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.

Despite polls, Pfeifer still optimistic
b Dick Cavalli

WINTHROP
II

YOUR OJ.IN PER5CINAL HOI&lt;OSCOPE :

AVOID THE FOL.LOWINq- FOTENTlAL.L..Y
IROUBLE50ME SIT1JAT10N5 TOD'\Y ...

II

co

NOr HL.J..-IA

1HE 5ca&lt;E F!&lt;O\A.

'OKLAHOMA' IN '(CUR LlND6RWEAR Q\J
l'f-IE W&amp;3T 5L.Cf€ OF NaJNT E\!EI&lt;reT.

il
I

J.

ii

By JAMES HANNAH
AMoclated l'reM Wrller
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Disputing polls that
show U.S. Sen. Howard Metzenbaum with a big lead,
Republican Paul pfeifer says he remains "cautiously
optimistic" about the outcome of Tuesday's election.
The state senator from Bucyrus said his pOlls show
that he's running "extremely well" lnlargemetropoll·
tan areas that are traditionally Democratic, adding
that he's nearly dead even with Metzenbaum In Lucas
County.
And pfeifer said that If the reception he's received
on the campaign trall was an Indicator, . he would
"blow him (Metzenbaum) outofthewaterby a hefty
margin.''

Surveys publlshed Sunday In the Akron BeaconJournal and Columbus Dispatch showed Metzenbaum, a Democrat, leading by substantial margins.

I

\ :'

I
I

Austin said that If as many as 3.1 mUUonOhloansgo
to the polls, Celeste should win by 16 toW percentage
points.
ABrown campaign aide said Sunday there's noway
to gauge the accuracy of those polls, saying It's dlffl.
cult to determine If they reflect the views of those who
Intend to vote In Tuesday's election.
Jim Wray, Brown's campaign manager, said cam·
palgn workers will focus their efforts on getting out the
vote for Brown.
"The ray of hope we would see Is a dlrect function of
voter turnout," said Wray. "There Is really very little
we can do In terms of strategy (In the flnal48 hours.)"
Wray said that If the polls are accurate, he believes
voters have been swayed by Issues that transcend the
platforms and personalities of the two candidates,
such as the general condition of the economy.

The Dispatch poll gave Metzenbaum a lead of 58
percent to 40 percent, while the Beacon.Journal poll
had Metzenbaum In front with 57 percent to 28 percent
for pfeifer. The latter poll showed 13 percent still
undecided.
The-polls also showed Democratic gubernatortal
candidate Richard Celeste leading Republican Clarence Brown by a large margin.
The Dispatch showed Celeste ahead of Brown 61
percent to 38 percent, with 1 percent for Libertarian
candidate Phyllis Goetz. The Beacon·Journal survey
found Celeste leading 56 percent to Z7 percent,.wtth 1
percent for Ms. Goetz and about 16 percent undecided.
"I think It's high," Celeste camp_algn director Gerald Austin said ofthe Beacon·Journal's 29-polnt mar·
gin. He called the Dispatch's 23-polnt advantage
"more In the ball game."

Bob Hughes, chairman of the Cuyahoga County
GOP, believes that Celeste could win Cuyahoga
County by more than 150,00! votes, which could spell
doom for Brown.
Roger Gillespie, political director of the Brown campaign, said he believes Republicans can moblltze
enough support In Hamilton and Franklin countiesplus In the Urbana congressman's southwestern Ohio
baUiwlck- to overcome any advantage Celeste might
have In northeast Ohio.
Hamilton County, a traditional Republican strongh·
old, Is crucial to Brown's chances, said GUiesple.
"We're going to need at least a 40,000-vote margin In
Hamilton County to come out of there In good shape,"
GUiesple said. "Historically, Republicans count on
Hamilton and Franklin counties to produce enough
votes to more than make up the margin the Dems are
going to get In Cuyahoga·...

I

...
u

c::o Nor BWY A s~Df-lAND
CHEE6~KE,

" ro Nor BUY 6Ta::K 1N A
PU56Y WILL.OvVF~tND

AND STAY

AWAY~ ANYONE WHO 15
PLAYIN61-TH~

The Daily

. ,.

50Mf:'DA'&gt;1 I'D LJ KETO

Vol .31 ,No. 126

entinel
1 S•ction I 0 Pog••
A Multimedia Inc .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 1 1982 ·

1912

MEET THE PEROQt..J WHO

IN "THE IRA5H COMPACTER ."

Mayor cuts
ribbon to
highlight
ceremony

'Deep Throat' w~ Haig
NEW YORK (AP) -FormerWhlteHouseCounseiJohnDeansays
Alexander M. Halg Jr. has to be the "Deep Throat" of Watergate
fame, but the fOrmer secretary of state dismisses the notion as

10·31

~'absurd .' '

by Ed Sullivan

Priscilla's Pop
EMILY 1 MY GCXJ!7NE5S/ ORGANIZING
THEM 10
\VHA.T ARE '-rOU DOl NG
PUTINTD
WITH ALL THOSE
ALBUMS.
PHOTDS?

I LOVE 10

TAKE PICTURES,
BUT IT DRIVE$
BERNARD CRAZY.

HE THIN
IT'S A BIG
WA0TE OF

nME AAD

MONEY./

Halg on Sunday denied being the mystertous source of many
explosive Washington Post stortes about the scandal that toppled
President Nixon.
But Dean, In his new book, alleges that Halg was among the few
people who knew enough about the Inner machinations of the Nixon
administration to provide reliable Information, according to a story In
the Nov. 91ssue of Time magazine.
Even Time questioned Dean's claim, In part because of "the
Inherent Implausibility of the ultra-dignified and Instantly recognlza·
ble Halg skulking around Washington garages undetected at 2 a.m."
"Deep Throat" Is the name Post reporter Bob Woodward gave to a
source he met at odd hours In unorthodox places In 19'72 to receive or
have confirmed Information for stortes about the Watergate scandal
which eventually led to the reslgnatlo~ of former President Richard
Nixon.

No solution to court problem
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A special commltlee formed by the
Ohio Municipal League to study financing of municipal courts has not
determined any solution to the problem.
Several Ohio cities, burdened by the costs of municipal courts, are
attempting to find new ways to shift some of the expense to county
governments.
League Director John P. Coleman said the commltlee may recom·
mend state legislation which would makesupportformunlclpalcourt
operations more equitable between cities and counties.
Municipal courts handle civil cases under $10,000, misdemeanor
cases and hearings held before people accused of crtmes are bound
over to the grand jury.
County courts cover the same types of cases while common pleas
courts handle most of the felony cases and civil cases for larger
amounts of money.

WHEN HE COMES
IN HERE, ~U'LL
SEE WHAT I
MEAN.

Will pay for phone calls

•

DUSTY CHAPS

PRINTED IN CANADA

b Art &amp; Chi

Sa.nsom

IS Centl

Open house for Pomeroy's
Municipal Building draws 200

WRITE5'THE5511-\IN&lt;Si5.

D.::lN 'r PWT 'fOUR LJN ''-YCLE

6AqPIPE6.

'

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Airports Superintendent Daniel F.
Ginty has agreed to pay for all personal long-distance telephone calls
made from his city-owned home on the grounds of the Port Columbus
Airport.
The city of Columbus gives Ginty, In addition to an annual salary of
$37, m, rent-free use of a four-bedroom house on the airport grounds.
The city also pays for all utllltles.
A check of state and local records show that no other public official
receives free telephone service.
In a report publlshed last week, The Columbus Dispatch said Ginty
and his family made $758 worth of long-distance calls at city expense
In the last year, with $465worth ofthecallsmadetofrtendsandfamlly
members throughout the country.

The Forecast For 7 a.m. EST
Tuesday. November 2

Rain ~

Snow

f':\l

•Low ·

WEADIER FORECAST - The NaUooal Wealher Service foreca818 IIUIIII,Y and paerally wllnn wealher for molt of the nallon for
n-tay. Rain 'and llhowen are expedecl train the lower MIMIIIIppl
Valley to the Great Lakes. s.-&lt;•flun1e8 are expected for the I10I1hem
Plaln8. (AP Laaerphoto Map).

Ohio forecasts
Variable cloudiness tonight. Low around 60. Winds southwesterly
10 mph or less. Tuesday, mostly cloudy with a 50 percent chance of
showers or thunderstorms. Htgh In the mld-'708.·

Extended forecast
Exlellded Oblo FoJ't1(lU&amp;- Wednesday through Friday: chance of
showers Wednesday. Fair Thursday and Frld!lY, Hlgha In mld-1501 to
Jow6011 Wednesday; In mkHOI to low 9ls Thlll'lday andJ111c1..5011 to low
6011 Frlday."Lowsln mld-401 to low 9ls WedneK!ay, tben Thursday
and upper n to 1ow 401 Friday.

..

MAYOR CLAHENCE ANDREWS cuts ribbon dwlng open house ceremonies of the new city buDding In
Pomeroy Sunday afternoon.

Despite rumors, union official
says workers were not prepared
for layoffs at Meigs mines
By JEFF GRABMEIER
OVP News Staff
. Although rumors had been circulating for months,
many workers at the Meigs mines were unprepared
for the massive layoffs announced Friday, according
to a local union official.
Gene OUer, president of United Mine Worker Local
1886, said for four months "rumors have been flying' '
that the mines would lay off. However, younger min·
ers especially were surprised.
"They read the paper Friday and said 'We're not
going to get laid off. It's nothing but a rumor,' " Oller
said.
The Amertcan Electrlc Power System announced
layoffs of 920unlon and salaried personnel at the mines
Frtday afternoon. Meigs Mine No. 1 wUI be shut down
and Mine No. 2 will be partially Idled for an Indefinite
pertod, the company said.
The layoffs will hit many miners hard, Oller Said.
"A lot of them didn't save any money because they
didn't think (the layoffs) were going to happen," he
said.
More expertenced miners were aware that AEP
might be forced to furlough workers.
"I knew It lu!d to come," Oller said. "They were

putting good coal on top of bad."
Much of the stockpiled coal had set so long In the
elements that It had started to detertorate, he said.
Oller estimates that the mines have $47 million
worth of stockpiled coal.
"If I had that much coal I know I'd have to do
something," he said.
If the mines' preperatlon plant can process 100,00!
tons of raw coal a week, miners may he called back In
January or February. he said.
"That's what I hope happens," he said.
Meanwhile, Oller said the jobs of the950 employees
at the mines who have not been laid off are not safe.
He said there Is a "very good posslbUity" that other
layoffs will be necessary.
Furloughed employees have begun to file for unemployment benefits at local job service offices.
Edith Atkins, an official at the Pomeroy office of the
Ohio Bureau of Employment Services, said about 55
miners had come to her office the first two hours It was .
open Monday.
"Our office has been full the entire morning," she
said.
Officials at the GaUipolls unemployment office said
several mine employees were waiting at t)le door
when the office opened Monday morning.

LOganers feel killer still in area
Other parts of the bodies were
found two days later, wrapped In
munity say the9 think whoever plastic bagS and burted In shallow
ldlled two leen-agers last month graves scattered through a cornfield about :DJ yards from the river.
may st111 be In the area.·
A month before the kllllng~. the
"I lhlnk he ls, ... sald pollee Capt.
Steven Mowery. "And the people's !9rso of an unidentified man, about
45;was found In the woods In nearby
fear Is understandable."
.
Todd Schultz, 19, and his fiancee, McArthllr In VInton County.
Logan pollee have asked the FBI
18-year-old Annette Johnaton, dlsapeared Oct. 4. Two weeks later, for a 'psycholOgical proflle of the
Hocking County Slierlft Jim Jones· killer. They alao have c;ontacted a
and special dePuty Bill Grove dJsco. psychic who has been successful In
·
·
vered. !be torsos of the ·two teens other cases.
The
gruesome
killings
have
lll8lllt!d'In subm~ brush In the
changed this city of 6,600, situated 45
Hocking River.
LOGAN, Ohio (AP) - Pollee In

this small southeastern Ohio com-

miles southeast of Columbus.
"Thls has been a rude awakening
for many people." Mowery said.
"People here always had felt Isolated and Insulated from those
things that happen In big cities. But
this has sent a shock wave through
the community. A lot of them do
realize I)OW that It can happen here.
People are taking just a little bit
different attitude."
· Mowery owns !be Hocking Valley
Archery and Gun shop, one t&gt;f the
town's two gun stores. Although he
(Continued on page 10)

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Staff Wrtter
Ribbon cutting ceremonies high·
lighted open house activities of the
new Pomeroy Municipal Building
Sunday afternoon.
Mayor Clarence Andrews cut the
ribbon. He was asslted by Edna
Schoenleb and Jane Walton, former
village clerks.
Guest speakers were Sen. Oakley
Collins and Rep. Claire (Buzz) Ball.
Ball and Collins presented a flag
to the village. Ron Ash, manager of
Ohio Power Co .. presented Mayor
Clarence Andrews a flag which had
flown over the the nation's capital
building.
The dedication speech was given
by Fred Crow. village solicitor.
Crow stated he had worked under
several mayors.
Crow added he would like very
much to see a memorial for all may·
ors and all former graduates of
Pomeroy High School. Crow said he
was happy over the new city bulld·
lng since he has served as village
solicitor and was a graduate of
Pomeroy High School.
All council members were Introduced along with Ellen . Rought,
clerk-treasurer. Chairman of the
event was Betty Baronick, council
member.
History of the building (former
Pomeroy Senior High 1was given by
Charles Gibbs and James Diehl.
Gibbs stated the first high school
In Pomeroy was organized In 1873
which offered a three year course.
The first class had six members
'
Gibbs noted .

In 1913, the number of public
school students Increased In Pomeroy, thus there was a need for a
larger building.
Clarissa Pomeroy, descendant of
Samuel W. Pomeroy, founder of the
town, donated the building and
grounds of the Academy to the
Pomeroy Public Schools.
In 1914, by vote of the citizens, a
$40,000 bond Issue was approved.
Demolition of the old Academy and
construction of the present senior
high building began In 1915. C. T.
Coats was the first superintendent.
In 1915, the colors of purple and
white were adopted as the official
school color and the first class par·
tlclpated In a graduation ceremony.
Flty·three classes, (3,373 students) graduated from Pomeroy
High School from 1915 to 1967. The
building was sold to the village of
Pomeroy In 1976.
Gibbs was hired as a teacher at
Sugar Run In 1929.
In 1953Gibbs was named supertn·
tendent. He remained In that posl·
tlon until his retirement In 1966.
James Diehl. who was principal
under Gibbs for 12 years, told of the
consolidation of Rutland, Pomeroy
and Middleport.
Diehl observed that In 1967-68, students were still In their respective
buildings even though consolidation
had taken place. In 1968-69, all students attended high school at Middleport Senior High.
The ftrst class to graduate from
Meigs High was In 1968. AU students
were In separa'te buildings. Theftrst
graduating class from the new
Meigs High School was In 1970.
(Continued on page 10)

r

•

,,

'\-

....

'

�Monday, November 1,1982

Commentary
p AC- men and

The Daily Sentinel
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Behind Reagan's
Soviet grain deal
The White House and the Republican Party apparently have become
belatedly concerned about the potential adverse political Impact of the
seething frustration among fanners in the Midwest.
That's the only plausible explana tion for President Reagan's midOctober offer to sell as much as 23 million tons of wheat, corn a nd other food
grains to the Soviet Union during the current crop year, which began on Oct.
1.
The president's proposal , which can be charitably described as preposterous. is virtually certain to be rejected by the USSR. Its principal intent
presumably was to serve as a politicalgesturetoangryfanners who cannot
sell their crops even at depressed prtces far below production costs.
The tipo!f to the absurdity of Reagan's o!fercame on Oct. 13- two days .
before the president's a nnouncement -in the regular monthly report on the
world grain situation issued by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
Foreign Agricultural Service.
The llttle-noticed USDA report reiterated previous estimates that the
USSR this year would experience its fourth consecutive poor grain harvest
and would produce only about 170 million metric tons, compared with 229
million metric tons in the record harvest year of 1978.
But the report predicted that the Soviet Union would Import only 40
million metric tons of grain this year, down substantially from the44 million
to 46 million metric tons projected earlier by USDA analysts.
Even a t those reduced levels. the report suggested, the USSR may have
taken "extraordinary measures" to delay heavy dependence on Imported
grain until late in the 1~ -83 crop year. possibly next summer or autumn.
With his government's own experts predicting that substantial Soviet
grain imports would not materialize until the middle of 1983, the president
formulated an offer requiring the USSR to make a ma jorcommitment next
month .
Reagan proml&lt;;ed that if thP USSR agrees to buy the grain in November. he wou ld guarantee that deliveries would be immune from any
future embargo- but even that o!fer would expire In six months and might
be withdrawn during that period in the event of unspecified "extreme
circumstances.'·
Ever since President Carter's 19ffi embargo in grain exports to the
Soviet Union. the USSR has come to view this country (with considerable
justification) as an unreliable. capricious and unreasonable trading
partner.
Although the Soviets were offered 23 mlllion metric tons of U.S. grain
last year- exactly the same amount as Reagan Is proposing to sell this year
-they purchased slightly less than 14 million metric tons while supplying
the remainder of their needs through Imports from other nations, notably
Australia, Argentina, Canada and Common Market countries.
Meanwhile, this country's fanners are producing record-setting
amounts of corn (8.31 billion bushels 1. wheat !2.81 billion bushels I and other
grains- but lack a market. domestic or international, for much of their
harvest.
It costs these fanners more than$2.&amp;l togrow a bushel of corn, but that
crop now is selling for less than $2.W per bushel. Similarly, wheat costs just
under $3.&amp;1 per bushel to produce but now sells for less than$3.40perbushel.
Although now 2.4 million people- slightly than 1 percentofthenation's
population - are classified as fanners, about 25 percent of the country's
people live In rural areas a nd are directly or indirectly dependent upon the
agricultural economy.
Reagan generally remains very popular among these rural residents,
but there Is evidence that they may be angry enough about the ir economic
plight to "send hirna message" by voting against Republican candidates for
House a nd Senate seats and local posts in this yea r's elections.
Tass, the Soviet news agency, is a propaganda organization which
usually isn't worth quoting. But it probably wasaccuratewhen it characterized the president's speech as a ploy "designed to make a favorable
Impression on the fanners on the eve of the Nov. 2 elections.

Berry's World
••'
~

"Really! You're NOT alone! All the politicians
and their campaign ads on TV are getting to
me, too. "

Today in history.

WASHINGTON Politically
speaking, this has been the year of
the PAC-men. To read the news
magazines, or to listen to apostles
preaching the gospel according to
Common Cause, the trend marks an
ominous - Indeed, a dangerous turn of events. The general Idea Is
that the "special interests" are buyingcongressmen right and left.
As a general proposition, that notion is nonsense. Persons who participate in the fund raising of
political action commit tees are en·
gaged in activities as old as the Federalists and anti-Federalists of John
Adams' day. They are exercising
their right to campaign for candidates of their choice. What in the
world is wrong wl th that ?
The substance of such ancient and
honorable efforts hasn't changed.
Only the fonn is new. Forty years
ago, when I began to learn politics as
a cub reporter, campaigns were
much simpler and less costly. A candidate had an unpaid manager and
a small office staff. He needed
enough money to finance a modest
investment in posters, billboards,
newspaper ads and radio spots. In
general elections, his party did most
of the fund raising. With a few spectacular exceptions, October cam paigns were no big deal.
All that has changed. Through a
combination of factors, political
parties, as such, have been reduced
to Imbecility. Patronage no longer
matters; the parties cannot punish
transgressors or reward the faithful. Voters no longer punish trans·
gressors or reward the faithful.
Voters no longer a ttend rallies in the
park; they stay home and watch
television. Candidates no longer
ride the range alone; they are surrounded by herds of professional
managers, consultants, pollsters,
lawyers and accountants. Political
philosophy still counts, but a catchy
TV commercial counts for more.
What is the purpose of tbese ex·

t=-ic=s=--___J_am_es--::1: -.K--:-:i-:-lJ?a--tr=ick:-tend to multiply mitotically. Oldline party committees have been
left In the dust.
'
The recurring complaint Is that
PAC contributions scarcely cal] be
distinguished from outright bribery. Bosh! In a Congress of 535
members you always will find a few
ratters, but their numbers are exceedingly few. Last May 286
members of the House voted to veto
a proposed rule of the Federal
Trade Commission as to used cars.
Many of the 286 had received campaign contributions from the usedcar dealers. Were thelr votes thus
bought? Had they sold out to a spelnterest? I deny it. Virtually all

of the 286 would have voted precisely as they voted even If they had
never received a dime from the
dealers' PAC.
,
It Is regrettable - of course it Is
regrettable - that a House campaign may cost as much as $500,1XXJ
this year. Such budgets are the product of our times. Butsolonga5the
PAC contributions are publlclydlsclosed, I !aU to see the evils that
others perceive. Let the winds of
doctrine blow! That was Mllton's
exhortation a long time ago. At a
time when the winds of doctrine are
carried by thecostlychallllelsoiTV,
it remains a sound Idea today.

year.
·
.
·
Today's highlight In history:
On Nov. 1, 1952, the United States exploded the first hydrogen bomb In a
• test at Enlwetok 1n the Marshall !stands.
' On this date:
In 1509. Michelangelo's paintings~?" the celllng of the Sistine Chapel were
fbist exhibited.
.
1
· In 1755 an earthquake struck Lisbon, Portugal, kllllng 60,1XXl peop e.
In 1765: !lie Stamp Act went Into ef!ect In the Brttlsh colonies, prompting
stiff resJstance trom American colorilals.
In 1963, South Vietnam's president. Ngo Dinb Diem, was assassinated
dUJ'Ing an armY .x~p.

Under the union plan, which
would cover 1982-84, ro percent of
the $1.1 billion would be, in effect,
placed Into a central fund, administered by the union and used for salaries, incentive bonuses, pension
benefits and other player-related
expenses. The remaining 20percent
would go Into an owners' discretion·
ary fund, to be used for signing bonuses, free-agent acquisitions, etc.
The union package would be
worth$320 million this year, with$93
million going for Immediate acrossthe-board wage Increases; $3lll million In 1983 and $400 m1lllon In 1984.
The manageme nt proposal
leaves this year open because the
owners have yet to add up their
losses. It would be worth $240 million

:

In 1983, $260 million In 1984,$200 million in 1!13.5 and $500 million In 1986.
Seventy-five percent of the $1 .28 blF
lion would be guaranleed by the
owners with $480 million of the total
package to be collectively bar·
gained and distributed by the union.
In the agreement , which expired
last July 15. the collectively bar·
gained items such as pensions and
other benefits amounted to about 17
percent.
The union says the owners' la test
offer, the first by management
since Sept. 8, fails to address three of
the union's five previousl y de lineated "essential" demands- protection for vetera ns. the union's
right to collectively bargain for Incentive bonuses and a percentage of
the league's television r evenues.

53t JACKSON PIKE Rl 35 WEST
Phone 446 · 4 524
BARGAIN MA riNEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
AU SEATS JUS T $7 00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 200

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY t

Scoreboard ...
Basketball

BOS'l'ON

BREAKERS-Signed

Max

Georgt&gt; Ll&gt;wls, linebackers:
Ketron Dansler and Anthony Vel'ft'n, ~·
reues: WUJiam Fenn and Mike Moruc&lt;'l,
ruMiflR backS, and John Cooper. klckf'r.

