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TuMd11y, October 18, 1983 '

Pom.ray Middleport, Ohio

10--The Daily Sentinel

Halloween party set Oct. 31

Pomeroy Council ... (continued rrom page tl

A community Halloween j,arty
will be held in Racine Monday, Oct.
31, from 7 to 9 p.m. sponsored by the
ladles auxlllary of the ftre depart·
ment It was announced at a meeting
of Racine Council Monday night.
The event will be held In lieu of
trick or treat and will be held at the
fire station. Donations from res!·
dents to help with the expense may
be sent to Mae Cleland. The
auxlllary will annouce detalls of the
party.
Council In other bulslness autho·
rlzed the Board of Public A!falrs to
pay off a $3,001 note after Nov. 1.
Council must approve any expend!·
ture of the Board of Public Affairs
that Is over $l,&lt;XXJ.
Council also authorized Geroge

would cost to operate. Anderson
noted the cheapest part of the
sy~tem Is the eqlpment. The
operation Is expensive.
It was mentioned It could possibly
cost $20 a day for testing. It was
Indicated the Board or Public
Affa}fs could not afford any
additional expenses.
·
Council, In other business,
changed distribution of payroll
checks from the end of the month to
the third of each month and from the
15th of the month to the 18th. Reason
for the change was to g:Jve the·

I

Mara of the EMHNT Engineering
Firm t.o contact tane of Ohio to
examine the town's two water wells
to detennlne whether the wells can
stlll be used. Payment will be made
out of tbe general fund and
relmbused with money that will be
received through a loan from the
Farmers liome Administration.
They authorized the clerk to send
a letter toUnlversalSupplytohavea
represetatlve meet with. council to
discuss a stated "past due
amount.''.
The clerk was dh·ected to send a
thank you letter to Harold Hysell of
Hysell's Used Cars for the donation
of a seat for the town's dump truck.
Council recessed until Monday,
November?.

Clarence Stewart

Clarence C. (Sonny ) Stewart, 39,
15Q!! Allenford Court , Columbus,
former Middleport resident, died
Monday at Grant Hospital in
Columbus.·
Hew as bornJuly18. 1M4,lnMeigs
County, son of the late Clarence
Stewart and Iva Stewart, Rutland,
who survives. Mr. Stewart was
employed as an air conditioning
technician for the State of Ohio.
Besides his mother, he Is survived
by his wife, Jean Hunt Stewart,

·
I

Boosters to meet

To discuss event

The Meigs Athletic BOOsters will
meet this evening at 7: 30ai the hlgh
·
school.
Workers and baked goods are
needed for the wheels show to be
held Saturday, Oct. 22 at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds. Persons are to
contact Sandy lannarrelliat 992·7039
or Clnda Harris at 992·2451,

Meigs County Boys State representatives last summer wlll tell of
their experiences during the event
held at Bowling Green University
when Drew Webster Post ·39,
American Legion, meets this even·
lng at the post home. There will be a
dinner at 7 followed by the 8 p.m.
meeting.

SALES • SERVICE .
LEASING • TRAININ,q ,

Story, photos on P, 6

Weekly football picks

50th anniversary..•.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 19, 1983

H State Issue 3 passes..repeallng tax measures
passed this year ..the Meigs Local School Dlslrlct wUl
recelve$82J,849less in state aid funds for the 1985flscal
year, Meigs Local Supt. Dan E. Morris reported at
Thesday's district's board of education.
Morris said the $8W,849 represents a 19.8 percent
decrease in funds. He pointed out that contracts with
certified and non-certlfled pel-sonnet have just been
completed and were completed in good faith by both
sides based on estimated state ald Income.
Morris said state requirements will push the district
expenses higher in the future. If the Issues passes, '
causing less money to come ln. the dlstrtct will be In
"dire circumstances." lie said It would take a local
real estate tax of an addltlonal9.9 mllls !D raise more
than $1ll0,000 the district will lose H Issue '3 passes.
Supt. Morris also spoke on Issue 2 dealing with the
majority which will be required in the legislature to
Jl8.\S new taxes and said It w!ll be dl!flcult with the

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three-fifths majority that the Issue would require for
passage of new taxes to get any tax measure through
the legislature. He asked that the Issues be looked upon
as non·Partisan problems.
The four board members aitendtng.. Richard
Vaughan, Arland King, R,obert Snowden and Bob
Barton..were given an opportunity to make comments
on the two Issues but all decllned.
Reject ltii .
At last nlgljt'smeetlng, held lnMlddleport, the board
turned dciwn all bids received on two new school buses
alter Supt. Mo1Tls advised members that the district
does not have money appropriated for purchase of !he
vehicles.
However, he said the district has been
approved for one more bus..making a total of
three--and the board, · upon hls recommeildatlon ..
turned down all bids for the two and agreed )oadvertlse
for three buses with bids to be opened after Jan.1, 1984
when the funds will be available for the purchase.
Supt. Morris extended congratulations to Mrs.
Bonnie Flsber, a teacher at t~ Pomeroy Elementary
Scliool, who has been awarded a $2!&amp; Holden

Foundation Grant. Mrs. Fl.sher was assisted by
anotherteacher,DarleneArnott,insecurlngtbegrant,
Supt. Morris said. Pomeroy Elementary Is the first
school in the district to receive such a grant
The board approved a field trip for fourth through
'sixth graders and their teachers to vlslt the Center of
Science and Industry In Columbus on Nov.3wlthcosts
to come from the grant.
The board granted the Mulllns Construction Co. and
R,oy G. liefffner, Inc., 60 day time extensions for their
work in the renovation of the Meigs Junior High in
Middleport.
Upon the recommendation of high school principal,
James Miller, graduation for the class of1984 was set
for May 20and the board voted topurchaseOhioSchool
District Ltablllty Insurance with coverage for the
dlstrlct, the board, all board members, all
admlnlstrators, nurses and volunter workers. Anita
Kathleen Smith was approved for graduation with the
classof1983haytngcompletedallofherrequlredhours "'''
In cosmetology.
Sue Laudermllt, David Ross, Elmer Snyder and

Marcella Wilson were employed as substitute school ..
bus drivers for the 19&amp;'J..84 year and Charles Holiday,
Salem Center School Principal, was given permission
to attend a zone administrators meeting In Athens this
month. Apart·tlme library alde-·Carolyn Collins-was
employed with costs to be absorbed under the DPPF
program.
Supt. Morris was authorized to determine the
furniture needs of the Mlddleport Elementary School
and to advise the boardofthoseneedsattheNovember
meettng.ThecO.stswlllbepaldfromtheWatklnsTrust
Fund whlch was established for the benefit of schools In
Middleport. There Is some$8,iXX)In Interest available
from the trust fund. The prlnclpalls hot to be'Spent.
Board President Barton announced$81,lmhas been
saved this fall under the new bus routing plan. James
Carpenter, assistant superlntendent, will have a
reportonthesavtngsreadyfortheNovembermeetlng.
Barton also pointed out that he feels the rerouting has
··created a better slruatlon for district students
(Continued on page 12)

Spencer
·
trial
delayed

Inaccurate maps
hindered .r epair

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Meigs Local loser if repeai·passes

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Copyrighted 1983

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Parti.cipants sought

Hospital news

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Diana Coss, Reeds·
vUJe; Flora Fridley, Pomeroy; Mlrl
..
RadciHf, Cheshire; Harold Chaney,
Pomeroy.
Columbus; two sons, Clarence Lee •
Discharged - Hurley Hutton,
and David M., both of Columbus; a
Cecil Smith, Holly Starcher, Keith
brother, Jim Stewart, and three
Oiler, William Williams, Courtney
sisters, Mrs. Myrville Brown, Mrs.
Lu~k.
Iva Stewart and Mrs. Marcia
Elliott, all of Rutland, and several
nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Rawlings· Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with the Rev.
Larry Carnahan offlc!atlng. Burial
will be in Wells Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home .from 7
to9·p.m. Wednesday.

Area deaths

treasuer more time to make out the
payroll checks.
Anderson suggested the water
department sell several holding
tanks the water board Is no longer
using. He said the tanks have not
been used for some time.
Anderson suggested a counter be
placed in tbe pollee department to
tighten up security In the office.
Presently, the way the of!Ice Is set
up, records are exposed to the
public. Mayor Andrews wllllnvestl·
gate the situation.
Blll Young reported work on the
second floor of the city building Is

going well with 25 percent of the Bloodmobile here
electrlc Installed. He also noted
Columbia Gas still intends to fUe
An American Red Crols Blooci-'
agalnst Pomeroy even though , moline will be at the Meigs Senlof:
council has followed the required Cltlzerul Center, Mulberry Helght.ll, •
guldellnes. He suggested a letter be Pomeroy , from 1 to 5: 30 p.m.:
written asldng a reprensative of the Wednesday.
.
gas company attend the next
meeting to determine why the
Dinner Wednesday
company Is still flllng against
Pomeroy.
The annual joint Gallla· MelP;
Bernadette Anderson,clerk;,
Scottish
Rite dinner meeting will~J!!,
• treasurer, reported tlmlng on the
held
Wednesday
at 6:30p.m. at the:
traffic light at the Pomeroy·Mason
Middleport
Masonic
Temple.:
Bridge had been changed.
James
Cla(Worth,
Meigs
County
Steve Hartenbach, merterman,
Director,
and
D.
A.
Byers,
Gallta:
said he Issued 450 parkin~ tickets
Qlunty
Director,
are.
In
charge
Oct. 1-17. He reported 32 meter poles
reservations,
are out on the parking lots.

SOUTH CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - A construction crew that
ruptured a natural g~~S line, causing an explosion that demolished a grocery
and Injured 17 people, was relylng on inaccurate maps from a utility, a
.
federallnvestlga!Dr .said Tuesday night.
The maps supplled by Columbia Gas,of West V!rglnta Inc.indlcated that
the line had not been usedforyears,saldPatrlclaGoldman, vice chairman
of the National Transportation Safety Board.
But It contained «&gt; pounds per- square Inch of natural gas, considered
medium pressure, she said at a Thesday night news conference.
Gene WUlaman, Columbia's dlstrlct manager, confirmed later that the
maps were wrong and said an lnvestlgatjon.tnto the inac"curacywas under

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FRUTH PHARMACY'S

way.
Seventeen people were lnjured, seven seriously, In the 'blast that tore
through the FoodlfUKI supermarket on Oakhurst Drlve about 2 p.m.
Monday. The explooon occurred after a Holloway Construction Co. crew
working on an Appalachian Corridor G highway project punctured a
IJlree.lnch natural gas l1ne across the street from tbe store, Ms. Goldman
said.
She said maps supplied to, the construction company by Columbia
Indicated that the llne, which was lnstalledlnl955, hadbeenshutoff"several
years ago.''
"When we excavated thethref-lnch line, It washot-fullofgas," she said.·
Earlier, Ms. Goldman said the utility knew about the leak more than two
hours before the explosion leveled the buDding, but did not order an
evacuation.
·
The blast sent a ~eball throUgh the Foodland supermarket Monday
afternoon and caused the roof and walls to collapse.
Columbia Gas had been notified of lbe leak and crew arrived about 11: .Jl
a.m., Ms. Goldman said. The flow through the leaklngllnewasnotstopped
untll2:50p.rn., almOst an hour alter the blast, she said.
'"Ibeywere trying to determine where tbevartous valves were and which
011es to shut off," Ms. Goldman said.
Store employees and cusloiJlerS said they smelled gas several hours
before the explosion.

STOCK UP NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

FCC delays hike
for phone users

WEDNESDAY ·&amp; THURSDAY

WASHINGTON (AP) - The werestlllhurtlngandtheredlnkhas
Federal Communications Commls· not stopped flowing.
s!on Is giving consumers an unex·
In a batch of earnings reports
peeled, three-month reprieve from released Tuesday, several major
new telePhone fees that had been manufacturers showed big losses
scheduled tq take effect Jan. 1.
for tbe July-lleptember quarter.
The reprieve from paying a Among tbe biggest was Caterpillar
$2-a·month "access charge," how- Tractor Co., which sald.Jt lost $'70
ever, was accompanied by some mUllon In tbe latest three months
bad news- the FCC Is also delaying and lost $334 million for the flm rilne
an average 10.5 per cent reduction In months of tbe yeai. ·
Republic Steel Corp. said It lost
interstate tong-distance rates proposedbytheAmerlcanTelephone&amp; $35.3 million In the latest quarter,
Telegraph Co.
·and Allls-Chalmers Coip., a manu·
The commlss!OII voted unanll'll· facturer of · farm equipment, reously Tuesday to delay from Jan. 1 ported a $19.5 mll1lon loss.
until April 3 the Implementation of
The loss for Allis-Chalmers was a
both the new access fees and the large lrnprovemellt lrom the $&amp;14
lcog-dlstance rate cuts. Agency million It lost }I) the year-earlier
ofllclals said the delay was neces· period, but the company said
sary because they needed more demand In the agricultural, general
timetolnvestlgatetbelong-dlstance lndustrlal and capital goods
rate reductions arld othel' changes markets was "stlll depressed."
that were scheduled to accompany
The stock market took a dive
thepayment!itheJ2monthlyfeeby Tuesday after Digital Equlpment
cmiiiUI'IIi!n.
Corp., the nation's secood·largest
Jack D. Smith, chletoftlle FCC's COOJpUtercompanyy,dllc~ that
common carrier bureau, said, for ltaearningswerefalllnaweDslmt!i
eampte, .the agency might want to expectations. The Dow J(IIEII aver·
OIISer ATiir to make an eveu Jaraer 811! ~~~lost 17.!111lQ!!rtS
klllc-dlltalice rate reduction. He and cloled at 1,2fi0.81.
ltreiEd the delay would oot affect
International Bui1ness Macltlnes
thucba!uledflrst-of·tbe-yearbrea· Corp. unveiled two advanced verkupat the cm!pMy.
&amp;lollS at Ita Penonai Qrnpu1a' that
'!bate other dewlopments:
allowa themec:bfnee to Interact with
~ tbe ~ recovecy ' tiqer, lmt data pux I n. IBM
wblcb 11U belnp..hJiltreqthb , almiii!Xp&amp;CIIid to IDOl! Introduce a.
a1mo11 a )'ell', _ . QuarterJv Janecompu11!r, wtthQ!IeBJIIIlyMI
repmt. .IIDW'ed-'llltCOIItpanW predlctbiiJ tile debutror NOll. ],.

OCTOBER 19 ·&amp; 20
11 :00 A.M . .to· 7:00 P.M.
AT THE OLD DUTTON .·DRUG CO. BUILD.ING
CARDS,
WRAPPING PAPER, BO.WS, ETC.
.
.

.

.

.

FOR·ALL SEASONS
4.

'

,

STOP. IN AND ·s AVE
'I

•

ISSUES DISCUSSED- Karen Harvey, Athens
County .Conunlseloner, left, and Carole Weiner,
coorollnldor for the "No on Issues 2 and 3" of Athens
County, were the'speakers at a meellng held Monday

night at the Seolor Cltben8 Center attended by about:lO
Interested resident&amp; AITIIIIglng and oonductlng the
meeting were Henry Hunter, left, coordinator for the
No vote tn Meigs County, and John Riebel, Meigs
County Superintendent of Schools.

Tuppers Pl3ins project
described as 'unique'
The Improvement of lndlvldual
sewage systems In the Thppers
Plains area Is the first project of this
type EPA has funded, according to
Clyde Gaston of John David Jones
and Associates, Columbus.
Jones was ooe of sever.allndlvldu·
als attending Tuesday's ~kly
session of the Meigs County

Cornmlsslon.
Also meeting with the board was
Bob Leventry of John David Jones
and.Asscolates.
The $28l.lm grant will be used in
Thppers Plains, where It will help
pay lor the estlmated$400,~cost!i
the Improvements. ·The rest of the
expense will be shared by the
families wbo will bellefit from the
project, which Is needed toeUmlnate
loni·tenn sewage disposal problems In the corrununlty.
Guion statl.'d that the EPA will
pey about pen.i!nt of the design
cost and &amp;'I percent at the

ao

construction.

First stepfortheprojectts to begin
the deSign 1 work. According to
Gaston, projbt engineer, EPA will
give the commlssl9ners up front
money, awroxlmately $18,lm to
. begin the design work which will
cost a total of $00,lm. The design
phase will take 10 to 12 months to
complete. There will be a seven to
eight month period between design
and construction. In a year and a
half construction will begin, Gaston
stated.
Design work includes field work,
talking to residents and survey
work, Easements will have to be
obtained and this will be up to the
board of commissioners, al leaSt
temporary easements.
Tuppers Plains presentlyrelleson
septic tanks and soli absOrption
systems for waste water treatment:
The p1oposed program that has
bel!n .developed involves replacing
and upgrading the septic tanks with
new septic tanks and leach fields,

and In some cases, aeration units, so
that proper waste water treatment
1s effected withln tbe area.
•
With the grant, It Is ant!~lpated
there will be a cost to property
owners ranging from $100 to $l,lXXJ
each depending on the severity of
each problem . .
Gaston stated that the health
department has ~ . authority to
Inspect sewage systems qn private
property and tbe health department
can enforce regulations Ha resident
would·· not Want Improvement.
Gaston also added that It hoped by
now that !he bealth department and
residents are aware of the
problems.
It was also noted that a district Is to
.be formed before construction
begins. Gaston stated the commissioners must decide what kind of
dlstrlct Is advisable here.
A bulldlng ban was ·placed In
Thppers Plains by the EPA In 19'12.
(Continued on page 12)

Pamela Spencer, charged with
Involuntary manslaughter and en· ·
dangering children was to goon trial
on Oct. 31. The jury trlal has been
postponed according to an entry In
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
to Dec. 5.
The delay was granted so Spencer
can undergo another competency
evaluation, whlcl! was requested by
Steven Story, her court appointed
attorney.
Spencer will undergo testing by
Dr. Wlllls T. Driscoll, a Columbus
psychologist, who evalvatewhether
Spencer Is competent to stand trlal
within one year and if In hls opinion,
she Is mentiilly Ill or mentally
·
retarded.
Spencer was Indicted by the Meigs
County Grand Jury on the two
charges lnconnectlonwlththedeath
of her son born on Memorial Day.
According to law enforcement
officials, Spencer gave birth inside
her car and allegiodly placed the
baby in a plastic bag. The baby was
found by relatives and taken to
Holzer Medical Center where It was
pronounced dead on arrival.
Gallla County Coroner Donald
Warewhlme said the baby was born
alive. Spencer was charged ln the
death and ordered to the Shawnee
Forensic Center In Portsmouth for
competency evaluation.
Spencer who plead Innocent by
reason of Insanity was ruled
competent to stand trlal by doctors
at the center.
Story tben filed a motion ln Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to
suppress evidence and statements
mady by Spencer. A hearing was
held Oct. 5 With Judge Charles li.
Knight denying the motion to
suppress.'Spencer has been free on
$10.lm bond.

Firtn offers
free planting
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
major forest products company wlll
give landowners In eight southeast
Ohlo counties one free tree for each
one planted as part of an Ohio
Department of Natural Resources
reforestation program.
WESTVACO Inc., will pay half the
cost of trees ordered by landowners
1n Athens, Gallla, Metgs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Vinton and wa.
shlngtoncountles. Thecompanyhas
sponsored the program since 1966.

Weather forecast
One hUndred jlercent chance of
rain tonight. Low around 50. Winds
easterly 1().15 mph. Ninety percent
chance of rain Thursday. High near

60.

Exlmdeci Ohio Forecast

Friday throup Sunday:
GeaeraiJy fair: lillhs ~ 1.-s

8H8.

•

�·,
··'I

Wednesday, October 19, 1983

·.c omment

Page

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

Wednesday, O..lob1r 19, 1983

WOrth a little tear______W_ill_ia_m_F_.B_u_ck_ley_Jr._

The Daily S.entinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy , Ohio
DEV111'ED 'I'() THE INTERE&gt;T OF TilE MEIGS.MA.'WN AREA

4f:.a·
~~ ,..,..,__,.__-r'lr"'T""'E:!!dl~
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

..

:·· PAT WHITEHEAD
A..tstant Publll!her/ Contro ller

BOB HOEFLI CH
G~eral

Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated PresSi, 1nland Daily Press Associ a·
tlon and the American N ewspaper Publisher Association.
LETT.ERS OJ' &amp;PI!~,' JON are welcomed. They s hould be l ess than 300 words
• lonJ. AllleCiers .,...bjectto editing and mu st be s igned with name, address and
~ telephone numbef. No unsigned letters will he published. Letters should be In
&amp;ood tale, adtlre811tag Issues, nol penonalltles.

~Run,

Jesse, run'··
:b ut behind the scenes
: "Run, Jesse, nm," the crowds chant, but behtnd the scenes some
prominent black politicians and civil rights leaders hope that Jesse
Jackson won't.
.
· Merely by tlln&amp;tenlng to become a candidate for th~ Democratic
presidential nomination, Jackson has excited the politics of 1!*!4 in a way
seven buttoned·dOIIVII white men cannot.
But even Jackson may share the dilemma among black leaders at;&gt;out
whether he soould quit while a head. He has twice postponed an
announcement; llli now scheduled for late this month.
'
Black leade!'! do not have a common viewpoint and some concede that
they can't even clf!clde whether the gains outweigh the risks of alienating a
generation of new black voters, of nominating a conservative Democrat or
even of helping re-elect Ronal&lt;\ Reagan.
Joseph Lowery of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference says
the charismatic Jackson "has escalated the level of political enthusiasm In
the black commulllty. " but adds: "I am planning to support the candidate
... who I feel has ll!e best chance of empowering my vote to purchase a
one-way ticket west for thaUellow who happens to be living in the White
House. And that candidate . I will support regardless of race, creed O!
color.''
Privately, some blacks say that they feel uncomfortable about
discouraging any lllack.
,
Rep. Parren Mitchell of Baltimore says he plans to endorse Walter
. Mondale "In the very near future" btit offers extravagant praise for Jesse
Jackson : ;, Anything that focuses on the plight of blacks, minorities and the
ix&gt;or Is completely justifiable."
Jackson knows that a candidacy would subj ect him to Intense press
scrutiny and raise new pressures: position papers,to prepare, a staff to
recruit, money to raise. schedules to conform to, debates to take part Inand the unveilinl of concealed enmities within the black community to
confront.
Among black leaders, he Is not the most admired black. Caretta Scott
King, no fan of Jackson, has confided that If a black Is to make the run,
someone like Andrew M . Young, big city mayor, former congressman and
U.N. ambassador, Is more likely to make a respectable race.
And Young say! o! a pos~lble Jackson btd : "While It's psychologically
very power1ul and significant, I'm not sure what we can get from It
pillltlcallv."
Nonetheless, !lOme black leaders feel Jackson has gone too tar to pull
back. For months, he' s been saying, "If you run, you might lose. If you
don't run , you're 111aranteed lo lose."
Among those UJ'IIng him to make the race are Mayor Richard Hatcher of
. Gary, Ind., Rep. Ron Dellums of California, New York's Percy Sutton.
. they Insist a candidacy would raise issues white politicians would
otherwise avoid.
The dissenters Include such prominent black leaders as Mrs. King,
Young, Lowery and Benjamin Hooks of the NAACP. They make It clear
that they thtnk Jackson would hurt t~e cause by running.

