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•

Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

'

Sen. Long honored

pressurf system "dog" off. tbe
Georgia-South Carolina coast.
''Ii was a hurricane that never
realized its potential," said forecaster Bob Case of the Natio·n al
Hurricane Center.
In the Mldwes t, plunging
temperatures smashed, rrlore record low5, On Monday, as many
as 17 record low temperatures
were shattered with the coldest
spots In the nation recorded at

By United rress lnternatlol)'al
A hurriCane slapped Key West
with SO mph winds and spawned
small tornadoes In its wake but
did little damage and .caused no
injuries, while In the Midwest a
cold air mass drbve t~mpera­
tures below.the freezing mark.
Hurricane Floyd, the sixth
named tropical storm of the 1987
season, pushed up the Atlantic
today and was expected to
weaken as the "tail" of a low

Ohio Senator Jan long, a Middleport n!'live, has been
selecteed as one of the Outstanding Young Men of America for
1987. Selection to the honor is on the basts of demonstrated
excellence 'In professional endeavors and civic activities
resu lting in making the selectee's community as well as his
communitY and country better places In which to live. Fewer
. than two percent of eligible young Americans !)'om 21 to36 years
of age are selected for the honor. Sen. Long, a resident of
Circleville, Is a frequent visitor to Middleport and Meigs County
not only in his role as an Ohio Senator from !~17thDistrict but
as a former resident. He Is the son of Mrs. Dorothy Long of
Middleport and the late Lewis Long.
.

Squads busy past few days

EMS made 226 September runs ·

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports the
following calls over the past
thtee days .
Monday at 10:25 a.m., Rutland.
to Route 689 fot Wanda Sloan and
Mark Gordon to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 2: Ol
p.m. to Pomeroy Cliffs Apts. for
Hu.bert Clower who was treated
but not transported; Racine at
5:57p.m. to Ross Road for Morris
Teaford to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; later. to Ohio ·State
University Hospitals by Lifeflight; Rutland at 11:49 p.m. to
School Lot Road for Frederick
Brady who was dead on arrivaL
Sunday at 10: 20 a.m., Racine to
Fifth St. for Lisa Johnson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 10:24 a.m. to Union
Ave. for Hubert Clower to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ru tland atl: 31 p.m. to Montgomery
Road for Phyllis Hillsamer to
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers
Plains at 2:43p.m. to C111away
Ridge for Everett Ward to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 4:47p.m.
to Curtis Hollow Road for Marion
Boston to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Pomeroy at 8:55 p.m. to· Wolfe
Pen Road for Brian Reeves to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 9:06p.m . to Country
Home Mobile Home Park f9r
Henry Rider to Veterans Memor-

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service made
226 ru ns in September, Administrator Bob Byer reports.
Runs made by each unit Include Pomeroy, 57; Racine, 32;
Syracuse, 13; Rutland, 34; Tuppers Plains, 16; Middleport, 29,
and 45 transfer runs, There were 94 patients taken to Veterans
Memori)il Hospital: 33 to Holzer Medical Center; four to
Pleasant Valley Hospital and 18 to other instltutlons.
All vehicles of the service were driven 7, 978 miles during the
month, an average of 35.31 miles per calL In addition there were
three Healthnet transpprts during the month.

Second annual ride Nov. 7
The second ;mnual ride of Meigs County Bikers and those
from other counties to collect toys for Meigs County's
underprivileged children for the Christmas holiday has been set
for Saturday, Nov. 7.
.
~
The ride will start at the southbound roadside park on Route
33, move to the Pomeroy parking lot and then to the Rainbow
Inn, Middleport, where a party will be held for participants.
Good new and used toys are needed for the annual project and
these will be turned over to the Salvation Army for dlstrlbution.
, Residents wishing to help or those having questions about the
ride should contact Jo Frye, 742-2081 or Nancy Woolard,
992-3038. The ride will be held rain or shine.

Schools to be dismissed
Students of the Meigs Local School Dlstri£t ~ill be given a
: holiday on Thursday, Oct. 22, as classes gJVe way to a
parent-teacher conference day to be held from 9 a .m. to~ p.m.
Purpose of the day is to allow the parent and teacher to
discuss pupil progress and to keep parents and schools informed
about student activities as they relate to school behavior and
performance, District Supt. Dan E. Morris reports.
Parents will receive , a letter describing the conference
scheduling procedure along with informatlonpn the conference
through their students this Friday.
Supt. Morris encourages parents to take advantage of this
opportunity to communicate with their children's instructors.
Further questions regarding the conference day should be.
directed to the child's school of attendance.

tal Hospital; Middleport at 11:21
p.m. to ~oute 7 ' for Martha
Stewart to Holzer Medical
Center.
' Saturday at 3:04 a.m. to
Broadway St. for Daisy Sayre to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,;
Tuppers Plains at 8:06 a.m.
treated but did not transport
Chester Carson; Tuppers Plains
at 5:30p.m. transported Chester
Carson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 5:49p.m.
to Rutland St. for Robert Rhinehart who was treated but not
transported; Pomeroy at 6:01
p.m. to Union Ave. for Hubert
Clower who was treated but not
transported; 'Pomeroy at 6: 13
p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Flora Riley to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse Fir&lt;&gt; Department at 7: 12
p.m. to a structure f.lre on Fifth
St.; Barb Lewis, Cindy Wolfe,
Bobby Willis and Jean Imboden
were treated at tile scene by
Syracuse EMS: Barb Lewis,
Cindy Wolfe and Jean Imboden
were ·later seen in the Veterans
Memorial Hospital Emergency
Room; Racine at 7: 17 p.m. to
Bucktown Road for Benny
Rhodes to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 8: 4,7 p,m .
to South Third for Audrey Davenport who was treated but not
transported.

Bush, Jackson
still lead Ohio

Gallia man cited after accident
A Gallipolis man was cited in an accident Monday, at 7:,10
p.m ., in Chester Township on Ohio 7, at the intersection of
County Road 36.
Dale E . Adkins, 35, was cited for assured clear distance after
his car m&lt;~de c011tact with a car driven by Raymond N. Myers,
18, of Reedsville. According to.the report, Myers had stopped at
the intersection to turn left when Adkins attempted to pass.
Adkins was unable to stop In time to avoid hitting Myers' car.

CINCINNATI (UP!) ' - Both
front-runners in the presidential
primary races - George Bush
and Jesse Jackson - are losing
ground to their opponents in
Ohio, tho;, Ohio Poll reports.

Springfield and Rockford, Ill .•
with readings of 24 degrees.
"The cold should continue
today, especially in the Ohio
Valley," Pete Reynolds of the
National Weather Service said.
Frost and freezing temperature
advisories were in effect for
Indiana, Ohio.. Michigan, and
eastern Kentucky today .
Most of Indiana was barely
above freezing early today as
temperatures In Michigan
dropped Into the 20s, Reynolds
said.
Records were broken Monday
In Chicago; St. Louis and Kansas
City, Mo.; Grand Rapids, Mich. ;
Dubuque, Iowa: Paducah, Ky.;
and Binghamton, N.Y.
' .
Ali hurricane warnings were
lowered for Florida today but
remained in effect for the north·
ern Bahamas, Including the

~========================~

I

Grid
•
previews
Page 4

Bimlnis, Grand Bahama and the
Abacos.
At 3 a.m. EDT, the hurricane
center said Floyd was a minimal
hurricane with 75 mph winds
located about 125 miles northeast
of Miami near latitude 26.2 north,
· longitude 78.2 west. lt was
moving east northeast at 15 mph.
The· center said some slow
decrease In strength would continue ·a s the hurricane Interacted
with a low p'ressure center off the
Georgia-South Carolina coas!.
" With this low system In the
north, it could. become the dog,
and Floyd could become the
tali," Case said. "When It developed. it had several occasions to ,
develop into a significant hur~l­
cane. But it always· seemed to be
running Into a force that prohi- .
bited It from being a major
hurricane.''

llTI]SNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

11

8955

•

•

at

enttne

At the request of Pomeroy Charpber of
Commerce President Bill Nease, a meeting of
Mason Village officials and those businesses
which donated to the escrow fund for possible
.repairs to Pomeroy St. in Mason. has been
scheduled for Tuesday, 7 p.m., at Mason Village
Hall.
•·
Nease announced the meeting at yesterday's
regular chamber meeting at the Pomeroy Trinity
Church.
' Nease said the agreem.ent between the two
villages was that if the street was in the same
condition after the Pomeroy-Mason ferry service
ceased operation as before the ferry started, then
the money would be returned.
Nease said the meeting will enable Mason
offiCials to clarify their reasons for wanting to use
a portion of the escrow money to resurface the
street, since it was his understanding, after
speaking with Fred Franciose of the West
Virginia Department of Highways and Meigs

County Engineer Philip Roberts. that the street Is
in the same condi!lo'n. ·Nease did acknowledge
that both Franciose and Roberts did mention a
S)Jperficial discoloration of the road from an oil
spill.
Altogether, Meigs County and Mason County
businesses donated $11,600 to make the ferry
service possible during the four months the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge was closed for repairs. Of
that amount, $5,000 was paid to ferry operator
Darrell Rodger as as ince ntive to br(ng his ferry to
Pomeroy. The remaining $6,600 was combined
with $15,()(]() from Rodger and placed In escrow In
a Point Plea,_sant Bank to guarantee the posslbl~
street repairs.
If the escrow money wen~ returned. Nease said
businesses that donated would recoup $57 for each
$100 donated.
He said he hopes re presentatives from all
donating businesses will be in attendance at

FaU festival .

