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.show recess ton 'about over'
BRACHS
CHRISTMAS CANDY
FEET
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BY POLLENEX
CHRISTMAS IIOUGATS
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ILL FILLED ISSORTIIIEIIT
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89~
The relatively small gains this year have provided apparent
. support for most economists' forecasts that any recovery wUI be
weak, at least at the start.
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HERSHEY'S
ROLO MIIIIITURES
99
THE
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The Daily
HOLIDAY
WREATH
·
Voi.31 ,No.146
· CoPyrighted 1982
entinel
Reagari will
not push for
early tax cut
NELSON'S REG. $6.99
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XMAS STOCKING
$199
SPARKL-TEX
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9" Tall
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Reclamation official to speak
Bob Rothwell of the Ohio Department or Natural Resources'
reclamation division will meet with residents concerned over
subsidence caused by longwall mining at 2 p.m . Sunday In Wilton
Elementary School, Wilkesville.
Rothwell will answer any questions on how residents and a
'· roiiYiilttee formed to change Southern Ohio Coal Co.'s mining
procedure.
BY WHE"TON
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IN STOCK
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NELSON'S REG. $7.39
NUSON'S REG. $9.99
CLEVELAND- The winning nwnber drawn Monday night In the
Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Nwnber" was tni.
. The lottery reported earnings of $640,161.50 from the wagering on
its dally g(lme. The earnings carne on sales of $911,388.50, while
holders of winning tickets were entitled to share $271,227, lottery
officials said.
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and keeplnc track of blb and
mluet. :o\1e1 8-llduU, 2 Plutn.
AP Science Writer
WASHINGTON (APt - Breaking with other prediclions or a
ca lami tous winter ahead, government forecasters say the upcoming
season should be relatively normaL
But It may be colder than usual in
the West and wanner than average
in the East.
The National Weather Service. in
Its official winter foreca st issued
Monday, also said most of the nation
will be wetter than usual. But it
could not say If the added moisture
would be in the formofheavysnows.
The forecast disagreed with those
who say sunspots, caterpillars or
volcanic activity indicate a very
hard winter with record -breaking
cold In the East.
Bucking the ot her predictions,
·
NELSON'S REG. $8.99
CHRISTMAS
COOKIE CUTTERS
By WARREN E . LEARY
Lottery winners
$69'9
•Reg. Price .......... $29.99
• Ad Price ...... .. .. S23.99
.
WEATHER FORECAST - 1be Nallonal Wealher Service
. forecasts snow ud -w !lurrlee In lhe Weat for Wemesday. Rain Is
forecaat from tbe central Gulf to the Midwest. Mild Cll' warm weather Is
.expeded ilr moat areas. (AP Las~ Map).
•Leu Mfg.
Reltate ....•••..• ;$ 4.00
Your Cast
After llet.ajl~
Ohio forecast ,
.. NILSON'S RIG.
Increasing cloudiness tonight with 60 percent chance of rain after .
midnight. Law near 50. Winds southerly around 10 mph. Wednesday,
~ percent chance of rain, possibly heavy at times. HJgh ~.
99'
WASHINGTON (APt - Presi·
dent Reagan. in the face of stiff
congressional resistance, today
abandoned any thought of asking
Congress to move up the effective
date of nex t year's income tax cut
from July to January.
Reagan told reporters after
meeting with Republican congres·
sionalleaders that "we're not going
to make a push" for advancing the
scheduled tax cut. Instead. he said,
he will devote his efforts to resisting
anticipated congressional effort s to
delay or even cancel the 10 percent
tax rate cut.
The r>rcsidenl sa id he also is
concerned that moving up the tax
cut to stimulate economic recovery
would increase the already large
federal budget deficit.
But to delay the cut past July, he
said , would be "direc tl y opposed to
what is needed to restore the
economy ."
Senate Republicao leader How·
ard H. Baker Jr .. who mel reporters
with Reagan. said he had no serious
doubts that the administration and
its congressional allies will be able
to preserve lh!" July I date for the
final step of the thl'ff'-year tax
reduction plan.
He said he had r<'Corrunended
" that we not allempt toadva nceit,"
but Baker sa id Reagan had heard
con trary view' from other
members of the GOP congressional
leadership.
Reagan. Baker and House Republican lead~r Robert H. Michel
fa ced reporters a day aft er Con·
gress convened its posl ·elec tion
session amid conc0rn over the
nation's 10.4 percent unemploy.
men! rate and calls for legislation to
create jobs.
Congressional leaders told Reagan days ago that the tax cut
speed·up wa s not very popular in
Congress becauS<' of the potential
deficit problem. Moreover. Democra ts hav0 urged th at the July tax
cut be scrapped altogether to help
bring down the deficit. which
Budget Director David Stockman
reportedly is forecasting at $100
billion to $190 bi llion this yea r .
•
Weather service predicts normal winter
CHARLESTON - United Mine Workers president-elect Rich
Trurnka, faced with widespread unemployment in the nation's
coalfields, wUI be Inaugurated next month In West Virginia instead
or at union headquarters In the nation's capital, an aide said
Monday.
Trurnka and running mates Cecil Roberts and John Banovic
decided to hold the Dec. 22 Inauguration here because prevailing
economic conditions would make It Impossible for most coal miners
to make the trip to Washington, D.C., said Joe Corcoran, a Trwnka
aide.
·
"We based our campaign on the energies and talent of the UMW
membership, and we thought It was proper that the function should
take place In the coalfields," Corcoran said. "There are not very
many miners In Washington, D .C.
Trurnka, a lawyer and miner from Pennsylvania, unseated UMW
President Sam Church In the union's election Nov. 9.
NELSON'S REG.
$1.99
Each sold separately.
NO PUSH FOR TAX CUT - President Reagan, left, talks with
reporters bt the While House press room at the While House In
Washington Tuesday at Senate Majority leader Howard Baker Jr.
looks oo. Reagan announced that he would not push for advancbtg the
scheduled tax cut. (AP Laserproto) .
Event switched to West Virginia
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NELSON'S REG. 53.99
j
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~
,.
No. 7804
APR
$299
Chandlous Coleman, '!1, Rt. 2, McArthur, charged with kidnaping
last week after holding a VInton County sheriff's deputy hostage, was
bound aver to the grand jury Monday.
Coleman's $10,(XX) bond was continued by Vinton County Court
Judge Michael Brame.
Coleman was taken Into custody after he held the deputy, David
Hickey, captive for4 ~hours last Wednesday In theKentuckyTavern
on U.S. 50, west of McArthur. Coleman, who had reportedly
undergone a divorce, had became upset and began shooting at the
ceiling of the bar.
Hickey and another deputy responded, and Hickey was captured
when Coleman appeared at the bar's entrance. The ordeal ended
when Hickey escaped through a side door and Coleman was forced
out by tear gas canisters.
Boxes lor Blouses
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•2 Boxes for robes
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and Hol der , Holly Decoration and
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GIFT BOXES
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·. \...
3 Section, , 22 Page'
15 Cenh
A Multimed ia Inc. New,poper
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesda , November 30, 1982
$499
..
economy has not worsened much during that tlm0. but It hasn't
shown clear signs or improvement either. And most economis ts sav
the recession continued In October.
·
Encouraging recent signs include the drop in initial claims for
jobless benefits, possibly an Indication the national unemployment
rate will be leveling off around the current 10.4 percent - the highest
in 42 years .
In addition, retail sales have continued to rise, though not very
quickly.
·
On the other hand, Commerce officials said in a littl~- publicized
but Important report last week. orders to factories for new durable
goods fell 4.9 percent in October, the second big dedine in three
months.
That indicated there is not likely to be an y sudd0n r0viva l In
production In the next month or so since business managers can
hardly be expected to step up production and hir0 back laid-off
workers if orders are still falling.
18 Inch
12 Oz. Bag
REVERSIBLE
SCROLL CALENDAR
1983-84
employment figures to stock prices to orders for future factory
production.
In October, the new report said, five of the 10 components showed
Improvement, led by a continuing surge In stock prices.
Also pushing the Index up In October: Initial claims for
unemployment benefits slowed, building permits rose, the nation's
money supply Increased and business deliveries slowed - possibly
Indicating greater volume.
Four components did worse than In September. They included
decreased new orders to factories for consumer goods, fewer
contracts and orders for plants and equipment, lower prices for
sensitive raw materials and a drop in total liquid assets.
The leading indicators declined for 10 straight months befor e
leveling off last March as the recess ion continued to deepen sharply.
Since then, the index has risen In eve1y month but August. The
downturn.
100z.
~~
•Reg Price ....... $19.99
• Ad Price ...... .. $15,99
•Lell Mfg.
Rebate .... . .... $ 2.00
.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A key barometer of the nation's future
ecanomc health rose a moderate 0.6 percent In October, the sixth
. gain In seven monthS, the government reported today.
· The lise In the Commerce Department's Index of Leading
. Indicators was likely to be welcomed as a new slgn the recession
may be nearing an end after 16 months. The new report also revised
September's gain from 0.5 percent to a much stronger 1.1 percent.
Still, recent Increases have been small by comparison with those
near the end of the previous recessions. For example, the Index rose
mare than 2 percent for three months In a row at the end of the 1!8)
IICHAIOI IAZQII
10 Oz.
-~
The Index Is designed to forecast changes In the national economy.
It Is made up of statistics from 10 different areas ranging from
'
89~
. . •:
J
By ROBERT FURLOW
Associated Pre5s Wrlt(lr
Donald L. Gilman of the weather
service's prediction branch said the
East and Southeast. except for
Maine. should be in for a relatively
mild [){'Cember, January and
February.
" We expect the cold wea ther to be
in the West ," Gilman told a n~ws
briefing.
Gilman noted that others using
sunspots or volcanic ac tiv ity to
forecas t th0 weather all tend to
agree th at a hard winter is in store
for the country, particularly th~
East.
Those forrcaster s. as well as the
Old F armer's Almanac and the
Farmer's Almanac. and those
wa tching fuzz growth on caterpil·
Iars. don 't have a hard scientific
basis for such claims, he said.
The possibility of an extreme
winter is always there. despite even
his own forecast. Gilman admitted.
But he added that " nobody has any
grounds for nat-ou t saying that thL'
will be th~ coldest winter of the
cmtury," as some have done.
The chances of a relat ively cold
season exceed oo percent from th~
Great Plains westward. except for
the far Northwes t and along th~
Mexican border. he sa id.
The probability of extreme cold
exceeds 60 pcrcmt from western
Kansas and Nebraska through the
Rockies and Grea t Basin to central
Ca lifornia. The highest probability
offii gid weather, 70percent. is in the
basin areas surrounding the Great
Sa lt Lake, he added .
"The probability of warmer
w~ather than norma l in this
winter' s for<'CaSI exc!'eds55percent
from th ~ Appalach ian Mou ntains
eastwa rd." sa id a wPa lhPr SC'IVire
statement . "a nd r<'ar hPs a maximum of fi'> percent along the
mid·Atla ntir coas tal plains."
Th~ forecasters also sa id chances
or a relati vely wet win ter exceeded
o.'i percmt in mos t or th~ South , the
lower Midwest and East Coast
states as far north as N<'w York and
Connec ticut . Tlris chanc·e or higher
prrcipilation exceeds 60 IX'Irent in
the Oh io - Tenn~ssC<' Va ll ~ys and
coastal sta tes from Delaware to
Florida.
Only in w~str•rn Oregon and
Washington wa s th~r~ a high
probability of a drv winter. The
r hance of C'XCC'ssi\·p m oisture ex-
ceeds 0.1 pe1r0nt from New Mexico,
Colorado and Wyoming southwest·
ward to sout hern California.
No one hurt
seriously in
letter blast
LONDON (APt -A letter-bomb
exploded today Inside Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher's 10 DownIng St. official residence, slightly
searching the man who opened it,
Scotland Yard said.
But the parcel went off " nowhere
near the prime minister who was in
her office at the time," press officer
Gordon Shepherd said.
"It would appear it was a
letter-bomb package that exploded.
One person has been slightly
Injured.''
He said he could not identify the
wounded man.
There was no immediate claim of
responsibility far the explosion,
which occurred In a first -floor room
where mall Is sorted, the spokesman said. He said Mrs. Thatcher
was In hei: study on the second floor .
A ix>lice car and a fire chief's car
were·parked opposite the entrance
to the prime minister's residence
and reporters were not allowed
I
l
Inside.
N'S DRUG STORES
AND
'
NANCARROW'S PHARMACY
Extended forecast
... .:w .......
·I
Extended. Ohio ForeCMI - Thursday 1hrough Saturday: Mild
with showers possible each day. Highs In theOOsThUI'Bday, In the 50s .
Friday and In the upper 401. to the rllld.OOS Saturday. Lows In the 4ns
'Thursday and Friday and In the mid~ to the mid 4011 Saturday.
j
'
«
I
Scottish nationalist groups have
claimed several recent letter·bombs. But the last major terrorist
attack.ln Landon was July ~when
tWo Irish Republican Army bombs
went off .fit Hyde Park and Regents
Park, kUling 11 British soldiers and
wtiundlru! 50 'people. Seven horses
(Continued on page 10)
\
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LETl'ER BOMB EXPWDES AT 10 DOWNING
ST. - NewiDI&n, .forelround, Prell against railings
at lbe St. James Plll'k entrance to London's Downing
Street, Tuesday foD~g an explosion at tile ofllclal
residence of Britain's Prime
Thatcher which Injured one person. Pre~~ Officer,
Gordon Shepherd, said tile device went oil, "No
where near the Prime Minister woo was in her office
at the lime." (AP Wirephoto).
�I
'
.
Tuesday, Novemb~r 30, 1982
Commentary
Page-2-The Daily S~ntinel
Pomeroy.,-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, November 30, 1982
IJJCuurtStrro·t
l'nmt•rn\", Oh1n
6J4-99i·l l56
Ill·. \ 4rn:u TO TilE INTERF-"n41F Hit-:
1\lt: tc ;S..i\-MSO~ AHE 1\
ROBERT 1.. WINGETI'
l ' uhlbho·r
fiAT WHITEHEAD
BOB HOEFLICH
DALE ROTHGF.R. JR .
1\ 1\lt:i\IHFH ul Tho· ,h~ou-tak<t l'rt·~, . lnhwd Hai l.\
!lnwn• an '•·~~ JHipot·r l'uhl i., ho · ~ A ~~ •u·i11tioon
l'n· '~ ~~ ~~ udatinn ~nd
tht·
I.ETl"EH S OF OPINIO'Ioi 11n• ~do · umt·d . Tht'\ ~ ho1Uid ho· It·~ -' lh:Hl 300 ~nrtb Inn~ . All
l..th'r' un· 'll bjt"t"l ln rd1tlll~ 11nd must lw ., . ~iwtl ~· ith 1\.llmt' . addrrlo~ and h•lrphmw
numlw r. ~" unsi~nt'tllt'Ht"rlo ~ill bt· puhli ~ho•d . Lt'lh·~ .~ h o01.1ltllw in ~uud La., It·. ilddrt'~S ifl(
~~~UI'S . 1\Ul pt'fl'llllllllitit'~ .
A to Z: bill has all
but kitchen sink
It's an old lin~ but it's sometim~s tru~ : passing laws is like mak ing
sausage- no bod;· should tak~ too close a look a t what's going into the final
product .
.
It's a desc ription usual!;• r~sei"Pd for some c umbersome ptece of
l~gislation like tht> stat~ budg~t that may go far ~yond appropria tions to
include a hodgepodg~ of other it e ms .
. That was the case with a rec~ nt bill that ~gan as an att~mpt to correct
errors in th~ earlier-approved budget but wound up looking like a baggage
ca rt at a c rowdro airport.
R~p . Willia m Hinig. noor mana g~ r fo r th~S<>nat~ measutl' in the lower
. chamber. arknowlrogro as much . as n•pr~s~ntatives prcparro to vote on
the 127 · pa g~ bill.
"I think this is one oppo1tu nit;· to vote for a bi ll that rov~rs everything
from A to Z ... Hinig . D N1•w Philad~lphia. said . " It s tarts out with arctued
lPavt• and wind_<;; up with zoological parks."
TherP was no allrmpt to explain thr itrms in betwf'f'n, and the HouSf'
passC'd thP mrasun• 7H·H. withou t dPIJatt•. in abou t 2 minutes. it would ha v~
takt•n even l~ss time if the l~ng1h_v title had not ~n read by the clerk.
Ell'lll'l'l'n the i\ a nd Z to which Hinig refPrrC'd. l~gisi a tors dealt with
,.,
maftrrs affC'<·ting schools. prisons. lC'gislative IPadC'rs, the govprnor's
·:: offirr and homr W1 'athPrization .
Thr bill gin's school district s an PXtra cha ncr at winning voter appro\·aI
of inromf' tax lr\·if's.
Undrr ru rTC'Ill law . district s rna.\ · proposf' such a ta x on l~' at a genC'ra l
.r l('(' tion . ThP nf'\\. mPasun· p<>rmit..., a school incomf' tax to ~submi lled at
r ithf'r a p rim a 1~· or <..1 sp;'Cial f'l('('fi on as Wf'll. But if limits a board of
rduration from proJXlsing such a mt>asu iT' morf' than twirr in any
calf'ndar n •ar.
i>' gislators mO\'f'<i to give local officials in Fra nklin a nd Cuya hoga
counti0s mor0 timf' in which to d('('id0 whprr propost'd new prisons for
their arra s shuuld IX' hoi it. In addition. it cha nged the starling dat~ for
construc tion of ;1 :'lfXl-l:x'CI ror rt'f'ti onal facility at Grafton from no C'arlier
than .Julv I, i~IX!i to no later than i)(oc . :n. 1\lf\1.
The btl\ authorized the S.:·nall' and House bv resolution to crea te
additional leadership offi r·prs ~yond those s~lled out in c urrent la w.
it cleared the wav for Democratic go,~rnor-el~l Richard Celeste to
appoint his lieutenant gO\wnor as hPad of one of 22 Ca binet offices. The
measurr modifif's Pxisting prohibitions aga inst heads of Cabinet
d epartm~nt s holding other public offic~s to allow for the appointme nt.
•.
-··
@
........_,.. Clues to the future
-·
.......· of the economy
--··
:::
Economists traditionall y look to the Christmas Sf' Iling season for clues to
th<' future of the ('('Onomy.
Everyone from Presid~nt Reagan on down says a ny recov~ry must be
=:': IC'd by th~ ronsum~r.
~~ .
That bei ng so, ther~ is no bcll~r indicat or than the next month when, by
::;::. : · tradition. the consumf'r rxer1s motT' buying power than at any other time
:';:· of the yea r. This yea r that buying power will~ e ncouraged by a great
w~:..•
sell<'r effor1.
Indica tions exist some merrhants may Sf'('k almost no markup to move
: ';
merchandise. Man~' of them rebuilt inv<'ntorif'S on the ilSSumplion that
::. : economic acti vit ; · would ha ve picked up bv now. So far. it hasn' t.
- ··
Here are som~ of the possibilities that rould enh anr~ sal~s:
~:
-The consum~r has been holding back. a nd therdore is in a better
:.: . position to buy than ea rlier this year and last. .
~~;
Many peopl~ have rro ured rredtl outstandmg as a percent ag~ of
:;;;:: . income. Many ha v~ added to savi ngs, as indicated by a savings rate of 6.7
:r,: : percent in the second quartcr and 6.9 percent in the third. both above the
:.;: Jong·time average.
- ·
-There ha vP been additions to house hold assets.
::::: · ·
The improvement in stock prices has added billions of dollars to the net
worth of households. While equity in existing homes ha ve barely nsen over
:::::;;.: the 'p ast year. and b;· so me measures has fallen. 11 seems ready to nse
:.~;.
::<
......
=:-;:
:i:':
-
- r again.
. .
.
· While households might not be mcltned to wtthdraw such funds for
Immediate use. measurements of buyer attitudes show that they provide
-~
the confidence necessary for spending.
...,...
-Interest rates. a t least on some big ticket items, ar~ lower tha n a year
:::-:: :ago. While th~ impart hasn't yet spread to credit cards. it eventua lly may
...., - ·do so, assuming a rontmuat10n of preSf'nl trends. That could e ncourage
-..:. . ·buyers.
:;::·:
Some other fact ors work against higher sales.
.
-Unemployment is extremely high - more than 15 percent-'". ma ny
areas of the so-ca llro rust bell, the heavy industry areas the Mtdwest
:;:: · and parts of th~ Nort heast. Merchants tn those areas don I expect great
...... : :activitv.
·
:!';-. · Ho_.;ever. the impact of unemployment Is pervasive. Even in
- • econom ically h~a llhy ar~as it is unde rstood that weakness elsewhere can
,.
spread a nd endanger jobs. Sta tistics indica te that such fears lead to more
•·
savi ng, less spending .
·
•·
-Farm bell conditions, which urban dwellers te nd to overlook, are
"n
really quite poor. Farm income may tota l only $18 billion tills year,.do":'
::
from about $24 billion in 1981 and $26 billion In 1978. The concluston IS
'•
obvious: Holly wreaths a nd Christma'\ promotions cannot squeeze out
money t,hat isn't there.
.
-Christmas gift -giving, even when affordable, may be far down the hst
,.
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ot priorities.
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defenses. In thls regard, deficits be
damned. But after we have crossed
that threshold point, it Is equally
proper to observe that our resources are not Infinite, that appalling
deficits are projected for the next
five years a nd that prudent fiscal
policites a lso are a pari of national
security. Could this $27 bllllon be
spent more effectively on something else? It is a lot of money to
pour Into 100 holes ln the ground.
It Is the president's third assumption that causes the most trouble,
for here we deal with the whole
mlsty spectrum of perceptions and
conjectures. How much deterrence
is enough de terrence• On tills point
reasonably minded m en may well
disagree.
Depending upon how these infe rnal weapons are counted, the
United States possesses about 9,00J
to 9,500 warheads carrying a
destructive capacity of 3,500 meg-
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan was at hls best last week In
arguing a case for deployment of
the MX missile. He laid out the
ominous facts on the Soviet Union's
buildup of nuclear arms; he
e mphasized the relative obsolescence of our "antique" weapons.
