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l~lM Daily

Sentinel

Pamenay-Middleport, Ohio

r----United States Capitol---,

Meigs County happenings
Emergency runs

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Meets tonight

Th(ee caUs were answered by
local units Monday, the Meigs
County Emergeitcy Medical Servi.ces reports. At 3:33p.m., Pomeroy
went to Union Ave., for Linda
Roberts, taken to Holzer Medical
Center; Pomeroy at 9:59p.m. took
William Hysell from Pomeroy
Health Care Center to Veterans
. Memortal and at 11:01 p .m .. the
· Rutland unit took Alice. Spaulding
!rom Salem Center to Holzer
Medical Center.
·

Pomeroy O!apter 188, Order of
the Eastern Siar, will meet tonight
at the Masonic Temple. Sideliners
will be honored .

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There will be a special meeting of
Middleport Lodge363. F . and A. M.,
tonight at 7 p.m. at the the Masonic
Temple. There will be work in the
master mason degree and refreshments will be served.

Admitted--Opal Cremeans, CoolDavts, Rutland; Frank
ville;
WoHord, Vinton; William Hysell,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-James Nelson, Orpha Jame, Evelyn White, Belva
Groce, Betty Friend, Richard
Bearhs.

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Thursday meeting

Chamber .An anomyOUB caller to the Washington Post
~lalmed responsibility oo behalf of a group calling
ltseH the Amled Resistance Unit. (AP Laserphoto) .

Explosion rocks U.S. CapitQl

A 17-year old Rutland youth is in
eustody at Ona, W. Va., awaiting
charges following the theft of a car
the Meigs County Sheriff's Department reported today .
According to the sheriff's department, a-1974 Ford LTD owned by
Bus Daniels, Langsville, was stolen
Monday from the Little Coal Bucket
Carry out.
Daniels said he had gone Into the
carryout a nd had left the engine
running. When he returned, the car
was gone.
The vehicle was spotted by the
marshal of Procterville when the
driver purchased gas there but
failed to pay for It The marshal
pursued the car into Huntington
where the driver wrecked the car.

Lee found
(Continued from page 1)
Whitney said he diagnosed Lee as
having a borderline personality
clloorder, a combination of neurosis
and psychosis. When asked by Klng
ll the disorder could be treated,
Whitney replied, "1 find them
(diBocders l to be difficult, but
definitely treatable,"
During the oral hearing, the
defense attorney Klng, motioned to
remand the case back to juvenile
court. No decision was made on that
motion by the judge.
Lee Is presently incarcerated in
GaDla County Jail.
.
GallJa County sheriffs deputies
aJTeSted Lee on April 7, hours after
tlixlJng the body of Barbara
Twyman in a 40-foot deep well
located off Alice Road near Ewington. Twyman, a Buckeye Hills
Career Center student was reported
missing by h';'r family on March W.

Preceptor Beta Beta Cha pter of ·
Beta Sigma Phi Sorortty will meet
Thursday at 7:~ p.m. ln the
Riverboat Room of the Diamond
WASHINGTON (AP) - FBI weeks after a bomb was carried into
Savings and Loan Co.
investigators poked through debris
the House visitors' gallery while
ln a marble hallway oul&lt;ide the
Congress was In session, prompting
Correction · ·
Senate chamber this morning, heightened building security. Researching for the remnants of a . commendations forfurthersecurtty
In the Ust of silrvtvors of Thomas
bomb that explgded In the heart of Improvements were still being
Le White, 55, Long Bottom who died
the Capitol shortly before midnight,
drafted.
Thursday the name of a son, Rodney
heavily damaging a congressional
"We don't know who did It:'' Smith
Keith White, Rt ,1, LongBottom was
cloakroom and destroying priceless
said. Minutes before the explosion,
unintentionally omitted.
works of art.
however, an anonymous caller
An aide to the Democratic
telephoned the Washington Post and
Marriage licenses
leadership said damage may total
claimed responsibility on behalf of a
$1mllilon.
group calling Itself the Armed
Two marrtage licenses were
Senate Sergeant at Arms Larry Resistance Unit. The caller said
Lssued In Meigs County Probate
Smith said a pollee officer stationed
"the action" was ln response to U.S.
Court .
near the main doors to the Senate
military involvement in Grenada
Issued licenses were Michael
chamber 30 feet away barely
and~banon .
Dean Allman, 22, Albany, and
escaped injury in the explosion.
As the session ·approached, a
Christina Lynn McAfee, 23, Albany,
Smith said the Senate still planned to
layer of dust from the explosion
and Keith Thomas Ba"iley, 24,
convene today.
covered the carpeted chamher floor
Pomeroy, and Rebekah Jean Long,
"It was a mess," he added. "!twas and several maintenance workers
:IJ. Pomeroy.
depressing. The only good thing is
were busy with vacuum cleaners
that no one wa.S hurt.'"
and dust clothes.
· The main doors leading into the
The bomb blasted a hole "several
chamber
were
splintered
and
the
feet
wide and about 15 feet high" ln
Meets tonight
nearby Republican cloakroom, a
the wall hetween the main, tile'
floored corrtdor outside the Senate
meeting room just off the chamber,
Ohio Eta Phi Sorortty will meet
received
considerable
damage,
chamber
and the nearby Mansfield
ti\is evening at 7:15 p.m. at the
conference
room, said Mike WilSmith
said
in
an
Interview.
Senior Citizens Center. •
The explosion came only three
lard, an aide to Senate Democratic

Heavy . voter turnout expected
COLUMBUS, Ohio · (AP) - A
heavy voter turnout was predicted
today for ballot Issues to repeal a 90
percent state Income tax Increase
and raise the state's beer-drinking
age from 19 to 21.
Good weather, partly sunny and in
the 60s, was forecast, and the
secretary of state predicted a heavy
voter turnout - for an off-year
election- of 3.2 million voters. PoUs
were to be open until 7:30p.m.
Both sides on the tax issues
predicted victory Monday, but after
a campaign in which they spent a
total of almost $3 mllllon, most of It ·
on media, most observers were
predicting a close race.
The Committee for Ohio, against
tax repeal, raised and spent more
than $2 mlliion, Richard Murray,
the group's campaign manager,
said.
A spokesman for the Ohioans to
Stop Excessive Taxation, which
circulated petitions to put Issues 2

Lorain P. Sterret1, 80, Wadsworth, Ohio former Porneroy resident, died Monday evening. Funeral
arrangement will be a nnounced
later by Ewing Funeral Home.

Schoedinger East Chapel, 5300 E.
Livingston Ave. , Columbus. Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m .
Wednesday at Letart Falls
Cemetery.

James E. Weyers miller
James E . Weyersmlller; 60,
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy died Monday

Bonnie E. Jackson
Bonnie E. Jackson, 66, Pickerington died Monday at Mt. Carmel
· East, Columbus.
Mrs. Jackson was a former
resident and teacher of Meigs
County.
She was born January 26, 1917the
daughter of the late Howard and
Sylvia Gamble Miles . She was also
preceded in death by her husband,
Lee Jackson.
She was a retired shcool teacher
at Reynoldsburg, a mem.b er of
Reynoldsburg United Methodist
Church and Ohio Retired Teachers
Association .
She Is survived by one daughter
and son-in-law. Linda and Alan
Straus of Oxford, Ohio; two grandchildren, :Jennifer and Andy.
Funeral services will he held
Wednesday at 10 a .m . at the
Reynoldsburg United Methodist
Church, 1636 Graham Road, ReyFiiends may call

night at Cabel Huntlngtoon
HospitaL
Mr. Weyersmiller was oorn
August 23, 1923 in Meigs County the
son of the late John and Mary Love
Weyersmiller. He was also preceded ·in death by one sister,
Rosemary Arnold, and three brothers, Jack, Joe · and Robert
Weyersmlller.
He was captain of securtty guards
at the MbUntalneer Plant and · a
veteran of World War II.
He is survived by his wife, JoAnn
Weyersmiller; one daughter -and
son-in-Jaw, Mary and Mark Dillard,
Pomeroy;. one grandson, Eric
Dillilfd ruxl one granddaughter,
Andrea DIIJard and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 3 p.m . at EWing
FullE!ral Home. Friends may call-at
the funeral borne after 7 p.m . this
evening.

CORRECTION
OUR SUNDAY AD
SHOULD HAVE READ

OPEN 9 TO 5
MON.-SAT.
GALLERY
HAIR ARTS
111 I. 2nd St.

"2·3233

and 3 on the ballot, estimated ltspent
about $700,001. However, spokesman Curt Steiner called It "a ball
park figure. "
Issue 2 would require a threefifths vote by the Legislature to
increase taxes. Issue 3 would repeal
all of Ohio's 1983 tax hikes, including
a 90 percent J,ncrease in the state
income tax.
Murray, whose group bicluded a
broad coalition of business, labor,
education, welfare, and other
groups, brushed aside the results of
a Columbus DlspatchpollonSunday
which showed Issue 3 being passed
by 55 percent-45 percent.
"We've spent $.'Jl,OOJ tracking
voters on Issue 3, and that (tbe
Dispatch poll) certainly doesn't
square with what we've got,"
Murray said. He wouldn't give
numbers but said he Is "confident
that
welastweek,
wUI defeatsome
Issuelawmakers
3."
Late

clare

of the country at the time and who Is
now living in Athens County. Due to
her new residence, Mrs. Potraz did
·not Ill~ for reelection. The sixth
candida!~ in Monday night's election was Frank Casto. Only five
seats were to be fllJed.
To vote in the election, persons
must be reslqents of Meigs County
and must hold a current membership ticket in the Meigs County
Agricultural Society.
The board set a special meeting
for 8 p.m. on Nov. 28 at the
secretary's office and at that time
will confer with a representative of
Variety Attractions on bookings for
the 1984 county fair.

~-------------------------1

HEARING LOSS
IS FIRST
A MEDICAL PROBLEM ...
And
be examined by a qualified physician.
Medical or surgical intervention may be indicated.
If your doctor suggests that you try a hearing aid,
call the one who has been reliable since 1949 ...

444 W. UNION Sl,P.O. BOX 511, ATHENS, 0. 45701
594·3571
HOME APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

See Family Medicine Page 6

Weekly football picks

G-M Airport situation
See story Page g

•

Seyler, Pyles, Pickens
post mayoral victories
In Racine Village, Charles F.
Cler k-Treasurer, defeaiing his ReBy BOB HOEFLICH
publican
opponent
Ellen
Jane
Pyles.
incumbent mayor , was
Sentinel staff
opposed
only
by a write- in candidate
410
to
269.
Present
Rought,
Richard D. Seyler, Pomeroy
in
his
bid
for
reelection. However ,
serv
illg
by
appointclerk-treasurer
businessman, became the new
the
candida
te
Harry Lyons , Sr.,
ment, Bernadette Anderson, was a
mayor of Pomeroy Village as a
rallied
122
votes
to
give Pyles a close
result of Tuesday's generalelection. write-in candidate for the position
race.
Pyles
received
134 votes.
Operator of Modern Chemicals in and received 36 votes.
Dr. Harold D. Brown, a Demo- Incumbent clerk-treasurer, Margie
Pomeroy and a n a ntique collector
Wolle was reelecled with 188 votes
crat, was unseated as a Pomeroy
Seyler received 499 votes to win the
over the 102 votes received by her
post in his first bid for a public office. · Councilman. There were three
A Republican, Seyler defeated candidates seeking the two seats . opponent, D. Gene Lyons. Racine
incumhent Republican mayor, open this year and voters elected the Village also had a council race with
Clarence Andrews in the primary two Republiq:~ns, Bruce Reed with three candidates seeking the two
electloos to win thC nomination. In 511 votes and Henry J. Werry "1lh posts. Winners were Lawrence R.
yesterday's election, he defeated 375 votes . Dr. Brown received 338 Wolfe with W7 and Daniel B. Sayre
with 158. Defeated was Ben E.
another Pomeroy businessman, tallies.
Petrel who received 136 votes.
Wllllam C. Quickel, a Democrat, Republican Chester M. Knight was
Syracuse Mayor Eber 0. Pickens
unopposed
for
election
to
the
who received 262 votes.
was reelected in that community
William E. Snouffer, a Democrat, Pomeroy Board of Public Affairs
(Contin ued on page 121
became the new Pomeroy Village and received 623 votes .

Veterans' Day Service
Annual Veter ans Day services of
Drew Webster Post 39, Amertcan·
Legion, will be held at 10:45 a.m.
Friday in front of the Meigs County
Courthouse in Pomeroy. The Rev.
Father Ari'thonyGiannamorewlll be
speaker and Pomeroy Mayor Clar·
ence Andrews will give a welcome..
Church bells in the community wUI
ring to mark the occasion.

RIVIERA Bl!NDS BY

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, _November 9, 1983

CLEVELAND (AP) The
winning number drawn Monday
night in the Ohio Lottery's game,
"The Number," was 694.
·
'' In'the "Pick 4" game, the winning
number was 9452.

FRUTH PHARMACY
786 N. 2ND AVE.

Voi.32,No .148
C.,.yrightod 1983

entine

at y

e

'

r;::::::::~::::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::~

.

DILES H'EARING AID CENTER

PO MillOY

opposing Issue 3said they had seen It
losing 45percent to40percent with 15
percent undecided. The Akron
Beacon Journal reported similar
results in a local poll released
Sunday. ( - 4
~.
Steiner said he was not surprised
by the statewide Dispatch mail poll.
"We've been ahead right from the
IJ!oginning even though we have been
outspent 3-1 or4-1,"he said.
Noting the favorable weather
forecast, Steiner said, " We think
there will be a massive turnout of
people who thought 90 percent (the
Income tax hike) was too much." .
Murray and Steiner both agreed
that the outlook for Issue 2 Is for a
vote. The Dispatch poll showed
it as 50-50 and both said they didn't
have much quarrel_ .wlth that
projection.
"I'm not asconfidenton Issue 2. I
think It Is a toss- up," Murray said.

Incumbents reelected to o'J11
J ice
'
Four incumbents were reelected
to three-year terms on the Meigs
County Fair Board Monday night
wben the board's annual election
was held at the secretary's office on
the fairgrounds .
There were 118 persons casting
ballots in the aiUiual election held
from 5 to 9 p.m.
Reelected to their posts were
Roger Spencer, Hugh Custer, William Radford and Gerald Douglas.
A fifth member to the board Is
Barbara Fry, elected Monday
night. This Ls her first time on the
board but she did serve as an acting
board member for the 1983 Meigs
. County Fair In the absence of Mrs.
· LucUle Leifheit Potraz whowas out

Stories, Photos on Page 3

Clear tonight. Low near 40. Winds
southerly 10-15 mph. Mostly sunny
Wednesday. High in the mid~ .

Lottery winners

Slipped discs.••

Maj or Hoople on Page 4

l.EVOLOR'

Area deaths
Lorain P. Sterrett

Leader Rohen C. Byrd. " It 's a big,
gaping hole," he added.
Byrd's own office had dQors blown
of! their hinges, Willard said, buttlle
Inside of his office appeared tosutfer
no major damage.
The explosion damaged or destroyed several works of art,
including historic paintings of
Daniel WebSter, Henry Clay and
John C. Calhoun, and caused heavy
dama·g e to a grandfather clock near
the Senate chamber , Senate officials said. The blast also shattered
numerous pieces of heavy furniture.
"It may have caused a $1 mlliion
worth of damage," Willard said.
FBI ageents, wearing face masks
to protect themselves from dust in
the corrdlor , sifted through the
rubble, searching for bomb fragments and taking photographs.
Security was extremely tight
early in the morning, with Capitol ·
employees who arrtved for work
required to pass through as many !IS
three checkpoints to e nter the
building,
The Senate had recessed four
hours before the 11 p.m. EST blast.

Overseas education
NEW YORK (AP) - National
idiosyncrasies are as much a
learning problem for overseasoound businessmen as learning the
native la nguage, says a management consulting flon .
· The company advises businessmen to learn about culture and
protocol beforehand. This coold
prevent mistakes, such as discussing deals with Japanese over dinner
or patting a Frenchman on the back
after negotiations - both of which
are considered rude.

honor coach

Weather forecast

Thursday throogh Salmday:
Chance ol showers Thursday.
Fair im Frkiii.V and Saturday. IUglts
In the 50s 'lbursday and bt the 40tJ
Friday and Saturday. Inws bt ll..i'
40s 'lbursday, bt the 20s Frldii,V and
_In the 00s Satttniii,V'

Capitpl

CAPJI'OL BOMBED - A bomb exploded in the
United Slates Capitol BuDding shortly before
mldnlghl Monday. 'lbe explosion occurred ln the m
aln conidor between the Rotunda and the Senate

(Continued from page 1)
off Spring Ave., and one off Union
Ave.
Betty Baronlck read a letter
commending the v1llage for the
blacktopping . of streets and two
other letters were read commend·
ing the vliJage for trick or treat night
and the Halloween party 's ponsored
by the Pomeroy Chamber of .
Commerce.

Extended Ol!lo Forecast

Bomb In

The yard and bake sale to be held
Wednesdsay at the Long Bottom
Community Building sponsored by
the Long Bottom CommunitY Associa tlon has .been cancelled.

Columbia•.

a

0 o o o

Event cancelled

Youth faces
theft charges

-.

I

... 4

Meigs County Salon 170, Eight and
Forty, will meet tonight at the home
of Mrs. Rhoda Hackett . Members
are to turn in money for Items sold
and to return those not sold.

Veterans Memorial

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Tuesday, November 8, 1983

EBER PICKENS

RICHARD SEYLER

. CHARLE&gt; PYLES

Board members, trustees
chosen at Tuesday's election
Thoren, Jr., received 887 to be
elected to the board while Pyles the
third contender for the tWo seats
received 700. David Lee Hill was
unopposed for an unexpired term
and received 1,319 votes.
In the Eastern Local District six
candidates sought three seats.
A newcomer, Carolyn Sue Heines,
led the six candidates with813votes .
Second was Jimmy C. Caldwell , ·
incumbent, with 7&amp;; and third was
Roger C. Gaul, incumbent, with 747 .
Bernard Shrlvers did not file for
reelection to the board. Heines,
Caldwell and Gaul defeated David
L. Chadwell, 662; Thomas A .
Caspers,
and James R. Smith,
6.ll. Keith Weber was a wrile'in
Pyles WJSeated
Tn the Southern Local District, candidate in the Eastern District
incumhent Charles Pyles was and received 'JZ/ votes.
County board
unseated in his bid for reelection to
the board. Don P . Smith, lncum- ·
There were no contests for
bent, received · 894 and Joseph E. election to the county board of

Voters of Meigs County's three
local school districts elected candidates to serve on their respective
boards of education at Tuesday's
general electlon.
In the Meigs Local Dlstrtct six
candidates were sought the three
full term seats. Voters reelected all
three Incumbents. They Included
Richard w. Vaughan, Middleport,
who led the way with 1,858 votes;
· Larry C. Powell, Pomeroy, with
1,713 votes and RObert F . Snowden,
• Rutland, with 1,616. Other candidates were Roy R. Vaughan, wbo
was given 1,251 votes; Charles E.
Jones, 'R7 and Harold D. Graham,

roa,

education.
Harold Roush and Oris Smith,
ineumbent, were reelected to full
terms with 4106 and 3184 votes,
respectively, and VIrgil C. King
received 4605 votes to be elected to
Rn unexolred term.
There were races in ajl of Meigs
County's townships except one
Tuesday. One trustee and the clerk
were elected.
Township races
Scipio Township was 1J!e area in
which no race existed with Donald
H1 Weaver being named trustee
with 197 votes and Betty J. Bishop
named clerk with 213 votes.
In Columbia Township where five
candidates sought the trustee post,
Gay F. Johnson emerged as winner
with 91 votes. Gordon N. P erry was
second with a close 85 and Victor
Perry was third with 82. Jimmy C.
(Continued on page 12)

Taylor's extradition .delayed
·The case of Lindsey Taylor ,
Miliersville, charged with the October 5 slaying of Danny Melton, 30,
of Canton, in a M;eigs County m obile.
home continues to be bogged down
with red tape.
Taylor, Indicted by a Meigs
County Grand Jury last month, has
been the object of an extradition
proceeding between the States of
West Virginia and Ohio, but thus far , .
the extradition paper awaits Governor Richard Celeste' s signature.
In addition, the case has hit
another snag resulting from a
psychiatric evaluation from Weston
State Hospita l ordered by J udge
Black of Wood County Circuit Court
at Parkersburg.

The evaluation has been completed, but a report Is not expected
until late next week . Meanwllilc,
Taylor has been returned to Wood
County Jail for further proceedings.
Peter Sikora of Governor Celeste's office says a n application for
a Governor's warrant had been
approved
was on Celeste's desk
for his signature.
Paul Gerard, investigator for the
Meigs County Prosecutor 's Office,
indi cated the document will be
personally delivered ..to the office of
West VIrginia GovernOr Jay Rockefeller.
Meanwhile. Vincent Stone, 21,
Middleport, was sentenced to a term

and

of six months in the Columbus
Correctional Facility Tuesday
morning by Meigs County Common
Pleas .Judge Charles H. Knight.
Stone entered a voluntary p lea of
guilty to a charge of grand t heft.
Stone was charged in a bill of
information prepared by the office
of prosecuting attorney, F red W.
Crow lll , of taking approxil tJately
$180 that belonged to J oseph D.
Vadish . The incident occurred Nov.
3, at a bar in Middleport .
Stone had prev iously been convic ted qf and Incarcerated for
several theft offenses and was on
parole at the time of the most recent
offense, according to Paul Ger ard,
investigator for the prosecutor .

Ohio voters reject tax repeal, drinking issue
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Ohio voters rejected tax
rebellion and raising the drtnking age by wide
margins.
They also elected Toledo's first woman mayor on
Tuesday and threw out incumbent mayors in Akron
and Canton, according to unofficial results.
Gov. Richard Celeste, who campaigned vigorously
against tbe anti-tax measures, Issues 2 and 3,
promised to "reach out" in a bipartisan effort to
rerulld the state's economy.
"Ohioans have m ade a tough choice at the polls
today. And in doing so they have turned bac k the tide
which would have cost our state dearly,"' the governor
told a late night news conference.
Sponsors of the Issues said they would accept defeat
because their object was to give people a chance to
decide.

Issue 3, which would have repealed all state taxes
enacted since January, chiefly a 90 percent Income
tax hike, and Issue 2, which would have made It
harder to enact new taxes, both were tuined down by
more than 55 percent of the voters.
Voters also turned down a bid to raise the state's
• beer-drinking age from 19 to 21 in a contest that pitted
arguments about traffic safety against those that said
19-year-olds who can drive and who can fight and die
for their country'sl!Ould be able to drink.
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown estimated that
about :n,ooo college students registered as ·a result of
the Issue 1 arguments. About 59 percent of all voters
said 'no' to Issue 1.
The Rev. Duane ~mmervllle, a United Methodist
minlster and chief spokesman for Coalition for 21 ,
which backed Issue 1, said It appeared the vote on the

two other statewide ballot Issues influenced the vote
against Issue 1. He said it woulfl have passed if it had
stood alone.
Toledo voters gave their endorsement to Republican City Councilwoman Donna Owe ns as the city's
first woman mayor. Mrs . Owens, 46, beat Democratic
Councilman Peter Ujvagi by nearly 18,00l votes.
Shew ill succeed Democratic Mayor Doug DeGood,
who did not seek a fourth, two-year term. She said her
first priority Is to appoint a n emerg&lt;!llfy economic
·
task force.
Canton voters ejected Republican Mayor Stanley
Crnlch after W years in office, choosing Democratic
challenger Sam Purses by a 977-vote margin.
Purses, 41, lost to Cmlch in 1979. But this year
Cmich, 67, known as a law-a nd-orde r candidate,
· watched several of his aides plead guilty to kJckback

a nd theft of a uto parts c harges.
Akron Mayor Roy Ray conceded defeat at the
hands of Democratic sta te Rep. Tom Sawyer .in the
Akl-on mayoral race early today. Republicans ·
controlled the office for U1e past 18 years.
Republican Dana Rinehar!, Jl. claimed victory in
the Columbus mayor al race with a 3 percent margin
- about 6,100 votes - over Democrat Michael
Dorrian, a nd promised to continue policies of
Republican Mayor Tom Moody.
Democrat Patrick Ungaro, president of the
Youngstown City Council , was selected that city's
mayor, outdistancing his closest challenger In a
five-way race by about 2,500 votes. Ungaro, 42, will
succeed Mayor George Vuckovich, a Democrat who
decided not to seek a thfrd term.

