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                  <text>WINTHROP
THI:' LIFe OF AN.-'
A5TRONALIT 15

I REMeMBeRA

. ~HTWITH

e&gt;&lt;PSF&lt;IE:Nce r

PERIL. AND
UNSXPC:CTED
CALAM1r15,5.

Rape awareness

by Dick Cavalli

,,

TERRIFYIN~

'

'
AND
I PLUN$~D
HEADI..ON6f
TOWAF&lt;DTHS

.
.&gt;

HAD LAST~

~ROUND;

TOTAL-L-Y OUr
OF CONTROL. ... .

WHSN SOMETHIN&lt;:i'
WENTW~ ...

'

.

PagelO

e

•.

'

' Voi.32,No. 126
c.,.,•..,htod 1983

FAU...I~,TWI5TI~,

THE: RU6HINq
WIND 5CReAMINq
IN MY CARS •..
r KNEW !W/&gt;6
DOOMED.'

MY-60Ne5 6TIL..L.. ·
Act-ic WHEN THE

AND THEN I SPieD
A La-.11:: Fl~ ON
THE ~LJND Md.R
l!SI.ON. I AIMED
~IT AND ).AAOii A
PERFECr LANDI~!

Ohio lotto game winn_~...

SHS gals _w hip Athens

WEATHER~ COLD.

at y

•

enttne

Council
tables
sticky
problem
'The. Possibillty of abolishing the
Board of Public Affairs and appoint·
lng a village administrator was
dlscussed at a recent meeting of
Racine Village CouncU.
'The dlscusslon stemmed from
problems with 'the water department and the concern. councU has
aver the lack of candidates for
positions on the Board of Public
Affairs. Council, however,took no
action.
CouncU discussed trtck or treat
night or a conunwllty party, It was
noted that no organization had
qffered to ~ponsor a commwllty
· party, Council will make a decision
at their Oct. 17 meeting.
Councllmen Robert Beegle, Ben
Petrel and Scott Wolfe were named
to a canmlttee to serve with the fire
chief, s.:cretary of the fire department and a member of the
emergency squad to study Insurance coverage f11r 1984.
Marshall Alfred Lyons reported
that during September he rollected
$400, made seven arrests, Investigated four accidents, received 33
phone calls and Investigated three
canpialnts.
_. !&lt;, ~est . was ~e by Jim
Snodgrass, Racine resident, for
sections ct culvert to be placed near
a bulldlnghelsbulldlngattbecorner ,
of Main and Fourth. CouncU denied
the. request as they·are not allowed
by law to provide culvert to
Individuals. CouncU may only
replace culvert that Is damaged,
A letter was directed to John
MuiJ)}Iy, JOhnstown Road lnfonnlnghlmhelsautborizedtoconnectto
the new water Une as the old llnewill
be cut oil on Oct. 15.
Also meeting with council was
~ Mara, engineer for the
water system Improvement project Discussed wer~ the wells and
wellfleid.
It was reported that county
highway workers were In thevlllage
to chip and seal Vine, Cherry,
Walnut, Broadway and Fourth
S,treels.
A request made by Glen Rizer to
purchase a used seat for the dump
truck was approved.
Council recessed untU Oct 17, at7
p.m.

Mo-n dale wins
AP straw poll

..

MR. MEN AND -LITTLE MISS
(J{}j)@{!:!!)!
THERE'S A

RAINBOW.'

by Hargreaves and Sellers

Y'KNOW SOMETHING?
THERE~ SVPPOSED TO BE
A POT OF GOLD AT
THE END OF A
RAINBOW! ____........._;....;.._

LET~ TAI&lt;E
(l

A LOOI&lt;t·

IT MUG;'f

BE AT THE

OTHeR
END'•

l'ttiNTED IN CANADA

.ALKER PRIVATE EYE,

Cri' Hammond
1/EY/KNOClff~F
OVER 71/ElE! I
GIJ!TAG()

HODEL

HA NSEN

fonner Sen. James Buckley, R-N, Y.; and Energy
Secretary Donald Hodel. Right row, from top, are
fonner House Minority Leader John Rhodes, R-Ariz.;
Rep. Manuel Lujan, R-N. M.; and fonner Sen.
Clifford Hansen, R:Wyo. (AP Laserphoto).

DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -Gettlngadouble boost In thefirststatetoplck
delegates IQ the Democratic National Convention, former vice president
Walter Mondale won an Associated Press straw poll among more than 4,(00
Democratic activists and edged ahead of President Ronald Reagan in a .
statewide'survey of both Republicans and Democrats.
· Mondale then cast a thinly veiled assault on his chief rival in the public
opinion polls, U.S. Sen. John Glenn. D-Ohlo, who shared the podium with
Mondale aJtd the other announced Democratic candidates lor president
Mondale compiled 47 percent of the votes cast In an Associated Press
straw poll at the state Democratic Party's annual tundraising dinner,
topping California iienator Alan Cranston, who polled 37 percent
Next In line was Ohio Senator John Glenn with 5.9 percent.
Of the 4,143 votes cast, Mondale polled 1,948 to Cranston's 1,531.
Colorado Senator Gary Hart scored 3.5 percent while 197'2 nominee
George McGovern scored 1.8 percent, former Flortda Gov. Reubln Askew
and South Carolina Senator Ernest Hollings each drew less than 1 percent of
the vote and 2.8 percent of the Democrats said they had no preference,
And in a copyrtght poll in Sunday' seditions, the Des Moines Register said
Mondale Is holding a 3-2lead over Glenn among all Iowans, and has moved
ahead of Reagan. In a scientific sampling of 1,006 Iowans, the newspaper
said Mondale holds a 51-41 edge over Reagan, and a 63-34 edge over Glenn
among Iowa Democrats.
Both Mondale and Cranston had launched substantial organizing efforts
to turnou t their voters at the Democratic Party's annua!Je!ferson-Jackson
Day Dinner, while the other candidates disdained attempts to turnout their
supporters.
At the fundraiser, Mondale launched an assault on Glenn, who ,has
criticized the former vice president for being a captive of special interest
groups.
While not mentioning Glenn by name, Mondale called Reagan 's tax
policies a huge special interest bill and said that "'would have been a good
time fors Democrat who ts agalnstspeciallnterests to stand upanddecideto
vote no."
Mondale also referred to a recent vote tQ resume nerve·gas productionwhich Glenn supported- and said "I beUeve that those Interested, as I am,
In a strong defense, cuold have picked this one occasion to vote against the
productionofpoison.nervegas."

ReSignatiOD no sUrprise to supporters
By Associated Press
Supporters of Interior Secretary
James Watt were disappointed but
not suiJ)rised at his resignation
Sunday, partly blaming the media
for his demise, while his opponents,
though pleased, said the real ·
problT~ .Ues with , President Reagan's land policies.
, "I think it's sad that he had to
resign because of saying something
that was obviously unfortunate and
• poorly said," said fonner Interior
Secretary . Stan Hathaway. from
Wyoming. "He' sdone a good job but
that's the way it is In government
service today. We won't remember
what be dld, we'll remember what
he said. Most politicians react to
reporters, that builds the fires."
Hathaway was appointed by

In another accident, the patrol
Three people were Injured In two
James P. Fisher, 44, MlddJe.
cited
separate accidents Investigated
port,
for
DWI and left of center after
over the weekend by the Gaillahis
car
struck
a guard raU on 7 near
Melgs post .of the state highway
Middleport
at
1:
'l1 a.m. Sunday.
patrol.
The patrol said Fisher )Nas being
In the first, an elderly Pittsburgh
couple was treated at the scene by pursued by Middleport pollee when
his northbound vehicle went off the
emergency personnel.
'l1le couple- Eldred J. Mlller, 84, left side of the road and struck the
and Barbara L. Mlller, Tl - were raillng. His car was slightly
travelling northboUndon0hlo7near damaged.
Chester at the Intersection of
Township Road 291 at 2:ll p.m.
AvehicledrlvenbyLoulseAelker 1
Sunday when their vehicle collided 23, Middleport, was moderately
with a truck 'dr!ven by WUl(am R. damaged In a 2:15 a.m. Sl!nday
Call, 17, Long Bottom.
accident on Ohlol24.
• Call had reportedly pulled from a
The patrol said Aelker was
parked position on the benn onto 7 · eastbounil when her car went off the
into the path of Mlller's car. The left side of the road, went over a
.t ruckwasmoderatelydamagedan&lt;l guard raU, came back onto the road
Miller" s Volkswag!!fl was severely and hit an embanlanent.
damaged. The patrol &lt;;lied CaD for
A vehlcledrlvenbyKenD.Nutter,
29, Huntington, W.Va., was moderlalluretoyleld.
,
Delta S.·Braun, 24, Rt. ~.Albany, ately diiJTUI&amp;I!d-ln a coillsion with a
was treated and released from deer on Ohio 7 In Chester TowJishlp
Veteraru; Memorlaf Ha~pltal for at 8:14p.m. Sunday.
lnjul1e9 ,she received In a olllkar
A car driven byGeraldP.Shaulls,
acddent at fi: 25 p.m. Sunday.
21,Rt3,Albany,reportedlystrucka
parked ~ ~ to Marjorie
'l1le patrol said Braun was Corbin, Rt 2, McArth\lr, at 10: 10
westbound on 'Ohio 681, four miles a.m. Saturday.
- westotU.S.33,wben&amp;hereportedly
The patrol said Shaulis was
loltcmtroicthervehldeonaCUM!, backlnaoutotaprlvatedrlvewayof!
-totftherlghtsldeoftlleroadand Ohio 6119 In Columbia Tawnshlp
llniCk an embanlanellt- Her car when tile accident oocuured. ear.·
wu rll()(!erall!ly daln&amp;&amp;l!d:
bin's vehlclewu allgblly damaged.

'

JAMES WATT

PLENTY OF POSSIBILITIES
With the
resignation of Inlerlor Secretary James Watt, these
leading candldales have been mentioned as
successors. Left row, from top to bottom, are J. J.
SbnmoDS III, Interior Department Undersecretary;

Pittsburgh couple
injured in accjdent

. I•

I Section, 10 Pages
20 Cenh
' A Multimedia ·Inc. New1poper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio., Monday, October 10, 1983

President Ford In 1975 after stonny the Sierra Club.
confirmation hearing and resigned
Watt, who atonepointwasgivena
for health reasons just five weeks model foot with a hole ln It by
Reagan because of his penchant lor
later.
"I'm pleased to see James Watt controversial remarks, resigned
gnne, but to a certain extent, Watt Sunday, two,weeksafteracomment
got a raw deal," said Dr. George a bout members of a federal
Hulsey ofNorman, Okla., a member advisory paneL His characterizaof the board of directors of the tion of them as "a black, ... a woman,
National Wlldllfe Federation. "'He two Jews and a crtpple'" was widely
was simply doing what Ronald denounced.
Reagan wanted done as far as
Reagan, who accepted Watt's
conservation Is concerned."
resignation , praised the secretary
Peter Anderson. president of the for doing "an outstanding job as a
group Wisconsin's Environmental m ember of my Cabinet and in his
Decade. said also Watt was merely stewardship of the natural resourfollowing Reagan's bidding.
ces of the nation. "
Dr. RlchardL . Gordon , a member
"We are obviously pleased. But
of
the Federal Coal Commission
we're sUU concerned about really
who
has a paralYzectright arm, said
changing the pollcles _of that
.
Sunday
night that although he had
department and not just thestandup
comic," added Phil Hocker ' of been "distresSed" at being desJackson, Wyo.,nationaltreasurerof crtbed by Watt as a "' cripple," he

was lndUferent to the newsofWatt's small herd of can le grazed behind
him, Wan read his resignation ..
resignation.
Watt rode into a cow pasture to ~ letter, remounted, then answered
announce his resignation Sunday questions for about 20 minutes .
and then mounted his horse again,
Watt smiled as he talked to
joking that he wanted to Jide off reporters, but his voice quavered
quickly if questions from reporters from time Io time.
got too tough,
Watt's announcement came on
Then Watt, his wife and Barrack
rode off toward the waning sun.
short notice after his spokesman,
Baldwin said Watt probably wUJ
Doug Baldwin, walked doWn the
drtveway of Barrack Ranch at . . stay at the ranch through the week.
about 2:45 p.m. a nd told reporters ..... Watt came under criticism for his
waiting outside a fence along a , remark Sept 21 th at charactelized
nearby road that the Interior -· membersofacoaladvisorypanelas
Secretary soon would talk with
"a black, .. .. a woman, two Jews and
them .
a cripple."
About a half hour later, Watt, his
wife Leilani, and Thomas Barrack,
the ranch owner and form er Interior
Department official, rode up to the
fence on horseback and dismounted . Wearingacowboy hatasa

Marauder
band takes
first place

f

The Meigs High School Band,
directed by Marilyn Goodnlte,
arrtved home from Ironton Saturday with pollee and !ire department
escorts In celebration of the band's
having placed first in the Class B
competition at a Southeastern Ohio
Band Festival he ld in Ironton .
The band was met at the courity
line by the Meigs County s heriff's
department and Middleport and
Pomeroy firemen with fire trucks
and an emergency vehicle and was
escorted to the high schooL The band
won first place . in the overall
competiton of the festivaL
The Meigs Band will be going to
Atlanta, Ga., In April apd currently
ls working on funds for that trtp . On
Nov. 5 the band wm parade In
Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland,
,in uniform . before holding the
annual tag day.

l l people killed
on Ohio highways
COLUMBUS- At least 11 people

were killed In Ohio traffic accidents
--~

\"*""
BREATIIING MACHJNEDEMONSTATION- All
a pan:.of their tour of V~ l!fernorlal Jlotplhtlflll
...,..,nrdoo wMh a heallb unk, thele sixth Jl'llders
viewed a demooltratloD of the poelllve p1
1~
t.. tldql' maehiDe by .Jolm Brewer,_left, ilnd Don

' Stivers. Teresa Collins, dlredor ct nursing, and Beth
DaWIIOII, day llldft supervisor, conducted the 18
Pomeroy s1x11t p-aden of Darlene Amott on tile tour.
Room mlJthen accornpaaylng the lltudlllls weJ'I)
Belzy Newman and Julie Monk.

t

over the weekend, according to the
Highway Patrol. The patrol counted .... •.,'
traffic deaths from ~ p .m. Frtday
until midnight Sunday.
The only area deaths were
Timothy N. England, 18, Marietta,
and Jan R. Grosklos,16, Cutler, In a
on~ar crash on a Wasblngtori
County road.

�Commentary
r
lll Court Street
,
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOI'ED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

A~

~m~ r-T"'\...-.1~-.-·.~=·f=l

.

ROBERT L. WINGETI
Publishe r
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aaslstant Publisher/ Controll er ·

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

,

.

A MEMBER or The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tlon and the American Newspaper 'Publisher Association.
LE'M'ERS OF OPINION

l:t.rf'

welcomed . They should be less than lKlO words

long. All letters are subject to editing and musl be signed with name, address and
&amp;elephone number. No unstcned letiers wUI be published. Letters should be In
10od taste, addressing issues. not personalities.

Senate battle

•

If the Ouny of d.! sarmament talk
is beginning to cause your mind to
blur, the good neWs Is that you don't
have Alzheimer's disease. The had
news Is that tile goings and comings
of Washlngton-U,N .·Geneva ·
Moscow are almost entirely !!mpty
of meaning. Because the exchange
is not between the United States and
the Soviet Union, but between a ) the
United States and Western Europe;
and b ) the White House and the

voters.
Mr, Reagan began the year by
announcing what he called tbe zero
option plan. What It held could have
been understood by the Katzen.
jammer Kids. Addressing the
Soviet Union, Mr. Reagan said:
Look; you people have mountoid an
entire new aggressive weapons
system along your western frontier.
Now, we have plans to counter your
new system with a defensive

Political control of the Senate following next year's elections could be
determined by the decisions made In tile next several months by two
Democratic governors and two fu!publlcan women .
· Candidate recruitment by the Republlcan and Democratic parties'
national organizations is controversial because state and local party
officials perceive It as a usurpation of a political function that trad!tlona!!y
bas been their prerogative,
But both national political organizations have been preparing for the
1984 campaign with efforts to lure tlleir strongest candidates Into Senate
races whose Intensity has seldom been .matched In the past
That's because most po!!tlc!ans believe control of that chamber might
shift from the Republlcans, who currently enjoy a 55-45 majority, to the
Democrats, ~ho are .v!rtually certain to retain control of the Hou!!E1.
Leaders of both parties generally belelve that the best the Republicans
can expect Is a reduft'd majority In tile Senate- perhaps as few as one or
two seats- while It Is possible that the Democrats might emerge from the
election with a similarly slim majority,
The Repub!!cans' relatively gloomy prospects are widely attr!buUlble
to two factors - a number of GOP Incumbents seeking re-election co¥ld be
vulnerable to defeat and the Republlcans must defend 19 of the 33 Senate
seats to be contested next year while the Democrats must protect only 14

seats.

.,

To enhance their prospects, fu!publica 0 leaders have turned to two
GOP women who they helleve would be the strongest candidates against a
pair of potentially vulnerable Democratic senators seeking re-election.
In Rhode Island, fu!p , Claudine Schneider Is being Importuned ·to
challenge Sen. Claiborne Pell. In Michigan, Peace Corps Director Lore! M.
.Ruppe Is being pressed to run against Sen. Carl M. Levin.
The task of recruiting female candidates has assumed unprecedented
Importance among Republlcan Party leaders determined to close ihe
" gender gap" - the relatively recent pllenomenon In which more women
tllan men 'are highly antagonistic to the GOP.
(In Michigan, for example, Mrs. Ruppe Is being recruited by GOP
Officials even though former Rep, James Dunn, R·Mlch, has declared his
.
candidacy for Levins' seat.)
Meanwhile, Democratic leaders are pressing two governors to enter
races against a pair of Incumbent fu!publlcan senators seeking re-election
who are believed to be susceptible to strong challenges.
In Mississippi, Gov. William F. Winter Is being recruited to run against
Sen. Thad Cochran. In Maine, .Gov. Joseph E . Brennan Is being
encouraged to declare his candidacY. against Sen. William S. Cohen.
With Repub!!can and Democratic slates remaining uncertain In those
and a relatively few other states, four contests already have emerged as
major 1984 battlegrounds for Senate seats - an In each Instance tlte
Repub!!cans are on tile defensive:
- In North Carolina, Democratlc Gov. James B. Hunt Jr. and
fu!publlcan Sen. Jesse A. Helms have been Immersed In an Intense
political struggle for mor2 than two years.
- In Iowa , Democratic Rep, Thomas Harkin Is challenging
Repub!!can Sen. Roger W. Jepsen.
-In Texas, the Democrats have a chance to pick up the seat being
vacated by retlr!ng Repub!!can Sen. John G. Tower.
- . In Illinois, Republican Sen. Charles H. Percy faces primary
opposition from Rep, Thomas Corcoran, R-IlL, and then confronts Rep.
Paul Simon, D·Ill,, In the general election.
Repub!!can losses In all four of those states would give the GOP Only a
sllm 5149 Senate margin, while one additional defeat would produce .a 5().50
tie - and that's where next year's presidential campaign could be
particularly Important
Any combination of five Republican losses and Democratic victories
would !eave the Senate In a 5().50 political deadlock but the Constitution
gives the vice president the power not only to preside over the Senate but
also to cast a tie-breaking vote In that cbamber.

Monclcry, Octolnt 10, 1983

'

East-west tensions __. .:_______J_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n
WASHINGTON - The .!ncreas·
!ng tension between the two super·
powers Is alarmingly illustrated by
top-secret air traffic In the Caribbean, across tile Atlantic and from
Washington, D.C. , to Indiana.
Here's the story on the three
missions, all of which have ominous
strategic Implications In the East·
West military rivalry, My associate
Dale Van AtUllearned the details of
tile Olghts from high-level m!l!tary
and !nteU!gence sources,
- In the Caribbean, the Soviets
nave quietly flown 14 of their older
jet fighters - M!G·17s made In the
mld-1950s - from Eastern EJli'Ope
to Cuba, where they are now ready .
for de!lvery to the Sandlnlsta
regime In Nicaragua,
The mpve was In response to tile
bombing of Managua In early
September by planes of the anti·
Sandlnlsta guenillas. The bombing
runs were the brainstorm of tile
CIA, which persuaded Its "contra"
cllents that they must escalate their

faltering campaign on tile ground to
an air war If they hoped to show
Congress they were worthy of
continued U.S. support.
The bombing may not have
Impressed Congress, but It con·
vtnced Nicaraguan officials that
countermeasures had to be taken.
At their request, the Soviets new the
M!G-17s to Cuba, where they
reportedly w!ll be turned over to
trained Nicaraguan p!!ots.
The M!G-17s may be antiques by
state-of-the-art combat standards,
but they are more than a match for
the ant!·Sandln!stas' bomQers. In
addition to a clear ability to sweep
the sides clear of enemy raiders,
the M!G-17s can also be eHective In
ground attack against rebel hl·
deouts In rural Nicaragua and In
any aerial combat with Honduran
f!ghtec planes.
In retaliation, the Pentagon Is
seriously considering · a "surgical
strike" against the MtGs If they
ever do arrive In Managua. Thus

the CIA,' which unleashed the
antl-Sandlnlsta guerrillas In the
first place, bas succeeded In
escalating the Nicaraguan conflict
to a level that could now Involve
direct U.S, mll!taiy action,
- The secret trans-Atlantic
flights were by U.S, m!lltary
transport planes, which have been
shipping misslle .pa~ to West
·Germany and -other European
locations. The missions will frus·
Irate the West Gennany protest
movement, whose leaders are
trying to find out wllere and when
Pershing and cruise missiles are
arriving for deployment In their
country. The protesters hope to
block the arrival with massive
demonstrations.
But with the missile parts
. already In Europe for assembly,
the Pentagon hopes to have the first
of the Pershings ready for opera·
tiona! deployment by the December
15 target date.
·
- Another secret flight will be

that of the president's "doomsday
plane," the converted Boeing 747
that Is to be the commander-In·
cb!ef s. airborne command post In
the event of nuclear war. It will be
moved from Andrews Air Force
Base In suburban Washington to a
location In Indiana.
The reason Is simple and scary:
In the event of a Soviet attack, there
wouldn't he enough !!me for the
president to reach Andrews and
take off In tile airborne command
post. Soviet submarine-launched
mlsslles, coming In at a low
trajectory, would cut the warning
time from ball an hour to less than
10 minutes, The president would
never make It to hls command post.
The p~an now Is to move the
president Inland during the early
stage of ~ crtsls, or send him by
chopper to a bunker command post
when the first warning of a Soviet
· launch Is given. Then he would later
be transported . to the airborne
command post In Indiana.

Guilty' sort of ____________.:A~r.:...:tB=-=uc=h=wa==ld

Letter to editor

Supports celebration

"Thls Is where I always get
confused," I said. "Double Jeopardy a~ with the government
there Is a serious defect In the
Double Y car, but doesn't have to
admit it to Its customers."
My lawyer friend said, ''That's
because you don't understand how
the g0'1ernment and big business
work, The government's job Is to
protect tile consumer; the com·
pany's job Is to protect their sales.
As long as both sides sign an
agreement that they know the
company botched, the law Is
satisfied without admitting It, and
n~ one really gets hurt."

•
PHII.JJE FEVER - Philadelphia Phlllies' reUef pitcher AI
Holland leaps Into the anns of teammate Mike &amp;hmidt after the
final out In the Ph!Wes' 7·2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers
Satunlay night. The win clinched the National League Champion·
sll!p Series for the Phlllles who will face tbe Baltimore Orioles In the
World Series. (AP Laserphoto).

Scoreboard ...