His reasoning 'was persuasive.
But with deference to the preside nt and hls military advisers, I
find the case not yet convi ncing. In
principle Mr. Reagan Is exactly
right. He ls following policies at
least as old as the Antonlnes: as
Gibbon tells us, "They preserved
peace by a constant prepara tion tor
war." That Is sound doctrine.
The president's case rests upon
these assumptions - that hls new
"dense pack" configuration will
work, that the projected $27 billion
cost Is bearable, and that unless the
United States goes ahead with the
project the Soviets will not feel
s ut!icie ntiy " de te rr ed" from
atomic adventurism. Specifically,
the Soviets would perceive no
ince ntive toward serious negotiations on arms reduction and
control.
The dense-pack plan calls tor
instaillng 100 ofthe MX missiles In
underground silos just 600 yards
apart. The idea Is that the Soviet
Union might launch a surprise first
strike inte nded to nuillfy our
land-based missile system. Under
the pending theory. the tight
spacing would frustrate such an
attack because the Soviet missiles
would knowkeachotherout. Noone
knows for certain whether the
1heory Is sound. So enormous an
explosion, equivalent to millions of
tons of TNT, never has been tested.
On technological grounds alone, a
hlgh degree of skepticism can be
justified .
Any discussion of costs has to
begin with this fundamental proposition; National security comes
first. We just spend whatever has to
be spent - whatever ls truly
necessary - to maintain adeq uate
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WASHINGTON -There are 55
la me ducks on Capitol Hill this
week, 39 of them shot down by their
constituents . the rest retiring from
Congress voluntarily .
As luck would have It, most of the
39 losers have supported some ot
the most outrageous specialinterest legislation ever concocted.
It remains to be seen whether the
powertul lobbyists for these bills
will still have their ducks in a row
during the last weeks of the 97th
Congress.
Except In a few close races, t he re
is no certltia ble connection between
the Incumbents' defeat and their
record of support for the moneyed
special interests. A notable exception is the case ot Rep. Gary Lee,
. R-N. Y., whose primary loss was
clearly traceable to hls support of
legisla tion favored by the used -car
dealers and the American Medical
Associ a lion.
But an exa mination of the
Involuntary lame ducks' records by
m~ associate Tony Ca pacclo at
least creates a healthy suspicion
that the voters were expressing
dissatisfaction with their congressmen's role as e nthusiastic watercarriers for business and professional lobbyists. It suggests that
members of Congress wou ld be
well advised to stop thumbing their
noses at the consumer .
The following examples are
inst ructive:
·
- Last May, the House voted to
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stop the Federal Trade Commission from requiring used-car dealers to Inform their customers of
any known defE!i::ts ln the cars they
sell. Thirty-one· of the 39 defeated
Incumbents voted In favor of the
used-car lobby. The congressional
action, Incidentally, was declared
unconstitutional by a federal judge,
so the Issue may come up again In
the next Congress.
-The American Medical Association will be continuing its campaign to exempt the medical
professional from FTC oversight,
but Its lobbyists had better hope for
quick action: 26 of the 39 Involuntary lame ducks are co-sponsors of
the exemption measure .
- In September, the House
Advancing the tax cut
barely defeated legislation pushed
by the drug Industry that would
have given It special treatment on
patent protection by extending the
life of patents on medicines and
thus helping to keep drug prices
high.
There were tlve losers who
supported each one of the listed
special-lnteres measures: Reps.
John LeBoutilller, R-N.Y .; Eugene
Johnston, R-N.C.; John L. Napier,
R-S.C.; William C. Wampler, RVa., and Wayne Grisham, R-Callf.
Maybe the special-Interest lobbyIsts who try to Influence congressmen should follow that old rule of
the marketplace: Caveat emptor
- let the buyer beware.
Lowell Wingett
.:ac:
himself, to name one
new economic policies will result In
It President Reagan has done
an even greater budgetary surplus
nothing else, (and he hasn't) he has
it Congress passes full spending
proved that he Is one of the most
reduction goals. If all the spending
hldebound and stubborn men ever
reductions are achieved we would
to occupy the Oval Oftice. Tip
have a $23 billion surplus by FY '83
O'Neill has described him as
and a $121 billion surplus by FY '85.
"Hoover with a smile" but PresiThe deficit would be only $6 billion
dent Reagan has an advantage
In FY '82." A beautiful dream! But
President Hoover did not. He has
the hell of it Is that he ls still
the horrible example of the Hoover
dreaming!
Depression to guide him. He came
The 97th Congress did everything
the president asked the m to do In
to manhood during the . Great
Depression and, as a result, was a
1981. They cut business taxes
Democrat. He only changed to a
retroactive to January 1, 1981. They
Republican after he has prospered
enacted the 5-10-10 Income tax cut
In the Illusionary world of Hollyand cut social programs to the
wood and became acquainted with
bone. Yet, they managed to achieve
the big money men of the Bechtel
the biggest deficit In U. S. history In
Corporation and the oil companies.
spite of paring school lunches and
Since then he has devoted hlmselt
everythlng else they could think of.
to the welfare of that class of
No new president ln history ever
Americans whose Incomes are In
had more cooperation from Conthe $50,00J and up bracket.
gress with so llttle beneficial
results. Now, In the waning days of
The year coming up ls the fiscal
the 97th Congress, he ls trying to
year that he promised a balanced
budget. An economic fact sheets
peddle the same old basket of tripe
released September 9, 19!0 at the
to a Congress and public rapidly
height of the presidential campaign
growing more and more
had the following promise to the
dlsUlusloned.
American people that he would
Although he still talks bravely In
"Change- the country's economic , supply-side parlance, Reagan ls
pollcles so that we have a balanced
beginning to make the much
budget by Fiscal Year '83, a $28
criticized lndeclstveness of Presibllllon surplus by FY'84 and a $93
dent Jimmy Carter look like a
billion surplus by FY '85. These
sturdy aricbor· to windward. No
In a speech at New Orleans
recently, President Ronald Reagan
warned the upcoming 98th Congress not to tinker with the tax cut
he had rammed through the 97th
Congress, not to cut hls military
budget and not to pass any public
works progra m to relieve the 10.4
percent unemployment. Although
he didn't come right out and say so,
he lett the Impression he would be
just as happy If they didn't show up
at all .
The president was barely back In
the White House before he himself
was suggesting a little tinkering
with the tax cut by the lame duck
session of the 97th Congress. While
he thought he still had some muscle
with the prese nt Congress, he
wanted them to advance the
effective date of the last portion of
the 5-10-10 tax cut from July to
January of next year. That llttie
suggestion would add $14 billion to
the 1!m deficit, already estimated
by Budget Director David Stockman to be $200 billion.' Senate
Majority Leader Howard Baker
and House Minority Leader Bob
Michel told hlm, "No way! " The
burned child fears the fire and
there are a lot of burned children In
Congress since the Nov. 2 election.
Too many of the Reagan faithful
who did get their jobs back dld so by
the skin of their teeth. Michel,
I 5/4EAII., SIP, THAT'S
AU. I IEeP. IF I~
71.1/N IT INIJ
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Soviets to even more furious e!toris
to push ahead In the arms race.
In the end, It ts not a perception of
arms that will deter the Soviet
Union. It Is a perception of will.
Against a Soviet ftrst strike, would
we retaliate? The answer, taking
full account of the terrible impllcations, has to be; of Course. It ls not
possible for the human mind fully
to envision the consequences of a
nuclear armageddon, but some
part of the free world would
survive. Some roots of freedom
would remain, and In time these
roots would grow again.
My own judgment, for whatever
It may be worth, ts that thts
sense-pack deployment ls . not
needed. In a nice stroke of public
relations, Mr. Reagan has named
the MX missile the " Peac~
keeper." My thought ls that we can
keep the peace with what we have.
LobbieS are losers"-L.________J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
sooner had the 15 percent lneome
tax cut and the cut In business taxes
proved a falltJre In reviving the
'economy than he was drumming
up the largest tax ralse In history.
Now he Is trying to advance the tax
cut. Judging the future by the past,
that too will be Ineffective unless
the object Is to Increase the $1!m
budget deficit another $14 billion.
In . some mysterious fashion,
perhaps the economic team of
Reagan and Stockman have convinced themselves that there ts
nothing so good for tl)e country as
paying Interest on the national
debt.
Every month comes the news the
recovery ls' on the way - again.
The admlnlstra!lon has done much
bragging about lowering the inflation rate. Take the earning power
away from 20,00J,OOJ of the adult
population and scare hell out of the
rest and inflation Is bound to
rececte. The Fed has lowered the
Interest rate they charge member
banks to nine percent. But that
1\oesn't mean you can get a.
mortgage or auto loan from your
friendly neighborhood banker at
interest you can afford. It does
mean there wlll be another flurry
on Wall St., which doesn't excite
me.
I still rememjler 1929!
DOONESBURY
Today in history
Chesapeake at Southwestern
Hannan Trace at Symmes Valley
Washington C:H at arclevllle
Northwest at Clay
Chillicothe at Portsmouth
East Carter a t Ironton
honored Monday
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a tons. These missiles are deliverable from bombers, from submarines, from the _old Titan and
Minuteman silos. One megaton ls
the equivalent of one mUllan tons of
TNT. We are talking of three and a
half billion tons of destruction e nough to obllterate every conceiva ble target ln the Soviet Union.
How much ls enough? If the
Soviets are not deterred by the
prospect of retaliation ln thls
awesome degree, wou ld they be
slgnlflcantly more deterred by the
proposed MX deployment? It
seems hlghly unlikely. Would such
a show of determination by the
United States galvanize the Soviets
into signing a verifiable bilateral
agreement for arms reduction• No
one can say with certainty. It Is
equally plausible that the president's plan, once it were accepted
by Congress, would spur the
Tonight's games
..." .~-o~thern girls
Keeping the .._p_e_a_c_e_______-~J_a_m_es_J_.K_i_lp_at_ric_k
The Daily Sentinel
The Daily Sentinei-Page-3
By SCO'I'I' WOLFE
wlnnlng season, last year a league
The 1982 SVAC Volleyball chamchampionship, and thls season a
pion Southern Tornadoettes were
league title and sectional
honored 'at the Meigs Inn banquet
championShip."
room here Monday evenng. During
Coach Wolfe then praised her
the l!m season, the gtrls c1 Coach
team for an outstanding season,
Suzanne Wolfe clinched their first
. along with thanking all those who
sectlmal title and second consecumade tbe 1982 campaign a suecess.
tive league crown while compillng
Reserve awards were then presan outstanding 20-2 overall ·record. ented. Tilts year's young TornaSouthern High' Sehool Principal doettes pJSted a 12-4 overall mark.
James Adams gave the welcoming
co·ach Wolfe recognized
address, followed by the Invocation
members of her varsity club, whlch
by Wayne Roush. Adams reviewed
owns a 52-15 mark over the last
the hlstory of girl athletes In the
three years. She stated, "These
United States over the past 10
gtrls are winners In any sport. I
years. He noted that In 1971 :JXJ,OOJ
hope that the younger gtrls can
girls participated In hlgh school
attain the success these girls have.
athletics, compared to 3~ mUllan
It was done through dedication,
boys. Just last year, the boys' total
determination, and hard work."
leveled off just under the 3~ million
Receiving awards were:
mark, while the gtrls' mark had
Varsity (1982SVACandSectlonal
risen to nearly two million. It was
Champs) -Cindy Evans, Michelle
noted that thts was quite a jump In
Johnson, Linda O'Brien, Mel
just a short period of time.
Weese, Tonja Salser, Becky MILlkewlse Adams went on to point
chael, Amy LlttleDeld, Lare n
out the growth of Southern's
Wolfe, Debbie Michael, Jenny
volleyball program over the past
Bentley and manager Tina Allen.
slx years. Although volleyball Is a
Ali-League - Mel Weese, Laren
relatively new sport ln the area,
Wolfe, Cindy Evans and Tonja
Southern has come a long way.
Salser.
Adams said "Winning takes time.
Senior Awards - Cindy Evans,
You first must develop tradition.
Michelle Johnson, Linda O'Brien,
Under Coach Suzanna Wolfe that's
Mel Weese, Tonja Salser.
what Southern has done; first a
Local bowling
Pomeroy
Team
No. 6
N.C. State hit eight three-point
goals In 10 attempts, while the
Catamounts had only four In 16tries.
Thurl Bailey added '1:7 points tor the
Wolfpack, while Pat Sharp led the
Catamounts, 1-1, with 18 points.
Top Ten
Randy Wittman scored 31 points,
and Ted Kitchel added 15 as Indiana
ran Its record to 2-0 In a nonconference contest. The Hoosiers, of the
Big Ten, led 38-24 at halftime a nd
Increased that margin toasmanyas
20 points on several occasions In the
second half.
Miami was led by guard Craig
Tubbs with 14 points.
The three-point goal also was a
factor In Iowa's victory. Steve
Carftno hit a three-point basket
midway through the second half to
snap a 45-45 tie and give the
Hawkeyes the lead for good. Drake
had scored three times from
three-point territory to take a 31-~
halftime lead, and a three-pointer
by Terry Youngbauer pulled Drake
within 63-59 with less than four
minutes to play.
Mark Gannon scored 16 points tor
Iowa, now 2-0. Youngbauer led
Drake with 18, including four
three-pointers.
Second Ten
Bobby Lee Hurt scored 20 points
and had 10 rebounds to lead
Alabama. The Crimson Tide
jumped to a 10-2 lead and never
trailed. Alabama outscored Middle
Tennessee 26-4 to close out the first
half, and led 47-24 at halftime.
Cliff Windham added 14 points tor
Alabama, 1-0, while Dwayne Dorsey and Raleigh Choice had 10
apiece for Middle Tennessee.
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66
58
Eagie; Oub
58
Smllh-Nelson M ot a-s
49
Tony's Carry..Out
46
Fetty TrN• SE'rvlet'
35
High S('r\es - Russ Ca rsoo 541, Caroly n
Bachner ~l John Tyr£'E' 534 , Ot>bl Hens ll')'
468.
High ~~eame
- Russ Carscn
an. Carolyn
Bachner 193; John l'yr'l'<' ICJ2 . Pat Carson1'T7.
Team se-les - Tony's Carry Out 1936.
Team ~!TIP- Tony's Carry Out 009 .
CHAMPIONS HONORED - Members of the
sectional champion Southern Tornadoette Volleyball
team, who posted a 20-2 season record are, front 1-r,
Jermy Bentley, I.Jnda O'Brien, TordaSal.ser and Mel
Weese. Back - Debbie Michael, Laren Wolle, Amy
uttlelleld, Cindy Evans, Mlcllelle Johnson. and Tina
ADen, manager. The Tomadoettes were coached by
Suzanne Wolfe. Absent was Becky Michael.
•••
~3 1 JACKSON PIKE · RT. 3& WEST
Phone 446· 4524
Lukens
All-Big 10 choice
CHICAGO iAPl -All-American
wide receiver Anthony Carter of
Michigan, guard Joe Luke ns of Ohio
State a nd defensive back Keith
Bostic of Michigan were unanimous
selections on the Associated Press
1982 AU-Big Ten football team
announced Monday.
Carter and Lukens made the
dream team selected by a panel of
sports writers and broadcasters
throughout the Midwest a third
straight year as did nose guard Tim
Krumrle of Wisconsin and linebacker Marcus Marek ofOhioState.
Repeating on offense along with
Carter a nd Lukens was Illinois
quarterback Tony Eason.
FIRST
BLOOD
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TORNADOE'ITE SENIORS - Senior members of Southern's
championship voDeyball team were front, 1-r, I.Jnda O'Brian, Tonja
Salser, Mel Weese, and Tina ADen, manager. Back- Cindy Evans and
MlcheDe Johnson.
Gretzky honored
MONTREAL (API - Cen ter
Wayne Gretzky of the Edmonton
Oilers was named the NHL 's Player
ot the Week tor the second time this
season.
Life. Home. Car. Business. One name says It all.
Gretzky, who also earned the
honor two weeks ago, collected 10
points in three ga mes last week, ~-----------_JL-----------------------
ex te ndlng his scoring streak to 26
straight games. The record is 2R in a
row, by right wing Guy Lafleur of
the Montreal Canadiens in 1971>- 71.
..Auto-Owners Insurance
Player of week
NEW YORK !API - Forward
Larry Bird of the Boston Ceitlcs was
named Player of the -Week )Jy the·
NBA for the week ending Nov .28.
Bird averaged 29 points in three
Celtics' vJctorles last week. He a lso
averaged 9.3 rebounds and 4 assists
per game, while shooting .547 from
the field.
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Today Is Tuesday, Nov.~. the 334th day of 1982. There are31 days lett In
the year.
Today's highlight In history:
0n Nov. ~. 1962, U Than! of Burma was elected United Nations
Secretary General.
·
On tills date:
In 1782, America and Britain signed preliminary peace articles inPR!ls,
ending the Revolutionary War.
Ptlt.
Zlt:r's Sp:>rt Stoop
New college rules
produce more scoring
By JOHN NElSON
AP Spons Writer
Already, college basketball's flirtation with the three-point goal and
shot clock has produced some
rather remarkable results.
"There was more action tonight
than the entire month of January
last year," North Carolina State
Coach Jim Valva no remarked
Monday night.
Valvano had just witnessed a
rather cruel experiment. His 18thranked Wolfpack had demollshed
. Western Carolina 103-ffi In the ir
. seasonopenerwitha iotofhelpfrom
the Atlantic Coast Conference's
19-foot, three-point shot.
Guard Derreck Whittenburg led '
the attack with 28 points, hitting slx
of seven three-point attempts from
hts normal shooting range.
"The new rules are going to put a
premlwn on man-to-man defense,"
Valvano said. "It means you're
going to need quickness and depth.
Every time we went into a zone, I
broke out In a rash."
Western had the option of playing
under the ACC rules, which also
Include a 30-second shot clock
through all but the final four
minutes of the game. Coach Steve
Cottrell said he decided on the
morning of the game to p lay ACC
style at the request of Valvano.
"It was definitely a factor, a
bigger factor than I anticipated,"
Cottrell said.
In other games Involving ranked
teams, No. 8 Indiana defeated
Mlaml, Ohio 75-59, lOth-ranked
Iowa got by Drake 68-63 and
13th-rated Alabama whlpped Middle Tennessee State 103-58.
Bow InK Lane~~
Early Wednmdt\Y Mixed
Novfmber 'l~ 1982
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Page- 4 - The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy
(X'rsonal scan' during the Bucca n('(•rs· :!:1-17 :-.:ational Footba ll
League v·ictot-,· ov·er the Miami
Dolphins.
" I hOp<'propll' rmlize Tampa Bay
is no pushmw. ·· ( 'olziesa id Monday
nigh! aft~r !he Rues whipped the
Dolphins for thl' firs! time in six
mrrtings br!wrrn the intrastate
rivals . " I 11·anll'd to brat them bad,
and we gave lhrm a good oldfashion<'({ ix'ating."
Tht' lriumph, before a nation al
t~l!'vi s io n audience and Tampa
S!aclium crowd of 6.1,&14, wa s the
Burs' fit·st of the sllik<'-shortened
s~a s on and gav·e Tampa Bay NFL
bragging rights in Flmida.
And for Colzie. a Miami natiw
and formt•r Dolphin. it was a
"prrsonal \ ' ictor~ ·" O\'er his former
teammall'S and Coach Don Shula ,
who saw his .1-1 Dolph ins drop from
the unbea ten t·anks.
·-rm happv·. I'm sa tLsfied . l!'s a
IX'rsonal \"il'tm;;." sa id Colzie. who
was a member of the Oakl and
Raiders when the club won its first
world cha mpionship. ' 'I'll trade thai
wi n forthcSuprrBow l wewon in ·n
In faCJ. I'd lrade any Super Bowl
victory to brat Don Shula."
Colzie. who signed with the Burs
as a fr('(• agent after Shula cut him
during training ca mp in 1980,
intf'rCf'pll'Ci two fourth -quart rr
pas"'s and 1-cturned onl'of them .11
va rd s tosPI up w hat turned ou t totx>
.the win ning touc hdown.
.James Wildl'l' plowed into the end
1.0nr from~ ~·ards out togive Ta mpa
Rav J J.l lll lead with R: 27 rl'main ing. Bu l tht· Burs n('('(fed their fifth
interception of the night - and
fourth of Miami quarterback Don
Strock - to stop the Dolphins' final
thrl'at.
Strock, who replal'ed an ineffecti v~ David Woodley at the start of
the S€l'Ond half. directed two
fow·th-quart er scoring drtves that
kept Miami in the game. And , he
had the Dolphins moving again
when Mike Washington came up
with his S€l'Ond interception as time
expirro.
" I made the switch at halftime
hoping that we could get some
things going under Strock and get
some points on the board," said
Shula. " We just haven't shown any
rhythm in our offense, and we're
having a tough time moving the ball
consistently."
"This is two games in a row where
we haven't done anything offensi\'~ l y," sa id Woodley. " It has to
CO~C~lll US a little bit.
" We' re moving the ball but not
scoring points. It 's probably a
mL,tu•-e of things," he added .
" Wh a t ~ver it is. we'd better find out
and correct them ."
Tampa Bay built a 6·3 halftime
lead on a pair of Bill Capece field
goals and hiked its advantage to13'3
when quarterback Doug Williams
ran 3 ya rds to complete a 7-play,
38-yard drive with 3: 20remaining in
the third quart er.
Buc sa fety Cedric Brown picked
off a Strock pass on Miami's next
possession and retumed it 24 yards
to set up Capece's third field goal of
the ga me. a 36-yarder , for a 16-3
rogl' aft er three quarters.
That's when Strock got the
Dolphins rolling, teaming with wide
rl'CeivN Jimmy Cefalo on a 43-yard
pass play that se t up the first of two
Scoreboard ...
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touchdown passes to reserve tight
end Joe Rose.
