-
http://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/fb6d2d641d78e17e7088d7ee37d63875.pdf
ade12a2638ab3289ffe6dfb30a04a528
PDF Text
Text
- '.
Reagan, Koh' hope to reinforce partnership
ByGEORGEGEDDA
A81!0claled Pl'eli8 Wrtter
WASHINGTON (AP) - With a major Irritant to
allied relations out of the way, West German Chancellor Helmut Kohlls heading Into talks with President
Reagan determined to reinforce the partnership between NATO's most mWtarlly powerful members.
West German officials saki before Kohl's arrival
Sund!jy that Reagan's decision to lift the sanctions on
.firmS lhvolved In building the Soviet gas pipeline foreshadows a friendly meeting between the two leaders.
That Issue, along with the implications of the leadership change In the Soviet Union, Is expected to dominate Reagan's meeting and working luncheon with
Kohl today.
bv Dick Cav.a lli
WJNTHROP
REM&\AI3ER 1 THE
TR64.CH E-R:JU5 qER'v\
MUST NEVE< REL..AX
WE M"U6T Fl~HT lHE EVIL, ·
DE5Pic.Af5LE <:a=RAA .
OUR V lq iLANCE.'
WIIH ALL.OLIR6TRENQ-TH!
ACCORD I Nq L~ W~
NEVER 5LEEP5! .
<
WE: MLJ5f F16HT HIM IN
OUR CITIES AND HAMLET51
OtJ LAND AND ON SEA . ..
mined to " lead the German-American relationship
out of the twilight zone and confirm and stablllze the
relationship."
Reagan's decision, earlier this year, to impose sanctions on U.S.-llcensed West European companies involved In buDding the Siberian pipeline caused strains
In Washington's relations with Bonn:
Although less committed to East-West detente than
.his predecessor; rlelrilut Sclunldt, Kohl has been insistent that West German companies taking part in the
Soviet gas pipeline project should honor their
contracts.
The Impasse ended Saturday when Reagan announted the sanctions would be lifted as a result of
what he said was a "substantial agreement" between
the United States and its allies on guidelines for future
The Daily
•
US Pal & !M Oll
In an Interview Sunday with West German television, Kohl said he doubted that the death of Soviet
President Leonid Brezhnev and the successlon ofYurl
Andropov asCommunlstPartyleaderwiUbrlngabout
any dramatic, short-term change In Soviet policies.
"The problems naturally remain after Brezhnev's
death: the problems of Soviet over-armament, the
problems that we watch with concern every day In
Poland, the war continuing in Afghanistan and the
necessity to reach worldwide disarmament and detente," Kohl said.
He also said it is "quite obvious" that West Germany
must be cautious about preserving its ties with the
United States because of his country's dependence on
American mllltary power for its security.
On taking office last month, Kohl said he was deter-
Vol.3 I ,No. I 36
Copyr;ghlod 1982
East-West economic ties.
Since taking office last month, Kohl has pleased the
Reagan administration with his repeated assurances
that he wlU permit deployment of medium-range U.S.
nuclear misslies on West German soli late next year if
there is no breakthrough in U.S.-Soviet arms control
talks.
"Of course, there will be resistence, perhaps even
major resisll'nce. But we will still do it," Kohl said last
week. The purpose of the missiles is to counter the
Soviet deployment of SS-20 missiles targeted at Westell) Europe.
Unlike Schmidt's Social Democrats, the Christian
Democrat Union which Kohl heads is solidly behind
the missile deployment plan.
entinel
1 Section 10 Pag es
1S C.nts
A Multimedia Inc . Ne wspaper
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 15, 1982
(
1
WE MUST F16HT HIM IN
I LL6HUT UP
'r'OLJ'VE qaT
THE AAOUNTAINqANDON
THE ROLLINGf PLAINS ...
IF 'iOU'LL 60
'YOUR6El,.F
HOME.
.
\
A DEAL.
News accepted 'With caution'
b Ed Suili~an
Priscilla's Po
FIRST, THE
OH, SWEETHEART;
·
I'M SO GLAD "retiRE
l-OW: .1 EVERYTHING
HOfWATER
TANK BURST
WENT WI<ONG TODAY.'
CLEVELAND - Solidarity supporters In Cleveland have accepted .
news of the release of Lech Walesa with caution.
"Freeing Lech Walesa has not freed his people," said David Domzalski, chairman of the Cleveland unit of the Committee In Support of
Solidarity, to about 60 supporters attending a demonstration Saturday at the Soldiers and Sallors Monument.
Jerzy J . Macluszko, Pollsh-bornscholarwhois professor emeritus
at Baldwin-Wallace College, said Walesa Is only free if he Is able to do
what he did before.
AND FI..CCDED
THE eASEMENT
THEN A MAN TRIPPED
ON A CRACK IN OJR
51 DEWALK .AND HE ~
GOI NG 10 SUE/
THEN THE
BANK CALLE l/
AND SAID' WE
WE~E
$250
OVERDRA.WN.
WHEN I DROVE
lAJWNTOWN TO TAKE
CARE OF IT: I Bto.<?-HED
A FENI/ER a-.1 THE' CAR
THEN I FOUND
OJTQJR IN-
I .
Moody undecided on new tenn
SURANCE HAI7
LAP':7ED.
COLUMBUS- Mayor t om Moody says he has not yet madeuphls
mind whether he will seek a fourth term next year and added that
speculation that he has decided not to run Is distorted and premature.
"I would like to decide Feb. 1," Moody said. "I never make up my
mind before Christmas.' '
City Finance Director Harmon Beyer speculated last week that
Moody would not seek re-election. Reports from City Hall also began
circulating that Moody has Instructed Cabinet members to prepare
transition papers and advised them to be aware of other "occupa• ..00118J
opportunities."
FUNERAL SCENE - This was the scene Monday morning In Red
Laserphoto) .
May eliminate summer jobs
... AND IT'LL
WHEN I Gar
HOME, THE WASHING
N\ACHINE WENT
KA-FLOOEY"·
COST$93 TO
KA-YE IT F'IXEt7.
WALDe), HAVE '-rOLl
BEEN LISTENING
TO ME"
WHY
A~
Y<JlJ
STANDING THERE .
SMILING LIKE
THAT~
LANCASTER- A Falrlleld Countyofflclallsconslderlng ellm1nat ·
ing a summer jobs program for college students.
County Engineer Robert C. Reef said he may cancel the program
because the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services advised him that
he will have to pay unemployment compensation to a college student
who worked durtng the summer and decided not to return to school.
"It would be a shame to end the program, bull don't think it's right
that taxpayers should pay an extra $1i50toa person hired as a summer
student," Reef said. "Everybody who hires students during the
summer is going to have to look hard at their programs."
IM TRYING lO HAVE'
THE t:tCE DAY THAT
EYE~<:YON!; ?AID I
SHOULD HAVE .
Claims office should be closed
YOUNGSTOWN - The Reagan administration's consumer affairs office should be closed because it's a consumer fraud, says
veteran consumer advocate Betty Furness.
Ms. Furness, who was appointed In 1967 as the federal govern-.
ment's first consumer advocate by President Lyndon Johnson, says
the office she founded has been badly dOwngraded.
"I can accept that President Reagan does not believe In it (consumerism)," she said In a Junior League Town Hall lecture. "He has
said so. wbut I cannot accept a federalconsumerprotectlonofflce that
does not admit it does not act on behalf of konsumers."
b
DUSTY CHAPS
O.l'f Cf bAS~! COJ'T TaL
M€ 'fOJ to~ TO FILL
"ffiE:
T~K ~
-:..---••.._,
\1-{E.f<S'S A 'STATIOtJ
Af;oJT
Art & Chi
San so
I I
The Forecast For 7 a.m. EST
Tu•esclav. November 16
Square durtng funeral ceremonies for Leonid Brezhnev. ( AP
Soviets pay last respects to Brezhnev
MOSCOW (AP) '- Dignitaries
from around the world and thousands of mourning Soviets paid
their last respects to President Leonid I. Brezhnev today before his hero's burial In Red Square.
Vice President Geor:ge Bush, Secretary of State George P. Shultz
and Ambassador Arthur A. Hartman formed the U.S. delegation to
the funeral of the man who led the
Soviet Union for 18 years.
Brezhnev died Wednesday of an
apparent heart attack at age 75.
The funeral procession was to be
led byYurl V. Andropov, his successor as general secretary of the nation's ruling Communist Party.
Other Kremlin leaders and promInent Soviets bearing fragrant fir
wreaths were to join the solemn
march from the columned House of
Unions where Brezhnev's open
casket was on public display for
three days.
Andropov, 68, planned to deliver
the eulogy from atop the Lenin
mausoleum before Brezhnev's
flower-strewn coffin was lowered
Into the grave to a cannon salute.
The capital was under the tightest
security since Josef Stalin's death in
1953 as troops and police sealed off
the city center adjacent to the
Kremlin.
Delegations from more than 40
nations were arriving in Moscow for
the funeraL Government and party
leaders from all Soviet-bloc states
also were expected.
The official list of delegation
Abortion poll figures released
COLUMBUS - The majority of registered voters surveyed in a
statewide mall poll believes the Ohio General Assembly should not
limit a woman's ablllty to have an abortion.
The Columbus Dispatch conducted the poll Oct. ~'1:1 among 1,520
people.
Sixty-four percent of those who answered the survey opposed the
Legislature limiting the ability of a woman to have an abortion.
The Legislature is considering a bill which would require a woman
to walt 48 hours between the time she requested an abortltn and the
time she has the procedure.
In the poll, 51 percent of the Roman Catholics voted in favor of
limiting abortions while legislative action was oposed by70percent of
the Protestants, ~ percent of the Jews and 70 percent of the persons
who said they had other or no religious affiliation.
I
FIV~ MIL85
chiefs included Cuban President
Fidel Castro, Afghan President Babrak Karma! and Gen. WolclechJaruze lskl. Pola nd 's pre mier,
Communist Party chief and martial
law ruler.
Also attending were India's
Prtme Minister Indira Gandhi, Philippines Firs t Lady Imelda R. Marcos, Vietnam's President Truong
Chinh and Palestine Liberation Organl7.ation chief Yasser Arafat.
Secretary-General J avier Perez
de Cuellar was representing the
United Nations.
The U.S. delega tlon, bearing a~
ribboned fir wreath, spent a sllent
minute before Brezhnev 's casket on
Sunday, and Bush offered his personal condolences to Brezhnev's 74year-old widow, Viktorla.
Two Soviet army officers held the
American wreath in front of the
casket for a few moments before
placing it with the thousands of
wreaths filling the three-story
bulldlng.
·
(Continued on page 10)
•
UP 11-\E RoAD,,
No relief seen for natural gas prtces
TAKE. TH& CAtJ
'
NJD 6E.T
OOith~
••
WEATHER. FORECAST -
1be National Weather SerYice
lorecallt lor Tuelclay predicllllbowers In J*U ol WuiiiQpoa, Oreron
and Callforala. Rain Ia expected In a 111M! ruaalal (rom puta o1
WltllblnJttD alid Orepa Into ldabo. 8oow Ia predicted IDaline nllllliD&
lroQI pare. til we.tem Cauda lnlo Wablnpaa. puta Ill ldabo and
MODUula. (AP Luerpboto). .
'
Ohio forecasts
Clear and cold tonlghi. Low 25-.tl. Winds !lght and westerly. Tues·
day, lllOIItly swu:'Y and wanner. High !f0.55.
. Extended forecast
CLEVELAND (AP) - The chairman and president of Consolidated Natural Gas Co., the·parentfirmofEastOhloGasCo., hassenta .·'···
letter to company suppliers suggesting that if they do not ease up on
gas prices, government officials might do it for them.
G.J. Tankersly said that In addition to long contracts, producers
have sought a variety of price escalators, to go Into effect in 1985, when
most controls wlU be llfted.
Tankersley said he would like to continue gradual decontrol while
modifying other advantages given producers .
But according to a report In The (Cievelend) Plain Dealer, consumer groups, gas companies, producers and regulators agree that
blame for skyrocketing gas prices rests with the Natural Ga_s Polley
Act, developed In 1978 as a result of the gas supply crlsls shortage.
A Department Of Energy survey reveals that low-Income famllles
spend between 25 percent and 33 percent of their earnings on energy,
including natural gas, electricitY and gasoline.
.
Uke many othi!r gas utilities, East Ohio Gas last week put a
gasoOOSt recovery.charge Into effect, making the price to residential
custOmers· about $5.16 for a lhpusand cubic feet of gas, 40 percent
higher than the same time illst year.
·
Whlle the act has made avallable plenty of gas, it has permitted
producers to find the most expensive gas and sell it to pipelines which
pass the cost on to local gas COitlpanles. That cost is tl1QI1 passed on to
.
gas company.custcmers.
The long-tenn contracts plpellneso!ten,slgnedwlthproducers have
resulted In pipelines being forced to lake expensive gas supplies they
don't 1leed and to pay high prices when cheaper gas is avaUable. .
. NlcbolasJ. Bush, presldentcttheNaturalGasSupply Association,
said gas producers made the best of wbat the law provided and the
CUI'I'I!Jit pricing crlsls would have happened if all controls had been
lifted and the free market allowed to operate.
Bush maintains that total decontrol would probably increase prices
Initially, but those prtces would eventually moderate, much as oil
decQntrol has done.
Columbia Gas System, taking a different approach, has told its
pipeline suppliers it would not accept minimum amounts of gas for
which It had contracted. The action has led to a lawsuit .
Meanwhile, three weeks earlier than scheduled, an emergency
Home Energy Assistance Program began today, state officials said.
· Under the HEAP emergency program, a qualified low-Income
household may be eligible to receive a one-time payment of up to$200
to cover the period from today through March 31.
"Today Is the first day applications will be accepted for processing
from Individuals whose utillty service has been disconnected or from
those who have received a warning that their serviCe may bedlssconnected," said James Duerk, state development director. ·
"The start of the emergency program was moved up to get up to
30,1XXJ homes now without utility service back on line before the harsh
winter weather sets In," Duerk added.
Duerk said the starting date for the emergency program was
moved up after the Public UtllltiesCommissisonofOhlo reported that
between 25,1XXJ and 30,1XXJ homes were without heat.
"No HEAP emergency benefit wlU be granted unless the payment
will result In restoration of service or the prevention of utlllty service
disconnection," Duerk said .
Several Ohio gas utilities have aqnounced plans under which customers who have been disconnected may get their service restored
throughpaymentofhaiftheirdebtsandlmplementationofapayment
plan.
•
'~ ' f iJ
t
'
•
,,1
·~
\
~~
~I
�•
Monday, November 15, 1982
Commentary
...
Sports briefs:--.. Meigs alumni drops ·14.. 12 grid decision
Page-2-the Daily Sentinel :
· Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio :
Monday, November 15, 1982.
Boxing
What votes don t .L.p_r_o_v_e____w_i_llia_m_F._.B_u_ck_ley_Jr~
7
The Daily Sentinel
llll "uun .- .lr t·d
I'• IIU'fnl . I ihuo
614-11!1:.'-! 156
Ill \11 11-'11 111 IIIF 1'\ IT KE:-. rut- 1"111
\U· . It, ,..,. \1\ ~11\
UO \
ROBERT 1.. \\ l'loC.FTT
I' \T WHITEHEAD
flOfl flOEFI WII
DALE ROTflC.ER . .JR .
\ \IF\IHFil nl llw - "-~ "' IUio·lt i'n·"· lnlmul llfuh l'ro ·,, ' "'"
;w '\o ·\!.S jiU)Wf l'uhi• ~ IH"rs A~~"' ia11un
1<!111111
:11111 ill•
\nwru
I i T"l FKS OF Ol'l'ojl(l\ an• 1..-lo·um•·•l Tht'l ' huuhllu· 11-,, than :1011 " " Ill • lu1 11; \ ll
ldlo·r, ;u o· ' uh)t't'l '" •·dlllll l! u utl mu.' l tw ' il!lh'tl 1o111h n:nltt '. ;oohlro·,:- aud h · h· flll "'~~'
nur11 hn '\ •· uns ij! lk'tl h•lto<r ' "'II ho· tmh[i.,hnl l.t•llt·n. ' hooultllw ' " l!""'l l;t, ll·. :u.ltlro "'' "~
t.'o~ U,. ~ . llnl Jl'l ' fSn nalilit·'·
Thought, reality
It s hould be good news in a number of quarters. not least the Reagan
admlnlstraiton, that corporate contributions to public causes are up
sharply.
Last year the total was just short of $3 billion, despite a 4 percent
decline In corporate profits.
Unfortunately, there's more to the news on this subject. And that Is
that corporate foundations. the source of a large part of the giving,
expended more on health, education, the arts and other worthy recipients
than they banked in gra nts from their donor companies. More than
two-thirds of such foundat ions ended the year In the red and total reserves
dropped by 36 percent .
The figures co me from the Conference Board, the New York-based,
business-funded economic research organization that surveyed more than
750 major corporate contributors. What they suggest Is that while
continuing to meet present commitments, this Important source of private
philanthropic funds may be jaopardlzlng its future capabilities.
The news could be even worse If the overall economy does not pick up
shortly. Prolonged recession. In the words of a Conference &lard
executive, "could cause a further hemorrhaging In company foundations.
which ha ve never been noted for their extensive reserves."
The administration Is mentioned above because of its reiterated
expectations that private funding should and would cover an Increasingly
larger part of public social needs as government spending was cut back.
This isn't the first time the Conference &lard, which strenuously
lobbies its own business constituency to be more giving, has given the
problem a ttention. In a n earlier study, it concluded that while corporate
contributions could and should be Increased, there was no possibility of
their compensating for even a major part of the human-services spending
reductions projected In Washington.
Taking an even broader look at the problem, Worldwatch Institute,
the socially conscious Washington research group, more than agrees,
observing that the administration's expectations conflict with the realities
of the last decade. If corporate philanthropy Is unequal to the job, personal
is even more so.
In 1980. 84 percent of a total $47.7 billion spent In phliahthroplc causes
came from individual donors. Impressive as this may appear, It
represents only a fraction of federal cutbacks.
Further. administration policies are making it more difficult for
private charitable organizations to operate. Many are dependent to some
extent on subsidies that are targeted for elimination- $27 billion during
1~1 -84. Tax cuts benefiting primarily the high end of the Income scale give
the wealthy less incentive to make tax-exempt donations. Meanwhile,
costs. such as for mailings essential to most fund -raising efforts, have gQne
up sharpl y.
And on the strictly personal basis, the spirit of voluntarism often
advanced by the White House as the heart-warming alternative to
Impersonal government responsibility for good works Is not what it used to
be. Polls indicate that only one In three Americans gives even minimal
time to church, frate rnal. hospital auxiliary and similar traditional
activities. And of the minority . that does volunteer. only one In 10
contributes seven or more hours a week.
In the business of giving, it may be the thought that counts most
between individuals but In the public sector It clearly doesn't count e nough.
Berry's World
" This is titled 'Blank Wall' ... "
Today in history
Today Is Monday, Nov. 15, the 319th day of1982. There are46days left In
the year.
Today' s highlight In history:
On Nov. 15, 1492, Christopher Columbus noted In his journal the use of
tobacco among natives of the New World. It was history'sflrstrecordeduse ,
of tobacco.
On this date:
In15'77,S!rFranclsDrakeofEnglandbegananaround-the-worldvoyage.
In 19:11, the League of Nations Assembly held Its first meeting in Geneva.
In 1971, In Its first official statement ~ the United Nations General
Assembly, mainland China demanded that superpowers be given a lessintluentlal role In the world body.
And 1n 19'l9, President Carter said the Iranian govenunent wruld be held
a~table tor the safety of more than 50 AmericanS held hostage at the
U.S. EmbassY In Tehran.
Tenyearsago: CubaandtheUnltedStatesexpressedadeslretonegotlate
an agreement to curb the hijacking at alrll.ners.
Five years agi,: Israel ,sent a tonnal Invitation to Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat to visit Jerwialem and address the Israeli Parliament.
One year ago: The chalnn8ll ot the President's Coonct1 at EconomJc
Advisers MUIT8Y Weldenbawn, said unemployment In the United Stalel
mlgllt ~ the post·World War n peak at 9 percent before President ··
Reagan's pollcles start helpiiW the economy grow.
The other day Mr. Tom Braden,
the columnist and commentator,
asked whether "now that Reaganomics has been discredited,"
conservatives might come up with
something pew. He might as well
have said, "now that Bowie Kuhn Is
no longer baseball commissioner,"
who did I think would replace him?
Conservatives should take a deep
breatb, along about now, and
reflect on one or two matters.
First In Importance Is that what
the last election said Is Interesting
only at the level at which one
observes the evolution of democracy. If the majority of a people
vote no on a proposition, It does not
follow that that proposition has
been discredited. It Is unhappily
true that In living memory, the
people did not avail themselves of
the opportunity to vote no on Adolf
Hitler or J uan Peron. Professor
Stouffer of Harvard wrote 20 years
ago, after a coast-to-coast survey,
that If one were to disassemble the
BUI of Rights and feed it out
piecemeal to the voters, they would
end up repealing Its provisions.
Democracy Is a means by which
we decide public policy. It Is not a
means by which the truth Is
discovered. It may happen that the
majority can assert itself, and the
truth transpire, at one and the
same time. But democracy must
not be deemed an epistemological
process. If a president proposes
that the gas shortage be ended by
lifting controls, a nd the people
Instruct Congress not to lift controls, we are not to assume from
this that ending the gas shortage by
lifting controls Is a discredited Idea.
Samuel Johnson, using language
with characteristic directness,
wrote, "There Is no more likelihood
that the choice of a rabble (read a
majority) will be right, than that
chance will be right." We like to
think that the availability of
Information, 200 years' economic
experience and the Indust.rial
Revolution have enhanced the
likelihood of a majority's being
right beyond what was the case In
the 18th century. But the point
survives.
And then. Mr. Reagan's critics,
back In 1980 when he won the
support of 44 states, were reluctant
to transcribe that vote as a.
"mand,ate." Correctly so. I.e., the
amalgam of reasons for voting for
Reagan did not transcribe neatly
into a mandate for his particular
policies. They were In part that, In
part dissatisfaction with Carter, In
part other things. But suddenly
they now speak of the withdrawal of
a mandate!
But "Reaganomics," as popularly represented, has not In fact
happened, though the president has
moved In tbe right direction.
Carter's budget for fiscal 1982 was
$739 billion. Reagan ended by
spending $728 billion. Given that
Inflation was meanwhile reduced,
In constant dollars the Reagan
administration e nded up spending
more money than Carter proposed
to spend.
At the other end, If you take Into
Germany it Is seven percent, b)
account the bracket creep and
France nlne percent, In Great
Increased Social Security taxes, the
Britain and Canada, 13 percent.
people have yet to experience a
Did Reaganomics do it to Canada.
noticeable reduction In their taxes.
and Germany?
It requles time to alter national
By the way, at this moment In
habits, and national maladies,
America, under the beginning of
many of them induced by years of
Reaganomics, tbe total employ.
high central overhead, and the
ment
Is only 200,(XX) less than when
romantic expectations that ecoCarter
left office.
nomic progress Is unrelated to
The presumption of Reaganom·
exertion and sacrifice. If 100
lcs are that tax relief, a reduction In
overweight ladles join a fat farm,
government overhead and progresand 51 of them drop out after the
sive
deregulation will' help the
first week, It is not established that
health farms don't work, or that the . economy. The notion that these
presumptions have been "discreladles don't need to lose weight, or
dited" Is first a philosophical
that those who pulled out of the
effrontery, mistaking democracy
system should be surprised If they
for epistemology; and then, as a
continue to sag from overweight.
Unemployment is an Interna- historical matter, the equivalent of
advising King Ferdinand and
tional problem, not an Isolated one.
Queen Isabella, a couple of days
If Japan used our standard o'
after
he set outjln the Santa Maria,
reckoning, even there we'd find
that
Columbus had "failed" to
unemployment at five percent. In
discove r America.
Stevenson?"
WEMBLEY, England (AP) -John McEnroe defeated Brian
Gottfried 6-3, 6-2, 6-4 to win the Benson and Hedges Tennis Tournament tor the fourth time In five years.
HOUSTON (API- Peter McNamara and Martina Navl'atUova
won the $460,(XX) World Mixed Doubles Championships w!tb a 6-4,6-3,
7-6 victory over Shetwood Stewart and Joanne Russell.
TAIPEI, T!!iwan (AP) -Brad Gilbert, playing despite a sprained
ankle and a torn ligament, beatfellow American CraigWittus6-1, 6-4
to win the $75,(XX) Taipei Tennis Championship.
Swimming
BLACKPOOL, England (AP) -Houston University swimming
star Andrew Gray was suspended for two years by the British
Swimming Federation for use ot the stpmulant drug fencamtamlne
during the Scottish Swimming Championships In August.
Gray, 21, who grew up In Durban, South Africa, and Is the son ot
leading South Afrlcant swimming Coach Frank Gray, earlier· had
been given a two-year suspension by the Scottish Swimming
Association.
General
DETROIT (AP- Former Infielder Cass Michaels, whose major
league career spanned 12 years wltb the Chicago White Sox, Washington Senators, St. Louis Browns and Philadelphia A's, died at age 56.
