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                  <text>b Dick Cavallf

WINTHROP
I WASJU5T SITTINGHERE, COLJNTINq
THeM UP. ..

I CAN RE:MEMBI:R WHEN
THE: NEWMAN5' CAT WAS
THE ONLY ONE' IN THE
NEiqHBORHCOD.

Fair racing results

Pretty baby contest

AND .I qt:T 7 CAT5 ON
THIS 5T~EE:~ 12.NORE

story, photo, p. 3

See page 6

Wilander pulls upset.

AI&lt;CUNOTHE: CORNS&lt;.

ON WILLOW 5rREET: ..

StoryooP.4

Fair tractor pulls

puzzle winners

Story on Page 10

story 011 p. 10

•

•

Voi.32,No.91
Copyrithtocl 1983

THAT ADDS UP TO A
TOTAL. OF 34 GAT5
ON c..JU51 THIS ONE-

BLOC/&lt;.

.-

...

·-~

.---

.

------~--~--~~

GALLEON,

HOLLYHOCK?'

ITS A HEAVY,
'SQUARE- RIGGED
SAILING SHIP,
PRISCILLA.

THE SHIP HAS A VERY
ROMANTIC HISfORY .I

FROM 11-IE 15TH 10 THE

EARLY 19TH CENTURY.

IN FACT, COLUM8l.l5 HIMSELF
WENT OVER 1'M) THOUSAND
MILES~ A GAll EON.

possible loss of work due to rapidly changing
alter the scheduled Jan. 1 divestiture Into seven from $565.50 a week currently to $658.50 by the time
technology.
regional operating com~les. to spend $00 million a the contract expires In 1986.
'The proposed pact also Wll$ approved by lenders of
year In 1984 and 1985 on training and retraining
The present average hourly wage for workers .
the International Brotherhood of Electrtcal Workers
programs aimed at protecting current employees covered by the contract would rise from $12.33 to
and the Telecommunications International Union.
against the loss of jobs due to automation and other $14.35, not Including C&lt;&gt;lt-of-llvlng Increments.
'The CWA represents 5:15,001AT&amp;Temploy!!!!$ and .. lechnologlcal Innovation.
. . ..
. _.. . ·. . ,Watts $8ld he. would not be surprised If l(llephone
the.oth!!r two unions claim mpre than 150,000 people. · .
The .. pact . wUJ giVe e,xperienced workerS a !j.5_ ·- ta!Es.rtse sulistailtlally'"because of the pnicess thai's
The strikers will remain 011 the' picket lines untU
percent wage'llOOst tn the 'f!rst year, two annual1.5 Wlder way of re&lt;&gt;rganJzStlon of the Bell System, of
some 100 local collectlve bargaining agreements,
percent Increases In August 19&amp;1 and August 1985 and divestiture, the whole lntrrouctlon of competition .... "
which must be Included In the national accord, are
continued cost-of-llvtng allowances based on a But he btslsted that any rate Increases should not be
concluded across the country.
formula which pays 75 percent of the Increase In the blamed on the unions, which struck AT&amp;T on Aug. 7.
'The company abandoned Its demand that
cost-of-llvtng as measured by the Consumer Price
Rex Reed, vice president for labor relations at
customers.
Glenn E . Watts, president of the CWA, balled. the employees, lor the first time, contrtbu\1! up to ~ .
Index. . ,
. .
_.
.
..
. ,-'!T&lt;f,T, . descrtl:le&lt;l Ute.. a.ccot:d . as a · :'bal~
·. . _ 'Ib!! hlghestpa.,ld systems technldan l\'Drklng_under . se~~t al)d one really that serves aU.p8rtjes'qillte
· agreement "IIi ·this volatile 'lntormatlon age'" as a . jlei:cent of the_Co!;t of he_alth tnsuran¢e p(eml~. ..
It -accepted_language that W&lt;Juld require AT&amp;T,
lheratepaldli)NewYo•kClty,'for.lnstance;wouldi:!J ,W!'Il.'' , · ·.
·.
. pat-e-~ter that wUJ help Ainenc;nis faced with ihe
WASHINGTON (AP) - A tentative $3 bDllon
contract agreement between American TelephOne &amp;
Telegraph Co. and Its unions seems certain to end the
strike by nearly 700,1ixl workers. Normal telephone
service would be restored later this week upon
comp)etton of additional b!U'gajnlng at the local level.
. : Leaders . of . the . Coriununlcatloll$ WorkerS · ·of
Ainerlca and two smaiJer unlotis voted
to
IICCEPt . a proposed three-year pact providing
substanttaJ job security guarantees and economic
gains. It also could mean hlgher telephone rates for

SUilday

'

by Ed S.ulliva
IT WAS A TYPE OF 5HIP
lEE!/ E5Y THE SPANISH

IT HAl? THREE OR FQJR

[;EO&lt;~

AND WAS USED
FOI&lt; 60TH WAR AND
'ICOM\ERCE.
•

,..._.---

GOSH, THAT MUSTVE
SEEN THE 6EG1NNING .
OF nosE FOREIGN CARS,

swelter
in heat

f"HAl

CIIEESE 8(J,f'RITOS?
1/!VtESS
/.11!1{ C!IE!JPAK.

11Atx

I //ArE
Clll!JPAK CIIEE:JE

ARt 1, Coolville man died In Veterans Memorial Hospital this morning
of Injuries su!fered In a one-car accident near Tuppers Plains.

HOUSTON (AP) - More than
150,001 people sweltered today amid
the sticky heat and power outages
left behind by Hurttcane AUcla. and
Insurance experts predt~ted the
storm that clabned 17llves may be
among the coStlJest In u.s. history.
"Most ·peop!!! have been understandlng'(about the outages),'' said
Tonie Cardenas, a spokeswoman for
Houston Lighting &amp; Power. "But
we've also gotten a jot of irate
callers. Some people don't seem to
know tbl!rewas a hurrtcane."
Emergency crews were working
aw.md the clock to restore power to
m&lt;lSt Houston customers by the end
of thlli week, she said. At one point,
750,00l customers were Ielt In the
dark and forced to endure the
steamy weather without alr condttlontng whtle cooking on campltres
and barbecue grtlls.
'The Insurance Infonnatlon Institute said prellmlnary estimate!! of
Altcla's damage ranged !rom $750
mJlllon to $165 bDitori In the
six-county region surrounding
Houston.

Sunday.

Cris Hamm

Coolville
man
.
dies in wreck

150,000.

Ms. Cardenas said 150,00l to
n&gt;,OOlpeople were wltmut electricIty today. Don Beeth, a utWty
spokesman, said about "175,00l
miserable clttzerls" were powerless

WH1.7Clll(,l{.0 IIArG'

2 Section•, 10 Pages
20 C.nh
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, August 22, 1.983

au

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Priscilla's Pop
WHAT'S A

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enttne

Reach settlement in.telephone strike

CALL ME PARANOID,..
BUT I SMELL A
DtABOl-I~L PL.Or.

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9 ~RE CA.TS ON E=LM
PL.ACE1 AND ANO"T'-IER &amp;
CA15 ON BEE0-1 ROAD.

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l8ld ll1e barrlcadel that COidoned
off a tour-block &amp;n!ll d. downtown
Houlton were expected to be
reriiiM!d before tile II10I'IIbiJ tnme
lUSh.

lD Galwlton, 80 mae. lOUth,
owaen o1 belldl barnal returned
Sunday to liW'WY tile damage.

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HEAVY STUFF- 'lbeoe two heavy trac&amp;on
were unloaded simultaneously at the Melp County
Fair Saturday evening as area tractor coolest

partlclpuls prepared for the aruMial fair competition
which drew a large crowd lo the Rock Sprlop
Rookgrounds. See story on Page 10.

Governor given mild
•
support In tax
package .saving effort

'The temperature reachro 94
Sunday and was expected to remain
In the mld-~ today. The humidity
was 01/el' 90 peH;ent.
SomeresldelltsonwestGalveston
Island, hardest hit by the storm.
could be without elecll1clty as long
as three weeks the damage to the
area Is so extensive. otftclals say.
AUcta roared ashore Thur9day al
Galveston. flooding streets of the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Gov.
city of ro,OOl and damaging or
'Richard
Celeste, lnslsttrig that he
destroying seaside homes and
want
to be the point ll18111n
doesn't
rustnesses with winds uptollSmpll.
the
tight
to
save
his tax package,
'The storm moved Inland past
has
been
getting
only
mild irupport
Houston, dwnptng heavy ralris 011
from
special
Interest
groups.
the already saturated ground,
Celesie has been trying to get
shattenng windows of skyscrapers
organlzed
support from the state's
and kUling at least 17 people on Its
groups, with limited
education
northward march.
results.
He
will approach other
Insurance btstttute spokesman
groups
as
well
fpr help In what
Barry Walker sald the storm's
shapes up as a $2.5 mllllon media
damage would be among the
cootUest In U.S. history. Hurttcane dogfight over the nextfew weeks.
Paul Costello. the Democratic
Agnes, which kWed 72 people, cut a
governor's
press secretary. pointed
swath of destnlctlon lrom North
out
t1u1t
Celeste
made his position
Carolina to New York In 1!YI2 that
clear
when
he
called
for enactment
totalled$2bWion, Wall!er said.
of the tax package.
Now, Costello said, It Is tbne for
lD II&lt;NIItlln, c11a1n saws hummed the managers of state and local
aaresldentamnovedtreellmbsand (!OIIel'llil'let programs, schools,
debrll .uewn 8C!'088 stn!eta and smallbJs(-eesandotherswhoare
laWDL City Public Works Depart·
1111!11t empkJyeM WOitced tllrouih benefttlng from the package to
tile nllbl to clean uplbalteredilau
blown lrom the tkylcrapers. Depll1mi!Dt apoll'&amp;iilolll Dan Jones

• •

~- . . . .

.:h -."1

~ =~t that, In addition to

the 90 penBII Increase In the state
Income tax. tile Democratic L.egillature IIIIo approved tax relief lor ·
bus(1 2
, lll!lllor citizens, man1ed

secretary said: "This repeals the
tax relief. Itwtpesooteverythlng."
The governor set the tone for his
measured Involvement last week In
a speech before Ohio's publlc sch~l
superintendents, warning them of
dlsasttoos consequences for educalion If the taxes are repealed.
While he Is expected to do the
same In weeks aheacf among other
groups, the governor will let the
Committee for Ohio, a coalition of
retailers, labor leaders and educatton association officials, run the
anti-repeal media campaign.
Celeste said: "!'~ done what I
think Is right. I care about the
ootcome. But I think there Is a
substantial need now for concerned
cltlzeliS to step fOIWard and share
their conv1ctlons.''

Some of the lnfluentlallobbylng
groups the governor wants to join

the anti-repeal campa!Kn have not.

dol1e 50· They could be walling to be
sure that the group JlUihlng repeal,

Ohioans to Stop EliCl!llllve Taxalion, 11'!1&amp; Its repeal and a second tax
proposal certified for the ballot.
couples twna joint tax retuml and
S'IEP mllected about ~.001
otbera.
more than the 336,001 registered
R.eferrlna to the repeal llll'lllld- voter IIIPtaturel Deeded. The ligna·
ment, wlllcb Is allitoet certalD to be · ture1 ue be1J11 checked for vallc!ltY·
Clll the Nov. 8 ballot, the preu Certltlcatkm IJ belielled only ' a

.;.

formallty within the next two
weeks.
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce's Board of Directors met
'Thursday and decided that the
chamber, spllt In Its own ranks, w1ll
slay neuiral.
Another group Celeste would like
to haveonrecordagalnstrepeal, the
Ohio Manufacturers Association,
put out a publlcatton for Its
members last week exp1aln1ng the ·
Issues but did not take sides.
WUIIam Costello, veteran OMA
lobbyist (no relation to Paul), said
he did not know whether the group's
directors wUJ decide to lake a
position when It meets In
September.
The OMA, as well as the Ohio
Chamber, W!'reamong the groups to
work out an agreeement with
Celeste early this summer on the
businesS taxes that were paaaecl.
John Coleman, executive head of
the Ohio Mun1clpal League, said
opinion was divided among
members at a rneetlni In Colwnrus
011Frlday.
"AI yoo mtgbt guess, there's a
spilt.'' Coleman said. He said the
league doeln't have another meet·
log lchaluled untn the last week In
September Iii Akron.

Dead Is 26-year-old Myles R. Blake. He died at 5:55a.m. of Intra-cranial
hemorrhage and pulmonary contusion, a hospital spokesperson said.
'The Gallla-Melgs post of,the state highway patrol said Blake was taken
from the scene· of the accident to Veterans by the Tuppers Plains
emergency sqwid, after Blake's 1975 Audt struck an embankment and
overturned at 2:50a.m. today on Ohio 7, eight-tenths o!amUesouthofOhto
681.
The patrol said Blake had beeu drlvtngnorthbound when the car went oll
the left sJde ot the road. Blake then lost control, drove oack onto the road,
went off the right side and crashed Into the embankment. The car was
severely damaged.
'The accident was still under Investigation this morning, a patrol
spokeperson said.
'The accident Is the secondfatallty tooccurln Meigs County this month. A
tw&lt;&gt;-vehlcle accident Aug. 12 caused Injuries to Bob Molden, 31, Pomeroy, .
who died the following day In St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
Molden was a passenger In a truck that reportedly went left of center on
Ohio 143 and sideswiped another car, throwing Molden and another
passenger from the truck's bed.
Meanwhile, the Gallla-Melgs post of the State Highway Patrol reported
three other accidents occurred In Meigs County over the weekend.
The state patrol sald a tw~ar acctdent Involving vehicles driven by
Wllb!Jr S. Smith, 69, Rutland, and Wllllam J. King, 35, Pomeroy, occurred
at 6: ll p.m. Saturday at the Intersection of Ohio 684 and Scipio Township
Road 396.
King's vehicle was 1ravellngsouthboundon684 when It went left of center
on a cuiVe .and struck Smlth'svehlcle. King's vehicle contlnuedonafterthe
accident.
Both vehicles had light damage and King was cited for a hit and skip
violation.
A one-vehicle accident Involving a car driven by Max H. Long, 26,
Reedsvllle. occurred at 1: 11 a.m. Sunday on Ohio 681 In Olive Township.
Long's vehicle was !raveling eastbound on 681 when a front wheel broke
loose, which caused Long's vehicle to go olf the lett side of the road. The
vehicle then struck a tree. The vehicle had moderate damage.
A two-car accident Involving vehicles driven by Edwin D. Oberholzer, 51,
Albany, and Beatrtce B. Kaufman, 19, Albany. occurred at 1: 40 p.m. on
County Road 47.
Oberhatzer's vehicle was traveling southbound on 47 when he went left of
center on a curve and struck Kaufman's vehicle, which was !raveling
northbound on 47.
Both vehicles had moderate damage and Oberhalzer was cited for
failure In yield half of the roadway.

Petty larceny charges filed
'll1omas Fellure, Pomeroy, was
arrested early Friday morning at
the Meigs Coonty Fairgrounds and
charged with petty theft the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department

reported.

I -

Fellure has been charged In Meigs
Counly Court with stealing and Igloo
Ice cooler, lawn chair and blankets
from campers at the fairgrounds.
Darrell Krautter, Pomeroy Pike,
reported the trunk Gf his brother's
car was damaged when Someone
tried to enter thetrunkbycutttngout
the lock and attempted to pry It
open. Entry was not gained. 'The
Incident occurred at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds and Is stUI
under Investigation.
Keith Ashley, RD, Pomeroy
reported Saturday evening that five
youths were running down the hUI
behind the junior fair building when
one of the youths ran upon Ashley's
car and fell off. The hOOd and left
!root fender had damage.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy tonight. Low 65-70.
Winds northerly 10-15 mph. Mostly
SUI1IIY Tuesday. High In the mld-1!01.
Exlleiode&lt;l Ohio FOI'C!CII&amp;t

Wedl n"Y throup Friday:
Fllr. ' -, liiOiily In lbe ....
Jllpl iiiOIItly In*'

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.'

Mal tl1•y, A••Uit 22, 1983

l'll'oillttlll•no'¥'7'-Middleport,

Cincy masters Pirates, 6-4

·colllrnentaJ'Y
Picking friends _ _ _____R_ic_har_d_R_eeves_
The Daily Sentinel

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan - "We
welcome any step toward ending
martial law," was the oltlclal U.S.
State Department reaction to Gen.
Mohammad Zla ul·Haq's speech
here aMounclng .a vague plan to
hold national elections In 18 months.
The reaction ot Pakistani reporters was to pull out hand calculators. Remembering that when the
army seized power six years, one
month and one week before, Zla had
promised electon In !Kl days, the
reporters figured that with an
18-month pledge the general was
planning to continue his dictatorship for another 36 years and eight

Ill Cour t Street
Po meroy, Ohio
DEVOTE D TO T HE I NTEREST OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~
~._~.......c::~:....
'qlv
ROBERT L. WING~
Publis her

1

PAT WIDTEHEAD
A!i.•dsta nt

BOB HOEFLICH

PubiiAher/ ControUer

General Ma na&amp;er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
Ne.-1 Editor

A MEMBER of 'The AMoclated PrEM, Inland DaBy FreM Aa~odatlon and the

American Newspaper PlltJibhen

~

months.
The Pakistani journalists didn't
write that, ot course. If they had,
their newspapers would have lost
goyernment advertising (60 per. cent of the total here) and the
import licenses needed to buy the
paper to print The Americans In
Washington and In Islamabad were
almost as cooperative. Zla Is ou.r
hoy, and we pretty much ·go along
with his selt-proclalrned presid-

ency, " democratization" . and
"Islamization. ..
I was sitting In what used to be the
National Assembly - elected
represen!fttlves were long ago

MusHm rhetoric. This IB not
totalltartanllm. . he says, It IB

dismissed by Zla - listening to his
confident one-bour-and-50-mlnute
speech to the Federal Council, an
advisory pretend·parllament he
appointed to replace elected
leglslalnrs.
It was a wonderiUI performance.
The president , as he now calls
hlmselt, Is lnielllgent, capable and
charming .. You sometimes forget
that he rules at the points ot the
many guns ot his army, the most
prtvlleged class In this underprlvi·
leged society. Tomaskthatunplea·
sant reaUty - Inconvenient to his
American benefactors - Zla
makes his moves .behind screens of

·Hislamlzation.'; He may be sincerely devout hlrnselt, but this
public Islam seems mainly devoted
to holding oft even minimal
democratization.
Warning "certain elements" he meant pontlcl8ns In a country
where pubHc assembly Is bannednot to oppose his plans, he said:
"They wtll be met with a heavy
hand. Miscreants are not Uked by
Islam. They disobey Allah ... ..
The next day, In a press
conference and In conversation, the
general said: " My ambition In life
Is to · complete the Pt:OOe58 ot
Islamization so that there can be no ·
turning back ... It Is not only the
changing of certain laws from
Anglo-Saxon character to Islamic
character. It Is a social envlrol)·
men! turned to an Islamlc charac·
ter ... In the general society ltselt,
you have to put the alms an4
objectives s~t on the path ot
righteousness. 1bat's what I call
Islamlzat!Qn."
Watching Zla lor several weeks, I
tlnd we have a bit of a semantic
dlllerence. The things he caQs

lEITERS OF OP"'10N .,.. welcomed. They ... ould be 1eoo a..n 380 words Joor.
AU aetters are aubjeei to edJtlnC and mUll. be 81ped wtt.h name, addreM and lde phoae
numbt&gt;r, No u~ lette~ wW be. puw.hed. LeUenlhoukl be in pod iallte, addi'M""' -

... per!l)nallll&lt;s.

Three-tax monte
. If you've ever been euchred by a sidewalk hustler presiding over a
game of three-card monte or the moretradltlonal"shellgame," you have a
superb understanding of recent trends In personal taxation.
· That analogy Is especially suitable because In both of those confidence
games, the hapless victim Invariably Is deceived by the dealer's sleight of
hand while three cards or three shells are shuffled around a makeshift
· · iable: There lilso are three level$ ol gQvei-nment ~ lac~, st'ate and(.a) .
· ·~ actively Imposing UU!:es on Individuals.
In early 1981, the dealer In chargeolthethree-tlertaxgame, President
Reagan, convlna&gt;d millions of fascinated taxpayers to focus their attention
on the federal level as he produa&gt;d three consecutive years of tax
reductions.
. Those onlookers were so Intrigued with their federal tax cuts,
however, that !lley barely no~ed Reagan had dettly translerred to the
state 11!\d klcil:llevels the.responslblllty·- but not the funds ;...for operating
111111ons Dl dollar$ .wo~h of govel'111l)ent prograM$.
.
Federal aid In the states last year registered Its first decline sinCe the
Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations began tracking
those transfers In 1955. The total dropped from $94.8 billion In 1981 to $88.8
~llllon In l!ll2, an unprecedented decrease of $6 bllilon.
That development, the recession-Induced decline In state tax revenues
&amp;nd the pressure lor expansion ot state services have produa&gt;d an ongoing
budget crtsls which was the subject of considerable agonizing when the
~atlonal Governors' Association held Its aMual meeting at Portland,
Maine recently.
• An NGA survey shows that during the 198311scal year, which ended on
June :ll In most (46) states, 'rl states were forced to enact permanent tax
Jpcreases·whlle 24 enacted temporary revenue klcreases.
• Although state tax rates generally have been declining sinCe the
of caJI!ornla's celebrated Proposition 13 five years ago, "1983 wtll
(lo down In the aMals ot goverDil'oent finance as a year of tax Increases In
states across the country," reports the National Conference of State
legislatures.
:
In virtually all of those states, " not one dime went tor any new
i&gt;rollram, " says Utah Gov. Scott M. Matheson, a Democrat who Is NGA's
outgoing chairman. "It all went to ottset the recession losses and the
cutbacks In federal ald."
Many of those states, In turn, reacted to the Intense economic pressure
by substantially reducing the aid they formerly gave to cities, counties and
local school districts.
In Maine, tor example, the state government not only Increased taxes
on gasoline and cigarette purchases, but also redua&gt;d weltare payments to
local governments and transferred to town &lt;illcials the responslbllity lor
maintenance ot state highways within their jurtsdlctlons. As a result,
almost all of the state's 499 cities and towns have been forced to Increase
property taxes.
Even with tax lncrea...S, the NGA survey concludes, ''the tlscal
condition of the status ... Is by far the bleakest ever," with 47 states
resorting during the recently concluded tlscal year to persoMal
dismissals, across-the-board budget reductions, program cuts and other
austerity measures.
·
A number of states have turned In desperation to yarlous forms of
tlscal legerdemain such as accelerating tax collection schedules and
delaying expenditures - measures which mask but do not iesolve their
budget crises.
Even traditionally wealthy states, notably those with substantial oil
production, have not been Immune to the trend. Texas, lor example, ended
the 198211scal year with ageneraltundsurplus &lt;i almost$1.5 billion but that
figure was slashed to $600 million at the end olllscall983 and Is expected to
be drastically cut again to $22 million In tlscall984.
Texas has not required any tax Increases In 12 years but Gov. Mark
While, a Democrat, now has proposed new levies to raise an addltlonal$1. 7
bUUon In two years.
.
At least 33 other states have enacted or are considering permanent iax
Increases during the current tlscal year while temporary taxes are
pending In 19 states. Those revenues wtll come from the money people
"saved" In lower federal taxes .

p..,....ge

Berry's World

" / d9Cided to shallfl off my fa~/ h.tr the other
day and express my lndlvldual/tyl"

.

'· ,

\.