_......;____ Weather-----ble today and tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Mostly cloudy Thursday, with
a chance of rain in the northeastern part of the state. Fair Friday,
with a chance of rain Saturday.,'
Highs will be in the 60s each day,
with overnight lows in the 40s. , '

-Jugt-AttivedWOMEN'S SUITS
HAVE ARRIVED·
AT SANDY'S.

HOMECOMING HOPEFUL'! - These lovely
ladles, along with their escorts, will form the
Eastern High School homecoming court which
will assemble during festivities during intermission of the Eastern-Han nan Trace game slated lor
thl~ Friday. Pictured are front L tor. attendants
Crystal Kaylor, sophomore; Heather Ftnlaw,
Junior; Leigh Anne Redovlan, fn'Shman: and
Carrie Morrissey, seventh grade: Absent was

EAST MEIGS·- The stud ents of
Eastern Hl"h School with the&gt; aid
of their teac hers and s ponsor ship
of student council under principal Charles Moore have been
enjoying homecoming wee k activities this week In an effort to
boost school spirit.
Along wiht the usual. more
traditional educational methods.
homecoming wee&gt;k itse lf is developed into an educational
experience.
Several days are observed
during the week, re flecting the
attire of the day as in Beach day ,
Greek day , Fifties day, Dressup
day, and "green and white" day.

-GINGERBREAD HOUSE
OF GIFTS

SANDY'S

'

., ' "[" f'\ '
.,

I.

attendant Carrie Gillilan, eighth grade. In back
are queen candidates (seniors) I. to r. Larissa
Long, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Long, Rt. 3
Pomeroy; .Bonnie Koenig, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Koenig, Sr. Rt, 3 Pomeroy; and
Marilyn Barton daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Barton, Success Rd. Reedsville, The queen will he
crowned at halftime Friday evening.

CLEVELAND tUPI) - Gov.
' Richard ~-- Celeste defended his
gubernatorial record, under a
blistering line of questioning
Tuesday from a radlo talk show
host, saying it was strong enough
to support a presidential
campaign.
" I hope someday that I will be
able to run for president."

Celeste said on Cleveland radio
station WERE.
"Could you run for president
today based on your record as
governor of Ohio?" asked show
host Merle Pollis. " Forgive me,
because l voted for you twice. but
I think they would laugh you out
of town."
"Merle, I disagree with you,"

Celeste responded, "I think that!
could. I think I would have ,;trong
support. I don't think I could
afford it. I don't think I could
afford the ' time it would take to
raise $6 million or $7 million."
Earlier during the show, Follis
charged, "Dick, I'm sorry, but in
recent years, you haven't done
Continued on page 3

Resident at Washington meeting

Pomeroy resident David Ed• were leaders from Afghanistan,
be held this evening when more
wards heard Secretary of De- Angola, Cambodia, Ethiopia and
than 200 members of the U.S.
tense Cas per Weinberger and Laos, in addtition to U.S. senaCongress will receive plaques
exh11nged ideas with freedom tors and representatives from
honoring their key "votes on
fighters from around the world both parties, who areparticipatnationalsecurityissues,asdetermined by the voting index of the .
this morning as he· attended the log in the Congressional Caucus
American Security CounciL
Annual Meeting fo the United on National Security.
Rte. 3 Pomeroy; eighth grade States Congressional Advisory
Edwards had an opportunity to
The United States Congresattendant, Carrie Gillilan,
Board, Oct. 13-14, in Washington express personal views at the
sionai Advisory Board is admindaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil - D.C.
opening session of the meeting
istered by the American Security
liam Gillilan. Chester; SophoCouncil Foundation, and underwEdwards serves as a chair- Tuesday at· the Sheraton Namore attendant Crystal Kaylor. mens· advisor on the board.
tiona! Hotel in Arlington.
rites the work of the Congresdaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Terry ·
Ntcara g uan Resistance
Virginia .
sionalCaucusonNationalSecurKaylor, Rt. 1 Reedsville. The Leader Adolpho Calero was
The Wednesday afternoon ses- · ity, a bi-partisan effort
freshman attendant is Leigh Ann featured in the two-day program sion fea tured an examination of
concerned with preserving the
Red6vian, daughter of Mr. a nd which was sponsored _by the current defense concerns of the
nation 's freedom through milMrs. John Redovian. Rt. 3 American Security Co uncil United Siates government.
itary, psychological and moral
Pomeroy; and junior -attendant Foundation. Also appearing
A congressional recept
strength.
is Heather Finlaw, daughter of
~--~------~~~~
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen R. Finlaw,
Rt. 1 Long Bottom.
The Queen will be crowned
during halftime of the Eastern
Hannan Trace football game this
Friday.

Also posters, banners. and
school sloga ns , are utilized as
well as a giant spirit chain.
Homecoming queen candidates and attendants have also
been released by school principal
Charles · Moore. Senior candidates are Larissa Long, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Long, Rt. .1,
Pomeroy; . Marilyn Barton,
dau ghter of Mr. and Mrs. RIchard Barton, Success Road
Reedsville; and Bonnie Koenig,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Koenig, Sr. Rte. 3 Pomeroy.
The seventh grade attendant is
Ca rrie Morrissey, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Morrissey,

Unidentified ships attack oil tanker

REGISTER FOR

SIZES 8-20

to continue the alternative school
without the support of all three
district of I he county.
The county board last night
issued bus driver certificates to
Clarinda Theiss, Southern Local;
Catherine Wood, Carleton
School, and Robert White, Ea'stern Local and employed Nancy
Carnahan for a secretarial · post
at the county office. She replaces
Sheila Warner who reslgped
recently.

Eastern homecoming Friday

SAVE
OFF
VERYTHING IN STORE
IN GIFT CERTIFICATES.

cannot attend classes at their
regular schools. Through the
alternative school the students
continue their training daily sO
that they don't fall behind in their
s.tudies.
The co unty board di scontinued
the school last night since they
had received word that the
Eastern Local School District is
unable to participate due to lack
of funds and it was determined
that it Is not feasible financially

··-

You're Invited
To A Party!
Celebrating
Qur 2nd
Anniversary!
At Both Locations!

DOOR PRIZES $50.-$25.-$15

county, and pointed out that t·he · highest
percentage of taxes goes to schools. ·
He also stressed the significa nce of industry in
the· COU!J!Y by explaining that if Southern Ohio
Coal Co. were to cease operat ion , it would take a
40·mill levy In Meigs Locar School District to
generate the same amount of revenue as JJOW
received from the mines.
Collins explained how foreclosures of delinquent properties come abou t, and reported that
the prosecuting attorney Is preparing now for the
sale of abQut ~0 parcels of real estate for back
taxes .
·
As of september, Collins reported, the county
has received appoxitnately $251,000 frOm the
one•percent sales tax which was enacted in
February. Total sales tax co llection for the cou nty
had been estimated at $350,000andCollins expects
when end-of-the-year figures are in from the
state. the total will come close to the estimate.