Michaels died Friday at &lnSecoursHosp!talinGrossePo!nt~m
what a funeral home spokesman described as natural causes.
Michaels was a major leaguer trom1943ohrough 1954, spending the
bulk of his career with the White Sox. He had 1.142 career hits and a
lltet!me batting average of .262. He play~ In two AII·Star games,
representing the White Sox In 1949 and the Senators In 1900.
•
•
......._......
Akr. St. V.·SI. Mary 11, Struthl>r.l 0
F.lyr1a Cath. '11. BPIIP.w 16
Ironton :~. Mor~an II
Urbana 14, Hamilton Badin 0
DhWoaiV
Art'htold :n. Ro!lsford 6
DI-V
AshtaOOia St . Jom '11. Mln,llO Junction
Boxer Kim near death
COLUMBU!Ii. OtUo IAP I - 11K' OhiO
<~....-RyThr AModiRd P'rtM
hl~h
!i~C'hool botball semifinal pelr~gs
and lilt~ this wl"ek wllh all kk'kotls at
7:l'l p.m.
DIVIIION I
&n•u ll.fl.O vs. Ma.'llllllon 11M. Akrul
Rubtx>r ~'1. Sarurda..v
FA~roNFERENCE
1\Uinlk 01\1~
"Come on! Get rolling! We're giving you another chancel!"
Phlladl'lphla
_W L ret. Gil
Rl .!J6 -
Boolon
7
2
.778 1
~
~
WMhlna4on
.SXI .111,
.:n1 !i
.222fi
Dl'troll
Mllwaukft>
7 .1 .700 5 4 .!Wi I Y,
Nfow
Up to that time, it had been U.S.
policy to bolster the Lebanese
government. But tbe government
was held together by a delicate
political and religious balance.
which had "disintegrated," the
memo declared .
·
"Since the establishment of a
PLO state within a state in the
1970-73 period and the subsequently
massive inflow of arms to both
Christian a nd Moslem communities," reported the memo, "The
Government of Lebanon has been
unable to exercise its a uthori ty
throughout the country. "
The CIA now only saw " no
prospect of Improvement," but
anticipated that the Israelis would
lose patience with the Palestinians
and come crashing across the
Lebanese border to deal with them.
"Further Israeli incursions, If not
imminent, are nevertheless Inevita ble," the memo predicted. "The
question is no so much whether or
when such incursions will occur but
the scope a nd purpose of such
Incursions, and their potential for
Igniting a wider and more dangerous confrontation."
A large-scale invasion, warned
the memo. "might seek to link with
the Israeli-supplied Christian milItias to the north, redrawing the
political map of Lebanon."
The CIA decided, therefore. to
wean the -Phalanglst militias from
the Israelis. "It Is concluded,"
stated the top-secret memo, "that
1 .1 6
27
N£'W York
f4.,tral DIY...,
the agency should provide military
and financial assistance, as re- :
quested, to the Phalanglst mUitias.1
"Should these militias remain ·
solely dependent on Israeli sup-;
port," the memo argued, "the U.S.'
will forfeit a ll lnfluenceln a post-i
Incursion e nvironment, with the"
likely resulting suppression of the·
Moslem communities and expul-:
slon of the Palestinians."
The CIA strategy has been so;
successful tl!.~t Lebanon may now·
wind up as .. a U.S. protectorate..
There has ,ill So.been a correspond<
ing bre<~kdown
In the historic•,
...
cooperatiqrt between the United·
States an~~srael.
'
t\tlatlla
4
4
.SXI 2
trulanu
ChtrltjitO
4
4
.!Dl 2
t:,t, ~ •
-~ ~
boxes came from downstate Illinois
or the Chicago precincts. Either
side could have burled them there,
because as the Cubs ' home field It's
one of the safest hiding places In
Illinois."
"Then the election Is still up In the
air?''
"It could be for some time. They
now have scuba divers looking for
punch hole cards In Lake Michigan.
If they can find them and dry them
off we may have a better Idea of
how the election Is going."
"I didn't know they dumped
ballots In Lakl! Michigan."
"They do In November. The
water Is freezing and you really
need a close election before the
state will spend any money for
divers to find the boxes. Walt a
minute, I just got another bulletin.
They found another 2,(XX) ballots In
the Lost and Found Baggage Room
at O'Hare Airport."
"I wonder how they got lost?" I
said.
"The airline company thinks
some election oftlcla! might have
been c1rrylng them oqt of state for
"They don't know yet It the ballot
safekeeping, and then forgot about
them.' '
"That's a hard story to swallow."
"It isn't If you live In Illinois. Do
you know one election official at a
polling booth took all her ballots
home In a s hopping bag? And tried
to trade them for cat food
coupons?''
"Don't the people o.ut there get
mad when they can't find out who
their governor Is going to be?"
"It doesn't bother most of us.
We're used to it Some voters like to
have their ballots counted right
away. But most of the people who
have close party affiliations prefer
to leave It up to the political pros to
decide when their votes should he
tallied. · Besides, without NFL
football the governor's race Is the
only sport we have."
"Rumor has It In Washington
that Mayor Byrne of Chicago Is
holding back some of her machine
votes because she hates Stevenson,
and Is trying to make a deal w!tb
Thompson."
"We heard tbe same thing here,"
he said. "Adlai Is trying to get a
search warrant so his people can go
Mlltwelll DtvWon
San Antonio
6 .1
Kansas CUy
.1 .1
Dallal
Utah
Hwslon
Lol:
Tolf'do
St. Franru IU-0 vs. Miami
11.{).(1. Spnngfleld, F'r1da.v
DIV .. IONW
Akron St . Vlnct'IU·St. Mary 9- 1-1 \'S. El·
yrla Cat hO Ur 1(H).(), Parma, Saturda_y
lrooton 11.().0 vs. Urbana 11-M. GrovP
pert, Saturday
"""''""'
... '
5
0
um -
I
• •'
San Dk'Ro
DIVJIJON IV
W€'Uirijtton UH.O Vll. ArrhOOid IJ.rl-(],
Maumee, F'r1day
NE>L'WIIVillfL York ll·lHI \.'!;. Wf'!ll JcoffE'r·
son 11.().0, Lanrumer, F'r1da.v
DIVfliONV
Ashtabulu Sl. John 7-.W \'S. Nt>wark
CatlnUC' 10.1.0. Canton Fa~'('('ft Stadium.
.l"'3 .1
.2\0 ' ~
.(01 !IV,
.
Gollk'n Slatr
. fmC~
2
178 21.11
7
'
I
.444 !iY,
M .111 RV1
-~
"""''
!i
f'clo;tor\a St. Wmdelln 10-1.0 vs. Bradford 11.().(), Lima Sr.. Frlda~·
!WuniQ'"ReluiiK
""""rday'AGIUIM'fll
Dlv-1
New Yor k 111. [}(>fmtl 100
PhUIXk'tphla 110. Nrw JE'Dt"Y tm
s.:-uuiC'
San An!Mio !II
Indiana 119, ChiC'~ ll5
Om\"('!" HO. Dallas 1ll
Kan.~~ City 112. San IJk'Ro UI
Gokrn Sial€' 114. Atlanta 101
Su..a.,y'MG1n1ftl
Phlladt>lphla 102. Washington 9.1
Bo!lton 100, Mllwaukc(> !II
Mas.'illlOn 29, SitnduskY 7
Cln. Morik'f' .t l, Cln. Prlnrt>ton a!
Gahanna U, Upp•r ArUngtM 7
&>l'l'a 7, MmtOf" o
un.
.......,m
SN.nk' lO'l. Houslon 99
Pmt>nlx at Portland. 10 p.m.
1...c1s AnAl'k's Ul, ("'p,'(')and 9R
1\tDftdQ'IIGIMM
No
"'
!K'hRktlrd
jtari'K'S
'r..IQ'MGIIIMR
a! Nt>w York
Indiana a! Mllwau\(.('('
Kan.o;a., C ity at San An!Mio
C.okk>n Slate a! ChiC"<.~~
Hw~ton
l~
N<Wark Cat h. 28. Indian Valkoy N 7
Ohio c~ Foothtill
AnjJ'kli at Phomlx
Ohio
•~r~f....
NortiM't'Sf('m
Sf."'Mkt-Arnrrtwn
·
:II
('oaf.
Bowllnit C.l"t'('''' lta. E. Mk'hiJI;an 7
N. IIIIIW 12. M\am~ OhiO 7
Hockey
Toledo .1, Kml St. 0
_,..,c.,..
W. Mk'tlllc.n 16. OhiO U 7
NMIHIIHockeyt.,...
WAIM~ermct"
r•rkkDtvW::In
WLTOFGA
NYI!Ik.'ll
l26
2Rt~
PhlladelpNa 10 R 1 Tf 6.1
NY Ran,..r'!' 7 lO
1 f6 79
WashlnJ{ton 6 1
3 !lfi 61
Plltlburah 5 n
3 . 6.1 !H
NE'W J~
-3 11
~
6
8.1
-1
3 8J 00
96361M
!I 6
2 1'1 ~
1 1
• m 66
!'! !I
2 !fJ ~
Monfrt'al •
11
~on
Quftlr<'
Buffalo
Hanbrd
Murray St. 16, Akron 14
Yw,_own ~- :M, MoretK'ad Sl . 1!1
.....
...
ne..ta.nc~r
_.,._.,.._
A.~and
""
13"
12
17, S! . JOilllh. Ind. 14
Baldwln-WaUIC'E' :M, OhiO Norttl.>rn 0
.. ......,..c.t
--
Blufttm 17, Earlham L1
OPflarK"f' 18. Ancrrlon 14
Wllrrli,.ron 29, Flncla,v 7
"."'
C\nc'innall
~
MorRin St o
aamn St. 2R. Cent1111 St. ZJ
18
12
Dayton 42. Wk·Superklr o
Km,vm 23. Hlram 7
%!
CoUege scores
('.-npbell Collknllcr
NontMDIYIAtn
Chi('N[O 10 2 5 76 !18
Minnl'IOia 11 7 1 16 67
St. Lwl!l
7 11
1 1ft Tf
Toronlo
4 1
5 !II ti6
o.trcll
3 12
3 (1 8f
!I
9
Wlnnlptoa ~
loiAf~Wk'a
C.lfCIJ'Y
Yinm.t...er
·:e~::~.know. He's beendeadforJ
-
.........
Edmonton
7
4
96
M
5
1
7'l
M .
R 6
8 8
1 10
3 67 6.1
3 M 82
2 66 62
.......,.,.OIIIW
"'
"
11
9
I1IIDWEBI'
OltN:MI • lndllml 7
fowl a1, Wlec'clrUI 14
-111.-21
22
J9
-St. I&....,_, 7
19
19
16
\
.,
........
Ton>ollo~M-3
W-3.NYloloodoftl
Loo~~---.1
'(-tt
-
w.,.....
Pin""'""' '
-
-·""--·-·Qoolll<
••'
•'•
..
. ,.•'•
•,.
C.....,.IIW-....
-o!NYIItond!n
Nfw ....... i St. Lc1utl
-~~~v.. Loo"""""
I
" •
~
•
.,
'
.t
PO WilT
-
.r
Tailback Joe Foley ran8yards for
a touchdown and J eff Baasch
kicked two field goals for Gahanna .
Moeller will risk Its 11-0-0 record
against once-beaten Gahanna In
Dayton's Welcome Stadium Saturday night. Massillon and Berea will
match 11-0-0 marks In the other big
school state semifinal in the Akron
Rubber &lwl Saturday night.
Defending champion Akron
St.Vincent-St.Mary moved Into the
Division III semifinals by thumping
Struthers 22-0. The Irish (9-1-11 will
face Elyria Catholic (10-0--01. a 27-16
victor over Bellevue.
Urbana and Ironton, the state's
one- two ranked Class AA teams
during the season, wUI pit 11-0-0 re-
local hotel Sunday, said he was
praying for the 23-year-old fighter.
"I pray for him and I ask the people of America and my fam Uy to
pray for him" he said. "I also pray
for his family."
Mancini, his voice cracking at
times, said he was numbed by
Klm'scondition.
"I'm very saddened, very sorry it
had to happen," he said. "It hurts
bad to know you're a part of it."
Mancini, his family, and aboutlOO
followers croWded Into a room at tbe
Trop!cana Hotel to celebrate mass
with the Rev. Tim O'Neil, a priest
who traveled with Mancini from
Youngstown, Ohio, for the fight.
"Being a Christian I rely i'ln my
faith In God that aU things happen
tor a reason:" he said. "!just have to
relyonmyfalth togetthroughthis."
Mancini, wearing sunglasses to
hide a bruised and swollen left eye,
said his future In boxing was uncertain, adding that he was "going to
have to sit down and seriously think
about it."
~
to
s.. 29.
1
. •
-·-··
--·-111.11·
St. M
~-Cal--41
UCLA
.. ~ •
.
...
w.....,n.-au
.
.
-~~.-
l\tclgs-Grb.:r.llei
M
G
First downs
Yards rushing
Yards passi ng
9
t2
3~1 5
Tot al yard s
Pa ss('!;
'183
1
41 -93
R4
7-.10.1
7 l"J.l
.198
1TI
14-37-1 14-27·3
7-lfj J7.!n
Pcnaltll'S
Punt s
Fumbk-s- lost
2-0
Rf'lurn _
varci<;
St'Orf' hy qmu1('rs:
- ~2
2·1
92
(; rill.J If'S
Fl
fj
()
Ml'l_gs
r
'~
6 6--12
cords In the other Division Ill semifInals Saturday night.
The Hillcl!mbers ousted Ham ilton Badin 14-0 while Ironton eliminated McConnelsvUie Morga n 35-8.
Archbold thumped Rossford 31-6
In tbeonly Division IV contest Saturday night, earning the 11-0-0 Blue
Streaks a semifinal shot a t We llington (10-1-0) Friday night.
Defe nding state champion
Nelsonvute-York ill -0-0) wUI play
West Jeffe rson 111-0-0), Ohio's toprated Class A team during the regular season, In the other Division IV
0-- 14
semifinal Friday night.
In Division V action Saturday
night, Newark Catholic polished off
Midvale Indian Valley North 28-7
and Ashtabula St.John ousted
Mingo Junction 27-20.
St.John (7-3-0i will meet Newark
Catholic (10-1-0) while Fostoria
St. Wendel in (10-1-0) will be paired
wit h Bradford ill-0-0i in the small
sc hool stat e semifinals Friday
night.
The sta tc c ham pionships will be
dec ided on Friday or Saturday
night. Nov. 26 and Nov. 27.
PUT ALL
YOUR EGGS
IN ONE
I! you're llke most folks these ds,ys,you have a oar loan,
soma medica.! bills, a bank OI't'dJt card or two, and thsllstgoes
on. That's a lot of bills ... a lot of"los.ns."
T0111' 'bllla aouol1daa41a 0111' 'bult:a\ = O. . loan •
And one monthly PII,Ylllent. One that's probably going to be
smaller than the total ofpii,Ylllenta you're ma.klng now.
•••4
aaah, \oof Wa 4on't; qul'b'bi.At.
Ma,ybe you're thlnklng about a m'IJor purchase. Let'e pa,y off
what you owe now and throw In that extra you need, too.
T0111' hollla equl\)' ,.,.. a LO•G wa;r.
How muobyou need depends on how much you owe. And
your credit llmlt with us depends on you, too. For example, If
you own your home, we can loan you up Into the thousands
based on your eqUicy.
.-a
,
Larae Homeowner Loans up to
mtctu Just ftnclthlt nolill!!!l·
1~ can bo hlblt·fonnt~
'llle811111
Allllthlft
.
.
S.atal•alll
.
'I .
A~ERICC ~"':f
~loan
In Gallipolis:
502 Second Street
Phone 446-4113
A1'1'1811c«tc.ncer8oclely·t.
\
!Jn,oee
~o Li•i+
. CRRD1'7'irniL4) •
. Thlt .... ......, •• ~~-
I '
"'
sw..,
l>cpartnwnt
=~'cancer
.3
-IB.·N. - ! 7
Laor St. 31. Nov•.J.oo V-IS
lilll- .. 3 1 , - u. 0
yards In 11 tries. The Grizzlies had
four sacks for a minus 35 yards .
Pratt paced the winners with 50
yards In 17 carries.
Besides Dave nport's eight receptions, Larry Stewart hauled in five
passes for 93 yards. Ohio Valley's
Eddie Jett lived up to his namesa ke
as the split end grabbed six passes
for 53 yards.
OF
31. w........ 91. "
O>kndo .. """"91. e. -
Stadium. Number 88 (Ed Jett) Is blocked by Meigs'
8Jumnl player Van Willford (32).
lo phone. The sooner you get all your eggs 1n one basket, the
sooper you oan start seeing things "sunny side up"l
Y-111. SIR no.> St. 8
.'
'
For Upper Arlington, a second
meeting In three weeks with Gahanna was too much. The Golden
Bears committed eight turnove rs,
six of them lost fumbl es, and fell to
the Lions 13-7.
- .81. II. U1M St. ID
5
·~·o.n.
~
j
U1M 45. - E I Pooo :II
91, :l),c- -
7.111. Lcolll3
llullato ' lie
7t Yorlt Roll- 2
this weekend .
The Tigers ran their record to
11-0-0 this fall while handing Morgan
its first defeat In 11 games for the
Region 11 championship.
Ironton rolled up 337 yards rush·
lng and 412 total yards to only 57
rushing yards and 115total yards for
Morgan. which trailed 27-8 at
halftime.
On Nov.18111,
,.....~,
'I'IdlltB. ...... !li. u
.....,.;o-
D*tiD~M-4
~ I, Vllk'QIWr
......
.. ...
IIIMIIWDT
_:11,._.1\loMb
.......... Rkol3 .
Mexl<o 29, Cokndo St :M
Ok1ahoml G, M-.n U
Solllllem ....~ :11. ,.... """·"
wtnnlpla 3. VMCOIW'I" 2
Calply ~ PI_.., I
.. j,
Mancini, who attended mass In a
Ok1ahoml Sl. 141 ~ Sl. 16
Penn St. :M, Noll. Domo II
Yta~IWikJWn St. S ~ St 19 .
~7.NtwJ~2
<
Hammargren.
NKI'ulcl tB. Iowa St. 10
Ohio St. «1•.NortllwfMrm 28
3, Millo 2
Hat1Dd 5. sc. Louis 2
F»nonfm 4. PblllldAphla 3
dtlt-.o 3. Detrol12 .
t''
'
..
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)- South
Korean tighter Duk Koo Kim, showIng no sign of brain function or response to any stimuli, remained
alive only with the help of lite support machinery while the doctor
whooperatedonhlmsa!dltwouldbe
severaldaysbeforehemakesadeci·
slon on shutting the machinery off.
"We want to see If we can do anything else," Dr. Lonnie Hamrnarl!ren said Sunday. though
adding there was ."no sign ot any
responsiveness" and little hope Kim
could suiVive.
"What functions remain, we don't
know," he added.
Kim, knocked unconscious by
World Boxing Association light·
weight champion Ray "Boom
Boom" Mancini In the 14th round of
their title fight Saturday with a vicious right hand to the left sldeotthe
face, suffered a torn blood vessel
and has a blood clot on one entire
side ot his head, according to
Ohio grid scores
Atlanta at Portland
[konvt'r ul San Dk>go
r:
•'
I'
"""''
n-a<'l'
.IJH .'100 I '1.1
fi
fi
M
7
AnPJ"~
1'11om~
\
•
4
:1
2
0
Putifko DIYWon
10
Dmvrr
l
:
DIVIIJON D
MMltor l.ak€'Cat0011r842 Y!;, YOUnJZ·
MOOIW'y S.2.0. Akrcll RubbPr Bowl.
.~ town
1 7 .12\ !i
~'IERN OONFERf2liiCE
Into Merchll~dlse Mart, because he:
heard Byrne's people had . stashed~
away d07fns of ballot boxes on the,
glftware !floor. I just got another',
bulletin. fhey just found another·
100 ballot boxes In aderailed freight'
car. On the Burlington Northelll'
Railroad outside of Springfield." :
"That could put Thompson over\
the top," I said.
;
"Not necessarily. Someone told'
me that 200 precincts that sti~
haven't ~eported In are holding
1
back th~ir votes In the locker room·
of the Chicago Bears until the
freight train votes are counted." ·
"I must say you people In Illinois'
have put the thrill back In political
elections. Even the network exit:
pollsters can't predict what's golnt,
to happen ih your state from one'
November to the next. Have they~
counted your vote yer?"
'
·
"I hope so. Because my cousin
and I never agree on politics and
alway~ try to cancel out his vote.";
"What does .your cousin have tq,
say to that?"
·
1
10
day
..m :11,1,
r.
:1
Gahanna 10-l.fl vs. C\nctnnaU Moeller
11 -0.0, Oa.vTon WPicome Stadium. Salur·
Cl('Vt'land
~
'
J~·
Meigs scored again with just
under two minutes remaining when
Ietty George Gum passed to
Davenport from nine yards. The
PAT that would have tied the game
was a pass that felllncoml)lete .
The Grizzlies' front defensive
wall succumbed but 15 yards
rushing with Dan Buffington, the
leading Meigs' ball carrier, with 20
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
Cincinnati Moeller and Upper Ar·
llngton discovered It Is more difficult playing an opponent the second
time In one season In the Ohio high
school football playoffs.
Moeller's margin dwindled from
56-7 to 33-W In a second successive
weekly meeting with Cincinnati
Princeton Saturday night, but !twas
good enough to advance tbe topranked Crusaders Into the Division I
state semifinals.
The Francisco brothers accounted for four touchdowns In endIng Princeton's season. D'Juan
Francisco, a sophomore, scored
three times and Hiawatha Francisco, a senior, added another touchdown for Moeller, bidding for Its
sixth state crown In the last eight
seasons.
Meanwhile, at Tank Memorial
Stadium tn Ironton, fullback John
Pemberton scored three touchdowns and rushed lor 118 yards to
pace Ironton to a 35-8 romp over
McConnelsville Morgan In a DivIsion III high school playoff football
game Saturday night.
Mike Smith added 11.2 yards In 14
rushing trips for the Southeastern
Ohio League champions.
Ironton will battle Urbana In a
state semifinal game at Groveport
Prep pairings
Basketbal.!.--
TURKEY BOWL ACTION - Ohio Valley
Grizzlies Quarterback Rick Barlon advances the ball
during Sunday's Turkey Bowl lOt at Marauder
Ironton mauls Morgan 35-8 in playoffs
Scoreboard ...
'
I
By KEint WISECUP
MARAUDER :>TADIUM -The
.Ohio Valley Grizzlies withstood a
furious second hal! Meigs Alumni
comeback In clinging to a 14-12 win
here Sunday afternoon In . the
annual Turkey &lwl.
Passing , was the name of the
game as 64 aerials we~ launched
with 28 completed for 2f{l yards In
the combined efforts.
Mlck Davenport, a 1976 Meigs
grad, grabbed the Meigs offensive
MVP as the end caught eight
passes.for. 77 yards and scored both
Meigs touchdowns. Van Wilford, a
1!8) MHS graduate, was merited
tbe defensive MVP tor the second
straight year.
The Grizzlies, gaining revenge
for last year's 34-6 pasting, had
tight . end Art Terry lor their
offensive MVP. Terry caught seven
Rick Barton passes lor 34 yards and
scored the two-point PAT after the
first Grizzlies TD, the margin of
victory. <h Terry and Barton
reign from Salem College.
Part<ersburg's Boo Boo Henderson was named the Grizzlies'
defensive MVP for the second
consecutive year. Henderson
scored the second Ohio Valley TD
on a 67 yard Interception return.
Concord College's Steve Pratt
opened the scoring with a one yard
run In the first quarter to give the
Grizzlies the lead. Barton fi!pped to
Terry for the PAT.
Henderson's Interception return
made It 1W at the half.
Meigs' Steve Randolph lect a
comeback In the third quarter as
the 1977 Me!gster quarterbacked a
46 yard drive In seven plays.
Randolph's 15 yard strike to
Daveport capped the drive. The try
for the extras tailed.
Tennis
Under Israeli influenc~'-'------A+'.tt_n_uc_hwa_L~d;
Of ail the election races on
election day nothing compared to
the governor's con test In Illinois.
On Monday I called a friend of
mlqe at the "Chicago Sun Times"
and asked him If either Jim
Thompson or Adlai Stevenson had
won.
"We may not know unti11984," he ·
told me.
"How come Illinois Is so late In
reporting their election results?" I
wanted to know.
"Because we don't like to count
all our ballots on the same night.
<h sides like to keep some notes
In reserve In case they need tbem at
a future date. Like It the election Is
too close to call. Now that eno.u gh
time has elapsed, we're starting to
see a lot of votes that no one knew
had been cast on election night."
"! don't understand."
"Well, while I was talking to you
they just put a bulletin on my desk.
They just found a whole bunch of
ballot boxes underneath home
plate at Wrigley Field."
"Is that good for Thompson or
")
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)- Lightweight tlghterDukKooK!mclung
tenaciously to lite despite having no sign ot any brain fuiK'ton, wiliie a
distraught Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini attended an Impromptu
mass to pray tor the South Korean.