P HTLADELP HIA iAP ) - Three Lezcano.
So this Is largely a new-lookPh!l)!e
years after they won baseball's
world championship, the Philade~ team wll!ch opens the 1983 World
phia P hillies are shooting for the top Series · in Baltimore with 19-game
winner Johfl Denny, another newcoprize aga in . ,
They captured their second mer, going aga!nstScottMcGregor.
Pitcher Steve Carlton was on last
National League pennant of the still
Phillles
team In the World Series,
. young 80s by l:lea ring the Los
but
only
third baseman Mike
Angeles Dodgers, champs of the NL
baseman Pete Rose
Schmidt,
first
West, in a best,of.five series that
and
center
fielder
Garry Maddox
ended In four games with Saturday
are
starting
lineup
holdovers.
night's7·2 victory.
Yet, despite the brief time
And the 42-year-o!d Rose is
between penna nts. with a couple of
exceptions, the Phils go Into the · playing only because Len Matusek,
World Series aga inst the American whO forced him to the bench In
League champion Baltimore Or!· September, was called up too Ia te to
ales with an a!mostentirely newcast beellg!blefortbeplayoffsandWorld
In 19f!J, Philadelphia's catcl&gt;er Sertes.
The man who oversaw the
was Bob Boone. He'sw!thCa!!forn!a
now while BoDiaz is behind tile plate reconstruction of this · team Is
General Manager Paul Owens, who
for tile Phill!es.
The shortstop-second base comb!· took the changes so seriously that he
nat ion were Larry Bowa~n
Manny even went downfr'iimlhefrontoff!ce
Trtllo, now accept lngth '
with to the dugout In July to run tile club
ontreal
the Chicago Cubs an
E xpos , Ivan DeJesus and Joe himself
That as
move
had a fascinating
field manager
.
Morgan are the replacements.
parallel, When tbe Phlls won In 198J,
Left field belonged to Lonnie ' It was under DaUas Green, who also
Smith, now a St. Louis Cardinal, and had left the team's executive suite to
Greg Luz!nski . wllo doesn't need a takethemanager'sjob.
glove anymore as a designated
Green, now·president and general
hitter wltb the Chicago White Sox. manager of the Cubs, was supposed
Now Gary Matthews, the National to be an interim manager wllen he
League playoffs' most valuable took over the ~Club in 1979. But he
pl ayer, plays there, oftell Inter· stuck around for a pennant. Might
changed with other outfielders like Owens, also an interim, decide to do
Greg Gross or Von Hayes or Bob the same thing?
Demler.
That shOuld ml!ke him· right at
Bake McBride handled right field, home In the cast of senior citizens
but he was shipped out to Cleveland, Phlladelphia fields, The Phill!es
!'!'placed by Joe Lefebvre and stxio have the oldest team In baseball and

-

Baltimore
Butr&lt;olo

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New England

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taste that outshines menthol- .·
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St. Louis at Tampa Ba}'

San Diego at

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Chicago a t Detroit
Oewland a t Pltt.sOOrgh
Buffalo at Baltimore
Cincinnati a t Denver
Los Angetcs Raiders a t scan le
New Yor k Giants at Kansas C1ty
Allanta at l..cE Angeles Rams
Philadelphia at Dallas

\

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Phll!tdelphla
NY Rangers
NY isles
NewJerscy
Washington
Pittsburgh

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NHL results

13

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6
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Hartlord 4, Ebston 3
Quet..&gt;c 9, Buffalo 2
N.Y. l!ilanders 8, washlnrton 7, OT
N- Jerwy 6, D«rolt 3
Ph.ll&amp;dclphJa 6, Montreal 3
N.Y. Rangers 6, Plttsb.lrg_h I
St. i..OUIS 4, Chicago l
Toronro 6, Loa Angele!l 3

9

.
Sunday'• G.me~
Boston ·4. H art1ord 1

Buft'alo 5, Wutingt()n 2
Philadelphia 7, PittsbUrgh 1
• Edmonton &lt;1, MlMCSOta 3, OT
calgary 1. w~ 1. tie
Chicago 6, Detroit 4
vancouver 7, Toronto 4
MMidal(sGamel

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v~ at St. l.ll1l5. (n)

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Houston a t Minnesota
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Dallas :n. Tampa Ba y 24, OT
Phlladt!lphJa 17. New Y ork Giants lJ
Moi1Pa,)''!l 0ar118f!;
Pltubur~~:h at C!nclnna tl

FORD TRACTOR

MARY C. KEBLER'

Sunday's Gm~m
Washblgton 38, St. Louts H
Denver ll, Houston 14
t..Unnesota 23. Chicago 14
Q eveland 10, New Y ork Jets 7
Dfotroii :ll, GnH~ Ba y 14
Nf'W Or~ans 19. Atlanla 17
Bllffakl :ll. Miami :fl. OT
Bllltimlrc l2, New England 7
Son Diego :lB. Scank' 21
Los
Los

DALE HILL

DEPENDABIUTY
'
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101
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3 3 0 • .500 161 166
2 4 (I .113 129 123
2 4 0 .11.1 llfi U&amp;
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0
1

Rose continued. "When he took
over, we were one game 6ver .500
and now we finished up 18 over .500.
So he m ust have been good."
· What Owens did was to tum the
P hillies into a team of role players,
situational specialists with a revo!v·
ing door, using his whole squad.
"We neected to get set Uneups, get
our confidence up so we could start
winning," Schmidt said.

lP;"Le~t~m~e~·~sa;y~t~hi~s;a;bo;u~t;P~a;u;J,;"~;~;;;~;;~~~=~ ·.

National Football ~
By The~ PnBr;
American Conlerutee

LooAngele!';

'

call themselves the Wheeze Klds , a
play on their 1950 champion Whiz
Klds. The Important thing Is, IIley
weren't the Was Kids .
Or were IIley?
' Morgan, 40, was Invisible until
September and; even with a sizzling·
finish, he batted just .23Q. Rose,
benched for the first time In his life,
suffered through his toughest sea·
. son, hatting just .245.
That's why Owens ' platoon sys·
tern was so Important:
Or was it?
"This was a team that did it all
themselveS," said Rose .
And bow about Owens?
"The P on my uniform stands for
Philadelpll!a andnotforPau!, " said
Rose. "I'm a team player and I
always felt the team was the
difference. You need someone to
write the lineup card out and make
the changes."
And how about Owens?

NH.. results

Edmonton

in history

\

.,

•

was not tllat It left us contingently
system. But tllere Is an alternative but obliterated tile party that stood
on
the weak side o! a formula, It was
to our proceeding to deploy. It Is for unilateral surrender. On the
that
It was ·a new position. And It
that you agree to dismantle. If the" Issue, France's M!tterrand has
suggested that the president's
United States deploys, then both always been finn, and the Ital!~s
flex!bll!ty was tbe principal feature
·superpowers will have acll!eved unusually united.
of his d!silnnament pla:n, The
So what then did we do?
partly on the East-West boundary,
Mr. Reagan began to .de!!ne his trouble with too much Oexlbillty Is
On the oilier hand, If you pull b!ick,
that It tends to undermine !nflexlbll·
we will also he at parity again, only position. Well, he said, he did not
lty.
And althOugh one tends to ftnd
at a lower total explosive level , mean tha Zero Option sbould be
flexibility
!!sled on the positive
Naturally we wnuld prefer ·the taken literally. II the Soviet Union
pages
of
the
dictionaries of the
latter to the fanner, because we wanted to do so, he explained, we
world
and
!nflex!b!Uty
on the
prefer ·fewer over against more wo)l!d go along on hall measures. ·
negative
pages,
you
absolutely
nuclear weapons: But you all Or three-&lt;~uarter measures. Or
need to begin with !nflex!bU!ty when
decide, I'm busy, We don't have a one-thlrO measures. Or one-eighth
you
are talking about such round
lot In common, but we're both measures. Look, Ma, how flexible I
numbers
as American freedom and
against suicide, so let's go,
am!
national
sovereignty.
In the spring and early summer,
In fact, Mr. Reagan's elaboration
And now the White House has
the Soviet Union suflered two did not yield a phllosophlcal point. II
come
up with new overall d!sarma·
po!ltical setbacks. West Gennany the Soviet Union were, let us say, to
men!
plans, These can he relayed
fought elections, and the party most reduce by 10 percent Its .new
with about the degree of complexity
adamantly In favor of the deployoffensive weapons, we would rement of defensive weapons won duce the deployment of ours by 10 "':"!lie-niarket wUI stand. For Instance,
tfiere IS the Idea (the "build-down"
handliy. three months later, , In
percent - and we would still be
plan) that for every new missile the
Great Britain, Mrs, Thatcher all
even. Tbe trouble with this move
supeijiOwers build, they w!ll agree
to destroy two old ones. Thill's
lnjerestlng, but there Is a lot of the
.,.sl\e!l game In It because one new
one can he more than twice as
potent as two old ones. Or - the
big-thinkers said - we can go
further than this. We can agree to
remove three submarine m!ss!!es
for every two new submarine
missiles, get It? I.e., you net
m!n!m!ze the loss of m!ss!!es by
putting them on submarines rather
than In South DakoUl and tbe Urals,
because that way, It there were a
nuclear exchange, the bOmbs could
come In looking for targets In the
water. And submarines being
harder to find than silOs In South
Dakota, tile temptation to a first
strike would lessen. Still getting It?
Of course we an.still get it.
But why all the commotion over·
·these erlst!c !mprovtsatlons? DQ •
they mean anything? No, not
really.

I am constantly fascinated when I offense?''
Justice man says, because of the
read In the newspapers that the
"Possibly, But let's start at the
publicity, he can't look the other
Justice Department or a federal beginning. Double Jeopardy puts
way and Double Jeopardy will !lave
agency has just arrived at an out a Double Y car without brake to he fined and go allead with a
. agreement with a large rompany or pedals. Tile engineering depart· recall.
lpowerfu! Individual accused of ment catches It after tile mlllionth
"The lawyer for the company
wrongdoing,
car Is on tile market. They Inform says this Is all right with him
The stories read something like their salespeople, who tell them to providing Double Jeopardy doesn't
Ibis: "The Double Jeopardy Auto- sbut up, Finally, the government have to admit there Is anything
I would !Ike to make a few babies and don't understand a lot of
moblle Company agreed with the safety people get wind of It and, wrong with the car, or else the
comments concerning the letter what's going on, my oldest, 19
Justice Department not to manu· after testing the vehicle for two settlement could be construed as an
facture any more of their Double Y years, -come Ill !lie. conclusion that admission of guilt,
written by Mr. Batey In Thursday's months, does comprehend the word
edition of the Dally Sentinel. It fun. Would you get some enjoyment
cars without brake pedals. The the Double Y could cause.a danger
"The Justice Department lawyer
seems ·like every time someone out of the fact tbat you deprived
company paid a $50,00! fine, and on the highway.
·says he Is sure he can get tile auto
said It would recall aU Double Y
wants to do something for the good these children of that?
"They contact Double Jeopardy safety agency to agree to · the
As a very-overprotective parent I
of this town, someone.else Is against
cars now on the road that are and say · their Idea Indicates the stipulation, providing Double Jeo-'
It So what If there Is a four day would much rather walk the lighted
missing the brake pedal. While . Double Y car may have a flaw in Its pardy promises not to do It again."
celebration for Halloween? !for one streets of town for four days versus
paying the fine and making the braking system. The company
don't feel tbat . It's sacrilegious. the dark streets going from door:torecall, Double Jeopardy executives responds by saying tbe • safety
After all, I'm sure there won't be door for one hour. I'm sure the
denied that there was a problem agency did not , test the car under
practices of witchcraft on display, children of the community would ~with the Double Y car, or a reason road conditions, and the only time
enjoy a celebration too.
for the recall,"
• Nor w!!l there be "seances, etc . ....
people have accidents In a Double Y
I'm more than willing to chip In
I commend Ms. Scally for
I consulted a · lawyer friend, of car Is when they try to stop it.
wanting to take part In this and help Ms. Scally and the which I bave many In Washington,
"The safety agency ·studies the
celebration. Her children are all Chamber of Commerce In any way
to ~k him what exacUy It meant data submitted bY Double Jeopardy
grown. She doesn't have to do this, possible, After all this Is for my when the COmJlli!IY was fined, and concludes tbe only thing that
But yet she Is and on her own time, children too ..
agreed to recall all Its cars, and still can stop a Double Y car Is a brick·
Sara Marie Bratton
I'm sure slle would appreciate help
was able to maintain Its Innocence, wall. In preparation for this
341 Sou til 2nd St.
"They have to do that," he said, negative reaction, Double Jeofrom anyone.
Middleport, Ohio 457ti0 "Otherwise tile company would pardy bas hired tne best law firm In
AlthOugh my chlldren are just
open Itself up to a lot ol fr!vo!o~ Wash!ngton - that usually me!Uis
lawsuits."
the law firm with the best connec·
"I understand that . . But why tions to the present acjmlnlstratlon.
would the government allow them The lawyer calls his friends at
to malnt11ln their Innocence when Justice and says. he Is shocked that
Today Is Monday, Oct 10, the 283J,Udayof1983. Thereare82days left In
Double Jeopardy forgot . to put a .the auto safety agency WOUld pick
the year.
brake pedal on the car?"
on an American car firm just as the
Toclay's highlight In history: ,
·~The government Is more con·
economy Is starting to shape up. He
On Oct. 10,1981, Anwar Sadat, the assassinated president of•EI!Yilt. was
ceTnec! with getting the can tlxed offers to meet with the Justice
'th8n punlsh!ng the company for Department lawyer to work
burled near CairO.
In
Incompetence. If they bring Double equl111ble solution that will satisfy
On this date:
1n 11145. the U.S. Naval Academy was opened In Annapolis, Md.
Jeopardy to trial It's going to take tbe company and the government.
In 1911, revolutionarieS under Sun Yat-Sen overthrew the Manchu ' years to resolve the problem, and In They make a date tor a golf game at
eynasty In China.
the meantime a lot mom people the Burning Tree Club."
,
In 1913, thewatersoftlleAt!antlc and tbePac!f!c(lowed together through
could get killed."
. "It sounds so c!vll!zed," I sald.
the Panama Canal after U.S. ·engineers blew up the Gamboa Dam.
"Suppoee the company know·
"lt Is. Usually bY the ninth hOle an
In 19&amp;'1,' a dllm collapsed near Belluno, Italy, Tbe resulting flood ldUed · '!ngly was ~ellln&amp;'can without brake agreement can be bammered wt.
pedals? Isn't that a cr!mlnal In the case ol the Double Y car, the
l,SXIIJIOPle.

To~ay

2-""
Dally Sentlrwl
Middllport, Ohio

G:et on with it ________w_m_u.m_._P_.B_uc_k_ley_Jr.,

The Daily Sentinel

'q!v

Pag•

F'onwra'j

H&amp;R

l'oollroy. 011.

..

�•

•

-·
Page

4 The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 10, 1983

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Cowboys reinain unbeaten; Browns edge Jets
By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
Somehow, they dolt. Everyweek ,
the Dallas Cowboys do it.
Thls tlme, though, even the Dallas
players were wondering whether
they'd pull out another comebacll
victory.
And, of course, they dld.
Rafael Septlen boo\ed a 42-yard
field goal with 4: 38 gone in overtime
Sunday to lead the National Foott:Jall
League's only unbeaten team to a
27-24 decision over .winless Tampa
Bay. In aU six of their victories this
season, the Cowooys have come
from behind . None of those rallies
· was more improbable - or more
dramatic-- than thls one.
Dallas trailed 24-17 in the final
moments and was deep in Bucs
territory, when quarterback Danny
White was intercepted in the end
zone by Cedric Brown. But the
Cowboys forced a punt, taking the
ball with 79 seconds left on their own
26.
White hit Ron Springs three times,
then passed to Timmy Newsom e on
the left sideline. Newsome tlghtroped the final 35 yards of the ·
52-yard scoring play to tie it with 47
seconds left.
Tonight, Pittsburgh is at
Cincinnati.
Bills 38, Dolphins 35
Joe Ferguson riddled the NFL's

No. 1 defense against the pass for
five touchdown passes a nd 419
yards. He hitByronFranklinfortwo
ms and also found Joe Cribbs for a
pair of scores, including the tying
touchdown from the 1W!h 23seconds
togo.
Joe Danelo hit a 3&amp;-yard field goal
at 13: 58ofOT after Miami's Uwevon
Schamman missed from 52 and 43
yards in the extra session.

Browns 10, Jets
Matt Bahr' 44-yard Jleld goal helped by a gusting wind llstPd at 16
mph -as tlme ra n out m oved the
Browns to the top of the American
Conferenc&amp;Cen tra l Division. Cleveland's touchdown came on Bcbby
Jones' spectacular first-half reception of BrianSipe's32-yard pass. The
Jets' Richard Todd connected with
Bruce Harper on a 15-yard m ·toss
with 1: 28 to go.

Rams 10, 49ers 7
The 49ers went Into the game as
fhe highest scoring team in the NFL·
but managed only a 3-yard touchdown run by Roger Craig with 4: 52.
left. Eric Dickerson, the NFL's
leading rusher, picked upi42yards
and the visiting Rams' only touchdown. Chuck Nelson kicked a
41 -yard fteld goal for LA and Ivory
Sully blocked Ray Wersching's
last-second field goal attempt. ,
Raiders 21, Chiefs 00
M arcus Allen recovert'U team-

mate Frank Hawkins' fumble in the
Kansas City end zone with 8: 29
remaining to lilt the host Ra iders
over KC.Hawkins was hit around
the Ka nsas City 1 and the ball rolled
into the end zone, where Allen fell on
it, capping a comeback from a i4-0
deficit.
"This was not what you'd call a
pretty game." said Allen. "We
didn't play that well but we always
seem to be a ble to come f!'Om
Saints 19, F alcons 17
New Orleans, at4-2 off to the best behind "
The Raiders , 5-l , m arched 46
start in Its 17-year history, got a
game-winning field goal from · yards on siX plays for the winning
touchdown. Hawkins gained 29
Morten AnderSen for the second
tlme this . season. Andersen, who yards on four canies in the drive,
which was aided by a defensive
beat Ghicagoinovertlmeearlier this
holding penaa!ty and a n offside
year, kicked a 35-yard field goal as
penalty against the Chiefs.
tlme expired . He had fourfleldgoals
ln all.
The Saints had been shutout in
their last two trips to Atlanta.

At San Diego, the Seahawks blew a
21-0 margin. The much-maligned
Chargers defense got the clinching
score when Andre Young streaked
40 yards with an Intercepted pass
"1th 2:04 to go.
Quarterback Dan Fouts ~ playing his third game with a broken
wrist- !gnlted the 21-point secondhalf rally by hitting Bcbby Duckworth for a 59-yard m in tl)e third .
qua:rter.
Redsldns38; CardliiiiiS14
Washington continued to roll,
winning on the road for the eighth
straight time. J oe Thelsmann
passed for two · scores and J ohn
Riggins ran fqr three while moving
into fifth place on the all-tlme
rushing list.
The Redskins took advantage of
four St.Louis turnovers and seven
penalties.
Broncos 26, Oilers 14
Houston lost Its 13th straight as
visiting Denver, ranked 28th in the
NFL in total offense with an average
of 245yards, had262at the half. Steve
DeBerg, replacing John Elway at
quarterback, threw for two scores,Rich Karlis kicked fou r field goals
and Sammy Winder rushed for 165
yards .

-

Can Herd victory
signa.l new start?
HUNTINGTON, W.Va . (AP)- A
13-10 victory over Ea st Tennessee
State can signal a "new start, a new
Herd, a new outlook on things,"
Marshall coach Sonny Randle says.
Scott LaTulipe' s 22-yard field goal
wlth4:06left provided the margin of ·
victory Saturday as the Thundering
Herd captured a Southern Conference win on its home turf at Fairfield
Stadiwn for the first tlme ln seven
years.
" He's as good a kicker as the re is
in the conference," Randle said of
LaTullpe, a junior from Woodbridge, Va . " Ifwehad gottenbeatlt
was all over for all intents and
purposes." .
LaTullpe was given a n opportunity to kick tl&gt;e game-winner when
East Tennessee State 'roughed
Marshall holder BU!y Hynus for the
second time in the game. The second
roughing call came six plays after
LaTulipe had missed a 53-yard field
goal with the game-tied atl0-10. ·
The penalty gave the Herd a first

Torrance earned $27 ,00&gt; for his
runnerup fit\lsh, lhefirsttimehe had
made the cut in 10 American tour
tries in 10 years.
"I was tentative on the greens all
day. I went out just to try and play a
solid round, but that 's golf," said
Torrance, a E uropean Ryder Cup
player who was here to prepare for
next week's matches against the
United States at West Palm Beach,
Fla.
''I'd have said thank you If you'd
have told me I'd be inaplayoffatthe
beginning of the week," said the
30-year-old Torrance, who has
captured 10 foreign touraments
since turning pro in 1972.
A disappointed Torrance was
asked if anything positive bad come
of the playoff loss.
He paused a second, then answered , ' 1$27,CKK&gt;. "
Veteran Wally Armstrong shot a
68 and finished in third place at 274,
earning $17,00&gt;.

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Annual picnic of th~ Middleport
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home of Mrs. Clara Conroy
recently.
Guests included C. E. Blakeslee
and Eddie Bur kett, a long with two
visitor s of the hosts.

~,

ao

E

HARD ROCK - These Eastern High School
Future Homemakers of America didn't "rock around

or coupon good
for $1.00 off any
classified ad.

I
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.I

Expires Oct. 31. ·

the clock" bullltey did lake to rocking chairs from 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday at the Kroger Store in
Pomeroy to raise funds for Children's Hospital in

PRtCFS '

Datly .......... :.~ ..................... 20 Cen ts

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIO NS
Inside Ohio
13 Weeks ........... .... ~........ ;.... ., .. $14.041"'" ·
26 Weeks ..... .......... , .. .............. $27 .30
52 Weeks
........ $51 .48
Oul.s lde Ohio
13 Weeks ................ ;·............ .... $15.21
26 Weeks ..... ........................... : $29 ,64
52 Weeks ..... ...... ...... ... ............. $56.21

{!:;'

condillo~~~hO~~ ~~~~"=o~:

se
i
?~!~~h~~~~~~~=ig:.oo. tN WIT=s'~:1i:g,~

m

Several members of the American Legion AUJdllary, Drew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, attended the
8th district fall conference held at
Junction City Thursday.
Representing the local unit were
Ellen Rought, president; Loretta
Tiemeyer, district junior activities
chalrrru.n;· Mary Martin, Athens
Mental Health Center representative; Iva Powell, Catherilne Welsh,
Linda Powell, Pearl Knapp, and
Rhoda Hackett.
The conference and school of
instruction was hosted by the James
E. Fisber unit 376 of Junction City.
Mrs. Helen Hampson, district
president, talked to the group on
membership and presented her
theme for the year, "Hit for
Membership Goal, Hit a Grand

No subscrl pllons by man permit ted In
towns w here hOme car rier serv ice Is
aVa ila bl e.

.........

oo· Inc

Su,.

Tucker; (back) , Judy Jones,
Barringer and Patty Jones.

P,..P

Davis, Jody

Legion auxiliary attends conference

Subscribers not desiring to pay thecarr!er may remit In a dvance direct to
Th e Dall y Se nti nel on 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credit will be given carrier each
month.

1

1

Colwnbwi. Taking part were (front), Angellne

stare her, Tammy Capehart, Connie Clark, Beth

Slam."
Eighth district chainnen conducted the school of instruction on
Americanism, children and youth,
community service, junior activities, v~terans affairs, publicity, and
health center representatives. Mrs.
Rought served on the resolution
committee.
Richard Folk, mayor of Junction
City, extended .a _welcome. James
Balding, first vice commander of
the Eighth District, gave greetings
and soowed slides on the recent
national convention held in Seattle,
Wash . A report on that convention
was given by Charlotte Balding.
Guest speaker was Doris Wainwright , department secretary.
It was announced that the
Christmas party will be held at

Golden Rule Class has meeting
VIsit to. the Meigs County Infirmary
on Oct. 20 was planned durilng a
recent meeting of the ·Golden Rule
Class of the Middleport First Baptist
Chun:)l.

The · group wm meet at the
Infirmary at 7 p.m. for a time of
devotions, singing and fellowship,
with Martha Klein to have the
devotions. Afterward the class
members will go to the parsonage
for a dessert :;morgasbord.
Meeting at the home of Mr. and

Mrs. Lacey Barton, John Riebel had
the opening prayer before the
potluck dinner. A white elephant
Christmas party was planned.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Manning Kloes, Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Imboden, Mr. and Mrs.
Martha Klein, Van and Joe, Rev.
and Mrs. Mark McClung and Anna
Marie, Jean Thomas, Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Davis, Mr. and Mrs. John
Riebel and Johnny, Dale Wa lburn,
and ihe hosts.

Chillicothe on Dec.15 and that a field
service orientation will be held a t
Lancaster Nov. 13.
Mary Moose, president pro tern
for the host unit, had theopening and
closing for ,the meeting. Refresh- .
ments ',fere served.
,Plans are being completed by the
Pomeroy unit to serve the blodmo- ·
bile canteen on Oct. 19 a t the Senior
Citizens Center . Volunteers to work
should contact Loretta Tlemeyer.lt
was noted that the unit is now at 75
percent with dues payable now.
Gerrl Hamilton Is the membership
chairman. Next meeting wil be Oct:
25 with the program to be on
education and scholarship by Francis Hunnel.

Personal note
·Clarence Baker of Reedsville has
r eturned home after undergoing
heart surgery at the Cleveland
Clinic.
Those visiting with Mr. and Mrs.
Baker before his surgery were S.
Sgt. Jean Baker and daughter ,
Kris, Sumter, S.C.; S. Sgt. and Mrs .
Larry Baker, E glln Air Force Base
in Florida; Mr~. Jan ice Castle and
family, Guysvllle; Mr. and Mrs .
Roger Baker and sons, Coolville;
Sharon Coleman and Pa ul Reddy of
Fredericksburg, Va., and Tina
' Coleman.