I!LAZE BATnED - Gal!lpols llatil-, R"teted
by units !rom Point l'lea88nt and Mlddlepoli, ballled
a blaze at WIDis Dre Cp., 201 'lblrd Ave.,_Gallpolls,

fur -'Y _.ea boura "-lay niPt aad early IIIIa
morm.g, 'lbe lire, which llllarted in the t'ttal!i&amp;dlnl

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MIDDLEPORT. OH.

. Q .URS·MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
H
• SUNDAY 11:00 TO 8:00
PH. 992-6491 OR 992-3106

Three alarm fire hits
Gallipolis tire business
•

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GALLIPOLIS - GallJpoUs firemen worked through the night to
control a blaze that broke out in the
retreading plant section of WillJs
Tire Co. and caused an estimated
$180,000 worth of damage to the
building and contents.
·
· Fire Chief James Northup said
this morning two' firemen were to
remain on the scene at W1 Third
Ave. until noon to put ootsmaU fires.
The majority of firemen, assisted
during the night by units fro!'n Point
Pleasant and Middleport, returned
tolhestatlonat5:Wa.m. today after
battUng the blaze for nearly seven
hours.
"I didn't feel real comfortable
about It untli 2:45 ·or 3 o'clock,"
Northup said. ''What could have
happened was that It could have
spread toOiherbulldlngS ...whellyou
deal with a product such as llres, It's
vecy tllfllclllt tosdngulsh."
The c;,ntpolt• department said
they were called to thesceneatlO: 28
p.m. Tuetday, when an unknown

female caller informed them flames
and smoke were coming out of tbe
brick trame structure.
The department said the fire was
probably caused by amaHunctlonof
the electric motor in the retreading
machine, located in the buDding's
first floor. That section of the
businesS had been Ienodeled in the
pastyeartoaccornmodatearetread
plant, according to co-owner Raymond WilUs.
·
The motor tire burned wiring
insulation and spread to ruljber
trimmings, eventually ,Igniting approximately two-thirds uf the first
!loor and approximately haH of the
second !loor, the deparlment's
report said.
Four employees were working
when the fire broke out. All escaped
without ln!IIIY'
Smolae from the blaze spiralled
rM!t' the clty'aiiOUthern end dul1ll&amp;
!he night, and soot waslllbefoundon
nearby resldellcel this IIIIII'IIIng.
City pollee and streetclepartment
r'

)

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crews blocked off entrances to the
scene, and some of those Intersections - Court Street and Third,
Grape Street at Second and Third
and Vine Street and Third - •
remained closed this morning.
The fire damaged 400 pair of Ohio
Bell telephone cable and knocked .
out service to approximately 350
customers, said Uoyd Carroll,
asSistant manager for too local Bell

office-.

.

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. shuto!fpowertrithe buUdlng
atl: :lla.m. The shutoff affected four
other customers, saki Andrew
Lemley, C &amp; SOE Une foreman.
Power was restored later in the
momlng, he added.
As the !Ire cantlnued, mutual aid
was received !rom Point Pleasant,
whlcb sent nine men and two
vehicles, while Middleport assisted
with three Jlreflihters and a
JlUIIllll!l'· nlpolls had 33 men and

c...

tour trucks

on tbe scene.

'

plant, caused an estimated 1180,000 worth of damage.

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Comment
The Daily Sentinel

ltomenty-Middleport, Ohio

'

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE IN:J'ERI!lST OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA

J'llb.

-~m~
~v

,..,.,__,._-r. r"T"""E:! c::l. """'
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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publtsher/ Contl'oller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

.
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, I.nland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
LEJTERS OF OPINION are welcomed. They should be less than 300 word!~
long. A.llletters are subject to'ed.ttl.ng and must be signed with name, address and
telephooe number. No unsigned tett:ers wUI be published. Letters should be In
JOod tute, addretuilnc lssuH, not penooalltles.

Jackson in the race
WASHINGTON - Tile Rev.
Jesse L. Jackson announced his
presidential candidacy one nlght on
"60 Minutes." The next morning
The Washington Post played the
story on page A·23. If thls . was
Intended to suggest that the reverend is not truly likely to become
our second President Jackson, the
editorial judgment was lmpecca·
ble. But this volatile· black evange·
list has the capacity to make
explosive news, and my. thought
would be to treat him with the
deference we give to a box full of
dynamite.
It has to be said, in one sense, that

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The trust me style
of U.S. government
'

Sen. Joseph Eiden of Delaware barged into debate on the Senate floor
with an unmistakable message to his fellow Democrats. It was that he had
just been briefed on the facts and they'd be wise not to criticize President
Reagan on Grenada.
Blden couldn't say what facts because the information was top secret.
He'd been briefed. The senator was saying, "Trust me. "
.The "trust me" system of government was in full force during the
Invasion of Genada - the administration was the sole source of the facts
for the first few days- but !hat's not so unusual.
· Whenever something dramatic happens, a group of people in
Washington springs into action. They work the phones. Reporters? No.
Congressmen and their staffs. Their need to know turns them into snoops.
Whoever has the information can shape the debate. ,
. · When the Invasion began, tlle press and the publll got all it knew about It
from Reagan, who announced it three hours afteg the landing.
The "facts" were Reagan's facts: the operation was necessary to save
American lives; it was necessal)' because control of tbe island had fallen
·
into the hands of "a brutal group of leftist thugs."
· Briefed on Reagan's facts, House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill of
Massachusetts came out of the White House saying that no word of
criticism should be spoken when Ametican boys were under fire.
· Days later. when the administration was no longer the only source of
facts, O'Neill was more skeptical. By then. de~te was superfluous.
. It's an old slot)'. The Public Broadcasting System series on the Vietnam
~ar makes a persuasive case that Congress passed the Tonkin Gulf
resolution - a functional declaration of war - on the basts of an
atlministration account of a naval attack that never occurred.
· White House control over what Congress and the public are allowed to
know will be made more complete If the adminlstra lion plan for controlling
sensitive information takes effect.
: An estimated 100,00J government employees would be required to clear
ajl their speeches and their writings with the government - even after
li~aving office. Even novels would have to be approved.
: And, according to Kenneth J. Coffee of the General Accounting Offlce,2:.;
mUllan of the 5.1 million people on the government payroll and aJ)&lt;l!lter1.3
rnjlllon people on the payrolls of defense contractors would be subject to lie
detector tests. They could be fired for refusing to participate. The purpose
ltj both instances is to prevent leaks.
:Getting the facts, says Rep. Sam Gejdenson, D.COnn., is ''always a battle
with the administration- any administration. No administration wants to
give up information.
· "That's what thts whole lle detector thing is about -to shut olf the flow of
information, not just to the media and t~ publ)c but· to Congress, too.
·
Information is power."
To counter executive control of information, members of Congress have
to play spy.

Berry's World
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""-•cb•r 9, 1983

James]. Kilpatrick
----------~--------------~---

Jackson Is not a serious ·candidate
for the Democratic nomination. To
the best of my knowledge, the
gentleman has but two qualltica·
lions for the offlce. he purportedly
seeks: He Is a native-born Ameri·
can, and he Is more tlian 35 years of
age. But Jackson has no polltical
organization; he never has held
public office; and he lacks the
several mllllon dollars required for
a respectable spring campaign.
What he has- and about all he has
- Is charisma. And he Is black.
In certain political contexts these
clearly are assets. I never have
covered a Jackson speech, but my

I

I

fellow reporters tell 'me he is a
firebrand, a spellbinder,
wal·
lbanger ,a nd a major-league rhes·
merlzer. He has that gift of rhythm
that Ignites an antiphonal response
in an audience. "! am," ·he cries,
and the crowd repeats, "I am."
"Somebody!" he says. "Somebody! " the cry comes back. This ls
potent stutt· for some audiences,
and .l t probably Is enough to reduce
his competition to a band of
clgar-store Indians, but lt ls not the
stuff of which a pariy nomination is
made.
As a black, Jackson will have an
understandable appeal to black

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"For me, it's a long shot. Nobody seems to be able to visualize a man in
the supporting role of this production."
&gt;

voters. He Is only the second of his
race to beCOme slgnlflcantly In·
volved In a presidential bld. Shirley
Chisholm of New York, a woman of
uncommon charm and intelligence,
gave lt a go in 1972. She ran
respectably ln the Tennessee and
North Carollna primaries, but
polled only 431,00l votes out of 16
1 mlllion that were cast in the
Democratic primaries that year.
Jackson will do much betler in
1984. The black vote Is the most
eohesive 'of all bloc votes. Given an
opportunity to cast a ballot for one
of thetr own, blacks should roll out
for Jackson in impressive
numbers. He wlll pick up conven·
tton delegates not only in the South
but in Northern urban areas also.
He wUI1go to the San Franctsco
convention as more of a power
broker than, say, Alan Cranston,
Gary Hart or Reubin Askew. When
Jesse Jackson speaks, somebody
out there is golng to listen.
I suggest that prospect for this
reason: Jackson knows that he will
not wtn the nomination Itself, but if
he falls to wtn the plat1onn
commitments or the promises as to
personnel that he ts seeking, he
could form a rump partyandrunas
an Independent. Such a course of
action would give Jackson a place
ln the history · books, and it would ,
just about guarantee the re-election
of Ronald Reagan.
It Is Jackson's charisma - his
ablilty to ignite a train of political
power - that must cause the
greatest concern to Reagan and his
brother Republicans. In 1~ Rea·
gan carried Massachusetts by 2,400
votes, Tennessee by 4,700, Arkan·
sas by 5,100, South Carolina by
11,400, Mlssisslppl by ll,!Ol, Ala·
bama.by 17,400, and North Caronna
by 39,400. The seven states have 57
electoral votes.

an Investment to save the elates Tony Capaccio and Indy
company."
Badhwar spent some 15 hours with
Hoffman: "You honor your part voice stress experts at Peter
of the deal and that way you'll Comras Associates of Springfield,
Va,, and Roger Shuy, a llngulstlcs
obviously live longer."
DeLorean: "I just w!mt out. I professor at Georgetown Unlver'
won't talk."
.
slty. They produced independent
Halfman: "How Is our little transcripts that were remarkably
daughter? Wanna get her head similar.
smashed?"
Neirt we asked Hal Lion of Lion
The conversation supposedly Recording Services, Washington,
took place on Sept. 15, 1982 - the D.C., to run the tape through a
same day DeLilrean says he told battel)' of sophisticated electronic
other undercover federal agents he
machines to see If the tape had been
wanted out of the deal. Thls was two spliced - that is, faked by clever
months after the deal was initiated editing. "I could find no splices,"
- by DeLilrean, the government sald Llon, a respected audlo
says.
engineer. He concluded that it was
I've had the tape, obtained from a . most probably the tape of a
confidential source, for more than a . replayed telephone conversation
month. I was worried about its picked up by a bug.
Next we tried to have a spectoauthenticity, so I had experts
palnstakingly check it out.
gram, ol'volce print, made by Volce
The source had said that a Idimtlflcattonlltc. of Manville, N.J.
bugging device with Its batteries But the company president, E .F.
running down had picked up the Alexanderson, said the background
nolse was "so overpowering that all
conversation as It was belng played
back on a tape recorder. Armed speech patterns were obllterated;
with this ·tnformatlon, my asso· this made spectowaphlc analysts

Impossible."
Alexanderson suggested we take
the tape to "a linguist or speech
scientist!' someone with a
trained ear for volce patterns and
other ldentification signs. We went
back to Shuy, and also io Louis
Gertsman, llngulstics professor at
City College of New Y!!(k.
Both Shuy and Gertsman con·
eluded that, while the tape was
barely intelligible, speech forma·
tion patterns not dependent on voice
clarity establlshed that one voice is
definltely'DeLorean's and the other
could be Hoffman's. They com·
pared the tape tQ known samples of
both men's voices.
"There are two and only two
people ln the conversation," sald
Gertsman. "One Is DeLilrean and
the other plausibly Is Halfman." He
noted "enough slml1arity in tamlly
of vowels and speech sounds"
between tbe tape and the known
sample to ,Identify Holfm311.
"!t's both people," said Shuy, who
found enough similarities in thelr
use of vowels. vocabularv and
intonation.

Super new gun law_______A_rt_B_uc_hwa_ld__

"We're lucky Ronald Reagan wasn 't president
at the time of the Bay of Pigs, eh, comrade?"

Today in history
Toctay Is Wednesday, Nov. 9, the 313th day of 1983. There are 52 days left
ln the year.
,
Today's highlight in history:
On Nov. 9,19!0, the northeastern UnltedStatesandpartsofCanadalwere
·
crippled by a massive blackout.
On this date: In 19ll, George Claude of Paris applled for a patent for the
~~ neon tube for advertising signs.
In 1918, Gemlany's Kaiser Wilhelm abdicated.
In 1933, President Franklin Roo!evelt created the Civil Works
Admlnl.stratlon to provide jobs for more than 4 mUllon unemployed people.
In ~. the U.S. Supreme Court confirmed a 1922 ruling that major
league baseball does not CIOOII! within the scope of federal antitrust taws.
And in 1970, fo!1llel' FrenchPresldentCharlesdeGauUedled atthe age of

79.:

~en years ago: E. Howard Hunt was sentenced to2~ to eight years 1n
prilon for his part In the Watergate break·ln.
Five years ago: Teamsters President Frank Fitzsimmons called
President Jtmmy Carter's voluntary 7 percent wage-hike guldeline
unacceptable to the union.

PARTY PARTICIPANTS- Partlclpatlng In a
surprise party honoring Melp Coach Charles
Chancey lor 25 years in the coaching profession were,

left ·to right, fonner principal James Diehl, Sandy
lannareW, booster club president, and Coach
Chancey. ·

Dabney Is not a gun nut. He just
hates people who don't love them as
much as he does . He was feeling
pretty good the other day.
"Did you see the story in the
newspaper? The president Is ask·
ing for major changes In the
country's gun laws. "
"You mean to make It harder to
buy a gun?"
"No, stupld, to make it easier.
The gun control act of 1968 was too
tough on law-abiding citizens. He's
backing a bill now ln Congress
which will make it possible for you
to order a gun through the mall as
well as !rpm another state without
any red tape." •
"You mean I can buy one through
the mall thls Christmas?" I asked.
" Maybe not this Christmas. But
surely by 1984. The blli Is now
backed by 52 senators· and 120
House members . By election tinte
we'll have the others all lined up."
"I can't . walt for my gun
catalogue," I said.
"Right now there's a sllght kicker
in the btll. If you order lt by mall, the
buyer and llle seller have to meet
face to face before you can make a
deal."
"How can I do that, It I live in
Washington, D.C. and the dealer ls
in Dallas, Texas?".
Dabney grinned. "It won't be
easy. That's why \Ve're not fighting
that part of the bill."
"How else will the law be
changed?"
.
"The bill provides thai no records
have to be" kept when a weapon is
sold from one person to a party in
another state. A lot of people were
reluctant to buy handguns In the

past because they were afraid the
pollee would know they had one.
Under the new Ia w It will be
no body's business."
"And the law enforcement people
won't be able to trace a firearm?" I
asked.
"Not only that," said Dabney,
"but the Bureau of Alcohol, To·
bacco and Firearms will need a
search warrant before they will be
allowed to look at a gun dealer's
books."

"What a boon to the gun business
in the United States," I said.
"Almost anybody wlll be able to
buy a gun now without Big Brother
looking over his shoulder."
"Th~ anti-gun lobby is trying to
get an amendment attached to the
bill that would require a waiting
period for gun purchases to allow .
local pollee tinte' to check out the
buyer to see It he's got a"crlrnfnal
conVIction or has a mental disorder.
But our lobby will fight that ·one to
the death. When a person wants a
gun, he should get it as soon as he
forks over his money."
"I should hope so. Someone could
try and kUI him while he's waiting
to be cleared."
"Not · only that, but the police
would have his name" in the
computer forever. We don't want
anybody in this country to know
who hll5 a gun. Look what happened
in Poland."
"I forgot about Poland."
"Another good thing that could
come out of this blll Is that the
admlnlstration wants to permlt
licensed dealers to sell thelr wares
at gun shows. Now they can only
display them."

"Gun show attendance should
rocket."

"We're golng to get the whole
package through," Dabney sald.
"The president Is really going to bat
on.this bill. It means as much to him
as the MX missile."
"I know It's a good bill, but why Is
the president so emotionally
involved?"
"Because when he ran for olflce
he promised us prayers in school
and a handgun under every pillow.

He hasn't delivered on prayers in
school, and If he doesn't deliver on
changing the gun laws in this
count!)' he's going to lose the most
powerful constituency in the Unlted
States."
"I hope you , win the battle,
Dabney," I said. "I'd love to get one
for my w!te's birthday. I can't tell
you the times she's said she'd like to
shoot me when I've done something
that drives her up the wall."

CINCINNATI 1.\P)- Cincinnati
Bengals Asslsta.tt Coach Bruce
Coslet thinks he's finally gotten the
hang of call1ng plays.
Coslet, who inherited play-calling
chores three days before the start of
training camp, said it took him
several regular-season games IJe.
fore he felt at ease sending plays to
the bench.
"Quite!rankly, tostarttheseason,
I was scrambling," Coslet said. "I
don't mind admitting that.
"I feel comfortsble about it now. I
feel comforiable with the play
calling. I'm learning to think a
couple of plays ahead. It's somethingyoudon'tknowhowtodounder
a stressful situation until you do it.''

Coslet was thrown into · the Tampa Bay23-17 for ltsflrstvlctory.
"I felt the first really good game I
streSsful situation when former
called
was Tampa Bay. I think that
offensive coordinator Lindy Infante
accepted a head coaching job with was a real turning point," he sald.
the rlval United States Football "We started to do more stuff, also."
The )3engals' offense failed to
League and became engaged in a
come
up with big plays and often
legal battle with the Bengals.
hurt
Itself with mistakes and
Coslet said it (t\ok most ot . th~
penalties
during a 1'6 start. But
tour-game preseason to a(ljust to
Cincinnati
has ....rolled off three
thinking a couple of plays ahead.
straight
victories
while scoring 1J.7
"I started getting Used to that by
points
nlne
more
than in the first
the end of the preseason," he sald.
seven
games
combined.
"The first couple of games in the
Coslet attributes the offensive
preseason, I had no ldea. It was
rough, but It was something I had to resurgence in part to two areas:
better execution by players and a
go throUgh."
to the two-back offense.
change
Coslet sald he finally was pleased
with his work ln the fourth game of
the se&lt;1SQn, when Cincinnati edged . . - - - - - - - - - - - -

Duran-Hag.ler bait
preSS before fight
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) _
Roberto Duran and Marvelous
Marvin Hagler glowered at and
threatenedone anotherTuesday at
anewsconference,whileSugarR.ay

ArumcalledLeonarda"manwho
reallywantstoflghtthewinner."
Before the news conference
ended, Duran went to the microphone and, again in English. sald,

oowNING-CHILDS.
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

••

'l

r~";N~o;;m;o;re;;f;lg;h;t,;a;in;';t;t;h;;;at;;ri;;;g;;;htd~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~"

Leonard?''
Leonard
"I am watched.
ready to fight right now lf
Mr. Marvin Hagler wants to fight in
front of everybody here, " Duran
sald through an interpreter.
Duran then shook a flst at Hagler,
who said something to Duran, while
engaging him in a battle of stares.
Duran then approached the
microphone again, looked at Hagler
and said in English, "I promise,
Thursday you're · no more
champion."
After being introduced, Hagler
smlled broadly and said, "Two
more days, I can't walt, man ... "
Hagler wlil defend the undisputed
middleweight championship Thurs·
dlM SKY EYE V RECEIVER
day nlght at Caesars Palace ln a
•CHAPPARAL POLAROID I
scheduled 15-round bout against
•s.R.S.
QUAD POD FEED SYSHM
Duran, the World Boxing Associa·
•s.R.S. COMPLETE POLAR
tton junior mid11Iewelght title·
Special
holder. Duran, who once held the
llghtwelght and World Boxing
Introductory Price
100° L.N.A.
Council welterweight titles, Is bld·
• For the New 6 Ft.
•125 FT. COMPLETE
ding to become the first man to win
CABEL SET
SYSTEM
four championships.
This
system is complete. Instal·
"There's no .way I wlll underestl0
lltion &amp;· tax is extra.
mate Roberto Duran," said Hagler.
~etular Retail Price $1.795
"l'mreadyineveryway."
Before introducing the fighters,
promoter Bob Aruril introduced
~
Leonard, the fornter undisputed
145 N. Columbus Road- Athens, Ohio
welterweight and WBA junior
middleweight champion who retired last year after he suffered a
INAlJIIII5594·2524 •IN OHIO, t ·100·592·1957

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TilE CHANCEY FAMILY -Shown following a
surprise party lor veteran Meigs football mentor
Charles Chancey Is the Chancey family, Mike, a
membi1r of the 1983 Melp Marauder football squad;

Mary, Coach Charles Chancey and Rick Chancey, a
1983 graduate who loflllerly played football for his
father.

Chancey
honored

DeLorean tapes ?_________;___J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso__n
WASHINGTON - Twelve days
ago, Hustler Publisher Larry Flynt
called a press conference to keep
me from "scooping" him. He
released a short, almost unintelllgl·
ble tape recording of a telephone
conversation in which a govern·
ment Informant apparently threat·
ens the daughter of automaker
John z. DeLorean.
If the tape is authentic, it could
lend credence to DeLilrean ·s clalm
that he was forced lnto a multl·
million-dollar narcotics deal by the
government Informer, James Tl·
r;nothy Hoffman, and was afraid to
pu!f(lll\~llll8e ot,a,'Ih\'eatto harm
his flv e·yea r -o ld daughter,
Kathryn.
According to the transcript put
together by ·a coustics and llnguls·
tics experts, the crucial portion of
the conversation between DeLil·
rean and a man presumed to be
Hoffman went like this:
DeLilrean: "I don't want any paJ1
of narcotics. I tried to tell you that in
Washington when you first mentl·
oned dope ... All I ever wanted was

Sentinei~Page-3

Bengal play Caller has
tnore confidence now

page 2-lhe Daily Sentinel
. W..lne~y,

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesdcly, November 9, 1983

The Meigs County Athletic
Boosters Club Tuesday night
honored veteran Coach Charles
Chancey with a surprise party.
Chancey, Meigs' only head
football coach slnce the dlstrict
was formed in 1967, was recog·
nized for hls 25 years , In the
coaching profession, 21 of those
at Pomeroy· and Meigs High

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OFFERS CONGRATULATIONS - Former Meigs High SchOOl

principal James Diehl congratulates Coach Charles Chancey during
Tuesday's banquet in ~gnition of Chancey's 25 years In the .ooachlng
profession.

Unwanted player, Lee
sets kieking record
TOLED(&gt;,Ohlo (AP)-TonyLee,
unwanted ' by major colleges, has
beCOme the University of Toledo's
all-time kick scoring champion in
helping the .Rockets to an undefeated football season.
Lee couidn 't even coax a scholar·
ship from the Mid-American Conference team in the ~nlng.
And he didn't receive a grant-inald until his sophomore season after
his last-second field goal from 41
yllrds provided Toledo wlth a 27·25
upset of wth·ranked San Jose State
in the California Bowl in 1981.
Once he became a scholarship
player, the product of Fostoria,
Ohlo, was even better.

mostlyonhlsown.Hedevelopedltso
well that Leemade65straightextra
points ln one stretch. He has 196
career kicking points, wiplngout the
old Toledo mark of 173 established
by Ken Crots IP 1973.
Going into a game at Northern
llllnois on Saturday, Lee has
connected on 38 of 48 field goal
atlempts and 81 of 84 extra points

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Four times hls kicking was the
difference in games last fall. And his
magic toe has settled the outcomes
ol four of Toledo's last five games,
6-3 over Bowling Green, 1().9 over
Mlaml
37...34 over Kent State and
.
2().16 pver Western Michigan.
Lee's performances have he)ped ·
Toledo open wlth a 9-0 record,
joining tbe nation's two top-ranked
powers, Nebraska and Texas, as the
only teams unbeaten at this point of

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the season.

