<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12646" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12646?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T20:54:22+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43618">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/da378bc0d974870550d0d0c56cd9d0ac.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0921df7235b77cbe34113b1b96eb6deb</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39661">
                  <text>•

'

Tuesday, October 6, 1987 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio ·

Page. · 10-The Daily Sentinel

''

Racine .merchants have. meeting

-· ·--··-'-.

Racine Merchants' Associa·
will be giving away items every
. Debbie Rizer and Shel!a Long
tion finalized ~ans in their most
10·15 minutes. The ladies group of Portland PTO will be selling
recent meeting lor the Harvest
will also be seiling tee cream and crafts and baked goods. Racine ·
Moon Fall Festival to be held this
colton candy.
PTO will be selling chill and pop .•
Saturday in Racine.
The firemen will be selling hot · There
also be many street
The Racine American Legion sausages and barbequed gamesandcraftdlsplays,lnclud·
Post will lead the parade which
chicken. Assisted by the junior Jng basket weaving by Janet
will start at 12 noon. Southern firemen, the firemen will also Theiss and woodcarving by Del·
High Band and the festival's
demonstrate fire fighting tech· mar Hamrn ..
Harvest Moon queen wiiJ be nlques from the ·early day s of
Racine Methodist Church will
preseni.
•
fl&lt;efightlng to modern times.
be selling bean soup, cooked In an
Racine Volunteer Fire Depart·
A volleyball tournament , spon· open kettle, served with corn
men!' s Ladles Auxiliary Is span· so red by ttie village's Emer· bread.
Following the parade, Minerssoring public games. The group . gency Medical Service unit , will
will also have a money hat and
be helct starting at I p.m. .
yllle resident VIc Brown will
L
present a history on Sutton
Township.
·
·
Sue Hager is in charge of a pte
harvest to be shared with the eating contest.
Rock Springs, E.nterprlse and
Flatwoods United Methodist
needy. Canned goods, blankets,
·Those present at the meeting
Churches will be having a harv·
offerings, and· other items to be Included Joan McLain. assocla·
est festival celebration on Sun· distributed to the needy , may be tton pr~ldent, Gerald and Shir·
day, Oct.18. A potluck dinner will
brouj'ht to the celebration as ley Slfnp5on. Sheila Long, Alana
begin at 6 p.m. at the grange hall "first fruits" offerings . The Butler, Vlck Brown, Ann Layne,
on the Rock Springs fairgrounds.
public in Invited to attend and Janet Theiss, Debbie Rizer and
Beginning at 7 p.m., singing by encouraged to participate.
Sue Hag,er.
Dany Hayman and the Faith Trio
will be featured, in addition to a
musical program by the SUM
FIRESIDE INN
HELP WANTED
15roup. Rev. Jeff Adler of Clncin·
Certified
X
·ray
Presents CHARLIE LILLY
nati will have a special messag~
TechniEian
WEO.,
OCT. 7, 1987
for the evening. Purpose of the
For
Doctor's
Office
EVENING
harvest festival is to provide an
675-5789
Call 675-1637 or
opportunity for Individuals to
Sand Hill Rd ., Pt. Pleasant. WV
675·1638
bring together fir st fr uits of the

Ohio Lottery
Playoffs
underway

will

Roger Johnson, Matt Little· and Danny Perkins.
Standing are Free Langona, Shelly Ranegar, Tim
Little, Genia Anspach and Rctt McBride.

' Fall Festival ~lated by school
West Columbia Elementary
School, in West Columbia, W.Va.,
will be having Its annual fall
festival on Oct. 17. A soup sale
will be held from 12 noon to 7 p.m.
Games will be played from 1 to

Vot.37 . No.105
. Copyrighted 1987

.

•

at y

flowers serve bOth to honor the deceased and to reaffirm the value of life itself.

sentiment Which the flowers represent can ·travel
funher than the funeral. Floral arrangements mav be
taken to the gravesite or to the church. Many hospitals _....oloi.B
and rest homes ·will accept gifts of flowers for their re~

.

I

•

public records law."
She explained that the Ohio Supreme Court held
last month that a 1985 state law eliminated the
writ of mandamus- an emergency court order. as a remedy to those denied access to records.
Instead, she said, the news media and
Individuals seeking records must resort to a·civil
lawsuit which "could take years and the
information would no longer be relevant."
· The bill sent to Celeste would restore the writ of
mandamus as a remedy.
The Supreme Court case Involved a Fostorja
newspaper seeking records from a local hospital
association.
The Ohio Newspaper Association and the Ohio
Hospital Association worked out · the final
language of the bill. and both supported it.
The sports agent bill was kicked around
tho~oughly in Boster's committee, and all sorts of
recommendations were made.
Sen . Eugene J. Watts. R·Columbus, author of
the version passed by the Senate last week, urged

All-Day Music participants sought
from 9 a.m. ta 9 p.m .. at Adena
Music Park in Jackson. With
permission, the group attempts
to teach seli·protectlon mea· •
sures to students and school

raJJ/J ·~
fJ' hUe

f1r

~

5TH STREET
(614) 667 -3110
COOLVILLE. OHIO

. ..

•

~~oon~
T~~~k~i~ited
attend the
Oct. 17 event and j-~--~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

!0

refreshments will be served.

Strausbaugh Cooper, parc.els. to
William E. Cray and Dorothy A.
Cray: Salem.
Allee Chevalier and William
Chevalier, right of way, to
Monongahela Power Company:
Olive.
Roy W. Dowell and Beverly J .
Dowell, tracts , to Home National
Bank, Sutton.
Home National Bank, tracts, to
Charles W. Curfman lind Norma
Jane Curfman, Sutton.
Richard J. Jacks. dec'd, certif·
icate of transfer, to FrPda Jacks
and Penny Lynn Rey nolds,
Rutland.
Penny Lynn Jacks. aka. Penny
Lynn Reyn9lds and Raymond
William . Reynolds, trac ts. to
Freda Jacks. Rutland.
'·
Rodney Karr • a nd Barbara
Karr, parcels, to Diamond Sav·
ings an·d Loan Company, Pome·
roy VIllage.
Mary Lou Hoover, V., A, to
Herbert Olen Hoover, Salisbury .
Lowell D. Chevalier and Bon·
nle Sue Chevalier, parcels, to
Sally Klvloja , Olive.
Virgil Cozart and Lona Cozart,
parcels, to Tammy L. Boggs,
Olive.
Marion Wood aka·. dec'd, Mar·
ion Woods, dec'd Affld., to Letha
H. Wood, Margaret Christy,
Virgil M. Wood , Robert P . Wood,
Geraldine N. Hawk, Chester
..Village.
1 L~t ha H. ;:W.&lt;&gt;_&lt;?d. Margaret
Christy, Roy R. Christy, Virgil
M. Wood, Roberta Wood, Robert
P. Wood; Jeraldine N. Hawk.
Harold H. Hawk , Lot 9, to TJm
Smith and Karen Smith, Chester
Village.
·.
Robert D. Barber and Tammi
Barber, parcels, to Ronald W.
Vance and VIrginia L. Arthur,
Orange.
Randy Joe Lee, Lot 37·
Bosworth' s addition, to Crystal
Lynn Lee. Middleport Vi llage.
Gale Rol and Heiney, Pi'rcel, to
Board of Trustees, Olive Town·
ship , Olive.
Rodney W. J efferson , dec'd,
Certificate of Transfer, to Maud
J. aka, Maude Jelhorson Hill,
Middleport.
·
Maud J . aka, Maude Jefferson
Hlll . A!fld., to Donald C. Jelfer·
son, Middleport.
Dale Teaford and Wanda Tea·
fo rd, Sheriff's deed. to Home
Na ttonal Ba~k . Syrac use
VI I1age.
,
.
Glenn Eugene Vance, .dec 'd,
Certif icate, to Lucllle • Mu rray,
·
Rutland. ·
Ronald N. Hysell and Linda K
Hysell, .23 A. , to David W.
Haggy. Rutland.
.
Sandra Ca rl, tracts, to Robert
Blankenship a nd Stella BlankenShip, Scipio.
·

action and said his bill was "designed to
keep the bad guys out and hit the good guys
practice."
The issue surfaced last summer when it was
disclosed that Ohio State AII·Amertcan Cris
Carter had signed a contract with two profes·
· sional sports ageqts before his football eligibility
expirea- a violation of NCAA rules.
•
Watts 's bill requires .rgents to register with the
Qhlo Department of Commerce for a $500 fee, post
a $25,000 bond, obey 'a ll rules of the NCAA and
make full disclosure of background and
experience.
Ohio · State football coa~h Earle Bruce and
athletic director Rick Bay each . told the
committee "It would not be too soon" to pass the ·
bill.
··Some of this has got to be ,stopped," said
Bruce, warning that agents soon will be
contacting college sophomores and trying to lure
. them away from schooL "I don't think you

'

I ' -!.•

LIR&amp;E 147 IIICE

It's

SURF
LIUIDRY D£TERIEIT
.

9
1 5 00~G.

Salem Center; Leigh Leach, ,daughter of Cha~les
and Jennie Leach, Pomeroy; and ·Sherry Cooper,
daughter of Tom and Cathy Cooper, Middleport.
The queen will be crowned during 7 p.m. pregame
activities at Friday night's game against Vinton
County.

MEIGS HOMECOMING QUEEN CANOl·
DATES- Five Meigs High seniors will be vying
this Friday for the title of homecoming queen.
From left to right are, Laura Cobb, daughter of
Donna Branham, Pomeroy; Susan Sandy, daugh·
ter of Eugene and Jean .sandy, Salem Center;
, Jodie Ervin, daughter of Jack and Joyce Ervin,

Iranian boats ambush three
Saudi Arabian Oil tankers

96~.

2 PACK
600
POLAROID
IISTIIT FILl

WITH FREE SUPER
NATURALS COSTUME

I COUll

8 GUICE CLIIRIL

COICEPTROL

FINAL lET

DISPOSABLE IEL

4~U~EG.
$1.29

Hill SPRAY

,.,.u&amp;
"""

1~~G.
ll.U

16~2!0WILUE
. SAVE $3.00

COLOR PORTRAIT
PACKAGE
GET ONE BXIO ENLARGEMENT,
1WO SX1'S PLUS 20 WALLET
SIZE PRINTS.

69!REG.

2 PACK
ADDIIG IACHIIE
PAPER ROLLS

ROBITUSSIII DM ,c=~
ROBITUSSIII CF
ROBITUSSIII PE
YOUR CHOICE
·;

·2aOO,REG
•

$2.19

&amp;D COUIIT
EXTRA-STRENGTH

HLEIOL
TABLETS

3•!.

Residents along the coast evi· resume their voyages.
It said Iranian long-range
dently heard the attack, report·
artillery
early today destroyed
ing as many as eight loud
explosions that rattled windows radio , television relay and radar
and rumbled across steel docks . stations as well as a radar·
"It woke me up," said one . jamming fQ.clllty in the strategic
shipping official. "I went down to hills near Suleimanlyeh, a pro·
the shoreline thinking maybe vincial center about 30 miles
there wa s an attack, but I Inside northern Iraq.
The station gave no further
.couldn't see any flash or fire."
The attack came less than 12 details of the attacks, which
hours after Iraq said its war· followed Iranian missile strikes
planes raided a "big naval against Baghdad Monday and
target," military parlance for a Tuesday that analysts said could
large tanker or cargo vessel In signal a resumption of the deadly
·
Iranian .s ervice. The vessel was "war of the cities."
In
Tokyo,
the
government
not identified and shipping sourannounced Japan will contribute
ces could not confirm the raid.
Official Tehran radio said about $10 million for the protec·
today the· Iranian Navy stopped tion of shipping In the Persian
and searched 11 merchant ves· Gulf and expand financial and
sels In the gulf during a 24-hour technological aid to nat ions In the
period, but let all ~f the ships region.

MANAMA, Bahrain (UPI) Iranian Revolutionary Guards
aboard three speedboats am·
bushed a Saudi Arabian oil
tanker today , hours a.fter Iraq
said Its warplanes hit another
ship off the coast of Iran, gulf
shipping sourcrs said.
The 12, 770-ton tanker Raad ·
Al·Bakry VIII cam e under
rocket-propelled grenade and
machine-gun lire in the southern
gulf about 20 miles offthecoast of
the Unlt~d Arab Emirates. ·
But damage was minor and the
vessel coni inu!!d its voyage. the
sources said. The vessel had
loaded its cargo at the Siiudl
Arabian terminal &amp;t Ras Tan·
nura and was heading out of the
gulf to deliver Its goods to J ed~ah
when the attack occurred about 5
a.m .. sources said.

''It's a possibility," conceded a
subdued Dole after the commit·
tee voted 9·5 Tuesday for a
recommendation that its col·
·leagues reject the Bork
nomination .
_"( Bark) told me he wanted me
to continue to look at the options
and he wanted me to get back to
him tomorrow." Dole said In a
television Interview . "Hold him
it looks pretty grim, and I think
he shares that view ."
Committee Chairman Joseph
Biden, D·Del.. said the full
Senate would take up the nomina·
tion no later than Oct . 16 and
possibly as early as Monday.
Bork. meanwhile, was back on

recyc~ing

Capitol Hill trying to sway the
dwindling number of undecided
senators. YetevensomeRepubli·
cans said It appeared a lost cause
with at least,five GOP members
among the 54 opposing votes
claimed by the head count of
Assistant , Democratic leader
Alan Cranston of California.
Cranston's counterpart, Re·
publican Sen . Alan Simpson of
Wyoming, was not one of tho se
willing to relinquish the fight.
"This one isn't lost. There are
86 peoplewho have never partlcl·
' pated In this,'' Simpson argued ,
referring to senators not on the
14 - membe r Judiciary
Committee.

-time in Meigs
glass (which must be separated
as to color) .. copper and other
Items will be accepted for
recycling.
The onlY known outlet for
new spapers is on North Columbus Road In Athens.
Wiggins feels that '"recycling
is the only answer." He poin ts out
that "sanitary landfills all
around us are rapidly reaching
capacity a nd authorities tell us
that the cost of tra sh disposal in
Ohio Is over $8 per ton." In New
York and New Jersery, he adds,
the cost is $100.
Wiggins says that the county's
natural resources must be preserved for future generations ·
and to make Meigs County, and
all of Ohio, a cleaner, healthier
place to live.
For more information, write , ..•...
the Meigs County Office of Litter
Co ntrol, Union Ave . at Route 7,
Pomeroy, 45769, or call, 992·6360.

\

'ExeJ:Dpt well' .owners have 90 days
to comply with state oil, gas laws

89

$9.97

4 IUICE

postpone until next year or the year after," he
·said. "You 've got a good thing ard I'd like to ask
you to pass it. "
But Rep. John R. Stozich, R-Findlay, sponsor of
the House version , urged catltion . He objected to a
prov.ision in the Senate bill requir ing agents guilty
of an · infraction to pay the remainder of .the
scholarship of an athlete who loses it for signing
early .
Stozich also said private colleges, such as
Xavier, Witt enberg and the University oJ Dayton ,
should be included. The bill now applies only to
agents dealing with sc holarship athletes at state
universities.
· ,_ ..
Any amendments will have to be dealt with by
.the Senate, which does not reconvene until
January. Watts said " the world ' s not going to
end" if the bill doesn't pass this year.
' 'Hopefully, they'll get the problems worked
out." said House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
D-New Boston . ·'I hope it can be worked out
because I think it's needed."

By NANCY YOAC)IAM
The purpose. of the elementary
school drive is to help teach
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Office of students the value of a cleaner
Litter Control Is sponsoring a and healthier environment.. and
recycling drive for all of Meigs also to allow them to raise extra
County during the month of money for playground equip·
October. "This is a new expe· men!, libraries and other pro·
rience for most of us and we urge jects. The drive is being limited
everyon&lt;;&lt; to join in," says Ken· to weekends only during the
ney Wiggins, director of the month because a! limited storage
space at the schools and to
county Jitter control ofnce.
Although the drive is being prevent children from tran spOrt·
conducted mainly through the 'ing recyclable · materials on
elementary schools of Meigs, buses . However, !!.students can
Southern and Eastern Districts, get their materials to the recy·
all clubs, civic organizations, cling center·during the week, it is
church groups and others are permissible, Wiggins says.
"We are hoping parents will
asked to work together In this
get involved in helping their
project.
Recycling can bEi fun as well as children collect their material s,"
p~ofltable. according to Wiggins.
he adds.
Trl-County Recycling has
It also saves energy, valuable
natural resources, factory equip· opened a collection center at the
ment and reduces pollution, as intersection ·of Routes 143 and 7
well as the amount of trash going near Pomeroy . Aluminum cans,
to landfills .

LESSREIITE

$7.99

2 Sections 14 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Re~gan, allies still feel they
WASHINGTON tUP!) -Pres·
!dent Reagan and conservative
allies insist they still have a
mathematical chance to rescue
the Supreme Court nomination of
Robert Bark despite their crush· ·
ing defeat in the Senate Judiciary
Committee.
But with Democrats already
urging another nomination to
waste no more time in confirm·
lng a new justice, Senate Repub·
lican leader Robert Dole of
Kansas said he would confer with
Bark today about the possibility
• of the.j:udge wl~hdrawing his own
name because of Reagan's vow
to see It through a. final Senate
vote.

Property transfers
Compiled By
EMMOCENE HOLSTEIN
CONGO
Meigs County Recorder
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Arthur 0. Allen, Cathaleen
Lucille Allen and Lawrence
.Gluesencamp. Louise Gluesen·
camp'. release of R·W, Meigs.
. Marvin L. Randolph, Mary B.
Randolph to Claude Jackson
Humphreys, Jayne Humphreys,
1.88 A.. Salisbury.
Charles H. Theiss, Bonnie F.
Theiss to Charles H. Theiss.
Bonnie F . Theiss. parcel, Sutton.
Beatrice Ganell Justice to
Gary Erlewine, Sheila Erlewine.
parcel, Salem.
Gary Erlewlne, Sheila E r ie• wine to Southern Ohio Coa l Co.,
parcel, Salem.
.
Nora R. Eason and Robert H.
Eason. LOO A. to John E.
Foreman a nd Linda J . Foreman,
Chester.·
Earl Powell, .dec' d Affid .. to
Delores Powell, Roy Eugene
Powell . Debra Gilkey, Ddnna
Fral ier, 'Middleport Village.
' John · Franklin Aieker · and
Leona Kay Roach, parcels , to
James F. Russell and Irene F .
Russell. Middleport Village.
Emerson E . Houdashelt a nd
Peggy M. Houdashelt . 1.5 A, to
Margaret Bollinger, Pomeroy
Village.
Elissa A. Utt, 60 A, to Kenneth
·
R. Uti. Chester.
Willard Hines and Elsie Hines, ·
Lot 9, to Emery G. Haggy and
Lelia J . Ha ggy, Prrmeroy
V'iHage.
Arnold E. Green and Mary A.
Green , right of way, Leading
Creek Conservation District,
Rutland.
·
· Beverly Bailey , eta\, Jimmi e
J . Bailey, eta !• . Gertrude M.
Pellegri no. eta!. James A. Pelle·
grino. e ta!. Rf.nble Linthicum,
etal . Lise M. , Linthicu m, eta I,
Sherrie L. Rosen. eta!. Joseph A.
Rosen, eta !. Glen E. Linthicum
Sr .. eta!, Terese S. Linthicum,
eta!, parcels. to Flore~ce P . Goff, .
Olive.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Compan y, Amendment
Articles . of Incorporallon, to
. Columbus &amp; Southern Power
Company, Meigs.
Kevin R Sheppard and Susan
A. Sheppard, easement, to Ohio
·Power Company. Sutton.
Grego~y 0. Erwin and Ma ryS.
Erwin, easement , 10 Ob i() Power
Co mpany , Salisbury.
Charles L. Neutzling a nd Ca·
rdlyn S. Neutzling, easement, to
Ohio Power Compan y, Rutla nd .
Fulton "J;hompson Tractor
Sales, Inc. DBA Associated Fab·
rlcators, Inc. , easemen t, to Ohio
Power Co mpa ny, Salisbury. ·
Clyde ·A. Cooper a nd Edith .

enttne

have chance to rescue Bork

/ '1/fl

J'~

•

s~edy

sidents and patients.
• ~£:~~~,?,0':;:&gt;":~
Or flowers given by friends in honor of the deceased i:·· ,_..,.. .... ...,.,
may be given tO guests as a fragrant reminder of a life __, ...,
that has passed and of the value of their own lives.
Most florists have developed special floral arrangmentsforfunerals. Waalsocanansworyourquestions
about the value of flowers in funeral services. Ple.ase
call us if you would nke more information.

.. ( 608?

Pomeroy- Middleport·. Ohio, Wednesday, October 7, 1987

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -The Ohio General
Assembly has sent to Gov. Richard F. Celeste
leglsl~tlon giving the news media and individual
citizens quick access to public records blocked by
a government agency.
·
Final legislative approval came Tuesday on a
91·0 House vote. The Senate had passed the bill
last week. The measure will take effect
immediately upon signature by the governor.
The House held back another bill - licensing
professional sports agents representing college
athletes - to study It further and Iron out some
rough spots.
Rep : Jolynn Boster, D-Gallipolis, chairman o!
the House Ethics and Standards Committee which
held an initial hearing Tuesday on that bill, said
..additional hearings will be held later this year.
Speaking on the House floor, Boster said the
public records bill "will put back into Jaw a quick
and effective method for citizens to enfor~e the

beauty 'and fragrance of flowers serve as a

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank, Thoma and other relatives.
Sarah and MBtthew, Texas Road, · Tom Summerfield, Medina,
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and was a recent visitor o·f Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning and Ronald. Mrs. Robert Russell and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver of
Richland, Ind. were recent vis· were Thursday visitors of Mr.
!tors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard and Mr. Harley Johnson, Tammy
and Iva Johnson.
·

•

Chance of showers. Low
mid 30s. Sunny
Hil;l'h in mid 50s.

CeleSte . gets · quick access hill for .signature

reminder th,t funeral services are for the living.
Colorful. tas'teful floral arrangements are generally
sent by those who cannot be present but wish to ox;, · "'"a their condolences. These floral pieces help the
bereav~d to accePt that life continues, though the
loved one is no longer present to share in it. As such,

Wolfe Pen area happenings.

Any musical group willing to
donate time and talent to the
Melgs-Gallia-Jackson Child As·
sault Prevention Program Is
asked to contact PeggyMarclpko
at· 985-4413. The Ch ild Assault
Prevention Program is sponsor·
ing an all day event on Oct . 17.

e

WHAT HAPPENS TO THE FLOWERS?

2:30 p.m. and from 4 to 6 p.m.
There will also be a baked goods ·
sale, cake and pie walks, a
..country store and giveaways
with lots of prizes. Everypne
welcome.

164
Pick 4

Page 3

· • / bezng
• ptanned ·
.H.arvest . Restzva

NEW OFFICERS AT CltRISTIAN SCHOOLThe Gallia Christian School has elected new
student council officers lor the 1987-!!S school
year. Seated are, left to right, Elizabeth Langona:

Daily Number

Z OUICE

SECRET

ROUIID OR WIDE SOLID
REGULAR • POWDER FRESit
SPRING BREEZE

.'Exempt well" owners In schedule so they can meet Monroe, Noble and Washington
Meigs.County, as well as others environmental regulations go· Counties .
During tlie grace period, no
in southeastern Ohio, have 90 · verning oil and gas operations,
,
Oil
and
gas
wells
may
be
enforcement
will take , place
days to contact the Ohio Depart ·
exempt
If
It
was
drilled
a
nd
against
existing
violations. How - ·
.. ment of Natural Resources
completed
before
1980,
Is
loca
ll'd
ever, ODNR a.dvlses well owners
,.(ODNR) and set up a schedule to
in an unglaciated par t of the to conta.ct Its 011 and Gas
, comply with state oil and gas
state, Is llmlted In depth and Is Division during the gr~ce period
. . / Jaws , Including brlnt! · disposal
permanently hooked up for do· '- to discuss problem wells and
laws , according to J. Michael
mestlc
fueL Exempt well own ~rs avoid enforcement action. '
Biddison ; chief of ODNR 's DIV·
do
.not
have to cqmply wit h
Brochures detailing exempt
is ion of 011 and Gas.
certain
filing
requirements and well Information can be obtained
HOMECOMING -These are the Southern High
He said that the division will
School homecoming candidates and attendants
observe a 90-day grace period, · fees, but must m eet all state from a local oil and gas well
envlronmen t a! regulations. Inspector or by calling' the
.who will be taking parlin halftime actlvUies at the
s~a(tlng October 5, to allow
Southern-Oak Hill game Friday night. Across the··
''exempt well" owners an oppor· Othet· counties where these wells division's regional office at (614 )
front are seniors, who are queen candidates and ' tunlty to esta.bllsh a compliance - are: found In Athens, Belmont, 984·2344.
.
'

.

'

-

'

)

..

•
~.

'

lhey are, 1 to r, Donette Talbott, Depa Watson,
Dina Shuler and Wendy Triplett; at the b·a ck are
class attendants who are, I to r, Junle Beegle,
fi-e ghman; Tracy Norris, sophomore, and Tracy
Beegle, junior.

•

�·'

\

r

•

• j

~

•

Commentary
_The Daily Sentinel u. s~ Japanese trade
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·M ASOI' AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

.

~('.

.

