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OUR GENERIC DRUG$1 ·I
Can Save You Money

' i

Generic drugs can generally be purchased from the manufa~turer at a lower cost than
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•

Color contest winners

See letters on Page 2 ,

Photos, story Page 7

Baseball top managers

Cornerstone service

Page4

PageS

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a1 y

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Voi.32 ,No. l37
Copyrighred 1983

•Aiotlllftft Ml•
oCanllyCot11
•MeftocJCt....,.
110..

Public speaks out

I

Pomeroy

en tine
2 Se&lt;tiont, 12 Paget 20 Cents
A Multimed ia Inc. Newspaper

Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 25, 1983

2,000 U.S. troops invade Grenada

,.,..QIOICI.
69~ '

BRIDGETOWN , Barbados (AP) - About 2,00J
U.S. troops invaded Marxist-ruled Grenada today
along with 300 soldiers from six Caribbean nations,
and President Reagan said they had secured both of
the island'.s 1airports.
,
Reagan's announcement today followed a broadcast by Radlo Free Grenada that helicopter-borne
U.S. paratroopers had landed and taken both airfields
on·the island in the eastern Caribbean. The broadcast
said there was flerce fighting at the main airport.
One airport is being built by Cuban workers, and
Barbados state-owned Caribbean Broadcasting Co.
sald three Cubans were killed and 22 wounded in
fighting at the new alrsir'ip. It gave no source for the
report or other details.
The Invasion was launched a day after the new
military regime et!ectlvely blocked evacuation of as
many as 300 Americans from Grenada, which sits
about 100 miles southwest of Barbados and 100 miles
north of Venezuela .
Reagan told a Washington news conference that the
United States acceded ' to a request from the

MIW1111f•l

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YOUR CHOICE ·

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HALLOWEEN
fUN AND SAfETY

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LITE·UP' w
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THEATRICAL IIIE·UP
TEMPORARY SPRAY·ON HAIR COLOR!

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YOUR CHOICE

'109

• .,79

NELSON'S DRUG STORES

NANCARROW'S PHARMACY

...

•am

Organlzatlon of Eastern Caribbean States to go into
Grenada to oppose the " brutal group of leftist thugs"
running the nation.
'
He sald In -addition to American forces that those
Involved carne from Antigua, Barbados, Dominica,
Jamaica, St. Lucia and St. Vincent.
Reagan sald the goals of the operation were to
"protect" Innocent llves," Including up to l,OCO
Americans, "to forestall further chaos," a nd to work
lor "the restoration of law and order and

demOcracy.''
American medical students on Grenada sald In
ham radio broadcasts that one helicopter crashed
during the Invasion, and that the state radio was
urging doctors and nurses to report for duty,
indicating there were some casualties.
Barbados' state-owned Caribbean Broadcasting
Co. radio said Grenada 's state radlo stopped regular
broadcasting. CBC also sald the invaders set up a
radlo transmitter in Grenada, declaring that
"Caribbean forces have arrived in Grenada to protect

lives and restore order" and urging Grenada's'
citizens to ald in the operation.
The ham reports said the medical school's "True
Blue" campus, at the end of the new alrfleld, had been
taken by the invaders, according to Leslie Wilbur,
university co-director of operations, ln a telephone
Interview from Bay Shore, N.Y .
The operation effectively cut in half the island
nation olllO,OOO people, which has an army of about
2,00l troops and another 8,00J paramllltary 'forces.
A male voice sald "Grenadans, unite to save our
homeland, unite."The male volce went on to Say " aU
Grenadans are asked to report to the militia bases
immediately. '·
" Foreign forces must not be allowed to land," the
male announcer said.
"Grenada belongs to Grenadans, no foreign forces
must be allowed to land," he said.
Radio Free Grenada had been transmitting
throughout the night but it suddenly went off the air
without signing off at about 6: 16 a.m.
An Associated Press reporter and others saw aU .S.

Navy transport plane land at Grantley Adams
International Airport at Bridgetown. Barbados '
capital, on Monday. About 50 Marines stepped off the
plane and boarded two Sea King tran sport helicopters
and a Marine Huey guns hip.
Thehelicopters took off abou t 5 p.m., headed north
acr oss the runway, then veered south. Grenada is 110
miles southwest of &amp;rbados.
Grenada's miutary leaders took over the island
Oct. 19, after soldiers killed Prime Minister Maurice
Bishop In the climax of a power s truggle over how the
Marxist government should run the nation of 110,00)
people.
The new regime lru stra ted plans of American
diplomats in Bridgetown on Monday to begi n
evacuat ing a t least 300 U.S. citizens who indicated
they wanled to leave Grenada because of the
upheaval.
The revolutionary council, led by Gen. Hudson
Austin , kept Grenada's a irport closed on Monday.
The council claimed the United States, Britain and
Caribbea n nations were planning to invade.

Subdivision
ready for bid

Explosion toll
figure at 207

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel staff
Middleport Village will advertise ·
lor bids on the Installation of water
and se_we¥ ijnes and the construction
of streets for a housing subdivision
on Hartinger Parkway.
Meeting ln regular session last
night, Middleport Village Councli
was Informed by ·Mayor Fred.
Hoffman that plans lor the subdlvislon ground work are completed and
ready lor blds. Cost of the project ls
expected to be ln the · range of
$lJ),OOl which will be paid from the
town's HUD Site Development
Grant. Counc!i gave the green light
for getting bids on the project.
Mayor Hoffman was also given
authority to enter into a contract
with the Ohio Department of
Highway Safety lor additional
traffic control by the Middleport
Police Department. The hours wlll
be from 8 p .m. to 4 a.m. on Fridays
and Saturdays for 48 weeks. Cost of
the additional hours will be $5,675
with the federal money on the
program to total $4,540, the village
share being tl)e remaining $1,135.
Concentration of the program will
he on drunken driving .
Chrisbnas bonuses
Council gave a first reading to an
ordinance which will provide Christmas bonuses for village workers.
Regular full-time employes · wlll
receive $125 and part time employes
will receive $62.50, providing the
ordinance receives approval of all
three readings. Cost of the bonu~
program wlll be $2,562.50. Mayor
Hoffman also presented a plan for
increasing the salaries of village
workers the first of the year. He
asked cou!lal inembers to study the
plan until the next meeting. The plan
calls for a 30 cent an hour across the
. board Increase which would average about a seven percent hlke. The
plan costs would total about $17,2.JJ,
the mayor sald.
Council received a llst of hOmes in
the target area of the tQWI}Wh!chare
scheduled for rehabilitation under
theHUDprogram. AllofthehOuses
listed run over $1l500 each for the
suggested repairs and improvements and in accordance wlth
village ·regulations must be approved by coun&lt;:ll when costs run
over the $9500 figure. Councu did
approve the Ust.

BEIRUT, Lebanon · (AP) U.S. Defense Department today put
Marines were ordered Into foxholes
the oven il! U.S. casualty toll in ttie
and bunkers today near therubbleof
bombing at 192 killed. ,
the l)ombed U.S. command post
In Washington, as a political furor
after three suspicious vehicles were
built over the Marines' mission,
seen at the airport, a Marine
President Reagan declared the
Marines will s tay, beca use "we
spokesman said.
Some 300 Marine replacemen ts
have vita l interests in Lebanon ... the
for comrades kllled or wounded in
mission remains and it remains
Sunday's terrorist bombing had just
unfulW!ed. "
He said the bombing was "a
taken up thelr pos itions at the
airport, where the U.S. contingent of
horrify ing reminder of the type of
a four-nation peacekeeping force is
enemy w e face in many areas of the
world today - vicio.us,. cowardly
headquartered , when the order was
given.
and ruthless ."
"There have been three vehicles
But House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill said Congress is •·going to
spotted driving around the area,' '
said Capt. Wa¥J~e Jones. He added:
have a complete review of why
"There are suspicions they could
we're there and wl1ether il is
contain explosives.''
wort hwhile to keep our boys there
Earlier today, rescuers dug out
fo r diplomatic reasons."
F rench President Francois Mit ·
four bodies from the shattered
compound, pushing to 'lffl the
terrand, returning ro Paris alter a
number of American servicemen
visit to Beim t, said tha t France
killed after a suicide terrorist drove
"remains and will remain faithful to
a truck loaded with TNT into the
its engagement ln Lebanon .''
lobby of the lour-story, concrete
Iran and Syria rejected U.S. ·
buUdlngwhere Marines were s leep- . suggestions that those countries
ing Sunday morning.
were behind the twin terror born bA similar attack on the post of the
ings. Both The Washington Post and
French contingent of the peacekeepCB.&lt;:; News quoted unnamed U.S.
ing Ioree a lew seconds after the one
governrnenl sources as saying there
on the U.S. compound left 58 French
were indications that officials at the
troops dead or missing, French
Iranian embassy In Beirut m ay
officials said .
have known In advance about the
Marine guards, with guns at
bombing attacks.
ready, were on alert today at the
On Sunday, an anonymous teletemporary U.S. Embassy, in the
phone caller told the Beirut office of.
British Embassy building, where
the French news service Agence
u.s. spokesman John Stewart said France-P resse that the "Islamic
there was an "Indirect threat." The
Revolutionary Movement,'' a preU.S. EmbaSsy was destroyed by a
viously unknown group, had carried
terrorist bombing ln April.
out the bombings. But on Monday a ·
Marine spokesman Maj . Robert
caller told the French agency that
Jordan spoke of the probab!llty of
" Islamic Holy War," anot her shad finding more bodies In the rubble.
. owy group, was responsible.
This second group had claimed
"We are now to the second and
responsibiUty for a similar carfirst floors where the majority of the
bomb attack last April on the U.S.
Marines were sleeping and we've
E mbassy· ,in Beirut , ln . whlch l7
taken out many of those. We have
America ns and ~2 other peoplewere
some more to go," he said.
Bulldozers and cranes provided · killed .
P resident Am in Gemayel told his
by the Lebanese government and
Cabinet that , despite the bombings,
private flnns ln Beirut worked
(Continued on page 12)
under spotlights throughout the
night and into the morning at the
-Marines' airport zone and at the site
of the bombed French quarters.
The latest figureS Issued by the
•

Mayor Hoffman reminded council members that a one mill lire
department levy will be on thebaliot
in the November election. He
sires~ thelevylsnotanewtax,b~t.

:!renewal.
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party plans

Mrs. Yvonne Sea!iy, president of
the Middleport Chamber of Commerce, met with council to update
plans lor a Halloween party belng
staged, at the suggestion of c6uncll.,
by several -organizations with the
chamber serving as the coordinatIng organization.
The Meigs High School Band will
be participating ln the observance, ·
Mrs. Scali.)( announced. A parade
will be held from the Fruth-Sears
area to the Meigs Junior High
football. field where the party will be
held. All of the costumed particl·
pants, parents and teachers and the
public as well. are Invited to join ln
the parade. Possibilities of firemen
and the American. Legion taking
part were discussed and the pollee
department wlll lead the parade.
There will be vehicles at the rear of
the parade for smaller children who
would find lt difficult to walk the
distance Mrs. Scally sald.
The parade wl)ll~ave the forma tion area at 6 moving to the field
where costumes will be judg'i!$ and
prizes awarded the winners. There
will be cider and donutS served to
everyone attending and those ln
costume will receive &lt;1 sack of
candy.
Mrs. Scally reported that candy is
still needed. She stressed that slnce
trick or treat night wll.l not be held
this year, having given way to the
party, that residents are requested
to purchase bags of candy and place
them in the containers at Fruth
Pharmacy, ViUage Pharmacy,
Vaughan's Cardinal and JohnSQJl's
MarkV.
Residents are asked to do this by
Saturday night and on Saturday,
members of the chamber, parentteacher organizations, village officials .and other Interested persons
will sack the candy lor distribution
to the costume&lt;fon Monday night.
Mrs. Scally reported that more
than $100 has been received in
contributions from the public for the
party. Such donations can be left at
Central Trust and money wW be
(Continued on page 12)

Homicide-suicide investigated
.
.

BATAVIA - A fonner Meigs
County couple ls dead this morning
apparen~ as a result of a
homlclde-sulclde In Clarmont
County near C\nclnnatl.
The CJarmont COunty Sheriff's
Department was called at 5: a! a.m.
today to the residence of 66th
DIStrict State .Representative Sue
Fisher, 48, and her husband, Ted,
uo age 411, Jocated on SR 232 near
bl!re.
.

Both were i found with gunshot
woundstothehead. '
Prellrnlnacy invest!gatlon by.sherttf' s depar1rnent personnel shows
Fisher, son ol Mr. and Mrs. Hiram
Fisher of Mlhersville, appan!fttly
shot his wUe !hell too1c h1s own life.
Mrs. Fl$ller Is the daughter ol
Mrs. VIrgil Hayes, fonnerly of
Pomaoy, who now lives In Colurn:
bus._. The Incident Is still under·
investlptloo.

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mESSING -

A U.S. Nay chaplain blesses the body of a Marine

Tuesday who hwas ldDed Sunday during a terrorist bombing of the
Marine coounand cenler near the Beirut airport. Bodies of Marines

ldDed are stm being uncovered as the grim dlgglng task continues. ( AP
Laserphoto).

Mason County family
receiyes good news,
son, husband is okay
· By Jeff Morris
OVPstaff ·.·
Marte Edwards of Gallipolis
Ferry bad so much fa\th that . her
son, Marine Sargeant William
Edwards, bad survived the explosion which took the lives of 'Ji!7
Marines Sunday she wrote him a
letter Monday.
"I just never gave up hope he was .
ative," Mrs. Edwards said. "In fact,
I wrote him a letter y~terday. " ·
Notification that the 26-year-old
Marine was alive came at 9: 15 this
morning, according to Edwards'
wUe, Sarah of Apple Grove.
· "He bad given this person a
message to let me Know he was
OKAY and he loved us, " she said. "I
think It was a corporal (who
telephoned heY with the message). I
couldn't hahny understand because
the operator messed us up. He just
told us he was OKAY.' '
Sarah said the flunlly had
contacted Washington, D.C., to find

out where Edwards had been
staying when the e&gt;q)los!on oc·
curred and had been told he was
staying ln a tent away from the
building and had not been placed on
the Hst of those kllled.
"There lor a Whtie he called me
every week," hls wife said. "Then,
when the fighting started, he
couldn't calL I was reatiy upset
yesterday. lgot two letters from him
yesterday and we all stayed up and
called and called to try to find out lf
he was all right."
William's mother sald her 5on,
who had been In Beirut since May 28
and was scheduled to come home
the middle of November, had told
hls family not to worry about him.
"I just went ahead and wrote
him," she sald. "He always wrote us
.
'
letters tell.ingus hewasallrightand
not to wony, because somebody
was watching over him."
His wife sald the f!IJIIUY and tried
(Continued on page 12)

Meigs' Boyd okay
Mark Boyd, Serving with the U. S.
Marines ln Beirut, Is okay after the
Sunday explosion, according to
word received by h1s mother,
Annette Boyd, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Boyd telephoned Sgt. Tolorchlk Monday and was assured that
Pvt. Boyd was neither kllied nor
wounded ln the Beirut Incident.
Sgt. Tolorchlk Is the officer who
notifled Mrs. Boyd was Mark was
Injured In Beirut on Sept. 23. Mrs.
Boyd hears regularly from her son
and he Is scheduled to return home

sometime next mOnth.

Mark Boyd

�··r

Comment
The Daily Sentinel
1 ~1

Court Street
Pome roy, Oh.to
DEVOTED TO mE INTEREST OF mE MEJGS·)J,\SON .'\RE:.~

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHI'I'EHEAD

Assis~ant

TIHIICIQy, O:luber 25, 1983

•

Just In case ________
It Is the consensus of a few I have
spoken with that what had a special
effect on the public was his calm
recognition of his Impending death.
To contract terminal cancer even
seven or eight years later than the
cardinal's age of 62 reduces admirablllty in the .-s ense that a man
approaching the biblical age of
three score and 10, let alone pass It,
is expected to die. When Sen.
Hubart Humphrey faced the end,
he did so with great courage; but It
was not to be CO!l)pared with the
courage of a younger man similarly

The death of Ca rdinal Terence J .
Cooke in New York early this
month affected the public with a
force that surprised. Most people
who kn~w of his personal activity
were pr~pared to acknowledge that
here was . indeed a practicing
Christian. ·a man without affecta-

BOB HOEFLI CH

Publisher/ Controller

Pagr2-The Daily Sentinel
Famtroy- Middleport, Ohio .

General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB. JR.
r-;ews Editor

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inl and Daily PresS ..\ssoclaUon a nd the American News pape r Publis her .J\ssoclation .

iions. simple in his tastrs. direct but
not s tentorian in his deeds. But

when he died the bereavement was
at several degrf'E's of grief hig her on
the Richter sca le of reverence than

expected , and so me wondered out

toud .about this .

William F. Buckley Jr.
~----~~-------

afflicted.
The cardinal, as one would
expect. was approached by any
number of those people condescendingly designated as ''fringe
medicine types" - though every
now and again one of these types
discovers cures for bubonic plague.
It ts n&gt;ported that the cardinal
turned down all suggestions that he
receive strange thaumaturglcal
drugs or potions or whatever. And
this surely reminds us, or ought to,
of the danger we all face. not so
much from our enemies, as from

LETTERS OF C) PINION art' Wt'lcomed. They should he less than 300 words
long . All lett er s are s ubj ect lo editing and must he siK n l'tl wilh na nw. ltddress an d
telephon e nu m ber. No unsigned lettf'rs will be puhlis hed. L('!lt•rs shou ld ht&gt; In

. good t aste, addressln_g issues, nol personalllles.

Reagan raises
stakes in Lebanon
, President Reagan is escalating the rationale for his Lebanon policy by
suggesting thal a U.S. military withdrawal could lead to Soviet domination
of the ent ire Middle East and a cutoff or Western access to the region's oil
supplies.
By depicting the stakes in those terms Monday, Reagan indicated that
previous administrat ion justifications for the Marine presence in Lebanon
did not. go to the heart of the issue.
Before Monda y. the administration had been defending the Marines: ..
: mission in more limited terms: to make Israel's nmihem border secure. to
:. help achieve Lebanese national reconciliation ·and to promote the
,. withdrawal of all foreign forces from Lebanon.
: Butj(eagan, speaking a day after the Beirut airport massacre, said the
: stakes involved not only Lebanon's poUtical future but that of the entire
: Middle East, the security of Western oil supplies and American globa l
&lt;'redibility as well .
· Reagan noted that forces Joyal to the Soviet Union have taken over in
such countries as South Yemen and Ethiopia and "it would be a disaster" if
· forces with similar orientation were able to spread the ir influence
throughout the Middle East.
: And . citing the presence of several thousand Soviet military advisers in
. Syria, Reagan said pro-Soviet forces are poised to move elsewhere in the
: regio n.
He added , ·· If Lebanon ends up under the tyranny of forces hostile to the
:. West, not only will our strategic position in the eastern Mediterranean be
&gt;threatened, but a lso the stability of the entire Middle East, including the
··vast resource areas of the Arabian peninsula ...
· Despite the enormity of the stakes. Reeagan sa id it would be a mistake
:. for American forces to become involved. in the area other than in a
· peacekeeping role. If Americans were to go into combat , ''We would be
· fighting Arab states. and that is not the road to peace," he said.
: Reagan's statement left some a nalysts wondeting whether the
:- administration can achieve its ambitious objectives for the region with
· 1,600 n on ~ombatant Marines.

A story about dollars _

Encompassing socialism??

.
like to commenI on a

I would
· recent newspaper article that
· opposed issues 2 and3 . 11 stated that
• .;1

coa lition of economics professors

· fro m b hio are against the issues.
. One of these professors is Frederick
:: stocker.
He is the aut hority that the liberal
: elemeti.t of t his state t rot s out when
, they want to say something they

· hope will impress you. Stocker has
' been on the tax bandwagon for

; years. t think he is the economist
r

who advocated passing a law to

::alto~ school boards to raise

··property talies without a vote of ,the
people . In a ll probability these
fellows have self-preservation in
mind and hope to get a raise if the
taxes stand.
1 would like to make a few other
points.
(1 ) If Governor Celeste had not
kicked down the statehouse door to
· get to the people's pocketbooks he
would not be in the fix he is in . Look
how his bully boys put that tax over.
They told the minority party toshup
up. Democracy , eh?
1211 have seen in my lifet ime this
same hardsell on taxes repeated
over a nd over. To hear the tax
advoca tes talk you would think that
good, stiff taxes are the best thing
sinc.e the birth of Christ.
(3) There is an' attempt by some

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Top schools
remain first
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cincinnati Moeller, Urbana and' Mogadore Improved their records to~
and kept the class leads toda~ In The·
ASSOCiated Press' weekly Ohio high
· ,
schoolfootbaU ratings.
Moeller pushed the state's alltime winning streak to 56 straight
games by romping over Cincinnati
Roger Bacon 28-i&gt;. So the Crusaders
easily retained the Class AAA lead
with 333 points.
A state panel of sporis writers and
broadcasters also kept Urbana in
the Class AA lead for the sixth
straight week this season. The
Hlliclimbers, 26-0 victors over
Springfield Slmwnee, earnecl 293
points.
Mogadore stayed In the Oass A
lead for the fourth CODSeGUtiveweek
after the Summit County school
edge Rootstown 1~-10. Mogadore
collected~ points.
Thesamesetsofchallengerswere
still chasing the frontrunners with
Akron Garfield and Sandusky
second and third again In Class
AAA, Elyria Ca thollc and Fostoria
Nos.2 and3inCiassAAandFostorta
St.WendeUn and Archbold second

hunting, men."
A week later. "Telephone call for
you, captain, on scrambler."
"Ted, this Is Beetle at NAVOPS.
There seems to be some sort of a
~ustup In the Philippines, and
Marcos could fall. We have to get a
carrier there as fast as possible to
show the flag. This order comes
straight from the top. Full power.
Ted, and don't zigzag."
"For God's sake, Beetle. Tell
them I'm sailing as fast as I can.:·

Harris will
replace Ross

and third in Class A.
Cincinnati Princeton, after nipping Mkl&lt;!letown 23-22 in a battle of
Top Ten teams last week, moved
from sixth to fourth place. The
Middles, No.4 a week ,a go, tumbled
to eighth tl\is week.
Austintown-Fitch was still fifth in
Class~ with Youngstown Ursuline slxtl)l. Centerville seventh.
Upper Arlington ninth and Massillon Washington lOth.
in Class AA, It was the same
ranking order as last week with
Akron St.Vincent-St.Mary fourih,
Steubenville fifth, Ironton sixth,
CCanaJ Fulton Northwest seventh,
Belpre eighth, Washington Court
House ninth and Leavittsburg
LaBrae lOth.
McComb kept the fourth spot in
Class A. but Berlin Center Western
Reserve, fifth last week, fell to lOth
after losing to Norih Lima South
Range 1().7. South Charleston Sou·
theastem moved up one position to
fifth, swapping places with Newark
Ca thollc. Arlington was seventh,
McDonald eighth and New Philadelphia Tuscarawas Catholic ninth.

