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Wednetday, $eptember'~,1982

Pomeroy Midd
. ..,
'-port, Oh'10

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Page 12 The Dai Iy Sen tine

Congress working swiftly on ·rail strike legislation
WASH1NGTON (AP) - Congress Is working swiftly to complete legislation that would order
locomotive engineers to end a
strike that officials say Is costing
the already-battered U.S. eConomy
up to $1 billion a day.
After a day of testimony by government, union and management
officials. the measure was rushed
to the Senate floor, where It was
approved by volcevoteTuesdayevenlng with fewer than a dozen senators on the noor.
The retum-to-work order was

The bill's approval by the Senate
Tuesday night was urged by leaders of both parties, Including Sen.
Orrin Hatch, R·Utah, chairman of
the Senate Labor and' Human Resources Committee and the panel's
ranking Democrat, Sen. Edward
M. Kennedy of Massachusetts.
The only dissent In the less than
half-hour of Senate debate was voIced by ,Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
D-Ohlo, who said he thought Congress should never Impose a labor
settlement.
But Lewis, the leadoff wlfness in

hi! hard on the strike's Impact on
the economy.
" ... The well-being of this country
cannot afford a national rail
strike," Lewis testified. "The contlnuatlon of rail freight movements
Is critical, and a protracted strike
would lmperD both the nation's
economy and defense."
He cited estimates that the shutdown, affecting nearly all of the nation's freight railroads as well as
some commuter and Amtrak service, Is costing the economy as
much as $1 bUllon a day.

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MOBILE HOME BUCK
STOVE
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The Buck Stove O.A. draws
the combustion · air that
feeds the fuel from outside the home. This stQve
may be placed at a min- .
theprocEdure
House today
moving
under anthrough
expedited
that r~separ~~a~te:.;;;;;;;;;:::::===;;~~;;~--~
could have II on President Reaimum of 10 inches from
gan's desk by day's end.
SPECIA~ OF THE WEEK!
The measure will take e!!ectlmcombustibles.

m e dl a t ely up o n Reagan's
signature.
Meanwhile, the strike by 26,(lX)
members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engln~s continued into
its fou1th day today.
The walkout has Idled another
400,(lX) railroad workers and Transportation Secretary Drew LewiS
told Congress Tuesday that unless
It ends, up to 500,000 other people In
rail-dependent industrles could be
laid off within two weeks.
Rep. John D. D!ngell, D·Mich ..
called · a meeting of his House
Energy and Commerce Committee
today to consider the stt1ke legisla-

Rea~~:an's

tion, drafted
Monday
wheoonnegotiations onlPr&lt;
broke
down.
··

HAMBURGER

64(

.With Fries....•s1.04

Adolph's Dairy Valley

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Strike cancells
first NFL game

Cross solider's
trip paid off..

Physician faces
multiple charges

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Page 9 ·

Page 16

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Voi.31 ,No.99

"LOCIIed lllhl £nd olthe

Visit our Mechanic St.
Warehouse and find out
more about the Buck
Stove Outside Air heating
system.

By BRIAN FRIEDMAN

Assoelated Press Write
Freight and passenger trains began slowly picking up steam today
as locomotive engineers dropped
their picket signs and work crews
chipped away at the mountain of
cargo tbat piled up across the nation during a cosily four-day strike.
The 26,!XXJ members of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers
yielded to the congressionally mandated settleme nt signed by Presldenl Reagan on Wednesday
afternoon. ending a strike against
117 railroads. Only Coru·all, the fed·
erally subsidized network in the
Nmtheast, was una!!ected because
It had a separate union agreement.
The walkout cost the economy
nearly $1 billion a day by adminlshatlon estimates, forced a half·
million layo!!s, stranded thousands
of commuters and slowed to a
tiickle the delivery of cm·go such as
crops and coal. Several auto plants
were severely affected and had to

Ptmer01-Mnon Bridae."

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Meigs
hoard••..
(Continued from page 1)
necessity procedure due to the time
element Involved because heat will
be needed In the school and the
board wUI ask for Immediate Installation of the new boller.
Supt. Morris was also authorized
to employ a structural engineer to
visit the Pomeroy Elementary
SChool and study possible structural
defects In thai building. The engineer will make a report and recommendations to the board on the
matter. The hoard then moved into
an executive session to dlscuss personnel and finances.
All board members, Bob Barton,
Larry Powell,Richard Vaughan,
Arland King and Robert Snowden
were present along with Supt. Morris, Asst. Supt Cslpenter and
Treasurer Jane Wagner.

DEPOSIT

.MARKET
BACK TO WORK -

A Burlington Norihem

Reagan's signing of lhe emergency bW that returning
striking engineers lo work went Into effect Immediately. ( AP Laserpholo).

crewman ~118 aho&amp;rd an Idled locomotive Wednesday night lo power II up for commuter train runs
whlcb were lo resume Thursday morning. President

After Appalachian Highway

us ·_ 33-35 improvements top
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In
area
SEORC priorities

Six defenda nts forfeited bonds In
the court of Pomeroy Mayor Clar·
ence Andrews Tuesday night. They
are Cheryl wilSon, Racine, $45;
PhyWs Lawson, Pike, Ky., $-17; TImothy Faulk, Columbus,$49; Susan
SalSer, Pomeroy, $47: Erma Yoho.
Pomeroy Pike, $45, and Kenneth
WUt, Minersville, $45, all posted on
speeding charges.

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Two defendants forfeited bonds
in the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Ho!!man Tuesday night.
Buddy Kerns, Evans, W.Va., forfelted a $376 bond pested on a charge ·
of driving whUe Intoxicated, and
Brian Taylor, Middleport, forfeited
$100 pcsted on a disorderly manner
charge.
Fined were Elwyn R. Yost, Mid. dleport, $10 and costs, Improper
starting and backing; Lance Herman, Middleport, $50 and costs, dis·
orderly manner; Michael Dill,
Middlepcrt, $250 and ~ts. three
days In jail, driving while Intoxicated; $25 and costs, !allure to yield
the right of way at an intersection,
and $25 and costs, no operator's license; J a mes Chadwell, Ruttan!!,
Joseph J . Brown, Racine, $25 and
costs each. no baffle plates; Jewell
Mathews, Racine , andJamesCoun·
ell, Langsville, $250 and costs each
and three days in jail, driving while
intoxicated.

Connecting u.s. 33 with the
bridge across the Ohio River at Ravenswood, W.Va., and Improvements to u.s. 35 have been named
as priorities by the Southeast Ohio
Regional CouncD's Highway Users
Committee.
The priorities are the first named
by the committee that go beyond
completion of the James A. Rhodes
Appalachian Highway - which
stiU remains the committee's top
priority.
G. Kenner Bush, committee
chairman,' said the completion of
the Appalachian Highway has been
recognized as a priority by the Appalachian Regional Commission,
Including · Improvements of the
Athens-Albany and the AthensCoolville portions of the highway.
Beyond the Appalachian High- _
way, the committee- has recommended the connection of :i3 to the
Ravenswood bridge, and then to tnterstate 77 as the Jlrst priority for
road projects to be constructed dur- .
lng the remainder of' the decade.
Construction of a four-lane bypass
around Jackson and making U.S. 35
from two to tour lanes from GaUipo. lis to Rio Grande was the committee's second priority.
"Improvements to routes 33 and .
35 are Important because they will
serve as north-south feeder tines,"
Bush said.
·
·
The committee's recommendation calls for construction of a two-

SAVINGS
BANK ONE's new SUPER. SEVEN is a money market
deposit account that matures in only seven days. The ·
interest is normally tiS(j to the 91-day U.S. Treasury Bill rate,
until the Treasury rate falls below 9% for a specified time.
Then banks can pay a higher rate to their customers. Right
now, BANK ONE is paying 10% on the SUPER SEVEN
SAVINGS Plan.
Just keep a minimum depos~ of $20,000'in a
SUPER SEVEN ~you can make additional deposits any
time. Each .deposit also matures in only seven days, so you
always have easy access to your money. The interest rate
on your SUPER SEVEN will change weekly, So you can be
assured that you will always earn fair money market rates.
Now is a great time to put your money back in.the bank.
Stop:by any BANK ONE office for details. ·

Free clothing day set
The Gallla-Melgs Community
Action Agency will hOld Its free clothing day for low income famUies
on Friday, Sept. 24, from 9 a .m . until 12 noon. The agency's clothing
bank Is located In the old high
school building In Cheshire.

Veterans Memorial

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lane ro a d on a four -lan e
right-of-way from where 33 Intersects with Ohio 7 near the Meigs
County Fairgrounds at Rock
Springs, to the new bridge at
Ravenswood .
"This connection would provide a
direct link with I-77 at Ravenswood,
and would setVe as a major northsouth route between Columbus and
.9harleston," Bush said.
Bush said the priorities were
named following meetings with
chamber of commerce officials
from Pomeroy, Gallipolis, Pmtsmouth and Chlllicothe. The committeealsometwlthDavldL . Weir,
director of the Ohio Department of
Transportation, to discuss which
highways would have the best
chance of being constructed during
the 198Js.
Duling a committee meeting
Tuesday, members heard a progress re(iort on the construction of
of three remaining gaps In the Appalachian Highway by Jim Wa t·
klns, acting deputy director of
ODO'I:,' s District 9 office In
Chillicothe. ·
The report, In summary. said:
-sardinia to Macon, started In
No~ember 1981. now 40 percent
complete, with some grading and
PaYing work completed. The project Is scheduled lor completion In
October 1983 and Is now 5 percent
ahead· of schedule.
-Macon to Winchester, started

In June 1982, some grading work
has been completed. The job Is now
21 percent complete, with a finish
date set for May 31, 1984. Officials
are hopeful the section can be completed next year.
-Winchester to Seaman, started
In February 1982, n9w 43 percent
complete and 7 percent ahead of
schedule, with some basic paving
already completed. Scheduled
completion date Is Sept. 30, 198.l

Front loader bid ·
commission topic
The bid for a front end loader for
the Meigs County Highway Deparment was discussed Wednesday at
a meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
Meeting with the commissioners
to discuss the bid were Philo Roberts , county engineer, Ted
Warner, highway superintendent
and J im Allen of Southeast Equipm ent Co.
1n other business , Davld Koblentz, commissioner, was appointed to The Litter Control Board
and road problems In the Arbaugh
addition In Tuppers Plains was
discussed .
Attending were Henry Wells,
president, Richard Jones and Koblentz, commissioners, and Martha Chambers, acting clerk.

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M·eigs project g~~s approval;
Coolville facility..given funds
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\)hlo's 1002 Appalachla,n DevelopWASHINGTON· Meigs County ·,
Meanwhile, In Columbus, Gov.
haS been app!Wed for a $1.!1 mllllo11 James A. Rbodes today announced ment Project lnveslment Package
contains approximately $3.9 mllHUD grant for constructlol) of. a apptoval of a $22.!m inmt from the
new elderly hOusing comllk!J$, ac- Appalachian Regional Commission llon In funding proposal~ for Ohio's
·. cording to an announcement this totheVillagll!ofCoolvllleforsecond '28 Appalachian counties In areali of
bealth, enterprise develOpment,
momlng from the otflce of Ccing. year operatlnt ~ to tiM! Cool. Clarence Mlller;
v111e Health Care
child development, energy, educa... 'lbe .complex, sponsored by the
• The giant will be si.PP~emented don, Infant mortaUty reduction,
Meigs ~ty Senior Otlzens. 0r: · with WP.l'l9 frOnt loCal IIOUJ'CeS.
bouslng, research and demonstra·
pnlzatlon and the Melli Coonty The C11J!Ier provltles ambulalory tlon and local · access road
COOunlsaloo, Is planned for con· service to resldellts ~ Atbens, "construction.
· ·ltructlon alonr the new road be- Meigs and Waablngtoa Coontles.
~ the Mulben'y Height. pubJic
'The project ~- lubmttted for
ARC Is a state-fedl,&gt;ral partnerhldldlnl complex and UnloG. Ave.· approval by the Oblo ~t · ship whlcll promotes the economic
!be road CJill!l.led up a lllllliber of ci ~lop{nent's"APP!'I•chtan• Of:· al.i suct8l development of the Ap0( ~· owned W., b- de- . lice willctt admiBistel's the ARC
pallicb!aJi ~n of the United

cemer:

Seek volunteers
The Mell!li Athletic Boosters are
asking for volunteers this evening
and ThurscJay at 6 p.m. to work 011
· the new track area at the high
schoOL Persons are asked to bring
garden rakes and shoVels.

1.5 Centa

A Multimedia In(. Newspaper

•·educe production or close .
" It will be so11 of a sigh of l'f'il ef
for the grain industry ," said Rod
Turnbull, spokesman for the Kansas City Board of Trade. "There's
no use growing It if you can't move
it ...
Although engineers were back on
the job within hours of the president's signature on the legislative
order, railroad officials did not expect operations to return to full service until Friday afternoon at the
earliest. Some said It would be Sunday before the freight was moving
at full steam.
" It will be a couple of days before
things get back to near normal."
said John Bromley. a Union Pacific
spokesman In Utah. "The system Is
quite lnhicate and flu id, and It
takes a few days for things to get
rolling."
Service was expected to retu rn to
normal today lor commuters In
. Chicago, Boston. Sa n Francisco
and other cities outside the Nor-

theasl Conidor which depend on
train service.
"We anticipate a norma l rush
hour" today for the estimated
120,000 Chicago-area commuter
train riders. said Chicago Regional
Transportation Authority spokeswoman Joyce Macdonald.
Amtrak, whose trains in the
Midwest, South and West were
halted by the st1ike, resumed service today, a lthOugh o!!lclals salti
full operations wouldn't be bac k on
t: ack untu tonight. About1B,(lX) of
the system's 55,000 da ily riders
were affected by the strike.
The first Amtrak train to stat1 up
again was the Desert Wind, which
runs from Ogden, Utah. to Los An·
geles. Amtrak officials said. It
pulled out at12:05 a .m . today- six
minutes late. according to an Am·
trak spckesman who asked not to
be Identified. He added he didn't
know how many pa ssenge1·s were
aboard but said there were "very ,
very few."

Center threatens employee layoffs

Mayor's court

Admitted--Woodrow Campbell,
Pomeroy; Kathleen Anthony, Mid·
~; ~I ,McDonald, Ruttaiid; DeWayrieDlfi, Racine; Elva
Birch, Racine; Eva Shaffer, Ra·
cine; Elma Reuter, Rutland.
Discharged-Carrie Snyder, Howard Aleshire, Ruby Halllday and
Margaret Wyatt.

2 S&amp;etions., 16 Pag••

Rail strike ends

PomtrOJ, OH.

to secure the new boller through a

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, September 23,1982

Copyrithled 1982

PH. 992-2556
570 W. MaiR

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wbi!Dtt w88 liullt
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P.roKram
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By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP staff writer
The staff and clients of the GalllaJackson-Melgs Community Menta l
Health Center may become victims
of the bitter feud between the center and the three-county 848-hoard. '
The me ntal health center m ay
lay off 80 to 100 employees because
the 648 board Is holding back a
$137,500 fedeml block grant earmarked for the center. said Bernard Niehm, center director.
Center and 648 board officials
agree that layoffs would severely
damage c lie nt services, but both
blame each other for the situation.
Center direCtor Beman! Nlehm
said the 64B board is "trying to dominate the center through holding
back the funds ."
He cla ims the 648 board uses Its
funding powers to manipulate the
center.
648 board executive db'ector
Maxine Plummer claims she has
no choice but hold back the funds.
"Il he (Niehm) Is going to com promise his clients and staff to
make Q pclnt, I'd say he's incom petent," Plummer said.
648 board administrator Dan
SChwendeman said his boa rd was
surp1ised to discover the center
was having financial difficulties.
The 648 board learned through
the news media the mental health

cente r was planning layoffs and
lea rned from the slate the center
had bo11·owed $100,(lX) recently, he
said.
However. lhe center's August fl.
nanclal repor1 showed they had a
balance of over $100,000, SChwendeman said.
"How could we know they were
having problems?" Schwendeman
asked.
Because the center had bonowed
money despite the repc1ted balance, Schwendeman said he and
other officials decided they needed
to examine the center's financial
records.
However . center officials refu sed
several attempts Wednesday by 648
hoard officials to Inspect Its books.
Schwendeman said .
Another problem arises because
the center and the 648 board have
been operating without a contrac t
s ince the beginning of the fiscal ·
year July 1.
Plummer said the state a uditor
has told her the board should not
r elease funds s ince It does not ha ve
a contract with the center.
According to Nlehm, however,
the 648 board has no right to hold
back the block grants.
" Wf' earned the funds. They're
not the 648 board's." Nlehm sa id .
He said the center's books are
open for Inspection, but claimed the

648 board is making unreasonable
demands.
648 hoat·d officials appeared without notice Wednesday and asked to
see the fi nancial records immediately, he said.
Niehm sa id he, director of operations Male hom Orebilugh and fiscal
officer Bill Cantre ll were all unava ilable Wednesday to show the
records.
Center officials are willing to
schedule a time Thursday evening
or Ftiday to make them available,
he said.
The lack of a contract should not
be a n Issue in the release of the
block grant. Niehm said.
He sa id the contract the648 hoard
has proposed would take away all
a utonomy from the center. The 648
board has refu sed to negotia te a
contract which would be acceptable to both agencies, he sa id.
Niehm said If the block grant
funds are not relf'ased in "a day ot·
two" staff mem bers will be officia lly notified of layoffs .
Eventually, the entire staff of
about 140 may have to be laid off If
the center ca nnot receive funds, he
sa id.
Plummer said the 648 board
would consider putting center employees on Its payroll to keep services going.

Brr-brr--cold winter ahead!
By Associate Press .
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. - Remember the miserable winter of
'82? Some forecasters say the
coming winter wUI be even
worse - even though predicting
the weather that far ahead may
be more a11 than science.
Today Is the first daj of fa ll,
and everyone agrees that's a
sure sign cold weather is not far
behind. But coming up with a
more specific forecast depends
on whether you subscribe to the
sunspot theory, the volcano theory or simple Intuition.
Hurd C. Willet of Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
says the prediction of a cold winter Is "almost unanimous," but
National Weather Service forecasters are, to putit kindly, skeptical of their Indepe ndent
colleagues' prognostications.
"1n principle, It may be possl·
ble to predict this far ahead,"
said i:loitald L. Gilman, chief of
long-range forecasting for the
weather service. "TherealQUt:S·
don Is: Do we luive the tools now
't o do It?"
' Gilman doesn't think so. U the
weather service put out a winter
fOrecast now', he said he's lay
odds that It ~ be 52 percent
correct - mt much better than

iupptng a coin.

To a forecaster . winter Is December, J anuary a nd February. The weather service holds
off its winter prediction until late
November. Gilman says it averages a bout a 64 perce nt
reliability.
Willett, a professor emelitus
at MIT, is one of a few meteorologists who ma ke very longrange forecasts. He puts his
faith In sunspots. "My forecast
Is for a· very cold winter this
year, with the coldest weather in
the eastern United States . and
. not so cold in the Far West," he
said. "A very cold winter would
be five or six degrees below normal for the average of the
winter."

He expects January to be the
nippiest month, with temperatures eight degrees below normal in parts of the country.
Wlllett says this winter could be
the coldest of the century, but It
depends on whether sunspot activity continues to be low, something that has not happened for
the past two years.
Willett b,elleves that sunspots,
magnetic stOrms on the sun's
surface, come and gq In very
long
In 1975, he says, an
80-yearcycle )Iegan. This means
that sunspot activity should be
101\' for about·two decades.

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ThutSday, September 23,1982

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Commentary

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WASHINGTON - Loren Jenkins, The Washington Post reporter
who flrst smelled the death In Shatllla camp In Beirut, reported that
he counted 46 bodies before he became too slck to goon. Six thousand
mlles away, I knew how he felt.
If you believe Israelis responsible for the massacres in the Palestinian camps- and I have contempt
for the denials and lylng coming
dally from Tel Aviv these past four
months - then we, too, are hardly
without blame. We, Americans, are
all Israells,ln the sense that John F.
Kennedy once sald he was a
Berliner.
We, the taxpayers of the United
States, are paying for much of the
slaughter in Lebanon. The Amerl·
can subsidy - most of It In military
aid - f01· each resident of Israelis
now more than $&amp;Kl per year. But
our relatlonshlp with Israel - pa·
tronage or brotherhood - goes
much deeper than financial ties.
Over the years, we have received
tab· value, at least, for the Amerl·
can money, public and prtvate, crlt· .
leal to Israel's existence and
survival. The ties that bind us, after
all, are historical, political, stra·
teglc and, most ot all, moral.
At the end of World War II, the
United States, nobly, calrolatlngly
and perhaps a bit foolishly, assumed the historical debts of the
West, of the exhausted European
powers. One or those debts was to
the Jews of the world. Even before
the Holocaust, the Brltlsh, rulers of
Arabia before the war, had prom·
!sed Jews a desert hOmeland and
that promise was kept, wlth the
United States paying most of the
bllls.
Polltlcally, that commitment
was welcomed by most Americans
-especially, of course, by American Jews. And Jews, although less
than three percent of the nation' s
population, have provided a disproportionately hlgh percentage of na·

ROBERT I.. WINGETT
BOB HOEFI.ICH

,\ 'Iiiii Ili IIl l'uhll ~ h l• rf( ' nut r nllt · r

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

A MEMBER nl Tht• A l&lt;i~ udatt"d l'rt s~. ln)unc.l Ou ih l'rt'"" A,.M II iuliull unll lht·
·
,\ nn·ri• a n N • · ~A s pctprr Publi ~ h•· n~ Asstwliltinn.

I.FTIEKI'I OF OPINION an· .,.,.,, .,m,·d Tht&gt;\' s ho~ltl tw 11.,. ,. th:111JM "'""' ~ t.. ug. All

l..tt• •r" Ht' ~ ubjt&gt;d tu t&gt;dilill,l( and mu ~ l

tw s l,l(;wcl wiLh rwnll', utldrr~ h inld t.-lt-phum•
uumhn. Nu uruil~lk'tl l t"'h•n; 'll"ill bt- puh!lsht•d . l.t•ttt•rs l'l hnultl ht• int:nnd Uls tt•. addrrs~ in,l(

IS.\ Ut'll , nul prrsunalltlt&gt;s .

Tough language
and Israel
President Reagan Is using particularly tough language these days when
he talks about Israel.
But his rhetoric, In the view of some members of the Jewish community,
Isn't as tough as some of his policies.
Still, among representatives of the nation 's Jews In Washington, there !sa
feeling that Reagan may be the best friend Israel has had In the White House
since Harry S. Truman. But, they feel , the steps hls adrnlnlstratlon has
taken do not reflect that.
Recent public opinion surveys, taken before the slaughter of Palestlntans
In refugee camps In west Beirut that were under Israeli control, show
Increased Jewish support for Republicans In general.
According to pollster Louis Harrls,ln the 1~ congressional campaign 68
percent of the Jewish vote went to Democrats and 22 percent went to
Republicans. This year, he says, swveys show that 63 percent are supportIng Democratic congressional candidates and 26 percent are backing
Republicans.
Surveys on the president's handling of the Lebanon crisis show a nationw,lde negative rating of 51 percent. with40percentposltlve. But In the Jewish
community, that rating Is 64 percent negative, Harris said.
·"It Is a bit more anti-Reagan on that issue," the pollster said, adding that
the conflict In Lebanon " Is not helping hlnn with the Jewish vote, but It
doesn't look like It Is crippling him, either."
Jews make up 2.7 percent of the U.S. population, but their Impact on
politics Is greater than that because they make up at least 4 percent of the
voting population, according to Hyman Bookbinder of the American Jewish
Committee.
:One lobbyist, a representative of a Jewish organization, said that In 1~.
American Jews voted for Reagan "In unprecedented numbers because of
their antlpa thy to J lmmy Carter." Harris' figures Indicate tha !54 percent of
the voting Jews chose Carter, 24 percent chose Reagan, and 14 percent
supported Rep. John Anderson, an lhdependent candidate.
"Where doeS the Jewish community stand today 7 " asked the lobbyist,
who requested anonymity for himself and the group he represents. "Support tor Ronald Reagan Is considerably less than It was on Election Day."
The lobbyist commented aliout Reagan that "whatever you think of his
policies, In his heart he considers hlmsel,f a friend of Israel." "The policies of
his administration do not reflect his personal opinions," he said.

COLUMBUS, Ohlo (AP) - Slg·
nals In the Statehouse Indicate not
only another round of statetaxhlkes
but the posslblllty of more local
taxes as well.
No decision has been made, but
one of the recommendations made
to the Legislature's joint tax study
committee Is to let municipalities
enact Income taxes In excess of one
percentage (Xllnt without a vote of
thepeople.
·
The committee was told by the
Ohio Municipal League that not only
Me state, but many of Its cities are
on the financial rocks. Barring the
arrival of the long-awaited economic recovery, services In many
clUes may have to be severely
curtailed.
Most of Ohio's blg clUes already

When Internal growth Is thwarted by a weak economy, fear of risk-taking
or simply by poor management, big business frequently decides to stalk the
other fish In the sea.
The results can be very Impressive. Sales surge, and maybe profits too.
The mergedcompanlesmlght beabletoreducecosts. They might bust Into
the Fortune 500 llstofblggestcompanles. The boss becomes a verypower1ul
man.
Those aren't the only reasons for the spate of mergers. Sometimes a
smaller company is stalked because It has a load of Idle cash. And sometimes that smaller company Itself goes on the hunt just because it has the
cash to do so.
Often a company ls sought because its product line complements that of
the acquiring company or helps the acqulrer diversify.
But aslde from sometimes questionable benefits to the acquiring parties,
does anyone really gain from a takeover? Lois of people.
By their own pre-arrangement, officers of the acquired company regardless of merlt or lack of it - might losethelr jobs but stJJI float to an
easy landing with blg pensions, popularly and derisively known as golden
parachutes.
.
SharehOlders of the acquired company might gain, especially If their
stock has been selling far below the offering price, a common occurrence
these days. And, less commonly, the acquiring company's shareholders
might gain too.
.
Speculators gain, especially If they have early word on·the plans of the
acquiring company. And it happens too, In spite of the Secwities and
Exchange Commission's efforts to eflforce Immediate disclosure of such
lnforma tlon.
Underwriters who handle the offering make money, of course, and so do
the armies of lawyers that generally participate In such deals. Suits are
common, and even when they are not Involved, mammoth piles of legal
papers are.
But there are others for whom benefits are rare, and many who might
sufterbeeauseofthemerger.Employeessometlmeslosetheirjobsbeeause
of duplleatlons when two staffs are merged.
one sad consequence Is when the acquired company declines, along with
lts jobs, because the larger company cannot manage It properly.
In a larger context, the question that today plagues academics and
recteral regulators Is whether mergers strengthen the country.
Manyeconomlsts,regulatorsandothersputupastrongargumentthatln
a world economy the United States needs "World-size" business organizations In order to compete effectively. Against, for example, Japanese
trading concerns.
·
In theOry, large companies are better able to oifer economies of volume
and toengagelnJong.tennresearch;butwhetherornottheydolsdebatable.
Some are as badly iled up In bureaucracies as the federal agencies they
criticize.

h~story

·

.

I

6" &amp; 10"
.
LEAP FROG - Clclnnatl Reds' shortstop Dave Concepcion goes to
· the air to avoid the slldlnj~ San FrancisCo Giants' base nmner, Chill
Davis, during the fifth Inning of a game, Wednesday night In Clnclnnatl.
Davis was forced at second on teammate Duane Kuiper's double play
ball to Reds' pitcher Mario Soto. Concepcion threw on to first to complete the double play. (AI' Laserphoto).

