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                  <text>.

Kaiser to lay off 950 employees

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WINTHROP

b Dick·CavaH·I

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Appereatlf 1111118110 llllploye. of the Ravennood Plant of tbe Kaller
AIWDlnum Olemicel Corp. are 14) be laid oft about Nov. li, u altep by
tbe company to
more competllive e11 the market.
.
. It wu UllofflclaiJy reported tbat IICIIIIIIwo daallaal8rlecl ompio,eM at
the p1ut were laid off at once when they reported to wark m Monday and
tldl mornlilc a letter poinllng out the delllre of tbe finn to be In a more
ccnpetltlve poaitlm wu dlatrlbuted to workers. The letter waa written
by E. T. Naelroade, wna i111111811er. It stateS:
.
"tbe purpoee of tldl communlcatloo is to aclvlle you tbat tbe decision
hu beell made to adjllll Ravenswood'• operating level downward au~

becoi••

. Dl D 'YOU DO "'aJR .

A~llHME:TIC HQ'v\~~
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•' .

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llantlally.
"AI ,au know from previous meetings and dlacusaiOM with you, going
beck to April of tldl year, tbe Ravenswood Worlai competitive poaltlon In

•

e
Voi.:IO,No.141
Copyrilhlod 1911

the marketplace is projected to Bleadlly wouen over time unleaa,
womma toptber, we take actim to correct our COlt problems.
"Our competitive situation In the markotplace Ia not as ~ as it
._., to be and could be, even when ·buslneoa II good, we are very
vulnerable when our marketa weaken, Beca11111 of tldl competltve COlt
.problem, we have been forced to make a number of product line and
volume level decialons which will result In a reduction In the operating
level In the !abtlcatlon plant. We ezpect to bnplement thele declsiona
about the lith of November. At that tlmeit wllllil.so be necessary' to shut
down a third Ravenswood pot line,
"Thla reductlm In operating Ieveii In the two plants will affect about
'00 hourly and IX) 1818rlecl omployees.
" Clearly, tbe lou of a third pot line will result In even greater COlt

••

aty

MRS. H~ELL.. f5 ·
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1/C.eT t...lf&lt;a..:y 10 8E~IevE~

Priscilla's Po

Ed Sullivan

COME Q.l, I-IAZEL" •

' l.ET'$.(VN-ICE ·'

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most attention In Tuesday's election.
A record &amp;mOWII, possibly $6
million, will be spent by proponents

and opponents of IMue 1, but
J.
Celebrezze Jr. dQeSil't ezpect the ex·
pensive campai8Jl8 to lure voters w
the polis.

SecrelaJ:y d. State Anthony

IS8ue I is a proposed constitutional
amendment that would require the
LegiBlature to pus laws allowing
private companies to sell ·wodo:ers
compensation insurance.
Backers of · the issue say that
private competition would make the
current non-profit, state-run syatem
more efficient. Opponents say that
costs would rise, injured workers
wouldn't get as good a deal, and the
state would be stuck with covering

Evacuate eight families from homes
ST. MARYS, W.Va . ..: Eight homes remained evacuated today alter
emergency crewB were unable to cap a natural gas leak from a private
well, officials said.
The homes were evacuated Swl(lay afternoon alter attempll to pllll!
the leak with mud proved unsuccessful, said Thomas Huzzey, director
of the state Oil and Gas Commission.
'lbe Pleasants County sheriff's department reported that the well
was owned by UtM Operating Co. Sherlll's deputieS, state troopers,
emergency personnel and vol~r firelighters were at the scene this
morning, about seven miles south of St. Marys, just off W.Va. 2.

Newspapers may get more ads

I

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WASHINGTON .,. 'lbe higher postal rates'which took effect this past
weekend may mean more advertising inserts In newspapers and fewer
ads sent through the mail.
· The new rates which took effect Sunday increased the cost of a first·
class letter from 18 cents to 20 cents 8nd the C08l of a postcard from 12
cents to 13 cents. 'lbe cost of additional ounces d. first-class mail
remains at 17 cents lild parcel poat rates remain unchanged.
The American Newspaper Publishers .o\laoclation had criticized the
old ratea aa below what it COlt the Postal Service to handle direct-mail
advertllements. It said this diverted bWilneaa from newspaper Inserts.
Pam Riley of the publiabers U&amp;ociatlon said tbe new third-class rate
IISed by the dlrecHnalladvertisers is now "based on COlt" to handle
the mail. Relerrinll to the Postal Service, she said, "We are not
fighting them any more." ·

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Food prices g~ing up again

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WASHINGTON - Food pricu are ezpected to rise.between 5 pij--

enttne
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fs'edion. 12 Page&amp; 15 Cents ··: .
A Multlm.edla Inc. Newspa~r

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high-risk jobs that would be ignored .
by the private insurers. .
IS8ue 2 would make sweeping
changes In the way lines are drawn
around Ohio's legislative and
congreaaional districts.
Backers say the proposal would
create a system for drawing those
lines that would eliminate political
manipulation of districts. But opponents say the new system would
create as many problems as it would
solve and give the governor ex·
traordinary powers.
In Cleveland, Democratic state
Rep. Patrick A. Sweeney is
challenging Republican Mayor
George V. Volnovich, who is seeking
a second tenn.
In Youngstown, incumbent
George V. Vukovich, · 53, is being
challenged by Hugh Frost, a black
Republican. Frost, 54, is assistant to
the president of Youngstown State
University.
In Toledo, incwnbent Democratic
Mayor Doug DeGood is seeking reelection against Republican city
Councilman Csrty Finkbeiner, who
has been a vocal critic of the mayor.
DIQatd ~ ,flnt and ii"4111Jlbelner second In the city's non,
partisan primary.
The choice in Dayton is between
fonner Democratic state Rep. Paul
R. Leonard and City Commissioner
Patricia Roach. Leonard, 38,
defeated Mrs. Roach, 41, by a 2-to-1
margin in the city's non-partisan
mayoral primary. Mrs. Roach's
name remains on the ballot, but she
hu withdrawn fnm active campaigning and is supporting Leonard.
More than 3 million Ohioans are
expected to cast ballots between 6:3G
a.m and 7:3G p.m. Tuesday acrOS8
the state, Celebrezze said.
He predicted that 54 percent of
Ohio's 5,8411,544 registered voters
would cast ballots. If his esthnate is
accurate, Tuesday's total would he
slightly more than the 2,964,924
Ohioans who voted in 1979. The off.
year record turnout for Ohioans
'
came In 1977 wben 3,402,150 voted.

'

UNVEILING SIGN - Raveaswood Mayor Robert
Dittmar II sbown uuvelliDg a sign on the Oblo side of
the new WOllam S. Rltcble, Jr. bridge leading IIIIo

Three people were hospitalized.In

two separate accidents Investigated
over the weekend by the Gallia·
Meigs Post of the stale highway
patrol.
Two of the injuries resulted in a
motorcycle accident In Meigs Col!llty Sunday night.
The patrol said Daniel R. Taylor,

25, Middleport, was riding the bike
southboWld on U.S. 33, three-tenths
of a mile north of HI. 681, at 9:25
p.m. when be lost control on a curve,
went left and overturned, causing
severe danuige to the motorcycle.
Taylor and his passenger, Sharon
L. Ward, 29, Middleport, were both
taken to Holzer Medical Center by

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&amp;o..,..,
.......
"The lOll of tbe conlrOllera Ia produclq
l q dllaJI at alrPI'II and !ewer fllghla, .and Will probably lead to

Write-in candidate

Jmldl ~tar. and ublrp r.ductioa Ill dllcount !area," tbey 118ld.

~.ather forecast

Rtl

' ''Oitllh

t- W I tiJIII'ouJibll'rlday: Fair Wed-

.-.,IIIII Dwldai_, a ole ...llfDw•a FrldaJ. n.Jiy highllii~andnliltCI!'•,._

...,

. 'lbe .patrol said a car driven by
Barbara J . 1'11!ut, ~4. Augusta, Ga.,
was westboWid on U.S. 35 at 6:35
a.m. Sunday when the car went off
the left side of the road, continued on
and struck a culvert.

Tonya Trout was treated and
rel..ised for a fractured ann, a
hospital spokesman said. The patrol
said the Trout vehicle was severely
damaged.
'lbe patrol cited a driver in a twQ.
car accident In GaWa County near
Cheshire Saturday afternoon. ·

In ...........

eloudJ ......... 1-. In low 'to mjcUOe Putly cloudy
ru.IIJ.Iflllllla 111111 to ......... a..... of rain., percent tonlgbt
lild 101* c1 t"--IJ. Wll* ••'ahlearoundl . . tonllht

Ward waa also admitted for head
injuries aqd was reported in stable
condition today.

Trout and a passenger, Tonya R.
Trout, 8, also Augusta, were.taken to
HMC by the Gallia EMS, where Barbara Trout was admitted for facial
cuts and hip fracture. Sbe was repor·
ted in good condition this morning.

WASHINGTON - Air travelers are tbe "real looen" In the adminlltraticll'a flrinll of airDdng air traffic controllen, a group of conlllllll'llllden told Prelldent Reapn today.
In a leiter to ""pn, tbey cited ailfety (,COI"'IC""~'"ms beca- of stralna
oal'IIIIIIIIIDI ~ and 011e1 hired alter the strike bepn Alii!. 3.
.Tile "'"Jn'; atiOIIIINd tha lilrlklnl1111111ben of the l'iofe&amp;Blonal Air
Trall'lc CGIIIrollln OrPmuticll oa Alii· G.

MoatJi

the Pomeroy EMS, wbere Taylor
was admitted for possible head injuries and was listed In good condition this morning . .

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Group says travelers 'real losers'

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Ravenawood. 141oldog 1111 are E. A. WIDget! of Racille,
at left, and former Rave!!Swood Mayor Peal Moore,
lo;;gtime leaders ill lbe drive to getlbe span bull!.

Three hurt · in weekend wrecks

creases, an Agrlcullure Department ecoaom1st said today.
'fhll year'a increase, qnce projected aa blgb aa .15 percent, now is
forecaat at about 8 percent, the llll1llllest Iince 1m. Food prices rose
... percent Ill 1980.
'
J. Dawaon Ahalt, deputy uaistant aecretary lor ecoaomlcs, said
"grocery 1tore food priCI!I may rise On the order of 5 to 8 percent" In
11112, re11ect1n11 bwnper cropa of corn and other commodities, along
with allowdown In the natiCIII's pnerallnflatlon rate.
Food priCI!I for Jl1ella eaten outside the home 111&amp;1' go up slllhuy
.· Iuter.

·~'

Nwneroua attempts were made tldl morning to CC111l8ct the penollll8i
director at the plant. However, aeveral Unes Into the office regiaterecl
billy or the director was tied 1111 with other calls.

•

cent and 9 percent In 1982, the third straight year of single-digit In·

I

petltive"~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, November 2,1981

COLUMBUS (AP) - Two state
issues and mayoral races hi four of
Ohio's largest cities are the most
vllible aspects of Tuesday's off-year
election, but the real story illlly be in
the 253 achool-related tax issues in
thelllate.
Voters will decide II they're
willing to pay more lor education in
220 of the lllite's815 acbool districts,
along with nine joint vocational
achool districls.
State school Superintendent
Franklin B. Walter says the largest
munber of achool-related tax issues
in four years Will be on the ballot. He
said most of the ·levies are being
sought because of iilflation imd the
uncertainty over funding of achools
because of Ohio's budget problems.
The state issues have drawn the

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we

School issues will
·be decided Tuesday

WHIQ-1 CNE OOYOLJ THIN!&lt;

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

both plantli and, Indeed, ra11a the question w~ or oat
we can continue to operate the reducticln plant at all.
" It is my belief we can avoid shutting down tbe reduction plant and anr
further eurtallments of the fabrication plant operation, ll, tocetmr,
can deal decilely with the LBiel we haVI' been clilculainll with ~ and
and all of our employ_.luuel which collectively pnerate our campetltlve diaadvantage.
.
"I am still convinced that by working in a spirit of mutual cooperation,
we will he able to make the Improvements necessary 1a be COlt como.

preo8!1l'8l on

BRIDGE BAC&amp;GR00ND - E. A. (llld) W 0 II f!l 81 &gt; , no
lDIIIMed I drift te pi tile llrt!lce lletw- Melp Cllla&amp;J ... BaP-WII d
willie tea ' . . lidlllllllllat-weoddlrllltlleeuiJ ..... .,.._...
a I ' aU. aldie Rat-A ad Cel aiiJ l'llt 811111....... tile

dJdlrc!lte 'WIIIplt ... ram • • - • •• MaJ« ... .._. pm
, ~ lllfwMIIID • ann tllat were Jill fri 1a Ollie and Well
VII'Jiall toevwtlwe ,., ......... aHielall to balld tk .....

'' !s.

VIctor Bahr is a wrll&amp;-ln cindldate
;for a trustee poat In Cbesler Township in Tuelday'a election. He wu
not listed with other candldatea for
tbe pool In
edltiCIII.
Meantime, the Melp County
Board of Electl- reports that 301
pencna have 9oted via the a'-ntae
.ballot In Tuellday's election. Thla Ia
about an average number, it Ia

Sunday:•

reported.

Troopers said Steven E. Montgomery, 19, Crown City, was unable
to stop for a stopped vehicle driven
by Latonya R. Kincaid, 17, Point
Pleasant, and collided, cauaing
moderate damage to Kinceld's
vehicle.
Montgomery was cited for assured
clear dis~ce.
According to the report, a vehicle
driven by Steven R. Layne, 25,
Gallipolis, was southbound on Green
Twp. Rd. 4, seven-tentha of a mile
south of Rl. 588, at 11: 15 p.m. Satur• day when his vehicle went right and
struck a ditch.
·
The vehicle was moderately
damaged and Layne was cited for
DWI.
Brenda L. Nibert, 19, Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was driving southbound
at 10:50 p.m. Saturday on Gallia
County Rd. 3G, one mile north of Rt.·
160, when she lost conlrol of her
vehicle, went off the right side of the
road and struck a mailbox and Ohio
Bell Telephone Co. power transmitter before coming to a real.
Nibert was not Injured in the accident.
The patrol said Brian K. Harold,
18, Eureka Star Route, wu IJOidh.
bound on Rt. 7 In GaWa County at
8: 10 p.m. Saturday when a deer
collided with his car, callllng
moderate damqe.
PaulE~IIImden, 57, Plilly, W.Va.,
· wu westbound on U.S. 311 lllir
C'•IUpoUa at 9:35a.m. llpncJIJ wbln
a deer ran Into the path at 1111 oar.
The deer coUidecl wltb lh M'l

veblcle, calillng ~ .,......., .,:.

cording to the report. '

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�Moncley, November 2, 1981

Commentary

Bengals in.drlver's seat after victory

Pag-2-The Dally Sllltlf!el
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Mimday, November 2. 1911

.,
"

WilliJJm F. Bllckley Jr• .:~

The long march

'

J.JMA, Peru - It Is not widely
known in America the damage done
in Peru by the general. But between
1968, when he ousted President
Belaundo Terry, and 1975, when he
was himself ousted by a caretaker
ganeral who restored democracy in
1980, Velasco did as much as any
single man could do to make more
acute the pUght of the poor in Peru,
while simultaneously doing such
damage as he could to the e"'
trepreneurial class.
Everyone in America knows about
Chile, and about Allende . and
Pinochet. Very lew are aware of the
consequences, lor Peru, of 12 years
of socialism.
·
The road hack from rampAnt
socialllim Isn't easy. ''The day I was
sworn in," President Belaunde
recalls, surveying one of the state
rooms in his resplendent palace, "I
told them" - i.e., the legislative and
judicial leaders- "that I would not
spend one night in the palace until
the press were free." General
Velasco had, little by little,
destroyed the free press and
nationalizect television. "And they
said to me, 'Mr. President, how is it
possible to free the press overnight? .
There is the matter of all the outstanding contracts, the· question of
compensation ... '"
But Dr. Belaunde, who had spent
the years of Ilia exile teaching in
America as an architect and urban
planner and consultant, held to his
determination. He smiled: "Finally,

of course, they came up with a
solution. Under General Velasco, a
law had been pa!llled pennitting the
president to name the directors of
the companies that Published the
news and ran the radio and
television stations. They hadn't yet
gotaroundtorepealingthlslaw. So?
I fired all the directors and appointed fresh directors: the people
from whom the newspapers and
broadc&amp;sting companle:~ had been
stolen. And" - he gazed about the
huge Rococco palace with its ltallan
marble floors - "I slept here that
night. Though the architecture of
this place Is not ClUlclly my taste. In
Washington, I had an apartment the
whole of which was smaller than the
ditling room we ate in."
President Belaunde, at 67, has
been around a long time in Peruvian
politics,andwaselectedpresidentin
1!163. His rhetoric tends to populism,
but hiS economic program, in the.
hands of his prime minister, Manuel
Ulloa, recognized that the
prodigalities of Velasco need to be
atoned lor.
illloa, a man of vast connections
who spent his exile as a businessman
in Spain, points out that when the
generalt.ook power, Peru's lnflatlon
was minimal and the foreign debt
less than a billion dollars. "Wben we
took over again, the inflation was at
80 percent and the foreign debt $10
billion. Half of our revenues go to
paying interest on that debt and to
maintaining the military. And dam-

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

The Daily Sentinel

111 Cour1 Stl'ftt
Pomeroy, Obio
fl ..fH.%151
DEVOTED TO 'IHE INTEREST OF Tift:: MEIGS-MASO!~i AREA

BOB HOEFLICH
Gtaual MIIUIJtr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
NeWJI Editor
A MEMBER of Tbl! Auoc:lated Prt111 lnlaod 0.11 Pre1i11 A
I.IIJ
Amerleaa Ntwlpaper PUbUahen Auoda~.
Y
Dot: 011 aDd lbe

LE'ITERS QF OPINION art weleomed. They should be leu thlla 10e wontslaq All
lrtten are aubjeel to ~llag aDd mu1t be Aped wltb lllmt Hdreu aDd telepbo• ·
ber. Na u•llaed leUerw will be publlahe4. Letten aboulll be iD lood .. lie ' addre::'",
llllllfl, DOl penonaiJUra.
•

Where there's
smJke

vive is in organic poor health. But
this time .aroond, the thinking Is, if a
man on horseback Is called in he will

not be a .Marxist Ideologue, but
ratbel' someone on the order of
Pinochet. . ·

God spare them the one-party
alternative, but God will have to ·'
devote conaiderable attentiun to all ··"
this, because Peruvians need belp.
Meanwhile, In Fernando Belaunde .•·,
Terry, they are singularly blesaed.