"He's got to beoneofthe best ln the
country atkickingurxlerpressure,"
Toledo Coach Dair Slmrell said. of
Lee. "He's just phenomenal under
pressure.'•
·The 6-foot-1, 174-pound Lee. a
1,®yard passing quarterback as a
high school senior at Fostoria
St.Wendelln, discOVered he wasn't
big enough or last enough to merit a
major college scholarShip.
So he developed a kicking style

included Speakers
former for
high
Schools.
theschool
principal James Diehl, busl·
nessman Bill Childs; Attorney
Carson Crow, a former player;
football official Bob Burton and
several members of the 1983
Marauder football squad. On
behalf of the tx&gt;osters club, Mrs.
Sandy Iannarelll presented
Chancey with some gifts. Coach
Chancey spoke briefly at the
end o( the banquet. All speakers
noted the coach was more
concerned with the players than
winning.

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�Page

4

The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 9, 1983

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Murphy takes MVP award
ATLANI'A (AP)- Dale Murphy
Murphy led the league this S'ear
insisted he was surprised by his with 121runs batted lnllJid with a .540
second straight National League slugging percentage. He was sixth
Most Valuable Player award, but In batting average (.302); second In
his philosophy makes the honor runs scored (131); second In home
seem loglcal.
runs (36); s!xthlnhlts (178); third In
The Baseball Writers Association on-base percentage (.393); fourth in
of America on Tuesday made walks (90); and tied for fourth In
Murphy the fourth NL player towtn game-wlnnln£RBI (14).
back·to-backMVPawardsslncethe · He 8tso stole ll bases to become
honor was created In 1931.
the sixth major leaguer to hit ~
Murphy received 21 of 24 first· home runs and steall:J bases In the
place votes cast by a panel same year.
comprised of two wrtters from each
At 'II, Murphy Is the youngest of
National League city. Andre Daw- 'the National Leaguers to win
son of Montreal, Mike Schmidt of consecutive MVP awards. The
Philadelphia and Pedro Guerrero of otbl!rs were the Cubs' Ernie Banks.
Los Angeles each received one (1958-59), the Reds' Joe Morgan
first-place vote.
(1975-76) and Schmidt (198}81).
Murphy had two second-place
Murphy Is the second Bravetowtn
votes and one for fifth for 318 points the award. Henry Aaron won It In
as each panelist votedfor10players. 1957.
Dawson got 213 points, followed by
"I'm toextremely
honored
i"\d
SclunJdt with 191 and Guerrero with happy
share It with
my team·
182.
mates and coaches," Murphy said,

MURPHY A HAPPY Wll''NER - . Atl!lllla
Braves' Dale Murphy, left, chats with Braves' ~Ia·
nager Joe To!Te, Tuesday at a press uonferenoo In Atl!lllta alter it was !lllnounced that Murphy was theN a·

tiona! Baseball League Most Valuable Player. II was
the second year ln a row that he was named MVP.
( AP Laserphoto).

Um-kumph!

Hurricanes storm Seminole lair
By Major Amos B. Hoople

The Original Drawback
Egad, friends, this week's card
boasts a plethora - hak-kaff - of
outstanding matchups- with bowl
game aspirations riding on the
results.
Vying for top billing is the
Independent clash of the Florida
powers, Miami and Florida State;
and an SEC head-on collision,
;'\ut:mrn and Georgia, forthe right to
be the host team In the Sugar Bowl.
The high-flying Miami Hurri·
canes will take their polished
offense and M)gged defense to
Tallahassee, Fla., to challenge the
explosive offense of the Seminoles
In what should be a wild and woolly
affair.
In a fitting climax to an exceptional season, we see coac h Howard
Schnellenberger's Hurricanes topping Bobby Bowden's Florida State
boys, 31·28. Har-rumph!
For the third week in a row
Interest 'tn the SEC will run high.
Auburn and Georgia get it on for the
87th time In their classic series,
which began In 1892. The records
stand 41·38-7 1n Georgia's favor, and
the Bulldogs have won the last three
contests.
(And, dear readers, how Is this
for a switch 7 VInce Dooley, the
Incomparable Georgia coach, Is a
1954 graduate of Aub~rn . while Pat
Dye, the Auburn mastermind,
graduated from Georgia In 1962.
Egad! It must be confusing kaff·kaff- In those households.)
Speedster Bo Jackson is :· Jugging
the leather." so to speak, for
Auburn, He will make the differ·
ence In Athens, Ga., asthe visiting
Tigers take a rock 'em, sock 'em for
a 31·24 decision. Har-rumph!
Looking at the rest of the SEC
sked we foresee a Florida win and
over Kentucky, 35-31; Tennessee
doubling the count on Mississippi,
42-21; and . LSU slipping oast
Mississippi State, 32-24,
In the Big Ten, Illinois will stay on
track for the Rose Bowl trip with a
35·14 triumph over Indiana . Michl·
gan, still clinging to its Rose hopes,
will thump outmanned Minnesota ,
30-6. Elsewhere, Ohio State will
prevail over Northwestern, 35-10;
Iowa will beat Michigan State,
28-14; and Wisconsin will top
Purdue, 28-21. Kaff.kaffi
In the Pac 10, UClA, aiming for
Its second straight Rose Bowl
appeara nce, will squeeze by an
excellent Arizona squad, 22·20.
Jove! That's close!
Washtogton, with an outside
chance at the Rose Bowl, will take
Southern Cal, 35-21; Arizona State
rates the nod over Oregon State,
33-10; Stanford will beat Oregon,
22-15; and California , will get by ,
washtogton State, 25-17.
The awesome Nebraska Cornhuskef'l and the potent" Oklahoma ,
Sooners Will warn\ up for their
annual Big 8 donnybrook on Nov. 26
, with easy triumphs over conference foes. Nebraska -led by Mike
Rozier, whose 150-yards-percontest rushing makes him practi·
cally a Helsman Trophy shoo-In will whack Kansas, 49-14. The
Sooners will have little trouble
pollshtog off Colorado, 33-17.
Here Is the HooJ1le Upset Special
o! the Week; the Clemson Tigers to
upend Maryland In the ACC
headliner. The Tigers are banned
from bowl competition this year, so
they'd like nothing better than to
whip the loop leader. We are ca!Ung
It Tigers 'II·24 over the Terps.

Har-rumph!
Notre Dame has been absent
from the bowl scene since Gerry
Faust took over three seasons back,
so you can expect them to go all out
against the Joe Paterno's Nlttany
Lions looking for a major post·
season assignment. The Irish
played Penn Stine tough the last
two years, losing 24·21 in 1981, and
24-14 last season. This week the
Hoople System is calling it N.D.
24·21 over Penn State. But not
without a battle. Joe Paterno's
clubs fight to the last Inch.
Kaff.kaff!
In the Southwest, Texas will
romp over TCU, 35-7, and SMU will
dump Texas Tech, 32-21.
Crowd-pleasing Brigham Young,
with an astonlshtog offense of better
than 600 yards per game. will
dispose of WAC opponent Colorado •
State, 49-10.
In other meetings, North Carol·
. Ina, going against Virginia for the
88th time, will run Its record to
52·33·3 In this traditional .series with a convincing 42-17 win.
Pittsburgh, playing at home, will
take Army, 42-14. West VIrginia will
level Rutgers, 35-13. And Boston
College, with the amazing Doug
Flutle at the controls, will continue
its determined bid for the Lambert
Trophy, denoting supremacy
among Eastern elevens. BC will
turn back Syracuse 31-18. ,
The Golden Eagles of Southern
Mississippi ambushed the Alabama
Crimson Tide last season, 38-29. But
Ray Perkins' crew figures to
reverse that this Saturday. 'Barna
will triumph, 24-21.
Finally, the '83 Hoople System Is
operating with precision - despite
rain, wind, thousands of missed
blocks and some colossal upsets.
Late tn the season your Favorite
Forecaster had a total of 362
winners out of 514 picks, for a
creditable , .704' percentage. Har·
rumph!
Now go on with my forecast;

'·

Grambling 21 S Carolina St 14

Holy Crass 28 Delaware 7
llinols 35 Indiana 14
Indiana St l3 Drake 10
Iowa St 70 Kansas St 13
Iowa 28 Michigan St 14

Lafayette 38 Kutztown St 8
Lehigh 21 E Stroudsburg 7
Long Beach St 28 Fresno St 21
Louisiana St 32 Mlsstsslppl St 24

Miami (0) 33 E. Michigan 7
Miami (F) 31 Flortda St 28
MJctllgan 30 Minnesota 6

Missouri 28 Oklahoma St XI
Navy '11 S. Carolina 22
Nebraska 49 Kansas 14
N Carolina 42 VIrginia 17
N Carolina St Z1 Duke 21
Neo.~.• Mexico 22 Teus·EI Paso 15
Notre Dame 24 Penn State 21
N Dllnols 17 Toledo 14
Ohio State l5 Northwestern 10

Temple 22 Loulsvtlle 14

Tennessee 42 MissiSsippi 21
Texas 35 TCU 7
,
Texas A&amp;M ·21 Arkansas l5
Tulsa 49 W TeKaS St 6

UCLA 22 Arizona 20
Utah 35 Utah St 29

VanderbUt 24 Virg1nta Tech 21

W Michigan 18 Kent St 12
W Vlrgtnla 35 Rutgers lJ
Wisconsin 28 Purdue 21
Wyom~ '17 San Diego St
Y;ile 14 Prtncetool2

t06t2ln57

Pittsburgh
'll('W Jei'S('y

J&gt;otrolt
Toronto

Mike O'Berry, catcher, to Edmonton of

Pacltlc Coast League.
DE T R 0 IT TiGER S-Add&lt;'d

the

RaMy
~~

Lowry,

C!llcliE.or, to Mler.
Naablall~

ClNaNNATI
Stewan. scout.

....... ...._
1

21

15

42

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7 7 1 1553 &amp;:1
680126162
Montreal
Campbl!D Cunlermoe
Norri8 Dlvld:ln

Bob Lacey and CUM Brown. pitChers and

and

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78014t6M
410:Z10M63
2130
4-1272
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pitcher,

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MSEMU.

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the Rev. Blaine Farley, ev8.Jiglil~t. continuing through .Friday
night.

Vanmuvf'r
Los Angeles
Wltm"""

fiSltJ

.mm

J85U6374
49 · ~

10~78

79¢
With Fries .................... '1.24

Bowllng Green 18 Ohio Unlv 10
Brigham Young 49 Colorado St 10

ADOLPH'S

Boston CoUege 31 Syracuse 18
California 25 Washington St 17

Clnclnnatll? Memphis St 14

DAIRY VAu.EY

Clemson 'l1 MaJ)IIand 24
Colgate .)) Richmond 7

"At The End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge"

....
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sentative, Branham Newspaper Sales,

733 Third Avenue, New York, New
York 10017.
Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.; Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.

• ( \! [)

Savt'',
f!ll 1 11

·

The annual chicken ami notodlel
the Sacred Heart Church, Pomeroy, Thursday. Serving will
begin at 5 p.m.

PRICES

Dally ...... ........ .. ............. .. ... 20 Cents
Subscribers not des iring to pay the'carrler may remit ln advance- direct to
The Dally Sentinel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit will be gJven carrier each

Over a hundred attended a recent
youth fellowship meeting at Eden
U.B. Church, with the Rev.Carl
Gillian presenting a missionary !lim
on the progress of the U.B.Churchln
Africa.
Refreshments were served at the
parish hall following the fellowship
hour. Several songs were sung by
visiting yruth at the meeting.

available.

· MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IMide Ohio
13 Weeks ..... .... ............... .. ...... . $14.04
26 Weeks .... ..... ............... ........ . S27 .30

52 Weeks ........................ ........ . S51.48
Outside Ohio

13 Weeks ........ ....... .... ......,.,. .... , $15.21
26 Weeks ......... ....................... , $29.64
52 Weeks ......... ............ ... ....... , , $56.21

Slinderella

DEPARTMENT STORE

Ruth ·Smith lost the most weight
and there was a tie lor runner-up
between Kelley Hawkins and Joan
Vaughan at the recent Sllnderella
meetmg" held at Five Points. ·
At tJie Mason class, Janet Morris ·
lost the most weight ·and Helen
GrtmmandLolsAnnReitmlrewere
runners-up. Jo Ann Newsome,
lecturer, reports that new classes
are be!ngfonned at Tuppers Plains,
Ravenswood and Point Pleasant.

Phone 742-2100
!HRU NOV. 12. 1983

........... 6/69'
MARGARI N~1148Tm89~ ORANGES
24 COUNT HEAD

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$ 99

Round Steak .... ~ ... .
09
Ground Beef ....\~~

Fellowship meets

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrier .service is

113 COUNT CALIFOIN)A

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BOILED HAM ......... ~8•• .Sl..97
SUPERIOR
BIG RED BOLOGNA .~8...... 89¢
ECKRICH
Ham &amp;Cheese Loaf ...1A .. s1.99
HOMEMADE
HAM SALAD ........... ~e... SI.59

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supper and bazaar will be held

SINGLE COPY

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49
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One Month ................................ $4.40
One Year ................................ $52.80.

FRESH PORK BUTT

Roasts or Steaks
SMOKED

Picnics
W-ILSONS SAVORY
Ba co n~........................L~:..
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Open house

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BABY LIMA BEANS ...........~nx ........ 79'
2 LB. ORE ID~ CRINKLE CUT
FRENCH FRIES ................~AIL ... SI.39

Open house wW be observed at
Monday -night's meeting of the
Pomeroy Elementary School PI'O
at 7: ~ p.m. In observance o!
,
American Education Week.

Troop organized
A new girl scout troop has been
organized at Letart Fails. The troop
number Is liJaJ and members will
meet every Wednesday at 3:00 to 5
p.m. at the school.
The service project will be to
operate a child care center for PI'O.
World Assocatloo pins and Girl
Scwt
were given {o the new
girls, Dawn Shuler, Jody Hayes,
. Valeria Patterson, Carrie
Gloeckner, Dee Cline, Marcy Craig,
Stacy Craig, Velessa Hunnen and

Bananas

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c'HEESEFT oiCNRNERS ..2.8Pm /97' ...
22 OZ. GINIRIC
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TOILET TISSUE ....... nG.. SI.l9
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INSTANT MILK ....... so¥ .. S3.39
MEAT. .s1.79
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LB.

59

Brenda Hunt.
The leaders are Debbie King and
Donna Price. Serving on the
committee are Sandra Patterson
and Margaret Gloeckner.

32

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Happenings

POSTMASTER: Send address to The

•"

Kl I!

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

POMEROY - The WUllng
Workers Class of the Enterprise
United Methodist Church wt11
meet Thursday at 7: l1 p.m. at
the home of Dorothy Long with.
AgneS Dixon as hostess.

Member: ' The Assoclat~ Press, In·
land Dally Press Assoctaton and the
American Newspaper Publishers As·
soclatlon, National Advertising Repre-

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
FISH SQUARE

~:

POMEROY - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, wt11 tm!et Thursday night at 7; ~ p.m. at the
temple. Dues are now payable.

RUTLAND

12 02. KRAFT SINGLES
16 SliCE AMERICAN PROCESSED

HOURS
Mon.-Sat 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM
~ORE

1HURSDAY

The Daily Sentinel

2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

I LB. BLUE BONNET

We R_,. 11wt Right To
u.ntt Qulntltleo.

CARLETON- Revival servi·

1U£l76

Calgary

Calendar

ces at the Carleton Church with

CHEESE ...... m. $1.97 GRAPEFRUIT .liM •. '1. 79

Ball St 21 Central Michigan 14
Baylor 42 Rice 20

Fullerton St 2!5 Nev-Las Vegas :t!

Philadelphia 'iY (s)t_&gt;S

1\merkan l..t:a«UC •
CALIFORNIA
ANGELS- Added
Roo
Romank'k, .Jay Kith&gt; and Da\'ld W.
Smith. pitchers and Pat Keedy, third
tBSeman. to the roster. Released Mickey
Mahler, pttctler. Assigned the contracts of

O'Neal,

W L T 1"111 GF G.o\

104:Z220T~l

\V~hlngton

~

""""" ...._

1/Y R.anl,'f'n

Transactions

AJabama 24 S Mississippi 21
Appalachia n St 26 Marshall H
Arizona St 33 Oregon St 10
Auburn 31 Georgia 24

Florida 35 Kentucky 21

'

W Carolina 40 Gardner-Webb 14

The Daily Sentinel-Page

I y, ,.._,._ 9, 1983

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Walter Crooks with Mrs.
Dan Thomas to be co-hostess.
Something for Christmas will be
presented by Mrs. Betty Pean.

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

OneW~k

I

POMERO.Y .
Chapter 8J RAM and Bosworth
CouncU 46 Royal and Select
Masters will. hold a business
meetlngWfdnesdayat6:~p.m.
Royal and Select Master degrees will be ~erred.

Ohio Valley Putlltshlng Company· Multimedia, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohlo45769, 992-

Negotiations between the Browns
and Slpe, now play!IJg the final
season of a four-year Browns
contract, began Mollday, but the
team's Initial o!fer reportedly left
Slpe and Keating unimpressed,
One source, whodidnot want to be
Identified, told The (Cleveland)
Plain Dealer that S!pe and Keating
were "turned off'' by the Browns'
offer, said to be for three years.
"It's designed to be a careerendlng'deal that would keep Brian
with us untu he Is finished playing
football," said Browns principal
owner Art Modell.
Sipe Is expected back at the
team's training complex at
Baldwin-Wallace College today to
prepare for Sunday's game against
the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.
Cleveland's two backup quarter·
backs, Paul McDonald and Rick
Trocano, also are In the final year of
their contracts. McDonald reached
a verbal agreement Oct. 19 on a
two-year contract, but later he
balked on the deal.

Wedt

WEDNESDAY

PubUshed every afternoon, Monday
tlvough Friday, 111 Co.urt Street, by the

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PfliCES

Hockey

· Washlngton 35 Southern Ca l 21
Wake Forest 35 Georgia Tech 14

Saturday, Nov. U

Columbia 18 Cornell 13
Dartmouth 31 Brown 6
E Carolina 33 Wm &amp; Mary Ll

Gould added the Generals were
focusing their attention on one of the
three but would not say whether It Is
DeBerg.
Warren Moon, of the Canadian
Football League's Edmonton Eskl·
mas, also Is reportedly seeking a ·
GeneralS contract.

Oklahoma l3 Colorado 17 .
Pennsylvania 20 Harvard 10
Pittsburgh 42 Army H
San Jose St 40 Pacific 18
S IUlnols 36 Wl&lt;.'hJta St 11
SMU 32 Texas Tech 21
Stanford 22 Oregon 15

..•

adding that the Individual honor
could not erase the team's dlsappolntmmt In missing the playoffs.
The Los Angeles Dodgers beat the
Braves by three games to take the
National League West title.
Murphy will receive a $100,fm
Incentive bonus, placed In his
contract last year after his first
MVPaward. He hasfouryearstogo
on a contract setting his base salary
at $1.3 mllllon a year.
Murphy joined the Braves from
their Richmond farmcbib ln1977.1n
18 games, he hit .316. The next
season, he hit only .'lZl, but he had 23
homers, and In 1979, his average
climbed to .'I/6 with 21homers. He
hit 33 homers In 1!m. 13 In
strike-Interrupted 00. In his first
MVPyear,hehit 281wlth36homers
andlWRBI.

Browns offer Sipe
new lifetime contract
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - The
CleVeland Browns have repOrtedly
made a contract offer to the team's
veteran quarterback, Brtan Sipe,
which would enable Slpe to closeout
his National Football League career
In Cleveland.
, ·
Tlieoffercame as the New Jersey
Generals of the United States
Football League disclosed on Tu~·
day that Slpe's services are no
longer being sought. Sipe and his
agent, Ed Keating, met Tuesday
with the Generals' owner, Donald
Trump, at Trump's New York
oftlce.
"Everybody assumed we were
going to do a Slpe deal," said Jim ,
Gould, executive vice president for
the USFL franchise. Gould said the
Generals once considered signing
Slpe, but refused to elaborate on the
sudden lost Interest.
Three other NFL quarterbacks
have contacted theGenerals,lnclud·
lng Steve 'DeBerg of the Denver
Broncos, Gould said. He refused to
name the other two quarterbacks,
but said they were starters.

'

'

.'

Omitted
Laurie Provence was maid .of
honor and the brklesrnaltls were .
Martca Cale, Megan Cale and Lort
Roller In thewedtllngof MeUssa Sue
CaJe andBrtan Keith Conde, Julyl6,
at Heath United Methodist Church,
Middleport.
'llle name of Miss Provence was
lnadvertenlly omitted from · Sun·
day's aCCCAmt of the wedding.

Thanksgiving dinner
planned by gmnge
'llle annual twtcey and ~
'I!!anh&amp;lvtng dinner ol the Racine
Granae wm be held Nov. 18 at 6; ~
p.m. at the baR.
, Thole alleJvllng are to take a
covered dllh and their own table
IM!I'VIce. TherewW be apig Ina poke
auctkJD toUowiD&amp;' the dinner along
with calce Wllkl and other

EINN

Beef Broth.!~~~.~~·.
ZESTA
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Crackers .....~.......L~

19

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3oz.

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Lllllit Four Per Customer

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Membl!l'l are ID take gills tor the
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PKG.

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Offer hpl11s Nov. 12, 1983

�Wednesday, November 9, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Wednesday, November 9, 1983

Pas•

..

6

Family Medicine ·
•

'Slipped disc' treatment starts with rest, exerctse
'

By Edward Schreck, D.O.

Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University CoUege

I

of Osteopathic Medicine
QUESTION: What Is a slipped
disc?
ANSWER: "Slipped disc" Is a
commonly used ~prm
nlated or rup·
lured disc. A per·
son's spine Is
made up of 33
bones called ver- ·
tebra. These l
bones. which in.
crease in size froni the neck to the
Low back, support the muscles
attached to them and protect the
spinal cord Which runs through

their centers.
Between the vertebrae are struc·
tures called Intervertebral discs.
They function as shock absorbers
or cushions and help to maintain
space between the Individual vertl'brae. Each disc Is made up of a
tough, fibrous outer ring with a
sticky, jelly·llke mass 1n the .:enter.
Sometimes the fiber of the disc
tears and the center begins to push
against the n~rve roots of the sptnal
cord. This pressure from the torn or
herniated disc causes paln 1n the
area of the body supplied by the
nerve Involved.
Sometimes the pain from the
troubled disc extends from the back
all the way to the feet and toes this Is often called sciatica or

pinched nerve. Usually, however,
the pain is felt mainly' in the Low
back. The palo Is often sharp down
the back ·of the thigh and Leg and
may extend Into part of the foot. It
may hurt even more when the
patient coughs, sneezes or goes to
the bathroom. This happens because the pressure on the spinal
column tqcreases during these
actions, making the ruptured disc
protrude even further against the
nerve root.
QUESTION: How does a doctor
find the disc problem?
ANSWER: First your physician
will do a physical examination,
during which he or she will bave you
do different maneuvers to try to
reproduce the pain. Your doctor

the patient to continue on )VIth
ordinary activities. If these pJ:OCedures don't belp and the pain and
other physical signs persist, then
back surgery may be needed.
Refined surgical techniques today
often mean not as much of the disc
Is removed as was traditionally
done In the past. This allows for
better Wound healing and less
trauma tu the tissues and struc·
lures 1n the area of the herniated
dlsc, making recovery easier.
'
In selected cases, another alter·
native to surgery recently has
become available. Inj ectlon of an
enzyme called cbymopapatn (klmo-pah·patn) Into the disc dissolves
some of the jelly-like material and
1n turn, reduces the pressure on the

may order laboratory tests or
x-rays to check for other diseases
which could give you sl!nllar pain.
An electromyogram might be
ordered to check the electrical
function of the nerves that travel
from the spine to the Legs. But the
definitive test for a herniated disc Is
a myelogram (mile-a-gram). dur·
tng this procedure, a special fluld Is
Injected Into the Lower part of the
spine. The fluid outlines the nerve
roots, helping to define points of
pressure from a protruding disc.
QUESTION: How Is a herniated
disc treated?
ANSWER: Rest and exercises
which strengthen the back may be
enough to reLieve the patn and allow

Iiappening around Racine
By Mrs. Francis Morris

business session. Roll call was
answe!'e\1 by nine members. The
Love Gift program was presented
by Mrs. Gretta · Simpson and
dedication prayer. Offering was
$85.65. The subject of a program by
Mrs. Mildred Hart was "More Than
Earthlings." She had a reading
"American Baptist Women takes
giving seriously." Other readings
by members Included "Awesome.,''

The Esther Missionary Clrc l•
met at the home of Mrs. Marte fto
for the October meeting on Thj.lrsday afternoon . Mrs. Florenc•
Adams, president, opened the
meeting with the group slngtng.
"Just When I Need Hlm Most.'
DevOtional title was on Patience.
"Waiting on God.'' "Trust and
Obey" was sung preceding the

The Daily Sentinel Page-7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ol1io
" An Abundance of Grace," "The
Grace of God," "An Investment In
eternity," "From His Death came
light and life." Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Roy.
Lt. Martha Carson of Jackson·
ville, N.C. was recent Sunday
dinner guest of her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Bradford. She
left Friday for California, spending
a short time with relatives; then
going to Okinawa tor one year's
service with the mllltary.
Mr. and Mrs. James Autherson

and their guest, Mrs. Raymond
Butcher of qatvin, W.Va., visited
Mrs . Butcher's son, Terry Nichols
at Scioto Crest Center, Hilliard,
Ohio.
'
Olivia and Zachary
Cunrilngham
of Cottageville spent a weekend
with their grandparents; Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Hart. '
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Hall of
Hamlltou spent a weekend with
Mrs. Edna Pickens.
Mr. and Mrs . Linley Hart and
Henry Roush met Mr. and Mrs .

