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: 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.

.,
tl
oi

T1
. l(j

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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

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Commentary

..!

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Races to watchl____________

The Daily Sentinel
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Tuesday, November 2,1982

Page-2- The Daily Sentiner ··
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :
Tuetday,November2,1982

ul ollo ""' ~

'" "''' 11"1 p•·t, nnaltln''

Unemployment: its
impact on the vote
Did unemployment In September rise by 455,000 jobs or did It decrease by
15,000? Were 11.3 million Individuals involved? Or 10.7 million? Or nearly20
million? Which would you use In estimating the political impact?
Acase could be made for all the figures cited, but that hardly answers the
job of those who seek todetermine the 1m pact of the unemployment problem
in this year's voting. They know It will be great. But how great?
The most optimistic estimate of unemployment In September. the latest
month for which figures are available. put It at 10,695,000persons. That was
the raw figure- that Is, not seasonally ad justed- obtained bY, the Labor
Department.
Since the previous month's raw figure was 10,710,000 workers, the September estimate represented a decline of 15,000 and produced a jobless rate
of 9.7 percent. Not good, but much better than the official rateof!O.l percent.
The 10.1 figure , as you know by now. is arrived at by seasonally adjusting
the num bers, the goal being to smooth out the fluctuations in employment
due to strictly seasonal factors such as weather, holidays, the opening and
closing of schools. and the cyclical natureof businessessuchasfarmlngand
recreat ion.
An. explanation fro m Martin Lefkowitz, director of economic trends and
statistics for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce:
"Students who work in lhese summer activities aren't counted as unem·
played when they go back toschool unless they seek employment. Teachers,
on the other hand. aren'l counted as newly employed when they return to
classrooms."
Unless you plan to make acareerof understandingthisconcept It Is best to
drop il righ t there and simply accept the promises of those Involved with It
Ihal there are very sound professional reasons for seasonally adjusting.
Seasonally adjusted, unemplc_ ment in September rose to 11,260,000
wo rkers, about 455.000 more than in August. In other words, the seasonal
adjustment factor turned a decline in the raw data into a big increase.
In a political reference, it probably amounted to much more than simply a
big increase. because it also helped produce a record of sorts, one loaded
with emotion. The resulting jobless ra te was the highest since the Great
Depression.
This is not to say that unemployment in September was unfairly portrayed as being worse than it was. Some people say It was much worse, and
Ihey too can produce numbers to document if not prove their case.
But in seeking the political impact of the depressed employment sltua·
tion. some people are Inclined to go even further. That is, they would
multiply the numbers by two, to account for relatives orfriends for whom
the Idled individual might have some economic responsibility.

Berry's World

...

EAST LANSING, Mich. (NEAl
- Meet Bob Carr, a veritable political weathervane who has served
throughout the past decade as an
exceptionally reliable Indicator of
the direction in which the nation's
electoral winds are blowing.
A 39-year-old Michigan Democrat, Carr has sought election to the
House of Representatives five times
In the past 10 years from a congressional district whose voters are so
evenly divided between the two major parties that elections frequently
are decided by only a few hundred
votes.
Carr made his first bid for office ln
1972, but president Richard M.
Nixon won re-election in a landslide
that year and many Republican
candidates in marginal districts
were carried Into office on his coatta Us. Carr lost by only 457 votes.
In 1974, however, the Watergate
scandal produced a Democratic
landslide and Carrwaselected to his
first term -by a mere 647 votes out
of more than 147,000 ballots cast.
He was re-elected by more substantial margins in 1976 and 1978,
but In 1981 President Reagan led the
Republican P arty to a nationwide
sweep and Carr lost his seat to Rep.
Jim Dunn, R-Mich., by 2,Z74 votes
out of almost 220,000 ballots cast.
The boundaries of the district
have been changed this year to conform with the population shifts reported In the 1981 census, but Carr
and dunn are battling each other
again in a contest whose outcome Is
likely to reflect the na tionwide pat!·
ern of political preferences on Nov.
2.
There are few rivals to Michl·
gan's 6th Congressiona l District in
terms of bellwether political
venues, but two others are notable
because they provide the setting this
year for contests in which Demoera Is who held House sea Is ln the
late 1970s are seeking to topple Republicans who defeated them in the
Reaga n landslide of 198l.
In VIrginia's 8th Congressional
District, which Includes Washing·
ton's western suburbs, Republican
Stanford E. Parris and Democrat

the home of many RepublicanHerbert E. Harris have faced each
lea ning professionals and
other no fewer than three times in
the past five elections.
executives.
Pontiac ,a heavily Democratic inParris was elected in 1972but Hardustrial city long dependent on the
ris defea t~ him in 1974 and was
ailing auto Industry: has a large
re-elected in 1976 and 1978. Parris
black poulation and an unemployrecaptured the seat in 1981 but faces
ment rate which has hovered just
a Harris challenge again this year .
under :lJ ·percent throughout the
Here In Michigan, the setting for
past year ..
the Dunn-Carr contest Is a congresIn between those two urban censional district near the center of the
ters lie the small towns and rural
state's Lower Peninsula stretching
townships of Ingham and Livingfrom the state capital of Lansing.
Government workers in Lansing ston counties - Mason, Williamare believed to be about evenly di·
ston, Fowlerville, Howeii and
vided in their loyalty to the Republi· scores of other communities where
can and Democratic parties. East
political conservatism is a longLansing Is the site of Michigan State . standing tradition.
University, whose politically active
The unabashedly liberal Carr has
students and faculty members tend sought toshapethecontest as a "refto favor the Democrats, butlt also Is erendum on Reaganomics" al-

··.

Basketball

o_b_er_t_~_
al_te_rs ;·

Atlantic Dht-.6on
\\'
Phlladl'lphla
1
llos ton
'l
Nrw ./rrwy
I
WashtnR:on
I
NN· Vor11
u
f 'MJtr lll Dlviltkm

though he insists that "I'm not going ;,
to get a free ride on the backs of the ::
unemployed" · because jobless
workers disenchanted with the poll!·
leal process tend tovoteatrelatlvely
low rates.

The 39-year-old Dunn, a former ;:
house painter who has become a "
millionaire building contractor, sel- •
dam mentions his Republican afflli- •
allan, stresses his differences with ..
Reagan and runs on a campaign
slogan of "strong, fair, independent" - with emphasis on the last
word.
When the votes are counted here
this year, Carr's political future Is
again likely to be inextricably linked
to voter preferences far beyond the
6th district.

Today in history
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 2, the300thdayof1982. Thereare59daysleftln the
year.
Today's highlight in history:
On Nov. 2, 1917, Britain's Baifour Declaration on P alestine called for the
establishment of a Jewish national state.
On this date:
In 19:ll, Halle Selassle was crowned emperor of Ethiopia.
In 1956, the Hungarian government renounced the Communist bloc's
Warsaw Treaty.
In 1964, King Saud of Saudi Arabia was deposed and succeeded by King
Faisal.
In 1967, white mercenaries and black troops Invaded the Congo from
Portuguese Angola. ,
Ten years ago: American Indian activists seized the Bureau of Indian
Affairs building In Washington and demanded reforms of the bureau.
Five years ago: The Kremlln disclolled t11tt ~twSql!let&amp;nJIIIUICWtt was
far below expectations.
One year ago: President Reagan told Jordan's King Hussein that the
United Spites stood behind the Camp David accords for a Middle East
peace.
Todlly's birthday: Actor Burt Lancaster Is 70years old.
Thought for today: "Democracy Is a word all public men use.and DOiie
understand.".:... George Bernard Shaw, Irish-born wrlter (:fl66.1!M)' •

7. Akron Sr. \'lnC'mi ·Sr Mar.· 1111 1 7-1

1. Pt1 . fiB

n

1.101
0 \.(XJJ
1 . ~1

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point~ : 11. Mc&lt;'ortnf'lsv Oll• Mu r~;r n fl.! . 1 ~.
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Indiana
Cll'\'l'iand
Chlraao
Atlunta

n 1 rru

-

1
11

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em 2

n 1

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ll

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'Arrhbold ."ll. 16. Oak Uar1lor 2.1. 17. Wf'll
lnatun !.!. Ill llll'r. WNit Mllmn Milton
Union and Haw&gt;nm r Sou th1·a.~t J'l. 20.
Sptin,llbom 2lL ~ 1. Columbu~ &amp;•:&lt;~If'\' Hi '!!
llll'l. Coldw.nf'r and Umu Rath H . :N
lllf'r . St Mllr\'Sand HamO!on Badin 1."\
'lti 1lh'l. Cloclnna tl Or.&gt;r Park and ~t:u· t:rn
Pll'asant lfl.
CI.A"\SA
l. WNit Jrfff'r.llln t l\'r. 11-1~0. 2~1
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s-on. 24R
·
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~ . MC'Comb 1\'1. 9-0-Il 'll4
~- A.~ nland C' rM tviC'w 1\'1. !+-l~ll . Z!ll
li. F'~torla St. WPndelln 1\ 'r. 9·1Hl. 191
1. Mldvalr Indian Valli'\ 1\;onh r\'1 . K.( ~
I. U1
II. Bradford 1V1. 9.{).(\ !H
9. NPY.· F'trlla&lt;k&gt;l phla 1'uSC'ar·awa .~ Catho
Ur tV I, ~ 1 ·0. n
10, Rawson Cary-Rawson rV r. ~ HI. ~1
Other SC'hools l"ert&gt;lvlnR 10 or mon:•
poln1 s: . 11 , Bt&gt;rlln Cf&gt;ntrr WPsll'rn Rf'Sf'rvf' l'i. 12. CrookS\11Jp 26. ll. C«iarvlllf'
'l'.. 1". MQtZadol'(&gt; 22. 1~. lndf.&gt;pmdmc'f' 18.
li, VInton North Gdla 17. 17, ~onla
1.1. 18. Mllford Cf&gt;nt Pr Fairbanks U . 19.
Ashtabula Sl. John 12.

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unr

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1
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1
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(WWl 2
.!Ill 2

Mond!Q''-" Game.

No garl'IM .o;rhroull'd

_ 1'ut&gt;!wlily'11 GIIRW!Ii
Sa n Ok&gt;)(o u1 Nrw ,lf'I'Sf'\'
i)(&gt;froU at C1l'\•f'land
·
W a.~hln,l;l t on at Atlanta
Mllwauk(&gt;(' at Kansa s r uv

Dalla~ a t Houston
St&gt;atclr at Utah
Ponlarxl at PhoPnlx

1. 120
.
.
H. Cadiz ~ \\' 1. ~1. !fl
8, Nf't!ionvillt- \ 'ork H\' 1, ~. 13
Ill, Mllk•rsOOra Wf'st llolmr•s 1111 1. !H)

n. ~

I

1

\\'&amp;,TER!"&lt; ( 'ONO:Rf.:N( 't:

·

Ohio standings

Wf'dfW'!IdM,Y'II G1UJM&gt;11
Indiana a t Bo~on
~n ~a t Phlladl'tphla
Nf'W Jt&gt;rsey at Washingto n

ot• CoDr~ Football
ByT~AMoclaled

Chlrago ac Df&gt;lrolt
Houston at Do llas
1..(111; A11Rt'lt'!i at Dt&gt;nvf'r
San Antonio at Sl&gt;alllr
NY at Gokk&gt; n Slott'

PHM

BI~~:Ten Ccrnl.

l.af\11' Ovt&gt;rall
WLT " ' LT
6 0 0 ti 2 o
410 ~:10
4 10 ~ l 0
~ 2 0
6 30

Mlc htaan

Iowa
OhiO St.

DUmls

420

Y.1scoo.~ln

Hockey

•

•

..........
Ebston

641~\1

~
4
:1
."19 tO
4 ~
l
~
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26
2 .1249
(:ampbell t'onfel'ellet&gt;
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Buffalo
Hartford

Chlca~

Sl. loul.'l
Toron1o

Dt&gt;troll

~.

WlnnlpeR
Los An,tf'k'!i
Calgary
F'...dmonl on
VancouVA"

~®f~IL ·'!liE~ bi'~WI/AJ!.A

WASHINGTON- I have a suggestion for American voters today:
On your way out the door to vote,
take a look around your home.
For just about every Item you see
- the butter, beer , eggs and milk in
your refrigerator, the bread and
sugar in the cupboard, the livingroom furniture, the fixtures in your
kitchen and bathroom, the bikes
and mowers on the lawn, the car
that you'll drive to the polling place
- there is a political action commit·
tee that has been trying to infiuence
your vote.
They Include the Amalgamated
Sugar Co. PAC; Land 0' Lakes Inc.
PAC: Anheuser-Busch Co. PAC;
Dairymen Inc. PAC: Wickes Corporation PAC; American Standard
Inc. Good Government Fund; and
the Taro Company Employees for
Better Government Committee.
Even Hallmark greeting cards
and Orkin exterminators have
PACs that channel money to congressional candidates they hope will
give them a break in the new
Congress .
There are now 3,149 political action committees in the United

$600).

- McDonald's, Burger King,
Hardee's and White Castle all have
their political action committees.
- The American Nazi Party's
National Soclalis National Election
Committee has been mercifully inactive !his year, but it stili exists,

•

waiting to goose-step onto the stage.
- There are at least 20 strongly
pro-Israel PACs, including Americans for Better Citizenship, Arizona
Politicaiiy Inclined Citizens, Americans for Good Government, and the
Desert Caucus.
- The Armenian National Committee PAC has given$26,250 to five
candidates this year, including
$10,000 to Gov. Jerry Brown's campaign for the Senate in California .
~ - Filipino physicians practicing
in this country have a PAC that donated a total of $750 to Sen. Paul
Sarbanes, D-Md., and Rep. Romano Mazzoli, D-Ky.
-PAC for 2, based in Los Banos,
Calif., advocates limiting members
of Congress to two terms. Strangely,
it has been inactive this ye.,r, according to the federal election
records.
THE ECLECTIC AIRPLANE :
The war in Lebanon proved the effectiveness of the Israeli Kflr jet, a
hodgepodge of aircraft design the
Israelis have been working on since
about 1970.
The Kflr, which was supposed to
be ready for the 1973 war but never

made it into action, Is based on a
French Mirage airirame and powered by a General Electric J ·79
engine, the same one that's used In
the F-4 Phantom.
According to a CIA report , "the
Kfir can fly at more than twice the
speed of sound and can be used
either as an Interceptor or a groundattack aircraft." The plane's development was set back for a couple of
years while the Israelis reworked It
to overcome the damage caused by
an East German spy who had infUtrated the Israeli aircraft industry.

·~

::
::
::
•.
•'·
,·,.
,.
::
•.
;:
•·
•.

.

In their annoying way, the Israe-- •·
lis didn't tell the United States about
their great new warplane. The CIA '
Only learned about the Kflr when an
internal Israeli message was
intercepted.
One problem with the hot Israeli
plane Is its hotshot Israeli pilots. According to the CIA, the Israelis have
a tendency to fly their planes beyond
normal stress limits.
In fact, the month after the Kflr
was publicly unveiled in 1975, one of
the planes was lost over the Mediterranean when It "reportedly disintegrated while accelerating at high
speed."

6

~

~

I
:1

2
:1
2

M .12
47 49
66 65
~

fi.."l

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7
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w

The CIA man continued, " Now, ·
Treumann Is no dummy and he .'
lived in Queens long enough to know 1: ..,
that ridlng .the New York subway Is :.~.
far more dangerous than being a '::.
'spy for a Co1llffiunlst country. Sp "j-:•
rather than risk his life on the IRT; · ! "
he decided to come in from the· ,,) ,.,.
cold."
·'

DOONESBURY : &lt;;
"

...-.
I 'G

)

. 1--

: 4~:
,:...

ctl;i
1· ('.1 J

....

)..

'

Ma!~lllon Ill.~. ~

.1. Clnrlnnall PrlnCl'IOO

....

'

:1~1

point~

....

'

TEXA.I.i RANGERS-NafTl('(j ~ Ra·
df'r. manaaPr. and sl,llfl('d him to a 001'·
yt&gt;ar ronlriK' t.
F0011IALL
Unll.ed Slit"' Foodllllll Ltap
LOS ANGELES EXPRE~-Named
J Prry WUllams and LyiP Smith an&gt;a
srouts.

COLUMBUS. 0~ tAPI -- How a state
parwl of ~port&amp; wrltt&gt;n and broadcastPI'!
ra nks Ohio hiRh schOol foot ba ll teams thL'I
wN'k· for Tht&gt; AMOCiatfd ~s tnanw of
SC'hool~. playoff divisions In parenthf"st&gt;s,
won- lfl!i l I'{'('OI"ds and polntsr :

standing loan to Polan! of $2 billion.
When Treumann informed them he ,.
,.
couldn't make the monthly pay- ,.
ment, Bowery repossessed his car.
Treumann sent a message to the
Minister of Finance asking him to '·
settle up Poland's debt with Bowery ::
Savings 5o he could gethlscarback. _:.
But the Minister cabled back, 'Im·
possible to do. From now on take the :0

subway.'"

1\tne-rtcan Lequr
BOSTON REO SOX-Plam:l Tony Pl'r·
l'l., drsiRnatf'd hlltf'r , on wa tvprs, for ttl('
purpo.... of R{vlna him his uncondlt1onal
N'lf'!ISf'.
CHICAGO WHITE SOX-Namf'd Oavl'
Dunran plt ct\1~ roach, and Ed Brinkman
lnl1f'kl lnstnrC'Ior.
MI NNF.rol'A 1WINS-Tradf'd J oh n Pa·
Cf'lla. pltct.&gt;r. to thPTt&gt;lt.IIS Ra~rrs for
I..Rn Whltt&gt;house. pllchl&gt;r.

2.

800

40 0
.1 1 0
220
2 20
1 :1 0
040

li·Baldwln-W' \'('(&gt;
Moun! Union
Hetdt&gt;lbefll
capita l
W0011ter
Muskl11,1tum

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

1 10
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170
260

11-0hto Northl&gt;rn

62o

WI11Pntlf&gt;1-R

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2 20
ouerbetn
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[)('nlson
I .1 o
Mll.lirlta
040
li·CII nched LraRUf" playorr Jx&gt;rths
Ohk» Valley CoN'.

li 2 11
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111. A-0-0, '?i t
4, Sandusky riL 9-{).(1. 'Zl1
~ 111t&gt;1 . Miami TraC'f&gt; !Ill . Wfl. and
Bf&gt;rf'a 11 1. 9-0.0, 1:11
7, Canton McKJnlc&gt;y tiL 8-1 -n ll'l
R, MPntor Lclkf' CatOOI\c til l. 6-().2, 61
9. Younj;tstown Mooney 1111 . 7-1-0. f7
10. Gahanna til , 8-1.{), 43
Othf&gt;r M"hOOls l'('('('!vl nR 10 or mon&gt;
points: . 11 . Au~tlntown FITch .1112, Columbus Eai\lmoor 25. 1J t llf&gt; l. Elida a nd
Cmtw111f&gt; 21 . 15, Ca nton Gk'nOak 19. 16
Ok&gt;l. TolrdoSt. Francis, ToledoCf&gt;nTral
Ca tholic. Toledo WhllmPr a nd Vl111'f'nt
Waf""f"N1 1 ~. M niP!. WOO!tt'l" a nd Chardon
U . 22 t lk&gt;l, Ctnclnnatl La.Sallf&gt; and Uppt&gt;r
Arllnlflon 10.
CLAI!l! .U
1. Urbana tiD I. 9..0.0. 2til
t , lrMon IW), .... ! II
.1, SINbf&gt;nviiiP 1111 . ~. 716

44o
2 ~·1
0110

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MurraySt
040
HOO!IIf&gt;r·Bu&lt;.iteyt&gt; Conl

Monday'• SpoN 'l'nnllactltm!l
BASE BALL
OWNERS- F'lred BowiP Kuhn. rommls-

ClnciMall

,._

E . Kl'ntucky
Akron

Transactions

1,

240 3~0
2 4 0 "2 6 0
1 ~ 0 3 ~ 0
Mlchl~t~n St .
1 ~ 0 11 0
Nor1hwt'Sit'rn
160 2 1 0
Mld-Mlerican Coni.
LeajPe Ovrrall
WLT WLT
4 1 I 5 2 1
C. MlchiRan
520 ~20
Bow l!~ Grl'f'n
420 620
Miami, Ohio
4 2 0 ~JO
OhiO U.
no 4 4 o
Ball S1 .
W. Mtchij!an
3 2 1 52 I
430 540
240 2~0
N. ltllnols
060 080
E . Mtchlaan
060 080
KPnl Sl .
ON&amp;Conl
t.naw 0vrra11
WLT WLT

Le~

High school ratings

I t'\' ~

'!

J
1
7
4 6
4 6

~

12

,.

::

Art Buchwald

____

\

2
7

16

Mond.,'• Ganw

Intelligence details concerning model kit of the Stealth bomber. But
what really piqued our interest was
Treumann's defection.
"The Polish government's big- when three checks he wrote against
gest mistake," he said, "was send· the Los Alamos Employees Credit
lng a top banker to the U.S. to spy for Union bounced."
"The man reaiiy sounds Inept at
them. Our people knew that there
was no change of Polan! paying keeping his cover," I said.
"When Treumann finally came
back Its debt to the Western banks,
so the man had to be sent to the over to our side he said it wasn't his
United States for another reason. fault. The Polish Minister of Finance kept bugging him tO get Irvin
You don't need a top banker to renegotiate a Polish loan he kept produc- Trust off his back, and the Warsaw
Pact commander kept badgering
Ing Poland 's liabilities .on
him on how many nuclear submamlcro!Um. He once tried to open up
a new account at the bank of Amer- rines were stationed In New Lonica and instead of a pressure cooker ' don. the poor man never could keep
his cables straight. "
he asked if he could have an MX
"Is that why he defected?"
missile. Once he offered to pay back
"No, strangely enough it was a
Interest on the Polish debt .to the
little thing that got him angry. The
Continental Bank of Chicago if the
Bowery Savings Bank held an outvice president would give,..his son a

........

~

1'\A
Z!

