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b Dick Caval

WINTHROP
HAL-LOWEEN 15 ALMOST.
. HERe,.. BOYI CAN HARDLY WAIT1

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at y
Tax increases unlikely'

AU.. 1HATCA.NDY! LOLLI~1
AND &lt;JeLL'tSEAN6.,.AND
.
JAW6Re:;A.Ke.=R.5 ...

WASHINGTO~ (AP) - Tax inunlikely next Y&lt;;'lr but
wtll have to be conaldered m 1983
and 11114 to rein in the runaway
federal deficit, Senate Majority
Leader Howard H. Baker Jr. sayB.
And unleao there is a "fierce uptum" in the ecoMmy, Baker says,
Congrelll wtll have to find even more
than the fl,15 l:iWon in budget
aavinP that President Reagan wants over the next three years.
Reagan, strouling to balance the
budget by 11114, has cai\ed for $3
bllllon in tax increases and $13
billion in addltlooal spending cuts in
flacall882, wblch began Oct. I. .
He has yet to send . specific
~1· to Cofl&amp;re88, and admlnlslratloo officiall have said they
are COIIIIderlng higher excise taxes ·
011 psolllle, alcohol and cigarettes.
But BUer saki Sunday tllat he
w.ld not expect "excise taxes or
.~else in '12."
Queltlooed on CBS' "Face the
Nation/' Baller said House and
Senate Repljbllcan leaders reached
a general consenauslaat week "that
we had to address the question of in·
creased tax revenues, also a con·
sensus that it should not be done in
~are

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CANDY APPLE6.,. AND
50tJR MLUS.,. AND
MAJ&lt;BHMALL.ON iWI5T6 ...

ARE. YOLI OLJTOF YQ.JR MIND~ 00
'fOU REAL.IZE=WHAT AU- -n-v\T

STlJFF WIU.. 00 1V YOLJR TSE:-TH ~

BAKER FACES NATION- Seute Majority LOIIder Howard Baker
sloplto IBIIl wllli .-,~ogmpllen before appeariD&amp; oa CB8'1 "Faee The
N1lloa" prGilBIII Suday Ill Waalllllpoa. (AP Laaerplloto).

'

Ed Sullivan·

Priscilla's Pop
a-l,HI.

PERHAPS WHAT
SEEM'S CONCEIT
IS MERELY SELF·
CONFIDENCE.'

THAT JENNY W .' I
CAN'T BELl EYE !-lOW
CONCEITED SHE IS.'

1 Section, 12 Pages

Romeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 26, 19t1

\5 Cents

A Multimedia Inc.

receuion, Bakf!l' said, "'!bat wnuld tum,"
be the world's worst time to.add to
the lax bunlen."

.

But the T e " - ftepubllcan ad·
ded: "I do think we have to
reallsticaUy look at the p&amp;aspecto in
'83and'84."
Baker said he planned to outline
the Republicans' geoeral plan for
whittling the deficit at a White ·
HOUBe meeting with Reagan later
thia week.
•
Baker said be hasn't given lip hope
of a balanced budget but conceded:
"It may take · ,draconian
meaaures...if· we're ever .golpg to
~nvince the Fed ·that thoae (Jn.
teres!) rates got to come down: But
if you take a look at what it would
take to balance the budget in '83 or
'84, it will make what we've done so
far fape into insignificance hy com·
parison."

more than the $li5 billion ., sider revenue enhancement," the
Reagan has proposed.
administration's tenn for selected
"I 111Q1P01"1 a general plan to lax increases, in 1983 and 19M.
reduce
of that in appropriated
House Ways and Means ComfunU and same of it in other funds " mittee Chairman Dan Roslenkowski
Baker said, "and' I'm willlng to~
(Co I'" ed

some

n mu

onll81!l

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As interest rates drive up the cost
. of government borrowing and the
siuinping economy drains revenues,
most economic forecasters, ineluding the Senate Budget Com·
mitlee, are projecting . budget ·.
deficits far larger than the ad·
ministration anticipated for the next
three yaars.
1982."
To counter that, Baker said,
Citing President Reagan's recent "we're going to have to save, in my
statement that the nation is now in a judgment, unless we get a fierce up.

Representative Richard
In .bla Capitol HW oHice
reeenlly. Gephlrdt II gradually educalillg democrat party members Ill
aa economic approach he believes wW restore tbe party's wanlne power.

RESTORE
Gepbudl, D-Mo., geatum

an latervlew

·~APwerpboto).

Mobile .home fire kills Gallia woman

TooAY

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Saturday. Middleport firemen
A ~year-old Patriot Star ·Route protection.
linguished the fire in 30 minu\05.
woman ,died in an early morning fire ' The department anawered anotber
reported that a ker&lt;osene stove in the
home apparently exploded and fire
near Northup in Gallla .County call to a mobile home'fire jn Addison Fire destroys home
spread rapidly. Mr. Kloes and his
today.
Twp. Sunday night.
Jacklyn Wolfinbarger was . Firemen sakilin electricalshort in
The mobile home of Herman dog escaped but nothing was saved.
pronOIDICed dead at the scene of a washer-dryer ignited the Kloes, Front st.; Middleport, was Firemen were on the scene for about
asphyxiation by Dt. Donald machine's controls in the home. destroyed by fire at about 8:30p.m. one hour and twenty minutes.
'
Warehime, Gallia County coroner.
loCated on Smith Roa~ and tenanted
The GaWpolls Fire Department hy Violet Sheets, Rt. 4, Gallipolls, at
said Wolfinbarger and her husband, 9:33p.m.
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BLOUNTSTOWN, Fla. - A tornado touched down in this small
• Richard, were tenants in a mobile
The fire caused an estimated $200
Florida Panhandle town Sunday, wrecking some homes, knocking out
home located 500 feet away from Rt darnlge. Twenty-one men were on
A Middleport woman was injured was southbound.on Rt 160 in Gallia
conununications and leaving an unknown nwnber of people injured.
141 on Lincoln Pike. Owner of the, the scene for 30 minutes, the report in a one-car accident in Meigs Coun· County at 9:30 a.m. Sunday when
Details were sketchy because of the poor communications, but a
mobUe home was identified aa CarUs · said.
ty early Saturday morning, ac- her vehicle struck a deer which ran
guard at the jail in neighboring LibertY Coonty said pollee from other
Plymale, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. ·
A discarded cigarette· may ·have cording to the Gallia·Meigs Post of into the · path of her car, causing
convnunities had been called in to help handle the emergeilcy.
RlcbardWqlf~gerlaemployed ignited grass at the Wal~er Walker thest.atehiQhWilVDatr&lt;ol.
moderateda~::.':~e.CI'I.IIrle•
.
·
were taken' tq a ~tal ~ NaJ:janna beclllle CalhOIDI
hy a barge company and . was· reSidence, 162 Jackson Pike. at 2: 16·~-··;f,~l~i~,e~
,l~"e\~~:~~~
HllllpiW·•had no power; Elli8.;gld_. ,~ ·- belileved ,•·l • ,ici'liliff'lr"tlli· arne latW"ltft •ll '•all.JJvstaft!ly...... + * " " - - r
ri
seriously lnirt.
, .
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depa~t
spokeaman said.
' " The department sai~ 1~ men ex· aMnd . 1 H 'tallat i th
··ou·thb&lt;:•und on Meigs
Rd. 5
The report said a. fire of undeler·
emona ospl
er n e mor· .,
l)ing
5:05p.m. Sunday when a deer ran inmined origin broke out in the home A I,
.
The patrol said King was west· to the front of his car. There was
around 2 a. m. and ignited the inPP IC81IODS
bound on Rl. 124, six·tenths of a mile slight damage to his vehicle.
lerior wails, studs and furniture.
Aceordi ng to there port , Rona ld L.
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'j bl
east of U. s. 33, at 12:50 a.m. when
'
Twenly.four fireme n fought the 8V81 a e
she lost control of her vehicle, went Lewis, 21, Rt. 2, Patriot, was · nor·
PARADISE VALLEY, Ariz.- The bodY of the ex-wife of furniture
fire
for
nearly
two
hours,
causing
an
off the left side of the road and drove tbbound on Rt. 325, one-tenth of a
store mogul Leori Levitz was fOIDid Sunday in the ruins of her home
esUmated $4,000 damage to the
The Home ·Energy · Assistance
over an embankment.
mile south of Rt 554, at 10:45 p.m.
which was deliberately set ori fire, pollee said. ·
structure,
the
department8aid.
Program
(HEAP)
·
which
is
Her
vehicle
was
severely
Sunday
when a deer ran into the side
Margaret "Bibi" Levitz, 42, was dead in a bedroom, said Debbie
Wolfinbarger's body was later available to senior citizens and low damaged in the accident, the report of his vehicle, causing moderate
Valdivia, a dispatcher for the towp's pollee department.
taken to the Willis
dama ~
. Funeral Home in income families will he accepting ~
Mrs. Levitz, who was divorced fl'OJ:II Levitz last year; had been
Gallllls
po
·
·
.
appllcationsuptoJan,30.
In
an
otherwise
quiet
weekend,
Roher! F. Brown, 38, LangsviUe,
reported missing after a fire swept through her home early Friday in
This is the third fire-related death
Appllcatloll,'! may be obtained (to motorists in hoth counties were was eastbound on Rt. 124 at 5:30
this affluent Phoenix suburb. Investigators said the lire was the work
in Gallla County this year. A double thoile who qualify) from the Si!nlor · 1 ed b
1 of a car-de ac- a.m. today when his vehicle struck a
of an arsonist.
·
p agu
Ya ser es
er
fatality On March ..
... took the llves of ·a"...ells Center, Convnunity Action cidents.
deer on the road. There was
Levitz, a founder of Levitz Furniture Corp. who lives in the Phoeilix
Johnny
HenslSehay,
31,
and
hiB
stepson,
Agency,
banlis,
post·
.offices,
etc.
Delsa
R.
vi
ray,
27,
Rt.
2.
Vinton.
moderate damage to his vehicle.
area, had pressed for an investigation into hiB fonner wife's disapver Jr., 12, when Help in flllinll out the applications
James Lee
pearance.
their Lincoln Pike mobUe home · forma may be l'eceived at the Senior
caught fire. The Hensley home was Citltens Center, Conununlly Action
located in a township without fire Agency or by calling 992-7225.
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••• IN THEW

JENNY

W.'

Tornado wrecks several homes

Meigs woman hurt in 'w reck
..

Mogul's.ex-wife found .d ead
IM

I'LL BET "raJ GET

MORE GCXJDIE$ 11-IAN
ALL THE OTI-lER TRICK·
OR· TREATERS.'

.. I SEE WHAT '
'TO.! MEAN/.

T~E

TREAT,
'SILLY.'

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Controllers get new assignment

· WRIGHT·PATIERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Ohio (AP) -¥ Three
military tralfic controllers from Wright-Patterson Air Force Base are
being assigned to help the 'Federal Aviation Administration iii han·
dling air traffic at Greater Cincinnati Airport,·according to ~ of·
·ficialB.
·The controllers are among hundreds of military controllers mitping
to fill in at civilian airporta following the federal government's
dismissal of 11,600 striking controllers in August.
·
,
Four Air Fore~ controllers from Wright-Patterson remain on~
porary assignment at Logan InternatiOnal Airport in Boston.

Dog kills four year old boy

Speaker chosen
for fu -service
school program .
H.· Stephen Glenn,

Ph.'. D.,

Lexington, S. C., will be the main

t~OTOM
, .

KETTERING, Ohio -A 4-year-old boy was attacked and killed by a
neighbor's Dobennan pinscher Sunday after the boy apparently-went
into the neighbor's yard to retrieve a ball, pollee said. .
Pbllce Chief Randall Barney said Ronald Ml!lllll!l' suffered wounda to
hiB neck and face in the altlck by one fl two clop in the neighbor's
yard. Pollee were called by a neighbor and sbot bothdop. ·
Barney said the dog~' bodlea were liken to Ohio State University for
autopsies to try to detarmlne,why the boy was atq,cked. . ·
The boy's mother, Breilda,la confined to a wheelchair and could not
help the boy' poll~ laid. She sa;. part of the attack.
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Policeman's fu~eral set today

,i)YI I

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CLEVELAND - Fwleral .-vices were to be held today lor
Patrolman Anthony J. Jolinaon, 22, the only Cleveland policeman
killed in the tine of duty lbla )'ear.
.
Jollnaan died laat Wednelday altar he waalhat in the head during 1
robbery fl a Nallooal City Bank branch on the city's eut sjde. He had
been anther- only three monU..
~ f1mal will be held at 11 a.m. at COry United Methodllt Churdl
oo EaallOIIIII Street. Johnson IIIUMYed by hla wile, Tracy, and 1
aeveiHtlCIIIIIHIId IIIII, Ailthorly Johnsen Jr. .
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Weather forecast

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Ill tile low 1101: ~with rain lllre)f ~.

•-.iighllllld
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, . _ fl pnclpltalloa
"'
WbldiiiNithwlylO.IImpb .......

speaker at the Meigs County Inservice program Wednesday, Oct. 28
at Meigs High School.
GleM will~~~e as hiB topic "Basic
Skills for Uving." The In-service
program is made poulble through
utilization of state moples appropriated by amended subetitute
bill 59 and support funds provided by
local school districts. ·
Participating in the'progr&amp;nl wtll
be teachers and adminiatraton
from Eastern Local, Meigs Local
and Southern Local. No claales will
be held on the day of the program.
In-service activities llJ'e deaiped
to meet the specific neec11 fl
teachers as detennined by a system
wide needl aaaesament. RuueU
Moon is the in-lervlcecoordlnator.
Ratllitration wtll be rroin 1:30'
a.m. tot:1h.m.; ..,.maexerdlea
from 9:15 1.m. to 9:31 a.m.; 9:30
a.m. to 10:~ a.m.; Gt.m, lla.m. to
12 naon, first sellion; U 110011 to 1
p.m., lunch; I :Iii p.m. to 1:06 p.m.,
IICOild sellion: 2:10 p.m. to 1:10,
third. sellioo ~ at 3:11 p.m.,

4llmiall.
1.-1m and tbelr tapiCII

Old; wurlllna wllll llludenll with
IPI"'"IIIedi,Dr.llclllliSpirb,Ohlo
Unlvenitn llllproYiq · readlnl

*1111,

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1n1

·-.Jnll behavior probleml, Dr;

Lorlll Mylel, Ute depart-

rnent of education; working with
talented and gifted, Dr. Albert Leep,
Ohio University; incressing staff
motivatioo, Dr. Shirley Slater, Ohio
University; managing siress, Dr.
Mel Witmer, Ohio University; im:'
'p~i!lll teacher, administrator and
comrriunlly conununicalions, Dave
Southward, Morgan County Schools;
IChool law for teachers, Frederick
Crow m, Meigs County ~utlng
Atton\ey; 'pupil evaluation, Dr.
Harry Sowards, Marahall Univer:
ally, and Miss Boola Dilley, Ma.llhall University; bBaic first aid
sldlll, Rhonda Dailey and 'l'eresa
Collins, Veterans Memorial
Hospital;
cardiopulmonary
resuscitation, Sharon Birch, Mary
Price and Joyce Tborne, ,school nur·
ses; uslnillearnillll centers, Linda
Bauer, RfoGI'IIIdeCollege.
Servin(J on tile ~ee planning ·
comrnlttae IN: Dilma Jenkins,
R~ Elemtntlry; l'Ont Kelly,
MEIGS COUNTY JUNIOR MISS-LyDDO OUvtr, daughter of Bob ad.
.Eastern lfllh; Unda Lear, Meigs
Dorothy Ollvtr, Unloa Ave., Pomeroy, a eenlor at Melli High llebeol,
· Junior lfllh; ~ Moore, county · Wllll&lt;ed away Slllardly niCIII wltb the IIIIIIW Mils tiUe aad alm.t Ill
llfflce; John Perine, Tuppers Plains
other 1warda. The ·~ Jllleul waa lleld at Southern HlJh lk*oel
Elementary; Debbie Roush,
aadltortam. ID lddiU. to .tlle Janlw MIN awud, whidl affen a •
'
Solllhem Junior High; Carla
ldlollrlblp, Mill ou- nee~, .. tile )"OIIfb fltaeu, taleDt, pa11e u11 •
''?II •· ..... Jlllllar High; Carla
IIIII ~elulnllc anrdl. She- p1 e eated wltb 1 111eMaee 1111111
llltUlef, Ia U•n*: Ruth Stear· 1pe~ru&lt;:e
Jlmiar
MlllllrtJikn·al
r- plaqgea. The first NDei'IIP- Alida
. 111. S)u•a•• JliGJJay; Greta
E-.
dlaPtlrfill!lllrlee
al
t&amp;e Efta llplrflawardl walta Alida
IJullll, -.lr 41111ea; Martha Ven...
8llerrJ
lleelle.
........,
of
Mente. ad ftoler Jleelh. fte..,...
nut, Milp-..a.; a.ry Walker,
-•pr•and
r.,
S.lt
't'*lollllllar
M1a1, IDe. LymaewDIIU:a ..... ll
Melp lfl&amp;b Ill( Llf:)' White, Mldtltntate
flail
Ill hiN UII'J' at liiL Veraoa.
·
dltlport Elentlntary.

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· . Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Dally Sentlntl
. Pomeroy-Middleport, Qhio
Monday, oc;tobtr 26, ltll

·The nightmare of Norman
. Norman Lear,. the television
p~oducer, has sent out a letter
("Dear · Friend") " more im·
portant," be said, than any be would
likely send out if he were to live 1,000
years, and this may not be an
eitaggeration. The purpose of that
letter is to rslse money for
something called People for the
American Way. This tax-deductible
organization is del-oliill' 'ttl ·~e~
communications l!&gt;t.
c seeking to liido
hief being d01ll
y
Je" religious !l"gures who have
been sa vocal in recent months.
"The danger of the Religious New
Right is not that they are speaking
out on political issues, which is their
i-ight, if not their obligation; It is the
way they attack the integrity and
character of anyone who does not
stand with them."
. One reads on quickly to find exampies set by old practices. "Accusations such as 'he voted for the
Department of Education' con·
!ributed to the defeat of these
legislators" - ·Mr. Lear cites the
defeat of John-Culver, Birch Bayh,
Frank Church and George
McGovern. among others.
· "If that sounds suspicious," Lear
goes on, "listen to Richard Zoae,
head of Christian Voice, who said,
'We can talk about a balanced
budget as a moral issue because the
Bible says 'you should not live in
debt.' " And so on: Mr. Lear's

)".

:

LA .n ips Yankees to take series
LOS ANGELES (AP) - 1be lood

LeaarL.----,-,-----Wi-:-'!'_ia_m..:__F._B_uc_kt_er_Jr.

is devoted to our sinner - but why should we be . illiterate and·overbearing. His son· seeks, in a word, to shove off all way, defeated Georse Mc:Gow&amp;n.
the very
"pluralistic society" and opposed to angry at it being brouPI up? The in-law, a political liberal, a bright, those superstitions that trace to the And so Nonnan Lear .
institution
of
pluralism
threatened.
the current ·!hreat to "the very Bible concerns itself with a great brave, generOus, literate and con· Old, or the New Testaments.
"Dear Mr. Lear: This may be the '
Because you see, they are a laughing
essence of individuality."
many things, and 111.1 not.diffiCult to , cemed.
most
important letter I will addrels
It is all, really, quite confusing.· understand that there is a moral
No conservative hero goes un- matter. Like religlon.
to
you
If !live 1,000 yean. Haven1
Mr, Lear was very active in 1980 in
. For instance, do we· understand that dimension to the matter of a society tarnished in "All in the Family," no
you
made
the mistake of viewing
it is a threat to tbe democratic way living beyond its means.
conaervative tenets unscorned. ·the presidential primaries, seeking
pluralism
..
one's right to defy the
of life to say .abOut a candidate that
A society that goes into &lt;lebt Is Yollll8 liberals live openly with girls to. give Jeuy Brown to the republic
beliefs
of
others
and eam their vote
be voted for the Department of engaged in a transfer of lllcOI!Ij!, for before they are mlliTied. They scorn as its p~dent. Instead, the country
Education? A moderately resour;,._ those who owe the debt (the whol~_of • ~ r:_e.!l.f..~ .. ~~o!'~.• -: . .~ar elected Ronald ~gan and, on the by doing so• Yours.~~~JI.m,:• ::-:... .
~
~-lr'Ml!' 'i:MieUji'W1!1ia Alnfrit'an"!l&amp;lltfl'Wt!H.to wliOifi
1f141t4 reasons for voting against the debllS ~(a few). That prac,.m •CUlver Birch Ba&gt;"h, Frank !Ice of unposmg the burden oo othel'!l
Church and George McGovern, and one can find, without diffiCulty,
only one of these would be ihat they broad !llrlctures against In the Bible.
gave us . the Department of Indeed, one of ~ Ten ComEd~cation. But why is . the mere
mandments , enJ?ms , against
menti~n ?f that vote an altack o~ the covenng one. s . -neighbOr s goods.
pluralistiC soc1ety?
Shoul? that commandment gwde
Ame~Cllns who seek go !We, acli!r. Lear made no mention of the ·cording to the words of lbe Lord. ·
National Education Asscxllatioo.
It Is one thing for a pluralistic
This, probably the most powerful society to tolerate those who scoffs!
lobby in the United States, th.e Ten Conunandment,s., B~t I see .
systematically set out to defeat no conurubnent, In pluraliam, to
everyone in Congress who had voted think less of .the commandments
against the Department of •because they are regularly abused.
Education. And inasmuch as this is l\nd nothing ~ !1M; Bill of Rlghtnan
an organization of teachers, from pre~ent an mdlvulual. from Voting
whom preswnably we non-tea.chers aga1nst those who scoff at the Ten
· have much to learn, why isn't the Commandments, nght . .
.
f'!EA an object of Mr. Lear's conNonnan Lear, of course, '" the
cern, alongside' Richard · Zone, man who gave us Archie Bunker. It
whoever he is?
IS, l think, th~ · only televisi.on
And the business about the Bible progra'!ll ever tried tomake a pomt
saying"Youshouldnotllveindebt." of vtewmg, so funny was II. But, of
Well, I am unfamiliar with the course, 1t was.~ parody, Ar~hie
· passage, and in respect of that par- · Bunker, . tbe political conserva~ve,
News item: Department of Energy may have to go.
ticular injunction I am a hopeless IS stup1d, cowardly, avariciOus,
orga~iton

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The Daily Sentinel

·-

Ill Court Strert
Pomrrny. OhliJ
&amp;lf-"2·%156

DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

'

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publls~er

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

. bsMant PubllMhf'tiCuntroller

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

•

·Nrws Editor
A MEMBER of The Associated Pre•~ , lnli!NI O.lly Prus Auodallon and the
Amerlrau Newspaper Publllhen AUOC'Iatlou.

LETrERS OF OPINION are ~~o· e\comed. They lhould be les1 thau 310 word1loDII- All
\eUers R.re subject to edltlo&amp;lilod mu1t be •lined wltb name, addres1aud telephene number. N,p uulp!!d \etten will be publlabtd. LeUen1 •h0111d ~ In JOOd ta1te, addrenlog
lfln~s. not penonallllrl.

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Reagan substitutes guns for
WASIUNGTON (AP) - Con· · The rationale behind !!eagan's
servative a011&amp;ld Reagan iB flghtlng economic policies is at odds with the
the lllition's lateSt recessiOII using thillklng of liberal economists, but
familiar liberal weapons but with a the immediate results are the same.
new-twist. He's substituting gups lor
!!eagan's chief economic adviser,
Murray L. Weidenbaum, said with
butter.
The president's ecoOOIJIIC unabashed glee this week that the
·program contains stimulative IIi&gt;: ·, economic program already in place
cuta and a deficit spending plan that contains short-term medicine for the
would make a liberal ec0110JR\81 newly declared recession along with
proud. But while Democratic ·ad- long-tenn cures for the more
ministrations fought ui\employmen( peristent problems of inflation and
by building up public works sluggish economic growth.
programs and federal assistance
~·Already baked into the cake,. If
programs for the Jobless, this you wish, are tax cuts and defense
Republican president has'persuaded spending for leading a strong
Congress·to cut aid programs and Is recovery in 1982," Weidenba'um told
pushing for a massive defense a conference of business executives.
buildup that will create new jobs.
"Even the liberals can't disagree

. ...

How not to
get conned
The old con games are alive and well, and costing the nation's con·
sWl)ers "at least $21 billion a year," ac_ording to a new, 22-page Justice
Department pamphlet titled "How Not to Be.Conned.''
Con is still slang, my dictionary says, short for the word confidence. It's
been transformed jnto a transitive verb meaning: ''To swindle a victim by
first gaining his confidence." A second, broader definition is "to trick or fool
by glib persuasion."
The point of the Justice Department's compendium of fraud is to alert
you to the various con games still thriving. The booklet was prepared as part
of a campaign run by the Crime Prevention Coalition, 42 national
organizations ranging from the AFL-CIO'to the U.S. Jaycees. The pamphlet
says:
"Free enterprise. Tbe open market. It 's the American way. And most of
the lime it works .
"Unfortunately, it works for dishonest businesses as well as honest
ones/'
.
·
So the old phrase, let the buyer beware, stili applies- everywhere.
For example:
Crooked repair people don't fix your propl~m but charge you anyway.
Some use inferior parts, others charge you for work you didn't expect and
some even "insure" fur\ber work by making sure something else soonwlll
go wrong.
Fraudulent home improvement firms offer "free" inspections or
unusually low prices for expensive joba.
Land developers can take you for a ride, expecially in the Sunbelt. Many
are required by law to file a statement with the U. S. Housing and Urban
Development Department. If you have doubts, write HUD's Office of ln..
terstate Land Sales Registration, 451 Seventh St., SW, Washington. D. C.
20410 for a copy.of the developer's property ,report. Cost: $2,50.
Those work-at-home cons are ubiquitous. The catch is that after you buy
the parts and provide the labor you expect to selllinished products back to
the parts seller- oot the company won't buy back !lie finished products.

NEW YORK (AP)- In conceding
that recession may now be upon us,
the president has descended from
the stratosphere of political dreams
to a mundane w:orld of people having
a very tongh time making .ends
IIM!Ct.
'
Millions of Americans ha.ve been
aware for months that the economy
was bogging down, and they needed
no statistics \O dcicument their
feelings. Home builders, car
dealers, job seekers, retailers )mew
the reality.
President Reagan-knew it too, but
because he had a program to seii he

was forced to dwell on the positive,
long-range aspects of his goals. He
had to llell the dream; to dwell· on
pain was counterproductive.
The Pain therefore was hardly
discussed, though the president and
his economic advisers knew that
before the dream could come there
would be a period of unemployment,
bankruptcies and business strife.
Now that these negative economic
facts of life ate with us, some of the
president's supporters are
disillusioned. The mood bas
changed. The unmentionable word
has been spoken. A new economic

L.·

b~uer

with this type of (anti-recession) . the idea behind traditional
policy," observed Manuel Johnson, Keynesian tax cuts is to put more
a deputy . assistant treasury money inio the pockets of cooawners
secretary and "supply-side" - to increase the demand for g_oods
economist.
and services.
"The whole policy can be in·
terpreted as Keynesian," Johnson
saJd, referring to the theories
The '."otivation behind Reagan's
developed in the 1930s by British plan to mcrease dele~ spending by
economist John Maynard Keynes. . .$22 billion In 1982is to strengthen the
"But we came at itfrom a·totally dlf· nation's military forces, while
ferent motivation. We didn't do it for public works programs sought in the
the recession but to fight inflation."
past by Democrats have ~n aimed
The motivation of the supplyat helping economically depressed
siders' tax cut is to stimulate areas.
savings all!~ invesbnents that can be
used to build plants and new
But the short-tenn effects of these
businesses - to increase the supply
policies are indl~tlngulshable.
of goods and services. By contrast,

When moderate Republieans are
asked where their future candidates
for national office will come from,
they often point.to .several attractive
governors currently residing in
statehouses around the country.
But two ol these governors are
likely to be fighting for their political
lives next year against some old
Democratic names. Their own
futures and those of. the moderate
wing of their party may llinge on the
outcome of their re-electioo races.
'One of them is "Big Jill)" Thornpson, who is nearing the end of his
second term .. governor of Illinois.
He is one of his state's most popular . Daniel Walker, who was the
govemors in recent memory and he State's .Deniocratic governor f~m
has recently· asswned a blgher 1973 to •1977, is a~ talking about
P.rofU~ oo· the national scene; for · chaU~nging Thompson. ~alker was
~xample, he hel!ded President
'defeated In his party's 1976 primary
Reagan's colllllljBsion on violent by Secretary of State Michael
f""ln:l!'· Thompson has long been ex· Howlett, who was subaequentiy
~to beeome a major factor in
crushed in the general 'election by
natiqnal GOP politics.
Thompson.
, · ·
' · NoW It appears that Thompaon
Tllompson's political aides are
might glve the boys more iniUative will be 'challenged for THiectiOII
quietly "leakirig" polls purporting to
to try even harder.
·
'
nexryear by lohjler U. S. Sen. Adlai show Walker to be a stronger poten.
If fans tan follow other lp&lt;ll1s ali Steveollpn IU, whose name itUI t1a1 candidate than Stevenson; they
over the alate, I thbt they should be ean-j'es SCiille magic . In IUinols are saying that 'l'hotnpljon fears
able to come out'ance • week and ..------:--...:.-, r-----...;......;_, r---....;--_......,
support aild cheer onapoup of boyl
.,
that are doing a good job of atlcking
IQ'/.,mJ
~MY
together and not giving up. - Otan,
/IN/II• .
· liCe.