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Cl.JSJtMER ()JT' '1laJ; 'MNlS W CASH A1'vmm' lXWR GICI&lt;:

'"

U. S. almost seni troops to reduce
Papandreou's odds..._______Ja_ck..,..-A_n_de_rs_on
I

higher-ups in the Defense Department hierarchy.
Advocates still want to make these
moves ·on the military chessboard.
But the biggest obstacle now would
be Papandreou who has questioned
his country's NATO connection,
declaring that the alliance offered
only feeble protection if a conruct
erupted and wouid merely result in
posed.
unnecessaryc.Greek bloOdshed. He
The Greek government then in has now been elected Greece's firs!
power asked the Pentagon to send socialist prime minister.
combat lroops to Greece. The
OLYMPIC SCANDAL: A nasty
American presence, it was thought, drug scandal inyolving U. S. Army
might bolster the government and athletes has been uncovered in the
head off Papandreou'a aocialiat 1 Uw.known Olympic !lp&lt;lrla of the
challenge.
Pentathlon and Biathlon. According
The idea received some support to an intensive investigation, an Arinside the Pentagon. A secret my doctor at the Pentathlon training
proposal, drawn up in Europe and center at Fort Sam Houston, Texas,
forwarded to Washingtoo, called lor prescribed sedatives to military
stationing a U. S. Anny division in sharpshooters trying out for the
Turkey and half a Marine division in American Olympic team.
.Greece. The 82nd Airborne, a crack
This was in flagrant violation 'of
troubleshooting division, would have both Army and Olympic rules which
been deployed to southern Europe.
ban the use of nerve and muscle
The intention not only was to relaxants for competitors in the two
strengthen our Mediterraneous . events. The.participants compete in
defenses but to undercut Papa"' such sports as marksmanship,
dreou. This was acknowledged in the swimming, horseback riding, fenserret plan, whose proponents cing and running.
argued: "Even if you beUeve it &lt;!pes
According to an investigative
not make military sense, there are report by the Army's inspector
political imperatives."
.
general, the sharpshooters resorted
Pentagon sources told my to the taboo drugs In 1978 and 1979 to
a\19ociate Bob Sherman that the steady their nerves and enhance
secretary of the Anny once e"' their scores.
dorsed the plan but was overruled by
In one instance, the investigators

PubU1ber

Auistanl PubiiUer/ControUer

boycott undemocratic countries
could prove to be criticai to
Peruvian democt acy.
He does not recognize anything so
fragile BB to require approval by an •
American presldel!t In order to sur-

WASHINGTON - The Pentagon
stopped .short of p~eddling in tbe
recent Greek election and possibly
blocking the controversial Andreas
Papandreou from coming to pOwer.
During the election campaign, he
swore to withdraw Greece from the
North Atlantic Treaty Organizaiton.
This would leave the southern flank
of Western Europe dangerously ex-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PAT WHITEHEAD

ned If we can fi!ld QUI where the $10
bUiion went." ~omic recovery Is
under way, but has a great deal of
traveling to do. Inflation Is reduced
this year to about 80 percent and it Is
hoped next year to reduce It to 46
percent.
·
The general wbo kicked out the
marxist but took hla own time bef,ore
resturing democracy is General
Morales Bermudez. General
Morales said an Odd thing last week,
which caused a little apprehension
in Peru. He hopes himself to run for
·president In 1985, and in discussing
the subject rather casually he added, "unless there is a military ~oup
by theli."
General morales Is not himself
situated to execute such a coup,
because retired generals in Peru,
Uke retired Mexican presidents, are
powerless. But the mere mention of
the poosibility sets the teeth on edge.
It must be understood by
Americans (but Isn't) that a
military coup in Latin America Is
something that quite regularly happens. Moreover, it Is not always unwelcome.
The bright editor of Peru'sleading
newsweekly Caretas is apprehensive about President
Reagan's hWJ)IIn rights policy on UJe
grounds .that Reagan's refusal to

The timing is entirely accidental but completely appropriate.
The House of Representatives has voted to continue the tobacco price
support program, reversing the hard line that it has taken in pulling much of
their accustomed federal support out from under a clutch of other coddled
commodities - most recently sugar and peanuts.
As pure chance would have it, the pt'l&gt;{obacco vote came as the
American Cancer Society was revving up its fifth aMual Great American
Smokeout, a concentrated publicity effort to convince millions of smokers to
lay off for 24 hours on the theory that many of them having tried it will like it
enough to kick the habit for good.
Bud timing for the Smokeout, you might think. But you might be wrong.
WASHINGTON (NEAl - The InThe circumstances of tobacco's victory indicate that it may be of the pyrrhic
terior
Department is offering fanvariety, in the political arena if not necessarily in the marketplace.
tastic
bargains
in a continuing aucIn winning this one, the tobacco caucus had \0 make political alliances
tion
of
one
of
the nation's most
and promises that its leaders acknowledge make changes in the present
valuable
natural
resources - offprogram inevitable.
1
shore
deposits
of
crude oil and
As support programs go, tobacco haslieen one of tile least cosUy to the
natural
gas.
taxpayer- $36 million in the last fiscal year, by the Agriculture DepartBut the auction rules, in effect,
ment's reckoning - and has been an economic mainstay for significant
limit
qualified bidders to those with
numbers of small farmers in the growing states. Those are points supporters
billions
of dollars in as8ets. As a
made much of.
result,
virtually all of those
But neither is the point really at Issue here. That is the question of
benefiting
from the cut-rate prices
whether. the government should be aidi~ in any fashion and for any reason
·
are
wealthy
multinational oil comthe production of a coounodity it has elsewhere - through the Surgeon
panies.
General's office- branded a public health hazard and the use of which it is
Three yean ago, Congress passed
committed to discouraging.
a
law specifically designed to bring
There are nutritional as well as economic and poUtical cases to be made
an
end to the cozy relatiimshlp .befor peanuts and sngar. But never for tobacco, not merely a commodity but,
tween
the giants of the petroleum in·
in -the words of Ohio freshman Democrat Robert Shamansky who led the
dustry
and the government officials '
charge against the support program, "a diseaae-causing drug "
In
charge
of the auction program..
As it has turned out, the tobacco debate of 1981 has If a~ythlng added
But
crucial
provisions of the
point to the Smokeout of 1981, set for Nov. 19. If tobacco is economically imstatute
were
never
implemen.ted by
portant to a part of the nation, It Is many times more economically costly to
thooe
who
are
supposed
to adthe entire nation in health terms.
Costs to industry and buainess in tobacco-related illnesses alone are minister the law, inspiring a civil
estimated in the billiona. Death rates of cigarette smokers at all ages are suit initiated by a coalition of conswner organlzatlons, Unlona and
higher than those of non-smokers.
·
Specifically, men who smoke less than hall a pack a day have a death Callforala govenunent agencies.
One year ago, the U. S. Circuit
rate some 60 percent higher than nonsmokers; a pacli: to two packs a .day, 110
Court
of Appeals for the District of
percent higher; two or more packs dally,l20 percent higher. These are "unColumbia
ruled that · the Interior
necessary" deaths, as tenned by the Cancer Society, which puts the total at
oome300,000ayear.
..r-~~------,
DeathaJcome from heart and circulatory lmpalnnent- smoken have 70
.:a.~-=~
percent more heart attacks than non-smokers and an abnonnally high inPtACISI.R IIIAfllii6KJN,
cldence of atrokel.
.
wr 1a1 N1Wf1. ~
They ~ from lung cancer, rare among IIOIHIItlokers but the moat
lti'ITHIN61.n 1M/:
frequent cau.se of desth among smoke..._ and related directly to the munber
CliiP IIIIPPfil
of clgarette8 smoked. Mild smokers are eeven tlmelaallkely to die of 111111 i.F....,.J
7D KXI!
cancer aa IIOIHilloken, moderate lll1oken 12 times aa like!)' and liMY)'
I
smokers :M Urnes asllkely,IClCOI'dlng to 1111 Enclllh study.
They come fram emphylema and chronic lx""""lla,llngerlng dl-eee · "'··'---'
that registered fivefold 1ncreaae1 In the death ralel between 1M&amp; and 1m.
The m.oka '• rllk or death II u to 15 tlmeli tllat of the liOIHIIlokeJ.
TheycamefromC811C11' or the IIIOIIth; C8IICII'oflhe ~aeyu, 11ri1wJ blad- ,
der C8IICII', ~tic cancer- IIIII CCII1IIIiilq ~hal .uD to tell !he
fuliiiOry of nokllw aa • healtb buanL
,
All thla hu, or courae, bela aa1c1 before. It -·t be aaid ofiiJn enough.

.

.

charge, Army doctor Col. William A.
Taylor Jr. prescribed 20 milligrams
of lnderal. a nerve relaxant, to a
soldier-marksman an hour before a
pistol-shooting competition. Another
military competitor took five
1nilligmms of Valium prior to the
same event.
Other banned prescription drugs
such as Libriwn, Lomolil, Proprandol and Proponat were also
provided.
The pistol scores of the Army
team members were noticeably
higher in 1979 than in the 197.6 Olympics - so much that the United
Statea was favored to win the event
at the 19110 game8. The u. s. boycou
of the Moscow Olympics saved the
Army athletes from li tainted. viclory.
The Army hasn't yet decided what
to do about the charges. Meanwhile,
the team physician and one coach
have been transferreil from the Sam
Houston training center.
Sources told my reporter Monica
McKenna that' the Anny team has
been di'ug-free for the past two
years, with a corresponding drop in
its scores.
EXECUTIVE MEMO: Assistant
"-ttomey General Jonathan Rose,
erstwhile underling to Richard M.
Nixon, wants to 'gut the Freedom of
Information law. No wonder. In the
early 1970s, he received some
disagreeable publicity (I) for
avoiding combat duty in Vietnam by

.

claiming a shoulder injury, though
he was an ardent tennis 1\"d squash
player; and (2) for peddling proNixon speeches to receptive •
senators during the ITT In- ,
vestigatlon. Rose would Uke to ahut ·
up inquisitive reporten.
- Regulaton at the En-vi•onmental Protection. Agency.
have become pussycats. Of 81 couri
cases pending against waste'
polluten, only six have been filed · ·,
this year. Yet the General Ac- ' •
counting Pffice recently found .that
96 percent of the ~ilea inspected ' '
failed to pass EPA standards to '"
protect the public from poioOnous _.,
dumping.
- The Big Three of President ::
Reagan's National Security Council _
are White .House security adviser 1,
Richard Allen, Secretary of State :
Alexander Haig and CIA Director
William Casey. On Capitol Hill, they
have been dubbed '&lt;Wyhken,
Blynken and Nod.'' Explained a "
wag: Allen Is Wynken because he :
looks the other way when uncomfortable issues arise; Haig Is. ,
Blynken because of .his blundering·;;.
statemenls; and Casey · Is Nod
becaue he naps during briefjngs.
,
-Fired memben of the air traffic •
controllen' unioo have · recenUy· ·
found themselves blacklisted also by'
the Saudi Arabians who are willing
to use U.S. AWACS in thealr but not .)
American knowhow in their control r·
towers.

Auctions: for big oil.OnlyW:-__R_o_bert_~_al_te_rs ;
Oepsrtrnent was in "clear violation system under which royalties paid to systems.
Several of those systems were;
of the statutory mandate" - but the the government are fixed at 16.67
designed
to reduce the size of the up- ,' '
department again decided to ignore percent and leases are. awarded ·to
front
payment
but Increase the
the bidder who 'offers the )argest ,
the law's requirements~
amount of the proffts or ·royalty"
Instead, it appealed that decision cash bonus in advance.
A system requiring large Initial share paid to the federal govern- ;
to the U. S. Supreme Court, which
recently heard oral ail!UIIIIIIIts in.the payments for a successful bid ob- ment in cases where exploration was .,
case and is expected to rule on the viously discourages independent oil oucCessful.
'
Although the new approaches are ·
producers who must conserve their
Issue in the next few months.
At stake is the future of the federal resources to pay the millions of Ukely to produce biiUons of dollars in ·
program under which oil and gas dollars in costa associated with 'ex- ~1101!111 revenues for the federal • ·
lreuury, Watt has refused even to '
drilling rights . to more than 19 ploration and production. ·
Only the wealthlrst oil companies esperiment with them unless ormillion acres of submerged land on
the outer contiltental shelf have been have sufficient capital to gamble at dered to do so by the courts.
I'
leased at government auctions co"' · the auctions. Jn 1969 and 1971, for
example, all of the leaaes auctioned
"Walt Is thti public's trustee aad u..i
dueled since 1954.
by the federal gtivemment went to responsible for leuins the public's ;
About 5.3 billion barrels of oU and the industry's 20 largest flllllS,
resources In a . fashion which ·
Included iri that category are the Provides the American people wltll a '
50 trillion cubic feet of natural gas
- Exxon t Gulf·
have been produced from OCS wells "seven sisters"
fair rate of return," says Edwin •
•
.
'
Shell,
Texaco,
Mobil,
Standard of Rothochlld, director of the Energy off. the Atiantic, Pacific and Gulf
coasts as well as the coast of Alaska. l;alifomia and British Petroleum Action Edut:ational Foundation, the''
But Interior Secretary James G. as well as Conoco, Cities Service, public-Interest group leading the''
Watts believes the OCS Ianda, still Getty, Phillips, Union and Arco.
court fight.
'
In 19'18, Congress IOUI!ht to
largely lUiexpiored, bold the poten"Instead," says Rothschild, ''he
tlal for providing 38 billion harreill of remedy that situatlon by amending has thwnbed hla nose at Congress,
oil and 139 trillion CUbic feel of the Outer Continental' Shelf Landa .. adamantly refused to carry out the
Act of 11153 to require the Interior law, CCiltlnuoualy violated hla legal
natural gas.
The vast majority of OCS auctions Department to cooduct a five-year nilndate and cost We lnpayen
conducted to date have utilized a experiment with sill new biddinll billions of dollara in lost revenues. ••

,.--------....,

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CINCINNATI (AP) - For once,
theanctunaUBenpl•dldn'thaveto
worry about 11toiJ111nt1 Earl Campbell. An opportunistic offenae and a
.pulled muscle took care of that.
With Houston's blgest weapon
watcblng from the atdeUnes, the
Bengals built a commanding lead
late . !n the second quarter and
breezed to a 34-21 victory Sunday
that broke Campbell's and the
Oilers' dominance over Clnclmati.
With a 6-3 record, Cincinnati aJao
I'QII! to aole pooo
ion of !lrBt place
in tha Ameriean Confererq:e Central
Division.
It was the Bengals' firSt victory
over Houston in the last seven
games. Not co!ncidentany, It was
the !lrBt time that the Bengala held
CampbeU, a lourth-year ruaniD8
back, to under 100 yards ruahlng (be
had 74· yards in 14 carries before
pulling a hamstring).
"Weplayedourgametoday," said
Unebacli:er Do Harris, wbo had one
of three. Cincinnati Interceptions
that led to sconia. "We didn't let
them play their game."
Campbell's injury wBB only part of
!he reason. The Bengala' ~lnt
barrage In the second quarter forced
the ground-minded Oilers to go to
the air - sometimes with
disaaterous results .
. A pair of second-quarter Interceptions off quarterback Ken
Stabler set up a touchdown pass by
Ken Anderson anP a field goal by
Jim Breech. A third-quarter Interception resulted in the last of Anderson's three touchdown tosses.
"We played almost flawless ball,"
said Bengals tight end Dan Ross,
who caught two of Andenon's TD
passes oo a pattern Installed
apecially for the game. "I think this
game and the Pittsburgh game (a
34-7 Cincinnati victory) were two of
the best we've put tog~r."
Andenon was almost flawless in
the early going, completing IS of his
first 16 passes. He got a real for part
of.the fourth quarter, after his third

. GOOD DAY FOR ANDERSON - CloclJUiaU
Beupla quarterbecli: Ke11 Amlenoo bead&amp; for the sldeIIDes after plcldag up five yards oothe gruomd darlog a.
. game agalllst the Houston OOen Solld8y to Cloelmlllti.

Duke 38, a...,p. Tech 24
Florida st. 5&amp;, W. CtroUna 31
Funnan :IS, Marshall 3
Georgia ft, Temple 3
J...oui8lana St. 'rl, Miaaalppl ~, tie
LoW.aiana Tech 17, SW Louisiana 17, till!:
Miami, Fla. 17, Penn Sl 14
N. carolina 11, Maryland to
NE Louisiana 55, Nkholl! St. 18
S. carolina.- 20, N. Carolina St. 12

7

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'

AFIFTH GRADER AT
POMEROY ELEMENTARY.
VOTE FOR MY DAD,

helped the Blazers pull away after
the Sonics had moved to within one
point, 73-72, in the third quarter on
Gus Williams' basket.
Williams led SeaWe with 21 points.
He scored 12 points, four of them on
fast-break layups, as Portland's offense sputtered early in the third
quarter.
Portland forward Calvin Natt had
13 poin\.8 anll13 rebounds.

ERT 'Bob'
For Meigs local School Board
He Cares A&amp;out
My fducatfon and

Your Child's. Tool
PAID FOR BY THE CANDIDATE ,

I

Virginia 13, VMI 10
.
Virginia Tech ~. Kentucky 3
William &amp;.: Mary 31, James Madison 19

aemaon 82, Wake Forest 14

MIDWEST

Ball St. 3$, E. Michigan 13

High school

Bowling Green 13, Kent St. 7
Q:at. Mic:blgon 31, O!Uo U. 21
CinciMali 17, Tulane 13

IJilnola M, Iowa 7
Kansu St. 10, Iowa St. 7
Micllipn 31, .....-.. • 13
Micllipn St. "· lndlona 3

grid scores

Nebrulul 31, Kanau 1:»

Notre Dame II, Navy 0
Ohio St. 45, Purdue 3S
~~;,_~. - 1 2
Toledo 17' IU&amp;UIII, Ohio 10
'II. Mlchl.lon II, N. lUinolo 12
Wlchitl Sl. 38, IUlMil St. )
Wlo&lt;onaln 51, Norlhw....... 0
80IJ11IWE8T

'Akron
Ain&gt;n
II

Arbnau .u, Rice 7
Arkansas St. 10, Teua-A\'llngton 7

Bay M, Rocl;f River 0

. e "· Beacln•ood
cadiz . , Buckeye N. 0

7

,

HOUlton 20,. Teua Chriltlan 18~
Oklahama 4&amp;, Colorado 0
Sou1hem Molh. fl, Tuai AI&lt;M 7
S. Millaluippt 22, N. Te:ua St. 0
Tnu 21, Yexu Tedl t
Tulsa H, nrue e
FAR WEST

Canal Fultoa NW lt, Falrletl 1
~ .MeKIDiey 10, Tol. ScoU 0
an. Moeller 42. Lakewood St. Edward I
a-. Banedlctlne U. Alliance I
a-. Centnl Cs1h. 14 Gllmaur 0
a-. Eul I, Cleve. W
. Tech 0
Cleft. Hawba M, . HudiOn W. Re:lerve

'

J-

a-.

AU- Force 7,

Hsy ... Cleve. ColiiD..... 0
Clove. St.
32, YOUJIII. Bal'fi\ 6
Clove 21l, Dove....... I
·a
.... UDivenlty
ljl, Klllll (Pa.J Prep 8
Col. Holtley 7, Col. ....... •
Cot w.u.non 3&amp;1, Col. St. Charlet o
DIJ. Olsn&gt;Jul I, Doy, 1 ' 1 - I
11«1n tt,
McNidlolu
St. . . . _ ... Poril. ilul '
....,_. ·W. iJ, B....,. It
N.. London 2ll, N.....U. St. Paul 0
, N - Cslh. II,
NOI1hridp

an.

'

Anny. S
ArUona 48, Texu-EI Puo 15

Bri&amp;hsm ¥001111 II, New Mateo 1

. c.m..,u.

li1, OreiGII St. I
Hswall 57, "ev.-Lu v - 21
Raclflc U. 17, Fullerton St. 18
Souttom Cal 41,
SL 11
UCLA. 2111. Oref{on 11

w...._

o

.

{DALE HIU

J-

Newl&gt;ory

.M,

R l - !Ita.

17

NU. MciCinloy 21l; Wan'tJI 111r&lt;1JnC Ill,

lie
.
l'lmlo Podllo 7, Woioll

=. . . . . .,_.
PolsDd •• ,..,..
lila.

,!',_

Qevelsnd ""·

. . . . . . . . . . . . . R1.,..1

, _ Col-

TRACTORS

J-2 o

·ltonnod1

17, -

13

215 W. Main

7

TGL Ill. TGL ........ I
TGL DoVilllla lJ, Tal. 'li'oodnrd I
TGL a.! 2ll, 8yiYula N - It

Y--.
y- =·'.

Pomeroy

T
. . . ~u,ttnra•
WIIIII'IDO 11. Q •b aod t

992-266r-

Y--0

Y-.

JpolloaI
.. an..
Y -... Olool)'

•

Your Vote lnd lnfiUIIICI App~ICIIted

R. G. uBob" Pickett
Bedford
Township
Trustee.
.
.

-"

HI! I'M SCOTT BARTON

~·~i'~%

Tennelllf:e st. 28, Southern u . 18
Tn ...cba.ttanqa 17, E. · Tennessee St. 0
Vanderbilt 28, Meq,hll St. 0

~
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•

Andei'IGJI cOmpleted Zlpuses oo 30 attempls for 211
yards aod three touebdowu. He aJao l'lllhed for 15 Y""'
.ds. The Beoga1B woo the game 34-Zl to tall:e tile lead
atop the AFC Central Dlvlsloo. (AP Laaerpliotol •

times in their 17-10 victory over CinTD pass put the Bengaill ahead 34-7. cinnati earlier this season. Stabler
"He's like a heat-seeking and Reaves combined for 25 commiasile," Ross said of the quar- pletiOns in 'Sl attempts Sunday lor
terback, who completed 21 of 30 301 net yards passing.
"This forced ·us to go to the
passes for 281 yards.
John Reaves took over for Houston passing game today," said Houston
when Stabler huri his left wrist and Coach Ed BUes. "Maybe in the long
directed a pair of fourth-quarter run it will help us."
Another reason for the Bengals'
scoring drives.
. ... .
success
was their ability to control
The Oilers threw the ball just six

-cendldate For-

~

The IZ.

women's professional golf tournament.'
The ~apanese team, led by Yuko
Morlguchi, shot a total of 729 against
the Americans' 738 over the par-73
Genglyama golf course.
The 10 best scores on each side will
be counted dally for team scoring in

Howard U. 1&amp;, Norfolk Sl. 21
Plttlburgh 29, Boeton CoUege !4
Prlncetoo 31, Penn 30
SUppery Rock 4R, Lock Haven St. 14
s,.-- 11, eo...,. zt
W. 'Vlrolnla 211, £. Csrullna 3
Yale 2{, Dartmoolh 3

~

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·r'

CHIBA, Japan (AP) -

member Japanese women's golf
team toot a nine-stroke lead over
the United States in the opening
round of the U.S.-Japan Pioneer Cup

=
•
...

r~iliili~iii!iiiii~~ ,

ce of Scotland
tied for
another
Senior
of Australia
andthird,
Sam Torranstroke back at 289.