Jones and

NatklnaiBwdu&gt;thall A.• •dal6on
By Thf' A.Modawel PreY
FA!o!'TERN CONFERENCE
Ad.ntk I)(W!kln
W L Pet. GR

Philack'lphb
Boston

'10 1.101

Nt&gt;w .k&gt;l'!l(')'

.500
.500

0
I
I
Washington
I I
NN York
0 2
f"mtru.IDM•n

•

2

0

2

o um

1

0

ClllcaJZO
Allan l;t

o
0

Ohio Hiatt School Fo«hal
s.turday'!l RauJb
Akron Kf'flrnof'l' 25. Akron Buchtel IJ

urn -

Mllwaukrr
Indi an&lt;~

High school scores

.((1)

D&lt;&gt;froll
Ck'\·r tand

-

urn -

Akron St. V-St. M 0, LakP Ca th. 0, liP
A.~hlaWia 14, Gf&gt;nl"Va 6
Ausl\ntown -F11ch 14, Wa!Tt"n W Rl'-

-

.m

Buckt&gt;yt' W. 14, BuckPyP Tratl 6
Ca diz ~- Buciw)'f' N. 0

.{IX)

.OOJ

Canton Cat h. 23, Rav£&gt;rma 16
Centerburll 24,
Cln. Academy

Mldwf'M l&gt;lvltllm
San Antonio
Kansa.~ Oty
. Dallas
i)(&gt;nw•r
Utah
Hw..,ton

~ 1l4t eowlf.B~ ~f'.'lb4 lt.lE.Jo • l't'lt .z.

IWNN'M&lt;i

~ eootton·.a~1!P ~

zens of machines that bore striking
resemblances to the popular Pac
Man, Donkey Kong and Centipede
games.
No one suggested that the New
Jersey company, U.S. Amuse·
ments, has undeiWorld ties. The federa! raiders were operating under a
revised federal law that makes unauthorized copying of video games
a crime. The big boys of the videogame industry - Atari, Midway
and Wtlliams Electronics - complain that their copyrights have
been infringed.
According to a sworn statement,
an FBI undercover agent visited
U.S. Amusements last January and
spoke with a salesman named
David Gordman.
"Prior to giving Gorfman $1,:ro
as a down payment on six games,
Gordman gave me a tour of the entire facilities of U.S. Amusements,
where Illegal video games ere rna nufactured and stored," the agent's

affidavit stated.
"Gorfman stated that the pres!dent of the Philippines had recently
"eJ:&lt;pelled" all video games from
tha t country and that U.S. Amuseme nts was in possession of a large
number of illegal video games that
had been shipped into this country
from the Phlllpplnes through JFK
Intemationl (Airport)," the statement continues.
The day after his first visit, the
FBI agent returned and paid Gorfma n $4,150 more, according to the
affidavit; he "received two illegal
'Puck Man' video games lnfringl!&gt;g
onthe'PacMan'copyright,onellle- ·
gal 'Galaxlan' game and one illega l
'Caterplllar' video game which Infringes on the copyright of the 'Centipede' video game."
The four machines ere examined
iJ~~ makers of Pac Man and Centipeoe , and they "determined that
the games unquestionably In·
fringed on their copyrights."

percent on tax-exempt municipal
bonds. If the special interest political action committees don 't want to
buy my vote, then I don't think I
want the job."
For Governor- Hayden Dunkerman. This was a tough choice ~
cause Dunkennan's opponent has a
much prettlerwlfe. But Dinkennan
has two more children than his rival. Dunkennan also was an allstate running back In college, while
his opponent, because of a bad knee,
wouldn't go out for the team. Dunkerman's other qualification for
making a better governor Is that, In
his state, which has a 20 percent
Hispanic population, his whole famIly professes to be crazy about Mexican food ..
For Lt. Governor - Ramsay
Wilder gets our nod. Wilder disagrees with almost every stand
Hayden Dunkennan, the man we
support for governor, has taken.
Therefore, slnceneitheroneofthem
c&lt;iuld work together, It's doubt1ul
that Dunkerman would aie leave
the state during his four years In
office. AlthoughWilderhasnoexec-

utive experience, we still endorse
hlm because a lieutenant governor
doesn 't need anyforthlsnothlngjob.
For State Attorney General Dallas Reisling would probably
make a betterattorneygeneralthan
Arnie Burchett. He has been more
forthright In answering the tough
questions posed to him by the media. Last week in a televised debate
with WIWIT's hard-hitting Reg
Smiley as moderator, Dallas was
asked where he stood on the death
penalty and he replied, "It's none of
your damn business." Smiley's
follow-up question on how Dallas
. would deal with white-collar' crtme
brought this response: "I didn't
come here to discuss my personal
life." Smiley then tried to pin Dallas
down on what stand he would take
on prayer In public schools. Dallas
replied, "I have made It a rule never
to talk about the Constitution when
appearing on television."
. ·
-For making Smlley look like a ·
fool, we have to endorse Relsling
over..Annie Burchett, whose makeup on the show made him look
tert1ble . .

0 I.fill
0 l.llll
I
I
I
I
I
I

•

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, ·"""" ,

I
I
0

r.oldC'n Statr
Srotlit'
Phornlx

In February, U.S.customsagents
opened two large cartons at JFK.
Airport. Consigned to U.S. Amusements from the Philippines, the car:
tons contained 4411legal Pac Man
and Galaxlan clrcult boards. As
part of the undercover lnvestigatlon, the shipment was t\IJ1led over
to a driver sent by the company.
In March, the FBI agent returned
to U.S. Amusements and bought 10
additional illegal video games, according to the affidavit; In July, he
bought 30 more counterfeit rnachines: sixMissPacMans,slxKong
Gorillas, five Dig Dugs, six Kangaroos, two Bull Frogs and five
Zaxxons.
Footnote: U.S. Amusement5' attorney, Barry Slotnik, told my assoelate Tony Capacclo that the FBI
man's affidavit was "very misleadlng." He said, "We all know what
hype Is." Slotnlk also said the company's games were "absolutely not
counterfeit."

CI('YC'. Hawken 16, Hudson W. ReservP

14

-

I

I

I~

I

II

.(Ill

Phlladl'lphla 110, NPW .k&gt;~ 99
lholton 112. Atlanta !17
wa~hlngton 14.1, Chicago 125
Mllwaukrof&gt; 1(11, NE'W York 86
San Antonio 112. Pocthmd l!n
Utah 128, Donas 12.1
Goldl'n Stall' 117. Houston 110
Sunday'" Gaunn~

Grand Val. 34, Uodgf."mmnl 14
Grovp City 28. Cor. WPSUand 20
Hamillon Badin 19. Cin. McNJchola~ 10
Huron t2. F'rmlont St . JOSf'ph M
Jptfprson 21. Pymatunlng Val. 7
Lorain :ll, MaMon Harding 0
Loudonvlllf&gt; 43, Mar\on Cath. 0
Loul!!vllll' Aquinas 2l Lorain Cat h. 0
Mogadol'f.' 43. Akron Hoban 2'i
Moi\J"'Of"VIIIP 19, EdOOn 14
NPW Rldunond 48. Batavia 8
Newark Cath. '11, Hebron Lakewood 0
N. Bend Taylor 29. Hamilton Ross 0
Norwalk St. Paul 7, Co!Uns W. ResNVr

Mondll)''!l Gamf!ll

~tun-s ~hroull'd

Tue!lday'• Gamf'!li

On&gt;gon Clay '11, Lima Cath. 7
Oregon Strltc h 30, Tol. Llbb(&gt;y 7
Panna Holy NaRK' 12. Cif've. Trinity 6
Pt&gt;tf'I"'SbUI'J! SprlnR. 'll , Lowt&gt;IMllP 2
Pon Clinton JG, Sandusky St . Mary 0
Richmond Hts. '11. Be-aChwood 14
St . Wrndelln 6. Patrick Henry 0
~aker Ht~ .

Hockey

College scores

PMricll DlvWon
WLTGFGAI"tA
NY lsll"!!
11
2
0 66 :vi
22
l'hlladl'lphia 11 a
o ~ 40
16
NY RanR£&gt;rs 6 7
0 53 ~
12
New Jf'r!l('\1 .1 6
3 40 ~
9
W a~ hin,~ttoi. 3 fi
1 ."!6 49
7
Plnsbull!h 3 !I
I 42 711
7
AdiUTWI fHvWon
Montll'lli
7 :l
.1 ~7 4.1
17
~
6 4
1!'1.1
~1
1.1
Bo!iton
~
4
3 :19 40
13
Buffalo
4 ~
3 ~ 49
II
Hanford
2 6
:l 32 49
n

Camphcll ConfNMCf'

..."

•

•~
•
•

.,

'

DMrolt

-Dl&gt;WM
9 2
I ~
fi :l
4 52
~
7
0 44
2 ~
4 .11

.1

2M. Panna 0

Young. Rayen 29, YOUOR. WUson 6

WIIAet!Coo~

Toronto

Tom Nlssalke, who took over as
Cavaliers' coach a week before the
season opened, said he was not con·

Tol. l)piJlJbls.s 31, Tol Woodward 0

Natklnal Hockeyllqut'

MJrtnM;Ota
ChicaRO
St. l.oul~

By The Associated Press
The Cleveland Cavaliers have
started thls National Basketball Association season the way they ended
last season- losing.
The Cavaliers were beaten Sunday night by the Milwaukee Bucks
119-95, their 21st straight loss, tying
an unofficial NBA record for consecutive losses over two seasons. The
Detroit Pistons lost 14gamesendlng
the 1979-&amp;1 season and seven more
starting the 1900-81 campaign.

0

San D1f'!W at NN-· J£'f'liPY
[)(&gt;!miT at 0{'\'eland
Wa~h!nRton at Ck&gt;vE.iancl
MllwaukN' at Kansas Cit.\"
Dallas at How.1on
~attll' at Utah
Pon land at Phol'nb

8

1

37

43

4.'1

Sm)1he DlvWon
'MM!pt'fl:
6 3
1 51 32
t.os ATW'iPI 5 4 .1 n
Edmonton
4 6
3 ~
Vanrouver
4 6
2 43 39
('.aiRary
4 7
2 Ill 62
SllurdQ'II GllrMII
Ol'lrolt 4, Hanford 2
Q\lf'lx't' ~. NY Ran,~tPrs 4
Boston 4, Mootreal 4, tk&gt;
Buffalo 3, Toronto 3, til'
CaiR811' 4. Plttsbur¢1 1
NY lslan&lt;k'rs R. New Jl'I""SPY ~
Mlnrv.'SOta 3, Philadelphia 2
washlrij{ton 6, St. t.oul!l 5
OitcaRO 5, LoL!I A~les 5, tk&gt;
SUnd.IJ'• Gamm
Vancouvt&gt;r 3, Edmonton 2
Buffalo l Montreall
NY Rangers 6, Pl11sburRh 2
Philadelphia 3, WIMipPR 2
MoadiJ'I Gamf'
Cn l~ary at Nt'W Jeney
'NI!edloy'1 Gamn;
Vai\C"'U\\t&gt;r at QJetl«
MlnnPtOta at Hartford
New Jl'f11l'Y a t Montnoal
Ptltsbu$ at NY lslandPrs
Dt-4rolt a t St .Louis

Transactions

19
16
10

"
". '
...., "

7

13

II
10
10

·Weekend
sports briefs...

CoUea:e Football~
EAST

Army 41, Columbia 8
Pl&gt;nn St. ~2. Boston Collf'l;:e 17
Plllllburgh 6.1, LoulsvUil' 14
Prln&lt;'l'lon 17, f'l:&gt;nn 14
Syracu.w 49, Colgatt&gt; I~

TempiP 41. Ct!'K'Innatl 7
Yalt' 22. Dartmouth 21

souru

SOl!I'HWIBT

24, Rft 6

Oklahoma St. .JJ, Mlssour1 :!}
Southrrn Ml'th. 47, Tt&gt;xas A&amp;M 9

Tt&gt;xu 'IT, Texas T«h 0
FARW!8T

/

Ntvada·Reno 37, N. Iowa 0
New Me~ St. 34, N. Arlmna 32

Oklahoma 45, Colorado 10
San DJt&gt;au St. 21. Utah 17
San JOlt' St. 48, Nev.·Las Vescas 14
Slanbrd 43, Wastungton 31

' UCLA 40. Oregon 12
Utah St. 3),

llf'lrham Young 17

NEW YORK (API- Negotiators
for the National Football League's
striking players formally submitted
a three-year, $1.1-biUion package, a
counter proposal to the Management Councll 's $1.28-bllllon plan offered earlier.
GOLF
LAKE BUENA VISTA; Fla.
(API- Hal Sutton birdied the 72nd
hole to force a playoff, then subdued
BUI Britton with a 15-foot birdie putt
on the fourth extra hole to claim his
first pro title In the Walt Disney
World Open Golf Classic.
TENNIS
TOKYO (API - John McEnroe
rallied In both sets to defeat Peter
McNamara of Australia 7-6, 7'5 for
the championship of the $llO,IXXl
Seikn Super Tennis Tournament.
AUTO RACING
ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (API Darrell Waltrtp took over the lead
after a sertes of late pit stops and,
with the aid of a miscue by Bobby
Allison, raced off to victory In the
Warner Hodgdon American 500
Grand National stock car race.

SEEMR.

A

FRONT-END ALIGNMENT
WITH GENUINE G.M. PARTS
Plus 75' Tax
Parts Additional
For Most American
Cars. Trucks Slightly
Higher.

GMQUAIJTY

SERVICE PARTS

~I

MO'l'ORS ~&amp;s Di'ViiiOiil

SIMMONS OLDS-CAD..CHEVY., INC.
308 E. Mains

PH . 992·6614

WHO SUPPORTS JOLYNN BOSTER

FOOTBALL

W. V\rli(inia JO, E . Carolina 3
MIDimlT
Indiana St. 24, TUinols St. 7
Iowa 14. Dllnols 1.1
Kansu St. 9, Iowa St. :1
Mlch.Jgan ~. Minnesota J.l
Mlch.Jgan St. 22, Indiana 14
Nt&gt;braska !U. Kansas o
OMo St. :fl. Purd!Jf' 6
Tulsa .11, Wichita St . 21
Wisconsin !H. Northwe5tem :m

Air F'Ort't' 44, Wyomlr¥~: 34
Arizona 34. WasNngton St. 17
Arlmna St. 17, SouthPm Cal to
Calllomia 18. ~ St. 14
Colorado St . 38. TPxas·EI Puo L1
F'rt'sno St. 40. Long Beach St . 22

&lt;;erned about the losing s treak,
which Includes lwo ga mes this season and 19last season.
"That was last year," he said.
"But I can see how the team los t a lot
of games. It Isn't going to be easy,
but we're going to be a respectable
bailclub. They all need a tremendous amount of Individual coaching. I
knew that when I came here."
Meanwhile, the Bucks, led by rookie Paul Pressey, looked like world
beaters to Nlssalke.
Pressey and Junior Bridgeman
played som e terrific basketball
against Cleveland, scoring 23 points
each. Cliff Robinson led the Cavs
with 18.
Elsewhere, It was Seattle 127, San
Diego 109; Detroit liS, Indiana 115,
and Denver ll4, Phoenix llO.

By The Associated Press

Alabama M. Misslsslppl St . 12
0\lkl' :11. Gf&gt;orRia Tf'("h 21
F'lorlda 19, Auburn 11
F'1or1da St. 24. Miami, F'la. 7
Gror,l{la :W, Mrmphls St . 3
Hooston 31. TPu!l Christian '11
Louisiana St. 4-'i, M!Mis.slppi II
Maryland 31. N. CaroUna 24
N. Carotlna Sl. :n. S. Carolina .l
N&lt;Ml't' Dai"I'IP' '17, Navy 10
Ru~l'rs :Jl, Rkhmond 14
. TulanP ll. Baylor 15
Vlrxlnla 37, VMI 6
Vlr,inla TN'h 29, Kentucky 3

Arkalt585

modified portion of the Cardinal 500 at the Martinsville,
Va. Speedway. Evernharn was treated for burns on hls
faceandneckandretumedtowatchtherace.Sisconewas
Down by helicopter to the bum center at the University of
VIrginia Hospital with Drst and second degree burns ahout
the face and neck and thlnl degree burns on both hands.
( AP Laserphoto I.
.---------~------~----------------

Cavs drop opener,
extend loss string

Cl('\1£'. St. JO!ii'ph 'r7. Barberton !I
Ck&gt;v€'. Unlvt&gt;rslty '17. l(lski tPa. l Prep .1
Day. Bf'lmont 24. Day . Jt&gt;trN"llrr M
Day. Mf.&gt;adowdalf' 'Zl, Day. ChiJm-Jul 7
Day. WhltP 21, Tot. Scolt 6
E. Knox 20. Z~. R05('('rans 7
Elyt1a W. ~ . Lorain Southvk&gt;w 10

Sl&amp;urdily'llG&amp;mefll

No

..•
••
••
~
••
•,

~

Cln . Pum.•ll 14, Ctn. Walnut Hills 6

Mllwrtukf'f' 119. Clf'~and !r.;

DOONESBURY '
.•
.'
•

..

~ AnRf'l~

Portland
San Dll'IIO

Cln. M()(&gt;lk&gt;J' ~- LakewtxXt St. Edward

,, ··"""" ,,
·""

I
0
0

12

14

Df'troll 1111, Indiana ll~
~a !tic 127. San Dl('fro tr'-1
J:k•nvPr 114 . Phol'nlx 110

For Mayor - the incumbent,
Charles Bledsoe, has done a good
job and deserves another ~nn. The
fact that he gave the garbage contract for the city to his brother-inlaw, and received a free trip to
Tokyo from the company who sold
the city 200 buses that have been
recalled for faulty brakes, does not
detract from our opinion that Bledsoe Is probably oneofthemostpopular machine ~T~ayors the city has
ever had. We eqdorse Bledsoe ~
cause he Is beholden to no one,
thanks to a blind trust fund In the
Bahamas set up by his close friends
In the school contraCting business.
For City Council · President Sarah Evans gets our overwhelming endorsement, because she's a
woman.
As for the various proposltlorfs on
the ballot: We favor all the ftf.
· numbered ones and are against the ,
even ones, with theexcep!IOn!iProposltlon 82, whiCh reads, "The.people ct this state believe that tn the
event of a nuclear attack no alternate parking wUJ be permitted at
ground zero."

.,

0 l.llll
0 !.IXll

Luca.~

20. On. Country Dey 8

CI('V£'. Central Cat h.~. GILmour 0

.fiXI

,,

Pactnc lMvWon

DRIVERS ESCAPE FLAMES - Race driver Ray
Evernharn, of Hazlet, N.J., nms from IW! bunting modiOed race car (hidden by Dame and smoke) after he
wrecked on the back stretch and was hlt In the rear by
Tony SiscOne of Hammonton, N.J., going an estimated 90
mph. Evernharn's fuel tank was ruptured and gus was
thrown over both cars. The accident occUlTed during the

..,,.o

.&lt;m

2
2

~TERN CONFERENCE

Election endorsement.IJ....Ls_______A_rt_B_uc_hw_a_ld
It Is now time for this column to
endorse certain political candidates
for public office. We have studied all
the Issues and arrived at our conclusions by not only comparingwhoour
choices are running against, but
how they stack up to what we've got
already.
For U.S. Senator - Plato Syracuse. We support Plato because he
was the only political candidate this
year who did not have his picture
taken with an unemployed automobile worker. When this was pointed
out by hls opponent in their final
debate, Syracuse defended himself
by saying, "Icouldn'tdoanythlngto
get the man his job back, and he
knew It and I knew it, sowhyuseupa
lot of my time for a lousy two minutes on the evening news?"
For Congress -Walter Rosebud.
Our reason for choosing Rosebud
over his opponent Is that Rosebud,
although a multlmllllo!lillre, refused to use a cent of hls own money
to finance his electlorf. He was
quoted on "Meet the Press" as sayIng, "I worked hard for my fortune,
and I have no Intention of blowing it
on the election when I can get 13

Daily Sentinei-Page-3

~CT 29 thru NOV ~

Video game fakery"--::-:--:---:-----;-;::-:-J=ac=-:-:k::-:-An=d=er=so=n:
WASHINGTON - Counterfeit
versionsofthepopularvideogames
Pac Man, Donkey Kong and Centi·
pede are popping up in arcades
acrossthenationfasterthanfederal
gents can gobble them up.
Though no definite link to the Mob
has been established, officials of the
Justice Department's Organized
Crime Division suspect that underworld bosses -long involved in the
vending-machine and jukebox business- are up to their shoulder holsters in the lliiclt business .of cloning
the ubiquitous quarter-eaters.
Wherever there's a fast buck to be
made,theMobmusclesinsooneroc
later - and the market in videogame machines and cartridges appears to be limitless.
Significantly, It was FBI agents
and attorneys from an Organized
Crime Task Force who raised a
large New Jersey-based manufacturer and distributor of video games
last July. The G-mep lugged off do-

member countered with his comments. ':They'd better take this, or
something close to it," he said of the
owners' offer, "or we can all go
home."
';!'he owners' negotiators spent 45
minutes discussing the proposal
with union bargainers, then talks
were recessed for the night.
The 42-day-old strike has claimed
six regular-season weekends.
One of the player representatives
assembled here at the union's behest said It could be the last weekend
to bite the dust. "The settlement Is
reality by Wednesday, and possibly
we're playing by Sunday."
If they're back on the field Nov. 7,
they'll meet the NFL's unofficial
deadline for saving the season.

CRUJSERWEIGIIT Tl'l1.E HOLDER - Leon Spinks, the fonner
world heavyweight champion, holds up IWI cndserwelght title belt after
defeating Jesse Burnett In a unanimous 12-round decision for the charnplotMip at McAfee, N.J., Sunday. (AP Laserphoto).

·&lt;

•

By BRUCE LOWITf
AP Sports Writer
NEW YORK !API - The National Football League Management Co uncil's executive
committee was studying the strik·
lng union's latest contract dem'\nd,
a three-year, $1.1-bllllon package.
Even without seeing It, though, one
of the owners already hates lt.
"They're not going t9 get three
years," the owners' executive committee member said of the union
plan. " If they think they're going to
get It, they're crazy!"
The Management Council, the
owners' bargaining unit, formally
offered Its $1.28-billlon package Sun·
day afternoon. On Sunday night, the
union countered with Its plan- and
a council executive committee

rP:....=0=-=1=··

pensive undertakings? The purpose
Is the same purpose It has been all
along. As some with has remarked,
the object of an election Is Df:!t only to
throw their rascals out; It Is also to
throw our rascals ln. The object is to
elect our kind of folks.
Enter the PACs. Ten years ago
there were only 113 political action
committees. This year 3,149 PACs
have registered· with the Federal
Election Commission. These committees will distribute an estimated
$80 million to candidates for the
House and Senate, almost half
again what they gavetwoyearsago.
No candidate can receive more than
$5,1XXl from a single PAC, but PACs

The

Committee studies contract demand

•

Today is Monday, Nov.l, the30'ithdayof1~. Thereare60daysleftlnthe

I

Pomervy-Middlejx~rt, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentiner
Pomervy-Middlepolt, bhio
Monday, November 1,1982.,

*YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS WHO
GAVE MANY HARD-EARNED $10 AND $20
CHECKS.
*91% OF BOSTER'S CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTORS LIVE IN THE 94TH HOUSE DISTRICT.