'

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R!ciJ8tcl;l

I

Giants Manager Frank Robinson
sald he decided to remove Martin,
who has just one complete game In
23 starts this season, when Alex Trevino led off tho eight with a single to
center. Robinson said he thOught
Martin deserved a victory, and the
bullpen had the beSt chance of notch·.
lng it.
"No, 1 didn't sense that he was
tiring _ I just felt that It was time to
take him out," Robinson said. "He
hasn't been out there that much
lately, or thrown that many pitches. ·

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Rutland club participated ln the
competition wlth the top 10 In scores
being Rlck Boln, Buck McNeal,
Mark Pierce, R.T. Stewart, Larry
Sayre, Greg Peckham, Paul Sea·
rles, Glen Crisp, Clyde Sayre wlth
Dave Davis and Perry Kennedy tyIng for the lOth spot.
Syracuse toPs Portland
Other shooters were Tom Crisp,
Bobby
Wllllamson, Roger Black,
The Syracuse fifth and sixth
Spires,
Van Willford, Mike WilTim
grade football team defeated Porlford.
Bill
Biggs,
Charlie Neutzllng,
tland Tuesday 6446.
Phil
Weaver,
David
Petry, a cub
Chris Stewa11 threw three touch·
with
the
second
highest
_score In the
down passes to Chlis Stout. Stout
shoot,
Burt
Kennedy,
and Mrs.
also Intercepted a pass and went 30
Larry
Sayre
and
Mrs.
Clyde
Sayre.
yards for a TD.
Todd Lisle, Chuck Buckley and
Pelle Hendrix also caught passes
for TO's for the winners. Syracuse
coaches are Mike Stewa11, Rollle
Stewart and Lan'y'Taylor.

Rutland Bow Hunters Club lJe.
came the thlr!l place Ohlo State
championship team In the statewide competition held Sunday at
Polecat AJchery near Grove City.
TwentY-three shooters from the

.

•

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~

have Income taxes In excess of 1
percent, Toledo being the highest at
2.2&gt; percent. But In each,lnstance,
voters had to agree before the rate
could advance.
The study committee Is not studyIng a specific figure but It Is believed
the lawmakers would set some kind
of a llmlt on taxes which could be
enacted bY localleglslatlvf bodies.
Currently, among the bigger cltles, Colunnbus has the lowest In·
come tax with 1.5 percent, although
a hike ls being sought.
· - Akron, Canton, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Parma, Springfield, and
Youngstown aU have a 2 percent
tax. Dayton has 1.75 percent.
Cincinnati's tax .was last In·
creased In 1973, Dayton's In 1974,
and Springfield's In 1979. All the oth·

ers ln the group have Increased
since 1979, Canton's and Toledo's
having been boosted this year.
Most smaller Ohio m\11\lclpalltles
do not have Income taxesassteepas
·
the larger cities.
Gallipolis and Rlo Grande both
currently have Income taxes of 1
percent.
However, Galllpolls voter,; will be
asked to approve a one-quarter pePcent Increase In their Income tax
this November.
While larger cities may need In·
come tax Increases to fund basic
services, the proposed .Increase In
Gallipolis would he to finance a
swimming pool and related
facilities.
This proposed Increase would last
eight years.

On the state scene, several critl·
cal money problems loom, IncludIng the expiration next July of $600
mllllon In temporary taxes the Legislature enacted earlier this year to
~P bills paid until the end of the
current blennlunn.
It would take a splrlted boosfln
the economy' to create enough jobs
and sales to fill the $600 million void
just tokeepstateseiVIces.atexlstlng
levels.
The committee, headed by Sen.
Richard H. Finan, R-Cinclnnatl,
and Rep. William E. Hlnlg, D·New
Phlladelphla, Is !Iylng to digest a
myriad of state tax proposals which
Include Increasing the state Income
taxandrepeallngtaxroUbacksubsl·
dies to local governments, among
others.

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mles of peace and human freedom.
What, serlopsly, does this Peru· .
vian smoothle expect the world to
think of an organization whose Hu·
man Rights Commission can labor
for a year and come up with a list of
22 violations of the U.N.'s vaunted
Universal Declaration- of Hutnan
Rights, not one of them In any coun·
try behind the Iron Curtain?
"This book Is my l'!lllglon," he
told a Times reporter, pointing to a
bOund copy of the United Nations
Charter. Maybe he ought to try
some new religion. The bOOk he
worships Is just possibly the bi"ggest
collect!on of hYpocrtses ~d out·
right lies since Baron Corvo's
memoirs.
Unfortunately though predlcta·
bly, the secretary-general's pro- ·
posed remedy for the weaknesses
of 1his organization woold oiuy
make matters Infinitely worse. Instead of trying to steer the U.N.
gently away from Us constant ridiculous attempts to run the world- a
task for which It bas neither the ·
mandate, tile Infrastructure, the
power or the .sheer .political compe.
tence - Perez de Cuellar
only to equlp .the u.~. with.enough
clout to make Its orders stick: His
annual r~r't calls on the Security

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CouncU to bolster Us alieged efforts
for peace with "explicit ~n~arantees
for collective or lndlvldual suppor·
live action" - meaning Sanctions,
at least economic and If necessary
military, against nations that defy
lts wishes. There has been no more
grotesque confusion of roles $lnce
the Carnegie Endowment for Inter·
national· Peace Issued,- some years '
ago, Us Insane study or how many
aircraft carriers (llld divisions It
would take to Invade and ovethrow
the Republic of South AfriCa:
I happen to Uve atiout nine blocks
from the U.N., and no doubt farnlltarlty has bred contempl. I have
seep lts tax-exempt stat( and all
those well·fed "dlmploll)ats" sashaying around town In long, black
limousines, largely at our expense.
I also know just how recently
some of these grandees were living
· In mud huts, If not trees. And If I can
help it I am not about to see my
country, or free ml!ll anywhere, ordered around by a gaggle of phonies who lumi sold their WOrthleSs
votes to the Soviet Union In return
for the adulation that Is still avauable, In this sick world, to PEOPle Wnnng ·to make rude noises at the
United States Of Ari'lertCa. ·

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berO'av.doolneaftertbeCarilpDavidsummltwithlsraellPrtmeM!nlSta: ;~
MenachE!m Begin.
I
On tJdi date: . • . . .
.
. .
. . .·
In 1719, John Paul Jones. aboard the U.S. warship Bon Homme
. defeJtecl the cruntess of sc8ituough ott the ea8t ~ ~ Brit$.. ,
,

the standards they profess. Without
a base of demonstrated moi1il.lty,
Israel would just be a poor eountry
.with advanced weaponry. The
Iranians, the Vietnamese, the Ru&amp;slans do not seem to feel the·need to
come to public grips with their massacres. We, however, must llnderstand how a group of our. young
men can be responsible for sme:
thing like My Lal - and Shatllla
and Sabra are M My Lals.
It Is our standards, our rhetoric,
our morality that Is being iliJIIled
down In Lebanon -and 1ol(e are paylng for the bullets. That Is what
Menachem Begin, who began his
publlc life as a terrorist and -seems
determined to end It as one, has
done with our love and money.

for us. We're not expected to win
day·ln and day-out . There's no pres·
sure to win.''
Martin gave up a lead-off, llnedrlve single to Dan Driessen In the
second Inning, when the Reds
mounted their biggest scoring
threat. Martin also Issued two of his
four walks that Inning, loading th(!
bases with two out. But he got Soto to
ground Into a flelder's choice and
end the threat.
The Reds got only two other
ru!Ulers In scoring position the rest
of the way.

~--

Ignored by most of the world was
NEW YORK (NEA) -;rhere Is
such a rare departure from the cus·
nothing qutte · so stale as yestet'·
tomary self-adulation over at that
day's pieties, so lt was a distinct
bat·belfry on East 43rd Street that It
rellef the other day when that Peru·
vlan with the unpronounceable made the top of page one In The
New York Times one day last
name -Javier Perez de Cuellar week.
who Is secretary-general of the Unl·
One would think the point was alte&lt;l Nations finally admitted the
near-total Impotence of his most too obvious to bear making.
The secretary-general's efforts to
organization.
It would be asking too much to meditate the Falkland Islands disexpect him to endorse what Amerl· pute between Brltaln and Argen:
ca's U.N. Ambassador Jeane Kirk· tina had, If anything, less Influence
palrlck pointed out several months on developments there thaD the
ago: that the U.N. Isn't even a de- town meeting of WOOdstock, Vt.,
pendable "force for peace," tend· had on the prospects for a nuclear
lng on the contrary, In many freeze. The repeated demands of
Instances, to "prolong and exacer- the Security Council for a ceaseftre
In Lebanon, and for the wlthdqlwal
bate confilcts."
But the secretary-general's ad- of Israeli !rooPli, only ·brought to
mission was a step, however lnad· mind FOR's wisecrack when told,
shortly after Pearl Harbor, !Ut
vertent, In the right direction which, as far as I am concerned, Is Bulgaria had declared war on the
for the United States to recognize United States: "Did you ever hear
what a tireless servant of the an ant break wind In a
Communist-Third World bloc the .thunders toni!?"
From Afghanistan to Cambodia,
U.N. has become, and pull out of U
and from Central America to the
altogether.
It will give you some Idea of the valley of the Tigris and Euphrates,
distance tl)e U.N. '.usually main- the recoltl of the United Nations Is
tains between Itself and reality to not only one·of unrelieved and a~ .
learn that Mr. Perez de Cuellar's ject !allure but all too. often· one. of
blunt admission of the well-known servDe obedience to those nations
are the real enefact that the U.N. Is being defied or and forceS that
,.

;J!IIt9.

In the year.
•
i
Tlxlay's hlghllght In history:
·
On Sept. ;J.
Egypljan President Anwar Sadat returned borne to a

I

lcs to maintain the ~!elf-Images cen·
tral to ourex!Stenceandsurvtvalas the people proud to call
themselves ".Americans" .or
"Israelis."
The current leaders of Israel, and
many of their AmeriCan suwer·
ters, have dlsmlsSI!\1, with contempt and with the phtase "double
standard," argumentsaboutlossof
"moral capital."
"Who judges Iran and Iraq,
whose fratricide kUfs mOre people
each day .. ." ;ISks Albeit Vorspan,
vlce president of the Union of Amerlean Hebrew Congregations. ''Is Is·
mel · alone to be measured by
severe moral stanjlards?"
No, not Israel alone. The United
States and Israel, the nationS of
moral rhetortc, should be judged by

Hyprocrisy
in
spangles
.

Today' ~ Th~••Sept. 23, the 266th clay of um. There are99 days left!

ms,

tlonalleadershlp and (before public
financing laws) of the ful)dlng of
Democratic presidential campaigns. That kind of transoceanic
link was as American as apple ple
- my polyglot country fought two
world wars In the Interests of my
ancestral homelands, the lands of
the Anglo-Saxons.
Even If those things had not been
true, It would be In our strategic
Interest to ally with Israel, tJ;le dom·
lnant and consistently dependable
military power lnoneoftheworld's
most valuable and troublesome
corners.
But, beyond and above all that, Is
the shared morality of the two democracies. We are both big-talking
nations that must try to live up to
our magnltlcent and moral rhetor·

Page

trade strikeQuts for .wins

CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati' · Martin, whowalkedfourandstruck
Reds' right·hander Mario Soto
out three. "They hit the ball pretty
would trade In some of his ample wellacoupleoftlrnes, but Igotafew
strikeouts for a more scarce breaks."
Martin figured the third-place
coll'U110dlty.
·"I wish I only had 100 strikeouts Giants will need a lot more breaks If
and 31 Wins," Soto lamented, after they're to overtake the Los Angeles
he was out-dueled by San Francis- Dodgers and Atlanta Braves for the
co's Renle Martin In the Giants' 2.0_ National '4!ague West title. The
Giants are 4'h games behlnd Los
victory Wednesday _night.
Soto whiffed nine In eight Innings Angeles wtth 11 games to play.
"We have to get almost every
. to raise his strikeout total to 259 and
break
Imaginable," Martin said.
tie Philadelphia's Steve Carlton for
"We
play
the Dodgers six more
the major-league lead. He also ImWe'll
probably havetowlnall
times.
proved his solid earned run average
six.''
_to 2.79, but saw hisrecordfallto13-l2
Martin sald the Giants' long·shot
as his tealllJ)llltes failed to muster
position
doesn't necessarily apply
any offense against Martin and repressure
to the club.
liever AI Holland.
"We
know
people don't expect us
Martin, 7-8, blanked the Reds on
to
win,"
Martin
sald. "Since spring
two hits untU Holland came on In the
training,
everybody
has said bad
eighth to hOld Cincinnati hitlEss the
stuff
about
the
Giants,
that things
rest of the way and plck up his fourth
are
just
not
going
to
work
out.
save.
"I think that works as a positive
"I had pretty good control," said

Statehouse signals indicate more taxes

Business mergers:
good or bad?

Today in

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Ill Cuurl Strnt
Punlt·r .. v. llh iu
614-992-! 156
\t r n :U T HTIU: INU :RF..4iTIIFTitE Mf. IGS- MASON AREA

PAT WHITEHEAD

2-1111.Dally Senltnll ·
PonllloY' Mlclcfhput; Qhlo :
Thunday, S.,lember 23,1912

Israel, morality_____~...._____ h........~r;-.d-Re_ev-....es

The Daily Sentinel
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The Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~unday. Septet .... 23,1982

Thursday, Septembet" 23,1982

TT~~------------~~~============~~==~,

Union says payments
serve as scare tactic

By A.!I!OCiated Press
ABC was supposed to telecast a
National F'ootball League game tonight. The gamP won't be played,
but I he network will pay the league
regardless in a move the players'
union leadership says is designed to
scare sttiklng players.
CBS and NBC also wUJ pay for
games this weekend and next even lf
there is nothing to show. Tonight's
At lanta-Kansas City game was
ca lled off Wednesday by the NF'L
and the rest of the thlrd weekend
was in danger of fa lling victim tot he
league's first in -season walkout.
"All 28 teams will receive full TV
payments for two weeks," Art Modell. owner of the Clevela nd Browns
and a member of the NF'L television
committee, said Wednesday . "At
least two weeks, maybe more, It 's
open-ended."
But NF'L Commissioner Pete Rozelle said that lfthestrlkelasts more
than two weeks, the networks would
stop paying. He also said that the
networks' two-week losses would be
recovered next year.

"It Is evidence of the league and
networks working together to scare
the players,'' said Ed Garvey, executive director of the NFL P layers
Association. "It Is part oft heir effort
to weaken the players' resolve . It
won't work."
The league will collect Sll million
to $32 million from the networks in
the next two weeks. Although the
NF'L was unable to buy strike Insurance- as team owners did during
last year's baseball strike - It has a
$!51-million line of credit with a consort ium of banks.
The NF'L's decision marked the
first time In the63-yearhistoryotthe
teague that a game was halted by a
strike. The playerswalkedoutTues·
day because the union and the club
owners were unable to complete a
collective bargaining agreement to
replace the one which expired July
15.
Negotiations brokeoffF'ridayand
none are scheduled.
The first slgnofaposslblecrack in
the solidarity of the union ca111e
from New Orleans, where team

" I have already spoken to a
number of the Saints a nd they are
behind me abou t aba ndoning the
wage scale," said Erxleben."! am
still In the process of contacting the
team . If the majority Is against It, I
will call up and say, 'Hey, Ed (Garvey), my team doesn't want It

anymore.'''
"I think somebody Ms got to step
out and dpsomethlng. lftheplayers
want the wage scale, tine. But I
thtnk there are a lot of people thinkIng like we do.

flat side last week, a 29-0 loss to
powe11u1 Warren Loca l. You can
•·est assured a Chyrley Chancey
coached 11 won't be that way two
weeks running, which brings to
mind an ot' war story.
Back In 1968, the second Meigs
Marauder footba ll tea m, was
" flat " In a 28-6 loss to Pt. Pleasant
In front of the ho111e folks . A week
later Meigs tm-e out of their loc~er
room at Nelsonville a nd two how-s
later, above ·a field stre wn with
cracked "Buckeye" shells read a
sco1-eboa rd, Meigs 30, NelsonvllleYork .0. That ranked as one of the
mo s t - In s pir ed Marauder
pe1formances.
In scouting •·epo11s of the Maraudel-s, Natoli said, "Meigs has
played three good games. We won't
take them lightly. They have the
best fundamentalist coach (Chancey) I've ever seen,JNe are really
Impressed with Burdette IChris)
and Taylor (Greg),"
In 11 previous meetings, the Ma·
ra ude1-s hold a commanding 9·2
edge. Waverly last won In m insoaked 12-6 squeaker at Waverly In
191ll. Meigs won l'ast year, 43-21.
Weather foreca st calls for warmIng trend F'rlday (60s) but a slight
chance of showers. Typical football
weather. See ya' F'rlday.

DeLamielleure feels he's underpaid
CLEVELAND (AP) - Football
fans who think an $85,001 annual
salary for a player is high s hould
think twice, says Joe DeLamlelleure, a 10-yea r National F ootball
League veteran.
"My wife and I sat down and figured It out. Over the 10 years I've
played pro football, I have earned
an average of $65,001 a year, not
counting the bonuses I was paid for
making the AU-Pro teams," said the
six-time All-Pro lineman who was
traded to the Cleveland Browns in
1980.
"If those bonuses a re included,
the average goes up to $85,001 a
year. Ask the fans what they think of
that? "
DeLamielleure says fans should
look past the salary figures.
" I've been fortunate," he said .
•'I've never known a serious injury.
But I know, as we all do, that my
next play could be my last, tha t I
could get hurt a nd .never be able to
play a nother game.
"That's something most of the
fans don't think about.''
Players routinely fa ce many
acheS and pains lha t aren't common
to other jobs, he said.

"It goes with the terrttory and we
know tha t," saldDeLamlelleure,31.
"But how many of the fans are
awareoflt? Andhowmanyofthem
realize It keeps getting worse and
worse the older you get, that's It's
something that's never reversed,
that we just have to Uve wlth?"

Boosts earnings

DeLamielleure said his salary.
comparatively low among veteran
players, sterns partly from his own
ineffectiveness as a negotiator. fie
said he rtow works through an agent.
All members of the Browns team
are honoring the NFL Players Association strike that had Its second full
day Wednesday.
DeLamielleure said during training camp that he was leaning somewl1at toward being antl·unlon.
"But I came to the realization
we 've all got to stand together, everybody in the league," he said . "If
we (the union) dort'twinthistime, If
the union falls again, It's going to be
all over. The players will have no
strength whiitsoever."
DeLamielleure said he first
thought a strike wouldn't happen
because of the money at stake for
both sides. But he said potential financial losses to players and team
owners probably will keep the strike
short.

moREN

"THE COVE"
3 MiiM Out of Pomeroy of Rt. 7

SAY "HI" TO MIKE AND THE OTHER
FRIENDLY FOLKS THERE

SPECIALS EVERY WEEKDAY EVENING

DENVER (AP) - Tile turmoil telecasts and apParently voids a n
over the televising of coll~ foot- agreement to independently teleball games appears likely to sub- vise the Oklahoma·Southem Callside, at least for a few weeks, now fornla game on Saturday.
that a three-J\Idge appellate panel
Earlier this week, Oklahoma and
has granted a stay requested by the USC sold the telecast rights to their
National Collegiate Athletic Saturday football game for $250,001
Association.
. - the first time colleges had made
NCAA attorneys on Wednesday thelrownarrangementswithbroadIDed a rn&gt;tlon for a stay of a lower . cast outlets for football telecasts
court ruling which strips the organ!- s ince the NCAA assumed contml
zatlonofltscontrolovercollegefoot- over such telecasts In the early
ball teleeasts. Several hours later, 1950s. The sta tion purchasing the
the lOth U.S. Circuit Court of Ap- tcleeast rights, KOCO, also sold Its
peals panel granted the temporary telecast to other outlets across the
stay.
country, Oklahoma Athletic DirecThe court also asked both parties tor Wade Walker said.
to the suit to tile additional tnformaOfficials of KOCO and of Katz
tion on specific matters. After all Communications, an Independent
briefs are on file, oral arguments In
production company, said they
thecasecouldbeglnas soon asNov.
would appeal the granting of t he
15, according tocouri clerk Howard stay in hopes of proceeding with the
Phillips.
telecast.
The ruling, in effect, reinstates
"If the stay is upheld , we wlli
NCAA control over college football
simply have to abide by it," said OU

TODD MuGRAGE

110 jlouDtl
Senior tackle

140 pound
Fresluniul guard

Unity, conditioning major goal
CINCINNATI (AP) - Team
unity. and ,conditioning will be the
aim oC the Cincinnati Bengals players as the Nationa l Football League
Players Association s trike
continues.
"As long as I've been with this
football team, It's never been more
unltled, not so much on the Issues as
on staying together, " said elkht·
year veteran linebacker Glenn Camero~ as he emerged from a team
union meeting at a restaurant
Wednesday .
"The whole pulllOSe here Is to
keep this team together. That's
pretty much the commltment this
team has made to Itself, " said safety
Mike Fuller, tea m playe r
representative.
The Bengals planned to start workouts today at the University of Cincinnati's Nippert Stadium. They
will also use Its weight room
facilities.
At the same time, Bengals
coaches prepared Wednesday for a
Monday night game against the
Browns in Cleveland. The game is
still scheduled.
Signs of a crack in solidarity
among Bengals players surfaced
Wednesday, as linebacker Reggie
Williams sa id he would be willing to
break ranks with his striking team-

mates to play_on aey Cincinnati
team fielded during·the strike.
However, W!Uialns declined
further comment.
"The team consensus is that 'oo
comment' be the game plan at this
stage. It's important at this stage
that people on the team stick together," he said.
Two other Bengals, backup quar·
terback Jack Thompson and tight
end M;L. Harris, did not vote Monday when the players took a show of
hands on whether to support thewal·
kout. Harris did not attend Wednesday's meeting, nor did rookie wide
receiver Rodney Holman.
UC agreed tolettheplayersuselts
facllltles after the university's head
football coach, Mike Gottfried,
spoke on the telepl!One with Bengals
quarterback Ken Anderson.
UC Athletic Director Mike
McGee said the university was
making Its facllltles available because Anderson and the Bengals in

"We just want to keep everybody
In condition and keEp some kind of
football edge," Fuller saki. "We'll
have some very light seven-on·
seven (JlilSSing dr1lls), more or less
just for tlmlltg.."
" Nobody ls golrig to say they'll
keep edge like they'd like to keep.
We're just trying t make the dest of
the situation," said Fuller.

an

The Daily Sentinel

' .

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Sportlight
I

By George Strode

BEST ANCHOR IN ANY STORM
BANK SAYINGS ARE SAFE. Each depositor Is
Insured-up to $100,000 and no one h"as ever lost a
dime in a federally Insured apcount.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Southington Chalker, forced to gtve up Ohio
prep football last year because of only 13 players, has revitalized the sport in
Impressive fashion .
; The Wildcats from Trumbull County areofftQthreestralghtvlctories and
the state's No. 16th Class A ranking this fall, with an opening roster of 40
players.
·
Ayear ago Chalk~ Coach Bill Hart asked the school board to drop football
because~ was down to 13 healthy players a!t~r an 0-5 start.
Around Ohio: Jim Coates' ~yard field goal on the last play gave Wa rren
Kennedy a ~'28 decision over Leavittsburg LaBrae. Snookle Stargell, the
couslnofretli-ing-Plttsburgh Pirate great WIUle Stargell, had a97-yardpass
interception return for LaBrae.
Toledo city schools returned to night football last year for the first time
since 1963. It's having a dramatic effect on atteru;lance. Waite drew more
than. 16,001 for Its first three home games this fall. The school had not had
that many fans in an entire season when It played day contests for security
reasons.
Mark Snyder, Ironton's quarterback, ran eight times for 173 yards and
three touchdowns and hit three of five passes for 101 yards and another score
In a 40-0 romp over Portsmouth. Hiawatha Francisco, Moeller's senior
talback, has 544 yards and seven touchdowns in the No. 1 ranked Crusaders'
three triumphs.
Princeton's backfield: Quarterback Matt Daniels, 24 carries, 160 yards,
6.6 yard average, and runningbacks Robert Thompson, 37-284, 7.7 average,
and James Brown, 35-283,8.1 average.
Newark Catholic's Sherman Elliott's four touchdowns against Johnstown came on runs of 25 and 6 yards and interception r eturns of 38 and 67
yards . Coshocton Is only two defeats away from the school record of 19
straight losses. Keith Castner of West Chester Lakota has six touchdowns
this fall .
Quarterback Dan Postnot hit~ of 27 passes for a schoolrecord314 yards
ID beating Xenla .36-7, giving usual patsle Dayton Wayne a 3-0 beginning.
Wayne never has been above .500and finished 0-10 in 191ll. Rookie Coach
Mike Salupo has BellbrOOk l&gt;!f to a 3-{) start, thanks toW victories in Its last
two games. Randy Ralston kicked field goals of 40 and 30 yards for the
decisions,
,
Wadsworth beat Barbirton 2« for~ first time since 19rl. NelsonvWeXork, the 1981 Division IV playoff champion, has pushed its winning to 16
games. Ironton has not lost tn Its last 46 regular season starts.
. AshvUie Teays Valley went from an 11-Slead, and with possession, to a
2l-ll defeat tn the last 42 seCbnds against Colwnbus Linden-McKinley. A
fiunble, long pass and lnt.erceptlon-retuni helped give the winners 13closing
points.

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He hopes this year to parlay those
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M·S8: iiO t'O

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Elghlh Grade
St&gt;pt . 23. a l Wahama, 5:~ p.m
Sepl. 30. Alheru;. 5::ll p.m.
Oct. 7, at Ga llipolis, 5: :r&gt; p.m.
Oct. 14, ~a n. !'i:JO p.m.
Oct. 21. a t VInton Co .. 5::l&gt; p.m .
Oct. 28, Belp1-e, 5:30. p.m.
Seventh Grade
Sept . 27. at Belprt&gt;, 5:55p.m.
Oct. 4, a 1 Oak Hill, 5: :r&gt; p.m .
Oct. 12. at Jackson. 5: JJ p.m.
Oct. 18, Oak Hill, 5:~ p.m .
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Nov _1. Belpl'P, 5: .1 0p.m.

BANK SAYINGI_ARE PROFITABLE.- They now
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market.

"We don't release how much the
contracts are tor, or how long they
are when It's more than a year,"
said team spokesman Bob Steiner.
Riley took over a team with an
unimpressive 7-4 record not good
enough to allow Westhead to keep
his Job.
Westhead was dumped after a
much-publicized outburst by guard
Earvin "Magic" Johnson, who
asked to be traded and said he could
no longer work for Westhead .
At a pressconterence toannounce
his coaching plan.s, Buss said Riley
and Jerry West would share the du-

.TRIAMINIC
SYRUP

KEROSENE HEATERS

EBERSBACH

Seventh Grade
An outmanned Meigs eleven
was shot down at Middleport
against a talented bunch from
Jackson . It was noted that this
J ac kson tea m may be one to
watch In future yea r s with tre·
mendou s s trength and s ize.
Meigs players giving a tine performance were Michae l · Bar·
trum, Silty Brothers a nd Shawn
Liberatore .
Coaches f01· these two Meigs
tea m s are assistants Jon Kloes,
Robbie Eason , Rusty Bookman,
Carson C1·ow a nd head man Jon
Arnott .
Coac h Arnott Invites a ny In tereste d junior hig h boys to come
out a nd join his Meigs tea ms .

•

BANKIAYINGSAR~ALWAYSWOATHPAR.No
flu~tuatlons due to the ups ind downs of the

ties, only to be contradicted by West
himself, who got up to say he would
not be a coach.
•Riley graciously covered for the
mixup, saying he had not decided on
his game plan.
The 37-year-old former Laker
player first became a n assistant
coach in November 1979. He had
retired in 19'76 from nine seasons
with the NBA, five of them with the
Lakers. He was hired as color com mentator for the team before signing on with the coaching staff.
He has had somewhat of a light·
handed style with the Lakers.
"I tell myself, 'Don't over-coach,
don't overdo lt. Just play your
gam e. Execute and keep emphasizing your philosophies and principles,"' he said last year.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Laker.s
owner Jerry Buss wasn't sure who
he was appointing as coach when be
fired Pau1 Westhead last November, but things worked rut well
after Pat Rtley took rNer almost by
default.
La; Angeles won 11 ollts next 13
games, and went on post a regularseason recordof50-21. Then the Lakers swept the Phoenix Suns and San
Antonio Spurs before defeating the
Philadelphia 76ers to win the National Basketball · Association
championship.
So, It was no surprise Wednesday
when the Laker s released a brief
stateme nt that the Riley had been
signed to a multiyear contract.
Ternns were not disclosed, but published Indicated that the deal was for
two years.

Junior Hllh !khedule

POSTMASTER : Send addrel:ill to Tilt! Daily
Sentmel. J1) CourtS! .. Pomeroy, Ohiot5789.

Starting
lineups
RT
RC

much Improvement fro m a year
ago as they lost twice to the Ironbabies as seve nth graders. The
victory took It s toll though , as
two Meigs playe r s we re serlously Injured . Wingback Don nle Becker broke a leg a nd will be
lost for the year while g ua r d
Brian Layh will be out several
weeks with a broke n hand.
Pointed out for superb play were
middle guard Kent Eads, tight
e nd J esse Howa rd and quar terbac k Phil King.