EAST

~

!f.

under par, and collected a $12,1100
first prize. stephen shOt a 71 in the
final round.
American Art Russell, Peter

Harvard U, Brown 7

...boma ... MillliiJppl St.
Aubum 14, Florida 12
Citadel 21, Pretbytertan 3

Australia with a 811.
GIFU, Japan (AP) - Yutall:a
Hapwa fired a flnal.roond kncler~r 68 for a • total and ~ the
$218,000· Japan Open golf tournament by one stroke over Kenjl
Mori and Tsuneyuki Nakajima.

by three strokes over Australian
Lyndaay Stllphen.
Rotlerahada n-hote total of285, 7-

By Tile AlloelatedPreu

. IIOil'l1l .

"tej...,_

over-par 76 to win the ·$75,000 New
South Wales Open golf toumament

·College results
u, Columbia

!H.....,... •

Bradley fired a
and
took the ftnWound lead. She followed. by Jao
of

SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -Bill
IIUI'Yived a flnaJ round 3-

Rosen

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Por- second NBA victory in as many ·usually block out much better and
bave rebounded well against Portland's lack of rebounding in several games. SeaWe dropped to 1-1.
prei.eaaon games caused Blazer
"Our rebounding was soUd," tland. If you allow a team as many
Coach Jack Ramsay some coocern, Ramsay said. "I was pleased with second and third shots as they got
but he's ~ginning to feel better our young guys- with the defense of tonight, you're in trouble."
Center Mychal Thompson had 12
about thlnga.
Darnell Valentine and the solid play
rebounds and led the Blazers in
In fact, he felt much better after of Pete Verhoeven."
the Blazers dominated SeaWe in a
The Blazers also out-rebounded scoring with 21 points.
SeaWe led early in the first quar104-94 National Basketb·a u Phoenix 44-43 in a 103-95 victory
As8oclatio,o victory SIJ!Iday night.
Friday night.
ter but Portland took command and
The Blazers out-rebounded the
''They hurt us on the bOards,'' said led 51-41 at !iillftlme.' .
A three-point play by Thompson
SoiJlcs, 58--39, on the way' to their SeaWe Co&amp;(:h LeMy Wilkins. ·"We

Holy Crtlla

the three-dly toumameat.
In lndiYidllal ' "'''~lion, Pat

Golf

·Portland tops Seattle for second win .

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Sports briefs ...

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The Daily Sentinel-Pag-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

...._____...,...
•

\

ELECTION- NOV. 3, 1911
. Pd. Pol. Adv.

We've got·vou covered.
In these Inflationary times It should be
comforting to note that, although we're
your hometown power company; we're also
part of tile American Electric POwer Svstem.
It'S a 7-state network of generating
plants that Is supplied bV an extensive coal
delivery network and linked bV the most

effldent power lines available. Plus It has a
central computer complex that makes sure
we deliver the most economical electrlcltv
every minute Of every dav.
·
so. as a result of all this, we·ve been
able to keep vour electric rates below the
national average. • ·
•IOuftt; I .U ~ 't'alf'DOOII. No. •1 NoVember. 1IJ!I!O

we give It our best
OHIO POWER
COMPANY
. '
.

�Monday, November 2, 1911

Monday, November 2, Ul1

Meigs

Gardener~

plant flowers at
· school as civic projec~

Soulheaslem Ohio Coualies, were sbmdlng, Mn.
Robert Thompson, Marietta, treasurer, lei~ 8Dd Mary
Lou Capps, Marietta, secretary, rlgh~ wllb Mrs. Leo
Tilus, Jameslowa, lbe OAGC prealdenl

REGIONAL MEETING SPEAKER - Bob
·Thomas, piclured here wllb Pal Holler of Pomeroy,
retiring Jteglon 11, Ohio Association of Garden Clubs,.
was lbe guest ~emoustrator a( the regional meeting .
Saturday al Eastern High School. Coming from St.
Pelershorg, Fla., the national and International In-

Shower held for
Bragg bride-elect

struclor and demonstrelor Ia artistic design of Dower
arranglilg, presented an autstandlng pn1grem during
the afternoon seaslan. Tbomaala lbe fOIIIIdor aaddlnlctor of the American Guild of Flower Arrangen.
Se~eral hundred women were on hand for Thomas'
program.

Amy Fisber, recent bride of Kenneth Bradd, was honored at a·bridal
shower recently at the home of
Valerie Jlanstine, Crew Road.

prizes to Shelly Smith. the most
original; Amy Whaley, the prettiest;
and Tracy Eblin, the scariest.
Games prizes went to Lori Hayes

and Tara Humphreys.
Donuts and apple cider, chips and

Ann Sisson and Valerie Simpson

judged the costumes

a~d

awarded

cookies Were served and each girJ

received a treat to lake hume.
Following refreshments, the group
bobbed for apples and had their fortunes told. Others attending "ere
Stephanie Banks. Missy Leach, Pam
Haley, Stacy Young, Yevette Young,
Heatber Singer, Mandy Eblin. Janet
Simpson, and Patty Smith.

Social Calendar
Monday

Methodist Church sponsored by
UMW. Bazaar begins at 9 a.m .

TilE MIDDLEPORT Ga rden

Club will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday at the home of Mrs. Daniel
Thompson.

with dinner at ll a.m.

REGULAR FAIR Board
meeting 8 this evening at the
Meigs County Extension Office;
annual fair board election, 5 to 9
p.m.• at extension office.

Ladies
REEDSVILLE Auxiliary, Olive Township Fire
Department bake sale at fire ·
hou~e in Reedsville on election
day: also hot dogs, coffee and ,hot
chocolate; starling time 8 a.m .

TIIERE WILL be an election
day dinner at the Reorganized
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter
Day Saint, Tuesday with serving
from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. The menu
will consist of beans and cornbread, hotdogs, sloppy joes,
homemade pies, cakes, coffee,·
pop, and hot chocolate. The
public is invited.

POMEROY - Annual oyster
supper of Drew Webster Posl39,
American Legion;

observance

wiU honor all World War I
veterans; starts at 8 p.m..World
War I . vets
transportation
contactneeding
a member
of
Commander Gerald Rought at

a bazaar Nov. 3 and 5, at the
Kroger Store in Pomeroy. A bake
sale will also be held on Tuesday,
Nov. 3. The event wiU be held
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
SPECIAL MEETING, Meigs
Chapter OAPSE, 7:30 p.m. ·
Tuesday, Meigs Junior High
Sc~ool.
\
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
OES regular meeting, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday. Dues are payable.

Tuesday
FOREST RUN - Women will
have soup, sandwiches, dessert,

beverages at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church all day
Tuesday, election day.
BAZAAR :ruesday . at the
Kroger Store in pomeroy from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. A bake sale wiU he
held in conjunction with the
bazaar. A bazaar wiU also he held
on Nov. 5, at the same location.
Spo nsore d by Sy r ac use
Presbyterian Church.
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Presbyterian Church will sponsor

ELEcTION DAY dinner for
public starting at 11 a.m.
Tuesday by auxiliary of Racine
Fire Department.

EASTERN High .School marching hand in concert at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at high school; pubUc ·
invited.

•

CHESTER - Election dinner
and bazaar Tuesday at Chester

'

decorations Cl!ll t.e changed from
time to time for a fresher look.
'J'Ine cl the members '*-"
strated the theme of "Brtaglng the
Out In" with flora! designs. Marie
Birchfield used crescenl c!eelgn with
baby's breath, chryaanthemuma
and bitteuweet vine; Mrs. Bilhop
showed a hargarth c!eelgn featuring
eucalyptus, ctu-ysanthemwnl and
statlce, and Margaret Ednrda, a
boxwood chrysanthemum and
eucalyptus all in autumn colors.
Marjorie Fetty, Meigl County ccntact chairman, was a guest at the
meeting. Mrs. Bolin wUl host the
Nov. :13 meeting with the program
topic to be on planting and growing
daffodils. The traveling prize
donated by.Mrs. Birchfield was won
by Mrs. Stewart.
·

may have to scrap the

Veterans ol World War I wUl be
honored Tuesday night at 8 p.m.
when Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, holds ill annual
oyster supper.
World War I veterans needing
transportation to the observance are
asked to contact a member or Commander Gerald Rought alll92-ti837.

recognize them . Once you spot

cause problems.

TRUSTEE
v

Levrs

1

Residents appointed
M ..D.A. chairpersons

STRAIGHT LEG
Reg. 521.95

EN'S

NOW

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

.

VOTE FOR A MAN WHO CARES

VOTE FOR ROBERT "BOB"

BARTON

The Daily Sentinel ·
IUSPSl. . .l

Al&gt;t~oiMilltlmedil,lltc:

NOW

A Iso Student Sizes

r------------J

FOR MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD

.

YOUR VOTE AND INFLUENCE APPRECIATED.

Publllhod every oltemooa, Monday tlv&lt;io«h

Friday, Ill COW1 Street, by the Ohio Valley

P u - c.r.-y · Mulllmodla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;781, Q82.2I58. Second ca.
))OIIIgeJHlid at Pomeroy, Ohio.
Membo" ..,. Alloclatod Preoo,lnland Dolly Prtu Allociatlon and the American

NewlpllJler Publilhen Alaocl.aUoa, Nati!IIUII
Advertiliag Representative, Branham
s...,..,.,. Sale!!oi733 1'blnl Avenue, New
vm.,NewYirll 7.

r;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;~~

The decorations were in keeping
with the autumn colors of the wedding. The refreshment table was
centered with a decorated cake In
the laU colors, and wicker baskets
and crystal punch bowl completed
the table appointments.

SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

No aul:wcripUon~ by mall pennilted 1n town.
where home c&amp;lTierservtce ill av.U.ble.

·THAT'S RIGHT. NO NEED TO WAIT TILL JANUARY 1982 TO SAVE BIG.
wr ARE HAVING OUR CLEARANCE SALE NOW! YOU CAN SAVE UP TO 50%
OR. MO NOW!

IIWL81JB8CRIPTION8

!MOIIth

otU•aadWeit·v.....-

Slxmooth

I·Year

3Mmth

I Month
I Year

Pd . Pol. Ad. by Cand.

$10.10
111.61

'

13!.11t
IIUit

!II.DO
$11.10

J_RENEWAL
TUBERCULOSIS· LEVY

Sending gifts wete l'eggy McCune, Kelly alld Chad McCune, Etta
Mae Hill, Dorothy McKenzie, Lucy ,
Donahue, Sue Beegle, MarjOrie Gibbs, Doris Sayre, Paula Sayre, Belva
Fisher, Doris Adams, Bernice
Lavalley, Gladys Sblelda, Mary
Carolyn Wiley, Jtebecca Tate,
Jtebecca Triplett, April Smith, Jlazel
Fox, and Lee Lee.

AT EMPIRE FURNITURE CO.,

Subscribers not desirfns to pay the carrier
may remit tn advance dincl to The Dilly"
Seadnel on • :t, 8 or U month bull. Credlt
wiD be given carrier each month.

"Your Vote and
Influence Apprecjated"

Others at the shower wee ·the
bride's mother, Bonnie Fisher, ber
grandmother, Mabel ShieldS, her
great-grandmother, Bertha Robinson, Debbie Roush, Courtney Ruush,
Becky Mallory, Kay Warden, Debbie Lavalley, Margery Roush, Bambi Fisher, Jeremy Joe Fisher,
Dorothy Johnson, Jeimlfer Johnson,
Stacy Warden and Sarah Fisher.

162.11

.
Doily . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1$ Celli

SOUTHERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION

hostess, Della Johnson, Ann Rad·
ford, and Debbie Sebert, with prizes
going to Becky MaUory, Clara Mae
Sargent, and Bunni Ward~n.

ILOO

14.40

SINGI..E COPY
PRICEII

GARY (DENNY)
DENNIS EVANS
FOR

Games were conduCted by the

SIJBSCIUPTION RAT»!

8J C8ITitr .-Mot. Ro.iJr
OneOneM&lt;IIlh
One Year

Meigs County provided 11,509 services
last year to help kee11. tuberculosis under
control.
There were 28 active cases treated ·in
Meigs County.
There is an annual case load of 408
persons seen in the clinic. As of July 1,
1981, there are :u; patients on preventive
medication.
Paid for by Concerned Citizen•

'

.....

....
•

ED

I,.
•

••

••

•••

;

•
•••=
•

••
•
~

LIVING ROOM GROUPS
REGUlAR
SALE
&amp; LOVESEAT '999.95
A .&amp; CHAIR

'599.95

A &amp; LOVESEAT S799.95
&amp; CHAIR

Children, families. individuals In
crisis, the elderly and the mental'
I~ ill.

'

6:30AM. to 7:30P.M.

'1099.95
'899.95
'569.00
'599.95

&amp; 01 lOMAN 547&amp;.0.0

DATE: November 3rd

P•kl frw ~ l ..r\lyllon.llo:v"
th~ ('..lb•-J.k"'" lrrW9 lik-m-' IW•IIk 8Nnt • Julin C Micor L'"-'r"*1

Pd. Pal. Ad. bY Cand.

die, the ~18 wiBb 1o 1n- alld t1me1 of lhe ~ '· '
COl porale the community In lhelr
claMM should WI Coonle llndllur1
pn111111n to eerve aa their yearly t-or::.::Da;::.wn;;.;;.;Martin.==----'--community activity.
The cl"'!M wUl be conducted by
Instructor Dawn Martin, a Kyger
Creek lll8b School graduate and former FHA chapter president. MarUn
hal md and ccmpleted the danceaerobicalnstructor's requlremen18 by attendlllg Instructor worUhopa
sponsored by lhe Charleston YWCA
lnAuguslandOctoberofthlayear.
Persoils may register for claases
by calling Connie Bradbury, FHA
advllor, at 367~147 or '!lfi-T¥r7, or
caU Dawn Martin,lnatruclor, at 381·
7254. A$15 fee Ia to be paid at the flrst dance session. Anyone interested
original heavyweight
Oluln· "lashed Levi Jeans.
who has. questions or needs addltlonal detalla on the avallablllly
FLARES

tee·lings into consideration.

RSVP: Your YES Vote for the Mental
Health Renewal Leuy.

YOUR VOTE &amp; INFLUENCE -APPRECIATED

· Games were played, fortunes
were told and there waa a spook
house. Music was provided by the
Francis Andrews Ba!ld.

who~e

PLACE: Voting Polls,
·
General Election

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP

'

.

POS'I"MAST''i:R: Stnd addreu to The DIU)'
Sentinel, Ill CouriSt., Pomei'O)'. OhJ0~788.

TIME:

'

Prizes were aWarded to Melodie
Forbea, Mrs. Robert Fife, and David
Van Jnwagen for lhelr coatumes.
George Foss, Edith Burton alld
Gladys Taylor, reddenll of the
llea!th Care Center, were the
Judges.

. G.EMINI (May 21 -June 20)
Steer clear of individuals who are
too dictatorial or demanding.
You'll have your own way of
doing things, and you won' t ap·
preciate their Interference.
CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Promises you. make will be taken
seriously, so don' t make commit·
ments unless you are certain you
can fulfill them.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 You're a
capable producer today, but you
msut be careful not to exaggerate
your accomplishment$ while put·
ling down the efforts of others.
Share the glory.
VIRGO !Aug. 23·Sopt. 22)
Think carefully before becoming
involved in e)(penditures with a
long·term paycheck . Buying Is
fun. erasing the debt mav not be.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Nor·
mallv you're .tactful but tOday
you could ' be more demanding
than diplomatic . . Take others'

where the benefits lie, you'll
know exactly what to do about
them .
SCORPIO !Oct 24· Nov. 22)
Sometimes we can tell harmless
little .fibs and get awav with
them . Today, however, il you
don't tell it like it Is, it could

SAGITTARIUS (NOli. 23-Dec.
211 Be realisti c regarding
situations where you are hopeful
of some type of material reward.
Expecting more than vou•re en·
titled to will result in disappoint·
ment.
CAPRICORN !Doc. 23·Jan. 19)
Unless Someone specifically asks
for your advice, It mav be 'wise to
keep your suggestions to your·
self. Even when counsel Is
reque~ted, think before speaking. '
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2Q-Fob. 19)
The temptation to talk t3bout
• something told tO you in con·
fldence may be difficult to sup·
press. If you blab, you' ll be sorry.
PISCES !Feb. 20·Morch 20) If
possible; try not to lend or borrow
from friends. There's a chance
that something could ac ·
cictentally occur to cause h'rd
feelings. '
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Don't take anything for granted
careerwise . Situations that
usually benefit you could 'tto a
complete reversal .
TAURUS (April 2Q-I\&gt;Iay 20)
Plan each of your moves
carefully before proceeding on•
compll,:ated jobs. If you make
mistakes, there's a chance you

Second .annual Halloween party
for residents, staff and frtenda of lhe
Pomeroy Health Care Center waa
held Thuraday night.

Vets honored
Tuesday

'·

Center. party

Ftm- .can be full. Eopec111ly
wben you are Involved In 1eroblc
dlnc:lna· Simple, vlcoroua dlncel
are c!eeiiP""' to stnnclben the cardlovaacular system, Improve
Oe:liblllty, balance and coordinalion. ThlB Ia your opportunity 1o
lind ft.._ the fun way, and 1mprove your Ufeatyle and overall
health and we~~«~n~~ .
The Kyger Creek High Scbool
Chapler of the Future Homemakers
ol America (FHA) Ia planning a fall
session ol danc$erobic · claases
begiJinlng Wednesday, November 4
through Wednesday, December 16
!run 7 p.m. until 8:30 p.m. at the
high achool. .
Aa part ol the chapter's state
project, · \"Student body,'" emphaalzlng good nutrition and exer-

J)rolect.

There wilt be ample opportunities around you this
coming year, but you will have to
be discerning In order to

WHO:

r~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i
CANDIDATE FOR

H~th

You are invited to help

BAKE SALE and bazaar by
Willing Hands Ladles of An·tiquity Baptist Church, 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. Wednesday at home of
Mildred Spencer.
·

Aerobic ·dancing classes offered

Astrograph
November l~ i981

happenings ____________

Salon 710

Wednesday

.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday,
Nov. 3, alB p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.

on fall door decorations. She allowed
that by .braiding macrame cord,
balling twine or any sturdy yarn,
various plant materials can be attached to make attractive
decorations. Some ol the materials
she used in the demollltratlon on
swags and wreaths were Italian
com, strawberry · popcorn, field
com, gourds, straw flowers, bittersweet, baby's breath, and silk
Dowers. Colorful ribbons were used
lo 1118tch tlie materials.
t.frs. Davis also demonstrated bow
to soak str1pa of com huaka In water
and thenfonn them Into loops which
can be fastened on to a straw wreath
base bighlightlng with colorful
Dowers and rlbhon. Mrs. Davia
noted that the colors used In

•

GARY F. HYSELL

!1!12-!i937.

.

.

Mrs. Davis gave a demonstration

RE-elect

Brownies hold Halloween party
POMEROY-Costume prizes were
awarded at a Halloween party of the
Salisbury Brownie Troop 1220 h'eld
recently at the Enterprise United
Methodist Church.

RUTLAND-Nearly a hundred
tuUp bulbi were planted around the
Rutland Elementary School Thuraday as a special civic projecl of the .
Rutland Friendly Gardeners.
Mrs. Margaret Johnson and Mrs.
Marjorie Bishop conducted the work
·IIBIIion with the sixth grede clllls
which earlier had been lold ahout
the organization of a junior garden
club at the school aa a part of the
therepy program. In November the
club wOrked with the ruth greders on
mating fall door wreathes.
Saturday Janet Bolin, Suzy Carpenter, Marie Birchfield alld Joan
. Fetty were delegates to the Region
.II, Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, meeting held at the Eastern
Hlch School. Others members attended and aaalated Bob Th&lt;mas In
an arrangement demonstretlon.
Joan Stewart entered the Dower
show with a design on the theme
'Wise as an Owl", and Mrs. Bolin
judged the horticulture division at
the show.
A costume party was held in coojunction with the regular club
meeting· held Wedneaday night at
the home of Mrs. Stewart. Priz"'l
were won by Mildred Jeffers, a
guest, the prettiest; Judy Snowden,
the most original; Mrs. !Jirch!ield,
most unlisual, and Mrs. Johnson, the
ugliest.
Officers' reports were given wlth
Mrs. Bolin noting that county,
regioilal and state dues had been
paid. A thank you waa resd from
OAGC for a donation to the
Wahkeena Nature Preserve and the
Wright State Garden for the Senses.
The club also received a letter from
the Rulland Elementary School for a
faU flower arrangement.
It was noted that Mrs. Bolin had
recently attended an exblbltores and ·
judges' school in Columbus where
she took· further study in chrysanthemwns, dahlias, period nora!
design, and judging ethics. Several
members of the club went to the Bob
Evans Farm Festival, and plsns are
being made lor a visit to the Dudley
: Greenhouse in Parkersburg on Dec.
3. Mrs. Marjorie Davis is chainnan
of tours.