:·L etter to the editor
At the Oct. 10 meeting ol the
·Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation, all members•present
· voted to oppose Ohio Ballot Issues 2
: and 3, and to encourage the state
: legislatufl' to provide continued

Here Is a story. It will not tear pains, they were arrested by the
District of Columbia pollee and
your heart out, but It is worth a little
tear, and will remind us of some of charged with violating a 1983 D.C.
the ongoing dlf!lcultles we get into statute that forbids such unfriendly
reconciling things like the Constitu· · acts. The statute In question
(22·1115) Is called, "Interference
tion of the United States, federal
with foreign diplomatic and consu·
law, District of Columbia laws na
Jar offices, officers arid property dhuman impulses.
On Aug. 15, two young men of Prohibited."
The two gentlemen have gone to
patriotic instinct organized a dem·
onstration outside the residence of court demandmg that the statute be
the Soviet ambassador in Washing· struck down as unconstitutional .
ton. Floyd Brown, 21, and Will Moreover, they have managed to
Faron. 19, respectively !rom Wa· secure the services of a tough legal
shlngtmi (state) and FlOrida, were hombre called Raymond D. Battoc·
Interning in Washington under the chi, who among other thtngs works
auspices of the Young America's hard to declare as legal anything
Foundation.
Jack Anderson does, so that, one
They organized a demonstration can see, he Is a busy man.
. against · routine Soviet atrocities
The young Americans are ap·
and held forth outside .the Soviet pealing on three grounds, only the
residence, where they set out to first of which Is Qt.other than purely
burn the SOviet flag. For their teclmlcal interest. They maintain

that law Is unconstitutional because lives o! any foreign government
. wlthtn 500 teet of any bullding or
It Is not "content neutral."
Somewhat to the surprise of legal premises within the District of
watchdogs, Connie Belfiore, who Is Columbia used or occupied by any
the spokesman for the U.S. attor- toreign government as an embasy,
ney's office, advised the Washing· legation, consulate, or lor other
ton Times that her office had official purposes'" - without permission of the ~hlef d. pollee.
" never heard" of the distinction
Brown and Faron are pleading.
Now the wording of the !awls: "Ii
· It Is this language of the statute
shall be unjawful to display any
that Is belng-challeltged on constl·
Dag, banner, · placard or Hevlce
tultonal grounds. The appellan1s
designed or adapted to Intimidate,
are saying that, In etfect, you have
coerce or bring into public odium
here a law that would not molest
any foreign government , party or
people who gathered outside the
organization, or any officer or
Soviet Embassy to celebrate
officers therefore, or to bring into
Gulag, but would punish people who
public disrepute political, social or
gathered outside the Sqviet Em·
economic acts, views or purposes of
bassy to deplore Gulag.
any foreign government, party or
organization or to bring Into public
The young people's brief cites
disrepute any officer or officers or
most
conspicuously the case of
diplol!'atlc or consular representa·
Pollee Department of Chicago v.
Mosley, 1972. The court, tn striking
down a regulation comparable to
D.C.'s, declared: "Above all et.!,
the First Amend!Nftt rpeans that
government has no power to
restrict expression because of Its
message, Its Ideals, Its subject
matter of Its ' content... Our people
are guaranteed Ill! right to express
any thought, free frclm government
censorship. The euence of thll
forbidden censorship Is content
control. Any restriction on expres.
slve acllvity because of Its conteni
would completely undercut the
'profound national commitment 1o
the principle that debaie on public
Issues should be uninhibited, robust
and wide-open.' ... Government
may not grant the use of a forum to
people whose views Its finds .
acceptable, but deny use to those
wishing to express less favored or
more controversial views. There Is
an 'equality of status' and government must afford all points of view
an equal opportunity to be heard.''

&amp;'f!1'TO ADMif IT
w~ OHL~'A ~."Ml'~~VAREN'rGaNGTo
Spies · and terrorists_______J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
'Gi~~L J~~ZELSKI ~~~ If H NOBEL CCtM\I'IT'£t loV\S'N'1' CAU.EP !Y

WASHINGTON- ln the subter·
ranean w0rld of spies and terror·
lsts, t1Je Reagan administration has
embarked oil yet another secret ·
mission. This one Is centered in the
Sudan, geographically the largest
nation In Africa.
Not only Is the Sudan considered
strategically Important by adminls·
tratlon geopolltlctans, It Is the slteof
a major pipeline project and heavy
Investment by Chevron Oil.
This giant country has f~w
population centers, lsolated from
one another by vast stretches of
desert and priniltive transportation
facilities. So vast a space with so
lew people Is difficult enough to
maintain centralized rule over; but
the tribal rules of the south have
grown disenchanted with their
Moslem leaders In northern Sudan.
Adding to the aggravations, the ,
Sudan has two unruly neighborS -

Marxist Ethiopia on the east and
radical Libya on west- which are
stirring up rebellion. According to a
highly sensitive State Department ·
cable seen by my associate Lucette
Lagnado, there Is "evidence of a
growing externally sponsored In·
surgent threat to southern and
western Sudan."
To President Reagan's global
planners, this translated Into the
"need lor an effective Sudanese
counter Insurgency capability." So
the Pentagon has sent a Securtty
Evaluation and Assistance team to
the Sudan.
The project has "high political
sensitivity," according to the cable,
so the American counterinsurgency experts have been traveling
Incognito, their presence known
only to the Pentagon, the U.S.
Embassy ani! top ofllctals of the

Sudanese government. "Civilian
attire Is directed for travel in and to
Sudan," the cable cautions.
The American public was not
trusted to know about the Sudanese
involvement. Nor, lor that matter,
was Congress. Sources at the House
subcommittee on Africa, lor exam·
ple, said they had heard nothing
about It from the pentagon.
The team Is no more than the
camel's nose under the tent- three
Individuals with "specific skills and
expertise In counterinsurgency
problems" and one who Is know!·
edgeable in "Sudanese politicomilitary senslt!Wtles."
classified cable makes clear
·that Chevron's oilinvestmentls the
chief concern. The oil fields have
threatened by rebels who
oppose the Khartoum government
of President Gaa!ar Mohammed

The

been

Ntmelrl, and the American team Is
supposed to develop speclllc plans
tor protecting "pJ'9posed on facilltles In southern Sudan against an
Insurgent threat."
The team will also evaluate the
Sudanese ability to deal with the
insurgents, ' through observation of
training in progress, employment
of tactics, equipment organization
and leadership, and operational
planning skills."
While Congress and the pubUc
are being kept ln.the dark, Chevron
Isn't. The cable notes that "an
appropriate Chevron represents·
tlve" will brief the Pentagon team
and accompany It on Its Sudanese
rounds whenever possible.
A possible operational option
would be the dispatch of U.S.
Special Forces to train the Sudanese In countertnsurgency.

Long distance access fee ____L--=-ow_e_u...,....w_ing...;:;_e_u

Opposes Issues 2, 3

,.

2-The Dally Sentinel

adequate funding In the future. The
board operates the carleton School
and Meigs Industrtes sheltered
workshop In Syracuse. If Issues 2
and 3 pass, this program would lose
over $60,000 In state funding next
year.

Ma Bell will beofficlallydeadand have a lieU of a surprise coming! In
burled the first of the year. When Ohio, Ma Bell's child, Amerttech,
you get your first 1984 phone blli, and lndenendent phone corhpales
you 'may wantto help dig her up and have $179 million In rate increase
bury the Federal Communication requests before the Public Utilities
Commission In her grave. If you Commission, an average monthly
need help, holler!
·
Increase of $5.50 per_customer. In
A couple of years ago the Reagan Kentucky they are seeking an
administration dropped a govern· average P,'onthly Increase of $14.82,
,.
'
.•
ment anti-trust suit against AT&amp;T · which points toward a coming
and dumped a real can of worms In practice of charging rural custothe laps of the millions of telephone mers about four times as much as
customers. Ma Bell agreed to a those In cities. This will be called
court ordered breakup of her "measured" rates .for local calls
massive holdings Into seven re- which will diller depending on the
,•
·'
gional corporations and these seven duration, time of day and distance.
·'
corporate children will take over Quite confusing! ·
·'
·'
from Ma Bell and begin billing
Congress is . galloping to the
customers In their regions Jan. 1. rescue! In the House a bill has
Each of these local telephone already l,leen Introduced by a
companies · are rushing to raise Colorado representative that can
rates ·before the breakup. Some halt the FCC's access charge. The
·'
phone bills could double or triple bill would repeal the access charge
·'
overnight. In the past, local com· altogether and est~bllsh a $400
. panles had been subsidized by . million "unlversal 'fund" to keep
AT&amp;T !rom long distance rates. · clown costs of residential service.
D~-This
subsidy ends the first of the Backers of the bill fear that excess
IC !MavNEA io.;: ~..;, ..,.....,..~
year and local companies are on fees could rtse as high as $12 per
their own. Long diStance rates will month In the next lew years .
·
..,•
" Have your opponents objected to your attire
drop, but charges lor baste tele- Lawmakers are reported to be
phone service will rise preclpttously scrambling to get on the band
Sen.tor Glenn?"
as local companies seek to make up wagon. A slmllar bill to be
lost funds. 1bls Is where the FCC Introduced In the Republican Sesteps Into the picture not as the hero nate would delay the excess charge
but the villain. They plan to charge lor two years, delaying a political
every residential customer a $2 per hot potato unttl after the 1984
month tee tor local access to long election.
distance lines, whether they make
As a Senior Citl2en r am
:; Today is Wednesday, oct.'19, the292nd d~yof1983. Thereare73dayslett
'
.
long
distance
calls
or
not.
A
typical
concerned
with ihe effect the
. in the year.
Reagan
solJtlon!
Increased
telephone
costs will have
Today's hlghllgbt In history:
.
·
· The change In America's tele- on ·my age group. We are more
· On Oct. i9,1973, former White House coUnsel Jolm Dean admitted he had
phone system Is so complex and dependent on telephone seiVice
: plotted to CfNf!t liP the truth aboot Wat,l:rgate, and he agreed to be a
bewildering
that hardly anyone than any other s(,gment of society.
•
.
: prosecution witnelll In the c~.
It
Is all about or really Sometimes In case; of sudden
knows
what
. On thiS date:
.
v
cares ·unttl they get tli!!lr first 1984 Illness the telephone can Uterally be
. In 1781. Brttlsh troops under Cornwallis were defeated at Yorktown, a.,
bill. A New York Times Cli'l poll the dJfference between llfe and
:• a5 the AmeriC8D Revolution neared Its end.
·
showed that only 29 percent ct ti¥JSe death. Most~ us budget our money
.: In 1944 Amer1ca11 troops laDded In the Phlllpplnes c!'lrlng World War D .
polled had any Idea how divestiture closely and an extra two or live or
· In
the U1lllld States placed an embargo on shipments to Cuba. .
would
af1ect them. Which means more dollars paid monthly for
. And a11o 111 - . Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and 52 other blacks were
that
71
percent of phone customers utUttes Is that much less we will
; arrelted In a slt-clulwn demonstration at an Atlal)ta department store.

Berry's. World

.-

have tor food. To some shut-Ins or
very old the phone Is their only link
to the world outside their homes. As
usual, our needs are subordinate to
the needs of big business for profits
under the present administration. If
you are a Senior Citizen It Is
Important that yuo write your
Congressman urging support for
legislation to halt the FCC's access
charge. A letter to your state Public
Utility Commission protesting the
rate Increase might also be helpful.
Long distance calls are largely
the tools of business and should he
charged as a legitimate business
expense. To ask the domestic phone
customer to . underwrite business
calls makes no sense whatever.
Those supporting the FCC .ruling
argue that home . customers will

save If they make $20 worth of long
distance calls monthly. 1bls argUment that you will save money by
spending money also makes no
sense. It Is bare comfort to the
home customer who must pay the
access lee whether he uses long
distance or not to know he could
save money on 10111 distance calls If
he made calls he can't afford. Such
perverted thlnklni may cause the
wholesale cancellation of phoDe
service by subscrlbl!rs who think
that Alexander Grnham Bells'
Invention Is a luxury they can no
longer alford.
If you are among that 71 percent
of telephone customers aghast at
their January bill, remember I
tried to warn you!

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Guilty pleas signal major. drug problem
KANSAS CITY, Kan. (AP) Gulltypleastodrugcllargesby!our
members of the 1983 Kansas City
Royals should beadanger signal to
thoSe who run professional sports,
says the federal official who5e
Investigation resulted In the pleas
and Indictments against 12 other
people.
Noneofthe12peoplelndlc~bya

federal grand Tuesday lias any
apparent connection with professlonalsports.ButU.S.Aitc!meyJlm
Marquez said lnfonnattori''Supplled
by Vida Blue, Willie Wilson, Willie
AlkensandJenyMartln"shedllght
on the case." ..
"I certainly· hope that these pleas
of gullty by these players, and the
attention this case has received ...
will bring to the publlc' s attention

league basebaU teams, Marquez
can League batting championr
paused a moment before saying:
Aikens and Martin. pleaded gullty
"You're asking nne a question that
three days earlier to a 'Charge of
may relate back to grand jury
attempting to posses• cocaine. All
testjmony, and I would just as soon
were released on unsecured bond
not comment."
and ordered to report to the
Blue,a!ormerCyYoungAward·
coortroom of U.S Magistrate J.
winning pitcher, ~&gt;leaded gullty
MUton Sulllvant M ,Nov. 17 tor
Monday to possessing three grams
sentencing.
provtdedbytheRoyalspl~yers,whoo_f:.coc;;:,:a:;in:;;.e:.·..;W,;,;ilso;;;.;;n.;,;,,;;the_l_!¥!2_Am_e_ri_·_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
earlier had pleaded guilty to , misdemeanor charges, had indi· .,
cated cocaine use among · Other '' ·
major league baseball ieams or
among other professional athletes,
Marquez said, ''!'cannot answer
that. I'mso!TY."
·
When asked If testimony In the
upcoming trials In the case would
By George Strode
Indicate whether cocaine use Is
widespread among other major
evenmorethe!actthereapparentiy
Is a drug problem In professional
sports," Marquez said at a news '
conference following the
Indictments.
Marquez saki he did not expect
anyothermembersq!theRoyalsto
be charged In the case.
Asked If evidence or testimony

Ohio
Sportlight

S~AC teams nursing

minor humps, bruises
Hannan Tr,ace visits Southern · Scott Pickens, Mark Foreman,
Friday night In the headliner contest ·Brian Hawks and Jack' Glassburn.
this weekend In theSVAC .
According to Pirate mentor: John
In other games, Southwestern
Blake, the squaOjl Is In good s~ape
viSits North Gallla and Eastern goes
after last week's blowout.
to Kyger Creek.
Coach Mark Hartman's Kyger
As of Monday, three Wildcats
Creek Bobcats wilt try to remain
· were nursing Injuries from Frtday's
tied with the Pltates against
game at Kyger Creek. Dekt!Barnes,
Eastern. Last Friday night, the
sophomore end and defensive back,
Bobcats scored early but had t.o hold
Is recuperating from bruised ribs
on until the final four minutes before
and his starting status Is doubtful;
putting the game on Ice against a
Melvin Clagg has stretched Uga· determined Hannan Trace team.
ments of the knee and Jeff Barnes Is
Tallback Steve Waugh had a good
sore but expects to see action.
night offensively garnering 147
Teny Cline will replace Clagg at · yards. He scored the first TD.
the linebacker-lullback slot while a
Defensive back Duane Abshire who
freshman, Rocky Bennett, was take enjoyed a fine night had a 45 yard
Deke Barnes' place on ·defense.
Interception return and senior
Trmmy Hurst will play his offensive lullback Shane Stover rambled :rT
spot.
yards lor the last score.
Coach Jack James' Southwestern
In recording their fourth shutout
Hlglanders enter Frtday's game at the season, KC' s defense halted
still seeking thatflrstleaguevlctory two Wildcat scoring drives, the first
following two losses. The Highland- on two long losses and the other on a
ers may be playing without the tumble recovery at the 19.
services of one of their top lineman,
North Gallia' s defense held East·
senior Randy Layton. Layton sui· ern to just five first downs and 53
fered a shoulder injury against totals yards laSt week ..The Eagles'
top running threat, Troy Guthrie,
Southern. He Is listed as doubtful.
If Layton cannot go, his spot will was also Injured In that game.
be occupied by ettherDavldRalney,
SVAC S&amp;ancl!np
Dan Daines 0r Frank Cochran. In ·
ADGameo
assessing his team's game against
Team
WLTPOP
tile defending C!hamps, James
North Gallia ............... ....... 5 I 0 186 41
Kyg1!l' Creek ...................... 5 I 0 132 lll
said, "We may have to pull ol!
Sou!bern ........................... 4 3 0 159 115
sometype of surprlse,".
Hannan Trace ................... 3 3 1 112 ll9
~ NorthGalllarecordeda51-0romp

over Eastern last Friday night.
The Pirate offense clipped on all
cylinders led by Eric Penick, the
league's premier back. Penick
unol!lclallyrushed!or258yardsin20
carries while scoring three touch·
downs. Other Pirates getting Into
the scoring act were quarterback

Southwestern .. ...... ....... ... ... 1 6 0 49 211

Eastern .. ..................... .. ... 0 6 1 12 224
SVACOIIIy

North Gallla ...................... 2 0 0 100 14
Kyll'!l' creet ........... ........... 2 o o ro o

SOUtllern ... ..... ................... I 1 0 63 57

Hannao Trace ................... 0 1 I
Eastern ................. ........... 0 1 I
Southwestern .....................0 2 0

6 26
6 S7
8 89

~Fl'tdal'• pntf"LLI:

Hannan Trace at Southern; Southwestern
at North Gama and Eastern at Kyger Creek.

Outdoor enthusiasts
sought for contests
CHESTER -The Ken Amsbary
Chapter of Izaak WAfton, located
near Chester, will be sponsoring a
Big Whitetail Buck and largest
Grouse TaU contest again this year.
The contest will be similar to last
·year's event, which proved to be a
huge success for the sponsors.
Each contest will require a $5
entry fee, payable to any member
of tlie chapter. Entry deadline tor
the deer contest Is Nov. 27.
In the deer contest, either
archery kllis or gun kiiJs are
eligible. In order for an archery kill
to qualify, It must be dated as
entering prior to the kill.
All racks must be tagged and
killed this year. The winner will be
Judged on' the toliowing criteria:
(1) One point awarded tor each
Inch at the wildest inside spread;
(2) One point awarded for each pint
on the rack one-inch or longer; and
(4) each point one inch or longer oil
the main beam will receive one
point lor each Inch In length.
The highest total points will win.
Typical and non-typical will be
judged together and Inches will be
measured to the nearest one-eighth
Inch.
All entries for the grouse contest
must be in by Nov. 27. Tails must be
trom grouse legally ~led this year

and must be dried In the spread
position. The winner will be determined by measuring the widest tall
at the farthest point.
Entries will be judged Saturday,
March 24, at 7 p.m. In the Izaak
Walton club house. The decision ot
the judging committee will be final.
For any further information call
John Jeffers, 992-7212; Joe Batley,
~; Russ Well, ~; or
Jim Hull, ~-

S~ ShooU

The Ken Amsbury Chapter of
Izaak Walton will be sponsoring
slug and mllZZie loader shoots at Its
clubhouse In the near future tor any
Interested sportsmen.
The rWe slugs lor sholgun shoots
will be held the four Sundays prior
to deer gun season beginning In
Ohio on Nov. 28. Dates lor these
shoots will be Nov. 6,13, 20 and 27.
The muzzle loader shoots will be
held three Sundays prior to muzzle
loader season.
Jan.
All shoots
The1.dates
will be will
Dec.begin
ll, 18, at
and1
p.m., and will consist of freehimd
and bench ,rest events at vartous
distances. Rifles and scopes will not
shoo In the same category. Various
prizes of meat and money wjll be
awarded to all winners .

••·I

8 FT. COMIIIANDER DISH
ARUNTA RECEIVER

.

!Today in history

J98i

..'

'

•

ONLY '

PLUS RECEIVE

FREE

. $179500 .
SAVE S450

COLUMBUS, Ohio (A?) - Fans always question why coaches are
reluctant to use their substitutes, even with what appears to be asafe football
lead.
There Is no such thtng If you llsten to Bill Frost, the coach at Logan Elm
near Circleville. ·
·
. Frost Inserted his subs after Logan Elm bull! a 26-14lead with two mlnl!tes
to play against Millersport Friday tllght In a matchupo! winless teams this
season.
Millersport took advantage of !he strategy, scoredl2polntsandearneda
26-26 tie. Both sides are(l.6.1.
Around Ohio: Fremont St.Joseph's John Sidell stars on both sides of the
football . He has 76 completions in 151 attempts tor 1,070 yards andseven
touchdowns and has his team's three Interceptions this fall.
Lorain Senior, in the midst of 11 penalties for 127 yards In a 34-0 loss to
FrerOOnt Ross, had three players and one assistant coach ejected tor
arguing the calls.
Staie scoring derby In 1983 - Andy Peterson, Archbold, 26 touchdowns, 4
extra points, 160 points; Je!TY Mapes, McComb, 20 touchdowns, 16 extra
points, 136 points.
Regular-season winning spells .- .Ironton's 60 games withOut a loss; a
state-record 55,ylctortes In a row by Cincinnati Moeller; Steubenville's 19
consecutive triumphs.
Regular-season losing speUs - Jewett-Scto's 37 contests without a
Victory; Springfield North's 26 straight defeats.
Streaks ended - Millersburg West Holmes' 22 consecutive victories,
23-14, by Canal Fulton Northwest; Ravenna Southeast's 17 straight
victortes,17·11, by Mogadore.
Mike Dillon played !orCoachBillJonesatFindlayln1982, then the6-foot.J,
Zl).pound lullback rushed lor 'm yards Friday in helping Findlay rout
Jones' new Zanesv11le team 36-0.
A 92-yard kickoff return by Mark Slmpson with two n'llnutes left gave
Struthers a 23-26 decision over Youngstown Chaney. Simpson, a
quarterback, also passed 76 yards lor a touchdown, ran Syards tor another
score and kicked tour extra points.
Morethan1,00J.yardrushingclub1n1983-JlmCoates,WarrenKennedy,
1,063; Ray Southard, Brookfleld,1,040.
Cincinnati Hughes handed Hamilton Badin Its first hOme loss since 1977,
1~.Badtnlsnow5-2,marldngthefirsttimetheschoolhaslosttwogarnesln

one season since 1975.
Fostoria and Fostoria St.Wendelin used the same field last week to post a
combined 109-8 victory margin. Fostoria beat Lima Central Catholic 440
Friday night and St.Wendlln waUoped Danbury Lakeside 65-8 Saturday
night.
Tom Karplnskl of Toledo St. Francis had 267 yards In a 27.0 shutout of
Toledo ~!.John's. Notre Dame Acade'lly swept theToledocity girls !all titles
In tennis, volleybaU and cross country.
Wilmington has not allowed a touchdown In 17 straight quarters. Steve
Weltrner' s 21-yard field goal with 26 seconds left provided Loudonville with
an 1HO verdict over Canton Central Catholic.
Portsmouth East beat Portsmouth Notre Dame, 27.(), tor the first time
since 1963. And Columbus Hartley, a 19-10 winner, Is savoring Its first
trtumph over Columbus Watterson since 1m.
Tom Tupa, a 6-5, 2fl5.pound quimerback, scored all o!Brecksville's points
In a 17-3 upset of Berea. Tupa kicked a 23-yard field goal and ran twice for
touchdowns and added two extra points.
Four-touchdown performances- Steve O'Nelli, Cleveland Benedictine,
son of the late Cleveland Indians' owner Steve O'Neill, runs ot 41, 2, 1 and 77
yards aga,tnst Cleveland Holy Name; John Kolesar, Westlake, runs of27, 3,
18 and 16 yards against North Olmsted.

