<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14369" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/14369?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T21:40:34+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="45476">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/891e4e5a42da154c09dc525079c9b326.pdf</src>
      <authentication>67d0b6977cce9646ffb60abbfd7ed378</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44869">
                  <text>'I

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

I Meigs County happenings... l
Emergency runs

..

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

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

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

Probe accidents

Board to meet

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

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

,·

Special meeting

Church celebrates
Heri~·age Sunday.:

Page 3

Page 5

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

Veterans Memorial

Announce revival

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

COl"*'""'

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

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

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

'

.

DINNER .SERVED

6:00-S:30

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

Boosters .plan meel

By 'lbe .411001

__

~

THE LaSALLE

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

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

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

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

,.I size&gt; s-M·L.

OelivetY) ·

·Mictde!Jort OH.

an('~ departed

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

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

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

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

are

~

HEAVY DUTY

.,

·.

.

#26£61801 .

· s~·
·nnn=~
~:"' : tteny Duty . •
'

''24C)DO '

.

.

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

··

.

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

Golf artist. visits. JayMar Course

the left side of the road, hit an en-

5 Water temperature
I
. . '

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

!PresS

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

6 Cycle .·
5·Water LeVels .

.

t

tol'QI!I evacilated the port

KENMORE .
.WASHER

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

ter bulldlng.

Israeli forces· leave Beirut

ON KENMORE LARGE CAPACITY LAUNDRY PAIR

UVE ENTERTAINMENT
IN THE LOUNGE NIGHTLY

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

do, " Aspln said.

Court news .

SAVE $20000

NEW MENU ITEMS

Ph. 992-9917

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

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

·(In Stock and

LUNCH SERVED
11:30-2:00
DAILY SPECIALS

~

leroy Donohew

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

THE LaSALLE

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

Harvester will keep Ohio plant ope~

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

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

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

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

~....

Question mental health expenses .

Two injured in Meigs auto accident

By Tbe Assoclaled Press

Page 2

Page 8

•

enttne

ideas .to Gallia board

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

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

Extended forecast

Rain continues around Ohio

Property transfers

S~em committee gives

,.

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

a1 y

Letters to editor

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

. .

••

•

e

Veteraos MemorlalllollpUal

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

For 8 a.m. EDT
28

13'7 N. Second Ave.

Cardinals clinch .
NL -Easi pennant

•

HOURS: '
MOll.•Tu...·Wtds.·Frl. 9 to~

Thura.9tol2 '
Sat. 9.to2

I

J.

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

1

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

• ~ Courle, Anderosn

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

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

aDt While

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

ELBERFELD$ .IN

·-····-.

"· .

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

.

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

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

Athens firm prepares
for .Middleport project
By BOB HOEFUCH

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

�'

Commentary
Il l t HUrl ... I tt •o·l

J• .. nu·ru\ . • '"'"
i i4·!1!Jt·l 156
1•1 \01 1· 11 l'fiiiiFI \. TF HESTm 111 1- \U.:H;:o..-.\ 1\ SO\ \HI· I

RORFRT 1.. WINGfTI'
ROR HIIEFI.IfH
f ot ' lll •ral

\i:lll ii J,! t•r

II ALE RIITHGER. JR.
'.:o • ~o~ ~

f.:thlnr

I \II· 'IIH· B ul I'll. · \ '~"• · mkd l'n · ~ ' · lnhttN I llutl~ l'n·,1o ·"'' '" •al tull a tul tht·

lt tu·r +• ·' " ' ' ' " ' f+iljot'r l'uhlt , lwrs J\ ~,... ,. · iut inn.

n

1-li :-. I WI 11'1'\!111\ an· \olt ·h·umt•d . Tht' \ ' huulcl lll' It·~:- Ihan :lOCI ~o~unl :- lum: .\I I
: t i l' .. ul tjt•t·l tu t•dtiii H! .anti mus t IM· .. i ~itt •tl ~tlh nun tt•. :ullin ·"~ and tt·h·ph .. m·
+tun +iwr \ .. u n~&gt; i j.: tk• tllo• lh • r ' "'ill tw puhli l'&gt; ht•cl. l .t·lh•r.. sh,.utrl ~ - 111 J:m o~ ltu ~ •• ·· :+tltln·' "it+c

II
ld h·r'

" ' "' ' '· IIIII I"T"II Ilt l ilit·1&lt;.

Letters to editor
Neglect continues
I have jusl driven up Will's Hill
Road 1otherwise known as Golf
Course Hill - Sali~bury Township
204) where I live, and I became so
Infuriated that J had to write this
letter.
It seems that· just about any time
our road receives any maintenance, It Is only after we residents
have either written to the editor of
the newspaper or circulated pet!·
lions complaining about its depiora-"
ble condition. .
Considering the traffic on this
road includes patrons of the Jaymar Golf Club, delivery truck drivers, the mailman, and the school
bus driver, as well as the residents.
It Is probably the most traveled
township road In the county.

I have driven on many other
townships' roads where there re
only one or two houses, and these
roads are being maintained very
well.
we much too frequently must
buy new shock absorbers, receive
car alignments, and other various
vehicle repairs due to lhe road's
bumps, holes, and washed -out
ditches . There Is also very little
space for passing. One car must
completely slop In order for the
other to pass.
There is no need for lhls neglect
to continue. We are tired of being
Ignored' - Becky Cotterill, 33440
Will's Hill Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

Unfair to taxpayers
It Is unfair for theworklno:Amerlcan to have lo support families that
continue to have children after they
go on we if are.
In 1979 there were an estimated
597,1m out-of-wedlock babies born
In America. Illegitimacy has increased 50 percent In the lasl decade, a c cording t o
recently -rel e ased government
figures.
At least one out of every six
American Infants is born to an unwed mother. This social and moral
tragedy strains both credulity and
faith In a betler future.
The Immediate consequences of
teenage pregnancies are severe
enough. A pregnant teenager Is
more likely to drop out of school
and have subsequent births soon.
Unwed dropout mol hers are much
more likely lo go on welfare. Government figures show that at any
given point , 60 percent of children
born out-of-wedlock to teens rl'celve welfare.
More discouraging are projections that predict those same children will be lifetime recipients of
welfare of one sort or another and
thai they In turn will more likely
produce children out -of-wedlock. It
is a cycle of dependency that grows
with each generation.
I feel that the majorily of these
children grow up unloved, unwarlted. fatherless. crlmlnailzed by
the way they are forced to live and
bec¢me one of the major sources of
crime In our country .
A:ractor contribuling to the projections Is the marked trend among
today's teenagers to keep their
children and forego adoption. And
although many sociologists prefer
to Ignore reality, a motivating factor behind the rejection of adoption
Is the accessibility lo welfare.
A recent study of pregnant teenagers who planned to keep their
babies disclosed that many of the
girls viewed wellare as a'means of
becoming independent of their parents. It promised them escape from
an unsatisfactory home life. Ironically, that kind of "Independence"
all too often leads to dead-end dependence on the public dole.
Somewhere along the Jlne, society and Its public agencies will
have to squrely confront llleglti·
macy and Its ripple of debilitating
results. A good way to sliJrl would
be a critical examination of a welfare system that by Its very nature
lures thoughtless women Into personal tragedy.
WhY Is it that welfare (which Includes lood stamps and medicaid)

Page

Tue•day, SeptemiM. 2e, 1982

"

2~The Daily Sentinel

Cardinals clinch.east
race .w ith 4-2 victory

Middlepolf, Ohio
Tu.sday, Sep~lber 28,1982 •

The upset In New York concentrates the mind on several thing:;.
For many years, it was popularly
supposed that the Jewish vote, although only one-half the Protestant
vote and one-third the CathOlic
vote, dominated New York polllics.
This tor two reasons, the first that
Jewish voters tend to treat primarIes like holy days- thus giving nonJewish voters a good civics lesson
In primary voting. The second beIng that Jewish voters have banded
together In order to vote, as a rule,
for the liberal candidate. Of whatever party. It is almost impossible
to remember New York without
Sen. Herbert Lehman or Sen. Jacob
Javlls, respectively liberal
members of the Democralic and
Republican parties.
And then, In New York, there Is
The New York Times, lord of all it
surveys. Its Influence has been
huge, not only In respect of whom it
endorses: there are actually people
around who are guided by Ihe edit!·
ral policy of The New York Times,
which Is a major reason why we
live In a tonnented world. But an
endorsement by The New' York
Times flushes out money, and money is Important, though by no
means decisive In politics.
Well, this time around, The New
York Times came out tor Edward
Koch tor Democratic candidate tor
governor and Paul Cumurfor Republican candidate, whereupon the
voters registered their preference
for Mario Cuomo for Democratic
candidate and Lewis Lehrman for
Republican candidate.
Now: since 1970, there have been
six statewise races In New York.
Mr. Robert Abrams, who is Jewish,
defeated a weak Jewish opponent.
But the other races were won, respectively, by James Buckley,
Hugh Carey, Patrtck Moynihan,
Edward Regan and Alfonse D' A·
mato. That would suggest a strong
Irish·Italian-Catholic vote In a state
which, as already recorded, has for
years been identified with Jewish
liberalism.

William F.

But look, because the plot of crime_distances him ffom what ·
thickens. Mario Cuomo, the.Italian those voters desire, namely a tough_
Catholic, is the lettwardmost of tbe anti-crime program. Gordon
candidates this time around. Ed Black, the Gannett 'pollster who
Koch Is considered a Democratic took all the honors by .calling the
moderate. Cuomo IS a fine human shots In .the prtmary, sees 40 perbeing who, however, appears to cent of the voters believing that J...e.
have forgotten wh.~t It Is that Is lm· wls Lehrman would do something ·
portant In New York these days convincing about crime&gt; only 26
(and In most qther states of the un- percent believing th11t Cuomo
Ion) - namely, crime and would do somethlnt~,
•
unemployment.
And there Is the question of ecoMarlo Cuomo's obdurate opposi- nomic growt,h, with which Lehtion to the death penalty serves as a rman, a conservative, Is so
symbol of, well, more of the same. prominently Identified .. Here alIt Is not necessary to develop the most half again as many voters beayatollah's appetite for the death lieve that Lehrman, rather than
penalty In order to strike out con- Cuomo, would do something to In·
vlncihgly against crime. But voters · vlgonite New York's jaded
tend, almost necessarUy, to accept economy,
•
'
signals. And Cuomo's refusal to
The flgu res, In other words, are
side with the overwhelming major- there. They add up to the cltizl'ns of
Ity of New Yorkers who believe In New_ York desiring a candidate
the death sentence tor certain kinds whose specifications are those of

pays for limitless children? Whereas the maximum that Social Security pays for Is a family of three,
a mother and two children.
I feel that the famUies who want
children and who will love and rear
them properly and who can finanCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Only voted each time they had the
cially support them should be the
'
ones to raise the future generation eight of the 99 members In the Ohio opportunity.
Those In the 100 percent club are
of this country, This would elimi- House have managed to roll up pernate to a great extent the erosion of fect voting records, but a handfUl of Democratic f!.eps. Dean Conley, Columbus; Robert Nettle, Barberton;
our financial base and family others can boast of coming close.
And all but 20 members of the Helen Rankin, Cincinnati; Thomas
breakdoWn. I offer the following
amendment to the National Wel- lower chamber have a voting per- Sawyer, Akron; Ronald Suster,
Euclid; and Republican Reps. Rofare Law: "No additional aid will centage 9f al least !ll percent or
bert Brown, ,Perrysburg; David
be allocated for fuljlre children of a better.
Such figures are not necessarlly a
Kanno!, Toledo, and Robert Ney,
woman or family ar'feady receiving
aid for families with dependent reflection of attendance and do not
Bellaire.
reflect a representative's contrtbuchildren."
Another 14 legislators have
Please write your congressmen tlons In committee work.
missed
only a fraction of the roll
But It Is the time of year when
and senators and ask them to supcalls,
scoring
In lhe 99 percent
port the above Amendment to the those records take on an added imNational Welfare Law, Title IV of portance for Incumbents and politi- bracket.
Democrats In that category are
the Social Security Act, Aid for De- cal opponents on the outside
Reps.
Eugene Branstool, Utica:
pendent Children, which Is now In searching for ammunition In their
David
Hartley,
Springfield; Kevin
battles to unseat them.
the Senate Finance Committee.
Kapel,
Chesterland:
Harry Malott,
A review of records based on 859
It becomes the responsibility of
Mt.
Orab;
Ray
Miller.
Columbus;
roll
calls
through
June
16
shows
five
lhis woman or family to cooperate
Quilter,
Toledo:
Myri ShoBarney
with. the governmental agencies to Democrats and three Republlca~s
avoid having more children. If they
have more children, let them support these children or place them
for adoption. Why should we pay
these people for making the same
mistakes over and over again?
These payments Include: Welfare,
Free Good Stamps and Medicaid.
Of all the recent strikes that have football on Sunday."
Then they can go on H.U,D. (Free affeCted Americans, none has been
"They can't this week. There Is ·
Renl and Utility Allowance). Then as devastating as the NFL football nobody to play."
to Project SAFE (additional utllity players' action against the owner's.
"It's In the Constitution. They
allowance). Then to their Township
While we have read about the fi- have to give us loot ball on Sundays,
Trustee for free school clothes, and
nancial losses to the players and and Monday and Thursday nights."
lhen to their school for tree school owners, the toll In human tragedy
"Don't get made at me. There Is
lunches. Remember these welfare amongst lhe fans Is far greater nobody to play."
children will become tutur!' voters. than anyone lmagined.
"But In your heart you were hopWhat do you think about a three
Here Is just one of the scenes that Ing something like lhl.s would
year delay before Welfare pay- was played outlast Sunday In a suD- happen. You always resented me
ments be made to any mothers hav- urban Washington home.
watching football."
Ing children out-of-wedlock? If the
"I never resented it. I knew what
Sam Spllsky found himself sitting
working American can manage to
In front of his 25-lnch TV set, a six the game meant to you. It was your
cnflne the number of children to the pack by his side, a bag of potato life."
sizl' of Income, so can those on Wel- chips In front of him.
"But what am I going to do?"
fare. If Iheir Incentive to have more
"Why don't you rake the leaves
His wife said, "What are you gochildren Is taken away.
or wash the car or take a walk?''
Ing to do, Sam?''
It Is about time this country be"I C8J!'I do that. It's ,SI,lnday. ·
"Sam, there IS no - Redsklnscame practical instead of Idealistic
Cardinals' game. The players are · You're supposed to get four football
about human rights. This I~ neces- on strike."
games on Sunday," Sam said,
sary if the country Is to survive.
"'You're just saying thai because twisting the TV dials madly.
Rome fell because such problehls
"Maybe we could have sOme
you don't want me to watch
were Ignored. Giving money for dofriends over," Sam's wife said
television."
Ing nothing Is disastrous.
nervously.
'
.
"It's In all the papers, Sam."
I would appreciate very much
"I don't want to see any~. I
Sam looked up at his wife. "But
having a response to this Issue. I
it's Sunday. They always give us
find It more dt1tlcul1 each year to
rationalize the Idealistic "solutions" of Congress .. - The Council
for Welfare Ref6nn James E .
Wiseman, D.C., P.O. Box 431,
Greenfield, Indiana 46140.

Buckley Jr. ·':

Lewis Lehrman:
But what about the ethnic business? Will the Italians and the Irish,
bj!llevlng as strongly as IIley do on
the two Issues, vote tor the candl· ·
dates whose views they share, even
though he's Jewish? Or wUI they
vote forM~ Cuomo·because he Is
an Italian Catholic? '
The point about I.ehrman, who
survives ·trlumpltantly a nasty
campaign by Paul Curran, Is that
he Is a very unusual man. It Is said
about him that he is Inexperienced.
Another way of looking at It Is that
during the 00 years since graduatIng from college, he devoted him·
self not to· public office, but to
developing a business-In which he
was brUllantly successful, permitting him to accumulate millions of
dollars which now he puts Into his
reading and
campaign. And
thinking.

By .o\t!!JOclaie11Press
And who, pray tell,

"We've jusl won the Kentucky
Derby, and now there's two big ra-

1

Meet Southern~s Tornadoes

"We did have our late In our hands
three or four weeks ago and that's
what makes this period of frustration possible."
First baseman Pete Rose added,
"You can say we choked but I
wouldn't say that. Anytime you go In
a slump people say you're tight. I'm
not tight. It just wasn't much fw1
because we were losing."

Meta 4, Pirate!! 1
Rookie Scott Holman, 2-1, fired a
seven-hitter and drove In a run with
a fifth-Inning single to lead the Mets
over the Pirates.
Before the game, the Mets honored retiring Pirates slugger Willie StargeU. And later, Holman
ended the game by striking out Stargell with two men on base In the
ninth.
"My heart was pumping when I
had to lace Stargell In that situation," said Holman. "I was hoping to
get him to ground out. I was even
happier to strikeout one of the greatest players In baseball."
ABtros 7,8an Diego S

Alan Ashby, the AStros' switch·
hitting catCher, belted homers from
each side of the plate to give reliever
Vern Ruhle, 9-13, thevictery.
"I know this Is theflrsttime," said
Ashby, who hit a solo homer from
the left side and a three-run shot
from the right. "The only other time
I've ever hit two In a game came
here In San Diego the las I time we
were In, and they both were hit
lefty."
Jose Cruz collected three hits and
scored twice for Houston.

WENDELL ClARK
125 pound
Freshman end

CHAD ROBERTS

ZlO pound
Sophomore tackle

KEITII WIDTE

%10 pound
Freshman tackle

Hapless Reds whip Dodgers
LOS ANGELES (AP)- The Cincinnati Reds, who had the best record In baseball last year, are
CUJTently on the verge Of Setting a
club standard for futility. However,
they certainly didn't play the 93game losers that they are In the
opener of a two-game series against
the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Hard-throwing right-hander Mario Soto limited the Dodgers to five
hits and the Redscollectedl2hitsoff
four Los Angeles pitchers Monday
nlghlina&amp;-1Cinclnnatl victory over
the defending world champions.
The setback was the sixth In a row
for the Dodgers, equalling their
longest losing streak of the season,
and II dropped them Into a tie for
first place In the National League
West with the Atlanta Braves, who
blanked San Francisco 7-0 Monday
night.
Despite losing, the Giants remained just one game off the pace In

got to start winning."
Solo walked three and struck out
six Monday night. His six strtkeouts
gave him 265 for the season, tying
the Cincinnati club record established by Jim Maloney In 1962.
The Dodgers got their only run In
lhe second Inning on a double by
Steve Garvey and a run-scoring single by Mike Sciascia. The Reds tied
it In the third on a double by Alex
Trevino, a sacrifice by Solo and an
Infield out by Gary Redus.
The Reds opened the fourth Inning
with five consecutive singles off
loser Jerry Reuss, 17-11. None of
them were hit hard, but they were
enough to put the Reds on top to stay.
Johnny Bench, Cesar Cedeno,
Dan Driessen. Ron Oester and 'f\'evlno came through with the hits, the
final one chasing Reuss . Redus 11$1 a
sacrifice fly off r eliever Joe BEck·
with later In the Inning tocompletea
four-run rally .

the torrid NL West race. All three
contenders have six games left to
play.
Meanwhile, Cincinnati will finish
last In the division no matter what
happens the rest of the way. The
Reds, who were 6642 during the
strike-Interrupted 198lseason, have
the worst record In baseball this
year, 58-!11.
No team In the 1()7.year history of
the Reds' franchise has lost 100
games In a season. But this team
can only avoid such a fate by winning five of Its last six games.
The first ofthoseslx Is against the
Dodgers tonight. Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda expressed the
feeling after Monday night's game
that his team had to snap out of its
slump Immediately.
"''m just hoping we can pull
something out of the hat , get
started," he said quietly. "We've

Meigs reserves stop Wellston, 8-0
MIDDLEPORT - Sophomore
Jackie Welker's 47yardTD run and
a tenacious Meigs defense guided
the Little Marauders to an 8-1J rainsoaked reserve win over Wellston
here Monday evening.
Welker sprinted around his tefl
end on a mis-directed play with 28
seconds left In the first hall for Ihe
Meigs score. Welker also tallied the
extras on the same type of play.
Coach Larry Grimes' Little Ma-

Some House members have perfect record~
emaker.· Bourneville; and Mike
Stlnziano, Columbus.
Republicans voting on at least 99
percent of the roll calls are Ronald
Amstutz, Wooster; William Batchelder, Medina; JoAnn Davidson,
Reynoldsburg; · Jeffrey Dean,
Solon; Chllrles Earl, Ottawa; and
John O'Brien, Cincinnati.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, said election to
the House carries with II a responsl·
blllty to vote when the oppoi11.!nlty
arises.