~ounty

The Dally $entlrtei-P11-5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

SOFA &amp; LOVESEAT '599.95
SOFA

'999.95

SOFA &amp;. LOYESEAT '1399.95
SOFA &amp; LOYBIAT

51099.~

'58888
'299 95
•..88..
'54444
'58888
•3.4 444
•344"
'244" ·
'666 66
.•344"
'688°
'544 44

END TABLES,
TABLES
AND SETS

pTo50%·
DINETTES
$AVING$

OPEN .
MONDAY
AND

FRIDAY
TIL 8 P.M.

BEDROOM SUITES

REGUlAR
'1999.95
'1499.95

'1899.95
'2199.95
'1199.95
$1699.95
'999.95
•
51899.95
$1599.95

SALE

't

'988••
'744 44
'98888
'1222 22
5666 66
'988••
·'588 88
'988 88
'888••

A II Other Bedroom
Suites Now On Sale

•

�,
Pag..-6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 2. 1,.1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday,.November 2, 1981

-

· The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

" Pomeroy-Midc!l...-rt, Olllo .

Bills stop Browns, 22-13
piiJ ~

ORaiARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) Wbo C'J I' ' B 7 W1 Joe Crlbbl,
1 ~11 bllllledt wlllla very lbart
llrlde, Ill JaiD 1111 ......,
liredlwba ~nil delp Pill patlerlll Ia .lbe lflllmaJ Foolbd
LllpeT
CeniiJII1 DOt tbe Clevelaad
wba tfn1111" Cribbl would
hurt tlia • 1111 lluund, If II all,
and w•la +WI lml willie be C8Ugbt
tllree t "'""' '•o . . - In a Il-lS
vlc:torJ., 1111 Blllll!!phy,
'"l'bep!llplan - ' t IIIIo tome
like tlllt, bat we did blca1111 1111111
covwea-' tbey . . . Ill. Doubling
lbe wide recelitil farad lbem Ill

~..

lllid

Crtbbl, ...._ live recepliclal .....,
pac1 far 111 yarc1a - IIIIC '"1--bell
"'*"'1111 paformm:le Ill l8am
. biliary 11J 1 1'Ui1i1111c bact. Wray
CU11GD ani1bt 177 yudl worth ol

IIIUi....,.

...- Ill lla\ tbe llral year of tbe
franc1118e,
'1'111 BIJII iilayed onHia1f . . bebllld Ylud ID tbe AmeriCan eon.
f - Bill at U, Wbl1e Cleveland,
tbe ~ AFC Cenlnl cflam.
pion, libaDpld to 4-6.
Q11artert.ek Joe Ferau-1* just
It at a ,_. but gat 7111 yards out
Ill u.n tiiiiiD to QiiiiJI.
1111 ICGrlng , _ . to Crlbbe

Brow•-.

For the record. •.

__

..

.........

I.Wl'BRN CONJ'iiiiENCE

w

~

I

I

NewYor!l
NftJeney

I
0
0
I
c.m.JIM2
2
0
I
I
I
I

·~
Ch!coot•

I

nou..

1
I
I
·I

o.n....

Utah

~~

By WILLIAM R. BARNAIUi
AP Sporla Writer

Tbe San Franelsco 49ers may have
reached the point where !bey won't
S\U'Pf1lle anyone else around the
• National Football League ... unless
· they loae, that Is. ·
Picked no better than third in the
National Football Conference West
by moat prognlstiaators, the 49ers
r.alsed some eyebrows this year with
six · victories in their first eight
games, Including .a romp over
Dallas and a road triwnph agalpst
boa Angeles.
;.San Francisco did it again Sunday
'!lith a 17·14 road win over lbe Pltlilburgh Steelers, giving the 49ers six
ylctories In a row and a 7:2 record,

I

I

Seott!e
LooAnp.

49ers, Cowboys pass big tests
•

I

-

Laserpholol.

0
I
I
I
I
2

0
PadlleDI.._
I
0

Kai'IIU City

NFL lillie, Sanday ilftemoon. The Billa •OilD-13. lAP
.

I

..........

0
0

0

1
'I
1
I

~

Ph!1odelpllla 101, Atlanta 101
Indiana 101, New Yortl tt
Detrott Ill, a.icuo 101

Miami sW8mped Baltimote 2'1·10,
Tampa Bay tripped Cbicago 20-10,
Buffalo defeated Cleveland 22.-13,
Cincinnati beat Houston 34-21, lbe
New York Jell ripped the New York .
Giants 26·7, Dallas nipped
backfield. "But we knew this W8l Philadelphia 17·14, Green Bay
going to be a big test. Now maybe outlasted SeatUe 34-24, Los Angeles
everybody will believe we're lor !!lopped Detroit 20-13, San OieiO
real."
ec!Bed Kanll8 City 22.-211, Oakland
"This was lbe best phyllical test stopped New England 27-17 and
lor us, playing away from borne and Washlnllon outscored St. Louis uplaying in this stadium, where very 21.
lew teams" win," said 49ers Coach
~md Joo M~ had
Bill Walsh. "I'm proud we could thrown a (!ler&amp;-record 122 paases
stand in against this team and hold without au interception until
steelers cornerback Mel Blount
our own.
In other NFL games Sunday, . picked one off and ran 50 yards lor a
Atlanta ripped New Orleans 41·10, touchdown
best in the NFL along with the

San Ant.oalo

nou.. ••

Cowboys and Philadelphia.
"When we beat lbe Rams, I think
people started lo believe In us," said
Carlton Williamson, one · of three
rookies in San Francisco's defensive

1.1110

.5110

.1100
.1100
.Oit

WESIERNCONn'.RENCE

San Antollio

Bulf8lo Bllll, rw11 away with lbe ball from Clarence
Sc:ett, No. zz of ~ Clevelaod Browu, duriDit lbelr

.000

tOOt

.101
.101
-101
.1100
.000

WU.Cwlae:w:e

GB

W L TGFGAPII
IIZI'lstll

-

I
1

572.5112
41011111

1\1

110

IU0•572
AU..Db'W.

--1

.110
.1101

7101011114

IIIJ7417

I

C..phe" CWfawe

-

I
I
I

I
I

10

IAIAngo!eo

v.._..,

37151

MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF

4 6 3 ... u
27230516

Colondo

212381111

Colgary

Bolton 4, Hartford 1
Buffalo 6, PN1adelphLa 2

EDUCATION

••

• 4 0 71 ' Ill II
-~~~180101112

110

I

'