·USFL expands playoffs plans
HOUSTON (AP) -OWners of
United States Football League
teams have expanded their
playoffs from three to seven
games, partly In an attempt to
attract more attention from fans,
a league spokesman says.
The owners voted at their

annualm~tlngTuesdaytoa-dda

division, double the number of
playoff games and add a referee
to the crew ol!lclatlng each
game, .,...,kesman
Doug Kelly
-.said.
Each conference will send two
division champions and· two
wild-card teams to the playoffs,
Kelly said. Last season, the
USFL had three division cham·
pions and a wild-card team.
"We wanted to add a fourth
division becauseltgaveusmore
playoff possibilities," Kelly said.
"Obviously, themoret.eamsthat
arecompetinglntheplayo!lslate

1n the year, the more Interest
there Is 1n the league."
Theleague,enterlngitssecond
year, will begin an J.S..garne
regular season Feb. 26, Kelly
id
sa.
The USFL, which had three
· divisions with four teams apiece
last year, has added six teams,
Kelly said.
The teams will be divided Into
two conferences with nine clubs
each , he sa1d .
The season will end June 24,
Kelly said. The championship
game will be played July 15 at a
site to be determined later.
Each game this season will
have a crew of seven officials,
Kelly Sa.ld, the same as the
National Football League. The
USFL owners decided to add a
side judge this season, he said.
The league's draft was set for
Jan. 4-51nNewYork.

BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Backup
quarterback Paul McDonald, who
has been unhappy about a lack of
playing time with the Cleveland
Browns, faces a deadline today lor
deciding whether to stay In the
National
Football
League orLeague.
jump to
the
United
States Football
"I don't know how much stabillty
there Is In !he new league, but there's
,a great deal ot money among the
owners," McDonald said. "And If J
went to the USFL,It wouldbeagreat
personal challenge to help build the
league.
"On the other hand, the Browns
have been saying all lilong that I am
their quarterback of the future. I
believe that, but when !twillhappen,
I don't know."
Hugh Campbell, coach and direc·
tor of football operations for the
USFL'sLosAngel'sdaughter, Carel
·Russell Robertson, testified that
Ginter brought Kahl to her lather's
home in Mountain Home., in late
February or early March and that
he hid there until theendofMay. She
said Udey visited Kahl there and
Kahl on occasion dined at the Udey
home In Cotter.
Prosecutors said that at the end of
May, the Glnters drove Kahl to their
farmhouse at Smithville, where he
remained unttl ills death June :i In a'
shootout with Sheriff Gene Mat·
thews of Lawrence County. Matthews also died In the gunfire.
In his closing statement, U.S.
Attorney Asa Hutchtnscn told.
jurors, "It is up to you to do justice in
thiS case and to uphold the law."
Kahl' s son, Yorte Kahl, 23, and a
companion, Scott Faul, 29, were

convicted of second.&lt;Jegree murder
In the marshal's deaths. They were
sentenced to life prison terms. Joan
Kahl was acquitted on federal
charges of conspiracy and harborlng a fugitive.

~·~~~~iij~!i~Eii

They're here. The Ah'ens .
And the governmeflt
is keeping them secret.
Why?

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CALIFORNIA ON IDs MIND??? - Cleveland Browns' backup :
quarterback Paul McDonald faces a Wednesday deadline lor deciding '
whether to stay with the Browns or move to tbe United states Footbaii
League. McDonald, who has been unhappy with his lack of playing time
with the Browns, has received "final offers" from both the Browns and
the Los Angeles Express of the USFL. ( AP Laserphoto).

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Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

I ~- - Meet the Southern Tornado team

I

Wadkins heads field
at Walt Disney Classic
LAKE BUENA VISTA, Fla. (AP)
- Lanny Wadkins, a key figure in
the United States' Ryder Cup
victory last Sunday, and defending
champion Hal Sutton head lbe
lnvitatlonalfleldfor lbeWaltDisney
World Golf Classic.
The 72-hole event - the next·t.olast omclal tournament on the
liJ.month PGA Tour schedule begins Thursday on three courses at
thls sprawllng resort and amusement complex with 132 pros chasing
$400,000 In~ money.
The fonmat calls for the pros to
play one round on each of the thtee
courses, each day with a different
set of amateur partners, before the
field Is cut for the final round Sunday

DAVIE BRYi\NT
6-0, 145 pound
Senior Back

CHESTER COMBS
6-0, 223 pound
Jwdor Tackle

TIM EVANS
pound
Senior E nd

5-9, ~

JEFF CONNOLLY
5-7, 133 pound
Sophomore Back

at the 7,111J.yard, par 72 Magnolla
course.

Hak -Ka•'JU.I
J
1

Sutton, who scored his first career
victory and wrapped up Rookie of
the Year honors In this tournament
last season, will be seeking more
Important seasortal honors In this,

lloople·likes Irish over Trojans in 55th meeting:.~~~~~~~~
The Georgla·Kentucky meeting,
· By Major Amos B. Hoople
Ohio St 31 Michiga n St 14
Salurda.Y. Oct. t.!
Air Force 28 Utah '11
Oklahoma 40 Iowa St 13
Grid Wizard
tops in SEC action, will be a
Arizona 37 Stan1prd 10
Oklahoma St :W Kansas 24
Egad, friends, one of the nation's
barnburner. Georgia's Bulldogs
Arizona St 31 Washington St 17
Pittsburgh 35 Navy 12
Arkansas 14 Houston 13
R utgers 24 Wm &amp;: Mary :a&gt;
greatest collegiate rivalries Is on
lead the series 'J:I.7-2. They will
Auburn 24 Mississippi St 12
San Jose St 23 Long Beach St 21
ta~ for your enjoyment. Um·
make It 28 wins with a hard-won,
Bay lor 19 TOJ 14
S Mississippi 21 Tulane 17
kumph! The Fighting Irish of Notre 24·22 triumph over the tenacious
Bucknell 36 Columbia 11
Tem ple 3B Delaware 7
BTU 49 San Diego St 21
Texas :ill SMU 22
Wlldcats. Har-ru mph!
Dame host the Trojans of Southern
California !! UCLA 21
Texas A.&amp;M 17 Rice 10
California in the 55th renewal of this
Skipping across the country, here
Clemson :JJ N Garollna St 78
Texas Tec h 23 Tulsa 21
Colorado St 21 Texas El·P aso !II
Toledo 'l7 E Michigan 2l
classic .
is how we are calling 'em:
Dartmouth 21 Cornell 14
Vanderbilt 36 Mississippi 14
The ND-SC ga me is just one of .
The Hoople Upset Specia l of the
Flortda a1 E Carolina 24
Vlrglnla Tech 40 Richmond 7 ·
many old rivalries being contested
Week Is the Iowa Hawkeyes to
Flortda St 38 LouisvtUe al
VIrginia 31 Wake .Fores t 13
Fullerton St 2S Fresno St 24
Washlngton 'Il Oregon 12
on Saturday_
upend the favored Michigan Wolve·
Furman 28 Appalac hian St 21
W M!chlgan 14 Ball St 13
For a change neither the Irish nor rlnes on the Wolves' home field,
Goorgta :U Kentucky 22
West Virginia 28 Pt!M St 21
GE!orgla Tech 24 Tennessee 14
Wichita St 34 W Texas St Z1
the Trojans are ranked in the Top 24·21. And not too many clubs do
Harvaro 24 Princeton 14
Wi5con.sln 38 Indiana 21
10. But it doesn't make any
that to a Bo Schembechier eleven
Holy Crass 40 Brown 20
Yale 14 Pennsylvania 10
difference. You can throw the on It s own turf. Hak-kaff!
Illinois :l:i Purdue 31
Friday Hlp SchoolIowa 24 Michigan 21
Boyd County ~ Morgan 8
record book out the window w hen
Ohio State wlll chalk up another
James Madison 33 Lafayette 28
Coal Grove 60 Symmes Va lley :II
those - kaff.kaif .:.. old ftiends get win In the Big Ten by knocking off
Lehlgh 22 Army 18
Pt. Pleasa nt :JJ Ripley 14
LSU 28 S Carolina 21
'Nheelersburg 18 Greenup 6
Michigan State, 35-14. Also In the
together.
Maryland 35 Duke 20
Rock Hill 20 Oak Hill 8
The series started way back in Big Ten: lllinols 35-21 over Purdue;
Mlamf (F ) 31 Clnctnnatl ~
Alexander 7 F ederaJ Hocking 6
1926 when the fabled Knute Rockne Wisconsin 38·21 over Indiana, and
M!amJ (0 ) 17 Cent MJchlgan 11&gt;
Meigs 15 Belpre 14
Mlssourt 21 Kansas St 14
Vinton County ~ Mill er 6
· (105-12-5 .881) was tutoring the Irish Northwestern 28-7 over Minnesota .
Warren Local 28 Nelsonvf.Ue-Yor k 6
Montana 18 Ida ho IJ
and the famed Howard J ones
The three Florida powerhouses
Netl'aska 49 Color ado ID
Trtmble 21 Wellston 8
Nf"W Mexico 31 HawaU 28
J al'lrson 14 Galllpoi)Js 6
(121·36-13 .750) was starting to build wlll keep rolling, Mlaml will down
N IDlnols 22 Bowltng Green 20
Portsmou th 36 Athens 12
the Trojan dynasty. The Irish won host Cincinnati, 31·24. Florida State
Northwestern 28 Minnesota 7
Ironton 44 Waverly 0
will have little trouble with Louls. the opener in 1926, 13·12.
Notre Dame 24. Southern Call7
Kyger Creek 26 Eas tern 6
Ohio Univ 14 Kent St 10
Southern 1~ Hannan Trace 0
In the 53 meetings since, ND has \1lle, wlnntng, 38-20. The Florida·
North Gallia 28 Southwestern 0
taken 26, USC 23, with 4 ties.
East Carolina contest, however,
But the Trojan have dom inated will be something else. The Gators
the series in recent years winning 11 will win a tough battle from the
of the last 13 games. Last year 's Carollnlans, 31-24. (That's the same
finish was ,very frustrat ing for ND East Carolina aggregation we gave
as Southern Californ ia won, 17·13, you to upset Missouri- which they
'J'ENN1'!
VIENNA (AP) - Marco Ostoja
on a last mlnute controversial TD. did, 13·6. iiar-rumph! )
BRIGH:TON, England (AP)
ousted Tomas Smld, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3 as
Steve Buerlein, Notre Dame's
Other winners - In the P ac 10 Chris Evert Llcyd, easUy overcame first-round play continued In the
freshman QB, who has taken over are Washington over Oregon; 27-12;
MercellaMesker,G-1,&amp;-4 to advance Fis cher Grand Prix tennis
the starting role from cap[aln.Blatr Arizona State whipping Washing·
into the second round of !he $150,000 tournament.
Klel, hails from Fullerton, Calll. tonState,31-17; andArizonanalllng
Dalhatsu Challe n ge tennis
Later, Mark Dickson trounced
And Noah Vale, our- hak·kaff Stanfor d, 37-10.
tournament.
Nick Saviano 6-1, &amp;-0; Stefan
esteemed I ndiana correspondent,
Other seeded players to advance Slmonsson overcame Michael
Auburn wlll win again In the SEC
· sees this as a good omen for the by a comfortable 24-12 over Mlssls·
were Hungary' s Andrea Ternes· Westphal 5-7, &amp;-4, 7-5; Michael
South Bend crew. N.D. wlli upend sippi State.
varl, No. 3, who defeated Vicky Schapers surprised Stan Smith 7·5,
the Californians, 24·17. Har-rumph!
It'll he a good week lor !he
Nelson, 6-3, &amp;-0 and Britain's Jo 7 -5; Peter Felgl finished off Jaromlr
In other riva lries, Nebraska's Oklahoma teams: the Okla homa
Durie, No. 4, beat American Sandy Becka 6-2, !Hl; Anders Jaerryd beat
Cornhus kers and Colorado's Buffa· Sooners wjll down Iowa State, 40-13;
Collins 6-2, 6-3.
'
Eric Iskersky 6-1, 3-6, 6-J·
loes will butt heads for the 42nd and Oklahom a State will slip past ~---------...,....---------'------1
time; for Texas and Southern Kansas, 34·24.
Methodist It wlll be the 63rd .
Biighajll Young's powerful of·
meeting; West VIrginia ·and Penn fense Is much' too much for WAC foe
State will go at It In their 50th
San Diego State and the Cougars
renewal; and Georgia and Ken·
wlll win easily, 49-21.
tucky, In an Im portant SEC contest ,
The top attraction In the ACC wlll
will be battling for the 37th time.
find Maryland defeating Duke,
Jove! What a bunc h of crowd 35·20. Cle mson will prevail over
pleasers!
North Carolina State, 3().28, In a
Unstoppable Nebraska wlll ru n cliff-hanger . And Virginia wlll
its record against Colorado to Improve Its excellent record with a
With Fries .... . $1.84
30-11·1 with a 49-10 triumph. The convincing 31-13 victory over Wake
Texas Longhorns, m eanwhile, wlll
F orest. Har·rumph!
1n1prove their record over SMU to
Now go on with my forecast:
38-21-4 by taking a 28-22 decision,
Um-kumph!
West Virginia has had little to Season underway
cheer abOut In its relations with
RAONE - The Racine Volun~
~
" At The End of the PomerDy·Mason Bridge"
Penn State tralltng the Nlttany teer Fire Department has opened
u ons, 7 victories to 40 with 2 ties . Its gun-shoot season at its clubhouse
1..... .
M·Y·O·Y. .OH
. ..................PH
..
..
....r
But lhls year It wlll be a different near Bashan. Abundant cuts of
story . The Mountaineers QB. Jeff
Hostetler , who got his start at P enn m
match
eats or
winners.
moneyThe
Is Racine
awardedFire
to
State before transferring to West
Departme nt gun·shool bulldlng Is
o
·.
VIrginia, wlll be the difference. located just off County Road 28 near
.
West VIrginia will win, 28·21, In a Bashan. All proceeds go to support·
classic contest.
log the firemen.

Sports briefs••.

11 PC. SHRIMP

$1.39

ONLY
MEEKER
&amp;
BUXTON

.-·

. The Daily Sentinel

Following In the foot stEps of
several other'Pirates, Ei'lc P111lck,
North Gall!a's fine senior running
back, has now surpassed most d. !he
school's record producers.
Penick, a 29!1 pound speedster,
Wl!nt over the 1,000 yard mark last
Frtday with his effort against the
Eastern Eagles. Going into Friday's
' SVAC battle wllh Southwestern,
l:"enlck has 1,1118 yards to go wllh 14
touchdowns. Wllh !hose marks,
Penick has become !he schoel's top
rusher with 3.2511 yards. His ..,..-tng
bin~ has al8o set another school
record pnevlously held by Fred
Logan.
Last year, Penick scored 128
points. Logan's old record was 194
points .
.
Penick _already eyed by several
colleges has visited the University of
Cincinnati, Miami University at
Oxford, and Ohio University. He
plans to tour Kent State last this
month.
A general otudy student, Penick
follows such Pirate running suc·
cesses as Stertlng Logan, Fred
Logan,MikeCasey,RexJustlceand
Tim Howell .
All those players m ake the SVAC
All Dream Team as. well as the AP
and UP! Dlstrtct Tea m8. In add!·
. tlon, some received ALL STATE
honors.

(USPS t4li-HO )

A Dlvli loa of MaiUmedla, [n(:.
Pu blls hed every afternoon, ~onday
t hrough Friday, 111 Court Street, by the
Ohio Va lley P ubUs hlng Compa ny - Mul-

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Mem ber: The Associated Press, In·
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992 2342

Sooring reconlset

RUTLAND

NEW YORK (AP) The
National Football League announced It l)ad set a weekend
scoring record wllh lbe 14 games
producing a total of 161 points.
·
The previous record lor total
points was 732 set Nov.9-10, lMJ.
. The record was achieved 'll'hen
Green Bay edled Wallhington 48-47
Mondaynlghtln thehlghestscoring
Monday night game NFL history.
Through tbl! first seven weeks of
the season, NFL teams'a reaveraging44.1polntspergame. Thehllhest
average in history for ,a complete
season since the 1970 merger with
the American Football League was
41.3 points per game In 1!181.

DEPARTMENT STORE
Phone 742-2100
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., OCT. 22,.1983

Penick shatters .
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IVE THIW OCT. 22. 1983

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'
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

PLAYER OF WEEK
Shawn Ead8, IHO, 161 }l8llllll
senior taOback·lbtebacker, """
' - ' ch._ 1111 the Player Ill the
Week by the • Meigs County
Jaycees. Eada scored three
toudldoWils and nl!lhed for lll9
yards in 18 carries against
Alexander. ·He also caught two
passes good for l!O yards.

Su bscribers not destr! ng to pay th e carr ier may rem it In advance dlreet to
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pH 'T0

•

The other Ryder Cup team
members In lbe field are Calvin
Peete, Craig Stadler , Jay Haas,
Curtis Strange, Torn Kite and Bob
Gilder. Ray Flcyd had entered but
w iJMrew Tuesday, p lead in g
exhaustion.
Nick Faldo, a five-time winner on
the European iour and a member of
the European Ryder Cup team, also
Is eompetlng. ·
. Among the 1983 American titlewlnnmareMorrisHa talsky,Mar k
Lye, Rex Caldwell, U.S. Open
champ Larry Nelson and Jim
Colbert, a two-time winner this
year.

ADOLPH'S

t•==============;;;======~~

ALL LEA THE.R GOODS

As the holder of two Important
1983 titles, the Tournament Players
Championship and the PGA, he's
vlrtually assured of being named
PlayeroftheYear.
He leads runnerup Fuzzy Zoeller ,
who Is not competing here, by more
tj1an $10,000 In !he money-winning
race. A hlgh finish in this tourna·
ment, which offers $72,000 to !he.
winner, could wrap It up.
His opposition Is led by Wadkins
and six other members of the
American team !hat held off the best
from Europe for a one-point victory

in the biennial Ryder Cup Matches
last weekend.

~~======-========~5=2W:e:~':":·· =·· ·=···=·· =·.. · =·· =·· ·=-~=.2=1

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

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�•

Wednesday, Octobt~ 19, 1983

C:

M 1"ddleport
Garden
·
ClUb

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Wednesday, October 19, 1983
Page 6

Junior Miss_pag~ant Saturday

1984 JUNIOR MISS CONTESTANTS~ These
senior girls lroin Meigs, Eastern. and Southern High
Schools will compete lor the Iitle ol"1984 Junior Miss"
at 7:30 Saturday night at the Southern High School.
They are front, left to right, Pamela Dawn Riebel,
Eastern; Lynn Marie Epple, Meigs; Anne Lowry

-

Adams, Southern; Cheryl Ann Riffle, Meigs; Terre
Annette Wood, Eastern; Paula Jean SwlndeD, and
Sonya Kay Wise, Meigs; and second row, DeAnna
Kay Dalley, Eastern; Kelly Denise Whitlatch,
Eastern; and Jennifer EDen Meadows, Meigs.

Calendar

'

WEQNESDAY
RACINE -

The Southern
Local Board of Education will
m eet Wednesday, Oct. 19 at 7
p.m. at the high school.
MIDDLEPORT - A three
day revival beginning Wednesday through Friday will be held
at the Middleport Pentecostal
Church at 7:30p.m. nightly. The
Rev. William James of Little
Hocking will be the guest

speaker. The Rev. Clark Baker,
pastor Invites the public to
attend.

THURSDAY
POMEROY A regular
meeting of the Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee will be held at 7: 30 p.m.
Thursday at carpenters Hall.
All Interested Democrats are
invited:

Happenings
.Celebration set
MIDDLEPORT - The celebration of the 145th anniversary
of the Middleport Church of
Chrsit will be held Sunday with a
large anniversary cake to be
served during the 9:30 a.m.
Bible study hour. A speciall45th
anniversary gift will be pres-

The 10 contestants in MeigS
County's Junior Miss program to be
held Saturday night at 7:30 at
Southern High School will be
competing for over $1.400 in cash
scholarships, savings bonds, and
gift certificates.
The 1984 Junior Miss wUI receive
a $200 cash scbolarshlp from the
Sout~eastem Ohio Junior Miss,
Inc.; $100 savings bonds from the
Farmers Bank and the Spripg
Valley Pharmacy of Gallipolis; $50
bonds from Racine Home National
Bank, Central Trust of Middleport,
Simmons Olds-Cadlllac-Chevrolet,
Pomeroy, Downing-Childs/Mullen
Insurance of Pomeroy, and V. D.
Edwards Insurance of Pomeroy.
,Gift certificates will be given by
Merrt Ault Amsbary, cut and style
for the state program; char!Jl
bracelet from K and C. Jewelers,
Pomeroy; custom printing of Long
Bottom, Davls-Quickel Insurance
of Pomeroy, $50 worth of Avon
products and $50 cash toward state
finals for evening gown.
·
The runner-up wUI receive a $100
savings bond from Fruth Phar·

ented to every person attending
the 10: 30 lmornlng worship
service. There will be a potluck
dinner following the morning
worship service and a musical
concert at 1 p.m. by Purpose, a
gospel group !rom Greenwood,
Ind.
.

macy, Middleport;

$50 savings
bond from the Racine Home
Nationill Bank; gift from the
Chateau Beauty Salon, Pomeroy,
WMPO Radio-Middleport, and Southeastern Ohio Jimior Miss, Inc.
Gift certificates will also be
awarded by Clark · Jewelry, •New
York Clothing, Simon's Pick-APair, the Custom Print Shop, and
$50 in Avon products.
.
Preliminary award winners will
receive $50 savings bonds In the
following categories: Junior MisS

discussed various kinds of herbs and
displayed several which she passed
around as she gave Information on
each one. She explained the uses of
herbs and noted that she and her
daughter, Sheila, have an herb
garden In their backyard.
Nancy Hill showed a wreath
which she had made from wild
grape vine. For roD call members
named their favorite rooking herb.
rn the absence of Mrs. George
Anderson, Mrs. Lennie Haptonstall
gave the secretary's repqrt.