"I think that all of us, Democrats
and Republicans, have a responsibllh"j' ;o the people. I think every
effort should be made heretovoteon
ali issues," Riffe said. ·
The record for "Mr. Speaker," as
Riffe Is Identified on the electronic

vote board In the Housechamber, is
96.7 percent. But he pointed ouUbat
does not mean he wasn't present.
"I do not vote on ins'uran'l bills,"
said Riffe, who Is co-owner o~ an
Insurance agency In Scioto OlUnty,
"If I .was voting on Insurance bills
my record would be 100 percent.''

rauders
defense
to
minus eight
yardsheld
totalWellston
offense on
the slippery turf. Meigs complied
149 total yards, ali on the ground.
Neither team completed a pass,
Wellston In nine tries and Meigs in
two.
Sophomore Mark "Hambone"
Hammond was all over the field
defensively and came up with an
Interception. Sophomore Scott
Gheen also came up with an
Interception.
A few of Meigs standouts in-

House Minority Leader Corwin
M. Nixon, R-Lebanon, voted on m
of the 859. roll calls for a 89.7
percentage.
.
Rep. ThomasM.BeliofCleveland
had t_!1e worst voting record among
Democrats at 44.1. percent. Bell,
beset by a series of problems during
the session, Is not seeking reelection.
In the Republican caucus,. Rep.
Michi!E'i A. Fox, R-Hamliton, was
lowest with a 76.4 percentage.

CLINCHED TITLE - Members &lt;•f the St. Louis
Cardinals emply the dugout and nash to the mound

The NFL tragedy~-------A~r--:-t,B_uc_hwa_ld
want lo see football . The Redsklns
are on a streak. We're 2-and.Onow .
wecouldgoailthewaytotheSuper
Bowl."
'
"Sam, would you like to see a

Sam's wife nuzzled up to him.
"We could malfe love."
"Are you crazy? · Nobody In
America makes love on Monday
night."
movie?"
,
"Sam, we 've never talked this
"I'm going to s_tay right here.
long before on Sunday afternoon, "
Maybe they'll settle the strtke bebut since we are, lthink I should tell
fore kickoff time."
you tliat there is more to manied
"They won't have time to put on life than watching pro football .
games."
, .
their unifonns." ·
,,._;
' .,
"So they can play In their street
"The hell you say."
clothes. We used to do It as kids." ·
"I'm serious, Sarrj. ,Every fall
· "Please, Sam, you've got to face I'm lonely and l.'teej I've lost'.you. ·, . 1
reality. There aren't going to be This IS a good tesfofourmarrlage. • , ,
any games this week. By don't you U you can get thrqugh this week ,,, ,
go out and play touch football with without having watched a football .
the chlldren?"
game, It means that we have some'
"They don't kno_w the plays. How thll!g gblilg." .
"Like what.?"
. • '&lt;
can you play football without a ·
game plan?" _,
, , ·~ . "I~ wDllnd!cate I meahmore to
"I wish I coukl .do something f!?r :' you than Howard CoSeli." .
you. Tomorrow you'll fool better."
''Of course you mean more t&amp; me· •:.,
"How can I feel better' ·tomof,
·
-than
Howard Casell..But don't ask
. ::.
'
,t
•
row? Thete won't be.any I\10nday me to choose between you and , ·. ·
Night Football. What a!" I going1o . • fl'ank Gifford."
..
- '

.

dO?!'

,.,

\
··~·

following their H win over the Expos In Montreal
Monday night clinching the NL east title. ( AP
Laserphoto).

..

,;~

...

'

' '

•1,.('&gt;1

..

,J,~

''.' '

..Ill

"

..,.'
·I

..-..

'""

1 ...."!.

I

•1/.~i'
-

·~'CO"'

OAKLAND (AP) -Oakland A's
Manager Billy Martin says he's
been approached by~ New York
Yankees and the Cleveland Indians
about managing those teams, but
isn't looking for a way out of his job
with the fifth-place A's.
"I'm not soliciting jobs. 1 have
three more years on my contract
wlth Oakland," Martin said Mondaynlghtashlsteam'srecordfellto
66-!llwlthalossln Texas.
"There are only two clubs that
have called, New York l\fld Cleveland," Martin added. "Other than
that! have 110 comment."

roadtrlpthatalsowllltaketheA'sto

Kansas City, Martin said: "I want to
stay here. My home is here."
Martin, whose A'swon theAmerican League West last season, was
raised just north of Oakland, lnBerkeley. He reportedly IS receiving
more than $2Xl,(XX) a yei!I' under his
five-year contract with Oakland.
He said Oakland President Roy
Eisenhart gave Yankees owner
George Steinbrenner and Cleveland
president Gabe Paul permission to
c,talk to him about managing jobs.
Martln,54,managedtheYankees
during five seasons. He started In

eluded Kevin Meadows, Bobby
Hood. Malt Riffle and J ames

road losses. hosts the Athens Bll·
!pups next Monday a l Middleport.
stutl-dll'S

"Marauder Siril " was In Ihe air
at ole' Yellow Jackel fi eld as nearly
100 fans braved the steady downfall
Ia wilness a hand -smacking,
helmet-lapping enthusiastic Meigs
team and a loud cheerieadlng corps
that never once let the rain get the
belter of them.
Meigs, now 1-2 after two opening

~·pu.J1menl

M

w

"

-R
0
-R

,;
149

F'lr:-;t down&lt;&gt;

Yards rushing
Yards pa!&gt;!&gt; lng
Tol&lt;ll vard s

2

14~

Pas~

0·2·1l
16-7

0.~·2

0
b-.'IJ

-~ 11

F'umblrs- lost
Pu ms
PPnaltlf&gt;!o;
8y quw1f'l'!'(:
WPIIston

II II

M PI~'l'

f)

'

n
n

1-2
:t-.1\

()-()
0--1\

r-;:=======================:::;
NobodY can protect vour
AUIO ......,.., ... __,

Look to u110r quality Auto Insurance coverage, low

rates, attriiC!ive dlsc:ounts, and last, lair claims tlervice.
Call us today.

JEER~-~
.,.,.Auto
-

s.mo.

lnflul'8nt»

Open Daily 1 0-9; Sunday 1-6

c:::~~.-

Martin will ialk to Indians, Yanks

Today in.history
..

the Cards' 43-year old reUever.

are the St.

Louis Cardinals going to meet In the
National League playoffs? Don't ces togo."
ask.
While the race ended In the East,
While Whitey Herzog's Redbirds It reached fever pitch In the West.
"Everyllllng Is of bigger magnl·
nalleddo,Wn their firSt-ever NLEast
pennant Monday with a 4-2 victory tude right now," Nlekro saki after
ov€!' Montreal, the tight-as-a-drum blanking the Giants. "Every pl~h.
NL West got even tighter. Phil every strlkeout, every hit Is of
Niekro, 164, hurled a two-hitter as bigger magnitude."
the Atlanta Braves snapped San
"Pitching Is the key to any penFrancisco's five-game winning
streak with a 7.()victOry, while Cln· nant race," said Brave first baseclnnatl' s Mario ~to five-hit Los An· man Chris Chambliss, whose
geles &amp;-t That put the Braves and two-run d&lt;iuble toppeil ott alive-run
Dodgers - both with &amp;'&gt;-n records Atlanta fourth Inning. "He's
- Into a first-place tie, while the (Niekro) been pi~hlng great all
Giants trail by the co-leaders by one year but I've been here three years
and I've never seen him so good. His
game with six to go.
In other NL action, Chicago knuckleball can't be hit when he
topped Philadelphia !H, New York gets It !)Ver the plate. They just can't
beat Pittsburgh 4-1, and Houston de- hit it."
Cubs 8 Pblllles 1
feated San Diego 7-3.
Bill
Buckner's
RBI triple hlghMcGee's three-run, Inside-theUghted
a
four-run
Cub
third Inning.
park homer off Bill Gullickson, 12RandyMartz,ll-lO,scatteredseven
13, highilghted a four-run first
Inning. Iiave LaPoint, 9-3, was the hits before being relieved by Dick
Tldrow In the ninth, as the Phillles
winning pitcher.
"I thought we had a good chance were eliminated !rom the East race
to win It lnsprtngtralning, but then I with their loss and the Cards'
started towonderwhenwehitara8h victory.
"Sure, I'm disappointed," said
of injuries In May," saki Herzog,
Phlllles
Manager Pat Coi'rales. "I
who had won three Amerlcan .
League· West titles as manager of expected us to go Into the last week
the Kansas City Royals. "The first fighting for it (the division title),
one Is always the most exciting, but which w~didn 't do. II got away from
tomethey'reallgoodbecausethat's us."
"We weren't that great," said
what you're In this game for, to
third baseman Mike Schmidt. "We
win."
"This is Ukewlnnlngtheflrst leg of didn't have It together at any point.
the Trtple Crown," said Jim Kaat, Wewereiuckyenoughtohangclose.

" . -:.

Today 1s Tuesday, Sept 28, the27lstdayotl982. Thereare94d8.ys~ln
1
the year.
'.
Today's hlgllugbt In history:
·.
On Sept. 28, 1'181, Amerlt:an forces ~an the Revolutlonaty War siege of
British forces at Yorkto\Vn Heights In V!rg)nla.
,
'

The Daily Sentinel P,age 3
j

...

""11810~

New York, New York!

The Daily Sentinel

I' \T WIIIH:IIt:AIJ

-.

.....

The Saving Place'·'- - - - - ·

Steinbrenner fired Martin In July
1978, rehired him the next spring
and refired him In October 1979.
Martin has also managed Detroit
andTexas.forthreeyearseach,and
was In Minnesota for one season.
Clyde King has been managing
the sixth-place Yankees on an interim basis since replacing Gene Michael on Aug. 4. Michael had taken
overforBobLemononAprliZ7.
Bill Bergesch, the Yankees vice
president for baseball operations,
said King's status won't be dis·
cussed until the season ends, "but
that will be strictly up to Mr.

•K mart Firaarma and
Ammunition Policy
Fue~rms 11nd tmmunition .,, 1otd
'" 1tnc1 comphan01 •uth Fe•r•l .

SUfi 1nd loc.l law1 . All purdUM•
bl p ocked up i l\ IMfMM'I ,
P.., r cheMr of t~rearrrH mult bl •
, ..u:s.nt ot Sgt• m which firtllmt.

mutt

,,. sold.

::::::::::::::::-i

Before leaving Oakland tor the r-A_,u:.gus-'-1_1975_._rep_:_la_c_ln_g_B_ru_v_lr_do_n_._s_t_ein_br_enn_e_r...
"

Coach frred

THE -L IGH''TWEIGHT SAW

YPSD..ANTI,Mich. (AP)-Eastern Michigan_University on Monday fired Mike Stock as Its football
coach - two days aft€!' the Hurons ·
lost their 22nd consecutive game
and inherited the nation's longest · The Stlhls 'o32'AV was designed
for professionals, farmers,
.
· loslhg streak.
.
fo'festers,
contractors
Stock, 42, was relieved of his footand anyone who
ball coaching responsibilities llli4l
-needs heavy-duly. ' .
given a lklay vacation with pay
lightweight chain
. !rom the university. He Will be Of·
s,JW. So, If your
.
·
d
fl!!'ed another posltloo with the t.inJ,. woodcutting needs are more than average.r. you nee more
verslty Nov.1, the SchOol saki In a
than the average chain saw. Come try the ::;tlhl 032AV.
., .
'
statement.
· Bob Ul?olnte, 36. a member cl.
;
StllCk's original staff for the Mid- ·
American Conference team, was
Pomeroy'
606
E:
.
named as Interim coach.
,FRONT END•AUONMENT MOST CARS-BRAKE SERVICE
'"'befacttbatEMUis notwlnnlng
today Is not due In any lack cl. effort
on his (Stock's~ part," said John
Fountain, acting vb! pn!aldent cl.
university lelatloos, said In a

OESIGNED FOR
THE HEA IIYWEIGHTS

ShOtsnell ret&gt;ole IOmot e o
to 5 bOI(es per h o use hold

20gauge
K mart·
Sale Price
Less Factory
Rebate

a

oo

Your Net
Cost. per Box

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

992-2094

Main

,uaterrient

.

.

SMALL GAME LOADS

\

3.97
-1.00

12, 16 gauge

4.47
-1.00

2.97 3.47

Game Load Shotshells • For Small Game And Practice
Low brass shells available in 12. 16 and 20 gauge; 6. 7'12
and 8 shOt. Color-coded by gauge. 25 rounds per box . ·

1BS Upp('r Rivet ~~oad

Giillipolis

'

'

, '1,-

I

,.

'

·'

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

-

I

�Tuaaday, SeptM1bar 28,1982

strike continues,
games not called yet
NEW YORK (AP ) -

The Na-

tiOnal Football League piayers
strike moved Into Its second week

CAUGIIT STEALING AT THIRD - Kansas
City Royals' George Brett slides Into the outstretched
glove of CaiHomla Angels' third baseman Doug De

Clnces (11) whDe lrylng 10 84eal third In the lounh
Inning of Monday night's game In Kansas City. Brett
was thrown out on the play by CaiHornla catcher Bob '
Boone. (AP La8erphoto).

Angels closer to clinching pennant
By A!I!IOCialed Press
The California Angels know the
:sweet taste of success. And tonight,
:they might sip champagne.
• "It's not over yet, but It's just
:about a situation where we know
:what's going to happen," said Call·
·fomla' s Don Baylor after hls run.scorlng single In the seventh Inning
'Monday night sparked a 3-2 victory
over second-place Kansas City that
:reduced the Angels' maglc number
:to just two In the American League
:West.
: California, whlch,haswon eightof
Its last 10 games, now leads Kansas
City by 4'h games and can wrap up
:the division by beating the Royals
either tonight 0 r Wednesday night.
:Kansas 'City has dropped 10 of Its
last 11.
· In othe~ AL games, New York
routed Boston 10-3, Texas downed
Oakland 4-1, an&lt;\ Seattle and Chi·
cago split a twl-nightdoubleheader,
Seattle winning the opener 8-4 and
the White Sox laking the nightcap

iH
: Baylor's one-out single - hls AL·
le:.ding 21st game-winning hit - follQWed an Intentional walk to Doug
DeCinces.
· "They put me on the spot from
time to time, and I have to come
tl)rough," he said. "It' s a challenge,
there's no doubt about that. "

.· Tommy John, 14-12, scattered lO

hits over eight Innings while beating
l&lt;ansas City for the fourth time thls
stason and running hls career record to 14-4 against the Royals.
: "To beat Kansas City in Its own

ballpark and hold them to two runs,
I feel I pitched a pretty good game,••
he said. "We've got to win one more
game. I hope we do It tomorrow
night, but If not. we'vegot the games
In LA."
John left In the ninth inning after
walkfng pinch-hitler Ron Johnson.
Luis Sanchez came In for hls fourth
save as the Angels, who won the AL
Wes t in 1979, moved closer to a second division title.
Kansas City had taken a 2-0 lead
on U.L. Washlngton'ssolo horner In
the first Inning and Willie Aikens'
run-scoring single In the fourth.

today with only the technicality of a
formal announcement keeping next
weekend's 14 games allve.
NegotlatorsfortheNFLManagernent CouncU and the Players Association announced Monday that
theywlllmeetfnWashlngtonThursday, virt11ally guaranteeing that the
entlreleagueschedulewlll be called
off for the second straight WEek.
In a television appearance Sunday, NFL Commlssklner Pete Rozelle said that unless agreement Is
reached by Thursday, there CIN!d·
be no games next weekend.
Jim Miller, a Management Colinen spokesman, said Monday he assumes the games will be called art.
Given the distance between the two
sides, It appears unlikely that even
around-the-clock talks stanlng now
could save next weekend's games.
A second Sunday without NFL
games would extract additional fl.
nancial costs. Unofficial estlmates
put the price tag on the first week of
the strike at nearly $70 mW!on.