4SII1511S
IS2.Cl2
il2t64'712
412121110

Sl Lou!a
Toronto

I
I

FULL TERM

713UQt7
I I 4 ti 8 11
IJJGIIII

110
110

1.1100

KING

131104717

1.11111

.110
.110

~~~

I

--- -- - --712····
·
5r
-- ..
- _,,_
••
•

Cl...toad

RUNNING AWAY-- Fnmk Lewis, Na.'BZ of tbe

,Ill)

• 1.000

Detn&gt;!t
IJ1d!ana

-

.....
•I I.llli
I
.IGII
·""'
1

L

pmeaway.

. , fte Astl Pn.

llwllAIMdiU.

I

"'!bey were dCJ'INilll our wtalde
recelvn (Jerry Buller and Frallk
lAwla, wba llao aauslt five billa)
and boldinll our tlgbt end In,"
Ferguaon llld. "It's ICIIDelhlng we
IIW 011 film durlll&amp; the week, and we
uw It 'l8in upllaln. I talked to
(~ Coach) Kay !!lephel&gt;aon an tbe pbone about it."
Tbe Billa built a lUield midway
tbroogb 1be I8Cilllll quar1er, went
abead 11-4 011 a aafety in lbe third
quarter after !leveland's Matt Bahr
kicked field aoals ol38and 38 yards,
and Cribbs' ~Oiliest reception put lbe

ELECT
I
--'_ C. ARLAND
-

.........

~11.1hnd80yarda.

WE "EED UNITY IN
THE MEIGHOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT

Detroit S, Vancouver 1
NY IW1len t. Calgary I

t'tlkalo l,

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Taronto t

141. Denver ••

ilal-. Clt.y •

MUwaube 111, BMon 181

Son Ill... ill, 110
Seoltle ... ..
Goldoo Slate 101, Utob 81

RE-ELECT

.....,..a-

DONALD L·MOORE
TRUSTEE

-...a.-

Port1ond 1DI, Seotlle 14

No games IChedWed
T-•IIIY'oGo-.
Pll!!adelpjllo at Wuhlnpori
Alia,.. at C1dcuo
Cleveland It Dailu

SALISBURY lWP;

New York: .t HO&amp;allton

SanADtonioatPhoeni1
Loa AnM.elll at Portland
- WI
)''I GilDea
c:::hicaso at Bustoo
Atlanta at New Jeraey
Indiana at PtliiMtelphia
Cleveland at SID Antcrtlo
San Diea:o at Kanau Cit)'
I

HoultOn

GEN. ELECTION NOV. 3, 1981

I

YOUR VOTE &amp; INFLUENCE

APPRECIATED

at Denver

Loa An&amp;e._ at Seattk

Pd. Pol. Ad. by Cand.

Portland It Goldtn S&amp;ale

Ayes vote on
-Issue 1 ·.
is a vote for
Freedom
of Choice
'

State lssue 1
For
Against

#1
Only
5mgtar

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

Ultra'Ug ts

0 Philip Motrit Inc. 1981

Regular &amp;Menthol

5 mg "tar:' 0.5 mg nicotine
wv. per cigarette by FTC method

I

Brogaft.Warner Insurance Services, Inc.
David S. McCoy Insurance Agency
Davi.Oulckel Agency, Inc.
Downing Chlld1 Agency, Inc.
McGulnneu-Stanley Agency, Inc.
Mullent IMurance Agency, Inc.
Neal lnturance Agency
1 Saunllers-lvans IMulrance, Inc.
v. D. ltiwanl•lnsurance Agency, Inc.
The Wlleaezan Agency, Inc.
· Woocll11111rance Agency, Inc.

VOTE NOV. 3, 1981 ·
The Independent Insurance· Agents of Gallia
and Meigs counties ask for your support in our
efforts to pass State 'Issue No. I.
The passage of this very important issue will
eliminate the current state monopoly by allow~
ing ·the insurance industry to offer workman's
compensation on a competitive basis along with
. the state fund, thus giving Ohioans the freedom
to choose.

Paid fo( by the above Insurance Institutions
\'

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,{

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�'
Pag-8-The Dally Sentinel
Monday, November 2, 1911

(

•

r //

· B usi-n- ess Services
-·
__

I I

.

/

-·

.

SIDING

BISSELL

BUilDERS

SIDING CO.

PAINTERS

"ltlutlful, Custom
lullt G1r1111"
Col! for f"" siding
11t1mo!eo; Ht-2101 or
Ht-2160.
No Sunday Colis

ALSO

e

Parents In the Southern Local •
School District are being Invited to
·visit the respective schools attended
' by their children during the af.
temoon of Thursday, Nov. 5, bel·
. ween I and4 p.m .
This one-half day has been
.. designated as parent-teacher con. ference time by the Soulbern Local
Board of Education. ThlB occasion ·

affords the opportunity lor their
acquainted with
the schools and to discuss their
children's progress.
Notices explaining the procedure and purpose
of this cOnference session have been
sent to the home of parents.
The next parent-teacher conference has been scheduled for Feb.
5, next year.

Congress.

- The officials provided the figure in
Closed testimony June 21 before a

To meet Tuesday

effort to rescue American
hostages in Iran last year cost $193
million, Pentagon officials have told

House military appropriations sub-

conunittee. The testimony was
released Friday.
Ninety commandos

flew into the

The Meigs Association for Retar·
ded Citizens wiD meet Thursday at
7:30,p.m. at the community school.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
u.s. Rt. so lut

Dealer
F~RMEOUIPMENT

SENATOR SPEAKING- UDited States Sen. JeDRandolph (D-W.Va.) oald "lhll II a symbol of
America at liB beat" wblle speaking Saturday at lbe

IIinM

PARTS&amp; SER\II CE
USED EQUIPMENT

ribbon-culling and dodlcatioa ceremoay•for the DeW
bridge linking Meigs Ceauty wtlli Rav-.ood. ,

Mediwn damages were Incurred
two veblcles and a driver was
cited 88 the result of an accident on
E. Main St. Saturday, Pomeroy
Police said.
Pollee said a car driven by Dale F.
Brleldes, Shade, struck the rear of a

to

'

Walton, clerk, pointed out that the
levy Is for street lighting In the town.

·car driven by Debra L. McGuire,
Vinton, which was stopped in the
lane of traffic lqr a left turn.
Bricldes was cited on an assured
dear distance charge.
Polifll alao reported that Jennifer
Burton, Pomeroy, has been cited to

appear in mayor's court on a
speeding charge after bitting, a chUd
on Mechanic st., Friday. AlviD
Philllpa, Pomeroy, who was litruck

'

Tractor wt C•b
MOD-4010 Oitsel J.D . Tra,tor
MOD-323 1 Row New Idea cor"
Picker
7-l·Hc

C~

R. MASH
CONSTRUCTION

by the car 11'88 taken to Veterana
Memorial Hospital and !hen to the
Holzer Medical Center.

Cu~tom kitchtns and ap-

pliances,
custom
bathrooms, remOdeling,
plum.bin, electric, and
he,a ting.
FREE '
EST! MATES
PH. 992·6011
992·7656
8· 20·tfc

Public Notice

992-6215"'" ft2.?~14
' - v t. Ohlo

at a GENERAL
ELECTION .!o be held In
the Township of Lebanon,
,Ohio. at the regular place
of voting therein, Tuesday,
the 3rd day of November!
1981,

the

question

Fully Guaranteed
22 Yrs. Experience
American and Most
~ F Drelgn Cars
Trah~mission Exchange

o

levying, in excHS of ten

'Trai\Smlssion Specialist
: Rebullts·Repairs
Seal Jobs
Open Sat. &amp; sundays ·
Located 5 miles north of
AINny on I "1, on the
Dale'scoH Farm.
660·6370
If no Ans. call742·2070
10·8· 1 mo. pd.

cemeterres.
Safd .t ax being: a renewal
of an .existing tax of one
mill to run for five years, at

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ·
ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE IS hereby given
that in pursuance of a
Resolution of the Village
Council of the Village of

·a rate. not exceeding 1.0
mill for each one dollar of
valuation, for Five r,ears.
The Polls for sa d E lee·
tlon will open at 6:30
o'clock and remain open
unlll 7:30 o'clock P.M. of
said day.
By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs county,

E:-nest A. Wingett
Chairman

I

Dorothy M . .Johnston
Dlre&lt;:lor
Dated Oct. 12. 1981 .

WANT AD INFORMATION

PHONE 992-2156

Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

: (10) 12, 19, 26." (11) 2. 4tc
.

D&amp;M
CONTRACTORS

. O~io.

there will be submitted to a
vole of !he people of said
Dorothy M . Johnstbn
Village at a GENERAL
Director
ELECTION to be held In Dated October 12.
1981
the V lllaae of POillPrnv .
Ohio, at the regular p!aces · (!OJ 12, 19, 26, (11 J 2, 4tc
of votlnq therein, on

1

• Remodelit1g
eAiuminum&amp;
Vinyl Siding
e Kitchen Cabinets
eAwning
eRoofing
ePainting

Public Nollce

'

Appointmtnll nol •lwtrs
necnllry. Fomrvly l(ut-n-li:url
Ieuty Sttop.

10·28-1 nio.'

Mlu.ER ELECTRIC
SERVICE
For all of ~our wir·
ing needs.
Let George Miller
check your present electrical system.
· Residential
&amp; Commercial
Call742·3195
2-B·tfc

ALL STEEL

. Box 65, Porlland, Oh.
Ph.l43·49!2
S$.00 Monthly
Serving the following
town~hips:
L,eb1non,
Sutton. ·· Lelart. Olive,
Orange, Salisbury, Bed·
ford, Chester, Salem,
Scipio,
Rutland,
Harrisonville and Mid· :
die port.
10-12-1 mo.

COMPLETE
RADIATOR
SERVICE
From the smallest
Hea,ler con !o tile
Largeot Rodlotor.
Radlotor s,.claiiS!
NATHAN BIGGS·
35 Yrl. Experience

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS INC.

Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph.H2·2174
5·7· 1tc

Ph. 304·773-5131
Mason, w. Va ..
10-81 mo. pd.

CONSTRUCTION

Sizes
"From 30K30"
SMALL

Utility BulldinJS
Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Rt. 3, Box 54
Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-143-2591
6·15-tfc .

New Homes - ex·
tensive
r!!mpdel·
in g.
•Electrical work
•Roofing wnrk
14 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992·7583
10·2·1 mo.

OHIO VALl~
ROOFING

REESE
TRENCHING
SERVICE
water· Sewer-Electric

And Home Maintenance
•Roofing olaiiJypes
•Siding
•Remodeling
•Free estimates
•ZO Yrs. experience '·

Gas Line-Ditches
Water Line Hook·ups
Stptic Tanks
coun!y Certilled '
Roush Lane
Cheshln, Oh.
Ph. 367-7560

TOM HOSKINS
Ph. 949·2160 or 949-2412 ..

Or Write Dally Sentinel Classified Dept.
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Oh. 457~9

. S&amp;W

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX
eANNOUNCEMENTS
1-card ot Thanks

•s-Furtliltltd Rooms
46- Spacetor Rent
47-WaniiCI to Rlfll
411- Equ~mtntfor R•nt

t-Lostand Found
7- Yard Salt
t-Publlc Slit
&amp; Auction
t-Wanttd to 8uy

11-Hov'-lhllfd GOOCII

52- C8, TV, Radio Eqvlpmtnt
53-Antiques
K-Misc. Mtr"Cfllndill
H-luildinw supplies
st--Pets llf' Sale
4* 51-Mulictl tnstrvmtnt
st-Fruns&amp; v ...tablll
59- For Stleor Trltd•

12-SituaUon Wanted
IJ--fnsuraRCI

1+-luslneSI Training
1$-lc,.oots tnstru,tion

16-RIIIIO, TV,
&amp; ca Repair

11-WantH To Do

17.
18.
19,
20.
21.

eFJNANCIAL
21-Busintn •
Opportunity
U- MOMy to LOin

.'

2l-Professiontl
SlrlliCts

eREALESTATE

....

n-Livn~k

.--Hay &amp; Grein
65--SHd &amp; Fertililtr

J3-Vans &amp; 4 w.o.

2o. - - - - - -

»-Farms tor S•tt

30.
31.-----32. - - -- - -

33.
34.
33. _ _ _ __

Wanted

37- Realt..rs

Want-Ad Advertising
DaaciUnes

72--Tr~ks

Iunday 1: • P.M . llrldlr

(101 12, 19,26, (lh 2,ollc·

'

CALL:

lt-Ot~t~rat Na•Unt
11-M.H.Re... lr

.POMEROY

.,_u,._.,..,.

LANDMARK

Rites and Other Information
UptoUwords . ., oneclayiflMrltH .... ., ., .... ............. U .M
Up to Uwords ... tflrft . . Yiflllrtion ..............• , •• , ,, , ., M.M
UptoUWNrds ... ti•UylhtStrttol'l ,, , , , ,,,,, .. , ........... 11.11
fAVM'I ......... ,.,tiM)
MMI"' MMit ..... alllll Yenl""" lrlllt.,... Ml_. Wfltl can
with orftr. U Cfftt ciMirae tw • carrylftl ... Num• • Care 11
TheiMIIMI.
\
, ... '"~ltlwr rnerftl 1M,..,;, ........ rtltcf _, ...........
"'!KIIMII. Tlla f'UIIIl5lwr wiiiMt 1M ............ tw Mlrt IIIIIIMI
IIIUI'Adltl..........

' 614-ft2·2181

Fum tnd
Home Dtllvtry of
Gn • Dllltl
. . .tlllgOII.
For

Ernest A. Wingett.
Cllelrman

Dorothy M. Jall,.!on
Doled Del. 12, 1911

Dlractor

_(!OJ 12, 19,26, (Ill 2,ollc

I

TRAPS and TRAPPING
supplies . Gene Hines ,
Amesville, _Ohio. 614·448·

Babysitting in my home.,
Bidwell area, weekdays.
call 388-9783.

Sale.
NEW PHONE NO.

992-6259

F r'ee Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992·2772
' 10-7-1 mo.

276 Sycamore St.
Middleport, Ohio
9-21-tlc

.WANTED TO BUY
SCRAP

CO•UNITNY
HOME I
I
acre with small trees. 8
room ranch . hom~
family room with wood
burnin~
fireplll ::e. 3
bedrooms. several
closets , lovely car·
peting, 'full baths, and
2 car garage .
BUILDING LOT - All
utilitfes, level or can be
used as a trailer lot. In
town near schools and
stores.
3 ACRES - On good
country road . Ideal for
your future . Raise a
garden to offset the high
cost of living.
ASSOCIATES: HELEN
L. TEAFORD, .SUE P.
MURPHY, GORDON B.
TEAFORD .

I•

PRICED RI&amp;IIT.
1
•

I.

l'

Lost and Found
Found: male medium size
Blue Tick BeeQie type dog .
Found in Sliver Ridge area .
Call614·985·4302.

6

Free art class lessons. Call
61&lt;-992-7492 .

Male, white poodle. Child' s
pet. Caii67S-3913.

Stalls for rent, horses boar·
ded, paddocks, pasture, in·.
door exercise area, tread·
mill . $45 per month. Call
614-1167·3405 .

7______Y
~
a~rd~S~a~l~
e _____

FOUN0·1 male German
Shepherd in Jerricho Road
area. Call675·5203.

Alley Sale between Millers
&amp; Warehimes. Nov. 3. Fur·
n iture , dr.apes, coats,
spreads, glassware, jeans,
baby clothes, &amp; misc.
Basement Sale 212 Jackson
Pike . Friday and Saturday.
10 to S . Appl iances,
housewares. books, toys,
tools,
sheet
music,
cushions, rugs, pony saddle
and much more.
Patio Sale 3 ~ miles out
Bulaville: Clothes, antique
furniture, glasswear . Call
-"6 -~432 . Sat.-? 9 :30-5:00.

9

Wanted to Buy

CHIP WOOD. Poles max.
diameter 10" on largest
end . 112..50 per ton . Bundled
s 1a b . $ I 0 .50 per ton.
Oeliverd to Ohio Pallet Co.,

Rock Springs
Pomeroy. 992·2689.

Rd .,

Gold, silver , sterling,
jewelry, rings, old coins &amp;
currency . Ed Burkett Bar·
ber Shop, Middleport , 9923476.
MONEY? I need
lurnltlJre. New, used or an·
buyfng glass,
silv.er, coins,
wa,tct1es. cha,lln'~· etc . Mar·
Mid·
992-6370 .
Raw furs, hides, scrap
metals ,
batter ies,
radiators, ginseng, yellow
root, and merchandise
brokering . Harper-Halstead Salvage Company , 300
Eleventh Street . 67S·5868.
Also Flea Market open
daily . Open Monday ·
Friday 1·5 pm .

home. Day or evenings.
have references. Cl!tll 4&lt;46·
4792
·
-----,..----Baby sitting , near
Foodland, any ,age, meals,
snacks, toys, sate _home,
references. Call --""6·7~-46.
S35weekly .
TV service calls, Call 992·
203-4. Also used color TV for
sale.
Will do house cleaning. 882·
2571.
Odd jobs and delivered
firewood . 675·3292.
Will do any odd job ,
general
house
main ·
tenance. Have experience
with carpentry, plumbing,
and electrical, also some
appliance repair . Call 675·
3770 or 675·5918 ask •tor
Steve.

21

Business
Opportunity

WANTED-CultiVators for
International Super A or
Cub , Write Phyllis Woody
Caldwell. RT . 1 Box 4.0na ,
wv 25545.

1,_,1_ ___,H,_,e,_,lp.,__,W"'a"n"le,dc__
HEAR US OUT! Texas
Refinerv Corp. offers an
opportunity for high in·
come PLUS cash bonuses
and fringe benefits In the
Gallipolis area , Regardless
of experience, write C.J.
Sears, Pres., Box 711 , Fort
Worth, Tx. 76101.

2~1======~B~us;i~ne~s~,==~-­
Opportunity
$180 per week part time at
home. Webster, America's
foremost dictionary com·
pany needs home workers
to update local mailing
lists. All ages, experience
unnecessary . Catl1 ·716·8426000exc:.6671 .

Garage Sale 1st. time
Brown house behind Bid·
well Post Office. name
StOlen Property. Aritique brand children's clothiflg·
kitchen safe . Antique sizes 3 thru B. Gas range, . Why settle for less. Sell the 22
Money to Loan
dining room cabinet. Two dinette set, &amp; misc. 388· best. Sell Avon . For more
Columbus First Mortgage
rocking ·c hairs . Other 8769, Oct. 31 ,9·5.
information call 742--2354 or Company FHA ·VA Finan·
items. Anyone knowing or
446·3358 .
cing Loan Rep. Cookie
seeing this furniture being
Garage
.
Sale
Thursday,
Krautter {304)675·3473 .
hauled in the vicinity of
Flatrock, WV on October 10 Nov . 5, 2 mi·. from HMC en Fulltime tempory position
Professional
or later. a liberal reward is Rt . 160. Last of season. available December 1, 1981 23
Bargains.
for LPN licensed in State of
services
offered. 675-1302.
Ohio in the WIC Program
at the Gallia County Heallh Piano tun ing and repair,
POSITIVIL Y no hunt inQ on Inside yard sale. 454 s. Jrd, Department. Call 446·4612 Love your neighbor tu~e
Middleport,
Ohio.
Thurs.
the old H. C. Brown Farm
ext. 59 . WeareanE .O. E .
your Piano. Bill War.d,
opposite Racine locks Oct 29 through all of
Wards Keyboard. 446·4372,
following
week
.
Letart , WV . Signed Bill Me·
•
Baby sitter' needed 1 lo 2 Gallipolis.
Daniel.
days
a
week
.
Call446·0026.
Yard sale· J family, Nov . 2,
PlANa·. rur-ii NG-' . .L.in~
Call the Scottish Inn for 3, 4. Yellowbush Rd. ,
Daniels , Associate :
Residential
Program
for
weekly or monthly rates on across from the Freeland MR / DD Adults, has Brunicardi Music . Phone
Norris
residence
.
9
to
4.
rooms or efficiency apart·
openings for Assistant 614-742·2951 or 614·992·2082.
Rain cancels.
ments. 304·675-6216 .
House Manager and Direct Ask about special rates. .
Care
Staff . Good career op·
Garage Sale. 2923 Maple
portunity in human servics HARPER Adult Care CeO·
Avenue.
Tuesday,
Wed
Giveaway
4
for creative and dynamic ter·providing the personal
nesday, Thursday . _
individuals. Direct Care care your elderly need in ·a
Kittens . Call446·4477.
$10,('}() yea r, Asst . H.M. home like atmosphere.
$12,00 year. Call 4.46·4768 or Vacancies now avallib1e.
9
Wanted to Buy
send res ume : O.R.S., P.O. call 304-675-1293.
Part Terrier puppies." Call
WANT TO BUY Old fur- Box 936, Gallipolis, Ohio
446-4977 after 5 weedays.
niture and Ant iques of all 45631.
Mobile home roof pauntlng
kinds, call kenneth Swain,
and anchoring. D and "N
7 vear old female Peek-A· 256·1967in the evenings.
workshop/ Day Ac tivity in· Estates. 675-JOOO.
Poo dog . White and apricot .
structors needed
for
Very good · company for
PAl 0 for clean, late inovative day program fer
older perscr;t. . Not good CASH
around children. Call 614· model used cars. Smith MR I OD Adults. Tea\.hing
Buick-Pontiac, GAllipolis, instruction background
742·2360 .
Ohio. Call 446·2282.
preferred or related experience . $10.000 year . Call 3c:1_ _,H.:;o,m:.::e,s:.:f:::O:..
r "'
Sa~l:::e__
3112 month old female Blue
446·-4768
or
send
resume:
New
J
bdr
.
house
with
Antique
Bisque
and
China
Point Siamese kitten . Call
O.R.S.
.
P
.O.
Box
936.
garage
and
·,full
basemeOt
Dolls,
old
quilts,
oriental
614-992-71 38 .
.
$45,000. owner will help
rugs, sterling silver, o!d cut Gall ipolis, Ohio45631.
glass, lamps, and art glass.
finance . Call446·0390.
Mixed breed puppleo, 6 Call 304·525-5545 . Ask for GET VALUABLE training
weeks old . Will be medium Ron, 12 Noon tilt 11 p.m.
as a young business person BY OWNER : 4 bdr ., split·
size dog. Call614·742-2985 .
and earn good money plus level. liv ing room &amp; dinirig
Massey Ferguson , 200 some great gilts as a Sen· room combination, eat·kl
tinel rot.~te carrier. Phone kitchen, lg , family rm ., •2
Puppy to a good home . 675· Dozer for parts, 388-8440.
3970 .
us right away and get on 112 baths, located in Tai.a
the eligibility list at 992· Esta1es, Club house and
BEDS· IRON, BRASS, ' old 2156 or 992-2157.
pool priv ileges, $75.000
Pai-t Labrador pups. Phone furnitu-re. gold. silver
458 ·1727.
.
firm . Kyger Creek School
dollars, wOOd ice boxes,
LPN needed, excellent District . Shown by appJ .
stone jars, antiques, etc.,
benefits,
paid vacation and only caii446·9A03.
households.
Mother and mixed puppies, Complete
---------.golden Retriever with Writ~ : M.D. Miller, Rt. 4, holidays, retirement plan,
disability, hospitalization 3 bdr. house in city wi"th
Pomeroy. Oh. Or 992-7760.
papers. 675·3628.
available (free after one 16x32 in ground pool . Fe"'·
year) . Call614·667·3196 Ar· ced in yard, plus extra•$,
cadla Nursing Home.
~-~~ -~~ ~6 r best offer. C~l

----'=='

Housing
Headquarters
Real Estate

Givuway
ANY PERSON who has
anything to give away and
does not offer or attempl to
offer •:~ony other tho'ng for
sate may place an ad In this
column. There will be no
charge to the advertiser.
4·

Lost : purse In ~roger
parking lot, Pomeroy. Will
the man who pickecf It up
please return it to Kroger
oflice or call 304-882·35S9
collect .

No Hunting or Trespassing
on Kenneth Watson farm ,
without written
permission. Kenneth (Butch)
watson .

General

WANTED
Alive and Active
Family of five , six,
seven,
or
more
members who have
outgrown their present
home and have $30,000
or mere in home equity.
If you earn from $22.500
to S28,500 per year. not
inclucfing overtime. you
might be able to qualify
to own this lovely, new
brick and wood 4
bedroom. 2 bath con ·
temporary home near
Pomeroy with finished
family room and gas
heat for only:
8% interest and
NO downpayment
Call:

NOTICE OF
ELI!CT!ON ON
TAX LEVY IN
(Pomeroy
Scrap
EXCESS OF THE
Iron
TEN MILL
LIMITATION
&amp;Metal)
NOTICE !S hereby given ,
Now picking up junk
Bill Childs 992-6312
!hal In · pursuance 01_..1
oulo boc!lll. Top prices
Graig swenson 593-5571
Resolu!lon ol !he Board of
paid lor auto bodies,
Education of the Eastern
scr~p Iron ~nd met~tls.
_________.,.
Local School Dlllrlct. Ohio,
1 milo west o! Folr· 11
ru~ 1;'1 ."':~t:\~\Tr
ground I on Old R I. 33.