Celeste· defends record, says
he still ·wants -to be president

15%

. Daily stock prices

Tuesday's meeting, as weli"asFranciose and
Roberts.
Although it's not unusual for property owners to
sometimes resent paying real es tate and personal
property taxes, members of Pomeroy Chamber
learned that taxes in Meigs Cou nty are much less
than taxes in most of Ohio.
·
Speaking before chamber regarding the collection and dlspersemen t of personal property and
real estate taxes, Meigs County Treasurer George
Collins explained that Meigs County's tax rate is
about $20 below the state average. which In 1985
was this approximately $58 pe~ thousand dollars.
Co ll ins explained that the assessed value of
property, or the amount which the property owner
is taxed, is 35 percent of th e true va lue. He also
explained the re.asons for state-required periodic
tax updates and property reappraisals.
lie explained the procedure by which taxes are
dispersed to the various entities throughout the

An alternative school designed
to provide regular classroom
training for students suspended
from attending their regular
schools was discontinued for the
present time when the Meigs
County Board of Educa lion met
in regular session Tuesday night.
The alternative school classroom is located in the Pomeroy
Village Hall and has.been used by
students who have received
suspensions and for that reason

Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast
fo r~ve precipitation IndiCated ·
UPI
WEATHER MAP - Rain showers will extend from the Florida
peninsula through the easte,n'Carollmis as well .a s from Southern
California across the southern half of the' platejiU region and the
central Rockies. Sunny skies will prevail over the rest of the
country except for Increasing clouds across the northern and
central Plains. Much of the nation will have high temperatures In
the 60s Q[ 70s.

Meigs . couples end marriages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Discontinue alternative school

911

Court news

2 Sections, 14 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, October 14, 1987

Hospital news

I

Cloudy ljlnight. Low near 40.
Variable cloudiness Thursday. High near 70. Chance of
rain zero.

·o fficials will discuss escrow Issue Tuesday

Gingerbread Boy Says

.....

Pick 4

-RAIN
~SHOWERS
"Cold . . . Static
Occluded

South Central Ohio
Sunny today, with highs near
60. Clear tonight , with a low in the
mid 30s. Sunny Wednesday. with
highs in the upper 60s.
The probability of precipitation is near zero through
Wednesday.
Winds will be light and varia·

!

046

•

License issued

-·-~

e

Vol.37, No.110
Copyrighted 1987

---4524

..

Daily Nutnf&gt;er

I

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10.14-87

crease from the May survey,
Trailing Jackson In Monday's
poll were Massachusetts Gov.
Michael Dukak.is (6 percent);
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo, an
undeclared candidate, Rep. Richard Gephardt of Missouri and
Sen. Albert Gore of Tennessee,
Bush held a 31 percent to 29 all at J percent; and Sen, Paul
perce'f!l edge over San. Bob Dole
of Kansas among the203 Republi- l)imon of Illinois and former
Veterans Memorial
. can voters surveyed, according candidate Gar¥ Hart, both at 2
Monday
Admissions -Evelyn
percent.
to ·the poll ' released Monday,
Tom Walters
Frederick Brady
Mundry,
Reedsville;
Ray HanThe
poll,
conducted
by
the
followed by Pat Robertson, Alexning,
Pomeroy;
Edward
Shae'
University
of
Cincinnati's
InstiFrederick N. Brady, 47, died
Tom Walters, 73. Point Plea- Monday evening at his Route 3 ander Halg and Jack Kemp, all at tute for Polley Research, Is
~:11 JACKSON PIKE-Rtl5 WEST
kel,
Long
Bottom
;
.
Hubert
a bou I 4 percent.
sant, died Monday morning at Albany home following an ex.
Clower, Pomeroy: · Eula Rice,
accurate - to within plus- or
Holzer Medical Center in tended illness.
BACK TO THEATRE DAYS 1
Middleport.
•
In a similar survey conducted minus-4 percent, researchers
* SPECIAL P~tCE ADMISSIONS •
Gallipolis.
Monday Discharges - Howard
Mr. Brady was born at Cowen,
AOULTS IJ ,5Q - CHI LOREN $2 .50
in May, Bush held a 10-polnt lead said. A total of 526 randomly
He was a retired problems W. Va.. a son of Garland and
Frank,
Clinton Chilton, Harry
selected
registered
voters
were
sATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
over Dole. Haig and Kemp are
engineer at . Union Carbide's Stella Keener Brady, Albany.
ALL SEATS $2 .50
Shain, James Kelly, Ronald
interviewed
between
Sepl.
22
and
losing ground. the poll's reBARGAIN NIGHT TUESCA! ll .CC
South Charleston Plant with 32
Davis.
He was employed with the F.E. searchers said, while Robert- Oct. 5 for the poll.
years of service. He was a 1932 Myers Co., Ashland, for 18 years.
Matched head-to-head in "trial
son's support has increased
graduate of Point Pleasa nt High He belonged to the Apostolic
heats,"
Bush and Dole scored
slightly.
School, and attended the Worces- Christian Church.
large victories over the front ter Poly-Tech Institute in Wor- · Surviving In addition to his
running Democrats.
Marriage licenses have been
cester. Mass.
,
Among the 241 \Democrats
When paired against Jackson,
parents are, his wife, Karren S.
in Meigs County Probate,
issued
Born Sept. 4, 1914 in Roslyn Williams Brady; three sons, ·polled, Jackson reb1ived the Bush led 60 percent to 22 percent
Court
to
John Phillip Swain III,
Farms , Penn. , hewasasonofthe Ricky Dwain and .F rederick
most support, 10 perc nt, down with 17 percent undecided. 21, Portland, and Kathy Lynn
lat e Ralph ·· and Elizabeth
from 18 percent Jn May.
· Against Dukakis, Bush led 48 . Swain, 18, Portland; James Allen
Junior Brady, both of Ashland;
Dashner Walters. He was also Michael Anthony Brady , AlBut no Democratic andidate percent to 29 percent with 23 Weber, 20, Reedsville, and Julie
. prec.eded in dea th by one siste r , bany; two daughters, Lois Forappears to be bene · ing frqm percent undecided, and the vtce Michelle Skinner, 20, Th ~ Plains.
Doddee Foran and one brother, tune and Teresa Brady, both of
Jackson's decl . nstead, (he president led Gephardt '47 perRalph.
voters
,
remaining . ceo I to 27 percenl.
Ashland; three · stepsons, RiSurviving a re his wife, Maxine . chard, Jr., and David Figley,
uncommitte .
Dole, the Senate minority
Filson Walters: one son, David
About ~5 percent of the re- leader, ran nearly as well against
both of Ashland, and Steven
Walters. St. Al ba ns; one daugh· Figley, Albany; five grandchild- spondents said they don't know the three Democrats. He .beat
ter. Carol Mourning, Middle- ren; three brothers. Dallas of
whom to support, and an addi- Jackson 58 percent to 19 percent,
port; one brother, Richard
tional
23 percent sai1they prefer Gephardt by 45 percent to 26
"Dickie" Walters, Point -Plea- Guysville; Nathan of Albany,
~omeone
other than the current percent , arid Dukakls by 45
and Terry of Ashland, and two
sant: five grandchildren a nd one sisters, Avis Sparks, Man, W.
candidates, bringing to 68 per- perce nt to 28 percent .
great -grand son.
cent the number of undecided
Va., and Carol Sue Wilson,
Services will be at 2: 30 p.m. Reynoldsburg.
Democrats - a significant in·
Wednesday at the Crow-Russe ll
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
Friday
at the Bigony-Jordan
with the Rev. Ronald L. Baird
Funeral
Home.
Albany, with the
officiating. Burial will follow at
· The complaint of the plaintiff
Rev.
Daymond
Adams officiatKirkland Memorial Gardens ,
and
the counterclaim of the
West Columbia I Elementary
Friends may call ca ll at ing. BuriaL will be In (he Sc)lool
defendant
have been dismissed
Sc-hool's annual fall festival will
fun eral home Tuesday, from 2 to Lot Cemetery. Friends m'I-Y call
by
the
Meigs
County Common
be held Saturday at the school.
at the funeral home from 2__to ~
4 p.m . and 7·9 p.m.
Soup sale·wlll be from 12 noon to 7 Pleas Court in a property dispute
•
a nd 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday . ·
p.m. Games will be played from 1 action filed by Charles Mugrage
to 2: 3Q p.m. and from 4 to 6 p.m. agairst Rodney Holman. Court
There will also be a baked goods costs are to be divided between
Flliqg for dissolutions of mar· Mullen, Middleport; Tina E.
sale, cake and pie walks, a the parties involved.
riage in Meigs County Common Green, Rutland, from Kenneth
An action by Joseph J. Quivey
country store and prize giveaPleas Court are Brian 0 . Mullen,
E. Green, Rutland.
against
Bonnie Sue Quivey has
Middleport. from Nancy o.
· A divorce has been granted to ways. Everyone welcome.
also been dismissed.
both parties
In the
case
of Paul
Stewart
versus
Mary
Wise
Ste- r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::j
wart. Mary Stewart has been
restored by the court to her
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
malden
name Wise.
Provided by
Jack
Eugene
Morris and Clara
Bryce and Mark Smith
Mae
Morris
have
been granted a
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
dissolution and Clara Morris
Firm
Price restored to the name Hysell.
Also granted dissolutions were
Am Electric Power .......... .. .. .. 28
Leah
lynn Spurlock and Charles
AT&amp;T .... ..... ... .. ... .. ... ... .'.. ....... .33
Lonzo
Spurlock; Henry T . CarAshland Oil ..... .. ... ... ...... ..... 65\1,
sey
and
Betty J. Carsey.
Bob Evans Farms ...... , .......... 20
Granted
a divorce was Violet
Charming Shoppes ................ .22
No Purchase Necessary. Need Not Be Present To Win.
G.
Satterneld
from William A.
City Holding Co ' .. : ... ..... ... .. ....31
Sa
tterfletd.
BIRTHDAY SALE IN EFFECT WED.· SAT..
Federal Mogul. .... ... ... ... :.... A4\4
Goodyear T&amp;R .... .......... .. ... 68\1, Lottery numbers
•ASSORTED COLORS
Heck's Inc. :.... ... ................. , 3%
CLEVELAND (UP I) - Mon,-1
.
,, ...
•ASSORTED STYLES
Key Centurion .. .. .. .. .. ... ...... .. .. 39 day 's win ning Ohio Lottery'
La nds' E nd .. .. .... .... ... ...... .... 23',4 numbers :
Limitect Inc ...... .. ... .. , .... .. ... ... 29
Dally Number
Multimedia Inc . .. .... ... .. ...... .. .. 68
972.
POIN'l' PIEASMT
1111SON; liV,
Rax Restaurants ........ .. . .. ..... 4¥.,
Ticket sales totaled
1102
ViU&gt;d/Parltinq
in
Side
,
703
2nd. St:teat
Robbins &amp; Myers .... ..... .. ..... lOY., $1,]76,110.50, with a payoff due of
10·6 p.m. Moa.•Sat., C:looed Sun. 9:30-5:30 Mon .·Sat. , Cloaed Sun.
POMEROY,
Shoney's Inc . .. .. ............. .. .. .27¥., $875,187.50.
222 EAST
675-7947
773-59.77
.
Wendy's inti. .. ............... ... ..... . 9 PICK-4
OHIO
MAIN
Worthington lnd .... ........ ...... 21 ¥.,
1643,

