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b Dick Cavalli

MYFA'THER~

. KENN)j 0095
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~T l1-le PITTeBU~ ;61"ESL...£:Re

HAVE A CHANCIE '10WIN ITALL
AS-A IN 1Ht6 Yf:AR . .

IF .

'YOUR FATH~ ei:LIEVE$ ...

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1 Section, 12 P•1n

lSCents

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"iOLJ DIDN'T LET..ME ANieH. I
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COWRADO SPRINGS, Colo. -

WA5

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 12, 1911

Copyrlehled '"'

James v. HarUnger, Commander in

HE: BELIE:V1:611-IAT AU..~
SHOULD I5E FREE= "TO 6PEA.I&lt; · .
THEI~ MINoe. WI11-ICXJT ~OF
PLJN15HMENTCR..R'EFR16A.L.

•

Promote. N~orad chief
.·t o ·four-star ·general

HE ~L.IEVES IN 1'HE ~TO:

VERY 5rRONQ-

at y

e

•

WINTHROP

•

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Chief of the North American
Aerospace Defense Conunand, has
been promoted to the rank of loU
genel'!ll. He will remain at NORAD,
hesdquartered in Colorado Sprin~ ·
NORAD is the U.S.-Canadlan partnership responsible for three
missions - the air defense of North
America, warntng of a mlssUe attack, and space defense. General
Hartinger took command of NORAO
January 1,1980.
Genetal Hartinger was born in
Middleport and is the son Or Mrs.
Violet Hartinger, who sliD resides

there.
After being drafted Into the Infantry in World War n and serving
8s a sergeant, be enterecHhe United
States Military Academy at Weal
Point. Upo~~ graduation in 1M9, he
received a commlsslon as a·second
lie'ntenant in the Air Fon;e, 11101111
. with a bachelor of science degree.
The general also has a maater's
degree in business administration
from The George Washington
University.
General Hartinger's assignments
include being an F-84 combat pilot in
Korea; gunnery instructor at
w~ AFB, Ariz.: at u. s. Air

Force headquarters ln the Penlagon; Commander of the famed

Flying Tiger 23rd TacUcal Fighter
Wing at McConnell AFB, Kan.; and
Commandant of the Air War College
aiMaxwelJAFB,Als, .
He also. was Conunander of the
Tactical Air Command's Ninth Air
Force,· with headquarter&amp; at Shaw
AFB, S. C. and, prior to taking bls
present assignment, waa Commander of the Twelfth Air Force at
Berptrom AFB, Te&lt;.
General Hartinger is married to
the fonner Mickey ChrisUan of
Mullins, W. Va. He has three
children: Jlnuner,Kris,anc!Mlke.

NEW FOURoSTAR GENERAL- Gen. Jamn V.
Hartblger, c-m•'Cier In Chief of the North
Aeroapace Defe1.., Commalld, reeeivn bla fourtb star
durfug a ceremony at tbe Peatagan. Doing the plnbing
bo1111n are GeD. Lew ADen, Jr., Air F"""' Chief of

Staff, lind Mrs. Hartinger. GeaeralllartiDier- bepa
bla military creer In the Infantry In World War 0, Bel"
viDR aa a sergeant. He was eottiDiiliBloned In the Air
F"""' after graduating from West Point. (U. S. Air
Force Photo I. ·

U.S. gives Egypt new assurances'

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CAIRO, Egypt (AP)- The United
States and Israel ·gave Egypt new
assurances of support and
COOperation in the wake of President

Anwar Sadat's a!!eestnation.

{,t

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Priscilla's Po
IT'S SUCH A LOVELY
AUTUMN DAY. POP.'

by Ed sullivan

•

WELL"•

~\-0~ ~.
• ,f

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I THINK l.rOU'VE
ANSWERED MY
QUESTION~
. POP.'
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Meanwhile, Egyptian authorities
said atleaal two more suspects were
being sought in the slaying of Sadat,
and a machine gun attack on the
home of Interior Mlniater .NBbawY
lsmsU was reported by pollee sources but denied l;ly the mlnl8ter.
Secretary of State A)e11nder M.
Haig Jr. announced Sunday that
U.S. forces will conduct "very extensive" military exercises in Egypt
next month with troops from Egypt
and some Persian Gulf countries. ·He
said American M2 bombers might
be used.
"We're going to have to show our
presence here from lime to lime" to
· demonstrate "that it is not fatal to
be an ally of the United States.''
Hslg said oa NBC's "Meet the
·'- Press,'' broadcast from Cairo before
Haig r.eturned to Washirigton.
· Haig also said American officlala
'are assessing the possibility of acceleraUng military ald to Egypt and
its southern neigh~r. Sudan, the
only Arab state that ope.nlY supported Sadat's conciliation with
Israel, ''as a coricrete
manifestation" of support.
He said Sudan is threateoed with
increased subversion and border
tension fueled by Ubya, and "we are
looking for a step-up of deUveries of
American equipment to this
threatened nation."
The Soviet government issued a
statement accusing the United
Ststeo of exerUng "gross pressure"

on Egypt and interfering in Egyp- "'
tian affairs. A State Deparbnent
press officer said the accusation was
llhogwuh."

In Jerusalem, Deputy Prime
Minister Simha Ehrlich sald Israel

is finnly resolved to carry out its
commibnents to Egypt under the
1979 peace treaty,
Under terms of the pact, Israel is
scheduled to withdraw from the final
third of the Sinai Pentnsula m April.
FoUoWing Sadat's a....Bsinationlast
Tuesday, Israeli militants demanded the govenunent suspend withdrawal plans.
.
"It is very clear that we have to go
on With the peace process even
without Sadat - as if Sadat were
still alive," Ehrlich told Israel Radio
alter a Cabinet meeUng Sunday.
However, Ehrlich said Israel sees
no need to softeo its position in the
deadlocked Paleslinian autonomy
negotia.tions wltb~a ·.,ature
tq, the JreW' E!YPffBDgovemment.
"We are doing all·we can," he said.
The' talka are scheduled to reswne
Oct.21.
· Haig called on the two peace part- .
ners to "strip aaide some of the infleXibilities of the past" and rapidly
conclude an agreement on homerule for the 1.2 mUUon Palestinians
Uving ·in the occupied West Bank of
the Jordan River arid the Gaza Strip.
Haig, who led a U.S. delegation including three. former presidents to
Sadat's funeral Saturday, met Sunday with Sadat's hand-picked successor, Vice President Hosni
Mubarak, who is expected to be confirmed as president in an election
Tuesday.

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Teachers urged to defy order
PHILADELPHIA - Striking city teschers were urged by their
union to defy a court order to return to work today, despite the threat
of fines, jaU sentences and dlsmlaals.
"U that's wbat it takes to put our contract put in place, I guess that's
what lt takes,'' Jolm Murray, president of the P)llladelphia Federation
of Teachers; told 300 union members Sunday. His remarks were the
union's first official reply to the injunction issued Wednesday by Common Pleas Judge ,Edward Bradley that ordered an end to the monthlollll walkout.
School officials, meanwblle, said they hoped enough tescbers would _
return to work today to enable cla••es to reswne Tuesday. There
would have been no school today anyway becsuse of the Columbus
Day holiday.

Ballonists celebrate by sleeping
SAVANNAH, Ga. - Their Super Chicken ID roosting on a coaslal
laland, the two men who made the first non-atop balloon trip acroeithe
United Stalel chooe sleep !M'I' celebration at the end of their 2,500mile fllghl.

.

"We're all ·about in the arne tlrecllllate," ce&gt;pllot Fred Gorrell, 4(Y,
said Sunday nicht in I telephone Interview. He and John Shoecralt, 38,
brrr r ~-the country In two days.
The PboeniX, Ariz: ~ were saving the champagne for ·
today when they ptamed to retrieve the polyetbylene balloon and eggslaped gondola- Cor wllich the Cl'lft was named- from Blackbeard
Illland jull-th of Savannah, Gorrell said. They spent \he nlcht at a

moteL

Weather forecast

l&lt;NOI.N841TELIYIIION~t .

'WOIItD ~Jft WON:...t.!T'S H!AJII THEM;UARI" -'

r

Carter, Ford urge
.conference with PLO
WASHINGTON (AP)- Gerald R.
Ford and Jlnuny Carter, who were
instrumental in bringing Israel and
Egypt together, say the United
States eventually must deal directly
with th.e Palestine Liberation
Organization to gain a comprehensive Middle East peace.
In an unpredecented joint in·
terview, the 38th and 39th presidents
also agreed that many moderate
Arab leaders support the Camp
David peace process but are afraid
to speak up.

Israel's right to exist. .
Carter, who personally supervised
the 1978 summit at his Camp David,
Md., retreat that led to a peace
treaty between Egypt and Israel,
said: "There is no way for Israel
ever to have an assur~ permanent
peace without resolving the
Palestinian issue ....So I think Jerry
is certainly right in saymg these .
discussions have to he done."
The problem, Carter said, is U.S.
recognition of the PW before PW
recognition of Israel.

For&lt;\ Ccn1.er, lrecj\tently • ""WI!' oBii't lljieall !Of liitMI:--1
a
simultaneous
caUing each other "Jerry" and think
"Jimmy... spoke on the flight back · acknowledgement of the PW that
from Saturday's funeral of slain · Israel has a right to elist, and our
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat. dealing with the PW, would eel"
The White House released the text tainly be something that I would
favor,'' Carter said.
Sunday.

MORNING MEETING- Ulliled Slalel Sett~ry of Slate Alelllltlder
M. Hall, Jr., left, lliCl Egypdtm Vice PftlldeDI HOilli MubuU reopond
to reporters' quesU.. Suday mortliDg after 1 meet1tt1 at Mubarak's
Caire mldeoce. The meeti,g prndaced a lllatemeal ot eoatlaued close
relations between the U. S. and Egypt despite tbe usassiDation of
PresldentAllwarSadat. CAP Laterpboto). CSet APWire Story).

Jury returns guilty verdict
A six-member jury deliberated for
approximately three and a half
hours Saturday night before returning a guilty verdict against a Meigs
C&lt;lunty man in connection with a
March 15 automobile accident which
resulted in the death of a 26-year-old
New Haven woman.
,
Stephen 0. Jenkins, 26, Racine,
was convicted of negUilent homicide
in Mason County Maglatrate Court
after two days of testimony heard
before Maglatrate Paul E. ''Snooky"
Smith•
Jenkins was the driver of a car
which collided with a vehicle driven
by April Parsons on Rt. 62 just north
of Point Pleasant shortly alter mid-.
night 011 Sunday, March 15.
Miss ·Parsons died March 19 in the
intensive care unit at St. Mary' s
Hospital, HunUngton, from head injuries suatatned ln that accident.
A~ to a ·report fUed by
Deputy Joe Young of the Mason
County · Sheriff's Department, who
waa the first witnesi to tealify for the
state on Friday, Jenkins was
· travelling left of center when the accidet;lt occured. Young also said that
through hill investigation at the lime
of the accident he had detenntned
that the point of Impact appeared to
be ln the northbound lane, the lane In
which the Parsona car · was
travelling . .
Jenldlll, wbo lesUfled Saturday ln
hill own defenae, aid, however, that
he did not think he was In tile nortbbound laDe, but on bla own llde of
the road when the coUislon occurred.
lie told the Jury that allhoagb be bed
looked clown to put a crmtte In bla
tape player •Just prior to the accident, he was driving llowlf, apo
pt'Otdmately 40 or 46 miles per hour,
llld eanluib' because Gf the CUJ'V1III
aloni Rt. 82.
Be llid be couldn't reraemblr
. lllUCb crt wbat ........ that ~
but ..-Ill lril.. up, ..... bright
llghta In ldl 8)W lllld a car CGilllng
toward 111m. 'l'llltt ""'"lilnl bit, he
~II!!!. batbliWI~ _nnthl• el.le
IIDiil he was In 10 llilllullnee belnl
triDipOi'led to PitMan! Valley

•

Hospital.
The defendant also told the jury
that a statement read in court Saturday moniing by Trooper C.W. Kimball of the West Virginia State
Pollee, who corraborated Deputy
Young's report, was not an accurate
statement from blm in. In that
statement, Jenkins admitted that he
had drifted into the other lane when
he reached down to pick up the
(Continued on page 12)

Sadat had urged that the United
States talk with the PLO.
"At some point that has to happen," said Ford, who was president
when theli'Secretary of State Henry
A. Kissinger emi&gt;loyed shuttle
diplomacy leading to the separation
of Israeli and Egyptian forces in the
Sinai.

I

...

"That is the kind of development
that I think has to take place if
you're going to get the neiloliations
lor the future off dead center,'' he
added."! would not want to pick the
date today ... but as you go down the
. road at some point, that dialogue has
to take place, and I think that will
happen."
. It was Ford who promised Israel
that the United States would not deal
with the PW until it recognized

Secretary of State Alexander M.
Haig Jr. said upon bls return to
Washingtoo early today that U.S.
poUcy hasn't changed - not to
negotiate with the PW Until it has
recognized Israel's right to exist
within secure borders.
,
Both former presidents sald
dealings with the PW would not
necessarily have to be with the
present leadership under Yassir
Ararat.
" It can be responsible business
and other leaders," Carter said.
"There may well be other leaders
that in time will either in conjunction with Arafat or independenUy have an opportunity to
represent them ln these eventual
negotiations," Ford added.

~

llula Evua. "beltll beld" ilia ..ce bJ So
~
DldcJ lootllall player, .hllle ....... Theme was eqe tile
WlldeaiL
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Th~

Monday, October 12, 1911

Commentary.
Cut this out and put 'in
'

This c:olwnn Ia going to be full of
figuree, but I venture that you will
not !riah to be witbout them. I tried
to alTIIIlle with lhe edltcin to publlah
lhi.s piece with perforated edges, IU
I found tbla lmpractlcai: Under lhe
clreumltaDces, get out lhe 8CI8aora
or the rQOr blade.
A aoundly run country will, 88
surely 88 the aoldler keeps his rlfie
lubricated, labor to maintain Ill
essential plant, correct? Another
way to put lhi.s Ia that If our per
capita Income were as low 88~ say,
India's or Brazil's, there would not
be much left over to a) guard lhe
common defense, or b) look after lhe
unfortunate. In order to do either of
these there has to be a certain
residue. That reaidue can be mul&lt;&gt;ted from the muaes 88 In the Soviet
Union, leaving them without lhe
essential ffllO(Ioms to engage In
commerce or to blunt the shwll
edges of life; or It can come out of
what might reasonably be called a
c'surplus.''
So that In deciding what pel'centage of the gross · national
product should be handed over to lhe
government to be spent as the
. legislatures dictate, one should from
time to time take the temperature of
· the economic plant. These figures,
culled from the Tax Foundation and
the Grace Co,'s economists to whom
we should all be grateful, are

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straightforward.
BetWeen 11162 and 111l, we wish to
knllll': . 1) What was govenunent
&amp;pending, aa a percentage of GNP?

What W88 the average investment, u a percentage of GNP?
3) What was the &amp;Muallncrease In
GNP {In every cue, we are talking
about the average between 1982 and
!Ill)? 4) What wu the percentage
Increase In productivity?
Here are the answers, In pel'centages, to the above for Six countries:
,
Japan: I) 8.7; 2) 32.6; 37,9; 47.8.
Italy: 1) 15.4; 2) 21l.~; 3) U; 4) 5.6.
France: I) 13.8; 2) 22.9; 3) 4.4; 4)
5.4.
'
Germany: I) 17.5; 2) 20.6; 3) 3.8;
4) &amp;:2. '
United Kingdom: I) 18.7; 2) 18.4;
3) 2.3; 4) 2.7,
United States: I) 20.6; 2) 17.8; 3)
3.5; 4) 2.2.
These figures speak volumes. The
United States spends over twice 88
much of its gross national prodiiCI
through the public sector aa Japan,
and more than any other nation
Usted. ·The United States Invests
about one haU as much 88 Japan, 88
a percentage of its gross national
product, and less than any other
country Usted. The United States'
real average growth In GNP is less,
as a percentage, than one-haU
Japan's, and less than that of any
2)

The Daily Sentinel ·
lllCourtStred

Pvmerey, OW.

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111-tft..!JU

DEVOTEDTO'IHE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

S!m~ · ~~""T'""·~c:::::l·-===­
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

'

, Pabtuber

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH
Ge~ttral Mlaager

Aulstlll'l Pllbll.llbt:r{Coulrollrr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NewtEd.Jtor
A MEMBER of The A11ocillted Prell, W.nd DaUy Prell Ahocilltioa a!ld tbe

Amerkaa NeiiPSJllper Publilhen Auoeiltloa.

,,

lEITERS OF OPINibN are welcomed, They abotlkt lit leu tbiiiM ,..NI 16q. AD
letttn are •bJett tG ditiDC and 111111t be alped with •me, adclreu ud telepbooe .....
ber. No Mllped lttten wiD be pUbllllted. Letten ...oWd be Ia 1ood W.ale,· adbnllal
tuan, . . penoM11tlel.

Labor's probers
·The First Amendment to the Constitution presumably guarantees
freedom of speech to ali Americans, but one govenunent bureaucrat decided
earlier this year that it didn't necessarily apply to his subordinates.
Frank A. Yeager, the i.abor Department's acting deputy inspector ·
general, issued an inter-office memo that said "employees are not to discuss
substantive agency matters with unauthorized individuals during or after office hours without prior approval" from senior deparbnent officials.
Yeater has since been replaced and the memo has been withdrawn but
the episode was only the most recent example of persistent attempis to
ha......S and hwniliate employees in an especially important agency of the
federalgovenunent.
.
The Labor Department is charged with Investigating violations of
federal laws by corrupt labor organizations, union Officials and recipients of
departmental funds, but it historically has evaded those oversight responsi bilities.
·

Pomeroy-Miclclleport, Ohio
Mondey, October 12, 1911

cent, the IIWiln the ,10,1110 bnu:ket
will be pa)'lnc %7 I* tiinl more tu
on the ~ dollar than he wu
In 19'11. Tile man earning • •1110 will

marginal dollu. The

'

1111

the • tu reform of Ronald Reagan, In

man eamiD&amp; tll5every.categoryottupayerwlll

$40,000 will be paylllfl nine percent be worse off thaD In 19'11. Ques11011:
more. In other words, after the great Is thla sufficient reform?

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Problems beset state budget hill
receive the benefit of a high-rost factor. "The state shouldn't mandate
such large increases," Kelp said.
He said the admlnlatration favors
its original proposal, which provides
a modest increase.for teacbers.
Kelp criticized lhe Democrat·
controlled House for ralalng the
budgets of the treasurer, secretary
of state, auditor, and atlof!ley

g~neral.

All of those offices are held by
Democrats who would get appropriations increases, over the last
biennium, ranging from 20 percent
to 33.3 percent, Kelp said.
Aronoff said all the items mentioned by Kelp, along· with many
others, will he review&lt;:&lt;! by his com-

mittee.

Today in ·history.

••

Today is Monday, Oct. 12, the 285th day of 1981. There are 80 days left In
lheyear.
Today's highlight In history:
On Oct.l21h,l492, Christopber Coiwnbus discovered America.
On this date:
-In 11142, American forces defeated the Japanese In the World War n
batUe of Cape Esperance on Guadalcanal.
-~ ~.lhe, Allled Control CouncU In Gennany ordered lhe dissolution
of Nazi Party alter World Warn.
-In 1980, Soviet Premier Niklta Khrtishchev upset the decorum of lhe ·
United Nations General Auembly by pounding on a desk with his shoe.
-In 1984, Army forces took control in South Vietnam, ousting the
govenunentofMaj. Gen. NguyenKhanh ina bloodless coup.
And In 1978, peace Ialka between larael and Egypt opened in
Washington; ~ United States auspices, 8111id predictions that rapid
agreement will be reached.
Ten yeara ago: Prealdent NIJ:on announced he would make trip to
Moacow,lndependent of his planned journey to Peking.
Five yeara ago: Swine flu vaccinstlons tn 10 states were suspended after the deaths of three elderly persons who received the vaccine at a Pit·
tsburgh cllnlc.
One year ago: Offlctais of the Algerian Red Cross said 1,500 persons
died In an earthquake that had dev88tated the city of AI Asnam.

a

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Doing good
while doing we.J]L.___
. . _ _ _ _ _ _ _w;_,z_zia_m_s_te_if
'

Let's say you're the president of a man. You lhlnk that governrnent
multinational corporation.
·spending for social prosrama has
Youproduct-asoftdrlnk,say,or dan\aged the economic system that
For example, the Senate Pennanent Investigations Subconunlttee
recentlyconcludedthatthedeparbnent'shighlypublicizedinvestigationofa a candy bar- is priced within the enabled your company to rech the
Teamsters Union pension fund "was a failure, the victim of poor reach of almost every American Forlwle 500. ·
.
· over age 12. But overseas it is a
You like lhe president's treatment
management, incompetence and bureaucratic infighting."
The Inspector general's office is supposed to act as a watchdog for the highly prized luxury._At home and of organized labor. You wish you
entireagency,insuringthatsensitiveinvestigationsarentoaccidentallyor abroad, your salea are brisk and could deal·with the unions ln. your
purposelymishandiedbylneptorcorruptofficials.
your profits keep pace with your buslneaa like Reagan dealt with
PATCO.
But the Govenunent Accountability Project, an exceptionally detel'- conservative expectations.
mined publi&lt;&gt;-interest organizaiton, has compiled considerable evidenCe to
You are a lifelong Republican who
"'" "'""' ,.
document Its claim that lhe inspector general's office has been "a corrupt voted for Ronald Reagan In !Ill.
As you aee it, union demands and
-•---,.
Your company's polltical action meddlesome govenunent edicts
and ......
,-~ged agency. "
, ,,
Those are serious charges, but lhe el!pel'ience of Willtam R. Gamble m, committee contributed sever'll promoting unqualified minorities
Nicholas J. Mangieri Jr. and other veteran..crimlnallnvestigators who have tbouaand dotlara to his campalgn.
and women have hurt prodiJctivity
worked in the inspector general's office s~ests that the allegations may be
You liked candidate Reagan's and angered lhe white men whostal'.
style aud occasional subatance. You ted .........,__ for your company long
va lid . •
.
·--...
Gamble, an oft-commended veteran oliO years In the department, was
~Jni=tea~
~ · before you did.
working In the Miami offfce when he began Investigating a "mllliO&lt;Hiollar aolt _ her'position weakened In the
Then you learn that the giant
pyramid scheme" that Involved possible criminal wrongdoing on the part of International communlly, , h.er ~lac:na~ waithso-all
. Jeaaeed
15 to 18 people, some of lhern politically Influential.
..~
In late !9'19, only one day after he had briefed a ·aentor depirtment of. = = r t a : : = O : : . tier Jackson, lhe black preacher from
ficial on the probe, he wu summoned to Washington, 8W1l11111ly removed
ChiCII(!o. You read that Coke Ia only
from the case and inexpllcably tranaferred to lhe department's Los Angeles
You though~ too, that Anlerica'a the first on a long list of companies ·
110cia1 fabric was.~•~- unraveled. that Jackson plana to encourage to
office
·
Minorities had ~"'a protected hire blact workers and invest In
claaa. Women were demanding and
Gamble fought back, publlcly charging that Labor Department olficiala recelvinl favored treatment
_
. M-•- black buafnesaell.
were mlaalng federal fWida eannarked for criminal probei. Altbough the
......
You nlBlize that your product line
department cialmed to employ 125 crtmlnal investigators, Gamble offered :.:;:;::ad~~- aense of com- ~~ ~:~wal~=
evidence thatfewer than 15 were actually at work.
u'
Gamble thell became the su\)ject of a vendelta-llke criminal inYou endorsed the tu and budget Americans and their aympathilrera
· Yestigatlon. After monitoring hla telephone converaatlona, opening hla mall
~~d~= at home and~lwoad. And lhell your
and pladn&amp; 111m under the surveillance otaequad of FBI agenta, the departsecretary
you tbal a Mr.

::=:

::J'

=

,!'

Jackson from Chicago is holding 011
line three.
What do you do?
You might do · what one
conglomerate ~done: Review the
pesky afflnnatlve action agreemenIs that the govenunent made ynu
sign, count the minorities in your
employ,addupyourcontributlonsto
the Urban. League over the past
decade and report to Jackson that
you're already doing more than
CompanyX •
Or you hire a high-priced
Washington law finn to defend you
against Jackson's asaault And you
t t the word that
pu OU
you might
charge the Windy City minister with
extortion.
Or you simply ten your secretary
that you will never be "In" when ·
Jackson calls and hope ' that he
moves on to lhe next targeted company.
·
·
That kind of tough talk and 1
re ""'
tant paternallam may go over big In
the locker room of tl1e country club,
but It may not wub at your next
lllncklloldenl' meetlllg. the stockholden are lnterelted tn proflta, and
your hard-line policy may dampen
the dividend that you ,planned to.an.IIOUDCe.

Heladmalledpenanaimaterlal~n. ""-:;;~-:::--::=:-1 ..-..;,_-----... r:ii~~i~fl

mentftnallyfoundcauaetoflreaamble:
pGitagHree piilillillllenvelope~, tiiUI aavlngfllUf wartb ofltampa.
1_) .~.1111ferl wurlhed evidence that alleul10 ~ olfldal• ot the
DIIU'IeC of Columbia government bad.coerced .naJ faYGn fl'ml wamen
moplq)ed Ulider the Compreheiialve Employment and TratnJac Act, a labor

&gt;

•
to VIctory

'

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) - Wollis
Stacy; a two-time U.S. Open champion; needed a 7.foot "survival putt"
for a birdie on the firat extra hqle to
· win the '150,000 Inamori ClaSBic In a
fOUI'-way playoff at the par-73
• Almaden Golf and Country Club

course.
But the key to her victory Sunday

was lhe way she played the finishing

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

\

•"*pd.

For the.record

I

.~

-Dj-

..,.....,w...........

Amerttaa Coafere~~tt

w

L '' T PF

Vancouver 2, Bulalo 2. Ue
Philadelphia II, Pittsburgh 2:

A· Pc\.

