &amp; 25 &amp; oct. 2, 9 a , m. to 12
1100111 Mon., Oct. 4, 9 a.m. t!) 9 p.m.

·,
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•

3RD ST., RACINE, OH .
Member 'FDIC

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

If negotiations fail, players will strike Tues~ay

Y~kees' bullpen blows lead,
Oriol~s c~nti.Due latest surge

.I

By Assoclaled Press
Dave Wlntleld and Roy Smalley
are on a home run binge for the
New York Yankees - but the defending American League champions aren't getting much relief
from their bullpen these day's.
For the fourth stralght game
Wednesday night, the Yankee
bullpen blew a lead and the "result
was anS.51oss tothecharglngBaltl·
more Orioles, who won their 23rd
game In the last '11.
The triwnph kept the Orioles 1'h
games behind Milwaukee In the AL
East race. The dlvision·leadtng
Brewers st:&gt;pped Detroit 5-3.
In the AL West, the division·
leading Kansas City Royals beat
Seattle 54 In 11 Innings and im·
proved their lead to two game,s over
the Callfomla Angels, 8-3 losers to
Chicago. Elsewhere, Cleveland
beat Boston 7-4, Toronto took a doubleheader trom Oakland, 3-2 and
12·11 and Mlnnesbta walloped
Texas 1~2.
As they had In the three previous
games with the Orioles, the Yan·
kees took the early lead - this time
5-2 after 5'h Innings - on a pair ot
two-run homers by Smalley and a
solo shot by Winfield, all off starter
Mike Flanagan.Smalley has hit
eight of his lll haners In the last 12
games and Winfield eight of his 34
In the last L'l games.
·But the Orioles came back to
score sbf runs In the sixth Inning.
Cal Rlpken Jr., tied the score with a
two-run double and then scored the
go-ahead ·run on Eddie Murray's
double.
Don Welchel allowed one hit In
12·3 Innings of relief and was the
winner In his major·leai!Ue debut

Sammy

for Baltimore.
Stewart
hurled the fin~ three Innings to
pick up his fifth save.

Minnesota seeks second win .tonight
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)Desplte quarterback Tommy Kramer's passing prowess, the
Minnesota Vlklngs' offense Is look·
tng for a more balanced attack this
sea5on, leaving the Bullalo Bll)s
with a little more to worry about.
Minnesota, wblcl) achieved just
that last Sunday In beating the
Tampa Bay Buccaneers, will once
again try to prove Its backfield can
run as well as catch when the VikIngs meet the BUts at 8: ll p.m.
EDT at Rich Stadlwn In a natlonal)y televised game.
·
Last Sunday against Tampa Bay
In · their 1982 National Football
League opener. the Vlkes rushed
for 101 yards and a touchdown and
pasSj!d for ll5 yards In beating the
Bucs 17-10.
Last year, Kramer threw for
3,912 yards - the Vlkes' pass of·
tense ranked second In the NFL . and Minnesota picked up three
yards In the air for every yard
gained on the grOund.
"We went In this year Y.ith the
Idea of opening up the I'UI\," said

Ahmad Rashad, Minnesota's all·
time leading receiver.
·
Ted Brown, the fourth-year veteran, rushed for 1,063yards last year
and once again Is Minnesota's lead·
lng rusher. He caught &amp;3 passes.
Great things also are expected of
rookie Darrln Nelson, the firstround pick trom Stanford.
"He's as good as any new back
I've seen In the 11 years I've been In
the league," Rashad said.
"Nelson Is going to turn that 5-or
&amp;-yard completion Into an ID-yard
run at the end," BUts' Coach Chuck
Knox said. "He's to their team
what Joe Cribbs Is to ours. He's
dynamite."
Cribbs, an All·Pro his two years
with the BUts, Is holding out for a
new contract and won't play
tonight.
'
Minnesota, which finished 7-9last
year, showed Indications of Jm.
provement In several areas besides
ruMlng against Tampa Bay. The
Vlkes held the Bucs, NFC Central
champs last year, to just 65 yards
rushing, and they Intercepted three

passes. The offenslne line also

opened holes for Brown and Nelson
and didn't allow a sack.
. "We come at you so
ways," Rashad said.
Buffalo also won Sunday, edging
Kansas City 14·9. The BUts' defense
came up with three sacks and an
Interception, but the running game
never really got untracked .
· Buffalo's starting backfield consists of an aging veteran, Roosevelt
Leaks; and a fullback. turnedhalfback, Curtis Brown.
At backup, robkle Booker Moore
Jines up wtth Arthur Whittington,
the halfback picked up on waivers
rrom Oakland. In the wtngs are lwl&gt;
players released by other teams,
Ted McKnight and Allan Clark, and
three Injured players from last
year.
McKnight was Kansas City's
leading rusher In l!m and 198J. He
underwent a knee operation last
year and spent most ot the season
on Injured reserve.
Clark was released by New
England.
. .

maey

Ray Floyd faces must win situation
PINEHURST. N.C. (AP)- Ray
Floyd faces a must-win situation
this week In the $250,000 Hall Qf
· Fame Classic, a ~uck event
; that will drop off the PGA Tour
: schedule next year.
"It's obvious that I must win at
least once more to have a chance,"
Floyd said of his uphlll stuggle to
overtake Craig Stadler on golf's
· money-wlnnlng Ust.
·• The veteran Floyd, enjoying one
: ot the finest seasons of his two• decade career, Is the favorite In a
: 156-man field that Includes only two
ot the year's top 10 money winners.
But even a victory tiere would not
do It for Floyd. He trails Stadler by
$54,492 with only five more oC!Iclal
: events remaining on the schedule

this season.

First prize In this tournament,
which got underway today on the
7,!ni yard, par-71 No. 2 course at
the Pinehurst Country Club course,
Is $45,000.
Stadler, who counts the Masters
and World Series of Golf among his
four titles this season, Is not com·
petlng this week. He has $441,30lln
winnings. Floyd: wtth $386,!119,
can't catch him In this tournament.
But only a victory will give him a
chance. Anything less would virtu·
ally ellmlnate him from the race
for tl1e title he calls "one of my
goals."

And, he said, his chances of mak·
lng up some ground are very good.

:Rockets trade Moses Malone
. HOUSTON (AP) ...!. The Houston
·. ROckets traded Moses Malone, the
: National Basketball Association's
: Jll(l6t valuable player last season, to
; the Pbltadelpbla 76ers Wednesday
•·m exchange for forward Caldwell
Jones and a first -round draft pick.
· MalonehasbeenanNBAAll-Star
flve times. He Is considered one of
; the top rebounders In league his·
; tory, and the 76ers need help on the
• boards.
• The Rockets will get the first• round pick 1n the 1983 college draft
; that the 76ers received In October
l!!f1 from Cleveland In exchange
fl
•
.

.

~

'

~ - Seioto J"tlSUlts .
; COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) • Brode, drlyen by Jeff SOX. won thi!
, ~ ~th .~ at Scioto
bowdUY~ nJpt IIi

pay

~ 111,411, ,.,., end. $5.1V.' '
•
;· 111e wblllel"s time wasj: .~5. ,
• •flePoncl ... Soli! ~!Or $6.1V
; - p, lliJDift!d by 01!1001 f«r

. ~ p.

'

)

..

'l1le aiDth ta£etrllecta, 2-J.l, pakl
. . . ..

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..

for the late Terry Furlow.
The position
RocketsInwill
In aeveland's
thedraft
1983 draft
and

Rockets General Manager Ray
Patterson said the team had a good
chance to draft a top player.
"Cleveland won 15 games last
year and the club closest to them
had 31 victories, so the law of averages suggest Cleveland will not fin.
Ish ·very high," Patterson said.
Paterson said the -~ts had
won 40 plus games the past few ye:
ars and were unable to draft top
picks.
·

WASHINGI'ON (AP)- TheNa· · day In New York, Garvey said.
The first game to he affected by
t1onal Footballl...ellgue Players Aspni
football's first regular-season
sociation wUl go strike '1\lesday,
strike
would be A:Uanta at Kansas .
Just two weeks IDIQ the seuon, UD·
City
on
Thursday.
less there Is a treakthrouglliD coo·
·The
owners
have Indicated !hey
tract negotlaflons resuming
will
try
to
put
on games despite a
FridaY. union ~ Ed Garvey
strike, using tree agents along with
says.·
Garvey conftimed Wedni!eday any .regular l&gt;layers who defy the
nlgbt what sources In the Nn.PA union. Thfi' NF1..PA has signed a
and elsewhere In the lab«r mbve- contract with Ted Turner's cable
ment told The Asaoclated Press television superstation, wtBs, to
f!I!J'lier: thatM'ondaynlgbt'sGreen stage a SE!I'ies of makeshift all-star
Bay Packers-New York Giants games.
"This Is totally iloll§lstent With
game will be the last one played
until a new oollecUve bargalnlng what we have beard all along,"
Jack Donlan, chief negotiator tor
agJ eement Is reached.
The formal decision will be made the owners' NFL Management
Councll, saki of the Tuesday strike
by the union's nine-member executive committee at a meeting Mon- date. "The NFLPA has had a mas·

on

..
and snapped the Angels' five-game
winning streak. Law's triple In the

fourth knocked out Gedf Zahn, 1&amp;8, aJid gave the White Sox a 5-llead
Brewers 5, '11gers 3
at the time.
Jerry Koosman, 9-6, allowed two
Roy Howell drove In three runs
with a double and a slng1e to lead
runs and seven bits over the Six In·
MUwaukee over Detroit.
n1ngs he worked before being reHowell's RBI double featured a lieved by Warren Brusstar.
two-run SECO!Id lnnlng and his twoIndlanl 7, Red Sox 4
run single In the fifth provided the
Andre 1bomton drove In three
Brewers With a 5-2 lead.
runs With a homer and a single and
Milwaukee starter Pete Vucko- Larry Milbourne and Ron Hassey
vich, 17-4, went 71·31nnlngs, allow· collected three hits apiece, leading
lng 11 hits before getting rellef help. Cleveland over Boston.
Dwight Bernard finished up for his
Len Barker and Dan $plllner
fJCtb save.
combined to check the Red Sox em
Jack Morris, lG-15, went the dis· five hits and just one earned run.
lance for the Tigers, giving up nine Barker, 13-11, went the first six In·
hits whlle striking out five ·and ntngs before Splllner came on to ·
walking two.
earn his 19th save.
Royals 5, Mariners 4
Blue J~ 3-12, A's 2-11
A palr ot Oakland errors allowed·
Steve Hammond lined a on~ut,
bases-loaded single off first base- Damaso Garcia and AI Woods to
man Jim Maler's glove In the 11th srore In the seventh lnnlng and Luis:
Inning to carey Kansas City over Leal scattered four hits In 72-3 In·
ntngs lis Toronto downed the 1\'s ln.
Seattle.
Wlllle Wilson opened the lith by the first game ot their
doubleheader.
beating out an lllfleld bouncer for a
Dave Baker, atontngforthreeer·
hit, then stole second. Walks to U.L.
rors,
drove home Garth Iorg from
Washington and George Brett by
second
with a on~t single In the
Seattle reliever Bill Caudill, 11-8,
ninth
lnnlng
to give the Blue Jays
•loaded the bases and 5!!1 the stage
the
victory
In
the second game.
for Hanunond.
Twins
10, Raogen 2
Dan Quisenberry, 8-5, gained the
Gary
Gaettl
belled four bits and
victory In rellef, pitching the final
.LeMy
Faedo
drove
In three runs to
three Innings. Quisenberry aided
power
Minnesota
over
Texas behis cause by picking two Mariners
hind
Bobby
Castillo's
six-bitter.
ruMers orr first base.
Castillo, 1~ 11, saw his streak of
Hammond had struck out In the
:m-3
scoreless ·lnnlngs shapped In
ninth with the Winning run · on
the sixth lnnlng on a two-run triple
second.
by Jim Sundberg. Loser Frank TaWhite Sox 8, Angels 3
nana,
&amp;-18, lasted until the fifth,
.Vance Law stroked a two-run trl·
when the Twins srored three runs
pie to blgbllght a five-run fourth lr\tor a fHl lerul.
nlng as Chicago defeated Callfomla

"You can't say you're going to
win any particular tournament,"
said Floyd, who has three :i982 illctorles Including tiie PGA. "There
are too many factors that enter Into
It to do that.
"But I'm playing very well, very
well Indeed. I've played well for the
past three years. I fully expect to
play well here."
Floyd, a former winner of this
title, faces a field that Includes
Jerry Pate, U.S. seniors champion
Miller Barber, Andy Bean and defending title-holder Morris ,Hatalsky. Also Included are 1982 Tour
title-winners Ed·Sneed, Tim Morris, Payne Stewart and Ed Fiori. •
The tournament, a fixture on the
PGA schedule for the past 10ye;u'S,
will be replaced next season by a S1
mUUon, 5-day event ·ln Las Vegas.
Pinehurst and the Hall of Fame will
sponsor a seniors t.Qumament.

\!laiiDa

8+12 relufDed 16f2.~.

lei' plan to strike."

He voived that a strike will not
gain the players their main goal, a
salary scale based on a fixed percentage of the 28 clubs' gross
revenues.
Sources who asked not to be !den·
tlfled told the AP that the executive
committee decided earlier this
week to walk out Tuesday with virtually no advance notice for fear
that the players would be locked out
by the owners.
Garvey, the NFLPA executive
director, at first called the report
premature. However, he was
quoted In today' s editions ol The
New York Times as saying later:
"Our choices were to announce a
strike for Tuesday or to walt a

TV rights decision upsets NCAA
TOURNAMENTCHAMPS-TiteMasonAngels
this IIIUIIItler captured lint place Ill &amp;he New Haven
Minor League Toumamem. The team flnlalled the
- a with 13 wins aDd 2 loel!es. Team members

werelefttorllltt,ScottJoaes,BradMJDer,CariKIDg,

Travis O'Brian, Scott Hayes, Jenny VPIIMeter, '11m

~

Miller, Mepn Nesler. Second row: st8llle)'

cbe.le·Pyatt, Shawn Roes, J880n HJJieald,.iobn f,wi;i

pan, Steve · Mlller, Troy Slpnan, Shawn ~ '
row, left to rllbt. WIIYJII.
Joaes, ·a•WaJ¢ 'COlU:h; PhD King, ·•.,..•"'
aDd•Mike Nester, coach.
. .,.

Ruaty Maynard. Back

coai4

Hooten whitewasheS Pa~es;~J
H~USt()n dumps Atl~ta, 5~4~
I

"

11Bndl sljn Diego Its flft)l siratgbt
loss.
1 ,
"'
'
.
. ~ ·s, MeiB 4 . ·
happy year for the 32-year-old
Andte Dawson, anotlter player.·
right-hander.
'
plagued by InJuty, ripped his m
Hooton ~~ knee surgery homer o.t the SeysoD In )JJe lith to
on June 21, lljlssl!d six weeiQ; and , lUt lhii·Expos over. the ,Mets. Mont·
only OO)v, ~ recapturing, lhl! filnn ~real Is two game5 belilni;l St. 4uls .
which ~ ~ hlm'a ~ ri. ln. tile Easf, but just a halt-game In
the Los ~ Do!l&amp;e: s pitching , !;lack of second-place }&gt;hlladelphla.
statt. On Wednesday lilght, Hooton · Chris Speier cleared the bases
Indicated that tile remaining aches • wtth a three-run triple In the sev·
and Palos are a minor annoyance enth to aid the Montreal cause.
as he blanked theSanDiegoPadres
Cardinals 8, l'hiJHea 0
5-0 on tbtee bits. The Dodgers' sixth
St. Louis hurler Joaquin Andujar
straight victory upped their Na· ' threw a three-hitter Wednesday tor
tiona! League West lead to 2~ hisfltthshutoutoltheseasonasthe
games over Atlanta, which lost 54 Cardinals grabbed a l'h-game lead
to Houston.
over Philadelphia In tl\e NL East. It
Elsewhere, It was Montreal 6, was the second straight shutout for
New York 51n lllnnlngs; St. Louis St. Louis - John Stuper and Bruce
8, PhDadelpbla 0; Chicago 7, Pitts- .Sutter combined on one Tuesdayburgh 2, and San Francisco 5, C1n- and theCardssurrenderedonlytwo
ctnnatl 4.
runs In losin&amp; tO Steve Carlton on '
.
It was Hooton's seeond shutout of Monday.
the season, but his fir$! since April
George Hendrick had a two, run
29. In his eight starts since his single and two sacrifice files for St.
surgery, he has allowed 12 earned
runs In 491nn!ngs, a 2.~ earned run
By A"''"''ated Prea!
'!'!ley call Burt Hooton ''Happy,"
yet this has been anything but ~

'

I

JOINS CBS- David (Dave.) Diles, Raclneareateiflldeut, will br1nJ
viewers sporil IIIII faD - tlllfl time lor CBS. D11e8, Mt1t ABC lor II
yean, r lped III!Veral weea aao wlel he w• Ull9ble to lll!gUtlate a
l18W coatrad which he cOuld IICile(lt. Be hal been Jlellll;lallnl rill C1l8
. tor lllOI'e than a yeilr and II! now unt1er ct111lrlct. DI1M will heiiD Ids
·duties 8a&amp;uray wheu he wDl he at lbe ~Purdue pme at 'YI!Ilt
·. ~eUe, lud. Rlll1'1!p0111qt caa be leeD locally Over Cbuulel8 TV.
· Diles wu reared Ia Middleport and malntebe a home Ill lbe RadDe
., area where he apeadstlme ai¥ay from hllllelevlslonduUes. He IIIIIIUIIIJy
.11tages the DUes Golf Toumamea&amp; which pnMdes thotaeandlt or doDan
each year lor local area OJ'I'M'z•tlons,

Louis.

CUbe 7, flralel2 _ .
The Cubs "used the !OI!gbaiJ to
5ubdue Pittsburgh'~ as Jolly
Davis
.I
,.. &lt;
smashed a three-run IDner ·and

·Keith )\{oreland and LEon Duriwn
added solo shots. FergusQn Jenkins

gave up 11 hits In postlng·his 275tb
career vll:tory, good form on the
all-time Jist:
· Altro8 ·II, Bravee4
,
Houston sever~ly damagjjd
Atlanta's pennaht J;lbpes by~
lng the Braves. Dickie Tholl's
three-run double~ a 2·2 tieln
the seventh alld the Braves couldJj't
catch up against Nolan.Ryan aJid
Dave Smlth, wbo pitched the Din~
lnnlng tO earn his lith f\&amp;Ve. · l

_.__

.-------------1

average.
Pedro Guerrero slanuned his
m home run to help the Dodgers

!USPS 145-!IGI
A Dlvhliun tl MuiUmedia, lat.
Kama City

Callbm.la

C&gt;lcaoo

,

*'

11

Texas

&lt;I

Mtnne.ota

.

N~w.

Southern
High School.
a
ening beginning
Sept. 21Below
and 22Is at
schedule for the newly formed
league.

siN&lt;ii.iiroiov

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92

HOCIIEV
NalloooiHocOeJLe-•
MONTREAL
CANADIENSTraded
Denis Herron. iQalle, w ttr Pitta·
bu&lt;f(ll
PenifUlns tor future coaslderatloDa.

16Y.J

~
'l1

.393

QUEBEC NORDIQUES-Su1pende&lt;l
Patti", Anton anclMulan Stastny , forwardl _.

31

,31fj

lndeflnl1ely tor their faUureto appen al
the team's tralnlnJ camp.

Leaden

(Hough 14-ll)

AMEIUCANLEAOVE

at Mlnneeota

BAtTING («XX at"bata):W.Wibm_. Kan-

sas ary, .311; Yoont, MUwauJft, .:J16;
. Carew, Callfm'lla. .318: GuN. Tomllo,
.311; E.Murr~. Balttncft, .316.
RUNS:Molltllr, M11W'aUkiee,U7; YOI.lftt,
MJ.Iwaukfe, 111; RJifndenon, Oakland,

Ml/waukee.11Jl.
HTI'S: Yount, MllwauJcee, JZ; Cooper,
MllwauMe, 183; W.Wllnl_. KaJaa; City,
171: Molitor, Milwaukee, 174; McRae.
KaMal Qty,l7l.
DOlJBLES: Yount,
Mllwau~,
t2;
White, Kansal City, fl: McRae. Kansas
City , !1;
Seottlo. 37; DeOnceo.
Calll:nla, Z ; L)'M. CalUomla, :6; Lvmsld, CllJcqu. :tl.
TRIPLES:IImml.
Detroit,
13:
W.WII!oa, Kansas City, U; Yo.ant, MUwaW!ee, 10; Maleby, Toronto, 10; BerlllllARI. Chlcqo. 9: Brett. IWllat City. 9.

New York.at Mtlwaukee, (nl
Oakland at Cbkago, lnl.
Kansu aty at Minne&amp;ota, (n)

---....
.

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NA'DONAL U'.AGUE

"

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Pet. GB
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auc,..

63

83

.t.ll . 19

New Yortc

511

86

.394

Loo -

Ol

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Ill. 64

AUanla
San Franchco
San otego

Ill

66

'16
7f

69

HOME RUNS: G.'naomas, MUwaWcee,
:6; Winfield, New York. :M; Rf'.JICbon,
CallO&gt;nUa. Jl; - · ete..laod. 31:

.:rll 1~
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1[1
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19f!

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411

S1"0I.EN

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·SNtUe, 40: Molitor, MJiwau• • 36; W•than. KaiiSlSOty, J6.
PIT&lt;HIN(: 06 Dl!c:Jslliui: Vu-.

Ill

6

Mllwaukee.- lH, .BSO_. 3.21; Palmer, BaittnD"&lt;, t3&lt;. .111&gt;. Ul;
~ 13~- .722. 3.16: Zalln. CalUomla. 1U. .11111.
J.S;t; GWdry, New York, lf-7, 1f£1, 181;
Sutcljffe, OevelaJXI, 12-6, .667. 3.06; Ren-

a..-.

kO, Cal01J111a, u... .647. 4.3:1; Peby, IJo.
""'~ 1&lt;8. .63&amp;. 1111.
S'IRII&lt;IDlll'lH .Bombte&lt;. Seoftlo. lTl:
Bariler. ct.Yefand. . m:
New
York, lff; RJ&amp;hetU, New Yor1c, 141; Beet·
fle. Seattle. 140.

G....,..

Cildmatl f

'lllonolo1'o-

N&lt;w YOI'tl (S.,U · 9&lt;) II Mdlln!BI

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San Dfllo (llmo&lt;k)' f.ll II San f'nn.

(SalklM'Ion

'

NAUONM.I&amp;tOVE
BA'ITlKi t«D at blliJ ;OOver, MM--

ctlco fBrftl!na !H), (n)
(),ly Games Sdlellulol

·,

~lASES&lt; IUI&lt;!IIdencJI,

Mil·

tand, U.; Garda, 'I'Mlnto, 48; J .Cna,

~ Soli Dfllo 0

Loo -

Deflvlo.

" - "· Mllw....... ""
waukee, 30.

lf

72
.5flt
8'1\
""""'
Iii .,.
.... 14\1
Cincinnati
iW !IJ
.3'1() 281!
- W~•G.mfs
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Sl. t.ou• ~ Phflade;&gt;hfa 0
aucaeo 1. Pi~ 2
Housk'll :S, Atluta "4 '
San Francilco

t22: nun-

a~y.

RBI :McRao. Kansas

ton. Clevcland, ll2; Cooper, Mllwa~.
U~ W-d. N&lt;w Yoo1&lt;. 100: G.11u&gt;w,

Gamee
C8ll.brn1a a17'ort~tto_. (nl
~at Ba.ltfmc:re, (nl
Barton at Detrott, In!

St. LouiS
l'llfladofphla

DowrJna, Ca~ ­

110; D.Evans, ap.ton, 100;
tornia_. 101.

•

Texas at Statue, (nl

At--

Slides ·' ·

"'

conlracta.

Fr~U)r"s

l'lttlhlrall. ..DJ:

troot. .331: -

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.

St. LoWI u New Yott, 2. (t·nl
Olkago at Mmtnal (n)
AtLanta a1 C-'lnckulaU. (nl
P1ttlbup M Ph11adelphla, (D)
Hoollm at l..t:ll AJeei!N, (n)
S.n DleiO • t San Fnncllco, In)

fjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~

3
6

.565

.

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15-lf), tnl
Seattle t&amp;Mbtt'f" 12--11) a t Ka.nsu Qty
U..eooar(ls-f), (nl
Only Games Scheduled

~

l'1Fl1l AND S1X'111 ORADI!S
TOOCB FOOI'IIALL
All (1..,. lit.