The Daily Sentinel Pag1 3

Ohio

.

11

democr"atlc' .Islam.,...tlon,, l call ...

"repression~ "

·

"See? There one goes again
the Central American species
seem
to get rid of that accent. How
are you at speech therapy?"
.
I

Birt my goVenimerit ·
doesn't. The hundreds of arrests
and the preventive detention of
pollllcal leaders wbo might have
objected to the speech are lgnol'ed
by the United States.
. . '1\?Jlle the general spoke, I found
. . ·- myaelf l!stl1lg what hiS rnlll.tarY rule ·
repfeseJits Jn Paklstaii. ·Then I ·
listed what It does not represent a-,
In most cases, even allow.
Zla stands lor and has generally
delivered: order; stability; relative
and, with luck and a lot
can't elllclency;
of American help, marginal ecOnomic growth.

U.S. gamble.__________J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_..._n
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan has made It easier lor
Communist China to buy · U.S.
high-technology Items lor probable
military use - justltylng the
expected $aleS with the bope that
the Chinese won't buy much, or
won't be able to use what theY. do
buy.
.
Thb hope IS ecboed In a secret
Pentagon estimate that disparages
"the Chinese abWty to absorb and
maintain U.S. equipment."
The report explains why: "One of
the lessons we learned trom
Vlelnam was that U.S. know·howotten In the form &lt;i U.s. adviSers or
teclu)lclans - must accompany
U.S. technology II advanced sys·
terns are to be used and maintained
properly. Altbough the Chinese are
technologically advanced compared to the Vlelnamese, they are
well behind the state-of·the·art In
most areas, and their common
soldier Is stU! technologically
unsophisticated.
"Thus, the Chinese might not be

capable of effectively Integrating
our· more advana&gt;d systems Into ·
their force structure. Even less
sophisticated equipment would rapidly detertorate II proper malnte- ·
nance were not understood and
perfonned. Given the Chinese
aversion to foreign technicians ...
this !actor could be critical."
This may seem like too much
reliance on an ethnic stereotype,
but the !act remains that China Is
tar behind the United States In
technology. This sbortcoming Is
retlected In the relatively primitive
state of Its enonnous mWtary
machine. A top-secret Pentagon
report seen by 11\Y associate Dale
VanAtta detaUs these weaknesses:
-Though China has the world's
largest anny (163 divisions), most
of Its equipment Is 1950s vintage,
consisting of copies or vartants of
Soviet mWtary hardware.
- Numerically, the Chinese navy
IS the world's second largest. But
the great bulk of Its Oeet Is made up
of more than 1,00) small, high-

are no
aircraft earners, and no· ships
bigger than a destroYer. ln tact, the
Chinese have only 39 ships that tall
In the "principal surface combatant" category.
- The· Chinese have ano antisubmarine aircraft, only one
missile-carrying sub and 106 other
attack subs. Few are long·range,
and none Is nuclear-powered.
- The Chinese air force 1s the
world's third largest, with 4,:Dl
lighter planes and 650bombers, But
again, the aircraft are technological Model T's. The planes can't
light at night or In fool wmther, and
ate generally no match for Soviet
aircraft.
- The Chinese have about 50
medlum·range ballistic missiles, !Kl
Intermediate-range missiles and
less than a dozen Intercontinental
missiles - a pathetically small
Ioree considering the Soviet nuclear
mlsslles arrayed against them.
- Chinese bombers have
dropped nuclear devices In tests,
speed patrol craft. There

but the planes that are designated

tor a nuclear role have no elecbunlc
counter~measures

against airdefense weapons and are therefore
extremely wlnerable. "'lbeoe constraints place tonnldable limitations upon the use ot bol'nbers
against weU-&lt;Ie!eated targirts, such
as those within the U.S.S.R." the
report observes.

•
-China's own detense .agalnst
Incoming missiles or bombers, on

the other hand, It bopelessly
Inadequate. ' Its early-warning system facing the Soviets Is riddled·
with boles. The ChiJiese have about
l,&lt;ro sudace-to-alr missile batter·
les and anti-aircraft guns, but their
crews might not even see Soviet
planes before It Is too late. '
LEGISLATIVE FUMBLE: In a
manly attempt to bridge the gender
gap, Congress manaaed to widen It
InStead - and caused the Social
Securtty Administration . a big
headache.

Com on the cob ________L_ow_e_ll_W_~.:_.e_ti
1

Since I have been doing my Boss at milking time. By then the
gardening In the &amp;Isles o1 the water would he bubbling In the
supermarkets the last !l!w years, I kettle. In went th~ com tor two or
had forgotten bow good fresh sweet three minutes and a hungry boy
com can be. I knew there had been didn't even need butter and salt for
something missing from my life but the first lew ears. For many years I
didn't know exactly what unW my always managed to have fresh com
son brought some freshly pulled coming on during the summer by
sweet com. Then I knew my secret planting at dllterent Intervals and
yearning had been for com on the making sure that too much time
didn't elapse between polling and
cob.
Show me a man woo doesn't mind eating. SWeet corn ID!dergoes rapid
getting butter and salt In his ears detertoratln when It Is pulled In bot
and I will smw you a man wm has a weather. If you are not fortunate
true love of com on the cob. It Isn't a enough to have your own com
treat to be eaten daintily. If there patch, buy com you know has been
are rules of etiquette for eating this !reshiy pulled, then keep It In the
epicurean delight, I never heard &lt;i refrigerator with the busies on until
them. All that Is required are two you are ready to use it. That,
hands, a few teeth and a napkin to lrlends, Is my sweet com lesson tor
wipe your lace when you come up today.! have been told there are
for air or another ear. Manufactur- those unenlightened people wbo
ers have developed dainty plastic prefer their sweet com cut from the
devices to put In mch end of the mr cob betore eating it. Naturally, I
realize there are people wbo object
for a better bold but we old com m
the cob lovers scorn such sissy to having their laces smeared with
gadaets. We tackle the com wlth.all .butter evet1 as there are some
the virtuosity of a master harmon- people wbo actually preter RepubU·
Ica played. We search the cob for cans to Democrats. I can't under·
· each precious grain before casting stand either attitude bUt respect
It aside and reaching for another. I
their rlaht to their own opinion. For
had forgotten the delight of eating thOse people wm would desecrate a
fresh com on the cob. It Is rapidly Iovety ear of aolden sweet com by
becomlna a lost art l&gt;r people who cutting It from the cob, I would
have to be content with aced com 'recornmencs a visit to the Green
that bas long since lost Its fresh Giant or to the canned I'JC)ds section
taste. Freebness and speed are &lt;i of their favorite supernlal'!let. As
the euence! .
painful as It'll to admit It, there are
I leamed the.art &lt;i cooking sweet a lot of stranae people In the world!
com from Grandma whea 1 was a
boy. She would lire up the kitchen
At one time In my long and
I'IIJlge and put on a kettle &lt;i water.
Tben she would I'D to the garden checkered C&amp;~Wr, I raised sweet
and puD the munber ot ears com to aell, theri!by putUng myaelt
nec.wy for a nal. Sitting In the · among that clul of people wbo
yanllwlng llllder the Silver Maple, prompted Omar'a plaintive quezy,
she would husk the com, putting the "I wonder what It II the vlnter buys
bu.sklln a basket as a treat for Old • one half as precloua as the ware he

sells?" Now, after years of eating Improving the quaUty of produce.
ott supermarket shelves, I regret Seed companles are quick to take
every ear sold. At first when the advantage of their -rch and
com from the produce shelves pass along the results to theh'
turned to ashes In my mouth, I customers. I freely admit that ~
thought my taste was changing,
sweet corn I had last week
just another 'dlsablllty of advancing suipassed any I ever raised or ate
years. I am happy to learn It was as a boy. The ears were larger, the
not my taste buds after all. For kernels plumper and sweeter. I had
years I have been consuming com always ~n partial to yellow
better suited lor bogs !han humans, . varletlell ao was IUrprlaed to lind
then blaming my petlectly Innocent the white ears as sweet and juicy 8$
taste buds. That com I was eating the yellow. Even IJy Writing aboutlt
was altllcted with old age, not me!
I have wwked up a VIII'8CioQi
The agrfculture depal'tJnents of appetite for IIIOft com m the cob.
our state un1ven1t1es have made
I lqle Bob comes often ari4
great strides In the last !l!w years In loaded with com!

QUARTER- 'lbeoe quarter honte8 raclnt~ atlhe
Ml!lp Coanty Fair Saturday

evenln&amp;

broughl In

I!IUiy laao.

1bls Ill the - d !'lllle of severallllaaed

and wu a 11real horae race.''

Quarter
horse event adds excitement
.
.

The excitement and speed of

AI Childs, Athens, placed the
winning entry In the second race,
followed by qu~~rter, borses owned
by Jennings Beegle, Racine, and

PITTSBURGH ( AP) - The
Clnclimatl Reds aren't going any·
where but borne when the baseball
season ends In October, and they're
trying to make sure the same late
betalls the Plttsllu$ Pirates.
The Reds got a strong relief effort
!rom Blli Scherrer and a key
two-run error from Pittsburgh
second basmlan. Johnny Ra; to
defea t the Pirates 64 Sunday and
win lor the third time In the
tour-game series.
Clnclnnat~ last In the National
League West, has now beaten the
NL East-contending Pirates six
times In 10 games this seaSoil.
·
"We lost some chanCeS' this
weekend but so did (East·leadlng)
Philadelphia In Los Angeles," said
Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner .
"It's all In howyoo want to look a lit.
The Pirates remain a halt-game
behind Philadelphia, but could bave
moved Into the lead over the
weekend as the Phlllles lost three
times to the Dodgers.
"You can't reflect on what might
have been or what could have been
or you'll lind ~ games you should
have won," Tanner said.
Both teams tried to give away the
sloppily played game Sunda y, with
the Pirates charged .with three
errors and the Reds with two.
"We just didn't play very well ,"
Tariner 5ald.

were awarded In the Meigs County
Fair youth tun sbow with horses
and ponies during last week's lair.
attractions of the Meigs Couny Fair
The high point horse was "Jody,"
Saturday afternoon, with three
raceshelngrunontheRockSprings Chilck Shields, Jr., Glouster.
Tammy Kennedy, rtde; the reserve
track.
·
In the third and 11na1 race, David high potDt horse was "Bo Wassa"
Wlnmngthe!lrstracewasahorse Richards, Gkluster, had the win- wlthCherylRlflle, rider; highpoint ·
owned by Joe Fiu:bee, Alexandria; .. nlrig )lorse, followed by two entries . ·l)o4y was ~'SinokeY" with: Mica . :
!OIIowed' by entries oi Carl Meeks owned by Jennings Beegle.
Jones, Rider, and reserve high
Meanwhile, trophies and ribbons point pony was "Blate". with Cathy
and Steve ~ler, both of Athens.
Joe Hobstetter, rider.
High point trophies and ribbons In
Hart~
live places were awarded In the 16
classes of CQ~tltlon with the
· ·· ' ·
•· .
- ·.•·
awa~ lleln&amp; ~·
the
'" WETHE:RSF:iEi.D, ~. (Afo) · saki ·the ·?$.)'1!!11'-old: Sti-ahge; ,;.110 · Meigs 4-J:I P~ ·RI(!ets anc).the ..
· ·· . ....: It was a.boii:J Curtis Strange'w!IO -:·:won his tfrst PGA 'tournament In, Blue Rlbboil Riders.
twlcechargedtothetopofapackot threeyears.Hedldn'tmentlonthat
Mike Jones was the announcer,
goiters vytng tor the lead In the he teed otl ori the 424-'yard final bole · with Karen Griffith and Cathy
PX),OOl Sanuny J:?avls Jr ..Creater with a one-lrnn.
Baldwin, timers, and Chuck Rlltle,
Hartford Open.
"With a two-stroke lead, yoo just Blli Downie, Jr., Kenny Hayes, and
But It wa8 a conservative CUrtis don't want to make the 'big Darlene Hayes, the ring crew.
Strangewhowalkedtothel8thteeln
mlstake,"saldtheslx-yearveteran, Romona· Compton was the point
the 11na1 round of the tournament whopostedaclosing68.
keeper.
SundaY clutching a two-stroke lead
Henner made his inlstake a hole
The classes were drunkard's
paradise, fiag race borse, flag r~e
over Jack Renner, the man he had earll!!r.
overtakenlorthelead.
Downtwostrokesheadinglntothe pony, pickup race borse, pickup
· Strange'sseconda:botonthepar-4 par-317thbole,henUssedatour-foot race pony, potato race for bones,
Ii&gt;le came to rest on the lrlngeol the (AAt tor a bogey. Had he made the potaln race tor pontes, barrel race
putting sulface about 35 feet trom (AA!, Reoner may have forced a for borses, barrel race tlr ponies,
playolt tor the championship. cone race lor horses and cone race .
the cup. On the next shot he tried
onlytopushtheballlnwlthlnJXittlng Strange would not have had the torponles,eggandspoonlorborses
distance.
breathing nxxn to play the 18th as and ponies, tlgure eight, cash for
The ball stopped about five teet conservatively as he did. Instead, cash, run, ride, and run, and pole
trom till! pin and Strange missed the
Renner, with a llnalroimd71, wound bending lor horses and pontes. .
' sbolt Pitt rt was the secood time In
up tied with Jay Haas for second
The fun show was. arranged by
two days he bogeyed the bole.
placeat269.
the Junior lair.
I. : Butb:v Uien It dldn'tntatfer
strange's 16-under 268 was the
·
highest winning score at the
.Strange already had won the 6,5'19-yard Wethersfield · Country
$54,00) Drst prize. Renner, his Clubcourseslncel974: Inlastyear's
playlngparlner, parred theboleand GHO, Tim Norris llroke three
tlnlshed a stroke behind.
course records enroutelna25.under
"I played a vezy conservative
chip and a very conservative putt," 259·

quarter horse racing added to the

°
.Strange WffiS

dO
. . pen

.lOF

w

The Reds took a 3-0 lead with solo
runs In the second, third and fourth,
only to see the Pira tes rally for a 4-3
lead In the sixth with the help of a key
error by sbortstop Kelly Parts.
~a.son Thompson drew a ~t
walk otl starter Charlie Puleo and
Dave Parker singled betore rookie
Doug Frobel tied thescoreat3-3wlth
an RBI single. An out later, Parts
charged Dale Berra's Infield rolle r
but failed tocomeupwlththehallfor
an error that allowed Parker to
score.
Tony Pena's double had accounted lor two runs In the Pirates'
fourth.

Russ Nixon. "Ifyou can't getahlt m
that ball, no one deserves a hit. I
don't think Ray !hrowshlrnooteven
lf he does get it."
.
" It would have been a bang-ban!!:
play, " Ray saki.
·
Wa lker, wbo had a three-run;
pinch-hit double In the Reds' 6-~
victory over the Pirates on Thurs·,
day, said he was'" just trying to drive
the ball up the middle."
;
Scherrer, 2-3. llnlshed o!t lhll
Pirates by allowing just two hl\8
over the final three lnillngs.
:
"That's what he's been dWig aQ
year, doing the Job," Nixon sa~
"He's been a valuable part of thli
club all year."
'

With reliever Cec!Uo Guante, 2-1,
on the mound, Ron Oester singled
with one rut In the Reds' eighth and
Dave Concepcion followed with a
plnch·hlt single. Pirates' relief a ce
Kent Tekulve replaced Guante, but
Gary Redus singled In Oester to tie
the score.
Duane Walker then bouna&gt;d a
hlgh·boundlng grounde r that
skipped over Ray's glove for an
error that scored two runs.
" It was a judgment call," Ray
said of the scoring decision. "We've
had a few judgment calls go against
us herein the last week ,but you can't
let It bother you ."
" Ifoo're damn light It should have
been a hit," said Reds Manager

SERVICE
Dependability
Peace of Mind
MARY C.

KESLER
Enrolled m
Practice

Before the
Internal
Revenue

Service.

TRI.,COUNTY
·H ea
· ·daCh eS ·h
· "(a}"JZe
· p · ·. ·· ·BOOKKEEPING&lt;:
· 08pl
ryor ·
SERVICE . .
.

SOUTH LAKE TAHOE , Nav .

(AP) -Aaron Pryor was hospitallzed, complalnlngotheadachesover
the weekend, but pnmoter Dan
Duva e~ the WQrld lloxlng
Assoclatlptf junior.- welterweight
~l)amplon's rellU\tch ~~gatnst Aiellb
Arguello togo on as scheduled Sept.
9atLasVegas.
Pryor was taken to Barton
Memortal Hospital by Booker
Grlflln, his press aide, Friday after
he had sparred 13 rounds.
Thechamplonwasllstedasstable
after a battery of tests failed to
disclose a head Injury, a nursing
supervisor .said, and he was
scheduledtobereleasedtoday.
Duva saki In a telephone Inter·
view Sunday from his borne In New
Jersey, "they found nothing wrong
... everythlngcamebacknegatlve."
The rematch against Arguello,
wbo Is seeking to beCOme the ·first
fighter to w1n titles In tour weight
ctasses, wt11 be the second lor Pryor
since he kept his share ot the
140-poundclasstltlebyknocklngout

Arugello In the 14th round of an
exciting bout last Nov. 12 at Miami,
Fla. On April 3, Pryor stopped Sang
HyunKlm In thethirdroundo!atltle
deten~ at Atlantic City, ·N.J.

818 E. Moln It,
.,
Pomeroy, OH.
H&amp;.R Block Ofllco Laaotlan.
.PH. 992·37911

;:=:;:.:. ._;_,~=.-'-··..:-._.::.::__,:...,.:;,.4!'::~~=~=~====~
·· ·
··

MICHAEL H. CHANCEY, M. D.
Wishes To Announce the Opening of His
Practice For

PEDIATRICS
Specializing in Childhood and
Adolescent Medicine

PINNELL STREET, RIPLEY, WV
EHective August 14, 1983
BY APPOINTMENT

TELEPHONE 372-5000

..-----------....:.:::.::=::..::=.:::.:....::.__..::::..._.~.______________________

,Marauders dump Athens, 2-p
ATHENS .... The Meigs Ma·
riluder grlddel'$ shutout Athens 2.()
In a two-bour controlled scrimmage
here Saturday evening.
Senior quarterback Nick Riggs
put the Marauders on the board
early wheri he went ·over froll\ a
yard ·out. The score came after
Athens had tumbled on thelrown23.
Sophomore tailback Brad Robin·
son rambled aine yards up the
middle tor Meigs' second score
midway !through the scrimmage. .
Coach Charles Chancey's 11
pretty much controlled the tempo,
particularly wltb their strong delen-

'.

slve performance.
Athens , under t1Je guidance of a .
new coach, !ailed tp post a win la~t
year while Meigs went 3-7. Meigs
won last year's contest at Pomeroy,
211-12. The two arch-rtvals do not
meet this year as Meigs jumps to
Trl- VaUey Conference play.
Friday at Marauder stadium
(Pomeroy). the Marauders host a
tour-tetim preview In meeting
Frontier High School. Athens plays
VInton County In the opener. Each
game wtll last two quarters with a
halt hour break between games.
The opener starts at 7 p.m.

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-,

Wepl....ell.

NWERme\NY·

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�Page

The Daily

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Sen~nel

Monday, Auglllf 22, 1983

Wilander has .upset win over McEnroe
MASON, Ohio (AP) -Despite bls
Impressive victory ln~CXXI

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OStJ ON \'lEW - Ohio ~ quazterback Mike 1'omzcak ( 15)
poses for a group ~ plloloCJ'11)1ber.1 Sa&amp;urday a1 OSU picture day al Oblo
stadium. The learn posed for a group pldure and !ben posed ,.for

.

•• •

pboeograpbers. {AP La.serpbolo). .

•

·. ~: . · osu ·coaches
gtven raises

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•••

Ohio· -l ~ l ,
Otiia State has given head
coaches of three major sports
pay raises, but Atltletic Director
Hugh Hindman says that "'ith
their records, they deser..,

COLUMBuS:;

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F ootball Coach Earle Bi'uce's
salary went up 20.5 percmt, to
$00,900; men's basketball Coach
Eldon Miller's salary went up
17.1 J&gt;?l'CE!Ilt, to $54,900; and
women's basketball Coach Tara
VanDerveer got a 31.7 J&gt;?l'CE!Ilt
raise, to $32.881.
The three are among nine
OSU coaches working under
l2·month contracts .
Hindman, whose 0"11 salary
was raised to $63,240, said be
fought for the raises before the
bOard of trustees.
n1 fought vecy hard to get· the
increases, particularly for E&lt;!l-Je ·
and Eldon. Mel the university
resron&lt;led ,'' he said. ''I'm stJll
not . satisfied; the)Jre still not
where they should be, and we' U
be working towani more lm·
provement next year."
According to a February
survey by The Columbus Dispatch . Bruce and MJJler each
ranked seventh among Big Ten
coaches in the same sports.
"They deselve better Ulan
that, .. Hindman said. ".Even
" 1th thesE increases, .Earle and
E ldon rank no h.lgher than fifth."
Big Ten football coaches "1th
higher salaries Ulan Bruce

. inC lUcie ~rge

Pei-~ at Mktu. .. . U.S. Open iit NEW' YOIL

gan State, Bo Scbe'mbechler of
Michigan, Hayden Fry of Iowa
and Mike White of Dllnois.
Basketball coaches with higher
salaries Ulan Miller's iDcJude
Bob Knlgbt of Indiana, George
Raveling of Iowa, Lou Henson ot
illinois and Jim Dutcher of
Minnerota .
Hindman cited "a number or
reasons" for the salary
increases.
'Tm extremely happy with
the jobs both EarJe and Eldon
have done,'' be said. '"Then,
there is their longevity with us.
In addition. they both 1ep1 esent
the university wen. they have
character In that we never have
to worry about them breaking or
trying to clrcumvent the rules,
and lastly, tOOr salar1es should
reflEct the quality of our natJon.
ally l'l'COgllized programs ...
In four )'ears at Ohio State,
Bruce bas compiled a J8.10
nn&gt;ni, won one Big Ten title
outright and taken the team ID
fOill' post -season appearances.
Miller is m82 at Ohio State.
Although be has never won a Big
Ten title, four or his sevm
Buckeye teams have made
post-season appearances .
Van Derveer. In three seasons
at OSU, bas CIX!lpiled a ~27·
nn&gt;ni. Including a 23-5 mark
last season when tile Buclteyes
shared the "'llfTll!ll's basketball
title with Indiana .

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OOL"Bl..ES: Bumz~er. ~ a
Klqllt. lba:la. ll:. ' ... did .a: 2'1.
1R1Pl.Di: ~- .U.Ia. n:
Htwbt. t Dl1r1oft.. ~ 7; Gnlm,
St. ~ 1: Raina.- ~ ?; ~

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G..... Oae
Mrs. P . crow, Room 17 -Sarah Anderson,
Tammy Bu11Jnaton. Danny Bul&lt;her, David
CamUcboel, Jenny ~' Jerod O&gt;ok,
JeruJJier Jlal!ey, Amy Dunt. Benny Ew!Jig,
wm Hall, Brian Heldreth, Beth Hysell,
Heather Knight Chris Lane, Fredrick Lee,

,.