Strock nipped a 7-yard scoring
aerial to Rose to cut the Bucs' lead to
16-10 with 11:57 left to play and then
rekindled Miami's hopes with an
11 -yard strike to Rose that pulled
Miami to within six points again
with only 34 seconds left .
Dolphin Lyle Blackwood recovered an onslde kick after It
bounl'ed off a Tampa Bay player at
the Miaml47 and Strock moved the
team to the Buc 40 before throwing
the game-ending Interception in the
end zone.
"1 was hoping It (victory) wasn't
going to slip away," said Washington, who also intercepted a Woodley
pass in the first half. "I've seen some
strange things happen ."
The Dolphins felllntoa six-way tie
for first place in the American
Football Conference. Cincinnati,
Buffalo, the New York Jets and Los
Angeles Raiders also own 3-1
records.
" We had a great opportunity to go
4-0which would have put us on top in
the AFC alone." said Shula. "But
when analyze It , we didn't play well
enough to be4.0. We got about what
we deserved."
Strock finished with 17 completions in 34 attempts for 204 yards,
while Woodley hit 7ofl3 for40yards.
Williams connected on only 7ofl9
passes for 81 yards, breaking a
string of 'n consecutive games In
which he's passed for more than 100
yards.
Vr~~;as
Coach Mike Jenkins' Hannan
Trace Wildcats wlll open their
1982·83 basketball ca mpaign with
back-yard rival Symmes Valley
tonight.
Reserve game starts at 6 p.m.
The varsity tipoff Is slated for 7:30
p.m.
Coach Jenkins lists four seniors,
four juniors and one sophomore on
his 1982-83 var sity.
The Wildcats wlll play a 21}game
schedule.
The Gallla Countlans will open
Southem Valley Athletic Confer -
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Spons Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio tAP)
Hiawatha Francisco and Shane
Bullough, central figures in Cincinnat! Moeller's sixth state playoff
title in the last eight years, are The
Associated Press' Players of the
Year in Ohio Class AAA high school
football.
Francisco, a 6-foot, 187-pound
senior, is the Class AAA Back of the
Year after gaining more than l,IX)J
yards in helping Moeller to 10
straight regular-season victories
and the No.1 state ranking.
Bullough, a 6-2, 218-pound senior
and the son of Cincinnati Bengals
defensive coordinator Hank Bul·
Iough, is the big school Lineman of
theY ear . HeanchoredtheCrusader
defense that was so difficult on
opponents' rushing attacks this
season.
Mike Currence of Massillon, the
target of a firing petition a year ago,
Is the AP' s Class AAA Ohio Coach of
theYear.Currence ledtheTigersto
10 straight victories, the No.2
statewide r anking and a berth in the
playoff finals.
Moeller whipped Masslllon 35-14
In the Division I championship
game Saturday.
The selections are made with the
recommendations of a statewide
panel of sports writers and
broadcasters.
Fi-anclsco, who appeared In four
straight state playoff title games,
leads the Class AAA all-state
backfield, quarterbacked by ¥ike
Timko of Cleveland St.Joseph.
161
J.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
The Daily Sentinei-Page-5
.
Purs~ant to the requirements of Section 4909.19 of the Ohio Revised Code, General Telephone Company of Ohio hereby gives notice that on October 1, 1982, it filed with the Public
~ttht1u C?mm1sston of Ohio an application (PUCO Docket No. 82-886-TP- AIR) for authority to increase and adjust its rates and charges for telec ommunications service and to change
1ts regulaltons and practtcos affecting the same .
•
RIGHT - BW GUmore, Mid·
dleport, landed an eight point
buck the first day ol the deer
JamUng season. The animal
weighed UO pounds and was
brought down on the Legloo
farm on Bailey Run Road.
This notice contains the substance and prayer of the
applicati.on. However, any interested party desiring comp·
Jete detailed information with respect to all affected rates ,
charges, regulations and practices should inspect a copy of
the application and all attached schedules at the office of
the Commission, 375 South High Street, Columbus, Ohio. A
copy of the application may be inspected by any interested
party at the office of the General Telephone Company of
Ohio located at 100 Executive Drive, Marion, Ohio. A copy
of the application and the proposed tariff sheets are also
available lor inspection during normal business hours at
any public business offict3 or Phone Mart of General
Telephone Company. of Ohio. In addition, the proposed
tariffs were mailed to the mayors and legislative authorities
of all municipalities served by the company on June 29,
1982, as part of the company's notification of its intent to
file.
BAG BUCKS - Brolher-bt·
laws Larry Spencer and Joe
Bailey, two Meigs Coody btm·
ters, recently downed a buck
each whBe lnmtlng with bow·
and-arrow. Larry Spencer,
Tuppers Plains, downed a 140
pound fleld-dre!llled, nine point
buck with a compound bow. Joe
Bailey, Chester, bagged a U2
poWid lleld-dreMed, eight point
with a recurve bow. Pictured
with Bailey are. 80118 Beau, left,
and Chrbtopher, right. Allhoup ·
bow season remains bt eflect,..
the week long shotgun began Monday. The GaUl&·
Melp-Athens County Ia ·
one li Ute most popular hunllllg
groWids bt the state due to lis
large deer populallon.
ence play Friday at Eastern. First
home game Is Dec . 7, against South
Point of the Ohio Valley
Confermce.
Tonight's non-league encounter
with the Vikings Is one of two
games on tap in the area. Chesa·
peake will open Its season at
Soul hwestern in the other contest.
Friday's SVAC schedule finds
Hannan Trace at Eastern, North
Gallla at Southwestern and South·
ern at Kyger Cr eek .
Hannan Trac e's roster and
schedule:
Any person, firm, corpor1tlon or 111oclellon may tile,
purau1nl to Section 4909. U ol the Ohio Revlltd Code,
obJection• to lhe propoaed lncrelltl 1nd 1djuatmenta In
r11ea 1nd ch1rgea, 1nd lo lhe propoltd ch1ngea In
regullllona 1nd prectlcn lff~tellng the aeme. The objection•
m1y 111'11' lhllauch 1ppllcetlon conlllna propoallalhlllre
unjual 1nd dlecrlmlnllory ctr unrenon1ble. Recommendation• which dlfferlrom lhlappllcetlon m1y be m1de by the
at1ff ot the Public Utlllllee Commlaalon ol Ohio or by
Intervening partlea 1nd m1y be 1dopted by the Commlaalon.
Timko, throwing for 2,730yards and
accounting for 'n touchdowns In his
career, led St.Joseph to a 24-4·1
record In his three years as a
starter .
The all-state running backs,
besides Francisco, are Terry White
ofCambrldge,JohnBernerofAvon
Lake and Tim "Bucky" Vance of
Springfield South.
Daryl Jones of Cincinnati
Hughes, twice All-Southwestern
District, averaged more than 23
yards per ca tch this season for the
split end honors. His tight end
teammate Is Upper Arlington's
Greg Guy.
All-state offensive line berths
went to tackles Doug Gilbert of
Toledo Whitmer and Mike Besta of
Austintown Fitch, guards Butch
Wilburn of West Chester Lakota,
Charles Calhoun of Massillon and
Allen Hartley of Delaware and
center Dan Gavin of Toledo
St.John's.
The defensive line consists of ends
Richard Llshewskl of Toledo
St.Francls and Dave Rastoka of
Mentor Lake Catholic, tackles Mike
Grim of Upper Arlington and Andy
Borowski of Cincinnati St.Xavier
and middle guard Tony Rus ol
Cleveland St.Joseph.
Bullough's Unebacklng buddies
are Chris Spielman of Masslllon,
Tony Beers of Gallon and Matt
Smith of Gahanna.
The defensive backfield spots
belong to Garland Rivers <lf Canton
McKinley, WlllieCiarkofSandusky
and Dwight Sistrunk of TrotwoodMadison.
40-Rick Watson
24-Rick Barnes
32--Rob Brumfield
:Jl-AI Bailey
5-10 3
5-9 3
6-2 3
5-10 3
20-BUI Swa1n
6-0 2
HANNAN TRACE RESERVE
Player
Robert Unroe
Derrick Bcl"nes
H&. Yr.
6-1 1
5-5 1
5-5 I
Phil Bailey
Ed Call
>-6 I
Mike Davis
Terry Cline
Mark Stw:.>elo;
5-7
5-7
5-9
5-9
Eric Darst
JoM Evans
5·8 1
5-7 .1
steve sun
2
2
2
2
WIUJCATS SUIEDULE
Jan. 7
Jan. 14
Jan. t8
Jan. 21
Jan. 1B
Feb. 1
Feb. 4
Feb. U
Feb. 15
Feb. 18
The Daily Sentinel
IUSPSl~ltol
'Referred to in the proposed tariff sheets as rate schedules .
A Dlvl.tdon of MuiUmedl.ll, fa('.
5-U 4
6-0 4
42-Rid< Ranmlph
12-Jeff Barlll'S
Dec. 7
Dec. 10
Dec. 14
Dec. 17
Dec. 21
Dec. 27 -28
Jan. 4
Specific rates depend on the rate band'
applicable to a specific location . The company is proposing
base. rate and zone rate area expansions
in selected exchanges. The average percentage changes in
monthly rates lor residence one-party, two-party, or four·
party exchange service and lo·r one-party business exchange
service in the company's 244 exchanges, are shown below
by schedule.
AI Symmes VaUey
At Eastern
Pu_bli!iht•tl ~very wft~moun , Mont.kty thruut.~h
Fn~y . _ lll Court Sired, by tht! Ohio V»lk')'
Publl!ihml( ~OtnpMny • Multimt't.llt~ , Inc ..
PtMneroy, Oh10 45789, 982·2151. St.•t:ond dlfl!M
JXt;lHJ.ttt puid HI POI!lt'roy, Ohio.
Mttmbttr : 1'ht: A.ssOl'iMia.l Pr~. lnhmd DMi·
ly Pre.u A.!S:socit~tion Hnd the Amerlt'ln
N c ws ~~r Publi.llherH Aliwciltiun, Na~tlorutl
Adverh:un.l( Repre!u~ ntMtlve , BrMnh.lm
Nt>W.!SJ)Bpttr Sales, 733 Third AvenUt! , New
York, New York 10017.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By C•rrter or Motor Routt
Ont• Wl~ k . . ... ....... .......... . .. 11.11\) .
One Munth
...................... $4 .40
0nl'Ycilr .
.. .... 152.110
SINGLE COPY
PRICES
Daily . . ...... ... ... .. .. . . . .. .. . IS Ccnls
Southwes tern
Fairland
At Kyger
AI Coal Gr(Jole
HoUday Tour~
Nu !\U~:riptrons by +rutH pt•nnitlt.'l.l in lowns
AI ChESapeake
At Southern
North GalUa
Symmes Valley
E~tern
At Southwestern
At Fairland
Kyger Creek
Southern
Hannan
NEW YORK (AP)- Hal McRae
of the Kansas City Royals, who led
the major leagues with 133 runs
batted in last season, was named
winner ol the American League's
wht•!"t' htunc t·arrit•r St:r'V It'c is H V Hila~bl c .
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
luitk 011111
13 Wcck.o;
:ai Wl•t·k.-; .
52 W•·•·ks .
... 114.01
... 127.:10
... 151.1.!
Oubihlt• Ohln
13 Wt•t•ks .
26 Wt•t•ks
52 Wt•t•ks
. .. .. .. . .. . .. .. . 115.21'
.... 129.114
$56.21
At North Gallla
,. ,,
•••,.
•,,
,.r '
.
,.... .'
,
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'~'
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r
''
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..
I
ID.DIIG TIE UIE 01
'
'
''t
lRAX 12 RADIALS Kf
11EII UMEST PRICfS
111.2.
''
I.
I
I .
••'
•' .
.......
..' >.
...........
....-:
..
,
'
'
'
Convoy
'
Cooperdale
Crestline
Creston
Curtice-Oregon
'
'.
'
,. ,. '
_ ·
,·
•
'
, •. p~alyr
Delaware
' .'i:5'811roy
Dexter City
DillonvaleMI. Pleas.
East Rochester
Edgerton
Edon
elmore
Englewood
Evansport ,
Farrnerlvllle
Fayette
•••
• ••
•
•
Outstanding Designated Hitter
Award lor the third time.
McRae pal'ed the DHs In hits
(189), doubles (46) , triples (8) alld
slugging percentage (.545).
••
••
••
••
l
•
••
Miami drops 75-59 cage tilt to 'Indiana
OXFORD, Ohio (AP) - Senior
forwards Randy Wittman, 31
polftts, and·Ted Kitchel with 15, led
Indiana University to a 75-59 victory
over Miami of Ohio in a nonconfer·
ence college basketball game
Monday night.
Mjaml, In Its season opener,
stayed close lor 12 minutes
the
Adena
Albany
Amanda
Amesville
Amsterdam
. Antwerp
Arlington
Ashland
Ashley
Ashville
Athens
Attica
Baltic
Baltimore
Barlow
Beach City
Beaver
Bellevue
Bergholz
Berlin
Berlin Heights
Bettesville
Beverly
Blanchester
Bloomville
Bolivar
Bowerstown
Bowling Green
Bremen
Brewster
Brilliant
Brookville
Brunswick
Bryan
Burbank
Byesville
Cadiz
Caldwell
Cambridge
·Carey
Carrollton
Catawba
Celina
Chatham
Chesapeake
Cheshire Center
Circleville
Clarksville
Clyde
Coldwater
Congress
POSTMASTER : ~nd t~ddr~ to Tht' DMIIy ·
Sentinel, I ll Court St. , Pom~roy, Ohio~769 .
Subsc.·nbr ·_rs _nol dt>s l rin~-t tu PitY the c•rricr
may rctml m adva nt't' dlrt't1 tu Tht• Dt~ily
St•ntuwl un a 3, 6 ur 12 10001h bM!Ii.!S. Cn'\lil
wtll ~ · g tvt•n earner cat·h munth.
South Point
Exchtnge
first half before the Hoosiers, 2-0,
broke the game open and coasted to
a 38-24 halttlme lead.
Miami guards Craig Tubbs,_with
14 points, and Chl!ckStahl had lOas
the Redsklns were · forced into
shooting outside by the scrambUng
Indiana defense who kept them
away from the net.
••
••
Schedule
IV
IV
V
IV
V
I
IV
IV
IV
Ill
IV
I
IV
V
IV
It I
II
II
I
Ill
tV
I
II
Ill
IV
VII
V
IV
tV
V
V
IV
X
IV
IV
IV
111
II
IV
I
Ill
V
IV
IV
VI
IX
IV
Ill
II
Ill
IV
Ill
IV
I
· IV
VIII
I
IV
II
II
IV
II
111
111
VIII
' I
lv
Ill
I
Exchtnge
Felicity
Flushing
Forest
Fort Recovery
Freeport
Galion
Garrettsville
Genoa
Georgetown
Gibsonburg
Grafton
Grand Rapids
Gratis
Green Camp
Greenfield
Greenwich
Guysville
Hammersville
Hanoverton
Harlem Springs
Harpster
Haskins·
Tontogany
Hayesville
Helena
Hicksville
Higginsport
Homervi lie
Huron •
Idaho
Jackson
Jenera
Jewett
Kelleys Island
Kilbourne
Knoxville
Lakeville
LaRue
Laura
Laurelville
Leesburg
Letart Falls
Lewisburg
Liberty
Lodi
Logan
Loudonville
Lowell
Lower Salem
Lynchburg
Malvern
Manchester
Marblehead
Marla Stein
Marlon
Martinsville
McArthur
McComb
Mechanicsburg
Mechanicstown
Medina
Mendon
Milan
Millersp!Jrl
Mineral City
Minerva
Minster
Monroeville
Montpelier
Montrose
Schedule
IX
Ill
II
Ill
Ill
IV
VIII
Ill
I
V
II
V
IV
II
I
IV
Ill
Ill
Exch1nge
Schedule
Morning Sun
Morral
Mowrystown
Mt. Blanchard
Mt. Orab
Nevada
New Bremen
New Burlington
New Concord
New Lebanon
New London
New Marshfield
New
Philadelphia
New Vienna
New
Washington
Ney
North Battimbre
North Eaton
North
Georgetown
North Star
Norwalk
Oak Harbor
Oak Hill
Oberlin
Ohio City
Ostrander
Oxford
Paris
Payne
Peebles
Pemberville
Perrysville
Phillipsburg
Piketon
Pioneer
Plain City
Pleasantville
Plymouth
Polk
Pomeroy
Port Clinton
Portland
Portsmouth
Port William
Prospect
Put-In-Bay
Radnor
Rathbone
Rawson
Red Haw
Republic
Resaca
Local Exchange Service
HANNAN TRACE VARSITY
No.-Player
Ht. Yr.
10-Dan Bays
5-6 4
14-Mlke Rossit er
5-11 4
Nov. 30
Dec 3
Exch1nge
This application affects rates and charges lor telecommunications services to all customers of General
Telephone Company of Olhio, provided pursuant to its
Exchange Rate Tariff, P.U.C.O. No. 6, and General Exchange
Tariff, P.U .C.O. No.7.
AL award third time
or
" -
area.
Hannan .T race opens cage
season at Symmes Valley
M~Rae wins
30, 1982·
Noti_
ce of Application of General Telephone Company of Ohio
for-Increases and Adjustments in Rates and Charges
LEFT - Malcolm Guinther,
16, Syracuse, lauded his 111'81
deer the flr!!l day li deer season.
The etght pobtt bud! was
brought down bt the Letart Falls
rf'('()l""d<;
.md tol,tl polntli. Poln!.'i llasl"'d on 21H9-Ut.
'·
' •,
Moeller players are
top AP Ohio gridders
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30, 198l
• ' Tuesday, November
'fampa Bay whips Miami
Dolphins for first victory
lly FRED GOODAlL
AI' Sports Writer
TAMPA, Fla . !API - The way
Neal C'olzie S('('S it, T ampa Bay
gainf'd r~sp<'C I and he evened a
Tuesday, November
Middleport, Ohio
Richmond .
Richwood
Russellville
Sabina
Sardinia
Savannah
Sclo
Scott
Ill
IV
IV
Ill
Ill
Ill
Ill
Ill
IV
I
Ill
Se~man
Seville
Shade
Sharon Center
Sinking Springs
Smithfield
Spencer
Spencerville
St. Mary's
Strasburg
Sugarcreek
Summerfield
Sylvania
The Plains
Tiltonsville
Tipp City
Trotw_
ood
Troy
Valley City
VanBuren
Wadsworth
Wakeman
Waldo
Warsaw
Watertown
Waverly
Wayne-Bradner
Wellington
Wellston
West Alexandria
West Field
Center
West Milton
Weston
West Salem
West Union
West Unity
Wharton
Wilkesville
Willard
Williamsport
Willshire-Wren
Wilmington
Wilmot
Winona
Woodstock
Yorkshire
V
Ill
Ill
II
V
IV
Ill
II
Ill
II
Ill
Ill
Ill
VI
I
II
Ill
IV
Ill
II
IX
V
IV
Ill
Ill
Ill
V
Ill
V
Ill
IX
IV
IV
IV
Ill
Schedule
IV
I
II
Ill
II
Ill
equipment or the charge for a Company provided telephone .
R-1 =Residence Individual Line R-4 =Residence Four-Party Line
R-2 = Residence Two-Party Line B-t = Business Individual Line
Suburban Service Zone Rates
Suburban Service Zone Rates also apply to customers
outside the base rate area .
A1/B1
II
Zone A
Current Rate
Proposed Rate
Ill
II
IV
Ill
IV
I
Increase
Percent Increase
Zone B
Current Rate
Proposed Rate
v
IV
IV
IV
IV
II
VIII
IV
IV
VIII
VIll
IV
V
IV
VIII
IV
Ill ·
IV
Ill
I II
II
Ill
Ill
IV
IV
IV
II
Ill
Ill
Ill
II
II
Ill
Ill
IV
V
IV
Percent Increa se
Zone C
Current Rate
Proposed Rate
Increase
Percent Increase
'•
I
•
- --:-·................;.----:--- ·--- _.. -
•·
$ 6.45
8.20
$ 5.40
6.90
1.50
27 .8 'lo
$ 2.70
$ 8. tO
10.30
2.20
27 .2 'lo
$ 4.00
27 .1 %
$ 9.75
12.35
2.60
26.7 'lo
1.75
40
29.6 %
3.45
.75
27 .8 'lo
5.20
1.20
30.0 'lo
Paystatlon Telephone Service
The company proposes to increase the paystation rate from
$.20 to $.25. The concept of a flat rate for semi-public
paystation service will not change . The existing credit
against the flat rate for coin-in-box revenues generated will
be discontinued .
Lale Payment Charge
The company proposes a late payment charge of 1.25% on
the unpaid balance to be applied on the customer's bill.
Private Llne/lnterexchange Mileage
The company is proposing to increase its private line/ intere xchange mileage charges.
Centrex Service
The company proposes to increase its rates for Centrex
· services .
Touch Call Line Charges
The touch call line charges will remain the same, however,
the company is proposing a monthly instrument charge of
$.75.
'See Usage Sensitive Service Note
Personal Signaling Service
A-2
R·1
R-4
B-1
$ 9.50
11 .90
2.40
25.3%
$ 8.60
10.90
2.30
26.7%
$20.00
27.50
7.50
37 .5 ,_.
II
Percent Increase
$ 9.95
12.50
2.55
25.6%
II
Schedule II
Current Rates'
Proppsed Rates·
Increase
Percent Increase
$10.30
13.05
2.75
26.7 'lo
$ 9.90
12.40
2.50
25.3%
$ 8.90
11 .25
2.35
26.4%
$21 .20
28.65
7.45
35.1 %
Schedule Ill
Current Rates'
Proposed Rates·
Increase
Percent Increase
$10.65
13.35
2.70
25.4 'lo
$10.30
12.75
2.45
23.8%
$ 9.30
11 .65
2.35
25.3 'lo
$22.25
29.40
7.15
32.1 %
Schedule IV
Current Rates '
Proposed Rates'
Increase
Percent Increase
$1115
14.05
2.90
26.0 'lo
$10.65
13.25
2.60
24.4 %
$ 9.70
12.15
2.45
25.3%
$23.45
30.75
7.30
31 .1 'lo
$11 65
14.70
26.2 %
$11 .10
13.90
2.80
25.2%
$10.t0
12.75
2.65
26.2%
$24 80
32.15
7.35
29.6%
$12.05
15.10
3.05
25 .3 %
$11 .60
14.40
2.80
24 .1 %
$10.60
13.15
2.55
24 .1 %
$26.10
33.25
7.15
27 .4 'lo
$12 .55
15.75
3.20
25.5 %
$12.05
15.00
2.95
24.5%
$11 .00
13.75
2.75
25.0%
$27.40
34.65
7.25
26.5%
$13.05 .