Prints·from

Sl9

63

Kina. quarterbeell: , ta aHI'Iesof o~y•ar

Oakland cN&lt;rrtS 6-IOl a1 Chicago (Hoyt

•

rr;:;~:::;;;;~i~?:;~~~::;~

Sept. 21-sy,:.c,... at Portland
llebooJ
Sept. 22-U!t.art it ·Sept. :1!1--Radne at Syracu.e
Sept. ~Portlancl at Letan
Oct. !1-l.elart at Syracuse
Oct. &amp;-Portland at Racine'
Oct. 12-'POnland at Syraruoe .
Oct.' 1.3--Radne •1 Letan
Oct ..19-S)'I"II&lt;IIIO at Oct. :xl-J,.etart at Pcrtland
Oct. 26-Syracuoe at Portland
Oct. 27-Lelart at R.octne
Nov. 3-CIIampionohlp came

61

82

U\1
14
Ill\\

-·lloms

10-T)_. (n)

by JI'Uiil ~nnltt....od In to~
wht·rt• hmnc l'Hrricr s~rvit'e i!l tiVIIilaDic . 1

13 Wl't'k.o;
ZtiWt'l'k.o;
!i2Wt·t·ks

.162

president.
ARIZONA WRANGLERS-Sipf'd

(n)
,'
New Ymt (RI&amp;heUJ t-8) at BalumOre
(Palmer ll-41. (ft)
8ostor1 IThrre.z 8-8) at Dro'olt IWllcox

Subst.'l"ibt·ns nut i,)(~;irlnt: lt1 ~y tht.o t:arricrr
IJWY . remit .in ~tdvant.'t! t.lired lo The 'Dail ~
&amp;•nhnt•l on a 3, 6 or 12 month bavil:l. Cn..-diLio
will bt• ~lvcn carri er c ~b month.
,.

13 Wt..'Ck.'i
2fi Wt't'k.'i
52Wtock.-.

.'Ill

.1!1!

51!
12%

(Sdeb 14-131.

PRICES
:
Daily ........................ J5Ct.-ntso'

MAJLSUBSCRIPTIONS
lrwldeOhlo
........... . .... ..
. . .. . ..... .. , ..
.. . ........ , .. ..
O••tsldr 011111
............ .

....

, .5(8

n

.

.
Beatry executive assistant to !he Jeoagve

lifl

Calib'n1a (Forsch 11-10) at Toronto

· ss2 ~

N11 subst.·riplions

But Taft Broadcasting Co., which
owns Kings lsland Amusement
Park and manages the nearby foot·
ball museum. says It will continue
to underwrite the operation.
"We are not losing a lot of money," said Taft chairman Charles
Mechem Jr. "lt Is our hope and our
plan and our Intention to continue
the facJUty. We haye no Intention of
giving It back.
"Things take time. If you're confident your tacillty IS good, you
stick With II. It's a quality facillty.
People like it. People are proud of It
... I'm every bit as enthusiastic
about It as Iwas the day It opened."
Taft said that after taxes, opera!·
lng the hall cost about $162,000 last
year.
"That's a very small price to pay
for the exposure and publicity we
get on a national basis," Mechem
sajd. Taft reported a profit of $38.8
mllllon last fiscal year.
Surveys conducted before the
hall was built predicted attendance
of up to :m,ooo.a year, but It took
nearly four years to reach 250,000.

of communlcatlona, and Akundra

-

.m

73
.,.

53

IVIOiat-6)

g:~':.~h ' ':: ::::::::::::::::::.:: S.4.40.
Jl .c(

Ork Year

.5&amp;1

611 .
71

'!1

Texu

SUBSCRIPTION RATI!S
By C..nier ttr Motur Rotite

""

"''R.

Gil

Wtd 'r'•O...
'l'm:wlto 3-12, OU1an:t 2-11
Ba1thcre 5, New Yoi-k 3
Mllwalltft :S, 0e1ro1t 3
ete..laod 7. •
C&gt;lcaoo ~ CaJftonlla 3
Mlnneoo!a 1~ Tt:ow 2
Kamas Qty ~ Seottle 4. u lnnlngo

Sentlnt!l , lll C&lt;lurt St. , Porneroy,Ohlot5789. ~

WMP092FM

61

tr1 n
m m

Sei.Wt&gt;

;
.
POSTMASTER: Send addrw to The DailY

HEAR THE Rl:DSALL
SEASON L.ONG ON

60

M

8t

ClUJud

r•.

Tht! ~lated PrHS, Inland Dai•.
ly PreuJ Assocb~Uon and the AmericM~,

NeW.!lpiper Sales, 733 ThlnJ Avenue,
York, New Y()rk 10017.

expected.

of marketlna; C.Orae McFadden dlr« ·

Pd.

E

"

Ncwllp.pcr Publbherl:l AHsod1tion, National~
AdvertlsinK Repretltmtatlve, Branhan1' ·

RACINE- Avolunteer-type fun.
damental football. progr!lm has
been ·Organized In the Southern Local School District fQr students IIi
the fJCtb and sixth grades at Portland, Syracuse, Letart, and Ra·
cine Elementary Schools.
The program has been organli.ed
to Interest young students In the
football prpgram, wblle also providing fundamentals In building a
strong football program In the
district.
Games, which will be of the •'two
hand touch" variety will be played
each Tuesday and Wednesday ev-

L

11
..,

'

admlnlltratton : Domlntc Carner« dlrec-

USFL-Named Steven E . Ehrhart

sel to I be commissiOner and dlrector Of

I

Ill
'72

M.m1~r :

Volunteer
program
organized .

--I

w

The Daily Sentinel

Published ewry Hfttrnoon, MoOO.y lhrou~~
FriWiy, Ill Court Sl.rt:!t!l. by the Ohio Vallt.');
PublllhlnJ(. CompMny; • Mulllnlt!tlla, loc. ·
Po1neroy, Ohio 45761. IJI92.ZI56. Set'OI'ld el
~~- l*idMI Pomtoroy, Ohio. ·

C&lt;IIIR·

u........................

1 ,._
oUII!IIICANLEMtJE

I,o.Smlth. . 5U.oull, ..DJ: .......... Chic:aao. .311; Guerren&gt;, 1.01 ...._... .m
RUNS: Lo.5mflh. St.LoWI. 1ll!; &amp;!tmldt. ·
~ llll: Murplo'. AUoniO, 101;
DIIWIIlll,
c..;.. I!. - - · 91; - - Chi-

..

•

a.._

Reprints

-~-.
"' -· ~
Au.nta. 96.~ aa...-.
1&amp;1; Lo.Smttll. lllAUII, 171;
- 1&amp; Pft11burF,
110; """"'· .!foul.
. ....
.
llOUIJLl&gt;;:
Sill Dl!fp&gt;. !1:

Transactions

''

T.- .

--~--~
. - ' - " " ·.

.

Ollwr, - L 311;

' '

•HUNTING •TRAPPING L143tiSES
eGU.NS •AMMO •SCOPES .
. •ARCHIRY
.

1ftUI!m!:'l11111. -

-..

HOME RUIIt~ New Yort. 3fl;

MaiOIIel.~n,ter,.,. tb! f'tdJidelphi•'Nf"

for CalawnJ .Jones, forwarll. and • ttnt·
CHICAGO

'

.

BEARS-PJ~De.lnla
,

'

ofiHIIve ~,· oa tile laJured re--

PuN.

... ~I; Lo.Sinnb. St.L&lt;odl, 8;
M&lt;Ger• . . . - 8 ; GlnB,IIOUI.... B;
TWu;II4IUI, Su I:Mew:», I.

Na&amp;... .aa...~~etWA..rl 5I
ROCKETS-Tra4ed

Lick,

1D;

-.~;w--vort.e:...,...

HOUSTON

rouodd&lt;=-~

· 31:

-.~31;--31; Lo.lllillfll.'~. 13.

AAAfa~

COM.Pt.n:EiHUNJI~ .lfEAOQUARTEifS" r ·

Kofoht. -

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CHICAGO WlllTE SOX-J. two·vear workine aa:reemeat wttli"Oellvfti ol
!hP American Allodatlon Mlbelr'frlP'e

'

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1111. -

ST.LOUIS

CAJUliNALS-C" IIAio

Co-

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.

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.

'

REDSKINS-

II;

-

-·

_

AfloldA.

~

'

'

paydays.
Shortly after the ruling was filed
In federal court In Oklahoma City
Wednesday, the NCAA said It
would appeal to the lOth U.S. Cir·
cult Court of Appeals. If the NCAA
ruling Withstood an appeal, there Is
Utile doubt It would be the begin·
nlng of a new era In college
athletics.
Ruling on a suit brought by Okta·
homa and Georgia, Burciaga held 1
that the NCAA had violated anti·
trust laws In selling game rights.
Burciaga also held that "the right
to telecast college football games Is
the property of the Jn.stltutlons par·
tlclpatlng In the games, and that
right may be sold or assigned by
those Institutions to any entity at
their discretion .
The decision was applauded by
big-time football Interests which
have been fighting the NCAA for
control of football television.
"To a large degree, the judge
fully vindicated what the CFA at·
tempted to do," said Charles M.
Nelnas, executive director of the
College Football Association,
through which most college football
powers sought exclusion from the
NCAA contracts.
"The selfish Interests of a few
could destroy college football as we
know It," said Way~ Duke, com·
missioner of the Big Ten Con·
fernce, whose members are not
part of the CF A.

r;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - Walt
Van Sickle won the Ohio Golf Association's 41st Seniors Championship Wednesday with a 2-{)Vel"-par
144 for the 36-hole tournament.
Van Sickle, 58, from Sylvania,
carded a l-over 72 Tuesday at
Heather DownS Country Club's
South course and another l-over 72
Wednesday at the club's North

course.
"I probably played better Tues·
day," Van Stckle,ln his first Seniors
tournament, said. "But the difference today was that I did not have a
three-put green. And I made a COU·
pie .of key birdies · down the
stretch."
He was tied With 59-year-old Alex
Poll of Reylloldsburg and 6!1-yearold Steve Plpoll, of Poland, Ohio,
after the first :!8 holes.
Poll shot 75 at Sooth Wednesday

1

BillY THE KID
HEALTH TEX

-

CALABASH
DON MOOR

SHIRTS
SIZE 4 TO 14

OPEN MON.·SAT.
9:30·5:00

KIDDIE SHOPPE
111 W. 2nd

Pomeroy, Oh.

stay
on
your
toes

VanSickle wins seniors event

Our new lr tt le ba ll e t fi O I looks
wonderf ull y toaa y and poHs
beau l rl utlywr l h most everythrngt
Ym/il love hOvtng 1l1n evecy

to finish second with 147.
The former Colwnbus pro said,
"! just wasn't hitting as many
greens today."
Plpoll shot a 78 on the North
course Wednesday to finish at 150,
In fourth place behind a 149 by
Marv Ott of Columbus, who was In
the 55-to 59-year-old bracket. Ott
had rounds of 74-75.
Fifth In the field of 3lll was 1900
and 1981 tournament winner Bob
Castor, 60, ot Ashland, with 75-7&amp;151.

co101 Black or Camel
An d JUSI

$2399

t.g.i.footnotes.
heritage house
OF SHOES
MIDDLEP9RT

..,.

Plan toumament

~
~

A coed I8IICtioiiEd slowpltch soft.
ball tournanient will be held In Gal·
uwu5· Sept. 18-19. For further
, lnfomlatlm. call44&amp;8139.
There wDl also be a sanctioned
One-pitch Softball tOurnament Sept.
18-191n Galllpills. Further lnforma·
11oo may be oblaiDed at 44&amp;8139. ·

with each sitting! *
~~~b Lading oolor portralta
you can eD,joy for yean to come.
Fifteen Wllleb, three 5 )( 7.
IDCI two 81&lt;10.

Pt11la32;

ONLY$}295

.

!ITOI.I:N ~~-II:

. ......
fie;. - .. La. Allllll.

!let DEPOSIT

Yoltl, ill!; !l.flox.~·

t

.. •

-

PrraiiNC (11 ~) : P- A&gt;
-1H,.711,Uil; . . . . - ..

·17-7, :a Ul; ~
... , . . - . 9lo
3.la OmHn1'. F

ns :

1 SM.
.... .Ill;
... J&gt;-7, . ..

~

Ulo -LDI~

Jt,.a.ua.

- ·~.oo~su.-.sa
•~ ~

IACWII M&lt;flll ...1, - ·
. lipid
birll
CwiDuiiJIIjr.~ .
.·
t

beat Colwnbus and Knoxville,
Tenn.. In the National Football
Foundation's search for a site,
were based on the preriuse that
many of the 2.7 mllllon annual vis·
!tors to Kings !stand would drive
three-quarters of a mlle from the
park and pay $3.75 to see the hall.
"If there was one area that surprised me, !twas the relatively low
transference from the park to the
Hall of Fame," Mechem said. ''But
when you think about It, It's not all
Uuit SUlJlrtslng. People make a real
commitment to the park. They
spend all day there."
Donald Schumacher, manager of
the museum, said tllere may be an
Irony In that the building's stately,
Ivy League appearance seems to
discourage prople from dropping
ln.
"It's too attractive a bulldlng,"
he said. "People think It's a place
where you do a term paper."
Although the hall hasn't yet had a
break-even year, SchUmacher predicted that could happen within the
next year. Attendance for Aprll,
May and June was 10 percent
higher than a year ago.
"I think we're on the right track,"
he said.

-·
._..._ ... . .....
13;

l.OIA.-,JD.

-·
.
.
,-......
=-.. . . -. -· v- ,._
.
....

The surveys, which helped Taft

week. In 'any event, we were gotng
to announce It Monday. But the sentiment Is to do something sooner, If
we find Friday that the owners are
stlll not serious about bargalnlng."•
He could not be reached late Wed·
nesday _night for comment. Theop, erator said Garvey's telephone,was
ort the hook.
Negotiators for the two sides last
met Sept. 8, when the players rejected the owners' plan to raise
minimum player salaries, ease
movement of tree agents and pay
seniority bonuses of $10,(0} per
~player for each year of service In
the NFL, up to $60,000.
Garvey said the unloo would respond to that proposal point by
point Friday and discuss · other
Ideas to mee t the players '
concerns.
The NFLPA announced last
week that any strike would come
between Sept. 19 and Oct. 3, the second and fourth weekends of the
season. Garvey said Sunday that It
probably would be Sept. 26 or Oct. 3.
The owners have steadfastly refused to negotiate on the players'
demand that the NFL divert 55 per·
cent of Its gross Income to a trust
fund that would pay player salaries
on a senl(\rlty-based scale with performance Incentive bonuses.

RBI:Mwplo', A\lan,., lilfl; lkodaler,

CNcaao.
St. OIMr. - - · 19:
SM.n FQ!Dim. 97; J .~ .PitJ.

'

•

But If the rullng stands pending
an NCAA appeal, all television
schedules this season could become
meaningless, with schools marketIng their games on a week-to-week
basis either Independently or
through conference tie-ups .
The ruling by U.S. Judge Juan C.
Burctaga also Is timely In light of
the threatened strike by National
Football League players. Several
schools have already expressed a
wtlllngness to switch their games to
Sunday. With the networks suddenly In need of football programming, many of the major college
powers might be In line tor big

Ohio
Sportlight

KINGS MILLS, Ohio (AP)- The
4-year-Qid College Football Hall of
Fame north of Cincinnati Is not
drawing as many people as

Majon

BJ-fte ...

KANSAS CITY. Mo. (AP)- A
'ederal Judge's ruling that frees ev·
ery NCAA school to sell television
rights to Its football games without
restl1ctlon was hailed as a smash·
lng vll;tory by scxne and a pl'lllude
to dmasler by Others.
In the meantime, NCAA attorneys sought to block Jmrnedlate lm·
plementatloo of the ruling which,
among o~ tltlnp, throws put
NCAA contracts with ABC and CBS
!Or oollege games this year. Even If
the NCAA does not get a stay nf the
order, the networks said Wednes·
. day they woold go abead With this
weekend's telecast schedule.

By George Strode

Scoreboard ...

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

Thistledown ·resull8

NORTif RANDALL, Ohio (~)
-Misty~. with Tony D'Amloo
aboard, nllnped to an e~ victory'
In the lealured alk7.YaDce race Wed·
nesdliy at Thlit.li!Ciown. · ·
'
The 3-year.(jld filly went the m1le.
In 1:423-5 over a muddy traclt to"pay
$5.8), $4.lll and $3.60. The second
•horse, Wll4 Chlk), feturned $8.~
· and ~.IV, wblle
paid $3.1V
to show.
.
The third trltecta romlnatlai ol

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

Pameray-Miclc:l. Ohio

&lt; 111rb,PI"
.., 211:

IJI; !

.•1.01 ....,.,
·- 171;

-Lao~··

""t tr&gt;e limo Ollfttfna:you
r'eeetve • ·coupon
-fol01t2
, bNutlful Chrlatma
Conlo.

..

'•

DATES:

Sept. 15·Sept. 19
Wed.· Sun.
Photography
Hours:

• Wallet size fits Christmas Card . Wed. &amp; Sat. 10·1,
Thurs. &amp; Fri.
• One gift per sitting
10-1, 2·5: 30,6·8
• Poses our selection
• Beautiful backgrounds available

Sun. 1·4

'·

�Page 6 The Daily Settinel

What's cookin'?

Oa~meal

Thursday, September 16,1982

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

isn't always b,oririg

Res · ts . _ p ·Salvation Army
cause; Rummel leaves for India
r.

By DALE M. STOU..
Melp County Extealloo
Home~

Many people think of oatmeal
only as a mound of gummy lumps
blandly waiting to be dut1fully consumed at brealdast time.
Oatmeal doesn't have to be
boring!
The oatmeal that we buy In the
store or at the millis made by rolling the groats (oats with the bull
removed) to form flakes and then
steaming them. That's wh.y It's
called "rolled oats." You can buy
two types In the store: old fashioned
and quick-cooking. The only dltference between the two Is the thinness of the flakes and thus the time
needed to cook the cereal. Nutritionally, the two are Identical. To
make quick cooking oats, the
groats are cut Into little pieces and
Ulen rolled Into small, thin flakes.
. Oatmeal adds tiber to your diet
and supplies protein, carbohydrates and other nutrients.
One cup of dry oatmeal yields
two cups of cooked oatmeal. Oatmeal should be stored In an airtight
contall)er In a cool dry place. You
can freJeze oatmeal, too.
I Uke topreparenutrltloussnacks
tor my family's lunches. AprtcotOatme&amp;i Bars are one of our favorItes. ·It's a great "cookie" !or
relresbments, too, because they
are so dltferent and so good!
~Bu-B

2.cilpe luncooked oatmeal, quick
or Old FQhloned
. 1 cup (lacked brown sugar
1',4 cups all-purpose flour
1 cup butter or margarine
~ cup chopped nuts
1 teaspoon cinnamon
',4 teaspoon salt
~ teaspoon scda

Combine all Ingredients, mixing
well, mixture wm be crumbly. Reserve two cups of the mixture. Pat
the remaining amount Into .a
greased 9xl3" pan or 2 greased
8x8" pans. Top with thick layer of
apricot preserves, using 1-1* cups
In all, sprtnkle remaining oatmeal
mixture on top. Bake at400degrees
for 25 to 00 minutes or until the bars
are brown. Cool and cut Into bars.
To make lunch-pack! •:g an easy
job, plan ahead by freezing some of
the aprtcot-oatmeal bars. I package each one In a plastic sandwich
bag, placing 10 or 12 In a freezer
bag. Then I can pop one Into a lunch
box for a super lunchtime treat.
Many people enjoy making fruit
desserts with oatmeal toppings.
This topping Is an excellent one and
can be used for peach, apple,
cherry or other fruit crtsps. The
fruit base Is made with about three
cups peeled sliced fruit, one-hall
cup sugar (or less) 1 tablespoon
flour, a dash of salt and 1 teaspoon
cinnamon. Place the fruit mixture
In a 8 x 8" pan and top with Oatmeal
Crunch Topping:
',4 cup uncooked oatmeal (quick
or old fashioned)
*cup flour
Y. teaspoon scda
'% cup brown sugar (or less)
Y. teaspoon baking powder .
One-tplrd cup butter or
margarine.
Mlx these Ingredients and crumble over the top of the fruit. Bake at
351).375 degrees for about 40 minutes. You'll love It! 'Ibis Is an old
famlly recipe and I've never had a
better "Crisp...
Oatmeal Is a traditional addition
to ground beef to create meatloaf.
'Ibis I'EC!pe baa the addition ·of
cheese, which makes It extra

FUnDy Medicine

Ulllvel'llll)' Co1Jeae
Of Ol&amp;eopatblc Medlellle
Olllo

QUI1:STION: What should I do If
one of mychlldrEm blt:!!alls.
his llfl1l or leg?
ANSWER:
First, try to rest
the part of the extremity that Is
broken. An untrained person
should never attempt to straighten a broken (fractured) leg, arm or ankle. If the skin
does not have an open wound
simply use a splint made out of
rolled up newspapers or pieceS of
wood. Th1s splint should be gently
lleld together with gauze, a belt or a
string. The patient should have
quick medical attention so that the
blood and nervoe supply to the limb
can be assessed !or possible InJury.

Freedom from smoking offered

•

11-IURSDAY
, POMEROY Chapter Ill Roy1111
Arch Masons wm meet Tnur&lt;-1
day at 7 p.m. Work will be In
· mark master and past masted
degrees. All companions are
vtted to attend·,

•

coJJected from all

Clleelle Meatloaf
ltervlllp,
l·blcb lllkle eacll

Egg, slightly beaten, 1
Milk, ~ cup
Rolled oats, '% cup
Ground beef. 1 pound
Onion, finely chopped, 3
tablespoons
Salt, 1 teaspoon
Cheese, chopped, * cup
Preheaf oven to 350 degrees F.
(moderate). Combine all IngredientS'; mix well. Shape Into a loaf 6
Inches long In a baking pan. Bake
about 1 hour until browned. Remove excess fat. Let stand about 10
minutes !or easter slicing. NOTE:
For a change, shape the meat loaf
mixture Into six Individual loaves
or put It Into mullin tins. Baking
ttme wm be sborter.
Dry oatmeal can be added to
most meat loaf l'I!C!pes Instead of
bread crumbs or other extenders.
Cooked oatmeal, leftover !rom
breakfast. also may be substituted,
but you wm need to cut down mi the
liquid In the recipe.
0! course, properly prepared oatmeal served at brealdast WW be
gobbled up quickly and then there
won't be any leftovers! FOllow the
I'EC!pe on the box of oatmeal, being
certain to add the oatmeal slowly to
the brtskly bolllng water. The oatmeal needs to stand for several
minutes after the cooldng pertod.
Try serving the oatmeal topped
with small amounts of brown
sugar, maple syrupe, or sugar and
cinnamon. Soak the cooking pan 1n
cold water for easy cleanup.
For your free guide to cooking
with oatmeal, contact Dale M. Stoll
at the Meigs County Extension 0!!lce, ~~96.

wlllch are located around the
elbow.
QUESTION: Are there any other
broken bones that cause extra
problems?
ANSWER: Yes, fractures of the
thigh bone (lemur) usually require
hospitalization and often an orthopedic surgeon will have to pin the
broken parts together, Also fractures of the lower leg In an aduit
often require the special services of
an orthopedic surgeon. Frequently
fractures of the tibia (the large
bone In the lower leg) need a prolonged Period of time to heal since
this bone has a smaller blood
supply than most other bones.
QUESTION: Does Jogging or
running ever cause the leg bones to
break?
ANSWER: I frequently find
stress fra~. also called march
!racturlls, In patients whQ do a
great deal of running. These patients will rome to the office with a
broken bone.In the foot or lower leg
that Is caused by repetitive and prolonged strain on the bone as a result
of regular Jogging or running.
These fractures are treated just as
any other bone with rest and castIng as needed.
(Editor's note: Although he cannot answer letters personally, ·Dr.
Schreck wm discuss questions of
general Interest In the column.
Please address correspondence to:
Ed Schreck; D.O., College of Osteopathic Medicine, Ohio University,
Atbens, Ohio 45'101.)

IIOIIl'Cel

addedupm:=~~=:::~~-

- a couple •.
dollan short
·the plane fare alclle. Tbere W(ll
money tor food or lodging. · ·
Tblng&amp; looked black and miDil
you. by thll time, It Will approiiCbo,
big noon and Glenna'S fltght W8l to.
leaw at 2:UI p.m. WednetMiay. :r
So - a quick run to the Jleal'b):
. Bank I ~ Pometoy w.ere i. ''ve!Y
quick" 'toan Ct t!IO() was IM!CW"ed
with two !leDtlnel staff' lllelllbiD '
co-~ to hurry the
aloa&amp;'· Glenna placed $3lO In her ac"
count to cover the check ~'
earlier fir the air !are and tiloks.1i&gt;:
for food and
1 11ope food,
and lodglna Is more ~ble Ill
lndli than' In the states or that~:
won't go far.
·
· • :
However, I !mow that GleriDa
feels that God wtil proYide.lfeel the '

POMEROY - Old~ · ~~~rj
Night will he observed n
when the Meigs County '-A'ono-1
cratlc Committee meets at
p.m. at Carpenter's Hall oil
Main St., Pomeroy. Pastcow~tvl
officials from the party will
on hand for the program
enled by E. A. Wingett,
time party leader. Among
to be onhandwUlbeDonml.l&gt;rell,l
a former county commissioner;

Plvce.:

lodalnc-

same way.

.

,

Mildred
Fowler,Fowler,
~~~:~=~
the late Roscoe
County's first Democratic
rl!f; Gordon Caldwell,
served as county auditor;
Offutt and Oscar Weber wh&lt;l fo1·-l
merly served as head of
State Hlgbway Department
Meigs County.