Shawn Nltz, MeHssa Pierce, ReQie Pratt,
Lany Rut!er, Eric Sutt, Usa Tanerson, Opal
WhJtlatch, Amy Yates, Usa Yeauger, Julla

··~

YOWl(!.
.
Mrs. C. Ohllllger, Room 13 -

lfeatller
Blank!l, '1'tlny Brown, Racbel Bush. Steven
Darst, Jell Darnell, Aaron Davts, Rebecca
Dileo, Travts llrellner, M!cbelle Doney, Alan
Durst, Tara Elwin, David Fetty, Denise
Hayeo, JOIOCJ Hll!, Emlly Johnson. Todcl
M!tcb, N&lt;rr!s. QystaJ Pridemore,
~ Reltm!re, Josepll Roberts, Katy
5aDIIers. Darrell Stone, Jaclyn Swartz, Jason
Taylor.

Gnde'IWo

Mn. 1. Dlehl, Room 14 - Brad Anderson,
Joe ilaphaw, Traltoo Cle!imd, Dan!elle

,._

Top _...,. .Jolm

OwnpioaaiJipe Sunday . . _ , Mllllder Willi ...

MeEIIne ., ..,..t ~ hiftml!: a po!ll' 111ot ....,,.._

llntiiiiJe In the United Slalea beallni!: McJ!!nroe H..N.

McENROE

UPSET -

thwi'l• 411•1naai;b w11b Mats lWaDilei' aUhe ATP

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(~hep pboto).

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The Jets, wbo also bad 'a cosUY
victory last 'nwrsday in Cincinnati.
wiD open In two weeks without
receivers Lam Jones, Wesley
Walker and Kun Solm, and oflen·
slve lineman Jim Lu.sclnsld. Sobn
season opener.
Ullderwent knee surge-y after the
Wltb the key injuries both teams ~17 0\'e!tiJne victory over the
sustained fNf!f: the 14 e '"'vi ooe ot Bengals and Luscinskl suffered a
the year's most attmct!ve mat· broken ned&lt;. Bolh fn!e agents are
chups isdegmer.llillg Into an an-out wt for tile year.
Ed Lutber, Fouts' replacemmt
patlent war.
Wltb quartertlad&lt; Dan Fwts Satuniay nlgbt, orebestrated three
already missing fn:m Saturday
flrst·balftouchdawns in his lim pro
nlgbt's game with a spralnol arch,
start as the Chargers buDt a ~
theCharg&lt;ersbsuwomoreAil·Pros haltllme lead.
',In their 24-7 romp over the San
"All we wanted to do was win this
Francisco 49ers.
ooe and dellelq&gt; sune nlllmeotum
ot!enslve tmm captain Dwg liofng into the regular season... said
Wllltersoo broi&lt;e his left forearm In Luther, wbo was JS.for-29 for 2al
the fwrtb quarter and wide naiver yards and two Interceptions.
Wes Chandler sustdned a "mild to
James Brooks opened the San
JMderate" spn1D at his left foot. Diego scoring with a 5-yanl nm.
Ouny!Jer Is rot likely to play agalnst
Luther passed ll yards to Kellen
the Lcs Anw' Rams next wee!&lt;, Winslow for another twchdown and
w1t11e Wllkersm will miss about six EamestJacksonscoredfn:mayard
weel3
• wt Rei! Benlrschke added a
Cooch Don Coryell, wbomustcut ~yanl field gmt San Francisco's
his roster down to Ill players by only points came on Carl Monroe's
Tllesday, called the loss at Wilker· J.yanl touchdown run In the fourth
son "a real blow to us," while Bill quarter.
WalshCt tlle49ersErni!i ged !rom his
In olher Satuniay games, Phlla·
team's seccnd exhlbltloD loss with delphia beat Green Bay 27-14;
thel)WJiaq:.J
asooattitude.
Chicago beat the Los Angeles
"When yrustartan Inexperienced Raiders, 27-21; New England
group agaiJJst front-line players
topped the l..csAngeles Rams )3.7;
they're going to get 1a1&lt;en apart,"
Buffalo nipped Detroit 17-16;
the San Francisco head coach said.
DenvEr beat Cleveland 19-10; Pitts·
''But the averr1dlng thing Is to bave burgh rode over Dallas 24-7;
theveteranshealthyfortheregular
HoustondownedNewOrleans~13;

Tampa Bay topped Atlanta 17-6;
Kansas City nipped Sl. Louts 17-16;
and the New Vorl&lt; Giants beat
Baltimore 27-14.
On Friday night, Miami mauled
Washlngtoo J8.7 · and Mimll&gt;sota
edgl;!d Seattle llH7.

r-----------1
LEGAL NOTICE
T~e

Public Ulilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public hearing. Case
No. 83·31 ·El ·EFC. to re·
view ll!e fuel procurement
practiCes and policies.of
the Ohio.Power Company
the operation of its Elec·
tric Fuel Component. anti
relaled matters. This hear·
ing is scheduled lo begin
al6:30 p.m. on Thursday.
August 25. 1983 al the
Ci ty Council Chambers ,
218 Cleveland Avenue .
SW. Canlon , Ohio44702 .
The session will end at
7:30 p.m. or such tater
1m! as is required in order
to accommOdate those
waiting to testify
All inlerested panies will
be given an opportunity to
be heard. Further information may be obtained
by contacting lhe Com ·
mission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : Mary Ann Orlinski,
Secretary

were blue. rlbbon . winners

~·.

.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS l - J
A Divl!iioa of Multimedia, I.e.

Published ('\'ery aflemoon. Monday
1hrOUJ! h Friday. lll Coort Strf!'@t, b)' the
Ohio Va lley Pllbllshhag Company · Mulli mt"dia. Inc ., Pomeroy, OhJo451158, 9922156. SE&gt;cond class pos1age paid at PomE'I"O)' ' Ohio,

M('mbl'r : The Associated Press, In·
la nd Dally Pres.s Assoclatoa and tbP
Ank&gt;rican NPW!ipaper Publishers As·
sodat ioo , National Advt"'Mlslng RepreS(" nta lt \·t-. Branham Newspaper SalH,
733 Tblrd ' Avenue. Ne-w Yqrk, Nev.·
l'ork 10017.

·--u.~·
While lbe
East leede£can'lfllidan

1963.

m..s

lieD(.
Gaql! F - bonsai for the
tblnl llrallbl pme lilld MII&lt;e
Tom!z ftrtd • five billa befDre
needing Jdntb.blniDg relief help

llnde 'lbree
Mrs. P. Whitt, Rocm 11- Candy Anderson,
Debbte Alkire. Brad Bagshaw, Jamie Biggs,
Nathan Brown, Chrtstln Buu.ard, Leanna
CUndiff, David DArst, Serena Davis, Bobby
Eynon, Denise Hysell, Charles Klng, M!s!l
Klng, Kevln Klein, Chris Knight, Lynette

Neece, Roush,
Annette Kelly
rterce,
StephanieShannon
Price,
Roger
Satterfield,

Scholderer-, Patrkk Steele, Jeanie Taylor,

Rusty Triplett, Katrtna Turner, Tommy
Wllson, Ch~lde Young.
·
Mrs. M. YOWlg, Room 12- KandiBactltel.
Jennifer Bamhart, Megan Bartels, Josh
Blalr, Joe Bonecut!er, Dennis Boyd, Elsie
Buftlngton, Anna Chapman, Tracy Collins,
Rodney CorneD. Amber Davta, Kelly Doidae,
Lee Henderson, Kevin Lam ben, Donald May,
Mellssp. Maynard, Bobble Mitchell, Garry
Neece, Tammy Queen, Brandon Rousli,
Elizabeth Roush, Angela Searles, Shannon

Spaun, Chris Swanson, Vlcld Warner. Stanley
Watsoo, Amy wrtght .
Gl'alle Four
Mrs. B. flsher, Room z; - Josh Bartels,
Joe Boyd, Jull Buck. Kim Burton . .Jamie
Chapman, Genta Cornell, Mindy FoulkrOO,
Autumn Grtffith, StPphanle Haggy, John
Harrtscn, Shawn Hawley, Jeremiah Heck,
Penny Klein, Melissa NeutzUna,lJsa Pierce,
Tammy Reitmlre, Jon Sargent) Rodney
Smith, VIrginia Swisher, April Tanneh!U,
Fral\k Waugh.
•
Mrs. M. Glbbs, Room :Ill - Barbie
Anderson, Rhonda Anderson, Micah Bunch,
Melinda DaUey, Jeremy Dean, Mickey
Goode, John Haggy, Kevin Howard, Oennls
Hoschar, Scott Icenhower, Tammy KJetn,
Reva Laudermllt, Joey McElroy, Lula
Nea~. Chris Ni~. Jason RatUtf, , Rachel
Roush,Snider,
Keith Smith,
Smith.
Paul Tyree;
Smith,
David
DavidJody
SWansm,
Lanny
Terry White.
Grade Five
Mrs. R.,Zurcher,Room24-VlrgtnlaBoyd,
Scott Brtnker, James Carpenter, Chase
Cleland, Raena Eblin, 11m Hall, Bobble Jo
Huffman, Raymond Landers, Aimee Mitch,
Shane PhiWps, Mark Russell, Amanda
Roush, Tracl Rowe. MUce Van Meter, Sean
Walt em, Jennl Werry, Ja~on Wright.
Mrs. M . Hysell, Room 23- Usa Capehart,
Kim Ewing, Robbie Fields, Eric Goode,
Patrick Grvszka, Ertc Heck, Angela Klein,

t\llgela l.irkln8, Shawn Upsroinb, Mike
Mayer , auts Neece, Lorl Pierce, Rebecca
Shamblin, Stacey Shank, Seth Wehrung, Tim

Wells, Brenda Wright.
GradeSix

F:

John Anderson, Trlna Bachtel, Nancy Baker,

Davtd Buchanan, Hank Clelan, Shawn Durst,
John EIUott, Don Groghan, Deanna Haggy,
Raymond Johnson, Kenda Kloes, Tommy

.

.

531 JACKSON PIKE ·In 38 WEST

Lane, Diana Neace. JennlferNewman, Mary

"""""---

Norman, Gall Pierce, Antlxlny Rowe, Mickey

~ler, Michelle Triplett, Valerle Van Meter,
Jerry White.

Miss Jltggo,
R. ""'"""
V!Jida
·
Jennifer Buck,

Randy Hawley,

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;========~~

~ST19t1Yu~
FA«MY t#'lru rMMISDO' I

UVE ENTERTAINMENT

JAMIE .SHOOTER
APPEARING

TUESDAY-SATURDAY
11 A.M. to 12 Noon

RepJ:el!el)tlng the ·. dub at the
cilnvt'ntlon.were MJ's.,Dean; Sheila
euitls; and Mrs. Koblentz . . Mrs.
Curtis Is a student OAGC judge and
was recognized at Tuesday's
banquet.
-

..

Mn. D. Arnott, Room 22 - Chris Alkire•

9 P.M:to · l2 Midnight ..... ·

.

Calendar · .·
MONDAY
POMEROY - A bus drlver
safety workshop wiD be held at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Meigs
High Scbool drafting room .

SEE RUTLAND FURNITURE FOR
YOUR HEATING NEEDS ·NOW

WEDNESDAY

WARM MORNING
CIRCULATING HEATERS
AMERICA'S MOST POPULAR GAS
HOME HEATERS

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Lodge 164, F&amp;AM, wiD obsel'lle
past masters night at 7:30 p.m.
Wedilesday · with work In the
master mason degree. AD master masons are Invited and
refreshments wiD be served.

POSTMA."iTER: Sf&gt;rd address to Tbt
Dally Sen ti nel. 111 Court St.. Pomeroy.

Ohio &lt;5769.

,

.

SUBS('ftJPriON llATF.S
87 CIU'Tift' ..- M .... a..t.

WE STILL
MAKE
HOUSE
CALLS

Ont&gt; \\'lf"E' Ii: .................................$1.00
One- Month ................., ... .. ... ...... St.t0 · ....
On(&gt; Y4.&gt; ar ........ .. ...... ........... ..... S52ltl
SINGLE OOJ"V
PRICD
Da lly .............. .................... 20 Cents

Subscri bers not desiring tO pay U'l~c-ar­
rll'r may rt&gt;mJt In advanct' d irect to
ThE&gt; Dally 5(&gt;-nlln'PI on J . 6or 12 rmnth
basis. Crt"d it will be gi'\'en carrier each
month .

S o $u bscrlptions by mall pt"rmllted In
towns wh(&gt;n:&gt; ~&lt;' c arrie r serviCf' b
available.

MAI L SUBSCRIPI'(ONS
i..W.OIJ!e

IJ \\'E'&lt;'ks .............. : ............... ... 114.01
2'6 \\'(&gt;(&gt;kS ........................... ...... 12!.30

52 Y,'ef&gt;ks

................................. 151.48

W~ks ----~~~- -~-~-

13
.... ..... 115.21
2:6 \\'f't"k.s ......... .. ' ................ .... . 129."
52 \\'e-e-ks ................... .............. 1156.21

1

1-----~---.......1---------

offense, the West pacesetters from
Atlanta rediscovered theirs In
Wrigley Field. The Braves had lost
four in a row, scoring onlY six runs •
but got 251n tOOr last'threevrtorles
against theCubs. DaleMUJllhYhad a
two-run single In a stx-nm first
lnnillg, bomaed In the fuurth after
the Cubs had climbed within a nm.
and 'singled to cap a two-run
sevmth.
Leoo Oumam, Mel Hall, Jody .
Davis and Thad Bosley hoi reed for
Qdcago.
''We really ~ a lot of nms
because this was oneattbosedaysat
Wrigley Field," said Murpby In
refeJ'I!IICe to a 17 mpb wind bklw1Dg
out ''Nothblgtssafeln thisparkwlth
tbe wind bkJwlng out. ..
c.va.la$, Aalro&amp;Z
Host St. Lwls11i00 Its tlttb In a row
as rookie Danny Cox wtpltched
Nolan Ryan tor bls first majorleeg\le vtctory. St. Louis, which had
been bavlng trouble 00 tbe mound,
held Houston to ·slJI runs In a
tour.game sweep of the Aslros.
GEorRe Heildrldt had four lilts and
Jmorbd In two runs.
Cox gave ttedlt to Cbase Ridd11!,
his coad! at Iroy (Ala) State and
thel8illeman wbowboslgDedSieYe
Carlton to his first pro contract In

Hardwick, Fred Heldreth, Jalmey Hubbard.
Davey Leonard, Sandy Moms, C.SSie Nease,
Mike Pl...,., Ertc Qualls, KeUy Smiuth,
Leanora Snider, Jeff Tracy, Ellen WatsOn.
Miss K Uoyd. Room U - Deanna Boothe.
Jason Carpenter, BonNe Casto, Ronald DUes,
Anclrea Dillard, Tracy F1fe, Jeremy Grimm,
Brad H~. Joshua Heck, Lee Hu.sk, Bobby
MitcheiJ, Slwmon Nltz, Stephanie See,
Stephen See. Tim SnJder, Bradley Swisher,
Clu1sti Waugh, Sandy Whitt .

Janet Koblentz and ~tty Dean · .program.
.
,.
.
.
ai the / Mrs. Wllilan:&gt; HendrickS, Vice:
tlo~ show btild at the annual (ireSident and generar manager of
canv3itlon of the Association of Lake County Nursery Exchange,
Garden Clubs held at Otterbein had. an address on . "Cacti and
College In Weste1V111e.
Socculents Around the World"
Theme 11 the show was "Basic is which was followed by the presiBeautlt\!I" with Mrs. Koblentz, a· denl'~ receptiol) honoring.the state ..
merll'ller ·ol ·!he Shade :yaney ctflcers, Mrs. Fred :SChuster, VaJi·
COuncil ai FlOral Arts, using for her dalla, .Is the state pre5ldent. Janet ·
arrangement the !berne, "Black Is Bolin, Rutland, 1s second vice
; Beautiful." She captui'ed "best of president.
show" In the artistic design
Clinics on phases of OAGC work
division.
·
In nature and conservation, publicBetty Dean, a member of the lty, news media, public beauttflcaChester Garden Club and the Shade lion, program books, tlower shows,
Valley Council; took her ribbon In ex.hlbltors and judges school, jun!ot
the horticulture division for a garden clubs, slide photography
basket of garden vegetables.
and garden therapy were held.
Mrs. Edwin Cope, proprietor of
Mrs . VIrginia Covert, Rio
"The Posy Patch" In Tipp City, Grande, was Installed as director of
entertained the 400 garden dub Region ll which Include&amp;. Meigs,
members from across the state Gallla, Athens and Washington
with her "WW!amsburg and otber CounUes.
An award for Sllllf'riOr rating In
Period Designs."
A tour 11 Innlswood Gardens and garden therapy was received by
"Sislers on SumrrJer Wings" pres- Betty Dean, a member of the Shade
ented by The Cbeerful Chickadees, Valley CouncU of Floral Arts which
a junior garden club were other also received superior ratings In
activities Included In the convention program book and publicity books .

•

..

Crow, Emmanuel CundiU, J . P. Davis, David

Flower show winners named

,.

By'l'heA.......... PraB
The San Diego Charg&lt;ers and the
New York Jets have only one more
exltlbitlon game to play before they
face each olher Sept 4 In the
National Football League regular

By ..
Pre.
Rlcl&lt; Honeycutt had JII'YEI'pltched
In the NafilrJal League aDd hadn't
been at bat siDce college. So,
naturally, be felt tight at home
throwing and swinging for the Lcs
AngPies Dodgers.
Honeycutt was 14·8 with Texas
before being dealt Ill the Il&lt;4a SOli
Frklay. He made his LA debut
Sunday In a ~ victory over
Pltlladelphla, scattering foor hlts
OVl!!' seven Innings before leaving
\VIth a slight cut 011 the left middle
finger. Hooeycutt siiUck out a
seasoo-hlgh sevm aDd retired the
flnalll batters be faced.
He also singled In hls first
major-league at-bat and lrougbt
borne a nm with a sqo
bunt as
the Dtlt¥i s reg1slen!d tbelr ninth
vlc!my without a loss this seasoo
OVl!!' Philadelphia Lcs Angeles bas
Wt!ICOIIE!d the Phlllles~7 In then!De
games aDd soot tbem wt five Urnes.
In olher games, It was Atlanta 1L
O!lcago 9; St. Louis S, HonstiW! 2;
CindnnaU 6, Plltliburgb t New
York 4, San FraDclsco 3, aDd tn a
dolaN$
'H', Montreal tiD: San
Diego J.O, then losl &gt;Z.
_ H~ wbocanbbau,..,.,,..,.
.. afree
qent at the end !1 the • 011, was
not dlstuitJed about swllddl!g
' ge, tbougb be was anxlrus ID
get llllr1ll!ll as a Oil :lg •
Mite Manbd llaauned .; twonmbomertorlbeDTs•

·Pas• 5

on the first day at scbool, Tuesday,
Aug. 23. Any stUdent name omitted
should report to the gym for .class
assignment.

Injuries rid~le San Diego· Charger team.

_...tee!

oYcico 1

TP.U.S 6..

•ron~eno~ -ur. ~ n )

~ 4
Afi.atlt.l ll . CliX:ago 9
Sl Loul5 !r., Hcustal l
~\:ldri-al }2. San Di$.1 G-5

~s Gan:w
I ~ i-111

B:6taa 5. Trrcdo 2

1 ~1J.9 i,{ ft i

- ·""""

Sev. 't'cr\;

1

.,, 8oMm:!
ie&gt;;t&gt;di s-61. fnl
Ca!ttnU I ~ l-l1 .,, ~

6.

C'mculnall

at;:.

~riand l. SPan:. 2
~- 't' B'k '- ~ 1

TU'CUO

Ati.a:l.:.a 9. Chicago 2
!'..:- '.t'rl; i . Sao ~ ~
Pirub.lrgh "- Ordruw!:i tl
Sl l..D.lls 1. lb.51Cn 0
l.Ds ~ { f"'lWdlotptU l
On.!lt g.-nes ~

""""'
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Ba.JtirT'a'\' 6.

Monday, August 22, 1983

.•

Pomeroy Elementary students

....
•

Honeycutt handcuffs
Phils in Dodger debut

"
i1i

_.,._

E.\S'TOO~

Ptn.blrgtl

.. ""' """"

...

53
f'i'

By The Bend

11\lp match, and repeatedly hit
baseline
l!botJI and lolls for
totheuet.

are to report lo the rooms as foUows

season."

" ,.

N..-\TD"i.U. U'AGl;"E

"I dkln 't think I had a chance to
win, oot after last week (at
Montreal) when I lost In the first
mmd," $aid \VI!apdpr, wbo js
ranJi£;d siXth 1D the ATP'ooil&gt;puter
and was seeded fwrth In
this tournameot.
McEnroe said he was SIIJ1lrlsed
by WilaDder's newlY acquired
proficiency on the Deroturf II
'surlace, wllk:h-·also _Is 1iseQ a) . ~

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Elementary homeroom assignments set

ranldn!is

•

•

•.
•

Assoctawa o t T e n n J s l s
CIJamploosblp, Mats Wllander of
Sweden doesn't view birnself as a
threat In the u.s. Open, wblch
begins next week.
"I'd be more surprised If I win It
than If I lose In the .first round."
Wllander, who celebrates hls 19th
birthday today. said after sweepiJlg
to the ATP title wltb baclt·tl&gt;back
u~ts of secood-rallked Ivan Lend!
and top. ranked Jolin McEnroe.
'1 doo't exped to win the Open,
even after this. But if John or Ivan
. have an otf·day , I can beat them eveR oo this sulface."
Wllanderwon the ATPtltle, wonh
$48.Wl, by upsettillg McEnroe, 64,
6-3 Sunday. He upset Lend!~. 6-Jin
Saturday's semi1lnals.
''Now I know I can beat~ ·
and Lend! If I play good, and they
don'tplayooUJp," WilandersaJd. "I
stllllmow I can lose to these players
- I can losetmnorrow- rut I know I
can beat them.
''And I know now I can playoo this
surface."
The ATP Olarnpimship was the
first hard-court victory for WI·
lander, who beat McEnroe earlier
this year in the quarter1Inals at the
French Open, wblcb is played 011
clay.

"'!bat's the best I've seen b1m
play on this type of court.''McEnroe
saJd. ''lfthlslsan lndlcawaofthlnsl.s

..

SboneykNew
Chicken Supreme

HAVE TH·E DAILY SENTINEL
DELIVERED TO YOUR HOUSE
MONDAY .THRU FRIDAY
AND ALSO RECEIVE
THE SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

•'

$1

Dinner

FOR ONLY OO PER WEEK
FOR HOME DELIVERY CALL

AboDeleu breast of cbartJroiled chicken, towed
with crispy becoo, aod yoar cllc*e of aaed IWill cheese

992-2156

$4.69

or taugy cheMv i'IJ Eese auce.
• Golden freach fries (or balretl potato after 5 PM)
• Warm ,OMI!OIIJI edan brad
• All the bot homemade 1011p IIIII guden fresh alld
)VII eve to eat
• ~ Sboaey's own'lbmato Vegetable Soup

. ~~
DinnerTableTM •
328 Viand Street
Point Pleasant W. Va.

SERVICE
GUARANTEED

.•

...
&lt;

•' '

.'
'

.

•.,
'•

·.

OUR ·SERVICE DESK IS OPEN
·.

..

UNTIL 6:00 P.M. MOND·AY-FRIDAY

'•

,·

I'

,,

VR-85

FEATURING.....
1. 2. 3.
4. 5.
6. ~

HEAVY RRC-WELDED HEAT CHAMBER
QUALITY ENGINEERED LONG-LIFE BURNER
"FIRESIDE" GLOWING RADIANTS
INTERNAL DRAR HOOD
RIGID FRAME CONSTRUCTION
QUIET OPERATING "CARPET OF COMFORT' BLOWER
PICTURE FRAME STYLING

8UY NOW AND GET

$50

TO

$1 00

If you intend to install bottle gas to heat with,
See us now. Bottle gas is the most reasonable heat you can use.