~~r~nnnn~ou~
submitted 10 a vote of !he
Mon.·Frl.l:30!o4:00
Dw-a•
·a
-~· of said sc11o01
Alter Aug. 3
District a! a GENERAL
Ph. H2-6564
ELECTION lo be held at
10cl2-lfc
the
regular
placeo
of vot1119 +~2;::;:~;:;==:1
lUI a
A
lhlroln, on Tuaday, the.
3rcl day of November, 1981.
Public Notice
the question of lovylng, In
excHJ of the len mill
By ordir of the BOI~d of
.:. ~': ': :. '. : .: ~ ': .: :;..
llmllatlon,lorthebenefltol , Elec:!ons, of Meigs Coun!y,
Eastern Local School . Ohio.
_,.
District lor tile f11!rpose ol '
Ernest A. Wingett I '[=~~!!!!~ii!i~~~
Maintenance of fll(:lll!les
Chairman 1·
purchasing ol eQulpmen1
SWEEPER
nd
I
and remodeling of
Doro!hyM. Johnston I:~;~W~:
· a
sewng
facilities.
Dlre&lt;:!or
repair, paris, and
Said lax being: an ad· Dated Dct. 12, 1981
Pick up and
dltlonal tax of 4.11 Mllll lo
Divis Vacuum
run for ~Jve
eersb a! a (!OJ 12. 19, 26, (II I 2, 4tc
one half milo up
role not
4. mills
IC:o~~~- Creek ~d. Call
lor ona
lor of
14
luallon, which •mounts .
FortY cents lor eedl one
undred dollars of
YIIUitl&amp;!!llor J:lve r,eero.
The
lor ·sa d Elec:-

m

t-;~~~~~~~~~T~::::;;;~;;:;-;~::::":"1 Will do baby sitting In my
1

Widower retir,d, average
income, jogs, hunts, fjshes,
gardens, hoping to contact
healthy ·non -smoking
woman under sixty five,
who likes outdoors. Replys
please give address, phone
number, and pertinent informa1ion . Send to P.O.
Box 102, Albany, Ohio
45710.

R.c.s.

Cllusified Pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

Ga Ilia Co. Area Code
614
446-Gallipolis
:167- Cheshire
388-Vinton
245-R io Grande
256-Guyan Dist.
643- Arabia Dist .

. .

...,.......

M-lltcfriCII '

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation·
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Win'd ows

wide with 2 baths . Nice
outbuildings, cellar and
1.88 acres. Ne~r town.
Just $37,900.
M!DD~EPORT - Nice
3 bedrooms. 21f2 baths
3 level lo·ts. Full
l..~=~~~t
lots
gOOd
1
hot ol water
car garage .

w··- AD W."ll':r

·'-"••''"IH".VMMtltl
D-PIIM"fll&amp; HUll..

Tuttday tttrullrlcl•yt :IG .-.M.

Shoot Racine Gun
Club. Every Sun. starting
at 1 m . Factory choke

NO hunting &amp; trespassing
on Bright McCausland
Farm operated by Woolhan,
Farms.

Shops the

' \ Dlractor
Dated October 12, 1981

SERVICES

Phone
614 1·.9 92·3325

.:

.Dorothy M. Johnolon
'

Jt-Camplntlqulpmetu

H

REAL ESTATE CO.

Ernest A: Wingett
Chairman

J4-Motorcyclls
Jf-INtl&amp; Mo-1
76-AutG Parts a
A'CtiiOf'itl .
r7-Ault Rtp~ir

u-••caVIIKitt

1M dtY bite.-. •'*'ltMion

1y~ii~~'fiO,:~~~~hJ~:F ~~~~~~~

lor 1111

Monday 2:00on Saturdl'f

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Public Notice

e;TRANSPORTAT!ON

31- MHIIt Hfllllts
lor S~r~te

~- R .. I Estate

Doro!hy M. JohnS!on
Director
Dated Oct. 12,
1981

NOTICE OF'
ELECTION ON ·
TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF TJ:tE

•2-W•ntM to B•y

11 - A.utol l•r Sa"'

l&amp;-lusineuluildinp
u-Lan a " " " "

Public No!lce

,,_Farm EctuiPmtnl

31- Hom'• tor hit

HARRISON .
TV SERVICE
NOW
OPEN
Used Color TV Sets for

Ernest A. Winget!
Chairman

e FARM SUPPLIES
&amp; LIVESTOCK

22. --~--23. - - -- - 25. - - - -- 26.
27.
28.
29.

STUART WAYNE.
PULLINS
Call A!ter4 P.M.
992·7656
10.9· 1 mo.

tt-Forl.."••••

•MERCHANDISE

eEMPLOYMENT
SERVICES
~ 11-tttiP wanttct

)Wanted
) For Sale
)Announcement
) For Rent

AND CUSTOMIZING
R1-Biue and Re-Finish
Restock, parts. etc.
Buy Guns I~
Above Wholesale

.. -Aparlmtl'lts tor REnt

4--GivNwn
So-Hippy Adl

These cash rates
inc lude discount

GUNSMITHING

• RENTALS

• 1-Houst-1 for lhnt
42-MobUt Homes
tor Rlnf

2-lnMtmorlam
:t-Announctments

Gun

wanted to do s•Jld bloslll19 .
Old cars , traile-rs and
smaller Items. Call U6·827A
after 5.

NO
hui1ting &amp;
no
trespassing without written
permission on Woolhan
Farms at App'e Grove .

IL B. SR .
216 E. Second Street

W1nted to Do

11

Apples, Honey and Sweet
Cider. Grimes, Romes,
Gal., ilnd Red Delicious,
Staymen Winesap. $5.25
per bushel and up . Cheaper
in volume. Fitzpatrick Or·
chard, SR689. Phone 614·
66'1·3785 .

. J&amp;R
TRASH SERVICE

ROUSH

Farm Buildings

.QEA.N'S AUTOMATIC

mill · limitation, for the
benefit of Lebanon Township for the purpose of
Maintaining anc;:t operating

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

PHONE 992-3021

UTOMOBILE
IN ·
RANCE been can celled?
Lost
your
operator's License? Phone
992-2143

Horses, pon les, horse
trailer, riding lessons. Hoof
Hollow 614-698·3290 .

NEW LISTING - Total
----------t---------+---------il elec.
3 bedroom dbl.

Townshl~

Dorothy M. 'Johnston
Director
Date Oct. 12, 19&amp;1

Pomeroy, Ollio

1-No. UIO Dieut Fora

Vehicles damaged in Pomeroy accident &amp;turday

A tu: levy, one mUIIor five years,
to be voted on Tuesday by the
residents of Pomeroy, wiD be ilsled
as CWTellt expense. However, Jane

lh~m~~Yd~h ~ .f.;Wel'9a'\~

New Hours:
Mon.II:OD-7:01
Tues.II:OD-S:OO
Weds. IO:OD-8:01
Thurs. 11:00·8: 00
Fri. IO:OD-5:01
Union Ave.

Ftrm ~quipm•nt

1

For street lighting

Public Notice
open untll7 ;30o'clock PM .
ofsaldday.
· ·
By order of the Board of
Ele&lt;:llons, of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

HAIR REMEDIES
Stylls!s: Mark Mora
and Cindy Cuthbertson.

Guysville, OIUO
Aulhorire4 John Detrt,
Ntw Hollafld, 8USII Hog

Small inv~stment~ large returns, ·Sentinel Want Ads·
Public Notice

V. C. YOUNG Ill

6747.
- -Dally
- -after
- -1 p.m.
--Racine Vol.. Fire Dept.
sponsors a shotgun &amp; rifle
rna t c h every Sa t - n I9 ht a t
· b u lldl ng
6 : 30 p. m . a t th e~r
Fac t ory chok ~
a12t Bash an.
e ht
&amp;
guag s o gun
open
slght22 rifles.

Veferalll Hospital ·
Saturday Admissions-William
Monis, Pomeroy; Mary McCallum,
Minersville; Barbara Richards,
Reedsville; Velma Reynolds,
Pomeroy.
Saturday
Discharges-Nellie
Lyons, Phlllip Donovan, AvaneU
Baas, Kenneth Payne, Vebna Siders.
S\lllday Admlssion&amp;-Anna Hart,
Pomeroy; Fred Miller, Pomeroy;
Clediih King, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharge-Ida While.

parenls to become

Iranian desert on April 24, 1980, but
the mission was called off after
three of eight helicopters broke
down before reaching a refueling
slop.

','tive

For bulk delivery of
gasOline. heatfno oil end
diesel fuel. tall L.anamark,
9'12-2181. Pomeroy. Oh.

(FrH Etllmotes)

Hospital news

:·Effort said costlY------------~
. · WASHINGTON (AP) - The ahor·

f'

Saturday after lbe bridle dedlealloll. Tbe Ravenswood
C of C hosted lbe evenl and served free hot dop and
soft drlub u weD u provldiDg an aftem..., of enterlalmnent.

Invite parents to visit schools

SANDY AND BEAVER In·
surance Co. hat offwed
services for fire Insurance
coverage in Gallla County
for almost a c.ntvrv.
Farm, hoMe and personal
property coverages are
available to meet in-.
c!lvldual
Contact
•ue!JI .

EARLY
SEASON
SPECIAL Deer slugs, rem.
12glluge, 25 per box, 59.97 .
Spring Valley Trading Co.,
Spring Valley ~laza, "'"·
8025.

_ Concret work
Jlumbi"!Q and
•lectrlal work

10.28-1 mo.

Will !10 rug weaving. S2.7S
yord . Ca11614-992·5971 .

r----

p!ete line of trapping supPlies. Trapo, dye, wax, and
lures.
Spring
Valloy
Trading Co., SpriiJV Valley
Pl.za, ,..._1025.

....._,

_ Roofing onG gutter
work

••Interior Remodeling••
FREE ESTIMATES
Phone m-2771
or H2-7093

3·11-tfc

SINGING AT PARK - Tbe Voices ol Uberty, a
group from Meigs County Wider lbe direction of Jnne
··van V1'8111teo, 81DJ several' aelectoaa during lbe
celebration at lbe Ravenswood Commlllllly Park

....,r.dclooo ond
r.modellng

They'll Do It Every Time

r - - - - - - - - - - , 1 TRAF'PER Wehaveacom·

"YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE"

AND

Announc-•ts

3

VInyl &amp; Aluminum
f

The Daily sentinei-Pag-9

Ohio

;m''

~IOJ'1A M~lnnda:.~~

Me igs Co. Area Code
614
·~9:1 -Middleport

Pomeroy
985- Chester
343-Portland
l47- Letart Falls
949- Racine
142- R:ull.lnd

Area Code 304

67~Pt. Pleasant

451-Leon
·
576-Apple Grove
. 77l-Mason
882-New H1ven
895-Letart
931-Buffalo

Situations Wanted

Widower retired to small
farm, avenge income,
jogs, huhts, fishes, gar·
dens, hoping to contact
healthy
non -smoking
woman under sixty five
who likes outdoors . R.eplys
please give phone no. and
address . Pertinent In·
formation to P.O. Box 102.
Albany, Oh 45710.

Room, board, and laundry.
Elderly
preferred.
Reasonable. Call 614-9'126022.

TO PLACE AN A" CALL
In Meigs County

In Ga!tia Countr ·

446-2342

992·2156
675-1333

'

12

Ellm Resthome. Care tor
· ttandlcapped, aged, or bed
patient. Temporary or
limlted·care . Or continuous
home with us. Equipped for
wheel chair. 742-2266 .

Mason Co., W.Va.

In Mason County

unti!J:3!1o'clock P.M.
otsaiddav.

7

wanted : someone to car·
pool from Pomeroy or Mid·.
dleport to Robbins and
1.=~~~ 1Day shl!t. Call 614-

2

Beautiful brick ranch, :3
acres MIL on Centerpoint·
Gallia Rd. 9 per cent finan·
cing. Low down paymen1.
Phone 379-2729.
•
3 bedroom house. 2 acres, :2
baths, tamily room . Full
basement. garage. 94?·
2079 .
Large historic home On
beautiful cot;"ner lot. 6th
and Main, Middleport . '19~ 5593 .
LANO
CONTRACT · 2
bedroom', full basement,
workshop with · attaChe:d
shed, approximately 112
acre. All excellent con·
dillon. S28,000·SI,OOO down
and 11 percent on unpaid
balance. S275 a month. tn
Racine area. 61-4 · 9-49 · 22~9 . 1
-------------~

Or rent·3 beclroom fur ·
nished home on BUd Chat·
·tin Road on big lev~l lot.
576·2711 .
•'

•

�--------------------~~---------------~-

--

-

-Ohio

31 •

Homn for Sole

2 ~room house on l

~

44

AP'Irtmtmt
torR tnt
Furnished apts. nice, 1
adults, steam heat,
utilities pd . Coli 4011·
after 7PM.

~ere,

2 miles back of New Haven

on paved ro.d, IIJIIY carpeted, self .contolned water
and septic system . 882-3267.

Vl£ ..

Rotllff Pools &amp; Service.

Complete

sales~

DlatTRACY

servlc.~

'
Restaurant
equipment
.rac:Oildllloned by RADCO.
Call 30-1-523·1378. Hgtn .•

Mobile home In c ity central
air and heat, adults only,
dep . 4011-0338.

3 bdr. house, 2 baths; fully
carpeted, S300 plus deposit,
The Roush hOme at
M{ Vernon Is for sale. Call 35 Chillicothe Rd., no pets.
Coll446·37&lt;48 or 256-1903.
the son at 61.4·927-5413.
Mobile Homes
for s~le

CLEAN USED MOBILE
HOMES
KESSEL'S
QUALITY
MOBILE
HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT
35. PHONE 446·3868.
12x60 mobile home · fur·
nished. Washer &amp; dryer,
central air , $5,500. Call367·

0416.
2 bdr . mobile home 1 mi.

APARTMENT for
Coll4011-0390.

Rent:

2 bdr. apt . for rent. Call.ui·
3937 .

5 rm. house in Gallipolis. '
&lt;;aii-U6-39,j5 after 5PM.
2 bdr . apt. clean. modern
furniture. Main St . ,
2 bdr. house at 2129 Chest· Cheshire. Sec. dep. &amp; ref.
nut St. Call 446-2599 or 446· Call245·5818.
7013.
Small furnished house,
Cheshire River Front adults only . Call 446·0338.
House. • bpr., 2 baths,
large kitchen with dish· 3 bdr. apt. for rent in Rio
wa,sher1 full basement, Grande. Calll ·682-7056.
fireplace, $275 mo. Deposit,
ref . required . C9ll 1·614· 1 bedroom apts. available
«8·3821 9 to 5 Mon .- Fri. or at
Riverside Apts. Equal
614-448·2555.
Opportunity Housing. Call
992·7721 .
For sale or rent . Lovely 3
bdr. house in country set· Available. :1 bedroom apt.
ting . Convenient to for
rent. Contact Village
Gallipolis or Rio Grande. Manor
Apts., Middleport.
216·734-3734.
992-7787.

from HMC . Call 675·6020,
after 5 446·2200.

Unfurnished house for rent, 2 bedroom furnish ed apt.
1 bdr ., $160 mo., dep. 992-5434,
992-5914 or 30H82required, no utilities paid,
2566.
no
pets.
57
Olive
Sf.
Phone
For sale or rent 2 112 acres
SJJitabte for mobile home 446-7886.
3 bedroom apartment in
h'ps county water and s~p ­
tlc tank installed . Call 256· Nice 2 bdr . house for rent Middleport. $150. month.
1705. .
fully carpeted . Call 256- 992·5692 .
6413.
2 bedroom apartment, furZ bdr. mobile home for
sale, reasonable . Call 446· 2 bedroom unfurnishecl nished. Over looking Ohio
6~25 .
S190. 1 bedroom furnished River. Brown's Trailer
_;___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ l.~~~,~~i~; ,~$125 . Naylors Park. 992·3324.
1~69 3 bdr., 12x60, fur· I
deposit. Call
1h double house. 2 bedroom
llished, 2 air cond. , &amp; ap- 614·992·2288.
furnished .
Deposit
r;:tliances included, $3,000.
requried.
Adults
preferred.
C:all446-1703,
s room house, bath, No pets . Call614-992 -2749.
hallway , utility room.
1966 12x4S New Moon office small apartment. Call 614·
1 bedroom apartment. No
trailer, hot water heater, 446-1578.
pets. John Sheets, 3 11:2 mile
A/C, fuel oil furnance, 1 full
b',ath. SJ,OOO. Call675-2600.
4 room house. Adults only, south of Middleport on Rt.
Syracuse, Ohio. can 614· 7.
Darian 12 x 65, 3 992 -3981 .
3 bedroom furnished up·
bedrooms. 1972 Crown
H"ven, 14 )( 65 With 8 X 10 2 bedroom home in Mid· stairs. $150 per month plus
eXpando, 3 bedrooms. 1973 dleport. Deposit required. ut ilities. Must pay aeposit.
~topia 12 x 65, 2 beclrooms. Call 614·992·5914 .
' No pets. Available Nov. 1.
Cali 614 · 992 · 55lr·~..after 4
1972 Invader 14 x 70, 3
p.m .
bedrooms. 1972 Nashau, 14
x: 60, 2 bedrooms . B 1/&lt;~ S 2 bedroom all electric ranSales, Inc . 2nd and Viand ch style home. 1 mile from 1 bedroom furnished apartSJs. Pt . Pleasant, WV . Racine. References and me lit
in
Middleport,
deposit required . Available utilities included
Rhone 675·4424.
. $185 per
Nov . 15. Call614·949 ·2849.
month plus deposit. No
pets. Call61"4·992·7177 after
MoBILE home located in
camp conley, extra hice 4 rooms and bath, full 6p.m .
stove and
and clean, phone 304·895- basement.
refrigator
furnished .
3~67 .
Deposit required. Call 614· Apartments. 675·5548 .
992-3090.
u:i;fio MOBILE HOME .
APARTMENTS , mobile
. ~~- 2711 .
,
houses,
Pt.
TWO bedroom 1 _lurnished homes
Pleasant al)d Gallipolis.
cottage at 2103 Jefferson 614-446-8221
or 614·245·9484.
19}3 3 bedroom 14 x 70, un· Ave. Deposit required . 304·
del'pinned. 675·AI064.
675-4100, day.
2 bedroom twin single lri
1972 Schultz 12 x 65. 304-675- 2 bedroom house, full Pt. Pleasant at 20S Poplar
2967.
basement on Viand Street . Street. $200 month plus
deposit. 1·614·263·8322 or
675-6803 or 675·3797.
614·263·2669.
1977 Victorian 14 x 70 two
bedroom , family room, all Nice 3 bedroom house near
electric . C~ll 675 -3987 or fawn. Two c ar garage and Efficiency rooms by the
week on Main Street,
675-3862.
utility building. $300 . 675- Mason,
WV . 773-5651 .
4506.
1969 KirkwOOd 12 x 65, 2
TWO bedroom apartment
bedroom , stove, carpeting,
air :Conditioned, very nice 4." c - -=--7e7--cc- - - - in Henderson, 304·675·1972.
2
contlition. Call 675-2.427.
Mobile Homes
.lor Rent
Furnished Rooms
Just arrived · 2 used mobile 2 bdr. mobile home for rent 45
SLEEPING ROOMS and
home's. 2 ancl 3 bedrooms. in toWn . Call446-0318 .
priced ·to sell. can be s&amp;en
light housekeeping apt.,
at the former K and K - ~~i~= ~ome for rent. Call Park Central Hotel.
Mobile Home Sates. Now
owned and operated by o
46
Space for Rent
and W Estates. 675·3000.
3 bdr., double wide, con- COUNTRY MOBILE Home
venient location in City
1966 12 x 45 New Moon of· limits, furnis!led, new car- Park, Route 33, North of
fi ce traitP.r, hot water pet &amp; drapery throughout, Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
heater, ac, fuel oil furnace, all gas, all utilities paid ex· 992-7479.
1 lull bath . $3000. Call 675 - cept electric, no pets, no
2600.
more than &lt;1, ref . &amp; clep . Trailer space on largesenii
req . $350 per mo. call 446· private lot, free water and
sewage in Pt. Pleasant.
3547 .
33
Farms for Sale·
675-1699.
84 ~CRE Farm for sale, 3
BR home. Will take proper- ~~~60 ~a~~n5 ~~~~~ fr~~ Trailer lot for rent or sale,
ty in town on trade· in. Free
complete hookup. Mason,
gas and royalty check. Far Gas heat, no pets, $165 mo. Second St. 773·5751 or 773plus dep. Call446-0822.
&lt;¥&gt;Pl. call379-2613 .
9520.
rent on
"Trailer for
3~
Lots &amp; Acreage
Bulaville Rd . and a space. 3200 sq. II. building located
at 22-t First Street, Point
Call446·8048.
L!OTS · Real nice campsite
Pleasant, WV. For further
on Raccoon Creek, all
information contact Bob
3
bdr.
mobile
home,
fur·
tJtilities available, $300.
nished, clean, convenient Messick at 6~5·2460 .
~wn , owner will finance,
location, upper Rt. 7, ref. &amp;
after 3 p. m., 256·6413.
security dep. Call245-5818 .
'
·' " ' ..-.
~Uid you like to own a
hOme of your own. We
cOdn't have $10,000 for a
down payment nor SS,OOO
even$1,000. Do what we
Call 513-592·9175.
2 bedroom trailer. Adults
e14.8cres, rural water, s mi. only . Brown's Trailer
Park. 992-3324.
fj"um town . Call-446· 1158.

*'

0

r'.'

.... .......... .
..........
~.

..

~'f "' owner, 3 apartment
nouse on approx . 1 acre.
l!'iVe In one, rent others to
rtrake your payment. Can
1fe "t:onverted single home.
qity · water, will consider
le_nd contract . 675·1883 9·5
p .m .

24. ACRES with 250 foot
river frontage .• Room
house, 5 miles from Raven·
swOOd bridge. In Ohio,
phone61H49·2286.

41

2 bedroom on
Rood. 675-3834.

San'dhlll

4 bdr. 2 112 bath bl level

with pool off u 35. Coli
WIUmon IIIHI Estote
Agency, .u.l-3d4.
F'OR LEASE OR RENT·
Modern 3 bdr. ran&lt;:h near
rown. S300 per month,
deposit &amp;
references
'equlred.' C•ll STROUT
REAl-TY .u.~-oooe.

USED REFRI _G ERATOR .
Corbin and Snyder Furniture,
955 Second,
Gallipolis. Call446-1171.
Special on · new recliner's,
$79 .95. City Furniture.
Located across from Post
Office In Pt. Pleasant. 6752608.
Couch. gray. $50. PhOne
675·3875 olter.5 pm.

STUCCO PLASTERING
textured ceilings, com·
merclal end rnldentlat,
free tltimotes. Call 2561182.

54 · Misc. Merchandice

Firewood. $20 pickup and
S70 for 1 ton truck load
delivered. Phone 576-2010.
Topper for 8ft. pickup, will
..II or trade . Call576-2069.
10 speed boys bike, 26 Inch
girls bike with baby
carriage. gOOd condition.
675-71&lt;48.
. .
Real nice 22 ft. trailer for
sale, exc . cond., self con·
tained with shower, $2:,150
or will trade for small
ti-uck or car of equal value.
full size awning goes with
trailer. Call-446·2459.
Firewood for sale. All her·
dwood. $35 pick up load,
stacked and delivered. Call
.u.\·9607 or 2,j5·5506 .
Craftsman chain saw, 18'
bar, rurts good. Call 446·
8181 .
Fuel Oil furnace, 140 BTU ,
$250. catt379-2617.
Closing OUt Sale. Fur·
niture. Ending , Nov. 6, -41
Neil Ave ., Gallipolis. Call
446-8067 .
Firewood split &amp; delivered.
S35. truck load, or $65 . a
cord. Call - 61-4·843·2933 or
614-843-'1'452.
Mr. Leggs Blue
$12 .99 pr. , Western
$11 .99 ea., Ladies
$4.99·$5.99. Bailey's
Middleport.

Jeans,
Shirts
Slacks
Shoes,

Coal furnace, tubular grate
with
blower,
tractor
wheels, 1974 Plymouth,
1970 Buick motor and tr•n·
smisslon . 1956 GMC truck.
Coii61H49-2638.

I~~i;';:ho;;:;.;i;;;,;:;t;;;,

Firewood-split, delivered
and stacked. Mixed wood
$65 per cord or S35 per hall
c,..d , HardWood $75 per
cord or $40 per half cord.
Call for quotes on Iorge
quanllles. Phone 245·5478.
wOOdburning . ad·on
furnance, still In factory
carton, heats Iaroe home,
$4SO. Call 256·1216.

4,000 lb. Pneumatic fork lift
with side shifter wfll
sacrifice. Call61~· 423·6873.
Freight trailer converted
to construction job trailer.
good cond ~ Call 61.4·423·
6873.
Firewood for sale, miXed
hard woods, delivered and
stacked. Call245·9264.
Water pump, trailer hitch.
Call446-2599.
zenith 23' color
looks new.
good, $65 .
washer
Platform rocker,
Phone -'46· 1468.

$15. ,

FIREWOOD $25.00 pickup
truck load, 304·458·1844.

shop equipm.enf or
employees. 2 wet
stations with bowls, 1
brown and 1 white. 2 s.,s,___,e,u'-'ild,i,_,n_,.g_,s,u"'ppt.,_,ie,.s_
hydraulic all purpose Building materials, block,
chairs, gold. 4 dryers and brick, sewer pipes, win·
chairs, 3 gold and 1 blue. 1 dows, lintels, etc. Claude
roller tray . 1 floor mat. Winters, Rio Grande, 0 .
Supplies and olher small Call245·5121 .
equipment. $2000. Call 614·
742 -2360 .
56
Pets for Sale
For sale : 8 fl . pool table.
Excellent shape. Call 614·
667·3333 .

PDOtiiLE GROOMING.
Call Judy Taylor at 367·
7220.
.

Firewood. Pick-up truck .ORAGONWYND
CAT·
$30, delivered and TERY · KENNEL. AKC
slacked $35. Call 614·992· black Chow puppies, CFA
5006
or
614-949· 2171. Himalayan, Persian and
L~onard Bass. syracuse.
Siamese kittens. Call .4446·
J844affer4p.m.
26' TROUTWOOD travel
trailer and camp site on HILLCREST KENNEL
R:accon Creek. Close tp Boarding all breeds, clean
Ohio River. SSOO down. indoor-outdoor facilities .