Otlcago 3, Calgary 0
MOIMIIy'1Game
MlnnesOIJ!
at Quebec

~~~ ~:~~=

Miami
Buffalo

2

N.Y . Jels

3

1 129 169

.417

1 5
0 130 149 .187
16010611!1&amp;.161
Ceatral Dlvb:ltD
4 2
0 1$3 131 .667
t
2
0 141 lll .661

New Ellgland
Baltimore "
Cincinnati
PiUsburgh

90

/lfl

Sll 12'1

.333

llous!Dil

I

2

0 II$

Cleveland

2

4

0

Western Dlvia:lon

TueadiiJ'IGame
Calgary at Los An!leles

Wretellll Spertl 1'rul8t:tlou.
By "n.e Auedakd Preu

7&amp; .833
f 2 0 193 1G3 .667
4 2
0 151' 132: .Ml
2 4
0 ' 83 • - -.333
15Det36.167

Denver
San Diego
Kansas City
Oaklornl

5

S..ltl•

]

0 133

BASEII.4LL ,
KANSAS

ElaRra DJvtllot~
N.Y.Glants •

St. Lools
washington

. MlnAesota
Tampa Bay

Detroit
. Green Bay
Chicago

Atlanta
New Orleans

2

0 117

90

Mike Glenn, guard.

' MILWAUKEE

4

0 111 128

J33

2

4

0 lOS l40

.l33

15089133

.167

'''

FOOTIIAU.

Ohio HI&amp;~ Stbool FoolboU

0 160 131

4

2

3

3

0 157 120t .687
t 1S7 115 .500

·~064136.167

Local bowling

Suadly'a Games

Pittsburgh 13, Cleveland 7
Los Angeles 31, Atlama l5

pOMEROY BOWlJNG LEAGUE

New York Jell 28, New E ngland 24
Philadelphia 31, New Orle&amp;no 11
Cincinnati 41, Baltinl4X'e 19

TEAM

Houlton 35, Seattle 17

TonY' s Carryout

F. R ~ ks Club

r . _ Bay 21, c..... Bay 10
Wasfiington 24, Chicaso 7
Sa'n Francloco 1&amp;, llellaa 11
Denver fl, Detroit 21
Minnesota 33, San Diego 31

lllniP..mad~I,D.

'

'
flulllr,Oct.II
Buffalo al New YOrk Jets
Houston at New England
New Orleana at Cleveland
Phllodolpllia at M • Pi«aburrh at ClndnnatJ
St. LoWs at Atlanta ·
San Francilco VI. -Green O.y at Milwaukee
Wa~ at Miami
San Dl"" ol BaiUmore

I

il

-,.·-.

.

•

14

..

;~ ci1BHIKI-run play to Stev&amp; ·_,
Watson. Detroit's Billy SimS had his' ·.l
best day 88 a pro, I11Bhlng for 185 : '' ~
yards and two touchdowns.
.
'· '

RED5KINS U, BEARS 7 ·

.. .

.,

.'

EARLY WEDNESDAY L IXED

hit by Lambert while releasing a
pass.
. •,
Lamberl drew a Mlllghlng penalty
and Sipe went to the sideline with ·
what was initially reported as a con- ~
cussion . Later, a Browns'
spokesman said Sipe riilght only
have been "badly dinged."
"I don't feel guilty at all because it
wasn't a late hit.. It wasn 't a cheap
shot," said Lambert, who visited
Sipe after the game to make sure he
was alright.
Cleveland cornerback Ron Bolton
disagreed.
"What's 15 yards when you lose
qreat quarterback like Brian Sipe?
That's the way Pittsburgh plays.''
Bolton said.
- •.
Swann, meanwhile, claimed :·
Bolton kicked him early in the gameand spit in his face when he rose td· ..
confront him.
" That's pretty low. That's · ·'
crawling in the dirt a little bit,.. said
SwaM.
"I don't do.things iike that~ never .

1 sajd, 'Your crew choked.' He

Seplemstr 3101•1

Eal(les Club
Smith's Body Shop
Tony's CarryOUt
Smilh-Nelllon Motors

. '..

' '

32
30
11
22

Lo n~shots

18
14
HIGH SERIES - IM~n ) Larry DugHn 589,
Clyde Sayre 531 : rWomenl Betty Smith 488,
IllllbelleCouch 474 ,
•
.
HIGH GAME - IMen) Larry Dugan 210,
Spwl RUtJ.Se11201; IWomen) I" belle Couch 179,
Hehm Phelps 172.
·
Zlde sSport.Shop

TRI~NTY

BOWLING LEAGVE
Se:pttmber II, 2:111

Te•m
Toler lnsuranee
RoachGuiJCiub

PCI.

Bill',s Body Shop

18

Coal Buckel!

16

H&amp;:R Jo'irestone
EawlesClub

14
12

»

TIPPED'roTHOMAS-Steelera' J . T. Thomaa comea upwltbapaaa
iDteDded for Cleveland Browns' Ozzle Newsome In tbe e........, to ead a
last mlaate acorlal !brest iD tbe lourtb quarter of Sunday'• game iD PIUBiJarlb. ComfDI Ia to ..ngratutale tile game saver Ia Steelera' J•ci&lt; Lambert, rflbt. The Steelera went on to win their fourtb game lllralpt ~7.

16

lUGH TEAM' SERIES - C01.l BuckelS 2491,
r011ch's Gun Shop 2407, Toll!r Insurance 2474.
Ht~H INOJVIOUAL SERIES- IAM'Y Dapn
:&gt;a:i,GregGibbs565, BobHen.tler.661.
HIGH TEAM GAME- Roa~oil t1 Gun Club 91M,
Toler Insurance fi7 , Smith Body Shop&amp;.

(AP Lue.,..to!.

Snead breaks streak

HIGH INDMDUAL GAME - J!ob Henaloy
219, Larry Dugan 214, B111Radfonl213•
. , . COLUMBUS,

·

.'

said, 'How' ' I said, 'Generally.' I .
guess it will cost me $5,000," added ·
Modell, anticipating a league line.. ··,
He did not elaborate on his
allegations ~bout the officiating.

TEAM SERIES - Ea ~les Club 1964.
TEAM GAME - EaKlesCiub687.

TEAM

.- ·

Unebacker Neal Olkewicz retur-' • •'
ned an Interception for a touchdown ··
and defensive tackle Dave Butz ·' ·
picked off another pass to set up a- ,. ~·
score as the Redskins won the first
time this season. The Bears scored :-·''
In the final two minutes on a paaa ·.: ·:
from Mike Phipps to Marcus An-' • · ~
deraon.
'
GIANTS34, CARD!NALB If
Phil Sinuns passed, for three' ",~·
touchdowns, two of them to JohnnY" " '
Perkins, and Rob carpenter rushed .,
for one as the Giants evened their .' : 1
recOrd at 3-3. Jim Hert's pass to' " -·
Doug Marsh and Theotls Brown's 3-· :&gt;
yard nm produced the cardinals' . ..'.:
scores.
·JETS 28, PATRIOTS 24
.
Three scoring passes by Richard ·.'
Todd, including two to Jerome · ·
Barkum, paced the Jets. S~ve •-'
Grogan, subbing for starting quar- -~
terlJack Matt Cavanaugh, direc~ a .. j
New England comeback, but Johnny '
Lynn's Interception as time ran out
killed the Patriots' hopes.
· 'I
Oll.ERS 35, SEAHAWKS 17
' ''
Ken Stabler .had three touchdown · · .:&gt;
passes and Earl Campbell scored '
twice and gained 166 yards rushing
for Houston. It marked the end of a ""
season-long slump for Stabler, who ~
had completed just one pass the '
week before. The Seahawks led 10:0 l
in the early going on a Jim Zorn psss I
to David Hughes and a Eield goal by i
Efren Herrera.
•
BUCCANEERS 21, PACKERS 10 ••
Quarterback Doug Williams
passed for one touchdown and ran
for another as the Buccaneers won 'I
the NFL's Battle of the Bays. The
Packers held an early lead on Gerry
Ellis' 7-yard TD run .

11

Bachner 184.

--

I, Lao Anloloi I

Zid~ ' sSportShop

Smith-Nelson Motors

Bachner 512.
HIGH GAME - fMcn f Tom ~mith 210, Bob
Couch 191; /Women) Betty Smith 200, Carolyn

Miami 1t Buffalo, (n)

mgzz &lt;hjvnbhj mc~)O..-ludlnl a· ',.· ·

Modell, meanwhile, visited the of·
ficials after the game.
"! respectfully asked for 'Ben , ··
Drieth (crew chief)," said the .
Cleveland team owner.

10
HIGH SERIES - -I MeJJ f Tom Smith &amp;70, Sob
Coach a:JJ; {Women f Pat Carson 521, Carolyn

....., •• o.me

-

Smith'~ Body Shop

32
28
22
14

No.5

New 'Vol'\ Giants :M, St.Louis 14

BRONCOS Z'l, IJONS !1
Denver won its fifth game against
a lone defeat behiDd Craig Morton's -

have,'' said Bolton.

EARLY WEDNESDAY MlXED
Seplfmlxr !1, ltel

Kanau City 17, Oakland 0

~y::-81.~ ~- ~-

Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland against Pittsburgh dating back to
Browns fueled the fire of their long 1970.
rivalry.
"It's ludicrous to even think
The Steelera and Browns have there's any jinx," said defensive end
been ·foes {o•.32 years, and they take Lyle Alzado.
things personally. So while there
"Jinx?" snapped Browns' Coach
wasn't much scoring in Pittsburgh's Sam Rutigliano. "Save it for
13-7 victory Sunday, assorted Helloween.'~
developments stoked both sides.
Jinx or not, Steeler safety J .T.
-Cleveland quarterback Brian Thomas secured the win with an enSipe was sidelined late in the third dzone interception of a tipped pass
quarter when knocked woozy by by Browns' backup quarterback
Steeler linebacker Jack Lambert, Paul McDonald with I :53 remaining.
who drew a roughing penalty.
"We were fortunate to survive and
--5teeler wide receiver LyM win," Coach Chuck Noll said after
SwaM claimed a Cleveland cor- lhe 4-2 Steeiers, winner of four
nerhack spit in his face.
straight, stayed tied with Houston
-Cleveland team owner Art and Cincinnati atop the AFC Central
Modell wentto the chief official after Division.
the game and told him his crew had
"We played very well against a
"choked."
good football team," said
-And the Browns scoffed at the Rutigliano, whose 2-4 Browns fell

.t67

2

lloles, with birdies on lhe 13th, 14th
and 18th holes.
"The back nine won lhe tou...
Tampa O.y at OPland
New York Glints at SeatUe
nament for me," said Stacy, whose
Denver at Kanu.11 City
$22,500 winnings Increased her
Los Angela at Dallu, (n )
M-.y,Od.lt
seasonal earnlngs.to$128,242,1.oth on
Chicago at Detroit, (nJ
the Ladies Professional Golf
Aaaoclatlon tour money-list. "t've
Naua.IHoeb)' Lape
never played so hard in my life. I
• wa~e~ ·c.tereMe
knew I had a chance to win and was
l'llll'ldl t&gt;Moloo
W L TFGAPtl
really pwnped up," she said.
1011043
Stacy shot a 70 for lhe final round
101133
, IZ111.3
to end regulation play at 288 and
12112UI
deadlocked with Donna Caponi,
...
0!0
5110
defending cham,Pion Amy Alcott and
211)14124
Jan Slephenslti. eaponl, who had a
10111&amp;!
11112113
.n, mlaaed a chance 19 extend the
111111!
playoff when her Z.foot birdie putt on
11211122
C..;t DC kwe
the mra hole rolled to the right of
N..tothe cup.
2 0 l . II 12 ~
T'""""
lOliDJS
"I wasn't nervlliii.•I just mlaHd
•1 ' l I ll 14 3
lhe putt," Caponi aald. "It shouldn't
1&gt;' 1110103
• 1
1010 · 12
have happened but who will know In SL Loull
110tl2
W1MipeC
~ buadnld yean.
.
2 I I IJ
T I
"What bolhen me more than vanceuver
Edmon&amp;on
2 1 0 11 14 4
llll)'lhlnjJ II t,bat with a victory I Colpry
IIIIlS
could lave locl&lt;ed up the Player rl. &lt;Jo1ondp
0
•I "U 0'
Lao Allieioo
0 'I I'
the Yell' ann!. But I still have
laiiGn l, llartllnl 1, Ue
another dlaJa In our last ,tour- · ........
I, lllflaiD I
nament Ia J..-a."
f11k' ... ;..::;
1 '
OD the atra bale, Alcott made a
w. n· On I. DiCrolt I
par, .... 8' , .... _ enMd
7, N.., Y i l t - I

fnlll ,.. 11&amp;411'11 ..... ... hoCiluJI
ber drift aut Ill bnilidl Each run-

Quinn

Nadollal FCtOU.U Leaaue
GREEN
BAY
PACKERS- Released
Oelvin Wil.liams, running back.

Weetera DlviJJou
4

.

BUCKS- S(gned

Buckner, guard, to a five-year contract.

.867

2

Gordy

Billy Con-

Natioul BuketbiU AgO( ..IIoD
ATLANTA
HAWKS-Announced
they
have received a signed offer sheet from

0
0 140 67 1.000
4 2 0 l t 0 123 /lfl
J 3 0100 9'1 ~
2 4
0108 151• .333
15
0!01 156 .167
Central DJvbl.a
4 2
0 13fi 146 .867
6

4

Americu Leape
CITY ROYA~FII'ed

MacKenzie, Rick Renick and
nors, coaches.
' BASI&lt;f.:I'BAU.

NJU.tllll CoafertDH

Ptllladelphia
Dallas

From AP Wires
The 4llera rolled up 440 yards on ofThe first · syllable of their fenae and !Jeld Dallas to 192, inhometown is taking on new meaning . eluding just 21 yards rushing by
for lhe Oakland Raiders, "Oh," asln Tony Dorsett, who entered the game
zerb, naught, empty... . 1
881he NFL's top ground-gainer.
For lhe third week In a row~ that
In other games Sunday, the Los
what's lhe defending Super Bowl Angeles Rams nipped lhe Atlanta
champions produced Sunday. This Falcons 37-35; the Minneoota
time, it w88 the Kansas City .Chiefs Vikings tripped the San Diego
blanking tile ltalders, 27-().
.Chargers 33-31 ; the Pittsburgh
"Sure,lhere's·a problem when you Steelers b&lt;Bt the Cleveland Browns
can't get lhe ball In lhe end zone 13-7; the New York Jets edged the
three weeks in a row," said AI New England Patriots 28-24; the
Davis, lhe Raiders' managing Philadelphia Eagles downed the
general partner. "We just can'tlet it New Orleans Saints 31-14, and the
conti(lue."
'
Cincinnati Bengals trounced the
Quarterback Jim Plunkett~ ben- Baltimore Colts41-19.
ched midway through the game for
Also, the Houston Oilers defeated
_the second week In a row, said there lhe SeatUe Seahawks 35-17: the
was plenty of blame to go around for Tampa Bay Buccaneers downed the
the scoreless streak unmatched sin- Green Bay Packers 21-10; the
C. the Old Brooklyn Dodgers were Washington Redsklns whipped the
shutout for six games in a row in Chicago Bears 24-7 ; the Denver
1943-44.
Broncos beat the Detroit Lions 27-21~
"It has to be an overall team ef· and the New York Giants best the St.
fort," said the Most Valuable Player Louis Cardinals 34-14.
In last January's National Football
Tonight, the Miami Dolphins play
League championship game. "Some the Bills in Buffalo.
things are. intangible. We start off
RAMS 37, FALCONS 35
The Rams kept pace with the 49ers
thinking we're going to get the ball
atop in the NFC West by edging the
In lhe end zone."
While the Raiders were main- Falcons on Frank Corral's 25-yard
.talnlng ~ stresk more futile than any field goal with 24 seconds remaining .
in pro football since World War II , leRoy Irvin returned punts 84 and 75
the Dallas Cowboys were also yards for touchdowns for lhe Bams.
engaging in a piece of history they Steve Bartkowski threw three TD
wouldjustassoonforget.
passes for the Falcons.
Oakland's Bay Area neighbors,
EAGLES 31, SAINTS U
the San Francisco 49era, and their
The NFL's only unbeaten and un·
upstart quarterback Joe Montana tied team, the Eagles got a psir of 1were stomping the Cowboys 41&gt;-14, yard touchdown runs from Booker
· the worst Dallas defeat since 1970.
Russell and a TD paSB from Ron
"It W88 about as bad as some of Jaworski. George Rogers had a f&gt;those times in the early years," said yard scoring run for the Saints.
VIKINGS 33, CHARGERS 31
Tom Landry, who has ' coached the
Cowbf.&gt;ys since their first year, 1980, . Rick Daruneier gave the Vikjng's
whentheywentll-11-1.
· a dramatic victory with a 38-yard
"We took what they gave us, and field goal as time expired. He had
they gave us more than we ex- missed the conversion follpwing
pected," Montana, who took over as Terry LeCQJUJt's touchdoen catch
the 49era' quarterback after a 59-14 1:51 'remaining, but was given a
loss to Dallas' last year~ said in ap- chance at redemptipn when LeCount
recovered an onside kick.
praising lhe Cowboys' defense.

I~~~~·~:=.~i~~~~~1t~.::.oo~

•••

Suday'l G.mes

N•Uaaai F"U.U Lape

,.....,,

·~

Pete Johnson, who rushed 75 yards on 20 carries, and Jim Hargrove
each scored one-yard touchdowns
after lhe ·Bengals had intercepted
passe.Sfrom Bert Jones.
Cleveland Franklin scored the
Colts' first touchdown on a one-yard
run to open the fourth quarter. Jones
later hit Reese McCall for a &amp;a-yard
touchdown pass.
The Colts, 1-S, missed earller
scoring chances after reachln~ the
Cincinnati 25 and 17. But Baltimore
blew its best scoring chance after
Hosea Taylor deflected Pat
Mcinally's punt out of the Bengal
end zone for a safety.

Anticipating a rush, Glasgow blit·
zed past Ross, who breezed into the

-I
=

u-...

l

pass.

---

. DOONES8lJRY
.

r.

end zone to gab Anderson's two-yard

you sure?'"

San Fl'linchlco

coca-cola, which hasn't done badly
seliJng sugar water all these years?
Coke weighed the costs and
benefits of the "covenant" and
asked itseU whether doing busineSB
with Jackson was good lor the company. The answer was yes.
'
. With a smile, Coke then asked It·
self whether the tax cuts it had
received didn't require it to demonstrate that the private sector couid
replace the heavy hand of govern- •.
menl Again, the answer was yes.

Apia,
ebarp rl. the inlpector general'• otllce liCIUiht to barMI
the ID• t....... and obltluct hll probe. A1tboagb liiiOUiht 1o )1111'1111 the
CBie, Menpri- aiJnJptl,y aMped to llllllla1 dulleiiD late lm.
Willa lie taqilaiDid pablldJ tliat the caae bad been
llie In
. ....... flillii'8l'• ofBca Clp8llld • - '"-tlptloa - wltb MencJtrt u tl
• tarpL
'
!itt. dllpatdUC IDv "Pt.ar:- to Uleb, CallfGrnla aad A1a1U, lfallcl
'ftle4eparimll&amp;- '*a -lild IJicbly r 1 nJid .....,... .....-.J.
-n- Jfdlrlde. a. t1n1 priority 1111111t ... to ~ 1111t ... .......,••
Jl a1 ...,.IIIIi I rttgalln- again an 1JU11iabe1f for dDinc tlialr Job.
·

Sunday, "Offensively, we felt we
needed to get back to basics as far as
lhe running game was concerned
and we did," said Coach Forrest
Gregg.
Cincinnati gained 121 yards
rushing, but passing proved to be the
key to victory. "You take what the
defense will give you," Gre!Q! said.
Ross said he even got help from
Baltimore cornerback Nesby
Glasgow on his tw&amp;-yard TD reception that gave Cincinnati a 24-:ilead.
"I heal'd the cornerback say he
was going In {on a blitz)," Ross said.
"I just couldn't believe what I was
hearing. I wanted to ask him, 'are

l..Os Angeles

Why not instead take a cue from

Said Coca-&lt;:ola President Donald
Keough, "The free enterprbe
system is being called on to utilize
some of its resources so that more
aegmenla of our society have not
pn1y an opportunity to purchase and
consume but ·an opportunity to
becGme p,roducera of our products.,
Similar talk could earn you the u~
•·
ban League's "good corporate
dtlzen'~ award next year. Wouldn't
lh!lt look nice 00 your office wall
right nut to lhe framed anJIOUIIcelnent that protlta are up and
that your contract has been extendedforanother!Oyeara? Quick! Before your aeeretary lela
....... him liaDt ap

·

BALTIMORE {AP) - The batUe
was close before Cincinnati quarterback Ken Anderson spotted a hole
In Baltimore's secondary and hit
Cris Collinsworth for . an !&amp;-yard
touchdown paSB.Iate in tbe first haU.
During the first 27 minutes of
play, the Bengals, 4-2~ scored ooly
once on Jim Breech's 38-yard field
goal while yielding a safety and a
field goal to the Colts.
"It looked like it was going to be a
struggle tn the first haU," Anderson
said.
Scrambling behind the Baltimore
two with 2:07 left in the haU, Anderson hit ColllnswOrth'for the firat
of the quarterback's three touchdown passes. "He looked at me and I
looked at him, and he went to the
corner of the end zone," Anderson
said.
Anderson blew the game wide
open wben he hit David Verser for a
20-yard touchdown pass with 21
seconds left In the haU.
The Bengals, captalizing on
Baltimore's weak secondary,
widened their 17-S halftime lead and
went on to take a 41·19 Natioilal
Football League.victory.
"I told Ken they were playing real
soft," said tight end Dan Ross, who
caught Anderson's third touchdown
... pass early in the third quarter. "All I
had to do was run 12 yards and turn
around. Every pass pattern I was
open," said Ross, who. grat:»bed
seven passes for 106 yards.
After Baltimore gave up 253 net
yards to Anderson's aerial assault,
Cooch Mike McConnack was asked
·how the Colts could defend against
lhe pass. "I wish I knew," he mut·
tered.
The Bengals had set out to improve their running game~ which
was ranked last in the AFC before

Birdies key

Depart~-.tpropn.

.f

Beagala after pictlag up sti yards oa tbe play. The
Beqllll weat oa to wiD the gliDe 41·19. (AP Luel'plloto).

PUTl'ING ON THE CRUNCH - Baltimore Colli
numiDg bact Curllll Dicl&lt;ey Is sandwlebed betweea Bo .
IWTII, ;eft. and Jolm Simmons of tbe CinciDDali

Bengals bomb .Colts, 41'-19

COWMBUS, Ohio {AP) - Aside
He cited Belmont Technical
from controversy over its major tu College as an eXIlfllPie - a school
hike, the House-passed state budget wltich has kept fees constant since
bill is riddled with other problems 1973. Under the rollback plan "they
which will make Senate paasage ex- will receive nothing," lhe director
tremely difficult.
said.
That's according to the Rhodes
In the area of primary and seconAdministration, and Senate Finance dary education, Kelp said the House
Chainnan Stanley J. Aronoff, R- refused to go along with an a~
Cincinnati, whooe panel hesds ministration policy to put new
Tuesday into its second week of money Into unrestricted aid to perhesrlngs on the $13.8 billion spen- mit local districts to set fiscal
ding-tax Increase package.
priorities.
It would be nothing short of a
The House reduced hasic aid by
miracle, Aronoff said, If the $30.8 million to fund several
Legislature gets the biD enacted pr,ograms, such as consumer
before the state's current temporary education and urban pilot projects,
budget expires Oct. 31.
Kelp observed.
While the tax portion Is critical,
He also noted that the lower chamArolioff's committee was told by ber reinstated disadvantaged pupil
William D. Kelp, Gov. James A. subeidies, reducing 'basic aid subRhodes' director of budget and sidies for big city districts In the
management, that the bill is un- proceas.
derfunded by t325 million.
As a result, Rhodes' budget chief
He also said IIOI'IIe of the policy said Dayton sch.ools would lose
decisions made by the House should $700,000 In buic aid by the end of the
be studied closely, and Indicated current fiscal year next June 30.
they should be changed.
Colwnbus would lose $1.2 million,
For Instance, Kelp said the House Cincinnati, $1 million: Cleveland, .
decision to reward colleges · and $2.:1 million: and Toledo, $900,000, he
universities that agree to cut student said.
fees is discrimirnnatory.
The House.also voted to increase
"The rollback program rewards the minimum teacher salary by
those universities that raised their $1,000 to$11,500 in the 1982-1983 ftacal
tuitions imd penalizes thoae that year.
kept fees low and made substantial
This move, he said, would hurt
reductions in spending," Kelp said.
poor school districts that do not

••

third consecutive shutout

wallet~.-~__,_______...:..:...Wi-==ill==iam.:.:..F.~.-=--Buc_k..;_ley~Jr.

other country Jlated, with the 81· _
ception of tlle United Kloiclom. Tile
United $tales' percentace of prodU&lt;&gt;tlvlty lncreaae has been only36 pel'cent that of Japan, and leaa even
that o{ Great Britain's. Sonlethlng,
then, would appear to be wrong In
the care and feeding of our capital
plant. .
What about corollary figures? In
1966, 18.8 percent of the GNP was.
taxed. By 91111, that had grown to 22
percent.
During that period, unem·
pl0)1llent lncreaaed by 28 percent.
Real Gl'lP, measured as the average
annual percentage change, went
down by 46.7 percent. Real bualneas
Investment.. rneupred annually,
went down by 74.7 percent Innation,
average annual percentage change
- Increased by 513 percent (i.e., It
went from 1.5 percent In 1966 to 9.2
percent In 1980). The federal deficit,
on an annual average, Increased by
3,115 percent~ i.e., It went from $1.3
billion to$41.8 billion.
And, finally, here Ia a showstopper: After AIL Reagan's tax
decreues have been enacted, i.e.,ln
1985, if we ·assume an inflation between n&lt;w and then of a mere 7 pel'' ' ~... .

..

• • •-of'

•

-

.
be paying 17 percent more

..

•

Super-Bowl champs s~ffer

·Pae-2-The Deily sentinel

'

Daily Sentinei-Pa!e-3

Ga. {AP) "'-· J.C.
,• Snead won his" first toumainent In
POMEROY BOWLIN9 LAN IS
fl~e yeara when be sank a tap-In putt
MORNING GLORIES
Sep&amp;tmberll, !Ill
for
,a par on the second hole of a au~
G&amp;J Auto Parts
:16
den death playoff to capture lhe
No, 5
22
Max'alnc.
1•
JIIO,OOO Southern Open Golf mOUI'u namenl over defending champion
C6D.,.....ou
12
Sinunl* Olda, Cold. &amp; Ctevy
I
Mite SuWvan, who bQgeyed the
HIGH IND. GAME - June Lambert m, Bar·
boO'O Whllilnp&gt;n I'll, Betty WhiU.lch Ill,
hole.
IUGH IND. SERIES- JW'Ie Lambert Ul, BetSnead made a 2WD-foot put.~ on the
tyWhl~II3,BarbonWhlllinol1onllll.
72nd hole to force 'the playoff and
JUGH TEAM GAME - No. &amp;, .., ; No. 5, 7U ;
No.l,lll.
.
finish with a 66 for the day and a 271
IUGH n;AM SERIES - No. 6, 23io; Gf,J Auto
total, 9-under-par.
Part.lll•: No. 3, 21tl.

-3

~\

DALE HILL' .
FORD .TRACTORS
215 W. Main
Pomeroy
l

•f

992-2668
"

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•

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

--· ------------

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•

Je.,.Y Reua outpltched Nolan
Ryan with a !lve.bltter and the
Dodgers Uled a lhreHun llxtb Jn.
ninl to beat the ~ for the third
straight time.

..

Ryan, who.had pitched a no-hitter
agalllat Los Angeles and allowed
only two blla lD his pnviOUI two
games against them, luted oaJ.y liJ:
innlnp this tbne u the Dodgen
reached the llsrd-lbrowlDg righthander for three ~ in their game.
breaking sixth. Rick MOIIday and
Mike Scioscia each llingled home a
run and another scored ... an error.

Jackson is eligible for free agency
at the end of the season.
Rei!SS, who worked nine scoreless
" This team is not going to play
innings
at HOUlton in the second
three bad games in a row," added
game-of
the
series, which the Astrol
Jackson. " The talent is too good. I
didn't want to be part of a club that won HI in 11 innings, gave up singles
1011 three in a row. What he (Stein- .. in the second, fourth, fifth, sixth and
brenner) said didn't have to be said. eighth innings, hut on each occasion
shut down HouaiOn.
The pressure was on us anyway."
Ryan never hilS beatea Los
Angeles in Dodger Stadiwn. His
record in the Jlllrl! is now ~. inSteinbreMer had particularly · cluding his IOUI'll with the New York
singled out Yankee catcher Rick Melsand the Astros.
Cerone in his Saturday tirade,
l~ving him in tears, and ironically
·' it was none other than Cerone who
"It's a most emotiOilal high," said
delivered the game-winning run
Reuss
after the Dodgers came back
Sunday night with an RBI grounder
from
a
tw&lt;&gt;-gwne deficit in the fivethat capped a four-run fourth and
game
series.
"We had to win three ·
later added another run with a
and
we
did.
games,
homer in the seventh.

Cerone, who admittedly got Into an
exchange of vulgarities with the
Yankee owner. "I thought about it,
but it's over, it's in the past. No
apologies are neceSsary."

WINNING FORM - Dooger pilcber Jerry Relll8 delivers a pilcb
durillg Sunday's game agalast the Hwslon Astrns at Dodger Stadium
Sunday. Renss pitched a &amp;-hlt shutout as the Dodgers' 4-0 victory ID the
best-of·flve series gave the Dedgen the National League Western
Dlvlslon IIUe. 1bey will meet Moatreal Tuesday. lAP Laserpholo).

Dave Righetti and Goose Gossage
provided able relief pitching for the
Yankees after Manager Bob Lemon
look starter Ron Guidry out after
four innings trailing 2-0. "When
Reggie hit it into the seals that
relaxed everybody," said Lemon.
"We were on the board and that was
the big turnaround for us."
Tommy John is scheduled to pitch
Tuesday night for the Ya.rikees

"It's@ most unusual year, 11 Reuss
said of the split season and division
playoffs created by the basebaU
strike. "Since we were declared the
first-hall winners and beet the
second-half winners, that makes
winning the division all the more
meaningful to us.''

•

"It's tough to win without scoring
any ' runs," said Houston Manager
Bill Virdon. "We just couldn't get
anybody over. I think anytime you
get as close to winning the thing as
we did, you have to he disappointed.
"But we just got beet by a good
club. Wejustcouldn'tscoreanyruns
off them. If the Dodgers continue to
pitch that way, nobody's going to

Crown heUer IUid flower 11r1a - S. . . Slyre and JteDy HeDaler
served respectively u flower girl IUid crown hearer at the 1111
homecoming activities In Racine Friday eveaiitg. llolb are kiDdergarteil
sludea.ta In the Soutbera Local School Dtltrfct. S_,.aniP. Ill the daqhter
of Mr. and Mn. Aaron Sayre, Syracn~e, while Kelly Ill the BOD of Mr.IUid
Mn. Daolel HeDJ!ler, Racine.

The victory gave Montreal .
Manager Jim Fanning a chance to
become the ftrst man to win a pennant afler taking over in the final
month of a season. After replacing
Dick Williams, Fanning led the Ex·
pos to a 16-11 record as they won a
stretch battle with the St. Louis Car·
dinsls ·fOr the secood-half division
title. "The club worked hard so '
long," ssid Fanning. "We had our
backs against the walls for most of
the last month and today (Sunday)."
"I never reaDy had time to
.analyze the quality of my stuff,"
ssid Rogers. "I just had to put some
zeroes up there for a while."

"you can't make major mistakes
against them."
The victory left the Badgers on top
in the Big Ten witho.Iowa a step
behind at 2-0 after a 4Z-28 decision
over Indiana. Michigan upped its
record to 2-1 by crushing Michigan
State 311-20; Minnesota went to 21-1

High
school grid scores
•
ByneA111odatNPrtu
Satardly'• llttllt.l

Kettering Alter 23, Day. Belmont 8
Lakewood SL Edward 20, Padua D
Lancaster Fisher 7.11, Fairfield Union 16
Lorain Cath. 19, Elyria W. 7
Lorain King 31, Lorain Southview 0

Akron N. 20, Akron Buchtel 13

Ashtabula Harbor 'll. Ashblbula 7
Avon Lake 32, Rocky River 18
Ayersville 12, HickavUle li

Lucasville

Barberton 26, MassUlon 24
C8ofu 33. B•id.&lt;'P0'1 8

CaldweD 20, Waterllrd 6
O ermont Northeastem 'll, Batavia 6
a eve. Adam!l 40, Cleve. E. Tech 6
O en . Benedictine Tl, Young. Rayen 0
Cleve. Central cath. 21!1, WarrensvWe 6
Oeve. Gilmour 20, Pittsburgh ( Pa.)

a

Cleve. Glenville 311, Cleve. W. Tech. 12
a eve. Hawken 16, Richmond Hb. 12
Cleve. St. Ignatius 21, Lake Cath. ll

36,

Detroit

Franklin

FiJPI\8&amp;

Massillon J1cbon 3, Canton Catb. 0
Middletown Madison l:l, RON 12, tie
Niles McKinley 14, Girard 13
Norwalk St. P1ul 10, Black River 9
Painesville Harvey 18, Cleve. T'rbUty 13
Panna Nonnand.y 13, Cleveland Hts. 6 ·
Perry 13., Jeffenoo 0
Petelllburg Spl"lng. 1:1, Mlne&lt;tl Ridge 8
Ports. Notre Dame 31, McDennott NW

Buckeye Central 211, Elgin 0

aeve. University
Cranbro&lt;* 0

21 ,

Gretn 0

Beachwood 23, Cardinal 17

Shadyside

Val.

(Mich.)

Col. DeSa\e!l 21, Col. Ready

Col. St. Charles 21, Col. Wehrle 20
Day. carroll 24, Lima Cath. 21
Erie (Pa. I Ac1demy 12, Belllire 10
Caraway 14, Malvem 8
Hamilton 8adirt 21, Da y. Cham-Jul. 1
Hudson W. Reserve 1:1, Klski, Pa. 8
John Glenn 211, New LeilnRton 0

0
Pymatuning Val.

felt

2, SOuth.ingt.on 0, for1

Rock Hll1 7, Ironton st. Joseph's 8
st. Wendelin 3$, Evergreen 14
Steu~viUe

, Swnmit

C.th. 7, Young. Ealt 0

Country

Day

34, Soutbeutem

~.

Indian Valley N,

I6
.
Tol. Macomber ltl Tol. OeVllbill 0

Tuscarawas CAth.

14

I
Twin VaUey N. 121 Mlaaiaainlwa Val. I
W1rren Howland Zl, W~n W. fte.
aenre 0

:Meet the Meigs Marauders

with a ~23 triumph over Nor·
thwestern, and Illinois dropped to H
by absorbing a 44-20 hanunering at
Purdue.
Butch Woolfolk ruShed for 253 yar·
ds in 39 carries to lead sixth-ranked
Michigan past rival Michigan State.
'"Yes, Butch definitely belongs in a
league with Marclll' Allen of
Southenl California and Herschel
Walker of Georgia," aaid Michigan
Coach Bo Schembechler. '"I always
wondered how many yards he'&lt;\.gain
if he'd carry 81 much as Allen.
Today you saw it."

"

..........,

.....

Jlllllr ...

Jllllllr!ISie
I

I '

'

Minnesota roUed up 516 yards 81
Mike Hohensee threw three touchdown passes to hand Northwestern
its 25th straight defeat. three short
of the major coUege record, Quar·
terhack Kevin Villars made his first
start Northwestern, completing 25 of
43 passes for 303 yards.
"The kids showed some poiee,J'.
ssid Northwestern Coach Dennis
Green who had his doubts about his
team after a 64-0 beating by Iowa.
Scott Campbell completed 19
passes for 290 yards and three touchdownS and also ran for a score to
lesd Purdue past Illinois.

Southern recently won the batUe
Velvet Elkins put Eastern on the
of Meigs County voUeyball tewna board with one point. while Souther·
with victories over Meigs and ner Unda O'Brien added four to in·
Eastern. The two wins boosted the crease Southern's lead to !1-1.
undefeated Southerners to 16-0 Carolyn Bowen. who had an exoverall and !U within the SVAC.
cellent evening, added two for
The Tornadoettes of Coach Suzan- Eastern. Laren Wolfe added the last
ne Wolfe first handed the Meigs six for the 1$-3 Southern win.
Marauders another loss by defeating
As in the Meigs victory, sOuthern
its netters, 15-4 and 15-11, in an ex· had its hands full in the second conciting assembly malch in froat ol the teat. Eaatern jumped to a ~ lead on
Meigs' student body.
good serving by Bowen, liUt Linda
Mel Weese rocketed the Tor- O'Brien brought the Southerners
nadoettes to a 9-41ead before Meiga' back at 4-3. Laren Wolfe then put
Suzie Lightfoot added two for her SHS on top after Eastern 1011 ita serclub. Laura Smltii added a single ve, and moments later Cindy Evans
digit for the Marauders and after added one more to give Southern a 7·
MicbeUe Johnson placed two perfect 4advantlge.
serves for Southern, which roUed on
After 011e lull rotation, Bowen
to the ll&gt;-4 win.
again came up to serve and did
The - d conlelt was much another outstanding job, giving
closer u bOth ~uada exchanged • Eastern a &amp;-7 lead. O'Brien locked
serves without a score several . the score at 9-9, then Debbie Michael
Urnes, and t1ie lead changed banda added one to make it 10-9 in
just as frequenUy. Both clubs lo8t Ita Southern's favor.
first four serves before Cathy Dean
Michelle' Johnson came off the
put Metp up by two.
bench in a crucial ~ ol the game,
Tonja Sl1ser fired three polnt- and came through wlth the last flve
IICOI"Inl serves acrou the net to give serves to win the pme/
Sout1wn a narrow one point ailLarell Wolfe led the wtnnen witii
vantage. Sazle Lightfoot then added nine ~~rves and O'Brien had seven. ·
another quintet of serves to up Melp Cindy Evans and Michelle Jotu.Cil
w.
each added five. Carolyn Bowan led
Mel Weese ol Scw!l!wu 1lartled ali aCarera with 11 during the
five aafellea the net, liviD&amp;
SHS an U advantage, but lhortly af·
ter Vlclliile8ord IO!bd the 1C0t1 at

RUTLAND - Open House will
be beld at the Rolland Elementary School Monday night
foUowing the regular meeting of
the Rutland PTO. The meeting
wiD he held from 7:30 to 8 p.m.
with the open house fl"()lll 8 to 9
p.m. Final plans wiU be made for
the fall carnival and haunted
house. Douglas Behnke, prin·
cipal, urges all parents to attend
the meeting and open hotde.

Jenny lleedon apln npla the
lead fCI' Yelp ~;11.., but four _.
-by Lanin W~~aiuld tine ....
wlllalnc IIIIIDa b.r Debbie llldiMI
dlnd-1 the will far IIAI•he•l. Bulle
Jed llllp wllb Ill polldl
and Mel
"-11 w1111 11.

lA.,..,...
At

1

w-1111 ....
1

1.. A,

.ef

Ml CIIDIAWQ

wltb a W ud 1W wiD Ill alalm the

matdl. 8o 4'""1'11 ........ aM '-1

. e11 two ... •lie pciiDII

117 Mel w-

and tine by CIDd7 EviM.

r

V. D. EIMARDS INS.
JliY. ·

Pomeroy

115 E. 2nd St.

ALL MAIL MUST BE

IARalO "
P. 0.\a. 54~, POMEROY
Due to delivery charges by
pe1t81 service.

'

.

evening.
In the reserve contest, Southern
won in two sets, !~and li'&gt;-ll..Sandy
Harden and Karen Hemsley each led
Southej'n with eiglll., points each.
Kriatl lladdls led Eastern with seven
points in a good perfonnance.
· In the Meigs reserve contest
Southern dfopped the match lr.-6, If&gt;.
12, !H. Ruth Fry led Meigs with 11
points, while Jenny BenUey led
Southern with seven.
•

RUTLAND PTO. 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the school. Open boUle
to he obllerved. Final plans to be
'
made for fall carnival.
SOUTHERN Junior High
Athletic Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at
the school. Parenti of aU cheerleaders and seventh and eighth
grede ball players asked to at·
lend.

The Rev. WiUiwiL~ddleswartli

ACS recruiting vol~teers

RACINE VILLAGE Council
Mooday at 7 p.m. at Village hall.

Tuesday

SALEM CENTER PTO, open
boUle, Tuesday, 7:15 p.m. All
parenta invited. Superintendent
David Gleuon to be there.
Refreshments. ·
POMEROY - ' Juniors of the
American Legioo Aqalllary of
Drew Webster POIII311, wiD meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the home of
Mn. Harry Davis, advisor.

EASTERN BANil BoOIIIerl
meeting 7:30 p.m. Tuesdiiy in
ba(ld room at high llchool.

RARES
STRAIGHT
. LEG
'
Reg. $21.95

MEN'S
,

NOW

Reg. 529.00

SPECIAL MEETING, Middleport Lodge 383, FUM, 7 p.m.

'1

Tueaday; work In Masler Muon

·

'

'
ES' . NOW '21.7 ''

all members aaked to attend. Refreahrnentl followinC
c~qree;

meetlni-

Also Student Si1u

NEW

CID18ING HOUSE

Wednesday

Thanks to the volunteer, the lifeblood of the American Cancer
American Cancer Society has grown Society. Each year," Michael says,
and made its mark as one of the "we face a new set of chaUenging
most prestigious voluntary health goals which must be met and these
organizations iit the world, says S. goals can be better reached with a
Michael, public information chair- strong volunteer army. Maintaining
man of the Meigs County Unil our present volunteer force and
Michael c&lt;~nunents : "Without these recruiting new and interested vOlunimportant people and their teers Is vital to the success of our
dedication, our programs of reseal' · organization. If. you wanr to help
ch, education and service would not conquer cancer in our lifetime arid
be 81 advanced as they are tod4Y. become a volunteer for the
Furthermore. their enthusiasm acts American Cancer Society of the
as a catalyst for generating new Meigs County Unit complete the
volunteer interest and hope among foUowing form . and return to:
the general public that progress is American Cancer Society, Meigs
County Chapter, P. 0. Box 692,
being made to beat cancer.
"Volunteers are. then. the Pomeroy, Ohio4li769."

)I

dependently as possible .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. Ill
You may I have numerous duties
to contencl with . today, so
schedule your time sensibly.
Don't become frustrated if you
can't get everything dOne at 'once.
_ SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23· Dec.
zu You're basically strong and
independent, but today you could
yield to peer pressure and do
':things contrary to your best in·
terests.
"CAPRICO~N (Dec . 22·Jan. 19)
Noone will think less of you today
if you fail to face up to challenges
where the odds are stacked
against .you . Actually, they'll
secretly admire your judgment
for backing off .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 19)
Usually you're a pretty good
listener, and when someone has
sound advice · you ' re willing to
glve it a trv . Todav. you might
. totally
ignore
the
wise
suggestions of paIs.

Name: . . .. : . .. . .. .. .... .. ·· ····· · ··········· ·· · ······ · ····· ··••· · ··
•

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Be
extremely selective today as to
whom you tel represent you in
situations which may affect your
financ es or secur ity . The wrong
cho it:e could be very costly ,

Former Volunteer Experience: . ...... , . ... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .. · · · · · · · · · ·
· · ····· ·· ·· ····· · ······ ·· · ·· ·· · · · ······~··· ·· · ······ · ······· · · · · ··· ·
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Walker entertains at her home

0

· ed
Mrs. Roger Walker entertam
with a family dinner at her home on
UniooAve. recently. AUendlngwere
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Leasure,
Mr
d Mrs
Anahe-Im. Calif

Transportation of pati~nt - - Clerical (typing, filing~
Bulk Mailing Receptioniat Programming Speakers
Bureau Errands - - Manning Bootha and Displays Telephoning - - Art Skilla - - Special Event - - Cutting
Dressing Material - - Patient Home Services (cleaning,
shopplnl!"\' light cooking, baby sit&lt;ting, etc., . for a
few hours a week) - -

.;

Interesting in Being: A
011 a regular basis-

volunteer for 1 time -

of Time You Wish to s~
-houn&gt;day;- honra-k; - hours

Amount

\,1\;~

IUSPSll$-..,1

ADlvltloa of MuiUmedla, lac.
PubliMhW ~ very afternwn, Munlhty thruul{ h
Fridl! y, 11 1 Cui.l rt Slreel, by the Ohlu Vllllvy
Pu bliMhill~ Curnpt~ny • Mullbnt!diu, lnc.,
Pumeruy, Ohi o 46769, 992·2156. St!cund clYIIII
"I)'J!oii.H){~ Pllid Ill PomeroY., Ohi o.

••

Membl=r : Tht As..mciat~ Pres.'l, Inland Dill·
ly Pre!!.~ AS...'Ilk'illliUII and lhe Amt!ricwn

'·o..

New:o;l)il~ r P ub lish~r~ A~'iUI :i&lt;~tiun,

Adverli ~ into:
Ne w:ip~~.pe r

R e p re~enl11.li ve,

NatiUIIII.i
Branh 1un

Sales, 733 Thi rd An nu ~. New

York, NewYu rk 10017.

'•

POSTMASTER: Semi address tu The Dttii y .•
111 Cuurt SL. , Pomeroy, Ohiu45769 ,

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MAll SUBSCRIPI'IONS

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SUMMER FILL-UP SPECIAl.

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-Finance

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LAST CHANCE FOR A

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The Daily Sentinel

'•