BOB HOEFLlCH
General Manager

A MF.MRF:R nf Thr- lln IINI Plf•ss I nlf•rn.IIIOnJ I. I ni.~nd D,tll\ P1 f'ss
As-.nll,tliOn ancl lh(' Amrnc.m Nf'wsp.lpC'I PubJi.;;hN..: Ao;soci ,JIIOn
l.FT'TF:RS OF' oPJNlOI'\ II( \IC'III!~j ThC"\ ~ houlrl bl' lc ss lhdn JIO \\ ~•1&lt;1&lt;.:
lcmj.! Allll'llf r ... ti l ' "Ubtl'( 1 Jr • f"rlliln l.! ,1nd mu s1 bl' !' t.Cnl'(l I\ 11 h n.1m1 ' .HI ell''"" .t nd
1f'll phnnf' numht •J f\1 1 un '-Jgnf'l"l 11'111 Jo.; 1.\ tll b1 • puh iJs hl'&lt;i 11•111 ' "s hou ld b1• 111
c nn&lt;l 11~1" •tlrln .. ~mg '""Ui" nnt pi'I , On.,htw"

Should judges try judges?
By BUD NEWMAN
WASHINGTON ( UPIJ - The founding fathers. who were much
praised during last month's 200th anniversary of the Constitution,
gave federal judges lifellme tenure to insulate them [rom the political
pressures of the day.
In 1787. the Constitution's writers properly presumed that ltfetlme
tenure would let judges _render potentially unpopular but
constitutional!)( correct decisions without fear of losing their JObs.
But the foundmg fathers didn't want federal judges to get too cocky
either. so they gave Congress the right to remove a sitting federal
judge for cause through the Impeachment process
The House could bnng charges and, If the a maJOrity of House
members agreed a JUdge committed an offense. they would vote
Impeachment - tantamount to an Indictment . The Senate would try
the case and decide the judge's guilt or innocence.
But now some lawmakers want to remove Congress from the
time-consuming process of firing flawed federal judges-. They want to
change the Constitution to allow judges to judge judges and decide on
removal Congress would ret am the power to impeach and tr} other
officials. like the president.
In the Constitution's 200-year history . on ly 10 federal judges have
been impeached by the House, with five of them getting booted off the
bench by the Senate after tnals.
The most recent case - and the first in 50 years- took place last
fall when the House impeached and the Senate removed federal
Judge Harry Claiborne of Nevada. who earlier was convicted In court
of tax evaston and sent to prison.
. Rep. Gerald Kleczka, D-Wls., co-author of a recenily flled
. constitutional amendment allowing Congress to establis h an
· alternatve system for removing bad federal judges. argues that in
modern times the Impeachment process "Is simply too time·
consuming."
"Because of the enormous demands placed on us. mdivlpual
members cannot devote the time necessary to conduct a thorough
Impeachment and trial," Kleczka said.
Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., co-sponsor with Kleczka. says
Congress Is "not capable ... of making the kmds of judgments that you
ougpt to make in an Impeachment."
"You can't expect people to all of a sudden treat congr.essmen as
judges when most of the time we're politicians," Frank said. ··we
haven't got the time and we haven't got the proper motivation .. No
one would tolerate a judge in a major case being as busy as we are
with other thmgs.
"People say impeachment shouldn't be handled politically. I
agree," Frank said. "But tf you don't want the decision made
politically, don't ask 535 pohllcians to make it .. We try to be
non-political. but it's hard."
'
Rep . Robert Kastenmeier, D -Wis. , chairman of the House
Judiciary subcommittee to which the Kleczka-Frank amendment
might be assigned, agreed impeachment reform is needed but
stopped short of endorsing th e amendment
"It may be in the final analysis we' ll have to amend the
Consutution," he said. "We need to change the process
I'm not
certain that this approach Is the best approach "
And. Kaslenmeter satd, "I'm not sure the judges would want to do it
that way . The judges may not want to try thetr own people. "
There may , in fact, lie need for reform tn the process for removing
federal judges But it Is Interesting that lawmakers would cite a
shortage of time and lack of attention as key reasons to make thts
change.
Cunously,. many manage to find plenty of time to raise mtllions of
dollars tn campaign contributions. to attend-an endless number of
part les. dinners and receptiOns. to take overseas tnps of questionable
value to taxpayers and to meet and have their ptctures taken with
every Boy Scout and senior cittzen group that vtslts the Capitol from
back home
It makes one wonder why they can't squeeze tn a few hours to carry
out their constit utional mandate IQ...C.Qn§.ider removing a federal judge
every 10 or 20 years.

Letter to the editor
The 14th Amendment
The 14th amendment to the
constitution, section 1. says· " no
person shall be deprived of
property without due process of
law" . We are celebrating the
200th anniversary of our constitution this year. That amendment
didn't say property had to be big
or small ·· just property.
Thts past summer I had a big
tract of ltmber cut and removed
by trespass Now a long comes
somebody else and cuts on what
few trees I have left. On or about
the 22nd of September. 1987. for
the supposed purpose of Improv Ing the Middleswa rt Cemetery
borders. on land owned by me ,
persons or a person, ENTERED
WITHOUT NOTICE. and cut a
. substant ial number of trees and
gave away the wood to an
individual who I happened to
intercept hauhng it away in a
truck. A few years bac.J&lt; some G
R workers. that I suppose were
supervised, c ut a nut -bearing
butt ernut tree on We lls Run that
stood 12 feet from the edge of the
gravel. We have ]ust ret urned
fro m the Vicksburg Battle Field
a nd the Battle Field Cemetet y
there is graced by a number of

trees. in aristocratic Charlestown , West Virginia , the city Is
lining some of their streets wtlh
trees. Lebanon Township seems
to be the only place that hates
·
trees.
You fellows like to hunt. There
won't be~ any woods left If the
attitude prevails Ihat I have been
subjected too. There was a nice
little bunch of htckones way off
the cemetery line and there was
a bsolutely no excuse for cutting
them.
I enjoy the woods and spend
co nsiderable time walking In the
woods. The big timber will soon
a ll be gone around he re. Our
family hold s some of the last. 1
have lived a decent life anii I do
not a ppreciate having Ihe thtngs
l enjoy taken away I don't hke
.excuses ft om people who are
running at every good tree they
see with a chain saw
The c ut ting of lhGse trees IS
suspiciously close to election
time. I do not thtnk I have been
told a ll the truth It looks to :ne
like a slick way to pass around a
little fire wood.
Gayle H. Price

Today in history
By United Press International
Today ts Wednesday, Oct. 7, the 280th day of 1987 wtth 85 to follow
The moon is waning. moving toward its last quarter .
Th e morning stars are Ma rs a nd Jupiter,.
Th e evening s tars a re, Mercu ry, Venus and Saturn

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

WASHINGTON-Forty-two
years - after the uncondilio~al
surrender of· the Japanese empire, some U.S officials are
feverishly warning of a new
outbreak of hostilities between
the United States and Japan: an
all-out economic war, touched off
by Japanese trade surpluses and
congressional retaliation .
Don't believe It. For all the
steamy rhetoric fllling the air
over Washington, cooler heads
will prevail-if only because the
American and Japanese economies are, like it or not. chained as
tightly together as the fugitive
cons In "The Defiant Ones "
Long before a trade war could
escalate to the level of the
holocaust predicted by the Henny
Pennies, both countries' econo·
mles would collapse
The situation Is a rough equivalent of the nuclear stra teglsts'
"Mutual Assured Destruction,"
with neither 'side rash enough to
provoke a confrontation that
would anmhllate both. Even the
hotheads in Congress can be
presumed to have enough sense
not to go for tough-seeming,
shortsighted trade restrictions
that would prove disastrous over
the long run.
The greatest roadblock to

protectionist folly. of course. is
the White House. President Reagan will stand firm on his
commitment to free trade. resist·
lng any more restrictive actions
that wlil discourage Japanese
Imports. Insiders note that Reagan has been given the authority
by Congress to Impose restric·
!Ions, but that he has not done so.
The reason for Reagan's stub·
bornness, of course, Is that he
realizes the Importance to the
U.S. economy of Japanese lm·
ports, and the harm that would be
dqne If they· were significantly
reduced. And one reason he Is
aware of this is the subtle but
pervasive influence of the Japanese lobby In both business and
government circles.
You don't read much about the
Japanese lobby, because the
press finds It easier to raise
alarm over the supposed Saudi
Arabian monitary clout, exert:lsed through Arab-American oil
companies. This is despit the
almost total lack of evidence that
the Saudis have exerted even
minimal Influence America's
pro-Israel policy.
The fact is, the Japanese lobby.
working quietly and effectively,
has now become one of the most
lnfluentlal In Washington The

pressure Tokyo ca n bring to bea r
through Its .myriad U.S. Importers and retailers is quite simply
enormous. Members of Congress
who don't know that already wlil
find out in short order. if they try
to punish Japan with trade
restrictions.
As if the political reason's
weren't enough to hose down any
Inflammatory protectionist action , there are other factors that
will help to ease the situation.
The revaluation of the yen will
cut Into Japan's huge trade
surpluses, as will the growing
Japanese investment in foreign
Industry. Another hopeful sign is
the resurgence of U.S. manufac·
turers In the competition for
world markets.
The pessimists point to Japa·
nese industrial a nd financial
corporations' increasing deversl flcatlon, and their tendency to be
less subservient to their govern·
ment's "administrative gut·
dance" · meaning production
controls. But our sources in
Tokyo say Ibis does not portend
irresponsiblllty by Japanese busIness. At theflrst signs of a trade
war with the Unltep States.
Japanese corporations and the
Tokyo gavernment would
quickly come up with "volun-

IS GfTTIN6 SERIOliS! ~E
WANTS To E.XeHANGrf
gL.oop TEST RES\JI.TS!
~................___

Ob:IO' M11'l NEWj -NIA "B'

•

By Jack .Anderson and Dale Vari Atta

I THIN" DAVID

f;/!ftiin,_8

Mathews pitches, hats Cards
to 5-3 victory in NL opener

Page- 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, October 7, 1987

~

tary'.' restrictions to appease the
econo mic hawks In Congress
Actually. Japan's success In
world trade has given it enough
to worry about. The last thing the
Japanese need Is a major trade
war with the United States and
all that this would entail.
Japan's btg problem is its
liquidity glut; it has more money
coming In than It can handle.
Bloafed by trade surpluses, mas·
slve pe rsonal savi ngs, stagnation
In domestic consumption and the
yen's growing value In relation to
the dollar, Japan has so much
money to get rid of. that It is
making bad Investment dec!·
slons both at home and abroad .
While the average family
would say. "We should be so
lucky!", the problem of too much
cash comlng, in Is not to be taken
lightly on the internahonal scale.
When the United States was In
this position, for example, AmerIcan banks desperate for ways to
put their cash to work invested It
In loans to Latin American
governments that later proved to
be suicida l Japan seems to have
no better grasp of what to do with
lis surplus.
Some administration officials
have been foilowlng the booming
Tokyo stock market's fluctuations with alarm. They know that
th e market boom · Is being
pumped up by Japan's excessive
liquidity . which means there's
too much money available for
speculation. With cash burning
holes in their pockets. Japanese
Investors are paying too little
attention to the fundamentals,
like company earnings.
In fact, a perceptive but
little-noticed study by the First
National Bank of Chicago concluded that tf a world depression
comes anytime soon. It will be
touched off by a stock market
crash In Tokyo. The reasoning is
that. just as the 1930s depression
was triggered by the 1929 crash of
the New York stock market
because the United States had
replaced Brltlan as supplier of
capital to the world, today Japan
Is supplanting the United States
In that role,
In short, no one in authority,
either in Washington of Tokyo, Is
likely to risk a U S.-J apanese
trade war tha , could rock the
Tokyo market and lead to an
eventual globa l depression of
hair-curling proportions.

i

•

'

CLARK STEALS SECOND - In Tuesday
night's National League playoff game in St. Louis,
the Giants' Will Clark slides into second and
successfully !~teals the bag as umpire Jim Quick

KETCHIKAN, Alaska
Midwest. minerals in the Rockies
(NEA)-"I run upwards of
and textiles In the Southeast.
$200,000 through my (business)
In almost every Instance, exchecking account each year,"
perts emphasize that the indusexplains fisherman Bruce Wal·
t~ les are hardly booming. In·
lace. "I don't have much left at
stead.. they suggest, the
t he end of the year but I live
businesses apparently bottomed
pretty well."
out after a long ,decline and are
Repairing a 250-fathom-long
experiencing a modest upturn.
seine net in the drizzle that only
In the case of Alaska's fishing
occasionally' yields to the sum in' industry, the downturn was
southeastern Alaska, the caused by the virtual disappearbearded 44-year-old Wallace hes- ance of the king crab from
itantly characterizes his annual Alaskan waters in the early
Income as "decent to good."
1980s. Annual' sheilflsh landings
In a marked change from the in the state peaked at 365 million
depression that devastated the pounds in 1980, then plunged to 86
state's fishing Industry only five million pounds by 1984.
•
years ago, the more than 50,000
Many of the state's fishermen
people engaged In fish harvest- averted econoJTI!C disaster only
Ing and processing In Alaska now by hastily re-rigglng crabbing
share In Wailace's good fortune
vessels and beginning to search
And that business is one of · for the ground fish (or bottom
a pproximately a half-dozen re· fish) they previOusly had
glona l industnes throughout the ignored
country that exjJerlenced severe
Thai includes all fin fish except
economic problems in the early . sa lmon. halibut and herrll)g. The
1980s but are now recovering.
value of the ground-fish catc)l
Among them are limber In the · was only slightly more than $1
Northwest, petroleum in the million In 1976 and just under $9
Southwest, agriculture In the

niUllon as recently as 1980. Last
year ; it was almost $198 mUllon
.Much of that growth is attribu·
table to a sharp Increase In
domestic demand for fish from
health-consciou s consumers
seeking an alternative to red
meat.
Also, American vessels have
begun catching and processing a
greater proportion of the pollack,
turbot, sole,• flounder, rockfish,
mackerel and cod In the rich
fishing grounds of the North
Pacific.
For many years, fleets from
Japan and, to a lesser extent. the
Soviet Union, South Korea and
Taiwan had little competition
from this cpuntry In their quest
for ground fish.
The Japenese especially value
pollack, which they process Into
surimi, . a white protein paste
used to nlake ersatz crab,
shrimp, scailops and other products. Last year, pollack ac·
counted for more than 70 percent
of all the state's ground-fish
landings.
When king crab supplies

._R_ob_e_rt_W,_al_te_rs
dwindled. domestic fishing interests began Invoking the 1976
federal law that gives the U.S.
fishing fleet priority over others
within the zone streching 200
miles out from the coast.
Thai protection against foreign
competition h~s no impact, however, on what has become known
as the' 'Seattlizatlon" of Alaska's
fishing Industry.
According to ·one industry
estimate, fully 50 percent of all
vessels engaged In commercial
fishing In Alaska are based in
Washington state, while an add!·
Ilona 1 30 percent come from
Oregon, California and the Canadian province of British Columbia Only 20 percent are Alaskan.
Despite ail the competition, the
newly thriving industry gives
even relatively small operators
like Wallace a n opportunity to
earn a decent profit.
"We've had some exceptional
catches In recent years," he says
while surveying the Sterra Ma dre, his 58-foot purse seiner.
"We're doing all right."

Spuds and satan go to school .By Sarah Over!ttreet
When I was a ktd the tssues
were short hemhnes. Beatie
haircuts . and !rousers for girls
The school admtmstratlon was
agln' em . a nd we, being kids.
stuck our toes over the tines
penodlcaliy.
We took regular tnps to the
principa l's office to kneel on the
floor to have our skirt- length
checked and to bare our necks fo r
collar scrutiny I was once sent
·home for wearing culottes, a
split-pant that looked like a skirt
and did a better job of hiding my
thighs than the shor t skirts we
wore .
This yea r, I he Issues are Spuds
MacKe nzie · T-shlrts In Prairie
VIllage. K an . ea rrings for boys
and Satan worship In Chicago,
and clothes In general In
Baltimore.
Kids In the Kansas school are
forbidden to wear Spuds shirts
because they "promote beer
drinkin g. and coni radict progra ms tha t teach st udents to say
no to drugs and alcohol "
Hi gh sc hool se nior Darryl
Olesen has agreed not to wear his
earrl ng .to school in Chicago until
a U S distnct court judge rul es
on the case The adm tni stra tlon

of Homewood-Flossmoor High
School in Chicago has flatly ruled
that student s may not worshtp
Satan. based on the findings la st
spring of two markings on
lockers and one on a floor that
resembled an "upside down A In
a Circle."
(I can't think of a stonger
Incentive for kids to iry devtl·
worship than for a school admln·
tstratlon to forbid It If you want
kids to try anything once. just
tell'em they can't )
And In Baltimore, kids In three
ele mentary schools will be wearIng uniforms this year. Th e
sc hool hopes to save chtldren the
pressure of clothes competition ,
as well as to quell any future
violent Incidents like the one In
1983 when one student killed
another to gain a stylish, $65
jacket.
· The ho-earrlng and no-Spuds
rulings seem patently absurd .
Kids express their lndlviduaiity
through dress. as well as state
me nts they deem Important to
make. To tell a normal American
kid he cannot wea r an earring to
school. m this era, Is about a s
sensible as te llmg him he ,can't
brin g hi s latest rock ta pe and

listen to It on hts portabl e
cassette playe r in the schoolyard
at lunch It me You' re JUSt s~tlln g
up a battle that doesn't need to be
fought
·
At first glance the forced wearIng of umforms in publtc schools
seems to rob students of the

chance to make' a persona l
statement a nd. dPvelop a n Jndt ·
vidual style . But tf Baltimore
admini strat ors ate telling the
truth, a sP t iPs of forum s hC' id
with parent s rcvraled th at 97
percent oft hem were in favo r of

MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) -The
Minnesota Twins hope to tHrow
three left -handed ptt chers
against the DetrOit Tigers Frank Viola , Frank VIola and
Frank Vtola .
Minnesota Manager Tom Ke lly
Is very aware the Ttgers were
76-35 thi s season against right·
handed pitchers, which his team
Is· loaded with , out only 22-29
ag'a inst southpaws, of which he
has just two.
. "I started thinking about setting up my pitching last week,"
Kelly said dryly "I was worned
about winning the divtsion first "

For Viola to ~ tart three games
against Detroit in the best -of
seven American League Cham
pionshtp Senes he's gotng to have
to reverse the trend of his
previous four seasons. The left
hander ts 5· 7 lifetime agains t the
Tigers with a 4.40 ERA.
"I wouldn't mind starting
three games," Viola said. "be
cause that means tt's the seventh
game and we're back here. "
Viola's opponent in the opening
game tonight is right bander
Doyle Alexander , who · merely
started 11 games for the Tige rs

Scoreboard ...
pl.nf'd t~alt&gt;ty T11n~ Elliot '" on lnjlu'll•d
!llgnc d dt'ft•n,lvt b,atk ( hm k

Computer
ratings · "

&lt;ump1on

( UI.I 'MHLS, Olliu fU J•J J - This
'AI'I k'&gt;~ Ohio 111 ~11 St IM!ol r\thhilt
Assot lllllun t ompuh ril:t•d lootlmll

uwkh· Rolund Aumut•llt•r a.nd rurmln~
hatk Llont 11 " 'il"'on, rt•t t&gt;l \'t•d a~~~~ IH't• k
n~S II• r '.~t:t•mptlon fl!r no~· llu kh• Clt .U"h•s

rt•Pwru•

llou~un

Rum~·)

\h• n m lll~;

l!lm, ,.. ,,

llh r~lun \ '
ltl Klun HI
I l'ut l"'llllllllli :'l;ntn J) tnu• !fi 1111 !
So•\l a rk ( tlht•llc ~! till l (,ru nd\lt•\1
11&lt;&gt;1)[1•~ !11 ;o, 1 (.ar.t"a' 1' 1M!, i
tll'.lll ~\ lll t ' li i4l ti to.t .. t Knnt.. iliiO 0
(aMI \\huhtosltr II ;u, X (ruuk."'\1111
IIIMI

Transa(•tions
II'" ,,.,fj
I""' ,\n~t;• ''"" - i\llllllllnt 4' 11 i\l.tna~et• r
1'11111 t.~.. ,rda 11nd ' Lx1t utlv t• \ ' It ,. l'rt•!&gt;i l
llo•nl trt•t.l4 l.•l rt "Ill n turn nt t.. l ~~L~UII
!'&lt;i! • illh• - \d~! d Uuh ".td:."'urlh 1t1UI
ltn n ll v pk)n,. lu 11- -• u nllll !!; s tall
lurunl o - S1t ld plh l11•r Tum tilt r 111
IJill\ f'r uf 1111 \JJtl•rltttn ,\,. .. mlalhlll
1 \ ,\ ,\ ), "''' '" lnllt•ltlt•r ,\lt·-t.. lnfanh• ln
S\ratUM' !I f tht• hllt•rrt:ulun:tl l.o. U.lfll•

1

ll.a sktllmll
f h .orlnltt 1 ~8 ,\ I N.lml'il (ot•n••
Utr!J., thro t tur nl pl a.vt r 111 rs{JnJWI
Huhlo 11 Sl.l(t• S ign• d In I \'l':lr
• 11111 r n '" r.•n •.rd- l o~trl nl.u l~unmr, RriH I'
lltoU!III• ~ n..rn I lnh!IM&gt;II .IIIII ltmiJIII
l.l' l(l'llt• .md """ 1rd~ Ht•nnu Uull o n 11nt1
lt 1 rr~ Willhun~
I \ 1-\kt ·r~ - Sll(m d • Nll!•r
i'illlrl 1.; I!I ,\ 11\Uit j. \I Ill' 1 110tr ,~t I

lurk -

!&lt;ill(llf'{)

Mlkt

fn r" .ord Sldno )

( II III J:• '
l\1• •1rot ,\lhh'th ( u nf• •rt•n•'' - N.um d
i:.1\l Sldt IIIIUI oL&gt;~S l'&gt; !JIRI ctlrt'l t ur !If
I IIIJIIIIIIIJH al.illn~

1~ nni""!WI' h,L&lt;;I /Mil 111 .11 IL

~

lfl

!H. Allanta I .!

\\1-t'ihl'ndnn ~~~ St IA!ub ~I
San lli• •Kl • Ill t lntlnnal1 9
( h•Hiand ~II Nt"' t. n~land I ll

(irl'l 11 1\ln !I 1\tln Ill'S Uta l lo
Duii!L" !IK !\;\' 1••1" 21
l . i\ R~hJ.. '" 15, HlUI"Il" ( lty 17
llutJ!oltm.JO Dt•nH•r IU
~•·utth• ! I !\1l a ml ~ ~~
1\Tnnd:lo\ s Rt•,.,ult"'
)olanforami&gt;&lt;~'tlll,l'l\

(,lantl'l~l

~u nd ttV

" Crllm..,.
Bnfi •.Jn at ~I \'I t :n g lund I p m
Ht•truk ul fl rrt•n B.aJ Ill m
llnu,.,IIIIJ,ol ( l1 ~·lund 1 p 111
KIUI!&lt;ll" C11,- .at :\ll.ornl. I p m
\llnn.·~•ll !l .11 f'l!lt a~t;u I p 111
~~ ,_ Orl•·an~ at )olj I uul"' I I' 111
~\ ''""' nllndlaJutpulilo. I tim
l' hllad••lphlu at liulla"~ . 111 111

t~

san llh•J:II 111 T11mpn Ha\ , 1 p m
\\:e.hlnrtun at N ' (,/~nts I p m
san tr.andM u ul 1\!lantu. I p m
c lndn11.11i al St ultlt I p nt
l'ilb.llllr!:h at L ,\ Hum:.. I 11 m
:Unnduv · .. c.amt•
I i\ lblrio

1ll 11• •11\ f' r 'I pIll
R1M hull
1 '11~1 Spa_-un s, lu duh
(•\II "'' rh... lw-t uJ.,, \I' ll )
( hampiu n... ldp "'• rl• ~
,\nll'rltan l,!'llKIH'
"1'1~ 0!1 "i Ut•truil .11 ..tlun. •,..,l( ,l
II ' :UJ IIIII
Th1,1r 011 II - ll•&gt;trolt .at Mlnll!"'""·l
II . ;J:J''p Ill

"'"' Otl

10 -

l\11n1M'sllla al U~.&gt;tnJII,

II -

:Uinm'l'IUia 11 l)t•lroll .

l.ft"ip/11

11111 d :U .ork l'unnur

fon uthail
( h ltlll:'ll - l'll r l ii .L~t· d tllrJII'rlm• k t r11
It Hrio .. frulll \\ .L-hinl,'1 0 11, "·lh t•d kit kt•r
luh11 lhl\h untl \loldt• f! l tl \ tr IUtk
ll• •tll\ llrl'
f•r o•••n Ita\ - "ah t•cl ptmtt•r lt•hn
Kh•h tM hmldl """ klc kt•r ;\daJn lluron,

x l\lnn lh I I! - 1\llnnt'SolU at l)t troll ,
I fl~ p m
x· \\ l:'d (ht II - lldrnlt at :\llnrM'Mitil.
I Uj p 111 ,
x· Timr Ott l t'J - O•t•ull •IMinl'li 'MII.a.
l(·Jl pIll
N.dlomd I A'IIKlU
t ( ardlnal" lt•a d sl•rll•.. I II)
1'111• OH 6 St..., Loul~ ·, !ol,u1

t'rantlsu I

"•'d.

l.uul ~.

Ji 1'1 (hI
!) 1'\l,
rr.uul..ttt .t25Jl Ill.
Sui

Ott

Ill

-

Sl

l.oul:-; ,11
lAHti ~

!II

)&gt;III II
S11n

11-' rarH l~ut M ~5 p m
~
~ ..."'un Otl
II - St Luul~ u t S.m
fo'ru.m ~~~ o I 15 p m
X·1UI' Ot t 11 - S11n J.' rantiMII .11 Sl

K: 25 p m.
t.. \\t•d. Ott. II - sun Franc ls1~1 ut st
l..ouls, K n p m
\\ urld i'it•rh"'
S al Uti I'; - l oi Ill IOnul ,11 t\mt rlt an~

mental!\' and ph ys tca ll y
drained." Tw1ns center fielder
Ktrby Puckett sa 1d " Th at wtll be
to our adv a ntage. If no!. we'll be
ready to pi'IY ·
Trammell sa id the tough fmi s h
would he lp the Tt gers
"We've had a couple days off
but when we clo play I think we'll

Published !"' \1 (' 1\o oll10rnoo n Mond&lt;.t\'
11n 0U)!h F rl d.n , 111 Cuu1t St ' Po
ml't O\ Oh io tw lh(' Ohi o \ta ll(')" Puh
11!-ihlng Com pany M u lt tfrl('(l! a
ln t
P omf'r ov O hio 457fi9 Ph 992 21!16 Sf&gt;

contl rla ss posla g(' pald .11 Po mC'r.oy,

Ohi o

II .111)1111
)oltut 1111 Ill -

Nallmutr .11 \mtrlc un .

II lllt'm
Tlu•
t 211 )l Ill ,, Ill
\\• •d (hI l l -

,\nwr h an ut Nallurml.
•
\\nu rt~. an .11 Nntlum•l

t o 1hC' O,d ly S£-n ll nf' l

•
1\ im•r\! .m

Oct
!~ at
roo;alluna l II U )I Ill
Joh'iUI Ot t H - Naliunul ,II f\ tlh•rlt .tn.
1)1111
)!;Sun thl :t~ - Ntal kll\lli.tl l\nw rltll n,
K !~ 11111
1•/
nt&lt;t l""'illry

New York Nf'\\ Yot k 10017
P 0~1 MASTE!it

S4:&gt;ml

FALL SPECIAL

TANK SETTING FOR HEATING
FORMERLY DOXOL GAS

NOW FERRELGAS
FOR MORE INFORMATION '
985-3307

~-~
iD

1981 Dy NEA lno

9-C

RIDENOUR GAS SERVICE
CHESTER, OHIO

"Would you mind not c!Jeefmg every lime
so'!"ething is said about the NFL players still
bemg on strike.".