John Fisher of Uniontown at
Ravenswood, W.Va. They took Mr.
Roush with them to Lake Wales,
Fla., where he will spend the
winter.
Mr. and Mrs. Crill Bradford and
Mrs. James Dugan of Worthtogton,
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Carson of
Coolville and Mrs. Ruth Frank,
Racine, were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. A. C. Bradford and attended
the charge·wlde worship service
and the Corner Stone Ceremony
which followed at the Racine

Methodist Church. A carry·ln
dinner was served at noon In the
social rooms o! the church. Among
others attending were Mrs. I..evinia
Simpson and daughter, Marlon
Knlghtstep, of Columbus.
Recent weekend guests of Mr·
and Mrs . Kenneth Turley were
Steve Gardener and son, Marcus,
and Mike Lawsonandson,Mlchael,
of Port Clinton, Ohio.
Mr . and Mr-s . .Ralph Badgley
spent a recent weekend with their
son, Mr. and Mrs . Larry Badgley

nerve root.
Nov. 14·21 has been designated by
!I1Y home county as Smoktng
Awareness Week. More and more
Local agencies are becoming In·
valved In trying to educate people
about the hazards of smoking.
Millions of Americans now suffer
from diseases that were caused or
worsened by smoking. I look
forward to presenting recent lnformatlon about this serious health
threal, and will be lnteres,ted In
receiving your comments.

0

Big Bend Service Unit
has leaders' ceremony

INVESTED - New leaders In the Big Bend Service Unit of the Black Diamond Girl Seoul Council
were Invested at • recent meeting held at the Qhlo

Power Co. oUice. Pictured, left to right, they are
front, Karen Brown, Nancy Yoacham, April lfar.

moo, and Sue Metzger, and back, Ruth Shain, Anne
Scarberry, Shari COgar, Sarah Johnson, Bemle Anderson, Jeanie Roble, Te&lt;anna WeD, and Shlela
Rach.

Rutland club installs officers
The 1984 officers were Installed at and Mrs. Howard Nolan for the craft
the recent meeting of the Rutland materials which they donated to the
Garden Club held at the home of county clubs. Rutland and Star
Mrs. Roy Snowden.
clubs used her seashells to make
Installed by Mrs. Harvey Erll'- favors for the show.
weine were Mrs. James Nicholson, ._ . Mrs. Jack • Robson and Mrs.
president; Mrs. Marvin Wilson, vice Charles Lewis attended the 45th
president; Mrs. Albert Woodard. anniversary meeting of the Wildsecretary, and Mrs. Roy Snowden, wood Garden Club. Mrs. Vernon
treasurer. Mrs. Nicholson pres· Weber suggested planting new
en ted a gift to the officers and Mrs. bulbs in the planter at the park in
Erlewtne.
Rutland. The civic committee wlll
Mrs. Wilson reported on the do so and will also plant an
recent county meeting atiended by evergreen 1n the planter at the
seven members of the club and also town's entrance.
on plans for the Christmas flower
A letier was read from Columbus
show to be held Dec. 3 and 4 at the &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
announcing talks, touf!!andfllmson
Senior Citizens Center.
The classes for exhibit drawn by
energy available to the club.
the Rutland club to carry out the
The regional meeting to be held
theme "On Christmas Day In the Saturday at the Multipurpose Build·
Morning" were discussed . Each ing was discussed and members
club Is to provide cookies and were reminded of the door prizes as
sandwiches. Mrs. Turner suggested well as country store Items.
sending an appreciation note to Mr. Reservations are to be made with

Mrs. Wallace Fetty.
It was noted that floral arrange·
ments for the homecoming at the
Rutland Church of Christ were
made by Mrs. Snowden, ,Mrs.
Canaday. Mrs. Nicholson and Mrs.
Diehl.
For other meetings, arrangements were made by Mrs. VIrgil
Atkins, Miss Ruby Diehl, Mrs. Carl
Denison, Mrs. El'tl€St Ward, Mrs.
Canaday, Mrs. Snowden, Mrs.
Robson, Mrs. Dayton Parsons and
Mrs. Nicholson.
' .
Members
contributed
to anDiehl
ex·
hi bit
of gourds
and Mrs. Chris
displayed an arrangement using
gourds with fall flowers.

. An Investiture ceremony for new
leaders highlighted a recent meet·
tng of the Big Bend Service Unit of
the Black Diamond Girl Scout
Council held at the Ohio Power Co.
offices ln Pomeroy.
Invested were Karen Brown,
Nancy Yoacham, AprU Harmon.
Sue Met?ger, Ruth Sbatn, Ann
Scarberry, Shari Cogar, Sarah
Johnson, Bernie Anderson, Jeanie
Roble, Texanna Well and Sheila
Rach.
During the meeting It was noted
that the magazine subscription sale
will end Friday and that the bulletin
Inserts for churches to be used on
Girl Scout Sunday In March must be
ordered right away.
A contest to design the day camp
patch was discussed and the
deadline for getting 1n on the
competition was announced for
Dec. I.
For the Dec. 1 service unit
rneetlng, 1\ was decided that
members will have a Christmas

531 JACKSON PIKE- RT. ~ ~T
PhOne 446 -4524
BAROAIN ltAAnNEES SAT &amp; QM
ALL SEATS J2.00

AOVUTISID I TIM II'OliC 'f
loch of th•n od••rflt•d lt•m• It requlr.d to ... fDDtUiy
o~ralloblo for tala '" ••ch Krot• Storo , o.c:.,t ••

ADMISSION EVERY TUESDA.'f 12.00

to·work on plans.
Council designated times to visit
the Center of Science and Industry
at Columbus were noted and Dec. 3
was announced as the time for the
first aid tralntngfrom14 p.m. at the .
Ohio Power Co. office.
As a special service project, the
BlgBendEastandWestunltswllldo
some decorating on holidays
throughouttheyearatthePomeroy
HealthCareCenter.

~OVEMBER 4 thru

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY:

•p•clflully noted In this od . tf we do run out of on
•d••rllt•d Item , wo will oH•r ,ow yo.,.r choh:o of o
comporoblo lt•m whon ewollaltl• . refloctlnt th.o tome
u~rlnt• or o rolnch•c• which will onlltlo yov te ttwrchoto
th• od~r•rtls•d lte"" at tho ed~r•rth.cl prlu within J0 doyt .
Only on• "ondor coupon will Ito ac:c;·opt~ por !tom
pwrchosod

!J

.
IOIAL SAIISFACTION GUAIANTII
l..,•rythlng you buy at ICroger ltJv•roi'lteod for yovr total
tofltfoctlon roeordlou of man eclwrer . If you or• not
utltfled thoe•r will roploco your ltom wllh tho tomo
tlrond or a comparobl• brand or refund your purchase
~trice

COPYRIGHT 1913 ·THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD SUNDAY, NOV. 6, THROUGH SATURDAY, NOV.

ANN'S
CAK-E
DECORATING

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.,

2-USED END TABLES
1-USED COFFEE TABLE

Anniversary
b
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0 Servance e
Florence Circle, Elsie Circle,
Linda Patterson, and Sue Hager of
the Racine area spent a recent
afternoonwlthMr.andMrs.Gariett
Circle at the Pleasant Valley
Nurstng Care Center. They went
especlallyforanobservanceofMr.
and Mrs. Circle's 61st wedding
anniversary.
presented
to the couple Gifts
alpng were
with cards
and
flowers. Cookies and punch were
served.

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786 N. 2ND AVE.

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YOUR FEDERAL
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USED GAS HEATER
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I

�Page

8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Nowmber, 9, 1983

The Daily Sentinel

County meets with oversight
committee on airport issue
"We take the position that the
lease agrl'e!Tient between Foothills
Aviation and the county has
expired," GaUia County Prosecullng Attorney Joseph L. Cain told a ·
member of the "Citizens OVersight
Committee" Tuesday.
'l'he statement came - during a,
meeting oi the county board of
. commissioners - In response to a
question !rom committee chaiJllerson Linda Hassemann, who asked
" ... why(iearledHltchCockcouldiiol .
run the ... (Gallla-Melgs
Regional; ... airport."
On Oct.11, thecountycorrunlssion
acted to cancel its contract with the
firm Informed Foothills co-owner
Hitchcock of Its Intention to " ... bid
the operation" of the joint-county
facUlty.
A groUp of airport users, both
ptivateandcorporate, supportlveof
Foothills' operation met on Oct. 30
and formed the "Citizens OVersight
Committee."
The groups primary stated goal
was to question the boards' move to
cancel the contract; and, challenge
subsequent action to evict the firm
from the facility.
On Oct. 26, Commission President
Paul D. Niday served a "termination of lease" and "notice to leave
the premises" on Foothills
perso1111e1.
The document delivered by Niday
advised, "If you do not leave (by
Nov. 1,1983), eviction action may be
'Initiated against you."
In stating . the commission's

position, Prosecutor Cain said this
morning the county viewed the
November 2, 1982 contract with
Foothills to be Invalid.
"We take ·the position that the
primary lease has expired," Cain
said, " ... that provisions of the
contract were violated ... that he did
not , as required, notify us of his
intention to renew the lease ... lf he
chooses to diSpute that.. .that wtll be
a decision of the court."
On Oct. 31, Foothills Aviation filed
a $1.6 million suit against the county
and the airport authority. The S)llt
alleges the commissions' action to
not renew the lease represents a
breach of contract.
Commlssioner Verlln Swain emphasized that FoothillsAviationwas
given an equal opportunity ro bid on
management of the airport.
" In facl," Swain said, "Foothills
was the only firm specifically... and
publicly... lnvtted to bid."
The county was scheduled to
publicly open bids for airport
operation later today.
Further responding to Hassemann's question, Swain said finan cial considerations were a primary
reason for the commission's action.
"You have to understand," he
said, "that at a timewhenweasked
all other county departments to take
a five percent reduction In their
budgets ... Mr. Hitchcock came to us
seeking a 200 percent Increase."
"The airport was supposed to be
self-sufficient In 1983," added commissioner James Saunders, "but we

allocated $5,00) that was not In the
agreement."
The recent dispute arose In
September, when Foothills sought
to renegotiate the terms of the
contract. The finn had proposed a '
new arrangement by which the
amount of county allocation tD the
Gallia-Melgs Regional Airport Authrolty would Increase from $5,1XXlto
$15,txXl per year.
Those funds - used to pay utility,
maintenance and related costs are channeled through thecountyto
the airport authority. Foothills has
no direct control overexpendltureof
tbose funds.
The firm does, however, assume
financial responslblllty for utility
ro;ts over and above the amount of
county contribution If !bose funds
are exhausted during the year. ·
Hassemann further asked If the
county would continue to support the
airport.
"I don't think anyone can make
the statement that we are not
lnte!eSted in the airport," replied
Swain.
"We would ·like the airport ro be
self-supporting," he added, "but this .
year alone, we have contrtbuted
$15,00) (for runway, hangar and
lighting Improvements), the CIC
(Community Improvement Corporation) has spent $25,00&gt; and the
state $50,00&gt;."
"We are very lnierested In the
airport," he added, "and I think the
amount of money we have spent
there shows our Interest."

Maine moose hunts continue;
voters save historic tavern
By Allioclaled Pra!;s
· The annual moose hunt will go on
In Maine. New Yorkers will spend
more than $1 billion to repair their
crumbling transportation network.
And a historic Washington tavern
has been saved from the wrecking
ball.
Those are among the results of
, voting Tuesday on ballot measures
in 11 states and the District of
Columbia.
The results spelled major political
victories for Ohio Gov. Richard
Celeste, who had opposed the two
anti-tax measures which tha tstate's
voters defeated, and for New York
Gov. Mario Cuomo · who had
whistle-stopped throughout his state
on behalf ofthe$1.25 billion "Rebuild
New York" bond which voters
narrowly approved.
With 99 percent of the New York
vote tallied , the bond carrted with
1,611,344, or 53 percent,ln favor, and
1,474,474, or 47 percent, opposed.
Despite a television campaign
thai featured the cartoon moose
Bullwinkle, Maine voters rejected a
proposed ban on the annual moose
hWll by a 3-2 margin.
With 632 of 651 precincts reporttng, 178,490, about 60 percent, voted
to keep the hunt, while 117,583, or40
percent, favored the proposed ban.
In other ballot contests around the
country:
-Washington, D.C. voters approved a measure making it city
poliCy to save Rhodes Tavern, a
183-year-old structure, that was
threatened by a __new commercial ·
de~lopment.

-A resolution protesting U.S.
involvement In Central Amertca
passed In Boulder, Colo. A similar
measure was leading by a 53-47

margin In Seattle with 57 percent of
the precincts reporting. And a San
Francisco measure opposing U.S.
Involvement In EISalvadorwonbya
margin of 74,6Z7 votes to 65,366.
-Also In San Francisco, a
measurecaltlngforrepealo1federal
laws requiring blllngual ballots won
61.6 percent of the vote. And an
anti-smoking proposition guaranteeing smoke-free areas In workplaces was a cliffhanger with 74,624 for
It and 73,546 against.
-A proposed rent eontrol measure affecting unincorporated areas
of Los Angeles County that would
roll back rents to January 1981l~els
was headed for defeat. With 159 of
541 precincts reporting, 21,500, or 63
percent were opposed to the
·measure. and 11,650, or '51 percent
were in favor.
-In the affluent desert retreat of
Rancho Mirage, voters led by

former President Gerald R. Ford
rejected a measure aimed at
blocking construction of a luxury
hotel and residential complex.
Frank Sinatra was among those on
the losing side. Ford was an Investor
In the proposed development.
-St. Louis voters rejected a $63.5
mllllon bond Issue which would have
funded part of the nation's largest
.voluntary school desegregation ptegram between a city and its
suburbs. The final vote was 35,129
for, and 28,402 against, but a
two-thirds majority was needed for
passage.
-Voter turnout was a heavy 66
percent In Cambrtdge, Mass. for a
proposal to turn that university tnwn
Into a "nuclear-free zone" where
nuclear weapons research would be
banned. Cambridge counts votes by
hand, and vote results won 't be

known for days.
-Houston voters, by a 584.2
margin, voted tobullda$175mtlllon
downtown Convention center. They
alsoapprovedestabllshmentofa911
emergency phone system.
-Three western Massachusetts
tnwns - Springfield, Chicopee and
Agawam - voted 2-1 against
proposals to flouridate their water
supplies.
-LaPorte, Ind. voters approved a
plan to create their own municipal
electrtc utility, and break ties with
Northern Indiana Public Service
Co. The vote was 4, 758 to 2,0ffi.
Backers clatmeil tbe city wtll save
$90 million over the next 10 years.
-Concord, N.H. voters overwhelmingly approved a nuclear
freeze resolution -the first passed
In that state since the Soviets
downed a Korean jetllner. Democratic presidential hopeful Walter
F. Mondale campaigned for the
measure last weekend.
-Washington state voters passed
a measure creating a citizens
commission empowered to redraw
legislative boundaries every 10
years beg1nn1ng 1990.
-Texas voters approved nine
constitutional amendments, lncludlngoneallowtngthestatetowitllhold
delinquent child support payments
from a person's paycheck.
-Voters In Dover, N.H., blocked
by almost a 2-1 margin a plan to
transfertheclty'sHredeparlment to
a prtv$te F1ortda finn.
-Wayne County, Pa., In the
Pocono Mountains, rejected a pair
of legalized gambling referendums.
One would have pennltted slot
machines and other forms of casino
gambling, and theotherwouldhave
given Individual communities the
· option to allow gmbllng.

Voters approve Gallia bond isssue
GALLIPOLIS - The passage of losing by 43 votes; and, for the
The .3-mlll levy for the county
the 4-mill school bond Issue which
county sales tax, 2,824 for and 5,615 health department would haVe
wUI generate $11.6 million for two against, shy by of passage by 2,791 continued operations there such as
new elementary schools, additions
votes.
vital statistics, the Women, Infants
and renovation to school buildings In
"We're so aPJ&gt;reclatlve to the and Children (WlC), Immunizathe Gallla County Local School Gallla County voters for gtwg us tions, Inspections and other public
District drew exhllara tlng re- . new schools," a bear hugging services.
·
sponses from school officials .and Superintendent Gary Toothaker
supporters waiting for final results said last night following final Weather forecast
at the Gallla County courthouse last results. "This was an effort of a
Increasing cloudiness tonight
night.
great number of people," he added.
Meanwhile, the failure ol the "The corrununtty worked and with a 30 percent chance of shOWerS
alter midnight. Low In the mld-50§.
.3-mtll renewal levy for the county worked, and thelrefforts .pald off."
health department fell short of
The voter percentage was 50.5 Seventy percent chance at soowers
approval and the 0.5 percent county percent forto49.6 percent agatnst of Thursday. High around 60.
Extended Oblo Forecast
sales tax was burted in defeat.
the total bond Issue vote. For the
Friday tbnlup Sunday:
'l'he school bond Issue vote won by health levy, 49.7 percent!or and 50.3
Chaooe of rain ... 1IIIIIW F'rlclq.
36 votes within the county. However, percent against and sales tax, 33.5
Falroa~andSunday.llllbl
when figures from Madison Twp.,ln
perceni for and 66.5 percent against.
JaCkson County, were added, the
The next step for the bond Issue Is In the4011Frlday, wannla&amp;lothelow .
lss(le was approved by a mere 19 to estabUsbaratlng. The bonds must . to mid-fOil bySunday. Lowttfromlbe
votes. 'l'he results from the Jackson be paid back to Investors in 22years. upper . . to mld-k
County precinct were '%/ lor and 44
The .5 percent sales tax would
against. ·
have pushed the total sales In the Lottery ~1'8 l
Final tallied votes from Addison county Ill six percent. The tax woold
CLEVELAND (AP)
The
Township - the last tOwnship have also funded the constriiCtlon ol
winning
number
drawn
Tuesday
reporting In at 10:29 p.m. - pushed the COUrthouse amii!X wblcll WBB
night In the Ohio Lottecy's game
the unolllclal bond vote to wilbln destroyed by a tire on Jan. 8, 1!81.
Gallla to 2,105 fa~ and 2,069
For the $2.4 million project, the ''TbeNumber''was883.Inthe"Pick .
againSt.
GaDia 1County cmunlsslon bor- 4" game, the wijmlng number waa
30lll.
However, with Madison Twp. ro.ved $1.3 mUUon with 6.9 percent
The lottery reported earnlnp
Interest !rom three county banks.
tlgures Included the Issue passed in
Tuesday o1 $6.ll,8117.!!0 from the
the filii district by a vote of 2,132 to The debt was hoped to be paJd off in wagertngon''TbeNumber,''played
~years , A 2.~mtll tax levy to tund
2,113.
dally except on Sundays. The
R«orded votes tor the health levy the construction was defeated by etll'lling!l came on sales of
were 3,521 tor and 3,564 against, voters In August 1981.
$1,001,447.50.

.'

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

r--------------------~-8-~---.-----=-j-§--~~~;---~~~~~--r-----------------~-------r
51 H... -

, ... ....., ..... ~h .......

4 GOoNWOo
~ Hop p ,IOIU

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1 ~ •• ~

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u~

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17

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rlw

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11 AIIICHliNIMO

-

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m-

IU

Loot: arown pocketbook In

books
In return.
Pic-P•c and
vicinity.
ypreclete
~========~r;:==::::=====:::::!~========:;r;:::::::::::::::::::;,-;::========:;1 identity
4411-1798.

Or W1tlt Dlilly Stitfltttl Cl11sifMd Otpt.
Ill Ceurt St. . PoiMIOJ, OfliO 4S769

! C o• &lt;&gt; ol l honoo '"'"'~'"..,'""""'
lin !&lt;&gt; •dlftAII•oN:o l
J -~ ...... ...,..... " ..

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

PHONE 992-2156

I,

Wednesday, November 9, 1983

-H-

IR - IMI~

117 - W ....

SIDING CO.
·"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages"
Ca II for free siding es-timates,~ 949-2801 or

M.L

KITCH EN &amp;SON
CONSTRUCTION

SIDING
BISSELL

CONTRACTING-

'PERSONALIZED POOLS''
PH. 1·304-773-5634

1

MASON, W.VA.
C. L. KITCHEN

·949-28oo·

No Sunday Calla
3-ll ·tfc

RECAMATION
•Excavating
•Ponds
•septic Tanks
•Hauling
949-2293

10·3·1 mo.

Racine. OH.
8 ) tiC

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
New Homes-E.tensive
Remodelin1
lnsur1nce Work
Cu~to.m Pole Bidls&amp; Gar-Jes
Roofing Work
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidings
15 Yea,. Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992·7683
or 992-2282
11-1-tlc

LOST One black white face
bull calf weighing approx.

800

Business. Services

Needlework

~----10 · 31 - 1

GLASS • GLASS • GLASS

Point • Mason

... .--

,1 '

'

SAVEMORE-MARK
Coal &amp; Kerosene
Heaters .
TO '189
Also Army Supplies,
Radios, Watches &amp;
General Variety
2nd St. Across From
Post Office
Mason, W.Va .

sgg

Auto Glass

.
IWhon YOIJ Need Glass Yoo Need Us ... We Can Handle

mO.·C

D&amp;J.

Yoor Ev..,.y Gloss Need! And

JEWHL'S
PLUMBING and
HEATING
•E~periunced

•Reasonable

•Work Guaranteed
JOB - BIG OR SMAll

992-6030

Minersville, OH.
10-3· J mo. pd.

773-5040

------Gii iiiiioilii-------- -----"F,.i' Fii&amp;iisaiit_____ ..

lbo. In vicinity . of

Yellowtown arae. Any information about this miasing
ulf or hla whereabout•
would greatly be appre ~
ciated . Contact Mack Elkins.
Rt. 2 · Box 174 A, Crown

City, Oh 46623. 814-256·
11B7.
FOUND Running loae, Thur·
day. Pomeroy Main St. rust
color male dog, Y2 Shepherd
&amp; 'hCollle. Approx. ·1 yr. old.•

Cali dayo 992-52721 eve.
992-7384.

COUNTRY CRAFT
COTTAGE
317 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, Oh. 45760
Cross Stitch and
Candlewick Supplies
Giving Lessons
Take Crafts on Consignments, also have craft
cilts.
HOURS: 9-3 Mon. thru Sat.
9-~ Friday

~...~

&amp; Vicinity
4 Family Yard Sale. Acro11
from Centerville School.
Th!Jrtday 8t Friday. Nov . 10
&amp; 11.
Rummage Sale Centenary
Townhouae . Nov . 10th, 8· 6.
Yard Sale Thursday, Nov .
11, 10~4 . Plantr: Subdivision
off Bulaville Rd, under pass
2nd. rd . to left. 2nd. house
on right at the top of hill .

FOUND Blue Tick dog .
1Oth, 11th, &amp; 12th Like now
9B6-4336.
LOST Blu8! tail gate for Ford
truck. Nov. 6th or 6th. Area
of Old Town Great Bend .
Reward . 943·6 186 after

6PM.

toys good X-maa. aewing
machine works good,
household, clothea, atero,
too much to tell. Sale
Greyhound Station, Spring
Valley Plaza.