FOR QUICK SERVICE AND A BOTTLE GAS COMPANY
PfRSONALLY OWNED BY THE GRATE FAMILY

'

�Ohio

Monday, August 22, 1983
~lday,

. The Daily Sentinel

, ... ...._,

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11-~l~

LEGAL .
NOTIFICATION

Appl•cant·
James E. Otddle dba J. D .
Dnll1ng Company

P 0 . Box 537
Locat10n o f Proposed Sa lt
Wa t er lnJect•on Wel l:

- Sectton 4. Sal•sbury Townshlp. Meigs County, Oh10, Edith
Forrest Lease
Geolo g1c Name and Depth of
lnJeCt•on Zone Clinton.
Aoorox. 4.400'

old calegory; Lacy
two year category; VIctoria Renee Thomllll with
Donna Thomllll, 18 months ro 2f months, l,lza J ean
Zahran with Janice Zahran, 12 ro 18monlhs; blll'k, I to
r, Cyolhla Ann Large with Carla Large, six to 12
months; Katl Cununbts with Peggy Cummins, three
to six months; Tiffany Qualls with Denise Qnalls,
birth to three months.

1

Card of Thanks

pret:iO¥.!!!'·'mol:htW~

For the .food, ·canis,
110MB, contfottiq -ds.
momorlaf &amp;ills 1rid tnii1Y
on our behltf we n
petul.
special thinks to - .
a-- of 11w11 -C

G'I_.,
!".r- lr. Bob ~Oils·
. ·Mr.

Ron IIIIJlll~n Wilcott
lor a btilutlltll semce. Also 1
special lhris to the loyal
lllrNns Clan. the ~
builders Class and The
Phillthott Woman of the
lliddltport Chun:h of Christ
I« tho wondllful dimen.
AI times lkl this WI rill ill
howverydurDtlrfMIY
friends Md relatiYes 111 to
uS: With their ~ 1nd
s!nnJih fratn Gotf I hottvy
burden ismucheuiartobur.

We thank God ltl' the

beartilul memories of our
dw llatlw.
Her Childrtn
3 Announcements

·.:,:·. .,eel
..

Sub Contractor
Bids Requested
For The Maples
Elderiy Housing,
Pomeroy, OH.
CALl: John Pupa
Northland Park
Homes, Inc.
Columbus, OH.

Gabriel Clayton Oldaker with Jerry Oldaker, two
year old category; do&amp;eph Lee JWOe with Robin
IWIIe, 18 tc 2f months; Ian Mullen with Debbie
Mullen, 12 tc 18 monlhs; blll'k, I tor, Raymond Canter
w1111 Leigh Canter, six to 12 months; MaUhew Nelgler
with Brenda Nelgler, three to six months, and Aaron
Krautler with Cbtdy Krautter, blrtb tc three months.

614~846-3400

-

EAFORD

.. .
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~. ·

RIILTOR

Phone

.•

I· ( 614 l ·992-3325

· ·~

NEW LISTING - 7 Rm. home
near Pomeroy. 3· bedrooms,
carpeting TP water, full

,.~: ·:~

•• ••

"

basement

RANCH - 5 yrs. old. OVI!r one
levelacra 6rm. house, 21!aths.
fami~ rm. with fireplace, 2 car
finished garage, lg, porch and
I&amp; sundec~ All ~ A·I shape for
$59,900.
,.r

.,.,
...

12 ACRfS .:... River front Ieveii
and. Ideal fur campers and
fishing, 6 rm. home with bath,
furnace and woodburner, 2
drilled wells for trailers.
$38,500.

:' '

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RANCH - Near Rutland. Level
, lot, 6 rms., bath, al new
carpeting just installed, eat-il
kitchen, 7 closels, living 121&lt;20
and abo!« len yean old.
Assumable 811% mortgage.
Reduced to $36,500.

...,
. •:.
SCHOOUO- Meigs County school students were
' ~.. weD repreaented in several booths of the senior lair
. buldlng a&amp; the Meigs County Fair. There were over
··"•
,, IOOenlrlesaltowbtg work lnvariouslleldshy students.

'• u ~

84 ACRES - Some minerals,
5 rm~. modem bath, new
looking oak floors, drilled well

Pictured In one smaD area used lor the exhlbltll, from
the Jell, are John Costanzo, Ma ry Bacon and John
Riebel, aD ol the Meigs County Superlntendenl's

Bam and yoong fruit 'trees.

omce.

140 ACRES I. « l -On Rl.
143 Wei! of Harrisonvile.
Fenced, lays welllg bam and
other buildings. Aboul $465.00

•I

_:~~young man finishes .cadet officer school
:,

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n ..._, ......

o....c-rw

n ...... .......,

7 1-~E....._.

Max D. Sterett has completed
Air Patrol's Cadet Officer
~ School, which was held at Gunter
7.'Alr Force Station, Ala., July

members of Air University and
personnel from HQ . CAP-USAF
conducted the 10 days of Intensive
training.
I • ~'
'
- ~ 27-Aug. 5.
CAP, a volunteer, clvutan auxilSterrett. a cadet o!flcer In Clvll Iary of the U.S. Air F orce, offers a
·;Air Patrol (CAP), wasoneolthe 106 number of other specialized
: teenager members from through- summer programs to Its 25,00J
·. •i cut the United States who attended
teenage members. Competition lor
' 1 the school.
.
these programs Is keen and being
'' The curriculum was designed to . chosen Is an honor.
· promote effective leadersnlp by
·Sterrett Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
- CAP cadet officers. It emphasized
Richard M. Sterrett of 9 Chapel: ~'. }llyebology of leadership, problem
wood Dr., New Albany, formerly ol
• IOivlng techniques, communlcaGallipolis. He has been a CAP
: ;" ttons skll1s, moral responsibilities, · member since. December 1979 a nd
- ~'physical fitness and basic corrcepts
Is alllllated with the Falcon Composite Squadron.
.~·.of management.
Air Force Reservists, staff
He Is · enrolled at VIncennes

· l::tvll

per

Meigs Lunch ·
Menus

NICE SWISS HOlE - Easy m

c.e

tlr 3 bedroom home.
Centrll aif and hot Wiler heat
Cedar closet, 2 bllhs, 2
porches and full basement
Only $45,000
NEW LISTIIIO .....: 6 roam
fum~hed house, all on lloor,
with l!alll carpetint; and level

Lunch menus tor the Metp Local School
District are as fOllows Aug. 23-AUiJ. 26:

Tueod'J' -Pizza, creamy cole olaw, JlHCII

hall, m1lk.

Macaroni

aae.J

78 ACRES - Want to hide?
Here ~ your chance in a SwEs
designed home. Li woodbuming fireplace in lhe ~15 il&lt;elt
room, 3 ful baths, one each
floor, spiral sllits, pantry, cook
and bahe linils, fuH basement,
hOBe born and lg fishing lake.

University, VIncennes, Indiana, In
Flight Technology.
His grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Otis Knopp, Racine.

Wednesday -

.....

••

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_.,.
• • ChHI•

HI leo"

147 l.,..,. ,...,.

I11)
ll

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11-CMoiU

Ul o-01.1

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IM l.o&lt;..,
, , lwlltlo. •

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.... _,_ ....

-·

and c -.·

bunered green beans, awlesauce, bread,
butter, mUk.
ThW'I!kY - Sallsl&gt;.uy Jleak, mimi
"''I'!!!bles,
Jello lhllt. Mlad, breod, - ·
mllk.
Friday - Coolt'o choice.

lol

Housing
Headquarters
\

PH. 992-3047

T_..., _ _

lJIOill-·

(

126-Thrifll Clift! Flowors
US-Petal Quilb
U !-Pillow llltw-Offs
IIUiociMI with S..,.
117-lllr Art al Nottllopoint

Mini· Cardigan

Maximum Proposed lnjec·
t1on Pressure - 300 lbs
Maximum Proposed Average
Da•lv InJection Volume- More

614 -949-2512

AND HOllE IIAIIO'ENANCE

Public Notice
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE OF GUY W. LEE,
DECEASED
Cue No. 24124
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On August 4. 1983. m thE!
Me•gs County Pro bate Court.
Case· No. 24 t 24. Mauflta L

. M1tler. Route 3. 45610 M1ller
Road. Pomeroy, Oh1o 45769.
was appotnted AdmiOISti"atnl!:
With W1ll Annexed of the estate
ot Guy W lee. deceased. late of
Route 2. Pomeroy. Oh10

4 5769
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge / .
Clerk
181 15. 22. 29. 3tc
,

Real Estate General

Show off a neat waist 1n this
racJan-sleeve min~cardigan.
Newest length! Cables accent
fronts and deep sleeves of th is sa
seed stilch of wtt&lt;sted-wei!ht
yam. Pattern 7052: Si1es 8- 0:
12-14 mcluded .
$2.50 fill' each pattern . Add
501 each pattern for postage
and handline. Send Ia:
Allet BnloU Ctllb '' 1 Ruti.IIaU

'-'

'

, The Daily Sentinel
IIu 1&amp;3, Did Cholsia Sta., lin

Tat\, NT 10113. Prinl Name,
Addms, Zip, Pattern Nu111Mr.
YOUR N£XT CRAA is in '"" NEW
1984 NEEOLECRAFT CAIALOG
Over J70 varied designs, 3 free
paltetns. Send $1 .50
All CRAFT BOOKS. .$2.00 llt:h
All lloab and Catliol-add 504
.... lor ........ anti hlttdllftl.
135-0alls &amp; Cltllhos On Pllltltt
134-14 Quick lllaUino Quills
13J.flllllon Hatle Qul1t111
132-Cittllt llrlatn*
128-(tMiopa l'llth- Quilts

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW LISTING - Middleport
- 3 bedroom •
nice
street, Cute kiltben, large linetl
closet, insulated. $32,500.
NEW USTING -l'omeroy 3 bedroom home, large living
room, full basement on a large
lit Fruit lrees. $24,000.

GOOD HOUSE - good neillfl.
borhood, good price. This 2-3
bedroom home has l.lactl!lof
ground. ful basement and is in
good repair. Only $31.500.

. A summary of the enacted
b!Jdget of Aulla.nd Townsh•D ·
. .sh.OWrriQ th~ intend~ use of"
Revenu~ Sh~rmg 'unds · and ·.
ather -pobl1c montes 1s ava•lab le
lor publ1c 1nspectton at the ·
ofl1ce of clerk upon req uest.
Au11and Towrish1p
Edna M Sw1 ck.

11

· . PHONE::99H816

·,. _. 1 ·21-r· ~ pd

ArbaUgh's ~rchery
&amp; Hunting Supply
!UPPERS PlAINS. OH.
'Bows &amp; Accessories
'Guns &amp; Ammo .
'Live Bait, Fishin&amp;
Tackle
'H~ntln&amp; &amp; Fishin&amp;

Public Notice
PURCHASE
REQUISITION
legal Advertising lor b1ds for
locatiOn of State Liquor Store
No. 22. 1n Pomeroy, Oh10. as
follows:
The Department of Liquor
Control w1U be acce;pt.ng b•d s
for the lease of a store. for a
lerm of 5 or 10 years. SLIItable
.for use as a State L1quor Store

ina

end

peinti~

R·l·l·

RUTlAND - 2 bedrooms,
starter home, double lol end of
street for privacy. $11,900.
UNCDI.H HIU ELEGANCE! -

Beautiful 2 story home with 3

bedrooms, I\! ~ family
roam , nice basement ,
equipped kitchen with bar.
porches, fenced baclt yard

$55,00J.

RUTLAND - Modular with
aaeage. Plenty of prden
space plus a 3 bedroom 24x58
modular that has 2 baths, fuly
equipped kilthen, fireplace,
central air. APflOI. 5-6 acres.
' $38,225.

WI!Odburner set up. ful

equipped Wlen. Allached
one c.- prage and new 2 car

Call: 949.-2263'

·. qr 94~-3~\l.llo .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

tor. .

. ·.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
-Donn

CON

ntdlltorlllnd hN•

~ ._.

1er~.Wetanel10

add boll and rod out ra· · ;

i , c*IM. We 11110 rapelr

PARTS oncl SERVICE

--

-Wotw

PAT HILL FORD

phone: !6 141 466 -4826 B•ds

lARGE OR SMALL JOBS

PH.

address 1f they are postmarked
no la!er than Wednesday.
September 14, 1983,
Department ol
LIQUOr Control
R1 chard E. Carsey
·
Direct or

992·2478
8-18·1 ""· '

STRIP

Washers; Dryers

Air Conditioners

or 992-7121
3·2Uic

'

COAL

WE ALSO DO
SERVICE CALLS

$3()00 A TON

742-2362

PH.
'

Route 4, Pomerov

S&amp;W TV
AND .
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

MINE RUN

Ra... Refriprators

Also Tranamlaaion
PH. 992-5682

181 22. ltc

USED
APPLIANCES

Chester, Ohio
Ph. 986·42811
If 11o A-r. Coli 915·4312
D-oyne Wlttlomo
&amp; Scante Smith
All latn 1nd llodela
Antenna lnllllllltlon
H01111 ca11s1nd Shop
Service Avojl~11:_.
L---....!:!~~WI

992· 2280

1·14'· 1110.

•

Custom
Sawmill Work
•Piariilt
*Shop Worit

•New Construction
•Remodeling
15 Years Experience

·'

992-3987
1 mo. pd .IB/12

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR VINYL
SIDING
'Sidin&amp; •
'Roolinc
'Gutter &amp; Down Spouts
'Remodelina
20 Y11rs Experience
In llo111 Area
FREE ESTIMATES
Call 843·5425

AL TROMM'S

JEWELL'S

BACKHOE

PLUMBING and

SERVICE
•Lowut Retet

HE.ATING

oE p ar1tnced

SeMce
SEPTIC TANKS
A SPECIALTY

JO.B - BIG OR SIIALL
. 992·6030
lllnersvllle, OH.

742-2328

8119/1 mo pd.

7-5-2 mD_pd..

Hl·tfC

NEW USTING - House is
IIIJile 1M rem::, lol is areal
value. Lot is
... utilities
on silt!. Rive! view, IPflOI.

75tt95. $9,00J.

Gil 992..191
JoMl...U949-HeO
Dottll T... 992-!1692
Jo Hill 915 U&amp;&amp;
Olltat 992-2259

A

~

(B
IIAITOI

'

'I

.,'

and responding to daily wqrk reports
!Ubmitted by our agents throughout
the state. .No experience necessary;
Paid to complete training. Work at
home. For information send selfaddressed, stamped envelope 9inches long to AWGA, Dept. E, Box
49204, Atlanta, GA 30359.

'

••

'

'·

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS

DIIH~l~~RA~~·~~OD
CARPET AND UPHOLSTERY CLEANING

DEEP CLEANED - SHORT DRYING TIME
USE SAME DAY..: ANTI-IIEIOIL DmiiGENTS
COMMERCIAL a RESIDENTIAL
•Prolessiollll Spot Rltlto¥11 Service
•1tt111 &amp; Calllna Cle1nlna
·
"Insurance Work Welcome"
James Knipt-273-5388
f• Ravenswood
Rick Hovatter-992-2606
In llitltlleport
"Fr11 Estimates On All Services"

Sizes mrtlro11 trxl&amp;'

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum

SIDING
1

UTILITY BUILDINGS i
Slz' frOIII 6'x6' Up
to 24'136'
IMulald Doa H1111111

i

P&amp;S Rlclna,
BUILDINGS
·.
011.
•. '
. , ·' · 1'1! .•&amp;14-t!HI~

104tfc

BISSELL
SIDING CO •

"Beautiful, Custom

f:

·.. r----::::::=::--TJI

:

'13.95

Good Selection Of

Sq. Yd . lnotallocl

GOLD SEAL

ANSO 1V NYLON
'15.95

lsearsl

$399 2~rRRY
I IOU ONLY IN IIOWN

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING
oDOUR
oiACKHOl
•SEPTIC STSTEIIS
•llllmONE
•
oWATll, GAS 111d

.,•

"FREE ESTIMATES"

'

SlWU LilES
•PDIDS. IECLAIIATIOI

*CHAIN LINK

•LAIDCUAIH.
COICtmWOII

WOlf( .

FENCING

,.

Built Garaaes"

For 5 Yurs.

..•'
...

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply · '

lseirsl

1

'Rtpl1tors

•fittlnp
~ Phone:

CATALOG
MUCHA NT

PH. 992-2178

1115-3137
Wlrtlloltl: 115-3509
Rnld~~ee:

G.-.gg • Petty Glbbi-Ownen
1-~

11-.t-1•-•·

Orep11, cloth11, gletewtrt,

celled If rain .

Colt

Butlneu

21

Opport'!f1lly

._.:....--~~'---·::..
·

to Mnd money through the
mill until you h1v'e lnvfttl·
geted lhl: offering.

hlva valid Tuchar Carttflce·

30 years, 1\lllllbll eftar
Aug. 9, 1983. Colt oltor II

aucce11ful buain111 for over

p.m .. 1-304-1175-2982.
22 Money to loan
HOME LOANS Low ft ..d

·

ONEI..cherforPoJniPI••·

oont Child a Fomlly Dovel·

Giveewey

opment Centlr; 1pp1y It 154o

lth . Avo. Huntlnglon belor!
&amp; p.m. Auguot 30th .

e kitten•. 4 mole,

2 ftlmete . Southweltitrn Community
Action Council Inc. 11 an
Colt 4411·8&amp;87 onytlme.

Corol Ntol

3-IJ.ttc

We~~~~~

441-3182

&amp;puppleo, 3 montho old . To Student nNdl round trip
good home In country. Cell ride rtO ChtNP&amp;tlkt, d1lly.
1114-2511-1702 onytlme.

Colt 448-4701 .

6 Lott end Found

oldorly poroon In my home.
Reuoneblt . Colt 982-8022.

Room. bolrd and care for an

13

lnturance

Auction every Tueadey SANDY AND BEAVER In·
·ntghl, Pt. Plooaent, WYo . au111nct Co. has offered
Auct. LoMit Ne1l . Ferm. Hrvk:ea for fire lns... renoe
houMhotd, 01toto, etc. Colt oovor1111• In Gottt• Counoy
for almost 1 century. Ferm,
1114-387-7101 .
l1cHne ond peroonol property
oovtrtgH ere evalleble tO

CUSTOM PRINT

....., lndtvtduol -do. Contact Kall Burle1on, IQtnl.

949-2358

Phone 4411-2S21.

Art you peylng to much for

youo holpflel-hoolth tnou·
Call Carroll
Snowden, 448·4210 .

rtnoa.

menl to flnenoe blltnM ..... '

oltor .11.m,' .

32 · Mobile Hornei
for Sale
TRI - STA ·T E MOBILE
HOMES . USED • CAII.I,
TRUCKS. GALLIPOLIS .
CHECK OUR PRICES.l:ALL
4411-7572.
CLEAN USED MDIIILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE HOME lALII,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPDLII,
RT 31. PHONE 4411-7:174.
1858 Detololor m)&gt;blle
homo, 10x45. Call -441·
3413.
1880 Wlndoor 14•70' whh
7&lt;22 ••pondo, 3 bdo., 2
beth. atero. mlcrowe"'· Dell·

trel11fr, etor:r,• building, and

more. Will I 10 IHII. Must
111 to epprecl1t1. Rodney-

Core Ad . Call 1114;2419229 .
1971 Governor 1 4~70 with
poroh 8•30 1nd underpin-

ning. 3 bedroom, 1'II both,

waiher-dryer, atovt, refrig-

erator, air conditioner, new

School 8pecl1l •25 norm1l
tunlnga . Auautt only .

4372 .

Colt 114-211 · 14112 ,
13,&amp;00.

f&gt;IANO TUNING·LAI\IE DA-

For 1111 by owner. 1I I 1

Werd'o Koyboood , 448-

1---------NIELS. Reliable 11rvlce
elnce 1811. Ataoclete of
Brunlc1rd' Mualc Co.·Phone

... ' ··- .....
' .. "

31 Home• for 81le

Ktngotv ott elocttlo mobile
home. 14170 whh 7•24
.Xpondo, 2 bdr., 1'II b1th,
utlltly room, oentrer elr,
flrepllct, ewnlng a undllr-

ptnntng . Aeooon for Hlllng

muat rtloclle . Prloe

UO,OOO . Colt 111 4-2411·
51172.
1978 8chulto 1 4•70, :a bdr ..
2 beth. 11. aond., totilt

Newty remodel.c:t 2 atory 1lectric, centr1111r, IliUm.·
frame, 1V. beth, 3V.:. acr... blo to1n with t1 ,000 down,
city achoola, riverview. cen 1t1y o.n r•ttd lOt.
nz.ooo. co11 441-4222 French City Brolcortng lerbotw..n 8 &amp; I.
vtce. 4411-9340.

4 bdr, r1noh home, iarge LR , 1978 Sterling 14•70. 2
full belement, with gerege, bdr .. toto! electric, aentoel
wood burner Included. alty air, ••· cond .• oen bt left on
1chool1, 2 milt• from town . rented lot. Frenah City Brok.

Would the peraon who found
C11l 441·02715 .
the tot rider car Hit on AI. Will do bebyaltttng In my
248 laot wolk, pleooe coli home. Live In Middleport• Houn. 2 earn more or 1111
11 4-S8&amp;-392&amp; In leto even- or... Cotlll14-182-1348.
on Rt. 180 botw- Porter a
ing• or mum h 11 end of
VInton, 87 Ft . welt.
Will do bebyalttlng In my U2,000. Colt 114·388·
drhrew.y where found .
holl'll. Recine INI. Refaren· 80153.

LOST: Alpine Ooo 1101t, .... 1114-848-2778.
tottoo rtghluo RWO.Ieft T2
hoo aollor on, lit. 2 a 12 Will do bebyolttlng In my
home. llockoprtngo .,...
South, 304·1175·482S.
114-892-2712.

lngo •n.oqo . . Down pey. ,

cerpet, will furnl1h If
needed. excellent conc(hk)n,
on rented lot. Mervin Dele
Clldwell, THna Run A'd ,

PIANO TUNING lock to

E q u 11 0 p port 4 nIt y
1114-742·2951.
3 puppleo. Coli 1114·317· Employer.
7743.

2 young dogo. Cell 44117283 .
'
81by1h In home for pr•
ochoot 1111•· Spring Volley
Klttona. Call 4441-77S5 .
oroo. Colt 4411·8325.

10 ecrea. bleck top road nur
Leon. Soon to hlvtt alty
weler, hou11 with out ..u-,t·
304-4&amp;8· 192~

POSITION AVAILABLE Au·

II""
19, 1983 Toocheo,
Gulldtng Hond School. Muot

TEll RY'S Borber Shop ot gent Lutton ot 304·1175·
Alllton, WV. Heir cula. 3150 or 01111 tall lr... 1-II00U.OO. Mondey -Frld1y , 31118.
3:30 to 1:30 p.m.