~~~~W~~~~·~Nk~-~an~d~~Mrs-~-~G~ary~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ ,

Committee Preference (1st, 2ndand3rd c))oice):
-

•
Ro•er Shoult-..

Walker, Mr· a nd Mrs· •
"'
and soo, Eric, Racine; Mrs. Gladys
Walker, P omeroy. Roger Wa lker
will be returning from Saudi Arabia
sometime ""'ober
m
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Nu ~ u b.o;cri ptiuns by mail pen nlUL'tl in tO'A"nll
where hume c&lt;:~ rr ler ser.oice is antlilb\e .

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Check areas you would be interested in for Volunteer service:

A volunteer

NUMBER 1 &amp; 2 FUEL OIL
·No•.2 FUEL OIL s1 14 gal. No. 1 FUEL OIL s1 18 gal.

Volunteer Service:

'

Check Avallable Day( a) For Volunteer Service:
u-A•
AlternOOn - · TuesdaY Morning '
Monday Morning - : ....,.,.y
· M-'~~ - ; ·wem-laY
, TUeld&amp;Y Afternoon - ; WedneldaY v ..- ...ursda Aflemoon
Aft~rnoon · - -; 1burlday Morning --; 1b
Y
',
- ; Friday Mornln!J-; Friday AflemOIIII,.. _ _ _ __.._

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'-iUIIIlllal!oD ••• •••• • •• ••••••••

The Micld!eport Amateur Gardenen will meet at ap.m. Wednedly nlCbt at the 1lalm !If Ml8l
Erma 8mltb with Mn. David
O""""np u eHillt Ill

ARIES (March 21 -Apri119) It's
not a good day to try to make i m·
port ant decisions under pressure.
Postpone Issues unlil condition s
are more favorable for reflection .
TAURUS (April 211-May 20)
Things you ' ve failed to attend to
properly could pop up today and
demand immediate attention .
Thi s time, do tile jobs right.
GEMINI !May 21·June 20)
You'll be disappointed today if
you expect your peers to tall In
line with your wishes and bid ·
ding. In fact, if you're too pushy
you might cause real problems .
CANCER (June 2I ·July 22) If
your household is in an uproar
tOday there 's a strong possibi lity
yo£Jr doings may be the ma jor
contributing fa ctor. Guard your
actions.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be v ery
careful today about what you sav ,
or what you put in writing. Your
words, spolc.en or penned, could
later come back to haunt you.

gratifying.
·
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Part,
nership situations usually turn
out to be rather fortunate for vou .
but today the opposite may be
true. Try to function as in·

Address: .. ' . . . .-. .. . ... . . ......... . Phone:: .... .. . ..•... . .. .. .... ...

MEIGS CHAPTER 53,
Disabled American Veterans,
Tuesday, at6:30 p.m. at the chapter home.

The original heavywei 9 ht
un-washed Levi Jeans.

Astrograph

Winding Trail
Garden Club

•• •

Levrs

Rose Garden Club

Refreshments were served by
Velma Rue and Jane Walton. The
siicial corillnittee members will be
hostesses for the next meeting.

Monday

Tornadoettes win Battle of Meigs

...

HaltVuV,.._

Norm Granger ran a kickoff 99
yards for a toUchdown and Gordy
Bohannon hit Charles Jones with a
51-yard touchdown pass for the big
plays in Iowa's victory over Indiana.
It offset a brillisnt perfonnance by
Duane Gunn, who caught six passes
for 197 yards including· touchdowns
of 71 and sa yards.
"Iowa is the best team we've
played this year," said Gunn, who
should know since Indiana has gone
against Michigan . and . Southern
California, both of whom have ~n
ranked No. I.

•

Middleport Lit Club

rose."

ceramics.

Social
Calendar

•

portunistic ways against Ohio State.
Again led by a tremendous defense,
they turned three recovered fwnbles
and an interception into scores.
Jess Cole completed only two
passes, but both went for touchdowns. ""They are very physical.''
said Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce,

Melody Weol, Darin Roush, freshmen. Pictured In the
back row are the 1981 queen caadldales; escort Pat
Jolmloa.and MIDdy MorTII, escort Tom R-berry and
Amber Warner, the Queen's escort Robert Brown, 1181
Qneea Sherry Bee8le, escort Kent WoUe and Bev
Roaah. Kneeling In front are flower girl and crown
bearer Stepbaale Sayre, and Kelly He01ler.

,

presented a program of slides on Fisher, Mrs. Hilda Yesuger, and ,ure from Luke, followed by mem· Koenig read the verse of the month.
Bend area flowers, birds, insects Mrs. Evelyn Hollon of the Wildwood bers praying the Lord's Prayer. 1be traveling prize donated by Mrs.
and animals· at the annual open c'lub; Mrs. Veda Davis and Miss Er- Members answered roll caU with Vercia Stout was won by Mrs. Grace
Stout. Hostess prize W81 won by
meeting held recenUy by the Win- ma Smith of the Middleport · "Things I Didn't Know Before."
The Gardener's Creed W81 read in Mrs. Anna Rice. Refreshments were
ding Trail Garden Club at the River- Amateurs; Mrs. Holter of the
boat Room of the DiamOIId Savings Chester Club and Shade Valley unison. Correspondence was read served by the hostess to 12 members
Council; Mn. Fetty, Donia Crane, from Mrs. Virginia Schroath of and one guest, Miss Beth Arbaugh.
and Loan Co.
He was presented a gifl from the and the Rev. Mr. Mlddleswarth, Florida, who is recovering from
club by Mn. Pat Thoma who in- guests, and Mrs. Thoma, Mrs. Cora surgery, Mrs. Carl Barnhill ,
troduced him. His slides olncluded Beegle, Mrs. Parker, Mrs. Jackie program chairman, presented the
the flower gardens of several Brickles, Mrs. Allee · Thompson, program on windowsiU herbs. She
Mrs. Ruth More, and Mrs. Peggy reported that the herbs are easy to
Pomeroy homes.
Mrs. Faye Wallace . presented a
grow, give fresh seasonings, and are
Mrs. Margaret Parker, president, Crane, host club members.
of the book. "'Hager - A
review
decorative as well. Mrs. Vercia
Next meeting will ~ held on Oct
extended a welcome to the members
Woman
from the Bible"' by Lofu T.
·
Stout read "Now is the time to."
of the Wildwood Garden .Club. the 19,8p.m.
The following officers were in- Henderson, at the Wednesday
Middleport Amateurs, the Chester
staUed for the new year: Mrs. John meeting of the Middleport Literary
Garden Club, and the Shade VaUey
Arbaugh, pf.sident; Mrs. John Club held at the home of Mrs. Nan
Council of Floral Arts. Devotions by
Moore.
The Rose Garden Club of Tuppers
Mrs. Tbomas were from Psalm 134 PlAins met rrcenUy at the home of Rice. vice president; Mrs. Harley
Mrs. Wallace reviewed the story
Rice. secretary; Mrs. Mary Jane
and prayer.
·
of
a slave girl who bore Abraham's
Mn. 'Norma Arbaugh.
Goebel, treasurer1 and Mrs. James
Mrs. Parker aiUIOunced the faU
Mrs. Mary Jane Goebel was in Stout, news reporter. Mrs. Doris son and discussed the visit to
regional meeting to be beld at
Abraham and the ability of the Lord
· charge of devotions, reading scripChester on Oct. 31, and Mrs. Pat
to handle all things She W81 in·
Holter told of several activities introduced by Mrs. Sarah Owen, ·
cluding the speaker, sale table, and
program leader.
nower show. She atao ' Introduced
Mrs. Maxine Phlloon presided at ',
Mrs. Marjorie Fetty, the new Meigs
the meeting with members giving •
County contact-chairman.
the club collect. Mrs. Beulah Jones •
PISCES (feb. 20·March 20)
Several glfta and flowers were
October 13, 1981
and
Mrs. Vivienne Waddell were
Unfortunately,'
·
some
indiv
iduals
Cor'isiclerable effort wi II be
awarded as door prizes during the
reported iU.
you have to deal w ith today may
spent by vou this coming year to
evening. Re!J:OSbmenls were served
not match your high standards .
Mrs. Moore served candy. Next
bring variou' departments of
to Mi"s. Mae Holter, Mrs. Grace
vour life into better balance. The They might try to take Credit for
meeting
will he held at the home of
accOITlPiishments whose rewa rds
changes may be difficult, but the
Mrs
.
Chloris
Grinun on Oct. 21.
go
to
you.
should
end results will be verv

Mrs. Moore talked about the
meaiB oo wheels program for shut·
ins and the need for assistance with
Preceptor Beta Beta endorsed
both tbe mental health and tbe that program.
Mrs. Clarice Krautter presided at
tuberculosis levies at a meeting
the
meeting which opened in
Thursday night in the Riverboat
ritualistic
form. It was announ!;j!d
Room of the Diamond Savings and
by
the
social
committee that there
Loan Co.
will
be
a
"come
as you are," casual
During the reports of officers and
or
western
style.
party on Oct. 22 at
committees. Mrs. Ullian Moore,
the
home
of
the
president,
6:30p.m.
, service, commented on her work at
The
program
by
Donna
Jones was
the Senior Citizens Center where she
on
"RoseS
as
Symbols"
and she
helps with ceramics. She ssid that .
noted
that
the
rose
is
a
symbol
of a
raw clay is used with leaves .being
pressed into the clay, and the writer's mood. associated with happroduct then being fired and painted PY dreams, love, woman and
to make trays. They wi!J be for sale motherhood, 81 well as with religion.
at the bazaar. She also commented Sbe quoted from Lawrence, "Enjoy
on a visit to the EMR class at the the rose of life before it withers" and
Pomeroy Elementary where she commented on Gertrude Stein's obworked with the children in servation, " A rose is a rose, is a

Preceptor Beta

Luerpholo ).
beat them."
No starters have been officially
announced for Tuesday night, but
the Dndgers figure to use either Burt
Hootoo or Bob Welch against Mon·
treai's BID Gtilllckson.
·
Steve Rogers pitched a six·hilter
and singled home two runs in the fif.
th to lead Montreal past
Philadelphia. It was the Expos' first
NL East title In the 13-year history of
the franchise.
It W81 Rogers' second triwnph of
the series and he again beet Phillies
ace ~ Carltoo to seal the victory
over the defending World ·champions.

Tile 1181 SooUIIera 1ll&amp;b Sellool bcmecamlnl queen
Sherry Beegle and her ....n &amp;bert Brcnrn poae wltll
the qaeea's ..rt followlne ba1ftlme CtiUliiUIIIOI In
Racine, Friday evHiDg. Tile queea.'1 CGIIll Ill compoHII ef Job.Roaah aad Ugle Gluua, Jua.lan; Toay
Deem and Tlaa HOI, sopllomores; 1181 •omeeom~oog
queen Terea HofllteiD aad escort Scott Frederlcll, ud

be held at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center on Oct. 23 and 24
beginning at noon each day.
-' · .'
1bls year's event will feature ' ·.
displays and demonatrationa by, .:
Howard and Geneva Nolan, : ·
lapidary; Loi$ Pauley, decoupage' ··
aild allk nowers; Denette tloffman, ,
basket weaving and corn hUlk dolls. ·
Items on display will include qullts. :•
coins, stampos, antique dishes and" '
toys, old kitchen tools, bottles, keys; :
Indian artifacts, pocket watches,
· wooden items and old clothing.
Lunch and dinner will he served
each day. A country store wiU have
crafts. bsked goods. home canned
goods, , homemade fudge and
noodles; and apple butter.
Entertainment will be provided by
Shirley Cerpenter's dance students,
the Stylelte's BatOn Corps, Armand
Turley at tbe organ, dulcimer
playhing by the Kenneth Ward
family , folk singer, Jim Clark, the
Athens County Senior Citizens kit·
eben band, and several of Meigs ·
County's senior citizens.
.
Other events will be a dance contest, a taU tale C&lt;Intest and a pie
baking contest. Computer pictures
will he offered and are transferrable
• to T·shirts, piiZZies, tote bags,
posters or calendars.

.Local groups meet _____.;. _ _ ____;_~----.:.-----

MOST HAPPY FELLOW.S - Montreal Ezpos catcher Gary Carter
lepo lDio the Ulllll of pitcher Steve Rodgers SWiday evenlag atllle clllllcm of division playoff game agalalt the PhWles In Pblllldelpbla.
Hodgen won the game with a 3-0 ahulout IUid alllo drvve ID the flnt two
1'11118_1o advance the Canadian team to the National Leape pllyoffs. (AP

Badger coach must worry about teain.'s overconfidence
By Associated Press
Having defeated Michigan, Pur·
due and Ohio Stste for a perfect 3-0
record in the Big Ten, Wisconsin's
plucky and surprising Badgers have
another prob)em.
"Now we've got to worry about
overconfidence." ssid Coach Dave
McClain. "We must be hwnble. I
talked to our squad about it right af·
tep the game."
The game was a 24-21 victory over
OIJio State on Saturday that had
Badger fans shouting "Rose Bowl,
Rose Bowl. Rose Bowl."
But McClain, said, "Any bowl talk
is premature. We're going to work
harder this week for Michigan State
thim we've ever worked before.
We'll do our best to retain ·our compo;sure.''
'
Bowl talk might be premature for
two reasons. Although this is the fir·
st time, Wisconsin has ever defeated
Michigan, Purdue and Ohio State in
the same season, the Badgers
haven't yet played oo the road,
wnere four of the last six games are
scheduled. Also, no less than five
other teams remain in contention for
the Big Ten tiUe.
Wi~consin continued
its op-

•

The third annual fall festival will . ·;

·

'
"Yesterday was depressing," said.

Annual fab.
fest planned

plf~:yoffs

Earlier Sunday, the Los ,Angeles
"There wu a lot of pe111ure 011
Dodgers defeated the HouaiOn
Ul," said Jackson, referrbrenrwlr
AltlU ~ for the NaUonal League
follOwing a :&amp;-!lou to the nrewen In
West championship and the Mon- · the .George Stelnhrenner follOwing a
treal Expos blanked the l-1 10811 1o the Brewers in the fourth
game Saturday.
Philadelphia Phlllies U in -lbe Eaat.
They'll start their five-game series
Tuesday night in Los Angeles,
Among other things, Steinbrermer •
Jackson, who has hit 16 post·
branded
his players "ovei'Jiriced fat
season homers, smashed his second
cats"
and
threatened wholesale
of the Mllwaukee series in the fourth
changes
If
the
team lost to the
inning to wipe out a U Brewer lead.
Brewers.
Oscar Gamble followed with another
homer to give New York a 3-2 lead
"George said yesterday that we
and the Yankees were off and runwould
embarraal the New York
ning.
Yankees if we 1011 three straight,"
aaid Jackson. "That really hurt. U I
doo'l play for them any more. I doo't
want to leave with that on me. T\lat

wasparamount.''

. . 'the Daily Sentine1-Pag~5

PGmeroy-MiddlepoH, Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Expos, D()dgers,
Yankees
in
'
By Aaodaled Preu
When the weather turns cool,
Reggie Jacksoo gell hot.
1be aplly·named "Mr. October"
lived up to his tiUe with a clutch tworun homer that helped the New York
Yan}l:ees Ileal the Milwaukee
Brewers 7-3 Sunday night In the final
game of the American League East
playoffs.
That put the Yankees into the AL
championship series against the
West-winning Oakland A's starting
Tuesday night· in New York and
completed the playoff picture for the
two league t!Ues.

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-CITY JCE AND FUEL 'CO.

''

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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992-2145

CD or nna Will Take Your Caii-Budaet Rates Available on Request

! ........................................~_..................... :

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PROPOSED AMENDMENT
· ·TO ·THE·· OHIO CONSTITUTION
1

PROPOSED CONSTI,TUTIONAL·AMENDMENT
To amend Section 36 of Article II of the Constitution of the
-·
State of Ohio.

PRESENTLY, PROTECTION IS AFFORDED INJURED WORKERS
UIROUGH THE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION AND
TilE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION. .
THIS PROPOSED AME•NDMENT WOULD CHANGE THE EXISTING
OHIO WORKERS' COMPENSATION SYSTEM BY REQUIRING THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO PASS LAWS ALSO PERMITTING IN·
SURANCE COMPANIES TO SELL WORKERS' COMPENSATION
COVERAGE IN OHIO AT RATES DETERMINED BY THOSE IN·
SURANCE COMPANIES UNDER THE REGULATION OF THE OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE.
IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT SHALL TAKE EFFECT ON
JANUARY 1, 1983.
(Proposed by Initiative Petition)
A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

In the TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMEND·
MENT below, the words written in
all capital letters are additions to
thP. Ohio Constitution. The words
written in small letters and- not
crossed out are already in the Ohio
Constitution and will rellJain in the
Ohio Constitution. The words writ·
ten in small letters and crossed out
are in the Ohio Constitution and
will be taken out of the Ohio Con·
stitution.

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED?