16.45
3.40
26.1 %
$12.60
15.50
2.90
23.0%
$11 .40
14.25
2.85
25.0%
$2885
36.00
7.15
24.8%
Schedul• IX
Current Rates'
Proposed Rates'
Increase
Percent Increase
$13.45
16.90
3.45
- 25.7 %
$13.20
16.00
$11 .90
14.65
2.75
23.1 %
$30.45
37 .15
6.70
22.0%
Schedule X
c;urrent Rates'
Proposed Rates •
Increase
Percent Increase
$14.00
17.55
3.55
25.4%
$t3.65
16.65
3.00
$12.25
15.25
3.00
24.5%
$32.00
38.50
6.50
20.3%
Increase
"'
IV
IV
I
I
II
II
V
Ill
Ill
IV
II
I
IV
V
Schedule V
Current Rates'
Proposed Rates'
Increase
Percent Increase
IV
II
Ill
II
Ill
:His
Schedule VI
Current Rates'
Proposed Rates'
Increase
Percent Increase
II
VIII
IV
Ill
II
IV
IV
Ill
VI
It
Ill
Ill
Schedule VII
Current Rates •
Proposed Rates'
Increase
Percent Increase
Schedule VIII
Current Rates'
Proposed Rates'
Increase
Percent Increase
v
Ill
I
IV
1
II
IV
Ill
Ill
v
IV
VI
tl .
I
II I
VIII
The comJany is proposing increases on personal signaling
services .
Repair VIsit Charge
Schedule I
Current Rates'
Proposed Rate'
2.80
21 .2 %
22.0%
• These rates are lor base rate area customers only and do
not include zon~ charges or charges lor supplemental
'
,)
$ 1.35
Usage Sensitive Service
The company is proposing to partially remove the premise
visit cost of maintenance from its local service rates. The
charge established will recognize the cost of a repairman
making a premise visit in connection with a maintenance
call associated with single line telephones .
Extended Area Service
Supplemental Rates
The company is proposing an extended area service rate
additive applicable only to exchanges filing for new
extended area service after the effective date of the tariff .
Miscellaneous Products and Services
Increases in rates and charges are proposed for several of
the miscellaneous products and services including :
•
•
•
•
•
increases for special billing number:
enterprise service;
maintenance of service charges;
non-published and emergency non -published service
and;
time announcement service.
Key Telephone and Private Branch Exchange
Systems and Equipment
The company proposes increases in trunk rates for key
telephone and private branch exchange systems . Proposed
rates and charges may be found in the Company's proposed
tariff sheets
The prayer of the application requests the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio to do the following :
(a) Find that the company's present rates and charges
and the regulations and practices affecting lhe same are
unjust, unreasonable and insufficient to yield reasonable
compensation for the services rendered;
(b) Find that the rates and charges and regulations and
practices proposed are just and reasonable and will provide
· not more than a fair and reasonable rate of return on the
value of the company's property actually used and useful for
the convenience of the public;
(c) Approve the filing of the proposed schedule sheets
contained in Schedule E-1 of the application , modified to
reflect such revisions thereof as may become effective .
pursuant to orders of the Commission , during the interim
between the filing of the application and the date upon
which the schedule sheets become effective ;
(d) Order that the proposed schedule sheets become
effective forthwith ;
(e) Approve the withdrawal of the present schedule
sheets contained in Schedule E-2 of the application;
(f) Grant such other and further relief as the company is
reasonably entitled to in the premises.
The form of this notice has been approved by The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio .
•
$ 2.75
3.40
.65
23.6 'lo
The company is proposing a limited introduction of
non optional Usage Sensitive Service in Huron , Ohio . Usage
Sensitive Service is a billing system that lets the customers
pay for what they use . Under the plan, the customer would
pay a substantia lly lower monthly service or "access"
charge for the local telephone service . Additional charges
will be based upon the type and number of local ca ll s made ,
the hour. day of lhe week and duration of each call , as well
as the distance to the ca lled party.
•
t
R-4
$ 3.25
4.10
.85
26.2 %
1.75
Increase
A·~
.
f"
'
•
·,
�Tuesday, November
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
30, 1982
Business SeMces ·
County's families gather for Thanksgiving
Edward Stiles, Middleport, were
Nina and Matthew Craddock, Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Platter, Middleport;
Roger and Nancy StUes and Chris
Alvarez, Gahanna; Barbara, Sue
and Ruth Fry, and Bryan Zirkle,
Pomeroy.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Brennan were
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Gerlach, Tara
and Alison, Mr. and Mrs. WUllam
Grueser, and Clyda Allensworth,
Middleport; Mrs. Susan Rawllngs,
MarysvUle; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Jay, Columbus; Trlsh CordUle and
Don Grueser, Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ of
Clevela nd and Jack Smith of
Lancaster were holiday visitors of
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart and Miss
Erma Smith.
Joining Mrs. Dorothy Downie for
Thanksgiving dinner were Mr. and
Mrs. Allen Downie, Debbie and
Elizabet h, Ridgewood Drive,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Edison
Baker, Middleport, and Mr. and
Mrs. William Downie and Bill of
Morning Star.
Mr. and Mrs. Geral d Shuster
were holiday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and Jayne
who visited over the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer and
family, Columbus.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Crow, Syracuse, were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Crow, Lori and Robby, Zanesville,
Mr. and Mrs. James Crow, Meredlty and Wesley, Route 3, Pomeory;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Kelley, and
Sarah, Columbus. The Kelly famUy
spent the weekend with the Crows
whUe the ZanesvUle Crow family
were overnight guests of Jim and
Pam Crow, leaving Saturday for
Columbus to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Hendershot . and Mrs. Ben
Dorsey.
Thanksgiving was celebrated at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Roush Sunday with a family
gathering. Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Roush and chUdren,
David and Sherrie, St. Albans, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flowers,
Pickerington; Doug Roush, Reynoldsburg; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Roush, Roger II and Susie, Grove
City; Becky and Lanny Tyree,
Charles and Jenny, Kenny and Lisa
Roush and sons, Jason and Justin,
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Parsons and
Lots Ann, Kim and John Eblin, D.
J . Jenkins, and John Sexton, Kevin
and Chris Smith, all local.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bradbury,
Middleport, joined Mr. and Mrs.
Carl Wolfe and children, Racine,
for Thanksgiving dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Richards of
Middleport were joined by Mrs.
Ann Angel and Kevin, Athens, for a
Thanksgiving visit In Columbus
with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Smith,
Zaglenda and Vaughn, Columbus.
Mrs. Floyd Weber went to
wftl!amstown, W. Va. over tbe
weekend to visit Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Hlll and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wall,
there from· Denver, Col. Mrs. Wall
Is a sister to Mrs. Weber and Hill .
Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Martin, Sr. of Chester
were Mr. and Mrs. Osby Martin
and Adam, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Martin and Heather,
Metro, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Martin Jr., J eff and Jan, Vincent;
Michael Martin, Ches t,er; and
Brian Beeler.
Holiday visitors of Mrs. Marcia
Keller were Mr. and Mrs. Don
WUI!ams, David and Deanna, and
Hilda Weber, Columbus; and Mr.and Mrs. Roger Keller, Randy,
Rodney and Russell, Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Reapp of
Merritt Island, Fla. are In the area
visiting relatives. This week they
are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Reapp of Gautpolts and Mr. and
Mrs. Osby Martin and Adam,
Middleport.
====·====~=========T=======
-H&G SEWER
ALL STEEL &
BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON
FAll PERM. SPECIAL
ALL PERMS
~Tues.
t1tru Set.
PH. 992-3982
For Appointn•tt , __
10-27-1 ""-
.Outters
•N- or Repair
•Painting
A program on Thanksgiving was
presented at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Ohio Eta Phi Cha pter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held at
the Meigs Inn .
Brenda Hill presided at the
me<>i lng wi th Janelle Haptonstall
giving the program. Linda Diddle
was a prize winner with a U
members participa ting in a game.
Judy Gibbs was elected pledge
captain .
Refreshments were served by
Vicki Au it and Kathy Cumings.
Middleport PTO
Wilkey Holman. long-time custodian in the Meigs Local School
District, was honored during a
recent me<>ting of the Middleport
PTO.
Gifts were presented to him from
the sc·hool and the PTO, and special
refres hments were served in his
honor.
The fourth grade classcs pres-
Philathea Women
Mike Gerlach gave a history of
Meigs County , Middleport and the
Middleport Church of Christ , at the
recent meeting of the Philathea
Women held at the church.
For a referenr<'. Gerlach. a
history teacher at Meigs High, used
a 1937 newspaper.
The Philathea song and "The
Lord's Prayer" opened the meeting
with devotions being take n from the
Ideals. Grace Hawley gave a
'Prayer of Thanksgiving"; Rose
Reynolds, " It's the Season" with
prayer by Clara Conroy.
The 26 members a nswered roll
call with things for which they are
thankful.
The group extended
thanks to Sabra and Vickie Morrison lor painting the praying hands
which were given to the octogenarians of the churc h.
There will be no meeting in
December. Next meeting will be an
afternoon one In January.
Riverview Garden
Riverview Garde n Club Christmas Workshop was held at the
home of Mrs. Grace Weber. Each
member made a Mr. and Mrs.
Santa Claus ornament to be hung
on a Christmas tree. This project
was directed by Mrs. Nell Wilson
and Mrs. Ruth Anne Balderson.
Other Christmas crafts were displayed and a crocheted Christmas
tree was given for a door prize to
Mrs. Marilyn Hannum.
The business session was conducted by Mrs. Grace Weber,
president . Plans were made for the
annual Christmas tree lighting.
Thank you notes were read from
Mrs. Ella Osborne for a book she
received from the club and for
cards and phone calls. Mrs.
Marilyn Hannum sent a thank you
to the group for a book purchased In
memory of Mrs. Ella Hannum
which was given to the Riverview
Elementary School library. The
school expressed thanks for receiving the book.
The December meeting will be
Dec. 16 at 7:30 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Pauline Myers with Mrs.
Helen help us
Tit for tat becomes involved bookkeeping
BY HELEN AND SUE BOI'TEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
My friend never remembers
what she has borrowed from me
and I hate reminding her. She Isn't
a cheat - just not money-minded.
She now owes me about $20.
She asked me to buy her an outfit
when I vacationed In Hong Kong
and I got a tremendous bargain.
When I came home I told her It cost
$1!0 more than It actually did . She
happily paid and was very grateful.
Now my conscience is bothering
me. Did I do wrong? - FEELING
GUILTY
DEARF.G .:
We-e-11, you were dishonest for an
honest reason, but Since you cheated no one, let's
just say you took a bookkeeping
shortcut. An explanation at this late
date would only cause embarrassment. Forget it . - HELEN
But don't take this route again.
Should your friend discover the
subterfuge she'd be much more
hurt than if you asked her for
money owed. - SUE
DEAR HE LEN AND SUE:
My guy goes on a diet. I lose
weight. and I'm already on thesllm
side. We live together and I buy
only non-fattening foods . II I eat
Calendar
TIJESDAY
MASON - Past Matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, w!U meet
at the home of Mrs. Thelma
McMurray, Mason, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday.
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
County Grange Officers Conference wUI be held Tuesday at
Rock Springs Grange Hall at
7::.> p.m. AU officers from au
granges In Meigs County should
be present to plan activities for
the coming year. Cider and
donuts wDI be served.
RUTLAND Township Trustees, 6: ll p.m. Tuesday at
Rutland Fire Department.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY- W.I.C. participants may pick up coupons
Monday or Wednesday, Dec. 1,
from 9· to 11 a.m.
i
'
!
MIDDLEPORT United Penil!CoStal Church, revival Wednesday, Thursday and Grtday,
7:ll p.m.; Sunday, 6 p.m. with
· Rev. and Mrs. Steven Piercey,
·evangelist. f!ev. Clark Baker,
putor, Invites the public.
MIDDLEPORT Lit erary
Club wUI meet Wednesday at 2
p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Bernard Fultz. The book review
"New Moon Rising" wUI be
given by Mrs . Marvin Wilson.
MIDDLEPORT Independent
Holiness Church will hokl a
special missionary program
and play "White Fences of
Haiti" Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Public Is Invited.
MIDDLEPORT - Weekend
revival Wednesday through
Sunday, Dec. 5, at Middleport
Independent Holiness Church,
Pearl St. Services nightly at 7: 30
p.m. Public Invited.
11-IURSDAY
BEDFORD Township Trustees Thursday, Dec. 2, 6 p.m . at
the clerk's home. Public Invited.
HARRISONVR.LE - Revival services wUI be held at
Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church, S.R. 143, Harrisonville,
DeC. 2-5 with Rev. Nadle
Fetterman, Summer HUI, Pa.
Servt:es wUl be held at 7: ll p.m.
There wUl be singing. Rev. Earl
Fleldl, pastor,lnvltes the public.
high-calorie things I feel guUty.
In a month, he's two pounds
heavier and I'm five pounds llgher.
How do you explain this? - JULIA
DEAR JULIA:
I'd guess your guy Is fudging, as
at candy and fast food counters.
Maybe he thinks between-meal
snacks don't count. - HELEN
J ULIA:
Don't feel guilty about eating
enough food to maintain your
correct weight: dieters shouldn't
expect that others In the householf
suffer along with them. (But if you
think It's necessary to encourage
your guy by serving only "his"
menu, then eat what you want
when he Isn't there.
... And hope he doesn 't do
likewise! - SUE
Correction
Francis Florist, Pomeroy, and
not the Pomeroy Flower Shop,
observed a 25th anniversary Sunday In conjunction with their
annual Christmas open house.
Astrograph
December 1, 1982
Your creative abllltles wUl be enhanced this coming year, but you
must be careful not to attempt todotoomany things atone time. Isolate
your best Ideas and work on them.
SAGfiTARIUS (Nov. ~Dec. Zl) Unfortunately, you cannot be all
things to aU people today. There'll be persons you may encounter who,
no matter what you do, you'll be unable to please.
CAPRICORN (Dec. %2--.Jan. 19) Monitor your conversations
carefully today If you talk to persons outside of the company or
organization you work for. Don't give away trade secrets.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. 19) Today, take with a grain of salt tips
from friends on ways to make money. Their Intentions may be good;
their Information could be far off course.
PISCES (Feb. ~March 20) Be appreciative of who you are .and
what you have to offer, Instead of comparing yoursell unfavorably to
someone else. If you could change places, you wouldn't.
ARIE!l (March 21-Aprll 19) Check your sources carefully today
before passing something on as fact that was told to you. There's a
posslblllty the Information may be Inaccurate.
TAURUS (April ~May 20) You're likely to have large
expenditures under control today, but It could be the Incidentals which
wUl cause you to spend more than you should.
GEMINI (May Zl-June !0) Listen to the advice others offer today,
but also give credence to your own evaluations. You're apt to be more
on target t~ they are.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Be very careful today not to make
things harder for yoursell than they should be.
LEO (July ~Auc. 22) This ts one of !hale days when you could
become Involved In a nwnber d. unpl'll!luctlve activities, wasting time
which should be devoted to other efforts.
VDWO (Auc. 2S-8et!t· 22) It may prove unwise to talk about things
' to accomplish.
today which you have yet
. , .
LIBRA (Sept. ~Oct ZS) You'!'!! sociable and gregarious, and
friends appreciate what you have to add,conversationally. However,
today take care not to dominate !he exchange.
SCORPIO (Od. U-Nov. 1:1) Deta1ts take on greater slgnltlcance
than usual today In your buslneis dealings. Double-check all the facts
and figures before you make a commtiment.
FREE ESTIMATES
20 ,.,. Ex!torionce
TOM HOSKINS
Pit 742-2834
Or 949-2160 10ii5/ttc
Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263
7-14-ttc
11 -3-1mo.
========:;it;=~::::::=~::::=====ltr:===~::;===:;i
AVAILABIE -The Meigs County Humane Society has a number of
mixed breed puppies, such as lbe ooe pictured, available for adoption.
Residents who are Interested and can provide good homes for the aniJnala
are asked to call 992--61l05.
NOla Young and Mrs. Margaret
Brown assisting. A gift exchange
will be held.
Gifts were brought for "Opera·
tion Santa Claus" at the Mental
Health Center. Mrs. Brown will
deliver them.
Roll call was answered by
members bringing a favorite hall·
day recipe. Maxine Whitehead
conducted the Thanksgiving devotions with the singing of "For the
Beauty of the Earth" and other
Thanksgiving songs. A poem entitled "Pilgrim Voices" ancl a
prayer were read. Mrs. Ma:xlne
Whitehead presented an honorary
member gift to Mrs. Opal Harris.
Refreshme nt s were served
buffet style using the Thanksgiv ing
motif by the program planning
committee to Debbie Weber and
J anelle Spencer, guests, and these
members, Mrs. Mary Allee Blse,
Mrs. Margaret Brown, Mrs. Janet
Connolly, Mrs . Mary Gt·ace
Cowdery, Mrs. Delores Frank,
Mrs. Margaret Grossnickle, Mrs.
Marilyn Hannum, Mrs. Pauline
Xi Gamma Mu
:
949-2840.
No Sunday Calls
BIRCHFIELD
TAXIDERMY
11·19·1 mo
meet•ng Dec 1. 1982 at 7·30
1
From the Smlllest Heater
Cole to the laqest lladiltor.
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
yra. old, excellent watch
To good home brinle female
pit buldog,shots. 2 yrs . old .
Good with children, good
watch dog. Call 614 -379 2609 .
-
THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP
6671 '
-------Ge<qe S. Hobstettet. Jr.
,
Stoke<
oo;'" !192-5739
LOAN, $32.5110.00 ·
MIODLEPORT - PRICE REDUCE
$40,000.00
RUTlAND - Maon Streel btra
n1ce three bedroom home. wtlh
wood burner. lol 6(h 100 Ask1ng
$20,000.011
POMEROY - Owner will land contract wah $~000 down, 10%
tnterest $236.41 monthly for 15 ye~ on this 4 bedroom home
with ll acre lrt New wifng aluminum ~ding Total prire
$27,000.00.
RUTlAND - College Street
Com~etely remodeled rwo bed·
10om home. new wn1ng, 1nsulated.
mOOern k1tchen On extra large
corner lot across from Grade
Schoo. Askmg $30.000.00.
Velma Nicinsky. Assoc.
742-3092
1 - - - - - - - --
;tenvQRQIFtlHBi&
Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
(lassifiedS and
5ave I I I
-1
1
1
ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
extensive
.Cllllotn Polo Bldp.
&a..s
o1oo1it Wott .
......... & vtn,l Sid~
15 , . . EXIlorionc:t
GR£G IlllUSII
PH. 992-7513
., 992-2212
It -It -He
PH.
kilchins and ·u=::::::::::::::::::::::~
~::h~;ms. Remodetin&,
add-ons, .. ~.~i• ~~mes,
·
·~· Sldmg.
Rt. I, Box 2n
FREE
RAVENSWOOpl wv
L. . .
1
.'
ESTIMATES.
PH. 992·6011
304-273-311010
''We Are N- Opon"
I~
·
J&L
11
PUBUC NOTICE
~-Kb
-~ ..~:~~illlztd
· 1s~·~~HM~
~· ~-
~WI..I
'nn
. INSULATION
Public Notice
_
~cf:, ~ .. ~=
~-~lit. iii 1112911 iiii
..
VINYL.&ALUMINUM SIDING
Survey o f Federal General
. •lniul.tlon oStorm Dpors '
',Storm WlndOwe oR..,._...m WlndoW.
•
Write
vour
aupplias.
1
,I
Ja"*
___.______
_.__________
Knnr
Jon Buck :
Clerk-Treasu rer 1'
V•llage of ,...,.
,.
M•ddlepon
r
I I
•
Ph. 992-2772
!~5-l
Racine Fire Dept . is sponsoring a gun shoot every Sat.
night starting Oct. 9 at 6 :30
p.m. in Bas han . Factory
choke 12 gauge shotguns
only.
name and address or .. ,__ • 1
6
,phone number If used. ""'"' day 1. :... dlys 1 .. ~;,_
You'll gel beller resulls --+--l-l";..;.:"'..:j..'....:41-w"-'•;
If you describe fully,
f,. ~t ••
give price. The Senllnel To 15
1"-~I• ....
reserves the right to --+---~-~-+---1
classify, edit or reject To25
jn.oo 11 .00
any ad. Your ad will be ..;_;~+--~..+-1..
1..
-.-.,~!
put In Ihe proper To 35
I>Y·'"' "'·"' ••·"'
classlflcallon If you'll --..L...-1--1---'-~-1
check lhe proper box
These cash rates
.
below.
Include discount · ' 1
--+
..
7-----~8. _ _ _ _ __
9, _ _ _ _ __
10. - - - - - 11. - - - - - -
12.
-_
-_;-:..
13. ____-_
u. ______
16,
. FNeEiil~
1,
Gun shoot. Racine Gun
Club. Every Sunday starting
1 p.m . Factory choked guns
only.
Phon•-----------------
6, _ _ _ __
1
1
"'
AAA ORIVERS EDUCATION CLASS Doc . 06,
1982. Ages 16 and over .
Call AAA 693-6677 10 E.
Union St. Athens . Don 't
miss outll
No hunting or trespassing
day or ntght on the Charles
Yost & Ivan Well farms .
---------lc-
18.