Tyson Eric Rose

Alison Nicole Rose

Personal note
Recent guests of Mrs. Ronald
Grindley, Minersville, were the
Rev. and Mrs. Harold Holmes,
Delaware. Weekend guests were
her son and daughter-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald Edward Grinclley,
Mrs. Anna Hicks, Colurribus, and
granddaughter, Crissy. Mrs. Hicks
is the mother of Mrs. Ed Grindley.'

conn1e:s
got 1t!

Pair celebrate birthdays at party
A birthday party ·was glven for
Alison Nicole Rose, a year old. and
her brother, Tyson Eric Rose,
seven, at the home of their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Archie Rose, Long,.
Bottom, Sept. 10.
_
Attending were their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J.

Others attending were Pauline
Ridenour, Goldie Frederick, Marcia KeDer, Thelma White, Charlotte
Grant, Mary K. Holter, Opal Hollon,
Letha Wood, Ada Morrls, Betty
Roush, Margaret Tuttle, Elizabeth
Hayes, Ada Neutzling, Mary Hayes,
Jean Frederick, members, and
Fern-Morrts and Sanat-a White.

Smith , Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
John J . Rose, Long Bottom. Also
there were Janice, Jeremy, and
lsraei Grimn:t, a great-aunt, Dena
-Kessler, and Larry, Julie and Toby
Curtis. Cake and ice cream were
served to the group.

THE SOCK·HOPPIN' SADDLE

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· ADVIITtiiD ITEM rOLICY
lach of these Hv•rtlt.cl lten'll 11 ra-.ulrH to lte r...tlly
111••llolll• for sal• In ••ch Krot•r 5tor•. o•cept as·
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oltv•rtlsolt lt•m ,
will oH•r you yoyr choko ef a
camparaltlo lt•m, wh•n awollaltla , raf1Ktln1 tho ......
savings or a ralncheck which will Oftfltla you te ,urchosa
tho odvartls.clltem of "'• a41vertlse4 ftrlco within H days.
OniJ one weftdor ~oupo111 will .._ occ.,te4 per ttam
pwrthotod .

HOLLY FARMS

Mixed·Fryer
Parts

w•

PAST MEIGS COllN'n' JUNIOR MISSE\1 - Assisting wllh tbe
Junior Miss program at Soutbem Saturday night will be, left to rtpl, ·
JuDe Gibbs, 1980; Cindy Crooks, 1983, and Lynn Oliver, 1982. AU three
serve on the Junior Miss Board along with Joyce QulUen, Mindy HID,
DoJUUi Rose, Kathy Cumings, David Harris and Ralph Werry •

Hymn sing set
LONG BOTTOM - A hymn
sing wUI be held at the Mt. Olive
Community Church at Long
Bottom Sunday beglnnlng atl: 30
p.m. The Pleasant Valley Trio
and the Bush family wUI sing
along With local talent. The
public is invited to attend. ·

lOlAL SATISFACTION GUAIANTEI
herrfhlnl yow '-uy at Kroeor It tuoront..d for your total
sotlsfa.:tlon , ..arcUon of monwfoctvror. If you oro not
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b'oncf or a compcuoblo ltrGnd or refunll yo~" purch~M
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Tuppers Plains

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* Font1nlnl NIIIYity Sell ()••'
* Avantl Stuffed Animals

Fresh
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* Stelnblc:h Nutcreckers
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MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
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11:00 TO 8:00

KROGER
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PH. 992-64.91 OR 992-3106

containers, flanked by yellow
tapers.
Hostesses were Mf3. Bowen and
Dana Kessinger.

22 . lttl. IN GAlliPOLIS AND POMEROY STORES .'

Past Councilors meets in Chester
The Past Councilors Club of
Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, met at the home of Ethel
Orr, with Inzy Newell as the
co-hostess. .
Leona Hensley opened the meet·
lng by reading Psalms 23. The
Lord's Prayer and pledge were
glven In unison.
Officers' reports were glven by
Ethel Orr and Mary ' Showalter.
Members responded to roll call by
commenting on halloween.
Games were conducted by Ada
Bissell and Mae McPeek. Readings
were glven by Erma Cleand and·
Betty Roush. Matthew Morris, a
guest, won the door prize. Refresh·
ments were served.
·

Mrs. HaptonstaU displayed an
arrangement of marigolds. The
table decorations consisted o! a
table arrangement of golden rod,
fern and mixed faD flowers In sliver

CO,niGHT 19P • THI IIOGII (0. ITIMS AND NielS
GOOD lUNDAY . OCT. 16 ..lHIOUGH lATUIOAY, OCT.

Rock Springs Grange
celebrates anniversary
The 50th anniversary of the Rock sang, "I Asked the Lord" and there
Springs Grange was observed was a humorous skit, ·"Food for
Thursday night with a dinner and , Thought" by Helen Blackston, Ethel
program highlighted by the presen- Grueser, and Opal Grueser. Group .
tation of golden sheaf certificates singlng was enjoyed, Louise Radford conducted a game, and Mrs.
•
and pins.
i\11 of the officers of the Grange Holter had a stunt. A poem,
"Friendship," was glven by Ethel
participation with corsages and
Grueser.
boutonnieres being pinped by Ethel
Grueser and Opal Grueser.
Recognized was Don Collins, a
The golden sheaf certificates
were presented by William former member who was a charter
Grueser , and Mendal. Jordan, member of the grange.
deputy master to Mr. and Mrs.
A floral arrangement provided by
WU!iam Grueser, Lqttie Leonard, the Pomeroy Flower Shop was
Homer Radford, and . Fred Goe- presented to Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam
glein, with each responding to the Grueser in observance of their 62nd
tribute. Others having remarks anniversary that day. Following a
were Pauline Atkins, Elizabeth closing prayer, the group sang
Jordan and Harold Btacksdton.
"Blest Be the Tie."
A sliver star certificate was glven
Approximately 65 members and
to Frances Goegleln who gave the guests attended the anniversary
history of the grange. Pat Holter observance.

field io be held this weekend was
announced. The possiblllty of the
garden club taking on 'plantings
around the new trees hi the vUiage
was cllscussed with a decision
postponed until a latter meeting.
Read at the meeting was a letter
!rom Janet Bolin expressing appreciation lor the club's participation In
the fair flower shows. Also read was
a communication from the regional
director regarding study topics.
The program was on herbs with
Betsy Horky as chairman. She

Plans for providing table arrangements at the Nov. 12 meeting of
Region 11, Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs, to be held at the
Senior Citizens Center, Pomeroy,
were made during a recent meeting
oftheM!dclleportGardenClubalthe
home of Mrs. David Bowen.
The members are to made four
large arrangements and several
~meets smaller ones for the meeting. Also
·
. announced was the Christmas
'
·
flower show to be held Dec. 3 and4.
The autumn herb fair at Mans-

Spirit award, scholastic award,
youth fitness, poise and appearance, and creative and pegormlng
arts. Providing the bonds wUI be the
Racine Home National Bank, two;
Craig Mathews, DDS, Hemlock
Pipe Line and Hartley Shoes of
Pomeroy.
, Those donating to the scholarship
fund were Ewing Funeral Hol)1e,
Quality Print, Pomeroy Cement
Block Company, Fabrlc Shop,
Landmark, Sears, James Conde,
and Bernard Fultz.

The Daily Sentinel-Page 7

Pomeroy- Middleport; Ohio

•

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Nursery and Gifts

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5:30 a.m.-7:00 p.m. Weekdays
8:00 a.m.·3:00 p.m. Sunday

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�Par I Tlw Dltily

Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport,

Ohio

~W~ed::n~==~·~~:=bH::~~~~~~9~8~3--~:-~----~------~~----~~~P~o:m=e~royz::M:i~dd=~~pM=:rt~,Oh~io~----~-~·~~~~~~1r-------:::~~he~~~~=U·u~,!:~v·~·
:·~·~:·~~-:;_~.

•
senrtces
•
Busmess.

Celeste will cut taxes
·~. budget surplus exists
'By 1be Aeipctetpd Press
Taxes will be cut next year If the
slate has 8 Jaree budget SUfJllUS,
Gov. RIChard Celelte says, and he
wlll ·take his message against two
tax-1-epea) ballot Issues to the public
vta television.
Celeste said TUesday he will
record a ~rn!Jiutlt television program aimed at Cllr/lncing Ohioans
to~ Issue 2 ancl Issue 3 onlbe
Nov. 8 ballot
Issue3 wooJd J:t!llE&amp;l tax increases
passed earlier thlll year by the
Legislature, pnn..ruy the 90 percent hike In t1IP Dte income tax
rate. Issue 2 woold make it more
dl1flcult for Iawri\akers to enact
future taX Increase$ by requiring a
60 pen:ent majortty of them to favor
a tax hike lnstetod of tbe current
simple majority.
"Should there lie an excesss (of
revenue ). we would u,e it for two
purposes: to pay off. our unemployment compensatiOn debts to the
l'ederal goverment, and to cut

Celeste and a small group of
carefully selected participants that
the governor's press secretary,
Paul Costello, said are being Chosen
by a marketing finn.
Theprogram,whichwillbesbown
at different times on stations around
the state, is being produced by the
Committee For Ohio, tbe group
spearheading opposition to the
·
issues.
In other developments on the tax
repeal issues Tuesday:
-A panelofe&lt;;anomlcs professors
from around the state beld a news
conference at Ohio State University
to dispute the pro-repeal arguments
of Ohioans To Stop Excessive
Taxation and statements that unless
Ohio's 1983 taxes are repealed, the
state will end the current biennium
with an $800 mllllon sutplus.
Prof.JobnBurke,ClevelandState
University, said "the possibility of
an$800mlllion surplus is zero. There
is not going to be one."
-The anti-repeal Conunlttee for
Ohio also Issued a statemeat saytng
businesses would be forced to pay a
$79 mUllan penalty to the federal
government over the next two years
and that the state's unemployment
compensatJon.fundwouldloseabout
$400 million if Issues 2 and 3 are
approved by voters on Nov. 8.

taxes," the governor told a gather·
ing of about 50 people at the Hyde
Park Center for Older Citizens in
Cincinnati on Tuesday.
The governor said approval of the
two ballot issues would result in
cutbacks of thing$ like tbe Golden
Buckeye discount program for
senior citizens, development of 33
senior centers, Shared Living and
Assistance for Independent Living.
celeste decllned to say what his
administration and the Democrat·
controlled Legislature would do If
voters aprove the two issues.
In Columbus, Celeste said be
thinks his televised message would
"provide an opportunity for me to
sharewithOhioansthecontextofthe
decisions that led to our budget cuts,
the tax package, and allow people to
ask me the questions that are being
asked of me around the state."
Detalls of the program, to be
videotaped at a prtvate session later
tblsweek, stlllarebeingworkedout.
But It is expected to involve

Legislators agree
··,.f on unemployment
bill compromise
WASHINGTON (AP) - Legislators reached ~nt on major
provisions of a blll extending
supplemental unemployment benefits as 11 jobless workers, some
from Dayton and Cleveland, protested the compromise witb a
display of clvll disobedience _tbat
ended in arrest.
.
The comprori-lile came as the
Labor Department released figures
Tuesday showing that t he
Youngstown-Warren area led Ohio
with a 15.4 percent unemployment
rate for August.
Senate and Hause conferees
approved a $4.6 billion, 18-month
program, according to aides at a
House Ways and Means Committee
briefing.
The program would continue
eight to 14 weeks ri. supplemental
checks for people wbo have used up
both state benefits and an extended
benefit period financed by state and
federal contributions.
It includes a revised formula tbat
would increase llle maximum
number of weeks ol the last -ditch
supplemental benefits in many
states. It also woukl give an extra
five weeks of aid to people who
. began receiving supplemental
checks after AprU 1and will exhaust
them by Oct. 23 - the date the
current program expires.
Some 632,001 people currently
receive supplemental unemployment benefits. Aldes estimate
another 3.2 mUllan to 3.4 mllllon wlll
be eligible for the dwcks within the
next 18 months.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Ohioans who think their state and
local tax burden is higher than that
in most states are right, a private
researCh group says, but tii~ recent
90 percent state income tax increase,
probably won't pusb Ohio much
higher in the rankings.
Personal income tax increases in
1982 boosted Ohio from 25th to 16th
among the states wben the nonpartisan Obio Public Expenditure

EVANSVll..LE, Ind. (AP) -

A

feasibility study of possible sites for
a $liO mUllan Obio River toll bridge
and connecting road oystem is on its
way to the state'l Transportation
Coordinating Boanl and the Highway [)epartn1ent's Toll Finance
AuthOrity.
Of three brtdge cerrldors studied ,
one east of Diamond Island in Posey
County near tile Vanderburgh
County line is "p I ted," accordIng to a report delivered to Gov.
Robert Orr MOIIAY. by state
highway director Gene Hallock.
State o!flctals dall't know how
qUlclcly thestate~ldewhether
to bulld the brtdiJI! IUid road system

west of Evansville.
But 'theY say a br1dge and roads
can't be built with toll revenues
aJone. Aneasterncorrldorciosestto
Evansville Is the mmt practical. A
dl!clslon by I~ ID proceed with
a brld8e would ,...Uire an agree(llellt with 8nd participation by the
state of Kentupky.
According to the report cltlng the
DlamOOd Island kx:ation as the
preferred site, a fttlmated 1,210
cars a day would- such a bridge,
wlllch would link lndiana 62 with
KI!Dtuckyl36nearGeteva,Ky.,just
west ri. Henderson.
ThiS compares with about l ,&lt;XXI
cars for a route about balfway
between EVIIIIIYGie and Mount
Vernon and 5fO Jtr a , site in the
Hovey Lake area west of ~ount

Vemonandacro18fromUnioritown,
Ky.
If the state wum to buUd a $14
million two-lane ~ and Spend
another $A5.5 llllllm for approach
roads and bypasses, state o!flclals

say additional SOUJ'a!S of fullding
will have to be considered.
1bese range !rom use of state and
t'

:.c::~M~
ta- cxn.. We cen eleo

1-1!-tfc

2nd St. acrose from
Pott Office
M11on, W. Va.

park Center for Older Adults lollowln&amp; his talk there
Tuesday artemoon. (AP I.as&lt;:rphoto).

'

GETJ'ING THEIR OPINIONS- Oblo Govemor
Richard F . Celeste talks wltli visitors to the Hyde

and one month ofthe40percent state
personal income tax increase (effective March 1, 1983) ," the council
saki.
But it said even witll a full year's
collection of the 90 percent income
tax boost, Ohio at the end of fiscal
year 1984 will probably rank no
higher than 13th or 14th among
states in per capita state and local

personal income tax collections.
At the same time Tuesday, the
council said the total federal, state
and local government tax burden
carried by Obio taxpayers jumped
137 percent during the last 10 years.
It estimated the total tax load for
1983 at more than$40billion, or$3, 7Ql
for each Ohioan.
Most of the load, 67.3percent, was

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end we also strvlce Ktrollnt H11ter1.

Pomeroy
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PH. 992-6792

"I W1de111tand tbe ,...realional
mo.
budget is in the red !''
I1-----.::::...:.::..:..:;:;:;...J

3 Announcements
SWEEPER end sewing ma-

chine rapal_r, parts, and
suppllet.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mila up

Georges Creek Rcl.
446-0294.

• IIOIOED &amp; ~r.'\'lWIIIEED

Pomeroy. Ohio

•

"·~;."'

9-J0-1 1110.

Coil

Gun thoot Racine Gun Club.

Every Sundov otartlng 1

I

p.m. Factory choked guna
only.
No hunting or tre~Pt~aalng on

-~ -------------------~-~ ~-t
.

I1. :
I,,
f.
(Fr.. lollmatoo) I
C. YOUNG Ill
r V.992-6215
or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
' Savel_l I .

CARPENTER
SERVICE
I

I

•

I

I

I

Phon•----------------6
phone number if used. •••• "'
do
You'll get better results
I _, 1•.. r•
ys

I
1

,

1

~~-

1

&lt;

- ·oump Trucks
- Lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gao Unea
- Septic Systems

17.

JB.
19,

l.

20.

2. . .

21.
'J.'J. . • -

3.

-·' -

... _,

---

- - ---- - ~-

... _._ _____

PI-!. 992-2478

5. - .

'1.4.

6.
7.

25.
26.

----_. -·- !,
. •• _ _ _ _

21.

.. . - ·- .. _ . _ __

_ . _ _ __

le.
29 .

_ •

- - - - --

30.

-

.
_ _ _ , _ __
1
·I e. .. . _ ... _ ___ ____
9
,

1
I to.
I II .

.-

• - - - ---

15.

. - ..

-- - -

3..

-. - - - -

ololr!~lfi!E

=

~-

oDump TNek

. . --- - -

16

.1

8

-- .

. Ma;l

~

mo. ....

AL TROM.M'S
BACKHOE

- ·•· - ·__· ·-___
_.:__
_

'!:!: ~ _~-. ~ ~ --~~· ~~: - ~ =~= ~~r Tht~ C~upon w::~. Remltf~~~.--,
I
.,

~22-1

Dally Sentinel
111 Court St.

'

TANKS

11
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
742-2328t-11-lf&lt;
... -------------~------·
... ~···' !.....______....;.;:;.;;::....~ .
,,..
·~

Alter 3 p.m. cell 614 -9923717.

•

Three very affectionate
mixed breed pupa to a
goodhome. Prefer farm, one
small kitten. After 6 p.m.

304·876-2208.
To good home, two large

mole doge. hoff coltlo ond
304-876-7353.

MILLS'
ELECTRIC

Have Your
Trophies
Professlon1lly
Mounted by

SHOP ,

PH. 742-222&amp;

~~

..

4 room, bath, basement,

double garage, storage
building . 3.6 acres. JY:z.
miles S . Albany.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do business with
people yo!J know. and NOT
to sand money through tho
mail until you have invelti·
gated the offering.

A--·

Auction l•rn. Conaljn _ . , !Ikon every llturdoy
1:00 !Ill lile lirM. Emmo
Belt
304·42811n.

House and 3 lots on West
Point Rd. in Hartford, WVfor

$t 1.ooo . 304-882-2831 .

For sale by owner in HillView
sub div. Greer Rd . V. mi. off
Rt. 2 . Mobile home with add
rooms ." 3 b.r .. living room·

•

12x24. kitchen 1 2x1 2. d.r.
Muffler Shop Profitable new 12x1 1, utility r. 12x12.

muffler dealerahip available.
High career income. BUsl ·
neea includes equipment,
parts inventory, advertising
support, factOry training.
700 dealerships coast to
coast. Expect 840,000 to
$60.000 annual take-out
income to owner .
814,995 .00 . For more in ·
formation 1-800-336 8014 . Serious callers only .

24x12 outbuilding, 1 24x1 0 outbuilding, fruit
house 10x10 on threelargr
lots . Good water. Elecstove;:
frig. air cond. dryer. 304 ~

773•6282.

Two year old house, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths. garage,·
heat pump. Phone 304·675-"

5545.
.

MASON County. house &amp;•
Excellent Opportunity for one acre, $14.000 or Will ~
right individual tO become trade for land, house of
distributor for leading snack mobile ''home. Or owner
Company - in immediate finencing . 304-743 -3817
area. Must have reliable and 304·562-5840.
truck &amp; minimum investment. Send retume to Box Three bedroom. new nptic, ·
808 in care of The Gallipolis city water. and gas heat ..
Daily Tribune. 826 3rd. Clifton, W. Va . 304· 773·

AVo., Gollipolio. Oh 45631 . 5860.

22 Money to Loan

32 Mobila Homas

WANTED·People in Gallia ,
Jackson or Meigs County
willing to participate in a
totter home type program
tor adult• with emotional
problema. Reimbursement

HOME LOANS low fixed
rata. Leader Mortgage. 77 E.
State, Athena, Ohio. 1-614· TRI - STATE

MOBILE
HOMES. USED - CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES. CALL
446-7572.

692-3061.

23

Professional
Services

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S DUAL·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
PIANO TUNING Lower 4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
pricea -regi.!IBr tunings - RT 35. PHONE 446-7274. ·

di.Counts to Senior CitiJ:ens,
Churchea S. achoola. Ward's 1972 12x60 mobile home.
Kevboord, 304-875-3824. great shape, furn ., washer,
dryer, dishwasher, fully car-

PIANO TUNING AND RE- pe1ed. Coil 814-367c7175. ,

PAIR. Service with skill and
integrity. Lane Oanielt-614'· 1965 Pontiac Chief trailer,
7·42-2951 , (Retiree, 10k50, good cond., 82,600 .
Teacher Discounts).
Call 446· 7513.