LOST Mala Pit Bull Terrier. 5
moe. old. wearing silver
chQker chain, cream color
with r:iger stripea. Pomeroy
Rd toward Athena. Call
Sheri at 694 - 4713 .

-·--·-'P-i'iiiiiiisin'f' ·--

8

Insurance ctueer. Up to
$300. per week while training for 15 weeks. Unlimited
earnings including expense
allowance after training. Exceptional fringe benefits and
some future management
potential for mature persons. Selling and servicing
Ufe Insurance . Call 614992-2480 Thursday and Fri~
day between 1 end 3 p.m.

&amp; Vicinity

APPLIANCE
·. SERVICE

Tri-County
'

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all your wiring
needs; furnaces re·
pair service and installation.
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

General Welding
Salem Twp. Rd. 180
Dexter, Oh .. 45726
Bill Eskew

PH. 742-2456
Knit him a pair of
warm slippers froni
4-ply' yam and feb
sol0 s. So comfortable
to we1r at leisure.
Nice for gifts, loo. No.
5086 has knit dlrec·
t.ions to fit all sizes. ·
ro Ofdet'. sene! S2 00 plus SOc lor
POStage llld hllldling tar each
p,anttn. Prlnt n1111e. lddrus . zip

c:octund ltylt nlollllber.
NEEDLE'Mmll:
(namufp.a(*)

P.O. Boll: 100
Aad10 City Stat1on
Mew YOf~ . NY 10019
Tnt New AL8UM
Free· Pallern
SectiOI'I-SJ 00 posrp.ald

•ill•

Ladders for
100 Barrel Tanks
And Drip Tanks
\\Your Plate or Mine"

3-7-tfc

10/ 1212 mo. pd.

Kitchen Cabinets - Roofing - Siding - Concrete
P1tios - Sidewalks New Construction - Remodeling - Custo111 Pole
Blrns.
CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing &amp; Siding Co.
Route 1
long Bottom, OH. 45743
985-4193 or 992-3067
12-2o:ttc

CHESTER

AUTO
PARTS
AND

REPAIR
CHESTER, OH.

10·13-l

100 .

GUNS

Vinyl Siding &amp;
Roofi
SAVE 30%
MORE ,
On Siding and Roofing,
Gutter and Downspouts

GOOD SELECTION
SHOTGUNS &amp;
HANDGUNS
We buy, sell or trade.
Good prices.

81

.. Free Eltimatea"
.. 12 Y•l'l Experience ..
''Work Guar1meed"

64 Misc. Merchandise

Fran~·s

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

Pawn Shoo
430 Second. Gallipolis

Pomeroy, Ohio
PH .- 992-1792

HOM ELITE

446·0840

Hf.26·1 mo.

Real Estate General

CHAIN SAW
SERVICE AT

3 Announcements
ANNUAL BAZAAR
VII&gt;GIL B. SR.

Sacred Heart Church

. 7t61i . 7nd 51.
Phone

Pomeroy
THURS. NOV.

Serviceman On Duty
Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 and 1 to 5
Saturday
8:30a.m. to 12 Noon
Also complete service on
all Hotpoint and General
Electric Appliances.
Other makes also serviced and we also service
Kerosene Heaters. ,

lOth
Ham and creamed
chicken dinners from
4:30 to 7 p.m.
Games of all kinds.
DoOr prizes every half
hour starti111 at 7 p.m.

1-(614 )-992·3325

NEW USTING - Nice ader 3
bedroom home. Slove, refrigerator, hot water hea( carpelilt&amp;
. full basemen( near slores. in
Pomeroy. Asking $39.1XXl.
NEW LISTING - 2.5 acres on
Rl 124 in Racine wrth 6 rm.
two s!OIY home, bath, gas fA
fumace &amp; f~l basement for
$40,000.

Everyone Welcome!

NEW LISTING -!Orm. oom~
bath, furnace, woodburner,
bath. washer-dryer, on two I~
lois in Syracuse for $25,000.

Pomeroy

NEW LISTING - 7 acres with
2 septic setups for motile
homes for just $7,500.

~ Landmark
614·992-2181

lliAILER SETUP -level lot 01
town or 3 acres in lhe oounl!y
for $6,000.
2 COUNTRY HOliES - 4
acres plus 5 rm. house or 2
acres plus ti rm. ranch near
Rulland.

Starting At

CARPET

•
Installed With Pad
KITCHEN CARPET
Repl1r Sl5.9S

S12

NOW I

r:s~•lltd

RUTlAND - 6 homes to
choose from. 3 on Rl. 124 two on Depot Street. with level

Regular

$}295

$15.95

lots.

ANSO IV NYLON
Rec. $11.95 ·
NOW S
95

IIDDLEPOIT -II fumfshed

=n~sc~~::.

15

$34,00).{)() 11come.