;A

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I'LIPPED -st. Louis Cardinals wide receiver Pat

High school ratings
ClASS AM
1, Clnclnnall Moeller jl), 8-U, J.l'l!XIInts

2. Akron Oarfteld HI. 7..0, 2'60
3, SD. ndus~ !ll. 8-0, 2li
4, CllldMatl Pr1nceton U) , 7-1, WI
5, A.usttnt!:Min-Fltcb {!), 8-0. 11!3

6, \'OUt'@stcr.vn Ursuilne (O J, S-0, UO

7,

Cerucrvu~e

(}). 8-ll. 10.1

8. Ml(kii(&gt;(()Wn

~1 1.

7-l. 84
9. Upper A.rllng1on tiJ, 6-H 74
10, Massillon Washington {1), 7-t, 65
Other schools rt"(.'elvln~~: 10 or rmre
points: 11, Toledo Sl. Jo~randll 5.1. 12. Alllanre ll. 13, BJ'{'Cksvlll(' !i. 14., WUmJng-

ton 34. 15, F"rmlont

~

26. 16, Berea 24.

17, Mentor Lake CattDilc 19. 18. We;Uake

16. 19, Wccthlnp;ton lJ. :11, SIK-Iby 10.

,

CIASSM

1, Urbana IIlli . 8-0. 29.'l

~lnts

2, Elyrta catholic mh. w. 2"B
3, Fa&lt;itor!a (lJll, s-o, 2Z&gt;
4; Akron St. V lncent-Sr. Mary (JJH, 7-1,

..,

5·, S!('Ubenv!Uc Ul l. B-0, 165
6, Jrooton !ni l, 7.0.1, 162
7, Canal Fulton Nort~r tiD 1. S.O, 107
, B, Belprt ITVJ. 8-0. En
9, Waslllngton Court UooSE' (Jill. H 7!i
10, Leavittsburg LaBr:le HII) , IHl, 7'1.

points:

U , PhilO 216. 12 illel, Millersburg WI.'St
Holmes and Loudon\'Wf' 21. If. Ravenna
So..atherut 22. IS, ColdwatN 19. 16. G(lr-

fourth quarter Monday night agaiJist the New York
Glan~. New York salety T.erry Kinard (43) was

field Hell&lt;;ht.s Trinity 1R 17 Ulel. Bam

!"SV!lle and St. Clalnville 17. 19. Huron 16.
20, Columtu St. Charles 15. 2l Hie!,
WarTefl Kmnedy and Paulding 12. 23
!Uel. St. Marys, Zarevlllf' Maysvlllf' anl.1

Hamilton Badtn 10.

1.

ClA.SSA
Mogadore tVI, R-O. 2!lfl"rnlnts

2, Fostorta st. Wendelln IV"!. 8-0. 256
3, Archbold IVJ, ~. 2'll
4. McComb IV), 8-0, 196
5. Sc::uth Olarlesta1 Soottr&amp;.stern IV). S.
0, ll7
6, NE"'IIark Catrolle (VJ, 7-1, 132
7, Arllrlgton (V), 8-0, 1l7
8, McDonald lVI. 7-1. B'l
9, N£1'111 PhUadelphio Tuscarawas Cat!» •
lk: tV), 7·1, 65
10, &amp;rUn Centf'or Wesii'Jll Reserw {V) .

7-1,52
Other schoolS With 10 or r1"'Ir1! poblt.s:
1] , RJctunond Heights 39. ~- WOOIJsiiE'kl
:fi. 13, Gates Mills Hawkm 29. 14. MIMJe.
town Fenwick '.!!1. 15, North Uma So.lth
.Rang{' 23. 16 (tiel, Columrus Ready and
Mingo Junction 22. 18, StrasQurg Franklin
17. 19, Delphos Sl. John's 1£. :!il. Baln·
br1~

Paint Valley 15.

North Gallla,
JUchmond Da.lf'
Wtndlcster 13.
Falrtlank.S and

:n

file ), VInton

Elmore Woodrnoi'E&gt; and
Sa.JthlMstem 14.

24. canal

:1:1 (Uel, Mlltord Center
HaM\.'@r'tCJ:I United 11. 11

UleJ. Fnmkftrt Adena and P lymouth 10.

Wilson becomes
Raiders' starter
By BRUCE LOWm
AP Sports Writer
The ,changing of the guard was
drawing to a close. Marc Wilson, the
Los Angeles Raiders' quarterback,
was being beselged by a flock of
writers and photographers.
in the locker next to his, Jim
Plunkett dressed quietly, almost
unnoticed.
It must be tough, someone
commented, to be Ignored after
having been surrounded by crowds
like that. "Oh, I don't know,"
Plunkett said with a sad smile,
surveying the unbccupled space
around hinn. "I've been In this kind of
crowd plenty of times, too.
Then Plunkett, a victim of some
disastrous seasons with New England andSanFranclscobeforebeing
rescued by the R.atders,pulledon his
boots, slung his jacket over his
shoulder, worked his way past
Wilson and his court and strolled out
of the locker room- alone.
Wilson Is the epitome of the good
guy- asoft·spokengentlemanwho
set all kinds of passing records at
· Brigham Young in the late 1970&gt;,
then becametheRalders'No.1draft
choice In 19!ll, the year Plunkett
reached the pinnacle with his Super
Bowl victory.
And In a matter of five days
starting last Wednesday, Wilson
became the Raiders' starting.quarterback, the co-signer of a rich,
five-year National Football League
contract and thetlrstquarterback to
beat the Dallas Cowboys this

season.
Hewouldseem,atflrstblush, to be
very much out of the Raiders'
Image, an Image of misfits, ne'erdo-wells and ·clubhouse lawyers
who, having failed at accepiance
elsewhere, have been given one last
chance on renegadeowner AlDavls'
team and have cashed in on it.
•
For a few days last week, Wilson
was very much in danger of
becoming a renegade of sorts, a
potential league-jumper. He was
being wooed by Donald Trump, the
owner of the United States Football
League's New Jersey Generals.

\

CINCINNATI (AP) M.L.
Harris, who postponed a knee
operation because of an Injury to
Dan Ross, will start this week at
tight end for the Cincinnati Bengals.
Ross. whosufferedkneeandanlde
injuries in Sunday's victory over the
Cleveland Browns, is expected to be
out two to three weeks, according to
Coach Forrest Gregg.
"But Ross said he was hopeful of
returning to action sooner !han that
after seeing team physician Dr.
George Ballou on Monday.
"He was kind of encouraged·
. ,"said Ross. · "He didn't think
anything Is seriously wrong. We
were discussing maybe even (playIng) this week ... !fit progresses like
it did from Sunday to today, it's
possible," Ross said.
Gregg said It wa5 too early to
make a diagnosis but he thought
Ross would be out two . to three
weeks,
Harris, who has been bothered by
a sore knee, put off an arthroscope
surgical procedUre.
Meanwhile, the Bengals called
rookie Andy Gibler iil for a tryout on
Monday.
Gibler, a 6-foot-4, 234-pound tight
end from Missouri, was claimed by
the Bengals on waivers from
Cleveland on Aug. 23. But he was
released In the final cut Aug. 29.

•

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

'1111ey (83}1&amp; upended as he goes for a pas8 during the

Ot~r schoo ls with 10 or mort&gt;

Now Congress is threatening to put
the ?ed under tighter control in an
effort to bring down Interest rates.
LABOR CASE UPDATE: Cher
Mungovan will get her chance to
testify on Capital Hill today, as the
Senate Judiciary Committee holds
hearings on a bill to close the labor
Jaw loophole that helped ruin ,her
husband's construction business
and drove him into hiding under the
federal witness protecton program.
I reported last month on the
Mungovan case. Walter Mundovan's business was wrecked and his
family life shattered by labor union
harassment, some of which Is
apparently legal unde.r the . Hobbs
Act. The Supreme Court bas held
that union members and officials
are Immune from prosecution for
acts of violence and Intimidation so
long as they are committed in
pursuit of legitimate union goals.
The hearing. being held at the
behest of Sen. Charles Grassley,
R·lowa. has also scheduled testlm·
ony from a former U.S. attorney
who argued and lost the case that
gave union goons carte blanche .
under the Hobbs Act, as well as
from others who will ask Congress
to close the loophole.

AnchOrS ·aweigh ___________A_rt_B_uc__hwa..:...:.:.ld_

There must be a solution
There has to be some solution to
an existing problem we have In the
village of Racine. I am referring to
an Incident I have first hand
account of.
Last Sunday moming, as I drove
up Third Street, I noticed that most
every store window (or business
places) I passed had writing and
pictures on them. I stopped at the
Cozart Building I had . just moved
out of for a closer look. Never In my
entire llfe have I seen, read, or
heard such vulgar, obscene sent en·
ces. pictures, phrases and accusations against nice people In the
village who never bot her anyone.
I went on to my shop, and found
they had visited me too. On my
windows were some terrible obs·
cene phrases and accusations.
Some of the things on my front
window I had to be told what they
meant. I won't ev€1\ repeat them. I
went to lhe town ma'rshal, to see I! I
couldn't do something about this.
He seemed to know who the people
were who did It, and they
were oot '
.

____:______,__..:.____Ja_ck_And_ers_on

WASHINGTON -This is a story fact, some experts told my assorailed the housing industry's recov·
about your dollars - how many
ciate Michael Blnstein that inflation
ery, with qrastlc effects on lumber,
you'll have and how much · they'll
will climb as high as eight or nine
cement and major appliance
buy.
percent by then. It could go even
suppliers.
The story is told in confidential higher if the Fed, under political
- The slower gro"~h in major
studies by the Federal Reserve pressure, loosens the money supply
Industries, with the high interest"
Board a nd the Intemational Mone- · In time for next year's election - a
rates dlscourJiging new business
tary Fund. There is not 100 percent
move that would stimulate preinvestment, means that laid-off
agreement 1 of course, on the
election prosperity.
workers wiU be less likely to be
economic outlook. But here' s w hat
The end result would be an
rehired and fewer new jobs will be
the Fed, the IMF and the admin is- economic boom, folloWed by runacreated.
tration' s own economists are priway Inflation reminiscent of the
- The dollar's overvaluation
valely telling the White House to Carter years. Interest rates regu-· compared to other currencies is
· expect in the coming months:
late the economic · flow like a
directly caused by the current high
public relations artists to make it
The economic recovery should watergate. High interest rates
interest rates . Money-market inlook like there is massive public last at least through the 1984
impede the flow; low interest rates
vestors are competing for the
suppon for excessive taxat ion. election, thoug h the growth rate will
Jet loose a cascade of money.
limited
supply of American dollars.
They want to overwhelm you by be far slower than it was earlier this
Despite the dramatic decline In
the
dollar's strength is great
While
endorsements by coalitions, groups year.
Inflation over the past several · for Americans traveling abroad, It
and organizations: I like to hear
The economy could be thrown months, Interest .,rates have reIs death to U.S. expon hopes and
what individuals a:re thinking. The into another recession by ·some
mained
stubbornly
high.
This
could
to domestic industries
devastating
big boys at the topdon 't.knowwhat unexpected international debacle
threten both the strength and
cheap imported
competing
with
individual voters will do once they - like a loan default by a major
dura lion of the recovery. Some
goods.
Our
products
'have been
get into that voting booth. But they Third World debtor. That posstbil·
•
examples:
out
of
the
forelgu
market,
priced
are worried.
ity is why the administration Is
With
the
cost
of
borrowing
because
no
one
can
afford
to
pay for
(41 There is danger of losing our fighting so hard. for the !MF " ball
money stlll high, consumer spendIn
overvalued
dollars.
Meanthem
present form of government. The out" that is so vehemently opposed
ing will taper off on the major Items
while,
foreign
Imports
are
relabiggest item in the state budget is by President RPagan's Conservathat are traditionally bought on
tively
underpriced.
Biggest
victims
welfare and · under the Celeste tive constituency.
credit: autos, big appliances and
are the auto, steel and textile
Administration it is headed higher.
Tempering this optimistic forehomes. But It's these big-ticket Industries.
South Dakota has one of the lowest cast is the economists' private
Items that will get the assembly
High Interest rates have already
unemployment rates in the nation assessment that the economy will
Jines rolling again. Meanwhile, high
been
a subject of heated debate
and a lso ha s one of the lowest tax begin to "deteriorate" in 1985. In
mortgage rates have already debetween the Fed and the Treasury.
rates. A1ter Jan. l when you get
your phone bill you will see what the
penalty for success was on the pan
of AT&amp;T.
When ! look around the world and
see the total failures of socialism
The U.S. Navy is getting a real
officer comes on the bridge. "We by special messenger. They should
and communism I have no qualms workout. Just the other day the
should beoif South Korea tm':'orrow be here in 2~ hours ."
wlien I choose to live under the free captain of the a ircralt carrier
night, sir."
"Now hear this . . This Is the
enterprise and capitalistic system. "Snail Darter" was carrying out
''Good.''
captain
speaking. This ship Is not
Governor Celes te is a n intelli· exercises In the Indian Ocean when
"Sir, message from White House going to Beirut. We are proceeding
gent , good looking and very perso· his communications officer came in . Situation Room."
to Iran. The Iranians may try to
nable man, but his system of -with a radio message.
"Read it."
close
Strait ol Horrnuz. Unfortugovernment and taxation is another
"Washington has ordered us to ·
"Proceed maximum speed to nately they are flying American
road, under the pretext o£ providing proceed Immediately to the coast of San Diego, pick up 2,(XXJ U.S.
planes we sold them when the shah
so-called needed services, an all· Nicaragua and stand by to Interdict
Marines and then sail to Beirut and was there. So make sure when you
encompassing socialism. Can't you any ships bringing In arms to the
stand off Med to give air cover to shoot down aircraft It's one of their
see it? - Gayle Price.
Sandlnlsta government. At the peacekeeping troops. Further guys and not one of ours. Also don't
same time we're to let through any orders for forthcoming as you shoot down any French planes
. boats btlnging arms to Honduras,
approach station.'' '
unless they shoot at us. Good
but we're to stop and search vessels
"Good grief, don't they know
approaching El Salvador to make where we are?"
•
Kids. which was obvious. Kids can't sure they are not supplying the
"Yesslr. I told them our position,
reach up that high. He told me it rebels."
but they said this Is priority one."
would do not good to take them to
"Tum the damn ·thing around,
Mayor's court. slnce It's so close to
helmsman,
and Jet's see how we
" Left rudder right, steady as she
election time.
to
Beirut
from here.".
can
get
Others, say the marshal, won't· goes."
Four
weeks
later.
Two weeks later. The communitake them in because some of them
cations
officer wakes up the
are his relatives. It's obvious we
captain.
"Sir,
urgent dispatch, top
"We're going through the Strait
have a problem here.
from
NA
V
ATLANTIC.
secret
Gibr&lt;Vtar, sir."
of
I have Jived in Racine for 35
Disregard
taking
up
station
of1
NAV Naples. Tell tbem
"Notify
years, raised five children here.
Nicaragua
and
proceed
Immebe off Beirut in three
we
should
and to my knowledge, nothing like
days.''
diately
to
Sea
of
Japan
and
standby
this has ever happened before.
In South Koren waters to guard
'Just got a rocket from NAV
I am not about to pretend that I
,
a
gainst
sneak
attack
by
North
MED
flagship, sir. We're to alter
am blind or illiterate. The reason
area
Korean
planes.
Patrol
entire
course and head direct for the Strait
we have !hese kinds of problems Is
of Honnuz."
because noone warits to get on 24-hour basis."
The
captain
said,
"Tell
them
"Do they say why?"
Involved.
received
and
make
course
message
"Apparently the French have
I don't know what to do, but if
for South Korea."
sold fighter planes and Exocet
anyone has any suggestions, I want
"How do we get there, sir? The missiles to the Iraqis, and the
Involved. I have. to live here, and.!
carrier's too big for the Panama Iranians are threatening to close
think it's a disgrace to society that
the strait and cut off Mideast on.
decent citizens must be harassed in &lt;;:anal."
"I
guess
we
have
to
go
around
the
mission Is to make sure they
Our
such a manner, and nothing Is done
do it.''
_
don't
tip
of
Argentina.
We
better
refuelin
about it. At lea$1 you know I hate
"Dowehaveanyup-to-datemaps
this ·kind of stuH. This will be all . BrazU."
"Aye,
aye,
sir."
of
the Strait?"'
FOR NOW! - Ruth Snodgrass,
Three
weeks
later
the
navigation
"Washington
Is sending them out
Box 42,,fu!clne, Ohio 45771.

.Letters to editor

our friends.
Prompted by the experience of
cardinal Cooke, a friend, a !earned
man of the academy who Is 69years
old, executed and has now sent me a
copy of a- document he has
distributed to a few close friends
and to tits lawyer . We are most of us
familiar with those legal instru·
ments that are Intended to stay the
hand of weeping relatives and
Hippocratic-mad doctors. One
form, widely known as the Uvlng
WUI, appears to be straightforward,
an instrument left with one's
la;vYer, insisting that no heroic
treatment be administered to prolong life if In the opinion of medical
speeiallsts there Is no prospect of
recovering your senses.
What Is insufficient about that
pledge, even if you cross all the
legal t's and dot the l's, my friend
advises, is that there are situations
in which you may be presumed to
be countermanding your own
orders - by, say, going to an
emergency room, or being taken
there.
Accordlngly, my friend has
added the following notations:
"The power of attorney shall
remain valid I! and when the
undersigned becomes Incompetent
or disabled for any reason
whatsoever."
And, "In cas~ of incompetence or
disability, the attorney In fact
named herein Is specifically authorized to accept or reject any
medical procedure proposed l?Y
attending physicians to treat the
undersigned and to prolong his lite.
The attorney-in-fact's judgment in
these matters Is to be Informed but
not bound by (the appended letter to
his doctor) and Is to supersede any
consent form the undersigned may
have signed upon being committed
to any hospital. "

..

Tuesday, October 25, 1983

called for Interference on the play. st. Louis, afte~
falling to go In for a touchdown kicked a field g~ to
Ue the game at 20-00 wl&amp;h 50 seconds 1o go in regulalton
tlme.Bothtearnsmloisedcltanceslnovdrtimetokeep
the Ue. (AP Laserphoto).

.

Giants-Cards battle·ends in 20-20 tie
ST. LOUIS (AP} - If Nell
()'Donoghue never has to endure
another such ordeal, he already has
paid his dues.
"1 felt good, but I missed," said
O'Donoghue after missing on three
field·goal atlempts In overtime for
the St. Louis Cardinals Monday ·
night. "If I had them over, I'd make
them all."
But O'Donoghue got no second
chances, and the New York Giants
were able to walk off with a 20-20 tie
In the National Football League
contest.
"Both teams had chances to win,
andthere'sfrustrationinbothlocker .
rooms" said New York Coach Bill
Parcells. "I can appreciate how
they mustfeel."
O'Donoghue, at 6-foot-6 the tallest
kicker in the NFL, embarked on his
misadventures after first rescuing
St. Louis from defeat.
His 22-yard field goal with 54
seconds left In the fourth quarter
created the tie. ' It offset Ali
Haji·Shetkh's earlier boot of 28
yards for the Gialits, but later the St.
Louis kicker went cold.
"There's no excuse," said O'Donoghue after squibbing a 19-yard
attempt among the three he missed
in overtime.
"These things happen. It's been a ·
long time since I missed three In a
row," themikl-manneredveteranof
seven NFL veteran seaaons said.
"Youdothebestyoucanandgoon.I
had to hit them, and I didn't."
"It was an excellent chip shot. It
was automatic, you win the game."
St. Louts Coach Jim Hanlfan said
wearjly. "We didn't want tol~the
clock, We didn't want Nell to run

.

Your rnsurance

around. He just missed it."
team had three turnovers.
As time was winding down in the
St. Louis, aftertralllngmostofthe
way in regulation ttme, dominated extra period. the Cards sent
O'Donoghue on the field to attempt
the overtime period to no a vall.
O'Donoghue first missed a 44- his 19-yard field goal on second
yard field goal attempt following a down.
shari New York punt. Following the __.::.=.::.:_________-i
try from short range with 1: 03 to go,
LEGAL NOTICE
he missed a ~2-yarder with 44
The Pub lic Utilities Commission of
seconds remaining.
Ohio has scheduled local public
Hanifan was asked, In view of his
hearings in Case No. ·83·98-EL-AIR;
team's numerous chances, if he
In the Maner of the Application of
equated the tle with a defeat.
Ohio Power Company to Increase
•'When you think of the opportuniCertain of its Filed Schedules Fixing
ties ... yeah, you have to feel that
Rates and Charges for Eleclric Serway," said Hanifan. " I don't recall
vice . The hearings will be held on
ever missing a win before In a game
Tuesday , November 1. 1983 at
like this."
6:30 p.m. . in City Hall Council
The Giants had a 14-10 edge at
Chambers. 401 Market Street.
halftime.
Zanesville, Ohio; on Wednesday.
November 2. 1983 at 1:30 p.m..
It was the first tie of the year In the
6:30p .m.. in the City Council
and
NFL and only the seventh In 87
Chambers.
21 8 Cleveland Avenue .
regular-season overtime contests
S.W.,
Canton,
Ohio; and on Thurssince the NFL went to suddenday,
November
3, 1983, at 6:30
deeath play in 1974.
p.m
..
in
the
Hall
of Justice. Room
St. Louis wound up with a 388-264
202
109
North
Union Street ,
advantage In total yards, much of It
Ohio.
Interested
members
lima.
generated by Mitchell's rushing
of
the
public
will
be
afforded
an
total of I()l yards on 24 carries. Each
Opportunity at these times to presen I testimony relative to the
proposed increase. By its appliCa·
Player of Week
lion.
Ohio Power Company seeks a
MONTREAL (AP) - Center
revenue
increase of $83,077,000 .
Bernie Nicholls of the Los Angeles
The major issues . as indicated by
Kings, who scored nine points In two
.
the parties , are :
games last week, was named the
a)
the appropriate level of workNational Hockey League Player of
ing capilal allpwance for lhe lag
the Week.
in
recoverin'~fuel expense;
After he Jed the way with four
b) the normalization of plant maingoals and two assists In the Kings' 7·2
tenance expense;
victory over the previously undec) the appropriate rate of return
feated Edmonton Oilers Oct. 20,
to be authorized :
Nicholls added three assists In an8-3
d) the proper distribution of revenue
trtwnph over the New Jersey Devils
responsibility among the various
two nights later.
customer classes.

IS ITA
POLICY'I
GRAN
ACCOUNT?
To us. you 're far more than

JUSt a policyholder. You are
an msurance account. ·

By handling all your protect ton needs- personal or

business-as an account.
we II see th ~t It 1s always

up to date . And that you
aren ·t paytng tor unnec-

essary or overlapping
coverages .
We ·u revtew your a'ccount

regularly io meet changing
circumstances and needs.

And well see that claims
are promptly and lairly
sen ted .
For accoun\abmty. count

on us . You'll lind we are ·
tnends you can depend on.