Ar.ea deaths

Ohio ..otttn · f

Hurricane weakens; Midwest·in deep freeze

Local briefs

l

Tuesday. October 13, -1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

\

'

MANAMA , Bahrain tUPii Suspected Iranian gunboats attacked an oil ta nker in the
Persian Gulf today. sl1ipping
sources said. just hou rs a fter
Iraq vowed to avenge an lr!lnian
missile attack that killed a t least
32 people and injured m9re than
200 others at a Baghdad elementa ry school.
Lloyd 's of London shipping
insurance brokers sa id "u nid entified war ships" attacked the
Liberian-flagged Atlantic PeacE/)
at 12:55 a.m. off the United Arati
Emirates coast.
Shipping sources said the attack had the hallmarks of an
Ira nian navy operation. Tuesday, Iranian Revolutionary
Guards attacked a Saudi Arabian
tank'h, the Petroship B, bUt
caused llitle damage and no
injuries.
The 84,631 ton Atlantic Peace
was machine·gunned 10 miles off
Dubal in virtually the same spot
as th'e Petroship B.
In Baghdad, Iraqi officials
discussed what kind of revenge to
take on Iran for Tuesday's
missile attack on an elementary
school In the Iraqi capital,

diplomatic sources sa id .
" Iraq's patience has run out
and it has become not only our
right but also our duty to reply to
this ugly crtme. They wanted a
war of the cities, so let it be,'' the
Iraqi Armed Forces General
Command said Tuesday of the
fourth Iranian missile attack on
Baghdad In just over a. w.eek.
The missile, believed to be a
long-range surface-to-surface,
Soviet -made SCU D, hit an Intersection next to the Martyrs
'ichool in sou thern Baghdad at
7:55 a.m. as parents brought
their children to school, diplomats who witnessed the damage
said by telephone.
"The children were singing
songs in the playground when the
missile landed, " Iraq's Di rector
of External Information Salah al
Mukhtar said. "The school has
been destroyed, totally."
Diplomats and witnesses said
medical teams a nd security
personnel reached the elementary school wi!hin minutes of the
explosion, but the victims st ili
were being removed froi]'l the
rubble more than an hour later.
The official Iraqi Ne:-vs Agency

•

reported 29 children and . two
women were among at least 32
people killed. In addition, 218
people were injured, Including
196 children, it said.
The Iranian attack was the
most destructive since lJ SCUD
misstfes crashed into Baghdad in
January and February.
One Western diplomat described the devastation as "very,
very gruesome" and said he
believed the government's casualty figures ancl account of the
attack were for the most part
accurate. The diplomat said
parts of the school were razed
and 16 nearby houses were
leveled or damaged.
Iran acknowledged that it fired
a miss ile at Baghdad, but said
the target was th~ Iraqi Dl!fense
Ministry compound lh central
Baghdad more than 10 mlles
away and that the attack was in
retaliation for Iraqi raids on
civilian targets.
· "The missile strike was In
response to Iraq's recent attacks
on civilian targNs in Iran and its
bombardment of an Iranian
school in So hall village in LaresContinued on page 3

a:

BUSY BLOCK - Pomeroy's East Main block
between Sycamore and Lynn Streets Is bu~tllng
with activity as the Dollar General Store makes
Its move lrom Its presenllocallon to a brand new
building. The City Loan building was finished just
a few months ago and a new business, the Buttons
and Bows chlldrens' clothing store moved In not

-

long ago at Its location on the block. Another
business, Sandy's Boutique also moved In just
recently and Main Street Pizza has moved into the
former · Sweets ·and Eats building. Dollar
General's first day of business in the new store
wlll be next Thursday, Oct. 22.

�' .

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f

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wedn!!sdaY. October 14. 1987

Commentary
.

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, OhiO
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTg OF THE

MEJGS· MASO~

\RE.\

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publi~h~r

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A M F.MRER 0! Th( • l'n 11Pd PrJ''"!-; 1n t( •rn.Jtlfln.ll. lnl ,tncl 0 .1II\ Prr ... ~
A "c.;nc·lalron Jml rhP Ampr·rr.m f'\r\\'.spapPr Publi"hfll " A..,~flrlJtton

~'

Th1 •\ ..,houlrl iW lc•-;o: 1t1:1n .~\11m d._
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11 lc ·ph~&gt; IH n umht•r '\ n un'-t[!nl'(\ h •l ll 1" 11 Ill b t• puiJit•hPd Lt•ll( ' "' -.hnulil hi' 1n
~·r11od 1 ,.,11 , utdrt .... rne '"'llt'" Jl ~&lt;l P' ''"l•n C
dttu •"
I FTTF.RS ()f' ()Pfl\10'\: ttl ' "''II nm1

Dangerous weapons
WASHINGTON- It is now 25
years since the Cuban missile
crisis -which supposedly ended
with the Soviet Union backing off
in the face of determined brink·
manshlp by the Kennedy admln·
is lra tlon . Bul the American
public has still not been told
officially the whole truth aboul
!his nerve-wracking confronta·
t I o n b e t w e e n 1 h e ,t w o
superpowers.
The State Department's determined cover-up has even exte nded to keeping top White
House officials in the da rk , by
withholding _secret documenls
!hat detail the delicate negotia·
lions in faH o( 1962.