Calaary 6. ~w Jf'nl£'Y :1
Tuftlday'11 Ganw
Van«H.rvf'r at ~ebe&lt;'
Mlnl'll'!lOta a t Hartford
NPW Jf'fYy a l Montn&gt;al
Plt!sbui'J[h at NY Is landers
Dt&gt;trol t a t Sr.Loul~
Wedneld"'• Gamt&gt;11
Boston a l Buffalo
NY lslandr~ at Df'trolt
Wash tmcton at ChlcafiiO
Wlnnltx11: at Ed roonton
Toronto at L.os AnRPif&gt;s

ROUNDUP ON ~ CMWAI&amp;N ~L.
States, and they have contributed
more than $81 million to the congressional candidates you'll be assessing today. To get a sampling of
"PACs Americana," my associate
Tony Capacclo (with the help of Edward Roeder, a veteran Washing·
ton journalist who specializes in
campaign financing I combed election records for some of the offbeat
committees that have tried to influence your vote today. Here are a
few:
- The Silver Dollar PAC and the
·Hard Money Political Victory
Fund, which want the country back
on the gold standard or some other
precious-metal currency base.
(American Space PAC, Campgian for Space PAC and Citizens for
Space PAC are pushing for further
flights into the stratosphere (on a
combined total contribution of

~2
t.1
0 44 411
254.114."1
.1 8
1 :11 ~
Smythe 01\tUon

6

30

By JOE MOOSIDL
AP Sports Writer
CHICAGO !API - Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn. who
help guide the sport to a peak of
popularity and oversaw unprecedented changes. fell victim to the
minority that opposed him.
" It took me seven years bul I fi nally got him. " sa id Atla nta Braves

owner Ted Turner, one of five National League owners who banded
together Monday to vote Kuhn out of
office.
Kuhn had fined Turner $10,000 in
1976 for tampering and then suspended him from baseball for a year
the following January.

Leaders
•
rematn
•
sametn

APpoll
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cincinnati Moeller, Urbana and West
Jefferson, all unbeaten and untied In
nine games, kept their leads today
In The Associated Press' Ohio high
school football ratings.
The final vote lly a statewide
panel of sports writers and broadcasters will be taken after the last
round of regular-season games this
weekend.
Moeller, the season-long leader In
Class AAA, owned the biggest margin of the leaders. The Crusaders

VOTED OUT Baseball
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
speaks at a press conference
Monday in Chicago after being
fired by the National Leaglle
owners. (AP Laserphoto).

quarters vote necessary for an lncomlrig commissioner but afterthat
It should be a simple majority . In
any other election , 70 percent would
be a landslide," mused the 56-yearold Ku hn .
At the end of his term. Kuhn will
have served as commissioner of
baseba ll longer than anyone except
Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis.
who reigned for 24 years.
Ironically. one ofthose being mentioned as next the commissioner Is
Ku hn hlmsell.
"I hope Bowie will be a ca ndi·
date," said San Diego Padres president Ballard Smith, who pointed out
that those who voted against Kuhn
did not have thr power Ia elect a new
commissioner .

Sa id Monlrral Expos president
and chief ex!'Cutlve officer John
McHale- who has also been mentioned as a possible candidate: "It's a
longshot. Bul who knows. In eight
months. Bowie Kuhn might still be
there and we'll find oul he's lhe
best."
Kuhn said he was awa re of the
possibility of again becoming
commlssionl&gt;r.

Also said tobe in contention fort he
job are former New Jersey Gov.
Brendan Byrne. AL Presidenl Lee
MacPhail and NL attorney Louis
Haynes.
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Top Twenty
Thf'TopTwmry lf'ams In The Associ·
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NG Pirates jump to
16th in Class A race

U·

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Coach John Blake's North Gallla
Pirates jumped two notches In this
week's Class A Associated Press
Ratings. The Pirates, S-1 on the
year, were ranked 16th.
I·

had 351 points to 285 for runnerup
Massillon and 251 for third-place
Cincinnati Princeton.
However, Moeller must play at
Princeton Friday night in what
should be a showdown for the Class
AAA poll cha mpionship. Massillon
also has a big date, playing visiting
Ca nton McKinley, seventh-ranked
statewide, Saturday afte rnoon.
Urbana stayed In front In Class
AA, earning 268 points to 219 for
second-rated Ironton and 216 for
No.3-ranked Steubenville.
West Jefferson, the Class A frontrunner, was involved In the closest
race. The Roughriders have 293
points, runnerup Cincinnati Summit Country Day 248, third-place
Newark Ca thollc 226and No. 4-rated
McComb220.
Youngstown Mooney (8-1-01
made an appearance In the Class
AAA top 10, moving Into the No.9
spot, while Rawson Cary-Rawson
(8-1-0) took over the lOth position In
Class A.
The Class AA top !Ohad the same
schools as a week ago although
there was some minor shuffling.
In Class AAA, Sandusky was
fourth again with Miami Trace and
Berea tied for fifth, Mentor Lake
Ca thollc eighth and' Gahanna lOth.
Elyria Catholic kept fourth In
Class AA. Bellevue was fifth , Circle\1lle sixth, Akron St. VlncentSt.Mary seventh, Cadiz eighth,
Nelsonville-York ninth and Millersburg West Holmes lOth.
In Class A, Ashland Crestview remained In fifth, Fostora St. Wendelln sixth, Midvale Indian Valley
North seventh, Bradford eighth and
New Philadelphia Tuscarawas Catholic ninth.

Friday's games
Gallipolis at Portsmouth
Waverly at Athens
Jackson at Meigs
Ironton at Logan
North Ga!Ua at Kyger Creek
Southwestern at Hannan Trace
Coal Grove at Fairland
Symmes Valley at Rock Hill
Logan at Pt. Pleasant
Williamstown at Wahama.
Saturday's game:
Southern at Eastern.

'·

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3

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HAMMOND BROUGHT DOWN - Meigs' sophomore fuUback Mark Hanunond (42) is brought down
on this play by Southern's Richard Hill (78). Blocking

RICHFIELD, Ohio (AP) - The
Cleveland Cavaliers, two losses Into
the ciirrent National Basketball As·
soclatlon season, can make history
tonight - and the Detroit Pistons
would Jlke nothing better than to
lend a helping hand.
.
If oevtand loseS to the Pistons, It
would be the Cavaliers' 22nd
straight loss over the last two sea·.
sons, earning them a spot In the
NBA record book.
The one-season consecutive-loss
record belongS to the Philadelphia
76ers of 1973, · who dropped ~
straight games.
Cleveland dropjled)9 games In a
row to close last season. Losses to
!hi! Boston Celtics and the MUwaukee Bucks opened the 1982-83 sea·
son, tying the Cavalieri! .with the
Pistons ·for the most consecutive
losses aver two~. Detroit 110
doubt would be happY to let 9reland take away !hi! dubious dlstiJ1c.
!Jon rt mostdefeata In a roN.
NBA spokesman Alex Sachare

said Monday that the two-season
losing streak would be listed In the
record books next season. Previously, the league has recognized
only the single-season losing streak.
"The record established In one
season will stay In the book,': he
said, "and right below It wtll be the
longest streak over more than one

in foreground is Marauder reserve Matt Riffle (:12) .
Meigs won, 22-0. Keith Wio;ccup photo.

Meigs reserves blank Southern, 22-0
POMEROY - The Meigs Marauder reserves scored a touchdown in each of the last three
quarters here Monday night to shut
out a stubborn Southern Tornado
reserve team, 22-0.
Meigs lit thescoreboardwithl :06
left in the first half when sophomore
Jackie Welker picked off a pass and
rambled 54 ya rds untouched. South·
ern had attempted the pass from
punt formation on fourth down.
Freshman Mike Chancey fired the
two point conversion to Welker to
make It 8-0 at the half.
Midway through the third period,
sophomore Mark Hammond
pounded in from four ya rds for
Meigs' second six-pointer. Chancey's pass for the extras was
intercepted.
Sophomore Joey Barton, who led
the Marauder ball carriers with TI
yards In 15 carries, scored the final
Meigs IDona one yard run . Chancey passed to sophomore Dan Tho-

mas for the extras.
In addition to Ba11on's totals.
Hammond had J8 ya rds on 10 carries. Sophomore end Scott Gheen
caught two passes forTI yards for
the little Marauders.
Fullback Charlie Boso led the Tornado rushers with 39 ya rds in 22
t1ies. David Ebersbach had a field
day as a receiver as the end caught
four passes for 89 ya rds.
Sophomores Jay Whittington.
Butch Stiles. and Mat I Riffle along
with juniors Donnie Mohler and
Brian Zirkle and freshman Kevin
Meadows led a strong Meigs defensive charge.
Sean Grueser, Jeff Connolly. Joe
Woife. Boso, and Ebersbach led Ihe
Tornado defenders.
Coach Larry Grimes' little Mara uders end their season at 5-3.

Total .\"cli 'Ch
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SJ t JACKSON PIKE Rt . 35 WEST
Phone 446 · 4524
BARGAIN MAriNEES ON SAT &amp; SUN
ALl SEAtS JUST S 1.00
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY S 2 00

~CT 29 thru NOV ~
FRIDAY lhru THURSDAY ,

M(•igs-Scrulhem stat..;
l~ · partnwnt

Firs t downs
Yards rushing
Yards pussi ng

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11
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NobOdy can protect your

AUIO ......... ._ __,
Look to Ulfor qudty Auto IIIIUI'IIIC8 CXMrltQII, low
rates. atlrllcfllle diloounta, and fall, fair cfalrnii8Mca.
Cduatoday.

·Cavs can make history tonight , - - - - - , . - -- - - - 1

Vi

Kuhn, whose term wUJ expire
Aug.13, 1983, after 14 ~ years as
commissioner, got the support of 18
of baseball's owners 26owners durIng their half-hour meeting Monday. But under the sport's rules,
Kuhn needed three-quarters approval in both leagues, and he dldn't get
It after owners faUedtoreachacompromlse that would have kept him In
office.
The AL voted 11-3 in favor of Kuhn
while the NL voted 7-5 in favor. But
Kuhn needed nlne favora ble votes
from the NL In order to gain a thi rd
seven-year term.
Voting against Kuhn In the NL in
addition toTurnerwereNelson Doubleday of the New York Mets; John
McMullen of the Houston Astros;
August A. Busch Jr. of the St. Louis
Cardinals and William Williams of
the Cincinnati Reds.
Opposing Kuhn in the AL were
George Steinbrenner of the New
York Yankees; Eddie Chiles of the
Texas Rangers, and George Argy ros of the Seattle Mariners.
Kuhn, who will remain at his
$250,000-a-year post until his term
runs out , said: "I'm disappointed . I
firmly believe there will be another
commissioner. But it will be difficult
to get the necessary votes to appoint
another person."
"I don't object to the th ree-

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Purdue

Nllklnal H(J(·ktJy Ll&gt;qut&gt;
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Patrick Dlvt!Hn
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Polish defector4---------------------------------------------" Ya know. I think I'm going to miss these Sunday walks when the football strike is settled."

4, Elyria Catholk Hill . 3.6fl. l6.l
~. IWllt'\•UP 41111 , ~ 1.~
6. ClrC'lr\1UP i ll !. !t-0.0. J.'lli

By The "-ocla&amp;ed Pr811
F.ASTERN CONFEHENfE

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Baseball owners oust Chief Bowie Kuhn

Scoreboard ...

Offbeat lobbies.....___________Ia_ck_A_nd_er_so_n ;:

One of the biggest deadbeats, as
far as International loans are concerned, Is Poland, The myth that
Poland Is not bankrupt Is being kept
alive by every Western bank, because no one wants to foreclsoe on It
at this time.
How did Poland and the U.S.
banks get Into such a mess? It now
turns out that the highest ranking
Polish banker in the United States
was also a Polish spy.
The banker's name Is Andrzej
Treumann and he had just defected
toour slde, and !snow somewhere In
the U.S. as a guest of the CIA Mr.
Treumann was ostensibly In charge
of renegotiating the Polish debt with
the banks in the West.
My source at CIA's headquarters
In .Langley filled me In on a few

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

are

~

season."

Cleveland Coach Tom Nlssalke
reaDy doesn't know much about th~
streak that began. last March 19 in
Milwaukee. He was hired only a
week before the 1982-83 season
_
began:
He said It might be quite a few
more games before the Cavaliers
becoine a respectable NBA squad.
"I told the players I can see how
the !ellm loll a let of games, 81111 how
they won only 15 last year," NIJ.
salke said. "It Lln't ·iiO!ni to . be
easy."
.
Cleveland bu had five coaches
since bu.slnellman Ted Stepien
. bolllht the team tn llllll.

,..

I

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

I

Sports World

Owners abandon
'safety valve'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Tuesday, November2,1982

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Radar new Texas Rangers manager
By DAVE GOLDBERG
AP Sports Writer
With Doug Rader named to manage the Texas Rangers, four or perhaps five more managerial jobs
remain to be filled. But most of
1983's major league managers will
certainly fit the famlllar mold - a
faithful organization man or a man
previously hired and fired .
Rader was named Monday to
manage the Range,rs, leaving vacancies to befilledlnOakland, Baltimore, California and Cleveland,
where Mike Ferraro will be named
as soon as a contract Is work"i out.
There are also the New York Yankees, where a perpetual vacancy
could be said to exist. Clyde King
still holds forth officially, but he will
return to the front office If owner
George Steinbrenner can reach a
satisfactory agreement that would
make Billy Martin Yankees manager for a third time.
Martin, who left Oakland by mutual agreement, Is one of those grand
old names floating around. A vete-

By WILL GRIMSLEY
AP Special Correspondent
Club owners have just ripped the spine out of major league baseball. It
now becomes a jellyfish organization with Its Integrity laid bare a nd left
defenseless.
When Bowie Kuhn failed Monday In Chicago to ge t enough votes for
extension of his 14 years as commissioner, baseball appa rently took the first
steps toward Installing a corporate-like structure of administration and
abandoning a the safety va lve dating back to th e 1919 Black Sox scandal
which brought the e lection of tough, old Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis as
the first commissioner.
Dumping of Kuhn was a black day in the game's history.
Landis, with his s haggy hair a nd bushy eyebrows. became the conscience
of the game, which had just been dirtied by a bribing scanda l, and a
guardian of Its ethics. He left a legacy.
Judge Frank McGarr of the U.S. District Court In Chicago referred to the
commissioner's broad powers when he upheld Kuhn In a suit brought by
Oakland owner Charlie Finley In 1977.
"You gentlemen ... had made up yourmlnds ... fora situation to be created
where somebody would be given authority, If I may put It brutally, to save
you from yourselves."
Now who's going to save the owners from themselves?
It Is a hodgepodge group with varied backgrounds and Interests shipbuilders, book publishers. hamburger kings. onetime movie stars,
predominantly In the game for business reasons, few with genuine baseball
roots long associated with the Wrlgleys and the Stonehams.
Kuhn antagonized many because of the even-handed manner In which he
administered rigid baseball law. He stepped on toes. He refused to be the
owners' pawn . Yet he was constantly criticized for his ac tions and often 1 '
railed In the press as a timid czar who tip-toed past recurring crises.
Nothing could be farther from the truth. A towering, distinguished figure,
By HERSCHEL NJSSENSON
educated at Princeton and VIrginia Law, Kuhn administered theofflcewith
AP Sports Writer
decorum - never making waves, rigidly conscious of the "best Interests of
The Pitt Panthers opened a comthe game."
manding lead !Dday In The AssoBaseball prospered under his jurisdiction.
ciated Press college football poll,
Even his severest critics, such as theY ankees' George Steinbrenner and
while Washington fell from second
Brad Corbett, when he owned the Rangers, acknowledged he was an honest
to
lOth and Southern Methodist
man with Impeccable principles. The chief fault, said his enemies, was his
moved
past Georgia ln!Dtherunnerlack of business and promotional Instincts needed for the modern, moneyup
position,
Its highest ranking In 32
loaded commercial market.
years.
The owners don't want a strong man. They want somebody they can bend
In addition, Arizona State shot
tD their will. Despite his low profile, Kuhn has proved- as did A.B. "Happy"
from
seventh place to fourth, while
Chandler - a commissioner of unshakeable Integrity .
Miami
and Auburn dropped out of
He has dealt with players and owners a like, disdaining favoritism and
the Top Twenty and Maryland and
giving no particular privilege to the bosses who paid his salary. It was this
Florida replaced them.
unwavering honesry that brought his undoing.
Pitt, a 63-14 winner over LouisHe suspended Steinbrenner for a year for illegal political contributions.
received 48 of 60 first-place
ville,
"He's ruled agains t m e 11 times In 11 cases but !don't hold It against hlm-1
votes
and 1,181 of a possible 1,200
think he does what he thinks Is right," said the Yankee boss.
points from a nationwide panel of
He fined a nd suspended Atlanta's Ted Turner for tampering with free
sports writers and sportscasters.
agent Gary Matthews. "It took me seven years, but !finally got him," said
SMU trounced Texas A&amp;M 47-9
Turner after casting his vote against Kuhn . He fined San Otego's hamand nosed past Georgia Into second
burger king, Ray Kroc. $100,000 for Idly expressing Interest In ball players
place with five first-place votes and
already under contract- a tampering abuse.
1,005polnts. Second Is the Mustangs'
He Invited the lasting Ire of both Charlie Finley ofthe Oakland A's and and
highest standing since they were
Cincinnati's Influential Bob Howsam by voiding the sale of pitcher VIda
No.1 for two weeks during the 1950
Blue to the Reds. He was constantly at odds with Finley, once m aking him
season.
sign Blue to a contract when the latter was a holdout and also voiding a $3.5
Georgia received three firsts and
million sale of Blue to the Yanke '·Joe Rudl and Rollle Fingers tD the Red
1,002 points following a 34-3 triumph
Sox.
over Memphis State and Artzona
The St. Louis Cardinals' August Busch held a grudge because Kuhn
State, which turned back Southern
ordered owners to open camps during the work stoppage In 1976. Kuhn
California 17-10, earned three firsts
antagonized the Mets' Nelson Doubleday by supporting revenue sharing
and 986 points.
and Houston 's John McMullen for not projecting himself Into the 1981
Pitt, SMU, Georgia and Arizona
players' strike.
Baseball super stars have not been sacrosanct. Kuhn ordered Willie Mays State are unbeaten and untied, as Is
Arkansas, which defeated Rlce24-6.
to divest himself of all baseball connections after he took a job at an Atlantic
City casino. He refused to allow Hank Aaron to lay out of a road game so his The Razorbacks received the rerecord home run could be hit In Atlanta. He dealt firmly but sympathetically maining first-place vote and 964
points In holding onto fifth place.
with Fergie Jenkins' drug case. Noone has been Immune.
Rounding out the Top Ten are NeBowie upheld the highest standardsofthegame-without fear or favor. A
braska, Penn State, Alabama,
guy ca n't expect more than that.
UCLA and Washington.
Nebraska remained No.6 with 891
points following a 52-0 rout of Kan sas. Penn State trounced Boston
College 52-17 and. climbed from
eighth to seventh, while Alabama
downed Mississippi State ll-12 and
rose from ninth to eighth with 754
points.
man for the union . "There's less moBy IRA ROSENFELD
UCLA, unbeaten but once tied,
ney there than meets the eye."
AP Sports Writer
whipped Oregon 40-12 and jumped
Following an occasionally
NEW YORK (API - Negotiafrom 11th to ninth with 727 points.
stormy briefing with union leaders
tions aimed ending the six-week old
on management's newest offer,
National Football League players'
about
half a dozen players spoke to
strike were recessed Monday night
newsmen to ex press their
after an air of optimism reverted
disappointment.
once again to frustration .
"I don't think we'll have a settlePlayer representatives. angered
ment now until January," said Marover a management wage-scale
vin Powell, player representative of
proposal, charged the club owners
the New York Jets.
with moving backwa1 d In negotia"We are back to Square One on
tions. They later vented their anger
some of the economic Issues," said
In a one-hour meeting with mediaNEW PHILADELPHIA, Ohio
the Detroit Lions' Stan White, vice
tor Sam Kagel.
( AP) - Chuck Hutchison, a former
president of the union's executive Ohio State All-American and CleveKagel promised to convey their
committee.
feelings to the club owners' negotialand Browns lineman, says the UniAnd Don Hasselbeck, player re!Drs. Shortly afterward, It was anted States Football League has a
presentative of the New England sounder base than the defunct
nounced there would be no further
Patriots, said, "It's really kind of World Football League.
talks Monday night.
ridiculous. We're not getting any
Earlier Monday, Tex Schramm,
Hutchison, a natlveofnearbyCarcloser we're not going to reach an
chalnnan of the NFL 's competition
rollton, serves as player personnel
agreement by doing something like dlrec!Dr and offensive line coach for
committee, said a seventh regular
this."
the Oakland Invaders of the USFL.
season weekend would be lost If the
But Jim Miller, a spokesman for
strike was not settled by mid"The biggest difference between
the owners, discounted the serious- us and the WFL Is that we have
Tuesday, and that the league was
ness of the Issue, calling It "a small
terri!Drial rights when It comes tD
c()nslderlng using conference
rather than division races to deter- snag typical of labor negotla lions ...
acqulrtng players," the 32-year-old
This Is the same kind of snag the
Hutchison said from his office
mine playoff berths.
union threw at us last night when
Oakland.
In a related development, four
they proposed a three-year
" All12 teams have five colleges In
players, threeofthemontheunlon's
their area that they can draw from
executive committee, held an Im- contract."
Later the player representatives
promptu meeting with Commis- two big schools, two medium
sioner Pete Rozelle at the league's demanded and were granted a
schools and one small school. We
meeting with Kagel.
Park Avenue headquarters, just a
can draft Incoming college players
, only from those schools, unless a
few blocks from th~ site of the negoschool Is In an area that Is not near a
tiations. They saJd Rozelle Indicated Howard top Rio runner
USFL franchise," he said.
that an 11-game regular season in Indian Summer Run
might be more \(!able than the 12·
"The WFL owners went broke by
OXFORD - Rio Grande Colgame season which he and club
paylng enormous salaries because
owners sald thi!y had been trying so Iege'sdlstancerunnlngteamtumed
ofblddlngwars. Thatwreck.edthem ·
In a stellar performance Sunday af·
hard tD salvage.
after a couple of years. Our system
ternoon at the JndtanSumrnerRun.
wt11 save money," he said.
.
nemanagementproposalwhlch
More than 500 runners particiHutchison said the WFL tried to
: raised the players' Ire calls for sign- pated In the race, sponsored by the
build a ~"e~Ntatlon by signing·such
: Ing and mcenttve bonuses to be part organization Mothers Against
big II{IJ1'leS as Larry Csonka, Jim
· of any mJnlmlllll wage. 1be union Dnmk Driving (MAim) .
Klick and Paul Wp11eld to huge
InsistS that part of the prqlOSIII. as
Phil Howard was the top Rio
contracts.
wrlttl!lllsachangelnleqlll!pollcy. Grande runner with~ stellar f~
"Wearebulldingfromtheorganlthe owners' plan, If a place tlnlsh ln. 34:43. He was fol.
zatlonal and administrative point of
player sipS for fM),OOl and tecelves lowed by J~ Walter In 25th
vtew," he sald. "With people 1111e
. a $10 00 11gn1ng bonUI, he meets the_ (37: 31), CoachKevlnPurcellln32nd · Goorge Allen and :John Ralston Jn
: requirements of the mlJilmum (38:0&lt;1) and Steve Leith, sutferll1g this league, we have prov~
• wage,"saldDaveSherldan.~ from a leg Injury, 63rd.
wtnnera."