,,
,·

1

So - the tlnailclal ~-'
was worked Ql!t and Glenna bopped '
·Into a car driYell by Sally Llllden'.
for her trip to, Cd~:Ob- ~
. nie tell you abOut the car. I! ~
motor stops, It Is lmpoiltlile IID.i'4!F
tart It without ptttng under· tbe

DEUGII'I'BD - Ma,1or Olema Blanmelllaldl a fM eii!JIIveiopel
wldcll contam .... from ... ! fll aad I"JIIIIa .. llelp wllll ller triP Ill
India. Thele
a IOtllleiiiM - l e f t at 'lbe SeDtmel Office for Major Rammel Ia aaJy ~day. Malol'Bummel. delplle
b e l q - 1180111ori ol baW!Ifuadll tG IIUib llle&amp;rtpiD lndJa.left from
Colwnbul on ber 10 hour flllbt Wedaeed- ~

ell\'..,._.......,......,

uted $574 through the Sentinel offlee.
Other friends and groups
s[
gave.
Major Glenna Hummel (R), one
Wednesday morning, . Glenna
of Melga County's most dedicated
was
scheuled tb anive at The Senworkers In the field r1 rellgton, left ,
tinel
oftlce between 9 and 9:15a.m.
Wednesday for India - I think.
to
open
the almost 00 envelopes conAs you may know, Major Rum•
taining
the $574 and to record wbo
mel felt a calling to make a return
the
givers
wete. However, ~e­
trip to lnd!a where she had been
ryone
knowa·that
Gelnna plans too
satloned as a missionary of the Salmany
actMtlel
'
I
n
too little time
vation Arm.y !or five years In the
and
Is
not
r
eally
the
epitome pt orlate 1940s and early 1950s.
In
spite
of
ber deep dedJ,·
ganization
Major Rummel - or Glenna as
cation
of
God's
work.
As It were, It
she Is at!ectlonate!y known In the
was
almost
10
a.m.
Wednesday
'
cominuntty - planned to IDake the .
trip pracUcally on faith alone. She when Glenna arrtved at the Senwanted to attend the Centennial tinel oftlce · to open the envelopes
Congress of the Salvation Arm.y In containing , the traveling money
Bombay and then visit In Calcutta gifts.
Well - you guessed It - or did
where she was staloned for the tlve
you? The Sentinel staff all pitched
years.
O!flctals In Washington, D.C., In with big Interest to get Gelnna on
..
rushed her passport papers
through In record time ·and she re- Toys help learning
celv~ the passport last Saturday.
However, therewasstlllaproblem
SKILLMAN, N.J. (AP) -Child- the money to go on.
ren'stoysshouldbedeslgnedtoprolt was !)rst believed that the tllght vide learning experiences tor the
alone would cost about $l,nl. How- child, according to a behavioral
ever, the final figure came to $1,515. scientist. ·
Glenna though ller dedication and
Dr. Darts Welcber, a consultant
work baa given freely of herself and for Johnson&amp;: Johnson Child Develber possessions over the years. She opment Toys, says.toys should athad no chance to acculnmula~ tract attention, be easy to handle,
funds for such a trip. Everyone and provide consequences or repltched In - a late last minute wards that reinforce a Child's exeffort.
ploratory and play behaviors.
On Monday, residents were adShe also says toys shoUld EIICOUI'vlsed that they could help Glenna age soctai, emotional. pl!ySiclil and
with the trip by dropping their con- Intellectual development throUgh
By BOB HOEFUCH

••-tS&amp;alf

MIDDLEPORT Child Conser. vatlon League meeting, 7: 00
p.m. Thursday at home of Mrs.
Helen Blackston; devotions by
Eloise White and the program
wm be a review of the league
by-laws.

- hoodandjlggllngafeWwtres.~
.- with the belp ol The DI!DY-~ .
el's Tim Halstead -+ got It stal1ed,
just before Glenna lett W~ay;
What with shortly ~two~ td
get io the airport In &lt;;:olurnbus, I
hope the veblcle kept 1111111\n&amp;. ;
Meanwhile, KfOUps and lndfvldu,
als are being asked tD leave gifts bi
sealed envelopes at The Sentinel of~
!Ice 011 Court St., Pomeroy In MaJO!'
Rummel's name so that the ~
oote can be paid It! before Glenna's
return. ;t'Wo ldnd souls Wednesday;
after Gtenna's departure, heard ~
the problem and contributed~ to;,
wardl paytnc It! the note. . . :··
Oh, by the way, ~Rummel ,
was ·a nervoUs wrecil~\'fediiNdaY:" ·
as shfJ opened the gUt lllvelopes ~
for her at The Sentilll!l ~.I~ :
asure you that she ulred God's
blessing for you If ~Were one at
the group who gave,'l!m sure Goct
didn't noitee' ber 8ervOusness as
much as we of ·The Sentinel staff
did. In fact. we gOt
too!
When Glenna WaS Mrded Into' tllil
car for her trip to Columbus, we all
reached !or a nerve ptll.
'
So - as I say - l!ajor Gli!nna
Rummel Jert Wednesday tor India
- I think!
•

NEW HAVEN -Wrestling at
8 p.m. Thursday at New Haven
Community Center.
POMEROY -Southern High
School Band Boosters will meet
at 7: :ll Thursday In the band
room. AD Interested parents are
asked to attend.
POMEROY - Southern
School Band Boosters, 7:00p.m.
this evening In band room; all
Interested parents Invited.

FRIDAY
Friends night of the
County Order of E ~~~e'~r;~:~;
Chapters wlll be held
at 7: 30 p.m. at Racine Masonic Temple. The worthy
tron of the host chapter
asked that members ••&lt;l&lt;t I
· with a cleaning session -nmr.-•
day evening beginning at
p.m .

1

nervous,

..

RUTLAND - A dance will be

'·"''"'n Saturday night-at Rutland

Civic.Center from 8 p.m. to 11: 00
p.m. The charge Is singles, $2.
couples, $3. Music wm be by the
Itomlc Sounds.

'YOUR HEADQuAmRS
FOR WESTERN WEAR

MDBOOTS ,.

SUNDAY
J

I

DAN'S
aoorsHoP ·

POMEROY - Homecoming
will he held at Morrts Chapel
Church Sunday with Rev.
George Hoschar of West Columbia, W.Va., astheguestspeaker.
Singers will be the Circle D
Quarteto!Racme.Thepubllcls
Invited.

·

MIDDlfPORT
trlbutlons by_The Sentinel O!tlce. r~pla~Y:_
· -------~_j~~~~~~~~~~~
Residents responded beautifully In
the one day - TUesday - they had
to function. In !act, they contrlb-

A new freedOm from smoking !zed within the larger group- are a
The banana
cllnlc program to help smokers join major empbaals.
the others to quit their habit Is being
The Lung Association research
MIAMI (AP) -The fact that one
offered by the Amertcan Lung As- showed that most partlclpsnts said
bad
apple wm spoil entire barrel
JOCIBtlon pt Ohlo, SouUl East they wanted to quit for health reaby
causing
rapid detertoratlon Is
Branch, and Is co-sponsored locally sons- to avoid lung cancer, emphwellknown.
~
by the Meigs County Tuberculosis ysema, heart disease - and to be
However,
apples
are qot ·alone In
Ot!!ce, Veterans Memorlal Hospl- able to breathe more freely, to have
suCCUJI'Iblng
to
the
Influences of a
J&amp; and the Cancer Society.
more energy, and to feel more In
single wayward associate.
,. The program will start on Tues- control of their lives.
day, Sept. 28 and conclude on Tues- .
Weight
control,to relaxation,
jlay, Oct. 26 . . The six-session tlfylng
triggers
smoke, are!denkey fiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliij;iiiiW~~R;;R;Ii.!;jp;ijfiiP!iiiiiiiiiii.-1
program wtll be held at Veterans elements In the freedom !rom
~emortal Hospital, East-West Dlnsmoking program. So .Is keeping a
Jng Room, and will begin each night record of the cigarettes one smokes
t7p.m.
each day.
~ "There Is lot of give-and-take In
"For people who benefit from
the group process, which takes the group support, this program Is the
)onel-Y element out of quitting on way to go," says Ma. Gray. For peo~own, " says Pat Gray, Branch
ple who want to quit In their own,
.l)lrectOr for he Lung Association. the Lung Association has deve)•When It comes to smoking, for loped a self-help freedom !rom
lome people quitting together Is smoking program that helps smokmore effective than trying to kick ers adopt a llealthler ll!escyle In ~
the habit In Isolation...
days. "The group program Is a dif1• According to Ms. Gray. In Its five ferent method to reach the same
,:ears of development and testing, goal, but with a rich added dimen-the new program, the American sion - other' people," she says.
.Lung Asl!liclatlon found that stgn'lng contracts to quit and assigning
~ards to oneself are Important
factors In successful quitting. One
'd the most popular parts of the pro,aram Is a panel discussion of ex'llllOkers telling about how they
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Epple had as
~ best to stay off cigarettes.
their
guesta receiltJy Mr. and Mrs.
!\IRJ8ll group Interactions - organ- Ricllard
Epple, Glen BW'nle, ~d.,
t
.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick ,- E~ple,
BaWmore, Md., ·~ Mra. Gerry
Behrendren ol Sancluaky. Tbey attended a family reunion at the home
ol
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Brown ol
• .lfoule Bill IIIII !ICbedUied to be
Ray, Ohio on Sunday. · ~ '
~ Oil later 'thll 111011th wtll Inwere ~at the reunion. .
~ tile- COil r1 blrtlr and death
Roy Wl8emln who IIICl maJcr
i1!11111CAtel the ~ r1 Vl- ' IIW'IIery
... 'bmu&amp;ht' homt frllm
t.J llr...,..., OIIUinbUI. trom 13 !0 Hober Medical
alter a llw
II»&gt;idiiW liD Mn- June Albley weeka stay. Be IaCenter
slowly llllprcw!ng.
Will,_ a.ntyGenf!ekV ~
'sl•" wbtC:b IIC4JP•Ing the bDl.
11'811111111d 10 Joc!ce their . JUIIIII' Pa,ne .... ...._. wtill ·
u. wltb tbelr state 1111 fllmil)'. He 'WIIItll.f« Oolunaii.ti , I
.
,., AIIIbllt
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POMEROY -An open house I
will be held Sunday from 3 to 4
p.m. In Room 204 at Southern
High School to display new computers purchased with ·Ch!Lptelr
n federal block grant money.
Students wUl be there to denoon-1
strate the programs.

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RUTLAND - County-wide
prayer meeting, 2 p.m. Sunday
at Rutland Bible Methodist
Church; Glen Bissell, class
leader.
POMEROY _;__ Homecoming
Sunday at Mt. Hermon Untied
Brethren Church with a carry In
dinner at noon In the fellowship
hall following SI!IldaY school at
9: 00 and morning worhslp at
10: 30. Afternoon services at I: 00
p.m. with music by 11\e Thomas
Family, Coolville. and the Soldiers of Light, Porter!leld. Public
Invited.

a

Harrisonville
Social News

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-GOING·BACK·TO
SCHOOL?.TAKE'A
FRIEND.Jilt__ E
DAIL¥;SENTI NEt

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~t of certificates
tslated to increase

-~.-' '791

s.tso.\

a

»-=

=

rw.

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SA1URDAY

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Helen help us

Calendar

an even lreeL Tile money Gleim!!:

Running and broken bones linked
On ,the way to the doctor you can
apply Ice to the fracture site to minImize the swelling. If possible take
the patient's pulse just beyond the
fracture site. Also, see If the patient
can move his or ller tlngers or toes.
When you get to the emergency
room or doctor's office report these
findings to the p!lysiclan or nurse.
QUESTION: I broke an arm
near my elbow and It never healed
up rigt\1; Wh.y?
ANSt'/ER: Fractures that are
close to the elbow joint are especially dlf1lcult to treat because of
the posslb!Uty of sertous complications. An elbow fracture, by Interfering with the blood supply, could
leave a hand that does not function
very well. Also, It Is very easy for
these fractures to heal Improperly
so that the elbow cannot be !ully
stretched out or bent 'Ibis can
happen even If the fracture Is set
correctly. In children such fractures can result In disturbances at
the growUl centers of the bone

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special:

. Family medicine
B)' Edward Sclm!ck, D.O.
A•btent Profe110r of

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RACINE -The annual homecoming · of the Mt. Mortah
Church of God, Rt. 2, Ractne,
will be held Sunday. There
be a covered dish dinner on the
church grounds atl2: OOi·.m.tollowed by special singing In the
·afternoon. Services will be
Wider the direction of the pastor,
. the Rev. JameS Satterfield.
public Is Invited.

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HARRISONVILLE Lodge ru
WW hold a ~nlc Sunday at 1
!l·m- at Forest ~res Park, Rutland. AD masons and famlllel,
Eastern Starmembersand!amllles and widows of Masons are
Invited to attend.

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MONTHS. •
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PdMEROY - Chlckell bar·
becue Sunday from 11 a.m. until
2 p.m; at the Pomeroy Flre Stat1on. Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Spouored by Pomeroy Volunleer Flre Department• .

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
•

(Why do I forget: names, or am I. getting senile?'
By HELEN Ba1'l'EL
DEAR HELEN:
I'm normally Intelligent, approaching 60, alert, acUve, employed - and worrted.
I've always had trouble remembertng names when I must Introduce people, even If I know them .
quite well. Llliewlse the names of
famous persons sometlm~ Illude
me when, for example, I'm discussIng a movie or a book.
My "blallks" didn't bother me
when I was younger, but now I see
!orget!ulhess as a sign of old age,
perhaps oncoming sentllty, and It
doesn't help these worrtes when my
juniors rush to help me out as If

they're covering !or the "old
party."
My tnemOry lapses may be Increasing. I'm on edge,.wonderlng If
my trouble with names wm spill
over to other areas and affect my
work and my ll!e. Co-workers consider me competent, even sharp, .
but C~~uld I he - GET11N~
SENILE?
DEARG.S.:
More likely you're getting scared
of the big 6-01 Memory lapses you
once accepted, perhaps even
shrugged o!f as amusing quirks,
now seem like old-age spots on the
brain. Worry makes you doubly
aware of them, and !ear that they'll

happen (as you well know) can
bring on the "blanks." If they occur
oftener nowadays It's probably because you're frtghtened, not going
senile.
Why not get together with men
and women In your age group and
discuss these and other problems of
the acUve 60s? When you discover
many people share your apprehensions, you may all learn to mile
about them. - H.
DEAR HELEN:
My husband only fools around
with other women when he's been
drinking and they're extra-wtlllng.

So he says. It's a matter of wea- he enj oys the excuses liquor
provides.
'
kened will power and.big (female)
Insist
that
he change, and If he
come-ons. They practically seduce
him. So he says.
won't or can't, don't waste your U!e
He drinks a lot.
on a womanizing lush. - H.
'·
Should I forgive him because he's
"not responsible" and these O!ngs . DEAR HELEN:
A lot of people wrttlng to you
"don't mean anything?" -HOME
ALONE A LOT
seem to have Identity problems. I•
DEARHAAL:
don't. I know exactly who I am) my
wile has already told me. - ·
Repeated forgiveness gives
HERMAN
.
permission.
A husband who blames his infiGot a problem? An adult subject'
delities on drinking and loose
women Is 1) a liar; 2) probably a for discussion? You can tal~ ltovet·
lush and 3) In need of professional in her column If you wrtte to Helen
help which he may refuse because Bottel. care of this newspaper.

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Meigs families and friends gather for area reun1ons
Gilmore
The annual Walter Gilmore reunion was held on Labor Day at the
roadside park on Route 33 and highlighted theobservanceo!Gilmore's
85th birthday.
Gifts were presented to him.
Those attending were Maxine MIchael, Melvin Tracy, Mr. and Mrs.
James Gilmore and Dennis, Steve
Eblin, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gilmore, Jr.. Seth, Travis, and Jason,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gilmore, Sr.
and Sl)naron, Ray, Ebl\n, Margie
wan:J; Tim Michael, Mr. and l\1rs.
Gene Gilmore, Kay and Jeannie,
Leona Eblin, Fred Zeigler, Mr. and
Mrs. Terry Mtchael and Jeremy,
all of Pomeroy; Kathy, Shen'y,
Terry, David, and Darrell Michael,
Mr. and Mrs.~ Wise, Becky,
Etta Louise and Heather, Brenda,
Kim and PamHaggy, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Manley, Tracy and CryStal,
Charlene Cadle, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Michael, Tara and Jeff, Middleport; Debbie Gilmore, Mr. and
Mrs. WllburWardandchldren,Rutland; Darlene, Richard and David
Stewart, VInton; .Judy Wolfe, Chester; Ertca McClintock, Albany;
Kay, Corey and Jessica Hat!leld,

Racine; Calvin Pickens, Racine;
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Michael, GalIon; Sondra and Lesa Dorst, Columbus; Bonnie and Scott Payne,
Duke Dllcber, and the honored guest, Walter Gilmore, Columbus.

Romine-Bieker
A reunion of the Romine-Bieker
families was lleld at the Eli Denison
Legion Hall In RUtland on Sept. 5.
Each lamlly brought a covered
dial! and their own drinks. A large
decorated cake wu provided for the
occasion. Frances IIAlmlne won the
door prize and prizes were awarded
to Esta Hickman, the olilest person
attending, with other prizes going to
other members ol the family. Softball was played during the day.
Attending were Charles and Tillie
Romine, Rutland; George Bicker,
Mildred Bicker, Teresa Bronosky,
Huntington, W.Va.; Esta Bickrnan,
Columbus;
Mary Bronosky,
Lexington, Ky.; John and Kathryn
Lambert, Joyce and Janet. Rutland;
Melvin and Frances Romine, Melvin
Jr. and Charles, Columbus; Kenneth
Romine, Nancy Stapleton, Larry,
Bernard, Annette, and Tina Romine,
Rutland; Cliff and Alice Plal)tz,

Astrograph
September 17, 1982
Keep on the best of terms with your family and close relatives this
coming year. There Is a possibility that, through them or their contacts,
you might put together something profitable.
VIRGO (Aur;. 2S-Sept. 22) Don't despair If your economic picture
has been a bit dour lately. Something fortuitous Is about to break and
you may get an lnkllng of It today.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) You wfil begin to have a freer rein now In
situations where you were dependent upon others. Progress can now be
made with the control back In your hands.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Take advantage of any opportunities
today to meet and mix with new people. There Is a chance that a valued
frtendshlp can be established.
SAGITri\RIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) New goals and objectives may
flash through your mind today, but you might at first feel they're
unobtainable. This Is not true -these are targets for which you should
strtve.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jllll. 19) Be aware of your present needs,
but don't dwell too heavily on the Immediate. Begin today to make plans
for a blighter tomorrow.
. . AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Alliances or partnerships loomed at
this time have a good chance !or success. AD your views may not be In
harmony at first, but they wm soon merge.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Start taking steps today to develop
situations which you !eel could open up a second source of Income.
There's a cliance you might tap a very lucrative channel.
·
ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9) New conditions are now stirring which
will affect your career and your relationships to co-workers. Fortunately, what's transptrlng will be to your benefit.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) New channels may open today to
provide ways to add to your Income and resources. An enterprtslng
I
associate will help trigger events.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) This Is a good time to Implement
changes to make your residence more comfortable and homey. Try to
add touches that wm also Increase the value of your abode.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) A matter which has caused you frustration and annoyance Is drawing to a favorable close. You should now he
able to begin something new you've been hoping to launch.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 Instead of sticking with plans which thus far
have proven unsuccessftil, seek ways now to .make Immediate revihave a good chance for success.
. sions.. Your new Ideas
'

Shade; Terry and Drerna Fleshman,
Missy and Teresa, Groveport;
Elmer and Charlotte Morris,
Sherry, Charlie and Diane,
Groveport ; Bobby and Leona,
(Cookie) Romine and Jeff, Lockbourne; Bob and Ha2el Romine,
Rose and Rick, Columbus; Bill and
Barb Romine, Billy, Timmy and
Loretta, Columbus; Ethel Shafer,
Columbus; Elsie Priddy, Middleport; Margaret Lambert Welch,
Commercial Point; Judy Snowden,
Edith Lambert, Rutland.

Durst
Descendants of Thomas Durst
and Mary Shirley Durst held a
reunion at the Racine Locks and
Dam Sept. 4.
Attending were Mrs. Jessie
Durst Hussell, Mrs. MUdred Burge,
MU!wood; Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Durst, Henry Hunt, Debby and Stephanie Tygrett, Pamela Matheny,
BUI Durst, Mr. and Mrs. Sidney
Bauer, Mrs. Mary Herdman and
daughter, Mary Lynette, Roberta
and Tina McDade, Cindy Sayre and
son, Michael, all of Leon, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs . Vltus Hartley Jr.,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Jones, Manford Bauer, Mr. and Mrs. Boyd
Schwarz, Mr . and Mrs. Rodney
Pullins, Point Pleasant; Marsha
MU!er, Karen Houchen, Carol Houchen, Nikki Houchen, Cottagevllle;
Carol Daniels, Salem Center; Dana
and Roberta Lewis, Clllton; David
Roush, Milton, Ky.; and Bob and
Erma Kapp, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush,
Mrs. Bess Parsons, Ron, Nancy,
Mandy and Michael Russell, Ed
Roush, Sharon, Ed, Jeremy, and
Jamie Hupp, Irene Hupp, Herbert
Roush, Doug and Cindy Sands, Racine; Darla Kelly, Pomeroy;
Ralph, Naomi, Mary, Judy and Ju11e Durst, Gallipolis.
Gifts were presented to Jessie

I

'1'011r "F. )( tra Touch"

The annual Grover reunion was
held Sept. 5 at the Route 33 Roadside Park.
Attending were Greg Grover,
Dena Grover, Myrtle Grover, Terrl
Lynn Grover, Karen Grover, Genla
Grover, Randy Hysell, Rachel Hysell, VIrginia Grover McClelland,
Mildred Grover Ashcraft, Bessie

F lon s t S1 0C £1 1957

· ?~U-&gt;

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644

352 f. . Main. Pomeroy

Your FTD Florist

Our pharmacists are qualified
through years of training and
experience to dispense drugs.
You can depend on us for the
best.

Pharmacy
K...-t~ MC'Culloutft, ··"'·

CNr1el IIHte, I.Ptl,
lon.hl HMiftt, I. "-·

•=•··"'·"''·"'·

Mtft. tfttU
, ...
Sui'ICin
II:JI
.. 12 :• 1M S tot·"' ·
PIEICIIPTIONI
ttM . - ·ltJI
~,....,,,

ler'vlft

,~.o .

• · Mllln

Sltbttal

arbtad
• • ._II

•ttglft 11111 Gltalc

Gtllalc

242 Pike St.

327 Juliana.
Hra: t 0.111 • 6 p.m. M- T-W-F

Hrt: 9 o.m. - 6 p.m. M-W-F

t a.m. - Hooft Thun.

374-2211

S
im
Is
In
Like to Lose up to 50 Pounds or more
by Thanksgiving?

.Come to the Open Meeting of
Parkersburg/ Marietta Medical Weight Loss Clinic
(Meigs County Branch)
WHEN? September 18, 1982SaturdGy at 1 p.m., 4 p.m., &amp; 7 p.m.
WHERE: DIAMOND SAVINGS &amp; LOAN

PJ's
BUIIIIY SlEEPERS

FWIIIEL
. BRUSHED IIYLOII

.iROus

.,

Grover

IIIII .

·sTOP BY AND
SEE OUR
.COMPLETE LINE OF
LADIES.WINTER
SLEEPWEAR
tltERII~L

Grover Wade, Marcia Grover Hou·
dashelt, Bob Houdashelt, Brian
Houdashelt, Loraine Grover. Venoy, Bob Venoy, Mark Venoy;
Robyn Venoy, Roger McClelland,
Patty McClelland , Dale McClelland , Amber McClelland, Becky
Blankenship. Tracy Blankenship,
Debbie Collins, Branson Collins,
VIrginia West. Kenny West, Todd
West, Raody Alklnson, Teresa Atkinson, Joy and Jill Atkinson, Linn
Keller, Rnsalee Keller, Nancy Gilkey, Chuck Gilkey , Jerry Eads,
Louise Eads.

SWISHER lOHSE

.

·· ·GOWNS
·BRUSH IIYLON
fLANNEL

Durst Russell , the oldest woman attending; Russell Jones, the oldest
man; Jamie Hupp, the youngest
child;. David Roush, who traveled
the farthest; and Russell Roush,
the largest family attending.
Prayer before the dinner was
given by Boyd Schwarz. Ethel Hartley, Mary Pullins, and Erma Kapp
decorated the tables. Bernice
Roush, Roberta Lewis and Henry
Hunt were In charge of the gUts.
Next year's reunion will be held
at the Racine Locks and Dam on
the Saturday pl'l'Cedlng Labor Day.

CIIEIIIIi£
' FUEa '
IIIJSHED lmOII

MAIN

S~.,

POMEROY

RND OUT HOW YOU CAN

. IIYUIII QU!LTED •

•LOSE 3-7 POUNDS WEEKLY and...

. COMPLETE LINE OFANGEL TREAD

.

*~PERIENCE NO .ttUNGER OR FATIGUE .
•KEEP THE WEIGHt OFF PERMANENTLY (the belt part!)

•LOWER YOUR BLOOD PRESSURE, CHOLESTEROL AND TRIGLYCERIDE
LEVELS SAFE, FAST. EFFECTIVE
.