Inning, capped by Rick Cerone's
three-run homer. Jerry Mumphrey
added a horner and two singles In
drtvlng In two morn runs.
Dave Rlghettl,11-9, pltched seven
Innings for New York.
Boston hit Into three double plays ,
and has now grounded Into 169 twln·
ktnlngs this season, one short of the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -This is
American League record set by the a key week for Cleveland St.Joseph,
Philadelphia Athletics in 1900.
Akron St.Vfncent·St.Mary, CfnclnRangers 4, A's I
nati Summit Crontry Day and Ha·
Rookle Mike Smithson pitched a milton New Miami In The
four-hitter for Texas. Smithson, 3-4, Associated Press' state prep foottook a one-hit shutout Into ihe eighth
ball ratings.
before Mike Davts' double drove In
St.Joseph, ranked fourth In Class
Oakland's run.
AAA, must play at St. VincentRick Langford, 11-lS,also pltched St.Mary Frtday night. The Akron
California, held hitless through
the first four Innings, tied It In the a complete game In taking the loss.
school ranks No. lin Qass AA for
Rookie catcher Bobby Johnson the second straight week. ,
fifth on Juan Benlquez' double, a
two-base throwing error by Kansas drove In three Texas runs with a
Summit Country Day, second
City third baseman George Brett two-run single and an RBI double.
ranked-In Class Abehind new leader
Mariners S.I, Rangers 4-4
that allowed Tim Foil to reach seNewark CathoUc, fa&lt;;_e5 a trip Frl·
Gaylord Perry, making hls first day night to Hamilton New Miami,
cond and Brtan Downing's RBI
start since serving a 10-day suspen- the state's fourthratedsmallschool
single.
"That was a tough one. They have sion lor throwing an illegal pitch, po~ .
all been tough lately," said Kansas notched his 3l7th career vtctory as
Even Cincinnati Moeller, the
City Manager Dick Howser. "We Seattle won the opener and eliml· winner of the last three Class AAA
played hard ag~ tonight, but just nated Chicago from AL West pen- polls and the statewide leader again
nant contention.
didn't get the job done. "
this week, could be awaiting an amPerry Is now 10-12 thls season. bush. The Crusaders risk their four"If I had to put my finger on one
key game, It would've been last Loser Jerry Koosman, 11·7, had his game winning streak against old
Wednesday in California," he said, five-~ winning streak broken.
rival, Cincinnati Elder, stlnglng
In the second game, Steve Kemp . froma25-0routatCantonMcKinley
referring to Kansas City's S-5loss to
the Angels, then the Royals' seventh belted a three-run homer while last week.
three Chicago pitchers held Texas
straight setback.
Said DeCinces: "Their backs are to six hits.
Jim Kern, 2-1, making his first
against the wall. If we win one of the
start
of the season, allowed lour hits
nexi two, It's over. I'm not taking
In
61-Jinnlngll.
Sparky Lyle permitanything away from them. We still
By 'lbe Aa!oclaled PreJs
ted
two
hits
In
1 2-3 Innings while
have to dolt:"
The
Pltt Panthers, bounced from
Salome
Barojas
finished
up
for
hls
Yankees lO, Red Sox 3
the
top
spot earlier thls seassbndes19th
save.
New York got ~lx runs In the first
plte an unbeaten record, have
climbed from third place to second
In The AssoCiated l'resscoilegefootball poll, seven points behind topranked Washington.
.
Penn State made the most dramatic move, jurnplngfromelghthto
third In Monday's poll after a 'J:/-24
victory
Saturday over 'NebraSka.
Monday '~ G~
Sl . Loul! 4. Montn'al 2
That dropped theCornhuskersfrom
N('\1,' York -1. Pll tsbunth 1
{lllr&lt;lJ(O K. Ptlllad£&gt;1phla 1
CLEVELAND (AP) -Cleveland second to eighth In the poll.
flnrlnnatl fi, l..os Afijl{'l~ I
Three teams - Boston College,
Indians center fielder Rick ManHouslon i. San Olf'!ro .1
Allanru 7. San Franctsro n
ning says he's entering the free Minnesota and Auburn- made the
1\w!lcla y'" Gamll"'
agent market because he wants to Top 'I\venty for the first time thls
St . l..oul!'i 1 F'oi'M'h 1-1·91 a l Montff'al
season, whlleOhloState,Illfnolsand
1H~&lt;'ni JH. t
win.
.
l'l rt sbu rJlh tCaf'ld('lur·]a
at NN'
Mlchlgan dropped out.
havenoldeawhatlamworthor
"I
YOI'k rL.\'IK'h ~· 71. 1n 1
Washington, following Its 37-21
Ch lrll):!l'l
Olrd ~ \ :!1 ;tl Phll;•drl]&gt;hlii
where I· Uplay next year,' •Manning
i('hrls tl'n"'m JoL Uh . 1n 1
victory over Oregon, received 25 of
"You
better
belleve
l'm
going
said.
ll ou~ l on 1Krwpp•••· :~ 1 .11 al San Dlf'lil:O
1l.o lt. u· H ·91 , mt
through the free agent draft and see 59 first-place votes and 1,114 of a
('lnctnmttl tPnsiOI'f' H-lth a t Los 1\nl!:l'lf'S
possible 1.100 points tram a nationwho
takes me.
I Wf'lr h
I I'l l
Atlanta 1Pf'l'f"J 2.-1 m· M ahll'r ~ !0 1 at
" If I leave Cleveland,lt will be for . wide panel of sports writers and
~• n Frandl'('(l d.a~ k~· 12·11 1, 1n1
a winner. I'm not out to leave Cleve- sportscasters. Pitt, a :D-3 winner
Wf'dnntdll)''ll GamN
C'hiC'aRO at Nl'w York, m l
land at all costs because my home Is over Illfnols, received 19 first-place
Montt'l'a l at Ptllladf:&gt;lphla. rnr
here and I feel comfortable with the ballots and 1,107 points.
St. Loul~o~ a l P1tl ~b\lrliih . 1nt
Last week, wlth51ivotersrespond·
{']ll('lnnatl a t Sa n Difl;ro. m t
Indians," said Manning, the club's
Hnuston Ill Sa n Franrl!it'O. tnl
ing, Washington led Nebraska 1,00
senlor
member:
·
AII:J nta at l.OI!I 1\ ~k-s . rnr
But the center fielder says he's points to 1,011, with Pitt at !HI.
Transactions
Seven first-place Votes went to
been frustrated with Cleveland,
Penn
State, which scored with four
partly
because
of
a
high
player
turMond•J'" Sportl Tr•nu.tlloM
HOCKF.\'
seconds left to beat Nebraska. The
nover.
Manning,
28,
who
has
been
N•Uorul HiM:kf'yiA'a lru"
NF. W YORK RA NCER S-SiRnf' d PE'Irr
with the Indians since 1975, Is one of Nlttany Lions receiVed 1,032 points.
Wa llin and Mlkf' Barkman. r i Rhi w \nJl!O: Pa r
Florida rose !rom fifth to fourth
ronuc hl'r. C'f' ntPr. a nd C ary Burns. \Mt
only 10 players on the 19!ll roster.
~o~.· l n lil:. nnd as~ l ~ nl'd lhr m Jo thf' Tuba 0\l rr~
with
one first-place vote and 973
"I
Vllnk
we
have
some
talent
In
nf thl' r l'nl ra l HOC'kl'y (.l"a$(Ui' .
.!IDCC:ER
points after defeating Mlsslssjppl
Cleveland
and
we
could
win
here,"
Mii.lor Indoor Soct•f'l' Lf'IIIK'Jt'
W1C'HI1'A WJ N GS- SI ~ nl'd Fra nk R a ~ ·
he said. "It would take some more State'J:/-17. TheGatorsswappedplamussf'n. f orw11rd .
guys corrilng up from the farm sys- ces with Alabama, which edged
tem, a few good trades and so on. Vanderbilt 24-21 and sUpped from
NHLResults
But I do be\leve they (~ fourth to fifth with four first -place
NIIL F.UIIhkiOn GIIIIIK't'
ment) have to stick with players votes a!XI968 points.
Mtnday'11 Gtunftl
Georgta beatSouthCaroJ!rn134-18
Edmonton ~. Cataarv 2
longer. It has been a revolving door
Qumtot 3. 'Tt:lm\ro 2·
and
climbed tran seventh to sixth
around
here."
N~· J~ .1, Phllak&gt;\p hla :.1
~·~~ o~
Since spring training, the Minne- with one
. first-place vote .and. 864
W hml~ at Vall('OUVt'f
sota
Twins,
and
the
Chicago
Cubs
PhlladP!phf a a1 NfW York lRiaadtri'i
Buffalo vs. Boston at Wof'C'l'Ster, Mass.
· andWhlteSoxhaveputoutfeelersto
Qurorc- w. Drtrol! at Wlnd'lor. Ontario
the Indians on Manning. ·
St . Louis vs. Los AnR['k&gt;s at Brard:ln,
Manatobe
'
"Chicago · (White Sox) will be a
N(W York R.anwn va. MIMl'SOta a t St
Top Twenty
posslbtllty,"
he said. "Butl have no
Paul. Minn.
idea What -Will bappen. If things
W'ectnNday'a Ganws
""'APTtPa,on..•,
1 ,,..._
Boston at Hartford
are equal, I want to go to a conBuffalo a t Qu~
'!bt'nlp,_,,
......
n.:"-'1lender. I'd like to play on a team
Edmon1011 at 'I'bror.to
""'
"""
tootlioll
..,.. wtth ilnc·
WlMl~ at Vanoouv('f
'
pl.x- wtel In ~. ...an
where the games In September
PhliOOPtpllla at New York Rangt"tS
~ Ud total ..... . Pom• t.al Cl'l •
mean something."
N&lt;'W York Jslanck&gt;n at New JE'raey
~19-18-17-16-~14-13-ll·U -~1454-3 -~
MiMesola vs. Calauy at Lefhk-.....
1:
Albr&gt;rta
.... ....,..._.,
MannlngslgnedwlthC!evelandfn
l,U4
1972. Since then, C~d has not
Montrool vs. Chicago 11 Mclnclm. ~·
I,JCio
Bru mwlck
'
1,1111
.
been In a pennant race. For tbe last
Ill
toUr se8sons, the llidlans have fin·
!18
llhed sixth of seven teams In the
1111
Aml!riDul Leape ~1. .
1lll
Manning IIIII flneamentlals as a
1111
1111
• proapectlve tree agent. His eight .
Ill
JBL ConttrucUon
6 l8 . llomc! I1UIS, '-1 RBis and .275blltting'
, !Ill
m
H.lgtllndMdual «•nr - Drbl ~&lt;Ana: tte; ~
average tills year are some ~ tbe
H11nnel lm; Carolyn Bldmrr .158. Frlnkie HWW'I
311
best statlstlcis ~his CliJ'I!ft'· · '
m
198.
'
I
117
llllh - l'r1111do H.-I 461: ~ '
Alsb,
bl.
defense
sbould
rnakle
O.c!IM&lt; ... Klnf Cl1
.
Ill'
Tetm hllh pme - Mflp IM f38.
·hlln a valuable cmlmodlty .In ~

M.IJor lla~ &amp;.vhllll
~

MIE RI&lt;'AN LE.\C. UE
F..Mrm Dhllllon
Pt1.
L
!f.!
MllwaukN'
'11
Baltimon•

'

" " ... GH'
"'"' "'"" ""'"
""
. ."
"
Wt"'Mem IHvWon
"
"'"'&lt;I " '"'~
....

71...

Boston

J:\1 '.,

Ot&gt;trolt
O{'Vt'l&lt;l rd

Nf'W York

Toronto
fa iUoml:t
IWI'I.'Iall f't t ~·
Chk'ajro

I~ '·!

.494
.-11&lt;1
.fti.'"l

iii

T!

~j

lli 1•!

17:1

-11 _.

7l

· "·~~

" "~·

.-12.1

:tl••..

..1411

'!i

iti

Sf&gt;U tll('

. "'.

Qakl and

t\1

Trxa.~

Mlni'W'sota

"

.:m :n

Mond ll)''~ ( :a~

St-artle tot. I , Ch i&lt;'3RO H

Ntow V01·k 10. Bo5ton .1
Tf'xas '1 . O&lt;J kland 1
Calllomla :1. Ka nsa .~

o r,-'l

Onlv

20~

sch«&lt;ulro

Tlte!tlhcy '~

GatlW\01

MJ nnMKlla 1 Viola HI and f l'llon IHl t at
Toronto tnanc;.· 14-1-1 and r.cu 4-101. '!.

'"'M.ll wa ultrf'

t ,

t t\.li&gt;dl('h 11 - \~l at ~ton
tRa lnf'\' 741. tnt
Ra i1IITIOI'f' tMM;rrll()r J.ll2t at Dl&gt; trolt
tPI'l T)' \~Mt, tnt
N('Vo' Yor·k tA.Irxu ndN fl- 71 ut C'INduOO
t .~ utdlfl t&gt; H -lit. tn\
Oaklllnd tCo~· 1 21 ill T£'XIIS I MallOn
l· ll . ln l
Callfor'tlla rWIII fl.li1 al Kan sas City

rr;ura lR. ll l lnl
Sru lll&lt;' IMOOT'(' i ·121 at Chlta110 rLamp
• 1

!toM I. tnl

Wednt'IW1a,y'N Gatne~
Ba ll\11"1()1'(' a t Of&gt;tm1t. 1n1
N('\1' York 'at ('j(H,.•pJa nd, 1n1
Mllwa uk('(' at Botllon. In!

~

MJ nnPf;(lta al Toronro. 1n1
Oa kland at Texas, 1n 1
~at ilt' at Chkajro. l nl
Ca lllomla at Kamcu City. tn l
N..\110N..U. I.L\GUr.

I

,. ,

Ealltt'm lH\'Won
W L
Ptt.

• ; x·SI . l..OUI!!
•'

Phi ladr-lphll:l

=
• Monti'1'UI
' • Pllt ~bllfl{ h
~ .

1:
~. :
••

;•
•
• 1

..
••
':

r·.

-

••
......
Tartan
llt~t

N~l

...

~adt Crpu ' Son.l
No.'
..
••
I

lili

1'l

. ~'Jt

11.1

7.1
7"

. ~12

11"1

GB

~

~

711 M7
6.1 9.1
WHteriiiiM\iWn
Allan! a
~ 71
1.D1 Anli(('IE-!I
lfi i-t
san na rK'tsro
lW Tl
San Olt&gt;JlO
~
7fl
Houston
r.\ ~l
Cincinna ti
58 ~
IH'ilnCIM&gt;d dh •Lodon lllk&gt;

01&lt;"8Jl0
NN York

..

,

91

. ~19

fi i,JJ

i·~~

9\i;o

.4-t~

:n

.«H

'llll)

.5t'i
. M~

. ~1!1

-

.nl

1
7

.4111

10

.:m n

Manning
will sign
with winner

\.'~4 1

t

~ ~~ 10 \.

19 9'
19
1410
lOU
8 16

/

Newark Cathollc)Green Wave, a
fanner multi-winner of the small
, school ratings, moved Into~ Class
A lead after Tiffin Calvert, last
week's front-runner, lost to Clyde

14-7.
A statewide panel of sports writers and broadcasters rates Ohio
high schools WEekly for the AP.
Newark Catholic, whose only defeat In four games was toClassAAA
Pataskala Watkins Memorial, had
· ~points. Calvert, beaten by Clyde
14·7, fell all the way to seventh.
Moeller,a35-8vtctorat8arberton
last week, posted:nlpolnts,85more
than runner-up Massillon. Cfncfn.
nat! Princeton held onto third place
In Class AAA with 204 points.
St.Vfncent-St.Mary, defeating
Loulsvllle Aquinas 13-0, remained In
linn control of the Class AA lead.
The Irish had 233 pofntstol78forNo.
2-ranked Urbana and 171 for thirdrated Ironton.
In Class AAA, Cleveland St.Joseph, Lakewood St.Edward and

Canton McKinley kept the fourth,
fifth and sixth spots with :;andusky
surging from ninth to seventh and
Upper Arlington dropping one spot
to eighth. Toledo Central Cathollc
took over the No. 9 spot and Gahanna the No. 10 position, replacing
Cincinnati Elder and Warren Westem Reserve in the top 10.
In Class AA•. Steubenville's Big
Red jwriped from sixth to fourth
with Elyrfa calhoUc sUpping one
notch to fifth. Hamilton Badin
moved upon.e to sixth, St.Marys fell
two spots to seventh, Columbus
Whitehall was up two to eighth,
Struthers sUpped one to ninth and
. newcomer Bellevue moved to lOth.
In Class A, HamUton New Miami
advanced from fifth to fourth, Ar'Ungton and West Jefferson three
spots to fifth and sixth. CrooksvWe
Wii5 up two to eighth while Marla
Stein Marlon, In ninth, and
McComb, In lOth, made their first
· appearances In the 'lqllO.

College had not appeared since
polnis, while Southern Methodist, a
early
In 1976.
16-13 winner over Texas Clu1stlan,
dropped from sixth to seVenth with
!mpolnts.
'
Nebraska· was l!ighth with 702
points, lollowed by UCLA - the
The Daily Sentinel
Bruins received the ~lnfngfirst­
place ballot - with 662 points and
. IUSPSIIWIII
Arkansas, with 607. UCLA, No.12
A Dlvhlo.,.IMaiU.....Io, l..,.
last week, moved Into the Top Ten
Publi:Jht..'t.l t!Vt•ry Mrlt'm~~n. Mond.y thruwth
wlt!t a 31-27 victory over Michigan,
&lt;Frldoy, Ill Court Sln:til,_by !he Ohio Volll'Y
while- Arkansas edged Mississippi
Publilhh11( Com.. ny • "MuJUmediM Inc..·
Pomeruy, 9f1io 4$78, ltl-2158: St.'t..-ond da~
14-12 and sUpped from ninth to lOth.
~fpilltl at Ponlt'roy, Ohio.
UCLA's surge pusb!d Notre
Mern~ : The Ast~uc,:i~lcd Pre$!, ln'-nd Dai·
bame out of the Top Ten despite a
ly
Prn:~ AQociaUon 1nd the American
28-14 triumph over Purdue. Behind
NcWH~per PubiW.nr Auoclation, National
Ad vert1sln~ Rep~lt!ntative , Brantuun
the Irish In the Second Ten are North
Newsp~ptr Sales, 733 Thin.t Awnue New
CaroUna, AiUOha Staie, West Vlrgi- · Ytrl,
New York10017.
'
nla, Texas, So11Uiem Callfo!'Jiia, Ml·
POSTMASTER, S.00 olid""" lo 111&lt; O.ily
ami,BostonCollege,Minnesotaand
Sentinel, Ill Cour1St., Pumeroy, Ohio45769.
·.
.
Auburn.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Last week,ltwasNorth'Carollna,
By C.nifr IN' Motor R.uk
UCLA, Ohio State, Arizona State,
g:~:~ ······ · ··· · · · ···· · ······· $1 .00
West Vtrglnla, . Miami, Texas,
Orll- Year
· · · · ·"" , ·'' · · ·'" H.40
sii.rii.E
i:OP.v
as2•110
Southern Cal, Illfnols and Michigan.
PRICES
Boston College raised Its record to
l).yiJy .. ...... · .. ...... · ..... .. lS Ccnb
2-0-1 by defeating Navy 3HI, MlnneSublt·rib•·.~ . not dc:drin~ tu pay the l'a rrlcr
l'Ota (3-0) trounced Washington
may_rcnut m ad~lUil't t.lin't1 tu Till• Daily
State 4l-11 and Auburn (3-0) deS!:ntuwl nn 11 3, 6 ur 12 mooth bilslll. Crt!tlit
WIIJ bt•J:l iVCn l'llrrier l'IIL'h ll ~nnth .
feated Tennessee 24-14.
Meanwhile, Michigan dropped
Nu xubst•ripliun&lt;~ .by 1N1il p.·nnittc..'IJ in tOWrL'L
wht·n· humc l'IIITtt• r scrviL't' is avaiiHbk.•.
· out of the Top Twenty by blowing a
21-0 lead and lasing to UCLA. Ohio
MAli.SUIISCJIIPfiONS
... ld&lt;Ohlo
State, No.3a week ago, disappeared
~ Wtocks ........... .... .. .. .. . . Slf.G4
Wc,.k,., . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
• 27 by losing to Stanford 23-:a:l.
52 Wwk.-. .. ..... .. .. .. .. .. . .. .. :: : i:, 1 ~;8
It was Minnesota's first a~­
OulHicft&gt;Oh'tl
ance In the ranklngs since the mid·
tJ Wl'l'k.'\
.. · .... · .. .. . $15.21
2fi Wt•t•ks
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . S!29.ft.l
die of the 1977 season, whl!!! Boston
52 Wt'l•lol. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . , . SSR.Zl

r----------..1===========~

HARDWARE
•'

1

'""' 12111.

tree agent market

'

'

0

FEATURING AFINE ASSOIITIIENT Of . '
.
· COMFORT GlOW

I

KEROSENE HEATERS

.

•

!'Hm ~ oerlet- -

BE ON THE LOOKOuT FOR OUR
FALL CIRCULAR IN THE MAIL SOON.
l ..

OCT. 2•.t982

EBERSBACH.
110W.MelnSt.
~h. ,992-2111

Ill
10

.

·-HARIMARE
s·lnce 1929

Pomar!y MJddl1p Dl't, Ohio

I

1

Methodism ·recap

hig~lights Heritage

Heritage ~unday was observed still uses the ch~h bell from that Cyrus D. Foss dedicate~!, the new
Sept. 26 at Pomeroy United Metho- structure.
edifice on Sept. 18, 1892, named In
dist Church with members celeMrs· om noted .that the $13,000 honor of Bishop Matthew Simpson.
brating 90 years In the Second used to construct the present The marble' font still used at the
Street church.
.cbilrch carne from camp meeting church was presented by his
Mrs, Glem\ Dill reviewed the · at the Rock Spl'ingll fairgrounds widow. The note on the buUdlng
past, noting that Methodism began during the summers of 1890 and was burned In 190f,
In the Por:neroy area jn 1838 as the 1891. Th&amp;t year the chapel was sold
Mrs. om recalled that In the
Ch~ter circuit. The ForneJ:OY cfr·
and the congregation held services spring of 19141 another land sUde
cult began with Sunday afternoon In the court house unW the Simpson damaged the church which was
services at Ken:s Run school when buUdfng
completed.
then repaired and a second story
Rev. Mlghlll Dustin serVed as the
The original plans to build at the added with a re-dedication on June
circuit rider. Later, the congrega- corner of Sycamore and Main 3, ~916.
tion moved to a cabinetmaker's Streets bas changro after a spring
The Simpson Methodist and the
shop and a coppel' shop back 0t the flood . Rev. D.S. Porter chose the Bethany German Methodlst
Pittsburgh Rig and Reel, now present site for the bulldfni which Churches merged In 1944. The only
Midwest Steel.
was nearly re~y for occupancy In · ordination service held In the
The first ch'urch was constructed February of 1892 when a mud slide
church, according to the records,
In 1850 on the site which the present occulTed and, i-eportecny, :llwagon was that of Rev. Glenn Hiles on Oct.
bulldlng, dedicated In 1892, now loads of mud and ·rocks wern re- Tl, 1968. John Bryant, a member of
stands. In 1859 the Union Chapel moved from the church site. Bishop the church, was the last minister to
was erected and the present church

waa

,·Pomeroy, Ohlo
M·S 1: Oil tos: oa

_

1

Sunday

enter the ranks from the church.
From Bethany German Methodist
Church, Margaret Bengel left In
;11190 for missionary work In Korea,
and·ber sister, catherine, later became a deaconess In the

conference.
During the obselvance of Heritage Sunday, a dedlcatloD service
was held lor Candace Werry ,Infant

daugbter of Mr. aiXI Mrs. Jeff
Werry.
A 6 p.m. snack dinner was held
featuring a birthday cake fnscrfbed
"United Methodist Church- 90years." Approximately 50 attended
the observance planned by Clnda
Harkless, Jane Walton and Allen
Downie. Displayed were old photographs and memorabilia. The evening ended with a prayer circle.