Owner will finance. 614·256· Also AKC Reg . O-r1216.
mans. Call446·7795.
New Crop Apples-Red and
Golden Delicious, Winesap,
Rome Beauty, Grimes
Golden and Johnathan·
Retail and Wholesale, any
quanity available. Also
fresh Apple Cider, Pum·
pkins, homemade Apple
Butter and more produce
delights. · Bob's Market.
Mason, WV. Open 7 days.
Phone 773·5721 .
Discontinued cabinets, top,
stove, hood, sink . $1200.
Dale's Kitchen Center. 615·
2318.
GOLDEN Phea!';ants and
Lady Amherst Pheasans,
phone 304-675-2961 after
5 :00p.m.

71

Elegant Bl!ldWin piano. To
be picked up and sold In
your area. Can be seen at
vour residence. ~esoo
person can resume
balance.
Financing
available with easy term
and payments. For further
Information call collect614·
773·5125. Ask for credit
manager .
51
Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

For Sale : 750 and 1000
gallon PLASTIC septic
tanks. State and County approved. Total weight 300
lbs .• Haul in your pick-up
truck. Ron Evans Backhoe
servic::e. located · 3 miles
South of Jackson on St. Rt.
93 . 286·5930.
APPLES· red· &amp; yellow
delicious Winesap and
Firewood for sale split_, Rome, $6,00 a bushel. No. 1
stacked. &amp; delivered. $30 a potaloes $6.00·50 pounds.
Market_,
large pickup load. Call 4-46· Rayburns
Kanagua, Ohio.
8535 or 446·7993 .

For sale Quilts hand made
for Christmas gifts. Jewell
Niday, -U&lt;I-3861.

BRIARPATCH KENNELS
Boarding and grooming.
A K C ' Gordon
setters,
English Cocker Spaniels.
Call388·9790.
Ha\fe 3 male Cocker
Span lets to.breed. 2 blonde,
1 red, good blood line, AKC
registered. "'"-9372 after
5:30PM .
Fish Tonk and Pet Shop
2413 Jackson Ave.. Pt.
Pleas~nt. 675·2063. Mon.,
Thurs., I Fri. 11 to 6. Tues .•
Wed., I Sat. '1 to 4. Check
our Fish Spr ::tl.
AKC
! Chshund,
Pomeranian and POOdle
pups, 30-4-895-3958.

6 piece Ludwig drum set, 5 AKC registered, 5'12 mon·
symbols, all stand, har· ths old, .male Boxer, real
dware. Phone 675·5295 after nice, healthy, S200. 304·576·
5pm.

_

_........
--··__............
.. .
... .........

Apartmemt
for Rent

TWO bedroom apartment,
5175. plu$ utilities, on 21st.
Street, 30-4-675-1174.

Twin single, large rooms
artd yard. Pt. Pleasant.
Deposit and references. 1·
6U-263·8322 or 1-614-263·
2669.

•1

..,.,

Auto for Slit
19n Camero. 675·2119 ..

1969 Mercury Montego,
•2.000 original miles, 302
ve, good tires, battery'
body damaged. Best offer.
675-3s.IO.
'
CAR lift $400. 39 ChevY
sedan $1500.311-1-576-2602.
SUR ·
AND
· NOW
AVAILABLE through
government sales, under
$300. Call l-1U·569·0W lor
your dl rectory on ·how to
purchase . Open 2A hours.

'

~ ICCliiFoUIY

E=OIII-•rn LIT11.A• •

BORN LOSJ!:R

7:11
7:11
1:00

French· City Painting
Residential, commercial,
Interior, exterior. paper
hanging, and texured
ceilings. Ph. 367·7784or 3677160.

:1977 Cull as Supreme Salon,
Hop, power WindoWs, p.s..
p.b., recllnltll buckets,
volour Interior. Like new.
$.1,500. 992·6362.
11975 Codlttoc Coupe
DeVIlle. Coll614-992·3911. ·
I
11961 Mustang, automatic,
~- Call 61H'I2·2797 or

SPECIAL Hove a
mothiO. POiilhed &amp; wax
lob, sso. WOK only 120. Auto SEWING ~achlne repairs,
service. AuthOrized Singer
Trim Center, 446·1968.
sates &amp; Service. Sharpen
Scissors. Fabric Shop,
Duality AUIObody &amp; Paint Pomeroy. 992·2284.
work. Insurance work
welcome. Sunroofs In·
stolllld from 1200-1230. Auto JACKS REFRIGERATID·
N. air condition ..-vice,
Trim Cantor, .u6·1968.
commercial, Industrial .
Pbona 882·2079.
71
Complfll
_ _...!E='q~U!!jlpmM!!!!!!!!!.t____
Q
Oonerot Houllng
Shasta travel trallor; S1110.
Stove, ref, &amp; alnk lnctuHd. JONES BOYS WATER
SERIIICE. Coli 367-7~71 or
Coii388-902S.
367-0591.

-

'MORRISON'S Auto Hifl,
Henderson, WV. Phone 675·
157~or675-211t.

.

()) RIIIIIIIRII WHIM: THI
ltiiDI AND THI! 11!1!8 Thlo
t»ecluetva teO Hrtea oontln-

·By Oawald Jacoby

uea wtth an e..mlnaUon of the

Oawalt "Cornet play at
match polnll abould be
baaed on wltat Ia going to be
beat lor · you at your
contract. Take th1a band as
an esample. We ltlve lbown
a final contract of oeven
. hearts u:rlved at alter an .
artificial two club opening, a
catch-all two diamond
respanae and Blackwood."
Alan: "South noteo , that
the final contract at other
tablea wiD be lis or oeven
hearts or lix or oevea no
trump. He doubta ll anyone
will stop abort of a slam. He
also noteo that there are 12
easy tricks and at a no
trump contract the play for
13 will be to like a spade
finesse against West."
Oawald: "In a heart contract declarer can take that
same fillesse acalnat West,
but be allo can like a ruffing fineue aplnat East ll be
so deslrea. We allo can oee
that East bas that opade
king so the ruffin&amp; lltiesse
will be the winner. At rubber
bridge It Is an euct eV@n
money chance wblclt
to
.flneue. In duplicate 1 Is
automatically correct to
take the rulllng llneue."
Alan: "The re&amp;SQn Is that
If West boldl that__king all

ANNIE

Ganoldlna Choplin otero u lha
celebrated flcllonel heroine.

Lily lort,ln thlollrot ota
three-pert etrltl on Edith
Wharton. fll'lt ArMrtoan woman
-llttto win a PutMnr Prize.
'HOUII. of Mirth' WII tht fir at
utireonNawYort&lt;ooolatytoba
written by OM of Ita .ldUIItll.

(80mlna.)
8:011 (I)
II 0 Vt I
-(IIUIICAL..IOOIIAPHtCAL/
••• ",......adJ Ill llul'
1:10 • • TIII!TWOOI'UINan

can hardly walt when

Brantwood oomea up with a
!Hied Engtlthman •• hoi._..
guatt but royalty-.outlo be
at hor

---.bly-

8:00

&amp; ·-·
l

~UPDATI!NI!WI

·Cll-AY_,-AT
n.-I'BomTollaSOid'
tll8t &amp;taro: Lynda Cartor,
rold Gould, Ed Nal1011.

war

711DCLUI

IIOYII-(THIIILLIJ!) ""
'-"'• tJ _
.. 11111
(1)111). MONDAY NIGHT
FOOTULL MIMatola Ylktngo
•• oan- ar- CCioalld·

•w•

-.

.... AWt Soalal

I"Ml"
GIII!AT PIIII'OIIIIANC. . 'The Houoo of Mll1h'

1:11

···,

Take the rutting finesse

lr"11""r or'"WArs
lf'YiD PRIVATI!

C.~U.B.A.)

NORTH

.AQJ

•Jus
+nz

WI!ST

••u

..

EAST
.KIOIU

•vas

•:

tJIOU
.KJn

till
.QI087

SOUTH

••

.AKQIOIII

tAKQ

•.~oz

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
S..d '
Wnt Narda Eut

Pau.
P101

24&lt; :
~ ­

Pus
Paso
Pus
Pus

Pass
Pus

Opening lead:

INT '
~

•J

oeven no trump bidden will'.
make their contract and

even if you mate seven

hearll you will only tle fo~
next to top with other tteVen ·
heart bidden. Take the ruff.
In&amp; fltlesse an~ If you are '
rilht you will be \)'lng for "
top, not next to top.'

M.A.I.H. 111o.somh

wounded aoldlere who arrive
from the front wllh unueual

e:ao

She ~ives an address
in Pinville!

--=CAwAffor
a I'OIIIIIIItla enning aftd qultt a
bit of wine Charley propoata
marriage to Ann 1nd ahl
~·-C-Promtara)

(IJJ!III!NITAI!DT:O!IIIIANY
Frequently deaorlbtld •• ,l he
tether of photojourullam,
Atfr~ EIMnataeclt ••• ona or
the Of1glntl photogrophari tor
'Lilt' magnlnt. Tble prOQrom
docu•enta hla rat urn to hla
ive Qarmany In tHO.
taUDAIIITY DAY
.
10:00
CIJLOU-BIItogttn
marriage propoaal from
baaeballaoout Ted McCovey
but Ia to buoy on • tiCNYthara'o
obig-liooaoto-ah•
can take tiMI to acoapt.

l

That G)al's

tooorn'ry
t' die!

!JUT SOMEHOW
THIS

110CSH'T

SEEM Lii&lt;E THE

AI MtinWAn!'

.l''IE 6/JT TO

riME TOI?O

TElL WINNIE

IT ... F'O~

ABOUT THE
NeW~L.
WE HIREP AT

lHE

As WINNie

SOME REASON.

~s.atoo

,.,..,...., eo ll)lna.l

(J) HOI OC•~'IT·TIII!

.,11-

VtiiORI QATHIII: A LOOK
a document

1

diNAt.trf
It,. fHOMAS JOSIPH

4% Inhabit
430ld dance
DOWN
I Conductor

ACROSS
1 Store event

5 Mllady's
beverage
dispenser
n Landed

l

•,

.,

r
D

s

Caldwell
2 Teus shrine

12 LGfty
13 Suffix for

3 RaUon
4 Greek
cyclo or
· letter
pano
5 One kind
14 Like
of scout
Mary's lamb I Choice
15 French
7 Likely
friend
&amp;One kind
11 Convened
of strike

12
SaiUrday's Auwer 1 •

'

'

22 Dude
38 With
territory
29 Acrou,
23 Certain
noted
missionary actms
%4 Covenant S1 Gennan City
17 Surnamed
9 Invigorate 25 Actor's sub' 3% Eapunge
(Fr.)
10 Unstable 21 One kind
33 A.aaeosment·
18 White House· II Muddy
of tide
38 Marith elder , ..
Kremlin
19 Ladd's
Z8 Atlantic
31 Chemin de •
hook-up
.....tar
Clty..ts_o..
ne,...,.,...;;;r.._..,....,
30 Where (It.)
%1 CUnning
b-.+---1--1-u Pitcher
Z3 Veutious

Z8 Goat
Z7 Stake
Z8 In medias

57'0~...

NlRSES ·

CONNIE B4CK
7V HI!A/. TK. ..

29 See·:tO Down
30 Plant
34 Auth&gt;r

•'

Deighton
35 VIper

38 Macaw

I GOTSOME
SCANDALOUS
GOSSIP fOR VE,
ELVINEY!!

LET ME
TELL

MINE

FUST!!

LOBELIA

POTTS ELOP'ED

OFF LAST NIGHT WITH
THAT FLATLAND SHOE

PEDDLER

NOW,

SHOOT!! ·

I GOT

A GOOD

NOTION
TO

S7Bipe dye
39 "Tortilla

_.

(stelnbeck)

40 Dutch coin

n

lr.r-1--1--+--l---t-

Martinelli

· DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

how
AXYDLBAAXa

to work

ll:
.,

- ·•'
.-

Ia L 0 )\1 G F B L L 0 W

Oite letter almpiJ 1tanda for onotber. In tbia wnple A to' ''
uaed for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Slqle !etten,
apootrophe1, the lenath an_d formation of the words are all
hlnta. 'ach doy the code letters are dllferent.

CUPTOQUOTB8

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1161 Sec:. Avo., OllliPOIII.
406-7133 or 406-1133.

.

.,

beoomt~lnvolvtd with three

1979 Mell•rd compor, 21 11.
self contllned, ~~- 6, ell
In tKC. cond. With lhoWer.
Cell:z&amp;5231.

~14-949·2717.

_,

BRIDGE

hlttory of martltly, froM tht
rleora of Puritan tthlca to the

Auto Rtpolr

FA~L

gaoled , tho abOve cartDOn.

,,.

IIATKIIIAL OIDCIIW'HIC

VIICIAL

!

77

-

011

-•-•tt

o41"t

1976 Grande Prix, air con·
dlllonlng, good cond., good
tires, AM·FM 1-trock. Call
44&lt;1·8203 or .u6·4135.

-

Jumble Book No. 17; t::ont•lnlng 110 puDIH, .. •v•ll.a.ti farS1.H poa~kl
fromJurnblt, c/o lhlt ~.-. loll34, Norwood, N.J. 07841.1nducMyour
u...., addNet, z:l cOIIM 1ncl m•k• checks
...,. to New•
a.

•.......,..,.." on

THI PIIAtlltl Looro into lit
Wilder Ia turloue wh•• the
'ttechtr of a apeclel college
11ar grodawtn
depend on her rttotlon to hla
rom••tla ov.-turu. (80ntlne.)
(C_Ioolld-Captlonad; U.S.A,)

Call 4.ot6·2801 for termite, .
roach, bird, rodent, spider,
and fleas control. Free
estimates, Bill Thomas.

BACKHOE and Septic tonk
Service. L.arry Siden·
strlcker. 675-5580.
·

-

CIIIUIPDAft-

(I)

~~::~~~~::

-

Saturday's! Jumbloo: BILGE MOTIF LOTION FINISH
·
Answer; How people who Jive "loose'' lives sometimes end up-'.'TIGHT"

ftatlltlfQ OOQI THI
WOQgiiOUII WAY.• ,.IINT

FER·RELL's WINDON
GLASS SERVICE Home
mainta·inance
and
remodeling; Phone 388·
9326.

IN Hl6 C.ELL MUST
HAVE MeN • .

~~-)

IPOIIT- •••;...

..

Sele
or. Tr.ode.
2 Sonsul
SP
7500 Stereo
speakers
trade
1974 Thunderbird loaded for~ wheels &amp; tires to fit 4with extras. AAsklng .wheel drive pickup. 5 tug
$1,700. Phont-146·7393.
pattern. 7~2-20116.

IICIKI1.Y . ,. . . . ,

(J)

b

l

'

I .K) (X) =~-:r~=~::.
Print answer here: A" (I I l )-[ I I )" .:

LA- AND IIIIILIY

·.~~~~~:::

1979 DODGE Aspen, call
before 2 or after S, 304·675·
1969.

11~ .

I

7:111 n'fOU-FOIIIT

••

.LitOO&gt;

t

I I I ) :I wHA'iiHern60NER
WHO MADE MU61G

SPEGOL

.,..~,..,.,

......... ·-· ......

BOEDUL

I

~~-=~·=·=~-a..__J_
IUIINITT AND
'G.ieiilii: and

Ashworth lnstallement
Service. This week special
Armstrong acertone vinyl
$7.86 Installed. Phone .1466o~1c__Fo:a..,r'!m!!..!'E~ql!u!IIP~m!'.e!;!n!'.t_
1978 Ford Fairmont. good 18019. All work.guaranteed.
1700 Ford 4 wheel drive condition, good gas
tractor . Excellent con· mileaoe. .c cylinder, .t A &amp; c Home Insulation,
dillon. Call 614-247-3752 al- speed, cute. 882·31,j5.
1nc. No Job to small or
ters p.m .
large. 2 vrs. experience &amp;
1965 Corvalr Monza, new training. Work guaran71 MASSEY Ferguson trac- tires, hew ball lolnt on the teed! Seve up to 30 to 50 per
tor. 135 gas. Bill Baird, Lit· steering, fair condition. cent on heating bills. Free
estimates. Call 286·7171 or
tie Sjxteen, Southside, 304· 675·141 1&gt;
•'\'
286&gt;57-40.
675-1100. Call or see before
9 a.m . or after 2 p.m.
1973 Dodge Sw!noer, slant
6, automatic, with air, $300. Bill Hawks. Chimney
675·4823.
Sweep. Free est. Cilll -U&lt;I63
Livestock
9531 or 388-8571.
30 Holstein 'heifers, calf 1974 Volkswagen, good con ·
hood vaccinated, A.l. dillon. 675-6153.
GENES
CARPET • '
breed, 3 freshen In Jan.,
Cleaning. Special rates for •
balance March 1. Call 30--CNov. and Dec. only. Call , 72
Trucks for Sate
273·2848.
now and save. 614·992·6309. ·;::
.~
1976 Chevy 2 112 ton dump
6 wks. old pigs for sate. Coli truck, heavy duty 16 ft . LOCKSMITH
Service.
256-6505 .
bed, twin holst, well equip· Residential, automotive.
ped, low mileage, ex. cond . Emergency service. Cawl
•
5, 3001b. Holstein heifers. 8, Call ,304-372-6390, Ripley, 882·2079.
2001b. Holstein • hellers, WVA .
Phone 388-8523.
RON'S Television Service.
75 Chevrolet 1/2 T PU, 6 Speclollting In Zenith and
14 head Holstein Springer cyl .. $700 or best offer. Call Motorola, Quazar, and
1house calls. Phone 576·2398
I
Tom Hamni 388·9783.
or .u6·2454.
·
1976 Ford Explorer 250,
1 grain fed steer. 850 to 900 auto., 4-wheel drive, new F &amp; K Tree Trimming,
lb. 2 white face cows with tires, fiberglass topper, stump removal. 675·1331.
52,650. Call446·9285.
bull calves. 614·247-2841.
RINGLES'S SERIIICE exPigs. $20 each. Lawrence 1979 Oodge PU, 6 cyl., stan· perienced mason, roofer,
electrician,
and Ellen Rice, 10 Mile dard, camper ' top, exc. carpenter,
Creek Road, Rt. 2, L~on, cond., S3,500. Eurell Auto general repairs and
Sales, Rt. 160 &amp; 554. 388· remodeling. Phone 304·675·
wv.
9754.
2018 or 675-&lt;1560.
Western saddle, 15 inches,
good condition, $75 . 576- For sale or trade. 1973 water w~Js. Commercial
Suburban. Call 614-992- and Domestic. Test holes.
2728.
5971.
Pumps Sales and Service.
30H95-3802.
6~4----~H~ILY~&amp;~G~r~a~ln~ ~--1971 pickup truck. First
1000 bushel dry ear corn . $500 gets II. 675·1302.
Are high Interest rates · ,
12+38, 13-6·38. Rear tracKeeping you from a new '
tor tires. 1 tube. Call 614·
1977 Chevrolet pickup home?. Then put a new look
949·2631.
truck, automatic, VB, good on your present one. We do ,
tires, new brakes, $1875. otttypesotcustombullding
For ·
905 Mossman Circle, Pt. and remodeling.
quality, professional ser·
Pleasant.
vices call: Terry Gray 895·
3386 or John Wamsley 773·
71
Auto tor S•le
73
\Ions &amp; 4 W. O.
5527.
1978 Plymouth Volare, 1979 Jeep CJ7, 6 cyl., auto,
good cond. Call379-2726.
quadr~ trac, 28,000 miles,
Carpentry, building an~
$4,500. Call Jell 388·9634 remodeling. 675·2-140.
1978 Dodge Omni 4 dr ., bat· evenings, work -4-46-«H2
chback, automatic, power ext. 159.
Stark's tree trimming and
steering, excellent cond .
removal. Insured. Phone
Phone 245·5617.
1951 Wlllys Jeep. SBOO. 576- 576-2010.
2«13.
.
'72 PONTIAC, Exc. cond.
Experienced carpenter •'
See on Chillicothe Rd ., 74
Motorcycles
available for home or 1
Alfred Holley's Trallor
business remodeling or
1973 350 Honda Scrambler, new . structures. Free
Park.
clean. 675-1780 alter 5:30.
estimates. References.
675·2440.
1976 Mustang II, V-8, auto
transmission, PS, PB, 76
Auto Parts
rlldlal tires, 42,800 miles,
&amp; Acctuorltl
S2,600. Call after 5PM, 446Plumbing
SHARLIE'S SALVAGE ·
4724.
&amp; Hntlnv
Auto parts, auto repair,
wrecker service, buy
CARTER'S PLUMBING
1978 Mecury
Zypher, automobiles, radiators and
AND HEATING
Power brakes
steering, batteries. 406-7717.
Cor. Fourth and Pine
air, low miles. Call 406Phone 406-3118 or 446·4477

,, , ,
--.

-;::==:;:::=====

44

I tJ

&amp;IMIAI-MT

PAINTING · Interior and
exterior, plumbing.
roofing, some remodeling,
20 yrs. exp. Coll318-9652 .

~-J72·6390,l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~§~

For sale 73 and up
Chevrolet truck parts.
Power steering change
over, power brakes. etc.
' Oliver 88 tractor, make
good pulling tractor. Call
388-9684 .

•.

WEATHERALL CON·
CRETE · quality and ser·
·vice, coll675-1582.

Flat Allis model 6E dozer
with cargo wench, Flat
Allis model SIS Nbber tire
endlooder 2114 yd. bucket,
completely overhauled
with new engine, both
Items in exc. condition.

4:30 PM.

-'f .

110¥.1, ,..,

CAPTAIN STEEMER Corpel Cleaning featured bY
Hllffott Brothers Custom
Carpets. Free Hlimotes.
Coll4-16·2107 .

New

Ripley, WVA.
Blaine than
King100 pieces of
More
brown underpinning tor a
mobile home, used just one
year , A seven and one half
feet by 58 Inch wide oval
rug, and white uniforms
size 9·10. Call-446·3065 after

•
•
VIewmg

C•ll

Two mobile homes. 2
bedrooms, ·'2 miles out of
town on Rl. 2. S100 deposit.
S175 per month plus
utilities. 675·3000 or 675·
6277.

Nice furnished 3 room
apartment. 7th Street.
Adults. 675-3811.

Houses for Rftftt

GOOD
USED
AP. ·
PLIANCES - washers,
dryers,
refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Ap ·
pliances, 1918 Eastern
Ave .. -U&lt;\·7398.

-.

Television

WVA.

2 BEDROOM apaftment,
kitc-flen furnished, HUD
program, utilities paid, If
qualified. 30H75·510-4 or
30H75·5386 .

~=-----------------~~----------------!T~he~D~a~ii~V~~~~~~~··

1981

pool coven, and win·
terlzotlon kits. Coll406-1324

bdr. apartment unfurn.,
Crown City, Ohio. Call

· 32

.•

1911

HER'E WE 60 FOR 1liE
All5T I-lOCKEY &amp;t\.\1E
OF 1liE 5EASOH ...

I CAH SEE M'(SQ.F
NOW 01/T OH TilE OL.'

FONP OON6 OOWN TilE

ICE lllmi'JME PUCK !

ARQRTJHV

JB

DYHAJDL

' &gt;

s X •L ;
•'

BHYQRT

CXHARQ

R D U J Q Y 0 E R 0 'H

I

' .

SXQSWOF

N

I
I

),

I'

--

THE HAPPIEST I.JFE, SEEN IN
PERSPECTIVE, CAN HARDLY BE BE'ITER 11IAN A STRINGING
TOGETHER
OF
ODD
LITTLE
MOMENTS.-~ORMAN DOUGLAS

S.Junlay's CrypJGqtta&amp;e:'

'

·:

�------ -

~

--r- - -

.'
Sentinel

2, 1911

Council aPproves pltase two for pi-oject
ByDTIECROW
Sealblel Staff Writer
Phase one of the senior high school

·ELBERfELD$
....

is nearing completion and phase two

wu approved at Monday night's
meeting of Pomeroy CouncU.
Meeting with cOuncU in regard to

the work being done oo the lonner
Pomeroy Senior High School
building was David Bassett, architect, of Reiser Architect, Athens.

Value!-

Basaett explained the winterization project (phase one) is
nearing completioo.
Basaett ulted CGWICil to pass a
resoultion approving the plans and
speclficatiOIII for phase two in order
that councll may oj)laln ill fiOO,OOO
loanlhroughFmHA. -· - CouncU gave Mayor Clarence Andrews authority to sign the
1resoiution as soon as it ill drawn up.

"Memories"
' ,.

room by·famou,, ·

-'

/RIJ.IJDtf

Edith Curtis Jones, 79, of 671
Polomar Drive, Hemet, Calif., died
Friday in a hospital in Lorna Linda,
Calif., after a long illness.
She was born ·in Racine in Meigs
County May 14,1902, daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. Donald Curtis. .
She attended the Racine schools
and m Rio Grande College and
Ohio University in preparation for a
teaching profession.
In June, 1925, she married W. H.
(Bill) Jones of Rio Grande. Most of
their married life was spent in northem Ohio where both were teachers
for many years. After retirement,
they moved to California.
Mrs. Jones was a member of the
Methodist Church and active in all
church work.
Survivors include her husband, a
daughter and son-ip-law, Marianna
and Richard Trigg, Santa Ana,
Calif.; two grandsons and a granddaughter; two sisters-in-iaw. Mrs.
B. Lewis Jones and Mrs. J. Maurice
Jones of Thurman; several nieces in
Gallla and Jackson counties, and
two cousins, Mrs. Audrey Patterson
and Harry cUrtis of Meigs County.
She was preceded in death by her
parents, three small daughters and
a grandson, David Trigg, who was
killed in a motorcycle accident just
two weeks ago.
Funeral services will be Tuesday
afternoon in Hemet, Calif.

Harry Chesher
Harry L. Chesher, 75, died at his
Cos! St. residence in 1\fiddleport
Sunday morning.
Mr. Chesher was horn Nov. · 21,
1905 at Haydenville, a son of the late
Marion and Elizabeth Rucoe
Chesher. He was also preceded in
dealh by five brothers and two
sisters.
A retired maintenance foreman
for the r&amp;ilroad with 42 years ser·
vice, Mr. Chesher was a member of
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport. He was. a member and
past master of Middleport Masonic
LOdge :183, Free and Accepted
Masons; amemherandpastpatron
of Evangeline Chapter 172, Order of
Eastern Stor; a member of the Advlsory Council of the Order of
DeMolay, and a member of the AnI t Accepted Sc--•
cen
u"""'RiteofFree
Masonry, ValleyofColwnbus.
Surviving are his wife, Jenevee

Man hurt in first
wreck on new bridge

daughter-in-law,
David
L. and
Blackford Chesher;
a son
and
Janice Chesher, SL Charles, Mo.; a