.HOUSE SLIPPER$

NO EXPENSIVE PACKAGED FOODSJust Regular Su~rket Foods
.
NO ADVANa Ri!SERVATIONS NEEDED
'
NO OtARGE OR OBUGATIONS

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8-The Daily Sentinel

'Thursday; s.pi..uber 16,

Pomeroy-Middlepott, Ohio

Meigs County correspondence
Mrs. Beulah Oehler, who is
staying with her daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Wright, had company
recently. Her twin sister, Lena
Cooper. from Kissimmee, Fla. The
members of each family gathered to
honor Beulah and Lena on their birthday at the Wright home.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh

of Floral City, Fla .. have returned
to their home after a visit with Mr.
Mcintosh's sister Mrs. Ralph
Spencer of Mye Avenue.
Out of town visitors at the
Spencer home were Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Davis of Poland, Ohio; Mr.
and Mrs. Felber Pullins of Urbana,
Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. John Frtel.and
children Paul, Edith Ann and
Marie of Louisville, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. Craig Brunk and daughter
Christina and Mr. and Mrs. Don
Lynn of Canton.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mcintosh,
Mrs. Carl Jennings and Mrs, Ralph
Spencer visited In Canton with their
cousin Mrs. Harry Davis.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell,
Racine, entertained with a dinner
party Tuesday. Attending were Mrs.
Aleta Lynn Burton and daughters,
Alisa Anne and Et'ika Lynn, Orlando, Fla.; Mrs. Floyd Chapman and
daughter, Kimberly, Pickerington;
Marine Captain and Mrs. Karl
Russell and chUdren, Melissa and
Kenneth, Scott Depot, W. Va.;
Dorothy Dandakis, Athens; Emerson Jones, Middleport; his grandson, John Davidson, London,
England. Mrs. Burton and
daughters and Kenneth Russell
spent the week with their parents.
Bruce R. Carman of Saugerties,
N.Y.. spent Labor Day weekend
with his mother, Mrs. Sylvia Car·
man and his brother, Dan, Long
Hollow Road. He also visited his fa·
ther, Ivan Carman, Peach Fork
Road. Bruce returned to New York
Monday where he Is employed by
the IBM Co. at Kingston, N.Y. He
has been employed there since gra·
duatlng from the Ohio Institute of
Technology In Columbus, June
1981.
Visiting Mrs. Marie Steiner, Middleport, were her son and wife, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Stetner of Warren.
The Steiners are on vacation. Mr.
Steiner is an associate professor at
the college in Big Rapids, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Russell,
Racine, entertained with a famUy
dinner party recently.
1betr guests were Mrs. Aleta
Lynn Burton and daughter. Lisa
Ann and Erika Lynn. Orlando,
Fla.; Mrs. Floyd Chapman and
daughter, Kimberly, Pickerington;
J'4arlne Cpt. and Mrs. Karl Russell
and chlldren, Melissa and Ken·
neth; Dorothy Dandakls, Athens;
EmersOn Jones, Middleport; Jolm
Davidson, London, England. Mrs.
Burton and daughters and Melissa
and Kenneth Russell, spent the
week here.

Wolf Pen
News Notes
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy of
Columbus were Labor Day weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
•McElroy and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
. McElroy, Jeff, Joey and Jessica.
Carl Russell and a friend of Co']urnbus, Mr. and Mrs. wuuam Rus·
lll)ll, Minersville, were Labor Day
guests of Bertha Russell and Earl
Russell.
Mrs. Iva Johnson visited Monday
afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Har·
ley E . Johnson and famUy.

Henderson, accompanied by Edith
Harper, Tuppers Plains, visited
Mr. and Mrs. Bm Wood, Zanesville.
Allred UMW served lunch at the
Norman Midkiff sale, Dutch Ridge,
Sept. 4.
Charlotte Van Meter returned
home after eight weeks In the hospl·
tal and attended Sunday school
Sept. 5.
Alfred Youth aremaklngplansto
attend the district youth convention
Shan Wells, Nelsonville, visited at Racine Sept. 19.
Marvey Carsey, Columbus, Is
his aunt, Mrs. Fannie Durst, on Wedvisiting
his daughter, Ruth Brooks
nellday evening.
and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Abels, Long
Sept. 5 Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod
Bottom, caned on Mr. and Mrs. John
and
Kathy, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Prater, Lana and Da.rrin, a recent
local, Karen Smith and
Henderson,
Sunday.
Steve Follrod, Athens, went to the
Mrs. Zelia Coppick spent Friday hOme of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Napier.
evening with her daughter, Mr. and
Pickerington, to celebrate the 83rd
Mrs. Dale Lawson and children.
1
birthday of Edith Harper.
Mrs. Robert Durst received news
Audrey Jean Spencer, Colum·
of the death ,of her nephew Lester,,
bus,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
son of Mr. a:ild Mrs. John Damron
Spencer
Labor Day weekend.
Tuscon, Ariz.' Mrs. Damron is ~
Gpnevleve
Guthrie accompanied
former Pauline Ritchie, a one-time
the
'bet
bert
Yost
family to the Yost
resident of this area.
reunion
held
at
a roadside park
Mr. and Mrs. Wade Mahlman and
eight
miles
east
of
Parkersburg, W.
chUdren, Temperance, Mich., spent
Va.
Sept.
4
a recent weekend with their cousin,
Leota Birch.
ZeUa Lawson was an overnight
guest recently of Angela James.
Mrs. Nell Middleswart, local, and
Mr. ·and Mrs. Barry Allen, Racine,
were guests Saturday at the home cl.
Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Allen and sons,
Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lehew 'and
Mellssa, Pomeroy, spent a day
recenUy with Mrs. Gertrude Lehew
and Elaine.
Mr.· and Mrs. Sonny Fisher and
sons, Indlanapolls, Ind., visited Mr.
an~ Mrs. Denver Curtis and Mrs.
Sylvia Carpenter last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson and
sons, Irondale, Oh., spent a recent
weekend with Rev. and Mrs.
Lawrence Gluesencamp.
Mrs. ZeUa Boyd, Mrs. Ruth
Sereno and Mrs. Reva Taylor, all of
Parkersburg, W. Va., visited Freda
Carpenter on Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Cheryl Holly spent W!ldnesday wlih the Harley Johnson
family.
Charles and Kevin Knapp were
Labor Day visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Doyle Knapp and KaU, Langsville.

Stivers ville
News Notes

When you answer your doorbell
sometime next week, JO,(KX) chUd·
· ren and young adults may ile stand·
tng there.
'; 'That's the number of Americans
whO are suffering from cystic flbro;'~ sis (CF), an Incurable degenera·
· Uve disease that affects the lungs
and digestive system.
1belr representatives will be the
Vlllunteers for the annual Breath of
LUe Campaign headed this year by
Mary Martin of Mlddleport and
Ruby Ml!rshall of Hemlock Grove
and theMelgsCounty.SalonNo. 710.
Martin and Marshall said that
they will appoint many volunteers
. Reed
to fan out through the neighbOrhood
and conduct a door-to-door cam·
patgn to sollclt funds for the Central
Ohio Chapter of the Cystic Fibrosis
Lisa Reed, daughter of VIcky Foundation.
According to Martin and Mar·
Hlll. &lt;lllfton. W. Va., observed her
shall
the money raised during the
eighth birthday recently with a
campaign
will be spent In three
party at the home of her aunt, Augareas:
medical
treatment, pubUc
ustine Clonch In Pomeroy. Cake
education
and
research.
and Ice cream were served and
"All three are Important," they
gtfts were presented to her.
said. "Medical therapy, developed

Turns eigh~

through ye~ of research, has
raised the average Ute expectancy
of a cystic [fibrosis child. Twenty·
five years ago, CF chUdren did not

live to even preschool age. Today,
nearly haU of thOse bom with CF
will llve past their twenties.
"But this Is stlU the number one
genetic killer of chlldren and ~ung
adults." "Public education In·
creases the chances of early dla~·
nos Is and treatment ," . they
continued, "One out of every 20
adults carries a CB gene. Then two
carriers marry, there 'ls a 25 per·
cent chance that each child will In·
herit the disease and a 50 percent
chance that the chlld wtU be a car·
rler. For those who Inherit, CF,
early diagnosis Is vital since the dis·
ease often masquerades as other
lung and tdgestlve d!Borders.
"1be need for a cure Is self·
evident. 1bere Is noae at present.
1be diseliSe ts. lnberi~. nonconta·
glous, degenerative and fatal. But

. In response to employee demtm(js, state officials have moved
the meeting site of tile Gallipolis
.Developmental Center Review
Committee.
The committee Is scheduled to
meet from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. today in
the meeting room at the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co., 990
Second Ave.
1be comml~ had originally
planned to meet In the Media Services section of the Activities Center
on the GDC grounds.
However, a group of employees
charged that persons with Information would be scared off If the committee met at GDC.
Sen. Oakley Collins, R-Ironton,
called officials In the Ohio Department of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities and
convinced them to move the meeting site.
According to a memo sent to employees by GDC SupeTqltendent

researchersarehard~tworkonthe

problem, and thefr work needs
broad pubUc support."

&amp;

.-•

.

COLUMBUS FIREMAN DIES .:.... Columbus fire.
~ of Maurice Gates from an
; abandoned warehouse .that bumed Wednellday.

.~Columbus

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -A Co: .lumbus fireman killed Wednesday
whUe fighting a three-alarm blaze
.In a vacant buUding was the first
't:lty firefighter to die In the line of
:duty ·In 10 years, offiCials say.
Authorities said the body of fireman Maurtce Gates, who was in his
·20s, was found shortly a!ter10a.m.
In debris In the ruins of the burned·
out Industrial bullding.
, Gates, a Jlrernan for 1 ~ years,
; ;was assigned tooneoftheflrstcom·
· panles to arrive at the fire, officials
.•said.
Fire Chief Raymond Fadley said
' Gates apparently g0t separated
tram other firefighters Inside tbe
~. buUding.
'
; "I have no Idea what hl!ppened.
~He was in there ftghUng the fire.
. ·'That was our main concern when ·
. ·we lost track of him, Instead of con·
.centratlng on ·the fire," Fadl.Y.
'said.
• 1be fire was reported at 8:48a.m.
, ·The first company on the scene
::soon called for two additional
alarms as flames and smoke shot
~ ,lllgh abqve the two-story building.
Ftremen said they were concerned
, :the blaze would spread.to the roofs
·~Of other nearby buUdtngs .
• Fadley said the large fire, ,high
tension wires and electrtcal trans·
, Jormers nearthe 'buildtngmadethe
•

NAMfiRANDS - ,COMPITITIVf PRICES
FACTORY TRAINID PIRSONNIL

EVERY DAY
LOW PRICE

Reedsville
News
Notes
Mrs. Margaret Nesselroad, Mrs.

OIL FILTERS

$}99

• EVERYDAY'
LOW PRICE

¢

PERMANENT
ANTI·FREEZE
YOU CAN
TRUST

AFT£* MFG." REBATE
WHEN YOU BUY 5
QUARTS Of CAM·Z Oil
SALE PRICE ISc QT.

Reblle .. .. .. 2.00
.•...... 2..CO

• Hee~y Duty
• 1·3/16" Bore
• 9/16" Rod

$299·

EVERYDAY LOW PRIC:JS .
U-JOINTS ••••••• ~.If:'..~.. '6.99 REMANUFACTURED
TIE ROD END .. ~r-:.8.66 STARTERS&amp;
~ ........ JOINlS ... Asl2.00
ALlERNATORS
PRICES
YOU CAN AFFORD .
REIIANUFACfURED

Prof~ss •onau.,.

rebu11t &amp; tested

toO.E.M.
spec •li cations

for most uS

cars. Pnced

DISC BRAKE

Alfred

AIR FILTERS

PER QUART
...... .. . . 4..CO

•••

.·,

wle~echange

fight difficult.
Bm Caldwell, a truck driver for
the nearby Hutcheson Oll. Co., said
he and other employees were com·
menUng about the smog hanging
over the area when "It (the roof of
the vacant bulldtng) went poof and
the flames shot way up In the atr."
Grover Pendleton of Grove City,
owner of the bulldlng, told arson Investigators the bulldlng had been
broken Into twice In the past two
weeks.
Flremen!Sakl Gates last was seen
when he came out of the burning ·
bulldtng to replace his air tank.

I

s2700

Property

Joyce Y. Porter to Bobby L. Porter, Parcels, Rutland.
Stephen E. Hoffman, Barbara L.
Hoffman to Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., Rtght of Way,
Chester.
Howard L. English Jr .. Barbara
K. Engllsh to Administrator of
Veterans Affairs. Lot 374,
Middleport.
Donald L. Hall, Roberta Hall to
Nora Buchanan, Spencer Bucha·
nan. 1 acre. Olive.

sggs

Exch.
loll Con

0~1 ...................... '31.10
llCtWIGI

\'
exceed OEM

performance

AS LOW AS

$13 16

slendards . .. and seve you
EXCHANGE
money 81 W811.
Prices Vary By Appllcttlon

f_MorgBn fJuimb

\

SATUR:~~~~~T.251h SAVE

HOMEUTE®
Chain Saw Headquarters
SALES-···
PARTS AND SERVICE

'.

POMEROY. OH.

•

a.o.:;.;.~

ntng Wednesday at 7 p.m. in room
204 or Southern }Ugh School.
No prev ious programmin g
knowledge Is necessary. The basic
language will be taught and biinds·
on experience will be provided. 1be
computers will be TRS 80 Colors,
and a Model I and a Model III.
These computers have been pur·
chased by Chapter two federal
grant money.1be feewUibeused to
maintain and purchase additional

mathematics.
Anyone who has further que,s·
ttons or who Is unable to attend
Wednesday Is asked to contact
Carla Shuler at 949·2Wl or 949-2700.

Veterans Memorial
Admltted .. Etta Ellis, Pomeroy;
Pauline Cunningham , Racine ;
Mildred Scarberry, Racine; Mar·
garet Wyatt, Pomeroy.
Discharged .. Marjorie Kester·
son, Elwood Bowers, Harley Ro-

r-c-en-tr_a_te_o_n_p_ri_o_rt_ty_w_or_k_h_et_p_
s _us__e_q_u_tp_m_
e n_t_f_or_h_t_g _h_sc_h_o_o_l__
be_rts..:...,P_a_ul_in_e_cu_nntn
__
gh_a_m_._ _

BENSON &amp;HEDGES
'

20%
lOO'S

•SLACKS
•BLOUSES
•SWEATERS
•SHIRTS
•JEANS

Only 6 mg yet rich enough to be called deluxe.
·Regular and Menthol.
Open a box today.

•SLEEPWEAR

-In ....

There wUI be a computer programming course for adults begin-

•DRESSES

;

'The Middle St-

"Freeing SCS employees to con·

Adult computer course offered

,

THURSDAY, SEPT. 16th

NOW IS TltE TIME TO GET
YOUR SAW READY FOR.: FAU
WOOD CUTTING.
' ·•
BRING IT TO G&amp;J:

MARGUERITE-S
OES·
81oi.
Middle

construct outdoor learning areas
and with pubUc lnforamatlon cam·
patgns or with routine papetwork.

lunteers are permitted to perform a
wide range of services on a parttime basis. "With the help of volunteers, we can be more responsive to
farmers, ranchers, and other land
users, and do a better job for less
money In less time," Myers says.
Your county Soil Conservation
Servi~e office can provide the detaUs on how you can help the soil
and water conservation effort.

•COATS

..

Shoes U.S.A.

I

Robert E. Moore to Sharon Faye
Smith. Parcel. Salisbury.
Kennety R. Nelgler, Brenda D.
Nelgler to Roger K. Stewart, Linda
L. Stewart .. 29 acre, Salisbury.
David L. Wooten, Wanda Wooten
to John Ator, 7.9174 acres, Salem.
Addie Powell to Ohio Power Co.,
Right of Way, SaUsbury.
Mary Donna Simms to Ohio
Power Co., Right of Way, Sutton.
Thomas Westen, Hazel Westen,
WUUam N. Eachus to Ohio Power
co:, Right of Way, Sutton.

SAVE 20% ON THE PURCHASE OF OUR NEW FALL
MERCHANDISE FOR BOYS OR GIRLS
INCLUDING:

Morgan Quinn® "Armadillos" fael great when you put ··em
on, and they keep on feelin' g1'811t, no metterwheretheyteke
you .... thanks to their sporty good loob end lUper fit. Tiley
feature soft leather end suede uppers end e durable, lightweight Urethane bottom that cUJhion1 YQUI' foot from heel
to toe. They'r in your size, 10 hurry in 8110fi.

In Ohio, volunteers can help with
field surveys and layout or conser·
vatlon practices, help train stu·
dents for soil land land judging
contests and with conservatlonedu·
cation programs. They can help

give the public more for each tax
dollar," Shaw said.
"Since we announced the program In mid-May." Myers said
"the response has been excellent.
More people are signing up every
day." One of those volunteers Is a
long-time friend of resourceconser·
vatlon, actor Eddie Albert who recently recorded radio spots to help
promote the volunteer program.
Many skills are needed and vo-

DISCOUNT

CMILDIINUAIHIONA.

MASTE~

CYLINDERS
Single .................... '21.75

In these belt-tightening times
when almost every day brings new
cuts In programs and services, the
Soil Conservation Service Is responding to public need through a
·volunteer program.
"Thanks to the Agriculture and
Food Act of 1001, the SoU Conserva·
tlon Service now can accept the volunteer services of any person of
any age or skill In helping with soU
and water conservation pro·
grams," says Peter C. Myers,
Chief of the USDA's SoU Conservatjon Service (SCS i.
SCS volunteers
are unpaid and
,
will definitely not diSplace any
USDA employee. According to Robert R. Shaw, state conservationist

eXCHANGE

CALIPERS .••••••.•••••. '31.78
Manulactured by
MONROE Automotive Equip. Co.

Periodically during major fires,
firefighters are expected to report
to their companies. WEdnesday's
search began after Gates faUed to
report.
Many of the firemen at the scene
began to weep as Gates' body was
brought out of the rubble on a
stretcher.
Of:tlclals said :rT Columbus firemen have been killed In the tine of
duty. Untll Wednesday, tile last
firefighter killed was Lt. Jack Russ
on Jan. 24, 1972, who died of Injuries
suffered In a fire nine days before.

lransferS

SUPER

AS LOW AS

·

Gates, a ftreman for le88 than two ye&amp;rli wu ldlled
whUe flghtbig the fire. 1( AP Lalierpboto)

fireman killed

'

autostor"

Robert Zimmerman, more times cleared GDC of wrongdoing ..
However, he dented employee
will be scheduled to hear com·
plaints tf the first session ls not long charges that this would affect the
enough.
findings of the review comh1Jttee.
1be memo stated employees who
Lyons wtU not be able to particiwish to meet with the committee pate tn the committee's hearings on
should do It before or after their Friday, Flewellen said. He will be
shifts or during break and lunch temporarUy replaced by Bob Mer·
times.
kle, chief of agency services at tl)e
"In other words, the Depart· Department of Administrative
ment's policy with regard to this Services.
committee will be that employees
Lyons Is expected to resume
wishing to present Information to work on the committee in about two
the committee must do it on their weeks.
own time," the memo said.
Other members on the commit1be review commltteee wtU be tee are Lee Da vls, personnel dtrec·
chaired by James Flewellen, chief . tor at the Tiffin Developmental
of ODMR's Olllce of Human Center; and MoUy Mortenson, adResources.
ministrative assistant to Colllns. ·
Flewellen said he will only meet
Colllns said Tuesday he has rewith employees Individually and ceived no word from Ohio Senate
wtU not meet with groups.
and House leaders concerning the
Flewellen confirmed that at least request that a legislative committee be formed to investigate emone of the committee members,
Wllllarn Lyons, also participated In ployee complaints at GDC.
a n earlier Investigation which

Meigs SCS program helps needy
· ~ men remove the

ARMADILLOSTM

.'·

review·pariel
changes meeting site

We're 'PARTS PLUS'

They're. 40% lighter!

.

G~C

Depend On Us ...

Parts Plus

Alfred Sunday School attendance
Aug. 79 was 25 and Sept. 4 the attendance was 30.
Aug. 29 Mr. and Mrs. Clarence

'·

has local representation .

AUTO PARTS

Margacet Cauthorn and Abigail
and Darlene Barton accompanied
Alison Cauthorn to Ohio Wesleyan
College at Dflaware a recent weekend. Alison will be a student at the
college.
Visiting with, Mrs. Helen Archer
a recent weekend were Mr. and
Mrs. Don Coleman and farnlly of
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith visited
recently at Paden Clty with Mr. and
MrS. Howard Young.
Carrel Chevalier of Mansfield
spent several days with his mother.
Mrs. Lona Chevalier.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead
visited with Mr. and Mrs. Edward
C. Hensch of Mayfield Village on
Labor Day.
Susan Hannum of Long Bottom,
Karen Probet of Reedsville Rd.,
Lawrence Pooler of Pomeroy Rd.,
Cindy Pitzer of Long Bottom Rd.,
and Kay Balderson of Reedsville
are observing classes at Jefferson
Elementary School and a Junior
High School at Parkersburg, W.
Va. lor a week. They are seniors at
Ohio University, Athens.

The Daily Senlinei- Page 9

Thunday, Septernber 16,1982

G&amp;J A~TQ PARTS ,
2403rd AVE.
.
;1704 EASTERN AVE. 144 Wt 2Jid ST.
Gf+LLIPOLIS, OH.. GALLI POLIS, OHIO POMEROY,OHIO
. 446·1813- ·
•,, . 446-4204
992-2138 '
•
i
WI'IIE
.
..
...
'.o
'
IN THE
YILLOW
PAOli

...
IV ,......

•'-to.tcW.• ."..
i

Plus ·

'){

I

LAY-A-WAYS ACCEPTED
ROUTE33 ·
MASON,V!V

773-5511
·•

.

OPEN EVENINGS
.UNTIL f P.M.

: Sll:VER BRIDGE;. PLAiA
GALLIPOl'IS, OHIO

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking I~ Dangerous to Your Health.

.

6 mg "tar;' 0.6 mg nicotine av. per ctgarette. by FTC method. •

�~~p~~!!!::i~";.~Da:!l!r.~~~~·~L's_G_r_a_c_e__
s_p_e_n~Pome~i:t:-M:!!idd~l;~
- !:..S;~~--h. -o. u~r-s--ir_t_c_o~Th~;~'·;:e!:.~~-~
. -- ~• ~
1 6 1 982

Ohio ,.

..'

•
MONTE CARLO, Monaco (AP)
·- Princess Grace spent her last
hours In a coma, kept alive by machines while the world was assured
·. 1\er Injuries !rom a car crash were
.not crt tical, senior medical sources
directly Involved In l&lt;ler treatment
said today.
The sources, who requested an~
nymlty, said palace otflclals knew
!rom the start that the former
: American movie star was In extremely serious condition.
•· "She had multiple Injuries of the
· .head, thorax and legs and no surgical operation was conceivable,"
one of the sources said. " The seriousness of her condition was con: firmed by a scanner examination."
Initial but unoftlclal reports !rom
. :palace sources said only that Grace
had suttered a broken leg and her
•daughter Stephanie escaped major
•. 'Injury Monday when their car
' plunged 12l feet Into a ra\rtne In
French territory just outside the
·. Mediterranean principality.
Less than 40 hours later, Grace
was dead.
The royal palace's press office
had said Monday that Grace's only
.. Injury was .a broken leg and that
· she was expected to remain hospl:. -~ for 10 days. It also said Stephanie had been treated for minor
bruises and released.
·. There were only two official pa- lace communiques on the accident.
The first, about nine hours after
- the accident, saldGracewasln "sa. tlsfactory" condition but was being
watched closely because of a
,broken leg and other Injuries.

'

&amp;-ports that could not be confirmed at the time described those
Injuries as two broken ribs, a fractured collarbone and a broken right
leg. There were also reports that
her thigh, not leg, was broken.
The palace statement said Grace
had been driving the 10-year-old
Rllver and that Its brakes had failed
on a steep mountain road.
That contradicted other reports
that 17-yelir-old Stephanie, lnellglble for a driver's license until her
18th birthday, had been behind the
wheel. A witness who claimed to
have pulled Stephanie from the
wreckagl! said she was Ofl the drtv·
er's side.
Inve;tlgators said It was lrnpossl·
ble to determine yet who was drivIng or what caused the accident.
The second palace communique
just before mldnlght (6 p.m. EDT)
said Princess Grace had died from
a brain hemorrhage about 90 mln·
utes earlier.
It did not elaborate on her !njur·
les but said her condition had stead·
lly worsened through the night and
that all avenue; of treatment had
been exhausted by Tuesday

afternoon.
Rumors circulated In Monte
Carlo that day that Grace had
lapsed into a coma.
The medical sources conllrmed
this and said Grace was put on a Ule
support system several hours after
the accident.
Grace's husband Prince Rainier
III and tllelr two other children,
Caroline, 25, and Albert, 24, were at
her bedside when she died, the pa-

.

PALA.CE QUEUE- Monaco reeldelltl walt 1D
. • Une outside the Monaco Palace lo view Prlncea8
Gl'8Ale Jy1n1 in state ID the Paldna Chapel of the
Palace Wec1De8clay nlthl. Thousands of looal people

lace said.
On Wednesday afternoon, RainIer broke the news to Stephanie that
her mother was dead, then returned to his ancient hilltop castle
with Caroline and Albert.
Stephanie remained hospitalized
today. A palace spokeswoman said
none of the girl's ·injuries "threatened her life."
Nadia Lacoste, who had been
Grace's spokeswoman since she
married Rainier 26 years ago, said
she spent some time with Rainier
and his children Wednesday after
rustling back !rom a West German
vacation.
,
"They all looked so sad It hurl
just to look at them, " Mrs. Lacoste
said, her !ace ashen. '"The prince
looked terrible. He looked beaten."
She said the princess "regained
consciousness at some point before
her death because she reqliested
that If people were going to send
nowers, they be small, sbnple

the open cotfln. .
The princess' body, gowned In
white stlk, will lay in state through
Frtday.