NO

ISSUE 1
'TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

AMENDME~T

ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE I
This Amendment. to the Ohio Constitution permits insurance com·
panies to provide coverage for workers' compensation insurance. Ohio
insurance agents and their companies now are prohibited from furnishing
workers' compensation insurance to employers for their employees.
The Amendment permits competition among insurance companies
and the existing State Fund.
The Amendment does not change the existing State Fund. It requires
that a State Fund be maintained. The Amendment does NOT change in
any way the existing level of benefits payable to injured worke rs.
Vote "yes" because the Amendment:
(
1. Creates a workers' compensation choice at no cost to taxpayers.
2. Ends an outdated government monopoly. Ohio is the only major in·
dustrial state which maintains a government monopoly for work·
ers' compensation. In fact, 44 other states have either rejected or
ignored this system begun in 1913.
a. AuthfMizM free c-~mpetition. T'o rlay's ~ystem h~ rlose~ t.n C(\mp~t~ .
tion. This Amendment allows hundreds of competitors to offer
their services. This competition encourages better. service, better
safety, and a better price.
4. Improves injured work~rs' services. For injured workers, this
means prompt attention to their financial, personal, and medical
needs. To employers, this Amendment reduces bureaucratic pa·
perwork and helps to cut government red tape.
5. Improves safety. Ohio has one of the worst workplace safety records in America. Over 400,000 Ohio workers are injured annually.
According to the Ohio Ins~rance Fund, a work injury, illness or
death occurs every four mmutes. Better safety means fewer acci·
dents, fewer deaths. This Amendment creates a powerful financial
incentive to reduce workplace accidents, because insurance companies reduce their costs with safety programs.
1
6. AimB .to lower cqsts. Com\,etition rewards those who deliver the
best services at the leut cost. High benefits are maintained.
7· Gives the freedom to choose.
.
Committee For the Amendment: Robert T. Bailey, Ronald Lee Beckel,
James J. Cicchetti, Richard A.
De Roberts, and Mary Edwards

Be it Resolved by the People of the State of Ohio:
That Sectlon 35 of Article II of the Constitution of
t he State of Ohio be amended to read as follows :

For the purpose of providing compensation to
etlm e1 WORKERS and their dependent&amp;, for
death, fnjurie• or ouupational dheue, oecuioned fn the course of sueh •·erltlt'!l!l'l'" WORKERS' employment, lawe ,....,.. SHALL be paaaed
establishing a state fund to be c~ated by~
Mf'Y contributioo the.reto by em.,lo)'erl, and administered by the state, determmine the tenna
and condiliona upon which payment shall be made
therefroin, LAWS SHALL BE PASSED PER-

BE PASSED AUTHORIZING INSURANCE
COMPANIIlS TO INSURE THE PAYMENT OF
SUCH WORKERS' COMPENSATION IN THIS
. STATE, ALL SUBJECT TO REGULATION AND
REQUIRED PAYMENTS PURSUANT TO SUCH
LAWS EXCEPT AS IN THIS CONSTITUTION

(Proposed by Initiative Petition)

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

•

Presently, the Ohio Workers' Compensation. Plan is funded by
employers in cooperative effort. The funds are placed into a shared risk
pool to provide medical benefits and 'compensation to Ohio's injured and
disabled workers.
·
Ohio Employers and Workers -are against State Issue 1, which would
drive up the cost of Workers' Compensation. Vote no on Issue 1 because:
• Out-of-state insurance conglomerates will double the cost of Work·
ers' .Compensation insurance for many Ohio employers.
• In every state in which out-of-state insurance conglomerates have
been allo"',ed to write Workers' Compensation, cost of insurance has
gone up, w'hile benefits have not correspondingly improved. -• In a recent study our Ohio Workers' Compensation system was
sixth highest in benefits paid to workers and was 11th lowest in cost to
employers out of 50 states.
• ~ur Ohio Pl_an treats al! Ohio workers with equality. Out-of-state
msurance gtaf!ts. Will skim off workers in low riskJ~,usinesses, and
leave most Oh10 mdustrJes to pay sky-rocketing rates for the same
coverage.
• Our Ohio Plan-is entirely funded by low cost employer premiums.
Not one tax dollar is used to subsidize our non-profit Workers' Com·
pe_n~ati?n system. ~ur sound and efficient system, earns over $200
m!lhon .m vestment mcome annually from Its $3 billion trust fund.
• When out-of-state insurance conglomerates drive the cost of Workers' C?ml'~nsation up, it will inflate the·price of goods and services
to Oh10 c1t1zens.
.:rhe effort to stop out-of-state insurance conglomerates from infil·
tratmg our non-profit Workers' Compensation system is so great that the
Ohio Manl!facturenl' Association, Ohio Chamber of Commerce Ohio State
Bar Association, Ohio Farm Bureau, all Ohio labor groups, 11nd state offi.
cials from both political parties urge you to vote NO on IBSue 1.
Vote NO on State Issue 1..
Committee Against the Amendment:

SESSMENTS, OR CONTRIBUTIONS NECES-

YES

SARY TO GUARANTEE THE PAYMENT OF
WORKERS'
COMPENSATION
CLAIMS
AGAINST EMPLOYERS INSURED BY ALL
SUC!f' COMPANIES. NO FEE, ASSESSMENT,
OR CONTRIBUTION SHALL BE CHARGED TO
THE STATE· FUI-(D TO GUARANTEE THE
PAYMENT OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION
CLAIMS AGAINST ' EMPLOYERS INSURED
BY AN INSURANCE COMPANY NOR TO ANY

CONTRIBUTE TO THE STATE FUND. Such
compensation shatl be in lieu of aU other righte to
compensation, or damages,·for euch death, injuries, or occupational disease, and any employer
who pays ~ pr-e~ · or PROVIDES FOR
PAYMENT OF compensation AS provided by Jaw,
passed in accordance herewith, shall nJJt be liable
to respond in damag-es at common law JJr by statute for such death, injuries or oceupational dis·
ease. LAWS SHALL BE PASSED GIVING TO
THE STATE DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE
THE POWER TO REGULATE, FOR EMPLOY·
ERS WH,O PROVIDE FOR PAYMENT OF COM'
PENSATION BY AN INSURANCE COMPANY,
PREMIUM RATES, RATING PLANS, AND THE
CLASSIFICATION OF ALL OCCUPATIONS
ACCORDING TO THEIR DEGREE OF
HAZARD. Laws may be passed establishing a

board which may be empowered to classify'all occupations, according to their degree of hazard,
FOR EMPLOYERS WHO CONTRIBUTE TO

THE STATE FUND..._to fix rates of contribution to
such fund acCording to such clusification, and to
coiled, administer and distribute such fund, and
t o determine all rights of claimants thereto. Such
board shall set aside as a separate fund such
proportion of the eontributions OR PREMIUMS
paid by employers as in its judgment m•y be
necessary, not to exceed one Jli!r centum thereof
in any year, and so as to equali%e, iuofar •• poa·
sible, the burden thereof, to be expended by such
board In such manner as may be provided by law
Cor the investi~ration and prevention of industrial
' accidents and diseases. Such board shall have full
power and authority to hear and determine
whether or not an injury, disease or death resulted becau•e of the failure of the employer to
comply with any specific requirement for the protection of tht'! lives~ health or safety of employees,
enacted by the General Aesembly or in the form of
an order adopted by such board, and ib decision
shall be final; and for the purpo8e of RUth investigations and inquiries it may appoint referees.
When it is found, upon hearing, that an injury,
disease or death ~suited because of auchlailure
by the employer, such amount aeshall be found to
be just, not ereater than fifty nor len than fifteen
per centum of the maximum award established by
law, shall be added by the board, to the amount of
the tompensation that may be awarded on account ofauch injury, ditE!&amp;Se, or death,'·and paid in
like manner u other awarda; and, if such com·
penRation is paid from the ~tate fund OR BY AN
INSURANCE COMPANY, lh• CONTRIBUTION

OR pr'emium of such employer shall be increa1ed
in such amount, covering such period of time as
may be fixed, as will reco\Jp the state fund OR
INSURANCE COMPANY in the amount of rsuch
additional award, notwithltanding any and all
other provisions in· thia constitution.
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL

If ~opted by a ni~ority of the electors voting
thereon, this amendment shall take effect on the
first day of January in the second succeeding )'ear
following its adoption, and existing S«tion 35 of
Article II of the Cqnstitution of Ohio shall be repealed from such effective date.

SHALL THE PROPOSED AME"'nl.•••••1
BE ADOPTED?

NO

INSURANCE COMPANY TO GUARANTEE

'.

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENI&gt;Mii'IT

Ohio's FAIR Amendment (for Fair and Impartial Re&lt;dist~ctiLng
1. Reform Ohio's system of -drawing state
sional districts through a nonpartisan method
political abuse.
2. Guarantee every citizen's right to compete on arreltLaL t,~asis with
other citizens or groups for winning adoption
d.istricting
plans.
3. Require publication of complete and accurate nor&gt;ul•tinn
tion for use by anyone submitting a plan.
' 4. Judge all plans submitted on population equality ·
compactness. ·
5. Establish a Commission on Reapportionment
whose role is limited to checking submitted plans
announcing the winning plans based upon the
rn,ula for compactness.
. j\MEND·
ARGUMENTS FOR A YES VOTE ON ISSUE 2, nn~· ht
MENT:
.
FAIR ends the game of political bosses creating for their·.f ri&gt;r•d~ .,are seats 1
that are overwhelmingly Democratic or Republican distitt;s,
FAIR forces politicians to compete and assures the
1\.t;'ea) choice ,
on Election Day.
.
FAIR eliminates .the creation of odd-shaped
a ~ · "Ger·
rymandering". This type qf political funny business
'r1istrict
lines will be stopped.
FAIR· opens the political process to public participation
competition.
•
FAIR prevents one political p.11rty from carving district
.r;o
trol of the legislature for the next ten years.
.
FAIR encourages, through its incentives for ~:~~r:!~~i:~~~~~~c•.''?;:r:i~;;f~
keeping neighborhoods, communities, torllnsr,lhiJ&gt;S
single ·
districts.

'If''"

'

Who Opposes FAIR?
Only the political bosses, whose political clout
your YES vote, are opposed to the FAIR a111endment.

'.

•

Wayne 0. Cobb and COlwnbla Ga

of Ohio, Inc., COiwnbus Gas Ttans.;

Col'J!., Agree . .and Ease., Bedford.
Monte L. Ford to Ro¥1e E. Ford,
8.421 acres, Olive.
·
Stephen Eugene Smith, dec. to
Rebecca ·J. Smith, Cert. of trans.,
Bedford.
Charles S. Norris, Enna J . Norris
to 'Nicholas R. lble, Diluia L. Ihle,
1.02 acres, I acre, Sutton.
klliMU'~tolteedA. Young,
P8i-Celi.~~...

AUGUST IN EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE.
AND SHALL REMAIN CONFIDENTIAL
UNTIL THE SIXTEENTH DAY OF AUGUST IN

'
be. e'urbed by
·~

.,

.

EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE.

SECTION 11. THE COMMISSION FOR

,)

Who Supports FAIR?

REAPPORTIONMENT AND REDISTRIOTI NG
SHALL EXAMINE EACH PLAN. SUBMITTED
PURSUANT TO SECTION 8 AND SECTION 9
OF THIS ARTICLE TO DETERMINE THE
VALIDITY AND SUFFICIENCY OF PETITION
SIGNATURES. THE COMMISSION SHALL
THEN DETERMINE WHETHER EACH PLAN
FOUND ACCEPTABLE IN THIS EX.O:MINA·
TION CONFORMS TO THE FOLLOWING
CRITERIA:

·

endorsedE~by~~O~h~i~o~~:~~~~~~~:~~:~

FAIR
has of
been
widely
Women
Voters
Ohio,
Ohio Farm Bureau, Ohio
li&lt;,m·•
munity and Civic organizations, and
·
dering is wrong, no matter which party dot~~
~ic~I~ ComfDit~e. 57
Submitted by the FAIR and Impartli\
'
.
1
'
East Gay Street, Columbus, Ohio
·d H.
Committee For the Amendment:
' rr A.:_ BIII!Ji~l!i"i
Carl H ..
arter,
Stitzlein,

.

4f,5,

1

LOCAL GOVERNMENTS ARE ImiOREJJi; i '
Issue 2 allows counties, cities, villages, townships ~n+neill:h~~o~·'!!,o~.s
to be divided numerous times to create legislative and
tricts. This will result in massive voter confusion
the responsiveness and effectiveness of our elected ·
create legislative districts that have no relationship to •
govsubdivisions. The current method requires that counties·
ernmental units be kept intact whenever poaaible in cjrawing t;,JlleB.
POLITICS NOT TAKEN OUT OF REDISTRWI'Il\f81
BECAUSE GOVERNOR IS GRANTEP EXCEIISI.VB ~~~
.
18
8
Designed to take politics out of legislative rediatlriclint; 11 ':' 2, m
fact, make• the proceaa political by givlnc exeeaaive "wer 1'if th1e Gover·
nor. Under Issue 2, the Governor alone muat carve uf,f'&gt;p.u\a·Oft· bloc~s of
over 6,000 and no guidelines apply to this power. Aily,plllfl 'at-'bnutted
under Issue 2 must uae the population blocks determini!G.lly th·e Governor.
·
,.

.
...
. E111NIC OR MINORITY REPRESENTA110N ·~;RBDUc:ED

.

.

.
No consideration Ia &amp;iven to avoid aplltting comhnmitlu or netrh·
borhoods with similar views or intereata when IP.gialatiu·HniMI' a..re drawn.

..

,.

i

_..

. r.

::

'

~' •

FOR

SECTION 4. EACH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT
SHALL BE ENTITLED TO A SINGLE REPRE ·'
SENTATIVE IN EACH GENERA' ASSEMBLY.
~
EACH SENATE DISTRICT SHALL BE ENTI·
TLID TO A SINGLE SENATOR IN EACH
GENERAL ASSEMBLY.
.
SB!:r!ON II. THE POPULATION OF EACH
CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT SHALL BE
SUBSTANTIALLY EQUALTOTHE ,RATIOOF
REPREIIJ:NTATION FOR THE STATE'S CON·
GRESSIONAL DIS.TRICTS, AND NO SUCH
DISTRICT SHALL CONTAIN A POPULATION
OF LESS THAN NINETY·SEVEN PER CENT
ORIIORETHANONEHUNDREDTHREE PER
CENT OF THE RATIO.
•
SECTION e. THE POPULATION OF EACH
SENATE DISTRICT SHALL BE SUBST·AN·
TlALLY EQUAL TO THE RATIO OF REPRE·
SENTATI011 FOR THE SENATBil AND NO
SUCH DISTRICT SHALL CONTAI A POPULATIONOFLESSTHANNINITY..U:VEN PER
CBNT OR MORE THAN ONE HUNDRED
THJ:III PI:R CENT OF THII RATIO.
UCH SIINATJ: DISTRICT SHALL U: COM·
PRISID OF THREE 61NIRAL ASSEMBLY
HOUR OF RIPRIIIENTATIVI:B DISTRICTS.
THI POPULATION OF EACH SUCH HOUIII
OF RII:PRB&amp;IINTATIVI:S DISTRICTS SHALL
BE SUBSTANTIALLY BQUAL TO THil BI.TIO

Circle on Labor Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Douglss Circle were
supper guests of Mr. and Mrs. War·
den Ours of Chester on Monday
evening.

Mr. and Mrs. Tom O'Neil and Mrs.
Evelyn Ingram, Mrs. Dwight Swepston and grandson, all of Colwnbus
were here th week of the Meigs
County Fair and attended.
Bob Bill Lee and Patrick Johnson
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tom
O'Neil and sons of Colwnbus from
Monday night untl! Wednesday and
attended the Ohio Slate Fair.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Beaschler of
Zanesville visited with Mr. and Mrs.
lil!rner Circle recenlly.
Ca!Ung at the home of. Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Circle on Sunday were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Circle, Mrs.
Dorothy Harden and son, Ralph, of
Morning Star, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Cir·
cle and baby of near Keno, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Circle and family.
Mrs. Elsie Circle is visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Johnson of Belpre.
Sandy Unrue of Hewston, Kan . .
returned home after spending some
time with a friend, Sandy Harden.

THE

NINETY-EIGHTH AND SUBSEQUENT CON·
GRESSES SHALL BE OF ANY FORCE OR EFFECT UNLESS IT HAS BEEN EFFECTED

PURSUANT TO THIS ARTICLE.

SECTION 2L THE BOUNDARIES OF GEN·
ERA.L ASSEMBLY HOUSE OF REPRESEN·

w;.rvJJJ~Rl~~~1~¥~~~+~TH~~m

•

ASSEMBLY SHALL-REMAIN IN EFFECT
UNTIL THE FIRST DAY OF JANUARY, 1983.

•

..

New appointments
WASHINGTON (AP)- Frank Ed-

ELECTED. NO APPORTIONMENT OF THE
STATE FOR MEMBERS OF THE ONE
HUNDRED FIFTEENTH AND SUBSEQUENT
GENERAL ASSEMBLIES SHALL BE OF ANY

ward Brown, an archeologist, and

Jean . V. Bony, ·a historian of
medieval architecture.. have been
appointed as Samuel H. Kress
Professors at the National Gallery of
Art for the academic year 1981-82.
Brown will be in residence for the
fall term, and Bony for the spring
term.

FORCE OR EFFECT UNLESS IT HAS BEEN
EFFECTED PURSUANT TO THIS ARTICLE .

SECTION 22. THE PROVISIONS OF THIS

ARTICLE ARE INTENDED TO BE SEVER·
ABLE, AN)) THE INVALIDITY OF ONE OR
MORE OF SUCH PROVISIONS SHALL NOT
AFFECT THE VALIDITY OF THE REMAIN·

ING PROVISIONS.

LINE.

·
SECTION 12. FOR EACH PLAN WHICH
MEETS THE REQUIREMENTS OF SECTION
11 OF THIS ARTICLE, THE COMMISSION FOR
REAPPORTIONMEN1 AND REDISTRICTING
SHALL DETERMINE DISTRICT GOMPACT·
NESS RATIOS AND A COMPACTNESS TOTAL.
TO DETERMINE DISTRICT COMPACTNESS
RATIO~ THE COMMISSION FOR REAPPOR·
TIONM~NT AND REDISTRICTING SHALL'
II) COMPUTE THE AREA OF EACH DIS·
C
TRICT IN EA H PLAN;
12) COMPUTE THE PERIMETER OF EACH
DISTRICT IN EACH PLAN;
Ill) COMPUTE THE COMPACTNESS RATIO
OF EACH DISTRICT IN EACH I'tAN BY Dl·
VIDING TH~ AREA OF EACH DISTRICT BY
THE SQUARE OF ITS PERIMETER;
14) COMPUTE THE COMPACTNESS RATIO
OFANYDISTRICTINCLUDINGTHEOTTAWA
COUNTY TOWNSHIPS OF
PORTAGE,
CATAWBA ISLAND, OR DANBURY, THE
LAKE ERIE ISLANDS, OR THE MEIGS
COU!i!TY TOWNSHIPS OF SUTTON, LEBANON AND LETART AS IF THESII AREAS
WERi: NOT CONTAINED IN THAT DISTRICT.
TO DETI:RMINE A COMPACTNESS TOTAL
FOR A PLAN, THE COMMISSION FOR REAP' PORTIONIIENT AND REDISTRICTING
SHALL SUM THE COMPACTNESS RATIOS OF

1

""'Y cal\ed on 'Nir. and Mn. Douslarl

MEMBERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
(A) THE PLAN SHALL MEET THE DIS· • HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ELECTED
IN 1980 SHALL HOLD OFFICE FOR THE
TRICT POPULATION REQUIREMENTS OF
TERMS FOR WHICH THEY WERE THEN
THIS ARTICLE.

18) EACH T-OWNSHIP, MUNICIPAL COR·
PORATION, FEDERAL CENSUS TRAC:!', OR
ENUMERATION ' DISTRICT, OR oN IT
THEREOF, AS DETERMINED BY THE GOY·
ENOR PURSUANT TO SECTION 7 OF THIS
ARTICLE, SHALL RETAIN ITS JNTEGRITV
AND SHALL NOT BE DIVIDED BETWEEN
DISTRICTS.
' (C) EACH DISTRICT CREATED BY THE
PLAN SHALL BE COMPOSED OF CONTIGUOUS TERRITORY AND BE BOUNDED BY A
SINGLE. NONINTERSECTING. CONTINUOUS

'• II

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl Johnson
and daughter, Sheryl Le Ann, spent .
Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Douglas Johnson of Racine.
Betty VanMeter, Sheryl Le Ann
Johnson and Eunie Brinker were at
the William Carelton home Sunday
afternoon.
Eunie Brinker called on Ernest
Clark of Racine a recent Sunday.
Roy Bookman, Elsie Call and
Dorothy Call of Buchtel, Ohio called
at the Douglas Circle home on SUnday. Rocky Pitzer of Basham was at
the Circle home on Monday.
Rev. Steve Wiison from New Jer-

ELECTED IN 1980 SHALL HOLD OFFICE FOR
DISTRICTS

I

Carmel News,
By the Day

THE TERMS FOR WHICH THEY WERE THEN
ELECTED. NO REDISTRI CTING OF CON ·

GRESSIONAL

11

Harold Eugene Smith 1p 'llanie&amp;t
June Smith, I acre, Salisbury •
Pomeroy.
1
David L. Chadwell, Donna J .
Chadwell to Spencer Buchlinan; Parcel, Olive.
Leonard E. AinoiJ, Faye E. Amos
to Liberty Oil and Gas Corporation,
Right of Way, Orsnge.
Genevieve Guthrie, Maxine Yost,
Delbert R. Yost to Liberty Oil and
Gas Corporation, Right of Way,
Orange.
Glen E. Robinson, Dorothy M.
Robinson to Liberty Oil and Gas Cor·
poration, Orange.
Knight Law Offices, P!nrshp by
Charles H. Knight, Ptnr., Barbara
McKnight, Ptnr., to Charles H.
KNight; Barbara M. Knight, Onethird Lots, Po111eroy.
·
Howard R. Ervin, Nancy R. Ervin
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Sutton.
Howard R. Ervin, Nancy R. Ervin
to James E. Diddle, Right of Way,
Sutton.

~;~~~Hf~I~

Issue 2 is a costly and dangerous experimentt ~~J~:~~~ form of
representative government. Vote No on Issue ,2, for t1
reasons:

William F. Bowen, J. Leo,nard
Camera, James M. Petro, and
Paul Pfeifer

'• '