Letter to the editor .,
I think the peop)e ~ the Soutbem
School District should be ll8hamed of
themoelves. I'm talldp8 about the
participation at the football games.
It's pretty bad when the boyl play
their .hearts out, then look up in the
standa and don't aee en01J8b people
to fill the bleachers, especially when
the vlaltlng team bu more people.
lnltead ol goln&amp; to tbe gamee and
baCitlnc tbe team, they lily home
and crlliclle them. Only five or m of
tbe boJ1 have ever p&amp;.yed footlJell
betcn, and I don't ~ of anyone
tblt'• perfect when they flnt 11art

out.

.
If pe41ple woold CGme out and •
part tbe te1m and the coachea, It

Walker more than be does Stevenson. But Delhoc'rats are not much
taken in by all of this and appear
ready to · give Stevenson their
nomination if be wants it.
Much the same situation is
developing in Iowa. Moderate
Republican · aobert Ray, who has.
been governor since 1969, would be
in a position to compete for national
office after winning re-election next
year. But looming on the horizon is a
· figure from out of the past: Harold
Hughes.
Hughes, a former truck driver and
recovered alcoholic, was elected
governor of Iowa in 1962. He moved
on to the U. S. Senate In 1988 and
made a brief try for the presidency
before retiring from public life in
1975 to becOme a Christian lay
missionary.
For the past live ~ears Hugbes has
run a religious retreat on
Macyland's Eaatern Sbore.jlut now
he is back in Iowa and undertremendolia preaure to run for the office
that be hi!ld 10 many years ago.
Hughes 1'1111181118 1 very popular
Ogure in Iowa; he is perhaps even
more popular today because ol his

King.

\

Support8 TB levy

LOS ANGEUES (AP) - Owner
George Steinbrenner of the New
York Yankees suffered a poaalble
broken left hand and other injuries
In what be said was an altereatioo
with two young men whOm be said
cursed blm and·attacked blm with a
beer bottle.
Steinbrenner, wearlrig a plaster ·
· east on biB left hand, also had cuts on
his right bane!. a swollen upper Up,
and a severe Jwnp oo his head. He
said received the Injuries In a flglt
.in an elevator Sunday night, several
hours after his team had dropped the
fifth game of the World Series to the
Los Angeleil Dodgers.
Steinbrenner, whO called a press
conference at 11:~ p.m. PST, said
he entered the elevator oo the lith
Door of the Hyatt Wilshire at about
8:10p.m. on his way to meet his wife
· IUid others for dinner. Steinbrenner,
Who was to be x-rayad ·when the
Yankees returned to New York
today, said be wu alone at the time
of the incident.
stelnbrenner said the men, who
were not apprehended, made
, cleragatory remarks about New
York fans and insinuated that the
Yankees, who dropped three
llf8lgbl games after heating the
Dodgers in the Ill's! two games of the
best~-seven series, were choking
onder pressure.
"It's not like an old man like me to
do this," Steinbrenner said. "It's OK
· for me to criticize my players
I pay the checb."

off, business inventories are up, new
ordel'!l for manufactw:ecJ goods are
down, Cllpacity utilization is at the
lowest level in a year, the merchandise (expoi1) trade deficit Is up,
housing iB a disaster area and the
auto Sector is in a depression.
The National &lt;\SSOCiation of Home
Builders says the failure rate of firms in construction is up 53 percent
over last year, as new-borne construction ha's dropped to less than I
millioo units a year.

recent religious activities.
SeVeral polls commissiooed by
Democrats here show Hughes to be
running only abOut 15 percent behind
'Ray. That is a lremendous showing
against a well-regarded governor
who has held office for a longer con·
tinuous period than any of his
colleagues.
·

because

SaJazar wins
·Marathon

Hug!Mis, like Stevenson, is playing
things close to the vest. He has not
said whether he will run, but a campaign committee made up of his old
supportel'!l bas started to solicit
money on his behal!. Unlike Thornpsoo, Ray has nothing tQ aay· about
· his potential cliallenger. "It's
Hughes' decision whether or not he
wants to run and it's a bridge 1 will
cross wh&lt;in I co1ne to· It," he says.
"Alii can say is that I will be a eandldate lor re-election and I think that
. the voters of Iowa will return me to
office."
·
The experts t'Onsider it likely that
both Stevenson and Hllt(hes will
decide to run for ~ovemor in 1!182. If
so, the;entire moderate wl~ u1 the
GOP will have a very large s!Hkc in
the outcome:

NEW YORK (AP) - Alberto
Saluar has ended ali the controversy aboUt the world marathon
record
The quietly; confident Saluar had
laid prior to Sunday's New York
City Marathon that. "my loal II to
. breik 2:01:33, 10 there's no doubt In
my mind or BI!Ybody else's mind
that I've sot the record."
SaJaiat left no doubts.
· rtunmnc smoothly and strongly
throusb Nn York City's five
,__..._ BaJa- covered the
arueDIDI Ill miles, 31111 yards In 2
houri, I mh•dM,13 aecoada.
.
Rll time bettered tbe dllputed
world ~ ~ 2:01:13.1, by
AIRallan Derell Claytan at AD-

--··

..---...;._ _ ___,

~

'

. . Ill&amp; jl,; lliiJ I-.card IIIIW Slin- ·

v-.

A vital service II at 1118ke November 3 wbell Me1CJ
decide the
fate of renenl ot tbe TB tu levy.
TbiJ II - PIQIII'a where the 1111rnlnlltraton JudldDIIIIJ apllld the

New

kalend

a.ratbon .
.... 11

'l'ba-.
e'l'JI==
'l

!
l

i •

'

•

p~

'

AT

Hyou have a BANK ONE six-month Super T Certificate of Deposrt, you
can most likely convert your investment to a BAN~ ONE T~ Free Ali·Sa~ers
Certificate without any interest penalty . .. and the 1nterest w1ll be tax free.
The Tax Free All-Savers Certificate provides savers with tax free interest
up to $1 ,000 on an individual return, and up to $2,000 on a joint return .. The
minimum is only $500, and an investment of $16,474 wtll earn $2,000 1n tax
free interest in one year at the current rate of 12.14%.
There. has never been anYthing like ~ before. The higher your tax bracket,
the better our Tax Free All-Savers Certificate is for you. Check the table below
to determine how much you
.IF YOU ARE A MARRIED TAXPAYER
would have to eam on an
FILING A. JOINT RETURN:
alternative investment to earn
Tauble
Mo11nal Tile rote C' lltUII 11m
. more net interest than you can
Tox otet on • tau le lnvettment
lncomet
on our AH·Savers Certificate.

$29.90().35.200

22%

15.56''

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18. 12"/o

$60,000.85.600

'
49%

23.80%

s1 a.ooo-20.200

t lllCOme and tax ratea are based on tne 1982 Federal Income lax
schedutel. tnlefest rate of 12.14% is equal to 70% of average
Investment yield on one·year Treasury Bills as of the most _
recent

'

auct~date .

Stop by any BANK ONE office and open a
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your
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·

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.,

-

BtJsbDn, May •• 1., 00 •

_ . . tbat..,.. ~ ofllclai]J' terlllllcl. Alld It - fut.er tbaa the
jl( '"' ~ lllll'k ~ 2:118:01, .
Ill by Gerlrd l'ftjboer ' ol The
Ntbrlandl April Ill, 1110 at Arnllutn
·
!Jim• a aatlft ol HIYua, Cuba,

funds
provided.
the ~
011 the N
BALLOT.- Jobn C.

.· DALE HILL.
FORD TRACTORS

'

I

politics. Stevenson, who has prac. ticed law in Chicago since his return
from Washingl.!&gt;n in January, has
not tormally expressed interest in
the race, but knowledgeable insiders
!;By that he Is under great pressure
from his party to oppose Thompson.
Early polls show , that Stevenson
could do very well In luch a contest.
Although Steve"'""'' Ms not anllOUI1Ced his intentions, Thompson is
already running hard against blm.
"I can'! think ol a single dollar Adlai
Stevenson' ever brought to llllnois,"
the governor remarked in a recent
sPeech.
·

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

Yank owner
bruised. in.
hotel fight ·

Threat to GOP moderates"'-· _ _Bo...,...b_W~_ag_ma_n
DES MOINES, Iowa (NEA) -

w..

bit Ia die bead by a ptteb from
New York Yaakeel reliever IUeb
Gouage Ia the etplb bmiDg ol
Saaday'o World Serlel game Ia
IAI AD&amp;eles. Cey wu takell from
die pme after die incldeat. (AP
Werpboto).

'

reality is upon us.
.
Less than two weeks later' the
Federal l!eserve reported that the
output of factories, mines . and
utilities fell a seasonally adjusted 0.8
percent in September, the worst
decline since June 19110. The decline
was described by a Federal Reserve
economist as widespread.
The evidence that forced the
president's admission of had times
in the economy, an admiSsion so
belatedly made that it is considered
a political blunder by some of his
supporters, Is indeed widespread.
Consider: industrisl production is

away fGr a clollb1e error. Now New IIDUhed a home nm to 11ft center
pltchen.
New York left lllx niimera on . _ York bad ~ at aecond and ftelcl. "A fairly declnt llldlr,"
Mfcted Guidry. ''A lllldlr, '' •I!Ml
,lrcm the aecond throulb the fowth third with- out. Bl&amp;ll'ouble.
Bul Reali would nat be rattled. He Guerrero, "a .JOod pltcb, ovw the
lnnlnga. Reuss aurvtftd a recordtying three errors by Dodpr oecond got eerme oo a pounct"ball, then plate.''
Tho next batter waa yeager and
baseman Davey Lapel, two ol them walked RoclriguciE intentionally,
On one play. Tho YankeM bad run- loadlns the bales. Guidry bunted 0C1 the bench, Lasorda WU atll1 .,.P.
ners at aecond IUid third with none and Reali made the play, forcing pl)'illllllllllllll~ advice. "Yeager
out and the baaes loaded with one out · Watson at the plate. Then Randolph oo biB flnt IWln&amp; put Ida weiPt on
in the third aild came away with grounded out and tile Inning was his baclt sldo," Luordll aald. "Wi
over.
yelled out to him to try and take It
nothing.
·It was to be New York's last M· easy.''
"What can you say?" wondered
"l didn't hear Tommy," the catYankee Manager Bob Lemon. "He 11euss penn!Ued only two more
got us out when we had opportunities baserunnenl the rest of the way. Bul cberconfC!IIIIed. "lwastoooclt.ecl"
the way Guidry was pitching, It
He then hit a 1·2 pitch for IIIIOther
to·Score.''
The Yankees nicked Re1111 for a looked like this might be a loet home run and the lead. "A futball,"
run in. the second when Reate cause. The slender Yankee left. aatd Guidry. "Maybe I put that In i
merely mowing doWil - littio bit of uweet spot" ·
·
Jackaon opened with a double and hander
It couldn't have been ...eeter lor
Lopes made his first error oo a the Dodgel'!l, rellrinC IO.in a row and
the Dodgen.
grounder by Bob Watson. Lou 15 of16 over one stretch.
Now, with one out in the seventh, it
PinleUa followed with an RBI-.lngle
to·left and New York seemed poised
was getting
toward
GooSe
and the last
person
the Gossage
Dodgers
to do some real damage .. But Reuss lime
shut the door, gewDg Rick Cerone to wanted to see was the a~ of the
bang into a double play and AureUo Yankee bullpen.
·"If he had looked $haky at all, he
Ilodriguez to roll out.
In the third, Willie Randolph wouldn't have pitched the aeventh,"
walked with one out and Larry Lemon said. "He was c&lt;imlng out af.
MilbOurne singled. But ReWIS wasn't ter seven, no matter •hat."
The Dodgers sensed the same
budging. He got Dave Wlnfleld on a
thing.
On the bench, Lasorda urged
force play growlder and struck out.
215 W. Main
Gue!TClro
to take it easy on biB
the dangerous Jackson, ending the
swing.
inning.
Pomeroy
"You saw Guerrero the first time
The next crisis was in the fourth
upi'
he
said.
"He
looked
like
he
was
inning. Watson, leading off, walked.
992·26~8
PinleUa grounded to Lopes, who first swinging too hard."
So
swinging
softly,
Guerrero
bobbled the ball and then threw it

JUT BY A PITCH - Loll
AD&amp;eles Dodcen batter Ron Cey
lies crumpled at die feet olllome
plate umpire Rleb Garcia as Garda calli lor belp after Cey wu

Statistics not 'n eeded to document feelings

'Supp()rt our team!

book of bueballltlitecY uys otartlng ptteben .-1 four daya off ......
-~for muimumef·
Ocleacy. Los Angelea Manaler Tom
Lasorda, a tradllionalllt, Ia not one
to tgncn age-old advice like that.
That as ma.u anythlns Ia why
the Dodgers sland today on the
threshold of the . world cham- ·
piOIIIblp. They will send Burt Hooton
out to nail It down In Game 6 of the
World sertes Tueedlly night in New
York with the suddenly.flounderlng
Yankees hoPing. to otay alive with
TommyJobn.
Hooton will have full five days of
rest, Just as Jerry l!eU88 did wllen he
ltred a brllliant· five-bitter to beat
Ron Guidry and the Yankees ~I Sunday, giving Los Angeles Ita .third
stralgbt victory and a s-2 edge In the
best«-eeven aeries. ·
·
()onsecatlve home n.ns by Pedro
Guerrero and Steve Yeager in the
aeventh Inning delivered the victory .
· to Los Angeles. But it was abrilliant
pitchinl Job by l!eU88 following a
COIII'IIIeGUS IJIIIIIIIIIC!rial decision by
Lasorda wblch set the stage for lt.
Pitcher Bob Welch never retired a
batter but the Dodger bullpen
delivered an 1-7 victory in an en.durance test Saturday. And you only
bad to -l!eU88'pilch in the final in·
nings Sunday to know Lasorda had
made the right decision abOut his

-BANKONETM Maillbaf FDIC

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�October

Miami's Jay l'etelwl ruahed for
Def... c1nmfneW Ute
four touchdowDa. 'nd"d'"l one cliO
yarda, .. be picked up 1Jt yardlln Mlc:hlpii-8IU .........
elgbt
carrlea, wblle leammale Greg Georp bit Cliff Reed 011 I lt-lrard
Conference coUege (ootball race
Jones
added 141 . yards and one acoriDI pul play ud Eart
heading Into the final four games ol
ter1an ldded a &amp;-,.,-cl touclldawn run
touchdown
In 33 atlempU.
the aeaaon, but he's sllU not a happy
Coach Brian Bum Ill the IIGbcata for the Broni:GL "Our
wu
man.
"It's a 10118)1 feellng to be In flrat lllld, "We made Greg Jllllelllook Wte better than theln - jlllt fiiiDIIIh · place, It means abaolutely nothing, an All-American, and he's an and that's the dlffereoee," lllld
because every flrstillace team haa ouslandlng player In his own rlsht·" · Westem Michigan C&lt;lach EWot
"I hav~ no Idea what happened," Uzelac.
losl thil year," Reed noted after
Ball State mentDr Dwlgbt Wallace
Miami routed Ohio University *'14 Toledo Coach Chuck Stobart lllld ol
Saturday to take the conference lead the Rocketa' ambush at Bowling h8dslmllar-tlmeata,~ "We
are never pteaMI with the !IUiaJme
Green. "It's fruslratlng."
from Toledo.
Falcons C&lt;lach Denny Stolz lllld, when we klee, but rm ab •DOiy
Reed may have· good reason to
fret. be!:lluse the Redaldna visit "We jusl warited the rest ol the proudofourdefea~e."
Eastern Mlcblpn led 7-a at half.
Toledo nat weekend with the league to know we're aWl In it."
Rockets anxious to recover frDin a Bryant Jrines rushed for 127 yards Ume and tbreelened to end I 14surprisiJ138-0 defeat at the banda ol and three touchdowns to lead the game 108inl! atreak, but l'IJlrtbem
Jlllnols dcmlnated the aec:uici ball 88
backyard rival Bowling Green. Fakons.
Central Michigan' s Herb . Joe Law ran 14 yards fill' a touchElsewhere, Central Michigan
downed Kent State 24-3, Westem Delonltill was pleaaed · that biB . down and set Ull anotherCIII 114-yard
\
I
Micbgan defeated Ball State 1~ and defenoe held Kent State to 3 yartb daah.
Huskies Coach Bill M8IIOry was
Northern Illinois won 36-7 over ruahing. "It played 88 hard ~ lt
could to get to Kent's qUIIl'lerback," upset with biB defenoe droppinc Biz
Eastem Michigan.
Miami leads the conference with a heaald.
potential lntercepti11118. "If ,we had
Kent State Coach Ed Chlebek lllld caught every Interception, 'ol the
4-0-1 mark. Central Michigan and
Toledo are tied for second at' 4-1, a thinHpwter goal-line sland by season, we would be In the 1esd In
followed by Ohio and Weslem CenlraiMlc!biganturnedthecontest the league," be aald. Eutern
Micblgan at 3-2, Bowling Green at 2- around. "A touchdown then would Michigan Coach Mike Stocli: aaw the
2rl, Kent State at 2-3, Ball State and have made It 17-7 and changed the third quarter 88 nqt troubleaome,
Northern Illinois at 1-4 and Eastem' COIDplezion Ill the game," he lllld. aaylng, "The field pcllitloo was
Reggie Mitchell ran for 1~ yards atrocious for us."
MichiganatG-4.
..,._APWirel
Miami C&lt;lach Tcm Reed haa biB
J!edoklno atop the Mid-American

¥"*'

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W~1 ... x

COMING ~OUGH - Baltimore Colt I'IIDIIIDg
back Curtis Dickey, left, stUf'llrms Clenland BroWIIll
defender Cl,areoce Seoit (22) aside during a .run 1n the

Saaday'• game ID Clevelaud;Dickey

and the
didn't fare too wen lor the day, I011Dg4228 to the BI'OWDS. (AP Laserplloto).

Hipple restores roar
·in Detroit's offense
By Associated Press
Eric Hippie, just a few weeks
removed from the third-string quar·
.terback job, is putting the roar back
into the Detroit Uons ..
Hipple, given the starting signalcaller's role when Gary Danielson
· was injured and backup Jeff Kornlo
was ineffective, has help put 79
.Detroit points on the scoreboard in
the two National Football League
games he has started in six dsys.
In the Mondsy night victory_ over
Chicago and Sundny's thrilling, 31-27
triumph over the Green Bay
Packers, Hippie has passed for 607
yards and live touchdowns and run
·for four more scores.
'
"I had more coufidence In my
ability to read the defensive
coverage today," Hipple said of his
second start. "I was thinking- all
game that we had to win today to
stay In the race. Winning this light
game will help our momentum. Mter losing tile close games early in
the season, this shows we can win
them, too."
The Uons, who improved their
record to 4-4 with the victory, didn't
•' take the lead for good until there was
1:54 remaining in the game, when
Hipple climaxed a 76-yard, 12-play
drive with a 5-yard TD run on a
; quarterback draw play.
:, . Hipple, a 19110 fourth-round draft
' pick out of Utah State, completed 20
~ of 37 passes for 271 yards in Sunday's
' game. He also ran 6 yards for a firstperiod touchdown and passed 1 yard
to tight end David Hill for a TD in the
: ~ second period.
-:· : Detroit's.other ppinls came when
· Rick Kane, subbing for the injured
~ . Billy Sims for the second straight
·· · week, scored on a 2-yard run in the
&lt;· third quarter and Eddie Murray
booted a 37-yard field goal.
·.' Ellis and quarterback David
Whitehurst, who came off the bench
~, when Green Bay starter Lynn
: : Dickey hurt his back in the second

:: : quarter, teamed for a 46-yard touch:; down pass in the third quarter.

Archiegoal
Manning
reserve
running
field
In the hit
fourth
quarter
and
hack Wayne Wilson on a 19-yard
scoring toss with 6:38 left !or the

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POMEROY, OHIO

''

$588

&gt;'

'.

'

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. ::: '
'
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::

:'

HANGING ONTO A SAINT - Clttcloall dofeaolve ead Eddie Edwards loeb hll 111'1111 U'llllllll New Orleattl 11a1a11 qarterbacli: .treble
Manning for a J.Z.,.,-cllou Saaday ln tbe llllpetdume. Munlncled tbe
Salata tea17·7upaet win._(AP l.elerpllofo).

Doorehett
Nlghtwl•ncl ·

....~:.: ·~::::::::;;~~~~~~~~;;~~~:::::::;:;l
GOSPEL MiniNG
''.

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Here 11 a rani value In a bldroom OI'(Mip:
Till warm rich dni'k pine flnlah t11ftl tile
CO\Infi'Y look. Tilt blnutlful br... pullllflcl
the frnllhlll9 touch ta ttlliiOVIIV group.
.

EACH EVE.NING AT 7:30

sunday Services: MornlnglO:OO, Evenlng6:00
Evangelist: Paul Keller
Paragould, Arkansas

IAKIR FURNttUIE

POMEROY - The COAD senior
nutrition program menu for the
Meigs Senior Citizena Center has
beenselfortheweek. It includes.
Monday - M.re&amp;roni and cheese,
brussel sprouts, . buttered . lima
beana, rice pudding, bread, butter,
·

Tuesday .:.. Oven fried chicken,
In just a feY/ days, Sc:ores of little · Inspected at hoine. Middleport
mashed potatoes, carrot pennies,
ghoota . and gobllna will fill the Police Chief J . J . Cremeans advises
.streets of the vUiages In Melga Coun- parents to discard any candy or apricoll, bread, butter milk.
Wednesday - Scalloped potatoes
ty. In Middleport, Pomeroy, and l!lher treats tbat are unwrapped er
Rutlapd, Trick-or-Treat Night will lippear to be opened. He also recoinand dressing,
with ham,
buttered purple
peas, plums,
tossed
be observed from 1:30 untJI 7:30 mends that fruit be carefully ln. salad
p.m., on Thursday, October 29. Since spected and washed and peeled
safety Is Important to both children before a child eats it. Some parents
and adults at Halloween, Meigs like to slice fruit into small pieces
Local teachers offer these beforegivingittochildren.
suggestions to Insure' a safe evening
foraU.
,
Traffic safety rules are learned In
scltool, but an excited child may
;,1 · tostumea for children can he safe forget to look .. both ways before
as ' well as scary. Whether, the daShing acr088 vlllage street. The
Week of Oet. 21, 1981
coatume Is purcha~ ' or put darkness of, the evening hour lnMeigs Couoty.
togetllet from clothes boxes In the . creases the danger of an accident.
attic, piU'ellts should take care that Youngsters need to be reminded ol
Bookmobile service In Meigs
it does not drag on the ground to trip safety rules. SmaU children should County is brought to you , by the
little feel, and that aU pieces of the be accompanied by a parent or an Meigs County Public Ubrary under
costume are sewed or fastened older brother or sister. Other contract with the Ohio Valley ·Area
securely~ A youngster caruiot have children may travel In groups or use
Ubraries.
fun If he haa to use one hand to hold. the buddy system. I.n general,' people
biB outfit together. Put strips ol are cautioUs on Halloween, but
Bookmobile schedule:
reflecting tape on costumes, drivers must remember to look out
Tuesday, Oct. 27 - Portiand Post
especially dark oaea, to Increase·a for trick'&lt;ll'-treaters as they travel·
child's visibility. Leave masks that through the neighborhood streets. Office 3:1().3:40, Success R"*d (near
obstruct vision at home or aave them Residents who welcome the 39060) 4:15-4:.45, Reedsville-Reed's
for Indoor partieS. Local stores offer . HaUoween beggars should turn their Store ii-6:50, Tuppers· Plains, Ar·
, . ~naive Halloween mak&amp;-up, In- porch lights on as a signal; the light baugh6:3M.
cluding a realistic "blood." Regular will also help to Insure safety on
•. Upallck and colored eY. make-up their property. A flashlight or \)lher
Thursday, Oct. 29 - Tuppers
; can also be used. Green eye shadow Halloween light will enable a child to Plains
Ludwick's 11:20-11:$0,
and white face powder make a great spot obstacles, · and it. will help to . Pomeory Health Care Center 1:30monstet face. Wrinkles and acars make him more visible to mot!lrisla. 2:30, Letart Falls Effie's Rest 3:35: can be drawn In with eye color
4:20; Racine Bank 4:45-5:4ti,
atlgb. Children can carry white or . Chief Cremeans said recenity th8t Syracuse Pool6-7.
shiny plaatlc bags to coUect their vandalism and accidents at
loot. If that old stand-by. the grocery Halloween in Middleport have been
Drop by your nearest bookmobile
aack Is used, put some reflecting
at a mi¢mwn In the last several for free entertainment and intape on it.
years. He commented, however, formation for people of all ages. We
that even one accident Is 1111e too have how-t&lt;Hio-its on everything
Aa difficult u It may be lor them, many when children are Involved. :from
auto repair to dieting, many
children should be cautioned never Meigs teachers agree. Happy
paperbacks,
and access to all the to eat any treatS until they have beeJ1I Halloween!
libraries in the area to take care of
your Information needs. The bookmobile staff will look forward to
seeing you!

b read, butte r, milk .
Thursday - Liver and onions,
creamed po~Jtoea, buttered spinach,
peanut butter cookie, cornbread,
butter, milk.
Friday - Fried .pork chop, sweet
potatoes, buttered cabbage, red
fruited gelatin, roll, butter, milk.
Coffee, tea and a choice of whole
milk pr buttermilt served daily.
Please register in advance for your
lunch. Pomeroy 992-2161.

Tuesday

•

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleporl PTO will meet !II 7:30
MOnday night at the school. Candidates for the Meigs Local
School District Board of
Education will be presented and
open house will be observed
foUOIIing the meetilqj.
A room count award of $15 will
be given to the class with the
most parents present. Third
grade mothers will be hostesses,
.and the lhird grade class will lead
in the pledge. There will be a
supervised nursery.
On Thursday night when trick
and treat will be observed in the
community; Middleport PTO ·
mothers will be painllng faces at
the school fO)' a 50 cent charge.

MEIGS Area Hollness
Associaton Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
at the Middleport Churchof the
Nazarene. Rev. Robert Miller,
pastor of the Laurel. CUff Free
Methodist Church guest speaker.
Public invited.
.