$240-1330 per month. For

1974 Shultz 12x65 .. 21arge
bdr., with built-in cabinets,
2 baths, air cond .! underpin·
land Centers, inc.. 412
ning, intercom, new rugs,
Homes for Sale
Vinton Piko. Gollipolis. OH .
drapes, furniture. outside
4&amp;631, 114-992·2192, - - - - - - -- - entrance box, 2 set's of extra ·
446-5600.
4 bdr. ranch home, large LR , steps, fire alarm, gas alarm,
full basement. with garage, first aid kit, fire extinguither,
NEED babyaitter to come to wood burner included . city $6.900. 1-304-882-2237.
home. If interested call schools, 2 miles from town .
Call 446·0276.
304-676-6806.
1972 1 4x70 Kirkwood , 3
BR , 1 V2 bath, new carpet,
Or will treda for anything of linoleum, 30 ft . .. awning.
We are expanding in Gallla value. 3 bedroom house back deck .. exc. cond. Cell
end Meigs Counties and with fireplace, central air, 2 446-8382.
need reliable people to tar- full bathe. in city limits.
vice our , growing buaineas Immediate POINIIton . Call Nice 2 bdr. mobile home
part time. Call 304·675· 814-245-52B1
1970 set up in city limits.
1090.
Ready to move into, asking'
Middleport, remodeled, five 64.200 . Cell 446-2491 .
room a and bath, gas fur·
12 Situations
nance, cozy fireplace, good 4 mobile homes. 1 0 ' and 12'
neighborhood . Price re -. '!_t_.' wide . 2 bedroom-.
Wantad ·
duced. Call614-992 .6941 . furnished . Low priced ..
Brown's Trailer Park . 61410% interat owner financTree trimming end remov,L Ing. new 2Vz story, 1760 992-3324.
Free eet:imatea. 814-992 - 1q.ft. liv. apace, 1Y1 baths.
6.6 ecraa. Sacrificed price ~·
6040 or 614-949 -2129.
Coil 304·896·3071 .
S12,000 . 3 bedroom trailer,
1% bath , pasture, fenced,
By owner house with 2 acres
Private home care. Ladie1 more or leas. been ramo- pond, gerden. 614-7422364.
Onlv. 304-876-2161.
deled, orchard, 87 ft . well,
&amp;22,000 . Call 614 -388· 1979 mobile home 14x80
9063.
unfurn. 112 acre lot, chain link
Wanted to do. Houae cleanIng, Point Pleosont and Leon Must sell, make offer. 3 bdr. fence in Ohio. $13,500.
area. References . PhOne in Henderson , new carpets. 304-676 -1 297.
904-46B·1 071 .
city watef 8a sewer. Natural 1976 14x70 trailer, 3 bedgaa furnance, last houu on room, 2 baths, large kitchen,
Henderson St. Toward Red- $10.000. 304-773-6023.
Insurance
mond Ridge. 823.000 . Box

•••I lacaie

more Information, call or
write, Becky Canter. Wood -

31

I:;:;::=;:::======
13

.533 Gallipolis, Oh 46631 .

1981 14x70. Shultz lhnlted

SANDY AND BEAVER In· 2 or 3 bdr. 2 otorv older

aurance Co. h11 offered
tervk;ea for fire lnaurance
coverage In Oallla County
for almost a century. Farm,
home end personal property
coverage~ ate available to
meet lndivldull needa. Contact KeD Burl81on , agent.

home wrth private entrance
apt . 617 Fourth Ave., GaUl-

6 rm houae 1 Y2 acre lot.
good outbulldinga. Will con·
tlder nlling on land con·

Phone 446-2921 .

troct. Coll614-379-2560.

18 Wanted to Do

3 bedroorri' house with 3
acral grou'nd, near Porter,

1~::;;.;==;::;==

old Rt. 160. Coil 446-4202
or 446-2867.

1---------Dump truck for hire, will
haul coal, 11nd, grevel, etc.

304-878-3190.

Homelmprovementa. Paint~
lnt lnt-r ond ooctorlor. frH

etllmoteo. Phone 304-876·
1128.

mobile home, microwave,
dishwasher. central air, underpenning . three bedrooms, 1 'h baths, ex;cellent·
condition, e16,600. Call

polio. Coli 44e-7277 or
448-4346.
304:676 -6049 oltar 6 p:m.

bet-••

AucnDN ev.rv soturdoy
night, II p.m, ~!- Alto

TAXIDERMY

Bu1iness

Opportunity

FOUND opprox. 8 wka. okl General Hauling ond Troth
white puppv with block removal Sorvl.., Reliable log home 4 yr. old, 4
apota. Found In vicinity of ond dapendoblo. Coli 446- bedrooma, 2 · acr... Woods
Mill Rd.. $62,000. Call
1010 2nd. Ave., Oolllpollo. 31 69
9 and 6.
614-388-~068.
Coll448-1119.
Law~ Mowing no vord to big
or amall. Reliable and depen- Locatwd In SyracuH·Near
dable. fOf estimate call ochool Ito awlmmlng pool. 3
8
Public Sale
bedroom attuated .qn one448·31 69, 9 to 6.
&amp; Auction
third acre lot. 824.600. or
To taki care of 1omeone •lck will ront for U76 mo.
Rick Pn,..,. Auctlontor or needa home care. Day• 304-818-3934.
Service. Eottte. Form, An- only, Point P'-aaant or Gallitique I tlquidltlon oolts. pollt ..... Good refwencos. 3 bedroom ·ran~h: atyle
homo, corpottd, ' !till tl••
UCMttd I ban-In Ohio &amp; Coll304-41f·1818.
bllsement, 1 car geraga, in
"
WVo . 304·773·1788 or
304-773-9188.
Wont to-do bruth hogging. ground pool 16x32 .
f11on hour, Coll814·258· •4a,oooo. 1114-992-&amp;856.
Auction every Fri . night ot _1_4_27_._ _ _ _ _ __
3 bod100m, 2 otory home. 2
tilt Hertford Community 1
Center. Trucldoodt of n- Trooh Service, Cool houllng. car gange . Former 8aptiat
merchlndiH ....., - · Dependoble. Will pick uC Poreonoge. 5th St., Recine.
ContiJIIIItntt of . n_ow ond junlt televltlont fr... Co I 614-949-2122.
u... m-hondiM olwoya 814·388·8813.
weloome. Richerd Roynoldt
Sale by owner. 3 bedroom
Auotloneer. 275·3019.

THE

N- Lime R""d
Rutt.nd. Ohkt

~

6 Lost and Found

SPORTSMEN

A SPICIAI.TY

The

8 dwarf ·rabbita for pet1.

heH grett pyreneea. Phone

Residential-New and
re-~irlna; Commercial
and Industrial.
BONDED-All Work
Guaranteed
Call 614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.
9-22· 1 mo. pd.

IARGI oo SMAll. .1085

13 .

2 grey kittens, approxlmetely 8 weeki old. Call

3·2-4-ltc

-Backhoe~

)Announcement

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR f

' - - =. .-.----~~~

- Dozer•

I )Wanted
)ForSale

paign color. Cotl 448-0026.
446-3237 after &amp;PM.

Alsp Transmission
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121

put 1 n the prope rT·~•:JsJ._~·~·~
..,~,.,~,"~"'r_"::::•oo~ -1 · f'-,-'-----'---'=--,·
classification if you'll ,
check the proper box
These co!h rotes
PULLINS
below.
•
include discount
EXCAVATING

( )For Rent

Hamlters to Give Away.

--~ ~~

I

Giveaway

I1.-------'-'·_"'. .J 388-B723.

St. Rt. 124, Pomeroy, OH.

classify, edit or reject-:;_T.;.••..;:..:lsl---11-1.,_....,·':'1-'-I.O+p--!
any ad. Your ad will be

4

GARAGE

BISSELL
SIDIN.GCO.

No Sunday Calt~'-"'

lu M , 7.041

claoses. 304-876· 7720.

Roger Hysell

. 949-2860.

·.~~~-'-f.~~;.~-~

The Dab-it Shop ha1 moved
to 1 new location, 1317

2 amallldttent,- littertrained.
female Calico, mate cham-

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Call for free sidina estimates, 949-2801 or

'10

I ..... 1.....

li·26·Hc

No Hunting and tre1p111ing
on EdHI Hugh111 Farm. Point
Pleanrit.

Ohio St., Point Pleooant.

Racine, OH.

SIDING

Print one word in each

\AI........

_

Violet Smith propertv ot
Rttdoville. Oh.

Call or come In for new

949-2293

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

·space below. Each In·

TotS

"Excavating
*Ponds
*Septic Tanks
*Hauling

work

-Plumbing and

1
Nam•---------~--------.•
.. - IT Address--------· I

reser'ves the right to

••

--

~euauN

-- I

i~iv~0~ri~e~5~~:ese~~:~~l

RECLAMATION

ond IWii
- - , . and gulttr w..t.
•

Write your own ad and order by mall with this I.
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone when you. vet I . . ...'~
results. Money not refundable.
I

titial or group of figures
counts as a word. Count
name and address or

M.L ..
CONTRACTING :

YOUNG'S

Cell 446-3368. - .

Coli todov (7141 821 -8900.

•DOZER
•BACKHOE
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
•LIMESTONE
•WATER. GAS and
SEWER LINES
•PONDS, RECLAMATION
WORK
, •LAND CLEARING,
' CONCR£Tt WORK

··F,.. Enlmatea''

v

Halp Wanted

Management person to
manage local photogr·a phy
club for international film
Corp. P1rt time to $984 mo .

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

-,

for Sala

There haa never bean a
better time to sell AVON.

Minersville. OH.

~·12- IFI;

•

304·676-1604.

11

992,6030

Route 4, Pomeroy ___

··~"'

Uncle Arthur's The Bible
Story or My Bible Frianda.

JOB-BIG OR SMALL

SERVICE

. P;R~~.; .:••:~~

~:!liN ~nuu,.•

LAFF-A-DAY

can 614-992-6416.

good condition. Call 304·

USED
APPLIANCES

FOR FUTURE USE"

'

Want to buy kitchen table
and chairs. coffee table, full
alze bed and 2 and tablet.

876-2790 onvtimo or 304675-3763 oftrer 6:00.

"CUT OUT

'

Buying daily gold, silver
coin a, ringe,Jewelrv. 1terllng
ware, old coina, large currency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

WANTED: Ginaing &amp; Yellow
Root. Alao new shipment of
trapping supplies. Hlp bootl
6 waders. George Buckley
864-4871. Monday-Friday
1-9 p.m. Sat. Ito Sun. 1-9
p .m.

AUTO
PARTS

.ENGRAVING .-

•Aluminum &amp; Vinyl

Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

CHESTER

. PlAQUES

Plumbing

Wanted to buy. New. used &amp;
antique furniture. yvill buy 1
piece or complete houaa-holde. Also complete Aucti-

Middleport, oh. 814-9923476.

'

••

!lEW USTI .. EVElY WEEK.

New Holland. Bush Hoe

2·2J.rtc
_._
: '---.,...----.-------11 ,·~

COUNTRY MOlE -Almost
3 acres,- 8 "'· house, 7 yrs.
old. All elec. with range refrigerator, dilposal and' d~--hwasher. Ashint $69,001.

MIDDLEPOIT - N.lourth
, St. 3 bedrooms, bath, carpetinl. nice kitthen~!orced
1lr lurn•ce IINI lot :~~~d25
;Mkint 127,000. What wHi
you atve! Alit 2 houses on
Grant lor $60,000.

·

9-15-1 rTitl pcj ,

. Trophy
ftllanufacturers

'

•Custom Pole Bldga.

Sizes sllrt from 12'x16'

PH. 992-2280' ,

· MINERSVIL£ - 4.77 acres,
. 7 rms., ball!, woodburner, 3
. bedrooms, Clrport and T.P.
water. For $28,000. Also 6
rm. older '-ne with bath
utilrties and · large lot lor
$6,500.

RIVER FIOIIT - Want to
boat, hsh 111d picnic?-Then
these 2 pieces are for you.
One has a 3 bedroom home.

•Insurance Work

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

STRIP
COAL

CONTACT

-

•Roofing

Authorized Jo~n Deer,

949-22!4

21

Oh. Or 992·7780.

on.,rlng nrvlce. Coli Ooby
A. Martin 814-992·8370.

All Makes and llodtls
Antenno lnslallttion
House Calls ond Shop
Service Available

THE
TROPHY
KING

New Homes
Extensive Remodelin&amp;

U.S. RT. 50 EAST .
GUYSVILLE, OHlO

Oewayne William•
8r. Scottie Smith

or 949-309 ~"·''

CON~~3~TION

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MINE RUN

PART-TIME HELP IN POMEROY
NEEDED AT ONCE.
RESPONSIBLE PARTIES ONLY.
GOOD PAY.

-

Call:

____ ,

r~~~~~~~~~rr~~~§~~~~~
31 Homes for Sale

. M.D. Millor.f!t. 4, Pomeroy,

r-----------~~1 :. 1~~~~~~-;1

.

WRESTLING

I

BEDS·IRON,
old
le11,
wood leo BRASS,
boxet, otono

jara, lntlqull, etc.. Com~
plete houHholdJ. Write:

Chastaf, Ohio
Ph. 985·4269
If No Answer, Coli 985-431!

ing and paintilw, storm
doors and windows.
All Work Guaranteed
"Free .Estimates"

61 4-992-5344.

1- - - - - - - - - -

acrooo from Spring Valley , _____ PfPiea~slrlt
Shopping Plozo . Tues. &amp;
Wed .. 9 to&amp; .
&amp; Vicinity

Olive St., GoHipollo, Dh.

fumk:ure. gold, silver dol·

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

All types of roof wort, new

Yard Sale 608 Circle Ave.,

Thurs. 11nd

AND

or repair, gutters · and
downspouts, gutter elm·

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood 'heatue. Swain Furniture, 448-3159. 3rd. &amp;.

Cameras . clothes, toys,
tools. tires . chest and antiques . Five Points area-

Wenttd to buy Uood mobile ~~~~----,---­
homH • truck camper. Call Yard Sate 9 to 6. Thun , Fri. Big sale, turn right at end of
814-446-0176.
&amp;. Sot. 163 7 Chestnut St.
Sandhill ,R.~ :A. 2Yt miln.

S&amp;W TV

Writesel

ROOFING

12·20-ttc

BOGGS

4411-3672

9·15

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity
-----------------··-- ·-· ······
Thursday and Friday ·

Garage Sale Oct. 21 &amp; 22 ,
Thurs. Sa Fri. Mana, womans
It teens clothing , toys, many
misc. items. Rt. 36 West.
next to HaHaft• Carpet Co .

Bill Gene Johnaon

.

EAFORD

CARRIER WANTED

H. L.

Route 1
Lon&amp; Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067

•.3:7-Hc

l rooc: ~OODtJOIO

l.~.,..s..,.... ,n

Discount on any new furnace ·purchued before Oct. l5.

. Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

10·17-1 mo. pd

· · For. all your wiring
needs; furnaces re-'
pair servica and in- '
stallation.
Reaidantial
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

imposed by the federal government
and amounted to a · per capita of
$2,496. State taxes were pegged at
20.1 percent of the total, or $745 per
capita, wblie local taxes made up
12.6 percent, or $467 per capita. ·
But the state figures, covering the
fiscal year which ended Jtine 30, do
not reflect this year's 90 percent
income tax boost.

~.,,.,,.,.,

•to··-·. .. .

•

mo. pd.

·~

APhone Coli brinp
HEATING • PLUMBING
Prompt Courteous Service
232 E. 2nd
Po01eroy, 0.
N~'s the time to aot your furnm r11dy for cold weoter. 10'11

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

PHONE:
Residence: 985·3837
WarehouM: 985-3509

MIUER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

.

' RESIDENTIAL • COMMERCIAL

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
inc - Sidin&amp; - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Constructi011 - Re·
model inc - Custom Pole
Barns.
·

·water Pipe
*Gas Pipe
*Regulators
*Fittings
*Dfips

$99 TO $189
Also Army Supplies.
Radios, Watches &amp;
General Variety

3 Announcemants

CARPET

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

Coal &amp; Kerosene
Heaters

l!J.l-1

AI RCONDITIONERS

'
10-3- 1 mo

D&amp;J
-SAVEMORE-MART

ll~•~•

Starting At

5
MA ON, W. VA.
C• l. KITCHEN

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

federal highway funds or cigarette
tax revenues to possible increases in
ton fees at other brtdges.
The state now operates three toll
bridges: at Cannelton, Mauckport
and over tbe Wabash River west of
Mount Vernon. Two other brtdges in
the state are either operated
privately or in the case of the
Wabash bridge at New Harmony,
byiiunois.
·
Funds coiiected from Indiana toll
roads can't be l®d for bridge
projects.
At one time, there was talk of
building a road llnking . the new ·
bridge with Interstate 64 about 20
mlles to the north.
,

PH. l-304-773·5634

I .-992-20J6
DIAL

""•"
·

··----Pcimerov---··-·--

&amp; Vicinity

Jim Mink Chev.-Oido Inc.

'~

'·" _

------ aiiiii.iioiiii.--·-- -·

We pay caeh tor lata model
ciNn uaed Cllrw.

IILECTIItCEELSEIEIClEAIIER

.

1

_~

T Buy

You Wont Him Good"