Panthers·
up lead in
APPoll

Players strike still
on, talks to continue

Hutchinson
says USFL
base 'sound'

"Under

Tuesday, November 2,1982

ran of New York (twice) , Mln~e­
sota, Detroit, Texas and Oaklanu,

he's a also a candidate for the An·
gels job left vacant by the resignation of Gene Mauch. Another
perennial Is John McNamara, fired
In mid season by the Clnclnna ti
Reds, and a posslbllty for both West
Coast openings. If It's Oakland, It
would be the second time there for
him.
Then there's Joe Altobelll, a Yankee coach and former San Francisco manager who's a candidate In
Baltimore, where Earl Weaver retired at the end of the season. If he
doesn't get It, the manager there
probably will be one of two longtime
organization men- Cal Rlpken Sr.
or Ray Miller.
And there's Jim Fregosl, fired by
the Angels last year and now a candidate for the Oakland job vacated
by Martin.
In fact, Rader Is something of a
rare bird. He has neither managed
In the majors nor served as a coach
or minor league manager for the
team he will manage - his minor
league experience was In the San

........

RANGERS' NEW SKIPPER
-Doug Raderwearsthecapand
holds the shirt emblematic of his
new job as manager of the Texas
Rangers. ( AP Laserphoto).

Diego system.
There figure to be only two managers with similar experience - or
lack of same - like Rader next
year: Ferraro, a Yank.eecoach, and
Lee Ella of the Chicago Cubs. And
Ella, a coach with ·t he Phlllles, got
the Cubs job last year after his old
Philadelphia boss Dallas Green became the Cubs' general manager.
At the start of the 1982 season, In
fact,l7 of the 71i managers had man
aged another major league team
previously and ail the others but
Ella had coached or managed In
their team's organization. Thirteen
of the 22 managers now signed are
also ex-managers and all but Ella
and Rader are In the second
category.
Since the season ended, there
have been four new managers
signed. Three of them - Harvey
Kuenn of Milwaukee, Bob Lillis of
Houston and Russ Nixon of Cincinnati were coaches who took over for
fired managers In midseason and
were extended.

;vt

f:t

••

Holiday foods, decorations to be
featured at Wednesday workshop

•

,.

,.

~

I

.....
I
·l\..1".;; •.

:

DEDICATION- First Southern Baptist church

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'

ofPorneroywlllbededlcatedlnapubllcservtceat2:30
p.m. Sunday.

First Southern Baptist
Church dedication Sunday
A dedication service for the new
building of First Southern Bapllst
Church, 41872 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, wtll be held at 2: .ll p.m .
Sunday.
The public Is Invited to attend. The
program will Include recognition of
all those who participated In erecting the structure_
New pas!Dr of the congregation Is
. Rev. David Hunt, who came tD the
Pomeroy church from Alabama
where he pastored a Southern Baptist church for several months. He
and his wife, Linda, and their child-

ren, Michael, three, and Christy,
two, reside In the Mulberry Avenue
property which formerly served as
thechurchofthe.localcongregatlon.
Rev. Hunt graduated from Baptist Bible Institute, Gracevtlle, F1a.
He and his wife are Columbus
natives.
Beginning Sunday evening, the
church will be In revival services.
Rev. Michael Hunt, father of the
new pas!Dr, will be the evangelist.
He Is the pastor of Salem Baptist
Church In Columbus. Services will
continue through Frtday, Nov.12.

NEW PASTOR- Rev. David
Hunt.

'

TIJESDAY

;

l
TITLE FIGIIT FOR DOME -

World Boxing

NFI.. strike. Promoter Don King, center, brought the
heavyweights IAlgether at a news conference In HousIAln Monday IAl announce the fight. ( AP Laserphoto ).

Council Heavyweight Champion, Larry Holmes, left,
will meet Randy "Tex" Cobb for the title In the HousIAln Astrodome on Nov. 22orNov. 71i,dependlngonthe

LaRosa not bitter over dispute
CtNCINNATI (AP) -Buddy La"I don't think he's entitled to
Rosa, managerofWorldBoxlngAs- $493,000. We wUI try that Issue In
soclatlon Junior Welterweight
court," PeUsald.
champ Aaron Pryor, says there's no
Pryor, 26, has a 31-0 record with 29
hard feelings over a financial dis- knockouts. He Is getting an estlmated $1.6 million before expenses
pute that was temporarily settled
Monday .
for his fight with Arguello, the blg'Tm not bitter at all," LaRosa
gest payday of his ~areer.
said after attorneys worked out an
Arguello, a native of Nicaragua
agreement paving the way for Prywith a 75-4 record, will be trying to
or's Nov. 12 title fight with Alexis
becometheflrstboxertowtnchamplonshlps In four different weight
Arguello In Miami. " I did what! had
to do. I'm content with the way It
clas~ when he steps Into the
came out."
Orange Bowl ring with Pryor.
LaRosa and Pryor have had preLaRosa, who has had several disagreements with Pryor during their
vlous disputes, but contended that
theywereongoodtermsagalnwhen
association, said be didn't want to
stop the Nov. 12 fight, even though
they signed a six-year contract In
he had asked for an Injunction to do
April 1981.
so.
Top Rank Intervened In the latest
"Iwouldneverwanttostopaflght dispute, claiming that It would be
of Aaron's," LaRosa said. "I wantto
liable for milllons of dollars In damsee his career go onward and
ages If the fight Is postponed.
upward."
Arum asserted Monday that the
LaRosa claimed that Pryor had flnanclaldlsputeandthreatofacanbreached his contract. He asserted
cellatlon had dampened Interest In
that Pryor signed the contract for
the fight, a contention that LaRosa
the fight without his approval, and
disputed.
thatPryordlverted$540,0001npurse
"Nothing has been done to dammoney to his own company In order age the sale of tickets," LaRosa
tD avoid paying LaRosa his deslg- said.
nated share.
Under the agreement Monday,
Attorneys for LaRosa, Pryor and Top Rank will pay LaRosa$493,000;
Top Rank, Inc., the fight promoter,_ Pryor wUI get $646,000; and Pryor's
negotiated privately In Hamilton
Hawk Productions, Inc., will reOiunty Common Pleas Court on celve $275,000.
Monday before reaching a temporary settlement. LaRosa will get
$493,000 after the fight, but a trial
will decide whether be should keep
all or part of lt.
"I feel good," Bob Arum, head of
Top Rank, said of the settlement. "I
think t)lls has been a terrible Impost·
tlonon us, thlslnternaldlsputeatthe
last minute that cast a cloud over It
(the fight) ."
Elliott Pell, attorney for Pryor,
said he didn't think LaRosa rightfully should be permitted tD keep the
$493,000.

Redwomen drop
three contests
ADA- RloGrandeCollege'svol1eybaJ1 Redwomen dropped three
decisions Satunlay on the campus
~Ohio Northern University.
The Re!;lwomen feU to host Ohio
Northern Uiuverslcy, TaYlor Unl·
verslty of Indiana, and Malone Col·
lege. 1be ·losses dropped coach
Jamie Jannl•s Redwomen to 1-lllon
the seliSOn.
nieywtllbattleatCapltalUniver·
slty today and wt11 clole out the
regular-season Thunclay agatns{
Cet1arvt1le Qlllege and !'tfanhall
UniVersity at. the Paul R. Lyne
Physical Education Center.

r------------The Dail y Sentinel
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II,;;;;~~~~~~~~~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
POMEROY HOME~ AUTO
600 Eaot Moln Street

Phone (61-+J 992-209-+

Pomeroy, 0. -+5769

Firestone

wl~rtlres

MOUNTING
AND BAlANCING

--::0 ,

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F18- 14
1.6 ..

G18- l"
5.60-15

1.81

2\16
2.09

G18-15
H78-l5

2.21

l7!1- l5

WE ALSO HAVE MUD 8t SNOW RETREADS
STARTING AT $2J50

MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club will meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at t!E'home of Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter. Nan Moore will review "My Life," Golda Meir.
Members wtll respond tD roil
call with the name of a famous
woman.
POMEROY - Rev. Richard
W. Jaymes wt11 be evangelist for
revival services Nov. 3-14 at the
Hermon United Brethern In
Christ Church, C.R. 82, Texas
Community. Services wtll begin
at 7: ll nightly and the publt Is
Invited.

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce will ·
meet at noon Tuesday at Meigs
Inn.

POMEROY - Public concert
by Eastern High School MarchIng Band, 7: .ll p.m. Wednesday
1n high school auditorium.

CHESTER - The Chester
United Methodist Women will
hold a public election day lunch
and bazaar Tuesday at the
church.

THURSDAY
RACINE .The pancake
supper to be held Thursday at the
Wesleyan United Methodist

MIDDLEPORT ·- Lodge No.

of officers and refreshments will
be served. All members are
asked to attend.
POMEROY- At 7 p.m. Tues-'
day, Meigs County Board of Education members will meet at
their offices for the regular No. vember meeting of the board.
POMEROY Eastern Star
Chapter, 7:45 p.m. Tuesday at
the Pomeroy· Masonic Temple.

POMEROY - Aglow Bible
study group, 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday
athomeofJeanWolfewithJoyce
Hlad song leader using thE! topic,
"Prayer and Praise."

members wishing to join are
welcome.

'

I

been

POMEROY Missionary
meeting, Hysell Run Holiness
Church, Thursday, 7: .ll p.m.
Speaker, Wayne Sexton and
Theron Durham, pas!Dr. Public
Invited.
POMEROY Evangeline
chapter 172, OEA, Masonic Temple, 7: .ll p.m. Thursday. Initiatory work to be exemplified.
Officers tD wear chapter dresses.
SYRACUSE - Holiday bazaar, Syracuse Presbyterian
Church annex, Thursday, 10
a.m. to3p.m. and5p.m. to9p.m.
and Friday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Saturday at Kroger's combined
with bake sale, beginning at 10
a.m.

ANTIQUITY -

Bazaar and
bake sale, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Mildred Spencer residence. S.R.
338, Antiquity, by Willing Hands
Ladles Society of the Antiquity
Baptist Church.
POMEROY - Meigs High
School, class of 1978, Thursday,
7: .ll p.m. at the Meigs Inn, Pomeroy. Plans will be made for five
year reunion In the summer of
'&amp;'l.

November 3, 1982

This coming year you could do rather well where joint ventures are
concerned, especially If you team up with persons whose objectives are
In harmony with yours.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You're very capable today at managing
sltuatlohs which might be a trlfie !Do difficult for others to handle. Your
skills may be called for.
SAGnTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) A situation may develop !Dday
with someone whb has been supportive of you, but who may now need
your backup. You won't let this person down.
CAPROCORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) In dealing with persons today who
are Important to your work or career, try to be more friendly than
businesslike. Warm ways will win them over.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Try to think of what you have to do
!Dday as being more of a game thari a boring challenge. When seriousness exits It lets success enter.
PISCE'I (Feb. 20-March20) Youmlghtbea trlfleslowgettlngoutofthe
starting blocks today, but you're a good stretch runner. Don't let early
obstacles deter you from vlctQry.
.ARIES (Mareh 21-April19) Don't be hesitant about compUmentlng
the deserving !Dday If they mertt lt. Your comments wtll be greatly
appreciated.
.
TAURUS (Aprll20-Ma,y 20) You're likely to be more fortunate In
partnership amingements !Dd~ than you Will be functioning on your
own. This could be especially true In business, '
GEMINI (May 2l.June 20) You can get others to do your bidding
!Ddaybytlrstsettlngtheproperexiunples. Youhavewhatlttakestobea
leader, so use lt.
·
CANCER -JI!DI,! ll.July 12) There's, a chince you might' meet
SOilli!OIII! !Dday whom 'you will 'llild very 8ppeallng. U you want the
situation to develop, give him or~ the right signals.
LEO (July %S-Aac. 12) SljcceU Is 1lke1y !Dday In situations where
your motivation Is WISelflab.
.
VlRGO (.\uc. 11-Sept. 1:2) Your ch8nn and wit are two of your
gteatest assets today In hliiptng you deal with othei's, and for achlevtng
objectlvell you establish for )'ounelf.
UQRA (Sept. GOd. IS) Coodltlml could be similar !Dday regard·
lng a conunerclal situation which you hal)d1ed succeufu1ly In the past.
'

:~

has

Astrograph

363, F&amp;AM wt11 meet Tuesday at
7: .ll p.m. There will be election

east-west dinlhg room. All-new

•

Church, Racine,
cancelled.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday
at 8 p .. In Syracuse Municipal
Building.

POMEROY - Candystripers
at Veterans Memorial -Hospital
wt11 meet Tuesday at 5p.m. ln the ·

Plus'50' F.E.T.

SYRACUSE Willin g
Workers Missionary Society of
Syracuse First Church of God
will hold a Christmas bazaar on
Nov. 3 and Nov. 5 at the Pomeroy Kroger Store from 9: .ll a.m.
tD 3 p.m.

RliTLAND - An election day
dinner will be held Tuesday In
the meeting room of the Rutland
Fire Department with serving tD
begin at 10: .ll a.m. and continue .
through the supper hour. Sponsored by the ladles auxiliary.

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

FREE
WHITE

RACINE --Th~re will be an
Electon Day dinner at the Reorganized Church c1JesusChrlstof
Latter Day Saints Church, Tuesday with serving from 10 a.m.to7
p.m. Thechurchlsbcatedbeslde
the Lebanon Township voting
precinct on the Portland-Racine
Road. The menu will consist of
soup, chill, hotdogs, sloppy joes,
desserts and ~ges.

POMEROY - TOPS OH 570,
costume party Tuesday at the
Coonhunters Building, Meigs
County Fairgrounds, 6 p.m.

Snow Biter

win~wti ...,

POMEROY - The annual
World War I Night and oyster
stew dinner wtll be held Tuesday
at 8 p.m . at the hall of Drew
Webster Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy.

WEDNESDAY

tl

'

Holiday foods, new a nd natural
decoration Ideas and Ideas for gifts
using fabrtcs will be featured at a
holiday workshop !Dmorrow from
9: .ll a.m.-3: .ll p.m. at St. Paul's
Lutheran Church In Pomeroy_
The workshop wtll also lea ture
ways tD cope with low-sodium and
low calorte diets throughout the
Thanksgiving and Christmas seasons. Easy exercise and unique
crafts that encourage exercises will
be part of the program.
"Seasonings of the Season," a
presentation focusing on using
herbs and spices throughout the holidays, wtll also give Ideas for using
sea~ntngs In every day meals as
well as In holiday gifts.
"The workshop Is really different
this year," according to Dale Stoll,
Meigs County Extension Home
Economist and coordlna !Dr of the
program. There will be something
for everyone at the workshop. Senior Citizens are providing displays
as well as well-known local crafts
people. The Fabric ·shop In Pomeroy and Shirley Huston of Syracuse
wtlj be displaying the latest holiday
decorations and fabric ldeas,lncudlng Ideas using embroidery hoops,
learning centers revolving around

current health concerns as well as
displays of chair caning, dried and
natural decorations and gifts made
from scraps will be featured.
Chris Goodall, Nutritionist from
the Ohio Department of Health,
along with Dale Stoll, have planned
the workshop tD meet the needs of
the contemporary family. Modern
families rea lize the need for lowerIng sodium In the diet as well as
controlling calories. To accomplish
this goal as well as fit In holiday
traditions Is a challenge.
Annie Moon, WlC counselor from
the Meigs County Health Department, wUI present a program on
blender split pea soup.
Monadlne Mattey, Pike County
Extension Home Economist, will be
featured with a unique program
called "Use It or Lose It- Creative
Exercise to Keep You Relaxed and
Healthy." This program will concentrate on exercise and stresscontrol.
Clndl Oliveri, Athens County 4-H
Agent, will be demonstrating natural and unique decora !Ions for the
holidays.
The workshop Is open to everyone. A potluck lunch will be available at noon. Each participant Is

asked to bring a low calorie main
dish, vegetable, salad, bread or dessert, as well as a recipe to share.
Please bring a table service.
Registration for the meeting ls$2.
Door prtzes a nd samples will be
ava ilable. Handouts on all topics
will be given to participants.
The time schedule of activities for
the day Is as follows : 9a.m . registration: 9: .ll a.m., welcome from Dale
Stoll, Meigs County Extension
agent ; 9:40a.m ., "KnowYourFood
Habits" Christine Goodall, R.D.,
Ohio Department of Health; 1 a .m.,
"Seasonings of the Season" by Mrs.
Stoll; 11:10 a.m., "Eating Ou t" by
Chris Goodall; 11:45 a.m ., "Soup's
On" by Annie Moon, WlCcounselor,
and Mrs. Stoll; and noon, potluck
dinner and time to view the
displays.
The afternoon program includes:
"A Little or a Lot" by Ms. Goodall;
"Natura l Decorat ions" by Clndl
Oliveri, Athens County 4-H Agent;
"Use It or Lose It" by Monadine
Mattey, Pike County agent , with
Bernice Anderson giving special effects; and 2:30p.m .. "Fabrlganza "
by by Ann Lambert of the Fabric
Shop, a nd "Hoops. Hoops, Hoops"
by Shirley Huston , SyracuS£&gt;.

§

Middleport will observe World Community Day

Calendar

'

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

.

World Community Day services
will take place at Middleport Heath
United Methodist Church at 1: ll
p.m. Frtday under sponsorship of
the Church Women United of Meigs
County.
Gifts and dues will be accepted at
the meeting which will carry out the
theme "Scarcity-Abundance" from
a Christian perspective.
A national observance, World
Communlty Day wtll focus their energles on the crisis of scarcity and
abundance In the world. The annual
celebration, observed since World
War II, Is motivated by the concern

ofChurchWomenUnltedforjustlce
and peace In a global society.
Writlen by participants In Church
Women United's International
Christian Causeways,lt draws upon
Insights gained from experiences of
sharing concerns and building
bridges of understanding with
Christian women of other countries
and cultures.
Initiated In 1966, International
Causeways have taken church
women from the United States to
Africa, Latin America, Irela nd.
Asia, the Caribbean, Eastern Eu-

rope, the Pacific.
Church Women United is the na 1-;;-,
tiona! movement bringing mort~u ·
than half a million Protestant, Ro!'" ·
man Catholic. a nd Orthodox women_
together into a Christian ··community o! caring."
World Community Day offerings
make possible the ~lsslon o!
Church Women United, includtflg-the Intercontinental Grots for Mfslo sion Program that funds projectlf.'•·
national and International, In su~~ port oftheempowermentofwomenri :
human rights. justice and peace. ing
•ip -

Bridal shower
Before J eannie McClure and Dick
Owen were married on Oct. 16, the
former was honored with a bridal
shower at Meigs Inn In Pomeroy.
Hostesses of the event were Audrey Davenport, Carolyn Bachner,
Taml Bachner and Judy Owen, sister of the groom.
Prior to the opening of gifts,
"'games were played with prizes goIng to Rhojean McClure and Betty
Owen. Door prtzes were won by
Jean Fisher and Edna Maxine
Gaskill.
Attending the bridal shower were
friends and relatives of the couple.

Edition available
The Christmas edition of the Salvation Army's "War Cry" Is now
being distributed In Middleport and
will be sold In the community for the
next two weeks. The edition will be
sold In Pomeroy the final two weks
of November. Persons missed may
call992-5472 or 992-7480.

ROYALTY- Jessica Covert was crowned queen and ,Joey Hensler, king

at the annual camtval held recently at Racine Elementary School. Jessica,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gary Jolmson, Racine, received the most votes in
the contest which was open IAl children In the first through the sixth grades at
the school. Hensler, numer-up In most voles, l• the son o! Mr. and Mrs.
David Heruiler, Racine. The queen received a pink carnation and the king, a
blue carnation.

WHO SUPPORTS JOLYNN BOSTER
*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 OPPONENfS FINANCES WAS
RAISED OUTSIDE OUR COUNTIES.
*ONLY 17 CAMPAIGN CONTRIBUTORS LIVE
·IN THE 94TH HOUSE DISTRICT. •

Nov. 2, Vote for Jolynn Boster,
the candidate who represents
you, the people of Gallia, Meigs
. and ·Athens Counties.
Paid for by the llo*for Slate Representative Committee, .kllln E. HaHiday, Chainnan, 26locust Street Gallipolis, Ohio, 45731.

,.