MEIGS Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, Monday, 7:30 p.m. home
of Mrs. Harry Davis.

HARRISONVILlE - Golden
Age Club, Harrisonville,
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at the town ball.
All members urged to attend.

MEIGS County Regional Planning Commission quarterly
meeting, 3:10p.m. Monday at the
Farmers Bank Building conference room. Tax map update,
acc.ss road and congregate
housing will be among the
current projects to be dlscliBSed.

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion
Auxliary, both senior and junior,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at the Legion
ball. Program on education.

'

POMEROY Past Matrons
Club, to entertain the Middleport
Past 1\latrons Club, Meigs Inn,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

Wednesday
OHIO VALLEY Commandery
24 will meet at·7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Officers are to take their
swords, belts and chapeaux for
full form opening rehearsal.

-

contacts, develop fr.e sh Interests
end gr~atlv expand your present
horizons. .
,
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Be
hopeful regarding Important lm·
pbrtant Issues today. If your at·
· Illude Is optimistic, you'll per·

form so a! lo transform dreams

Into realltln.
. '$AGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Gec •
211 You have a unique tolent
today lor Pilling otherl vitally lnternlect and willing to asalll you
In lhl.l lll mort benefiCial to. YOU
thin they .,., to""'"'·
CAPRICORN (Gee. 22-Jon. 191
~ llatener today whe~
with friends w~o expouse
progreUive Ideas. Somelhlrig
ttoay MY
put you on the track
IDI tidY
II.

a. •

i1'

""UA lUI (JH. 21-FH. 191
DOn't be IOorful of chollenglng or

.

ocr. 26 t1vu 30 ,

IVIRYONI WILCOMI

..•

meet and mix with new groups.
"(ou will make many valuable

CHURCH OF CHRIST .
DATE:

eigs Local Teachers Association

October 27,1Hl
advantag" of 4ny op·
portunltles this cominG vear to

'

200 WEST MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO

and· soloist. A year .later he toured Cat!sllrs Palace bac\&lt;lng up Tom
with the bBnd and Frank Sinatra, Jr. . JOneS and :.Vayne Ne)VIon. Larty has
'1be · group appeared numerous proved to be an Invaluable a(!dition
time.! on the Merv Griffin Show '1be to the Glenn MWer Ort!hestra and a
Tonight Show end the Mike Do,;giall great· attraction lor its world-wide
Show. O'Brien later appeared at the audience, •

COAD program menu

Tak~ '

Triple Drener
Mr. &amp; Mn. Hutch MinOr

•

O'Brien, director of The Glenn Miller Orchestra

Astrograph

COMPLETE
BEDROOM SUITE
,,•.i.

IU'I'IIIIgernenla ol the original' band,
organized by Gl- Miller In the 408:

Monday

a

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..._,

.

Social Calendar

Bookmobile
schedule

Country
Pine·

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...

MIDDLEPORT-A c:cwered dish
·. luncheon W88 enjoyed by members
Of the Women's A1UIIIary o1 the
United PentecGetal Cburch, Middleport, Tueodi!Y at the churcb.
Plans were made for a public
chicken noodle dinner 011 Nov. 13
during the t.•"'"ess meeting which
followed. A game, "How wen Do
You Know Your Partner" W88 .,..
dueled with Pam · MWbone as· the
winner. She also won the door prize.
Attending were Bonnie Baker,
.,Joyce Sauters, Mabel Pierman,
'Allee Priddy, Marjorie Doublas,
Amanda Eastinan, Sheryl Lambert,
Mary Nottingham, Carla Nottingham, Pam Mlllhone, Sharon
Wilt, Mae Mason, Cledlth King, eon.
nie Moodispaugh, Bonnie Copplck,
Barbara Pooler, Rita Arnold, and
JeanKelly.
·

..

r-----------~=====================::!

ing .and 8% for 2nd booking and a FREET·
Shirt for each additional booking.
992-2462

Pentecostal auxiliary

milk.

...----....----·
·
HAVE AT-SHIRT PARTY!
234 MAIN

waa held on NamibUI, South Wl!lll
MIDDLEPORT-Holiday
plai!S
Africa, the CDIIDtry being lltudled
A therapy prGiralll fill' the learftl'e
made
durln8
a
recent
meeting
this
yea.- f« foreign relall-. The
Din&amp; dlaalllllty aad ........a.... IDII)o
of
the
Junler
American
Lecion
Sdlool
for the BUnd and Deal In
tally retarded cia
at lilt 'lwler
Allllllary o1 Feeney-Bennett Po1!t Namibia wiD be ustetect by the
Elomealary Scbool .... held juniors.
Uy br the Shade Valley Council ol Ul, Mlddlepart.
SheUy
Fa
presided
at
the
mee11ng
A letler was oent to the Sanduaky
Floral Aria.
at
wblch
lime
the
group
decided
to
Veterans
H011pltal for the name ol a
The IS atudenta In the two classes
sell
candles
88
a
money
making
"gnindpa"
to · be "adopted" for
, dlaculsed buckeye a- and then
Jll1jjeet.
At
the
November
meeting
,
~
dlll'inl the year.
bed a worbhop where theY made
they
will
draw
niunes
for
the
annual
Repor1ed
Ill
were Tracy Ricbnecklacea 1lliDg macrame cord and
Cbrlstmaa
party.
mood
and
Mindy
Harrla. Pizza and
strung buckeyel.
Sue
Parsons,
chaplain,
had
the
pop
were
served
to
the group. Others
Member Ill ibe garden club .
opening
prayer,
and
the
pledge
r1
attending
were
Lois
Roush, Sue Parllllllisllng were Mra. Carol' Erwin,
allegiance
w88
given
In
unison.
IIOIIS, Shelly Fox, Sherry Fa, Kim
Mn. Debbie G - . and Mra.
Melanie ~ Trick or treat Margie Smith and Rhonda Me- Deem, Chriaay Richmond, and
baga ol candy were given to meJDo Daniela, pr1J81M!Ctive memben, at- leaders, Martha Hanel, Olrlstal
Richmond, and Betty Tyree.
bers 88 refreehmenta. NeziiiOIIIIon tended . the meeting. A dlscuaaloo
will be a Halloween party on Friday.
'

-t

The 01 cbesba will feature all the old
favorites 88 wen 88 IIOIDI! ol the
newer IWioo, ~to O'Brien.
'1be.Br' pqriiCJI! ol the evening will
be' concert style With the 1asl portion
open for both OOnlng and danctng. ·
Larry O'Brien fonnerly lollffil
with the Sammy !{aye Orcbeatra,
the Ray Eberle Band and the Buddy.
Morrow Band. In 1962 he performed· ·•
with the Sam Donahue/Tommy Doraey Orcheatra as teed trombonist

•

Junior to.:~uxiliary'

Shade Valley

'1be Glenn M!lferOrcbaib a, under
the direction ol Larry O'Brien, wiD
a~ attbO ·
. Natlooal Guard Armory, north of
~
Point Pleaaant on 'l'lluniday, Oc'•· toiler 29 ate p.m.
Sponsored by the Muon County
" Gallerle8 of Interest, lac., the con", ~wlllklckolftbeHUOnf&lt;ll'.
., the 'organlzation. Dna f&lt;ll' the affair
will be aeml-formalln lleeplag with
the "big bend era" tndltlon. Admiulon will be f7 .10 per penon Iii
advance and $8 at the door. Tickets
ere· ivallable at at11ena NatiON! ·
Bank, The Peoples Bank, The
• Gazebo and '1be Music Boa In PoiN
.· . Pleuant, Health Aid Pha,rmacy ui
New Haven and Bernadine's . of
. GaWpolla. Sei-UJMI ol Ice and cblpa
wtll'be &amp;Old.
. Tile orchellra Is.the only musical
organization )egally autllorlzed to
cary the 1111111e ol the Glenn MWer
.,' Orchestra
and the only one to play
the . authentic and o~lglnal

·"

Rutigliano.
StiU, the Colts Ignored the halftime deficit and acored ·two quick
third-quarter touchdoWns to pull
within 28-21 •
One came on a bizarre blocked
field goal attempt by Colts kicker
Mike Wood. The loose ball was
scooped up by Reese McCall, who
lateraled to Robert Pratt, who In
tum bounced a lateral to bolder
Greg Landry. Landry .ran the ball in
from 11 yards out.
Minutes later, following a Slpe Interception, Jdnes connected with
Ray BuUer on a 36-yard scoring
pass.

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

'..

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Browns bomb Colts; 42-28

CLEVELAND (AP) - The and 40 yards to Dave Logan ..: and a
atallatlcs .compiled by Cleveland 2-yard run by Charles White.
Saints' other TO.
"Today, we came out loaded lor
Browns quarterback Brian Sipe
Giants Zl, Falco111 Z4
bear,"
Slpe &amp;aid. "We went back to
were
astounding.
The
fact
that
they
New York won its third In a row afthe
basics,
to the things that have
came
ljgalnst
the
Baltimore
Colts
ter a 2-3 slarl when Joe Danelo
worked
for
us
for three years."
was
not.
kicked a 46-yard field goal with 5:40
The
return
of
6-foot-li Logan, who
"Defensively,
I
think
they
were
a
remaining in overtime tO cap a
missed
mosl
of
three
game8 with a
little
outmanned,"
Sipe
said,
comeback victory agalnat AUanta.
rib
Injury,
was
the
mosllmportant
perhaps
being
too
kind
to
a
Danelo's field goal came after
Brad Van Pelt feU on a Willian) An- Baltimore d•fense that had jusl factor In the offensive explosion.
"A guy like Logan is an inunense
allowed 562 tot.: I yards and 444 yards
drews fumble at the Atlanta 31.
talent
aruj has a domino effect on the
paaalngboth
&amp;"owns'
records.
The Giants, whoae only points In
offense,"
said Browns Coach Sam
Sipe
CDIDpleted
:;o
of
41
passes,
Inthe first balf came on a blocked punt
cluding
two
streaks
of
II
straight,
recovery by Mike Dennis, feU behind
17-7 in the third quarter before Phil for four touchdowns os Cleveland
Ohio High Se•ool Foetball
Simms completed seven·of 10 passes outscored Baltimore 42-28 In . a
By The Auoclaced Prell
lor 170 yards and t)!O touchdowns National Football League game S'unSaturdly'l ReiMitl
day.
Akron Fimtone 6,' Akron Kenmore 0
within a 7:33 span~the second half.
Arcanum 40, National TraU 0
Bills9,BI'OII&lt;087
. The loss WIIS the Colts' seventh
Ashtabula St. Jolm 14, Madilwn 0
Ayerav:llle 31, Wayne Trace 0
Nick Mike-Mayer drilled biB third straight, and marked the third
Beachwood 39, Richmond Hb. 0
field goal of the day with one second straight time they bad surrendered
BeUaire 42, Weirton, W. Va. U
BeUaite st. John 21, Zanes. Rosea-an:~ 0
remaining to give Buffalo Its victory more than 40 points. They entered
BoarWnan 3S, Slerllng, Mich., 0
the game as the NFL's mos1
in a defensive struggle with Denver.
Cin. PurceU·Marian 19, Fairfield 14
Cleve. Benedictine %1, Cleve. Central
Joe Cribbs, who rushed 24 times generous team, having given up 229
Colli. '
for 123 yards, set up Mike-Mayer's . points in seven previous outings.
Cleve. CoUin...ood · 0, Oeve. Uncoln-W.
'1be Browns, 4-4, ran up a 28-7 half- 0, tie
36-yard kick with 21 yards on four
Cleve. Hawken 26, Cleve. Univen~i ty 21
lime' lead behind three ol Sipe's
carries in the final drive.
Cleve. Hay 16, Cleve. W. Tedl 0
·
touchdowns - I yard to Ozzle
L1eve. Holy Name 9, Elyria W. 0
The Broncos' only points came on
Cleve. st. Joseph "n , Cleve. St. lttllltius
a 36-yard pass from Craig Morton to Newsome, 22 yards to Greg Pruitt 20
.
Steve Watson.
f9eril zo, Rama17
San Francisco beat Los Angeles at
home for the first time since 1966' aa
Joe Montana threw a pair of flrsl·
period touchdown passes and later
set up two field goals.
Montana hit Freddie Solomon with
And receive a fREE T·Shirt and receive
a 14-yard TD pass and connected
10% Off in Merchandise on Sales. Contact Jo
with Dwight Clark on a 41-yarder to
Ann Newsome, 992-3382 or Cathie Wood,
give the 49ers a 1-Hl lead.
949-2358.
The 49ers, 6-2, won their fifth
straight game and Increased their
lead in the NFC Weat to two games
Receive 10% of Total Sales, 5% for 1st book·
over the Rams and Atlanta.

Before he was injured, Dickey connected with James Lofton for a 75yard TD pass in the first period and
place-kicker Jan Stenerud booted
field goals of 27 and 39 yards for the
Packers, 2-6.
In other NFL games, Chicago
shocked San Diego 20-17 in overtime,
the New Orleans Saints upset Cincinnati 17-7, Buffalo halted Denver 97, Cleveland bombed Baltimore 4228, the New York Giants stopped
Atlanta 27-24 in overtime,
Philadelphia beat Tampa Bay 20-io,
St. Louis blasted Minnesota :ro-17,
Washington edged New England 24: 22, Seattle stunned the New York
Jets 19-3, Dallas nipped Miami 28-27,
San Francisco trlnuned Los i\ngeles
20-17 and Kansas City beat Oakland
28-17.
Bears 20, Chargersl7
John Roveto kicked a 26 yard-field
goal with 5:30 left in overtime to give
Chicago a surprising victory over
pass-happy San Diego.
The Bears, beaten by an average
of 11 points in losing six of eight
· games this season, retained
possession for 48 minutes to 21 for
the Chargers by•keeping the ball on
the·ground.
An interception by Gary Fencik
set up Roveto's winning field goal.
The Chargers had tied the game on a
3!1-yard touchdown ppss from Dan
Fouts to Wes Chandler with I :40 left
in regulation time.
Salota 17 Beogals 7
George Rogers, the top pick in the
1981 draft, broke a scoreless tie with
a 19-:.&lt;~!'&lt;1. touchdown run to lead New
Orleans, l.:J.it lalli..):~ar, to Its upset
victory over Cinciruiall;-the' firstplace team · in the American ConCawboys 28, Dolpblna Zl
ference Central Division:
Danny White completed two
Rogers carried 31 times for 113 touchdown passes in a 31-second
yards, his third straight 100-yard span late In the fourth quarter to ralrushing game and fifth of the season. lY. Dallas over Miami.
•
Benny Ricardo kicked a 38-yard

~

Sentinel-Page-S

The

Area groups hold meetings

.

Miami
coach
isn't
happy ~
.

·~.... ~.,

Ohio

Miller band
.
will perform
Thursday ·

Ohio

,~.

1,.1

competitive oltuatlona today.
W'l-'1 the chips are down. the
.mart m....-, will' be betting
you.' II ~...,. 0111 on top.

t'liCII ".... 21-MI,. :Ill

Put more filth 11! the ..,.IUIIIOIII '
·you make IDdeY r•lher 111111 In
lite JIICIIIIMnl of othel'l. The way
you -lhllllll llltoufd be more
ontarvet.
·
Altt•s IMIII'clt 11-A...... 1"
Don't Will for thlll(ll to ~~~­
todly. UH yaur lnltletlva In met. ~ you wont cflenVtd. Control

OPIN DAILY N
,

vour destiny rather than le"lng II

control you.

iUSPSII$-. .1

ADivlliea of Mltldmedla,IIM'.

Ideas.

Publiahed every afternoon, Mondly threu&amp;h

Give the collective goal J)rlorlty.
GEMINI CMoy 21-June 20) This
Is a gOQG day to attend lo the little

Frida)', 111 Court Street. by the Ohio V1Uey

things which need fixing around

vour . residence. Doing to now
may save you from big bills later.
CANCER (June 21•July 221

Seek SOCiable ac11VIIIH which
also effor&lt;l you pleasurable exer·
else today. Find an energetic .
companion for a brisk walk or
jog,

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You
should be rother fortunate In
financial situations at this lime,
provided you don't let them drag
on too long. Strike while tile Iron
Is hot.
. VIRGO (Aua. 23-Aug. 221 You
llhoUid be r411her fertunete In
financial slluatlana et lhll lime,
provided you don't let thet'n drag
011 too long. Strike whllt the Iron
II hot.
'
VIRGO lAIII. D-ltpt. 22)
cm.er. may be dectlvtd by out·
ward •-•r•nc:ee todiV, but
you're llble to plerct fiCICIIII.
vou·u lhlll!ll for whit !hey
are and act eccordlngly.
·
LIBRA (Sept. :a-oct. Ul Glva
vent to your •ml&gt;ll=tocley If
lhtre II something
Ill you
want to acqUire.
your
motivations are ltrong, IUCCeD
llllkely,
·'

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

The Daily Scncinel

.

TAURUS (April 2D-May 20) In
partnership situations today,
play the' supporting role If· your
counterpart has better

.

P\ablil.llmi

Co(npany •

MuJtimedia, Inc.,

.. Pllmei"')', Oblo".S'Itll, W2·2151. Secood cllll
poltap Plld 1t Pornero)' , Ohio.

Member' 'T1!t ._~led l'r!:ol,lnlond Dol·
t.~ Auoelltion and the ArneriCIIl
per l'Ub!Yhm -uon. National
Advertillnl Repnaentatlve, Branham
llewwpoper Soloo, Ill Third ~vonue, New
Yort.NewYort 101117.

POSTMASTER' Send adclreu "' , . lllll7
Sentinel, Ill Cwrtst., ~. Ohlo 611781,
fii1IIICIIII'I' RATI!II

BY~•MM~ra..te

OnoOi!e...a
OneYeat
I

The Farmers Bank's Dress-A-D.oll, Design-A-Toy
Contest is now ope11. If you'd like to enter, stop by
the Farmers Bank and pick up your materials and
information.
The winners will be on display in 't he Farmers
Bank lobby before Cbr.istmas. All dolls and toys
will go to deserving area children at Christmas.

IUIO
14.40

Free Parking

IIUJ

In Pomeroy
Every Saturday
Thfu Christmas

IIIIGLICOPY

PafCBf!l

DoUr .... .... .... ...... .... .... 11 C.OII
nul dellrlnl to Pll' 1!10 cantor
may ,.mit in ICMnce dlred &amp;o n.e Daily' i

Farn1ers

SenliMl on • J, I or 11 monell IJub. Credit ·

----lo-blo.!!!::
trill"'~~~---­lllodlnNo~b)&gt;maii(Mi

·-

•••

~­
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Bank

.'
\h·ml!l'r I' Dil' ·•
•

•

Your

Communih· Owned Bank
-

..

--

•
•
•

•

I

•

�The Dait

.
M '0T...:=...-rl AID
1

TO 1W iii COIIIIITU110II

FULL I EllS DF A

·

''

PROPOSED BY IJIIliATIVE HliiRMi ·

TO llfE OHIO CON

TO BE BUIMIMD TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELE~ON, NOVEMBER 3, ·1911

AN\' PERSON OR ORGANIZAtiON COULD DETERMINE OHIO'S

l
I

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO TH.E OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTITUTlONAL AMEND.MENT

1

·

To amend Section
...,

35 of Article

n

of the Constitution of the
State of Ohio.

PRESENTlY, PROTECTION IS AFFORDED INJURED WORKERS
THROUGH THE BUREAU OF WORKERS' COMPENSATION AND
THE INDUSTRIAL COMMISSION.
.

f

A majority-yes vote is necessary for passage .

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED?

NO

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
ARGUMENT FOR STATE ISSUE I
This Amendment to the Ohio CoJ;!stitution permits insurance comPanies to provide coverage for workers' compensation insurance. Ohio
.in.s urance agents and their companies now are prohibited from furnishing
workers' compensation insurance to employers for their employees.
The Amendment permits competition among insurance companies
. t"
St t F
d
d
an th e eXIS mg
a e un •
The Amendment does not change the existing State Fund. lt requires
d
d
NOT h
•
. t '
d Th A
th a t a Sta t e F Un d b e mam
a me •
e men ment oes
C ange In
any Way the existing -level Of benefitS payable tO injured WOrkers.
Vote "yes' ' because the Am-endment :

l. Creates a workers' compensation choice at no cost to taxpayers.

2. Ends an outdated government monopoly. Ohio is the only major industrial state which maintains a government monopoly for workers' compensation. In fact, 44 other states have either rejected or
ignored this system begun in 1913.
!l. Auth.,rizes fr"P rompetition. Torl"y' ~ •y•t•m is rlo•P~ to rompeti
tion. This Amendment aUows hundreds of competitors to offer
their services This competition encourages better service better
•
•
.
• ·
safety, and a better pr1ce.
·

4 • I mproves

k •
WOr ers

·
F Or lOJUre
· ·
d WOr k ers, t h'15
Servu:es.

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 rec.
.
.
. .
ords m AmeriCa. Over 400,000 Ohw workers are InjUred annuaiJy.
According to the 'Ohio Insurance Fund a work injury iiJness or
· th
f
•
t
B t '
~
1•
d ea
occurs every ou~ m1nu es. et er sa1ety means. 1ewer acct~ents, fewer deaths. Th1s Amendment creat1s a powerful financial
mcentive to reduce workp~ace accidents 1 because ins urance com~
•
,
•
pan1es redu.c e thetr costs wtth 13afety programs.
6. Aims to lower
costs. CoiiiPetition rewards those who deliver the
.
__ . ,
best serVICes at the least COSt.lilgh benefits are maintained .
7 Gl'ves the fr dom t ch
·
,
ee
O
oose.
Committee For the Amendment: Robert T. Bailey, Ronald Lee ,Beckel,
.
James J. Cicchetti, Richard A.
1 DeRoberts, a nd Mary Edwards
'9

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Presently, the Ohio Workers' Compe nsation 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 Emplbyers and Workers are against State Issue I, which would
drive up the c~st 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 allowed to write Workers' Compensation, cost of insurance has
gone up, while benefit&amp; have not. correspondingly improved.
• In a recent study our Ohio Workers' Compensation system was
sixth highest in benefit&amp; paid to workers and was 11th lowest in cost to
employers ouf of 50 states.
·

ISSUE 2
.
TEXT OF PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
(I'~e language proposed to be added to
Article

.'

(Proposed by Initiative Petition)

.. . ..
.I • 1 ...

A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

·~

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YES

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S..&lt;.l.l l

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
~,·

BE ADOPTED?

, ;'
I

H

NO
Hil l

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Ohio's FAIR Amendment (for Fair and Impartial Redi!otricting:l\lt~ ·; .,.

I. Reform Ohio's system of drawing state leJialative· andl~l*~~~
sional districts through a nonpartisan method that · e
political abuse.

•

Guarantee every citizen's right to compete on an e~~h!;i~kt~
other citizens or groups for winning adeption of t
plans.
.
3. Require publication of complete and ac~urate potpU.lat:iOJ!cii4rmll•
tion for use by anyone submitting a plan.
'
4. Judge aU plans submitted on population equality and gellgil
· compactness.
5. Establish a Commission on 'Reapportionment and
whose role is limited to checking submitted plans for
annQuncing the winning plans based upon the
mula for compactness.

2.

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···'I.J

FAIR forces politicians to compete and assures the voters of~ to:·alfh~ice
on Election Day.
, ,.,
":':' ·"
FAIR eliminates the creation of odd-shaped districts, k~rl~~f.l:~~
rymandering". This type of political funny business with ·
Jines wi11 be stopped.
F ,AIR opens the political process to public participation by C!'l~t~g,~lr
competition.
·
FAIR prevents one political party from carving district nnoes, l:a~:llf'' .ean­
trol of the legislature for the next ten· years. ·
FAIR encourages, through its incentives for geographical ct~~~~:'::~~:~~
keeping neighborhoods, communities, townships and countii!jl.
districts.
' . ..
,.

.·- .- ,

Who Opposes FAIR?
Only the political bosses, whose political clout ..yould ll\!1
yllur YES vote, are opposed to the FAIR amendmen r . ·

'

r

.H &amp;

Who Supports FAIR?

l it VI

...... . .
d

,~;~~t~~~:~::~:

FAIR has been widely endorsed by Ohio
Women Vo~rs of Ohio, Ohio Farm Bureau, Ohio
.munity. and Civi_c organizations, and Democrats
dering' is wrong, I)O matter Which party does it.

believe·

Submitted by the FAIR and Impartial Redistricting Ci)iiuJiitfll'e l •ffl .
East Gay Street, Columbus, Ohio 4:1215. '

Com~ittee For the Amendment:

'f/. .•

Issue 2 is a costly and dangerous experiment wti'tt~hllo~=~~~~
representative government. Vote No on Issue 2, for the f1
. LOCAL
' '

The effort to stop out-of-state insurance conglomerates from iilfiJ.
trating our non-profit Workers' Compensation system Is so great that the
Ohio Manufacturers' A88ociation, Ohio Chamber of Commerce, Ohio State
Bar Auociation, Ohio Farm Bureau, all Ohio labor groupe, and state offi·
cials from both political parties urge you to vote NO on Iuue l.
Vote NO on State Issue 1.
·

GOVERN~ENTS

ARE IGNORED

~

·,

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11

PJDVt:&amp;:• '· •:•

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

nor.

·

•

•

ETilmc OR MINORITY REPRBSENTA110N IS REDUCED!::!"/ j

··(.

•

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Issue 2 aUows counties, cities, vllla,ell, tc&gt;wnships ann~d ~=~~~=~,,
to be divi.ded numerous·times to create leJislativu and c1
tricts. Thi.s will result in massive voter confusion and
the responsiveness and effectiveneas of our elected
create legis.Jative districts that have no relationship to
subdivieions. The cum~nt method requlrtis thRt counties
emmental units be kept intact whenever possible in drawinc
r1 --:
POLITICS NoT TAKEN OtTT OF REDIIITRICTIIIIG.~ · · ' ..
BECAUSE IOOVERNOR IS GRANTED EX&lt;;ESSIVE
Deairned to take politics out of leafalative redlatrictini,~uae, i~
fact, makes the proeeaa political by atvbitr eaceuiye power ~~
nor. Under Iaeue 2, the Govemot alonellluat cai'Ve Up PQpulalciO&gt;lheli.Ot
over 6,000 ·and no pldellnea apply to this power. Any p161\.!rblhlfted.
under Issue 2 muat u . . the population hlocke determined bJ-~' GeieJ

'

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No conlideration Ia atven to avoid spHttinc communlttlllr~~~t .,.,.._
horhooda with similar views 01' in"rellt&amp; when lo!81elatlve lin•'IIN •Ihcliii; ,

- •.
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II,

Section

2

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•

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::=!!1Rolmlni'

Plalna
Pew-

.,Sutton.