A review of the Helen Steiner
Rice's book, "In the Vineyard of the
Lord", was given by Mrs. Dwight
Wallace at Wednesday's meeilng of
the Middleport Literary Club held at
the home of Mrs. Charles Gasklll.
The book deals with Rice's life and
her work along with some of the
stories behind her verse. As a
servant of God, she felt his special
mission ofwrltlnsl: for her.
One of her best known philoso-

phles Is that "the end ~of the road is
but a bend of the road. "
Mrs. Richard Owen, president,
welcomed members and conducted
the short business meeting. She
introduced the reviewer. For roll
call meml)ers gave a Rice
quotation.
Next m~tlng will be held at the
home of Mrs. Carl Horlly on Oct. 19,
7:30p.m. Mrs. Sibley Slack will give
the book review.

WHERE HIGH PRICES DON'T
HAVE A GHOST OF A
CHANCE!

·Clip Your
Halloween Coupon
In Today's Paper
For
Spooktacular Savings.
-,

The first 15 customers who bring in
each of the different coupons (pumpkin, witch, &amp; vampire) will get a 15 word
ad, for 3 days in 3 papers, (Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, The Daily Sentinel, Point
Pleasant Register)

Middleport literary club meets
531 JACKSON PIKE · RI 35 WEST
Phone 446-4524
BARI:JAIN MATiNEES SAT &amp; SUN

ALL SEATS $ 2.00
ADMISSION EllERY TUESDAY $ 2.00

Now, hu
~ound m
l'l twl•mt
10 play

'

.

.

WAR&amp;Mii
&gt;st

Star grange finalizes award plans
POMEROY - Plans for a receptlonhonorlngPattyDyer, winner of
the National Youth Representative
Award, tobeheidfrom2to4p.m . on
Sunday, Oct.23, weremadedurlnga
recent meeting oftbeStarGrange at
the hall.
The reception Is open to the public
and refreshments will be served.
;
Miss Dyer Is master of University
Grange and at the recent meeting

FQEE!!

W
EEK : 7:00 I 9 :10 P.M.
SAT I SUN MIITINE S.l :OO I 3: 10

installed the new ort'icers of Star
Grange. ·
The women's activities chainnan
reported on the Installation and
maintenance of smoke detectors in
the home. Reports were given on the
junior Grange committee and the
County Grange youth both held
recently. Nextyouthmeetingwill be
held on Nov. 19, at6 p.m. atDu!f'sin
Gallipolis.

Or $1.00 Off Any
Classif~ed

Ad
(Cash Ads Only)

FCA organizes for new year
., t

The 1~ organizational meeting of the Meigs Fellowship of
Christian Athletes was held Wednesday at Meigs High School
It was voted to retain the present
o!!lcers, Danny 'Ibllmas, Shawn
Eads, and Jon Perrin, captains;
Ruth Fry, secretary; and Jenny
Meadows. treasurPr .
The next meeting was set for Oct.
16 at 1 p.. m . at the high school with
members to lake things tor halloween ctecoratons. Sister Janet wD1
be the speaker.
The group deCided to buy a
televlsin antenna lor the school for
video taping pllrpOSI!S. Visits to the
nursing home and the ln!l1'm8ly

.

were dJI;cussed along with a work
·
day for elderly residents .

•

GOSPEL MEETINGS
AT WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
' At Our New 'Location on Laurel Cliff
Corner of Co. Rt. 76 &amp; Laurel Cliff Rt.
Pomeroy, Ohio

SUNDAY, 10:00 A.M. and 6 :00 P.M .

OCTOBER 9 THRU OCTOBER 14

Services Elch Eveln&amp; at 7:30
EVANGELIST: Landon Hope
"Everyone Welcome"

l

'

Programs were discussed durilng
an informal m eeting of the club
conducted by Mrs. Marjorie Fetty.
Mrs. Rose Reynolds was cohostesss. Mrs. F etty won the hostess
gifl. The October meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. Reynolds
with Mrs. Conroy as co-hostess.

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

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One Week ................ .................. $1.00
One Mon t h ..................·.......... , .. . $4.40
OneYea r ................................ $52.80 .
SINGLE CO PY

.

~~!r~~"..,",,'",

FIRST 15
CUSTOMERS
FREE
~;
AD

FREE

'

Slate or Oh10 De part men! ol Insurance . Certrht a!e o!
Complrance - The unders rgned, Superintendent or In·
surance o r the Slate of Oh•o . he rebv certlfi!l'- t Mt
Al LSTATE INDf:MNITY C O ut Nrnthbroolt, State ot
tllmo•s . ha~ compiled w1th the laws ol thiS State ap p lrcable to 11 and Is au tMOrlZ8-0 o;!ur1n9 tne current 'fear to
t ransae! lfl tri•S sta te 11$ appropnale busm ess or1nsurance
Il l lrnanc1al cond1r1on '' showfl by •Is annualstltcmen tto
nsve be&amp;f\ u follows on December 31. t982 Admltle-d
assets. $38.064,107 00: l rab1hhes. S22.SJHll9.00: Sur·
plus 513, 129. 79700. Income . $4 ,577,27900. E~~nd• ·
lures 5562.414 00. N111 il!i~els , 5 t ~ . 529. 797 00. Capita l.
$2. 400,000 00 IN WITNESS WHE REOF. I ha~e n9r8o.Jfl iO
~ 11bscr~oed my name end causad my se ~l to 00 a111~ed at
Colu m bus Oh•O, Ih iS d~y and da te Robert H. Katz . Sop!
o l fl'l&amp;urancc ot Otllo (i t 7)
Sta te of Oh•o . De partment o l l n surar~ce . Cttrtllu::a te o l
Com p har~ce - The unders•gned. Su~ri ntend en l of In ·
surance ol lhe S1111e or Ohio , hereby certihes tna t
ALLATAT! IN SURANCE C O 01 Nor1htlroo lt. Stale ol
11 11nors. nas complied wiiM the laws o ll hts Stale app lic·
able to •I and 1$ eulhor~zeo du11 ng !he Ctlnenl yea r to
lr ansae!,, thiSSlllle •ts aJ)I:lrOpriate bu&amp;•llii$S of msuram:.e
Its hMflC•al COM dltiof\ ''s hown by 115 annu ~ l statem61'11 to
hate been u !allows on Detemt:&gt;er 31 19!2 AOrm n eo
asse t~ . S9,658. 1911. 169 00 L•abllihes. 56,836.029 7J t oo,
Sur plus $2.8t9. 1611.43• 00. Income, 56.562,200,072 00,
e.penoltu•es. 55 .737 .260,2 11 00. Net assets. $2.822, 168,•l4 00. Ca p•lal. SJ.OOO.OOOOO IN WIT NESS WHER EOF
I ~ave he reunt o SubSCflb;ed my n11meandceuOO my s~:~ai
to be afl • ~ ed at Columbu~. Oh1o t h1s da'f 111no oate
Rober! H !&lt;all . Sup! of ln•uoanCf! of Onio t • t81
St ate ol Oh•o. Department or lnsu•ance, Ce rl ll•care o l
Compliaflce - Tne UI'IOers•gned, Sopermtefldent of 11'1 ·
, urance 01 the S tate o l Ohio, hereby cerlrhll$ thet
CENTR.IIL S TATES HEALTH I LIFE CO OF OMAHA of
Omaha , Stille or Nebrnska. nas comphed w11h the l11wsof
lh•s SC11te apohcable to 11 and •s a u t hor~zed out~ng t ne
c urr en t year to lraJJsacl•n th•s state •Is approp11ate b usi ness o l•o•uran ceo r~tne mu tual ptan. Its h nar~c~al condi l lon · ~ sho.,.,n by Its annua l Slatemenlto have been IS
touows Ofl December Jl , 1982· 1\d milted assets SS9. 75041 7 OO. l 11blh ties, $47.()53,630 00: S urplus Sti.696 737:00. l••come. $59 .557.344 00: Expend 1tures. $5 1.370:77 1.00 IN WI TNESS WHEREOF I h a~ehereuntosubsc r • bed
my nnmlll fld catJ sed my sear to be afh• lld 11Columbus
Oh•o. lh •s day afl&lt;l dale. Robert H Katz . Supt. o f lns ur :
ence o l OhiO . (1127)
St ate o r Or\10. Depa11ment ol Insurance. Ce•t1 licmte o l
Compl iance - The undl:l rslgned , Supennlffidenl of In ·
suran ce o t !he S tate ot Oh1o, hereby carti!les tna l
CONTIN ENT~L INSURANCE CO or Concord, Stale ol
Ne..- Hamps h•re has comptleo .,.,11'1 !he laws ofth•s S tate
appl•cnhle 10 rl ano •s authOII!ed durrng the cuqent year
to ~ranuct 1n lh•s s tate 1ls appropr~ate bus.ness ol
•MSurance Its l•nanc1al cond•tron •s shown by liS an noel
stalemer~l t o ha~e been 11 rollowson DP.tr&gt;mber 31 , 198:2
Adm11ted USeiS, S t.26t .S01 ,611 00; LIIICIIIIIE!S. S 1.02J.S,12,J6S 00. Surplus . S 164 . ~22 . 866 00, jncome, S717.f83 .26• OO . E~:pend• l u~es. S6!15.315.973 00 Ne t assets. $237,·
!16!1 ~ ~6 DO. Cap•tat , $53. S66 .360 00. IN WIT N ESS
WHEREOF I na~e hereuntq subsCflbe-d my name and
cause a my seat lo bealf1•eda1 Columbus Oh•o thiS day
!lnd dale Robert H ' Kelt . Supl o l lnsu;ance 0 1 OniO
t• 175)
'
.
State ol Dh1o Deparlment or Insu ran ce , Gertil icale ol
Compliance - Tha IJflOE!rsigfled . Su perir~lenden t o! lflsurance oltne Stare 01 01'110. ho re b~ ccrllfll!s lhlt ERIE
FAMILY liFE INS CO o r Er1e. State ol f'll nnsy l wa n ~a nas
co mpllec:t w11h tn11tewso r this State llppl•i:Abfeto u a it d Is
aufhOr+Zed d urm9 the current yea r to tranuc r In th l&amp;
s tale 1ts eppropnale IJUsine's or •nsu •ance. 11~ tinartcla!
co nditiOn •S s how n by •t ~ anfluat statement to howe been
HS lo lt ow' on Dece mber 31 , 1982· Admi tted assels
$4 t .402 ,1126 .00; l 1~bil•l 1es . $26.211 .9£1.4 OO: Surplus . $14 .~
070 .1134 00. Income, $12,095.6:).4 00: E• pend•lurel. $7.()42 ,26 1 00, Net a nets, $1. 5.190 634 OO· Capital s i 1 ~0
000 00 IN WITNESS WHER Eci F. I h a~e nere~nto' 5u t;;:
s~r lbed my m11me and ~RUSecl m~ sear to 00 all•xed a l
Columbus. Oj1•o th1a oaylnd dei.J Robert H Ketz, Sugt
or Insu ra nce of on,o (112 10)
·
S tate ol 0 1'1 10, Pep•nmen l of l11surance Certrricale ol
Complllnce - The undersigned. Supe u ~lenoent or 1ns\.rrance olthe State ol Oh•o . hereby cert•lres thttt ERIE
INSURANCE CO of Ena, State ot Penns~lwar'lla , M s
co mphedwlth Ihe l~ w sot tn•s St at~eppiiCableto 11and 1s
au lho.rrzl!d during lhe current year 10 tran,.ct •n !hiS
stal e liS approp11a1e bu~m~s or 1nsurance Its lmanc1111
co nO t!IOI'I tllriOwn b~ •!&amp; ennu81 statement to have been
as totlows or~ . December 31 Hl82 Admilted assets
520 , 7 1 8 , " 1 ~ . 00. LiBbll•lles. 515.!187.647.00, Surplus, $2 .:
311 1.26e .00. i flcome , $662, 102 00, Expendt1ures $1 359 :
442 .00. N etauet ~ . S-t .731 .268 00, CGp1 1al . $2.JSO .a00 00
IN WI TNESS WHE REOF-, f have hereunto subscribed my
n11me 111\4 ca used my sear to be a lli•f!d at Columbus
On lo , 1 1'1 1 ~ day and d ate Robert H Katz Su pt o t rnsu r:
ance ol Ohio . (U\1)
'
·
C Still~ o f Oh1o . Depllrtrnent ol Insurance. Cert 1f 1c 11 rc ot
ompl ance - Th e ono&amp;rs1gnec:t. Superr ntendent or lfl ·
surance ol t ne Sta te or Ofl lo, he reb~ certr11es ul111
FORI!.MOST INSURANCE CO ol Gr and Allpids. S ta te o f
~ lc h lgsn, hU complied with th e laws or \h's Sllte
appllcabl8 tO II lind 15 a uthorized du r1 ng tnecur&lt;eflt ~ear
IO !re nnet 1n lhrs Stille 111 appr opflate buS•I'ICss or
1r.BOflf1Ce . Its llna.nc•al conditiOn IS snown bY lis annual
s tatemen t to hav'e been 11s lo11owson December :}1 1982·
Adm1tled ane ls. $338,680.462 00. Llalrlli tias. S25i 459 .·
178 00 .Surp lus . $80,•21,264 00, In come. S21!5 281 i.SJ .
00 EJpeMdlturn $279,383,196.00: Net assel5.· 585. 22:1 •
284 00, Cap•lat, S-4 .000.000.00 IN WITNE SSWHEfieoF
I ha~eheraunto subacribed my nama a no uu&amp;ed my ~ 81 j
to be affiked 11 Columbus . Oh iO, !f111 &lt;:lay and dat e
Rober! H Kat!, Sop t of Insurance ol Ohio 1•253!
·
Slate o l Oh1o, Depanment o f lnGura r~ce . Cer ll t.c 11 te ot
Compl1 1nce - The un dars•gneG , S u P81"1nlendenl o l In·
s u 11n~e Of the S ta le ot Ohio. he ueby cerlllles thll
FRANitt.IN t.IFI! INI CO or Sptrn!}lr t ld, S1111 ot lllrno 11 ,
flU compiled w ith th' laws olth•s State appiiCIIIble to It
end •• au!hor!zed du u n'ijlhtl current ~ar to rra nnc t In
thrs ~tate 111 apr,ropr~•te bus•netsol ln surance 11sJ1nan·
c•al cond!t1o n 1 ShOWf\ by 111 snnua l stateml!f\t fo ha ~e
been I I loiiOWI on Decemj&gt;er 31. 1982: Admilled assets
$2,1165. 1G 1,096.00; lieb•hlies. IZ .263.!XH.OM oo· S u rp1u1'
;~-~
00:, Income, $~24.697. 33!1 00: b .lpt'fldll u rea:
00, Net asaets S402 100 000 00. C. p •tat
.
,
1• 2.00 .094.00 IN WITN ESS WHE REOF . t l'li ve he11 :
u n ~o IU b K rlbed m y name ana Cl ullld my u a l t o be
l ll l~ed I I Columbui ,' Orl•o IIIII dlly ln d Olle Robert H
Kill . Sup t of lnturii'IC:II o t Oh io fll256r
State ot Otilo, Oa parlmenr u r tnt urance Ce rt llic llto 0 1
St al~ ol Ohio, 'Hpa rtment ollna u ranca. Cerli ffc ate of
Co mpllance - Tile unde r!llgnld, Supuin'landill n l
Co m p l 11\CI - Thl llflde ra!gned S upllflntendent ot 'n·
01 11'1·
, 'H'•"• nce ol the Sta11:1 ol Ohio, hl!lrllby certll ies t hat JOHN • t urenee o f lhe S t1t1 ol0h1o, l'teraby cefllli H 11111 tNTI!R
COCIC VARIA.ll U'IINI CO 19
Muuch ulella hascomptifd .
0 ost on. Sta te o f OCIAN 1. . CO of Ind ianapoliS S till 01 Indian a his
applicable to It lr'ICI II autr,orl::t~~~~~~~:• o f lhll 81111 com p lied w!1hthe laM of th11 s uu'e appticableloit aNi •s
10 lrannc l m ih •S
to 1r11nuct tn th la al ate Ita a
r1 ac urr~ t vur • utho:rl ud during t he cur,.-,t
Slife _il_l approprlll!e b1A1n•s o 1 n11 ~11'1Ctl. tt s lln ~~~t~ Cia l
r.n a.,.n
clat
c ondmon 111no~ n by 111 1nnu a stttement 1o han beeri
ave
nn lollowtonDidlmbe 31 11182
11 Iott a.~ on December :u. (1112 : Admi UeG a tMII
; : •n-o 1111111. &amp;1so.e11,$6 eo; LIM~~tt'- 'sn~.
$ t &amp;0,7a!U4&amp;00, LIH!hllat St H SUI 0Tlll) Su•p l, , ·
OO: Sor~ul . &amp;t 18.t22, 3ti5.00: Income. 11!3 sn·174 :
207 715
1M ,ee&amp;.SJJ
· 00:
' El_pendr
· · tufes,'
00• xpe ndl!u r"
171' 111 '51900: Nat orne.
114 013 00: Net
.
•
·
IUMt..$35,207. 775.00 Caprtal S2 •
000' 000 00• IN WITNESS WHEREO f , t hiaft llere"\JilkJ
Wblcr lblld '"Y !'liM ana CluHcl m y 1111to t.all11" d 11
~~altiKM a l Cotvmbus~ro::.·::~~Y=-1 Colum
bul, Onto, ll'lf1 day 1110 IM!e Robart H Iii liZ
"' Mall:, SuP' ol' lfl1ut1 nce ot Otllo !• IIMJ
ot l.,.uranc.o l Otllo (1l41l
·

l800

bring In this
Halloween
Coupon
will get a
15 word ad
for 3 days
in 3 papers

POSTMASTER: Send a dd ress to The
Datly Sent! nel." lll cou11 St. , Pomeroy,
Ohio' ~ 57 69.

Stale o r Oh10 . Deparlmefll or ln~urance. Certdu; ate or
Compliance - Tne 11nders1gneo. Supenntenoen t ol lfl·
surance ol tne Slate ol OhiO . ne reby ce•!ihes tnat LONE
STAR LI FE INS COo l DliiU. State o r T&amp;llle , n.as c:o mpl&gt;e&lt;:l wrlh tile laws or th1s Slate applicable toi l and 11
aut horrled during !he cu~rent rear lo lransac:l rn th is
state its appro p riate bus1ness o in1urance Us hr~ancrlll
c:o nd1 11on is shown by liS annual statement to hawe btoen
115 follows on DecemDer :!1 . 1982 Adm1tted asset, ,
$160.!170,492 00. L•aD•htiH~. 5134.396,805 00. Surptus.
12~ .007~667 00, Income. 597 ,3!16.394 OO: Expenditures.
5113 .13Ei ,S16 00: Net assets, 526,573.687 00, Cap1t a1, S 1,·
666 .000 00 IN WITNESS WHEREOF. 'I have' hereunto
subscribed my name ~nd c:aused mys~aiiO be a rt 1~ed ~~
Columbus Oll•o . lh i5 day end da te Rober t H Kllll. Sup!
ol lnsurl! nce o l OhiO [13841
St~ t a ol Oh10 . Depa rl m8 nl o llnsu r.ance Cen•tlcllte o l
Com plu,n ce - The ~,mderslgrteO , Supeun'ten(!eni ot. ln·
~urance ol tne Sta te ot Qn,o, nereby cerhf•es that
MAS&amp;ACHUSETTS INDEMNITY &amp; LIFE INS CO pi
Boston, Stole of MassAchusells, h11s complied with the
laws ollh1S Slate appliceble to ) I~~~ IS autho11zeO d urrng
Ihe curral'lt year to transecl •n t.h1s slate !IS appropr~ ate
bus•neu oll rlSurllflCE lis llnsncllllcun(IIIIOn !5 s nown tly
11s ~nnuals.tRtementlohave oeen as IO II Ows on Pecem ·
ber 31, t982 AOmilleO UU\9 . S264,37!&gt;,09!i 00, lraOIII·
I11BS , $195.367. 124.00, Su1plus , SS6 , 522 , ~71 00. Income
5268,-481 .554 00 . hpefldrture5, 5225,065 262 00: Netu·
sets . $59.001.371 00. ClltHI&amp;I, $2, 48~ . 100 00 IN WI TNESS
WHEREOF . I hiVe hereUfllo subSC!IOO!l my m1me a fl!l
Clluseo my seal to be alfr•ed at Cotumbus .Oh•o . tnos oay
and date Robon H Kau . Supt of tnsuraflc:e o t Oh•o
(139!1!
51~1 8 o l Onio . Oepartmef\1 o llnstlr~nc e , Certrhceteor
Comp11an" - The undersigne d. Supeuntendent ol lfl ·
surence or the State ot Oh•o. hereby cer1rl1es tha t
MONARCH LifE INS CO ot Sprrngh!!ld, Stille u t M~su ­
chusetts. has comot1ed W1lhlhe 111ws ufth•s State app11c·
able 10 H and IS IIUthoiiJed d_u ring the currel'lt yeQr· IO
trllnsacl rn tn1s~tatelts aopropr~ate bus•neu o l •nsu•ance
l".hnanc•AI con d lliOI'I is shown bVilt afln)Jals tatcmentiO
na~~ been as follows on December 31 , t91t1. Admrlleo
assets, S552,489 1 4 ~ OO. l iablillles, $471.018 .71!8.00. Sur·
phiS, 574,802,628.00, Income. $153.935. T74 00 Ellfll!IJd• ·
tures. $t81 .036. 935 00. Net asstr ts . SllOrll tO 356 oo· Cap• ·
tal , Sfl.001.'130 .00 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, 1 nav9 here·
~rn t o su h~t.ntmd my name ana caused my seal to be
~ ll • • oo at Col limbus. 01'110, 11111 day afld dale Robert H
Kat2, Supt ot. Insurance or Ohio (~4 331
State or Oh iO . Department of ln~urence Ctrrl&lt;ficate o l
Com pll~flCC - The undersrgned. Supetir~l endefll ol in·
sunn'e ol the S late of Oh•o. heretJy ceruries thai
NATIONAL LIFE AND ACC IDENT INS CO ol Nash~il!e
Stale of Tenne55el! , hn cnmplrm:lwitn the taws Olthii
Slate applicable 10 rt a no 11 aulhorlled doJfll'lg thccurrenl
yea r tO uenu c t•n lh•s ste le 1ls appropnere busmess ol
1nsurance lis lmar~c•al condllron is shown by 1!5 11nnual
statr.mcnl to have been as follows on December 31 1!1112
1\dm•tted assets. SJ. 147 S!l8.6tli 00. lr~b•hnes 52 68t .
176.634 00. Surplus S390.8t8 096 00: Income. 5.106:602 .
738 00. E~J)I'.nd i lurel , 56~ .070 . 1011 00. Net anels S466.·
4 2 1.98t 00 Capital , 575 .603 ,8115 oo IN wriNE SS
WHEREOF. I have nereunto subscnbed my name arid
c aused m~ seat to be all•~ed at Columbus. Oh•o. th15 da~
ano dftle Rober! H l&lt;etz. Supt ot Insurance or 01110
(U 66)
Stare o f Onro. Department oltflsurance Ce ri iiiCIII&amp;ot
Compl1aflet.l - The und~:~rsigflllO , Superlfl"te noent o f In surance of the S tate 01 On•o. hereb\1 cer11hes thllt
Nt.t.GAR.II FIRE INS CO of W•lmll'ljjlon Ste teol Deteware
nas compHed w1!rl the law~ of this Stille ~pphcable to 1i
and Is au thonzod du r~ ng the current year to t r Hn ~ RCt 1r1
th1s slate l11 ep p topria te businen o f •nsurance Its l1flllf'\ ·
e ra I condition 1s shown by n~ an nu al 511tement 10 M~e
been as to llo ws on Oece(Ti b' ' 31, tQ62:Adm ii!Cd as ~o ls
190.943.324 00. Lleb • ll lle~. $7Q.9~2.4SO , OO: Surplus. $10 .
020 ,874 ()() ll'lcome, SS4 ,746.630 00: E•pend itures $57 063. 126 00 Ne t assets , $20.020.814 00, Capital , s 1ci.ooo .
000.00 IN WI TNESS WHER EOF. I have htueunlo sub ·
SCflbed m~ name and ~;aused my seal ro be af ll~l!d at
Columbus. OhiO. l h1s dll~ and dare Rotlert H Ka tz Sup I
ol l nsurenct~ of Ohro (U83!
State o f Onio. Department or lnsurence, Cert1 hc nte o t
ComplllflC8 - The Ufldl!!lllgnect . Superrnleodent ot rn surar~ce or the State of Ohio. he reb~ cert rfrttl§ that
NORTH AMERIC.t.N CO FOR Lllff: A HEALTH INS o l
Chrcago, State o l lllino•s_hH,!I compiii!Q w•th me laws o l
!hiS Stale applicable to 11 11nd is authorrzeo duii i'IQ th e
c urrent year to trHnsaot ln t riiS slate liS appropr 1atE; bus•·
ness olmsurance 111 lrnlflCIII cond1hon 1s shown b 1t5
•nnuel statemen t to have been liS lollows on Oecen!'hf'r
3 1, t982 Aomrued auets, $509.55 1.62000 L.ahll1t1 11
5• 09.519, 138 00, Surplus. 598.0~2 . 482 OO. IncOme $169 ~
HIJ, 1!16 00; Expel'ld1tures. 590.650.762.00; Net l ·sserS
St00,022.48200. CaPital. u .aoo.ooo.oo tN WITNESS
WHEREOF. I hnW! hl!! reu nto subscnbed m~ name an&lt;:l
caused my saal to bee lf••&amp;O at Colum bus. Ohio. lh 1s day
and da ti! Robert H. Katz, Sup_t . of Insura nce of Ohio
t• • 85)
,
C Stale of Oh1o Department ol ln•urance Cert1f1ea1e of
ormp l•• nce - The un&lt;'erSig ned, Sull\!rlntende nt 01 tn~R=~~~:~C:':u~~~L
TNs0 c''o' · ', "'"by ce rt ,ttes -t ha r
N
\1
o New Be•hn State of
ew ork, hh complied With the laws o l t hiS S t
eppllcll!)lftiO i tand •9aut nor~zeo ~:hJ rl flgl hec
1 Bhl
to l•ansact •n th1s state Its approp11 ate bualne~~ ~~:',n~~~~
anca on the mu1u11pl an Its flna r~c 1 al con d 1
lly liS annuli l ll lemen t to ha'o'l! been ~~uf~ 1'1~~~o:n
Deoember 31 , 19e~ Adm1 tled asset&amp; $36 3511 '*-3 OOn
Llllblhtrel $22,395,59200 &amp;.r rp lus , 5\ueJ,J6 i OO In:
~~e , $24 378 096 00. Expendl!ur9S s:;~ 1 30(1 676 00 IN
NESS WHEREOF I rlave Jlereu'nto ;u bs'cnbed m
Q~me and caused my 1111 1o be affixettat Col u mbU:
•o thrs oay and date Robert H Ka t1 Sup ! 01 tns"r ·
anceo t On~ !•547)
" ·
C Sta te ol Ohio, Oepar tmenl or lnsu raflc&amp;. certor1cate ol
~mpllance - The uflder~1gned Supenr~t enden t ot In~l,gnca o l th e S tale ol OhtO , heraby cett111es tha t .IOHN
lN LifE INS CO or Sl Lou ie Park. State of t,A 1 nne501~
hilS complied w11n tne llwt o l th1s Slate applica b le to 11
, , an O •s IUi hOiilt-0 d u nng t he current ~ear 10 trln&amp;ICI•n
lhlsstlte 1111 pp ropr1a1e bus1n115sof mtura nce 111 hnan
l crar cond 1110n 1s ahown br Its a nn uer Sl ltel!'lent to ha~e
, been a~ foHo ws on December 31 1962 Adml tt &amp;d au
1985,1596.400
Ll a bitll les St 22 lt4 ro
Sur~et!
160,70 1.89300 Income ~!i9 Q200 t 2bo 7E00' d u
s rs1 443,1154oo ~ . ..,.r •. s6a.Jb 1.moo ~~~;~ ,," u. 's~'­
000 00 IN WIT NESS WHER EO F' 1 ha 01! herTun iO
sul:ltc
rlb&amp;C\ my na ma a nd caused my aea• to De alii leO at
1
, . Cotum b ut, 01\to th is Oe ~ and dat a Aobl)(l H r&lt; a b S 1
l o r lntu ran ca o r Ohio 111'110 7)
' up