'

•

Style show displays ·fashion through sewtng
Tedious hours of hand stitching
no longer Umlt the creations of today's home sewer. As the fabrtc Industry celebrated. September as
National Home Sewing Month, the
focus Is op fashionable clothing
with Umlted Investment of time, reports Dale Stoll, county eKtenslon
horne economist.
With 55 percent of moderrl homernakets employed outside the
home, tim Is previous. Today the
Industry caters to these busy gals.
Special patterns featuring few pieces and &amp;lmple construction details
flU pattern bcoks. Garments With·.
out zippers, buttons, Interfacing
and facings go together quickly and
can be easily sewn by both"experienced and Inexperienced sewers.

for speclallabrlcs and end uses reduce sewing time considerably.
Once over with the Iron and forget
about machine stitching. Interfac·
lngs In tissue weights for sheer fabrics and those designed for
taUorlng all give home sewn garments a custom look with Uttle t1rne
Investment. Special notions like washable marking pens, tube turners
and buttonhole markers reduce t.edlol!S sewing tasks.
The smart sewer uses her sewing
machine to save time and energy .
VersaWe machines baste, sew on
buttons, tack down facings and securn hems. Special stitches Incorporate stretch and overcast seams
In the operation reducing time and

Many quick to sew garments will
be featured at the Fall Style Show,
Sunday, Oct. 3, from 2 to 4 p.m. at
Pomeroy Elementary SChool. The
fashion show, sponsored by the Fabric ~ and the !',felgs County
Cooperative Extension Service,
will feature over 60 garments,-ranglng from jogging suits to jumpers,
suits to formal dresses. The garments are all hom!! sewn and modeled by local women and children.
Fit ts simplified with patterns
that feature pre-printed . cutting
Unes tor ·bust cup alternations,
sboulder width and crotch length of
pants In addition to hem, sleeves
and waist length.
Fusible lnterfactngs engineered

effort for modem sewers. Machine
embroidery continues to grow In
popularity as sophisticated home
machines easUy · adjust to the
smooth, rapid stitching required.
Monogramming to personalize garments and gttts adds Individuality
and that personal touch to sewing
projects.
Sewing activities today give
added excitement and continue to
draw new sewers. Former ;;ewers
returning experience a new satisfaction In completing custom lOOk·
lng g~nts with an ease aiXI
speed they never lmaglned. Use
National Sewing Month to be reIntroduced to the potential and enjoyment of today's sewing.

Freedom-from smoking clinic begins tonight
call the Tuberculosis Office at 9923722. The program begins on Tuesday, Sept. 28, and culmina~ In a
celebralon on Oct 26. "We would
like to have room for everyone,"

Do you smoke because of tension Gray, "You see your own smoking
simply as p e rsonal
and stress? Have you quit before,
only to start smoking again when · mismanagement."
Developed and tdtect extenpressure mounted? Wasquittlnggn
your own too much ol a burden?
sively, the Lung Association's new
The American Lung Association program runs for slx sessions.
of Ohio, South East Branch, has a "Quit Night" Is at the third session.
FREEDOM FROM SMOKING Although the majortty of sessions
group program which may be just are a week apart, the fourth session
Is held two days after "Quit Night"
what you need.
"Quitting smoking Involves more to offer support and encouragethan simply eUminating a bad ment within 48 hours.
habit," says Pat Gray pi the South
"We think smokers can use all
East Lung Association. "It's a·mathe
help_and,support - even funjor change In lifestyle which affects
then
can 'get when they quit," says
a person's)!l!lf·lrnage and the ways
Ms.
Gray.
"And that Is what we try
dally. stresses are handled. Someto'supply
with
our programs."
times you can't ellmlnate smoking
·
This
program
t• cosponsored lopermanently unless you rej)lace It
cally
by
the
Meigs
County Tubercuwith ot~Jer coping strategies," she
losis
Office,
Veterans
Memortlll
says.
Hospital
and
the
Cancer
Society,
"When you are With others In the
to
find
out
more
Information
and
same boat, quitting smoking can be
easier for some people," says Mrs. about thls group program you may

I

Film series start;s Sarurday

A tum series entitled "Focus on
the Famlly" will be prnsented at
Middleport First Baptist Church
from 6:30 to 8:30p.m. on six consecutive Saturdays, beginning Oct. 2.
The public Is lnvlted to attend.
The series features Dr. James C.
Dobson. one of the na~on' s leading
psychologists and an expert In JamUy counseling.

says Ms. Gray, "but attendance Is
limited. Preregistration ts reques~ and you may do so by calling the Tuberculosis Office at
992-3722."

County meeting notes
GS Troop 1276

I

Released over two years ago, the
series has been viewed by over four
million Individuals In 15,000
churches across the na tlon. Dod·
son•s· popular presentations were
filmed Uve durtng famlly life
seminars.
The films Included "The StrongWllled Child," ·"Shaping the WID
Without Breaklng the Spirit,"
"Christian ,Fathering," "PreparIng for Adolescence," and "What
Wives Wish Their Husbands Knew
About Women."
The sertes offers churches and
schools one of the nation's most
popular authorities on family life In
a format that combines Information, entertnrnent and InSpiration.
Dobson Is the author of seven
books, his latest being "Straight
Talk to Men and Their Wives." He
ts associate cllnlcal profeSsor of Pediatrics at the University of South·
ern California School of Medicine, ·
and a memberoftheattendlngstaff
of Children's Hospital of Los An·
geles. He bas a radio program entitled "Focus on the Family'' which
Is syndicated to '200 stations and
heard In almost every part of the
country.

TholliJlliOII, and Jane Thompson r~
A possible service project lor Oc- celved blue ribbons.
Gardening tips tor fall were given
tober was discussed when Pomeby
Mrs. 'I'hompson Who suggested
roy Girl Scout Troop 1276 met at the
making
the final fertlllze!' applicaPomeroy Elementary School.
tion
on
the
lawn, harvesting gourds
Work was furthered on the first
before
freezing
temperatures and
aid patch and the pledges were led
them
In
a dry, well·
storing
by Patrol 3, the E.T.'s. A new
ventllated
area,
planting
tuUps, daf·
game, " pass the penny" was
fndtls,
hyacfntm
bulbs,
lifting,
played. Patrol 2, Mrs. Pac Man
dividing
transplanting
older
thick
served refreslunents and the SHck
clumps
of
peony,
digging
gladloU
Chlcs Patrun had cleanup duty.
There were 12 scouts and three corms and other bulbs, and preparIng a compost plle.
mothers present
The program by Mrs. Crane was
on dried materials using as her
source, ''The Art of Drying Plants
aeanup of the civic beautification
and Flowers" by Mabel Squires.
project at the Meigs County lnflr·
Mrs. Crane displaYed zinnias and
marywasplannedforeariyOctober
marigolds which she had dried In a
when Winding TraU Garden Club
mlxturnof com meal and powdered
met recently at the home of Bonnie Borax. Sand, she said, may also be
LeMaster.
used for drying. She explained that
Jackle Brickles presided at the some plants can be dried by simply
meeting which featured a display of hanging them upside down.
flower specimens and aiTangeDrted material may be used for
ments carrying out the theme "Aupictures, plaques, pressed under
tumn Splender." The specimens glass as well as in flower arrangewere judged by Addalou Lewis with ments. For roll call members disribbons going to Alice Thompson, a played dried plant specimens.
· blue and a white for zinnias; Peggy
Mrs. LeMaster read a poem, ''OpCrane, a red for zinnias and a blue timistic View" by Ben Bunoughs.
lor asters. Mrs. Lewis alsoelthlblted Jane Thompson will host the neK!
dahlias.
meeting,; Refreshments were
In the arrangments judged by served to those named and Ruth
Mrs. Brfckles, Peggy Crane, Alice Moore and a guest, Martha Gilkey.

Winding Trail

Astrograph

September 29, 1982
Your greatest success thls coming year wiD be derived from sltua·
lions that you already have going. Subdue Inclinations to make changes
just lor the sake of change.
LIBRA (Sept· 23-0d. 23) You're very capable at handling things
today which adhere to familiar routines, but you could get uptight and
make mistakes If tbe unexpected occurs.
SCORI'IO (Oct. M-Nov. Z2) Projects or ventures which you see
through to conclusion wUI provide happy results today, but things whlcb
you leave hanging may cause you problems.
SAGfiTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Even though your friends might
Dobson
do something you dlsllke, you'll be tolerant and forgiving today . How-,
eve you may not show the same understanding with family members.
CAPRICORN (Dec. !!Jan. 19) Pressureorchallengs wnl notdeler
you from reaching your objectives today. It wiD be InSignificant side
Issues that you may not handle well.
AQUARIUS (Jan. :11-Feb. 19) So long as you use the lessons learned
• Descendants of Gideon and Art· JoAnna Smith, son, Travis, Karon
from experience, you'll have no trouble solving problems which may
rneslaRoushbeldthelrannualreun· and Shelly' Connely, Roger and
confront you ~Y- Don't experiment.
.
ion Sept. 26 at Portland ParilEdith Manual and children Angle,
PISCES
(Feb.
:11-Manlh
20)
Beneficial
things
could develop for you
, Recognized were Henry RoUsh. Almee, and Regina, Russell aiXI
today through the good auspices of others, but be careful not to claim
t11eoldestperson; Travis Smith.~ · Bernice Roush -~ son, EdWard
credit
for something you didn't originate.
~ Mr. and Mrs. Dick Smith, the' Roush, Darla aiXI Roberta Lewis,
·
ARIES
(March 21·!\prB 19) Last-minute changes In plans are not
~ Rober.! and Mary ~h, .Ronald anji Nancy RuSsell, Mandy
·west Jtiftei'SO!I. the ooes ll:llveling aiXI Michael, Hersdlel and Eileen ', likely to work out advantageously today, because they are apt to be
predicated more upon impullje than logic.
tJ1t1! ljlrthest. Henry Roush of Ra· Roush, Eulah Wolfe, Loeglnn Hart,
TAURUS (AprU :»-May 20) Be careful today not to unintentionally
dne, aiXI Early RoUsh, East Letart, Etta Mae Hill, Gladys Shields, John
«rend
someone you work with by excluding him or her from something
• are the two surviving sons ~Gideon and Patty Pape, Jolimty, ADen aiXI
social v.:hlch other coworkers are Involved.
and Artmeston Roush.
Lisa Pape, Bob Jones, Orltl aiXI
GEMINI (May 21--June Ill) Not everyone you'll be associating Wltla
· ~tteJdtn&amp; were Herbert aiXI Kate ~h. Carroll !lnd' Wanda
today
will equal you In team splrlt. Eliminate 1he penon who may ,
Mary RouJh, Dale ~ Rol-e1 Nelgler.Jim and Joyte&amp;nltll aiXI
abd Mary Roush, Wllma aiXI Ha· children. MisSy. Malle aiXI Dllllde _Impair a collective effort.
CANCER (lillie !1-Jaly 2!) Methods or p'rocedures which worlc tor'
J'llld 5aJ1Ienl, Harold aiXI ft1argery rume. TammyHlll,GaryaudTerrt
you
mlgbt
not necessarily dp as well as others. Try not to lmpolle your
Roush, Lila Pape, Tracy Beegle,
Roush, . Jeremy, BraDcly, imd
systems
on
penons woo bave·never used tbem. ·
Carilla HOI, Way~~e aDd Luella · Adam,lW1dallandJudyRoberts.
·UW (iuiJ 11-.Aec- It) Yala have a convfncfng liiiiMer today; wblcb
lllJulb. Valin! Roush, Linley aiXI .
rnallll tor a gooclsalespenon. Unfortunately, you m181ltnotkllowwhen
Mbed Hart. Henry Roosh, LeOra
to stop ielllng - and lole till\ sale after you bave It made. - ·
ad Jolll YCUIII. .
.
.
VIBGO(AIIC.DSep&amp; II)Befatrlnsharlngtoday~penollllwho
AlaD BeeP. Dill aeepo.
beiP you pin ftnanclall~"or mal«&lt;alJy.
_·
file 8! .... Pamela Greene, Elll!en

Roush clan gathers for re~nion

FOR

an

Local bowling
W. l.

scale.
But the Management Councll, representing the owners. has so tar
refUsed to budge tram what unw
now has been considered an Immutable !act of Ufe In professional
sports - Individual cmtracts with
Individual teams.
Followtng Sunday's six-hour bargaining session at Hofstra University In Hempstead, N.Y., Jack
Donlan. chief negotiator for the
Managerrient Council, said the
owners were wtnlng to guarantee
the $1.6 bllUon they have offered, "If
the un1oo drops Its demand for a
wage scale." .
The guarantee would take the
form of a pool from which any money not spent during tbe five-year
life of the contract Would be distributed to the players based on a formula to be negotiated.
One source who attended Sunday's session said mast of the six
hours ofnegotlatlons was spentrelterating the baSic, long-held positions of both sides.

'Washington still nation's No.1 team

Scoreboard ...
By 11t(o ,\MocbKPd

agement Council estlmated that the
28 teams lost $29 ml1lkm In gate recetpls and teievtslon money, though
the television revenue Is a point of
dispute - the networks are paying
their regular fees for the first two
Wl!eks of the strike, but owners are
counting It as a loss because they
say they will have topayltbacknext
year.
Other losers Sunday were the 14
cities where games weren't played,
an estimated $2 miWon each In hotel
and restaurant revenue; and concessionaires, who put their losses at
$2 mllllon.
The basic bargaining Issue Is
based on a simple question: Shall
players cootlnue to negotiate fndl.
vidual cootracts with Individual
learnsorshalltherebeawagescale,
with players paid according to their
seniority In the league?
Having moved from Its previously unmovable position, a demand for a percentage of league

revenues, the union wants the wage

Moeller remains No.I team

..

Majors

By strfklng Sunday, NFL players
Ioiii SOOII!Wliere between $8 mllllon
aiXI S9 mllJlon In salary. The Man-

Tua1day, Saptwmbw 28,1982

I

.

.z.

Bilk. Elrty ~ Di!:ll IIIII

•

L

I

.

------

.l .

•J

Calendar
nlESDAY
MIDDLEPOJtT Masonic

Lodge 363 wru hold Its father and
son baDquet at 6:00 p.m. Tues-

day with tlckets at ~.50 each;
Earl Gltford aiXI Robert Morris
will be speakers.

I

POMEROY :... Ml:ldleport •
Pomeroy Area Branch of the
Amerlcal1 Association ol Uni·
verstty Women will hold a meetIng on Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m. at
the Meigs Inn.

I POMEROY - The Aglow Bl·
lie study will take place at 7
p.m. Tuesday at the home of
l'tfrs. Joan Wolfe. Joyte !Dad
will have the Bible study. The
Weekly Bible study.meetings are
on a different subject each week.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- Rev. Ellzabeth
FalknEr wUl have charge of the
7:00 Wednesday nlgbt service at
Hobson ChurchofChrfStlnChrtstlan UniOn. Rev. William Crabtree, pastor, invites the public.

POMEROY - American Legion Auxiliary, both junior and
POMEROY - Ohio Valley
senior members. 7: 30 p.m.
Qlmmandery
~ will have a full
Tuesday at the hall. Dorothy
form
opening practice; all Sir
Jenkins, music chalnnan, will .
Knights Invited, Wednesday
have the program.
night.
POMEROY - Women's As·
POMEROY - Wildwood
soclation will meet at 7:30p.m.
Garden Oub will meet at 7: 30
Tuesday; Group 1 o have the
p.m. Wednesday at the horne of
program; Group 2 to be hosMrs. Ada Holter for a come-astesses. Devotions by Mrs. Paul
you-are party.
. HaptonstaiL
Non-Denominational Bible
messages
at Diamond Savings
RliTLAND Civic Cen•er skat·
and
Loan
Riverboat Roolh at
tng, Tuesday, 7 to 9 p.rn. Child·
7:
30
p.m.
continuing Sundays
ren $1, adults, $2. Take your own
and Wednesdays through
skates.
October.
MEIGS COUNTY Holiness
POMEROY -Special meetAssociation, 20th anniversary,
Ing of Meigs County Budget
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the RuCommission
will be held at 9
tland Church of the Nazarene.
a.m. Wednesday In office of
Rev. R. D. Brown to speak. PubMeigs County Auditor Howard
lic Invited.
Frank.
POMEROY - Past Matrons,
POMEROY -Eastern Board
Pomeroy Chapter 1116, O.E.S.,
of
Education will meet Wedneshome of Dorothy Woodard, 7: :ll
day at 7:30 p.m. to discuss bus
p.m. Tuesday.
routes and personnel.
POMEROY - OAPSE, Chapter 17, Meigs Local SChool District, regular meeting, Tuesday,
7::ll p.m. Meigs Junior High
SChool.

RUTLAND Garden Club will
meet Tuesday at 7:ll p.m. at the
home of Mrs. Stella Atkins. Dues
payable, $4 for active members,
$6 for associate members. Program books will be available,
bakeless bake sale to !Je held.

TI-IURSDAY
CHESTER - An open forum
wiD be held at Chester Elementary School Thursday at 8 p.m.
to discuss the five miD levy. The
public Is Invited to attend.

POMEROY - Free clothing
day wiD be held at The Salvation
Army, Pomeroy, Thursday
from 10 a.m. unW noon. All area
residents In need of clothing are
welcome.

Landscaping
dedication
Thursday
A dedlcatlon ceremony for several trees and a new flag and pole
for the landscaping project of the
new Carleton SChool wiD be held
there Thlll"Sday at I p.m. In the
event of rain, the cernmony wlll be
held Friday at 1 p.m.
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter
of the Daughters of the American
Revolution have donated the flag
whicb will be raised on a flag pole
contributed by Manning Webster.
The chapter bas also purchased a
blue spruce with Mrs. Thereon
Johnson, conservation chairman,
to have the dedication of that Mrs.
Gary Moore, Jr. will make the presentation of the flag to the school.
In addition two other trees will be
dedicated that day, one from Mrs.
George Hackett, a blue spruce In
memoryofheifather, the late Paul
Smart, and the o\her from Mrs.
Dwight Mllhoan, Mrs. Thomas EwIng, and Mrs; Gary Moore, Jr., a
dogwood In memory of Isaac
Carleton.

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS
IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

NOVEMBER 2 GENERAL ELECTION
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY

OCTOBER 4TH
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VISIT
THE BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON- OR
- PHONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS OR-MAIL 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.

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD
OF ELECTIONS
MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
P.O. Box 411, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
PHONE 992-26t7
Regular Hours: &amp;:30-4:30 Monellys through-Fridays
ADDITIONAL HOUR·S FOR REGISTRATION
FridaY Evenings, .Sept. 17, 24, 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.; Oct. 1
.from 6
San., Sept. 11 &amp; 25 a·Oct. 2, 9 a.m. to 12
.noon; Mon., Oct. 4, t a.m. tot p.m.

to''

�I

'1 ' '

~ 6-The Daily Sentinel

1Uftdoy, s,»Nmber 28,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

Farmer's Alma~ac ,· predicts
frigid winter -for: East states

~

·

'

READIE'i STORE - As the sign above the door
!IIIYS. a seeond Ellloct's appUMce, televlsloo and carpeUng outlet wDI be opening sooo. Adate has been set
lorOct.lbyownerLarryElliott, whosaldthestorewUI

be prbnarlly Involved In sales, with repair service
operating out of the main 'Store on Pine Street In
Gallipolis.