Mancini, the World Boxing Association lightweight champion,
knocked out Kim In the 14th round Saturday.
Kim, knocked unconscious by Mancini's savage attack, was helng
kept alive by llte support machines In Desert Springs Hospital, said
neurologist Dr. Lonnie Hammargren.
Too close to cal.l. . .________J_a_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHINGTON - The Central
Intelligence Agency began secretly
supporting the Christian militias In
Lebanon last year to keep them
from falling completely under
Israeli Influence. The evidence Is
contained In a startling top-secret
memo dated March 6, 1~1.
This document correctly forewarned fully 15 months In advance
tbat Israel would Invade Lebanon,
that the Palestinians would be
routed, that the Christian Phalangists would e merge as the dominant Lebanese faction and, therefore, that the United States would
"forfeit all Influence" In Lebanon
unless "military and financial
assistance" was funneled to the
Phalanglsts.
The Daily Sentinel Page--3
Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio
•
�Page--4--:. The Daily Sentinel
Monday, November 15, 1982
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Redmen win season opener,
face Alice Lloyd Tuesday
• RIO G ltAN DE HONOREES- .John \\'ickliru•.
left, and .Jim Noe, s..•t·ond from left, wen• inducted
into Rio (jrandt• Collcgt:'-fommunity Coll(•gc·~
Athlctk llaU-of-Famt• during pn... . . game ccremoni~
By Sc<YIT D. MILLER
RIO GRANDE - The slxlh
wlnningest team in the nation In
1981-82, Rio Grande College's Redmen, picked up where they left off
last season Saturday night with an
easy 83-59 homecoming victory
over the Dyke College Demons.
The victory, before a near
capacity crowd at· the Paul R. Lyne
P hys ical Education Center, was
the sixth straight win dating back to
last season. The Redmen moved to
1-0 on the 1982-83 campaign, while
the Demons, easy victors by an
83-61 score over Franklin Univers ity Friday night. dropped to 1-1.
" We're na turally pleased to
come out of this one with a victory,"
Rio head roach John Lawhorn said.
"Dyke is vastly Improved over last
season and as soon as they get some
of those transfers eligible , they'll be
in real good shape. We played like a
team that was playing Its first
game - we didn't do some things
that we should have done.
"We'll look a t the rums, check out
our mistakes, a nd work some
things out before Tuesday's game
with Allee Lloyd (Ky. l College."
Rio Grande sprinted out to a
quick 12-4 lead ln the flrsl six
minutes behind the stellar play of
6-8 Bob Shaw and 6-4 Steve Arnold.
Shaw netted three free throws and
Arnold a pair of buckets and two
at Lyrrc Center Saturday night. Glenn Enslen, a lumni
director, second from right, presented Wickline his
plaque. Dr. Paul Hayes, college president, presented
Noe's award. The event climaxed weekend homecoming activities at Rio Grande.
goals and four points.
steals to lead the surge.
· Dyke cut It to 16-14 at the 8:52
Rio held a 30-23 margin In field
mark on a pair of free throws by 6-9
goals and a 23 of 34 card at'the line
center Eric King, but Arnold
compared to the Demons 13 of 24
slipped In six points In the next 10
mark.
minutes to push the margin back to
Pre-Game Ceremonies
eight.
Two former athletic greats were
The Redmen managed a five to
inducted Into the athletic hall of
eight point lead until the final 42
lame during pre-game ceremonies.
seconds of the half when Era!
Former legendary basketball
Burks notched two chanty shots,
coach John Wickline and exha rdwood ace Jim Noe joined an
Melvin Burke a drive, and Barrell
Jones a lob at the buzzer to cut ilia
elite group in the hall of fame.
32-29 at the intermission.
Sonia Scolt, a senior nursing
The Red men locked · up the
major from Oak Hill, was Intracontest in the first lour minutes of
duced as homecoming queen.
the second half with 1011Panswered
WaiJQn McDonald, wbo paced
Rio Grande to a stellar 26-7 season
points. Adam McNichols zipped in
'an eight-footer, Arnold a Up and a ' last year, was named the recipient
sla m dunk, Rick Penrod a jumper of the New! OliVer Award as the
from the key, and Jerry Mowery a
school's outstanding athlete. Reddrive for a 42-29 margin.
women basketball ace Robin HaLawhorn substituted freely the !:!;n was runner-up for the laurel.
rest of the way.
Sill> was also first runner-up for
homecoming queen.
Arnold , a freshman from
The Redmen will be back In
Warren, Ohio, paced a balanced
Rio attack with 14 points . Former " ac ti on Tuesday against Allee Lloyd
Racine Southern ace Kent Wolfe, a College at 7: :lJ p.m. at the Paul R.
5-9 freshma n guard, In his first Lyne Center.
collegiate contest, chipped in 12ln a
reserve role. Penrod and John
Dy ke i591 -Owens 1-0-2: K. Jones 2-1-5;
Maisch added 11 each and Mowery Rushton 7-.l17: Stewan 2-0-4; Harney 2-0-4:
Burk<' 1-0-2: Burks 0-2-2: B. Jonf>S 2-1-5; KlrtR
10.
G-G-!8. Totals 23-13-59.
King led Dyke with :18 points
Rk:J Grande (83) - Mowery 5-0.10: Penrod
5- 1-11 : Arnold 7-0-14: Maisch 3-!l-11; Shaw
while Michael Rushton added 17.
14 -6: Richards 1-5-7: Wolfe44-12: Frltz0-2-2:
The Redmen held 6-11 center McN ichols J-2-8: Wallers 1-0-2; Rivers 1.0.2.
Cleery Stewart to iust two field Totals :J0-2:1j\3.
Sonics make it I 0 straight, drop Houston Rockets, 102-99
By WILI..JAJ\1 R. BARNARD
AI' Sports Writer
The Sea llle Sup<'rSonics. still going al lop sJX'('d . left the 1\in less
Houston Rocke ts on !he l«unch ing
pad aga in .
The Sonics. 10-11 !his season. held
off a late rail,• 10 ddl'al the 0-H
Rockets 102-99 Sundav nig h! . Sl'a !tie
1\'ilkens said. "We hav·rn'l had
man)' lrsls. like bC'i ng behind 1oor20
points. We need a couple more
[('SIS."
from
In olhC'r T\'BA games Sunday. Philade lphia !ripped Was hington 1029:!. Boston edged Milwaukee 100-9H.
Los AngC'Ies bra! Clev·eland 111 -9H
and PhoenLx lri ppC'd Portland 10'2!>1.
equalling the besl star! ew·r bv a
Na tional Baskr· lball Assoc·ialion
club. lo-ll bv !he 1 ~14H - 4~ Wa shinglon
Ca pita ls.
"We've pla vrd w<'il. a nd if we
keep going like rhis. we'll be rC'a i
good. " Seallll' Coac h Lr nnv
sC'ven of !heir road ga mC's. buill a
~- 7:i IC'ad by hilling seven of !he ir
firs! eig ht shots in !he fourth quarter. But Houston rallied. r utting lht'
Sl'a llle lm d 10 99-9fi with ninC'
straight points. capped by James
is now fivC' vir torif's
awa~ ·
Th0 Sanies . w ho ha ve won all
Bailey's free throws with 1: 10 to
play.
Gus Williams' foul shot with 58
seconds left and two more free
throws by David Thompson with 33
seconds rema ining gave Seattle a
102-96 edge.
Rookie Terry Teagle tossed in a
lhrce-poinl shot with 21 seconds to
go Ia Irim Ihe deficit Ia 102-99. The
Roc kets go! one more chance to tie
!he game in lhC' waning seconds. but
Allen LcavC'II's lhree-poinl a !tempi
missed .
" I thought we were more aggr essive than we ha ve been," said Houston Coach Del Harris. who saw his
learn lose by 33 points a t Seattle in
the season opener for both. "We
were more serious about defense
a nd rebounding. When you'reshoolingasbadasweare, the onlywayto
keep in the game is by rebounding
a nd defense."
Williams led Seattle with 20
points, while Greg Keiser and
James Donaldson each came off the
bench to score 18. JackSikma added
17 points and 14 rebounds.
Teagle. making his first NBA
start, led Houston with 22.
76ers 102, Bullets 93
P hiladelphia won !Is eighth game
in nine outings as Julius Erving
scored 25 points and Moses Malone
added 20 points and 19 rebounds
aga inst Washington.
The 76ers blew an early 13-poinl
lead, but still had a 4341 adva ntage
a t halftime. Then with Erving and
Ma lone scoring nine points apiece,
Philadelphia outscored the Bullets
19-10 at the start of the second ball
a nd Washington never got closer
than seven points in the fourth
quarter.
Greg Ballard led the Bullets with
22 points.
Celtlcs 100, Bucks 93
Larry Bird had 20 points and 14
rebounds a nd lloston held Milwau-
kee scoreless for 5: 41 down the
stretch.
The Bucks overcame a 16-polnt
Celtic lead in the second quarter to
take a 94-90 edge with 7: 18 to play.
But Milwaukee's scoring drought
enabled lloston to rome back. Free
throws by Cedric Maxwell and Raben Parish broke a 98-98 tie In the
final' seconds.
Sidney Moncrief bad 22 points to·
lead the Bucks.
SIUIS 102, Blazers 94
Alvan Adams scored 22 points and
Maurice Lucas added.21 as Phoenix
.beat Portland for its fourth victory :
in a row.
·
NFL players strike in 56th day, no sign talks will resume
NEW YORK tAP> - TherPis no
sign lhalla lks aim<xl a! ending the
06-day Na ti onal Football League
players strike will rrsumf' soon. as
managemen t sticks to its position
that it ha s made a "bottom -line>'
offer.
,
In fact. 1hPrC' wrrP spvrr al indica-
lions Sunda.v !hal negolialions
wou ld no! tak(• place aga in without
movement on the ptayC'rs ' sid(•.
" I don 'llhink lhcvwil l mecl soon.
no! un less !he ba llpiayC'rs move
further from lhC' position lhev'vealread ~·
take n. ·· sa id K a ~ · McMurray .
director of lhC' Federal Mediation
and Conciliation Se rvirf\. after
se-
parate talks over !he weeke nd with
ma nagemenr ncgolia lor .Jack Donlan and union chief Ed
Carv0~' ·
MacMu!Ta)· said l1c exJX•rled
both sides "arc going Ia ha ve 10 iel
!he pressures build up" before there
is movement.
Meanwhile, Donlan sa id Sunday
he has told media lorSam Kagel Ihal
hr saw no
rr<:.~son
10 havr anot hf'r
mf'<'ling with Gan·cv. Kagel recessed !he la test round of bargai ning Nov. fi after lillie progrC'ss was
served in Donlan's rejecting Kage l's proposal to restart the talks, replied: "Absolutely. The meetings we
had in Cockeysville (Md.) and New
York were a waste of time. It
created feelings In the fans and players that something was ha ppening
when, in fact , nothing was
happening."
Garvey pulled a reverse of sorts
last week by enlisting the aid of
McMurray In his quest to resume
the negotiations. Shortly after the
strike began, Donlan suggested federal mediation but Garvey rejected
made.
AI !hal limC', Donlan madt' what
he ra iled a "bollom-linC' offe r." a
package !he owners va lued a! $1.313
billion over four ye<:.~ r ·s, sta rting in
1983. and $60 million in bon us money
in 1982. The union has asked for$Ll
billion over three years, starling in
1982.
Donlan conlerTed Sunda y wi th
Chuck Sulliva n. owner of the New
England Pa triots a nd cha irman of
!he owners' executive committee.
Sulli va n, asked if he fell the best
interC'sls of the league were being
Soviet cagers outlast Indiana five, 87-77
BLOOM INCTON. lnd ti\Pi Preseason exh >btllon basketball
games don'! count for much. but
the\ 'rr a
Vd luablr
mchra t 1on of how
much progress a team h<1s made in
practice, says Indiana Coach !lob
Arvidas Sabonis, a 17-year-old, 7foot -2 center, scored 25 points Sunday as the touring Soviet Union
team beat the Hoosiers frl-77 In a
nationally televised gam e from Assembly Hall.
"This is about as good a game as
we've had starting a season to see
where we are and what we have to
do," Knight said. "It pinpointed
some things for us. First of all, I
don't think we are a very good basketball team right now."
There was only one India na
player - freshman Stew Robinson
- who pleased the demanding
coach. And that was only ln the first
half, when the Hoosiers built a 42-38
lead at the Intermission.
The second half belonged to the
Russians.
"We made a lot of mistakes. We
had seniors making mistakes that
we just can't have," sald Knight.
"They took advantage of some
things defensively, and our rommunlcatlon was poor. Offensively,
we stuttered."
The victory lifted the Soviets to 5-1
on their current tour against U.S.
college teams. Both the Hoosiers
and the Soviets had :lJ field goals,
but the Russian squad hit 'l:l of 33
tree throws to Indiana's 17 ofl9.
Indiana's biggest lead was slx
points at 4().341n the closing minutes
of the first balf. The Soviets rallied
at the start of the final period and
took the lead for good at 54·52 on
basket by •Sergey Jovajsha with
13:13togo.
"My boys liked this game," sald.
Soviet Coach Alexandr Gomelsky.
"I've known Bobby Knight many
years, and twi's thebestcoachln the
United States. I think Indiana IS the
best team we've played so tar. 'They
have some good players and they
played well.
"But we played better defense\
aad IIley bad oo fast breaks," sald
Qomelsky.
The biggest lead for the Soviets.
was 12 points, 83-71, on a pair of tree
throws by Alexandr Belostenny
wllh two minutes to go.
Knrghl
And so far. he says. the Hoosters
haven't done very well.
a
•
li
roi.J.oW THE BOUNCING BAIL- Indiana's
steve Bouchie (114-left) batllell for loose ball with
USSR's , Verde)' Jovajsha (11-rflh') during action
between IDdlaDa and the Soviet Najiouls Sunday at
Assembly Hall In Bloomington, Indiana. 'lbe Soviets
beat the Indiana Hoosiers' IJ'/-7'1 In the HOOI!en1'
opening game. (AP Laserphoto).
I
it,
A hearing before an administrative law judge on a complaint issued
aga lost the Ma nagemen I Council by
the National Labor Relations
Board, originally scheduled for today, has been postponed toNov.29at
the Management Council's request.
The compla int cites 17 viola tions,
Including failing to bargain in good
faith and attempting to bypass the
union and negotiate directly with
the players.
The New York Dally News reported In today's editions that the
~~~..:::s~~!~~~:::v~~:~~~~e
r Local bowling 1
SkyUne Bowling Lanes
Morning Glortet
Novemher 2. 198!
Trom
......
Two' s Company
54
Custom Print
42
S\mrronsOid<i, Cadllloc
and Ch('V .
35
The Fatx'ic Shop
34
Merrl Amsbary
Ha ir Deslgfll>r
30
Me igs Inn
21
High Individual ga!"n'- BarOOra Wh.Jttlngtoo 213: June Lam~rt . Barbara MuiTay,
Mary Porter 178; Barbara Wh.lllingt on 172.
High Individual three-game; - Barbara
Whittington 555: June LamtErt 406; An n
Grover 461.
High team game - 'IWo's Company 822:
Melg; Inn 786; Simmons Old, Cadlllac a nd
Chevraet 784 .
High team three-games -Two's Company
zm: Slmrrons Olds, CadiiUc and Chevrolet
2ZE; Custom Prtnl2225.
cepl thegeneralframeworkofmanagem enl's last proposal.
The Daily Sentinel
I USPS 145-910)
A Dlvhdon of MuiUmedla, lor.
Pu.blishcd t!Very afternoon, Montll:ly throu~<Ch
Fmi':IY· _III Court Street, by the Ohio Valley
Pubhshm.l( Company - Multimetliu , Jill'.,
Pmneroy, Ohio 45769, 992-2156. Set'Ond da!UI
post.a.cc paid ett Pomt'roy, Ohio.
Member : The As.!lt)l.'iHict.l Press, Jnlund DHI·
ly Press Association und the Ameril'un
Newspaper Publishers As.!lociution NutioiUII
1 Advertisin.: Reprcscnti:ltive, Bri:lnham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue. New
York . New York 10017.
l
POSTMASTER : Send 1:1tklrcss to The Duily
Sentinel, Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
,
By Carrier or Molor Roulr
Ont• week
............. 1!.00
One Month ... ........... .. . . ..... $4.40
Ont· YcH r
. 152.80
... SiNGLE COPY .
PRICES
Dllily
. . .. ........ .......... !SCents
Subsl'nbt·rs not desirml{ tu pety the t:i:lrricr
111ay re1ml m advant"e dirt.'t'l to The Daily
St·nlmt•l un 1:1 J. 6 ur 12 month basis. Credit
w1l l bt·c•vcn l'H rriereH<'hmonth .•
Nu subsni pt1ons by lllllil pcnnittt.'1.1 in towns
wht·rt· hutllt' <'Hrricr st'rv il't' is i:IYIIilable.
13 Weeks
26 Wct•ks
52 Wt ·t·k.~
IJ Wt•t•ks
26 Wt•t•ks
52 Wt•••ks
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
lru;ldt'Ohio
..... ......... . ..... . .... $14 .04
............... . . .. ..... S27 ,30
.
. ...... . S51...S
Outsidt' Ohiu
.
.. ' . $15 .21
.
... 129.6<
.. . lf>6.21
Students ·receive high school equivalency;
Pomeroy Center open house tomorrow
Twelve students bave recently received their high school equivalency certificates through the
Pomeroy Adult Basic Education
Program. Students receiving the
G.E.D. were Nondus Hendricks,
Steve Young, Bonnie Friend, Shirley Friend, Bonnie Denney, Jackie
Zirkle, VIrginia Oller, Verna Gibbs,
Betty Tyree, Mary Searls, Stella
Bass and Freda Levacy.
ADult Basic Education provides
instruction in basic skills such as
reading, math, E nglish, science,
and rocia l studies to adults over the
age of sixteen. Adult Basic Education also assists its student s ln preparing for ent ry into jobs. skllls
OPEN HOUSE - Over 400 people attended the
grand openbtg and open house of the new Home Na·
tlonal Bank, Syracuse Branch, Sunday afternoon. The
new facWty, located on Third Street In Syracuse, S.R.
124, will be open for business today. On hand for the
open house were, left to right, Steve Schonberg, w-chitect for James Monsul Architect, Lancaster, who de-
Meigs group members hold meetings
i
Laurel Cliff
Missionary Society
A Thanksgiving donation will be
sent to the Olive Branch Mission in
Chicago by the Laurel Cliff
Women's Missionary Society of the
Laurel Cliff F'i'ee Methodist Church.
Meeting at the home of Mrs.
Karen Stanley, the group discussed
holiday projects which wllllnclude
sending missionaries overseas
Christmas cards. Powe ll gave a report on visltatlon for the month.
Jean Wright gave Thanksgiving
devotlons"tising the 111 th Psalm and
a meditation from "The Daily
Bread." Each one attending gave a
thought on Tbanksgivlng with
Evelyn Young, the co-hostess havIng a prayer.
Readings Included "Who Deserves a Break Today" by Jean
Wright, and "Operation Hope" by
Brenda Haggy.
The program, by Mrs. Haggy,
was entltled "Love Finds a Way to
Hear Haiti's Heart Cry" with a ski!
being presented by Shirley and !lonnie Friend. There was special
music by a quartet.
Kathy Pullins bad the prayer before refreshments were served to
those named and Donna Gilmore,
Janice Haggy, Shirley Meadows,
Genevieve Ward, Emma Fox,
Linda Soulsby and son, Billy.
Rutland Friendly
Gardeners
Rutland Civic Center decorations
ior the annual holiday flower show
to be staged there Dec. 4 and 5were
planned during a meeting of Rutland Friendly Gardeners held at
the home of Joan Stewar1.
The members were urged to
gather materials needed to decorate the cenler for the show which
Wtllcarryoutthetheme''Chr1stmas
1n the Country."
It was noted that all three delegates, Janet llolln, Marie Birchfield
~nd Margl Bishop, planned to attend the Region 11 meeting, Ohlo
Association of Garden Clubs, held
Saturday In Athens.
Mrs. Bishop distributed the 1982-
'83 books.
EXTRA FiRM
TWIN
Reg. S8995
FULL
Reg. s1()995
QUEEN
KING
Reg. Sl75
Reg. Sl70
$5995.
$7995
$9995
$8995 ·
Ea. Pc.
' Ea. Pc.
·Ea. Pc.
Ea.Pc .
SAVE $30 ~
signed the building, Mw-lon Rife, Columbus, who dld
the interior decorating and painting, and Tom Wolfe,
president. Refreshments were served and IOOS:alsavlngs accounts were given as door prizes. Numerous
Ooral w-rangements wer e received from w-ea business establisments.
'
'
FIRM
tra ining lor employment or per.sonal upgrading such as study ing
for the G.E.D., the L.P.N. entrance
exam , or the drlver' s license wrltten
test.
Each student sets his own goals.
He may just learn how 10 read and
write. A mother, who never finished
school, may want to be able to help
her children in their school work. A
man may wan Ito get his hi gh school
equivalency so he can get a better
job or more jol;ltrainlng.
Each student is assigned m alerials on his or her own level. There is
noclassrompetitlon . Students lea rn
at their ow n speed. This is cali ed
Individualized instruction. When
student s have problem s, !hey can
rece ive help from the ir A.B.E.
teacher or aide.
Adult Basic Education Is free of
cha rge and is laugh! a! the Pomeroy
and Middlepor11ibrarles. Hours lor
the Pomeroy Library Center are
from6:30p.m.to9p.m. on Tuesday,
Wednesday a nd Thursday. Classes
ar e held a! the Middlepo rt Library
from 10 a .m . to2p .m . on Wednesday
and T hursday. For more informa tion cali 992-5813.
The Pomeroy Center will be hosting an open house on Tuesday, Nov.
lfi. from 6:30 p.m. lo9 p.m . Besides
refres lunenl s. there will be an opportunity lo view !he cent er and
materials a nd 10 talk wilh the
teachers aOOut thr programs.
Financial management workshop, class
for local government officials available
Charlotle Willford presided at the
~tlng with the program featurIng a book report "The SelfSufficient Gardener" by John
Seymore. It was noted that his philosophy Is that gardening should be
year round ··In !he wlnler concentrating on planning and preparation
and keeping a compost pUegolng; In
the sprlng, concentrating on ordertng and plant propagation, In the
summer, planting and caring for
gardens; Iii the fall, barvestlng and
storing plants and bulbs.
FIRM .
The DailySentinei- Page---5
Following the meeting a
l!aJVestauctlonwasheld. Members
renilnded to start preparing
flower arrangements to be distributed to the elderly In Ru$nd.
: Preceding the meeting members
~joyed a masked halloween party
With the costumes being judged by
were
1om Stewart.·
Asbury UMW
Reedsville UMW
Gifts for holiday boxes for the
Pomeroy Health Care Center patients were brought by members
when Asbury United Methodis t
Women met last week at the homeof .
Margaret Eichinger.
Holiday activities were planned
when the Reedsvil le United Methodist Women met recently at the
homed Mrs. Lillian Pickens.
The annual Christmas dinner and
party was set lor Dec. 9inlhe church
basement . Members will make a
holiday visit to the Meigs Coun ty
Infirmary on Dec. 14.
Mrs. Doliy Reed presided a t the
m eetin g with members reporting20
sick and shut -in calls made during
the month. Thanks was extended by
Mrs. Erika Boring for the help In
prepa ring a dinner for her brothe r
and his wife In the church basemen 1
before their return to East
Germany.
The Lord's Prayer In unison and
scripture from Ecclesiastes by Mrs.
Barbara Masters opened the meeting. "Thanksgiving of the Pilgrims"
was the program topic presented by
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery with recorded
rriusic being presented by Mrs. Violet Satler!ield. The program roneluded with group singing of
"Heavenly Father" and Mrs. Satterfield's presentation of "The
Lord's Prayer."
Mrs. Pickens conducted a game
wlth Mrs. Sue Douglas winning the
prize . Door prizes went to Mrs. Satterfield and Mrs. Douglas. Refreshments were served to those named
and Jonathan Douglas, Mrs. Verna
Rose, Mrs. Pearl Baker, Mrs. Mary
Allee Bise, ·Mrs. Marlene Putman,
Mrs. Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Nola
Young, Mrs. Lorraine Wigal, Mrs.
Ruth Anne Balderson. Several
cards were signed . fo r shu t-in
friends.
It was noted that the boxes will be
prepared at the lime of the Chris 1m as dinner and party at the church
on Dec. 7. At that time therewlll a lso
be a gift exchan ge a nd toys wlll be
collected for the hospital patient s.
Mary Lisle will have charge of the
program .
Members were asked to serve a
luncheon on Nov. 20 for a workshop
with Helen Teaford and Beulah
Ward to plan the affa ir. Mary Cundi If presided at the meeting with
Margaret Eichinger giving devotions on Thanksgiving using Psalm
100 and scripture. Officers' reports
we re given and 99 sick and shut-in
calls were reported.
The birthdays of Margaret Eichinger, Mary Lisle, and Christina
Grimm were observed.