1 WEST MAIN
•

Present.

675-5789

Sand H1ll Rd . Pt, Pleasant. WV

:·
•'

...
:.':.•·•
"'•
••
...
~

..

~.

•

;t

BUY ·A MASTER MEMBERSHIP FOR ONLY r:.;.
:,!
S29 AND GET AN ASSOCIATE
;t·•
:&gt;•• M~MBERSHIP FREE. CALL FOR DETAILS. t;.
•.· HURRY - OFFER ENDS .OCTOBER 31st ·r~;.
f:;

...

•I

..
~·~

·•
•,.

PHONE
446-0699

•. '
.....

360 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS

~~m.
~~~'f)]~'})®
"

® ®

@~ ®@ ~ !@;
'

OCTOBER
CAR CAR·E
SPECIALS!

than ever

ootore

We're Old friends you can 11usl wtlh a
can trusl
PARTS PLUS!

~

WAGNER

~ALE88o

FAST nusH
SEALER

38 e

ANTI RUST

AFTER 50' REBATE

SEALED BEAMS

::~~ ........ $157
H6014 ......

REMANUFACTURED

UNIT~ ,.

LARGE BEARING
UNITS

$15!~ $19!!

WIPER BlADES

't"

REBATE

HALOGEN BEAMS

~~IlL~
11111111
J\Uf·

~=''

.. ~

IIIII

'" 11 \'·''" \

•

" i ~ •'
11ll

"---:::::!'--- r.

12 MONTH I 12 1000 MILE WAAR~NTY

-&gt;ANCa

AFTER

LJmtl4

WATER PUMPS
SMALL BEARING

$1

99

WIPER BLADES
(25 series)

HH5001
HH5006 ..

HH465t
HH4656 ..

$399

$4. 75

AFTER

'3"
REBATE

llmh 4

VALVOLINE MOTOR OIL

111 l out! St .

SUBS{'HII'TION Ut\T ES
1\.y Carrier or \totor Route
$.1 2'J

On c M o nl h

$5 45

Ye.tr

INSTANT REBATE 2.40
MAIL·IN REBATE 5.00

• After '1" Rebate

One WC'ek
On ~

CHARLIE llll Y

WED ., OCT. 7, 1987
EVENING

PomPJO:V, Ohio 45ilJ9,

S65 00

SINGLE COPV

•

FIRESIDE INN

,lddll'SS &lt;h.mgrs

25 Cc n1s

.

By United Press International
The New York; Knicks sig ned
free-agent for ward Sidney Green
to an offer sheet. The team also
announced former guard Walt
Frazter wtll JOin I he MSG net
work broadcas t team as an
anal:, st

We re a !;JDUP ol mdepenclent auto pans Slores who have
joined together under the Pans Plus banner-and now- ~
can saw mot"e oo a bigger selectiOn ol qua11ry aulo pans

( US ilS 1-15·960 )
1\ Dnhoion of Multimedia, ln u.

PRICE

,.

Knicks sign Green

WE'RE "PARTS PLUS"

The Daily Sentinel

M&lt;•mbc&gt;l L' n!IPd PJ P!;I~ lniP r n ;.~tlon.ll .
I nJ.1ncl f),I \I V P I('S~ A SSOCIJIJO n d nd I hC'
Oh io N('" sp.tp{'r Assodat 1on Natlon.1l
Ad vC'It ts tn g Rf' pl'f'SI:'nt ntl\'f' Bra nhHm
NE'\\ spa pC't Sal C'S 73:-1 Thh d A ~c n uC'

K !l pm
\ T llllr

MOUNT VERNON, Ohto
(UPil - Bluffton College tat l
back Greg Gll chrease and Wil
mmgton College hnebacker Don
Stzer were selected as NAJA
Dtstrlct 22 offensive and defens ive players of the week, respec
lively, for their efforts Saturday
G!ichrease, a 6-foot. 190- pou~d
junior · from Lima gained 163
ya rds in 24 r ushmg attempts. His
14-yard touchdown run was one
of six rushes over 10 yards 1n
Bluffton's 44-0 victory over Defianc e Coll ege.
Bluffton. rank ed 15 in NAJA
Dlvtsion II last week , tmproved
tis record to 4-0.

revert back to those games (wtlh
and won mne of them , with
To ronto), the way we pla yed
De troit wmning the other two
II ts no acc ident Detrott' s them. " he satd c'Bu t you nev er
know whaf's going to happen.
pttchi ng is ltned up the way 11 ts,
"I'm confident. We're coni!·
either
Alexander's !ii"st two
viet ones wtth Detroit after being dent We lhtnk we'te gomg to
obta tned from Atlanta were wtn. but I 'm sure Mmnesota feels
agamst Mmnesota Jack Morns the sam e wa y."
Minnesota's bigges t edge ts
has never los t to the Twins In
reliever Jeff Reardon The Tlg·
Minnesota and is 18 fi overall
agamst his home state baseball. ers do not ha ve a stopper m thetr
tea m. Thos e are two good reabullpen
" What we hav e to do is hold
sons the two are openmg against
them to three or four runs. which
Minnesota in the Metrodome.
I thtnk our pitchers are capable
Delrott right -hander Walt Terof
doing," Reardon said. "It's
rell completes Tigers Manager
gomg
to be awfully tough to shut
Sparky Anderson 's plan of s ta rt ·
them
out.
mg no left-handers against Min·
"My toughest out is Darrell
nesot a Ter rell ts openin g in
Evans."
Reardon said ' 'I know
Ti get Stadtum, where was 13 2
him
from
the Nationa l League.
thts season mcludmg two vtc to·
1'hts"year I think he got a hit on
rles over the Twins
every plt ch I throw •·
Even Kelly co ncedes Del ro1 t
Anderson hm tcd he ma) not
~ hould be favor ed in the senes,
.
walk
Kent Hrbek, who hit .390
although he also adds it does n't
wtth
four
hom&lt;' runs a nd 11 RBI
bother him
off
DetrOit
pitching this season,
''They won 98 ga mes and we
wtth
runnPrs
on base and first
won 85," Kelly satd. "That's a
open
base
difference of 1:1. so I'd say they
" I kind o!. worry about Gary
should be favored And they have
Gaettl,''
Anderson said " He's a
more experience than we do But
hard
-nosed
player. I ltke him."
that do es n' t matt er now .·· ·
Kelly
satd
hts team's httting ts
Mmn esota 's bt gges t edge ts tt s
not hts mam concern
league-best 56-25 record at home,
"Pttching Is the most impor
which bothe rs Detroit's cleanup
tant
part of th e ga me." he satd
hitter ver;, htlle
"If
we
get good ptt ching. E'very "Well." Alan Trammell said.
thm
g
ts
gomg to follow If we
·we won four out of six here so we
don't
get
good pitching . "
feel comfortable - but not
overconfident. •
··Jf they're the best club.
they're go ing to win 11," Ander·
son sa id "And if we're the bes t
club, we're going to win tl There
ts n' t gomg to be any letdown or
a ny thing lik e that "
Detr011 pl ayed a demanding
· sc hedule a t the end of the season,
lac ing AL East rival Toronto

IAJUI~ ,

o.

of week. n~med

AL sertes opener

~un fo randS! n 11 !&gt;I t

Od i I IIi 11 m

N~A players

seven times in 1he fina l 11 g&lt;Jmcs.
" I thmk 1he~ 're gomg to be

r~

l'iun Oi'l

( 1\ , ,,

.n, 1./\ ltums

ahead 5-2.
" If there was on e out , I might
have taken hiril out , but don't
forget I'm ktnd o!_ short for
pitchmg with only seven able·
bodi ed pitchers, " Herzog sa id.
"He hit a curve ball pretty good.
He didn't mash it. but he found a n
open spot "
With the score tied 2-2. Dan
On essen hit a one-out doubl e off
loser Rick Reuschel in the St.
lmuls sixt h McGeeohil to the hole
and Gi ant s shortstop Jose Uribe
made a fantastic stop, b.ut a bad
throw to get Driessen, who was
off the bag.
" I didn't have a ny chance at
first," Uribe sa id " Ii was a
Iough play My only shot was at
second "
The error allowed Driessen to
adva nce safe!:, to thtrd. Terry
Pendleton htt a one-run single,
Curt Ford 's smgle load ed the
b ases and with two outs. Ma·
thews dropped a two-run single ;n
le ft.
"I threw htm a good pitch. just
not good enou gh,el said Reuschel,
who gave up five runs on ntne hit s
in s tx innings. "They found the
holes today I did have good
stuff "
Candy Maldonado drove In San
Franctsco's fmal run with a
g round-rure double in the eighth,
th en Wtll Clark flied out leaving
the bases loaded. The Giants
were 1 for 8 with runners tn
scoring position
"We were· a httle unlu~·
said Giants Manager Roger
Craig "Just plain unlucky That
bali (Ma_ldonado's) cost us a run
The ball was in the stands a nd the
fan touched It there. That made a
bi g difference. But we battled
back and had a chance. Tltis isn' t
a one- game series."

Tuesday . but a solid pcrfor·
m ance from John Tudor agatnst
,""lave Dravecky in today 's Gamt&gt;
~. a r. off-day Thursday and a IIItle
lu ck wit h Cox cou ld lea ve the
Cardmals m good shape .
"Da nny IS a gamer and If he
could ha ve taken the ball, he
would have," Herzog satd.
"When they called me and said
he couldn' t move his head left. or
right, I knew he wouldn't be able
to pitch. We' ll. just ha ve to see
how he progresses
·'Under the circumstances, for
Greg to pitch 101 pitches and
keep us m the ga me until the
eighth mmng is an outstanding
effort."
Herzog was also pleased with
Mathews' two-ou t , two-runsingl'e
that capped a three -run .sixth
inning and put the Cardmals

•

K ~Jprn

4orl t n In 1tn nlf••r ~tu• ••l

Berry's Wor~d

Nt' "' Orlt uns
Pltlshur~::t•

I l l lt• I Ua \lnntla~"'utd .tml

&lt;hurl•.., Ar.:t•t•,

( hii 'UKII .~1 fltiladt•lphla I
TUIUJI!&amp; Bay .I I, Ot•lrult !7
lndlamapulls li, RulfJilu fi

"'i nlt'r~WUI E• lti 1-)

\\1.,1 I• fft•r .. "n ~~~ tKI ' '·" h 5 ll.unltt,nn
~4 ' " Ml.lmi 141 iii
fi Ill! 1 ( llllln n.tll
~1u r ilmunt
\t•r ...tll)\.., 1111d ( llllin ud l

nd

NA1JONAI . t' OOTMII Lh\C.t 't'

llhbdnn Ill

hurg'!!rtlt

Dardar, lln1•111an

t

Pro results

Dh lslt111ll
lh l(iu11 "i
I ( nlumhu .. f' runldln Jh·i~hts II ~~1 . !
IA•.\IIIKiull, I ( Hh unhu,.;" ath•r.'lun .l7 IMI
I f •,lnmhu"' l\fHrlin 12 ltl, 5 ( ulurnhu ...
ll.•)lalt'!Oi II lll 4• l'ort.'lmouth ~ 11 . 00, i
( ulumhus MMtnn l'rt~nklln n 01,, tl

ICt'J:"i lln II
I Hannllml ltht•r Ill ill, ~ lrnntun
~ ~~~
I l.ltklnft \allov I ~ II~. I (t h I
I USIIIH Inn nn d ltl,\tllll E/111 .!!\ .Ill t'UI h , 6
St I l u lr~' Ill• · !'I' ·n 't ( ohunltu :o~ 8rl~t;"'"
27 IWI M PuuwrtJf 1\lt•llf'&gt; ;tjj UO
Rt•Kiun I!
I (1m mrn•ll fo' ur,.,t l'ark Uno, '!
l' urt,.,nHJUih "''"'' .Ill JU :t llamlltlln
l~ttlln lfliKI, I 1\rtlllk\tllt• ~"1 -17
I
" \'illlnrt u n &lt;CJ\Irt lluu&gt;ot 24 ;;tl 6 I ,u•t.
~I), JMI , 7 \l11rru" l.lttlt 1\llantl IH 541 tl
sprln~••ltll\t• nlun lll rl~~; 111 lltl
Ul\ l~l nn 1\'
Kt ~ iun 15
I tl1•l Hulunuutl h frl rl011111 1nl"nu.ml
I n l um l ~1.. ,\, .uh · m~. 'ti ill 1 111 h, .1
R, Iton• ~ ti [~1. I ~ 4MI ( ortl\'t' IJ,IWMIII
llr\ .1111 !:l 00 ~ 1\tltlmnrt• l.iht •rt) t Tnlon
t! ~~~ ~ 0 tk IIIII ! 0 IJI , 4 (th'l lit .ath .tml
\m .111dU ( lt•.art r11 k, Ill 1~1 1 at II
tt1 ~:Inn IIi
I I.IU:!Millf'\allt \ ~.j 110 .l l\lll'tltr"'

"alvt tl d~·rt•n'llw

-

L\lurlin

rtllln'-"' (lnf'l lnur tthun ... t(tJOllil;r rnr l ht
rf'J:illnlll plol)nfr!oi) ln~tol v ln ~ l t•am~ In

:"Iii\\

uniform s

•
In

Twins host Tigers

lht rt •glun

Fishermen net profits. ____
._
-. .

By RICHARD LUNA
UPI Sports Writer
ST LOUIS (UP!) -The twllch
in Danny Cox's neck is nagging
Whit ey Herzog.
Cox was scratched as the
Cardinals starter Tue~ay in the
openmg ga me of t he Nattonal
League Champtons hlp Series
agains t the San Francisco
. Giant s St Louis Manager Herzog chose to start rookie Greg
Mathews. who allowed three
run s on four hil s In 7 1-3 Innings
and slapped a two-run single to
hft the CardmaJ S to a 5-3 vtctory.
Cox ts taking heat treatme nts
for the stiffness on the left side of
hts neck and, depending on how
he responds. he could be rea dy
for Came 3 of the bes t-of-seven
ser ies • Friday mg hl in San
Franctsco.
" If Cox can' t pttch Friday.
(Joe) Magrane will go," Herzog
sai d. ''I' m leaning to Ma thews
for Su nday ."
Mat hews' performance took
so me pressu re off the Cardinals,
who elected to go with JU St.etght
pitchers on the 24 -man roster in
favor of posttlon play ers because
of mjuries to Jack Clark, Jtm
gives - the safe sign. Cardinal shortstop Ozzie
Lmdeman and Wilhe McGee.
Smith is on Clark's arm and his lead foot is still
Herzog was forced to use Todd
short of the bag. Clark was left on second when the
Worrell and Ken Dayley in relief
following hitter, Buh Brenly, struck out. (UI'I)

Sub ~ cllbcl s not

deslrlnl! t o pay the C":l r
!let m" y remit tn adva nce d iH'CI to
T h P O.t ll y Sl•n t lncl on ,, 3 6 o r 12 month
bn ~l~ C rN:Itl \\1 11 bC' g lvr n f'Ar t' l(tr

Nlch

MUFFLERS

$1995
,t,RVIN ALUMINIZEO STEEL MUFFLEftS lAST
TWICE AS LONG ,t,S Q,t,LV,t,N\Z£0 I!ITEEL NUFFL£AS
1

" et&gt;k

No s ub:s~ J ip t 10ns bv mntl p~ 1 mltuxt In
UI Cfi S WIH'rC' h o m r {'U III('l SC't V\C(' IS
av.llltlbl c

G&amp;J PARTS PLUS AUTOSTORES

1\tail S ub~' rlptl ons

ln!ilrh• Mt•llf!" Co unt)'
1:l W£&gt;£'kS

Sl7 29

2G WN'ks

S34 O(j

52 W1·r ks

, S66 56

1

OutSidr Mt:lgs County

13 Week s

..

.. $18 20

26 Wl'ckr.

SJ ~ 1()

~2

$67 60

\VO('ks

Parts Plus Autoatortrs are •lnlle,...llentlr Ow nell' and hltt the right to determine their own Hlllng prlcts

GALLIPOLIS
·
240 Th1rd An.
1704 Easternlvo.
44~-1113
446-4204
Oaoly 8 a.m. toll 5•10 p.m. Da~y I a.m. till 7·00 p.m.
Sal. I a.m. 6U 4,00 p 111.
Sat. a a.m. til 4 p.m.

PT. PLEASANT
SIS Main St . 266 Ja&lt;ksan Avo.
67S-tS22
67!-27!t
a .... till s,oo p.m.

POMEROY MASON
119 W 2IHI Ave.
992-2139
8 . ... ~·l,.t!P·~III7~0ltS

THRU 10/ 13/ 87 AT PARTICIPATING PARTS PLUS A\JTOSTORES

'

G

~".-

....•.,
....

\

�.

'

•

.

I
-j,. ...'.-

••

Page-4-:. The

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. October 7. 1987

Redwomen
win another

Thompson
•
gomg
.pro

b RIO GRANDE
Rio ·
Gr11nde's volleyball team upped
its ~andlng In the Mid-Ohio
Conferen ce In three of tour
games Tuesday at Lyne Center.
Led by Lisa Schmeltzer's defensive prowess, the Redwomen
bested Malone 15-9 and 15·3
before falling to the visitors, 7-15.
Rio Grande rallied from the Joss
to overturn an early Malone lead
in t)le fourth game and .won, 15-9.
It was the Redwomen 's.second
pairing this season with the Lady
Pioneers. · On Sept. 24, Rio
Grande defeated Malone in three
of four games at ·Canton.
'
SERIES-While
"Malone hustled better than
bow ling In league play at the
any other team we've played this
Pomeroy Lanes '.on Wednes·
season," Rio Grande Coach
day, September 9th, Larry
Patsy F:lelds commented after
Sayre had a 268 game and a 630
Tuesday's match. The Lady
series.
Pioneers .are coached t his season
by Debbie Davidson and and WaUach has surgery
co-captained by senio r Sherry
By United Press International
Montreal E xppos third base_Gifford and jUnior Cathy
Bennett.
man Tim Wallach underwent
In addition to 17 kills, Rio su'r gery Tuesday for removal of
Grande's Schmeltzer, a 5-4"' bone chips in his left ankle.
junior from Lancaster, recorded Wallach, who batted .298 with 26
nine solo blocks against Malone. homers and a club-record 123
Setter Kris Cochran netted eight , RBI, should be ready for spri ng
FINISH FOURTH IN LEAGUE PLAY- The
Kneeling left to right are Van Klein, Shawn ' kills, Chris Williams had · 12, traini ng.
Meigs Marauders golf team finished fourth in this
Lipscomb and Jamey Little. Standing left to right Shelly Hoop served up eight In
year's_Tri• Valley Athletic Conference standings.·are Scott Barton, Matt Baker, Todd Powell, Kevin addition to three·solo blocks and
Taylor and ;Joe Smith.
.&lt;' •
Laren Wolfe had seven kills .
Bible College. On Saturday , they
In Ihe third game, Fields face Wooster, Bluffton and possisubstitutel] Jennl Couch forCoch- _ bly Walsh at Wooster. Bluffton·is
ran as setter. Coc hran and Couch . currently leader in the Western
earned ptalse 'from Fields as ~B~u~c~k:ey~e:._:c~on~f~e:re~n~c=e~._ _ _ _
Meigs' golf team ended Tri Wellston 14, Miller 4 and Federal
The Meigs ·Golf Team and setters, a position s he said is the' ~
Valley Conference competition, · Hocking with bne.
Coach John Kr awsczyn ex- key to the game.
"Our serving was off tonight,
. Individual league scoring ho- pressed their appreciation to Bill
finishing In fourth place in the
so
we' ll have to work on that ,"
league standings. ·
nors again went to Chris Knod - ·Childs of the Jaymar Golf Club
Fields
said, adding concern over
After six matches, Belpre was .erer of Trimble with a 38.3 stroke for their support throughout the
the
Redwomen's
hectic schedule
crowned league champion with average. Other first team All 1987 season.
of
last
week,
wpich
concluded
an accumulative score of 35 League selections were Brian
with
a
trip
to
the
Concord
poin ts. They were followed by McPherson of Federal Hocking
Invitational
and
contpetition
Trimble and Nelsonville-York with 40.80, Matt Ba ker of •Meigs
with two nationally-ranke d
who tied for second place with 30 - 41.50, Dave Brownin g oid
teams.
points each. Then came Meigs Belpre- 42.83 and Heath Clem"Anytime it's a conference
witlt.23, Vinton County i.•lth 18, ons of Nelsonvi lle- York- 44.00.
RIO GRAJ:&lt;DE - Storrny win, though. we' ll take it," she
weather Tuesday forced the . commented.
•
·
rescheduling of the Rio GrandeNow 15-6 overall, the RedwoMusk ingum soccer game at Rio men travel to Cincinnati on
Grande.
Thursday to compete agajnst
The Meigs High SChool Student American L,egioh Hall, also in · The teams played 25 minutes Thomas More and Cincinnati
Council have planned a parade Pomeroy:-There they will disem- before lightning caused the reand 'bonfire in conjunction wit h bark and march to the parking lot sc heduling, . explained Redmen
Homecoming activities prior to beside Marauder Stadium where Coach Phil'Anderson.
The game will be played again
Friday night 's contest with the there will be a bonfire . and the
Vinton County Vikings.
members of the football team on Thursday, Oct. 29, at 3 p.m. at
A spokesperson for the group will be called upon to voicetheir Rio Grande.
The Rio Grande soccer team
sta tes that all interested in comments on Friday's upcoming
will see act ion again Thursday at
participating w111 meet at the clash.
"T" in Middleport at 6: 30 p. m.,
The Marauder band and Meigs Bluffton and hosts Heidelberg in
Thursday evening. AI 7, the ' Cheer leaders will be on hand a nd a 2 p.m. Saturday game at
parade will get underway and all loyal fans are asked to attend• Stanley L. Evans Memorial
march to the Pleaser's Restau- this pregame ra lly to help get the Field.
rant in Pomeroy where they will Marauders fired up for a very
board busses and ride to the crucial game.
Connor named coach

MHS golfers ~inish fourth in loop

· Wednesday, October 7 • .1987

---Local briefs --....

By U.niled Press International
Ray Thompson. a 6-foot-5
guard from Summit, Ill. ; said he
will s ign a nalionalletterofintent
to play for the University oflowa.
ThompS"OH, who averaged ' 24
points and 10 rebounds for Argo
High SChool last year, is one of
the nation's top prep prospects.

TIME TO CHECK
THAT FURNACE!

I•

t~eu11Wee

'

'••

Junior high football results
By JJM SOUI1;BY
Meigs' Seventh GradE&gt; football
team shut out Belprj"'s Golden
Eagles 38 to 0 as Ihey oulgained
the opposition 223 yards to 46
while compiling only three first
downs.

Shawn Hammons, with 163
yards in 10 carries, was the
leading· ground gainer as he
scored three times for the Little
Marauders. Mike Welsh, with 57
yards in 9 tries and John Bentley
who gained 10 yards fn three
attempts accou nted for the other
two six pointers. Hammons and
Bentley each had two two point
conversions to their credit.
Mike Cremeans led the defense
in solo tackles with four,plus one
sack, followed by Matt Pierce
with three tackles, .Richard Sl!'·
wart with two and a sack,
Vincent Reiber with two and
Bentley and Jim Pullins with one
each.
·
· Also recording a shutou.t, the
Marauder Eig hth Graders
downed Jackson's rronmen 28 to
0 behind the hard running of
Terry McGuire who gained 125
yards in 15 carries and scored
two of Meigs' touchdowns. Frank
Blake and Jeremy Rupe each
scored for Meigs as ,they gained

59 and 30 yards respectively .
J e remy Phalin picked up 32 on
the ground, Kevin Musser gained
9 and Philip Hovatter 7.
McGuire and Quart er back
Darin Logan attempted four r------------:-----1
passes. compte! ing one for 35
yards to Shawn Hawley. Chuck
Mash, ~1mis Edmlnston, Haw ley and McGuire were each
crediled wlth a fumbl e recovery
a nd Phalin intercep ted one
e nemy aeria l for 27 yards.
~3 1 JACKSON PIKE- Rt 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
McGuire punted once for, 47
BACK
TO THEATRE DAYS I
yards . Musser and McGuire had
• SPECI AL PRICE ADMISSIONS .,
. two ~o lo tack les each! and Steve
ADU LTS $3.50- CHILDREN $2 . 50
Caruthers, Hawley and Joe
SATURDAY &amp; SUNOA'Y MATINEES
AL L SEATS $2.50
Mc E lroy had one apiece. Car uthBARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY S2.00
ers a nd Hawley each had a sack
on the opposing signal caller.
~CTOBER 2 thru
In conjunction with the Eighth
FRIDAY thru TI1URSOAY!
Grade Squad, Caoch Blake has
announced a schedule ~ han ge. •
Th e Lillie Marauders with host
Warren's Eighth Grade team on
Saturday, October 24th at the
Meigs Junior High Stadium.
Game time will be 7 p. m, The
junior high coaching staff feels
that this will be a great .experience for the pla yers prior to
ent ering the Senior High program. A portion of the Marauder
Band will be on hand for' the
contes t.

!OJ

OCTOBER 30th •
NOVEMBER 2nd

PICKENS
HARDWARE

Squad has six calls Thursday

MASON, W. VA.

I
1987

.•'

Closed for holiooy Monday .

Meigs County Office of Litter Control ·
992-6360

With Coupon, Limit 4

P.OP

,,,,t.
99t

f/64

..

'S

GULF

$159

.

Member F.D.I.C.

OFFER GOOD
OCT. 8 THRU 15,

15th Street
New Haven, W. Va.
882·2135

1987 .

'The Better Bank''

w•'"

-OCJ+

We Always Knew People
From Meigs County Were
Above ~verag,!
..

Carleton Ch u~ch , wt\Jch will be
having homeco_mlng this Sunday,
is located on Kingsbury Road In
Pomeroy, not in Syracuse.

•

•..

Our most popular girl's lOK
Yellow Gold Class Ring for
only $149.95. This golden
opportunity is for a liQlited
time only.
·

"

SALE ENDS NOVEMBER 30, 1987

••

...•

~

, ..Survey data shows 71%
of Ohioans read a daily
newspaper in the past
· week.*

lOK YELLOW GOLD!

Our survey shows more
than 83% of the people in
Meigs County rea~ The
•
Daily Sentinel **

The Daily Sentinel
We Deliver
Adverti~ing

·.

lnfcnmation

Call 992-21 56

,,,,

.
.'

'Market Opini.on R.e search

\

:
9187

··.

·------------

For Subscription or
Second Street
Mason, W. Va.
773·151514

. . ~·,";~!!t 1

lr;;;:::::~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~=j

~

I

.

~··~·0

•
2212 Jacbon Avenue ..
Point Pleuant, w. Va.
675-1121

I
li ·

l-

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Vera
Stewart, Cheshire; Gladys
Welsh, Albany; Paul Montgomery, Langsville; "Timothy
William T.
Evans, R-acine;
Grueser, Middleport. ·
Tuesday Discharges -Glenna
Fetty, Opal Willison.
·

'

-I
J •

S1.14

Hospital news

$299

With Coupon

FREE GAS ADDA liVE
WITH FJLL UP
•

East Thlrd Sf., Dayton, died
Jamesat·Irwtn
Kimes Jr .. 64, of
Sunday
his residence.
Born in Middleport on Dec. 23.
1922, he was a son of the late
Frank Kimes Sr. and Neva
Win egar Kimes who resides in
South Charleston, W.Va. He was
a forema n at the Elder-Beerman
. Furniture Warehouse in Dayton,
and was a n army veteran of

SHELL ANTIFREEZE

PEOPLES BANK

1

f.

Correction

10 ( .c(Fi~tl POUND

88&lt;

..

JamesKimes,Jr.

With Coupons, No Limit

ALL DEll ITEMS

PREMIUM 10W30

I

•substantial Penally For Ea~ly Wlthdraw11

Wlth Coupon, Limit 4

I
I

I
I
I
I
I

ADOLPH'S
o·AIRY VALLEY

CALL OUR NEW ACCOUNTS DEPARTMENT
FOR DETAILS!

6 PK. CANS

I
I
I
I
I

CHICKEN PAniE

-~

DEPOSIT ~

'89&lt;

FREE COFFEE WITH
PURCHASE OF 59( DANISH .

\

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

SAVE 30¢ I

~+~+o·r:/·
\
Speci~tl o"f the We~.k ·
·~·-

FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:

WE HAVE
-A SPECIAL
RATE ON
95DAY
.
CERTIFICATES
OF
.

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

I ~.

I

AVAILABILITY LIMITED
Deadline for Registration
· October 9th .

ALL 2 LITER POP

J

Area deaths

''

.

Daily stock prices

.

;,

Union Avo. at Rt. 7

DISCOUNT COUPON

Announcements ·

·Homecoming rally planned

By United Press International
Mark Connor, for mer pitching
coac h for the New York Yan kees,
was named baseball coac h at the
Un lversity of T enne sseeKnoO&lt;ville.

License issued

Two fined in Middleport court

J.::=====::;=====

Soccer game
rescheduled

Meigs County
court news
\.

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

"SEE US FIRST"
STOVE PIPE
L--FURNACE
FILTERS
t.--ELBOWS
t.---FURNACE
CEMENT

.w eather

shots are QVal'lable
...

'·

L-- GALVANIZED

Court news

The OJ!ily Sentinel-Page-S

· . Five defendants were fined
South Central Ohio
A marriage license has been
•
Slfowers
likely today, with
DZU
and 15 others forfeited bonds In
issued in Meigs County Probate
rI
the court ot Mayor Richard highs between 50 and 55. Mostly
Court to Hansen Bryce Buckley,
cloudy tonight, with a chance ·of
Seyler Tuesday night.
In Meigs County . Common 23, Pomeroy , and Pamela Dawn
The flu season is about to begin and again this year the Meigs
, Fined were Robert Hatfield, showers and a low in Ihe mid 30s. . Pleas Court action, RKE Federal
Riebel, 21, Pomeroy.
County Health Department will be administering flu vaccine
.
.
Rutland, $45 and costs, speed, Mostly sunny Thursday, with C.red it Union has been awarded
The vaccine will be available for 50 cents to senior citizens and
$I68 and costs. reckless opera· highs tn·the mid 50s .
$7,755.76 from Dan C. Heslep.
disabled individuals a·nd $1 for children and the general public.
The probabillty of precipitation; William Craft, Mlllford , W.
A motion for shock proballon
For children three to 13 years of age, two shots will be given,
Va., $63 and costs, unsafe vehl: tion Is 60 percent today, 30 for JuliA. Dailey ha s been denied !.===========~
spaced one month apart. Levy funds are used to purchase the
cle, $63 and costs, failure to · percent tonight and near zero by the court.
vacCine.
·
GOOD USED
transfer _license; Melinda Craft, Thursday.
Dismissed were the cases •of
The 87-88 vaccine protects · against the A-Taiwan, AWinds will be from the west at Farmers Bank 'and Savings Co.
Millford, $63 and costs, no
WASHERS, DRYERS
Leningrad, and B-Ann Arbor strains of flu .
operators license; James MI- 10 to ·20 mph today and from the against Roger M. Davidson;
Immunization ln accordance with the Ohio Department of
REFRIGERATORS, TYs
chael, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, northwest at 10 to 20 mph tonjght.
Norman Neece agaslnt Southern
Health recommendations, will begin in mid-October.
Ohio
Extended
Forecast
expired plates ,' $63 and costs,'
Ohio Coal Co. and James L
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES
Senior citizens will be immunized on Thur~day,Qct .15, from 9
Friday through Sunday
operating under suspension;
Mayfield, adminstrator or the
to noon and I to 4 p.m. at th.e Senior Citizens Center .. .
Fair weather Friday, with a Bureau of Workers CompensaDavid Dillard, Raci ne, $370 and
The general public wlll be immupized on Oct. 21 at the Meigs
costs, DUI, $63 and costs, expired chance of s howers Saturday and tion; Barbara Jeanette Lanier
County Heallh Department, 9 a.m. to .noon, a nd 1 to4 p.m., and if ·,· plates, $63 and costs, under Sunday, Highs will range from 55 Cullen against .Terry Ly nn
some vaccine remains, will be offered again on Oct. 26, same
to 65 Friday. climbing into the 60s Cullen; State of • W.Va. and
suspension.
hours.
62 7 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
Forfeiting bonds were Gerald Saturday and Sunday . Overnight Margaret Pierce agalnstEimo S.
Donahue, RD, Pomeroy, $44, lows will be in the 30s early Pierce.
PH. 446·1 699
speed; Jefferey Walt , Greens- Friday and ranging from the
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.
boro, N. C., $46 speed; Shirley upper 30s t9 the middle 40s
Two defendants were fined and seven others forfeited bonds
Gerlac h, Huntington, $46 speed; _ Saturd ay and Sunday mornings .
in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Tina Hill, Racine, $43. assured
Fined were John T. Oller, Cheshire, $15 and costs, speed, and
cleard distance; Paul Stanly,
Don Lovett, Middleport, $25 and costs, disorderly manner. $25
--- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---Albany, $47 speed;
Carolyn
VALASSIS BLACK AND WHITE
II dton ( f 0MY7
and costs, open container.
Shuler, Middleport, $43, lm-' Hymn sing
Forfeiting bonds were Terry J . McNickle, Racine, Donald W.
proper bac king, $50, no financ ial
There wil l · be a hymn sing
McCune, Charleston, and Gerald T. Scott, Gallipolis, $41 each,
responsibllly; Timothy Spires,
Sunday,
October 11, at 7 p.m. at
speed; Kimberly A. Batey, Middleport, $45, speed; Roy Boggs,
Langsvllle, $44, speed; Mathew · the Hazel Church located beMiddleport, $100, disorderly manner; Anthony W. Shamblin,
Hensley, Tuppers Pl~ins, $46 tween Portland and Lon g Bot~acine, $450, DWI, $ill, left of center; Mary E. Jones, Pomeroy,
speed; Shirley Landers, Syratom, off SR 124.·
$300, theft.
cuse. $50, no financial responsiSpeaker will be Rick Weaver
bility; Charles Jones, Pomeroy,
and singers will be the Jordon
$50, speed; Homer Cline, Galllpoand Weaver Gospel Singers .
.
lis, $46, speed; Brett Carl, Rd.
Pastor Edsel Hart inv ites the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six .calls
Pomeroy, $47, speed; Dale Hart
public to a ttend .
Tuesday; -Tuppers Plains at 7:51a.m. to Silver Ridge Road for
Racine, $48, sp~ed; Timothy
Gladys Chassee to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Rutland at 9:38
Shoemaker, Ravenswood, $46, Chill-soup supper.
a.m. to Route 124 for Paul Montgomery to Veterans Memorial
speed.
The fifth annual Bisseli chiliHospital; Racine at 10:55 a. m. to Pleasant VIew Road for Tim
soup
.supper will be held SaturEvans .to Veterans Memo r ial Hospital; Rutland at 12: 19 'p.m. to
day,
October 10, beginning at
a three-vehicle accident on Main St.; no Injuries reported;
No
one
hurt
6:30
p.m
.
Tuppers Plains at 3:42 p.m. assisted SEOMS and transporte d
Entertainment
wlll be proin accident
Doreen Marshall from an auto accident at the intersection of
vided
by
the
Bissell
Brothers
County Road 56 and U_.S. 33 to St. Josep h's Hospital; also
., No injuries were reported as Gospel Group and Glenn Abels
transported Josle Bonds from the same accident to
the result of a two car accident Music Makers. Guests may bring
Camden-Clark Memor(al Hospital; Middleport at 8:33p.m. to
·Tuesday on Pomeroy' West Main dessert or soft drink.
Park St. for Shane Ingle to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
Street the Pomeroy Police Department reported.
. Ruth Hill. Racine, was travel(As oll0:30 a.m.)
"tn g east on West Main Street
The offices of Planned Par,enthood of Southeast Ohio, 236'h
Provided by
East Main St., Pomeroy, will be closed Monday in observance of
when her car was struck in the
Bryce and Mark Smith
rear by a vehicle driven by Laura
Columbu s Da y. Offices .wlll reopen Tuesday morning at 8: 30."
of Blunt
...... Ellis &amp; Loewl
Frye, Rutland. Frye 'ras cited to.
court on charges of assured clear Firm
Price
distance.
Am Electric Power.. ....... ... .27}',
AT&amp;T .... ... .. ........................ 32%
Seeks. divorces
Ashland Oil ............... .. ....... 66';4
BUY THREE
Bob Evans Farms ... ... ........ 20'h
World War II.
Pearl Games
Besides his mother, he is
Filing for divorces in Meigs
ooOHEHrrER.l"Ml'""'"a'
GET
ONE FREE!
Charming Shoppes .............. 22%
~ ~'t I•IIJLTI-PAQ( OF REGULAR
I
TO
m:tt.IVI: '!{IIJA COUPON C.OOO fOR AriiH 2lii!A OOAD,\
County Common Pleas Court are City Holding Co ........ ..... .. ...... 32
OR SUGAR FREE CANADA DAY
ilRY liiNC(~ -l( , ~.-.~~. THlS Clllolf'l.f110 fOil~ -LOIIG WIIH
Pearl Garnes, 77, of Route '1 survived by one sister, Betty -. ·Tony a ' Proffitt, Rpclne, against Federal Mogul... .. .............. .43%
GINGER ALE
IHRU (31CAICIMAL IJP'C SYio1eOLS fl\0111 EIIH£RCJ,IMA. Dill
TO RET~ILER for eacn coupon whltll com·
GIIIGEA ~lt OA Sl.llAIIII\il GtNGEA AU r111Hl 2 trr~ ~111 .
Ewington, died Tuesday at her Noble, and one brother, Joe Michael Proffitt, Portland; Gre- Goodyear T&amp;R ..................70}'
~~~~! wrm lhe \elll'6 ~llhr s O!!tl w~ich \'00
lllOHG WITH 'I'OIJR DIIIGINA! CASH RE!lrSTE~ AEtEIPI WITH
8
acupl as cor aoenl. twda Cry WI• pay voo
Nil~ f'Arcu;rRCUo 10
Kimes, both of South Charleston, gory Alan Shamblin , Racine.
residence.
me lace value plus·~ hind~~- r.o~somm
CANADA DAY GINCiEA o\LE FREE OFFER
Heck's Inc ........................... 3%
W.Va.;
and
three
nephews,
Mark
against
Kimberly
Carol
Ball
PiiY ilppltable !lepo51t and sale$ tu. Gash
p 0 Bo 1065
Born April II , 19,10 in Charlesvahlll liZOC. ln~OICH ShOWinQ PIJIChases Ol
Ma;..., ~ MN 5s:J.48
Key Centurion ............... .. ...38Y..
utlltiem stotk otilems represented by cou·
· ~-""'
·
ton , W.Va ., s he was adaugltterof Noble of Fort Worth , Texas, Jack Shamblin, Racine.
Lands'
End
.....
,
..
....................
24
pons must be sMwn 11pon requegt Not to llt tran,terreo. ~111neG OJ
PlEASE PI'IINT
Filing for a dissolution of
the late Mint Doolittle and Esther Noble and Joe Paul Kimes 11,
lt(lrl)jl)Ctd oner vOid wnere pro!llbtted, wrd, rMitriCted or tan~.
tw.4E - - - - - - - - An)l LISe or 1t&lt;1emp11on (lndudlng ~ng cu1 coupon&gt;l not cons~te~~tw~h
b\lth in the service.
marriage are Delores . Barber, Limited Inc........................ 33 %
Randolph Doolittle.
ttttse te1ms cons1i1Uits lraucl and may 'IOI&lt;IIR coupuns subrTlltted Fo1
.o.DOR""'~'=====---;;;~;;
Multimedia
Inc
...................
70V..
•
rtGemptK:m, und coupons w your acco~nt n~me and o\ddress to
err._
UPC CODE
Graveside services for Mr.
Reedsville, and Jerry Barber,
She was preceded In death by
Canada
Or~.
Dept5974.
El
Paso.
Texas
79!166
UP
OAT£'lrt.&gt;-M
..,1e _ __
Rax
Restaurants
..................
4
Ya
51
will
be
I
p.m.
Frida:y
at
·
Reedsville.
her husband, Walter Frederick Kimes
MaiCh aoo Win lllrt! Oela11s 'NI1tf!! 'l'llij Sh!Jp
llf&gt; __.__ ~ /J ~~\...{'
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire,
Granted divorces were Nelson Robbins &amp; Myers ................ lO Y..
Garnes and one brother.
D. Watson from Brenda J. Shoney's Inc . ......................... 28
169oo 405248
Surviving are six sons and two with Rev . Dwight Anderson
Wendy 's Inti........................ 9%
daughters, Denny W. Garnes, officiating. Arrangements are by Templeton Watson, and Greg
Ind .........•... ... ..23%
Rawling,Coats-Blower Funeral
Reed from Lisa ward Reed.
Portland, Ore., Glen W. Gar nes, Home,
There will be no calling
Sunbury, Ohio, Joseph W. hours at the funeral home.
Garnes, Dexter. Ohio, Bernard J .
Garnes. Seattle. Wash .. Walter
F. f;arnes, Dexter, Ohio, Delton
L. Garnes,. . Wilkesville, Mrs.
Albert (Reva ) Caldwell, St. Albans, W.Va., and Mrs. Lawrence
\ (Lula) GJimore, Wilkesville; 32
grandchildren and 37 great-·
grandchildren; three sis ters,
Odell Randolf, Ripley, W.Va.,
Hazel Rhodes, Bidwe ll , and Ruby
Taylor of Florida .
Services will · be conducted
FRIES ...... S1.64
Friday, 8 p.m. , McCoy -Moore
Funeral Home, with graveside
services at Garnes Cemetery,
Ripley, w. Va., Saturday at noon.
Rev. Char les Curry will officiate,
.
Friends inay ca ll at the funeral
home Friday from 6 p.m . until
"At tho End of the Po•roy-MaiOR Bridge
llme of services.
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2556