19, - --- - - - - ' 20. - ·- -- - - 21.
22.
I·
I
23. - - - -- 1I
24.
Absolutely no hunting or my
farm day or night . Alma
Peterton, Rudand.
wrapped at
Moplowood Lake. S26 .
fli.OO. oxtfl for alclnning.
614-949-2313.
25. - - - - - -
26. - - - - - 27. _ _ _.:___ _
6
lost and Found
LOST Boy's 1983 GAHS
Reward! 304-675 -6788
7
experienced texidermlet .
1
1I
J,
EARN EXTRA Money for
Christmas. Sell Avon . Earn
good $$$, set your own
hours . Call 614-698-7111
(co llect} .
Water System Maintain ence
Worker . Send resu me. in·
eluding expe rience and sa lary requir eme nts by Dec.
15 to Syra cuse Board of
Public Af fairs, P.O. Box
323 , Syracuse. Oh.
NEED EXTRA MONEY or
help w;th coll ege axpense.s7
The West Virgin ia National
Guard ca n help . If you ai.e a
Junior or Santor in High
School or a Graduate, you
may qu alify for a $ 1,600
bonus o r up to $4,000
co llege Tuitio n assistance, .
plus you will have a secure
part tim e job after training.
Learn skills in Maintenance,
Supply, Clerical, Electroni cs . G oo d Pay - Good
Training-Good Benefits. The
W est Virginia National
Guard is No Ordinary Part
Tim e Jobl Call Sergeant
EARN up to $70.000ayearl
Use your work skills overseas . Write I.J .O.; P.O. Box
369; Bos(D n, MA 02129.
NO EXPERIENCE RE QUIRED for this high, in-
Yard Sale
--------Mini Fkta Market & Holiday
Baz aa r . Crafts . baked
goods. home decorations .
Flowerland Florist building,
Upper Rt . 7 , across from
linn's. Thurs. & Fri. Dec . 2
& 3, 9-5.
8
Public Sale
& Auction
come opportunity with national oil company in Po.int
Pleasant area. Regardleuof
expertence, write P.M .
Read . Box 696, Dayton.
Ohio 46401 .
Earn extra money selling
Avon in Point Pleasant area,
304-675-1429.
Pre -school teacher for Headstart Program,Pt.Piealant .
Must have Early Childhood
Degree. Apply by Doc. 10.
WVa State Champion Aucti oneer Rick Pearson. Estates.
antiques. farm. households.
Ucensed Ohio-WVa . 304-
773-5785 or 304-7739186 .
Auction every Fri . night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Consigments of new and
uaed merchandise always
welcome . Richard Reynolds
Auct;oneor. 276-3069.
Professional Auctioneer
Service. Over 30 years expe rience in new, used and
antique furiture. Licensed to
auction Real Estate, autos,
farm equtp., household, busnan, cattle, liquidations &
antiques of ell types . Osby
A . Martin & Rodney Howery.
614-992-6370.
9
12
Situations
Wanted
LPN nurse will do privote
duty . licensed in Ohio and
WVa. Call675 -7140.
Tree trimming & removal.
614 -949 -2129 or 614 992-6040 .
Will care for the elderly in
our home. Experienced LPN
care given . Phone 614-991 -
7314 .
'
Taxidermy . Deer Heads •lTd
Fur bearing animals. R.t .
St e wart . Rutland , Oh .
Phone: 614-742-3006. :
Valley Plaza. 446-8025 or
448-8028.
We pay C81h for late modal
cl .. n used cera.
Frenchtown Cer Co.
pay
614 - 84~ -
4701 after 7:p.m .
Buying Gold, Silver, Plati num, old coins, scrap rings
&. silverware. Daily quotes
available. Also coins & coin
supplies for sale. Spring
Villey Trading Co., Spring
will
WV .304· 525-5161 .
Fr;doy. Phone
Wanted To Buy
poundage,
at 640 6th Ave. Huntington,
Share driving and cost to
Columbus Monday throufih
Ooor HMdl mounted by an Wonted to buy tobacco
-~1
Call614-25 6-1198.
Medical assistant needed,
good hours and benefits,
experience required . Write
Box C-26. c -o Point Plea.
sant Register .
29. _ _ _ __
-- -- - - -
Lady to stay with me from
Fri. morning till Sat eve.
Clean su rt o undings. No
wolk involved. 8 mi. below
Gallipolis on At . 7 , Eureka.
Norweigan Elk Hound ,
answers to " Fiee -Ah ". Also
small brown mongrel.
answers to " Dafter". 5
miles north Point Pleasant,
30. _ _ _ _ __
31. - - - -- -
Sell AVON . Call 446-3358.
523-7602.
Bllt Gone John10n
Rent o &onto. 814-992448-0089
8829 or 614-949-2633.
The Dally Sentinel .(
1-11 Court St. v • .
Ave .. Gall;pol;s, Oh 45631 .
Medical receptionist immediate op,en ing, reference re quired . (:ontact Box P.23 ·in
care of Pt . Pleasant Register. 200 M ain St. Pt. Pl. WV .
28. - - - -- -
Mail 1-h'i~ (;upon'w~~h·R~-~IHanc~ ·
Experienced sale s clerk for
full-time position. no evenings, dependable. in good
health . Send resume to box
4000, in care of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune . 826 Third
Lutton 304 -675-3960 or
WANTEO TO BUY OtdfurniCurd. Ball Run Road, Moiga ture and Antiques of all
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
County.
448-3169 or 266-1967 in
DEER HEADS mounted . the evenings.
DHr cut •
32.------33.
34. --- - - - - - -
Help Wanted
toll free in WV 1-800 -642 3619 anytime.
No hunting or trespassing
on my property. Hartwell
I
I
I• Brow's Texklermy, Terry
Brown. 814-986-3B33 or
I 814-986-3364.
17. _ _ _ _ __
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769 ______
mo.
7576 .
Call
No Hunting or trespassing
on my farms in Cheshire
Twp. Violators will be pros cuted . J . Arthur Evans.
Address>----------------
3. _ _ _ __
4.:___ _ __
5. _ _ _ __
Pick up and
Georges Creek Rd .
446-0294 ..
results . Money not refundable.
'-2. -_
-____
Saint Bernard do g. 11
months old. very gentte with
children, Phone 304-675 -
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
own ad and order bv mail with this
I )Wanted
1 )For Sale
I )Announcement
I I For Renl
614-742-2752 .
SWEEPER and sewing ma - 1;::==;:::;:;:::;:;::==
chine repair, parts, and
coupon. Cancel your ad by phone when you gel
15. - - - - - ' - -
•N- Rooting
,
:·.::'r'
·1*!Ofs.•Fvrnlturw
~::::::::::::~~:::::::::~•::8
·10:·ft.~c· . .
-
I
- ~~~~~ mo.
742 2
In Memoriam
3 Announcements
,
6 month old german she pherdS. border collie mixed .
Fe male . All shots &
wormed . To nice home .
.J\LOST Pure Bred German
shepherd are of Mt . Zion Rd .
in Patriot. Call collect 304 -
In loving memory of our
husband and father, Henry
Eichinger who died Nov . 29,
1967. 1nourheartshe'sstill
so very alive.
Opal, Charles , Dennis,
Donald and laura .
RUllO!
I
11
after 6pm.
Day or Evening
rn
Da;sy Duke . 614 -6 69 ·
4581 .
REWARD . Call 446-0195
742-3171
2
Part German Shepherd. fe male, 6 months. Good with
kids, watch dog . Named
class Ring . Initials T.S.B .
Chery !imley, Assoc .
N
Fish-Game Headlife Size Mounts
Plus Hide Tannin& .
k~chen .
on appro•. I acre. ASSUMABLE
counts as a word. Count
Excellent Service
4 ..
HYSEll RUN RO. - Nee 4
bedroom. I bath. mddern
Print one word In each
Quality
Part German Shephe r d
male, 3V:t yr . old, good with
children. needs country
home. Call 446 -8647 after
HOBSTETIER REALTY
space below. Each In·
IIIia I or group of figures
C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION
Free puppies mixed breed.
medium size. Call614 -245 -
POMEROY - In town barg~n - 2 bedroons, nice kachen,
porch, reduced Io $22,500.00.
~":a~
2-26-tlc
'
It 11 30. lie
cora radiators and
heater cores. we can
1
: ' r:i:t!:.
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT HILL FORO
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
11-8-t 1110.
1-3-lfc
Ph. 992-2174
charge to the advertiser .
dog. Call446-1678.
carpet lhroughout Reduced lo
I
18-
Farm Equipment
Parts &Service
Pomeroy, Oh.
of fer any other thing for sale
may place an ad in this
column . There will be no
kimo dog. To right person , 6
FARM - Apf)'oximately 18250 acres, Port~nd. Beautiful house.
barn, buildings, garage All mineral right> Call for appoinlment.
I
Dealer
1
ANY PERSON who has
Make mon ey for Christmas.
REALTORS:
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.. GRI .. ................................. 992-6191
Dottle S. Turner .. ............................................. 992-5692
Je111 Trussell .. ... ................... .......................... 949-2660
Office .......................................................... 992-2259
SERVICE
U.S. Rl. 50 Easl
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Oeere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equlpmenl
let"IUII
White male American Es-
I REA JY
.
992-6370.
lmplovmeRI
614-388-9679.
POMEROY - Remodeled 3 bedroom h001e on 4 lois, pretty
klchen, carpet. Fireplace f~ed for wood burner. $24,500.00.
RADIATOR
SALES " SERVICE
Rldiltor Specillist
NATHAII BIGGS
35 YB. Experience
'
P.M. M onday through Fnd ay.
t'l ~~AND
sterling. je-
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempt to
on this like new three tedroom
home . .full basement has fam1ly
room wrth hreplace Beaut1ful
PARTS""'d SERVICE
4-5-ttc
BOGGS
RADIATOR
. SERVICE
long Bottom Oh
Revenue Shanng hpend•tures
for Mtddlepon Village for l•scat
year 1981 IS av~ul able for
public tnspec t1on at the mayor's
office. 23 7 Race Street Middleport. Oh1o. from 8 AM to 4
I
~
silver,
Write :
No Item to large or to Small .
Will buy one pte ce or cqmplete household. N ew , ul8d,
or antique furniture . 614-
Giveaway
1 female pups to giveaway
and 1 female dog. Call
Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
p.m. '" Reedsv•tle or at the ..:·
house of the clerk Ada B•ssell
1)30, lie
~/
•Rofrigofatoro
We can repair and
Hor se lick
Black Tom cat, must be kept
in house. has been de -
•Dryers •Freezers
• ·3-7-tfc
COMPLETE
4
l;..mber -~9: 1982. and the
wuhera •Ranges
1110.·
Farm.
Rood. Galllpolia Forry, WV .
54 Misc . Merchandise
.
TWO Campi11lots in Portland. Near River - 62' x I 00' and 45'
x 62'. Call for infonnation.
All Makes
Call742-319~
614-742-2178
POSITIVELY no hunting oo
Supple
weeks The lastlS
n.1x consecut1ve
1 WlllbemadeonNo
•Washen •Dilh-
repair service and
installation.
Residential
& Commercial
LOCATED ON
STATE ROUTE 124 EAST
OF RUTLAND
•
t'
608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259
10-1-t1c
KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
::~:~: yor~r~~;:~
WE SPECIALIZE
IN DEER HEADS
SMALL ANIMALS
BIRDS-FISH
The actual expenditures of · '·
the Revenue Sh a'nng Fund by '
(1
11-8-1
3 Announcements
would like to express their
ltanlts alii appreciation to
friends and neighb~ who
sent flowers, food . and
canis during the death of
their mother and grandmother. Their thoughtfulness will never be
forgotten.
The famiiv of Phoebe lee
;:::::::~::~t:::::::~::~ti~~~====~I,------------~-----------
o(llctric woft
regular
CARD OF THANKS
--..... · J::;t
''CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"
ON PERMANENTS
Mon.-Tues.-Wed.
Now thru Dec. 31
KAY'S BEAUlY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-2n5
Wo Honor Ooldon lluct<eye
cord• Except on Penn.
Spocillla.
plete hou sehold s.
Gold.
The family of PHOEBE l£E
1
jan, antiques. etc .. Com-
"Johnson, tell your wifelodo welry , rings, old coina &
something about that static currenc y. Ed Burkett Berber
Shop. Middleport . 992cling! "
3476.
Real Estate-General
Also Transmission
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
3-24-lfc
15% OFF
11-7-1mnpd.
..
the
and
Bri" This Ad
Good For
-Sept;; SystEms
LARGE OR SMALLJOBS
PH. 992-2478
Public Notice
at
M.D. Millar. Rt. 4, Pomol'by.
Oh . Or 992 · 7760 .
1 Card of Thanks
6
BEDS-IRON . BRASS , old
1101 26. 11 II 2. 9. 16. 23. 30.
6tc
Real Estate-General
AUTO & TRUCK
REPAIR
992-8216 or 992-7314
Po""'"'Y. Ohio
11-28-tfc
-Gas line;
tlll0dolil1i
publi c
The ob1ect of !he Complatnt
a parlttton action concern tng
011 and gas underlymg the fol lowmg descnbed real estate .
Sttuated •n Lebanon Townshtp, Me1gs County. OhiO. and
more particularly descflbed as
follows·
The Norl h East quaner of the
North East quaner of Sect1on
~N~oe T~~~~~~r~~·= (261. Town
:·;.:~;.:.~";,Eleven (1 1). 1n
''Pd' •v Purchase.
1
~Lv~· 1 l'..."::f_ Forty acres. be1ng
111ne
more or less Bemg a
P~~~"~j the same pr operty con1~
Ve~ye~d to the sa1d SA. RUtten by W E Ruttencutter by
of record 1n the off1Ce of
1
the County Recorder of Me•gs
County. Oh10
and the prayer IS that the
above desc nbed real estate be
part1t1oned . that the mterests be
set off or ordered sold 1f 11 cannot be part1110ned. for an aliawance ol attorney lees here1n
and cosls
You are reQwred to answer
the Compla.nt w1t h1n twentye1ght days al ter the last pubhca han olth ts not1ce whtch wtll be
publ1shed once each week for
IS
I
RAW FUR . Hlghaat pricoa
pold. Lake Jack10n Fin lo
Fur . Call 614-882-7448.
clawed . Call 614 -367 0681 .
St. Rl. 124 Pomeroy, OH 1
V. C. YOUNG Ill
-Water
-Sewer
New Holies -
th e
45 769.
Wanted To Buy
fumiture. gold. silver dol lara. wood Ice boxes, ltorut
adm tn1 strators. execu tors and -
GARAGE
IFroo EaUmotaol
-Dump Trucks
-Lo-Boy
-Trertcher
•',.
'·
Curt•s. et al.. Defendants. Thts
act1on has been asstgned Case
Number 1809 7 and IS pend1ng
1n the Common Pleas Court of
Me1gs County. Pomeroy. Ohto
7
n.
Larry E Spencer
Cle rk of Cou rts
Me1g s County
Comm on Pleas Court
Jenn1e B Berd1ne. tf I1V1ng.
1
days lor answer
whose address 1s unknown. the ~ ~;~· co mmen ce on that date
unknown spouse. 11 any. whose
In case of your fatlu re to
name and address are un - answer or otherw1se respond
Roger Hysell
oloctricol wort<
~
Trustees. Me•gs
Cou nty, Ot-no 'tan Q.6 seen by
TO: Hazel M. Cun1s. 1IIMng.
whose last known address tS AI.
1. Long Bottom. Oh to 45743.
the unknO'Nn spouse. 1f any.
whose name and address are
unknown. the unknown hetrs.
devtsees. lega tees. admmtstrators. executors and -or ass1gns
of Hazel M. Curt•s. 1f deceased.
S.A Ruttencutter. 1f hvmg.
whose address 1s unknown. !he
unknown spouse. 11any, whose
name and address are un known. the unknown helfs. de v 1 sees. I ega t ees .
adm1n1 strators. executors and or ass1gns of S A Ruttencutter.
tf deceased
G Ruttencutter. tf llvtng.
· whose add ress 1s unknown: the
unknown spouse. If any. whose
name and address are un-known . the unknown helfS. de v 1s e e s . I e g a t e e s .
adm1n1strators. executors and or asstgns of G Runencutter. 1!
deceased .
W H. Berdtne. 1f hv1ng. whose
address tS unknown. the un·
known spouse. 11 any, whose
name and address are un·
known. the unknown he1rs. dev1s e e s. Ieoa t e e s.
1
adm.n
strators.
executors
andtfor
ass•gns
of WH
Berd1ne.
1' :and
992-7201
- Concrete wort<
-Backhoes
wttp
Twp.
NOTICE BY
PUBliCATION
9
Dated Octobe• 26. 1982
James W Suttle and Greta M
Suttle. Pla1nhffs. -vs- Hazel M
G.......-
-Addona and remodeling
- Roofing ond gutter wortc
PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- Dozers
r-----------___;._'
Ol•ve
-VI-
PH. JIM CUFFORO
CARPENTER
SERVICE
.i
Plelntfffa.
SYRACUSE - 3 Bedroon oouse on State Rt. 124. Goal conditlln.
nice id, porches, worklhop. $35,000.00.
to reskle In Sumter, S. C.,
where he owns and operates a
painting and general home maintenance service.
Harold Is a 1960 graduate of
Scipio High School, Harrisonville,
and Is married to the forrner J ~t
K. Verrnllllon, Marysville. He
received his bachelor's degree In'
personnel management from Park
College, Kansas City, Mo., and his
master's degree In business ana
management from Central Mlchi·
gan University, Mt. Pleasant.
Mich.
During his more than 22 years of
mU!tary service, he was decor'ateil
with the Bronze Star Medal, twb
Meritorious Service Medals, fou)Air Force Commendation Meda~
and numerous other awards and
citations.
Most of his career was served In
personnel management, computer
services and commandant of the
professional mUitary education
program for enlisted personnel. Hfl;
last two years of service were spe~t
as a personnel management I!)·
spector for the Ninth Air Force
Inspector General at Shaw AFB. '
His overseas assignments hi·
eluded Okinawa, VIetnam, Franc<!,
and The PhU!pplnes
:
Following his retirement on Def.
1, he and his famUy will reskle at
their Rocking G Ranch near
PUBUC NOTICE
:
YOUNG'S
or ,' :
GRETA M. SUTTLE.
oRoc:ineandSynocuae
11 -26-1 mo.
-Plumbing
you have been named Defend an ts tn a legal act•on ent1tled
eaoec~~ngand:,ing
Gauge Shotguns
Only.
3· 11 -lfc
contlnu~
Bernard Nlehm, Gallipolis,
was confirmed earlier.
eexcavating
oooptic l'(llama
edump tJuck
'
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choke 12
"Beautiful, Custom
Buill Garages"
I
Call lor free siding •
estimates, 949-2801
obockhoe
EVERY
BISSELL
SIDING CO.
OHIO
JAMES W. SUTTLE AND
default Wtll be rendered aga1ns1
you for the relief demanded 10
th e Compla1 nt
,f deceased
,
You are hereby nollf•ed that
known: the unknown heors. de- ~s r;qu~red by the Oh'o Rules of
v , s e e s . 1e g a t e e s . '-'~' Procedure. 1udoment bv
odozar
Bashan Building
Vinyl & Aluminum
SIDING
A Christmas party was planned
for Dec. 21 at the home of Tun!
Redovlan when Xl Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
met recently at the Middleport Fire
Station.
Carolyn Grueser presided at the
meeting with members being
reminded to take their gilts for the
gift exchange wrapped In white
paper with a red bow. Debbie
Flnlaw, ways and means chati-man, thanked members for workIng on the holiday workshop which
·
was reported as a success.
Donna Byer reported on plans for
the New Year's Eve party. ~
cultural report was gtven by Mr~.
Byer on the fine arts, canvas and
clay. Mrs. Flnlaw was hostess
Youth confirn1ed at St. Paul's
Five people were confirmed
Sunday Into the congregation o.f St.
Paul's Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
They are Erin Anderson, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. WUllam Anderson,
Jr.; Sue Ellen Fry, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James Fry; Susan Jdnes,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Jones; Scott McPball, son of , Mr.
and Mrs. Hugh McPhaU; and ,Judi
Mees, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Malcom Mees.
The conf_trmation occurred after
15 months of concentrated study of
the Holy Bible IUid Dr. Martin
Luther's catechism, ~th the students being tested regularly by
Pastor WIUlam Mlddleswarth:
The five were attired In white
robes for ·the ceremony and wore
red catnatlons, gifts from ~heir
parents. They entered with Pastor
Mlildleswarth and professed faith
wlth-theApostles' Creed, following
which !hey wei'!! blessed and
welcomed Individually by the
pastor. Each was then presE-nted
with a Bible on behall of the
congregation.
Also presented with a Bible was
Bernie Nlehm, sp" d. Dr. and Mrs.
FIRE DEPT.
10-28-1 mo.
or ass•gns of Jenn•e B Berd•ne.
deceased
CONTRACTING
RACINE
CALLAL
742-2328
Twins retire from Air Force
Shaw Air Force Base, S. C .. M.
Sgt. Darold G. and C-M Sgt. Ha rold
D. Graham of HarrtscnvOle are
retiring from the Air Force after
more than 20 years In the service or
their country. They are the twin
sons of Bessie M. Graham of Route
4, Pomeroy.
A 1961 graduate of Albany High
School, Darokl entered the N.avy
Initially and then he transferred to
the Air Force In 1971. He is married
to the former Shirley A. Antrlt:t, a
native of Newark.
During his mUltary career he
received numerous citations Including the Meritortous Service
Medal, three Commends tion Medals, two Air Medals, and sev•eral
additional decorations. He .'llso
earned Air Crew Wings from the
Navy and Air Force. He was a
Crew Chief on a Navy patrol plane
and a ground maintenance supervisor during most of his Air Force
career. His last assignment was as
a unit career adviser and first
sergeant at Shaw AFB, S. C.