'PERSONALIZED POOLS- 11

PAT HI ll fORD

773-6040

~~~~~~~ . ~,:;':..~::~·

CONSTRUCTION

acldbollendrodoutradilrtorl. We eleo rapeir
G• Tanka.

Council
made
a comparison
based r~========t=========:r:;;;:;;;;;:======::!=========­
on
state and
local
income tax levels.
The report does not reflect the
impact of a 90 percent income tax
increase whlcb took effect March 1.
Or Wtile Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
But the group said it would Ukelynot
lll Court Sl., P()Nf'IJ. Ohio 45769
raise Ohio's spot in the rank!ngs by
more than three places.
One reason is that several other
states also raised their personal
income.taxes this year.
·
I t:o,.. "' TI••Molpood onMI•..-.col
Il l "OUMIIOIIG&lt;&gt;Oao
71
lo&lt;S ...
I J ro"if i•·d 1"'1-!''-• ,~) ,..• r 11! u
In_,.
' lpood on ooi•O"COI
7l
!il •t8
1 J ......... wo
"The main reason would be the
5]
........
~··
'"""";,it , .j,.,,J... ,,. ''" '' ""J:''' ...
J "' ~"-""'"'"'"'
H
•c
...- .....,.
s • "'"' M.. ,h,,..,,.
li&amp;
n..,..,. .,~"'"
statesatthetoparesofaralheadofus
•H•t&gt;• ""d•
I I ..... '"' , ...
,..,.n Ca
a..... cwn"
71 ll.,.oPoriO&amp; """'""''"'
'Yo•d ............. - . .... .
n ...... • ••
..... c ....... .
AoooCO&lt;Jo lOt
that we couldn't catch them even If
•.-clio,.
71 -Com . ... ............
''"''"
.
.......
!ioiHe• Ul•oo . , _
'"'·,.,
~..
we doubled it again," said Jack
t w-••a~""
~'"'
.......
a....
Whitmore·, ' council research
ru
.,.,..,.,
I U _,.._
director.
'" ._.,...
JJJ w - He said those states bad higher
graduated state income taxes than
Ohio even before local taxes were
included.
The councU said a 50 percent
increase in the state personal
Real Estate Generel
income tax which took effect July 1,
TV &amp; APPLIANCES
TRI-COUNTY
SCIPIO RECYCLING
1982, raised Ohio's ranking- wben
627 3rd Ave.-Ph. 446-1699
Top Prices Paid
considering both state and local
Spin WastMrs. Gas and Elec.
GENERAL WELDING
DI)IIS, Auto. Washers , Gas &amp;eltt.
For All Cast or Sheet
income taxes - from 25th for the
RanJts , hfriJerators, 'N sets.
Salem Twp. Rd. 180
Type Aluminum
flscalyearendingJune:JO, 1981, toan
216 r. . 7n41 St.
l!ii~EAL~~~~
627
3rd
Ave.,
Gallipolis
Dexter, Oh. 45726
Delivered to Pl1nt
estimated 16th ranking for the
Phone
Ph. 446-1699 ·
I¥• M. East of Paaeville
Bill Eskew
period ending March 31, 1!&amp;.
On Township Rd. 141
H614)·992-332S
"It should be noted that Ohio's
.
PH.
742-2456
We
Specialize
1982-83 state income tax ranking 1 Card of ·Thanks
NEW LISTINQ -2bedroom
in Aluminum Only
only includes nine months of the 50
bungalow wrth balh and gas
Ladders for
PH. 992-3466
furnace. Should heat very
percent state income tax increase
100 B.arrel Tanks
10/ 1912 mo. pd
easily and be a nice place to
And Drip Tanks. Also
live and walk to !he stores in
CARD OF THANKS
Indictment refused
1011212 mo. d.
Middleport lor $21,000.
Please accept our sincere
NEW LISTIIG -You'll love
ATIIENS, Ohio (AP) - An
thanks for the kindness
this 12 acres near Langs·
11 Help Wanted
Athens County grand jury has
shown us in the loss of our
ville. Modern 2 bedroom
refused to return an indictment
home, 15 yrs. old. 4 nice size
loved
one.
against Violet Denney in the Aug. 20
rooms, bath, 2·porches and
A ·special - thanks to:
fatal shooting of her husband.
barn, eic. Also a 2 bedroom
County Prosecutor Mike Ward
trailer. All for only $35,000.
Friends &amp; Neighbors,
said no indictment was returned
Rev. Ron lloyer, James
NEW LISTIH - On Rt. 7
because there was no "criminal
E. Simpson, Middleport
by-pass. Small 5 rm. frame
intent."
home with furnace, water
Fire Dept., loyal Men &amp;
He saki the evidence shows that
and lull buemenl Asking
the victim, Harold Denney, apWomen Class of the
$8,000.
proached hts wife In their mobile
Middleport Church of
home and threatened to shoot her
$17,000.ot - 8 rm. reaChrist. Holzer Medical
sonable iletM in Pomeroy
and her parents.
with bath, furnace, nice
Center Stiff.
She struggled with blm, and the
kitchen, dinillg, and l4 ol an
gun went off, fa Ially wounding the
992-2156
Family. of Leo Searls
acre with trees and shrub·
man, Ward said. ·
bery . .

Bridge study enroute
to coordinating board

~ard Sa\eS

PubllcSale
&amp; Auction

night, Pt. Pteonnt, WYo.
Auct. Lonnie Noel. Youth
f=~~~~~~=9m=========~========~~=========~~=======~~Auct~neve~he•d•v
R::::c:~R
KITCH EN &amp; SQN
OHIO VALLEY Plumbi~All~~~~~~upplies ~~~~;r6:.~01 comdon st.

Buckeye State moves up in overall tax ranking

Eleven people from Dayton;
Cleveland; Wbeellng, W.Va.; Pitts·
burgh; and Erte, Pa .. unhappy with
the compromise, staged a sit-in
Tuesday morning in the tourist·fffied Capitol Rotunda.
They bad lobbied Monday for
eight additional weeks of checks for
people who have exhausted the
last-ditch supplemental benefits.
They also wanted a shorter
extension, contending tbe 18-month
renewal will give Congress an
excuse to stall · on reform of the
complex, three-tiered unemployment compensation system.
"We've trted just about everything. We've marched, lobbied,
testified and petitioned," said Jack
Baublitz, president of the Erie
County (Pa.) Unemployed Council.
"We are here today to try again.
We have no other course," added
Linda Wa tklns, president of the
Cleveland Councll of Unemployed
Workers.
Theprotestorssatinacircleonthe
floor for a brief time before some 15
Capitol pollee officers surrounded
them and led them away one by one.
They were told they would be
charged witb unlawful entry, punl·
shable by a $100 fine or up to six
months in jail.
The Labor Department said
unemployment rates in Ohio cities
for August were: Akron, 10.2
percent; Canton, 12.3 percent;
Cincinnati, 9.1 percent; Cleveland,
10.3 percent; Columbus, 8.0 percent; Dayton, 9.4 percent; and
Toledo, 11.6 percent.

8

aectional h.oma. like new.
Lot at end of Street. Ar-

beugh Sub dlvlolon, Tuppart
Plolno. 135,900. Wllloccept
Mobile Homo cin !rode.
Flntndng ovllloble to quell·
fled buyar. 814-992-7034
doys. 614·992 - 7871
evenlnga.

•

Mobile Home Moving. u.
censad and Insured, Free
Estimates $100. per hookup minimum. Phone 304-

676-2711

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-676-2711 .
1966 Schultz, beat oH•r'
over , $2 ,200 .00 . Phone.

30'1-676-1678 .

1973 Vandele 14x65 with

16x6 expando, bath and
half. 2 bedroom all electric.
appliances &amp; air condition

incl . 304-273-4610.

12x60. three bedroom. all
atectric. Phone 304·675·

4204.

33

Farms for Sale

114 acre farm on Roush...
Hollow Rd . Has house, bam,

ond olhtr building&amp;. Coill.
614-388-8626.
.

35 Lots &amp; Acraage .. .
_________
MASON Countv: 6 ecrao·
with a

house,

both for . .

U4,000 or wilt trode lor

1

houae or land. Or owner

financing. 304-743-3817.
304-662-6840.

•

•

�Page

. ...

...

10-The Daily Sentinel

,_

•w•

36 lota 8o Acreage

61 Household Goods

Theill Do It Every Time

Ing available. Call446· 8221
after 8 weekdeys.

Call 448· 3788.

Seeeoned

g,~
:}/
!1f!I,Ni.

1 or 2 adults. 15 minut8s
from Gallipolis. Coli 61 4·
266·1 198.

'IOWCUM

Nice 2 bedr. cottage. gu
heating, adultaonly, no pats,
deposit and referenclts re-

2 bdr. house upper Second
Ave .• Gallipolis. Basement ,
1 car garage, gas fumance,
no pett .. 1 child . deposit .
Coli 614-388·8296 otter 4 .
$236. month . 3 bedroom.
Fully carpeted, gardener fur-

nished, Stove and refrig

61 4· 992· 281 5 from 9 to 6
or 614-992 -2362 from 5 to

7 p.m.
2 bedroom home in Langs-

ville area. Deposit and reier-

enca required. 614-742 ·
2641.
Nice 3 bedroom home, 2

baths. 2 fireplaces.

iE ~

For rent with option to buy,
14 ft. all electric. 3 bed rooms. 1 V2 baths. setting on
nice lot. Roady to move into.
8225 .00 per month . Phone

304-576-271 1.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
Furni1hed apt. $2 bdr., 196.
water paid, 1136 Second
AVe., Gallipolia. 446-4416
after 7 p.m .
Unfurnished 1 BR Apt.,
nearly new , no pets. Call

446 ·3817.
4 room apt. utilities paid, all
carpeted. Adult• only, no
pets. Call 446-3437.

3 &amp;. 4 room furnished apt!.

614· 992-6434, 614· 992·
5914 or 304· 882·2666 .
Apta. for rant. 614-992-

6908 .
1 bedroom Apt. in Point
Pleasant, W .VA. 614-992·

5858 .

sant . 304·882· 3329 . .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. m obile home all
electri c. 1urnished, 2 ¥2 milos
out Rt. 588. $175 mo.
Security dep . &amp; ref. Call

446 · 2602 .
2 bdr. mobile home in city
limits. garbage &amp;. water
furnished , edult's only. no
pets . Ref . &amp; sec. deposit
required . Call 446-2491 .
2 bdr mobile home. Close to

Apartments . 304-675·

5548.
APARTMENTS . mobile
homet. hoasn. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis. 614· 446 ·.

8221 .

TWIN " iiiVERS TOWER .
Apartmentt now available to
elderly &amp; disabled with an
income of leu thin
$12 ,300 . Renting far 30.
percent of adjusted income-

. Phone 304-675-6679 .
2

bedroom

apt. at Gall.

Forry . 304-876·2648.
Small furnished apartrment
in Poi11t Pleasant , 304-676-

hos pital. Coil 61 4-388 · 1366.
9760 .
1------'- - -- - 2 bedroom Mobile Home in
Racine. 614- 367-7148 .

2 bedroom, electric range,
large kitchen . batement and

yard . 304·676·2264

2 bedroom trailer c lose to evenings .
school, park. st.ores. Deposit 1 ----------~---­
required . 614-992 -6914.
Furnished efficiency apartment, all utilitiea paid, depTWO bedroom mobile osit required , $200. 304·
home . unfurnished, 896- 3460.
e200.00, plus utilities and ~~:;;:::::::;;:=::::;::;::::::;:;;::==

deposit. No pots . 304-676·
2464

JA mile . out Sandhill Rd.

304·675· 3834.

62 Oliva St ., Gallipolis. 6
piece wood living room suite

with 6 Inch !lot arms f399.
bunk beds complete with
bunkies 8199, 2 piece lntron livingrqom suites $199,
antron recliners 899. other
reclinen eso, maple dinette
teta 8179, love seats $70,
hide-a - bed 8260 , box
springs &amp; mattress twin or
full 8100 set ret~ular- tlrm
e120. maple dinette chain
eJ6, W81h ltlndS $34,
maple rockers $69, 7 piece
chrome dinette tet 8149, 6
piece dinette set 889, uaed
bedroom auitea, re1irgeratora. ranges. cheat. dre11era,
wringer washers, TV's,
dryeres, &amp; ahoet. Call 448-

3159.
Sofa. chair. rocker. onoman. 3 tables, (extra heavy

676·1206.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished apt. S186 . Water
paid. 2 bdr .• 1'31 1h 4th.
Gallipolis. 446-4418 after 7
p,m .

chair 1nd loveaeat. •276.
Sofas and chairt priced from
and up to $126. Hide-abeds , $440. and up to
8626 ., Recliners. 8175 . to

$350 .. Lampo from $28 . to
$76.5

pc.

dinenes from

e99., to 436. 7 pc. 8189
and up. Wood table with six
chain t426 to $746 . Deak
' 8 1 10 up to 8226 . Hutches.
$660. and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with manreates, 8250. and

446-0338 .

up lo 1396.

Baby beda,

8110. Manra11e1 or box
springs, full or twin, 858 .•
firm, $68. and *78. Queen
sets, $196. 4 dr. chaeta.
842. 5 dr . cheats, 864. Bed
fJ&amp;mes, 820 .and e25 ., 10
gun - Gun cablnett, e360.
Gas or electric ranges 8376.
Baby mattretMI, 8 26 •

4416 alter 7 p.m.
Vacencies for ladies or men
in private partial care home.
Room &amp;. board. handicap,
24 hr. nufling Cafe. Reaso·
nabla in Crown City. Call

614·256·6609 .

46 Space for Rent

Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and

court house . Cell446·0866

876-7746 or 614-246 ·
6344.

1 acre trailer lot on BidwellRodney Rd . 860month . Call

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Park, Aoute 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

992-7479.
PUTNAM county: 2 acret of
l1nd with all hookup for
mobile ' hdfne." 8100. per

month. 304·562·5840 or
304-743·3817.

Utllitloa paid. Call 448·
11119.
Completely furn ished upttllrs, one bedr. apartment,
newly decorated. adults,
references. Centrally lo·

49

Cor- Third • Olive, Clolll·
polla, Oh. Ph. 814·448·
3984. Evana Emerprisaa,

efter 7 p.m.

9-1. Mon. thru Fri.

(Mon:orvUiol now 1 bdr.
1111 par mo. Coli 4,46·
1241, Mon.-Fri. . 8·6 .
.

} bdr. ldiGhen, lumlaMd. 1
ilclr.. kllohen, lurnlohocl. A·
0no1 RMI Ella.... Csrol
R-or. Coil 304·
1175-11104 or 304·871·
7381.

Y-.

AKC Registered Batsett
hound puppies, five weeks
old. wormed, ready to go

next weak . 304· 676· 6214 .
Rabblta, 81 .00 oach":"Phcine
304-676· 308 1.

1----------

Wood spllttlf hyraullc A
horae power. gaa motor,

Registered

Musical

14" . Call

Instruments

Upright piano e200. 937·

Coffee table and 2 end
t11ble1. Free standing room
divider bar with cabinet and
light. 2 padded b1r stools.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegatables .

Baby bed, car bed, ear ·seat.
fireplace screep. grate,
washer, dryer, ten tpeed.

e560. Coli 446· 3939.
Antiqua' Hootier cupboard.
axe. cond. Call 448-3946,
after &amp;PM.
Earty American living room
tuite. rust brown cream
plaid. herculon material. like

naw. $260. Call 614·387·
7101 .
Uaod furniture:
rocking
love•1t hldo-a·bed,
end rockerrecliner. Corbin Ia Snyder
Furn~uno. 955 Second Ave.
Call448-1171 .

Pair boya tlze 4 ekatet. like
General Electric w11her and
dryer, 2 year• old . Also •
Meigs Marauder jacket, like
new. mentamall. 814· 992·

3236.

~~
61

Goods

f100.00. 304·1171· 1578.
One let of bookcaH head-

board bunk bedo and mat·
tr••••·• *180.00.

304-87&amp;·1 88.6.

Phone

ator &amp; 2 balta . $100 .
614·992·2571 .

One kitchen dlaplay. oclda
and endl ldlchon cobln11o.
Dale't Kltctien C.ntitr.

Couch • chair, 2 Iampo for
sale. Cellf14·2BI·14U.
Couch. Oood cond.. 134
Hilda Dr. Con 44f-4311,

Carpal olrnoll · - 1 llx1 I,
blue, I 110.00. Phono 304171·1348.

11le·Beige

J?.ry firewood,

carpeting .
delinrd.

phone 304·875· 7771 .
SEASONED oek firewood,
304-676·2757 alter 4:00
p.m .

Farm Equipment

1963

Ford

tractor and

May . Call614· 246·6696.

Roglotored Hereford bull •
hoy for aala. 304·675·
2991 .

bulla. Sllurdoy. October 22.
1P.M. at the Athent County
Fairground•. Athene, Ohio.

Eighty hoed from A"ow
farm• end R. B. Hereford
farms. Ad. 4, Athent, Ohio,
with the top bloodHn11ln the
wortd for alza and maternal
traits . All cattle tested and

guaranteed . 61 4·593·
8034.

Harragotr, John Deere 60
bu. apre•der. Call6,4~682·

3931 .
Poled Charolis bull2 yr. old,
Siegler fuel oil stove, gravity
bed wagon. 323 New Idee 1
row corn picker, Olive' No.6
cornpicker. Allis Chalmers

20ft. corn Auger. 8·10-14
ft . wh .. t diac. -1· 2·3-4 bottom plows, AUla Chelmefl G
~ultlvating tractor, other
farm mechinery . Ralph
Howe. Rt. 124
Mayhew

Rd, Jackoon. Oh. 614·286·
6944.

304· 675·2088 or 675·
4560.

"73 Volkswegon Fastback,

Watar Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. lett holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.

aUtO·tra no .. I 1 .000.00.
Phone 304-773· 6860.

.
.
c

Phone

614·367 - 063~.

WHAT? t'IHI:HE

1 SEE .
Al.L FllqH"t

night's program features an
attempt to force the Vietnamese Government to
provide
information
on
MIAs and some aerobic eKercises done by male dancers . (60 min .)

YOU'Ll SEE
WHEN WE
GET THEf!E!

AFIE YOU Tflt\IN6
ME, IF NOT TO
MIGG AMqELA'S?!

(])MOVIE: "Goin' South'

place custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut-

Cil MOVIE : 'Telefon·

Q) l Spy
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Sugarland
Express'
(JJ Ql ~ World Series
Game #7/or Alternate
Programming Should thi s
game not be necessary ,
then The Faii "Guy, Dynasty
and Arthur Hailey' s 'Hotel '
will air at their regularly
scheduled times .
Ill (JJ ® Whiz Kids Bank
embezzlers frame Richie by
making it appear that he has
illegally accessed the bank 's
computer. (60 min .)
(I) ® Hitlor·.s #1 Enemy:
Bufied Alive The exploits
and possible fate of Raoul
Wallenberg, the Swedish diplomat who saved the lives
of over 100,000 Hungarian
Jews, are examined. (60

1 979 Ford Courier Pickup, tor, (Day 814-692·4066,)
real sporty. f2896. John'a Inight 61 4· 698·8206.1
Auto Sel11 on Bulaville Rd.

GET

446·4782.

your

carpet

SHIP

SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER. Wetor removal.

For selo 1979 dodga 4x4,

fumiture cleaning, free etti-

lou of extr11, •"· cond. Call

matea . 614·446·21 07.

676-7191 Iller &amp;PM.

1---------blood·

llon, " Go-Men-Go"

line, !(txcellent c!ontorma-

tlon . Coli oftor &amp;:00.
304-67&amp;-5028 .
Two registered Hereford
cows, three yn. old. with
c.lv11. Breed to Registered

Hwalord .bull,
3105.

64

304·882·

~~?:~YI!ll
• ;,t\,o-R "I'""
ii.W lolllltl,.-~T
!-~" .' ....m_
i ~~v.~~~¥.,
.·rf?:Y.'r!.' ·&lt;
-~!!.=~.
T~E.

~"f..J..!·.~ ~.!.·~~-TN~,~~~:~~:.,,B;

7•.

304-6:"5·2686

73

lAF ""'-""'' !dH"f!..l '!':±~',T&lt;
F
. ~· ·
'a.:X%

"-·~ ~~~~~-~~UI~
'7

1..!.~\

~''

~'

!iff

, ..4

I- ~i·tJ~\
-&lt; •ii":.:''" ·

Y~-t.AY.-=\

· ~ fii...

rrff.•,....... iK/1'1.~ .

.:;L}

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

'

CARTER'S PLUMBINO
AND HEATING

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

•z

A PLEASURE,
DOCTOR! SHALL
WE GET TO

•

v..oRK?

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Phone 446-3888 or 446·
4477

Jeep Honcho 4x4, topper.
whJte spoke wheels. blue
jean package, priced

U.491 . Call 614·266· JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG. Fomerly Oewitt •a
,a483.
Plumbing . Call 814-367·
1879 Jeep CJ·6. 6 cyl .• 3 0676.

Hay &amp; Grain

min.) ICiosoo CaptioneOI
MOVIE: "The Andro-

spd ., axe. cond., •3.300 or
Hey

for

sale.

304·882·

~=~~-for . pick_up - ~-~1)

:\:fll.· 83

3416.

8

meda Strain'

Excavating

8:30

66 Seed 8o Fertilizer
Wheat

for

cover

crop.

cloanod &amp; baggocl. Coli
:6:-1-4_·2_4_5_·_5_1_9_3_.- - -cal8otte copying from only
one lo 500. Call for pilclng
304-468·1 863. Leon Re·

74

M oto~cycles

mi. Coli 4411·8038.

76

614-949·

1974 Cadillac. Call f14·
379·2314.
1979 4 dr. VW Robbllt,
auto.. PJI. AM·FM. air

Chrlt Creh 19&amp;7 conatellation cabin cruil8r. 38 ft .•

Good-1 bcavating. baae mentt. footers. drlvewayt,
11ptic tanks" landscaping.

44f·l234.

vw Bcriroco '78. Air, 4·

=d..,.. U.2811 or

Call anytime 446·4537.

-

aor. 114·992·7811 .

1874 Cougar Xll7. ~ of
new porta. Runa good.
Looks good. E-lonl run·
1 .condltlon. 114·742·

t.'8

1178 - o a d CadiUoc.
814·112·1284 or 112·
7113.

9 :30

Jr.

Drain a. All klndo of Ditching.
~~~~-~d . Oh . 614 · 742·

AT ME. SHE LOOKS SO
STERN ... SO DISAPPROVING ••••

••

76

614-742·2407 or614·742·
2068.

Auto Parts

&amp; Accenories

1110 arid up. Body - ·
extra
. pen
otriplng, cuolom
otrlpoa.
Coll44f·038t.
phono

C1mplng
Equipment

,

For sale ·or trocle,
•
. . _ . liNpo lltlhl. 810..
andewr.tua ahH.Pho~~
f711·1121f7 or f71-4478.

78

Motora Home•
• Camp••

1173 Dodge motor homo.
Call14·241·1113.
'

(]) PKA
Kame

Electrical
Refrigeration

documentary
celebrates
Time magazine· s 60th anniversary .

([) Ozzie and Harriet
(I) Inside the White House
Tonight's program presents
a behind-the-scenes look at
what goes on In the White

•''

~ ..
t

I~EY

TRV

WAIT, MAW I! THAT

1

or 1114·367-0591 .
No•d aomethlng hauled
away
oom11hlng
movedl
Wo'll or
do~
- Coli 446·3169

..

IT

NOW

RICKETY 0C BRIDGE
MIGHT BUST
IN TH'
MIDDLE

I

••

••
•

PEANUTS

!::.":r14~;:~. 7~~j~m

l COME FROM A FAMILY
OF EI61-1T ••• AT FIRSt WE
WERE QUITE CLOSE ...

JtMI WATER SERVICE.
Coli Jim Lanlor, 304· 878·
7387.

•

I

CAN'T BELIEVE I'M
SITTIN6 IN ~E MIDDLE

0F. THE DESERT
TALKIN6 TO A CACTUS!

·

I

~~-~terday· s

Jumbles: PERKY WEDGE

ARCADE

EMERGE

Answer: · Peqpl e wh o don 't dye th eir halr co uld even-

tua lly oo Ihis- MAK E THE "GRAYED"

puu••,Ia l'f'l ...BoJIbla 34,for 11.ts
pi WI 554 poatagto
Norwood, N.J. 07841.

Ju......,.. 8ooll No. 13. containing 110
lrtd handling from Jumblll, cJo lhll

•

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Ja&lt;;oby

I

Pool'

12:41~ I~~j~n,.
Front'
Marrlttd JGIIn

:
. 1 :00

G

Entorllllnment Ton!ghl
(I) MOVIE: 'The Curse

of lha Black Widow"

.

.
•·

A shaky grand slam
His four no-trump call
wass U:i'lscientific . If South

NORTH
+A!&lt;J 92
"QJ82

sh'owed just' one ace there
might well have been two
quick losers in clubs. When
South did show two aces,
North just bid seve n to save
time and to avoid giving the

l0-ii·83

tA3

+95
WEST

EAST

"9
t

• 86
"6 3

+ Q 7 54

defense any information.

South won the diamond
lead, drew trumps with two
leads, led the I 0 of spaoes
and let it ride. A second
spade finesse gave him the
chance to discard one diamond and two clubs on
spades ano make the grand
slam.
At the other table South
played in six hearts against
that same diamond leao. He
had a simple safety play to
make it. He played A·K·J of
spades ano chucked his los·

KQJ 8

t l 07652
• Q 10 4 2
+JI J73
SO\]TH
10 3
"A!&lt; 10 7 54

+

+94

+A 86
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West
North Easl
Pass

2•

Pass ·

Pass

4 NT

1•

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

ing diamond. West scored

his queen. but South t ook the
rest .
For the record, it turned
out that North's slam-bang
bidding had actually jeop·
a rdized his team 's chances.
Somehow or other at the
other table East and West
had done so well on t he other
boards that a tie result on
this hand would have made
t hem a winner, but if the
grand slam had gone down,
so would the match .

Opening lead: +K

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
It was t he final round of a
Swiss team match: North
fell that his team needed a
good result ano bid unscien·
· tifically but most successful·
ly to a grand slam in hearts.

(NEWSPAPER E NTERPRISE ASSN.)

ti£tN.~tef'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

DOWN
1 Hi~itoff
2 Criticize
3 Recants

ACROSS
I Region .
5 TranSmits
10 Prod
11 Wine
13 Evaluate
14Gotobed

fEnding
for lemon
5 Abrade

15 Letter

6 Choose
7 King Cole

11 - andFox
17 Never
(Ger.)
18 Anglo-Saxon

8 Pub
9 Arranged in

a series
letter
· 12 Adolescent 25 Nourishment
16 Starch
19 Ukely
Z6 Uncover
source
28 Dutch liter
21 Compulsion 22 Turmeric
23 Against
23 Quote
· 24 Tourist's
24 Bit role

32 Nouveau

neckwear

26 Gaffe

·27 Spanish
duke
28 Big theory
29 Wire

measure
30 SwiSs
river

publi,co
34 Uncle

(I) Jack Benny Show
I]D MOVIE: 'The Drowning

•

MWIPI~r.

tncluct. your name. adciAIIJ , zip coOl and maka checks parableto NewapaperbookL

31 - bono

I

- - - -·- - - - -

TRISTATE
UPHOLITERY IHOP
1113 leo. Aw.. O.illpoita
448· 7131 or 441· 1833. ·

tr I I I J
(Answers tomorrow!

House during a campaign

l

1743.
Now Hauling Good Lump or
4

Upholstery

Now arrange the clrded leners to
t~e surprise an8l¥er, as suggested by1he above cartoon.

fonn

Prlntanswerhere:

year.
(jj) News

Comedy Time
(]) (I) aJ Ill (JZ News
MOVIE: 'Fat Chance'
(JJ Another Life
I!) SportaCenter
ill Dr. Who .
(jj) Palllsers
• Benny Hill Show
11:15 I!) Women' a Volleyball :
Unltttd States vs. USSR
11 :30 D Cll aJ Tonight Show
ill MOVIE: 'Trail ol lhe
Pink Panthor'
(JJ Doble Ollllo
(JJ CatUna
,I
( I ) -..
D (I) Ill News
l.atenlght America
(II) Nlghdlne ·
Twilight Zone
12:00 (I) Bum• &amp; Allan
(JJ MOYIE: 'Heller Skel·
ttr' Parl1
(JJ Nlghltina
•
D (I) Pollee Story
M'A'S'H
.
Thlcke of the Nlalrt .
I12:30 Davl~ ~~~~l~ht with
1 1 :00

I

;~~~~~:;.;~.m~~::

87

Contact

10:00 D (]) aJ I Love Men
-- (I) Time of Our Lives This

;.