ni!i:Ns~rlMf.f~Na: 1~E~~ S~~~~g~~

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENI,Mi:N'T

•

•

A majority yes vote is necessary for

WORKERS' COMPENSATION INSURANCE
SHALL BE REQUIRED TO PAY FEES, AS·

THE PAYMENT OF WORKERS' COMPENSA.
TION CLAIMS AGAINST EMPLOYERS WHICH

ALL DISTRICTS IN THE PLAN.
. SECTION Ia. NO LATER THAN .THE
THIRTY Fl Bin' DAY OF JANUARY 1182 AND
THEREAFTER NO LATER 'THAN'tHE tuiR·
TIETH DAY OF SEPTEIIBER IN EACH YEAR '
ENDING IN ON!, tHE ·COMMISSION FOR
REAPPORTIONII&amp;NT AND REDISTRICTING
SHALL· ADOPT FROM AMONG THE QUAL· .
IFYING PLANS FOR CONGRESSIONAL DIS.
TRICTS THAT PLAN WHOSE COMPACTNESS
THIS lS AN EXPENSIVE PROPOSAL WITHOUT FUNDING
TOTAL IS THE HIGHEST, AND THAT PLAN
SaALL BE THE PLAN IN EFFECT UNTIL A
Supporters have failed to tell voters that Issue 2 is 11 very costly N£\V PLAN IS ADOPTED AS PROVIDE!) IN
.
THIS ARTICLE.
/
. ~etluld of redistricting, and no money is being provided to pay for it.
SECTION )4, NO LATER THAN THE
THIRTY FIRST DAY OF JANUARY 1982' AND
DO NOT ADOPT A COSTLY EXPERIMENT
THEREAFTER NO LATER THAN tHE THIR·
TIETHDAY OF SEPTEMBER IN EACH YEAR
WJIICH WILL LOCK-IN OHIO LEGISLATIVE
ENDING IN ONE, THE COMMISSION FOR
DISTRICTS FOR THE NEXT DECADE.
REAPPORTIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING
IIHALL-A.DOPT ·FROM- AMONG T-11£-QIJA.[...
VOTE NO
IFYING PLANS FOR GENERAL ASSEMBLY
· · HOU!!t OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SEN·
ON ISSUE 2
ATE DISTRICTS THAT PLAN WHOSE COM·
BINED COMPACTNESS TOTAL IS THE HIGH·
Committee Against the Amendment: Charles L. Butts, Dale Locker,
EST,AND THAT PLAN SHALL BE IN EFFECT
Harry Meshel, and Barney
UNTIL A NEW PI.AN IS ADOPTED AS PRO.
VIDEO IN THIS ARTICLE.
Quilter
SECTION 16. THE COMMISSION FOR
REAPPORTIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING
SHALL MAKE AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC
DISTRIBUTION THE MAPS AND LISTS OF
UNITS CONSTITUTING THE DISTRICTS IN
EACH PLAN CHOSEN PURSUANT TO THIS
. ARTICLE. THE COMMISSION FOR REAP·
'· (The language proposed to be added to
PORTIONMEt/T AND
REDISTRICTING
SHALL ALSO NUMBER EACH DISTRICT IN
Article II, Section 2 appears in capital letters.)
EACH PLAN, BEGINNING IN EACH IN ·
BE IT RESOLVED BY THE PEOPLE OF THE
OF REPRESENTATION FOR THE GENER'AL" STANCE WITH THE DISTRICT LOCATED tN
STATE OF OHIO THAT ARTICLE II SECTION
ASSEMBLY HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES,
THE NORTHWESTERN CORNER OF THE
2 OF " J:HE CONSTITUTION OF 'oHIO BE
AND NO SUCH DISTRICT SHALL CONTAIN A
STATE, BY GIVING EACH DISTRICT A CON·
AMENDED, THAT EXIST! NO ARTICLE XI OF
POPULATION OF LESS THAN NINETY·
SECUTIVE NUMBER FROM WEST TO EAST
AND, AFTER NUMBERING THE DISTRICT IN
THE CONSTITUTION OF OHIO BE RE·
SEVEN PER CENT OR MORE THAN .ONE
THE MOST NORTHEASTERN CORNER OF
PEALED AND THAT NEW ARTICLE XI OF
HUNDRED THREE PER CENT OF THE
THE STATE, REPEATING THE PROCESS
• THE CONSTITUTION OF OHIO BE ADOPTED
RATIO.
FROM WEST TO EAST UNTIL ALL DISTRICTS
ALL TO READ AS FOLLOWS'
'
SECTION 7. &lt;A l ON OR BEFORE THE FIF·
HAVE BEEN NUMBERED . TERMS OF
TEENTH DAY OF DECEMBER, 1981, AND
SENATORS
REPRESENTING
ODD·
THEREAFTER ON OR BEFORE THE FIRST
ARTICLE II
NUMBERED DISTRICTS SHALL COMMENCE
DAY OF JULY IN EACH YEAR ENDING IN
. Sec~j on 2. Representatives shall be e;lected
ON JANUARY 1, 1983. TERMS OF SENATORS
b1enmaiiy by the electon of the reapective house ONE, THE GOVERNOR SHALL MAKE DOCU·
REPRESENTING EVEN-NUMBERED DIS·
MENTS AVAILABLE FOR PUBLIC DISTRI·
of representatives districts; their term of office
SHALL COMMENCE ON JANUARY l
shall commence on the fint day of January next BUTION INDICATING THE POPULATION, TRICTS
1~.
'
AREA, AND LENGTH OF PERIMETER SEGthereafter and continue two years.
MENTS OF EACH TOWNSHIP, MUNICIPAL
SECTION 16. BY UNANIMOUS VOTE
Senators shall be elected by the electors of th.e ' CORPORATION, FEDERAL CENSUS TRACT, ONLY,
THE COMMISSION FOR REAPPOR·
respective senate districts; their terms of offite AND ENUMERATION DISTRICT IN THE
TIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING MAY RE ·
-~- ~hall commence on the first day or January next
STATE V!HOSE POPULATION DOES NOT EX· ,JECT ANY PLAN SUBMITTED PURSUANT TO
after their eleetlon. All terms of aenators which CEED
FIVE THOUSAND.
.
SECTION 8 OR SECTION 9 OF THIS ARTICLE.
commence on the first day or January, 1969 shall
I~ THE COMMJSSION SO REJECTS A PLAN,
(Ill IN THE CASE OF TOWNSHIPS, MUNICbe four yean, and all terms whieh commence on
IT SHALL NEXT CONSIDER THAT PLAN
the first day of January, 1971ahall be four )'eara. IPAL CORPORATIONS, FEDERAL CENSUS WHOSE
COMPACTNESS TOTAL WAS NEXT
Thereafter, except for the fillin1 of vacancies for TRACTS, AND ENUMERATION DISTRICTS
HIGHEST.
'
unexpired terms AND TO COMPLY WITH THE WHOSE POPULATIONS EXCEED FIVE
SECTION 17. IF THE BOUNDARIES OF A
REQUIREMENTS OF ARTICLE XI- OF THIS THOUSAND, THE GOVERNOR SHALL DIVIDE
CONSTITUTION, "en a tors shall be eleeted to and •EACH INTO THE SMALLEST POSSIBLE SENATE DISTRICT ARE CHANGED BY A
NUMBER OF UNITS CONTAINING POPULA·
PLAN ADOPTED PURSUANT TO THIS ART!·
hold office for tenns of four year•.
TlONS NOT EXCEEDING FIVE THOUSAND, CLE, A SENATOR WHOSE TERM WILL NOT
AND THE GOVERNOR SHALL MAKE AVAILARTICLE XI
EXPIRE WITHIN TWO YEARS OF THE TIME
THE PLAN IS ADOPTED SHALL HOLD OFSECTION I. THERE IS HEREBY CREATED ABLE, ON OR BEFORE THE FIFTEENTH
FICE FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE TERM
THE COMMISSION FOR REAPPORTIONMENT DAY OF DECEMBERLn981L AND THEREAF·
FOR WHICH HE WAS ELECTED, IF HE IS A
AND REDISTRICTING COMPOSED OF FIVE TER ON OR BEFOR~ TH~ FIRST DAY OF
IN EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE, THE
RESIDENT OF A NEWLY CREATED DIS PERSONS. ONE PERSON SHALL BE CHOSEN JULY
INFORMATION REQUIRED IN DIVITRICT NOT ELECTING A SENATOR WITHIN
BY THE SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF REP· SAME
SION
(A)
OF
THIS
SECTION
FOR
EACH
SUCH
TWO
YEARS OF THE TIME THE PLAN IS
RESENTATIVES AND ONE BY THE LEADER UNIT.
ADOPTED. IF MORE THAN ONE SENATOR
IN THE SENATE OF THE POLITICAL PARTY
WHOSE TERM WILL NOT SO EXPIRE WOULD
(C) NOTWITHSTANDING THE REQUIRE ·
OF WHICH THE SPEAKER IS A MEMBER
AND ONE PERSON CHOSEN BY THE LEGIS~ MENTS OF DIVISION (B) OF THIS SECTION, REPRESENT THE SAME DISTRICT BY FOL·
LOWING THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SEC·
· LATIVE LEADER IN EACH OF THE TWO IF ANY FEDERAL CENSUS TRACT IS FOUND
TION, THE DISTRICT SHALL BE REPRE·
HOUSES OF THE MAJOR POLITICAL PARTY NOT TO BE CONTAINED WHOLLY WITHIN A
SENTED BY Tl:fE SENATOR WHOSE: FORMER
Of WHICH THE SPEAKER IS NOT A MUNICIPAL CORPORATION gR TOWNSHI~
CONSTI'EUENTS MAKE UP THE LARGEST
!VIDE THAT
MEMBER. THESE FOUR PERSONS SHALL, THE GOVERNOR SHALL
FRACTION OF THE POPULATION.QF THE
TRACT ALONG THE OFFICIAL BOUNDARY
NEW D.l,STRICT. IN ALL OTHER CASES,
OF THE MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OR
ELECTIONS SHALL BE HELD TO ENSURE
SIDERATION AS THE FIFTH MEMBER WHO TOWNSHIP.
THAT THE TERMS OF SENATORS CONFORM
SHALL, WITH THE CONCURRENCE OF
(D ) AS USED IN THIS.SECTION, "PERIMETO THI; PROVISIONS OF SECTION 16 OF THIS
THREE OF THE FOUR ORIGINALLY NAMED TER SEGMENT" MEANS A PORTION OF THE
ARTICLE.
MEMBERS, SERVE AS CHAIRPERSON OF PERIMETER OF A TOWNSHIP, MUNICIPAL
SECTION 18. THE SUPREME COURT OF
THE COMMISSION. IF THREE MEMBERS OF CORPORATION, FEDERAL CENSUS TRACT,
THE COMMISSION ARE UNABLE TO AGREE OR ENUMERATION DISTRICT, OR UNIT OHIO SHALL HAVE EXCLUSIVE• ORIGINAL
UPON THE SELECTION OF THE CHAIRPER· THEREOF, AS ESTABLISHED IN DIVISIONS JURISDICTION IN ALL CASEo ARISING
UNDER THIS ARTICLE INVOLVING THE AP·
SON, THE CHOICE SHALL BE MADE BY LOT (A)j iR), AND IC) OF THIS SECTION THAT
PORTIONMENT OF THE STATE FOR MEM·
FROM THE FOUR NAMES ORIGINALLY CO NCIDES WITH THE PERIMETER 6F THE
BERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. ANY
SUBMITTED. THE COMMISSION SHALL BE STATE OR OF ANOTHER TOWNSHIP,MUNIC·
PERSON MAY CHALLENGE A~Y SUBSTAN·
RESPONSIBLE FOR REDISTRICTING CON· IPAL CORPORATION, FEDERAL CENSUS
TIAL ASPECT OF AN APPORTIONMENT
GRESSIONAL DISTRICTS AND APPORTION· TRACT, OR ENUMERATION DISTRICT, OR
MENT OF THE STATE FOR MEMBERS OF UNIT THEREOF. PERIMETER SI!!GM€NTS PLAN ADOPTED BY THE COMMISSION FOR
REAPPORTIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING
THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY. NO MEMBER OF AND AREAS MAY BE DETERMINED BY THE
BY FILING A COMPLAINT WITH THE COURT
THE UNITED STATES HOUSE OF REPRE · USE OF MAPS.
NO LATER THAN TWENTY DAYS AFTER
SENTATIVES OR THE OHIO GENERAL AS·
SECTION 8. ON THE DAY THE DOCU- THE MAPS AND LISTS OF UNITS ARE MADE
SIMBLY MAY SERVE ON THE COMMISSION. MENTS REQUIRED IN SECTION 7 OF THIS
AVAILABLE PURSUANT TO SECTION 15 OF
IN PERFORMING UNDER THIS ARTICLE
ARTICLE ARE FIRST MADE AVAILABLE
'f!fli' COMMISSION FOR REAPPORTIONMENT FOR PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION, THE GOVER· THIS ARTICLE . THE COURT SHALL AN·
ITS WRITTEN DECISION WITHIN
Allll REDISTRICTING AND THE GOVERNOR, NOR SHALL, BV PUBLIC NOTICE, CALL FOR NOUNCE
FORTY FIVE DAYS OF SUCH FILING. THE
311A LL HAVE THE A.UTHORITY TO REQUIRE T!IE SUBMISSION OF PLANS fOR DIVIDING COURT
&amp;lAY INVALIDATE THE PLAN IF IT
'!HE: SERVICES AND ASSISTANCE OF ANY· THE STATE llj,TO CONGRESSIONAL DIS·
DETERMINES THAT THE PLAN CONTAINS A
SJ:ATE OFFICE, DEPARTMENT OR AGENCY.
TRICTS.
.
SUBSTANTIAL ERROR. IN THE EVENT THE
t'HE FOUR PERSONS CHOSEN BY LEGIS· • SECTION 9. ON THE DAY THE DOCU . COURT INVALIDATES SUCH PLAN, THE
LATIVE LEADERS SHALL BE APPOINTED MENTS REQUIRED IN SECTION 7 OF THIS PLAN WHOSE COMPACTNESS TOTAL
NO LATER THAN THE SEVENTH DAY OF ARTICLE Al&lt;E FIRST MADE AVAILABLE
RANKED NEXT HIGHEST SHALL BE
DECEMBER, 1981, AND THEREAFTER NO FOR pUBLIC DISTRIBUTION, THE GOVER·
ADOPTED BY THE COMMISSION, AND THE
LATER THAN THE FIRST DAY OF MAY IN NOR SHALL, BY PUBLIC NOTICE, CALL FOR TIME LIMITS FOR CHALLENGING AND
EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE, AND TO· THE SUBMISSION OF PLANS FOR DIVIDING RULING UPON SUCH NEW PLAN SHALL BE
GETHER WITH THE CHAIRPERSON SHALL THE STATE INTO GENERAL ASSEMBLY THE SAME AS THOSE WHICH APPLIED TO
SERVE UNTIL THE LAST DAY OF DE · HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SEN· THE ORIGINAL PLAN . IF IT BECOMES
CEMBER IN THE NEXT VEAil ENDING IN ATE DJSTRICTS.
NECESSARY TO THE IMPLEMENTATION OF
ZERO. IN THE EVENT OF A VACANCY ON
A DECISION ARISING UNDER THIS ARTISECTION
10.
EACH
PLAN
SUBMITTED
THE COMMISSION, THE PROCESS ORIGI ·
CLE, THE COURT MAY CHANGE THE DATE
NALLY USED TO SELECT THE PERSON PURSUANT TO SECTION 8 AND SECTION 9
UPON WHICH CANDIDATES FILE FOR
OF
THIS
ARTICLE
SHALL
CONTA
IN
MAPS
WHOSE SEAT BECOMES VACANT SHALL BE
ELECTION TO OFFICE .
AND
A
LIST
OF
TOWNSHIPS,
MUNICIPAL
UTILIZED ANDA REPLACEMENT SHALL BE
SECTION 19. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY
FEDERAL
CENSUS
SO APPOINTED WITHIN SEVEN DAYS CQRPORATIONS,
PROVISION OF THIS CONSTITUTION OR ANY
TRACTStQI&lt; ENUMERATION DISTRICTS, oR
ArTER THE VACANCV OCCURS.
LAW REGARDING THE RESIDENCE OF
UNITS .REOF, AS DETERMINED PUR·
MEMBERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
SUANT TO SECTION 7 OF THIS ARTICLE,
HOUSE
OF
REPRESENTATIVES OR
CONSTITUTING EACH DISTRICT, AND
SENATORS, PERSONS SHALL BE ALLOWED
SHALL BE ACCOMPANIED BY A PETITION
THIRTY DAYS FROM THE TIME A PLAN IS
BEARING THE SIGNATURES OF AT LEAST
ADOPTED UNDER THIS ARTICLE TO
FIVE HUNDRED ELECTORS. PLANS SUB·
MITTED AS A RESULT OF THE 1980 FED· CHANGE RESIDENCE IN ORDER TO BE
ELIGIBLE FOR ELECTION TO AN OFFICE
ERAL DECENNIAL CENSUS SHALL BE
INCLUDED IN SUCH PLAN.
FILED WITH THE COMMISSION NOT LATER
THAN THE FIFTEENTH DAY OF JANUARY,
SECTION 20. THE BOUNDARIES OF CON19~ AND SHALL REMAIN CONFIDENTIAL
GRESSIONAL
DISTRICTS
FOR
THE
UNTIL THE SIXTEENTH DAY OF J;.NUARY,
NINETY-SEVENTH CONGRESS· SHALL RE1982. PLANS SUBMITTED THERf:AFTER
MAIN IN EFFECT UNTIL THE FIRST DAY OF
SHALL BE FILED WITH THE COMMISSION ,JANUARY, 1983. MEMBERS OF THE UN ITE D
NOT LATER THAN THE FIFTEENTH DAY OF
STATES HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

'

OTHERWISE PROVlOED. ALL AUTHORIZED
INSURANCE COMPANIES WHICH WRITE

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED

.

ISSUE 2
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSnTUTIOtiAL AMENQft'IENT

.MITTING EMPLOYERS WHO QUALIFY TO
PAY SUCH WORKERS' COMPENSATION Dl·
RECTLY TO EMPLOYEES, AND LAWS SHALL

YES

. ...

ANY PERSoN 'oa ORGANIZAtioN couLD DETERMINE oHIO'S
·
·.
.
LEGISLA'I1VE DISTRICl'S
..
.
·
· Anr ~~t;rs~n or group, no matter wh!lt their ii1.t erest, may submit plans
for red1st!'lctmg. Consequently, any radical or extremist groups ·such ·as
the ~m.en~an Communist or Nazi PartieB could submit a scheme·designed
to ehmmate communities of interest in, the Ohio Legislature.
. ·

PROPOSED AM
TO THE OHIO CO

..
BALLOT LANGUAGE, ARGUMENTS, AND
FULL TEXTS OF AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO CONSnTUnON
PROPOSED P~ INITIAnVE PETITIONS
'
TO BE SUBMimD TO THE VOh:RS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION, .NOVEMBER 3, 1981

. I

Meigs·.
'Property
Transfers

EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
If approved by a majority of the eledora Voting

on this aml'!ndment, the amendment shall take ef·
feet thirty days afte~ the election at which it wall
appro\'ed. Upon the effective date of this amendment, existing Artide II, Section 2 of the Con ·
stitution ~or Ohio, and ex i ~ting Article XI of the
Constitution of Ohio, shall be repealed .
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Arthritis personality

'

STATE OF OHIO ,

OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY

OF STATE
I, Anthony J, Celebreaae,Jr., Secretary orS~at~ .
do he reb)' certify tha\ the foregoinr ia a true copr
of Prop;.Md C0n1tltution.I Amendments filed 1n
the Offtce of the Seeret&amp;l')' of State by Initiative
Petition pursuant to Article 11hSection tb of the
Constitution of the State of 0 io, lo.ether with
ballot lanruap certified to me b)' the Ohio Ballot
Board and arrument.a, 1ubmltt.ed to me b)' the
proponents and opponent.• of the issue. a1 pre·
scribed by law.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto
subtcribed m)' name and amxed my omcial ,.eal
at Co\umbUI thil 10\h day of September, 1981.
.
Anthony J . Celebl'fl&amp;al'!, Jr.
Secretary of State

•

ATLANTA (AP) - Is there an arthritis personality?
No, say the experts. But if you
already have rheumatoid arthritis,
your ab!Uty to cope with stress can
affect how you feeL
"Many patients first notice th~ir
symptoms following a disturbing
event such as a death In the family,
divorce or some other emotional
strain," says Or. Frederic c. MeDuffle of the Arthritis Foundation.
11
8tress doesn't cause the disease,
but people oflei!"improve when their
1Jtres8 is relieved," he says.
If there are 110111e common personality features in arthritis patients, they result frGm having a chronic
disease It's hard to face the conslant phya!cal demands of arthritis
without some depreuion or other

:&gt;"M:~ pro)ll~. a~s.

..