Mary Cundiff had the ThanksgivIng program entliled " Freedom ls
. Something More." Members related blessin gs and the world thank
offering was received. Opal Kloes
had the spiritual life closing. Re.
freshments were served to those
named and Ann Sauvage, Nancy
Merrifield, Marcia Karr, April Harmon, Irene Parker, Norma Houdashe!l, Linda Ferrell and Carol
Cundiff.
Syracuse PTO
Observanre of National Education Week, Nov. 15-19, was announced at the recent meeting of
Syracuse PTO held all he school.
Mrs. Stearns advised that parents
are welcome to visi t the classes and
school during the week and extended a special invitation to tbe
open house which wlll be held on
Wednesday, Thursday and Friday .
She also announced that the school's
· Christmas store wlll be held early In
December.
·
Read at the meeting was a letter
from Superintendent !lobby Ord
thanking the PTO for.support of the
school levy. It was noted !bat the
school carnival was a success and a
vote of thanks was exlended to the
merchants wbo donated to the
project.
Betty Van Meter, president,
!banked all !bose who helped with
the carnival. She also reported tbat
the stage curtain and valance has
been ordered.
The basketball schedule bas been
received and the room mothers
were asked to make arrangements
for working the roncesskm stand. It
was decided that the football trophy
will be engraved.
The Christmas party was announced for Dec. 22. Room rouni
was won by the tillrt;l grade. A
Thanksgiving program was pres·
ented by the third grade class.
Regislrati:lns are being accepted
for aworkshopo nflnancial management for local government officials
to be held in Athens on Nov . 29-Dec.
1.
Sponsored by Ohio Universit y's
Institute for Local Government Administration and Rural Developm ent, the workshop will focus on
governmental acco unting system s.
cash management techniques, investment options and the use or Idle
funds. Particular attentio n wlll be
placed on converting cash basis accountin g systems 10 accru al basis
The workshop wi ll al so rove r
guidelines for lile adminis trat ion of
federal commu nit y devclopmenl
block grant s.
Staff or !he Columbu s office of
Price Waterhou se wlll conduct !he
sessions. Reference m a te ria l wi ll be
provided.
Course credit is ava ilab le and !he
regis tration fee is $50.
The Athens workshop wi lt be held
all he Ohio Uni vers it y Inn . Richland
Avenue. The same works hop will
al so IX' offered at four other location s around thf' stafC' during the
nPxt four months to attract intC'r -
esled participa nts from throughout
Ohio.
For more information on the
Athens works hop a nd to register.
conl ac lllte OhioU niver sil yO fficeof
Works hops ancl Confer ences.
Athen s, tfil4t o94-68.'\l.
This program h<~ s been made
available with !he hC'Ip of gra nt s
from !he Ohio DPpa11men1 ofDevei opmen!'s OfficC' of l.ucal Government Srrdrcs.
Bike-a-than nets funds for St. Jude's
Thirty-one riders took part in the
St. Jude's Children' s Researc h Hospital blke-a-thon with $882.80 being
raised for the hospita l Ia date as a
resull of the recent activity .
Brenda Roush, chairman, and
Marjorie Smith, co-cha irman of the
bike-a-tha n, report tha t ot her collections are yet to be received. They
extended tha nks 10 many businesses which contribu ted to the
event as welt as to the riders and
workers taking pa rt.
Riders included Ma ria Peltergrino. Troy Yankuns. Melissa Neu 1-
zling, Ronnie Ratliff. Ama nda
Roush, Jason Ra tliff. Kelly Maranko, RogerSmith. BiliGilkey. Patricia Dav is, Toby Swar!Z. J ohn
Bechtle. John Harrison. Ivan Powell, Rober! O'Brien. Julie Buck.
Richie Arn old, David Beegle. Melanie Beegle. Kevi n Hea ton. Mall
& hloss, Jason Doweli . Wall y Ha lfield. Shawn Lipscom b, Todd Hood.
Bre nda Hawley, Stepha nie Ba nk s.
Michelle Tay lor , Dreama Bent z.
Jennifer Reed. Dora! hy Kenney .
Prizes a nd refreshments were
provided for the event a nd worki ng
":ith the cont es tants in stag ing !he
bike-a ·lhon \\'ere Ba rbara Hal field.
Carolyn Banks. Brenda Ncul zling,
Donna Hatfield and Na nc)' Reed.
Top prizes were $.'>l savin gs bo nds
with
winnt'!"S
\x'ing
StPpha ni r
Banks for the most mo ney coliecled. $11.1.111 : Bill ( ;ukev. second
mos t ma ne)' collected. $U 2.50:
Kevin 1-t ealon for going 2'i mi les
which was the goal of ail riders.
Kevin collected $~ R .4'i .
Each child was presented a participa tion prizP donated by a bu si-
ness and a lso t-shir1 s for brin ging in
$2'ior more and a lol c bag and 1-shirl
for bringin g in $7:l nr
more.
Little_Miss, Mister Pageant Saturday
There wlli be a Little Miss-Little
Mister Thanksgiving Pageant held
at the Scottish Inn on Route 62
North, Point Pleasant, W. Va .. on
Saturday, Nov. 20. a l 9 a.m.
There will be severa l age group s.
0-6monlils: 7-12 months: 1-2yea rs;
3-4 years: 5-fi years: 7-8 year s: 9-12
years: and 13-16 years.
Presents Region 1 program
Betty DeanoftheChesterGarden
Club a nd the Shade Valley Council
of Floral Arts presented the program a t the Region 1 meeting, Ohio
Associati:ln of Garde n Clubs, held
Tuesday at Della in Henry Count y.
She was accompanied by Mrs.
Janel Bolin. second vice president
of the OAGC a nd advisor of !ha l
There v;ill bel hc foll owingcalegories: beau ty tpa r1y drcss 1: spo r1 swear: la ienl : a nd photogenic .
Out of coun ty judges will be judging the pageant. Applicat ions may
be obtained by callin g Lynn Morgan. 507Chandl erDrive, Point Pleasant, W.Va .. phone 304-675-5005. or
Wanda C. Gabril sch. Route :i. Box
448. Soulil Point . Ohio. 606-329-o939.
region .
Mrs. Bolin also allended regional
meetin gs at Wooster. Ealona ndSatina recently. As second vice pres ident. she is adviso r Ia tho se regions.
53 1 JACKSON PIKE - RT. 35 WEST
Speaker slated for Point Rock services
Rev. Clyde B. Rodgers, evangelist, singer and chalk artist, will be
featured speaker at eva ngelistic
services to be held a t 7 each
evening Tuesday through Sunday
a t the Point Rock Church of the
Nazarene, State Route 689 between
A,Jbany and Wilkesville.
Rev. Rodgers entered the field of
evangelism In 1933 and since then
has conducted revival cam paigns
and camp meetings across the
nation and in Canada . Before his
call to the ministry, Rev. Rodgers
was a commercia l artist and each
night he draws an attractive
picture to Illustrate a gospel song.
The effectiveness of his art work is
/
)
'·'
/
Phone 446· 4524
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT & SUN
AU SEATS S 2 00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 00
enhanced because he sings the song
as he draws the picture complel!ng
both steps simulla neous iy. The
public is invited 10 a tte nd !he
services.
Pe'rsonals
Mrs. Harry Davis a nd William
Lehew were in · Orient Monday
where !hey were mel by Mrs. Alma
Johnson, Springfield, for a vis it with
Miss Dorothy Leifheit, Orient Developmental Center. On behalf of
the Juniors of the American Legion
Auxiliary. Drew Webster Post :!9,
Mrs. Davis presented a n America n
fl ag to Cottage L a t the Center.
Accepting for the cottage was Miss
Leifheit, a long with a social worker
and a supervisor.
MvFAVORITE
..... ,,!:¢!~,..,
~IIR O IIXXI·
I
!I\1CA I'Ali11R
-1
PG)
1st WEEK: 7 :00 & 9: 10P .M.
SAT & SU N MATINEE S .1 ~ 00 &
EVANGELISTIC SERVICES
NOV. 16-21
7:00 EACH EVENING
REV ClYDE 8 ROOGERS IS w Kiel ~ krown il!. a
soo:::essful evengelst m the Churdl ot the Nata~ene
Hav11g mte.ed \he ll!tl otevan!J!•sm 1n 1933.11e tlas
coodocted revMI campaiiJIS. ~nd hetl camp mrehngs
aams lle natoo and n Canirla His message IS p1am.
bgu3. 8ndcorwnc11 g. An ardent sUdent ol p10phecv.
he rs well at:M! to soundly presmt IhiS 'o'efV lffill!rtant
leittwli of the &eptures. Be be his cal tothe rnmsb)"
Mr. Rodgtn was a ccmmetoalartlstard IS nowdevOOng
hiS talent very eNedNely lo hiS m1rnstry Each "'!!It he
draws a beaublll p1dure 1Huslritlng sane gos~t song
•'
Meigs
area 4-H .news. notes
'
The eltedlvBle$ of hisar t«crk IS evefl morelnlflfeswe
because he Slfli!S tte song h~ll as t'e draws 11le
. pictur< romplel~ bolh ~ ·lh<lo rill-sly B•
;_~ Metp ._H ~Riden recenlly vi.SUsan Jones, Judy Meet and Kristen stawte'.,
..., ure Cealer Ill Sclorloe and lndultry . : Tire )'OUil8 people were transport«~ b).: Ra-.
(QJst) tn CaJumbua. 11refr taVOJile displays
chael Downie, Ben·Siawll!r, and Mr. and MrS..
....,uo. Ill a coat mlrlt, a"-""""" Earl Hunt.
·
....,., a-lll)'tlla'year, a pta-
systems, and on identifying available cash for inveslmenl .
cause of hiS unuslill-.. JW tie& bean lllltd "Amenca's(jghtring~llllt ...
·
··t'l'W'l ., .,Ji
At a recerrt meeting Ill IJie club held at St ..
- · u *-tlnle ~. arid ure · ,Paul's LullleraD Churell, . plans were dll~;~ - ·
f<"-dlorstrattrwatllyn!An!nalnAtlrenut
~tr:t.;:,•r.:=: ~-:.=Nov.IUChrtltmuparty . ·
l ~:--:_==-~---~~-- :
ALBANY,
'
,,
�Monday, Nove.,oer 15, 1982
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Page-6--- The Daily Sentinel
~~Novennber
Girl Scout diary
Girl Scouts, Brownies discuss Thinking Day and Thanksgiving
The troop also discussed Think·
ing Day activities a nd selected
three countries. one of which will be
represented by the scouts In food,
costume, song, dance or skit al the
Troop 12'76
Thanksgiving craft s were dis·
cussed al the Nov. 1 meeting of the
Meigs Seoul Troop 1276 held a t
Pomeroy Elemenlary SchooL
observance to be held in February.
Sharon Riffle spoke to the girls on
first aid, demonstrating how to
bandage a sprained· ankle, what to
do in the event someone chokes, as
Meigs County regional correspondence
il y gal hering. She is the da ughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hayman .
Lucliie Kimes was ho me
recen lly.
Mrs. Shi rley Saiisbury and child·
ren, Galli polis, spent the weekend
wil h her parents, Mr. a nd Mrs. Dor·
sel Larkins. Shirley's husband,
Sieve, was away with the Army reserves In the Carolinas.
Ninety-nine-year old Neil Groce
did her part for democracy, s he
cam e lo vote, walked in, voted and
walked out. I wonder if she was I he
oldes t person in the cou nty who
voted?
The Long Batt om Commu ni ty As·
sociation will stage a bazaar and
bake sale Wednesday, Nov. 17, beglnningallOa.m. intheCommunlty
Building. Aii proceeds will be used
to com plele the new community
bu ilding.
There will be no November meet·
ing of I he Lo ng Bot tom Community
Assoclallon . Instead there will be
two meetin gs in December, the
first, and lhe29th both beginnlngat7
p.m. in the Community building.
Anyone wishing to co ntribute
items to this column please do so by
caiiing985-4275 or write Box 7, Long
Bottom.
LongBottom
News Notes
By MELODY ROBERTS
Mr. and Mrs . Don Pullins, Willi·
amslo wn, W.Va. , called on Mr. and
Mrs. George Sellers recenlly.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Deeter were
vis ited by Mr. a nd Mrs. Jim Deeler,
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs Hartis Frank wis h to
annou nee t tey have a new grandso n, George Mark Kibble Pickens.
He is 1he so n of Rev. a nd Mrs.
Grorge Pickens, Mowryslon, Ohio.
Debbie Al heriOn, daughlerof Mr.
· and Mrs. Clarence At herton. turned
21yearsold Nov. I.
Oclober 24, Paige Hayma n celebraled her 201h birlhday with a la m·
Honor roll
ThP fi rs! ninf' v.'('('ks gra ding period honor
rdl olthf' Eastern H igh ~hool ha s ))e(>n an·
nouno•d. Making a grack'of " 8" or aOOve in all
thf>ir subj f'r1S to lx> nampd 1o ttlC' roll werf':
Sc>\·rnth grad£> - Lori Bur kP. Maraly nBar·
tm. Amy Bc>rkhimer. Abl,gal1 Cauthor0.A m v
Conoolly. Br:va n Du rSI. RPnff' K aylor. Tiffi
Lawson. L ar f>sa Lon,g , Ruth Nuller. Darlfflf'
Pulk>n s. Am~· Ritchie . .lod,\' Sch<1ekel . Kelly
Thompsm . Trent Uptm .. l o t• Y oo~
F:lghl h ,grade - Tra\'i.'> Nf'w lun . Klrk RN'd .
Rob~· n BarnP!1 . Todd ( by , !.aura F'arle~·.
Am~· l.ou k !. . T :m1m.v Robl•rt s. Lf'sa Ruckn·.
J)plpah S and.~ rs. Todd Wilson.
:\i nth grade- John Rli'P, Dawna Gruf'Sf'r ,
l.is.t lknder <;On. (iPnf' Jaco ll>. Angle Pool('r
Tf' nth grade - Lisa Ha wk, Trar i Schul.
Stf'Ua SmiTh. Angie SPf'tlC'('r.
EIPWnl h g rad(' - Rand\' Batu·. Shd l\'
11f'arh.<>. Da\'(' Brandt . lonnif· f'lark . Fkre11iJ
Dt'f'tf'r. Ann D iddiP, :\l .trk Ewing. Paula
F' rK'kPr. Victor Cillilan . Hl f'k .Johnson. Kc\'i n
LulP, Lori Looks . Pa m Hii'IX'I. All('(' Ri lr hle,
Chester
News Notes
By CLARICE ALLEN
Mrs . Lany Roush has returned to
her home in Winter Haven, Fla.,
after a week here with her mother,
Mrs. Oris Frederick. Mrs. Frederick has been returned home after
undergoing surgery at the St. Josep h Hospital. Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Allen vi·
s iled In Ash land, Ky. with Mr. and
Mr iL<iSa S(_'arbrough , lknri('tta Thomas,Scotl
TrusS('!, Lori Ril chil '
~·f'tflh GradP - Li''1 Col lirt<;, Jull(' F.lbff
ff'ld . DPron J('I,I,'P!1. Unda Thoma . Rffk\' Am
br<J' P, Brian Collins. Da n • Gaul. Si1aron
Crlrtlrt Pam Mu rph~·. M.trk Hirf'. Rhonda
HifJJf'l . Tim R.otx>rts. ,l(' ff Shlivl'rs. Tina
SproC.T'r . Bet hTI."'o.~fo nJ . Brtan \\'PI I. Ed \Vpr l'\',
Mf'IL<;sa Thum.1s
.
Mrs. Walter Kouns, Grace Bu·
cha no n a nd Robert Allen.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lorentz,
Belpre, called on Denzel Cleland.
Mr. Cleland Is recuperating from
surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Virgll Wood, Spring·
field. spent a weekend with Mrs.
Letha Wood.
Mrs. Pauline Rice, Appamattox,
Va., and Mrs. Maxine Miller,
Athens, called on several friends
here.
Mrs. Erma Cle la nd a nd Miss
Faith McCain spent a few days In
South Carolina with Rev. and Mrs.
David Tysinger and daughters.
Mrs . Elizabeth Wickha m and
child ren, Richmond, were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Riden·
our and Mr. and Mrs. John
Wickham.
Sunday visitors r:i Mr. and Mrs.
Kirk Chevalier and Jessica were
Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Roberts and
daughter, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Beal, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Young and children. Pomeroy, and
Mr. and Mrs Russ Well and daugh·
ters. local.
Carmel News,
By the Day
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle vi·
sited Mr. a nd Mrs. Gene Carpent er
of Stlversvllle recently.
Mrs. Ethel Orr of Chester caUed
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Lee and farnlly recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Haym an Barnltz of
Pomeroy were at the home ct E unle
Brinker a recent evenin g.
Betty VanMeter, Sheryl Johnson
and E unie Brinker called at the
hom e of Mr. and Mrs. William Ca·
relton and daughters of Racine on
Friday evening.
The Daily Sentinel
PHONE
Or
w.. t•
c;An""""''"''""
....... .
~
,,II ........
"••100'0' ,....
\)(I 1\I I. AO<I..,[Q•<I""'"'
lloo .. &llo,CUO"
"II """'"""'"'
It"'~ '" P""' ~''"'"" ' n
""'"'""til•••
II ( tmQ•"'I[ QU•""""'
-
\OM•>< "'' " """" '"'
\llvoiO•""
'"PP' '•'
..11Mu><•o<<n>l<u""'n"
........ h••
...... .......
ll.,o,....
...
,,_,,,,
,.om.,,
.. .
t,.~
"""''' i oO.
... f .........,... ••
\
~.,
.. ......................
' """''""
• "'""""''•Bu•
. :-,.s- MHE --
lll otOft\111• '> • '-
b,.,
-
-·-G·- ..........
_.
........-
tt>- LotOttf o*'
"' ••m tQ ~•-nt
'"····
I"p·~-·""
I [ • <ooOI""!
""""" ' .•.... ,.,
C.•""'"'""""""
.......
......
I!U-"'' '
...
wr ......... , ... ,..,..••,_
II
" ... , ' r......
..,_,
llt- Wo""'l
. , . _ , ... II' ............
..) ,. ........
_..........
. .
" ·~·
~""'"""''"'
<t .... , h 6 ( I A•o•·•
•.... c_,,.
.......... .-~
,_
,..,.,......
"~'- •'-'
tu- • ..
" .. ou ....... ......
\•lu Ohon • o ~,_
.l)o"'"''
........."'"''''"'""
1\\<-• '""'"''"'''
. ,............"".
,.,..,..,_,.
....,-...
,.,_,_
G•H .. ( - I y
..... a...
..n.-o
,_,,,_o,,
..•1' •""''"'"
..............
..• IN••""""'...."'"'
1\•u•n·-••""'"'
" .... p ............
COMPLETE
RADIATOR
From theSE:!ft!st Heater
to 111e Lllpst Radiator.
ecn Radiator Specialist
~
......
POMEROY - The 1963 gra·
dua ling class of Pomeroy High
School will mE<'I Monday a1
Meigs Inn at 7:30 p.m. to begin
making plans for Iheir 201h reun·
ion in May of neXI year. Those
inlerested in helping bul will be
unable 10 atlend lhe meeting are
to contact Ralph Werry a l Meigs
Inn at 992-3629.
POMEROY - Winding Trail
Garden Club wil l mC!'I a l the
home of AiicP Thompson Mon·
da y al7 :30 p.m. Roll call will be
10 copies of candy recipes. Pat
Thoma Is inchargeoflhegarden
calendar and Ruth Moore the
workshop. Members are lo bring
arrangemen ts sui table for the
Christmas flower show.
carnivaL
4
...,.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Group II of
Middleport First United Presby·
terlan Chu rch will meet Tues·
day al 6:30 p.m. at LaSalle
Restaura nt, Middleport , for the
annual Thanksgivi ng dinner.
From there the group will go to
the home of Mrs. Paul Hapton·
slall where Mrs. F rancis Ander·
son wlll give devotions and the
group will study a c.hapter of the
sludy book.
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363
F&AM Tuesday at 7 p.m. Work
in master m asun degree. Refreshments wlll be served. All
master masons are Invi ted to
at1end.
3 Elegant Parts!
Public Notice
Printed Pattern
Custom
'J
Or 949-2160 10125/"c
co .. wv
......-c_.,
-·..,___ ...._
U l - l't ,. ......II
>n-Mo_ _ L ...,l
'11 - ·~ ....
,_. , _
U ..
U~tlll-th
' "' " "" '
-~-
WID
~ ......
· -· -
01011
.and
Remu deImg,
FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011
l>. -ot. .... G<I ..
O...a..
kitchens
BriG~~s Ad
15% 0~
Q
Jvarla bl f' tor puiJtoc tns pectron
.11 the homf' o f the clerk
Wonda l Ebltn
By 1hoppln1 In your home area ,ou eave on
1a1, the wear and tear on your car and avoid
the hazard• of hl1hway and freeway
travelln1. It pay1 to ehoP' where you llvel
Clerk
Sahsbwv Townsh•p
.'
Glen A.
949·2860.
No Sunday Calls
l ·ll ·lfc
Sales Representative
Metropolitan Life
. Insurance
Company
116 Layne Street
New Haven, W: Va . 25265
PH . (304) 882-2657
10·20·1 mo.
·•
Phone
NEW LISTING - Large country
home w!h lurnace, nice wood·
burningf ire p~ce wrth heat~a
la. I\? baths. 3 bedrooms,
carpeting and 2 outbuildings
plus root ce l~r. All lor only
$39,500.
MID DLEPORT Lit erary
Club wUI meet Wednesday at 2
p.m . at the homeofMrs. Charles
GaskilL A book review "A Few
Minutes With Andy Rooney"
will be given by Mrs. Bert
Grimm.
DOUBLE -2 fanilybrickon2
level lois in Middleport. 6rooms
and balh in each. Hot water
heat. lois ol r8'Tlodeling and
nice vew ollheriver.Askingjust
$28,500.
4726
t.,-/1.._ -llJr-~
Slim,·strarghl cardigan, blouse
with rullled revers, side-zipped
panls: how much do you think
thrs trrc would cost lo buy' Sew
and save- choose flannel, knit
Punted Pattern 4726: Mrsses
Sizes 8, 10, 12, 14. 16. 18. Size
12 (bust 34) jacket, pants 2 518
yds. 60 "; blouse 1 718 yds. 45 ".
$2.25 lor uch pottern. Add 5oe
lor uch pattern for pomp
1nd h111dlin1lA:
Anne Adlms
:ll 1
Plltem Dept.
Sent
The Daily Sentinel
243 West 17 SL, New lor\. NY
10011. Prinl NAME, ADDRESS,
ZIP, SIZ£, ond STYLE NUMBER.
Be smart, be successful, sew a
new wardrobe with our NEW
fALL-WINTER PAmRN CATALOG.
Over 100 easy styles! Plus free
coupon for any $2.25 pattern.
Catalog, $1.50
W. CRAFT BOOKS .. $2.00 uch
115-Ripple Cnlchet
117-EIIr All of Nltdlepoint
, TRAILIROR HOUSESITE -3
acres in thewoodsongoodhard
road wrth all utilrtes. Bargiin at
$4,500.
2.8 ACRES - And a 6 room
home. Balh, basement and 3
bedroans wrth all utilrtes. Has
more land avail<ille.
NEW LISTING - Lookrng lor a buKiing or mobi~ home sle'
Approximalely 10 acres ~oping land on Stale Roule with electric
and T.P.C.water avai~ble. $8,500.
OPEN
WED., FRI., SAT.
NEW LISTING- Main Street, Rutland - Alhree bedroan home
on approxrmatley 5!Yx20(Y kit. Forca:f air gas heat wih set up lor
wood burner, separate utilrty, insulated. two baths, garage and
storage buiklm& backyard above ground pool Jus! $28,500.
.......
"""* Avlilllllt
.... :11- · liMn. Rills
TUPPERS PlAINS - Priced Ra:fuca:f' Three bedroom r.mch.
carport, large,,., utaly, isulated, good condi~n. Just $25,000.
lllloNIItlwi&
PIIOIIE !JIS.tM& or
!JIS.3929
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF WOODROW P.
CAMPBELL DECEASED
Cue No. 23933
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OFFIOUCIARY
Oh November 9: 1982. •nrhe
Meigs Coun ty Probate 'C ourt.
Case No. 23933. Grace E.
Campbell . II 8 Peacock
A.....enue. Pomeroy. Ohro 45 769
was appotnted Adm1ntstratrnc o f
the estat e of Woodrow P. Camp-
Rec. '19"
NOW'1695
.6 Rolls ol501 Nylon
'17"
bell. deceased. ialeoll18 Pea·
. NOW
YD. INSTALLE~
'
'1495 -=~~-
!'
Ailsiille~
Jlu're In aood
hands. •
Af,_.U....._Co.. ~ . IL.
p~;~Quickef
!Aiency, Inc.
: .. Pomeroy"
.
- - -~
Raben E. Buck
Proba1e Judge· .
Clerk
111!15. 22. 29, 31C
flower beds. Call446 -4620.
Interested in buying Pickup
truck or 4 WO , pay cash and ·
or assume balance. 446 -
9265 .
BEDS-IRON, BRASS, old
fu miture, gold, silver dollars,
wood ice boxes, stone jars,
antiques, etc ., Complete
household s. Write : M .D .