t
t

· -- - ----------- - -- - --- - - - ----- - ~I
I
First 15
I
I
customers who

sentatiVe, Branham N~ !!ipaper Sales ,
733 . Third A\'t;&gt;n ue, New York , N ew
York 10017.

S

PC ,
AMERICAN

HAIJ.OWEEN COUPON

sociation, National Advertising Rep re-

NelsonvU!e - Class " A" volleyball pairings were announced
Sunday at Nelsonville-Yark High
school in Bu.,htel. Southern was
top-seeded in the tournament at
17-0, while Trimble was second
seeded with a 10-5 record. The
tournament begins at 9 a. m .
Saturday , Oct. 22, and consists of
eight teams in two brackets. Two
winners will advance to the district
at Chillicothe. At 9 a. m. Eastern
faces Miller, Trimble faces Crooksville at 10: 15, with tbe two winners
meeting for the sectional crown at
11: 30 a.m. Southern meets Federal
Hocking at 1 p.m ., Kyger Creek
faces North Gallla at 2: 15 with the
championship between the · two .
winners beginning at 3: 30 p.m .

COLUMBUS, Ga . (AP ) - Unknown Ronnie Black said he never
wanted to be a golf bum so he set a
three-year tlme Jimitfor a victory on
the PGA Tour.
Black, 25, realized his goal Sunday
by winning the S250,00J Southern
Open golf totjrnament on tbe fourth
hole of sudden death playoff and
earn $45,o:xJ, nearly doubling his
previous earnings of $46,358 in two
years on the tour.
Black came from three strokes off
the pace set b)' Scotla nd's Sam
Torrance, fini shing with a 1-under par 69 over the 6,791-yard Green
Island Country Club course.
To,rrance had a 72, including a
double-bogey5on the par3,210-yard
14th hole that enabled Black to catch
him.
Beth golfer s then parred the rest
of regulation and thefirstthree holes
of overtime before Black dropped in
a 6-foot putt on the par 4, 378-yard
13th hole for a birdie and the victory.

lbae---5

land Dally P ress A.ssocl at on a nd the
Amer ican Newspaper Publishers As-

• •
pamngs

Black .captures Southern Open

Monday, Qctobe; 10, 1983

Middleport
Amateurs
have meeting

s:!

Class A

.
RETURNS SHOT - Meigs' Cathy Dean (10) shows good hustle In
returning a shot in last week's game against Vinton County. The
Marauderettes won the TVC contest. Dave Harris photo.

•

.,

r;===========

Announce

Tornadoettes
still unbeaten
the way. Southern won the second
By SCOTI' WOLFE
gam
e 15-8, then topped off the
ATHENS - The Southern Torna-Qctory with a 15-5 win.
doettes put their perfect record on
In the second match of the
the chopping block here Saturday
afternoon, then swung the axe as Saturday tri-m atch Southe rn rolled
their recorded victories over Class over Athens 18-16, and 5-4. Defend" AAA" Athens and the powerful ing league champion Southern
Eastern-Pike Eagles. Southern's represented itself and the conferoverall ledger remains perfect a t ence very well against tough
17-0. while also owning an B-0 m a rk opposition,-first taking a 9-21ead on
fo ur point serves by Becky and
in the SVAC.
Southern put its record to the Debbie Michael, with Wolfe adding
test; first against Eastern-Pike who the other.
SHS went on to lead 13-6, but Ann ·
knocked off Athens U -15, 15-8, and
5-8, then against the bigger Lady Sternechert added eight serves fn a
Bulldogs. Eastern-Pike lost its first row for a 14-13 Athens lead.
Debbie Michael tied It a i 14-14,
m a tch of the year against Jackson,
the n had won 13 straight befre Athens went up 15-14 on a Beth
Carlson serve, then U.ren Wolfe
m eeting Southern Saturday .
Eastern-Pike, now 13-2, dis- notched a 16-15 lead for Sout hern in
played its winning form in the first the nip-and-tuck battle.
Athens was not to be de nied as
game as ltyolled over Southern 15-8,
Jean
Reese again locked the score
the Tornadoettes' first Joss in any
at
16-16.
Hemsley belted a served-in
m atch this season.
for
Souther
n' s 17-16, before LittleSouthern came back, however,
field
notched
the game-winning
· after regrouping between games,
and played championship ball the _point ' 18-16.
The second game started out as
r est of the way. Severa l long volleys
k ept tension at a maximum, but close as the first, 4-4, but Southern
Southern's team effort paid off for found the grove and rolled to a
convincing 15-5 w in.
t he win.
In the first match Amy Littlefield
Tremendous play by Laren Wolfe
and Amy Littlefield fro m ooth the led all servers with 10 points, while
front and back lir\.es sparked Jenny Bentley and Deb Michael
Southern's comeback a tt ack. Per- netted seven. Brown had 11 for
fect sets by Karen Hemsley, Debbie ' Eastern-Pike. In the nightcap
Michael, and Jenny Bentley gave . Bentley led the winners with nine.
Southern plays Athens at hom e
Wolfe and Littlefield op portunity
for Southern 's "one-two" victory tonight in a rem atch, beginning at 6
p.m., then faces league foe North
punch.
SHS led 8-0 in the second gam e Gallla away Tuesday. Saturday,
a nd wsa never seriously challenged Oct. 22, at 1 p. m. Southern plays
despite some scary mom ents along Federal Hocking ln the sectional
tournament at Nelsonvme.

JJy The Bend

Donnell Thompson dumped New
At Chicago, Tony Galbreath ran E nglandQBSw.·eGroganintheend
for 104 yards - including a 52-yard zone for a safety as host Baltimore
scoring jaunt - and Darrln Nelson won its third straight. Allegre has hit
added 78, with ll 56-yard TJ:l romp. 13 of14 fleldgoals, threefromover50
•The Bears comrnltted five turnov- yards.
Eagles 17, GiantS 13
ers, offsetting a 102-yard effort by
Ron
J
aworski's two touchdown
Walter Payton.
passes to Mike Quick and Tony
" We've ~ fortunate this year in
the turnover ratio," said Viking · Franklin's 25-yard field goal keyed
Coach Bud Grant. "With the injuries the Philadelphia victory , The homewe're having, we've· been iuclly . town Giants lost a touchdown In the
They've compensated for the lack of fourth quarter when, In attempting
to recover a fumbled punt in the
offense."
Eagles
end zone, llnebacker Byron
Lions 38, Packers 14
After a pep talk from their owner, Hunt was called for holding.
" The Giant player (Hunt )
Willlam Clay Ford, the U ons
snapped a four-game slide with a grabbed an Eagle (in the end zoite)
home victory. Rookie fullback and made no attempt to goaiterthe
James Jones ran for three touch· ball," said reteree Jlm Tunney.
"The rule states that he can push or
downs and E ric Hipple passed for
if he goes ·aJter the ball."
pull
two.
"I told tliem we'd had a lot of
teams here and that I thought they
were one of the better ones," Ford
The . Baily Sentinel
said. "I felt we were at a critical
stage. !felt we'd let some games get
--- _
( USPS Ul-960)
A Dl\'lslon or Mulilmedla, Inc.
away that we .perhaps shouldn't
have, so I thought I'd try to pick
Publls hed every after noon, MOnday
them up before they got too far ·
through Friday, Ul Court Street, by the
Ohio Vall ey P ublis hing Company - Muldown.
Colts 12, Patriots 7
;~~~~~~~·~~~~t'a~~~~~J6!i
meroy, Ohio.
Rookie placekicker Raul Allegre
booted a 52-yard field goal, then
Memb er : The Assoc l a t~ Press, In.,
,VIIdngll 23, 8elll'!l14

Chargers 28, Seahawks 21

. The Daily Sentinel -

..

•

(Offer Expires
October 31, 1983)

.-

�..
Page

6 The

'

Daily Sentinel

..

Pomeroy-

b

p.m ., at Meigs Coun ty Jaycee
headquarters, East Main Street,
Pomeroy.

POMEROY - Eastern Local
Board of Education will have a
special session, 7 p.m. Monday.
•

--·-

TUESDAY

Rtm.AND- Open house will
be ob5erved when Rutland PI'O
meets Monday, 7 p.m ., ·at the
school. Second graders : will
'present a program and refresh·
r(lents wlll he served.

SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
PI'O will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m.
at the school. Plans will be
completed for the fall carnival to
be held Oct. 29. Ms. Janice
Deem's second grade class will
present the program. All parents
are invited to attend.

POM;EROY .:... Southern High
School Athletic Boosters will
meet Monday, 7::ll p.m., ln the
junior high.

'EAST MEIGS Eastern
Local Band Boosters wlll meet.
Tuesday, 7: :ll p.m. in the high
school band room.

. . POMEROY - There w ill be
•an organizational meeting to
."form a Jaycette club. Monday, 7

Happenings
Dexter Church of Christ anniversary
DEXTER The Dexter
Church of Christ will observe Its
85th anniversary with a hom e• coming next Sunday, Oct. 16.
Sunday School will be at 9: :ll
a.m., morning worship at 10: :ll

•

10, 1983

Monday, October 10, 1983

~roy

Rape awareness greater, survey shows

Calendar
MONDAY

~y, Ck~r

Middleport, Ohio

followed by potluck dinner at

12: :Jl p.m. Afternoon. services
will be at 2 p.m., with singing by
the Grubb Family. The public is
Invited.

. Arape aware~esscampalgn held

white women are committed by
last March by WOOdland Centers
white men ? (Yes)
·
(then called the Call!a-JacksonIs It true that rape Is an
Meigs Comm~&lt;nity Mental Health Impulsive, spontaneous act of
Cent en was shown to have b)- sexual passion by men· woo lack
creased awar~ness and knowledge available sexual relationships?
of rape Issues, according to the
(No)
results of random telephone surDo you believe that women
veys administered before and alter
frequently make false reports of
the campaign.
rape to seek vengeance? (No)
In December, 1982,female volunIf a man forces sex on his wife,
teers and Cent er staff m embers
would you, consider this rape?
randomly sullveyed 61 adults 1n the
(Yes)
three-county area regarding rape
Do you believe that most rapists
" m yths'' and "facts" and c6in- are strangers to tbe victims? (No)
_pared resporldents' beliefs to actual
Do you believe that · a healthy
studies .and statistics on sexual
woman can resist rape If sbe really
assault. The questions and their
wants to? (No)
correc t answers were:
If a woman Is forced to have sex
Do you believe that rapes happen on a date or with a man she has had
in rural areas like M eigs county?
sexual relations with In the past,
(Yes)
can this be considered rape? (Yes)
Do you believe that women can
Do you agree with the following
invite rape by t he way they dress or
statement: Men who rape gener·
behave? (No)
ally have normal sex lives and
Do you agree with the statement · score normally on most psychOlogi·
that half of all rapes happen In tbe
cal tests? (Yes)
victim's home 7 (Yes).
Responses to the pre-campaign
Tell m e II y ou agree with tbe
survey determined the theme and
following statement: rape Is an act
Information used In March's "Rape
of violence and aggression, rather
Awareness Month," according to
than an act of sex gratlllcatlon.
Jeanette Rowsey, the center's
(Yes)
Public Information Consultant,
Do y ou believe that most r apes of
who coordinated the campaign with

the theme "Rape Is .n ot sexy- It's
violent!''
· "Local editors and radio stations
were extremely cooperative In
· helping us educate people 1n these
sensitive Issues," Rowsey sal1!.
In addition to media coverage
during the month, posters, displays
1n libraries and literature on rape
issue and prevention were distrlbuted tlu'Oughout the area. and
.public education programs were
presented by center staff.
In the months following the
campaign, workerS surveyed 65
residents a,t random using different
telephOne numbers, In the three
counties to evaluate the Impact of
. the Rape Awareness Campaign.
Eileen Coan, a Mansfield Unlver·
stty Student working as an Intern at
Woodland Centers, analyzed and
evaluated the pre and post·
campaign surveys and found the
following results:
Among the survey respondents,
there were equal numbers of males
and females ranging from 18 to 88
years of age; respondents were also
divided equally among Gallla,
Jackson and Meigs Counties. In
both pre and post-eampalgn surveys,-there was a tendency for older
respondents to answer fewer ques·

!ions correctly , Coan's report
states.
Forty percent of those surveyed
after " Rape Awareness Month"
were aware of the center's campalgn, with 65 percent of Callla
County residents, 36 percent In
Jackson County and I5 percent In
Meigs County being aware of
"Rape Awareness Month."
In the -pre-campaign survey,
respondents '!veraged 6.5 to 56
percent correctly-answered ques·
!Ions. In the post-campaign survey,
respondents scored higher at 7.2, or
62 percent. Among the "post"
survey respondents, those '-VhO
knew M arch was Rape Awareness
Month scored 'III average of 7.8, or
70 percent correct responses.
Altoough the rape awareness
campaign reached a l arger percent
of the public than w as expected by
program staff, "It ls obvious that
much m ore needs to be done to
change the deeply Ingrained beliefs
of rural Americans" as Is stated In
Coan's r eport .

.MINE RUN

STRIP
COAL

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

SPORTSMEN

Have Your ·
Trophies
Professionally
Mounted by

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Authorized John Deer,
Nftv Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

THE
TAXIDERMY

Farm '=quipment
Parts &amp; Service

The campaign and survey were
part of a year-long Rape Preven·
tlon and Education projected
funded by the Ohio Department of
Health.

0'

216 F. . 2nd St .

-.

11 - Hetp Wanted
12-Situated Wanted
1 )..Insurance
14-Business Trai ning
1 !&gt;-Schools
16- Radio. TV &amp; CB Repair

. 1 7 - Miscellaneous
18-WaniBd To Do

Public Notice
PU8UC NOTICE
- The annual electron of the
Mergs County Agn cu.lture Soetety Otrectors wtll be held
Monday. November 7. 1983 tr"1
the Secretary off,ce at the Fa1r
Gtounds at Rock Sprmg. Ohto
from 5 to 9 p m .
Ouahfrcatrons for dtrectors
a\'e that they must be aquallfred
v6rer of Mergs Counrv and must
have a membershr p l!ck.et m
SCjld SOCiety of 1983
C8ndrdates petrtiOns must be
filed wrth the Secretary no later
than 5 p.m Monday. October
j 1, 1983 Only persons holdIn~ memberhs1p t1 ckets at th e
close of the 1983 County Farr
or at least ( 1 5) calendar days
befOre the date of electJOn are
qUalrfted to vote Petttrons can
be ·obtarned fr om the Farr
Secretary
The Metgs Agncultural Society By Mrs Wallace Bradford.
Secretary

21 -Business Opportunity
22-Money to Loan

REIITOR ·

1· ( 614 ) · 992· 3325

23-Professional Services

31 -Homes for Sale
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
· 33-Farms for Sale

34-Business Buildings

41 - Houses for Rent
42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43- Farms for Rent

44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
· 46-Space for Rent
4 7 -Wanted to Rent
48-Equipment for Rent
49-For Lease

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
ELECTlON ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MIU
UMITATIO'N
NOTICE rs hereby g11Jen that
rn pursuance of a ResolutiOn of
the Board Trustees · of the
Tawnshrp Rut land . Ohro
passed on the 28th day of July.
1 983 there wrll be subm1 tt ed to
a vote of the people of sard
Rutland Townshrp at a GEN-

ERAL ELECTION to be held 1n

r•ain open until 7:30 o'clock

P.t!. Of Slid day.
By order of the Board of
Elections. of Meigs County.

20!h day of June. 1983 1here ·

will be submitted to the vote of
the peOple of said Pomeroy

Village at a GENERAL ELEC·

TION to be held in the Village of
Pomerov, Ohio. at the regular
Ohio.
Leslie F. Fultz · places of voting therein. on
Chei,man · Tuesday. the 8th day of NoVember. 1983. the question of
levving. 1n 'xces!!l at the ten m1ll
Frances M . Thomas
ltmitat•on. for the benefit of
Director
,,
Pomeroy Village for the purDated October 7. t 983

61-Farm Equipment
62-Wantedto Buy
6 3-Livestock
64-Hay &amp; Grain
65-Seed &amp; Fertilizer

Public Notice
pose of provrdrng ~nd marntarnrng lrre apparatus. appliances .
bu1ldrngs. or s1tes therefor. or
sources of water supply and
mater1als therefor. or the estab· .
llshment and ma~ n tenance of
lrnes of lrre alarm telegraph. or
the payment of permanent,
part-t1me. or volunteer frremen
or frre hghtrng companres to
operate the same or to purch ase ambulance equrpment.
or to provrde ambulance or
emergency medrcal serVIces
operated by a frre department
or fire frghttng com pany
Sard tax. be1ng: a renEPNal of
an ex1stlng tax of 1 0 mtllto run
tor frve years.
at a rate not exceed1ng 1.0 mills
for each one dollar of valuatton.
wh1ch amounts to ten cents for
each one hundred dollars of
va luatmn. for f1ve years.
The Polls lor sard Electr on wil l
open at 6:30 o'clock A.M . and
remarn open unt1l 7:30 o'clock
P.M. of satd day.
Bv order of the Board of
Electtons. of Me1gs County.
Ohto.
Lesli e Fultz ,
Charrman

Gatlia County
Area Code 614

I

•

NOTICE rs hereby grven th at
1n pursuance of a Aesolutron of
the Board of Tru stees of the
Township of Scipio. Oh1o.
passed on the 1st dav •of July,
1 9B3. there w1ll be subm1ned
to a vote of the people of said
Scipto Townshtp at a GENERAL

ELECTION to be held 1n !h e

NOTICE OF
ELECTlON ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MI(L
UMITATION
NOTICE rs hereby grven that
rn pursuance of a Resolut1an of
the Board of Trustees of the
Township of Rutland. Ohro.
passed on the 4th day of
August. 1983. there 'NIII be

Real Estate General

POMEROY,O.
992· 2259

GEN&lt;RAL ELECTION lobe held
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MIU
UMITATIOI\I

tn th e Village of Mrdd leport.
Oh10. at the regul ar places of
vo11ng therem. on Tuesday, the
8th day of November. 1983.
the quest1on of Iewing. tn
excess of the ten mill limitation.
for the benefrt of Mlddlepon
Vrllage for the purpose _of
prOIJidrng and marntarnrng hre
apparatus. appliances. burldrngs. or s1tes, therefor. or
sources of water supply and
materials, therefor. or establishrng and maintaining of lines Of
f1re alarm telegraph or the
payment of permanent. parttrme or ~,~olunteer fi remen or f1re
fr ghting compantes to operate
the same.
Said tax being: a renewal of
an Et)(istlng tax of 1.0 mill to run
·for five years.
at a rate not exceeding 1.0 mill
Ifor each one dollar of valuatron,
~ which amounts to ten cents for
-each one hundred dollars of
....aluation. for five years.
The Polls for said Election Wlll
open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. and
remain open until .7:30 o'clock

Township of Scip10. Oh1o. at the
regular places otvot1ng therein,
on TUesday, the 8th day of
November. 1983. the question
of lev'ying. in exc~s of the ten
m•lllimitatron. for the benefit of
ScipiO Township for the purpose of providing and maintaining fire apparatu s. appliances.
buildings. or sites· therefor. or
sources of water supply and
materials therefor. or the establishment a'nd maintenance of
hnes of fire alarm telegraph or
the payment of permanent,
PM . of said day.
part-time. or volunteer firemen
Bv order of tbe BoC!J!rd
or fire fighting companies to
Elections, of Meigs County,
operate the same or to pur, chase ambulance equipment or ·Ohio.
Leslie F.
to provide ambulance or emerChairman
gency medical services operated by a fire fighting company
Frances M. Thomas
or a fire department
Director
Said tax berng: an additional ·
Dated
October
7.
1983
tax of 1.5 mills to· run for , five
years.
110) 10. 17 . 24. 31 . 41c
at a rate not eKceeding One and

RACINE . We have 5
properties here. On~ three. five
and 6 bedroom homes . .4Jl with
baths and other utilities. Pick
what you wanl

Pt. Pleasant .'
Leon
Apple Grove
Mason
New Haven
Letan
Buffalo

LAND - Some level near
Racine. some pasture near
Rutland.

Up to 15 words ... One day insertion .. . .... . .. $3 .00
Up to 15 words .. . Three day insertion . ....... $4 .00
Up to 15 Words _.. Si• day insertion ........... $. 7 .00
!Average 4 words per line}

Public Notice

608
E . Main ...lollll.-.;-...

Frances M. Thpmas
NOTI CE rs hereby given that
Dr rector rn pursu8nce of a Res'Oiutin of
Dated October 7. 1983 .
the Councrl of th e V1llage of
Mrddleport. Ohro. passed on ,
1101 10. 17. 24. 3 1. 4tc
the 8th day of Augu st. 1983
therewrll be submrned to a vote ·
Public Notice
of the people of satd Village at a

6 75 45B 5 76 773 882 895 937 -

NI.W LISTING - EASTERII.
DISTRICT Mini farm'
Approx. 33 acres with new
ranch home, 3 bedroom~ 2
baths, main kitchen and
summer kilchen in baSL_ment
.large metal barn. All tHiS for

only $47,500.