Public Sekt
8o Auction

31 Hom" for 81le

4411·3359 ,

N1tkm11 Guard I• looking for rate . Luder Mortgege, 77 E.
ptloplo to flit Ito ronka. If you Stete, Athono, Ohio. 1· 1114·
NOW OPEN, Fl•· lt Shop, ere • high echool 11nlor or &amp;82-3051 .
2101 Jelferoon Avo. Pt. gradual• and have no prior
Pleooont, Gtuo fetched). atNice In thl mllftary, tha
Profeeafonal
.cqen repelra, am1ll ep~ Wilt VIrginia Army N1tlon1l 23
Sarvlc111
Dll1noe rtp1lr1. hendmldt Gu1rd m•v be the ptaae lor
foother goodo. New a uMd youl Eern gooct.r,•v. good
merchandise for •••· buy or benHito, job tr nlng 1nd
1r1d1. Stop In-pity video eduoellonel 11111tance for
c•L 8ookkHplng
gemea. Sneck1. 9 e.m.-10 only 1 wHhlnd 1 montllend
Broed renge of bookkMing
p.m. 304·87~·248&amp;.
11 daya Noh eummer. For 1nd ttx MNICII IYIII1bl1 to
more tnfvrmatkJn cell Iar- euh: your bu1lneae 1\Hda.

4

~gn1 .

unto bit of ..everything. C1n·

For l11n; Auto Service
Center, M11on, WV, 3 beys,
2 holtta, ••cellenl locelk)n,

tlon thru Dept . of Eduaetlon.
Flo wen· 304-8915· 3315 1, 1ppllca1lon obtained by ell·
Cherleo Thomoo-888·34122, ling or writing Mr. Devld
Jim Voung-304-812·3333. llot!Ht 11 111 4-3117·0102 or
wr"•: P.O. lox 14, Cho·
AEOUCE oole a foot with ohtra, Oh 411120 .
GoBeN Tobloto &amp; E-Vop
''weter pill•'' , Fruth THE Woot Vtrgtnll Army

f .

'W•ter PiP.
•a.s Pipe

.,'

•
••
·••,.J

ond

DeVIl V1cuum
CIMner, ona htlf mile ,u p

delivery,

Southeastern Ohio. Co"tlot

Admlnlotretton Ookhtu Hoo·
pitol, 3110 Choroletta Avo.;
Oekhttt: Oh 4511&amp;11. 11 4·
812-7717.

No Sunday Calle

·ertng Sorvice, 4411•1$40,

71, 14•70 FIHtwood, . 3
bdr., both • holf, Plenty
coblnet apeoe, 'tr oond.,
11.000. Cell 114-2415&amp;178.

Almoot niiW 4 rmo &amp; beth, 1 971 14150 c:i••~ 2
low UO 'o. Cell 441·0124. bdr.,
111 h..t. llrep'aoe.
1
0120
deok wNII
In Mldtltopon, niiWiy remo- ewnlng,redwood
freme
deled homo whh flrepleao, ntng, with tie dunderpin·
- . ..,.,
poulble woodburner. cioN good cond. Cen 114-U7ta ochoolo .end ohapplng. 0it58 oftor IPM, If no
Colt 114-182-8841 .
···-r 4411-2121.
Extre nice hou .. on Rt. &amp;IS• 1811 Nilohue 14x70 tOIItl
IPPrOJI, 3 mi. E11t of Porter. oloctrtc,
gorden tub • olllrtPriced rocluood. Shown by

tng. 112,800 or poollble
oppot"tment only,. 440· l1nd
wNII f1,000
1340, 4411· 7801 or 114· downoontroot
. Colt 441·2211.
2H·II413.
•
tad
In
SyracuM·Neer
11711
Kirkwood
14170to\al
Lo..
oloatric. 3 bedroom. :1 full
ochool &amp; owtmmtng pool. 3 batho, woter IOfot-. ,..
bedroom 111uat1d on one- f ""'
•
....__
lhird tore lot. t24,500. or r..eretor otave, 1111
nlng, beck pa,.h, borlloisue
will ront lo• 12715 mo. piJ ond lond lnalud~d.
304-851-3834.
114,000. lteve Prloe 1114Sele by - -·Ruottc httto.l -:
8-::-82:-·:7_7_21-:-:•-•vt:.....tme_._ __
8YTecuoo. 3 -.omo. 2 USED Mobile H - . 304botho, bi-t...l whh potlo a 571-2711 .
•;

-r•·

cover. 3x30· 2 Clr g1rege.

11•12blrn. 1114-912-2St57 1877 OAKWOOD 12~~1.

IIIIOlD I -IIIMMIUD
PHONE Jl. CUFFOIO
_,

lnstlllld And
Werrtntld by SNrs

Yd. ln•tallocl

RUBBER-BAa&lt; TWEED .

SWEEPER 1nd Mwlng ml·
chine repelr.
end

Call for frn sidlna as·
timatea, 949-2801 or ' 8
949-2860.

64 Miac, Merchandlte

CONGOI.!uM

IEAI.TOIS
lllnlj E. Cltllnd. Jr.

.'

'
We need assistance in evaluating

3 Announcement&amp;

Shuetlonl
Wanted
1-_.:._
_ __

•Dump Truck

•Work Oulnlnteed

Big yord oele Mooon, behind
VFW, Tuoo. Wad. n,uro.

3 cute klnono, good heolth. 12
Ceiii14-379-2158B .

Around

•R_..,.

obtelned al Scenic Hilla
Nur1lng Center. Monday

for

I NOTlCE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·occupetlonal Thertphy LISHING CO . recommend•
ConiUitant nHdecl for 2" thel you do bu1ln111 wtth
bed tong t11m corolectuty In people you know, ond NOT

Phermecy.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Will be accepted at the above

...
. ...
-.. ..............

1nd engine repair. Mirvln

-8tcotlcs~

1-IJ.tfc

tltl. toye. Hertford, Wltoh

M.l lo or fomete lull lime or .
port !ime. l\lo · o'•~rlenco.
·neMoury . .Colt ' .1114·3•7·
0411 for 1ppolntin111t.

LETART MACHINE SHOP

- GooUn•

992-2196
Mlddlepoot, Ohio

Soenla Hlllt Nur1lng Center
Ia now hiring ttaff RN'a a

Cell 1175-2242 .

· 7·1•·lmo.

Georgeo Croel&lt; Rd .
441-0284.

-Lo·Bov

- Tronchor

o.T.....

4·5-tfc:

-D._Trudll

·

YARD oolo, Aueuot :I:S'If .•
24th. School otothoo, Mdl·
proodo. cu!telno. Avo'( loot·

Plano pleyer for Ooepel
group, Mult Mcrlflce time.

"Bonded &amp; fnmltl"

rrt•.up

flood 18 !Kingobury .. d. I.

first houH on rlghl.

A GOOD .HOME FOil
U&amp;OO . NICE 10140.
DEPENDABLE child ooni ELECTRIC HEAT, . EXCEL·
ovolloblo In my· homo,. Pt~y · LENT COI\IOITION: f700.
;oom. flnaed vard. 304- o 'OWN , . B·ALAI\ICE , PI 227-0414 8:30AM-9PM, 8715·2&amp;27.
NAI\ICED. 31 PAYMINTII
Mon,-Thur .
OF '10&amp;.48 A MONTH .
304·1576'271 1.

PH. 949-2224

Pte

weweya. Turn 11ft County

11

Baleamen for eleotronlc
equipment . Send resume to Bobyolttlng In my homo. Colt

IIACIN!.OH.

ouppl!oo.

&amp; VIcinity '
·············· ····--~ . -----··.

t':~;;;;;;;~~===:::::::::::

·Bob CampteU &amp;
Don Rose

2·26·1fCt

Middleport :

nina August 23rd.

Pipeline, well slttt, I1CII- · box &amp;58, Korr, Oh 4&amp;143.
mation, ponds, utility con- Trucking . No axper,ence ne~on and Mplicllnlls.. . a.aury , For hjformltlon Qall
· 1·119·227•01127 or 1-1119•

Pamoroy, Oh, ,·
Ph .-992-2174

' w. lliR f'llllll1r lnd ....

end Unootn Pike Ad. begin ·

Vou cenAVON
meke .good
oolllng
Celt Monevl
4411·
33&amp;8.
18 Wanted to Do

HEMLOCK
PIPELINE

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, Inc.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

1--------V•rc:t Salt at C1ntenerv 141

thru Frldoy. lAM to 4PM .
Cell 4411· 71 eo.
.

"

I '

1

.

........ .

!lulovttta lid., 1 milo out . Mil e:. ltem1 . Lovely
Dreperlu, platuroo end IWIItera •Ohttp, jiCtlttl.
dtohoa, toptl ptoyor, atoollo.
dothea, en(l mleo . lttmt.
ontlquoo . 201 Beooh ' Bt ..
Yord Bote Wild. • Thuro. MiddlepOrt . Aug 22-21:
lAM to 3PM, 41 lift II C,..k
St. lloby otothoo NB to 2T, MOVING BALE, Tueo., ~mottmlty cloth01 . Jenny 23, 8:30· 2:00. ..... ....
clothing, lumlturo. f - gl·
Und crib. Store AC .

LPI\I 'o opptlootlono o1n be

Farm Equipment
Part• &amp; Sitrvlce

· .~ltlialoi Sp~lallst ·
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Experience

~c;.n.-;c;y

---···--···--·-·········· ...····

U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OH 10

Firm Equipment
Dtlltr

RADIATOR SERVICE

......

I

Dur,
.New Holllnd. Bush llcrl

Front the Smallest Hiller
Core ID the Largest Rtdil·

,986·33'~-1 mo. "'

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

•Drv~r~ •FrMJera ·

St. Rt. 124, Po11eroy, DH.

PART-TIME HELP
NEEDED IN THE
SYRACUSE AREA.
CONTACT
THE DAILY SENTINEL
AT 992-2156 OR 992-2135

$1295

OertgtleltTu••·Aug, 23rd
1t Cempblll'a rllldenoe, on

tlonero . 1114-882 -l&amp;to .

SALES &amp; SERVICE

COMPLETI

s.

Rang••
•Rilfrlger.tara

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

HELP WANTED

block garage. $53,00J.

Plea• or oomplele houH·
holds. Al1o complete Auc:tl·

Autllorlztd John

,

Spectficallons and bid forms
are available upon request
lrOm: Chief ~ Real Estate
DIVISion. Ohio Department ol
L1qt or Control. 2323 W. Ftlth
Av.. Col umbus. ·o hiO 43204.

STARnNG AT
INSTAU£D
WITH PAD

•

I·S·Ht

Help Wanted

CHmERAIEA - I~ acres
of land .nit a 3 bedroom brick
ranch home. fill
basemtlnt .nit rec. room lnd

&amp; VIcinity
......... ·-· ·---·- -··-·.. -· ·- --

Buying dolly gold, ellvor
ootno, rlngo,)twoloy, otorllng
wore, old cot no. to 'II• curr111ay. Top prlaoo. Ed. Bur·
kott Borbef Shop. 2nd . Avo .
MiddlepOrt, oh. 814-112·
34711.·"

BOGGS

949-2293
Racine, OH.

36629 Rl. 7
Pomwor

•W•Ih•• •DI8hwt~~hera
IM.

•Excavating
•Ponds
;Septic Tanks
•Hauling

LEONARD F. ERWIN
CONTRACTOR

All Wort GNrlnleltl
"fret Estimates"
I

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

'CUSTOM BULDING

storm

All Malces

'Do&amp; Supplies
· lfrs.: Weekdays 10-6
Sat. &amp; Sun. 10·8
Closed Tues. &amp; Wid.

Pomeroy. Ohto.

EARN $4.87 HR.

ORIOROUSH
PH. 992·7513
., 992-2212

... ·-·--·

- ~iillii:iofii

Wentedtqbuy . New, uMda
•nllque fuontture. Wilt buy 1
onHrlng Mrvloe. Coli Ooby
A. ¥ortln 114-892·11370.

15 Years h:perlence

REClAMATION

•Custom Bolli Homes
•ViceroJ Homes
. From Ca~ad,
*Modular Homes ·
*Ramodalln&amp; Jfl)ls
•Pools

autters 1od .
downspouts,' &amp;Utt•r clllll·
~pair,

M.L
CONTRACTING

NEW

.All types of roof WOit, new

tir

Kitchen Cabinets - RoofIna - Sldlna - Concrete
Patios - Sidewtlks New Construction - Rt·
modellna - ·custom Pole
Barns.

PRICE REDUCED- Sa¥1! now

will) imaginllive interior ~
Fun basement $26,000

Oh . Or 112-nllo.

New Hotnu - Extensive
Remodlllna.
•I nsur1nct Worlt:
.Custom Pole Blqs.
&amp; G1ra1ts
•Roolln&amp; Wort
&lt;AIIrnllltln &amp; 'llnjl Sidltlp

. l2·20.11c

ROOFING

985-3561

lictiiSI

and contatnmg appro~eimat ely
2.000-3.000 square feet m the
.Market Area of Mulberry Av m

on this lvoely 2 bedroom home

Itt•••
hou .. holdl , Write:
·· --·
M.D. Miller... t . 4. Pom""'''.

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

11·11 · c

Route 1
· lona Bottom, OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992-3067

. "'

181 2 2. ltc

smart cardigan. Knit mostly in

PLAQUES
ENGRAVING

Roofirt &amp;Siding Co.

H. L. Writesel

doors and windows.

Remodelin&amp; &amp; New Homes
"FREE ESTIMATES"

PUBUC NOTICE

lll·Add I lllicl Qtoilts
.
l~lck 'n' £Jsy Transfltl

60a

*Tables &amp; Chairs
*CQiller Cupboards
*Buffet, etc.

Ulillb. pd.

SERVICE .

Public Notice

· fntA6u'8~

Man~

~

2506 Gr1nd Ctntill Avo.
Vlon111 ; W. Va .

CARPENTRY

7052

-=

and In· :

V. C. YOUNG 111

JOHNSON

IBI 22. 11c

KING

R •"'• and tuttor,...,.
-GK;uele wM

l

WOOD
WORLD

(Formerly Employed by
Lee Conslructton)

ofrev,ew. . . ··... .' '·

~E!V~~

1
ttallatlon.
("• htlmatM)
Retidentlll
i
lit Commercial
I ' 992;6215 ., 992-7314
Cell 742· 31 911
•
Pomeroy, Ohio
L...._ _ _ _ _ _.:;l·l:;:·•::.~_,· •...:.
·-.....--,,.....--'':;;'·"~·;::"''-'

PATRICK &amp; EUGENE

water .nJecliOn proJect shall file
such cOmments or ObJeCtions.
In , wrq1ng. Wit h the 'UNOER-

43224. Such comments or
ObJectiOns shall be f•led with the
d1V 1siodn dno ta ter thhan f1bft een
ca 1en ar ays 1rom 1 e pu 1lealion date 1n a newspaper of
general Ci rCulatiOn 1n the area

•11

FURNITURE

'Roofina olall types
R11idtntlat &amp; Cot~morclel
'Gut1tr1 ·&amp; Downspoftts
"Storm Wlndttwt &amp; Doors
FREE !STIIIAT!S
20 Ttors Exparillct
WOIIK GUAIANIHD
TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 742-2834
or 949-2160

'

·GROUND II'IJECTION CON. · TR OL SECTION, · DIVISION OF
OIL AND GAS. FOUNTAIN
SOUAAE. COLUMBUS. OHIO

CARPENTER

For 111 your wiring [

pair 11nilce

THE
TROPHY

YOUNG'S

OAK

OHIO
VALLEY
ROOFING

OR
Ohio Oepanmem of Natural
Resources. D1v1S10n of 011 &amp;
Gas. Fount ain SQuare. Colu mbus. Oh1o 43224. 614-265-

wentld To Buy

C.lh for broken 1lr condl·

IIU..plote Af&amp;luns
11!-Prlle Atplns
•
lll·EIIy Art at Hailllin Clochtl
109-SanKnltlllli&lt; tls$Utlncl)
IOI·Itlllanl Sewln1
106-ltllfinl falliott
104-htsiiiiiiiiiiiJ
IOJ.I5 QuHIIIor lodly

than 200 Bbls,
'
Further lnformatipn May Be
Obtained By Contacting the
Foii C~Ning :
..
James E. D•ddla dba J. , D.
Drilling Company. P. 0 . Bo)(
587. Aac.ne, Oh1 o 45771 .

neede: furnecea re- ·

"Licensed &amp; Inspected"

u.,;.,,_.
""'
.
,,._ a................
""'

u 1 .. u -..

.,....._._

WeddU. Cakes and
All Occasion Cakes

··-

.,
........... - - .
Ir _ _ _ _ __::
":__'...:-.:.:...----~-~
aJ.r..--.
:!=-:--~0......., _ _
. 11-M.M lll. .t

DECORATING

MJu.ER
·ELECTRIC
SERVICE

CAKE

........ ,. j , ,.
jtiiiiiM'itt/l j r·l••t•h"'''' •• •• ·ha~tp • • ·

E. Main

Real Estate General

-".. '

n.,.......,,....,.

7J.v.e••wo

9

- - - - - - - - - r - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . , - - - - - - - - - I ·IIDI·I.. ON, I ..A... old
fvmllure. t10ld, olivet lloi•N,~~"•"·-OM
laro, ontlq...., eta., Com-

l"'ll''~

6917 .

GertnitjeJ

IIillitr. .

BOYS - These are the male wbtners ol the
· · • annual preUy baby conled of the Meigs County Fair
by the Middleport Busln... and Professional
;.~:· Women's Club. Judges were Mrs. Loretta Jones,
· '' Jaclu!on. Mrs. Lucy Earwood, Mrs. Gladys Grant,
·;;: 'bolh of GaiBpoUs. The winners are front, I tor, Travis
•: &lt;;: M. Brewer with WUIIam Brewer, thr~ years;
.

11··-·.......,._
uw............,
........
............_...

•

Any person des•nng to comment or to make an objeCtion
with reference to an appliCation
for a perm1t to conwuct.
convert ro. or operate a salt

the

,,; •.

~·~
.............
t_

Public Notice

Name and Address of

GDU.S - 'Dtese are the girls who won bt the
pretty baby contest slaged Salurday at the Meigs
""'- ·c.uty Fair by the Middleport Business and
· · · l'lul d mal Women's Club, Mrs. AlwHda Werner ,
chalnnan. Jeuay Turner was the announcer and
priaM of $$ gill certUicates were presented by the
Elberfeld Department Store. They are, front, I to r,
·" 1-rme Lane MJUer with Denise MDier, three year

_

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

,._
....... _. __

t:l•.uifi•••l

... ..,.

, . ~-~
1 • II"'Gr••

_

Public Notice

•

I:J.IIOOI. . . .

n ...-

lht Dally Sentinel-Page · 7

A11ddleport, Ohio

Business Senices

I

TERESA'S

Jl1' a..tliro

u .. _ . _ . . , . _ ,

,,...,_w..-

.._

U ·C: I , IVIIII_f..........,.

,,32·111--.,
.................

,.,... .....,1..... ..,_1

• ....... u.

.,.

._.~,

1.... " " - ·

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

__

,, .

~,

PHONE
992-2156
Of Wrilt Olilly Stnti11tl Ct1n1fted D•pt
Ill Court St.. Po!Mroy. otlio 4S7U

,.c...,..,,-•..,.•...._•
,liAn_.,. _ _ _

August 22, 1983

eft.,

•.

.

ARR~LAIHING
FOil I
~,. RENT

.

...\i\J~Jits

1!1

p.m.

Genorol H-na end Trooh
romovel Borvloe. Roll1ble Pr•otlaolty new home. &amp;
Mid depentleble. Cell 441-. rpom1, oomplttely fur 9 . Wanted To Buy
3181 botuHn t 1nd &amp;.
nlehed.7 mllft ftom Pt.
Pleeaant. UI,OOO. 304·
LIWn Mowln1 no y~rd to big 8715-7313.
1(111 pey Ollh "" model •amoll
. .. ..._ ...d..._.
ct11n ulld etfl .
Jim Mink Cllev.-Ofd• lno. doblo. 'or ntlmoto colt fiVE roam . houll, 'II eore,
4441-3151, I to II.
IIHI G..,. Johnoon
good Wilt, MPttc oyotem,
.U-3172
louthtlde, Mooon County,
T11oll ........... caol, or .,,• 304-137·2111 .. 304-171·
tlllnt. Will pial! up old 111711.
rolrlaorotato, TV'o, tllvoro,
w1ohen. Cell 814-iU · LAND CONTRACT - lmell
1113.
down poyment and bol1nN
like rant. Remodeled 5
roome, Will pey . . - prtoe lor Wll do bebyoNtlng ooptla evllem
lond. 304-171·
In my - T-'V end 4 mobile hamoo, WWI
a
'Cell 814·441· yoora ••l*lenoo. Cllt 441· 3030, 304-178·3431 or
01715.
11315.
304-871-21153.

oo-.

t...,. """'

-----4--

c•ntl'lll ' ", all tleotrkl.

t•n

304-8715-3812 bot- 1
• 10 p.m.
1978 14170 THAll ......
room, 2 fun lletho. .....,.,
dryer, dlehw••'*· - 1
olr, ownerwllllnlnee!!f1;12

...,_t. •u.ooo.
Will._
:115
ltvor whhtn
4418-11110.

mlleo, 104I

1971 RICHA .. Dij)'lll
12xl0, 3 boclroom, 11!1
beth1, ••pando on ...._
room, c1rpet.
. , '

dryer hQoll up.

burner, atorm

IIWnlngo, !*'loll\'
good aondltlo11,
304-171-11812.

•

•

�P'aga 8 The Daily Sentinel
33

They'll Do It Every Time

Farm• for Sale

Mol go Co. Rd. 18, 88 ..,_
1 / 3 paotuN, 2/ 3 woodod.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. oholr. roclw, otto·
mon, 3 tobiN. lllltfl hHvy
by Frontlor), till. - ·
choir and l o - t . t271.
Solo a ond oholror.k:ed from
*2811. to t8911. obloo. 1411
ond up to I 1 21. Hldo·•·
bedo , l440. ond up to
•n11 .• Rocllnoro, 117&amp;. to
UIO .. Lompo from t28. to
HI. II po . . dlnottM from
t98 .. to 1438. 7 po .. t188.
•nd up. Wood table with alx
cholro 1426. to f741. O.ol&lt;
1110 up to t22&amp;. Hutchoo,
•110. and up, maple or pine
finllh. Bunk bed complete
with mattreaMa, •210. end
up to UBI. Boby bodo.

all mineral righta, unlimited

graVIty fed

81 Hou1ehold Qoodl

tprlngwat~r .

maturing timber, fenced In

pooluN. 24' by 30' polo
bam, large utility bul dlng.
BNuttful 8 room home, ell

-'ectric. completely In••
lated. Includes new cerpet.
fenced in prd. aelf ciNnlng

oven, lido by oldo refrigerator frM;r;.,, Athly wood
burning ttove. Ideal for klda
and• horooo. t88.000. Coli
448-9&amp;10 or 992-31!011.
32 acre farm. 3 bedroom
home. 2 outbuilclnge oft
Royburn Rolld. t38.000.
304·17&amp;·5336 ofttr 6 p.m.

t1 10. MattretHI or box

oprlngo. lull or twin, U8 ..
firm,

34

36

Buainr.ss
· Buildings

Lota

&amp; Acreage

31i acrH at Rodney on W.T.
Weteon Rd. Owner flnenc·

lng ovolloble. Coll441-8221
oltOt' 8 -doyo.

.

..

Nice lot on Raccoon Creek
with 18 lt. trowl troll.er
awning a deck. Priced to
..... 448-9340. 448· 7901
• , ~14-2.~8-8413. ,
-'--'-'---.;._;,..,..'------'-----'-'
FIVE. acral wlttl baument."
city water. pt, "-sent, cell
304· 773-5713 olter 7:00
p.m.