.,•

Full

(]) Album Flash
f!IIIIN N News
1 0 : 1 5 (]) TBS Evening News
10:30 (]) Album Flash: John
Cougar

,.
•
1874 351 Cleveland onglno
8o
Ia transml11ion. t280. pair 1 - - - - - - - - - - "'::
84

0 (]) aJ Family Ties Alex
needs a teacher's recom mendation for a co ll ege application but Steven and
Elyse don 't help matters by
behing the te,acher.

I FEEL UNCOMFORTABLE
WITH HER STARING DOWN

menta. footera,landtclplng.
driveway•. farm ponds-;.

W 78

~~ng~J:C,"::.,~
..
tmllrook.olrahoobon
rwor. Allldng •110. Ooocl

•

with trollar, 112,800. Coil
614·367·0378 botwaon Meigs Excavating. Bulldozer
10-3. 614·446· 1343 alter &amp; b1ckhoe service. Ball·

cond .• sun roof, rMI nice,

U, 191. John'a Auto Soloo
on Bulavlllo Rd. Coil 448·
4 782, Oolllpola, Oh.

(f) (jj) Eddie Boyd: Bank
Robber Tonight's program
tells the story of· Canada's
most flamboyant and noto- •
rlous bandit, Edwin Alonza
Boyd. (90 min .) [Closed
Captioned!

J.A .R. Co!'lttruction Co .
Water Lines, Footers.

TOP CASH paid for late
arn Avo., Oalllpollo. 448·
2282.

0 (JJ ®MOVIE: "S.O.B.'

61 4-448· 1142 botwaen
7 :00AM. 5:00PM.

Daviton.

0 (]) aJ Facts of Lila Too·

gram features a terrifying
tale of a man's 47 day captivity in Central America .

Cat 216 hoe, dozert, crane,
loadert, dump truck. Cell

Jamet · l.
owner.

Boats8nd
Motors for Sale

Sponomon This

(]) 700 Club Today·s pro-

t·

1974 Honda Chopper 30 in .
over front end. CB 7&amp;0 F.

Wo~d

tie learns that her boyfriend
is illiterate and she must help
him on a college entrance
exam.

1978 Harley Davidson Super Glide. exc. cond., low t.4_4_6_·_
7_9_o_3_
. ------

1982 Honda CB 710 Cuo·

model uled c1re.
Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Ellt-

9:00

Phyllis would
never allow it
in the house I

Lonnie Boggs Excavating.
Dozer, backhoe, dumptn~ck .
Work by hour or job. Call

Coil 814·949-2737.

Autos for Sale

GASOLINE ALLEY

basements, etc. Call 448·
4907 . Carter &amp; Evant
Tran1portation.

(])

show feature s fishing , kayaking and surfing. (60 min .)

1978 Bluer new tifel &amp;

rima good cond. Coli 814· DOZER WORK By Ted
246-9498.
Hanna, ponds, ditches,

~~~:~~~;;~~~~~~kSH: /·~~~ ~~~lnh~~ il4.f7";141~~··
: ·'

AL!.EY OOP
;.

19711 extr
Bulok
Electro air,
many
11, •1.100. c 1n Attention Auto P1intlng

Two row corn picker. 'two
IOWI with pigs on them.

,'"&gt;;'~

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

1'::

diac. Oood cond. 614·247·
3896.

BOARDING HOUSE

82

1972 Dattun truck with
topper. 16&amp;0.00. Phone

J I I

Tonight
@II One Day al a Time
8 :00 0 (]) Cil Real People To·

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One

atrlpeo. Coll614·388·974 1.

I

tGLUNJE

D (])Tic Toe Dough

·(l) 0 (JJ Family Feud
(jJ Wheel of Fonune
8
{]2). Entertainment

OTHEFIWISE. '!OlJ'LL
OFFICER.
BE HEW FIESPONGISLE, I WILL
MISS PEASE.

call

afte' 5 .

V-8. Cleveland engine. auto.
trans .• PS, PB. end alrcond .•
metallic blue wJth white

E5ECAtJ!;;E HE HAl/ SEEN
FEELH•I5 THIS /..ATEl..Y.

~News

Cll Good" News

8

'-· nnc11 SHE RETU~NS,
l'"~t:H::&gt;c: NOTIFY US ...

E lJa R Tree~ Service, fully
Insured, free estimates.

1977 Ford Roncharo. 361

.

V lS.lTED A 5-Hfl:INK

GilD People's Court
flil Jeffer110ns

0

i

304-896· 3802.

Trucks for Sale

KANISA~OO

iHc

I .KJ

show features Willie Masconi vs . U.J . Puckett. (60
min .)

i

with Major Hoople

Call614-245·6193.

~,:3,:0:4:·11:7:8:·=2:2:90=.===::JL:3:0:4:-8:7:1:·:3:3:0:8.====~

•

RINGLE'S SERVICE oxpo·

Rally whaola, ·65,000 milea.
304-675-4181 .

MYFAIL

Pocket Billiards Stars This

rlenced roofing, including
hot 1:11r applicatiOf!, carpenter. electrician, mason. Call

'77 Camero 306 . Auto.
PS-PB, Air, AM-FM cattett.

I LURBY
I KJ

(J) Video Jukebox
(!) 2nd Annual Lepndary

removal. Call 676·1331.

Dttaun F·10. 6 apd. Call
or will On separate. 814448·2108.
742· 2801.
Po~uolo Electric Co. all
-~
ph1HI
of electric work. all
1957 Ford FolrlonaiOO 312
2
cars
for
pant.
1970
work
guel'af'lteed . Aerltl
engine, auto., •1.000 or
chevella • 1 970 Olda Cu· truck rental. Coil 614-446·
beet offer. Coil 814·388· doaa.
81 4-949·2608.
2711.
8108.
Oonarol Tlru, 8ply SEWINO Machine ropolra,
1980 Dodge Aapon auto., Three
BOOx1 8.11. Pricocl cheap. sarvlca. Authorlzad Slngar
PS, PI, e cyt., aunroof. rNI 304·871·3788.
StiH &amp; Service Sharpen
nlct, 12,9911. John'a Auto
Scletort. Fabric Shop,
Sale• on Bullville Rd. 44•·
' PomeroY: 892-2284.
4782.
Three Oener1l Tim, Bply.
1978 OldsmobUe 8tarflre 800x1 e. II. Pricocl cheep.
Phono 304-1175-3788.
86 General Hauling
v.e. auto.,
PI, P8, $3,1815.
AM·FM
upe.
rNI sporty,
John'e Auto 81ln on Bul•· 77 A
vllo Rd. 44f·4782.
uto Repair
I ~j~N~o~BOYSWAl:eRJW~,
.......::...:.:.::._:..:.::....:..:..:.::...__ _ 1l - - - - - - - - - l·'
'UI .. ,4'3JT-Y41'f

Ford 800 tractor with 61h ft .

If

7:30

F &amp; K Tree Trimming, ttump

77 DODGE, 318 automatic.
good work . car, 1600.00.
304·458-1728. Callalter .5 .

Purebrocl Polled Haralord
cattle auction. Selling cows.
cows and calves, heifers and

•

houao calla. Call 576-2398
or 446·2464.

9 after 5.

(jj) MacNeil/Lehrer
News hour

(I)

RON' S Television Service.
Specializing In Zenith 1nd
Motorola . Quaur. and

,~.t~op~
. w~h~ito~a~po~k~e~w~h~ae~l~•·
miles, 12900.00.

72

C!J Charlie's Angels
II ill Wheel of Fonune

BORN LOSER

614-446·4066.

1971 Jeap CJ7, liberglal8

71

dition. 304·882·2066. Nice
Chrlllmoa gilt.

· ,·c,

1600.

Phone 304-876-2478.

M gravity wagon, 12ft. MF

1974 Chevy Pickup. 1954
Mlnnoapol ia NN. 379·
2820.

~~J,.~•.
!:"-!!"'~. · ·~K'
,_c··

VW BHtlo

_ , _ ,..

(I) Emenainment Tonight

Cooling. Sheet Matol Work.

~~~~~~!~~~~tom.
~
2734. Extrae.

Bear Mini-Magnum compound bow with quiver, five
errowa. Bow excellent con -

•un

18

1971

I PALPE
I.. _._
I

Cll Carol Burnett

Oallla Refrigeration Co. Call

1 tJo HP MF 1 1 00 tractor, 30
HP 711 BMF ataer slke
loader. 10 T 300 buahel J &amp;

676·1286 altar 5 p.m.

Commadore Vic20 Super
E•pancler with 3KRAM car·
trktge, Adventure land car tridge, progr1mmer manual.

Buck Rogers

()J Alias Smith and Jones
(!) SponsCQnter

wllhert, dryera. rangee,
comp1ctort, dithwlahert,
mlcrowav11. Heiting •

676· 1 390.

cording Service.

Corn crib1 wire tight . new
900 bu. &amp; 1 200 bu. alzo.

,,. 0

•

B (]) aJ NBC News

®Over Easy
7:00 0 Cil PM Magazine

.&amp; modola refrlgerolora,

1974 Volktwagen Super
Beetle. Call 1fter 6, 304-

plowa. 81.600. Call 614·
245-6239 .

a.

Sears 21 . Roller walking.
jogging ekerciser. Like new
whh tpeedometer. 304-

Large Microwave oven_ ~~h ·
atand. alto cheat freezer.

304·1171· 7353 ..

Quarter hort·e filly.

montha . Call f14·lB8 ·
8270.

For your recording nHdl try
ut. for original mattering

wheel dlac. 14 ft.. Dunham

18 in, color Sylvania TV.
8200. Floor exerciser viber·

1

New wood burning stoves.
f400.00 aoch. Ona good
uaed elactrlc range,

~~ijij~
61

new. 815. 614-949·2606.

Boat .oHar. 61 4 -992· 3249.

Solid pine 84 in . sole, with
matching loveaeat, ex . cond.

776·1 1111 .

or 61 4 -379·

1--- - - - - - - -

7189 .

oak chelt $66, sm. desk
unfinithed 138.22, lg. de•
unfinsihed $60. Skegg1 Appliances Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, 448· 7398.

1207.

Heifer A.B.
calves
dairy-beef
croll.
Morgon
&amp;426
Tanglewood Rd. . Cro11
lJJnea. WV 25313. 304·

ripened, elder dropa. Call

For

Quarter harM

real gantlo. Call 44_8 · 1393.

All like now. Alter 6, 614·
992-3960.
I.Oo.,nsn Ridge Apples trll·

lah'od $31 .92, 5 dr. flnlahed

$76 each used wathars A
dryers. Nice &amp; clean, gua·
ranteed 30 days. Several to
choo• from . C1ll 614-266-

Regietered

2874 or 937-2896.

$75. 40' aloe. range 195.
30' alec. white range 895.
40' avacado green Kelvine tor Jange e95. 5 dr . Cheat of
drewert unfinished 846 . 3
dr . chett of drawe" unfin-

f960 . Coil f14·241·5816 .

Autos for Sale

pups .

!:;;:;=::;;:::::;=;===

Chevy Chovollo Supar Sort 67
covers,

Beegle

Phone 304·895·3938.

axe. cond. Call 446·3171 .
wheel

6:30

~THAT BCRAIIIILEDWORO OAIIE
byHennAmoldlndSobLee

Unacr&amp;mbMI .,..._ four Jumbles,
one letter to each square,10 form
lour Ofdinary warda.

Prairie
(I) (jj) 3·2· 1. Contact

Registered App1loon stal·

hoator. Ca11446· 1887.

Gas cook tto've for 11le. Call

Furnlohocl opt. 2 bdr .. 1 138
2nd .. A.... Oollipclllo. f18&amp;
walw paid. Coli 4411·4418

City, Ohio. Coli 81 4·266·

Call614·246-9136.

8199. Call446·7658 .

Reg. Quarter horN mare, 8
yr1. old-Sorrel tor exp. rider,

12 week old plga for sale by
tha head. 614-742-2536.

with headphones, tell than a 614-742·2801 .
year old works perfect on
land or shallow water, $60. Registered Bolton Terrier
1 Sears T.R. Discrimator puppies. Bleck &amp; white, 8
metal detector. le11 than a weeka old. 8100. Shou &amp;
year old work perfect $160. wormed . 304-883·8378.

Multi-stitch aewing machine
with cabinet . like new,

-~

ADBA Registered American
Pit Bull Tenier pups. Cham-

AKC regittered female pup
*75. or make offer on any.

3000 T.R. metal detactor.

-~

Cow for Ale. Will freshen in

Cocker Spaniel pups 160.

1 Brinkman treasure sensor

I KNOW,.. ¥0U ' ~~
GEE •••

Appll1nce Service All m1kea

71

Uvestock

8350. Call 446·2107 or
614-245-5027.

AKC registered female
Cocker Spaniel 2 yean old
e&amp;o . 2 male AKC regiatered

cluded. 676·7980 .

New Oak Furniture. tables,
chairs. cupboards, pie safe.
dry sinks. Paul Conkell
Antique•~ Tuppers Plaina.

Harvest gold ref . $96.
Coldapot white ref. $96,
coppertone re1. es&amp;. Whirl pool wether e126, Kenmore
dryer 866. Kenmore dryer

haired.
Wildfire,

pion blood fina . 8200. 614·
949-2791 .

reo, fm·am -cassette. Price
negotiable. Extre partl in-

Good selection of bedroom
suites , cedar cheats,
rocker~, metal cabinets,
awi\lal rockers.
Used Furniture •• bookcase,
range1 , chairs. dryert. refri~Jerator~ and TV's. 3 miles
out Bula\lille Rd . Open Sam
to 8pm, Mon. thru Fri., Sam
to 6pm, Sat.

448-2317.

euo.

Unfurnished 2 bdr. in Crown

German ehort
daughter of PJ

$160. Call446·7126.

For Lease

For lease Modern offic•
suite etpecialfy good for
insurance. real estate or
accounting. ~300 1q.ft.
Four roOms plus lge. clerfoll
office, kitchenette lnd ator·
age room. Nat. gat, central
1ir, carpet . Aent very rNaonable for this quality office.

cetocl. f200 mo . plus dop.
Call 446·2236 or 446·
2581.

Firewood- cut uP. al1b1, 816 Call 446·8234.
pickup load . Call 614-246·
6804.
Bird dog for ale. 1 ·vr. old

446-3768 .

63

puppies.

AKC Lhaspa Apto femele,
10 mo. old. Mutt sell. *76.

Buckeye coal Ia wood stove.

I DON'T THINI&lt; ...

THE&lt;¥ 8ROU611T Ml! ~EI&lt;I'
IJECAUSI! I TO~D TIIEM THE:
RO&amp;OTS W~RE !'JTARTitJ&amp;
TO TI&lt;UST ME .

Call 814-388·
===========~~·=· "'="=,.~·:~:':":""'~":~:•:•:··~~:11pt1CIIIfzlng
in 9887.
built up roof.

~

Roady to go. Caii446·0B67.

Fof rent 'Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

Jackson Estate Apartments
1536 Jackson Pike (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one bedroom apartments
rent. starting at $167 and
two bedroom rent starting at

Furnished upstairs apt ,, 3
rooms Ia bath, clean. aduha
only. no pets. ref. req .

Regl1tered

~~'rf. er top . 614 · 84 3·

Furnished 3 rooms, with
private bath . Reference preferred . Call 446-2215 .

448-2745 or leave meuage
on 1n1wering service.

AKC

814·379·2116.

lights of equipment. apparel
and downhill skiing basics.
Cl) Uttle House on the

lng . 3v year• experience,

Call 446·3844 alter 4.

Buck stove largest made
with gla11 door inserts. Sand
&amp; pipe. axe. shape. Call

day· s show features high-

PAINTING • interior end
exterior. plumbing, roofing.
some raf"Odeling. 20 yrs.

Dragonwynd CatteryKennels. AKC Chow pupplee, CFA Himalayan, Peralan and Siamete kittens,

614-266-1210 .

PLASTERIN~

textured ceiling• commerciel and reaidentlel, free
utlm·a tes. C1ll 814-258-

1182.

niel pUppies. Call 614·388."
9790.

Moving Sale Antique &amp;.
modern furniture, clocks,
household, pitcher 8r. bowl.
garden tools, misc. · Call

(]) Alpine Ski School "Tho
Mountain Awakens .' To-

61 4 -367· 1220.

cilltlaa. Engliah Cocker Spa.

1427.

(]) New Treasure Hunt

Wkly.
(I) Gl (JZ ABC News
1J (JJ (jJ CBS News
til Business Report

sionel All -breed grooming.
lndQ_o r-outdoor bo-.rdlng fe-

Fifewood 6315 pickup load
delivered. $26 if picked up at
the farm . Call 614-266-

Oflo(

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·

large wood burning add -on
furnace-brand new- heats
hot water - automatic
controls-firebrick lined .

Sleeping room 8116 , utilities paid. range S. refrig.
Share bath . Man only. 446-

"

STUCCO

0

® at

(J) MOVIE : 'Make Me an

Home
Improvements

'il'i)'i}'i.'\.fl' ID'il'

~ ~ ~~"

o,.. , _

(JJ

Judy Taylor Grooming . Call

Brlarpotch Konnala Prof••·

___________

$35. bod fromoa 120, 126,
&amp; $30. king frame $60.

446·0322

,.

0

rn o

(1) Rllloman
(!) ESPN's Horse Racing

Furnished Rooms

day1. $125 . mo . ,

a 193. $200 dopoait. Cal

or coal. e590. Coli 61 4·

Seara refrlg. brown, white
metal cabinet. Hotpoint
drylf, end table, Kerosene

Cil (JJ

oxp. Caii614· 38B·9662.

Firewood for Ale- eJO.OO a 446·8598
pick -up . Plu1 delivery. 698- 2303.

2bdr .. 2 bath. 1 1 Court St.
Rot. &amp; dop. $325 mo. Call Private trailer lot locatedJ.%
mile• from City Limits on Rt.
446·4926 .
688 . Coli 446·3870.
Small turn. house 1 or 2
adu!ts only. no p ets. Call

controls - 2 bloweu -glau
dooJ·ash pan-tits 30 ln. to
48 ln. flreplace· burns wood

by Frontier). 8885. Sofa,

_c_a_ll_4_4_6_
-o_7_6_6_.______ • 8590 . can 814·256-1216.
Two· bedroom trailer ,
8160.00, plus deposit. Crab
Creek A oad . Phone 304-

~"'"

TV &amp; Appliances. 627 Third
Ave .. Gallipolis. 446-1 699 .
Spin wathers, g1s It electric
dryers. auto washers. gat 8r.
electric ranges, refrigeretors. TV sets.

46

81

Walnut lumber 8 and 10ft. HILLCREST KENNELS
long. Call304-458-1997.
Bording all brHda. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Firoplsce inoon·stlll in lac· Dotiermen puppies: Stud
tory carton-autom8tic So.-vice. Coli 446·779&amp;.

JVC Compact ponablo ato·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

e286 . to e896. Tabloa, e45

Unfurnished Apt's. with
stove and refrig . M iddleport,
Pomeroy &amp; New Haven .
Deposit and refeJencea re·

&amp;:oo a

ill! News

Troybilt Tillers Sal,, &amp; Ser·
\lice. Swithert Implement,
St. Rt. 7, North, Gallipolis.
614-446-0476.

for Rent

1QL19/S3
EVENING

0 . Call 614· 246·5121 .

~2_6_6_·1_2_1_6_.
r~~==~~~~~~~;r~~~~==~~~==~1
44
Apartment
B1 Household Goods

quired. 614-992·7611 .
7 room house in Pt. Plea-

AL. 'TUCCI ,

~~!~!'~
..1098PFOH'T.MORS.RP.,
_ron~,
CDLOIIAOOCOLO~IN(;S,

1 bed room Apt. $196 . mo.
pump. large kitchen , garage including utilities . Equal
&amp; pat io . $325 . per housing opportunity . Conmonth . 882 · 2406. 882 · . tact Village Manor Apts.
2447 or 675 -55 40 .
614 ·992·7787.

Tw o or three bedroom
home , electric heat,
$276 .00 month plus deposit . 304-675-55 45 .

7~8

H&amp;SJUSr 1

z:;1fvNNr

heat

Two year old, t hree bedroom
home. two baths, garage,
heat pump. 304-675-5646 ,

'l~pii;;;~£~\~,\~1\i.l1ll

-~"""'

WEDNESDAY

efter 5 p.m . .

Pets for Sale
Galli• or pick up at Richard• 56
&amp; Son. Call 446· 7785.
----------

~

Television
Viewing

RONALD REI\G ....N.

1877 Yellowllone Camper
28' . .c.u 814· 992-6189

Limestone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs, ·

~

•

oak firewood,

Building- material•
block, brick, sewer pipes,
windowe. lintels. ate .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

6246.

ref. Call 446 ·3176.

Avo. Caii446· 1BBO.

79 Motora Homea
8o Campera

The

.Ohio

56 Building Suppliel

Knauff Firewood Pic kup or
Delivered. 12" -22 " atocked
in Yard . HEAP wander .
prompt delivery. 614-266·

on Rt. 160 in Vinto n . Central
air, $350 mo., sec . dep. 8t

qulred. city-1935 Chatham

r

Avac1do gaa range and
Sean gas heater. 304·8715-

64 Misc. Merchandise

4 bdr. houae 5 acrea of land

1983

304· 871· 2717 oltor 4 p.m.

(304) 882·3196.

"'"''''
Houses for Rent

October

October 1.9, 1983

DICK TRACY

1307.

21ota for aale in New Haven.
(Twin Ced1r Add itio n) City
Mwer and water . Phone

41

•

Kl_T_'N_'_C_A_R_L_Y_LE_
'"------~by..:...;L....ar_ry:_W___;rlg:..:;l).t

64 Mlac . Merchandlae

Two 30 " solid 01k, IQuare
end tablet. amber swag
light, 38" three drawar
painted iolld wood chelt.

315 acr•• at Rodney on W.T.
Wat1on Rd . Owner financ-

•

Ohio

(dial.)

35 American

Indian

36 illuminated
37 Account
39 Agreement
til One of the
kingdoms

UYearn
4% Bait
Equal

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work it: •
.
Is

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another . In this sample A is
used for tbe three L's, X for the two O"s, etc. Single letters, .
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all ·
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQVOTEs--

SY

ZBM

XBJE

GUFBWU

N I A

B'G L B P U Q U ,

NAASFQUA

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XONQ

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ONGU

ZBM

TBQ PUYQ7- 'O NJJSLBI
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Yesterday'• Cryptotplote: I FEEL LIKE A LOAF OF BREAD. ·

GO, THEY TOAST ME.- PAUL DICKSO!'l'S ·
"BOOK OF TOASI'S"

WHEREVER I

�•

12- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

Wednesday, October 19, 1983

Middleport, Ohio

Fire safety canvass underway

.·Mayors Court
Three defendants were fined,

lhrlie forfeited bOnds and two others

w~re given jail 'sentences in the

court &lt;lf Middleport Mayor Fred

and costs, driving while Intoxicated,
and $100 and costs, possession of
marijuana, and Allen R. Brickles,
Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly manner.