Public Notice

·$34,000.
submrned to a vote of the
people of sard Rutland Town-

shiP at a GENERAL ELECTION
to be held m the TownshtP on

Rutland. Ohro at the regular
pl ace 3 of votmg therem. on
Tuesday. the 8th day of November. 19B3. the QueStiOn of
levy1ng. rn excess of t he ten mrll
hm1tatron. for fhe benef1t of
Rutland Township for the prevention of. control and abatement of arr pollutran
Said tax be1ng an addrtiOnal
tax. of 1 5 mrlls to run for frve
years.
at a rate not 8xceedrng One and
live tenths mrlls tor each one
dollar of valuatron. wh rch
arncunts to f1fteen cents for
each one hundred dollars of
valuatron . for trve years
The Polls for sa1d Electron Will
ooen at 6 30 o'clock A.M. and
reman Open untrl 7·30 o'clock
PM of sard day.
By order of the Board of
Elections. of Metgs County.
Oh10
Lesl1e F Fultz.
Cha1rman

2nd St. acrosa from

Rutland, Ohio
PH . 742-2226

773-6040

RIVER Vfi.W - 3 houses with

above town, a nice one in the
upper part ol Pomeroy, and .
one in the lower }Jart .4Jl real
good

bur

ANGUS ASSOC.

Aeaistered Ancus Sale
MON .. OCT. 17. 1983

11

7:00P.M.
Gaflia Co. Fairgrounds

- we've ana-

lyzed the local rain and it's only

Daled Ootober 7. 1983
1101 10. 17. 24. 31 . 4tc

I

calves.
. for Information or
Catalo&amp;ues Contact ,

HOM ELITE
CHAIN SAW
SERVICE
AT
POMEROY
lANDMARK

HARRISONVILLE - Approx 6
acti'S rl lenced cleared ground
and a cute 2 bedroom with an
eqlipped kitchen. Several
building~ for chickens, cows,
etc.. a POfl!l and a big garden
~rea $26,900.
NEAT AND NICE - Describe
this one floor plan home. House
has a full basement with utility
room and a 12x20 slllrage
buiding a~. There is plenty d
carden space on this 2 acres.

spacious home with 3 .bed-

large lam~ room, nice

kil:hen, in lhe counlr)' air, this -

is it l.arlll! ll4 ac:re ~ 2
gnaas, woodbumer and POOl
II!Je. $53,000.

•

.

POMEROY LANDMARK

JICk W. Clruy, lltr.
·
Drive a little and uve 1 lot-frH dlllnrr wltft mlahnum order within 75 miles
Yes, wt 11rvlct wlllt wt 1111. W. trt YOtlr locti HO!~oint D11ltr.
.

Stor1 H011r1: 1:10 to I:JO. 1111 Clolld II 1:00 P.1.
s.mna ltlp, 1111111 .- llhoti Co•nttts
PH. 614-112·2111
.

I

6 Family Yard Sale Mon thru
Wod. 9·6. 833 Fourth Avo.
Furniture. Levia, clothing.
infanta 8ladulta .

I

1

Roofing &amp; Siding Co.

Tree trimming and r8moval.
Free estimates . 614-992-

Dartt Gray Shipped tabby
cat. Male. lost approl(. 5
weeki ago . Big he•d. black
collar, approx. 13 lb1 .
Answer~ to Boo-Boo. In the
Alcina area. Childs pet and
wanted detperately. Re·

8

Route I
Lone Bottom. OH. 45743
985·4193 or 992·3067

Call: 949-226~
· or 949-309 ~ 10_,,

LOST Female Cocker Spaniel buff colored, an•w•r~ · to
Maggie. Owner Ia heartsick.

304-876-4333.

OHIO VALLEY Plumbin~AII~~~i~~~upplies
•"II You Want a
Plumber Bod
You Want Him Good"
IILECTRIC EEl SEWER CLEAIIER

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
.·

RESID~NliAL ~

COMMERCIAL

992-2036

A Phone Call brlnas
Prompt Courteous Servlee
232 E. 2nd
Pomeroy, 0.
Naw's the time to Jtt your furnace ready for cold weattr, 10%
.
Discount on any new turnace purchiSed before O~t. 15.
9 15
HEATING • PLUMBING

Rick Pearson Auctioneer
Service. Ettate. Farm, Antique &amp; nC.uidation ulas.
Ucansed &amp; bonded in Ohio 8r

·water Pipe
•Gas Pipe
•Regu lators
•fittings
·orips

St. Rt. 124. Pomeroy. OH.

r----IDIAL---,
AIR CONDITIONERS

G&amp;W Plastics
and Supply

Roger Hysell
GARAGE

· Also Tronsmi11ion

wva . 304·773·5786 or
304· 773·9186.
Auction avery Fri. night at
the Hanford Community
Center, Truckloads of new
merchandite. every week.
Coneigments of new and
used merchandise always
welcome. Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer. 276-3069 .

Phone:

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Residence: 985·3837

Warehouse: 985-3509

9-IS·I m~ . pd.

.,

GUN SHOOT

S&amp;W TV

RRE DEPT.

APPLIANCE

RAONE.

Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Chake 12

Gauge Shotguns
lQ.IQ.I mo.

AND

SERVICE
Chester. Ohio

Ph. 986·4269 ·
If No Answer. Ctll 915·4382
Dewayne William•
&amp; Scollio Smith

All llakes and Models
Antennt lnstallttlon
House Ctlls and Shop
Service Avtlltble

9-15-1 lit.

~-

8177.
9

Trophy
Manufacturers
: PLAQUES
ENGRAVING

For all your, wiring !
needs; furnaces -re- · 1
pair service and Installation .
Reaideptial
&amp; Commercial
Call 742-3196

AUCTION evtrv Saturday
night, 6 p.m . Mt. Alto
Auction Barn . Consign menta taken every Saturday
1 :OQ till sale -time. Emma
Bell Auctioneer, 304-428-

THE
TROPHY
KING

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean uaed cara.

Jim Mink Chev.-Oidt Inc.
Bill Gono Johnoon
448· 3872

ture, 448-3169, 3rd. 8o
Olivo St .• Gallipolis, Oh .

J.7·tiC

Selection

Of

GOLD SEAL
CONGOLEUM

---'---pt·Pieasaii·f ... ~ ;:

.

&amp; Vicinity .

.· ;

·····················-··-····"' r

ae.:

THREE family garage •..
October 1t &amp; 12. 3037th .
St. New Haven, WV from 9

a .m . to 4 p.m.

Homes for Sale
~

Or will trade for anythlngi of
value. 3 bedroom houM
with fireplace. central air. 2
full baths, in city limiu .'
Immediate pos•aaion. Call

~:
~

•
:

6329 .

.

ln~urance

10% inter~t owner financ- "
ing, new 2112 story, 1750 ;
sq .ft . llv. apace, H'z batha .•

SANDY ANO BEAVER In·

3 bedroom · houH with
acres ground, near Porter,··

13

Call 304-B96·3071.

&gt;

surance Co. has offered
services for fire . insurance
coverage In Gallla County
for almost a century. Farm.
home and personal propeny
coverages are available to
meet individual needs. Con tact Kail Burleson. agent.

Phone 448·2921 :

18 Wanted

to

S:

old At. 180. Coli 446·4202 '
•

or 446·2867.

Located In Syr•cuae-Neer •
school 8r swimming pool. 3 :
bedroom situated on one- .
third acre lot. $24, 800. or ·
will rent for $276 mo.

304-866-3934.
Do

General Hauling and Trash
removal Service. Reliable

and dopondoblo. Coil 448 ·
31 59 between 9 and 6 .
Lawn Mowing no yard to big
or small . Reliable and dependable. For estimate call

446-3169, 910 6.
To take care of someone sick
or needa ho~me care. Days
only) Point Pleasant or Gallipolis area. Good references .

Caii304·46B·181B .
Want to do brush hogging .

$16 on hour. Coll814· 268·
1427.
Nureee aide desire• pan
time. care for elderly. house
cleaning. babysitting, etc. in
your home. Call 446-3918 .
Dump truck for hire, will
haul coal, sand. gravel, etc .

304-875-3190.

•

3 bedroom ranch etyle
home. carpeted. full eize
basement, 1 car garage. In
ground pool 1&amp;x32 .

·..
.:. .

845,000. 8t4·992·686B.

.:

-~

:

2 houses close to Meigs

High

School.

Mutt

Make

us , an

offer.

61 4·992· 7724.

toll. :.
Call ·
•

5 room house on acre k»t .
Pomeroy. First $4,750. or
best offer takes it . 61 4·592·
6778 .

.'
·
•

'

1hree bedroom 2 ltory house
on Park Dr. Newfurnance II
air conditioning. dream kitchen with all appliance• •
Owner will carry second or
all. Small down payment.

304·675·2192 .

•.

3 bedroom, new aeptk:
syltem , city water, g111 heat,

Clifton, wv. $13,600 . 773·
5B80.

6 rooms and bath in Henderson . City water &amp; sewer,
natul'l!lll gas furnace . mult sell. Priced reduced to low
$20's. Bob Kiesling. 1·614448·250t .

21

Business
Opportunity

32

Mobile Homes
for. Sale

814-446-0176 .

MILLS'
ELECTRIC
Residential-New and
re-wmng; Commercial
and Industrial.
BON OED-AII Work
~uaranteed

5 P.M.

CHESTER

AUTO
-PARTS
AND

REPAIR
CHESTER, OH.
9-12·1 mo.

M.L

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER ·
SERVICE

BEOS·IRON. BRASS. old
furniture, gold, sliver dollars. wood ice bo;~Ces, stone
jars, antiques, etc ., Complete households. Write :
M.D . Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy,

CONTRACTING·

RECLAMATION

-Addons and ......doling
Raafitag and gutter wed

Oh. Or 992 -7760.

"Excavating

~·=··· wartc
-Piumblne
and

a.

•ponds
•septic Tanks
"Hauling

oloctrical warlc
(F,.. Eotimatos)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

949-2293

992-6215 or 992·7314

1·1·11C

11·26-tfc

Vinyl Siding
Roofing
SALE
DEAL DIRECT &amp;
SAVE 30% OR MORE
· On Sldinc and Rooflnc.
Gutter 1nd Downspouts

,.Free EetlmMea"
"12 Ya•re EXperience"
··work Guer•nteed"

R. E. HOME
IMPROVEMENTS
Pomeroy. Ohio
PH. 992·8792

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BULDINGS
Sizes start from

12'116'

. R•~in~. Oh.

tlb. 614~J.~g)'

DEALERS wanted. wood &amp;

Buying dally gold. silver
coins, ringe, jewelry, sterling
ware. old coins, large currency. Top prices. Ed. Bur·
kaH Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave.

Vinyl Replacement
Windows

WANTEO: Glnolng llo Yellow

As Low As

$2 50 Each

"Frfte f1timafes"
Also Blown Insulation

lnsulatd Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

A. Mort•n 8t4-992-6370.

Certaint8ed
Material &amp; Labor

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
· to 24'x36'

STARTING AT
INSTALLED
WITH PAD

,.

Sq. Yd. lnotaflod

ANSO IV NYLON
$15.95

RUBBER-BACK

$399 iA~RRY

I ROLL ONL \' IN BROWN

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
.elnaulltion

•Storm Doors.
•Storm Wlndowa
•Repl1cement Windows
•New Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772
·

9·9·1 rno.

HOME LOANS Low liKed

p.m.

592·3061.

Coli 44B·3368 .

4-5-tft

Experienced telephone so-

3

licitor. 304-738· 7418.

Announcements

NEED bobytlllor 10 como to
home,

If

Interested

call

SWEEPER and sawing machine rapalr, pllrtl. and

304·675· 5B06.

IIUppliot.

Immediate Opening . EvenIng R.N. supervloor. Acute
care nursing. management
uperience required. Contact: Director of Personnel,

Pick· up · ond

delivery. Davia VacuuRI
Cleaner, one h•H mile up

Goorg,ot Creek Rd.
44e·0284.

Coil

Fruth

PlooMnt Velloy Hotpllol.
Voloy Drlvo. Pt . Pl. W1l
uno. Ph . 13041 en.
4340.

Racine Gun Club duel •re

lop.growth lndullrlot In tho

due. UI.OO. Mull bo peld
boloro Jon. t, 1884.

US Ia expending ita dealer
network in WV. Minuteman

a.

fall with
GoBeN capaulaa &amp; E·vap

Reduca ufo

'w•ter pille·
Pharmacy.

A manufacturer in one of the

JEWELL'S

PLUI!IBING and
HEATING
•Experienced
•R•aoMbie
•Work Guaranteed

JOB-BIG OR SMALL
. 992-6030
llnersvlllt;'OH.

IQ-3-1"'· of,

AL TROMM'S

BACKHOE
SERVICE

·~Rn.

Alvund

·~tudt
SEPTIC TANKS

A SPECIALTY

742-2328
U1-tfc

22 Money to Loan

n

Professional
Services

p.m . FIICtory ct:oked guns

lndullrlot It loaking for
dool•!'l tnd Milt peoplo to
morket their WIR ELEBS SE·
CURITY SYSTEMS . Ex·

only.

tremely High Income paten·

Gun ehoot Racine Gun Club.

Evory Sundoy llorllng

1

NO hunting In tha Oolmao
Jeffrl11 firm on Locult
_Ridge.
No Hunting ond tretpoulng

.on EdooiHughoeform, Point
PIHunt.

tiel. Coli 304·623·8237 or
write O.M . Rlchordo Dlst.,
P.O . 8o• 2583, Clorkoburg,
wv 2e301.
.
WANTED: I glrltto work, to
repl- ! 'who don't. Coli
304·87~· 1428 . 6·8 houro.

C&amp;rL Bookkeeping
Bro•d r•nga of bookkeeing
and tax tarvicea availlble to
euit your busineaa needs.

Corol Naol

TRI - STATE MOBILE
HOMES . USED· CARS.
TRUCKS . GALLIPOLIS.
CHECK OUR PRICES . CALL
446-7672.
NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV M081LS HOME SALES.
4 MI. W~ilt. !JALLIPOU8.
AT 35. PHONE 446 · 7274.
141(79 2 bdr. unfrun., mobile home, carpeting. appliances, central air &amp; he•t.

$11,000 . Cell 614·2666035 . after 7PM 61 4·261·
1672.
1974 Shuhz12•86, 21orge
bdr., with built-in cabinetl.
2 bathe, air cond., underpin·
ning, Intercom. new ruga,
drape1, furniture, outaide
entrance box. 2 •t• of extra
steps . fire alarm. gee al•m. ·
first aid kit. fireel(tinguisher,

$6,900. 1· 304-882-2237.
1972 12•80 mobile home.
great shape, furn •• Wither,
dryer. dishwasher. fully car· ·

PH. 992-2772

"CUT OUT

PARTS ond SERVICE

738-8637 or write Mountlaneer Stoves, P. 0 . Box 1803.
Huntington, WV 2&amp;719 .

23

FOR FUTURE USE"

•Weaherl •Diahwaahara
A1ngee
•RetrigerMDt's
•Drylfl •FrMnra

stovea. Advertialng ,_. pro-

motion program lor deelers .
Call 304· 897-7083 .or' 304·

rate. Leader Mortgage.
E.
State, Athans, Ohio. 1· 61 4·

9·9-! mo.

985-3561
All Makes

coer free standing &amp; insert

664-4671 . Monday-Friday
1·9 p.m. Sat. &amp; Sun . 1·9

Blown Insulation

9-JH 1110.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

876·1 619, 6 to 9 p.m.

Root. Also new shipment of
trapping auppllee. Hip boots
&amp;. wader1. George Buckley

J&amp;L

r

LISHING CO . recommend•
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to sand money throug,h tha
mail until you have investigated the offering .
Water truck and route in
Mason and Gallia County.
Serious inquiriee only, 304-

Middleport. oh. 614-9923478 .

UTILITY BUILDINGS

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·

Wanted to buy. New. used
antique furniture . Will buy 1
piece or complete households. Also complete Aucti·
oneerin9 tervice. Call Osby

Racine, OH.

Pomeroy, Ohio

Help Wanted

. $13.95

Good

4 family yard tole- 6~31'1 :
Rusaell St . Middleport. Be- •
hind Heinert Bakery. Oct. :
10,11.

Best of care for invalids or l-6-1_4_·2_4_6_·_52_B_1_ _ _ __
elderly who need room and
Middleport, remodeled. five .. ~
board . 614·992 -6022 .
rooms and bath, g .. furWill do housework . S3 .00 an nance, cozy fireplace, gOOd'"· ·
hour, Gallipolis Ferry and neighborhood . Prlcl re- •
Point ...E:Ieasant, 304-676- duced. Call614-992· 6941. :

Wanted to buy Used mobile
homes &amp;r truck camper. Call

9-22- l mo. pd.

CARPET

6040 or 6t4-949 -2129 .

Wanted to buy used coal &amp;
wood haaten. Swain Furni-

320 JERICHO RD.
PT. PLEASANT, W.

'

,
'

.

Auction avery Tuesday
night. Pt. PleaiBnt. WVa.
Auct. Lonnie Neal. Youth
Canter Bldg., Camden St.

12·2CHft

'

31

Situations
Wanted

860.00 money order lost in
vicinity of Pt. Pl. If found call ·

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON

.. .... F,.cimerov···········...·

:=========::.1----"""'-----

word. 814·949· 2133.

Barns.

:~

foI

ward offered ,

Kitchen Cabinets - Roof·
in&amp; - Sidinc - Concrete
Patios - Sidewalks New Construction - .Re·
modellne - Custom Pole

All Work Guaranteed
"Free Estimates"

· Yard Sale 632 Se~ond Ave.
Bedroom ·suite, dining.room
surte, end tables, drape.,
clothing.

Coli 614· 388·8870 . Ro·

9-22·1 mo. pd.

ftema.

614·367·7101 .

After

$1295

'

. _

992·2282

ing and painting. storm
doors and windows.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Other Makes Also Serviced and We-Also Sentlce Kerosene Heaters

'

or

mi•cell'aneous

708 Second AVa. Oct. 13,
9-4. Oct. 14, 9· 12.

12

There has never bean a
better time to sell AVON .

ALSO COMPLETE SERVICE 011 ALL HOTPOINT AND
GENERAL ELECTRIC APPLIANCES.

Porch Sale Winter clothing,
and

Lost and Found

6

•

Middleport

White uniforms clothing. ole
naca . tools . furniture .
diahea, etc. All week 225
3rd. AVo. Gollipollo. 9·6.

•

phono 304·
ofter
KITTENS
to773-6268
a good home.
6 p.m.

- Septic Systems
LARGE or SMAU JOBS
PH . 992-2478

H. L. Writesel
•
ROOFING

IO·J.l mo.•

CONTACT 992-2156

.
SERVICEMAN ON DUTY
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8:30 to 12' and 1 to 5
SATURDAY 8:30a.m. to 12 Noon

IF YOU hillle been looking lor a

992-7583

'PERSONALIZED POOLS"
•

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

614-992-2181

$29,000.

10-3·1 mo i&gt;d

2136 .

Dozers
Backhoes
Dump Trucks
Lo-Boy
Trencher
Water

•
'

&amp; Vicinity

KITTENS. 3 montho old. to

- G.as Lines

GREG ROUSH

downspouts, J,rtter clean·

CARRIER WANTED

OlCK NEAL
Rt. 2, Vinton. Oh. 45686
PH . 614·381·8287

2 percent water.''

w. v,.

a.

Gallipolis, Ohio
SELLING: Cows. heilors, elub
heilers. 4·H &amp; FFA. yoana
bulls, 30 or more quality elub

news,

&amp; Vicinity

good homes, call 304·675-

·- Sewer

Sidings
.
15 YEARS EXPERIENCE

CONSTRUCTION

Calf 614-742-2214

Housing
Headquarters

SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

D~rector

--

•Roofing
•Insurance Work
•Cu11om Pole Bldga.
and Garages
•Electrical &amp;
Plumbing
•Aluminum &amp;. Vinyl

Poll Office

Mason.

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

New Homes
Extensive Remodeling

All types of roof won, new
or repair, gutters and

Only

th~. One 2 bedroomer on 124

Frances M. Johnson

Also Army Supplies.
Radios, Watches &amp;
General Variety

C.. L. KITCHEN

FARMS - 5 acres in Southern
wrth house; 76 acres will!
house, bam. near l.ang;llille;
58 acres wrth bank barn and
house in Nease Seltlemenl;
145 Acres near Harrisoi!Yille 011
Rl 143, and 96 acri'S near
Rutland.
•

$25,000.

RW'roAS . H~ E. Cllllnd, Jr. •
011992-6191
Je8i TIUIIIII Mt-2660
Dottie T1111tr 992-5692
Otlit:e 992·2259 • •

WOODS - Wanl to have
privacy and live among the
wild. Just the thing oul
SYRACUSE - · Modern 3
bedroomer on an~elg lot One
floor plan, carpeting garaga
shrubbery, out of· flood. Only

PRIC~ REDUCED POR·
TIANO- Th~ nice 2 bedroom
home wrth full basement on a 1
acre lei ~ a real buy at

rooms,

NI.W LISTING - Nice lookini
3 bedroomer wrth view of river.
Cook and bake units, I~ baths,
ho,t-water heat $40s.
,. -

RUTLAND - 5 to pick lrom.
Starting at $19,500 to $32,500.

85-General Hauling
86-M.H. Repair
87-Upholstery

110). 10. 17. 24 . 3 1. 41C

NOTICE.OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
UMITATION

Mason Co .• WV
Area Code 304

992- Middlepon
Pomeroy
985 - Chester
343-Ponland
2 47 - Letan Falls
949 - Racine ,
742 -'- Rutland
6!i7 - Coolville

$99 TO $189 .

PH. 1-304-773-5(»34
MASON, W. VA.

NI.W LISTING-I.&amp; 2 fami~
home next to telephone
buildini and Crow's. Hot wate1
heating paneled down, nice ·
woodwork and l~ rooms.
Asking $38,000.

...

83-Excav•ting
84-Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeration -

Frances M. Johnson
D•rector
Dated October 7. 1983

Public Notice

exchange.~

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446- Gallipolis
367- Cheshire
388 - Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256 - Guyan Dist.
643 - Arabia Dist.
379 - Walnut

81 - Home Improvements
82-Plumbing &amp; Heating

Public Notice
frve tenths mills for each one
dollr of valuat 1on . whrch
amounts to f1fteen cents for
each one hundred doll ars of
valua tron. for f1ve years.
The Polls for sa1d Electton wrll
open at 6:30 o'clock A.M. and
rema1n open untrl 7:30 o"clock.
PM . of sa1d day.
By order of the Board of
Electrons. of Mergs County.
Oh10
Leslie H. Fultz
Cha1rman

cover 1 he

following lelephone

3 5· Lots &amp; Acreage ·
26-Real Estate Wanted

the TQINnShiP of Rutland. Oh10.
at the regu lar places of vot1ng
th erern. on Tuesday. the 8th day
of November. 1983. the ques ·
t1on of levymg. tn excess of the
ten mrll ltmrtaliOn. for the
benefrt of Rutland Townshtp for
the purpose of provrdrng and
marntarnrng fif e apparatus, appltanceS. bwldrngs, or Sites
therefor. or sources of water
supply and matenals therefor.
or the establishment and mam11"01
3. 10. I 7. 31c
tenance of lmes of frre alarm
•.
telegraph or th e payment of
permanent. part-ttme. or volunteer firemen or frre lrghtmg
• , Public Notice
companres to operate the
same
Sard tax berng: a renewal of
NOliCE OF
an ex•st1ng ta)( of 0.3 m1ll to run
ELECTION ON
for friJe years.
TAX LEVY IN
at
a rate not exceedrng Three
EXCESS OF THE ·
ten th s m111 far each one dollar
TENMIU
of valuatron. whrch amounts to
UMITATION
'NOTICE rs hereby grven that thr~ cents for each one
rn pursuance of a ResolutiOn of hundred dollars of va luatton.
the Couhcrl of the Vtllage of for frve years
The Polls for satd Election wrll
Syracuse. Ohro. passed on the
7th day of July. 1983.therewlll open at 6:30 o'clock A.M . and
be- subm1Med to a vote of the . remam open untrl 7:30 o'clock
•
people of sard Syracuse Vi llage P.M. of sard day
By
order
of
the
Board of
afa •GENERAL ELECTION to be
Elec11ons. of Me1gs County.
hetd in the Vrllage of Syracuse.
Ohro. at the regu lar place of Ohra.
Leslie F. Fultz
ve tiRg therein. on Tuesday. the
• Ghaiuoafl,
8!11' day of November. 1983.
tO. • question of levyrng, rn
Frances M . Th omas
· excess of the ten mtll limitatio n.
Director
fof.. th e benef1t of Syracuse
Village for the purpose: o11 Qated October 7, 1983
provrding and ~aintaining ~~~ e 1
aJ'pifratus. appltances. bulld- 1101 ·10. 17, 24. 31 . 4tc
1ngs. and srtes therefo r .Of
SIJUK:ti!S of water supply and
Public Notice
rmnerias therefor. and the
p-ayment of volunteer firemen ·
NOTICE OF
to,operate the same.
ELECTlON ON
: ·Said tax being: a renewal otl
TAX LEVY IN
an-existing taM" of 1.0 mill to run I
EXCESS OF THE
foe- ftve years.
• '
TEN MILL
at a rate not exceeding 1.0 m1ll
UMITATION
for each one dollar of IJaluation.
NOTICE is herel&gt;y given tha1
which amounts to teh cents for .
each one hundred dollars of 1n pursuance of a Resolution of
j the Council of the Village of
valuation, for· five yea rs:
•The Polls for said Election will , Pomer9V. Ohio. passed on the

cplln at 6:30 o·clotk A.M. and

Cla.~sified page.~

71 -Autos for Sale
72-'l"rucks for Sale
73-Vans &amp; 4 WD
7 4-Motorcycles
75-l!oats &amp; Motors
76-Auto•('arts &amp; AccessQ._ries
·77-j'uto Repair
· •
78-Camping Equipment

Kerosene
Heaters

SHOP
New Lima Roed

NEW LISTING - Trailer 1111
near Sea~ for $1,500.
•

...r

51-Household Goods
52-CB. TV &amp; Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54- Misc . Merchandise
55- Building Supplies
56-Pets for Sale
5 7-Musicallnstruments
58-Fruits &amp; Vegetables
5 9 · For Sale or Trade

&amp;

KITCHEN &amp; SON

. Phone

~

1 -Card of Thanks (paid in advance)
2-ln Memory
(paid in advance}
3-Announcements
4 -Giveaway
5-Happy Ads
6-Lostand Found
1 · Yard Sale (paid iti advance)
P-Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction
1 9-Wanled to Buy

······c;aiiijioiii........ .