�November 2,1982
Sentinel

·. Meigs ~unty,
Shade Valley
Officers were msta lled dt the an
nua l plcruc of the Shade Va llev
Counc U of Floral At1s he ld 1ece ntl\
- at Roya l Oak Park
Installed in cand lelight crt em
ony by outgoing p1 estdent Sheha
Curtis, were Mrs Steve Frost pt es
!dent. Mrs Rtck Koblcntz ' !('('
.pr,esldent, Mrs &amp;&gt;b Thompson se
-cond vtce prestdent Mt s Btl!
FranciS, secretary, Mrs Tom
Karr. treasurer. a nd Ml' Paul
Curtis news reporter
Mrs Pat Holter repo t tc'Cl on the
Oh)o Associa tion of Garden Clubs
Gardeners Day Out at the Cmcm
n ati Zoo "here she took pall tn a
Dower show entitled What s Ne\\
at the Zoo." staged m "''era I
anliDa l houses throug hou t the zoo
Garden hin ts for the month m
eluded selecting locations fm
spring Dower bulbs to be planted
and getting them In the ground as
early as possible so that thev ha'e
time to root weU before fl eczmg
weather Snowdrops. crocus glor,
of the s now. were among the bulbs
to be planted now. while tulips and
lilies can be planted late! In pt ~:Ldug
sites tha t are mulched to prevent
frozen ground

Community
Association
A progress report on the new
building was giVen by Tom Hay
man, Harold Brewer and Paul
Ha uber at a recent meeting of the
Lo n g Bott o m C ummuntty
Association
It was ooted that the fl agpole
forms a nd found aton are ready fm
concrete as we ll as the butldmg
Door Hayma n noted that he had
done some dozer work on the
grOunds around the building The
windows a nd lentils are In place
and the frost guard has been m
staHed It was reported that Rt
chard Garfield will pourthe floorfor

l1.468 71
Hayman presented severa l btlls
on ~ from the Forest Run Block Co
for $90, Lowe $21 and a not her for
$912fornails P lum blng forthe new

•

BrC'we1 money for gas

Meiod) Roberts tt eas ut er ri:L
po t ted btlls fi om Bt ewe1 fot $143 89
fo t supplies, Untvet sal Supply f01
plumbmg supplies $232 !fj It was
noted that the soup supper raised
$:101 73 and that there wet e dona
lions from Ma nnm g Roush. $20
ret rsa Collins $20 a nd Fern Ha
mtlton $'2o
A bazdat a nd bakesalewassetfot
No' 17 a nd the Novembet meeting
v.as cancelled" llh the next meetmg
to be held on Dec I Leota Ferrell
ga\ P a $20 donatonn Alt a Balla rd,
Mae McPeek. Ma ry Andt ews will
host the next meetmg
Costum e prizes went to Joey
Ba nes most ongmal, Tina Newlun
p! ettlest. Cnsty Newlun, glamor
ous Gmger Hayman funniest and
Ca ttle Newlun, cut tes t
Attending were Mae McPeek
Leota Fene ll , Pearl Powell Mt
a nd Mt s Albert Barber Mr a nd
Mt s Btl! Thurston Francis An
drP\\ Mary Andt ews Ada Btssell
Mt and Mt s Paul Ha uber, Mr a nd
Mt s Tom Hayma n and Gmger,
Marv Crlsty Tina and Ca rneNew
lun Mr and Mrs Ha lan Ballard
VI\ tan Kreamer, Naomi Schoon'
over, Beth hayman Ron Murphy,
and Melody Robert s

Chester PTO
A book senes to be used on a rota t
mg basis by a ll grades has been
purchased by Ches ter PTO
Meetmg recently a: the sc hool,
the PTO discussed various projects
to be earned out dunng the yea r It
was noted that the carnival was a
success financially
The first grade won the room
count at the meetmg condu('('d by
Twl la Buckley, president
Mary Rose. the lunch room super
vtsor talked on the hot lunch program and a lso served several
dtshes whtc h the students recetve In
their lunches usmgthecommodltles
provided
The siX th grade mothe rs served

Slinderella
Ja ne Tucket received her 20
pound weig ht loss 11bbon and certlfl
cate at last weeks meeting of the
Mason Shndet ella class Francis
Oli vet and J ackie Ftelds lied for the
most weight lost m the class with
Lmda Clat ke and Wlnift ede Cla t k
tymg fot 1unnet up At the F ive
Pomt s Class thPt c was tie fm the
most wetght lost between Wa nda
Stafford and Mat id Mat Jo wtth Shlr
lev Johnson as m nnet up

Drew Webster
A film on ed ucation was shown by
Margare t Johnson. atde a t Rutland
Elementa ry School, at !he Oct 26
meeting of the Amenca n Legion
Auxt l!arv of Drew Webstet Post 39.
Pomeroy
Followmg the film , Mrs Johnson
discussed the film 's presentation of
education and com pared It toed uca
non m schools today
Lorett a Tiemeyer prestded a t the
meetmg wtth Mary Martin, acting
chapla in, giVmg the prayer E llen
Rought . membership cha irma n,
noted that membership now sta nds
at 135. 13 short of goal Mrs Robert
Hunnel. Martha Fox, Shellle and
Sherne Fox, a nd Mildred Houdson,
weno: introduced as new members of
the umt
November bemg mem bership
month, Mrs Rought a nnoun('('d a
tea to be held a t the Nov 23 meeting
a t the ha ll, 7 30 p m Theme will be
"One Genera tion to Another" with
past presidents to be honored Suzan
Thoma , accom pa nied by E lizabeth
Duffy, will smg Mrs Martm will
mvne the new members, a nd the
JUniOrs wtil register the guests
E rma Wmtth a nd Rhoda Hackett
WJJI be hostesses Dues are payable
now and those who haven't paid are
asked to do so thts month
Refreshments were served by
Frankle Hunnel and Peggy HarriS

Troop 1079
Annual mvesutu re of the Reeds
VI lle Brownie Troop 1079 was he ld
recently at the Umted MethodiSt
Chu rc h Reedsville
The meetmg began with three

new members being welcomed into
the troop The five other members
were rededicated during a candle
lighted ceremony Each one repeated a part of the Girl Scout law
after lighting a candle The Lord's
Prayer m untson closed the
ceremony
Ha lloween treats were served
Troop leaders are Betty Dill and
Mary Newell a nd the troop Is spon·
sored by Gordon Proffitt of Prof·
fitt's Grocery, Portland Troop
members a ttending were Mandy
Drake, Chastldy Mllhone, Deana
Good, Amanda Barringer, Mtsty
Newell, Jamie Brannon, Karen
Morns a nd Valene Wilson Unable
to a ttend were troop members,
Amanda Wells a nd Jessica Reiber

Meigs County, regional correspondence
By BERTHA PARKER
Attendance at the Free Met hodiSt
Church Sunday, Oct 24 was 100
Choirs m embers present were 11
Mr and Mrs Ray Altman, Mans
field were visitors at the local
church Sunday
Mr and Mrs Faye Count ryman
Greenville spent the weekend wtth
Mr a nd Mrs Roy Howell
MtssCecil Sauver,Athens, vis ited
recently Wlth Mr and Mrs Vern
Story
Mr a nd Mrs Pearl G ilkey VIS ited
Sunday Wl th Mrs Della Stahl
People m the cornmum ty were
'ery sorry to hear of the death of
Mrs Nellie Tracy and Cha rles
Mash
Larry Clark sang a solo a nd Mr
and Mrs Robert Barton sang a duet
m the evenmg services at the Free
MethodiSt Church Sunday
Attenda nce at the Free Metho
dtst Church Oc t 10 was ll :i Chmr
mem bers present were 12 Severa l
child ren sang a song a t Sunday
School dt rected by Mrs Sht rlev
Fnend In the evemng five men
sang
Ms Kathy Pullins has been r~:L
turned hom e fro m PVH
Mrs Helen Dunkle. Chancev vt
stted recently wtth her brother
Nor m a n Sc hae fer a nd Mrs
Schaefer
Mr E tc he lma n, Harn sv tlle
J ack Hoffner Pomeroy ca lled on
Mr a nd Mrs No rman Schaefer
recently
Mr a nd Mrs Faye Countt y man
Greenville, spent a weekend with
Mr a nd Mrs Roy Howell
Wyatt Schaefer Mt Vernon vi
sited his parents. Mr a nd Mrs Nor
man Schaefer recently
Mrs Emma Fox had as het
dinner guests a recent Sunday, Pas
tor a nd Mrs Robert Miller a nd son
Scotty, and Mr and Mt s Ttl ma n
Houser, mlsslonarv from Zt m
baliwe , Africa Mr Houser gave a
talk a t the local ch urc h Sunday,
Oct 10
Revival will be held from Oct 25
to 31 Rev R Eugene Gill wtll be
guest speaker Rev Gill was pastor
of the local church for 12 yea rs a
number of years ago Everyone ts
welcome to the meetings
The Holiness Rally will be held a t
the local church Oct 26

CARMEL
Mr and Mrs Tom Wolf and
children, Tash and Katie, of Hardy,
Va called on Mr and Mrs. Douglas
Circle a recent Friday.
Paul Moore spent a few days with
Mr find Mrs. Aldon Springs of Vln
ton, Va.
Rocky Pitzer and Tod Bissell of
Bashan called at the home ot DouglaS Circle on Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Harris ot
Xenia visited with Vema and Lula

.

--.

Mrs

Manlyn Young and son

Davtd spent the weekend Wlth her
patent s Mt a nd Mrs Edson
Roush and attended the Roush
I£'U mon

Man lv n IS from SJdney,

OhiO
Mrs Edtson Johnson and Mabel
Bt ace of Rac tn e ca lled a t the home
of Mr a nd Mrs Arthu r Earl John
son and famt lv on Su nd ay evenmg
Mr a nd Mrs Edson Roush went
to Spnngfteld Mtssoun to vtstt with
hts brothel Mr a nd Mrs Stanley
Roush They also vtstt ed m Boypon
Beach tn F londa whtleon therr trip
Thev tetumed home Monday Oc t
II
Shervl Johnson a nd Bettv Van
Meter spent a Sund ay evenin g a t
the home of Mr and Mrs Wilham
Ca t elton a nd fa mtly of Racme
Mt s E thel Orr of Chester Mrs
Ma ril yn Newma n of Ga han Ohto
a nd Mrs J a net Grueser of Loga n
Ohto called at the home of Mr a nd
Mt s Robert Lee on Tuesday
Mt a nd Mrs Denny Harns and
sons of Xe ma Ohto ca lled on Lula
a nd Verna Circle recently
Mt s Dorot hy Harde n. Sandy and
Ra lph of Mormng Star Hetght s
were dm ner guests of Lula and
Ver na Ctrc le a recent Sunda y
LONG BOTTOM
By MELODY ROBERTS
Mr and Mrs Elbert Ftt zpa tnc k.
La ncaster, stayed the weekend
wit h Mrs E rn est me Hay man
Mr a nd Mrs Vtrgll Wamsley,
Cheshire called on Mr and Mrs
Dorset La rkms
Mr a nd Mrs Mike Bisse ll and
fa nuly Mlddlepo rl called on Mrs
Ada Bissell a nd Kenny
Condolences go out to the family
of John Wells, Racine, Mr and
Mrs Stanley Wells had been In
their home for severa l weeks before he had to be hospitalized
Ca ilmg on Mr and Mrs Paul
Ha uber were Mr and Mrs Robert
Bowles, Pomeroy On Sunday the
Haubers called on Mr and Mrs
Francis Kibble a nd daughter s,
Tuppers Plains
Mr and Mrs Elbert Fitzpa trick,
La ncaster. donated a gas furnace
to Long Bottom Communit y
Association
Mrs AJk:e Houctashelt, Wilkes·
ville, Mrs Ora Sinclair, Sumner
Rd . called on Mr and Mrs Paul
Ha uber and famUy
Nell Groce, 99, Is a t the home of
Mr and Mrs Johnny Newlun She
Is recovering from a hip ailment

RACINE
By Mrs. Francis Monis
Mrs Dorothy Badgley was hostess In her home for the October
meeting of Esther Missionary Circle which opened with devotions by

_

Mrs Velma Tay lor A business ses
ston followed with Mrs Mildred
Hart , president, in charge a lso
presenting the progra m entitled,
'A a Christian, I have a job to do"
with readmgs by members on the
subject After closing the meeting,
eight members enjoyed a fellow
ship hour wtth delicious refresh
ments served by Mrs Badgley
The Booster Class of FlfSt Baptis t Church school was hosted by
Mrs Ora Hail In her home Oct 15
After a devotional penod and bus t
ness session, a program was given
by Mrs Margie Grimm Readings
by members were, " Is Life Worth
Lt vmg?," by Emma Adams,
'Only God's Hand," by Clara Powell, " I've Made an Amazmg DIS·
covery," by Garnet E rvme, "God's
Love," by Fern Dolby, "As You Go
Through Life," by Ura Morris,
"This Life of Mme," by Velma Tay
lor, "The Patience of God, " by
Man e Roy, "An Operation," by
Florence Adams, "Can't Under
stand It," by Ora Hill, "A Man wtth
One Book," by Dorothy Badgley,
"Why the Daily Walk," by Wanda
Powell, "Somebody Loves You,"
" I Connthlans 13 Love," and "Safe
In Our Father's Hands," read by
Margie Grimm The meeting
closed by slngmg "Blest Be the
Tie " Refreshments were served
by Mrs Hill to 13 members
Mr and Mrs Solon Butcher of
Spencer, W Va spent a recent Sun·
day night and Monday with Mrs
Grella Simpson
Mr and Mrs Ralph Badgley and
Mr and Mrs Bria n Simpson spent
a recent weekend with Mr and
Mrs Max Wolfe a t Sandusky
Mrs Grella Simpson accompan·
led her son, Mr and Mrs Bud
Simpson to their home at Seymour,
Ind , and spent two weeks Her
brother, Mr and Mrs Edward
Howell of Flushing went after her
and visited a few days and returned
her to her home
Rev and Mrs Glenn Bate of
Cambridge, Ohio spent two days at
the home of Mr and Mrs. Ed
Wagner visiting former neighbors
and friends
Sunday, Oct 17, Racine First
Baptist Church held a celebration,
featuring ''The Good Old Days"
with regular services in the morn·
lng, potluck dinner, and events of
the afternoon Included the group
"Harmony" bringing special singIng, preaching by Rev. Walker and
Rev. Rollyson ot Marietta and a
large display of okl articles. Several ladles wore old·fashloned
dresses and bonnets. Mr and Mrs.
Russell Rhoades were among outside visitors.

--

Personal
Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Wright have
returned from a brief vacation at
Lake Cumberland, Ky. They also
attended the Renfro Valley Barn
Dance Show In Renfro, Ky

...

a

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Public Nottce

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
JAMES W SUTTLE ANO
GRETA M SUTTLE
Plamtiffa
HAZEL M CURTIS, et at
Defendants
Case No 18097
NOnCE BY
PUBLICATION
TO HazP.I M Cu rt tS tl ltvonq
whosP lttst known addrP.ss 15 At
1 Long Bo tt om Oh•o 45 743
thP unknown spousf! 1! any
whosf&gt; name and address &lt;trf&gt;
unknown thf&gt; unk nown het r ~
rlev•sPes leqa tf'P.S admtntslr a
tor s e)(ecutors and or ass•gn s
o t Hazel M Curtt s I deceased
SA Rutlf!ncutt er tl ltv+nq
whosP ar1dress •s unknown the
unknown spouse 11 any whose
namP and adctress are un
known the unknown hP.•rs c!P.
v • :.e rs
leqa 1 ees
Jdm•n•c; trat ors P.)(ecu tors anct
or a~stgns o f S A Ru1!P.ncuuer
•I r t0ct&gt;ased
G Ruttencu 11 Pr
I ltvrr1f1
w hOSP add rPSS •S unknown th P
unkn own spousP tf any who ,p
narnf' and adr!ress fliP un
known the unknown he11 s rJe
v1SP.es
IPqa tf' P.S
Jdmtnls !f ators P.~ecu t o r s and
Or ass t(jn s o l G RtJitP.nr.u tt P. r t
drx:Pttsed
W H Ber d tne •I l•v•nq whose
address •s unknown the un
known spou~P. d any .....nose
nam r&gt; and addr ess ar e un
known thP unknown hP. rs de
V I &lt;; PP.S
lf'(ld ! CCS
adrn tnts!rators P.~ec ut o rs and
o r fiSS!(jns of W H Berdtne tl
OecPased
Jenn•e B Berc!t ne I ilvtng
wh ose ar1d ress •s unknown th e
unknown soouse tf any wh ose
name and addr ess are un
known the unknown hetrs de
v SP. PS
lega t ef!s
aclm nts tr ato rs e)(ec u1or s dn(l
o r ass1gns o t JP.nn1e B Berd ne
'' deceased
You are he1eby nottftPd tha t
you have been namPd DP.hmd
an ts •n a legal ac tton entttled
James W Sut11P. a nd Greta M
Su tt le Platn!I II S vs Hazel M
Cur hS e1 al D efendants Thrs
act ton has been asstgned Case
Number 1 809 7 and IS pendtng
•n th e Common PIPas Court of
M e gs Coun ty Pomeroy Oh• o

45769

The ObjeCt o f the Compla1nt
•S a parttt+on action concerntng
Ot ! and g as unde rlytng the fo1
low1ng descrrbed real estate
S tuated tn lebanon Town
shtp Metgs Coun ty Oh 10 and
more part•cul arly descr tbed as
fo llows
The No rth East quarter ol the
North Eas1 Quar l er ol Sectton
No
Twenty S•~ 126) Town
Three Ol Range Eleven (1 11 tn
th e Ohto Company s Purchase
contatnmg Fo rt y acres betng
th e sa me more o r tess Betng a
pa rt o t the same property co n
veyed 10 !he sa td SA RUtten
c utter by WE Ruttencu tter by
deed ol r~cord m !he oflrce of
the County Recorder of Me•gs
County Oh•o
and th e prayer IS that the
above desc rrbed real estate be
partttroned that the rnterests be
set off or o rdered sold +I t! can
not be pantMned l or an alto
wance of attorney fee s herem
and costs
You are reqUired to answer
the Complamt w +thtn !wenty
e•g ht days alter the last publtca
!ton of th1s not+ce whtch wtll be

publtShed once ear.h wePk fo r
st)( consecut•ve weeks TtlP last
publ ra t•on wtll be mddP on No
vPm~ r 30
1982 ,mrl thf'
twenty P1q ht r1ays f(Jr an sw 1 r
w•il comrnnnce on that datP
In casP o f your la ttwe to
answP.r o r othefwtse respon r1
as requuPd by th e O h1 0 Rules of
C•vd Procf'Cl urf! 1udqmnnt by
dP.fault wtll be renrlererl aga nst
you tor the reltef nem,mded tn
the Complatnt
Da ten Octob er 26 1982
Larry E SpencP r
Cle1k o f Courts
M eLC)!&gt; County
Common Pleas Cou rt

11012611112 9 16 23 30
61c

Public Nottce

VS

ROGER EPPLE, et al
Defendants
No 17702
In l ilt! 11 11 1 f n l 111 01do r 111
S llf' rl1trd Sr Ill• rnhr 1 19A2 tn
th 1 lhl\\f' r rtl!!l• II 11 I t( oil I Wtll
n tl(1r l ot , tl f' 11 p J!lltt 1 &lt; t nn
(It thf' d (JIIt I th o (n r1 Hn11&lt;;.r
11 Pn1 r • r •v Oh ' til til• tl t&lt;lvr
111111&lt; d (Otlllly lll'l !) lllltfl 1 /
thr 20111 d ry n l Nnv• rnhr r
111A7 11 l Onn rto!CJI " AM
1111 !rdll twtnq d• &lt;;r 11ht rl 11 til
1 I tit o.. tl \l llf n thr C:nt Illy nl
M f! q tnt! St 111 fJI 0 1 11 mrl n
thP Town&lt;;.h tp 1!1 ( 1u &lt;., If r 111 Wtl
Still !If 111 lhr l own&lt;;htp n l
rh• If! If\ th&lt; (Ill lilly f11 Mr tq&lt;.,
ttltl St tl• n l Ot11o tnt! I uthrr
hn l!lolf ri
II HI
jr o., o I ti t d 1
f1tllrrw
nf'flll l!ltlll rl tlu &lt;\rnt thwo &lt;;I
r Ollh 1 t~l S, L trrJ!l N•r ~~, on
TownN1 1 3 nu 11 11 Nr • l/11!
!hf' Ohut (IIITI II II IY" Ptill l l tSr
thf'n • l ttl ll l 'i N1 rff l 111 !111
Wl &lt;&gt; l lrrtl Ill 11rl S• 11 on Nn
111 l dt• t l tH f' o l f1t1
•o rl..,
thl'lll f' Uj(Hl!llll E I I !J:'\1 1111'1
w th 1111 SoH ih 11111 nl 1•d S• r
! ()11 Ill till r f'ILI 1 n f
nrl Sor
1 on lhf'f\1 r Snt tl h If\ tlu ( r r•l• r
ol 1 Rtrn r iliiPd W 1lkr 1 Attn 1
rl •sl mr" nl A 1 11 1rl" tlir'm f'
South 4') r!l'qrrrc;. Wr&gt;st 32
rod &lt;.; II\ Ill! lfl/J ti l 11 \ I dl I 11
thrr 11 Srll t!h In I hi Sf'&lt; I on
I nf' l h1'11r r W• &lt;.; I n11 thr SntJ ih
ltnf' n t &lt;; url SPr ttnn tn th f'
PLACf 0 1 BlC,INNINGt on 1 urt
•nrr r;n 11 rP. c;. morf rr t. o.;&lt;;
SAvr ANO EXCEPI thr " 11
ttl lllfli ynq , 1trl prrn t r s
wh•c h • nnt ro 1wr yr 11 Ill •n
lf'nrlr'd tn hf' cnnvf'yr d l •v th o;
I OIWf'VdllCP

1

~ coaltlng progllllll )

· ·-__
-"··.
11• •

"'"'w'
l • "':n

on.-&gt;~~ ,

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Public Notice

f'nt! 10 J)f't\f'll!l r rt!&gt;h tn h rlnli

1 55 rracw 109 Volumf! 1 58
n:Jilf' 046 o f thP M e•qs County
DePrl rPcw rl s
Anpr J I Sf' rt V lluf'
$37 600 00
1 flnnot ltf! sold
lo r lr&gt;SS than two l htrds of thf'
il!lfl! ilt&lt;;f'(j Vtlit lf'
f f' rrn &lt;; o l Sfll f! Cttsh
James J Prollttt
ShPrtft ol
MP!IJS Counly Ohto
r 10 1 1 7 19 7fl 11 11 7 4 tr

nn d IV n l " 1h w 1th b illttnc" to
IH p wl tttJO!l dPhvf'ry 11 f rlf'f'rt
J1m"" J Prn l f !!
Sh1 rdl
Mt ,q.., ( nttntv Ohtn
OilY I nl• v Hl•t&lt;;.f't
md (nlf'
A I f'lll l Prnh "" 1 n tl
A &lt;.,()( I i\t()l
1\tltt!IH y". lnt 1'1 III li tii