Repti"Senlmg

State Auto Insurance
A II•·'

~'~::;:sH~ar~h:th wu. ESPN announces cage coverage
"There was never an ultimatum
like, 'Sign me or I'm going to leave,'
never anything Uke that," Wilson
said. "I Just think everybody just
knew It was coming down tothewtre
and something had to happen· one
way or the ather. _
'"the situation was that either the
were
conunttled
to meI just
or I
Raiders
was going
to go
to the USFL.
worked out that the Raldersdectded
they wanted tohavemearoundfora
while. It's nice to be liked especially at those prices.
"I heard Trump said on 1V that
they weren't interested in me, that
they never were, that! Was a backup
quarterback, that they had no .
interest In me, which Is a flat-out
lie." He halted for an Instant and
giggled as he said "lie," surprised at
himself for using that word.

COLUMBUS Ohio (AP) -Eight
basketball g~es involving Ohio
colleges, Including five contests for
Ohio State, Will be carrled this
winter by ESPN the cable network
announced Monday.
The first Ohio school appearing on
ESPN will be Cincinnati, with the

Dec, 20.

Ohio State's games on ESPN wlll
be Indiana Jan. 7, at Michigan Jan.
18, Northwestern Jan. 28, at Iowa
Feb.19 and Michigan State Feb. 22.
Dayton'sFJyerswOlappeartwice
with their games at DePaul Feb. 22
and visiting Notre Dame March 3.

~-c-~w.--.
Place ·

- -W

The Scw1ng

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•

I

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�4 The Daily Sentinel

P'age

PotMroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, October 25, 1983

Tuetday,~r25,

1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Lasorda, LaRussa cop top managerial awards
.

NEW YORK (AP) - Tommy Lasorda of the Los
Angeles Dodgers captured his third AssOciated Press'
•National League Manager of the Year award today by
one vote over Houston Astros Manager Bob LUlls. .
Lasorda, who guided the Dodgers to their fifth NL
West title In 10· years, emerged victorious from a
three·way voting war that also Included Plttsbu~h
Manager Chuck Tanner. tasorda received ·28 of a
possible 87 votes from a nationwide panel of. sports
wrtters and broadcasters.
Lillis, who led the Astros to·a third·placefinlsh In the
NL West, received 'll votes, and Tanner, whose Pirates
finlshed six games back of Philadelphia In the NL
East, was third with 23 votes.
Paul Owens, the Phillies general manager who took
over In the dugout on July 18 from the fired Pat
Corrales, had six votes. Atlanta Braves Manager Joe
Torre, last year's NL Manager of the Year, had two
votes, and Blll Virdon of Montreal received one.

The 50-year-old Lasorda took over the Dodgers tram
Walter Alston In 19i7 and immediately led the club to
the National League pennant. Healsowon pennants in
1978and 1981, when the Dodgers won theWorldSeries 'In six games over the New York Yankees. He won his •
previous Manager of the Year awards in 1917 and1981.
This year. the Dodgers clinched ll .&lt;' NL Weston Sept.
30, the Friday night before the en&lt;1 o. the season, and
wound up with a record of 91·71. "r , ::. 1' .;t the playoffs
In four games to the Philadelphia ,.,h1llies.
This was to have been a rebuilding year for the
Dodgers, a team replete with sophomores and rookies.
SieveGarveyandRonCeyweregonefromthetearn,
following on I he heels of players like Dave Lopes and
Reggie Smith. Bill Russell was the oO]y veteran left
!rom ari infield that had played together for 10 years,
Rookie Greg Brock replaced Garvey at first base,
while second.year player Mike Marshall moved into

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Coach
Earle Bruce can explain why Ohio
State has lost two of Its last five
. football games and apparently
dropped out ol the Big Ten
Conference title race.
The Buckeyes, 5-2 overall, are two
games behllnd league co-leaders
llilnois and Michigan with four
conference contests left for each
contender. Ohio State plays visiting
Wisconsin Saturday.
Bruce !iays It's simply a matter of
the Buckeyes' poor ·play in the final
minutes of the fourth quarter. "In
the last four·flve minutes of the last
few games, we've played rather
terrible," he said. "We've played
well except for a few costly plays.''
The Ohio State coach then ticked
off \!le examples:
-A blocked punt by Michigan

JAY PROFF'OT
5-10, 175 pound
Sophomore Tackle

'

Contest
violates
regulations

CRAGE BBROWN
5-2, 166 pound
Freshman Center

Ohio football
standings
Otlkl Coleie

Mancheslt"''

Football

0 ' 0
0 • 0

Blum on

811{ Ten full.
I.e~

Overall
WLT WLT
I 0
nunols
' 0 0 6 I 0
0 6
Mlclll~ tm
' 0 0
0
.1
low•
' 't2 0
1
0 5
Ohio St.
0
u
1
2 1 0 3 1 0
Indiana
0
2 3 0
Nortllweslem
I
1
I 3
0 4
2 4 I
Mic higan St .
M!ni1{'S(J\il
0 5 0 I 6 0
Mld-Amerkan Coni.
0 0 1 0 0
Toll'do
I 0
0 0
N. llllrlOis
2 0
4 I n
C. Mlch!Jian
3 2 0 4 .1 u
~·l ln~ot Gr{'('l'l
.1 0
3 2 n
Ball State
3 n 3 1 0
Ohio U.
0
2. 3 0 2
Miami. Ohio
0
I 4 0 3
w. M ldllli:an
n I 6 0
0
E. Mlch~an
0 5 0 0 1 0
Kt'nl S1.

''

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4 0 0
E. Kentucky
4 I 0
Mkldl&lt;' T('ll n.
I 0
Yw . .()I.IJnSt.
0

-·

' '2 u
''
1 0

Mum1~· !;t.

1

TE'I1n . Tech
Austin Pt&gt;ay
Mordlead S1.

'

0

0 '

0

I

'

0

I

""'Ill&gt;-

3 0 0
2 I 0
2 I 0
I
0
0
I
0 3 0

w""""

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Mount Union
C&lt;Jplral
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1 0 0

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' 0
3 0

Indiana C'tral
EvansvUJe
Valparaiso
Franklin
Sl. Juseph
~

Ash.lancl

0 '

0

3 00
2 0 1
202
220
120
0 2 1

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~ 'Z I
322
3 40
1 :i 1

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:i 0 o

John Carroi.J

3 2 0
2 J 0
J 0
J 1

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~thany

Hiram
, Wash. &amp; Jcfr.
Thit'l

Cml!ral

~t.

0 0

J 1
05 0
lndPpmdrnL,

7 0 0

7 0 0
.1 4 0

3 :J 0
3 J 0
I 4 I
I 5 I
0 7 0
1 0 0
4 2 I

Kenyon

[luylon
Ctnclntl.111

4 3 0

3 ~ 0
I 6 0

Cb&gt;rl~

College's top 20

5 3 0

B)' '~be AMocl*'tl PnM
'IWmty !rams In lhC' ASSOC'I·
atl:'d Press COUI!g(' fOOtl&gt;aU poll, wllh firstplace votes In parmthl-.les. wason
ll'COrds and total !XJints. Polntli basM on

4 3 0
I 5 0
1 0
n1 0

•

3 1 0
1 0
.1 • n
0
53 '• 0
0
2 '

•

.

I 0
5 2 u

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'

3 0 n
I I I
o.nl~
0
I
Ottertrln
0 2 I
Ohio WesJyn
0 3 0
' • ...,, .• H~Budl.eye Cool.
4 0 0
F\ndlay
I 0
Wilmington
I 0
3· ' 0
Hanover
Ohio Northl&gt;rn

Bu!l!'r

I 6 0

6 I n
4 3 0

otUo Cmferenoe

Baldwtn·WaU ,
Musldnlt\lm

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I

0

0 '
0 1 0

.'

6 0 0
5 I 0
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4 2 0
• 2 0
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1l\(o Top

:D-19-tg.n l&amp;-15-IH:J.lHI - I a.s.s-7-&amp;~ -21,
I .NebrBI!Ika 1~ 1

l.Texas

1"'~

ll'orth Carolina
4.Auburn
S.F1orida
6.Cfrorgta
7.Miaml , Fla.
&amp;Michigan

...,.
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&amp;&lt;&gt;I

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&amp;I~

74.1

9.llllnob
IO.SO. MethOdist
U ,Wil!I!Unltlon
12.West VIrginia
13.Mill)'land
14.0klahoma
l5.8rlg1\am YWJ¥:
16.0hi0 Stare

&amp;1~

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lB.Alabama
19.8oston Col~

1,156

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&gt;-1&lt;1

State last week for the Spartans'
oruy touchdown in the Buckeyes'
22·11 victory.
-lllinols' 83-yard,37·second drive
that pulled out a 17-13 Illinois
triumph two weeks ago.
-Two Purdue touchdowns that
cut the Boilermakers' losingrnargln
to 33·22 three weeks ago.
-A third.&lt;Jown long pass for a
touchdown providing Iowa with a
20-14 decision five games ago.
Bruce was asked to explain the
fourth-quarter. problems that have
sent the Buckeyes reeling from the
nation's top 10 and serious conten·
tton for the Big Ten title and Rose·
Bowl berth.
"Idon'tknow," he answered. "HI
did, I'd stop it. Our story has been
late In tbe ballgame."
The Ohio State coach bristled

Steeler lineman still critical
PITTSBURGH (AP) - Pitts·
burgh Steeler defensive lineman&gt;
Gabriel Rivera, who Injured his
spine in what pollee charge was an
alcohol-related car crash, was
Involved In five traffic Incidents In
his native Texas over a four-year
span.
Doctors say It will be another 10
days before they learn whether
injurtes to the 22·year-old athlete's
spine wlll leave him paralyzed from
the chest down.
Rivera was in serious condition
Monday at Allegheny General
Hospital, after being In critical
condition over the weekend. 1-je was
admitted Thursday night after j

PETE JOHNSON
5-8, 135 pound
Freshman Guard

:1~
~

1183

...

""
"'
"'"""".,
&gt;45

513

J7IJ

19 '

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio
State University football Coach
Earle Bruce says he didn't know·a
contest on his local weekiy television
show violated the ethics of the l
National coneglate Athletic
Association.
Bruce challenged Yiewers to beat
his forecast ol winners In weekend
collegiate games In the contest
called"! Beat The Buckeye Coach,"
part ot his weekly show on
WTVN ·TV during the football

I

season.
' "It was just a fun thing to do,"
Bruce said. "That's why we
Incorporated it into this show."
OSU President Edward JennJngs
said Monday he had necelved a
letter from the NCAA, requesting
thaf'the promotion be discontinuE!(}.
Hale McMenamin, assistant di·
rector of the NCAA, said an NCAA
administrative cornrolttee had determined It Is "contrary to the spirit
and the Intent of tbe principles of
ethical conduct as described In the
NCAA manual."
In the promotion; viewers corn·
peted with Bruce In picking winners
ol Saturday college football games.
Bruce made his picks Friday
evening on the program.
Bruce said Monday that he and
other coaches predicted outcomes
of football games on a slnillar shoW
when he was head coach at Iowa.
State.
"!didn't know It was any violation
because nobody sald then," he saki.
"If It had been a violation, we would
have stopped lt."

being hurled through the back
window of his sports car dur!nti a
head-on collision IIi suburban Ross
Township.
Police charged Rivera with
drunken driving, speediilg, reckless
driving and driving on the wrong
side of the road.
The San Antonio (TE:XBS) Light
reported that police records show
Rivera was Involved in five separate
traffic Incidents between March 1,
1979, and Jan. 12, 1983. He was
charged and pleaded guilty In at
least four of them.
Last Thursday night, Rivera
demolished his 1983 Datsun 28Q.ZX
sports car.
·
The other driver, Allen Watts, 48,
of Ross Township, told pollee
Rivera'scar skidded Into the path of
his car near an Intersection. Pollee
said OO.foot skid marks left by
Rivera's car Indicate he was
exceeding the 35 mph speed limit but
pollee have not sald how fast be was
traveling.
Watts escaped serious Injury. ·
The Impact hurled Ute 6-foot·3,
285-pound football player out the
back window of his car. He landed in
weeds beside the road.
"It's very, very sad," Steelers
Coach Chuck Noll said after
Sunday's 27·21 victory at Seattle.
Running back Franco Harris said
the Steelers dedicated the victory to
Rivera, who listened to the game in
his hospital room with his pregnant
wife, Kim, and other family
members.

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444 W. UNION ST.,P.O. BOX 511, ATHENS, 0. 45701
HOME APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

5944571

,)

\'OUR

the Conatttutton ort e t.ate of Ohio.
(Proposed by Initiative Petition)

Oh10

1

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO' CONSTITUTION
1

PROPOSED CONSTITt:TIONAL ... MENDMENT

Tll l!mund Anldtt XV by addinll a n~w &amp;&gt;ttton 11
St11h•
IPropuNd

of Ohio

orth .. Con~tl iUl!Oil nl' thl•
1

1

~

by lnit!lltLY!! Ptlltton l •

THIS PI\OPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD:
I. PROHIBIT ANYONE UNDER AGE 21 FROM CONSUM·
lNG 01\ POSSESSING ANY ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES.
2. PROHIBIT ANYONE FROM FURNISHiioiG ALCOHOLIC
BEVERAGES TO ANYONE UNDER AGE 21.
3.1NVi\L!DATE THE PRESENT STATUTORY LAW
WHICH ALLOWS A PARENT OR LEGAL GUARDIAN TO
FURNISH ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGES TO A PERSON
UNDER 21 YEARS:
4. DEFINE ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE AS ANY BEVEMGE
CONTAINING •;, OF 1% OR MORE ALCOHOL BY
WEIGHT.
5. NOT APPLY TO SACRAMENTAL OR MEDICAL CON·
SUMPTION.
•
6. REQUIRE THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO PASS LAWS
IMPOSING PENALTIES FOR VIOLATING THESE SEC·
TIONS.
.
A

majority yes vo te ia neceaaary for passage.

YES

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO ,

Proposed by l}llttotive Petition)

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Argument for State Issue 1
Vote yes on State Issue 1. Ayes vote sets the minimum legal drinking
age in Ohio at 21 years for all alcoholic be\(erages.
Ohio should go to 21 b~ause of th e growing problem of teenage alcohol
abuse. Drunk driving is the No. 1 killer of Americans under 21 years of
age. Last year, 330 Ohio teenagers died in traffic deaths. Half of these
deaths were alcohol related . Over three rilillion teenagers are alcoholits. Each year thousands of Ohio teenagers struggle with the problem
of alcoholism. Some become problem drinkers as early as 12 years of
'
age.
The problem of teenage alcohol abuse has received growing national
attention. On December 13, 1982, the Presidential Commission on
Drunk Driving added its voice to other pro-21 advocates; saying in its
thoroughly documented report, "States should immediatelr, adopt 21
years as the legal drinking age for all alcoholic beverages. '
The benefits of raising the drinking age to 21 are thoro ughly researched. Studies show that raising the legal drinking age to 21 produces an average annual reduction of 28 per cent in nighttime fatal
creshes involving 18 to 21 year old drivers.
·
Despite heavy opposition from the beer industry, Michigan voters
raised the drinking age to 21 in 1978. The following year , drunk driving fatalities among 18 to 21 year old drivers decreased by 31 per
cent.
..
lfOh10 goes to 21 C!:u'l. ex~d:
• A reduction i6 alcohol related traffic deaths
• A reduction in personal inj ury and prop,erty damage accidents
• A reduction in alcohol abuse among teenagers
• A reduction in ata demic and social problems associated with
teenage alcohol abuse
Enough young adults have been lost, enough lives have been ruined by
the introduction of alcohol at Jiuch a young age. Ohio needs a drink mg
age of 21.
Submitted by Rev . Duane Somerville, Chairman

i.

Vote NO on Issue
Issue 1 eliminates certain parental rights,
discouraees a sense of r·es~onsibilit~ in Ohio's young ~e~ a'!d
women, and fails to face the tough Issues of drunk driVIng m
Ohio.
Vote NO on Issue 1 because:

CALL 446-11 S 1

• Passage of this issue would make il a trime for a mother or
father to give any alcoholic be11erage to their children m the
privacy of the ir own home· the best so lution to alcohol abuse is
a total educational effort by parents, sc hools, churches, and gov ernment. Simply passi ng a constitutional amen dment won 't
make the problems di sappear.

ftltd181h&lt;Jek

&amp; COMPUTER

CENTERS

A majority ye1 vott it neceuary .for pu••l•·
YES

' for paaeage.
A m~ority yes vote is neceuary

YES

'

SHALL TljE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
"

~

• Young men and women aged 19 and 20 can vote. serve in the
armed forces, marry, raise children , and sign contracts · they
have all th~ tightfi a nd responsibilities of adulthood and it is
unfair to Lei I them thn l they legally cannot drink a can of beer.
• Prohibition~ in e ffect nationally from 1919 to 1933, did not. pre·
· vent adults from drinking. People only turned to illegal sources
and illegal places for alcoholic beverages.
• Raising the age for drinking beer to 21 will not stop 19 a nd 20
year old~ from drinking beer · i_t wlll mer~ly force t~em out of
responsible, supervie.ed and pohced establishments mto potentially dangerous setting~&gt;. ·
• The drunk driving p1 oblem involves people of all ages · prohibiting only 19 and 20 year olds from drinking ~e~ is not the
answer. Ohio recently adopted a to ugh drunk dnvmg law and
raised the age for drinking beer to 19: 21 is already the_mini mum age for wine and liquor · these laws s hould be g1ven a
chance to work.

Mrs . Helen Fix
Mr. Thomas C. Green
Mr. William E. Philpott

This wi!J give us true tax relief!
raised over $600 million, making Ohio's corporate income tax
4th highest in the countrv. Unless we pass the repeal. Ohio will
lose more jobs.
• REDUCE UTILITY RATES. Taxes were raised on public utilities, and these increases are passed on to us, the consumers.

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
PROTECT YOUR HARD·EARNED INCOME
FROM HUGE TAX INCREASES
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 2
CURRENT OHIO LAW MAKES ITT~ EASY TO PASS BIG TAX
_.. )NQREAS .

o MAKE POLITICIANS MORE ACCOUNUBLE WITH OUR
TAX DOLLARS. Soending is out of control iii. Ohio soaring
186% between 1973 and 1983. The budget for 1985 is 3 1/:.z times
higher than 1973!
• WILL NOT uuse financial problems in Ohio . The taxes will
expire June 30, 1984 , giving the governor and legislature
almost 8 months to take whatever steps they deem appropriate.
• WILL NOT hurt schools, universities, or other state institutions. Because of lower unemployment, fewer people on welfare,
and the improving economy, Ohio may coilect a tax surp lus
unlesa the tax increases are repealed . Essential programs will
not be harmed by repeal.

REQUIRING A % VOTE to pass tax increases will have these
benefits:
• It will guarantee a full discussion of budget priorities and the
need (if any) for higher taxes. Never a ain will a h e tax
increase be rammed t hroufth the
· a re
ore voters av
a chance to express their !le ings.
• It will reduce the grossly excessive partisanship tha.t has ruined
the tax process in Ohio government.
• It will guarantee that taxes 8re in fact passed by legislators
representing a ~ majority of Ohio voters.
·
Several other states also require a ·V&amp; vote (some even requi re %1. Ohio
law already requires a % vote for: 1) placing an amendment on the
ballot; 2l overriding a governor 's veto; and 3} creating a new judgeship.
Isn't a multi-billion dollar tax bill equally important?
Members of legislative minority parties - and, thCrefore the people
they represent - have been ·completely excluded from the process of
raising and appropriating state funds. By passing this amendment, we
will assure that all taxpayers are truly represented in th1s process .

ISSUE 3 GIVES US THE VOICE
IN TAX POLICY THE POLITICIANS DENIED US LAST SPRING.

VOTE YES ON ISSU E 2

VOTE YES ON ISSUE 3

"'

o WILL HELP MANY SENIOR CITIZENS AND NOT AFFECT
THOSE ON LIMITED INCOMES. Most senior citizens haYe
never been required to pay Ohio income tax. Their taxes have
not been reduced.

• WILL NOT raise real estate taxes or reduce rollbacks or homestead exemptions.
• WILL NOT reduce revenues for road construction or repair,
which is funded by separate taxe_s

GUARANTEE REAL MAJORITY RULE

TO RETAIN YOUR TAX DOLLAR IN YOUR POCKETBOOK
Committee -~R the Amendment : Linda A . Horgan, Mithael J .
Marsh , John Spina , Dr. Richard Vedder and Thomas J . Zuber .

Committee FOR the Amendm ent: Linda A. Horgan
Michael J . Marsh
John Spina
Dr . Richard Vedder
Thomas J . Zuber

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
VOTE NO ON ISSUE 3
Here's what Issue 3 would do to Ohio. and to you:

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
ISSUE 2 BAD FOR OHIO AND FOR YOU'
ISSUE 2 WOULD REPEAL A BASIC CONSTITUTIONAL PRINCI ·
PLE OF OUR REPUBLICAN FORM OF GOVERNMENT, TAKING
AWAY RULE BY THE MAJORITY AND GIVING US RULE BY THE
MINORITY.

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•

ISSUE 3 WOULD DEVASTATE EFFORTS TO IMPROVE
OHIO'S ECONOMY AND PUT PEOPLE BACK TO WORK
WHILE THREATENING THE STATE'S UNEMPLOYMENT
COMPENSATION SYSTEM. IT WOULD ELIMINATE TAX RE·
FORMS FOR SENIOR CITIZENS AND •' AM ILlES AND CAUSE
A FINANCIAL CRISIS FOR MANY SCHOOLS, WHILE GIVING
TAX BREAKS TO UTILITIES AND OIL COMPANIES.
TO

Imagine this situation :
_
You're in a meeting with 98-other people. You 're faced y.• ith an important decision. After much discu ss ion ,,you and 58 ?t her_people vote to.d o
one thing ; the other 40 people vote to do somethmg d1fferent. The s1dc
with 59 votes-e. maJonty-wms, nght?
WRONG!!

of

TO OHIO'S SENIOR CITIZENS, ISSUE 3 WOULD'
• Cut in half the senior citizens tax credit a nd resu lt in hi gher
taxes on retirement income.
• Put the care of many elderly Ohioans at ris k, by threaten1ng
medicaid fin ancing.

PORK BARREL POLITICS

TO OHIO'S FAMIUES, ISSUE 3 WOULD'
• Increase the ''marriage penalty" for most working couples who
file joint tax returns.
• Decrease the personal exemption by $350.
• Eliminate the new $20 tax credit allowed for each dependent.

• Since Issue 2 requires more than a majority to pass certain bills ,
the amendment encourages political wheeling and dealing to
gain the necessary votes.
·
• This unequ a l distribution of voting power could be brough t in to
play on many bills. which could freeze the del ivery of important
public serVices.
'
• Because of the amendment 's sloppy wording, Issue 2 would undoubtedly spark lengthy court battles which could para lyze government servi ces.