Cottage and 1 1cre elong
Kanawha Rlwr, 8 mllee
from Pt. Ploooont. coli ~04·
171t· 754.1 ovonlngo,
::.
1 I ooreo lond on block top
rood ISOO. ocro. Recently
ourvoyod. 304-178· 7841
evening e.
TWO large lote In Twin
Codor Addition. N- H.,.,n,
wv. 304-882-2487.
TWO &amp; five ocro · ploto for
mobile h - or buNdl~g
oltoo . 304-875-3030 or
171· 3431 .
LOT with mobile homo.
completely fumlehld. nut
a nlco. Quick Poo-olon.
304· 171-3030 or 175·
343~.

110 ACRES, morkoblo
timber. tobacco bue, 1 015
lbo . 3 Borne, pond, good
fonclng. 304.876-3030 or
878·3431.
.
Trailer loti in New Haven.
304·171·1462 oltor B.

4 bdr. houll 6 acru of lend
on Rt. 110in Vinton . Cantrel
elr, •3&amp;0 mo. , sec. dap. &amp;
rllf. Coll441-3175.

Nicely furnlahed mobile Furnfehed apt. aduhe. cloH
home, central air and heat, 1 to Hoapital . No pete. 304-

mi. bllow city, overlooking 1-17~6~·~22~6~7~·-----­
river. Adulte onlv. 441- FURNISHED oportment,
0338.
.clutts, no pete. phon~ 3042 bdr. troilor locotlld on 1..:..17_1_·_14_&amp;_3_._ _ _ _ __
Upper Rlvor Rd. oil utllltleo
paid except electric. Dep. 2 bedroom apt. In Meson.
Adu~o only. No pato. 304roq. Coli 441·B818.
875-1482 olter li.

2 bedroom mobile

~ome

IIIIo. t181. 4 dr. ohooto,
142. II dr. cheoto, 1114. lfod
lromH, t20.ond t21 .. 10
gun - Gun Cllbinets. *310 .•
dlnotto cholro flO . ond t28.
Ou or electric rangea.. *325
upto.376. BabymatresMI,
t21• t36, bodfromoo t20,
t21i. • t30. king lromo tBO.
Oood Mleotlon of bedroom
eultee , ceder chests,
rockers. metal ctblna11.
ewivel rockers.
Und Furnhure -- bookcaH.
ranges. chairs, dlnnett Ht,
wood toble ond cholro. dry·
era. refrigerator• and TV's. 3
milea out BullVille Rd. Open
9am to lpm.. Mon. thru Fri ..
9am to 6pm, Sat.
446-0322
NiCe uktction of weehere,

44

Apartment
for Rant

A ntca home. can be 8n older
·one. mun have at luet 8
roone, etc. Locateclln city of
Oolllpollo. prllferobly downtown. Excollont coro will bl
given by reoponolble lody
ond 13 _ , . old oon. Call
441·9148 or 441-2848 or
contact Evelyn at Oacar' 1
Restaurant.

·......- ........ . .

"

61 ilousehold Goods

3110, 4 BOLT Chevy englng
block. 1100. Set ol 360
. Chivy holdoro, t21. 304·
882·2164.

•
Motors Homes
llo Campers
I WI•~ ... IF
ISEE HIM, I
CER.TAINL'{ WIL l: ,
WA!'H ... 50.0 0·
8YE ...

Bulk firewood 7-101'M. oow
...eon yourMH a Mve . *17
loco oord. con 114-3888248.
.

pi-•

71
1971 VEGA. V-1. 380 ongino. turbo t-loolon.
llolloy Cillrborotor. Eldlt'block manifold. excellent
oondltlen, 11 too. 304171·3114.

PAINTING • Interior ond
axtar6or, plumtMng, roofing,
eome ramodlllng. 20 yrs.
3pt. 81t. dlocforlllo. •3oo. 1981 PLYMOUTH Horizon oxp. Colll14-388·9112.
814-742-2047.
TC 3. - - · low ml3
.._. 1178 Gronodo . 304- Moroum Roofing &amp; Spout·
lng. 30 yoon oxporlonca,
HOMEMADE hoovy duty 8711-US8 oftor I p.m.
· specializing In built up root.
firewood. epllter. electric
ttart. Wlooontln V-4· po· 1974 Ford pickup. 11.000 Colll14-388-981i7.
worod, 1100. 304-178· miiH. good 302 eng. nllldt ' ..:..:·_ :_ _ _ _ _ __
trono. lnotollod. ·uoo. 304· RON'S T-lolon Service.
4581 or 304-1711·1147.
171·7241, 4 p.m, to r 1 · SpoclollzlriO In· Zenith. ond.
p.m.only.
··
·
M·otorol•. · Quaza"r; aiid
··
hou11 collo. Coli 178-2398
83
Uveatock
1174 CMw Mollbu. P.S.. or 4411·24114. .
p.b. 1380. ,614-892-71811.
F • K TrM Trimming, etump
4 H.-n holfaro for olio. 1892 Dotoun 200SX , nmovol. Coli 175-1331 .
tiOO • hood. Coll814-318· loo.dod . 114-812· 1137
-nlngo.
RINGLE'S SERVICE oxp•
8420.
rtonced rooRng. Including .
1171 Chivy ChovottoHotoh hot tor.....,.cotlon. corvon•.•
Bock. Vory - d cond. 8Ht tw; elattrlcllln~ muon~ Qell··
IMU:IIt'tlllh offer. 814·882· ' 304·171-2088 - or . B7li·
41180.
. .
2812.

Hey &amp; Grein

Building Suppli11

-•tor

..

. ...

Ao-.

4782, · - I to 7.
U Dido Cutl111, 442.
89,000 mlloo, llrico •1 ,000.
Coll441-1181.
1874 Chovrolot Mollbu
Cloulo - d ohopa, t1 ,000.
Colloltor I, 114-:117-7147.
1187 Ford Muounl.
11 .eoo. Coli i14.38 •
8809.

-.wlth

M F - . 1. .
bruoh ...... plow, ..... ...,.
""
• ·.....
Coli plow,
441-3113
-.
I,.

lifter I 441-3331.

ANNIE

··--· -· - .

LE.T'S. ·JUST; HOPE I

DON'T MilKE A ME% ..
. OF"iT THIS .
·nME, TOO!

114-2~· 1418.

18M Chovy PU. Ctll 448·
2787 or 441·78111.
1 979 Plymouth Arrow plclc·
up. E.xaeU.nt oondltk)n. Sun
roof. topfler, 4 new rlldlol.
tlroo, new bottory. t3800.
114-9U·3181.
1817 DODGE 0200 ~ton
duol - • · aood cond..
llltbod,
. 011130(-171-1248.
.
1982 CHEVY 1·10, V-1, 4
- - ' · 304-112·2704.
1810 pickup bod. 8 lt ..
3Q4-178-3237.
.

73

Ven1. 4 W.O.

1910 AMC Eagle Umltod
outo. trono.. PI, PB, AC,
PDL, AM·FM cuiottl,
t8.300. Call oltlt' 8, 44118010.

SEAMLESS GUTTERS. Ono
piece custom fl1 your home.
Quaranteacl. Advanced Out·
tor, (Doy 814-592·40118,)
(night 114-898-B205.)

1874 Hondo 310. 7.400
octuol mHoo. Coli I 14·388·
8755.
1874 Hondo Chopper 30 ln.
ovor front ond. C8 710 F.
Colll14-941·2737.
'1871 KZ 780 Kew-1
Motorcycle. H11 wlndohlold.
liMY bor. cruleo control.
luaogorock.- ..... noholn ond oprock..._ A*h!
11200. or coli O.ry 1':
HvMII ot 814·112-1311 Or
1114· 882-1880.
1811 Hondo 125. t3110.
1114-812-7110.

.....

. """ ......

-·

1+-----....,.-

lurvlvol
Special
' Mzime: Atrica'a Mytter·
ioua Spring.' T~might'l program look• at the variety of
creatural who vitit Kenya's
Mzlma Spring. tR) 180 min .)
tiD 811o ol Chomplono
lfil G,..t Railway Joumoyo
g MOVIE: 'Tho Hard Woy'
8:30 G (}) (!) Femlly Tlet Alox
docldoo to be a big brother
10 o Vietnomeu boy. (R)
Ill (I) Nowhort Loolie'o
cousin luatl after Kirk Devona. (A)
9:00 G (})(!)MOVIE: 1bo End'
(}) MOVIE: 'Timo Altlr
Time'
CD 700 Club Todoy'o program
features
author.
Kevin Poretta.
(!) Auto Racing '83:
NASCAR Chomplon Spark
Plus 400 from Brooklyn,
Ml
G . (I) tiD 81vonth Annuli
Clrouo ol Tho Sllro Mlckoy
Roonev lfNil at ringma•
ter at 36 top entertalnera
perform circus acta at
Ceasar• Palace in Las Ve·
goo, Nil. (A) (2 hro.)
()) (!]) G,..t PorloriT.oncel
'Bridashood Rovloltlld.' Julie aand1 Charlet off to find
Sebastian. (R) (80 min.)
[Ciooed Caplloned)
9:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Monty Python
Llvo It tho Hollywood
Bowl'
10:00 ())
Broodway
Playt
wa,hlngton
(!]) Nelli INN Newo
10:30 (lJ ltrael: Amerlco't Key to
Survlvel
lfil Other Vlslono Other
Voices
Iiiii In -rch of....
10:46 I]] TBS Evenl!!j N-1
1 1:00
CIJ 111 ()) tm 01

'lOUR Ol! BUL&gt;DV, A.LLEYI

82

PJumbing

llo Ha•ting
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phon• 448-3888 or 4484477· '

' -------

[t.old

JIM'S PLUMBING. HEATI NO. fomtrly Dewitt' •
Plumbing. Coli 814-311701711.

Now
you'll .

you not
togo

never

down
there,

83

qet:

out!

Rover!

~

WINNIE

Cat 21 5 hoe. dozers, crane, ,
lood-. dump truck. Coli
114·4411·1 142 botwoon ·
7 :00AM • 5:00PM.
•

----------------Clood-1 EXGIYIItll'lg, baa• ':
menta, footere.. drlveWeya, 88ptlc .. nk1, landacepi11g. ~
Coli onytlmo 448-4137,

Jlmea L.

Davison ~

Jr ..

owner.

a oo

J.A.R . Conetructlon Ca. ~
Water Linea . Footera, •
Drolno. All klndo ol Ditching.
Rutlond, Oh. 81 4· 742·
2903.

- · d2l Nowo

Molgo Excovotlng. Bulldo1or •
•

t.ckhoe Nntice. Btte·

monte, loottro, llndocoplng, •
1182 Kewoookl .810 LTD. drlvewaye. farm panda.
Wlndjllmmor, lo--, om· 1114· 742-2407 or814-742· -..
1m • -; cronllbor. olooy 20118.
bor. 111100. 304·812·
- - - - - - - - - - 'pl080 '·
3221 .
BACKHOE, darer, dump 1
truck. UcenMd &amp;eptic IYS· :•
117S KAWASAKI. 7.100 tem lnltllment a repair.
llltull mlloo. 1787.00. A·1 · '304-871· 71181.
· condition, Ph- 114·112·
7104.
~'
84
Electrical
1 IM HARLEY Spomor,
&amp; R fr'
.
::
noodo work. 304-171 ·
e lgeriiiOn
1317.

-~

~

SPEA.K ID ME-' F. W.! IT'S

Roofing end Carpentry ;
won:. general repaira, cell r
Anthony Wllllomoon, 814· '.
387-0184.

Excavating
· 18711 Ford Bronco 4x41 - - - - - - - -- Ronohor modol. AM-FM
DOZER WORK By Tod
Clllllto, AC, 18,400. Coli
Hanna . ponde. ditch••·
oltor .4PM, 4411-4787 . .
booomento. Ito. Coli 4484807 . Carter a Evans
74 CJii Jllp, I cyl., 11200. Tranaponadon.
304-171· 3708.
Loi'lnl• Boaa• Excevltlng.
Dozer~ backhoe, dumptruck.
Worll by hour or fob. Cell
74 Motorcycle•
448-7903.

1171 MontfiiiD 4 dr., lldon,
YlfY good .. ,_paint,
oxtro onow • rlmo,
11.000. Coli 814·311·
1111.
;1179 Hondo Howl&lt; 400,
oxc. cond. 304·178-1773.
1873 Hondo Civic 4 cyl.. 4
epd., 40 MPO, oxc. - · ·-::.....--------------1100. Call 448-1124.
711 8oets 1nd
Motort for l1le
1874 Plymouth Duotor,
lllnt I onglne. 3 opd. trona.
"""' good, little rull, 1800.
'
11'
trt-liul -lit
Coli 448-1124.
1throush wlndthlold, 10 HP
1173 Plym'o uth · Rood Morcurv. ltorllnr boot
Runn•. Br•y with red trtollor. aood eond., 1.410.
Olrlpee, -~~-Mull bo Coli 81~216-8716.
..... to 1ppr I te. Cell
441·1300. .
GrummonllohiMI--·
plotewlth11HP"'-·11 trolling IMIOf. oonn!J
11 CHEVITTI. 2 - ·
autolftlolo. ....... • c•• il Prtce on 1n1111adon. c.n
cond111on, Uf.OOO m11M 114-211-1111 • .
saaoo.oo. 304-171·1771.
1171 Plboo"""' 11ft. with
1871 I'ONTIAC c:.tolln., 1110 10 . . . . . . . . . . - - · 1811
tlfy, 1400 ""-104-171- .
- · Col 112-UI7 11Mr
4111 • 171-1147.

..........................

E • R Troe Sorvloe,, fully •
lnaured, free eetimatea. ~
Phone 814-317-0138, coli
lifter I.

1871 FOI'd 85 PS, eohool
but new motor • brllku.
oxc. cond., s1.1oo. Coli

c...- .

Farm Equipment

I_,_,__
I I ... TI

---

rJ r

==:;::=:::==

.

BARNEY

DID 'IOU SAV
SNUFFY GAVE
UP CORN
SQUEE!IN'S?

· ·
(}) MOVIE: 'Gr-eory'o Girl'
(}) MOVIE: 1blngo Aro
Tough All Ovor'
(1) SporttContlr
1111 Bonny Hill Sh11 :16(1) PKA Full Contoct
Karoto
11:30 8 (})(!)Tonight Show
(lJ Another Life
I]] Colllno
CIJ Soop
0 (I) Hart to Hert Tho

••
NOPE··
I NEVER
SAID THAT,
ELVINEY--

I SAID HE WAS
ON TH'WAGON

Harts travel to Monte Carlo

lor a wedding, only to find
tho bride unwilling . (R) j80
min . ~

tiD All In tho Fomlly
GliD Nightllno
IIIII Gunornolco
12:00 (lJ Bumo &amp; Allon
I]] MOVIE: 'The Blondor
Thrlld'
()) Nightllno
()) Monty Python
® MOVIE: 'The· EIIeot ol
G•mmo Rcye On Mon In
tho Moon Mortsold• Port 1'
. 12:30 8 (}) Cll Lo1e Night with

,,

lEWlNG Moohlno ropalro, 1
MrVIce. AvthoriHd Singer :,
..... • lonrlco Shorpan ,
lcfeaora. Fabric &amp;hop, t
Pomorcy. 192-2284.
:,

8&amp;