~~h;;;~Y=d-;ln~sts;t,lle~d;;;iJI
ClndJ Sbipa

Good Selection Of
GOLD SEAL

CONGOLEUI

TWEED
•••·

S7.9s

5 FARMS - Some 0:.
bottom, some hils,-'! and
ClliiJ land. AI sizes and prices.
Two 12 acn ones and many

rMier5.

~~~Aef!M.J.~~=
n&amp; l.iJis II $2.500.00.

)101 14t1.

II about
I* lat. CIIIID see or

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 9B5·4269
If No Answer. Call 985-4382

.,.a

PH. 992·2478

E . M~inLW~.U
POMEROY, 0.
992-2259

Roger Hysell
Rl. 124.Pomtroy Ohio
AUTO &amp; TRUCK ·
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

Discover EneacJt-A-Car, the
modern answer to soaring
new car prices! Drive the Vlthicle of your choice ... any
make and model. No down
payment I.OMII' mcnlhly
payments. Read all about it.
Send for Frtt Booklel L-16.
Bob BlacQton, an authorized independent EnppA-Car Broker, Box 326. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Want Faster Information?
Call 614-992-6737

IIDDlEPORT - A nice
corner lot in a f!llO!I neighborOOod wrth four . bedrooms,
beautiful bath, large IMng
room. dining room, big pantry,
full basement, and a one car
garage. Now $45,000.

Mason.

713-5710 · 773-Si 18

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

·water Pipe
•Gas Pipe
"Regulators
"Fittings
•Drips

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke 12
Gauge Shotguns
Only

PHONE:

RADIATOR
SERVICE

MILLS'

We can repair and re·
c.ore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

ELECTRIC

Residential-New and re·
wirinc: Comrnerci1l1nd In·
dustriaiiiON OED
All Wort Guaranteed
Call614-742-2214
After 5 P.M.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198
Middleport. Ohio
1·13·tfc

11·1-1 ~0. ~d

THE
TROPHY
KING

SPORTSMEN

Have Your
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by

Trophy

Manufacturers

THE
TAXIDERMY
SHOP
New lima Road
Rutland, Ohio
PH. 742-2225

'PLAQUES
, ENGRAVING
320 JERICHO RD.
PT.

9·29-J mo .

GRAVEL
HAULED
. AL TROMM

742-2328
10/20/t.f.n.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses
P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Alcine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191 •
1.0·6-tlc

SCIPIO RECYCLING
Top Prices Paid
For All Cast or Sheet
Type Aluminum
Delivered to Plant
I¥. I. East of Paatvllle
On •Township Rd. 141
We Specialize
in Aluminum Only

PH. 992-3466

I 0/19/2 mo. pd

WE GOOFED... YOU SAVE

A 2 STORY HOlE with 3

PREDICTIONS OF A LONG COLD WINTER CAUSED US TO BUY

balcony, patio and a

w~hing

well. lois ci closet space, new
plumbing and new wiring.

TOO MANY STOVES AND FIREPLACE INSERTS ... IN ORDER TO
MOVE THESE STOVES
LOW WHOLESALE...

WE

HAVE CUT SOME OF THE PRICES BE· .

$35.1XXl.OO.
IF AIINI FORI is what you're
tor,
, here rt is!
newel three
loo~ng

home,
heav•ly
burner set

• 0.1. Vlrtlble SP8Id blowers

basement, gas
air heat,
on appx. 19 acres of 1\'00ded
land. Some hard wood, all
minerals. Th~ ~ it! · Asking
$35,1XXl.OO

• HNVyCIUiy--

RACINE - Three rentals in
one - two units with two
· bedrooms, one willt three
bedrooms. $500
renllll potential. TWll
are
furnished. Building
num siding. SllnJ! building
also. 'Asking $35,000.00. Malle
offer.

foreven.~hell:

dlstrltlutlort.

REWARD.

:t'andhM-==

ll.pln at $15.000. But
owner wants offer.
•

•LIMESTONE
•WATER, GAS and
SEWER LI~ES
•PONDS , RECLAMATION
WORK
•LAND CLEARING
•CONCRETE WORK

All Makes

BONDED' &amp; WliRK GUARANrEED

PHONE JIM' CLIFFORD
992-7201 ].).If

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5'·tlc

AL TROMM'S

USED
APPLIANCES

BACKHOE
SERVICE

Washers, Dryeis
Ranges, Refrigerators
Air Conditioners

•Lowest Rates
Around
•Dump Truck
Service
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CAlLS

742-2352
Route 4, Pomeroy

742-2328

UN.

outer--

UlbaM1iclllt

llitllmlnous coal b y Greantllestlrtg LaD.

TV &amp; APPLIANCES

lned'"""

• FlfaboX I10ttDm
1y, lncll fire llrtclc.

Novt avanable In black or three deCQiator CldOrS. .
use Inserted In fireplaCe or free stard IQ:

SAVETo45%
DIRECnONB: South on Ohio Rt. 7, 6
mllea 'below GelllpoHa to Raccoon Creek
Bridge - Follow ligna.
OPEN TIL DARK

l

627 3rd AYO.-Ph. 446-1699

CALL NOW

Spin Wl~hers, &amp;u Jnd El1c.
Dryers, Auto . Wash11s. GIS &amp; tlec.
Ren&amp;IS, Refri&amp;erltors, TV sets.

Have 1 Carpet
I~ Your Home
Shampooed "FREE"
And See A
Kirby Demonstration
Completely "FREE"
Limited Offer
Call 986-4226
Ask lor Guy Shea
Independent Kirby Dealer

11).2(- J mo.

Bring This Coupon In

For 10% Off
Any Service
Expires Dec. 30th
Monday thru Friday
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd
Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-2725

627 lrd Ave .. Gallipolis
Ph. 446-1699
. w .. . . . . . . . . ..
.

. . . . . ...

a&amp; O a

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

3 Announcements

614-367-7101.

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Estate, Farm. Antique 8t liquidation sales.
Ucensed·&amp; bonded in Ohio &amp;

WVo. 304-773-57B6 or
304-773-9186.

Auction avery Fri. night at
the Hartford Community
Center. Truckloads of new
merchandise every week .
Conaigmenta of new and
used merchandiae alway1
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276·3069.
"White Elephant" Auction .
Fri. , Nov. 11. 1983. 7:00
p.m . Mason Grade School.
Sponsor; Mason 6th Grade .

'

Mt.Aito auction every Sat .
night, 6 p .m. Starting
Christmas seson. No mora
consignments will be taken
until after Christmas. Emma
Bell Auctioneer . 428-8177.

H. L. Writesel
ROOFING
All types of roof work,
new lr repair, gutters
and OWQSPOUf$, gUt·
ter c eamn1 and
paiptipg, storm doors
and wmdows.
All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

Call 949-2263
.or 949-3091

9

E.O.E.

SWEEPER a!ld aewing machine repair, pans, and
1uppliea.
Pick up lind
delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cl,aner, one half mile up
Qaorges Creek Rd.
Call

446-0294.

Gun shoot Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday starting 1
p.m . Factory choked guns
only .
Vacancy : Juiia's Personal
Care Home . Formerly
Mercer Canvale1ence
Home. 18 years experience.

Clifton. W.V. 304-773 6873.

Racine gun club meeting will
be Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m.
lnat:eed of Nov. 24. Nomination of officials .
Earlier this year Ned Chilton ,
Publisher of The Charleston
Gasatte, ran articles telling
us how great Cuba and Fidel
Castro are. Last weak Chll ~
ton told u1 that the rescue of
1,400 Americans by U.S.
Marin81 in Grenada brought
shame on our country .
Where was the Gazette
when a madman in Iran held
U.S. citizens hoatage7 Our
state leaders lead u1 into
unemployment and our aelfatyled 'leading Newspaper'
extolls communi1m. Where
haa the love of God gone in
West Virlnla1 If you agree
write to Senator lacy

·

Help Wanted. People to do
light offite and telephone
work. Apply in person. FOP
Lodge, Neal Road, Point
Pleasant, WV, after 10:00
AM to 4 :00 PM. Thurs. and
Fri.
Paople to do light delivering.
must have car and know
Point Pleasant area. Apply in
pereson FOP lodge, Neal
Road, Point Pleasant, WV.
after 1 O;OOAM to 4 :00PM ,
Thurs. and Fri.

Situations
Want ad

12

Will babysit in your home.
infant or pre-school, 850 1

week. Call 446-0763.

Wanted To Buy

Tree trimming and removal.
Free estimates . 614-992-

8040 or 6-14-949-2129 .
We pay cash for late inodel
clean u1ed ca'rs .
Jim Mink Chev. - Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johneon

446-3672
Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood heaters . Swain Furniture, 448-3169, 3rd . &amp;
Olive St .• Gallipolis, Oh. ·

---------:-~

Have vacancy for elderly.
Room, board and care.
614-992-6022 .
·

I now have an opening for an
elderly person in my home.
Well experienced. 667 ·
6329 or 667-3402 .

Boso and Golden garage
sale. First house below the
Ritchie Bridge. Great Band . ..

car

in

good

614-256-6532.

cond.

Insurance

Call - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

SANDY AND BEAVER In -

BEDS-IRON. BRASS. old surance Co . has oHered
furniture, gold, silver dol- services for fire in&amp;ur'ance
lars, woc;td ice boxes, stone coverage In Gallia County
jars, antiqueS, etc., Com ~ foi' almost a century. Farm ,
plate households , Write: home and personal property
M .D . Miller, At. 4 ~ Pomeroy, coverages are available to
Oh. Or 992-7760.
meet individual needs. Con ~
tact Harry Pitchford. agent .
Wanted to buy. New, used &amp; Phone 446-1427.
antique furniture. Will buy 1 1- - - - - - - - - piece or complete household•. Also complete Aucti- 1 5
Schools
oneering service. Call Osby
Instruction

A. Martin 814-992-8370.

Buying daily gold , silver
coins. rings,jawelry,sterling
ware. old coins. large currency. Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave.

Middleport, oh. 614-9923476.

Raw Fur Buyer . Beef &amp;r Deer
Hides- Ginseng. Trapping
Supplie1. George Buckley,
At. 2, Athena, Oh. Phone

614-864-4761. 1-9 Daily.

Photography clanes for information phone 304-6752931 between6:30to8 :30.

18 Wanlod to Do
General Hauling and Trash
removal St.rrvice. Reliable
and dependable. Call 446 ~
3169 between 9 and 5.
Lawn Mowing no yard to big
. Reliable and depen 1
For estimate call

---------

Babysitting in my home.
Cheshire area. Call 367-

7814 .

Now open . New home for
elderly people. Nurse on
duty at aU time. Phone

304·676-7610 .

Wright. Jr .. Bo• 86. Brod-

STRIP
COAL

4

Givilaway
Language

Coli 446-4954.

Harve•t gold Norge dryer,
does not work. Call after

6:30. 441-3199.

PH. 992-2280
2-23-llc

Puppiaa. nine weeki old.

e

puppies and mother.
Mother poodle and Terrier,

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUY~VILLE, OHIO
Authorlztd John Dtfrt,
New Holland, Bush Ho1
F1111 E~~t~lpmtnt

Diller
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Servic.

Lost and Found

LOST 2 month old block
Auatrolllon Shtphord ond
BluohHior In Batlamaad viclnlty. If found call 304-8781749 antwera to name Flfl.

Call 446-0276.

Middleport , priced for immediate po11esaionl Cozy
home with floor furnance,
fireplace,. reasonable utili-

ties. all 992-6941 .

3 BR, 3 acres ground. Near
Porter Old 160. Take mobile . ·
home trade in. Call 446-:

4202 or 448-2867.
•

4 BR bi-level, eat-in kitchen,
LR . dining area, family
room, 21h baths. 2 car ~
garage, gas heat, central air.

$68.900. Jay Drive. Coli
446 -7923.

located in Syracuse-Ne'ar .
school &amp; swimming pool. 3
bedroom situated on onethird acre lot . $24;500. or
will rent for $275 mo.

304-855-3934.

.

3 bedroom ranch style ·.
home. carpeted, full siztt •
basement, 1 car garage, in ~·
ground pool 16x32 ,

$45.000. 614-992-5858.

5 .6 acres. Sacrificed price,
$12,000. 3 bedroom trailer,
1 Y1 bath, pasture, fenced,
pond, garden . 614 - 742- ,.

2364.

For sale 1 mi. above Chester
on St. At . 7, brick home on 1 ·
acre lot. 6 yr. old quality built
home . Largelivingroomwith
fireplace. 4 bdr ., dining
room. 2 baths, 2 car garage.
Frank Revnolds. at 3043 bdr. fireplace , hotwater
heat, 202 Butternut, Po rile- .

•ov. &amp;6,600. Call 9922007.
..
3 bedroom ranch style home
with large beth . kitchen and
living room on a one acre lot
with swimming pool. ·· .

$36.000. 614-742-2624 . ...

4 rooms , bath and utility ·. ··
room , nice location, . 304~ ·

675 -1090.

Save thousands, 1983 ·
Spring Hill by Fteedom,
24x56 three bedroom, two
full baths one with garden
tub, cathedral ceiling, dishwahser, fireplace, utility
room , fully carpeted. Needs ·
insulation under floor. Furnace and some trim dam &lt; :
aged . Sold new $30,000 .00
occupied one week. As is .. •
along with blocks tor ..
$18.900.00 . Possible
owner financing a1 12 per
cent with $6,000.00 down . .
Shown by appoin1ment

only. 304-876-7377 be ·
tween BAM and BPM .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS,
TRUCKS . GALliPOliS .·
CHECK. OUR PRICES. CALL . ,
448-7572 ,
.
NEW AIIID USED MOBILE ··
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL- ,
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES, :.
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 446-7274 . .
2 bdr. 12x50. $3.500. 3 ,

bdr., 12x70, total electric, 2

boths $7,500. Call 614446-0175 .

I NOTICE I
1976 14x70 trailer, 3 bed ~ ,'
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB - room , 2 baths, large kitchen· '
Princlpol, P.O. Bo• 14, LISHING CO. recommando $10.000.304-773-5023 .. '
..
Cheohlre. OH 46620. Call that you do buainaaa with·
614-387-0102. Avoilablity- people you k.now, and NOT 1981 14x70, Shultz limited

Teacher in town need• bab-

yoittor for 7 mo. old baby.
Call 448-2829 otter 4:00.
Med.

experienced in

father roglll-d Old Englloh l.go•no•·oll . working knowiShaep. 304-8!18-31124.
·edgo of outomotad inotru6

Business•
Opportunity

,S chool. BA or BS degree
from accredited univenltv·
college in .Speech and ~aar­
ing. Contact: David Ratlif'.

Pupploo port Norwegian Elk December 2 . Application
hound, 304-878-2136 or deadline-November 1 &amp;.
19B3.
876-4433.
304-8B2-33BO.

BOGGS

Development

21

Spociollot- Guiding Hond
Leh over yard tale ttems .

full basement. with garage.
wood burner included, city
schools, 2 miles from town.

448-3169, 9 to 5.

11

ahaw, WV 24817.

MINE RUN

4 bdr. ranch home, large LR , •

773-5421 "' 773-5319.

1979-80-81 Olds o• Chevy 13

SHAME. SHAME. SHAME.

$JQOO
iiSfiPin f o r - - -

4· ZH!~

.Auction every Tuesday
night, Pt. Pleasant, WVa.
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Center Bldg.. Camden St.

wva. lie. No. 429-84.

oonstrucaon-sturdy,_.,-

-for• Appl-.s for Dllrr*tg

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•SEPTIC SYSTEMS

•Washers •Diahwashera
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

J ·3-tlc

'

•BACKHOE

985-3561

bolietllllte -~(~~~
ll1d

POI£ROY - Older home 111111
neals some won, bul has

- ~~_..&amp;!'~

•DOZE A

KEN'S
APPLIANCE ·
SERVICE

3·1 O·tfc

• large atrUQht IMiiUWable

BEAUTIFUL FARII! Ri.er tronlllgR Approx. 182 acres, 5
bedroom house In excellent
condition. Barns implement
shediile,2 car 11111ge. SO acrs
liMa
40 acres pasture. AH
minerals. Make 1n oller.

CONTRACTING

FOR FUTURE USE"

•

IIODlEPO!IT - Nice quiet
street with a I~ story home
with part basement Rela. on
the concrete front porch. Big
k•chen &amp; dining room. Some
new carpeting and paneling.
$19,000.00.
bedrooms, large beautiful living
room and dining roo, I~ baths,

Rummage Sale St. Joseph .
C~thotic:; Church. 3rd. -&amp;
.
Pomeroy St., Mason, WV .' "
Thurs., Fri . &amp; Sat . Nov. 10, ·:
11 &amp; 12. 9 til 3. Clothes,
toys. books. Misc.

J&amp;F

Residence: 985~3837
· Warehouu: 985-3509
10·1 n mo. pd.

10·1 0·1 mo.

11 / 2/tln

lANGSVIllE - One 1\oor plan
with one huge bedroom and
aoothef • average si2ad bed·
room. Almost new ~uminum
sidin&amp; new roof, new carpet in
living room, aereator septic
system, large bath wrth utility.
I~ acres partly fenced.
$21,500.00.

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Ohio . 11 -1.2 and 13. Old

10-3-1 mo.

"CUT OUT

GARAGE

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Dozers
-Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
-lo-Boy
-Trencher
-Water
-Sewer
-Gas lines
-Septic Systems
LARGE or SMAll JOBS

{3~)

Bashan Building

...

~..~louted in H&amp;R 1-0"';.
Block Building ~

Rt. 33

Deweyne Williams

PARCEL SERVICE

279 Main St.
Porneroy, Oh.

..

~-~-~ - -----·· ··· ·---~·-······

TV

AND

BRING YOUR PACKAGES
FOR SHIPMENT TO:
POMEROY

miles North of Flatrock, WV.
Two mile• South of 87 on
At. 2 . look for signs. Thurs.
and Fri. Nov . 10 8t 11. Van
load of new and used
clothing , all sizes infants
thru adults. Jeans, late
country records 45's, other
misc.

tools, crocks, jars, applian~
ces. winter clothes and
much mOre . 10 a.m. to 4
p.m .

Free

S&amp;W

&amp; Vicinity
House and vard aale four . ,

mentl. Send Reaume and 3
reterencat to Box 2020 in
care of the Oelllpolls Daily

Tribune, 82B 3rd. "Ave ..
Gollipollo. Oh 46631.
1-----------------Lab. Su,....,laor with at ioaot
2 ~- of clinic lob. o•p•rience. FamiNor with equlp-

to send money through the
meil until you have inveatigated the offei-ing .

I:;;:;====;:===
22 Money to Loan

1------------HOME LOANS FIXED
RATES 12Y,% purchete or
refinance, 11 1A% adjustable
rate. Leader Mortgage ,

Athono. 1-800-3.,-6654
23

Profossional
Services

ment rtpair end melntane- PIANO TUNING Lower
ance. Send reaume to Box · prices-regular tuninas·
2020 In care of the Golllpollo dltcountl to Senior Cltlzene,
Dolly Tribune, e28 3rd. Churchill &amp; schools. Ward's

L08T black, w~. ton
. Baagle dog. Long HollRood. 304-676-3407.
Avo .. Gaillpollo, Oh 46831.

Keyboard, 304-878-3824.

mobile home. microwa...,e.
dishwasher, central air, underpenning , three bed.
rooma, 1 Va baths .. excellent
condition. $15 ,500.. Call

304-675-8049 alter 5 p.m:

Mobile Home Moving, Licensed and Insured, Free .
Eatimates t 100. per hookup minimum. Phone 304- ~

576-2711 o• 576-2886.

USED MOBILE HOME .
Phone 304-676-2711 .
2 bedroom completely fur.
nished' With waaher and
dryer. air condition. porch
and underpenning, 304·

675-3030 or 676-3431 .

Wanted older three bedroom
mobile hometest for Point
Pleasant

�Page· 10--The Daily

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

They'll Do It Every Time

32 'Mobile

Homes
for Sale

Wednnday, November 9, 1983

Ohio

November 9, 1983

51 H·o usahold Goods

54 Misc. Merchandise

30 ' coppertone range $96,

Country Crafts, 91fte, Tole
Paintings, Quilts, pillows.
afghans. November 1 .1 . 12.
6th St. in Syracuse. 614992 -5082.

For sale by owner. 1972 2

JO' alee . range 165. Tappan

BR,

,,lec. range avocado green
top &amp; bottom oven $176,
Coldspot refrig . $96. frost
tree refrig. •ss. 6 refrigera- 1--------~­
:orl to choose from. Ken· For Sale hand made log
:nora auto. washer 896, cabin dollhouses with furnll(enmore auto . dryer $66, ture,$86 .00 . 614·448 ·
Maytag wringer washer 4830 ,
$76. 6 d awer chest s•4. 4 1- - -- - - - - - drawer cttest 836, de11er Oak firewood, Phone 304·
$67,
&amp;38 . Skaggs 675 -2073.
Appli n e. , 1Jpper River Rd. 1- - - - - - -- -446-7 338.
Meat block top resurfacing
machine, see the country let
Nic8 couch large coffee it pay the bills. Phone
table with glass top &amp; 2 end 304-675-2406 .
tables. Co11446-7832 .
Running boards for pick-up
Maple bunk beds 8150. 3 truck. Sixteen gauge J .C.
pc . bedroom suite with full Higgens shotgun . Homelite
boq $1 50 . Ca11446-4 1 18 or XL2 chain saw. 304-875446-6977 . .
2792 .

12x66

trailer.

with

water bed, beautiful coordi ·

nated llvingroom. large·
handmade tile shower .
Owner moving rrwst sell

Immediately. Coll446-7171
or 446-8288 after 5PM .

1 4x70 2 bedroom unfurnished mobile home, carpet·
ing, appliances, central air-

$1 ,000 down $127 month,
good 2 bedroom mobile

home on rented lot (Rodney) . Call 446 -1241 or
614-256-6224 .
1970 Blndale, living room
e.pando 1 2x63 , 2 BR . tot81

Maytag washer A-1 cond.
guaranteed 196. GE washer
like new guaranteed $1 36.
Coli 614-367-0560.

electric, central air, awning,
underpinning.

deck . Cell

6, 4 -245-9222 .
New, 984 Skvline 14x70, 3
BR . 1 V1 bath, completely
fum
., delivered
set.
regular.
$16,500.and
Special
114,500. French City Mobile Hoines. Call 446-9340.
New 1984 sectional 1306
sq'. ft .. 3 BR •. 2 full baths.
family room, deliver,d ar'ld

set regular$ 2'4, 500. Special
S21 . 995 . French City Mo-

bile Homes. Call 446-9340.
14x70 1981 Nau'sha 3 bdr ..
deluxe, underpinned. central
air. set up in nice park. priced
to sell. Call 446 -7904 .
1972 Schultz mobile home
12x62. all electric. 2 bdr ..
tip out , good con d .. priced to
soli . Call 446-7832 . '
, 972 mobile home with 1 Yz
acres land and outbuilding.
Located near Mudsock . Call
446· 0063. 56.500.

:·

~-=======·:· ==~~~==~~~~=~ -6806.
- - - - - - - -- 42 Mobile Homes
f or R en t
In Mercerville . 2 bdr . t.railer.
S175 per mo . Call ~56 6251 .
12x60 2 bdr. modern fur·
nished trailer, convenient
location, Upper River Rd.
deposit req . Cell 61 4 -446·
8568 .
Furnished trailer. Kanauga,
675 -3475.

35 acres at Rodney on W.T.
Watson Rd . Owner financ ing available ..Call446-822 1
after 6 weekdays.
14Yz acres. Roush Hollow
Rd . off At. 554, nice road,
building space, rural water
close . Call after 6PM , 614388-9718
For hunting or home site. 80
acres $24.000 . Meigs Co .
near Eastern High School on
Twp. Rd . 614-985-4116 .

3 BR house, with carport.
Garfield Ave. location . Call
614-245 -5259 or 446 ·
8579
4 bdr. house 5 acres of land
on Rt . 160 in Vinton . Central
air, S350 mo .. sec . dep . 8t
ref. Call 446· 3 175 .
3 rooms and bath, 142 4th
Ave .. $160 mo., S100dep .,
6 mos. lease required . Call
446- 3667 after 5 .
House beautiful 3 bdr., 2
bath, LA. FA , wall to wall
carpet, dishwasher, gas
heat. air con d., in Gallipolis.
Ref. req. Call 446-1409
after 6 .
Two story house. 4 bdr ..
$2150 per mo. S250 dep.
raq; Call 448-4222, 9 ,30·
6 ,00 .
3 BR house between Centerville and Oak Hill, $176/ mo.
Also Country store for lease.
t126 / mo. Coli 614-2459316 .
House for Rent or Sale.
for 1 or 2 persons,
quiet location, ref . &amp; deposit
required. Call 446-3384 .

1 uitable

Two bedroom house 1935
Chatham Ave. Adults only,
no pets . Call 446 · 1680.
Furnished 3 room cottage,
adults only, no pets. Ref . &amp;
deposit. Call 446 -2543 .
2 bdr. 1 bath, basement, Rt.
7.- south, ~225. Call Wlsempn Agency, 446-3643.
Rent or sale-2 bedroom
unfurnished house. close to
General Hartinger parkway
In Mlddlaport. 614-9923467.
•236 . month . 3 bedroom .
Fully carpe1ed. gardener f~r­
nilhed, Stove and refr~g .
614·992-2816 from 9 to 5
or614-992-2362 from 6 to
?p.m.
Two years old three bed room, two car garage. heat
pump . 304-676-5545 .
Ht)usa on 6 acre1 of lend. 2
full Hths, utility room. 3
bedrooms. kitchen, dining,
llvlng room. •376 mo. plus
dep. 304-675-3099 . .
Unfurnished houae two bed·
room. One acre. 8185.00
pluo dopooit. 304-875·
2264 evenings.
Are you looking for a nice
clean, newly redecorated
home in good neighbor~
hood? This is it! Deposit and
references required. 304·
676-1962.

42 Mobile Homea

45

Furni.Shl!d Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central tiotel.
Call 446 -0756 .
46 Space for Rent
Furnished office for rent.
Close to city building and
court house. Call 446 ·0855
days, S125 . mo .

2 bdr . trailer. furnished .. Nice trailer space for rent.
water &amp; trash paid. No Call 446 -4 736 or 446 4265 .
children . Call446-4063 .

3 bdr. trailer. 1Yz baths. 3
miles from Holzer Hospital
on Rt . 1 60 . Call 61 4 -2454mobileho.mes . 10'and12' 9170.
1t . wide. 2 bedroom · · -----~---­
furnished . Low priced . 2 bdr . trailers. Apartments 1
Brown 's Trailer Park . 614- bdr . Beautiful river view in
992 -3324.
Kanauga . Fosters Trailer
Park. 446 -1602.
1974 Granville 12x65 3
bdr .. completely furnished.
WO -AC . porch, awning, unApartment
derpinning, $7,500 . 742- 44
for Rent
2000 .
c

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Washer &amp;. dryer. Call 992-

Furnished apt . $185. Water
paid, 2 bdr.. 131 Yz 4th,
Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 1
p.m.
2bdr .. 2 bath. 11 Court St.
Ref. 8t dep S325 mo. Call
446-4926 .
Small turn . house 1 or 2
adults only, no pets. Call
446 -0338.
Furnished 3 rooms. with
private bath . Reference preferred . Call 446-2215.
Furnished apts., 1-2 rm. &amp;
bath down &amp; 1 up. Also 1 -4
rm. &amp; bath up. Clean, no
pets, adults only. Ref. req .
Call446-1619.
2 bdr . apt .. utilities partially
paid. 3 room apts. utilties
paid . Ca!.! 304-676· 5104 or
304-675· 7386 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
992-7479.

Full size mattress and old
style open box springs. One
26 in. boys ten speed bike,
one 20in . boys regular bike .
304 _676 _171 4 _

47 Wanted to Rent
Respectable family of 4
would like to rent a nice 3-4
bedroom house in City
School district. Wanted immediately. Call446-4190.

49

For Lease

For lease Modern office
suite especially good for
insurance. real estate or
accounting. 1300 sq.ft.
Four rooms plus lge. clerical
office, kitchenette and storage room . Nat. gai, central
air, carpet. Rent very reasonable for this quality office.
Corner Third &amp; Olive, Galli·
polis, Oh . Ph. 614-4463994. Evans Enterprises,
9-5. Mon . thru Fri.

MvtwhMmllww
51 Household Goods

1-------'----

Misc. Merchandise

Knauff Firewood Pickup or
Delivered . 1 2" -22" stocked
in yard . HEAP vender,
prompt delivery. 614-266·
6245.
1-U-m_e_s_to_n_e_,-S-a-nd___G_r_o-va- 1.
Delivered In Mason, Meigs,
Galli a or pick up at Richards
&amp; Son . Ca11446-7786 .
Fireplace insert-still in factory carton-automatic
controla-2 blowen -glni
door·ash pan·fits 30 in. to
48 in. fireplace-burns wood
or coal. $590. Call 614·
256 -1216.
Firewood- cut up, slabs, $16
pickup load. Call 614-2455804.
Firewood for sale $36 a
pickup load delivered. 10
loads for S-300. Call 614·
268-1427.
Ume stone delivered , for
&amp;10. a ton . Call 614-2661427.
WOODBURNING STOVES,
freestanding, fireplace In·
serts, mobile home approved, &amp; fumanee ad·ons.
Jividens Farm Equipment,
446-1676.

Building materials
block, brick, sewer pipes.
windows. lintels, etc ~
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.
0. Call 614-245-5121 .

Farm Equipment

JD model KBL 6 ft. pickup
diec. JO model 248 cornplanter, MF 3-1 4 plow with
&amp;pare moldboard, PTO 3
point poathole auger, all In
very good cond. Call 614·
669-631,.

Musical
Instruments

Kimball electric organ. like
new . Call446-7230.
AR P OM Nl II STRING MA·
CHINE SYNTHESIZER. Coli
446-1968 or446·1012and
ask for Chuck.

- - -------1
Plaomar 300A CB Unear
Amplifier. 304·676-1664.

71

Ntcly furnished modetn mO·
bile home, in city. 1 or 2
oduho only. Coli 448-0338.

Autos for Sale

CAPTAIN EASY
Ot.JL'i A FE-I'll
MLl!!-I!A~ ~LIR·

VIVED THE
fRUPTION 0~

"EI..

1979 Flot X-19, .3.000
miles, good condition.
f4,200. Call oftor fiPM,
448-4041,

62 Wanted to Buy

72

itiTUA~

1'-l

THE MOUNTAIN,

E · &amp; R Tree Service. fully
insured. fr-e estimatet.
Phone 814·367-0636, call
after 6.

. ,
a

''I

I))® 3-2-1, ConbiCI