Ohio

r::i~

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.Jay Evan&lt;: !1561

By KEITH WISECUP
The Meigs Marauder Junior
High grid squads opened play In
the past week with the ,eighth
grade team posting an lmpresslve 12-0 win over Jackson while
the seventh graders took It on the
chin 26-0 against Jackson .
Eighth Grade
Meigs taUback Huey Eason ran
55 yards for a TDon the second play
of the game and later plunged In
from twoyardsoutlntheMelgs wln
over a bigger Jackson team.
The Mara uder .Ba6es s howed

provost Gerald Turner. "That
would mean, then, that the USC
gam e would not be telecast."
Dr. Richard Perry, director of in·
tercolleglate athletics at USC, said
the university "entered into this negotiation w 1th the full understanding that the possibility of a stay
might occw-." '
Perry called "a bltdlstorted"earller reports that USC would not distribute any revenue from the game
to other members of the Pac 10.
USC spokesman Tim TI'Ssalone
said the California school and Oklahoma would split the game revenue
50-50. Oklahom a officials have said
the univer sity will split the money
with other Big Eight members.
"We are na tura lly pleased toreceive the stay," said Dave Cawood,
an NCAA spokesman. "This will
permit the NCAA membership to
approach the a ppeal from the district court in an orderly fashion ."

two
year
pact
Lakers
coach
signs
.

strlldng Chiefs' players attended the workout. Thu.,..
day nlp.t'sAtlanta at Kansas City gamewaslhe llrsl
game canceBed due lo the strike. (i\1' Laserpholo) .

Young Marauders post 12-0 victory

room."

SUBSCRIPTION RATFil

totiemel
i'OS.
wn)
'

SOCCER-LOT CJDEFS - Kansas City Chiefs'
q. . .rback BID Kenney (center) waits for the snap '
from center during an lnfonnal workout on a soccer
field at a Kansas City park Wednesday. About 40

general have helped with
recruiting.
"We'll d6 what we can to help
them," Mct:lee said. "I contacted
university officials and therewlli be
no conflict, at least until classes
start (next week). They would have
the use of the field and the weight

By C.ntu or Mutur Route

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP)
SE
QB
Wor ld champion 3-year-old pacing
SB
filly Three Diamonds boosted her
J im Thomas 1~1
F8
t\Jldrt• Pursell 11651
T8
season earnings to$445,339Wednes(Del..... )
day in winning the $140,001 Jugette
Blak(&gt;man
T
Rhoades
co-feature of the Grand Circuit race
T
Thomas
E
meeting at Delaware County
Ed Sh:u'S&lt;'OD kcr rl&amp;))
E
F'airgrounds.
Mark Rockwell 11001
ILB
M_Tarketl
ILB
Driven by B!'llce Riegle, · ,lhe
Dan{' Ba11ley 11701
daughter of Albatross won both her
g~.
Joff Tnckoll 116.')1
Ptu"M.'\1
division and the raceoff In mile
s.
Hanis
s
times of 1:573-5.
Ch1is Hamilton 11101
s
The victory was the 13th in 17 sea·
son starts lor the fUly, owned by r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1
George Segal of Highland Park, Ill.
I'm No Angel, driven by Mike
O'Donnell, won the second division
in 2: 003-5, but finished seventh in the ·
raceoff.

STOP IN AT.. .....

Appellate panel grants stay
in college TV game'dispute

{

RICHAliD LYONS
140 pound
Senior end

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

Middleport, Ohio

J

player representative Russell Erxleben said he was po!Ung members
of the Saints to see If they wanted to
continue to go along with the union
demand for a wage scale.
Jack Donlan, executive director
of the Management Council, which
handles the bargaining for the club
owners, predicted at a news conference Tuesday that many players
would tell their leaders that they
would settle for the money management had offered and ask the union
to drop the wage-scale demand .

Winless Meigs faces
Waverly team Friday
By KEITH WISECUP
linebacker at Ohio State and uncle
Dennis was a Waverly and Ohio
In probably their fina l regula r
meeting, the Meigs Marauders a nd
University cage standout.
Waverly's leading rusher Is tallWaverly Tigers open Southeastern
Ohio Athletl&lt;.- League action this
back Andre Pursell, but 200 pound
fullback Jim Thomas has come on
F'rlday night a t Waverly.
Both the Mara uders and Tigers
strong, pounding the middle for 80
yards against Wheelersburg las t
seek greener pastures next year.
Me tgs switching to the Trt-Valley
week.
Conference while Waverly will reThe 2-1 Tigers have beaten PI·
turn to the Southern Ohio Conterketon 27-0 .and Pmismouth's Troerlce, the loop it left in 1969 In favor
jan s 14 -6 whil e lo s in g a
of the SEOAL .
hea11breaker to Wheelers bw·g, 1613, a game they led 3-0 heading Into
Footbalt fortunes have been
downhill since that 1969 club, the
the final qua•1e•··
On the other side of the ledger,
school's last winning season. The
cl9sest to a .500 year came las t seathe Ma ra uders will be without the
son at 4-6, a record Coach Rocky
services of two-way sophomore
Natoli thought should have been
tackle Tony Welch, who suffered 11
better.
broken ha nd a~a lnst Wa n-en Local.
"We should have been at least
Star11ng senior offensive guard
Randy Stewart has dropped
6-4, but a couple of bad breaks hurt
us. This league may be just a little . football .
Stewa11's departu1-e perpetuated
too tough for us , but It Is wella shake-up In the Marauder offenbalanced. Anybody can beat you,"
commented fourth year ct&gt;ach
sive line. Stalward senior center
Greg Taylor will switch to guard,
Natoli.
junior Brtan Spencer wm switch
The Tigers are led by senior
fmm guard to tackle In place of
quart~•·back Tom Thompson, the
Welch, a nd 1unlor Jay Evans will
league's leading passer and allhandle center
league selection a year ago.
Quat1erback Rick Chancey will
Thompson comes from a list of
not dress again. thus giving Nick
Waverly greats with the same
Riggs his third straight sta11 at
na mesake.
signal-calling.
Brother Ed was an all·Ame1i ca n
Meigs, a t best, was a little on the

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6 OZ. SPRAY
ONLY

$}97
REG. 13.31

�Thunday, September 23, 198t

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio

Page---6- The Daily Sentinel

Braves suffer sixth ~traight loss, ;i-*2
· Shortstop Craig Reynolds, who
lost hls regularstartlngjobtoDlckle
Then, tripled In the eighth Inning
and scored the winning run on an
Infield single by Phtl Garner .
Dave Smith, 5-4, gave up a single
to Terry Harper and a walk to Chris
Chambliss In the ninth before being
relieved byFmnkLaCorte, who had
a nightmarish first half this season.
But LaCorte got the last three outs,
two on strikeouts, to earn hls sixth
save.
Padres 2, Dodgers I
San Diego kept Los Angeles from
extending Its lead In the West as
Alan Wiggins' one-out single to cen·
ter field In thelOthlnnlngknockedln
the winning run.
Joe Pittman led off the lOth with a
single off Tom Nledentuer, 3-3, and
was sacrificed to second by Broderlck Perkins. Wiggins' game-wlnning single came off reliever
Steve Howe.
Luis DeLeon, 8-5, picked up the
victory with two !nnlngs of one--hit
relief.

By Associated Press
With 12 winning strea ks and eight
losing streaks of three games or
more this season, the Atlanta
Braves have had to learn not to get
too high during a hot streak or too
low after a string of losses.
Now It 's their tu rn to keep a stiff
upper lip after losing 3-2 to Houston
Wednesday night. the Braves' sixth
straight loss to the Astros In the last
lOdays.
The Braves remained three
games behind first-place Los Angeles In the National League West
after I he Dodgers fell 2-1 to San
Diego In 10 Innings. In other NL
games, St. Louis edged Pittsburgh
2-1, Montreal routed Philadelphia
11-4, San Francisco blanked Clnclnnat1 2-0 and New York heat Chicago
5-2.
The Astros, who lost to Atlanta slx
times while the Braves were winning their first 13 games of the season, got key performances from two
players struggling to make up for
disappointing seasons.

TheDodgersorilyruncamelnthe
fifth lnnlrigon Mike Marshall'~ solo
homer ott Padres starter Tlm Lellar, who gave up only five hits In
eight Innings.
Carillnab 2, Pirates 1
Tommy Herr's RBI single with
one out 1n the eighth Inning boosted
St. Louis past Pittsburgh and gave
the Cardinals a 5%-game lead over
Philadelphia in the East. Any comblnatlonofslxSt.Loulsvlctoriesand
Phlllles losses would give the Cardlnals the division title.
Steve Braun's pinch-hitdouble in
the eighth started the Cardinals'
winning rally. Tito Landrum pinchran for Braun and raced home with
the game--winner when Herr laced
his hlt to left field ott Plrates•starter
Rick Rboden, 11-13.
Dave LaPoint, 8-3, sea ttered eight
hits In eight Innings, and BruceSutter pitched the ninth to gain his 35th
save.
The Cards' first run came In the
third on Ken Oberkfell's second
homer.

•

game wlnnlng streak.
Holman, 1-1, allowed six hits,
walked two and struck out two In
72-31nnlngs. Giles lUI his homer and
Gardenhire singled In a run In the
second Inning, when .the Mets
seared three times to take a 5-0 lead.

Scoreboard
FADING FAST- Philadelphia PhDUes' Pde Rolle hanp hill head
In lhe dugoUt as the Monlreal Expos open up a big lead on their way to
an 11-4 National League victory over the PhDlles, In Montreal Wednesday niJhi. (AP Laserphoto).

By The AMoclated P'nM
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SCORES WINNING RUN- St. Louis Cardinals'
. Tlto Landrum slides across home with the winning
: mn In the eighth Inning Wednesday night at St. Louis
. against the Pittsburgh Pirates. Pirates' catcher

Only &lt;iamt&gt;S 5chrduk'd

Steve Nicosia makes a late tag after getting the ball
from left fielder Brian Harper. Tommy Herr singled
to bring Landnun home. LandnJm was a pinch
runner lor Steve BrallB. St. Louis won Z-1. (AP
Laserphoto).

Ftiday'11 Game~~

f'tt1sbu11:h at Montll'al, tnt
l~ ouston at Ctnrlnnatl. rnt
San Dlt&gt;jlO at Atlanta. t nl
Phlladt'lphla al NPW York, tn•

Chlrap;o a l St.

Angels set .atten~ance mark,
maybe Royals' pennant hopes
By Associated Press
The California Angels smashed
~ AmerlcanLeagueattendancere-rord and possibly the Kansas City
Royals' pennant hopes In one fell
swoop.
"All I know Is thatthewholeworld
jilst saw an 8\-2-lnnlng double-header," said California Manager
(:;ene Mauch foliowlng hls Angels'
8-5 triumph over the Royals WedOesday night. "That (win) was the
difference between three games
and one game."
His reference was to his team's
three-game lead over the fading
Royals In the AL West following a
~eep of their three--game series in
Anaheim. The teams began their
iltg showdown three days ago tied
for first. Both have 10 games left to
play, Including three against each
other at Kansas City next week.
The game was watched by 51,273,
swelling the Angels' season attendimce to a league-record 2,672,377. It
broke the old AL mark of 2,6Z7,417,
set by the New York Yankees In
198)_

Elsewhere In IheAL, the Mllwaukee Brewers beat the Boston Red
Sox 3-1 to Improve their lead in the
East to 2% games over the Baltimore Orioles, whose game with De-troit was rained out. Also, Toronto
edged Minnesota 3-2 In 10 Innings,
Cleveland defeated New York 5-{) In
a game called after seven Innings by
rain, Oakland stopped Texas 5-3and
Seattle whipped Chicago 8-4.
Doug DeCinces drove In four runs
with two homers and a sacrifice fly
and Dave Goltz pitched 32-31nnings
of superb relief for the Angels.
Tommy John, 13-12, was the winner
Wlth relief help from Goltz, whoretired the 11 batters he faced to pick

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CLEARANCE...
NOW IN
PROGRESS!

Chk'o~

IKOO!iman 10-SI :u Sl&gt;a!IW
IMOOrl'1·1ll , In\
Only GOITit'S Srhrdulfd

Your "Ex tra Touch"

Florist Since 1957

Toronto at Seank'. 1n1
KaAAMI City a1 Oakland. In I
Collfo•,..la ot TextUI. In I
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a1 Chkolt'[). 1n 1

&amp;Uimo rt• at Mllwoukft&gt;. 101

fk'Vt'land at Detroll. lnt
N&lt;'W York 81 Bo5ton. I nl

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

Transactions
Wedne..tay'11 Sp•rta ,.,.llnNacUonN

Brown to join the media Inside and Moody said, pointing out the new
Invited her to ask questions. ·
club wlll employ 75 people - includ·
She accepted the Invitation and ing 35 Playboy Bunnies.
"I expect to use my honorary
twice challenged Playboy executives for what she said was legltlrn- key; I expect to take my wife there;
lzlng the role of women as sex I expect to take my adult children
there; and I expect to enjoy a welobjects.
Daniel B. Stone, a Playboy !nter- come addition to the cultural theme
national vice president, said it was of the city of Columbus," he said.
unlalr for women employees of the
clubs to he criticized for the way
they choose to work by people car·
rylng signs.
"Playboy has contributed money
to NOW for years," Stone said.
"And they take that money and
they take it gladly. Playboy's been
involved In'women's programs and
a lot of our goals ar~ the same. We ·
believe in abortion rights .. . we be-lieve In equal pay ... What we think I --~~~~~~~~~-J
NOW or any of these groups should
stand for Is freedom of choice."
Ms. Brown winced when she saw
Mayor Tom Moody accept ~e first
official keycard to a new Playboy
Club that wtll open In November .
"That's terrible," she remarked,
refe1ring to Moody's participating
in the news conference. "Espe-cially If he's promoting the AllAmerican city. This ce1talnly Is not
conducive to the kind of AllAmerican city that I want to live ln.
This says that women can he sex
objects ... "
The mayor made no apology In
accepting the key, saying he considered his participation In the news
conference neither demeaning nor
flivolous.
"From my point of view, the de-velopment of the Playboy Club In
Columbus Is good for this city ... ,"

· IIUKETBALL

AT TilE

NIAL SHOE STO

Thursday
September 23rd
9:30a.m.

ARIZONA WRANGLERS-SI~tTK'd Se1··
punter. to a two. year oont1·act .
GOLD-Appolntf'd Donald
DENVER
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lla: hl f'nds and wide r'f'Ceo!V('rs ('()Dt'h.
Ca.adle• FIWII.hall Leap.~!
•
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CON C ORDESRc lea~ U&gt;o &amp;&gt;ldfrmo nn. offenslvPtat'kle.
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FOR DETAILS
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OPEN JfU 9:00
FOR YOUR'.
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THE

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5th Street

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Price

YJHINO DRASTICALI. Y RIDUCIDIII

YOUR DEALER ON THE R IVER ....

POII.EIIOY, OH. , .•

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Price

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Shoes Marked As Low As $2.00
Everything Must Gol

Retut•nfd AI C'ha•·uk. wldP rl"t'elvPr. to thP
Britis h Columbia lions fol' falllna: his mMI·

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•

THE 1983
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FOR THE FIRST GLIMPSE OF
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l"'rkla.Y'• Game~~

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"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Bunny Kim stood beside Bunny
Ellen, their floppy cloth-and-wire
bunny ears outlined against the
door to the meeting room, and
watched as a group of women held
up candboard protest signs for
news cameras.
"Playboy Offensive To Women,"
said one sign; "Playboy Lies About
Women," said another: "Playboy
Exploits Women," read a third.
The sign carriers, members of
the Columbus chapter of the Na·
tiona! Organization for WDmen and
other women's rights organizations, showed up Wednesday at a
news conference called by Playboy
Clubs International Inc. to announce the planned November opening of a club In Columbus.
Playboy Clubs contribute to the
oppressive view of women,
charged Wanda Brown, president
of NOW.
"Perhaps worse than that, a lot of
people are making money off merchandising wQmen In this way. It's
not the women who are getting
rich: It's the bosses of the Playboy
Industries," she said.
Bunny Kim, of the Cincinnati
Playboy Club, disagreed. "I don't
fee~tl}at they have a right to tell me
what I should do with my body or
myself. I make a sufficient amount
of money. I am the one who pays
my bllls; I'm the one that has to
provide for me."
"I'm happy. I love It," she said of
her job.
Playboy public relations counsel
Howand Slgmond, just before the
news corrt:erence began, asked Ms.

9:30-5:00

e

WE NOW STOCK

"

Pet. GB
.M9 -

6.1

COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP)- Payne Cities tournament and the Magnolia
Stewart, perhaps one of a klnd~n the to win," he said.
pro golf tour, Is confldentthathecan
"Generally, If I'm playing either
win the $:1!i0,00J Southern Open Golf Saturday or Sunday, I think I've got
tournament.
a chance to win unl~ somebody Is
·"I think my chances are very shooting out the lights," he said.
good," said the24-year-oldStewart,
Defending champion J.C. Snead
who In hls first full year on the tour heads the list of favorites for the
has won the Quad-Cities Open.
$45,001 top prtzeover the6,791-yard,
A high finish In the 72-hole event par-70· Green Island Country Club
that starts today would put him well course.
over the $100,00J mark In earnings.
Others In the field include Andy
"I enjoy playing this golf course. Bean, who has earn!!~! $100,001 this
Maybe because I played well here year, tops among the entrants,
last year and f'm • staying with George Burns, Hale lrwln, Larry
friends, but I'm excited about play- Nelson and Keith Fergus.
Ing here this week," said Stewart,
who has played many tournaments r-.;;;~~~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;.
this year ouUitted In knickers and
who receives acupunture treatments in hls ears to Improve his
mental outlook.
Stewart flnlshed'nlnth here a year
ago a!ler leading going bite the final
round. On the final day he suffered
bogeys on the last, but says that
experience taught him how to win.
'That experience was very helpM," admitted the 6-footer who
played tile Asian tour In l.9ro-8J. be-fore' playing 13 tournaments here a
year ago, earning $13,400.
"I think my finish here a year ago
shows In my play this year," said
Stewart, who also won the Magnolia
Shirts, Dresses,
Classic, a non-tour event.
"I came from three shots behind
NOW HAVE
on the final day In both the QuadCHRISTMAS TOYS.
OPEN MON.-SAT.

aud,i tions

CANDLES
Decorat1ve
·
NOW Y2 PRICE
G~UP OF

1m

~It's.

E'..B*r11 IMvWon

scoreless-Innings streak to 24 and
lowered his earned run average to
2.85, best among AL starters, ln winning for hls third straight game. He
wentslxlnnlngsandyleldedjusttwo
singles, both to Willie Randolph, be-fore being removed with.tightness
In his right arm. Glynn pitched the
flnallnnlng and picked up his third
save.
-''s5; Rangers3
Right-hander Steve Baker posted
his first major-league victory in
more than three years, leading Oakland over Texas.
Baker, 1-1, blanked the Rangers
·on five hits until the eighth when
Nick Capra led ott with hls first
major-league hit, a home run.
Baker, wholastwonasamemher
of the Detroit Tigers In 1979, was
lifted after Wayne Tolleson and
Mike Richardt followed Capra'shomer with ~Ingles. Dave Beard re-lieved and finished up to register hls
lOth save after glvl."lg up a sacrifice
fly to Peter O'Brien and RBI double
toBillSteln.
Mariners 8, Whlie Sox 4
Bruce Boehle, Manny Castillo
and Todd Cruz belted homers, leadIng Seattle past Chicago.
.
Right-hander Bob Stoddard, 3-1,
aitdrelleverEdVandeBergbenefltted from three double plays. Vande
Berg, gaining hls fifth save in hls
73nd game, tied the American
League record for most appearances by a rookie set by Doug Corbett
of Minnesota In 19ro.

FALL SPECIAL
SELECTED

tnt

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Ca llfomla

up hls third save.
Brewers 3, Red Sox 1 _
Mike Caldwell pitched a fourhitter and Ben Ogllvle drove In two
runswlthahomeranddoubletolead
Mllwaukee over Boston. Caldwell,
17-11, walked one and struck out
three as he won hls lOth game In hls
last 11 decisions.
Ogilvie homered off Brian Denman, 2·3, leading off the second for a
1-0 Brewer lead. The Brewers made
it 2-0 In the third on an RBI groundout by Ted Simmons before Dave
Stapleton llned his 14th horner leadIng off the fifth for Boston. Ogllvie's
double drove in an Insurance run for
Mllwaukee In the eighth.
Blue Ja.vs 3, Twins 2
Damaso Garcia, the fourth Toronto batter to walk In the lOth Inning, forced home the wlnnlng run
as the Blue Jays beat Minnesota.
With one out, Brad Havens, 9-13,
gave up hls first walk of the game. to
Leon Roberts. Lloyd Moseby ran for
Roberts and stole second, which
brought on reliever Ron Davis. wu:
lie Upshaw was given an Intentional
walk and both runners moved up
when pinch-runner Ernie Whitt
grounded out. After plnch·hitter
Hosken Powell aLso was Intentionally walked, loading the bases, Garcia then ran the count to 3-2 before
before walking.
Jtnl Clancy, 14-14, went the distance for the Blue Jays and allowed
just five hits.
Indlan!l5, Yankees 0
Rick Sutclltte and Ed Glynn combined on a two-hitter and Mike Hargrove scored three runs and
cracked three hits, Including an RBI
single, as Cleveland blanked New
York.
·
Sutcliffe, 14-6, extended hls

Loul:o~.

San Frn ncl'iCO at lAI&lt;i

Stewart confident
of Southern victory

8

IJ

•

Group opposes Playboy club

Majors
WL
Pct.
-~~~88 ..,.
.m

l

. RIO GRANDE - Former 0hio
"America has been dominant
Hayes defined some of this counState·. University · football coach try's problems as crime and drugs politically and economically since ·
WaYne Wo6dl"C?W (Woody) Hayes and said he thinks honesty, k_eeplng · W.W, IT. ChoiceS made In tile U.S.
received a standing ovation from a one's word and Integrity are economy ·arrect world economy,"
packed house at Rio Grande Col- Important.
Scott continued.
lege and Community College's Fine
Tribe discussed the "bundellS of.
. and Performing Arts Center before
Panel reactors for the 1ec111re democracy or victory." He said the
he addressed "The Effect of the . were Dr. William Scott, of Kenyon U.S. adopted a bipartisan 'foreign
Great Wars on Democracy," open- College, and Dr. Ivan Tribe, of Rio - policy thljt was not broken Uiltll at,.
ing !lie community forum series.
ter VIetnam, which led to further
Grande College.
Scott noted changes In the l$olatlon by this country and to
Hayes focused his lecture on world's power struciure as a result questiontng of Its role In the world.
World Wars I and IT, outUnlng their of World Wars I and n, saying EuHe satct" the U.S. became a world
events whl,le comP!lrlng defenses rope had been the dominant po'¥er policeman In the 1900s and that toand offenses and likening coun- and that Russia and the United tlay systems of democratic organ!·
tries' leaders to sports team States are now dominant. This ·re- zatlons, such as the United Nations
coaches.
sulted in the "American vision" be- and the North American Treaty Oring transformed to other countries, ganization, are In disarray.
~ "We're all in this together,"
which chose self government and
"Democracy Is Utile more wldes·
Hayes said. "Democracy Is under domestic restructure.
pread than It was In 1913 or 35,"
the gun and we've got ·to make It
He said, "Racism was rep~­ Tribe concluded.
work. We've got to get rid of our dlated with Hitler's defeat. It de-Moderator for the event was Rio
pi'Qblems at home. Lenin said you feated the racist ideology" and led Grande College President Paul
can't whip a country untll It has to the U.S. looking at Itself more Hayes.
whiP.Ptid Itself."
closely for problems with racism.

Mei85,Cut.2
Ron Gardenhire collected three
hits and drove In a run, Brian Giles
homered and Scott Holman earned
hls first major-league victory as
New York broke Chicago's six:

Philadelphia
Montl'f'al

SepteR.,., '23,1

oriner
U football .coach
lectures on . effect·of .wars

Expos 11, Phlliies 4
Chris Speier drove In a teamrecord eight runs with a bases·
loaded triple, athree:runhomerantl
a two-run single as Montreal dam- .
pened Philadelphia's pennant'
hopes.
The eight RBI broke the Expos'
recondofseven,sharedbyfourplay·
ers. Gary Carter aLso homered roi
Montreal, hls 29th of the sea.Son.
Bill Gulllckson pitched a .five-hitter apdstruck out nine to even his
record at 12-12.

St. Loob

Th~,

882-3466

New Haven

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Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Meigs County and regional hap_penings

Sepw~§.[Ograph

GSprogram

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) You are exU"emely ett.ecUve today, provided you are dealing with persons who operate on the same waveThe. Black Diamond Girl Scout
lengths. However, if you run Into opposition you rnlghtnotuseyourbest
Council's nrst program conference,
judgment.
"Parachutes for Planning'', will be
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You're the type who always trtes to
held Oct. 9and 10 at Jack.son'sMills.
reciprocate when others are helpful to you. Today, uncharacterlstl·
· Ills opentoreglsteredglrlscoul.s,l4
rally, you may be more concerned with taking than giving.
years ot age and older and adults.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-D~. 21) Expenses could get out of hand.
Registration Is to be made at ·the
today II you associate with persons who are able to spend more freely
Council office, 700 Bigley Ave., Chathan you can. Abide by your budget, not theirs.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) This Is one of those days when you
may fail to leave well enough alone and Interfere with something which
is running smoothly, only·to cause unnecessary complications.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Feb. 19) Today frlends will accept you with
Walter C. Zwles Ill graduated
your shortcomings, provided you are prepared to overlook theirs.
Sept. 9 with Squadron 3709, Honor
PISCES (Feh. 211-March 20) Once a touchy Issue Is resolved today ,
Flight 105, at Lackland Alr Force
let it lie and be forgetten . Rehashing it could undo all the good you've
Base, Texas.
·
done.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) You're capable of handling difficult
His parents, Walter and Ardath
sit uations early In the day, but unless you make sure they are bonded
Zqles,
Pensacola, Fla., attended his
toget her solidly all could later unravel.
graduation.
TAURUS (April 211-May 20) If you are making changes at work
today be sure the solutions you arrive at do not later create a set of new
Alter spending a few days with
pi'Oblems. There's a chance they might.
hls
parents, Zwles reported to ShepGEMINI (May ZhJune 20) Jmpmtant agreements should not be .
pard
Alr Force Base, Wichita
entered Into hastily today. If you jump the gun you may have to abide by
Falls,
Texas, where he attends
some unfavorable tenns.
technical
school.
CANCER (June Zl-July 22) Be sure that either you or your mate
Zwles
Is a 1980 honor graduate of
are on the scene today if you're having work or service performed
Washington High School, Pensacaround home. Unsupervised, you may get poor results.
ola,
Fla. An amateur golfer, with a
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Use a light hand when dealing with those In
handicap of four. he has won first
your charge today and you'll have no problems In getting them to do
place cash awards in several golf
your bidding. Heavy measures invite rebellion.
tourna!Jlenls recently.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Your material prospects are very encou ·
He is the grandson of Muriel
raging tod~y. but it's possible you might do something foolish which ·
(Athey) Spires, Kyger, and the late
could offset your gains.
Dennis L. (Bud) Spb·es.

rleston, w;Va. 25.ll2.
Grace Pleasants. dlre!:tor of till&lt;
University Counseling Center, VIrginia Union University, Richmond,
Va. will be the keynote speaker. Dr.
Pleasants was tonnerly director of
the program department of !he girl
scouts of the USA and Is presently a
member of the Board of VIrginia
Commonwealth Girl Scout Council.

Graduates from Lackland Base

There will ·be numerous worl1·
shops, an International dinner, and
a resource center with displays,
films, program bOOks and equipment avaUable.