General Hauling

Ch·-·
~~~nylh-

(J) MOVIE: 'Hievy.Metor
(J) MOVIE: 'Lody

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE. Coli 814·387-7471
or 114·317-0891.

• (J) MOVIE: 'The U.20
an HaurD,..m'

JIMS WATER SERVICE .
Coli Jim Lonler. 304-1711·
73117.

1

Uphollltary

. TRIITATE
UPHOLITIAY IHDP
1113 he. Ave.. G•lllpolle.
441·7133 or 441-1131 .

...

0

-llnlld,.....
'•

,11'11.

9N-.

Mtry Hartmln. Mary
Hartmln
12:48 (!) NFL'o Q,..tllt Momen1e NFL'o Oretlllt Mo. monto proHntt hlghllghtt
ol tho 11181 World Chom~n Orun Sty P•ckoro.
1:00 Clll Mantetl .IDin
Ill L-lnment Tonight
~~NN Hoadll"' fMwo

.,.'

J

.....'

''

J

I KJ

Answer here:

. ...

SUCH F~UIT .JS
NOT C.ONSID~ED
MUCH 6001' WHeN

~
. j.(',

UNO.,TAINABLE.
""""""
the answer,
circled letllfl
to ·• l,•
lorm
the
surpri11
u sug·
gnlld by the abOve cartoon.

f.

t I I I Jt I I I ·I I

(Answora tomorrow). r

JUMBO COCOA MATRON
I Jumbleo: THE
BLOOD COUNT

Soturdlly'o

LIZARD

. · ·;·

Answer: Another name for DracUia-

..

r-e,:
..,.._=-•.....,....L.cwrtFMar.a.Oio•••a
..~~=~·:·:·'"~"""'~'"":=":t.'~""~·:.:=~··:
...:;;;.=:.·;. ....,IIMII41,Grwlll
=-;i·R"i::=:·~·
,_,....,.,-*"o.nn1

,._YIIIk. N.Y. 10111. .......

, "•

RziP.ooda.

--------------------~~~--------------

BRIDGE

.,

.:

01wald Jacoby and James Jacoby

..$ hooting tor a top .·
-'

.

.

. .....

.J

NORTH

+A lOU

'

+962 . . .

• EAsT

·. W1!:sT . .
+H76 .

ner, and I oee that you set- .· Y
tied for thre\! no-trump, hav· . r
log given. up any . ld~ of • · · ;·

.

slam contr"ct ".

two."

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer. South
Weot

N - Eul

Sootlo

P..
Paa
Paa

It
3+

3+

· · . ·-

: · · ·' ·

· ··

Oswald· ·"When.i&gt;ave bid ·:- · ·
three no-iruinp, I knew be:'&lt; · ·.
bad heart strength, a dupll- . ,..',
cation of values across from • , ;my singleton. Hence my
conservatism."
• •
Jim: "I tate it that Dave ...
won the bean and led a low · .;
club to dummy at trick ·

.109661
.Q7U
tKU3
tQI
. . ..
+QJ105
SOIJTR
tK2
• AK3
tJ7
+AK87 U

Puo

...."'·;

·'".

of the five sessions."
.. r
Jim: "You were his part- . .

+Q~~

·

~

•'

Oswald: "He most certain: ::·
ly did just that. He gives up, ~
a trick If clubs split 2·2, : .
breaks even If they are 3·1 r •
and acores his tor If Eut . . ~
bappem to bold al four. He ;
baa reuoned that one IarKe· ' •
part of the field would be 1n . ,
Iii clubs. The small slam- ·• ·
makes a&amp;ainst a 2-2 split. II • .
the clubs split S·l or 4·0· ·•
three no-trump making lou; ··' ·
(wJIIcb he was sure of on bla ·: ' •
play) would oulacore any . r
five-club contract.s."
,:. ·
Jim: "Did anyone else try ·-;
that club ufety play?"

t+

Puo
Puo
Puo

''

· day).gettlng one of his many · ·: top scores Qn his way to ·. ~;
topping the field in each one . •·

tA 106U

3NT

Openlng lead: •10

J...,.,.

By Oowald
111111 Jameo Jo...y

Oewald: "In 1834 the East·

Oswald: "No one else dld,

em Pain wu fully u pres-.
tiliouo an event u any

that all other game bldd-.
en went down one in three
no-trump or five clubs and
down two In the club slam."

10

National. Here we 10e the
latA! Dave Bruce (IJfe Muter No. 1 and the ~teot
malch poiDt player ol that

. ".
.-.
· '·
·· · ·

~APEIIIII'ITIIIIPRIBIAB&amp;N.) ' '

I·

..,

...
' I

·~C'IM"W
lty THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

. ,,

... "'.

DOWN

1 Palnful yen

.\

1 Israeli

.' ••..t

5Byronpoeloical hero

·10 Boast
11 Hart auto·biography
URate

13 Angola's
capital
(var.)

.,,.

Z=ly
aMOyed
SFamily
chore
fSheep

...., ,.

5Twenty
1 Greek

,
. ·~:

\.

·~

Yesterday's Answer

letter

14 Written

7 Newman
film,
with "The"
8 Sand novel
9 Ncmadize
11 Vigilant

15 Jujube
11- fizz
l7 Obtain
It Owned

ze Cash

15 Occupied
18 Soft drink

outlay

·

.,

Zl Example
29 Michel· · ,.,
ZZ "La Boheme" angelo · •:·

role

Z3 Infested
Z4 Heavy

sculpture ...,.
33 Algerian .: ; ·
city
. . ,.

reading

35- d' Aostli,•!'

Z8 TV's
" - 66"

Italy

'. ,"'

M Kimono
'
. 21 Volcanic
flavor
29 Greek island
sash
" i
swnmit . .,......,.,.-.,.,.....,.,..,....-,.,....~..,.....,.,...... I ·

zz "Just' andme ..." t,.,.+-1-+24 Monogolian
Z5 Eye layer
IIAdresl
Katharine

1:-::-+-++-

Z7 Plelhon

29 Pay a visit
:10 Aquatic
eagle

31 Curse
the day

3Z "Winterset'
role

34 Metal sllnd
II Hebrew
1=-+--1--

measure
Japanese

wild dog
38GI'I!t!k

letter
38Eibow;
.. Persia

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here'a how
AXYDLBAAXa
Ia

Dtvld~on

PEANUTS

87

m

...

tURREBB!
IJ I tJ
IWOBETSt .

rn

ESTIMATES, FURNITURE
CLEANING. CAPTAIN
STEAMER 814·448-2107.

Approx. 40 ocro llold corn,
.llmlld
a lortllzlld. wort&lt;lng
I piece bedrooin aufte,
com plclclt' • 40 lt.
maple. H11 twin bede, mat·
Building mttlriela
u.aoo. Coli 114-3BB·
- - • box oprlngo. Vory blook. brick. Hwor plpoo, 830o.
good cond. t185. 814-985· windows, lintale, etc .
4348.
Cloudo Wlntoro, Rio Gronde, GRAIN otoroge for Nnt,
Q. Colll14-24&amp;·1i121.
4,000 to 40.000 buohtl
31 Inch elumlnum l'lorm .
oOpoclty. Allo d'ling IVIUI•
· door with fr•me. *15. 81•ble. Morgen Woodlawn
1192-73112.
&amp;8
Pets for Sele
Fon11, Rt. 31. Pliny. 304878·1218 or 1711-22711.
Fraezer Ale. Cheat modllt.
I cu. lt. t231.81; 8 cu. lt.
1285.911; 1 li cu . lt . G•rbllo lot- Nlo. 2 for 11.00.
. . . ... . .'
1388.91; 20 cu. lt . IB.jlO NOh In - ·· Moko
good pato. Coll448-3412.
141 8.911; 211 cu. "·'
•472.98. Speclol: 15 cu. lt.
Shophord·Biuo _7_1__A_ut
__
o•_fo_r_S_•_''1325.911. Pomeroy Lind· Auotrollon
HHior pupploo, 7 wl&lt;o. old,
morll. 814-992-2181 .
oxcollent palo. Coli 814·
TOP CASH paid for lito
3711-2143.
Caah for brok•n tlru - cora. Smith
conditionau . 114·992· HILLCREIT KENNELS -lulclc·Pontloc.
1111 1 Eut1810.
.
Bordlng oH brelldo. lolling orn Ave.. GolllpoUo, 448·
Jock Dog Food. 2212.
1878 FORD Gronodo, Hoppy
Dobormon
pupplu; Stud
1880. 1971 Hondo 175,
1181 Plymouth Horizon
UOO. 1011. olumlnum boot, llorvlco. Coli 4411-77911.
luto., PS, olr, AM·FM otoro,
1711.-304-876-4188. AKC Roglot- Poodle pup· llko ·now. 1.100 mi. Call
ploo, oloo odillt doge. Coli 448-71141 &lt;I' 814-258·
FIREWOOD, ook &amp; mople, 441-0887.
1831.
Ul. load. dollvorod. 304BII-~9118 .
AKC Aoglotorod Gonmon 11171 lulak ~-· Um-.
lolldlld with oxtre'o.
EXTR'A good top eoH doll· l!hepord 'p up. 1 0 woeko old, 4nodoor,
ruot,
•oollent oondltlon
175.
All
ohoto
•
wormod.
vorod, 304-178-7771.
throughout. 9n1 owner.
1114-981-38411.
t8.300. Coli 441-0784.
WANTED to buy: uood tin
Two milo AKC Old Englloh
roofing. Hoy for - · •1.25
1882 IXP ox. oond; Coli
dogo. 51-1 - · old.
bolo. Phone 304· 171·2320. oht21i0 . ooch. 114-387· 441-4880.
SHOTGUN borroll for 870 0111.
1978 Z-21 Comoro; 4 epd ..
Romlngton. 28", Improved
NETHERLAND D-rf rob· T·top, PI, Pl. olr oond ..
cylinder, vllrtlole rib. t100. . blto,
S4.00 110h, 304·175· power windowa. eharp
304-87B-1B74.
ti.200. Coli 441·1814.
3913.
SMALL air conditioner,
1880 2 dr. Dodgo
t121. 304-1171·2837.
outo, PI, PB, low mN-.
67
Mueicel
rwl nlao, 12.7tl. John'•
lnotrumants
CEMENT picnic tobl11, 304Auto llle, l u i - Rd. Coli .
178-5182.
441-4782.- I to 7.
BOLIN 8 HP rtdlrig rrowor.' For 1111 antique violin epWestern Auto mower, 7 HP. proiHd VIIUI 1300. "'*1"8 1178 Folrmont Ford-lon·
- n . outo .. rool oloon,
304-175-11112.
*2711. Coll448·1124.
U ,818. John'o Auto 8ole,
lulovlllo
Rd . C.. l 448·
ATARI Syotom, lncludeo Boldwln plono. E.c. cond. 2
dult cover. c:artrlclge riCik • Vllrt Old·, "Church Ull 4712, • - I to 7.
3 cortrldgu. 304-11711· t1.11)0. 814-982·3824.
1878 VW Robllll, 4. epd .. olr
4507.
oond .. AM·FM rodlo,
SELMER ftuto, 304·882· •2.111. John'o Auto lllo.
2413.
8ulovlllo Rd. Coli 441·

81

(1) ESPN't lnoldo Baubllll
a -· N.wa
(I) 8 ()) Family Foud
()) Buolnou Roport
tiD You Aoklld For It
(!]) Rofloctlont On Roll
Cll 1D Entorttlnmont
Tonight
8:00 ·• G (I) (!) Lovo• .lldnoy
: W .Phlli!&gt;' Mirlowo. Prlvltl
.he 'The Po.ncll.' M~•lowe
confronu Syndicate hit
men while guerdlng a
Q!lngster marked for death.
(I) MOVIE: 1bo Foe'
Cil I Spy
(1) NFL'o G,..tllt Moman.. NFL's Gre11te1t Moments presents 'Savio~.
Sainto and Slnnoro. (80
min.)
I]] MOVIE: 'Chinatown'
(I) •
(121 Mtfor I.Nguo
B-11: THmt to 81
Announced
G (I) M'A'S'H A thre•
man United Nations delegation visltt the 4077th.

Get vou.r cerpet In ahlp
ehlpa. Water removal, FREE

84

- .·
. .-

derneath tha bailment of
an ecctintric Inventor.
. (lJ Dolill GUllo
.

Water Welle. Commercial
and Domutic. Teat holn.
Pumpa Sal•• end Service.
304-8911-3802.

bulbe, lenera. Hale Signe.
Coli FREE 1 -S00-128·7~41
anytime.

.

aer. [Cio10d Captioned)
7:00 8 (}) PM M...zlno
· (lJ Burnt &amp; Allon
C!l Sportoeontor
CilG ... n Cil Entor111nmont Tonight
(!) Chertlo't Angolt
8 (I) Tlo TIC Dough
()) (!])
MocNoii-Lohror
Report
®Nowt
•ID P-lo'o Court
estorTrok
7:30 G (}) Lie Dotoctor
(}) Fregglo Rack Yiolt tho
world of Freggle Rock un-

STUCCO PLASTERING
texturefl ceHinga commerclol ond rooldontlol, tree
ootlmltH. Coli 114-266·
1182.

ftuhlng errow llgn. New

-----. -.

'

hil highly IUCC8IIfUI Clr·

Will burt bin otacm • 81' Farm Equipment
fumance 24"" good cond.
Call 441 -11172.
. Lito modol John D-1 A
tractor, IKC. cond., wry ·
Wood toblo with 4 chalro good rubbor with front ond
711.
S71i, ttblo • . - loodor, 2bottom
toblo tBO. Coli llftlt' 4PM. - · t1 ,310. Coli 114·
441-4787.
318-88811.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Cli tiD ..

(}) MOVIE: 'Gr-eory'o Girl'
MOVIE:
'B,..klng
(})
Awey'
(}) Tlo Too Dough
(]) I o...m of JNnnlo
()) R-Ing Rolnbow
(!]) High FNg Wild, Wild Woot
8:30 8 (}) (!) NBC Nowt
(}) Leve ·Thet Bob
(]) Fothor Know• BHt
(])laiD ABC Nowt
G (~)«~ CB8 Nowo
())Dr. Who
(!]) Ovor Eooy Jeon-Piorro
Ramptl, one of the world'• ,
most renowned flutiltl ,
performs and talk• about

Firewood cut up oiabo 111
pickup lolld. Con 114-2411·
8804.

66

(J) (I) (!) •

1D Nowt

oloc. Coll1 -114-387-0378 .

Hou11 cool houling. Coli
1114-388-9812.

THAT 9CRAIIBLEO WORD OAIII _. ;.
by Henri Amcld and Bob LH
·

...

EVENINO
8:00 •

REPOB9E8SED Slgnl ~··
thing down! Taka over pey-

Kenmore atove &amp; refrigilretor. Froot f .... t1 50. 814·
881·4348.

Auto Part•

Ill Swedo Cooh Roglott&lt;i,

64 Misc . Merchandise monto 118. monthly. 4'x8'
5 piece living room e:uite.
Exc. cond. f200. 114·1811·
4348.

IYIONDAY
B/22/83

&amp; Accessories

79

1lte Daily Sentinei-P'a~ ! --:'

Television
Viewing

Boet1 and
Motort for Sale

78

1

Ohio

11 FT. trl-hull. oolotv oqulp·
- · runo good. 304-175·
1387.

Or...,.l.

Tretter lot located · on
"ddloon - Bulovllle Rd.
Aduho only. Coli 814-317·
7438.

tor. Coli 304-171-8104 or
304-875· 7388.
Offlco opoco • boouty ohop
spece. Cal Cleland Reelty.
Furnlohod opt. 1 bdr. '195, 814·982· 2219.
Wt\•r • alae. ptld 7 NIH
:Ave~ Oolllpollo. 441-4411 TRAILER opaoe, 3 mlloo
lfter 7 p.m.
from town, function 2 • 12
ot old Y, 304-878-3248
Furniehld upatelra .Pt. 2 after 8.
rooma • bath. olean. lduh:a
only. no pete. ref. req , Call Uptown Point PINMnt ol·
441-1518.
flee or nitail epac;:e available
In prime location. Ground
Apartmer111 (equal houalng IIVII with frH periling. 1125
opportunity) one bedroom oq. lt. to 1178 oq. lt.
rent tterta at e117 .-r ovolloble. 304-875-9741 or
month, two bedroom ... rta 304-878-2194.
ot '193. Oepoolt t200 (no
peU} nnr Spring Valley
Clnomo. Coli 448-2741 or 47 Wanted to Rant
leeve me11aga.

~~--~--------~~~

o.llvored In Moeon, Molgo,
Golllo or pick up It Rlohordo
• Son. Col 448·778&amp;.

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

Urge tl'lliler lot on Addleon
Bulovlllo Rd. Coii441-421B
or 448-4738.

78

by Lwry Wrtght

For- moto1 culvortllnoh
thru 80 lrlollln otoak. 8tott
tpprovlld 111 II'UII 12 lnoh
tB.38 par lt., 24 Inch
t10.10 par lt. 31 s11.10 .,... lt. Aleo plutlo
culvort In otack. I lnoh t1wu
181noh, 81ncllt1 .80 por lt ..
12 Inch U.IO por lt. Ron
e..,_.n, Enterprl••· , 4 mi.
8outh ol Jockoon on IT ..RT.
93, 114-281-1830.

Glrto 20 ln. hi-riM bloycle. 1
yoor old. Weotem flyor.
140.00. Coli 888-4317 oftor 1:00.

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Apartmenta Utlftlee p,artty fum .• COUNTRY MOBILE Home
apartmenta . l'tlella~e now. Pori&lt;, Routo .. 33, North ol
UOO por mo. A-Ono Reol Pomeroy. Urge lou. Cell
Eltltaa, Carol Yeager, Reel- 992-7479.
.

2 bdr .. 1~ baths apartment.
ground floor, *31() mo.
lnoludlg utllltloo. Coli Wleeman Real Eototl Agency,
448-3143:

Knouff Cool• FlriWOOdluy
now for' ..., • .,.. wood thll
Whltlf. Coiii14·218·124G.

dryers, refrlg~r~~tore. end Futl oil lumoco, 210 gollon
rangoo. Coli 448-8033 or fuel tank on ltlnd, wood
448·81 81. Borgoln Born 2 antrenc• door with frame.
mlloo out Geor01• Cr~~k Rd. Warm mot;'~ wood a coal
lto'tle. Ev .
lng rMeontTV • Applloncoo, 827 Thl!d blo; ·Cill 448-73111, prmr.Ave. Golllpollo, 448· 1 1199 . rebly eve·lr
· ··· . · ··
Spin w11hor•. po ·• electric
dryers, euto washers, g.. a New Oak Furniture, ublat.
electric: rangn. refrlgere- cholro. cupboordo, pie oofo,
tore, TV Mts.
dry olnko. Poul Conkolo
AntlqUH, Tupparo Plelno.
3 moto- GE -•hor •
dryer palro. 2 whlto pair. 1 210 goiiOn lull or -Uno
evecado pair. 12-11 other tonk on B f09t otond. t180.
.. good waahare a dryera to
or boot - · 10'x15' •••
ctioo.. from .OuarentNd 30 elumlnum
ewnlng. e31o.
doyo, Coll814-21t·1207.
1114-992-28011.

in

Roolne. 814·387-028B.

Mercerville 1 or 2 bedrootn
.1711 C1II 875 5 104
·
•
·
t175 mo . Coli 441-1157,
Newly rodecoroted 3 or 4 8-6 Mondoy-Frldoy.
bedr. houM on Rl'tlervlew 1 -~-------­
Dr. No pete. Inquire at Furnished effienoy apt.
· Sheppord &amp;oleo • Servkleo, 1150 pluo utllltleo. Coli
Flrllt • OHva St .. Gallipolis, Wiseman Real Eetete
Oh .
Agency. 441· 3143.

llomodoled 2 otory hou•.
721 Third Ave.. Golllpollo 7
room• • bath, lerQe beck·
yard, off ttreet parking, no
poto.' t210 mo., •1110 clop.
0111448-2997.

end •78 . QuMn

2 bdr. trailer heat1 with
neturel gal. eduha only, no Apt. for rent, downtown Pt. ·
Pleaaant, fur!lilhed, ell utillpoto. Coli 1114-317·7~38 .
tloo· pold. 304-895, 3450, · ,
. Centenary;· 2 · be'd i'oom, ·
~m .. prlvl!te, *180. Eureka;
1 bedroom, fum., riverfront,
t100. Rllf. • dop. 1-814- 46 Furnished Rooms
843-2844.
For rent Slaeping Roome
Extro nlco ;z bdr. mobile ·ond light houee kHPinl
hon\e. LOOIIted 2~ mi. from roome. Park Centrel Hotel.
G0 111pollo on Rt. 688. Acjulto ' I .::C.:.••.::.•~44.::.1:.·.;.0...,7.::.88.::.'.::.·_.:.:__..:;
· only. Ci!1 .4 41' 2aoo.
·
~~~~~ 'room. • 111 • .utDI· .
2 bdr: mobile home. Coli tiM .f!lld, rengo • r!'frla.
448-0390.
Shon both. Mon only. 448- Color TV 26 ln. remota
4418 olter 7 p.m.
control, ecrean floor rnodll,
t100. Coll448 ·1,87.
2 bedroom trailer. Furnlehed. No pato. Depoolt I·
requlrld. 814-992-~749.
48 Space for Rent

8 room houM In country,

Hou• fvr rent In city &amp;
rooma • beth. fumithed or
~nfurnlohod . Coli 4480924.

•ea.

84 Mlec. MerchlndiH KIT 'N' CARLYLE"'

UmMtone, Sand.

22, 1983

Monday, Augwt 22, 1983

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

L 0 NGF I L L 0 W

to

work It:
•. • .

One leiter oimply ttandt for onother. In lhia oample A .._:·~~
uood for the three L'o. X for the lwo O's, ete. Sln1le lettera. ':;: .
: tpoatrophes, tha lencth and formolion of the wonlt oro all--·
, biDII. laell do~ the codeletten ,re dllerent.
•\

caYnoQUOTIS

XDZF J I
PXTS

YXQ

ZARCK
RFBA

HJ

P XT

: ~:

A J Y X p ~·

FJOACAJOA~p·.;:

.'

l·
I

I

'

�Pagl!

I0--- The Daily SentiMI

Porrll!ftly-Middleport, Ohio

Manday, August 22, 1983

Tennessee woman not puzzled in Athens
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - The
winner · of the second annual
National Jigsaw Puzzle Champion·
· ship, whocollected$1,0011nlessthan
an hour, had a huny-up shopping
trip before going to New York with ·
two sisters who won the team
championship.
Joellen Belfuss of Memphis,
Term., wasn't puzzled at aU by her
problem Sunday as she finished first
In the singles division.
Piecing together a 500-plece
picture of a Colorful !lower arrange.
men! In 59 minutes, 43 seconds, was
worth a $1,000 first prize to the
21-year-old Duke University junior.
Sisters Lisa Helser and Lori
Reeves, defending doubles cham·
pions from Columbus, Ohio, reclalmed their title. They assembled
a 1,001-plece cartoon depleting last
year's puzzle championship In 2
hours, 20 minutes, 35 seconds, and

spUt the $1,0011lrst prize for the best
team effort. ·
All threeflrst·placeflnlsherswere
being !!own to New York City for an
appearance on the CBS "Morning
News" program today.
The second annual tournament,
jointly sponsored by the Athens
Area of Chamber of Commerce and
the Dairy Barn, a civic organization,
attracted 264 entries for the singles
competition and 160 teams In the
doubles event. Contestants came
from :rl states.
This . year's tournament drew
twice as many as the event a year
ago.
Mrs. Reeves, 23, said she plans to
buy a dishwasher with her share o!
the winnings, while her J.S.year-old
sister said she plans to save hers.
"But we are more excited about
the trtp than the money," Mrs.
Reeves said.
·

"We've never been to New York
before," said Miss Helser. "Well, to
the country part. But we've never
been to the city."
Mlss Beltuss, who plans to apply
her winnings toward her education,
said she had to stop In Columbus to
buy some clothes be!ore making the
fllght to New .York.
' "I didn't bring anything with me
for a trtp like Utat," she said. "I
dldn'tplan to win."
She said the change In plans will
cause ber to miss some vacation
stops with her parents, who accom·
panted her. "But I'U fly home and
get back before they do," Miss
Belfuss said.
Mlss Belfuss finished first In
Saturday's semifinals, assembUng
a different 500-pl~ puzzle In 1hour,
11 minutes, 47 seconds. The Helser·

John McEnroe drops
VUas in Charleston

Reeves team also !!nlshedllrst In the
sernlfinals by assembUng a 1,00J.
plecepuzzleln2hours,l0minutes,49
seconds.
Terri LaspataofGlasshoro, N.J.,
won the$750secondprizeforslngles.
She finished her puzzle in 1 hour, 14
minutes, 30 seconds.
Patrtcta Andrew, 43, and her son,
Jeff, 19, both of Allentown, Pa.,
placed second In the team event and
split the $750 prize. Their wl.nnlng
l1me was 3 hours, 7 minutes, 22
seconds.
Thin:! prize of $500 for the singles
event went to Andy Bradburn ot
Chicago, who had a 11meoi'ihour,16
minutes, 34 seconds In the !lnals.
Third place In the teilm effort went
to Nigel ·Foster and Susan Hewitt,
both of Pltlsburgh, who finished
their puzzle In 3 hours,15mlnutes, 37
seconds.
.

Page 5
Page4

•

Vot.32,No.92
C:py....oodl913

.

Paul Reece, Salem; Jim Waugh,
garden tractor pull.
Don Elliott, Guysville; Carolyn
Crown City; and Kurt BattreU,
1n the !lXI pound tractor division Burge, Millwood, W. Va.; and Jeff
Albany.
tor children of Meigs County, Wilson, Pomeroy.
In the 8,001 field stock category,
winners were Danny Folmer,
Awarded prizes In !be 1,100 pound
first through sixth prizes were won
Pomeroy; Cheryl Folmer, Pome- open class were Cheryl Folmer,
by Earl St. Clair, Logan; Dave roy; Pete Hendricks, Syracuse;
Pomeroy; Alan Ayres, Lowell, Jim
Archer, David Hlvley, Gallipolis;
Joy Butcher, Harrisonville; Robert Stalnaker, Jeny Campbell, WUkesJohn Klaus, Marty Morality, Ra- Hendrtcks, Syracuse; Shelly Stahl,
v!Ue; Ed Burge, Millwood, W.Va.;
cine; and Rodney Keller, PoiTlj!roy.
Racine.
and Harry Smtih, Letart, w. Va.
First through seventh places In
Winners of the 900 pound tractor
Trophies for the g~rden tractor
tl!e . 7,200 modlfted . tractor class
chUdren's d!Yislon were Danny
.pull were donated by Bank One,
were awarded ·.to Charles Waugh, · Folmer~ Keliy Ayres; Lowell; ·. Baimi' Lumber, ·mdenour Suppl.}:, :
Charies Melton, Washington Court · Robert Hendrtcks, Brtan Elliott,
Pomeroy Home and Auto, Land·
House; Jeff Pennelton, Paul Reece, Guysville; and Joy Smith, Letart,
mark, Excelsior Salt, Modern
Gilbert Warner, Harold Ford, and W. Va.
Supply, Federal Mogul, Tuppers
Don Battrell, Albany.
1n the 1,000 pound open class,
Plains Hardware, Reed's Country
Danny Folmer, Jim Folmer, and prizes were awarded to Jim Store, Dale Hill Ford, and
Cheryl Folmer, all of Pomeroy, Folmer, Pomeroy; Terry Ayres,
Burdette~sCamperSales. ··
wel"'.the -blg.wlnners In Saf\Uilay ·. Loweii::· Jim Stalnaker. Marietta; ·.·..
!llornlng's Meigs Couniy Fair

Area deaths
Mary Howell
Mary Howell, 85, PagevlUe died
Saturday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospllal.
Miss Howell was preceded In
death by her parents, John and Iva
Howell and her foster parents Pearl
and Martha Robinson.
She attended Happy Hollow

A marrtage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to
Steve Allen Mabry, 22, Rt. 7,
Pomeroy, and and Elizabeth Jean
Place, 21, Wixom, Mich.

Veterans Memorial

Meigs Athletic Boosters will hold
a work party and meeting at the
Meigs Stadium In Pomeroy Tuesday, Aug. 23, at 7 p.m.

Saturday Admissions--Bonnie
warner, Pomeroy; Bethany Roush,
New Haven.
Saturday Discharges··Cecll Han·
lng. Eva Stout, Marlorle Stewart,
Carl Hendricks, Jr., John Norman,
Harold Gilmore, Donald EbUn,
Bethany Roush.
Sunday Admissions··Mary Rhinehart, Middleport; Darrell Dugan,
Racine; !..avera Piersall, Mason.
Sunday Discharges--Karen Har·
man, Paul JusUs, Ronald DUe,
Sharon Caughey.

Free clothing day
The Gallla·Melgs Community
Action Agency wiU hold Its free
clothloiday for low-Income persons
on Thursday, Aug. 25, from 9 a.m.
untU noon.
The clothing bank Is located In the
old high school buUdlng In Cheshire,

f

Meeting postponed
ThemeettngoftheSouthernLocal
Board of Education scheduled for
this evening has been postponed
untU Tuesday, Aug. 23, at 7 p.m.

Announce pool hours
The Middleport Pool wiU be open
from2p.m. to7p.m.onAug.23,27,29
and Sept. 2, Regular hours wiU be
maintained Aug. 27, 28, and Sept, 3,
4, and5.

Plan work session

No major ch8Jl8e!l
Bus routes of Eastern Local
School Dlstrtct will be similar to last
year with some minor changes the
office of the superintendent announced today.
Due to last minute personnel
changes the olflce or the superln·
tendent was unable to release a
report earUer.
Parents are advised that buses
will run as close to last year's
schedule as possible.

Tuesday meeting
Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wUI
meet Tuesday, Aug. 23, at 7 p.m.
Work In entered apprentice degree.
Refreshments wUI be served.

Meigs County

ASSASSINATED -Security men carry the body ol a man believed
to be fonner 8enalor Benigno Aquino Jr. moments alter shota 1'&amp;111 out
at lbe Manila lnlemallonal Airport as the oppoellloa poUIIclan returned
Sunday after thn!e year&amp; ol sell·lmJIOIMlll sell-exile In the United Stales.
Body lying down Is ~tilled. (AP Laserphoto).

R•d
h •
•
I enour' c aiil saw wmner
•·.. The ar~~~uaJ.chalnsa~ cOntest at
the Meigs CoUnty Fair was the
featured grandstand attraction Sat·
urday afternoon, with John Ridenour of Chester taking !Irs! place
prizes In both modified saw
divisions.
Winne~ tri -ihe. afternoo11 ,event
were: .
Stock chalnsaw: · 0-2 - John
Johnson, Marlon; Lowell Ridenour,
Chester. 2.1·3.5 - Russ Wells,
Chester; Rod Chevalier, Chester.
3:64.5 - CecU Mldklt!, Hemlock

.
.
. Grove; Ro5sDennls: 4.&amp;5,5-..,Jilhn
Johrison, Don Lambert, 'Pomeroy.
5.6 and up Don CuUums.
Hemlock Grove; T. R. Cullums,
Hemlock Grove.
Modified chalnsaw: 0.5.0- John
Ridenour, CecU Midldtf, T. R.
· CuUums. 5.1-· and·.- up- John ·
·. Rldfinour, T. R. CuUums, Richard ···· . ·
Leetlie, Letham.
In the unllm!ted modified dlv·
lslon, winners were Richard
Leethe, T. R. CuUums, and Don
Lambert.