• Buck Rogers
8:30 • (]) (!) NBC News
(]) HBO Rock: Oonno - A
Hot Sunvner Night Donna
performs ·•• the Pacific Am·
phitheatre · in Costa Mesa,
Cal~omie.

6QLD LAVA INTO THE 1'1/ATER

~
,,,.•

Prol~

FOitME'D IN
CRATSR
OF "EL Ji6UNOO:' WHILE'
THE DTHEF'.S
CEREMONIOUS·
LY T055ED
LUMPS Of' THE

HONOR OF

Water Weill. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales end Service.
304-895-3802.

THAT HAD
T~E

8E6AN
PfllFOilMI&gt;JG

(]) Riflemen
I]) ESPN'o Horse Racing
Wkly.
(I) G GJ ABC Nowo
Ill (I) ® CBS Nowo
I)) Buslnooo Report
®Over Eaoy
7:00 8 (]) PM 1\11-lne
(I) Allots Smith and Joneo
(I) SportoCenter
CIJ Carol Burnett
CIJ Entortolnmont Tonight
(!)Charlie's Angelo
D (I) IIYheel of Fortune
(I) I1D MecNoll/l.ehror
Nowwhour
()II Newo
.
GJ People' o Court
•Jeftersono
7:30 8 Cil Tic Tac Doug~
(]) IMide Boxing
(I) C.ooar'o Tahoe Billiards Clasalc Coverage of
Semifinal # 1 is sponsored
by Corner Pockets of America. 160 min.)
CIJ Good Nowo
(I) Ill (I) Family Feud
®Wheel of Fortune
GJ
Entenainment
Tonight
• One DIIV at a Time
8:00 8 (]) (!) Reel People Tonighfs program features a
special Veterans Day salute .
160 min.)
(J] MOVIE: 'The Hound of

AROUND HIM ...

BORN LOSER

CXIR ''lEA CJJl1l
'5/o.LE.S'~~ UP,

AfJ f.6TUTG~t-.-- 11\0RIJAPPI.J:: ..

:0 WH4 J.OT SAVE.

ntr::cosrcr:
AV'JmiSIIJe&gt;
FOR~SAlf,

•

~ lfE:AR~

1979 Ford Courier pickup,
reel eporty, $2,996. John" a
Auto Salas; Buhwilla Rd.,
448-4782.

'I'

lfEY! YOu KNOW

BETTEI'!'I'i

T' GGFIATCH UP ANGELA'S

OOOA, 5/lNDY! (lET BACK
NOW liN' I'LL

a

IT...

••

House raising,leveling. re1il- ...
ling. concrete wqrk. base· ·~
mant ~ter proofing, foun- .. .. •
dation w · , free estimates. · t ~'-":
304-676- 908 .
•..

81 Jeep truck, 76 Ford
truck, 70 Lincoln flatbed
trailer. Call between 6-7,
448-0181.

·of

.,
CARTER'S PLUM BING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Phone 448-3888 or 4464477

~6;4::H;:ay=;&amp;=;G:ra~i:n::= ____________________ ,

ALLEY OOP'
TAKE YOUR TIME!
OSCAR AND l WILL BE
OUT IN THE LAS..~U
CAN JOIN US WHEN
'IOUVE FINISHEP!

I

"'
'I

'JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Fomarly Dewltt's ~
Plumbing. Coli 614-3670678.
,....,.,
~ ..,..~

-=--::.....,
SWAIN
~===.:===
··&gt;&lt;•
Spinet-Console piano bar·
'76 JHp e~~:cellent condi·
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
83
EKcavating
, ~,;:
gain. Wanted, Reeponsible
tlon. '76 Luv truck. VS con62 Oiive St., Gallipolia. 6
party to taka over low large round balft of hay and vereion. blazer wheals. roll -~------------~--- 4
Furnished apt . $2 bdr .. 196. piece Wood living room suite
....4 '
monthly
payments
on
spinet
hay.
Will
desquare
baled
water paid, 1136 Second with 6 inch flat arms 8399.
bar, auto. transminion.
pieno
liver
Can
be
seen
locally.
around
Gallipolis.
Call
DOZER WORK By Ted ~; :
1
AVe., Gallipolis . 446-4416 bunk beds complete with
304-878-3388.
Go cart and 2 yr. old Write credit manager, P.O. 448-10&amp;2.
Hanna. ponde. ditches. ·:·~
after 7 p.m .
bunkles &amp;199. 2 piece an- guolding. Call 446-1466.
Box 33. Friandens. Pa.
basements, etc. Call 448- ~"'1
980
'-'
ton
F260
Ford.
tron livingroom suites 8199,
16541 .
4907- j Carter a. ·Evens _.;
Excellent quality hoy, oquore ••.ooo. 304·676-7768.
Furnished apt . 607 2nd .• antron recliners $99, other
Wild
Cherry
lumber
60
cent.
bolao. Coll814-387-7419.
Tran1portatlon.
,
Gallipolis. 1 bdr., adults. recliners $80. maple dinette
I
$200. utilities paid . Cell sets $179. love seats S70. oft. Call 446-8038 .
1973
Ford
pickup
F-100
58
Fruit •
Lonnie" Boggs Excavating. : J
First class t-ay. •1 .76 ba~. with fibergla11topper. Runa
446-4&lt;1\16 after 7 p .m.
fiide-a-bed $250, box .. Firewood, Delivered 8t
Dozer, backhoe. dump1ruck. ' •
Redmond Ridga, 304-676· good. 304-676-2039 altar
&amp;
Vegetables
springe 8t mattresa twin or ' Stacked, $36 ..00 e load.
6970.
5
Work by hour or job. Call .• ,:
3 or 4 room unfurnished apt . full $1 00 set regular-firm
------~--------l~p_.m
__
. ____________
.46-7903.
. .•
utiliti&amp;$ paid, adults only. no 8120, maple dinette chairs 875-6644.
"I
pets. Call 446-3437 .
1978 Dodge power wagon,
Potetoes. 501b. $6 .00. 304-~ ~
$36, wash atands $34,
Cat 2 1 6 hoa, dozen, crane. ·'
Red
wing
back
chair,
carpet,
.
.
•3,600.00.
Three
quarter
676
2328
maple rockers &amp;69. 7 piece
loaders, dump truck. Cell
ton. 4 whe•l drive, 4 speed,
Furn. effiency apartments. chrome dinette set 8149, 6 eize 4x18. beige lamps. car
614-•48-1142 between
Choice of three. for single or piece dinette set $89, used radio. Call 446-0429.
Autos for Sale Good condition. 304-88271
7:00AM &amp; 6:00PM.
couples only. Newly redeco- bedroom suites. ~afirgera ­
l
_ ----rated. starting at $160 mo . tors, ranges, chest. dreuers, Kenmore diehwaeher. axe. I ==::::::PIIftn
_______________
Good· 1 Excavating. bue1978 Chevy pick-up, 4
Security dep . S. ref. Call Mr . wringer washen, TV's, cond .. $175. Victor desk,
~ TOP CASH paid for lata wheel drive, 46.000 miles, mentl. footart, driveways. ....
Dobson, 448-4807 days, dryeres. &amp; shoes. Cell 446- adding machine, 136. Call
446-2602 ova.
446-3204.
61 Farm Equipment model uoed coro. Smith oxcollon1 condition, septic tanks, landscaping. •
3159 .
Coli anytime 446-4&amp;37,
8uick-Ponlloc, 1911 Eoot- $4.500.00 . 304-676 Antiques, oak fumiture reJames L. Davison, Jr. ' I'
om
llvo.,
Gollipollt,
•462792.
One bedr. apt., 11 613 Third
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Jividen's Farm Equipment.
owner.
Ave. $136 per mo .. includ- Sofa. chair. rocker, otto- production, mise . i1ema, Use Long tractors. Vermeer 2282.
."'
ing water. Call 446-4222, man , 3 tablet, (extra heavy our Christmas layaway plan. round ba ..rs. rakes, tedders.
Conkels, Tuppers Plains.
J.A.R. Construction Co.
1976 Monte Carlo exc.
9 ,3o-5 ,oo.
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
by Frontier), 8686. Sofa,
mowere a. a complete line of eond., good tires. Call after 73
Water Lines, Footers,
chair and love1eat. $27.6 .
bale handlars &amp;: feeding
Drains. All kinds of Ditching.
3 room &amp; bath in Pomeroy . Sofas end chairs priced from Wood burner supplemental accessories. Tobacco 8t corn 7, 614·2411-.9479.
48
Willey•
Jeep
rebuilt
furnace, for usa with present
Rutland, Dh. 614-742- .~. '!
992-5621 .
8286. to $895. Tables, $46 heating system. Call 614· sprayers, wagon&amp;. rotary
engine I. drive. new winch,
2903
.
1971
Super
Boolte
rebulh
;I
and up to &amp;126. Hide~a­ 992-6461 .
tillen. rotary cutters. blade1,
brakes, shockt, ecca11orie•.
.;
new paint. •1.286. Coli
Completely furnished,
beds,8440 . and up to
cuttivators, discs. plows, motor.
446-1769
ofter
164 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
newly decorated. all electric,
"I
$626 ., Recliners. •176. to Dolly $20., Dremel electric post drivers, plactlc tanks, Coli 4•8-1815 or 448- 1:00PM.
84
Electrica I
centrally located. at $200
·•
powerwashers. wood split· 12•3.
$376.,
Lamps
from
128.
to
chain
1harpener
$20
..
Bluemo. plus deposit. Call 6148r. Refrigaration
$76,6 pc. dinettes from grallhatchat.ewi10.,G .E. ters Ia wood burning stoves!
446-2236 or 814·446And a complete line of pant 1980 Deluxe Renauh leCar, I 979 Cheorokoo Chi of PS,
$99
.,
to
436.
7
pc.
$189
smoke
alarms,
new
$5.
ee.,
2581.
'. '
and up . Wood tablewlthaix bolt cuttar1 116., 2-16" T &amp; service.
4 opd., full ounroof, AC, PB. elr, CB radio, other
chaira 8.426 to $746. Desk Bird hubcaps. tpoked $10 . USE!) EQUIP,
Pasquale
Electric
Co.
all
oxtreo.
Coli
949-2814.
AM-FM. rul oporty,
1 bed room Apt. 8196. mo.
8110 up to 1226. Hutches. ea .• AMF 10 speed bicycle IH h~dro 70, 246 MF. ~6 •2.496. John's Auto Sales,
phan• of etectric work, all
including utilities . Equal
8660 . and up, mepleorpine 836 ., country all time grea- Massey. 86 Masaey with
work guaranteed. Aerial .,
housing opportunity. Con- finish . Bunk bed complete test hits •16., Arrow heavy loader, 176 Ma11ey Fergu. Bulevlllo Rd., 448-4782.
74 Motorcycle•
truck rontol. Call 814·446tact" Village Manor Apts. with manresses, 8"260. and duty hammer stapler 818. ·son, Farman C. Gravity
2718.
~.
77 Ford Pinto Square wagon
614-992·7787.
~
up to 8396. Baby bedt, new, Swingllne staple wagons, N.H. grinder· ona owner, 37.000 · m; ..,,
8110. Manra11e1 or box hammer tacker. new 112 .. mixer. cornpleker, square exc. cond.lnlideandout. No
SEWING Machine repaire, ; •. 1
2 bedroom furnished apts.
1983
Honda
V
86
maglnum.
springs, full or twin. 168.. McCullock 14" chain bar balers, 2 • 3 bottom plow1.
aervlce. A..-thorlzed Singer · ~ I
614-992·6434, 614-992·
firm, e68 . and e78. OuMn 110., 2·McCullock chaine post augers, tobacco setter, rust, never wrecked, PS, PB. Coll614·367-0138.
Salas • Service Sharpen : ·J•
AC,
AT,
4cyl.,
f3,000flrm.
5914 or 304-882· 2666.
Sci11ors. Fabric Shop, · · •
sets, • 1 96. 4 dr. chasti. ee. ••.• various sockets, cultivators.
Coll814·2111-64711.
I 974 Yomoho 2110 dirt bike,
W ·E 8 U V U S E D
t42. 6 dr. cheoto, e&amp;4. Bod Inquire. 814-992-7617.
··
Pomeroy. 992-2284.
1 bed room Apt. in Middlef2110.00. 304-876-3401.
framoo, t20.and t25., 10 - - - - - - - - - I t - EQUIPMENT
port. Utilities included.
1980
Dotoun
310
GX,
omgun . Gun cabinete, e350. Men and women's clothes. 448-11175.
$200. plus deposit. 614·
1m rodlo, greot mpg, ruot I 878 Kowooltl 8110" Motor85 Generel Hauling
Gu oi elect;ic ranges$376. women's size11-14. men's
992-7177.
Baby mattresses, 8215 &amp;.
Comple1e tobacco 11ripar proofed, ooklng ta•911. Coli cycle. Very good condttion.
Coli 304-982-2202,
836, bad frames $20·, $26, 28 · 30 • maternity clothes, 1111 up, 2 strippare. 1 auto. 446-111128.
Apartments. 304 · 675 - &amp; $30, king frame 160. white unlforma. 304-875- conveyer It press box, eJtc.
I'
JONES BOVSWATER SER5548.
I
Good selection of bedroom 6212.
cond. •2.000. Will canaldar I 978 Volkowegon dl-1.
VICE.
Coli
814-387-7471
Coli 814·245-9405. .
76
Boata and
I
sultet,
ceder
chuts,
Fir•wood.
_
.
:3
cattle
on
trade.
Call
814·
.
or 614-387-01191.
304 882 26 7
APARTMENTS, mobile
Motora for Sale
rockers, metal cablneu.
258-8476,
1979 Pontiac Fir,bird, Y·8,
homes. houset. Pt . Pleasant
.11
Need eomethlng hauled . ,)
and Gallipolis. 614-446AT. PS, PB,Contact
AC. excellent
swivel
rockers. bookcase.1
Used
Furniture-condition.
441·
away or aomething moved?
..1
8221 '
22ft. St.rcr1ft, new •lr. We'll do h . Coli 446·3159
rangoo, choiro, dryero, ro- OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with ••-•-- u---•- 1185 oftor II p.m.
1
frlgerators and TV's. 3 miles
' MllJfJr nuuJIIu
cond .. verv good condhlon. between 9 and 5.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER.
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
&lt;tJ'i$~"""'"
,~
1978 • 1879 Dodao Vono, Phone 30•·1175-21211 oftor
Ap1rtments now 1v1i11b&amp;e to
8 00
Water heuling, Fast Service,
Bli,m;,
~~:UP!~ ~ ~ :·.
oldorly &amp; dlooblod whh on .to
to 6pm,
5pm, Mon.
Set. thru Fri., 9om
'( to'~
•
U.OOOfor7:30·•:30
both. Ull-4119
low roteo. Coli 81 4-2118income of less · than
boiWHn
Mon.- I·
•
446-0322
;~,:·
1n3.
t12,300. Rontlng for 30
'
Fri.
· 79 Motora Home•
percent of adjusted lncomaTV
•
Applloncoo.
627
Jl!lrd
.;;;;N
;
""':
·
!
Now
Hauling
Oood
Lump
or
.Phono 304-876-81178. .
1971 Chevy lmpela, exc. ·
8o Camperi
Avo., Golllpollo, 4411-1899.
'"'
·-:;
Stoker Coal. Ml.nimum 4
j
cond ..
Coli onvtlmo
Spin washers, gee &amp; electric
LT
ton. 614-387-7101.
2 .' bedroom apt." et Gill .
448-8513.
. drv-ro, outo woahoro, goo &amp;
foFN~~ 1'0
"'
· llttN&lt;"
0
I
Forry. 304-878-21148.
eleetric r~nges. refrlgera~Ao~
8 ft. olldo In compor With JIMS WATER SERVICE.
1971 Pontloc Cotollno 2 dr.. ltocko, fiiOO. Coll•411-2075 Coli Jim Lonle&lt;, 304·67 5 •
; · ~"W!~i.o
Two bedroom epartment in taro. TV ....
HT, PI, PB, AT. olr, V·B, ..,.,,
.
7397
Ma10n. W.Va. Adutts only.
Larue wood burning edd-on
~
YOU
L.ll~e MY
·
makae•c.
MCOndcar.
•aoo.
1--:----------=-~
no polo. 304-675-1452,
1
Coli 814·2611·1"2 oltor 5 1978 Wlldernou "oelf- '
furn1c1-bnnd new-heets
5IO~RA.PHY
oftor 6:00 ..
! PM.
contolnod compor, wHh roll
hot wlter·automatic
F'OR
controls-firebrick lined.
out -nlng. Coil 448-7230. 87 . Upholatery
BA~ND
Duplex 8 rooms, bath. ba1e~
t 878 Novo hotchboclt, PS,
t890. Coli 614-256-1218.
p.o..TAt'
ment, water fumiehed, Lock
PB, AC, rough body, f700
2&amp; Road. Point Pleuant,
firm. Coli 448-80111.
· Truclt ' compor, 1800.00.
TRISTATE
Uvingroom euit *40., tan
, -614-448-0239.
II
V
.IIJJ!t
HU A ~Y
Ten- ollde-ln, oiHpo olx,
1 UPHOLSTERY SHOP . ,
11
chair •30.. two electric
!....'''' (. ~,O.M/1 "1/T$/PE,
I 878 VW Robblt, excellent 11• • - · .,_.,, leo box. 11113 -·Ave.• GolllpoH1.; ,
One Mdroom ap1r1ment, hootoro Ideal fD&lt; boaamont
BuT
~K.TLY
·
I
· U,loo.oo. :S04- _cioHuS04-Cj;;l;l;2'i-2;0;5;:t;;.;;;;;.; 448-7833 Of 448-1133. ~··
fumished or unfurnished. or gorogo. 304· 773·5231.
TIJII!R N#ll'e/' ,
.:8.;_71:..·-43:_2_7_.- - - - : - : 304-875·5&amp;46 .
11111 Cltevy buo
:./.fi
Wo do -llty reupholoter· ;.:::,
ThrH pi- bedroom oulte
l
I
.-;/ff"
I
,
10
Toyoto·Tercel
front
10 - - · - - lng,m... newcuetommede ' '
whh box oprlngo ond motNi~e one bedroom apan:-:::---...
....... ...... lnl-frn. oxa. Olllldltlon, ou ...... - p h o l - fumhure. R &amp; &gt;
ment, utilities furni1hed, treoo. Ivory color, UOO.OO'
~........
r-r
• oond.
30···71M Muufocturlng, C,_h :
Coil 304-882-2202.
~T.. .SHARP IC:to I H• i/-'1 1 ·1035ori71·48M. ,
·ltltehen. ldHI for hunting
304-875-7112.
City, 814·258·1•70.
'
ond flolllng. 304-773·1171.
. .. '

'

Mister
Walt
ain't
'

Need

in his

t'set
th'

.

a

go;n
f like
a hole

r~~~-!~~~-~~~e~l~ll~l~~~--------------------l--2_0_&amp;_3_.

=

------·

solid
beam

ceil in:
Joel!

hook

..

~·

.-'.1

....

.
BARNEY

BALL$ 0' FIRE ~~

U

a

"":·v.,.E,,j
.iff

l-;';;~·~==:;====

DOWN 'IOI'JDER !!

'

•------------

PEANUTS

'

co-·fu-.oo. . . .

WHERE'D EVERI'BODI' 60?!

-------------------- ···

."

..

(I) 8olp

8 I)) Pollee Stoov The
trenefer of desk officer Use
Beaumon1 to the vice squad
lead• to a seriee of e~~tplosive
developmonte. IRII60 min.)
(I) Lotenlght Amertco
()II M•A•S•H

®l'ltl.....

IF
.=.,..

11:41 (I)
I))

E:
MOVIE:

w-·
(I)

'

'

a

l

•

&gt;

uaoo.

\

'

•aso.

'Swamp
MOVIE:
Thing'
(I) I Spy
C1J MOVIE: 'Fat City'
(I) Ill IB Fall Guy Colt's
pursuit of a lady bail jumper
leads him onto a trail of extortion and kidnapping, {60
min.)
II (I) ® Whiz Kids Richie
and his robgt set out to
catch a crooked mastermind
who takes over the police
computer system. {60 min.t
(I) ® Chemical People
'Community
Answers.·
Host Nancy Reagan joins
Willie Stargell and Michael
Landon to describe how
community task forces can
deal with the problems of
drug and alcohol abuse. 160
min.) (Closed Cap1ioned]
•
MOVIE: 'Hong 'Em
High'
8:30 I]) NFL'o Greoleal Mo·
menta Nfl's Greatest Mo·
menta presents highlights of
the 1 982 Wo~d Champion
Miami OoiDhins. _
9:00 8 Cil (!)Facto of Ufe Bleir
and Jo plan a birthday surprise for Mrs, Garrett that involves a surprise for Blair.
(Ciosad Captioned]
(]) 700 Club
(I) Top Rank· 8o~lng from
Los Vogoo, NV
(I)
GJ Dynasty Fallon
-and Jeff learn the truth about
Adam and Stephen fai ls to
appeir at the custody hear·
irlg. (60 min.)
Ill (I) ilD MOVIE: 'Bill: On
HioOWn'
(I) (jj) Great Porfonnancu: Uve From Uncoln
Center 'The New York City
Opera's 'The Cunnirig Littlo
Vixen'.' The New York City
Opera presents Leos Janacek's opera in a special performance from the New
York State Theater at Un·
coin Center. 12 hrs .. 30 min .)
9:30 DCIJ(!)FomilyTieaUnder
pressures of senior-year
grades, work and college
boards, Alex resorts to taking some of Mallory's diet
pills to keep his energy_ up.
(]) Album Flaah
10:00 • Cil (!)St. ElMWhore A
husband finally tekes his
wife home in good health
and V.J.'s marriage is jeoperdized. (60 min .) .
Cil MOVIE: 'Enigma'
(IJ MOVIE: 'The Kidnap·
ping of the Prnldent'
CIJ T8S Evening News
(I)
!ll Arthur Hailey' o
Hotel Peter's ex·wtfe retums while Chris1ine and
Mark play cupid for 1 dejectad hotel guest. (60 min .)
.INN News
10:30 (I) Oule IHICI Harriet
•comedy Time
11:00. (])(I)(!). (I)®.
GJNewa
(I) Another Ute
(I) All In the Family
· aen~ Hill Show .
(I) CIJ Tonight Show
1 1 :30
Johnny is joined by Nell
Caner, Robert Klein and
Merio Eorfe. 16o min.)
(I) Doble GUllo.
(I) SportoConter ·
(I) Catllno

a

THAR's A MEAN
~- OL'BEAR

t;=========:J-=========~

, 1l,
_;,;

I (J

tCHYPISj

xJ r

IAFDACEt

Yesterdav's

I

,_,..NFL'e
I•

'·

'Amber

G,...... Mo-

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. u suggesled by~ above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: HOARD TEPID ENSIGN SWERVE
Answer : What a bull In a china shop can cause .A "OISHASTER"

BRIDGE
Oswald

Jacoby and James Jacoby

A very lucky error
NORTH

11·9-83

.4

+Q 10 6

.A.K864 '
+AKQ2

WEST

led going • into this final
session . This particular
event was played at board-amatch scoring. A plus score
for a board wins one point, a

minus score gets a zero and

EAST

+K

• 54 2

'I'Q9762
• J 53 2
+to 8 6

• A 10 8 3
tQ9
+9 7' 3
SOUTH
tAJ9 .8 73

'KJ5
t tO 7

+H

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West Nor1b East South
It
Pass• I+
Pass
Pass
3+
3+
Pass
4+
Pass 4 NT
Pass
Obi
6+
Pass Pass Pass

5'

Opening lead: '1'6

By Oswald ·Jacoby
and James Jacoby

It was the final round of
the 1952 National Men's
Team Championships of the

ACBL .
West was one of the great
all-time players. His team

a tie gets half a point.
South found himself in a
slightly optimistic slam.
East won the first trick with
the ace of hearts and led
back a heart to South 's king .
Now South called for the
queen of spades from
dummy .
We'll let world class
expert West describe what
happened at this point.
"I heard a voice say , 'The
lead's in your own hand.' I
looked around to see who
had said it and suddenly
realized that the voice was
mine."
The rule is that declarer
must lead the same suit
from his own hand , so naturally enough he played his
ace, dropped the expert's
singleton king and was the
only declarer to make that
spade slam. The slam was
not bid at the other table in
the match so it was a swing
of one lull board, but to
show that justice doesn 't
always triumph. the team
that lost the board still won
the event.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

~~•a•~•J

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Influence
1 Summon
3 O'Neill play,
5 Stringed
with ''The"
instrument

4 Poetical

10 Israeli port
11 Get there
13 British gun

5 Scram
6 Angry

14 Fur

7 Hockey

adverb

15 - T

great

(exactly)
16 Sleeping
setup
17 Malayan
· coin

18 Wax
ecstatic
20 Whack
21 Author
Vidal
22 Utahtily
23 Direction
on ship
25 Sword

8 Nursery
rhyme tyke
9 Ordinary

Yesterday's Answer
23 Nasal
29 Attack

I2 Becharm
sensations
16 Concise
24 Public
19 Israeli
events
dance
25 Debark
22 Ornamental %'l U.S.
stone
sculptor

30 Taylor in .
"Johnny-'
31 Condition
36 TV actress ,
Charlotte
31 Rowan

r.-"'T."""W'-r.:-

~Ukraine
assembly

Z7 "-Nome"
28Eye

28 A.ssenled
32 Spoil
33 Ailing

.

34 Nocturnal
flyer

38 Exalled
37 Seaweed
38 Drainage
39Fat

40Sc0ff
41 Present

DOWN
1 Sticky
mixture

DAILY CRYP'J'OQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXVDLBIIAXR
lo

LONGFELLOW

One letter almpb' stonda for another. In this sample A lo
used for the three L's. X lor the two O' s, etc. Single letters, ·
opoatrophea, the length and formation of the words are all
hlats. Each day the code letters ore dUI'erent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

WEAZA
DZA

love'

.I .

.

I K] JJ
~ 'l I I I X I Xrr I XI)

(IJ

~

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

b

MONDE

the Baakervilles'

,·•.,

82

1

a

House• Raited or Moved.
Floors leveled, joist'• aill'e ... '
replaced, basements dug , :
beneath house, 8J1Cavation.
ponds or road• made, All
,
work guaranteed. Free Esti· . "
mates. "In business for over • ~
a quarter of a century••.
j
HOUSE MOVERS - 676- . 1
2711 ..
..;t:J

1982 GMC S- 1 6, auto.
trans .• AM-FM, stero can.,
wide bed package, with
flbergla11 topper, 37,000
mlloo, $6,300. Call 4468060.

I

1.!):.

()) Uttle Hou•• on the

OFA LAKE

STATLIE ...

SPARED,

A

THE GOWEN
ON!' WOULD 60
TO THE CE-NTER

GET your carpet SHIP "
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN ~~
STEAMER. Water removal, ......
furniture cleaning, free esti·
',
mates. 814-448-2107.

Trucks for Sale

1972 Chevy lh: ton Pickup,
Horaas. New and u1ed sad-' short wheel base,•. exc.
dies, 1 horae-horse trailer. cond .. $1,396. Call 614814 - 698·3290 . Ruth 245-9670.
ANves.
I 979 Ford pickup. 16,000
actual
miles. l.ike new,
Pigs for solo. 304-882·
$4·, 800. North of Racine on
3448.
Carmel Rd. David Persons.
One 2yr. old rogiotored 1 980 Chevy Luv 4x4, four
Morgan, Arbien mar~~. One
12yr. Jtandard mare. 304- speed, with topper.
*4,000.00. Sears whirlpool
676-2098.
for bath, used very little.
304-896-3618 or 8963621.

'-'I6UNDO~

T~EY

SEAMLESS GUTTERS, One
piece custom fit your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut·
tor, IDoy 614-592-4066,)
(nigh! 614-698-8206.)

1976 Che"Y Monza 2 plus 2.
VB, new tires, PS, PB,
automatic transmi11lon. tilt
wheel. air conditioning , rear
defrost, air shock•. needs
pointed, $1 ,000.00 . 304882-3448.

MAN WAS COVERED WIT~
60LD l-AVA DLI!i&lt;T UNnl. HE
LOOKED LIKE A t:&gt;Ol.OEI'l

FOil &amp;EINii

F Ill K Tree Trimming. ttump
removal. Coll876·1331.

--------:-:

1980 Plymouth Fire Arrow 6
spd., axe. cond. AlsO 1981
CB 760 Custom excellent,
extras. 992·8037 eve.

ONCE A '/EAR A TR16E5 ·

THE'I VI/ERE
. ~0 GRAT!FIJL.

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing, includir'g
hot tar application. carpen·
ter. electrician, mason. Call
304·67&amp;-2088 or 676·
4680.

1977 Ford Granada. New
pain~. new tires. ni.w exNew dozer, very reasonable. 'houot. Aoklng f1 .BOO. 304·
Coli 448-8038.
773-601 3 oftor 6:30 p.m.

Tobacco Quota for 11le.
Location-Gallla CountY.
107.9741bt. Min. bid 1.00
par lb. bid reg. Owner in
. appropriate county Intent 10
actively produce tobacco on
your land. 1 .000 lb. max.
Dragonwynd Cattery-. quota per tillable acre. PayKennels. AKC Chow pup· mentbycertifiadcheekonly.
pies, CFA Himalayan, Per- Sale aubjact to available
sian and Siamese kittens . . quote ..d qualified determiCall 448-3844 after 4.
nation by Dept. of Agric.
Submit written propoaal
AKC Registered Poodle pup- with bed .Price, quota
pies, ready to go. 448-0869. amount desired. county location and advise the
Beagle pups 6 month• old, amount of tillable acrN
&amp;76. each. 1 AKC reglotored available to suppon your
female 6 years old . 8125 . quota raquasta. No verbal
304-676-4154.
bids accepted, Ofl•send 12
Noon Nov. 14, 1983. Moll
Wanted Great Dana for stud bids to: Crown City Mining,
service. Phone 304-882· Inc.. 8422 E. Main St ..
Reynoldoburg, Oh 430118.
2027.
Attn: Dale Thompson.
One six year old registered
Plott Coon hound. 304676-2098.
63
Livestock

57

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RON'S Television Service. •
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola, Quazar, and
houoo cello. Coli 576·2398
or 446 -2464.

61

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t XJ

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Appliance Service All makes .~
models refrigerators,
•
was hen. dryers , ranges. . . •
compactors. dlshw•shers,
microwaves . Heatln_g 8t
Cooling, Sheet Metal Work.
Gallia Refrigeration Co. Call
614-448-4086.

1

for Rent

8:00 •

&amp;

t-;;;::;:::::;:::;:::::::r;;-;:::::;::::~:::;:;:~
~

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EVENING

1 - - - - -- - - - 1-

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u--lour J u - .

11/9/83

• I

55 Building Supplies

i}ftl)~fi}it f!IJTMAT~LEDWORDOAIII!
. ~ ~ ~~·
byHonriNnclldllnd BobLH

WEDNESDAY

Marcum Roofing &amp;: Spqut·
ing. 30 years experience, •
opeclollzlng In built up roof. ·
Call 81• · 388-9857.
•

RCA Stereo. Video Disc
Pets for Sale
player, remote control .:elght 56
ditfererit movies and concerts. 8300.00. Phone 304·
HILlCREST KENNELS
675-2029.
Bording all breeds. Sellir;'IG
Armstrong forced air fur- Happy Jack Dog Food.
nace, 105,000 BTU capac· Doberman puppies: Stud
ity, and all controls. plus Service. Call 446-7796.
humidifier. CHEAP . Phone
Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
304-676-3300.
614-367-7220.
G"a s range $126 ,. couch and
thair S40 . table and four Brierpatch Kennels Profe1chairs $25., fireplace insert sional AU-bread grooming.
fiberglass $25 ., warm morn- lndoor·outdoorboardlngfa·
Ing heating s~ove 8250. cilities. English Cocker Spa304-773-5163.
nlel puppies. Call 614-3881 - - - - - - - - -9790.

54

Television
Viewing

STUCCO PLASTERING •
textured ceiling• commer·
ciel and residential, free
estimates. Call 614·266·
1182.

Diamond cluster ring,
&amp;260.00. 304-773-6949 .

The Daily Santinei--Page--11

Ohio

rK.:..;IT_'N:..:'...;C;.;.ARl.:..:::..:Y.:LE:,,.
_ _ _ _ _ _.....,:b::.Y.;.L.arry__;:_W_rlght..:.,

--.k

h . . t , 811 , 000 . Call
614 -256 -6035 , or after
?PM 614-256.1672.

•

DZA

·B AZM

KXIA

LAXLUA,

JEX

ZAKXNZHAPNU

DW

·OAQGT ZAIXZKAPNU : - XTRAG GDKE
Ysterda)'01 Cryptequote: BEFORE TilE ADVENT OF THE
RADIO 'l11ERE Wil!RE ADVANTAGES IN BEING A SHUT·
IN.-DONHEROLD

'

�..

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 9, 1983

·Pomeroy- Middleport, Q,io
•

Board members, .
(Continued from page 1)
Haning recelv.ed 44 and William R
Law son received 18. Gloria Hutton
was unopposed for th!' clerk's post
and received 178 votes.
Harry C. Hill was elected trustee
by a good margin 1n Letart
Township receiving 153 votes com·
pared to88recelvedbyhisopponent,
Christopher Tod Wolfe, and 71
received by a thlrd contender,
Herschel D. Norris. In Letart
Township, Joyce M. White defeated
June H. Wickersham for the clerk's
post, 162 to 13.'\.
Denver G. Hysell was a strong
Winner for the trustee post in
Salisbury Township getting 1006
votes whlle hisopponentsCharlesH.
Bartels and Robert Lee Mash
chalked up553 ajld197, respectively.
Wanda L. Ebiih, incumbent , was
· reelected clerk with 1,081 votes over