Saunders birthday
Jessie Saunders of "Journey's
End". a retired Meigs County
school teacher, ob5erved her m
birthday thLs week.
· She was visited during the day by
Dorothy Pierce, Regina Swift, Ella ·
Mae Daugherty, Helen Reynokh,

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and

Clyda AllensWorth· 'l'hey
cream and cake whiCh
was served to the hono~ guest and .
a fX'Iend, Helen Eaten of Ashland.
Ky.. whohasbeenllerevlsitlngwl!l\
Saunders. Saunders noted that .~
was her nrst birthday party.
Saunders a~ Mlddle!X&gt;I't
Church of Christ with Bud and Hazel
Wilson providing her
'
transportation.
Saunders and her father, the late
E.O. Saunders, whotaught~63
years before retiring, resided for
at "Journey's End.~·
brOUght Ice

Zwies

Calendar
11-JURSDAY
POMEROY - Shrtnettes will
meet at 7: 30 Thursday night
home of Mrs. Grace Etch, Lincoln Heights.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ,

Thursday, Septembel' 23,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

eigs Cou~tians contribu~e to Maj. RUil1Itle~..~~~
By BOB HOEIUCH
SeoiiDel'stlltf Wiiter
Thanks! ,

having made the dreamed of
excursion.
,
By the way Rummel's ortglnal
trtp was fororUylOdays. However:

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Staff members of the Dally Sen·
ttnel have beenqultewrapped upln
the trlp of MaJ. Glenna Rummel
(R) , Salvation Army, to India to at·
tend the Centennial Congress of the
Salvation Army In Bombay and
then to visit In Calcutta where She
was statlt;med for five years as a

with the expense Involved In getting • vellng money that she was ablt to
to India ' and back, she ts going to
take with her, we're advised that
remain 1n that country unttl Oct. 1.
she has a roof over her head and
1n spite of the small amount of tra·
food to eat.

We will not be publishingMthe
names of contributors to
a1·
Rummel. In fact, man~hav~~~~':;'
that their names not
pu s ·

missionary. .

As you may ~an, readers l"esp(,nded to reports telling of Rum·
mel's wish to make the trtp and of
her need for flnancla:I support.
However, you may also remember
that· on the day Rummel was supposed to board a plane In Columbus
for her 30-hour fHght to India, not
enough money had been
contributed.
So a $500 loan was quickly ar·
ranged at Bank I of Pomeroy and
Maj. Rummel took off for the Columbus airport arriving there just
In time to catch her Olght. Readers
learned of the financial problem of
the note and the staff Is happy·to
report that In five days time you
have contributed an additional $5!17
on behalf of Rummel.
The contrlbutions made It 'possible for . SenUnei staff members to ,
pay off the note Wednesday - $500
plus $25 Interest - and the remain. lng money was put Into her account
for a "rainy day." You pitched In
most generously to make It all possible - and we at the Sentinel feel
pretty proud to live In a county
where residents are so helpful and
responsive. We thank ·-you. We
know that Rummel on return home
wUI be greatly relieved that she has
no debt hanging over her head from

THURSDAY, SEPT. 16th
THROUGH
SATURDAY, SEPT. 25th

SYRACUSE VlllagP Council
will meet In special session with
the Board of Public Affairs
Thursday at 7:30p.m.
POMERO Y - Preceptor
Beta Beta will meet Thursday at
7:45p.m. In the Riverboat Room
of Diamond Savings and Loan.

•DRESSES
•SLACKS
•BLOUSES
•SWEATERS

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OVER THE TOP - Geoeroils readel'8 ol The Dally Senilnelln the
past live days cooirlbuled Sl!6'7 011 hehalf of Major Glenna Rummel (R ),
Salvation Anny, to inore lhan pay off a $1100, plus IDierest, note arranged 011 the day of Major Rwnmel's flight so that she could make a
return trip to India where she once served as a missionary for live
yeiii'S.

•SHIRTS
•JEANS
•SLEEPWEAR
L.AY-A·WAYS ACCEPTED

but Ms. Hall plans to pursue a career In wtillng through The Wrl·
ter' s Institute, next fall.
A Time To. Be Free contains 128
pages with black and white illustralions and has a full color cover deplctlng a sheaf of l'Oses a'ltractiong
two Inquisitive butterflies. It · ls
available fl'Om the publisher, Box

OPEN EVENINGS
UNTIL 9 P .M.

FRJDAY
POME ROY - Circle D.
Wranglers will be feat ured on a
program Friday night at the
Jackson Co unty Stockyard
Building, located off 1·77 on
Cedar Lake. The group includes
Doug Circle on the violin; Harold Hager on the guitar, Steve
Burson, the banjo, and Sut•
Hager. voca list.

BANK ONE's new SUPER SEVEN is a money market
deposit account that matures in only seven days: The
interest is normally tied to the 91-day U.S. Treasury Bill rate,
until the Treasury rate fallsbelow 9% for a ~tied time.
Then banks can pay a higher rate to their customers. Right
now, BANK ONE is paying 10% on the SUPER SEVEN
SAVINGS Plan.·
Just keep a minimum deposit of $20,000 in a
SUPER SEVEN and you~ make additional deposits any
time. Each deposit ~so matures in only seven days, so you
always have easy access to your money..The interest rate ·
on your S~PER-SEVEN will change weekly, so you can be
assured that you will alWays earn fair money market rates. ·
Now is a great time to put your money back in the bank.
Stop by ~ny 8ANK QNE office for details. .

MASON, W. Va. - Public
spaghetti supper from 4:30 to 7
p.m. in Waha ma Hlg h Sc hool ~a ­
feteria as a part of homecommg
Friday; sponsored by band and
athletic booste•·s.

SATURDAY
POMEROY -National hunt·
lng and flshlng day will be held
Satu~y at Royal Oak Park
,from 7 a.m. until 4 p.m. sponsored by the lzaak Walton Club.
There is no admission chm·ge
.and lunch will be pmvlded free
of charge. There will be events
for:all ages. children and adults.
,; J?OMEROY - Songfest at
' Stiver Run FreewUI Baptist
: church wUI be held Saturday at
7:30 p.m. The Temple Bells will
be !eatured.

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SUNDAY

:

. POMEROY - Annual homecoming at Eagle Ridge Church
will be held Sunday with t he
''mornlng service aJ. 10 a. m. and a
_-carry-in-dinner at 12:30 p.m. The
.. ');afternoon pro.gram will begln .at.
·1 :30 · and will feature the Orr
Family. Rev. Carl Hicks, pas·
tor, invites the public.

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Apple polishing. Ohio's loaded with apple: corn,
potato festivals during September. It se~ms hke .a
harvest festival of some sort or another IS croppmg up
in almost every town.

More oom-pah-pah.
Attend one of the ethnic festivals
in the state. There
are so many:
Oktoberfests,
Greek festivals,
Polish festivals. Listen to
the music, eat and enjoy.

All aaboOOQOOard.
Boarding a steam train
or sailing off on a riverboat excursion are two
'
of the more exciting
ways to see Ohio in
the fall.
Fo•

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SPECIALS

ml~soo:aucKEYE

Our travel advisers will be there to answer your calls throughout
September. Or, mail this coupon to Ohio, Box 1001,
Columbus, Ohio 43216 .

----------------------------Yes, please send me more in forma tion .

.

Name'---------------------------------------

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Address _____________________________________

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Every Saturday. Night 6:30 t~ 9:00

6· Oz; Prime-Rib Dinner'

'bu haven't seen Ohio until you've ·seen it all.
Some fall

POTAT,O aOAi'. vEGET.AiiLE,ltOT ROLLS • .
NON·ALCOHOUC"BEVERAOE AND

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SAlAD BAR

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City

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BANK.ONE. .
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with Ohio.

Fall in

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Thera II 1 IUbl!antlallnl'en!ls1 panaly for early wllhdrawal.

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLI POLIS, OHIO

:842~,~M~i~no~t~,N~.~C~.587~0~1~$12~.95~p~pd=.o~rj~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

E'lEN THOUGH WE'RE REMODELING
WATCH .FOR SATURDAY NIGHT
I

CHM.DaiN'I PAIHIONK

...through the local bOOkstores.

"Your Family's Health Is ·our beverage will be provided.
The pl'Ogram will proceed at 1:15
Concern" Is the topic for the 1982
Jackson Dlsllict Health Confer- p.m. with "Your Family's Health
enCe. The conference will be held Is Our Concern." Several persons
on Thursday, Sept. 30." from lOa.m.
will be on the afternoon pl'Ogram.
Fred Weaver. Administrator, Jack·
untU 2: 30 p.m. at the Jackson Area
Extension Center, St. Rt. 92, south son County Health Department;
Frank Petrie, Administration,
of Jackson.
Meigs County Health Department,
Registration will begin at 9 a.m.
with the program beginning at 10 and Charles Terry, Past Adminis·
a.m. Dr. Coty Bates, Associate Pro- trator, Jackson County Health
fessor. Health. Physical Education
Department.
and Recreatton, The Ohio State . These gentlemen and other
Unlve!"Sity, wtll begin the day's Health Depattment employees will .
pl-ogram.
· answer the following questions:
This workshop w!lllook at the im·
Do you know what you health depact of stressfulllfesty!e and its pos·
pat1ment does? What can and
itive 'and negallve relationship should they do for you and your
upon health. Participants wtll befamily?
come more \aware of potential
Registration fee for the day·~ prohealth pl-oble~J~s related to stress.
gram
is $2 before Sept. 24 or $3 after
They will also become aware and
24th
- or at the meeting. The
the
experience a variety of coping
fee
is
to
cover speaker expenses,
skills to help manage their stressful
costs,
and
refreshments. This
lifestyle: (Pie;tse wear-comfortable
Is
open
to the public.
meeting
clothing arid participants will have
To
register,
for
more Informaan opp6rtunlty to do severalrelaxa·
tion,
or
to
arrange
transp011ation,
tlon exercises on the floor.)
contact
Dale
Stoll
at the Meigs
At 12: 30 p.m. there will be a lunch
County
Extension
Office,
Box 32,
break. Those attending are to take
Pomeroy,
45769
or
cal1992-6696.
and
their own lunch.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Republican Women 's Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at
Meigs Inn. State Representative
Clair "Buzz" Ball will speak. Refreshments will be served and
all Republican women are in·
vtted to attend.

tuaait.Shop
®

Area health conference planned

POMEROY - Pickup of produce and bulk items at the Meigs
County Co-op is scheduled for
3:30p.m. Thursday at the Senior
Citizens Center, Pomeroy. Vernon Nease and Mlldred !hie will
also be there to take orders for
the Oct. 7 delivery. Represent atives of the Co-op are at the Center every Thursda y from I to 4
p:m. to take orders.

20%

•COATS

Janice L. Hall, 126 Center St., bOOk contains both rhyme and free
Crystal Lake, Is one of 484 poets verse to delight even the most varnationwide whose poehy has been led tastes.
Janice L. Hall, whose poem
selected for publication In "A Time
To Be Free." The book, published "Thanks," was selected from a
by QuUl Books of Minot, N. D.,isthe fleld of nearlY 4.000 submissions by
third In a sertes of poehy collec- hopeful authdrs, has been Wliting
Uons designed to promote and revi- poetry forabout15years .Sheisa
talize an Interest In poehy and to native of Mason, W. Va. Shegradu_give recognition to deserving amaated
fromShe
Wahama
School in
Mason.
lived lUgh
in Mlddlepott
tew· authors.
The contents, referred to by the prior to moving tq Illinois. She has
publisher as "good old-fashioned lived in Crystal Lake, Ill. for 14 yepoetry," rewards the re11der with al'S, and is currently employed by
sincerity, warmth and a clear un· the Crane Packing Company as an
derstandlng of the authors' Intent. Inspector.
Wtitlng has a lways been a hobby,
Sublltled, A Treasury of Fa,lth 1
Humor, Wisdom and Love, the

MIDDLEPORT - Special
meeting of Middleport Lodge
363, F&amp;AM Thursday; work In
E.A. degree and refreshments
following meeting.

SAVE

SAVE 20% ON THE PURCHASE OF OUR NEW FALL
MERCHANDISE FOR BOYS OR GIRLS
INCLUDING:

Mason native has poetry work published

POMEROY - Revival in progress at Hobson Christian Urtlon
Church. Fred Crabtree, evangelist. Special singing nightly, 7:30
services.

We know' who gave Maj . Rummel
will know_ and m~ybe, best of all
God knows Thank you'
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Jackson County Apple Festival,
downtown Jackson .
International Mining and
Manufacturing Festival,
Cadiz.
Qhio Pumpkin Festival,
Barnesville .

Apple festival, Smithfield ..
Appalachian Fall ·Farm Festtval,
Athens.
Inside Ohio's First Capital City
Tour, Chillicothe.
Military Histoty Day. Historic
Lyme Village, Bellevue. ·

Armstrong (Neil) Air &amp;. Space
Museum, Wapakoneta .
Charles Mill lake, Mifflin.
Buckeye lake State Park.
Millersport.
Seven Caves, Bainbridge .

Hancock Historical Museum,
Findlay.
Edison Birthplace, Milan .
Garst Museum, Greenville .
Valley Gem, Marietta.
Jackson lake, Oak Hill .
Ohio Department of Development

Office o£ Travel and Tourism.

:

Ohio is an ~ual Opportunity Employer..

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-Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Thl!ttday' September 23, 1982

Tbui1Ciay, September 23,1912

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Freedom f~om smoking clinic
sl~ted for Sept. ·28 to Oct. 26

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Meigs County and area organization members .hold meetings
Lewis Manley
A newsletter on district activities
!rom Thora Gatwood, District 8
president, was read at the recent
meeting of Lewis Manley American
Legion AuxUiary held at the home of
Mrs. Ruth Brown, Galllpolls.
Mrs. Margaret Bowles presided
at the meeting. The newsletter an·
noWlced the selection of the Ia te
Lucy Ware Webb Hayes as the tam·
ous woman of Ohio to be ldentltled
with the district this year. It also
announced the district school of In·
structlon to be held at Lancaster on
Oct. 14.
It was noted that Mrs. Bqwles received a heritage award !rom the
department convention held recently In Cincinnati. Members dis·
cussed attending the
get-acquainted tea on Nov. 7, 2 to 4
p.m. at Uthopolls, and the need for
grab bags and lab robs for veterans
at the ChiUicothe Hospital. A report
on legislation was given by Mrs.
Lula Hampton.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Brown. Next meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. Helen
Halper.

Better Health Club
A report on the use of !lie club's
hOspital equipment was given by
Iva Powell at the recent meeting of
the Laurel CIII'f Better Health Club
held at the home of Polly Eichinger.

Mrs. Powell explained that the

Laurel Cliff Missioryary
Plans for a shutln visitation program were made when Laurel Clltt
Free Methodist Women's Missionary Fellowship met recently at the
home of Jean Wright.
Welcomed Into membership
were Emma Fox, Shirley Friend
and Bonnie Friend. Karen Stanlw
opened the meeting with selecteO ·
scriptures from n Cor. 5,John3, and
Luke 6, and devotional readings.
Prayer requests were given and the
prayer was led by Shirley Frtend.
Mrs. Wright presided at the meetIng with Donna Gilmore reporting
that the church is doing well on
pledges. Mrs. Powell talked about
the reading program notlng that the
group remains first In reading In the
conference. Bible reading was also
encouraged for the members.
The missionary retreat was announced for September In ,Mansfield with several members
planning to attend. Theyouthgroup
for missions, director, Karen Stanley, announced the children will
meet Sunday to see slides of Haiti
and the Dominican Republic.
Refreshments were served by the
hostess to those named and Eva
Robson, Genevieve Ward, Janice
Haggy, Brenda Haggy, Beulah Oehler, Evelyn Young, Janelee Johnson, Wanda Eblin.
Next meeting wfll be held on Oct. 5
In the fellowship room.

Shade Valley Council

Betty Dean reported on the anon)y requirement for residents to
.
nual
conve~tlon of the Ohio Associause the equipment Is to return It In
tion
of Garden Clubs held In
gpod repair when they are finished
Columbus
at the recent meeting of
with It so that It will be available to
Shade
Valley
Council of Floral Arts
another person.
held
at
the
home
of Debbie Osborne,
Powell presided at the meeting
with prayer being given by Mal)' Chester.
Mrs.Dean discussed voting deleMUler. Devotional readings In·
gates, with Mrs. Pat Holter serving
eluded "Faith" by Jean Wright;
as this year's delegate. Others at"~alk a Mile With Me" by Bertha
Parker; "Labor Day PrayPr" by tending from the club were Mrs.
Dean, Sheila Curtis, and Janet KoMarge Fetty.
· !rhe hostess had a game with blentz. Regions 16 and 11 hosted the
prlzes being won by Eva Robson, convention providing favors and taMrs. Wright, Donna Gilmore, and ble arrangments In the theme of the
convention, "Make Mine Count!)'
Mrs. Fetty.
Style."
Dean I!Ommented on the educaRefreshments were served to
tional clinics regarding the various
tliose named and Genevieve Ward
activities·of garden club work, and
and a guest, Beulah Oehler.
Next meeting wUI be the ann! ver- told of the arrangment demonstrasa!)' potluck supper on Oct. 14, the tion by Louise Smith of Dayton and
the models wearing authentic peplace to be announced .

rlod clothing ranging from an 1.854wedding dress to mini skirts.
Mrs. Curtis reported on theOAGC
exhibitors and Judges' school held In
Columbus where the guest speaker
was Bob Thomas, Florida.

Preceptor Beta Beta
Service projects to be carried out
by the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter'

of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will Include the bloodmobile canteen and
work at the senior cltJzens center, It
was reported at a recent meeting of
the chapter held at the Riverboat
Room of the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co.
Ruby Baer. service chalman, dis·
cussed the projects notlng the Lll·
llan Moore will continue to work
wllh theceramlcsclassattheSenlor·
Citizens Center. Sponsoring students to Buckeye Boy and Girl State
along with a project of river bank
beautification were also mentioned
as worthy projects for the chapter.
Nonna Custer, program chair·
man, reported that the International
program theme of "Golden Key to
Friendship" is being changed to
"Golden Key to Loveliness" with
emphasis on personal
development.
Clarice Krautter, social chair·
man. reported on the pool party and
luncheon at the home of Roberta
O'Brien. A communication was
read from Internatlonal regarding
the membership status of Shirley
Beegle, Marjorie Cr'ow, who at·
tended the meeting, and Anita
Conde, all to become active
members.
Officers reports were given. Dues
are payable now. A salad buffet
with soup, hot bread, coffee and tea
was served before the meeting with
a dessert course following.

Southern Hills
Arts Council

Goldsiayn gave a historical over·
view and Introduced officers for
1982-83. Officers Include Curtis
'
Sixty persons attended the recent preslden! (Rio Gran.del; 'Joh~
annual meeting of the Southern Lambert, vice president (Jack.
Hills Art CouncU at the Louis Jln· . son) ; Shaft1n Keller, se&lt;!retary
/WeJiston); Charles "Fenwick,
'lira Winery near Oak Hill
treasurer
(Jacksol)); and GqldAccording to Jean Curtis, presl·
stayn,
agent
(JacksOn) .
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dent of Southern HUls Arts Council, ·
Cw1-ent trustees were reOI-ganmusic was provided by Beverly
lzed and the foUowtng'new trustees
Summers and Cindy Kessler.
Paintings by Mal)' Wile, LUly were annolinced: Gallla County Goklstayn and John Lambert were Doris Lanham ani! Honey Irwin;
Jac~n Co1111ty - Sue SOvey.
displayed.

Donna Stanley and Elizabeth Walton; Mellis CoWlty - Leo Hill and
Janet Koblentz; and VInton County
- Betty Post.
The year's activities' were lllghllglited and goals for 1982-83 were
explained by Cw1ls.
The council meets on the second
Monday of ~!ach month at the Fine
and Performing Al1s Center on the
campus of Rio Grande College and
Community College. Meetings are
open to,Gallla, Jackson, Meigs and
Vinton county residents.

A new, fr.eedom from smoking
cllnlc program to help smokers Join
with others to quit .theiF habit, is
being offered by the American
Lung Association of Ohio, South
East Branch, and is cosponsored
locally by the Meigs CoWlty Tuber·
culos!.s Office, Veterans Memoriru
Hospital and the Cancer Society.
The six-session program will
begin on Tuesday, Sept. 28, and will
conclude on Tuesday, Oct. 26. The
program will be held at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, East-West DinIng Room and each session will
begin at 7 p.m. Sessions will last
from one and a half to two hours.
"Tills is a brand ni&gt;w group pro-

Artist Series tickets available

BEST OF SHOW- For
her fourth coDSeeutlve
year of exhibiting a&amp; the
Ohio State Fair, Nancy
Roush won lbe best of
sbow In the open cia811 for
foreign techniques of ad·
vanced cake deeoratlng.

Season tickets will be available
untO Sunday for the Artist Series at
Rio Grande College an(! CommunIty College, according to Jean Curtis, director of the Fine and
Performing Arts Center.
Curtis said that season tickets
will be sold until Sunday's performance of the Kentucky bluegrass
group, The ,McLain Family. After
that performance, only Individual
tickets wUl be sold for each
performance.
There are five . performances
scheduled for this year' nerles In·
eluding the McLain FamUy Band,
the National Shakespe!U'e Company, the Cincinnati Opera Associ-

maette, a
silver pblet and a «l&amp;8h
She recelved 1a

prize. Her Iambeth ~e
featured the Engll!llt ~

tiJod and look more than
four days to complete. II
featured about 400. florets
· on the sides with a rabbit
plaque on the top designed
by the Tuppers P.Iatns re;ldent with food colors.
Mrs. Roush will lie ln!ilnactlng In cake deoorat·
lng COIII'!Ie this fall for the
Athens City Parks and IJ.ecreatlon Commission.

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The 1982 graduating class of the
Practical Nursing Program of
Buckeye Hills Career Center will
hold Its commencement exercises
on Friday. The ceremony will be
held at 7: :ll p.m. at Buckeye Hills
Career Center In .ruo Grande.'
Thirty·three women and one
man will receive their diplomas
and school pins durtng the cerem·
ony. James York, assistant dlrec-

7:llat
the homeofMrs.GraceEich.
Attending
the c-ookout were Shirley Beegle, Carolyn Dalley, Edna
Slusher, Mary Gruesser, Gertrude
Mitchell, Beulah Ewing, Emma
Clatworthy, Mary Bowen, Lillian
Moore, Cora Beegle, Kay Kogan,
Grace Elch, and Jean Moore. GuestswereKathl)'nHyselland.NeUle
Brown. Mrs. Logan was assisted
with the cookout by her husbar)d,
Dwight.
.

\

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4

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Carl
. The Carl family reunion was held
~ntly at the scout cabin on Kings·

bury Road.

. Those present were Mrs. Faye
and Tlha
Rllfle, 'charles and Betnlce Rllfle,
Ralph and Sadie Cai-1, Melanie "Dillard, Brtan King, Rodney and Mona
Frecker, Jason Frecker, Phil and
Paulette Harrison, Rodd and Trevor Harrison, Virgil and Judy Carl,
BREIT, Randy, Danny and Melodl
Carl, Ivan Carl, Jay Roberts, HaZel
and Bud Wilson, Roy and Mabel
Br!ckles, Eva and Uoyd King, Brill
and Phil King, Larl)' and Carolyn
Banks, Stephanie and David Banks,
Denise and Bruce Brickles, · Dale
and Marlene Harrison, Scott and
Jodi Harrison, Oscar Scholl; 'Olen
and Louise Harrison, PautaCarl, all
of Pomeroy community; R1idney ·
~utcher, Harrtsonvlle; Rhonda,
Jodi, ,Shawn and Dale Gibson,
Athens; Steve and Sue Jeffrey, MIchael ,Brlckles, Gaithersburg, Md.;
Bill Qlbble of Maryh\nd; Rheba,
Jeremy and Ryan Hysell, Ashley;
Bill and Isabelle Cool, Waverly;
Dwight and Jackie Carl, Wilmington, Dela. Terl)', Coleen, Jay, Jon
and Joshua Ohlinger, DWlcan
Falls; Rodney, Debbie and Stephanie Carl, Belpre.

Ilraft;' ROil Rlftle;'Matt

Several fWld raising projects
were dlcussed at the recent meeting
of the LadlesAuxlllarydthe Racine
Fire Departinent.
Beulah Autherson, vice presl·
dent, conducted the meeting with
Sharon Johnson leading In the
pledge and Mae Cleland, the Lord's
Prayer. It was noted that card
games are being held at the fire
!louse with the first one io be Friday
night.
Asoupdlnnerwlll beheldon0ct.8 .
beginning at 11 a.m. at the fire
house. Chill, vegetable soup, bean
soup, chicken salad Sllndwlches.
com bread, pie cake and soft drinks
will be Included on the menu.
Refreshments were served. by
Mae Cleland to Mrs. Autherson,
Ruth Shain, Sharon Johnson, Agnes
Boggess, Terl)' Johnson,JeanJohnson, and Chris Johnson who was a
guest.

Friendly Circle

AIKlE LOOK.- So popular Ia the IIIII! faD fMhion scene Is the
prairie look, many tlme8 created by comblniDg cool'lllluited labrk:s,
silch as these dresses at right made by Pat Wolle of Cbe8ter for her
4Jwghlers, Susan, 10, and Anna, three. Both will model their dresses In
'!le Oct. 3 style show at Pomeroy Elementary School.

Fall
fashions will
.
be displayed Oct. 3
''Fall Opilons ... bold and basic"
will be the focus of the fall fashion ·

show to be staged at 2 p.m. on Sun·
day, OCt. 3, at Pomeroy Elemen·
tacy School.
~
the Fabric Shop, Pomeroy, and 1·
the' Meigs County Cooperative Ex- 1
tenSion Service are COQperatlng on
the fashion show of home-sewrt fall
ancj wtnter garments. The public is
Invited to attend the show where
refi-eslUJiellts will be served and ·
• docjr prizes awarded. There wm be
a ~ cent donation tq help defray .

expenses. .
.
Accoi'dlng to the guidelines for
f

I

participation In theshow,andabout
75 persons are expected to model
garments, they must be con·
structed by the person modetlng
the garment or by a parent ·or
grandp8l'_ent. ·
·
Expected to be Included are
ccats, jackets, sportswear, h9Hday
dresses, lounging clothes, school
clothes, and play clothes.
A wide-range of 'lyles made
!rom .new faD and winter fabrics
using a variety of quaUty construedon te&lt;;hnlques are sure to be
Included.

..

pott
of .thetickets
Ohio Arts
Council. at a
Season
are available

Sale

SU4 ·

Payne

LA.YAWAY'NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

The first annual Payne reunion
was held Saturday, Sept. 18, at the
Forest Acres Park, Rutland.
· Attending were Joe and Freda
Payne Carsey, Middleport; Bob
and Judy Jacobs, Columbus; Roland and Penny Spradlin, Roland,
Jr., and JuUeofObetz; Sally Welsh

r® Recliners
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An easy solution to decorating problems' Put one of
these head-to-toe-comfort recliners on each side of
you( fireplace hearth 'and you have lurned an ordinary
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What great "roommates"?
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Outwardly they are Identical but-on the.ms1de of
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you will ftnd a difference To be sure they are IJoth
crafted lrom quality matenals and components. but
you cap have eilher the Wall Saver • Reel mer or the
Rocker Recliner What IS your pleasure? Come m
and make your choice But come soon

school age students and younger.
costof$IDforadultsand$10forhlgh
Individual performance tickets
may be obtained at a cost of $6 for
adults and $3 for high school age
students and younger.
Tickets may be obtained at the
main office In the Perfomung Arts
Center at Rio Grande College and
Community College. For ticket lnlotmatlon, call (614) 245-5353.

tor of adult education, will preside.
Special awards will be made to
the graduates with the highest scholastic average. An award will be
presented to the student who was
chosen by the class and the faculty
as the person who best exemplifies
the qualities of the licensed practl·
cat nurse.
The public Is Invited to attend thf'
ceremony.

Michael R. Smith, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy 0. Smith, Paneroy, has
been promoted to lance COillOral.
. He rece(yed the promotion while
siatloned at Marine CoiPl -BaseTwenty-nine Palms, Callt. His pro-,
motion was based on his perfor·
n:umce of d\Jtles while being
assigned as an electroolc mechanic ·
00 !be Marine CofPs wire guided
missile systems.
'
Smith IS a 1981 graduate bfMelgs ·
HighSchool.
.

~

'

'

.....,.

Parts Plus
CIUt'olt'oi'CI

SAVE!