K. G..-r, Janet Sue
Grueser, Jody Gum, George G.
Gum, Jr. to Tuppen Plain!· C!feeter
Water Dlst., R. W., Bedford.
,
Norman E. Riler, dec., to Gel'
trude Estella Rizer' Cert. of Transfer, Sutton.
Cora E. Vance, dec. to Glenn G.
Vance, Cert. ofTrana., Rutland.
MeUnda J . DaYill to Jobn L. Davia,
Lola, Pomeroy.
Harley E. Gilmore, dec. 'to
()orotby L. Glbnore, Cert. of Trani".,

~~iL~tl/~~~A~~i~ ~~FlR~vPb'J~\~

THis ARTICLE.
SECTION II . NO LATER THAN THE
THIRTY FIRST DAY OFJANUARY.._III82.._AND
THEREAFTER NO LATER THAN THE THIRTIETH DAY OF SEPTEMBER IN EM:H YEAR
&amp;NDING IN QNE, THE COIIMISSION FOR
REAPPORTIONIIENT AND REDISTRICTING
SHALL ADOPT FROII AMONG THE QUAJ..
IFYING PLANS FOR GENERAL ASSEMBLY
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ·AND SENATE DISTRICTS THAT PLAN WHOSE COM·
BINEDCOMPACTNESS TOTAL IS THE HIGH·
EST, AND THAT PLAN SHALL BE IN EFFECT
UNTIL A NEW PLAN IS ADOPTED AS l'RO·
VIDEO rN THIS ARTICLE.
SECTION 16. THE COMMISSION FOR
REAPPORTIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING
SHALL MAKE AVAII.ABLE FOR PUBLIC
DISTRIBUTION THE MAPS AND LISTS OF
UNITS CONSTITUTING THE DISTRI~ IN
EACH PLAN CHOSEN PURSUANT T() THIS
ARTICLE . THE COMMISSION FOR REAP·
PORTIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING
·SHALL ALSO NUMBER EACH DISTRICT IN
EACH PLAN, BEGINNING IN EACH IN ·
STANCE WITH THE DISTRICT LOCATED· IN
THE NORTHWESTERN CORNER OF THE
STATE, BY GIVING EACH DISTRICT A CON·
SECUTIVE NUMBER FROM WEST TO EAST
AND, AFTER NUMBERING THE DISTRICT IN
THE MOST NORTHEASTERN CORNER OF
THE STATE, REPEATING THE PROCESS
FROM WEST TO EAST UNTIL ALL DISTRICTS
HAVE BEEN NUMBERED. TERMS OF
SENATORS
REPRESENTING
ODDNUMBERED DISTRICTS SHALL COMMENCE
ON JANUARY I, 1983. TERMS OF SENATORS
REPRESENTING EVEN -NUMBERED DISTRICTS SHAI.L COMMENCE ON JANUARY I,
1986.
SECTION !~ . BY UNANIMOUS VOTE
ONLY , THE COMMISSION FOR REAPPOR·

SaliBbury.
Vtrgiilla E. Hartley to Wlllam R.
Capehart, Jr., Candy K. Capehart,

1.09 A., Rutland.

appe11rs in capital letters.) •
FOR THE tENEIIAC"
BE IT RESOLVED ,BY THE PEOPLE ofi THE OF REPRESENTATION
HOUSE OF IIEPRESENTATIVE·s .
STATE OF OHIO THAT ARTICLE II, SECTION ASSEMBLY
AND NO SUCH DISTRICT !!.HALL CONTAIN A
2 OF THE CONSTITUTION OF OHIO BE
POPULATION OF LESS THAN NINETY·
AMENDED, THAT EXISTING ARTICLE XI OF
N PER CENT OR MORE THAN ONE
THE CONSTITUTION OF OHIO BE RE · SEVE.
PEALED, AND THAT NEW ARTICLE XI OF HUI'(DRED THREE PER CENT OF THE
•
THE CONSTITUTION OF OHIO BE ADOPTED, RATIO.
SECTION 7. iAJ ON OR BEFORE THE FIFAl.L TO READ AS FOLLOWS:
• ·
TEENTH DAY OF DECEMBER, U&amp;l._AND
ARTICLE u ·
THEREAFTER ON OR BEFORE THE 1UST
DAY OF JULY IN EACH YEAR ENDING IN
Section 2. Representative• ahall be elected
biennially by the eteeton of the napective houae ONE , THI! GOVERNOII SHALL MAKE DOCUof repreeentatives diatrict11; their term of office MENTS AVAILABLE FOR Pl,JBLIC DISTRI·
INDICATING THE POPULATION ,
shall commence on the tint day of Januaey next BUTION
AREA, AND .LENGTH OF PERIMETER SEG·
thereafter and continue 'two yean.
MENTS OF EACH TOWNSHIP MUNICIPAL
· Senators shall be eleded b)' the elector&amp; o( tlte CORPORATION, FI!DI';RAL CENSUS TRACT,
reapeetive aenate diatrich; their t.erm• of office AND ENUMEI\ATION DISTRICT IN THE
ahall commence on the firat day of January next STATE WHOSE POPULATION DOES NOT EX- n%~~~~~t:P s~{s'?./fT/~5TJ~~s~~~TRT~
after their election. All terma of aenatora which CEED FIVE 'fHOUSAND.
SECTION 8 OR SECTION 90F THIS ARTICLE.
commence on the ftnt day of January, 1960 shall
tB) IN THE CASE OF TOWNSHIPS, MUNIC- Ir THE COMMISSION SO REJECTS A PLAN,
be four yean, and all terms which commence on
NEXT CONSIDER THAT PLAN
the nnt day of January·, 197lahall be four year!!. IPAL CORPORATIONS_. FEDERAL CENSUS IT SHALL
COMPACTNESS TOTAL WAS NEXT
Thereafter, except for the filli!l.r_Of vacancies for TRACTS, AND ENUM,.RATION DISTRICTS WHOSE
unu:pir.d terma AND TO COMPLY WI.TH THE WHOSE POPULATIONS EXCEED FIVE HIGHEST.
SECTION 17. IF THE BOUNDARIES OF A
jlEQUIRI!lMENTS OF ARTICLE XI OF THIS THOUSAND, THE GOVERNOR SHALL DIVIDE
CONSTITUTION,aenatora ahall be elected to and EACH INTO THE SMALLEST POSSIBLE SENATE DISTRICT ARE CHANGED BY A
NUMBER OF UNITS CONTAINING POPULA· Pl.AN &lt;'&gt;DOPI'ED PURSUANT TO THIS ARTIhold olftce for: term• or four year&amp;.
TIONS NOT EXCEEDING FIVE THOUSAND, Cl.E, A SENATOR WHOSE TERM WILL NOT
AND THE GOVERNOR SHALL MAKE AVAIL· EXPIRE WITHIN TWO YEARS OF THE TIME
ARTICLE XI
ABLE, ON OR BEFORE THE FIFTEENTH THE PLAN IS ADOPTED SHALL HOLD OFDAY OF DECEMBER'" 1981, AND THEREAF· FICE FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE TERM
TER ON OR BEFOh THE FIRST· DAY OF FOR WHICH HE WAS ELECTED. IF HE IS A
JULY IN EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE._THE RESIDENT OF A NEWLY CREATED DIS·
SAME INFORMATION REQUIRED IN viVI· TRICT NOT ELECTING A SENATOR WITHIN
SION lA) O.F THIS SECTION FOR EACH SU~H TWO YEARS OF THE TIME .THE PLAN IS
UNIT.
ADOPTED. IF MORE THAN ONE SENATOR
(C) NOTWITHSTANDING THE REQUIRE· WHOSE TERM WILL NOT SO EXPIRE WOULD
MENTS OF DIVISION IBJ OF THIS SECTION , REPRESENT THE SAME DISTRICT BV FOLIF ANY FE DE RAJ; CENSUS TRACT IS FOUND LOWING THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SEC·
, NOT TO BE CONTAINED WHOLLY WITHIN A TION, THE DISTRICT SHALL BE REPREMUNICIPAL CORPORATION OR TOWNSHII!. SENTED BY THE SENATOR WHOSE FORMER
THE GOVERNOR SHALL DIVIDE THAl CONSTITUENTS MAKE UP THE LARGEST
TRACT ALONG THE OFFICIAL BOUNDARY FRACTION OF THE POPULATION OF THE
OF THE MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OR NEW DISTRICT. IN ALL OTHER CASES,
ELECTIONS SHALL BE HELD TO ENSURE
TOWNSHIP.
THAT THE TERMS OF SENATORS CONFORM
(D ) AS USED IN THIS SECTION "PERl ME·
THli: PROVISIONS OF SECTION 16 OF THIS
· TER SEGMENT" MEANS A PORTI6N OF THE TO
PERIMETER OF A TOWNSHIP, MUNICIPAL ARTICLE.
SECTION 18. THE SUPREME COURT OF
CORPORATION , FEDERAL CENSUS TRACT, OHIO
SHALl. HAVE EXCLUSIVE, ORIGINAl.
OR ENUMERATION DISTRICT, OR UNIT JURISDICTION
IN ALL CASES ARISING
THEREOF, AS ESTABLISHED IN DIVISIONS UNDER THIS ARTICLE
THE AP·
!All (8~ AND (C) OF THIS .SECTION THAT PORTIONMENT OF THEINVOLVING
FOR MEM·
CO NC1DES WITH THE PERIMETER 6 F THE HERS OF THE GENERALSTATE
ANY
STATE OR OF ANOTHER TOWNSHIP, MUNIC· PERSON MAY CHALLENGEASSEMBLY.
ANY SUBSTAN·
I PAL CORPORATION, FEDERAL CENSUS TIAL ASPECT OF AN APPORTIONMENT
TRACT, OR ENUMERATION DISTRICT , OR Pl.AN ADOPTED BY THE COMMISSION FOR
UNIT THEREOF. PERIMETER SEGMENTS
AND REDISTRICTING
AND AREAS MAY BE DETERMINED BY THE REAPPORTIONMENT
BY FILING A COMPLAINT WITH THE COURT
USE OF MAPS.
'
.
NO LATER THAN TWENTY DAYS AFTER
SECTION 8. ON THE DAY THE DOCU · THE MAPS AND LISt'S OF UNITS ARE MADE
MENtS REQUIRED IN SECTION 7 OF TillS AVAILABLE PURSUANT TO SECTION 16 OF
ARTICLE All£ FIRST MADli: AVAILABLE
FOR PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION THE GOVER· ~~li'NM1~~L~ilfA~,n~~M~A~rT~rN
NOR SHALL. BY PUBLIC NOTICERCALL FOR FORTY FIVE DAYS O,F SUCH FILING. THE
THE SUBMioSION
PLANS FO DIVIDING COURT MAY INVALIDATE THE PLAN IF IT
THE STATE INTO CONGRESSIONAL DIS - DETERMINES THAT THE PLAN CONTAINS A
TRICTS.
SUBSTANTIAL ERROR. IN THE EVENT THE
t"HE FOUR PERSONS CHOSEN BY LEGIS·
COURT INVAJ.IDATES SUCH PLAN, THE
9.
ON
THE
DAY
THE
DOCU·
SECTION
LATIVE LEADERS SHALL BE APPOINTED MENTS REQUIRED IN SECTION 7 OF THIS PLAN WHOSE COMPACTNESS TOTAL
NO LATER THAN THE SEVENTH DAY OF ARTICLE All£ FIRST MADE AVAILABLE RANKED NEXT HIGHEST SHALL BE
DECEMBER,_I98IJ. AND THEREAFTER NO FOR PUBLIC DISTRIBUTION, THE GOVER· ADOPTED BY THE COMMISSION , AND THE
LATER THAN THo; FIRST DAY OF MAY IN NOR SHALL, BY PUBLIC NOTICE , CALL FOR TIME LIMITS FOR CHAI.j.ENGING AND
EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE, AND TO- THE SUBMISSION OF PLANS FOR DIVIDING RULIN.G UPON SUCH NEW PLAN SHALL BE
GETHER WITH THE CHAIRPERSON SHALL THE STATE INTO GENERAL ASSEMBLY THE SAME AS THOSE WHICH API'LIED TO
SERVE UNTIL THE LAST DAY OF DE· HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES AND SEN- THE ORIGINAL PLAN. IF IT BECOMES
CE!IBER IN THE NEXT YEAR ENDING IN ATE
NECESSARY TO THE IIIPLEMENTATION OF
DISTRICTS.
ZERO. IN THE EVENT OF A VACANCY ON
A DECISION ARISING UNDER THIS ART!·
SECTION 10.· EACH PLAN SUBMITTED CLE,
THE COMMISSION, THE PROCESS ORIGI ·
THE COURT MAY CHANGE THE DATE
NALLY USED TO SELECT THE PERSON PURSUANT TO SECTION 8 AND SECTION 9 UPON WHICH CANDIDATES FILE FOR
WHOSE SEAT BECOMES VACANT SHALL BE OF THIS ARTICLE SHALL CONTAIN MAPS ELECTION TO OFFICE.
.
UTILIZED AND A REPLACEMENT SHAI.L BE AND A LIST OF TOWNSHIPS, MUNICIPAL
SECTION 19. NOTWITHSTANDING ANY
CENSUS
SO APPOINTED WITPIN SEVEN DAYS CORPORATIONS , FEDERAL
TRACTS.., OR ENUMERATION DISTRICTS, OR PROVISION OF THIS CONSTITUTION OR ANV
AFTER THE VACANCY OCCURS.
UNITS 1HEREOF, AS DETERMINED PUR· l.AW REGARDING THE RESIDENCE OF
SECTION 2. UPON THE EFFECTIVE DATE SUANT TO SECTION 7 OF THIS ARTICJ;E, !.~EMBERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY
OF THIS ARTICLJ!, AND THEREAFTER IN CONSTITUTING EACH DISTRICT, AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OR
EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE, AND ONLY AT SHALL BE ACCOMPANIED BY A PETITION SENATORS, PERSONS SHALL BE Al.LOWED
THOSE TIMES, THE STATE SHALl. BE Dl· BEARING THE SIGNATURES OF AT !.EAST THIRTY DAYS FROM TH!: TIME A Pl.AN IS
VIDEO INTO AS MANY CONGRESSIONAL FIVE HUNDRED ELECTORS . Pl.ANS SUB· ADOPTED UNDER THIS ARTICLE TO
DISTRICTS AS THERE ARE UNITED STATES MITTEl&gt; AS A RESULT OF THE 1980 FED· CHANGE RESIDENCE IN ORDER TO BE
REPRESENTATIVES APPORTIONED 1'0 THE ERAL DECENNIAL CENSUS SHALL BE ELIGIBLE FOR ELECTION TO AN OFFICE
STATE. THE WHOLE POPULATION OF THE FILED-WITH THE COMMISSION NOT LATER INCLUDED IN SUCH PLAN.
STATE, AS DETERMINED BY THE MOST RE· THAN THE FIFTEENTH DAY OF JANUARY,
SECTION 20. THE BOUNDARIES OF CONCENT FEDERAL DECENNIAL CENSU~ 1982, AND SHALl. REMAIN CONFIDENTIAL GRESSIONAL
DISTRICTS FOR THE
SHALL BE DIVIDED BY THE NUMBER 01 UNTIL THE SIXTEENTH DAY OF JANUARY,
UNITED STATES REPRESENTATIVES AP- 1982. PLANS SUBMITTED THEREAFTER NINETY-SEVENTH CONGRESS SHALL RE ·
UNTIL THE FIRST DAY OF
PORTIONED TO THE STATE PURSUANT TO SHALL BE FILED WITH THE COMMISSION MAIN IN EFFECT
19113. MEMBERS OF THE UNITED
THAT CENSUS, AND THE QUOTIENT SHALL NOT LATER THAN THE FIFTEENTH DAY OF JANUARY,
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
BE THE RATIO OF' REPRli:SENTATION IN AUGUST IN EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE, STATES
ELECTED IN !960 SHALL HOLD OFFICE FOR
THE UNITED STATES HOUSE OF ·REPRE - AND SHALL REMAIN CONFIDENTIAL THE
TERMS FOR WHICH THEY WERE THEN
SENTATIVES. IF THE MOST RECENT FED· UNTIL THE SIXTEENTH' DA Y OF AUGUST IN ELECTED.
NO REDISTRICTING OF CON ·
ERAL DECENNIAL CENSUS IS UNAVAJJ.. EACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE.
GRESSIONAL DISTRICTS
FOR THE
ABLE.._ THE WHOLE POPUI.ATION OF THE
SECTION ll. THE COMMISSION FOR NINETY-EIGHTH A'&lt;D SUBSEQUENT CON·
STATo; SHALL BE DETERMINED BY THE
REAPPORTIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING GRESSES SHALL BE OF ANV FORCE OR EF·
GENERAl. ASSEMBLY.
EXAMINE EACH PLAN SUBMITTED FECT UNLESS IT HAS BEEN EFFECTED
SECTION 3. UPON THE EFFECTIVE DATE SHALL
PURSUANT TO SECTION 8 AND SECTION 9 PURSUANT TO THIS ARTICLE.
OF THIS ARTICLJ!, AND THEREAFTER IN OF
THIS ARTICI.E TO DETERMINE THE
SECTION 21. THE BOUNDARIES OF GENEACH YEAR ENDING IN ONE, AND ONLY AT VAbiDITY
AND SUFFICIENCY OF PETITION ERAL ASSEMBLY HOUSE OF REPRESEN·
THOSE TIME!!, THE STATE SHALl. BE Dl· SIGNATURES.
THE COMMISSION SHALL TATIVES AND SENATE DISTRICTS FOR THE
VIDEO INTO THE NUMBER OF GENERAL THEN DETERMINE
WHETHER EACH PLAN ONE HUNDRED FOURTEENTH GENERAL
A88EMBL Y HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES FOUND ACCEPTABLE
THIS EXAMINA· · ASSEM~LY SHALL REMAIN IN EFFECT
AND SENATE DISTRICTS PRESCRIBED BY TION CONFORMS TO IN
THE FOLLOWING UNTIL 1'HE FIRST DAY OF JANUARY, !988.
THIS ARTICLE. THE WHOLE POPUI.ATION
MEMBERS OF THE GENERAL ASSEMBI. Y
OF THE STATE, AS DETERMINED BY THE CRITERIA:
MOST RECENT FEDERAL DECENNIAL CEN- . tA l THE PLAN SHALL MEET THE DIS· HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES ELECTED
SUS, SHALL BE DIVIDED BY THE NO!IBER TRICT POPULATION REQUIREMENTS OF IN 1980 SHALL HOLD OFFICE FOR THE
TERMS FOR WHICH THEY WERE THEN
.
NINETY·NINE AND THE QUOTIENT SHALL THIS ARTICLE.
NO APPORTIONMENT OF THE
BE THE RATIO OF REPRESENTATION IN
IB J EACH TOWNSHIP, MUNICIPAL COR· ELECTED.
THE GINICaAL ASSEMBLY HOUSE OF REP· PORATION, FEDERAL CENSUS TRACT, OR STATE FOR MEMBERS OF THE ONE
RESENTATIVES. THE WHOLE POPULATION ENUMERATION DISTRIC1', OR · UNIT HUNDRED FIFTEENTH AND SUBSEQUENT
OF THE STATE AS DETERMINED BV THE THEREOF. AS DETERMINED BY THE GOV· GENERAL ASSEMBLIES SHALL BE OF ANY
!lOST RECENT FEDERAL DECENNIAL CEN · ENOR PURSUANT TO SECTION 7 OF THIS FORCE OR EFFECT UNLESS IT HAS BEEN
SUS SHALL BE DIVIDED BY THE NUMBER ARTICLE, SHAI.L RETAIN ITS INTEGRITY EFFECTED PURSUANT TO THIS ARTICLE.
SECTION 22. THE PROVISIONS OF THIS
THIRTY·THREE AND THE QUOTIENT SHALL AND SHALL NOT BE DIVIDED BETWEEN
Bll THE RATIO OF REPRESENTATION IN .DISTRICTS.
~RTICLE ARE INTENDED TO BE SEVER·
THE SENA'rE. IF THE MOST RECENT FED·
(C) EACH DISTRICT CREATED BY THE ABLE , AND THE INVALIDITY OF ONE OR
ERAL DECENNIAL CENSUS IS UNA VAIL· PLAN Sl:lALL BE COMPOSED OF CONTIGU· MORE 0~ SUCH PROVISIONS SHALL NOT
ABL!., THE WHOLE POPULATION OF THE OUS TERRITORY AND BE BOUNDED BY A AFFECT THE VALIDITY OF THE REMAINSTAT" SHALL BE DETERMINED BY THE SINGLE, NONINTERSECTING, CONTINUOUS ING PROVISIONS.
GENERAL ASSEMBI. Y.
LINE.)
SECTION •· EACH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
En' ECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
SECTION 12. FOR EACH PLAN WHICH
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES DISTRICT MEETS THE REQUIREMENTS OF SECTION
U approved by a majority or the electon votin8'
SHALL BE ENTI'J'LED TO A SINGLE REPRE· ll OF THIS ARTICLE, THE COMMISSION FOR on thi!l amendment, the amendment ahall takfl efBENTATIVE IN EACH GENERAL ASSEMBLY. REAPPORTIONMENT AND REDISTRICTING rect thirty da)lll af'ter the election at which it w.a•
EACH SENATE DISTRICT SHALL BE ENTI- SHALL DETERMINE DISTRICT COMPACT· appr(lved.
Upon the errective date of thia amendTLED TO A SINGLE SENATOR IN EACH NESS RATIOS AND A COMPACTNESS TOTAL. ment, existing
Article II, Section 2 of the COnGENERAL ASSEMBLY.
TO DIITERMINE DISTRICT COMPACTNESS · stitut.i(ln of Ohio, and exiating Article XJ of the
RATIOS. THE COMMISSION FOR RI!APPOR· Constitution or Ohio, shall be r.pealed .
TION!IENT AND REDISTRICTING SHALL:
(I) COM Pt/rE THE AREA OF EACH DIS·
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
TRICT IN EI\CH PLAN;
STATE OF OHIO
0!) COMPUTE THE PERIMETER OF EACH
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
DISTRICT IN EACH PLAN;
OF STATE
Ill) COMPUTE THE COMPACTNESS RATIO
I, Anthony J . Celebreue, Jr., Secretary of Sta~ .
OF EACH DISTRICT IN EACH PLAN BY Dl·
hereby certify tb.t the fore10inr i11 a true~ copy
SECTION 8. "THE POPULATION OF EACH VI DING THE AREA OF EACH DISTRICT BY do
o( PropMd Constitutional Amendmenta filed in
IIENATI Dllri'IICT SHALL BE SUBSTAN· THE 9QUAR! OF ITS PERIMETER;
the Omce or the Secretary of State by Initiative
14) CO!IPUTJ: THE COMPACTNESS RATIO
TIALLY J:IIUAL TO THE RATIO OF RI:PRE·
Petition 'Purauant t.o Article n .. Section lb of the
SINTATION FOR THI: SIINATE~ AND NO OF ANY DISTRICT INCLUDING THE OTTAWA Conatitutlon
of the State of Ohio, torether with
SUCH DISTRICT SHALL CONTAI A POPU· COUNTY TOWNSHIPS OF PORTAOE ·
lanpap certified to me by tile Ohio Ballot
LA TION OF t.Jll!8 THAN NINETY· VI:N PER CATAWBA ISLAND, OR DANBURY, THE ballot
Board and arrrumenta, submitted to me by the
CENT OR 1101! THAN ONI HUNDRICD LAKE ERIE ISLANDS, OR THE lllliGB proponents
.1nd op_ponenta of the i11aue, u preCOUNTY TOWNSHIPS OF SUTTON. LEBA·
THaEI Pll CINTOFTHE RATIO.
·
NON AND LIT ARt AS IF THESE AREAS aerlbeod by law.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto
WtRii: NOT CONTAINED IN THAT Dllri'RICT.
TO DETERMINE A COIIPACTNEI!8 TOTAL aubaeribed my n1me and affixed my omcial aeal
FOI A PLAN THE COMIIISSION FOR REAP· at Columbut1 this 10th dar of September, 1981 .
AJ1thon.y J. Celebrezae, Jr.
PORTIONMi!NT AND REDISTRICTING
, '
Secretary of State
SHALL BUll THE COMPACTNESS RATIOS OF

to

Steven H. Eblin, .Wanda L.
Herald Oil .and Gas Co.,

E
R.W.,

Salisbury.

.

Alvin Haggy, Martha Haggy to
Herald Oil and Gu Co., R.W.,

Salisbury.

Leo D. Davidson, Mar)' E. Davi
sontoHeraldOilandGas .Co., R.W.,

Rutland.
Kenneth C. Welsh, Aldena Welsh
to Herald Oil and Gas Co., R.W.,
Scipio.
Dan
Cremeans,
Barbar
Cremeans to Herald OU and Gas Co.
R.W., Scipio.

Carpenter
Personals
Earl Starkey, Qldest charter
ber, w.as honored when Cohan
Gl'8lll{e No. 2435 held their
lember meeting. A decorated cak
. and homemade ice cream were se
ved by the Eldon Barrows family
ot.rvance of Mr. Starkey's
blrtlxlay following the usualpotlu
supper. Officers were elected for
1981-«1 Grange year. Results of
County Women's Activity contesll
·were announced. Janet Hooper
county winner in the youth toy
lest and Bertha. Crippen was
adult county winner. Deputy M
Jordan urged members to
resolutions prepared lor the sta
G1'8118e IIOSilon. Legislation In

gE

II8WI W'U dJ.scuued.

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Panons ~
Dayton, recently called on ber aunt~
Murl Galaw&amp;y.

Mrs. Agnes

Whittington, ~

caster, vl:ilted on Sunday afte
with her sister-In-Jaw, Mrs. F
Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bratton we
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. M
dal Jordan on Wednesday. In the al
temoon, Mrs. Jordan and Mr.
Mrs. Bratton ·called on Ginev
Footer and Mr. and Mrs. ~liht
Seiple, Albany Rt. I. The Seiple
were leaving on SWtday to spend lw
week&amp; at their Sebring, Fla. h
and Mrs. Foster will spend the
with her grandson, Danny
and family, near Pl. Rock.
Bill Miller received word of
death of hia father, Ted Miller, a
Caledonia, Oh. and the Miller famll
attended hia funeral there this
week.

Turnmf

Mrs. Elma Vernon, slater of Mrs~

Earl Starkey, Is seriously ill in
1,anesvllle hospital. The Starkey
recenUywenttosee her.

Buckwheat
"

News Notes

Mrs. 0. M. Rife and her daughter
Phyllis Wooten, from Dyesvill
visited Ethel Rife Wedn~sda
evening.
Lila Jon.. and Helen Bolen wen
to Gallipolis Wednesday for Helen '
see her doctor. Helen has been i
with back problems for some tim
now.
,
Reva Johnson and Ethel Rife too
their father, martin MoUohan, t
West Virginia recently for him t
visit hls brother, Lanty Mollohan.
Bllf and Bruce Kessele
vacationed In North Carolina for
week recently.
)"aye Wood is stlll staying with he
daughter, Bernice Bowen, in Cana
Winchester. Fay's health Is still v

poor.
Linda and Richard Rife an
family vlslted her pereillll, Mr. a

Mrs. Sam Hlcka on Monday
helped to get pleted.

.

•
•
•
•

••

•

·

Audey C . .Bell to Howard Quillen, •
Helen P. Quillen, Sutton. .
Beule Marie Aahley, dec., to
Dorothy L. McGuffin; Betty Lou
Snow, Cert. of Trans., Middleport.

or

ARGUMENTS FORA YES VOTE ON ISSUE 2, THE FAIRI""'~"'"'IA­
MENT:
FAIR ends the ganie of political bosses creating for their fri•endls:~~Wfseti&gt;ts
that are overwhelmingly Democratic or Republican district&amp;.

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

,• . Our Ohio Plim is entirely funded by low cost employer premiums.
Not on~ tax dollar is used to subsi~ize our no11-profit Workers' Com·
pensatwn system. Our sound and efficient system, earns over $200
million investment income annuaUy from its $3 billion trust fund.
• When out-of-state insurance conglomerates drive the cost of Work·
ersi-Gompensation up, it will inflate the price of goods and services
to Ohio citizens.
·

Charles L. Butts, Dale Locker,
·Harry Meshel, and Barney
Quilter

I"

.

• Our Ohio Plan treats all Ohio workers with equality. Out-of-state
insurance giants will skim off workers in low risk businesses, and
leave mos~ 9hio industries to pay sky-rocketing rates for the same
coverage.

Committee Ag;ainst · the Amendment:

Committee Against the Amendment:

~trrJsN1GOf11)~~R:~~~~~~~~E1r;;s5-frTJ~~

EFFECTIVE DATE AND REPEAL
It adopted by a majority of the elee.tora votinr
thereon, this amendment shall take efrwt on t.he
first dir.y (If January in the •econd aueeMdinryear
following ita adoption, and exlattnr Section M·or
Article II of the Constii.ution of Ohio ah•ll be repealed from such effect.ivfdate.