Elliott's open second store
to fill area appliance needs
ric."' Elliott said. '" The community
By KEVIN KELLY
could
use a bigger romplex for apGALLIPOLIS- Like the proverpliance,
1Vs and carpeting."
bial phoenix rising from the ashes, a
,
Elliott
felt the building, with a
local appliance, television and carpeting firm Is going to try where a large showroom space and storage
area. Is natural as an outlet.
larger concern made good.
A grand opening of a second Ell!·
The plaza Elllott's wlll be mainly
ott's, Inc., Is scheduled for Oct. lin
the building formerly occupied by concerned with sales. with repair
Hatfield &amp; McCoy In the Sliver and other servtce to operate out of
the main Elliott's at 70 Pine St. ElliBrtdge Plaza.
The ttmlng, according to owner ott said servtcewould remain one of
and president Larry EUiott , Is just the main selling points In dealing
right. as Elliott's and other ap- with their products.
'"We've tx&gt;en highly servicepliance and televisionstores do their
best business In fall and early oriented to take care of the needs of
our service operations," he noted .
wlllter.
Hatfield &amp; McCoy, a nine-store "This Is the advantage of having
chain in Ohio. West VIrginia and your own service ·department ,
Kentucky, opened their eighth rather than farming It out, like the
outlet in Gallipolis last November big guys do."
Elliott plans a large promotion for
and did a successtul business here.
the opening, and said many estabThe failure or rour H&amp;M stores led
its management to declare bank- lished names will sold - Zenith,
ruptcy in June. The building, owned RCA and Sylvania televisions and
accessories, and household applianby Gallipolis attorney William Eachus and several associates, has ces, such as Whirlpool, Gibson, Hotpoint, Magic Chef and the Litton line
stood vacant since.
"Uelt therewasaneedin this arm of microwave ovens.
The store will also carry the Arm·
beCause of businesses going out and
thosewhoretlred, !lkeAllisonEtect- st ron~ Studio line of carpeting, a big

a

plus for Elliott, who said he abandoned carpet sales at the main store
about a year ago due to a space
problem.
The store will employ live, with
Elliott and manager, and four salespeople. Colin Saunders wlll spUt hls
ttme between the main store and the
new one, and Rick C!\)ak has been
added to the staff. Brenda Wilson
and Steve McGhee, two salespeople
who were employed by Hatfield &amp;
McCoy, wUI also join Elllott's.
The store will be an expansion of
Elliott's business, which began
some 46 years ago in Gallipolis with
E111ott's father, Morris. Duling
World War ll, Morris EUiott operated his appliance service out of a
garage.
Following the war, E111ott's was
located In the space now occupied
by Brunlcarcll 's. and In 1954, It was .
moved to the present location at
Third and Pine.
At this time, regular openingttme
for the second E111ott's Is 10 a.m.
from Monday through Saturday.
Larry Elliott said he's stU! deciding
If closing ttme will be 8or9 p.m.

35. people attend pond clinic
Approximately 35 people endured the . rain to attend the pond
clinic sponsored by the Meigs Sell
and Water Conservation District
(SWCD), Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR), Division
of Wildlife and Cooperative Extens!Qn Service recently.

Jsl~:.m:a~~~~=.n~~:;~u~i~~~

demonstration to find out thp kind
and size or fish in the pond.
Huss also discussed wildlife management around a pool and told
about how you can get a wildlife
plan on your farm .
John Rice, extension service, discussed vegetation control around a
pond and chemicals that are safe to
use with a pond.
Robert First. Sell Conserva lion
Service. talked about picking a site
for a pond and about pond
construction.
Andy Lyle, Meigs County Game
Protector, talked about the Cooperative Hunting Agreement with the
Ohio · Department of Natural Resources. He explained that this can
only be used to restrict the number
of hunters on a property at one
time, not completely eliminate

SEO women s rally
slated Ociober 15 .
It was announced today by Mal-

die Mora and Catherine Colwell,
members or the Meigs Farm Bureau women's committee that the
Southeastern Women 's Rally
would be held Friday, Oct. 15, at the
Newark High School, Newark. The
' meeting wDI be held from 9:30a.m.
to 3 p: m. Father Richard CoMoly,
Ch4plaln for the CinciMatl Bengals, will be the featured speaker. A
buttet luncheon wiU be served and
entertainment provided. Price of
; tbe~ketsare$10each. Tlckets .are
_to be purchased before the end or
'·'' September rrom Maidie Mora, 992'7765; catherine Colwell, 742-3002;
~ Nonnan Will, 742-2791; or Sy!• vta ~· 992-7216.
TlckeU may also be purchased at
~.&amp;fN*·CouniY Farm Bureau of:
., . liCe-in PonleJ'OY; 992·2181.

..
I
J f

.

~

.

'

hunting on that property. App!Jcations lor the agreement are avalla·
bleat the SWCD office In Pomeroy.
or from Lyle.
Roy Miller. chairman, Meigs
SWCD. welcomed everyone and In·

traduced the other supervisors
present, Thereon Johnson and
David Gloeckner. Lunch was
served following the tlnlc by the
Meigs SWCD ladles auxiliary.

DUBLIN, N.H. (AP) -The Old
Farmer's Almanac, the 191-yearold yellow and black weather bible
ready to hang In pantry or prtvy.
predicts a frigid winter for the East
and a mild one lor the West.
The 1983 edition or the nation's
oldest continuously published peri·
odlcal, Issued today, says It makes
forecasts basl!d on both "the latest
scientific technology" and a secret
formula locked In a black box In the
almanac's offices.
But Abe Weatherwlse- a pseudonym for publisher Rob Trowbridge and editor Jud Hale cautions that the Aprtl4 eruption ol
the, Mexican volcano El Chlchon
could throw off this year's forecasts
because the almanac went to press
before the.·volcano's effects could
be assessed. Weatherwise predicted . severe
cold waves rolling across the East
in January, February and March
after a mild and sunny December.
The West may face a serious
drought as a result of a warm and
dry November, then rain and relief
In December and a cold snap at the
end of the year, he said. The Middle
Atlantic region should expect a wet
spling and possible fiooding .
The publishers clalrn an accuracy rate or 80 percent, and the U.S.
government took them at their
word at least once. Duling World
War ll, all copies or the magazine
were confiscated after German
spies were captured off the East
Coast consulting its forecasts.

lous editions or the Bible. including
a 1632 publication In which the Sev·
enth Commandment admonished:
''Thou shalt commit adultery."
-Instruction on hulling corn,
'·tor the three, possibly four people
In the world who would be
interested."

The Old Farmer's Almanac's
most recent success was predicting
last winter's bitter cold wave. The
forecast was for a major snowstorm and cold wave In the East
and South durtng ' the ChristmasNew Year's holidays. The forecast
was a bit narrow, though: The cold
wave spread 'into 'lhe Midwest and
lasted through January. ,
The almanac Is not to be confused
with a younger publication called
'simply the Farmers' Almanac,
which Is only 166 years ,old. That
almanac, published in' Lewiston,
Maine, isglven away by businesseS
as an advertising promotion.
The younger almanac's winter '
forecast- prepared by Caleb Weatherbee, a pseudonym for an unl-.
dentlflelj weather burt from New
Hampshire - also predicts · a
colder-than-normal winter, with
above-.average snoWfall virtually
everywhere but the Pacific ·
Northwest. But the Farmers' AI·
manac, which also claims 80 percent accuracy, did not predict last
winter's killer cold wave.
The Old Farmer's Almanac, on
sale for $1.50, offers anecdotes and
stories along with Its year-long forecasts for 16 regions of the country,
tide and planting tables, and breedIng charts.
This year's almanac offers these
tidbits:
- An old-fashioned cure for Insomnia: Smell your socks before
retlrtng.
-A list of prtnters' errors In var-

Hospital News

A conservation practice that
works well on the sloping cropland
of Meigs County Is a sod or grassed
waterway.
According to Robert First, District Conservationist, Soli Conservation Service (SCS), sod
waterways control gully erosion
and handle surface water runoff In
a non-erosive manner. Also, they
can be driven across during farmIng operations.

BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, ellver dol·
Iars. wood Ice boxea atone

Mr: and Mrs. Monte Bass, daughter, GallipoUs; Mr. and Mrs. wuuam Jenkins, son, Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs. f\1~ Yester, son. Vinton.

jars, antique•. etc.,' Com-

plete hou•eholdt. Write :
M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,
Oh. Or 992-77 80.

EAFOR

Gold, oliver, oterling,
welry, rlnga, old coins &amp; currency. Ed Burkett Barber
Shop, Middleport. 992 ANY PERSON who has ony- 3476 .
thlng to give away end dot11
not offer or 1ttempt to offer
OLD FURNITURE, bedo.
any other thing for Nlo may Iron, brau. or wood. Kit·
place 1n 1d In thia column.
chon cubbaodo of ell typeo.
There wUI be no charge to Tebles, round or square.
the advertlaer.
Wood ice boxeo. Old deoko

4

VIRGIL 8. SR . lEAl
216 E .~.. ~!, ·

Phone ·
1-(614)-992-3325
QUALITY - Brit.k veneer with
aboul4,000 SQ. fl covered patio, landscaped yard, 3 bedrooms (one enormous), ' 2\L

and bookc..ea. Will buy
complete houoehold. Gold,

family room, 2 fireplaces. carpeting, 2 car garages
and only 30 yrs. 001. Excellent
condition.

silver, old money. pocket
watchea, chaina, ring1, and
etc . lndlen Artifacts ot all
typeo. Aloo buying baoeball
cardo. Osby Martin 9926370.

NICE - 2 bedroom country
hOOte. Bath, automatic heal
T.P. water, garage and 2 acres
on hard road. $45,001

erosion such as diversions , spring
developments for livestock and
critical area seedlngs are also eligible f~r cost -sbare assistance, Fox ·
says.
For further Information about
erosion control practices, contact
the SCS or ASCS office in Pomeroy.

CONVENIENT - One floor
carpeted 3 bedroom home. Nl
city· utilities, garage, carporl
and large levellot. Just

Few tackt of clothes. Call
814-388-8449.

742-2328

Pittsburgh No. 8 A
Mine Run (Strip)

AVAIWL£ In country -home site, trees and fresh air
on_£00CI road.

Delivered Price:
POMEROY-$31.00 Ton
MIDDLEPORT
AND RACINE-$32.00
Ton
·

Nice I 17

Custom kitchens and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
ad d-ons, · new homes,
elecltic, siding.

story 3 bedroom home in good

.:

~:1.'::;"'~""

....,

... ..

I Y ..,d~"''
""'" '""''""'" ''
~ ~~

•

&amp; . ... . ...

,.. ...,., ..,IO ~w •

,

""""'*-'
'
,, , .••••-101..

..... . . .

II fi~•-" O!o!Kw t""•h
~~ ~

11 ~···~--····~ ...... .. ..,

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

. ................;

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

w ~ u''"'~' ~ ~'"''"'"

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

·.._

~
M ~ o ·,o l [ •l" ' ' "l&gt; .ooh "

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

::

...

...

Housing
Headquarters

""

,---------------------

INSPlilt::TION - SCS Technlci!UI, Reid Youn1 ln8pects the shape
Md grade of a completed sod waterway. SCS Pholo by Robert Flnlt.

" " 0..."-'''*"'

•1 t ll ,t ~ &amp; ll••t" ( """"' ' nt

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

1

PHONE 992·2156

_
..

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

·~ · ( I'll!

~-'""""' ''" H· ·~•
_ _ ¥ .... . . ....

7

' ..

S,.~

......._

'' ,~
..
....."', ' '"'"u-n
v ..... .........t ,

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

......

~ ··

_,___..
-·-.
_,_,.

10 Au tn ,.orh i. Ao ... •~ • ·•"

II AwiO w.,..,.
/Ill ........ ,""'"""""'

,..!;:.;'

..,_
.__,....
·~-­
-•oc,.,_ .......,

··- 0"'"'"
""'""''
.,·· -................
"'""'
.. r,...,.. . ... .. ..
II [ 01 •••1.....

M

..

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

llo • lo ~ ~ · ~·­

U.llt t • .... ~

~~··""

~-

0.0.·-

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

.......

U!o-!f " -....

~o

.....

.-...,,_
"···' .

"'1-- ,.,......_
_....__ ...,_
W-

. ..

--

llll

...,.. ,_

.. ..

, , _ _ .011\1 ... ,...,....,

Reat' EstA!t• - Generol

'

'

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

..

( JWented
( )For Sele
( )Announcemtnt
( )For Rent

NEW USTIIIG - PDi£ROY - Next 1u nature. Close in - ~x
acres. nice I~ story fr.ime, three bedrooms, equipped new ltitclten. flmily room, soaee building, garden space, gas hot water
hellel. $29.500.
.

.

.

.
IIlii USIIII8 - .U.IIOY ,..,. Six room house on fotir tots, three

-1. _ _ _ __

2----- -

..

3.
-- -_
-_4. _-_
_' _
5. _ _ _ _ __

.

ballt. page, p5 space 'heaters. R~~ · Building lin!
$6.500.
.
'
( .
.
.
bedttatiS,

!8 .USII.- . . . , , -Three bedrlll(D house. two~~ llllh, IllS bot-. . ltelt. $8.900.
' .
IIlii umiG - ~ui:usE - .Eiier&amp;Y effil:ienl2-3 bedroom~

new ClllJill. 1110)CM1eled bllh, JMI Jat,assumaliie low interest loan

~' $2S.OOO.

.

.

6--~---­
f

'

.

.•

;'

- REAL.TORSt
Henry_E.Cieland,Jr ,GRI ...... . .. . .....
1
Jun Tl'usull ............... . : . .. ... . ..
. Dotk5. Tumer ........... , ... ,'.: . ....
, Oltlce . .' ... . .... , ........ . .. . . .. ..... ,

,
992-6191
949·2HO
992· 5692
992·2259

23. _.:___ _ __
24. - - - - - -

25. - - - - - -

' 7. - - - - - - -

26. _.:___ _ __

9. _ _ _ __

27. - - - - - 28. _ _ _ _ __;_
29, _ _ _ _ __

8. _ _ _ _ __

!

20. - - - - - -

10. - . , . . - - - - 11. - - , - - - - ' - -

30. _ _ _ _.,.:..:._

·12. -~'----13. -,---..:'---~---::..

31. - - - - - 32; ---~--

l4. -:--..:,..._ _ _ _

33. --,------

15. _ _;_-.,..___ :u.
\
16. - - - - , - - - 35,
' Mill T~ll CopJIOII wltll RtmiHanct

I

I

, .'

'

Tilt Dilly Stntlnel .

111 Court St.

·Pomeroy, 011~ 4576f

.

· ~~---~~~~~-~~~~-----• .
. ·'! ' Ji
' .
I .

99Z-Z663

. POMEROY, OHIO

_

·Plater Craft and

Ceramic Bisque

-,

l

eacbers,
Seoul
n~:::~il"1 end OrganlzaCome In and
A Look At .Our
DIS· .

Would like to do houuw~
$4.00 per hr. Call614-367•
~396.

Will do hou ae cleaning
wookly. Call 675-6393.
-~---~ ·
Tree Removal Servk:e. Cell ::
for froe 01tlmate. 614-367: ' ·
7267, avenlnga.

Wanted to do, wintarialng
homes, mobile hom11 and
automobiles, free eadmatee.
304-675-3591 .

21

Business
Opportunity

LOOKING for people who
want to earn between *600
ond uo .o·oo monthly
through this "newest tnd
fattest growing company In
tho nation"' . Call 304-6761293.
Deiry Freeze for lease. No. 1
Garfield A•o.. Golilpollo .
Equipment may be purchaood. Coli 446-8594.

1980 Pontiac Sunblrd , 4
cyl .• auto, AM -FM . alr cond ., 28 -32 MPG . Coli
446-6612 .

Conveniently type ltora

Call now 614-898-7111
collect.

Aaaistant Chief Technologist Labretory . Jackson
General Hospital, Ripley,
W.V. Ia now interviewing for
an a11i1tant Chief Technologlot lor tho labratory. Job
will require ability to work In
all areaa of the lab, acheduling 1: training. allitt &amp;. writIng pr.ocedure manuals,
mtlntaining qualhy control
record, maintenance of
equipment including minImal repair &amp; calibration and
aome weekend work. Oulllifled person will have 2 years
of experience in a medlcallabratory, have a B.S. degree
In Medical Technology &amp; be
ASCP regiatered. lntereated
paraons may call Personnel
Dept. at 304-372-2731
Monday-Friday for more information . Equal Opportunity Employer. M-F -H.

Sit1,1ationa
Wanted

21. ---~-22. _ _ _ _ __

Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small. Reliable and deptm·
dabla. For estimate call4483169 otter 6PM 256-1967.

with gasoline storage tanks,

18. - - - - - -

19, - - - - - -

18 Wanted to Do

Set your own hours . Sell
Avon . (Mult be 18 or over) .

W.T. Rowlolgh &amp; Mr. Groom
Distributors . Dale and
Wllmo Wood, 2213 Mt. Vernon A•o. 304-876-1090.

17.

Karate the uhlmata In self
defence all prht'ete l1110n1.
Men, women, &amp; children. In·
atruction thru black belt.
Alto avail111ble Karate uni lormo puchlng and kicking
bags, and protective equipment. Jerry Lowery &amp; Auoclotoo Karote Studio, 143
Burlington Rd .. Jockoon,
Oh. Call 614-286-3074.

AVON . Need extra money?

Hair stylist with following.
or booth rental. Aale. for Sue,
614-446-3703 .

NEW USilNG- llllllAND- II\ stori frame horne with 2-3.
bedrooms, aluminum siding, wpodbiWI1er .set up and a ~rage.
Moslly paneled and carjJeled. $24,900.

NEW liSTING- POMEROY ;_ Two story, three bedroom, storms,
.. . ~ hill. blllt. $13,900.

Babyeitter wanted for kindargarden child In Conte·
nary . Coli 448-0492 oftor
7PM .

JUST graduated &amp; unsure
about your future? The West
VIrginia Army National
Guard can help you decide.
We are looking lor high
sctfool seniors &amp;. graduataa
to train in communications.
administration, supply, mechanica, 6 many other
fieldo . If you quollfy you may
be eligible for an enliatmant
bonus and college or VoTech aniatance . Sa one of
West Virglnlat beat . For
more informotion, call 304676-3950 or toll free 1800-842-3619.

-~­

M · ~­

--

••~ c-

Ucented Administrator for
100 bad nuralng home.
Watt Union Ohio . Pleaaa
Hnd resume to Kim Nye.
P.O. Box 1088. Galllpollo,
Oh 46631. Salary commeneurate with experience.

Naed baby oltter In Racine.
Minersville area, 2 children,
1 IChOOI age. 1·2 yo. old.
614-949-2824 . Need immediately.

. follu"'-« lf!lr.p/lullfl r.Jtrl!....- .. .
1

I I v • .., ... ¥10

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

Yard Sale

t:l...ifiH-- ..._.. ...

, "V"'""'
''"'"''"' ~......

I&gt;

"""""'"''"'"
""""._"''

YOf/R NEEI)S

s.

L -·~

"" ""•w
, "'- ·",.....,....,
•~,.,.~
Bw•kl...,
............
,

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

., ,.........,,., li.no

&lt; 1 -.... ....... ~ . ... . ....

6 Lost and Found

easily finance.

Ot Wrttc O.o'l' SfflhMI Cl•~ • tltt.od 0\&gt;pl .
Il l Cour t ~I . , l"omt"Qry . Otuc •~rtt

~=~~ : ~=~ : ::::~ :::~~

Port Collie and Sheppard .
Loyal. obedient and good
wtth children, needa good
home with room to run.
304-675-4382 .

repair. Hot water heal central
air and garage w~h rental Will

T

Schools
Inatruction

1111111

Help Wanted

CALL AL

$27,000.

MIDDlEPORT -

lntvlv

' AND
BUILT
REWORKED

BARGAIN - 2 houses with
baths, gas, city water, garages
and level lot for only $21,000.

The Daily Sentinel

;,! .._... ....
....._...
' ...... .

Giveaway

bath~

,.

..~

'.

Standing timber. Call 614388-9908.