45(
10W40

Smitb
A reunion ofthefamllyofMr. and
Mrs. Wllllam F. Smith, Sr. was held
recently at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Smith, Tim, Mark and
Joey, Middleport.
·Attending were Mr. and Mrs:
Fred Smith and daughter, Kay, Mr.
and Mrs, Carter Smith and daughter, Sarah, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Rosenbaum, Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Bing and daughter, Nicole, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Fred Hoffman, David and Beverly, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Hoffrijan, Pomeroy; Mr. and
· Mrs. John Buck, Middleport; Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Duckworth and son,
Bobbie, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Zirkle, Beverly and
Andy, Xenia, Mr. and Mrs. Dick
Conlssford, Teresa and Mandy, Homer; Anita Edwards, Middleport;
Tom Thompson, Letart, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Smith, Laura,
Ray, Jr., Eric and MaUhew, Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Baughman and Jef·
1frey, and Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam F .
Smith, Sr., all of Mld&lt;Ueport.
Unable to attend were Mr. and
Mrs. TedSplres,Mr.andMrs.Tom
Spires, BreU and Cindy, Defiance,
and and Mr. lmd Mrs. Smiley Fry,
Columbus, due to the death of Fry's

mother.

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week basic trlanlng course, James
Is ~~Cheduled to receive technical
training In the General Career
Field .
James will be earning credits toward
associate degree through
the Community College of the Air
Force While attending basic and
other Air FC~W technical training
~hools. .
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60 MONTH 149.95 Exdl.
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Corres!*&gt;ndence

James M:: Hall, \11?11 or Mr. and
, · Mrs. \)lar~ E. Hall of Rou~ 1,
• Reedsville, enlisted In the US. Air
FOrce's Delayed E~ted Pro.aram,.accordlng to S-Sgi. Michael
S!olmer, Air Force recruiter 1n

•J

Brenda HDl, the pretlie!lt, Sonya Wolfe, left, and J&amp;neUe Haptonstall. The three were presented prtzes.
The affair was held at Pomeroy United Methodist
Church leDowshlp room.

BE A STEP AH EA.D

and Jim, Marysville; Nancy Lease
and Beth, Kenton; Kenneth Payne,
Cindy and Tefl)', Harrisonville;
James and Jay Payne, Brenda and
Bud, Reynoldsburg; Betty Collins·
worth, Harrisonville; Wayne and
Patty Payne, Kim, Scott, and
·Jackie, Columbus; Benny and
Cathy Branham, Bl)'an and carrte,
Harrisonville.

Regional serviCe news notes

~

~

UNLOCJIING DIE PAST - The IUlDual rush
pariy of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Ph!
Sororl&amp;y featured coMumln1 and disPlays of another
era. Winners In the C08Iume judging were, seated,

r-.;~~;~~;~~;;~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Meigs families, friends reunite

Racine F.D. Auxiliary

A donation to the church mission
program was made and plans In·
ltlated for hoUday acUVltle5 when
Friendly Circle met Tuesday even·
lng at Trinity Church.
·
Marie Hauck conducted the
meeting and named EUzabeth Flck
and Erma Smith to the nominating
committee. Flck reported on cards
sent to the sick. Pauline Mayer
thanked the group for cards.sent to
her mother at the time of her
· birthday.
A thank you note and gift of money from Dr. and Mrs. James
Schmoll was noted with
appreciation.
Mary E. Chapman's program·
was on September, Labor Day, Its
origin and meaning wheri organ·
lzed In 1884, as compare4 tq tqday's ·
celebration, the beginning of
sc;hool, and the beauty of !be month
as summer wanes and fall arrives.
A whimsical reading,' "The.
ABC's of Fruits and Vegetables"
and prayer concluded the program.
Following the program a silent
auction was held. Mae Mora serVed
a-desSert course to 14 members and
Mary Elaine RUSIIell.

atton , the Metropolitan Brass
Quintet, and the Fantasy Express
Theatre.
Each program Is sponsored by
Rio Grande College with the sup-

Nursing students graduate Friday

Shrinett'es
The annual cookout of the Twin
City Shrlnettes was held recently at ·
the !lome of'Mrs. Kay Logan.
Jean Moore presided at a brief
business meeting. The next mret·
lng was announced for Thursday at

taxation techniques, Identity their
triggers, encourage exercise, and
help devise ways to avoid weight
gajn," Gray continued.
"By the third session, we expect
smokers to be off cigarettes," she
said. "Then we help them laWlcli
and practice their new lifestyle as a
nonsmoker, Maintenance - practicing staying off cigarettes - Is a
central focus."
Cray said smokers can use all the
help and support they can get when
they quit, which Is what they II)' to
provide with FREEDOM FROM
SMOKING programs.
The fee for the program Is $15, $5
of which is refWlded to those wiiO
atlend all six sessions. Advance
registration is requested and can be
accomplished by calling the Tuber·
culosls Office at 992--3722. Further
Information regarding the program can also be obtained by cal·
ling that office.

gram," said Patricia Gray, branch
director for the Lung Assocta,tion,
"which the American Lung Associ·
atlon has spent five years developIng and testing across the country,"
Ms. Gray says the cllnlc emphasIzes unlearning a habit and does not
Involve seare tactics.
"We try to make quitting a less
stressful experience and help
smokers figure out beUer ways to
cope with situations that ordinarily
trigger their lighting up," she
added. Small group exchanges are
a vital part of the program.
"1n thiS approach, we help smok·
ers develop an Individual plan of
action to quit, Introduce them tore-

Mr. aJX! Mrs. Kenneth Marklns,
Racine, liad as recent viSitors, Mr.
8l1d Mrs. Wllltarn Reid, Abalene,
Texas;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Reid, Hataskala; Mr. andMn. JunIor Smalley, Weirton, W.Va.; Mr.
Athi!ns.:
and Mrs. Waite!' Terrell. PataJ.
James, a l9T1 graduate of East·
kala; Mr. and· ~ JQim A. P8im,
em 8lgh $cllool, Is scheduled .for · ~ Mr. ~Mrs.Bf!l~un.
eallsllnel1t In the Regular Air
ShanDon and Julia, Pat.lll!loy,, .
Force cl! Oct :.1, 1982. Upop gra·
Frank Matldns, Northup, and Mrs.
dualkll: ~ the Alr Force's six· Alma Woods, Racine.
·

'·

ROUTE 33
MASON. WV
PH. 773-5511
I

~·

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·~,. Pa'rb l'lus autostoft.1 ...

"TH/EIIf IS 0111
NIAll YOU"

~AUTO

PARTS

PROFFESSIOIALS

••

�12-The

1982

Pomervy-Middleport, Ohio

Sent1nel

23,1982

ODOT files action, divorces sought
The State of Ohio, Department of
H1g hways, aka Department of
11 ansp01 tatlon Is s uing the Vlllage
of Pomeroy fm $41 00 58
According to an entry In Meigs
County Common Pleas CoUI1 on
rune 2 1971 thevtllagewasaskedto
1emove an eight Inch wate1 line on
SR 7 In the opt non of the state the

I

wate1 line constituted an obstruc
tlon and lnterferred with recon
strucUon and Improvement ofSR 7
The VIllage ol Pomeroy !ailed to
comply and the line was removed
by the state highway department at
a cost of $41,!&amp;'! 58
Meanwhile according to other
entJ les In common pleas cou1t five

Area deaths

llah F. Stone

M1 s llah F'ulton Stone 82 a
fm m e 1 Meigs Count y resident died
St•pt 1'&gt; In Pa. ke1 SbUI g W Va
Mrs Stone was 1eared In the
!laze! Community near Long Bot
to m She was the daughte1 of the
late William and F'annle Smith Ful
ton and was born Oct 22, 1899 She
was also p1eceded In death by he1
husband John Stone In 1956
Surviving are a daughte1 Mt s
Nola Nadeau of Wilmington, N C
a son Gene Stone VIenna W Va
seven g1 andchlldren six gl'eat
g• a ndchlld1en Su1v1ving cousins
In Meigs County Include M1 s Aud
1ey 81 ewe1 Portland M1 s Lottie
B1 adfm d Racine M1 s MOdred
i\olle Pometoy Health Cat'e Cen
tel
Mrs Ulah Swan Tuppers
Plains Mt s Leota Massat Reeds
ville, and Mt s I nos Poolet
Reeds viDe
M1 s Stone was an active
membei of the Wayside Methodist
Church at Vienna, W Va
Services wet e he ld at the Vaughn
Fune1 al Home In P a1kersburg on
Sept 20 and g~aveslde Iiles were
held at Sand Hill Cemetery Long
Bottom, with the Rev D Edward
Boye• oftlclating

Ira M. Arnott
11 a M Amot! 65 Rt 2 Racine
died Wednesday at Vete1 ans Me m
o1ial Hospital
M! Alnott was boi n Sept 19 1917
at Antiquity the son of the late Otis
and Bei1ha Roush AI nott
He was also PI eceded In death by
thH~ b1 othe• s Cia I k A11hu1 and
John Amotl and one slste1 Wilma
Riggs
He Is survived by his wife, Kat
hleen Selle• s AI nott, one daughter
Lois Wolle Racine two sons Robelt E Amott and Thomas I AI
nott Racine thi'ee b1 othei s Jess
Amott Rocheste1 Pa Bill Arnott

and Hank Arnott, Racine three sis
te1 s Zella Taylm, Middleport,
Mae Durst, Springfield and Violet
Bush, Racine, five grandchildren
and several nieces and nephews
Funeral services wtll be he ld Sat
urday at 1 p:rn at Mt Moriah
Church of God with the Rev James
Satterlleld otticlatlng BUiial wl1l
be In Letart Falls Cemetery
Frtends may call at Ewing Fune1 al
Home afte1 7 p m this evening

Hazel L Ferrell
Hazel L Fen ell 77 a I'esldenl of
Rt 4 Galltpolls died at 6 10 a m
today tn Hotze• Medical Centet
In falling health the past yea1
she was bolD May 9 1900 In
Fayette County W Va daughtei
of the late Anthony and Rosie Thomas Cante1 burry
She marrted Emmett Ray Fer
1ell on Nov 23, 1925 at Boome1 W
Va He pi'eCeded he1 In death In Nove mbei , 1979
Five sons and eight daughters
survive Jimmy ParkersbUl g,
Jack and Sammy both of Dexter,
Ray Belp1e, Cha1les, Gallipolis,
M1s Rose Ashley, Montgomery, W
Va Ruby Ferrell FayettevUie W
Va Eli.zabeth Fen'eli Grandview
lnd Mrs Mary Shafte1 GI'eel , S
Virginia Ferrell Gallipolis
C
Mt s Lou Ratillf Yorksville Ohio
Mrs Julie Owens, Rodney and Bar
ba1 a Fen-ell GaUipolis
Fifty six grand and 36 g~eat
g1 a ndchlldi-en su1vlve
Two brothers preceded he1 In
death
She had 1eslded In Gallla County
the past 12 years
M1 s Feu'ell was a membe1 of
the Church of God at Boome1
Fune1 al services will be held 1
p m Saturday at the Waugh
Halley Wood Funetal Home with
the Rev Geo1 ge Jones officiating
Bu1 tal will be In Mt Zion
Cemetery
Ft lends may call at the funei al
home II om 2-4 and 7 9 p m F1ldav

Meigs County happenings..
Released on bond

To close highway

Mike Pierce Rutland who was
an ested Tuesday by the She1iff's
depmtment on chm ges of cultlya
tlon of marijuana was I'eleased
from custody undei $7 500 bond un
til a pi'elimlnary heming Is held on
Sept 30 the Meigs County Shertff s
Depa11ment 1eported
He appemed befme Meigs
County CoUl t Judge Pall lck
OBI len
The deparment Is Investigating
the theft of a Moped taken f• om the
yard of Cm olyn Reeves Rt 4 Un
ton Ave Pome10v sometime Tues
day night 01 Wednesday morning

A poi11on of SR 681 wUI be closed
beginning Monday, Sept '1:1, the
State Highway Depattment
Iepoited
A new culvert wUI be Installed at
mile post one South of Albany The
10ad will be closed from 8 30 a m
to330pm
Detou1 signs wl1l be posted for
h attic TI afflc will trave l on SR 692
and SR 143

Water turnoff set
The watei will be tu1 ned oft In the
village of Mlddlepm t this evening
to• foul houis beginning at 10 30
pm

Veterans Memorial
Admitted Alii ed Meadows New
Haven
Dlschaiged Tammy Bable
Holly Starchei Eva Stout Patilcla
Cleland Roy Young JI
Eva
Shaffe•

Emergency runs
Thi-ee calls we• e answe1'ed by local eme1 gency units Wednesday
At 3 29 p m Middleport took AI
bei1 Keeton, Libei1y Lane to Vete1ans Memorial Rutland at 8 m
p m took Ca1olyn Mayles to Holzei
Medical Cente1, and Pomeroy at
11, 06 p m took Elza Gllmot'e from
his home on Lincoln Heights to
Veterans Memorial Hospital

Adopts food policy
The Southern Local School Dis
trlct Board of Education agi'eed to
provide educational television
through ETSCO at a board meeting
held Tuesday night
The tee will be 25 cents pet stu
dent The food service policy lor the
current year was approved and
added ta the substitute teachers list
were Jeannette L Mengon, Helen
Maag, VIcky Lldabaja, Debra
Musser Ann Hodges, Margaret Lewis
Bills were approved and
~ustodlans thanked for their work
fn the buildings oven the summer
months
•

Chamber meetmg set

, A meeting ol the Middleport
Chamber of eommerce has been
set for 12 15 p m, T1,tesday In the
lobbY of tl)e LaSalle Hotel

I

Wiestllng matches will be held
Frtday Sept 24 at Rutland Civic
Centet

Hospital News
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGE'ISEPT 23
Mark Bausell, Shane Blain Bill
Burton Bernard Connolly, Audra
Cremeens Loretta Finley Bernice
Gardner, Wanda Henry Rebecca
Howell, Dwight Hysell, lv8ll Lam
bert, Geanla Latiolais Herman Ml
chael Wilma Montgomery, Karen
l'yfoore Russell Nichols, Lori Pres
ton, Mrs Robert Rowland and
daughter Mary Saxton, Lucinda
Sayre, Alma SCar~rry, Joe Smith,
Thaddeus Smith, Mrs Roger Tay
lor and son, Patrtcla Thomas, Betty
Webb, Darrell West, Ruth A Whitt
Ruth E Whitt, Mrs Charles Wood
and son

BIRTHS
Mr and Mrs Gary Colvin daugh
ter Rodney, Mr and Mrs Patrtck
Drake daughter, Jackson, Mr and
Mrs Charles Erwin, son Oak Hill;
Mr and Mrs Jimmy Jenkins, son,
Gallipolis, Mr and Mrs Thomas
Jlvlden, son, McArthur, Mr and
Mrs Tracy Johnson, daughter. Bid
well, Mr and Mrs Daniel Salls·
bury, daughter Gallipolis

Clear tonight Low near 45 Winds
southwesterly around 10 mph Frl
day, partly cloudy High 70-75
Extended Oblo Forecaat

Saiurday throullt ~: •
a..· of lbowen IWurday.
Fair Sunday and Maaday. Jllp.ID
the 8011 Saiur11a¥ and 1D the low to
mkl-'lllaSuada)' IUid Maaday. LowS
ID the 40Bs.Ainla,y IUid Sunday IUid
arouad 58 Maaday

LEGAL NOTICE

on or bet ore the 1tU h day of
November 1982
Ftr st Family M o rtg age
Corporat•on

Ray E Jus l•s Jane Doe Un

known Spouse tf any ofRav E
Jusl•s Dott•e l Justis aka Dot
he Just s aka OoUte Lou Jus us
and John Doe Unknown
Spouse I any of Dottle l Jus
ItS aka Dollle Juslts aka Dot
tte Lou Jusl tS whose last

known place of restdence was
373 Pearl Mtddleport Ohto
45 760 w•ll take not•ce thai on
7 2 1 82 Ftrst Famt y Mort
gage Corporatt on ftled tts
Compl atnt n Case N.umber
18264 rn the Court ot COm

mon Peas of M e•gs County
Ohto a tegmg that the defend
ants Ray E Justt s Jane Doe
Unknown Spouse tf any o f Ray
E Justts Dotlt e L JusiiS aka

Oolite Lou Just ts and John
Doe Unknown Spouse tf any
ol Don e l Justts aka Oottre

Just s aka Dott•e Lou Just•s
have or clatm to ha ve an tnter

BY CARLIS LE BIRGE
McNELLIE AND AINI
R1chard L M cNellte
Attorney for Pta nt tff
100 1 Euclid Avenue Swte

600
Cleveland Qh o 44115
1216) 861 5282
WE UND ERSTAND THAT
YOU WILL AFTER THE lAST
DATE OF PUBLICATION PRE
PARE AND FILE WITH THE
CLE RK OF THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT AN AFFIDAVIT
OF SUCH SERVICE BY PUBLI
CATION PLEASE FORWARD
TO US A COPY OF THE FIRST
LEGAL NOTICE OF SERVICE BY
PUBLICATION IN THE ABOVE
CAPTIONED MATTER FOR
OUR RECO RDS
(91 16 23 30110) 7 14 21
61c

est n the followtng descrtbed

real estate
REAL ESTATE
DESCRIPTION
SITUATED IN THE Townsh•p

Public Not1ce

of Chester COUNlY OF Me1gs

IN THE STATE OF OHIO AND
DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS
TRACT ONE
Betng 1n Sect• on 36 and be

NATIONAL FLOOD
INSURANCE
PROGRAM

~Flood

g1nn mg at the Southwest
co ner of a 2 7 ac e tract of real
estate conveyed to Rev H
Pooler and tls1e J Pooler by

Detonnlnlliont
AGENCY FEMA
AcnON .....,_ rule
SUMMARY

......

Ail Drillii ll.l'rict
lH1S IOilll1 UIID

Drillll- EJdl
li&amp;III If ... load.
tany flit IIIII lliooO,.lhll-fli.
Z:GOp.• l:lOu
Sol l Sao. 4:GO ,.. !:30 ~·
PHQNE t92 9913
921 mo

•

liOns for selocted locations 1n
th e nut ton tn accordance wtth
sect•on 11 0 of th e Fl ood Otsa s
ter Protec!IOn Act of 19 7 3

stream ot col'lfluence wnh Hose
Creek Depth 1n feet above
ground x Ete\tatton m feet

!Pub L 93 234) B7 Slat 980
wh•ch added sect1on 1363 to
th e Nat anal Flood Insurance

Acl of 1968 (Tille XIII of the
Hous•n g and Urban Develop

ment Ac1 ol 1965 (Pub L 90
44BJ 42 usc 400 1 4 128
and 44 CFR Pan 67 4 (aJ
These elevallons together
w•th the flood pl a•n manage
men! measures requ•red by
section 60 3 of the program
regulatrons are the m1n1mum
that are requ red They should
not be construed to mean the
com mumty must change anv
ex•sung ordmances that are
more stnngenl tn the r flood
pa n management requtre
men ts lhe community may at
anv t1me enact str •cter reqwre
men ts on ns owrt or pursuant
to pohctes estabt shed by other
Federal State or Reg1onat eot1
lie S These pr oposed elevallons
w•ll also be used to calculate
the appro pr ate flood .nsurance
prem•um rates lor new but d
ngs and the•r conten ts and for
the second layer of msuranae
on ex1S t1n~ bwld1ngs "and thetr
content s
Pursua nt to the provtsrons of

n.tJ•nr:l

I
I

(NGVDJ - 581

124 Syracuse Ohto Send
comrnents to Honorable Eber
Ptckens Mavor Vtllsge of Syra
cuse Vrllsge Hall State Route

t9J 23 30 2tc

...' . . ..
•• " oa • "' • • •• • "'
1--- P-u-b"lt'_c_N,.,...o-t-ic-- PUBUC SALE

1981 Datsun
1979 CJ7 Jeep

1977 Chevrolet Four Wheel

Dnvo Ptckup

1977 Ct'levrotet M onte Carlo
197 5 Dat sun Stat•onwagon
The Rac•ne Home Na11onal
Bank reserves the nghtto re1ect
ony or all btd s and to remove
any or all veh cles I rom the sa te
at any ume

o

6, - - - --;-7
8
9,
10
II
12
13
14
IS

Pommy, 011.

I

I

'CUTOUT
FOR FUTURE USE

REPAIR
Also Transmlssron
PH. 992·5682
or 992· 7121
3 24 He

Hcclter

b1g

lot

$12,000 00
BAUM AODITION Lovely 3 bedroom brock
home, 2 balhs drapes
famo (y room woth
loreplace
full
basement, over 1 acre
Ownllr fo nanc1 ng
Askong $67 500 00
RACINE - Broadway
St lovely 2 story home,
4 bedrooms, 2 baths
Level folll9'x124', near
school Price Reduced
to$22,000 00
Velma N1cinsky, Assoc
Phone 742 30'12
Cheryl Lemley, As soc
Phone742 3171

~

Cor e

to

Georgea Cr . .k Ad
448 0294

Colt

Do ' o Croft Supply Spring
Volley Plaza 448 · 2134
Wonter hours Monday thru

X mea Bezaer All Items
new Crochet macrame
needlepoint end heed•
SAM titl 1 463 Lariat Dr

Gethpoho Flrot St wool of
Holzer Hoapitol Good items
for glfta
Golf Loaaona John Toaford
Cheater Oh10

CHARLIE HATFIELD
OPERA TOR
PH 742 2903
9 3 1 mo pd

Fonalty Oponong Capco
Ant1&lt;1uea, cotfoctabtoa used
furnoturo &amp; appliance•
Something for ovoryona

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

l&gt;adoator Specoahst

For all your Wlnng

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

needs,
furnaces
reparr servtce and
rnstallafton.
Res1denftal
&amp; CommerCial

J&gt;"omeroy 6h
Ph 992 2174

Call742·3195

2 26 He

'

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
US Rl so Eut 1
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equopment
Deater
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
1 3 He

S&amp;W TV
AND
APPUANCE SERVICE

Chester, Ohio
Ph 985-4269 or 985-4382
DowaynoWIIII.,.
&amp; Scottio Smith
AI mal&lt;• and rnodeh
Ant-• lnatalation
House call and ahop

ML
CONTRACT! NG

• Do!ll .. llltlhal Seniti,
Water, Sewell. Ponds
Foundations. RKiamalfons
"FREE ESTIMATES"
We Soectahze l'n

Rac.ne &amp; Syracuse
Sewer Hookups
Phone' 949·2293
or 949·2575

osvocoi!Voilrolilo

9 20 1 mo Pd

KOUNTRY KLUB

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

FALL GOLF TOUR
Beginlng or I nter
ALL AGES
TRIPS WEEKLY
Beautofut Goll Courses
Drivong Ranges
Call John Teaford
Chester
Also
PRO SHOP
CLUB REPAIR

''Beauhful, Custom

Built Garages"
Call for free sodong
estimates, 949·2801 or
949 2860
No Sunday cans
3 11 tfc

304 982 3224
Notoonol huntong and fishing
day wliiiMr aponoe11d by tho
luok Walton Club at tho

w1ll be charged FrH lunch

will bo provided Thoro woli
be '"enta for all agel
children and adults Demon
ltretiona on gun safety
reloading shells turkey
calling, tex•dermy, f11h
tlllet.ng lea f11h1ng archery
d trapping. canoeing

Don' t m111 the b1g Chnst
mas premier Where Ban
quat room of Meig1 Inn

When Frl Sept 24 T1ma
10 a m thru even1ng

Doctor referela by appoint

Farm Museum Sat

n

Sept

'

WAih A house lllat wi11 I"'Y for 11self? This proper
ty has a three bedroom garage IIPI with rental
ROtenlfal of 1175/month Maon house ha$ one
"""room apt up to rent for SISO Lower floor has a
nice two bedroom hOme for you fully carpeted,
equipPed kitchen, dining room, farge living room
• and an enclosed porch Assume 8'1&gt;% toan w1th
$6,:100 down for 25 year term, wolh payment or $287
month Tote! pr1ce SJS,OOO 1
REAL TORS•
Henry E Cleland, Jr , GR l
Jean Trussell
Dottoe 5 Turner
Office

, H2 6191
94f·2MO

ttH6f2
tf2 225t

GUNSMITHING

-Septoc Systems

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

AND CUSTOMIZING

Complete Gutter Wort,
Complete Remodehne.
Roofi" of all lypes.

PH. 992·7656

WorUd rn home

11'81

Re-Biue and Re-Fonosh
Restock, Parts, Etc

20

STUART W~YIIE

yellS.

FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 843-3322

ton

Remodeling

Custom Pole Barns

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Rooltng &amp;Sidtng Co.