Public Notice
NOnCE OF SALE
nv Vll !i JI til Ill Pt Pitpl llr
Ordr 1 11 l S tit
ltl'd 11 tl til th f'
( r llliiHlll P111o; Cnt trl nt Mr 11 1
{ Olllily 011t(J Ill !hf' (";)&lt;"f O!
( h· 1111c 11 M o!lqiliiP ( omp HlV
• 1 uw·t P11tl 0 l 1nf'y tnd C 1
rnlyn f l 111 P.y f !11 ttf'lO!l 1
ptdfllll&lt; 111 th1 rr 11 1f'lll if lf'd !lf'
I!H l ( 1,r No 1H247 rn &lt;; ud
()til l I wrll o tlr r lor &lt;; rl1 11 !hr
ftnrll rlom n ll l1o (nllrtl1oll'i' ' rn
Po1nr roy Mr Il l '" (IH/11 !y Of1r0
or lfH--' li !fl dry n l Df'rl'ln lu' l
1f)/1/ 11 10 00 A M thr In I
lowmq trnd o; .rnrl IPn1 m• n 1o;
trrw•l

PARCEL NO 1
I hi' l1rllnw111 &lt;1 ri f''&gt;l l tllf'd 11 :JI
1 I 111 11 lhr ( !lti llly n l M l't I"
S1 rtr 1 I 0 11111 S tlt&lt;; l'l\Hy ! own
o.; lnp \tid lu tilq 111 tl1r Vrll tqf' o l
p, fnl roy tlld Ill !hr SOIIlhP l SI
r rrtnf! n f $f r I tOn No A Town
') R ~Hlr jf' 13 ll lrl hP.q llnt!lq 11
Il l Ifill Sl tk r II th f' 'if11 11f1WI &lt;; t
rn1nr r n l J FrlwHd Fos 11r &lt;.,
IIIII Ill&lt; I11CI1hf'ntf' "oOIIth &lt;1 J
llr qu • .., nrr mnHdf'&lt;; wf'&lt;; l
171 '-1 Iff I tl11nq thf' Wf' ! &lt;;t dt
of a 30 foot road thence S 3 1
ri f' q no 11 n t!r s WP.S1 103 [)
l1 f'1 tlonq s 11rl lll ild thPnrr
111t rl h Ufr dr q .~nd 45 WI'&lt;;! 60
feet !hence north 3 1 d eq 00
f:'\ SI ! /1r&gt;l'11 o th0Wf St I n1 111
url J rrtw1rrt Fo• !l'r thnnr. f'
&lt;;O tt l h ')7 rlf'q 00 I :JS I JOJ !r01
Jlonq '&gt; il•d J I dwmrl Fnc;.tr 1 o:;
W1 &lt;;I ltn0 to thl' nl.11 r of hf'qtn
llll\fj 1 ltTl l ltlll/ ll j 4() 100 II tP&lt;;

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
SIDING

SOUTHERN DISTRICT- Oulstardtng desogn tn lhts tflree bedroom
home, unusual fireplace, two balhs formal dimng, carport. pal!o, 'h
acre ~( plus renlal coltlge All for $42.500

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

POMEROY AREA - Five acres wilh four bedroom home Fully
slorms, two woodburners lo cut heating costs two car
garage, outbutldmgs, garden space Alllhts for $27,1XXl'

"Beautiful, Custom
Buill Garages"
Call lor free Sldong
est1mates, 949 2801 or

msu~ted.

HARRISONVILlE - A lhree bedroom double wide on approXI
mately ~ acre ~t Eye catching front bay wtndow 1\l baths dimng
room ll~ng room, family room, eqUipped kitchen, front ' porch
central atr All for $30,1XXl

949·2860

No Sunday Calls

FARM- Chester - r\ooroxtmately 82 5 acres, 30 acres tillable,
two ponds. barns. shed~ and a mce lhree bedroom remodeled
home will FA heat plus woodbumer

STATE Of OHIO.
DEPARTMENT OF
INSURANCE
CERTIFICATE OF
COMPUANCE

REALTORS•
Henry E Cleland, Jr , GRI
Jean Trussell
Dottle S Turner
Ofhce

Thf' unders+gned Supenn
tenden t 01 lnsur ance 01 The
StatF&gt; O f Oh•o her eby r.ertt !tes

New Homes extensiVe
remodeling,
'Eiectnc work
'Custom Pole Bldgs
&amp; Garaees
'Roofing Work
'Aluminum &amp; VInyl
Stdtngs
15 Years Expenence
GREG ROUSH
PH 992-7583
or 992-2282

""

992-6191
949· 2660
992 5692
992-2259

lB

thai REUBLIC NATIONAL LIFE
GROUP INSURANCE CO ol
Dallas StateoiTexashascomp
fled w •t h the taws o f lhrs stat P.
appltc able ro 11 and ts au thonzed
dwtng the current year 10 tran
sac t •n thts stal l" ti S appropnate
bust ness o f tnsu rance Its ftnan
era! condt!lon ts shown by ti s
annual stalement to have been
as ta llow s o n D ecember 3 1
Admt11 ed
A sse ts
1 98 1
530 12 1 902 00 Ltab tltttes

REAl lOR

9 51 mo

OPPORTUNITY $$

Is whit tl1is 14~1CI1 Rutllnd
Fann Offln. Anxious seller
has priced ac:conlqty. Includes nnl home, blm, pr-

•· m111lllls,andmuchmt.
If you 11M inllmt iRI aood
ccuntry finn or mtner~ls,
pus

up

this

~IVEHOIIE
. (Rimll)

,.,.for., lla. . . .t. Rkt

""'-·

Call:

RCS IIEAI.TORS

and

1~14-593-5571 or 992-6312

J

Hysell
•
GARAGE

51

Rt 124 Pomeroy, OH

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Also Transmisston
PH . 992-5682
or 992-7121
J 24 lfc

p
Oh
omeroy,
Ph 992·2174
226 "c

Glen A. ~oush

EUGENE LONG
Superior Siding Co .

Sales Representative

Metropolitan Life
Insurance
Company

VINYL ~ ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work,
Complete Remodeling,
Roofing of all types.
Worked 1n home area 20
years.
FREE ESTIMATES
CALL 843-3322

116 Layne Street
New Haven, W. Va . 25265
PH (304) 882 -2657
10 201mo

tJ~=========~

9 172moPd

J&amp;F
CONTRACT! NG

-

bathrooms , roofi
carpet, ceramic
cement work. painting, storm windows,
siding, andy type of
remodeling.
Commercial or
Residential
OVER 16 YEARS
EXPERIENCE IN
BUILDING NEW
HOMES

odolOf

eexcavat1ng
osoptic systems

odump truck S8MC8
- . g and J8Cieimong
oRacine and Syracuoe
-hool&lt;up
Wook lltllnod and
Guaranteed
Pli JIM CUFFORD
992-7201
J0-7Hc

Owners:
Osby A. Martin

Rodnlty How8ry
PH . 992-6370

~

~=======10:/:24:/:Uc~

H&amp;G SEWER

HOOK-UPS

Kitchen Cabtnets - Roofmg - S1dmg - Concrete
Pattos - Stdewalki New Construction - Remodeling - Custom Pole

Barns.

Real Estate - General
HOBSTEITER ~EALTY
These cash rates
&lt;nclude discount

GtOIJt S Hobstttttr h

Br•t'
PHONE 992 5739

NEW LISTING - On Hysell
Run Road 3 bedrooms. 1bath
modern kil!:hen Fuel 011 fur
nace. home recenlly Insulated
ASSUME LOAN wtlh down pay
ment Sells for $32,500.C
!lwnP.r anXIOUS lo sell
I IIDDIIPORII.owiv 3 bed
room home m exceiJent condt
tion Thts home has been lotally
remodeled In !he rustic look
There's a full basement w/ fam
tly room NICe location on Syca
more St ' PRICE REDUCED 1o

$42,1XXJOO
IIUTIAND - Nice 3bedroom
ranch on corner lot Situated on
a little IM!r 2 acres, lh~ home

on this one"'

21511ULBERRY AVENUEII
Alldayor-.q
l.emlly, Aaoc.
l'fiont 742-3171
E111111fW$ •
Vejnw Nlcinsty~soc.
Phorie 742-Ml

a.m

( )ForSale
( !Announcement
( )For Renl

,•

,.

,...

17
18

19, -

..

20
21

••

22

"••
'

23

I

'

!•
25
26

27

..
I

'•'

I

,,..
I

j,

I

I

•I

""'

I

I

&lt; !Wanted

Can for an aJli!Oinlment
WE HAVE MO¥ED TO

deposit,

'oger
K

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the Smallest Heater
Core to the Larpst Radtalor
Radtator Spectahst
NATHAN BIGGS
35 Yrs. Expertence

i1 II 2 li e

.....
-l'llnllroy
Is Milible lor lnlmldil• oc-

4 bed2 111111 han will! f~tto
lshld ~RIGIII, lltiChld

BUILT AND
REWORKED

I
I
I
I,
I
I

I
I
I

III
I
I

H
COAL
DELIVERED

LIMIT30.00
ED SUPPLY
1

ton

Withm 10 lltlt Radtus
of Pomeroy
$32.00 Within 20 lilies
$35.00 W'llllln 30 Milts
PH. 992-2618

4

INTERNATIONAL
HARVESTER
PARTS
AVAilABLE AT:

DJ's TRADING
POST

Ask me about Allstate's
Slwrt Term Health Po/rcyhelpsto protect you
between jobs, etc
Dtsabrllty I ncomt
Protection - when you
become totelly dtsabled
Compreh&lt;nswe Med~eal­
provtdes M11Jor Medtcal
and Hoapttai/Surgocal
expense coverage

Allstate·

You're in rood hands.
Allltft"- W.IIIIW't.IICII C11 Nonhitt-ooiL ll

See or phohe

Davis-Quickel
Agency, Inc.
"Acroa From The
Courtho~in

Syracuse, OH.
Contact Fem or C. T.
PH. 992-7301
10/ 1811

,of heaJlth
msurance
for)'Ou?

1110

Jlomeroy"

PH. 992-66n
10/24/ 1 1110

Public Sale
8o Auction

WVa State Champion Auct1
oneer R1clt Pearson Eatates,
antlque1. farm, households
Loconoed Ohlo·WVa 304
773·6786 or 304· 773
91B6

Giveaway

ANY PERSON who hRiany
thmg to give away and does
not offer or attempt to offer
any other th1ng for sale may
place an ad m th11 column
Therewdlbe noJ:hargetothe
advertisM

FREE
CALLAL
ESTIMATES
742-2328
PH. 992-6011
-2~8~·1~m~o§::~ 3agoodhome
protty,long l'aored
kitten
B
Call614·
266to
L--~---.!!.l!L.!!iJ~Pr====~l~0~

heretm to s ub ~c rtbed by name
and ca used by seal to be a ll t~ed
:'It CokJmbus Ohto 1h1 s day a net
date July 1 1982 Robert J
Hdtc hlo rd Jr Supe11ntenden1
o t !nsur ance o t Ohto I SEAL)

RIGIII,

COittlinpollly

FIREPLACES
&amp;
CHIMNEYS

Custom kitchens and
balhoooms
Remodehng,
add ons. new homes,
plumbing, electnc, siding

S I 032 56 4 00 Su &lt;p lus
S2 7 589 33 7 00 Inco me
S7 4 222 963 00 Expend•
"" "' S49 309 825 00 Net
Assets S29 089 337 00 Capo
101 SI 500 000 00 IN WIT
NESS WHEREOF I have

has 2 baths, mce kil!:hen Wllh
island range, familY. room has
fireplace Owner Will negotiate

This

8

FREE
ESTIMATES

PARCEL NO 2

Wentad-ledy to claen hou•
2 dayo • wook 814-992·
8728

tOJ t mood

POMEROY- Areally niCe lhree bedroom home. new chatn link

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

3 Announcements

'-----------1

C. R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

_36_78_3
____________
__
pup•
part 614-38B·9679
Coihe·part Fox
Tomer
Colt
2 black togor female ktttRIIs,
8 wko old. httertrarned Call
614· 246·9492
2 cats. 6 k1tten Call after
2PM 614·992·2696
3 k1ttena 2 calico and 1 yel·
tow B wka old 992· 7406
2 male cats, 1 all wh1te, 1
long hair ad gray 986-42BB

Help Wanted •

Want lady to live In or i'tay
during tho day houro Call
614-992-3704

PH 992 2478

J 11 ti c

~~ approximately 1\l acre level lot Range, ref . carpeting

11

--~~---

SWEEPER end oawlng machine repair, parte. and au pplloo Pick up and delivery,
Devil Vecuum CINner. one
hell mila up Gaorgao Crook
Rd Call446-0294
·ICGotf lessons John Teaford
Chaster, Oheo
Gun shoot. Racme Gun
Club
Every
1
F Sunday start~ng r
oJym actory choked guna

- Backhoes
-Dump Trucks
- lo Bay
-=-Trencher
- Water
- Sewer
- Gas ltnes
- Sephc Systems
urce or Small Jabs

•Rolrigonoto11
oOJYO&lt;O •Fr_.,.
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5Uc

NEW LISTING- MKfdleport NICe qutetstreetl \l story, 3bedroom
home, dtmng room, new furnace $18,900 00

Public Notice

NCurlty

Gowtdo ~II .. Equal

.;;~;~;~,:~

FIXED RATE'
NEW LISTING Uncoln Hill- l\1slory, lhree bedroom house wtlh
formal dtmng, slorrns,tnsulation, free standtng fireplace vmyl sidtng,
large lol Qxxl condition Just $22,500
'

~.

..... ........,..,...,_,

cupllley. A 1'"111111 to month
ltlse Clll bl ll1qld with

Oppoo1l:lnlty • ~·

uo n

0 .... .... ..,

lnt-od perwono Who
boon "'*"''k&gt;Yod lor
a-...o~-m
clayo lhould ....... te11toir
local Ohio a.- of Employn•ot 8eMcoo Oftlce
l o r - ..... and 10 ·-

~

Public Notice

don't
Tho Roo G - Co1ogo
CETA Plogrom II --.g
penlcipomo lor a room *llllrliitlng progllllll
lor a food Pant pro....... (TNa II not a

( _

&lt;Jp"

"'

fh f' follow nq If '&gt;l r thf'd 11 11
• &lt;; I 111 '&gt; 1111 ttr&gt;rl 11 1 !hi' ( 1111111¥ o f
M1 •ll'&gt; Sr 11 1 nl Oh•o and •n l hf'
Vrll:'lqf' n l Po n\1 rny hf)tHidl'd
111rl rlt:'&gt;f ltbPd r&lt;; follows
nrq I HI !lfj Il l \ 11)1 Wf! t f llf&gt; OJ
l {() i110 1 tl lf'y ll thr SO tilhl :'JS!
/1\ flllll)l l lfl l :ltl1 40iltl f'jl ll
rf'l o;otd 111 St Jnlr v B Jnnf'o; .nrl
Ann 1 l Jr1n~'&gt; hy W rllt un l
fhnm ilc;. rnd Marq Iff'! L 1ho
Ill I&lt;; thr nr I' ~ ntt l h 1 1 dr qrf'I'S
Wf Sl 14 ir.PI liOn (I &lt;; 11d lllf'y
thP nt f' north 6fl dP.(Jr f'es mrt
4 1l Wf'"&gt;1 P"' ttl .. I w•th St :'1nl1 •y
B Jo nes south l+ne 60 It
thence north 31 degrees east
14 It to Stanley B Jones
southwesl corner thence fol
lowtng Jones hne easl erly to
the place o f beg+nntng be1ng a
EXCEPTING AND IUSFRV parcel o f land fr om tng 14 feet
lNG 1 ldr f'S tllf' only ln r Flrn 1
the alley and runnt ng back at
Eprln 1 nn1&gt; o.; tnly lr 11111 hrJrn'
th at Width s dtstance o l60 fe et
IIHi !Wit 12\ Ill/ " InC J!fd on
REFERENCF !)£E D!&gt; Vn
till lhc)VI di'S( lt hr d !JIIlpl fly
1
235 n~llP. 20 1 Vol11me
Sfl!rl Prf'mt&lt;;f'S j 111 ;)!N I 1n
C lw &lt;;t ' r I owns h q 1 M 1 '11 s
~:-::-;:-;;-:--:----=:-----...,..Cunnly Oh n
Real Estate - General
Sn1 rl Ptf'fll 51&lt;., A1 pril v d 11
S 120 700 00 :'J nrt r ilnnnt hf'
c;.nlrl lnr !P"oS th,tn twn l huds o l
$$
th 11 1fl'lOIIn t

THI S SHEI11Ff S SAl f OPER
ATF S UNDER TH E DOCTRINE
OF CAVEAT EMPTOR THE
MEIGS CO tiNTY SHEHIFF
MAKE S NO GUARANTEE AS
TO STATUS OF TITLE PRIOR TO
SALE
TERMS OF SALE Ten per

985-3561
All Makes

' II PERCENT FINANCING N&lt;YIV AVAIIABL£1 15 YEAR TERM

........_,,
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Public Nottce

ot1• MI_,.,t

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608 E. MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
PH.992-2259

{IJIIUIC!I"lf ff'ft!pltmJf! f'.Uiu.ll,lft'a.

\II.,., L "'O 0&lt;
lo •~to f&gt;• ' ' ' •

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~~~·

PULLINS
EXCAVATING
- Dozers

=========:==::===t=================ir=======~======~~======;=======~
OUT

Auction every Fn mght at
the Hartford Commumty
Center Truckloads of new
merchandise every week
Cons•gments of new and
used marchand11e always
welcome Richard Reynolds
Auctioneer 276-3069

NEED EXTRA MONEY or
help with college oapon•eo7
The Woot Vorgonla Nado,.l
Ouerd can help If you ere 1
Junior or Senior In kigh
School or a Oredueta. you
may qualify fore •1.1100 bb·
nua or up to •4.000 college
Tuttlon
lllllltance.
plua you
will have
1 aecure part tine
JOb after tralmng learn 1ldll1
'" Melntenance, Supply
Cler~cal . Electronk:1 oooci
Pay Good Troining·Good
Benefits The West Virginia
Nauonal Guard Ia No Ordl·
nary Part Time Job! Call Ser·
geant
Lutton
304 676-3960ortolllroaln
WV 1 · B00 · 642 - 36l9
anytme

12

Will do babysrtting m my
home
Have reference ..
614·992 6913

13

WANTED TO BUY Oldlurno
tu re and Ant1que1 of all
k•nds call Kenneth Swalfl ,
446·3169 or 266·1967 on
theevenmgs
Buymg Gold S•lver, Plat•·
num, old coms, scrap rmgs &amp;
arlverware Dally quotes
avalla~e Also coma &amp; co•n
supplies for sale Sprmg Val
ley Tradmg Co, Spring Val
lay Plaza 446·8026 or
446· B026

Situations
Wanted

Insurance

SANDY AND BEAVER lntu·
ranee Co has offered Mrvlces for f~re msurano•
coverage1n Gel he County foe
almost a century Fann'
home and personal propa~
coverages are avallebla to
meet 1nd1vidual needs Coh.-:
tact FostM lewis, egent
Phone 379· 2204
Are you paymg too much for
your hosprtal health Insurance Call Carroll Snowden '
•
446· 4290

Free to good home 1 male, 1 We pay cash for late modal
female pups W1ll be small clean
used cars
15
Schools
dogs 614·992·3702
Frenchtown Car Co
lnstructton
B1ll Gene Johnson
3 kittens, 2 male. 1 female 2 446·0069
monthsold 614-742· 2328
Wanted to buy tobacco Karate the ult•mate 1n MHdeWh1te and black poodle poundage, wlllpaytoppnce fence all pnvate leaaons
Small Patches 247· 32B2
Men. women, &amp; ch•ldren In:
Call614·379 2165
1truct1,on thru black belt'
Wh1te. med1um stze dog Juck Cars w1th reusable Also available Karate wnt·
Sprt and tamer Name of
fonns puchmg and kicking
W1skers 1 year old To good ports Call614 388·9303
bags and protectrve equip·
homeonly 247·4666
BEDS IRON BRASS old ment Jerry Lowery &amp; Auofum 1ture. gold, s•lvar dollars, c•ates Karate Stud1o, 143
wood 1ce boxes. stone Jars Bu rhngton Rd . Jackaon
antiques. etc . Complete Oh Catl614·286·3074 '
6 Lost and Found
households Wnte M D
MIIIM, Rt 4, Pomeroy, Oh
Or992 7760
18 Wanted to Do
LOST m
of w1th
0 J
Wh1ta
Rd .v~namty
wh1te cat
Gold.
sliver,
sterling
J&amp;
black and tan mark1ngs If
seen or found call 446 welry, rmgs, okl COinS S. cur
rency Ed Burkett Barber General Hauhng and Trash
1607 Childs pet Reward
Shop. Moddtoqort 992 removal Serv1ce Rehable
LOST 2 dogs, 1 black 3476
ond dependable Call 446Schnauzer 1 salt S. pepper
3169 after &amp;PM 266·1967
Schnauzer m Fa1rf1eld · No Item to large or to Small
Centenary area Call 446 Will buy one ptece or com Expeuneced babysitter
plate household New, used LPN . m my home, reasonal:
7489 or 446 6506
or ant1que fum1tura 614 ble rates, weekly or hrly AU
LOST mana bllffold Beacon 992-11370
ages welcome Cell 448Stat1on Please return con- I:::---:-----------4380 ealc for Anna
tents. mally Robert K1mes h· Wanted double barrell shot
cense $20 reward Call gun , s•de by s•deor over and Custom Combtmng, corn &amp;
986·3839 or 986·3931
under Red Keeton 992· soybean Call after 6 4462646
4746
.
FOUND black type Poodle
hke to buy sat of bunk LPN
Moddlaport aree 992 2484 Would
beds Call992 3690
wants to baby11t m her
home, hourly dally or
Lost-puppy m 8 M1la Road WANTED to buy-good uoed weekly Contect 461 Hodgearea, German Shephard and metal truck topper to fit wood Dnve or call614-4484
Colhe m1xed, mostly black
4
304 675 2347
676-3466
m
1979 Fordalter
short6 pbed