TO OHIO'S CHILDREN, ISSUE 3 WOULD:
• Result in many school di strict s pushing for lai-ge property tax
· increases or cutting educatiqnal se rvices.
• Decrease support for non-public schoo ls causi ng them to cut
services, raise tuition or perhaps do~je .
• Limit higher ed ucation funding , preventing man y young
Ohioans from getting a college degree.

OTHER HIGHER TAXES?
• If the legis lature could not mise necessary funds for important
services (schools, facilities for the mentallr re.t.arded , e~. J local
government might have to take steps to Sign ifi cantly mcrease
prooerty ~VOTE NO ON ISSUE 2

TO OHIO'S SECURITY, ISSUE 3 WOULD'
• JeopBrdire Ohio's bond rating which ·co uld halt construction of
desperately needed prisons and cost Ohio citizens millions of
dollars in additional interest payments.

•••••••
COMMI'ITE;E AG... INST THE AMENDMENT
Margaret Burley, Noel &amp; Donna Graham , Clet us Homan, Duane
lrving1 LaVern Lee, Paul Minus, Charlie Nash, Ht!berl Pe_rry, Rose
Schne1der, Dennis Sheehan, Janis C. Swepston, 'Terry W1lson and
Josiah Blackmore.

ISSUE 2
TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

........

TO OHIO, ISSUE 3 WOULD BE A TRAGEDY

VOTE NO ON ISSUE 3
COMMITTEE AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Margaret Burley, Noel &amp; Donna Graham, Cletus Homan , Dua ne
Irving, LaVern U!e, Paul Minus, Josiah Blackmore. Char lie Nash,
Hilbert Perry, Rose Schneider, Dennis Sheehan , Janis C. Swepston
and Terry Wilson.

ISSUE 3
TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

&lt;The proposed new language is that set forth in carital letters and
underlined ; language to be de leted is inter in~. l

BE IT RESOLVED )!Y THE PI:OPLE OF THE STATE OF OHIO
THAT ARTICLE II. SECTION 15 OF THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
BE AMENDED TO READ AS FOLLOWS:

ISSUE 1
TEXT OF THE PROPOSED·
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
BEn RESOLVED HY TH£ PEOPLE OF TH£
CONS'I'ITUTION OF OHIO BE AN!ND!D

sx~:~c~J~1~1~M/\'j!(1',m~f,L,t,'~f,flo\i~

B~Yr~Aii!~~f.b~~tk

IAl 1lw O.nerll Awmbly aha ll e'nlltl no law u~pt by bill eM _ £XCt:PI' t 'OH fltiYJ::NVE
.I!.AW.Ii~n{l bill ..hall he pu"" wltho\11 th~ ooncu~nc.. ol'a m.IJDroly ortl'.., membentle.:l.l!ll
U1 each houtt. ~G BlkUSHAlL HE PaSSED WITHOUT THE CONCURR·
ENCE Of THNj[ -fJUHS OF THE MEMR£R.i EI,ECTEQ TO !;ACUIJO! )SE B1ll1 may onj!mate
m tither ho~~te, b111 INIY be altered, amcndtil, ur r~r:-el.t&lt;l 1n tiM! other.
rBl Tilt llt)'lt ofUit lawa oflh1111l.lte shall bt, "bt ot enacU!d by lh•l!'!ntTil auembl)' of thl' IJ.lll.e

ormuo ..

OHIO'S ECONOMY, ISSUE 3 WOULD'

• Triple the minimum payment on th'e totporate franch1 se tax , an
increase that would hurt thouSands of small busintJsses .
• Reduce taxes for utilities and oil compan ies.
• Burden Ohio's businesses by increasing property taxe s on in ventory an d equi pme nt .
• Threater\ the solvency of Ohio's un employment ?o mpensation
system.
• Cut back new business/job developj11en t efforts

Issue 2 says the si de with 40 votes, less than half, wins .
That is the unfair principle Issue 2 contains-:-that a miooritr votes
can veto the decision of a majority in the legislature on certam Important financial matters.
FurthermOre Issue 2 carves t his bac kwards logic into Ohio's constituLion, where ii can't be changed without wasting tax payer dollftrs on
another election .
There are other pro blems with this constitutiona l amendment:

't-

a

I

a Ideal for Studentl, Bullneaa People,
Englnee111 and Scientists
a &amp;a8y to Program In BASI~ Language
a Reedy·to·Run Software Available
a Expandable 2840·Character Memory

REPEAL THE TAX INCREASES
' VOTE YES FOR ISSUE 3 .
. ISSUE 3 WILL:
,
o REPEAL THE UNNECESSARY AND UNPRECEDENTED 90
PERCENT INCREASE IN OUR STATE INCOME TAXES.
• CREATE NEW JOBS IN OHIO. Taxes on Ohio business were

THOSE SUBMI'ITING ARGUMENTS
... GAINST PROPOSED ISSUE I'

.liD

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

NO

VOTE NO ON ISSUE I

riD

'

THE PROPOSED AME:NDMENT IS AS FOLLOWS,
ANY CHANGES IN THE TAX LAWS OF THE STATE THAT
WEREENACTEDAITERJANUARY I , 19831JiUTBEFORE
THE EFFECTIVE DATE OF THIS AMEND ENT, SHALL
EXPIRE ON JUNE 30, 1984 . THE TAX LAWS OF THE
STATE THAT WERE EXISTING ON JANUARY I, 1983
SHALL BE DEEMED TO BE IN EFFECT AS OF JULY I,
1984. HOWEVER ANY TAX SCHEDULED TO EXPIRE BE·
TWEEN JANUARY I, 1983 and JUNE 3~ 1984 SHALL EX·
PIRE PURSUANT TO THE LAW AS ITE ISTED ON JANU·
t.RY I, 1983.

THIS PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD REPLACE THE
PRESENT CO NSTITUTIONAL MAJORITY RIJaUIRE·
:.lENT FOR THE ENACTMENT OF REVENUE
ISING
BILLS IN EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
WITH ~ THREE ·FIFTHS MAJORITY VOTE REQUIRE ·
~lENT IN EACH HOUSE OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
A REVENUE RAISING BILL IS ANY BILL CONSIDERED
BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY THAT PROPOSES ANY
CHAN GE IN THE. LAWS OF THIS STATE THAT IN·
CREASES THE REVENUE DERIVED FROM ANY TAX
LEVIED UPON ANY PERSON 0&amp; TAXPAYER BY ANY
. MEANS OR METHODS INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED
.TO. THE IMPOSITION OF NEW TAXES, INCREASED
RATES, CHANGES IN METHODS OF COMPUTATION, OR
CHANGES IN DEDUCTIONS. CREDITS, EXCLUSIONS,
EXEMPTIONS, OR DEFINITIONS.
IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT SHALL
TAKE EFFECT DECEMBER 8, 1983.

REPEALING THE TAXES'

ARGUMENT.AGMNST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
ARGUMENTS AGAINST STATE ISSUE I

BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

li!l. [!!]

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AloiENDMENT
To •mend Artie\~! XII by ado1t:in~ a new Section 3a Qf

n,

~G:IIIIIDI:IIUJI]JOJ[2]0BIIIIalil
00(2]1IJ@JIEJGJI:EiCU~aiiiDDCI
CD CD [[) til 'Cil IEl liD tl:l d:J cD
B
Iii
13 IIJ l:i) I ,.;. II ••u I ~ (!][l:J • a a a

"

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

SAME DAY SERVICE
ON RELINE &amp; REPAIR

Save
sso

·3

2To amend Article II . Sect10n l 5 of the Constitution ofthe St.ate of

SUBSCRIP;fiON RATEli

ALL WORK GUARANTEED

I

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE .OHIO CONSTITUTION

By Carrier or Motor Route
One Yleek .................................. Sl.OO
One Month ................................ $4.40
One Year ................................ SS2.BO

SALE! OUR MOST POWERFUL
TRS-80® POCKET COMPUTER

USE

And should be examined by a qualified physician.
Medicpl or surgical inlervenlion may be indica led.

•'

The Daily Sentinel

FULL UPPERS ...... ~ .. $90
FULL LOWERS ........ $90
·RELINERS ··········~·· $J5

I

BAlLO! LANGUAGE, ARGUMENTS, AND
FULL lEXTS OF AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO CONS11TUTION
PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITIONS
TO BE SUBMITTED 10 THE VOTERS AT
IRE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 8, 1983

PRESENT OHIO LAW PROHIBITS PERSONS UNUER TWENTY-ONE
FROM PURCHASING OR CONSUMING ANY INTOXICATING LIQt,: OR
THE PRESENT LAW ALSO ·PROHIBITS PERSONS UNDER NINEti:;EN
FROM PURCHASING OR CONSUMING BEER.
'

a

DILES HEARING AID CENTER
•I

"'There are the players, the coaches, the general
manager, the owners," said LaRussa, whose team
caughtfire In the second half of the season and won the
AL West by a record 20 games before succumbing to
Baltimore In the playoffs. .
LaRussa won the. honor easily, getting 51 of a
possible 87 votes from a national electorate of sports
wrtters and broadcasters. Joe Altobelli of the Orioles
finished second with 21 votes. Toronto Blue Jays
Manager Bobby Cox was third with 11 votes, and the
other four went to Sparky Anderson, whose Detroit
Tigers fitnlshed second to Balttnnore In the AL East.
Last year, LaRussa's job was In jeopardy when the
team feU to .500beforemaking a job-saving turnabout.
The same thing happened this season when the club
was struggling at lfi:-24.

DENTURES

ftadiG
!aek
lhu

HEARl NG LOSS
IS FIRST
A MEDICAL PROBLEM

I

people.

when a reporter asked for details of
the blocked punt against Michigan
State.
Obviously referring to his contra·
verslaf critclsm of walk-on field goal
specialist Paul Allen the previous
week, Bruce said, "!got towatchrny
answer. The first thing you'll say
I'm criticizing somebody. And !sure
as heck don't want to criticize
anybody. The bi&gt;st thing I can do Is
say the punt was blocked.
"If you want to study the films,
youcanflndouthowltwasblocked.l
think that's the best way you guys
can find out aboutlootball anyway."
Bruce indicated Ohio State was
out of the Big Ten tipe picture when
It was suggested the school's 12th
straight bowl trtp was the oruy .
remaining Incentive.
"I think wehavetoset that goal (of
playing In a howl).lt's the only one
·
we've gotlert~; .he agreed.
Mike TornC1ak , the team's regu·
lar quarterback who suffered a
concussion at llllnols, has been
cleared for duty again and resumed
practice Monday. Jim Karsatos, a
red·shlrt freshman, started In
Tomczak's place against Michigan
State and threw. for 170 yards and
one touchdown.
"The big thing Is to see how Mikels
physically, how he gets back In the
swingofthlngs,"Brucesald. "Uhe's
healthy, he'll be able to uphold his
position."
·

Negotiations end
NEW YORK ( AP) -After !ailing
· to reach an agreement Sunday, the
National Basketball Association
and the counsel for the league's
officials said no further negottatlons
were "'I planned In the contract
Impasse between the league and its
regular referees.
The NBA regular season opens
Friday o!ght, andlfnoagreementls
completed, substitute referees, who
have worked exhlbttlon games, will
otrlclate.

where you have to pass the credit around. There Is no
other Individual honor dependent on so many other

Mistakes costly to Buckeyes·

Meet the Tornadoes

MICKEY TUCKER
HO, 140 pound
Sophomore End

tile outfield as Pedro Guerrero look overCey's jab at
thlrd. ln addition, Lasorda haill982Rookieoftlle Year
Steve Sax at second base.
But that, in effect, was what Lasorda did.
Brock, while hitting ooly .224, drove In 66 i-uns an(!
had 20 homers, and Marshall, who ptayect In oruy 49
games last year, finished with a ,28!1 average 65 RBI
and'l7 homers. While struggling at third basewith31
errors, Guerrero remained a potent offensive force,
hitting .298 with 103 RBI and 32 homers. Sax, In much
the same straits asGuerrerowlth30errors, hadl75hits
and stole 56 bases.
In the American League. Tony LaRussa, who twice ,
In the last two seasons carne close to being fired by the
ChicagoWhlteSox,smiledgraclouslywhenhelearned
he had been named American League Manager ot the
Year by the Associated Press.
LaRussa, who turned 39 during the AL playoffs, said
"Of all the honors and awai)ls one l'ecelves, thls Is

1he Doily Sentinel-Page-S

BE IT RESOLVED IIY TH! PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF'-&lt;lHIO THAT ARTICI.E XII, SEC.
TIO N 3a BE ADOPTED TO REAO AS fOLLOWS
ANY C HANGES IN THE TAX LAWS OF THE STATE THAT WERE ENACTED APT'ER
JANUARY 1 19&amp;3 BUT BEFORE TH! E FFECTIVE nATE OF THIS Ah4E.NDMENT. S HALl.
EXPIRE ON ,JVN£ JO , 1984 THE TAX LAWS OF THE STATE THAT WERE EXISTING ON
JANUARY I, lfl83 SHALL BE D£~MEO TO BE IN EFFEC'l' AS OF' JULY I, 1984 HOWEVER,
ANY TAX SCHEDULf.:D 1'0 EXPIRE BETWEEN JANUARY 1. 1983 A NO JUNE 30; l!l8~ S HALL
EXPIRE PURSUANT TO THE U.W AS IT EXISTED ON JANUARY I. 19a3

1C1 Evtry btllshall be eonlulered by .. th hou~ on three doffo11'nl tiaya, unleu lwD-lhu·dJ. ~fthe
mtmbtn 11~ t.o tl~e hou~~e 1n wh1th it 11 .,.nttuiiiiUJPf! nd th oI ~tur.ment , and l'V~r')' 1nd1 ~ 1rtual
tontlft,.llon or a bill Of aet1on 1111penrtin1 the 11"&lt;1u,,...ment shall he r«omed In 1he JOumtl of the
ret;~~ttive ho\Wii No bill mar be ~Ned unu llM bill hu ~n n!produ«d ·~d d111tnbuted 1.o me~ ­
ben oftht houw m 'll'hkh it 11 pendinrand rwrry 1mmd.TMnl Wn m1de l"llllble upon • member 1

...-~~'[1:::l:i~::f~E:~:~:'·~:~f~~~::;L.::';:~:i~~i: E~1;r ;:!,~~--::.-~'~".::;~~

UN ITED STATES Of AMEklCA
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE Of THE SECRETARY
OF STATE

I, Sherrod Brown, Sen'eury of State. do hereby cen.ify that the roregomg 1e a true
eopy or Propo&amp;ed Constitutional Amendment. fil ed 1n the Office of the Secreta f)' of Slate
by lnill!ltlve Petition punuanl to Art1dtll. Sett1on lb of the Conatitution of the State of
Ohio, together with ba llot lanruaa.e certified t.o me by the Ohto Ballot Board and lUfll·
menU
~.

"ubmi tt.ed

t.o

ml! by the

..

proponenhl ~nd upplnenla

of lhe 'luue, 111

IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunt-o eub.c ribed my

uffide i &amp;I!B illt C.:olumbu• th\• 9th dJ.y orSep..mber, 1983.

•

name

.

by

affiKN

my

preacrtbed

and

Sherrod Brown
Secret.ary or State

�The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Tuesday, October 25, 1983

By The BeDd

School contest winners

The. Daily Sentinel

Andrea MOQre, Syracuse, a first
grade student ai Syracuse Elementary, was thegrandprlzewinnerofa
coloring contest sponsored by .
Brogan-Warner Insurance Services, In obse.vance of National Fire
Prevention Week, Oct. 9 to 14.
First graders throughout the
Southern School District partici·,

Tuesday, October 25, 1983

Page 6'

Theater department in ·rehearsal
The Theatre Department of Rio
Grande College and Community
College has completed ·auditions
and Is currently in rehearsal for Its
December production of Ron Cowen's award-winning play

which define every human life.
Featured in the Rio Grande
Theatre production of "Summertree" are Jim srown (young man)
of Wellston, ·Ohio; Kent Crider
(father) of Oak Hill, Ohio; Jean
Ann Vance (mother) of Btdweil,
Ohio; Rebecca Hofat (girl) and
Richard Ross (soldier). bot~ of
Gallipolis; and a guest appearance
by Nell Sloane (boy); a student of
Gallia Academy and a resident of
Gallipolis.

''Summertree."
The tender-hearted drama was
first Pll¥nted by the Repertory
Theatre Company of Lincoln Center (New York City) in 1968.
Featured in the original cast were
David Birney and Blythe Danner.
The play investigates the seemIngly innocent sequence of events
which lead a young college student
with aspirtations of becoming a
concert pianist to his death In
Vietnam, thereby Ulustrating the
significance of the daily occurrences- some profound,,others not-

..

Information days ·set
at Rio Grande ~allege
Rio Grande College and Community College will hold' eight
information days throughout the
1~ academic year for students
interested in enrolling at the
institution, according io Dean S.
Brown, Executive Director of
Admissions and Records.
Brown said the sessions will be
held Oct. 20; Nov. 11; Dec. 9; Jan.
20; Feb. 16; March 16; April 12, and
May 11. Each session W\)1 Include
Information from the various prograins of the Institution including

-Speaker scheduled

ENTERTAIN- Shirley Carpenter Dance Studio
students entertained at Saturday night's 1984 Junior
Miss Pageant at Southern High School. They are,
front I tor, Tracy Beegle, Debbie Werry; second,lrto

Understudies for the production
are Margaret Evans and Ralptl
Gueltlg.
"Summertree" is slated for three
· performances In early December,
and wlll be presented In the Fine
and Performing Arts Center. Stage
Manager for the production will be
Susan Bennett of Vinton, Ohio. The
play will be directed and designed
by Edward Roark, Director of
Theatre at the college.

The Rev. Don R Karr of Old
Leadihg Creek Road will be the
guest speaker a\theSalvatJonArmy
Sunday, Oct. 23, at 7:30p.m.
On Thursday, Oct Tl, Charles D.
Jones of Middleport will speak at the
Salva!Jon Army at 7: 30 p.m. Jones
will be accompanied by his pastor,
the Rev. Earl FleldsoftheWesleyan
HoUness Church. There will be
special music. The public Is Invited
to attend.

the School of Nursing, ·School of
Business Management, School of
Education, Health, and Physical
Education, School of General Stu·
dies and Liberal Arts, and the Army
ROTC Department
There will also be presentations
on · admission to the college and
financial ald. Each session will run
from 12: 30 p.m. to 3:30 p,m.
For additional information, contact the college at (614) 245·5353.
Toll free in Ohio HID-282·7201.

LETART FALLS ELEMENTARY- Taking first, second and third
respectively In the coloring contest at Letart Falls Elementary were,
from left, Sabrina Congo, Tracy Pickett and-BIII,LCralg. Behind the
children Is Judy WUliams of Brogan-Wamer Insurance.

Hike
and
campout
Group hosts
patient party at Bob Evans Farm

r, Kristen Slawten, Lisa Poulin, Amber Cummings,
Christi Maidens, Amy WeD; back, I to r, Susan
Houchins, JUI Reynolds, Amy Luckeydoo, Kathy
Thomas, Leah Doidge, Mindy Spencer, Suzanne Clay.

Mr. and Mrs. Roger Gilmore and
Tim Glaze known as the "Sweet
Countcy Sounds" group presented
the entertainment wlieh Mrs.
George Hackett, Jr., hosted the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution at her home in
Middleport.
The group played several musical
numbers, mostly written by Gilmore, on replicas of early instruments. They also spoke on the
origination of the instruments
during their presentation.
Regent Mrs. Robert Ashley
conducted the opening ritual followed by prayer by the chaplain,
Mrs. Clarence Struble. The defense

rel?"rt was given by Mrs. Gene Yost
and Mrs. Mattie Buck displayed a
number of books purchased for area
libraries on behalf of the chapter.
Members were asked to take
Items to next month's mee~g !or
patients at the Veterans Hospital in
Chillicothe and were also asked to
save soup labels and newspapers.
Mrs. Ashley reported on a
meeting of the Marietta Chapter
which she, Mrs. Ronald Reynolds
and Mrs. Clyde Ingels attended. It
was noted that several members
had attended an open meeting ih
Athens, the Southeast District
meeting in Coshocton, meetings in
Portsmouth, Chillicothe, Waldsch'

Calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter
17, OAPSE wil meet Tuesday,
7:3d p:rll., al Meigs Junior High
·
SchooL
SALISBURY

-

Salisbury

PTO will meet TUesday at 7: 30

p.m. A skit , "Some Ideas To
Help Your Child In School" wlU
be presented by the fifth grade.
POMEROY - The Auxiliary
of Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, both senior and junior
members, will meet at 7:30
Tuesday at the hall. The program ·wlll be on education and
scholarship with Tim Flesher as
the guest speaker.
RACINE -The Meigs County
Holiness Association will meet at
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.,attheRacine
Church of the Nazarene.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Jaycee Women's Chapter meetIng 7 p.m., Tuesday, at Jaycee
Headquarters, E. Main, Pomeroy; officers to be elected and
projects discussed.
POMEROY - Meigs chapter

of American Association of
University Women will meet,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at Meigs Inn.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Ohio Valley
Commandery 24, Knights Tempiar, will meet Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m.
POMEROY - The Wildwood
Garden Club will meet at the
Forest Run United Methodist
Church at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
for a costume party and
meeting.

THURSDAY
BRADFORD- The Women's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Churches of Christ will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Bradford Church of Christ. Pat
Arnold will speak on cancer and ·
there will be election of otflcers.

SA11JRDAY
POMEROY - The Sunrise
Gospel Group will be at the Ash
St. Freewlll Baptist Church at
7:30p.m. Saturday. Thepubllc Is
invited.

Happenings
Free clothing day
POMEROY - Free Clothing
. Day will be held at the Salvation
Army, Butternut Ave., Thursday from 10 a.m. to 12 noon. All
area residents in need of clothing
are welcome.

Tuppers Plains
Trick or treat
TUPPERS PLAINS - Trick
or treat night In Tuppers Plains
bas been set for 6 to 7 p.m., this
'lbunday night.
The siren wlU sound to start
and _ eqd the annual event.
Residents wishing to partlclpate
are to turn their porch Ughts on.
Firemen wlU he throughout the
town and are asking parents to
see that their chlldren cross
streets with cautJon.

mldt House and the state meeting in
Columbus.
A letter was read stating that the
b&lt;inquet hall in WashingtOn Is in
need of new glassware, llnens and
sliver in the old colonial pattern by
Towle.
The chapter agreed to purchase a
new flag for the Carleton School in
Syracuse. A letter was read from
Mrs. Ray Swick, historian, inviting
the chapter to attend the second
Mid-Ohio Valley Inter-county His·
tory group picnic to be held from 1 to
5:30 p.m. on Sunday, Oct. 30 on
Blennerhassett Island. Each person
attending Is to be,a covered dish and
table service..
Refreshments werese.ved by the
hostesses, Mrs. Hackett, Mrs.
GeorgeMorris,Mrs.JamesO'Brten
and Mrs. Joseph Struble to
membersandguestsWhowereMrs.
Margaret Harden of Columbus and
Mrs. George Hal, McDonald.