710 received by her opponent ,
Richard B. Balley.
In R utland Township, Charles E.
Rlfe was a strong winner 't or the
trustee position With 321 votes over
158 received by his opponent, Leo B.
Morris. ·Edna M. SWick was
unopposed for clerk of that township
and received 427 tallies.
There was a five way race for the
trustee posl ln Salem Township a nd
winner was John F. Colwell with 131
votes. Tallies received by his
opponents include Robert Beaver,
90; Wa lter F. Garnes.34; Richard L.
Lambert, 26. and Ralph F. Moore,
12. Bonnie G. Scott, unopposed for
Salem Township Cler k, received 184
votes.
Wilbur E. Robinson defeated
E dgar J. Pullins, 18().131, to win the
Orange Township Trustee post and
Nina R Robinson, unopposed,

received 239 to be named clerk.
A close race took place In Bedford
Township where Stanford Stockton
received 176 votes lor the trustee
position and his opponent. Rona ld L.
Wood, tecelved 173. Jane M.
Frymyer defeated Brenda S. Roush
for the clerk's seat, 209-131.
Eison R. Da iley was wihner of the .
trustee post in Lebanon Township
with 201 votes over 158 received by
hl~ oppone nt Morris E. Teaford for
the full term. Guy A. Rose with 184
votes was winner of an unexpired
trustee position over write-in candl·.
date Harry Richard who received
lll. Shlrley A. J ohnson with 220
votes defeated Linda C. Evans, l bl,
for the clerk's post.
In a four way race in Chester
Township, Victor A. Bahr received
'294 votes to become trustee over
George A. Wolfe, 2!18; Bernard D.
Gilkey. 103, a nd Gary Lynn Nelson,
75. B. Darlene Newell was winner of
the clerk' s post In a three way race
received 31.1 votes to defeat William
Michael Will, 284, and Elmer G.
Young, Sr., 128.
Chester Wells, a former Meigs
County Commlsslon, came through
for a strong win in a four way race
for the Olive Township trustee post
scoring with 346 votes over his
opponents, F rancis H. Andrew,l74;
Sol s. Bigley, 102, and Clifford
Longenette, 7'2. Virgina A. Newlun
was elected clerk with 372 votes
defea ling Barbara Ann Hannum
with 264.
Delbert A. Smith was elected
Sutton Township trustee with 726
votes over the 400 received by his
opponent Roy E. Armes. P aul S.
Moore was unopposed for the Sutton
clerk's post and received 843 votes.

Renewal levies win approval
A total of 7,659 Meigs County
voters went to the polls during
Tuesday's gene ral election, a sizea·
ble incr ease over a compara ble
election two years ago when 6.891
reside nts cast ballots.
Voters in the subd.ivisions a pproved several re newal levies a nd
one new levy was a pproved a nd in
Olive Township wet and dry
measures went down in sound
defeat.
Tax renewals a pproved included:
Middleport Village, one mill , fire
protection, 489 to 180.
Rutland Township, .3 of one mill,
flre protection, 347 to 140.
Pomeroy Village, one m ill, fire
protection, 540 to 184.
Syracuse Village, one m ill . fire
protectlon, 226 to 90.
In Rutland Township. voters
defeated a 1.5 mill levy for pollution
control , 328to 136. Scipio Township
vote rs approved a new 1.5 m ill levy
lor fire protection 137 to 122.
In Olive Township-voters soundly
defeated the sale of beer, 468 to 231,
and sale of takeout beverages unde r
C and D permits, 462 to 225.
Voters of Meigs County voted 3749
to 3425 in favor of increasing the age
for drinking. However, voters cast
strong no votes on State Issues 2 a nd

Seyler., Pyles ·

·

3. Negative votes on State Issue 2
totaled &lt;!PM compared to 2107 in
favor of the amendment while on
Issue 3 voters cast 4899 negative
votes a nd 2177 in favor of that issue.
Here's how Meigs Countians
involved in voting for board of
education m embers in other coun·
ties c9st their ballots: . A !he ns
County Board of Education, Ruth
Ha rris. 134, and Frank E . J e nsen,
97; Alexander Local Board of
Educa tion, Gay F . J ohnson, 240; R
Leslie Cornwell, 1ffi, and Fredertck
C. Zirkle, 73. Meigs residents
Involved in the trl-county vocational
levy, an add itional tax, turned down
that measure 226 to 83.

1

Emergency runs
l'wo calls were answered by local
units Tuesday, the Meigs County
E mer gency Medical Service reports. At 11:14 a .m ., the Pomeroy
Unit took Bertha Russell, Wolfe P en
Road, to Pleasant Valley Hospital,
and at 12:22 p.m., the Middleport
Unit took Donald VanCooney, North
Second Ave., to Holzer Medical
Clinic.

LUNCHEON
BAKED STEAK, MASHED POTATOES, CHOICE
OF GREEN BEANS OR HOMEMADE NOODLES

DINING ROOM CLOSES AT 7 MONDAY-SATURDAY
DINING ROOM CLOSES AT 4 ON SUNDAY

NEW FALL HOURS

Belpre-Hornet preview

HENRY WERRY

WILLIAM SNOUFFER

BRUCE REED

•

Commissioners sign 40-year lease ·
A 40-year county lease to the
Meigs E lderly Housing Corpora·
tlon. presented commissioners
Tuesday by Richard J ones. com·
m isslonE'r, who also serves as
p~ ldent of the E lderly Housing
Corp., has been signed by county
commissioner s.
The lease includes the former
Chlldren's Home building locatedon
2.14 acres of ground.
Jones asked fellow commission·
ers, David Koblentz and Manning
Roush, to go over the lease before
signing it. Jon~ said the Instrument
had been reviewed by the prosecu·
tor and the assistant prosecutor.
Jones noted that on the plus side, it
Will allow the county to renova te a
county landmark ;md use It as a
worthwhile community need for

apartments for the elderly."There
is no other way the county could
afford to spend s:ni.OOJ for such a
Landmark," Jones stated.
The Elderly Housilig Corp..
~lved a HUDgrantln the amount
of $1,700,001 for 46 a partnients for
the elde rly.
TheChlldren's Homebulldlng wlll
be renovated and will be part of the
housing complex.
In other business the commission·
ers agreed to enter Into an
engineering agreement With the
fLrm of John David Jones and
Associates to perform the engineer·
ing wor k on the design phase of the
Tuppers P!allis Wastewater project
in the amount of $64,700.
Meeting with the commissioners
was C. E. Blakeslee, executive

dlrec!Dr of the Meigs County,
Regional Piannlng Commission
who recommen~ that the county
employ a county gra nts adrninistra ·
!Dr or planner in 1984.
The commissioners informed
Blakeslee tha) the employment of
such a persori is underconslderatlon
and a job descrtptlon Is being
compiled.

Marriage llcenses
A marriage license was issued in
Meigs County Probate Court to
Charles Arthur Ritchie. 31, Portland
and Lort Diane Faulk, 24, Portland.

Area deaths .

Lorain Sterrett

Funeral services for Lorain
Sterrett, ffi, Wadsworth, former
Pomeroy resident , who died Mon·
day at Wa dsworth will be held
Thursday a t 10:ll a .m. a t Ewing
Funeral Home withlhe Rev. David
Ma nn otflclatCemein
g. Burial will be In
Beech Grove
tery.
Friends will be received at the
funeral home today from 2 to4 a nd 7
to 9.
Mr. s ter rett was born0ct.28,1902

at South Slde, W.Va., theson ot' the

late Charley W. and Daisy A. Pullin
Sterrett. He was also preceded in
deaul ·by one sister , Comella
Bankhead.
He was a former e mploye of
Crow's Steak Hou se, P om eroy, and
a member of the Beech Hill
Methodist Cburch, South Side.
He issurvlvedbyhiswlfe, Harriet
Sterrett; one son, Willia m Sterrett,
Copley, Ohio; two granddaughters,
Rachel and Emlly Sterrett, CoP1ey;
on brother , Eugene M. Sterrett,
P oint Pleasant.

Hattie E. Roush
Mrs.Ha ttleE.Roush,85, Racine,
died Tuesday evening at the
PomeroyHealthCareCenter.
Mrs. Roush, a hQillemaker, was
born Feb. 15, 1898 in Meigs County
the daughter of the late Joseph and
Sara Singer Gary. She was also
preceded in death by her husband,
Lloyd Roush, one brother, Waller
Gary, two sisters, Bessle Gary and
EdlthShatn.

on

She was a member of Carmel

United Methodist Cburch.
Survivors Include one son a nd
da ughter ·in·iaw , Wayne and Clau·
dla Roush, Racine; ·one brother,
Oliver Gary, The Plains, and
several nieces and nepheWs.
Funeral services will be held
Frldiy .a t 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Don Walker
officiating. Burial will be in Sutton
Cemetery. Friends may call at the ·
funer al home anytime Thursday.

Yoi.32,No.l49

.
WASHINGTON ( AP) - Wholesale prtces, despite
the sharpest gain In food costs sin!:e April, rose a
modest 0.3 percent In October, the government said
today. Largely offsetting the 1.1 percent food prtce
gain was the first drop In energy prtces in six months.
Beef and veal prtces rose 2.4 percent, the first
~ after three months of falling prices and a
renewed Indica lion of the lmpact of the swnmer' s
prolonged heat and dry weather.
Fresh fruit and vegetable prlces rose 18.5 percent,
also a result In large part of the swnmer weather.
·As for energy prices, the department said natural
gas costs tumbled 2.8-percent. Over the last year, gas
prices have fallen 0.7 percent, theli' first 12·month
decline since 1965. Department analysts said a glut of
gas on the wholesale market produced the October

,/1)11, • ..,...,.

NEW DINNER HOURS
TUESDAY-THURSDAY .
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Office
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8:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m. Sunday
1

Income tax rates If unemployment
fell below 11 !l@I'Cellt and the state
recorded a surplus of $100 million.
Riffe also called for Celeste to
" reevaluate his whole operation" In
light ol his slumping popularity,
hinting the governor smu1d considermaklngsomeunspecltledstatf
changes.
MISSING TEENAGER Celeste said he was planning no
1be
mother of a Meigs County
changes in Ills cabinet.
leen&amp;p!l'
today-Issued an appeal
"I think I hlive a very strong
for
"""'
about her 17-yeaNJid
cabinet team. I think we'll get better
dauglder,
who has been missing
asweworkatthlngstogether.Ithink
since
Oel.
13. Christina Lynn
·oor goal now has to be to respect the
Haning
was
last seen wearing
concerns of the people of this state to
jeans,
blue
tennis
shoes aitd a
use the resources we havei&gt;rudently
blue
windbreaker.
She
Is 5-2, and
and to get people back to work," he
weighs
122
poonds.
She has
said.
brown
curly
hair.
Anyone
know·
Prudent use of public funds,
lng
of
her
whereabouts
Is
asked
Celeste said. was the message he
1o
catJ
the
mother
at
992-2117
gave to cabinet members at a
evenings or !I9'Ual5 or the
meeting Wednesday morning.
department of Sheriff James J .
Avenues for saving money that
Promtt 992-33'71 or ~.
are being explored at the cabinet
saki.
level Include continuing restrictions
.House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe on out-of-stale travel, a pilot
Jr., D-New Boston, said he wlll program to avoid uMecessary
Introduce a bill that would reduce htrlng and close reviews of
contracts.
Celeste put in an appearance
before a trlendly crowd of school
officials, telling them voter rejec·
tlon of tax repeal was "not a llceruie
to spend but a mandate to be
prudent" In the use of tax dollars.
Hewasglvenstandlngovatlonsby
GaryW. Eynon,ll,Syracuse, was
about 750· attending the arurual arrested early this morning in
meeting of the Ohio AJsoclatlon of connection With five breaking and
E 1e m e n t a r y
S c h o o I · enterlngs at Syracuse Elementary
Administrators.
School from Oct. 24 through today,
It was his first speech since MeigS County Sheriff James J .
· Tuesday's election, In whiCh voters · Proffitt reports.
turned down a bid to repeal a 90
Due to the number of breaking
percentlncreaseinthestalelncome and enlerlngs, the sheriffs depart·
tax.
ment Installed a burglar alarm In
. Celeste and other opponents had the school which alerted Deputy
said paasage would mean major Brian Bissell, dispatcher, that a
cuts In spending for scbools, and he breaking and entering was In
said the defeat at repeal was progress.
teBtlukiiJY to the commllmellt ol
Sgt. Randy Forbes entered the
Ohioans to education.
same window that Eynon had used
CELESTE IN VICTORY But he also said thel:e was a deep to get Inside the structure. Eytion
Oltlo Gov. Richard Cele8te gettconoern among voters about IICM' reportedly left via the front door.
llll'el wUb Ills fills Tuelda, ntpt
Sgt. John King and Sgt. Milford
public rooney Is spent.
a !l&amp;lttetlo.- JlreM con"They are deeply et.nremed that Hysell were outside the building and
..,._ where he dllcu88ed the
those of us In pubUc life assure that as Eymn left, shots were fired by
defelt ol two lax lnltladlves, one
every single dollar ·ts well spent. · both King and Hysell who apprerepee""t a 9&amp;-pereent lax lnThey are ccncemed that we make helided Eynon.
. , _ he accomplished 110011
prudent Judgmi!RtaaboutWhereand
Other officers on the scene were
after, taking ofllce. ( AP
wbenwelnvesttaxdollars,"'Celeste Deputy Don Snyder, Capt. George
IMerphoto).
said.
(Continued on page 8)

COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP)-Fresh
trom an election victory upholding
his tax increase package, Gov.
Richard Celeste is sounding themes
of fiscal pructence and warning
against "unrealistic expectations"
oftaxcuts. •
Celeste carrted those messages to
his cabinet and to a group of school
' ,,_ admlnlstratoi'S ew1 Wednesday.
,
Jk told xeport~rs . after one stop
that he en&lt;inrsed tax relief in the
evellt ot a big budget surplus.
"I would support a plan whereby
we would commit excess funds
should we have them to wylng off
the Wl€1Tlployment compensation
fund debt and 'to tax cuts for
Ohioans/' Celeste said.
"I think It's lmportant though that
we not hold out unrealistic expecta ·
lions at this point In time because I
have not seen any evidence yet that
would lead me to conclude that we
have excess revenue," the governor

We've got
comfort
and fashion·

~&lt;;)VEMBER .

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HOURS: Mon.- Tues.,-Wecf.,.fri. 9 :30·5 :00 .

Thurs: 9:30-12:00-Sat. 9:30-2:00
J

HARTLEY SHOES

•

POMEROY.OHIO
992-5272

.• wicl•W·Prae Witter

'!WO trestunan p&lt;emors scored major political
vlctorlei with referendums u Obloanll backed
Rlcbard Celesle's90pereenttncomelax IDcreaaeand
NewYarla!l'llwent aJonawithMarloC\iomo"areqUESt
to sp!llll $1.25 bWion to fix CI'IIJIIbllll&amp; I'Oidwaya and

'

Hartley Shoes located in the
Upper Block in Pomeroy

N. SECOND AVENUE
' MIDDLEPOIIT, OHIO
PHONE 992-2178

Indeed, over the last 12 months, wholesale prices
have risen a small L3 percent, the lowest full·year
gain since the 1 percent increase poSted over the
November 1966-November 1967 period.
Detaillng last m onth's price activity, the Labor
Department said:
- New car prices jumped 0.8 percent after falling a
sharp 2.1 percent in September, when dealers offered
customers special deals to close out the 1~ model
year. Light truck prtces shot lip 10.8 percent after
tumbling 5.6 percent In the previous month.
The department noted that ''the October advances
refiected price hikes for 1984 model-year vehicles by
domestic producers."
- The 1.1 percent food price Increase was well
ahead of the 0.7 percent advance of September a nd

matched the gain recorded in ApriL Vegetable prices

rose 5.3 percent and poultry costs rose 0.3 percent.
Bakery goods rose 1 percent
Pork prices last month, however, were off 2.5
percent and daLry product costs fell 0.2 percent.
-Gasoline prtces fell 0.2 percent, slighlly better
· than the OJ percent decrease of a month earlier. Fuel
oil prices jumped 4.2 percent as the winter heating
season began in parts of the country. Fuel oil prices
had risen 2.5 percent In the previous month , when
natural gas prices were up 0.5 percent
· The energy price calcula tions reported today were ·
for September. That component of the wholesale
price. measure lags a month llecause energy
companies report their prices too late for inclusion in
te most recent index.

WASHINGTON (AP) - Con·
The Sena te, meanwhile, began
gress has untll midnight to pass an ac tion on Its version of the bill
emergency spending bill to keep Wednesday. Sen. Jeremiah Denton,
moneyfiowlngtomostofthefederal R·Ala:, ollered an amendment to
government.
ban financing of abortions bY
Standing In the way Is a squabble l'e!¥ral employee health insurance
within the ranks ol House Demo- plans unless the mother' s life is
crats, an abortion filibuster in the . threatened by carrying a baby to full
Senate and the desire of legislators term.
ln both champers to attach pet
After a sertes of parliamentary
amendments tcr th!' em ergency sldnnlshes, Sen. Bob Packwood.
measure.
The House today was making Its
second attempt of the week to pass
the measure.
It trted to pass the measure
Tuesday, but just enough rebellious
!res!unan Democrats - trying to
In Billions
draw attention tobudgetdeflcitsand
Of Dollars
Ioree action on a tax bill - defected
/ 'I .J /1 16
and the legislation was rejected
1 ,.,,. ,,, yr&gt;.11 una s

R-Ore., sought to block the amendment with a filibuster that he began
by reading from a book on the
history of abortion. Senate leaders
then put the entire measure aside
untll today.
The House version of the emer.
gency bill would continue funds
through F eb. 29, 1984, for govern·
ment departments and agencies
whose regular fisc a 1198&lt;1 a ppropria.
lions have not yet been enacted into
law.
The Senate version would con·
tlnue the money until Sept.ll,l98l,
the end of the current fiscal year.
Delay In e nacting a new bill,
necessary to replace an .existing
measure that expires at midnight ,
could leave the affected agencies
technically without money.

RDf.R.I t

D!tl'f

~203.

"Often one can be so clever he's
downright stupid," Majortty Leader
Jim Wright, D-Texas, said of his
junior colleagues. Wright had spent
houn; Tuesday lending off Republl·
can assaults on nearly $1 billion in
additional domestic spending he
sought to add to the bill only to have
the entire m easure defeated.

Wealher forecast
Windy and cold tonight with 70
percent chance ol rain. Low 3540.
Winds northerly 20-ll mph. Windy
and cold Friday with nearly 100
percent chance of rain, possibly
miXed with snow. High about 40.

·'""'' ,]()

Woman hurt
in accident

/ 'J/1 tl 4
I, ,f · ' ' yc.rt ends

s .-,,lt.•mllcr 30

A Pomeroy woman was injured in
a two-vehicle accident o n Ohio 7 in
Gallla County Wedmsday.
Nlne teen·year-oid Sheri A.
Wa lker d id not require treatment at
SnurCI•
the scene, according to the Gallia·
US OtttCc of Management and Budget
Meigs post of the state highway
patrol.
INCREASING FEDERAL
The patrol said Walker was
northbound
and stopped in traffic at
DEBT - This graphiC on tiE
a
construction
site on the road at 3:35
lncreaslnr Federal Debt IJe.
tween l!MO Wid 1984 Is lor use a.•
p.m. Traffic started aga in and then
desired With story on the deftcit
stopped, and Walker's vehicle was
fever sweeping Capitol Hill. ( AP
struck in the rear by a vehiclcdriven
by Gerhard K Stellrecht, 27, Logan.
Laserphoto) .
Walker's vehicle was slightly
damaged and there was no damage
to Stellrecht's a uto.
Dennis R. Carman, 33, Rt. 4,
veterans anmd of these~ dld not Pomeroy, escaped injU!y when his
see service In World War II.
vehicle overturned on Huntington
The largest group of veterans is Towns hip Road 45 in Ga!lia County
from World War II. They number Wednesday.
12al. Therearestlll40veterans from
The patrol said Carman was
WorldWarl.
westbound at 2:40p.m. when his
Since the ending of the Vietnam
vehicle met a schoolbus. Carman
pu lled his car onro the berm and
War ,l20personsfromMeigsCol!llty
havese!Ved In the armed forces a nd
overturned, according to the report.
have been discharged. There are an
A vehicle driven by Donald w.
additional 350 persons who were in
Barnett Jr., 25, Langsville, was
service between the Korean Conflict
slightly damaged when it struck a
and the Vietnam era. Others who
deer on Ohio 124 at 6:20 p.m .
served-In previous periods of peace .• Wednesday. T he deer led the scene,
time number: :lO.
the patrol said.

Veterans Day observance set
TornotTOW Meigs County will
obServe Veterans Day and special
services will be conducted at 10:45
a .m. in front of the county
courthouse at Pomeroy by Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion.
AccordlngtotheVeteransAdmln·
lstration, Meigs County has a total of
2,850 armed forces veterans of
wbom 2,240 are persons who served
during a war tlme period.
The latest statistics siiCM' that 700
served in the VIetnam era and of
these 690 had no service In Korea.
There are 440 Korean Conflict

Freshmen govem,orS score major victories

Bonnie

SEARS CATALOG STORE

2 Sections, 14 Pages
20 Cents
A Mvltimedio Inc. Newspaper

Emergency money hill
faces major squabble

-

FRIDAY-SATURDAY

EAR, NOSE &amp;THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

decline.
For the year, the Labor Departr;nent said its
Producer Price Index for finished goods has risen at
an annual rate of just 0.6 percent, virtually assuring
that the pace for all of 1~ will be well under the 3.7
percent \lf 1982.
Indeed, economists say the final tally for the yearwill be about 1.5 percent, which would be the smallest
Increase since the 0.5 percent advance of 1964.
While House spokesman Larry Speakes, In Tokyo
with President Re9ltan. called the October figure "a
significantly low rate of inflation" and added that "in
recent weeks we have seen a remarkable string of
Indicators oi a nourishing economy. The oCtober
producer prices showed the foundallon for the
recovery Is strong."

Governor warns
against unrealistic
.
cut expectations

FOR THE HOI.IDAY SEASON
CALL NOW TO ASSURE A RESERVATION
BEFORE If'S TOO LATE

•

•

· Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, November 10, 1983

Copyrighted t 913

Admitted..Julia Sellers, Athens.
Discharged--Mary Davis, Nancy
Taylor, Permella Cox.

1
1
1

'

See story Page 9

at y enttne
•
WhOlesale prices show modest gain

Veterans,Memorial

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

8

Airport bids opened

6

e

(

WE WELCOME YOU
TO TRY OUR NEW
SPECIALTIES
ENJOY THE GREAT
FOOD AND FINE
, ATMOSPHERE
.• •

See

Big ·Brothers' office

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.-~------------.,,

Property transfers

4

or

Try Our Daily

LUNCHEON &amp; DINNER SPECIALS ........... '2.99
BREAKFAST SPECIALS .........................'1.99

(Continued tt;om page 1)
receiving 193 votes whlle his
opporent Kenneth H. Cundiff received 146. Janice Lawson .was
unopposect as clerk-treasurer In
Syracuse and received 290 votes.
Two seats on council were to be filled
but there were no candidates on the
ballot. Write-In candidates, Glenn
Cundiff a nd Oris Hubbard received
25 and 24 votes , respectively . Robert
Cunningham, a write-In candidate
for the. board
public affairs in
Syracuse received 10 votes.
·There was only a race for
clerk-treasurer in the Village of
R utland wtth Deborah Black Gil·
more emerging as the winner over
Brenda S. Weber, 95 to 69. Jolm L .
Miller was reelected mayor of
Rutland. Unopposed he recelved133
votes a nd there were two council
candidates with two seats to be
filled. Elected were Warren G .
Black, 71, and Larry D. Edwards,
36.
Middleport Village hadnoracesln
Tuesday's election. Reelected we~
Mayor ·Fred Hoffman, RepubU~an .
who led the way with 597 votes;
Cler k-Treasurer Jon Buck, R., 519;
councilmen, Wl!UamG. Wallers,R. ,
467, a nd Carl J. Horky, R .. 466.
Thomas R Anderson, 412 votes, and
Lewis H. Sauer , 484, both Republi·
ca ns were unopposed for election to
the Middleport Board of Public
AffaLrs.

_.similar

Flf1ycttBIIIM 1
nftt&amp;ldumS.
·
Ia OIIID, C 5 II
two anU·wnneasures.
Ia San Francisco, prUjli»llluw tD eafon:e ca:e V&lt;*n dlltlallltlllal!l o1 !hem. ''Obloul have turned
nD-IIIIOidnl areas and plea! IIIIIP tilllblttloal on bldt the lllltwl** WOUidhaveCOitcmllatedearly,"
Cllillnictlcll were8tlll tmciDietocaB W•'*•~ .
· C 5 r.llld. "T55Iy llave said no to retul'lllng to the
Mot:w
s1:11J. falr pme ID Maine, Lol Ailp!Pa fl .........l~udfllciallnstablll!yofputyean."
CciliDIYtlll'llld bldt Mil C(ill:tti,.St. Lou11 Nja!ltid •
A ltrmlllue t!lat wou5d haverepee.led all tax laws
lald...,fardr ll'flltlonandSUFraiidlcocallet eaaete tldl ,..... lilcludlng r 90 pe!Clt!llt IDI:aill! tax
larrallldtoPliiiDiurl ballol:a.
.
IDCI n. falled1,119.374tll,efl,«J6,orl!6pel(:entto44
ReltiPiitiOiil paOitrltbil U.S.liMIMment In Central
jlil\SIL
~·

,

America were approved In Boulder, Colo., San
Fraaclaco, and Seattle.
Although lllllllt voters didn't cast ballots on the
queat1on. PhUedelpllla approved a "Jobs With Peace"
lnldatlw 8llllna the ledl!ralpemmmt to increaSe
sp !rcllncmaiGdlllprocrams.atlheexperiseofdefense.

are

-v.- -·
I

.,,,kl&amp;e'!

A secood Issue, which would have required a
three-tlfth&amp; legislative majority to enact future taJt:
increases, lost by an evllJI wider margin, 1,982,797 to
1,~2.961, or 59 percent to 41 ~nt. ·
Cuomo had traveled his stale on behalf of the
"Rebuild New York" bond,andvote!'Swentalongwtth
the reqUI!IIt, optlllg toshoulderahettynewdebtforthe
next fola decades In ncbaace for fewer pollloles,
slurdll!r Ill ~dies and smoother ralllln8. '1111! Ialiy,
wllh99pi!ilBttreportetl, was1,641,3M,or53pl!IU!Iit, tn
favor, and 1,474,114, or 47 percent, opposed.
Advertlsements featuring the cartoon character
Blllwlnkledldn't dl••nade Mrlnevoters, wllodeclded
to keep thelraMualtnt:IOIIehunt. The bid to ban1110011e
hunting failed byaJ.2 margin.

-- -···

.

" Youhave torespectMainepeopleforlheirrespect

· for Individual rights, '' a nti-hunt leader John N. Cole
said.
St. Louis rejected a $63.5 million bond issue ordered
by afederaljudgetohelppay forschooldesegregation.
The vote was 35,129 In favor, 28,402 opposed,, but a
two-thirds majority was required.
L"We wOl examine our options," Superintendent
Jill are Jmes.sald, •
Voters In Rancho Mirage, Call!., sided 1.\ith former
President Gerald F ord and cleared the way for
constructlon ofalwrury hotel andresidentlalcomplex.
Another resident, Frank Sinatra, was among those
wttowantedazonlngchangetoblock the development.
Ford, an Investor, opposed the change wblch failed
1,%;2 to 1,'114.
'
'
'·

~

.......

·- · ---------~-, .,~~---'- · -·- ---- ---~-

.

__ --.)1.

--'*--- .,

..., ... .. .J_; •...: •• :...·~.... -..._ -._.,
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