'

•

RECYC

Pomeroy- Middlepqrt, Ohio

ANR.

··

.. Telephone survey of 2,000 Meigs County residents taken (
/)
· November 1986 - January 1987 _ ·

•

�•
Page-~-The Daily Se,ntinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. October 7. 1987

.

. ..

,..,~~

.......

The Daily Sentinel- Page- _7

Wednesday. October 7. 19Sr

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

...

.

..

,~~

••

Fires-··
every45

about
States.

•
•• •
•

•

•

~

...

"'

.

••
•
••
• •

•.

'

' . . ··..

.. . .

•

.

.. ..

•'

.

.
.,.

-

~ ~

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

.'

:•

•• •

&lt;
••

.,
•

.

'

the•
·
..

•

'

..

'

•.

------ :
••

.: .. '

...

'

'

FRUTH PHARMACY

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY .

BANK:ONE~

. '

'

:;. ·

Fifteen thousc.od people u·hn care.
BANK ONE, I.THEN5. NA

•

t-------------------------+-------------------------~------~At~hen~s~O~n·~o~Me~m~~~F~DtC~------- :

FARMERS BANK

•'

THE DAILY SENTINEL
•

VILLAGE PHARMACY

POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

GRA-VELY TRACTOR SALES
AND SERVICE

MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT

MIDDLEPORT

'

~./

POMEROY

.

POMEROY

'

MIDDLEPORT

K&amp;C JEWELERS
. POMEROY

RACINE

FABRIC SHOP

POMEROY

POMEROY

CHESTER

••

c&gt;;

•'
'

.

•

i
'
•'

.
•
•
•

.'•
•
•.

MIDDLEPORT

GALLIPOLIS

RIDENOUR SUPPLY ·

POMEROY
'·

,.

RAWLINGS-COATS-BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME

'Bo-b&amp;vaMS
RESTAURANl

Just ~ few smiles from.,home!

;.

'

•

.•

•

•
•
•
•
'
.......

•

•

CHESTER
''

RIDENOUR .TV &amp; APPLIANCE .
CHESTER

POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT

DOWNIN(;-CHILDS '"" r
MULLEN-MUSSER INSURANCE

SHO~P

convenient. Now everybody
is gonna want to come here."
We sure hope so!

AIQng with the new improvements, you'll find the very best
love our new one. We offer a
whole new assortment of usual parts of the old place still heremeals. Yet, each is prepared the our smiling, friendly people.
Yet. despite our best efforts,
same careful. hoinestyle way.
"I'm glad the old staff is here. the regulars have one major
,_,
I'd hate to spend 40 years break· complaint. ·
"This new locatibn is too
ing in new people."
If you like the old menu, you'll

c 19ei BobEw ns, lnc

•

QUALITY PRINT

•

•

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY

KING BUILDERS

brigh
But·we
it

The regulars from the original
Bob Evans Steakhouse have
been singing the praises of our
ne_w Bob Evans Restaurant-in
their own unique way
"Food's just as good. But why'd
they go and make a whole new
menu? All I need is the usual."

'

POMEROY

JIM COBB
CHEV.-OLDS.·CAD.

BAUM LUMBER

'

992-5627 .

ACE HARDWARE

SYRACUSE

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
\ .

~

SHOE PLACE
MIDDLEPORT

HOME NATIONAL BANK

•

'

~----------------------~--------------------------~--~------------.-----~
hmfa!t hOU$~ MIDDLEPORT
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY . .·MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES ·
'

"'t's

•'

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS

PAT HILL FORD .

VALLEY LUMBER

•
•

51ATE FARM INSURANCE

...

POMEROY

.

MIKE SWIGER

. EWING FUNERAL HME

POMEROY

.

•

MGM FARM CITY
POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT
., .

•.

.

•.

•

•

'

'

�.

•

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel_

·Reibel-Buckley
The open-churc h wedd ing of
Pamela Pawn Ri ebel· and
Ha nsen Bryce Buckley will take
place Saturday at 6: 30 p.m. at the
Mulle n Me mori a l Bapti s t
Chu rch, 1520 Putnam Howe
Drive, Selpre. Music Will begin
at 6 p.m.
The Rev . Ma rk M cC!un~;,

\

Wednesday. October 7 ·'987

Pomeroy:-Middleport, Qhio

former pastor of the Middleport
Fi rs! Baptist Chu rc h, will perfor m th!!' doubl e r ing ceremony.
She is the daughter or Mr. and
Mrs. Jo hn D. Riebel. Sr ., Ba um
Addlt on, Po met·oy, and he Is ihe
so n of 'Mr. a nd Mrs. Roge r N. ·
Buckley, Texas Road , Pomeroy.
Mrs. Sharon Haw ley, organi st
a nd voca lis t will be accompanied
by Chris Rouse, pia nist. Miss
Robyn Pit zer will serve as maid '
or · honor a nd Miss Tammy

Mort on, ·Miss ·Lori. Louks. and
Miss MeliSsa Scarbrough will be
the brides maids. Flower girls wll
be J essslca Watson and Julie
Bailey .
.
Kev in Buckley will be his
brother' s best ma n. Groomsmen
will be Scott Robinett e, John
Ri ebel. Jr. and Char,les Massa r.
Ringbearer will be Chris BaiL
Mrs. Jo Ann Wt son will be at the
gues t book registry.
The reception ~til be held in

Wednesday, October 7, 1987

Homecoming

Cancelled

• ch urch fe llowship haiL
the
Miss Riebel Is a gradu ate of
Homecoming at the' ·.Joppa
A field· se rvice orient ation
Eastern Hi gh Sc hool a nd R io
United
Methodist Chu rc h will be
program ~c h edulcd for Sunday a t
Grande Co llege- Holzer Sc hool of
held
Sunday.
The Mt. Herm an
the Feeney-Bennett Pos t 128,
Nursing. She is employed as a
'
Trio
will
sing
at
1:30 followi~g the
reg istered nurse at Camde n- Ame rican Legion, new hall on
carry-In
dinner
at noo~ In the
Clark Me morial Hospital, Par- M!il Street. ha s been postponpd
be g iven in
shelter.
Awards
will
due to the recent illness of the
kersburg, W.Va .
Seldon
~ohnson,
six
categories.
Buckley is a gr aduate of · D~p a rtm ent of Ohio fie ld servic(,'
pastor,
Invites
the
public
to •
offi cer. T h ~ ses!on has been
Easter n Hi gh Sc hool and Is
employed by Wesiim CGnstru c-·· rescheduled for Nov. 22 at the attend .
sa me loca tion.
·
lion, Inc., Pomeroy.

---::----------------_,;..._---,.---~___:.

_____________ __
__:_

EASTMAN'S

, Pomeroy-· Middleport, Ohio

I

• •

•Juliu ~

Janey - $100, Gallipolis
•Ruth Ann Angel - $1 00, Gallipolis
•Jeff Bonecutter - $100, Pt. Pleasant
•Marjorie Adkins - $1 00, Pt. Pleasant
•Dale Smith - $100, Pt. Pleasant
•Sheila Cockran - $1 00, Pt. Pleasant
•Virginia Rayburn __: $1 00, Pt. Pleasant
•Linda Storms - $1 00, Ohio Valley

.'
·.
..

•

Jo.·n·The· w.·nner's' c·.rcle••..
Play
.

YourlndependentlyOwaed
Low·Price~ Supermarket .

••
_::.,_
·.;

More Savin s .During K-roger's 2nd. Week Of

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 9

.

...
I

•Anne
.

Simp~ins - $1 000 Winner
TWIN RIVERS FOODLAND .

•Diane Harmon - $1 000 Winner
RIPLEY FOODLAND

-PLUS HUNDREDS MORE!!

•WE RESERV E THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. •PRICES EFFECTUVE SUNDAY,.OCT. 4 THRU SATURDAY, .OCT. 10, 1987. • USDA FOOD STAMPS AC&lt;;EPTED. •NOT RESPONSIB_LE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS.

'

.

FRESH CHICKEN

FOODLAND

Qu~:fers

-'----- -----·
----- -·
.
U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN FED
BEEF, TOP ROUND ROAST OR TOP ROUND

88

London
Bro-il ............... . . · ;·

lb .

oz.

BOXES

..

Maxwell
House Coffee
'

~~·SS99

.

.

FOODLAND GRADE 'A'

,

Large -Eggs

TENDERBEST QUALITY
WHOLE BOSTON STYL

Pork Butts

lzza
'

· •REGULAR •BUTTER FlAVOR

Crisco
Shortening
-LIMIT ONE-

99

$ 39
Fudge Stripes............. 1
NEW FUDGE COVERED $
Gras~hoppers ............. 139
TOWN .HOUSE
oz. $
16
Crackers ..................... 199
KEEBLER

TOWN HOUSE

Jr. Cheddars....... ~ ....... 5159

3 LB.
CAN

$

Crust ·

I

Plus Deposit

•REG. •DRIP
•ELEC . PERK •ADC

DOZEN

Thin or
WhQie Wheat

'

R C Cola

· HEAD

IN-STORE MADE
. CHEESE &amp; PEPPERONI

Deli
.

Iceberg
Lettuce

Margarine
Quarters

16

-DIET RITE, CHERRY RC
DIET OR REGULAR

CALIFORNIA CRISP

17-oz .

.. . . .. .. . .. .. .. . 12-ln.
BAKED FREE FOR TAKE-OUT!
• •

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE, DIET MTN. DEW,
MTN . DEW, DIET PEPSI OR

EASTERN GROWN GOLDEN .
OR

Red.Delicio
Apples ........ :..

5-lb.
Bag
·-. i

.

OLD FASHION REGULAR OR GROOVY

Mike ·Sell's
~otato Chips., . .
•

---.... Pepsi
--- CoIa........ :. . ....-.. .
--

.
...
.•.
...
•
ALL MEAT

•;.~z $169

2- Ltr.

$189

• CH EE SE •B EEF

Springdale 2% Milk .. ~ .. ..........................

Gal.

59¢

Cost Cutter White B'read............. .. ... .... 16-bz. 25~:
I

Exckrich Franks ....~?. .... , . .
REG ._or BE EF
LB
Smoked Sausage ......: ...... 219
ECKRICH ·
$2$9
Smorgas-Pat
.
ECKRICH ·
6 oz. p kg .
89
Cooked Ham ..................
1
REG. or BEEF
. $
•
•
12 oz. pkg , 189
Sw1ft S1zzlean.................
-

1

. Big I{ Soft Drinlts......... .. .... :..:.... ... ......... 2-ur.

•

,

Eckrich Franks

NON RETUR NABL E BOTTLE,

11-16-oz.

•

$

...

SWI FT

.

Turkey Franks ....... ~~.~!~..... 89
•. ·

(

PLEDGE

ASSORTED COLORS

furniture Polish

Charmin
Bath
Tissue
-LIMIT ONE-

.'i,:&gt;,:$ 269
32 Oz. Can

.

·

Shout Spray ....
-

G~A~E-7 oz. can ,

A1r Freshener ..

$259

Cheer
Detergent
.

'

$129

4 ROLL

PKG.

oz.

42
BOX

�•

•

.
Page..:... 10 -The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middll':tport; Ohio

Wednesday, October 7. 1987..

Wednesday, October 7. 1987

Co~munity calendar/area happenings ,.
THURSDAY
POMEROY - RocR Springs

Grange will meet. at 7:30p.m. at
the hall.