There's a reason for this
continuing coverup: Soviet often·
sive weapons now in Cuba are far
more numerous - and more
sophisticated - than lhe 42
medium-range ba(Jistlc missiles
thai caused all the ruckus a
quarter·century ago.
Secret and top·secret documents we've seen make clear
!hat the "historic" agreement
between President Kennedy and
Soviet chairman Nikita Khrushchev was given a pretty sustan·
tial "spin" by the White House to
make it look like a diplomatic
triumph.
In fact, the U.S.·Soviet agree·
ment was a compromise. Con·

By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

Happy birthday,
franc~ised innkeeper
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Traveling down lhe road loday, it is
difficult to believe the first motel chain In America wasn't even
establ!shed 36 years ago. '
Yet , we are told, what became the nation 's firstfranch1sed roadside
inn Is celebrating its 35th birthday in Memphis, Tenn. , I his year
That would be the Holiday Inn opened in 1952 by Kemmon Wilson
after a family auto trip to the nation's capital. Wilson was reported
"irked" because he had to pay $2 per child to oblain lodging for his
kids
Let us pause here and exclaim in unison, "How times have
·changed!"
,
Although Wilson's chain sUII mAkes no c ha rge for youngsters under
12, try setting a foal in the door, much less an over age child, for a
couple of bucks and you see how far you get.
Anyway, Wilson named his motels after a Bing Crosby movie. In
1952,
coincidentally. a company IJearing the Crosby name
demonstrated the first video tape
According to "What Was New in 1952," ' compiled by a Wilson
spokesman, videocassetts "have revolutionized the way we entertain
ourselves.'' However, my guess is that ol' Bing would rather have had
a piece oi the Holiday Inn business.
Oral least, some of his heirs would.
Also in 1952, a television "silcqm" was deell)ed to have a regular
viewership in 14 million households. At that time, the nation average
was about 10 milion households.
Two potential sponsors mighl have been the first credit card ever
issued and a British compamy that produced the first tea bag.
I don't know whether plastic was acceptable at Wilson's Inn ..
In Texas, however, one need look back no farther than last Jan. I to
be seized by instant nostalgia
The first of the year was when Richard Reavis, senior editor of the
Texas Monthly, a magazine published in Austin, announced his
" national" tour of my native stale.
I recently returned from an auto trip that took me' more !han
halfway across Texas. Admittedly, I didn't stop at every wayside, as
Reavis did, lo buy a souvenir postage s tamp.
For that matter, I didn't stay al every Holiday Inn I saw ei\her.
Neverlheless, I never knew before that it was possible to mak,:&gt; a
"national tour" of Texas.
It's hard lo believe Reavis even lives in the same state w1th Dr.
Michael DeBakey, a Houston surgeon.
DeBakey has been quoted by another magazine as opining that "the
rmtural history of science is the study of the unknown It you fear it ,
then you're not going to study it ."
But then the doc probably won'! make a national tour of Texas
either
As to whether Reavis used Rand McNally road maps dunng his
drive is not revea led.
.
· A new book on retirement by Rand McNally may be as instructive
for what it imparts aboul lhe population at large as about t he 2.5
million Americans expected to retire this year.
For ins tance, a reader learns that "Americans move, on average,
11 times ifi a lifelime. "
In so mobile a society; It's a wonder members of a household find
time to argue over what "sitcom" to watch.

Letters to the editor
Seeks suggestions on issue
Recently it has come to our at tenlion llfllt our families reside in
Meigs Local School District, not
in Eastern Local School District
as we were led lo beleive.
Tlie Mann family has res1ded
in !he same home for the las! five
years, previous ly residing in
Eastern Local School District for
four years, and on ly las! month
was confirmed to be in Meigs La·
cal School District
The Jones family moved Into
the same area as the Mann fam ·
ily las! spring having resided in
Eastern local School Dis tnct for
six years (with excJ?ption of a
shorl period In Soulhern Local )
after a series of meetings wilh
various Meigs Local School DIS·
trict officials who assured us our
children could altcnd Eastern
Local Scoot District . •
After thi s school year s lartcd,
our families were · informed by
Meigs Local School Distrt officials thai we reside on the line
belween Eastern and Me igs Lo·
cal Districts and would have io
attend Meigs Local Schools or
pay tuition to attend Eastern Lo·
cal Schools. Bul when lhe deci·
sion was mad'e by both families
to send our children to Eastern
Local Schools and pay tuilion ,
Meigs Local School Board would
only release one studenl (Mark
Mann) lo ride the Eastern Local
buses, thereby refusin g ' to re·
lease the other three c hildren,
; one of which lives in the same
house (Amy Mann) . -the other
two are Jeff White and Marc
Jones.
Now we 'as parents are responsi·
ble for driving three of our four stu·
dents · to Eastern Local Schools
each morning and picking t hem up
each evening, while still paying
tuition. Meigs Local School Board
could eas ily release them fortran ·
sport on Eastern Local buses,
\'

"

~'

,;'_

..

which pass our homes each day,
while Meigs Local buses do not
even come close to our homes, and
Meigs Local would have to extend
a route in order to p1ck up our chil·
dren if we elected to send them to
Meigs Local, which we do not feel
would be in the best interest of our
children.
Eastern Local School Districl
Board ha s Indicated intenl to
meel with the Meigs County
School Board and County Sup!.
John Riebel concerning the in·
elu sion of this area mto Eastern
Local Schools This type move
has been done 'before by the
County Boar d in a situation in·
volving bolh Easlern and Meigs
School Dislricts.
Now our families are faced
with a real dil emma .
(1) Move inlo Eastern Local, but
it curtails moving a trailer , and
selling and buying another home
and uprooting two families.
(2) Staying where we are, pay' lng tuition and transport three or
four students every day.
(3) Stay where we are, pay tui·
tlon and pray Meigs Local School
Board will al their nexl tloard
meeting release the other three
children for Eastern t ransporl.
(4) Pray that at the nexl Meigs
County School - Board meeting,
the County Board will cede Ibis
area to Eastern Local School tlis·
trict.
We would like to request that
anyone with suggestions, or com·
ments concerning this matter,
please contact us! We need your
voice to speak. We may be
reached as follows: David Mann ,
Rl. 3, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769 or
Paul Jones, 33877 Flatwoods Rd. ,
Racine, Ohio 45771. The phone
numbers are David Mann 992·
6300 or Paul Jones 992·6161.
We thank you for your supporl
David Mann &amp; Paul Jones

Squad has three calls Tuesday
Bombers were on the list.
In a memo to the president on
Nov. 5, Attorney General Robert
Kennedy reported on a meeting
with Sov1et Ambassador Anatoly
Dobrynin , saying he told the
Soviets that " certainly It was
very clear that the bombers , the
IL·28s, had to go."
Khrushchev wouldn't budge on
the bombers. Secretary of State
Dearl Rusk sent Stevenson this
top·secret memo on Nov.?: "So·
vlets take position that KennedyKhrushchev agreement related
only to missiles .... Our primary
purpose is to get the MRBMs
(missiles) and JL-28 bombers
out, and we would go far in
reducing the lis! of offensive
weapons in order to achieve this
purpose. "
On Nov. 20, Khrushchev wrote
lo President Kennedy, complain·
lng 1ha t, In their correspondence
!he monlh before, Kennedy had ·
not made "a single mention of
bomber planes." Khrushchev
said the IL·28s were so old they
couldn't be classified as offensive weapons, and anyway, "we
Intend to remove them within a
month "
The Soviets eventually did
remove the IL·28s, and the U.S.
quarantine of Cuba was llfled.
But the Soviets now have more
and better warplanes in Cuba
than Ihey did then: a dozen Tu·95
Bear bombers (some with nuclear capabilily) and about 40
MIG-23 or M!G-27 fighterbombers, ail of which can carry
nuclear bombs. Intelligence offi.
cials have told Congress they
can'! tell for sure if the Soviel
planes In Cuba actuaily have
nuclear bombs.
Furthermore. U.S. intelligence
has conf1rmed the delivery of at
least six nuclear ml~sles lo Cuba
by submarine in 1972 and 1974,
a nd the naval base at Cienfuegos
Is linked by rail to &lt;i nu clear
warhead storage facility .
'

By Robert W alt~rs

A senseless han'est
JUNEAU, Alaska iNEAJ -It
Is by far the country's largest na·
tiona! forest . covering 80 percent
of the southeastern Alaska arch!·
pelago and spanning 500 miles.
from the Pearse Canal on the·
south lo Disenchantment Bay on
!he north.
More than half of its 16,7 mil ·
lion acres are covered w1th wes·
tern hemlo ck, Silka spruce or
red or yellow cedar. the oldest of
·!hose trees date b'a ck 800 years,
measure 10 feel in diameter and
soar 250 feet high.
It is the Tongass National Fo·
rest, the la st old-grow lh rain fo·
res! anywhere on Earth outside
Ihe tropics- bul its fulure Is en·
dangered by the federal agency
!hal is supposed to protect it.
AI risk are more than the majestic trees that require hundreds of
years lo reach malurlty in !his
spectacular region of snow-capped
mountains, mist-shrouded fjords,
alpine meadows and pristine livers
and lakes.
•
The thriving ecosyslem in Ala s·
. ka 's "panhandle" teems with w1ld·