VOTE NO
ON ISSUE 2

I

lnrlnuses: WORKERS and their dependent.t, for .
death, injuries or occUpational diaeaae, oc·
c:aaioned in the course of auch aril•e•'• WOJlKERS' employment, lawe fM7 SHALL be paned
eatabliahing a atat.e fund to be created by~
HPf ~ptributioil thereto by employers, and adminietered by the state, determining the terme
and conditions upon Which payment 11hall be made
therefrom, LJ\WS SHALL BE PASSED PERMITTING EMPLOVERS WHO QUALIFY TO
PAY SUCH WORKERS' COMPENSATION Dl·
RECTLY TO EMPLOYEES, AND LAWS SHALL
BE PASSED AUTHORIZING INSURANCE
COMPANIES TO INSURE THE PAYMENT 01'
SUCH WORKERS' COMPENSATION IN THIS
STATE, ALL SUBJECT TO REGULATION AND
REQUIRED PAYMENTS PURSUANT TO SUCH
LAWS EXCEPT AS IN THIS CONSTITUTION
OTHERWISE PROVIDED. ALL AUTHORIZED
INSURANCE COMPANIES WHICH WRITE
WORKERS' COMPENSATION INSURANCE
SHALL BE REQUIRED TO PAY FEES, ASSESSMENTS, OR CONTRIBUTIONS NECES·
SARY TO GUARANTEE THE PAYMENT OF
WORKERS'
COMPENSATION
CLAIMS
AGAINST EMPLOYERS INSURED BY ALL
sucH COMPANIES. NO FEE, ASSESSMENT,
OR CONTRIBUTION SHALL BE CHARGED TO
THE STATE FUI'(D TO GUARANTEE THE

BY AN INSURANCE COMPANY NOR TO ANY
INSURANCE COMPANY TO GUARANTEE
THE PAYMENT OF WORKERS' COMPENSAC
TION CLAIMS AGAINST EMPLOYERS WHICH
CONTRIBUTE TO THE STATE FUND. Such
compensat;on shall be ;n Ucu or all oth" r;rhh to
Compensation, Or damageR, (or !IUCh death, in·
juries, or oc~pational diBeaBe, and any employer
who pays t-he IIPI!MittM or PROVIDES FOR
PAYMENTOFcompensationASpr(lvidedbylaw,
paned in accordance herewith, shaU not be liable
t(l reapond in damag¥a at common law or by 8 tatute for •u~h death, injuries or occupational di•·
'""· LAWS SHALL BE PASSED GIVING TO
THE STATE DEPARTMENT OF INSURANCE
THE POWER TO REGULATE, FOR EMPLOY·
ERS WHO PROVIDE FOR PAYMENT OF COMPENSATION BV AN INSURANCE COMPANY,
PR)!:MIUM RATES,RATINGPLANS,ANDTHE
Cl.ASSIFICATION OF ALL OCCUPATIONS
&lt; ACCORDING TO THEIR DEGREE · OF
1-IAU"RD- Laws may be paeaed ..tabll•hinr' a
board which may be empowered to claaeify all occupat.iona according to their degree or haaard
FOR EMPLOYERS WHO CONTRIBUTE TO
THESTATEFU~D~tonxrateao~cont~butlonto
such rund ae&lt;:ordmg to auch claBIItfteatton, •nd to
collect, administer and distribute tiuch fund , and
to determine all rig~ts or claimants thereto. Such
board shall set astde a! a aep.r•te fund such
proporUon or tho contribuUons OR PREMIUMS
paid by employera as in ita jud«ment may be
necMsary, not to exceed one per centum thereof
in any year, and so as to equallae, insofar as possible, t_he burden thereof, to be expen~ed..by such
board 1-:' such.manner ae mt~)' be provtd,ed by t~w
for the Investigation and prevention of mdu11tr1al
accidenhl and dinaae11. Such board shall have full
power and authority to hear and determine
whether or not an Injury, disease or death re •ultcd bccou" or tho ralluro of the employer to
comply with any specific requirement for the protec tlon of the lives, h~alth or IU'ety of employees,
enacted by the General Auembl)' or in the form of.
an order adopted by 11uch board, and ita decision
sha ll be final; and ror the purpose orauch tn.eati·
gations and inquirie11 it may appoint referee~.
When it is found, upon hea.rinr. th•t an injury,
· diaeaae or death resulted becauee of auch failu1'4t
b)l the employer, sUch amount al shall be found to
be just, not gn&gt;ater than ftfty nor leaa than ftfteen
per centum o/the maximum award eat.abllahed by
law, shall be added by the board, to the amount of
the compenaation that may be awarded on atcount of such injury, diaeue, or death,'·and paid in
like manner as other awarda; and, if such compenution is paid from the state tund OR BY AN
INSURANCE COMPANY, the CONTRIBUTION
OR premium I'J( auch employer ahall be increa11ed
in 11uch amount, coverinr 1uch period of time as
may be fixed, &amp;8 will reco1.1p the state fund 0~
INSURANCE COMPANY in the amount of IU(\h
additional award, notwithatandin• any and all
other proviBions in this constitution.

A COSTLY EXPERIMENT

WHJC.f t WILL LOCK-IN OHIO LEGISLATIVE
DISTRICTS FQR THE NEXT DECADE •

That Section 36 of Article lJ of the Conatitutlon of
the State or Ohio be amended to read aa followa :
For the purpo.e of providlni compenutlon to

(Proposed by Initiative Petition)

' ·
d
lDJUre

DO NOT ADOPT

Be it Reaolved by the People of the Stat.e of Ohio:

IF ADOPTED, THIS AMENDMENT SHALL TAKE EFFECT. ON
JANUARY I, 1983.

YES

vo~rs

Supporters have failed to teU
.that Issue 2 is a very costly
method of redistric.t ing, and no m
, oney Is being provided to pay for it.

ISSUE 1
TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONSnTUTIOt4AL AMENDMENT

'

THIS PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOUlD CHAN,GE 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.

"IJ:g

LEGISLATIVE DISTRICTS
·T~I~V~f~80A~00h~~~-~H~.:a_
Any person or croup, no. matter what their intereat, may submit plana ' TdiREAFTI:B No LATBa THAN tii1 THIRfor redistricting. Consequently, any radical or extremist croups such u
1~~rN~yNog:~~~~J= 1~fgl~~~
the American Communist or Nazi Parties could submit a scheme deslrned RIAPPORTIONIIENT AND aEDII!TIICTING
to eliminate communities of interest in the Ohi_o LeJi~lature.
TJ'f.~'&lt;t1-~rs ~~11c:t/o~\«iifl::A~uJti:
TRICTS THAT !'LAN WBOSJ: OOIIPACTNESS
TOTAL IS THE HIGHBBT AND THAT PLAN
•THIS IS AN EXPENSIVE PROPOSAL WITHOUT FUNDING

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

In the TEXT OF PROPOSED
CONS1'ITUTI.O NAL
AMENDMENT below, the words written in
all capital !etten are additions to
the Ohio Constitution . The words
Written in sma11 letters and not
crossed out are already in the Ohio
Constitution and will remain in the
Ohio Constitution. The words writ·
ten in smaUietters and crossed out
are in the Ohio Constitution and
will. be taken out of the Ohio Con· •
s titution.

Property
transfers

.

ALL DISTRICTS IN THI:PLAN .

••

a

fall work co

.

Clovle BroWil and Reva Jo
vlsltad Ethel Rife Tuelday.
Belen Reinhart of Arizona is he
vlsltlng and staying In her trailer
.w Sept. 1&amp;. She baa her daughte
vicki and granddaughter Ke
trlth her.
Waoda 01t Mollohan brought his a
pie butter OWe to the Sent
Cltlsena at ~ and bel
with mUlDe apple blltter.

-Ethel Rife.~

•
•

•

�•

'.

Pag-11-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio.

Group II

Salisbury PTO

Endorsement of the tuberculosis
levy renewal was made by Group II
of the Middleport First United
Presbyterian Church held Tuesday
. nigh,! at the home of Mrs. Joeeph
Bailey.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace talked on the
levy ·renewal. Plans were made
during the meeting to have a
Thanksgiving dinner in November
at the Holiday Inn. Mrs. Paul Hap.
tonstaU· presided at the meeting.
MI's. Myron Miller took the least
coin offering using an article written
by Sherina NUes &lt;in Sri Lanka.
Mrs. Moore, devotional leader,
used "These Days" aa her topic, and
Mrs. carl horky for the program
reviewed ''JOni '' by Joni Eareckson.
Mrs. Moore had the clooing prayer.
Refreshments of candy, peach pie
and ice crealll were served. Cohootesses were Mrs. Moore and Miss
Kathryn HyseU.

and Tuesday evenln&amp;a. noted !bat
school pictures will be taken Friday,
The annual fall festival of the and advised that aeveral students in
the fourth, fifth and liith grades are
Salisbury PTO will be held oo Nov.
!4, it was BMounced at a meeting taking part In the Mental Health
Read-11-lbon.
held Tuesday evening at the school.
The meeting opened with the
He also announced !hat 'claaM
pledge to the flag led by Cub Sc&lt;&gt;ut will be dlsmlsaed oo W~y for
249 and devotions by Mrs. Martha · a teacher in-aervlce day. On dilplay
were sev~ral llllllples of school
Hoover.
The program waa presented by desks. These will be purcbased from
Pr. R. Craig Mathews, dentist, who funds from the bond levy.
Mrs. Hoover's first grade won the
showed the fi1Jn, " How to Prevent
!)ental DiseaBe." It 6tress&lt;i&lt;l the im- prize for the room count.
portance of using dental floss in . . Mrs. Karen W~er will conduct a
daily oral care. Dr. Mathews gave book fair at the November meeting.
the two Important rules for good oral
care: remove plaque from the teeth
at leaat once every 24 hours and
avoid sweets;~~nd candy. Neglect and
Girls of Cadette Troop l116 atfear of tl!e-dentist were the reasons' tended the Girl Scout Fun Day at
he~.e'!Or poor dental care.
K,ing8 Island recently. Going from
)'~ membership cormnittee an- the troop were Regina EbUn, Jackie
nounced that membership in the Frederick, Darla Norris, Dawnette
PTO now stands at 69. Principal Norris, Jell Welch and Guy Norris
John Lisle announced parent- with the leaders, Rhea and Harold
teacher conferences for Thursday Norris.

ltl1

Ia late September Cadtittes of
'I'roops .!116 and 1180 attended the
Cadette !!:vent at Camp Sandy Bend
near Elizabeth, W. Va. Making lhe
trip were Dawnette Norris, Perla
Norrll,

Business Services
118DIATOI
Sill VICE
From lht Smallnt
Hoa,tor Core 1o .,.
L. . . .stllodloler.

WORDS

DAY

lESS

13

!HAN

3

6

10 '

DAIS

DAYS

DollS

'4

'4 . 17
UPIO.
35
WORDS

'7

'9

7

1

10

1

11 '16

1

'16

'19

Meigs County for the pur·
pose of providing om·
bulance service. emeroen·
cy medical service, or
both.
Said tax being : an ad·
ditionalta• of one (1.01 Mill
to run for a continuing
period of time, at a rate not
exceeding 1.0 mill for each
one dollar of valuation,
which amounts .to Ten Cen·
ts for each one hundred
dollars of valUation, for a
continuing period of tlme.1
The Polls for said E lee·
lion Will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M . and remain
open untll7 :30 o'clock P.M.
of said day.
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs county,
Ohio.
Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman
'ilorothy M. Johnston
Director
Dated Oct. 12, 1981

Public Notl~e
PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual election of
the
M e igs
County
Agricultural Society Direc·
tors w ill be held Monday,
November 2, 1981 in ttie
Meigs Cqunty Extension of fice, Mulberry Hts., from 5
to9 p.m .
.P ublic Notice
Dorothy M. Johnston
Public Notice
Qualificatio ns for direc·
Director tors are that they must be a
Dated October ,12, 1981 qualified voter of Meigs
Nominations will be ac·
ELECTION
County and must have a
cep ted from the floor at the
LEGAL NOTICE
(10112, 19,26, Clll2,4tc
membership ticket in said
time of election . Two
The Ohio Soil and Water
society of 1981 .
Conservation Commission supervisors are to be elec·
Candidates
petit ions
PUbliC Nollct
wil l cause ilh election of ted. You may cast your
must be filed wi th the
supervisors of the Meigs ballot at the annual
Secretary no later than 5
NOTICE OF
Soil and Wat er Con· meeting or on the day of
p.m . Monday, October 26,
ELI!CTION ON
servation District to be election at_the Meigs Soil
1981. Only persons holding
TAX LEVY IN
held in accordance with and Water Conservation
membership ticketS at the
EXCESS OF THE
Chapter 1515.01 ·14 of the District Office at 22 1 West
close of the 1981 County
TEN MILL
Rev1sed Code of Ohio, at Second Street, Farmers
Fair or at least (15) calenthe Multipurpose Build ing, . Bi'lnk Building, between 8
LIMITATION
dar days before the date of
Pomeroy, Ohio d?'r' Novem· A.M . and 4 P.M .
CE Is hereby given election are qualified to
Absentee bal lots m a y be
· ber 10, 1981 at7 :30 p.m,
In pursuance of a vote.
Nominees
are
RelC sec ured at th e loca l district ResolutiOn or the Board of
The Meigs Agricultural
She nefield, Tom Thei ss, office.
Commlllloners . of the SoCiety . By : Mrs. Walla ce
Pat Holter , and Edison
County of Mtlgs, Pomeroy, Bradford, Secretary .
(1 0) 12. 26, 2tc
Hol lon.
Ohio, palltd on the 11th (1 0) 12, 19, 26, 3tc
·-·-~""·••--•-:;;;.;:..,_.,_ -- -- --- - - day of Auguat, 1911, there
-- - - - - - - - - . wilt bt submitted to a vote
Public Notice
I Dillie people of said County
I al o GENERAL· ELEC·
NOTICE OF
TION to be held In the
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
1 County ol Meigs, Ohio. al
EXCESS OF THE
'""regular places ol voting
.
I !therein, on TuesdaY. the •
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
:;Jrd doy o1 November. 1981,
NOT ICE Is hereby given
rtlle question of levying, In , that
in pursuance of a
.excess of lhe len mill , Resolution of the Board of
tllmllotlon, for the benefit ot ' Trustees of the Township ot

-

Curb Inflation
Pay (:ash for
Classlflads .and
Savell I

1

WANT AD INFORMATION

Wr ite your own ad and orcler by mail with this
coupon . Cancel your ad by phone wtien you get
results. Money not refundable.

PHONE 992-2156

I

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

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

Address,-----_;.---

Phone _______________

CLASSIFIED AD
a ANNOUNCEMENTS
1-c 1 ,&lt;1 of Tfl1nks
2- ln M1mori1m
l - Annountemenb
4-GiVIIWII'f
f-HIPO'f Ads
..... lOSIInd F ound
7-Yird Silt

R1nt
41-W.nfed to Rent

t-Publlc Sile-

4t-E~uipmentlor Rant

1 Auclion
1- Winled fo Buy

41-F.,- Ltltt

eMERCHANOISE
S1-HQU .. holdGoocfs

52- CB, TY, Radio EctUipmtf'lt
»-A~iqun

11-HtiPWinltd
12- SIIUI!Ion Wlnlld

14--Mise. Mer cllanllile
U - BIIIIlltlling SUpJIIU

1)-tnsuranct

1. ---~'---

2. _ _ _ __

3. _ _ _ ___:_

·· - - - - 5.
6. _ __ __ _
7, _ _ _ __

I
I
I

I

8. _ _ _ __
9, _ _ _ __

. I 13.
1 10.
1 15.
I

I

I
1

··

m court st.

a FARM SUPPLIES
&amp;LIVESTOCK

'~====~==~~~~:i:=:::::::::::5~·7~·1~t~c:i:=:::::::::~1-::m:o:.pd::.~

....

65-Sted &amp; Flrtlllltr

a TRANSPORTATION

11 - Autellor sa11
P2-Tr~stor

1111

Pr-VMII&amp; I W.O.

71-Aute Parts i.
ACWIICW!fl
11- AUNI.,.lr

J1-1Niton

:·: A~~ai:E
SERVICE

One of the Green Berets caught a

snake which he let the scouts handle.

Mike Mulford was captain of the
Special Forces Co. B Groon Berets
working with the scouts.

Call Ken Yaung

Monday 2:DOon Saturday

Tutsdly thru FrN11y 2:01.-.M.
thtct.v 1M lora IHfiMicaiiM
su...,y2 : M P . ..-. , , , . ..

.

I'
I

1
1.
1

L_____ :!':~:,.~:~~------_J

1 t-H.,.. 1 1m,...wm~
.,_,.umltfnt I Hutlnt

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M. JOhnston
Director

Doled Oct. 12. 1981

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESSOFTHE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance of
Resolution of the Board
County Commissioners
the County of Meigs,
Pomeroy, Dhlo, passed on
the 18th day of Auguat,
1981, there will be sub·
ml"ed. to a vole ot the
people ol said County ot a
GENERAL ELECTION IO
be held In the County .of
Meigs, Ohio, at 'he regular
places of voting
therein,
Tuesday,
the 3rd
day on
ol
November, the question ot
levylrig, in excess of the ten
mill limitation, for the
benefitofMelgsCountvfor
the purpose of providing
care, maintenance, treatment and hospltaHzation of
reSidents of Meigs County
Who are , suffering from
tuberculosis, at hospitals
with which the Com ·
missioners ot Meigs county
have contracted, and for
the supporl ot Tuberculosis
Clinics. purs~ant to the
authority granted in Sec.
339.38 of the Ohio Revised
COde .
Sais tax being; a renewal
of e)(isting. tax of Four Ten·
ths {0.4) to run for Five
vears, at a rate not ex·
ceeding 0.~ mill for each
one dollar of valuetion,
iiihich amounis !0 .Four
cenrs ror eacn one nundrec:l
dollars of valuation, lor
Five years.
, The Polls for said Elec·
lion will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7: 30 o'clock P.M.
of said doy.
·
By order of the Board of
Elections ot Meigs County,
Ohio.
Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M . Johnston
Director
Dated Oct. 12, 19J!1

(10) 12, 19, 26, {11) 2, ~~c
Publl~ Nallca
NOTICE OF
ELECTION'ON
TAX LI!VY IN
EXCESS OF THE

••,,,,.,.fl..

es-a ....... t HtutfM
--~ . H . h..lr

• .,. 17- u,....ttry

lint..,

UptoiSwords ... .,..tity~ , , ,. ,',, ., ..... . ..... ..... 11.•
Up .. n worfs ...
lnNttlllll .• . ......• , ..... ... ... , • " " '
UJtoUwur•s ... sl••r•~ .... , ,, . .. , .......... . .. lrM

,............. ...,u...,

Mabill H111t1 ......... 'f'IN Nlel .,, ace...- "'"

wtn.

u•et

ella,.. ter an Cln'Y"'f I • """'"' Care
TM ,v......_r ,...,.... .... ,..,.. ...... ., rttld .., ...........
....,_.,,TI.P......... WIUMt .. NIIIIAIIalllw...,. . . . _
wltft ercllr , U Clflt
Til SMHMI.

Nt

Dorothy M. Johnston
·
Director
Date Del. 12. 1981 ·

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

(10) 12. 19. 26, (lJJ 2. 4tc

( 101 12, 19, 26, ( 11J 2. 41c

Dorothy M. Johnston
. Director
Oct.
12, 1981
10112,19, 26, (11) 2, 41c

Public. Notice

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TENMILL .
LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
that .In pursuance of a
Resolution ot the 1/lllage
Coun~ll of the VIllage ' of
Pclmeroy, OhiO.. passed on
the 201h day ., July, 1981,
there will be submiHed to a
vote of the people of said
VIllage at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held · In
the VII lope ol Pomernv .
8t.. fhe regular ~laces
... •u""" •nt:Ht'ln, on
Tuesday, tho 3rd day ot
November,
1911,
the
question of leVying. in ex·
cess of the ten mill
limitation. lor the blnefit of
Pomeroy VIllage for the
purpose of Current ex·

PubllcNollce
NOTICE -OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE Is hereby given
in pursua11ce of a
Resolution of tM Galllo·
Jackson·Melgs
Mental
Health Board ·ot Go II Ipolls,
Ohio, PISsed on the 201h
ot August, 1981 there
be submitted tb a vote
lo be held In
of M4tigs, Ohio,
at the regular places of

voting thereon, on
Tuesday, the 3rd day of
November.
1981,
the
question of levying, In excess of the ten mi 11
llmltation,forthebenefltof
The Gallla·Jackson·Melgs
Mental Health Board tor
the purpose ot current
Operating expen'ses.
Said lax being: an ad•
dlflonal tax of two tenths
mill to run tor 5 years com·
menclng 1982, at o rate not
exceeding 0.2 mill for each
one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to two cents
for each one hundred
dollars of •valuation. fOr
five years.
The Polls for said Electlon will open al 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain '
open unlll7:30·o'clock P.M.
Of said day,
· By Order'Of the Board of
Elections, ot Meigs County,
Ohio. ·
Ernest A. Wingett
ch,lrman

Dorothy M. Johnston
Director
Dated Oct.
12, 1911
(10) 12, 19, 211, (11) 2, 4tc
Public Notice NOTICE OF

tt~'ft~~e~

-

?:

EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
.NOTICE Is hereby given
lllot In pursuei"e ol a
Resolyllon ol the. Board ot
Education ot the Easter~

Shop

'FALL CARPET SALE
c.s....,.C.rry
1 Orten TwIRusiT-

...
' -ill eq. yd.

1 BlutFnol
1 Cr"" Bed

'12•
Par Oc-:;.::

IJeact stloction of c ..... lllru the 30111 ot Oclobtr,
Buy Now &amp; saws2.u Per Yard
25 ralls c1rpet In stock to pick from.
Reguler ltac:klcl, ca1111t lnlfalltcl free
with pad. Good stltctliNI Roll Ends Rem·
nants S2.M up.

10J 12, 19, 26, (')1J 2. otc

•

It's ABlouse Yea'r' .

PH. 992-6011
992-7656
8-20· tfc

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

:BISSELL
'IDING CO.
"Btlulllul. Custom
lullt Oorl&amp;tl"
Clll for , lrH sldlnt
tsHmolts, ~49-2101 or ·
.o 94f-H60.
'''· ·
No Sundoy Colis

"'

3· 11 ·1fc

STANDARD
OIL CO.
{SOHIO)

we ere nOw serving all
of Meigs Co. with
Heating OU ; · Diesel
· .. sUpreme.
Gasoline,
' comlete
line
of
Lubricants ~ for the
farmS' &amp; inclusrry.
PH . 992·3460
1
1f long distance, call cal·
lec1 : ~
Larry E. Muter, De•ler
8·30·1 mo.

NOW

VNJ.EY
ROOFING

\ •20 Yn. experience

,. TOM HOSKINS
Ph. Nf.21J or
!

,.,_,AI"'
ttC
11:....

Ioated ,0c,,12, 1n1

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.!O . Rt. SO Eut
GUysvltll, Otllo

__Acldon1and
r.n1odeling
_ Roofing ana autt•r
work
:_concret work
_ Plumbing and
electrial work
(Fr•• E1tlmot") ·

AuthoriJed Johll 0Hril!,
N1w HoU;~nd,l115h Hog
Firm Equipment
De11lvr
FARM EOUif'MENT
PARTS &amp; SERVICE
USED EQUIPMENT
t- No. 1600 Diesel Ford

Tractor wt C.ab
MOD-4D1D Oiil!lt-IJ .D. Tractor
MOD· l2l I Row New· ldu cqrft

V. C. YOUNG Ill
9W-62l5 orWl-nU
Pom•ro, , Ohio
9-30-rfc,

PICker

FRANCE
ELECTRONIC
SUPPLIES

J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

-ment.

•

HAIR, REMEDIES

Soft, fem~n~ne, · elecont~
lashion's now blouses team witil
diJfime pools, 10 out lo ~lhnlr
with ion&amp; siills. S... dOIIa~
sew in Cllflt, illil
,.
frinlld Psttem 4U6: Ha4
Sizes 10\1, 1211, 14\1, 16\1,
18\1, 20\1. Women's Sizes 34
36, 38. 40, 42, 4,:, 46, 48. ,.

Stylists: Morlc Mora
lnd Cindy CulllbtriiOII.

.Jill....
............

UMIIr_. .... _...

.. at

'I I

_.....
11M Ia ..-o:'
I
·~!J•
'

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

I

.The Dally Sentinel ·

,.