'304-875-2474.

Real Estate General

' '&gt;I
................................
' .... • •

Coal

9-19·1 mo.

1-lt!c

/-------------------------------------------------------------------~--------~----------------------,
I

D&amp;J
SAVE MORE-MART

.

·~ '•i.~

I

3 adorable kitten• to good
home, 2 atriped, 1 aolld .

BOGGS

-:r..

tfti~~-"'~II,...,.V-'Wl 1nwff..V,..-. :
•

*

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Pas•

.

SERVICE

Ranges,

Daily Sentinel

Giveaway

o..
PAT HILL FO RD '

NEW LISTING - Business
bid~ Business section of
Middleport

,lliiA&amp;IBI

USED
APPLIANCES

$3()0
. 0.

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

•W ·'•'•
" '' '""'.............................
"'•• ' •·••
...... ~

4

- - - - - : - - - - - - - ' T " - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - r - - - - - - - - - - ' " T - - - - - - - - - - - 1 1 yr. old pon Cockopoo
friendly w kldt. Colt 446·
6632.
Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
J&amp;F
RADIATOR
2 b1g1 of Yard Sale hems.
CONTRACTING
SIDING
Coil
614- ~BB-8449 .
•DOZER
We
can
repair
and
r&amp;··B~CKHOE
Clothll, mens big sizes. Call
COMI radifnOIS and hell·
•SEPTIC SYSTEMS
446·3718 .
Washers, Dryers
•LliiESTDNE
COI'IIe. We car. olio
Adutt m•l• Cockapoo to
•WATER. GAS •nd
Refrigerators
acid boil and •"" out ra"Beautiful, Custom
good home. After 3 p.m . call
SEWER LINES
diators.
We
a!•~ . pair
Built Garages"
Air Conditioners
814-985·4488.
•PONDS. ~ECLAIIATION
T.....
Ca
II
for
free
siding
es·
WORK
WE
ALSO
DO
A TON
Pupploo8woektold.Mixod
•LAND CLEARING,
timates, 949-2801 or
SERVICE CALLS
! brood. 614· 992-2038.
CONCRETE
WORK
949-286.0.
PH . 992-2280
992-2196
II(IIIDED &amp; WORK GUAAANTEED
742-2352
1 mala blue dobe~man, e
Middleport, Ohio
No su·n day Calls .
PHONE
Jill
CLIFFORD
Route 4, Pomeroy
montho old . 814 · 892 ·
..! 2 2J.IIC
l-13·tfC
l-l l·tfc
9 12 uc
7468.
992-720 I " ·"'

PHONE 992-2156

T

The

Business Senices

EAFORD(B

The Daily Sentinel

Middleport, Ohio

446-3862

PIANO TUNING L:owor
priceo-regular tuningadiscounto to Senior Citizens,
Churches I. •choola. Ward's

Keyboord, 304·675· 382.,.
PIANO TUNING · LANE DA·
NIELS . 742 · 2951. -Aioo
'ceah for Spinet or Grand
piano '_ lEven damaged con -

dillon}.

peted . Cell614-367-7176.
4 mobile homes. 1 0 ' and 1 2'
ft . wid8 . 2 bedroom· ·
furnished . Low priced :
Brown's Trailer Park. 614992· 3324.

19B1 14 ft.x70 ft. SchultZ
Trailer. 12ft x 5~ ft. porch. 3.
bedrooms, 1 Yi baths. 614-·

247-3726.

'

Bayview Deluu 14x70. Ex ~·
cellant condition. Centrel
air. 2 bedroom, den, under-

pinned . S1 1, 700. 614·992·
7380 after 6 p.m .
•. ·
14x70 Skyline, 816 ,000. 2bedroom luxury modal, .cir··
cular kitchen, dining room
with bow window, bathwtth
garden tub, separate
show•!, carpet. wuhar.
dryer. stove, frlge. covered
Pltio, central •lr, under·~

pinned utility building. Nl.:.
lot. 614-992·3063.
Nowly remodeled 2 11ory
fr1me, 1 Yl b•th, 3Ya acrM,
city echoola. riverview.

f32,000. Coli 441·4222
between 9 a. II.
4 bdr. ranch homO. large LA.
full basement. wh:h garage,
wood burner included. city
schools. 2 mile8 f ::om town.

Coli 446·0276 .

By owner House whh 2
aor• mort~ or IMa, bMn
Nmodelecl, orchord, 87 ft.
well, 122.000. Colt· 814·
388·9013.

USED MOBILE HOME; IN
GOOD SHAPE, 304·171·
271 t .
1979 mobile home 1 4x80

unfurn. Vz acre lot, chain ~fftt

fence In Ohio. $13,!100.·'
304-676-1287.

- -- - - - - &gt; -.•
1978 14K70 troiler. 3

bed:

room. 2 batllJ, large kitchen,

.1 o.ooo. 30'4-773-1023.
1981 Schuhz. both •

~.

extra nice, with centql ltlr.

304-671-1371.

'• .

�-

'

•

Monday, O..IOber 10, 1983

.'
Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport,

32 Mobile Horne•
•

for

51 Household Goods

Sale

For oalt by owner In Hlttview
Sub Dlv, Oreer- Rd. 'A mile

off lit. 2. Mobil, homo wkh
·Mid room.. 3 br, living room

12x24, kitchen 12•1 2, d.r.
12x11 . utility r. 12•12.
24x12 outbuilding 1-24x10
outbuilding. fru i t house
10.:10 on three l1rge 1011.

Good water. alec atove.
trig ., elr cond., dryer. 304·

n3-5282.
1981 14x70, Shulti limkod
moblkt home. microwave.

dlahw11her, centrel air, underpennlng, three bed·
rooma. 1 Yz bathe. •~cellent
condition, ' 115.800. Coli
304-1175-11049 after 6 p.m.

1978 1 4k70 TRAILER. 3
bedroom, 2

bath•. large

kitchen, 110,000 . 304773-5023.

33

Farms for Sale

40 acre farm very nice. 4
bdr. houte. 2 baths, 2 large
bema. Tobacco beae. Cell
814-258-6790.

~----------r----------·1
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 bdr . trailer. furnished . Cell

44

A

partment
for Rent

Apartments . 304- 1175 5548 . .

446-0756 .

35 acres at Rodney on W.T.

Wauon Rd. Owner finenc·
lng available. Coll446-8221
after 6 weekct.ya.
One acre lot wrth platform
for houae and in -ground
pool. for information , 81 3865 -1232.
2-approx . 1Y.:! acr'e Iota for
ulo, tavol toto, 13,900 each.
Call 814-388-6801 .
14'-"2 acrea Roush Hollow Rd
, off Rt. 05:', ' nice road,
bUilding apace. rural warer
close. Cotlll14•388' 9718.

APARTMENTS, mobile
horrill, houses. Pt. Pleasant
end Gallipolis. 814 -448·
on Rt . 588. Cell 614·245- 8221 .
9170.
TWIN RIVERS TOWER .
Trailer for rent. Call 448- Apanmenta now available to
alda~y &amp; dioabled whh on
1052.
income of leu than
2 bdr. unfumiahed mobile 112.300. Ranting lor 30
home in Cheahire. Dep. percent of adjusted lncome.Phono 304-676-11679.
required . coli 446 -4369.
2; bdr . trailer with large
room, 1 mile out of Galllpolla

2 bdr. mobile home for rent
on Rt. 180. eteo rant. 150
depooit . Coli 814-388 97113.

43 Farms for Rent

Wanted to buy. 1·6 reaaona·
bly priced acrea in GallipoliaCheahire aree tor home site.
614-992-11177.

Assumable 8Y.I percent loan
on this 20 acres. ii~a bam,
(24x32). outbuilding end
workshop, cellar houee and
a 3 bedroom, 2 batha.
woodburner in living room .
Drilled well. Coli 304-8763030 or 676-3431. May
consider trade.

44
4 bdr. house 6 acres of land
on Rt. 160 in VInton. Central
air, f360 mo .. aec. dep. &amp;:
rof. Call 446-3176.
For rent or sale 5 rms. &amp;.
bath. large garage, garden,
juat outside city , city
schools. Call 446-4798.

1 or 2 adulto. 16 minutal
from Gallipoli1 . Call 614266-,198.

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr. Regency Inc. Aportmanes HUD Available Utiltiea partly tum .• apartments
available now. 1200 per mo.
4 room apt. utilities partially
paid 1150. A-One Real
Estates. Carol Vaagar, Real·
tor. Call 304-676-6104 or
304-676 -7388.

1- - - - - - - - - -

pretera~y

3 bedroom, SyNcuse. Ref·

2bdr .. 2 bath, 11 Court St.
Rat. ll dop. 1325 mo. Coli
44 -4926 .

eret1cea required. 614-992•
2728 .

Unfurnlahed, 1 bed~oom. all
urilitkta paid except electric.
Goll . Farry. 304-676-1371
or 875-3912.
2 bedroom apt. in Hender-

son. 304-676-1972.
FURNISHED efficiency
apar1mant, utilities paid,
deposit required . 304-896·
3450.
2 bedroom apt .. at Gall.
Forry. 304-1175-2548 .
3 &amp; 4 roOm furnished apta.

614-992-,5434, 614-9926914 or jo4-882-2666.

h - - - - - - -- -

Furnished apt. 1186. Water
pold, 2 bdr.. 1 31 'h 4th.
Galllpollo. 446-44111after 7
p .m.

Nice 3 bdr. home 1226 mo ..
aduha. Located 4
mi. North of Holzer on Rt.
160. Call 446-7322.

TWO bedroom apartment in
Mason, adults only, no peu.
304-1175-1462.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sl~pin.g Rooms
end light houltl keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Coli 446-0756.
Sleeping room $1 16, utilitie&amp; paid, range It retrlg.
Share bath . Man only. 448«16 after 7 p.m.

46 Space for Rent

2 bedroom conage, new
carpet. good Jocation. in
town, 304-676-71134 altar

For lean modern. unfurn .. 2
bdr. apt. Overlooking ciry
park. lncludaa range &amp; reNice 3 bedroom home, 2 lrlg . 1175 mo. Call 4411baths. 2 fJreplacea. heat 1819 or evenings 448pump, large kitchen, garage 2326 .
&amp; potlo . 1326 . per
month .882-2405, 882 - Furnished 3 rooms, with
2447 or 676-6640.
private bath. Reference preferred . Coi1448-2215 .
For IIIIa by owner in Hillview 1 - - - - - - - - - aub dlv. Greer Rd. V4 mi. off Jackson Eatete Aputmenta
Rt. 2 . Mobile homaw~h add 53&amp; Jock1on Pike IEqual
rooma. 3 b.r., living room Housing Opponunlty) has
12x24, kitchen 12x12. d.r. one bedroom apJ~rtments
12x11, utility r. 12x12. rent starting at t167 and
24x12 outbuilding, 1 · two bedroom rent starting at
24JC.10 outbuilding, frujt 8193. 8200 . deposit. Cal
houee 10x10 on threal~rge 446-2746 or leave me11age
Iota. Good water. Elecatove, on answering "rvice.
trig. olr cond. dryer. 304- 1----_::.__ _ __
773; 5282.
2 bedroom apt., furnished,
utllitle1 pold, 1276, 1100
3 or 4 br. new carpet and dap .. odult1 only, no poto.
paint. garden tpace, 281 B Coli 446-0952.
Madison Ave. Pt. Pl. Lease. 1 - - - - - - - - - securlty deposit and ret. Furnished upataira apt.. 3
304-8&amp;3-54117.
rooms &amp; bath. clean, adults
only, no "pats, ref. req.
2 bedroom. unfurnished Utilities paid. Call 448 houH, •200. 1 momh. dep. 1519.
raq. Jorrlcho Rd . 304-&amp;75- 1 - - - -- - - - - 7308.
Unfurnished 1 bedr. ept ..
nearly new, no peta, t119
Four room house in country, woter lurnlohed. 150 dapfurn .·YJ barh. drilled well, car ooit. con 4411-31117.
port. 304-&amp;75-4123.
1 - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - t Completely fumiahad upTOTAL electric home. call stairs, one bedr. apartment.
after I p.m. 304-8711-1711 . newly docorotad, edult1,
referencet. Centrally loTWO bedroom. Iorge kit- cotod, 1200 mo. plus dop.
chan, lull booomant and Coli 44&amp;-223&amp; or 44&amp;yord. 1175. o month. dop- 2581.
oolt . 304-&amp;76-22641- -- - - - - - -0¥0ningl.
Apt. 1 bedroom troll.,. 2
bedroom. overlooking Ohio
River. Kan•uga. Fosters
Troller Pork, 4,411-1 802.
42 Mobile Homes
5.

l----------

Large trailer lot approximately V:a mile from Rt. 7 on
Addison Bulovllle Rd . Call
448-3n5.

COUNTRY MOBILE .Homo
Park. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call
992-7479.
Mobile home Iota for renr,
water and Hwer furnished.
1 amall child accepted.
304-1176-,076.
''

··~

.······
. ....... ...... ..

51 Household Goods

Fireplace inaert-atlll in factory c.,ton - automatic
controla · 2 blowera-glau
door-ash pan-fits 30 in. to
48 in . fireplace-burns wood
or coal. $690. Coli 814258-1216 .
Plz:za oven. $400. Joea
Pizza in Cheahire. Call614·
367-0871 .

'

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220 .
Briarpatch Kennels Prof••·
aional AU -breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spl·
nlel puppln. Call 814-3889790.
Registered Pointer pupa. 8
wko. old . Call 614-2459439 .

Dragonwynd Cattery..Kennela. AKC Chow pupWoodburning $tovea, fr~es · pies, CFA Himalayan, Perrending, fireplace Inserts, alan end Siamese klttena.
mobile home approved, &amp;: Call 448-3844 after 4.
tumance ad-ona . Jividana
Farm Equipment, 441- AKC rag. male Beagle pup
1675 ..
tor sale. Also older trained
dog. 614-843-6154.
Firewood pickup or d~li­
verad. Call 614-256-8689. Registered male red buff
Cocker Spaniel pup. Also
Uaad Ditch witch trencher
cats for sale. 614modal 2300. 1-614-694- Siamen
992-2607.
7842 .
AKC Registered female
Sherwin-'WIIII•m• Nova air- cocker spaniel. 2 yeara old.
leal electric paint sprayer.. $66 . Al1o AKC raginarad
Uka new. 1160. Call 614- cocker spaniel puppiea. 1
388-9790.
male, 1 female . •a&amp;. each .
614-742-2801
.
Troybilr Tillers Sale• &amp; Service. Swishera Implement, Rabbltl 11. each. Phone
St. Rt. 7, North, Gallipolia.
304-676-3081 oftar 4:30
&amp;14-446-0475 .
p .m.

Furnlohed 2 bdr., ctoon, citY
ulllltln, prlvoto toi. good
location, no children or pot,
1181 mo. Colt 44&amp;-0938.
21Mir. mobile homo wotar s.
-age furnlahed. Coii44B01101.

belr. troller 12x&amp;0 '
· U71
Nice 3mo.
pluo u1Hhln. 314
3 rd St.. KanMrge. Colt 44&amp;7441
·
"1878 2 bctr .. fully oorpotacl
with - - • dryW, on 2
..,,. tot Poftar - · t200
mo. Coli 114-31'1 -1101.

plld, 1171 mo., 1110 dop ., I
mo. Inn required. Call
446-3887 after I .
Furniahed apt. 2 bdr ., 1131
2nd., A111., Gottlpolio. 1198
wotor pold. Coli 448-441&amp;
otter 7 p.m .

1 bed room Apt. 1118. mo.
Including utllltloo. Equol
houtlng oppol'lunlty. Con- . Vlltago Manor Apto.
614-982-7787.

rni' ------.---

Mlo•w...

1977 Nom•d
contllned, air cond., awn·
ing. exc . cond. Call after
4:30, 814-246-9153.

~e 's ((of
fo j!.e

10112/83_.

·•

EVENING

~:

6:oo ••

Urge utility trailer, 1200.
Coli 446-81 31 .

l(;l)tliNct!

Hy..,._

If '~

\II~T~e&lt;h!

Buy Factory Direct. Lightweight. fibergl111 Scemp
13' and HI' travel trallara &amp;.
new 19' 8th wheel. Call now
toll trH 1-800-348-4912
for tree brochure and SAVEl

Prairie
(I) &lt;1D Y.E.$. Inc.

CAPTAIN EASY
IT'!&gt; Ai-l- 5- E-T... JUST
LIKE 'IOU WANT ED IT, E ASY:

,.0. .

GU ~!&gt;$
THEY' Ll- ~ E

I

I 'Ll- 5&amp; &amp;ACK

6:30

WIT H TH E OTHERS

HERE PRETTY
. SOON.

IF YOU NE-ED

7:00

81

~~====::====r.~c~,~-~.,~-~"~. ~~~;;~
61 - Fa~m Equipment

71

Autos for Sale

19&amp;11 Chevy Impale; roily
wheels. lenered radial•. new
point. $1200. 30.4 -6761724.

Livestock

Nice 3 yr. old Aroblon
gelding. Would conalder SHOW CAR 1 966 Novo
trade. Coli &amp;14-384-2286. Super Sport. "Too much to
llat" muat: ... to appreciate .
3 Shotoo 8o 2 IOWO. 1 boor, 1 15,500. 00. phone 304rubber tired farm wagon. 876-7167 or 304-676 614-949-2237.
2952.
Bred hereford COWl . Reg.
polled hereford bull. Contoct
Harley Rice. 614 - 6673389.

Raglnered Hereford bull &amp;
hey for oala. 304-8752991.

·rwo

registered Hereford
cows with calvea. 33
nlontha old. *350. each
304-882-291 il.

1969 Volkowegan Bug,
priced 1660. 304-676 2678.
1974 Volkswagen Super
8Htla. Call after &amp;, 304675-1390.

1974 Galaxy 500. 2 door
hardtop. 614 -949-2689 .
1300.

COW &amp; coli, phone 304175-421 o .

64

Trucks for Sale
1979 4x4 Chllvy ou1o.,
eliding bock gtooo, 48,000
mi. Cot14411-1012 otter&amp;.

Hay &amp; Grain

large round balea of hey,
t20.00 each. Will deliver.
Cell 4411-10&amp;2.

.-.. ......... ······
'

Autos for Sale
71
---------

STUCCO PLASTERING textured ceilings commercial and residential. frn
eatlmatas . . Call 614-2661182.
7:30
..

· ~A

MIIJUTE:,LCAA1T

IIEAR A"'l\ltJb 'M1H 11-11'5
0011 I~ M-1 tARS ...

8:00.

.."

RINGLE'S SERVICE . experienced roofing. including
hot 'ar application, carpenter, elactrician, mason. Call
304-675 - 2088 or 8764660 .

• WE HAVE REASOr!
10 &amp;ELIE\IE SHE'S
Ali ILL~IIL 111../EifM

MAYSE THAl'G
HIM AT TH'
1.700FI NOW~

Warer W,.Jia. Commercial
end Domestic. Teat t'loles.
PumP• Sales and Servtce .
304-896-3802.
E &amp; R Tree Service, fully 1:
insured , free estimat8s.
Phone 614-387-0636, call
after 5.

·'

SEAMLESS GUTIERS, One
piece cuatom fir your home.
Guaranteed. Advanced Gut* .,
tar, (Oay 614-592-4066,) ·
(night 614-698-8205.)

ALLEYOOP

Roofing · and Catpe'ntry
work, general repairs. call
Anthony Wllllam1on, 614367-0194.

OOP'S IN 'THE Ci-iAMBER, DOC ...
BUT WE DIDN'T GET ROBERTS!

1971 Chevy 4 WD. ,_.ton
PU. ou1o, PS, PB, looded, 41 =::::::=::::::~::::;::;:::===
ln. lilt kit, 38 ln .. Monotar
Plumb"lng
mudder ttrea. alum . wheels, 82
&amp; Heating
duel headers. roH bar with
off rood lltoo. log Ilea.
AM·FM atero redio· tape.
moke good puller. U,495.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Coli 44&amp;-41143.
AND HEATING
.Cor. Fourth and Pine
1 982 \'1 ton Dodge Ram Phone 446-3888 or 446pickup whh toppor. 4 apaad. 4477
otondord 1hlft. 1114-9926434 or 814-992-5914.
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Fomerly Dewitt'S
Plumbing. Coli 614-311773 Vans S. 4 W.O.
05711 .

1----------

..• '
GASOLINE ALLEY

.'.·

vI ... :·.

·'·

HE GONE IN FOR
DIVERSIFICATIONTHERE ARE PLANTS
AND SU6SIDIARIE5
IN EVERY PART OF
THE WORLD.

..

'"·.:·
.,.

.

··~,

(,1&lt;

BARNEY

-

large wood burning ..,d-on
furnace-brand new-htltl
hot water · automatlc
controla-flrebrlak lined.
11110. Call 114-21&amp;-121&amp;.

w-

a.

d

C:.t814-381.~;;;~·

d

'

1----------

...
'

'

WAS JUST

••••
•

•

I

'

I:

MADE FOR
SPOONIN'--

'!J~

DID

'IOU

REMEMBER
TO SLOP
TH'HOGS,
. MAW?

--AN' THAT AIN'T .
ALL THEY WAS
MADE

FOR!!

- 1:'.I
'.
•'
-~·
I'

~-=-~,:.,c::t!n.:':.'n=
tide

01 , Ulad 3 morlthl.

85 General Hauling -' -· j:
-- - - - - - - •~ ·',. ,.,
,
1
JONES BOYSWATEII SER- ""~:
VICE . Call &amp;14-367-7471 ~iG.

=.:~;on.:· !:! 5 r:Cjol~l=il;·3~4;:8ill~.~~==-I orWotor
&amp;14-387-0511 .
814-112-3117.
houllng, Foot Sal'lllca.

,__n'o l'or Lno laPI!lolvo aon a truollo, loni0-1----:-- - - - - · 114-742-2734.
AHentlon Auto Pelntlng
1171 Ford llron T-o. 1180 1nd up. lody work,
P.l.; p.b •• body oao. - d. eo&lt;tro pen nrt...,g, ouotom
1710. Witt - - · -· otrlpto.
"8·0111304-773-IOUI-11 p.m.
1171 Ptym- Duetw, I 78 Motors Homea
cylinder. Only IIIII. 114·
• Campen
742-2171.

~~'P.~~~~

con ·

I=========

1110 1mat1 olD LTD
101. pe. pb. em. fm. 4 door,
f . gold. A·t . .......
40,000 mil••lloob .• ••100. 114742-1010.

••.ooo.

_,

11' ft. Tarry - · PUIIy
----ned. ol..,. •.

. . . . . . . . . . . . II . . . . .

piDniD ..... ~ l'ltld .....

· · 1 ..000. tlrm. lt48U-1111.

~

low rotoo. Coli &amp;14-2561743.

Now Houllng llood Lump or
I t - Coot. Minimum 4 '
ton. 814-387-7101 .
JIMI WATER IEIIVICE ..
Colt Jim Lenior, 304-8717397.
.