Family-has reunion

RUTLAND- The Star Garden
Club will meet Thursday at 1
p.m. at the home of Pauline
Atkins. Members are to exhibit
dahlia and · chrysanthemum
specimens.

---

•

Descendants' of John Edward Steven Martin, Alliance;· Os by,
Martin and Mary Francis Bian· Ma ry and Adam Martin, Katy ,
kenship held tjleir 16th anneal Texas, Connie Devore, Mr. and
reunion at the. home of Les and Mrs. Robert Persons, Galliplis;
Sheryl Gi bbs, State Route 124,
Dan, Toni, Scott and Amanda
Pomeroy, recently:
Williams ..Lisa and. Joshua W\lli·
Re nilda Ma rshall, president. a ms, Greenville; Larry and
extended the welcome and do· Betty Koffer, Pittsburg, Ohio.
nuts and coffee were enjoyed
Pat Marlin, Michael, Renilda
mid-mor ning with a basket and Sarah Marshall, Steve Car·
dinner being held early after· ter, Valerie, Christine and Ste·
noon. Mary Martin •. had the phen, Alvin L. Goddard , and Dick
Invocation, and an auction waS R. Wi se, Columbus.
held by Mike Martin and Osby
Albert and Eileen Martin ,
Martin. assisted by Danielle Mic h.a el, Chris , Angie and Vinson
:
Kibbl e.
Martin, Thomas; Suzanne and
It was decJded to find a Danielle Kibble, Brian Beeler,
. per manent place 1b hold the . Margaret Wyatt, Ethel Grueser,
reunion and the date was Edna See, Lena Martin, Henry
changed to the second Sunday in a nd Jaret Werry, Edward Mar·
June. Officers elected were Mike tin, Gwe n and Patrick Martin,
Martin, president, and Chris J eff, Luelle, Ryan and Nathan
Martin, secretary·treasurer.
Martin .'
Gifts were present ed to the . Jam es and Karen Gibbs, Les ·
oldest family member, Albert ley,' Sheryl, Brian and Stacey
Martin; the youngest, Vinson Gibbs, Blondena and Sean Gil·
Michael Martin, 14 month old son bert, Susa n Pullins, Roland Mor·
of Michael and Chris Mart in; ris , Richard C. , Margaret and
Osby Martin, Kat y, Texas, who Br ian Geiger, Brian Mullens,
traveled the [arthes t; and Eddie Michael Mullens, A. J . Black·
Martin · for having the most ford , Dick Brickles\ Mingo and
children present.
-.
Maxine Hinkle, Julie Dougherty
Attending were Joseph, Ets~ko an d Tom Chaffin, all local.
1-jedeki and Angelia Martin,
The 1988 reunion was set for
Daisuke Mltsumori, Fort Bragg, Ju ne 12.
N. C.; Robert, Debbie. and

POMEROY - Shade Rlller
Lodge 453, Chester, will have a
regular meeting Thursaay at 8
p.m.
POPLAR RIDGE - Rev ival
services at Poplar Ridge Church
will get underway Thursday
evening, 7 p.m., a nd continue on
Friday and Sat urday evenings at
th e same time. Everyone
welcome.
POMEROY - There will be a
revival service Saturday, 7:30
p.m., at the senior citizens center
in Pomeroy, with Evangelist
Herbert Inscoe. The public is
inyited.

I .

SMITHFIELD SliCED

VAC PAK BACON ••• ~ •••••••\~L!; •• S1.99

SMITHFIElD -· 6-8 lb. AVG.

SMOKED ·TALLY HAM •••• }~;~ ••••••• 99'

HOMEMADE

-HAM SALAD •••••••• ,••••••:•••t~~ •••••••• 89C
OZ.
RED DELICIOUS

APPLES ....... l.ur... a FoR 69'
CAitFORNIA-40 CT.

MARSH
GRAPEFRUIT •••••2 FOR 89c

KRAFT 16 SLICE-PROUSS!D

PIMENTO ~
CHEESE ......... !.t~.~; .... S1.89

2 11&gt; INCH UP

HOFFMAN'S

FRESH ·
PEACHES ............ 3.!~;..... 99'

SUPER SHARP
CHEESE ,........... ..L.L ••• S3.39

HASH BROWN POTATOES ••• ~ S1.39

TASTE OF SEA

OCEAN PERCH FILLET •••• !.~~; .. $2~95
BETTY CROCKER

STIR &amp; FROST ••••••••••••••!.~!; ... S1.5 9

Q'KEN KEG

SWEET PICKLES •••••••••••• ~!.~.~·.. S1. 99

PIE

CR.~ST

'

MIX •••••••••••••••••••• S1.19

THANK YOU BLACKBERRY

PIE FILLING ..................!.l.~~·...s1. 99

PRICE SAVER

SPAGHETTI ••••••••• ~ ••••••••• !.2.~~~•••••• 99 &lt;

AIR WICK MAGI( MUSH.ROOM -

ROOM FRESHENER ••••••• !;~.~!;. S1.69

GENERAL MILLS

CHEERIOS .....................~.5.~~·•• S2 .49

VEGETABLE ALL

•

MIXED VEGTABLE$ •• :•••• ~.~.~~·•••••• 59'.
CAMPBELL'S TURKEY .

NOODLE SOUP ••••••• !~.3~·.~.z~.. 2f$1.09
ARMOUR ..:. S' OfF

at .the regplar P.laces of
voting ttlerein, on 1J'uesday,
the :tlllrd day of 1'!9\.,e'l)ber.
1987. the questlon"of, tevv ·

ing a tax , in excess of the ten
mill ' limitation , for the be·
nefil of Middleport Village
for the purpose of providing
and maintaining fire appara tus, appliances, bu{ldjl"!gs. or
sites therefor, or sources of
water supply and :materials
, therefor, or the ·establishment and ma1ntenence of
linea of fire alarm telegraph,
or tha payment of perman snt. part·iirne. or volunteer
firemen of fire fighting com paRies to operate ttle same,
includillg the payment of
firemen employer's contri ·
butlon required under sec·
tion 742 .34 of the Revised
Code, C?r to purchase ambu·
la~ulpmenl, or to provide ambulance or emergency medical service
operated by a fire depart mart or fire fighting
company.
Said taK being : a renewal
of ah exi.ting tax of 2. 0 mills
to rUn for five years, at a rate
not .-exceedlng 2 .0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
whii:h amounts to '$0.20
(Twenty cents) for each One
hundred dollars of valuation,

...

P.M. .

'

Located on State Rt. 7,
Reedsville, Ohio. 5 miles N.
of Chester, Ohio.

CHRISTMAS IN
~: OCTOBER SALE •

.

2 FOR 57(

The Polls for aaid Election
will-be open at 6:30 o 'clock
A.ft4 , and remain open until

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACIY

7 :30 o'clock P.M .

EXP :. 10·12- 87

By order of the Board of
Ele-.tion.s. of Meigs County ,
Ohio .

·

VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••~.% .. 2 f$1.19

• Evelyn Clark. Chairman
Jane M. Frymyer ,
..
Director

..

COUPON

·

NOTICE OF
'APPOINTMENT OF
.
FIDUCIARY
On Septen]ber 23 1987,

2 BOTILES OF SO

· in the Meigs Countv Probate

$377

Court, ·Case No . 25637 ,

linda S . Pullins. P . 0 . Bo•
207, Pomeroy. Oh io45769 .

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

Was appointed Executrix of
the estate of Johli P . Frick,
deceased, late of SR 33.

EXP.: 10-12-87

33330.
46769 .

SHOES
1/
/4

~:ti
SALE .

1/4 OFF

1

•.

•.
•.

•.
•.
•.
•.

•
•,

·...
•.

DELSEY
BATHROOM TISSUE

:om 79&lt;

•

...

LIMIT 2 PACKAbES

SWIISHI!R &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

.·

EXP. : 10,-12-87

Columbus. Ohio 43224
LEGAL NOTICE
INFORMAL CONFERENCE
COAL MINING &amp;
RECLAMATION PERMIT
APPLICATION
#R·0354- 3 and R·0463 ·10
APPliCANT: Southern

Ohio Coal Company
· P. 0 . Bo• 490
The Division of Reclamation hereby gives notice that
an informal conference on
the aboye coal mining and
reclamation perrpit applica·
tions will be held on October

Wilkosville. Ohio 45695

Persons who are or maybe
adverseJv affected or any of·
ficer or head of any fsderal.
state,. or local government
agency or authority may at·
tend to present their views.
(10)7, ltc

11

•

·-·-

BUY 1 PAIR - GET'2 PAIRS
OF EQUAL OR LESS VALUE

....

'

FREE

.•.
.•.
•.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
EXP .: 10- 12-87

COUPON

.

....

QUALIFICATIONS TO INCLUDE:
~Strong writte'n and verbal com-

·~

TIMEX
WATCHES
'$SOO

A PERMANENT, FULL TIME
ADMINISTRATIVE CLERK
POSITION IS AVAILABLE.

.·.·-·..
..·.
..
'

.

munication skills.
.r.-Willing to assume responsibility .
t.-Typing: .60 words per minute.
~.-Transcription skills.
t-Completion of college busi·
ness courses preferred .
t-Experience in a medical setting
preferred.
1-Salary commensurate with experience. r
_

•
•
•

.
~·

OFF

.

•.
"·

'••

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

•

EXP .: 10-12-87

r--

r---

r----SWISHER

LOHSE

Pharmacy
l&lt; onnoth MoCuiiOIJgh . R. Ph .

IL

Ch•rln Riffh,, R Ph

AOMid l;lan1ng, A Ph. .
Man !hru S~t 9 00 A M to 9 PM
SoJndiiV 1 D 00 A M t•~ 4 00 P M

PRE.SCR IPTIONS.

'E Main

J

'

PH 992 _2955

Frlendly
'

PLEASE SUBMIT RESUME NO.- LATER . THAN
TUE.SDA Y, OCTOBER 13; 198 7 TO:

'

Sorvice

•
'

PC1111f!rov. Oh ~

. -~~~:.::____ _

•.

•

1,.
I

1

in

7:30 o'clock P.M .

Bv order ~f the Board of
·Elections. of Meigs County,
·Evelyn Clark, Chairrrian
~~ •..r
Jane M . Frymyer,
Oirsctor
Dated)August 14. 1987.
(1017. 14, 21 , 28, 4tc

Saturday. October 10th,
1987 at 10 :00 A.M., the

Home· Natianal Bank, Ra ·
cine. Ohio, will offer for sale
at public auction the follow ·
ing :
1981 - Olds Cutlass 1 G3AR47ASBM40862
1984 - Chovy Chavette
- 1G1AJ78C9EY204638
1 977 - Chevy Blazer CKL187F128963

The Home National Bank
reserves the right to bid at
the sale and to reject any or
all bids.

(91

29 . 30; {1 Oj 7. B. 9

Margaret Holm
' Assistant .Admin,istrator ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
11 S East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
EOE

~~6~1 ;4;·7~~~~S~~~ ~:=·v=·~G;iv=e=a=w;a=v====
. 'ITIJCGlllli

Re-Open

.,,
" ~,,.~.,.~
..
· ··'" •.·

;"\'- ~ . ~;;:_t
~

)

FITNESS CI.U-2 . :

FULL BODY TONING
and FIRMING

li' .. F~•n . fh·uhh,· &amp; (:opd For
'You! - Rrln,c ,\ ·Frlo•IHI..

SPtciAI RAFIS lOR IIUO!NTl
PH . 992 ·2300 Oo Stop By
11 S W. Second, Pomeroy
.
10-5·1 mo.

HAVE AVIDEO
TAPE MADE...

Ohio. 46769 .

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nenelroad , Clerk
t9130: t10) 7. 14 , 3tc

Public Notice
Happy Ads
·Happy Birrhday
October 7, I987
WILIJAM C. GOOREY
HAPPY BIRTHDAY.
Hll.l.
~rm s.

Rcs t in ~

in pcJcc: with

God.
Th c:r&lt;:·s no sufferi n~ ur
sickness.
Nn Glr'! C~r or pain in
Ht!avl'n .
O ur lnsr few words rogerhcr were so sad,
Yo1.1 wtrl' the best hus·
band anyone ever hJLI.
We.: miss you and wt:'ll od·
ways love you. D:Kidy,
You arcn'r a~mc

Fril'nc.ls

Real Estate General

Real Estate ~~
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
·
1 ·1614)·992-3325 '

NEW LISTING - Mulberry
Ave. 5 rms., 3 BRs. 1~ balhs,
gas lur nace, new s.s. sink,
wood cabmets, carpeting,
basement and 2 porches .
$27,500.
SYRACUSE - 100x5 0
corner lot. garage, 6 rms.,
being remodeled. Has 38Rs,
gas heat. alum·. sid1ng and
fronl. orch. Asking $25,000.
SYRACUSE - 160xl00 lot,
6 rm. ranch , cook and bake
un1ts, birch kitchen, all elec.,
range, refrig., plus carpet·
ing, near the school. Ask1ng
$37,500.
RACINE AREA - E!cellent
3 yr. old ranch , rec. rm .,
32x20, relrig., · cook un its.
disposal, dish washer. m1cro·
. wave, basement, Ig. fire·
place, formal dinin~ swim
pool. tennis court and 5.25
acres. $97.500.
SYRACUSE. - 4 yr. ~ ld
doublew1de. Cathedral ceil·
ing '" LR and kit., 3 BR, 2
baths, all elec. range, refn g.,
dishwa sher. su ndec k, Near
the store. $43,000. •
POMEROY - 3 lots. 3 BR
remodeled home. Gas FA
furnace. new shingle roo(,
bl own·m insulat1on and gar·
age. $18,000.
4.368 ACRES - Near
Rac1 ne dam. TP . water
a~ailable. Good for camping
and CBs. Only $6,000.
POMEROY - 8 rm. older
home in need of repa11. Ha s
gas FA lurnace, rec. rm .,
shop, carpeting, storms and
2 lots. Was $l8,000. GIVe us
an ofler.
CERTIFIED
APPRAISALS

992-3326

Housinq
1-~eadquarlers

G~wlt! "'

Annive rsary

•Baby Shower
•Family Reunion
•Any Special
Occation

PH. 992-6959
mo.

FREE WEDDlNG CONSUlTANT
YVONNE' SCAU Y•

Bridal R ~gistrv and
most comple te line of
\~ e ddin~ Flowers and
Accessones in th is area

Middleport- 99 2•~-"''-'D~ u

lOST : Black &amp; gray tamale cat.

lost on Railroad Street in
Kanauga. Call614-446· 9490 or

168 North Second
Middleport; Ohio 4S760

lost: Ladies gla11es in beige

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FOUND . M ale Red !II White pert
Pekingneaa found Shadle
Bridge, Henderson aide. Contact
Wanda Gnfen lee, Greer Ro&amp;d,

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Heoe

BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992 -65!0
RESIOENCE PHONE
(6141 992 · 17S4

10-8-lfc

1128/tln

V. C. YOUNG Ill

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Transmission
PH • .992-5682

9'12 -6215 or 992-7314

or 992-7121

work

(Free Estimates)

Pomeroy, Ohio

IIIII! L MANO, JR..... qq2.6191
JUN 1-UIII!L ............ 949 ·2660
DOTTIE TUINEI ........... 992 ·S692
lUCY RIFFLE ............. 949 ·3080

OFF I(( ......................... 4J92 ·22SIJ

'

A

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4·16· 86· tl~

•

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING
Now Open 7 Days
A Week
DAILY 10 AM-6 PM
Located ot Carner of
Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER , OHIO
•HOM E BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS

REFERENCES

Phone Doy or Evenings

985 -4 141

Pomeroy

.Purchasing all
types of
non -ferrous scrap
GLASS .... . 2 ·¢ lb.
•
#1 Copper
Current 53¢ lb .
Top Grade
Aluminum Sheets

40¢ lb .

GENfRAl CONTRACTORS

g. 28·1 mo . pd.

• VlNYl SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

•

BISSELL
SIDif1!G CO.
"F ree Estimates"

PH. 949-286Q
or 949·2B01
No Sunday Calls

.

' Be hmd Blue T&amp;rten
MiddlepQrt, Ohio

PH. 304 -773-S6Sl
·

912211 mo.

GEARY
BODY SHOP
SSO PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORI, OHIO

992-3537

9· 18·87

CHECK DIE·

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Authorincf John Deere,

Friday . Oct. 9, Saturday, Oct .

10. 234 Mulberry A ve .• Pomeroy . 10:00 -7

Dealer

3 Peach Circle, Middleport,
Oh,o. Ruben andThalmaCollins.
614 -992-3442 . Tuesday, Wadnasdav: Thursday, Ocl. 6, 7 , 8.

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY
.

At. 124 between Rutland and
~ematary..
10:00am· 5:00 pm. Oct. 8, 9 .
and 10. New and used cl othing.
drapes. stereo. table and cheirs .

langsville. past Mills

······ PfPiaa·sanf .....

let Us Fence Vou In

&amp; Vicinity

FREE ESTIMAT ES

R ES1DENTIAL/ CO MM ERCIAL

'

·-A

Several Yard Sales. lots of new
th ings. leon Baden Road from
87, 0cL7 to Oct. 10.

PH. 742-7027

14
,
.' ,;-,V
/.'j'(JIJQ·""
I ".'1i,. : Al
If
'L(f /'¥r
I'

-..

~ ·,

/, ~

;.r (

....J

IH

-,._

1k'J' (~_,

:

I

'

'

.

5!

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.

POMEROY-98S:3S61

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

i
Yard Sale continued b&amp;cause of weather Oct . 5 thru 10,
Gallipoli s Ferry, W , Va . Thousand of item s.

Yard Sale. Thurs and Fri. 2211
Jefferson Ava. Something for
everyone. New clothes. Cancel if

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

WE SEll USED APPLIANCES

misc .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Peerson Auct lon~e r licensed in Ohio and West' Virgi·
nia. Estate. antiqu'e, farm , liquidation s&amp;les, 304 -773 -5785 .

4 5-tli:

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
&amp; REPAIR

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

•All MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REASONABLE RATES

949-2263
or 949·2168

CHESHIRE

4-22·87-ttn

YSale, 2312 Jeffer1on Ave.,
Thurs. Fri, Sat. 9 ;30 till 1.
lawnmower. furniture and lots

.

All-Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges ·• Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

3·11-ttn

Howard L. Writesel

Yard and Craft sale. 2021
Jefferson Blvd., Oct . B. 9 , 10.

8

985-35b 1

from Sovonnah , Georgia

" FRESH" SHRIMP SALE
SAT~ OCT. 10, 1q37
. I :00 P.M. .

Yard Sale: 30 &amp;: 32 Chillico1he
Rd. Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday. Wheels &amp; tires, jaens,
Christmas tree, quilts &amp; CfaftS.
tOtr:!l.

rein.

New Homes Built

Aluminum Cans
34¢ lb.
9·11· 1 mo.

bowling ball.

New .Hollond, Bush Hog
Form Equipment

1-3.' 86 tfc

•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING •G ENERAL
REMOOE.UNG &amp;
REPAIR S

clothe~.

······ Pomeroy ........ .

farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Service

Day or Night

POMER()Y~

PRICE REDUCED - RUTLAND - Nice 10 year old
brick ranch home 1n good
condibon. Over I acre of
ground.. wilh 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, fu ll basement, large pa·
11o. equ1pped kitc hen, many
other nice features. Must See1
MAKE OFFER $39,000. 00.

machine,

misc ., etc . Jackson P ike Ha~ersvjlle . Thur'l. &amp; Fri.

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

PRICE REDUCED - OWNF.R
WANTS OFFER - Eastern Dis·
tr1ct on Rt. 7. Are you lool&lt;ing for
a mini farm? llo you want an
older 4 bedroom house w:th
most of the remod~ing
completed? large rooms w1th
modern leatures. Barn &amp; stor·
age shed and chicken hoose .
complete th~ 18\; acre mm;
farm. $40,000.00.

Computer, dishwasher, sewing

SALES &amp; SERVICE

" A1 Reosonable Prices"

RUTLAND - Nice ranch Woe
home on a lei·el lot 3 bed·
rooms, equipped k~chen, en·
closed back porch. close to
schools. Ail in good cond1t1on.
$33.500.00.

Yard Sale : At. 36 - Behind Caldwell' s Truck Shop. Wad., Thurs.,
B. Fr i. 9- 6. If Rain in.ide.

BOGGS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

E.

Multifamily Porch Sale: Saturday, October 10, tO :OO AM .
Quality in fant-babv - women 'a men 's clolhes , baby crib ,
playpen , caneat, bauinette, '
stroller. Tara Route 7 , Addison .
Rain· Shine.
Ba:sament Sale: Wed. &amp; Thurs..
Oct. 7 B. 8 . 9 -6. 844 5th A11e.
Excellent clothing. Ready to
wear. Soma misc. Very reatona ble prices. Browse in comfort.

9· 18-1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

PRICE REDUCED - HERE
IT IS' Your home in the
country, over 21· acres ol
ground. plus a 2 story farm.
house w/ 3 bedrooms. eel·
la r. garden area, shed &amp;
woodburner for extra heat.
Ra nge, relrigerator, d1sh ·
washer. washer &amp; dryer.
$27,500.00.

One mile out 141 . , ,_,irror,
picture, doubleknit material ,
drapes. clothing, misc. 9 - 6.
Thurs. &amp; Fri.

6-8 pm-Drinks SO'
VCR TAPE RENTAL
W. VA. LOTTERY
CARRY-OUT

]9) 30; (10]7. 14 . 3tc

NEW LISTING - HYSELL
·RUN - Really nice ranch
With a gorgeous kitche n,
huge lamily room, big liv 1ng
room with lireplace, plus a
tra iler hookup. All quiet and
peaceful on approx1mately
20 acres. $53,000.00.

160. Baby bed, coets.

BEER &amp; WINE
Happy Hour

Robert E. BtJck,
Probate Judge
Lsna K . Nesselroad. Clerk

-------· .. ... -- ·- •----

price or Ins
Thursday Bth. 10-3 . 7 miles out

CLIFTON, W. VA.

45769.

Yard Sale

---

RAILROAD
JUNCTION

45701. was appo· ed Executrht of the esta e of Lana
0. Gibson. deceased, late of
Route 4 , Pomeroy, OH .

7

... ---·
....
Everything V1

6-17-tfc

4· i5·' 86·1C

FOUND , 1976 P.P:H.S . Cle11
ring. initials lGD, call 304· 6765726 end pleau pay for ad.

&amp; Vicinity

Rt . 124, Pomeroy Ohio

- Addons and remodeling
- R oofing and gullur work
- Concrete" work
- Piumb1ng and electri cal

Poin t Ple&amp;sent.

······ Gaffijio1Ts..........

Roger Hysell
Garage

in·the Meigs County Probate

pet and pa'rtiy new roo!.
$21,000.00

case. 614 -992- 3393.

We Carry Fishin g SuppliEi'i

Court, Case No . 25640.
John H . Gibson. 492 Estates Drive. A th~, 0 H.

0.
' 992-2259
NEW LISTING - BRADBURY - Close in, but out ot
town. Ga rden area , 3 bed·
rooms, oubuilding, (ron! and

446-3047.

New Location:

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
CARPENTER
SERVICE

JANU VENOY

Found· Billfold on At . 36. Call t o
identify . Call 614-379 -2362 .

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

SHIILIY HOUSTON

Lost and Found

Certified Licensed S

DENNY CONGO

YOUNG'S

Male Shepherd dog. automatic
wuher needs repairs, 304 - 6762347.
~·

6

9-18-1 mo .

BASKET WEAVING and
STENCILING CLASSES

BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING

CALL 992-6756
.. "DOC" VAUGHN

REASONABlE PR!CES- IRY USI

SIGN UP NOW FOR

Yard ~ale leftover~. Clothes and
misc . FREE . Call 61•· 446 -

away . Can 61 4· 446 -7076 .

Repairs
NIASE Cenified Mechanic

w.-·".

White male kittens.

Call614· 446· 921l7 .

Black &amp; white kittens to give

Domestic Vehicles
A / C Service
All Major &amp; Minor

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Septembeo 26. 1987.

rear porches some new car·

TEAFORD

" \ ' ou Nnm~ · 11 -

•Child' s Birthday
Pat tv

btGJU."l'

I'm wirh you. Dea r.
Sadly miss&lt;.od by Wife,
Madeline: Daughccrs and
Sl1n: Mtlrht.·r: Raymjmd:
Br;1thcrs; Gran&lt;.khildrcn:

•Wooden Gifts
•Pictures
•Pottery
' •Cement Products

Give ~YifiiY·

3386 .

Most Foreign and

•Music Boxes

.. You Tun f.an Lt• ok &amp; F~·4• 1
~•'11 f' r &lt;\1 'l'i,1:1'r Fil ni'I'!O f.lu b! ..

9-18·1

SYRACUSE, OHH1

SYRACUSE, OHIO
•Ohio SouViners
J•Candl6s

LaSALLE GAlLERY
5

JO'S ··
GIFT SHOP

-~

~

UGHN'S · .,.
AUTO &amp; DIE:SEL
SERVICE

For Buslneu

Case No. 26639.

Martha Collen Van Meter,
104 locust 'Street. Pomeroy, Meigs County. Ohio,
45769. was appointed Executrix of the estate of Leo~
nard Earl VanMeter. de·
ceased, late of 1 04 Locu&amp;t
St. Pomeroy, Meigs County,

•

I will not be responsible for any
debts other than my own,
Gregory l . Burdane. HandiH'aon,

RUTlAND

in the Meigs County Probate
Court,

Thank Vou l

Rt. 124 Acrou from
Happy Hollow Rd.

•Pare~ts'

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On September 23, 1987,

To the per1on who returned my
purse 1o Shake Shoppe em·
.ployeea on Thursday , 9· 24.

OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.

•Wedding

Public Notice

Due to destruction of fences end .
property , all proPerty owned end
leased bv us is posted and c losed
to all hunting without written
permisaion o Jamet and Frank
Drehel Leading Creak Road .
Middleport , Ohio .

•SLUGS
•AMM O
•G UN
•MUlZ LELOAOING
SUPPLIES

1987. thooe wilt be sub•mit
ted to a vots of the poople of

said Rutland TOwnship. at I
General Election tq be held
in the Towi1Ship of Rutland
at the regular places of
voting therein, on Tuesday:
the third day'" of November,
1987, the question of levying a tax, in excess ofthe ten
mill limitation. for the be·
nefit of Rutland Township
for the purp·o se of maintaining and ope~ating
cemeteries .
Said tax being: a renewal
of an existing tax of 0 .3 mill
to run for five years. at a rate
not exceeding 0 . 3 mill for
eech One dollar of valuation,
which amounts to S0.03
lthree cents) for each one
hundred dollars of valueliOJ",·
for five (5) years .
·· "
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6 ;30 o 'cl ock
A .M . and remain open until

Announcements

MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

of
Board ofof,;:~~~E:~
thethe
Township
M~igs County, Ohio,
on 't he 30th day

Datod Septombeo 16, 1987.
· 1101 7. 14. 21. 28. 4tc

• PUBLtc; NOTICE

Busin-e ss S.e rvices

pursuanc:~e''~~~:~R~::;;~:~;~~

Ohio .