The 44th annual banquet of the
Homebuilders Class of the Middleport Church of Christ was held
recently in the church social rooms.
Features of the evening Included
election of new offtc;ers, recognition
of past presidents, and a program of
humorous readings. Elected were
Colleen Van Meter, president;
Kathryn Evans, vice president;
FarieCole, secretary; EdnaEvans,
assistant secretary, and Willard
Boyer, treasurer.
Activities of the year were
reviewed by class members and
special recognition was given to
Wallace Bradford, the first president; Bud WUson, the lOth pres!·
dent; Annabel Houdasbelt, the 35th
president, and Mrs. Van Meter who
has served the most terms In the
office of president. On behalf of the
class Mary Martin presented gifts to
those honored guests and to the
teachers, Danny and Jeanette
Thomas and the current president,
Colleen Van Meter.
The prograrp_consisted of several
poems, readings and songs by the
commltteeof Marilyn WUcox, Edna

Evans, Kathryn Evans, and Willard
Boyer. The Boyers entertained with
"I'm the Pessamlst," Mrs. Wilcox,
Mrs. Evans, and Boyer, ''Going on a
Lion Hunt," Kathryn Evans, a
poem, "Ode To Winter Underwear," Clarice Erwin at the plano
with Mrs. Wilcox singing "On Top of
Spaghetti."
Edna Evans read poems, "God in
October," "Halloween," and others
from Ideals by Joseph Newton. Glen
Evans sang "I Feel Like Traveling
On" and "Because He Lives," and
the program closed with prayer by
Ed Evans.
Attending besides those named
were other past presidents, Muriel
Bradford, Marte Curd, Hazel Wilson, VIrginia Buchanan, Nora Rice,
Farle Cole, Mary Martin and
Kathryn Evans, and regular class
members, Wlllard and Nettle
Boyet, Dorothy Roach, OSby Martin, Glenn Evans, Raymond Cole,
EdandEdnaEvans,ClarlceErwin,)
Thelma Boyer, Marilyn Wilcox,
Mary and Dale Hy~~ell, Emogene
Crooks, and Mr. and Mrs. BiU \
McDaniel.
..

w,

BASHAN- The Ladles Auxlltary fo the Bashan Ftre Depart·
ment will stage a Halloween
party Monday trom 7 to 8: :ll
p.m. for all children of the
Keno-Bashan Road, Eagle
Ridge Road, Rainbow Ridge and
the Bashan communliy.
There will be no trick or treat
night In these areas. rThere will be prizes for
costumes for chlldren, ages one
.through 12. The Auxiliary will
provide retreshlne!rts.

Specialties From Our New Night

Rtm.AND - Rain or shine,
the Rutland Church of God will
be holding carport sale from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday at the Bob

a

· EadS' re.kleDce on Salem St. All
proceeds wlU go to the bulldl1lg
fund.

eastern edge, near.Raccoon Creek.
"Experienced and novice hikers
are encouraged to attend as well as
youth groups and scout groups,"
according to a spokesman ·for the
Bob Evans Farm. Ailliikers should
wear comfortable footwear and two
pairs of socks to avoid blisters.
Overnight hikers should bring their
own gear, food and cooking utensils
to camp and cook out over the
campfire at the Bob Evans Farms'
campsite.
For more Information call the
Bob Evans Farm (614-Z45-5305).

MIDDLEPORT - Ray and
Doe
Nemeth will speak at
the Chrlsltan Feliowshlp
Church,_ 383 N. Second Ave.,
Mtddle/lort, at 10-a.m. and 7 p.m.
Sunday.
The couple has had wide
experience in ministering to
Bible study and prayer groups,
Sunday school classes, churches
and other groups. They founded
Shiloh Ranch, a worshlp center,
to enable the couple to bring
together under one roof people of
au faiths for teaching, worship
and fellowship. The Rev. Mike
Panglo, pastor, Invites the pubHe to both of the Sunday
services.

CABINETS
•FREE EITlMATEB
•TRAINED INSTAllERS

RACNE
Ph. 992:3978

"DIP!WDAILIIIIVICIIIIH:! 1107··

Its Simply Good Taste•••
Get a
Glass When
You Enjoy a
·Medium Serving
of Coca-Cola at
Pomeroy
Burger Chef

ENJOY THE GREAT FOOD AND
FINE ATMOSPHERE
TUESDAY· SATURDAY

+ ·_,

Only
4~

5 P.M.· 10 P.M.
Lounge Open Monday
Thru Saturday
11 A.M. • 1 A.M.

UVE ENTERTAINMENT

Deacon Giles
Frld'"" &amp; Satu.rdiiiY Nllahhl

The.SI!Craments of holy baptism
were observed Sunday at Trinity
Church, Pomeroy, with the Rev. W.
H. Perrin presiding.
Christened were Zachary Carl
Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
C. Davis, and Matthew Robert
Thompson, sonofMr. anciMrs.Fred
Thompson. A flower arrangement
for the altar was provided by Mrs.
Pat Holter, grandmother of the
Davis Infant.
The organ prelude, "Sortie,"
arranged t:&gt;y Cyrus Mallard was

presented by organist, Ralph
Werry, and the choir presented the
morning anthem, "America, Our
Herllage," Miss Sybil Ebersbach
presented the quiet time and
meditation , music preceding the
service.
'
Grandparents attending were Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Holter, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Thompson; a greatgrandmother, Mrs. Ada Holter.
Several other farnlly members
attended.

Final plans for the potluck and dressing, potatoes, gravy, homereformation educational event - made noodles, rolls and the beverwere made at the Oct. 10 meeting of ages. Those attending are asked to
the Board of Deacons of the take a vegetable dish, salad or
Middleport First Presbyterian dessert and are encouraged to
Church (USA).
·Invite a guest.
The event Is being sponsored by
Jack Sorden, moderator, prethe Presbyterian Ministry in Meigs sided at the meeting, and the Rev.
County which includes the Presby- Wanda Johnson opened the meet·
terian •churches of Middleport,
ing with prayer.
Reports were given by Carroll
Syracuse and Harrisonville. It will
be held at the Middleport church on Ann Harper, secretary; Judy
Oct. 30 with the potluck dinner at 5 Crooks, treasurer; and Joan
Sorden, cards.
p.m.
Next meeting will be Nov. 14 at
The Middleport Board of. Dea·
cons wiD provide the turkey,
7:30p.m.

Friendly circle meeting
Officers were elected and fall activities. It was noted that a soup
activities planned when Friendly, dinner will be held at the church on
Circle met Tuesday evening at Oct. 28: and that on Nov. 13, a
earry,in dinner and church kitchen
Trinity Church.
Mllp' E. Chapman and Evelyn shower will be held following the
Strauss reported for the nominating monllng service.
Gay Perrin presented "Customs
committee. Elected were Pauline
Mayer, ·president; Peggy Harris, . of Halloween" with a reading
vice president; with Norma Louise "God's Gift" and singing of the
Jewell, secretary; and Evelyn hymn "Bringing In the Sheaves"
wlthMaryStewartattheplano. The
· Gilmore, treasurer, being reofferatory prayer was by Mrs.
elected.
Members were reminded to take Perrin. Unison prayer closed the
foods to stock the pantry at the meeting..Mrs. Stewart and Mrs.Joy
Russell served a salad course. A
church during the cornlitg weekend.
Christmas stocking savings are to shower for the church kitchen was a
feature of the social hour.
be !&lt;lken tothenextmeetlngwlth the
money to be used lor holiday

Pomeroy PTO hosts ·
~M~et the Teachers'

\

Menu.

.

PLANING MILL

At 124, Syracuse

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

Weclome You To Try Our New

Baptisms conducted at church

•

Middleport deacons meet

Speakers scheduled

Class officers 'chosen

Halloween party

Carport sale

If hiking through the woods and
enjoying the fall foliage and fair
weather sounds appealing, then
plan for an outing soon before the
winter chill sets ln. A perfect
opportunity to enjoy the outdoors Is
offered Nov. 5-6 during the Seventh
Annual FaD Hike and Campout at
the Bob Evans Farm near Rio
Grande.
A five-mile overnight hike and a
three-mile day hike through the
farm's wOOded trails are planned.
Both hikes depart at 1 p.m. and
organize at the Adamsville Log
Cabin Village located at the farm's

Fifteen veterans and 60 other
patients attended a party hosted by
the AmeriCan Legion Auxlllary of
Drew Webster Po;;t 39, Pomeroy, at
the Arcadia Nursing Home.
Cake and punch were seJVed to
the residents and for the veterans,
cigaretes and candy bars were left
for later distribution.
Assisting with the party were
Gerald Rought, past commander of
•Drew Webster Post 39, Ellen
Rought, unit president, and grand·
son, J. B. Knight, and granddaughter, Jessica Hamilton, a junior
member, Veda Davis, junior chairman, Erica McCltntpck, Amber
Hankla,LanleHankla,PearlKnapp
and Rhoda Hackett, and Mary
Martin, state representative for
veterans parties.
While there the juniors also
honored their adopted grandfather,
Bill Rovnak, a veteran. They took
him a decorated cake, gtltS, and
money.

PORTLAND ELEMENTARY- Winning first, secondandthlrdln the
coloring contest ~ Portland Elementary were, from left, St.&gt;ve Triplett,
Sao« 'Carsey and Jolm Hannon. Behind them Is Judy Williams of
. Brogan-Wamednsurance. .
·

GRAND PRIZE WINNER- Andrea Moore of Syracuse Elementary
won the grand prize in the coloring contest sponsored by Brogan-Wamer
Insurance. She was presented with a $50 savings bond by Judy WUHams
of .the sponsoring company •

•

DAR. meets in Middleport home

pa ted, coloring pictures provided by
Westfield Insurance Companies.
Miss Moore was presented with a
$50 savings bond by Judy Williams,
of BrogliJl·Warner. ·
Williams also presented $W to the
first place winners, $5 to the second
place winners and S3 to the third
place winnerS.

With the purchase of a Salad
You Get the Glass for Only 29'

··Collect a set.
OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 30TH
oner good at parilclpatfiig Burger Cbel
locatloaa wblle R _ppllea last.
c.:-·"*- o- ... _ ,... _., •....,_, ...... _ .. ,.,..,.,. ... c..•.e.,.e-.,.,,,

'

"Meet the Teachers Night" was
held when the Pomeroy Elemen·
tary PTO met Monday night at the
school.
.
Bob Morris had the devotions
with the pledge being led by the first
grade. The first graders also had
the program which carried out the
Halloween theme.
Morris gave an explanation on
new policies on promotion, and
retention of students, the , bus
system and discipline in the schooL
David Bowen spoke on the State
Issues 2 and, 3 to be on the
Novwnber ballot with · the PTO
golna on record as opposing both
Issues because of alleged cuts
Which cdUld result In education
fUndiiiJ.
.
'The teachers were introduced by
M~ and presented corsages. It
was noted that the school m!!mber·
I

ship drive contest was won by Mae
Youog's th!Td grade class In the
downstairs, and Becky Triplett's
sixth grade class In the upstairs.
The !all carnival was announced
for Nov. 5\with the open house at the
school to be .held on Nov. 19.
co;:::~ first grade w~n the room

To _end marriages
Asultfordlvorceandad!ssolutton
of marriage were filEd In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Unda D. Crites, Pomeroy filed for
divorce agatnst
L. Crites,
P!lrneroy, and Anthony Ray JoneS,
PtJrneroy and Artie C. . Jones,
Pomeroy tiled for dissolution of
marriage.

nm

RACINE ELEMENTARY - First l!lld second place winners in the
coloring contest at Racine Elementary were, from left, Charles Bissell
and Peggy Caruthers. Absent was Jason Deem, who took third place
honors. Judy WUliams of the sponsoring agency is behind the clilldren.

SYRACUSE ELEMENTARY - Taking first, second and third place

In the coloring contest at Syracuse Elementary were, from left, Amy
Weaver, Mason FiSher and Adani Krawsczyn.ln back is Judy Willi:uns

of Brogan-Warner Insurance.

Meigs County property transfers
'
U.S.A. Farmers Home Admin. to
Lawrence E. Hysell. Lot, Salisbury.
Dale Profitt, Letha Profitt to Date
F. Profitt, Lana J. Profitt, 20 acres,
Lebanon.
Robert L. Halley, Geraldine
Hailey to Robert Halley, Geraldine
Halley, P a r c e l s ,
Cheshire/Salisbury.
Theron Jolmson, Mary L. Johnson to James E. Diddle, Right of
Way, Letart.
Theron Johnson, Mary L. Johnson to James E. Diddle, Rlgh of
Way, Letart.
Edwin S. Cozart, Laura H.
Cozart, Edna Pickens to Ralph
McKenzie, Right of Way,Racine.
Robert L. Imboden, Patricia
Imboden to Ohio Power Company,
Right of Way, Rutland.
Harold F . Eriewine Jr., Regina
Erlewlne to Harold F. ErlewineJr.,
Regina Erlewine Jr., 74 A., Salem.
Wilbur Warner, deceased, to

Eileen Robinson, Betty Wallace,
G9rdon Proffitt to Columbus and
O.ville
Larkins, Doris Marks, Elza
Southern Ohio Electric Co., Right of
Larldns,
Tressie Stethem. JoseWay, Lebanon.
phine
Osborne,
Linda Boster,
Glen H. Litman, Kathryn L.
Brenda
Nichols.
Delmar
Larkins,
Litman to Columbus and Southern
Diane
Wingler,
Ruby
Dunn,
Leota
Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way,
Johnson,
Dorsal
Lar
kins,
Robert
Salem.
Larkins, Fred Larkins, Ada Ralph.
Richard Stewart, Donnie Darlene
Harold Smith, Roy Edward Smith.
Stewart to Coiu111bus and Southern
Carrie Evans. Cert. of Trans. ,
Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way,
Chester.
Salem.
Martha C. Mays, deceased , to
Larry R Wells, Anita G. Wells to
Albert Quivey, Cert. , of Trans.,
Columbus and Soutbern Ohio ElectChester.
ric Co., Right of Way, Salem.
Linley Martin Hart, Mildred
Luava Hart to Harry B. Greathouse, Dorothy M. Greathouse, Lot
MIDDLEPORT - Lee Rick2, Racine.
Peter F . Klein, .et al, Nancy H.
enbach of Faith Mission will be
Klein, Richard H. Klein, Laura Z.
special missionary speaker at
Klein to John Thomas, Cheryl
7: 30 p.m. Wednesday at the
Thomas, Lot 65, Racine.
Mi~eport Independent Holiness Church. The Rev. O'Dell
Kathryn Ec Gilmore, Robert N.
GUmore to Kay Louise King, Lot 73,
Manley, pastor, invites the
Middleport VIllage.
public.
Danny Wayne Robinson to Re·
becca Sue Robinson, Lot, Rutland.
Carol Rhodes to Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co., Right of
Mrs. Juanita Bachrel ·has re- . Calvin Lee Grant, were recent
Way, Lebanon.
turned
from a three week visit in visitors of Mrs. Iva Jothnson and
Jolm N. Ginther, Judy K Ginther
Florida. She visited her sister, Mr. and Mrs . Harley Johnson
to. Columbus and ' Southern Ohio
'
Thelma Howard, and a niece, Mrs. Tammy and Terry, WoliPen .
Electric Co., Right of Way, Chester.
Peter Hastings at Gainesville, and
Dorothy Roseberry, Cecil RosebMr. and Mrs. Les Frank, Sarah
another
sister, Gladys DIIJ,
erry to Columbus and Southern
Beth,
were Wednesday visitors of
Clearwater.
Ohio Electric Co., Right of Way,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Lebanon.
Mrs. Betty Hammer of Columbus Ronald.
Ruby Congn; Charles Congo to
spent
Wednesday and Thursday in
·--Columbns and Southern Ohio ElectGary
Mitch
has returned home
Pomeroy
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bob
ric Co., Right of Way, Lebanon.
the
Holzer
Medica I Center and
from
Hoeflich.
Delbert Heasley, Marie Heasley
from injurts
reportedly
improving
to James. E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Ies
which
he
suffered
at
the Meigs
Mr.
and
Mrs.
J~rry Holly and son,
Cheste,r
Mine.
Janice Weber, aka Janlve
~-Kestner, Stephen M. Weber to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Pete Earnheart of
James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Columbus
were
Saturday
visitors of
Admitted--Jenny Bearhs, PomeChester.
Iva
Johnson.
They
had
dinner
at
roy; Ada Bays, Syracuse; Amanda
Janice Weber, Charles Ritchie,
Duff's
in
Gaillpolis
and
also
visited
Savage, Albany; Glendon Faulk,
stephen M. Weber, Lori Ritchie to
Lincoln Russell and Mr. and James
Pomeroy.
. James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Discharged--Otto Falls, Michelle F. Russell, Middleport. ·
1'
·
Chester.
Pearson, Arthur Reeves, Kay
Dale Smith, thelma Smith to
Logan.
Dale E. Smith, Thelma Smith, Lot,
Olive.
Admitted--Lois Cleland, LangsMarriage licenses were issued in
Dale E. Smith, 'l'h(,1ma J. SMith,
Guy
W.
Lee,
deceased,
to
Mallei
ville;
Josephine
Mallory,
Pomeroy;
Meigs County Probate Court to
Marvin W. Reed, Darlene Reed to
- Dale E. Smith, . Thelma Smith, If. Lee, Cert. of Trans., Bedford. --IlelvaFisher, Racine.
Jam~ Chagrnan, 29, Middlewn, _
Wtute Collins, Cordle E. Collins to
Dlscharged··David Edwards, and Sally Walters, 24, Middleport;
MalVin Reed, Darlene Reed, Lot
WOllam B. Collins Jr., Charlie E.
Amanda Savage, Eunice Nutter, Ralph E . RoSe, Sr.38, Racine, and
103; 011ve.
Mary Sheets.
Carol Baker, 36~ Racine .
.Warren F. S~ts. Phyllis Sheets Collins, U acres, Salisbury.
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., Right of
Way, Salisbury.
Ron M. Wiseman, Wilda M.
Wiseman to Glen Kennedy, Brenda
Kennedy, 16.3 acres, Scipio.
Adra H. Swick, deceased, Alva
Swick, affidavit, Salem.
Judith L. Hood to Danny J. Hood,
Lot A 1.25 acres, Chester.
Carl Wayne Hensley to Diane
McQuirt, 22.1126 acres, Columbia.
Milton Bartram, Donna J. Bartram to Roger Davis, Edward
Bartels aka VIs-Tel Partnership,
Sheriff's deed, Pomeroy Village.
,_ John Lightfoot, Sue Ellen Light·
foot to LeadingiC~k Conse.vancy
Dlst., Right of Way, Salisbury.
Central Coal Co. to Columbia Gas
Trans. Corp., Right of Way, Letart.
John A. Watson, Jr., Arlene M.
Watson to Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., Right of Way, Lebanon.
Charles S. Gibbs, Ellen M. Gibbs
to Columbia Gas Transmission
Corp., Right of Way, Lebanon and
Sutton.
Agnes L. Brown to Harold D.
Brown, Trustee, Parcel, Chester.
Agnes L. Brown to Harold D.
Brown, Trustee, Lot, Chester.
Alma Harvey, deceased, Luther
G. Ha.vey, Walter Alan Ha.vey,
Dale Luther Ha.vey, Affidavit,
Columbia.
Robert Chaney, Gladys Chaney
to Charles Lewis Shain, '34.01 acres,
Salisbury.
John R. Koehler, Jean F.
Koehler, Donna Mae Koehler toW.
H. Lowman, David C. Lowman, Lot
297, Syracuse.
Earl Ramsburg, Mable Ramsburg to Herald Oil and Gas Co.,
Right of Way, Rutland.
William S. Thornton, Rose E.
Thornton to Herald OD and Gas Co.,
Right of Way, Rutland.
Harold H. Ramsbur~. [)pris_
Ramsburg to Herald OU and Gas
Co., Right of Way.
Francis Lightfoot, Clara Lightfoot to Herald Oll and Gas Co.,
Right of Way, Salisbury.

I

Speaker set

Persomtl notes in Meigs county

Veterans Memorial

Marriage licenses

"

��'
Sentinel
1

Ohio
114 Mlac. Merchandiae

Homes for Sale

Firewood· cut up, sl1b1, *1&amp;

51

15 room house. 3 baths.

pickup food. Coli 1114·245·
5804.
•

basement, large lot, 9 fireplaces, Hlstarlcel landmark.

Serloua inquires only. Call

Cozy

fire -

place, gas furnance . Priced
to Mil. Coli 992 ·8941 .
Located in Syracuso-Naar
aehool 81 swimming pool. 3
bAdroom situated on one-

third acre. lot . 824.600 . or
will rant for $275 mo.

304·866-3934.
3 bedroom ranch style
home, carpeted. full size
basement. 1 car garage. in

ground

·pool

] ,6x32 .

$45 ,000. !11 4·992·5B58.
3 bedroom. 2 story home. 2

I

car garage. Former Baptist
Parsonage. 6th St., Racine.

--""- - , ,._

by owner. 3 bedroom

lot 'at end of Street. Ar·
secttonal
new.
baugh
Subhome.
divisionlike
, Tuppers
Pialns. 836,900 . Will accept

Mobile

Home

F~ancing

on

/H~IO

44

available to quali·

fled buyer . 614·992-7034
days, 614 · 992 · 7671

41

Eastern

District .

$250 .

month plus deposit . Refer·
ences required . 614-949 ·

2660 evenings.
10

Pet.

interest, owner
financing , new 2 % story,
mod-A-frame, 1% bath, 314

Houses for Rent

4 bdr. house 5 acres of land
on Rt. 160in Vinton . Central
air, S350 mo., sec. dep . &amp;

ref. Call 448-31 75 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair. rocker , otto·

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. kitchen. furni.shed. 1
bdr .. kitchen, furnished . A·
One Real Estates. Carol
Yeager, Realtor . Call 304-

675·5 104 or 304-675·
7386 .

Ave. Call446· 1680.

Furnished apt. $2 bdr .. 196.
water paid, 1 1 36 Second
AVe., Gallipolis. 446 -4416
after 7 ·p .m . .

4 room apt . utilities p41id. all
carpeted . Adults only, no

pets. Call 446-3437.

446-0571 .

New 2 bdr. apt for rent 16
minutes from Gallipolis. Call

2 year old home. 3 bedroom.

2 bdr. Central air. equipped

614· 256 ·1198.

pies. 304· 675-1B22 .

3 bedroom house, Gallipolis
Ferry. 304-675· 6336 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TAI·STATE MOBILE
HOMES. USED· CAR~.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446·7572 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST . GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 446 -7274 .
19'72 14x70 Kirkwood. 3
BR , 1 v, bath. new carpet,
linoleum. 30 ft . awning,
back deck ., exc . cond. Call

$2B5 . to S895. Tebloo, $46

SJ&amp;O ., Lamps from 828 . to
$76 .6 pc. dinettes from

$49.500.00. 304-675·
n5a or 1175-6904.