87

PEANUTS

• I

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'

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A80UT '(()l}R
SUPPER:.

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Upholatery

TIIIITATE . ·
UPHDL8TIII'I' IHOP
1 1II - · Ave., GoHipotlo,
441· 7113 or 441-1133.

v

(]) MOVIE: 'Becket'
Cil I Spy
(J) NFL'o Graoteot Momenta
NFL· s Greatest
Moments presents high·
lights of the 1973 Wo~d
Champion Miami Dolphins
and the -1974 World Champion Pittsburgh Stealers. (60
min.)
ill Portrait of America:
Texas
ill 81
ID That' •
Incredible!
II (I) ® Scarecrow and
Mro. King
(I) &lt;ID Oil Kingdom• 'Kings
end Pirates.' Tonight's program looks at the discovery
of oil in the Persian Gulf and
the amount of petrodollars
that have come into these
countries. (60 min.} ICiosod

~.

• MOV E: 'The Young
Savagea'.
9:00 1J (I) (I) MOVIE: 'Adam'
CIJ 700 Club Today's program features a New Zealand couJMe
sam
as
missionaries to the United
States.
(J) AU10 RIICI1111 '83: USAC
Champlonohlp Dirt Cora
from Roooburg, OH
ill Osmondti et Billy Bob'o
ill G llJ NFL football :
Plttoburgh et Clocinnatl
0 ill !ill AfterMASH Alma
Cox aats up Klinger to fail his
civil service test in order to
replace h im with her own nephew .
ill Ill&gt; Graot Performenceo
'A Tribute to Balenchine.'
This special tribute to the
late choreographer George
Balanchine features three of
Balanchine's masterpieces
by tho Now York C~y BaNet .
(2 hrs.l
9:30 (]) MOVIE: 'The Bell Jar'
ill !ill Country Mualc
Aaaociation Awarda Ann
Murray and Willie Nelson
host this annual special
which salutes the best in
country music . (90 min .l
10:00 ill TBS Evening New•
.INN Noiws
.1 0 :30 (]) Album Flaoh; Ronotadl
Ill Ozzle end Harriet
• Comedy Time .
1 1 :00 1J (]) (I) II (I) ® Newa
(])MOVIE:. 'lluurrectlon'
CIJ Another Ufo
(J) SportaCentor
ill All In the Family
(I) Dr. Who
&lt;ID Pilgrimago to Mecca
• Benny Hill S._
11 :15 (J) ESPN'a Saturday Night
ot the Fights Saturday
!'light at the Fights preoonts
· a 10-Round Lightweight
bout featuring Robin Blake
vs. Tyrone Crawley from
Loveland. TX .
1 1 :30 1J (]) !D Tonight Show
(I) MOVIE; 'So Fino'
CIJ Dobie Gllllo
ill Catlin•
1!1 (I) Hol'l to Hart
(I) Latenlght America
®M•A•S•H
Twilight Zone
12:00 CIJ Buma &amp; Allan
ill MOVIE: 'Strongero
WhonWeM-'
ill D llJ Newt
!ill MOVIE: 'The llreat
Lover'
1
• Thicke of the Night
12:30 D (]) (I) Late Night with
Devid Lln~n
CIJ Jock Benny Show
ill a llJ Nlghtllna
D CIJ Columbo
12:45 (]) MOVIE: 'Lo Ronda'
1 :00 (]) MOVIE: 'Goln' South'
CIJ I Married .loofl
ill e..-nment Tonight
allJ ,._.
1:30 8
(]) NBC News
Overnight
CIJ Lovo Tho! Bob
Cil Newe/Sign Off
aCJICNNH-IneNews
1 :45 (J) !SPN'o Inside Beaoboll
2 :00 ill --..., Father
!ill CBS Newt Nlghtwotch
2:15 (J) SportaContor
2 :30 (I) MOVIE: "Rich and
Famous'
(I) Ufw of IIIey
(J) NCAA FQ!!tboll; ll!OW
Domo .. South Carolina

•'•''
.

-·
~" ~

I

'

I SUPPOSE IF I LEARNED
TO USE ACAN OPENER, I
WOULDN'T I-lAVE TO PUT UP
WITH JOKES LIKE THAT

byHanriAin&lt;lldandBcbi.M - ~

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..,. lottorllllour onllnory - ·
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WHAT DID THEY
ENI!&gt;~AVE ON THE

....

~OI!IOT'6 TOM5STONE'i"

•

Now _arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as
ge•ted by the - .. cartoon.

suo·

XXI )

Answer here: (

..

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IBUHLEM

rJ

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(Answers tomorrow)
Slturday's / Juinbiu : TRILL BOUND GOVERN ROBBER
An._: What the locksmit h made when his shop
caught fi re- A BOLT FOR THE DOOR
. '

olwnlllllloc* No. t1, cont. IRing 11 ~ pualn, I• ••all.,._ lor $1.15 piUI 55c poetaalncl ~ Iron, JumbM, cTo th11 MWSP,ptr, loA a4t _Norwood, " ·"-· 01141.
. lnctltdiJOUfMmt.,ldclrHa.llpooeltlnclmtbchlc:kt~yaDtetoN-..perbooka.

-

.BRIDGE

-·

"

Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

-· Going overboard
NORTH

lll-lll-8S

+AK5

\Pe

+A 10 8 52
+KJ98

niversary ~

e

'~ I '

UHd Youth - · wolnut
color, mmrtao &amp; rollo. P~co
1172. Alklng e?ll, good
1po~nd_._c_a~_t_44_e_-7_a.,.8..:,1_.__
1Computerlud Utton 'mlcrowove • otond, 1410. Coil
441-lt?ll - ·

.

HOLLER LOGS

~i~::~~~~=====

1875 EVENRUDE boot,
good condition. •1.000. !'84
3 04-n 3 -1023 '
&amp; Refrigeration
12 FT otumlnum oeml V
- t. 7'111 HP motor. ntraller. electric trolling mo- SEWING Mochlna rapaifl.
tor. nso.oo. 304-171· HfVice. A,.uthorlzed Singer
11324.
Soloo &amp; Service Shllrpen
8cioooro. 'Fabric Shop ,
Pomeroy. 982-2284.

•:r:.

e
e

e

-.

1973 vw . _ -lo.
Am-Fm -.,.. new atae1
bOlt rodtolo, m ...go.
ohorp 11881. 1872
5

Buck Rogera
(I) !D NBC Newo
Ill Rifleman
(I) D llJ ABC News
Q (I) !ill CBS News
. (I) BuoinHs Report
&lt;ID Over Eoov
8 (]) PM Magazine
Ill Alias Smith and Joneo
SportaContor
ill c.rol lumen
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Chertla'o Angelo
G (I) Wheel of Fortuna
(I) (j)) MIICINoii/Lahrer
Newahour
~
!ill News
llJ People' a Court
Jefferaons
IJ (])Tic Tac Dough
(]) Fraggle Rock Visit tho ·
world: of Fraggle Rock Underneath the basement of an
eccentric inventor.
(J) ESPN'slnolde Bueboll
ill Good Newt
(I) liJ (I) Family Feud
!ill Wheel of Fortune
a
llJ Entertainment
Tonight
• One Day at a 'T ime
IJ (]) (I) Boone Boone and
Rome's friendship becomes
strained.when Rome falls for
a girl Vt!ho has fallen for
Boone . (60 min.)
(]) Time of Our Uvea This
documentary
celebrates
Time magazine's 60th an-

e

~

WEST

EAST

1.. AQ 51

., 3 2
+Q96
+Q 10 63

~ 10 8 6 4

+J972

t!Jt

ro-752

SOUTH
+Q3
., KJ 10 9 8 7
+K73

+H

.

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
w..l Nortb Eaot
I+
Pass
Pass z+
Pass
Paos 3+
Pass
Pau 4.,
Pass
Obi.
Pass Pass .
Opening lead:

,.,

Soutb

3.,
6.,

••

Pass

•4

Captioned/

GET your carpet ,SHIP
SHAPE WITH CAPTIAN
STEAMER . Water removal,
fumiture cleaning. free etti·
motes. 614-448-2107.

..

TV &amp; Applloncoo. 827 Third
A110 .. llaltlpollo, 448-1899.
Spin wa•hera, 011 • electric
dryers. auto washer•. 011 •
electric rang11, refrigerators, TV lltl.

e
e

•

~lgl00001t ~ THATICIIAMBLEDWOIIDCWII •--·

rn

Home
Improvements

ENCO aelf unloading corn 1'973 Camara, good cond.
wagon, now, on!y 1650. vary clean. 12,000. 304- PAINTING - interiOJ . and.
extarlor. plumbing, roofing.
111 4-742-301 o.
_67_5_-_,8_3_9_o_tt_ar_ &amp;_p-:.m_._ _
some remodeling. 20 yrs.
1
WD Allio-Cholmen.· A-1 71 VW Super Beetle, aut. -axp. Call 614-388-9152. ahllpe with plow• •nd corn good cond. 73 rebulh eng.
plowo. f1.500. 614-742- 199&amp;.00. 72 VW B-lalor Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout3010.
portll375. 304-468-192&amp;. ing. 30 yeau experience,
apecializing in built up roof.
Oliver pull two-row corn 191&amp; Ford Galaxte 600 Call 614-388-9867 .
picker. Qood · cond. 11100. convertible. 1harpl 11200. _::::_:__----.:~--:-1
Stolk chopper, 4 row 1500. 1975 Dotoon 820 pickup RON'S Television Service.
1114-985-31181 .
1960. 304-1176-4048 otter Specializing in Zenith and
Motorola , Quazar, and
a p.m.
ALLIS Cholmara t,..tor, 8 1-:.__ _ _ _ _ _ __
house calli. Call 576-2398
HP lawn trecror, •3&amp;0.00. Navy blue jacket. matchll or 446-2454.
304-676-3424.
pants sulr, loll. in front of
K&amp;K Mobile Home. 304- F It K Tree Trimming, stump
&amp;75-243&amp;.
removal. Call 676-1331 .

63

Ill Cll ro • Cll !lle

llJ News
Ill MOVIE; 'lllorto'
Ill Now T.-ura Hunt
CJl Unlimited
Roclng This show features
the San Oiogo Thunderboat
Regatta. 160 min.)
ill Uttle Houn on the

TOP CASH poid for toto
Firewood *36 piCkup load FISH TANK, 2413 Jockoon model uaed cars.
Smith
delivered. $26 if picked up at Avo. Pt. Ptouant. 304-676- 8ulck-Pontlac. 1911 Eontho farm. Cell 614-256- , 2063 . 10gollontankll9.99 ern Ava.. Gollipolio. 4481427.
each . Baby parakeets 2282.
$1 0.99 tach. Finch 15.99
21. cu.ft. Horpoinr upright each . Guinea Piga *6.99 1970 Lincoln Continental
freezer. used only 6 moa. each . Hamtters *1 .69- Mark Ill, good condlrlon. 1979 chevy Luv 4•4 AC,
AM·FM, new tires. Call 83
1476. Cell 614-256-166e. 12. 99 .
Excavating
black, 12,200. Call 448- 448-4292.
0212
.
Bobybod . Call446-7106.
1 878 Chjlvy 4x4 '4 ton, 350
57
Musical
1979 Mazda GLC wagon, 4 opel., AM-FM otero. Eogla DOZER WORK By Ted
Homelhe chain saw, super
auto. AC. AM-FM radio, top llbergloo1 topper. Coli &amp;1 4- Hanna. pond·• . ditches,
Instruments
..,_
..
XL 12, auto., 16 in., 1126.
baaementl. etc. Call 446rock
. .a.ooo. Coll614-245- 268-&amp;279.
Also wheel chair &amp; walker.
4907.
Carter
&amp;
Evans
9467.
Coli 614-245-5474 . .
Tranaportetlon.
~.
AK C Rogiotored Poodle pup- 1978 Chryolar Cordobo exc.
•.•
1976 Chevy 1 ton 4 wheal Lonnie Boggs Excavatirlg.
Engagement ring &amp; wedding piea. Ready to go. Call
cond (ow milu, U,800. drive. Good cond. 614. 986band Interlocking, 1 O· K 446-0867.
Do:zer. backhoe, dumptruck.
Call 448-4389.
3848 . .
white gold, 3 diamonds. Call
Work by hour or job. Call
446-3125 .
Wanted old. Pianos . Paying
446-7903 .
,.
Nova SS. Coli 4411120.00 and 140.00 oach. 119
8687.
74 Motorcycles
Saxephone wood burner Firat floor only. Write giving
Cat 21 5 hoe, dozen, crane, , ,I1 1•
with magic hltat, living room directions. Witten Painoa.
iQodoro, dump truck. Coli ,
1966
buick
2
dr.
Sedan
suite, Meytag diahwaaher Box 188 Sardis Ohio .
-,
1114-44&amp;- 1 142 between
end 1976 Kawnakl KZ 400. 43946 . Phone 614-483- mechanically good. nMda 1974 Hondo Choppor 30 ln. 7:00AM &amp; 6:00PM ..
soma body worll. 1600. Coli
1605.
Coli 1114-379-2309.
.,
448-18t3 doyo ooklor OVI&lt; front and. CB 760 F.
Coli
614-949-2737.
Good-1
Excav1ting.
baseDonny,
446-0057
eva.
"'
My collectio!'1 of house Bundy Trumpet for 111le.
menta, footen, drivewaya,
plants for Nla. 438 Hedge- 614-742-2656 .
septic tanka, landacaplng.
1980 Dodge Aapon outo,
wood Dr.. Gallipolis. Call
•,I
Boat• and
Coli anytime 446-4637.
PS. PB. 8 cyl., sunroof. 75
446-2494.
Jame•
L.
Oeviaon.
·
J
r.
Johns Auto Salea. 446·
Motora for Sale
69 For Sale or Trade
owner.
4782. Bulovltlo lid. AHI
New Oak Furniture, tables,
,.
nice. 12.9915'.
chairs, cupboards, pie sate.
J.A .R. Construction Co .
Chrlo
Croft
1
857
conatallodry 1inks. Paul Conkela
'.
1977 Honda, 6 utility trail- 19eo llenoult LoCor 4 opd. don cobln crulnr, 38 lt.. Water Linea. Footera,
Antiquea, Tuppers Plains .
.....
'J
ers, trade for air compre11or AM-FM topo, lull ounroof. with troller. 112.800. C1tl Draine. All kinds of Ditching . •:\-~!U
I
aprayer. log splitter. Cell root oherp. 12.281. Johno 814-3117-0378 botwoon Rutl&amp;n~ . Oh. 814-742i.
2803.
I
814-388-8246.
Aula Soleo. 44&amp;-4782. Bu- 10-3. 814-448-1 343 oft•
iavillo Rd.
8.
Melga Excavating. Bulldozer
&amp;
bockhoe oervlco. Booe115' Gla11maater boat. walk
•.
thru wlndahlotd, 60 HP. men11. foot.-a.landa~aplng ,
Mercury ·~ong' trailer. drlvew•v•. farm ponds .
&amp;1 4-742-2407 or 614-742I HI. Coli 446-2877.
...
20118 .
I

Fumlohod olflclanay and 2 178 ooch ulad Woohero &amp;
-room Apt.ln Mlddt"""rt. Dryero. Nice &amp; cloon, guoOh. No pate. Mont111 _ , rontHd 30 doyo. 8over11 to
pluo 1100. -urlty. 814- chooMfrom. Coii814-ZII8892-3174.
1207.

1 bdroom 12x10 fur·
nltlhod. Wooher •
1110. lllul utllltl-. •
• Apto. lor ""'f. ·. 814-882oolt. No pota. 614-11 - _s_eo_e_._______
1
7471.
•
2 -room Apt. turni11Mod
J · ~ 1• • • • ,..........., or 1180. mom11 plu1 utllltlel
tlllfurMhM- Camp Conley. end t rallt. cwerlealdne .._
104·171·1171 or ,,._ OIIIo I I - In
Oh. 814-112· 3324.
litI .

•

1leepa 6, self

for Rent

Unfurniahed 2 bdr. In Crown
City, Ohio. Coli 114-2.&amp;62 bdr. mobile homo ot 8520.
E,..rgroon. Coli 448 -7032 · I-F-ur_n_ll_h_a_d_1_bd-r.-,-u-t-llk-lo-1

Television
Viewing

54 Misc. Merchal'!dise 'KIT
CARLYLE"'____...;._::__..;:....,..~
by Larry Wright ' 79 Motors
Homes
;;:..:.....::::_.::::;.::.:,::._
a. Ca mpars

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, otto· 36,000 BTU Wor111 Morning
man, 3 teblea, (extra heavy heater. &amp;14-992-3139.
by Frontier). 1886. Sot•.
chair and loveseat, t276. B ft. truck bed liner, air
Sofas and chaira priced from compre11or. Apt. si:ze gaa
1286. to $895. Tobloo, 146 stove, 8 ft . truck topper,
and up to $125 . Hide-a - 1965 lord cor. 614-742beds . $440 . and up ro 2231 .
1525 .. Rocllnora, 1175. to
t 3&amp;0., l "' mps from $28. to 14 ft. CB Antenna. Approx.
t76 .5 pc. dinettes from 100 ft . heavy duty co-ox.
199 .. to 4,15. 7 pc . .1189 130. Coli 814-992-3325
and ur . / , )rJ table with six before 4 p.m.
chairs ~ ~25 to S746 . Desk
f110 u., to 8225 . Hutches. For Sale: Lumber 1 " and 2"
8660 . end up, maple or pine dlmenalon, poplar, oak or
finish . Bunk bed complete pine. For prices li"d avella·
with mattre••••· $260. and bility . Contact Millwood
up to 1396. Baby beds, Inc .. 304-273-2622, Rt. 2
$110. Manreuas or box at Evergreen Hlll1 . Road,
springs, full or twin, •sa.. Mondoy -Friday, 8-4 :30;
firm ; 168. and $78 . Queen Saturdoy, 8-3:00 .
sets, $196 . 4 dr. cheats.
142. 5 dr. chests. s54 . Bad Dry firewood. deliverd,
frames. 120 .and 825 .. 10 phone 304-875-n71.
gun - Gun cabinet•. 8350.
Gil or electric ranges, 8326 2 color TVa. 304-876-2815 .
up to IJ76. Baby mat·
tresses, 825 &amp; 836, bad Firewood for sale. 125.
frames 820. 826, ll 130,
king frame 860 . Good aelec·
Oaok &amp; choir. brown living
tion of bedroom auitas, 304-676-1735.
cedar chatta. rocker•, metal room chair, dlnettta let. 2
cabinets. swivel rockers.
chest of drowero, kitchen
U11d Fumlture .. bookcaae. ICCIIIOrfll, bedaprtllldl •
rong,., chalro, ·dinnott sot. cur:talna. 1 teb.le lamp. 1
wood table and choirs. dry: floor larilp, blankets. odd
en. refrigerators and TV's. 3 table, radio wl~h 2 apealcers.
mllea our Bulaville Rd. Open ,3 04-876-1438 attar 4 :30.
9em to 6pm, Mon . thru Fri.,
9am to 6pm. Set.
446-0322
55 Building Supplies
54 Misc . Merchandise
Building materials
block. brlc.k. sewer pipe1,
Knauff Firewo.od Pickup or windows. lintela. etc .
Delivered . 12'' -22" stocked Claude Winters, Rio Granda.
in yard . HEAP vender, 0 . Call 614-245-5121 .
prompt dollvary. 614-2686246 .
56
Pets for Sale
Umeatone, Sand, Gravel.
Delivered in Mason, Meigs,
Gallia Qr pick up at Richards HILLCREST KENNELS
ll Son. Call 448-7785.
Barding all breeds. Selling
Happy Jack Dog Food.
Firewood- cut up, , alaba, Doberman puppies: Stud
115 pickup lood. Coli 614- Service. Coli 448-7796.
246-5804 .
Walnur lumber 8 and 10 ft.
long. Call 304-468-1997.

DICK TRACY

Monday, Oc!ober I0, 1983

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

·-·.

say they were unhappy with
t he result Each one blamed
hls partner."
Oswald: "Actually there is
a 10 percent play for the
slam. If East holds Q-i; or
singleton queen of trumps,
the slam makes. The first
bidding problem came at
North's third bid. Mary Zita
(Mrs. Oswald Jacoby), who
checks these columns. says
that North should bid three
no-trump rather than that
obsalre three-spade cue-bid
and that South should have
passed ri~ht there."
Jim: ' South made that
suggestion also, but North
felt and still feels that if he
had bid three no-trump,
South would have gone to

.'
.' .

'

'

four diamonds."

Oswald : " You have
already given me the South ·
player's name. I am su•e he
would have bid over three
no-trump, but maybe be
would s1mply have bid four
hearts, which North would

.,

ha:ve passed."
By O.wald Jacoby
and J1meo Jacoby
Oswald: "You played in
the special rubber bridge
game at the New York
Cavendish Club recently.
How about some hands from

that game?" .
Jim: "Here's one lhat
caused a lot of discussion.
North and South were two
goOd players. Needless to

Jim: "North's bid of three
spades was made by most of
the experts who were asked
about it. l was one of those
who favored it, but Mother
has changed my mind. He
should have bid three no-

..

-.
'•

trump.~~

Oswald: " Now we come to
South's jump to six. A bid of
live should hav e been
enough with his hand."

-·
. ·-.

'

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

.~byNd'·"-'
THOMAS JOSEPH

.. '"

ACROSS
9 Nevada city
I Choice beef cut 10 Cheer
. ··~
14 Burn
6 Provide
.,
food
17 Bad luck
.··
'
11 Gladiatorial
(Jr.')
setting
18 Rainer
12 Molding
film role
type ·
19 Western
13 Russian
alliance
20 Frets
poet
15 Born (Fr. }
21 Old robe
Yesterday's Answer
I&amp; "I - Rhythm" · style
17 Unending
24 Hindu
32 Vene ra1e
39 Old hand
22 Beetle
princess
33 Concept
40 Health .
23 War deity
%5 "- homo"
34 Famous La.
resort
27 Overfed
Z6 Germ
political
U Egyptian'" '"
28 Locate
28 Matins and
name
weight
•
!9 .,..- goose
Paternoster 35 Italian city
42 O'Ne ill
··
30 Strut
.:30:.;,F;..ro::h;:;
.c....,.,.......;.38:..- Avi.v
drama
31 On a fixed
"
r;;-.,........,.._,..:..:,;;....., · ·

...

.. ..
...

income

..

~-

33 Stevedores'
union
36 Laraine.37 Russian
author ·
43 Enroll
44 Ward off
45 Spry
46 Condition
DOWN
I Frank 2 Anger
3 Bulgarian
gold coin
t Inner
(prefix)
5 Made fun of
&amp;Myron 7 Rosary bead

.,.

...
.,.-

8 Chinese
society

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTElo

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to

work

It:
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· One letter limply atonds for another. In lhio sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
opoolrophes. the length and formation of the words are all
hia11. Eoch day the code letters ore dill'erent.

..

CRYPTOQUOTES

-

•·
YXVFQYM ·
DGRTG

ZIV

TRY
VFG

ZLQYM
VLQINDF

J XI

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XU .. •·

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'

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�/

Page

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10--The Daily Sentinel

Funds sought for Halloween party

Improper usage could pose.
problems for home owner8
By LOtltiE COOK

Associated Press_Writer

lack the extra safety lea tures the
commlssion suggested, making
caution a must for consumers.
There are two basic types of
portable kerosene heaters convective and radiant.

r

Area deaths

Robert M. Grimm

Robert Melvin Grlnun, 58• Syra·
cuse, died Saturday morning at
Long Bottom.
Mr.GrinunwasbornAug. ll,l925
at Syracuse, the son of Christena C.
Gintear Grimm, Syracuse, and the
rate Melvin B. Grimm.
He was a laborer for Columbus
Showcase, a Veteran of World War

IJ, having served with the U.S. Navy
and a member of Carpenters Local
'lffn, Columbus.
In addition to his mother, he is
survived by three children, Bonnie
Grimm. VIrginia; Roberta Raybum a11d Debbie Reeves both of
Columbus; one sister, Mrs. Ray mond (Margarete) Teaford. Minersville; two brothers and sistersin-law, Floyd and Hazel Grtnun:
Whitehall, and Reese and Janet
Grimm, Grove City; several grandchildren and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday
atl p.m
EwiJ.'Ig
Home with
the . at
Rev.
JoyFuneral
Clark
officiating. Burial will be in Pine
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home at anytime.