3o .,~~3~Bi0iiaindjo~Rkilo~riAininiaii

7

Yard Sale

Mov1ng Sale large assort·
ment of household items
large womans clothing,
pans. m1sc
ttems pots
New
dtlhes.
glaaawara.
&amp;
waahmg machme Nov
2nd. 3rd • 4th 9AM to
6PM, Kerr. Ohro Rod •
wh•tegarage
Vard Sale on 664 second
house past Bidwell School
Clothes, toys, Avon bottles,
ske1nsofyam Nov 1.2.3

WANT to buy used %hp an
compressor Call 304 676· 21
1169

liiiPIIIJ
~~~~,~~;~~~
let lava
plfllfll

11

Help Wanted

Business
Opportunity

LOOKING for people whp
want to earn between •600
$50 000 monthly
1:~:~~~.~~ thrs "newoot and
1
II
grow1ng
notto
n" Callcompany
304-676-n
293

Wanted Ucensed Nura1ng
Home Admm•strator for ap 22 Money to Loan
prox•mately 100 bed sktlled
nurs1ng home 1n Southeast
M1chegan Sale 60 Ne•l Ave , ern Oh1o Please send re HOME LOANS 14% foxed '
Galhpohs Toys, games, sume to Box 1088 rata leader Mortgage, Ohto
ctotheo. baby bed, atero, doll Gallopoho, Oh 46631
1 -B00 -341 · 6664,
house
Eam extra money for Chr~st· _____&amp;_1_4_6_9_2_-_:3..:0..:6..:1___
Carport Sale 1 m lie out 141 mas Sell Avon Earn good 1
Clothmg, fum1ture, drapes, $88 Set your own hours 23 Professional
Call 446 3368 or 446
Services
odds &amp; ends Thurs S. Fr1
2166
Garage Sale macrame ce
ram1c dolls, etc Thurs . Fri- Babys1tterfor a 3 yr old boy
C&amp;L Bookkaorpong
day, Saturday, 9· 7 Box 408 Near hospital Prefer mature Bookkeepmg &amp; ta~t servic;e
C1rcle Dr , Plants per.on Call after 9AM S. be· for all types of businesses
lonr 7PM. 446·0010
SubdiVISion
Carol Neai446·3B62
Garage Sale Nov 4, 2 m1 MLT &amp; MT, 69 bed hooprtat PIANO TUNING &amp; REPAIR
from HMC, Rt 160 Box w1th 1mmed1ate opemng1 for Call B1ll Ward for appoint·
1pr1ngs &amp; mattress. TV tower MLT • MT Com plata oalary ment, Ward's Keyboard
and frmge benefit package 446 4372
antenna. mtsc 1tems
.
Send resuiJ'Ie or apply 1n per
Nov 4.5.6 Thurs . Fn . &amp; son to Oak Hill Commumty
Sat Antiques, tools. dolls. Mechcal Center, 360 Charf1wall11acw
lotto Ave , Oak Holl, Oh
ITUIC Barbara Offutts near
omeroy Healt Care Center 46656 or calladm1n11trator
at614·6B2·7717
31 Homes for Sale
Oldrt33
Several famdy -lndoonTurtday-Friday and Saturday, 10 to 6 Syracuse, near
pool Hegh chairs, dreas~ng
tables. strollers, car ~eat.
ktds clothing. maternity,
sewing mach1ne, mov1e projector, fum 1ture

Someone to babysit 2 amell
chi kl ran •n my home Monday
thru Fnday Mutt have own
transportation Call 448141&amp;.

Save$$$ If Interested 1n spa
c1oua10 rm stone, sphtlevel.
5 yr okl home w•th all the
EXTRAS Call 446·303B ,
Bargam prtced at 870.000

Waitress-apply in person at
Haakln's Lounge Night 5 room house w1th garage
shift Must be 21 or over
and outbUilding for sale
Four fam1ly garage sale
$9,000 Catt 614· 367:
AVON
G1ve
yourutf
a
Nov 3, 1at houl8 on left on
0619
Chrtttmea
Bonua
Sell
Avon
Yellow bush Rd m Raane
Earn good money, set your House 13 0 acreage • 76
Nov 2-3 Salam St In Ru· own houro Coli 614·698- Mau1e Ferguson 230 an~
tland Sponoerod by tho Ru- 7111 collect
oqurpmont Call 614·367tland Brown1e mothers
0194
10-4
Account executive Cable TV
advartialng Groundfloorop- Houae for sale ReadsviUe
PORCH oalo. November portunlty In exciting field Good Investment property •
2nd • 3rd. 604 6th St New Malketioog background pre· t19,000 423-9614or423·
Heven Fumitura,chlldren • ferNd. crNtlve akllls necll- 4203
edd clothing, babythlngo • oary, prole11tionel treinioog
miiC Item•
provided by oxporlene»d 3 bedroom houoo on 1 34
staff. Superior pot.,dal tor acret. lnoido Racine Corp ,
the right candidate Guaran- hmltl 814-949-2222
- d Income and exponoe allowance . •12.000 to EDITH A HAYMAN rni- • /
•1 B,OOO firot year, Reloca- dence on Vme St, Reel·
tion poa11bility Sand rooume ne,Oh. now offered for tale
to P 0 . Box 7361 , Charloo- at *20,000 Property •.P· "
pa110d at *26,600. Forinlor· •,
IDn, WV 2&amp;313
met1on. contact fNd w
Loot-puppy. In 8 Mle Road Crow, Attomay, Pom•oy i
area, Germen Shetlllerd and Oh 992-6132 or Ruth En!; '
Collie mixed, mostly black. Columbuo, · Oh 814-231: ' ~
190B
304-87&amp;-2347.

1~--_:.· \

.-

' 41

..... ._, ..._..

BOGGS

_ General

~

~

'(

Curie tecentl v
Pat nee Ctrcle spent the weekend
with Mt a nd Mt s Kevm Sheppard
of Tuppe t s Pla ms

Cheshire &amp;
lid&lt;llepa,rt. Ohto
PRESENTS
Marshall Tennant Band
Wed., Frt. Sat
m October
Wed -Draft Ntle
(all draft beer " prtce)
n
Thurs ·Pool Tourn Ntte
Datly SpeCIIJs
Not Menl!oned
Open 7 days a week
Carryout Beer &amp;
Wme Available
Extra Spectal
Frt &amp; Sat 10 to 2
Ortnk any drtnk
for I low prtce
~hone 992-9913

The eighth birthday of!J'ommy M
Pennington Jr. was otJserved recently with a party at the Rutland
Civic Center.
Attending were Connie Osborne
and daughters, Kim ~nd Karla,
Marlyn Wllllams and )Holly WUllarriS, Judy Eblin, Regina, Amber
and Matthew Eblin, Susie Robin·
son, Marcia and Andy/ Debbie Cof·
fee, Missy, Tracy and Cassidy, Mrs.
Edmonds, Rusty and Phillip, Debbie Harmon, Larry arid Tabby, An
Ita Jacobs and Chrissy, Tracy
MUam and Stephani!!, Angle and
Robbie Rider, Angle, Julian and Tonya, Kim CoUin and Sheryl Thoma,
Missy Sisson, Jason McDaniel,
Scott Gardner, Gary Adams, Chris
tal and Davy Priddy, Shelly Adams,
and Becky Vance.
Sending gifts were Robbie Eads,
Sheila and Travis Hendricks,
Brenda Coffey and Mike Grate,
Freda and Meral DaVIS

The Dail y Scntmcl

·- ...

rCA~NffiD[iLEmLI~GijHTfiiiN~N~ilir=:=:=:=:=:==irr==~~~~==:;r;=====~=-r::---:---~-~

Pennington bitithday

Syracuse First United Presbyler
ia n Church recently held a hayride
a nd weiner roast for the Kinderga rten, Lassies and Live Wire
Classes a nd their families
Attending were Tammy Wolfe,
Tracie Hubbard, Chris Deemer,
Robin Savage, Tammy Theiss, Kim

LAFF-A-DAY

Business Services

• •

Marvin r.fcKelvey, Jay and Ml
chael McKelvey, Jeff j\llen, Bill
McKelvey, and George Schneider

Adams, Sha ron Barnett, P am Mil·
Jiron, Todd Adams, Eric Milliron,
Kerrle Mullen, Rodney Holman,
Andrea Theiss, Jeanette Duffy,
David DuUy, Carol Adams, Jim
Adam s, Tunle Redovla n, Amy Beth
and Leigh Anne Redovlan, Marilyn
Deemer, Kevin Deemer, Kellle
Mullen, Peggy Holman, Luke Hoi
man, Trlsh Holman, Amber Cum
lngs, Nancy Baker, Heather Roush,
Pam and Tom Theiss, Eleanor and

Church hayride

VI

LAUREL CLIFF

•

area organization members participate 1n act1v1t1es

butld mg was dona ted by Ray
Young Mt and Mts Hatla n Bal
la td dona ted the flost st11p Ha t old

The

Ohio

November 2,1982

Ohio

.

�--------------------------------------------------~-----~
---~----~-~~~
Tuesday, November

Page-8

The

Pomeroy

Sentinel

31 Homes for Sale

8 room house , two lots, very
good location . 680 South
2nd .. Middleport . 810.600.
Call614·992 -2602 .
For Sale - Repossessed
House . 3 bd .rooms , all refin ished. new c arpet throught .

They'll Do It Every Time
rHt= CAl&lt; RVNS

OI&lt;A'I', 8/.IT
,L"/&lt;%\o" (JRtN6S
t r IN ,L"QR A

rvN£-vp ....

Sits on 3 acres . located on
Bashan Rd . Exc . terms to
right party. Contact Bank
One of Pomeroy . 614 -992 -

2133 .
HOUSE Meadowbrodt Ad dition. 3 bedrooms, family
room with firepalce . centra l
air, basement. phone 304 -

675 -1642.
THREE bedroom . 2 story ,
Colonial brick , fireplace .
basement,
new furnace .

1211 Main St . 304-675 2381 .

3 bedroom house and lot on
Plymale Rd . Gallipolis Ferry .

F.H.A Approved . 304 -675 30 08 .

3 2 Mobile Homes
for Sale
T RI - STATE
MOBILE
HOMES . USED - CARS ,
TRUCKS . GAlliPOliS .
CHECK OUR PRICES. CAll
446-7572 .
ClEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEl ' S QUAl·
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES .
4 MI . WEST. GAlliPOliS .
AT 35 . PHONE 446 -7274.
1979 1 4x70 mobile home
with 7x24 expan do , 3 bed rooms, exc . cond., price

S12,000 .
0576 .

Call

614 -367·

USED MOBILE HOME . 576 ·
2711 .
1982 14x70 HOllY PARK.
bra nd new . all electric, 3 bed -

rooms. also has super wall , 1
owner , must sell, see to ap preciate. $17.5 00. Call304 89 5-3651 or 895-3584 .

42

44

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished 2 bdr . mobile
home in Crown City . Call
614 -256 -6620.

2nd floor furnished effi ciency apt. Apt . 4, 729 2nd
Ava . Adults only. 446 -0967.

2 bdr . mobil e home fully fur nished. adults only. Call
446 -4110 .

Nicely furnished mobile
home, central air, 1 mile
below city overlooldng river,
aduh only. Call446 -0338 .

Trailers for rent . Call 446 4225 or 446-0766 .

First floor unfurnished apart·
ment . Inquire at 631 4th
Ave .. Gallipoli s.

For rent two bedroom mobile
home one mile from city ,
adu tts . no pets. Call 446 1158.
Mobile home 12x60 for sale
or rent, no pets, deposit re quired. Also trailer space .
Csll446 -3812 .

1 brd. furnished apartment
good location in city, no
children or pet s. Call 446·
1162.

Wood burning add on furnance . Still in factory crate.
8460 . Call 1-614 -256 1216.

1 bedroom apt. very nice,
$136 month . new carpeting ,
refrigerator and stove. Call
992 -5880.

3 bdr . trailer. private lot. 4
mi . from HMC . very reasona ble to right tenants . Call446 0514 .

bdr.furn . apt. in Rio
Grande, Oh . $225 mo. all
utilities pd . Children &amp; pets
accepted. Call 446-0167.

19 70 Windsor mobile home.
3 br. partly turn . incl. Sears
washer S5200 . 304-675 ·
43 61 .

Mobile hom e for rent s 150
per mo .. deposit . Call 614 388 -9747.

34

2 bdr .. gas &amp; water furnished , partially furnished ,
no pets. $200. 8100 dep .
Call after 5, 446 -4745 .

Furnished apartment . All
utilities paid. Adults only .
Order couple preferred . Call
446 -9623.

For rent trailer furnished . for
2 persons. S 100per mo . Call
675 -7379. after 6PM .

3 bdr. unfurnished apt . at
103 Court St. $215 per mo ..
S100 dep ., no pets_.. ref .
required .

Business
Buildings

TWO unit apartment build ing, pdce reduced . 304 675
7541
0'
614- 446 -3703 .

3 5 Lots &amp; Acreage
For sa le one and half acres
more or less. appr01timately
600 ft road frontage on
Cora -Centerpoint Rd. near
Ce nterpoint . $3,000.00
Phone 682 -6944 .
Two acre lots -150ft. road
fron tage . city water, behind
84 lumber . Call 304 -676 6873 or 675-3618.
92x 11 0 corner lo t S55 00 .
Twin Cedars Addition , New
Haven. 304 -882 -3206 .
20 ACRES . black top road.
timber &amp; water . Price re duced . 304 -675 -7541 or
6 14 -446 -3703

Avntals

41

Houses for Rent

Small furnished house, 1 or 2
adu Its only . Call 446 -0338 .
5 room house &amp; bath. nice
garden space, located 110
4th Ave .. Gallipolis. Call
446 -3870.
5 room house in Eureka un furnished . dep . req . Call
614-256- 1413.
Furnished house 2 bdr ..
$195, water paid . 241 JdCk·
son Pike.Gallipolis . Call
446 -4416 after 7PM .
2 bdr. house in city basement
gas furnance. carpeted.
adults. no pets. Call 446 0968 .
House 4 r . &amp; bath. in country ,
will rent cheap . Call 614 256 -6639 .
Small house almost new on
waterfront. Really nice. all
modern. convenient. carport. No pets. adults. small
deposit . Call266 -6472 .
Home for rent highway 160,
4 mi . from holzer. $226 per
mo. Prefer adults. Ref . &amp;sec .
dap. Call446· 7322 .
Pomeroy-2 bd .room unfurnished house. &amp;196. mo. Sa·
curity deposit. &amp;1 00. plus
utilities . After 6-call 614992 -2288.

NEW Haven . 7th . St .. 2-3
bedrooms. garage, full base ment, $326. plus deposit,
roforoncos. 304-576-2681 .
ALL electric home with gar·
age &amp; ful baaement. refer ence
required .
304 -675-3217
2 bedroom to - uM and two
bedroom apt. both axe. con dition. References Aequ i'ed .
304-1176-19 62.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bdr. mobile home 12x66,
fumiahed, convient location,
Upper River Rd. Rof. dep . required. Coli 448-B668.

Trailer for rent in Kanauga .
675 -3475 .
2 bedroom trailer . Real nice,
adutts only . Brown ' s Trailer
Park, Minersvlle . 614 -992 3324 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

2 bd.room furnished Apt . &amp; 1
eHenciency Apt . 614 -992 5434 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

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

lAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofa, chair , rocker, ottoman.
3 tables. lextra heavy by
Frontier), 8686 . Sofa. chair
and loveseat. &amp;276 . Sofas
and chairs priced from $286 .
to $896. Tables. $38 and up
to S126. Hida-a-bads,$440 .
and up to $626 ., queen size.
8380 . Recliners . $176 . to
8325 .. lamps from $18 . to
865 . 5 pc . dineHes from
$79 .. to $386 . 7 pc .. 8189.
and up . Wood table with six
chairs $396. to 8660 . Desk
$110. Hutches. 8300. and
$660., maple or pine finish .
Bedroom suites - Bassett
Charry, $796 . Bunk bod
complete with mattresses.
$260. and up to $396 . Baby
beds, $99 . Mattresses or box
springs. full or twin. $68 .•
firm , 868. and $78 . Queen
sets, $196 . 4 dr. chests,
f42 . 6 dr. chests, 864. Bad
frames, 820.and f26 .. 10
gun · Gun cabinets. &amp;360 .•
dinette chairs 820 . and $26 .
Gas or electric ranges, $326 .
Baby matresses. &amp;26 &amp; &amp;36.
bodframas 820,$26, &amp; 830 .
Used Furniture -- bookcase.
ranges. chairs. end tables,
recliners and TV's. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 7pm, Mon . thru Fri .. 9am
to 5pm, Sat.
446 -0322

Furnished Apt .. 1 BR . 243
Jackson Pike . $226, utilities
paid. Adults . 446-4416 af .
tar 7 p.m .

Furnished efficiency $175 .
Utilities pd. 920 4th Ave .,
Gallipolis. Adults . Call 4464416 after 7PM .

2 bdr trailer total electdc ,
6150 mo .. 1 mi. back of
Evergreen . Call 614- 246 9170.

Household Goods

Plastic Septic Tanks. State
and county approved. 1.000
gal. tank, price &amp;340. Other
sizes in stock, haul in your
pickup truck. Call614 -286 6930. Jackson. Dh . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES

1- - - - - - - - - -

5 hou se trailer . and 1 trailer
lot . Cal1446 -1052 .

51

2 bedroom apt . in Middle port. $176 . month plus utilities . Between 1 a.m . &amp; 3
p .m . 614 -992 -6646 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

Apartment for rent Middle port, newly remodeled . Call
992 -3690.

2 bedroom furnished. No
pets. $160. month plus utilities. In New Haven , W.V . Eff . Apt . Suotabla for 1 or 2
304 -882 -2466 .
people. Roush Lane in Che shire, Oh . 1-304-773 -6882 .
Trailer for rent Middleport .
Call992-3590 .
Apartments . 304-675 6548 .
For rent -small trailer , suit&amp;· l - - -- - - - - - blefor 1 or 2 people. Partially APARTMENTS . mobil&amp;
fumished . 8135 . mo . plus homes, houses. Pt . Pleasant
deposit. 614-986 -4464 or and Gallipolis. 614 -446 614 -992 · 7479 .
8221 or 614-246 -9484 .

Blue Ridge Mountain fire place inserts now in stock at
Swisher Implement Co .• St.
Rt . 7 North, Gallipolis, Oh ,
446 -0476 .
Firewood . Cuttolength . Del ivered in dump truck loads or
may be picked up in yard .
Crown City, Oh Junction
653 &amp; 218. Call 614-2666246 .
For sale Restaurant Carryout equipment, used.
lowest prices . RAOCO , 304 623 -1378.

Middleport, Ohio

Hou se coal. Pickup at mine
site. Forest Run Rd . &amp;26 . ton
thru Nov. 614-992-2280 or
614 -992 -2618 .

Auto . washer and dryer.
$80 . Kenmore washer and
dryar . $160 . 614 -742 2352 .
Call Robert Harper for Gin seng and Yellowroot prices.
304 -676-1293 .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

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

Houses and 1 • 2 bdr. epartments for rent. HUD program ovoHobll. A-One Rool
EIIIIOI, Corol Yell•· Rolltor. C.. 304-8711-11104 or
875-83811.

Television
VieWing

Motorcycles

TUESDAY

19BO Suzuki 11 00 L, must
seU • . belt reeaonable offer.
304-676-2073.

11/2/82

Boats and
Motors for Sale

C' APrM-1 EASY

16 ft . Storer aft alum., 60 hp
Johnson motor, best offer .
304-676-2073.

BUYING and selling used
heavy equipment (agricultural. construction, mining,
chemical industry, etc .)
through consignment for a
national company . Starting
at $16,000. valua . Call Robert l Harper. 304-676 1293.

I WONDER WHERE
NAJ IH HE SAID
HE'D BE RIGHT
BACK.

1981 16ft. 4 in . flbergloss
sasa boat, 176 hp outboard,
2 livewolls, 81600. 304676 -2719 .
{/ · 1.-

SONY cassette. diacoustic
speakers, Realistic receiver,

77

Auto Repair

SPECIAL Complete enamel

tl •IMJDy N(" '""

$300 . Raliegh 'record'·!:==========;:::=========~ paint jobs from 8300. SunEnglish built 26Va" frame.
roofs installed from 8226.
Sun-Tour shifters $160.
Auto Trim Center, 446 Raol to raol tape recorder 56 Pets for Sale
71
Autos for Sale
1968.
$16. 304-676-1613,
--------Byeriy and Felts Automatic
RCA stereo for sale, good
79 Pontiac Bonneville, 2 dr .• Transmi11ion. Rebuilt or ex·
condition , 8200.00, Call
h blue, velour interior, changed . All work guaran304 -676 -6999 altar 6 :00
cruise. AM·FM. 8 ·track . Call teed. raasonble pri~ea . Call
446-6639 .
p.m.
614 -266·6068.

t"

1977 Pontiac Firebird Formula. 46,000 milea. radio,
S-trock, SB roadhandlor GT
tires with white lettering,
disc brakes, PS. spoiler. 360
automatic, yellow with Formula decals. t4,300. 614246 -620B.

-lc Congestion7 Stuffy nose7
New soothing " Medicated
Vapors'' replacesmesayvaporizera all night long at Hockenberry Pharmacy.

We will MEET or BEAT any
legitimate price your receive
on any new piano or organ.
BRUNICARDI MUSIC CD ..
61 Court St .. Gallipolis. Call
FRANKLIN stova, 9 ft . reg . 446 -0687.
pipe, 9 ft . triple w a l l l - - - - -- - - - $260 .00 , 304 -675 -2 620 Piano cherry fruit wood finish, French design, &amp;800.
after 6 .
Call446 -4670 after 6:30.
FIREWOOD 304 - 468 1083.
58
Fruit
APARTMENT sized gas
&amp; Vegetables
cood stove, $60. call after 6.
304-676 -4148 .
Potatoes. Humphrey Farms
still hu Kinnebecs at 89.00
Handmade cedar chests . per 100 lb., ex . quality, your
304 -676-3489 .
containers . No Sunday
Sa lea. Get your winter pota Late model gold deluxe toes now. Reedaville. Oh
Whirlpool washer . 304-676 - 614 -37B -6296 .
4624 after 4:30p.m.

55

Building Supplies

59 For Sale or Trade

Build your own garage l-::---------24x24 all lumber furnished, For sale or trade, rabbit dogs.
8696. Can deliver. Barnpatt- 304 -676-1070.
ern also. Call 614 -886 - 1- - - - - - - - - 7311 .

Firewood. cut to order,
pickup or delivered . Call
614-266-6689 .

I

1979 Boss Tracker 111 . like
new, big motor, needs repair. 614 -986-4339 after 6
p.m.

Dump truck load of hard·
wood, approx . 4 PU loads.
$100. Call 614-367 -0637
after 7 .