AKC reg . Doberman pup·

by Frontier). S685 . Sofa.
man. 3and
tabl.-s.
he•vv.
chair
love !extra
seat, $276
Sofas and chain priced from

Unlurnished2bdr. 'inCrown bedo,$440 . and up to
City, Ohio. Call 614 ·266 - $626 .. Reclinars. $176. to

2 bedroom home , gu ,
adults, no pets, deposit,
references. 1936 Chatham

acre, brick front apd siding, Lowe!' River Rd . Dep . and
city water . Price . ref . req . Call 446-0143 or

SaJl2. fclar66

accessorial, Including fish,
$160 for all. Call446-4423.
eva. 614·266·1666.

FLIN'T j MICH ·

6520 .

acre . $60 ,000 . 1 -896 - 4 bdr. home with option to
3071 .
buy , full basement with
garage. S200 mo. 2 bdr.
Nice threo bedroom home in cottage $140 mo. Both
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. : one located 2 miles from ~ity on

2 bath. garage and heat
pump. 304-!175 -5545.

springl &amp; mattress twin Qr
full $100 set ·reQular·firm
.11 20 , maple dinette chairs
136, wilsh s1ands _S34,
maple rockers S59, 7 piece
chrome dinette set 8149, 5
piece dinette set $89, used
bedroom suites, refirgerators, reriges, chest , dresserl.
wringer washer&amp;, TV ' s,

and up to $12&amp; .. Hide-a·

evenings.

4 bedroom house for sale.

1·26 gollon, wl1h ltond. oil

250;/FENTOH ~~.

tiiii~i~ii~r~~~~~~~~~J

trade.

hide · a - bed $250. bo•

kitchen , $300 mo . 41
Spruca St." Call 446-2158.

S235 . month. 3 bedroom.
Fully carpeted, gardener furnished, Stove and refrig .

614-992-2816 from 9 to 5
or 614· 992·2312 from 5 to
7p .m.

Need someone to s"hara
expenses in apartment. Call
446-2892 after 6PM .
Furnished efficiency apt.,
newly redecorated $165 all
utilities paid, deposit re quired . Call 446 -3046 or
446-2602 evenings .

Chester-Newly remodeled ,
fully carpeted, 6 rooms . full
basement, 5175 . mo . plus
security deposit and referen ·

One bedr. apt: 513 Third
Ave.. S 1 35 includes water.
Call 446·4222, 9Am to

cos . 1-B66 -1731 .

5PM .

3 bedroom house in Tuppers
Plains. Available Nov. 1 .
61 4 · 9B6·4 1 33 or 61 4-986 ·
39BB.
Nice 3 bedroom home. 2
baths, 2 fireplaces. heat
pump. large kitchen, garage
&amp; patio . $325 . per

month . 882 · 2405 , 882 ·
2447 or 675 · 5540.

Antlquaa, oak furniture reproduction, mlec. items . Uae
our Chriatm11layaway plan.
Conkell. Tupper• Plains.

$99 .. to 436 . 7 pc . $1B9
and up. Wood table with six
chairs 8425 to 8745 . Desk
$110 up to $226 . Hutches.
$660. and up, maple or pine
finish . Bunk bed complete
with mattresses, $260 . end

up to $396 .

Baby beds.

pick -up. Plus
698·a
for (lelivery.
qle-sao.oo
Firewood
7189 .

8200. 614·992-7617.

frames, $20.and $26., 10
gun · Gun cabinets, 8350.
Gas or electric ranges &amp;376.
Baby mattre11es. $26 &amp;

large a~&amp;ortment of tteel
traps. Moltly fox No. 1 'h.

114-992-7185.
firewood.

821 2nd. Avo. Coli 446·
215B.
Available Nov. 1 . Nice 2 bdr.
apt ., carpeted, W· D hookup,
1 mi. North of Bridge. Call

for Rent
2 bedrooms furnished. 2 mi.
1rom city on Lower River Rd.
Call 446 -0143 or 446-

information .

0571 .

14x60 mobile home. 2 bdr ..
take over paym~mts . Call

2 bdr. mobile home . CAll

197il 'Duke 14•70 2 bdr.,
family room . AC . microwave. underpinning. total
electric. Rio Grande. Call

I 14-246·9225 .

446-0508 .
1969 mobile home for rent
or sale . Excellent condition .
Available furnished or unfur·
nished with price negotia·

ble. 614·992 -7479 . '
Home . 614·992-5443.

bdr .. with built~in cabinets,
2 bathl. air cond ., underpin- 2 bedroom Mobile Home
1Jing, Intercom. new rugs, furnished on one acre. Prefer
c1r..-11. furniture. outside older couple or 1 child only.
entrance box, 2 sets of $175 . plus deposit. 614axtrll eteps. fire alarm , gas 742·2753 .
alarm, firtt aid kit. fire
axtinguiaher, &amp;6,900 . . Call 12 bedroom mobile home.
utilities paid . 1 kid accepted,
1·304·882 ·2237 .
no pets, dope or drunks.
1972 12x60 mobile home, John Sheets 3 Y2 miles
great shape. furn .. washer, South of Middleport . R-7 .
dryer. dishwasher. fully car- Call 367-0611 .

992•3324.
6.6 ~eras . Sacrificed price
*12,000. 3 bedroom trailer,
1 YJ bath, pasture, fenced,

pond,, garden.
2364.

61 4· 742·

304!.676-1297.

'

1871 14x70 trailer. 3 bod·
room. 2 baths, large kitchen,

110.000. 304· 773-5023 .
19B1 14•70. Shultz limited
mobile home. microwave,
diehw11her. central air. un·
derpenning . three badrooms. 1 'h baths, excellent

condition. *15,600. Call
304·17!-8049 after 6 p.m.
Mobile Home Moving, lioen•d and Insured, Fraa
!ttlmatel *100 . per hookup minimum. Phone 304 ·

1'11·271 1

German Ridge Apples tree·
ripened. cider drops. Call

book.

Call 446 -2066

evening~ .

1974 Cougar XR7. lots of
new parts. Runs good .
looks good . Excellent running condition. 614-742·

448-S698 or 614-379· 1_2s_o_1_._ _ _ _ _ __
2303.
I'

deliverd.

1974 Chevy Vega Station·
For sale or trade Coondog.

Cotl614·268·1416.

wagon GT. Auto .• p.s., goad

tlroo. 8450. 614· 949·2202 .

For sale or trade. Good home 1984 Ca&lt;vetto. $5,600. Ap·
in Mason, 2 acret. Call paloosa mare $600. Walk

behind Grovoly $600. 114·
992·6190.

367-0611 .

,farm. 304-896·3396.

..

61 4·992· 6434, 61 4-992 ·
5914 or 304·882·2568.
All new efficiency apt. 1 or 2
people. No pets. Oaby A .

Martin . 614-992-6370.
Apartments . 304 - 676 -

APARTMENTS . mobile

homes. houses. Pt . Plea~ant
and Gallipolis . 614· 446·

8221 .
TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
Apartments now available to

CAF!.toFuL, [----__, - - EA!&gt;Y.

(Season Premiere)

ditch

witch

manto. 304·676·1848.
Se1ame oak firewood t30. Apache two horse trailer.
.PICk · UP load . 304· 676 - axe. condition. $1100. 304- 67 Camero, good cond. 360
6492.
675· 1816.
auto . 12,000 . 304-876Avocado green refrigerator. Two twin bed upholst. head· Model 742 BDL 30·08. 6781 or 676·2231.
white gas range, other furni - boards, axe. cond . Complete 304·676-3248.
turo. Call 61 4·256· 6307.
!v·mat . &amp; b. opringo. $200.1:;::;:=:======= 72
Trucks for Sale
t&gt;r set . 304· 676·5804.
Livestock
_ _ _ ___:__ _ __
63
1
54 Misc . Merchandise
batuxe weight bench ·• 1- - - - - - - - - - 1979 Ford Courier Pickup.
1 _ _ .:..__ _ _ _ _ __
real oporty. $2995. John'•
weig~tl $66. Exercise cycle
1·
Salea on Bulaville Rd.
$60.

Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia or pick up at Richards

2 bedroom apt . at Gall . _&amp;_s_o_n_._c_e_II_4_4_6_·_7_7_B_6_. _
1
Ferry. 304· 675·2648.

55 Building

long . Coli 304·458· 1997.

Building materiala
block, brick, sewer pipes.
windows, lintele.~ · etc.
Clau'd8 Winters, Rio Grande,

Fireplace insarf-still in fac tory carton-automatic
B95-3460.
controls·2 blowen~glaaa
2 bedroom. 206 Poplar St. door-ash pan-fits 30 in. to
in Pt . Pleasant . $176 . 48 in. firep)ace-burn1 wood
or cool. $690. Coli 614·
month . 446-3703 .

256·1216.

Springfield, MA Philadel-

RINGLE 'S SERVICE e•pe·

Fame Game. 12 hrs., 30
min.)
CIJ Good News
(I) 0 (I) Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune
Gl 1D Entertainment
Tonight
l!il One Day at a Time
8:00 8 III (7) A Team The A
Team tries to stop a rancher

304· 675 · 20BB or 675 ·
4660.
Water Walla. Commercial
and Oonaestic . Test holes .
Pumps Sates and Service .

304·895·3802 .

HEY.. ARE
YOU TFIYIN'
T' STALL ME,

E &amp; R Tree Service, fully
insured , free e.stimates .

~IN5?!

Phone 614· 367-0636. call
after 6.

676· 1206.
2 bedroom mobile home in
Henderson . After 4 p.m .

304-675·1 665 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

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

Call 446·0766 .
Vacancies for ladies or men
In private penial care home.
Room &amp; board, handicap,
24 hr. nur1lng care. Reuonabla in Crown City. Call

61 4-256·6609.
Furnished apt, $186. Water

paid, 2 bdr.. 131 \1, 4th,
Galllpollo . 446·44 16 after 7
p.m.

46 Space for Rent

2bdr., 2 bath, 11 Court St.
Ref. &amp;. dep . 1325 mo. Call

Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and

446-4926.

court houH. Call 448-08511
doyo. *126. mo.

adutta only, no petl; Call

COUNTRY MOBILE Home

Furnished 3 roome. with
privata bath. ReferenCe pre-

Patte, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Lerge lots. Call

992·7479 .

farrad. Ca11446·2216 .
Jackson E.tata Apartment•

636 Jackoon Pike (Equol
Houolng Opportunity) hoo
one

bedroom epanmentl

USED. MOBILE HOME . rent otanlng ot • 1 II 7 ond
Phono 304·678·271 1.
two bedroom rent ttanlng at
*193. UOO depoolt. Col
446·274! or lnve mouogo
36 Lots &amp; Acreage
on answering servlcf!,
u,psWirs apt.. 3
35 acres at Rodney on W. T. 1-;-- ."-'" &amp;: bath, cle8]1, adultl
Wat1on Rd. Owner financ- only, no pets. ref. req.

,_____

fngovellolllo . Call448-822 1 Ulilitiea paid . Coli 446·
oftor I wookdoyo.
1619.
...:.__

A.C., p.o .. tilt. radlol

Mare. 6 years old. Palamino. ~~~~~~m~·=fm=~ot:o:reo=
. :::::8:14:·
~
86.
HILLCREST KENNELS 304-876-15692.
Bordlng all breeds. Selling
Happy Jock Dog Food. 64 Hav &amp;. Grain
Vans ·&amp; 4 W.O.
Doberman puppie1: Stud
Sarvice. Call 446~7796 .

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call

Hay for

61 4·367-7220.

341 a.

sale.

exc. cond . Call446-3171 .

alan and Siame• kitten1.
can 448~3844 after 4.

Firewood for sale *3&amp; a

Rog. Pointer fomolo 2 yro.

pickup load do)lvored, 10
loodo for *300. Call 114·
2156·1427.

49

For Lease

For · ' " " Modern office

suite npeclolly good for

old, good hunters. All shota

&amp; wormed, UOO. Coli 446·
4472.

1--------- ----------For IHte tobacco be• for 5
yHr period. 20c • pound.

304' 876·31131.

.

.-.. ' . .... ..... .
.............
71 . .Autoa for Sale
.
TOP CASH peld for late
modol uMilf CON. Bmflh
Bulck·Pontlac. 1911 Eoot·
am Ave.. Genlpollo, 441·
2282.

ttrea, new brakn, otalnll

Four room1 plua lge. clerical
kitchenette and ttorege room. Net. gas, c,ntral
air. carpet. Rent very re110•

78 Ford LTD AT, N. Pl. olr
oond.. 202 ,- . et,Boo.
Colll14•241·8108.

offi~.

noble for thlo quollty office.
Corner Third &amp; Olive. Galli·
polio, Oh. Ph . . 814·4411·
3194.

Evan• EnterpriMI,

9·11. i!fon. thru Fri.

1978 Hondo CR12! good
cond. Call 441·971 0 otter
5PM.

...BUT l WANT FULL
PAYMENT FOR TH'
t..A5T SIX 5HIPMEJ'fTG!

TFIUTH 15, I'M

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. One

~i_ ...OR

from capturing wild mus·
tangs and shipping them
elsewhere by train . (2 hrs.)
(l) MDVI£: 'Prince of tho

HELLQ BMNDEFI...
&amp;OMETHIN"' IMPORTANT?
...1'/ELL, 'lEG ...
I'M FFIEE

HELLO?- OH,

City'

CD MOVIE: •The Stunt

TO NIGHT..,

Man'
(I) I Spy

EL5E!

CIJ Boomerang. Part

tor, (Day 61 4-692·4068,)
(night 61 4 -898·B206 .)
~

..

-~

GET your carpet SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal.

••'

·"""'...

furniture cleaning 1 free estimates. ,614·446·2107.

•••

()) illl Nova 'Talking Tur·

w

Plumbing
&amp;. Heating

ties .' Tonight's program
looks at compvters and
children through the eyes of
Seymour Papert, fat her of
the Turtle computer. (60

.,

.••'

''

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
:~~e 448·3888 . qr . 446 ·

min .)(Ciosed Captioned!

® Maya&lt;al Debate
l!il Hungry Eyes
8:30 (I) Ill ~ Happy Days Ri·

'

-·

chie returns from the U.S.
Army to a family reunion .

!Closed Captioned]
9:00 Cll 700 Club Today's
guests to he announced .
(I)
Ill (jJ Three's

Fomerly Dewitt's
•I

••

.••'

Excavating

II Se·

cond of 2 parts . Klaus Barner, Danielle Vollej Trevore
Kent .
CIJ Q) ~ Just Our Luck
II (I) Mississippi Ben de ~
fe11ds a woman accused of
shooting her husband. (60
min .)
.
1

. Company

llJ(J)MOVIE: 'First Affair'
IHl Vietnam: A

WORK By Ted

Hanna, ponds, ditches,
basements, etc. Call 4464907 . Carter &amp; Evans
Transportation .

-.

Coli 814·949-2737. •
1112 Hondo CB 7110 Cuotom. Extru. 8 14· 948' 2734.

·-====~=====
1711

1--..;________
78

they found baffling and unforgettable. (60 min .)

fixed!

(Closed Captioned!
® MOVIE: 'Midway' Part •
1
&amp;I Mizlou Boxing Special
9:30 (I) Ill ID Oh Madeline

qoes
in the
base·
ment

'.'

Cat 216 hoe, dozers, crane,
loadera, dump truck. Call

814·446 · 1142 between
7:00AM &amp;: 6:00PM.

Madeline plans a scheme to
impress her friend by having

her acting partner pose as

or not

her husband .

Rohner must decide on
whether to take a job as a

college baseball coach or·

.. '

I KNOW ORVILLE
NEVER EXPECTED TO
6EE THAT MONEY HE

_,- ''

"~ '

'

'

stay with the Bay Citv Blue·

WINNIE

/

Oh . 814-742·

GAVE

...;

I

51LL AND ME ...

,...SEND A ,MESSENGER
OVER TO WRIGHT ENTER·
PRI5ES AND HAVE THIS

..P,UT I LIKE
TO SETTLE

MY

ACCOUNTS •••

NOT liE INDEBTED
' TO

birds. (60 min .) ·
(]) Top Rank Boxing from
I.Jis Vegas, NV Top Rank

ANY/JOPY.'

Bo)(ing presents a 10-round
Jr. Lightweight bout featuring Jimmy Jackson vs. Delio
Palacious from Las Vegas,

CHECK HAND-DELIVERED

10 l?&gt;tll ...P£R50NAU.Y/

NV.-

.

NC.UIIIIIIII

CIJ 0 (jJ Hart to Hart
(I) Firing Une

:-t

·-

614-742·2407 or614-742·
208B.

News
l!iiiNNNews
10:15 (l) Bette Midler: No Frllla
10:30 CD Blonclle
illl Thio Old House
Ill Comedy Time .
1 1 :00 • (l) (I) (7) Ill (I) ® Ill
ID News
CD HBO Rock: Donne • A
Hot Summer Night
(l) MOVIE: 'Thomaoine
and 8uohrod'
·Cll Another Ufo
CIJ TBS Evening Now• ·
())Dr. Who
(jj)la Anyone Home on the
Range7 Tonight's program
(jJ)

"•I
••
•

--.,.....,

Electrical
&amp;. Refrigeration

'·· (''

~

Pasquale Electric C.,:. •. ' I'll
phases of ldectric work, all
Work gua~anteed. Aerial

•

truck rental. Call 61 4·446·
2716.

'
'

SEWING Machine repairs,
..-vice. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop,

TATER·- WOULD
'{()U GET TH'
FLOUR SIFTER

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

.

'

FOR MOMMY

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Know your experts

..•
...-

young player who was supposed to be good, we
promptly gave up on him
NORTH
10·25·8S
when he led a club to
+K 7 6
dummy's queen at trick two
• A 10 6 4
. and wound up losing a club
t A 964
trick.
+Q 10
When his partner chided
WEST
EAST
him, South argued that the
+Q10843
+J 9 2
I O·spot finesse would have
.J2
cost him a trick if clubs had
.Q98'
tQ7
• J 10 53
broken 3·3 and East held the
+J 7 54
+98
jack.
That stalement is correct,
SOUTH
but his play was bound to
+A&gt;
lose against all 4-2 club
.K73
breaks while the 10-spot
t K 82
finesse would succeed any
+AK632
time West held J.Ji:. J ·x·x or
Vulnerable: Neither
J·x·x·x in clubs. Of course
Dealer: South
the 10-spot finesse would
also cost him a trick against
West
North East
Soalb
a singleton jack in the East
I NT
' hand.
Pass
2+
Pass
2t
Incidentally, our young
Pass
3 NT Pass
Pass
hero got his trick back later.
Pass
When West scored his club
jack, he led the spade queen,
Opening lead: +4
which was allowed to hold.
Then when South cashed his
spade king and the good

clubs, East was squeezed in

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
The correct way to play
today's club suit is pretty
well known. if you are a
good player you should know
it.
Thus, when we watched a

the red suits and declarer
made five-odd.
Of course, so.me of the
real experts found that same

,.

squeeze after proper club
play and made six no-trump
but five no--trump wasn 't

a

bad score.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.

.

~.'~Hd

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Presbyter
I Island of the •1 Elysiwn
Leeward
group
5 Game
like bingo
10 Divulge
11 Mythical
flyer
13 Really i
14 Black belt's

.. '

D()WN

I Cooking
direction
2 Famed
fabulist
3 Pioneering
4 - Khan
5 Prolllible
Yeslerday's Answer
6 Florida city
art
· 7 Black
I9 Anchor
27 Oklahoman
15 Russell's
substance • 22 Poet
29 Struck
nickname
8 Followed
23 Things
30 Kitchen
16 Fencing
9 Doing the
to he done
stove
dummy
town
•
24
Set
aside
34
British gUJl
17 Bantu
12 Mariner
25 Haberdashery 36 --fly
language
16 Pillar
product
37 Cube
18 Large olive
20 Beat
21 Officious
Z2Greek
letter
23 Patois
25Former

TOP

....

,.

German

.· .

state
26 Equipment
27 Yugoslavian

.•

.•

'

28 "C- Si Bon"
29 Fastening
substance

-·-

31 Ending for
gun or sin

'

3Z Witticism
33 Holds
. 35 "Puff, the
Magic-"
energy development. (60

SHELF?

I JCINE'B BOYS WATER SER·

.~.

-+-4--&lt; . ··-

37By-of
Bonny Hill Show
. 38 Fly
11:30 8 III (7) Tonight Show
. 39 "Bus Stop"
Cll Doble Gllllo
playwright CIJ Cotllno
(I) 8oop
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
B (I) Magnum P .1.
·
(I) L..tenlght Americ:o
•
AXYDLBAA)(R
® M'A'S'H
Ia LONGFELLOW
1D Nlghtllne
'
One letler simply stands for another. In this sample A is
• Twilight Zone
12:00 ()) lnolde Boxing
used lor the three L's, X lor the two D's, etc. Single letters.' '• ·
apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
(J) Burno &amp; Alle'l
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
(I) MOVIE: '!lew_.. My
.'
min.)

VICE. Call 114· 367·7471
Of 114·367·0691 .

•

aomafhing hauled
or eomethlng moved?

do .H. Coli 446-3169

'
'

9 end&amp;.

1743.

BRIDGE

looks at conflicts between
traditional values of the
American West and the
economic values of massive

OFF'N .TH'

General Hauling

Water
low rates.

·

10:00 8 CD (!) Bay City Blueo
(PREMIERE! Manager Joe

at all!

Meig1 Excavating. Bulldozer
&amp; backhoe nrvice. Baae·
menta. footers. landscaping.
drlvaweyl, . farm ponds.

Boltta and

..

· decides to dispatch over 1. 5
million Americans into a war

qet the dryer

I

446-7903.

86

s.P&lt;Mit•verl

Jumb.. Book No. 11, COI'Itltnlna 110pum.a1ta •••ll•t&gt;M tor sus tHu• 6
lncl hlndllnt !rom Jumble; clo tht. MW&amp;PIJ)t'r, aox 34, Nonvood, N.J. 07NS.
lncludli your n~me, •ddr11n, llpcodllncl mlh chedo:a p•y•bl• to N•wap.~ptrtlookl.

(1965· 1967).' In two years.
the Johnson Administration

Maybe now you'll

.''

lonnie Boggs Excavating .
Dozer. backhoe, dumptruck .
Work by hour or job. Call

Rutland.
2903.

Television History ' AmerTakes
Charge

ica

GASOLINE ALLEY

1974 Hondo Chappel' 30 ln.
over front end. CB 7150 F.

1910 Doclve . - _ .. 1--M-~_
.to_ra_fo,...r_S_•_I...:e._
PI, PI, I cyt .. ounroof, _,
nice, U.8H. John•• Auto
lain on Bulovlllo Rd. 441· Chrll Croft 1817 aonotello·
4782.
don collin - - · 28 ft.,
,,.. ., 112,100. Coli
814·387-0378 llelwoen
1871 lmPI!I Chew. 4 dr.. 10-3. 114.,.....1343 otter
f'S. Pl. AC. otoro. II n- 8.