WHO SUPPORTS
OPPONENTS?

BOSTER'S

*93% OF THE OPPONENTS FINANCES WAS
RAISED OUTSIDE OUR COUNTIES.
*ONLY 17 CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTORS LIVE
IN THE 94TH HOUSE DISTRICT.

KROGER STORE
POMEROY, OHIO

' We will be accepti" applications for Part-time.employment for our ~emodeled
facility in Pomeroy, Ohio. Retail experience preferred. Part-time positions include:
Cashiers, Baps, PiOduce Clerb, and Deli-Bakely Clerk. Applications will be
accepted at the Bureau of Efnployment Sirvices, 39350 Union Ave., Pomeroy,
Ohio, between the hours of 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. No phone calls please.
·,

1

THE KROGER CO.
E.O.E. '

Nov. 2, .Vote for Jolynn Boster,
the candidate who represents
you, the people of Gallia, Meigs
and Athens Counties.

,,

Paid for by lite Bosler for Stale Representative Commitlee, John E. Halliday, Cllainnan, 26locust Stree~ Gallipolis, Ohio.45731.

..

•·

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 1,1982

Monday, November 1,1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Ingrate of Year' award to ungrateful guy

PRESENTED PRIZE - Mrs. Fae Craig of Pomeroy is presented a
. S25 cash prize by Tim Halsread of The Dally Sentinel's advertising staff.
Mrs. Craig competed in the Senlinel"name the advertiser" contest and
was one of some 250 readers who correctly ldentHied all the advertisers
involved and was selected as winner by a random drawing lrom the
con-ect entries.

slderable fa ith in human nature. GOOD (AND MAD) SAMARITAN
DEAR GOOD AND MAD:
You're entltled!
The duffle bag owner's initials
might weD stand for "Thoughless,
No-class Ingra te."- H.
DEAR HELEN:
There are magazines directed to
working women, younger housewives, older married couples, retirees, etc., but I don't know of a ny
publication aimed at middle-aged
and upward single women. Di·
vorced, widowed, or never·
married, we've reached the
tllrow-away age where wrinkles
and pounds multiply faster tha n job
or social opportunities. We can't
successfully compete with younger
women tor the few men availa ble;
we've usually risen as high as we'll
be allowed, careerwlse, and our
psyches aren't helped by wa tching
1V and movies which make caricatures ot older females.
What we need is a voice for "5().

and-over singles." Any suggestions? -ONE OF THEM
DEAROOT:
Fifty Upward Network (F·U·N)
seenns made to order tor you. An
offshoot of the Fine Arts Network, a
"meeting service" for intelligent
singles, it aims especially at 50-plus
women. Organizer Nancy Meyer
wiD begin publication of a national
F-U-N newsletter in January and is
presently asking suggestions as to
content, areas of concern. etc.
For more information, plus a
questionnaire giving you a chance
to express your Ideas, send a
stamped, self-addressed envelope
to Fifty Upward Network, Box 4714,
Cleveland, Ohio, 44126.

IUSPSJU.. . I

A Olvlvlon uf MuiUmtdbi,IDc.
Pub l• s~d

t&gt;vt'ry aflemUt)(l, MOI'ltbty thr~ h

Friday, 111 euun.Stn!ttt: bftht; ,OhJ u~v,.u cx. ,..
Publi!lhinl( Comp~:~ny • Multim~i¥, Jill·.,
p,,mt•ruy. Ohio 4$769, 992·2158. St.'t"Ofkl l'111u

~lct~c plll d Ml Pornt'roy, Ohio.

Mcmbt.or : The A:~Sot: ia~tt'd Pr~. Inland DHi·
Jy Press Association 1tnd the Amcric~m
Nt·wspuper Publisht!rs As.olociation, Na~tiorutl
Adverti:~inr-:
Rcprescntali vc, Bnmham
Nt·wspaper &amp;ales, 733 Third Av ~t nuc, New
Yurk , New York 11Mll 7.
POSTMASTER : ~ nd culdreKS to The Daily
Sentinel . Ill Court St ., Pomeroy, Ohio45769.

PERSONAL to "Periectionist":
Ben Franklin's advice tor someone
like you was: "Keep your eyes wide
open before marriage, half s hut
afterwards."
That goes for women too doubled! - H.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Hy Ca rrier or Motur Route
On• · wct•k .
. ... SI .OO

Ont• Month
0nl' Yt·ar

. $4 .40
.. $52.80

SINGLE COPY
PRICES

.... 15 Cents
SuiNT ibt·rs nul dcslnllt.! tu Jl&lt;:IY Ull' t·arncr
ma ~

n •n11 t m aJ va nn~ 1.h rt'l'l lu Tht· D&lt;1ily
S.·nlHli 'l un a :\, 6 ur 12 month basiS. Crt'llit
w1lllw 1-! 1""\'11 t •arrlt•r t 'a t·h ITWill h .

Nu .~ ubS~ TipiiUI L" by mall pt•nnillL't.lm towns
wlwn· hmn\' t·arrit'r scrv •n• is av1:1 ila bll'.

some of tlle essentla l amino acids,
too. but one or more of the essential
amino ac ids is low or absent. It is
necessary, tllerefore, to combine a
variety of pla nt protein sources and·
or anima l protein sources.
What does a ll tllisamino acid talk
mean? It means tlla t in order to get
tlle prote in tha t you need, you must
eat adequateamoun tsofmeat, fish,
poultry. eggs and dairy products. U
you eat beans, and you want to get
tlle necessary proteins, then you
must combine beans with other
plant sources such as whole grains,
or eat small amounts of a nimal protein foods witll the beans. One prote in source complements another .
Now tllat I've convinced you how
wonderiul beans are, I have a super
recipe for you to try. This is a variation of the traditional bean soup and
it is rea lly great.
Hearty Bean Soup
I lb. navy pea beans
2 quarts wa ter
I cup chopped celery
3 carrots, chopped
2 medium onions, chopped
1 cup chopped ham or 1 meaty
ham bone
2 potatoes cooked and mashed
I can of cream of mushroom soup
2 ~f bouillon cubes

1 teaspoon basil
1 bay leaf
1 tablespoon dried parsley
or
2 tablespoons fresh chopped parsley pepper
Sort and wash beans. Cover with
water. Bring to a boll and boll tor two
minutes. Remove from heat and let
soak two hours. Add a ll remaining
ingredients. Cook until the beans
are tender, about two or three hours.
(Remove ham bone and cut ha m ott
tlle bone. Return ha m bits to the
soup.)
To provide additional sources of
protein, team up tlle soup with Ca·
lico Muffins. These muffins contain
whole wheat flour plus cheese for a
really unique flavo r.
Calico Muffins
In a small bowl combine:
! egg, beaten
'A cup milk
6 tablespoons margarine , m e lted
In a medium-sized bowl combine:
I tablespoon chopped green
pepper
I tablespoon chopped onion
6 tablespoons grated yellow
cheese
'h cup white flour
'A cup whole wheat flour
'h teaspoon salt

I tablespoon baking powder
2 tablespoons plus ~ teaspoon
sugar
2 tablespoons plus 'h teaspoon
corn meal
Add liquids to dry mixture, mixing only until just combined. A few
Jumps may remain. P lace in
greased muffin cups. Bake a t 400
degrees tor 25-30 minutes.
Learn more about a lternate meat
sources by a ttending the Holiday
Workshop on Wednesday, Nov. 3 at
St. Paul's Lutlleran Churc h in Pomery. Annie Moon, WICCounselor,
and I will be demonstra ting a Super
Split Pea Soup and I'll have lots of
hand outs for everyone. I wll! be glad
to send you informa tion about dried
beans, including a flyer on meat
stretchers, if you will contact me,
Dale Stoll, County Extension Agent,
Home Economics and 4-H, Box 32,
Pomeory, Ohio 45769.
Learn more a bout alterna te meat
sources by at1ending the Holiday
Worl&lt;shop on Wednesday, Nov. 3 at
St. Paul's Lutheran Church in
Pomeroy. Annie Moon, WIC Counselor, and I will be demonstrati ng a
Super Split Pea Soup and I'll have
Jots of ha nd outs for everyone. I will
be glad to send you Information
about dried beans, including a flyer

MAll. SUBSCRIPTIONS
Insldt' Ohiu
1:\W t•c k ~

$14 .04

paper rolls, crepe paper, leaves and
construction paper. Jody Smith,
Melissa Neutzling and Debbie Alkire led in tlle flag ceremony with
Angie Swiger providing cookies and
Stephanie Price, Kooi·Ald for
refreshments.
Parents assisting were Barbara
Smitll, Charldine Aiklre, Sue
Walker, Sandy Henderson, Brenda
Neutzling, Beverly Roush, Kathy
Price, Diane Bachtel, Tina Collins,
Donna Klein, Mary Dillard, JoAnn
Weyersmlller, and Laura Swiger.

Lewis Manley 263
A party a t the Veterans Admlnls·
tration Hospital in ChUJ!cothe on
Dec. 16 was announced at tlleOct. 26
meeting of tlle Lewis Manley 263
American Legion Auxiliary held a t
the home of Mrs . Ma rga ret Bowles,
president.
The meeting ~ened in ritualistic
form with the bulletin from Thora
Gatwood, Eighth District pres!dent.
being read. It noted the veterans'
party at Chlllloothe as well as the
midwinter conference l1l be held at
the Hilton Inn North· in Columbus
Jan . 28. Members were asked to
take a $litem for ditty bags for the
midwinter conference.
Florence Richards stated that the

ldts had been ordered a nd Mrs. Bowles gave out instruction sheets to
be included In the bulk m a iling
which she received from the
department.
Lula Hampton reported on the
monument which is' a me morial to
VIetnam veterans in Washington
noting that It bears the names of
57,9ll Vietnam veteranseitherdead
or missing In action. Rei!rring to
the National News, Mrs. Hampton
noted that it wlll be dedicated on
Nov. 11. The monument was designed by Maya YingLinof Athens.
Mrs. Hampton also reported that
AI Keller J r., newly elected national
commander, has presented goals
for the American Legion tor the
coming year to the veterans affairs
committees of both house and
senate.
Members sang "In the Garden"
to close the meeting and refresh·
ments were served by the hostess
from a table decorated In the fall
motK.

Jordan, county deputies, Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Crabtree, e lected
county delegates, a nd Carla Rife,
princess, a nd BUI Dyer, prince,
youth representatives.
Dyer was selected as third
runner-up in the state contest for
prince.
Howard Caldwell, state cha plain
for the past 4 years, was elected
master tor a two year term. James
Ross who retired , has been state
master for the past 14 years.

ent, Lloyd Dllllnger, assistants,
Bob PuUins and RusseD Archer;
lay leader, Florence Spencer; dis·
!riel union representatives, Doris
and Lloyd Dillinger; Nurture and
membership care committee, Nel·
lie Parker, Florence Spencer, Nina
Robinson, Janice Pullins; Out·
reach committee, Gertrude Robinson, Thelma Henderson and Nellie
Parker; Age level and lamlly min·
lstries, Ruth an Lloyd Brooks; Ma·
rllyn Robln'6o n; Camping
coordinator, Thelma Henderson;
church pastor . p,artsh relations
co mmittee, Nina Robinson ,
Thelma Henderson, Charlot1e Van
Meter; finance committee, Randy
Dillinger, Nina Robinson, Lloyd
Dllllnger, Florence Spencer, Genevieve Guthrie; new members on
Nominations and personnel committee, Osie Mae Follrod, Gertrude
Robinson, Martha Poole; ·iiew trustee members, Ruth Brooks, Hobart
Swarz, Robert Pullins, Richard
.Spencer; church school finance secretary, Randy Dillinger; church
treasurer, Nina Robinson; administrative councll recording Secretary, Janice Pullins; communion
stewards, Florence Spencer and
Charlotte Van Meter.
Church revival services are Nov.
1-6 at 7: 30~ speaker, Rev. Frank
Crofoot, Athens. Special music every night. Everyone welcome.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Koehler,

Troop 1271
A halloween costume party was
held when the pomeroy Troop 1Z7l
Brownies met TuesdaY evening at

t1)e school.

Tile BrOwnieS submitted names .

for the drog logo and selected the ,
United States, Japan and Atrtca as i.
possible CQUJitrles /Dr the Interna· :
Uonal1blnldng Day oblleJ'Vance.
Relay races were enjoyed by the
girls who also made owls from
'

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Smith of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Smith and Jodi were weekend gu·
ests of Mr. and Mrs. Don Smith at
Grand Rapids, Mich.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Olleman of Ra·
venna visited recen tJy with Mr, and
Mrs. Marvin Reed.
Mrs. Grant Smith, Mrs. John
Smith and Melissa, Mrs. Terry
Smith and Barbara visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Smith at Kenton.
Grant Smith and his sons, Terry

.. $15.21
129.6&lt;

1 :\ Wo ·•·k .~

:!f\ Wo •t ·ks
:,2 Wo ·o · k .~

. $!"Jii .21

MONDAY
RACINE Chapter 134, Order of
the Eastern Star, will meet Monday a t 7: 3l p.m. at the Masonic
Temple.

'1'H£Y SAY W£ CAN BOIR.OIAI UP fO
$30,000 OR f'IO~E. ON OUI H()(JS£ !'

~

MIDDLEPORT Garden Club
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at .
the home of Mrs. Daniel
Thompson.
LETARTPTOwillmeetMon·
day at 7: 3l p.m. AU lntei'E'Sted
parents should attend. Refresh·
mentswillbeservedandbabyslt·
ting service provided.

POMEROY - Meigs reserve
football team will play Southern
reserves at Marauder Stadium
in Pomeroy on Monday at 5: 3l
p.m .
RACINE - Southern Athletic
Boosters will meet Monday at 8
p.m. at the high school to com·
plete plans for the football ban·
quet to be held Nov. 13.

MIDDLEPORT Garden Club,
7:30p.m. Monday, home of Mrs.
Da niel Thompson.

';:================;::=====:;-,
AStrograph

November 2, 19112
Your material prospects look very encouraging for the year ahead.
However, there will be times when you might need business or financial
advice. You must be sure to deal only with experts.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Don't make promises or agreements
today merely to get another ott your back. You might later regret not
coming out with a "no."
SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Don'tglveawaysecrets tooutsld·
ers today which are supposed to be kept within the confines of your
company. It could hurt your job.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) If you are involved in a fun compet!·
tive sport today, be a gracious loser if another plays better than you.
·
And if you win, do so with grace.
AQUARIUS (Jan. ~Feb. I9) Avoid comparing relatives or family
members today witll outsiders who may be more successful. You could
trigger a domestic rumble.
PISCES (Feb. ~March 20) U you are dealing today with persons
you do not know too weD, don't take everything they say literally. They
could be stretChing facts a bit.
ARIES (March 21·Aprill9) .Pay attention to small details in your
commercial dealings today. Count your change carefully and be sure to
ask for receipts or guarantees.
TAURUS (April ~May 20) Welt-intentioned associates may feel
free to advise you today, but take their suggestions with a grain of salt.
Make major decisions yourself.
GEMINI (May 2l.June 20) Small details assume more importance
than usual today work-or careerwise. Don't do things hastily or you
may Iorge! to dot the i's and cross the t's.
CANCER (June 21.July 22) Try not to comment today if one friend
is criticizing another who is not present. You might be blamed later for
commenls you didn't make.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Your actions and behavior will be closely
observed by others today, even though you might not be aware of it.
Don't give them anything to talk about.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Double-check today anything which you
put in writing or affix your signature to. Legal problenns might later
arise from an avoidable error.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It won't be the large expenditures which
will bend your budget out of shape today, but It could be a nuinber of
small, nonessential purchases you feel compelled to make.

If you own your home,

you could get a large loan, too.
Just phone. When you see for yourself how fast we say
''yes," you11 wonder why you waited so longI Call to Ond
out how low your monthly payment could be.

CREDJ"A,_AM A~~~.IJ..J.Ulf'l OF

ERIC

•

In

..

Betty James recen tzy gave a
layette shower for her daughters,
Susie Huffman and Laura Icen·
hower, at her horne in Clifton. W.
Va.
Donna Guinther and Betty Lee
made small bootie replicas for the
mints and nuts served to the guests
along with cake, Ice cream, coffee
and drink.
Attending were Marketta Steele
and Mlkle, Erma Burge, Carolyn
Burge, Kaylene Robinson, Marie
Smith, Tony a McArtby, Phyllis Plymale, Beth Smith, Melanie Mossman, Jacld Biake,Robyn Young,
Carol Smith, Melba Icenhower,
Cyndl Gary, Sharon Rhodes, Donna

and John, rea!lltzy went bear hunt·
lng in Ontario, Canada.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hensch,
Lea Hensch and trtend, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Palmlsano, Mr. and
Mrs. John Oliverio, Tony and
Timmy DoJohn of Mayfield, Mr.
and Mrs. Edward Mensch, Cuyahoga Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Walt
Hensch of Massillon were Sunday
dinner guests fl. Mr. and Mrs. Ern·
est Whitehead.
Mrs. Opal Randolph, Mrs .
Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Alberta Ed·
w-.,AIJII Mrs. Mary AUce Bise
vlli'ltat~ih Mrs. Rose Thomas and
Mrs. Gladys Baughman recently at
GahaMa.
Mrs. Maxine Martin and Linda,
Manakin-Sabot, Va. spent a week
with her son, Hugh Martin and

Mrs. Bess Webster of Tuppers
Plains visited Tuesday with Mrs.
Gladys Wllilanns and Ruth Anne
Balderll&gt;n.

Mrs. Fern Gaul, former Meigs
County teacher, now retired and livIng in Columbus, is a patient at
Grant Hospital, Columbus, followIng major surgery on Thursday.
Mrs. Frankie McKelvey, Belpre,
and Mrs. Leanna Beegle, Racine,
spent Thursday with Mrs. Gaul.

~'ve got your loan

Gallipoli~ ;

;)02 Second ~treet
Phone 4-iti-4 113

TUESDAY

Coonbunters Building, Meigs
County Fairgrounds, 6 p.m.

RUTLAND- An election day
dinner will be held Tuesday in
the meeting-room of the Rutland
Fire Department with serving to
begin at 10: 30 a.m. and continue
through the supper hour. Span·
sored by the ladles auxlliary.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce wiD
meet at noon Tuesday at Meigs
Inn.
CHESTER -. The Chester
United Methodist Women will
hold a public election .day lunch
and bazaar Tuesday at the
church.

ON
MfiGS COUNTY
HEALTH

i.

LEVY
Property TaxUnfair Tax
Pd. Pol. Ad. by A. G. lipscomb
Hemlock Grove

Hospitalized

POMEROY Easte rn Star
Chapter, 7:45 p.m . Tuesday at
tlle Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

RACINE
willthebe
an
Electon
Day..Tiiel;
dinner at
Rear·
ganized Church r1 Jesus Christ of
Lat1er Day Saints Church, Tues·
day with servinglrom 10a.m .to7
p.m. Thechurchlsbcatedbeslde
the Lebanon Township voting
precinct on the Portland-Racine
Road. The menu wlll consist of
soup, chill, hotdogs, sloppy joes,
desserts and ~ges.

VOTE NO

The First Southern Baptist
Church willhaveareviva!Nov. 7-12
at 7: llp.m. eacheveningwlthevan·
gelist Michael Hunt, Columbus.
There will be special singing each
night. Dedication of the new build·
lng will take place at 2: 3l p.rh. on
Nov. 7durtnganopenhousewiththe
public invited.

family.

RUTLAND - Slim and trim
c lasses wiD begin at Rutland
Civic Center Monday. Classes
will be held on Monday and
Thursday mornings on 9: 3l a.m.
Informatl:m on joining the
groups may be secured by cal·
ling Ann Spires, 742·2960 or 7422454
POMEROY - The annual
World War I Night and oyster
stew dinner will be held Tuesday
t
t h haD
a 8 p.m. a t e
ol Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy.

Jean Guinther a nd Nita, Betty Lee
and Mlkle, Chrissy, Helen Savage,
Cindy Litchfield, Bonnie James.
Sheila Proffit1, Betty Cadle, Doris
Martin.
Sending gifts were Mrs. E lber
Fox and Judy Sites.

Revival set

Help Us Help You
VOTE YES NOVEMBER 2nd
FOR YOUR

MEIGS COUNTY
EMERGENCY MEDICAL SERVICES

Calendar

Ohin

LEVY RENEWAL

their offices for the regular November meeting of the board.

Passage will not increase your taxes.
Composed of Volunteer Squads from Tuppers Plains · Racine · Pomeroy · Middleport
Syracuse · Rutland
PO. POL AOV.

POMEROY - TOPS OH 570,

costume party Tuesday at the

NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE SALE

POMEROY - TheForestRun
United Methodist Church will
hold an Election Day soup dinner
at the church. Serving will begin
at 11 a.m. and continue until 6
p.m.

20°/o 640°/o OFF
ALL SUITES IN STOCK

WEDNESDAY

How is it possible for Rice's to sell high quality suites for
unbelieveable low prices?77 Here are 6 reasons:

SYRACUSE Willing
Workers Missionary Society o
Syracuse First Church of
will hold a Christmas bazaar o
Nov. 3 and Nov. 5 at the Pomeroy Kroger Store from 9: 3l a.m.
to 3 p.m.

1. low overhead.
2. Family operation.
3. Direct factory buying.

MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club will meet at 2p.m. Wednes
day at the home of Mrs. Wllso
Carpenter. Nan Moore will review "My Life," Golda Meir.
Members will respond to roll
call with the name of a famous
woman.

4. Volume buying.
5. Volume selling.
6. Small mark-u

ReQ. $299 .95

$}9995
SAVE $100

POMEROY - Rev. Richard
W. Jaymes will be evangelist for
revival services Nov. 3-14 at the
Hermon United Brethern in
Christ Church, C.R. 82, Texas
Community. Services will begin
at 7: ll nightly and the publr is
invited.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
ship Trustees will meet Tuesday
at 8 p.. in Syracuse Municipal
Building.
MIDDLEPORT - Lodge No.

363, F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday at
7: 30 p.m . There will be election
of officers and refreshments will
be served. AU members are
asked to attend.
POMEROY- At 7 p.m. Tues· •
day, Meigs County Board of Ed·
ucatlon members will meet at

Attend state grange
Several Meigs County Grange
members were in Columbus Oct.
17-191orthe110th session oft he Ohio
State Grange held at the Sheraton
Columbus Hotel. In the group at·
tending were Mr. and Mrs. Mendal

Our gift to you. A beautiful

CHRISTMAS
ORNAMENT*
with each sitting!

ThesH0p
.

f

POMEROY. OH.