Miller, Rt . 4, Pom eroy. Oh .
Gun shoot, Racine Gun
Club. Every Sunday starting
1 p.m . Factory choked guns
only.
101711 mo.
G.......-
Or 992· 7760.
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF HUBERT M.
. PRICE, DECEASED
Case No. 2367B
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 3. 1982.1n the
M e•gs Coun ty Probate Court .
Case No 23 678 . Carolyn l
Pr tce. Penl and. Oh•o 45770
was appomted Executnx of the
estate of Hubert M Pnce. deceased. late of Penland. Oh10
Robert E Bu ck
Prob ate Judge Clerk
111)8.15.22 .3tc
11
ORDER now-Holiday home made candies to insure deliv·
ery. Wedding and Birthday
cakes. reasonably priced .
304-675-6627.
Deer Heads mQUnted by an
experienced taxidermi st.
Bob Cline, Rt. 2, Point Plea -
sant. 304-675-1448.
4
Giveaway
ANY PERSON who haseny·
thing to give away and does
not offer or attempt to offer
any o1her thing for sale may
place an ad in this column .
Therew~l be no charge to the
advertiser.
38900 SA 7
Aeeds'v1 11e. Oh10
45772
Kittens 7 wks old. Call 446-
(1 1) 8. 15. 22 . 3tc
8264.
Four lovely kittens to give
away. Cell446-93441ateev·
enings, saturdays or after noon on Sunday.
Free to good home. Female
calico cat . Approx. 2 years
.,_-__________ _____ _. ____
I
,;, Curb Inflation II
Pay Cash for . I 6
I
Classifieds and II
Savell!
lI
107-«c
Write your own ad ar)d order by mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results . Money not refundable .
I
I
I
Phone __________ II
1
.
REPAIR
lost and Found
call388 -8592 or388·9922 .
LOST-black & tan female
Fox Hound. Reward . Ken -
neth Gadner, 304-676 ·
3977.
LOST-small black purse, be tween Skyline Lanes & Mid dleport, OH. Reward, phone
304-773-9011.
8
I
10/24/l mo.
DIRECT CARE STAFF Need
by a progressive residential
care facility servici ng men tally retarded adults with behavioral disorder s. Previous
experience working with
people required . Applicants
must be entergetlc , creative,
patient, and able to work
flexible hours. $10,000 per
year salary for a46 hourwork
week , along with other benefits. Night relief staff also
need6d at residential homes,
Bach elora de-
yearo worlllng directly with :
developmentely diubled in·
divituel s, aubsltlute meater1
degree for 1 year of experience . In the Pt. Pktaunt
area: (1) House director. AB
degree, p<eforobly In ooclol
field. 121 Independent living
skills Instructor, LPN, min imum quellftcetions-current
license In StateofWettVirglnia. (3) Home life inltNctor:
minimum queliflcationt· 72
s emester hounof eccredited
collage course, preferably In
Equal
Opportunity
Employer.
ACCOUNT executive cobol
TV advertising. ground floor
opportunhy In ea:cttr.g field .
Marketing background prefared , creative skills necessary . Profeastonal training
provided by expert etaff. Su perior potential for the right
candidate . Guaranteed in·
come & expenae allowance.
812.000 .· 818,000 . firot
year . Relocation po11ible.
Send resume to : Acco ... ntEx·
ecutive, P.O. Box 7381.
Charleston, WV 26313 .
NEED experienced automo bile painter. At least 5 years
experience. 304-876-3373 .
AVON . Give yoursetf •
Christmas Bonus. Sell Avon .
Earn good money. set your
own hours. Call 614 -698 7111 collect .
12
Situations
Wanted
ATTN : Mothers, responsible
16 yr. old will care for your
child while shopping or
working . Call 614-245 -
614-949·2129 or 614-9926040:
13
Insurance
SANOY AND BEAVER lnourance Co. has offered servi·
cas for fire inaurance
coverage in Galli a County for
almost a century . Farm,
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet indivi:tual needs. Con tact Foster lewis. agent.
Phone 379-2204.
Are you paying too much for
your hospital -health inaurance . Call Carroll Snowden,
446-4290.
11 PM to 9AM, 83.60 per
hours, 30 to 40 hr. work per:
week . If interested 18nd re sume to Ohio Residential
Servies, Inc .. Rt . 1 Box 7.
Mill Creek Or., Gallipolis. Oh
45631 .
Baby sitter needed imme diately for 2 children , 1 is in
school. Bladen Mercerville
Rd. Call 614-266-6684 af-
15
Schools
Instruction
Karate the ultimate in setfde fence all priv81e le11ons,
Men, women, children . Instruction thru black belt .
Also available Karate uni forms puching and kicking
bags, and protective equipment. Jerry lowery Auociates Karate Studio. 143
Budington Rd ., Jackson,
a.
a.
Oh . Call614-286-3074.
ter 6PM .
Buckeye Community Service islookingforacoordina tor for its Gallia -Meigs
Foster Care Networtt to
serve developmentally disabled clients. A degree in Social Work or related field is
preferred; 2 years experience, and access to a motor
vehicle and travet are required. Send resumes to Julie Kramer , P.O. Box 604,
opportuity employer.
18 Wanted to Do
General Hauling and Trash
removal Service . Reliable
and dependable. Call 446 -
3169 after 8PM 256-1967.
Nursing in private home.
Daytime only in Gallipolia or
Pt. Pleasant . Will give ref . If
required . Ceii46B -1818.
licensed LPN will care for
children in my home any
hour, daily or weekly . Refer -
Positkm Available, Substi tute School Bus Driver for ltnces. Cell446-4380.
Guiding Hand School . Must
pass physical examinationa
Plnanglal
and hold current bus driver
license for school bus oPera tor. Salary will be 83.36 per 21
Business
hour. Availability - immeOpportunity
diatety. Applications can be
obtained from : Mr. David
Ratliff. Principal, Guiding
Reward I
Also Transmission r.
PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121
after 6:00. 1-513·434·
0541 .
Jeckosn. OH 46640. Equal
Foss, 304 - 676 -4226 .
,
quellle~~tlona :
gree In behavoriel h11hh or
related fleld , experience -2
Tree trimming & removal.
Full or part -time consultant
showing Aloette fine cosmetics . Unlimited income .
Full company training -no in vestment . Established customers in area. Call collect
614-446-4273 after 5:00
pm .
lost - Diamond ring,po11ibly
at Murphy' s, Gallipolis Plaza
or Ponderosa . Mrs. Norman
Auro&muc·t\
GREEN ACRES REGIONAL
CENTER . Cue monogor·
discount. Call 446-3368 or 9397 .
446·2166.
---------
Why have 2 Diamonds. 15
Emeralds, 70 Pearls, over
800 Directs switched? Call
Lost Hereford cow . If found
Address---------1
GARAGE
.
4 year old Oaschund dog.
Good house pet. Likes older
people bUt doesn ' t like child -
THREE kittens, 304-675·
1138.
Name----------1I
Roger Hysell
· St.
~
Help Wanted
Christmas is co ming -- sell
AVON now and start saving!
Earn good money selling
beautiful gifts, buy yours at
6011 .
PH. JIM CUFFORD
992-7201
and women's. Call 446 ing
outfits.
All sizes, men' s
4637
.
Wanted to buy a% ton truck
load of cow manure for
Oh . Reword. Call 304-773 ·
Wotk lnoured and
Public Sale
S. Auction
3·24·1fc
MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Oazers
.-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
WANTED -Out of work-out
I Wanted
)For Sale
IAnnouncemenl
)For Rent
Auction every Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
ueed merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
For all your wiring
needs; ·furnaces
repair service and
installation.
Residential
& Commercial
Call741'-ll'n
- Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas lines
- Septi: Systems
lARGE OR SMALL JOBS
PH. 992-2478
11·1-1 mo.
Auctioneer. 276 -3089 .
MURRAYSAuctlonheldev·
ery Sunday at 2:00 p .m . at
Hartford Community Build -
OF YOU
SIYLING SALON
SYIACUSE. 011.
OiiMT•'... Sii.
I'll.··-
Far-It
I
1Q.27·1 nh
EUGENE lONG
Gold, oliver. oterflng, )e·
11-~~or- §.i~i~~·
e;••
.Contpilll Guttlr WO!k,
No Itom to Largo or to Smell.
Wll buy one ploce or com pl~to houHhotd. Now, uood,
or ontlquo furniture. 814·
892·8370.
Rtmodtllna.
of Ill trPISIn home . . 20
···,'
~!AJ!S..
~~"
'
9-1
a. cur-
.
WANTED-one, 3 gallon
oproy point pot, 304-1715·
112B.
' -i
·--.... ,) J ....
,,
through this "newest and
fastest growing company in
the nation" . Call 304-676 -
1293.
view call614-992-3382.
EARN EXTRA Money for
Chriatmas. Sell Avon . Earn
good $$$, set your own
hours. Call 614-698-7111
(collect[.
1 - - - - -- - - - -
Need someone to live in,
ahara expensea. Permanent
Guerd cen help. If you are •
Junior or Senlor in H6gh
School or a Gradu1te, you
may queiHy for e •1. 600 bo·
nuo or up to 84,000 coli-
rency. Ed Burkett Berber Tuition 111i1tanoe. plua you
Shop. Mldlloport. 992· will have • secure part time
3476.
job oflortrolnlng. L..rn oldllo
& AI.UIINUI
. ...
'
'!"'anted To Buy
welry. rings, okl coins
of money. Need a new jobAmbitious people . For inter -
Bill i ·h_o_m_e._6_1_4_·9~9~2_·28
__4_6_.__
NEED EXTRA MONEY or
help with college oxpenooo?
The Wool Vlrglnio Nedonol
lng. Auctioneer:
Ohlinger.
9
: 'PH. 992-6677
Ir-
Announcements
LOST Purse lost · between
SkylineLane's& Middleport ,
,...., hookup
Uae your wortc •nta OYttf·
Hand School. P.O. Box 14, LOOKING for people who
Cheshire, Ohio 46620 , want to earn between 8600
and 860,000 monthly
(614) 367-0102.
20% OFF
ALL PERMS
NOV. 2 TllliJ DEc. 4
45769
WantedtobuySquareDanc·
'bmVWIIQIIY11Jiil
10-28·1
FALL PERl. SPECIAL
coc k Avenue. Pomeroy. Ohio
edumptruckooeodlng end redeiming
<Recine and Syr~~a~oe
CALLAL
742-2328
·
; Courihoule In
SQ.
_..,..,...,..
~
Guysville, Ohio
Proltction- when you
become totally diaabled.
Co"'f'rtlo.noilll MedirolprovuietJ Mflior Medical
~and Hoopit.aliSurgical
:·Acroll From. The
6 Rolls .ol Anso IV Extro Good Nylon
5 Year Presidential Wear Warranty .
eboc:lcOOe
AUthorited John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Parts &Service
I ·J·Ifc
BUILT AND
REWORKED
f·
f
$}495
~~~~~~~~~~~ ~
ren . 614·992-3916 .
CONTRACTING
FIREPlACES
&
CHIMNEYS
i-
INSTAU£0
-
J F
_ ,
64 Misc. Merchandiee
Public Notice
Sa•d Board of Educat1on re ·
serves th e rtght to accept or rete<: ! any and all or parts of any
and all b•d s
Board o f EducatiOn
Eastern Loca I
School Otstrtct
Elo •se Boston .
Tr easurer
En
Wanted to buy a good used
old . Call614·992·2428 .
10201 roo.
·Dioability lncorru~
IN GEM BLUE, AMBER, RUST AND
WOODLAND BROWN.
PARTS end SERVICE
U:S. Rt. 50 East
between jobe, etc.
AVAI~ABLE
FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3752
ANYTIME
Middleport, Ohio
11-8-1 mo.
SALES & SERVICE
tl1 'I"'- Mil~
CIIK.I - ... prices
Housing
Headquarters
YD. WITH
'PAD, INSTALLED
doghouse. Call446· 7136 or
676-1333.
Golf Le11ons. John Teaford .
Chester, Ohio .
992-2198
• Rofrigoral0f1
.Oryen •FreeztH'I
BOGGS
Ask me about Allat.ale'a
1
Short-Trrm Hoalth Policy- ~
~elpo to protect you
$1 L'M5. SQ.
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
aleo acid boll and rod
out radiatora. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORD
All Makes
7:30-10:00
SUl HELEN AND BRUCE. ALL
REALTORS. CALL992-3876.
NOW
1982
RADIATOR
•W-•Diohwoohero •Rengoo
"CHOOSE YOUR HOME NOW! THE BOND ISSUE MONEY SHOUlD
BE AVAILABLE SHORTLY!
REALTORS:
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.. all .... ........ ......... .............. 992-6191
Dottie S. Turner ............................................... 992-5692
Joli!Trussell .... ...................................... .. ...... 949-2660
Office ............................................................ 992·2259
2 bedroom
frame home v.ith bath, sun
deck, new klchen and dining
ara. Out of all floods. Askilg
$17,000
7 · 14-~ c
1-716- B42 · 6000 .
121B.
cell
Oeby A . Martin
Rodney Howery
PH . 992-6370
half milo up Georges Creek
Rd. Call446·0294 ..
- - - - - - - - ·IC-
Area
...;
lANGSVILLE AREA - 2.5 Acres wrth ranch home - lhree
bed roans, bath. utility, hookup klr \\llal burner. Only $26,000.
SMALL' HOUSE -
Rt 3, Box 54
Rocine, Dh.
Ph. 614-843·2591
10·6·11<
4-5-~c
WEST MAIN - POMEROY - Excellmt homewrththreebedroom~
l'h balhs, new lurnace and rool, fireplace, (ius woodburner, new
carpelrn& lull basement ~5.000
BUSINESS & BUILDING- 2
story brick with excellent locl~n rn downt""n Micklleport
PrK:ed lo sell.
123-Stitdl 'r( Petch Qllllts
129-Quid 'n' [IIJ TriiiSfers
Books and Catalog - add 501
each for postage and , handling.
SKATE-A-WAY
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
11·3·1mo.
NEW LISTING - Want acreage plus seclus~ n' Approximale~ 21
acres ol rollin& cleara:f ~nd, complete~ lenced lor horses or cows,
barn, gorgeous vew fran six year old ranch home v.ith IhrB!
bedroans, Iamay room, central stereo system, excellmt condit~n.
plusely water and free gas. Locala:f 10 miles Irom ~meroy. 3mrles
to Route 681.$68,000.
P&S BUILDINGS
"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALLAL
Ph. 742-2328
608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.
lnsuloted Doa Houses
FREE ESTIMATES
Can with reusable
porto. Call614-368 ·9303.
SWEEPER and sewing me chine repair. parts, and supplies. Pick up and delivery,
Davis Vacuum Cleaner, one
Syracuse - Racine
Meets All Specifications
HIGH PRES. REGUlATORS
LOW PRES. REGUlATORS
Free Delivery
PH. 985-3892
or 986-3837
Greg Wimebrenner
10/17/1 mo. pd.
The Boa rd of Educatron ol
Eastern Local Sc hool Drstrtct
destr es to rece1vesealed btds on
the foll owmg
l Gasohne and a rt
2 T1res and tubes
3 Fuel ad
4. Fl eet1nsurance
In o rder to be co nstdered all
sealed brds shaH be recerved •n
th e Treasurer' s Office by 12 o:clock noon on December 16 .
UTILITY BUILDINGS
•New .or Repair
· •Painting
Juck
Weekends : 12 noon to 9PM .
HOOK-UPS
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sizes stort from t2'x l6'
•DownspoutS
Call614-379·2166 .
lntplvvmenc
lvr lsve
ALL STEEL &
POLE BUILDINGS
•Gutters
Wanted to buy tobacco
poundage, will pay top price.
feat. Job offera guar1ntMd
614-664·4761 . social field . Contact David
Hours week days: 6 to 9PM . Eakle, 304-782 -2622 .
,---H-&_G_S_EW-ER--,
ORANGE
PLASTIC
GAS PIPE
•
"Beautilul, custom
Built Garages"
Call for lree siding .
estimates, 949-2801 or .
H. L WRITESEL
HOUSh
G&W CO.
BISSELL
SIDING CO
ON PERMANENTS
Mon.-Tues.-Wed.
Now thru Dec. 31
KAY'S BEAUlY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-2n5
We Honor Golden Buckayo
cordo Except on Perm.
Spoclalo. 11·8-1 roo..
446-0069
ley.
$32.00 Within 20 Miles
$35.00 Within 30 Miles
PH. 992-2618
IIII·Ht
SIDING
ROOFING
Real Estate-General
1-(614 )-992-3325
PH. 992_7583
,. 992.2212
Vinyl & Aluminum
We pay c11h for late model
clean uaed c•rs .
Frenchtown Car Co.
Bill Gene Johnson
deer hides, Ginaeng, trapping supplies. George Buck -
w '30.oo ton
~hi~/~!!~dius
GREG RilUSH
Fern or C. T.
PH. 992-7301
10/ 18/ 1 mo.
ley Trading Co., Spring Vel·
ley Pion, 446-8026 or
448-8026.
LIMITED SUPPLY
~um\';'~.~'1'(7=
Contact
Ph. 742-2834
bathrooms.
add-ons, new homes, ·
, plumbing, electric, siding. .
COMMUNITY SHOPPING PAYS
OFF IN MORE WAYS THAN ONE!
198 1 hns hePn submtlt ed by
th e TruStePS o f Sol rSbl rrv Town Shtp as requ rrPrt hv th r Othce o!
R('Venu e Sha rr n11 The report rs
oeust&~:satdils
oRoof;,. w.n
a.
RAW FUR BUYER Beef &
;=~~~~~~=~t.======~~~"~t:========~~::::=======~~====~~~=~~ 3
SHOP LOCALLY
The rrpor 1 o n the uses at
General RrvPn11e Shar tnq
Fund s lor nle fi sc al year o l
•.
\
~ TOM HOSKINS
COAL
DELIVERED
extensive
=~n!.,rk
Syracuse, OH.
· '?:~
p8CIII r~ ng
Ona, kitchens. beroofing ,
carpet. ceramic tile,
cement worll, painting, etorm windows,
siding, any type of
remodeling.
·commercial or
Residential •
OVEB 1S YE'AR(J
EXPERIENCE IN
BUILDING NEW
HOMES
Long Bottom, OH., 45743
986-4193
10/ 1811 . od.
New Homes -
DJ's TRADING
POST
ESTIMATES
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing & Siding Co.
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
AVAilABLE AT:
Pomeroy. Oh.
lA _ _ , _ . , . . , . . , , . . ,
PUBLIC NOTICE
day Syracuse Homemakers
Club will meet Wednesday at 10
a.m. at Syracuse Presbyterian
Churc h. Dale M. Stoll, Meigs
Coun ty extension agent, home
economics, will demonstrate
cooking. The meeting Is open to
the public. Members should take
a salad or dessert for the noon
potluck a nd take any items they
are making for the holiday
season for display. A business
session will follow the noon
potluck.
Astrograph
AND HOME MAINTENANCE
FRfE ESTIMATES
Real Estate-General
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
MIDDLEPORT- Meeting of
The
board of trustees of ColumPomeroy a nd Middleport
bia
Township
will meet Friday a t
WEDNESDAY
C h ambers of Co mm e rce
4
p.m.
at
the
township
building.
SYRACUSEThird
Wednes·
member s, 5 p.m . Monday in up·
sta irs meetin g room of LaSa lle r---------------------------.J
Hotel to complete plans for the
first annua l Chrislmas parade
and promotional prog ram of the
two towns.
November I6, I982
POMEROY - Meigs High
Improvements are likely this coming year where your m aterial
School fall sports banq uet will be
needs are concerned. Sudd en shifts in co nditions could spring }UU into the
held Monday at 6: 30p.m . a t the
profit column .
high school cafeteria for those
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov, 22) Conditions with an Influence on your
athletes who participated in foot
securtty or matertal well-being could take some unusual twists In your
ball, vo ll eybal l , go lf a nd
favor today. Be alert for strange signals.
cheerleadlng.
SAGITI'ARRJS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) You could be quite successful
today If you-Involve yourself In projects giving you the opportunity to
MEIGS County Chu rches of
express your originality or In ventiveness.
Christ Men's Fellowship will
CAPRICORN (Dec. Z:Wan. I9) Get an early start today. The types of
meet a t Pomeroy Church of
results you're looking for could come qurkly. Stalling tends to lessen
Christ Monday at 6:30 p.m . A
your posslbUlties.
Thanksgiving dinner ' will be
AQ~rus (J!"'· 20-Feb. I9) Today, trytomlngle withpersonswho ·
served with turkey and ham to
are progressive and forward-looking. There's a chance they might be
be furnished by the fellowship.
pu ttlng something together in which you'U neatly fit.
PL'lCI!8 (Feb. 20-March 20) Don' t let challenging developments
Everyone attending Is asked to
distu ril you today. When under the gun }QU can be extremely resouceful
take a covered dish and his own
and ingenious at surmounting obstacles.
ta ble service.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll I9) Just because bright Ideas may come ~
easily to you today, don 't discount! heir merit. Your flashes Of brilliance I
POMEROY .- New officer s
could be worthwhile.
'
will be installed at 7:30 Monday
TAURUS (Apr1120-May 20) Be prepared for unusual conditions or
night by the Pomeroy Chapter
sudden s hifts in your commercial dealings today. There's a chance
186, Order of the Eastern St ar, at
somethin g beneficial might unexpectedly develop.
Pomeroy Masonic Tem ple. The
GEMINI(May21.June20)Makeanefforttodaytogettoknowbetter
installing- officers will be Dessi
someone you met recently. You have have more in common than you
Lorenz, past grand m atron of
reall2e. A good re@~lihip could result.
·
,
~rtzona; and Qlester King. Har·
CANCER (June 2l'July 22) Don't be bogged down with unworkable
rtsonvllle. All members are to
procedures. Use your ingenuity today to come up with better ways for ··
take a dessert.In5tallatkm prac·
· doing things. Your concepts will be good.
tlce will be held Satunlay at 2
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You're likely to be bored and restless today
p.m . at the temple.
unless you Involve }Uurself in activities which are tun and challenging.
Make agameoutof all that you do.
CHESTER PI'O, 7:30 p.m.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Where family matters are concerned
Monday at the schOOL Brownie
today, try to keep your schedule flexible. Something "fun" may unexTroop 1067 to have the operung
pectedly pop up. You'll want to be free to partlcipaie. '
ceremony a nd progra m . Fifth
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Don'twasteyourtimetoday.Bythesame
grade mothers to serve refresh·
token, don't be so structured that you lack freedom r1 moblllty. Fun
ments. ChUd care will . be prodeve1opmen ts may present themselves.
INTERNATIONAL
HARVESTER
PARTS
20 Yeors £xperilnce
2-26-«c
~--------·~"·' =
"·----------------------------------~
SIZES
Route 1
tho ovonlngo.
New construction - Re-
PH . 742 -2266
OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING
:~~~... , DooB
The Daily Sentinel
FRlDAY
Discounts to Senior Citizens & Handicapped
"""'"'"''""'"'
£ov•OI''""'"" "'"'
,. .... . . ...... 000
Calendar
vided . Decision will be made on
expendilureoffunds from thefa U
modeling - Custom Pole .
Barns.
Comme.ct.~
Ph. 992-2174
V D .... _ . ,
.. ~ .... ......
•Appliances . •Refrigeration •Heating
•Cooling •Air Cond . •Electrical
•Plumbing •Roofing •Gutters
Carpentry ··Residential or Business
Mobile Homes
105-1 mo.
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Cabinets-
~ftios Sidin!i~f:rete ·
'Roc:_~=~ r"'
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience
jll) 15 ltc
MONDAY
oooo. Write LJ .O.: P.O. Box
389: Booton, MA 02129 .
992-2156
-.O.OM....O
lll0" 6 O <t• • ~
lo .... [ .. . .. .... ~ , ...,
~ ~--,= -=~
EARN up to HO.OOOayoorl
Ph. 992-2772
follolllinlf releplw"e r. .nlu"'Ce .. ..
nII Yon>
' '"""'"',.""
& OW O
\) Ui oQ.,.,
• ...,, Am
'"''"""
.....
,...F""""
'""'" '"""'""'"'
II
, .,~,.."
Help Wanted
Buying Gold, Silver. Plall·
klnda, caU Kenneth Swain.
1ure end Antiques of all
H
Free
Estimates
James
Keesee
Cf.11ified pqa OODE't' t/lr
. 11
num, old coin s,acrap rings S.
allverware. DaHy quotes
available. Also coins
coin
auppUea for sale. Spring V•l-
C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
•• _ .....,.. c._,
~~•·nonO!>l><>' T••"' '
JJP•olo "'"" "' ~' " ' "'
WANTED TO BUY Oldfurni·
COMPLETE OME
MAINTENANCE
•Insulation •Storm Doors
•Storm Windows •Replacement Windows
•New Roofing
D• oty s.tllo M I Ctn iotottl Dept
Wanted To Buy
•owN
448-3169 or 256-1987 In
r=====~i=~=i~~~:;:;;:;:====i1jr=========::t=========~~;:;:::;:::===;::::;=;r-.:;::;::;:;;;;;;;:;::;:d
VINYL & ALUMINUM SIDING
~- - r -::::
( Ot<lollnanh l.,.•<l•""" •• "'''
( o• Oo< l •on'> < Po•<! •" •O••"< oJ
9
JOBS Ovoraoo. Big money
J&L B1.:
INSULATION
II I Cou rl U , PMfteot;Y· Of!i04S7.,
~ -=-=-
The Daily Sentinel Page 7 ·
Ohio
Business Senices ·
Elementary School , Pomeroy .
traveler patch.