;accounting. 1300 oq.lt.

rHI ••tate or

INVESTMENTS AN'... TH'

piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced.Gut·

----Hay, big round balee t20.

pelnt. no ruot. Col 448·
1714.

lneurance.

ALL F\I~HT! rLL .
~I VE YOU A WEE/4!

PFIACTICALLYBlfOHE~

304-882~

_________..._
1
Dodge
4x4 814-2&amp;631 8 auto.,
Must.Sell new demonstrator Indoor-Outdoor boardlngfa- 1 -::;:::::=:;::~:;;::=.;::=
13,100.
Cell
_
, 1978
Sewing Machines with free - cilltloo. Englloh Cocker Spo· 1 6 s~d •· Fertl'll'zer . · 1427.
6 uu . .
1- - - - - - - - - arm, 12 design• etc. were
niol puppies. Coli 114-38B·
over
now $98. Cell 9790.
Dragonwynd Cattery- Wheat for cover crop, 1979 Jftp. 304·1711·3241.
Kennel•. AKC Chow pup· cloonod &amp; bogged. Call
Wood tplitter hyraulic A
plea. CFA Himalayan, Por· 1114-246-6193.
74 Motorcycles
horse power. gas motor,

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

-------3
Smell turn. houl8 1 or 2
446·0338.

Ford Explorer pickup

Pets for Sale

Briarpatcb Kenn•l• ProfBI-

Furnished Rooms

EASY N0\'1, COYOTE...
I'VE MAOE SOME 81l0

ELITE THORAX CIPHER

aneslhetlc?" -" YOU CAN HAVE ETHER"

phia vs. San Antonio is featured in the NBA Hall of

rienced roofing. including
hot tar application, carpan·
tar, electrician, IT)ason. Call

..

Answer: "Is It going to be a local or a general

Hall of Fame Game from

F 8t K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. .C all 875-1 331.

oional All·brnd grooming. eech. 304·675·2377.

45

News hour

®News
Ill (jJ People'• Court
l!il Jefferaons
7:30 8 III Tic Tac Dough
CD HBO Coming Attrac·
tlons
(]) NBA BasketiJall: NBA

BORN LOSER

J .A .R. Construction Co.
Water Lines, Footers .
Drains. All kinds of Ditching.

0 . Call 614·245·6121.

56

.

'

Vesle&lt;doy'sl Jumbles : VAPOR

Ill (I) Wheel of Fortune
()) illl MacNeii/Lohrer

.,,

or 446-2454.

DOZER

Now arrange the drded letters to
rorm the surprise answer, as suggested by tho above cattoon.

(Answora tomorrow)

(I) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Charlie' • Angela

Good·1 ·Excavating, basements, footers, driveways.
tanks, landscaping.
anytime 446-4637,
1 L. Daviton. Jr .
owner .

Sup~lies

Walnut lumber 8 and 1 0 ft .

Furnished efficiency apartment. all utilities paid, dep·
osit required. 8200 . 304~

304·675·3B34.
Two bedroom trailer ,
$150 .00, plus deposit . Crab
Creek Road. Phone 304-

Camero 360 4-apeed or
1omeone tilke over pay-

) I I XJ
Answer: t XXXJr I I Jr I XI J

CIJ Carol Burnett

(I)

w~h

percant of adjusted income. Phone 304-675-6679 .

• Buck Rogers
8:30 8 III (!) NBC Nowa
CD Rifleman
(]) SportsCenter
(J) • iD ABC Nawa
Ill (I) ilD CBS News
(I) Buolneoo Report
IHl Over Eaay
. 7:00 8 III PM Magazine
Cll Ali• Smith and Jonas
(]) Thia Week In lhe NBA

RON"$ Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar. and
house calls. CaH 576-2398

83

One kitchen display, odds
and ends kitchen cabinets .
Dale's Kitchen Center.

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 12"-22" stocked
in yard. HEAP vender,

(I) @3·2·1., Contact

Ju;r se-

Plumbiog . Call 614-367·
0678.

trencher . 1 ·81 4-194· 7842.

on prompt delivery. 614-266·
in come of less than 6246 .
$12,300. Renting for 30 1-L
- i-m.,.,e-s-to-n-e-.- S-o-nd- .- G-r-a-ve-1.
elderly II&lt; disabled

R66

Prairie

CAPTAIN EASY

61 4·446-4068.

lNG.

675·6029.
Used

CIJ Uttle House on the

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

Franklin wood stove. 304·
2 bedroom furnished apt .

CD New Treaoure Hunt
(!) ESPN'o SportaForum

'•

Appliance Service All makes
&amp; models rofrlgeratoro.
washers, dryers. ra"ges,
compactor~. dishwashers.
microwaves. Heating S.
Cooling. Sheet Metal Work.
Oallla Refrigeration Co. ·Call

82

.....

O!fer•

•

'77 Camero 305, Auto .
PS-PB, Ai~. AM·FM cassatt.
RaHy wheels, 66.000 miles.

JA. mile out Sandhill Rd.

1979 mobile home 14x60
unfum: Va acre lot, chain link
fenc• In Ohio. S1 3,600.

pedals, $500. Coli 8·4 446·
3144 aok for Pat. after 4 coli
448-8327.

1978 Honda Accord ex.
MPG. good cond ., aingle
owner. ~,ic• beJ9w blue

Cell 814-24!·!193.

after4 614·367-7630.
4 mObile homes. 10' and 12'
ft. wide . 2 bedroom furnished . low priced .
Brown's Trailer Park. 614·

Home
Improvements

~;";"";"';~~·~~~·~-...~·~·~·~·~"~"~""~r~:::~~~~~~~~ cau 614- 388· 9857 .

Corn cribs wire tight,
900 bu. &amp; 1 200 bu.

peted. Coli 614· 367·7115.
1966 3 bdr.. Granville,
underpinning. $6,500 . Call

81

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spouting . 3C years ·experience,
specializing in built up roof.

~(1tf' ttVJ.5",

304-876-4181 .

5548.

2 bedroom furnished Mobile

1974 Shultz 1 2•66, 2 large

./Jft:U

304-273-9745 collect.

Baby bed. 1 mo. old mattress, $25. caU 446-1176 .

"

8:00 8 III (I) (7) 1!1 {() ® G
ID Newo
CD MOVIE: 'Milko Me ""

PAINTING - interior and
exterior. plumbing, roofing.
some remodeling. 20 yrs.
eJtp. Call 614-388 -9662.

r

8690 . Call614· 266·1216 .

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one lett~r to each square. to torm
tour on:tmary words.

10/25/8.3

1182.

dryer~,

Newly remodeled 2 bdr.,
unfurnished, equipped kit·
chen, cQntral air. $260 mo.,

'fl'f}I}N') fi;}';t ~THAT SCRAIIB~ED WORO GAME
~ ~ ~~s
byHenriArnoldand8obLee

TUESDAY

"'

675· 1090.

614· 246 · 9222 .

448·9596, after 4PM.

,.
•

STUCCO PLASTERING -

19:79 Ford Fiesta, sun roof.

auto washers, gas &amp; . p.m.
electric ranges, refrigera tors, TV sets.
Hand made log cabin style
doll house with ' furniture.
Large wood burning add·on
$66. 446·4630.
furnace - brand new-h·t tats
hot water -. automatiC Firewood big pickup load,
controls-firebrick lined . $35.00 delivered, $25.00 at

FINCiERI'I'IINTIN(!i

taxtj.Jred ceilings commercial and residential. free
..timateJ. Call 614-266·

Two bedroom house in
Hendeerson. Phone 304-

House and two acres. located on 100ac. farm near
3 bdr., 14x70, with ex· · Cornstalk,. Buil1-in Country
panda, wall to wall carpet, kitchen. fireplace, air, . etc.
central air &amp; heat . Call A-vailable in Nove"rf1ber .
$260.00 per month plus
446· 1687:
security . Call 216 · 327 1970 Vlndale with expando, 7548 aftrer five .
12x63, 2 bdr., total electric.
unfurnished, awning, underpinning. deck, central air. 42 Mobile Homes

Oh . 304·675 · 1726 for

0

Good thing• to Eat . Fltzpo· good condition. f1 .600.
tricko
Orchard, s.R. 689. 61 4·949·2082 . After 4
phone 304·875· 7771.
Pumpkinl. gourds. and .P_._m_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
to 5pm, Sat.
1;;:;;;;;;~~;-:;;;;;;;;;;;, acme apples left. Open thru 1
448-0322
oak firewood,
1974 Buick Century Gran
304-676-2767 after 4 p.m. Oct. 29 from 9·5.
Sport. Goodcond, V-8auto.
TV &amp; Appliances, 627 Third
Suzuloi AM 126 High Rider.
Avo., Gallipolis, 446·1 699 . SEASONED oak firewood,
59 For Sale or Trade 814·992-3989.
Spin washers, gas &amp; electric 304· 676-2767 aft"' 4:00
Dry

Television
Yiewing

IN AODITION iO

•

11

EVENING

$36. bod frames $20. $25.
&amp; 130. king frame $60.
Good selection of bedroom
suite1 , cedar chests .
rockers, metal cabinets,
awivel rockers .
Used Furntture ~ - bookcase,
ranges. chairs, dryers, refrigeretorsand TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd. Open 9am
to 6pm. Mon. thru Fri. , 9am

DICK TRACY

0

14 shot auto. pistol. like new
$426. 1000 round cue. Thomas organ. lighted keynew .223 caliber ammo board, 2 kaybo.rd1. foot

842 . 5 dr. chests, 854 . Bed

The

.

Autos
Air compreller-t1815. 2-8 54 Misc. Merchandise 71
---------ln. table SIWI· I100 . .&amp;
$125. Alum. owning. Bx16.
1160
. 8 walnut .wall
KC reg1atera
.
d w 1
1979 Oldomobile Starfire
El· A
e maranet
C. binets·e80. each. see
V-8.
outo., PS. PB, AM·FM
W •• k. Old 30 4
Pupple.
9
don Walburn at 380 S. 3rd.
•
·
·
real oporty, 03.196.
4891719
t.pe.
Middleport . 61 4·992, 1.
1_:...:_·_~·------ John's Auto Sales on Bula ·
2B05 AKC Registered Doberman ville Rd. 446-4782.
New Kerosun Heaters. 614· puppiea. Call876-1822.
1 - - - - - - -- - 1978 Fairmont Ford Future
992·2698.
2 dr .. 4 opd .. 4 cyl .. radio.
PS. PB. air cond .• real nice.
Muaical
AR -1 5 (Colt) rifle, .223 57
$2,295.
John's Auto Salas.
Instruments
caliber, 81 new •436.
Sulavlllo Ad. 446-47B2.
· Browning Hi-power 9 mm.J----_;:.__ _ __

$110. Manresses or box
springs. full or twin, SSB .•
firm , 868. and S78 . Queen
sets, 1195. 4 dr . chests,

1983

•

Call814-245·9183.

Call 614-246-9127 after
6PM .
.

446-8382 .

Wind1or 14x70 with expanda, 3 bdr .. 2 bath. pri~etl
at ap,rox . payoff. Rodney.

-

1973 Dodge motor home.

Ithaca 12 ga ., auto, full
choke, 30 inch barrell*200.

dryeros. &amp; shoes . Call446·
3169.

fi.A.HERRIMAN,

814-949· 2122 .
Sale

Motors Homes
&amp;. Campers

79

~--~------------·

62 Oliva St., Galllpolii. 6 I '
piece wood living JOOm suite I t~:;;-;:;;;-;;;,:~;:--;,;;:;;;
with 6 inch flat armt 8399, I•
spe•kers, elbum
bunk beds complete with
record cabinet,
bunkies e199, 2 piece an~ plu1
c•mer•. One
tron livingroom suites t199, step polariod with case. Call
antron recliners $99. other 614-24!-5484 evenlngt.
recliners $80, maple dinette
sets $179. love seats $70. Fish aquerium•1 · 30 gallon,

Middleport. one floor plan,
saver!

"

SWAIN
J20 Ditch Witch
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE U~·::•;ha,r . Call 1·814·694·

448-2481 .
energy

by Larry Wrlghl

KIT 'N' CARL YLE••

Otlabet

Oclober 25' 1983

..

"

-··

e

Service,

614· 256·

-

Now Heullng Good 'Lump or
Stoker Coal. Minimum 4

i

ton. 614-367·7101 .
JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lonler. 304-675·
7397.

I

I

I

,'

c.mptng
Equipment

PEANUTS

HERE, YO\!

GOTA

I'OST CARI7
F«&lt;M SPIKE

· 10-U

I' DEAR SNOOPY... MY
FRIEND ANI7 I ARE.

MAKIN6 A PAINFUL _
JOURNEY ACROSS TilE !
COUNTRY TO SEE VOl/ ,,

I

I

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1111 loo. A.... Gollipolls
441·'7833"' 448·1833. . •

1

PAINFUL 7 WIN WOULD
TilE JOURNEI' BE PAINFUL?

ouc".

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® MOVIE: 'G,.nd Prix'
Thlcke of the Night
(f)1D !Me Ntghl With
.12:30
DaVId Lon.man
(f) MOVIE: 'Tho World
A-.II"'J to Gal!!'

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(]) NBA lluk.moll: 'NIIAHall of Fome Oome from
Springfield. MA Philedel·

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tured in the NBA Hell of
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JUesday, OctOber 25,

12-The Daily Sentinel

Consumer prices
.rose last month
WASHJNGTON (AP) - Consumer prices, propelled by higher car,
food and housing costs, rose 0.5
percent last month in the biggest
Increase since May, the government reported today. Price. had
risen at the slightly more moderate
pace of 0.4 percent ln both July and
August.
·
For the first nine months of the
year, prices · paid by consumers
have risen at an annual rate of 3.7
percent, rais!ngthepossibUltyofthe
lowest one-year figure since the 3.4
percent ofl972.
Prices climbed 3.9 percent last
year in what most economists say
was a recession-linked improvemen! from the 8.9 percent increase
of1981 and the 12.4 percent 19&amp;l.
In all, pricesrose2.9percent In the
12 months ending in September.
ioday's Labor Department report
said.
' ·Prices rose 1 percent for new cars
and 2.1 percent for used autos,
increases reflecting "the discontinuance of the latest domestic rellate
programs and low inventory of both
domestic and imported 1983 models," the report said.
Used . car prices have risen
sharply in each of the last five
months, increasing at an annual
rate of almost 20 P.E'rcent !rom April
to September. ,
Food prices.. rose 0.4 percent in

Subdivision

September, the biggest gain since
the 0.5 percent Increase of April.
"The lrnpact of the prolonged
summer drought was reflected in
higher prices tor fresh vegetables
(up5.3 percent ), fatsa!)dolls (up2.6
percent) ....and poultry (up 1.9
percent). "
Food costs had gained 0.2 percent
in August after declining in the
previous two months, and they are
up 1.9 percent over the last year ..
Meat prices have been falling
because many ranchers, faced with
soaring feed bills this year, have
greatly re&lt;juced their herds. However, that action also has cut the
potential supply of meat for next
year, making higher prices likely at
that time.
Today's report said housing costs·
rose 0.5 percent in September,
including increasesof0.5percent for
homeowners and 0.7 percent for
renters. Housing prices. which had
rtsen just 0.2 percent in August, are
up 2.1 percent from one year ago.
Gasoline prices rose 0.4 percent In
September compared with a sharp.
1.1 percent In August. Such prices
are 8 percent below their peak level
of March 1\R!.
Overall transportation costs rose
0.8 percent last month, with car
prices accounting for most of that
gain. and havegained2.8percentfor
the year.

Moore receives prison tenn
Jerry Ray Moore. 19, Pomeroy,
was sentenced to a term of one year
in the Columbus Correctional FacUlty by Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge Charles Knight Monday.
Moore on a bill of information
prepared by the ,office of prosecut!ng a ttomey Fred W. Crow ill plead
guilty to a charge of breaking and
entering of Modem Supply Store,
Pomeroy last week.
Prosecutor's investigator, Paul
Gerard reported that Moore had

three prior felony convictions, all for
breaking and enterlng and was on
parole at the time of the latest
offense.
Moore was apprehended last
Thursday as he was leaving the
Modem Supply Store and all
properly taken In the breaking and
entering was recovered. Moore was
remanded to the custody of the
sheriff to be transported to Columbus to begin serving his sentence.

Mas()n County_ _.:.:&lt;C:.:.on::.:.ti::.:.nu::.:.ed_tro_m_p:_a.:::.ge_l_l_ _
various ways to find out if her
husband was alive and were
overjoyed when they thought they
!f3W him on some footage on
television . .
"We were watching television,
and we thought we saw hlrn on
television picking up some rubble
from the explosion," she said.
Family members also te lephoned
a hotitne number In North Carolina
set up!orMarlnefatnilies to check to
see if William, who has been a

Marine for seven years, was still
alive.
"They just told us how many were
killed and they told us it was hard to
explain, and to keep watching the
news and they would try to keep us
informed," Sarah said.
The Edwards', Jackson and
Marie, aiso have another son in the
service. Wilbur Roy, 19, whoisln the
Navy. He is presently aboard the
carrier Kennedy which is steaming
toward Lebanon to relieve the ship
presently stationed off its coast.

Meigs County happenings•.
Missing person's
report filed here

Veterans Memorial

(Continued from page 1)
used tosupplementcandysupplleslf ·
necessary. Feeney-Benneit Post
128 American Legion, haS given
$3)) and the town has given $400 to
help with party expenses.
Schools are preparlng arl work In
·. conjunction with the party and
· prizes will be awarded for the best
entrles. The art work will be
displayed in business houses of the,
town. The Middleport PTO will
stage a festival on Saturday and
Vaughan's Cardinal will be holding
its annual pumpkin pie baking
competition on Saturday. En;ptoyes
In stores will be ln · costume on
Saturday and possibly Monday and
stores will be holding special sales
on Saturday as a parl of the
observance, Mrs. Scally reported.
Judges for the costumed are being
TRUCK OVERTURNS-'11ds IS-wheeler !IEflli coal !lllck road. 'lbe ~er, Eugene Gulgnet, said that he selected and among them will be
left lbe -road 1ft order to avoid strlddng anoiher
tnack look to the ditch where II overturned ~
Rep. Jolyn Boster of Gallls County.
vehicle which had stopped to make a left band tum
momlng. 'lbe tnack was traveling south on the Hoole 7
At the sugg,estion of Councilman
Into Union Ave. 'lbe truck Ill owned by William '1'.
by-pass near the Union Ave. lnlf:l'!leCIIon on the rain
Allen · Klngl council voted to plant
Herron,~
evergreen trees along Broadway
near Logan St. as a beautification
project.
Council also voted u11anlrnously to
install a new street light betWeen
MUl and Race St., near the William
Grueser properly to discourage
loitering. This was done· after
By DEBORAH ZABARENKO_ television plcrures, radio, ln phone because he didn't want to scare us,
Councllma'n
Bob Gllmore said that
AssoclaUd Press Writer _
numbers passed hand-to-hand but he sometlrnes" would say he
he feels additional light in the area
didn't really know what his mission
Death wore a uniform and life among servicemen in Lebanon.
will dlscoorage loiterlng and the
MaryCiokonofSanDtegolearned was," the elder Price said. "I feel
came with a phone call for the
sometimes resulting vandalism
agonized families of U.S. service- I· her husband, Navy Senior Chief my son was sacrificed."
"I get so nervous when the which is occurlng in that area.
men In Beirut today, as those who Journalist Joseph Ciokon, 43, was
already knew the worst treasured safe after she recognized him in a telephone rings, wonderlng 'what Council recently passed legislation
aimed at discouraging the loitering
telecast from u.s. mllitary head- I'm going to hear," said Michelle
last letters and railed against a
and patroling by police officers In
the
wife
of
Marine
Cpl.
Calbert,
quarters
in
Beirut.
massacre that "didn't have to
the problem area has been beefed .
"I
was
happy
and
I
felt
guilty,"
28,
of
Wichita,
Kan.
Robert
Calbert,
happen."
up.
"u
a
man
In
uniform
came
up
to
the
"I want someone to tell me why saidMrs.Ciokon. "Somanyhadnot
Attendlng the session were Mayor
my son had to die," said Lou Meurer heard about whether theli-men were frontdoor,l'dgoout the back door. I
Hottman,
Counellmen King, Gilof Louisville, Ky., whose 21-year-old safe. I saw Joe on 'lV last night and I couldn't face him."
.
more,
Carl
Horky, Jack Sattedield,
Marine Lance Cpl. Michael Balson Ronald was killed in Sunday's am grateful he Is OK. I feel for the
William
Walters
and Dewey Horton.
terrorist bombing. "I guess I don't wives and familles who are still com of Vernon, N.Y., was reported
waiting for word."
dead Monday, but three hours after
matter ·because I'm just a dead
"The only thing I want to know Is his famlly got the o!flcial word of his
Marine's mother. ButT hope a lot of
people start asking this question . whetherornotmyson Is alive," said demise, Balcom called home from a
(Continued from page '1)
Irene Henry of East St. Louis, ill., hospital in West Germany. He had
now."
The parents of Lance Cpl. Duane talltlng about Lance Cpl. Eric A. only been wounded.
he remained determined to convene
Nancy Goen learned her son,
. Wigglesworth, 19, of Naugatuck, Pulliam, 19. "All I know Is that his
a scheduled reconcillatlon conferConn., lirteved in private, but the platoon was to pull out of there in Lance Cpl. Dennis C. Goen, 20, Was
ence in Geneva, Switzerland, next
slain man's uncle criticized the November. He was supposed to be safe ln a second-hand message
Monday, the Le,l lanese state radio
'1ow-key" security at the Beirut home for Christmas."
relayed by one of his buddies.
reported.
For many, no news was good
"I was sure my baby was dead ...
airport, where the bombing
The meeting of representatives ol
news.
__
then the telephone rang. It was the
occurred.
Lebanon's rival religious and politi"We haven't heard a thing and wife of one of Dennis's friends over
''Qther than the fact of shook right
cal factions is aimed atendingyears
we're
delighted,". sald Lavon Sin- there," Mrs. Goon said. "She told
now of what happened; the family
of civil war, a confllct touched oflln
feels that It didn't have to happen, gleton, father of Lt. Mark Singleton, me she had a message from our son
~t~rge part by Moslem demands that
that lt shouldn't have happened," 24, of Conway, S.C. "We're really to call him and she gave .me the
the Christian minority give up Its
said Grover Wigglesworth, the glad and we're thlnking Mark Is all number."
dominant.political role here.
right."
"This ls the way Vietnam
corporal's uncle.
The daybreak atlack on the
For others, waltlngwas agony.
The crushing irony of a jaunty
started," said Richard Devlin, 28,
Marines, most of whom were
"It's like you heard the first shoe brother of 21-year-old Pfc . Michael
letter received Monday morning
sleeping at the time, was made by
added to the pain for the parents of drop when . you heard of the Devlin of Westwood. Mass. The
the driver of an explostws-laden
Pfc. Mark Hehns of Dwight, Neb., bombing, and now you'rewattingto Devllns learned of Michael's death
pickup truck who crashed through
who learned of their 19-year-old hear that Second shoe drop," said from two mllltary officers, who
and swerved around security barrison's death from Marlne officials Sue Freeman, whose son, Lance were accompanied by the family's
ers at the airport base. He then
after reading "Hello, I'm still alive" Cpl. Clayton J. Freeman of Green- clergyman and a police detective.
~mashed his truck into the lobby of
Just the appearance of a univille, was In Beirut at the time of the
ln a missive !rom Lellanon.
the command post building and
"Of course last night was a attack. "You can't relax."
formed Marlne was enough to
detonated the estimated one ton of,
Three uni1ormed soldiers came to unlock grief for Guillermo San
sleepless night, sitting and waiting,
TNT.
hoping for a phone call rather thim a John R. PrlceathlshomelnAttalla,
uniform," said Marvin Heims, Ala., to tell hlrn of the death of his Pedro
"AreSr.
you
because
ofhere
Hialeah,
Fla. !"Y son Js
Mark's father. "Then this morning 20-year-old son, Marlne Pvt. Chris- dead?" San Pedro asked. When the
the Marine Co11&gt;s came and told us topher James Price, after the father Marine nodded, acknowledging that
that is was the end of it for our son." had spent a wlde-€yed night on the Lance Cpl. Guillenno San Pedro Jr.
As the grlrn news came formally, telephone trying in vain for
had dled, thefatherscre8llled as his
wife, Edllja, cried and held their two
with a visit from an officer In dress information.
illllform, good news filtered In on
"He didn't say much in letters younger sons.
531 JACKSOI'I P1I&lt;E- RT. 35 WEST

U.S. families warit answers

Why did massacre occur?