�•

•

---

-·

!ag-8
Th5 Dally sentinel
..
~~~~!!!!~~~~~~----------------~------------~P:o~m~er~o~y::M~id~d~le~p~o~r~t,~O~h~i~o~----------------------~----------------~M•on~d~a~y,~o_c_t=o~ber_1_2_._,,_,_,

returns, Senthlel _W ant Ads
NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL'
LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that In pursuance Ofd ofa
Resolution of the 80llr
Trustees of the Townshl~ of
Olive, Ohio, passed on the
2nd day of July, 1911 there
will be submitted to a vote
of the people of said Townshll! at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held In
the Township of Ollve, l

(10)12. 11&lt; '

Public Notice
ELEC!TION
LEGAL NOTICE
Ohio, at the regular placn l
The Ohio Soil and Warer
of voting therein, on j conserverlon
Tuesday, the 3rd day of will cause an CommiSSion
election· of
November, 1981, the
of the Meigs
question of levying. In ex• supervlson
Soli and Water Con ·
cess of the ten m 111I servatlon
District to .be
limit;llflon. for the benefit of
Olive Township for the pur· held in ~ecordance W1th
1515.01 ·14 of the
pose of Maintaining anQ Chapter
Revtsed Cocle of Ohio, at ·
~rating cemeteries.
the Multi~rpose Building,
Said tax being : a renewal
Pomeroy, Ohio on Novem·
of an exlstln~ tax of One ber
10. 1981 at7 : 30 p .m .
Mill to run for five years, at
Nomi('ees
are
~ex
a rate not eKceedlng 1.0 Shenefield.
Th~tss,
mill for each one dollar of Pat Holter, •.Tom
and Ed1son
valuation, which amounts
.
to Ten cents for each one Hollon.
Nominations w1ll be ac·
hunared dollars of cepted
from the floor at the
valuation, for Five y,eers.
time of election . Two
The Polls for sa d E lee- supervisors
are to be elec·
lion will open at 6 :30 ted. You may
cast your
o'clock A.M . and remain ballot
the annual
open until 7:30 o• &lt;lock P.M. meeting at
or on the day of
of said day .
at the Meigs Soil
By order of the Board of election
Water Conservation
Elections, of Meigs County. and
District Office at 221 West
Ohio.
Street, Farmers
Ernest A . WlngeH Second
Bank Building, between 8
Chairman A.M.
and 4 P M.
Absentee ballots may be
Dorothy M. Johnston secured
at the local district
Director
Dated October 12. 1981 office
( tO) 12, 26, 2tc
(10) 12, 19. 26. (11) 2, Ole
Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS herebY given
that the Board of . Meigs
County CommiSSIOners,
Meigs County, Ohio, pur·
suant to the requirements
of u s. Publ ic Law 92·500,
as amended by Public Law
95 217, Section 201, will hold
a Public Meeting at 7:00
p M
on
Wednesday,
oecember 2, 1981 at the
gymnasium of the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School
on s R 681 just east of S. R.
7 in Tuppers Pla1ns. The
purpose of this Meeting will
be to exrlain the develop·
ment o a wastewat.er
Faeillties Plan for the untn

corporated area of Tuppers
Plams, Oh10 to residents of
the area and other tn ·
terested ind ividuals and
organizations, and to
receive comments and
Quesftonsfrom the publlt;
The Tuppers Platns
Facilities Planning Ar.ea
consists of the untn ·
corporated Village of T.up·
pers Pla1ns and 1m ·
mediately ad jacent area~ .
The Tuppers Pla•ns
Facilities Plan will include
the following ln!ormatlon
about the planntng area :
wafer quality problems
and goals ; and envtron·
mental inventory, land use.
populatton, and waste·
water flow projections;
evaluatton ot 1he c:.ur-ren1
wastewater treatment and
disposal
method.s; i
eva~uation of alternatrve
solutions to the area's
wastewater · needs; and a
proposed selected plan
based on cos ts and env1ron·
mental consideratons.
Antic1pated completion
of the Tuppers Plains

..

CALL:
Ernest A. Winget!
Chairman

Ernest A. Winget!
Chairman
Olr&amp;etor

Dated Oct. 12, 1981
(10) 12, 19, 26,

(ll)

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

Public Notice

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

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Dated Oct. 12. 1981

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given
that In pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of
Education of the Eastern
Local School Oistrict, Ohio,
passed on the 16th day or
June, 1981, there will be
submitted to a vote of the
people of said School
District at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held at
ttle regular places of voting
therein. on Tuesday, the
3rd day of November, 1981,
the question of levying, In
excess of the ten mill
limitation. for the benefit of
Eastern Local School
District for the purpose of
Current operating ex·

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL ·
LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given
thAt In pur.uanca of a
Resolution of the Board of
commissioners Of the
Countv ·of Meigs, Pomeroy,
Ohio, passed on the 18th
day ol August, 1981, there
will be submitted to a vote
of the people of said County
~ a GENERAL ELE~
TION to be held in the

Public Notice

Public Notice

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Date Oct. 12, 1981

(10) 12,19. 26, 01) 2, 4tc
Public Notice

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
.. ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-c 1rd ot Th•nk•
2-ln Momorl•m

e RE;NTALS

• 1-Houi.S for Rent
42-Moblle Home•
••-Ap.~rlmenrs for A En I

!-H•ppy Ad I

45-Furnislllld Rooms
46-Sp•ce Jor Rent
47-Wintea to Rtnt
•t-Equlpmlnl tor Rtnt
4t-For L011e

6-LolfllndFoltnl

J- v•ri's.._

1-Public Sale
&amp;Aut:UM

t-W•ntecl to lur

11-HIIftiWifttH
u-Sih.l•tien

w•"'"

ll-lns~nnct

14--lutlntll Tninhtt
1S-5CftNIIInstrucflon

Sf-ForS.Io.,TrHt

11-Wanttd To Do

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

eFINANCIAL

•

19, ---~-20. - - - - - 21. - - -- - 22. - - - - - , - - 23. - - - - - -

26.
28.-----29.------

00. - - - - - ; 31. - - - - " ' - 32.

~-H.JY &amp;

Servicll

Grain

•TRANSPORTATION

31-Hontetlor hte

rt-,.u,..lor 5• ..

J2-MMHe HoMes

n-Trucks fo!' S•le
JJ-V.J•I&amp;4W. D.

»-Firms lor S•ll
l4-lut~MII lulld1n11
U - Littl &amp; Acr. .te
]6- R.. l Ett•te W•nted

,.._..Motlrcyc:les

,.,,....

l7-Ri1Uors

n-Autol.,.ir

Moftd•v 2·00 on S•turd•r
Tu..-v Hllru ,,..,..., J:ot f'.M.
1M IIY IliON p&amp;llllutiiM'
' luM•Y 1: .. P.M.

33.

'rMI•v

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

KAfS
BEAUTY SALON

eRoofing •

• Painting

PH. 992-2725
169 N. 2nd

Middleport. Ohio
9·20-1 mo.

10·8·1 mo pd

8-18

•

( 10) 12, 19, 26, (1112, ~tc

•

WANTED

supreme.
Gasoline,
comlete
line
of
Lubricants for the
farms&amp; industr;y .
PH. 992-3460
If long distance, call cot·
lect:
· larry E. Miller, Dealer
8·30·1 mo.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.S. Rt .SO E.llf
GU'f!VIIIe, Ohio
Authonre.d John Deere,
New Holland. Buth Hog
F"ilrm Equ1pment

Oealer
F"ARM EQUIPMENT
PARTS&amp; SERVICE
USEO EQUIPMENT
I- NO. liOO 01C$CI Ford •
Trilclor .-1 C•b
M00·4010 Dtesel J .O. Tractor
MOD·lU I Row Ni!w ldcil corn
Picker
7l tic

WALNUTS

.

STUART WAYNE
PULLINS
Call After 4 P.M.

BUILDING
OR
TRAILER LOT
Eastern District 100'X200' with water,
electric,· and septic:·
$6,000.

ROUSH
CONSTRutnON

New Hames - ex·
tenfive remodel·
ing.
•Electrical work
•Roofing work
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
-- . Ph. 992·7583

REALTOR
Henry E. Clellnd. Jr.
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Jean Trusse11949·2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692

ALL STEEL

Farm Buildinp

Misc. M~chanctice

Sizes
"From 30xl0"
SMALL

Rutland Furniture Carpet Shop
FAll CARPET SALE
.

UtiHty Buildinp
Silts from 4x6 to12x40

GET RIADY FOR -WINTIR
S11AG CARP UBBER BAC 3 ROLLS
3 ROlli to

Pick From

'12"

Caalt-n·Carry
1 Grnn Tweed
1 Rust Tweed

·,5..sq. yd.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
111. J, Box M
RlciM. Oft.
Ph. 614-143·2591

1 Blue Fnst

1 Creek Bed

2

~·15·11c

.,For October
~ .•d.

IJ-u,.._.,,....,.

M-M.M.R ... Ir

Buy Now &amp; 51Vei2·S6 Per Yard
25 rolls Clrpet in stock to pick lrom.
Regular blckecl, Clrpet Installed free
witii'Pitd. Good selection Roll Ends Rem·
nants S2.5G up.

Rlttt 11ncl Other lnformetion

Ph. 949·2160 ar 949-2412

STANDARD
OIL CO.

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTIPN

(SOHIO)

Custom kitchens and iPpliances,
custom
bathrooms, remOdeling,
plumbin, electnc, and
heating.

we are now delivering
home heating 011 in all
parts of Meigs co. We
want new customers.
Larry E. Mi1Jer·Dealer 1

FREE
ESTIMATES
pH . 992·60 II
992-7656
8-2.0-tfc

992·.3460
If Long Distance,

call collect
9· 21-1

mo.

WANTED TO BUY

REESEilt4/
TRENCHING
SERVICE
water·Sewer·Eiectric

',,

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the smalltll
Ht..ler C.,. to IIIP
Le....IRaflltor.

I
I

Gas Lln ... Di·~hes .
Water Line H k-ups
Septic T1nks
county certified
Roush Lane
Cheshire, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560
1·7·llfc

Pit. ftMlM

••

Now picking up junk
auto bodies. Top prices
Pllid for auto bodies,
scrap Iron and metals.
1 mile west of Fair·
grounds on Old Rt. !3.
Mon.- Fri. I:JO to 4:DO
Aller A•g.l
Ph. 992-6564

_Addonsond
r•mod•ling
Roofing anCI guHer

Trailer
Driveways.
specialty.
Gas &amp; Wattr lines

- work
Cancr•twork
- Plumbing ond
- •ledrial work
(FrH

10·12· tfc

WORK

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
. SERVICE"

Estimates)

JIM LUCAS
Ph. 742·2753

V. C. YOUNG Ill
'9vJ.6115or 99'.H31.t
PomflO'(. Ohio
9 »fie .

10· 12· 1 mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

'

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Box 65, Portland, Oh.
Ph. M3-4912
$S.ot Monthly
serving the following
townships: Lelianan,
sunon, Letart, Olive,
Orange, Slllsbury, Bedford, Chester, Salem,
Scipi'O,
Rutland,
Harrisonville And Middleport.
10-12-1 mo.

"le•utlful, cuatom
•ulll Glratt~"

Call for frH lldtng
ntlmetn, f4NI01 or
949-2....
No sunday Cells
3-ll·tlc

Fully Guaranteed
22 Yrs. Experience
American and Most

11

Help Wanted

WANTED
The Tuppers Plains
Chesler wa,er District
39561 Bar 30 Road, ,
Reedsville, Ohio 45712, ·
is seeking a full time
class 2 operator for the
treatment plant and
facilities. Please call
collect 614-915-3315 for
interview ar questions.
Must live in water
district which coven
parts ol • Meigs and
Athens Counties. Salary
to be Hsed on your experience
and
ualiflcattons.
Real Estate- General

For bulk delivery of
gasoline. healing oil and
diesel fuel, call Landmark,
992·2181, Pomeray, Oh.
Horses. ponies. horse
trailer. riding lessons. Hoof
Hollow 61~-698-3290.
Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 p.m. Factory choke
guns only.
Racine Gun Club Dues are

due. $25. Must be paid
before I.J-82.
TRAPS and TRAPPING
supplies. Gene Hines,
Amesville, Ohio. 614-4-486747. Dally alter 1 p.m .
CIOSO!d Sundays.

ANY PERSON Who hiS
anything to give away tnd
does not offer or allempf to
offer any other thing for
sate may place on ad In this
cotutnn. There will be no
charge to~ advertiser.
Terrior dog, ChOW ChoW
puppy, 10 wks. ol&lt;!: call&gt;lol6·
9310.

'

IRGILB. SR.
216 E. socond Strut

Phone
H 614 J·992-3325
CAMPSITES - 1 acre
only $1800. Has Slate
owned hunting land on
three sides. Forked Run
Lake near. Select vour
sitenow.
·
NEW LISTING 7
room house and nice 2
bedroom trailer on Rt. 7
near Eastern School . 18
acres, $32,000.
NEW LISTING
Gravel Hill property ol2
lots. bath. new nat. gas
F.A. furnace. Iaroe
basement near stores
and schools. only
$21.000.
COUNTRY RANCH Brick with over 3 acres.
3 bedrooms, 1'1:2 baths,
central air and heat.
Quiet location near Mid·
dleport.
NEAR COAL MINESNew home with •.a
acres on two good coun·
try roads. Total elec.
with 6 rooms and
garage. Fresh air and
sunshine for S39 ,000.
MIDDLEPORT BRICK
- Stately showcase 7
room hol]le In the heart
of tfY'Nfl. has 3 or .o1
bedrooms. 1'12 baths.
Central air and heat,
garage with storage,
2 HOUSES - May sell
leperate. One with 3
bedroonis, 2 baths, mod.
kit , full basement, nat.
gas furnace, swimming
pool, garage and 3
ac;res . 2nd has 2
bedrooms; bath, full
basement, gas, cltv
water and one ecre. ·
BAUMS SUB-DIV. Very nicely carpeted 3
bedroom brick. 2 full
baths, full basement
with family room and
fireplace. equipped kit.
Large tlvlng, garage
and well landscaped lot.
ASSOCIATES
Helen Tuford. Oonfon
Tuford. ond Suo Murphy.

H·llc

Chatham Ave., Oct. 2
thru Oct. 16, 9 to 5. Furn.,
dishes, clothing, baby
Items and etc.
31

Garage Sale. Tuppers
Plains, Oct. ,_., 15, 16. 9-5.
Gordon Caldwell residence.

Big garage sale. Clifton,
WV. Gepe Riley residence.
Sat, Mon, Tues., Oct 10, 12,
13. Toys, lewetry, boys
school clothes 1-1,, bedding, girls and mise
clothing, more mise, and
1969 Mustang. Follow
Signa.
3 family yard sale. Rl. 2
north at 'Y.'. Plenty of
children's clothes. Tuesday
and Wednesday, October
t:l-1~.

Two kiHens

grey male1
tiger strip female, house
pets, IIIIer box trained.
Must provide good home.
Call&gt;lol6-2996.

9

WANT TO BUY Old furniture and Antiques of all
kinds, cell kenneth Swain,
256-1967 In the evenings.
CASH PAl D for clean. late
model uled cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Call&gt;loi6-22B2.
Junk cars with or with out
motors, scrap metal, and
batteries. Call 388-9303.

Fullllme
temporary
position for registered
dietician or equivalent,
opening December 1, 1981
at the Gall Ia County Health
Department In the WIC
Program . Call&gt;lol6··1•112 ext.
59. Weare an E.O.E.

Lost: Billfold In Pomeroy
between courthouse and
Front St. Call6l~-992-5060.
Lost: Husky dog. Block
and while with Ashland
tags. Answers to Rebel. SlO
r~ard. Call ~14·992·5313 or

Ht /II\1111J

~14-992-3-180.

WANT to buY standing limber, sacres or more. Rocky
Wooldridge, 614-289-2476 or
614--193-2591 .

FOUND· White female German Sheflherd with red
collar. Coii675·237S.

1972
Chevy
truck
passenger's side door. 6756218.

Hl'.lllilll.lrlt'l'

Bodyman needed to work
In Rutland. Apply In person
ecross from old R uti and
high school.

&lt;W6·8012.

DEAN'S AUTOMATIC
Rebullts·Repilrs
Seal Jobs
Open Sal. &amp; Sundoys
Located s miles north of
Atblny on I 611, on the
Dale Scon Farm.
664-6370
ttno Ans. call742·2070
10·8·1 mo. pd •

Gallia Co. Are" COde
614
446-Gallipolis
367- Cheshire
381- Vinton
245-RiG Grande

.tl~y llrlek H - - Loc1111d on Ru!~~ S!',._~~
The lUst dorl't build ttwm
MlddltPO_"tcentr~ Mit and air. conditioning.
~gJ;:!/ be(lrooma, 2 b8tftl. basement, garage,

"'

Harry

Group Medical coverag~
for small business, as well
an Individuals. Malor
medical, basic hospital, &amp;
group life lnsuranc~ com·
blntd to give you one of the
best programs available.
Very competatlve rates.

R.C.S. REALTY INC.
BILL CHILDS, Mgr.
Ph-"2·6312
Ohio

mo.
'\

Mason Ca., W.VA.

IR MttgJ,tOUIIIy

446-2342 -

192-2151

MaC c...nty

2 bedroom house with ·
basement. Garage 36x~2.
on 1 acre tot. Located on · .
route 7 In Tuppers Plains.· •
Call992-220l.
'

- - - - - - .,

Meigs Co. 91 acres . .3 ~ ,
t)edroom hou~. sectuded .'•J
Lots of wood 8. son'fe ';•
tillable. 614-S96-4577 or 992- :
12865.

5 room house with large lot.' ·
Call614·992·398l.
•

Wonted to Do

.....

5Sl8.

•

5 room house corner of
Hamilton &amp; Front St.. Mid·
dleport, Ohio. Call992-5171 .
Milton Road, Camp Conley.
2 year ' old, 3 bedroom
house, fully carpeted, with
1 full and two and a half
bi!iths, yard landscaped
with large utility building ,
Assume 8 "h percent loan .
67S-627S.

1

bedroom fur·
nished home on Bud Chat·
tin Road on big level lq;t.
576-2711.
Or rent-3

2 bedroom house on 1 acrei
2 miles back of New Haven
on paved road, fullv car·
peted, self contained water
and septic system . 882·3267 .
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

TRI · STATE
MOBILE
HOMES. Gallipolis. Yea•
end sale, price reduced,. •
used mobile homes. CA:LL· :
.446·7572.
-. ;

,

r

.
·
·
1968 12X60 mObile Joome, J ,

7175.

or 2 bdr, with or Without ,
two add-a-rooms, exc : •
cond. 367-7610 .
r

NEW LISTING 63XI2 Vin·
dale with 7x12 expando
living room. Like new in·
slcle and out, carpeted
throughtout, like new WOOd
burner, silver top awning, 2
bdr. Priced to sell fast. Call
Johnson Mobile Ho'me
Brokers, &gt;lol6-3547 .
FRENCH CITY MOBILE
HOME
BROKERAGE
SERVICES Let US sell
'\'OUR mobile home. Call
«6·9l&lt;W or 675·6898

~

,
;
,
P

t

:
1

','
:
•

t
. . , - - - - - -..,.... r

1968 NEW ENGLAND
12&gt;60 2 bdr., 11(11 baths, air
icbnd.. total eletrlc,
delivered, SS,SOOJ French
City
Mobile
Homh
Brokerage Services, 446·
934) or 675-6898.

!

1
•
•
~

•

:,

' ~---=-~- !
1981 PATRIOT (New) i

!

1~&gt;70, 3 bdr .. garden tub,
front kitchen, tOfaletectrlc,
furniShed. WARRANTY, '

,•..

~=~~~~~~~~~$13,995.
Homn•:
&gt;lol6- ;

ctuntno

•;
Will do blbl'lllllng .. 67/!r-

4092.

•

' .

7 room house in Mid·
dleport. Corner lot. Needs
some work. Phone 614·992·

TV ser•lce calls. Call 9922QU,A;sousedcolorTVfor

67S.b33

•

Information:

Will do bebY lilting In the
hOme. Reasonable rattt.
Houn from 7AM to BPM.
Live on Mill CrHtc Rd. or
Call&gt;lol6-9351 anytime.

In Go Ill~ county

tit

more

Responsible woman on
BUllVIlle Rd. would like to
blbY sit In my ,home In Ad·
dlvllle School district. &gt;lol67399.
.

AreaCodel..
67s-Pt. Pleasant
4SB-Lton
576-Apple Grove
77J-Mason
lll-NewHIVtll
19s-Lttlrt
137-BUIIIIO

/

Pitchford,

Phone~· 1421.

II

TO PLACE AN AD CALL

Iorge private lot. S50,000.

...;u

Mc1gs Co. Area COde
614
Y9'J - Middleport
Pomeroy
Y8!i- CIIester
J43- Portland
247-Letart Falls
949-Raclne
742-Rutland

256-Guyan Oist.
643-.Arabia Dist.

*

baths, family room. Fu.ll ,
basement, garage. 94~· ,;
~79.
.· . 'J

1912 furnished mobile !
agent. home, central air, dtsh· '
L~~~f,~~~. washer &amp; dryer,•'
I
pool . Call 367; •

AUTOMOBILE
IN·
SURANCE been concelled?
Lost
your
operator's License? Phone
992-2U3

Transminion Specialist

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES

- - - - - -···

3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2 .

SANDY AND BEAVER Insurance Co. has offered
services for fire Insurance
coverage In Gafllo County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and penonal
property cover1ges are
available to meet In·
dlvldual needs. Contact

Steve McGhee, &gt;loi6-0B1B or
&gt;lol6-o552.

Clllslfijietl Pages cover the
. following telefJhone exch11nges •••

•

3 BEDROOM home for ~··
sale. Call between 6 and 7. :

Information on ALASKAN
and OVERSEAS employment. Excellent in·
come potential. Call 312741 -9780ext. 4061 .

For

Foreign Cilr5
Transmission Exchange

Homes for S.te

3 bdr. home located at 123 ·. ·
Garfield Ave. 2 ecres lot-·
runs from SR 7 to Ohio ·
River. Full basement, .·~
finished rec . room, 2 •,
fireplaces, 2 1/2 baths, con· , ,
crete pool, new carpet and '
paint. Will consider your· •
property In trade. Owner
will consider financing :~
with $10,000 down and $500 •
per month. Call&gt;lol6· 1546 for -.
an appointment.

'

Screp metals, batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering. Yarper-Hals~
ad S1lvqe Company, 300
Eleventh Slreet. ~75-5868.
Also Flea Market open
dolly . Open MondayFriday 1-5 pm.

..

BY OWNER : ~ bdr .. spill·
level. liVIng room &amp; dining
room combination, eat·in '
kitchen, lg. family rm .. 2
112 baths, located In Tars
Estates, Club house and
pool privileges, $75,000
firm. Kyger Creek Schoof
DIStrict. Shown by oppt. · •
: :
only call&gt;lol6-9403.

and earn good money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route carrier. Phone
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 9922156 or 992-21S7.

BUYING GOLD &amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything MANAGEMENT
OP ·
stomped lOK, ~~K. Ilk and PORTUNITY. We are
dental
gold.
Class
rings,
Sheepdog free to good
seeking qualified Inhome in country. Has wedding rings, sliver coins dividuals to train for
shots, 1 1/2 yrs. old. Call or anything stampad management positions In
sterling. Clarks Jewelry Hardmans Home Centers If
388-9763.
store. Gallipolis &gt;lol6-2~91 or vou are high! y mot\ vated,
Free k\Hehs. 2 blac'k and 992- ~ In Pomerov.
desl111 rosponolbliiiY, par·
sonal
growth,
white, I tan ~nd white. 2
montha old. , call 614-992· Wanted to buY Doctors professionalism, and are
SCates. Call &lt;W6·2655.
willing to re-locate, send
JMO.
your resume In confldenee
Found. Black &amp; tan dog. BEDS-IRON. BRASS, Old to Stan Hardman, Hard·
man's Home Center, Gen
Male. Large. Rt. 143 bet· furniture, gold, silver Office,
Box I 40, Spenween Harrisonville &amp; dollara. wood l&lt;e boxes, cer, WV PO
25276.
stone Iars. antiques, etc.,
Pomerov. 992·3988.
Complete
households.
Write:
M.D.
Miller,
Rl .•• Girl or lady to stay with
LOST: In Bunker Hill area. Pomeroy, Oh. Or992-7760.
wife while husband works
Wed. evening. Lorge black
shift work. No chores
male
with
brown
lust your presen·
markings/ bobbed tall . CHIP WOOD. Poles max. required,
Write to Box P-B, % Pl.
Mlxt&lt;l breed. Bull Terrier, diameter 14" on largest
Register, and
female, blonde with white end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
you.
Slab.
$10.50
per
ton.
on chest. Reward. $100. 992Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
J96.1.
Rocl&lt; Springs
Rd.,
Two bags of clothes,some Pomeroy. 992-2689.
Situations Wanted
12
girls pants size 1H6. Mvst
toke both bogs. All dlf- Gold, silver. sterling, someone to care for me In
ferentJdnds of clothes. '75- jewelry, rings, old coins &amp; my home. 992·261141.
c•rrency. Ed Burkel! Bar·
6518.
ber Shop, Middleport. 992Ellm Resthome. Core for
Standing tree for free 3476.
handicapped, aged, or bed
firewood. lust for culling
·Temporary or
NEED MONEY? I need patient.
down. 675-2903.
limited
care.
Or continuous
furniture. New, use(f or an·
llque. Also buying gloss, home with us. Equipped for
china, gold, sliver. coins, wheel chair. 7~2-22641 .
Lost ond Found
watches, chains. etc. Mar2 walker dogs, 1 female 10 lin's General Store. Mid- Wanted: any odd {obs,
months, 1 male 5 yrs. old, dleport. Onlo. 992-6370.
wood culling, splitting and
In Clark Chapel Rd. area.
hauling jobs. Call ~1H92 Name taos say Bill Holley,
7803.
Gay, WVA. a. Bill Parsons, Good used Treadmill exer·
Must
be
In
good
cond.
ciser.
Gay, WVA. Contact Jack
and tension adjustable. 992·
Pickens 2~5-5007.
13
Insurance
306).
Found: Siberian Huskle.
Black am! while female .
Old Rt. 33 near P.H .C.C.
Coll614-992-3296.

~·--.~·· '

Now 3 bdr. house with "
garage and full basement
$.15,000. Call&gt;lol6-0390.

GET VALUABLE training

Wlnled to Buy

...-· ·- .............
~

as a young business person

Real Estlle- General

NIITNAN 111101

.....1• • • •

J

&lt;Pomeroy Scrap
Iron
So Metal)

'

Rl..llerltiHIINII

'lllfal
(

SCRAP

1

u Yn. •••ullltet

I'

Have a friendly toy party
and get your Christmas
toys and gifts .free. For
more Information call
Pomeroy, Ohlo992-3561.

•

~ood setection-.f corpet thru the 30th of October.

llfrlllrltion
lt-01Mrll Hnlln1

TOM HOSKINS

2-B·IIC

10-2·1 mo.

AlB

• RemOdeling
• Free esttmates
• 20 Y rs. experience

Call742.·3195

992-7U6
1o-9·1 mo.

buildings.

Bring Your Wiln.uts
To
EXCELSIOR SALT
WORKS INC.
Pomeroy/ Ohio
614-992-38tl

54

ANI) CUSTOMIZING
Re-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock. parts, etc.
Buy Guns 10%
Above Wholesale

And Home Maintenance
• Roofing of all tyPeS •
•siding

Let George Miller
check your present electrical system.
Residentlill.
&amp; Commercial

S&amp;W
GUNSMilHING

A WORKING FARM Appx. 142 acres wllli a
nice 3 bedroom home
plus a small rental unit.
All minerals except 3rd
coal. Appx. 60 acres
tillable. Barn &amp; out-

BLACK

'sq. ycl.lnstalled

M-ltoctrlc•l&amp;

we are now serving all
of Meigs Co. with
Heating Oil, Diesel

ROOFING

For all of your wir·
lng needs.

STANDARD
OIL CO.
(SOHIO) '

PRICE REDUCED Cute 2 bedroom home in
Pomeroy with~ nice kitchen, patio and porch,
and cellar area .' $24,900.

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Oaled Oct. 12. 1981

SERVICE'

Middleport, Ohio
9-21-tfc

MOVE IN BEFORE
WINTER This 3
bedroom newly constructed
home
Is
waiting for you. Near
town with a rustic 1.75
~ere lot. New llreplace,
full
basement,
1'12
baths, and only S42,000.

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

October Special. Furniture
Upholsterlng·25 percent off
on labor. 1 month only.
Mowrey's
Upholstery .
Phone 1-304-675-4154.

Coun·

276 Sycamore St.

COUNTRY LIVING IS
THE BEST - On your
own farm of 21 acres
with a newly remodeled
.4 bedroom home near
Harrisonville. Barn &amp;
other
buildings,
privacy. $39,900.

SIZES

•

D-l!)lcawetlnt

992-6259

PRICE REDUCED On this 3 bedroom
graceful home With th.,
look you will love. Low
utility bills will make it
even more comfortable.
Sunny kitchen, l1f2
baths, basement, nice
lot
in
Middleport.
$42.000.

The D11ily Sentine•

,t-~""
12"-PIIIft..lll I HNHnt

Sale.
NEW PHONE ND.

NEW
LISTING
SYRACUSE
3
bedroom home with new
gas furnace &amp; water
heater. Chain link fence
around yard at this
pr.ice. $19 1 500.

4567

··~'1

SERVICES
Want· Ad Advertising
Dudllnts

wave Length FQI'
Longer Hair

eAwning •

9-S·tfc

HARRISON
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN
Used Color TV Sets for

$32,000.

Public Notice

Printed Pattern

sue•_..._.,.,.
............
,....
..............
.........
.
..........

,~lOllS &amp; MOMrl
76-.l.vto P1rts &amp;
AccnHrlts
'

pt-C•m'tllll IOUiJmlllf

'

eAiuminum&amp;
Vinyl Siding
e Kitchen Cabinets

. Npw$)7.50
. Now.$22.50. ~w 127.50
. Now 129.50

::=========j;::====::::::;:::::;:j:=========~
Furnltrue stripping.
MILLER ElECTRIC
VALLEY try
Strippers 304-7-13-3109.

storage building, wood
burner, and nice lot.

All!

Search no more, "'"'" to.nd
the lun, dun, 10parlle jlclets
JOU need to clw 1 fresll lift to
JOUI futtion lito. Thoy'lfl bolll
blsic, eosy snd will ..,. JOU $$.
Printed Pill.. 4567: Misses
s,... a. 10, 12. 14. i6. 11. s;a
12 (Hst 3-1) csrdiPit Ill prds
60-lnch; w~h collsr I S/1.

U-Setd &amp; Fertlllter ·

e REAL ESTATE

•Hot Water Tonks

NEW LISTING
SYRACUSE - A neat
double wide home with
equipped kitchen plus
dishwasher. eleo. heat,

PAYING
SB.OO Per Hundred L~s.
After they are hulled
Starting October 1st

Sal•

n - Prottnioftet

27.

(10) 12, 19, 26, Clll 2, ~tc
Public Notice

•2-Wtntld to luy
6:1-LirHIOCII

ONOrhlnlf't
22-N~Mt&gt;y to L.Nn

Abov~

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

' ,;_,..rm EquiPment

21-IUiiAIII

These

Sf-Milt:. Mtrt:h•ndl$1
U-lulldlnJ Supplln
M-Peh for S•le
u-Mualc•llnltrumtnt
SI-F;ulh &amp; V'fiiAbiiS

16-RIIIMO, T'¥,
&amp; Cl ROINIIr

17. _ _ _ _ __
lB.

S1-Ho'llfh01d GOOfs
St-CI, TV, Radio Equipment
U-AniiiiUel

$20.00
$25.00
$30.00
135.00

Ph. 304-773·5131
MasOn, w. va . .

•Oishwt~~h•n

NEW LISTING
NEAR CHESTER
Appx. 2 acres of nice
laying land with a .o1
yr.old beautiful ranch.
Large utility room,
gorgeous large master
bedroom, bright pretty
kitchen, with walk-in
pantry, 1'12 baths &amp; 3
bedrooms. $49,000.

NOTICE OF
ELECTION DN
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that In ~rsu~nce Of a

Dorothy M. Johnston ·
Director
Oated October 12, 1981

•MERCHANDISE

•EMPLOYMENT
SERVICES

•

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE;
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE is tlereby given
that in pursuance of a
Resolution of the Village
Countil of the Village of
Pomeroy, Ohio, passed on
the 20th day of July, 1981,
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of said
. Village at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held In
• ., .. \lilian,:. nf ~nm~r:nv.
Q~l9, . at the regular places
of voting theretn, on
Tuesday, the 3rd day of
November.
1981,
the
question of levying, In ex·
cess of the ten mill
limitation, for the benefit of
Pomeroy Village for the
purpose of Current ex·
penses.
Said tax being: a renewal
of an existing tax of One
Mill to gJn for Five years.
at a rate not exceeding One
mill for each ' one dollar of
valuation, Which amounts
to ten cents for each one
hundred
dollars of
valuation, for five years.
The Polls for said Elet: ·
tion will open at 6:30
o'clock, A .M. and remain
open until7: 30 o'clock P .M.
of said day.
By order of the Board of
Elections. of Meigs County,
Ohio.

for R•nt

3-Announ~menh

4--Give•w•r

S&amp;PT. 2lthru0CT. 2•

• Remodeling

•Disposals

POMEROY·, 0:" 992·2259

Octob•17

Or Write Daily Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

•Washere
•Dry•rs
•Ranges

601
E. Main

00

PHONE 992-2156

,PARTS ANO SERVIa
ALL MAKES

Real Estate- General

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

Public Notice

1

SALE

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS

Public Notice

(10) 12,19, 26, (11) 2, 4tc

~IMITATION

9

PRICED RIGHT.

(10) 12, 19, 26, (ll) 2, ~tc

2, 4tc

Call Ken Young
For Fast Service

614-992·2181
For Farm and
Home Delivery of
Gas
Diesel
Heating Oil .

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Oated Oct. 12,
191ft

· - ·-·~~boF-Othy M. Johnston

WANT AD INFORMATION

)Wanted
) For Sale
} Announcement
) For Rent

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

POMEROY
lANDMARK

NOTICE Is hereby given
that in pursuance Of ola
Public Notice
Resolullon of the Board
Trustees of the Township of
PUBliC NOTICE
Lebanon. Ohio, passed on
The annual election of the ~th day of August, 1981
the
Meigs
County there will be submitted to a
Agricultural Society Dtrec- vote of the people of said
fors will be held Monday, Townshl~ at a GENERA_L
November 2, 1981 in the ELECTION to be held on
Meigs County Extension of· the Township of Lebanon,
fice. Mulberry Hts., from 5 Ohio. at the regular place
to 9 p.m.
of voting therein, Tuesday,
Qualifications for direc· the 3rd day of Novemberl
tors are thatthey must be a 1911. the question o
qual ified voter of Me igs levying, if\ excess of ten
County and must have a mill limitation, for the