Brownies observed the birthday of
Participating In the activity were
Juliet! Lowe, founder of Girl
Deanna Hall.gy, Jeanie Arms, Toni
Scouting in Amertca. The story of
Rutter, Jenne Werry , Nancy
the founder was read from the
Baker, Aimee Mitch, Greta, Riffle,
handbook with Bernie Anderson
Shelly Trlplett, Amanda Roush,
providing · the cake Inscribed
Jenny Buck, Jenny Newman, and
"Happy Birthday Brownies ."
Kim Ewing.
Gam
es were played.
·
Racine Brownie Troop 1259
QSP
materials
were
turned
In
Invitations for the investiture to
and the girls were told how to earn
be held Nov. 28 were made when
the B patch. The Brownie squeeze
the Racine Brownies met recently
a nd taps were sung by the girls with
at the Racine Baptist Church. The
Investiture ceremony will take Julie Buck playing taps on a toy
trumpet
place a t the Letart Grade SchooL
Conducting the opening flag
The flag ceremony was prac·
tlced. Kellle Ervin was elected as ceremony were Candy Anderson,
scrtbe. Refreshments were served Melinda Da lley. andTammy Kleln.
Refreshments were served by
by Michelle Stohart, Beth Clark
Barbie
Anderson, Rhonda Ander· '
and Jody Hayes with the meeting
closed with the friendShip circle son. Parents assisting were Bar·
bara Smith, Laura Swiger, Diane
and taps.
"Bachtel, Donna Klein and Chari·
Pomeroy Brownie Troop 1271
Meeting Nov. 9 at Pomeroy dine Alkire.
well as other first a id skills.
It was noted that the troop
received the super troop award for
last year's activities.
October activities of the troop
Included a hike from the home of
Janice Haggy. On the hike were
Amanda Roush, Tanya Collins,
Monica Turner, Shelly Triplett,
Greta Riffle, Aimee Mitch, Nancy
Baker, Jennie Werry, Jeanie
Arms, Toni Rutter, Deanna Haggy,
Karen Trlplett. Lynn Arms, and
Alicia Haggy. Afterwards the
scouts worked on Christm as
ornaments.
On Oct. 24, the scouts walked to
Meigs County Infirmary where
they sang Halloween songs and
gave treats to each resident. The
activity was pa rt of a service
project while the walk there
completed a requirement for four
of the girls working on the foot
1982
in
M•lntenence,
.Supply,
Clerical, Electronlco. Good
Pay-Good Trolnlng-Good
Benefits. The We.t Virginia
National Guard lo No Ordi·
nory Part Tlmo Job I Coil Sor·
geant
Lutton
304·176·3960 or toll frHin
wv 1· 800 · 642 · 3619
8flytino.
INDOOR
MINATURE
GOLF -Games: etc . Imme diate inStallation . Financing
arranged. Starting $4,900 .
MINI -GOLF, 202 Bridge
Stroot, Jessup, PA 18434.
717-489·8623.
22 Money to loan
HOME LOANS 14% fixed
rate . Leeder Mortgage, Ohio
·only 1-800 -341·8664 ,
wv• . 814-692-3061
23
Profeseional
Services
C&L Bookkeeping
Bookkooplng & tox oorvlco
for •II typn of buline11es.
Corol Nool448-3862
PIANO TUNING & REPAIR
Coil Bill Word ·tor appoint·
mont. Word'o Koyboord,
441-4372.
'
�..
... ' "
Page-S The Daily Sentinel
~·1111111
31
They'!l Do It Every Time
44
r---
Homes for Sale
Great
bargain
completed -3
bdr .,
With fan $459, oetboxoprlng
& amonreoo f1 00. firm
Small furnished effiency. 1 $120, oofa·loveoeat lit choir
profesaional type male only. $199, loVO HOtl e70, nOW
Canter air 8t heat. Call 446 - coal 8t wood heaten 11 low '
a1 e399 with blower~, uMd
0338 .
coal 8t wood heaten, new
2nd floor furnished effi - din at sou $75& up, rofrlgar·
ciency opt. Apt. 4. 729 2nd ators, ranget, bunk beds
Ave. Adults only. 446 -0967. complete 8170, bunklea
just'
dining
area, large kitchen. brick
front , full basement with garage, large lot. 4 miles from
Gallipolis, city schools , only
$37.600.
Call
614-379·
2617. Will consider trade in
mobile home. etc.
On Land Contract, Cheshire.
QH . 7 rooms . bath. base ment. garage, workshop ,
gas furna ce. Call 614 -388-
0
p · 76 .
c
Fo -r - S-a-1e- --R-e-p-os_s_e_s_s a- d
.:;~ ~o
.
'II. ~~
0
L'.'::..
fD
-r/taPy~t4"
•MI01'0 rt·.'-(.
tU::~ VOfU'•
'
\
2133 .
35 Lots & Acreage
6 room house. lull basement .
separate two car garage . 1.3
acre lot , Rose Hill. Pomeroy.
41
For sale one and half acres
more or less. approximately
600 ft road frontage on
Cora -Centerpoint Rd . near
Centerpoint . S3 .000. 00
Phone :614 -678 -
2513.
Phone 682 -6944.
HOUSE Meadowbrod< Ad ·
dition. 3 bedrooms , family
In Rio Grand e. 93 ft . lot ,
S6 ,500. natural gas. city
sewer. owner will finance at
S1 .000down S100permo .
10% interest . Call614 -379 -
room with firepalce . central
air . basement . phone 304 -
676 -1542.
lOVELY 3 bedroom , well in sulated , full basement.
fenced back yard , kout build ing, curtiansincluded. priced
reduced $7,000. Must see to
appreciate. 304 -675 -4338 .
2617 .
10% interest . Call614-379·
2617.
- - - - - - - - -lc 1 0 acres for sale . Near East ern High School on Silver
Ridge . Meadow and wood land. S500. an acre . 614 -
304-675· 7689.
HOME for sale. Chandler
Drive . remodled . 3 bed rooms . 8 V1 assumable ,
4 room house, unfurnished,
good location, 304-675 -
1302.
2 small houses and trailer
spot torrent. 1 nightclubfor
42 Mobile Homes
Furnished 2 bdr . mobile
home in Crown City. Call
614-266-6520 .
2 bdr . fully furnished , adu h:s
Two acre lots -150 ft . road
frontage , city water, behind
Mobile home for rent , gas,
adu Its. no pets. Call 614 -
lis. $4.000. 304-882 -2428
after 5 .
367-7438 .
2 bedroom mobile home,
adults only. no pets. Call
446-3368 .
2 bdr. unfurnished mobile
home, 12x60, natural gas
heat on At . 35, deposit re -
quired. Call446-4229 .
36
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS .
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446-7572 .
Real Estate
Wanted
Eureka 2 bdr. furnished . ref .
& dep . Riverfront . Aduhs .
Calll -614-643-2644.
COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
AT 35 . PHONE 446· 7274 .
Franchise
$250.000,000
last
of
food
company desires build -to · 3324 .
be_d_r-oo_m
_lu_r_n_is_he_d_. _A_d_u_
~s
surt store location . This pizza 1 ·del ivery outlet requires a
maximumof60x150ofland preferred . No pets. Deposit
and a 1000 sq. ft . buildingto required . 614 -992 -2749.
1959 10x50 Castla trailer ,
our specifications. locatK>n · - - - -- - - - - good cond .. S2,500 . Call on a major road centered in
3 bedroom nicely furnished.'
8
446-0924.
densely populated residen - Total electric . Nice location .
tial area preferred. For de - 614 -992 -3965.
1 Ox 50 Liberty trailer , tailed informatk>n write or 1- - - -- - - -- $3 ,500 . Call 614 -367 · call : McNeill Enterprises, 3 bedroom Mobile Home.
7150 after 5 :00.
Inc ., 305 E. Water St .. Chilli - Approximately 5 miles from
cothe, Oh . 46601 . 614 - Pomeroy or Middleport. At.
12x60 2 bdr . Buddy mobile 773-6590, Attention Pat 143 . 614-992· 6868 .
home. Set up with 2 or41ots,
McNeill.
gas heat. rural water, Plantz
For rent - Trailer, two
bd .rooms. level lot. garden
Subdivision . Call
space , garage, Syracuse.
1979 Liberty mobile home
Ohio . 614-992-2282 .
70x14 , 3 bdr .. central air,
1- - - - - - - - - stove & refrig .. new carpet . 41
Houses for Rent
Small trailer . Suitable for 1
gas heat. S10.500.Call446 ·
or 2 persons. Partially fur·
0963 or 992· 6173.
nished . S135 . month plus
Small furnished house. 1 or 2 daposit . 614-985 -4454 or
1974 Young American adutts only. Call446 -0338 . 614-992-7479.
14x70, 2 bdr., good condi - 1-:---------tion , $5 .100. Call 446 - Rent or lease with option to 3 bedroom Mobile Home. 1
0770.
buy, immediate possession. chilo accepted. No pets. Call
Near Holzer, $350 monthly . 614 -367·0611 '
2
446- 1240 . :~~~~~~~~~
1
See what 's NEW lor '831
Save a bundle on remaining
Call614 -367-7260.
l- - - -- - - - - -
14•70 MOBILE home. 3
'82's. WE HAVE YOUR 2 bdr. house in city, deposit bedroom. $176. a month
OEALI We're E~SEA HOME required . $225 per mo ., Call plus utilities & references,
CENTERS on US 23. Circle- The Wiseman Agency. 446 - 304-675-6871 .
ville 474 -6214 ---Chillicothe 3643.
772-1220. Open Lola.
THREE bedroom all electric,
Very nice 2 bdr. duplex
house. furnished. $185 mo.,
Main St .. Cheshire. Call
197112,.&0mobilehome, 2
bedroom, fuel oil heat, partially fumished. good condi tion ,
$5 , 600 . Call
614-245-5818 .
614· 388-9092.
tricity . 304 -576-2441.
576-9073 .
Furnished house $175. wa ter paid. 2 bdr ., 241 Jackson
Pike, Gallipolis, one child ac -
ceptable. Call446-4416 af·
ter 7PM .
For rent or sale fully carpeted. 6 rms. & bath . 6 mi.
·from town. no pets . Call
446-1158.
$120.
ment.
Inquire .at 631 4th
Ave
., Gallipolis
~---------------Furnished Apt .. 1 BR. 243
Call
614-266-1207.
1
bedroom Mobile Home.
Meson, 3 bedrooms, 2 acres.
. 2 bedroom rental. Call 614-
• 367-0611 '
: 1982 Shult 2 bedroom, total
·.electric, dishwasher, micro·
·')NJJVB oven , etc . $16.300.
.614-992-6766 or 614-992·
:'!5871 .
2 bdr . house torrent . Newly
remodeled. adutts preferred.
$200 per mo. Pay own utili·
USED MOBILE HOME .576·
; 2711 .
'
(
~
""o
.1)
_...., r-
~-----'~-
~
r\. .
L!J>
p.m .
-------~-----
,I!I!;E~~~ ;:;:;8=·:::;A=u;to=;P;a=rt~·.==
4
ondcountyapprovad. l,OOO
gal. tank. price $340. Other
lis park front, S200. Call
sale price $18 .76. Spring
sires in stock. haul in your .
446-3919 .
Valley Trading Co .. Spring
Volley Plaza, 446-8026.
pickup truck. Call 614-286·
6930, Jackoon, Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES
Garage apt ., S225. 29 rear
Neil Ave ., Gallipolis. 'All utili-
GAs floor furnance
e5o,
ties pd. I bdr. Call446-4416 66.000 STU Siegler gas wall
lumance $76 . Call 614·
alter 7PM .
367-0317 or 614-367·
Furnished efficiency $176. 7697.
Utilities pd. 920 4th Ave ..
Gallipolis. Adults. Cell 446· Firewood for sale 836 a load.
Call614-379·2644,
4416alter7PM .
Call
1-614· 256·
~53 lit
wood saw, other equipment .
Howe's Farm Mechinery, Rt .
GIRL'S shoe skates. sire 2,
3 rm . apt. adults only , utili - like new. $9.00 Call 446·
ties paid, $226 per mo. Call 0196 otter 4pm .
Waterline For Sale 3.4 inch
1 Early American couch, al most new, not 1yrold, 8160.
Set of women's wedding
rings, diamond saohires.
2644.
614-286· 6930.
190 XT Allio Chalmaro
$4996. C Farman $1400,
For sale Restaurant Carryout equipment. used.
676· 7421 , Can anytime.
Siders Equipment Co .• 304·
For rent -Currently taking ap plications for renting 2 lovely ladies 2 diamond r~g.
bd.room Apts . Goverment appraised 81,300, accept·
sub-divide Apts . at laura- ing $660 firm , Call 614·
land Apt . Complex in New 246-6438 alter 6PM.
Firewood.
$100.
63
Dump
Livestock
Regiltered Quarter Horse.
Baby high chair, good condi -
Aloo grade . Saddlao, brldlu,
tion. Call468-1997.
winter horse blenkets. Welt-
ern boots. 614-698-3290.
dep . 992-6692 .
446· 7003 alter 4PM .
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. large lots. Call
992-7479.
For sale-used Ditch Witch
4010 trencher and u~ed
John Deere back hoe. 1·
Maruhaudlwe
collent ohapa, 4 opd .. 4 cyl.
Call446-9789 altar 6PM .
Metel sheets for all building
purposet. • Flat porcalian
enemet coated . 4JI8 thru 4 Jl
vered. 614-843·3603.
76 Corvette auto, dark
brown, taddle fan interior.
12. Prlceo. f7 .00 to t9.SO.
614-667-3085 .
AM· FM otero. PB. PS. PW,
T- top, air, new extwuat 1.
tires. very good condition,
614-694· 7842.
Household Goods
56
Hoover portable washer·
e75. Westing house automatic washer-886. Electrk:
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers, dryers, refrigere·
tort, ranges . Skagga Appliances. Upper River Rd .,
beside Stone Crest Motel.
HILLCREST
New Conn Trumpet. S200 .
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Dobermant pupa and
Doberman Stud Service .
614-992-2681 .
1983 Necchi sewing ·m a chine cost new $439 .96.
equipped with free are. rig
zag. and much more . Repossessed model only 3 "!.Q.ntha
old, like new CfOndition, pay
off balance owed of only
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
72 Cadilllac utre nice. new
baby cradleo.
3489.
sian and Sl.-nese kittens.
76 Ford Granado, otlck ohllt,
6 cyl., good tlreo, good
Baooat puppioo. Call 614- shape . $860. Aloo 77 Ford
246-6130alter4PM .
In~" ..;.: opeed. 6 cyl ..
p;~·:: .;;;·~-.. $1460. 6147 wk . old pups, VJ registered
Doorman. 10il doced. $15. t,:::-:.~~.,.,-._-----Call614-266-8689.
~~ ·~~· -;,~;ionBaetle. VW,
Call446-3844 alter 4PM.
Fruth
4
oaml-
talet inyourarea. Call (refun·
Soalpolnt Siamooe kittens.
1-714-669-0241ext.
lemaleo. $46. Born 9·17·
~i.
dlrectoryonhowto
82. 614·992-7102 .
~~~~:·~24~hr~·:..·------
742
AKC Ragiotered Doberman 11976 FORD 4 door oedan.
pupt. black and rust, two fa-
~~'.. .-!.:,:
!
moles. It weeko old. Call
304-468-1613.
;;
•170
:.:.:.:
air ·conditioning,
Musicel
Instruments
on 1ny new piano or org~n.
&O.OOOmUea.exceflentcon·
1----------------
81
.. , ,
l
>
1
' '
H•- on Ulllali Rol. "".,..
e~~ ~~-~~- wv.
.;,j
·r'
,
J '~'- r.~,-~. ~
t '•••
u
'
,
0
'11,
'
,.
~~~~~~~~~=~~~~
-.o:~·~''"''~~t!!:1J ICAT.No. . . winch . .: R• I?.!.. DOOGI Vlrt, owtQ!I'I· '
~ ~~~ ~
"'..&
•• _.., 1 ,..~~ -;:;~-Ts- =~~~l"~~:.;•• 1~4- 1 _.~..:_w;g.~i:'s.""··
excellent condition. rafer·, I
Phone: ' .
-re-qu_.,_•_d._30_4
=·=87
" 1'=1 ·-'. JI_p
.m_.·_____1_10_•._m__
.·•
:fl'r::'t! :,"' 1·71~731· t·-~_':_2_.
I
tinues,
program·
the NFL alternate
plavers' strike
con ·
Item two~ix were a
contrac'with Grabbum,
a comp'ny secretl~ ~wn
by h1m
F 8t K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call675-1331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE ~xpo-
..
Melba we're
goi~q like
to
havmq you as
our mayor!
an' Pert!
876-
Pumpo !laloo and Service. ·
304-895-3802.
Seomleoi ·
Gutter- Doort. Offering con·
tinu11 guttering, aeaml111
siding, roofing. garage
doort, free ntimetet, 614- ·
I THINK YOU'VE DONE
~NOUGH ·~IJ51NES5 "
FOR ONE DAY.
~T'S TIME
FORA NAP!
NOT AFRAID
YOU. 1 WANT
YOU TO GET
WELL AND ON
YOUR FEET
AGAIN. ·
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477
Electrical
BARNEY
SEWING Mochlne repolro•
oorvico. Authorized Singer
Soleo lit Service Shorpon ·
Sci11oro . Fabric Shop,
Pomoroy. •92-2284.
CAN Ot: BULLET
SLEEP IN MV
BED TONIGHT?
N.,W Houll!'9 houaa cool,
'
''
lump or ltaker up to 8 ton .' ~"
. Umutone. top ioll. liM dll'!"'f
Callll14· 387-7101 .
•'#'
:water hauling. Clotern • .
w.llo. etc. Jolol Bleko.ll14r•·
' 982·58118.
•
PEANUTS
JtM8 Woter lorvle». Coli
Jim lAnier, 304-8711·7387.
A brilliant defense
NORTH
ll·U-82
• J 72
.KJ 10
• 10 s
.AI0862
EAST
+KQ63
WEST
+10 9 s
.9 6 s 3
• 842
.4
tKB743
• QJ6
.K7S
SOUTH
+AB4
.AQ7
t A92
.QJ9 3
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Weot Nortb East
Soutb
I NT
Pass
Pass
3 NT
Pass
Pass
Opening lead: t4
By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
Oswald: "Defense gets little of the credit in any game.
The man who scores the
touchdown or makes the
grand slam grabs the headlines, but good defense real-
ly changes losers into
winners.''
Jim: "One principle of
defense is not to be afraid to
take partner's trick. Don't
do it much of the time, but
don't refuse to do it when it
appears necessary."
Oswald: " South ducks
East's jack of diamonds at
trick one and East's queen at
trick two. He takes the third
diamond and loses the club
finesse. But East can do
nothing to beat three notrump. A normal result, but
look what West could have
done to beat declarer."
Jim: "At trick two West
should
overtake
his
partner's queen of diamonds
and shift to the 10 of spades.
He would be lucky to lind his
partner with four to the
king-queen, but he would
have made the luck by his
brilliant use of his diamond
king to overtake his
partner's queen."
Oswald: "You could really
fry an egg on South's forehead after that exhibition.
He would wind up going
down two tricks instead of
the one he would be down by
taking the first or second
diamond."
Jim: "Or the game and
rubber he would score
against normal defense."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
t--~~~~~=~~~---1~~~~~~~~~
l!l~~·a~
s.J.
by THO .... 5 JOSEPH
,....
4 Cereal plant
Ma
M
I Inebriate
5
ry oore
6 Usher's beat 6 Agreed
11 Alleviate
7 Anger
2
Statement
8
River in
1
of belief
the Ukraine
ACROSS
13 Sycophancy 9 Conrad
15 Ending for
character
resist
10 Nervous
16 Before
17 "A New
Leaf"
star
14 Mascagni
opera
18 _bear
19 At an ungodly
18 SeH-respect hour
20 Oahu food 20 Coal source
21 Vital
Z3 Manatee
statistic
27 Deft
%9 Herd
Gratify
Yesterday's AIIBwer
24 low~ coUege
25 Eggs
26 Marry
28 Relined
37 Scot's
ancestor
39 Box
40 English river
31 Enthushtsm
34 Confuse
35 Floated
36 Say it
41 Cultured
Z2 Outfit
isn't so!
43 American
author
44 To be, in
Barcelona
30
32. Guide
33 Track
event
Bribe
35
38 Rove
39 Sad sound
1 great
42 W'th.
haste
45 Bracket
48 Realty
tenn
47 Choral
composition
cu
"
87
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
A police officer is gunned
----------------- ·
--::--:--::-:::--:--~
BRIDGE
down by revolutionaries. 48 Messed up ' t-:-::-+--t--r.!\!1
(Rl (60 min.l
DOWN
()) PBS lete Night
I Cake
D (jJ Nlghtllne
2 CoDege In
12:00 (J) Bums lit Allen
(]) ESPN Praoenta Satur·
No. Car.
day 1\!lght at the FJghtl
3 Deer track
(])
MOVIE:
'Sunoet
8outeverd'
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
())News
AXYDLBAAXB
'
()I MOVIE: 'Roed to Rio'
D (jJ lelt Word If NF~
II LONGFELLOW '
Football is aired on this
One letter almpb' ot111do for onotber. In this 11111ple A 11
dolO, this program . will be
· uoed> for tb• u.re, L'o. X for the two O's, etc. Sln1le !etten,
proempted.
apaetiophea, the lenlth end formotion of the wonla are Ill'
12:30. (I) CZllele Night with
blllta. Eecb day _tho codalelten ore dllrerent.
Devld Lllttwmln David i1
joined by Fran ~ebow~
end Margery · GrOss. (60
min.)
m Jack Benny Show
GORV
VBH
KR
RCGGCP
()) Benny HHI Show
• Cll MOVIE: 'Columbo:
PKQQ
XAVKDKVJ
RCOQ;
VBH
Mike Me • Perfect
Murder'
MGKZBVHW
KV ..
(I) C.ptloned ABC NIIWI
XWY
. AQHXWRH
1 :00 (I) MOVIE: 'Emily' '
General Hauling
JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE. Call1114-387-7471 or
' 1114·387-0591.
ongmi'~,:,~~~~~H
tries to prove himself as
the 40771h's. champion
practical joker.
(I) ill) Megic of Dance
Ballet.'
'The
Romantic
Dame Margot Fonteyn
traces the story of romance in dance and its greatest exponen1s. (60 min. I
9:30 Ill (I) ® Newhart Dick
loudon reveals an ability
to embarrass his wile.
10:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Silence of
the North'
111 (I) IJD Cagney lit
lecey
A construction
worker's dea1h raises suspicion of murder. (60 min.)
(I) Six Great ldeaa 'Lib·
eny.' Dr. Mortimer Adler
discusses his argument
that there is no such thing
as libeny itself. (60 min.)
())) Newswatch
10:30 (I) AF.I Showcase
(J) Star Time
(I) TBS Evening News
ill) Throat of Nuclear War
11 :00 D (I) Newocenter
(I) MOVIE: 'The Drown·
lng Pool'
(]) ESPN SportsCentor
Cil Newo/Spom/Weather
D (I) ClJ News
(I) Dave Allen at lerge
® E}'ewitneoo News
11:30 II CIJ CZJ Tonight Show
Johnny is joined by Peter
Strauss and David Stein·
berg. (R) (60 min.)
(I) MOVIE: 'Cuttera Way'
(J) A >thor Ufe
(I) ® All In the Family
Ill (I) Trapper John M.D.
a
& Refrigeration
86
D
a
houoa calla. Call 676-2398
or 446-2464.
Supremo V-6
I""V"'"• f3800. 882-3180,
That'.
tress of Parma. 16D- min.l
(I)
®
Private
Benjamin
9:00 D
(I)
CZl MOVIE:
'Dre"'ed to Kill'
(I) MOVIE: 'lipstick'
(J) 700Ciub
(I)
liZ NFL Footbell:
Philadelphia at Atlanta/or
Alternate Programming If
8:30
RON'S Television Service.
Specieliring in Zenith and
Motorola, Quarar, and
;!~.?.~.Cutlo11
liZ
ancea 'Charterhouse of
Parma.· Fabrizio is arrested
and imprisoned in the for·
good condition .
304-468 - 1864
74 CHEVY BluO<. 100
Hondo. ____________
304-115·3593. _
Wo will MEET or BEAT any 1-......::;;;__
leghmote price your racolva 19711 LINCOLN Mark 4.
WOODBURNER, Saara. In
good condition, e176. 304·
882-2703.
HBR!!