~~~~~~~~~::

granddaughter, Nicole Chesher,

=~~~~:;.~~:~of:n;

cousinsalsosurvive.
Services will he held at I p.m.
Wednesday . at
the
Rawlings-Costs-Blower Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert Robinson officiating. Burial will he in the
: Greenlawn Cemetery at Nelsonville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday. Masonic rites will be con.ducted by the Middleport Masonic
Lodge at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the
funeral home. Pallbearera will he
Leland Brown, Everett Bachner,
Jack Bechtel, Lee McComas, James
Eulger and Roherl King.

~

roperty transiers

Nancy Adams to Lillian Proffitt,
18 acres, Lebanon.
Roy Proffitt, Lillian Proffitt to
William Wayne Russell, Sharon c.
Russell, 4.441 acres, Lebanon.
Nancy Adams to Lillian Proffitt,
15 acres, Sutton.
Larry M. SMith to Janet A. SMith,
PI.LotsZ07,20B,Pomeroy.
Charles Leo Eskew, Frances
Jeanne Eskew to Charles . Leo·
Eskew, Frances Jeanne Eskew, Ft.
Lo E p
I • omeroy.
JamesJ.Proffitt,SheriffforMark
Still, et al, to Secretary of Housing
and Urban Development, .83 acre,

'

'

Bennett, 78, 2m
llock St., Pomeroy, died Saturday

~atthePomeroyHealthCare

Cenler.
' She II survived by two sons,

Cllarlel w. and wWtam w; Bemett.
boCb fl Memph!1, Tenn., and a .
........... Mn. Oliver (lbrlon)
MJrbee! in Pcln.,.oy, . , . . whom

""

'

Nostalgic dining furniture thafs scaled
to fit your modem townhouse/
apartment Ufestyle. Each piece in solid
oak and selected oak veneers with a
rich, lively, golden oak finish. The
warmth of yesterday, today. At prices
that seem more like yesterday.
• 5-pc. set includes 42" .diameter '
round, claw-foot pedestal table. Four
~pool-back, saddle-seat chairs.
• Matching curio/china, 41" x 16" ·X
74" high, has interior Ughting, gla~
shelves, brass and porcelahi hardware.

r

•

Soviet sub

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
·

COLUMBIA THE BEAUTIFUL - Wltb liB servlee gantry roUed
back, Colombia's stark wblte beauty Is rev!"''ed u It Is coatrasted agaip, st lln"\l!~&lt;.!!!!!&amp;!!t !ilk lbr ~ounldown of liB W&lt;'tlllelclay moralng launch_
procioeclliil'iiillily. (AP Laaerphoto).
·. ·
·

Wage

workers ou!Jltripped the rate of inDation in the first nine months of this
year.
The Labor Depsrtment's Bureau
of Labor Statistics said Friday wage
increases averaging 11.5 percent
were achieved for union members in
418 collective bargaining settlements.
Inflation was at an annual rate of
10.1 percent in the first three quarlerll, despite a 14.8 percent annual
rate of inflation in September.

Mental patient ruled incompetent
DAYTON- Mental patient Charles Lee Johnson, '1:7, was ruled incompetent to stand trial for murder in connection with the August
beating death of Nancy Weidenborner, 32, a psyciatric attendant lit the
Dayton Forensic Hospital.
Judge Robert Brown, Montgomery County Corrunon Pleas Court,
dlsmlased the murder indictment Monday against Johnson. He said
Johnson, who ill m retarded, was incompetent to stand triaL
Mrs. Weidenborner wu attacked when she asked Johnson to move
out of her way in a hallway at the hospital, police said.

r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~

REVIVAL
ROCK SPRINGS
UNITED MElHODISJ
. CHURCH
Nov• I.' 7 7•30
p, M,
,

Mourners jam church for last rites

Speaker:
Jerry Skaggs,W.M.P.O.
Special Singing Nightly
Everyone Welcome

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

Every Tuesday Night At Crow's

I

CIBVELAND - More than 900 people, Including Gov. James A.
Rhodes, Mayor George V. Volnovich and a representative of President
Reagan, jammed St. James A.M. E. Church to mourn the passillg of
publlaher WUllam 0. Walker.
There were 62 honorary pellbearers at the Monday funeraL
Walker, 85, died lui Thursday after suffering cardiac arrest in the
offices of his black-oriented newspaper, the Cali and Post.
Rhodes, Voinovich, City Council President George L. Forbes and
Thaddeus Garrett Jr., the chief domestic policy adviser to Vice
President George Bush, each delivered tributes to Walker, who took
over the Call and Poot in the 1930s and built It to a statewide circulation
of nearly 441,000 copies a week.
"He wu a pillar for thoee who were weak to lean on," ·Garrett said.
"He was the penon who answered the call at midnight. he was the
keeper of the doOrs of hope."
Oleveland Roman Cathollc Biahop Anthony M. Pilla deUvered the invocat!Gn at the funeral and futher tributes were given by National
Newspaper Publlahers Association President John L. Procope and
editors of the Call and Pool,
· Five city blocks were closed to traffic around the East Side church.

•

'

ALL THE KE~TUCKY FRIED
CH ICKEN· YOU CAN 'EAT.
·

Farmers Bank's Dress-A-Doll, Design·A:Toy
Contest is now open. If you'd like to enter, stop by
the Farmen Bank and pick up yQur materials and
information.

·

'

.Winning lottery numbers

The winners will be on display in the Farme~
Bank lobby before Chrlstma!L All dolls and toys
will g«;J to de~erving area children at Christmas.

221 w. Metn

In Pomeroy
Every Seturdly
Thru Chrtitmes

Served with Whipped
Potetoes, ~hlcken Grevy,
Cole Stew, Hot Roll, Butter
enCICOHM.

..

.,

_.,·-~~--·

.

Generally clear tonl&amp;hl '-a 40-111. Plrt1y cloudy W~y.
Highs in mid to upper. . a-ce of rain 11 percent tonight and I) per-'
cent Wednesday. Wlndn~rt.llleaboull mph tonight.

Bank

Ellleadtd Ollio rou HI- 11lllrlda)' tbrllugh Saturday: Cooler
through the period wltl1a ~of showers 'l1nanday and fair Friday
and Saturday. LoWII 'l'hunday and Friday In .the mid-till and IID-40
s.&amp;unlay.lllgha in the mid to qpper 101 Tllunday, coo1lnc to the low to
mldal Slturday.

'

Y()ur Communih• Owned Bank

Pomeroy, OH.

_______

Wea_ther forecast

Farn1ers
'

Ph.t92·f432

Ohio Luttery'a deily gama "The Nwnher" wu 565.
The lottery reported earninga of $794,738.50 on the drawing. The earninp came 011 sales of fll70.-.50, while bolder&amp; of winning tick~ are
entitled to lhlre •171,233,lottery officiab said.

Free Perking

l·o-----------------trow's Family Restaurant
Bevtrlttl which hll¥1 1n lddiHonal price.

'

, CLBVELa\ND - The 'flnning number drawn Monday night in the

DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY
Sor,Y, f'IO Subslllules except

aflo~t;

day conditions would he acceptable,
with scattered clouds, winds of 12
mph, visibility at 7 miles and ternperature of 74 degrees.
"Since we got into the coqnl,
everything has gone bang, bang.
bang." said shuttle test manager
Donald K. "Deke" Slayton. He said
it was smoother thsn preparations
for Columbia's maiden flighl in
ApriL
The launch pad was busy early
today as work crews checked power,
environmental. navigation and OOJTImunications systems, removed unnecessary equipment and made the
cockpit ready for the crew. The
schedule called for a 12-hour, 1().
minute "hold" beginning in the morning, with the countdown reswning

STOCKHOLM, Sweden (AP) the Soviet government also agreed
The week-lung crisis over the groun- to an inspection of the sub's
ding of a Soviet submarine in \ navigational equipment, charts and
Swedish waters appeared today to duty list.!. Swedish officials claimed
he ending after the Soviet Union met that the aged, Whiskey-class sub hsd
Sweden's demands and Swedish tugs been fitted with special intelligencetowed the sub to safety.
gathering gear.
After a g&lt;H~head from Moscow,
the sub's captain, Lf. Cmdr. Pyotr
The Swedish government, after
Gushin, and his navigation officer · barring Soviet salvage ships from
were questioned for six hours !l'lon- rescuing the sub, had said Swedish
day aboard a Swedish navy ship tugs would not refloat it until the
about t11e grounding of the sub last government received a satisfactory
Tuesday night in a restricted • ~qn of the grounding. But a
military ares off the southeast coast stonn blew up while Gushin was
near the Karlslcrona naval base.
being interrogated.
Tlie commander-in-chief ·of
"The submarine sent Mayday
Sweden's anned forces, Gen. Len- signals over the radio and fired
nart Ljung, told a news conference emei'Jlency red flares and asked for
.
'

'
-~--~------ ~-----__;;_-

1
.,,

- - --''-""

Philip Rausmussen, Middleport.
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 2:17a.m. Tuesday morning by the Middleport Emergency
Squad with a gunshot wound in the
leg.

in the evening.
Early Wednesday, the crews will
load the ship's huge external tank
with 526,000 gallons of volatile fuels
to drive the three main engines.
Engle and Truly are to pilot the
spacecraft for 5 days, 4 hours, 10
minutes -· more than twice the
duration of the firnt mission. They
have a flight pian that is suitably
more ambitious than the first, as

they conduct tests carefully
designed to further stretch the limits
of the ship's capabilities.
After 83 circuits of the globe, they
are scheduled to return to Earth
Monday. landing at Roger• Dry
La,ke at Edwards Air Fon·e Base.
Calif., alll:40a.m. EST.

Swedish crisis ends
· assistance," said Cmdr. Gunnar
Rasmusson. "The rough weather
threatened to break up the submarine.''
Despite !l().mile winds. two tugs
completed the salvage operation in ·
Jess than an hour, and the sub was
anchored about 10 miles from tbe
Kariskrona base.
"The submarine ill safely secured
and blocked, with no possibility to
break loose and escape," said Cmdr.
Lennart Forsman, the commander
ofthe naval base.
A navY spokesman said Swedish
· engineers would go over the ship to
detennlne if it was stili seaworthy.
Gushin and his navigation officer
were returned to the sub. ac·

Middleport .man shot in

· gains for some 1.5 million American

.-

November 3~ 1981

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (AP)- bird poised lor a second triumphant
Joe Engle and Richard Truly paid a tour of spsce.
pre-dawn visit to shuttle Columbia
Engle and Truly drove to the iauntoday, thanked launcb crews for the ch pad from their crew quarters
so-far perfect countdown and said about 6 a.m. and spent an hour
they are eager for Wednesday's th~re, inspecting the IZZ-foot-tall
flight in the first spaceship ever to , vehicle and chatting with many of
make a retnrn trip to orbit.
the workers.
"Everything is going beautifully
and smoothly with the count," said
The astronauts then took to the air
NASA spokeswoman Mary Fitz- in an executive jet to practice
patrick. Columbia ill scheduled to lif· emergency landings on a 15,000-foot
loft al7:30 a.m. EST after overnight runway near the pad. They would
loading of the supercold fuels that use the strip Wednesday only if their
will power its drive into space.
shuttle engines quit early and they
The astronaut.! stopped at the could not get into orbit.
· Officials foresaw no problems but
launch pad just bours after a large
service structure bad been rolled fretted over the uncertainties of
• away, leaving Colwnbia bathed in weather. Air Force forecasters
flnodlight.l, a glistening American predicted this morning that launch

Gains better inflation
WASffiNGTON (AP) -

en tine

practi_c e abort 'landings

T-L=ynn-=-~O-hl~in=g=er~,=ZS~,=Mi='d=dl=e=po=rt=.--1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

rio;li:ve;.;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~==~~~===;;;~

Gladys Bennett
Gladys Johnson

Taylorofand
Sharon
Ward,infrom
the
scene
an auto
accident
Darwin
to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland
at1:32p.m. took Bill King from King
Ridge Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 6: II p.m. took Roger
Walia.;e from Meigll Mine 2 to Holzer
Medical Center. The Racine Unit at
10:07 p.m. took Shirley Ables from
Apple Grove to Veterans Memorial.

building and 1 am glad it ill being may submit them to the liquor consaved."
trol board.
The plana shown by Bassett MonGoett Is presently closed du~ to the
day night bad been approved eerlier .fact that a pel'!IOII ill not pemutted to.
by the Department of Industrial bave a [).2 and C.2 license m the
Relations and a building penni! was same location.
granted.
Goett indicated that he will place
Also meeting with council was - one of tile Ucenses in escrow. He did
Tom Goett of Tom's Carry Out. say thai he will add electronic
Goett asked for a copy of minutes of games in his operation.
the last meeting in order that he
(Continued on psge 12)

AstronaUts visit shuttle;

.I

Ravenswood ER S!luad.
Mark Hall, Middleport, .and Brian
Friend, RD, · Pomeroy, were
arrested Sunday on a petty theft
charge.
Larry Salser, Flatwoods Road,
reported that a tank of botUed gas
had fbeen taken from his camper
during the nisht. The tank was
located at the resideme of Friend.
Both men are lodged in county Jail
pending a hearing in county court.
David Barnes, Racine, reported
that the door glass and some parts
were taken from his Volkswagon
that was parked on his property. The
The Mjddleport Emergency Squad incident ill under investigation.
took Linda Hedrick, Oliver St.. to
Holzer Medical Center at 4:34p.m. Marriage licenses
Saturday.
Other calls by local unit.! on SunMarriage Ucenses have been
·
1
ded
p
••
issued
to Raymond Jeffrey Michael,
day me u : omeroy, l:w a.m.
took Anna Hart, Route 33, to 29, Middleport, and Debora Lynn
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Lawson, Zl, Middleport; Gary Joe
Pomeroy at 10:31 p.m. took Dan WoHe, 34; Middleport,' and Sonya

Hazel Hamon

p

Oh

.

The first accident . to occur
following the opening of the William
she had been making her home. S. Ritchie Jr. Bridge at R::vc;Uiwood
There are 13 grandchildren and was Sunday at 2:20p.m. on SR 338
several great-grandchildren sur- the Meigs County Sheriff's Departviving along with a sillier, Mrs. ment reported.
William E. Slllra, 53, Ravenswood
Alston (Alice) Foster, Texarkana,
Tex.; a sister-in-law, Mrs. Mildred was traveling east on 338 on a motorPinson, Memphis, Tenn., ahd cycle when he lost control on a curve
(near the Paul Sayre residenee) and
several nieces and nephews.
slid
off the highway.
Mrs. Bennett was a member of St.
Shira
was taken to Jackson
Mary's Episcopal Church in Mem·
General
Hospital, Ripley by the
phis. Funeral arrangements are incomplete. Services are planned for
. Memphis.
Taken to Holzer

Hazel Hamon, 66, Rt. 3, Albany,
died Sunday evening at O'Bieness
Hospital following an extended
illness.
.
Mrs. Hamon was born in Jackson
County, W.Va., the daughter of the
late Bilton and Lucretia Magnus
Covey. She was also preceded in
death by one brother, Wayne.
Mrs. Hamon was a housewife and
a member of Mt. Union Church.
She is survived by her husband,
Nobel R. Hamon; six daughters,
Mrs. Rex (Bonnie) Oheadle,
Albany; Mrs. Roger (Doris) Speigie,
Columbus; Mrn. Tom (Betty) .Kirby
and Mrs. Jerry (Mary) Wiseman
both of Hamden; Mrs. Paul (Mona)
Birchfieid,DadeCity,Fla.,andMrs.
Roger (Nonna) Bevins, Chattaroy,
W.Va.; four sons, Preston ofMcArthur; Gary of Rutland; Randy of
Albany and Robert of Woodville,
Ohio; Z9 grandchildren and two
great grandchildren; one brother,
Marvin Covey, South Charleston,
two sisters, ldras Petry, Diamond,
W. Va., and Reva Hartman, South
Charleston.
Funeral arrangements will be arr
nounced by Bigony Jordan Funeral
Home, Albany.

at, y

e

..

MAKING MUSIC - Tbe Melp RIP Scllool bud II plelwed pero
formiDC Saturday during die ~ ud dedlcaU.. cerem.U..
for the new $18.1 mlllloa bridle linkiDg Melp County '!rliiiiU.-wood,
W. Va. The Ravenswood High bud allo preaeoted aeledloaa darinl die
eetemony beld at tbe center of lbe span.
·

Area deaths
Edith Jones

·.

Bassett, the police department will
he located on the first floor, alona
with an office for the chief of police,
quarten for the water department,
bathrooms ana council chamber.
The second foor, which will have
several rooms available for office
space, will bouse the mayor's office,
and offices _flli the clerk and
secretary.
Bassett stated, "It is a fine

•

'

r

townhou~(linJng
•.
..Ji'
' ";·

TALIUNG IT OVER- WOllam S. Ritchie, Jr., former c0111Dll8sloner
of die West VIrginia Department of Highways, for whom tbe new $18.6
miWon bridge between Meigs County and IUvenswood, W. Va. was
named, is plcluni!J IDWug wltb Great Bend resident, Mrs. EvereU
(Helen) Hayes during tbe celebration at tbe Ravenswood Commuolty
Park, after tbe bridge dedication Saturday. Rilehie resides In Ravenswood.

Council wu given 1111 EDA grant
in the amount of f/5,000 lor the winteriution of the building. The
bulldlng willbo: ~ headquarters for
the new city building.
Phase one included windows, painling, interior work, insulation and
heating. Phase two will include eiectrical work, plwnblng, painting,
doors, bathrooms,~,
According to plaris ouUined by

According to Middleport Police
Chief J. J. Cremeans and Meigs
Sheriff . James J. Proffitt,
Rausmussen was shot with a .ZZ
caliber pistol at the Good Times

~eg,early

companied by Cmdr. Karl G. Andersson, head of the Swedish interrogation

team, anq two in-

terpreters.
A report on the interrogation, at
which two Soviet diplomats were
also present, was expected. later
today . .
Gushin claimed last week lhstthe
sub got into the restricted area by
mistake, because some of its
navigational equipment failed. But
Swedish o!licials ~~&amp;id skilled
maneuvering was necessary to
penetrate the area, in which there
are ntuneroi.LS' small islands, and it
was obvious the sub was there intentionally.

today

Lounge in Middleport.
whose names were not revealed
Chief Cremeans indicated that the have been· taken into custody for
shooting appears to he accidentaL . questioning. They are confined to
However, the sheriff's department the county jail. Rausmussen is
reported that a man and woman reporled in satisfactory condition.

Meigs ·fairboard elects new members
Five incumbents and one new.
member were elected to the Meigs
County Fair Board Monday night at
the Meigs Extension Service Office.
Elected to three year terms were
. incwnhents, Dan Zirkle, Wallace
Bradford, Fred Goeglein and C. W.

Proceeds
with mill
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Timken
Co. offlce11 can now proceed with
their plana lor a $500 mlllion plant in
Ohio.
'
· steelworkerS signed a major labor
pact with the Timken on Monday af·
ter agreeing to an 11-yeer no-strike
pact so the company could afford the
facility.
"It's great news," said Timken
spokesman Donald Eagon.
.
Tbe Steelworkers approved labor
contract concessions over the
weekend by a 3,446-334 vote.
Timken ill a $1.3 bllllon-a-year
manufacturer of bearings and alloy

steel.

Under the psct, which outlines
labor relations during a three-year
steel pJant construatlon phase and
other agreements through 1992, con·
atruction is to start next spring at a
date to be announced by Timken.
The project in the Canton area
would be the largest current
manufacturing Investment in Ohio,
say state development commission
ofticlals.
·~we are very pleased and elated
by that kind of vote," Canton Mayor
Stanley A. Cmlcb saiCl of the
steelworken' ratification meetinga
in Canton, WOOllier and Colwnbua
over the wtekend.
"The leaderahlp of the tmlon waa
very IIIII' ; I 11e In 1eWng the
agieement," the abl:-term mayor added.

Henderson, along "'ith a new member, Virgil Windon of Route 3,
Pomeroy. Elected to serve the
remainder of an unexpired tenn,

with two years remaining, was
Roger Spencer, who bad been serving in the position until the election.
There were only six candidates for

the six pos\8. Not running for reelection to the board was Hennan Carson, veteran board member.
Fifty-four residents voted.

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