PH. 992-3471

Lasting color portraits
you can enjoy for )'elll'l to

wallets, three
5x7s and two 8xl0s
ONLY $}295

eoote. Fifteen

We Will
Cut, Wrap
and Freeze
To Your
Specifications.
---- -·--

Reedsville
News Notes

Page 5

Double layette shower held

. . $S H8
nut~i tlt·

This
being
Mrs.
Wilson's
last off!clal
visit
before
Grand
Chapter,
she 1~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;;:~
expressed her appreciation for the
support and courtes;es extended to
her by the chapter lor the year and
the recepton that the chapter hosted
tor her.
Refreshments were served at the
close of the me2tlngby Mr. anqMrs.
Norman WUl, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Rice, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Cotterill and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
WUitamson.
Tile next meeting will be Nov. 9at
7:00p.m.

Amesville, visited his sister, Mr.
and Mrs. Hobart Swartz.
Mr.and Mrs. Samuel Michael,
St!versville, called on Mr. and Mrs.
WUber Parker and famUy.
Warren Stearns, formerly ol this
community, is making a satisfactory recovery from a heart attack.
Mr. and Mrs. Garland Caldwell
received word that their son-in-law,
Mike Kestner, returned home from
University Hospital, Columbus.
Alfred Livestock Club served
lunch at the Charles Calaway sale
Oct. 16.
.
A large crowd ol friend and
neighbors attended the 25th annl·
versary of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee
Henderson Oct. 16.

...... .. 127.:10

26 Wt·i· k ~ .

:,2 Wi •t•k.'

on meat stretchers, if you will contact me, Dale Stoll, County Extension Agent, Home Economics and
4-H, Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio45769.

HOW DO YOU APPLY?

Meigs County organization members hold meetings
Pauline Atld ns was e lected
worthy matron.and Charles King,
worthy patro n, at the Oct. 26 mfet!ng of the Harrisonvil le Chapter 255,
Order of the Eastern Star. held at
tlle Mason ic Temple
Other of ficers elected were Golda
Reed, associate matron; Bob Reed,
associate patron; Grac ie Wilson, secretary; Donna Nelson, treasurer;
Clara Mae Jeffe rs. conductress;
and Karen Facemeyer. associate
conductress.
Installation was announced for
Wednesday, Nov. 10 with practice to
be he ld Nov. 7 at 7 p.m. at the
temple.
Introduced a nd weloomed by the
worthy ma tron wereGracieW!Ison,
deputy gra nd matron; past matrons a nd past patrons, Ruby Diehl,
50 year member . Harold Rice and
Bob Reed, honored masons, Ber·
nice Hoffman, pas t deputy matron
and aide to the most worthy grand
conductress, Lois Pauley.
Presented 40 year pins were
Frances Young, Bernice Winn and
Helen Carper. The pins were presented by Mrs. Wilson who ro mmended them for thel rservre!D the
chapter. Annual reports were
given.

·sunday school attendance Oct. 10
was 45; church attendance 22. Oct.
17 Sunday school attendance was
36; cpurch attendance, 24.
Charles Woode, Dayton, visited
community friends and a t1ended
Sunday school and church where he
led the singing.
Oct. 12 Nina and Gertrude Robinson, ;Florence Spencer and Nellie
Parket of Alfred UMW accompanIed Rev. Thomas to Arcadia Nursing Center for monthly worhslp
service. Others joining were Lucllle
Barrows, North Bethel, Betty Chevalier, Tuppers plains, and J oe
Connoliy, Long Bottom. The program featured opening prayer by
J oe Connoliy, group singing, read·
ing from First John, chapter 3 and
sermonet1e by Rev. Thomas. Unison repeating of the Twenty-Third
Psalm and the Lord's Prayer
closed the service.
Alfred Church nominating com·
mittee- Genevieve Guthrie, Janet
Moore, Nina Robinson, Florence
Spencer and Nellie Parker met
with Rev. Thomas Oct.16. Nomina·
lions included: chairperson of ad·
mlnlstrative council, Robert
Pullins; church school superintend·

The Daily Sentinel

Recipes of soups, muffins for those nippy fall days

Harrisonville OES

Alfred
Social Notes

Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk It over
in her column If you write to Helen
Hottel, care of this newspaper.

What's cookin'?
By Dale M. SWD
Meigs County Extension
Home Economist
A steaming bowl of fragrant soup
is the periect food for nippy fall
days. Bean soup is a nutritlous,
''stick-to-your -ribs' ' soup that is low
in cost a nd easy to fix .
Most of us have grown up wi th
some type of bean soup. Thrifty
cooks have a lways relied on beans
as an inexpensive meal. Beans are
just brimming with all sorts of good
things like fiber and protein and
they have no cholesterol. Beans
have five times as much fiber as
celery. One cup of beans has about
1!(1 calories compared to 235 calories for a three ounce beef patty .
Most people rea lize that our bodies need protein . Protein is made
up of about 20 basic com ponents,
called amino acids. We can manu·
factu re some of theseaminoaclds in
our bodies but tllere are nine a mino
acids which our bodies cannot
make. We have to get these from
other sources . We can get tllese "essential amino acids" from meats,
fish, poul try, eggs and dairy products. These sources have tlleessential amino acids present in varying
amoun ts. P la nts provide some of
tlle essentia l a mino acids present in
varying a mounts. Plants provide

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs COunty and regional correspondence

Helen help us
By HELEN BOOTEL
DEAR HELEN:
Driving on a busy freeway I spot·
ted a duffle bag tllat had evide ntly
dropped from a vehicleupahead. At
considerable risk I stopped and retrieved It, da rn near getting
flat1ened.
Inside there were clothes. credit
cards and $3(l! in cash.
I immediately shipped the bag
(insured ) to the address on its label,
and received notice from the P.O.
that it had a rrived.
That's the only notice I got, though
I also wrote a letter to the owner
telling him how I'd found his
belongings.
In addition to risking my life, I
also spent more than $9 on postage.
For this, not even one word of
thanks!
I hope the ungrateful guy, whose
initials are T.N.I., reads m y letter
and at least feels a little ashamed of
himself.
"Honesty may be Its own reward," but I' ve lost $8.25, plus con-

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

INCLUDING tk DEPOSIT

•
•
•
•

..

Onl' gift per sitting
PuM:s uur selection
Dcauliful backgrounds available_ ,
Ask about oor Occorator Portraits

• AI the lime ol tilting

~ou

will receive

1 coupon redeemabfe lor 1 beaullful
Limited Edlllon Christmas Tree
Orn1ment.

1,

.

•

~-·--"11®·
:18&amp; UPf'ER RIVER ROAD
· '.
.
GAWPOUS
'

r

.

• DATES: NOV; 2-NOV. 7
.
·' HOUR8:-THUR8 •• FRI.10-1,2·5:30,8-8
8UNDAY1-4

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Monday,,November 1

Page- 6 -The Doily Sentine l

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 1,1982
I

PHONE 992-2156

Business Seni.ces ·

0 • Wr oll O.lt tl' S"'hn r l ( ln ttlotcl Dr pl.
I l l Cour l St., Pom"rw, Oil tO •s"t
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In God's great garden
ofourliws,
Some rain must fall .
But after that, He
sends the sun
To triumph over all.
And so when sorrow
comes to us,
And teardrops cloud
our day,
He sends us strength
to bear our load
And light to guide our

-Tampering reports keep police busy
men! Sunday.

The youth admitted to Children's
Hospit al. David Me Night , 13, was In
good condition early today, said
anot her nursing supervisor, Mary
Lou Herron.
Police Sgt . Dan Wood said the
yout h ate a bag of malted milk balls
and that pollee were examining
anot her bag of the same brand the
youth collected .

I

He said Initial investigations indicated that the youth's Illness
stemmed from something in the
candy, rather than from overeating.
"There's something there, " he
said.
Another pollee department spokesman, John Williams, said "needles, nails, pins and razors" were
reported In trea ts turned In to Columbus pollee. No injuries had been
reported from the objects. he said.

Maude Erwin
Maude L. Wea rs Erwin, 84, 542 S.
Third Ave .. Mlddlepot1, died Sunday in Camden-Clark Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va ., after a lengthy
illness.
Bam Nov. 21, 1897, In Pliny,
W.Va .. daug hter of the late Ira and
Na ncy Legue Wears, she attended
Middleport Churc h of Christ.
Surviving are five daughters a nd
sons-in-law, Garnet and Raymond
Brown of Columbus, Maxine and
Richard Brown of Chillicothe,
Helen and Melvin Hood and Irene
and Harley Hendricks, ail of Pomeroy. and Julia and Roy Davidson of
Grove City: a son and daughter-in-

law, Dexter and MaryErwln ofNew
Haven; a son, Everett "John" of
Middieport; a sister, Mrs. Mary E rwin of Toledo; a brother, Walter of
Pomeroy; a daughter-in-law, Mrs.
Clarice E rwin of Middleport; 17
grandchildren and 27 grea tgrandchl!dren.
She was also preceded In dea th by
her husband, Arlie Erwin; a son,
Chester; a da ughter and three
brot hers.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday In the RawlingsCoats-Blower Funeral Home, with
the Rev. Robert Milton o!flclating.
Burial wlll be In Riverview Cemetery. Friends maycali atthefuneral
home anytime Tuesday.

South Point driver charged following mishap
was crossing 7 at 4:40 p. m. and
drove into the path of a southbound
car driven by Shawn A. Holliday, 19,
Parkersburg, W.Va. Both cars were
slightly damaged.
Richard L. Coleman, 37, Pomeroy. escaped inju ry at2p.m.Sunday
when the patrol said he fell asleep at
the wheel of his vehicle while traveling eastbou nd on Ohio 681.
The car went off the left side of the
road and into a ditch, causing moderate damage.
The pa trol sa id a vehicle driven
by Gera ld P. Shaulis, 20, Albany,
we nt left of center on Ohlo689 at 9: 10
a.m. Sa turday and collided with a
sout hbound a uto driven by Ray L.
Chadwellll . 37. Athens.

COLUMBUS - J ohn F. Havens,
, chairman, and John G. McCoy. vice
chairman. announced the Board of
Directors of Bank One Corporation,
multi-bank holding compa ny
:headquartered in Colum bus. voted
a three-for-two stock split and
elected two additional di rectors
.today.
Havens expla ined, "The board be, lieves the stock split reflects Bane
One's petiormance and will serve to
_Improve stoc k marketability." Additional shares at the ratio of one for
·every two shares held on Nov. 9 will
be distributed on Dec. 14.
·· Following the stock split, Bane
One will have over 16.6 million
shares outstanding, ranking it 27th

a

among U.S. banking institu tions.
A cash dividend which will be
maintained proportionally on the
new shares is calculated to be :J)
cents per share and will be paid J an.
4. 1983.

The board elected two new directors, Leona rd K. F irestone and Edward H. Jenklngs, enlarging the
board from nine to eleven.
Fires tone is a director of the F irestone Tire and Rubber Company,
Trustee of the Eisenhower Medical
Center, and a director of the Smithsonian Institution, among other busIness, civic and government
affiliations. He served as United
Stales Arnbassadbr to Belgium
from 1974 to 1977.

Sadly missed by Betty
Dean and Family.

p---;=====:;---...lj

I£ GAL NOTICE
The RroG randeCollegeCETA
Program 1S comm11ted to equal
employment oppor tuntt •eS for
alt applicant s. parttctpant s and
employees 1n all facets of lt SOP·
eratton s. and where deltc1en nes are noted to take a!ltrm attve
ac t1on to correct suc h deft cten ·
r tes In addt tt on. 1t tS ou r policy
to recru tt . htre and promote tn nil
JOb classtftcattons Wt th regard
to race. color relu:.jtOn. nat tonal
or•qtn sex(exceptwheresextsa
bona hde occupatiOnal qualtft ·
calion) . ancestry. aqe. pol!ttcal
atlt llattonor bel•els. or handtcap
(prov•ded physrcal limttat•an
does not prevent tab oerfo1·
mance 1-'arttctpants shall not be
dtsc r•m•nated agatnst on the ba SIS o"f CllrZenShlp
It tS our pol1cy to take alltrma ttve actton to ensure that all
tra1n1 ng programs and all per sonnet act•ons such as a rate o f
c. ompensa tton
bene f ils .
transfers. promottons. layoffs
.:md termtnattons are admtnrs ·
teredwt thou t regard to race. co :or. re1Q10n. nat tonal ortQ in. sex.
ancesti-y. age. poltt1cal alftl ta ·
!tOn. Ct ltzens ht p, handtcap or
belie fs
Bernard Murphy. ASSIStant
Dean lor Off -Campus and Con ttnUtng Educa tton wtll have the
ovmatlresponstbtltfY of admtn·
rster 1ng the program It a pro·
qr c~m parttc•pant or appl•cant
!eels he-she had been dtscrtmr·
nated aga•nst .n employment .
seektng employment and -or
tratntng w tt h thtS agency. heshe should tmmed1ately contact
Jerry Jones at (614) 245 -5353 .
ext 20 1 to pursue the proper
diSCrlmtna t ton compla1n t
procerlure

There was moderate damage to
Chadwell's vehicle and slight to the
Shaulis car . No citation was Issued.
Two deer accidents were also reported by the patrol over the
weekend.
The firs t occurred at 11: :Jl p.m.
Friday, when a deer ran into the
path of a car driven by Robert G.
Davis, 49, Pomeroy, while Davis
was northbound on 7. The deer was
killed and Davis' 'car was slightly
damaged.
Victor E . Cook, 23, Pomeroy, was It 1I t . li e
northbound on County Rd. 26 at 3
Public Notice
p.m. Saturday when his vehicle also
struck and Kllled a deer which had
LEGAL NOTICE
run into the car's path, causing
Pursuan t to Ohto Rev•sed
slight damage.
Code Sect&lt;on 1513 07 181121

!1). nottce tS hereby gtven ot ap -

Announce stock split, new board directors
Edward H. Jennings Is president
of the Ohio State University. Jennings, whose doctorate Is in finance,
previously held the presidency of
the Universly of Wyoming. He has
been an advisor to the World Bank
and Rockefeiler Foundation. He !sa
director of Ohio Bell Telephone Co.
Bank One's directors also authorized the purchase of up to 250,!XXJ
shares of the corporation'scommon
stock. Such purchases will be effected from time to time at current
market prices through public and
private transactions. The reacquired stock may be used in the corporation's acquisition program and
for other corporate purposes.

11 ... _.... .. ....... ...

11 , .... . .....

........ ...

...... • c .....
~

pltcatton for a permtt to con duct coat mtn rn g and
reclamatton operattons at the
s1 te ot the Mergs No 1 Mme.
owned by Southern Ohto Coal
Co .· P 0 Box 490. Athens.
Oh •o 45 701 The srte tS located
1 6 m1 tes east of Salem Center
ad1acen t (tn a northerly dtrectton) to State Route 124 In
Metgs County. Ohto More speCt ft ctally. the s1 te occuptes par trans of Secttons 8 an d 16 and
Frac ttons l 2. 6. and 12 (Sec ·
!tOns 9 and 51 tn Salem Town shtp, T BN. A 15W. tn the
ho ll ow of Pa rker Run and 1ts un named tr1butanes. The des crt bed area tS conta1ned tn the
Wtlkesvtlle and Rutland US
Geologtcal Survey 7 5 mtnut e
quadrang le maps A copy of the
appltcatton IS avarlable for pubhe rnspectton at the oH1ce of the
M etgs County Recorder Wn tten correspondence concern rng the apphcatton may be
submttted to the Orvtston of
Reclarratron. Fou ntatn Square.
Butldtng B-3 . Columbus. Ohto

""'"''-"' Orota.,

l ) c . o - ............

__

-

·-

""'""-"' '"'"a., -•......
-"',.. ~oo...........-·_ ._,

II Ufi"'O\ ....

Discounts to Senior Citizens &amp; HanJiicapped

u ..

"•
•.•

1

PH . 742 -2266

10-20-1 mo. pd .

Public Notice

Public Notice

and 59 . sa td potn l he1ng 1n the ~5. thence east along the to sa1d potnl. thence north 90
north line ot sa1d Sectt on p. deg oo· 00'" east along the
centerltne of State Rou te 681
2.850 feet. more or less. to a grantors· north property ttne
th ence South 325 00 feet to
porn! tn the extsl tng ce nterline and the so uth ltne of sa rd Lot
the southwest corner of satd
Lot 10 th ence Eas t 400 feet to of Sta te Route Number 68 1. Number 1 5. 400 00 fe-et to the
th e Sou theast co •ner o! Lot 7 of thP.n ce so uth 0 deg 00' 0" east pornt of begtnnmg and contatn alonq a ltne. 900 00 feet to an tn g 3 129 acres
satd Htckory Acres Subdtv tston
1r on p,n tn the Southeas t corner
Subtect to a!l legal htghways
th ence Sou th 100 feet to the
Southwes t co rner of Lot 19 of of Lot Number 15 of Htckory and easements of record
Acres SubdiVISIOn as recorded
Descnptton tor the above
sa1d Htckory Acres Subdtvtston
1n Plat Book4 Pages 58 and 59 descnbed tr act betng the re thence East 8 40 feet to the
sults
of a survey made by Ht 1n thf' records ot the Metgs
Sou thea st cornP.r of Lot 15 of
County Recorder"s Offtce and chard C Glasgow. A S 516 1
satd H1 ckory Acres Subdtvtston
Deed Referen ce Volume
thence Sou th 731 50 feet to the prant ors northeast properTY
th e pot nt ot beg.nntnq of a 60 3 corner sat d pomt also be,ng 269. Page 26 7 . Metg s County
the real potnt of beqtnntng for Deed Records
acre par cel as desc11bed tn
Contatntng after satd excep th e la nd herern descnbed
Met QS County Deed Records
thence south 0 deg oo· oo·· tton 87 531 acres . more or
VolUme 284 Page 6 71 satd
less
However. Me tgs Coun ry
east atong the
antors· east
potnt be1ng at an 18 mch HtckproperTy ltne 4 1 00 feet to an Tax Plat shows acreage at
ory Tr ee. thence North 68 deg
15' oo·· West 130 19 teet to a ex.sttng 18 rnch h•ckory tree. 62 233 acres. more or less
Th1s descrrptron tS tntended
thencf&gt; north 68 deq 15' oo··
30 rnch Poplar Tree. thence
Nonh 70 deg 20· 00 " WeSI vvest along a l1ne. 1 00 teet to tncorporate all of the prop to a 30 tnch poplar tr ee. thence erty descnbed tn the mortgage
736 00 teet to a tencecomer at
a 12 mch double Oak Tree . north 70deg 20'0" wes t along to The Federal Land Bank o!
a ltne. 31 7 79 teet to an tron Loutsvtlle. recorded tn Mort then ce Sou th 62 deg 15' oo-·
West 243 00 teet along a . pm. thence nort h 0 deq oo· gage Volume 133 . Page 441
oo·· west at onq a ltne. 174 88 of the r-..·.e,g s County Reco rds.
tence. thence South 57 deg
10" 00" WeSI 242 00 feel feet to an trori ptn, thence nor - however. excepttng the prop th eastwardly i'ltonq a line and erty descnbed tn two Parltal Realonq a tence. thence North 7 7
deg 50" 00 · Wes1 2 I9 feel wtth the arc of a cUrve to th e left IP.a ses recorded m Mortgage
havtnq a radtus ot 40 00 ff!et a Release Volume 10. Page 55 .
alona a ten ce. thence Noflh 69
deq ' t 5 00"" Wes1 352 00 leet d1starice of 99 92 teet to an and Mortgage Release Volume
tron ptn the tong chord of sa1d 10 Pa9e 28 1
to 8 24 rnch Wtld Cherry Tree.
Pr o perty appratsed a t
arc beanng north 18 deq 26 '
then ce North 58 deg 25· oo··
05·· eaM . 75 90 feet to satd S60 000 00 and cannot be
West 418 00 teet to an 8'tnch
potnl. thence northwestwardly sold for tess than two-thtrds o t
M aple Tree thence South 50
along a ltne and w1th the ar c ot the appratsed prtce
deq 45· 00· West 4 18 00 teet
Tetms Cash 1n hand on day
a curve to the riQh t havtnq a
alonq a fence. thence South 2
deq 50" 00"" Eas1 169 00 feel rarl1us ol 10 00 feet a d•stance ot saiP
of 9 2 7 feet to an •r on pm tn the
alonq a fence. thence South 25
grantors' north property ltne JAME S J PROFFITT
deq 10 oo·· East 165 00 teet
and the southwest corner ot SHERIFF
atonq a tencP to an 18 tnch Oak
sa td l ot Number 15. the long ME IGS COUNTY
Tr ee thence South 4 7 rleq 50.
oo·· Ea~t 289 00 feet al6nq a chord of satd arc beartng north
26 deq 33" 54 ·· wes t. 8 94 feet 1101 18. 25 II 11 l. 31c
lence thence South 35 n"eq
15'
East 191 00 teet atorlrJ
a fencp to a 15 tn Ch WalnUt ----------------------~I
Tree thP-nce South 11 deq 30'
I
oo·· East 70 00 teet along a
fence to an 18 tnch Ash Tree
·I
th ence Sou th 4 7 dell 40' oo··
.I
E&lt;1st 56 feet ~lonq a fence to a6
I
rn ch Elm Tree . thP.n ce South 66
neg 34 ' 15·· West 755 74 feet
to a fencP. post on the East ltne
I
of Sectr on 11 then ce North 82
cleq 29'
We st 381 70 feet
to an tr on p1n thence North 52

ROOFING

QQGGS

H. L WHITESEL

SALES &amp;SERVICE
u.s. Rt. 50 East
Guysville, Ohio
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm l;quipment ·
Deater
Farm Equipment
Parts &amp;Service
t·J-tfc

Ph. 992-2791
or 949-2263

ALL STEEL &amp;
PiLE BUILDINGS

UTILITY BUILDINGS

to a potn t. thence South 83 deg

Wr i te your own ad and order by mail with th is
coupon . Cance l your ad by phone when you get
r esults . Mone y not refundabl e.

36. 23"" Easl 764 69 feel 10 a
fence post . thence North 6 deg

23" 3T Eas187089 fee110 a

potnt 1n the centerline of sard
State Route 681 . thence the fol lowtng dtrecttons and drstances
along the cen terline of satd
State Route 681. Sou th 82 deg

SKATE-A-WAY

l
I

or 9B5-3837

St tuate rn Section 5. Town 4.
Range 12 . Orange Townshtp_
Mergs County. State of Oh10
and berng more tully descrtbed
as follows
Commencrng at a potnt m the
northwest corner of satd Sec-

~-

•23.

5.

2~ .

6. _ _ _ _ __

7. _ _ _ _ __
8. _ _ _ _ __
9.

- - -·- -

32.

------

33.
34.
35.

u.
15.

16.

10/1811 mo.