membership ticket in said benefit of Lebanon Townsociety of 1981
ship tor the purpose of
Candidates
pet i t ions Maintaining ant:t operating
must be filed with the cemeterie5.
Secretary no later than S
Said tax being: a renewal
p m Monday, October 26, of en existing tax of one
1981 Onty persons hold1ng mill to run for five years, at
membership tickets at the a rate not exceeding 1.0
close of the 1981 County mill for each one dollar of
Fair or at least (15) calen· · valuation, for Five y,ears.
dar days before the date of
The Polls for sad Elecelection are qualified to tion will open at 6:30
vote
o'clook and remain open
The Meigs Agricultural unlll 7:30 o'clo&lt;k P.M. of
Society. By . Mrs. Wallace said day.
.Bradford, Secretary.
• By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,
(10) 12. 19, 26, 3tc
Ohio.-

These cash rates
tnclude discount

KMp Thl1 Ad lor
Future Referent•

•

r

1973 3 bedroom J.C • 10, u.n--!

derplnned. '75·4()6.1.

,.

�Pag-IG-::The Dally Sentinel
32

Molllle Homes
for Sole

_

CLEAN . USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL 'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE ~-3863 .
1971 - MASTERCRAFT
12x6.l, 2 bdr ., 2 full baths,
gas completely furnished,
delivered $6,995. French
• ci ty
Mob ile
Homes
Brokerage Services -4469340 or 675·6898 .
1975 PENTHOUSE 12x70, 2
bdr., electric, patio door,
furnished. front I i ving
room. French ci ty Mobi le
Homes Brokerage Services
4.46·93-40 or 675·6898.
1972 Arii ngton m obile
home. good cond. , fur·
niture i ncluded practically
new, $5,500. Cali 245-95:14
after6F"M.

5 ft. x7ft. utilltv traitor . Call
4-46·8528. .
1972 New Moon 12x.SO, 2
bdr., gas heat, furn., $4,900.
Ca II 388·9692.

41

· Houses for Rent

2 bedroom unfurnished
$190. 1 bedroom turnishtd
apartemnt. 1125. Naylors
Run . Security deposit. Call
614-992·2288.

TWO r epossessed mobile
homes, brand new 1 81
models, (pr-evious dealer
lost floor plan money) . Save
big SSSSS. Must sell quickly .
K &amp; K Mobile Homes

Pt. Pleasant. WV
675·3000
MOBILE home located l n
Ca.mp Conley, extra nice
and clean. phone 304-895·

3961.

•

USEO MOBILE

HOME .

576~2711 .

1969 trai ler 12 x.65 with 1973
2 room addition, dishwasher, bar stools, underpinning, 2 porches. 8822416.
1966 New Moon 2 bedroom
trailer, 12 x 55. Phone 6752439 .

Lots &amp; Acreage
LOTS · Real nice campsite
on Raccoon Creek, all
utilities available, $300.
down, owner will f inance,
call after 3 p.m., 256-6413 .
Would you like to own a
home of your own. We
didn' t have S10,000 for a
down payment nor $5,000
norevenSl.OOO . Oowhat·we
did Cali 513·592-9175.
BY owner, 3 apartment
house on approx . 1 acre.
Live in· one, rent others to
make your J'ayment. Can
be converte single home.
City water, will consider
land contract. 675·1 883 9-5

p.m .

av owner, 25 acres on Hen-

derson Hill, overlooking
the Ohio and Kanawha
R ivers. 615· 1215.

Furnished apt. S200. per
mo. one bdr .. adults,
second floor. 446·4416 after
7PM.
For rent 2 bdr .- apartment
i n Crown City . Call 2.563 bdr. apt. for- rent in Rio
Grande. Call1 ·682-7056.

H.ouses for Rent

small furnished house In
the city, adults only. Call
446·0338 .

I bedroom apts. avai table
at Riverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing , Call

m -m1.

4 bdr. 2 1/2 bath bl level
with pool off Rt. 35. Call 2 bedroom apartmerit on
Wiseman Real Estate · Spring Ave, Pomerov . Par·
t ially furnished. $170 you
Agency. 446·3643.
pay utilities. Call 992-2288
after 6 p.m.
Small 4 r111 . &amp; bath, fur-·
n ished, located 735 rear 3rd
Ave., Gallipolis. $150 per Available . 1 bedroom apt.
mo., $65 deposit . Call ~- fnr rent. Contact Village
Manor Apts., M tdctleport.
3870 or ~-13~.
992·7787.
2 BR house, State Rt. 7. 256·
2 bedroom furnished apt.
6.120, ~-4292 .
992·543•. 992·59U or 304-882·
2566 .
3 bdr. house futtv car~tecl,
2 balhS, $300 plus deposit,
35 Hinkle Ave., no pets. Apartments. 675·5548.
Cal 1~- 37~ or 256· 1903.
APARTMENTS, mobile
houses,
Pt.
For rent 3 bedroom, brick homes~
&amp; frame, yr. Old ranch In Pleasant and Gallipolis.
Green Schools area, $325. 614-~· 8221 or6U· 2•5·9~.
mo. Call ~-3643.
3 room furnished cottage,
For rent 2 story, 3 bdr: utilities fur-nished, adults .
hOUse, fireplace, In Vinton, 675·2812 or 675-1580.
large lot, garage, no Inside
pets, S300 a month. Furnished efflency apt.
security deposit, ref. Down . town Pt. Pleasant.
required. Cali 388·1795.
All utilities paid, dep. req.
.
Ca1130H95-3450.
Nice hOme tully carpeted
end drapes, air cond., fur- 2 bedroom twin single in
nonce, ba"IJ'nl, well in- 'pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar
sulated windOWS
doors. Street. $200 month plus
large lawn. 1 mile from deposit. 1·614-263·8322 or
Gallipolis. Ret. dep. req ., 6U·263-2669.
·
· $250. Cai1416-0239.
3 bedroom unfurnished
N 1C E HOME, fullY car· apertment, New Haven
peted, drapes, air con· area, deposit required. 882·
.dftlonlng,
furnace, 3135,
basamtnt, well Insulated,
storm doorl
wlndoWI, ~ room unfurnished cotlarge r.wn, stove and tage. Phone 675· i453.
refrig,, furnished, wood
burning atove, 1 mi. trom
GalllpOIII. Ret. •nd DIP. 2 bedroom apartment In
HendenOn. $1.50 per month. ·
required. $2.50.00.,
675·1\172.
4-16-0239.

Furnished apts. 2 bdr ..
$230.. ulliitles paid, near
HMC. adults. Call -1-16-..16
after 7PM.

For Lease

-4 bdr. home with basement
on 2 acres near G,avin
Plant , $360 .
Includes
heating. Call-4.46·3643.

..... . ., . " ..' .
I

t

I-'

0

0..

I

For sale new 1n1 model
HWing machine, ZIG·tags,
monoorams, sews on but·
tons, makes button holes,
darns, menda, far1(:y stitch.
Reg. price $219.95 now only
$99.50. Free phone call .
Call collect 1·304-736·9241 .

'

Squires B'i ngham 22 L. R.
ammo $1.19 per box. Eclip·
se 12 gage game loedes. 6
shot, 20 shells per box $3.95.
Spring Valley Trading Co .•
Spring Valley Plaza, 446·
8025.
F irewood·spllt, deliver-ed
aod stacked. Mixed wood
S65 per cord or $35 per half
cord . Hardwood $75 per
cord or S40 per half cord .
Call tor Quotes on lar-ge
quanlties. Phone 245-5478 ,

Wood for sale. Cali J .J .
Justice 388 ·82~ .
Firewood Oak, Hickory
mixed, delivered. Call
Jamie at 245·9264.

Split hickorv firewOOd,
a load . Call245·9«3.

«o

Diesel Farm tractor, 56
Chevorlet station wagon,
wood stove, 1 16 ft. tilt
equipment trailer with
wench, 16ft. utility trailer,
1979 Jeep 10 Honcho, lots of
misc. Cali 367·7533.

7HE~

~--

•

1~72.

New woodburning ad-on
furnance, still In factory
carton , heats large home.
~ - Call256· 1216.

Two 32 ft. wooden extension ladders, ladder
i acks, rota tille_r, good con·
dition. PhOne 675-4506.

Building Supplies
55
Building materials, block.
brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows, lintels, ek Claude For sale 2-8N Ford trac Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . tors, set of 217 plows
&amp;cultivators with shields.
Call245·5121.
Can be seen at Oak Hill
Village Trading Post or
Tweny gauge tniid steel call614·682·7054 after 7PM.
sheeting .
Enamel ,
procelain coated. Many
building uses. Will not rust. 6;.3; ----:, ;-l;;:iv;;;e;;st;;;oc:;k.-- Sizes 4ft. by 8ft., S5.60. ~ft .
by 10ft., $7.00. Ht. by 12ft.; 3 yr. old pruebred Hereford
$8.00. Tuppers Plains, bull . Gentle, $600. Phone
Ohio. 614·667-3085 or 614· m -7104 after 7PM.
667·3074.
'
511. bus hog partially new.
Twenty
gauge
metal Cali 256 - ~13.
•
sheets. Enamel, porcelain
coated. Many bul ld ing
uses. Will not rust. Sizes ..t Gravely tractor &amp; mower.,
Call after SPM 367·
ft. by 8ft., S5.60 . ~ft. by 10 $750.
0482.
.
ft., $7.00, 4 ft. by 12 ft .•
$8.00. , Tupper-s Plains,
Ohio. 6t4-667·3085 or 614· 1 Hereford Polled Bull, 1
caw, 1 heifer. Call 614-992·
667·3302.
7869.
56
Pets for Sale
Exotic chickens S3 ea'ch.
POODLE GROOMING.
Assorted ducks $1 each.
Call Judy : Taylor at 367- 675·5774. .
7220. •
.

Fish Tank and Pet Shop
Jackson Ave.. Pt.
Pleasant. 675-~ New
hours-Mon. , Thurs., &amp; Fri.
11·6. Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 114.
.
2~13

--· . . ......
... ...
.......
.... , ....
11

Auto lor Sale

1tJ78 Dodge Omili ..t1 dr., hat·
chback, automatic, power
steering, excellent cond.
Ph. 245·5617 alter 5PM.

1917 Camara GOS, air cond.,
AM-FM sterocassette. Call

7~

Monte Carlo gOOd cond ..
$800, Call ~-49~.

75 Mustang.cyl, AM· FM Strack, 62,000 miles, $1,800.
Call.u.l-486.

1976 Dodge Aspen standard
trensmission, 2 dr., 6 cvl .,
m'ke me an offer. Cali 446·
4328.
'

""•n TRACY

: SU"''IAY MGI!

AF"PEARE!D
· OCT. ~Sf.
TI-l&amp; t=IR&lt;::iT OIIILY
STRIP AF'P&amp;ARiiD

OCT. IZ,I931.

Cu&amp;g1-.:a60ULD

'
•••

..l

l"!!ta&lt; /.)~
. ARTIST
.

~-~.

1977 Plymouth, 4 dr. sedan.
~aii6U·m-22&amp;2 . .

BUNDY Trumpet with
case, excellent condition.
$125. Ca II 4.46· 4327.
Fruit
&amp; Yotttobles
Fresh green beans, tur·
nips, red &amp; green boil peppars. Raymond Rowe 2~72192.

58

For Slolt or Tr•dt

19n F250 campar special,
AC, PI, PS. For sale or
trada lor cattle ot equal
value . .u.l-1052.
'

.

-

.
=

Deere 33110 combine,

Nlalllt FerguiiQn 300 comNtw ldatl·l ,._
kerl Oliver 2 raw plckM.
rw daa .1 raw plcller.
SUper M Far.,.U•nd 2 ,._
mountwd picker. Run
·~·Farm Machinery.
St. Rt. 139, 6 mllallloutll ot
Jack-.. C•ll216-2731.

John Deere GO Dour comly rebuilt with 6 -r

e

aullc billie- winch.

-1256.

Black with red str:ipes.
Good condition. ~195 or
best offer. Cali 614-9115-3828

or 61~-ns-35.54.

Uninox Electric Piano with
case and sustain pedal,
good cbnd., $325.00. Call
256·1332 or 2.56·1307.

5t

1919 Ford LTO II · sport.

1971 Camero. Good running
condition . Also good body.
Ca116U·m·6309.
1976

Ford

Torino,

very

1100&lt;1 cond. $1,500. 1974

vw

Dasher, exc:. cond. 11,500.
742-2734.

MORRISON'S Auto sales.
Henderson, WV. Phone 675·
1574 or 615-2881.

Scottsdale 10 1977 model
Chevy pickup, VB engine,
one owner, good tires,
automatic, new brakes,
priced b&lt;1iow blue book
listing. Lionel L. Smith, 905
Mossman Clrcle : 67S·3~2.

1917 Chevy pickup, 305
engine, ps, pb, automatic,
$2295.00. Phone .6 7t3054.

1971 Ford step van, right
hand drive, slide up rear
door, 6 cyl automatic, good
condlllon, $850 . 576·2866.
1980 Jeep, excellent con dition. 675·5643.
Motorcycles

All used bikes drastically
reduced for immediate
clearance. Betz Honda
Sales,
Upper
Rt . 7,
Gallipolis. -1-16-22-40.
1978

Honda motorcycle,
350, low mileage, like new.
Cali 304-372·6390, Ripley,
WVA.

1975 CB 36DT Honda $700.
6.000 miles. Good cond. Elt·
tended fork &amp; headers,
regular pipes Included. 9922717 or 992·2684.

u ft. John Boat, 51" beam,
..4.5 h.p. Mercury Motor,
trolling motor &amp; battery,
oars &amp; life lockets. Clke
new. $1,000. Phone 742-2131 .

16

Auto P•rts
a Acceuorlas

--=====_._CHARLIE'S SALVAGE
Auto parts, auto hpalr,
wrecker service, buy
automobiles, radiators and
batteries. -1-16-7717.
international 5 speed Iran·
smisslon, rediator. end six
900-20 Wheels and tires,
starter, and other parts
from 1970 schoolbus. 576·
2866.
For Chevrolet : U Inch
wheels and tires W, four 1.lnch cragera S100. Phone
675-32«.

•

77

AutoRepalr

..

MeOIUM-AARt:... AlJD
I'M I tJ A HURRY!

FALL SPECIAl. Have a
machine polished
wax
lob. $50, wax only $30, Auto
Trim Center, ~-1968.

a.

cwa~ll~..tundroEii~·~b~le;;,;::--:;;;;;d Shasta
travel
trallor,
$7GO.
Stove, ret,
a. oink
inclvdtd.
Call388·9025.

197• Volkswagen c•mpor,
sink, retrloer••· pop up
top. AIIO Dltsun topper.
Coi1675-57Q.I.

conniving daughter, Naney,
goea after the lead In tha
tchool'a annual feaUnl. ahe
d0111 ao Ina way thatcaueaa Mr.
Olaton and Charlet to teach
her a le ..on In manner• and
behavior. (Conclualon; 60
mina.)
(CIOII·Captlon•d:

cq.J'f SfAAe

llORSeS

T---~

!LS.A.)
IJ) NATIONAL GIOGRAPHIC

IVjE~

ANNIE
HAW OUT, HE L6ll'eD BELIEVE THAT
UP 10 BE! PETTeO.. AS ~LY (161

I!ELIE\1€ '100
SEifT lliE WHALE
10
UG!

AC'TUAI..lY, 1 RJ1&lt;:6fr WI/(JU Ita\
IT 1'/AG, lf/NI! ~ Hl6 ~ 8UT HE
DO!!S EXPECT 10 BE! PI!TTS)
FOit IT, GO 'IW'V ~!ETTER 00
iT ~

Plt00'«7

ALL &amp;liYI

8:111
·
8:10

ALLEYOOP

8:18
8:00

WEl-L, NOW! THAT .,UST BE THE,CAMP
(1" """"""'E EPURE . .. .JUST WHERE THE
t::'tPEN YoCMAN SAID IT I&lt;.OULD BE!

GASOLINE ALLEY

Are high interest rates
keeping you from a new
home? Then put a new look
on vour present one. We do
all types of custom building
and remodeling .
For
quality, profession• 1 ser·
vices call : Terry Gray 89S3386 or John Wamsley 173·
5527.

EverL!
mirror
in this
hou5e
i5

But,
Walt..!

fine until
into one of
insidious

OOLjOU

hear me,

Ph4tlis?

comin~

STANLEY STEEMER
tarpet Cleaning

ctownl

~- ~208

NAIHVILLI! RPD

11·28
11

WINNIE

EXCIVIting

Btu Y's PAR?iYER

750 and 1000 galion
PLASTIC septic tanks.
State and County ap·
proved. Total weight 300
lbs. Haul in your pickup
truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
Service, located 3 miles
South of Jackson on St.J!t.
93. 286-5930.

CW TH£ WEST
COAST IS T/i!YIMS
70 CONTACT HIM.

I 'VE llEEN RINEiiN6
THEM¥se. .•
1f091"11)1fl. ...
IWk),.,.~

.

WELL, ~NIE'LL
eE GETnNG OUT
I'M &lt;SLAP'
OF THE HOSPITAL
)QJ SUGGE5TfP ~.I THOU&lt;SiiT
lUNCH, DEAR.
WE '5HO!Jll7 I

•

EDWARD'S Backhoe and
Dozer Service. Specializing
in septic tank. 675· 12~.

15

UPDATI!NIWI
THITONIG~TSHOW
'The Beat Of Careen Oueate:
Suu nne Plethette, Buck
Henry, Sarah Purcell, Joe
Wllllema. (Repeat; 60 mlna.)
()) ANOTHER UFI
ilJIIOVII-(DRAIIA)" "From
II.I.o VICtooy" 1878
ClJ CBS LATIIIOVIE
Quincy : •Honor Thy Elderl' An
elderly man commit• auiclde ,
and Quincy learnt he wu a
victim of abu.. at the hand• of
hie aon. (Repeat) Harry 0 :
Coinage 01 The Realm' Harry
• Orwellaearohtl tor Donald
Yorkfitld when Yorkfle!d'a
daughter rtqulrea tranaplent
eurgery and tlela·the only
fi211ible donor. (Repeat)
ll!IIIIOVIE ·(DRAIIAI " ' ~
"Tell Me that You LO'II Mt,
Mton" 1870
11:41
IIJl. NEWS
.
11·10
MOVIE
,
-(HIITORICAL·DRAIIA) ••.•
" 1853
12:00
IICHALI!'SNAVY
12:11
D GOLD Hool: Dionne
Warwick. Gold re,cord winners
~ th .. r hitaonga.
Clll. ABCNIWINIGifTUNE

;liD

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
COr. Fourth •nd Pine
Phone ~-3888 or 4.46·..77

JACKS REFRIGERATIO·
N. air condition service,
commercial, .. Industrial .
Phone 882·2079.

-...
~

'
••

I

•'M

BARNEY

I(OU CAN'T PLAY

OUTSIDE TODAY,
TATER· ·

M'-1 131G TOE
TELLS ME 1T's
FIXIN' TO RAIN

~lftl&gt;yTtdKoppll.

12:30 (I) • CD TDIIORROW
COAIT-TO·CDAITGuooll :
A~)Cooper, 1'1111 Sllvori. (IIO

J

12:41
12:111
1:00
1:10

·-

Generol Hnllng

JONES BOYS WATER
fr~fE · Call367-7m or
I

16

#CKII!NNY
• -ICWOIIAN ·
ClllfiiiOATIIII!PORT
IIY UTTLI! IWtGtl!
IILI!NWITHTANYAGion
C.rnpbeft and Tanya Tucker are
logett•er again at Harreh'e in
Let VIlli for an
ol
mualoale
nl

M. H.Rt!l!lr

MOBILE homo skirting,
70xU from $220. to Si95.
..K K Mobllt Homes
Pl. Pieaoant, wv
675·3000

a.

17

•

Aul&amp;i'S~~~.

..

SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp; Service~ Shilrpen
~cissors.
Fabric Shop,
. ..omeroy. m-228-4.

ll!0.1:LU8

1111•

e

MOBILE
HOMES
MOVE0, 0 REASONABLE.
576·2711 or 576·2866 . .

Eloctrlcot

1E

IIONDAY NIGHT
FOOTULL ~BC Sporl&amp; will
provide ~;:overaae ot tl'lt aeme
· betwMn the Miami Oolphln'a at
tht
Buttolo
Billa.
(l;lo_Lid:{:optlonedl
ClJ ®l II.A.I.H. Mol or
Wlnchtater becomea tncreuingly reolualve end introapectlve after e anlper auack on tt'le
oamp.(Ropeotl
8:10 ~ MOVII! -(COMIDYI " ' ~
·~rlUI~In" 11181
• (I) Clll 11th ANNUAL
COUNTRY MUSIC A880CIA·
T10NAWAAD8MooDtvioand
Btrbara Mandrell holt thil
award I apeciallrom Nathvlllt.
Tenne1111 ; performeraand ..
pretenteralnciude Altbama ,
Roaanne C11h, Lacy J. Dalton,
Merit Haggard, George Jon II,
Ronnie Milaap, the Oak Ridge
Boya, the StatlerBrothera, Killy
Walla, Dottle Wt1t and Slim
hitman. (80mlna.)
CIN UPDATI NI!WI
10:21
liNG OUT AMI!RICA
10:10
TBIIVINING NI!WI
10:10
10:111
11:00

CARPENTRY,
home
building &amp; remodeling, 30_..·
675·2440.

&amp; Rtfrlporollon

.•

THAT'S
INCREI!JBLI!
eWCJ!Il PAIVATl! IINJAMIN
In a aurpriaallank attack on
..ntty, Captain Ltwlt decidea
to ....peupPrlvateBenJamlnbY
ualng ravertt paychhology and
Qlom9111 her to equad teadat.
WWl8HAKI!8PEAIII! PLAYS
'Othello' Anthony Hopkins
atarelnthettlleroltii'Othello'
beglnl .the fourth 111aon of the
Shakeapear• Playa . B9b
Hoakinlltlago and Ptnolope
WllaonplayaD..demonainthia
Jonathan Miller production,
staged on en extraordinary aet.
repreeenting Othello' a Cyprea
etioce. (4 hre.)
ClJ IIDVIE ·(DRAMA I " '
~n!lklt..PiitVCia"er" 1H8
• (I) CJ!I) THE TWO OF"US
Deapfle a atrong warning from
Brentwood, Nan tttlhtrtelf up
ror 1 ehock when aheln•lata on
mHtlng the writer of the moat
ardent tan leHer the'• ever
elved.
l:II.II.UPDATI! NEWS
• (!) IIONDAY NIGHT A~
THI! MOYIE&amp; 'Family Reunkln
188 t Start: BtHtOavil, David
d.. tlon, John Shea.

r

Stark's Tree Trimming . Insured. 304·576·2010.

M

Upi!Ololtlry•

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Avo., Oalllpolls.
+16-7133aroW6-1133.

A "CHA&amp;M"iHAT
A
DEI!P 64 .. 15EiWEEN HUSeJANC'S
ANt:' WIVES.

,r , ;

Mli5Hi C~EAiE

I I ()

ILASSIA I

,.

.. .
._.,
'
.'

;

Now orrenoe lhe clrded - . to
suggesltd by lhtllbollt cartoon.

PEANUTS

••

"(XXII.XI)" .·•

'''

.'

.,'
•'
•
I

{

•

IS THE SC~OOL FOR
61FTED CHILDREN, I'D
LikE TO ENROLL ...

M NOTSORE
0

••

I
I
'

'

1110

,...

~ ~\

.·'
•,
'· ,

.......

.1:00

-

,·,

BRIDGE
By Osw•ld J•coby

Oswald : "The A~BL has
finally produced the book of
the 1980 Olympics . It is well
worth waiting for and Henry
Francis and the many others
who worked on It are to be
congratulated . The final
match wes won by France
over the United States . The
match was close and the
bridge excellent."
Alan: "France took an
early lead. Here Is one of the
early boards. The bidding in
the box is what took place
when Frence held the EastWest cards. West's threeclub bpening was_ a typical
effort to take advantage of
the favorable vulnerability
to start some action. North
bid lour clubs
and the
French East doubled. The
Americans had to get out of
that spot and eventually
landed In four spades. East
might .have doubled, but he
teared that a double would
give away an Important trick
so he just passed and was
happy to pick up 200 points
for- a two-tr-ick set."
Oswald: "The bidding
started the same way at the
other table . But Instead of
doubling four clubs,, our
. player bid five clubs. If Marl
of Fr-ance had -tried five
diamonds the French would

..
' '
..

NORTH
10·11-11
+AKJ76
.KQ 10642

...

.K
+

10

WEST

'.

EAST

·~

+Q1042

•a3
US•2
+KQJHI

•AJ8
.874
+u~

SOUTH

.9

+GU

..

UQJ 1013
+976

Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: West .
Wet&amp; Nortll Ea1t
s+
t+
Obi.

Pus
Pass

4•
Pass

. -.

•· y,

Pass
Pau

Opening lead:

..

+K

have incurred a loss, but he
elected to double five clubs
and pick up SOD points for
the three-trick set. This gave
France a 12 IMP gain on the
boal-d and since the final
margin was only 20 IMPS It
was most Important."

dl~tMitJt~

..

loy THOMAS JOSEPH
zFabled
ACROSS
I Boutique

' •, .

. .,
.'.,.

race loaer

3 Viva voce
4 Having

5 Uncovered
IOO'Hara

royal

plantation

.... ~:·,

~:::.:·~~·.

...:,'..
., '
··, .
'•
' ' ..

privileges

11 Untroubled

12 U.S.S.R.

5Uke

some eyes

lake
13 Tell all

I Skill
7 Get back

If Overdue
18 Jabber

ZG H _ Slaten

n Brit. huntiJig
cry (var.l
21 Opposite
30 Sundered
of Idealism 31 Sicilian
22 Canadian
city
province
3Z Old-time
Perry Award 23Swnmon
dance
19 Legal
Z5 Big
:WSong
8Expand

17 Polllical
'Least
conservative shaUow
18 Rage
11 Cubic
19 Rich source
measure
zo Athlete!s 15 Antoinette
"wheels"

21 Pluvlous
Z3 Desire
Z4 Different
Z5 Dobbin's

judgment

. I'

,

ro·.

and Alan Sontag

·•'

·,

Tales of 1980 otytnp.l cs

(Teusl

game

.. '
.

syUable

tresaes

ZSGennan
composer
Z7 SiJiger

..•

.. ' .

' I •w'

Natalie

..

28 Celtic deity

~

....·
..

Z9Lawman's
shoulder
Item

113 Eye problem
35 Timbre

'

' .~

,_• I ).

!I Famish

37 Brllilh
compoaer ·
38 Archipelago

..' .'

near Asia

.. ,

3tGenuine
DOWN
I Wild guess

-

.

... &lt;'

,...

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -;- Here's how to work it:
II

One letter aimply stando for an~iher. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, el&lt;. Slncle lelters.
apostropheo, the lencth and formation . of the words are 111
hints. Ea&lt;h day the eode letters are dlfl'erent.

YBHVK

'VH

CNI.

DSRA

RWSMBWML

-JNV ·KN

ADB

KWSSDC

..

VS

. Y L W.S

DG

... ,._

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

CRYPTOQUOTIS·

1:41 ~

. . ..

.

1:11

YES, MA'AM .. IF ~15

~.

1 j

form the surprtM ln8Wttr, u

Print answer here:

ar:..AINING DOQS THE
WOOI!HOUII!WAY
1111 •
ENTI!RTAINIIINT
GHT
7:3&amp;
-OIID AND ION
7:111
CIII._UPDATI! NEW&amp;
I:OD
• CD L1TTU HOUSE ON
THE PRAIRIE Whon Mro .
Oleaon'a newly adoJ)Ud

'"7~ (JJif-S "b ~. WIS

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-895·3802.

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service . larry Slden stricker. 67S-5580.

•

I SLAQULl

I

RINGLES' S SERVICE ex·
perienced mason. rooter,
carpenter,
electrician,
generel repairs and
remodeling. Phone 304·675·
2088 or 675·4560.

13

•

.. .

() I

~HCID
INTMTAINIIINT

~IIACNII.-\.2HAIR

Dave's Appliance Repair.
Washers, dryers, plum·
bing, electric, generel handyman. Phone 304-576·2921
or 675-5689 .

Plumbing
&amp; Hooting

7:00 Wif"PIIIIAIIAZINI
(])
PIIDGRAII

YOUAIIKID,ORIT
AIIOTIII!R Ufl
IIOVII
·I AD VI! NT URI·R OIIA NCI!l
••• " ·~bo" 1M3
I)). (I) FAIIILYFIUD
. CilLAYI!RNI!ANDIHIRLIY
DCOIIPANY
DtCIIi CAVITT SHOW
RICHARD IIIIIIONS

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
675· 1331 .

12

.•-•'

IYINIIIG

7:10

stumpr~moval.

t977 Kawasaki 1000, new
tune up, 2 helmets. $1700.
675·2~7 or 615-5760.

1972 Volkeswagen, 675'21164
or 182-2f.l7.
Duality AutObody &amp; Paint
work. Insurance work
'
SURPLUS JEEPS, CARS, welcome. SunrOOfs lnTRUCKS, Car-lnv. value stallect from $200-$230, Auto
$21113 sola lor flOO. Far fn- Trim__!: enter, -1-16-1968.
lormatlon on p11rchaslng
.similar bargains, Call 602· 71
Comtotlltf
H1 -IIJ1~ Eoct. 7965. Phone
Bgutpment
. WANTED-Late
Yoluwapon Baetle
condition. -1-16-2072.

Call 446--2801 for termite,
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas .

• . I '

. '.

..

DAYIACIAIN

001-l'T ~.SIR,~ IT

·~·

·-·."'

lniiPPIT IHOWQuoat:
lllniiY R-1.
•
7:01 Cll CAJloL. IURNITT AND

t'D I..IKBA ~\Ge
,q;f\/ft:~&lt;:\VlJS€ STEW&lt;

..

' .. ·• t

TICTACDOUGH

BORN LOSER

~·

'

ocr.ta, 1111

W~ITER

French City Painting
Residential, commercial.
interior, exterior, paper
hanging , and texured
ceilings. Ph. 367 · 778~ or 367·
7160.
.

.

. ''.'
. .·-

_,.,

MAX COLLINS

FERRELL's
WINDON
GLASS SERVICE; Home
maintainanc:·e
and
remodeling. Phone 3889326.

Pag-11

·T elevision
•
•
··VIewmg

CR~TOPI

or~·2454.

1971 Buick, gOOd cond.. ;====;:::;:;==:~==
fully equlped, very low · iS
Boats•nd
miles. price $1,150. Phone
Motors for Salt

AKC Registered Doberman
pups, 7 weeks old, tails bobbed, wormec::l, 1 female, 2
males, black and rust. $125.
458· 1513.

RCA Whirlpool w..her and
dryer. Phone675· 1393.

Fl RIS'T"

'

1976 Chevy 2 1/2 ton dump
truck, heavy duty 16 ft. ·
bod, twin holst, well equip·
H ~ M CLEANING SERped, tow mileage, ex . cond.
VICE Steam &amp; or .pressure
Call 30•·372-6390, Ripley,
wash trucks, trailers,
WVA.
.
.mobile homes, farm equipment, etc . Phone 388·9376
1976 Ford F·100. '"'ton. 8ft.
or~· 3829.
bod, caii61H92-2282 .
LOCKSMITH
Service .
1971 Ford dump truck.
Residential, automotive.
$3200. Caii61H85·4395.
Emer!;lencv service. Cawl
882·2079.
1977 112 ton pickup truck
with topper, 38,000 miles,
RON'S Television Service.
350 C I D, automatic, ps, pb,
Specializing in Zenith and
good condition. Phone days
Motorola, Quazar. and
before 7 pm 67S-28..t7.
house calls. Phone 576·2398

74

1979 Ford Pinto one
owner,3 dr. runebout with
sport package, ~ spd., AM·
FM 8-trac:k, 36,000 miles.
Asking $3,-400 or deal tor
Cutlass or Monte Carlo.
Cai1367·0478

Lumber. I x 8iflch x &amp;ft.-16
ft. poplar sheathing, air·
dried. Millwood Inc. Near
the intersection of US 33
and wv 2. 304·273·2522
days, or 273-5398 evenings.

Muslnl
Instruments

1976 Ford Explorer 250,
Auto. ..tl·wheel drive, new
tires, fiberglass topper,
$2,850. Cali ~-9285.

3~·2686.

1980 · Buick Century exc.
cond . Coil ~-8310 a.fter 5,

57

79 Dodge pickup, 6 cyl.,
standard , camper top,
$3,600. Calf 388·975~. Eureli
Auto Sales, Rt. 160, 554,
Gallipolis, Oh 45631.

1971 Ford Van. 6 cyl. auto.
trans. am·fm·tape, good
cond. $2,500. 992·3743.

· ~

Rabbit dogs. Elmer Kapp,
behind Krodel Park.

Jphn

(

Pufe Angus bu lis, 7 months
old, with or without papers.
Norm Lieving. 675-2902.

78 Musteng~ exc. cond., ~
cyl ., ~ spd., $3,595. Cail388·
975..4. Eurell Auto Sales, Rt.
160, 554, Galli poll,, Oh.

61 \ ..orm lgUIPII!!!!1

..-m.

Massey Ferguson M-50
tractor, pOWer steering,
disk, bush hog, plows,
harrow boom, must sell
due to heath. For cash only
price ~.500. Ca 11245·9105.

1 Franklin wood fireplace.
S85flrm. 895·3503 .

1972 MG -Midget engine,
good condition $300. 1~1
Sears trav~l
luggage
trailer $600. 197~ Triu~h
Spltfir~, less engine,
.
1958 Harley Sportster
needs finished $1300. 15 ft.
boat, open bow, trl haul, 55
hp. $1500. Phone 675-6397. ,

~·

BING'S CONCRETE CONSTRUCTION - Specializing
In concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
basement, garage· floors
end.etc. Free estimates. 11
year~ experience. Call 367·
7891.

1 oak finished desk. Call
256-6413.

Used Copper-tone gas cook
stove. White refrigerator.
2~ Maple Ave or call 675·

-

STUCCO PLASTERING textured ceilings, com·
mercia! ond residential,
tree estimates. Call 256·
1182.

WEATHERALL ' CON ·
CRETE · quality and ser·
vice, caii67~; 1S82.

For sale Sears fireplaCe,
used 1 winter . Call379· 2~.

For sale 19' color TV, $125.
4•cu. ft. cement mixer with
motor, $125. 300 gal. fuel
tank, $20. '6 HP mini bike
motor, $50. 20' bovs bike,
$10. Phone 675·3645.

Homo
tmproYtmMII

The DillY Sentlnei-

PAINTING · InteriOr and
exterior, plumbing,
roofing, some remodeling.
20 yrs. exp. CallB-96.12.

. ..

a.

Harley

11

CAPTAIN STEEMER .C ar·
pet Cleaning featured by
Hoffelt Brothers custom
carpets. Free estimates.
Call ~-2107.

. - ..
-. ...
-

a.

1911

Tubular grate with blower
for flreplece screen, S7S.
Cali 4.46 - 39~.

They'll Do It Every Time

r-.ROT!tVA,
--

Nova.

256· 1~27 .

Household Goods

Sl

Wright 1978

For sale 2 wood &amp; coal burning stoves, S3oo- efl. Call

Full size bed with dresser,
verv reasonable. Call 388-

t l _,

Auto lor hit

KIT 'N' CARLYlE ""
by larry
r------------_;
__;_~.,loavld-. . 67HI2~.

Hannan Trace Senior Class
i s taking orders for
Homemad't ·Apple Butler:
Anvone wanflr'IU to buv
some: contact wanlta Cralo
256-6660, Verbi Waugh 2562680, or Carolyn Chapman
256-6479.

9932.

a.

(

71

Apartmemt
for RMt

49

Monday, October 12, 1911

Fuel oi l stove &amp; 200 gal.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
tank . Cali 256·6413. ·
Sofa. chair. rocker, ottoman, 3 tables, $500. Sofa,
chair and ioveseat. $275. Franklin stove, large siz_e.
Sofas an~ chairs priced Burns wood or coal.
from $285. to $795. Tables, Reasonably priced . . Call
$38 and up to $109. Hide· a· 614-992·3118.
beds,$340., queen size, S380.
Rec liners, $17S. to $295., Fii-eWOOd. SPitt &amp;d~uvered .
Lamps from $18. to $65. 5 $35 . truck toad, or $65. a
pc . dlfettes from $·79., to cord. Cali 614-843·2933 or
$385. 7 pc., $189. and up. 614-843·2452.
Wood table with 4 chairs,
$219 up to ~95 . Desk $110.
Hutches, $300 . and S37S., F ir-ewood $30. pickup toad.
For rent 2, 2bdr mobile maple or pine finish. 949·2870 after 5 p. m.
homes, located In Porter Bedroom suites · Bassett
area. Ref . &amp; dep. 367-7101.
Oak, S67S. , Bassen Cherry, 26' TROUTWOOD travel
$795 . Bunk bed complete trailer and camp site on
12 X60 mob ile home . 2 with maftres$es, S2SO. and Racca. Creek . Close to
bedroom, bath end half. up to $350. captain's beds, Ohio River. S500 down.
Approximately s miles $275. complete. Baby beds, Owner wtll f lna11ce. 61.4·256·
from Pomeroy and M id· $99. Mattresses or box 1216.
dieport on . Rt. 143. CaLl ~14· springs, full or twin, $58.,
992·5858.
.
firm, $68. and $78. Queen Pears. 1970 Chevy 'Pickup.
sets, $195. 5 dr. chests, ~9 . Best offer. 675-4373 or 675·
,1 bedroom mobile home. 4 dr. chests, S-12 . Bed 6283.
frames, $20 .and $25:, 10 gun
675·4154.
DRAGONWYND
CAT•
· Gun cabinets, $350., dinetTERY - KEN~El . AKC
te chairs $20. and $25. Gas 1.4 ft . alum inum bass boat,
Unfurnished
trailer, or eledrtc ranges. $295. Or- 1S hp motor, trailer,
black Chow puppies, CFA
married couples, 1 child ac· thopedic super firm, S9S, trolling n'totor, swivel
Himalayan, Persian and
cepted. 675· 1076.
Siamese kittens. Call ~ baby matresses, $2S &amp; $3S, seats, best offer. Phone 615·
2039.
3844 after ..4 p.m.
bed frames $20, $25, &amp;. $30.
Ranges,
2 bedroom mobile homes In Used,
bend area, adults only, no refrigerators, and TV's,
Air compressor, asking
HILLCREST KENNEL
3 mites out Bulavilte Rd.
pets. 675· 1452 or 675·2?96.
S.SOO. Car lift for garage,
Boarding all breeds, clean
Open 9am to 7pm, Mon. asking $400. 576·2602:
indoor-outdoor faciHties.
Also AKC Reg . Dober·
Two mobjle hOmes, 10 X 50, thru Fri., 9am to Spm, Sat.
~- 0322
mans. ca II ~-7795 . .
2 bedroom, 2 miles out of
New Crop Apples-Red and
town on Rt. 2. $100 deposit,
Golden Delicious, Winesap,
USED
AP - ~orne Beauty, Gr-Imes
$205.00 per. month plus GOOD
B~IARPATCH KENNELS
ut1nt1n. 675·3000 o..- 675- PLIANCE'S - W.Shers, Golden and • Johnathan·
Boarding end grooming.
dryers, . refrigerators, Retail and Wh91esale, any
6277.
AKC GQrdon setters,
ranges . Skaggs Ap · quanlty availabl4;t. Also
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call ~-4191.
2 bedroom. furnished or un- pliances, 1918 Eastern fresh Apple Cider, Pum·