His overseas assignments Included VIetnam, where he accumulated more than 450 combat hq-urs,
Korea, Japan, Thailand, Guam,
The Phlllpplnes, Hong Kong and
Turkey. His muttary travel took
him around the world twice.
Following his retirement, on .Jan.
1, 19&!, Darold and his famUy wlll
FIREPLACES
&
CHIMNEYS
REWORKED
Myers, Mrs. Ella Osborne, Mrs.
Marlene Putnam, Mrs. Cathy
Spencer, Mrs. Grace Weber, Mrs.
Nola Young, Mrs. Janice Young,
Mrs. Opal Harris, Mrs. Ruth Anne
Balderson and Mrs. Margaret
Cauthorn.
J&IF
GUN SHOOT
BUILT AND
~
Ohio Eta Phi
ented the program and won the
room count award. Rev. James
Broome gave devotions with the
second grade class leading in the
pledge. The ways and means
committee announced that the fall
ff'Stival was a big success. Plans are
being made for a Santa's workshop
to be held Dec. 7-9.
SEPTIC
TANKS
INSTALLED
CALLAL
Ph. 742-2328
Common: ill
'Remodelq
'Stonn W'mdows & Doors
FREE ESTIMATES
-
Holiday activities were planned
at the recent meeting of the United
Methodist Women of tht> Racine
United Methodist Church.
A bazaar and soup dinner will be
held Saturday from 10 a. m tol6 p.m.
with Martha Dudding aschairrnan.
She asked that members meet at the
church at 7 p.m. Tuesday to make
candy. and that everyone take
bazaar Items and vegeta bles for the
soup to the r hu rr h at I p.m. on
Friday.
It was voted to send potted plants
to shutlns this yea r. Ruth Smith is
chalrrnann for the project _
Louise Stewart presided at the
meeting during which time sick
calls were reported and officers'
reports given. A thank offering and
pledge service was conducted by
Mabel Shields assisted by Clara
Mae Sargent.
The Christmas dinner and meet lngwill beheld on Dec. 20atMcCoys
In Ripley. Members arc to meet at
the church at 6: llp.m. There will be
a $.1 gift exchange.
A committee wit h Betty Roush as
chalrrna n, was appointed to buy
some needed silverware and dishf'S
for the kitchen.
The UMW
members will be guests at the
meeting of the ladies of the Racine
Baptist Church on Friday, 7:30p. m.
at the Baptist Church.
Refreshments were served by
Mabel Shields and Clara Mae
Sargent during the social hour.
10-6-Uc
AND HOME MAINTENANCE
• RoofinJ of all types
illsidentlol &
•Downspouts
~
Rt. 3, Box 54
Rocine. Dh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING
H. L WRITESEL
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY,
Oefendanta.
Cue No. 18097
P&S BUILDINGS
IOn/1 mo.
ROOFING
Public Notice
UTILITY BUILDINGS
FREE ESTIMATES
PH . 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3762
ANYTIME
NGV. 2 THRU DEC. 4
i..AFF-A-DAY
Public Notice
HAZEL M. CURTIS, et el.,
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.
Insulated Do& Houses
The Daily Sentinel
Ohio
Public Notice
Sizos start from 12'xt6'
Syracuse- Racine
Area
20% OFF
Meigs County organization members gather for area n1eetings
Racine UMW
HOOK-UPS
SYRACUSE. OH.
.,
POLE BUILDINGS
~
"We gather together to ask the
Lord's blessings ... "
Thanksgiving was that kind of
day, a time shared with k>ved ones,
of being thankful.
It was a time for rekindling the
spirit of the very first ThanksgivIng, when In the autwnn of 1621
alter harvesting a bount lful crop
the PUgrlms joined with the native
Americans In thanking God for not
only their material well-being, but
also for an a bundance of good will.
And on the local scene famUles
had traditional gatherings.
Joining Mr. a nd Mrs. Phll
Ohlinger of Rose HUI for Thanksgiving dinner were Mrs. Bernice
Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Evans,
Alicia, Cindy, Ryan and Matthew,
Portland, Robert Brown, MlnersvUle; Mr. and Mrs. Don Hunnel and
Artie, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Warth, David, Darrln and
Amy, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Terry Evans, Megan and Jessica,
Mr. and Mrs. Phlllp M. Ohlinger
and Brahm. Missing from the
famUy group were Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Sisson and Nate and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Ellis and C. D., Rose Hill,
who spent the holiday weekend In
Marshall, Mich .. with Andrea and
Sharon Owens.
Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
... ' "
30, 1982
November
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
top
Bob Cllna, Rt. 2, Point price. Call 614-379-2166.
Pleuont, 304-876-1448.
RAW FUR BUYER Beef &
DEER-aklnned, cut, deer hides. Ginseng, trapping supplies. George Buckwropped, 304-876-1498 .
lay, call 614-664-4761.
Hou,. week days: 6 to 9PM .
Taking new atudenta In Weekends: 12 noon to 9PM.
PI-Lung-Kung-Fu, Martial
Arta, Mil clofM>M, lnotructor Wanted to buy Square DancSl .. Rogor a ..... aaolotont Ing outflta. All olzoa. mon'a
h•o. Iandy Oldakor, 304- and wom.,'a. Cot! 448171-7722 anytlmo.
41137.
•
PIANO TUNING-Lane D4·
niels, assoc. of Bruincer~l
Music Co. -Cunninghan's Of
Athens. 614 -742-2961 4r
614-992-2082.
CHAIR CANING. Expoi,
experienced S88t weavln .
lane Dani els 614-74 •
2951
or 614-992 -208,.
(No refin ishing.)
•
Will babysi t in my hom • .
Dey or evenings. 614 -992·
6829 .
13
•
Insurance
•
SANDY ANO BEAVER lft-
surance Co. hea offe~
Hrvk:ea for fire inauranae
coverage in Galli• County
for almo st a century . Farrt.
home and personal property
coverages are available to
meet individual needa. Colttact Foster Lewis. agent.
Phone 379-2204.
,
Are you paying too much ~
your hoapitol-ho.tth lno•
ronco. Cat! CarroCt
Snowden, 448-4290.
j
�..... . . ...
0
ft
15
The Doily Sentinel
They'll Do It Every Time
Schools
Ins truction
51 Household Goods
MQ!tMV...
lilt
forms puc hing and kicking
bags, and protective equipment. Jerry Lowery & Alto·
Solo. choir, rocker, otto·
man, 3 tablea, (extra heavy
by Frontllf). $886. Solo,
chair and loveaeat, *276 .
So til and chairs priced from
$286. to $896. Tables. •46
and up to $128 . Hide·•·
bedo. •440. end up to
$626 .. Rocllnero, S176 . to
$360 .. Lampo from $28. to
$76. 6 pc. dinetteo from
$99 .• to •436. 7 pc .. •t89.
and up. Wood table with six
chalro $426. to $745. Deok
$110 up to $225. Hutcheo,
8660 . and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattreaeea, 8260. and
up to $396 . Baby bedo,
cia tes Karate Studio, 143
Rd..
Jackson,
Oh . Call 6t4 -286-3074.
1 8 Wanted to Do
Soti'VII'Q<IY~I~S.JUN'IGW
-....
IS THAT AU..
'\
· ~- ,¥~Mo.H ···· ,...----....J 'IOU HAY& TO A:>···
r.
WATCH THOSE SII.L'I'
3t59 aft er 6PM 256 - t967.
/'.
c.ARlOOHS? EiO
<~
CLEAH 'lOUR Rall\! J
~ >,
Gen era l Hau ling and Trash
removal Service . Reliable
and dependable. Call 446 -
HAS HIS SNOWS ON···-NOW
Nursing in private home.
Dayt im e on ly in Gallipolis or
Pt . Pl easant . Will give ref . if
required . Ca ll 458 - t8t8 .
l.:.. ']~
I
~'
~~- \..
'• 'I
Sand blasting old cars and
trucks or smaller items . Call
~
~'-!
~ ~~
1>. , .,;;
~
1 '
lo·
4i4i6i·i8i27i4i.ii~iii ~~~~~~~~~~~T~~~~§~~~~~i
,lnantlal
41
21
0
Business
·
pportumty
Urgentl y needed f our l~d ies
to train as beaut y adv1sors .
No eKpe ri ence necessary .
Unlimited earnin gs . Full or
part time . work from home.
Ca ll 6t4 -367 -0490. 675 5t62 . o• 446 - t 988
22 Money to loan
HOME LOANS t2 % fixed
rate . leader Mortgage, Ohio
o nl y t - 800 - 3 4t - 6554.
WVa . 6 t4 -592 -305 t
23
Professi onal
Services
C& L Bookkeeping
Bookkeeping & 18)( service
for all types of businesses .
Ca rol Neal 446 -3862
Houses for Rent
For rent or for sale, house. 5
mi . from town . no pets . Call
446 -1158.
1980 Governor 1 4x70. with
10x14 built on room .
87,000. Take over pay5 rm . house loc ated at 926 menta. Cell 614-643-2676
1st. Ave .. Gallipolis. Call after 6PM .
446 -3945 .
--------3 bdr. hou se with garage
located in Gallipolis. Ref . &
sec. dep . req . Call 4460264 evenings.
4 bedroom modern home
near Holzer. lease with
option to buy , $360
monthly . Cell 6t4 · 367·
7260 .
Nice. 2 bdr., duplex apt .,
large rooms , completely furnished. $186 per mo .. Main
St.. Cheshire. Call 6t4245 -58t8 .
1 mi . below Eureka 2 bdr .•
bath. reference, S150 dep
Ce116t4-643 -29t6 .
PIA NO TUNING & REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for app ointmen t , Ward ' s Keyboard .
446 -4372 .
PE RMANENT HAIR
RE MOVAL - Professional
Electro ly sis Ce nt er. Inc.,
A .M .A . Approved. Or. Referra ls . Gift Ce rtificates. new
hour1 .
By app oi ntm ent ,
304 -675 -6234 .
Real~scace
31 Homes for Sale
3 bdr . home in town. base-
ment. large lot. many tr ees,
woodburner , quiet neigh bor hood . 832.50 0 . Call
446 -4999
Fo r Sale - Repossessed
House. 3 bd .rooms. all refinished. new ca rpet throught .
Sits on 3 ac res . l ocated on
Bashan Rd . Exc . terms to
right party
Contact Bank
On e o f Pomeroy . 614 -992 2 t3 3.
HOUSE M eadow brook Ad dition , 3 bedrooms . family
room with firepa lce, ce ntral
ai r. basement. phone 304-
675 - t 542 .
LOV ELY 3 bedroo m. well
i nsul at ed .
full
basement ,
fenced back ya rd . out build-
ing , c urt ains included .
grea tl y redu ced . Must see to
appreciate. 304 -675 -4338 .
FOR sale or rent . 4 room
hou se. on Chestnut Ridge .
large lot. $14,000 or rent
$126. a month . $ 76. depos it, ph one after 3 p.m ..
304 -675 -7689 .
House. needs repairs, situated on large lot in Henderson, StO .OOO . 304 -675 6408
3 br. 2 baths, 2 ca r garage,
fir eplace. hea t pump, all
brick, 4 1h ac re s of land . 8 V2
perc ent assumable loan at
Apple Grove. 304 -576 2a65 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - S TAT E MOBILE
HOM ES
USED · CA RS.
TRU CK S . G A LLIPO LI S
C HECK OUR PR ICES .
C ALL446 -7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL ' S DUAL ITY MOBILE HOME SALE S.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274 .
12x60 2 bdr. Buddy mobile
hom e. Set up with 2 or 4
lbts. gas heat, rural water .
Plantz Subdivision . Call
446· t240 .
USED MOBILE
576 -27tt .
35 lots
HOME .
& Acreage
Modern 3 bdr. full basement. N . 160. 6 mi. from
Holzer Medical Center, Ref .
& sec . dep. Call 446 ·0595.
nished.
pets,
2 bdr. no
gas
& f200,
water $tOO
furdep . Cellefter 5, 446 -4746 .
Mobi le home fore rent,
adults only. Call 446·3368 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
adults, no pets, references.
20 acres close Cheater. $75 deposit . Call e14-3e78eautiful wooded hometite. 1 _
77
_4
_3_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
t..nd contract . 810,900. or 1·
3
bedroom
Mobile Home.
beat offer. 6t4-985 -432t .
Approximately 6 miles from
Two acre lots-150 ft. road Pomeroy or Middleport. Rt .
frontage. city water, behind t43 . 6t4·992-6868 ..
84 Lumber. Call 304 -676· 1- - - - - - 3
. room completely fur6673 or 676· 36t8.
nilhed. Nice location. 814-
~~~~~~~~~
illsrt!al&
~
43 Farms for Rent
Secluded, mini farm, all
fenced , remodel farm home,
with 4 bedr .• $300 per mo.
Cleland Realty 992-2259.
44
Apartment
for Rent
Furnished 3 r . private bath.
846 2nd. Ave .. Gallipolis.
Ref . preferred . Call 446 22t6 .
Small furnished effiency, 1
professional type male only.
Center air & heat. Call
446·0338 .
J_-v-
~~~-- oorn-
Fo~
992 · 3966 or 814-992 ·
7479
·
1
fWO-mobile homes for rent
41 Houses for Rent on Rt. 2 about 6 mlnuteo
from town . Call after e.
304·1176·6277.
Small lumiahod houoe. 1 or 1-,-14-M_I_L_E_ou_t_S_o_n_d_h_III-R-d.
2 odulta only. Cell 446·
• 11_
304 117 3834
0338.
oop5. I
John
IIC;:'~:'::~'·:;~~.JI'!~~~a·~
~~~~~~~:_
~
.:1_2_0_0.
~~· "
~ fr":'z"' beef, hell
'
8
••
\A.n,".:'C:;a-
.,
I§i"jnuhandlwe
51 Household Goods
76
!~5 . •
SWAIN
AUCTION & FURNITURE
STORE 82 Olive St .. Golll·
polio. King cool lo wood
h..tero with fon t469. HI
box apring • amattreu
1100, firm 1120, oofa.
lovn•t lo choir 1199, lo""
••t• f70, new coello wood
he otero u low 11 t399 with
blo-ro, uoed cool & wcod
helltlro, now dlnet 1011 t75
& up, refrlgeratoro, rangeo,
bunk bode complete 1170,
bunldeo mottr-• t40,
cheoto, drooo.... ·TV'o. Call
4411·3189.
1-
78
Used Furniture - - bookcase.
rangea. chairs, end tables.
washers, dryers, refrigera tors and TV' a. 3 miles out
BulaviUe Rd . Open 9am to
6pm, Mon. thru Fri., 9am to
6pm, Sat.
446-0322
Grave blankets. e14 -9927 320.
---------Nat!A'al gas dryer e86 . Frigidaire jet action washer.
white , $100 . 8t4-742·
2362.
1983 Necchi sewing ma chine colt new 8439.95,
equipped with free arm, zig
zag, and much mOf'e. Repossaued model only 3 months
old , like new condition, pay
off balance owed of only
$tt6. Call 6t4 -386·89t8.
out of town call coli act.
40" Frigidaire stove, white,
$86. Whirlpool washer &
dryer. green, $126 . 6t4742-2362.
USED Furniture. Refrigerator, 36 in . gas range. living
room suites. so fa bed,
swivel rockers, end tables,
coffee table . Corbin and
Snyder, 966 Second, 446·
tt7t .
56
POODLE GROOMING. Cell
Judy Taylor at 614- 3877220 .
~ 1 I~ 1..1
l ~,l-;:~ c-:~l~{rl«<fmoK
MY, lFEE.L L
liKE
I
NEVE.!'
~ ~~·."bu/\\' ·~~ ~J~;~~\~v~~ ~Jl~S
1
'IMS2·~ ~
'r~~~·r
itlfM ·
om<-nn • .. \'; f"1' o~ HI(.
~
WHEW
I. ·
~
...
""
~'Y
Jj
:.....:..:..-
•
'l'~
)
~~RN~
1~;;:;
-. .,: _, ll~:
-....,
\. /
' · •
\
~I
~I
'li
ij
f;
.• ~:...... . ......
· N<<>UINc:O Wtlt.N
.--
c\i;:
~~
LEFT~ II·!C
2e ft. covered wagon travel
trailer, t2,400 . Call 814843-2916.
64
HayS. Grain
Mixed hoy for oole. •t.60
bolo . 8t4-843· 3294 after 6
p.m.
Hovel:~~~~~~~~~~
Spaniel
pupploo and
•160.
bean
wormed
had all
ahota. Call 8t4 -38B -9766
after 5PM .
71
Autos for Sale
Registered Himelayan 7
month old female kitten .
declawed. has had allthots. t979 Pontile Sunblrd, 4
cyl ., 4 opd., AM· FM ltero.
Call614·245 -6000.
olr, 48,000 mi .. axe. cond .
Coll448· 7838 or 448·1387
Went a cute, fuzzy stocking after &PM.
stuffer. AKC M i n e t u r e i - - - - - - - - -Schnouzer puppieo. Will be 1979 Oldo Delte 88 Royal.
AM-FM otero, cru 1oe
reody week before Chrilt· A
mas. Salt and pepper, ahota control, electric duel lodes,
and wormed . Call 446- rear dafogg1r, tilt steering
4880.
wheel , new tlreo. Coli 8t4·
AKC REg . Cocker Sponiel _37
_ 9_·_2_3_2_o_.- - - - 1
block & white 1 yr. old, t981 Dodge Omnl 4 dr..
lwmole. Call 446-2203.
new tireo, Alpine rodlo ovaRegistered English coon tom, 4 opd ., 37 MPG
houndo pupo. t36 . uch. overoga, $3,900. Cell 448·
6830.
304-676-2799.
c.
Shih Tzu pu ppleo reody for
Chrillmoo. Will hold with
depollt, coli altar
304·
676· 3838 .
e.
57
Mllsical
Instruments
We will MEET or BEAT. any
legitinate pri:e yo .. receive
on any new piano or organ.
BRUNICARDI MUSIC CO ..
6t Court St .. GollipoNo. Call
446·0687.
-------·lcELECTRIC organ, 304-468·
t617 .
58
Fruit
& Vegetables
77 Bonneville, 66,000
mUea, excellent condition ,
•3.300. Coli 446· 8639 .
1978 Pondoc 8 p111anger
wagon. elr, AM ·FM, CB,
good fomly cor, $1,000.
Cell 4411-2439.
t978 Ford Pinto CountTy
Squi'e, rod w~h wooden
grain aiding, crome wheats,
$1,200. Call448-2469.
88 Camero, $3,000. Call
8t4· 379-2726.
I - - - - - - --
198 t Chryoler Cordoba, low
mileo, $8,000. Cell 6t4·
379-2726 .
1976 Cougar XR7 36 I .
P.S .• p .b., a.c .• a.t .• cruise,
t .w .. om-fm tope. •1.360.
81 4-992·8676 .
81
JIVIDENS FARM 1973 chevy pickup 63,000
EQUIPMENT
mlleo. Engine and body In
446-1676
good lhepo. •1.300. orB 0.
NEW·· long tractoro,
Call 446· 1808.
Vermeer balers • hay
equipment. bale movers •
1977 F·260 Ford 4x4, very
feedera, wagons, rotary
good lhape, hoe 8.000 lb.
tillers, rotary cutten,
-m winch, olr, AM· FM
....
plowo, dloc, COIHtte, 34,000 mi., lOti of
cuhivetora, blades, gates,
extroo, •6.600. Coli 6t4·
& power waahera.
3117·083t .
Andoeouotogetocomplote 1 - - - - - - - - -llne of parte & oervl.. l
1970 lntomotlonol Scout.
USED·· 276 Money Flfgu- 304·45B·1882 .
oon w~h loador, IH hydro 1- - - - - - - - - · l c 70. two Ford Jubll••· 100 1968 GMC pickup, t700 or
Ford, B·N Ford, 70 Ollv.er, bolt oflwr. 304· 876· 7485
Ferguoon 30, M1111y orcouldbeo•nat922 23rd
Harrla-poney, corn plenter, StrHt.
plowo, dloc, round boler.
gooae neck grain trailer.
J.D. manu• spreader.
73 Vena& 4 W.O.
WE
BUY
USED
EQUIPMENT!
1980 Jeep CJ-6 good
cond., 4 extra whoolo. Cal
1 largo bin will hold approxi- 448-3807.
'.
mately 1.600 lbo .. of groin
oteel conotructlon. Coll614- 1979 Blozer 4 WD, 380
379· 21109.
ou10. , 28,000 mlloo, lock·
·out hubo. 304-882·2234
after 8 p.m.
62 Wanted to Buy
74
Motorcycle•
I wll pay 28c per lb. for 1 - - - - - - - - tobocco quote. 304-87112911 ·
1974 Y11111h1 Enduro dirt
bite. 2,900 mlleo. Col 488·
1197.
63
Llvaatock
11711 8uz'*l 880 hoe bean
,.altad. molta offer. • Cal
3 outotontlng club co""'•· 488· 1997.
Buder Horo!Ord Farm. Cal
1114· 281: 1113. or 1114· Hondo 80 Mini bike, good
2811·1181&.
oond.. U80. Cell 4411·
7322.
Roglot ... d
Horle.
Aloo •••· lodcl•. brldleo, Honda 10 Trill llko. Exc.
wlntllf'hO...btlllkala.Weot· cond . 1178. 1114· 112·
ern booto. 114·881·:1210.
7288.
II:;;::=;:==:;:==
au••
CONCEHTflllTION, l
IFOii~T Tlf'
TIME',
AH'~
United CraftA. Roofing ,
apouting, aiding and a«Jrm
windows. No job too large or
too omoll. Ooby A . Martin,
Rodney Howery. 8t4-992·
8370.
YES, IT'S CHOCK-FULL
OF CHOPPED WATER
LILLIES, SWAMP GRASS,
United Craft. Complete Cerpentry Servl... No job to ·,
large or too omoll. O.by A . .
Martin, Rodney Howery . ·
8t4· 992-8370.
SHREDDED DUCKWEEP,
AND,UH .... .
RON' S Televlalon Service .
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar. and
houoe colla. Cell 676-2398
or 446· 2464.