'

.., "" c1o1at
lhorpontnc my

ENTERPRISE IIOADI
A ~ bedroom I10uH
tn.rstust rlglrt for your
ramlly . Nlct front
porch, tully Insulated,
good condition. Appro• .
'!lo ocrelot. Jusll28,500.

brln1

SYRACUSE
BAR·
OAfNI Approx. SO'x100'
lot Willi 2 bedroom
!rome 110me. Equipped
kllcllen. Utllll'/ room.
Neall $2.,900.
NEAll
POMEROY!
This 3 bedroom homo
has a private location ~
Excellent condlllon Willi
fireplace, full base·
ment, garage. su,soo.
' PRICE REDUCED! In
Pomeroy I A 3 bedroom
homo wllll lull basement. Central
air,
carpeted, patio with
sliding gl811 " - ' · Now
only $17,500.
REALTOR
Henry E . Cltllnd, Jr.
.n..1tl
ASSOCIATES
Jtln TrUSHII Mf·2660
Roger Turner 992-Uf2
Arnor992·M92

Ph. I&lt;IH912

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

-" "

""

•

~~~'
...
•twayt
earr. PI• lftW K......KIWI

-.

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

b'I'O:l:J

12, It, 26, (11)2, ~

...,,....

IVDIIODT

SWEEPER and sewing
machine repair, parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call
446-029....

ANY PERSON who has
EARLY
SEASON anything to give away and
SPECIAL Deer slugs, rem. does not Offer or attempt to
12 gouge, 2S per box, $9.97. offer any other thing for
Spring Valley Tradin~ co .. sale may place an ad in this
Spring Valley Plaza. 446· column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.
8025.
Sanders Ceramics St. Rt. J kmens. Two black and
211. Open Mon. I. Tues . one calico. Call446·9542.
7:00PM till 9: 00 PM. Call
256-6265.
.
3 puppil!s females miKed

$100.00 REWARD to the
person furnishing In formation leading to the
arrest and conviction of the
person shooting the Ford
automobile that was for
sale on St. · Rl. 211 In the
month of October. David
Culpepper, P .O. Box 131 ,
Gallipolis, Oh ~5631.

Rul Estate- General

J&amp;L BlOWN

WANTm TO BUY

INSUlATION
VInyl &amp;

SCRAP
&lt;Pomeroy Scrap
Iron
&amp; Metal)

Aluminum Siding

VIRGIL B. SR.
216 E . Second Street

Phone
1-(614)·992-3325

. etnsulatlon· ;-

D&amp;M

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE

CONTRACTORS

ROUSH

CONSTRUCI'ION
14 Ye•rs
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583

TRUCK LOAD- New Fur·
niture . Living room suits,
dl"ing . room sets. wall
huggefs, and loungers . Call
614-992-7608.
REDUCE Safe and Fast
with Go-Bose Tablets or
capsulet and E · Vap Woler
Pills. Nelson Drugs,

Farm Buildinp

NO
trespassing wi1hout written
permission on Woolhan
Farms at Apple Grove,

Utility Buildinar

NO hunting &amp; trespa~slng
on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Wool han
Farms.

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt.

~, IDX~

••cine, Oh.

Ph. 11foii4H5f1
6·15·1fc

ID-Hmo.

GRACE JOHNSON has
returned to work at Kay•s
Beauty SalOn," Mlddlerporl.
Phone 992·2n5 for an ap·
polntmenl.

CASH PAID for clean, late
mOdel used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, GAllipolis,
Ohio. Caii.W.·2282.

- - - -·- -·

3 kittens. 1 female, 2 males.
991·fiJ17.

Male collie to a good home,
especially gentle to
children. 675·1167.

J~c=~~~~~~=
NEED MONEY? I need
furniture. New, used or antique. Also buying glass,
china, gold, silver. coins,
watches, chains. etc. Mar·
tin's General Store, Mid·
dleport, Ohio. 992-6370.
Scrap metals, batteries,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
roar. and merchandise
brokering . Yarper·Halste-

Also
dally . Open
Friday 1·5 pm. -

open
Monday ·

WANTED to purchase any
type of ex-military vehicle
or vehiCular equipment.
Contact Donald G. Barber
· 'jr. BoK 1572, Parkersburg 1
wv 26102 or call 30H22·
1709. .

Buying Gold,
Sliver,
Platinum , old coins, scrap
rings &amp; silverware. Daily
qUotes available . Also
coins &amp; coin supplies for
sale. 4.46·802S, .W.·B026.
Gold. silver, sterling,
iewelry, rinQs, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Barber Shop. M iddleport. 992·
3~76 .

....__,,

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

The 2 Hunters seen In a
black pickup truck taking a
battery and fence charger
Tuesday evening 1~13-11
on cecrest Ridge Road, off
Broad Run Road, must
return or be prosecuted.

11

Help Wan led ·

Baby sitter in my hOme
Plantz Subdivision . Ca ll
446·0043 or «6-4442.
RN or LPN tired of hospital
schedules? Schedule your
own hours. Preform life insurance
medical
evaluations. Ideal part
time iOb for Gallipolis/Pt.
Pleasant nurse not working
lull time. Ca ll 304-346·5916
(Charleston).
House keeper needed for
disabled man early 30's.
Child acceptable, Pt .
Pleasant area . 675·7260 call
arter 5.
GET VAlUABLE training
as a ·young business person
and earn gOOCI money plus
some great gifts as a Sen·
tine! route carrier. Ph'One
us right away and get on
the eligibility list at 9922156 or 9'12·2157 .
we are now taking ap ·
plications
for
bus
mechan ics. Applications
will only be accepted at
Meigs Local Bus Garage,
Rutland, Ohio.
LPN or RN tor private duty
nursing for male patient at
Pinecrest Care Center. 11
p.m.·7 a . m . 304-675-1524, or
675-5941.
BAB V sitter in my home,
Monday through Friday .
Reference required. 304675-5623 .
12

Situations Wanted

Elim Resthome. Care for
handicapped, aged, or bed
patient. Temporary or
limited care. Or continuous
home with us. Equipped for
wheel chair. 7~2 - 2266 .
13 .

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. has offered
services tor fire insurance
~ coverage in Galli&amp; County
for almost a century.
Farm, home and personal
property coverages are
available to meet In dividual needs. Contact
Harry Pitchford, agent.
CHIP WOOD. Poles max. Phone 4.46-1427.
diameter 10" on largest
end. $12.50 per ton. Bundled
IN ·
slob : $10.50 per ton. AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been
can·
Dellverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,
Lost
your
Rock
Springs
Rd ., celled?
operator's License? Phone
Pomeroy, 992·2689.
991·2143

·r========..:c:::===:==-;.1
U11~Hi{ied P11ges cove~ 't he
'follmcinl( telephfone exchRnges.,

'

Gallia Co. Area Code
,__ 614

446-Gallipolis

sign up

~7-Chesr.ire

you cando
Ofcoune. whether vou ~survey­
Ina or airttdlcaJRtrol. you mUitQualifv. And
you may have 10 wait a bit b an opening In
the aldll aainlnc of your choice.
But if you qualify, wewill~~~ee your
choice up io ~ve montha In~.
.
For. chance I ) - your QlWIIJy
(andaain b me eldll of ~choice~ vllkyour
iocal Army Recruller. Or Clll Army Oppoltunides. m-7113 .,.coiiKt 19H231.

--Vinton
245-Rio Grande
156-Guvan Dist.
.-3-Arabia Oist.

Mnan Co., W. VI.
Are• Code 304
6l$-PI. Plo111nl
571-Applo Grove
77J-Mason
112-Ntw Hoven
ats-Lttart
917-BUIIIIO

61+,2-1111

For Parm and
Homt DIIIVtry Of
Gil
Dltltl
HNtlntOII.

17

Miscellaneous

Eleanor or Debbie. Sewing
for all occasions, also men ·
ding and alterations. 10 am
· 5 pm. Monday ltlru
Friday. 330 I RobInson
Avenue, ~orner of .Jackson
and
Robinson.
Pt .
Pleasant.
·

11

wonted to Do

Would like to do baby sit·
ting In my home, any shift.
Coii.W.· 1197.
Tl/ service coils. Cali 992·
203&gt;4. Also used color TV for
sale.

458--LIItOII

Would like trash hauling.
Any odd lobs. Farm wort&lt;;
WOod c:IIHing. Call 992·7803.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL
In Gollla (OUftty

446-2342

PRICED RIGHT.

Call ...... I'.M.

Meigs Co. Area Code
614
YY1 · Middleport
Pomeroy
915- Chester
34:1- Portlond
247-Ltlort Falls
94t-Ractne
742-ttulland

In Mtlgs Countv

.•

992-2156

Iota!
malll.,g to
lists.
All
home workers
update
ages, experience
un·
necessary . Call 1·716·842·
6000. Ext. 6671 .
22

Money to Loan

Columbus F 1rst Mortgage
Company FHA·VA Finan·
cing l..oan Rep. Cookie
Krau"er (3041675·3473.
Professional
Services

Will

do

Piano tuning and repa ir,
Love your neighbor tune
your Plano. Bill Ward,
Wards Keyboard. 4.46·4372.
Gallipolis.
HARPER Adult Care Center-providing the personal
care your elderly need in a
home like atmosphere.
vacancies. now - availible,
caii30H7S·1293.

31

Homes for Sale

New 3 bdr . house with
garage and full basement
W.OOO. Owner will help
finance. Call446·0390 .

"

BEDS· IRON, BRASS, old
furniture, gold, silver
October Sbecial: Furniture dollars, wood Ice boKes,
Upholsterlng·25 percent oft stone jars, antiques, etc .•
households·.
on labor. 1 month only , Complete
Mowrev•s
L!PhOistery . Write : M.D. Miller, Rt. ~.
Pomeroy, Oh. Dr991·77fiJ.
Phone 1 ·304·675· ~154 .

- - --- - - -

$180. Per Week Part Time
at
Home .
Webster.
America's foremost die·
tionary comp.any needs

23

BUYING GOLD&amp; SILVER
paying cash for anything
stampe&lt;I10K. UK, 18K and
dental gold. Class rings,
wedding rings, silver coins
or
anything stamped
sterling. Clarks Jewelry
Store . GalllpoiiU46·2691 or
992·2Q54 In Pomeroy .

5 mixed puppies to
giveaway . 1·614-682-6010.

TRA~S ond TRAPPING 6
Lost and Found
supplies. Gene Hines, '--~!!.!~~=~­
Amesville, Ot)io. 614·,.· , FOUND : Small white kit·
6141. Daily after 1 p.m.
ten by Rutland Dept. Store.
Will give to good h&lt;lme. 4th
Racine Vol. Fire Dept. houseo n left past Post Of·
fice in Rutland.
}1~$41'$ a shotgun &amp; rifle
match every Sat. night at
6:30 p.m. at their building Stolen Property. Antique
at eashan. Factory choke kitchen cafe. Antique
12 guage shotgun &amp; open dining room cabinet. Two
rockihg chairs. Other
sight 22 rilles.
items. Anyone knowing or
Apples, Honey and Sweet seeing this furniture being
Cider. Grimes, Romes, hauled in the vicinity of
Gal., and Red Delicious, Flatrock, WV on October 10
Staymen Winesap. 15.25 or later, a liberal reward Is
per bushel and up. Cheaper offered. 675·1302.

in volume,
Fitzpatrick
Or·
chard,
SR689.
Phone 61.4·
669·3785.

WANT TO BUY Old fur·
nitur~ and Antiques ot -atl
kinds, call Kenneth Swain,
256·1967 in the evenings.

wlfh German shepherd.
Callofler •· 388-1573.

Gun Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting Puppies . Collie and
at 1 p.m . Factory choke Terrier. Free. Call after s
pm 675-6633.
guns only .

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

.

Announcements

ATTENTION DEER HUN·
TERS . Come In and For bulk del i very of
register now for our Big gasoline, heating pil and
Buck Contest. Spring . diesel fuel, call landmark •
Valley Trading Co., Spring 991·2111, Pomeroy, Oh.
Valley Plaza, 406·8025.
Horses, ponies, horse
TRAPPER we have a com· trailer, riding lessons. Hoof
plele line of trapping sup· Hollow61H98·3290.
plies. Traps, dye, wax. and
lures.
Spring
Volley
Treding co .. Spring \Ioiiey 4
Giveaway
Plaza, 446'8025.

W8lll. , .........
ThUrL li:IH:OO

1

t[:=~~~~~~~l'[=S~~~~ii==i
3

Moa.n:•7:00
T-.n••s:oo

i

Business
Opportunity

rau

for
shopplnl spnu

-Houn:

~

Will do housecleaning by
week or day . Caii367-G324.

utn cuh

Locollon
Grtall
Original - o r k and
'h l r - floOrs makes
lllls 3 bedroom home
something
sp·e clal.
II~~Wn 1nau1a11on maket
It ener~y tlflclent. Mid·
dleport location maket
11 convenient. Alum·
lnum Siding makes It
molntenance tree. All
tor 129.500.

'

..........s.oo
UllllllAft.
I'Q!.IIem' 01110

dhlnc.

YlewiJtC llkllls.

C)assified Ads

PRICE IS RIGHT -'

u.oo fo\onlhly

Serving the following
townsllips: Lebanon,
SuHon, Letart, Olive,
Orange, Salisbury, Bedford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio,
Rutlond,
HlrrisonYille and Mic:J.. :
dleport.
1~12·1 mo.

Oltf cars, tr:allers anct
smaller-Items. Call ~ ·8274
after·S.

·

Box 65, Portland, Oh:.

, ..

Er-IA. Wl-'f
Chiii'INII

Oorot~y M.

"YOUNG'S.
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

OPEN

.~10

o1
ty,

BOGGS

"';~;, ..,.II Wanled to do sand blasting.

PRICE III!DUCE~I 1
family or dUplex 7 room
homO wllll 3 bedrooms.
GOod street In Mid·
dleporl. Good renlal In·

'992-6259

Public NOII~e

=. . . ·~

2·1·1fc

POMEROY,O.
m-2259

NEW HOME - Small
dOwn payment will han·
• Storm Doors
'd,., ·•·• 'acres ·on lwO
Now piCking up Junk
roads. Now 3 bedroom
• Storm Windows
auto bodies. Top prices
all electric home. Room
• Replacement
paid for auto bocuu,
for several homes or
,Windows
scrap iron and metals.
trailers. Only $39,000.
1 mile we5t of Fair·
TRAILEII Family
grounds on Old Rt.33.
Free Estimate
rooms, equipped kif·
Mon.-Fri.
8:
30
to
4:00
James Keesee
chen and air condi·
Aller Auv. 3
Ph. 992·2772
Ph.992-6H4
tioner. All ell'( utilities
10·12·"•
on a SOx 100 level lot for
10·1·1 mo.
only $9.600.
------------------_,--------------------~-------------------11 nice
NEW wooded
LISTING building
-- Two
lots near Rock Springs.
T . P. water available.
BARGAIN - Good 2
bedroom frame home
with bath, coal furnace.
basement. and 3 lots for
iusiS12.000.
• Remodeling
HOME AND BUSINESS
eAiuminum&amp;
BLDG
Nice
Vinyl Siding
renovated 4 bedroom
• kitchen Cabinets
w aler-Stwt,.,Eitclrl~
:~ u s.ed Color TV Set~ for
home. Nat. gas F. A.
eAwning
Gas 'Lint-DIIchtS .
saie.
..
furnace, new carpetlno
• Roofing
Lint Hook·UPS
~
NEW PHONE NO.
and moctern equipped
• Painting
kitchen waiting for you.
'
. r
Ph. 304-773·5131
Hobby or buSiness bldg.
1
2161SY,camore 51.
All In excellent concliMasDn, W.Va .
,_ MiddlefOI't, OhiO
tion. Only $31,000.
ID-8·1 mo. pd.
J ,
.;
9·'21 -tf c
EXCELLENT
MOdern 1'/:z stories, 3 or
can be 4 ·nice bedrooms
with lots of large
storage closets, 2 baths,
ALL STEEL
hot water heat, dry full
basement, apartment
with garage. In nice
condition for you to buy.
Silts'
Asking $69,900. Make ol·
~·From IOX30"
New Homes - ex•
fer.
SMALL
•
ASSOCIATES: OOR•
tensive remodelAnd Hom• Malnten•nc:e
DON -· B. TEAFORD,
,.oRooflng Ot'all typos . ·
Ing.
HELEN L. TEAFOAO
•Sioll•t
'
•Electrical work
&amp; SUE P. MURPHY
Slzts from 4•1 1o 12•40.
•Ronlciclellng
•Roofing work
\oFrtenUmates

,.

( 10J 12, 19, 24, (111 2, ~tc

rv

FREE
ESTIMATES

.:

Dorothy M. Jollnston
Director
Dated October 12, 1981

Elec:llous, ol Molts

Custom kitchens and appljances,
custom
bathrooms, remodeling~
pl1olmbin, electric, and
heating. ,

HMRISON
TV SERVICE

Ernest A. WlngeH
·
Chairman

Ohio.

.C. R. ,MASH
CONSTRUCTION

DorolhY M . Johnston
,
Director
Dated Oct. 12. 1981

Mill to (Un for Five yean.
at a rate not exceeding One
mill for eoch one dollar ot
valuation. which amounts
to ten cents for each One
hundred dollars of
valuation, for five years,
The Polls tor said Elec ..
lion will open at 6 :30
o'clock, A.M. and remain
open untll7:30 o'clock P .M.
otsaldday. ·
By order of lhe Board ot
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio.

note-•nv

Call 742-3195

5·2Hfc

Said tax bel nO : a renewal
of an exlstl!'lll tax of One

NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TI!NMILL ·
LIMITATION
NOTICE II hereby given
that in pursuance Of a
Resolution ot tho VIllage
Council ol the VIII- Of
Rutland, Ohio. pallltd on
lhe ~~~~ day ot August, 1981
there Will be submllltd to a
vote of the people ol Mid
Vllle&amp;t et t GENERAL
ELECTION to be held In
the VIllage ot Rutland,
Ohla, at llio regular pl•ces
or volin, tfttreln, on
Tuesday, he 3rd . 'day of
November,
1911,
the
qt.lfttlen ot levying, In eK·
~e•• ot the 14!11 Jl1111
limitation lor the - I t ot
Rutland VIllage for lhe pUr·
-of CurrontoxponMI.
~aid to• belnt: a , . _ a I
of ' en existing tax ot 2.0
Mlllolo run tor Flw veers~
at a rate
2.
mills lor u c h - dollar
valuati011, which •mounts
to T....,~nts tor _ ,
11u
dollars o1
val~atl~
Flvl-.n. ·
Tile
II for Mid -I!IIC·
11011 WII at · 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
:r:,:rJll7:. 30o'~lock P .M ..

Ltl Gtorgt Mllltr ·
clltck your pruont tltc·
lrl(olsysteni.
Roslcltnllol
' &amp; Commtrcl•l

Ph. 992-7201

penses.

,

For all of your wlr·
lng needs.

• Backllot
• E•cavallng
• Septic Systems
• W-'er, Sewer &amp;
Gal L.lnes ·
eDumpTruck

L)cenled.l. Bonded

OhiO,

ll~~~peop~~~le
said Meigs
at 0ot GENERAL

Rutland Furniture

sq. Yd. Ins lolled .

11- ·ICIVItlftt
N-•ltc:trlcatl

Rates and Other Information

--

Said t"" being : an ad·
dltlonol lox of 3.D mills to
run for a continuing period1
at a rate not exceeding 3.u
mills for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts
to Thirty cents for each one
hundred dollars or
valuation, for a cOntinuing
period.
The Polls for sold Elec·
tlon will open at 6:30
o•ctock A.M . and remain
open until7 :30 o'clock P.M.
ot said dar.
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs county.
Ohio.
Ernest A. Wingett ·
Chairman

Mlus ELECTRic
SERVICE

eTrencher

. NOTICE OF
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
· TENMil.L
LIMITATION
NOTICE IS hereby given
that In pursuance Of a
Resolution ot'lhe Board ' DI '
Education ol 111• Eastern
Local School Dlslrlct,•Ohlo,
11&lt;1ssed on the 16th day DT
Juno, j981, there will j)e
subml ued to a vote of the
-pie of sold School
District al a GENERAL ,
ELECTION to be held 'at
the regular places of votlhg
therein, on Tuesday, ilie
3rd day of November, 1981,
lhe question of levying; In
excess of the ten mIll
limitation, lor llle benelll o1
Easltrn Local School
District for the fJ'Irpose' of
Maintenance ot laclllllesf
purchasing of equipmtn
and
remodeHng 'Of
facilities.
•
Said tax being: an lid·
dltlonal lax or 4.0 Mills, to
run for Five years, at a
rate not e)(ceedlng ... a mflls
for each one dollar , of
valuation, which amounts
to Forty cents for each one
hundred d~lltrs of
valuation, for Five years. ·
The Polls for said Elec·
tion will open at 6t30
o'clock A.M. and rem.,ln
open untll7:30 o'clock P.M.
otsald day .
By order of the Board- of
Electons, of Meigs County,
Ohio.
E~nest A. WlngeH
Chairman

Pf!l&amp;eS.

'1..._
.--

SERVICES
Wont·Ad Advortlslnt
Oe&amp;dllnes

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Public Notice

3Rollsto
Pick Front

7t-Ct m,illtl ~~tUI,mtftt

1

~.

GIT RIADY FOR WINTiil
. SHAG CARP
BIER
3 ROU$

r.--Met«cydn
P5-1Ntl I Metorl

1

_,.. ,
.....

6)-Linstoc:k

64--Hty I Grain

TransmlssiGII SPfCiollst
Rellullll-lltpOin
· SHI JoDI
Open Sot. &amp; Sonclays
Loco ted 5 milts nortll ol
Albany on 1 611, on the
Dale ScoH Form.
"44370
If no Ans. c•ll742·2070

P omeroy, 0 "'
Ph. tt2-2174

6t- Firm EQUIPmlflt
62- Wantftl to Buy

AE~L ESTATE
lt- Hom••tor Slle
,
U - Mottl" Hamu
fer St ..
),..:...Fitmstor S11e
:M-Iuth'lll lulltllnts
U-L•h &amp;Acrt. .t
l6-· Real Estale Wantld

3~. · ---~--

Mall This Covpon with Remittance
The Dally Stntlntl

11- Wtnttd To Do

e

32. - - ' - -- 33. - - - - -

35.

_,16.

U - Muslctl hUirument
st-Frults &amp;' v,..tll*s
sr- For Slit or Trldt ,

n- Mon~y to L01n
23- ProfnsloMI '
Sarvlcas

30.
31 . _ _.:,.__ _

--------'---

14- Buslnen Tratnint
IS-Schools instruction
lt---Aidio, TV ,
1 ca Rep•lr

21 - Buslnus
OPPOrtunity

29.

1D.
11.
12.

M--Pets tor 51ft

a FINANCIAL

20. - - - - - 2 1 . - - - -- 22 ·---~-23. - - - - - 2~. - - - - - 25. - - - - - 26. - - - - - " - - 27. - - ' - - - - 28,

41 -HovstS tor Reftt
42--Mobire Homes
tor Rant
,
44- Ap.irtmentl tor REnt
4t-5pae~lor

SERVICES

17. - - - - - - , - 18.
19, _ _ _ _ __

a RENTALS

U-Furnlslltct Rooms

a EMPLOYMENT

JWanted
JFor Sale
)Announcement
)For Rent

IND~X

DEAN'S AUTOMAnC

SMITH NELSON
M010RS INC.
•

-

(1011 f. 19, 26, (11) 2, ~ti

E.MA...Wi

Rodlotor lllfCiollst
NATHAN IIGGI
J5 Yn. Exporltnct

Small investment, large returns, Sentinel Want Ads
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 Boord of
Trusteesoflhe Township of
Olive, Ohio, passed on the
2nd day of July, 1981 there
wilt be submitted to a vote
of the people of said Town·
ship at a GENERAL
ELECTION to be held in
the Township of O~ive,
Ohio, at the regular places
of voting therein, on
Tuesday, the 3rd day of
November, . 1981.
the
question ·ot levytng, in excess of the ten mill
llmltr\tinn . for.the benefit of
Olive Township for the pur·
pose of Maintaining and
o~rating cemeteries.
Said tax being: a renewal
of an existing tax of One
Mill to run fodlve years, at
a rate not exceeding 1.0
mill for each one dollar of
valuation, which amounts
to Ten cents for eacn one
hundred dollars of
valuation, tor Five years.
The Polls for said ~lec­
tlon will open at 6:30
o'clock A.M. and remain
open until 7:30 o' clock P.M.
ohaid day.
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County.
Ohio.
Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

Bridle. costume, SUits, I.
acces. Call Becky Brown
379-2.560.

Frederick, Brenda Wbite, TIJIIIIIy

Capehart, s-n Jett, and Shari
Cogar. Harold and Rhea Norrta acCOOlpanied the group.

I

Public Notice

.

'

Far Faa1 Service

Public Notice

li- -wonted to 0a
Will do sewlnt in mv home.

Regina Eblin, Jactle

Cadette 1116

THE COMMON

Ohio

any

odd

·lob,

~~~:~·~H~~~~~u;s~e~ru~m;~··~n~·

BY OWNER : 4 bdr.. split·
level, living room &amp; dining
room combination, eat·in
kitchen, lg . family rm .. 2
1/2 baths, located in Tara
Estates, Club house and
pool pr i vileg es, $75,000
firm . Kyger Creek School
District. Shown by appt.
only call-446·9403 .
3 bdr. home located at 123
Garfield Ave. 2 acres lot
runs from SR 7 to Ohio
Ri ve r . Full basement,
finished re c. room 1 2
fireplaces. 2 1/2 baths, con crete pool. new carpet and
pa int. Will consider your
property in trade1 Owner
will consider financing
with $10.000 down and $500
per month. Ca II -446·1546 for
an appointm~nt .

FLORIDA REAL ESTATE
For sell or trade . 3 houses,
Jax, Florida appraised at
S130,000. Will sell tor
$110,000 or sell separately
or trade for acreage of
equal value in Gallia Co.
379·2700.
Farm House. 3.4 ~ere farm ,
tob. base. 2 barns, 15 m i.
South of town . Call 446·2.426 .
3 bdr. house in c ity w ith
16x32 in ground pool. Fen·
ced in yard, pius extra's,
S68,500 or best offer. Call
446 · 7~97 .
.
3 bedroom house, 2 acres, 2
baths, family room. Full
basement, garage. 949:
2079.
- ---~---

By owner. Nice 2 ·bedroom
ranch type over 3 car
garage. $27,500. 13 pet. interest available. 949 ·2801 or
949·2860.
Large historic home on
beautiful corner lot. 6th
and Main, Middleport. 992 559:1.

LAND
CONTRACT · 2
bedroom, full basement,
workshop with attached
shed. approximately •1:1
acre. All eKcellent con·
dition. $28;000-$1 ,000 down
an&lt;l 11 percent on unpaid
balance. $275 a month . In
Racine area . 614·949-2249.
Syr acuse, 3 bedrooms,
large living room , fully
carpeted, 2 baths, 2 car
garage . $38,000. 992·2t•38.'
- ·S room house corner of
Hamillon and Front St.,
Middleport, Ohio. Call 9925171 .

-·---------

-·~-

-------- --

LANDC.ONTRACT 10' int ..
small down pa ·t ment , Pay
5215.,12 per month, nice ·
starter home with ·2 BR,
garage, and garden spot .
Call Hobstetter Realty . 742·
2003.
Milton Road. Camp Conley .
2 year old, 3 bedroom
house, fully carpeted, w ith
1 full and two and a half
baths, yard landscaped
with large utility building ,
Assume 8 V2 percent loan .
675-6275 .
---·-~--~-- ·-

Or rent·3 bedroom fur·
r,lshed home on Bud Chat'·
tin Road on big level lot.
576·2711. .
2 bedroom house on 1 acre,
2 miles beck of New Haven
on paved road, fullv carpeted, self contained water
and septic system\ 882·3267.

Sandhill Road , ,Pt .
Pleasant. 3 bedrooms, 1 '12
baths, double garage .
owner will finance. lm·
mediate occupancy . 615·
5817 .
- -~- .......

-----·..

"

'

•

�.

'

'

..

Ollla
Homu for Silo

3J -

HOU SE· Meaddwbrook Ad·
dition. 3 bedroom, family
room with fireplace, cen-

tral air, basement. 304·675·
)~2.

I

8y owner,

Lots &amp; Acreage

35

on Raccoon creek, all

1300. 2 bedroom furnished, 1150
per month plus uflllles.
Caii57H073 or 576· 2441.
call alter 3 p.m ., 256·6413.
utilities

available.

down, owner will financej

home In Mason,

living

room

for Rent

with

fir'eplar:e, dining room, klt-

Furnished apts. nice, 1
·Houses for Rent
cflen, larl}e siHing room,- 41
fUII size basement, all car· 4 bdr. 2 112 bath bl level bdr .• adults, steam heat,
peted, fotal electric, silting with pool oil Rt. 35. Call 1220 utilities pd. Call ~·
on Iaroe lot. For more In· Wiseman Real Estate 4416 after 7PM.
formation call 773-5241 .
Agency. ~-3643 .
2 bdr. apartmen't unfurn.,
In Crown City, Ohio. Call
Small 4 rm. &amp; bath; fur· 256-6520.
12
Mobile Homes
nished, located 735 rear 3rd
lor Salt
Ave., Gallipolis . SilO per Mobile home In city central
TRI · STATE MOBILE mo., $60 deposit. Call ~· air and heat. adults only,
HOMES. Galjipolls. Year 3870 or 446·1J.IO.
dep. 446·0338.

end sale. pnce reduced.
used mobile homes. CALL

~ · 7572 .

Call446·3945afler 5PM.

NEW LISTING 63x12 \lin·
dale with 7x12 expando
living room. Like new In·.

side

and

5 rm. house in Gallipolis.

out.

carpeted

ttlroughtout, like new wood

burner. sliver top awning, 2

' 1976 New Moon 65X14, gas,
: 2 bdr., 2 window air con . cutioners, skirting and
steps, extra clean, $7,995 .
' Johnson Mobile Home

: Brokers, ~ -35~1.
: 12x6S
Schultz
two
' bedrooms partially fur , nished, new carpet. llhone

446·7380.
TRAILER For Sale. 1971
12x60 Elcono $6800. Un' derpinning and new
: awnings. 446·15-d.
: 1970
Riflcraft
12 X 65
mobile home. 3 bedroom,
front kitchen, utility room.

Call 614-992·7313 after 5

APARTMENTS
One
carpet.ed, $300 a month plus bedroom starts at $152.00
depo_s • t , no
pets, 35 per monttl. Two bedroom
Chlll1cothe Rd . Call ~· 1 starts at$l8B .OO per month.
3 748 .~356- l903.
Deposit $200. Call4ot6·2U5.

require&lt;:! .