Explosion

,,rii~~!~~~£1

---4524

Admitted: Oris Hubbard, Syracuse; Ada Starcher. Pomeroy;
A missing persons report has been Mary Ann Myers, Langsvtue.
Issued for a Candy Riffle, 14, Apple ·
Discharged: Jennie Bearhs,
Grove according to the Meigs Glendon Faulk, Betty Friend, Lora
County Sheriff's Department.
Cleland, Josephine Mallory.
The girl was last seen Sunday
when whe left..bome with another
Fence damaged
girl from the Apple Grove area.
Riffle is 5 feet 4 inches tall. has
A fence near the Pomeroy Church
blonde hair, and was last seen of the Nazarene, Union Ave., was
wearing a polka dot shirt, blue jeans, ext'?Dsively damaged early Sunday
and tennis shoes. She was last seen morning when it was struck by a
tn the company of Sherry Butcher.
vehicle driven by Eric Lee McKinAnyone having any information of ney, Route 2, Point · Pleasant.
the whereabouts of either girl are
Pomeroy Police said the car was
asked to contact the sheriff's office traveling northeast on Union when it
apparently went out of control
at 992-3371 or 992-3889.
strlklng the fence. McKinney allegedly left the scene of the accident
but was later found at the Pomeroy
Clitf Apartments. He will be
charged with leaving the scene of an
A Racine woman was cited for accident. Damages were over $150.
failure to stop within assured clear
distance of another vehicle Monday Petition denied
morning following an accident on
s.R. 124 near Racine reports the
A petition filed by Virgil P . Phillps
Gallia-Meigs post of the Ohio for post conviction relief has been
Highway Patrol.
denied by Common Pleas Judge
Teresa A. Wilson, 22, was travel- Charles H. Knight, on the basis of an
Ing west on the high'riiY· ' Julle earlier voluntary plea of guilty.
GibbS, 21, Rt. 2, Racine, driver of a
In other action in the court, Ada Y.
vehicle ahead of Wilson, was ' ~ttlngton was granted a divorce
slowing down for a vehicle in front of from Leslie L. Whittington.
her. The patrol reported Wllson
faDed to slow down her vehicle Tea slated tonight
str!klng Gibbs' vehicle to the rear.
Ohio F;ta Phi Sororicy wUl have a
Both vehicles sustained moderate
preferential
tea this evening at the
· damage ln the 8:15a.m . accident:
River Boat Room at Diamond
Savings, Pomeroy, at 7::ll p.m .

Racine motorist
cited after accident

Emergency runs
l

Four calls were answered by th&lt;j
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Service Monday.
At 1:51 a.m. the Pomeroy unlt
went to the Main Street residence of
Dale Peck and transported him to
veterans Memortal Hospital; at
12: 53 p.m. the Rutland unit transported Joseph MeCaU ' from Long
Street, Rutland, 'to Veterans Memorial; at 1:46 p.m. the Middleport
unit took Gladys Wines from her
., Hlgh Street reidence to 'the Holzer
Medical Center; and at 2: 28 p.m.
George Kom, Jr. was taken from his
Middleport home by the Mlddleport
unit to the Holzer Medical Center.

1983

Boo!tters to meet

BARGAM IIIATJHEES SAT.&amp; SUN

SET rejects forum invitation
COLUMBUS (AP ) -The group
seeking to repeal Ohio's 1!&amp; tax
hikes has turned down an offer to
parlicipate in a forum on the
constitutionality of Its ballot
proposaL
"A kangaroo court," was the way
Ronald L. Braucher, executive
director of Ohioans to Stop Excessive Taxation (SET), on Monday
depicted the forum.
He referred to a statewide panel of
law professors th~t will conduct the
forum Friday at Capital University
ln Columbus.
Panel members were named by

House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr. ,
D-New Bcston, who said some legal
schOlars had told hlrn that the tax
repeal proposal (Issue 3) on the Nov.
8 ballot may be unconstitutional.
Although Riffe insisted the investigation ls non-parllsan, Braucher
called the forum "an 11th-hour
campaign event" and said he has no
intention of participating in it.
He had been invited by Louis A.
Jacobs, law professor at Ohio State
University, who sent Invitations to
people on both sides of the ballot
issue.
In other developments, Common
Cause of Ohio, a citizens' lobby, said
Monday lt will engage Its 7,000
Weather forecast
members In a statewide voter
education program .to try to defeat
Ooudy and cooler tonight with a30 Issue 2.
percent chance of drizzle. Low40-45.
That proposal, also inftiated by
Winds northwesterly 10-15 mph.
SET, wouldrequlrefuturetaxhlkes
Mostly sunny Wednesday. High in Ohio to be supported by a
near 55.
tJtree.flfths vote of the Legislature.
Extended Ohio Forecast
'l1nlrsdlly through Saturday:
lottery winners The
Fair weather through the period. Ohio
CLEvELAND (AP) Wghs ln the 60s on 'l'hursday and In winning number drawn Monday
the upper 60s and low 'lOs Friday and
night In the Ohio Lottery's game
Salu~. Lows 35-40 'l'hursday
"The Number" was 548.
momlng, 40-45 Friday and in the
lnthe"Plck4" game, the winning
mld-408 to arowid 50 on Saturday.
number was 9712.
the lottery reported earnings of
$594,825.50 from the· wagering 011
Thursday meeting
•"rite Number," played dally except
Sundays. The earnings came 011
Twin City Shrinettes will meet
sales of $961,115, while holders of
Thursday, Oct. Z7, at7 p.m. at the
wlnning tickets are entitled to share
home of Cora Beegle,
cine.
$.li6,289.00, lottery otrtctals said.

Meigs Athletic Boosters will meet
this evening at 7: :ll p.m. at the high
school. Film of the Belpre--Meigs
game will be shown. ·

PHARMACY

•

OHIO, INC.

Marriage licenses
Marriage liC€!15€5 .was Issued tn
Meigs Cpunty · Probllte Court to
Robert Petry, 54, New Haven. ·and
Marvel Quillen, 38, Middleport;
Wllliam Matthew Smlth, 21, Ewington, and Unda Ashburn, 19, Rt. 1,
Ewlngton.

ALL SEATS $2.00

E.

MIDDLEPQRT, OH.

MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
S•• SUNDAY
11:00 TO 8:00.
-6491 OR 992-31 06

.-

ADMISSION EVFRY TUESDAY 12.00

Only a simple majortty Is required
now.
Sue Burk, Common Cause's state
director, said Issue 2 would impede
the Legislature in its dally bustness
to the point that It "could cripple the
democratic process ln Ohio for
years to come. .

. .

Meets Wednesday
POMEROY - Meigs County
Commission will meet Wednesday, 1:~ p.m., Instead of today,
due to an out-of-town meeting.

Meets Oct. 31
RUTLAND Rutland
Garden Oub, which was to have
met Monday, has reschedUled
the meeting ·for Oct. 31, 7: :ll
p.m., at the home of Mrs. Roy
Snowden.

f~~~;:~~~~~;;~;;~~~~~;:~

Major Hoople's picks

Fainting causes ...

Weekly eolwnn on Page 4

See Famlly Medicine Page 7

Baseball's all stars

Smoking and cancer

Story on Page·6 ·

See Cancer AMwerline on Page 9

•

at y

e

4t

.

enttne

Voi.3~,No.t31

Pomeroy

Copyri!lhtod t983

Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 26,

198~

.Steps taken
to retnove
airport lessee
By LARRY EWING
Tribune staff Writer
County commissiOners have taken first steps toward evicting the firm
operating the Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport . A co-owner of Foothills
Avlatlon, however, says he intends to remain in buslnessatthejotnt-county
facility.
·
By a unanlrnous motion, the commission directed Prosecuting Attorney
Joseph L. Cain to "take whatever legal action necessary" to remove
Foothills A viatlon from the p~;emlses.
This rnomlng, county officials were pfeparlng to deliver notlfica tton to
Foothills' management that they are being asked to leave the premises.
That notification, drafted by the prosecutor, specifies the firm should
vacate by Nov. 1, 1983.
The actlo11 to evict came exactly two weeks after the commission moved
to Invalidate Its lease a~ment with Foothills by informing the firm of 1~
tntentlon to bid the operation of the facility.
"It Is our position that the contract no longer exists," Commissioner
Verlin Swain said durlng discussions prior to the motion.
"We now need to get someone up there to operate the airport," he added,
"and we would like to move as swiftly as possible."
In a separate motion, the commission directed commission clerk Joan
Davis to proceed to advertise for bids for the operation of the facility. The
advertisemellt for bids Is expected to begin Friday, with bid openings
·
scheduled in approximately two weeks.
Contacted following the meeting, Foothills co-owner Gearied Hitchcock
said, "It will be our attitude that our lease ls still good... and, we are not
going to leave."
Citing the speciflcs of a Nov. 2, 1982lease agreement between Foothills,
!hi county comrnlsslon and the Gallia-Melgs Regional Airport Authority ,
Hitchcock said he found "no logic behind the (county's) recent decision. "
"We have· not vlolated the terms of the contract;" he said, "If we choose
to we can stay here for the next 15 years."
The recent dispute · arose tD September, when Foothills sought to
rmegotlate.the terms of the contract. A clause in that lease arrangement
allowed for renegotiation of the amount of county contribution --: to the
airport authority- on Sept. ~of each year.
The 1982 agreement specified that amount at " ... $5,000 for use by the
airport authority, which shall use all of said sum for payment of expenses
at the alqlort, Including all utlllty bills, insurance bllls and normal
maintenance expenses."
(Continued on page 12)

2 Settiona, 16 Page•
20 C.nta
A M11ltimedia Inc. N•wapaper

-

.

Armed
Cubans
•
continue
fighting
~

•

BRIDGETOWN, Barbado~ (AP)
- Armed Cuban workers who
· · e luded capture by invading U.S.
Marines and Army para troopers on
Grenada continued to fight back
today despite sUffering casualties,
U.S. and Cuban officials said.
The Defense Depariment In
W.asbington said two members of
the U.S. force have been killed and23
wounded since the assault began
Tuesday. Other U.S. officials satd
three Grenadian soldiers were
killed and up to 600 "Cubans
captured.
years;
standing,
I
to
r,
Ada
Holter,
Genevieve
LONGEST-Representatlng the longest period of
President Fidel Castro of Cuba,
Guthrie, both 53 years, and Pauline Atkins and
membership ln the Meigs County Fann Bureau
Marxist-led
Grenada's staunchest
Vernon Nease, both65years. Thosewithover50years
Federation attending Tuesday nigjlt's annual meetally
,
said
today
that some Cubans
of membership were presented gifts while those with
Ing ln Chester were front, I to r, Juanita Sayre, Eula
been
killed
and
wounded in the
had
50 years and under received pins.
Wolfe, both 40 years; Zlba and SyMa MldkHf, 45
invasion, but vowed his countrymen
would not surrender. He said he did
not know how severe the Cuban
casualties were because of bad
'
communications with Grenada .
He raised the possibiili ty of
evacuating the Cubans, who have
been helping build a new airport that
was one of the first areas .seized by
Trustees for local dlstrlcts and a
State resolutions passed last night adequate .access be built to the
U.S. paratroopers Tuesday.
delegate to the state convention included: Support of legislation Ravenswood Bridge from the ap"We will not remain ln a country
were selected at the annual meeting which would make it mandatory !or proach o~ Route 33 with enough
that was invaded and is occupied,"
of the Meigs County Farm Bureau utilities to purchase nature gas flexibility to avoid damaging proCastro said durlng anew conference
held Tuesday night at the Chester available In Ohio before out of state
ductive farm land.
at the National Palace in Havana.
Elementary School.
natural gas can be purchased; that
National resolutions
H e ruled out sending
Trustees elected to three year due to' the erosion l!long the Ohio
National resolutions adopted .In- reinforcements.
terms include Mrs. Pat Holter, River, a re-evaiua tlon of this land be
cluded: Support United States
A strongly pro-Cuban military
Route 3, Pomeroy, distlict 1; Eula made to determine the true acreage
House Bill HR4 which would force regime took control Oct. 19 after a
Wolfe, Racine, district 2; Sylvia and aiso how many acres . have
utilities to transport local natural power struggle in theruiingsocialist
Midkiff, Route 3, Pomeroy, district washed away and that there be an
gas to consumers · which · would party. Grenadan soldiers killed
3, and Catherine Colwell, Route 1, equitable way to reemburse the
result in lower cost for customers;
Prime Minister Maurice Bishop In
Vinton, district 4. Maida Mora, owner for his loss; that pressure be
support leglslation which would the coup.
Route 3, Pomeroy, was . elected brought on governmental agencies
enable the Corps of Engineers to
President Reagan, calling the
delegate to the 1~ state convention.
to assist farmers with drought
stabilize and secure critically erod - military regime "a brutal group of
ing areas along the Ohio_River to . leftists thugs,' : said the Invasion was
County resolutions approved dlsast.e r problems; that the conti·
nuation of state and federal money
reduce the amount of soil lost due to undertaken to protect some 1,lXXJ
Include--support ofiegtslation which
erosion on private or public land; Americms on the island and to
would force utllltles to use more be made available !or reclamation
bring pressure on governmental restore order and democracy.
Meigs County wells so that local of properties damaged because of
agencies to assist farmers with
landowners will receive more strip mine and run-off and residue
The Americans, most of them
not
presently
covered
by
restoration
disaster problems; com'
drought
revenue; stringent enforcement of
students at St. George's University
plete eradication of the multiflora
hunting laws which would require programs; opposition of the legaliMedical School, were reported
zation
of
marijuana;
that
elected
·rose
; support of a supply and
written permission on prtvate
Tuesday to be safe. Arthur Massoio,
ties, and the attackers were not properly; that the Meigs County township trustees and county comdemand concert and oppose lmpor'
a school spokesman, said in nearby
Identified.
missioners
be
given
a
uthority
on
,
lations of all farm products which
Commissioners instigate a thoBarbados that university officials
locating hazardous landfills ln their
would be detrimental to the Amerirough
feaslbillty
study
of
the
Meigs
were
"shocked and surprised" by
Lebanon's state radio said Bush
respective county rather than the
can farmers; oppose the legaliza - the invasion since the students could
County
Highway
system;
that
the
and his wife, Barbara, wore
tion of marijuana; continue to
seriousness of the drug situation in State using statutory authority to
have been evacuated "peacefully."
bullet -proof flak jackets and ~tee!
monitor all foreign investments in
Meigs County be fully realized and overrule local officials; that com ·
The Reagan administration offihelmets as they toured the ruins of
plete eradication of the multiflora
the United States and an immedia te
that
authorities
be
encouraged
to
cial,
who spoke on condition he not
the Marine compound.
study to determine an equitable
rose be mandated with matching
to
take
lrnmedlate
and
continue
be
named,
said units of the Army's
Robin Gray, a White House
limit as to what this Investment
funds made available from state
forceful
actlon
with
stronger
en·
82nd Airborne Dlvtslon would probspokesman. said Bush would be
and federal governments; that
(Continued on page 16)
forcement
and
stiffer
penalties.
ably be sent to control one of
brtefed by Beirut-based Marine
Grenada's two airports, which were
o!flcers on the current military
seized
by ·the . invaders, and free
situation and meet with Lebanese
Army
Rangers
to attack pockets of
President Amin Gemayel to express
resistance.
district's
siX
'
Improvements
to
the
ment or new building funds and 20
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) -This
U.S. suppori for his embattled
"There was more resistance thqn
elementary schools and will be In bond Issues.
year's increase in state funding .for
government.
we
thought there would be, " the
effect
for
a
22·year
payoff
period
.
State Superintendent of Public
schools notwithstanding, voters wUl
official said.
Beirut newspapers, meanwhile, be asked to decide 155 local
Officials have noted that money will Instruction Franklin Walter said the
The assault on Grenada by nearly
be used to put up new buildings to number of measures was not
published a statement they said was school-related tax issues on the Nov.
2,lXXJ
U.S. trocps began before dawn .
issued by )ranlan otflclals to · 8 ballot
replace Cadmus, Centerville and unexpected.
Tuesday.
Some 300 soldiers or pOl tee
congratulate those responsible for
Vinton elementaries and replace
"That's not a surprise. We
By comparison, there were 211
six
Caribbean na lions from
the twin bombings.
portable classrooms at Vinton and !mticlpated that there would be a
measures considered at the NoJamaica,
Barbados,
Dominica, St.
The latest Pentagon flgui'es vember 1\R! general election when
Hannan Trace elementaries. Im- numbero!them .Obviouslyifwehad
Vincent,
Antigua
and
St. Lucia provements will be performed at not had the increase in state funding
placed thedeathtollfrom the suicide state government was still in the
·
joined
the
Invasion
.
terrorist bombingattheMarlnepost midst of Its budget problems.
Cheshlre-Kyger and Addaville.
the number would have been at least
The Reagan administration conOhio Department of Education double what lt is," Walter said.
to 216 dead and 70 wounded. The
Among those isSiles that wUl be
r
tends that a 9,00l-foot runway under
_French command today put Its decided will be a 4-rnlli bond Issue in
records show 35 of the 155 levies or
In the November 1982 election,
casualties at 47 killed, 15 wounded the Gallia County Local School
Issues on next month's ballot are 41.2 percent of school-related tax construction on Grenada would let
new or renewal emergency · Issues were approved. The approval Soviet and Cuban wa11&gt;lanes land .
and 1l still missing in the rubble of District.
measures. ·
what liad been a nine-story building
rate had been about 45 percent ln Bishop had deni~ thiS , saying the
new facility was bullt to encourage
The bond issue will finance $11.6
In addition, there are 51 continu- general elections over the last
in a west Beirut residential
tourism.
mllllon worth of construction or
ing levies, 49 for capital improve- several years.
neighborlX&gt;od.
.J

Trustees chosen, resolutions
given Farm Bureau support

Bush inspects
explosion site
BEIRIJI', Lebanon (AP)- Vice
President George Bush, wearing a
heinie! and flak jacket, today
lnspe~,:ted the devastated Marine
base where a bomb ktlled 216
American servicemen and said
"lnsldlous terrorist cowards" will
not change U.S. policy.
At dawn, before Bush's arrival,
the Mar~ were fired upon with
small anns, mortar and bazookas
and ffn.od back, said Maj. Robert
Jordan, a Marine spokesman.
Bush, standing before the mountain of rubble where rescuers were
still looking for bodies fi'Qm Sunday's . terrorist bombing, said:
"We're not going to let down friends
because of terror."
"We're not going to let a bunch of
Insidious terrorist cowards shake
the foreign policy of the United
States," he told reporters. "Foreign
policy Is not going to he dictated or
changed by terror."
Jordan, describing tbe shooting
attack on the Marines today, said
the Americans "fired ·two rounds
tnxn 81nun mortars" toward the
eastern perimeter of the base at
Beirut airport.
Tltere ~ no reports of casual-

School issues on November ballot

Domestic . problems apparent motive for shootings
It's bulb planting seasonwe've got the flneat selection of quality
spring-flowering bulbs.

Tulips
. Daffodils
Hyacinths
Crocus

contents. Both had been shot in th~ Enterprises.
·
·
head. The ofllcer said o!lly the ~ A colleague of Ted Fisher at
known problem the couple had was Zlnuner said be was a quiet
domestic.
person," Pennington said . .
"She was gojng away for a whole
Mrs. FISher. a Republican, was in
week by heTself . to do some her firSt term ln the Ohio Leglslathlnklng," said Marte Tolin, a close ture. The first person to be elected
friend of Mrs. Fisher. She saki Mrs. from thenewlycreated66thDlslflct
Fisher, a reglsten!d nurse, had tn western Clemlont County, she
planned to leave Tuesday.
was a legislative member of the
The couple has a !lOR, Mark, in Power Siting Board of the Public
NewYorkCityandadaughter,Jan, UillltlesCommlsslollofOhio:
ln Calffomla, pollee said.
Mrs. Fisher co-sponsored leg1slaFlsherwasanelectr1lllk:engineer lion concerning health, education,
111 the Zimmer Nucle..- Power_ ~justice and local governStation. Both he and his
also " ment. She was the sponsor of a bill
operated acoosultlngbwdness, TCF that prqlOIIed increased criminal

wife
'

'I

Representatives and to the entire
penalties for rape.
Fisher totally supported his wife's · state."
political life, relatives said.
In a joint statment, House
"He was right behind her, and she
Minority Leader Corwin Nixon,
always acknowledged lt," said his
R-Lebanon. Assistant House Minorcousin, James FlsherofC!ncinnatl.
Ity Leader Waldo Bennett Rose,
"She always said she couldn't
R-Llrna; and GOP Whip Dave
Johnson, R-North Canton, said they
have done it without Ted,'' said
were shocked by the deaths.
James Fisher's wife, Lou.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe,
"Sue, as a freshman representative, was well on the 'way to
D-New Boston, said he knew Mrs.
Fisher only a short ttnie, but she
becoming an outstanding legislator," Nixon said. "Her personal
"proved to me that she was a very
capable, articulate and fair person. strength was ln mobillzing the
This Is a great loss to her legislative talents and concerns of her home
dlstrlct, -to the Olilo Rouse« of . district "to nelp make l"!Pslatlve
decisions."

Rep. Sll8 Fisher

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