~

tlon Conservation Service (ASCSI
program. According to Dave Fox,
ASCS office director, a sod waterway Is eligible for 75percent oftotal
cost up to a maximum of $3,500.
Average cost for a w.aterway Is
$1,200 to $1,500_- Fox added.
Other practices that control soli

~· · ······
''""""'-.......
.........
......
,,,, '"""'""""""""''
,'' "..,,......
,. ,.,_.,
Caryl Matlack, deceased , E. F.
. . ....... .......... .... . .
•• 10"""'' lo""
.,
Mary
Kesterson,
Guardian.
to
..............
Matlack, deceased, Floyd Matlack,
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elec.
Affidavit, Orange-Olive.
Joseph E. Bissell, deceased, to Co., Right of Way, Chester.
Steven L. Sayre, Dixle R. Sayre
Ada Bissell, Affidavit, Olive.
to
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Gloria Riggs to Herald OJ! and
Electric
Co., Right of Way,
Gas Co., Right of Way, Scipio.
Sallsbury.
J . Paul Strausbaugh Sr., Donna
SATIS~Y
Ernie Lee Ramsey, Sarah L.
R. Strausbaugh to Columbus and
Ramsey
to
Columbus
and
Southern
Scut hem Ohio Electric Co., Right
Ohio Elec. Co., Right o~ Way,
of Way. Salem.
Chester.
David R. Arnold, Nancy Arnold
Leland Parker, Margaret
to Columbus and Southern Ohio
Parker
to Columbus and Southern
Elec. Co., Right of Way, Chester.
Ohio
Elec.
Co., Right or Way,
Aletha J. Wagner to Charles F.
Chester.
Wagner, Tracts, Lebanon.
Judith Marshall, Barry Marshall
NOTICE OF SALE
n1ng. conta1n1ng One .(11 acre .
Revna C. King III, Linda Lee
By v1rtue ol an Pr ~1p e For more· or less.
to
Columbus
and
.
Southern
Ohio
King to Paul Barr aka Paul H.
Order Of Sale ISSUed out of the
Apprat ser1 v a l u P.
Elec. Co., Right or Way, Chester.
.
Common Pleas Court of"Me•gs ' $22.50000
Baer, Parcel, Chester.
County. Oh1o. 1n the case. ol , Connm -be ·sold lor tess than
Pat Mitchell, Marcella Sue MitPark F1nancial. Inc.. Columbus. two - th~rds the appr n1sed value.
Oh10. agamst Robert P. DMeTerms of &lt;S ale. Cash
chell to Terry Lee Powell Sr., MaClarence E. Randolph, Jr., tro. upon a 1udgment theren
JAMES J PROFFITT
rllyn L. Powell, Parcel,. Rutland.
Shenlf of
Brenda L. Rando!P,h, to Ohio Power rendered. bemg Case No.
Hazel Cundiff, deceased, Robert
Me1gs CountY. Oh10
18216
'"said
Coun.
I
will
oiler
Co., Right ol Way, Suttoo.
for sale. at the front door of t.he 19) 21. 28 1101 5. 12. 4tc
Cundiff, Affidavit, Rutland.
James S. Conkle, deceased, Atll- · Courthouse 1n Pomeroy, Meigs
Stella E. Kloes, deceased, Hilda
CountV. Qhio. on the 13th dir{' 64 Mile. Marchand!•
davit, Meigs. ·
of November. 1992. at t 0:00
C. McLain, · Cert. of Transfer,
Bill Frye to WUUam G. Peck, · o'clock A.M .. the toiiOWing
Meigs.
Dellli L. Peck, S.E. COI')Ier of Lot lands and tenernents. to w1t:
Sally Ann Aleshire to Stanley EuSituated 10 the Townsh1p of
462, Ml!fdleport.
Rutland. CouniV of Meigs. and
gene Aleshire, Part Lot, Pomery.
State ol Ohio. and described as
Baptist Church of Rutland, Ohio
follows. to Wit:
Bemg 1n Sect1on No. 1, Town
nka Rutland Freewill Baptist
Margaret McCall, ck!ceased, RoNo. 6 . Range Ho. 14. ol the
Church, Keith M. Woods, trustee, . bert·McCaU; Afll\la~t. Salisbury.
Ohio Company's Purchase. and
Steve ettaney; trustee, David W.
Robert McCall, JOhn w. Lee Jr.,
beginning at the southv.'est
corner ol land owned by Mil85
Edmonds, trustee, to Bruce D. ··Frances Lee, Louie D. Lee, Jamie
M. Hysell ih the public road
Bumgardner, Parcels, Rutland.
Lee, Leo N.I,&gt;ee. VIolet Lee, Gaey where the land ol.said Miles M.
Hvselt aod the land owned by
Oavid L. Bumgardner, Shirley J. p . Lee, DorothY Lee, Ilo11118 R!llthe Cook heirs tOm; thitnce
Burng'andner to Methodist Church UnS, Cbai1es G. Lee, Judy '·Lee, north
ato119 the Cool&lt; line 209
o( Rutland, Ohio, aka "Utiand'Unl· Clarence Lee, R!rth Ellen Lee to
feet: thence east 209 feet
thence south 200 feet or to the
ted Methodist Churc11, 1!1 al, Judi- · VIrgil R. Lee, MaJdnl! Lee, lhreepubltc road: tHence west atono.
m~nt Entry, Rutland.
f9tlrths acre, Sallsbmy.
the road _to the pt~e of begin-

i

We pey caeh for late model

clean uaed cars.
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnaon
446-0089

Four sod waterways were Installed on Meigs County farms this
past month, reports First. The average size of these waterways Is 400
feet long by 25feet wide. Desi~~Dof a
waterway consld~rs drainage
area, slope of the land, and amount
and frequency of ralnlall, says
First.

lltn-.,., r

Hight o! Way, Bedford.

Buying Gold. Sliver. Plotl·
num, old colna, acrap rlnga
&amp; ollverware. Dally quote•
evalleble. Aleo colne &amp; coin
oupplleo for ule. Spring Volley Trodlng Co., Spring Vetlay Plozo, 446 -8025 or
448-8026 .

MINERALS - Near Harrison·
vilk!, 66 acres fenced and open
lor lease on hard road.

Once grading and shaping work
Is completed, lime, fertilizer, seed
and siraw mulch Is added. Straw
mulch helps to hold moisture and
control erosion untU the seeding Is
established, First added.
Cost -share assistance is provided
through the Agriculture Stablllza-.

15

the evenfnga.

HOLZERMEDICALCENTER
DISCIIARGI!S SEPI'. %l
Mrs.·Ronald Cline and daughter,
Pamela oituey, Russell Denny, Victor Evaris, Do1Ul8 Glbbs,Grace Holter, Patrtcla' Houdasbell, Mrs.
Thomas Jividen aiJ(I son, Alisha
Jude, Howard McHenry, Barbara
Neece, JuUus Pasquale, Mary Pennington,. Kelly Roach, Josephine
Sparks, Mindy Stewart, Anna Taylor, oi\nclrea VIola, Irene WeUJnan,
OWen WUbur, Gladys Wolfe, wu:
liam Young, Mrs. Rick ZlM and
son.

roperty trans ers _
Madeline E Ice, deceased, Dar·
rei E. Ice, Cert. of Trans.,
Columbia.
Allen Lee King, Kay L. King to
Harold W. Hanson, Irene L. Han·
son, Lot No. 71 , Middleport.
Richard A. Ryan, Mary S. Ryan
to Raymond W. Larkins, Nancy J.
Larkins, 2.391 acres, Olive.

WANTED TO BUY Old furniture and Antiques ol all
klndo, coli Konnolh Swain,
446-31 69 or 256-1967 In

Sod waterways help control erosion

,r--------------..---------.
p
£
I
Christian Church of Rutland,
Ohio nka Rutland Church of Christ,
J . William Bl"Own, hustee, Frank
Young, ttustee, Frank Young, hustee. Herbert N. Elliott, IIUstee, to
Btuce D. Bumgardner. Parcels,
Rutland .
Robert G. Peckett, Eloise M.
Peckett to Strata Corporation,

Mobile Home lnouranco·
Franch City Mobile Homolrrturance Agency . Call
446-9340.

gasoline pumpe, commercial air compreuor, tire ·
changers, and etc. Will ac·
capt any reuonable offer.
(3041 675-3354 or 6752681 .

22 Money to Loan
HOME LOANS 14% flx(d
rate. Leader Mortgage. Ohio-- ·
only 1-800-341 - 8664.
WVa . 614-692-3061

Bualnatt Loans t s :
100,000 . Equity Aeoourceo,
Dayton, Ohio. Call collect .
513-258-0112 .
Bu1iness Loan for $1 0 io .
•50 Thousand . No front mo- ·
nay . Send inquires to
C.P.H .C.. Box 1 Country
Lane, Shado. Oh 45776.

23

Professional
Services

C&amp; L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping It tax urvice
for aU typee of 'bualne&amp;MI.
Carol Neal 446-3882
PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoint· ·
ment. Ward'J Keyboard , ·
446-4372.

31 Homes for Sale
In ground concrete pool on 2
acre lot. Alao haaa 3 bdr. air
conditioned house with full .
batement, 2 WB fireplaces,
new carpet. Would consider
lower valued property In
trade or will finance with
low down payment and 10 %
interest. Located 123 Garfield Aye. Coli 448-1646.
Land contract. $36 .000
Cheshire Village . Call 614367-7663.

Story and half house completely remodeled wi1h new
thermal pane windows. new
3 People to oell Avon. Coli vinyl siding with niceveiw of
440-33118.
river. 3 bedrooms. 1 bath, ,.. .
8
Public Sale
new kitchen. cabinets, new
Ill Auction
AN ovalleble for quotl~ad 0-W. garbage diapoul. new ' "
dopondabto child cora. Sole, 1elf cleaning oven, new ref. ·,.,
lnllructlve ploy ohuatlon . with ica maker. living room, r
Auction every Fri. night ot Reooonoblo nrt... Releron - family room with bar. Jl8W .,.,
tho Hertford .Community cea. Cotlt 4411-28111.
carpet throughout. Kyger . -·
Cent.-. Touckloado llf Creek School Syotom, ••
Tr• trimming &amp; removal. $38,000. Call 448-8274.
end • 614 -949-2129 or 614992-11040.
Nice 3
ohopod
Will do houN cleaning, baby peted. oatn ar1d
olt1lng or groceery ohopplng. 1114-992-5046 and
Wanted To Buy
ook for MelloN.

.......

�-ft.

"

..

The Daily Sentinel

31 Homes for Sale

Ig'Mtruhwnd.lew

They'll Do It Every Time
~~

House for sa le 1 60 Second
ave .. Gallipolis. Call 446 7605 or inquire at Bob's
C ar rvout. Easter n Ave ..
Gallipolis.

.J:tl,~

polis. Couch, lovea.. t and

or 614-992-8718.

r-----~------------~

446-31159.
GOOD USEQ APPLIANCES
· waahers, diyera, refrigera rangaa . Skagg1 Ap -

tor~.

pliances, Upper River Rd.,
betide Stone Creat Motel.

446-7398.

oxp. Coll814-388-9852.·

'"
""'

,Morcum Roofing &amp; Spout- ' ,
ing. 30 yeara experience.
spoclollzlng In built up roof.
Call8t4-388-9622 or 81438B-88117.
.

: i

r

-

Electrolux thampooer wtth

brushes. Like new I 176.
614-992-6293 aher 8 p.m.

v

304-676-1293.

Trombone 176. 7ft. pool ta- Armstrong flute With case.
good condition, oomo ohoet
bla t715. 304·8915-3999.
muolc, t100. Call304-675•
Firewood 126.pickup load. 8389.
Ask for Tim . 304-8953999 .
68
Fruit
Couch and dining room suit.
&amp; Vegetables
304-676-3346.

44

ation . Reasonable rant on

House, two Iota . .680 South building . located in Meigs
2nd. Middleport . 814,600. Co. Ohio. 826.000 or boot
House or trailer lot in Brad- offer. 61 4-992-6186 bebury . Call 614-992-2602. tween 2pm &amp; 2 :30am.
Sale or rent . 2 bedroom 1- - - - - - - - - ho mo on tho river: route 1 24 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
between .Syracuse &amp; Ra cine. 61 4-99 '--5949.
For sale one and half •crea

House &amp; lot . 64x1 11 h . 2 more or le11, approximately

rooma up &amp;: bath . Full bue- 600 ft road frontage on
ment with shower. 836 E. Cora-Centerpoint Rd . near
Main . Pomeroy. After 4. Centerpoint. 8 3 ,000. 00

614-992-6347.

Phone 682 -6944.

HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad- 26 acres. 614-667-3609.

dition. 3 bedrooms, family
room with flrepalce. central Two acre lou-1 60 h . road
air, basement, phone 304- frontage, city water, behind

676-1642.

Beautifully restored Victo·
rian, 6 bedrooms. 4 firepla ·
ces . ornate carved
woodwork, air conditioned,
insulated owner financing.

84 lumbar. Call 304-6766873 or 676-3618.

Apartment
for Rent

Real Estate
Wanted

304-676-6999.
Wanted : out of ttete buyer
THREE bedroom houe, Crab need• house or apt. building
Creek Rd .. Maoon Co . All with owner financing. Write
electric, 304-675-3329 .
Box 1006 in care of The Gal-

3rd. Ave.,

Gollipolis, Oh

676-7641 . evenings.
For sale or rent. lmme-

I~~~~iliiii!E~~~~~~
I:

diatoly. House in Clihon. All 41
appliances. large tot . 304-

Houses for Rent

676 -2699.
Small furnished house, 1 or

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 adults only . Call 4460338 .
3 bdr home, 81 Locust St .

Call U6-4110 before 6 or
446-1 1 64 after 6.

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS ,
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS . 3 bdr . bi-level, family room,
CHECK OUR PRICES . fireplace, garage, gas furCALL 446-7572.
nance , large yard , city
school. Possible rental pur-

chase. Cell 446-7438 .
CLEAIII USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL- Pomeroy· 2 bd.room unfur·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES . niahed houl8. 8196. mo .
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS , Security deposit. $100. plus
RT 35 . PHOI\IE 446-7274. utilities. After 6-call 614992-2288 .
1980 Redman sec tional

home. 2Bx70. 3 bdr., 2
ba.ths. FR , FP and wood
stove . Appliances including

diswasher, 446-6630 .
1980 Kirkwood 1 4x70, 4
bdr .• on nice rent ed lot in
Cheshire area . low utilities,
built to FHA standards and
FHA loan available. Nice
porch, underpinning, like

new. Call 614-388 -9776 .
Richardson 10 x4 1 mobile
home. 2 bdr. part ially fur·
nished , carp eted, gas f ur-

nonce . Ca11614-256 -1413.
10x50 m obile h o me ,
$ 1,800 Cal l 614 -3888547 .
10 x44 mob i le home.
$1,200 . Cal l 614 -245 5064 .
1972 Lancer mobil&amp; home,
12x66, good cond . Call

5 bd .room house . good
neighborhood . Fully
equiped kitchen . lincoln
Hill, Pomeroy. Oh . 614·

992-3489 after 6 p.m.
House for rant. 3 bedrooms.
1 03 8th Street, Point Plea-

sent, $260 monthly, deposit
required , new furnace with
gas saving features . Can be
seen, 6 p.m . to 8 p.m . daily
except Sunday, Phone 614·
446-8398 between 11 a.m.
and 9 p.m .
House. references needed,

14•54, 1981 Oakbrook , gas
heat. $8,996 . Call 4464089 .
1$71 Forest Park. 12.:60, 2
bdr., total electric. excellent
condition, {on rent lot ). Call

446-9340 .
1982 Clayton 1 4x65 . 2bdr. .
2 full baths, 3 ton, central
air:

deliv ered and se t .

$12,900 . Call 446-9340 .
1973 12x60 Baron .
86,600 . Must sell. Moving.

Call Andy Vaughan. 61 4·
742-2897.
1 974 1 2 x 60 Kirkwood mo·
bite home. Underpinning,
fuel oil drum. alr-cond. Very
clean inside. Large closet.

Lou of atoraga. $5,200.
614-992-3041 more info.
Trailer and two Iota owned

by the late Zuololla Smith,
272 W. Main Stroot, Pome-

roy. Oh. For information.

call .Lula Belle Hampton,

101 Kerr St., Pomeroy,
Ohio . 614 -992 -2 021 or
Fred W. Crow. Attorney,

Pomeroy, Ohio. Coli 614992-5132.
1988 I:IO!IIollte 12x66 mobile home, 2 bt', clean, goC?d
cond.. lncludH underpinning .,d wheelo. Mull oell,
c•ll 304-882-2246.
!

pletely furnished . Call 4489669 .
2 bdr. mobile home. Call

446-0390.
2 bdr mobile home for rent
out 160 2 Vt miles from hot-

pita I. child accepted. Call
446-0167 .
12~&lt;66

2 bdr. mobile home,
new carpet, clean, security
~ep . and ref . reQ . Bob
McCormick Rd. No pets,
water paid, *166 par. mo.

plus utilities. Call 4411·
4491 .
For tale or rent unfurnished

81 lllaahua 14x70 rrioblle
home. 3 bedrooms. front
deck Off kitchen, wood

o••

burner.
heat. stove and
refrigerator inclu;ded. Call

814-246-9226 after 6.
2 tidr. mobile hom&amp; In city.
Ref. and dep. Cell614·26tl·
1922.

'
BINGS CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTIOIII Spociollzlng in
concrete driveways, lidawelke, floors, patios, etc. 11
yr. axp. Call614·367-7891 .

,,

. ,,,~

low Freeatone cennlng
peaches now evatlable while

now for October delivery the supply 11111. BOBS
166. each delivered. 304- MARKET· ·MIIon W.VA .
675-7241.
773-6721 Of!OII 7 doyo o
week.
W. T. Rawlelgh &amp; Mr.
Groom Products. 304·6761090. 2213 Mt. Vornon~­
Ave . Point Pleasant.

Furnished Apt ., 1 BR , 243
Jackson Pika, S236 . Utilities paid . 448-4416 eher 7

Early American conaola co·
lor televiaion. 2 early•American wingback chalra and 1
living room couCh . All excel lent condition. Inquire 8t

918 2nd. Avo ., Gallipolis.

Furnlahed 3 r. private bath,

846 2nd. Ava., Gallipolis.
Ref. preferred. Call 4482215.

0338 .

1- - - - - - - - - 2nd floor furnished effi-

Furniture for sale. Selling
cheap . Couches, end table,

etc. Call 446-3937.
Apartment size Whirlpool
dryer and Westinghouse
wesher, other Kenmore,
Moytag. Whirlpool &amp; G.E.
washer a &amp; dryert. Call 61426~·1207 .

ciency opt. Apt. 4, 729 2nd
Ava . Adults only . 446 0967.
Deluxe garage apartment. 1
bdr., central air, Firat Ave .•
no pets. ref. required . Call

61 4-266-6506 .
Jackson

Estataa Apart -

ments. 636 Jeckson Pike.
Gallipolis . Equal houaing op portunity has 1 bedroom
apartments, rent starta at

will call you back.
Furnished apt., no pets.
adult a. 3 rms., and bath. Call

54 Misc . Merchandise
Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved. 1.000
sizes in atock. haul in yoiJr

Available Oct. 1. llllce 2 bdr.

8195 . Cell collect evenings
1-304-273-9746 .
3 room furnished apt. $260.
month lndudes utilities. Inquire at Meigs Inn in
Pomeroy.
3 bd.room apt. in Middleport. Equip. kitchen. $150.
mo. plus security deposit .

614-992-6692 .
Furnished &amp;pt . Adulta only,
no pets . Middleport. 4 room
house-lincoln Hgts., unfur-

6648 .

Wood burning add on fur·
nance. Still in factory crate,

pies, CFA Himalayan, Persian and Siamese kittens.

Pets for Sale

DRAGOIIIWYIIID CATTERY
- KENIIIEL AKC Chow pup-

HILLCREST KENNEL ·•
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Rag. Doberman• pupo and
Doberman Stud 'Service.
Call 446-7796 .

way power blade, roll cab,

hwasher. Coli 614-2459664.
Firewood $26 .00 pick up.
96% hard wood. Jet. Rt.
21 B &amp; Rt. 563, Crown City,
Oh . Call 614-266-6246.
WOOJ;)BURIIIIG STOVES
Free standing fireplace inserts. mobile home and furnance ad-ons . Jividen's
Farm Equipment , 446$10

pickup. cut up slabs 816.
round wood 820 . Rio
Granda area . Call 614-2466804.
Searo table oaw, heavy duty
cut Iron table. 1 0 ' blade. 1 8
molding hoods, 8260. Call
446-6684.