Mall This Coullon with RemiHance
The Daily Sentinel .
111 CourtSt.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

CARPET SALE

110) 18. 25. 11 1) 1. B. 41C

l!iG. '15"

Public Notice

3· 11 -tfc

10/24/ 1

•Wuhen •Dilh·

waahwa•R•ng•

•Refrigerators

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-rtc

From the Srlllllest Heater

Core to the lalpst Radiator.
Radiator Specialist
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yr1. Experience

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
'Addofts and remodtlin1

-Roofinland ptter won
-Contre 1 work

- Water
-Sewer
- Gas lines
- Septic Systems
llr&amp;e or Small Jobs
PH. 992-2478
10·3·1 mo. pd

-Piurnbinf ond

wort
lfrn £stlmotes)

electriu

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
9·30·tfc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy, Ott.
Ph. 992-2174

.,

2-26-rtc

.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission ·
PH . 992·5682
or 992-7121
3 · 2~ · tfc

-

-

......,_
-=-tlng

Complete Gutter WOit,
lete Remodeling,

-*oyotom•

=

. odump IIUCk ......

CHARLES SAYRE
AND SON
Roofing~ Siding Co.·

ooeodlnglrtd rodolrnlug
oRooinelrtdB-hootcup
Wlllkl_,....lrtd."'
Qunntoed

j

PH. JIM CUFFORD
992-7201

~
.

1

17"

t12-ZH3
POIIEIOY, 01110

Plastir Ctlft·and
Ceramic Bisque

Glen A. hush

ROOFING ·

I

__

...:_-".:.:__

____

..:___

Racine Fire Dept . is sponaoring a gun ahoot every Sat.
night starting Oct . 9 at 8 :30
p.m . in Ba shan . Factory
choke 12 gauge shotguns
only .

Giveaway

.

'

lltw llavin, W. VI. Z,Zii~-11
Pit. (304) 112-2657
10-20·1 mo.

,,

I•

•

116 llYn• Slfett

10-28-1mo.

BOTH OF YOU
STYLING SALON
SYRACUSE. OH.

FALL PERM. SPECIAL

200/o OFF
ALL PERMS
NOV. 2 THRU DEC. 4
Open Tues. tltru Sat.
PH. 992-3982
For Appointment

10.27-1 mo.

any other thing for aale may
place an ad in thi s column .
Therewil be no charge to the
advertiser.

ment. Jer ry Lowery • Auo·

446-3169 or 266-1967 In
the evening s.

91•

toy Trading Co., Spring VatPlan, 446-8026 or
446-8028.

toy

Rio Grande College
CETA Program it -ing
par1icipantll for a class-

The

rOom skill training program

for a food oervice. Para profasoionals (Thit it not a
quanlity cooldng program.)

Cars

with

reuaable

Gold, sliver. sterling. je·
welry, rings. old coins &amp; currency . Ed Burkett Barber

Shop, Middleport . 9923476.
No Item to Large or to Small.
Will buy one piece or com plata houaehold. New, uta d.
or antique furnitu re. 614 -

have been unemployed for
a minimum of eeverf (7)

dayoshould telophonelhelr
toea! Ohio 8u1811u of Employment Setvices Office
for more details and to ar-

LOST
White
black
seen

in vincinity of O.J .
Rd . white cat with
and tan markings. If
or found call 446 ·

1607. Childs pet. Reward .

LOST 1 large male, striped
cat . White flea c~lar . Third
St Racine . Plea se return spa cial pat . Anna Obitz, 949·

2097.

986-3839 or 986-3931 .

608 E. MAIN

FOUND black type Poodle
Middleport area. 992-2484.

POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

NEW USTING- Middleport Nice quiet street,! 'h story,3bedroom
home, dining room, new furnace. $18,900.00.
SOUTHERN DISTRICT- Outstaooing design inthisthree bedroom
home, unusual fireplace, lwo batll~ lonna! dining, carport, patio, 17
acre· lot, plus rental cotl:lge. All for $42,500.
POMEROY AREA - Rve acres with four bedroom home. Fully
insulated, ~ lwo woodbumers to cut heating costs, lwo car
garaflll, outbuildings, gartlen space. All this for $27,!XXJ.

FARII- Chester - Apprwdmately 82.5 acres, :Jl acres tillable,

two ponds, barns, sheds, and a nice tllree bedroom remcxleled
.

=~tB

Lost-puppy . in 8 Mile Road
area, German Shepherd and
Collie mixed. mo stly black .

304:676-2347.
7

YardSale

,lf1oving Sale large assort ment of household rtems .
Large womans clothing ,
dishes. gla11ware, pots Sr
pans. misc. itamt. New
washing machine. Nov .

WANT to buy- used V,hp air
compressor . Call 304-675·

1169.

Yard Sale on 664 second

houaa pelt llidwotf School.
Clotltoo, toyo, Avon bottlao,
okolno ofyom . Nov. 1.2.3.

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

11

.'

required . Call 468 -1818.

Plnenglwl
21

Business
Opportunity

LOOK! NG for people who
want to earn between e500

and

$60 ,000

monthly

through this " newest and
fastest growing company In
the nation ". Call 304-676 -

1293 .

Help Wanted

Call 446-3368 or 4462166 .
Babysitter for a 3 yr . old boy .
Near hospital. Prefer mature
penon. Call after 9AM &amp; be -

HOME LOANS 14% fixed
rate . Lea der Mortgage, Ohio

only 1-800 -341 -6664 ,
WVo . 6t4-692-3061
Professional
Services

Carol Noal446-3862

PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
Call Bill Ward for appoint ment, Ward' s Keyboard ,

446-4372.

"''''"'''

31 Homes for Sale
Bi -level, 3 bedroom home.
Family room with fireplace
and natural gaa fumanca .
Just outside Gallipolis on

B"'ntwood

AVON . Give yourself a
Christmas Bonus. Sell Avon .
Earn good money, set your
7111 collect .
JOBS Overl8as. Big money
fast . Job. offers guaranteed,

1 · 716 -842-6000 .
1218.

22 Money to Loan

··'

Wanted Ucensed Nursing
Home Admi nistrator for approximately 1 00 bed skilled
nursing home in Southeast ern Ohio. Pleaae send re sume
to
Box
1088.

Ext .

AVON · earn extra money for
Christmas . Pt. Pleasant area,
Ambrosia, Jericho Rd . 304-

676-1429: Now Haven,
Sand Hill Rd .. Flatrock 304892-2646.
help with college expensaa7
The West Virginia National
Guard can help. If you are a
Junior or Senior i n High
School or a Graduate. you

moy quoiHy for a 81,600 bo-

down .

Or .,

assume

83,000
9'12 %

$44,000 mortgage . Coli Mr
Gemma!! 216-428 -6320 after 6PM .

S_ave $$$1finterastedinspa ceoua1 Orm stone.splitlavel.
5 yr. old home wrth all the

EXTRAS . Call 448-3038.
Bargain priced at $70.000.

House &amp; 10 acres of land for
sale or rant . Newly remo deled. 6 room s. 2 baths. also
utility . Clo• to Veterans
Hospital on
Mulberry
Heights In PomMoy , Oh .
Available Nov . 1 . Call collect

1-614-444-8601 .

House for sale . Reedsville .
Good investment property .

819,000 . 423-9614or4234.203.
3 bedroom house on 1 .34
acres . Inside Racine Corp .

nus or up to e4.000 college
Tuition assistance. plus you
will have a secure part time
job aftartraining . learn skills
in Maintenance, Supply,
Clerical, Electronics. Good
Pay- Good Training -Good
Benefits. The West Virginia
National Guard is No Ordi nary Part Time Job! Call Sargeant
Lutton

1% story 3 bedroom house
with bath, carport and stor•ge building on level 'l:t acre
lot on ~iat street in Rutland .

304-676-3960 or toll free in
wv 1-800 -642 -3619

denca on Vin~t St. Reci ne.Oh. now offered for sale

anytime.

limits. 614-949-2222 .

813,500. 614-742-2460 or
614-992-6676.

EDITH A. HAYMAN rooi-

ot $20,000. Property op-

Account executive Cable TV
advertising . Groundfloorop-

ferred, creative skills necea·
sary, professional training
provided by experienced
·staff. Superior potential for
the right candldllte . Guaran·
teed Income and expense al -

patsadat $25,600. For information, contact Fred W
Crovv, Attorney, Pomeroy.

Oh 992-6132 or Ruth Etlio
Columbus, Oh 614-231 1908.
HOUSE Meadowbrook Ad-

dition, 3 bedrooms, family
room with flrepalce, central
air , basement , phone 304·

676-1642.

THREE bedroom, 2 otory,
Colonial brtck , fireplace,
basement. new furnace .

1211 Main St. 304-6762381 .
.
1 bedroom home in Hanford

on 2 toto. 304-773-6216.

LOVEL Y_3 bedroom, wott insulated , full basement
!"nee~ bock yord, kout build:

'"II· curtfonolncludod, priced
SANDY AND BEAVER tnou-' reduced 17.000. Muotaoeto
oppracleta. 304-676-4338.
ranee Co. haa offered Mrvi·
c••

WVo Stote Chemplon Auctlonoor Rtck PolfOon. Estotoo,
ontfqueo. form, houoohotdo .
uconaocl Ohlo-wv•. 304773-57811 or 304-77391811.

Nursing in private home.
Daytime only in Gallipolis or
Pt Pleasant. Will ,give ref If

C&amp;L Bookkeep ing
Bookkeeping &amp; tex service
for all types of busine11ea .

towonca. 112 ,000 to
118,000 flrot year. RotocaNov. 4.6.6. Thuro., Fri .. &amp; tionpoulbltlty.
Sondreoumo
Sot. Antiques. tooto. dotfo,
misc. Barbllra Offuns near to P.O. Box 7361, ChortoaPomeroy Heelt Care Center . ton, WV ~631 3'
Oldrt33.
loot-puppy. In 8 Mite liood
PORC!I 10lo, {llovombor oreo, Gorman Shepherd and
2nd. &amp;3rd. 8046th.St. Now Cottle ml•ad. mootly block.
Hoven. Fumlturo,chtfdren &amp; 304-876-2347.
adul clothing, bobythingo&amp;
mlac. ltomo.
13
Insurance

8

work. 304 -675-4929 .

23

lmplq 1111111
lee lpve

2nd., 3rd. &amp; 4th. 9AM to portunfty In exciting field .
&amp;PM, Karr, Ohio. Rad &amp; Marketing background pre-

white garage.

Will do bebysrtting in my
home, dayshift only . Call

Mr. ParTy 304-342 -8161
8:30AM to 4:30PM.

beds . Calt 992-3690.

NEEO EXTRA MONEY or

LOST mans billfold Beacon
Station . Please return con tents, maily Robert Kimesli ·
cense. $20 reward Call

Exparinaced
babysitter ,
LPN . in my home. reesonel ·
ble rates , weekly or hrly. All
ages welcome. Call 446 4380 ask for Anna .

Would like to buy set of bunk

own hours. Call 6 14-698Lost and Found

and dependable. Colt 4463169 after 6PM 266-1967.

2646 .

long haired gray. 985-4288 . fa"' 7PM, 446-0010.

6

General Hauling and Tr11h
removal Service . Reliable

Prime servi ce station or con vient atora for leaae . 1 st
Ave .• Gallipoli s. Low rental ,
i nvestment requ ired . for in·
fonnation and interview call

Wanted double barrel! shot gun, side by side or over and
under. Red Keaton 992 -

2 cat s. 5 kitten . Call after

dogs. 614-992-3702.

18 Wantad to Do

992-6370.

Earn extra money for Christ·
mas. Sell Avon . Earn good
ses . Set yow- own hours .

Interested .parson• who

1

Will rake leaves, and do yard

Gallipolis, Oh 46631 .

Freetogoodhome. 1 mala,1
female pups. Will be small

Jackson,

Wanted to buy tobacco
poundage. willpaytopprice .

3 pretty , long f"Bired kitten to

2 rrele cats, 1 all white, 1

Rd .,

Oh . Calt 614-288-3074.

446-4158 .

malo. Call 446 -7684.

3 kittens 2 cal teo and 1 yel-

clatoo Korato Studio. 143

after dark.

4 puppiea. 3 male &amp; 1 fa ·
Pups, 6 wks. healt hy. curly
black with white markings.
mixed Beagle -Toy Terrier .
Will give to responsible fa m -

bogo, ond protoctlva equipBurlington

Buying Gold, Silver. Ptati·
num. okt coins , scrap rin
silverware. Daily quotes
available. Al so coins &amp; coin
supplies for sale . Spring Val -

20 Goldfish . Call 446 -3732.

low.8 wks otd . 992-7406 .

Real Estate - General

H

ture and Antiques of all
kinds. call Kenneth Swain,

WANTED to buy-good used

a good home . Call 614·2666783.

range for en interview. Rio

,A':

Alto availeble Karate unl~
fonn a puchlng and kicking

metal truck topper to fit

1 hampstor. Calf 446·3732.

~~r- .
fifE ESllliAIO

WANTED TO BUY Old furni-

porto. Calt 614·388-9303.

6PM or weekends .

CALLAL
742-2328

REAL TORSI
Henry E. Cleland, Jr., GR I ........ . . , .. 992-6191 · ·
Je•n Trussett .... ... ...... . ... , . , ... .. 949-2660
Dollies. Turn_er ... . .. . . .. . ...... , .... 992-5692

I Doers

Wanted To Buy

9

Juck

Gun shoot, Racine Gun
Club . Every Sunday starting
1 p.m . Factory choked guna
only .

s qnools
Instruction

Karate the uttlmatelnaetfde·

Colt 614-379-2165 .

Golf Leuons . John Teaford .
Cheater, Ohio .

15

fence all private l111one.
Men , women , a. children. In·
atruction thru black bett .

No HO or N. Calt 446-1822

ites. Call 446 -0094 after

f4etropo,itan Life
.,, Insurance
·company .

Or.Mt-21111

_ ...._

! 1111 8 4t r

2~1

Sales Representative

.... TOI MOIIIJIS ... ·•
flt..'MZ·IIM

-- ----

( 10118

Allil 11011£ IAIIITEIIAIICE

. lOY. . . . _

-·~---

FIREPLACES
&amp;
CHIMNEYS

home wtil FA heat plus woodburner.

·=~~ '

--

quc~clran t e

POMEROY - Areally nice three bedroom horne, new chain link
fence, on approximately Ill acre level lot Ranflll, ref., carpeti"'
$27,!XXJ.

"SSn

_.....

11

HARRISONVILLE - Athree bedroom double wide on appioxi·
mately \1 acre lot Eye cill:hing Iron! bay window, I\\ bath~ dining
room, living room, family room, equipped kitchen, lront pon:h,
central air. All for $30,00'1.

long

CAIPIT

.....

thP Vi! lf'S Mt lls and WtlkPsvtllf'
US Gf&gt;oloq,cal Su rVPy 7 5

FIXED RATE'
NEW LISTING uncoin Hill- Ill story, tllree bedroom house with
formal dining, storms, insulation, free stmdingfireplace,Yin~ siding,
large lot Good condition. Just $22,500.

Patios
New Construction - Remodelinc - Custom Pole
Barns.

Auctfonaor. 276-3069 .

Wanted old toy trains , any
places, parts, or accessories .

Rd. Calt 446-0294 ..
- - -- - - - - -tc -

much for

your hoo~ A' I - heolth inaurance. Cot! c,..,.otl Sno-n,
448-4290.

welcome. Richard Reynolds

25 26. anrl 31 &lt;n Columb&lt;a ANY PER SON who has any- 1979 Ford short bod. 304l ownsh&lt;p r 9N R 15W lhe thing to give away and does 676-3466
after 6 p.m.
c:IP.sr:nbP.~:t arP&lt;~ •s cont&lt;MPd tn not offer or anempt to offer

'11 PERCENT FINANCING NUN AVAilABU! 15 YEAR TERM.

inc-

Auction every Fri . night et
Hertford Community
Center. Truckloedo of now
merchendlae avery week .
Conalgments of new end
u•d merchandise alway•

the

446-0069

half mila up Georges Creek

PtrY'P.V to

Are you

We pay cash for late modltl
clean used can .
Frenchtown Car Co .
Bill Gena Johnson

Ohto Morp specdtcally, th e Stte
occur,es po rt tons ot Secttons

- - - - , J copy of the appl .catton 1S avatlablf&gt; f01
at thf&gt;
mmul
f&gt; rt1hlt C tnSI)P.CitOn
rnaps
A
offtce o t the Mf!IQS County Re co rdPr Wr•llr.n corre spon
rlen rf' c o n cf'rn .nq thf'
appltcatton may bf"! suhrn1 t1f'd
to thP Oovrsron o f RPr lam,lti On
Fountatn SQ11iHf' Awlc:lrntl R-3
Colurnb1JS Oh•O 4322t1

BUILT AND
REWORKED

cupancy. A moot1t to month
lease can be ana~ witll
security deposit, and
reference.
Call:
RCS REALTORS
1-614-593-5571 or 992-6312

&lt;mal ely. I 1 mdes southeasl ol
Potn t Roc k tn Me1gs Cour l!y. 4

GARAGE

8·20·tfc

VINYL &amp; AlUMINUM

CAll 843-3322

NOW'16.1
NOW '1491 ··

0 - -- - --

OhiO 4 5 70 1 The SliP. ISfoc med
1ust so uth o f thP llllf:!r scctr on at
coun TY roa ds 2 7 and 9. appr ox -

St. Rt. 124 Pomeroy, OH

FREE
ESTIMATES
PH. 992-6011

EUGENE LONG ·
Superior Siding Co.
I

.Roger Hysell

Custom kilchens and
bathrooms. Remodeling,
add-ons, new homes,
plumbing, elecltic, siding.

Yllfl. '
FREE ESTIMATES

.._,1,.

LEGAL NOTICE

du c t cool m&lt;n&lt;no and
&lt;eclamm,on operm&lt;ons a1 lhe
sttP. of the MP.1Qs Mine No 2
owned by Soulhe&lt;n Oh&lt;OCoal
Co P 0 Bo&gt; 490 A1hens

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

All Makes

Public Notice

Daily Specials
Not Mentioned
Open 7 days a week
Carryout Beer &amp;

lO·J. I mo.

985-3561

1

Housing
Headquarters

(all draft beer Yz price)
Thurs .-Pool Tourn . Nite

Fri. &amp; Sat. 10 to 2
. k
0nn
any drink
for 1 low price
Phone 992-9913

ts available lor immediate oc-

13

Public Sale
8t Auction

BEOS-IRON , BRASS , old
WANT TO BUY ON A lAND
fumitura, gold. silver dollars,
CONTRACT7 THEN GIVE US A
wood lea boxes, stone jars.
CALL WE HAVE SOliE. SUE SWEEPER and oewin~ ma- antiques. ate ., Complete
IIURPHY, HELE" AND BRUCE chine repair. parts, and supp- households. Write : M .D .
)'EAFORD, All R~LTORS,
lies. Pick up and delivery, Mf!tor, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh .
Davis Vacuum Cleaner, one Or 992-7760.

Pur su ant to Oh10 Rev•sed
Coclc Sect1on 151 3 07 IBI 121
10. nottc e ,s hereby lJIVf'n of an
pltcatton to• a pP.rmrt to con -

Wine Available
Extra Special

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

For all your wiring
needs; furnaces
repair service and
installation .
Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call

mo.

Between Cheshire &amp;
Middleport. Ohio
PRESENTS
Marshall Tennant Band
Wed .. Fri. &amp; Sat.
in Qctober
Wed.·Oraft Nite

Prllll locatld ,_ Pomeroy

8

3 Announcements

CANDLELIGHT INN

"CUT OUT
FOR FUTURE USE"

C. R.-MASH
CONSTRUCTION

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE

of all types.
in home 11111 20

6 Rolls of AnsoiV Extra Good Nyton
5 'I' tar Presfdenllat WorWarranly.
sci. vo ..INSTALLE~
6 Ro.t!s of 501 Nylon ·
,

992~n

(Rental)
This conternponry 4 badroom. 2 batllltorne willl finished family room, atlaclted

BUILDING LOT - Near Mid·
dleport with all utilities near lor
only $3,800.

Opportunity Emptoyer.

lloo-.-·-··----~-------------~

43224

PH.

EXECUTIVE HOME

66 ACRES - Fenced,lays nice.
leading Creek water and all
minerals. Good lor hou~ng,
sheepor cattle larm.Will sell for
less than $700.00 anacre.

Grande Cottoge is an Equal

27.

13.

Davis-Quickel
Agency, Inc.

No Sunday Calls

-Trencher

Syracuse, OH.
Contact Fem or C. T.
PH. 992-7:.11

25.

11.
12. - - - - - -

tO. _ _ _ _ __

See or phone

949-2860.

-Backhoes
- DuiRp Trucks
-La-Boy

DJ's TRADING
POST

26 .
28.
29.
30.
31.

15 Years Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583
or 992-2282

-Dozers

_AVAilABLE AT:

18.

2.
3.

Alt.u.u 1.111 ll*lrlliCitCo., Nortllbrooll , IL

"Beautiful, Custom
Built Garages "
Call tor free siding
estimates, 9~9- 2801 or ·

my

PULLINS
EXCAVATING

INTERNATIONAL
HARVESTER
PARTS

17.

20.
21.
22 .

You're in good hands.

Is whet Utis 149acrt Rutland
Fann Offers. Anxious seller
his priced acconli~. Includes rural home, bam, pra&amp;~. minerals,and much more.
If you hive intmst in a aood
country farm or minerals,
don't pass up this
opportunity.

2PM 614-992-2696 .

--+-+-+--1---1

1.

umtnum,
Sidinp

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Greg Winebrenner
10/1711 mo. pd.

19,

SAVE AND EXCE PT

·

Free Delivery
PH. 985-3892

!Wanted
!For Sate
1 1Announcement
t I For Rent

Allstare·

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

won

&amp; Garages
'Roofing Work
'AI .
&amp; y· I

Meets All Specifications
HIGH PRES. REGULATORS
LOW PRES. REGULATORS

reserves the right to
classify, edit or reject
any ad . Your ad will be--+--+--+--+---!
put In the proper ~:,:.L_ _r~~:!~~~j
classification If you'll check the proper box
These cash rates
below.
include discount

The bearrnQs m the ahovf!
descr1pt10n are based on bear ·
rna s tn Hr ck o ry Acres
Subd tvtStOn
Reterence Deed Volume
283. Paqe 15 t . Me1qs CounTY
Deed Records
The above descrtptton IS
based on a combtnatt on of several pnor surveys . one survey
by Wtllram Jewell. a curren t sur·
vey of State Rou te 681 and 2
calculated ca ll s

expense coverage.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

•custom Pole Bldgs.

ORANGE
PLASTIC
GAS PIPE

phone number If used.
You' ll get better results --+--+-_;_+....;.4--i
if you describe fully,

way

BRICK VENEER - Extra nice
2\\ bath family home. Large
lamiiy room with WOIXIburning
fireplace, dishwasher, disposal,
range, reftigerator, lovely krtchen, carpeting, central a1r and
heat, 2 car l!ilrages,2 patios and
large landscaped lot A-one
shape for $125,000.

provides Ml\ior Medical
and Hospital/Surgical

1017/1 mo.

ew

G&amp;W CO.

titial or group of figures
counts as a word . Count
name and address or

give price . The Sentinel

Comprehen6iue Medical-

:======!:0.:20.~1=mo~-~f=========~t=========~

Print one word in each

12·· East 406 78 feet to the
potnt ot begtnntng. contatnrng
41 07 acres tn Sechon 11 and
49 59 acres tn Sectton 5 for a
tot&lt;~ I of 90 66 acres. more or
less. excepttng all legal fiQhts of

PH. 992-2618

·Electric

Privlte Parties Availlble
IIon.-TUl$...Th II'S. N;,..,
IUJ~
Sat.-Sun. Afternoon
Check our sltate prices
before buyina.
PHONE 985-9996 or
985-3929

space below. Each fn-

deg 3944 Eas1 149 46 lee1.
Nonh 79 deg 43" 30 " EaSI
633 35 feel. Nonh 76 deg 33"

Protection- when you
become wtally disabled.

FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 614-992-2681
or 614-992-3752
ANYTIME

CONSTRU CTI0N
N

OPEN
WED., FRI., SAT.
7:30-10:00

Address---------

3T Eas1 166 56 feel. Nonh87

ton
Within 10 llile Radius
of Pomeroy
$32.00 Witllin 20 Miles
$35.00 W'tlltin 30 lliles

Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-2591
!0-6-tlc

Name-:---------- I

passtng th e East lme of Sect1on
11 at24 feet . South 78 deg 42

130.00

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

I

58" 52 .. EaS1359 81feel. Soulh
68 deg 42"24"Easl87 75feel.
South 57 deg 38. 53· EaSI
83 98 leel. Soulh 52 deg 40"
36" EaSI 154 44 feel. Soulh 61
deg 45 11 EaS1 114 3Bieel

Disability Inco me

Syracuse- Racine
Area

LIMITED SUPPLY

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'.
insulated Doe Houses

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for ·I
Classlfleds and II
.:,,
SaveiJJ
I

fP.el tn !In uon n•n thf'n rf' Nonh

w protect you

between jobs, etc.

H&amp;G SEWER
HOOK-UPS

COAL
DELIVERED

Sizes start from 12'116"

oo··

6deg 23"3TEaS1466 151eel

h e lp~~

"Acrosa From The
Courthouse in
Pomeroy"

jo

deo 32· 30" WPSI 1204 93

NEW LISTING - 340 acres lor
less than $500.00 an acre. Has
a 10 room renovated larm
horne with free l!iiS, 5 bed·
rooms, large family room and TP
water. On time, $175,000.

Slwrt -Term Health Policy-

7-14-Uc

8'

oo·

for}'Ou?

Ask me about Allstate's

Owners:
Osby A. Martin
Rodney Howery
PH . 992-6370
10/ 24/Hc

FREE .ESTIMATES

NEW LISTING - Back of Mid·
dleport, with viewol Rt. 7.Has3
bedrooms, modem bath, Lead·
ing Creek water, 2 pon:hes and
large lot For only $23,!m.

msurance

FREE
ESTIMATES

•Gutters
•Downspouts
•New or Repair
•Painting

1-(614)-992-3325

Which kind
of health
•

Ons, kitchens, bathrooms , roofing , '
carpet, ceramic tile,
cement work, paintIng, storm windows,
liding, andy type of
remodeling.
Commercial or
Residential
OVER 15 YEARS
EXPERIENCE IN
BUILDING NEW
HOMES

Carpentry •Residential or Business
Mobile Homes

'
I

way.

I

Area death

~

........_.

VIRGIL B. SR . '=:!!=ill
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

•Appl!ances. •Refrigeration •Heating
•Cooltng •An Cond. •Electrical
•Plumbing •Roofing oGutters

·.........-·..........-.............. -

Public Notice

In Memoriam
IN MEMORY OF
Earl H. Dean
Who pa.-1 away
Nov. 1, 1979

Colmer, district operating engineer, left, pictured
here with Bernard GOkey, county malntenMce superintendent, reported that the vehicles are In excellent
condition Md ready for removal of the winter's snow
Md ice.

~

r•~·-""'

~ ==========il

WINTER INSPECI'ION - The annual inspt&gt;Ction for winter readines.' of the II truck~, two grader.&gt;
Md two loader.&gt; at the Meigs County garage oflhe Ohio
Department of ffighways, was held Friday by mechwlics from the district garage in Marietta. Larry

.

~

·-""''Oft'
" ...............

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

die

"(......... t~'""""""'

.............
...... ,..._...
"' ""·"-'"""•

" . ..............

~

tl&lt;nw•-•

CCKJer

folio-., releplwJ11e ucluu•~rea. , ,

........ a. ....... .

)0

" .... ....... .
",
................. . .

2

....

u•v•o..,...,

II'""
".,,.,..,
•·••f"'"
........

--

Cllui/iM fMPt

....

··-"''"'"
.."'""'" ".....~""'. .... .......

1\ l •••a•""'-'""

Pvl)l•&lt; ~Ot&lt;

nz

~

\JA.I&lt;Qo&lt;&gt;"

•o•d ~o&gt;• oQO•d '" '"''"' ''

m

-

f ~ &amp; ••a•oh~'-'

Real Estate - General

$$OPPORTUNITY$$

COMPlETE HOME
MAINTENANCE

-

"""""'"""'"
"11 v•,.
...... I.• 'II',O....

\1--G--.

II Cl.

..

c; ....... .

The Gallla-Meigs post of t he Ohio
Highway Patrol cited a South Point
teenager for reckless operat ion in a
one-car accident on Cou nty Rd. 25
Saturday night .
Michael L. Jones. 17, suffered mi·
nor Injury in the wreck, but requ ired
no trea tment.
The patrol said Jones was eastbound at 10 p.m . when he lost control
of his vehicle, drove off! he left side
of the road and went into a ditch.
-causing severe damage to his
vehicle.
A Wellston woman was ticketed
for failure to yield lateSunday aft er·
noon In a two-vehicle incident on
Ohlo7.
Clara B. Yi nger. 58, reportedly

Real Es tate - General

I

TTE ~ - w

By The Associated Press
Ohio pollee were busy today inves·
ligating reports of booby-trapped
goodies given to Halloween trick-or·
_ trea ters, Including some sweets
: turned In to pollee containing needles and rawrs and others that were
suspected of being chemically
contaminated .
In Wellston. in southern Ohio. Cit;·
Service Director Rick Devlin said
." fire department crews issued warn·
lngs over loud spea kers after about
· a dozen reports of candy being con·
taminated with needles were recei\·ed by police. There were no
injuries reported .
He said the community of 6.000
had never had any such problem on
previous Ha lloweens.
A Gallia County woman reported
·; to the sheriff' s department that her
son discovered a needle in a ca ndy
bar he was eating Saturday .
No injury was reported.
A 13-year-old Columbus youth
was hospitalized for "questionable
hall ucinations and inappropriate
behavior" Sunday night after he ate
candy collected while trick-or·
treating . said a spokeswoman at
Children's Hospital, nu rsing supervisor Susa n Cunningham.
Columbus police sa id 51 reports of
treats that had been tampered with
were received by the police depart

The Daily Sentinel Page 7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

for

fire

Insurance

covorogoln Go lila County for
almost

1

century.

Farm,

homo ond poroonol property
covorogoo ore ovoltable to
melt lndlvlduol noodo. Contact Fost• Lowlo, ogont.
Phono 379-2204.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
USED MOBILE HOME . 6782711 .

·

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-- ~~~~-__,_~_,.._~~~~--............___...
-- -------------~~~~~~~
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Page - 8 -

The Daily Sentinel

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

They'll Do It Every Time

.

Bur HOw
CO"LD THEY

SAME COI:Ie -

ON ··· ALL 'rOU
HAVE TO~
IS 8&lt;JY A
CON~ 01&lt;
SKI L~ AN '

SEND '[,M l!&lt;RU
THE MAIL? THE
LETT&amp;I&lt; SAYS
1 WIN A

ClEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEl "S QUAl ·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GAlliPOliS.
RT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274.

614 -367 ·

~I'

~~! '

'

'

brand new . all el ec tri c. 3 bed roo m s. also has super wall . 1

~t:\1)\

For sa le one and half ac res
more or les s. appr01d mately
600 ft r oa d fro ntag e on
Co ra -Centerpoi nt Rd . near
Ce nt erp o int . S 3, 000 . 00

Ph one 68 2-6944 .

,-

Chest er .
S1 2 .000 .

Two acre \ot s -150 ft . road
frontage , ci ty wa te r, behind
84 lumber . Call 304 -675 6873 or 675-3618 .

L ...

I

-

\• 'I_

1

V·-

/ Aa.x'I:i"

" WILH&amp;MINA .""

SCRANTON ,

~

42

M b"

0 for
tieRent
Homes

44

partment
for
Rent

2 bdr. mobile home 12~e66 ,
fum ished , convient location
Upper River Rd . Ref . dep . re :
quired . Call446-8668 .

Furnished 3 r . private bath,
846 2nd . Ave., Gallipolis .
Ref. preferred . Call 446 2216 .

Furnished 2 bdr . mobile
home in Crown City . Call
614 -256 -6520 .

Small furnished effiency, 1
profeasio nat type male only .
Center air &amp; heat. Call 446 0338 .

nished , adults only. Call
446 -411 0 .

Trailers for rent . Call 446 4225 or 446-0756 .
For rent two bedroom mobile
home one mile from city,
adutts . no pets. Call 446 1158.

2nd floor furnished effi ciency apt. Apt. 4. 729 2nd
Ave. Adults only. 448 -0967 .

20 ACRES , blac k top road .
timbe r &amp; water. Pri ce re - 5 house trailer , and 1 trailer
duced . 304-675 -7541 or lot . Call446 -1052.
614 -446-3703.

First floor unfurnished apart ment . Inquire at 631 4th
Ave .. Gallipolis.

2 bdr trailer total electric ,
$160 mo .. 1 mi. back of
Eve rgreen . Call 614 -245 9170.

Furnished Apt ., 1 .BR , 243
Jackson Pike . S225, utilities
paid. Adults. 446 -4416 al ter 7 p.m .

3 bdr. lrailer, prNate lot, 4

1 bdr. apt . in Rio Grande, Oh .
Furnished. Call446-016 7 .

Sma ll furn ished house. 1 or 2
ad ults only . Ca ll 446 -0 3 38 .

mi. from HMC . very reasona -

ble to right tenants . Call446 0514 .

46 Space for Rent

5 room ho u se &amp; bath , ni ce

garden space. loc ated 110
4th Av e., Gallip oli s . Call
446 -3870 .

2 bedroom trai ler. Real nice ,
adutts only . Brown ' s Trailer
Parte MinersviUe . 614 -992 3324 .

Downtown office space for
rent . Coll446 -3432 .

For re nt small cot tage hou se
in city limits, responsitN e
adutt s. de posit re quired . Call
446 -4767

2 bedroom furnished . Adults
preferre d . No pets. Deposit
required . 614 -992 -2749.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Parte . Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots . Call
992 -7479 .

4 bdr., one flo or. all car pet ed. house in Vinton . Call
446 -9765 after 5 :30PM .

2 bet4room furnished . On 1
acre . Couple -1 child only .
S200. month plu s dep . 614 742 -2753 .

Trailer lot . 3 miles from
Chester on Scout Camp Rd .
614 -985-3979.

Haven. 304 -882 -3206 .

Rvncal&amp;
41

Houses for Rent

5 room house in Eureka un fumished . de p . req . Call
614 -256 -1413.

Furnished ho use 2 bdr .,
$195. wat er paid . 241 Jack son Pik e, Ga llipo li s . Call
446 -4416 after 7PM .
2 bdr . house in city basement
gas furnan ce . c arpeted ,
adults , no pets. Call 446 0958 .
House 4 r. &amp; bath. in country ,
will rent cheap . Call 614 256 -6639 .
Small house alm ost new on
waterfront. Really ni ce. all
modern , convenient, car port . No pets. adults . sma ll
deposit . Call 614 -245 9170 .
Home for rent highway 160,
4 mi. from holzer. S225 per
mo . Pre fer adults . Ref . &amp; sec .
dep . Call446 -7322 .
Pomeroy -2 bd .room unfur nished house . S195 . mo . Se curity deposit . $ 100 . plus
utilities. After 6 -call 614 992 -2288 .
For rent . Unfurnished 2 bed room house . All new paint ,
carpet in liv ing room , hall &amp;
bath, storm windows &amp;
doors. 614 -992 -3090.
NEW Haven . 7th . St .. 2-3
bedrooms, garage, full base ment , $326 . plus deposit ,
references , 304-576 -2581 .

All electric home with garage &amp; full basement, refer e n c e
r e q u i r e d .
304-676-3217

2 bedroom furnished . No
pets. $150 . month plus utili ties . In New Haven , W.V.
304 -882 -2466 .
Trailer tor rent Middleport .
Cell992 -3590.
MOBILE home, 3 bedrooms.
bath &amp; %, all electric, unfur nished , &amp;200 month plus
electric . Glenwood , 304576 -2441 . 576-9073 .

43 Farms for Rent

Farm -6 rooms . 3 bd .rooms .
S200 . month . 614 -992 5908 .
Secluded , mini farm , all
fenced , remodel farm home ,
with 4 bedr., $300 per mo.
Cleland Realty 992 -2259 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 brd. furnished apartment
good location in city, no
children or pets. Call 446 1162.
Furnished eHiciency 8176.
Utilities pd , 920 4th Ave .,
Gallipolis. Adults. Call 446 4416alter7PM .
Modern 1 bdr. apartment be tween hospital and town .
Sec . dep, lease. No pats. Call
446 -2065 alter 8. ·

1- - -- - - - - - -

1 bedfoom apt. very nice,
$1 ~6 month. newcarpettng,
refngerator and stove. Call
992 -5880.

2 bedroom hou se and two
bedroom apt . both exc . con dition. References Required .
304 -675 -1962.

2 bd. room furnished Apt . &amp; 1
effenciency Apt . 814-9925434.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bedroom apt . in Middleport. &amp;176 . month plus utili ties. Between 7 a.m . &amp; 3
p.m . 614-992 -5546.

2 bedroom fum . mobile
homo 8166 . per month .
•so. deposit. partial utilities
paid. 304-676-6612 .
ONE bedroom mobh home.
8160. per month. phone
304-676-4164.

TWO mobile homes. garage
apartment, 6 minutes from
town on Rt. 2. call after 8
p .m .• 304-876-82n.
SALE or rent-t200. plus utilIties. ucur~y doposll. phone
304-875-3681.
ps08
btwo bodrotm mobile homo.
Kitchen furnlshol, nloo •
dNn. •186. plus titiNtloo.
_..,.led couples only. one
•!1""11· child ocooptod. rom· '
onces. 304-876-1078.

Apartments .
5548.

304 -875 -

APARTMENTS . mobile
homes. houses . Pt. Pleaaant
and GaUipolis. 814-4468221 or614-246 -9484.

Unfurnished apartments for
rent. Call Automotive
Supply. 8 till 6 , 304-676 2218, 304-876-8753 .
ONE bedroom. HUD opartment. in Pt. PIMtent, cell
814-445-3131.
TWO bedroom oportment,
oir conditioning, woter• goo
pol d. '250. per month. 3046711·529' .
FURNISHED 1 bedroom
op1f1mont. Adults only, no
.,.cs. cell 304-8711-3788.

TWO bedroom mobMohome.
·1K1tchen furnished. · nice •
Ctoon. U10. Goa, 10- •
wotor pold. Morrlod couploo
only One smell clllld eccopted. retlroriooa. 304875 -1078.
.

.

Apartment for rent Middleport, newfy remodeled. Call
992 -3690.

IN Mldcloport, 2 room offld_.,..mont, 304-18221i88 or 8'4-88~- 72cie .

I

Equipment . Coll446 -1675.
Now taking orders for home made pies at Raynor's Peach
Orchard . Coll446 -4807.

Attention Trappers com plete line of trapping
supplies- dye, wax, lures, 55 Building Supplies
trapps and taggs . Spring Val ley Plaza. 446-8025 .
Dump truck load of hard wood, appmx . 4 PU loads,
8100 . Cell 814 -387 -0637
after 7 .
Waterline For Sale ,.4 inch
160PSI 817.95per1001t ..
1' 160 PSI 828.95 per 100
11 .. 1'1.-160 PSI847 .50per
1 00 ft . Ron Evans Enterprises. 4 miles South of Jackson on St. Rt . 93 ,
614-286-5930 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
- washers, dryers, refrigerate rs. ranges . Skaggs Ap pliances, Upper River Rd ..
beside Stone Crest Motel.
446 -7398 .

Couch with metching loveHOI • choir. Call446-0279
after4PM.

Kenmore avecMio wither,
no11ly now concltlon 11211.
GE w11hor 1100, Kenmore
IPirl . woshar UO. A
number of good uaedeloctrlc
dryor. vorlous pri:es. Coli
814-258-1207.

-

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64 Mlec. Merch1ndlee

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.

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IN!

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PP..ID
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BUSTER
60
OFF, 1
LONG~
KNE'W ./ .a-FTER
HE - ALL HE

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,-\: ~
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11/1/82
·
8:00

Motorcycles

I()

l

m

77

0

57

Musical

71

Instruments

!----------

Autos for Sale

;!

Piano cherry fruit wood fin 9_?8 Trans-AM 400 4opd..
ioh. French daoign $800 1 , ._.,p, AM-FM couetto.
Coll446-4670altor"6:30. · ~~~-~~~miles, runo good.

=------'!isis~
58

Fruit

lit Vegetables
- - - - - - - - -Potatoes.
Humphrey
still
has Kinnebaco
at Farms
•9 .00
per 100 lb., ax . quality, your
contatnors . No Sunday
Sa lea. Get your winter pota toes now. Reedovlllo. Qh
614 -37B-6296.
59 For Sale or Trade

WOULD like to trade Registered mala Walker Coonhound, top bloodline• for
regiatered male Bluetick or
Redtick, at least 2 years old.
304-882-2673.