By order of the Board of
Elections. of Meigs County,
Ohio .
Evelyn Clark. ·Chairmen
Jane M . Frymyer,
Director

Rest inA in Jesus' loving

ADMINISTRATIYE
CLERK

....

7 :30 o'clock P.M .

Help Wanted

IMMEDIATE OPENING

"•

Notice 'is .hereby given that
in pursuanCe of a Resolution
ot the Board of County
Commissioners of the
County of Meigs, PomerO\'.
Ohio, passed on the 12th
day of August. 1987, ttiere
will be submitted to a vote of
the people of said Meigs
County, Ohio at a General
Election to be held in the
County of Mei9s al the
regular . places of voting
therein, on Tuesday, the
·third day of November,
1987, the question of levying a tax, in excess of the ten
mill limitation , for the benefit of Meigs County for the
purpose of supplementing
the general fund for the
purpose of making appropriations for the Meigs County
Health Department .
Said tax being: a renewal
of an existi'tiQ tax of ~ .Omills
to run for five years. at a rate
no't exceeding 1 .0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to $0.10
(Ten cents) for each one
hundred dollars of -valuation ,
for five {6) yesrs.
The Polls fpr said Elec,lon
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M . and remai n.open until

22. 1987 at 5 :30p .m. atthe

location state below :
Wilton Elemenatry School

. I

•
.~

Fountajn Square

AA/EOE

PIERCED EARRINGS

IIIOTICE OF ELECTION • ..
ON TAX LEYY
'·~·
tN. EXCESS OF .THE .
TEN .Mt~L LIMITATION

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
DiVISION OF
RECLAMATION

(304} 675-4340

., . ,

1

..

Public Notice

Public Notice

Pleasant Valley :. Hospital
and Pleasant Valley . Nursing
Care Center are seeking highly
motivated registered nurses
·for full and part-time employment. Current benefits inelude: medical and dental in·
surance, retirement plan. life
insurance, 's hift premium pay,
malpractice insurance, tuition
reimbursement and more.
Call or visit the Norsing
Service offices at Pleasant Val·
ley Hospital, Point Pleasant.
West Virginia, for more information.

-.
·.

300f0

SALE
SALESA.
'SALE
SALESA
SALE
SALESA
SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA
SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA

Public Notice

CAREER
.OPPORTUNITIES FOR
:REGISTERED NURSES

·....

EXP.: 10-12-87

SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA
SALE· .
A~L WOllEN'S
SALESA
SALE
TENNIS SHOES
SALESA
SALE AUTRY • CONVERSE- ADIDAS - FOOT JOY SALESA
SALE
SALESA
SALE
.
OFF
SALESA
SALE ·
·· ·
SALESA
SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA
SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA
SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA

HARTLEY
SHOES

fREE

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

i~ii
2
~~/o
~!
SALE
· SA

SALE
SALESA
SALE
SALESA
SALE
SALESA
SALE
SALESA
SALE
SALESA
SALE MAn VAN VIAIIEN.- owNER
SALESA
SALE210 EAST
OHIO• SALESA
. POMEROY,
.

Dated August 27. 1987.
tt017, 14, 21 , 28, 4tc

'

_Buy 8 oz., Get 4 oz.

400/o

Ohio

(9130; 11011. 14. 3tc

FRESH FROM OUR
MACHINE

NUTS

Pomeoov.

Ro'bert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
lena K . Nesselroad, Clerk

COUPON

~~

By order of the Board of
Elections, of Meigs County,
Ohio .
Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. FfymyBr.
Director

Athens. Ohio 45701

• Public Notice

CAPLETS

~!

7 :30 o'clock P.M .

Date Aug . 27. 1987.
110f7, 14·, 21. 28 . 4lc

TYLENOL

·~~

SALE
SA
SALE
SA
SALE
SA
SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA
:SALE
. ALL MEN'S..
SALE
All
SA
SALE. . REDWING
SALE MEN'S SA
WOLVERINE
s
I,SALE TIMBERLAND
ALE HUSHPUPPY SA
!SALE WEINBRENNER SALE
SA
~ALE WORK SHOES SALE
SA
'SALE
OO/ . SALE ,
SA
SALE
/0 OFF SALE
OFF SA
SALE
SALE
SA
:SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA
:SALE
ONE TABLE
SA
~sALE , woMEN'S son SPOT LOAFERS sA ·
SALE "
OFF · ·
SA
SALE
SA
SALESALESALESALESALESALESALESA
SALE
All )
SALE
SA
SALE
woMEN's
SALE .:~~s SA
SALE N~~~~:~~~~s SALE FLORSHEIM SA
SALE
SEBAGO
SALE
SA
SALE
CASUALS SALE
. SA

2

Notice is her.e by given that
in pursuance of a Resolution
of the Board of Township
Trustees of the Township of
Chester . Me igs •County,
O~io, passed on the 11th
day of August. 1987, there
will be submitted to a vote of
the people of said Cheater
Township, at a General
Election t o be held in the
Township of Chester at the
regular·~ places . of voting
therein, on Tuesday. the
third day of NoVember,
1987, the question of levying a lax. in excest of the ten
mill limitation, for the be·
nefit of Chester Township
for the purpose of main'taining and operating
cemeteries ,
Said tax b8ing: a renewal
of an existing tax of V: mill to
run for five years, at a rate
not e•ceeding % m~U for
eaeh qne dollar of valuation.
which amounts to $0 .05
1
(five cents~ for · each one
hundred dollars of valuation.
fo'r five (5) years .
The Polls for said EIaction
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until

lor live 161 yea11.

SALESALESALESALESALEI~LESALESA
SALESALESALESALESALf.~_(.ESALESA

DRESS SHOES
11 ·
/4 OFF

County. Ohio at a General
Election to be held
the
Vlttigo of Middloport,

RUBBING
ALCOHOL
16 OZ. BOrnE - 70% ISOPHRYL

SHOES

ORE-IDA-24 OZ.

BETTY CROCKER

:

POMEROY,OH

~~·

TURKEY BREAST •••••••••••• }~; •••• S2. 99.

MARGARINE .......!;!L... 79c

M iddleport Villag e. Moigs

..

ADULT BEGINNER SEWING CLASS
STARTING OUT 12TH
CALL TODAY SIGN UP 992-2284

county. Ohio, paSsed on thB
theN will be submitted to 1
vote of the people of said

10 A.M.-5 P.M.
A.M.-~

Vi tfago of M id dleport, Molgs
10111 day of August, 1987.

FABRIC &amp; CRARS · ·:
NOW OPEN
:. .,&gt;.
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri.
Sat. 10

SALESALESALESALESALESALESfl.!..ESA
SA
·
SA

SWIFT ECKRICH

BLUE BONNET QUARTERS

.....

CRYSTAL

~!t~

COTTAGE CHEESE ..... '1.49

of the Village Council of the

EASTERN HILl .
FABRIC SHOP.

Certified X-ray
Technician
For Doctor's Office
Call 675-1637 or
' ,___6:..;.7.::..5·.:. :16:.:;.38=--__,

SAUNATU~f*. ALL WOMEN'S Hush Pupp~· SA

BROUGHTON'S-24

Notice I• hereby given that

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Ohio

Public Notice

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

In pursuance oh Resolution

rr===========:;:'

HELP WANTED

. (614) 992-2284

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

1:_Kiv.;p

will be offered th e tests to be.
given this Wedn esday , 10 a .m. to ,
non; Oc t. 14, 9 to ll: 30 and 1 to _
3:30 p.rn: a nd Oct. 16, 1 to 3:30 .
p.m , •.,
• "" '
'·
~ ··

SIGN UP LIMITED

llOW.MAlN

THURSDAY &amp; FRIDAY
OCT. 8 &amp; 9

Fo~0 s~:::

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

...i,..a'l.ta••••

Free Candy Classes

992-6910

· POMEROY- Cholesterol a nd
triglyceride blood screening at a
cost of $3 for both tests is being
offered by the Meigs County
~alth Department for a limited
time.
·· The nu rsing staff has secured a
special tab testing machine on a
loan basis and w11l be offering the
two tes ts on Wednesday, Oct. 7
and Oct. 14, and Friday , Oct. 16,

by appointm~nt. Those who
mlssM the Meigs County Multi·
phasic Health Screening pro·
gram in June or those who ·had
high readings are Invit ed to tAke
advantage of the special screening now. The staff points out that
often these tes ts in the high range
are an .indication of impending
heartproblenis.
Only tile first 100 persons who
call for an appointment , 992·6616,

STARTING OCT. 15th

FREE
BEANS &amp; CORNBREAD RECIPE

.:-.

Health dep artment

Public Notice

KIDS CAN SEW CLASS

BEANS &amp;CORNBREAD
MONTH

514 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

FRIDAY
-eoMEROY - Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
met Friday at 1 p.m., Grace
Episcopal .Parish House. Guest
spea~er will be Mrs. Wlliam F.
Smith, Columbus, national de.
tense chairman . Mrs. Paul Elch,
Miss Lucille Smith, . Mrs. Da1e
Dutton and M~Eleanor Smith
will be hostesse$. Members are
to take crafts for holiday bazaar
at Wal!lerschmidt House.

J

367-0322
9-23 -1 mo.

9 . Wanted To Buy
We pay cash for late mod"' clean
used cars,
Jim Mjn lt Chev .. Qids Inc.
Bill Gen8 Johnson
6 14-446 -3672
TOP CASH paid fo r ' 83 model
and newe r used c ars. Sm ith
Buiclt·Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Av e.. GRIIipOl is. Ca ll 6 1 4-446·

2282
WANTED TO BUY : Used wood
&amp; coal h9a1ers. Swain ' s Furni ture. 3rd &amp;· Olive St . GaiBpolis .

Call '6 14 ·446· 3159.
Wanted to buy: Long 't'IU!Od. Call
11nytirne· C &amp; R Firewood . Call
6, 4·367-0669.
W 8 buy at111nd ing timber. Call

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

-

a:

.

ct LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Au~ioJogist

z .

'-::- (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

614 ·379·2758.
Building lot in Gallipolis Citv
Schools D istri ct. Call614· 4463617
dei~ gold , silver coins,
j ew el ry , st erling ware , old

Buving
ring~ .

coi ns , large currency. Top

pri-

ces. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 814-.

992· 3476.

•

Wanted to buy, ttanding timber.
Call AI Trom~ at 614·742 ·
2328 .
+

•

�•

.- I

,

==~==~======~~~~~~~~~:-~:::-------~lr4;4~:A~p~.;n~m~e~n;t~~~5;1~H~o~us~e~h~o;ld~G;oo::d;I~:K:IT~'N~'~C~A~~~YL~E~®b=-y~U-"l--W=.=rl~gh:t----~==~=r;,~3~V~a~n~s~8o~4~W~.O~,;-'
,

.
.....
Page--12- The Daily Sentinel

.

[ !'IIJIOylllt~llt
'

~-~~~r ·~~!CPS

11

for Rent

Help Wanted

Avon-StU Avon for Christmas.
Make olD percent. Call61 • -«6· ·

33&amp;8.

EXC!LLENT WAGES tor spare

time auembly work: efKtron-

Rill

lcs, cr.tta. Others. Info (604)

e.t 1-0091 Ext. 2987. Opon 7
doyo. CALL NOW!

p..,_ time ..... cl•k nMded for
popular Junior clothing store in
O.lllpoll1. Send resume to: Box
CLA 10,7 ol o Golllpollo Dally
Tribune 826 3rd. Ava . GaHipclla,
Ohio 4&amp;&amp;31 .

n.c•urv- At least 21 yrt. of
ege. Call 814-245-9316 after

8,oo PM .

"They can't help smelling
like that
they're bt.ode gradable."

Government Jobs. 816,040·
859.230 yr. Naw hiring. Call
808-687-11000 Elll. R-9BO&amp; for
currenl federal list.
.:__;__..:,:---..:....:.:__________:~ ·
31
Homes for Sale
Free Christmas dfaplay klt Frlendty Home Parties now hu
openings for mnagera and
Home for Sale by Owner:
dMI.,. in your ern. All new
Greenbrier Elt., 3BR .• bi~ IMtel
Chrittmq lin• of qualhy mer- 'i on 2 .4acrn, AC. W.B.F.P .. wet
ch.,dlae M n~•onable prices-no
b•. 2 car g•ee•· Ph. Before
Mf'Yice ch•ge-no paper work4'00PM 114·448·4009 After
high commission and override.
4PM . Ph, 304-676-3818.
C1ll 1-800-227- 1&amp;10.

LAB TECH
Jackaon General Ho1p. Ripty, w.
V1 11 accepting application• tor a
full time medical Lab Technicien,
qUIIIlfl.d applican1. will hwe a 2
or 4 veer degree In Medical
Technology and 1 current ASCP
Rttiltry. Hoapttel otters excellent Millry and benefttt for more
informlltkm cell, Per10nnel Dir•
cotr 304-372-2731 or apply at
Ho..,kll bualineu office.
AVON · All areas. Cell Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2545.
AVON. ell ereu. cell Shirley
Spe••· 304-875-1429.
f'ed•el. State and Civil Service
joba n4.877to $83. 148-year.
now hiring call job · line 1·618459-3811 ext F2284 for info 24
hro.
CertHiect X-rey technician for
·Doctora office. Cell 304-6751637 or 876-1838.
Radiologic Technologlel
lmmedilltt opening for regiatired radiologic technologist.
Evilning shift, 2 :30-11 :00 pm
Monday• · thru Frid.,-. Send
re~Umeto Pte. .nt Valley Hotpttal. Director of Peraonnel. Valley
Drive, Point Pleasant,, W . Ve.
2fififi0. 304- 87&amp; -4340 ...
307, AA·EOE .

12

Situations
Wanted

For nice lady thl need• • nice
horne lnttead of wages, live in
with very ltttle work to do: Be
compMtion for middle •ged ill
lody. Coll814-441·9fi1fi, ,
Have opiH1ing in my home for
eld..-tv lady. 16 yeer1 eJtperi.,ce. reuoneble rat... will
give reference. 304-773-9186.

18 Wanted to Do

Jim's Odd Job Service- painting,
c.-penter work. sundeck, aiding,
roofing. Co11614-379-2416.
Queltty roofing. Free estimate.
e10 1 aquer~ . Contact Randy at
814-446-89&amp;1.
Music Lettonl ~flute, cl~rinet,
ae•ophone, oboe. and beuoon.
Call lore Snow 814· 266· 1814.
Would like to do Fell &amp; WintM
hou.aeleenlng. PleeM cal 6143&amp;7· 7633 or 387-7696.
Carpenter Work, e6 .00 • hr. or
by ·the job. Pan ~fling, painting,
drywall, remodeling. Call 814448-8377.

Will help finance or lend con·
tract. 10 yr. old hou1e. 3 Br.,
Patriot Village. Cell 614-4461340. 448-3870,
4 BR .. fireplace. full b11em«tt. 3
mi. 10. of Gallipolis. t34,900.
Call Days-514-446·1616, after
6,00· 448· 1244.
Like new. maintenance free, 2

br. ranch. fulty carpet:ed. 15 min.
to GalllpOIII or Mercervill-.
f27,000. Coli 614-268-8200

41

1Houses

for Rent

4 lA . houH on 1 acre. E)CCel
location. Ref. Call A-1 Re•
Eltele Broker. Call 304-676·
6104 or 876-7738.
Unfurnilhed hou11. 3 br. Rodnev Village II . t275. Call 614448-4416 1fter7:00 PM.
Furnlahad 3 room co1tage.
Newtv redecorated. Adults only .
No pett. Ref. &amp; dep. Cell
814-446-2&amp;43.
Nice 3 br. wtth •••ge. t2715 1
mo.- option to buy. Dep. req.
Cell after 4 :00 ' PM 814-3888824 .
,
3 br. home et 918 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis. Cell814-445-8030.

HouM at 80 Chillicothe Rd. Very
Choop. Co11114-448-2404.

Furnithed 1 br. houte. 936 1st.
Ave. UOO e mo. Cell 814-4454038 or448· 18U,

1984 Triumph II 14•70. AI
electric· Cultom m6de. EKcellent shape. e9000. Phone 614·
&amp;98-4429.

Sei•Rent: Ranch 1tyle. Large
kitchen, uti lily rm .. single gar·
age. Like n.w. Carpet thru· out.
Call 614·448-1368.

All brick , 3 br., 1"Y.r bath,
flrepltce. l•mdry roqm. Owner
financing. Ce11614 ·448-0722.

2 br., carport S. •torege eret.
$226 a mo. Dep. &amp; ref. required.
Coll 814-448-3888 or 4414491 .

Handl Man Special· 6 room end
beth. attic. basement. 1 1 0 State
St. Price)'lfgotlable. Cell 61~
992-3726.
Brick St. . Rutland. 3 bedroom, 2
beth, lerge family room with
Buck Sto~e. large deck with
pool, s..ilite, n8'W carp.-t, extra
lnsulttlon. Owner moved. mult
sacrifice onty $43.000. Call
814-742· 2788 or 613 ~ 238·
2763.
2 bedroom home in Pomeroy. 2
baths. 2 car garage, landscaped
pool, utllite, c:lo1e to 1Chool1.
Co11814-992-32fi4,
Middleport. Lovely interior.
close to 1tores end 1chool. Price
reduced. 614-992-6709 after
8;00 p.m.
House and lot in Leon .,... Rt.
62, with vinyl 1kling, atone
front , new porch, priced
$16,600. Owner will finance.
304· 686-4374 .
Firat time home buyers, you can
own a ho~e for whet you now
pay in rent. teller will help with
financing. 10 minute• from
town. 304 ~ 676-4008 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1978 Buddy 14x55 with 12x32
addition- 3 br .• 2 porches,
underpinning. woodburner. antennae. t8600 or best beat
offer, Call 814·446· 8427 after

5.
1970 Flltzcratt 12x7D. 3 bed·
room trailer. 15600. call 614·
2&amp;6 ·1613.
1984 Schultz with expando. If
interested call 814-448-6726 .
12• 66 mobile home. Colemtn
furnance, central air, 'new 30 gel.
hot water tank. Will sell to beat
offer. Cell after 6:00. 814-992·
6721 .

3 bedroom . *200. per month.
Mulberry Ave .• Pomeroy. Cell
between 9 :00 and 8:00. 814992-5587,
2 bedroom house in Pomeroy.
Furnished or unfurni,hed. Call
614-992-8723 1fter 5:00p.m. '
H0uM for rent , Reyburn Road.
304-17&amp;-5253,

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished 2BA., cable av1ilable.
AC ., river view In K1nauge.
Fosters Mobl.. Home Park. Call
614-446-1802 ,
2 br .• w•ll to wall c.-pet. Private
lot In GeiUpolla. Call 814-4481409 •Iter &amp;,00 PM.
2 br .• 12k80. Wash..- a. Dryer
hookup. v.. mi. from HMC on Rt.
35. Dep &amp; Ref. required. Cell
814-448-4389 or 304-876 9760,
Furnilhed 2 br. mobile home.
located in Centenary area. f200
a mo . Call 614 -441-2390.
2 br . tl'lliler &amp; 2 br. houte next
door to college. Call 814· 446·
1323 or 246-9170.
2 bedroom. furnished . No pets.
1160 par month plus utilities.
Call 81 4·949-2948.

Double wide, private lot,, nice
area, 3 bedroom1, 2 full beths.
dining room. family room. air
cond, Gallipoli• Ferry, $325.00.
304-876-3087.
3 bedrooms, rent plus utilltiet.
Gallipolis Ferry. for information
call 304-675-4088.

44

Hou" cle1ning or office cleln·
ing by dey. Cen give ref•ence.
lmm•culete cleaner. Call 614448·810&amp; ,

1966 12x60 New Moon mobile
home. 2 bedroom. very good
condition, eety to heat. $3900.
Might take .4 wheel drive on
panlal trade. 814-992- 3698 .4

Can do light hauling end roofing.
Reaaonable ruu . Mer ion
Snider. 614-949·2629.

1 2•60 Fully c•petad. Reduced
to •saoo. 81~ - 742-2796 or
814-742-2777.

1 end 2 bedroam apartment• for
rent. Basic rent fof 1 bdr ..
$183.00; ?. bdr .. $219.00. Also
required a e200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT: Jeck10n
Eatetes Dept. Ph 448-3997
Equal Houting Opportunity.

FIAEWOODI Locust, oak ,
ch•rv. t36. per pick-up load
delivered. Bill Slack. 614-9922269.

1979Governor14K70. 3br, 11f.t
beth, central air , moved or left on
rented lot. 304· 773-9121 .

F1nanml

Holly Park 14~70 , central ai r,
porc h. shed , underpenning ,
$8600 . or beat offer. 304· 6765417 after4 p.m.

448-8&amp;~3 .

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUBLISHING CO . re.commenda lhat you
do bu1in..a with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the m1ll until you have
Investigated the offering.

Newlr· 'Jidecorlted apartment1
for rent. On•bedroom. unfurnitlhad. aacond flaor . From
t1 76. to *225. per month. Cell
Wlflings: 814·448 · 4421 or
441-232&amp;.

7 piKe heavy dark pine group.
Couch, rocker. chair, ottomtn.
CQffM tabte end 2 -end tabl".
v.., good oondttlon and QOOd
quality. •300 for all. Call l1498fi-31i10,

Urge two-bedroom unfurniahed
apartment with tlove, refrigerator, washer end .,er. Overtook~
ing City Park. $2215. per month.
Clallevening1: 614·441-442&amp; or
448-2326.

F,-lgid1lre Stack Waher· Dryer.
Meytag partible waahar. 40
Inch OE Range. Autom1tlc
Wlthlf'8. AutOmatic dryert (PI
end electrlcl. Froat free refrlger·
etor. Gu rangn . Flreatore
Store. MlddJeport.

bedroom. upltlin. newty
romo~ol.... Stove ond refrigerotor furnilhed. *200, p.- month
pluo Ulllitioo. .,oo, dopooll
roqul_red. Coli 811·992-3489
even•ng•.

34

B 'usiness
Buildings

Commercial buitdipgs for lease.
Downtown Pt. Pletsant. Stor81,
office•· A· One Reel Eltate.
Carol Vetger. Broker. Call 304·
676-6104.

2 bedroom furnished apt. .fool'
rent in Middleport. "Caii12 :003:90 or after "7 :jg p.m . 514·
992-6084.
r
1 bedroom furnithed in 'Middl•
port. Cell 814-992· 5304 or
814-441-8898.
·
APARTMENTS, mobile hom81,
houses. Pt. Plnsent and Gelllpo.
lio, 814-448-1221.
2 bedroom furniaed apt, ref and
deposit. New Haven, W . Ve .•
304-882-3287 or 304-773 ·
6024.
3 rooms end bath, gu hut,
ground floor. washer end dryer
hook up, no children. immlditrte
occupancy. No pets. phone
304-875-4480 ••• 63 or eo.
Two bid room apartment. 304876-2&amp;48.
Unfurnl1hed one bedroom gar~
age apt, Huntington, W. Ve.
t176 . month plul utilities,
e100.00 security deposit. 304·
526-1081.

46

Furnished Rooms

Room• for rant, day. week.
moilth. Gellia Hotel. CaM 814·
446-9680. Rent ulowea $120
month.

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

Furnished room. 1100. Ut1Uti81
paid. Share beth. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
448-441 0 eftor 7pm.

46 Space for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

Furni1hed Efflcleru:y $146. UtllitiH paid, there beth. 607
Second Ave ., Gallipoli1 Ph.
448-4416 after 7PM .
Up1t1lrt unfurnished apartment.
Utilities paid. Carpeted. no child·
ren or pets. Call 814·446-1837
2 BR . epts. 8 clotetl, kilchenappt furnished, Wa•her· Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, newly
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Apto, Coil 304-876-773B or
875-6104,
Furnilhed Apt. - 1 Br. UOO.
Utiliti• paid. 701 4th Ave.
Gallipolis. Cell 814-441-4418
efter8 :0Q PM .

SWAIN
•AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olivo Sl, Oolllpollo.
'NEW- 6 pc, wood group- 1399.
IJving room sultt11· I 1 99· •&amp;19.
Bunk beds with bedding· *198.
Full tb:e matlr... • founciMion
a~ortlng · us . -Racllnen
aunlng- •99.
USED- Bed•. drtll..,_, bedroom

•1•s~e211.

1uit11
Desk•.
wring•, washer, 1 complete
line
of used furniture.
NEW· Wntern boote-' *30.
Workboolo *18 • up. (Sioel.
toft toe) . Call 814·448·3119.

Big Oaltota firm home bulh on
your hn. t12.996 &amp; up. Cell
614-881-7311 .

Space for smell traillf'l. All
hook-ups. CliMe. Al1o efficiency
room1. air and cable. Meson.
W.Va. Call304 ~ 7i73· 6651 .
,r

Trailer spac• for rent fully
equipped in Mason, W. Va.
304-675-li319 •tter 7 :00pm .

49

For Leese

•

Fo'ileuebeaement under store,
11u5 Jeffenon Blvd .. shop or
1toragge. 304-876-1436.

Merchanllise

1!1::~~·61&gt; ·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofn and chairs priced from
8396 to 8995. Tables •so end
up to 1125. Hid•a-beds e390
to *696. · Aecllntra $226 to
$37&amp;. Lampo •2a to ., 2fi.
Dinettes 8109 end up to 1496.
Wood table w-6 c:haira *286 to
t79&amp; . o.. k t100 up to *376 .
Hutch• 8400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w·methea. .
t296 end up to 1396. Baby beds
$110, Mtttre•" or box spring•
full or twin 868. firm 878, end
888. Queen lets *226. King
$350. 4 drawer chetl $89 . Gun
cabinets 6 gun. a•• or electric
range U76 . Baby mattres~ea
$315 &amp; 846 . Bed frames *20
e30 &amp;. King freme e&amp;o . Good
selet:tlon of bedroom tuitea.
'metal cabinatl, heedboerda I 3D
tnd up to $65 ,

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

90 Days Nme es cuh with
approved credit:. 3 Milu out
Buhwille Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 614·4460322,

PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood· 6 pc. living wood
IUites, t399.95; cheat of drew·
••· 4 drawer· e48, IS drawer$&amp;9 .96; m1t1rea a. bbx ..,rings·
ful! size; 312 coil, 1149.915 set;
twm mattre11n , $95
sat.
THE WORKING
MAN 'S "FRIEND
Valley Furniture
New - and ultld furniture and
eppllcancea . Cell ' 614- 448·
7672. ~oure 9-6 .