Plaooant. Call 304-6752463.
Unfurnished Apartments.

call Automotive Supply,
304-676-2218, 8-6 p.m. ,
304-676-6763, 8-10 p.m.

For solo: Registered Golden
Retriver puppiet, 2Vz

mo.

t(ay &amp; Grain

64

1---------cor~

In fino

I~
·
··

old. $1 25 .. Call McArthur,
596-4447.

71

AKC Registered Poodle puppies. Call 448-0857.

1980 Ponl lac Flrebl~d. AM FM Cllostte, oir. fS.OOO
firm . Call 814-2118-1598.

AKC Brillny Spaniol puppies, 8126 ea. Call 614379-2630.
Grooming aervlce1. Will clip
Sc::hnauzera and etc. 814·

992-7342 .

57

Musical
Instruments

lmpo~o.

. t INc!i _c::RIME'

tronce. oulsldrts Hondero&lt;&gt;n. ::~~~~~~:
utilities furnlohtd. *225 . !'!."l:;~f.
:Y,
month. 304-876-6730 . • 1'\1'1 (
CI'IN
_ .
QUICI&lt;ER '
Furnished

•vv

"L-

PM .
2 bedroom trailer. Real nice.
adults only. Brown' a Trooil· or 'l _ _ __ _ _ _ _ __
Park, Mlnarsvllla. 614-992· 46 ,Space for Dent
3324.
'!

.

'-!;'I,.,-;;! hl'IP if.,~~ ,.L
.

)T~~~...;.;'-':".~n .

·
F'

\liE'LtEND

- '-:- -.
7

,.-.;;::-;:-:-,':----, ____,
, •.

•• 1

Furnlohed ·room. f1 111. utll·
tiel pd, olngle mola, ohere
beth. 919 2nd. Ave .. Golllpollo. Coll44tl-4416 oh.e r7

.,

wllh Major Hoople

WINDOW TINTING - l:'uto:
Homo-Commercial. , Cut
high enorgy coli. ilrofHolo)1oily lnotolled, Call 4463100.
1960 · Olds 88 ak~ orglnol
Ia. Col14148-0198.

•a&amp;o. ••

1974 '·
TR8
cond .. sharp.
oak for ~r. Lee.

j~~

197$ Dodu• Colt u,5oo.
Call 4411-4880 oftor 4.
1974 Oldo. Defto. 88, good

~

_17
1

..,..,~ ~...
U ~!;.

·J....

(·

hs

/'

1179 Pen1'-c luhblrd: 4
cyl., · AM·FM 11Wo, A·C,
ue. aond.JCall448..7131.or
448-1317 after I.
'-•"•• •
1.'••• C - •· _,.,:,
~-,.,...,

.,-/ · '
F-.ao-lt. , _ . _

2 bedroom furnlohed. COUNTRY MOBILE Ho- 1.~
Adulto preferred. N9 pets. Pork, RouM ' 33. Nq,h of
~~
'
1
~~~
-roo
Depoolt r81Julred. 814·992 · .Pomeroy. large' lqto. Cab
992-7479.
'
·.;.;. , ;;; ,f:;:t';':f'.,. . .
2749 .

Cont. 'towncar,

1178, lui.,.._, ex...u.Ott'
condition. Call 448-9340.

or:11\l!!&gt;TE.-.D
il~c:o1o:

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

Vi

2158·1788.

T&gt;iE M~ll. S

1

1988 Volkowogon Footbock. Cell4114-268-8838.
1978Fo;dFalrmont.4dr.,4
cyl., 4opd. 1ronllntloolon,extra cloen. t2,195. Coll448-

Lincoln

'ii ~m·, l ~t·"~

L

------~-..:·-:__

1974- Detaun_ 2802,
od
con d., U,OIIO. Call r,4-

~
.......~'1J~,1

' ( ~--

•

:

or-.zr:&gt;

(]) NCAA Footbell : Nebraska at Penn State
(I) MOVIE: 'Fathom'
(I)
lill Happy Dayo
Season Premiere. Fonzie's

e

owner 813150 . 304-676- 304 -876 -2098 or 8754334 aher 8 p.m.
4560 .
1974 Datsun 2802, good
cond. U100. 256-1788.
Water ' Welle. Commercial

quest for a lady leads him
to a divorcee who doesn't
go for his unique charm .

[Closed Captioned]
0 &lt;Il ® Bring 'Em Bock
Alive !PREMIERE) Frank

and Domestic. Test holes.
Pump• Sales and Slirvice .

1 976 Lincoln Contlnantal
town car 54,000 miles,
good con d. one owner. 304·

Buck sets out to rescue
the Sultan of Johoro. (60
min .)
(I) National Geographic

304-896-3802.

676-1102.
ADVANCED Seamleas
72

Gutter- Doors. Offering continuse guttering, seamless

Trucks for Sale

Special 'Egypt: Quest for

.. . WE'LL. SHOOT 'IM
RIGHT OUT OF HIS

siding , roofing , garage
1980 '-' ton Chevy pickup, doon, free aetimatet, 61 4 · ·
one owner, low mileage. 698-8206.
Call 448-4782. Gallipoli,.

Eternity.' The works of
Ramses II, a great pharoah ,

SADPLE!

ore presented. (AI (60 mm 1
[Closed Captioned[
liD
Kennedy
Center
Tonight 'A Salute to

1982 Chevy S 10 with PAINTING .interior &amp; eKte· "1•
topper, 85900., 304-676- rior, free estimates. 304- .,
:'
6894.
676-1128 .
•. '

Duke.' , Celebrated jazz ar ·

tists appear together to
pay tribute to the late com ·

67 f&lt;&gt;rd, half ton pickup
UOO. 304-876-4436 after SAVE NOWI Cut winter
6 :00 P·'l'·
bills. insulate your home.
For in!. call Paul 1-626- -·

poser Duke Ellington. (RI
160 min .)
8:30 (J) G (IJ lave me &amp;
Shirley Seoson Premiere .

4404 for free estimates.

Vans &amp; 4 W.b.

9 :00

1973 Ford Econollne 300, rior, building and remodel12 ft . cube van, auto, good ing, replace or install siding.
cond. Coli 614-245-9448. and roofing. 'Experienced"
304-676-2440.
74

windows. white spoka
wheelt, new radial tirea,

What's the
qoodnews?

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

'1174 Anti 18 e ltlllltiCC
~ CIIMp. Call ._,,..
742·2171.

..

.

\

.

his wildest dreams . IRI (60
min .) [Closed Captioned]
())) National Geographic
Special 'Egypt: Ouest for
Eternity .' The works of
Ramses II, a great pharoah,

Backhoe and Diteher Work,
Free estimates, French City
Mobile HomQs. Inc . Call

are presented. (AI (60 min .)
[Closed Captioned)
9:30 CD MOVIE: 'All the
Marbles'
CD MOVIE: 'Ratum of a
Man Called Horse'
([) G1 lD 9 to 5.. Season
Premiere. Violet Judy and
Ooralee throw a love wear
party .
10:00 (I) TBS Evening lllews
CD
lill Han to Han

WINNIE

•446 -934~ -

5HEGOT ALL
THAT MONEY
FROM ORVILLE ...

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

SEWING Machine i-epair.s, •
12' flberglasa row boat, service . Authorized Singer
with tit trailer, electric mo· Sales &amp;: Service Sharpen .
tor, 3'h HP g~s onglnol, Scissors . Fabric Shop,

UOO: Call 614-245-6870.

76

a

The Harts purchase of a
honeymoon bed entangles
them in an art smuggling

Pomeroy. 992-2284,

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

85

scheme. 160 min.) [C losed
Captioned[
I]) Firing Une
())) Newswatch
1 0:30 CIJ Sing out America
&lt;Il Major League Ba. ..
bell : Atlanta at Sen

General Hauling ,

USED tires. Honohawa JONES BOYS WAl:ER SERTlrH. Luc.. lant, Pt. Plea; VICE . Call 614-367-7471
oont, phone 304-8715-7360. or 614-367-0691 .

BARNEY

Francisco
(j]) I Remember Harlem

'Toward A New Day : Harlem 's decline and its re-

Cor part.. 1974 2-door Need something haUled
AMC . wrecked for . peno. away or something moved7•
good motor, tranami11lon, We' ll do it. Call446·3169or
etc. 1200 or beotoHer. 304- 614-256-1967_ahar 6.
896-3820 or 304- 8768828.
-

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

birth are

7

01 .

.

SPECIAL Complete enomel
point lobo !Tom t300. Sun- Horfay Eblin Tr~sh Houling.
roof• inlllllled frol'!l • 2211. Pick upa in Cheehire, Porter
Auto Trim Cenler, 44'8- ond Bidwellareoa. Coll814387-7267 evonlngo.
'
198~.
-

'

• 1

'•

1!"

JIMS · Water Service. Call

- - - - - ' - - - - - - Jim Lanier, 304-675-7397. '
78
Camping
Eql!lpment
87
Upholstery

action .

.

CD MOVIE: 'RIIoltomon'
(IJ Another Ufe
,CD Blln!IY Hill Show
II (J) Quincy Quincy
traces an • old buddy' a
death to araonlc poisoning.
(R) (60 min.)
.
(I) Cllptloned ABC Newo
I)D AH In tho Flllllly
. • ill Nlghtllne "
12:00 ID MOVIE: 'Cintla Annie
end ut1le llrhchal'

'

PEANUTS '

,,
11arcrah fold-out, u10d
1wlco: · eocollen1 cond.
*2411. LocatM Meln:-'""d
a-nd. llillcldloport. Qhlo.
114-IIZ·ZI28.

' I

MOtor Hame •

• ·C.mpen·
'

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOf
1 Hl3 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis .
448-7833 or 446-1833.
MOWREYS Uphoiii"'Y Rt.
1 Box 124, Pt. Ploooant
304-1711:4164. '
•

'SO 'iblmE ~MARBLES"

I KNOW I{OlJR

WEIRD 13ROTHER

'.

Cll

'

''

'

-.na • Allen,

(I) NCAA Football: uc1LA' •

1--_:__...:_.....:.:._,.1

F""""'re repolred, ontiquH
.........-~~fit _,ored. ou11om cablneto
PCirll tNak. Cell 871·11400· 304-1175-3871 •fl•r II p.m:

IR) (60

11 :00 II CD Newacantar
(IJ Naehville RFD
(jJ ESPN Spona Center
CD IJ,(J) !lD Gllill Newt1
(!) Newo/Sports/Weathar
CD Dave Allen at _Large
1 1 :30 II ID (!) Tonight Show
CD Race lor the Pennant
Barry Tompkins and Tim
McCarver host this look at
tho past week· s baseball

Now Heuring house .coal.
- ~v

examin~d .

mi~ -1

!~~~. or stoi~~ke~r u;:P
to 8 ton.
sQil, till dirt.

77 t'outo Repair
;::·;,·
_ _:_:_ _ _ _ _ ·'-"" o

_ • ..,..,..,. 7t

Pl'llllte. Call-4 .......

periments succeed beyond

-=-::----'-::---:---

84

l!ll Three's
Season Pre-

mate . [Closed Captioned)
0
&lt;Il ® MOVIE :
'Shadow Ridera'
CD Mystery! ·or . Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde: First of 2
pans . Or. Jekylrs bold ex -

1 978 Kawaeakl 650. Beat_ 83
Excavating
offer. Mull ooll. 814-742· - - - - - - - - 2897.

..
~- '

NORTH

i-28-82

+K QJ65
.10 6 2
+63
+; 4 3

EAST
tiO 91
53

WEST
t!A872

IYQ 9

•s

[.i.Q 9876

+J 10

+54

+Q 10987

SOUTH

+3

.AKJ 71

+A K J 2

+AK Z
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: West
West
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

North
Pass

zt

I NT

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

z+

East

Soutb
Obi.
3NT
SNT

Opening lead: ts

Now South uttered a silent
prayer to the gods of chance
and played his ace and king
of hearts.
The queen drorped and
dummy s 10 o
hearts
became an entry for
dummy's remaining spade '
honor. South had his slam
and East had a migraine
headache .

~~vwf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
37 Poker term
ACROSS
I Under one's 38 " - Gabler"
39 Lack
(achieved)
5 Burton 's
DOWN
birthplace
1 Premise
10 Sandarac
2 Construct
3 Witch
tree
11 Intersecting 4 Prefix
12 Half (prefix) for cycle
13 Tell tales
5 Fatigued
1t Here (Fr. )
6 Music hall
15 Naval vessel
features
16 Grandiose
7 Foamy
18 Psychic's
8 Joins up
9 Russian plain
gift'
19 Child of Loki II Play for
time
20 Comedian
Johnson
21 Fish
23 Stallone's
nickname
and others
24 Gossip
25 Meadow
sound
26 According to
Z7 Rang, as
a bell
31 Run neck
33 Dock-workers'
union
34 Signing,

Yesterday' s Answer
15 Useless
greenery
17 " All - Jazz"
20 Aida
21 Suppress
22 Fissured
23 King Ibn 24 Pastry

25 Bell sounds
27 North Pole
name
26 Keaton
29 Choice
300utmoded
32 Lenient
35 Pallid

as a
contract
35 Hold
it!
311 Perfumes

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's
Ia

how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFE_LLOW

One letter limply atondl for another. In this sample A· I•
·x for the two O's, ete. Single leiters,
apoetropheo, the len,ih and formation of the words are all
hinta. Eocb doy 1he code !etten are different.

ueed for the three L's

CRYPTOQUOTES

PQJRDTB.\JI
RWBJRQ

JB

EWTR

CJ F R
HAWD

EYDRV ,

F RI H.

·i$F=

Yetterday'a ~te: SILENCE IS THE LANGUAGE OF ,,

· IIOerb'o goddaughter !riel
to tree henelf from her gift

FEAR.-GIAOOMO LEOPARD!

e

••

girl got- INTO DEEP WATER

L-------------- - - - -----

miere. Jack believes he' s
broken the rule of no
hank y-pank y with a room-

Cor. Fourth and Pine

8oats •and
Motors for Sale

Gl

CD

indoor-outdoor •••ft•• NO Phone 446-3888 or 4464477
.
ruat. Driven on
only, 40.000 mi .. , ;~-;;-;-.
Call 446 -06~6- tftar Drm. '
,

1981 Kawasaki 1000 LTD,
4,000 mlloo, excellent condillon,-304-676-1 028 after
5.

II ID (!) MOVIE: 'Seem•

Company

·CARTER'S PLUM BilliG
AND HEATIIIIG

vertible cloth top with tinted

Shirley's dream of marriage
finally comes true

Like Old Times'
&lt;Il700 Club

Motorcycles
82

75

4782, Golllpollo, OH.
I,
1·

meet a black orphan on
their honeymoon . (60 min .)
(I)
MOVIE:
'Student

rienced m~aon . roofing , car..
· panter, electrician, general ...
1 978 Plymouth Volara, 1 repairs and remodeling . Call

Answer: What the guy who made a pass at I he wrong

The weak two bid was
first thought of by Richard
Richardson around 1935.
Howard Schenken and
Edward Hymes Jr. started
its serious development
around 1942 and today it is a
standard expert tool.
Neither Dick. Howard or
Eddy envisioned one like the
abominable bid by East, but
bridge is a game of rree
enterprise and East tried it.
The bid did have an effect
there. It goaded his opponents into a really horrible
no-trump slam, but East was
properly punished when
South broughl the slam
home.
South won the diamond
lead and gave a quick count
of winners and losers. He
, had to lose lhe spade ace so
he needed five heart tricks.
Five hearts, plus three
diamonds and two clubs
gave him a total of 10. He
needed two spades for his
magic number.
At trick two South led his
singleton spade. West was
correct when he ducked.
South still needed a second
spade trick so he continued
by leadin~ dummy's king
and sheddmg his deuce of
clubs.
West won this and led
another diamond.

Tonl~1

RINGLE 'S SERVICE o•pe-

Autos for Sale

~==:;======l=========:.J ·448·04815.
~~:'o~o !':.;11 •,::M~~~d~li

TWIIII Rivers Tower now
ranting to qualified appllcants 60 or older. 304-676- ~· ·~
8679 . HUO asalotod project. vuM BOARDING HOUSE

1.;:.:.~ J,~f ]{
~~~ r~~~O_L_I~O~E ~

304-676·

Jumbles: RIVET TEASE ANYWAY DROPSY

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

8 :00 II (I) (!) Father Murphy
Mae and John Murphy

1979 Jeep CJ-7, au,dra·

1,000 bushel ear corn.
All Breed Grooming, 7 days $2.70 bu . Old corn. 6\4a week. Pick up and delivery. 992-7468.
Call 814-367-7B77 .

We will MEET or BEAT ony
fine clas- legitimate price your receive
sical reproduction oak furni- on any new plano or Offlln.
ture In stock. Paul Conkel . BRUIIIICARDI MUSIC CO ..
Tupperaplaina, Oh . Rt.7, 61 Court St., Golllpol'-. Coli
l\lorth End.
446-0687.
Antlqueo.

uoo.

oher 6.

(Answers tOfT'IOrrow)

Bad bid, bad slam

~eclal

Trak, brand new whl1e con-

condition. Butler Hereford

stove, chain block. drill
pre11, fuel oil, mower, dis·

Slabs

Grain fed freezer beef. law-

POODLE GROOMIIIIG. Cell Farm; Lower River Rd. Call
Judy Taylor at 614-367- ~14-256 - 1 ·113 or 6147220.
258-6618.

Side by sldo rofrig., erect.

Quaur, and

PAINTING . Interior or exte-

rence Burdell. Call 814246-6181 .