&lt;

life, Including the nation's largest
concentration of bald eagles Also
present in abundance are grizzly
bears, deer, salmon and trout.
Early In, this century, the U.S.
Forest Service concluded that
limber production here was was
the key to the economic develop·
ment of the remote, sparsely populaled region.
(Even today, only aboul 60,000
people live in the area, with 70
percent of !hem concentrated in
Ketchikan, Sitka a nd Juneau, the
state capital.)
Although logging contracts in·
other national forests. seldom exceed 10 years in dural ion. the Forest Service argued that longer
terms were required to attract
limber companies to the Tongass.
Two 5o· years contracts signed·
in the 1950s are still in effect.
They guarantee the Louisiana
Pacific Corp. and the Alaska
Pulp Corp. exclusive access to
timber on federal lands at excep·
tionally favorable prices.
But there is httle domeslic de·
mand for Tongass timber. Vir-

program lost 91 cents for every
lually all of it is shipped to Japan
dollar spent on it in 1983, accord ·
(Alaska Pulp is a Japanese corpo·
ing to the Wilderness Society.
ration) where it is used to produce
That increased to 93 cents In
rayon, cellophane and other pro·
1984
and 99 cenl in 1985. Last
ducts whose global markets are
year, the Wild~rness Society caldwindling.
culates, Ihe Forest Service lost
To provide the Japanese with
99.8 cents (or every dollar II
an almost limitless supply of
spenl here.
c'heap pulp-grade timber , the U.
In addition, the sc heme ha s
S. treasucy is being bled under ~n
failed to attain its primary goal
obscure provision of the Alaska
of creating new jobs. Since 1980,
National Interest Lands Conser·
vation · Act of 1980.
employmenl in the region's tim·
ber Industry has plummeted
By passing the congressional
from 3,000 to less than 1,800.
aut horization and approprlalion
The governments of more than a
process that governs other fe·
dozen
~ommunitles in the area are
deral spending, the law requires
on
record
opposing the senseless
that the Treasury Deparlment
timber harvest. The leading fish·
automalicaily "make available"
to the Forest Service at leas! $40 ermen's organizations object to
"su~Jldizln g a foreign company lo
million each year to finance the
despoil our landscape and waters' '
Tongass timber program.
In addition , the law specifies while threatening Iheir livelihood.
In what the Southeast Alaska
that lhe national forest supply
"dependent industry" with 4.5 Conservalion Council describes
as "reckless pursuit of an inflexibillion board feel per decade.
While rig idly controlling sup· ble mandate," however, the Foply, the federal government has resl Service persists in its plans
little influence over demand. The · lo clearcut 17,000 acres of virgin
result, Is that the Tongass timber limber every year.

Where the money goeS_-,--__B_y_S~a_ra_h_O~v_e_rs_tr_e_et_
There was a time when I
thou ght if I ever made as much
mon ey as I'm making now , I 'd be
in !all coli on .
It 's not hke I'm a candidale for
!he Fortune 500 a nytime soon,
bul my salary today would have
made my eyes spm. the year I
signed my first leaching con ·
lract And even that seemed' like
untold riches afler years of
dishing of McDonald 's fnes and
Mr. Swiss burgers. I was to make
$7,400 a year for merely working
10 hours a day corralling
sevenlh·graders , grad ing papers
and ta kmg tickets at foolball
games.
But that $7,400 didn 't go very
far after I started dipping into it,
any more !han my much larger
paycheck stretches now . It's
am azing ·how a few years can
dim lhe figures of a five ·digil
sa la ry. My fr iend Marla Geary
succ inclly calls II the "Charmin
balhroom tissue theory of economics. "
At first, you think !his new
cache · of money will manifest
ilself in a handsome savings
account, maybe a few stocks and
bonds to pigeonhole against old
age. Then, little by little, i1 slarts
to frilter ilself away.
Firs!, the Always Save ba·
throom tlssu.e gives way to the
Charm ln . You're in the . supermarket, a newly rich person, and
you begin to wonder why wi th all
!his money In your pocke t · you
have to use toilet tissue that has
Ihe texture of the paper towels in
a low· rent gas station.
Next, you begin to believe your
son palate deserves cann'e d
green beans without the stalks in
!hem. You chafe at K-Mart
underwear, and then you want

'

the · mascara without !he big
lumps in 11 . Pretty soon il's the
end of the month, and Exxon will
have to surv ive a little longer
wilhOut you as a stockholder.
There are peeplewho will save,
invest and prosper no matter
what period of history they live
m. But I suspect that for Ihe rest
of us, it's all in how you look at
money, and a lot of that depends
when you grew up. My parents
grew up wearing flour sacks and
rearing two litlle boys in lhe
Depression. My folks could save
money panpandllng at bus sla·
lions. Putting money away me·
ani lhey'd never again have to
wonder if !hey could afford
chicken necks instead.of potatoes
a nd beans, and the bank wouldn't
foreclose on their two·bedroom
bungalow.
But they died nol having spent
much of what they saved, and m y
fa ther lefl the bulk of H to a third
wife. That has a powerful impact
on a kid . It tends to propel a
shopping cart stra ight to the
Charmin and lhe Del Monte
green beans while one is alive.
Future generations- especially
future spouses - couldn't possl·
bly need money as much as the
one making It who has it burning
right lhrough her pock et at lh!s
very momenl.
Many of my contemporaries
ha ve laken Ihis economic theory
to the extreme, believing one
doesn't need to even mak e money
before spending it. I don't know
why thi s should qother me so
much , but it does. tall H a quirk ;
I wan! people to pay for their own
Charmln . Bul !hen I guess those
folks were around when m y
pa r e n ts . were making one
chicken la s t lhrough lhrPe

suppers. Just like !hose who
always invest !heir money
wisely, the re are ·those who ride
lhrough life on !heir brother's
dollar.
I know I could do better
financially . I could subscribe to a
few investml'nt magazines and
start reading Sylvia Porter, but I
think I already know my ' eco·
nomi c prognosis: The sum Iota!
of my need for the high· price
spread and soft bathroom tissue

is equal to the expansion of my
means. So, I here are worse sins. I
have an IRA and medical insu·
ra nee, and I makP my hou se
paymenl on time. I may not ever
challenge Malcplm Forbes, but I
don ' t think he has to worry about
paying off my tab if I gel sick of
lose my job.
In the interim, I don't care for
lnduslrlal·grade toile! paper .
Pass lhe Charmin, please, and
don ' t squeeze it

Berry's World

Mei'gs County Emergency Medical Services reports three
calls Tuesday; Rulland at 7:03a.m. to Hill St. for Carl DPnnison
to Holzer Medical Center; Middleporl at 3:29 p.m. to VIllage
Manor Apis. for Mary Ramey to Veterans Me mori al Hos pilal,
Rulland at 7: 2~ p.m. to Roul e 681 for Ruth Darst to Holzer
Medical Cenler.
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Meeting slated Oct 20
The annual mee ting of the Meigs County Council on Aging will
· be held 1 p.m . Tuesday, Oct. 20, at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center, Char les E. Blakeslee, president, announces.
The meellng is open to all members of the senior citizens
center and lo all who have made contributions to Ihe cenler or
the council during the past year. Business to be transacted, in
add it ion to reports by the officers , will be the election of lrustees
to the board of the council for one-two·and three·year terms.
After this year, one· third of the lrustees will be elected each
year to three· year lerms.

Unidentijieq ... conlinued from page 1
~

tan province Monday. " said a
Iranian Revolutionary Guard
Corps statemenl earned by the
official Islamic Republic New s
Agency .
But diplomats rcfuled Iran's
claims. One Weslern diplomat
said there was a refinery and a
power station In the area where
the missile fell but that the
Iranians were "qulte clearly not
trying to avoid civilian areas."
"These missile~ are extremely
inaccurate weapons with a mar·
gin of error of something like 2
miles," he said. "The first three
seem not to have hit heavily
populated area s. But this · one
did."
Tuesday's missll~ tell in the
Dora district of southern Bagh·
dad where the lhree olher mis·
sites in the past week also
crashed.
In the.soulhern Persian Gulf.
suspected Iranian Revolullonary
Guards atlacked the 39,115-lon
Saudi Arabian oil tanker, Petro·
, ship B, 10 miles off !he United
Arab Emirales port at Dubai

Celeste...