Waterline For Sale 3A inch
160 PSI 817.96 per 100ft ..
1' 160 PSI $28.96 per 100
ft .. 1'!.'160PSI$47.60por
1 00 h . Ron Evans Enter·
prises. 4 miles South of Jackson on St . At . 93 ,
614 -2B6-5 930 .

74

75

/

Building materials block,
brick, sewer pipes, win dows. lintels. etc . Claude
Winters , Rio Grande. 0 . Call
614 -2 45-5121 .

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
Secluded. mini farm , all STORE 62 Olivo St .. Galllpo·
fenced. remodel farm home, lis. Couch, loveseat and
with 4 bodr .. t300 por mo. chair, 8199.; wood and coal
Cleland Raa«y 992 -2269.
heaters; box apring and mats
trou, t100. Roclinoro, teO.;
9 x 12 linoleum rugs. t22. ;
44
Apartment
maple rockera, •49., wrinfor Rent
ger waahera. refrigerators,dinatte seta , chest,
draaser1, bunkie mattresa,
Furnished 3 r. private both, t40. Coll448 -31 89.
B46 2nd . Ave .. Gallipolis.
Rof. preferred. Call 448- GOOD USED APPLIAN.CES
2216.
• woahoro, dryoro. refrlgero- - - - - - - - toro. rongoa. Skoggl ApSm .. ll furnished efliancy, 1 pllencoa, Upper Rlvor Rd.,
profoasionll typo malo only. l&gt;ealdo Stone Croat Motel.
Center air &amp; holt. Coli 448- 4411-7398.
033B.

~I&lt;AMMiN~?

WODDBURNING STOVES
Free standing fireplace inserts, mobile home and furnance ad -ons. Jividens Farm
Equipment. Call446 -1676 .

••••uhwnCIIwe

Farm -6 rooms . 3 bd .rooms .
8200. month . 614-992 6908.

I WoNDeR 1F f-le WAs
AiS Ct.AWS CR
COMPl-AiNiHC:I A&amp;xJf fHe

SHAI&lt;feNi~

King wood burner with
blower. uud 2 aeasona,
good condition . $260. firm .
614 -949 -2603 .

Metal sheets for all building
purposes. Flat porcelian
enamel coated . 4x8 thru 4 x
12. Prices. $7.00 to $9.60.
614 -667 -3 085 .

56

Pets for Sale

HillCREST KENNEl
Boarding all breeds. AKC
Reg . Oobermans pups and
Doberman Stud Service.
Call446 -7795 .

John Deere dozer 1010 runs
good, wood or coal burner
with circulator 81 00. Call
614-246-9320 after 5:30
PM . Yard Sale 11 OTexasRd . POODLE GROOMING . Call
Judy Taylor at 614 -367Nov. 4-6-6 .
7220.
Man's cashmere top coat
size 38. girts Gallia Acada - REG . QUARTER HORSES
For sale-4 bd .room mobile Unfurnished apartments for
home. Also for saleorrent. 3 rent . Call Automotive mey wool .jacket size 12. Training. showing, breeding.
bd.rooril mobile home. Also Supply, 8 till 6, 304-676 - Hohner accordian. Call614 - sales and boarding . Contact
Dan Beam, Gallipolis, 446246 -6274 after 7PM .
hava for sale 2 acras good 2218, 304 -676 -6763 .
0183.
home in Mason will trade . I- - - - - - - - - John Sheets. 31f2 miles ONE bedroom. HUD apart - Hobby horses, handmade
ment, in Pt . Pleasant. call ideal for 2.3&amp;4 year old . Call DRAGONWYND CATTERY
South Middleport. R-7.
. KENNEL. AKC Chow pup446 -3886.
614-446-3131 .
pies, CFA Himalayan. ParMOBILE home. 3bedrooms, 1- - - - - - - - - bath &amp; Va. all electric, unfur - TWO bedroom apartment. House coal for sale $24 ton . sian and Siamese kiHens .
nished . &amp;200 month plus air conditioning. water &amp; gas Call614-266-6816 or 614 - Call446 -3844 after 4PM .
electric. Glenwood. 304· paid, $260. per month . 304- 266 -6747.
Would you like a cute Cocker
676 -2441.676 -9073.
676 -6294.
Hidabed. good cond .. Call Spaniel puppy for Christ ONE bedroom mobile home. FURNISHED 1 bedroom 446 -9416 .
man? AKC Blonde Cocker
$150. per month, phone apartment. Adults only, no
Spaniel puppies e150. Have
304 -675-4154.
C11e Knife Sale Product no. been wormed and had all
pots. call304-676 -3788.
6231 Yl. 2 bladed. bone han - shots. Call 614 -388 -9766
TWO mobile homes, garage IN Middleport, 2 room effi - dle. list price &amp;18.76, sale after 5PM .
apartment. 6 minutes from ciency apartment. 304-882 - price 811.25 . Spring Valley
town on Rt . 2, call after 6 2666 or 614-992 -7206 .
Trading Co ., Spring Valley For sale American Pit-Bull
p.m .. 304-676 -6277 .
Terrier ADBA Registered fe Plaza. 446 -802 6.
male, 6 mos old, white shots
SALE or rent -8 200. plus util Johnny Stewart fox call &amp; health record . Call 61446
Space
for
A
ent
ities, security deposit. phone
tapes . Cottontail rabbitt, 388-9616.
304 -676-3591 .
gray fox pup, plus many
--------------- psOB
more. Spring Valley Trading PEKINGESE puppies. AKC,
btwo bedrotm mobile home. 1 'I• acre mobile home lot, 1 Co .. Spring Valley Plaza, 8126 . 304 -676 -6030 after
Kitchen furnishel , nice &amp; mile past Centenary on 141 . 446 -8025 .
6:00p.m .
clean . 8185 . plus utilities . Dep. required , &amp;160 permo .
You
pay
utilities.
Call
614
Married couples only, one
Firewood, $36 . truck load . AKC Registered adult toy
small child accepted. refer - 246 -6841 .
866. a cord . Split and deli - Poodle &amp; her puppy, 1/a week
ences. 304 -675-1076.
vered . 61,4-843-3603 .
old, both for 8300. Father
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
also can be seen, will conTWO bedroom mobile home . Perk, Route 33, North of Hoover t,Jpright sweeper sider him also, real small,
Kitchen furnished . nk:e &amp; Pomeroy. Large lots. Call with attachments, 4 years 304-676-7877 .
clean . 8210 . Gas, aewer &amp; 992 -7479.
old, 846.; Zenith console stewater paid . Married couplet - - - - - - - - - -lc reo With am-fm radio, $200. AKC Registered puppiea,
Trailer
lot
.
3
miles
from
only On e small chUd ac 614 -992 -3269 .
beautiful bassett hound . Toy
Chester
on
Scout
Camp
Rd
.
cepted. referencea. 304Pomeranians, both pick of
614
-986-3979
.
675 -1076.
litters from stud service.
Shots &amp; wormed. Al10 takIng deposits on Cocker Spa43 Farms for Rent
niels. 304-676-7877.

51

by Larry Wrlghl

54 Misc . Merchandise KIT 'N' CARLYLE ••

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

OIC'K TRACY

2,1982

Tuesday,

2,1982

WOULD like to trade Regiatared male Walker Coon hound, top bloodlines for
registered male Bluetick or
Redlick, at least 2 years old.
304-882· 2673.

-.................
........ .. ....
'

61

Farm Equipment

Corn cribs-wire type, 900
and 1,200 bu. Call614-2465193.

JIVIDEN ' S FARM
EQUIPMENT
446-1676
long tractors. Vermeer balers &amp; hay equipment. Bale
movere &amp;. feeders. wagons,
rotary tillers. rotary cutters,
seeders. blades, gates, disc,
plows. cultivators &amp;
woodburners.
And see us to get a complete
line of part &amp; service!
USED :
IH hrdro 70, Ford Jubilee.
600 Ford, Ferguson 30, 70
Oliver, Masaey Harris Pony,
8· N Ford. cornplanter.
plows, diac, round baler, JD
manure spreader, goose
neck grain wagon , and used
woodburners .
We Buy Uaed Equipment!

62

Wanted to Buy

Good used piano for church .
304-676-28B6.

63

Livestock

Pigs for sale. 7 weeks old.
$46 . oa . 814-992-6971 .
Bred Hereford cows . Contact Hariey Rice. Reedsville.
Dh . 614-687-3369.
3 croaabred cowl, one Slmnotol bull. 304-882 ·2142 .

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Harvest special whole
shelled corn t6 .00 por 100
lb. your socks. t&amp;. 75 por
aacked. Morgan Woodlawn
Form, At . 36. Pliny, WV.
304-676-227&amp;.

largo round blloa t1 O..t2&amp;.
304·468-111&amp;6 or 304·67&amp;7641.

-

... . ....
... -· ....
.......
' " ..
71

'

Autos for Sell!

Forule1979 Ford Floatooxcellent ahope, 4 apd .. 4 cyl.
Coll4411-8788 otter &amp;PM.
1980 Chevrolet Choveno,
oxtro ahorp,, low mlleogo.
C.ll4411;4782.
1988 Pontile ~otellno PS,
Pl. AC, body &amp; engine oxc..
new engine. new exhauat.,
,1400 or 1300 end 1 good
gun. Touo Rd. Box 2&amp;,
trol..r of hill.
1178 Trono-AM ~ 41pd ..
T·top, AM·FM ao-o.
32,000 miles, Nnl good,
t4.000. Coli 814-388111.9.

81

1981 Cutlaas Supreme Diesel with everything . Will con alder older car aa trade in .
614-742 -241B.

PAINTING - interior and exterior, plumbing, roofing.
some remodeling . 20 yrs .
oxp. Caii614·3BB-9662 .

1978 Chavy Cornaro. typo
LT. black, am-fm S-track stereo. T-top, V-8 engine. new
radials, shocka, new hoses,
exhaust, axe. cond .. ona
owner. 84,000. J . Hutchison, 742 -2 306 .

Marcum Roofing 81 Spouting . 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof .
Call 614-388-9622 or 61438B -9B67.

1976 Dlds. Cutlass Su preme. 360 auto., ps, pb,air·
cond ., excellent cond .
614-992-7769.
HARTS Used Cars, Now
Haven Weat Virginia . Over
20 le11 expensive cars in
stock.
1977 MONTE Carlo, 304882-3116.
JEEPS. Cars. Trucks under
1 00 available at local gov't
salaainyourarea. Call (refun ~
doblolt•714 -&amp;69-0241oxt.
1866 for directory on how to
purchase. 24 hrs.

*

1 970 VW wagon, runs good.
body good. $660. 304 -B96 3664 .

79 TRANS AM. Special Edition, loaded, 31 ,000 miles.
call304-896-3326 .
74 Buick Rogal, good cond .
$800. See at 2626 Jefferson, or call 304-676 -7176
after 6:00.

72

Trucks for Sale

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

77 Bronco4-WD. 302.2 borrel, standard. good cond .
Coll614-:tll6-60&amp;6.
1977 Joop Wogonoor good
cond.. t2,900. Call 4464670 oftor 6:30.
197B Joop CJ6, now soft
top.lotaofextrea, axe. con d.
Coll446-0616 .

,...---"'---,,- HAH?!

MEUP!

IIHOTHEK.

ENEZZLER.S!

TIME ...

RON ' S Television Service .
Specializing In Zenith and
Motorola. Ouazer. and
house calls. Call 676-2398
or 446 -2464.
F • K Tree Trimming, atump
removal . Coll876-1331 .

RINGLE'S SERVICE experienced roofing. including
hot tar application, carpen ter, electrician, mason . Call
304 -676 -2088 or 6754660.

&lt;:ASOL.INE ALLEY

Have ~ou told
40ur fnends to
qet out and
• vote?

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

ADVANCED Seomloss
Gutter-Doora. Offering continuae guttering, seamle11
siding, roofing, garage
doors. free eatimates, 614 698-B206 .

&amp; Heating

73

·suPPOSED'

CUNHIN6, M155

-Y' 68\T 'CR.C6JG" HECK IT OON'T
BY R/66/N' Ttl
EVeN ll\H.E A
COi'IPUTE!tS?.. &amp;UT GENIUS LIK.E ME
HOW 15 THAT
00 IT! CO!olPUTERS
POSSIBLE, Mit AltE PLAYI'EN5 FOR.

CHRISTIAN'S CON STRUCTION . Constr .. roofing , siding, spouting,
fencing, painting, repalra •
cloonlng. 446-2000, coli be foro 8 and after 6:30 .

1977 Dodge ',\ ton pickup.
Long bed, 318 automatic,
22,000 actual mlloa, very
good cond .. $3,400. 814246-6208.

76 Joop Cherokee ot, pa. pb,
am- fm, good condition,
70.000 mi. $1960. 304676 -2700.

- I COULD STILL YOU AAE 10011T
HAVE &amp;EATEN
CASTIGATE ME. l
WARBUCI&lt;.S IF
Ff6UitED WITHOUT
YOU HAON'T
Ttf: 115P! ... BUT
FIIILEO TO 6AC!t TliEitE WILL BE

011'? rt«i WHAT
A80UT YOIJfl

M11onary work, Logue Con tracting, At . 1. Ewington .
Call614 -388-9939.

PAINTING interior &amp; exterior, free estimataa. 304676-1128 .

8ft. truck topper, blue bubble windows $160. 13 ft.
acattter .trailer, very good
cond . f600 . 304-6763333.

82

Oh~m~.4es! In fsc:

some o'th'qirls has come
di-rec'from wor

Plumbing

WINNI E
CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Phone 446-38BB · or 4464477

83

8UT IT'S SUCH A
BEAUTIFUL DAY.

LET'S LET SOME

LIGHT AND AIR
INTO THIS ROOM.
IT'S SO GLOOMY.

t.I$A COOPER?
ISN'T SHE THE
YOUNG LADY WHO
WORKS FOR 81LL
AND 'TUTU?

SURELY YOU DON'T
HAVE ANYTHING

AGAINST SUN AND
8LUE SKIE5, DO

Excavating

YOU?

Trenching -water lines. gas
lines. drainage. Call 614246-6193.

84

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING Machine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Salas • Service Sharpen
Sciuora . Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy. 992-2284.

86

BARNEY

General Hauling

JONES BOYS WATER SER VICE. Coll614-387- 7471 or
614· 367-0691 .

73 Chevy Blozor. 4 whool
drive. Auto. trent, runs Nood something houled
grllt, body rough . t600. away or aomething mov8d7
Cell 949-2779 alter 4 on We'll do II. Coll446-3169 or
· 614-266-1987 oftor 6 .
WOikdlyl.
1978 Ford 4-whool drlvo
180, outo.. lockout hubs.
o.c. t3,800. Phone 1114·
742-2480 •.

Now Hauling hou1e coal,
lump or ltoker up to 8 ton .
Umoatono, top soli, flll ·dirt.
Coll814-367· 7101 .

197&amp; ~ Chevy 4x4. 3&amp;0
outo .. L.W.B .• AM·.FM. 8 ply
tires. new bed liner. Good
cond. 941-21131.

JIMS Wiler Service. Coli
Jim Lanier, 304-876 -7397.

PEANUTS

87

~

1978 Ford Bronco fully cuatoinlzod 38,000. 112·7408.

Upholatery

Motorcycle•

TRISTATE
· UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 83 Soc. Avo .. Oolllpolis.
4411-7833 or4411-1B33.

1977 XR •7&amp; Hondo dlrtblko.
good cond. Coli 441.·3884.

Mowii~YS Upholstery Rt. 1
lox 124. Pt. Ploount, 304117&amp;-41&amp;4.
•

74

8:00

ANNIE

- IT'G OBVIOUS THAT
TH\5 '!ollt. EAZEE' \llil5
IH I'IAit&amp;UCK.S' EMPLOY!
HE 0/JTWITTEP YOU!

1177 C8 780 K Hondo·. Low
mlloogo. good cond .. llld
off·I'OIIOII lor Mlllng. A·.M - FURNITURE repelred, onF.M . radio &amp; cuo. ployer,
reatored, cuttom caoloo torlng. Oood lltoo.
304-17&amp;-3871 oftor
j
1880. 814-182-11113.

AN AT,TORNE'( YOU

SllOULD BE ACQUAINTED
THE TERM 1'E6RESS"

AN

E6RES5 IS AN

,f)(IT F~OM

PROPERTY

E6RE55 USUALLY RE~ER5
TO A WAY our
.

v
• • I

.•

I FEBRYLj

(!) Futuro Sport
(J) Carol Burnett
()) Cl ()) ® Gl I]}) Nowo
(2) Nowa/Sporta/Woathor
CIHID 3-2· 1, Contect
8:30 0 Cil (2) NBC Nowa
Cil MOVIE: 'Pride of tho
Bluogroaa'
Cll ESPN Sportsforum
(J) Bob Newhart Show
()) Ill (j}) ABC Nowa
Cl ()) ® CBS News
Cil Dr. Who
liD Over Eosy

7:00 .0 Cil (2) Decision 'B2 Roger Mudd and Tom Brokaw
anchor election coverage
of House, Senate and gubernatoria l races across the
country.
Cil HBD Mogazlno Starring
Dick Cavett This show presents an inside look at the
shows and stars appearing
on HBO.
(]) Thia Week In Tho NBA
(Season Premiere)
(J) Gomer Pyle
(]) Ill I]}) 'B2 Vote
Q (]) ® Campaign 'B2
Cil liD MacNeil-Lehrer
Report
7:30 (!) ESPN Sports Center
IIJ Andy Griffith
Cil Business Report
liD This Old House
8:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Prince of tho
City'
Cil MOVIE: 'Rich end
Famous'
Cil I Spy
(!) NCAA Football: Memphis State at Georgia
(J)
NBA
Basketball:
Washington at Atlanta
())II]) Nova 'Why Do Birds
Sing?' Tonight's program
examines how birds sing
with regional accents. (A)
(60 min.) [Closed Caplionod]
9:00 CIJ 700 Club
())II]) Mystery! Tho Threa
Tools of Death.' Father
Brown discovers the truth
about the murder of a philanthropist (60 min.)
[Closed Captioned]
10:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Taka This Job
and Shove It'
Cil Firing Line
liD Newswatch
10:30 Cil Star Time
(J) TBS Evening News
10:461lll Election Special
11:0Q D Cil Newscentar
Cil MOVIE: 'Ghost Story'
(]) ESPN Sports Center
(]) Q (]) ® Ill I]}) News
(2) News/Sports/Weather
Cil Dove Allen at Large
11:30 0 Cil (2) Doc:ision 'B2 Roger Mudd and Tom Brokaw
anchor election coverage
of House. Senate and gubernatorial races acro ss the
country .
CIJ Another Life
(J) Saro Dana-Part 2 Second of 4 parts. Sara 's first
love whose family had her
convicted as a thief moves
to ' Austra lia and wreaks
havoc on her new socia l
status. (2 hrs.l
()) Bon!!Y Hill Show
Cl ()) ® Campaign ' B2
Cil PBS late Night
Ill I]}) '82 Vote
11:46 Cil MOVIE: 'Lipstick'
1 Z:OO Cil Burna &amp; Allen
(]) NCAA Football: Notre
Dame vo. Novy from Glonta
Stedlum In East Rutharlonl. NJ
()) '82 Vote
Ill I]}) ABC Late Night
Newt
12:30 CIJ Jock Bonny Show
()) ABC late Night News
Cil Coptloned ABC Nlwa
1:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Tho See
Wolveo'
(I) '1 Married Joon
Ill I]}) News
1:1&amp; Cil MOVIE: 'Nijinaky'
1:30 Cil My unlo Margie
(J) MOVIE: 'Tho Spiral
SIIII'OIM'
• (j}) CNN H•dllno Nowo
2:00 Cil lllchllor Fothor
•
(I) ® CBS Newa
Nlghtwetch
2:30 CIJ Ut. of Rlloy
· (]) ESPN Sporta Cantor
3:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Islands In tho
~m·

rr

1

Mswer:
Yeste•day·s

THE EJEST WAY TO
KEEP THIN 15 NOT

TO EXCEED1HI5.
Now arrange the circled loners 10
form the surprise answer. as sug g~sled by the above cartoon

r rI I I I J

XI I

THE " (

(Answers tomorrow )

I Jumbles OAKEN

LUCID ROBBER COWARD
Answer : A dress that makes you look slim often
makes olhars do lhls- lOOK 'ROUND

Jurnl:t't Book No. 20, containing 110 puo:lea.ls available l or S1 .95 postpakf
from Jumble, clo thlt newspaper, Box 3-4, Norwood, N.J. 07648. 1nclude your

mune, addtels, zl coda and make checks payable to News a

rboo«.s.

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and James Jacoby

Deal yields lessons

D (Il Nowacontor
CIJ Tic Toe Dough

-

(}J 700 Club
3:1&amp; (I) MOVIE: 'Oiau Sphinx'
3:30 Cil , MOVIE: 'Rioh ami
Fomouo'
.
(]) Thlo WMk In The NBA
(Souo~ Pr.miero)
4:00 (]) CFL Footblll: Homllton
nEd-ton •
4:30 CIJ .._ Begley
4:4&amp; (}J MOVIE: 'One on One'

'.
(

t
J I I IJ

tNAVIED

EVENING

( l\111117,.,..."'&lt; IM"-t UI .... liM Ool

CAPTAIN STEEMER C.rpot
Cleaning featured by Haffalt
Broathers Custom Carpets.
Free estimates. Call 4462107.

B ft . GMC pu bod, $300 and
used driver door for Chevy
PU . Also 314 ton over loads
suspenlaon. Price reasonable. Call614-669 -4166.

78 Chevy pickup truck
t1760. firm . 304 -676 7466 .

-

Home
Improvements

1976 Corvette red. ex . cond .
Mull Soli, $6,900, Jackson
Dh. 1-614-2B6-6160 or 1·
614 -2B6·6686.

1977 Ford Granado 3 spd
with overdrive, 81.900.
742 -2362.

CAl-l I laP IT IF ~ OCl\11
6€'1 F'RCM!Jr'E;D 1D A
D8SK JOB?!

lee Ia••

STUCCO PLASTERING textured ceilings commercial and residential, free
estimates. Call 614-26611B2.

1974 Buick laoabro AC . PS.
PB . $800. 949 -2780.

BORN LOSER

12:00 Cil HBO Magazine Storrlng
Dick Coven This show proaentt an lnaide look at the
shows and stars appearing
on HBO.
Cil MOVIE: 'Take This Job
end Shove It'
Cil MOVIE: 'Navar Wavo ot
oWAC
(]) NCAA Football: Momphil State at Georgia
1:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Ono on Ono'
(J) MOVIE: 'Guns ot Batool'
2:00 Cilln tho Kltchan w/ Jamlo
2:30 Cil Baa Bao Block Sheep
3:00 Cil MOVIE: 'Tha Soo
Wolv•'
(]) NCAA Footboll: Notre
Demo vo. Novy from Glonts
Stedlum In Eut Ruther·
font. NJ
3:30 Cil MOVIE: 'Secrets of
Three Hungry Wives'
4:00 II Cil NBC Special Troot
'Hot Hero Sandwich.' Tho
fun and frustration of
growing up are examined .
Guest starring Erik Estrada . Bruce Jenner and
Olivia Newton-John. (A)
(80 min.)
6:00 Cil
Kamlkazo:Miulon/
, Outh Personal testimony
and intoNiews are used to
explore this World War II
tactic .
6:30 Cil MOVIE: 'I Go Pogo'
Cil MOVIE: 'Hell's Angela'

NORTH
+K2

six clubs, impregnable
against any defense. But 100
honors do not count at duplicate tournament bridge, so
South cannot be faulted for
electing to play the more
rewarding, though somewhat dangerous, six-spade
contract.
Note also the cue bid of
the singleton heart by North
1