Call

STROUT

REALTY 4&lt;16·0008.
We will be having several
homes for rent, lease or
lease with option to buy
within the next few weeks.
All over $200 per mo. &amp;
required references &amp;
deposits. For more in·.
formation call
Strout
Realty 446·0008.
-4 rm . apt. part furni5hed,
adults only , Call 446-3733,
even ing 446-0171 .
3 bdr. unfurnished house.
close to town. Family room
with fireplace, low cost nat.
gas heat. 446-.. 240 or -446·
9655.

p.m .
For rent located in Oak
· 1971 Oar ian 12 x 65, 3
: bedrooms. 1972 Crown
• Haven, l4 x 65 with 8 x 10
' expando, 3 bedrooms. 1973
: Utopia 12 x 65, 2. bedrooms.
1972 1nvader u x 70, 3
bedrooms . 1972 Nashau, 14
x 60, 2 bedrooms. B If• S
Sales, Inc. 2nd and Viand
Sts. Pt. f'leasant, WV .
: Pr1one 675-4424.
: TWO repossessed mobile
homes, brand new I 81
·models, (previous dealer
lost f\oorplan money) . Save
big$$$$$ . Must sell quickly.
K &amp; K Mobile Homes.
Pt. Pleasant, WV
615·3000

.

Hill. 5 rm. house. Call after
4P.M 682·6010.
3 BR HOUSE, located 125
State St . Sec. Dep. and Ref.
required . Call 446·0254
evenings.

WE HAVE SEVERAL
NICE HOMES FOR RENT
OR LEASE . CALL NOW.
THE WISEMAN AGENCY,
446·31&gt;43 .

Camp Conley, extra niCe
and clean, phone 30-4-895-

'f/67.

for

Rent.

3 bdr. apt. In Rio Grande. ·

2 bedroom unfurnished
$190. 1 bedroom furnished
apartemfjt. $125. Naylors
Run. Security depqslt. Call

614-992·2288.

CB,TV, Radio
EqUipment
~ACE 1000 B Side band
with D· l~ mike, Slltronlx
mOdel 90, 11 F D Black Cat

52

frequency counter, Hawk
Linear, 50 wolf, $215 . call

304-615·2387.
5"3c.....___:A
:o.n
e.t"'lq,.u,a,s _____
Antique square grand
piano, good cond. Call 614'-

384-5391 (Wellston) .
Misc. Merchlndici

54

3 dog frick sawmill . Ex·
cellent cond . 843·3421 .

Calll-61H82-1056.
2 bedroom apartrnent on
Rt. 7 below Eureka . ref. &amp;
dep. requ ired. Phone 256·
1142 after 5PM.
1 bedrOom apts. available
at R lverside Apts. Equal
Opportunity Housing. Call

992·7121.
2 bedroom apartment on
Spring Ave, Pomeroy. Partially furnishetl . $170 you

par utilities. Call 992·2288
after 6 p.m .
Available. I bedroom apt.
tor rent. Contact Village
Manor Apts .• Middleport.

992-1181.
2 bedroom furnished apt.

992·W4 , 992-5914 or 304·8•2·
2566 .
2 upstairs apts . in Rutland.
2 people, 1 child only . Arnold Grate. 742·2511 days,
7"2·2246 evenings.
3 room furnished apart·
ment. Adults only, no pets.
Phone 614-949-2851 .
1 bedroom furnished apart·
ment. 614-992·5434.

Discontinued cabinets, t6p,
stove. hOOd, sink. $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 675-

APARTMENTS ,

mobile

houses,
Pt .
and Gallipolis.

614·446·8221 or 614-245-9484.
3 room furnished cottage,
utilities furnished, adults.

Michigan apples, Red·
Yellow
D elici ous,
Johnathan, Stepman, Win·
dsap, cortland . Delmar
Garnes, Letart, wv . 8953400.
Sears K'enmore gas 65,000
BTU space heater . 675·

6073 .
2 bedroom twin single in
Pt. Pleasant at 205 Poplar

Street. $200 month plus
deposit. 1·614·263-8322 or
61063·2669 .

1 ton GMC 1950 Chevy
pickup. Floral living room
suite. Floor furnace . Phone

675-5162 .

"

Falls; Dhlo. w·llh dining
room and fireplace . Range
and refrigerator included .
$135. plus deposit. 1·216·532·

HOME .

1973 3 bedroom 14 ~ 70, underpinned . 615-4064.
1973 Victorian 14 x 65, extra
Oice ,
woodburnlng
fireplace, ready to move in.
Phone 675 -4544 for appointment.

1912 Schultz 12 x 65 . 304-675·
2901 .

· · - -- - - MOBILE home skirting,
7Gx1.4 from $220. to $A9S.
K &amp; K Mobile Homes
Pt. Pleasant, WV
615·3000
FOR sale or rent. 12x.SO
PMC houSe trailer on nice
; lot, call after 5, 304·675. 5658.
1977 Victorian .l4 x 70 two
· bedroom, farillly room, all
electric . Call675-3987.

Mason,

phone 304·675·2961
5:00p.m .

Five rooms down town
Pomeroy .
S125 .
plus
utilities. Adults, no pets.

lo4·615·1044.

Phone 992·3201.

Ave . Deposit required . 30-4·

SLEEPING ROOMS and
light housekeeping ~pt .,

675-4100, dar.
Mobile Homes
for Rent

42

'

3 bdr., double wide, con·
venient location in City
limits, furnished . new carpet &amp; drapery throughout,
all utilities paid except
electric, no pets, no more
than 4, Ref. &amp; dep reg. 5350
per mo. 446-3547.
3 bdr. mobile home com·

pletely furnished. Call 446·
9669 .

2 BR

Gallia HS. Call388·9692.
Rent.

House Trailer for

Caii~· I052.

2
bedroom, bath and half.
12 x 60

mobile

home.

Approximately 5 miles
from Pomeroy . and Mid·

dleport on Rt. 143. Call 614·
992-5858.
2 bedroom mobile home.
Furnished, adults only , no
ptfl. &lt;4 m i It abOve New

Haven. $160 per month.
Call ~·882-2466.
Trailer with addition.
Located on acre lot with

buildings. CR211ot and last
M9f~ths

rent plus deposit.

Utilities not paid. 614-949·

2603.
2 bedroom

on

Sandhill

Road. 675·3834.

schOOls, rural water, . ex·

BY -ner, 3 apartment
on approx. 1 acre.
L.lw In .,.., rent Cllllllrs to
!Nke your
be converlla 1 note hOlM.
City • ...,, Will conalder
1 - contrKI. 675-1113 f-5
p.m.

r.r,ment· c.n

UnfurniShed 2 bedroOni
troller. married couples, 1
child accepted. 675· !076.
3 bedroom ·mobile home,
furnlohed or unlurnllhlcl,
all olectrlc, wa-r lnd
dryor, ec, I child eccoptod.
Dtllollt and relertncft.

~Ht33.

1915 CHEIIRDLET Impala,
good condition. price
reduced. 36" gas range S30.
304-675·3163.
Cub scout Uniform size 8 for
sale.Or trade for size 12.
615-6205 .
FirewOOd.

$35 truckload.

882·262'/ .
Suncrest

WEATHERALL CON ·
CRETE · quality and .. r·
vice, call675·.1582.
PAINTING · Interior and
exterior ,

Pomeroy. Large lots. Call

GO·cart 304-BB2o2424.

Trailer lots. Caii67S-1076.
OFFICE space or small
business, available November 5th. 1508 Jefferson, call

304-615·1435.

lots,

"=-----'P_,e,_,fs,_,_lo,::..rS,a,_,l,.,e___
POODLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367 _
7220
·

~RIARPATCH

.KENNELS
and groemlng.

Boarding

A Kc

Gordon

setters,

English Cocker Spanleis.
Call 388·9790 .
ACK

registered

blonda

cockor spaniel puppy. Call
between 1 to 4 afternoon or

2 American Pit
Bull
Terriors pups. C81f 446-

___

7504.

-·

.____._

AKC

_____ _

DachShUnd,

Pomeranian

and

Poodle

pups, 304-895·3958.
Fruit

58

•

&amp; Vegetables

Potatoes, apple'i, pumpkins, &amp; cider. Rayburn's
Market, Kanauga, Oh. 44ft·

8247 .

NICE maternity clothes,
small sizes, 304-675·-t072 .

............
.... .
......
__ ,.,... . ....
.

1975 Ford Granada, 1970
Chevy
pickup, utility
trailer , antique oak
secretary,
dresser.
washstands, round oak
tables, stack bookcase,

- .. ... .. ..

61

phonograph, clocks, oak
roll top desk, bullermold,
Household GOOds

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair, rocker, . ot·
toman, 3 tables, SSOO. Sofa,
Sofas and chairs priced
from $285. to $195. Table&amp;,
S38 and UP to $109. Hlde·a·
beds,$340., queen size. 5380.

Rocllnero, $175. to 1295.,
Lamps from..,ll8 . to $65. 5
pc. dlfettes from $19., to
S38S. 1 pc., $189. and up.
Wood table with 4 chair&gt;,
1219 up to 5495. Desk $110.
Hutches. 5300. and 5375.,
maple or r,lne finish .
Bedroom sui es - Basseff
Oak, 1615., Bassett Cherry,
$195. Bunk bed complete
with maHre$Ses, S2SD. and

up to 5350. Captain's ·bodo,

$215. complete. Baby bods,
$99. Mattresses or box
springs, full or twin, $51,,

firm, 168. and S78. Q"""
sets, $195. 5 dr. cnes11, S4J.
4 dr. chests, 543. Bod
tromes,S20.andS25., tO gun
· Gun cabinets, S350., dlnet·
hr chalro 120. and $25. Gas
or electric ranges, $295. Or·

tllopedlc super firm, · IPS,
baby matreuea, S25 &amp; 135,
bod lr.mea $20, 525, &amp; S30.
used,
Ranges,
refrigerators, end TV's,

3 miles out Bulovllle Rd.
Open 9am to 1pm, MOn.
tllru Fri., 9am to5pm, Sal.
~-o:m

GOOD
USED
AP·
PLIANCES • w..hera,
dryers,
refrlgorarora, ·
rongea.
Sk•oos Ap·
pllencn, 1911 Eostern
AVO., 446-7391.
(

brass kettle. baskets,
wicker furniture, misc.

items. ~-:ms .
Weight' s assorted sizes,
total 300 lbs ., exc. Cond.

I

~· 0429 .

QOOd
cond, $150 . Call 44oi·l680.
Wnher

&amp;

drver,

Meyer 250 bushel PTO bat·
ch grain dryer. 985-3831 .

Redwlng boots, Safety foe. 1 ••
L
Reg . price $19.95. Our price ~
"'------"-'1-"ve.,s,toc=k- - - 156 .95 . Bailey' s,
Mid· Cows, cows and calves,
dleport.
herd bulls prospects,
vearl lng heifers. Some .
sired by or A. I. to National
55 _..cBe:u,._,l,ld,_,l,_,ngLS,..,u,.p,..pe:ll,e" s-- Champions I Second annual
Building materials, block, sale will be ot the Athens

lg~r;:r'Falrgrounds,

2PM,
31. For catalogs
contact Arrow Farms, Rt.
&lt;4, Athens or Jeffers' Farm,

.~==;;;;:;=::;::::;:;._j Rt. 1, Athens, Ohlooj5701 .
Cattle-Cows,

cows

and

calves, herd bull prospects,

72 ;--:-·--rn.cksfarii~-

1976 Chevv 2 112 ton dump
truck 1 heavy duty 16 ft.
beil, lwln holst, well equip·
Call JO.I-312·6390,
WVA .

Ripley,
.

County

R1, Athens, Ohio
Phone61H93-8274.

II'GIAL

cvl., standard shift, low
mileage, gOOd cond., $1,895.
Chevy luv Truck,
without topper.

1916

with topper.
after 5PM.

Call~­

-· -----~-----

1911 pickup truck.· First
ssoo gets it. 675·1302.

ill GREAT PERFORMANCES:

45701 .

7.t FORD half ton, rusty,
runs good, 302, s.tandard,
overload springs, positive
traction, $695.00, 304-895·

3921 .

.

- IF 1W 1'111ALER6

OF COURGE ! l'iECAN
00 'rtlU Hl't.e USE MY 5/fiP 01/ER
IT ISH' T?

HAVE EVEM FOLLOYIE!7

A 8CIIT. Mit.

Htlet1 lliEY lEAN

H &amp; M CLEANING SER ·

~EU.MM!\!

VICE StNm &amp; or pressure
wash trucks , trailers, 1
mobile 'homes, tarm equip-

THE!(E !

A~'?

ment, etc. Phone 388·937~ :

or .u6-3829.

j

H.

Ashworth
tnstallement
Service. This week special '
Armstrong llcertone vinyl j
$7.86 Installed. Phooe 446· ~
8019. All work gueiranteed T

ilZ Ill

.

Inc. No Job to small or
large. 2 vrs. experience &amp;
training. Work guaranteed! Save up to 30 to 50 per
cent on heating bills. Free
estimates . Call 286·7171 or

286·5140.
GENES
CAR.PET
Cleaning. Special rates tor
Nov. and Dec. only, Call
now and save. 61-'·992-6309.

----===·==---1979 Ford van .cs.ooo miles.

73

excellent shape, $4,500 or
best oiler. Phone 379·2196.
1973 VW Van. 1/ery good
cond :-"11,600. m-6362.

l

Phone~·7322.

882·2019.

V:OO I])D(!} MONDAY NIGHT AT

RON ' S Television Service.
Quazir,

and

calls.
orhouse
446-2454.

Phone 516·2398

1976 Ford \/an, E350 . $1800 .

F &amp; K Tree Trimming,

I've

stump removal. 675·1331 .
RINGLES'S SERIIICE ex;
perienced ~ason, roofer,
carpenter,
electrician,
Qeneral repairs anct
remodeling. Phone 304-675- '

2088 or 675-4560.

~

700CLUB
MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE)"
"RO.llll~ut" 1V80
(J) iUJ 01 MONDAY NIGHT

:

FOOTBALL Houston OHara at
Pittaburgh Stealers. (Closed·
Captioned; U.S.A.)
·
CJ (f) llaJ M. A. S.H . A USO
troupe makes a rare and
unupacted detour to the
4077th when one of Ita
members ra II sill; Broadway
star Gwen Verdon guest stare
a a te'med a tripper Brandy
Doyle. headliner ot the USO
company. (Season Premiere;

Water wells. Commercial

1'979

Golden

Eagle

Cherokee Jeep, all power,
radio, tape, new tires, low
mileage, excellent con·

and Domestic . Test hQies ~
Pumps Sales and Service.

~-895-3802 .

Are high interest rates
keeping you from a new

home? Then pula new loaf&lt;

Motorcycles

on your present one. We do

All used bikes drastically
reduced tor Immediate

all types of custom building

clearance.

quality, professional ser·

Betz

Honda

Sales, Up~er Rt.
Gallipolis. 446·2240.

1,

For

sal!!' 1970

Chevelle

wreckeG. Whole or parts Including good IIPOrt redial&amp;

and

rem~dellng .

For .

3386 or John Wamstey 173·
5521. _ _ _ _ _ .1
Carpentry, building
remodeling. 675-2440.
·12

rldlols, .,.. oooner. 1100.
Clllalter 5 pm 675-1092.
'1917 TraM Am, ps, pb, air
c:ondlflonecl, «111-llc,
·cr•-::c;s. llde plpn,
err
Dlua. 5M IIIII

IIKkntr or CIII675-GIG;

191, · · - ~., kt.
dftlotl•• • • .,...... . .

VltiYI fall, lxclilllnt -

1f77 CAMARO*'f7··"·

work.

&amp; P11n1
work
In·

Auio

and

~mlna .)

8:30 W IIORE THAN A CONCERT
The Netherland a Woodwind
Ensemble , the Amalerdam
COnoertgebouw conducted by
Bernard Haltlnk, and rock art/It
Frank Zappa perform inthla fii!TI
rrated by David Froat.

FO~

CAtiflH?NIA.'

l

Plumblnt
&amp; Healing

V:35
10:00

CARTER'S PLUMBING '
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ond Pine
Phone ~-3888 or 444·4117
A

ctun

&amp;aves ~

furnace

cleaned. Caii67S·2158.

i3

BARNEY

EKCIVIfint

BACKHOE and Septic tank
Service.

L-arry

strlcker. 615-5580 .

--- ---'·--·----·

-q--

Gefteral Kaullllp ...,

l.l.lilm THE MAGIC OF
DAVID COPPERFIELD An

OF JAMES J . BUTTI! Jim

DON'T Ne\JER TAKE
THESE PILLS ON AN
EMPTY STOMACH,

Slden·

l

DOMINICK LABINO

I!!' CLOSE

enterta inm ant apecial which
guides viewere through an
aatonlahlng ~orid ot humor,
dance and magic, etarrlng
David Cop·perfleld; Jtaon
Robards holts, with guaata
Susan Anton and Audrey
Landera. (60 mine.)
(I) ROAD BACK: TH! STOI!Y

money . Have your furnace

Beattie waa one~ a promlalng
~oung lighter, but miafortune
cauud him to turn to drugs, ·
alchohol and fi111a11v an
Involvement with organized
crime. Thla film chronlclaa his
early yeara of deep air, and
preaenta Baattlaln hla work
today, struggling with young
felon. at Nexus , a prograaaive
therapeutic canter which he
tratea. (80 mlna.)

ITNEVER IS

•
10:08
10:28
10:30

l

NEWS
TB8 EVENING NEWS
CIN UPOATl! II!WI
liNG OUT AMERICA
~,tiED HITCHCOCK

:~:= ~i£ir~~

NAIHV{W Rf'D
·
MOVIE ·IMUIICAL) ••
Modn-"IHD
TOll IN TH! HOUR
NTHI,AIIILY
~ATI!NIWI
TONI0HT8KOW

PEANUTS

JONES BOYS WATER
SERVICE. Coil 367-1411 or
367~1.
.

17
tt•trar, 1171111.
llttlllnclllded.

OFF ...

NAI/Tifll/..
SHE I!J!

-·--- --··-=:::-:--'72 PONTIAC, Exc . cood . .
"
E lactrlcel
~ on Ch!lllcotl&gt;e Rd.,
_ __!..Retrlpratlon
car
lift
for
11
..
age
IAOO.
202
Alfred Holley's Trallor
engle plug lurbo liNda for SEWING Machine repair&gt;,
Park.
small block SIOOO. tm Oldo service. Alilt1orlzed Singer
fctr parfl SilO. Phone 576· Sales &amp; Service. Sharpen
MORRISON'S Auto NIH. :H02.
· SCIIIOrl. Fabric Shop;
Henderson, WV. Phone 67S·
Pomeroy. 9t2-n&amp;.-.
..
1514or 675·2111 .
----1
77
Auto Repolr •
JACKS REFRIGERATI0- 1
1911 Mustang II, 4 cvtllldlr, FALL SPECiA~ Have a N . air Condition service, ·l
4 _.t, em·fm radio tape machine polltnid &amp; Wll' commerclel, Industrial .;
deck. ac, 3t,l00 miles, lob. $50, wax only l20. Auto Phone 882·2019,
.-.
S2500. 304-937·3244.
TrlmCtflter,446-1N8.
1913 ~hryller Newport, 4 OU811ty .

81Lio ANI/ 1
AAE GOOIN$ TO
$EE EJILLY

WAIT'LL 131R171E
ANC1 WINNIE
FINC1 QJT HOW

vices call: Terry Gray 895·

and new duel exhaual. Cell
446·93111efter 5.

air,

THE MOVIES 'Splendor In The
Grau' 1981 Stars : Meliua
Gilbert, Cyril o·~allly, Ned
Beatty . An adaptation of
Will i am lnga ' a classic
bittersweet story of two
sensitive teenagers in
pr a · Oap re sa ion Ka naa s,
whose love ia shattered by the
saxual moras of the day and
preaaure to conform to parental
aotatlona. (2 hra.)
"

Specializing In Zenith and

675 · 74~.

-~-------

A cyl., 4

Service .

Residential. automotive.
Emergency service. Cawl

Motorola,

THAT'SINCREDIBL~

FOr h'is courage In raacuing an
autistic child I oat in rugged
~;nountalna at night, the aeriea
preaentaa Botton flrtfighteraa
Ita tlrat lncr4idlble Hero; an
e)lclting air aatety breakthrough In the form of a plane·
alzed auperchute to land both
small plana and pilot, and a
world record attempt by •e
water pkiera to aki teamed
behind one boat will be
!,utured. (60 mlna .)
.
B::iO lAJ HBO SNE~K PREVIEW: .
NOVEMBER Jerry Stiller and
Anne Meara hlghllghLthe
upcoming movies, aport a and
1!2.8~18 on HBO In November.
IIIII (I) llaJ THE TWO OF US ..
Brentwood' I blgdayoffwflh lin
attractive Engllah girl named
Mellen 'alnterruptedbyCubby
and Reggie pleading for advice
about the women In their live a.
8:58 (I) CBN UPDATE NI!WS

vans &amp; • w .D.

evenings.

automatic,

DANCE IN AMERICA 'Nureyev
andtheJoffrey Ballet in Tribute
to NIJintkv' In one ot the moat
ambitloua 'Danca In America '
' productlonaaverundertaken,
· Rudolf Nureyev and the Jeffrey
Ballet dance three Niinaky
worka: 'Petrouchka', 'Spectre
data Roae' •nd 'L' Aprea·Midi
d'un Fauna'. (80 mina.)
(]J) GOl.OEN AGE OF TELEV~
liON 'Day a of Wine and Rose a'
ClltfRobertaonendPiperlaurie
atar ae a pair of alcoholics who
lind more Importance in alcohol
than they do In each other, and .
are intwltably driven apart by

ANNIE

tor termite,

LOCKSMITH

.

Judy Benjam in Ia 'wav out of
uniform' when aha atrlpalor a
coveted and covert b~th In
Q!.pta'ln Lewla' private tub.

or 367· ·

---------------

P u reb red
E.n glls h · 7;;,;--,A.-:m='-tor:::Osa"'t;:e--Shepherd puppies. Great
For sale 1976 Y· Z-80
stock and watchdogs. Cali
1978 DOdge Omnl4 dr ., hat· Vamatia dirt bike new
614·247·2161.
chbaCk, aUtomatic, power dunlop back fire, very good
steerlnv, excellent cond.
cond., .i300. Caii24H216.
Fish Tank and · Pet Shop
Phone245·5617.
241J Jackson Ave. . Pl.
Pleasant. 615·2063. Moo.,
AutoPom
76
1973 BuJck LaSabre .
Thurs .• I Fri. 11 to 6. Tues.,
&amp;
Accessories
5525. Exc. cood, new
Wed., I Sat. 11 loA. Check
Call304-675·6743.
C.HARLIE'S SALIIA~E
our Fish Special.
Auto parts, auto . repair.
wrecker strVIc:e. t,tJy
Ford
Mustang
197S,
PB,
Stud Service · AKC Old
automobi-1~. f"tdiators and
PS,
auto.
Call
245·5669
In
Eng.ll~h Sheepdog. 895·3624.
batterl.r,. 446· n17.

door,

1..1 ~ t:¥-W{ /&gt;.LWf&gt;..Ys !-If&gt;..&lt;;;~

1975 Chevy pickup truck, 6 · A &amp; C Home Insulation,'

1978 Honda motorcycle,
350, low mileage, like new.
Call 304-372-6390, Ripley,
WVA.

Monzo,

iltlULD' J/&gt;.. Ll 1&lt;1:; ~ 01.\1/e 1\J IT I

IUCIJilaJ PAIVATE BENJAMIN

1978 Plymouth Volare,
good cond. Cail379·2126.

~·8169.

M

U..S.A.l

roach, bird, rodent, spider. ,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas.

Ca II

I
m·

THE PRAIRIE The citizen a of
Walnut Grove and Doctor BakeJ
hlmulf are ahoc ked and
angered when It Ia discovered
that the new physician t'le hired
to help him handle the town 's
medical naedala black. (80
mina .)
(Cioaad·Captioned;

Resiclentla'l, commercial,
interior/ exterior, paper
hanging, and · texured '

~·2801

HAPPY DAYS AGAIN
(f) nc TAC DOUQH
lllJ MACNEIL-LEHRER
POI!T
!!!!WB
W MUPPET SHOW
PRE·81!A80N BASKET·
BALL Atlanta Hawk a va
Wa!lllngton Bullate
YOUAIKEDFORIT
ANOTHIR LIFE
. ·
LAVERNE AND SHIRLEY
AND COMPANY
8(1) FAMILYFEUD
ill NIGHTLY BUSINESS ·
l!l!PDRT
ilaJ
RICHARD SIMMONS
llttDW
Cf1l TRAINING DOGS THE
WOOJ!.HOUSE WAY
1JZ •
ENTERTAINMENT
NIGHT .
CBN UPDATE NEWS
8 (!) LITTLE HOUSE ON

(I) NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC

Call

74

the · Athens

Fairgrounds, 2 pm, Oetober 31. For catalogs con·
tad Arrow Farms, R4,
Athens or Jeffers' Farm,

QuarterHorse

They:l.l Do 'kEvery Time

a=

(.~ ~ /&gt;.. 01&lt;11.11&lt;
AIX\ll11l01 ~1/eReJ.~o:?

1975 Sliver Camaro runs
good. Caii24H212.

1966 chevy Impala 8, 2dr.
coupe, good cond., .$400.

7:5B
B:OO

. BORN LOSER

in concrete driveways,
sidewalks,
patio,
basement, garage floors
and etc. Free estimates. 11
years experience. Call 367-

ceilings. Ph . 36H78A
1160.

at

1978 Chev.

HARP/tHY···

0390.

dition. 713-5323.

apct., goOd clean car. $2550.

5.4Y6~S 1HiE

1969 Charger fixed up as
' The Genera! Lee' Dukes of
Hazzard. 4-46·7100 or 446-

vearll ng heifers. Some
sll'led or bred A.l. to
National
Champions .
Second annual sale will be

Gelding: GOOd with kids. 11
vrs. old. 245·5252.

.. ,

BING·s CONCRETE CON·
STRUCTION · Specializing

992•6176.

f .arm Equipment

Ford tr.ctor, live PTO
gOQd cond .• $2,350. Call ~ ·
7322.

cord. Call 614-143· 2933 or
614-843·2452 . .

Contest

gas

1973 GMC Jimmy. 350, 11·8,
A·speed, PS, PB, while
spoke wheels. $1375. 614·

S35. truck load, or $65. a

GRAND Champion

ex-cellent

- · ~-

256·1311.

1981

tires,

Cell256·6753. ·
Turnips $6.00 bushel. Kale
&amp; mustard greens, .50 lb.
Raymond Rowe, 217-2192.

For s~le wood burning
stove, 'ltke new, S120. Call

2186.

1977 Mustang good cond.,
Ps, PS, AMIFM radio,
standard floor Shiff, 4 new

ped, low mileage, ex. cond.

..,

AKC registered, S1f2 mon·
ths old, male Boxer-, , real
nice, healthy, S200. 301·576-

Auto lor Salt

7 to10 evenl~gs, 256· 1361 .

93. 286·5930.

•

71

DRAGONWYNO
CAT · mileage. $2,300. Call 256·
TE~Y · KENNEL. AKC . 6265.
black Chow puppies, CFA
Himalayan, Persian and 78 chevette, extra sharp. .7891 .
Siamese kittens. Call ~- Call446·70411.
38_... after ,. p.m.
F-ERRELL ' s
WINDON
GLASS SER\IICE Home
1911 -Buick Electra very maintainance ..
and
HILLCREST KENNEL
low miles full ~er, good remodeling . . Phone 388Boarding all breects4 clean condition, Sl,OOO. · Call ....ut9326.
indoor·outdoor facilities. A630. ·
Also AKC . Reg. DOI&gt;er·
mans. Call AA6-7795.
French CitY Painting

For Sale: 750 and 1000
gallon PLASTIC
septic
tanks. State and County ap·
proved. Total weight XlO
lbs., Haul In .your pick·up
truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
Service, located 3 miles
South of Jocks011 on St. Rt .

$125. 458·1513.

plumbing !

r~~~~ii1~~~~,r,;::::::;;:;;;~;~~~i 20
roofing,
some
remodeling :
yrs. exp.
Coll388·~2 .

19 cubic feet Sear-s gold
"refrigerator
with
icemaker, 1200. Coleman
presidential electric fur·
nance. S125. Call245· 9508.

rust.