WHEioJ 50MEBODY TRIES.

~

75

AN D PRO MI~I! . , I COULD US.!!
TO 6 1VE: Mf A
THE: ACTION.
CALl.. W~EN YOU

· AND 8'( N!!)(T Wj;c Ko

. -' .

TO MOVE A CHUI-IK OF

w:
.... .
. ..........

Boats and ~.~ ..
Motors for Sal(,:::~

IOET ~18BLE.

CMH TO THf &amp;ANI&lt;.
IN SWIT:ZI!F.'LANO-

~

.

Pontoon boat. 24 ft. wltlj 4:£'j
inch Pontoons. Excelllnt ~ :;
tion. 13600. 614· 992· 7at.o;" .. :; i

•
-•r:

~ -7

•

76

•·

1a

Auto Parts ••

A

• ·~

·

CC8180F181 ...•~

~J=:::========:;:======~";:";:''":"':;·'";:·~ ·------------------4·~;
:.,.!J ,,
Budg• Trenamiaaion•: usedano. "
reballt, all typH. Guarent" 30. .
64 Misc. Merchandise

.m:·~-----------­
l :::oft:.::::~~4~tp:
Firewood for aele, delivered

Uke new. King wood a. coal
stove whh blower. U1ed 1
winter. Cell 61tl--256-1636 af·
ter 4 :00PM,
Good hunting coat. size XI. e40,
Good cond .. 2 lamp1. Thread •
thimble house. C1ll 814·4468361 .
Firewood for ula. Delivery
aviilable. Cut S. 1tacked. Call
814-448·0961 . AlsO wiM htul
IIWIY scrap m.wl.
Clothes: Women•- aize 1 -3,
piano, refrigerator, washer·
dryer, wringer w11her, antique
buffet, tv. curtains. Call 81424&amp;·9241 ,

Catalytic converter•. only
189.915. Moat mOdels. lnatella ~
tion •lao aveiltble. Muffler Man,
9 Stimpaon Ave.. Athen1, Ohio.
1-800-843-3787.
Mt.ed herd wood •labs. *12 per
bundle. Cont.tining approx. 1 'h
ton. FOB. Ohio Pellet Co
Pomeroy. Ohio. 814- 992~8461 .
Floor lamp, 3 light. t1 0. Exercise bike, $30. Large 3 shelf
nicely finished bookc18e, 120. 2
white c•amic Sp1ni.t\ decor
end table lamps with new
shades. $21. each. Call 8 14·
992-2413 ofter 6'00 pm .
King Wood and Coal Burner with
blower. 1 yaar old, like new.
$378. Coli 51 4-992-&amp;086 otter
6,oo.
Firewood for Nle. Cherry, Oak.
Sa1oefras, Hickory, t40. Pickup load. Split end delivered. Cell
614-992-8336.
Klmbtll cherry console plano
with bench. 17 ft. 1973 Fan
tnvel trailer, ••If-contained
aJeepa; I . 1984 Yemah• 200, 3
wheeler. 814-992-&amp;870.
King WoOd end Coal Burner with
blower for Milt. Lilj.enew. 1300.
Cell 61 4 ·985-4418.
For Hie. Poalttble. Camplete.
t100. 114-992 -?016.
For aele. 3 flllhint arrow lf.ln•.
walk In cooler, 2 door 11111
cooler. counlers, glau · show
caMs, 2 cathreglJtert . George's
Carry Out. 3 mil• touth of
Middleport, Ohio.

...i,.l..----------...j

•ao.oo lood, 304-896-3441.

Monroe copl• Model RL-812.
undll" 16.000 copi•. 304 -876~
4087.
Coal llove t75.00. 410 pump
ahot gun, 30-30 788 Remington. 12 gtuga Stevena 38 inch
berrell, 304·5715· 7469.
QE refrlger..or. warlt condition.
eso.oo. Clll after '5:00. 304875-1494.
,,

-.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materitll
Block. brick. sewer pipes. win·
dows. lintels. ate. Cleuct. Winlert, fUo GJende. 0 . Call 81424&amp;-6121.
Concrete block• ell aiae1 yartl or
delivery. Meson und. Gallipoltt
Bloclt Co, 123Y. Plno St ..
Galllpollt. Ohio Coli 114-448·
2783.
Reedy miJt concrete a'nd ell
concrete euppltes. Cell ut Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies.
304·773-&amp;234,

66

Pets for S a_le

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. Air breed1 ... AII
1tyl11. Julie Webb Ph . l14-448~
0231 .
Dregonwynd Cattery Kennel .
CF" . Hlmalaytn, Perelen and
Slameee kitten•. AKC Chow
puppies. New kitten•; Persians.
Col1 114-446-3844 oftor 7PM.

61 Farm Equipment

doyo . Coil 614-379·2220 br .
·304·675-4230.
. .... ; : ;

Homallte Super XL. 18 Inch bar.
t299. 91 . Sldtn Equipment
Ca .. HenderiOft, w. v•. 304·
876·7•21 .
MF 210 (19831 trector. S0·80
8u~ Hog, Bush Hoe grader
blade. MF 2x14" plow1, MF 5 ft
dilc, MF 2 row cultivators,
transplanter MT-122 tob1coo
..tter. Priced togeth• or indlvidually. Pete Sommer et 304·
67&amp;-3260 doy: 67&amp; -3117
_evening•.
International 1050 grinder miur
magnet. Hay feeder, 3 1creen1,
good cond. 304-273-4215.

After 6 :30. 304-6715-1500.

62 Wanted to Buy

Now buying shell corn or e•
corn. Call forlel"tquotes. Alv•
City Form Supply, 114-448298&amp;.

63 ·

Reg . black Morgen mare. 10
veers old. Wetl broke to ride and .
dr+ve. CaU 814·698- 6298 .

64 . Hay

&amp;

Grein

Miud hey $1 . bale on wagon.
Hoy for bedding 80c. 304-675&amp;&amp;79.

franspnrtalion
71

Auto's For Sale

19B&amp; Plymouth Horizon. Auto,
ec, A dr. 29,000 mH11 - t31500 .
Coll614·379-2726 .
1972 Buick. Good work car.
AM-FM · C.s1. Ctn be •een et
241 rear Jeckaon Pike, Apl. 1.
noo.
1977 Buick Regel 360. v~e.
auto, pa. pb, ac. tilt, em-8 track
ttereo. Red, whhe t.ndau top.
Excellent cond. 80,637 1ctu1l
miiMge. Call 614-448-3668.
1972 Nove . Good running c:on~
dition. 6 cyl. t200. Cllll aftlltl
4:30 114·446 · 7693,
1976 Camero. Call 614-268123&amp;.,

Yorkahira TerTier, 18 months
old, Blue and Gold, phone
304· 773·&amp;436.

19n Monte Carlo and 302 Ford
engine a tren1mi11lon. Call
814-448-8278.

Fruit
8o Vagetebles

Steinleu lleel e•h•u.t •v•temt.
Now cu1tom made for your
truck, motor home or cla11\c car.
With~ life- tim a warranty. Muffler
Man, 9 Stimpton Aw .. Athen1,
Ohio. 1·800·843-3767.
1979 Thunderbird. Cell 814·
992·3438.
1982 Chevy MaHbu Cleulc. 4
dr., air, P8, PS , AM -FM radio.
H5gh mileage. •9915 . Cell 81 4·
992-8471 .
1978 Camero Rally Spon. auto,
AC . tilt, AM -FM stareo. air
1hock1. 360 four barrel!, 304676· 1139.
1•1 81 Volkswagon Galf. 30467&amp;-5325,

Wine.. p, Rome. Melro1e. Supef
Ooht red &amp; yell~ Delidoua 1 980 Ctteveit• 4·door, 4 1peed.
Applft. Honey,'l0f'Cihum, apple uood work car 8800, 304-BB2butter, pumpkins Ia e1aorted 2478 or 882-3662 .
food item1."Dunrovln Fruit Farm
881 S . of Albany. Wettltdaye 1979 Bonneville Pontiac 301 ,
9·6, WHkends 9 -5. Call 814- ec, Pl. pb, tilt pw. nice cer. high
~8:.:9:.:8~·1:::2:::9:::8:::·______-:-:------ 1"lllf' f1600, 304-676-2563.
ou,ltty Fruits snd Vegetabl"
retell and wholesale. 1 &amp; S 1981 Plymouth Reliant K-Car, 4
cyl, auto. air, p1, front whe
Produce aero•• from Pizza Hut. drive. Nice Uttle car. t 2496.
Oalllpolil, Ohio.
304·876-2563 .
f ;. •

r 1r111

Su1Jplir~s
(; liVI~SIOLk

61 Farm Equipment

77

Auto Repair

..

•

.

'

......

Struu, $119 .96 pair, ln•ta.!lfld .•
Molt modele. Muffler Man, 9
Stimpson Ave. Athen1, Ohio . .l
1•800·843-3787.
I
:1

WILL
CUT IT
OVT WITH THe
MeMOS?·· -- :t'M

1911 Travel Meta f;op · up :
camper. 1&amp;00.00 or b..._t offer, "
304·576-6118 ,

OMNI)Cf/:WT,

~7;:;;8==c~.:m:p:;:in:g==: ,!

fo~ C~YING .

OUT

1980 Buick Regal. Real 1h1rp
. tr•· High MilO.. *2. 198: 304875·2&amp;83.
1986 Cougar. 3.8, V-6, t1k1
over payments, can IH 2212
Madison Ave. after 8 :00 PM .
'78 Camero Z28, PS. AC, PB,
2,600. Coll304-675-4072 altar
3,30 pm.
.

.

L.OUP!

1973 Starcraft 23 ft . camper.
304-176-3427.

SPrvicr.s

--'-JcOL,;;;v
r
,'

DON'T HEAH ANVl'HIN'

,.,'

EITHUH, C~'N! I .. ...

BASEMENT
. ,_ .~ s
WATERPROOFING .....,.,....
Unconditional lifetime gU.re~
tee. Local rttf•encll turnjshect.:,-,.
FrH enlm.tn. Call collec:r...'"'l
1-614-237-0488, doy or nlghi.·:"RogeraBetement x
Waterproofing.
•
SWEEPER end tey.oing machine ·. :.
repair. p1rta, end auppll•. Pict ·. ·'
up end delivery, Davis Vacuurv I :.
Cleaner, one half mile up ~~
Georg• Creek Rd. Cell t14-..~ .,..
448-0294,

1979 GMC van. 8 pe11enger.
New paint. pb, pa, air. 87,000
actual mil•. EJtcel. cond. Call
114-448-4169,

58

'

...... ,.!;

Rottweiler pup, 9 weeki.
wormed, cell 8:30 tiH 4 :30 aik
for N•ncv 304-175· 2308 or
875-1170 enytima.

Guitar· Meded by Harmony.
Mahogany. t715. Call 614-4464999 .

-.

WANT TO BUY windlhield
frame snd parts to fit 1977 CJ 6
jaep. 304 -1715-6009 .
.. ..

=----o-:-

1979 fiord Mu1tang. 6 cyl. ,
•m·fm-cats with eq. Runs fine.
Good cond. Fl,.t e7&amp;0. Call
614-446-7077,

K..,.

1talled . Most Fords, Chevy
truckl. Vans, 4•4's. Muffler
Man. 9 Stimp1on Ave ., At hen1,
Ohio. 1-800-843-3757 .

6 Holtfein heifers to com• frnh
Home
soon. Cell 514-241- 9170 or . 81
448-1323.
Improvements

Regi1tered Cocker Spaniel puppie•. Bl.ck, bJown, white parts.
Himaltyan kittens. No check.
Call814-992·2607.

Guitars : Electric· K•Iemuoo ,
176 . Acoustic-Yamaha 12alring, e1&amp;0. Harmony An:htop,
n&amp;.
•so. Call 614-4460656,

,,

Livestock

1981 Calevler AS . Auto., ec, p1,
pb. am~tm radio, tilt, re.defroat. Cell 614-446- 2323 af·
tar 4 :00 PM .

Mu8icel
Instruments

-----~----------lcDuel eJthMist kits, t99.96 in·

Equipment

English Setter-7 yfl. old. Well
trolned. Cell 614·258-1108 af·
ter 15 :00 PM .

57

'

FOR "SALE - 820 John Deere
01 ... 1 Trector with bru1h hog.

~. .

Uled lf'd rebuilt trenamin6olta•~
Internally inspected and gueri rt-,.,1""
teed. ln.llatlon available. We buy junk tran•mittkms. Cell
814-448-0981 ,
I

h

1981 Mercury LynJt, 4 cyl, auto,
CROSS llo SOtjS
U.S . 315 W•t, Jaekton, Ohio. ,new brakea , exhaust.
81 ,200.00. run1 good. 304814-288·8411 '
MasMV Ferguaon, P,Jew Holland, 882 -2e&amp;2 or 8B2-2664 .
Bush Hog Saltp a Service. Over
40 uHd trtctora to choo•• from
•Trucks for Sale
&amp; complete line of new a .uud 72
equipment. Largest Mledion ·in
S,E, Ohio,
1978 ~~ ton Ford pickup. Fair
cond. *6&amp;0 . Call 614- 3791-row Oliver ~;prn pick•. 1200 2684.
bu. wire corn c:rlb-good cond.
Colll14 ·448-8427 ofter fi . · 19715 Chevy 1hort bed 4•4 . 10
Inch lift with 40 inch tlr81. New
Ferguson Tractor, good condi- paint, Good cond . Too much to
tion. 990 Int. hay bind. 12 ft . lift. Call 614-387-0239.
dump bed. 8ft. dump bed. 1978
Honda 750. Set of 18 ft. log 1977
Ford truck wlth bed.
bunk. Olkter dour. 3 wev blade. Replaced molor. Runs very
Divco milk truck with ref. unit good, no rutt. Call 114-992·
1 e.l21 .
Calll14-742-246fi.

.

Vinyl Siding, over heng '"~ .
gutter~. Call 814-448-8834. o~
Frill! Estimate.

EEK &amp; MEEK

RON'S Televltlon Service .
HouH c1111 on ACA, Qyezar,
GE . Spaciallng In Zenith. Call
304-576-2398 or 814 -4482464.

..
. "

1HE. 61..11-J&lt; AGAill

NOTt-\lt\JG .. .

Fetty Tute Trimming. stump
remove I. Call 304- 876~ 1331 .... .

---------------------;·.
Rotary or cable tool drlllina'..
Most wela completed semed(y.
Pump salt11 end service. 3D•·
89&amp;-3802
•

Starlu Tree end Lawn Servj,c:.;.!;-~
lawn cere, landscaping, ltU"'Il -t ~
removal. 304-678 -2842 ...01 :~ .........
678·2903.
f'. .. , ..

10 · 1

----------------~~
WINTERIZATION , , -~~
1

Securi1y Lightl. Storm .Win/ .. .! •
dows. ln•ulation, Roofing, Oen·
erel . Repairl. 304-876·8367 . .

82

DON'T BEL-IEVE

wHO!s YOL.IR NEW

A NYTHINEf 6HE T.E L.L.5

Te:ACHER THIS

Plumbing
Heating

YOLJ AeOL.lT ME: .

TERM':?

&amp;

•

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANQ. HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614· 446 -3888 or 814446-4477
APPALACHIAN WOOD STOVE ,
Wood1md c;:oalatovea, furnacH.
and inaena. Brunco, Ashley,
Con~alideted Dutchwest. BuY. - ·'
1ell, trade. 10 yrs. exptlf"ience.
At. 143, Carpenter. Ohio, 81'4.- ~ ~
898-6121 ,
• ', .

BARNEY
,.

I SEE JlJGHAID
GOT A TERRIBLE
BAD REPORT CARD
THIS

84 , Electrical
8o. Refrigeration

------------------~~
'· .~
Residential or commerciel"~ wir­
i~g . New 1ervice or reptirs.
Llcen•ed electrician. Estimete
free. Aidenour Electrical. 304·
876-17B6.

85

A

c

Outrun - Ratio - Wooly -- Exhort -- YOU'RE NOT

PEANUTS
KERE 15 ALEAF FROM A~
OAK TREEAHD AfWTI-IER
FROM AN ELM TREE! TI-l E
NEXT ONE IS fJ:. SURPRISE,..

Upholstery

R &amp; M Cuato m Couch•• and
R~upholstery , St . At. 7 , Crown
Cny, Oh. 814·268-1470, Evo.
814-448-34 38. Open daily 9 to
4:30. Set. 9 30 to 1 :30. Old &amp;
new Uphostere·d.

A LEAF FROM OUR

DINING ROOMTABLE!

HA HA HA IotA!!·

·I

S~O VLD HAVE TI-10U61-lT
ABOUTTI-lAT A LITTLE
W ~ILE LONGER..

((
io-1

'

I

~

~le

ID 11J ~118 Show

---

.

tQJ865

'

+108613

WEST

EAST

.J98532

• A Q 10 4
tAK 10

·--+J

By James Jacoby

+K 109

.It's a sad day, f or br•'d ge JUS
' t ICE
' ,I t 9 3 2
+AK9
7 52
when 23 high-card points, almost all in
SOUTH
aces and kings, can take· only tbree
.AQ87654
tricks against four spades doubled. ·
.K76
Could something have been over+14
looked on defense?
+Q
South traded on favorable vulnera· 1
Vulnerable: East· West
bility wben he jumped to three spades
Dealer: East
and bis partner went along with tbt
gag by bidding four. Naturally East West
Soalb
Norlb East
doubled, and West could not visualize
3t
2+
bis side making 11 or 12 tricks I~ ' Pass
4+ Dbl. Pass
hearts, so be passed.
1 Pass
Pa!S
East took tbe king of clubs and con-- ,
tinued with the ace. South trumped,
Opening lead: 2
and crossrulfed hearts and dubs until •
he had ruffed bis third heart with the L--"-----,---,--~...J
spade jack in dummy. By this time the a seven-bagger to jump . to three
remaining club in dummy was a win- spades.)
. ner. When he played the club, East·dis- East was more at fault for not readcarded a diamond, hoping tbat West ing yesterday's column. Then he would
could trump, Alas, West had no have known at the second trick to lead
trumps and declarer was able to shed 'back tbe king of spades. Try as be
a diamond as the dub held the trick. might, declarer must now lose five .
Now a diamond was led from dummy_ tricks and be set 300.
to East's king, and East tried to cash
the ace. Soutb ruffed and exited witb a A new book by James Jacoby and
low spade, and East had to win and his father, the late Oswald Jacoby, is
lead back into tbe declarer's A·Q. That now available at bookstores. It Is "Ja·
4s an ugly 10 tricks for declarer, but .coby on Card Games, • published by
cow:se East was at fault for not Pharos Books.
rulfing the last club. (Surely Soutb had
@ ""· NI!WSPAPEil ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Magazine
(!)Sign Off
1!11 Moneyllna Current
reports on world economic s
and financial news with ~ou
Dobbs, (0:30)
lUI Honeymooner•
18 CD ~ova Connection
11:3011(2) 81 Tonight Show
(I) SportiCantar (~)
ffia.re
II (Jl NlghHina 1;1
I[§) Magnum, P.l.
1!11 &amp;porte Tonight Ac11on
packed sports highlights w ith
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
'Addeny• cas Leta
Night What\ Ma)or Clack
resigns from lSI, Adderly
begins an lnvesllga11on ,
11)1 Magnum, P.l. Kl's Don 't

li-H7

NORTH

+J 3 2

Can justice
be served?

+

or

'

l»y THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS DOWN

1 Engender 1 Hackneyed
2 Save

6 Plethora
9 Vibrant
10 Farm

· wedding

costs ,
3 Taken

setting

for

12 Literary

work

•

granted .
4 Night
before

13 Aquatic
animal

5 Decisive
Yesterday'• Answer
17 O'Neill
29 "I 16 IUumined 6 "perture
7
Devour
play
Camera"
18Cheering
8 Composer 20 Color
32 Cheer
word
23
Nail
33
Start
Vivaldi
19Legume
11
The
"D"
24
Embezzle
34
Vogue
21 Snooze
in FDR
211 Victor
36 Slippery
22 United
14
Drive
28
Lists
39 Sunnount
23Math
back
27battery
41 Jewel
ratio
;.;;;.;.;.~l!:'""'r':""'""'l!"""
24 GoOdman's
15 Mimic

music

27Thread '
holder

ell2l

.

BRIDGE

28 Prong
290ne

(0:30)

NOT my mother."

around and act like YOU' RE

1151 Newo

Dump ·tru ck delivery, coal•.-~
stone. sand. gravel, till and · ~
11wdusl, 304 -67&amp;· 3190.

•

1was to chaperone mv daughter's high school danca. "What
"· do 1 do?" 1 asked. ''li's easy," she answered . "just stand

u rn CII 11 CIJ ®J 111 il2l

Watterson ' s Water HauiJng '
reasonable rates, immediat~
2, 000 gallon delivery , clsterrlli "
pools. well, etc. call 304-678·
2919.
• •

NUMBERED LETTE RS IN
THESE SQUARES

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM·i.ITs' ANSWERS ,

storios , (1 :00)
Ill (lJ Benny HUI
10:20 Ill MOYIE: Donovan's R"l
(NRI (1 :49)
10:30 CD American Snapahoto
(!]) Gina llehauir lnter'l .
Plano Cornpatition
Ill CD Hogen'• Haroeo
1t:OO CD Remington SIMla

Paul. Aupe, .Jr. Witer Service.
Pools. cisterns. wells. Call814- ~ •· .
446· 3171 .
... _..

P~I N T

9:30 (I) CJ ()) Slop Max!IOell
Story The newspaper
replaces him on tho
sportsbeaJ and llml1s his
storlos,
10:00 (!) Ano1he! Cla111e Summar

1!1 Scuba

Cornple1e the chuckle quoted
by lilhng in the missing words
you d~velop from step No. 3 below.

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTER S
TO GET AN SWER

ahead to tomorrow's news

..

I

~-

asked the teacher. One student ,
.
.
.
.
.
.
ready fOI' a break In classee.
. . - - - - - - -- ---,replied, " At this t ime of year wa
GA ME P 1
reruns:·

.,
'I:J

I[§) C11112l The EqU811zar
McCall and Kostmoyer's .
fishing trip turns Into a raco
lo save a lifo.
(!]) i1J1 Newo
!!)I Evening Nawe A wrap up
of today' s news and a look

A &amp; A Wate r ServiCe. Hofne ~ ·
Cilters. wells, poola filled . Fg r- ; . •
marly Jamea; Boy1 Wtters.Call "'
304· 676 -6370 .
• .. , ..

I I I I Is ;

I__J_.J._JI.......J.-..1.-J

Line October

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimmh1Q:":
pools. ciatarns, wells. Ph . .611-•'
245-9285.
' • • ..

" Why didn't someone tell mB I

1---~~..;,:....;.;.1_;_;:..,1,.;:~:....;:,.1....::;,..1--1: G)

~ Kanawha Coun1y on the

Dillt,rd Water Service:
~iaterns . Wells. Delivery Any.:.
;
ttme. Call 614-448-7404--Ncr Sunday calls

i

I had already given this lecture? "

newsmakers and celebrities.

.

~-

~.,.:.V...;.;_N:.:..,;E:....:K..,_.-1 •

1:30 (2) Leal F10ntler
(I) CJ ()) Head of the Clau
When tha kids think ono
must go, they argue abou1
who's expandable. I;!
9:00 CD Femtllaa Under Fire
(I) PIO Surflng PSAA
Championships from Malibu
Beach, CA (l)
(I) CJ ()) Hoope111111n Mo
becomes enamorod of a
handsomo actor doing
research lor a role. E;l '
(!) (!]) Corrldaal Talea of
Paoolon and Revolution
Theatrical presentation of
corridos , passionate Mexican
folk balldds that tell storlos
of love, war, life and death
along the U.S.·Mexican
·
, •
border. l;l
I[§) tD 1121 Magnum, P.l.
Magnum is caught belwoon
life and death. Can ho got
out of Umbo?
!!)I Leny King ~Ivai In dopth
interviews with 1op ·

HOW IN THlJNDER
DO YOU KNOW
"THAT, Mf\W?

I I' J I

l {l~-ti· I~

&lt;n

Po~ li-- .z. •

Mowrey'• Upholstering serv ing
trl counware a22 year~. Tl)e best
In furniture uphol1tering. Call
304 · 675 · 4154 f.or t r e e
e1timata1.

I. I

(I) CJ (I) Dynao1y Tha pol'1ce
strongly suggest that Steven
may need psychia1rlc halp.

."

87

CREORG

1:1511 (2) 81 Mo)orPLaague
118.....11

Gener.al Hauling

.

lette rs of
scrambled words
low 10 fctrm lovr sirnple words .

•

ich"re
11111) M"A•S"H
7:05 Ill Andy GriHIIh
7:30 D (2) Hollywood Square•
1!1 Scholaetic Sporto
America (T)
(I) Newlywed Game
Ill ()) Judge
•
llJ Wheel of Fortune 1;1
1!11 C101111re (0:30)
Ill ll2l 1111' J-rdyl 1;1
lUI Berney Miller
111 (lJ WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 Ill Sanford and Son
8:00 CD Second Honey~
D (2) G5J Major ~eague
lleHbell: An Inside Look
(I) Sallboardlng 1986 Banks
Barb'adcis Funboard
, Challenge (R)
(I) II ()) Perfect Slr8ngere
Balki must accedo to an
editor's soxual desires or be
fired . I;! '
(!) (!]) Dlecover. wo~d of
Science ~ook at manatoes
and why 1helr survival in
Florida Is In jeopardy. C
(II) e!l2l The Oldeot ffookle
Ike and Tony search lor a
psychic to help 1oca1e The
Cereal Killer. Q
0 Prlmanawo Wrap ups of
the day' s world nows and in
dopth feature roports, (1 :00)
lUI MOYIE: Dirty Heny (RI
(1 :42)
11111) MOYIE: The Aviator
(PG) (1 :38)
'
1:06 Ill MOYIE: Mother ~ode (PG)

T1ME
.
'

Reom::~ nge

(1 :43)

I·US 1V S£!" IS 00
'

EVE.NING

-,-

0 four

6:00 CD Crazy Uke a Fox
D (]) CII CJ (I) ®l Cll ll2l
81 Newo
(!I Sportal..ook (l)
C!l Dr. Who
.
(!]) Squore One TV 1;1
lUI Fact• of ~Ito
• 11) One Day II a Time
8:05 Ill Allee
6:30 II (]) 81 NBC Nlilh~y Newe
(]) Inside 1he PGA Tour (A)
(i) 'D ()) ABC News I;J
(!) NlghUy Bullneel Report
I[§) 111112l CBS Newo .
(!]) Degraul Junior High Vlck
9ets &amp;augh1 cheating ; Joey's
loke backfiros, C
!!)I ShowBiz Todtly News of
the entortainmon1 world Is
anchored live from ~·ew
'fork. (0:30)
i1J1 WKRP In Cincinnati
1!1111) Tob Clooe·for Comfort
6:35 Ill Carol Burnett
7:00 CD Rem1ng1on SIMla
D CD PM Magazine
1!1 SportaCenlor (L)
(I) Enlellallnmenl Tonight
a ·()) People'• Court
• (lJ .(!]) MacNeil/ ~ohrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
'
I[§) Newe
!!)I Moneyllne Curren!
reports on world econom ics
and financial news w ith Lou
Dobbs, (0:30)
111112l 81 Wheel of Fottune

~VetJUE: .