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

",1¥""'''lo•WO
... '-'"

1Julll8 factorY appeared

to be part
~·lllajfll' OIJ!!l'atloli that could be
ltiJnld flier several states.
~ ~~~~ fl8ld no lm!ltli have yet
'.llila lii8M:'Ibl! case was under In·
.,... . . . b' IMfallllOiitha.

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

,,_.__
".-..
.. ..._. ... ..
Jl,........ ....

~

)&lt;--.. . . . .

11(111.........._

~

Outside the castle perched atop a
rocky peak, residents began paying
their last respects to Oscar·wtnning
actress their handsome pl1nce
wooed away !rom Hollywood at the
height of her brief but triumphant
career.
Camera-toting tolll1sts hovered
outside, snapping pictures of the
dally changing of the guard and
chattering In a dozen dlt1erent

llllt... COI•M•-

...

_.......__

rt ~twhMW­

... ..

IJ

~

School District Board of
Education. The · bonds or
checks of the three lowest
bidders will be held until
the e•ocutton of the con·
tract and rne furnishing of
the required performance
bon!!. after which they will
be returnea on aemano.
The checks of other bidders
will be returned on demand
after the bids are can·
vassed.
The performance of eacn
contract shall be secured
by a surety bonding company, contract bond, ar.·
proved by the atoresa d
owner. In an,amount equal
to 100 percent of the con·
tract price tor tne fattnful
performance of the work.
No bidder may withdrew
his bid for a period of thirty
(30) days after the opening
thereof.
The right Is reserved by
the aforesaid Meigs Local
School District Board of
Education to relect any or
all bids and to waive In·
formalities.
Bids and J&gt;ond shall be
filed In the same sealed en1
velope, marked and ad·
dressed to : Ms. Jane
Wagner. Treasur~r. Meigs
·Local School District
Board of Education, 621'
South Third Avenue. Mid·
dl~port, Ohio 45760.
By order of : MEIGS
LOCAL
SCHOOL
DISTRICT BOARD OF
EDUCATION

·known place of residence was
373 Pearl. Middleport. Ohio
45 760 will lake noloce !hal on

concur.nng mortgage 1 deed
grven to secure the payment of
said note and conveying the

DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS
TRACT ONE

Be1ng 1n Sect1on 36 and be·
gmning at the Southwest
corner of a 27 acre tract of real
estate conveyed to Aov H.
Pooler and t !Sie J Pooler by
deed daled June 8 . 1951 . and
recorded '1n Volume 166. page

379. Meogs Coumv Deed Records. reference to whic l1 is
hereby made; th ence North
396 feet Ihence East 330 feet
thence South 396 feet to t11e
center of tlie 8ubi1C road:
thence West 33 feet to the
place of beginn.ng. containing
3 acres. but subject ro aIl legal
h•ghways.

· PREMISES COM MON LY
KNOWN AS At 3. 36659
Te)(as Road. Pomeroy. 0hJ0
45769

Public Notice·

The pla1nt1ff furth er alleges
that by reason of default of the
defendants m the payment of
promissory note. accdrtfing to
1ts tenor. the cond1t1ons of a

LEGAL NOnCE

Ray E. Just1s. Jane Doe. Un-

known Spouse. if any. ofRay E.

Justis. Dottle l. Justis. aka. Dottle Just1s. aka. Dottie Lou Justis.
and John Doe. Unknown
Spouse. •f any, of Dottie l. Jus·
tts. aka. Dottie Justis. aka. Dot·
tie Lou JusttS. whose last

I
I
1

!

Cle~sslfleds and

l

Savell!

AIID

NANNY
Bennie, Sandy,
Jessica &amp; J.R.

Write your own ad end ord@r by mall With this
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results. Money not refundable.

AimounliliM I At

mo.

ton - . Remodeling
Custo"-' _!'o!e Barn ~.

CHARLES SAYRE

AND SON
Roofing &amp;Siding Co.

Ph. 949·2160 or949·2322
4·20·1fc

COMPLETE
RADIATOR

tt eater

Core

to

largest Radi&lt;~torll.

the ; I
·

Padi,ltor Speciali st
NATHJ!, N t"".! IGC ~.
JS 't'rs . E :w pen encc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Attorney for Plaintiff
1001 Euchd Avenue. Su1te

600

Cleveland. Ohto 4411 5
12161861 -5282
WE UNDERSTAND THAT
YOU IMLL AFTER THE LAST
DATE OF PUBLICATION. PRE PARE AND FILE WITH THE
CLERK OF THE COMMON
PLEAS COUaT. AN AFFIDAVIT
. OF SUCH SERVICE BY PUBLICATION. PLEASE FORWARD
TO US A COPY OF THE FIRST
LEGAL NOTICE OF SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION IN THE ABOVE
CAPTIONED MATIEA FOR
OUR RECORDS.

SIGN UP NOW FOR
FALL EIIROUMENJ

BARBARA'S SCHOOL
OFOANCE
JAZZ .
..
TAP ?~ESUUP

19) 16. 23.30 (10)7 . 14. 21.
6tc

Ladies Jazzetcise
Call Barbilra
Lawrence
. 992-~282
8-25-11110

- ~~!~:~R~

CANDLELIGHT INN
Between Cheshire &amp;
·Middleport, Ohio · ..
PRESENTS

r--udios Nipt

All Drinks Roduud f1lr - . .
. lltd.-lhtt NIJhl
All Dratt Iller II Pri&lt;t

$17.500.
POIIUOY- 2.8otre~ rJ ~rd tw
the chillhn m pols. 3 belkooms,
~nt ard _gas lumoce.

School.

•

....

3
4

stone-t.hrowlng," be ildded. "My
love for rny wife Is paramount to
everything. They can take away ·
anything but her."
. '
Hls wife, Janice Harton Parks,
16, who last year wa&amp; in a nlnt!l'
grade science class taught by

'
.

5.
6
·
7· - - - ' - - - ' - 8·

houle=Qil·

HOBSTETTER'REALTY

Geo..S. Hobstetter;
Jr.
Broker

!!:

to ~..._.,

The coupll! said they 1XK* their
· vowaltiAprlllnaprlvatereemwy

before fi'll!rlc). '.

:1 14.
16.

'

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'
·I

I
I
I
I
•

. .

Till Dally S.,.tlntl

111 Court lt.

'
I

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1
1

34. - II:
35. _ -~--Mall'flhls Coupon wltll Rtmltt,nct
j

·
...._.,..,;· 011 4176f
~ ...., .. .:.. .. _~ __ :._.;. _______ _

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1 12

:1\ 15.

1

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

22.
23
· - - - -24. - - - - - - 25. ---~-26. - - - - - ' - 27.
· 29. .

:~r:::::: -~ ,3:

. In the Lehlah County communl1y of
Catas:auqua. where ~arks reUiel.
The two have said that ttfnl. Parks,
a ~t.·A s~_ t. expects !" ~ .

608 E.. MAIN

•

10.

I
I

J

.

.
REALTORS!
.
Hetlry E. Clel•nd. Jr., GRI . : . .. . ....•..• ff2 ..1tl
JuaTruiHII . ........ . ..... . .. ~- .... .. Mf.2UO
. DGttle I. Tu,....r . ........ ·.......... .. .. . 9tt-Ut2

:1···················· ~····w

'
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(

.

LIVE IN ONE-RENT
T."'E
OTHE!!
~
Located on - Mulberry ,
1 Ave11ue.
4 bedroom ,
home with · l ¥2 baths,
full basement. Addi·
ttonaf rental income
Jrorn the 1 room garage_
apartment. Both for
$30,000. 00 or m~ke
' reasonable offer I I
SYCAMORE ~T. - In
ol(l[ddlepo!'l., E•tra &gt;, nlce
3 - ~room · home •• like
new. Modern kitchen.
family room with . .
fireplace, ' Full ' ' base·
ment with wooclburner.
Sells tor only $45,000.00,
ST. ROUTE 143 - . 1.88·
acreS wtlh lovely 3'
btld•Oilm Barrtn~ton •
home. exlfa ' ntce kit· :
c11er1 with double oven
and Island range.· 2
bajiiS 'and ltdd-cin faml·
ly , _ , w/'ilfoddbilrller.
C:ell todav, Alklno

.atoo.oe.

·

· •

ctleryl Lemley, Assoc.
PI!. ,42-3171 •

Velnlli Nlclnti!,, , A~IGt.

'

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J· 2HI~

,
Open Year ·Round

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
"Beoutlfut, Custom
Buill Garages"
Call for fl'ft · siding
estimates, 94J.2101

or:

~

No Sunday Calls
3·ll-lfc

Pittsburgh No. 8 A
Mine Run I Strip)
Oellvtred Price :
POMJ:ROY-$31 .00 Ton
MIDDLE'PORT
AND · RACINE- $32 .00
Ton

....

·,':

FURNITURE, bedo ,
tron, bra1a, or wood. Kitchen cubbardo of oil ty- .
Tabl•. round or aquar1.
Wopd Ice boxoo. Old delko
end boollceon. Will buy
complete h11u10hold. Gold,
doy.
RIWerd.
PhoneThuro304- ollvor, old money. pocket
Dlomond
nacktoce
watchoa, cholno, ringo, ond
875 -8980 after IIPM.
etc. lndlen A"lf1ct1 of oil
Aloo buying boooboll
Black. port Mtnchelter. pert
Ooby Mt"ln 992terrlor, old dog, ·304-882'
2996 .

1----- - - -

.·.

Meigs Co. -$31 .00 Ton
(Plus Delivery)
4 Ton'Minlmum
C.O.D.
PH. 992· 2280 or
992-2618

.........
'. ' '

H. L WRITESEL

SALES &amp; SERVICE

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co.

r

I'll. 742-~ ,

..

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Own your own Jean·
Sportweer, Infant-Preteen
or Iedin Appotol Storo. 01forlng oil notlonolly known
brendo ouch •• Jordeche,
Chic. Lee. Levi, Vendorbllt.
Calvin Klein, Wrangler over
200 other brando. 17,900 to
118,800 lnctudoo be9lnnlng
Inventory. alrflre for one to
Faohlon Cantor, trolnlng,llxIUNI. grand opening promollano. Call Mr .. Koonon (305)
81B-3839.
Money to Loan
HOME LOANS t4% flxld
roto. Leador Mort'joge. Ohio
only t-800-3 1 - 8684,
WVo. 114·1192-3011

Yard Sale
Fleo Market op111·olr, Chillicothe MaU Shopping Con·
tor, Chillicothe, Sopt .
t7-18 -19.

Attention Rock Bono audl·
tlon now being given for 7
county battle of tho bondo.
UOO cooh prlu, mull bo
damo racordlng. Call for •P·
polntmont. 1114-2911-70118 .

PI onto

SWEEPER ond liowing machine repair, pafto, and
ouppllu. Pick up tnd dollv·
ery, D1vls Vacuum' Cleaner.
one hill! mill up Georgoo
Croek Rd. Call 441-0294 ..

ML
CONTRACTING

R MASH
CONSTRUCTION

S&amp;W
GUNSMITHING
AND CUSTOMIZING
PH. 992-1656

a

MIDDLEPORT
Lovely 2 story frame
home with 3 bedrooms.
one bath . Gas forced
~ air f~rna~p .• ~ lose lno.t o
1
' '
·stores )1~ ~\ , sf!opJ!Ing .
' • M!l~t se11 q APPrecoate.
PRICE . REDUCED to

~-

1i ·

PH. 992·5682
or992·7121

cr~~~~~:lli

Found-Lodl11 glao111. Noar
new brkleoluot before Bur!Ingham along road. Found
Bun . Blfocolo· brown. 81499Z·77U or ooa Botty
Korn, Burlingham on tum.

Th••

ANI Eotato - General

,

28.

Also Tran· s' mission

~ 4 ~omily Yord Solo
1200·1400 wMkly. Work·
to to 1 Sapt. 17, t8, 19. lng part or full tlmo ot home.
Over 1 00 plionto, wood cool! No exporlenco. All egoo. Na·
uove, new handmade tlonel Company. FNt Inforu.s. Rt. so e.st
qultu, womono bowling mation. oend 1 otompod.
• Gutters
Guysville, Ohio
boll. boy bicycle end bicycle oelf-addrHHd onvolopa to
• Oownspot rts
Authorlzld John Deere,
part1. motorcycle and mo-- RISA. Box 42 Rt. 1. Nor• New or Repair
New Hollal\d, Bus,h Hog
torcycle perto &amp; en gino. Loto thup, Oh 461166.
• f_"1ainting
Farm Equipment ·
BIIIOOnJ Jor Blrthdeyo, Get of mloc. Janice Sheeto. Toke
FREE ~STIMATES
Deoler
Wollo, Annlverurlu, Swee- 326 ·thur Rio Gron,.., trun Lady to llvelri pert·tlmo with
Farm Equipment
Ph. 992-2791
thHrtt or Pantn. Cell Bat· right at Vet. clinic onto Cen- •ml-lnvalld femole otroke
torpolni !'Ill. go t milo tum patient . Molgo coil 992loono and Co .. 4411-4313.
Parts
&amp;Service
949-2263
right, 1ot gr!IVol roed, 111 11703 or 986-3680. Gatllo
i·3·ffc
houM ~n loft. Slgno POitld. coli 1114-3117-7124 or 3877· )4 tfc :
Dl'o Craft Supply, Spring
711411 oftor fl .
Valloy Plaza. 448-2134. 3 Family Gorage Sale Sopt .
17-18, 2002 Chatham St.,
Wlntor houn: Monday thru Golllpollo. Moped 1978 AVON. Nnd eatra money?
Friday 10 to 6, Saturday tO
Set your own houra. Sell
to 4. All crooo otlch oupplloo, good cond .. omalt oloc. kit· Avori . (Muot bo t8 or over).
chen appllancea. radlo1, hair Call now 814-698-7111
D.M .C .
dryert, mlcroacope, bed· collect.
2 Inch oteel plp11 to be do- ding. tupperware. Avon. clo·
thing, toyo, big wheel &amp;
n~~ted to con1truct 1occer
mlac . itema.
Electronic Tech. for TV reQOIII for lprlng IUIOn.
1 Dozer &amp; Bdhot Slnlca,
Contact
0.0.
Mcintyre
Park
pair. Experienced only. Pert
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Yerd Sale Soturdayo Only. or pooolbly full time. 814Wiler, Sntr1, Ponds
Dlot .. 4411-41112 ext. 68.
Griffin'• Orocery. K,aneuga, 992-8269 .
Complele autter wodl,
FoundatioM; Rlciltllllions
No Hunting .,, kind. day or Oh. 9-7 Rein cencolo.
complete remodeline, roof.
"FREE
EsTIIIAI'ts"
night.
Vloletoro will be
inr -ol all types. Worked in
proucuted. On any of my Yard Solo 3 Family Yerd Solo JUST graduated &amp;. unaure
We
SIH!claliz.
e
ln
home area 20 years.
farmo.tn Chuhlre Townohip. Sopt. t7-1 B. 4 mi. out t41 . about your futurel The Wool
Racine &amp; Syracuse
Clothing. bedroom oulte, VIrginia Army National
Free estimates
J. Arthur Evono.
Sewer Hookups
CB. curtain, more.
Ouord con help you dtcl ....
Citll843-3322
Golf Laooono. John Tooford.
Phone 949·2293
We oro looking tor high
llorage Sole, Sept. 17-18, achool aeniora &amp; graduate•
Cheoter, Ohio.
7· 16-2 mo. pd.
or 949-2575
SAM . Rt. 588, 'lz mi. from to trein h1 communlcatlona .
8·30· 1 mo.
city limlto.
admlnlotratlon, oupply, rnechonlct. &amp; meny other
Flnolly Oponlng-Copco.
An- Yerd Selo 99t Third Ave .. tlolda. If you qualify you may
tiqun,
colloctableo, uHd
r---:--::-::-:c::-::":':'-..;r I lu rnltu re &amp; epplloncot. Gelt!polto. Sop!. 18 . bo eligible for tn enllotmont
bonua and cotlege or VoSomething for overyono. Clolhol. mloc.
'
8:30 o.m.-4:30 p.m . Mon ..
Toch ooolaunco. Be one of
2 Fomlly Goroge Sale Boyo Weot Vlrginlao boot . For
Wid., Fri. Othertlmoobyap- clothing
3T-4T. Nice more lriformotlon, coli 304polntment. Buy-Seii-Trode.
627 Fifth St.. lvon Powell women• clothing end mono. 875 -3980 or toll fru 1 Cqstom kilcheas anit ' R11 .. Rtcine, Oh. 614-949- 4 mile out Bui!IVillo Rd. Fri . 800-842· 3619.
&amp; Sat.
2486.
b1throoms. ·Remodelina,
WANTED: Muolclano &amp; voadd -ons, new homes, '
Big II Femlly Yard Sale Fri- colloto to form 80'1 a 60'1
esewer
plumbing. eiectiic, siding.
Gun ohoot, Roclne Gun day ona Soturday, 8-8. Rod- pluo non rock group, 304eGas
Club. Every Sunday otonlng ney Vllloge 11 . Many ltemo. 875-6370.
• Water Lines
1 p.m. Factory choked guno Don't ml11 thia.
only.
LAST CHANCE, Houoo of
CHARLIE HATFIELD
Powell' 1 6th St. Raclno. Uoyd, noodo lfvo demon·
OPERATOR •
Sept. 18. l7. 18. Like~­ ltratore to ahow our line of
PERMANENT
PH. 74M903
boby, children end adult toye-glfto. Our damonotro·
HAIR REMOVAL
9·3· 1 mo. pd.
Profe11lonol Eloctrolyolo clothing .
ton earn about *6.00 an
Center. A.M .A. approvld,
hour. peld woekty. Our kit to
Sept. 18, 1982, 9:30 on loan, no Investment. col·
Doctor Nftrolo. by appoint- Sot.
1_ _ _-:::-:-:~---,J mont only. 30'4-1175-8234. e.m. to 4:00p.m . ottho Bob lectlng or delivery. Coli Me
Roy reoldance-5th St. Rt· Collect. 1114-992-7048.
clno. Sponoered by tho
Southern Football Boootero
Giveaway
with proc.eda to go towards Clerk typllt, temPOrary pooi992·2663
the football building fund.
13 to 6 montho). 20
' PER SON who hao any- Will hevo everything from A ' lion
POMEROY, OHIO
ANY
houra a wHk. including oc·
thing to give awoy ond doeo to z and plenty of ft. &amp;liNing cuional Saturday work.
Send reaume end applicanot off• or, attempt to offer hotdogo, pop, and coffee.
tion to Box P- t 4, C·O Point
any, othor thine.for ulo may
17
end
18.
Porch
oete-Sopt.
Re-Biue end Re-Finish
Pleount Roglottr. Appllcaplaee ~•n ad In thl1 column.
Teachers.
Scout
Restock, Parts, Etc.
'!"MI .,. no charge to 277 Moln St. Mlddltpon. tiona will be received until
Leader$ and Organiza·
Loot day, o~erythlng .. 10 September 20, 1982.
the aclvertiMr.
tions, come In and
STUART WAYNE
centa. Rain cancels.
Take A Loa~ At Our
--------lcSituations Wanted
Package Deals. DisPUUIIIS
counts Available.
HUNTIIIG UCEIISE
Small br!Md. puppy. 2 to- Porch oolo-Sopt. t7 end tB .
LESSONS STARTING
AVAILABLE
ma!e••·2 male. Caii814·266- 277 Moln St. Mlddlopo".
Loot day, everything .10
138 1
CALL or STOP IN
Tree ' trimming
Nmovel .
centa. Rain cancels.
TO SIGN UP. '
~- 1 · 1 mo.
814-g49 -2129 or 814SIU.E ON
1 - - -......------41 Malo ' Border Colllo, age 4
Robert Lawlo rHidenco. Rt . 992·6041 .
ORNAMENTS
~-----...;..~--1 moo. Call 1114-2611-6729.
124, 81111. out of Recine. 38
lnaurance
mi. marker . LOTS OF
Bag of clothn. Coil 446THINGS.
2804:
3 'tomlty yerd Hlt·flrot time SANDY AN.D BEAVER tnM~lo trM to give awoy for
over. FrldayandSaturdoyon IUrance Co. h11 oHered aer~
wood. Coll448-1588.
Rt.7, ~of a milo from tho vlcea for flre ineurance
coverego In Goilla County
-Dmers
Motl)er
calico eat a 3 kltteno Union Ave. tumoH.
for almost 1 century. Farm.
-B•ckhoes
3 .""'"· ol~. Too good homo.
. -Dpnip Tr~cks
Yard Solo 3208 HoW.rd home ond paroonot proporty
cell 441-334 t •
-Lo-Boy
Avenue. Gu dryer. t40. cov..ragel art lvalleblt to
meet individual noedo. Con·
-Tiencher
Froa kltteno. Real pretty, Cheap Prlcool. Thuradoy and tact Footer Lawlo, agent.
- Water
Frldoy,
9
tltt
1
il&gt;nll' hairlld. 8 wko. old. Lit·
Phone 379-2204.
·
-sewer trolniod. Coli 614-268-Gas Lines
Yerd Sole. red houllonRay81188.
.
-Septic Systems
burn Road. off Sand Hill
Road, Friday end Saturday.
School• Instruction
Largeor:SmaiiJobs
Pt:f. H2·2471 .,
Public Sale
0.:
.__ _,_,_· ..,;.9-._~·~lm;..:.;;.
' pd;;;;_.-'ol 1 -'~''~ P&lt;pok·•·POcl. 8 week•
It Auction
Hal ollota ota"ld and
beiM\ wormld. 8t4Auction !IVtry Fri. night ot
the Hartford Community
Cent•. T~o of 1!M
march.,.dla _ . , weok. 1119•.

Plaster Craft and
Ceramic Bisque-

lNG SEU.a IF

19, - - - - - -

9·

---------lc-1----------

REPAIR

BOGGS

.

PHONE 992-9~13
9-2-1 mo .

20.

----~

AUTO &amp; T11UCK

1----------+----------t

Office Ph. 742-2003

"1 decided It wooldn;t be gOod to
drag my wife through the lies and

Beglnlng or 1nt'llr.
ALL AGE 5
TRIPS WEEKLY
BeautiluiGolfCourses
Driving, Ranges
Call John Teaford
Chester
AIS9

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

All Drinks II Piico
THIS-™'SBARD
1oM Wolf Bond
Drink &amp; Dnlwn b&lt;h
,
Nipl of 1ttt Bond.
c.r., oot IMIII illne Milalllo.
.
Open Mon •.fri.
2:011 p.OI.·Z:30 r.m.
Sill Suo. 4:011 p.m.-2:10 1.m.

Heatlquartr•rs

1.
2.

GAR'AGE

ROOFING ·

J.A.R.
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY

SYRACUIIE - 7 room flame
IMt leis. Wil lllte
$16, .00 b' •. quick . .

17.
18.

Rnaer Hyse II

KOUNTRY KLUB

9~~- 2160. ·

~

':::=======~~=========+=========~
•

216 E. ~~d H·
·
Phohe
H 614 ) · 992·3325
3 ACRES .- In the COIIIIry
witlt wale[ .,.., eledric lf!d nat
gas l'llillllle. $4,500.
POMEROY .:... Wantolie 3 bedroom home will! bll!t, ..
tdilios. oubnatic gas hell, carpet·
!!'&amp; l8ment m Slflll Yllt1 tw

Housing

Moaday. (AP Luerphclto)

9tH215 ort92- 731~
Pomeroy, Ohio

-----------if-----------+----------1

=~?:,OJ,.RI~HT. CALL

( )Wonted
( l For sate
( l Announcement
( )Fpr Rent -

'

or

P'liineroy', On.
Ph. 992-2 174
2·26 ·1fc

.;..;.:l - 'IE - 11101* home

These cnh rates
tnclud@ discount

V, C. YOUNG Ill

Announcements

SF. RV!Cf
from
th e Small es t

BY: CARLIS LE . BIAGE .
McNE LLIE ANO AINI
Ric hard L. Mc Nellie

RACINE ~ 2 liMes b' ore
priCe. g l\tOI1IS it 0111! 11111 4 "
oller. ~. 11M boths ord netlinll
.gas heat Willi b' $37,500.

-Ito 111w
• oloc~:r.:
(Fr•Estiloalooj

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

Fu st Fam 1\y Mortgage
CorporatiOn
.

Addren·------~--~--~-

TOM HOSKINS

Route 1
Long Bottom, Oh. 45743
985-4193
9-15-1mo.

November. 1982 .

Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all·types
I Siding
1 Rem·o dellng
• Free estimates
• 20 Y rs. experience

•

premises descri bed. have been
broken and the same ha.s become absolute
The plaintiff demands that

EVE

IN STATE - A Menace pollcemau lllaods bellde Pt ~I&lt;! e11 Grlllie of
MOII8CO. who lies ID ~~tate ll1lllde the peieH011 Chapel of C1Je MOIIIICO
Palace WedDeday. MODIICO ifllkleutl were allowed to view lbelr late
PriDe-. PrlaceaB Grace - the fonner ftlm 11tar GI'IICil Ke1J,y - died
1'ueldliJ ~ 1be waa aerloully IDJured lD a cu cruh near Mooaoo

OHIO VAUEY
ROOFING

walks - New Construe:·

~"r ald. Reily rD lf!d
!lllllly !.!!~ HM 12 corl*lclt
~.;d~ linlfence. Askinc

Phon•--------~--------

•backhoe
•excavating
•septic,systems
•dumptruckservice
•seeding and reclaiming
•Racine and svracuse
sewer hookup
Work Insured and
Guaranteed
PH . JIM CLIFFORD
992-7201

clean uud cere.

Frenchtown Cor Co.
- ····--·-. ..
For all your wiring
5.
8111 Gent Johnoon
"'Either that ar somebody. just
448-0089
needS;
furnaC'S
a touchdown · ·
repair · serVIce and • ·
Installation.
Lost end Found
Wanted to buy tobacco
poundage. Co11446-1437.
Resldentla 1
Wanted to Do
LOST II moo. okl black Dob.&amp; Commercial
ormen_ln .t he vlcln,._, of BidCall74~1-l'l9~
wet!. C~ll 1114-388-811111 or B~~:~;::.IC)~~ BRASS. o,ld Houoe pointing llo all ty- of
conltruction work . Call
wood gold,
fee boxes.
-'"..,.-•_·8_8_1_0_. __ _ _ _ _
oliveratone
dol- 448-7283.
Found-Young german oheantlqu11, otc.. Com·
phord, Labor day. wMk·end
houoaholdo. Writo: Will caro for old.,ly peroon In
d Mulberry Ave .. Po..,...oy,
• Mitior, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, their home, days only.
Phona 304-1176-5123.
Oh. Owner pt.... contact
Or992-778o.
va
Carolyn Thomll It 882· 1-------~.3091. or 882-3128 oftor Gc&gt;ld, oHvor, oterllng. I•·
4 :30p.m. Or Don Thoma at wotry, ringo, old colno a cur.St. Rt. I:MPomeroy, 0 ~
G.ond J Auto Porto ttore. lf rency. Ed Burkett Borbor
Buslnau
not clalmld by Wlok-ond, Shop, Middleport. 992 ·
Opportunity
wMI glvo to good homo.
3478.