F 8t K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Cell 676 -1331 .
RINGLE'S SERVICE expo·
rienced roofing. including
hot tar application, cerpen ter, electriciar . mason. Call
304-676-2088 or 676 4680.
Plumbing
S. Heating
United Craft Plumbing and
heating aervica. No job to
large or to small. Oaby
A .Martin. Rodney Howery.
Phone 814·992·8370.
84
&
Electrical
Refrigeration
SEWING Machine repolro,
service. Authorized Singer
Soleo lo Service Shorpen
Sciuon. Febrlc Shop,
Pomeroy. 992·2284.
llARNF. Y
HIS "OL' MULE
85
15 FIXIN'TO
RETIRE
Gener11l Hauling
JONES BOYS WATER SER·
VICE . Call 814-387-747t
or 814-367-0691 .
Need something hou led
away or tomething moved1
We' ll do it. C.ll448·31 59 or
614·258-19871fter
e.
Now Hauling houaa coal,
lump or otolcer up to 8 ton .
llmeotone, top ooll. flU dirt.
Call814-387·7101 .
Water hauling. Cistern,
wello, etc. John Bloke, 6t4·
992·8888.
PEANUTS
JIMB Wotor Service. Cell ,
Jim Lonl.,, 304·878·7397. •·
87
WHOOPS! NOW
I'VE DONE. IT!
Upholatery
---------- . ::,
TRI stAre
UPHOLSTERY 8HOP
1 1113 Bee. Ave.. Galllpollo.
4411•7833 Of 4411·1833.
:·
~
,
..
·.
Cil
rn
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 448·
4477
1
t•
T'KEEP 'DAODY' WAITIN'Ii'INNE~
/WIIN. CATCHitl' UP ON ~
SCHOOLIH' TAK.E5 50 MUCH
TH' WINO MOVIN' TH'
8RAHCHE5 AROUND, I 6UE%..
TREE5 SURE TAKE ON CREEPY
5HIIPES ONCE fT GETG ~H. -
•• JUST
a.
82
61
HAVE T'BE CAAEFUL HOT
CHRISTIAN ' S CON ·
STRUCTION. Conltr .. roof·
ing, siding, spouting, fencing, painting, repein
cleonlng. Call 446-8253 or · ;
446-2000.
1 9BO Turbo Trone Am,
T-top, low mileage, loaded,
after 6, 304-678· 2906.
• " •••••
I==========
Farm Equipment
72 Trucks for Sale
ANN I E
CAPTAIN STEEMER Corpet
Cleaning feotured by Hoffelt
Broathera Custom Carpets.
Freo eodmateo. Cell 446·
2t07.
ADVANCED Seomlau
Gutt8r- Doors. Offering continuee guttering, aeemle11
aiding, roofing, garage
doors, free eatimatea,' 814698-8206.
~~~~~~~-~~~74
Plymouth
II1
1
II
matic
po pb Sotellita,
$1 29" auto304
'MAPI 11
ass-3es& . •
u.
·
-
Marcum Roofing lo Spout·
ing. 30 years experience,
specializing in buih up roof .
Coli 6t4·388-9867.
1976 FORD 4 door oedan.
pa. pb, air conditioning,
cheap, good condition .
.796. 304-468 · t 864
evening a.
1979 Ford Courrior, good
condition , $3,200. Call
304·876-4148 .
WHAT'S IJ.Ant 111~
HA.TS ~
PAINTING
Interior and
exterior, plumbing, roofing,
some remodeling . 20 yra .
exp. Coli 814-388·9852.
Buy your Chrl1tm11 opploo
now, while prices are cheap.
Rome Beauty oppleo, •s.
bulhal; Goldin Deliclouo,
higher. Freah made sorghum
mola11e1, $4. 1'.1 !l'lllon.
Crump' I Red Apple Hou•.
Rt. 35, Hendoroon.
POTATOES, .8 tOO LB.
BAG, Wisconsin RuaHtt no.
t appleo, H buohel. Roy·
burn's Marttet. Kanauga,
Ohio.
BOR N I.OSF.R
..
Cil
Nawaconter
MOVIE: 'St. lves'
(I) Tic Tac Dough
(!) Future Sport
(]) Carol Burnett
(]) 0 (]) Ill (121 News
(I) .Nowa/Sports/Weather
(I) ® 3·2·1 , Contact
GD Eyewitness News
6 :30 II Cil (I) NBC Newo
(I)
MOVIE:
'Armored
Attack'
(!) ESPN's Sportaforum
(]) Bob Newhart Show
(]) Gl (121 ABC News
0 Cll ® CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
®Over Easy
7 :00 II Cil P.M. Magazine
CD Men's Gymnastics:
1982 Ceasar's Palace
Invitational This program
shows how money can be
saved and spent wisely.
(!) This Week In the NBA
(]) Gomer Pyle
(() Entertainment Tonight
(I) Charlie's Angels
0 (])Tic Tee Dough
(I) ®
MacNeil -lehrer
Report
® Eyewitness News
Ill (l2l People's Court
7 :30 II Cil ® You Asked For
It
(!) ESPN SportsCenter
(]) Andy Griffith
Cll 0 Cll Family Feud
Cll Business Report
® This Old House
Ill (l2l Entertainment
Tonight
B:OO II Cil (I) Father Murphy
Lizette falls in love with a
troublesome teenager. (60
min.)ICiosed Capt ioned!
CIJ MOVIE: 'Falling in
love Again'
Cll MOVIE : 'Rough Cut'
(I) I Spy
(!) Best of the NFL · 1970
Oakland
Raiders
Highlights.'
ffi
NBA
Basketball:
Philadelphia at Atlanta
(]) Ill (l2l Happy Days
0 Cll ® Bring 'Em Back
Alive An intelligence agent
wants Buck 's help to res cue another agent . (60
min.)
Cll ® Nova 'Goodbye,
Louisiana .' Tonight' s program reports on the stag gering wa ter problems of
Southern Louisiana . (60
min.) IClosed Captioned I
8 :30 (!) Top Rank Boxing from
Las Vegas
(]) Gl 1lZl Laverne &
Shirley
9 :00 0 Cil CD Gavilan Gavilan
teams up with a spy -Intraining to ge t back Gavilan·s latest invention . (60
min .)
(I) 700 Club
(]) Gl (l2l Three 's
Company
0
(]) ® MOVIE :
'Something So Right'
Cll (jj) Mystery! 'Melissa .·
First of 2 part s. Guy Fost er
1s suspected of murdering
hi s wife . (60 min .) ]Closed
Captioned]
9 :30 Cll Ill (12i 9 to 5
t 0 :00 II Cil CD St. Elsewhere
Or. Samuels becomes Involved with an orthopediC
patient and Or. Cavanero
attempts to deliver a baby
by telephone . (60 min .)
CV More Unexpurgated
Benny Hill Thi s Briti sh TV
star returns with more comedy sketches .
Cll MOVIE: 'Kenny Rogers as The Gambler'
(]) Ill (l2l Hart to Hart
Cll Firing line
® Newswatch
1 0 :15 (]) TBS Evening News
10:30 (I) Star Time
Cill Inside Washington
Mark Shields hosts this
behind-the-scene s look at
the nation 's capital.
1 1 :00 II
Newscentar
CIJ MOVIE: 'Ode to Billy
Joe'
(J) ESPN SportsCenter
(]) 0 Cll Ill (121 News
(I) News/ Sports/Weather
Cll Dave Allen at Large
®l Eyewitness News
11 : t 5 ffi All In the Family
t t :30 0 Cil CD Tonight Show
(}) Another life
Cll Benny Hill Show
0 Cll Quincy
Cll PBS Late Night
® All In the Family
Ill (12i Nightline
t1 :45 CIJ MOVIE: 'The Party'
(]) MOVIE: 'Room at the
Top'
t 2 :00 (I) Burns & Allen
(!) ESPN Special: CFL
Ft!<>tball Championship 19B2 Grey Cup from
Toronto
(]) Nightline
®
MOVIE:
'Rooster
Cogburn'
Ill (!21l.ast Word
t 2 :30 II Cil (I) lata Night with
David letterman
(I) Jack Benny Show
CIJ Last Word
0 (I) MOVIE: 'McMillan
& Wife: Two Dollaro on
Trouble to Win'
CIJ Captioned ABC News
12:45 Cil MOVIE: 'Sphinx'
1 :00 (I) I Married Joan
Gl (121 News
1 :30 II
Cil NBC News
Overnight
CIJ MOVIE: 'St. lves'
(I) My Little Margie
(I) News/Sign Off
Gl (121 CNN Headline
Newa
1 :45 (]) MOVIE: ' The Great
Gerrick'
2;00 (I) Bachelor Father
1!1 CIJ. ® CBS News
· Nlghtwatch
2 :30 (I) Ute of Riley
(!) .ESPN SportaCenter
2 :45 Cil MOVIE: 'Tho Howling'
3:00 CIJ MOVIE: 'Rough Cut'
(]) 700 Club
.
3:30 (!) Thla Week In tho NBA
3:45 (]) MOVIE: 'Her Kind of
Men'
6 :00
STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings commercial and residential . free
altlmoteo. Cell 814·268·
1182.
Water Wells. Commercial
and Domeatic. Telt hohts.
Pumps Sates and Service.
304·895·3802.
byHonriAmoldandBobLee
lour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary warda.
EVENING
Home
Improvements
Ground corn, e&.OO per
cwt. Will mix minerals. HARTS Uoed Core, New
mot11•s. if deai'ed. 304- . Haven Welt Virginia . Over
20 leaa expensive cara in
876-3308.
stock.
9
~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ $
UniCrlmblo -
e-
11/30/82
=
lee lww
DRAGONWYND CATIERY
· KENNEL. AKC Chow pup·
pleo, CFA Himalayan, Per- Hay for salt. Orchard gre11,
sian and Siema• kitt.,a. Timothy & clover. Stored at
Llohor Ferm, Rudand. Oh.
Coli 446-3B44 after 4PM.
Goebel Anguo Form, Cool·
Would you likeocutoCocker ville, 1-614·887· 383B ev·
· __
Spaniel puppy for Chrllt· _en_l_ng.::._o-'&_w_e_okAI_n_d_•_
moa1 AKC Blonde Cocker 1
REPOSSESSED SIGN! No·
thing down! Take over pay·
menta e&s .oo monthly .
(4' x8 ' 1 fluhing arrow olgn .
ew bulbs, letters . Hale
Signa. t -800 - 626- 7446
anyhne.
with Major Hoople
Holata in heifers for sale. 2 to
tO monthl old. •160. to
uoo. 614·742-3033.
'illli'INl ID~
S~ntinei - Po
TUESDAY
C'APTAN EASY
livestock
63
Pets for Sale
HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding all breedo. AKC
Reg . Dobermans pupa and
Doberman Stud Service.
Coli 446-7795.
Hot point electric dryer S60.
t now gr'"'" awag llght$26.
Call 6t4·992-6260 after 6
p.m.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
1 _,...>..
Television
Viewing
Auto Parts
S. Accessories
Motors Homes
S. Campers
The Doily
TRACY
Short bod topper, good
condition, •1 00. 304·876·
8476.
a.
I f.U
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi
6 cylinder Rambler tran•
minion. 304-676·2271.
Firewood delivered •eo. 1
cord. Cool dellvorod •45.
ton . Coli Tom Hooklna 814·
949 - 2t60 or 614 -742 ·
2834.
furn~ure,
~
1982
cord . Split and
o_"''lv_•r_e_d_._8_t_4_-8_4_3_·_3_6_o_3_.
1
$42. 5 dr. chelto, , 54 . Bed Now aolid oak
lot
oetl,
4 dr. chelle,
frames,$196.
820 .and
826 ., 10 of mlac.itema. Buy direct
gun • Gun cabinets. , 360 _, and save. Chriatmas lay-adinettocholro $20. and $26 . way avollable. Open Sun·
dayo . CONKELS
Gaaoraloctricrongeo. S325 ANTIQUES-Tuppera Plalna .
up to $376 . Baby ma·
tresses. S26
836, bed _R_t._7_.- - - - - - - frames 820, 826, & *30, 1
king frame 860 . Goodselec- S & E Giftl Shop aelllng
Hon of bedroom suites, entire ltock. Call 614-992·
cedar cheats. rockers, metal 6162. Acro11 from Codnen
cabinets, swivel rockers .
in Syracuee, Oh.
I~~? A_i!:J...sb
DIC'K
Boata--and
Motora for Sale
30,
or
.ro .
Fire>Wod. S36. truck load .
8110. Manre11ea
bo•
springs,
full or twin,ore68
.•
firm, 8e8. and 878. Queen
I HO\olv~f:Of.If..V
Tuesday, November
t2 ft. aluminum boat. 4 h.p.
Chryolor. Seoro electric.
814-992-3013.
i/.',;,i.'c;u 61 :v~,!".b~1 tthru
3
1
1982
1979 8111 Trackor1t 1. Like
new, big motor. needs repolr. 814· 988·4339 after 8
p.m.
0
0
I~===========-l:=========~
COUNTRY MOBILE Homa
Pork. Routlt 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large: Iota. Cal
992 -7479 .
To 'feU.,
0
1Gra,ll;~~:
••
~
f'.-rO
Fuel oil a«Jve w;th tank,
movilt camere with projec !Or In very good cond . Coli
l-8_1_4_·_
3_6_7-_o_s_8_t_.- - - -
76
30,
- ·-··-"-
1974 Chryller 18ft. boot.
1978 ChryiHr 90 horae
motor with power lift. Boot,
motor & trOller U,OOO. Coli
814-3117·0831.
'' 'fiMBiR!" .~
11
2nd floor fumished apt.
Adults only, no pats. You
Call Robert Harper for Gin For rent furnished 3 bdr.. pay own utilities. 729 2nd Whirlpool avacado washer- seng and YelloWJoot prices .
dryer pair extra, nice con d .•
house 6 mi. from Gallipolis. _A_v_e_.C_ei_I_4_4_6_·0_9_5_7_._ _
$260 . Dryers, also nice 304-676· t293.
Call 446 -0469 .
1
variety
, 30 day guaranteed.
Houses and 1 & 2 bdr.
BUYING and oelling used
FOR RENT 2 be.droom apartments for rent . HUD Call 6t4·266 ·t 207.
heavy equipment (agricultuhouse downtow, $276 rent program available. A-One
ral, construction, mining,
plus deposit. Call Baird & Real Estates, Carol Yeager. G.E. washer & dryer good chemical industry, etc .)
asking
$260.
Call
cond
.,
Fuller Realty , 446 -70t3 .
Realtor . Call 304 -676 through consignment for a
446·3926 .
6t04 or 676 -6386 .
national company. Starting
Newty remodeled 2 bed- 1- - - - -- - - - at $16,000. value . Cell
room house, located 3 miles Nicely furnished mobile G.E. auto washer, harvest Robert L Harper. 304-676·
gold,
guaranteed,
S11
0
.
from Addison . Security dep - home. central air, 1 mila
t293 .
osit. refer11nce s required . below city overlooking river. Kenmore auto washer .
Cell 446 -3775.
adults only. Call 446·0338 . $tt0 .. white . Both 30 day WOOD split & delivlfod,
warranties . Call 446 -8181 .
$30. pick up truck load,
Furnished house 241 Jack- Furnished effiency. Utilfties
phone 304 -676-777t .
son Pike. Gallipolis. S176, pd. $136 . J V2 Neil Ave .,
water paid, 2 bdr. Call Gallipolis. 446 -4416 after 7 54 Misc . Merchandise FIREWOOD, $60 . cord,
446 -44t6 after 7PM .
1- - - - - - - - - $30. Y, cord, delivered p.m.
ltocked, 304-676-6366 .
Pomeroy -2 bd . 100m unfur- 2 bdr. unfurnished apt. in Plastic Septic Tanks. State
nished house . $195 . mo . Crown City . Call 614 -256 - and county approved. 1,000 1.4 CARAT diamond engageSecurity deposit. S100. plus 6520.
gal. tank, price 8340. Other ment ring, 10 carat white
utilitie s. After 6 -c all 614- 1- - - - - - -- - - sizes in stock, haul in your gold setting, 8260. excel 992 -2288 .
2 bdr. apt. partially furnish, pickup truck . Col16t4 -266· lent Christmas gift, 304newly remodeled, gas heat. 6930, Jackson, Oh . RON 676·6644.
riverfront view. water paid. EVANS ENTERPRISES
4 room house. Preferably Call 446·39t9 .
Fire>Wod. $30.00 load oplit,
adults. no pets. 6t4 -992·
Wood burning add on fur- 826 ., unaplit, delivered,
Furnished
effiency.
UtiHtiea
398t .
nance. Still in factory crate, 304-6i6- t206 .
pd .. 70t 4th Ave ., Gallipo- $450 . Call t - 6t4 · 266 ·
Nice 3 bedroom house lis . $t50 . Call 446-44t6 t2t6 .
King size waterbed includes
$2 50 . month . $100. dep- after 7PM .
frame. headboard. heater,
osit. References needed . 1- - - - - -- - - - Waterline For Sale 'A inch vibrator. brand new. Call
Near mine 1. 614 -742 - Furnished apt . 3 bdr, $195, 160 PSI $17.96 per 100ft., 304-676 -4t48 .
2t26 .
water paid, children & pets t' t60 PSI $28.96 per t 00
acceptable, 131 4th AVe. ft ., t 'lo' t60 PSI $47.60 per Two diamond engagement
6 rooms & bath, unfur- Gallipolis. $150 . Call 446 - 100 ft . Ron Evans Enter- r~ga, 1-wedding band and
prises, 4 miles South of 1-pre-engagement ring, ap _4_ t_6_ ah
_ er_7_P_M_._ _ __
nished . Deposit required . l-4
New paint & carpeting .
Jackson on St. Rt. 93, praised at over •1t 00. Will
6t4 -992 -3090.
POMEROY -2 bedroom un - 6t4·286-6930 .
oell seportaly or all for $500.
furnished apt., $160. 2
304-676-273t .
Unfurnished house . 6 rooms bedroom house $185 . Dep- For sale R.eataurant end bath . All new paint . osit $100 . Call 614 -992- Carryout equipment. used, t 976 Vag a, 31.000 mileo.
Carpeting . Deposit re - _2_2_88_
. - - - - - - - lowest prices . RADCO, ExceUent condition . girls
quired. 6t4-992· 3090 .
304· 623-t378.
1
clothing size nb to 24
6 rm apt .. with 3 bdr. in
months. 304-676-2633.
FIVE bedroom. 2 % baths. Middleport, $160 per mo. Baby high chair. good condi beautifully decorated Victo- 1 p~l_u_
s _d_
• P_-_9_9_2_·_5_6_9_2_._ _ tion . Call 468 - t997 .
8 months old Yamaha rerian. carpets, drapes. formal 1ceiver, Technics tum table, 2
·dining room . gas heat, 5 room Apt . with 3 For sale lump coal & fire- large Fisher speakers, pd
S550 . month . 304 ·675 - bd.rooms in Middleport. wood . Zinn Coal Co ., Inc. $850. will oell for $660.
6804 .
$150 . month. plus depos;t. Coll446· t408 .
304-895-387B .
Call 6t4 -992 -5692 .
4 room house, unfurnished .
Firewood for sale. Call 614 - 8ft. pool table with accello good location. 304 -675 - Efficiency apt . 6t4 -992· 388 -968t .
riea, good cond . 8126.
t302 .
6434 .
304 -896-33t6 .
WOODBURNING STOVES
Furnished 4-room co ttage . Apartments . 304 - 676 - Free standing fireplace inAdults. No Pets . 304 -676· 5648 .
serts, mobile home and Truck
b ed. topper,
8 ft.like
fur new
long
insulated,
t453 .
fumance ad -ona. Jividens 8160.
304 -676-324&.
APARTMENTS , mobile Farm Equipment . Call 446 homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant t676 .
42 Mobile Homes
and Gallipolis. 614-44655 Building Supplies
8221 or 6t4· 245 -9484.
Royle Cool Co .. Upper Rt . 7,
for Rent
Gallipolis. Houae coal for
Unfurnished apartments for sole. Call 446·9200.
Building materials block,
2 & 3 bedr. trailer lot for rent . Call Automotive 1- - - - - - - - - - brick. sewer pipes, winSupply, 8 till 6. 304·676· Firewood, S 100. dump
rent . Call 446· t 062 .
22t8, 304 -675 -6763.
truck load. Delivered . Call dows, lintels. etc. Claude
Winters. Rio Grande, 0. Call
6t4· 388-9687.
Furnished 2 bdr. trailer with
614·246·6t21 .
TWO bedroom apartment,
bath & half at Evergreen . excellent condition, newly
Seasoned firewood . split,
Out 160 2Y2 mi. will accept painted , carpeted. washer &
Build your own garage or
stacked and delivered for
children & pets. Call 446dryer hookup, private en- S30 • larga load. Call barn. 24x24 , •8.960 .
0t57.
Lumber furnished. Can de1- - -- - - - - - - trance , off street parking. 446-7993.
liver.
Other sizes. Call 1reference required. 304- l - - - - - - - - - - 6t4-886-73t1 .
Eur9c:a 2 bdr .. furnished , 676 - t962 .
Heotolotor, $76. Cell 446·
ri ve rfront lot, ref . & dep. Call
3873.
NEW SHIPMENT Matol
6t4 -643· 2644.
1 bedroom furnished apartaheeta for all bulding purment, utilfties paid, outskirts Captains bed . lite new. po••· Flat porcellllln enemel
1970 Squires mob. home of Henderson. 8226 · phone
round gleaa tabht , 10 Kt . coated . 4x8 thru 4 x 12.
304-675 -6730.
·
s7 . oo t o •9 .u
•o .
for sale or rent , good cond ., I::;::;:==::;:=;;:::==
men' s black onyx and dia - Pncaa,
Crown City. Call446 -3926 . I
mond ring. Cell 614· 266- Oddo olzaa for troller under·
46 Space for Rent
t768 .
pinning. 6t4·887·3085.