1986 Honda XFI 80, 1982 •
Suzuki Jr. 60. Both good,to,nd ...•
304-676-6269 oflor 4:30. • •

London Fot ell weath• coat. liz
14. t40. 2 girls. size 5 velvet
dr81HI·I2&amp; each. Size 6 coat
with hooct-e10, Wool coat with.
1cerf. tize 14, $30. Call 114446·8389.

Fu'rni1hed apt. n.. t to library.
prof11alonal aduh only. t__.;.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
EJtcelleh t 8uaine11 Location. One
Parking. Call 814-448·0338.
r
good for office or drive-through
cllity , Contac t 304 · 675 · ~- Br .. carpet., Stove, refrlg.
Own your own eppsrel or 1hoe .fs
furni1hed . Waatler· dryer hookltOfl , chooae from : jean · 4035, 9 t .m .· 6 p.m.
up. Water, garbage paid. Ne•
1poruwear. ledie• apparel.
men's , children-maternity, large
Silver Bridge. Call &amp;14-44635
Lots
8o
Acreage
702&amp;.
1i1e1 , petite , dan c ewear eerobic, bridal, lingerie or acc•·
aorl• ltore. Add color enalylil.
Furnished apt.- 4 room• and
Bre"da: U1 Claiborne. G11olina, Near Eureka Dam : 14 1cres - 10 beth. Centrally located. Ref. end
Heltthtex. Levi, Lee. Camp acres with tobacco beae. l,end Sec. dep. required . Call 1148.-vertv Hill•. St Michele. Cheus. contract. Cell 614-446-2404.
446 -0444 ..
Oulblck Red. Gen81ia, Forenu,
Organically Grown, over 2000 2 Building Iota- 1 Ya acret each · 2 br. epanment. Adult• only.
ot'herl. Or 113.99 one price with county wate r. Jerry• Run Inquire, Shepperd'•· Firtt &amp;
d11igner, multi lier pricing dla· Ad. Apple Grove, W. Va. Cell Olive St. QellipoUa, Ohio.
count or family ahoeltore. Aettil 304-578-2383 ,
prlc• unbeUwable for qualhy
2 Bedroom. stove &amp; refrlg.
furnished. cerpatad. Easy walk
aho• narm•ltv priced from *19.
to e80. Over 2150 branda 2600
to downtown Galllpollt . UI,O a
Rentals
mo.
otyloo, •14,600 to '26.900,
,, Phone 814-241-8181.
inventory . ·training. fixture• .
EffiCiency apt.; 2 rmsa prtvate
grand opening, airfare. etc. Can
Op«&lt; 15 diY•· Mr. Loughlin 41
bath. e160 • mo ..- Utllttl• paid.
Houses for ·Rent
828 2nd. Ave. C.ll 114-44118121818 lfi&amp;fi.
2390,
'
t9 . 99 ONE PRIC E SHOE Nicely fulMished 1meU houu.
STORE OR t 10-.20 FASHION Adulu only. Rtfarencet re· Nice 2 br. apt ,: Stove, refrigeraSTOAEI Open a non-fran chise quired. Off street p"arking. Ph. tor, water'-rurnished. 4 Y, mli11
nore with the Liberty Feahiont 1 _B_1_4_-44
__6_-o
_3
_3
_8_.___________ from Gallipolis. U10 a mo. No
pets. Call614-440· 8038.
advantage. Over 1. 300 brand
nam• . One-tim a fee, Inventory. 4 SA. houM for renn 3 mi. s o. of
fiJtturn, buying trip, auppliel, Galli polis. $300 e month plus Furnilhed apt. 2 br. 1138 2nd.
Jnatore trsining and more. Ca y dep. Ref. required. Call 8t4.. Ave. Gellipolla. 119&amp;. Water
any ti.,e. Dan Ko•teclcy 501- 445· 1615 Alter 6 :00PM .. c1ll paid. Cell 814·446· 4418 after
"I don't care where we vecatlon as long as
327·8031 .
448- 1244.
7,00 PM.
our friends envy us when we return:·

•

/tW!t&gt;l '-lA!-co;r e:Q.JAL-?
MAJ:bit.IAL-

Motorcycles

WED., OCT. 7

WOIO
GAM I

_ ________:._ _: Edito d ~y CIA Y - · '01\AN

.

GL 1000 fully drHoed §0!1:,_-:'
304-57&amp;-21 31 .

Finlshec1Gredellumber, 2x10.118
apProx. Ouentltyat300et•6.00
• bolfd. Cell 814- 266 ~ 8692
efter 7 :00.

Firewood for aale. Seuoned
hardwOOd. Celll14-742~ 264&amp; .

74

LE.V~L

Page- 1 3

T~~;~~~y S©\t~lA-~t.!fS®

Television
. "
Viewing

~ Wf'U£

760 Yemah• with 2000 miles.
• 1900. call 814-448-4109 or
614-379-2740.

Chest· aolid walnut, cedlf lined.
H1nd made. High qu1ltty . .. 200 .
Coil 814-387-7149,

51 Household Goods

CXJTf'tJT

1983 Jeep Scrembler. l cy l., 4
4&amp;.000 mil ... t4500, . C ~!!
614-985-4324.

I t&gt;Ou~T IF You ' ~

mte

FIGijiiE SHAPING TABLES
Open your own figure Nlon wltn
the original SU.uHer Concept
Figure Sh.,lng .. blea. Buy
factory direct. Call 312-2349&amp;47.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Calr 814 - 992 ~
7479.

eor

ElectroktK vecuum cleaner, run1
used appliancea and TV set._ like new. with lttlchments.
qp•n 8AM to 8"". Mon thru eee.oo cuh Of tarmaerranged.
Set. 814·448-1191,' 827 3rd. Phone 304-17&amp;-4418 .
Avo. Golllpollo, OH,
~--.:..:._:.:..:,:._:__-:----~-:----:
Eleetrolu• October apeclal. B-9
GOOD USED APPLIANCES ahampooer only t289.00. C.l!
Washlf'l, dryers, refrigerators, 304-175.:1417.
ranges . Skeg~• Appliances, 1- ------------------Upper River A:d. betide Stone Nev"er used Tappan microwave.
Cl'llt Motel. 814-448-7398.
Call efter 8 p.m .• 304-87&amp;2319.
·
64 Misc. Merchandise Electrolux ia having • Fell Sale.
Super ditcount. Cell 304· 7883213 for furthtf information.
Callehtn'a Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000tiru.aizes12, 13,14,15. Seuoned oak firewood. Cell
HI, 18.6. 8 mil• out At _ 218. 304-876-2767 ..... 4'40.
Call 614·268 ~ 8251 .
Couch 1r1d matching chair.
Ple1tlc: ciltern
approved. Med"erranien stvle couch with
plastic aeptic t•'*'· plellic alate top end tabln built-In: 26 "
culvlll'tl, met•l cutverte. AON Megnavox colortelevtaion. 304 ~
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock· 67&amp;-71 90.
oon, Oh. 61 4-281-&amp;930.
leercet 70 XLT Scanner. 20
Quality firewood. ell herdwood. channel. 1 o bend. hand-held
for sale. •25 e pick-up load. Cell with charger, caM, meg. ant.
614-317·0889 .
cig. lighter plug. 304-8715-2823

Mobile Home lot 80 ft. or Ins.
920 41h., Gallipolis. $78. Water
paid, Call814-448-4418 ofter7
PM,

-~

AFl~'? /('(}';7

op..

\'l~lol.- . Y~ . II~ CA'WI~H .

County Appliance. Inc. Goad

Firewood-Hard and mlud .
Hauled end 1tecklld. $30 a load.
Cell Ed oi114-441-397B.

'

.-,-.

~ITA~

CraftmMter 1ofe • lov...et.
Black with print. Lea th .. 1 year ·
old, UOO. Coli 814-441-7307
.,.., 15pm.

Office Space for rani. Excel.
downtown Gallipolis location.
lnquiritl cell 814· 441-4222 .

Furnished mobile home. 30467&amp;-8612,

1973 Viking. 12xl6. 1 'h ecr81.
Just ou1 of Beshan on Eagle
Ridge Rd. Reduced to 59000.
O.G . Polk.

Will do babysitting in my home.
Have e.Mperiencet. Call 614-

G.E. w11her. R•al nice. t 121·
Firm, Call U4-3e7·0322.

2

.:_. :_:.;_:.;_______________ t-----------...,r-------.:...----1

H•Jp others, make friends, VO lUNTEER at Americare Poriteroy Nursing Center.-Phone
Jan Bu1kirk at 614-992-6806.

' 441·
Brookside Apertmente:
1932 or 448-4839, Ono bed·
room apartment whh lara•
country kttehen, f'IW eppliln·
c•. utility room; water. ""'"
end tra1h 1ervic81 provided.
Quiet area.

-The Dai ly Sentinel-

Pomeroy--Middleport. Ohio

•

O~ious livinQ. 1 end 2 bedroom 1p1rtment1 at VIHega
Manor and Rlvtrtide Apartment• In Middleport. From
1216. including utllltiM. Call
814-992-7787. EOH ,

le.ct Guitar player needed for
country • rock-n-roll . Prefer
tomeana who ainga but not

RN· lncreootng ~dmtoliono. ••.
quire 2 pert-time RN poait5ona.
A - . _.., lmermodio•• ....,
focilhy. W.Vo. licenoo required.
Long term c•e. Experience .e
plua. For appointment call _304·
5715-300&amp;.

Wednesday. October 7. 1987:

P011'18roy--Middleport. Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Wednesday. October 7. 1_987

.'

--time
30 Tenninate
31 Self-

effacing

311i Cuckoo
38Tin-S7Sea god
38 Italian

city
40Marble

•2 Genuine
430btaln

admission
44 MataHari,

e.g.
411i

Edit

,

DAILY CRYl'TOQUOO'ES- Here's bow to work It:
'
.
AXYDLBAAXR

liLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the wol"!fs are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQ1JOTE

R p.

H LV R H
T N N

K U N

I •

Mp

·z

R V

U R P

s

.B J

•

J

uw

•

KR iU

K N ST

H R

.~

I B V

B

N T L

B

INVNHTW

I 'R V Z ' P

v

WLW .

K W T

T P

Yeeterday'a Cryptoquote: EARLY TO RISE AN ,
, EARLY TO BED MAKES A MALE HEALTHY AND
WEALTiiY ANO OEAD.-- JAMES__:rHURBER

.

,

-

•

�Ohio

October 1' 1 ·

One of the
World~s

Hoopl~'s

Most

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

.
298 SECOND ST.
.

Daily Number

forecast

Respected
Names In

STORE HOURS

Ohio Lottery
594
Pick 4
. 6245 ~
Superlouo
2-8-20-25-30-43

Page ll

Fine·- China
.

•

.•

--..~

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, OCT. 10, 1987

at y

e

SAVE OVER: 40 %
FROM DEPARTMENT
· AND JEWELRY STORE
PRICES WITH OUR
CONVENIENT
PURCHASE PLAN

Vot.37, 11io. 106
Copyrighted 1987

'

Clear tonight. Low near 40. ·
Cloudy Friday . High In 60s .
Chance of rain near · zero
througlo Friday.

•

enttne

Pomeroy. Middleport. Ohio. Thursday, October B. 1987

•
2 Sections 14 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Hearing on grant funding resumes T:g_esday
GRADE. A .

· •

Whole Ch1cken ••!'o•• 39

(
THIS WEEK'S
FEATURED

CHICKEN

ACCESSORY ITEMS

Leg_Qtrs ••••_•••••••• :~ ••
.. SUPE.RIOR FRANKIE

_

Wieners ••••••••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

•

Nine . applications were reBy NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
ce ived hy the commissioners for
The Meigs County Co mmis- · the Ohio Department of Developsioners continued Wednesday's ment CDBG funding of $92,400.
. henring on Community Develop·
Those submitting applications
· ment Block Grant funding until include Chester Fire Departll a.m. Tuesday. Commission ment, Scipio Fire Department,
President Manning Roush an- Sutton Township and Pomeroy
nounced at yesterday's regular Village in a combi!led project.
ineetlng that the continuation Racine, Syracuse, Pomeroy,
was necessary in otder for the Middleport and Rutland Vilboard to obtain answers !rom the lages. a nd Rutland EMS.
state regardin g a co·uple of the
The' commissio ners have also
proposed CDBG projects.
promised $"20,000 of this year 's
' Present Jlesterda y for the block grant allocation to be used
. CDBG hearing were representaas match money for a potential
tives from the Scipio Township
new business in the county.
Volunteer Fire Department and
After subtracting the $20,000
Kim Shields, Ihe ·county's direc- pledge, and the cosls to administor of development.
ter the block grant pr&lt;rgram,

Crystal Set

$ 09
1

Save $3.00 from our
Regular Discount 'Price
With This Coupon

there remains $63,000 to be
divided amo ng the projects
chosen !rom the nine. Under
CDBG guidelines. only e!gh t
projec.ts may be funded.
County Engineer Philip Roberts reported that he met this
week with Everett Schultz. 01 ive
Township Ti-ustee, to check on
the possible widening of a onelaM bridge on Rice Run Road
where Schultz says lhal several
near accidents have occurred.
Roberts ·i aid the bridge is in good
condition and made recommendations whi ch might a lleviate
some of th e problems"at the site.
Roberts also reported he is
giving the final review to the
county's new map. ·

Bork returns ~orne to family

FORREST BROOK

WASHINGTON iUPI) - With favor of the politically charged
his defeaf in the Senate now all nomination.
The round of announcements
but certain, Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork went home to Wednesday raised the number of
talk with his family before what Bark's declared Senate oppoWhlte House officials said would nents to 47. with 31 publicly
be another meeting today with supporting him and, 22 undePresident Reagan.
clared. But Assistan·t Demo- ·
Bark and the pres iden t had cratlc leade r Alan Cranston of
maintained their pub)lc determi- Ca lifornia claimed 52 solid votes
nation to press on folltJWing talks against Bark and four leaning
t he mornin g after his crushing toward opposition - a total of
defeat in the Senate Judiciary five m or~ than the simple 51
Commiltee. but as eight more majority needed to deal Reagan
senators then declared their a historic political blow.
opposition, Ihe conservative fed·
White House aides said Bark
era! judge went home Wednes- would meel with the president
day night to mull over his fu ture. yet agai n today, one week before
"No one except the lightning the· full Senate:s scheduled d·atl'
st!'lke-mentality .guys think -w~..up the nomination .
can pull it out,'" concede&lt;! a grim
After meeting with the presiTom Korologos, th e White House dent Wednesday , Bark went to
aide , who led the apparently .,. ,Capitol Hill to talk with 15
unsuccessful lobbying effort In supportive Republican senators.

Sliced Bacon ••.••• ~••

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

$159
Chu.ck Roast ••••••••
LB.

LOUIS RICH

Ground Turkey.~~ •• 89(

(.Pepperoni •..••.. ;.~z••• 99
HORMAL SLICED

I
I
I
I
I
I

3

1«3

ECKRICH

~.

f3

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

Smoked Sausage •• ~·· $199

HARVEST - One of these girls will he crowned
queen of the annual Racine community harvest
festival Saturday. The festival will be a day-long
event with numerous activities and is staged by

Candle Set

'
'

Save $3.00 from our
Regular Discount Price
With This Coupon

Racine business operators. The harvest queen
candidates, I tor, are Alisa Wilford, Tracy Beegle,
Junie Beegle and Donette Talbott.
..

Money still in escrow six weeks
after reopening of Mason Bridge
•

Approximately six weeks after
the reopening of lhe PomeroyMason Bridge, th e release of

YELLOW

Onions ••••••••••••••••
3 LB. BAG

FLAVORITE

69&lt;

GRADE A

·Instant Coffee •• ~~!·$299

"
9(
Ex. Lg. Eg.gs ••••••~•• ~ 5
TV Dinners ••••••••••••• 89&lt;

HUNT'S

FRESH BAKERY

'

BANQUET

MAXWELL HOUSE

$21,600 held in escrow in a Point
Pleasant bank to repair possible
damages to Pomeroy St. in

•

HO~OGENIZED

Milk .••••••••.•••-.• ~!L•···· $159

•,

.
I
I
I

I
I
I

lw

w

&lt;

•

--------------.~

L

10-12

oz.

s oz.
79.&lt; G.lazed Donuts •• ~~z. $1 ·49
Manwich ••••••••••••••••
1

•
•

• ••• •.
.•• ~ •.•. •.cou·PON •. •......
•
'

SWI

MISS

SOFT &amp; GENTLE

HOT CHOC. MIX

BATH TISSUE

Reg. or Marshmallow

12 ENV.

PAK

4 ROLL
PKG.

79&lt;

Umit 1 .Per (uJtomer

Good Only At Powell's
Offer Good Thru bct.

•

HUNT'S

•

TOMATO SAUCE

69(·

limit I P,r Customer
Good Only At Poytell's Super Valu
Offer Good Thru Ocr. 10, I 987

•••••• COUPON •••••
•
·····~

.t·~··

•

1S
•

•••••••• •••••••••••••

oz.

3f $1

limit 3 Per Customer
1lood Only At Powell's Super Vulu
Offer Good Thru Oct. 10, 1987

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

FLAVORITE SUGAR
S LB.
BAG

, •

~.

$149
·

limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Super Valu
Offer Good Thru Oct. 10, 1987

An animal claim for the loss of jurisd iction over lownship roads county re.cords from National
two pigs has been received by the and suggested they speak with ·Underground Storage in Pennsylv'1nla at a cost of $50 per.
commissioners from Irene Mar- the township trustees.
The commissio ners also con· year .
tin of Albany, however, Wayne
Reviewed with John Fosfer,
Roseberry, co unty dog warden, ducted the following ma tters in
work-study
coordinator for the
recommends the claim be disal- yesterday's meeting.
county
board
of . education, a
lowed because Martin has three • Named Kim Shields as the
wh ich was pregran!
proposal
unlicensed dogs . The com mis- county's representative to the
pared
by
Foster
and Everett
sioners would be unable to Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
Holcomb,
Meigs
High
vacational
process the claim because state Developmen t District's Regional
instructor,
for
funding
to provide
law prohibits them from paying Loan Review.Committee.
.food
-service
tra
ining
for JTPA
Discussed with Jane Frymyer
claims to ow ners of unlicense.cl
eligible
'
s
tudenls
in
the
vocaof the Board of Elections, the
dogs.
tional
field
at
the
schooL
. Evelyn and Floyd .Wicinsky, posslblilty of having to replace
Approved a request from Bob
Corning, met with the board to the county's ballot tabulator with
.-- director of the Meigs
Byer
request some road maintenance a computer at some point ill the
Emergency
Medical Service, for
on Parkinson Road in Rutland future.
EMS
personnel
to attend various
Township where they own propGave approva I to Larry
training
sessions
throughout the
erty. The commissioners told the Spencer, clerk of co urts, to lease
Wicins!ty's that they have no microfilm storage space for coming months..

ROBERTS SURPRISED - Meigs County Engineer Philip
Roberts Is surprised thai the escrow money for possible repairs to
Pomeroy St. in Masoq has still nol been. released. Roberts said
several weeks ago that he was In agreement with Fred Frandose
of the West VIrginia Department ol ~ghways tloat the street was
nOt damaged during the period of time that the Pomeroy-Mason
ferry was In operation. Jl.oberts went back to Mason yesterday for
a second look at the street, and says again that an oil spill on the
road Is "a superficial discoloration" only.
f

t_/

Mason, is still up in the air.
Of the $21.600 total. $15,000
belongs to ferry operator Darrell
Rodger Who returned to his
Clinton, Iowa home shortly a ft er
the ferry di scontinued operation.
The remainin g $6,600 is to be
returned on a percentage basis to
the Meigs and Mason County
businesses which donated to the
escrow account.
It was reported by Mason
Village officials over a month
ago that they were waiting lo r
official word from Fred Franciose of the West VIrginia Department of Highways that Pomeroy
St. was not dam aged during the
tim e the ferry was in operation
between Pomeroy a nd Mason.
However, councllmembers were
going to check the road I hemselves to ascertal n damages
themselves and to compare their
findings with those of the department of highw ays.
Meigs Cou nty Engineer Pbilip
Roberts sa id that he spoke with
Franoiose in Pomeroy on the day
of the bridge reopening, and that
Franclose had already examined
the street• and found no pavement
damage. Roberts sa id that Fran·
close's only concern at the time
was on oil spill which bad
di sco lored th e street's surface.
Roberts then examined the
slreet himself and co ncurred
with Franclose tllal the only
possible problem could be the
spill. However, Roberts felt that
any damage · from the spill
appea'r ed to be "only superficial
discoloration ."
Although Robco·ts expected the
money to be released right away
since he agreed with Franciese
lh!!t Ihere were no real damages
to the road, the money still' has
not bfen releas1•d.
Roberts was surprised when he
learned yesterd ay tha t the money Is still being held a nd went
back lo Mason to view the road
again. After checki ng again, he
still believes the di scoloration,
which is about 100ft. long, Is only
superficial. He guesses that it
was caused by !)yld draining
Continued on page 6

Presidential aides said the judge
left the White House vowing to
press ahead, bu I he wou ld no I
co mment to reporters.
The Republican senators, who
escorted Bark and his wife to
their car after their meeting ,
applauded and gestured enthusiastically but told reporters he
had not yet made up his mind ·
aboul whether to withdraw his
nomination .
"Obv iously, Judge Bark has to
look at this for himself and his
fanilly," said Sen. Phil Gramm,
R·Texas . "We as!(~d him to come
becau se we want him to fight it
out .... He said he wanted to think
about it ."
.."]f I had a bet lo make, l'd.bet
he'd stay," said Sen , Malcolm
. Wa llop, R-Wyo.
Several sources said Bork was

Iran forces fire on Japanese
chemical tanker in gulf today
vesse l's captain. Salvage tugs Sea port of Jeddah.
MANAMA, Bahrain iU PI) Baghdad radio said Iraqi war.
Iranian forces fired a missile into were en route to the scene and
a Japanese-owned chemical one source said a U.S. Navy planes tod~y attacked a "very
ta nker off the Saudi Arabian helicopter was seen flying over large naval target," which gen·
coast today, setting the engjne the area shor tly after the attack. erally refers' to an oil tanker, off
"They were .questloned by the the Iranian oil loading terminal
room on !Ire and injuring three
Ira
nian s about the nationality of at Kh arg Island In the northern
crew membert shipping sources
said. ·Iraq also claimed it hit a the vessel, their las t port of call . .gulf. It said warplanes scored
ship nea r an Iranian oil termina L and l'lte nat ure of cargo," said "a n effective and accurate hit"
The attacks came a day after one shippin g source. The vessel before returning safely to base.
The assault was carried out, ·
I ra nian. Parliament Speaker Ali was on it s way to Saudi Arabia
the
radio said, in order to cut
Akbar Ha shemi Rafsanjani empty at the time of the attack
Iranian
oil revenues used to "to
warned th at the growingWestertJ. alter unloadi ng its cargo in
continue
the war and a nd aggresnaval presence in th e Persian Dubai at the south er n end of the
sion''
agai
nst Iraq a nd destabllgu
lf.
!
.
Gulf Is " pus hin g the world
fze
regional
security .
Japan had so ught assurances
towa rd the edge of catas trophe."
On
Wednesday,
Ira n's official
Today's assault on the from Iran that J.apanese vessels
Islamic
Republic
News
Agency
Panamanian-flagged. 9.431-lon would not come under attack.
sa
id
Rafsanjani
accused
WestTo moe 8 was the second Ira nian Two· recent ambushes of
ern
nations
of
backing
Iraq
in the
attack in 24 hours on a vessel Japanese-crewed ships brought
doing bu si ness with Saudi Ara - . a temporary halt to Japanes~ Persian Gulf ~onfllct a nd warned
that Tehran's patience was wearbia, Iraq 's ally in its 7·year-old shipping in the gulf.
ing thiri.
·
The attack was the second in 2~
war with Iran.
Rafsanjanl
also
·Charged
that
hours
by
Iran
on
a
vessel
Shipping sources sa id . ·th e
the United States has exaggerJapanese-owned Tomoe 8 came connected with Saudi Arabia. On
a
ted the exten t of mine laying in
Wednesday
,
Iranian
Revolutionunder attack about 9:45 a.m .
t
he
Persian Gu lf region and had
some 50 miles of! t)le Sa udl port ary Guards fired rocket ·
itself
planted e;wlosives in the
of AI Juoail, with at least one propelled grenades at a Saudi
waterway.
m issile hitting the engine room tanker a nd sprayed it with
Rafsanjan l. who made the
and setting it on fire. Another machine-gun fire some 20 miles
comments
during a meeting with
souurce said two missiles were off the United Ara b Emlrales
the
Belgian
amba ssador to iran.
·
fired.
pori of Ajman.
warned
lhat
if iran really deDamage was· minor and the
Three of the 23 Burmese crew
clcted
to
sow
mines in the gulf,
members aboard the vessel were tanker co ntinued its voyage from
"all the world 's mine sweepers
injured, . according to shipping the main Saudi oil terminal at the
(Continued on page 6\
sources in radio contact with .tne port of Ras Tanurah to the Red

feet. The section formerly occupied by Ace
Hardware, now moved to the end of the complex,
Is a partolthe section being ex panded . According
to Don Vaughan the expansion gives the store not
only an expanded area lor existing departments
but the capability of adding new departments.

UNDERGOES EXPANSION - Vaughan's
Cardinal Food of 1\fiddleport is undergoing a
11)ajor ex pansion which Is expected to be
completed in early 1988. About 10,500 feet Is being
added to the grocery store display and work area,
, making the total facility more than 20,500 square
\

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="201">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2791">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39663">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39662">
              <text>October 7, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4302">
      <name>doolittle</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="68">
      <name>garnes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="593">
      <name>kimes</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