Tuesday. There were no Injuries
or major damage.
Revolutionary Guards made a
similar attack on the same vessel
Sept. 20.
Tehran Rad10 reported the
Saudi ship.had been a !lacked, but
prov1ded no details other than
saying the s hip belonged to the
Saudi royal family.
Tuesday morning, the 11th
U.S ·escorted convoy · of rP·
flagged Kuwalli tankers success·
fully and "uneventfully" com·
ple!ed a two-day voyage up the
gulf to Kuwait, ~entagon off!·
cials said in Washinglon. The
four·tanker sealraln was the
biggest convoy since U.S. war·
ships launched the escort duty in
July.
"No unusual Iranian activity"
was encountered by the three
escorts, the guided missile frl·
gales Hawes , Klakring and Ford.
Pentagon spokesman Fred Hoffman said. The Navy's amphibious assault ship Mount Vernon
tagged a long

Conllnued from page 1 ,

-~"--~---"-----

anything the public agrees
with."
"You took," Celeste said, "at
how pt'{)ple are back lo wqrk and
what we'vedonetoget them back
to work , a program thai is now
the modPI fo r the rest of the
• country. You look at what we did
to negotiate and get Honda to pul
a second plant In Ohio."
Celeste was also questioned
concerning a number ot alleged
scandals In his administration, I
including those disclosed by The
Cleveland Plain Dealer regard·
• ing no·bld slate telephone con·
tracts awarded to a firm con·
nect ed wilh a Ce les te
contributor.

"The story alleged thai a
major contrlbulor to my cam·
paign is a s harehold er in the
company," Celeste said. "The
paper said this guy ( Jeftrey
Friedman , son·ln·law of Tele·
Communications Inc. Chaitman
Carl Milstein 1 contrlbu ted
$50,000 to my campaign, which is
false. He did nol. He con1ributed
$100,000 to the Ohio Democratic
Party and contributed $1.000 to
my campaign.
"There Is a Ieglllmate concern
!hat is raised. Thai is, are Wf'
protecting the taxpayers money
,when we enter in no· bid co ntracts
llke this? Were there any special
favors don~•" Celeste said.

Name poster contest ·winners
The following stud en ts were
winners in Chester Elementary
School's Carnival poster contest.
Theme for the posters was
"October Magic."
Morning kindergarten; Cassie
Rose. firs! place; Shane Machir,
' second place; 'Eric Smith and
Jessica Kimes, honorable men ·
tion ; Afternoon kindergarten,
Molly He1nes, first; Chris
, Krawsczyn, second; Sarah

Daily stock prices
- ..

(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Provided hy
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

Firm
Price
Am Electric Power .... ........ 2R %
AT&amp;T ............ .. .... .............. 33 \(\
Ashland Oil ................... .. 65 '1,
Bob Evans Farms .............. ... 20
Charming Shoppes. .. .. .. .. 21%
· City Holding Co ... .. .......... ..31
· Fedetal Mogul ........ : ..... .... 43 Y2
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. .......fl6 1J
Heck's Inc . .... ..................... 3o/,
Key Centurion .. .. .. ............ 39
Lands' End .................. 23\&lt;\
Limited inc ........... .. ........... 28%
Multimedia Inc .............. 6H%
aax Restaurants ...... , ........ 4¥,
Robbins &amp; Myers.. . . .......... 10
Shoney's Inc .............. .. .26¥,
Wendy's Inti. ...................... 9\(\
Worthington I~d ............... 21 \(\

Dinner set 0('1. 21
The annual joint Gallia ·Meigs
County Scoltlsh rile dlnn e1 will
be hPid at the Mtddleport Ma·
sonic Temple on Wednesday,
Oct. 21. at 6:30 p.m .
Reservations mu s t be made by
Saturday, Oct. 17 Gallia County
members are to ca ll D. A. Byers
at 44IJ.1948 or Bud Harrison al
446 ·3 750 Meigs Couynty
members are to call James
Clatworthy at 992-'3503. Enler·
talnment will be provided by
Scotlish Rite members of
Columbus

Answer 39 ('alls

" Well, what's on the agenda for tonight?
No - let me guess."

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

r---Local ·briefs·- ---,

.·

fronled by an ~narguable U.S.
military superiority - and
Kennedy's evident delermina·
tlon to use it - Khrushchev
grudgingly .agreed not to deploy
the missiles he was sending to
Cuba and lo remove those
already there.
But the Soviel leader flatly
refused to pull out the IL-28
Beagle bombers based in Cuba,
despite repeated U.S. insistence.
This· insistence was made clear
in - the series of stlll·secret
documents.
Firs!, in a letter to the Soviets,
U.N . Ambassador Adlai Stevenson listed the weapons the United
Stales considered lobe offensive.

•

Wednesday, October 14, 1987

Th e Middleporl Fire depart ·
ment answered 39 calls during
the monlh of September, Fire
Chief Jeff Darst reports . Of the
total runs nine were fire calls and
30 were emergency runs All
vehicles were driven 1,477.1
miles during !he mo)lth.

Frank and Jessica Grueser ,
honorable mention; First grade,
Jennifer Starcher, firs!; Sean
Beeker, second: Beau Bailey and
Matthew King, honorabl e mention; Second grade, Bet hany
Cooke, first: Nicholas Burke,
second; Kate Beeker and Bobby
Rupe, honorable mention; Third
grade, David Vanlnwagen, first;
Jack Beeker, second; Ben Kauff
and Lisa Stethem, honorable
mention; Fourlh grade, Melissa
Dempsey, first: Laure n Young ,
second ; Brandi Reeves and De·
bra Ze1gler, honorable mention;
Fifth grade, Jamie Ord, first ,
Lee Connolly, second; Rvan
Buckley and Jessica Radford ,
honorable men lion; Sixth grade,
Andrea Dillard, first: Richie
Arnold, second ; Amber Well and
Alicia Zeigler, honorable men·
tion; Mrs. Buckley's and Mr
Hlll's classes; Thomas Schuler,
first; John Miller, second : Rod·
ney Crites, honorable mention;
.Jeff White, f1rst; Ronnie Wells,
second; Michael Baslm, third .

Announcements

Pre-dawn temperatu res Tul"s·
By United Press International
day
d ipped into th e 20s and 30s
Brisl\, gusty winds Iailed a cold
from
the Great Lakes to New
fron t tha t drifted down from
England, and at least 15 cities
Ca nada and stretched aeross
much of the nation, while tropical across Michigan, Indiana. Ohio.
Pennsylvania, Ken lucky, Louis!·
storm Floyd fizzled as it chugged
ana. Wesl Virginia , Alabama,
northeas t in the Atlantic.
New Hampshire, Mis.sfssippl and
Ellsworth Air Force Base nea r
Rapid City, S.D., recorded gusts Texas reported record lows for
Ihe dat e
up to 58 mph \ate Tuesday and
co lder air erepl in lo the northern
Pia Ins from western Canada.
The records included readin gs
Wind gusting al 25 mph to 35 mph
of 22 in Concord, N.H.; 25' In
blew over the high plains of Toledo, Ohio, and Alpe na, Mich .;
Kansas , Nebraska and th e
and 34 in Meridian, M1ss. In
Dakotas.
Waco, Texas, a reading of 41
Freeze warmngs were !~s ued
broke a mark of 42 set in 1917 .
!his moming by the National
Tropical storm Floyd, which
Weather Service for parts of - has run into a cold Iron! over the
eastern Pe nnsylvania and the
ocean , weakened thi s morning i!S
interior sections of New .Jersey.
it moved northeasl at 15 mph.
Th e wea ther service forecasl
Floyd was downgraded from
rain mixed with snow for south·
hurricane to tropical storm Tu es·
ern Wyoming.
day, and hurncane warnings
Pete Reynolds, a NWS meteo·
were lowered fbr Flor id a.
rologlst, said many of the states
Rough seas in the wake of
along Ihe Gulf Coast were suffer·
Floyd forced 24 crew m ember s
lng unseasonable cold as were
aboard the 400·1oot Venezuelan
the Ohio and Tennessee Valley
freighter Alma Llan era to a ban·
regions.
don ship off Hillsboro lnlr l near
More than 50 record low s have
Miami Tuesday morning after
been sel in the Plains and
the ship's cargo shifled. All were
Midw.est since the weekend.
res cued by the Coast Guard.