PUUINS

Rou1e 1

HUNTING &amp; TRAPPING

Long Bottom Oh 45743
985 4193
9ili mo

SUPPUES
911 mo

9 17 2moPd

4

Gtvaaway

offer eny other thtng for 11le
may place an ad in thu
column Thera will be no
charge to the advertiser

3 puppoea 2 mote and 1
tamale port Boogie Coli
876 6702
Wh1te femele cet

Call

448 4495

New
-ex·
tenslve remodeling
• Electroc work
• custom Pole Bldgs &amp;

813 wash.ngton 51, Ravenswood, W Va 26164
Phone (3041 273 sass
MONTH OF SEPTEMBER

Gorages

ANNIVERSARY SALE
Guns

Golf Clubs
Golden Retriever Boots
Ten1s
Weoghts
Weoght Benches

F1shong Supplies\
scopes
1
Traps
Boots
,

• Rooting work
• Aluminum &amp; Vonyf
Sidings
15 Years Experoence
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7 583
or992·2282

MUCH, MUCH MORE
Open 91o 6 Monday lhru Saturday
1

L--"~-------..::-----:-~~:.::::::;..-' t---:----------1

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

HZ·2Hl '
POMEROY, OHIO

Plaster Craft and
Cnniclilflue

VINYL 8t ALUMINUM SIDING

Teachers,

elnll lltCion eStorm Doorl

•Storm WlndoWief'ep!er••1811t Whidona
·~Roofing

Free Estimates

James Knr•
Ph. 992-2772

'

9 22 1 mo

Scout

Leaders ariel Orpnlza·
tlons, come 1n and
Take A LOGic At Our
Packap DillS DIS·
counta Available.
LESSON$ STARTING
CALL or STOP IN
TO SIGN UP.
SALEOtj
ORNAMENTt

Rt 124 It Welnut Grove
Park 8 miles out of Rac1ne

mental Dlaobtlotlos Oua1lf1

Man tot Retardation and
Developmental Dl•abilit1e1

( Moator dogroo ouonttaf)
Retpona1bilitie1 Admtn11ter

Vece Chauman

Middleport

Babystttmg m my home
Rodney area 2 ch1ldren of
my own can g1ve reference

Call oft or liPM 614 246
9262
Wtll do house clean1ng

weekly Cell 676 6393
Machtne qultttng

Call

446 0267

21

Gellia

Solo Sept 24 &amp; 26 at 2108

Attontoon Rock Banda

Monroe Ave Ledys alecks
amall 11zea mise

aud1t1on now be1ng g1ven for

Rt 2 north 8 milot from Pt
PI Sept, 23 24, 26 9 a m
til 7 42 onow blade 71
Honda cycle, utility tra1ler
new baby clothes maternity
clothe&amp;, 2 baby carrlera &amp;
much more

7 county bonto of tho ban do
$600 caah pr1ze plus free
demo recording Colt for
oppoontmont 814 286
7068
L1cen1ed Adminis1retor for
100 bed nur11ng home
Weet Union Oh1o Please
sand resume to K1m Nye

Mtao ltema 23 24 26th 9
ttl 6 00 6 2 Burdette Ad do

P 0 Sox 10BB Gattopolos
Oh 46631 Salary common

tlon Pt Ple11ant

aurate w1th expenence

8

Babysitter wanted for
k1ndergardan child 1n

Public Sale
&amp; Auct1on

Centenary Call 446 0492
oft01 7PM

Auct1on every Fn mght at
the Hertford Community
Center Truckloads of naw
merchand11e every week
Con11gments of new and
uaed merchand1ae alweya
welcome Richard Reynolds
Awct1oneer 276 3089

9

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY Old
furmture and Ant1que1 of 111
kinds call Kenneth Swain

446 3159 or 266 1967on

Wanted LPN 1 full11me part
t1me weekends for pnvate
corporat1on new group
homes 32 adult r111dents
Excellent fr1nge benefits
Contact Oh1o Bureau of
Employment Serv1ces 46
Ol1ve ST Galhpoha Oh1o

45631
Program Coordtnator to
d1rect group home for
persons With mental re1ar
dation tn Jackson Ohto A
IOCIII 18rVIC81 related
degree 11 requtred applicant
must be Quallfted Mental
Retardetton Profeu1onal

the evemngs

(QMRPJ or OMRP e1Jglb1a

Buytng Gold Sliver Pl1t1
num old co1n1 scrap nngs
&amp; 11lverwere Dally quotea
available Also coms &amp; coin
supplies for 11le Spung

experrence w1th peraona
with mental retardation 11
required and expertence m
working 1n re1tdent1al
fact1111es 11 preferred Send
resume to Oav1d Mtlhken
Buckey• Community Sarv1

Volley Trodong Co Spring
valley Ptezo 446 8026 or
446· 8026

coa P 0 Box 804 Jackson
Oh 46640 01 ce11 614 286
6039 Equot Opportunity
Employer

We pay cash for late model
clean used cers
Frenchtown Car Co
Bill Gena Johnson

446 0069

AVON Need extra money?
Set your own hours Sell
Avon (Must be 1 B or over)

14 t baler for parts Call
446 B381

Busmess
Opportun1ty

Standing timber

Call

614 388 9906
446 3692 or 448 9777
A good Robb•t dog No pup
Call 614 388 8661

1h1ft d1fferen11al Contact
Nancy VanMeter d1r;ector of

Nuroong 614 992 6806

home Co11 304·8711·51 82

Oold 11lver sterling
jewelry unge old coins &amp;
cunency Ed Burkett Barber

~lowers,

Shop, Moddtoport
3476

304 676 3960 or toll free
1 800·642 3619

4 kottono B wks old ,u
mota Coli 814 266 8839
old dog, port Non.o
Elkhound Colt 448

Mete lr11h Setter purebred,

no poporo, 1 yr old Ca11
814-367 068B
K1tten1 to geve 1w1y to good

304·676 11349

Border colho pupploo, II
WHki·Oid 30.·468 1783
2 trees cut down for wood

140B Ohio St 304 876·
3490
2 dog a good homo one
femole part Saotle, 8 moo ,
mother full blooded One
port Elkhound and Cottle 9
moo old 304-11711·73711

6

Lost end Found •

2 doga loot Rod uci. and a
wotkor Black and white
Between Union Ave •nd

Lincoln
71198

Hill

814 992·

Token from my ho,.. SePt
19 in Syracuao Calioo
kltten. half grown,
to Corley Reword fo• hor
aofl return Contao1 Grtct

•n-

Tho11'10n, ecro11 from

8yrocuao Poat Office

Route d11trrbu1or through
out Gallipolis Point Pleasant
are• Servtng retatl grocers

With the highest quototy
paltry products avarlable
Established and unesteb
llahed terrrtoues ava1leble
You w111 rece1ve $260 per
week during tra1nmg net
commta11on potential after
tratning m excess of $600
per week Must have 1n
vestment $4 600 step van
or ability to purchase van or
Ieese expenence prefered
but not raqu1red Send brtef
reaume to C11tnbutor P 0
Box 3122 Huntmgton

WVA 26702 ol call 304
736 4364
Dairy Freeze for leaae No 1
Garfteld Ava Galltpol1s
Equ1pment may be pur

chased Call 446 8594
1980 Pontiac Sunb1rd 4
cyl

auto

AM FM

atr

cond 28 32 Mi&gt;G Ca11
446 6612
Conventently type store
w1th gasohne stontge tanks
gaaoltne pumps commer
c1al &amp;If compressor ttre
changers and e1c Will
accept any reasonable offer

(304) 676 3364 or 676
2661
Own your own Jean
Sportswear infant Preteen
or Lad1e1 Apparel Store
Offer1ng all natronally
known brandt such as
Jordache Chtc lee Lev•
Vanderbilt Calv1n Klem
Wrangler over 200 ~ther

BEDS IRON BRASS old
furniture gold silver
dollerJ wood tea boxes
atone Jan ent1que1 etc
Complete households

Wrote M D Miller Rt 4
Pomeroy Dh Or 992
7760

992

OLD FURNITURE bodo
Iron br111 or wood Ktt
chon cubbordo of oil typoa
To~Joa round or aquaro
Wood Ice boxoo Old doako
tnd bookcuu Will buy
com plot• houoohold Gold
allvar. old money. pocket
wetchH chain1, ring• and
etc Indian Artlfocta of aU
tyjlo8 Alto buying 1Mrao1Mr11
oerda Oaby Manln 992
11370
I

1942, 44, 47, 48 Point
Pleaaant High School
O·Ken, 304·8711· 31174
380 cu in .,glne for 1888
Pontioc Firobird, Coli
304-876·1233

1-,-------:.....-a u

y. r

Good eontl' milk cow
r-ontblo, 304·4118·1087

Hair styli1t w1th followmg
or booth rental Ask for Sua

Situations
Wanted

bto bod 11 et 4 000 (fourteen

Thousand Dollars)
All brds s~ou1d be directed to
R1o Grande College R1o

Oh•o

46674

The college reserves the
ught to retect apy and all
bidS
(

3 brm home 3 milea from
cltv mmt condltton many
extras 1mmod1ate posses
Story and half house com
pletely remodeled with new
thermal pane w1ndowa new
Vtnyl Stdtng Wtth niC8 Vetw Of
uver 3 bedrooms 1 bath
new krtchen cab1neta new
D W garbage d1spoaal nay
self cleamng oven new ref
With 1ce maker 1tv1ng room
fam1ly room wrth bar new
carpet throughout Kyger
Creek School System

$38 000 Call446 8274

New home 3 bd room fully
carpeted F~replace with
heatalator full buemen1

garage 614 992 7064
3 bedr oom house Ft.~ll
basement 1 car garage
central heat &amp; atr good

focahon 614 992 3586
3 bedroom house on 4 40
acres w1th loU of shade
central a1r fuel oil furnace
and wood burner etum1num
std1ng good storm w1n
dows double car garage Y2
mtle from Chester on Rt

248 644 000
4294

614 986

House two lots 680 South

2nd Moddleport 814 600
House or trailer lot 1n

Bradbury
2602

Call 614 992

Sale or rent 2 bedroom
home on the nver route 124
between Syracuse &amp; Ra

cone 614 992 6949
3 rooms and bath upstairs 4
rooms &amp; % bath down 2
room basement garage
Mostly carpeted Washer &amp;
dryer Resonably priced

614 992 7244

HOUSE Meadowbrook
Add1t1on 3 bedrooms
fam1ly room wtth f1repalce
central a•r basemen1 phone

304 676 1642

brands 87 900 to 816 600
Includes begrnnfng mven
tory aufare for one to
Feshton Center trammg
fixtures grand opemng
promotions Call Mr Kee

THREE bedroom houe Crab
Creek Rd Mason Co All

304 675 6999

nan (306) 678 3639

etectnc 304 675 3329

22 Money to loan

Stx room house 1 acre
along Kanawha R1ver

304 676 7541 evon•ngs
only 1 800 341 6554
Wva 614 592 3051
Bu11ness Loans $5
1 00 000 Equity Resources
Dayton Oh1o Call collect

By owner 2 or 3 bedroom
home partially furmahed

304 676 4565
4 room house large lot

2602 L•ncoln 304 676
5034 or 304 676 4381

613 268 0112
Busmus loan for $10 to
860 Thousand No front
money Send 1nqutres to
C PH C Box 1 Country

Lane Shade Oh 46776

23

Profess1onal
Sorv1ces

C&amp;L Bookkeep•ng
Bookkeeping 6 tax serv1ce
for all types of bus1nesaes

Carol Neal 446 3862

32 Mob1le Homes
for Sale
TRI STATE MOBILE
HOMES USED CARS
TRUCKS GALLIPOLIS
CHECK OUR PRICES
CALL 446 7572
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUAL
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES
4 Mt WEST GALLIPOLIS
AT 35 PHONE 446 7274

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call 8111 Ward for appomt
ment, Ward 1 Keyboard

446 4372

14x70

1975

K~rkwood

mob1le home frreptace all
electrrc
Call 614 245

9463 aflor 7PM

614 446-3703

12

at which time bids will be
opened read and evalu
ated low m1n1mal accept•

Beaut1futly restored Victo
r1an 5 bedrooms 4 ftrepla
ces
ornate carved
woodwork au cond1troned
msulated owner flnenc1ng

rate leader Mortgage Oh1o

ohift Upgraded nt11y &amp;

until

2744

HOME LOANS 14% foxed

Attention RN s Pomeroy
Health Care Center now has
opening for full &amp; part time
AN for 3 to 11 &amp; 11 to 7

College

2 OOPM October 1 1982

Owner fmancing 10 percent
down 10 pet 1nterest 31h:
acres Modern tn country 3
or 4 bedrooms family room
Wtll rent w11h reference•
Moro mfo call 614 99.2

Call now 61 4 698 711 1
collect

Monager Atton Hol1 Rio
Grande

soon Call 446 3897

terviea provided by the

Boord Salary nogptiobie
Avoitobto lmmodoatoty
Contact Mr Jomaa Hottoy

tn the office of the 8uaine11

Would hke to do housework

day to day operation of

JUST graduated &amp;. unsure
about your future? The West
Vug1ma Army Nat1onal
Guard can help you decide
We are looking for h1gh
school sen1ors &amp; graduates
to tra1n 1n communications
admm11tratton supply
mech1n1cs &amp; many other
f1eld1 If you qualify you may
be ehg1ble for an enlistment
bonus and collage or Vo
Tach a1111tance Be one of
We•t V~rgmiu be11 For
more Information call

6632

SPORTS

Veult Plant Good cleen
clothes ell shes thea
appliances and mise

Tobacco poundage Call

2 doga both 2 yrs old 1 4
mo old pup Coll614 266
6218

--------------------~--------------------~-=:::::::::::::::::::/ goan
1 yr
OLD&amp;

cetlons meat certtftcatton
standards for Supenntend
ent Ohio Department of

All church choirs and

Gotzgorotd 304 676 6226

Roofing
Sedeng
Con
crete Pat1os
S1de
walks
New Construe

Yord Solo Frl and Sot Sept
24 26 1 mile out 141 by

water trapping and trap
ahoot.ng

gospel groups welcome to
participate contact Paul

Cabinets

Superintendent Gallla
County Board of Mental
Retardetlon end Develop

t1ll 3. at Crowa Lot on T '"

gospel sing, Muon Coumy

Kitchen

POSITION AVAILABLE

2 Family yord Solo Griffin 1
Grocery In Keneuge, Oh
Sot 9 t111 7 Rain canceta

Club Every Sunday ltorttng
1 p m Factory choked guns

ANY PERSON who hoa

S&amp;W

84 00 per hr Cal1614 367
0396

co11 448 3169 after &amp;PM
266 1967

Reterdetion end Develop

Ch1cken barbecue and

Large or Small Jobs
PH 992 2478
931mopd

Aodlo Station

Choahtro, Oh 46620
(614)367 0102

mental Dlaobihuoa P 0
Box 14 Choahoro Oh
46620 (814)367 0102

-Dozers

-water
-Sewer
-Gas L.nes

12 Evona Hoightl, Thun
and fr1 1st StrHt left after

Yard aota Sept 23 24 10

-Backhoes
-Trencher

Portorbrook Subdlviaton
Gange Sale off Fairfiotd
Centenary Rd Fri 24th 9 to
5 Lou to choose from

See led bido woi11Mr accepted

614 246 6363 ext 217
Lawn Mowmg no yard to btg
or small Reliable and
dependable For esttmate

Gun shoot Recine Gun

McDaniel Cultom Butcher
1ng West Columb11 W VA

Col1 448

Marked to ATTN Business
Maneger
House may be v1ewed by
epporntment only contact

time teacher for Guiding
Hend School Must have a
valid teachmg certificate
from the Department of
educetlon Avalieblillty
Immediately Apphcat1ona
can be obt110ed from Mr
Dav1d Ratliff P 0 Box 14

County Boord of Mental

only

Garfield Avo
1646

Grande

18 Wanted to Do

Pomeroy

mont only 304 875 6234

-Dump Trucks

child'• pool and toota

Call 614 2B6

POSITION AVAILABLE
September 14 19B2 Full

Yord &amp; Porch aoto 22 23
24 9 4 At 23B Condo• St ,

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

-Lo Boy

chain aew, vaporizers.
Avon 1i11 6 anowsuil

Jack

Help Wanted

Trodo 1127 Fifth St Ivan
Powell Roo Rocono Oh
614·949 24B6

HAIRREMOVAL
Professional
ElectrolysiS
::::::::::::::::::1~::::::::::::::::;t~::::::::::::::~~ Center
A M A approved
Vtnyl &amp; Alumrnum
SIDING

1 Day Only V'ord Sole 9 8
Friday 127 Garfoold Avo
Galtlpotio Baby clothoo.
chlidrona 4·12. Poulan

Sopt 24 &amp; 25 614· B43
2432 Garage ule

PERMANENT

THE.

son Oh
3074

eppointment .... Buy Sell

=======4=5=1f~c=-~========~~======~3~7~t~fc~ 126th
Royal Starting
Oak Pork
time
SotwiiiiMr
Sept7
m tlll4 p m No admi11ion

Superior Siding Co.

'WHILE WE ARE AT THE STATE
REALTORS CONVENTION, OUR
SECRETARY WILL SET APPOINTMENTS
TO SEE ANY OF OUR OVER 100 PROPER
TIES

A

esewer
eGas
• Water Lenes

the

NA T HAN t~ IGt c
35Yrs E •peroence

• wuhers
• Dish
washers
uanges • Refrlgerat
ors
• Dryers • Freezers
PARTS and SERVICE

EUGENE LONG

'

Low mofeage 302 or 2B9
Ford engine 304 896
3997

Pick up and

·; ...----------+----------4-----------1 enythtng
to g1ve away and
does not offer or attempt to

PH.992·2259

f
I
I

J.A.R.
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY'

Larqest Radoator

All Makes

enclosed porches Just
off Rf 7 on approx 1'1"'

on

oupplloa

delivery Davis Vacuum
• Cleener, one half mile up

FREE
ESTIMATES

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
&lt;~RVICF
From th e Smallest

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

ST RT 124 - Sotod
)&gt;uotl lwo story home 4
bedrooms 1 bath 2

furnace

RemOllellna,
ne• homes,
plumbma, electnc, 11dma

bathrooms

, Frt Other tlmoa by
9 30 am 4 30 p m Mon
;~~~~~~~~~~t=~~~~~~~~;t~~~~~~~~~~ Wed

Off•ce Ph 742 2003

central atr gas furnace

.

417''

GARAGE

Work Insured and
Guaranteed
PH JIM CLIFFORD
992 72019 3 1 mo

Broker

NEW LISTING- RUSTIC HILLS- A ranch home
with e'xtrasl Three bedrooms. but also fam1ty room
cha1n link fence metal slotage buotdong, etectnc
baseboard heat, centraf a1r front and rear parches
J)JSIS:U,900

Th~ ~·Jt~:~llll

Roger Hysell

Wanted To Buy

and aowlng
and ' SWEEPER
m1chine repelr, parte end

100

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

sewer hookup

Goo S Hobsleller, Jr

7 Asking $10,000 00
POMEROY- Brick Sl
two story, two bedroom
home fireplace new

~ltthens

9

143 Burlington Rd

PH. 992 _6011

51 RI.I24Pomoroy,OH

•seeding and reclaiming
•Racone and Syracuse

IIOBSTffiER REALTY

NEW LIS.TtNG- Rullapd - Fove room house w•lh
twp bedrooms, carpor't. bath dming room 1n
suiated, back porch, 90'x181 5' tot $12 000 •

34 - - - - - -- 16
35
-~ - - - - Mall This Coupon with RtmiHanct

Call Barbara
Lawrence
992·3282
8-2S.J

Rool Eatote - General

NEAR / POMEROY - F •ve acres of ground,
secluded and near a gOOd road Excellent bulldong
site or mobtte hom~ sole Wanl$7,500

32 --:--,.,----,-~33

Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

•dump truck serv1ce

!91 22 23 24 3Ic

- Outstandong value 10 lh1s ranch home! Three
large bedrooms, kitchen With range hOOd, knotty
pone cabinets and panelong Spacoous loving donmg
room bath full basement With fam1ty room sum
mer k 1tchen shower, woodburner h9;Pk up F A
heat, conCrete porches, aiJ on three acr'es With \ltew
of the nver Askong $~7 000

4

Ladies Jazzercise

•excavatong
•septic systems

The Farmers Bank and Sav
mgs Company Pomeroy Oh10
reserves the ng ht to btd at thts
sale and to Wtthdraw the above
veh•cle pnor to ~ale Further
the Farmers Bank and Savmgs
Company reserves the nght to
reJeCt any or all b1ds subm 1tted
Further veh des are sold 1n
the cond•llon they are m w1th
no expressed or 1mphed war
rantles g 1ven

home, s1tuated on ap
prox 15 acres, near Rt

'

FREE ESTIMATES

•backhoe

PH43K5021 0084

'NEW LISTING- SOUTHERN SCHOOL DISTRICT

5

add ons

T"

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

otic&amp;

acres REDUCED TO
$20 000 00
HANDYMAN'S SPEC!
AL - Older 6 room

Garage Solo Sept 24- 26
10 OOAM Ctotheo mtoc 9
tentha mHo out Neighbor·
hood Rd

Ktrate the ultimate 1n self
defence all private les10n1
Men women &amp; children
lnatructlon thru bleck belt
Also avellable Karate
uniform• puching end
lucking bags and protectiVe
equipment Jerry Lowery &amp;

Auoctotoa Karate Studio

to 4 All10
croao
oupptioa
~;;~~~=~~~~==:;;~;;;~~~~fr==~~~~~~~·
Friday
to 6,otich
Saturday
10
DMC
i

1------.,.:____

'WITH THE (11625% INTEREST RATE WE
ANTICIPATE MANY TRANSACTIONS
CALL TODAY FOR OUR APPOINTMENT
THIS IS A LIMITED INTEREST RATE AND
WILL CHANGE SHORl'l Y

2
3

J~P ..., AGES 3 &amp;UP

7 14 tic

1---------p 1 N

608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Phone------------------

17
18
19,
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31

Custom

9101 mo

Address·-----------------

)Wanted
)For Sale
)Announcement
&gt;For Rent

H. L WHITESEL
, Gutters
• Downspouts
e New or Repatr
e Parntmg

new cerpet Would con1ider
lowar valued proper1y in
trade or will finence with
low down payment and 10%
inttratt Loceted 123

Grande Ohio

3 Announcements

CONSTRUCTION

BARBARA'S SCHOOL
OF DANCE

Open Year Round

Name ___________________

(
(
(
(

FAll ENROLLMENT

ROOFING

Fnt:tav September 24 at 10
am The Rac•ne Home National
Bank w•ll off er for sale at Pubhc
Auction the lollow1ng

ub ic

Yard Sale

UP MOW FOR

8

A..l Estete - General

Wrote your own ad and order by maot with lh1s
coupon Cancel your ad by phone when you get
results Money not refundable

' '

~

Nohce 1s hereby g!VBn that
on Saturday September 25th
1982 at 1 00 a m a pub •c
sale w111 be held at 105 Un1on
Avenue Pomeroy Oh1o to
sell for cash the lo tow1n g
collateral
1975 Ptymou th - 4 Dr Gran
Fu r y
s e r 1a 1 N o

54 Mise Merchandise

7

124 Syracuse Ohoo 45779

In ground concrete pool on 2
aero lot Alao hoo a 3 bdr efr
conditioned houae with fuU
IMraomant 2 WB fireplocoa

Offered by tho board of
Truateos R1o Grande Col
togo Rto Grande Ohio
House known 11 BOHN
HOUSE located at 221
West College St Rio

at the vollage Hall Stale Rou1e

ment A{:1ency hereby cert1f1es
that the {proposed) flood eleva
t•on determ•nauons •f promut
gated w•ll not have as gn•hcant
econom•c 1mpact on a substan
hal number of sma ll enttttes A
llood elevatton determ1nauon
under sect1on 1363 forms the
bass for new local ordmances
wh•ch d adopled by a local
commun.tv Will govern luture
constr uct•on Wlthm the flood
ptam mea The elevauon det er
m nahons however 1mpose no
restnct10n unless and unt•lthe
local co mmun11y vo luntar ly
adopts flood pla•n ord1nances
m accord wtth th ese elevauons
Even •I ordmances are adopted
•n co mphance wtth Federal
standar~ s the elevattons pres
cnbe how h1gh to butld •n the
flood plarn and do not pros
c11be development Thus th•s
act•on on ly forms the basts for
future local act• ons It 1mposed
no new requtrements of 1tsell •t
has no econom•c tmpact

Flood insurence
Floodplains
The proposed base (1 00
yea r) flood elevations lor se
lected locat•ons are
Proposed Base ( 100 vear)
Flood Elevattons
State Oh10
Vtllage Village of Syracuse
County Me1gs County
Source of Fl oodtng - Oh o
A• ver Locat1on - About 700
feet upstream of conf uence
wtth Rose Creelf,. Depth m feet
above ground x Eleva11 on •n
feel (NGVO 500 x
SourcP. of Floodmg - Ohto
Locat1on - About 3 2 m1les tp