pklns. homemade Apple
furnished, located in Camp Ave. , ~ - 7398 .
'
Butter and more produce
Conley. Call675·1371 or 675·
Jeanie's Pet Shop New
delights.
Bob'
s
Market,
FOR
SALE:
Dinette
set
3812.
hours 11 -5, closed Wed . &amp;
$45, gOOd cond. ; window w- Mason, WV . Open 7 days.
Sun. Cali ~ - 7920.
Phone
773·5721
.
2 bedroom on Sandhill casing $20; Call ~- 0391 at·
ter 4 p.m.
Road. 675·3834.
AKC Dobormans, red male
New 3 wheel bicycle. 1230.
proven~ $200. Female black
Cali 675·2284.
&amp; rust, bred, $300. Coil -1-1654
Misc.
Merchandice
44
Apar-tmemt
1562.
for Rent
Ratliff P'ools &amp; ~ervlce . 3 block saw mill . 1975
Complete sales, service, Dodge ..tl wheel drive. SJ6·
For Sale Registered Black
2 BEDROOM apartment, pool covers, and win· 29~ .
· AngUs bull. Approx. 1,5QP
H U 0 accepted. ·675·5104 .
teriza tion kits. Call446·132..t
ibs. $800. Call ~- 3539.
Pacific DL·105 12 and 20
APARTMENTS
One Restaurant
equipment gauge reioader, complete,
Purebred
English
bedroom starts at $152.00 reconditioned by RADCO.
$150firm. Catalina am·fm 8 Shepherd puppies. Great
per month . Two bedroom Call 304·523·1378. Hgtn., track record player $75
watch and stock dogs. Call
starts at $188.00 per month. WVA . '
firm. 675-6052.
614·2·7·2161.
Deposit $200 .,Call446' 2745.

~95.

41

..

4 room house. Cali 6U·m· 2 bdr. apartment unfurn.,
3981 .
.
in Crown City, 'Ohio. Call
256·6.120.
6 room house in Rutland.
$150 month. 614·742·2523.
Deluxe furnished apartment central air and heat,
6 room home, basement, excellent location, adults
furnace. 222 N. 3rd Ave., only, lease. dep., upper
M iddleport. No pets, 1 sxall br.acket, reference. 446child. $150. a month; $100. 0338.
deposit. Inquire 17..t Coat
St., Middleport, or call 928· Mobile home In city central
air and heat, adults only,
5855.
dep. ~·0338 .
2 bedroom house with
basement, in Henderson,
Furnished ROOm ~o
$165 month, $100 depos il 45
and references. 675·1118.
SLEEPING ROO.MS and
light housekeeping apt.,
3 bedroom house in .coun· Park Central Hotel.
try, 9 mrles from pt,
Pleasant. $250 per month. 46
Space fer Rent
576·2111 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33, North of
House. Nice neighborhood. Pomeroy. Large tots. Call
Near Mason County 992-7479.
Fairgrounds. $350 per mon·
th. 675-4506. '·
Trailer lots. Cal 1.675-1076.

Mobil'eHomes
1972 Schultz mobt le home &amp; 42
for Rent ·
about 3 acres land, new
garage, fruit trees, on
black top r oad on Raccoon 14x70 3 bdr. total electric
Rd, between Rt. 7 &amp; 218 . trailer 10 minutes~ from
town on private lot. $200 a
c1111 ~~ 7832 .
month plus deposit &amp;
uttrltles. Ref . requir-ed. Call
12 X70 3 bedroom trai ler, 256·1393.
all new carpeting, runs on
LP, fuel oil, or gas . Un· For sale or rent 1979 14x70
furnished. Se ll for $6000.
Call 614-367·0677 after s 3bdr., located in Middleport on large tot, AC,
p.m .
range, refrigerator, S2SO
per mo. plus utilities, $250
1971 Oarian 12 &gt;c 65, 3 dep. req . or owner will help
bedrooms. 1972 Crown finance with suitable down
Haven, u x 65 with 8 x 10 payment . Call 992·6173 or
expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973 446·0963 .
Utopia 12 x 65, 2 bedrooms.
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
bedrooms, 1972 Nashau, 14 12x60 2 bdr ., mobile home,
x 60, 2 bedrooms. 8 lf.o~ S 5 miles from city. Ri!ccoon
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand Creek Rd. Gas heat, , no
Sts. Pt. Pleasant, WV . pets, $165. monthly, plus
deposit &amp; utilities. Call 446Phone 675·4424.
0822.

Monday, October 12, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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�.-Page-12-The Dally-5entinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Dhio

Monday, October 12, 1911

No one hurt in six· weekend accidents
Tbe Gallla-Melgii'(Jot of the at&amp;te
patrol cited a Hemlock
Grove man In a one-car acddeht In
Meip County Saturday morning.
Tbe patrol aald David H. Barnhouse, 19, was northbound on County Ril. 311 at 11:55 a.m. when his
vehicle west off the right 1lde r#. the
road and struck a fence and~Modente l!amage was done to
Barnhouse'• vehicle and he was
cited for exceaalve apeed.
In an otherwlae quiet weekend, the
patrol was kept buly investigating
·propertY damage and other minor
accidents.
Tbe patrol said a vehicle driven by
William Foster, 17, Rt. 2, Racine,
was southbound on Cross street In
Racine at 10: 15 a.m. Saturday when
the vehicle struck a manhole · and
bottomed out, causing mnderate
damage.
~Y

Trocpera reported a .wbicle OWIIed
by Wllllam T. Jamilon, 28,
Galllpolia, was parked 011 Addilon
Twp. Rd. U at noon Sunday wben It
apperenUy allpped out r#. gear,
rolled downward and atruct an emba!*ment Tbe auto was moderately
damaged.
.
Accilrdlng to the report, Brian L.
George, 16, Rt. 2, Cheshire, kilt control r#. bil vehicle while weatbound
on RlliM at the juncUoa with County Rd. 32at2:30a.m. Sunday.
Tbe car then went off the ri8ht side
r#. the road and atruct a fence,
causing moderate damage and no injury. The pa'trol reported no Injuries In
two car-&lt;1eer accidenll over the
weekend.
Bryan J. Wolfe, 18, Racine, Will!
northbound on U.S. 35 at 9:40 p.m.

Saturday when a deer 111ruc11 the
front r#. bil veblcle. The deer _,..
killed and Wolfe's wbicle ,..
moderately damaged.
Tn&gt;opers said Clarence Martin, 54,

Egypt elects new president today

-a11o-n.:

Rt.1, t..ge, W.l/a.,
bouDd Ill u.s. • et 10:10 LID. Sun. , wben ·a clair - ldlled alter
llrlkiDc his car. Tbe car maderataly damqed.

r----------- -----------

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
-' '

'

CAIRO, £opt (AP) - liJOpt today eJecte Hosni
Mubarak president, ~ Anwar Slldat, and a
landlllde was predicted lor the only candldale. Pollee
were ordered to shoot anyone "dilturbintlllabillty and
IIOCUI'ity."
Ofllclal results from the referendum, In whldl the 12
million voters were asked to mark "yes" or "no,. next
to Mubarak's picture oo their ballot8, could be an.-.cedtaeerly u Wednesday.
·
•
' Mubarak, the air Ioree commander chosen by Sadat
in 11175 as his vice president and future succesaor, was
nominated by Sadat'o NaUonal Denlocratic Party and
approved by the Natiooal Assembly.
· The leader of the small pro-Soviet Prog~ ive

Unionist Party urged his foUowen to vote ' 'no," but the
leader of another small oppGIItlon perty, the Socialist.Labor, supported Mubarat. He aald he was ready to
" give him a chance" to change Sadat's policies.
Meanwhile, more deteill of Slldat'o •••Mination
last Tuelday became available, and official sources
reported 18 anny officers were transferred to civlllan
polls becaue r#. ' 'fanatic religious tendencies."
Defense Minister Abdel Halim Abu Ghazala aald all
four r#. Sadat's killers survived althoush pfevlous
government atetementa sald one of them was killed.
The foor are repOrted to be members of a ~Uc sect
dedicated to kllJlng Moalem leaders who do not Uve up
to its standards r#.lundamentallion.

'-

Meigs County-happenings

.' '

-'

Voi.30, NO.l2J

Ju'!.enile faces
mUltiple charges

\
New! Fully Padded

)

roiEDO Ohio - The University of Toledo is conducting an investigation lnto the collapae of makeshift bleachers that resulted in injuries to about 40 high ocbool band members.
More than 100 members of the New Philadelphia band were waiting
to hove a photograph taken Saturday when the bleachers fell.
Thirty-four were treated at hospitals. the most serious injury was a
fractured ankle, but two band members will miss the rest of the lootball season, said Dick Grummere, New Philadelphia superintendent.

Seamless Tricot
The natural look bra in a smooth, ·.
sensuous polyester tricot with no seams
to show through the dingiest outerwear_
Each cup is attached separately to a
unique bottom band of elastic for
individual cup adjustment Adjustable
ring·and slide demi-stretch straps and
stretch elastic nylon and LycraB
spandex sides and back add perfect fit .
and comfort

Possible hit men killed

2nd Floor- Llng11rle Dept.

_

_

.

NEWARK,- A work slowdown by Newark teachers thai hsd curtailed IIOJile extra-curricular activities Ia over following a contract setUernent that ended a pay dispute.
The Newark Board of Education on Monday unanimously approved
the pact, which was ratified last week by the Newark Teachers
, ~r

sorry, No Substitutions, Except ·aeverages
which have an additional price.

, _Crow'·• Family _R estaurant
PH.

. 221 W. MAIII
(

'

0

,

A'··

.•

,, ,

~~nt hikes the ~ ~Y for a starU'\g teacher from
, $11,000 to$11,9311and Ia retroactive to July I.
'
· Teachers still were not completely satlafled with the contract. NTA
President Sandra Holcomb sald many teachers felt the lower figure
was an insult.

Waver.ly robbery sticky situation
WAVERLY, - A drug store robbery Monday night was a case of
sticky fingers --:- bit for the victlms, not the thieves.
. Waverly pollee say two men entered the Waverly Drug Store just after eloalng time Monday and took an undetennined amount of money
'and drugs at gunpoint.
,
Before they made their getaway, the men used an epoxy cement to
glue the hands of the store's employees to the Door to make certain
they couldn't-call pollee, officers said.
'

OHIO

COAL TRUCK OVERTURNS- WUllamH. Worrlx, U, Hamden, was
treated and released from Veterans Memerill Hospital Mooday morning after be loot oontrol of the coal truck be was drlvtug on U.S. 33 at 9 a.m.

11te truek went olllbe left side of the road and overturuetl. The slate highway patrol said Worrlx was taken to the hospital by the Pomeroy

emergency squad.

Hamden trucker hurt .in Meigs wreck
Five people were injured iri four Buck Ridge Rosd coiHded with a the scene.
The vehicle was moderately
separate accidents in the area in- board on the Gallia County Gun Club
damaged
and no citation was issued.
v~ted Morull!y by the GalltaF ;A.I'tyal7 : 50p.18. '
Mmgs Post of the state )ligbw~y
Troopers
said Ronald D. Johnson,
Sununer was taken•to HMC by the
patrol.
21,
Proctorville,
fell asleep at' the
Gallia ~MS. where he was treated
The patrol said a coal truck and released for a fracture to tb&lt; wheel of his vehicle at 10;30 a.m.
operated by William H. Worrix, 42, right index finger. Tbe bike was -while northbound on Rt. 7, went off
Hamden, lost control on a curve on slightly aamaged.
the left side of the road and overU.S. 33 in Meigs County at 9 a.m.,
turned, severely damaging the car.
went off the left side of the road and
Johnson was injured, but not
The pstrol said s vehicle driven by
overturned.
treated
atlhe scene, the report said. ·
. Frances R. Steger, 57, Rt. 2,
Worrix was taken to Veterans Gallipolis, was attempting to stop
Tbe patrol investigated three
MC1ftorial Hospital by the Pomeroy lor traffic on Raccoon Road in Clay minor accidents Monday.
EMS, where he was treated and Twp. at 8:30 a.m. when she lost conAccording to the report, a car
released. The truck was severely trol, slid off the right side of the road driven by Letch C. Smith J r., 28, St.
damaged . .
Albans, W.Va., slowed for oncoming
on a curve and struck a utility pole.
Troopers said Jason F. Summer,
Injured were two passengers in traffic on U.S. 35 at 8:55 a.m. and
14, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, was taken to the vehicle, James Franklin, 8, Rt. 2, was struck in the rear by a vehicle
Holzer Medical Center alter the Gallipolis, and Misty Stanley, 7, driven by Shirley A. Jones, 41,
motorcycle he was operating &lt;m Ga!Hpolls. Neither were treated at Gallipolis.

Smith's car was sHghtiy damaged
and there was no citation issued.
Troopers said a truck operated by
James E. Krans, 55, Radcllll, alld into a parked car on U.S. 35 owned by
Rhonda L. Stewart, 25, GaiHpolis, at
8:15a.m. The brakes on the truck
had failed, and the accident caused
slight damage to the Stewart
vehicle.
~ report said a car driven by
Donald W. Carr, 17, Rt. 2, Northup,
backed into a parked car owned by
Ronald L. Hanunond, 17, Rt. 2,
Patriot, at the Southwestern High
School parking lot at 4:50 p.m.
Carr's vehicle was moderately
damaged and the Hammond auto
was slightly damaged.

Saudi Arabia harbors ldi A min
WASHINGTON - Saudi Arabia, not Ubya, is harboring lonner
Ugandan dll)tator Idi Amin, says Sen. Rudy Bosehwitz, a leader of
Senate opposition to the Reagan adminlstratioo's proposed aale of
AWACS radar planes to Saudi Arabia.
The Minnesota Republican's -assertion was in response to a
statement at a Natiooal Preas Club luncheon last week by Vice
President George Bush criticizing Ubyan leader Moammar Khadaly.
Bush called Khadafy "the world's principal terrorist and trainer of
terrorists. He's the prote-,torr#. the likes r#. Idi Amin."

Fear more bodies pinned
MANILA, PhiWpinea - Aatherities feared many bodies stiU were
pinned beneath rocks In a southern mine camp swamped by a flood
and avalanche that killed at least 194 people, injured 134 and left 99
ml.alng.

Rescuers said Monday that they could not move many of the rocks,

some described as "bll!l!er than a V~gen car," lor lack of cranes
and buDdozers in the remote valley camp 6011 mlles southeast of
Manila.
The ROVenurtent said a (().minute flash flood Friday night caused
bundredt of rocks to tumble more than t,OOO feel onto camp
· bunkhouses, trapping or killing workers and their families.

The Farmers Bank's Dress-A-Doll, Design-A-Toy
Contest is now open. If you'd like to enter, stop by
the Farmers Bank and•pick up your materials and
information.
The ~inners will be on display in the Farmers
Bank lobby before Christmas. All dolls and toys
will go to ' d~serving area children at Christmas.

•cOmbination Ofnrier Oil~
•Dinin&amp; RiiOm Only
Served with: Whipped
'Poatoes, Chicken ~ravy, Cole
Slaw, Hot Roll, BuHer and
·coffee.

•

.

Stout woman suroives attack

For Just · $325

,,

FORT THOMAS, Ky. - No charges have been flied in a northern
Kentucky shoot-out that left two men dead and neighbors terrified.
Police said Donald Ruebusch, 42, Mason, Ohio, and Antonio Pe_na
Santos, 37, Burlington, were shot to death·after trying to force their
way into a house Monday morning. Pollee said the two men were armed with a shotgun, a .357 magnum pistol and a .44 magnum revolver.
one of four occupants of the house told pollee he shot the two men in
self-defense. The occupants were questioned and released Monday.

Newark teachers end slowdown

-.

\.

15 Cents ~

A Multlmldlolnc. New...., per -

Bleacher collapse under probe

It's time for the Farmers
Bank';s
•
Dress-A-Doll, Design-A-Toy
Contest.

'

2 Sections, 14 Paves

--

Jury.••

I

enttne

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ELBERFELDS 1N. POMEROY
t-~wru=·te~·:Bi:'d:w:eU~-------J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Eatf

.

\

Area deaths - ~r

All ~e Kentucky Fried Chicken You Can

a1y

•·

Tbe Southern Local Board of
Education will meet In reguiar
sessional 6:30p.m. Thursday at the
high school cafeteria.

A Middleport juvenile was
"arrested Monday morning several
thefts charges and will appear
before Meigs Juvenlle Judge Robert
SECOND- R)'BII Holter was lbe "wfldcaf' overshadowed by lbe
Will show film
Buck.
roar of a Tornado !!pre oo lbe freshman floal at Soulbera HiRh School
Middleport . PoUce Chief J. J.
Friday wbea homeeomlaR wos observed. Tbe Hoot took seeoad placeIn
Tbe Meigs Athletic Boosters will
Cremeans
said the juvenlle will he meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
lbe compeUUon.
charged with taking a rifle and high school. Fllms of the Meig&amp;shotgun from a vehicle parked at 839 Logan game will be shown.
S. Second Ave., Middleport, on Sept
19; A cassette player and cassettes
from a vehicle parked at the rear of ·Vehicles damaged
the Dutton Drug Store on Oct. 7, and
in minor accident
theft
of an eight-track player and
Floyd Williams
Charles Wesley Hayes .
radio with speaker from a vehicle on
Two vehicles were damaged In a
Floyd Williams, 54, Route 1,
Charles Wtsley Hayes, 65, · N. FrontSt. onSunday.
collision at the traffic signal on W.
Lt. George Miller of the Mid- Main St., Sunday.
Langsville, died Saturday at Pomeroy, died Sunday at Holzer
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Medical Center following a lingering dleport Pollee Department was the
Pomeroy Pollee said a car driven
investigating officer on the case.
He was a son of the late Elbert illness.
by Darrell L. Day, Bidwell, struck in
Mf. Hayes was a son of the late
· Williams and was also preceded in
the rear a vehicle driven by David B.
death by a brother, Elbert Williams, Carson Hayes. He was also preeeded Revival reminder
Bevan, GaiHpolis, stopped at the
Jr., and a son, Jbnmy.
in death by hiS first wife, Dollie
signal. Tbere were light damages
A boilennaker and a member of Wright Hayes.
Envoy Ray Wining reminds the to the Day vehicle and 'medium
Local 667, Charleston, W. Va., Mr.
A veteran of World War II, Mr. public that a revival starts at 7:15 . damagestotheBevanvehicie.
Williams is survived by his wife, Hayes was an active member of this evening at the Salvation Anny ,
Ught damages were Incurred to
~Ill'• Clifford Williams; a daughter,
Drew Webster Post 39, American _ 115 Butternut Ave., with the Rev . two cars on Powell's parking lot
Barbara Kennedy, Route 4, Legion.
Chuct&lt; McPherson a as evangelist.
Saturday when a car driven by
Pomeroy; two sons, Elbert
Mr. Hayes served in · the U. S.
YPSM Eloise Adams will be the Eleapor Tbomas, Pomeroy, backed
Williams, Dexter, and Clarence Navy during World War II. He was a
leader and soloists will be Mrs. from a parking space into the left
Williams, Route I, Shade;.7 eight past commander of Drew Webster EdithSpencer,Middleport,andMrs.
front of a car driven by Prudence
grandchildren; his mother, Lillie Post 39, American Legion, and was
Dyke, Middleport; two sisters, serving as adjutant of the post. He Chuck
vi ted. McPherson. The public is inMabel Hannan, Rutland, and Judy was a member of lbe 40 et 8 and was
Caruthers, Middleport; three a fonner treasurer of the Meigs Meets tonight
brothers, Ray, Pomeroy; Mickey, County Pioneer and Historical
Syracuse Village Councll will
Syracuse; Ronnie of Danville, and ' Society. He belonged to Heath meet this evening at 7:30 p.m.
several.nieces and nephews.
UnitM , Methodist Church in Mid, Servlcal, will be beld at l p.m. · ~
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral • Ha~es had retired from ,30 years Boosters to meet
Home
with the Rev. Uoyd Grimm !· service
in the grocery bll8iness
·
I I
The Southern Athietic Boosters
officialing. Burial will be in Miles having last been employed by Pen- wlli meet this evening at 8 p.m. at
Cemetery, Rutland. Friends may nyfar~ Markets.
the higb school.
call at the funeral home from 2 to 4
Surviving are his wife, Ester Bonn
and7to9p.m. today.
(Scott,ie) Hayes, Pomeroy; a son
and cjaughter-in-law, Ct.arles W. and
Benjamin F. Batey
Claudia Hayes, San Antonio, Tex.; a
'
.laughter, Mary S. Hayes, Chicago,
(Continued from page I)
Benjamin Frederick Batey, 56, Ill.; his mother, Mrs. Ha ze1 Hayes,
Jackson, fonner Meigs resident, SyracUse, 8 stepdaughter and her cassette and then hit his brakes,
died early Sunday morning at the husband, Sandra Jean and Harry which he should not have done
hospital in Oak Hill. '
RoiiSh, New Haven; five brothers, because Ohly his front brakes were
He was a son of the late James and Raymond, West Columl&gt;ia; Carson, working properly. Jenkins also said.
Helen Batey. He was also preceded Des Plaines, Ill.; Vlrgll, Columbus; in the statement that he had had
in death by a brother, George, two Bill, Methopo1IS,
· 1nd.; Bob, G'wna, several beers earlier that evening,
sisters and a grandchild.
Mrica; two sisters, fia Bowers, Et- before 7:30p.m.
Jenkins said that although he had
·Mr. Batey was a retired disabled
na, and Grace Ruschel, Pomeroy;
signed
the statement, he was not
truck driver. He was a member of two grandsons, Charles Robert and
completely
coherent at the time the
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Christopher Hayes; stepstatement
was
taken at the hospital
Legion, Middleport, and Meigs granddaUghters, Krisin, Marla and
on
the
afternoon
of March 15. He
Chapter 53, Disabled American Whitney Roush, several nieces and
said
drugs
the
hospital
had given
Veterans.
nephews and several grand nieces
him for pain and the fact that he had
Surviving are his wife, Dezzie; and nephews.
children, James E. Batey, CoiumServices will be held at 2 p.m. not yet recovered from a concuSion
bus; Marshall Batey, Jackson; Ben, Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral sustained in the accident, left him
nie Batey, Jackson; Cathy Batey, Home with the Rev, Robert Robin- groggy . .
He also said that he did not realize
Jackson; Timothy Batey, Houston, son officiating. Burial will be in
Tex.; nine grandchildren; a brother, Meigs Memory Garden. Friends until several days after the accideat
Andy Batey of Middleport; an uncle, may call at the funeral home after 10 that there had been other people injured and was not aware that April
Ben R. Batey, Middleport; two aun- a.m. Tuesday.
ts, Mrs. John Hite and Mrs. Viola
Parsons bad died until he read of it
•
in the newspaper. ,
Bales, Middleport, and several
nieces, nephews and cousins.
Jenkins was given a sentence of '
Services will be held at 3 p.m. Chicken barbecue
one year in the Mason County Jail
Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
and fined ~- - Although his atTbe Twin City Shrine Club will torney, Stephen Uttlepage, could
Home with the Rev. Mark McClung
officiating. Burial will be in Rock hold a chicken barbecue this evening not be reached for comment this
Springs Cemetery. Friends may at 6:30 at the club house ln Racine, morning, Jenkins will have an opcall at the funeral home from 7 to 9 All area Shriners are invited to at- portunity to appeal the verdict to
this evening.
tend.
Mason County Circuit Court.

.
EVERY TUESDAY NIGHT AT CROW'$

" In spite of all this mess, there is no danger of a
revoluUoo," he declared.
Abu Ghazala said the loyalty of the anny was proved
by the fact that three of the four assassins were
civilians disguised as S4lldiers.
• " If the armed forces were infiltrated, El-Islambouly

would not have hsd to briJig in ~rs ," huald.
He aald the lieutenant gave ~ memben of hilertillery unit special leave to make room for the three
other attackers oo his truck in the military pande
Sadat and other top leaden were reviewing. The ammunition and grenades Uled in the attacll Wlli'O ~
chaaed from Criminals in SOUthern Egypt, the def~
mlniater S!lid.
•
El-lllambouly sald he organized the an"lination
becauae Sadat "was_not governing the country In an
lsllunic way," Abu Ghaula said, and also because the
Heutenant's brother was among 1,$36 Moalem fun.
damentallsts and other opponents jailed by Sadat JUt
month.
\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, October 13, 1981

Capyrltllltld 1981

Meets Tuesday

for a week or so."

•

e.

-,..'

Abu Ghazala aald in an Interview wilb Tbe
Asllociated Press that the ringleader, lilt U . Khaled
AhmedSbawld E~lslambouly, had come out of a coma
and "told the wholellory."
He 8lld he eapected a court-martial in four ,or live
. days and death by hanging lor EI-Is,lambouly, and " I
hope they will Jet me leave him hangU. in the open air

Farnters
Bank
Your Communih Owned Bank

-

•·

Bj!:I:.GRADE, YUIL\tllavia A stout woman st
abbed by her ltuaband :If times with a. kitchen knife W!IB expected to
recover In a bolpitai, the newspaper Poiltika reported today.
The paper laid Ten!lija Vucetic, 52, would survive the wounds
''thankllll her corpulence, due to which none r#. the vitel org8118 were
jAei ced by the at&amp;ha."
.
The paper quoted netghban u saying the incident in the northern
Adriatic port of Rljeb took place fotlowinl a family quarrel. Tbe
buband, Daniel, wu &amp;m!Sied, the paper said.

Ohio winning lottery number
ClEVELAND - The winning nwnber drawn Monday nighl in !hi!
&lt;*o LDIIerY• dally game "The Nwnber" was 811.
'l'llllaltery nported eanill'lp of ttl81,10l.IO Ill the drawiJII. The ear-' ninp Cll1l8 onulll of •14,211.50, wl1ile boklen of winnlnl tlcllets are
· llltiJied to e~~are-.aa,lattery offtciala aald.

Weather forecast
l'lrtiJ .cloud)' lonilht ll1d Wedneldlly.

Willa IT -1111011' Ill Jllld.7111. Qlrzt of

Wiadlll

Lon

toatchl 4NI. Higi1B

rain_.._ pllt1111 tiJiqJt

....

~IIIIUbi..IJmph~

Carter joins Reagan in AWACS battle
'

WASHINGTON (AP) - Jimmy
Carter, joininC President Reagan in
his battle over AWACS radar pl8nes
for Saudi Arabia, says the sale is "a
litmus test of America's rellabiUty"
and Is needed for peace in the Middle

a hail-hour with Reagan, · who
defeated him last November.
Meanwhile, former President
Ford, who lost the' White House to
Carter in 1976, said he also will join
Reagan's lobbying drive for the sale.
East.
"I think it's very important-that.
"I can assure you that if the
once the presideat makes a com- eong...., turns down President
mitment of that kind to a valuable Reagan on the AWACS deal, it will
friend like the Saudi Arabians that have a devastating effect on our atthe Senate approve what the tempt to pursue the process of peace
president has proposed," Carter in the Middle East," Ford told repor•
said Monday as he arrived for a two- ters Mooday In Arizona.
day stay In Washington - his lint
"lb! 18.5 billion arms sale, inextended trip back since he was cluding five Airborne Warning and
Control System planes and F-15 jet
president.
"A lot of foreign c6Untries can't weaponry, is in jeopardy in
understand the Intricacies of Congress. The White House has
American law and they -look upon a made some gains since the
promile by the president as being a assassinstion of Egyptian President
commitment on the part of our own Anwar Sadat, but an Associated
Press count last week showed the
nation," he added.
Carter was to meet with Republican-run !lenate lined up57-31
congressional leaders at a Capitol to veto the deal.

Racine may get housing complex
Poeslbillty of the construction of a
low income houling complex in
Racine was diacullled at the recent
meeting r#. Racine VWage Council.
Properties liated u poaible sites
lor the camplu, if it meterializes,
are owned by Dallas Cleland, Dale
Hart, E. A. WiJ1Celt, Eldon Kraeuter
and Bill Hobacll. .
CouncU dlleusaed possibly taking

I

I

over the operations of the Racine
Gas Co. with Attorney Steven Story
and will diScuss more aspects of the
situation later.
CouncD accepted a fire contract
with Sutton Township, to be divided
between Racine and Syracuse Fire
Departments and li(e protection
contracta with Letart and Lebanon
Townships were rehewed.

No quorum, thus, no business

=

1llll to the lack\ of a quarum, a
~

of Middleport

Caancliftl na&amp; held Monday

'l'llrr • ., ... J\1111J.......
'l'llrr llrO' . . ,_,, n ,.. t.tlle
.. .,., 'lira 0 ITTil MIIJ,

lim luncheoq today and then visit for

~

Fred Hoffman IDdlc:aled
tha&amp; 110 IJI I ..a] llllke ap .-leiD wW
be held ll1d the lmt np1ar llllllln&amp;

nlghtiiOet.•.

Rejection in the House this week is
considered inevitable. Tbe Senate is
scheduled to vote next Tuesday.
In a letter to Sen. Sam Nunn, DGa., that was made public Monday,
Carter said, "In many ways, this has
become a litmus test of America's
reliability" and added that "the
beneficial influence of the moderate
Arab nations is a valuable resource
which we should nourish whenever It
is practlcalto do so."
"For the well-being of our own
cowitry, for the continuing seeurity
of Israel and for the peace and

security in the Middle East and Per-sian Gull area, I hope that you and
other members of the Senate will
give him (RC{lgan) this support,"
Carter wrote.
Opponents of ~ sale have eK•preased lear that the AWACS could
· be used against Israel and could fall
into unfriendly hands if the Saudi
monarchy iS overthrown.
Carter said the Saudis ''are strong
and influential moderates in an area
where moderation is vitai in circumscribing fansticiam and violence. "

.

Mayor to meet with hoard
By KATIE CROW
Syracuse Mayor Eher Pickens and possibly some members of council will meet with the Syracuse-Racine Hegional Sewage District Wednesday night to inform the sewage bo&lt;lrd of the projects that hsve not
been completed in the village of Syracuse by Ontario Pipeline Co.,
following the laying of sewer lines.
Tbis was announced at Monday's COWJCll session.
It was disclosed that council plans to_ upgrade the present street
lights. A letter haa been dirtcted to the Ohio Power Co., for a breakdown of the additional cost.
Council approved a resolution acceptihg amount and tax rates for
the village as set by the budget conuniasion.
The annual oboerva!IC'! of trick or treat night in the community was
set for Thursday, Oct. 29, from 6:30p.m. to 7:30p.m. The siren will
sound to begin and end the evening's actlviUes.
Council agreed to replace the stop sign at the intersection of Worchestar add s-Ill Street.
Council allo agreed to draw Up a ~uUon tO change the name of
John Street to Carleton Street.
At an earUer meetln8 c:ounc1l streued that the up keep of the
lldewalka Ia the sole 1espoilliblllty of the property owners.
Following the regular hullneu session council went Into executive
IOelllion.
Attending were Mayor Pickens, Janice LaWIOD, clerk;
Holmaa, tr.Rrer; Millllll Varian, pollee chief; Robert Wiaplt, ~!'P­
ta aclmlniatrlllor; Troy ZwiDinl, Jack WU1iama, WiWe Guinlblr, M1ck
Alb and Kathryn er-, cqundJ mmlbera, Jean Hall, Ker&gt;netb l)n!!ff,
Bill Cundill, Doug Hemaley and Jim
.. Teeford.

c-se

'

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