•
'
of Middleport-where of ~lder and donuts wm .b e served to
an annual trick ortreatnlghtw!llnot everyone attending. Helping with
be held-are being asked to contrib- the financing of the ·event Is
ute toaCilrlllllunlty Halloween party Feet!eY·Bennett.Post 128 American
being staged In lieu of the trick or Legion which has sent a $.lXl
cootrlbutlon to the Chamber of
treat activity.
Large contalners for candy are Canmeree. John Werner w!ll be
being placed at VIllage Phannacy, handling the public address sYStem
Vaughan's Cardinal, Johnsons for the party to be held !rom 6 to 8
(Mark V) Supennarket and Fruths p.m. on Monday, Oct. 31.
P~cy where residents may · The Middleport Chamber will
place bags of candy for the party.
Members of the Middleport
ChamberofCommerreandparents
· and teachers of schools will collect
the containers and bag the candy so
that each chlld will receive a candy
treat at the party. Persons who
would prefer giving monetwy
donations for the party may take or
send the!rdonattonsofCentralTrust
In Middleport.
Thepartyw!ll be held at the junior
high school football t!eld and prizes
will be awarded the best~ In
prettiest, ug!!est, funniest and most
ort8tnal categorles In several age
groups. Adults of the conunun!ty
are Invited to attend the
view the costumed. Refreshments
~ldents

local fire department first. TilE'
heaters are illegal in someplaces
and their use Is restrlcted in
others.
Make sure any heater you buy
has a seal of a pproval from · a
testing agency like Underwrlters
Laboratories, indicating !I meets
fire safety standards: The he1;1ter
also should have a device to" tum
off the name If the unit tips over,
and a battery-operated lighting
device to el!mlnate the need for
matches.
·Proper ventilation is essential
for safe use of kerosene heaters,
The heaters consume oxygen as
they burn. A reduced oxygen
supply In the air can result In
complete combustion of the
kerosene and the production of
carbon monoxide - a colorless,
odorless gas which can klll.
Kerosene heaters also can·emlt
pollutants like carbon dioxide,
nitrogen dioxide a11d sulphur
dioxide. Whenever you are use a
kerosene heater you should have
a Source of fresh a!r, !!keadooror
window, open at least one Inch.

M!lllons of Americans will turn
to kerosene heaters to' keep
warm this winter, but authorities
warn that there Is a risk of fire or
pollution If the ht&gt;a ters are not
used properly.
Convective heaters usually
the staff of the . Consumer
have a circular shape, with the
fuel tank located below the wick
Product Safety Commission in·
and combustion chamber. They
vestlgated the heaters earlier
this year and said it did not think
circulate warm air up a nd out in
all directio!ls and are designed
mandatory safety standards
' for largeareasratherthansmall,
were necessary. It did, however,
confined spaces. Convective
recommend some changes in the
heaters must be moved for
way kerosene heaters are made
to lessen potential dangers.
refueling; they do not have
The commission staff said the
removable fuel tanks.
Radiant heaters generally are
industry should develop a device
that would automatically shut
rectangular in shape. Like con·
vectlve heaters, they have a wick
the heater off if tlje name nares
up. It also said there should be
and combustion chamber. They
guards around· heaters to prealso have a reflector to direct
vent children and pets from , , heat at people or object. Many
bumping !ntb'them.
models have a removable fuel
tank so the heater can stay in
The Insurance Information
place while the tank is refuelled.
I nstitUte estimates there are
No matter what type of
about 10 million kerosene tu&gt;aters
heater you are considkerosene
in use and it says· inost of tilt&gt;
ering,
you
should check your
models already on the market

I

residence.
Mr. GrueserwasbornJuly1'l,1898
in Minersville the son of the late
Wenda! and Christina Grueser. He
· de a th by his
was a 1so preceded m
wife, Cora Grueser.
He was a farmer in the Miners- ,
ville Community.
He is survived by one son,
Lawrence Grueser, Pensacola,
Fla.; one daughter, Karen Haines,
Minersville; one brother, Jess
Grueser, Pt. Pleasant; one sister,
Thelma Grueser, Pomeroy; four
grandchildren, five great grandchildren and one great, great
grandson.
Funeral serviceS will be held
Wednesday at 1, :.l p .m . at Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. St,eve
Nelson oificlatlng. Burial will be in
Beech Grove Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Tuesdayfrom 2to4and 7 to9. Jnlleu
of flowers friends are asked to
contribute to the American Cancer
Society.

Saturday Adm!ss!ons-WUIIam
Capehart, Middleport;. .Orpha
James, Pomeroy.
Saturday D!scharges~- Glor!a
Decker, Angela van
Carla
Dili, SandraLuckeydoo.
Sunday Admissions--James
Fisher, Middleport; WUbur Han·
nlng, Middleport; Hall!e Starcher,
Pomeroy; eecu Smith, Pomeroy;

Cooney,

,...

CLEVELAND (AP) The
holder of the one winning ticket In
last week's "Ohio Lotto" game will
receive a jackpot ot $798,297 in 15
annual tnsl&lt;tllments of $50,000 plus

lottery officials said.
one . final lnstallrnent of $48,297,
The winning numbers were 6, 14,
18, 24, Tl and 35.
There were 1:.l players who
correctly chose five of the s!x
numbers drawn, and each w!ll be"
paid $654. There were 4, 751 who
selected four of the six numbers, and
each won $48.
'
Sales totaled $1,133,160, while the
lottery will pay out $1,lll,3ffi,
officials said.
The jackpot now returns to Its
base amount of at least $250,000.

E. J . Miller
and Barbara Miller
at
Tuppers
Pialnsat3:03p.m.
treated
the scene of an accident ori Route 7;
Tuppers Plains at 10: 58 took Willie
Grueser to Holzer Medical Center.
Saturday runs included Pomeroy
at 9:28p.m. took Orpha Jap1es from
Union Ave., to Veterans Memorial;
Rutland at 11:23 a.m. took Gatha
Alvarado from County Road 13 to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport
went to 6.ll Mill St. at 11: 28 p.m . to
treat Freda Bing and Middleport a t
5:04p.m . went to 26 Railroad St. for
ED!s Plants, taken to Veterans
Memorial.

At The Farmers Bank

·Weather forecast
Partly cloudy tonight. Low 48-53.
Winds light and southeasterly.
Partly cloudy Tuesday. High 69-74 ..
Exteilded Ohio Forecast
Wedne8day Uirough Friday:
SCattered showers Wednesday
and Thunday. Fair on Friday.
JDcbs mainly !illbe 008. Lows 4U2.

•

·.

WE ARE SORRY FOR THIS ERROR

Ba

~~~~~~~~~=i~~ii~~~~~~;;~
Therefore we are announcing our new Certificate of
Deposit. This new certificate allows you to decide the
maturity date with a .lower minimum requirement.
For only .$1 ,000 you can now purchase a Certificate of
Deposit with a maturity of anywhere between 32
days and ' 182 days, whatever you decide. If a longer
rn.a turity is your desire, a deposit of $100 is all that is
necessary. The rate earned on these Ce~tificate of Deposits ·will be compounded daily giving you the highest yield and will vary depending on the length of
maturity~ ~top by ahd talk it over with one of our experts ..

AUTO BATTERY

$492.?

Trade-In

DiaHMcl .. 'Amara's bllt·llllina
-

4301 SERIES

....... ,

CU.T $23

repi~Ca~~nt

boalry.
f
rt--

IAVIIIOI on"'' tOmpiotolint of Oio·
Holll bdoiios; cor, boat. utlity, truct..

motartJCit.

THRU DECEMBER 19th ONLY

"YOU CAN DEPI!~:D ON YOUR HOMETOWN FRIEND."

In Stock- Ready To Pick Up

•
.

-

AUTHORIZED CATALOG MERCHANT
GREGG AND PAm GIBS

Middleport

N. 2nd Ave.

Mon.. Tues.. Wecf., Fri •.

PH. (Ohio) 992-2178
(W. Va.) 773-9577
•

HOURS

9:30 to 5:00

Thuri 9:lo to 12:00
.$It

9:30 to 2:00

'

Fo

Farmers
Bank

y_. ~lt7 Owned' Bank

By BOB HOEFUCII
Sentinel staff
MiddlePort VIllage Council Monday night suspended the rules and gave all three required readings
to an ordinance designed to reduce loitering and the
vandalism and harassment that sometimes results.
Retired Middleport businessman William Grueser
to discussed loitering and vandalism which takes
place on North Second Ave., near an apartment
bufldlng and a restaurant buDding he owns.
"If this behavior continues there w!ll be no
Middleport left", Grueser commented as he outlined
to councll members the money he has had to spend on
repairs caused by vandalism and the rent moneys he
has lost because people are afraid to J)ve In the
apartments due to the harassment and vandalism.
"It's dangerous to live In this town and It's getting
worse aU the time" , Grueser said.
. Grueser said he Is surprised someorle hasn't been
killed. He commended Officer Sid Little tor keeping
those loitering on the move untO about 3: :Jl In the

afternoon. Other officers see the loitering, but
apparently 'a re afraid to get out of the cruiser to do
anything about It, Grueser stated. Grueser said the
problem started four or live years ago and Is getting
worse. Grueser said beer bottles have been thrown
through windows of his property, apartments and the
restaurant bufldlng have been broken into, downspouting has been tom down, paint has been poured on
steps and there has been harassment of his renters.
~fan!iy Is prevalent also, Grueser Sa.td.
Councilman Dewey Horton said police officers
cannot arrest an Individual tor Just standing on the
street. He also emphasized that citizens "WIU have to
· have enough guts to fOe charges against people
breaking the law" . He pointed out that thevlllage has
two cruisers In operation these ciays as well as an
expanded pollee force In attempting to deal with the
problems.
Awlll'e of problem
Mayor Fred Hoffman sald he Is aware there Is a
problem and be recommended walking patrolmen

The body of an unidentified man was found Monday at approximately 11
a.m. In a traDer home on county road 00, Forest Run Road.
According toSher!!f James J. Proffitt the trailer horrie had been occupied
byMary£dlth Taylor, Mrs. Taylors son, &lt;\lid daughter, UndlleyTaylor and
Freda M!lhoun. Mllhouit had moved from the trailer some tthie last week.
The whereabouts 11 Mrs. Taylorandherson, Lindsey areunkownacconllng
to the sherltf's department.
Jack Scarbrough, Stlversvllle, a frlendof !he Taylors went to thetraUerto
get some clothing for Mllhoun when he discovered the bOdy.
Suspecting foul play, the body was removed byEwlngFuneraiHomeand
was later taken to the office of the Franklin County Coroner in ColumbUs
where an autopsy will be performed. It ls hoped that !dentfflcat!on can be
made as a result of tests that will be made. According to reports, the body
was seated on a couch and was covered with a blanket. It was also reported
the man had been dead for several days and decomposition had set ln.
At the scene were Sheriff Proffitt, Dr. John Ridgway, acting coroner,
Herman Henry of the BCI, Paul Gerard of the prosecutor's otrlce, Gary
Wolle, Investigator for the sheriffs department and sever'al off duty
deputies.
Meanwhile, the sher!!f's department Is investigating the disappearance
of Roger Lee Cooksey of Lou!svllle, Ky.
According to a missing person's report received by the sheriff,
an employe of Nuckols and Associates of Cincinnati was working as a
securlty guard at Foote Mineral Plant in New Haven. Foote Mineral Is
presrntly on strike.
·
Co!Jkseyls!n his 40's !ss!xfoot tall, weighs approximately 190pounds, has
light brown hair with some streaks of gray and blue eyes.
•
'

especially on Friday and Saturday nights.
In conclusion; Grueser said he knows it is easy to he
critical, but the problem Is affecting the whole town,
and is a disfavor to business people in that shoppers
leave the community when they see groups of people
loitering !n.the business section.
Council agreed with Mayor Hoffman that walking
patrolmen should be avaUab!e.
Thus councU suspended the rules to pass a n
ordinance presented by Mayor Hoffman to help deal
•
with the problem.
The ordinance Is to prohibit sitting on grounds or
walls or leaning against buUd!ngs. It states it shall be
unlawful for any person, wlthoul permission of the
owner or les!l(!e, to slt upon any of the grounds or
retaining walls or lean . against the building' of any
such owner In the vlllage of Middleport . Violators
shall be guUty of a misdemeanor of the fourth degree
and shajl be fined not more than
and lmprlsoner
not more than 10 days,or both for the first offense and
for the second offense within one year, violators shall

s:m

be fined not more than $250 and imprisoned not l)'lore
than :.J days or both.
Objection noted
Jim Hudson voiced his complaint against the $1 .50
rate increase granted Ca bienterta inment recently .
Hudson said he had been unaware that the increase
was to be granted. He said the increase is excessive
and that hehas had poor service from the company.
He asked If he could circulate a petition against the
Increase.
Several council members said the increase was the
first given the company in four years a nd that the
company has Improved its service ill the community.
CouncUman Carl Horky said he has looked into the
possibility of another company, but found none willlng.
to come into such a small area.
"
Hudson said he feels the hike was "one heck of a
percentage Increase" and indicated he will discontinue the service.
Hudson also questioned firemen washing their cars
(Continued on page 12)

Accident
sends trio
to hospital

,..

")\

'.
•

SCENE-'lbe body of a male, beUeved to be In his
30'a, was found seated on a cooch, covered with a,
blanket Monda.v In a traDer home on the Forest Run
Road. Sherlfl James J. PromttlsBhownatthehomeas

By'lbe Allsodet.d Press
Consumers appear more w!ll!ng
to make major purchases, signaling
that economic growth w!ll continue
through the Christmas shopping
season and Into the New Year, a
buSiness research group says.
Investors also were In a buying
mood as hopes that the ecollomy's
rebound will be retlected In reports
of growing corporate profits helped
shatter reCords on Wall Street for a
third straight trading day Monday.
The Dow Jones average of :Jl
Industrial stocks cllmbed. 12.50
po!ntB to close at an all-time high of
1,284.1ii, surpassing the peaks of the
previouS two !lesSions.
A broader stockmarket !ndlcator,
the New York Stock Exchange
canposlte Index of more than 1.500
canrmn stocks, moved within
striking dlstance of the 100 leYel by
climbing 0.91 Monday to a re&amp;nl

.,

The Conference •Board said Its
Buyjng Plans Index, a measure of
conswners' ptans to make rna.tor
purchaleS within s!x mooths,
8PUI'iMI up to Itll.6 In September
trom 89.9 In August. The Index hlld
earlier sUpped trom 103.6 In J\UII!
and ~.51n July, and stood at 100 In

'

he waited for a unit from the Bureau of Criminal .
Investigation to arrive to help with tbe investigation of
the death. Identification of the body hadnotbeenmade
today.
.

Trio. charged in recent thefts

NEW HAVEN - State pollee hassee. Fla., and btought Ward and
have arrested two juveniles and an · the Juvenile to Mason County after
adult on grand larceny charges In they waved extradition
Ward was arraigned befo~
coMectlon with a series of burglarIes to a New Haven residence In Mason County Magistrate Paul
which thousands of dollars were "Snooky" Smith and was Incarcerstolen, a spokesman for the Point ated In the Mason County Jan in Ueu
Pleasant Detachmeni of the West of $5,000 boqd, Beckett said. The
juvenile was released to the care
VIrginia Slate Pollee reported.
"In the middle of .September, and custody ofh!s parents, he added .
sla~ pollee started Investigating
some unrelated thelts In the. New
.ln addition, Beckett saki another
The board's Consumer Conll· Haven area," Corpora! K.R. Beck- 16-year-old youth was a~ted on
dence Index, a measure of senti- ett said. "During the Investigation, September 28 in New Haven . The
ment about current and future we recetve&lt;I information 11 a crime youth was arraigned and incarcereconomlccond!dons, reglsteredjl3.9 In New Haven ot a New Haven ated in the Ona Youth Center for
last month, little changed from the residence being burglarized oyer a several days prlor to being released
level near which It has hovered since perkxl of s!x to eight months.
to the custody of his parents.
· AprU.
.
"Durin&amp; the burglaries, several
Beckett sald burglaries occurred
"Consumers' Increasing optim- thousand dollars were stolen. As a at the residence of Lll Stephens.
Ism about present conditiOns, their result of the state pollee InvestigaHe said Trooper Smith and state
confidence In the !mmedlate future, tion, three · arrests have been pollee have recovergd several
and thell: Increasing plans to spend made," Beckett added.
thousand dollars in property which
Indicate a strong business cUmate,
Beckett said Dale A. Ward, 22, was apparently purchased from
tor the rest of this year and Into the . New Haven, and a 16-year-old youth money stolen from the Stephens'
early months of 1984," said Fabian were picked up In Florida Frlday. residence. According · to Beckett,
L!ndeil, executive director of the. Trooper M.S. Smith flew to Talla· that property Includes motor vehiConsumer Research Center of the
bJ•""u-Js sponsored study group.
In other ecmom1c news:
Federal Reserve Board Chair·
LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) education In their business session
man Paul A. Volcker told the
Calling
tor
more
stable,
long-term
today. Harold Hodgklruion, a senior
American Bankers Association COil·
national
farm
programs,
Midwest·
fellow
at the Institute for' EducaVl!lltlon In Honolulu that banks
ern
govenKll'B
emlorsed
a
proposal
tiona!
Leadership,
w!ll be a featured
nationwide must support reflnanc.
lng LatlnAmel'lca'sdebt!ftheThlrd Monday for a bipartisan federal
speaker.
.
New off!cersoftheconferencewill
World's attempl atecoo...n!c recov- cmun1ss1cn to advise Congress and
el'y Is to suc:ceed. Volclcer wamed
the president on agricultural and be elected before the meeting ends
food policy.
later today.
that shutting . of ''flows of CarUn emphasized the need to
credit" wwld lead to widespread
default.
.
The propoeed cunmlsS!on, re- remove politics froin the agricultu·
And, Gulf &amp; Western Industries cOOlmellded by Kansas Gov. John rat policy-making process In urging
Inc., In the midst of a ' massive CarUn, won UII8JIImous support support for the federal .!arm
d!VI!stlture~. ~!tloet
1r&lt;m diJel executives attenct•na the coounlsslon.
"American agriculture can no
$401.6 IIIDliQG In the fourth Qll8l'llir MldwstemGovemonCmference,
ton,ger be subjected to political
and$212.1 million lor Ita entire fiscal wblcluepr 1ts 13 ~IA!II.
year elided Juzy 31.
The
were to focus on whims which produce short-term

Researcher says
consumers appear
ready to-spend

99.63.

Memlwr FDIC

'

2 Se&lt;tlons, 12 Pages
:20 Cents
A Mult imedia Inc. Newspaper

Council okays ·-'get tough' legislation

the base periOd of 19111-19'10.
'I

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 11, 1983

Cooksey,

DIEHARD

Story, photo on page 10

Lawmen await
autopsy report

99¢
NOT 4 For 99 1

Missing children ••••

•

Suspect foul play

OUR SUNDAY COUPON ADVERTISEMENT
SHOULD HAVE READ
(1) Beef, Bacon &amp;
(1) Rax Roast
Beef Sandwich
Cheddar Sandwich

NOT 4 For 11.49

Steelers dump Bengals

Voi.32,No.127

•

LIMIT 4

See photo on Page 6

·'

C..pyrighrod 1983

.,.,, .

1503 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis

liMIT 4

See letters on Page 2

at y

I~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I

$149

Meigs homecoming•••

•

BUYA
BUCK.
SAVE A
BUNDLE!

Mechanic St.-Pomeroy, OH.
992-3671

We look
alter your

Public speaks out
Seep,age4

ELBERfELD§ WAREHOUSE
.

The Meigs County Jaycees will
meet this evening at 7 p.m . at the
Jaycee Hall In Pomeroy. An
organization meeting w!ll also be
held to form a Jaycete chapeter for
womenofMeigsCountybetweenthe
ages of 18-35.

Gets five-year term
CINCINNATI (AP) - Charles
Henderson, 29, Cincinnati, has been
sentenced to five years in federal
prison for his part in the mugging of
Judge Cornelia Kennedy of the 6th
U.S. CirCuit Court of Appeals.
Judge Kennedy was assaulted
and robbed of $00 on a downtown
street May 1by three men. The other
two were convicted and sentenced
previously.

Representatives of schools, the
village, Interested residents and
other groups are !nvlted to attend
tomorrow's night Input session. The
chamber Is stW attempting to work
out ajacko{)olantem carving contest
and a window painting event with
prizes to be offered.

r~seii;·~Pe~rm;e~l~!a~Cox~.~~~;;;;;;~d~~~~~~;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;::::~~~~

Norman Grueser, 85, SR 124,
Minersville, died this morning at his

Ninecallswereanswered by local
emergency units over the weekend,
the Meigs County I;:mergency
Medical Service reportS.
Sunday runs included Pomeroy at
9:23 p.m. took Oarence Longstreth
from Pomeroy Health Care Center
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 7:24 a.in. took Wilbur
Hanning from his residence to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 4:46
a. m. took · Homer Graham of
Antiquity to Veterans Memorial;

'

Edgar Middleport.
Wolfe. Middleport; Martha
Searls,
Sunday Discharges--Lydia Hy-

Meets tonight

Nonnan Grueser

Emergency squads
have busy weekend

meet at 7:00p.m. tornofi'OWnlghtto

round out planS for the party In the
meetlni room of the rwne .'

With qur patented Buck Stove Forced Air
· Heat Machine, you can cut abig chunk out
of those high lfeating bills. You'll stay cozy
by your Buck Stove no matter how bad the
winter is.

Veterans Memorial

Ohio Lotto winner
.
$ 798 '&gt;97

receiVeS

Monday, O.:lober 10, 1983

0

c!es, motorcycles, cars and trucks.
·Beckett would not sayexactlyhow
much money is Involved in the case.
"We feel additional charges will
be brought against the people
already In custody as well as other
people not In custody," Beckett said.
"This Investigation is so complicated, and the reason for that Is the
number of persons Involved directly
or Indirectly.
"Such as not only do we have the,
theft and the unlaWful entry into the
Stephens' residence, but also the
receiving of stolen money or
property purchased by money that
was stolen," Beckett added.
In the preliminary stages of the
state police investigation, Becken
said Trooper Smith was assisted by
the Mason County Sheriff's Department and the New Haven and
Mason pollee departments . ·
Hearings and court proceeQ)ngs
on charge5. against the suspects in
custody are pending at this time.
Beckett said.

•

Governor-S endorse bipartisan poli~y

aowmors

and often short-sighted solutions,"
Carlin said. "The process of
developing agricultural policy Is
simply out of sync with the
long-term needs offarmers.
"There Is a growing consensus in
the United States that we need a
new, long-range farm policy to cope
with future problems."
The proposed farm group would
be called the Food and Fiber
Fe!leratlon and be made up of
agricultural experts representing
''producers, consumem, marketing
and economic perspectives, " Carlin
said.

RODNEY - A two-car accident
on U.S. 35 near here sent three
peoP.!e tq_the hospital Monday nlght,
while a pedestrian helping at the
scene was injured when struck by
another vehicle .
The accident, which occurred at
8:58 p.in., one mile west of0h!o588,
is still under investigation by the
state highway patrol's Gallipolis
post.
The patrol said a car driven by
La ndolph Blackburn, 51, Vinton,
was eastbound when he reportedly
turned left into the path ·of a car
driven by Elma Goheen, 41. Coalton,
and collided.
Both cars were severely damaged, a nd Blackburn, Goheen and a
passenger in G&lt;.been's car, Anna
Cook, 72, Coalton, were injured and
taken to Holzer Medical Center by
the Gallia County ,E mergency
Medica! Service.
A hospital spokesperson said
Blackburn is in guarded condition In
the intensive care unit, suffering
from multiple trauma . Goheen was
treated and released -for ·multiple
trauma, but Cook was adm itted for
multiple cuts ana is listed in stable
condition this morning.
The patrol said that a pedestrian,
Robert L. Bums, 32, Rt. 2, BidweU,
was directing traffic at the scene
without aid of a ilght at 9 p.m. and
was struck by a westbound vehicle
driven by Kenneth G, Lee, 25,
Huntington, W.Va .
Burns was taken to HMC by the
EMS, where he was admitted for
treatment of a knee fracture. He
was listed In s table condition this
morning. That accident also remains under investigation, the
patrol said.
In a related matter,an 18-year-old
Ironton woman seriously injured in
a two-vehicle accident in Gall!a
County last Friday was reported in
stable condition this m orning in St.
Mary's Hospital in Hun tington .
A spokesperson said Amber D.
Chapman has been removed from
the intensive care unit~ where she
has been since her transfer from
HMC.
Chapman and Car l E. Lambert,
38, Rt. 2, Patriot, were bot injured
when her car and Lambert's truck
collided on Ohio 141 in Perry
Township. Chapman suffered several injuries in the accident and was
at first listed in critic~! cllnditio(\.

Contract ratified
The Eastern Local School District
Board of Educa lion met in special
session Monday night to ratify a new
three year contract with noncertlfled employes of the district.
The employes hag approved the
contract last week .
The new contract provides a 4.7
percent salary increase the first
year and 4.2 percent Increases the
next two years. The contract also
Includes life' insurance paid 1JY the
district for regular employes:

.

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