Call

814 -388 -

79 Pontiac BoMevlle, 2 dr.,
interior.
I:;·;~·-:;.;.;··;.,;;;;; 8-track. Coli

l~... :~~~:-~~our

lllu~~~~~----

1-~9I? Pontile Flreblrd For'""'"· 46,000 miles, radio,
l8-11rock, SB roodhandlor GT
~~~-~~'-~~ white letter.,g.
··- .,-~···
opollor. 360
·
with ForI !!'!'!a_~..~~;. 84.3oo. 6141981 Cutluo Supreme Dia sel with everything. Will conaider older car aa trade in .
614-742-2418 .

1----------

~ruhpp!ln

1978 Chevy Camero, type
LT. black. am-fm 8-track stereo. T-top. V-8 engine, new
radials, shocks. new hoses.
exhaust. exc. cond., one
owner. e4,000. J . Hutchison. 742-2308.

61

1974 Buick losabre AC. PS.
PB . 8800. 949 -2780 .

-

i Lll ¥1\Uik

Farm Equipment

C.ll448-4782.

1977 Ford Granado 3 spd
with overdrive, &amp;1,900.
742-2362.
HARTS Uood Cars, New
Haven West Virginia. Over
20 leu expensive cars In
stock .

1977 FORD Maverick, one
owner, automatic transmission, power stear.,g. aircon ditioning , 40,000 actual
miles. 304-773-6170.
77 Regal Buick with T-top.
exc. cond. aut . p.a .. p.b .• air
cond. 304-876 ·1799.

STUCCO PlASTERING textured ceilings commercial and · retidential. free
astimotoo. Call 814 -256 1182.

A NN IE

72

HA5I(T

73 · Vans lit 4 W.O.

I

77 Bronco 4-WO. 302, 2 barrel, otandard, good cond
Coll814-258-80118.
·

78TronsAmdarlcblue,outo
on the floor, •6.400. Coli
448·81178-r8.
1t88 Pontile C.tellno PS
PB, AC, body. engine oxc.:
new engine, new exhault.
1400 or UOO 1trtd • good
gun. Tourr Rd. Box 25
trallor9fhlll.
•

1857 Dodge power wogon
4 wheel dr. ~ ton with
wench . Good shape
.1.200. 514-9811-3582. .

ADVANCED Seamless
Gutter- Doors. Offering continuae guttering, seamless
aiding. roofing, garage
doors, free estimates. 614898-B205.

a

a

~w•wd'

CASOLINE ALLEY

A coffee at
Miz' Poshb4's
home?

She
canswinq

a lot of

votes,
Melba!

The ladies
are in the
parlor!

.......... ,, J

... if I is elec' mayor be
mos' happLJ t' come qive ~er
place a qood cleanin'!

.

'

..

PAINTING interior &amp; exte rior, free estimates, 304676 - 112B.

WINNIE
WHAT DO )'OU THINK
YOU'RE GOING TO

Plumbing
lit Heating

ACCOMPLISH?

i.,--+-I--+-+-

. '~
.'

'"

Excavating

~ranching -water lines. gas

hne•. drainage . Call 814246 -6193.
84

a

BARNEY

Electrical

lit Refrigeration

MV FELLERS ARE

MIGHTY HARD ON
THEIR CLOTHES

SEWING Machine repairs.
serv1ce. Authorized Singer
Salao &amp; Service Sharpen
Sc111ora . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992 -2284.
85

..

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SERVICE . Call814· 387-7471 or
614-367-0691 .

..

Now Hauling houte coal,

l~mp or stoker up to 8 ton .

L1mestone, top toil, fill dirt .
Call814-387-7101 .

..

JIMS Water Servloo. Call
Jtm Lanier. 304·676-7397.

,

IT wAS f..

87

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP .
1183 soc. Ave., Qelllpollo.
448,7833 or 448·1131.

.

.,...

1,41i .

. 'I
-~

I

.~

I

•

' ,'

file-.

1111••
,......., •...,•"•,mJ:;
........ 304-..,..

I SIIOUU'-IIAVE

80WLIH6 WON lllE
BALL
lllURNAMEHi,
81/T I DIDN'T
.6ET ANY·MEAKS

Upholstery

FUIINITUIII : I ln._ 811·

a

a

.,·..,.,

1878 Ford 4-whoel drive "MOWREYIU......-.yllt.1
160, ·outo.. lockout hubs Box 124, Pt.
304I.e. 13,800. Pflone 814: 871-41114.
742-2480 .
1876 ~ Chevy 4x4. 31i0
luto., L.W. B.• AM-FM, 1 ply
tlrea. now bod liner. Good
cond. 841-2831 ;
.•

I

CHRISTIAN'S CONSTRUCTION. Conllr .• roofmg. aiding, tpoutlng.
fencing, painting, repairs &amp;
cleaning. 446-2000. call be foro Band altar 5:30 .

83

1974 CHEVROLET pickup
truck, 8660. 304· 8762238 .

a

Maaonary work, Logue Contracting. At. 1, Ewington .
Call814-388 -9939.

8 ft. GMC pu bad, 8300 and
u•d driver door for Chevy
PU. Alto '.4 ton over loads
suapenison. Price reasonable. Call614-889-4155 .

1980 GMC diesel pickup,
coli ofter 6 p.m., 304-8763248.

JUST THfiT.' A PIECE
OF 5K.Y!
XPtSAPPEiWE~!:'

CAPTAIN STEEMER Carpet
Cleaning loeturod by Hoffelt
Broathers Custom Carpets.
Free estimates. Call 4482107 .

Trucks for Sale

1977 Dodge 'II ton pickup.
Long bod, 318 eutomotic.
22,000 octuol mlleo. very
good cond .• U,400. 614246· 6208.

'SI(.YE 5EC~TIES'
T\JR.NED OUT 10 ~

Marcum Roofing 8a Spouting. 30 years experience,
specializing in bult up roof .
Coll614-388 -9622 or 614 388 -9867.

CARTER"S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 448-3888 or 448•
4477

KJ I X]
I I XJ 'K XXI X]

•a

MIWOH OOLUlfC5, Alii

II€EH

IH FO!t
6E\'ERAL
()IIY5?.1

PAINTING - interior and exterior, plumbing, roofing.
some remodeling . 20 yrs .
axp. Coll614-388-9862 .

70 Chevy 1 ton tNck, long
wheel booo, 8900. Call 614379-2700 alter 6.

I

w.,t

YES! I LfHT THEM 100

.1!\R. EAZEE

Water Wells. Commercial
and Domestic. Test holes.
Pumps Sales and Service.
304-896 -3802.

73 Chevy Blazer. 4 wheel
drive. Auto. trana, runs
g ..... body rough . • 600.
Coli 848-2n9 after 4 on
W)IOI&lt;doyo.

t.G; J:i~~-:3:2~ ~wv-

Home
Improvements

1970 VWwagon, runs good,
body good, •&amp;50. 304-8963654.

1878 Jeep CJ5, now oolt
top, Iota of extras. axe. cond.
C.11448·0616 '

n

81

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing, including
hot tar application. carpenter, electrician, muon. Call
304-875 -2088 or 8754680.

78 Gremlin, n-tlrn. 6 cyl.,
auto, exc. cond., •1.800.

81 C.rnoro 11,885, 78
Grend Prix U, 7811, 81
Chow Mol. Cl. 4 dr 14,786
11 Fo:d E-.t 14,286,
CiteVotto 11,2116. 11 Grand
Prtx lll,411i, 77 olds cutlo 11

i~ii~i~iii
~
=

82

KJ I

Play sate tor contract

El Camino Camper top.
8160.814-992-2396.

JEEPS, Cera. Trucks under
$1 00 available at local gov't
salesinyourarea. Call(refundablol1-714-669-0241 ext.
1866 for directory on how to
purchase. 24 hrs.

FORDRoncltero,1974, runs
good. good conditions, AM,
FM. cauetta player,
8600.00. call 304-8763147.

KXJ

·BRIDGE

UP \'OR. "Tl-\N..\I&lt;Sbl\11 tJb ~

Camping
Equipment

F 8a K Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Coli 676-1331 .

FM .....tt•• •4.300. cell

Call448-86~8olter8.

I JUST f',()OOI-{1" A~'110 Ft\1TE:IJ

1977 MONTE Corio. 304BB2-3116.

79 TRANS AM. Special Edition . loaded, 31 ,000 miles,
coll304-895 -3326.

DUCIL

(I) Nowa/Sporta/WNthar
(I) IHl 3-2-1. Conteot
8:16 (J) NCAA Instruct lonol
Serloo
8 :30
(I) (I) NBC News
Cil MOVIE: 'Man Of
Conflict'
A D~e55THAT
(J) Pony'a lnalde Track
, MAKES YOU l-001&lt;
fi) Bob'Nowhart Show
SL.IM OFTEN MAKE5
fi)
OTHE~ DOTHI5.
til CIJ tiD CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
(fi) Over Eoay
Now arrange the circled letters to
81 (j]) ABC News
form the surprise answer, as sug·
7:00
(I) P.M. Magazine
gested by the above cartoon.
(I) SRO: Crystel Gale In
Concert Crystal sings all of
Answerhere: (
her greatest hits.
(I)
MOVIE:
'Rolntroe
(Answers tomorrow)
County'
Saturday's! Jumbles: LAPEL DEITY WHINNY DOUBLE
(J) ESPN's Horn Racing
Answer: A girl can be pretty as a picture wh e n sh e's
Wkly.
lhla- WELL·PAINTED
CIJ Gomer Pyla
fi) Entertainment Tonight
Jumb.. Book No. 19, containing 110 puzzles, Is available lor $1 .95 postp1id
(I) Cherlle'a Angels
from Jumb'-, clo thl• ntwl ptper, Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include your
til fi) Tic Tee Dough
name, addrtll, zip code and make checks payable to Newspaperbooltl.
(I) 1Hl
MecNeii-Lahrer
Report
"® Newo
e tl1l People's Court
7:30 8 (I) tiD You Asked For It
(J) ESPN Sporll Center
fi) Amorlcen Profeulonels
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby
CIJ til (I) Family Feud
(I) Bualneu Report
IHl Making a Living Work
e
(j])
Entertainment
Tonight
8:00 8 C2J (I) Little Hou10: A
Oswald: "Seems fine . 1
Now Beginning The resisuppose you have one fot
dents of Walnut Grove try
today."
to rescue a deaf and dumb
NORTH
ll ·t-82
Jim: " Here is a hand thlt
lad from a carniva l show.
+KQ 10
illustrates the need to rl~y
180 min.)
.7 3
safe for your contrac l.~ ·
(I) MOVIE: 'Paternity'
tAJ97 5
rubber brid~e ."
'
Cil l Spy
+K 3 2
can
see
w~at
Oswald:
'I
(J) NCAA Football: Notre
happened at the table.
EAST
Dame va. Nevy from Giants
WEST
opened the ace of clubs -nd
+J9 8 2
Stadium in Eaat Ruther·
+65
must have continued with
• Q iO 6 2
lord, NJ
th e quee n. South lOOk
• Q i O8 3
CIJ MOVIE: "Casablanca'
t K6
dummy's king, discarding a
+9 6 54
CIJ Gl tl1l Thera lncredlblel
+AQJ87
(I) ® Square Pegs
diamond and proceeded to
SOUTH
Patty and Lauren are inlay down his ace and king of
+A
743
vited to a Halloween party
trumps. Then the bad trump,
.AKJISI
by the "popular kids ."
spade and diamond breaks
t42
left him one trick short."
(I) IHl Greet Parlormences
+10
Jim: " There was an unu'The
Charterhouse
of
Vulnerable: Neither
Parma.' Fabrizio discovers
sual safety play available,
Dealer: West
the horrible reality of war.
but this declarer missed it.
160 min .)
He should cash just one high
West
Nortb East
South
8:30
(I) Private Benjamin
trump and then start on
i+
it
Pass
2•
Benjamin enters a mile run
spades. West would ruff the
Pass
I NT Pass
4.
with the general's daughthird spade, but would not be
Pass
Pass
Pass
ter.
able to lead a trump without
®Choose Tonight/Vote
sacrificing a trick. South
9:00 1J (I) (I) MOVIE: "Born
Opening lead: +A
would get to ruff his last
Beautiful'
spade and be home with the
Cil 700 Club
bacon."
(I) NFL Football: De1roit e1
Oswald: " Your fi rst hand
Minnesota/ or
Alternate
for
the column is a very
Programming II the NFl
By Oswald Jacoby
tough one. Our readers can,
players' strike continues.
and James Jacoby
if they wish, study the whole
alternate
programming
will be shown .
Jim: "I'm ready to put in a hand carefully and see why
this safety play is sure to
(I) tiD M'A'S'H The
lot of work now that I 'm
4077th"s Halloween bash
back with the column again. work once both defender s
is continually interrupted
How about using these Mon- follow to the first trump
lead."
~ incoming wounded .
day talks to discuss a r,rinciCillfil Magic of Dance "The
ple of bidding or play• '
Ebb and the Flow: To·
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by THOMAS JOSEPH
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afternoon
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sight
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and Joanna learn that
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the inn 's basement.
11 Pirnola
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10:00 (I) MOVIE: 'True Confes1%
German city
8 Optional
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13 Take.
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15 Negative
10 Latvian
CI: Six Great Ideas
25
Danube
33 Hindu
16 Sailor
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17 Hipster
18 Literary
about the concept of
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35
Feel the
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great
beauty. 16D min .!
Italian
loss
20 Matronly
19 Diagram
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delicacy
36 Salt tree
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20 WiUt (Ger.)
10:30 Cil Ster Time
fi) TBS Evening News
29 Encircling
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21 Altar conIHl Threat of Nuclear War
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11:00 U Cil Newscanter
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32 Photocopy
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26
Savoir-faire
11 :30 IJ (I) (I) Tonight Show
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29 Source; cause
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34 Alder tree
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35 Homo sapiens
up in the strugg le for
38 Requiring
power on the new frontier .
Juliet Jordan, Harold Hopprecedence
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41 Asswned
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42 Thread
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tiD All In the Family
43 Championship
11·46 (I) SRO: Crystal Gele In
44 Map within
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Cil Bums • Allen
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BORN LOSER

197B Chevy 4x4. o.w .b .•
auto, Scottsdale pkg .
$4,200. 304-875-7879.

1877 Joop Walionoer good
cond.. n.soo. Cd 4484570aftll6:30.

44~·8678 - r 8.

roofs installed from '225.
Auto
1988 . Trim Center, 448 - --------Byerly and Folta Automatic
Tranami11ion. Rebuilt or exchanged. All work guaran toed,
reosonble prices. Call
446 8639
•
·

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\DACROWt

SPECIAL Complete enamel
paint jobs from $300. Sun-

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith end
Motorola. Quazar, and
house coils. Call 678 -239B
or 448-2464.

76 DODGE Dart Sport, alent
6, standard. 22 mpg, A-1
shepa. $1500.00. 304-876 8276.

NAKOa

N-•

YOU CAN'T
THINK OF ANYTHIN(; Mil . McKEE
!'AID 0"-l TH~

Auto Repair

78

1

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N-ntor
Tic Teo Dough

IORREBB!

CAPI'AN EASY

fl . I

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Unscromblo lour Jumbles,
one lellor 10 NCit square, lo lorm
lour ordinary words.

e

Boatsand
ll/lotors for $ale

PHONGEC:~~~::r.)!i

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EVENING

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byHenriAmoldandBobl.oe

CIJ C.rol BurMtt
CIJ til CIJ tiD e tl1l News

14 ft . John boot. 67" beam
4.6 h .p. Mercury motor, trot:
ling motor &amp; swivel aeeta
Call John Wise 614-742:
2131 .
.

II

.

~~~~"'~~~~~~T
._'J_ l{~)~T) w~fN~ ~to~ . ~hc~="~:r:~~lA"',:~
1

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Plostlc Soptlc Tonks. BUtte
and county oppooved. 1,000
gel.
priOit t340. Other •
slzH In atoclt. houl In your
pickup truck. Coli 814-28111830, Jockacn. Oh. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

wllh Major Hoople

4 W.O.

1978 Ford Bronco fully customized 36,000. 992-7408 .

75

1880 Chevrolet Chovette,
r---------J-=========:.1!~~
extra llhorp, low mllooge.
OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Van• lit

Television
.
Viewin2

'1877 XR -76 Hondadlrtblke
good cond. Ca11446-3584. '

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

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
STORE 62 Olive St .. Gallipolis. Couch. love~&amp;~~t and
chair, S199. ; wood and coal
heaters; box spring and mattress. $100. Recliners, &amp;80.;
9 x 12 linoleum rugs, &amp;22 .;
map._, rockers, $49 .. wrin ger washers, refrigerators. dinette sets , chest ,
dressers, bunkie mattress,
$40 . Coll446 -3169 .

4411"-0322

Build your own garage
24x24 all lumber furnished,
$695 . Can deliver . Barn pattern also . Call 614 -8887311 .

73

74

Corn cribs-wire type, 900
JOhn Deere dozer 1010runsl;;
and 1.200 bu . Coll614 -245 good. wood or coal bumer 5 6 Pets for Sale
6193.
with circulator $100. Call - - -- -- - -- 614-246 -9320 alter 6:30
JIVIDEN'S FARM
PM . Yard Sale11 OTexasRd. HillCREST KENNEl
Nov. 4-5-6 .
Boarding all breeds. AKC EQUIPMENT
446 -1876
Reg . Doberman&amp; pups and
Long tractors, Vermeer bal Man 's cashmere top coat Doberman Stud Service.
ers &amp; hay equipment. Sale
size 38 , girls Gallia Acada - Coll446 -7796 .
movers. &amp; feedara, wagon a,
mey wool jacket size 12 .
rotary t1llen. rotary cutters,
Hohner accordian . Call614 - POODLE GROOMfNG. Call
Judy Taylor at 614 -367 - seeders. blades. gates, ditc,
245 -5274 alter 7PM .
plows, cultivators &amp;
7220 .
woodburnera.
Hobby horses. handmade
~nd see uato get a complete
ideal for 2.3&amp;4 year old . Call REG. QUARTER HORSES
Training, showing, breeding, line of pirt &amp; service!
446 -3886 .
sales and boarding. Contact USED :
House coal for sa le &amp;24 ton . Dan Beam , Gallipolis, 446- IH hrdro 70. Ford Jubilee
800 Ford, Ferguoon 30 70
Call 614 -266 -6816 or 614- 0183.
256 -6747.
- - -- - - - - - Oliver. Massey Harris P~ny,
DRAGONWYND CATTERY 8-N Ford, co rnplantar
Firewood, $36 . truck load . - KENNEl. AKC Chow pup- plows, disc. round baler, Jci
$66 . a cord. Split and deli - pies, CFA Himalayan, Per- manure spread.-. gooH
sian and Siamese kittens . neck grain wagon. and used
vered . 614-843-3603.
woodburnera.
Call446 -3844 alter 4PM .
We Buy Used Equipment!
Hoover upright sweeper
with attachments, 4 years American Pit Bull puppies.
488 Hoybine. 268 New Holold, S45.:Zenithconaoleste- Coll614 -388 -9661 .
land rake , both like new.
reo with am-fm radic.. $200.
Would you like a cute Cocker 614-949-2059 .
614-992 -3269.
Spaniel puppy for Christ tung coal or wood stove. man? AKC Blonde Cocker 1-:--:--- - - - -- livestock
Used 6 months . Wrth blower Sponiel pupploo et 60. Hove 63
and pipe. 614-843-4894. been wormed and had all
$300.
shots. Call 814-38B -9765
after 6PM .
Pigs for sale. 7 weeks old.
House coal. Pickup at mine
846. ea . 814 -992 -5971 .
For
sale
American
Pit-Bull
site. Forest Run Rd . $26. ton
thru Nov. &amp;14-992-2280 Of Terrier ADBA Registered fe- Polled Hereford Bulls for
male, 6 mos old , whites hots
814-992-2618 .
sale. Wide selection of 8 -18
&amp; health record. Call 614month old bula for both
Wood and -or coal burning 388 -9616 .
commercial &amp; regiltered
furnace with forced-air
breeders. You saw us at the
blower. drah blower, ther- PEKINGESE puppieo. AKC. Meigs Co. Fair, we are the
8125
.
304-875
-6030
after
mostat. *600. Warm Morn people with the bull "Big
·
ing. gas stove 66.000 BTU. 6:00p.m.
Jake'·. Outstanding herd
8260. '12 h.p. shallow well jet
health program . All bulls
pump *75 .. Strack player for AKC Registered adult toy guaranteed. Call Country
car with 2 speakers . 614- Poodle &amp; her puppy. Y2 week Road Farm. 614-247-2704
old. both for $300. Father
992-7890.
also can be seen. will con- days. After 7 p.m. 814-2472702.
2 TV antennas . Mrs. OIIMt sider him also, real small
304-676-7877.
.
Young, 298 W. Second St.,
Bred Hereford cows. ConPomeroy .
tact Harley Rice, Raedsvine,
AKC . Registered puppies,
Oh. 614·867·3389.
Cell Robart Harper for Gin- beautiful ba11ett hound. Toy
seng and Yellowroot prices. Pomeraniana. both pick of
litters from stud service.
304-676-1293.
.
Shots &amp; wormed. Also tak - 64 Hay lit Grain
BUYING and oelling used ing deposita on Cocker Spaheavy equipment (agricultu - niels, 304-676 -7877.
Harvest special whole
ral, construction, mintng,
chemical industry, etc .) REGISTERED Australian shelled corn f6.00 per 100
through consignment for a Shepherd puppies. 304- lb . your ucko. f6 .76 per
sacked. Morg1n Woodlawn
natiol'\ll company. Starting 876-8388 evenings.
Farm, Rt. 36. Pliny. WV.
at 815.000. value. Call Ro bert l Harper. 304-876- AKC Regilterad Bassett 304 -876-2276.
Hound puppies. 8 weeks old,
1293.
larr., round baleo •10.-a26 .
304-372-872B.
30 -468·1866or304-876GE dishwasher, electric
7641.
stove. 304-676-7879 or
304 -876-3110 .
67
Musical
Instruments
SONY caaaette, diacoustic
speakers, Reallatic receiver,
UOO. Roliegh 'record"71
Autos for Sale
Englloh built 26'12'' frame, We will MEET or BEAT any
Sun-Tour shifters $1 80 . legitimate price yourrocoive
Reel to reel tape recorder on any new piano or Org1n
•16 . 304-676-1S 1 J.
BRUNI CAROl MUSIC Co.: Foroale1879 Fordflostux-lc81 Court St .• GalllpoNs. Coli cellent llhopa, 4 spd., 4 cyl.
446-0887.
Ca11441·8758 ofter IIPM.

51 Household Goods

to
to llpm,
7pm.- Sat.
Mon. thru Fri .• 9om

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, windows , lintels, ate . Claude
Winters, Rio Grande, 0 . Call
614-246 -6121 .

Metal sheets for all building
purposes. Flat porcelian
Firewood, cut to order, enamel coated. 4xB thru 4 x
pickup or delivered . Call 12. Prices. $7.00 to 89 .60.
614 -667-3086.
814-266 -6689.

a8eruhaedlll

lAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa. chair, rocker , ottoman,
3 tables. {extra heavy by
Frontier). $686 . Sofa. chair
and lovesaet, &amp;276. Sofas
and chairs priced from $2B6 .
to 8896 . Tables. $38 and up
to 8126 . Hida-o-bods.8440.
and up to *626., queen size,
$380. Recliners. $176. to
8326 .. Lamps from $18 . tn
*86 . 6 pc. dinettes from
879 .. to 8386 . 7 pc .. 8189.
and up . Wood table with six
choir• 8396. to $850. Desk
$110. Hutchoo. $300. and
&amp;660 .. maple or pine finish.
Bedroom suites - Bauett
Cherry. a796. Bunk bod
complete with mattreaaea.
$260. and up to U96 . Boby
beds. *99. Mattre11esorbox
springs, full or twin, t&amp;B .,
firm, 188, end f78. Queen
sets. 8196. 4 dr. chasto,
842 . 6 dr. chest•. *64. Bed
frames, e20.ond $26 .• 10
gun - Gun cabinets. t360 ..
dinette chairs t20 . end t26.
Gaooreloctrlcrongoo, U26.
Boby me tresses. t25 &amp; U6.
bad !romeo UO. a26, &amp; t30.
Uaed Furniture ·- bookceae,
ranges, chairs, end Utbloo,
recliners and TV' a. 3 mlleo
out Bulevillo Rd . Open 9om

New soothing ""Medicated
Vapors' ' replacesmesayvaporizersall
nightlongat Hock en berry Pharmacy .

FRANKLIN stove, 9 ft. reg .
Case Pocket Knife Sale, 3 pipe, 9 ft . triple wall
bladed. yellow composition :,~!rOSOO . 304-675 -2620
handles. list price $19.60
less 40% off 811 .70 sole.
price. Spring Valley Trading FIREWOOD 304 -468 Co., Spring Valley Plaza, 1083.
448 -8025 .
APARTMENT sized gas
Bear Polar LTD compound cood stove, $60. call after 5.
boew list price &amp;227 . sale 304-675-414B.
price &amp;108 . Spring Valley
Trading Co ., Spring Valley Handmade cedar chests.
Plaza. 448 -8026 .
304-675-3489.

Houses and 1 &amp; 2 bdr. apart·
ments for rent . HUO pro gram available . A-One Real
Estates, Carol Yeager. Real tor. Call 304 -675 -5104 or
675 -6386 .
Nicely furnished mobile
home. central air, 1 mile
below city overlooking river,
aduHs only . Coll446 -0338 .

r-----------~~~

CAMOUFLAGED new army
clothing, combat boots. denim 14oz. Jeans $10., lined
dorilm lackats 818 . up, (un lined $1 5 .1. Sam Somerville's warehouM. 7 miles
Firewood . Cuttolength. Del - east Ravenawood , junction
ivered in dump truck loads or lndependanae Road-old
may be picked up in yard . Route 21 (new Erol. Open
Crown City, Oh Junction 1:00-7 :30 p.m . Friday, Sat653 &amp; 218 . Call 614 -266 · urday, Sunday (Monday Ev6246 .
enings) . Phone orders Pt.
Pleasant , 304 -876 -3334.
For sale Restaurant · before1 0 :00a .m .
Carryout equipment, used ,
RCA stereo for sale, good
RADC0.304 - condition, $200 .00, Call
304 -676-5999 alter 6:00
TRAPPING SUPPLIES Buy· p .m .
ing Ginseng . George Buckley . Rt. 2. Athens. Oh . ORIENTAL
High Bulk
664-4761 . Hours: Week - Weight loss Secret. 100per·
days 6-9 PM , Weekends 12 cent safe natural "Asian
noon -9 PM .
Root " Glucomannan Cap sules at Hockenberry
WOODBURNING STOVES Pharmacy.
Free standing fireplace in - ' - - - -- - - - - serts, mobile home and fur - , .-lc nance ad -ons. Jividens Farm Congestion? Stuffy nose?

A

Mobile home 12x60 for sale
or rent. no pets. deposit re quired . Also trailer space .
Call446 -3812 .

9 2 x110 corner lo t $5500 .
Twin Cedars Addition . New

'

\ ~~-

1·1

2 bdr . mobile home fulty fur - 1- - -- - - - -- -

Bea utiful w o od ed ho m esite.
COnsider lease purchase or

land co ntract.
614 -985-4321 .

...JY.:"" ,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f,~N~NA~·=~

35 Lots &amp; Acreag e

close

/\~~

I

~.._..

by Larry Wrlghl

~~w.:r

0

~.

-

1ng. pr ice reduced . 304 6 7 -44
5 6-370
7 53. 4 1
o r
614

ac res

r~

,. ,

~~i

: ~ 1:

.L.._

TWO unit a partm e nt builc;t -

19

l,

-~~

ow ne r, mu st s ell . see t o ap pr eciat e. $17. 500 . Call304 895-3651 o• 895 -3584 .

Business
Buildings

·

T ~~ 1

~-

1982 14x70 HOllY PARK.

34

HEI&lt;MJNDS
MADE UP···ll&lt;E
C0H MEN lAI-1'MUCH NICEI&lt;
THAN WC 00 ···

Br&amp;
Rrze\ f : YOU
c;ETA
Yo· Yo ·

h SE"-""

1979 14x70 m obile home
with 7x24 ex pando , 3 bed room s. exc . co nd ., price

Call

IS lHE CON MAN!&gt;
t'RSAM (;lilc ····._.A

f'itJIO&gt;L..J'L.--0800Y
bVI&gt;IZ-Y()ETS l!&lt;E

[P

64 Misc . Merchandise KIT 'N' CARLYLE'"

Blue Ridge Mountain fire place inserts now in ttock at
Swisher Implement Co .. St .
Rt 7 North. Gollipolio. Oh.
448 -0476.