PROI'OIUIOIIIS! WHO ARE
YDU, DREAM LAO>'?
claanlng. Coli 4411-8263 or
448·2000,
84
67
PA.WSOI'FA
ing, siding • . spouting,
fencing. painting, repair• &
698-8206.
the safecracker turned comedian was
I Answer: What
-A WISECRACKER
the school paper.
(I) ())) Groat Perfonn·
SICINNif UITLE
CHRISTIAN'S CON·
STRUCTION. Conotr .. roof.
/ ..t .
---::-::::-::::::1
1
... Tlo.I(E YOUR
SUPER PHYSICAL COlli ·
DITtON MID HAS PERFECT
Coii614-JB8-9939 .
ADVANCED
..
HICCUP ROTATE
Jumbtt Book No. 18, contllnlng 110 puzztes, II avalllbM IOf S1 .96 poetpakl
(I) ® Square Pegs
Patty and lauren become
investigative reports for
Maeonary work, Logue ConU'Icting. Rt . 1, Ewington .
or
Walnut
(XXII)
from Jumble, clo INa niWipal*, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. lnctudl your
ntrne, lddrets, lip code and m1k1 checks payab~ lo Newapaperboc*a.
0
2107.
304·676-2088
4680.
to
Now arrange the circled loners to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.
Jumbles: COWER WHISK
tncrediblel
. Brolthtrs Custom Carpets.
Free estimetas. Call 446 -
~~-~~~~~:.._
eutometic, 30·06 rifle. extra
cUp, see through mounts and
REMINGTON
Cll
CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpal
Cleaning loeturad by Hoffeh
ROOFING. repair or inltallo·
_ __
lion. Building lit remodollnblue Tick . Call 614·742- 11'!ARTS. Uoed Cora. Now
2666.
IHav,•, \ Weal Vl'llinla. Over g,interlor or exterior. Free
ootinotu 304-875-2440.
!~
expensive cars m ,
Ragloterad Red Bone pup- ;••v•• ·
piet for tale . 10 weakt old. I. I~I=DC:
82
Plumbing
After 6 p.m . call 614· 742Cora. Trucko under
& Heating
3168.
f1 00 ovoHablo at local gov't
'for aale-Reglatered femle
304-676-
FIREWOOD. split $30 . 1ood,
unoplit t26. load, delivered.
304-675-1206.
446-0322
lng. 30 years experience,
Water Wellt. Commercial .
and Domestic. Tett holes:.
SRUNtCARDI MUSIC CO .. dltlon. 304-458-1864~
81 Court St .. GolllpoNo. Coli l-:--:=-----:-----'----•-mobile home, 3 bedrooms. Very nice 2 bdr. house in Ad - 6roomApt. with Jbd.room~ :
448·0687.
11976 MUSTANG. block
~ large kitchen with laundf¥ dison, REf. 8t Dep .. t8f'msne- . In Middleport. f16i..
CO~I;.
mo::'.'lln9tt~hu,
~~~;:;;-;:;:::;-~;;:;;-....
with interior. 302 auto·
·-. room. phone 304 -882 -! gotiable. Call692-4359,
pluo dapoolt . Call 6
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Major Hoople ' Ron Wilkin e. 114 Evorgroen Imaiic.-motor juot boon ro-2820 .
6692.
Dr .. Pt. Pt081ont. Glboon~~~. ~ ~~-1 ~!.~ f1 4 0 o. o o.
2 Bedroom modern houoe. Apartmanu . 304-676.. HA~'sOME ~;:·.; ;.;;~.~~~IM}
HLLEE'TJ>N_/
.....
~~UT
l
::~~!~b~~at"~:~r,;,it=~t 1~u~-u,u·~181.
with large utility room and 6648
.w.• · ~1: ' !"~ ~1
~5! \
~ ~, "\ N;~V
zi
pick
33 Farms for Sale
brick fireplace. $260 par
·
~-~
ri
Ii-i TtiT~~~-:~~·
..:l"r:.,. _. P'L.Yl N· ~:9 6 ~
up. 304-676month pluo utilitieo. Calli · APARTMENTS. mobile
~.!. 1 1, ro 1 ,~ :."~'
·~, ;-~ :" · · , ,.- OVER -;;==:::;;:::~====
943-~5oo:
homao, houoeo. Pt. Pleount
, :;:, ! ':.~~' ~
, 'h11 i<i~~ ~}
_,]'~~.1 -::
90 acre farm, 2,100 tobacco
Galllpollo. 814-446- ~
"": .... .;~ "
--..;,.,
"'-"""
68
Fruit
19119Chovypickup~~~~~~o,on...... with bam. good pao· 2 Bedroom modern houoo. and
8221 or814-246-9484.
~,.;;-~,:;:.
~
(
,.~NP.IN'
&
Vegetable•
gino. outo. power at-~g.
• .-..~.
1
tu •· tome tlmbtr, Iota of with largo utMity room end
1:\ ,....,
olr cond .. new !lreko linea&
11.-wood,ln IAwr.,ca& Gal - eo.fodtemp
. I"~IVI"'•
' - -M):.pj ~~~
IN,
exhouot ~otom. f8110. Coli
Unlurniohed oportmento for
lie County. Coli 614· 643·
Pomoroy-2 bd .room unfur·
rant. Coli
Automotive
~~
~
J-'.~I<E.) POTATOES, flvo ton ii go, '-4::-41-:=·::-4-2:-3=1fte=r::-11-P:-M-·
___
2191 . .
niohodhouoe.f1911.mo.
So· Supply,
8 till&.
304-&?&- : n,
1curity dapoolt. f100. pl,uo 2218, 304-1176-57113.
f8
.00
por
hundred
lbe.
Rod
1874
CHEVROLET
pickup
111
utilitin. Altar 8-ca11.814·
a yeMow dollclouo oppln. truck . . .00. or boot offer,
992-2288.
Two 4 room oponm.,t1 ,
, ~
304-8911-3400.
· 304-8711·2238.
36 Loti & Acreage
1~
f125 month. effldoncy : lV
I.
apartment eso per mor«h, 1 •
J./l
1178 Chevy C·20, 4 ipaad
SALE or 1-• p.. chno. 9 3 bedroomo. All new point. perM>n, reforenco raqurod, .
69 For Sale or Trade · tronomlaalon, _ . · - ·
Acree outbuMdlng,22QOoq. Carpotinlivingroom.2bed- 304-875·2841.
•
·
(
lng,po-brokaa,olrcondl·
ff 4lilec.room, 2 belho,llv~g; room•. both lit heR. Oepotli1,
tion, Sldero Equipment Co. '
,.;om dln~g room. fomllyl required. 614-992· 3090.
WE ore currol)tly tolclng op-:>-::;l,._[l t IO
. 118 VW, 78 Honda 560. Coli Phono304-8711·1421 .
·
plication• for renting 2 - · ·
·•· .,
1'
' 814-2118-8838.
ruom with flrepiM>o, large
utllltyroom.201r ..rot~~~.OOc 2or3bedroomhouoe,oxcal-, room opertntonto.
[~ ]'J'
·112
.. · ·
1< . ~-:::-:-:-,------ 1,.,,.
•.ii.Wn
-~~~ front porolt, Milt lent condition •dnolghbor· Government ouboldllld, oi
T
'"'
V
73 CAT D·ll 1"-' Hyd It ;•v ' Vlnl & ~ ~··-·
pump.T_m... frMI,.._ hood,2-room
AportmontCornLi~t' p.., ·
: blede with tilt ROPI
·
·
ties. Call446· 3204.
, 1973 14•70 GRANDVILLE'
Marcum Roofing lit Spout·
DRAGONWYND CATIERY 1979 AMC Spirit. 36,000
·KENNEL. AKC Chow pup- miles. Exc. cond. Atking
pies. CFA Himalayan. Per- $3,200. 614-949-2596.
tie. good condition.
614· 388·9866.
0183.
ORDER now for Chriatmu,
handmade cedar cheats &
bedt, e99. Mattresaesorbox
springt, full or twin, $68 ..
••P· Call614-388-9862.
Call
71 Volklwagon Super Bee·
returns
National Cable Television
Association ·Awards For
Cablecasting
Excellence'
ceremonies is cablecast
live from Beverly Hills
where honors will be presented to 40 nominees .
tarior, plumbing, roofing,
some remodallng. 20 yra.
heavy equipment tagrlcultural, conltructlon, mining,
chemical industry, etc .)
through consignment for 1
national company. St•rting
"water pills ' ·.
Pharmacy.
son
Grove. (60 min.)
(I) MOVIE: 'Ode to Billy
Joe'
(J)t Spy
(]) NCAA Football: Penn
Slllte at Notre Dame
(I) Ace Awards The 1982
STUCCO PLASTERING •
BUYING and oelling uaed
REDUCE sale & laot with
Go8eoe Tablets & E-Vap
to $896 . Tobias. $38 and up
to $126. Hlde-a-bedo,$440.
HO K.IDDIN' ?.'
WOW, THAT'S
6REAT! ...
THEY MUSHi 8E
5HOWN WITH A
6/v\IL.E.
(Answers tomorrow)
Salurday's
Cll 0
(I) Family Feud
()) Buolneoo Report
())) Making e living Work
D
(jJ
Entertainment
Toni.11ht
8:00 D Cll Cil little Houoe: A
New Beginning Nellie Ole~
'l,I
Print answer here:
elo
L
Home
Improvements
Training. showing, breeding,
sales and boarding. Contact
Dan Beam. Gallipolia. 448-
at $16,000. value. Call Robert L Harper. 304-676·
1293.
Sofa, chair, rocker,ottoman,
3 tables, (extra heavy by
Frontier). $686 . Sofa, chair
and loveaeat, 8276. Sofas
and chairs priced from e286.
to 6pm, Sat.
1976 Chevrolet Malibu,
360, otd .. t400orbestoller.
Call614·367-0317.
KENNEL
ICOMTIA
III
(J I
(]) ESPN SponsCenter
ANNIE
81
t
ENTAIN
(I) American Profeooion-
u-•&
' rienced roofing. Including
hot tar application, car pen· .
te•. e*trician. mason. Call
304-675-1293.
out of town call collect.
on raquaot. 614-992-3201 .
614-367-
radialo, fully equipped, uooo
regular gas. Call 614-266·
POODLE GROOMING. Call 1216.
Judy Taylor at 614-3677220 . .
76 Chevy Chevone. 30.000
mi .,like now. Call614-379·
REG. QUARTER HORSES 2613.
Call Robert Harper for Gin seng and Yellowroot prices.
$116. Cell 614· 385-8918.
out Bulavllla Rd . Open 9em
to 6pm, Mon. thru Fri .• 9em
Call
Call446· 7796 .
Wood. Split & delivered.
$26. truck load. Coli altar 4
p.m. 614-992·6939 .
446-7398 .
Gerden, paltura. No pets.·
References required . Info.
$6,900.
0694.
Pets for Sale
dryer. $66. 614-742·2362 ,
Autos for Sale
For aale1979 Ford Fietta eJI·
614-246-6121.
Firewood. 836. truck load .
$86. a cord . Split and deli -
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
71
Building materials block,
brick. sewer pipes, win dows, lintels, ate . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande. 0 . Call
place $76, 1 Magic heat
stove pita floor e40. Call
46 Space for Rent
SPECIAL Complete anomal
paint jobo from $300. Sun·
roofo lnatalled from e226.
Auto Trim Contar. 4481968.
J
opeclollzlng In bult up roof. ·
Coll614-388'· 9622 or 814·
JSB-9867.
55 Building Supplies
free ' atanding fire-
'The Dollars and Sense
Show .· This show 11ooks at
vacuum cleaners, turkeys .
cake mixes and other products .
(I) MOVIE: 'Shoeshlne'
PAINTING- interior and u -
614-388-9687.
reasonable ..Call 676-6466.
Auto Repair
1l\IS l
c.:oNtT
~~~v6!
aotinatas. Call 1114-2681182.
truck load. Delivered. Call
birds with cage e50. 6 channel radio control equipment,
77
_014, NO!
teJiturad ceilings commer·
clal end raaidantlal. free
lowaltprices. RADCO. 304·
623-1378.
Haven. W.VA. Call 304·
882 ·3386 from 10 e.m.- 8 Corn cribs wire type, 900
end 1200 bu. Call614· 246·
p .m.
6193.
Ellaciency Apt. 614-992 Pair of peach faced love 5434.
dlaport, S160 per mo. plus
New Idea Model 323 one
row corn picker. 614-949 -
100 ft . Ron Evans Enterprises, 4mileaSouthofJackaon on
St.
At . 93,
$250. Man diamond ring.
$100. Call614·388-9342 .
Have several alternators GM
124 & Mayhew Rd ., Jackson, Oh. 614-286-6944.
160 PSI $17.96 per 100ft ..
1' 160 PSI $28.96 per 100
ft .. 1 '1.. 160 PSI $47.60 per
446·0962 .
$100. Call614-992-2288.
dlggero. whoel dlocko.
grader bladu, 3 point hitch
218. Call 614-266·
6246.
room house $1 86. Deposit
New Idea ground driven, and
a hone drawn apreader. pull
rototary mower, concrete
mixer with motor, poat hole
Crown City, Oh Junction
Gallipolis. Call446-4416af· 14. Call616·266-6796.
tor7PM .
POMEROY ·2 bedroom un·
lumiohedapt .. $160. 2bad·
PPO. Now Holland PPO,
Firewood . Cut to length. DelIvered in dump truck loada or
()) Entertainment Tonight
Cil Charlie' I Angelo
Ill ()) Tic Tee Dough
(I) ())) MacNeil-lehrer
Report
()I Eyewitneu News
D (jJ P~e·o Court
7:30 D (I) ® You Aoked For
It
(I) Conoumer Reports
I
tor, reverseable scoops, ma nure spreaders; John Deere
may be picked up In yard.
Airway sanitizer sweeper.
goodcond, 2snowtirettfles
For sale corner pickart, New
tJ I ~ J
(I) Gomer Pyle
BORN LOSER
Idea No. 10, AC Snapper. and tome water pumps I.
Ulld wagon. Siegler fuel oil lual pumps. Uoed will oall
heater, 276 gal. tank, front raaoonble . Call 814and loader fits 8 N Ford trac- 6694166.
Wood burning add on furnance. Still in factory crate.
$460.
1216.
& Accessories
Farm Equipment
In
=Newhart Show
())News
D ()) ()I CBS News
())Or. Who
())) Over Eaoy
D (jJ ABC Newo
7:00 • (I) P.M. Magazine
(]) ESPN' a Horse Racing
Wldy.
JJ~~~~::::::::::=r:=====~·~§~ oaato.
holder
andadjuna:
anchor; .
seta onrod
a new
turtle
~61
P-Ie
A~ONf,
121oot Sea King with owlval
2 bdr. apartment, newly rem- sod buoter. stainless lleol
odaled: 12StateSt .. Gallipo· lock blade, list price $31.96.
$260. and up to $396. Baby
Doomed'
(]) Pony'o
pair. 614-986-4339 after 6
•
Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and up . Wood table with six
chairs $396 . to e&50. Desk
$110. Hutches, $300. and
$660., maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites . Bassett
Cherry. e796. Bunk bed
complete with manra11et,
THE TWO OF u,; .
WI~~ N!?YER 6Er
!!.ITO THAT
1979Bo11Trackor111 . llko
fl · /'5
-
Case Knife Special Case XX
$79 .. to $385. 7 pc., $189 .
Sert..
8:30 8 (I) Cil N8C News
(I) MOVIE: 'Legion of the
new, big motor, needa rt·
~~-....._,-
54 Misc. Merchandise
51
12 ft. Meyor aluminum V
bottom boot, 7'11 HP, Fire·
atone .-.gina. aU acceaeorles
needed for co11t guard approved. Price $360. Coli of·
tor 4. 448-2571 .
lT
(
Boatsand
Motors for Sale
bla trailer. Coli 304-458· ·
rlngo. $326.00, 304-676with 4 bedr.: $300 per mo. firm, $68. and $78. Queen , 1474.
Cleland Reahy 992-2269 . , soto, $195 . 4 dr. chaoto,
dep . req . Call446-0596 .
$42. 6 dr. cheoto. $54. Bed ATARI VCS & cartridges,
frames. UO .and 826 .. 10 304·676-3646.
3 bdr. fumished trailer, be - 44
Apartment
gun - Gun cabinets. e350 ..
tween Gallipolis & Addison
dinette chairs e2o . and 826. REPOSSESSED SIGN! Nofor
Rent
on paved road. Plus washerGasorelectric ranges, 8326 . thing downl Taka ovor pay·
dryer hookup, children plu&
Boby matrBIIOI, $26 & $36, manu f68 .00 monthly.
pets welcome . Room for; 6 room Apt. with bath, cerbed !ramal e2o. $26.& $30. 14'•8'1 llaohlng arrow olgn.
garden. $150 per mo. Calli peting and incountryclosetol Used Furniture .. bookcase, Now bulbo, lottero. Halo
614-246-9320 altar 7 PM . highway. Wood or electric 1 renget, chairs, and gblta, Signa. 1 · 800-826-7448
heet .
Merried adultt . reclinert and TV's. 3 miles onytina.
3 bdr., with full basement ,
available Dec . 1. Ref. & sec.
"-
r~
1.-1.
'-y/'::t
Jackson Pike. &226. utilities
- -Misc.
- - -Merchandise
- -- - - paid. Adults . 446-4416 at - l t54
ter 7 p.m .
$66 . 6 pc . dinettes from
Secluded. mmi farm, all
fenced. remodel farm home,
Guaranteed.
76
:
890each . Kenmore avocado
washer nearly new cond .
Firstfloorunfumishedapart -
$326 .. Lamps from $18 . to
AT LAST - Professional mo deling in your area includes
skin care , commercials. dra matics, photography. Also
male models. limited appli cations accepted. Call Gail
McHugh at 1-992-7440.
~,
I·::t=""-=--I I .. 0
(I) Newac:enter
MOVIE: 'Incredible
Shrinking Woman'
(I) Tlc Tee Dough
(I) Cerol Bumlltl
()) • ()) • (jJ NIIWI ' ·
(I) NIIWI/Sports/Weetller
()) ())) 3-2-1. Contact
()I Eyewitneu NIIWI
8:15 (]) NCAA lnltNc:t lonet
1980 Honda XL185. f7oo:
Collll14· 245-6312 after 5 .
__
u,.;
8
Ju-.
VEVER
(I)
1
f( ~--r.':':·}" )
Wjlrlpool wuher· dryer pair
and up to $626., queen sire,
8380. Recliners. S176. to
lis. Oep. "'q .. $200 per mo . 43 Farms for Rent
Call614-367 · 7558 .
2 bdr trailer for rent , couples
; bast offer. 614 -667-6329 .
( - - -- - - - > 1967 12• 50. New Moon .
,. $3,600. 304-773-6882 .
unfurnished, bath & %.
washer - dryer hookup .
$200. monthly, plus elec-
Gallipo· · l ~:;::;:==;=~===
3 bdr . house in East
only. Cell614-367-7743 .
2 house trailers . 1 liberty
12x80 complete with kit - chen & bath. 1 Price Myers
12x60. 6 big rooms . Must
; -seU together . Good cond.
. Plus add on room with win dows. Must sell $6,000 . or
below city overlooking river,
5 rm apt., with 3 bdr. in Mi<J-
2 bedroom trailer . Real nice.
adults only. Brown ' s Trailer
Park, Minersville . 614 -992 -
~
~
Furnished apt ., $196 , water
paid, 6 rooms. 1314th Ave .•
for Rent
985-4116.
6 V2 ACRES . Harrison Town ship , Gallia County. 6 miles
out on At . 775 . from Gallipo -
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
month . 304-675-6804.
only . Call446·4110 .
84 Lumber. Call 304-675 ·
6873 or 676-3618 .
$67.000. phone 304-675 5085 .
FIVE bedroom. 2 v2 baths.
beautifully decorated Victo rian . carpets . drapes. formal
dining room. gas heat. $550.
sale or rent. 304-676-7693 .
Building or mobile home site
1 acre in country. near 775.
Gallipolis schools. $3,500.
Will finance at $1 ,000 down
FOR sale or rant , 4 room
house. on Chestnut Ridge .
large lot. $14,000 or rent
$125 . a month. S75 . deposit, phone after 3 p .m ..
Houses for Rent
1
3169.
aduh only. Call446-0338 .
~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~=:;~·;~
11/15/82
8:00
7
I
Singer sewing machine. rig
tor. Call 304-675-6104 or zog
model. runo and looko
675-6386.
like new. $60. Call614-385·
8918, out of town call
Nicely furnished mobile
cpllect.
home, central air, 1 mile
't
'
:
riQht
Contact
SankOne ofparty.
Pomeroy
. 614 -992
Forties .
]
1 · ~~74. Yamaha Enduru dirt
b••· 2,900 mlleo. Coli 4181997.
-lo
UOICfiiRblo lour
one
HCh oquare. lo form
four ordinlly WOIIII.
EVENING
mattresses e40, chestt.
dressers, TV's . Call 446-
Houses and 1 & 2 bdr. apartments for rent . HUD pro·
gram available . A -One Real
Estates. Carol Yeager, Real ·
House. 3 bd.rooms. all refin ished. new carpet throught .
Sits on 3 acres. located on
Bashan Rd . Exc . terms to
r--::::======::::::::---,
itfl~Nt!i)'it ~ THATSCIWIBLEDWOROQAIIE
~ ~ i,NI.l<.!)~·
byHenriArnoldondBobLM
Tel~vi~io~
Vie~g
Motorcycle•
llt. King COli 6 wood heater~
Rat. preferred . Call 446·
2216 ,
tract . Call614·388 -8276.
p4
SWAIN
AUCTION & FURNITURE
STORE 82011veSt .. Golllpo-
Furnished 3 r. private bath,
846 2nd. Ave ., Gallipolis.
House for aale. Cheshire
Ohio. Will consider land con :
by Larry Wright
KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"
The Daily Sentinei-Page-9
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
15, 1982
61 Household Good a
Apartment
for Rent
FCPVP.'
Monday, November 15, 1982
Upholatery
r
I
TRISTATE '
I· . UPHDLITIRV IHOP
, 1111 lea. A'!!·~ CWIII>olio. •'
448·71Uor .... 18$3:
.
(I) I Merrled .10M
()) NILhtllne
• ' Ill CNN
,
N.1:30 •
(I)
Overnight
MOWIIIVI Ullllolotory Rt. 1
lox 124, Pi. Pla-nt. 3041711-11114.
.
'
..
;
••
NBC
-
YG .
ICBWRCW
HINidllne
News
Yealerday'a CrJplllqaote: AS A CURE FOR WORRYING;:
. WORKJSBETTERmANWHJSKEY.-THOMASA. EDISON ·
�..
Page-10-The Daily Sentinel
r---
Meigs FFA earns bronze medal
The Meigs FFA was awarded the bronze medal in the recent
parliamentary procedure contest held at the Trl-County Joi nt
Vocational School.
In the contest parliamentary procedure rules were followed as
planned disruptions of the meeting were lnJroduced Into the contest.
The Meigs officers participating were Greg Bolen, president;
Rodney Tripp, vice president ; Mike Goeglein, student advisor;
Tony Gilkey, secretary; Bill Holcomb, treasurer; J im Parker,
reporter; and Tim LeMaster. sentinel.
Advisors are Everett Holcomb and Dave Pope.
Don Hill hos heart surgery
Friends are announcing a card shower for Don Richard Hill who
has undergone major hea rt surgery at University Hospital in Colwnbus. Cards may be sent to room 80'2.
Marietta official to speak here
James L. StPphens. director of financial aid at Marietta College,
will speak on financia l aid at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Meigs Hirh
School.
Interested parents and students from all Meigs County 5choolsare
invited to attend the program. Families will be able to get a quick
estimate of financial aid eligibilitv at the meet ing. Stephens will have
._._~t h him a computer complete with printer that ca n provide the
estimate of the famUy's need in Jess that fi ve minutes.
Time will be a llowed at the end of the meeting for a confidential
appraisal with any family that desires this information.
John Redovian, guida nce counselor at Meigs High School, is in
charge of the program.
The Ohio Highway Patrol has concluded one of the largest safety belt
surveys conducted in the United
States, in which 65,00l Ohio drivers
were contacted by troopers to determine how many used their
seatbelts.
"Statewide, slightly more than :10
percent of all drivers and occupants
were found to be wearing their seatDells," Patrol Superintendent Jack
Walsh said.
"Although this may seem to bean
impressive figure since it Is well
over the national average of 9 percent, It doesn't give a true picture of
safety belt usage in Ohio," he added.
Wals)l said usage on the turnpike
was 29 percent, and on some days, it
exceeded 34 percent. For the interstate system, the rate was 25 percent, and for federal highways, 19.
For state routes, county roads
and township highways, the usage
rate drops progressively down to 7
percent. This would indicate that
Ohio's motorists are wearing safety
belts during long trips on superhighways and leaving them unbuckled
when short trips are taken on secondary highway systems, Walsh said.
"Safety belts should be used for
Issue three marriage licenses
Three marriage licenses have been issued in Meigs County Probate
Court .