agent Phone 379 2204

X

PUBUC NOTICE

Uat of IUbjecta In 44 CFA Port
67

covereges ere available to
meet individual needs
Contect Foster Lewla

Maps ava1lable for tnspectiQn

Fedeoal Emergency Mana ge

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classlfleds and
SaveiJJ

POMEROY-Ill 00 Ton
MIDDLEPORT
AND RACINE-S32 00
Ton

Wit-Drift NiiJit
~~~-----­
Ill Drift . . II Jria

Public Notice

been delegated by the O~rect o r

Delivered Prtce

Between Cheshore &amp;
Moddleport, Ohoo

SANDY AND BEAVER

Homo and poraonol property

Public Notice

5 USC 605(b) !he Assoc•ale
D•rector to whom authoroty has

Prttsburgh No 8 A
Mme Run ( Strrp)

PRESENTS
T--IMiot lllcJl!

Weather forecast

Public Notice

Public Not1ce

HOUSE COAL

CANDLELIGHT INN

31 Homes for Sale

Insurance

for elmoat • century Farm

I

COD
PH 992·2280 or g
992·2618
co

13

coverage 1n Go111o County

George D Massar, Margaret B
recorded 1n Volu me 166 page
379 Me gs Coun!y Deed Ae
Massar Richard R Campbell
Techntca t mformat1on or
cords reference to wh1ch •s
Margaret Campbell to Royal Pet
herebv made thence Nort h commenls are sohc1 ted on the
roleum Properties Inc , Right of 396 1eei Ihence East 330 feel pr opose d base ! 100 year)
thence South 396 feet to th e flood elevat1ons hsted below for
Way and Tank Site, Bedford
selected locattons rn the natton
cen ter of the publ1c road
Beulah B Jones, deceased, Wal
These base (100 vear) ll ood
thence West 330 fee t to the
ter Emerson Jones, Cert of trans , place of beg1nntng conta1 n1n g elevati ons are the bas• s tor the
flood pta•n management mea
3 acres but subtect to aIllegal
Middleport
sures that the community ts re
h1ghways
J PhlUip Jones Lois M Jones to
PREMISES CO MMON LY QUtred to e th er adopt or show
KNOWN AS AI 3 366 59 ev•dence of be1ng already tn ef
Buckeye Rural Electric Coopera
feet tn order to qualtly or rema n
Texas Road Pomeroy Oh o
tlve, Inc , Right of Way, Scipio
qual tiled lor part Ctpahon n the
45769
Nat•onal Flood tnsur ance Pro
The plamt1IJ further at eges
George Edward King, deed ,
gram (NFIPI
that
by
reason
of
default
of
the
Opal P King A!tldavlt Salisbury
DATES
defendant s 1n the paymen t of
The penod lor comment w•ll
Robert E Jacks, Donna Y Jacks promtssory note accordtng to
1ts tenor th e cond• Hons of a be n•nety !90) days followtng
to Leroy Kennedy VIvian K
the second pubttcat1on of th1s
concu rr ng mort gage deed
Kennedy, 1 'h acres, Chester
ptoposed rule tn a newspaper
g•ven to secure the payment of
Marilyn M Robinson, Woodrow saiCf note and conVAy1ng the ot local c rculatton 1n each
commun 1ty
W Robinson to Blauser Wen Serv , prem•ses descnbed have been
broken and the same ha s be
ADDRESSES
Inc Right of Way, Olive
come absolute
See t able be ow
The
pla•nhfl
demands
that
Clarence J Struble deceased
the defendants named above
Allee A Struble, Affidavit, be requ red to answer and se t FOR FURTHER tNFORMA
TION CONTACT
Pomeroy
up the1r tnterest 1n sa1d rea est
Mr Robert G Chappel
or
be
forever
barred
from
ate
Lucllle Jacks to Leroy Kesiiln
Nat to nal Fl ood Insurance
asserting the same for foredo
Program
ger, VIrginia Kessinger, 2 acres, sure at sa•d mortgage the mar
12021 287 0230
shall1ng of any hens and the
Rutland
t=ederal Emergency M anage
sate of sa•d rea estate an d that
James Elmer Sellers, deed , Dar
rnent A~ ency
the proceeds ot sa •d sale be
Washmgton 0 C 204 7 2
applied to the paymen t of pian
rell Lee SeUlers, Wanda Sellers, At
1111 s c1a1m 1n the proper order of
fld,avlt, Lebanon
SUPPLEMENTARY
ts pr~or ly and for such other
J B O'Brten, Roberta O'Brien to &lt;~nd lu rther rehef as IS tUSt and INFORMATION
The Fed eral Emer~ency M an
equ1 tabl e
Kenneth K Walton, Dollie M Wal
r~ ge ment Agency g•ves not•ce
The defen dant s named
ton, Right ol Way, Olive
of th e propose d determ•nat ons
above are req u1red to answer
of base (1 00 v.ean flood eleva
Joseph BlsseU, Ada Bissell to
Chester WeDs Dorothy Wells, Lot
139, Olive
Basil W Long Evaleen Long to
Rodney C Long, 50 acres, Salem
VIctor Counts, VIrginia K Counts
to Jeffrey L Counts, 115 acres,
Sutton
Charles F Wagner to James E
Diddle Right otWay, Lebanon
Kathleene l3 Davis Trustee to
James Clatworthy; Jr. Emma K
Clatworthy , Parcels, Middleport
I
Robert L Rudolph Esther C Ru r----------------------~
dolph, Richard H Rudolph, Phyllis I
M Rudolph to CarlE Klaiber Mit I
I
zlann Klaiber, Parcels Chester

4 Ton Menemum

LAFF·A·DAY

Insurance Co hll offered
services for fire insurance

deed daied June 8 195 1 and

Meigs Co -$31 oo Ton
(Plus DehveryJ

\

The

Lolt end

Busine8s Senices

o.a t, Stflhnt t Cl.n"tiH 0t11t

111 C001rU I P - - y OIIICI117..

Property
transfers..

Deadline to ente1 the 1983 Meigs
County J unlot Miss Scholai s hip
pmg~ am Is Saturday, Sept 25 at 2
p m It was announced today
The first pt actlce session fm the
contestants wlll be heldSatmday at
2 p m at the Meigs Inn Senil01
gills llvtng In Meigs County are m
vited to partlcfpate
On the local level ove1 $900 m
cash scholarships bonds and gilt
ce1 Uttcates will be awared to the
wlnnei t unne1 up and othet
winne1 s In addition the 1983 Junlm
miss will I'epresent Meigs County
at the Ohio Junlm Miss finals on
Feb 4 and 5, at Mt Vemon

PHONE 992·2156
o~w• 10!

,divorce cases were fUed , a notice of
an appeal and four other divorces
were granted and another one
dissolved
FUlng for dlv01-ce were Carla S
Kimes, Long Bottom against Ran
daD L Kimes New Haven, Hazel
Darlene Weimer Racine, against
David Lee Weimer Orient, Ohio
Frederick M Hanel, Minersville
against Martha Low Hanel, Mid
dlepo1t Mary A Jeffers, Mlddlepoi1, against Joseph L Jet!ers,
Pomeroy Penny Plesset Rt 3, AI
bany , against Kenneth HaUer,
Athens
A notice of an appeal was llled by
Waite• Reibel, Pome1 oy against
Midwest Corp , Pomeroy and Ray
mond Connor, admlnistratol of the
Bureau of W01 kers' Compensation
G1 anted dtvot-ces were Frances
Loretta Viola from Louis Jesse VI
ola Tanya E Davis from Jason J
Davis Susan E Stai-chel from
Russell E Starchet Jo Ellen
Hawk from Dannls Hawk
The man !age of Araka A StewaIt and Kevin G Stewa11 was
dissolved

Entry deadline
Wrestling set Friday

The Dsuly Sentinel

Ohio

31 Homes for Sale

1980 Redman sect1onal
home 28x70 3 bdr 2
baths FR FP and wood
1tove Apphances mcludmg

dosweoher 446 6630
3 People to oel1 Avon Con
440 336B

Land contract 8 36 000
Choshlro Village Call
614· 387 7663

Tree trimmmg It removal

614-949-2129 or 614·
992 6040
Boerding

home haa va

voncy Elderly only Reaont·
blo 61 4·992·6022
W111 do houM cloomng, baby
alttlng or eroceory ahop.
ping 814·982·6048 and
aak for Milia..
Exp automobile pointer, li
yoon experience 304·8711·
3373

'

1969 12x66 Kongo mobot,
home a1r cond fully car
peted fuel 011 furnance
good cond111on 2 bdr Call

HouH for 1111 150 Second
avo Gatlopotla Colt 446
7605 or onquire at Bob 1

446 9797

Carryout Eastern Ave

Gallipoha

bdr on ntce ranted lo1 1n
Chesh.re area low utlllttes,

MaJIItic homo for sete Rio

FHA loan available N1ce
porch underp1nntng like

1980 Korkwood 14x70, 4
built to FHA stondorda and

Grande overlooking college
green Newly renovated 3
bdr f1m1ly rm , modern

kitchen, formal dining rm • 1
acre lot Will conuder
rent·buy option, aa1umable

mort111111• Call 448 B090 or
441·4897

new Call 614 388 9776
Atchordoon 1 Ox41 mobolo
homo, 2 bdr Plrtiatly
furn11hed

furnonco
1413

cerpeted, gat

Cali 614· 2116·

�14-The

Sentinel

64. Misc. Marchandlae .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 Ox S O

mobll a

Plootlc Septic Tonko. Stote
and oounty opprovod. 1.000
gal. tonk, prloo 8340. Other

home .

sizes In stock, haul In your

8 1,SOO . Call 614 -3SS·
8647.

pickup truck. Call 614.28115930, Jookoon, Oh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

1 0 K4 4 mobil e h o mo .
8 1,200 . Call 614 -246 5064.
l~ncer

1972

Building Suppllee

1- - - - - - - Mttol shooto for 111 bUMding
purposaa. Flat porcellan

mobile home,

12K60 Ba ron .

$6,500 . Must sell. Moving.
Call Andy Vaughan. 614 -

delivered. Coli for Inform•·
tlon, 446-4649 .

US ED MOBILE HOME .
676 -2711 .

Seara Kenmore sewing
machine and wooden ce·
binet . vary good cond . .

1971 Concord, 12x60 with

1125. Call 446 -7340 .

tipout . See at , 404 Lewis
Street , lot 6, Point Pleasant.

360-8 John Deere dozer, 6

afte r 4 .

way power blade, roll cab.
new paint, •7 . 200 . Call

1973 12x60 trailer 84,600.
304-773-5156 .

446 -4237 after 6 PM wk .
doyo,

For sale Farm, 207 acres on

house. Call 388-9346 .

2 bedroom furniahed .
Adulta preferred . No pett.
Deposit required . 814-992 -

2749 .
Mobile Home . 2 bedroom

portlolly furniohed . 8186 .

34

Business
Buildings

Bar 8t Drive-thru situated at
74S N. 2nd .. Middleport,

Ohio . Wanting to sell
building and real aatate .
Includes new fiberglass

roof, patio , docking and
river facilities. all equipment

and otock and D1 and D2
liquor permit . Owner will

finance. Call (614) 992·
2381 -days- Monday thru
Frldoy.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
For sale one and half acres
mOre or less. approximately
600 ft road frontage on
Cora· Centerpoint Rd . near

Centerpoint . $3.000 .00
Phone 682-6944.

month plus utilities &amp; dep .

No pato. 614-992-7479.
2 bedroom mobile home .
Utilities paid . Beautiful
location on the river .

614-992-6949 .
2 bd .room trailer. Racine.

8200 . month .

8100.
deposit· utilitiee not Included. Interested penon•
only call 614-949-2726.
Furnished 2 bedroom mobile home. $186 month,

phone 304-676 -6612 .
12x60 mobile homo, 8150.
month, 850 dopoolt, 1 child,
coli after 12 noon, 304-6753868 .
Used mobile home, ready to
move Into FOR RENT with

OPTION to buy . 304-5762711.

Unfurnished Apartments ,
c all Automotive Supply.

lthoco side by oldo double
12 gauge ahotgun
304-675-2218, S-6 p.m .. barrel,
modoi200-E,
trigger,
304-675-6753, 6-10 p.m. auto. ejecton,olnglo
new con'd .•
1476. Call 4411-33BB .
TWIN Rivera Tower now

renting to qualified appli·

canto 60 or older. 304-676 · Smell upholotorod choir,
6679 . HUD ouistad project. walnut arms and legs .
Blonde maple telephone
toblo with glooo top . Coil
Naw Haven . 3 bedroom 446-0443 .
unfurn opt . 304-882-3366 .
Fully lnouloted end wired
Nice turn . 3 room a
10KU building, 1700 or
private entrance, aduha,
best offer. Call 614-367StrHt. 304-676-3811.
7212 .

45

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room . *1 16 .
utilities pd . single mole.
share both. 919 2nd. Ave.,
Gallipolis. Coli 446 -4416
oftor 7 PM .

46 Space for Rant
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
Pork, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call

992-7479 .

43 Farms for Rent
Two acre lots-160ft. road
frdntage. city water, behind

84 lumber. Call 304-675 6873 or 675-3618 .

36

Real Estate
Wanted

Wanted: out of state buyer
needs house or apt. building
with owner financing. Write
Box 1008 in care of The

Galllpollo Dally Tribune, 825
3rd . Ave ., Gallipolla , Oh
46631 .

Farm for rent -near Harrison ville. $300 . per month .

Clealond Reolty . 614-9922269 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

HUD available 2 bdr. deluxe,
kitchen furniahed, good
location , utilities partially
paid. 6 rm house for rent.
Residential and commercial
properties for aell or lease.

A-One Raol Eototea, Corol
Yeager, Realtor. Call 304-

8entalw
41

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom house on Rt .
218, available Oct. 2nd. Call
446-9686 .
Small furnished houn, 1 or

2 oduhs only . Call 4460338 .
2 bdr. house on lower Rt. 7 ,
dep . req . Married couple

preferred . Call 614 -256 1413.

676· 6104 or 676-6386.

2 bdr. downtown. all carpet.
complete krtchen, all electric heat-air cond., Waaher-

dryor. Call 446-4383 doyo,
446-0139 eve.

Furnished Apt .. 1 BR, 243
Jackson Pike. 8236 . Utilltiea pold. 446-4416 after 7
p.m.

Trailer lot 90x70 , Pearson
Trailer Court , Galllpolia

Ferry, WV, 304-675-6167.

... ... ... ... .. .
•

u.&gt; .o o • '• "

•

61 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION FURNITURE &amp;
PAWN SHOP 62 Olivo St ..
Golllpollo. Couch, lovoooot
and chair,

lhuggoro 1126.; bunk bods
with bunklos, 8170.; box
oprlng and mattraso. $100.
Firm, 1120.; reclinero. 880.;
9 • 12 linoleum rugs. 822 .;
maple rockers. *49 ., wrin·
ger waaben, retrlgeratora,
dinette sets, chest, dresters.

3 walnut logo. 304-6762539.
One front quarter beef for
ule, 304-8B2.-2419 .

30 .06 outomotlc, ocopo
over and under mounts and

bunkie mottreu, 140, Coli
448-3169.

sling 1300. 304-676-6211.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Winch for Jo~n Dee;., 460
dozer $600 . 304-676-5668
after 6 p.m .

- waatlera, dryera, refrigera tors, ranges . Skaggs Appliencea, Upper River Rd. ,

garage and basement, $800

per mo. Call 446-2917 .
Poniaroy-2 bd.room unfurnished house . S196 . mo .
Security deposit. $100. plus

446-0338 .

utllltieo. Altar 6-call 614992-2288 .
House for rent. 3 bedrooms.
103 8th Street , Point

Pleoaant , $260 monthly.
deposit required. new
furnace with gaa saving
features . Can be seen. 5
p.m. to 8 p.m. daily axcapt

Sundoy, Phone 614-4468398 between 11 a.m. and
9 p.m.
Houae. references needed.

304-676-4684.
For rent or sale, 3 bedroom
home . For iniormation call

304-895-3516
3 bdr country home, modern
kitchen. basement. carpet·

Schnauzers and etc. 814-

992-7342.

Boorcet 111 oconner 11 ~5 .
304-676-482B.
Fireplace grata, 6 otolnleso
steel tuboo, end blower type
grote . 304 - 676-3244

dle, 11 '1&gt; montho old ,
170.00, 304-882-3872.

Rod Dellclouo, Golden Doll·
clou1, Wino. Sap 1nd Rome
8oouty tppleo. John Owono
or Taulby Owono. No Sundey ooloo. 614-379-2676 .

bdr .. central olr. Flrot Ava ..

Trombone 176. 7ft. pooltoblo 871. 304·B95-3999.

no pete, ref. required . Call

614-256-6606.

Firewood 126.plckup lood.
Aok for Tim . 304-8953999.

Jackaon Estate• Apartments, 636 Jackson Pike,

Gallipolio. Eq,.al houolng
opportunity has 1 bedroom

Morcum Roofing &amp; Spout-•~•
opeciollzing In built up·roof.
Coli 814·388 · 9622 or;
614-388-9867.

cond., make good work car

*210. 304-871-7121 oftar
5p.m,

1971 Unooln Continontol
town cor 164,000 mileo.
good con d. one owner. 304875-1102.
1B70 Pontiac C1tollna. runo
good.

$162. per month . Call
446-2745 or leovo moaoogo
we will call you back.

Nearly new, 1 bdr .. apt. with
refrig. and otove. $189 por
mo., water included . Call

looka good,

72 Trucks for Sale
1980 '14 ton Chevy pickup.
one owner. low mileage.

Coli 4.4 6-4782, Golllpolio.
For sale 81 luv truck pickup

line R model and pans firm
troctor, 4ft . bruohhog. 304895-3441.

82 Wanted to Buy

loago. Coli 446-2706.

Motorola. Quazar . and

houoe collo. Coli 676 -2398 ·
or 446-2464.
F &amp; K Tree Trimming. Jtump

removal. Coll676-1331.

1977 Chevrolet pickup with
toppar U8oo. 304-6754334 altar 6 p.m .

rienced mason, roofing ,
carpenter, elect ric Ian,
g,tneral repairs and remodel-

1973 Ford good onglno end
tronomilllon. 1100. Call
448-7649.

73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

RINGLE'S SERVICE expe-

19B1 Kowaookl 1000 LTD,
4,000 milu, excellent condltion, 304-676-1028 altar
6.
•
i- - -- - - - - -1979 Kowo1akl 260. 300
aee to appreciate . actual milea, 304- 675 ·
coli 614-992-6646. 6719 .
4 p , m.-614·949- i - - - - - - - - 84,296.
19S6 Triumph Tiger 600,

Doyo
Alter
2218.

Men'o ltft hond golf clubs .
304-676-17S6.

1974 Ambasudor otation
wogon. Cheap. Call 614-

Livestock

1973-&lt; Honde 360. $160.
. 814-zr86-3597.

cond .. p.o. ,p.b.,p.w., power
door locks. A.m.-f.m.rodlo.
8 track otoreo, cruloo control,rur window defogger,
tilt wheel. wire whlllio, new
tlrn, outo. trunk reiMoe.

Hldabod. 304-676·6937 or
304-676-7626 .

1---------

1978 Kowuoki 650: Beat
offer. Mull ooll. 814-7422S97.

exc . cond.

ru,n1 good ,

helmet Included $660. 304n3-6835 .

742-2178.
1::===~=====
1979 Plymouth ·Champ. 75
and
A.M.- F.M .. front wheel
Motors for Sale
drive. good oond., 40mi. per r - - - - - - - - - o•llon. Aftor 6 • 814-992- , .
31569.
12' flberglaso row boat,
with tilt troller, olacttfc motor, 3% HP gas engine,
82.00. Call 614-246-5B70. ,

Ing. Call 304-676·2088 or ·
676-4660 .
Weter Walla. Commercial •.,
and Domestic. Teat holes. ~
Pumpa Sales and Service. .

,.

Gutter-Doors . Offering
contlnuse gunering. aeam· •
le11 aiding. rOofing. garage •
doors, free estimates,

'

PAINTING . Interior o.r
exterior , building an·d
r .e modelbg , replica or
install aiding, experienced

and roofing . 304-676 2440.

the

Plumbing

76

WINNIE

Electrical

Pomeroy. 992-2284.

3 room furniohod opt. 1250.

We'll do lt.,Call446-3159 or f ·
814-268-1967 ofter 6 .
~

haopltol. child accepted.
Coli 446-0167.
12x66 2 bdr. mobile homo.
new carpet. clean, ~ecurity

dop. and ref. roq , Bob
McCormick Rd . Nci poto,
w1tor paid, $166 per. mo.
pluo utllltioo. Coli 4484491 .
for •I• or rant unfu~lehed
81 N.. hua 14x70 mobile
home. 3 bedrooms, front
dec• off kitchen , wood
burner. gas heat. stove and
refr,gorator Included . Call
814-246-9226 after 6 .
2 bedroom tr-'lor. Rtll niCe, .
.,tulto only. Brown'o Trailer
P8rt. MinoriVIIo. 614·182·
3324.

American wingback chairs

Pomeroy Cliff Apts .. 246

2 GE 18 lb capoclty waohor:
oloo Whlrlpool 'motchad polr.
Wutlnghouu t11ilor olza

Union Ave. now accepting

applicotiono for 4- bd. room
·Apto. Coli 614~992-7772 . 8
o.m. tNI 3 p.m.
Aportmonu . 304· 6766148.

General Hauling :

IT AIN'T FAIR!!
PAW FIXES A

MIDNIGHT SNACK--

I
I

and 1 living room couch. A)l
excellent condition. lnqulra
at 91B 2nd. Ave .. G111ipoHo.

waaher. Kenmore,

pool end Moytog wuhero
end dryaro. 30 ,dey "''""' 11!0!!;:''\
tied. Cell 1114-2118·1207.

APARTMENTS, ! I ' O b i l o l - - - - - - - - homH, houl8o. Pt. Pl-ont .
and Golllpolio. 814-4468221 or 614. 241·9484.

3110 IU1Q- I KIPEI~I~.L Complete onomll
304•876 • paint )abo from 8300, Sun.
roofo inltlllod from 82.25.
Auto Trim c.ntor, 446·
1 8 18
1979, "ol&gt;bh L-8"'*, vwy ,__ _ _· - - - - cl.,., 18"77 LTD Ford. Ill·
.,..l.,t304.182·24711.
-oltloft. · low mlINge,

'
111111 Bulaklltvlortt. • 2 ule

IJil"""iC.m\~;Q-;--:-~

Equipment
--ceorr• trill.. 8tarcrtft 1---_;,;___ _ _...:_
llllllper, 304·

Now Hauling houoe cool , '

~::~~!.!:.o~: ':,~ofl:. ~~~:

C•II614-31J7·71Q1 .

!i

..

U!'holstery

Opening lead:

•J

one favor ite to win . Still I
was lucky . Had I held the 10
of trumps instead o! the
nine, restricted choice would
not have a pplied and I would
probably have played for the
2-2 break and gone down."

L-------------------_,1
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Pulpit
sign • off

DOWN
1 Redolence
2 One kind

of house
3 Happening
4 Stack role
5 Contrivance

5 Arrest
g Rant
10 Bird SOWld
,. Dollar bills
""
13 At this time
15 Karloff role
17 Priority's

8 Not here
7 " ... - the
ramparts"

pref!J:

8 Uke Tom

Ye11terday's BDBwen.
24 Director's

31 CaMed

18 Cunning
11 Argentine
call
tomato
19 Bardot's soul
city
25 By product
.. Fonn of John 14 Choir member
(according 32 Mine roof
liN

system .

(R)

(60 31 Soft food

tnt

p

··AN' I GIT TH'

NIGHTMARE!!

37

"'Tis a pity"

Abby together end Leure 39 Greek river
decides to move back in
..
with Richard. (R) (60 min.) to Jack Kelch's
[J) Soundltlge Specials
weapon
'The Blasters .'
U Onmillcient
(j)) Newawatch
one
1 0:30 (I) Video Jukebox
42Film
(l) Slnt out America
(I) TBS Evening News
criUc
(llJ Coping with Kldo
43
War,
11 :00 8 (I) Newscenttr
to Shennan
CII MOVIE: 'All the
Milrble1'
(l) Nlllhvllle RFD
IIJ Ntwo/Sporta/Weather
D (]) rB Nawti
(I) o- Allen at Large
11 :30 II Cil IIJ Tonlght Show
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
(I) MOVIE: 'lot'o Do It
AXYDLBAAXK
Again'
·
II
L
O ·N G I' E L L 0 W
(l) Another Ufa
()) ESPN Sportl Cer)l:or
One letter simply 1tands for another. In this sample A b
(I)_QD ,411Jn. the F.!""ily
uaed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
(I)
11J News
apoetrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
0 (]) Quincy Quincy blnta. Eleh day the code !etten are dllferent.

a

f

.l

JIMS Woter Service. Call
Jim I,Ainiar, 304-876-.7397, r

87

newspaper

Karen catches Gary and

Sciaaora. Fabric Shop ,

•

2 bd .room furnished Apt.,
utilities inc . , Middleport,
Oh. 8206. par mo. 614992-7177.

" Just correct play ,"
replied the Prof. "It was the
use of restricted choice.
We!!t's play of the heart-10
was forced since he had a
singleton. Had he held jack10 he might well have
played the jack. Thus my
finesse was about a two- to-

D

service. Authorized Singer·,

Soleo &amp; Service Shorpen.-

Two-2 bdr. trailers com-

2 bdr mobile home for rent
out 160 2 1h mile s from

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

""MOVIE: 'Brian'o Song' !4 en po
(I) CD Knou Landing 35 Rhapsodize

SEWING Machlna ropolra, ;

Need something hauled 1
'a way or aomethlng moved? ~

CARS 82001 Truck1 11601 71 Plymouth, porto. 1422
Av1lllble ot locol gov't Ohio ,Btroat, Pt .. P11118nt.
aaleo. Call lmundlblel 1.
-71.4·11118·0241 ext. 1 Bllll
Rap"ir
for dlractory- lhowa you 77
how to purch-. 24 houro. , _ _ _ _ _ _.:__ _

East

~~Horseshoes ," murmured

min .)

8196. Coli collect avonlngo
1-304-273-9746 .

E1rly Amer.lc1n conaola

Nortb

gains faith in the criminal 30 - brio

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Call 814-387747! or 814-367-0691 :

color t.t leviolon, 2 ·early IIM~iRii'ROi.

school

justice

BARNEY

carpeted wrth stove &amp; refrig.
Wuhtr &amp; dryer hookup,

Wett

tioned]

&amp; Refrigeration

85

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

10:00 U (I) 1IJ Hill Street 27 Yearn
Blues Thieves steal a fu- 28 Capek play
naral varr that contains Zl Endln
Renlt.cfs fathior' s remains
g
arrd Joyce temporarily refor favor

Avalloblo Oct. 1 . Nice 2 bdr.
apt. at Konauga. fully

&amp; Accessories

tAQ
+963

..

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
Phone 446-3888 or 446 - :
4477

84

•Kn42

ceusing ah outcry from tho 21 English river 18 Elephant's~ar
to rule)
33 Harbor to
peron1s. IRI
22-~ llamlni
21 Function
2&amp; Actress
remember
&lt;Il Wodehoula ~ ·a-.o~
Swiss river
Martita
38 Jumble
(j)) Thi1 Old Houoe CJr.,
-""
pontor Norm Abram fin·
· tlllla.role
23 " - heart
28 Short poem 38 Feather
!shes worl&lt; on the kitchen 21 "-the
ue'er won .. ." :10 Desist
scarf
cabinets . (R) (Closed C4p·
Horrible"

&amp; Heating

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

2 bdr . mobile home. Call
446-0390.

()) Top Rank Boxing from
Lao Vagal
D (]) rB Simon &amp; Simon
The recovery of some sto·
len antiques leads Simon &amp;
Simon to a computer dati!'!l service. (R) (60 min.)
(I) To the Manor Born
&lt;ID Sneak Previawo Cohosts Gene Siska! and
Roger Eben look at what's
happening et tho movies .
9 :30 1J CIJ IIJ TOIChon Only
Diana 's ideas on premarioal se• are quoted in

SAVE NOWI Cu,t winter
bill I, Insulate your home.
For In!. call Paul 1-6264404 for free ootimateo.

Furnlohod apt . , no pau,
adult11 3 rmo .. and both. Call
446-0171 or 446-3733.

month Includes utilities .
Inquire at Meigs Inn In
Pomeroy.

(l) 700 Club

GASOLINE AlLEY

NORTH
+Q84
.Q763
+K742
+74
WEST
EAST
+JI 092
+H3
•10
.AJ6
tJ963
tlOBI
+AQ 105
+KJ8 2
SOUTH
+AK6

East.

Nell saves tmo day when
the Kanisk y home is

robbed. (R)

PAINTING interior &amp; exterior, free a~o timatea, 304-

.8 2

Here is the Professor bid ding his hand to the limi t as
usual. Many experts would
merely have reb id three _of
some suit instead of jumpmg
to game.
Had he rebid to three
diamonds, North would have
gone to four hearts. A threeheart rebid would undoubtedly find North passing. .
The Prof won the opemng
lead in his own hand and
promptly Ied a Iow Irump
toward dummy. West produced the 10 and dummy's
queen fell to East's ace. The
deuce of clubs came back.
West took two clubs and led
the 10 of spades.
The Prof won in dummr, ,
led a trump and prom~t Y
finessed the nine after ast
played low. It held and the
relit of the tricks were
claimed.

CIJ IIJ Glmma A Break

9:00 8

814-698-8206.

ing . Off Sendhill Rd .
304-BB2-2095 eher 4 p.m.

pletely furnished , Cell
446-9869 .

(I)
Ill at
I1JKanoae
NFL Football:
Atlanta
City
[J) Good Neighbors
(jj) Moneymakon

ADVANC,ED Seomlau "

--------~------- ·

446-3617.

(I) Femlly Feud

respondent and an assassin arrive in Honolulu. (R)
160 min.)
(I) Sneak Prevlawo Cohosts Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert look at what's
happening a1 tho movies.
8:30 (IJ MOVIE: 'Foul Play'
(]) CFL From tho 65 Yard
Una

676-1128.
19B2 Kawosa•l Spectre,
19B2 Ford 1 ton flatbed .
614-742-2226.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

middle when a news cor-

304-896-3802.

Motorcycles

Restricted choice wins

(]) National Geographic
Spacial
(]) NFL Story: Une By
Uno
(() MOVIE : 'The Laot
Commend'
ill D I1J Joanio Lovao .
Chachi Cl\achi is heartbroken when \Joanie becomes
the darling of fraternity_
row. (R)
.,.. (]) ""'
""' M 1gnum, p ..
1
.,.
Magnum is caught in thio

"DADOY"?

RON'S Television Service.
·Sll"clolizing in Zenith ond ·

19B2 Chevy S1 0 with
topper, $6900., 304-6756894.

74 Dodge club cob $800.
304-675-6211 '

Must

AGENT~,

I I I)[ I XI]

BRIDGE

Woman'

4M4, exc. cond .• low mi·

1950 Oldo S8 okk orginal
8860, 11 io. Coii4~ · 019S .

door. vinyl tap. auto .• air

THEIR.

Now lfTinll" tho circled letters to
form the surprise answer, aa aug·
gestad by t11a above cartoon.

Jumblllool No. 20, containing 110 puatet, Ia nallable f01 S1 .te potlpllld
from Jumble, do this newap.per, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07848.. lncrucM ycK~r
neme, addNM,
code and make thtcks
sb~ to N.wa
.

CI) lAverne 111d Shirley
(]) BuoiHIS Report
&lt;ID All Crwturee Great
and Smell
11J Emenainmem
Ton'l!ht
8 :00 8 CIJ IIJ Fame Leroy discovers a gun that hie
brother left and attempts
to got rid of it . (R) 160
min .)
CIJ MOVIE: 'Adem'•

.. !&gt;HOULDN'T WE TELL OH- I OOH'T
TH' GO'IE!tNMEHT
AHY REAL
THAT STELLA HAN
MECES51TY I'Oil
I(.JDNAPPED ONE O'
TtiAT, ANNIE••

()

IIIOT TO RUN FO~

OFFICE ANYMO~e.

(Anowers tomorrow)
CRAWL EXODUS RADIUM
Ana-: From which riches have baen known to
como- RAGS

(]) Aiidy Griffith

ANNIE

()

. I Jumbloo: AGATE
Yesterday 1

IBNIWI
()I P-'o'o Court
7 :30 8 (!) 1B You Aoked For
h
(I) Inside tile NFL len
Dawoon and Nick Buoniconti analyze this weak· s
NFL action and look aheed
to next week' s games.
()) Anotller Life
(!) ESPN Sports Center

(]) D

WHY "THE VETER'AI-i
P'OI.Ii iCIAN Cl'ECIDED

HE COULD(

D

new

Ing. well paneling. ctlling
•tile ·s. oidlng . 614-992 :2769 .

(I) P.M. Magazine
()) Bull'o Eye
()) ESPN Sporteforum

e

llano's Steam Corpet CleanScotch Gourd - Free
ootlmatal·oprlng opeclolo·
Gene Smith. 992-6309.
Carpentry repair &amp; remodel -

An&amp;w:

8

(]) Gomer Pyle
(I) Ent-'nmont Tonight
1IJ Happy Dey1
D (I) Tic Tee Oou9h
(I) ())) MecNeii·Lahnor
Report

BINGS CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION Spociollzi!IIJ in ,.
concrete drivowoys, olde·
wolko, flooro. patio,, etc. 11·
yr. exp. Coii814-367-7S91.

otickor 1600. 304-468 1654.

I ()

(I) Dr. Who
(j)) Ulilo, Yoga end You

BORNUlSER

I

IGRUHNYI

()) 160.000 Pynomld

Brolthara Custom Carpets,... ,

73 Ford l TO. good running

I ()

: IJ

ill Bob Newhart Show
(I) 8 11J ABC Nawo
8 (]) (IJ CBS Nowo

CAPTAIN
STEEMER
Cleaning fottuied
by C1rpa
Hoffelt,:~

1------- - - -

LAASI

hosts this look at an extraordinary femily :

7 :00

Autos for Sale . Free' ootlmoteo. Coli 446·
2107.
600 bU. of old corn In fino 1B64 Pontloc Tompoot, 2
condition. Butler Hereford door, air, roily whoels. 326,
Farm, lower River Rd. Cell aut., now point, 1876. 304- Masonery work. Logue
Contracting, At. 1, Ewing814 -268-1113 or 614- 458-1880.
266·651S.
ton. Call S14-38B-9939.
79 Ford truck 302 V-B, outo.
10 buohel whoot. 614-9S6- po. pb, air. tAt whoel. tow
bumper, toppar XLT pock· CHRISTIAN ' S CON 4320.
ago 15,000 . 304-896- STRUCTION . Conotr ..
roofing, siding, spouting ,
3415.
fencing, paln11ng. rapalro &amp;
1982 Pontile Catolino, now· cleaning . 446 -2000, coli ,
point, now tlreo, nobuilt mo· before 8 end after 6:30 .
tor. 304-B91-3416.
.

(I) N - r
(I) MOVIE: ' The Henging
Tree'

8 :30 8 CIIIIJ NBC Nowo
CII Who Are Tha
Dobolta? Henry Winkler

WE'RE GOING
TO NES'P OUR
HfAP!J IF Wf'f(f;
GOING TO GET
. OUT OF THI5.

lng . 30 yean exper Ience,

71

I

I I I

(I) Eloctrtc Company
(j)) 3-2-1 . Contoct

oomo remodeling . 20 yro . •
. oxp. Coli 614-388-9662.

Hay &amp; Grain

KYKIN

Cll 8 Cll rB 8 I1J Newo
1IJ Ntwo/Sporti/Weathar

PAINTING · lntorlorond .,

64

8

ill Carol Burnett

exterior, plumbing, roofing. •

good engine and Interior,

63

apartments. rent starts at

8:00

.:.1_18::..2::..·------- ~
••

~~=======::::::~~~~=.::;:::;~~,

I

EVENING

estlmotos. Coli 614·256·

GOOO THINGS TO EAT :::
19BO CJ-7 ' Jeep, 6,200
CANNING PEACHES, Yel- 1974 Triumph TRII good miles, hard top, lock doors.
low Freootone conning cond., oharp. Coll446·2060 $6,000 . Coli 614· 388·
paocheo now avollobto while uk lor Mr. lao.
81532 .
tho oupply laoto. BOBS
MARKET--Muon W.VA . 1979• Dodgo Colt 82,600. 1967 Joep pickup. Body
773-6721 open 7 dayo a Call 448-4860 'ofter 4 .
rough but runo, Firot $800.
week.
Nlc1 74 Bootie, now point. tokoo it. 814-992·7789.

evenings.
Deluxe garage apartment, 1

...

----------------1
Ont AKC Silver nltlo poo-

small ma.nure epreader, mo·

2nd floor furnished effi·
cioncy opt. Apt. 4, 729 2nd
Ave. Adulto only. 4460967 .

9/23/82

teMtured · ceilings commer· :
clal end residential, free ...:.~o

1979 20C M111oy Ferguoon
end looder, plow, disc, culti- 1976 Chryoler Cordoba 2
vator. tines, bruah hog,
door, vinyl top, air conditl·
grader blade. 110,600. Coli onad.
good running cond ..
448-2971,
e?OO. Coli 614·3B8·BI61 .
Hammer Mill. UtMity troller. 1979 ·Ford LTD Landau. 2

Small furnished effloncy, 1
profe11ional type malt only.
Canter air &amp; heat . Call

HIMSEU:....,

STUCCO PLASTERING · ~

1974, Olds Delta 88, good
cond .. RH, olr cond ..
61,000 actuol mllea. Call
446-04S6.

Houae for rent 3rd. Ave.,

Gallipolis . 6 rma. with

Grooming nrvlceo. Will clip

beolde Stone Croat Motel.
448-7398.

84·5 2nd . Ave., Gallipolis.
Rof. preferred. Coli 4462216.

FROM ADONIS

••

-

81 .700 . C11i 814-379 74
2722.

Furnished 3 r . privata bath,

•

'
Home
Improvements
_ _ __:.r_ _ ·w

81

POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Toylor at 614-3677220.

Conorilo. All colon. mole
and fomole . Good alngoro.
Coli 614-3B'8·8132.

.Television .
Viewing

I SHOUL-DN'T ·loiAVE

HAD "TO HE'AI'l THIS

Coli 448 -7791.

For ule: Reglotorod Golden
Retrivor puppleo, 2'11 mo .
old, 1126. Call McArthur,
698 -4447.

The Daily Sentinel Page IS

Middleport, Ohio

&amp; Campers

~~~ ~

Doberman Stud Service .

and Yellowroot prlcea.