Adults only, no pets, total
elect ri c. Call 367-7438 .
Ni ce lot in area 's host
subdi vision . appr oved for
FHA & VA loan. owner
finan ce . Ca ll 614 -256 t2t6 .
42 Mobile Homes
f or Rent
I·So;;;lo;ol,,~;.~~·;~;,~·:-;;;;;t;;;;i;,
1~-::-~:· '~"'!' .,... 1nd uelo.
plonter,
November
by Larry Wright
, o •n.; ~ of each, $200. 4
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
/I()M~ oo•
T~
Ohio
Moto X blcycln, mfg . by
ldul. •t26. Batz Hondo
448 2 240
pllan ..o, Upper River Rd.,
bulde Stone Cntlt Motel.
448· 7398.
Ill.
..
64 Misc . Merchandise KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
. wolhero. dryoro, relrlgaro·
toro, rongeo . Sltaggo Ap·
Kar ate the ultimate in self
defence all pt'ivate leuons,
Men, women . &. c hildren.
Instru ctio n thru black belt.
Al so available Kara te uni-
Burlington
... ' "
ft
.-.-~
,,
"
NIROY
THE SAILOR TU~NED
MIN ISTER WAS
SKILLED AT THIS.
I DAYNITb
. I KI_
Ans~tarhere:
.
[
Now arrange the circled let1ers to
form the surprise answer. as suggested by the above cartoon
I I XXJ r XXXI ]
(Answers tomorrow)
Yesterday's
I
Jumbles: GASSY BERTH NESTLE
Answer : A soft touch -A CARE SS
DEFACE
Jumble e-. No. 20, containing 110 puzzles, Is available I Of $1 .95 potlpald
lrom Jumb'e, clo thla newapaper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J . 07648. Include rour
n1me, lddtnl, zl code and make checks payable to News
a.
BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
Mystery lady's saga
August. Barbara, winner of
NORTH
many mixed and women's
11 -30-82
titles. was an adve r tisi ng
genius and her all too few
bridge articles were both
good bridge and gr ea t
humor.
In thi s one. the la te John
Crawfo rd is depicled as a
br id ge-playing J ames Bond .
Barbara is a myst ery lady
who becomes declarer with
Crawford as dum m y. Howard Schenken. introd uced as
" a man who looked like
Sche nk e n . talked lik e
Schenk en and act uall y was
Schenken." was East.
Th e m ystery lady ruffed
ihe second diamond. cas hed
the spade ace and r uffed a
low spade. Then she took her
ace-king of trumps and led
the spade queen to West 's
ki ng.
West cas hed the queen of
trumps for the third delen si ve trick and led his 10 of
spades. Now Barbara (the
myste r y lady) ran all her
trumps and squeezed West
to claim th e bal ance .
Schenken asked , " Why
didn't you lea d a cl ub.
+8
. 74
• J 963
+AQJ 743
WEST
EAST
+K1 0952
• 63
• J 10
HKQ742
• Q9 6
t85
+ 10 8 5
+K 96
SOUTH
+A QJ74
.AK8 532
• 10
+2
Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
West
I.
Eas t
North
South
Pass
Pass
Pa ss
Pass
Pa ss
2+
Pass
3+
Pass
Pa ss
Open ing lea d: tB
By Oswald Jacob y
and James Jacoby
partner?''
"Bridge World" magazine
has just published a short
anthology of its bes t articl es
from the ea rly '6 0s.
The first article is by Bar bara Kachmar . who died thi s
Barbara sa id , " I wo uld
have had to finesse to get a
di sca rd of my la st low
soade"
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Intrigue
6 - and ca rry
10 Western or
Spanish
12 Roman
emperor
13 Household
14 Anagram
for Leon
15 Finis
16 Tavern
18 Born
19 Half-brother
of William I
20 Unstable
22 English river
DOWN
I Inv itation
2 Set right
3 Hold a course
4 Menu tenn
5 On the square
6 San Quentin
guest
7 Ready to use
Yesterday's Answer
8 Utter
9 Punctured
26 0 'Hara
~~ Hag
11 Basic doctrine
plantation :14 Of the ear
17 Without a
28 Cuban
:15 He broke
chaser
province
Ruth 's r ecord
21 Gin
~0 Belt
41 C.S. A . leader
23 Fencing foil
~2 TV teacher43 Cr ee k
24 "Pinafore"
men
25 Kind of store
(abbr.)
27 Mexica n treat 1
29 Oceans
31 Meat
33 City in Italy
36 "0 Sole - "
37 Dull routine
38 Constellation
39 Got together
40 Russian city
42 Unmitigated
44 Part of the
neck
45 Ballet tenn
46 Different
47 Consumers'
crusader
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTEIa
Here's how to work
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LONGFEI.L OW
It: ·
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A li
used for the three L's, X for th e two O's, etc . Si ngle letters..·
apootrophes the length and formati on o f th e words are all-·
hinta. Each day the code letters are different.
. ·'
CRYPTOQUOTES
PLY
SN
SOB
SN
A L N P V
HOTB
DBBWBW
PS
P G B
ULDW
HP
A E B H P-.
p
s
J G H P
SNNBE
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PGB
OB
LV ··:
USUBDP .
AEHILHD
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Yet~le!'day's Cryptoquote : ANIMALS FEED THEMSELVES; .~
MEN EAT ; BUT ONLY WISE MEN KNOW THE ART OJ!' EATING.-BRIIJ..AT.SAVARIN
•
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�Page- l 0- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Mid~leport, Ohio
Consultant says retailers
need to 'relearn hustle'
..--Local briefs:--.
Literary club m eets Wednesday
The Middleport Literary Club will meet Wednesday at 2 p.m. at
the home of M rs. Bernard .Ful tz.
A book review "New Moon Rising" will be given by Mrs. M arvin
Wilson.
Plan therapy workshop Friday
A free day- long workshop on Play Therapy Is being sponsored
by the Southeastern Ohio Voluntary Educa tion Cooperative
(SEOVEC) in Athens on Friday , Dec. 3. Dr. Donald Gordon,
professor of psychology at Ohio University , will be the fea tured
presenter. The work shop will be held at !be SEOVEC office, 507
Richland Ave.. Athen s. from 10 a.m . to 3 p.m .
Parent s. teachers. community service workers, and university
representatives throughout sout heastern Ohio are encouraged to
att end. To register for the workshop, contact the SEOVEC office at
5!)1-42.l'J.
Meigs emergency runs
St>ven calh were answered by area squads yesterday and one,
ea rl'' this morning. according to the Meigs County Emergency
Medica l Sercice.
Th<> Middleport emergency squad transported Narlie Hysell from
a Bradbury residence to Holzer Medical Center at 7: ()I a.m.,
followed b\ another call at 9:50. when E lba Hutton was treatro by
the unit at hc·r Bradbury Road home. At 10: l2a .m ., Addison Seaman
was taken from Bre<>zy Heights to Holzer by the Pomeroy squad.
The Rut land unit was called to New Lima Road at 5:46 p.m .,
tra nsporting Tom Stewart to Veterans Memorial Hospital, then
back to New Lima at 8: -13p. m . to take Dennis Searles to Holzer. The
Middleport squad answered another call at 10:42 p.m .. lo Mechanic.
St .. from where Lisa Baxter was taken to Veterans Memorial.
Monday's final call was answered by the Pomeroy unit , which took
Harold Chane,· fmm the Pomeroy Health Care Center to Holzer.
At o: 21 a.m . Tuesday. Middleport was called to a Cole Street
residence. treat ing Linda Hendricks on the scene.
Missionary meet Thursday
The r<>gular month ly missiona ry meeting of the Hysell Run
Holin<>ss Church will be held Thursday at 7:30p.m . Speaker will be
R<>v. l.C'land Hal<'\'. and Pastor Theron Durham welcomes thepublic.
DON MORA
Mora named
to board post
Don Mora. Supervisor of th~
Meigs County Welfare Department, has been ap!lllnled to the
Gallia-Jackson-Melgs Community
Mental Health Center Board of
Directors, Bernard F. Nlehm, Ph.
D ., cent er director, anoounced
today. Mora, a Meigs County
native, was a dairy farmer for 33
years.
As a board member Mr. Mora Is
responsible lor representing the
community In establishing and
maintaining corporate structure of
the organization, planning, financial management, assuring quality
of care, evaluation and advocacy.
Other new board members appointed Include Mike Fortner of
Oak Hill and Sharon Keller of
Wellston.
Mary Brummitt
This week's " box score" repcrt from the Ohio Department of
Highwa.v Safct\· shows that of 20 fatalities reported last week, four
t20 p('rcent 1 were alcohol-related . So far this yea r. alcohol has been
im·olvcd in :l8 percent of aU traffi c fatalities .
·
During the past w<>ek. the state highway patrol made 934 arrests
for DWI. bringing the yea r 's total to 44.fr>5.
The repcr t also shows that of the 18 victims that had a sea tbelt
available. on!, · one wa s wearing a belt at the time of the crash.
The repcrt showed that during the past week there were three
deaths in full -sized cars. three in mid-sized cars. one in a compact.
Sf'\'f'n in subcompac ts. four in trucks and two pedestrian deaths.
Family funeral services were
held this morning at Carey Funeral
Home. Cleveland for Mary Ann
Neigler Brummitt. o7, Cleveland
who died Sunday morning at a
hospit al in Cleveland .
Mrs. B111mmitt was the daughter
of the late Eber and Dalphne
Neigler who were residents of t)le
Racine area .
She is survived by her husband,
William Brummitt ; three children,
Ivy Lee. Buddy and Jean all of
Cleveland; one sister, Betty Jean
Franklin. Cleveland ; one brother.
John Wingett. Cleveland and one
niece and thr<>e nephews.
Twent \' defendants were fined and five others forieited bonds in
Meigs CountY Court last Wednesday.
Fined b,· .Judge Patrick O'Brien were John Holsinger. Jackson,
O\'Nioad. $J.'io and costs: Frank Hallen. Jr ., Jackson, overload, $25
and c~sts: William La111e. Glenford, Ohio. speed, $20 and costs:
V!ornon BartPis. Cincinnati, sp.>ed, $23 and costs; Kathleen W .
Carson. Athens. speed. $10 and costs; Gary Hutton, Albany, failed to
vif'lcl . $10 and cost s: Jeffrey Kimes. Reedsville. insecure load. $15
;mel cos ts: Edward N. Emerson. Cincinnati. speed. $20 and costs;
Dennis T illh, Rutland . speed , $21 and costs; Barry Bryson,
Huntington. speed . $24 and costs: Raymond Patterson, Rutland,
sp('ed . $2 1 and costs: David Jenkins. Racine. speed, $24 and costs;
Larrv HolsingPr. Racine. sp('ed, $2.1 and costs: Joanne C. Hinshaw.
Huntington. iiiPgal passing . $20 and costs: Kevin E. Brooks,
Coolville. sp('ed . $20 and costs; Fred E. Kuhn. Middleport, unsa fe
vehicle. $111 and cost s; John D. Stumbo. Minersville, no opera tors
license. $7'i and cost s. pr obation: Esther Keeton, Pomeroy,
tciPphonP harassment , costs only: James W. Pickens. Rt. 2, Racine,
theft . $7o and costs. 30 da.vs confinement. 2.'> days suspended; Gary
Slaven. Micldlepcrt. non-supper!. two years probation and costs. pay
$10 a wf'ek arrearage and $35 a week supper! .
Forieiting bonds were Jeffrey R. Hawley. Middleport , improper
parking, ~12 50; Russell J . Woomer. Watert own, no valid license on
trailer. $.10.50; Carolyn Arbaugh, Ca nal Winchester, and Richard
Fisher . .Jr. Vienna. speed. $.'>0.50 each; Michael H. Schmidt , Rt. 1,
Reed sville. no registra tion decal. $45.50.
Plan Christmas sale
A special Christma s sa le of items in the lobby gift shop at Veterans
Memorial Hospita l wi ll be held Friday from !0:30a .m. to4 : 30 p.m.
Marvin Kelly has surgery
Marvin Kelly . Middlepcrt. underwent surgery this morning
(Tuesday ! at the Holzer Medical Center. Cards may be sent to him
there at Room 2.12.
Association meets Thursday
The Meigs Association for Retarded Citizens will m<>et Thursdaya t
7: 10p.m . at the Carleton School in Syracuse.
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) A
consultant who serves small business says retailers have had life soft
for so long , they' ve forgotten how to
hustle.
Jeffrey Slutsky of Fort Wayne,
Ind., president of the Retail M arketing Institute, says now that times
are tough, small businessmen have
had to relearn how to outsmart the
competition.
Slutsky, 26, says big companies
have economists and huge advertising agencies to advise them on how
to boost business, but the mom-andpep pizza store on Main Street gets
no such advice.
"Retailers had It too good too
long," Slutsky said. "Then all of a
sudden It stopped . Once they had
hustled to get started . But they
forgot. They forgot how to look lor
business to survive."
Slutsky says he bombards his
usually older clients with the
techniques of "street!ighting, "
"duklng It out" and "creative
borrowing."
"Street!ighting is an attitude,"
and represents relearning how to
outthink the competition, he said.
For example, the staff of a Fort
Wayne appliance store found It was
losing sales because customer s left
the store to comparison shop.
Slutsky's stop-gap solution was to
stock a freezer In the store with l<>e
cream, and give a carton to each
customer at the completion of the
sales pitch. Then the customer
either bought quickly or went ho01e
quickly without shopping elsewhere
because the Ice cream started to
melt .
It's not a new Idea, but Slutsky
says that's part of creative borrowIng - call it stealing If you wish.
A small advertising agency
working within the budget of a small
retailer can't alford the time or
expense to work up an Innovative
campaign. So creative borrowing
has to suffice.
·
The Retail Marketing InstitutE
shows that It Is trying to get . its
clients to think instead of doing their
marketing thinking lor tbem.
Slutsky said he envisions seminars throughout the country at which
retailer s can be taught to come up
with their own good marketing
Ideals - or learn creative borrowIng In the alternative.·
Aimed with some knowledge on
how to m arket as well as how to
make pizzas, for example, small
businessmen will be able to "duke it
out" If needed. That means they can
successfully battle their way
through bad times that separate
periods of prosperity.
Slutsky circulates his Ideas on
small business marketing through a
free monthly newsletter called appropriately- "Streetfighter."
Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday admissions--Bessie Rudisill, Pomeroy; Pearl Bunce,
Middleport ; Nora Hartman, Long
Bottom; Eula Welker. Columbus;
Shirley Frazier, Middleport.
Monday discharges-- Patricia
Cleland. Amos Cross, Sr., Robert
Young, Robert Grimm.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGE'> NOV. 28
Eugene Adkins. Katherine Bennett , Alison Blair, Elma Grueser,
Juanita Harmon, Pamr:>laMarcum,
Robin Neal, James Rife, Mrs. John
Simmons and daughter, Freda
Smith, M rs. D6nald Vaughn and
daughter .
BffiTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Burton, son,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Coughenour, daughter , Hamden.
NOV. 29
Mamie Boggess, Robert Cornelius. Ella Cox, Linda George,
Darren Harris, Sadie Harrison,
Geneva Jeffers, Zane Jones,
Brenda Roush, Eva Sheffer. Beth
Sheward, Mrs. Patrick Story and
son, Dewey Swisher, Ada Wotiiman.
BffiTIIS
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Bonecutter,
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Cr abtree, son.Jackson;
Mr. and Mrs . Donald Hill, son, Oak
Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Frederick
McCoskey, son, Ravenswood,
W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Rick Taylor,
daughter, Pomeroy.
No one...
SIGHTLESS MAN'S DOG BURIED - Dave
Rindahl, center, was jofned by other members of his
family as he mourned his dog Sammy at graveslle
services conducted by the Rev. WaDaee Henk, right,
who said a prayer Monday. The sightless man's
Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs County Probate Court to
Michael Bryan Wayland. 22, Mlddlepcrt, and Maria Dawn Legar, 20,
Pomeroy; Danny Dean Barr ett. 2.1. Dexter, and Lois Ann Ockerman,
32. Dexter.
Senator on stand in teamster's trial
CHICAGO !API -Sen. Howard
Cannon, who lost a re-election hid
after being tied to an alleged plot to
sidetrack trucking legislation, denied being offered a bribe and
testified he didn't know the Teamsters' president from "a bale of hay"
at the time.
Wearing a U.S. flag pin on his
lapel, the Nevada Democrat testi'fied Monday on behalf of Teamsters
President Roy. L. Williams and lour
others charged with conspiring to
bribe Cannon to thwart passage of
trucking deregulation laws.
The government claims the
alleged bribe took place at a Jan. 10,
1979, meeting In Cannon's Las
Vegas office.
"I didn't know Roy Wllliams·from
a bale of hay when he came into m y
offi<>e," Cannon testified In U.S.
District Court, adding he didn't
recall Williams saying a word
during the meeting.
Cannon is not charged In the case,
and the trucking bill eventually
passed with his supper!. He lost his
re-election bid on Nov. 2 to
Republican Chic Hecht in what was
considered a major upset.
At the Jan. 10 meeting with
Williams and Cannon were defendant Allen Dortman, a former
adviser to the pension fund , and Ed
Wheeler, a Teamsters' attorney.
The· prosecution contends that
Cannon and a group of his Las Vegas
neighbors were offered exclusive
rights to a piece of prtme property
owned by the Teamsters' Central
States Pension Fund. In return, the
government says, Cannon promised to take control of legislation to
der egulate the trucking Industry
and stall it.
In response to questioning by
Williams' attorney Thomas Wadden, Williams said he wasn't offered
a bribe or anything of value and he
Cannon testified that the Senate
Commerce Committee, of which he
was chairman, produced a bill In
reasonable time that was "adamantly opposed " by the Teamsters
union.
Much of the government's case is
built on tape recordings of conversa tions electronically Intercepted by
the FBI during 14 months of
ea vesdropplng on the telephones
and offices of Dorfman, 58, and one
of his employees, William Webbe.
Webbe and some of the defendants are frequently heard on the
tapes talking about a "commitment" they had with Cannon.
In a May 21, 1979, taped
conversation between Dorfman and
Cannon, the two acknowledge some
sort of land deal existed .• The
defense contends the Teamsters
wanted only to give Cannon a fair
chance to bid on the 5.8-acre tract.
also were killed .
Today 's attack occurred about
12: 15 p.m . (7: 15 a. m . EST! when " a
yellow jiffy bag type envelope 8
Inches by 4 Inches Ignited while It
was being opened by an official in
his office In 10 Downing St," a Yard
statement said. "He received
superticlal scorching on his face and
hair and is having a medical
checkup."
The explosl9n was the latest
breach of security surrounding
Britain's leaders. On July 9, a
31-year-old drifter named Michael
Fagan slipped over the fence at
Buckingham Palace, climbed a
drainpipe and· gained access to
Queen Elizabeth IT's bedroom. He
sat chatting with her for nearly 10
minutes before help arrived.
In the past three years, letter bombs have been sent to Mrs.
Thatcher, heir-to-the-throne Prince
Charles, and six legislators of both
the ruUng Conservative Party and
opposition Labor Party.
None caused any Injury.
Tina Marie Nance. Syracuse, filed for divorce In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against Michael Joseph Nance, Syracuse.
In other court action Donna Large MeCianahan flled for support
under the Reciprocal Agreement Act against James Large.
Kathy A. Williams was granted a divorce from Elbert L . Williams,
Sr., on charges of gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty and the
marriage of Mary Beth Clark and James Oliver Clark was dissolved.
Trustee meetings announced
Lebanon Township trustees have scheduled a meeting lor 7 p.m .
Wednesday at the township garage.
Meanwhile, Salisbury Township trustees will meet at 7 p.m .
Friday at the home of Wanda Eblin, clerk, Laurel Cliff Road. The
meeting is open to the public.
'·
t
100
MINIATURE
i
i
A Great Buy i
LIGHTS
On AGreat Gift
tteml
didn't make an agreement on how rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;R~;;;;~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
he would handle deregulation laws.
Deer season opens Wre<'k probed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (API - The
state's deer-hunting season opened
Monday with l ew sertous mishaps
being reported, officials said.
An estimated 240,tro hunters are
expected to take 43,tro deer during
the season, which extends until
Saturday over most oft he state, said
the Ohio Depatiiment of Natural
Resources.
The Gallia-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol investigated a
single-car accident on Meigs
County Road 26 Monday.
According to the patrol, Margaret
Eynon, 'S/, Racine, was eastbound
on CR 26 when she lost cqntrol on a
curve and struck an enbankment.
Her car was slightly damaged.
There were no injuries or citations.
Large 181ection
in Pots
and Hanging BUketa. Chriltmu ·
Cactus. VIolets, Foliage Pienta 8o
Han(jng ~lllkOII. Candle anngementl, door wreathea, end cut
Chrillma,s
Now Tailing Orden
for Grave, Blo,nko'ts.
9 to 6
to 6
a
Commmon pleas court
1
trained leader dog was shot to deathooThanksslvln«
Day and a felony charge hM been flied against a
neighbor. l.:lons lntematllloal has ~ered Rindahl, 24,
another leader dog free of charge. (AP Laserphoto).
(Continued from page I)
Marriage licenses issued
MACY
IArea deaths j
Box score: 20 deaths reported
Twenty fined in county court
Tuesday, November 30, 1982
sugg.
retail
Bras • Longlines • All-in-One • Girdles
Including ~ovely Lool< bras by l8HOUR
EIBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OUR BUSINESS
BEGINS WITH
FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS
FRUTH PHARMACY
ALL STORES
OPEN7DAYS
A WEEK!
FREE PARKING
"THE EVERYTHING STORES"
2501 J•ckson Ave.
Point PIHSIInt, W. V~ .
101 Sixth Ave.
Wuntlnt~tnn . W
Va
1125 Malin
~llt•n ,
StrHt
w: Va .
364 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis. Ohio
120 W. 2nd
St.
Wellston·, Ohio
�
Dublin Core
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Title
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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
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Newspaper
Dublin Core
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November 30, 1982
brummitt
neigler