FALL GOLF TOUR

Kitchen Cabinets
Roofing · Siding - Concrete Patios · Side-

RNI Eotato - Gonorol

.ftAPPY
BIRTHDAY
MOM

;~~ ~4~::7l~~ ;!:;

~~~~~~~~~~j~=====~~~~~=====~9-~1~0-~1~m~o~-~F~~ffi~~~~;;;~

.....
tt•

mon Pleas of Meigs County. the defendants named above
Oh1o. alleging that the defend - be required to answer and set
ants. Ray E. JuStiS, Jane Doe. up·their interest in said real est·
Unknown Spause. if any. of Ray ate or be forever barred from
E. Justis, Dottle l. Justts, aka. asserting the same. for foredo·
Dottie l ou Justis and Jo'hn sure Of said mortgage. the mar·
Doe. Unknown Spouse. if any. shalling of any liens. and the
of Dottle L. :JustiS. aka. Uott1e sale of said real eState. and th at
Justis. aka, Dottie l ou JustiS. lhe proceeds of said sale be
have or cla•m to have an 1nter. applted to the payment of pla1n·
est in the following described t1ff s claim in the proper order of
real es tate:
· its prionty and for such other
REAL ESTATE
and furtner relief as is just and
DESCRIP110N
equitable.
SITUATED IN TH E Township . The defendants named
of Chester. CO UNTY OF Meigs above are required to answer
IN THE STATE OF OHIO. AND on or before the 18!11 day of

Treasurer

Pay Cash for

..

Public Notice

18264 in fh e Court of Com-

(8) 26 (9) 2. 9, 16, 4tc

Curb Inflation

··-··--... -·

_ , . . ,_

8-2~1

U ...

11911"11- n......, _,..
..... ~~-· II. . .,

7·21·82. F1rst Fami~ Mort·
gage Corpo rat ion . filed its
Complaint 1n Case Number

Ms. Jane Wagner,

.

Ont""' _ ,.... .

Public Notice

Public Notice .

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

1

...,,............
-C..IIt

1/IIIIIS-n.

• I:""-"'
.....
l_ ... ·-

Public Notice

I

~· -

~-

-'-

!

l •t••"lllt

IIIII H I - •
&amp;IU-'Itf'

·"*"· . .·-

HMoto&lt; ..' - ' 1

tenslve remodeling
• Electrjc work
• custom Pole Bldgs . &amp;
Ganges
•Roofing Work
•Aluminum • Vinyl
Sidlngs
15 y,ar.s Experi~nce •
Greg Ro"sh .
Ph.
•
992 7583
or 992 •2 282
,

1111"1ulllllo• lo ""l..,..

e•-•-'
.......

1\k-lto\ti'WI_
... _ I V &amp; ( I I t -0(

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
seated proposals will be
received by the Meigs
languages.
Local School District
Palace guards, l;llack armbands Board of Education, 621
South Third Avenue, Mid·
on their spotless white unlfonns, al- dleport,
Ohio, until 12 :00
lowed only Monaco's ll,!nl res I· Noon Daylight Saving
on Septomber 2T,
dents inlo the palace chapel_to view Time
1982, lor Alterations to Mid·
dleport Junior High School
and
Administration
Building .
Bids will be del ivered
and publicly opened and
read aloud att2 :00 Noon on
the same day In the office
of the Treasurer at the
Meigs Local School District
Board of Education Office.
621 South Third Avenue,
Middleport Ohio.
Copies 01 the Plans and
Specifications and other
proposed
contract
documents are on tile and
open to public Inspection at
the office of the Treasurer.
Applications from con·
tractors Interested In bid·
ding on the work, together
with payment of FiftY
Dollars ($50.00) per set,
should . be fllod promptly
With Gerald P . Pierron Ar·
ch itect, Inc., . 1025 Ninth
Street, Portsmouth, Ohio
45662, and the bidding
material will beforward@d,
· shipping charges collect.
Any bldder upon returning
such set w 1tnln thirty (30!
days after . the date for
receiving bids and in good
condition, will be refunded
. his payment.
All proposals must be ac·
companied by a bid bond
e•ecuted by a Bonding
Company licensed by the
Stale of Ohio, or by a cer·
tilled check drawn upon a
solvent bank In the Stale of
Ohio, payable to lhe order
of the Owner, in an amoum
not less than ten percent
waited for hours lo view lbe body of the PriDceM who
(10 pet.) of the amount of
died Tue8day after suffertq serious wounds in a cu
the bid. The bond or check
shall be forfeited If the bid·
crash near Monaco. ( AP Wirephoto)
der Iells to enter Into a con·
tract with said Meigs Local

AU.ENTOWN, Pa. (AP) - ~
high school science teacher taclilg
a dismissal hearing because of his
common-law marriage to a 16year-old student has resigned in eXchange for a clear record.
'
"My cnmsel told me he ~elt there
was no sense in continUing the tight
any furtlier," Wllllani Parks, 35,
told more than 100 people on Tuesday nilbt atter.aiiClloql board hearIng on charae* aplost him was
closed at his request.
"The SChool board has made a
Jlldgment in mor811ty, and, righter
wrong, I mlllt accept It," said
Parlca. who bed tall8ht ror lllyears
at the Whitehall-coplay H'w"

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

'"

:.;•.

r~=~~~~===~Fr===~g~~-m~o~.;t===~;.;=· ~~·~30-~tf~c~~======~~~~

-- -.-.
ILtHC.IH

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

g j ,=;:-€
"'"-'"""''
.., .
Cl~-...
.........
..._ ... "'""'

11.....,.._
ut-.ntt
u--..,,..,.,.,.

:_;:;:~::;:,::;ss ng. Teacher-student marriage flop

.. •. SblrlffJifll Spiqer said th'e marl-

"..,,.._,. __
"-"·-·
11--lt"Cift

,....,..

SERVI~E

::t::J.-:!\"""""'

Mlxld pupplel, meke gOOd

Buying Gold, Silver, Plati.
10 Mile CI'MII ROid. num. old colno. ocrap rlngo
&amp; oilY-aN. Dolly quoteo
ntlne dogd. Lawrence IIVIileblo. Aloo colno &amp; coin
Y•ue,• Church, ouPDIIel forHio. Spring Val·
t.Y trlldlng Co .. Spring Val·
Pupplea. 2 female, %'&lt;;how· ley Pluo, 4411·8028 or
Chow, mother ucollent 448·8021:
kld'o dog, 304-8711·7588.
Wo pay caoh for tote model

ELECTRIC
.

CARPENTER

,.,, _.!~~

' Goll Clubs•
,
Guns
•
Golden Retriever BoOts Fishing Supplies\
Tents
1 &gt;
Scopes
.
Welgh·t s
''1. Traps
Weight Benches
·,
Boots
·'
.
'
MUCH, MUCH MORE !
Open 9to6 Mondav thru Saturday

\.

a-1/W _ _ _ ...

mr - :z~·-

1

·.;~-u .

,

Homes- ex·

,.,on probation In the court of Mlddle-

. ,,EATON, Ohlo (AP) - A marlthat was
~~ltted out of.a network of caves·
!'IJI ai'UI'IJI area has been uncovered
by Preble County authorities.
The sheriff's department esti~JPI.S t!le value of the pot and the
t~ at $10 million doUars.
,;,..llm!ltlgators found about l,lnl
,marijuana plants.below a series c1
•4rY!Ir llrnpll and also contlscated
.·M&amp;" c1 garbage cans tilled with

PHONE 992-2156
Il l Covtl II., """"W • CMUe4f1"

· · Three defendants forfeited bonds
and five others were fined or placed

' '!111DA production factory

Business SerVices

,

813 Wuhlngton St., Ravenswood, W. va·. 2416-4
Phone (~04) 273-SISS
MONTH OF SEPTEMBER

Of Wrtlt OltiiW ktiiiMI C~nifild Dtltl·

?TOJ

'LAFF-A-PAY

i·~~~~~r====~rrr:~~~~~~==il~
· ==ii~iir.i~==~:
' '· OLD&amp;
YOUNG'S
,MILLER
r:j;~~~~jii~iJ'

celebrities tnm 8I'OWid the globe,
are expected to attend.' No otllclal
guest lilt has been re~ yet

The Daily Sentinel

. cparges.

.'

a

urday. About !'D) people, lncllllllng,

I!IL.... Io A c -

Two men were fined and five others forfeited bonds in the court or
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
· · Fined $25 each on assault
-ellarges and paced on probation for
· siX months were Altred Birchfield,
' :J.'pmeroy, and Carl Hughes,
Middleport.
· Forfeiting bonds were Thomas L;
~·~~tty, Columb\15, and Edwan'! ., ,.
- ~th, Clllutnbus,$50eachonlntox- ·
·ioatlon charges, and Clair Reed,
't,8ngsvtlle, $47; James White,
:;J?omeroy, $46; Donald Reuter, Mld'dll!pot, $45, and Gregory Garrison,
Point Pleasant, $46, all on speeding

i:.

"She was as beautltul as ever.
She looked like bride," said resident SUzanne Bergooze.
Funel'al services were set far Sat-

.'

ANNIVERSARY SALE

flowers.''

:·Mayor's Court

•;JlPrt Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
night.
• ;.. .forfeiting were Thomas Hoffner,
•.Middleport, $25, no baffle plates;
:,WDilani A. Capehart, Middleport,
·Silo, squealing tires; Van A. WUltord. Rutland. $100, dlsturbltul
manner,
Fined were IJonna A. Slaven,
' ~port, $10 and costs, failure to
t -~ tJie right of way; Max Geary,
~~rt, 20 days probation, rtd~ dOUble on Moped; Jeff Schloss,
?Pomeroy, S25 and costs, no baffle
plates: Keith Musser, Middleport,
· $50 and costs, disturbing manner;
JimmY Morrison, Middleport, $50

I

The

PULLINS
EXCAVATING ··

c-tument•

of new ·~d
uolld morChan•H alway1

-··

cietM
"'"'eomo._Richard Reynoldo Burlington
' Oh .rC~It 81
Auction-. 2.711-30118. ·

.Wanted

To

B(ly

WANTED TO IUY Old;.,,.._
·1111d Amtquee of Ill
cell Kenneth ........
or 2111·11117 In

Wanted to Do ·•

Profllulonal
Services
CS.L Boollkoaplng
Bookkoaplng &amp; tax oervlce
for oil typao of bu~n11oe1.
Cerot Noel 448-3BI2
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Celt Bill Word for appoll)tment , Ward'• Keyboard,
4411-4372.

HouM In Pomeroy~ 2 .,_qry,
4 bedroom, 1 ~ both. Nl.c o ·
porch • enciGMII .....
fuU bllomont. - ·
loll of r .......lng
n - otorm wlndowe.
,1100. Would COfloldtr
oolllng fumlohod . Wll ,. not
conolcler renting. lorloul
coHo only. e14· 192&lt;70!,4 .
HOUSE Melldowbr- Ad·
dltlon, 3 bldroomo, lamlly
room with flrepolce. -trot
olr, booement, phone 304875-1842.
.
CAPE Cod otyle cottege
homo. nlco river vieW. 7
roomo, t ~ botho, coli 30.4773-67t2 or 882-28311.
Upper 20'o.
'
Beautifully reotorld VIctorian, 8 bodrcomo, 4 flrepla·
cea, ornete ' carved
woodwork, olr conditioned,
lnsuleted own• flnenolng,
304-1178-11999.
THREE bedroom houo, Crab
Co"" Rd.. Maoon Co. All
electric, 304-871-3329.
Two bedroom houoe for
ulo, downtown. Oall 304·
876-2331 oltor 8 p.m.
SALE orront•.4 room houoe,
both, utMity roonl, t171
month, Hondoroon. depoolt,
304-1178·4381.

1----------

Sl• room houee with 2 lid·
joining loto, t11,000,00,
304-773-91112 .
•.

Mobile HomeJ
In groUnd concrete pool on 2
for Sale
acre lot. AI•• heo a 3 bdr. olr
conditioned houoe with full
baoomont, 2 WB !lreplac11,
niW corpot. Would conolder TRI - STATE MOBILE
lower valuld property In HOMES. USED -MOBILE
trode or wHI flntnce with HOMES, CARS, TRUCKS.
low down payment ond 1 O'!lt GALLIPOLIS. CHECK OUR
lnterott. Located 123 Gar· PRICES. CALL 4411-7172.
flold Avo. Coli 448-1548.
Will tndo my oqulty In a 4
unit opt. bldg .. for atroltar &amp;
lot or a houn • lot. Balance
con be peld by lond contract.
Coli for dot alto 448-3937 .

Lend controct, · 135 ,000
Cheohlre Village. Coli 81•387-7663.
.
Attractive 2 bedroom home.
locetod In ~lty. Reuonobly
prlcld. Shown by apPOint·
mont. Coli 4411-11337.
Fire damagad houl8. can be
restored. on 2 lot1. large out
building. Bldweti-Rodnoy
Rd, juot off 864 In Bidwell.
es.ooo. ceii448-04BB elter

4.

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME IALE8,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 315. PHONE 448-7274.

1981 14x86 Venture, 2
bdr.. axe. cond .. completoly
let up. Cell 814-288-17118
or 814-21111-82811.

1----------

14x70.1975 Klrkwoodmoblto home. flroptaco, all
electric. Call 1114-241194113 after 7PM.
Schultr moblla homo
14x70, 3 bedroom, on.-ll'ld
o~e half both. Coli 441109611 otter 4 :30.
·

Houoo for oale t 50 Second
eve .. GelliPOIII. '411.000. Total olec. 14 x 70 houoe
Call 448-7506 or inquire ot ).tl&lt;anor. Fully furnlohid .
Bob' o Cerryout. Eutern
trf Ponthouoe. We•hor
Ave .. Gollipollo.
ond d,Yar, dloh woohor. central oir, wOOd bur-. 8 mt.
Nlca 3 or 4 bedroom L- from Pomeroy. 11 mi. from
lhoped home, fully ctr· Atheno. Priced to 1111. For
petod, both end a htlf, utility moro Info. call 1114·992room. ond 1 lorgo 1-cor gor· 11034 aftor 5 p.m.
age. Central air. gaa fur·
nonce. dlthwaoher ond USED MOBILE HOME .
dlopoul. Vory eooy to omln- 6711-271 1 .
taln on o otmoot 'lz ecre 111'111 - - - - - - - - - lot. locotod on Rt. 36 cioN
to Holzer Hoopltal. With on MOBILE HOMES MOVED
IIIUmable 8Vt loan , Ucenllld &amp;' lnoured . Coli
$47,000. Coll876·7647 af- 304-5711-2'111.
ter 8PM.
1976 Comoron mobllo
homo 1 4x70, 3 bedroom.
Open houM Fri., Sat.. Mon. Now 3 bdr.. only one and one-holt both, con·
U7, 500 . Full buomont, treltlr, utH,._, bldg.inciudod.
with goroge, dining arH, 304-773-&amp;143.
brick front, lorgo tot, c,._,
ochoolo, owner will holp fl.
Farms for Sale
nance 11 12 porcont. Alto
mobile home trade ln. NHr
Centenary, jult off Rt. 141
on Groham School Rd. Colt For Nle Farm. 207 acres on
814-379-2817 .
Parker Run Rd . Land contrect tvailable . 118,000.
Mojoltlc homo for ule. Rio down, 12 percent interoot .
Grendo ovorloolllng college Mineral rlghto Inc. · No
green. N-ty· ronovatld, 3 houM. Coil 388-9348.
bdr., family rm., lnodorn liltchen. forn\al dining rm.. 1 ·
aero lot. WIU conolclar rent
by option. auuinoblo ln!lrtLou &amp; Acreage
gege. Call 4411-8090 or
4411•4897.
I
For 1111 one and half acrH ·
more or 1111. apptioximattlv
Hou• 800 It rood frontoge on
lo- Coro-Conterpolnt Rd. • Centerpoint . t 3 ,000.00
Phono 882-11944.

board ofTruo-

College.

0 .33 of on acre on Lincoln
Piko. Electric hooll up. ldaal
for tnollor, 111,800. Coll4487934 otter 5 :30PM.

�,
12- TM

Tllunday,

Real Estate
Wanted

.Regloterod block Poodle
For Mle·8een floor furnace. pup. Mole. Born 4-25-82.
15,000 BTU-only 4,yra. old. AU ohoto to 6·83. Pomeroy,
614-982-BZIIO.
Dh. 114·182-7102.
- - - - -- - - - - ' ' --lcTIRED of baing " oil Reglotered block Poodle
gummed up" from the pup. Mole. Born 4-2&amp;-82.
oymptono of ouch thlngo •• All ohoto to 1·83, Pomeroy,
headoohll, conatlpotiOn. or- Dh. &amp;14-1112-7102.
thritlo, ellergiH, ond oH'alty7 Coli 304-875-1293 tor
herbal asaletence from
Neturollfo.

onablo, 304-757-8504.

letOjl on 1 1 / 3 ocro lot with
goroge. odu"•' only, B mi.
South on Rt. 7 . Coli &amp;14251-1113 .

.

Pototou, 304·895·3400.

Smith Corona cartridge ribbon typewriter. very aood
condition, 11110.00 . Call
304-8711-2129 -ofter 5 p.m.
Moytog woohei, General
Electric dryer, pitlo, dinette
oet. Coli 304-875-2019.

Coli &amp;14-378-2431. after
IIPM . •

tOr

rent in

78 Chovy PU ' cuotom deluxe, heavey ~u.ty, 'II ton,
••c. cond. · CoU 814· 2511113113.

1-------.,..--

F 350 Ford 1 ton
. 11 000. 814-tllldoyo. 814-9811-4116
ondweek-endo.

'
WINDOW TINTING
Auio-..
Home-Caiftblerolol. Cut
hlgh onergy coO!, profeo- 1982 Forii 1 ton t~uck, 304olonelly lnotoiiad . Coli 441- 875-4384.
3100.
Vane &amp; 4 W.O.

1- -- - - - - - -

44 8 0

Misc . Merchandi•e

Furnished Rooma

International T-D8 dozer. 8
ft. blade, u ,ooo. Clll4480231 .

Clrclo' o Molal. telephone
446 - 2601 . For Rent ,
WHkly, 1 pereon •eo.oo: 2
poroono 870.00. Cable T.V..
air cond.

Ollvar 31111, 7 ft. mower.
14110. Coll441-0231.

Furnlohed room. •1111. utllltleo pd, olngle mole, oharo
beth. 918 2nd. Ave., Oalllpollo. Cell448-4418 after 7
PM .

EST KENNEL _.
all brHdo. AKC
pupa end
Servle;e.

1------- - -

Apartment
for Rent

~vaHeble

19n L.J . Orend Prix. low
miiNge, exc. cond. Cell
1114-211,· 18,158. .

1971 Clmoro, 307 engine,
-~
1 t 12 000
Wciodo corn picker. 1300. ' 3 .,..,., no.,. po n ' '
·
1 1 11 000
·
Cell 814-2111 -1038, after C!\r" ° ~ ;'3, ~ ·
•
4PM. No SIIUtdcly -callo.

For sale Reltaurent ·
Space for Rent
Corry!!UI equipment. ulld.
- -- - - -- -'-- ·' lloweot prlcto. RADCO, All Breed Grooming, 7 doyo
lo
304-523-1378.
a week.·i'lck up.,d delivery.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home 1- - -- -- - - - Celll14-387· 7877.
Furnlahed 4 roomo &amp; bath, Paric, Routa 33, North of
1-- - - ---:- -l:tiin. no poto. odulto only. Pomeroy. Lorge Iota. Cell For Sole Rawlllgh Producto,
cMp. roq. Cell448 -1618.
992-7479 .
1824 Eottarn Ave .. Golllpo- Amerlcen Pit 8~11 puppleo.
llo. Cell4411-91118.
Call ,8 ,1 4-388·8547.
;,
jj;D
2 bdr. deluxe,
turnlohed. Qood lo·
utllltleo partially
"
"
mt house for rent.
•
1111 end commerclel
·
tor 1111 or leaoe.
Household Goods
eal Estat11, Carol

.

'

GOOD THINGS TO EAT :::
CANNING PEACIIES. Yellow Freestone cennlng
paecl'lu now evallabli while.
ti)t oupply ,laoto . BQB8 1878 Ford Fairmont, 4 dr.,
MARKET--Mooon W.VA . ••· clun, 82,200. Call44&amp;773-5721 opan 7 doyo o •.. •• v~. Gelllpollo, OH .
week.
APPLES oeveral voilotyo of 71 Mercury Comet perfect
o.volloble. Houro 9 to 8, Fltz· !'Ondtlon, aood tkn, •soo.
patrick Orcilordo. St. Rt. Ooll 814 - ~88-9328 .
889, WllktvHie, Oil, 81937811.
.
t 871 Cutlau Suprome'burgondy with whlto vinyl top,
AC, PS, AM-F.M cooootto,ln
... ... . '
duli radio. 280 omoll V-8,
~:~ew · tlr.- on front, new
brlkeo • ohoclco, good goo
mllugo, 12,000 tkn\. Cell
1192-72011 momingo or 448'510 1fternoon, ook for
FALL TRACTOR SALE
JIVIDENS FARM Paul.
EOUIPM:::_
1914 lntarnetlo~ol trovaiall
18715
Long trectoro, Varmaer otatlonwogon, aood cond ..
belli, ljoy oqulpmant, bole 1850. Coli 814-246-1017.
movaro &amp; floclera, wogono.
rotary tllero, dloo, - r o, 78 Pontiac GrMd LIMono. 2
rotary cuttero, blociH, goteo dr .. euto, PS, PB, AM-FM
otaro. AC. cruloe, tilt wh.l,
&amp; cuitlvatoro.
And See Uo To Gat Your cloth Interior, epprox .
Petro &amp; COMPLETE 113.000 miiH. 14.800. Call
304-871- 11111 .
SERVICE.
Uoed Equipment
IH Hydro 70, Ford Jubilee, 74 VW lug, good cond. Cell
135 MF, 800 ford, Maoooy II 14-379-2722 . .
Herrle pony; 70 Oliver, B· N
Ford, Plowo, dloc, JO me- 1 974 Oouun 260Z,
·u,100 . Coli 814 -268nure sprMder.
· ·
1718.
We buy Uoad Equipment

2 row Oliv.r corn piclr.M.

Furnlthed 2 bd.room mobllt
hoot't. Adulto only. 1148411,.2U3.

304-117~·1044.

~

1979
cyl..
cond.,
7B38
8PM .

8:00 •

Rt. 4 Bo• 21 Teuo Rd. on
Hill .
1880 CJII· Joop, lou than
14,000 mllu, 111,900.00
304-882-211114 . .
Motorcycles
18B1 Harley Oavloon four
glide. Caii448-4740.
1975 Harley Davleon oupor
glide 1200 CC. Coli 44121 08 before 2PM and anyweokando.
1972YamaheX88110, muot
oee to oppreclete, 1700.
304-1711-4873.
1971 PE 1715 Suzuki, oxcallent condition, 30it·875 72411 .
- - -- - - - - -

. Boatl. and
Motor• for S1le
14 foot Ster~raft •lum. eeml
V-hull, 10 HP Johnlon out·
bOard. tlttraller, new condit 10 n , 1 1 2 0 0

n

1887 Dodge :Charger. AI·
For ui•Wolkar 4 jooet elect- moot ohow condltlo'n: Body
ric holot. 1 hp; motor. 7,1100 Immaculate. Rebuilt 318, oont,
lb . capacity. 814-992 - Hollay 4 berrll. hudan. 1 ~-----..:...-5048.
Muot eee to epprecloto. No
.
-lo- I · •~.~~P~· Coli 1114-892-8689 1888 Dodge Porto, 304Fot·oale·Welkar 4 pott elect·
2 . noon.
896-348&amp; .
ric holot, 1. hp. motor. 7,1100
lb . cepoclty. 1114· 982 6048.
Auto Repair
SPECIAL Complete enemel
paint jobo ftom•1300. SunSupreO,e Ojeool. rOI&gt;fo lnotal\1!1 'tcom t2211.
Aoito Trim Center, 4481188: .

Livestock · '
,, Camping
Equipment

·---·
. ...... ..
......
..... .

BORN LOSER

'

I 1-iA.\/~ AA Am:lt~T~IJT lD

•

~ ~.WILLO#JCQ.t.i.

'.
CHRISTIAN'S CON·
STRUCTION. Conotr .. roofIng, aiding, ojooutlng,
fencing, pointing, rapolro &amp;
cleonlfl11. 44&amp;· 20,00. coli betore 8 and after 5:30 .
ANNIE

OH, MAN! THE ONE CAU.YIN6
CALL AND THEN THAT
CAR. PULLED UP...

VJ\nl /o/-R. WII..LON~!

!DNowa

for the atudenll and Doria
and Montgomery try a experiment In telling t he
truth. (RIIIO min.)
(J) MOVIE: 'Retum of a
Men Clllod HorN'
.
CD Nadonel Geographic

&amp;IG

~ill

Cl) MOVIE: 'The Sllenooro'
(I) Gl (!21 Joanil . LOVII

Corpentry ropolr &amp; remodel·
lng, wall ponlllng; , ..lllng
tile &amp; aiding. 814-9822768 .
''

Chaohl Joanie ia forced to
decide between plo~ing
with the bond and ononding Richie Jr.'s birthday
party. IR) [Closed Captioned)
D (I) ® Magnum, P.l.
Magnum learns that vic·
tory doean't mean the end
of the war for some partici·
pants. (RJ (80 min.)
(I) llneok Pravlewa Cohoots Gene Siakol and
Roger Ebert take a look at
what's happening at the
movies.
8 :30 (J) MOVIE: 'Circle of Two'
(I) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlentlc City
(I) Gl ()) NFL Football:
Mlnneoota at Buffelo
Cll Good Nelghbore
()]) Moneymakero
9:00 D (2) CZJ Gimme A Break

RON'S Televlolon Sorvlco. ,.
Spaclolblng In Zenith and
Motorole. Ou•zlir, •nd
~ouee colla. CoU 1711-2398
or 4411· 24114. '
F &amp; K Tree Trimming. otump
romovol. Call8711·1331 .
RINGLE 'S SERVICE experienced meaon, roofing, cer·

pant_e r, eiao1riclon, general
ropoire and·remodallng. CeH
304-1175-2088 or 11·75·
411110.

\vltfl.

·corrlmllf'Cill

ond Do!ftlltlc, Toot 'holeo, +
Pumpo Seleo ond Service.
304-8811-3802.

kill may have caused her
to become pregnant. (R)
I]) 700 Club
Cl Cll ®Simon &amp; Simon A
man lalla to h11 death only
minutea altar A.J. and Rick
serve divorce papert on

PAINTING Interior &amp; ..te. rlor, ffH utlmoteo, 3048711·1128.
Plumbing

8&amp; Heating

"'

.
CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATifo4G
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
,Phone 448-3888 or 44144n

HOW WERE YOtl TO
KNOW THAT ORVILLE

-Electrical
• Refrigeration

" ~~,&lt;

him . (A) (60 min.)
(I) To tho Manor Born
()]) Snook Pravtowo Cohoot• Gene Siakel and Roger Ebert toke a look at
what's happening at the
movies.
9:30 II (2) !D Tooohera Only
Principal Cooper oxporiencea a mid-life criaia. (Ri
(I) Wodehou11 Ployhouoa
()]) Thla Old HouH Carpenter Norm Abram installs
tho chimney for the wood
llove . (AI (Cioaed Captioned)
10:00 D C2J !D Hill. StrMt Blues
Furillo learns thll tho
handgun uaed to kill a policeman was stolen from the

SEWING Mii:hlna rapolro
urvlce. Authoilzed Singe;
Sol•· &amp; S.,ice Sharpen
Soluoro~ F.abflc ~shop,
Pomeroy. 91~·2284. •
'

o

;

l ·' ~"l 1 1

BARNEY

WHO TOLD '/00
I WAS HIDIN'
IN BLUE CAV~,
'SHERIFF?

•I

~·- downtown. 111 corpot.

.,...,_ kitchen, oil eloot\'lit I!Mt•.lit cond.. Waohar. Call 448-4383 doyo.
0139 ""'·

-

I I I J

I BLEETEj
I I [
IRELPHE

(J I

l

II

I

police department (A) (60
min.)
(J) MOVIE: 'Tho Split'
Ill (I) ® Knots Landing
Abby grows more brazen in
her affair with Gary while
Val decides to take direct
action. (AI (60 min.)
Cll· Juot Friend~: Rob
McConnall • Boll Braaa
Rob McConnell and tho
Boss Brass play in concert
at Howard Rumsey's Concerto by the Soa in Redondo Beach, CA./60 min.)
()]) Newewetch
10:16 (2) MOVIE: 'Looker'
Cl) TBS Evening Nowa
10:30 I]) Slng out America
()]) Coping with Klda
11:00
(J) N--•ter
!}) Naohvllla RFD
(I) ESPN Bporta Canter
!D Newo/Sporto/Weethar

e

II

Now arrango lht circled lotlero IO ·
form the 10rpr1M answer, u sug· ..r~·
geotad by lhlebovl cartoon.

Print answer hel8:
.
Yes Ierd ay s

I

II

rI

I I ) :.:
I

(AnoworltOtfiOoiOW ( ~'
Jumblea: TASTY KHAKI DISMAL
FARINA · r. • ~­-,
.
Answer: What lhay called the paramocllca' maocot- •
THE FIRST·AID "KIT"
' •·

•

J - 11oo11 No. 211. contolnlnO 110 puateo, ilovo-lor 11.16 _.,.Ill

· '·
- -. cloehil-por,llolo30, N......... NJ.O l 8 U . - - · , . '
NIIM, acklfftt,
code ncl IMkl check&amp;
lblt lo M
' .-··
.,

., ...

BRIDGE

Freak

hand~

odd result

By O.wald J1coby

ud Alu SoDIIII
Here Is one of those freak
hands thlt wu actually
dealt In a friendly IMP
match where five of the
eight players were former
world cbampiotll.
The blddln&amp; in the box
took place at a table where
North, South and East were
amon&amp; the five cbamplona.
North and South were ualng
the forclns no-trump
to major openlnp
an Eut elecled to pua
rather than to bid any number of spades. He expected
to show spades liter on, but
South jumped to four hearts.
Eut coufd hardly believe
the bid be bad beard, but be
recovered from bls shock to
double.
Had West opened a spade
South might well have &amp;one
down three, but West led bls
fourtb· best diamond. Eut
ruffed, led bls kin&amp; of spades
and got bls lleCOIId shock of
the band when South ruffed.
Not that South was In &amp;ood
shape. He bad to loae one
diamond and four trumpB
lor down just two.
liB Is the cue with all
lrealtlsh bands with rather
divided stren&amp;th, piUB-MO
doesn't have to be a really
&amp;ood score.
Eut and West can make
lour spades and if they 1et
doubled their score is 590 .

.J2

NORTH

·----

U8U2

.AI IIIII

EAST

WEST
.Q8764

•s

tK IOU

+JH

.....

.AI IIIII
.KJIOSI
+QI

SOUTH

·----

res:rnse

.AQIUIJ
tAQJ7

+7!

Vulnerable; Nortb-8oulb
Dealer: South

,.

Weol

Nortb

Eut

lloalll

Put
Pea
Put

!NT
P111

Put

4.
Put

Db!.

Pau

Openin&amp;lead: ••

However, in this match It led
to a real awing.
At the other table Bob
Hamman and Bob Wolff
were North and South. Bob,
we don't know which one,
played in five dlamoqll$.
aoubled. We don't know bow
he made it e:rcept that be did _
for a r)UB of 750 and a net ,
gain o 1 S IMPs.
·
·~·

'

~,.,.. wd'

Samantha thinks her first

GASOUNE ALLEY

ADVANCED Seemleu
Gutt«-Doon. Offering contlnuM guttarlng, -mleoo
aiding, rooting, goroge
doora. tree.aotlmatea, 81489B-B2011.

I

II

eoun

II} (!21 Paopll'a
7:30 D (J) You Aokod For It
(J) lnaldo the NFL Lon
Dawson and Nick Buoniconti analyze thlo week'o
NFL action end look aheod
to next week'a games.
CD Another Ufe
(I) EBPN &amp;porta Clnter
Cl) Andy Grttflth .
(I) • (I) Family Feud
!D Laverne.and Shirley
Cll Bualnon Report
® Richard Simmona
()])All Cr11turea Gnoat and
Small
Gl · lD Entertalnmant
Tonjght
8:00 D CZJ (I) Fame The teach-

CIJ NFL Story: Uno By line

JONES ltOY,S W4TER SERVICE . Coli 81'4-317-7471
or 814-38?-01$81.
' '

Realtor. Coli 304'.71·1 104 or 8711-1388.

~ ~ WfO l.tA5 AN APRlltrrW;~n

ers prepare thei r own show

THE &amp;OOY MADE APHONE

Gone'o Steam Carpet CleanScotch Gourd - Free
eotlmatoo- oprlng opicloloGeno Smith, 992-8398.

W1t1r

RODIF ~

cil Newioenter

MOVIE: , 'The Laat
Giraffe'
. Cll Clrol Burnett
Cll • (I) !D •lUI Newo
!D Lav- ond Shirley
(I) ENtotrlo Company
()]) 3-2·1, Contaot
8 :30 • (J) !D NBC Nowa
(J) tiiO.OOO Pyramid
(I) CFL. From tho till Yard
Uno
Cll Bob N-hln Show
(J) .lUI ABC N-•
• (I) &lt;lJ CBS No'NI
(I) Dr. Who
()]) Ullao, Yoga ond You
7:00 • (J) P.M. Magazine
(J) Conoumer Raporta ':rho
Foaling Fine Show: Fitnen and health-related
~roduoto are examined.
m Bulra Eye
(I) ESPN Sportlforum
(J) Gomer Pyla
(I) Entlirtalnment ToniQht
!D Happy Oayo ·
D (I) Tlo Tao Dough
(I) ()])
MapNei~Lahrar
Report
(J)

Maoonory work, Logue Contrectlng, Rt. 1, Ewlngton .,
Cell 814-388•9939.

for auto. c.r of equel value.

Pontile B'lnblrd, 4 304-11711-28111 .
AM-FM otero, olr
Aut p
exc. cond. Call 448·
0 8 I
or 44&amp;-1387 oftor
&amp; Acc8110rie1
'

GEIIL Forego chopper, IHC
&amp; Gehl blo-o. ' Galli &amp;
John D-• Farago 8oa11.
n - &amp; Uled, ,904·175·
3883.

CjU'TAIN STEEMEitCorpet
Cleenlng teoturad by Hoffelt
Broot"*o' Cuotom Car,..o .
Free itotlmotoo; Coli · 448·
2107.

SINGS CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION Spaclollzlngln
International Scout 4 cyl., 3 concrete drlveweyo. oldeopd., 4 -WD, runo ••c .. body · wolko, liooro, patloo, ate. 1 1
good, big tlreo, good ohapo. yr. oxp. Coll814:367-7891 .
N- battery, 1710 or trade

19B2 Honda • 760 Night
Hoov'y duty troller ~ ule, 8 · 197B Toyoto Corolla 2 dr .. Hawk, bluo, 1 500 mlloo,
ply rated tlreo, ell brekeo ora 1·otondord tronomloolon, ro- helmet , engine 11uerd,
hookad up. Coli 81J4-2&amp;11· dlo, olr, vary aood cond., 12400, ucellont condition.
1208.
v-I
12.9110. .Call4411-2300.
304-&amp;715-5585.

'Garage apt. New Haven, 3 l
2 Wdroomtreller. Reel nice, . bedroomo , unfurnlohod
oclulto only. Brown'o Troller 1200. month, pluo utllitleo.
Poil&lt;,ll11neravllle. 814-882- 304-882-33611.
3324.

Clifton,

'

- -- -·
.....
... . ... .

ThrH room tumlohod apart·
ment. adults. no pett. Point
Pleaoont., Coli 304-67524113.

Two 1p1r1mants

Truck• for Sala

Morc.u m · Rooflng &amp; SPoUt-Ing. 30 yuro ,xperlonct:
· IPC!Cioilzlngln built up roof.
Callll14~388-9822 or 814388-9817.

9/1.8 /82
EVENING

S,TUCCO. PLAiiTERING ,,·
texturad celllflgo commercial · end rotldentlol, ffH~
lltlmatao. 'Coif 814-2116·
1182.
'

1980 Pontloo f Jr:tblrd• AM·
FM cuoetio, llr. t8,000
firm . Collll14-21111-1198.

2 'bctr. .mobile home new
cerpet, clean, on Bob
McCormlckm Rd. Adulto
only, nopoto, ooo. dclp&amp; ret.
required. woter paid, t1BO
por..mo. Call448-4491 .

,,

'

Home
.
Improvements

.

"

2 troller. nat goo hoot. clun.
riverview. Coll446-11102.

U lJ,

p,._. ...;.,

h•d ot 14.01!0 ,.
mlieo. fair conciltlon, '
.3,2111.1 CeM 441-2881.
;

to tit

.....---. . . '.... .... ..... ...

Two-2 bdr. trailers complotaly turnlohed. Call 4488889.

l.lnfurnlihld 2 bedroom
• 1 110. par mnlh. Camp Conl_ey. -304-875-1371 or 876-

..

Wonted to buy e aoocj ueocl
camping tnllor 18 to 20 ft.
Coil' aftl{ 11:30, 814-3117·
0111.
.

'·

2 upotoln Apto. No children,
1 ·cor. Amold Grete- 814742· 2248.

w.v.·.

''

Limbo tor oelo. Butchering
alzo, app,ox. 100 lb. 180 1978 Jeep, olx cylinder,
each . Col~ 8.14-992·l713. 38,800 mlleo, 13100 firm:
19711 Chavette, 304-117&amp;IIB4B.

1- - - - - - - - -

14x70, thrH bedroom, ol
elactrtc, unt. 1200. monthly
pluo electric . Gl~nwood,
304-117&amp;;2441 or
304-578:8073 .
.

'

Unturnlohod 1 bdr. apartment with ttove&amp; refrlg., no
pete, Bob McCormick' Rd.
C~ll 446-31117 .
.

·Deluxe gerege epenment, 1
bdr .. control air, Firat Ave ..
Nice 3 bd.room houeil near no polo, ret. requlrocl. Coli