$199.; wal-

79 Motor Home

Ford truck. Coli 6715-5400.

AKC Raglotored Shih Tzu 1980 Pontloc Flreblrd. AMpuppleo, 6 weoko old, 1 fe· FM ctooette, olr, 16.000
Antlquoo, lmporto, fine dol· mole. 5 moloo. 8121. each. firm. Call 814-216-1698.
olcol reproduction ook furni- 304-675-6S66.
ture In otock. Paul Conkel,
Tupporsplain s. Oh . At.7,
WINDOW TINTING AutoNorth End.
57
Musical
Home- Commerclll. Cut
high anergy coot, profeo·
Instruments
.Pool teble &amp; acce11orie1.
olonolly lnotllle~ . Call 446·
Ping pong t obto, typewriter,
3100.
Wo
will
MEET
or
BEAT
ony
adding mechine, metal
legitimate price your receive
owing. 614-992-3018 .
on any new piano or organ. 79 Pontiac Grand loMono, 2
Bo«lod gao Warm Morning 8RUNICARDI MUSIC CO .. dr., 1uto, PB, PB. AM· FM
heater. Con b• converted to 61 Court St ., Golllpollo. Call ltero. AC. cruiu, tilt wheel.
natural gas . Maytag wringer 446 -0687.
cloth interior, approx .
wooher. Phone 614-992·
13.000 miiH. 14.800. Call
Monln
gultor
triple
0
-18,
3111 .
304-676-1611 .
1360. 304-S76-1761 .
Fire wood for ule. 8 30. spiH 1-B-un_dy
_ t-ru_m_pe_t-.-, - - - .-- - _ 1976 Camero olr ohocko,
1 25 30 4
8o delivered. 614-992-7237
_
_
meg wheela, radial tires, au·
773
6867
or 614-992-671B .
toniotic, 79,000 mi. Coli
44S-4730.
TIRED of being " oil
58
Fruit
gummed up", from the
1975 Comaro PS, PB, 360
&amp; Vegetables
aymptona of such thlogs es
engine, 1 owner, price
headaches. constipation. ar·
*2,960 firm . Coli 448thr;tls, allergies, and obea- Gorman Ridge apploo. Red 0971 .
ltyl Call 304-675-1293 for end Golden Delicious, Romo
herbal asalatancti from Beauty and Wino Sop, 17,50 1977 Sunblrd auto, air
Naturalife.
buohel. 84 .00 V. buohel. cond.. sharp, extra clean.
Corner of Lollronde Blvd. Call 446-4782, Golllpolio,
and Portsmouth Rd. Coil OH.
Call Raben Harper for Gin- 446-869S .
1293.

~

~-----------------, . 8ft. flberglall camper to fit ••"~

HILLCREST KENNEL •
Boarding ell broedo . AKC
Reg , Doberman• pupo end

1Coli
WHk.
up and delivery.
614·Pick
367-7B77.

down, 12 percent interest.
Mineral rights Inc. No

by Larry Wright

one mel coated. 4•8 thru 4 •
12. Pricoo. e7.00 to 89.150.
614-067·30B6.

All 8rHd Grooming, 7 doya

Parker Run Rd . Land con -

CARLYLE"'

Firewood for sale , cut 1nd

742-2897 .

tract available . 816,000 .

KIT

28 ft. Markel bauboord
heatera, • 30 ea . Contact 68 Pets for Sale
Charles Thaxton, 614-3SB·
8742 .
DRAGONWYND CATTERY
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446-4113 .
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September

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16--The Daily Sentiilel

Thunday, September 23,198~1

,

..

Columbus Physican faces indictments

Aug. 31 of this year.
Pollee said they found a ski tees and was suspended trom Its
James Kura, Franklin County mask, surgical gloves, rope, a medtcal staff. His staff prlvtleges a!
public defender, said WWiamJack· flashlight, a pry tool and a plastic MI. Csrmel J{ospltal aiao
· ::
110n had spent most of bls five years , bag Inside the apartment when Dr. suspended:
WW!am Jackson was sentence(~
In prison-at the maximum-security Jackson was apprehended.
Southern Ohio Correctional FacllIn the Sept, 5 Incident, Jackson to 14 to 50 yean In prtson after a
Ity at Lucasv!De.
was charged with aggravated bur- Franklin County Jury conv~
"He's been stabbed In there. He's glary and possession of criminal him Jan. 12. 1978, of two counts ~
been assaulted In there. It's not a too~.
rape and ·two,counts of aggravateil
very pleasant thing• to happen to
:
Detectives then took another look burglary.
someone," Kura told The Colum- at some attacks attributed to the
Although decltnlng to give sWj
bus Dispatch.
"Grandview Rapist," named for clflc details, Mlller said he put legaJ
Kura said he filEd a motion with the neighborhood where the lnltlal machinery for WIUlam Jackson'~
Judge Paul Martin seeking a new attacks occulTed.
release In motion Immediately af·
·•
trial based on newly dlsrovered evl·
ter police told him about certain as.
PoUce sources said the attacker pects of their tnvesttgatlOn ot of:
dence. A hearing Is scheduled
had worn surgical gloves In some of Jackson.
Friday. ·
::
_Miller said he wouldn't oppose theao to 1008fsaultsofwhlchdetec·
"I knew the~ was a problem. J
the new trial motion and said he lives suspected the Grandview Ra· Immediately called the public
wUI ask the Judge to drop~ case.
plst, although they said they lacked · fender," Miller said.
"
, In addition to the rape and bur- a common link to tie all viCtims to a
•
The prosecutor said he spo~
glary charges, Dr. .Tacltson ts single assailant.
A -spokesman for St. Anthony with William Jackson in person an4
charged with five counts ot gross
sexual Imposition, four counts of at· Hospital said Jackson was "cons!· said the man asked what wool~
tempted rape, twocountsoflddnap- dered by those In the profession as happen It Dr. Jackson were fo~
ping and one count of possessing an outstanding physician who al- lnnoeent.
crtmlnal tools.
ways conducted himself In an ex"I told hlin It wouldn't make a bit
of dttterence. I don't think you did
The pollee Investigation of the emplary manner."
He had been on the staff at St. It," MUler said.
physician began after he was arA Franklin County JaU spokes·
rested about 6 a.m. Sept. 5 Inside Anthony since 1!174. Three days af·
the apartment of two women who ter his arrest, Jackson resigned man said Wednesday night Dr.
from the St. Anthony board of trus- Jackson had been released on bond.
weren't home at the time.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ....:. A
man who has been JaDEd for ftve
years was near freedom today IJe.
cause of Indictments against a physlclan for three dozen rapes,
l,ncluding two the JailEd man was
accused of committing.
Dr. Edward Franklin Jackson
Jr., a 38-year-old Internist and
former board member of a Columbus hospital, was charged with 36
counts of rape and 46 counts of aggravated burglary Wednesday.
Prosecutor Michael MUler said
the Indictments should lead to free.
dom for William Bernard Jackson,
30, of Columbus, who was convictEd
by a Franklin County Jury on Jan.
12, 1978.
"I think the Judge wiU grant It,"
MUier said.
While sharing the same last
name, the two men aren't related.
Pollee said they are slmDar In physleal appearance. Both are about 6 ·
feet tall, both wetgh about 00
pounds and both wore beards.
The Franklin County Grand
Jury's 94-eount Indictment accuses
Or. Jackson of breaking Into homes
and raping the women who lived
there between Sept. 28. l!Y/5, and

DOCTOR AND WIFE - Dr. Edward FranJdiD Jackson and bls
wife, Allee, walt In a court oHice Wednesday prior to Jackson's arraign.
menton aM count Indictment. The doctor Is charged wtth rape, kidnapping 1111d burglary In the lndfclment. (AP Laserphoto).

ELBE~FELDS
FRIDAY,
SEPTEMBER\
24th

were.

IN POMEROY
~
8-~

MEN'S WORK
GLOVES
Hush Puppies Gloves at special sale prices
this weekend.

$1.29 9 Oz. Brown Jersey Sale 99¢
$1.49 Red Palm and Back Chore
Glove ................................ $1.19

lADIES'

BLAZER SALE
Weekend Sale Prices on our new fall and winter ~zers.
Every misses and extra sin! blazer is included. Corduroy,
wool blends, tweeds, velvets, leather looks and polyeste~.
Qualicy name brands like Bradley, Douglas Marc, Oot\y
Mann, Wrangler, Trissi and Chestnut Hill.

SATURDAY,
SEPTEMBER
25th

REG. $25.00 ......................... SALE '18.75
REG. $32.00 .......................... SALE '24.00
REG. $43.00 ......................... SALE '32.25
REG. $59.00 ......................... SALE '44.25

-Control Top with Sheer or Support Leg.
-Extra Control Top with Sheer or Support Leg.
-Re-inforced heel and toe or sandalfoot

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

Sizes 30 to 44 Waist 10 Ounce Denim, 100%
Cotton. Sanforized Shrunk. SAVE.

V2 PRICE

SALE!

LINED
LINED
LINED
LINED
UNED

REG.
I REG.
IREG.
. REG.

'9.95 Sweat Pants in Grey, Burgundy and Denim
Jue. ·....................................... SALE '7.99

SUMMER
HANDBAG CLEARANCE

·GOWNS and ROBES
Cotton and Nylon gowns, robes, nursing gowns and ensem·
bles. Sizes XS thru XXL

, REG. s7.00 ................. SALE S5.95
· REG. s1o:so· .......... ;..... SALE S8.95
REG. Sl5.00 .......... :....SALE Sl2.75
.
REG. S23.00 ...·........_....SALE '19.55

'20.00 ...... :..................... SALE H5.99
'28.00 ............................ SALE '22.39
'36.00 ............................ SALE '28.79' ·
'47.00............................ SALE '37.59
-·

..-------------------~

' '

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,EIBERII,t IS IN PQMERQY
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enttne
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A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

enrichment plaJit In Pike County have less fear of the plant than
those who live farther ti-om lt.
omctais of the tiVe-eounty Sctoto-Palnt Valley Mental Health
Board and Mental Health Center revealed Wednesday the results of
the two surveys of more than 1,&lt;00 perSons each In October 198l and
In AprU and May 1982.

Aurora man faces life sentences
CLEVELAND - A 26-year-oid Aurora man faces three rnanda·
tory life sentences In what officials say could be the state's first
aggravated murder conviction stemming from a car colltslon.
Sentencing for Ronald C. Hendricks Is scbeduled Oct. 6.
Hendricks was found guDty In Cuyahoga County Common Pleas
Court on Wednesday of three counts of aggravated murder and one
of attempted murder. He was accused of crashing bls car Into
another vehicle Feb. W In an attempt to kill hlrilself and Duane
Chisholm, 22.

Insists he's wrongfully charged
HAMILTON, Ohio - A former Miami University football player,
who was banned from the school until bls case Is decided, Insists that
a 21-year-Oid COEid wrongfuiiy charged him with rape.
The Butler County ~nunQn Pie~ Jury of eight men and four
women resumed deliberatiOns today.
,....~ U~W!l~!EMk;h.~l.~ ~sert~!he victim did not
li&amp;Ve to l'elllat her anac...,.- to char1111 rape.
The female roomrltate d. the victim testified ealler that she had
dated COle, had
him at a party the night of the tnctdent and
InvitEd him to the apartment.

seen

Papers blast drifter's acquittal
LONDON - The acquittal or the lovelorn drltter who perched on
the queen' s bed and drank the prince's wine means It's "open house"
at Buckingham Palace, newspapers charged today In a flurry of
fuming editorials.
The verdict Thursday In favor of Michael Fagan was "bonkers."
declared the sensational Sun tabloid, describing tt as "the craziest
caseslncethetrtal otthe Knave a! Hearts In 'AUce In Wonderland."'
Fagan, 30, penetr4ted royal security twice over the summer,
vaulting over the palace walls, clambor!ng up drainpipes and creepIng through hallways.
He was ~u)tted In Old Batley Central Crtmtnal Court on acharge
of stealing a half-bottle of Prince Charles' California wine on June 7
IIi the first break-ln.
.

Winning Ohio lottery number
CLEVELAND -The winning number dr~wn Thursday. night In
the Ohio Lottery's daUy game "The Number" was 983.
In the semiweekly "Pick 4" galne, the winning number was :'i769.
The lottery reported earnings of ~.271 on Its daDy game. The
earning's came on sales of $900,758, while holders ot wtnnlng tickets
are entitled to share ~.487, lottery officials said.

Weather forecast ·
Sixty percent chance of showers or thunderstorms tonlgllt. Low
near 50. Winds southerly around 10 mph, possibly shlfllng to north·
westerly by morning. Saturday, continued cloudy with a 50 percent
chance of showers. High 65-70.

'

Extended Oblo 'l'orecut

8uday lbrciuP 'l'ueeda)';
Fair tiiNup tile ~ lll&amp;bl e:10 Suaday 111d In lbe low to
mld-'ltl Maadllf lllil1'lleeciii.Y. Lows 4HO 8uDday llliiiD lbe low to
inld ... Monday lllil TuaN~a,y.

'
For 8 a.m. EDT

25

·'

NEw - The new urgency care oenter to e-ve 19 Veterans Memorial Hospital. The service wm U!le
(III&amp;Jenle who are mor aeed e-vlce on weekmcls wW the ofllces of Dr. Wilma Mansfield and Dr. James
be ·operated In lhe Melp Medical BuDding, adjacent WithereD In this buDding.

Veterans Memorial offers
new -'Urgent Care Center'
Satunlay or Sunday.
VMH Administrator W. Scott Lucas, stresses that when a major
emergency occurs, such as a heart
attack or life-threatening accident,
the· hospital emergency room remains the place to go.
That facUlty, which operates 24
hours a day, every day, wUI also
continue to treat minor emergen·
cles Including cuts, sprains,
bruises, broken bones, and sports
tnjurtes.
The new urgent care center will
treat other medical problems.
The weekend schedule enables
patients to receive quality health
care and not have to tak~ ttme off
from work. Also. those patients
who have a famDy doctor, but who
don't want to bother him on the
weekend, can utUize the new facilIty which wUI send a full report to
the patient's physicians If the patient requests.

A major new step In famDy medl·
cal care comes to the area Saturday when Veterans Memorial
Hospital In Pomeroy, tnaugura tes
Ibis region's first urgent care cen·
ter. It wUI be open every weekend.
Increasingly popular In many
sections It the country, urgent care
centers enable patients to recetv.e
treatment, for all but the most serious situations, on weekends when most doctor o!flces are
closed.
Veteralls Memorial's Urgent
care Center will be tuny staffed
with doctors and nurses.
Veterans Memorial's Urgent
Care Center will be located on the
hospital grounds, In the medical offlee complex.
.
Patients do not need an appoint·
ment Hours are tailored to setve
working families. Citizens wW be
seen on a walk-In basis with little or
not watt from 9 a.m .. to 9 p.m. on

Among the illnesses that would
be treated at the urgent care center
are flu, rashes, sore throats and
childhood Ulnesses, etc.
In addition, the Veterans Memm··
lal Urgent Care Center wtll provide
physical exams, Immunizations,
pap smears, veneral disease
checks, pre-marital blood tests and
a wtde range of other se1vlces.
"Giving people treatment when
they want It wUI be the key to Vete·
rans Memmial Urgent Care Cen·
ter," declared Lucas.
"We're doing everything possible
to make medical care avaDable to
local citizens," said Lucas. "It's
part of ouron-golngcommttment to
the community. Our physicians
will serve the public during times
on weekends when many people
want to be setved.
"It's a new concept to the region,
but Its popularity elsewhere speaks
well for the future here.

Forensic Center closing will
hurt services to area courts
service was avaDable locaUy,"
Gordon said.
He said area judges have told
him they will not ask for psychiatric evalua Uons as often because of
the time and money Involved In
sending cUents to Pmismouth.
The Shawnee Forensic Center
wUI not pay for all evaluations done
for Municipal and Common Pleas
Courts, as the Southeastern center
dld, Gordon said .
"For those In local county jails, It
means the time and expense of the
county ~her!fi's department for
transportation and security to and
from Portsmouth," according to
Gordon.
The closing of the center will also
hurt the area because the Shawnee
Center will not contract with' local
mental health agencies, he satd.
He estimates the loss to local

The director of the Southeastern
Ohio Forensic Psychiatric Center
said the closing of his agency Oct 1
means area Judges wUI be less
likely to request psychiatric e-valuations for mentally disturbed
defeildants.
Manhall S. Gordon said the Ohio
Department of Mental Health, In a
cost-cutting move,.has decided that
services for' this area wUI be provided by the Shawnee Forensic
Ceilter Ill Por1smoutb.
.
''We're realbl disappointEd about
this," Gordon said. "So are a lot of
area Judges and legislators."
The center provided local courts
with eval118tlon!l of persons found
not iuDty of crimes by reason of
tnaanlty, !bose Involved with drugs
and those suffering from other
mental health problems.
•
"Courts came tn us b!leause the

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Forty-six units of housing fOI' the
elderly and handicapped wUI be
constructed on land In Pomeroy ad·
jacent to the Senior Citizens Center
with funds from a $1.9 million secured through Housing and Urban
Development by the Meigs County
Elderly Housing Corp.
The non-profit corporation with
Richard Jones, Meigs County commissioner, as president; Paul Bar·
nett, the Rev. Robert McGee,
Manning Webster, BUI Young and
Eleanor Thomas, members, were
advised Thursday morning by the
office of Con g. Clm·ence Miller that
the loan had been approved.
Encompassed in the project Is
the renovation of the fmmer Child·
ren's Home, now occupied by the
Meigs County Board of Education
and the Meigs Cancer Society. The
buDding Is being registered with the
National Register of Hlsto1ic Pia·
ces. Renovation wtll be In accordance with mainta inin g that
registry.
The new housing wUI be 100 percent subsidized with rent to be determined on the basis of Income.
Completed plans show four units,
three stmies high, of brick and
frame, with architecture to complement that of the fmmer children's
home. Plans were completed by
Fred Schwab p1ior to the time the
non-profit corporation fUEd for the
loan In June, 1982.
New construction will be located
In an area between the Senior Citizens Center and the children's
home. Access wUI be from the road
tn front of Veterans Memmial Hospital to a driveway which wlll be
buDt between the end of the clinic
buUdlng and the front of the child·
ren's home.

Once official notifica tion has
been received from HUD. the nonprofit corporation wUI move toward getting the housing complex
under construction.

Lawyer
can prove
absence

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)-Alawyer says he can prove thata63-yearold man questioned by pollee In the
slaying of 8-year-old Kelly Ann
Prosser wasn't In Columbus the day
the girl disappeared.
"I can and I will verify beyond a
agencies will total $15,000 to $20,000.
At most, Gordon said the closing shadow of a doubt that Walter Mitof the local center wtll save the chen was nowhere near Columbus
when the' terrible Incident ocstate only $6,000 a year.
curred,"
lawyer William Abraham
In the long nm, though, he said It
told
the
Columbus.Cltlzen
Journal.
will cost more "both In terms of
"I
can
say
that
this
Is
one
of the
dollars lost to our area and the unfew
times
In
my
career
that
I
have
a
availability of local services."
man
(as
a
client)
who
Is
so
totally
Gordon blamed several local
agencies for the state's decision to Innocent," Abraham added.
Mitchell, of Colwnbus, returned
close the center.
from
West Vlr!glnla and surren·
The Athens-VInton-Hocking 648
dered
to police Thursday. He was
board and the Gallla-Jackson·
questiOned
about the girl's death,
· Meigs Community Mental Health
but
not
charged.
Center tried to convince the state
The Franklin County Municipal
that they could provide forensic serCourt
had Issued a warra nt for Mit·
vices cheaper than the Souiheast·
cheU's
arrest Tuesday on a charge
ern Ohio center, he said.
of
gross
sexual Imposition Involving
The state decidEd the services
an
11-year-old
girl on the city's
could be done cheaper, biltsupr!sed
North
Side
Sunday
ntght.
the agencies by glvtng the responslMltcheU's
lawyer
would not disblltties to the Portsmouth center.
cuss
that
charge.
But
he denied that
"As It en(jed up, nobody 'tn the
Mitchell
had
anything
to do with the
area got It," Gordon said.
slaying of Kelly Prosser and satd he
told his cUent to cooperate with pollee In that tnvesttgatlon.
The girl was reported missing
The Commerce Department re- Monday after fa lUng to return home
ported Thursday that Inflation, as fromthe Indianola Elementary
measured by the CoD.IIumer Price School.
lndex, slowed last month to 0.3 per··
Her fuUy clothed body was found
cent, or a yearly rate of 3.3 percent.
WEdnesday afternoon. Searchers
At the same ttme the Labor Dezeroed In on the area In neighbOring .
partment said Am;ricans' average
Madison Olunty, about five miles
weekly earnings, aner adJusting southofPlalnClty, after a blue rainfor Inflation, I'OIIe 0.1 percent In Au· coat ldentltled as that of themlsstDg
'gust atterfalllng0.2P,ei'Cel!tlnJuly.
girl was spOttEd on a road.
'

Presiden,t ·say$ r~covery is at hand .
·•. • fte All t t•W ~

soaring Inflation wUI not soon ·
return. .
.
MFor my friends In the financial
marlleta, this Is one more stake In
the heart of Inflationary expectalions," }le said-Thursday.
, Wall StrEet did riOt react great!¥
to the lleWII. Stock prices fell mod·
estJy : wbiJe bond prices Edged
all81Jtl&gt;: hither. Interest rates
dipped a bit.

' 1'lil 'nport tMt IDflatlaa slowed

Jlieeat

emwa1 pace 'last
11 t oldtnte that tile eoonoat&amp;' 11 recovering trom receaslon,
Trtutiry Secretary 'Donald Regan
uya.
..... uJd tbe ~ shoWed

.·~-~1Da._..l'l!l!OY·
r!f,"'llltl' liat 1be ftnnrl!a!

cum·

ft!lllllry atJoqld be ~ tl!at
I

j_

•

Hl!D loan
jtnancing
46 units

~-~

· OPEN FRIDAY TIL·8:00 AND SATURDAY 'TIL ·s

a·

Pomen»y-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, September 24,1982

I

Limited quantitY. Discontinued pattemnnd colors.
ill~. 12. and 84 inch lqt!IS. Re&amp;. '14.49- '18.99
·PIIf,, ~lie They lat!
·
· •
·.

•

e

· ·WINDOW .DRAPES

REG•.s&amp;.OO to su.oo ......-SALE s2.00
REG. s12.00 to 519.00 ..... SALE S4.00 ,

•

Page 8

·CLOSE-OUT SALE!
•

Final Clearance of our remaining stock
of summer handbags.

Page6

WALTZ LENGTH

· Weekend Sale prices of warm winter coats for little boys and
girls. Quilted coats, fur-lined coats. pile-lined coats, reversible .
coats and others. Sizes 12 to 24 mos.,2to 4,4 to6X, al'ld 7to 14.
I

REG. $579.00 ............... SALE '469.00
REG. $995.00 ............. :.SALE '749.00
REG. $1189.00 ............. SALE '890.00
REG. $1979.00 ........... SALE '1399.00

FlANNEL ...... 115.35
FlANNEL ..... '17.80
FlANNEL ...... '21.80
FlANNEL. .... '23.40
FlANNEL. .... '24.25

COAT SALE

$799

Save up to $580Jl0 on Quality Bedroom Furniture
for your home. Nationally advertised brands like
lane, Riverside, DMI and Carolina. Choose Maple, .
Oak, Pine, Walnut, Pecan or Beechv.ixld. ,

' Small (34-6); Medium (38-40), large (42-44),
Extra large (46-48).
·
Plaid patterns and checks. Button and snap
front styles. SAVE NOW.

CHILDREN'S

and Sizes. Wrangler and Springfoot ·brands.
50% Cotton, 50% Polyester. Big selection of solid colors including pastels-Warm fleece lined.

BEDROOM SUITES

FLAN-NEL SHIRTS
MEN'S $18.95
MEN'S $21.95
MEN'S $26.95
MEN'S $28.95
MEN'S $29.95

Page 4

I

'

MEN'S S9.95

CREW NECK
SWEAT
SHIRTS
S, M, L
XL

BOYS su.95 VESTS ........ SALE '9.44
BOYS '19.~5 VESTS . ...... SAL£ Sl5.76
BOYS '29.95 VESTS ...... SAL£ '23.66

su.oo .................. SALE S9.35
S16.00 ................ SAL~ '13.60
'22.00 ................ SALE '18.70
'31.00 ................. SALE '26.35

MEN'S QUILT LINED

s15.95 EXTRA SIZES 46 to 50 ...... SALE s13.88
·--

' Sizes 8 to 20. Good style selection. Buy earty
and save this weekend.

SEPTEMBER SAl£

MEN'S ELY S14.95
WORK DUNGAREES

PLAYTEX
PANTYHOSE SALE

BOYS' WINTER VESTS

· New Fall Cardigans, PuHovers, V-Necks, Cowl
Necks, Boatnecks. Many assorted designs and colors. Jr. sizes Small, Medium and large.

Look-a-like -doesn't
blame rape victims

people In a five-county area show th!lt residents near a uranlnum

SALE!

JUNIOR
SWEATERS

Church dedication

CHD..LICOTHE, Ohio- Mental health officials 5ay two surveys of

,•

SALE

Reds rehire Nixon

Nearby citizens have fewer fears

,

·SALE!

·~

'

'

l

\1·

'"

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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            <elementText elementTextId="44858">
              <text>September 23, 1982</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
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    <tag tagId="1732">
      <name>ferrell</name>
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    <tag tagId="1598">
      <name>fulton</name>
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    <tag tagId="193">
      <name>stone</name>
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