Receiving licenses were Kelven Joe Keirns, 24, Millfield, and
Nancy Elaine Smith, 21, Rt. 2. Pomeroy; James Austin Hicks, 23,
Proctorville, and Linda Lou Partlow, 21, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Perry A.
Carpenter. 63, Rt. I, Langsville, and Hilda D. Wilson, 62, New Haven.
Couple to end marriage
Frank Hera ld, Jr .. Middleport, and Sharen Maye Herald, Middleport, filed for dissolut ion of marriage in MeigsCountyCommonPieas
Court .
In other court action Rose E. Debruhl was granted a divorce from
James Alvin Debru hi on charges of gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty and the marriage of Jan B. Clark and Joe N. Clark was
dissolved .
Association to m eet Wednesday
The Area Fire anq Emergency Association will meet at 7:30p.m.
Wednesday at the Syracuse F ire Station.
Emergency runs
Four calls were answered by local units on Saturday, th~ Meigs
Coun ty Emergency Medical Service reports.
At 5:28a.m ., the Middleport Unit took Lewis Longfromhls homeon
S. Third Ave., to Holzer Medical Center and he was later taken to St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington where he died Saturday afternoon;
Middleport at 1: 15p.m. was called toS.Second Ave., forM rs.Eieanor
Zeiher who was dead upon the unit 's arrival. At 2:53p.m., the Racine
Unit took Brenda Manuel from Racine to Holzer Medical Center and
at II: 27 p.m., the Pomeroy Unit went to the scene of an auto accident
on Routes 7 and H3and transported MarvinOIIertoVeterans Memor·
Ia! Hospital. There were no Sunday runs, the emergency medical
services office reports.
Walesa, ~we must win'
ything to go the way we established
it, " Walesa said. "I will not abandon
the road and the !deals which we set
forth in August."
He referred to August 1900, w,tten
Solldarity was founded as the Soviet
bloc's first Independent labor federation during violent strikes at the
huge Lenin Shipyards where
Walesa was an electrician in the
Baltic port city.
"ln my future conduct, I will be
courageous but also prudent and
there is no discussion on it. We must
win!" Walesa declared.
By KATIE CROW
Taxi service will again be available in Pomeray.
At a meeting of Pomeroy CouncU
\ _Monday night, councU issuing a taxi
fi'anchlseto Ron Wise, Marietta, for
operation of a taxi service in the
any highway travel regardless of
the length or the trip," Walsh said.
''If everyone wore their safety belts,
our state's death toll would be cut
nearly in half."
In25ormoreEuropeanandCanadlan jurisdictions that have enacted
mandatory safety belt laws, usage
increases tD approxln1ately 78 percent. In most of these countries and
provinces, the improvement in the
usage rate is often accomplished in
total absence of enforcement and
legal penalties for noncompliance.
The safety belt usage rate in these
countries represents a form of volunlary compliance with an existing
statute, and with that compliance
has come a 40 percent drop in traffic
fa tala lies, Walsh said.
"Here in Ohio," he continued, "we
have no mandatDry safety belt law.
We do, however, have a lawofprobabUlty that says you are six times
more likely to be kllled or injured in
an accident if you are not wearing
your safety belt. Will it take a mandatory safety law to bring about the
levels of voluntary compliance that
can save thousands of lives and prevent an incalculable nwnber of disabling injuries?"
vlllage.
Wise informed council he pres·ently operates a taxi service in Ma-rietta known as th e
·Marletta-Wllllamstown Tax!
Service.
· The fi'anchlse will be effective
Dec.2. W!sesald theamountofbusl.ness he has will determine how
JERUSALEM (API - Wracked
with grief, Prime Minister Menachem Begin has returned from the
United States to bury his wife of 43
years today at the biblical burial site
on the Mount of Olives.
The private funeral ceremony
added to the sombre mood of a country commemorating a day of
Voi.31 ,No. 137
' Copy•ightod 1982
Eloda Webb
Funeral services for Eloda B.
Webb, 93, who died on Nov. 2, were
held on Nov. 4 at 10 a.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home, Middleport.
Bob Melton conducted the services with special music by Ron Ash
and Peggy Brlckles. Pallbearers
were Robert Brown, Binghamton,
N.Y., a son-In-law; andgrandchUdren, Jan Hauck, Brent Hauck, Ron
Evans, Jeff Evans and Deck Webb,
all of Columbus. Arnold Webb,
Columbus, and Richard Pickens,
Cheshire, w e r e honorary
pallbearers.
Out of town fa mlly members and
friends attending were: Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Brown, BlnghamtDn,
N.Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Webb,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Jan
Hauck, Brent and Brenda, Mr. and
Mrs. Ron Evans, Jeff and Scott,
Mr. and Mrs. James Warren, aU of
Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Pickens, Newark.
Ethel Stout
Ethel Parker Stout, 95, Tuppers
Plains, died Sunday at her residence following an extended lliness.
Mrs. StDut was bam in Meigs
County the daughtewr of the late
Leslie and Addle McCain Parker.
Her husband, Abner Stout preceded
her in death in 1956. She was also
preceded in death by one
granddaughter.
She was a member of the St. Paul
United Methodist Church, Tuppers
Plains.
She Is survived by one daughter,
Mrs. Frank (Mae) Dorst, Long Botrom; three granddaughters and
I
I
Area deathS
r
three great grandsons.
FuneralservlceswlllbeheldWed·
nesday at 1 p.m. at the White Funeral Home in Coolville with the Rev.
Richard Thomas officiating. Burial
wit! be in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on
Tuesday.
Veterans Memorial Hospllal
Saturday Admissions--Gary HyseU, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges- -Jessie
Cooper, ChristDpher Davis, Sally
Pierce, Benjamin Davidson, Jr.,
Gary Hysell.
Sunday Admlsslon--JohnBuffingtDn, Pomeroy; Florence Deeter,
Racine.
Sunday Discharges--Eva McKinney, Vera Stewart.
Lewis F. Long,65, 744SouthThlrd
Ave., Middleport, died Saturdayaftemoon at St. Mary's Hospital,
Huntington.
Mr. Long was bam Nov. 1, 1917, in
Parkersburg, W. Va., sonofthe late
WUUam and Myrtle Davis Long.
Mr, Long was employed as a
machlnlst at Imperial Electric Co.,
Middleport, for 30 years. He at·
tended Middleport Church of Christ
and served in the U.S. Army Air
Force during World Warn. He was ·
a member of Local15871. B. E . W.,
and Middleport Feeney Bennett
Post 1.28' Amerlcan .Leglon.
He is Survived by his wife' Dorothy Long; one daughter and sonin -law, Joyce and Ray Redman,
Mason; one son and daughter-Inlaw, Jan Michael and Susan Long,
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Davis, son,
Middleport.
NOV. 13
Ira Black, Raymond Clarkson,
Mona Cox, Leroy Dalley, Regina
Duncan, Frank Farrell, Goldie
Jackson, Deena Kennedy, Thelma
Kl
nnlson, Harley McWllllams,
Stella Morgan, Mrs. Larry Norton
and son, Helen fWbinson , Nora Robinson, E r 1ca Shelton, Donald
Spencer, Mary Steele, Goldie
Weimer.
Worthington; two sisters, Dorothy
Long and Violet Walker, Pomeroy;
one brother, Murrlan Long, Ravenswood, and four grandchildren.
Funeral services wit! be held
Tuesday at 1: 30 p.m. at Ewing Fun·
era! Home with the Rev. Ben Stevens and the Rev. Richard
RDthemlch officiating. Burial will
be in Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home at anytime. Graveside servl($ will be
conducted by Feeney Bennett Post
1.28, American Legion.
l
Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV. 12
Norma Angel, Floyd Baker Sr.,
Fiorella Barton, Rhonda Blland,
Eslle Blackburn, Nora Cambron,
Opal Crabtree, Carla Davis, Timothy Greene, Timothy Hall, Sandra Holstein, Terri Houston,
Ntdrea Hysell, Teddy JohnstDn,
Ulysses Landrum, Frederick Lanler, Katherine Ugg!ns, Mrs. Charles Manuel and daughter, Troy
Miller, Ernest Null, Wllllam Ollver,
PhiUp p arsons, Helen Rife, Ruth
Schramm, Krlsty White, Deborah
Whiteley.
BJRTIIS
wwis Long
BJRTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rupert,
daughter, Ewlngton.
NOV. 14
Mrs. Mark Bailey and daughter,
Mary Francis, Donna James, Cha·
rles Mahle, Beulah Maynard, Cathy
Moore, Mrs. Steve Pickens and son,
Larry Swift Jr., Drexel Vance, Jessica Wedemeyer, Eugene West.
BIRTHS
Mr. and . Mrs. Kevin Mitchell,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Marlo Rocchi, daughter, Galllpolls.
SOVf,€
• t S...
(Continued !rom pa~ 1)
Tens of thousa.'lds of Soviet cltifiled
B
zens
past rezhnev's open
casket over the weekend.
Columns of mourners wound
through downtown Moscow, past
buUdings festooned with crimson
banners and black pennants. Red
d bla k b ling th
an
- eCommunist
traditional
colors cfor una fallen
leader- adomedseverallargeposters ¢ Brezhnev hung throughout
the city.
Dirges were broadcast by the
state-run radio and television,
which suspended regular programinlngwhenBrezhnevdled.
Television interrupted a concert
tD show Andropov and other PoUtbu
be
ro mem rs standing as honor
guards beslde Brezhnev 's body and
ling his wid
canso
ow.
The
has not
ed Soviet leadership
fill
nam anyoneto thepostofpres·
!dent, the second, less powerful of-
rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~f;lce;;v;ac;a;ted;;by:;B;rezhn;;;ev;;'s;d;e:a:th:.;
OLE TIME VALUE
COLUMBUS- The lame duck Legislature Is tryingtoshoreup the
state's exhausted unemployment compensation fund before adjourning this week.
Rep. Clifford Skeen, D-Akron, chairman of the House Commerce
'llnd Labor Committee, introduced the remedial legislation Monday.
Leaders hope tDclear the decks no later than Friday and adjourn in
<leference to the 115th General Assembly which convenes Jan. 3.
Bllls on drunken driving, hospital licensing, grain warehouse protection and auto seat restraints for children also areon tap, along with
a myriad of pet measures legislators push as sessions end:
Kroger, Dillon to merge
CINCINNATI - The Kroger Co. Is expanding its Midwestern and
Southern markets to the west by merging with the Kansas-based
Dlllon Cos. Jr\c. in a multimllllon doUardeal.
Under a deal announced Monday, Kroger, based in Cincinnati, is
putting approxlrnatly $7ll million into a merger with Dillon, based in
Hutchinson, Kan.
Dillon Chairman Ray Dillon Jr. said his company accepted a
merger proposal from Kro., 'r. Stock trading for both firms was
suspended Monday while details were worked out.
Kroger is the fifth-largest retailing company in the United States,
based on total sales. It manufactures and processes food for sale in Its
supermilrkets, primarily in the Midwest and South, and operates the
SupeRx Drug Store chain.
Dillon operates supermarkets, convenience stores, junior department stDres and related facUlties primarily in Colorado, Arizona,
CallfornlaandKansas.Dllionhadsaiesof$2.8billloninflscall982with
net earnings of $50 mllllon.
They'll remember 97th Congress
WASHINGfON - Two Ohio congressmenaf!! predicting that this
year's lame duck session of Congress will be la!Jll!r than usual..
Reps. Clarence Brown, R-Ohio, and Rep. Clarence MUier, R-Ohio,
both said Monday the 97th Coqgress will be distinguished by having
enocted fewer laws than any Congress for the past 40 years.
Brown, who lost his bid for governor, said difficulties in getting an
acceptable federal budget approved and delays in shoring up the
beleagured Social Security system are to blame for the 97th Congress'
sluggish performance.
Miller said House Speaker Tbomas P . O'Neill put much legislation
on hold, preferring to walt untU the first oftbe year.
CLEVELAND- The winning nwnber drawn Monday night in the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" was 639.
The lottery reported earnlngsof$289,161.50from the wagering on its
dallygame.
•
The earnings came on sales of$9:10,448.50, while holders of winning
tickets are entitled to share $631,287, lottery officials said.
~ - ,_
... ... !.·· :
.
ELBERFELDS
'INTRODUCING
·cOLUMBIA BY HICKOK
' · •..
'
''
• •
CMiaw:!~
=~·n.e.:=:ee::as:::e::
day. Rain II expected In tile Noftltwelt with linow lbftes In 1qher
elevll&lonl.~enareforecMtlorllleSouthweatlllldSouthealltcioMtal
AN ENTIRE BELT WARDROBE
. , _, (AP tnw pboto Map).
Has his initial plus snap in insert for sport or casual wear - ·
~IPE
·Plus brushed silver and aokl insert for more fonnal
wear.
FULL GRAIN TENDERHIDE LEATHER
.Leather ed&ed and stitdled. Brown one side -reverse to black.
One siZ8 fltull. .
'
RED GRAPES ............. ~ .. ~b; 59¢.
Middleport. Ohio
the left lane tum sign on East Main
at the intersection of Butternut
Avenue is missing. Anderson sajp a
new sign Is needed and the street
needs to be painted to show the direction of travel in the right lane and
arrows indicating a left hand tum
off Main ontD Butternut.
He also noted a yield sign is
needed at the interni.'Ctlon of Second
and Sycamore streets. The sign is to
be placed on the Second Street side
for traffic to yield to traffic coming
up Sycamore.
A request made by Dr. E .S. VIllanueva to park vehicles on the west
side of Mulberry Heights was
denied.
Meterman Steve Hartenbach reported for the period of Nov. 1 to
Nov. l5, he has Issued 415 parking
tickets.
Street Superintendent Jack
Krautter asked councUto purchase
two sets of chains at a cost of$172 per
set. Krautter also asked to have the
transmislon repaired on the tractor
and to place electricity and gas in
the outside building behind the city
hall. Council approved all requests.
Councilman Larry Wehrung re(C-ontlnued on page 10)
entinel
2 Sections 20 Pages
1SCents
• A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper
EDWARDS AIR,FORCE BASE,
Calif. (AP)- Space shuttle Columbia broke through desert cloudcover at dawn today and returned to
Earth for the fifth time in just 19
months. The mission milestone: establishing the American ship as a
commercial cargo carrier.
Four astronauts swooped through
high clouds and calm winds, sun
sparkling off their craft, to touch
down on the Runway22, a15,00l-foot
concrete skirt that sits on California's Mojave Desert.
It was right on the centerline, and
commander Vance Brand asked
Mission Control, "Are we down
now, are we on the ground?" The
reply, fi'om ground communicator
Roy Brtdges: "Absolutely. It was
beautiful."
It was theship's flfth perfect landing after five perfect launches.
The crew arrtved home elated
with the landing, elated with two
successful sateU!te deployments,
but disappointed by a canceled
space walk.
Brand and pilot Robert Over·
myer got the "go for deorblt bum"
right on ~lme and at 5: 33 a.m. Paclflc time they triggered the rockets
high above the Indian Ocean. "On
time, good bum," said Brand.
Landing was at 6:33 a.m., just
seven minutes after sunrise. Autoland computers guided the craft tD
about 40,00l feet and then, well
above cloudcover that quit at 15,!XXJ,
Brand took over.
For re-entry, mission specialist
Joseph Allen rode in the cockpit,
while WU!lam Lenoir strapped himself into a seat on a lower deck.
"We Dellver," became the NASA
motto, in orbit and on Earth. "Fast
and Courteous service," said a sign
waved by the crew. Just after the
ship came to a halt, a'nd sating
wbrkers surrounded the craft,
Brtdges said: "You certainly llved
up to the motto. Welcome home."
Columbia kicked up dust to end Us
postcard delivery home.
(Continued on page 101
AN<YI'HER F1RST - Brooks Sayre, center, was
the first to mall a letter at lite Syracuse Post Of lice in
1963 and was lite first individual depositor at the new
bank bt Syracuse. lncldentaDy, Sayre alsl has an
excellent record of driving harness horses to first
place in area racing programs. Pldured with Sayre
are, Margaret Cottrill, postmaster, left, and Gary
Norris, right, cashier at Home National Bank, Racbte.
Wholesale
•
prices
up
FIRST COMMERCIAL DEPOSD' made at the Home National
Bank, Syracuse Branch, Monday morning was by Helen Baer, front,
owner and operator of Baer's Market, Syracuse. Walling on Baer is
RomaSayre, Branch manager.
By MERRILL HARTSON
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (API - Wholesale prlces last monthrosea modest
5.7 percent, calculated annually, as
car dealers introduced higher
priced 1983 models, the government
said today. Food and energy prtces
both fell slightly.
The new Labor Department report means that, for the first 10
months of 1982, inflation at the
wholesale level is running at 3.3 percent. If that rate persists for the rest
of the year, it would be the smallest
full-year gain since the3.2 percent of
1971.
Without the higher car and truck
prices, wholesale prices would have
remained essentially unchanged
from September, the department's
Bureau of Labor Statistics said.
Prices to dealers rose 4.1 percent
(Continued on page 101
Safety director blasts House members
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Saying the Ohio House has amended a
drunken-driving bill until it Is "totaUy inadequate, " state Highway
Safety Director Earl Reich wants
lawmakers tD restore tough provl~
slons the Senate approved earlier
this year.
"Despite the fact that this bill was
given extensive hearings in the Senate and approved by a vote of :n-o,
the House Judiciary Committee has
held thjs Yltalpleceoflegtslationfor
months and now weakened It with a
whole laundry list of amendments,"
Relchsald.
Unless the bill Is restored to its
previous form, Reich said an entire
year's efforts to put teeth into the
state's drunken-driving laws will be
wasted.
Retch said the Senate-passed bill
included aU three key reforms recommended by the Governor's
Task Force on Drunk Driving.
Those were tougher penalties for
drunk-driving convictions, automatic and immediate 90-day suspensions of a driver's license if his
blood-alcohol content tops 0.13 per·
cent, and a "per·se" provision mak·
ing a blood-alcohol level of" 0.1
percent conclusive proo! of a
,
violation.
Reich said last week's House
committee amendments would
take away most of the stiffer penalties for repeat violations, eliminate
the automatic suspension and 1 eplace the "per se" provision with a
lesser offense called "impaired
driving," which would allow most
offenders to escape even current
mandatory penalties.
·
Predict 'big year' for housing industry
Six stylish
combinations
•
in one package.
GOLDEN
MARKV
Lawmakers work on jobless fund
I,K;CtlJIJt'U ~
;EMPEROR
Charles Legar, infonning councu
the fire department had painted and
inspected the village's 77 hydrants.
Legar asked council tD reimburse
the fire department for the cost of
the project, which !Dialed $231.
CouncU approved the request.
CouncU noted it's the street de-partment's job to maintain tbe hydrants. Three hydrants needing
rePairs were referred to the water
department.
CouncU discussed land options on
property localellinSyracuseforwater well sites, but took no action.
Councilman John Anderson said
Shuttle
returns
safely
Ohio lottery winners
.Budget
Pleaser
Special
BANANAS
Chuck Mann, of Engineering Associates, Wooster, council accepted a
bid fi'om Morris Excavation, Columbus, of $76,935 to complete
Phase m of·the sewer system. The
Morris bid was the lowest received.
Phase III, wUI extend the sewer
system !rom the back of Kerr Street
to the old waterworks building on
East Main.
Second reading of an ordinance
increasing gas rates 1.3 percent
rather than the 5 percent originally
requested by Columbia Gas was approved Monday night.
A letter was read from Fire Chief
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 16, 1982
DEcLARES EDUCATION WEEK - Syracuse Mayor Eber
Pickens Friday signed a proclamation designating Nov. 14 through •
Nov. 20, as American Education Week. 'Ibis year Syracuse Elementary
is participating with schools throughout the county by olferlag ·:·
specialized programs and demonstrations. Theme of this year's efforts :.
is "A Strong Nation Needs strong Schools." The event is sponsored by
the National Congress of Parents and Teachers, National Education
Association, Natlnnal School Boards Assoclallon, American Legion and
United States Department of Education.
mourning for the 75 Israel! troops
kllledThursdaywhenanlsraellmllllary headquarters buUding collapsed inTyre, southern Lebanon.
Begin's wife, Al!za, died Sunday
from a heart attack after being hospitalized early last month for treatment of chronic asthma and acute
respiratory problems. She was 62.
r----------------------"""11
many vehicles will be used.
In other· matters, councU was informed an old sewer line is broken
on East Main Street. The line services three residents.
'
The line Is broken on one resident's property, and until U Is repaired, the other residents cannot
repair theirs,
Meigs ·County Health In spec!Dr
John Jacobs informed the residents
that the sewer line must be repaired
by Dec. L It was noted the line has
been broken for approxln1ately a
year.
Upon the recommendation of
The Daily
Begin returns home
for wife's services
Pomeroy firemen answer alarm
The Pomeroy Fire Department was called toW. Main St. , Pomeroy, about 8:12p.m . Sunday to what is known in the community as the
Sauvage building.
The building is owned by The Farmers BankandSavlngsCo. which
permits it to be used as a training location for the local boxing
program.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles Legar said that someone had apparenUy set fire to wood used in boarding up the windows of the building.
There were minor losses with the primary damage being to the
window frame where the fire was set. A customer at Powell's Store
noticed the fire and ca lled the Pomeroy department.
Taxi serVice will .resume in Pomeroy
Patrol concludes
seatbelt survey
Local briefs:·---
GDANSK. Poland (API - Free
after 11 months in detention, Solid·
arlty chief Lech Walesa says his
outlawed union must reach agreement with martial Ia w author! ties,
"but not on our knees."
Walesa returned to a joyful homecoming Sunday after mysteriously
disappearing for more than a day
following his release. He did not utter the name of Solidarity in a brief
speech tD the cheering mob outside
his Gdansk apartment.
"I will be faithful and there is no
forcethatcandlvlde us. !want ever·
Monday, November 1.5, 198l
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
. IDEAL
CHRISTMAS
.
" Gin FOR Hill
IN STOCK--READY TO DE-LIVER!-,.
I· Sears·f
1oaw: MAIN sr.; Fio"~Rov. oH .
:'PHONE:
ELBERFELDS IN.POMEROY
Authorized catalog Merchants
·· 'Grq & PattY .Gibbs
·
IOhlot &82-21 78
1\Y. Y1.}773-81577
• .HOURS:
Mon.· Tuti.-Wed .-Fri . .9 to 15'
Thur•. 8 to 1 2
81t. 8to2
to group today. -
Ohio forecqt
Fair and col!l tonight. Low 25-ll. Winds Ughi and southerly. Mostly
sunny Wednesday. High M-00.
EataltletiOhioF'urecllt-ThutldaytbrwibSaturday: Falrwlth
tbrouJb the period. Hlahlln the SOB ann 1ows .
-.ona~ temperatures
··
.
'
.
U.S. Sen. Donald Rlegl!!,D-Mich.,
contended the lndustiy Is stDI in
such severe Htralts that the Reagan
'admlnlstra)lon s11ould urgently put
together a policy to belp It recover.
'"'llls problem Is ·now so serloos .
Extended forecasJ
ilrtbe:Jll.
NEW ORLEANS (API- The depressed housing industry Is starting
to come back and should grow in
1983atltsbestcUpinseveralyears,a
federal housing otrlclal says.
Kenneth Thygerson, president of
the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corp., predicted that falllnginterest
rates woold help ·make 1983 the
"best Y!!ar of the~~ three or four
years for housing." His comments
came in a speech to the U.S. League
or Savtngs As9oclatlons Monday.
President Reagan was to address
'
• ,
'
·
,+i
and goes so much to the heart of the ..
Amerll;an eccriomlc system that It
can't be igr!ored aily longer," said
Riegle, a member of the Senate
' BanldngCommittee.
Noting that Reaian was sche-
duled today to address theS&Lexecutives meeting here, Riegle said he
hoped the president ''would get
some flavor for the fact that we've
got a major housing problem in this
country."
In his mid-afternoon speech, Reagan was to talk about "the economy,
U.S. Sen. Donald Riegle, 0-Mich.,
contended the industry is still in such
severe straits that the Reagan adminis. tration should urgently put together a
policy to help it recover.
"This'problem is now so serious and
goes·so much to the heart of the American economic system that it can't be
ignored any longer," said Riegle,. a
member of the Senate Banking Com-
mittee.
the president's record, and hopes
and predlctons for the future," according to Larry Speakes, deputy
presidential press secretary.
Other speakers today included Richard Pratt, chairman of the Federal Home Loan Bank Board, and
Sen. Pete Domenlcl, R-N.M., chairman of the Senate Budget
Committee.
Domenlcl said today "the recovery in 1983 wlll be anemic, at least by
hlstorlcal, post-recession standards." He said that despite budget
cuts and tax changes enacted since
Reagan took office, "We face high.
deficits and high unemployment." ·
"Deficits will be in the range of
$1.00 tD $:nl bllllon or more for each
of those years, if present policy IS.
followed and the economy grows at
no more than 3 to 4 percent a year,
which seems Hkely," Don:tenlcl
said. To help, he suggested a fee on
Imported oil and a review ofplanstD
adjust income taxes to offset inflll·
lion.
�
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
11. November
Text
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.
Original Format
The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data
Newspaper
Dublin Core
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/.
Title
A name given to the resource
November 15, 1982
webb