~ , (If~IS TIMC· ·AUNT A""l f.

MJ7iYIN'G . . .

DICK TRACY

Monday, November 1,1982

Middleport, Ohio

64 Misc . Merchandise

SOMETHIJ\G ~ ~ COUL6:Y'~ WASTIN6

TRI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . USED- CARS
TRUCKS . GAlli POLIS :
CHECK OUR PRICES . CAll
446 -7672 .

S12.000.
0576.

Pomeroy

The Daily Sentinei-Page~9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 1,1982

2.: 00

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.

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(IJ) Newt
MOVIE:

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Yesterdly's CryploqDOie: THERE ARE FOUR WAYS OF EX- , .....
AMIN1NG MEN-BY THEffi CONVERSATION, DISPOSI- 1 ... _
TION,FAMILY ANDCONDUCI'.-HINDUPROVERB
. -..."..":!

-

�·.

: I

ii

Page-l 0- The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

1,198~

Ohio
voter
turnout
moderate
heavy~
to
I

Meigs County happenings....

By JAMES HANNAH
Associated PI'ESII Writer

Issued license

Election day dinner

Correction

A marriage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to Gregory Keith Lee, 20, Pomeroy, and
Tina Louise Randolph, 20 ,
Middleport.

An election day dinner will be held
Tuesday at the Racine United Methodist Church withservlngtobeglnat
11 a.m. and continue through the
supper hour. Soup, sandwiches,
corn bread, pie and beverages will
be for sale.

Wilford Taylor, 71, Rutland, who
died Friday was a son ~- the late_
Clyde A. and Lyddle ~haylort ·
Pearl Gibson Taylor was Ids stepmother. Services were held Sunday
at the Rawllngs-Coats-mdW~r Fun:·
eralHome.

Cancelled

VOTE FOR WElLS· FOR·
MEIGS COUNTY COMMISSIONER

A pancake supper scheduled for
Thursday, Nov. 4, at the Wesleyan
United Methodist Church, Racine,
has been cancelled.

*I am a veteran of Wor1d
War II.
*lainamemberofAmercan Legion Post 39,
Pomeroy.
*I am a member of the
Meigs County Fann
Bureau.
*I am experienced in local government.

Time change noted
The Syracuse Board of Public Affairs wlll meet this evening at 5p.m.
Instead of the regular time at 7 p.m.

ASSIST OPEN HOUSE EVENT - Assisting with
the ribbon cutting Sunday were, 1-r, Edna Scboenleb,

and Jane Walton, former village clerks, Larry Webrung, president of council and Mayor Andrews.

To meet Tuesday
The Candy Stripers of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will meet Tuesday, Nov. 2, at5p.m.ln theelclt-west
dining room. All new members
.wishing to join are welcome to
a ttend.

Lebanon Township Trustees will
meet at 7 this evening at the township garage.

ATTEND CEREMONIES- Pictured are some of
the 200 residents who attended the open house held at

VOTE CHESTER WEUS ON NOV. 2

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Pa~id~f~Of~b~y~lhe~Ca~nd~ida~te=

Finds no evidence of drugs

•

ISearsl DieHard®

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Hospital officials say they found no
evidence of drugs In a 13-year-old boy who hallucinated after eating
Halloween candy.
Children's Hospital reported that David McKnight was In good
condition Monday following admission Sunday night. His father,
Michael McKnight, said he believes the boy was given candy containIng PCP, a powerful and illegal hallucinogen.
Columbus police received 51 reports of Halloween treats being
tainted with foreign substances.

BATTERIES
IN STOCK

$5288

PHONE :
(Ohio) 992-2178
(W.Va .) 773-9577

CHARLES GWBS, former Pomeroy High School superintendent,
traced the history of the senior high school during open house festivities
Sunday afternoon.

KEEP
WORKING FOR YOU

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Sat urd a y Admlsslo ns--Arl ie
Lambert Rullana: Myrtle Murphy,
Langsville; Cla rence Norris. Racine; Goldie Matney, Cheshire .
Saturday Discharged--Eunice
Christy, El vira Barr, David Park,
Dessle Boring. Gertrude Hall, Dorothy Hawkins. Denise Qualls, Dora
Smith, Ruby Haillday, Emma
Wayland.
S und ay Admissions -- He len
Shuler, Middleport; Walter Garnes,
Dexter; Helen Sauvage, Pomeroy;
Joseph Boyd, Pomeroy.
Sund ay Discharged -- Dennis
Palmer, Bobble Roy.

Loganers...

••.

~SENATOR COLUNS has gillllfl 26 years of service to
this rural area of Ohio in the Ohio General Assembly.

(Continued from page 11

declined to discuss business while
on police duty, his store manager
said guns sales increased 25 percent
In the first week after the killings.

Carl Littlejohn said the bestselling Item was a $50 Raven Arms
.25-caliber semi-automatic pistol.

'•HE IS THE MAN whom you have placed second in
Seniority in the Ohio Senate.
*THE MAN who has rai111d Educational Opportunities
for your children second to none throughout tha Stata
of Ohio.

"This Is a low-Income area and It
goes with people's price range," he
Emergency runs
said. "A lot of people come In here
and tell me they always thought It
Five calls were answered by local was a good Idea to own a gun, espeunl ts over the weekend, the Meigs cially these days. But we ain't selCounty Emergency Medical Servi- ling handguns to radicals and some
ces reports.
Joe Blow off the street."
At 12:12 a. m . Sunday, theMlddl~
Jerry Hutchison, who owns Jerport Unit took Floyd Reynolds, 4!Kl ry's Bait and Gun Shop, said during
Grant St., to Holzer Medical Center. the first week after the killings, he
Saturday runs Included Rutland sold about 30 handguns to people
Unit at 10:36 a.m. took Myrtle who had never owned one before.
Murphy from Danvllle to Veterans
"I can't say they're lining up to
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at break my doors down, but sales
8:14p.m. took Goldie Matheny from were up the first week," he said,
Rout~ 7 residence to Veterans Memadding that rmst people In Hocking
orial; Middleport at 8:26 p.m. took County already were armed.
Lionel Boggs from his home at 400
Grant St., to Holzer Medical Center;
"I wouldn't think It was a good
Pomeroy at 9: 56 p.m. took Mike year It I didn't sell1,500 guns," HutJones and Jackie Napier from the chison said. "But It there still Is a
scene of an auto accident on County
killer out there, he won't come to
Road 25 to Veterans Memorial
your door. He's a &lt;X!ward."
Hospital.

VOTE FOR LEADERSHIP YOU CAN BE PROUD OF NatiOnal Wealher

-VOTE FOR SENATOR OAKLEY COLLINS

NOAA. U S Dept

Fronts :

By Col~ns for Senate Q)mmittee-J. K. Col~ns. Treas.

.,
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forecaat from the central GuH to the Great Lakes. Mild weather will
condnue In ihli East. Cold weather Is expected lor the Plains- (AP
LueJllholo Map),
.

JUNIOR

Ohio forecasts

WINTER COATS
and JACKETS

Sixty per~t chance of showers or thunderstorms tonight and 70
percent chance Wednesday. Low tonight around 60. High Wednesday
65-70. Winds southwesterly lQ-15 mph tonight.

Ski jacketl, fur looks. hooded
jackets, reverwible jackets. and
belted styles,
'
Junior Ilia 6/6 and 16/16
andS,M,L.
Reg. 69.ou ____________ sale47.00
Reg. 66.00 ---- -- ...... Sale &amp;2.00
Reg. 73.00 ____________ sale 6&amp;.00
Reg. 116.oo __________ s8Je92.oo

Extended forecast
· Exteacled Oblo Forecut - Thursday through SatUrday: Much
colder with a chance of showers or snow tlurrtes each, day. ~ In
mld-408 to low 50&amp; Thursday and low to mld-408 Friday and Saturday.
Lows In the 308 and low408 Thunday, mld-:!na to low 308 Friday and

SAiiENDS

mid to upper 2na Saturday.

SATURDAY, NOV. 6th
Pd. for

by

Gallipolis couple.purchase
Baker Store in Middleport
The 30-year-old Baker Furniture
Store on North Second Avenue In
Middleport, has been sold to Lynn
and Casby "Skip" Meadows III of
Gaillpolls.
Arrangements for completion of
the transaction were made Monday
morning.
Meadows Is manager of the Empire Furniture Co., 842 Second Ave.,
Gaillpolls, which has been In the
family for three genera tlons.
Casby Meadows Sr., grandfather
of the purchaser of the Middleport
business, bought Into Empire In
1916. The lriterests of another owner
In the business were purchased and
Empire became solely Meadows'.
He was joined In the business by

I

Casby Meadows Jr. and In more
recent years, Casby Meadows III
joined the firm . Lynn Meadows will
serveasmanageroftheMlddleport
store.
Baker Furniture was established
In Middleport In September 1952 by
brothers Edison and John Baker. It
was located first at the comer of
Rutland and North Second Avenue
In the structure now occupied by
Foreman &amp; Abbott. The store then
moved to the Cook Wholesale Grocery building, also at the corner of
Rutland and North Second, and now
occupied by King Builders Supply.
Both Edison and John Baker were
active In the business over the years

as was their lather, C.M. Baker. In
July 1979, Edison Baker purchased
John Baker's Interest in the store.
However, John Baker has contlnued to work at the store. Janet
Baker Downie, daughter of Mr. a nd
Mrs. Edison Baker, has been servIng as manager of the Baker store
recently.
The business will retain the Baker
Furniture name unt!l February
1983, If the new owners wish. Appliances now handled by Baker Furniture wlll be dropped by the new
owners and Edison Baker will r~
main at the Middleport store fo r a
few months to dispose of that line of
merchandise.

First reading on an ordinance Increasing gas rates 1.3 percent
rather than the 5 percent originally
requested by Columbia Gas was approved at Monday night's Pomeroy
council meeting.
Councilman Bill Young said he
had attended a Coalition meeting In
Amanda and negotiations were held
In Columbus with the Consumers'
Counsel and Coalition representatives to negotiate a gas rate.
Young said the baseratewUibe$4
per customer. The average billing
of 11,000 cubic feet, which costs
$64.44 per month, will now cost residents $65.;!0 per month - a 1.3 per-

cent Increase overall. Also, there
will be no exctse tax charged on
bills. The new rate will go Into effect
Jan. 10, 1983.
Meeting with council was John
"Jake" Koebel, Columbia Gas offlee manager lor Meigs and Galila
counties. Koebel has met with coun·
ell on several occasslons on the rate
Increase. Councll agreed to join the
CoaU tion In order to get a reduced
rate. I
It will be necessary for councll to
approve tWo more readings of the
ordinance lor Its passage.
In other matters, Hank Cleland,
of Cleland Realty, met with council.

Cleland has been attempting to obtaln la nd options In the village of
Syracuse for the vlllage to drill an
additional water well.
Cleland presented a mapo!Syracuse, which showed where the present wells are located and where
another well will possibly be drilled.
Clelandsa ld he hadbeennegotiatlng with Jack Williams , Pa !O'Brien
and Vernon Bartles for slteone, and
Carroll Norris for site two.
On the Williams property there Is
a posslblllty that an option can be r
obtained for a test well.
An option will be drawn up and
presented to council for approval.

Council discussed passing a resolutlon whereby the village of ?orneroy will not enter Into any rate
negoltiatlons with any public utlllty
companies that Include provisions
not allowed for or provided for by
the Public Utility Company of Ohio.
The resolution wlll a lso Include cable television companies.
Pollee Chief George Stitt reported
that his department m ade47 arrests
and drove 5,551 miles last month.
Stitt also reported tha t $1,955 was
collected from the parking meters.
Stitt Informed council that the dispatchers would like to have unl(Continued on page 101

WEA'l11ER FORECAST - 'lbe Natlol1al W~r Service lore-

casts clear sidell for allrloM all of the nation lorWednellday. Showers are

$

bl
Ki
d

lis, have purchased the Baker firm. Mrs. Meadows
will serve as manager of the Middleport establisl&gt;ment. With Baker Is his wile, Bernice, a former Middleport businesswoman.

The James M. Gavin power plant
near Cheshi re ceased generating
electricity 10 p.m. Monday as Ohio
Power Co. officials temporarily
shut down the second of the plant's
twounlts.
Employees will continue to work
doing routine maintenance a nd no
layoffs are planned, according to
plant manager John W. Llzon.
The plant Is afflllated with the
American E lectric Power System,
which announced the layoff of 920
employees at the Meigs Mines )ast
week.
The Meigs mines provide coal for
the Gavin plant.
·
The unit shutdown a nd the layoffs
are related In that "It's a li due to the
economy," Llzon said.
While the economy played a role
In both decisions, Duane Zumbrunn, an Ohio Power Co. official In
Canton, said therewas nodirect connection between the decision to shut
down the unit and tha t to layoff mine
e mployees.
A lowered demand for the Gav in
plant's electricity has resulted In the
unit shutdown, Llzon said .
AEP officials said last week that
lower demand for electricity Is also
to blame for the mine layoffs.
Lizon said the beginning of cold
weather may spur enough demand
to restart operations at the second
unit .
Gavin's first unit has been shut
down since Oct. 8 for routine malnt~
nance, Zumbrunn said. It Is scheduled to be put back In service on
!Continued on page 10)

Council OKs first reading on gas rates

THIS DISTRICT CANNOT AFFORD TO LOSE EFFECTIVE AND RESPONSIBLE LEADERSHIP IN
THE OHIO-SENATE!

3

.

CLEVELAND -The winning number drawn In the Ohio Lottery's
daUy game "The Number" was 779. The lottery reported earnings
Mo~day of $749,916.50 from the wagering on the game. Earnings
came on sales of $1,020,477.50, while holders of winning tickets are
entitled to share $270,531, lottery officials said.

*THE MAN who finds no personal problem too large
or too small for his attantion.

c

tc
p

Lottery winners

*THE MAN who protects our Senior Citizens by lliffling crima through higher penalties.

p

T

MEXICO CITY (AP) -More than 30,000 strikers have shut down
Mexico's largeSt airline and university, seeking pay hikes to offset
soaring Inflation, and a national labor leader vowed not to extend a
Nov. 11 deadline for a general walkout.
There was no end In sight today to the strikes at Mexlcana airlines
and the National University, which marked the first major job action
since labor leader Fidel Velazquez called for the nationwide strike It
businessmen refused to grant emergency pay Increases.
Spokesmen for the union representing 7,323 ground workers at
Mexlcana said talks broke off late Sunday and workers walked out
Monday after management contended It could not offer more than a
25 percent across-the-board salary Increase. The workers earn the
equivalent of $170 to $645 a month.
Meanwhile, more. than 23,000 non-academic personnel at the
government-susldlzed National University remained firm In their
demand for a mlnlmum60percent wage hike. Thestrlkeaffectsabout
350,000 students and 45,000 teachers.

*THE MAN who promotes employment and jobe by
personal and legislative action.

He Ustens!
He Cares!
He Acts!

NEW - Lynn Meadows receives the keys to Baker
Furniture Store, Middleport, from Edison M. Baker.
Mrs. Meadows and her husband, Cashy "Skip" Meadows m, manager of Empire Furniture Co., Gaillpo-

,Ill

HOURS:
Mon .-Tues.-Weds.-Fri. 9 t!)S
Thurs . 9 to 12
'
SM. 9 to 2

mayor. and Baronlck. Laurie Provence registered the guests.

Assisting at the refreshment table
were Pat Thoma, secretary to the

COLUMBUS, Ohio (API -Conservationist Robert R. Shawsays25
percent of Ohio's cropland Is eroding at a rate that will reduce Its
capacity to produce crops.
Shaw, an employee of the U.S. SoU Conservation Service, said up to
1 million acres of Ohio farmland Is losing an averageoflO tons of soli
per acre every acre every year.
He said erosion at this rate can cause Irreparable damage.

'Mexican strikes continue

108 W. MAIN ST ., POMEROY, OH.

SENATOR OAKLEY COLLINS

Hospital news

$

Authorized Catalog Merchants
Gregg &amp; Patty Gibbs

Open··· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Larry Wehrung. presidenl of
Pomeroy Council. served as master
of ceremonies a nd ga ve !he weicome address. The in voca tion was
given by !he Rev. Robert McGhee.
Wehrung inlroduced former
mayors. E. F . Robinson and Cha·
rles Legar a long with Richard
Jones, county commissioner; E m·
mogene Holslein, counl y recorder
and Manning Roush. candidate for
commissioner .
Refres hmenl s were served lo
more !han 200 persons.

h

Offer Expires
November 10, 1982

·-~ """

(Continuedfrompage11

2

WITH TRADE-IN

Sears

Kaiser plans to
lay off 40 to 50
workers next week

Ohio soil quickly eroding

Plus Tax

LARRY WEHRUNG, president of council, served as master
of ceremonies during open house
of the new Pomeroy Municipal
Building Sunday afternoon.

Gavin
•
untts
shut
down

A vote for me is a vote for progress and unity for
Meigs County. I am as close to you as your telahone at any time.

Workshop Wednesday
Holiday foods, new a nd natural
decoration Ideas and Ideas for gUts
using fabrics will be featured at a
holiday workshop to be held Wednesday from 9:30a.m. to 3:30p.m.
a t St. Paul's Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy.
The ·workshop wlll also feature
ways to cope with low sodlU!fl and
low calorie diets throughout the
Thanksgiving a nd Christmas
season.
The workshop Is being staged by
the Meigs County Extension
Service.

1 Settion 10 Pages
15 Centt
A Multimedia Inc . N•w•paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 2,1982

served.

The Aglow Bible Study group will
meet from 7 to9 p.m. Tuesday atthe
home of Joan Wolfe with Joyce Hlad
as leader on the topic "Prayer and
Praise".

(!'

Voi.31.No .1'l7
Copyright.d 198'l

entinel

road construction and will wOii&lt; to serve you, the

Group meets Tuesday
the new municipal buDding In Pomeroy, Sunday
afternoon.

The Daily

day. Democratic gubernatorial candidate Richard
Celeste was In Cleveland and Republican Clarence
Brown worked crowds In downtown Columbus and
Cincinnati.
"We think we're going to win It," Brown said. "We
feel very optimistic about It, a nd who can say? Much
depends on turnout, much depends on where people
tum out."
State Rep. Paul Pfeifer, Republican candidate for
U.S. Senate, had campaign stops at Fountain Square
as well as Public Square In Dayton. Incumbent Democrat Howard Metzenbaum spent the day a t home.
Voters were making their decisions In the wake of
weekend polls by The Columbus Dispatch and Akron
Beacon-Journal that showed Celeste and Metzenbaum with wide leads.
Brown salrl &lt;:unrl•v In Columbus that hlscampall(ll
(Continued on page 10)

people, in Meigs County the way you want to be

lng Band, directed by James WU- 1
helm, wlll present a concert at 7: 30 1p.m . Wednesday In the high school
auditorium. The public Is Invited.

Trustees to meet

turnout. WhUe Jones Interpreted the turnout as a good
sign for Democratic candidates, officials at the Franklin County Republican headquarters here were
apprehensive.
Early voters at many Franklin County poUlngsltes
said they walled In line to vote for the first time In
recent memory.
County election officials reported voter turnout was
moderate In Montgomery County, moderate to heavy
In Hancock County, heavy In Jackson County, and
slightly above oormalln Richland and Allen counties.
Secretary of State Anthony Celebrezze predicted
that 3.3 mUllonOhioans, or58percentofthevoters, will
go to the polis today. That would be the largest turnout
for a gubernatorial election since 1!li8. But the National Weather Service said there was a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
The candidates wound their camoall!DS down Mon-

I am experienced in buildinQ construction and

Concert Wednesday
TheEastemHtghSchootMarch-

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Normal to heavy voter
turnouts were reported around Ohio today for the
non-presidential general election.
The day began mostly sunny despite a forecast for
cloudy skies and showers, perhaps thunderstorms,
Ia ter In the day.
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Richard Celeste cast his ballot shortly after voting booths opened
at Louisa M. Alcott Elementary School in Cleveland.
He said his staff planned to work during the day a t
,
getting out the vote.
, "Several thousand people are on the streets across
the state of Ohio today and they are determined to tum
the vote out. We'll have everything from sound trucks
to telephones ringing to people knocking on doors,"
said Celeste.

His Republican opponent, Clarence J. Brown, cast
his ballot at the Champaign County Courthouse In
Urbana, along with his wife and oldest son, Clancy.
Cuyahoga County Board of Elections Director Mary
Yates said precincts reported a moderate-to-heavy
turnout. A 55 percent turnout was expected In the
county It the weather remained pleanant, said Robert
Hughes, Cuyahoga County Board of Elections
chairman.
·Voting was heavy In Champaign County, where
Brown voted .
The Lucas County Board of Elections reported It
expected about 20 percent of the countY's total voter
turnout for the day would cast ballots ln 'the first four
hours. In all, 243,!m people were expected tovoteln the
county.
Franklin County Democratic Party Chairman John
E. Jones said he was "elated" by a heavy morning

_Stage set for home building recovery
By 'lbe A8li0Cialed Press
The decline In Inflation and Interest rates has set the stage tor a solid
recovery .In home building, and
Commerce Secretary Malcolm Baldrlge, seel "a much stronger year
ahead" for the Industry.
The Commerce Department on
Monday reported that spending on
~nstruct\on of new houses rose by
0.6 percent In September over .
August.
'
Any Improvement, however,
·won't come soon enough for more
than lO,(XX) workers wbo will be affected bY General EleCtric Co.'s
temporarY shutdown later this

month at Its major appliance manu- ment's report of an Increase In
spending on home construction, the
facturing plant In Louisville, Ky.
rate of spending for construction of
GE said Monday the planned
all types actually declined 0.2 pershutdown was necessary because
appliance Industry sales were 15 cent alter advancing In August.
The departiTient report also repercent below levels of a year ago,
mainly due to a weak housing
vised downward Its earlier estimate
of the overall construction spending
market.
The cutbacks are not as extensive In August, to a gain of 0.6 percent
as last year because this year's from a gain of 1.6 percent.
The stock market, meanwhile, refourth-quarter sales are forecast to
bounded from last week's losing
be higher than a year ago, the company said. Last year the division streak as the Dow Jones average of
was closed down from the last week 30 Industrial stocksMondayjumped
In November through,
the end of the · 13.98 points to 1,005.70 lri moderate
'
trading. The number of stocks that
year,
Despite the Commerce Depart- rose In price_outnwn~ the los-

..

ers by a 2-1 margin.
Bond prices also advanced Monday as Interest rates fell.
Inothereconomlcdevelopments:
-The Interest rate that savings
lnstltutlons may pay on six-month
savings certificates fell to 8.731 percent today, from the previous 8.97'2
percent. The rate at commercial
banks dropped to 8.481 percent from
8. 722 percent. The declines are a
result of lower Interest rates on sixmonth Treausry bills auctioned to
the public Monday.
-The American Iron &amp; Steel Institute reported that steel produc- ·
·
(Continued on page 10)

Boster for

...
'

.

'I

t.&gt;

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