600 bu. of old

new palnl, $7,200. Call
446 -4237 aher 5 PM wk.
dayo.

~~~--~-C:=~~ , ~--~~~~~~~

ITI I I I I I )"

BRIDGE

e

I

IS

Now anange lht circled lottero 10
form the surprise answer, as suo·
gelled by tho above cartoon .

Jumbtl BOOk No. 20, containing 110 puzdta.lt aWIIIablt for S1.8&amp; poetplld
lrcm Jumble, clo thll newapaper, Box 34, Norwood. N.J. 07648. Include Y""r
name, 8dcWN, zl code tnd make cheeks
tble lo Ntwa
1.

Bodleo'
(I) MOVIE: 'Suporfly'
(I) lllatlonal Geographic

Rigs for oole. 614-9492017,.

360-B John Deere dozer, 6

mai1t. adults, no pate, Point

Now Haven. 3 bedroom un·
turn opt. 304-882-3366.
Three room turn . opt .

.I

~9-~~,. Camero 360 auto·

- ~;..-~;.-

II

.

()) Buslneaa Report
())) Taj Mehal The beauty
and lha history of the Ttij
Mahal is explored.
(IJ
Entenalrwnont

Gourd - Free

houoe calls. Call 676 ,2398
or 446 -2464.
•

Uveatock

Call 446-3844 eher 4 p.m.

1-614- 256 ·

1924 Eastern Avo. , Gallipolis, Call 446-9616.

Firewood .

860 Ford tractor 8 3600, 1~~;;:M.S. tractor t3600.;
5 h . buoh hoQgl 8400.
1 3 .poJnt carry all •as.
Chevy 3 quarter ton pickup
$1 ,ooo. 304-1578-2328 or
304-576-2908.
63

For sale Aewleigh Products,

Throe room tumlohed apan-

45

.I

Yesterdays

()) D CD Family Feud

for directory that ahowa you
how to purchase. 24 houra.

73

56

1676.
APARTMENTS . mobile
homes, housat. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis . 614-4468221 or 614 -246-9484.

1979 20C Meooey Ferguoon
ond loader, pl&lt;&gt;w, disc, cultivator. tinea. bruoh hog,
gradar blade. '10.600. Call
Building material• block, 446-2971 .
brick. aewer pipes, windows, llntalt, etc. Claude Oliver corn picker Modal73Wln1an. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 2 row $626. Stock chopper
4 row wide, t!IOO. Corn ele614 -245-6121.
votor 36ft. tronoport, UOO.
614-985-3581 .
Build your own garage
24x24 all lumber furniahed, Farmell Super A tractor, all
$660. Call anytime, 1·614- equipment *2.600. 304676-6930 or 304-676·
8B6· 7311 .
3348 . .

pickup truck. Cell614-2866930. Jackson. Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

$460 . Cell
1216.

Farm Eauip
- ment
,

55 Building Supplies

gaL tank, price $340. Other

446-0171 or 446-3733 .
apt . at Kanauga, fully carpeted with stove &amp; refrig.
Washer &amp; dryer hookup,

used 3 months. 304-875• 61
1070.

Motal shoots for all building
purposes. Flat porcellan
oname.l coated. 4x8 thfu 4 x
12. Proces, 17.00 to 89 .60.
614-667-3086 .

$1 52 par month. Call 4482746 or leave me11age we

largest Buck atove made,

Motorola,

Mci:'ICAL CAIG WIIHOUT C.HAR'EoiNEo MU51'
151! C'OIIoll:' IH 16.

Print answer here:

CD Another Ufo
ill ESPN Sports Center

Specializing In Zonkh and ,

CARS UOOI Trucks '1501
Avolloble ot local gov't
sal as. Call (refundable) 1 ·
71 4-689 - ~24 1 ext. 1 866

A !'OCTO~WHOt?IVES

\HERBACI

the past week 's baseball
action .

, ,,

RON'S Television Service.

, v4o

Apartments . 304 - 676 -

Two -2 bdr. trailers com-

Tobacco biting box ea. order

ric heat-air cond., W~t~her­

3 bdr co untry home. modern
kitchen, basement, carpet-

446-41 13.

, ,,
"

•'
,

Upright freezer, approx. 6

dryor. Call 446-4383 doya,
446-0139 eve.

niohod. 614-992-3874.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

BORN LOSER

Gone Sr11lth, 992·6309.

2 bdr. downtown, all carpet,
complete kitchen. ell elect·

304-676-4684.

ing. Oft Sandhill Rd . 304882 ·2095 after 4 p.m.

1979 Plymouth Chomp.
A.M .- F.M .. front wheel
drlvo. good cond .. 40 mi. per .fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
gallon . Aher 6 - 614-992- cleaning. 448-2000, call belore 8 o_nd after 6:30.
3869.

11tlma1e1- apring apecials-

Yeager, Realtor. Coli 304676-6104 or 676-6386.

Small furnished effiancy, 1
profestional type male only.
lipolla Daily Tribune. 826. Center air &amp; hoot. Coli 446-

Six room house. 1 ac::re 46631 .
along Kanawha River, 304- 1- - - -- - - -- -

tYAXLAGj
) I I

()) Bull' 1 Eye
CD ESPN Sponatorum
Cll Gomer Pyle
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Cllerfle'o Angola
G (J) Tic Tac Dough
CD ())) MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
(]D New•
G &lt;l2l People' o Coun
7 :30 II 1D ® You Alked For
It
()) Race for the Pennant
Barry Tompkins and Tim
McCarver host this look at

Gene's Steam Carpet Clean-

months. 1400. 304-876- GOOD THINGS TO EAT :: :
6056
CANNING PEACHES. Yel-

()

Klda This show examines
sex education for children .

CHRISTIAN'S CO Ill r;~'
STRUCTION. Conatr., roof• '
ing , tiding, spouting, .:

Scotch

HUD available 2 bdr. deluxe.
kitchen furnished , good location. utilities psrtlally
paid . 6 rm houH for rent.
Reeldential and commercial
propertiea for sale or leaae.
A-One Real Estatat, Carol

TENKO

()) Talking Sex .. W{Your

•

Nova e9 model. 19 mi. par
gal. 4 opeod on floor, 400
engine. greet ohepe. 614742-3063 ofter 6 p.m .

DID P.M. Mogulne

I
I ()
-

I I IX)

(I) Andy Grlffl1h

p.m . .

36

())) Ullea, YO!I8 end You

7:00

Maoonary work,loguo Controctlng. Rt. 1. Ewlngton .
Ceii614-38B-9939 .
: •

Autoa for Sale

71

Musical
Instruments

(J) Bob Newlwort Show
(J) • (jJ ABC Newa
II (J) (]D CBS Newo
(I) Dr. Who

CAPTAIN STEEMER Cerpet
Cleaning fao!ured by Hoffelt
Brollhora Cullom Corpets . ..
Free estlmatH. Call 446·
2107.

'"
~~·=:=:::;;;:===::;=====:::===~
57

8 :00 D(l)~r
Cll MOVIE: 'Tribute'
Cll Carol Burnett
(J) • CD'!lD • lD Newo
(!) News/Sporto/Weather
(J) Electric Company
())) 3·2 · 1. Conuct
8:30 D ID CD NBC Newa
(J) 150.000 Pyramid

aoma remodeling. 20 yn. •w

@

tourOntlnay -

EVENING

PAINTING •.lnterlolond ox- .
terlor, • plumbing, rooflng, • ,,

~

U'*&gt;aot&gt;le u- four Jumblel,
onelel1tr to lOCh oqun, 111 form

1

9/2~/8~

-------- •··.
i

I
I

Llnooar, Browning Mork 4;
D· 1 04 mike, stock 3 high
gain beama, 60 ft. tower.
ground plane antenna &amp;.
Bolin tractor parts. 814949-2722 .

Hng and Vellowroot prlcet.

1:

eotlmotoo.· Coli 614· 266- · ,..
1182.
....

Snow blade forOravelytreC·
tor. Never uMd . CB radio &amp;

Call Roban Harper for Gln-

Television
Viewing

ti ...

te:~~:tured ceflingl commer- ..-.
clal end reoldontlol, fru

For oalo- Used Devil
Tronchor . 1 - 614 - 8947842 .

price aoch.
814-992-2805
.machino.
llk•llew.
both 11 'h
preferably altar 4.

ment, 1 car garage. centre! Busineas for tale. 0&amp; Night
heat &amp;: air, good location. Club licence. equipment &amp;
inventory . Preaently in oper614-992-3688 .

"!

..•

Clipper supormotlc maoonry
saw. V"'Y QO&lt;&gt;d cond. 381n. I~~
4 blade Goldbllll trowllng

3 bedroom house. Full base-

Home
'
Improvements

The

Ohio

STUCCO PLASTERING • "·

1 21inoleum ruga, *22.; ma -

waahera , refrigerators,
dinette seta, c::haa1, dreuars,
bunkie mattreaa. $40. Call

81

'

choir, •199.: wallhuggero
$1 25.; bunk bod,s with bun-, 66,000 BTU Clrculeting g11
_·ii~~ ­ haate;r, Warm Morning. Celt
klas, $170.: box
mattrell, *100.
614-992-7022 or 814•1 20.: roclinero. •eo.: 9 x 992-7476.
ple rockoro, •49., wringer

~-

by Larry Wrlghl

KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

Fire wood for 11le. 830. apllt
&amp; delivered. 614-992-7237

SWAIIII
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Oliva St .• Galli·

28,1982

I'

54 Misc. Merchandise

51 Household Goods

~~~

- . .

Ohio

-~~--

• of

(JI

f-*"' IM!d Mr.

-carv

..

BWEXRC

,,

SXHCRQ

ALL STRONG PASSIONS: LOVE, ANGER, SURPRISE,

�Page 1G-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, September 28,1982

P01!1e"7-Middlepo:t, Ohio

Springfield's future brighter
SPRINGFIELO, Ohio (AP) eratlng Oftlcer Donald D. Lennox
Thlscltyof73,!XXlhadabrlghtfuture . said Monday that the decision to
today after months of wondering consolidate In Springfield ultiwhether Its largest employer, Inter- mately hinged on Its more efficient
national HBIVester Co., would aban- plant, 40 years newer than Fort
don It In favor of Fort Wayne, Ind., Wayne's.
The mood was jubilant In Springand leave thousands unemployed.
International Harvester anfield. IH workers and community
oounced Monday It would consolileaders gathered In taverns and at
date Its truck assembly operations
private clubs to celebrate. Signs
In the central Ohio city and phase saying "Thanks IH" and "Springout truck operations at Its Fort
field Loves IH" appearedlnfrontsof
Wayne, Ind., plant. HBIVester'sdebusinesses.
clslon last summer to close one of Its
An estimated 2,:.Dl workers will
North American truck plants
lose their jobs In Fort Wayne.
prompted a bidding war between
Fort Wayne Mayor Winfield
the two cities that ended In a virtual
Moses Jr. said he wasn't surprised
that Harvester chose Ohio.
dead heat.
Company President and ChlefOp"The decision comes as a harsh

Endorsement pleases
Church's opponent
WASHINGTON (AP)-Ayoung
lawyer seeking to oust Sam Church
as president of the United Mine
Workers union says Church's allegations that he Isn't eltglble to hold
office are the'' actions of a desperate
man.','
Richard Trumka, 33, said
Church's claims are old and, "the
Issue was settled a year ago."
Trumka made his comments Monday shortly before accepting an endorsement of his candidacy by
WUllam Esselstyn, the union's
secretary-treasurer.
Trumka and his two running
mates praised Esselstyn for abandoning his own Independent campaign for I"EH!Iectlon to the UMW's
No. 3 post, calling the endorsement
"a tremendous boost" to the slate
opposing Church.
In unofficial union returns on
nominating ballots for president,
Trumka has the endorsement of ~9
locals to Church's 283.
Trumka says the union's chief
policy-making body, the International Executive Board, certified
his ellglbUlty by unanimous vote InJuly 1981. He s!Pd Church raised the
Issue again to divert a ttentlon trom
his own conduct as the union's
leader.
But a spokesman for Church, Eldon Callen, said the board reaf·
firmed Trumka's ellglbUlty for
office on the basis of "a forged
document.''

He was referring to a letter written In Trumka' s behall by former
union president Arnold MUler. The
letter certified that Trumka had
accrued enough "classified (WorkIng) time'' In the coal llelds to qualIfy for office under the union's
constitution.
The union's constitution says that
toquallfyforunionofflce,amember
of the United Mine Workers must
have worked In or near a mine lor
five years.
Callen clabned that Trumka
never met that requirement.
However, the head of the union's
Health and Retirement Funds said
In a letter to Trumka that the challenger's past employment with
Jones &amp; Laughlin Coal Co. "constitutes seven years of serviCe under
the terms of the 1974 Pension Plan
based on your classified employment In the coallndustiy."
Callen argued that Trumka, nonetheless, tails to meet the constitutional requirement for five years'
service In the mines. "He doesn't
have it, and theletterdoesn'tsayhe
has it," Church's spokesman said.
Callen said that under the pension
program, a person would need to
work only 2al days a year to be credited with a year's time lor retirement purposes.
When the Issue oi'I'rumka'seltglblllty was raised In July 1981, the
board voted unanimously to let the
southwestern Pennsylvania area
mine union official keep his seat.

Meigs County happenings ..
DOOication set

Admitted--Patsy Laudermllt, Ra·
cine; Norma Goodwin, Pomeroy;
Bernice Fry, Pomeroy; Dorothy
Reynolds. Middleport.
Discharged--Rita Rhodes, Kat·
hleen Anthony, Donald Weaver.

Dedication of Pomeroy's new city
hall will be held Sunday, Oct. 3, from
1 to 4 p.m. The public Is cordially
Invited to attend.

Four calls were answered by local
units on Monday, the Meigs County

Emergency Medical Serv lee
reports.
At 3:51 a.m., the Rutland Unit
took Dave Neutzllng from Meigs
Mine 2to Holzer Medical Center and
the 'I'IIppers Pl!iins Fire Department answered a call to a trailer fire
on Owl Hollow Road at 8:05a.m.
The Pomeroy Unit at 1: 21 p.m. took
Norma Goodwin from Lasley St. to
Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
the Rutland Unit at 7: 43 p.m. took
Carlos McKnight from the Rutland
Civic Center to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Money actipns filed
Two suits for money and another
for divorce have been flied In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Bank One of f'omeroy, NA, !Ued
suit In the amount of $44,!XXl against
Appalachian Petroleum Co., Reno,
Ohio.
Lavelle and Goldsberry Co., alegal professional association Athens,
filed suit In the amount of $6,858.98
against Dennis Boothe, Pomeroy,
for legal lees due.

Divorce sought
Rhonda Jewell, Rt. l, Rutland,
!Ued suit for divorce against Kevin
Jewell. Rt. 1. Rutland.

Sherwood Perry. Rt. 3, Albany. ·

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses were Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to Robert Joseph Lawrence, 19, Rt.l, MlnersvUle, and Teresa Ann Causey,
21 , Rt. l, Reedsville; Ronald Eugene Grate, 31, Rutland and Judith
Lynn Mora, 19, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

Minor damage
A car driven by a 'I'IIppers Plains
light damage In a
single-car colllslon.ln Meigs County
early Monday morning.
Accc)rdlng to the Gallla-Meigs
post ol the State Highway Patrol,
HarOld L. Nutter, 38, was eastbound
on Ohio 681 when he went ott the
right side of the road and over an
enbanlanent, corning to rest lJ) ·a

man received

ftekl.

There were no InJuries and no
citations.

•(

Ohio lottery winner

In the Ohio Lottery's dally game
"The Number" was 240.
The lottezy reported earnings of
$538,929 from the wagering on Its
dally game. 1be earnings came on
sales of $878,611!.50, while hOlders of
winning tickets are entitled to share
$3.11,679.50, lottery ~clals said.

IArea deaths

"ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE DAILY SENTINEL"
SEcnoN A· PAGE A1

/

FADJNG COMPANIES - This graphic details
the nwnber of American companies that have failed
since 1970. A record nwnher of companies have

f

Lola H. Duckworth
Lola Hawley Duckworth, 73, Syraclise, died Sunday, Sept. 26, at
Falls Church, Va. Arrangements
will be announced by Ewing Funeral Home.

Leroy WUllarn (Roy) Donohew,
77, CirclevUle, died Monday at ClrclevUle Manor Nursing.Home.
Mr. Donohew was born June' 29,
1905 the son of the late George W.
and Anna Mooney Donohew. He
was preceded'ln death by his wife,
Mildred Ours Donohew In 1979. He
was also preceded In death by three
brothers, Ralph, Ray and Paul Donohew. He attended East Letart
United Methodist Church.
Survivors Include four sons,
George Donohew, CirclevUle; John
Donohew,Clovls,NewMexlco; Jettrey Donohew, Townsend, Delaware and one
Gregory
Circleville;
sister,Donohew,
Evelyn
Webster, Garfield Hts., Ohio; several nieces and nephews and . U
grandchildren.
Funeral services wm be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home with the Rev. Pearl
Casto officiating. Burial wUl be In
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home after 7
P·~· this evening.

Business collapse reasons
deeper than·economic times
NEW YORK (APl- American
companies, weakened by two recessions In two years, are laUing at
the fastest rate since the Depression. But bankruptcy specialists
say the causes of collapse run
deeper than the unlrlendly economic tbnes.
Stumbling In the executive suItes, bungling In the board rooms just plain bad manage!'Tient - Is
critical in the failure of many companies, even In the best of times.
Also, moves to clear the web of
government
from
such
key Industriesregulation
as finance,
airlines

counting finn Ernst &amp; Whlnney. "A
well-managed company Is somehow able to gear Its business tp the
times so It can survive."
By Dun &amp; Bradstreet's count, an
average ol 473 commercial and Industrial companies have either
been forced to cJose or to seek reorganization each week so far this
year. That Is the fastest rate of collapse since 193'i, when the weekly
rate was 612.
"Bad management decisions
often can be covered up by good

.:•

••
:
••
:·

.

i••
•
:

$14995
•

NO COUPONS

. .YOU
. .................
:GET . QUALITY

NO GIMMICKS

a

SERVICE
W~EN YOU DEAL WITH LOCAL
PEOPLE.
.·

lcstasy
Bath Towel

lrregulan
t8.2t" Plltecll

27'2 Qt. (2.3 liters) ·

'WHISTLING
TRIG
. TEA KETTLE

----

It's time toI stock up on towels!
•
Thick, fluffy loop terry In a variety
of colors. Cotton/polyester,
25x46-lnch size.

·•··Fast-heating
aluminum
• triggeroperated
.spout

are

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

,.~ba~nkru~~p~tc~y~spec~l~al~ls:t~a~t~th~e~a~c-J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~.

12·0z._Bag
POIJIIIer

LA•Z•BOVREcuNA- ROCKER'
150.00 OFF ANY lA·Z·BOY

IN STOCK

om:
KT. WEDD'ING
BANDS

n,omen's '1995 Men's S39"

S39900

21

18 'lb.
Heavy Duty
ONLY

3.19.95

1

MANY SlfLES I'--.......,...J
Ill STOCK
CASH &amp; CARRY

5 PIECE WOOD

..Only

s2~99s

FREE S'ET OF PULL SIZE
BEMCO BUCKilOO WITH .
ANY· SUITE OVER,S599?5

~•

~­

-~

RADAUJIG£
MICROWAVE
·oNLY ·

$2194'!

'

Pure polyester fill for
plllow8,·toyl or crafts.
.Wuhable.

JEWELRY

ONLY

.

~················~·

I

ELBE~RFEL.DS · IN

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
•

:
:
:

economic -times," says Michael
Horgan senior vice president of
credit ~licy at Cltlbank "But bad '
decisions are exacerbated when
you get a downturn In the
economy.' '
Most bankruptcy specialists.
agree, however, that .even some
well-run companies are throwjpg In
the towel.
· For the year so far, 17,502 'businesses have failed, abnost half
again as many as In the same .period last year.

~~~~~~;,;:~~~~~~;:~T.=:===~;;,

and trucking have left many companles wlnerable as they cope with
unlamUiar competition.
And the on glut Is battertng the
energy business, which only two years ago was riding an unprecedented wave of protlts and seemed
almost Immune to recession.
But whatever the cause, analysts
say, the sickest side of business Is
the !countless numbers of small,
some t i•m e s fa m II y - run,
enterprises. ·
Joseph Duncan, chief statistician
at Dun &amp; Bradstreet Corp., a private credit-Information service,
says a great share of businesses
that go under
small companies
run by people with little previous
·experience In that line of work.
"It's when tbni!S get bad that you
separate the gDO!I management
from the bad," says Ben Evans, a

RUTLAND
BOTTLE GAS
RUTLAND, OH.
: / . · TANK RENT FRE~
:
100 GALLONS GAS
AND INSTALLATIONS
:
'

closed their doors, weakened by two recessions in two
years. (AP Laserphoto).

i

CLEVELAND (AP) - The win·
nlng nwnber drawn Monday night

GET VALUE PRICE &amp; SERVICE AT

Canle said missing
Informed that sherltf' s department
that three ol his 16 head ol cattle are
missing.
The cattle are shorthorned and
red and white In color. Perry had a
pasture field rented that Is located
ott county road, one mUe south of
Salem Center. The Incident Is under
InvestigatiOn.

Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes, In
Springfield tor the announcement,
said, "You know, there's not much
of a line between ,misery and
happiness."
But It was a line the people of
Springfield had grown weary of
walking, and they celebrated the
end ol uncertainty with gusto.
"Evezyone's happy about It,"
said Kathy Atchison, an employee
of the HBIVester Inn near the IH
body plant, where workers began
gathering about noon. "(The announcement) took a lot off of people's minds."
Ms. Atchison said lalk at the tavern In recent weeks centered on the
posslbUity the truck assembly plant
and Its approximately 2,1XXl jobs
would be lost.
"I work from like 2 to 6: ll, and I
talk to a lot of them when they get
ott," she said. "And that's about all
they've been talking about for the
last couple of months.
"You !mow, they'd see an ad for
something and then they'd say,
'Nope, I better not use that money in
the bank' because they didn't know
what would happen."
Monday's jubUatlon was tempered by concern for Harvester's
overall financial health.

uroy w. Donohew

Veterans Memorial

Emergency runs

blow to thousands of Individuals
who work forthlsmajoremployer1"
Moses said. "I'm not surprised. I
am disappointed and I'm deeply
concerned about the worry I know
this decision wUl cause."

: .

1-'!·.

40--count tall kitchen
can bags or 30 count
26·gal. size trash
bags.
83

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="186">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2776">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="44871">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="44870">
              <text>September 28, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1087">
      <name>donohew</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4477">
      <name>duckworth</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="114">
      <name>hawley</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