which enabled South to bia
the small slam. Once again,
at rubber bridge, North
would have simply bid six
clubs at this poinf.
When the bidding returned
to East he doubled: This was
a s~iallead-directing slam
double invented many years
ago by the late expert Theodore Lightner. The Lightner
double calls for the lead of
the first suit bid by dummy
or some other unusual lead.
Unfortunately, it is as
much abused as used and
such was the case here. West
knew that after the double
he was supposed to lead
something other than his
partner's suit. Unhappil y for
his side, he led a diamond.
Peculiarly enough, if West
were to make an unusual
lead of the queen of hearts,
wh1ch would hold the trick,
he would have no trouble
shifting to a club and setting
·
the doubled contract.

11·2-82

.4

t K865
tAKQJ82
EAST

WEST
• 73
.Q 6 52
• J 974
tiO 9 4

• J 54
.AKJIOI !
• Q 10 3 2

t -...
SOUTH
+AQIOi8!
.9 7

tA

t7 6 53
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West

Norlh

Easl

Soulh

1•

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

It
3t
4+
5•
Pass

It
3+
5t
6+
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass
Obi.

Opening lead:

t4

By Oswald Jacoby
and James Jacoby
There is more than one
lesson to be derived from
today 's deal. At rubber
bridge North-South would
plan a prudent contract of

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Grow
toward dark
&amp; Allege
11 Weak

12 One kind

DOWN
I Sheer fabric
2 Celebes beast
3 Joust
4 Sprite
5 Revamped

of opera

image

13 Hardhat's call &amp; Reproach
15 Baseball
7 Spanish
league (abbr.) article
I&amp; Israeli
8 Bohemian
airport
9 Holm
17 To this day IQ.Face up to
18 Overcome
14 " Trader - "
by ennui
18 Insipid
20 Legendary
19 Slag

Yesterday's Answer "
34 Terrible
assent
35 Kind of
Kimono sash
code
Stannum
37 Tete-a-tete
Anecdotal
38 Wife and
collection
sister
Egyptian city
of Zeus

22 Sailor's

24
25
26

28
20 Initials before 30 Rockfish
an alias
32 Disorderly

paradise
23 Composer
Nino
27 Alaskan

39 Sandarac

33 Russian

boat
28 Batman's
sidekick

29 Scand.
measure

30 Count
Ahnaviva's
love
~I Attire

33 Mtn. in Crete
38 United
37 Tea variety
tO Hardhat,
at times

43 Mountain
nymph

44 Papal crown

45Willing
41 Essential
oil
I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE -

Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

to work It :.

•

One letter simply stands for another. In lhis sample A ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, ·
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ail ' .,.
' hint&amp;. Each day the code letters are different.
•
CRYPTOQUOTES

LBPZQ

BT

MSXVWM

KGTWL;

KUSXWSLW

GL

WMS

KUSXWSLW : :

HBZWSZWSQZSLL ,

BT ' UGHMSL ;

WUPLW

WMS ••
WMS

KUSXWSLW BT IPXVGWGSL. - OPQQM.l(.
Yetlerdlly'a Cryplaquote: TO IJSTEN TO GOSSIP BOTQ ,
CREATF.SANDENCOURAGESGOSSIP. NO USTENERS, NO
Ga!SIP.IT'SAS SIMPlE AS THAT.- A.P.GOUTHEY

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~·-~-· ~~...._.,...~.,........,-.........,...,,.,..,...-....,.._,.._...,.....,._

Page- l 0-The Daily Sentinel

Correction

Pomeroy Lodge 1&amp;1, F&amp;AM will
hold lis a nnual election of officers
Wednesday, Nov. 3, a t 7:30 p.m . An
oyste r supper wUl follow. All master
m asons are Inv ited.

Ma ude L. Wear s E rwin, 84, Mid·
dle port, who died Sunday was a
me m ber of the Middlepor t Church
of Chr ist for severa l years.

Tuesday, November 2,1982

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

I Meigs County happenings... ,
Lodge election set

____________..,...________

Vehicle damaged
Funds distributed
Sta te Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson's office a nnounced today the dis·
tribution of $49,132,095 in Aid to
Depende nt ChUdre n to 572.745 recipie nts in Ohio for Novem ber. In
Meigs County, 2,054 recipie nts wi ll
receive $168,075.

To announce returns
E lection returns wlll be a nnounced this evening from the office
ot Larry Spencer, coun ty clerk of
courts. Results wUI be given over a
public address system .

License issued
A maniage license was Issued In
Meigs County Probate Court to John
Dale Zurcher , 31, Pomeroy, a ndRebecca Lynn Ta te, 33, New Have n.

Divorces granted
Two divorces were gra nted a nd
a nother was dlssoled In Meigs
County Common P leas Court.
Anna Ruth Cundiff was granted a
dlvorce from Greg Keith Cundiff on
c harges of gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty, a nd Ka thy J ean
Reed was gra nted a divorce from
David Allen Reed on cha rges of
gross neglect of duty .
The m aniageof Dale Wilfong a nd
Robin Wilfong was dissolved.

A car driven by a Wheelersburg,
Ohio ma n received heavy da mage
In a collision on Meigs County Road
1 Mo nday.
According to the Gallla-Melgs
post of the s tate Highway P a trol,
Pa ul H. Seeley, 30, was northbound
a t 4:57p. m . whe n he lost control on a
hillcrest.
He reportedly went off the left side
of the road a nd struck a n
e nba nkrne nt.
The patrol cited Seeley for not
having a driver's license.

Emergency runs
Three calls were a nswered by local uni ts Monday, the Meigs County
Eme rgency Medical Service reports. At 8:36 a. m ., the Rutland
Squad took Bertha Nic hols from
Ma in St. to Veter a ns Me mori al Hospi ta l a nd a t 10: 09 a .m., the Syracuse
Unit took Cha rlotte Nease to Veterans Me moria l. The Racine Unit a t
9: 31 p.m. took Ire ne Roush from
MUe Hill Road to Vete rans
Mem oria l.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted--Kimber ly Varian, Mason, W. Va.; Bertha Nic hols, Rutland ; WUIIa m Colmer, Pomeroy;
HoUle Green, Pomeroy; Rebecca
Sha mblin, Pome roy; Irene Roush,
Racine.
Discharged-- None.

Fire kills four
PEEBLES, Ohio (AP I - The State F ire Marsha l's office Is Investiga ting a farm house fi re In whi ch four persons died.
The dead were Identified as Gregg Sells, 35, of Hillsboro; his
girlfriend, Rita Ham m , 26, a nd her daughter, Am y, 4, also of Hills·
boro; and Kenneth Combs, a bout 30, of Dayton.
Another ma n. Gregg Smith, 26, of Dayton, Combs ' cousin, escaped
Inju ry In the fire early Monday m orning, Ada msCountySherlff Lewls
Fult on said .
Fulton said Kenneth Crawford has been assigned by the state to
Investigate the fi re beca use of the dea ths.
Fulton said firefighters be"eved the blaze was caused by a wood
stove. The building. owned by rlurna l Sells of Hlllsboro, burned to the
ground with the victims Inside.
F ulton said Smith reported he tried to wa rn the others but believed
they were overcome by smoke Inha la tion.
The sheriff said the bodies were sent to the Ha milton County
Forensic Center In Cincinna ti to determine the cause of deaths.

Gavin...

Dec. 5.
Ohio Power Co. offic ials had
briefly shut down one unit a t Gavin
In J une because of a lack of dem a nd
for elec tricity.
Kaiser Announces Layotfs
In the mea ntime, Kaiser Aluminum a nd Chemical Corp. a nnounced Monday that 40 to 50 people
a t Its Ravenswood, W. Va. fabrication pla nt will be laid off ove r the
next week.
In a statement released by
Kaise r , the com pany a ttributed the
additiona l layoffs to the "deterioration of Ravenswood's bus iness" a nd
failure of manageme nt a nd union
officials to reac h an agreement on
Issues Including job combina tions,

I
Eloda Webb

Eloda B. Webb, 03, Middle por t,
dled Monday a t Holzer Medical Center following a lingering Ulness.
Mrs. We bb was born Aug. 3, 1~
a t Greenview, W. Va. , the da ughter
ot the la te Benj a min F . Louvlna
Hager Ball. She was also preceded
In death by two daughters. two sons,
two ste p-sons , eight brothe rs and
eight sis ters.
She was a mem ber of the Middleport Baptist Churc h and a c ha rter
member of the Easte rn Stars a t
Madlson, W. Va.
She Is survived by two da ughters
and sons-In-law, Marie and Ric ha rd
Pic kens , Cheshire a nd Cressa and
Robert Brown, Binghamton, N. Y. ;
one son a nd da ughte r -In-law, Robert a nd Ma ria na We bb, Citrus
Heights, Calif.; one step-son, Arnold
C. We bb, Columbus; one sister ,
Mrs. Adrian Pauley, Greenview, W.
Va., and one brother , Cecil Ball of
Greenview; six grandchildre n and
six grea t grandchildren.
Fune ral services will be held
Thursday at 10 a .m . a t the
~~·Blower "Funeral
Home with Robert Milton officiatIng. Burial will be In Cheshire
Gravel HID Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funera l hom e after 3: 30
p.m . on Wednesday.

George McHaffie
GeorgeW.McHaffle,Sr., TT,RaU·
road St., Middleport, died Monday

1,000 to lose jobs
at Zimmer plant
CINCINNATI (AP I - J a mes
Ha rlow, executive secretary of the
Cincinna ti Building Trades Council,
says a bout 1,000 more layoffs a re
Immine nt at the Willia m H. Zimmer
Nuclear Power Sta tion.
While Cincinna ti Gas &amp; E lectric
Co. officia ls declined to discuss the
layoffs, Ha rlow a nd J a n Strasm a,
spokesm a n tor the Nuclear Regula tory Commission, said the utility
has told the m of the layoff pla ns but
not whe n they will ta ke place.

I

morning a this residence.
Mr. McHaffie was born Fe b. 22,
1904 a t Rutland, the son ot the la te
Lad and Nellie Slone McHaffie. He
was also preceded In dea th by one
brothe r, P erry McHa ffie, one son,
William McHaffie a nd two daughters, Dessle J ean and Emma J ean
McHaffie.

Thursday Is the final day to pu rc hase tic kets to the annual meeting
a nd banquet of the Meigs Soli and
Wa ter Conserva tion District to be
held a t 7 p.m. on Nov. 9 a t Southe rn
High School.
Tickets are $5 each to the stea k
dinner which will be served by the
senior class of Southe rn High
School.
They a re availa ble from the SWCD
office In P om eroy or from a ny
SWCD supervisor or candidate for

.O hio voter turnout
moderate to heavy..
collected a bout $1 million less tha n he wanted. He said
the shortfa ll forced him to a ba ndon television advertisIng pla nned for Septem ber a nd October.
The polls also s howed tha t sta te Rep. Sherrod
Brown, Democra tic candidate for secretary of sta te,
held a slight lead ove r Republican VIrgil Brown, a
Cuyahoga County commissioner.
Dem ocrat Celebrezze had a substantial lead over
Republica n Charles Saxbe, a sta te representa tive
from Mecha nicsburg, In the race fora ttorneyl!eneral,
according to the surveys. And Democra tic Incumbent
Thom as Ferguson was a head of VIncent Campa nella,
a Cuya hoga County commissione r, In the race for
state a udltor.
The closest contest a ppeared to be for state treasurer, w hic h pits Republica n Franklin County Treasurer Da na Rinehart aga inst Mary Allen Withrow,
Marion County treasurer.

Council...
(Continued from page 11
forms . Stitt was told to obta in prices
a nd report back to council.
Stitt a lso told council that delln·
que nt fines total $6,943. Stitt was
a sked to find out If pa yments are
being made on the delinquent fines.
Larry We hrung, preside nt of
council, presided In the absence of
Mayor Clare nce Andrews , who was
Ill.
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Stitt. Attendlng were
We hrung , Betty Baronick, Bruce
Reed, John Anderson, Ha rold
Brown a nd Young, c ounc il
m em bers, a nd E lle n Rought, clerk·
treasure r .

supervisor.
Larry Vance, chief of the Ohio
Department of Na tura l Resources,
Division of Soli a nd Wa te r Conse rvation, will be speaker .
Outs ta nding farmer , Good Year
fa rme r , w ildlife conserva tion
farmer, soU judging a nd affill tate
m em bership cerflcates a nd a wa rds
will be presented.
Two supervisors wUJ be elected
for three year te rms . Candida tes
a re J im Lucas, Alan Holter, E dison
Hollon a nd Don Cheadle.
Absen tee ballots may be cast In
the SWCDofflce on Nov. 3,4 , 5, 8 a nd
9 between 8 a. m . and 4:30p.m . by
those who do not pla n to a tte nd the
a nnua l m eeting.

p

near Bucyrus. Pfe Uer Is the republlcan candidate for U.S. Senate against
Incumbent Howard Melzenba um. ( AP Laserphoto) .

(Continued from page 1)

PRICES IN EFFECT

3" X 7"

Besides 21 congressiona l races, voter s were decld·
lng Ohio House a nd Sena te contests. Ma jority Democrats we re odds-Qn favorites to retain their control of
the Ohio House, but Republicans faced a stiffer chal·
lenge In their bid to hold onto the Sena te .
All 99 seats In the House , whe re Democrats have
e njoyed a 5643 edge for two year s, were at sta ke. In the
Sena te, 17 of 33 seats were on the line. The GOP now
controls the upper c ha mber, 18-15.
Voters also had three statewide ballot Issues. Issue 1
would allow the state to use Its bor rowing powe r to
provide low-Interest mortgage loans, Issue 2 was a
high-speed rail proposal, a nd Issue3 would provide for
election of me m bers of the P ublic Utilities
Commission.

SCENTED
PILLAR
CANDLES

'2"
Metal Photo

children.

Standard
Bulbs
(Two Pack)

60-75-100 Watt

FINAL
TOUCH

4

FABRIC

I TWO
2-PACKSl

FOR

$130
00

$1

---~~-

(Gallon Size)

30e

Your Final Cost
Two - 2 Packs

Reg.

JACKETS
and VESTS

BULBS

Less Sylvania Mall-ln Refund

SOFTENER

MEN'S WINTER

'4.99

Regular and extra large sizes in a big
selection of styles. Waist lqth
and car coat lengths. All warmly
lined. Our men's dress coats included in this sale.
Reg. $19.95... ............. Sale $15.50
Reg. $24.95 ................ Sale $19.40
Reg. $49.95 ............... Sale $38.90
Reg, $69.96 ................ Sale $54.50

')
. ··,&lt; J

.,

'-.~

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, NOV. 6th

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY'

BONUS OFFER!

Special Offer · At these prices it's easy to display a
number of your favorite photos in these beautiful
gold colored metal frames with an engraved border.
Two-way easel for vertical or horizontal display. Non
glare protective glass.

5" X 7"

DIAMOND BRAND

ENGLISH
.WALNUTS
Pound Bag

•

Reg.
'1.59

8" X 10" •

'119

A 10-12 LB. TURKEY WILL BE
GIVEN AWAY DAILY FROM
Ndv. 2n~ THRU NOV. 14th IN
EACH STORE
YOU MAY
REGISTER EACH DAY AT ANY FRUTH LOCATION!

"'UIII'h•uwut In l'nlnl I'IC'JUon nl ltf' MI!!Irr · l;allhmll ~ llulh Triluuw -J•onl f'ro)' S.ntln C'I . .l a(' lcRon .lourna lll r Pnld . 1114' \\'f'lllllnll ~nlr ~ . Thr \\'f'll!iilo n Tf' lf'Rra m . Thf' l'ulna m l 'n!iil . Tilt&gt; ( 'aho •ll Ht• c•nnl

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OUR BUSINESS
BEGINS WITH
FILLING YOUR
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OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEKI
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"THE EVERYTHING STORES"
2501 J1ckson Ave.
Po'lnt Pl,..s.nt, W. Va.

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Jamboree Saturday
A country blue grass jamboree
willbeheldat8p.m . Saturdayatthe ·
Rutland Civic Center featuring the
West VIrginia Mountain Boys. Ad·
mlsllon Is $2 for adults and S1 for

Sylvania

Frame~!

Stage...
tlon fell last week to the lowest level
1n more than 11 years, and pla nt use
dipped to the lowest point since 1933.
The tr ade group said steel production fell to l,&lt;m,OOO tons In the week
ended last Saturda y, a decrease of 2
percent from the previous week. It
was the lowest output since the
947,000 tons produced In the week
ended Aug. 7, 1971, said Janet Nash,
c hief statistician at the Institute.
- The tlve major U.S. a utomak·
ers have reduced the number of car
models from ?m In the 1982 model
year to27lln 1983, accorcllngtoAutomotlve News, an Industry journal. It
Is the lowestnurnberofmodelsstnce
191ll, when the cannakers offered
252 models. The highest number of
models was In 1970, when the automakers had 375 models.

We reserve the-right to limit quantities not
responsible for printing errors.

NOV. 2nd THRU Nov. 14th.

(Continued from page 11
He was a me mber of the SUve r
Run F reewill Baptist Church and a
retired e mploye of the New York
Central Railway at Hobson.
He Is survived by his wife, Hazel
N. Butcher, McHaffie; two daughter s, Judith Kay McHaffie and Reva
Jane Smith both of Middleport; four
daughters and sons-In-law, Madeline and Robert Chattin, Clifton;
Eleanor and Glen Faulk, Pomeroy;
Betty a nd Henry Carsey, RD, Mid·
dleport, and Doris and Russell Skidmore, Newport News, Va.; one son
and daughter-In-law, James and
Anna McHaffie, Portland, and one
son, George W. !'.feHaffle, Jr., Llut·
caster ; one sister, Ruth Allen, Gallsburg, Ill.; one daughter·ln·law,
Kathy McHaffie, Delphia, Ind.; 14
grandchildren and eight great
grandchildren.
Funeral services w1U be held
Thursday at2p.m . attheSUverRun
Baptist Church with the Rev.
George Hoschar officiating. Burial
will be In Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Rawlings-Coats-Blower Funeral'
home a1ter 3: 30p.m . on Wednesday.

CY

:TH

The Beacon-Journa l poll s howed Rine hart with a 33
percent to 30 percent lead over Mrs. Withrow, with the
rest undecided. The Dispa tch surveyshows Mrs . With·
row leading Rlne harl48 percent to 47 percent.

Reservation deadline for
soil, water fete Thursday

Incide ntal ma inte na nce and recall
r ights.
Because of these factors, the
statement said , "an Immediate resta rt of a potllne a t the Rave nswood
reduc tion pla nt Is no longe r feasible.
The timing of any restart wUI depend on economics which will be
affected by Improvements result Ing from a n agreeme nt.
"As we move to reduce Inventories and restructure our product
llne ... there will be a need fo r some
additional layoffs.:·
Both the company a nd the union
have been directed to further review and dlscuss their pa;ltions on
the ou tstandlng Issues and report
back to the core committee by the
first week In December.

Area deaths

PFEIFER CASTSS V(JI'E - State Senaror Paul PfeUer walls to
cast his vole, Tuesday momlng at his Uber1y Township poutng place

Harlow said Monday the utili ty Is
pla nning to shut down rem a ining
new construction work to add ress
NRC investigations about the qua lity of past work. Las t week, about
500 c ra ft workers at the $1.7 billion
pla nt a t Moscow, Ohio, were la ld off,
partly because of the NRC probe.

!Continuedtrompage 11

FR

STOP
SHOPPING

ONE
STOP
SHOPPING

A DIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION
PRICES MAY YAI'.Y AT INDIVIDUAL STORES AND DEALERS

\

101 Sixth Ave.
Huntington, W. Va.

1125 Mlin Street
Milton, W.Va .

364 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio

120 w. 2nd St.
Wellston, 'Ohio

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