Hoffman Tuesday nlght.
One of the defendants given a j all
sentence was handed that confineFour defendants were fined In
ment as the result of recent
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Jeglslation passedunderemergency Clarence Andrews Tuesday night.
They were Keith Musser, Pomemeasures by Middleport Vltlage
Council to curtail loitering and roy , $43 and costs, disturbing the
sometimes resulting vandalism . . peace, a nd $113 and costs, intoxlcaGiven. a 10 day jail sentence under tion; FredE- Kuhn, Pomeroy, $113'
the new ordinance for leaning_ and costs, intoxication; Kenneth
agalnst a bulldlng wlthou t the -White, Pomeroy, $313 and costs,
owners consent was Richard Her- resisting arrest; Richard Parsons,
man, Middleport. Don Lovett, Northup, $375 a nd costs. three days
Middleport , was given a 10 day in jail. driving while intoxica ted.
sentence in jail on a disorderly
Forfeiting bonds were Kathieen
manner charge.
Fryar, Pennsacola, Fla., $51 speedForfeiting bonds in the court were ing; Scoti Johnson, Pomeroy, $46,
Robert P . Slaughter, Franklin speeding; John Thabet, Mason, W.
Furnace, $450 posted on a charge of Va .. $43, crossingdoubleyellow Une;
drtvlng while intoxicated, and $200, Daniel Shastina. Pomeroy, $63,
drtvlng while under suspension; failure to regiSter motor vehicle;
Van Wilford, Rutland, $100, disor- Ernest Ward, Point Pleasant, $213,
derly manner , and Wayne Little, assault; Narutie Fox, New Haven,
Gallipolis, $100, disorderly manner. $43, assured clear distance; Clean
Flned 'Were James S. Eakins, Pratt, Pomeroy, $46, speeding.
Pomeroy, $425 and costs. and three Aaron Manis, Rutland, was placed
days in jail, drtvlng while intoxi- on six tnont~ probation after being
cated; Tom Water , Middleport, $425 charged with assault.

Meigs Local (Continued!rom~ge 1)
The board at a 3-1 vote, with
Barton casting the dissenting ballot
hired Richard D. Ash as girls' junior
high basketball coach for 1983-84.
The board before hiring Ash. who is
non-certified. paSsed a resolution
indicating that it had follo\ved law in
posting and advertising the position
opening .for certified personnel.
Barton said that he respects Ash, but
felt that a qualified certified person_
had applied and that hiring should
have been kept in the certified
personnel category. Due to the fail
conference of the io School Boards
Association at which King will be
delegate, the November meeting
was changed to Thursday, Nov. 17.
Supt. Morris sa id that he. Carpenter
and Treasurer J ane Wagner wtll
also be a'ttendlng sessions of the
conference.
John W. Blaettnar and five
students were granted permission
to attend a state DECA conference
in Columbus on Nov. 4 and 5 and the
board approved the attendance of A.
Girree Notter to a yearbook
seminar in Charleston, W. Va.
Professional leavewasgivenDonna
French and Lynn Lovdal, special
education teachers at Rutland, to
visit the Barrington School In
Columbus on Nov. 2. Mrs. Virginia
P oston, French teacher, and students were given permission tb
a ttend a. Frenchplay in Columbus on
Nov.2.
Karen Facemyer , varsity and
junior varsity cheerleader advisor,
was given permission to attend with

her squads two clinics and competi·
lions. Sharon Birch, school nurse,
was given permission· to attend the
Southeast District School Nurses
Assn. meeting in Jackson on Oct. 20.
Gets continuing contract
A continu\ng contract was given
Ms. Mindy Young, a teacher bt the
district, and following an hour long
executive session to discuss personnel, the board voted tD terminate the
services of Ernest Triplett, a noncertified employe on the grounds
that he did not report for work.
Substitute teacher pay to make the
district competitive with Southern
and Eastern Districts was In·
creased to$35 a daywith asubstitute
to be paid at the regular .salary
schedule beginning with the 21st day
of the same assigrunent and full
benefi ts beginning with the 61st day
In the same assigrunent. The board
approved a request that Carpenter
be permitted to prepare a propose
for consideration at the November
meeting for substitute wages of
non-certified personnel. The board
also adopted a policy on hiring !rom
the district's list of approved
substitute non-certified personnel.
To be considered bt such hirtngs are
seniority, the recommendation of
the principal or supervisor Involved
a nd the mpnber of days theemploye
worked In the previous school year.
Transportation agreements were
reached for a special education
student attendlng Rutland Elementary School and for students
attendlng the Ohio State School for
the Deaf.

•

Beginning today ihe members of
the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Departrnent will be going door to door
throughout the village of Pomeroy
handlng out fire safety Information
along with phone stickers with !Ire
and emergency numbers.
They will also be giving window
stickers that wm he~

IdentifY rooms where infants and
elderly persons sleep.
If a person so desires the firemen
will do a quick safety check or a
home when they call.
Firemen will also be asldng for
dontlons to help pay faor the new
rescue truck ihat was punchased in
Mav.

James Johnson, West Seneca, N.
Y. , died Monday.
He is the father of Harold (Hal) ·
Johnson of Middleport and the
father-in-law of the ~. Wanda
Jackson, Presbyterian minister of
Mlddlport. Also surviving are two
granddaughters, Yvonne Johnson,

a student at Musklngum College,
and Carol Johnson, astudent&lt;lfOhio
Unlverslly.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
Friday at the Warren-Hoy Funeral
Home et West Seneca. In Ueu of
flowers, friends are asked to make
donations to the Music Department
of the Ebenezer. United Church of
ChrlstatWestSeneca, N. Y.

IJames Johnson
. · ea death
DARDEN
McDONALD
GEORGIA RUNOFF - Mrs. Kathryn McDonald, widow' of
Georgia CongressmM Larry McDonald, and state Rep. George Jiuddy
Darde n, left, will
In a runoff after spectal election ln the 7th
Congressional District. Nineteen candidates
ln the ra&lt;:e lor the
seat of Rep. McDonald who was ldlled aboard Korean Air Lbles Fllght
007. (AP Laserpholo).

meet

were

Rutland a t 11; 12 p.m. for Kenneth
Ellis, Route 689, taken toO'Bienness
Hospital bt Athens; Tuppers Plains
at 11: 3l a .m. to Route 681 for Ada
Herald,
to Pleasant Valley
. Hospital , andTuppersPialns at 5: 52
p.m . to Grove Road for'Susan Coss,
Wednesday morning,at12:25. the
taken to Camden-Clark Hospital In
Pomeroy unit went to Willow Creek
Road where a car was damaged by Parkersburg.
fire. Wednesday calis Included 6: 53 Meets Thursday
p.m ., Racine to 'Third St. for Tim
E va ns, taken to Veterans Memorial
The Rock Springs Betier Health
Hospital; 7: 3l p.m ., Syracuse, to Club wlll meetThursday, Oct. 2J, at
Jack's Service Station for Judy
p.mP. rogram
at the home
Louise
Bearhs.
will beofgiven
by
McNeely, taken to Holzer Medical 1:15
Center; Rutland at 5:58 p.m., Teresa Abbott. In charge of the
treated Rick Johnson on Ma in St.; contest is Phyllis Skinner.
seven ca Us were answered by
local units Tuesday and early
Wednesday morning, the Meigs
County E mergency Medical Servi·
ces reports.
·

taken

\.•.;./

Pages 3,4

story on Page 12

•

Syracuse'. OH.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Prest-.
dent R.{!agan, standing flrll) _
!n two
key foreign policy areas, says the
United States will "deploy on
schedule" its modernized nuclear
mlsslles In Europe, and that If Syria
thiriks 1t can wear him down by
delaying peace talks In Lebanon,
"they're going to he disappolnted."
Reagan, calilng Syria "a roadblock" to peace ln Lebanon, said at a
news conference Wednesday nlght
the 1,600 Marbles deployed In a
multlnational peacekeeping Ioree
will remain "as long as there's a
possil&gt;Uity &lt;lf making the overall
peace plan work."
The president said that the United
States was trying to make the
Marines' positions on low ground
near the Beirut international airport
safer. Seven have been ldlled,
Including two hit by sniper flresint'e
Friday.
"I know the Syrians are dragging
their feet" in Lebanon, Reagan said,
adding that about 7,000 Soviet
advisers and technicians bt Syria
"are contributing to the disorder
and the trouble."
But, he said, "If they're doing it
with the idea of wearing me down,
they're going to be disappolnted."
The president said the Soviets
were conducting "a great propa-

PH. 992-3982

~

1..

WMPO _Radto's

FALL EXPO
***
October !1, 1983 ·
10:00 A.M. to 4:00P.M.

Meigs County Fairgrouods
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CLEVELAND (AP) ..:::. :, The
winning nwnber drawl! Tuesday
night In the Ohio Lottery'S daily
pme, "The NUI'!lber," was 741.
In the "Pick 4" game, pla)llid five
tlmell a week, the wlnnlng number

was2515.

-

ANSWERS QUFliTIONS - President Reagan pMure8 while
answering a question during his pre111 coofereoce In tbe Eut Room of
the White House Wednesday evening. During the..,_ Rea&amp;.in said he
~ sign the blD cleared by the Senate eu.r ln lbe 4bly, maldng
M&amp;rtln Luther KIDgJr.'s birthday a oatlonalboUday. (APT •serpldo).

Repeal impact
presented here
Approximately 40 concerned dtl·
zens met at the Senior Citizens
Center earlier this week to discuss
Issues 2 and 3 and the possible
impact of. passage.
Karen Harvey, Athens Gounty
Commmlssloner and coordinator &lt;lf
the Committee for Ohio In Athens
County, and Carol Weiner, speech
therapist at the Beacon . School In
Athens County, were the speakers
lor the meeting planned by Henry
Hunter, Meigs County coordinator
lor the Conunlttee !or Ohio.
Both outllned the proposed constitutional amendments and the projected cut In the budgets of the local
schools and other county ilgendes If
l.s$1e 3 passes. It was reported that
passage would reduce funding to
Eastern Local by·$218,354; to Meigs
Local by$8al,849; to Southern Local
by $279,617; to Meigs Counly omce,
$67 ,!141; and to Carleton School by
$&amp;l,(XXl. .
They contended that the reduc:
tlons in schooifundlnglftober~
by p10perty taxes .would require
additional mileage of 10.68 mllls In
Eastern, 9.90 ln Meigs Local, and
12.63 Ill SOuthern.
The speakers said that Issue 3
repeals not only the recent increase
In lnoome taxes, but also repeals 84
other laws, eUmlnatlng some new
tax reductions for senior citizens,
famDles and working couples,
repealing the inCreBSed unemployment compensation tax on employers, taking away sornenew personal
property exemptions which reportedly help small business and
fanners. ellmlnates the neW tax on
. oU and gas welis which helps !lnance

Robert Barton, president of the
- Meigs l.ooa!Schooi'DistricCIBoard
&lt;lf Educatioo, !Dday Issued a
sta\e!I'IE!It regarclbli rerJW'kll be
made on rerout:~Pi of scbool
thls !aU when the board met In
fl!llll)ar lll!88loil TUeaday nJahl.
Barlllllllld 1Dday:
''Tile atatecame ln and made the
llui2y and reported Ill the board that
there would be a savlnp ol
aiJPioxlnlately$111,10)torthe 19fl3.8t -

oo-

acboolyar.
''So at thll time, I feel the public
---

conservation or Ohio's natural
resources, remdves new tax exemption on small estates, gives $64
mllllon ln tax breaks to pubHc
ultillties.
John Reibel, superintendent of
Meigs County !;lchools, reported that
school offlctaJs have expressed the
fear that should Issue 3 pass the
districts would be on the verge of
bankruptcy. He said cuts would
have to be made at a time wben
schools are faced with new mln·

lmwn standards.
A letter from Martin Easterday,
examlner In charge at school audits
in Meigs Counly, was read In his
litier, Easterdayexplalned that his
pOsition Is IIOil'partlslan and that he
has never taken a stand on a state
Issue betore. However, he stated ln
the letter that hels taking a stand on
Issues 2 and 3 because ot the eftects
which they will have on state
serv1ces and the educational system, and urg8l a no vote on both
IsSues, warning of a potential
emergency situation should the
IsSues pass.
. John Jacobs commented on the
effect of pa•sagP. to the Meigs
Coonty Health Department, "and
other agencies contended Curtallments or eUmlnatlon ot programs
should the Issues pass.
In summary. the groUp agrt!ed
that schools, the health departrnl!nt
and other public service agencies
would con!lnue to operate,
at a
reduced level with curtanment ln
some areas contlnulng until olher
tax~ were a~ to finance the
programs.

--·- - -

20 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

-------

ganda effort" bt Europe to "per- announce his candidacy or bow out way or the other," he said. That
seemed to put thedecisiondate back
suade our allies to turn back and not of the race.
"Down the road one day, probably one month, because on Monday he
ask us for the deployment of
In the not-too&lt;llstant future, proba- said he would reveal his decision
intermediate-range weapons."
" possibly by the first of the year."
"Well, we're going to deploy, and bly before my (Feb. 6) birthday, I
deploy on schedule," Reagan de- will put your minds all at rest one
clared. "And once they see we're
going to do that" and not dlsann, ''I
thlnk they're going to see that the
best thing lor them is to negotiate
with us and ln good faith."
Under a 1979 NATO plan, the
United StateS Is scheduled to deploy
the ' first &lt;lf 572 Pershlng 2 and
land-based cruise missiles in Western Europe in DeCember, unless
U.S.-Sovlet arms talks produce an
agreement on controlllng medlwnrange weapons.
. Reagan said the Soviets "may do
some things, they may try, as has
been rumored, ·(to) walk out and
things of that kind. But we'll just
"-...
wait at the table, and I thlnk they'll
. .. ~-..f··. /''
come back."
The president said he hoped that
an agreement could be reached by
the end of his current term, 16
months from today.
"'-';,.
During the nationally broadcast
"'·"" ......_ ....
news conference, Reagan gave no
CUTI'ING IN - President Reagan cuts the first plece __ol cake
hint about whether he will seek a
during a celebration Wednesday at tbe Air IUid Space Museum In
second term. A re-election commit·
Washington marking the twenty-Mh anniversary of NASA. (AP
tee was formed with his approval on
Laoerphoto ).
Monday, although he refuses to

.

ODOT finishes·- plans
for SR 554 project ·
CHESHIRE - A sign at the
bttersectlon of Ohio 554 and
Roush Lane Road in Cheshire
Township warns that a nearby
section of the state route Is
closed.
Some time ago, someone
· spray-painted the message "due
1D lazlness" below the " Road
Closed" letters.
'file arafflti summarizes the
frustration Roush Lane residents have expertenced since
November 19!ll, when nearly
two ml1es of 554 between Roush
Lane and Gravel Hill roads were
closed by the state because
low-lying water has contlnually '
flooded the road. Roosh Lane
was then turned into a detour to
Ohio 7.
Residents learned this week
the Ohio Pepartrnent of Transportation has final1zed plans to
buDd . a new, elevated road
through the closed portion of554,

.

wlth construction expected to
start In spring.
A spokesman for COOT's
District 10 office in Marietta
confirmed Wednesday that the
road w111 be 1% miles_long and
will cost approxtmately $1:5
mllllon to build.
The road will be elevated to a
point where existing local water
levels won't flood. The spokesman also indicated the new road
sbould resist anticipated back·
water from the Ohio River.
The spokesman agreed the
project has been In the' works for
some time, but the highway
departm~nt, continually
plagued wlth budget problems,
was forced as late as 1981 to
adplit to residents improvement
of the road wasn't immedtately
possible.
Since the state and Gallla
Counly cornmlsslonets agreed
(Continued on page 8)

..

oot

i

I

School board leader
clarifies his statement

~

----

•

•

l S.C:tions, 12 Pages

~~;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WQ RK
Brawn DuEk CLOTHES

---------··--

·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 20, 1983

car-1-,ar'tt

Winning lottery numhel'8 ·

bloo~

at y enttne
.
Reagan firin on policies

e

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I •

Local grid roundups

.

Discover new
rich roasted taste.

Concernlng a new road at Boston
Hollow, Andrews was told that
easements must be obtained. Easement applicatiOnS m ay be obtained
at the county garage.
Andrews, the commissioners,
Roberts and Warner will vlew
Bigley Ridge and Boston Road
Fr)day mornlng . .
Roberts reported funds for seed·
lng, erosion and slips are available
thrOUgh Resourse Conservation
Development (Rc&amp;D). Roberts is
looklng into the possiblllly or
securing funds. It was suggested
that representatives explain the
program to the Lttier Board, the
comrnl.ssloner and the trustees.
Roberts also reported' that contractors would anive within a lew

I

vot.32,No. l34
Copyo-lghtod 1983

~~.~ERFELDS.

Tuppers Plains_(c_on_tin_u_ect_n-_om_pa_ge_1J__

Discuss sUp
Also meeting with the commissioners was F rancis Andrews, Olive
Township Trustee regardbtg a slip
on . Bigley Ridge, T-370. P hil
Roberts, county engineer and Ted
Warner, superintendent of the
Counly Highway Department were
present and informed Andrews that
work will begin by the end of the
month.

What's Cooking? Page 7

PERMANENT SPECIAL

Emergency squads kept busy

treats

release Rose

I

should be told If the ' savtnp are
t.akJni plr I have al'ked Mr.
(James) C'Arpentertopn!IIE!Ittotbe

boardofeducatlonC,:"=
·
nwuJar
board meetJn&amp;. Coocei-nJna
tbe
reroutllla. I can
tru1t that tile

district, a report rt
and iU(JIIne-at the MXt
Cllly

-declllcll we made oo rerouting u
the state~ .. tat lbr
tbe W I ol the"'"""" At this
time tbllre are still queatbls to be

answered. It

•

'

.

I

:

•

....

IIKllll'f - 11le Olllo Deps 111.- a1 'l'nlnlpoo: n "' hM
eGilllablled I ._ ali t I k1 ,.,...., tor a - lil!dloll of OIJm·!1M ,
? llri Tuw I \ lllnt ... ~elaNd far~ lliree :r-'8 clue ;
lou !mil 1110 ' a, All ODOT 111 a! · nan n11IUbe pnJed luiUed fCII'
"

I.................. .......

•

•

I

Body identified;
stolen car homed
The body of a man found Oct. 10 in
a mobUe home at Forest Run in
Meigs County has been otflcially
. Identified as that of Danny Melton,
30, a former resident or Batesvtlle,
Arkansas. .
Gary WoHe, btvestigator for the
Meigs Counly Sherlfl's Department
said positive lndentlflcation was
made by the BCI.
Melton, reportedly died from a
gunshot wound to the head.
On Monday, a Meigs County
grand jury indicted Lindsey Taylor,
34, Rt.1, Racine on a charge of
aggravated murder lric connectlng
with Melton'sdeath.
Meanwhile, Meigs County sheriff's deputies are lnvestigatlng the
burning &lt;lf a 199l Ford Thunderbird
that was found bt a strip mJne area
on wmow Creek early Wednesday
morning.
The department received a call at
12: 22 a.m. Wednesday that a car
was oo fire In the strip mining area.

When deputies and firemen arrived,
the vehicle was engulfed In flames
and had been stripped.
Owner of the vehicle 1s John D. or
Belly HUJ, New Haven. Hill told
deputies he had left the vehicle
parked In !rontofthe Blue TarTan in
Middleport.
A walkaway from Huntington
State Hospital was picked up
Wednesday evening in Columbia
Township just off the Appalachian
Highway . He was lodged in Meigs
County J aU untU arrangements for
his transfer can be made.·
•
Jerry Ray Moore, 19, Pomeroy
was arrested by Sgt. Randy F orbes
and taken Into custody on a breaking
and entering complaint.
Moore was found inside the
Modern Supply Store. It was
reported that Moore had several
limes of merchandise on his person
believed to be !rom Modern Supply.
Charges are expected to be flied
today.

Overcrowded classes
upset Eastern parents
Some 50 parents of klndergarten
students met with the Eastern Local
School District Board of Education
Wednesday nlght tD voice their
disapproval of large classes this
year.
The parents contend that the
enrollment in klndergarten held at
the 'I)Uwers Plains bulldlng 1s too
Jar~ and :!&amp;-lor the teacher and
an aide to handle properly, therefore, they want li. second klndergarten . tacllity establlshed at the
Chester Elementary School.
After hearing complalnts and
parent suggestions Wednesday
night, the board, which went Into
executive session on the matter,
agreed to advertise lor a hall-time
k:lndergarten teacher. The kinder·
garten teacher,CindyL!ton, present
for the meetlng, Indicated large
cJasses are a disadvantage in that
she cannot work with small group
activities. 'rlielXiardlOOk no iiCHon
towards establlsblng a second
k:lndergartentacWtyatChester, but
agreed toadVerusetorthepart·tlrne.
additional klndergarten teacher
with theldeathatateachercanwork
with small groups lntoanotherroom
at the Tuppers Plalns facility while
the second ll!acherwould handle the
remalnlna students. It was Indicated that some parents are not
satls1led action taken by the board

'

last night. The discussion brought
out that last year enrollment In the
klndergarten was larger than this
year and there were no compla ints.
The board discussed Statelssues1
and 2 to be voted upon at the
November election and it was
reported that should the tax-rela ted
measures pass, the Eastern District
would receive a pproximately
$250,000 less in the 1984-84 school
year. It would take an a dditional11
ml11 local tax levy tD make up the
Joss and without the state funds
many cuts in services would have to
take place in the district. Supt.
Richard Roberts reoorts.
~
The board employed' Linda E dwards as a substitute cook a nd
secretary and Nola Young as a
substitute kindergarten aid.
Given supplemental contracts
were Sue Thompson, advisor for the
National Honor Society; Nanc:t'_
Larkins, maihematics department
chairperson; Carolyn Tripp, E nglish department chairperson;
Maida Long, junior high cheer·
leader advisor; Barbara Russell,
advisor for th~ flag a nd majorette
corps.
Special educa tion classes were
given permission to make~ field trip
to Marietta on Nov. 2. The trip will
include a visit to the museum and to
(Continued on pAge 8)

'

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