mlno one. Dopoa~ roqulrocl. 614-21111-6506 .
1220. par month. 614-7422125.
Jockoon Eotatu Aportmento. 638 Jockoon Pike,
Orio ~room hOUM. IVIIII· Golllpollo. Equal houolng opble Sept. 18th, 304-175- portunity h10 1 bedroom
ept~rtmenta, rent atana et
297~ .
•112 par month. Coli 4482741 or 1.. ve .mesgga we
4 room houH unfurnished wNI cell you book.
Cemp Conley •.140. par
m9nth . Phone 304-175- 3 room turnlohod opt . UIIO.
month lncludeo utllltleo . In1371 or 675-3812.
quire at Melge Inn In
Pomeroy.
FOUR room hou11. ldool for
elcle&lt;ly couple, IIO!&gt;d loco2 nice Apt. In Mlddloport . 1
~lon , 304-8711-1302 .
turnlohad with utllltleo. 1 unHduM for rent, 3 bedroom•. furnlohod, you pey utllltleo.
103 8th Stnoet, PoiC)t Ploo· No poto11114-992-3190.
oollt, uqo monthly, dopooit
r"9"irocl, new furnece ·whh
1111 -vlng lollureo. Can b• Furnlohed IPirtiJIInto for
-n. 11- p.m. to 8 p.m. dolly rent. 814-982 -5434, 814ut:'opt Sunday. Phonol14- 992-11914 or 304-882 ·
4~1-1311i 'betw-' 11o. m . 2188 . .
onde p.m .

Comp.l otely turnlohad. 3
bd.room , toteleloctrlc, nice
location. •210. mo. pluo
dopoolt and electric. 81488:Zr39511.

Television
Viewing

bllo. M.OOO mille. """'' ,

~w.....
....1_·

.
'
Tile Dqily
Sentinel-Page

Ohio

Fonoie1874 VWoompmo-

Mualcal
lnatrumenta

2 bedroom hou11 on Rt.
218. available Oct. 2nd. Call
44&amp;-9688.

2 bdr. trailer out At. 1 &amp;0, 2
'h n:!R" tn.m hoopltol. c~n
441-01117.

16,1982

.,

Regloterad buckokln tlly, 2
ytoro old, 58 lncheo tall,
brollen ond quiet. 304-8714187.

2 bilr. hou11 Lower Rt. 7 • a
6 room houMin Eureka. Call
814'258 -1413.

Mobile Home•
for Rent

•.

s.P.t··-

2 Femola ·BHDII pupa. 120
Call Robert Herpor for Gln- ooch. Lawrenca Rica• 10
""'g ond Yellowroot prlceo. Mile Creek Rpad, . put
304-1175-12113.
Yauger Church, L~n W. Yo.

4 r. hou• renovated A lnsu-

Porneroy-2 bd . room unfurnlohocl hOuee. 1195. mo.
Security dopoolt. 1100. pluo
utllltleo. After 8-coll 814882-22BB .

Motor Home
• Campara

by larry

KIT ' N' CARLYLE ' "

Misc. Merchandice

W1nted: Block houH with
basement, minimum &amp; inGh
roof overheng. Caah if reel·

... .L. -

,.

Sentinel

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I " - . There
Eyes"
5 Went to seed
11 European
capital
12 Richly
bedecked
13 Mascagni
opera
U AUBtrian
river
IS Model of
excellence ·
17 Youngster
18 Lace around
20 Su.spend
ZZ Image
Z3 Meander
24 Russian city
25 Cantlnflas

DOWN
I Excursion
2 Israeli dance
3 Arab
chieftain
4 Arizona city
5 Adieu!
S Uterary
sleuth
Yesterday's annrers.
7 Black cuckoo
8 Wooden
21 Declare
31 Snatch
structures
23 Set back 32 Invented .. ,
9 Grain alcohol 24 Candid
33 Irillh
25
Worker
in
islands
10 Muffle
16 Wilder
porcelain 34 English river.
19 Cable
26 Scorched 38 Held
20 Beyond help 28 Glistened ·
a session . ~·

..

film
26 Roman hope
goddess
27 Superintend
Z9 - Aviv
30 Gallows
figure
35Earth
movement
37 Infrequent
38 Jewish
ascetic
39 Moslem
prayer call
40 Took a break
41 Nota -

bn+-t-t-+-t-

8(1)®Nowa

....,....... 3 r. private both,
. . . Znil. Avo.. Oeillpollo.
ftW;,. po...,ned• Cali 4411-

e

dJ,.

PEANUTS 1.

For lala. Mooroma ...,. :
UIED FURNITURE: twu ilv- (Cilrllt-, ooioral lillclo.
lng rm. """-· lamp tablr book. Ooojl i&gt;"-· P1oona
oofiMtabl~lpe.,dl-. ~ 114·112.-3431.. Aok tor
owlvli r...,..,._ · ortd atto- Rhojlan,
·mill · Corbin • Snydlt'• --:----:---:--'------'
Fum.,' 81111 leHncl · Avo.; I
Gollpollo, 114·441-1171. · Antlc!Uea,l--.llnaolle..., ._, · futiiiiMd 1111· ,
·
'
. . . reprallulllloft otlt&gt;fulnl.....,..,.. AIM· 4,'782IICI Dining,_,. oet, waoc1 oval IUn "' .co.~~. hul ~­
AM. · .W.Itl • ollly.
I oholra ond """-~. Tu,..,.,tahlil, Oh. Rt.7;
-'7.
, .
__
81~·112·1137.
Noc1h Erid. .. · ' ·

""f; -noo.
..

,,(J) Dave Allen ot Largo
11 :16 I]) Allin the Family
11 :30 D (2) !D Tonight Show
(11 MOVIE: 'In Pral11 of
Oldlr Women'
I]) Another Ute
(I)
(!21 Newt
. • (I) Quincy Quincy boliaveo that a movie ttar·s
death was not ouicide. (A)
(80 min.)
(I) Clptlonod ABC Nowa
® MOVIE: 'Tho Trojan
Wom•n•
•
11 :411 (2)
MOVIE:
' Mommlo

Doanoet'

'1110 01• """'!"""'!•
........._._U.;. .,,• Ia
door trecn wlolll lltiiVt,
,.._ llse:::a, 4 Drtl ....

..

~(:~ ~.,-.
IIIII . . . . . . . ..

·1110 ,-;,

:;.r,

.

(J) MOVIE: 'The Gocld111'
12:00 !}) Buma • Allin
.
(I) Auto !lacing• 'S2:
NASCAR Wl'lnfllor 400
~ Rlohrnond. VA
(I) lanny HUI Show
.
'
(J) PBI Lata ""'"
• 9 Nllhtllne ·
12:30
(I) CIJ ~ Night with
om,tll,ttorman

e

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

'

.

One letter olmply atands for another. In thia aomple A it .
used for the three L'11 X for the two O's, etc. Sincle letters, "
apoa1rophea, the leneth and formation of !he wordo . are ltll •
hlnta. Each day the code letters are dilferent.

-.
-~

CllYPTOQVOTES
E

MWRS

NJ I U
V .WR

•

."

SRLZWQJU

ZEUYRS,
VUIRCV

KWLSRCR

""'
L S-•.

LC

LSEVVRSVLJS
OJBLVRSRCC.
OUJTRUQ

'

Yeaterday's ~te; AN ANI: MAY

'.

WORK iUS

.

I

"'
.-.

-. •..
..,.,,
'

1

"";:. l
....

HEAR.f~;;

·Ot,rl',Btrr~MEVEI\MAKEHONEY.-()~SAYING
I

,.

AX\'DLIIAAXB
LONGFELLOW

!

--,~· -,•
. ' I1

�Paga 14-lhe Daily Sentinel

' 14 finns subm-it- bids for·
(Contlnu~ from 1J11ae 1)

subml~ bids on tour altemau.
pl9J!S and UD!t prices 011
suchas carpetlng'and waD~·

itemi

S!Jbmlttllla btds were:
,
Carl Stevens 'Construction, ParkerstJura, $l;'l!lli,tnl baBe bid (365
days), $43.$15 ,(4.'1 days) for alter·
nate 1,$118,200 (60 days), alternate
2, no change, ·alternate 3, and
tai,:IOO (31 days), alternate 4;
Chtidm Co!!atructlon, Huntington,
$1,594,&lt;XXI baBe bid (365 daya) ,
$52~ (65 days) for alternate 1,
$98,&lt;XXI (31 days), alternate 2, deduct $500, (no days) , alternate 3,
and $51,520 (60 daYS), alternate 4;
Denral, .lnc., Ashland, $1,BI,&lt;XXI
(:.l days), base bid, $ei.~ (4.'1
days) fQI' alternate 1, $52,112 (Ql
days), alternate:! .nochange,alternate:3,1 and $83,~ days) , alterHlmtlngton,
nate 4; DtnlaCo ~
1
$1,496.~ (38;1· •
s), baBe bid,
· $36,700 (31 days)' for alternate 1, •
$61,500 (Q} days), alternate 2, add
t8.500 (no days), alternate 3, and
$'18,1nl (31 days) , alternate 4.

nJNBRAL OFBASHiR GEMEYAL - '111e cof- ' IIHi family borne of Gemeyal 81111 be was burled there
b ~ lbe bod)' of PJ~Eied Baahlr Ge- yea&amp;erday. Tuesday he was 111a1n In a bomb blaslln
me)'lll, II - I a lbe lllreeCa ollllldaya, a lllGWitaln Ea8l Belrul. (AP Wirephoto)
vlllaie U miJee Eul oiBelrutW~ay. Blldayals

~

I Area deaths
Fannie Phillips

. UAW workers .back on jobs

Fannie Pbllllps, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday night at Veterans
Memorlal Hospital.
Funeral . ~ts wW be
IUIIIOUIICed later by Ewing Funeral
Home.

,~ following contract agreement
By 'l1le Asiloclllted l'real

United Auto Workers at three
. Chrysler Corp. plants In Ohio began
. returning to their jobs early today
as the canpany and the ·union
reached a tentative contract
aettlement.
.
But about 1-DIIlrst-shlftworkers
· at tile company's Twinsburg
ltamping plant southeast of Cleveland did not go back to their joba
shortly after the contract agreement was 8I1IIOWICEd about 6: 31
. a.m.
' At the plant, personnel represenflltlve Jim Lewis said that procluc. tlonhadnotresumedasof7:31a.m.
· "We're hqllllg to get back Into
prodllcllon oh the !II!COIId shift," at
about 3 p.m., Lewis said. "I don't
know what the problem Is. You'd
have to talk to the local union."
At UAW Locall22 In Northfield,
· members said that they had not
beell .notlfled by the lnternatlot: :1
unlm .Qf a settlement or told by
their ll!llders to return to work. ''All
we knOw Is what reporters are telllila ua ·and what we hear on the
news,". said a union officer, woo
WOOid not give his name. Local
· presjdept Bob Weissman could not
be reached for comment. About
3,1!10 hourly workers at the Twins·
burg plant are covered by the local.
In subultan Toledo, :m workers
at the: Chrysler' machine components plant In Perrysburg went
back to their jobs at about 7 a.m. At
UAW Local ~435. a spokeswoman
IJld that.picket lines were removed
lad all first-shift workers were retumlng to their jobs. Alnlt 900
.hcurly workersareemployed at the

plant.
At the company's Van Wert
plant. where powder metal parts
are manufactured, a spokesman
said that workers were back on the
job soortly after 7 a.m. About :.rtl
hourlyworkersareemployedatthe
plant.
In Cleveland, a worker aL the
Chrysler parts depot said all dayshift employees were back on the
job. The depot Includes 62 hourly
employees covered by Local 563.
Chrysler operations In Dayton
and In Sandusky were not affected
by the expiration of the UAW agreement at mldnlght 'TUesday. The
contract had been, extended for 24
oours to rnkln!ght Wednesday and
workers began walking off the job
following the end of that extension.

we-e eastbound.

'

,MUTi88'llicenses
A marriage license was Issued In

.Mc!fas Counly Probate Court to Ro'WI Harold Smith, 31, Racine, and
~

Cunningham, 'll, Rt. 3,

~

'

()been-ance canceUed
· A Friends Night observance
~ lor Friday by Racine
Qlapter, Order of Eastern Star,

OSP cites woman
following accident
· AMiddleport woman was cited

rM.l

,.!·
'

But the annoonrement of a tentative agreement did not affect walkouts at the defense division plants
that Cluysler sold to .General Dynamics Corp. In March.
The UAW contracts at the General Dynamics tank plants In Lima,
tn Warren, Mich. and .ln SCranton,
Pa., also expired at midnight but·
had been extended to 10 a.m. WEdnesday. Workers walked off the job .
at those plants Wednesday
morning.
Negotiations between the UAW
and General Dynamics were expected to continue today In Warren,
Mich. The previous contract co- ·
vered about s,:m hourly workers at
the three plants.· General DynamIcs assumed responslbWty for the
UAW contracts when It purchased
the division for $348.5 mllllon.

tJi eJK

sslve speed for condlt!OIIs
•ibereault rl a single-car accident
• . lrfllp Counly Road 3 Wednes-

_.mon!Jng.

.

' ~ to the G8iua-Melgs
, _ ~ the State Highway Patrol,
Flllk waiJOUthbound at 12:36 a.m.
willa abe went off the right side~
road, loSt cootrol and hl1 a

a.

•.

~

:n, ' ' ~

.~/ ;
i~ .. -"""· .

Reg . • 4.00 .... Sale
Reg. $6.60 .. . Sale
Reg. $7,00 .. . Sale
Reg. $9.60 .. . Sale

-

. they
not, conunlttee members said
will return next week.
The conunlttee was fOillled by
RII!IY Magnone, director of the Ohio
Department of Mental Retardation
and Developmental DlsabWtes, to .
deal with employee complaints.
Employees have charged the
GOC ~tratloa wltJi a host of
offenses, Including, hl!rrasment of
• ....._'lob bollshmen
employees '-..~ · a
ts
and Improper transfer~ clients.
Ma;t emplOyees seemed ha1J$1Y
for a chance to express their
complaints.
One~ said she tnok an lnlr
of penmallej!ve to meet with the
committee.

~

OVP ~ lltalletr

'i'a!·

About i!O jJI8ellt and f~
Hpolls Developmental Center emptoyees'waltedTIIundaytoexpress
their Cootplalnts. and ~ regarding i. variety of Issues to the
GOC ReviewCanmlttee.
Most ~ cautious opilmlsm that the committee wlll'resoive
their complaints.
"1 really t1on't !mow what will
cune~thls." one employee said. "I
hope sorne,thlng does.''
Anolller .said the committee
lnembi!I'S ''seemed concerned"
abrut till!~ sbe (itesented.
' 'lbe cmunl~ met with 23 per-

rnslnlng .employeeS today, If the

•

Bi dEFFGRABMEIER
OY,PIWI~ ·

Depending on Who you listen to, a
state panel's report concerning alleiell health violations at \he GaUlpolls Developmental Cel$relther
"leaVES roon\ for Interpretation" or
"meansabsolutelynothlng.:'
Onestateofflctaldlssatlsfi.Ed with
the report has called for a new ex·amlnatiOn of the clulrges brought
· againStGOC.
Thereportwastheflnalactlonofa
· state panel
. which heard GOC's appeal .of citations It receivEd last

BOYS' $19.95

QVI.T .UNED

SPORTSWEAR
·sALE

FLANNEL
·sHIRTS

ts•._ ~ .... Wlllblm .tvie with 111811 front.

MW , F.Ji. Spot
U.4to14. S~~.

.

DecEmber.

The citations. Issued by the Ohio
Department of Industrial Relatlolls, charged that GOC was riot
!ollowlngproperprocedurestoprevent~ spread of amebic hlstolyt· lea, an Infectious disease of the
Intestines.
The panel consisted of one representatlve each from four state agencjes. Its report listed several
"Observations and, reconunendatlons" which emphasized Improved
communicatlon between GOC and
the Department of Ilidustrlal
Relat!OIIs:
,
Butltdldnotdealdlrectlywlthtbe
cltat!OIIs, and this has angered IJo.

two 111811 ftep poduJt. Snepa
on wrist cuff., Size 8 thnl20.
· Colorflll plalda. Weekend
.
.
Sale. .
_.t,
~

Vall», ju.np.,. ~ 1ope.

.
.
.
Reg. *6.00 .. :, .. sii.
'Reg. • .11,.00 ·... Sele _.v., ...

.

Reg. •1~J:OO .....--..w
&gt;Reg. *22.00 .. ..

'.:.$.:1.550

MEN'S $19.95

STRETCH
DENIM
JEANS

of three~ not coonectEd with
theODMR. ·
TherevlewboardwOlwlllpresent
a final set of ~lions to

Morse Chapel Homecomlllg will
be held Sunday, Sept. 19 with the
Rev. George Hoschar of Wes.t Columbia as g\\E!St speaker.
Special singers wUl be Donna Bogard and the Folmer Tr! of Long
Bottom along with othe local singers. The public Is Invited to attend.

'\"'I : , &lt;

Reg; •16.00... :~~S8Ie. $11 ,99
Ret,419.oo ....: .s.~e •111.19
~ •2s.ao~
e20.1B
R"'. *,~-~ .... :Sale $30.39

LEOTARDs·and TIGHTS

A complaint for an appeal was
flied by &amp;1n Harris, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, against the Bureau ·of Motor.
Vehicles, Columbus.

Pink; Lt. Blue, Navy, lllec:k, Wln(t .nci Brown 1t1 Slzft

.

Petite thrU X•IMge. . · '
-

.

"

·

•

··,

!'eg.' $5.21511ghts... ,....... .. . ........ '
Reg. $8.60 Tights!. .......... Sele tl.59
Reg. •11.00 ....... , .....Sele U .• .
Reg. $11.60 ~dl ..... ~ .llle ft:lt
Reg. $12.00 ~dli ..... Sele $10.1~

Emergency runs
Four caDs were answered by Jo.
cal emergency units Wednesday,
the Meig!J County Emergency~·
' .leal Service reports.
.
. At U:50 a.m., the ~

ent Gallipolis
Developmental Center
employees IJlet with the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Results of a survey released today
showed a "distressing and alarmIng problem" concerning the use or
drugs and alcohol by students In
Ohio' s public schools.
The survey, described as semi·
random, Involved 1,700 students. It
was coilducted by lite department
of mental health among students In
grades ~en through 12.
State Rep. Mlc~l A. Fox, R' HlmU19D, wbo Is olferlng legislation to help correct the problem,
said the survey dilia Indicates 71
percent rl t11e. studellis In ihose
gradescummtlyareusersofdrugs
or alcoool:
Fox and. the mental health olflcta1s Involved In the survey de, cllned to klelltlty the , schbois In

....s•

filed

f

•

present~d ·
REVIEW ALLEGA·
TIONS- Past and pres-

nald Leivls, the Department of In- mine If health regulat!OIIs are belllg
dustrlal Relations official !ollowetl, but added that he "may
responsible for citing GDC.
hold off" unUI the present controv"They (the panel) did absolutely ersy Is Settlell.
· ·
ODMR and GOC officials do not
notlllng," Lewis said. "The report
doesn'taddreSstheproblemslnany agree that the report Is
way." '
meaningless.
AccordlngtoLewls,offlclalstrom
h!s department andODMRdedded
GOCSuperlntendentRobertZimmennan, while aDowlng there Is
at the appeal hearing that the panel room for lnterpretatiOII In the recoulddooneofthreethlngs: vacate port,saldlastweekhefeltltwas"a
the citations, modify them, or upvindication" of the center's claims
oold them."
that It has .fnllowt:ll necessary
"Theydldn'tdoanyotthethree," regu1atlons. r
Lewis said. "GOCwas certainly not
JameS G. Nibert, safely consulexonerated."
tant for ODMR, said It was "very
He has requested that another ' · wise' • of the cmunlttee not to deal
panel meet and ilea)·more speclfl'
with the citations directly.
callywlth thecltailons.
"Ithlnkltlsanlmposslblelssueto
Lewis said he Is pressing for a decldeonewayortheother,"Nibert
more specific report because he
said.
knoWs ODMR will not take the
The citations dealt with " highly
Initiative. ,
technlcal Issues" and 'the Depart"(The Department of) Mental
ment of lndustrlal Relat!OIIs should
Retardation Is not golllg to cootlnue
have have consulted medical ex.with the appeal because the report
perts before Issuing them, he said.
makes them lookllke!hey'rerlght,"
he said.
The ODMR weleomes lnvestlgaUntil the Issue Is decided, Lewis
ttons of their.factllt_les, Nibert said,
said he considers the citations
but he agreed With the panel's conIssued In December to bi! stW 1n
elusion thatrnorecommunlcatlonls
effect. He said an otfiCial from his
necessary before cltAtloos are
depai'tment will toor GDC to deterIssued.

.f
. I.

Complaints

Magnone.

School.drug abw~, hits ~pidemlc proportions

Pre-washed bkie denim.
Femoul Wrangler Flex-F'n
•comfort lbtitdl jealia.
Makes your •,feel great end
look great. Sizes 29 to 42
Waitt, lengths 30 to 38.
This ·weekend ....

Sunday homeooming

~=~~=~
. ~...

Angered state official ~ants
GDC situation re-examined

Sale Ends Saturday

UTTLE GIRLS'

Reg. 14.49- 63" .:.....9.40 pr.
Reg. 16.99-72" .... $10.40 pr.
Reg. 18.49-84" ... ..10.70·1*,
Reg. 17.99- 83" .....11.70 pr.
Reg. 18.49-72" ... .$12.00 pr.
Reg. 1~. 99-84" ... .$12.40 pr.

~

Were a la"""'"n
matter."
..... ~ ...
AcconUng to JIIIIII!S Fli!Wellen,
chalnnan of the cmunlttee, nxm
complaints he heard coocerned
bumping rlgbts and "Issues lnvolvlng the adlninlsirattve ...-H."
• .....
Flewellen lsc~ ofODMR'sOfflee of Hwnan Resources. Other
membersofthecommltteeareBob
Merkel, chief !'f aaency services at
the Department of Adrrtirmtratlve
SeJvlces; Lee Qavls, ~ dlrector at TlfflriDevelopmental Cen.
.
ter; and Molly Mortenson,
8dmlnlstrattve assistant to Sen.
Qakley ~~ R-IrOOton. .
~ 'has said the lnfonna- •
ttonbe ga~ by tiiiR'OI!lmlttee wfU

/~ (.theGOCadJtP.nlstratlonl
have d6ne everything bUt llfenle,"
she said. "Now It's ttme to light
bBck."
Another eri!p~ said: "I tried
io go thrOOgh the t hannels at GOC
and they tOOugllt my complaints

sevm-bour session
to meet with the re-

JY1E!!1!11n1 roomat the Columbus and
Smithem ObiD Electric Co. bulld1ng
on SecondAvenuewasavallable. U

WALLPAPER .:.
20°/o OFF

011r

A revival Is belllg held at·the Hobson Church of Christ In Christian
Union beginning this evening
through Sunday. EvangeliSt Is the
Rev. Fred Crabtree and pastor Is
WW!am Crabtree. The pubHc Is Invited to attend.

.

......,.. .G- .............. ·

~~ """"..

.

14Y, OUnCe No-feult IJU . .' .
nimend~. . . . %7
to 42 waltt end ........ 30 to
38 Inch-. Wll not lhrWI.
wrinkle or
IF- llulaiJtleg

GDC ReVIew Committee Thursday to present
their· complaints.. TOP:

Committee member
Lee Davis and Chairman James FleweDen
Hsten' as an employee
discusses a problem.
80TI'OM: Employees
await their chance to
speak with the
committee.

Eastern board plans forum sessionsi
A series of public forum meetings
to discuss a new five mW levy to be
voted on In the November eleetlon
were set up when the Eastern Local
Board of Education met In regular
session Thursday night.
The five mW levy would run five
years. The I!I'st meeting will be held
Sept. 31, at 8 p.m. at Chester
Elementary.
Other meetings will be Oct. 7, at 8
p.m. at Riverview Elementary and
Oct. 14, at 8 p.m. at '!Uppers Pllllns
Elementary.
·
During the forum meetings, tours
of the schools wW be made and text
books wfU be shown.
The board, In other business, set
up a building charge list for use of
the bulldlngs In the dls~t
Booster cluba and PrO organlza.
!Ions wW be charged for custodian
only. Other non-profit organizations
will be charged for custodian, $1 per

put•

WASHINGI'ON (AP ) - A Demo
p~l to provide :m,OOJ
public lleJ'Vlce jobs Is lleaded for
possible trouble tn the Senate .alter
being approved · by the }louse.
which students tespunded to ques- . where RepubliCans branded It "a
.!Ions. saying that to do so wOUld
billion-dollar ballot box ' baUout
result In community mid parental
bill."
1
resentment.
Amid sdme of.the sharpest part!·
But at a news
eoce, fox san exchalips beard this year on
said the swvey baduenw~uteH0111efloor, the$1buiiQnDemoblllty of onlt 2 pel1.'ell(, Tbere
l:rltk plan was adopted Thursday
889,001 studellts In· tile seventh on ·• m 169 ·votll and sent to the
. through the'12th Jllllllllli Ohio, he
GOP-controlled.Senate, where It Is
sal4. .
• ' .
;
expected to ~ecelve •a chilly
~In
a.,,
.... abllll! l epi- 1~..-derDic Pl'IJI)Ortloaltlll Olllo'a pubUc . SeDate Majority Le~r Howard
peboo1 iystem ... CUU!Dtiii:IUI all H. Baker Jt., R-Tenn., has said he
~ ~ Uld ~-· both . does.not plan to brlllg up the bill In
rurallnd ~ oMi'ut••rr · ;" ·he . ,tbli Senate. Bqt 11e ac~ It
~ addlg tluit ,..,~ Ill ccu,t ... up• 811 ~to
''llllmlll 1114 dlt
a" 1 : : ·~~ iellllatloiL
Be aald that 'lflllle.• petceaf ~
. .,,_ .. both lnlii!S pass the bill,.
(Contlllued on pqe 8)
.a VI!'IO·l!Y, President Reagan wOUld
cratlc

are

orbool .... 1111aWtsl 111....

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,
..
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belli...., ....... • • r

AOBD-fte .... PwwiiJ . . . . . . . . . _
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M ,' lrt a.bdl- jiliN's .... .a lllr·IIIII&amp; l*a En lie &amp;wv

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,1

oour for lights and Sl and hour for
heat.
Other ogranlzatlons who wish to
use any of the buUdtngs for profit
will be charged $50 for the first six
hours, $5 and hour for Ughts and $5
arid hour for heat. It the event goes
overslxhourstheywlllchargsland
additional $10 an hour.
The board employed tl)efollowlng
subatltute teachers, Jeanette Men·
gon. Dorotha Petrel, Roberta Maidens. Betty Roush and David Weber.
Scott Wolfe was employed as year
book advisor and Nola Young was
employed as substitute secretary
and teachers aide.
The board agreed to sell two
busses that were advertised for
sale. The bid ofttie R4clneChurchof
the Nazarene Chlirch was accepted
In the amount of $402 for a 48passenger bus and the bid of VIrgil ,

Holsinger, Reedsville, In the
amount of ~ lor a 66-passenger
bus.
Members of the FFA were given
approval to attend the Fann
SCience review tn Columbus at the
end of Sept. Members are to assume
all expenses.
David Janson, principal, was
given approval to attend the NI!W
Principal Conference In Columbus
on Sept. 22 and 23. ·
The board also approved the pay.
ment ot tuition for students to attend
Carleton SChool. The board also approved an activity fonn for athletic
contests. ·
The next regular meeting of the
board will be held Oct. 21. at 7: ll
p.m. A specla) meeting will be held
Sept. 29, at 7:30p.m. to discuss the
bus situation In the Arbaugh Addl·
!1011, '!Uppers Plains.

·oemocrats' job billln trouble

'*" '

suStained moderate ·

I

1 So&lt;tlon, 12 Pag..
15 C:..ts
A Multimedia Inc:. Newsraer ..

CoiDmittee h:ears
employe charges

$3.19
.4.39
$6.69
$7.69

DRAPERY
SALE

Unit went· to Rou1e U4 tor Jillla .
who was taken to
Moodlspaup
.
.
Veler8118
Meniortaflfoepltal
aadat
,4CIJ'drM!DbyDavldP. Turner.
6:32
p,m.,
the
RaciDe
unit
tock
t1, RJlDIIIJI!Y, W.Va., received mod- .
Scotty
Hubblrd
from
111!11'
the
Ra·
..... dlmql! In an accklelit on
·
cine
Elementary
School
to
J?lea·
Wrii·.W ebster Rd. In Gallla
sant Valley Hospital 81111 at 9:45 .
0D'1f3'·
.
.
. Till ..trol llates 'I'IInler' was p.m. tookHeatherBamettfrilrnthe
i': · ..,......., at 9:IMI a.m. when he . fire llation .to Veterans Memlrlal.
i ' ... dt tile rllbt side ~ tbe roed The !Jyrat'lllle Unit at 9:25p.m. tock
Msrk Clay to Veteranl Memortal.
t~'·i '• .ill CM!I'IIIrDed.

, :.

/ j

en tine

c••""''"''"2

j

ton blends. Complete
nmgeoflizel.

~

Revival announced .

Ap~al

at y

.

VoUI,No.95

and

has been cancelled due to the death
of Mrs. Mary SChull.

1\vo cars reCeived light damages
In 811 accident on W. Main St., near
1J! Pomeroy-Masoo bridge Wed·
n8lday night Pomeroy Pollee said
a Car driven by Mary Rogers, Galli·
poliS, struck the rear of a car driven
by Paul Taylor, Pomeroy, stopped
at the traffiC light. The vehicles

'

'

Two Day s.Je on olir 1111t1re
l1ock of Carnilolel, Ful
Sllpa, Teddla end Half
Sllpa. Nylon or poly/cot·

Haunted House ~. · hits Ohio plant

•

trlen.,

LADIES' .SLIPS

Wildcat strike .

Page 12

'

AlL

Jaycees . contlou~

M..,.uderettetJ
beaten by .~AHS

!0118 i1ur1llg tile

Meigs County happenings..
Minor damages

1

E.L,. HIJTII'.II: Son; Charlelton, chaJlie, altematt 3, and ,.,,100
$1,639,1117 ·(400 days), bale bid, · days) , alternate 4. •
;$M,OOI (400 dliys), alternate ·1, · Kine Contracting, lnc., JackJo!.
$112,tnl (400 days) , attemate 2, no Olllo, $1,619,700 (481 dayl) 1 . , .
cbsnge, alternate3, and~tnl(400 bid, ~.lnl . (4.'1 days), alterpate 1·
days), IJiternafe 4; E.P. Leach II: $91,100 j4.'1 days), alternate 2, rib
Spns, Huntington, $11564,&lt;XXI (481 cbsnge, alterna~3, and~ (:t}
days) , bale bid, $43,500 (31 days), days), alternate 4; · Ne!gbborpJJ
alternate 1, $75,&lt;XXI (&amp;).daY,), alter· 1. Construc.Uon, Hun tlngtoll',
nste 2, no cbsnge, al~te 3, and $1,56(,400 (365 ·days), base . bl!li
$88,700 (il dafl)i alternate 4; Ed- 150,600 ' (&amp;l days), alternate l,
Pat · Constructl~ll; Cl!arleston, ·189,100 (90 days), alternshl2, &amp;f
$1,6.'1l,tnl (450 days) , base bid. duct SZIO (no days), alternste3, and
$43,001 (Included In base bid If $88,&lt;XXI (10 days), aiternste.4; and
awarded within 90 days), alternste Soutl\em Coostructloo, St. Albani,
1, $107,001 (Included In baae bid), $1,412,700 (450 days), base bid
alternate 2, deduct $2,500 (Included $34,100,- alternate 2, $99,100, alterIn base bid If awarded within 90 nate 2, no cllange, alternate 3,"and
days), alternate 3, and $118,001 (In- $74,&lt;XXI (31 days) , alternate 4.
•
eluded In baae bid If awarded
·
within 90 days) , altemaie 4; Erp,
•
Construction. Sl,Q50,001 (400days ~ , To end marnages
base bid, $39,&lt;XXI (31 days), alter.
'
nste 1, $61,1!10 (90 days), alternste
Two suits tor diVOI'Ce, two dJ.sso. ·
2, add$12,Q50(31days),alternate3, lutlons and an appeai :hive been
and $61.lBI (90 days), alternate 4.
rued In M~ O!untY ·eommllO
J .A. W118on 1r Co., Sl Albans, Pleas Coort •
$1,8l2,&lt;m ·&lt;400 days) , baae bid,
Filliig fm- ·dlvom&gt; were A.llM .·
$37,600 (31 days), alternate 1, Rutll Cundiff,. Rt. 1, MlcldlepoJ\
$70,300 ·(31 days), alternste 2, no against Greg.Kelth Cundiff, Rl J.;
change, alternste 3, and t82,500 (31 Mlltliepolt and KeWe Dawn Vlt!'
days ), alternste 4; John CooleY, - rllng, a minor by Mary Jane HeadGahanna, Ohio, $1,588,015 (Dl ley her mother and next
1·
days), base bid, $35,tnl (31 days), ~Plains, against Gary~ ·
alternate 1, $48,tnl (31 days), alter· VIerling, Tuppers Plains. ·
,:
Flllngfordlssolutlon~~
nate 2, $5,&lt;XXI (no days) , alternate a,
and $'18,&lt;XXI (:.I days), alternate 4; were Terry lee ,McGuire, VInton':..
Karr Construction, Chester, Ohio, and Debbie Lynn McGuire, Vinton'·
$1,493,&lt;XXI (365 days), bue · bid, andCathyAnnSwartz,Middieport,'
$34,965 (:.! days), alternate 1, and Jerry David Swartz,
$75,&lt;XXI (:.I days), aitel118te 2, ·no Middleport.
·-

.•

be virtually assured because of the
administration's opj)06itlon to federal financing of local Pliblle works
jobs programs.
The bill was pas sect after an unusually soUc:l Democratic majonty rejected a $15 billion Republican
verslon~the planona243-152vote.
. Majority Leader .Jim Wright, DTexas, .who led the DemocratiC
puSh for the bill all week, acknowlEdged It was . not meant to end the
natiOn's 9.8 percent unemployment
rate.
· The measure is ;t"a tourniquet to
staunch the hemon11age by wblch
thiS ·ecoiiOill¥ Is bleeding ... ,"
Wright. said. -· '
Wright said the bill would put people to wqrk • ret~alrlng roads,
· bridges, and other publiC facWttes.
Republican Leeder Robeit H. Ml· .
chel rlllllnol$ dea1ed the bill.
"It will dl!celve, 'defleCt and de~-

fang a lot of unsuspecting unem·
ployed working Amer icans who
want their congressman to do
something about their plight and
they don't care what," Michel said.
Michel also said the Democratic
effort was an attempt to break "two
years of economic sobriety" and
"go on a blnge agaln,drlnklngfrom
the same old bottle of economic
moonslllne labeled 'Old Budget
Buster.'''

Republican Whip Trent i.ott of
MISsissippi dubbed tile measure "a
billion-dollar ballot box haDout
bill," adding that · Democrats
brought up the .. slxlrt-term, .c!ead·
end jobs bill to buy their own reelectiOn."

..

.Democrats, meanwhUe, Insisted

' was better than no action
their bDI
at all.

· ·

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