By JEFF GRABMEIER
prepared 13 of the charges In toldtheTrlbune"llmaglnelwUlgo
report. The group's claims that
OVP lliaff
advance and presented them at the allthewaywlththls."
Plummer traveled at public ex·
Clalmlngshelsgulltyofavarlety special meeting. After a 4().minute
Shealsodecllnedcommentonthe pense excessively and reimbursed
o! Improprieties, Including "lneff!- session closed to au but board board's charges or any other Issues employees for ·tuxedo rentals and
c!ency and dishonesty," the Gallla· members and Strapp, they voted 10 concerning her employment.
alcohoUc beverages was also con·
Jackson-Meigs 648 board Monday to 2 to accept the 13 charges, plus an
According to the letter which will talned In the list ofcharges approved
n!gllt approved a list of 14 charges addltlonaloneproposedbymember be dellYered to Plummer. she "has
Monday .
against Its executlve director, Warren Sheets.
been goUty of misfeasance, nonfea.
The review group was formed In
Plummer has seven days from sance.lne!llclencyanddlshonesty."
Maxine Plurnmer.
October by state mental health
"This Is tonotltyyouoftheboard's when she receives the Ust to request
Included In the charges are o!llcals to Investigate the operation
Intention to remove you trqm the a hearing before the board on the accusatlonsPlurnmerspent$445!or of the 648 board and mental health
position of Executive Director ... " charges. ·
two paintings, bought an alrllne center. the panel reccommended
After the hearing, the board can ticket for her husband· with board the 648 IJooird rnak,e ·~sweeping ·
, began the letter which accompanied
. . the rihilrgeS. The Ieite~ and charges . :then. vote to fire her, according to ftinds,..a rut'hlrect her sOn as janitor;· . cbanges" ,and request the. res!gna,.
Will ·· be formally dellvi!red ' to Strapp.' ·
· paying him mor-e than $11,000 lri a
tlonofPiuinmer.
Plummer, probably Wednesday or · Plummer would not say after the three-year period.
· 1n January the board, by a 6 to 5
Thursday, according to W, Joseph · meeting whether she would request
The list also contained several margin, asked Plummer to resign,
Strapp, attorney for the board.
. a hearing before the board. How· cbarges made by the Community but she has refused to voluntarUy
Attherequesto!theboard,Strapp ever, In a previous Interview, she Services Review Group In Its final

Meets Tuesday
The Harrisonville Senior Senior
Citizens Club ivUI meet Tuesday,
Aug. 23. Personsaretobrlngfoodfor
refreshments.
The auxiliary of Drew Wellster
Post 39, American Legion wiU
meet Tuesday, Aug. 23, at 7:00
p.m. at the post home.

Road.

Council to meet

SATURDAY
HAMlLTON - Catherine Pax, 19,
of Coldwater, In a two-car crash·on
U.S. 1271n Butler County.
DELAWARE - Fred C. Unga·
shlck Jl,19, and WesleyL. Miller Jr.,
17, both of Columbus, In a single'

•
A regular meeting o! Pomeroy
VUlage Council has been set for 7: :r1
p.m. Wednesday. The session Is In
lieu of the Aug. 15 meeting which
could npt be held due to the lack of a

Quorum.

•

shouted to scores of mourners at
Aquino's home In nearby Quezon.

MANlLA, Philippines (AP) -

Hundreds o! mourners today filed
past the bloodied, battered body of
opposition leader Benigno Aquino
who was gunned down at the airport
as he returned from three years of
self-exUe In the United States.
An Investigation headed by Man·
!Ia Pollee Chief Maj. Gen. Prospero
Olivas Is tiy!ngtodetermlne how the
unidentified looe assassin sUpped by
security forces at ManUa lnternat1ona1 Airport to shoot Aquino as he
stepped off the China AlrUnes plane
Sunday afternoon.
But some opposition leaders
suggested · the government may
have been behind killing the
50-year-old former senator, who
they saw as their best hope to end
President Ferdinand E. Marcos'17
years of authoritarian governing.

The capital remained calm today,
despite a power blackout ofundeter·
mined cause that extended through·
out metropolitan Mantia. Such
blackouts are not unconunon here,
though they usually affect a Umlted
area ot the capital.
The presidential palace resembled a m!Ulary garrison as
early as Sunday as troop5 with rifles
and machine guns stood guard.
Aqunlo's body, brought to his
home In suburban Quezon City In a
brown coffin early today, had a ·
disfigured face with bruises and an
open bullet wound. It was clothed In
a white safari shirt and jeans which
were covered with dried blood.
His mother, Aurora Aquino, had
demanded the body be returned to
her by the mlllta111 untouched.
"Sbe wants tile world to see what
they did to her son," said Aquino's
sister, Luplta Kashlwaliara. "It's
not beautiful, and wedon'twant lillY
mortlclan to make him look
beautiful.''

"The ll""ernment did It!" opposl·
tion figure Salvador Gonzales

Cold front coming

By 'Doe A_..ated ~
.. A cold front that extended from
lower Michigan to norlhem Indiana
this rnornliig was to move south
today and reacb the Ohio River by
Hom, Jeannine L. Horn, ParCels,
tonight. MeanwhUe, a high pressure
center over the Plains was to m&lt;Ne
Rutland.
Harvey E. Starkey, deceased,
southeast and be over Ohio by
Tuesday.
Oma G. Starkey, Parcels, Cert. of
Trans., Columbia.
·
Scattered thunderstorms are
forecast today with the approaching
Paul E. Hawk, Betty J, Hawk to
cold front. ·
Phillip H, Werry, Karen S. Werry,
High tempetatures today will be
Pt. of Lot 4, Chester,
In the IDi north to near 96 south.
James Raymond Stewart to
Tonight wDl be clearing, and
PhUUp H. Werry, Karen Sue Werry,
-n-layw!U
be sunny.
Parcels, Chester.
Lows tonliht wiD be 55 to 62 north
Norman J. EhUnger to Dorothy
B. EhUnger, Lots, Pomeroy.
· and In tile &amp;a! south. Tuelday's high
lelnperatures wiD be 78 to 87. '

RCA 25':Uogonal Color TV
with Slgnalock
Electronic Tuning
Bnlliant color performance plus the convenience and
reliability of electronic tuning .
• RCA Signalock electronic tuning lets you select all
VHF and up to 6 UHF channels with one convenient
control.
•
•
•
•

Automatic Color Control and Fleshtone Correction.
Automatic Contrast/ Color Tracking.
Automatic Fine Tuning (AFT) .
Super AccuFilter black matrix picture tube.

• Illuminated Channel indicators.

• Energy-efficient Xtendedlife chassis .
. A mortician assisting In the
.autopsy con!lnned an earlier government report that Aquino was
ldlled by a single bullet fired at close
ranae after he left the aillllane. The
bullet entered below the left ear and
exited througll the chin.
The airport was crowded with

•

thousands~ Aqidno suwortera. All
reporters except thole aboard tile
fiiBbl from Telpl!l with Aquino and a
lew regular alrpm't Jlhololrapherl
were kept out~ view of the plane.

ALL Ov:EJl.-8umrner vacllllon II aD over lor
...... o1 lhe Melp Local School J:llolrkS who
boarded buaes thll momlag to return to their cln·ea
lorthe-IChool year. Meigs Local is the lb'stdllllrlct
In Me1p Counly to opea lor 1!183-8t. Supt. Dan Morris

!ltudents; parmts, teachel'!land busclrlvel'!l hecawoeof
the a reroutmc plan ol buaes adopted last 'l'hur8day bY
lhed!Miid'sboardofeducatlon.However,hestatedhe
expects the rerouting plan to be a considerable
bnprovement once It IIi eHecttvely pullnlo operation.

lncllcated that there wiD be problems this week for

Meigs Local -· board adopts
promotion- retention policies
A pupU promotion-retention pol- and grades of siblings.
ent of any promotion or rentlon
The principal of a bulldlng wW be contrary to the poUcy and the
Icy has been adopted by the Meigs
Local School District Board of requlre(l to notifY the superintend· reasons lor the promotion or
retention must be given.
Education.
According to the policy. puplls In .
In grades one students will be
given letter grades In only reading,
grades one and two must pass hoth
reading and inath but the road gets
math and spelling, one-half year. In
the second grade students wUI be
tougher liS students advance in to be
given a letter grade In reading,
promo~ In grades three through
math, spelling and English. S for
eight students must pass a min·
and U for unsaUsfacsatisfactory
lmuni for four academic sublects.
tor:Y
will
be
given
In other subjects.
Three of the tour must be reading,
Arecord-breaklngheatwavethat
In
grades
three
through six, letter
mathematics and English. Read·
·
has
sent
temperatures
to
100
grades will be given In reading·
lng, math, EngUsh, science, social
studies, spelling and health are degrees held on todaY across language arts, math; spelling,
considered academic subjects. Art, Southeastern Ohio despite Mon· English, science, social studies and
health. S and U will be used for
music, physical education and day's downpour.
The heat has prompted an appeal physical .education, music, writing
writing are not, for pupU promotion,
considered to be academic subjects. from Gauta-Melgs Community Ac· and art. In the seVenth and eighth
The parents of a student who Is not tion Agency for donations of electric · grades letter grades will be given In
meeting academic crlterlc for fans for low·lncome and elderly all subject but writing and art which
promotion · at the end of the firSt peopk! that are ''Just about being will be graded on the basis of Sand ·
ldlled" by the beat, said Sidney u.
semestl!r must be notWed that the
'
According to the policy six weeks
chUd laces possible retnetlon and Edwards, CAA executive director.
"We have OUtreach people going grades are to be based on test scores,
the school Is to ask parents for a
Into
some of those houses and homeworkr oral response and
conference to discuss the situation.
apartments,
and they're like eN- classrOOm work. The value of
Parents will be notl!!ed at the end
of tile fifth six weeks IIJ'adlngperlod ens/' Edwards explained. '''lbelr homework, onil response and
If the child Is slfU In danger of being b\ldgl!ts w6n't allow them to buy classrOOm work will be decided by
fans or air condltlooers.''
the Individual classroom teacher.
retained. Parents will be asked to
DonatiOnS may be made to CAA' s However, dally work and test scores
attend another conference.
wiU make up at least tw~~ o!
A student may be il!conunemled main drlre In Cheshire.
"It's lust a humanitarian plea," thesixweeksgrade. Aslxweekstest
for reteDtlon placement or pro~
may count one-third of the six weeks
lion even lfthestudentdoesnotmeet Edwards~
No Ul eirecte upon people !rom the grade.
the cr11er1a for aractes one throogh
heat wave have been reported so tar
At the meeting at whlcb the policy
eight. The student's teacher must
by
local
health
alf!clals.
was
adoPted. Meigs ·Local Board
make wrttb!n recommendations to~
A
spokelpenc:11
tor
Holzer
Medl·
Member
Robert Snowden objected
the elll.'ePtiOD with written reasons
cal
Center
said
there
have
been
no
·
to
tile
fact
that wrlllnt II not an
submlttl!d to. the principal. In
cases
of
beat
stroke or other academic subjt!ct to be grades on
rnalcln&amp; a recommendation for
exception. the factors to be cons!· problems caUied by exposure to any level from aractes one through
dered wiD Include: phy8lcaJ matur· heat. Students' participating In eight. Snowden contended that
tty, at/Je, l1renith. weakneu. &amp;en· various band C8I1IPI aad football writing Is academlc and Important
practices 1\ave repor1edly been ·m that tile student must be able to
eral health and age: social'
teeiiD&amp;
ef!ectl, but IIOthlni ll!l'loul writ utlsfactorlly If the student Is to
matw1ty; ineatal mahlrtty; aca·
enoug11
to require treatment or be able to convey his thoughts to his
clemiC record, and special jrDblern8
hospttallzatlon.
teacllerlln aJ1 other subJects.
!ncludlni parents' attitudes, ages

Fans sought
for elderly

ROll " ,.,.,.,,

PINE OR MAPLE

ONLY

$55900
FREE DELIVERY

leave her post
On August 1, with unanimous
support from six new members, the
board decided to prepare w1itten
charges, the first step In the removal
process.
Near the beginning of Monday's
meeting, Plummer asked that she
be present for aU discussion ol her
employmen&lt;. However, the meeting
was closed because Chairman John
Rice said discussion would Involve
the $12 million suit She fll!'d against
the'boardand somestateandoounty ·
olflclals.
·
The suit. which will be heard In
U.S. ~trci!Court,clalmstheboard
and other defendants have tried to

fire her without due process.
Jackson County representative
Jean Scurlock and Meigs County
,appointee Jim Mourning were the
two members who voted Monday
against approving the charges.
When asked why he cast a
negative vote, Mourning replied: "I
feel Uke I have more knowledge ot
what's going on after 5~ years In
offlcethansomeonewhohasbeenon
two months."
Moilming was apparently aUud· · ·
lng to thetacftbat the new board
members who took their seats In
JUly were Instrumental In getUng
the 1f&gt;.member hoard to consider
!Iring Its executive director.

FHA&gt;· targets:· housing
funds for Middleport

vehicle crash on Ohio '1ST In
Delaware County.
WARREN- TheodoreJ. N06ek,
35, of Youngstown, In a one-vehicle
crash on Ohio 304 In Trumbull
County.
·
COLUMBUS- Steven Koloff, 26,
of Columbus, In a motorcycle
accident on a city street.

Opposition ·leader
Aquino gunned down

property transfers
Garfield E . Pauley Jr .. Evelyn
Jane Pauley to Garfield E . Pauley
Jr., Evelyn Jane Pauley, Parcel,
Lebanon.
George Ziegler, MUdred Ziegler
to Lola A. Slgnom, Parcel, Bedford.
George Ziegler, MUdred Ziegler
to RDger Allen Ziegler, Pa,rcel,
Bedford.
W. Wallace Bradford, Muriel W.
Bradford to Jon P. Buck, Tam! K.
Buck, Lot 2, Middleport Village.
David J. Kaufman to Henry J.

at the annual MelpCouniy Falrchalnsaw conleatSatun!aJatthe Rook
Springs Fairgrounds.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - At
least 10 people,lncludlng four In one
smashup, died In weekend traffic
accidents on Ohio's highways, the
Highway Patrol said.
The patrol counts traffic deaths
from 6 p.m. Frtday to midnight
Sunday,
The dead:
SUNDAY
MEDINA - Tiffany Mason, a
chUd, Eva Smothers and WUUe
Mason, both adults, ages and
hometowns not determined, In a
van-truck collision on interstate 71
In Medina County. Trooper Ronald
Andrews of the patrol's Medina post
said a fourth person killed was taken
to Akron City Hospital, but the
hospital would give no Information.
TOLEDO - Alun Kulwicki, 19, of
Toledo, a motorcycUst,ln a collision
with a bicycle on a ·Lucas County

Maniage license

Five calls were answered by local
units Sunday, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
reports,
At 1: 31 a.m., Ute Tuppers Plains
Unit took John Kibble from State
Route 681 to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg; at 11:48 a.m., Pomeroy took PauUne Saunders from 105
Maple Lane to Veterans Memortal
and agalnat6:04p.m .. the Pomeroy
Unit tookSaundersfrom 1~EastSt.,
to Pleasant Valley Hospital. At 2:02
p.m .. Middleport took Mary Shinehart from 318 Rutland St. to
Veterans Memorial and at 6: 12
p.m., Middleport took Helen
McClellan from 98 N. Second to
Veterans Memorial. At 2: 16 p.m.
Satunlay, Syracuse took Ben Cash
from the county fair to Veterans
Memorial.

FIRST - Goorxe Francis of Pomeroy .,.. the 8nl ol mtiiiY
..,....a; to obow his aldll with a chabrsaw In the llmlllsaw catepry

l Section•, tO Pou••
20 C.nt•
A Multlm,.dlo Inc. ~·w•pap•r

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, August 23, 1983

I 0 killed in weekend accidents

Community Church, Nelsonville.
She Is survived by several cousins
and friends.
F)meral services wUI be held
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Hughes
Funeral Home, Athens with the
Rev. Dear! Porter olflclatlng.
Burial wiU be In Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 2to4and7to9.

Meigs County happenings....
Emergency runs

•

at y enttne
e
14 charges brought against Plummer

Tractor pulls wind down fair activities
Winners In four categories of
competition were determined Sat·
urday night at the annual Meigs
County Fair tractor pull, winding
down events at the Rock Springs
!alrgrounds,
In tbe 6,000 field stock division,
first through sixth places were
i'wardea to John Stevens, Point
Pleasant; John Klaus, Somerset;
Lester St. Clair, New Strattsv:tl!e;
Dave . Arch¢r, Manetta; John
Stevens, arid Robert Edwards Jr.. · ·
Letart, W. Va.
Taking first through seventh
places In the 5,:m modified tractor
division were Jeff Pennelton, Washlnglo!l Court House; Vern Ray·
.. bJirn, Somerset;:· Ha.rolil Foi-d,
·coolV\lle: GUberi warner, London.

State fair winners

Outstanding leaders

.-

~·----------------------~--

!(I

By OOBHO~CJI
OVP!IIaff
The Farmers Home Administration has targeted
funds lor loans to build 20 new homes and 12 self help
housing units plus rebab!Utatlon of some 20 homes.
This was the report of Middleport Mayor Hoffman
Monday night when Middleport VIllage Council met In
regular session and Mayor Hoffman presented a letter
from Art Jones, district director of the Farmers Home
AdministratiOn.
The administration has targeted some $840,001 for
homes In the town.~~ Is expected that the push will be
towards an approximate five acre tract which the
vUiageownsaclllliSlroin General Hartinger Park. The
hOmes would be designed to cost from $40,001to$42,000
each, the mayor said. Self heip home construction Is a
brand new concept whereby the home owner
contrtbutes labor to the buDding of the house to cut
down costs. Jones said that the home construction
phases would be on a loan basis. The home
rehabilitation In the area neartheflveacretractcould
faD Into a loan category or could be a grant situation,
Jones reports. Jones Indicated housing money Is
avaUable through the Farmers Home Administration
located In the Farmers Baak and Savings Co. office
complex In Pomeroy.
The letter from Farmers Home Administration ties
Into a jobs bill application from Middleport fUed on
behalf of the village by Kim Shields, grant consultant
for the town.
Block party
Yvonne Scally, president of the Middleport
Chamber :of Commerce. met with councU and her
request forpennlssion lorthechambertostagea block
party next month was approved.
The four business blocks of North Second Ave., wUl
be blocked off for traffic one complete day and the
chamber will holdsldewalksales, an arishow,a Dower
show and other activities on the street. Efforts will be
made to Involve other organizations to seD Ice cream.
have games and other features, Scally said. There will
be a dance at night In an off street location. Council
approved the blocking off of the four blocks of North
. Second for the party and made plans to have pollee
olflcers on duty to route the tr,afflc down Front St. and
up North Third during the hours of the party.
1n turn, Scally indicated that the chamberwUI help

with -the Halloween observance being planned by
councillor chUdren of the community In lieu of the
traditional trick or treat night.
Scally also said council should take some action for
holders of parking meter permits. Holders of these
pen.llts are parking In prime spaces for the entire day
and this Lsadiscouraglngfactortootherpersons Uylng
to find a place to park In order to carry out business In
the community, she said. The street committee will
study Ute problem with theposslblllty of designating a
particular area where holders of such permits wUI
park. The report wUI be ready for consldera lion al the
next council meeting.
EqUipment evaluation
A letler from the ISO Commercial Risk Association, Inc.. was read by Mayor Hoffman IndiCating that
an evaluation has been done In Middleport on the fire
department equipment. As a result, the of new water
system, there wUI be reduced Insurance premiums In
many Instances, prlmarUy on commercial struc·
lures. The Insurance coverage on these buildings has
been changed from Class VII to Class VI . The new
rates wU! be effective Sept. 1.
Mayor Hollman also touched upon a suggeslon
recently by Councilman Allen Lee King thai the
vUlage look Into providing satellite cable television
servk;e that the municipal league reports that there
are )10 munclpal owners of the servl.;e In Ohio. Cost
and technical know-how are the drawbacks In such
operations, the league reports. Klngsuggestro that an
Individual knowledgeable on ·sat.elllte cable service
come to council with the posslblllty ot the village
sometime entering the service.
Council authorized Shields and Mayor Hoffman to
proceed with negotiating a contract for a $15,000
Department of Natural Resources grant lor the
planting of trees In the business section and at
General Hartinger Park. There are only six weeks
remaining lor the project to be completed. AU council
members were Invited to meet with the mayo':,
Shlelds and landscape people and offer Input on the
type ol trees they would suggest for the plantings .
Local residents who have been unemployed for at
least six months .will be hired to do the labor on the
project A landscaping fund was established by
council to handle the records Involved In the $15,000
(Continued on page 10)

Falling food costs decrease
last month's inflation rate
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Consu·
mer prices, held In check by a
second straight month of falling food
costs, rose a moderate0.4percent In
July, the government said today.
For the first seven monthsofl983,
retail priCes rose a tan annualrateof
lust 3.2 percent, bettering the 3.9
percent clip for aU of last year.
Prices over the last12 months have
risen only2.4 percent-thesmaUest
gain In 17years.
Also helping hold down the OveraU
rise In June's Consumer Price Index
was a modest 0.4 percent Increase In
gasoUne costs. Those prices are now
2. 7 percent lower than a year ~go.
despite May's 4.2 percent surge and
June's 0. 7 percent gain.
The 0.1 percent drop In food prices
resulted largely from tresh cuts In
-meat prices, a trend expected to
·reverse Itself next year. Food prices
overall had dwpped 0.3 percent In
June, the steepest one-month plunge
In seven years.
In all, July's 0.4 percent season·
ally adjusted gain doubled tile 0.2
percent advance of the previous

.·&lt; .. :

.·

.

month. Even with loday's report,
however, economists were stU!
predicting that' Inflation this year
will be less than lastyear'sadvance,
which had been the smallest In a
decade.
Leading the decUne In food prices
were asharp2.9percentdrop In pork
prices and a more moderate 0.7
percent decUne In tbe costs of beef
and veal. F're!lh !rult prices rose 3.1
percent whUe fresh vegetable prJ~
tumbled 3.6 percent. Egg prices
were off 1.1 percent.

at grocery stores declined 0.1
percent. Alcoholic beverage prices
were up 0.2 percent.
Across the hoard, prices last
month were slightly higher than In ·
June:
-Medical care costs rOse 0.6
percent. a bit above the Increases Of
each of the previous six months but
much less than the double-digit
gains prevalent over the last four
years.
Even so, those costs have soared
8.4 percent In the last year, the
sharpest gain for any_ of the major
WhUe meat prices were decUnlng components of the lhdex. .
for the second straight month and "'
-Housing costs were up 0.4
further cuts are expected as
percent, double June's 0.2 percept
producers trtm their hei'ds rather
gain. Homeowners' costs rose 0.5
than pay rapidly rising fee&lt;Jgraln
percent whUe renters' expenses
prices, analysts caution that meat
rose 0.6 percent.
prices will begin risfni next year as
-Home heating oU prices rose0,2
the number of animals going to
percent alter falllng 0.5 percent In
slaughter slackens.
'June. Natural gas prlcesalsoturned
The rising grain prices are largely
up, rlslng0.2 percent alter lalllng0.4
the product of the drought that has
percent In the preceding month .
scorched much of the nation's
Since last July, heating oll prtces
breadbasket.
have tumbled 8.9 percent, but
Mealseatenootsldethehomerose natural gas prices have soared 18.6
0.1 percent last month. Food bought
percent.

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