7:30

Call~·2107 .

30~· 372·6390,

female, black and

7:05

Carpets. Free estlmatn .

with new engine, both
items in exc. condition.

AKC Registered Doberman

i

CAPTAIN EASY

THE ANSWE~~~1-.

~lllf

WHOLE ~"

I lll0061lT FOR SURE
ntE ANSWER liJOOI.P 8e
lt.illiERE SOME PLACE

·11:08
11:28
11:30
' -

•••t

'The
Of Ceraon' Gu11ta:
Dick Yen Patten, David

TRitTATE

. UPHOI.ITiltiiY SHOP
na lie, Aile., GeHIPOiis.

•

'

'

i

u....... .,.. tow ...........
ono-ID--.tolonn

-~--

\LllJ

1

I G1NINNj

r

II

1ottert to
· u tug·

Now anonge lho tonn lho turpl1se -

llfstad by tho above-·

• I

Prlntariawerhere~

D ( I XXl )
(Answers tomoriow) :

Saturday's ! Jumbles : FLOOD DUCHY CHOSEN. PUDDLE .
'
Answer: What 1\1. porter has to do to hold down his ·
. job-HOLD UP
.
Jumblt 80011 No. 17; Conlalning 110 puzzlts,lanalllbilfor$1.85 poatpeld

trom Jumble, Clo this MWip.ptr, 80)134. Norwood, N.J. 01148. 1ndudtyour
namt&gt;, addf..l, zi code and mab chtcka
abt. to Netn
.

••oaE
Delay the ruff
·.

ByOawlldJoeolly

ud AIID 11111111 ,

NORTH

10.#&amp;.11

•a

.K 10 I

Oowald: ''North and South
belong in lbree .no trump. ·
They would aet there easily
If South opened one no

.AQIOta
.J42
EAST

WEST

trump as most experts
would. His hand quaWieo in
every respect "and It Is good
policy to open no trump

•u

•An

•t

.AQIIIU

U
+u

.J7U
+Qt01711

wben your hand is fully
quiWied."
Alan: "Alter a DO trump
openlns, North would just
raise to 1ame and South
would make five odd with DO
real trouble. Alter tbe bid·
dill.( started as It did, South
ml&amp;ht also have jumped to
three no trump over two

SoUTH

.QH73
.KJ 10
tK81

+AK

..

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

"""

hearts."

Oswald: "North c~uld also
have done better. He has no
singleton in his hand and
should have raised two no
trump to three Instead of
bicldiilg three spades."
Alan: "West opens his
deuce of hearts acalnst four
spades. Eut tlkes hll ace. If
be gives bil partner an
immediate ruff, South wm
malte four '!P!des."
Oowald: ' Eut must realIze that If West bolds two
spades the heart ruff wm
keep. In order to punish
North and South for tbetr

Nor*

Eon

Pua

s.."
,
2 N'l:

••

Pta
Pus

.'

bad bidding, he must lead Ills
aingleton · dlamoad at trick
two: Then be Jl'lbs the first
trump, lives West the heart
ruff antf ruffs a diamond for
the fourth defensive trick.

di~I:MI ~. g(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
14 Cruising

ACROSS

I Dispensed

C5

Speared

6 - spumante c&amp; For fear
10 Synunetrized
lhat
12 Astonish
47 Doubting
13 More
DOWN
orderly
I Signify
14 Do a knil·
2 Gounnandize
ling job
3 Become
15 Nobel
adept In"
physiologist
4 Suffix for
16 Swim
subsist
18 Cube
5 Gary Cooper
19 Half a score
111m role
20 Devilish fonn · I VIper
22 Beanery sign 7 Romberg
21 "- Whal
light opera
Cumes
8 Italian
Natur'lly"
25 "Take

·
Salurday's Au""r
30 One of
11 Dehydrated
the code~
17 Malay boat 32 Unwavering
21 La11811ish
33 - nuncio .
%3 Membership 34 Originate ·
oo a board 35 Majestic
Zl Firenze's
n Erode
river
t3 Chemistry
!II More stable
suffix

9 Delta

-Train"
27 Certain
colonists
29 O'Brian
TV role
31 Epic poetry
33-Currier,
to lves, e.g.

36 Borinl!
routine

37 Nigerian
38 "'Just-

of Those

Things''
311 Sufllx
for hero

CO Pop's
pacifier
cz Schedule

..,
DAILY· CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to· work It:
. AXTDLBAAXK
'
II

L0 N GF I L L0 W

·'

One leltor olmpJr stonds lor onoiher. In thio sample A.. 11
used for the three L's, X lor the two 0 '•· rtc. Slnsle letters,
apoltrophes, the lenath end !ormation ol lhe wordo ore all '
hint&amp;. Each dey the code letters ore dltrerent.
·'

cavnoquOTES
MGE
VDD

VJ

AJL

EW

ENHK
CWWL

·'

WJSA

VJL

RWT

LHKSGKKHWJ

W'R

UVJ

PA

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.PA

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S.'-*:r'• erul~t: THE MOST OOMPIETELY UlST OF

iiOYII ·(OIIAMA) •• \1
· ''I...., .lolt" 1MI

II

i' ,:'
. .. '

V

li""_:~NIW8

= i Rl.
'"'=~IIIJIII'·
lUff
. . . . .21ft.
. Ill MOWAIYS'U
1 IGII124. Pt.
, :IIMIn eiiC.
, with u-. 675-lll$1.
•
c.ti24-IDI.

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... \

,• ~

.··:

FNVE

0-.v: 'Let MaLightTho Wly'

...........1133,

.'

it#

.
I

Stotnberll, Mtlltoo Manchet·
(llepoot; eo mine.)
M!OTHIRLFE
(I) Cll LAT! MOVIE

· UPilllfl!! t

.. ; ..

..·.

&lt;-

''PinoccNo'·'

CAPTAIN STEEMER Car·
Cleaning featured by ·
Halfell Brotflors Custom

Coll256· 1427.

o.

EVENING
"f:OOI])e P11 ~GAZINE
(I)
PROGRAM
U!IANNOUNCI!D
.
CIJ IIOVIE ·(FANTA&amp;\\)"

'Pel

For sale wood&amp; coal stove.

brick, sewer pipes, wln·
dows, lintels, etc . Claude
Winters, . R lo Grande,
Call245·5121 .

-AY
OCT.ae, flllt

lree estimates. Call 256·
1112.

Mixed firewood . Single
load 535.00, 4 loads SIOO,
and 10 load 12110. Cell 256·
1411.

pups. 9 weeks old, 1 male, I
Cemetary

----------~~-- ·
JIM MARCUM ROOfing

STUCCO PLASTERING

100 Held Polled Hereford

nice location. 615·4296.

992-1419.

after

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

COUNTRY I,IOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, North of

chair and loveseat, S275.

appt. call379·2613 .

ttllentlocetlon. Phone 319·
21N.

Space for Rent

Sl

,84 ACRE Farm for sale, 3
.BR home. Will teke proper·
•ty In town on trade -ln. Free
:oas and r9yalty check. For

5 acre loll 15,'000. One
I...,acre
lot 11,000, city

441

Call after 5, 614-361·1251.

12x50 2bdr. trailer, fur·
nished, located near North

schools. Buy,_ and build
the future. ,Enter !tom
Rt. 160 or Bulavlllt Rd.
SS,OI». up. Phone .~ ·4153
altof5 :00.

Furnished Rooms

Park Central Hotel .

Firms for Sale

:1~

FURNISHED apartment,
301 Main St . 304-675-9760.
45

utilities . Phone256· 1157.

Approximately one half
acre lots, located between
Gallipolis and Holzer
Medical Center, eKcellent
residential area, city
.water, sewer and city

THREE bedroom apart·
ment for rent in Clifton,

TWO bedroom, furnished
cottage at 210J Jefferson

2 bdr. mobile home . Adulh
or11y, 5125. a month plus

did &lt;;aii51H9Hl75.

wv. 773·5651 .

,•

textured celllnga, com- ,;
mercia I and residential, 1 .

I

House- for rent or sale.
Close to school, large lot. 4
bedroom. 992-&amp;309 .

Conley, $6,000. Will help

· Would you II ke to own a
)lome of your own. We
didn't have $10,000 for a
down · payment nor $5.000
norevenl1,000. Do what we

digital clock, 304-773-9160.
GOLDEN Pheasants and
Lady Amherst Pheasans,

2 bdr. trailer In Henderson,
Sl25 per mo. plus deposit.

Lots &amp; Acreage

MAGIC Chef microwave
oven, touch control, with

Television
•
•
VIeWing

spouting and sldlno. 30
years eltf)erlence. Free •
estimates. Remodeling .
can388·9851.
·

Firewood split &amp; dell vered.

Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,

: SALE or rent-1972 New
. Moon, 2 bedroom, fur ·
nished, air conditioned. set
' up in 2 C's Park, Camp
finance, 304-675-2195.

3 ROOM apartment, partially furnished, 304·675·
5659.
.

~-

~- 4201

New woodburning ad-on
furnance. still in factory
carton, heats Iaroe home,
$450. Call256·1216.

Blaine King

···.

STANLEY STEEMIIR ·•
Carpet CIHnlng

quanlfles. Phone 26·W8.

with mOdel
cargo545
·wench,
Allis
rubber Flat
tire
endloader2114 yd . bucket,
·completely overhauled

....

tmeo••mca••

cord or $40 per half cord.
Call for quotes on large

Fiat Allis mOdel 6E cl.o ter

'.

.~,--~--~
";:·=--=--.--~.·I

Flrewood·spllt, delivered
and stacked, Ml•ed wood
165·per cord or Sl5 per half
cord. Hardwood $15 per

3 220-3000 watts heaters, in ·
wall type, new. US. each. 2
More than 100 pieces of
used gas stoves. 992-3201 .
brown underpinning for a
mobile home, u~ed fust one
POTATOES . South off year . A seven and one half
SR681 west of Darwin. Or feet by 58 Inch wide ova I
north of CRIB. Cecil Toban.
rug, and white uniforms
size 9-10. Call-'46· 306~ after
King . wood burning stove. 4:30PM.
S225 . 10 doll outfits . Fits 15·
16 in . dolls. Allll5. 614-949· 1979 A TC Honda70, electric
2603 .
guitar with amp $60, lntertainment center $30.
26' TROUTWODD travel Caii36H60&lt;1.
trailer and camp site on
Raccon Creek . Close to New 1981 mOdel sewing
Ohio River. $500 doWn. mac·hine.
Zig · zags ,
owner will finance. lt14·256- monoorams, sews on but·
1216.
ton, makes button holes,
darns, mends, fancy stitch.
New Crop Apples· Red and Reguatr price S2A9. 95 now
Golden Delicious, Winesap, only $99.50. Cali collect I·
Rome Bea•Jty, Grimes 304-736·5289 .
Golden and JohnathanRetail and Wholesale, any Firewood for sale mixed
quanity available. Al$0 hardwood, split, delivered,
fresh Apple Cider, Pum- &amp; stacked. Call682·6943.
pkins, hOmemade Apple
Butter and more produce
1
Market, Moving. Furniture 8i'1d ap·
for sale and Kim·
1 days .. pliances
ball organ . Caii446·B169.

Apartments. 675·55-48.
homes ,
Pleasant

itf~tl\IIOIWK
H111118M&gt; lot'e -t.o play With pel:6&gt;
bot its llflpol'ta~ t.o ~-- ~
'(ott~ a cal:., 'tiDt a du~t~b d~ .

Ripley, WVA.

2318 .

675·2812 or 675· 1580.

3~ .

USED MOBILE
576·2711 .

35

APARTMENT
Call ~·0390 .

A1IIIIIOII

2 bedroom house in Letart

MOBILE home located In

33

HUD accepted. 675·5104.

3 bdr. house 2 baths. fully

bdr. Priced to sell fast . Call ·3 bedroom r;:mch with
Johnson Mobile Home basement, reference &amp;
Brokers, .446·3547.
deposit r ·equired. Available
Nov. I st. Call-446·0595.
CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S 4
bedroom
house
QUALITY
MOBILE overlooking the Ohio River,
HOME SALES, 4 MI. 3 mi. from town . Lower
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT Rl ver Rd. S275 per mo.
35. PHONE 446·3868 .
Oep . required. Inquire at
422 2nd . Ave. or phone 4461977 70&gt;&lt;14, Govenor mObile 1615 or 44a·1244.
home. 3 bdr., 1 1/2 baths,
owner has moved to FOR LEASE OR RENT·
Florida priced to sell quick . Modern 3 bdr. ranch near
.Johnson Mobile Home town . $300 per month.
. Brokers• .u6·35,.1.
depos it -&amp; references

, - - - -- -

2 · BEDROOM apartment,

Gil'

11!1 Lorry Wrllld

Krr 'N' CARLVI,.E "'

Restauront equipment
rKOnelltfonod by RADCO.
Call 304-523·1311. Hgtn.,
WI/A.

Ap~~rtmemt

44

MIK. Morcllllldlco

Ratliff Pools &amp; Service.
Complete salol, service,
pool ctrvors. end wl n·
terlzaflon kill. Call 446-132A

LOTS · Real nice campsite

wv . 1 112 story, .4 bedroom,
large

M

42

'

Mond1y, Octoblr 26, 1981

..

• &gt;

VJL

ALL DAYS

KNWGDL

WJA.- UVTSGK

.,

VGTADHGI(

ONE ON WIDCH WE · HAVE NO'II

LAUGHED.-NICHOLAS atAMFORT

.. '

�12,-The Dally Sentinel

Ohio

Farmers' bill.peridjng
I

I

,

OOWMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

Far- House Agriculture and Natural
men who want to operate a market Resources Committee resume Thur' on their own land COIIld not be sday.
It is one of only a handful of comprecluded from doing so by county
and township zonlng ordinances if a mittee bearings slated in the.
bill pending in the House becomes General Al!Sembly this week as the
Senate seeks to wrap up work on its
Jaw.
The measure Jould prohibit version of a House-passed $13.8
authOrities from preventing the use billion state budget bill.
A Senate floor vote on the 211of land for a farm market so long as
at leallt hall the gross income mpntl) budget is tentatively
received was generated by the sale scheduled for Tuesday. Passage
of produce raised on farms owned or would send the docwnent back·to the
operated by the market operator In a House for concurrence in numerous
upper chamber revisions. A temnonnal crop year.
The bill allows local zoning agen- porary 15-day budget has been draf·
cies to regulate other factors such as ted should legislators be unable to
the size of the structure and parking resolve differences.
Ohio is operating under a four·
lots.
monlh
interim budget that expires
The market provision is obe part
Oct.
31.
of a Senate-passed bill designed to
SpP.[lSOred by Sen. Paul E. pfeifer,
benefit Ohio's agricultural Industry.
R·Bucyrus,
the main thrust of the
Hearings on . the measure by the
0

in· Ohio House

agriculture blll is to pmoent farmers
from being hit by .... utiUty
lll8l!lllliiiel when sewer, water or
other utility lines crou tbelr land to
connect with shopplnll centers, factories or other developnenta.
pfeifer said . the problem hal

become critical in some cues, forcing farmers toaell part of their land
to pay the assessments •.
The blll prohibits any public entity, other than a municipal corporation, from · collecting
assessments for sewer, water or
electrical service on property that is
used primarily for agricultural
production, except on a lot of one
acre surrounding a residence or
other nOIHigriculturalstructure.
A Legislative Service Commisslon
analyais says that in the case of
county water and sewer projects,
the exemption from llll8e8SilM!nts in

the blll applies Olliy If the land aiiiO
meell tbe ·deflnlUoo rl "land
devoted exduaively to qrlcultural
uae" In the real ptoperly taxation
law.
•
Another. part of Pfeifer's blll
protecta fanners from nulaance
suits brought by thoee complatn1ng
about such things as grain dryers
operating into the night.
The measure says any
· lgricultural production activity Is
presumed to be reasonable and does
not conatltute a nuisance if the· activity was establll!hed prior to ad·
jacent, nOn-agricultural acllviUes
and does not have a substsntial adverse effect on the public health,
safety or welfare.
pfeifer's bill has been endorsed by
!hoi Ohio Farm Bureau Federation
and the Ohio Farmers Union.

"

.'

'

Romanian·· leaders want missiles out
From AP Wires
Romanian President Nicolae
Ceausescu was quoted today as
calling for withdrawal of Soviet
nuclear missUes from Eastern
Europe in return for a hall in the
planned deployment of U.S. medium
range rockets In Western Europe.
'l'h!l maverick East bloc leader's
appeal came after weekend anti·
nuclear rallies that brought out
more than 650,000 people in six West
European cities in a show of growing
opposition to deployment of U.S.
nuclear missiles to match a Soviet
missile buildup.
Ceausescu's statement, made in
an Interview with the West German
newspaper Frankfurter Rundschau,
marked the first time a Soviet Bloc
leader has spoken out publicly for a
withdrawal of Moscow's SS-20
missiles as part of an arms reduction plan.
The paper quoted Ceausescu as
saying be favored a halt in development of new nuclear nli.ssile.~ as well
as the stationing of nuclear weapons
on European soil.
, Ceausescu said this would apply
not onjy to Western plans for
stationing cruise and Pershing II
missiles in Europe but also to "the
withdrawal of Soviet rockets," the
newspaper reported.
The Romanian leader called for
"decisive measures from the side of
governments as well as the public"
to end the arms race.
Ceausescu's proposal paralleled
calls by West German and other
Western Eilropean government.. for

scrapping the Western missile
deployment plan in relurn for Soviet
promises to dismantle SS-20 missiles
already deployed.
More than 200,000 marched Sundsy in Brussels, led by government
ministers and political leaders.
Police said it was the biggest protest
in Belgium since World War II.
Fiftydhousand Parisian~, some
wearing gas .masks and skeleton
costumes, paraded throWlh their
city and 30,000 rallied Communist·

11

Meigs County
Emergency runs
Five calls were answered by local
emergency units over the weekend,

the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service reports.
Sunday at 9:18 a.m., the Mid·
dleport Unit took Howard Dailey
from his home to Holzer Medical
Center and at 6:05p.m. took Jo~eph
Haifhill, Little Kyger Road, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. The
Pomeroy Unit at 2:32 p.m. took
Pauline Derenberger from her home
to Veterans Memorial.
' Early Saturday, the Middleport
Unit took Georgia Glaze from the
Riverside Apartments to Holzer
Medical Center and Pomeroy at 3:18
p:m. took Jeannlne Hubbard from
Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memorial.

"I think they shc?uld be taken
seriously," Weinberger said of the
marcl\ers. "It is completely un- .[
derstandable, but it's the wrong way
to get the result we aU want - no

war."

c

U.S.-Soviet disarmament talks are
scheduled to begin in Geneva Nov.
30. Weinberger and other West
European defense ministers contend
the Soviets will not pull hack any ri
their 'miS.slles unleSs U.S .. missiles
are deployed in Wes~rn Europe.

happ~nings. •
Marriage license ·.

Veterans Memorial
Saturdsy Admissions-None.
Saturday Discharges.. Donna
Smith.
Sunday Admissions--Philip
Donovan, Syracuse; Kimberly
Roush, Racine; Mary · Stewart,
Letart, W.Va.
Sunday Discharges .. Lester
Parker, Ruth Lewis, Howard Huck,
Cora Webb, William Keebaugh.

A marriage llcenae was issued to
Dennis Ray Grant, 20, Rt. I,
Langsville, and Pitricia Louise
Erickson, 18, Rt.l, Lailgaville.

To end marriages

Two suits for dissolution ri'
marriage were filed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
Filing . were Gene C. Oller, Mid·
dlepori, and Patsy L. Oiler, MidMeeting cancelled
dleport; Sandra Kay Morris,
Pomeroy, and William Earl Morris,
A meeting of Chapter 17 of the .Pomeroy. ·
Ohio Association of Public School
Jinna Arnott was granled a divorEmployes scheduled for Tuesday ce from Jolin Arnott and the
evening luis been cdncelled.
marriages of RW18ell Ray Burns and
Jennie Rosa Burns, Janel Smith and
County will replace
Larry Smith, an.d Cathy Joe Oldaker
and
George C. 'Jldater were
Rocksprings bridge
dlasolved.

Deputies check
several repor~s
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department received a report
Saturday morning from Bill
Foster, 17; Rt. 2, Racine, regar·
ding a traffic an accident.
According to the report, Foster
was traveling south on SR 7 when
the left front tire on his vehicle
blew out, causing the car to leave
the highway on the left and go
over an embankment. The
vehicle came to a stop at the edge
of Shade River. There was slight
damage.
Foster was not injured and no
citation was issued.

ruled·East Berlin. In Oslo, 7,000 Norwegians walked in a torchlight
parade sponsored by a group called
NO to Nuclear Weapons."
More than 200,000 demonstrated
oo Saturday in Rome, and 150,000
rallied in London, where Defense
Secretary Caspar Weinberger was
concluding a tour and talks with
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
defense ministers on the deplo)ment
of U.S. Pershing 2 missiles in
Europe.

BUl Kennedy, Sidehill Farm,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, reported Satur·
day morning that a two-year old
Holstein heifer had been shot and
had to be destroyed. The incident
is under investigation.
Nick Badovick, North Olm·
stead, owner of a cabin in Boston
Hollow, Olive Township, reported
that sometime last week and out·
building on his property had been
entered and several items tak~n.
Taken were electric generator,
shovels, and other items. No en·
try was made into the cabin
however, an attempt was made.

. POMEROY - A bridge located .7
of a mile north of the county
fairgrounds on county road 20 (Rock
Springs Road l in Salisbury Township, is being replaced by the depart·
ment of Philljp M. Roberts, county
engineer.

This is the second bridge north of

the fairgrounds. over Thomas )"ork
tributary, on county road 20, just
south of the chip mill.
,
As a detour route, traffic should
use county road 19 (Peachfork) and
county road 26 (Flatwoods Road).
The bridge repair should be cok·
pleted and reopened to traffic within
15 to 20 days.

·~

Sign·up Tuesday
Signup for a Meigs Alumni football
game to be held on Nov. 21 will be
held at 7 p.m. Tuesday night
preceedlng a regular meeting of the
Meigs Athletic Boosters at the high
school. Proceeds will go to the
boosters.

Emergency runs
,

.

POMEROY - Two runs were
made by the Pomeroy ER Squad
Friday the Meigs County Emergen·
cy Service reported. ·
At ~:29 p.m. Genevieve Guthrie,
involved in an auto accident, was
taken to Veterans Memorial
To visit Lions
Hospital and at 9:02 p.m. to Meigs
POMEROY - Leland E. Burba, Stadium for Evan Wiseman who was
Gahanna, district governor, will · taken to Veterans Memorial
visit the Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Hospital.
Club meeting at noon Wednesday at
the Meigs Inn. All officers and the
board of directors are especially
requested to attend lhi'!, meetln•.

Tax

Fall festival set
A fall festival will be held at
Pomeroy Ele~entary School Satur·
day, Oct. 31, !rom 6:00p.m. to 9:30
p.m. Costume judging will be held at
&amp;: 15 p.m. Games will be offered and
refreslunents sold.

AWARD PRESENTED-Cblrles Casaell (rilbtl, P""ldeol of die Melp
AlbleUe .llooolen, 'p reHDted a opeelal awud to Charlotte ... BUI
WUHord Pft&lt;ll' to, tbe ~Ironton footbail game Friday eveolq. 'lbe
lloooten presellle'd tbe plaque •to the cauple for "IIWlY yean tl
dedication,. service and leadership to tbe Melgll athletic programL"
(Pboto by Tim Tucker).

.
1
Area· deaths
'

John Harmon
John "Kemo" Harmon, 72, of West
Columbia, died Sunday in the
Pinecrest HPSpital in Beckley, W.
Va.

.,

He was born July 7 1908, in Point
Pleasant. His mother Blanche Harmon, and his wife, Maggie Decker
Harmon, preceded him in death.
Surviving are a step-5on, Charles
Decker, of West Columbia; one halfbrother, Freddie Richardson, Point
Pleasant; three stepo&lt;laughters;
several grand Jlnd great grand·
children.
Funeral services will be held at
the Foglesong Funeral Home on
Wednesday at 1&lt;30 p.m.. with the
Rev. George Hoschar officiating.
Burial will follow in the Lone Oak
Ce!11etery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Tuesday from 2 p.m. until 4
p.m. andfrom7p.m. until9p.m.

. Edward F. Demoskey
Edward F: Demoskey, 73, South
Fourth Ave., Middleport, diedSatur·
day at Holzer Medical Center.
Mr.Demoskey was born in Middlepor\ on Sept. 2, 1908, a son of the
late Frank and Edith Young
Demoskey. He was a carpenter and
· a aelf-employed contractor and had
also been employed at Mid-West
Steel durisg his career. He was a
member of the Middleport First
Baptlat Church, Middleport M3¥lniC
Lodge 363, Free and Accepted
Maaons, and was a honorary member of the Middleport Fire Depart·
ment.
Surviving are his wife, Lillian
Neutzling Oemoskey; a daughter
and son-in-law, Betty and Earl [)en..
ny, and a son and daughter-in-law,
William and Carolyn Demoskey, all '
of Middleport; his stepmother, Jen-

ny Demoskey, Greensburg, Pa.; two
brothers, Clifford and Harold, both
of Middleport; six half brothen and
.two half sisters, living In Pennsylvania; three grandsona, Ronnie
Denny, David Demoskey, Mid·
dleport, ' and Tim Demoskey,
Pomeroy; two granddaughters, Cln- ·
dy RoWe and Melinda DemoSkey,
Middleport; two great-grandsons,
Ryan and Jeramy Rowe, Middleport, and ·several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday · at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home with the Rev.
Mark McClung officiating. ' Burisl ·
will be in Riverview Cemetery,
Friends may call al the funeral
home anytime th1a evening.
Masonic rites will be at 7:30 this
evening followed by fire departmert
services at8 p.m.
·
Pallbearers will be Bill
Demoskey, Tim Demoskey; David
Demoskey, Earl Denny, Ronnie
Denny and'J ay Rowe.

will be present to participate in
trading and se!llng collectables. A
coin auction will be held foUowing
the meeting. Refn!siunents will be
served.Interested persons are invited · to attend and new memberships are being solicited.

Treat night set
Trick or treat night will be held in
the village of Rolland, Thursday,
Oct 29, from 6:30p.m. to 7:30p.m.

ELBERFELD$
WAAEHOU$E ON MEatANIC STREET
~

FOR JUST

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
' DINING ROOM ONLY ·
Whipped

Sorry, No Svbltltutts oxcopl

,,...,..... which hllveond ell-

dlll-t~ce.

Colt Slaw, Hot ~toll, Butter
and Coffee.

_Crow's :Family
221W. tMin

Ph. f92.54J2

.('

.

FIRE liCE

10AUON

Mai'OilOIL

$

Shell
1 Qt.

LIMIT I

Iii•
...

NILION'IIIG.

The OH KAN-ColD Club will meet

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT.

with

~·.~

10W-30 .

this evening in the Riverboat Room
at Diamond Savings and Looui:
A social hour precedeS the 8 p.m.
meeting . Out of town coin dealers

Every Tuesday Night At (:row's

Potatoes, thiCken Gr.vy,

' _. YhittaaJSUMMIR
··' .;~,AN'II.fRIIZI
'

Meets tonight

(Continued from page 1)
says one thing the administration
probably won't support because of
the Tevenue crunch la exteosioo of
the popular tax-exempt All-&amp;ven
Certificates:

Served

P'RESTONE II

ITOP .IN ILIIRPI-.oS WARIHOUSI
.

AND FIND OUT HOW A NEW lUCk
.

IIOVI CAN I~VI YOU MONIY ON
.
..
YOUR HIA TING ~ILLI THII WINYIR

•S.~ame Street
•Super Heroes
•Star Wan
A11t. Styln

MANYITYLIS
TOCHOOII
fiOM ·

�</text>
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