Process 21 cases in Pomeroy Court

RAIN
~SHOWERS
Cold '" . . StatiC . . Occluded

uap S:'IO'NS m1nmt1m 1~Mperat..Jres At
\J recer 1e ptec1pr!2t:on uidiC3 1ed

least 50% o' ant snade~ area ;s I:Jrecast
UPI

WEATHER MAP- Rain showers will extend from tlw southern
and central Rockies acros. the central Plains into Iowa with rain
mixed wit·h snow over. southern Wyom,ing. Showers and
thunderstorms will be widely scatt~red over northwest 'l'exas and
Oklahoma. i\ lew rain showers will dol upper Michigan and the
northern Pacific Coast. Skies will be mostly sunny over the eastern
quarter of tht• U.S. Most of the nation will have high temperatures
In the 60s or 70s.

The Daily Sentinel

Weather

Twenly·ope cases were pro· Anita Bargeloh. Mineral Well s,
cessed Tuesday night in the court w. Va., S63. expired plates,
of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Fined were David Roach,
Seyler.
•
B1dweil, $47 and cosls, speeding;
Forfeiting bonds wer e Pearl David Horner, Racin e and costs.
VanCooney, Middleport , $47;
operating under suspension; Ri·
Joyce Grimm, Co lumbu s, $45;
cha rd Carulhers, Sr., Pomeroy,
Ruby Grueser. Racine, $45;
$63 and 'costs, consum ing an
Brenda Darst, Pomeroy, $50;
alchol1c beverage m a moto r
Paige Winebrenner , Reedsville, vehicl e; Vincent Knight, Jr, $46
$45; Jackie Johnson, Letart, W. and cosls. speeding; Brett
Va., $52; Stanley Watson, DeJa- Friend, Long Bottom, $375 and
ware, $49; Karen Gilkey, Athens, costs. driving under the in flu·
$45,' all posted on speedi ng ence. and $4Ci and costs, speed·
charges; Gerald Pullins, ?orne· ing; James E. Johnson , Shade,
roy, $43, failure lo yield; Allen $48 and costs, open fla s k; James
Partlow, Pomeroy, $43, expired Ben tz, Racine, $47 and cost s,
plates; Terry Lewis. New Haven, speed in g; Timothy Jenkins ,
W.Va .. $63, nooperator'sllcense, Pomeroy, $43 and costs, no
and $44 speeding; Debra Nelson , operator's license .
Racine, $63. expired plates; ', ,

South Centra! Ohio
Mostly sunny 1oday. wilh highs
in the mid 60s. Increasmg cloud I ·
ness lonighl , w1th a low near 40
Va riable cloudiness Thursday.
with h1ghs bel ween 65 and 70.
Th e probability of precipit a·
t io n is near zero through
Thursday.
Winds will be from lht' soulh
near 10 mph today and light and
southerly tonight
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance ot rai n in I he norlhPrn
par i of the state Fnday and over
the entire state Saturday and
Sunda). Hi ghs wil l range from
!he mid 60s to th e mid 70s each
day, with ovcrnll:ght lows in the
mid 40s.

Fine four in Middleport Court

Makt&gt; 72 arrest;;

Four defendants were fined
and eight others forfeited bonds
in the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday nigh!.
Forfeiting · were Lowell V.
Johnson, Gallipolis, $42; Geral·
dine Cleland, Racine. $41, both
posted on speed ing charges;
Michael W. Price, Rutland, $450,
driving while intoxicated, and
$50 failure to control vehicle;
John F. Bumgarner. Wesl Columbia, W. Va., $450, driving
while intoxicated and $50, left of
center; John Thabit, Mason, W.
Va., $450, driving whlle inloxi·
cated, anq $50, lefl of center ;
John W Casto, Poinl Pleasant,

W. V~t·· $450, driving while
in toxicated, and $50, weavmg
course; Jack K. Spires , Middle·
port, $50, squealing tires; Anna
J . Williams. Rutland, $100, operating motor vehicle without
proper regard for safety.
Fined were Shane Engle, Mid·
dleport, $10 and costs on each of
three cha rges including failure to
control , no operator's license and
expired tags; Dennis Lavender.
Middleport, $10 and costs, stop
s1gn violation; Kelly Buzzard,
Middleporl, $10, ailowtng a dog to
bark continuous ly: Sandy
McClure, Mlddleporl. $10 and
costs, allowing a dog to run loose.

Seventy-two a rre ~ t s were
made b:, !he Middleport Pohce
Department durin g the monlh of
September, accordin&gt;: to the
reporl of Police Chief Sid Lit ti e .
The department in vesligated
eight accidcnls; collected $813
from the parkin g meters; wrote
446 parking llckels, and collected
$45 in merchant police fees All
ve hicles were dr~vcn 5,().12 m1les
during the month

tUSPS

H!).!l601

A Dl\•lsion uf 1\lultlrm&gt;dla , Inc.
PIJbltshC'd 1•VC'tV a rtf'ln{IQ n MQndav
F1ula v, 111 CnuJ 1 St . Po
mrroy Oh1o b' lht' Ohio VuiiC'V Pub
l llihlng Companv 'MulllmC'dlu
Inc ..
Pom(•ro\. Oil 10 4"170.G Ph 992·2156 Sf..
ron1l cldss p os t u~C' paid ~ 11 Pomrrov.

l hrou~h

Ohi O
Mt•mbt'f Unl! r d Prf's!i tnwrna110nal.
In land D&lt;Jllv PrC'ss Ass(l( li-lt JOn .and 1hr
Ohw N(•wspa pt'J Assodullon National
AdvPrtiSIR g Rr pJ rsrn lnll\'t', Br&lt;:~nhdm
NC'wsp HpC'l' S:ll f'S

7:~1 T hhrl AV('OU ('

Nf'w York. N('w York 10017
POSTMASTER Sr&gt; nd addt·rs!i changf's
1o ThC&gt; Datlv &amp;&gt;ntlnrl. 111 Court Sl .
Pomrrov. Ohio 'l!17ti9
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor IWult•
Onf' Wf'rk.
•
. .. ~1 25
$5 4~

One Month
Onf' Y r;u

.. $na.oo

.

SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Su bsrrlb('rs not d ~!J lng to p,rv th('('U I'
ttPI m,tv l'l'm!t In &lt;Hh•nncr dlr £'ct to
Tht&gt;D.1tl\ Sl--ntm eJ()na3.florl2month
bttsls CJC'Cill will br&gt; given t'ar l l('r P&lt;rch
\\ N•k
No f:; UbS(' J !pllon!-i bY mall p€'rmn tr&gt;d In

,t rP&lt;t'&gt; whPrr hum(' carriN S£'1\ lcl' Is
1\',11\.iblC'

!\tall Suhs(•rlptiCIRS
ln!!ildt• l\lf'ig!oi County

13 W&lt;'Pk:. • . ..
. ....... $11 29
2h Wf'C'ks ...
. •.... ,. , ,
~~4 06
~2 WC'C'k.S
~!if.
Oul!iid~,•

Mt•ig"" eo unty

n WC'ek s....
2h W Pr k'i. .
!12 WC'f'kS .

$1820
.. ... $3!i 10

$tl7 ti(l

-.

·.-••

..-.
.
•

~·

Village funds total $346,444.58

:~

All Middleport Village funds as 11ary scewer escrow. no receipts,
of Sepl. 30 lolaled $346,444.58, $2,246, $105, 971.2~; fire hou se
Village Clerk·Treastirer Jon imporvement, $8,601.20. $271.43.
$62 ,407 72; water tank, no re·
Buck reports
Receipts and di sbursement s ceipts, no disburs e ment s,
from each fund a nd the end of the $125,977.68; water, $1:l,871.51,
month balance of each, respPc· $10,087.01, $12,940.Ci4; samtary
tively,
Include: general , sewer, $9,093. 72, $9 ,030 :J;;;
$42.080.92, $12,077.30, $25,:175.42; $14,000 .06; s wimming pool,
street maintenance. $6,603.49, S48.78, $1,272.25. $6,464.89deficit;
$8,317.41, 411.12 deficit; federal cemetery, $1,203.07, $1,374.:10,
revenue sharing, no receipts, no $2,98611 deficit; waler meter
disbursemenls, $97.35; fin• trusts, $580, $140, $13,11q3.56 .
Receipts for the month totaled
equipment , $525 , $899.69,
$98,087.84
while disbursement s
$4,988.22 deficit; fire truck,
$77,101.18.
amounled
to
$3,208.59, $101.46, $12,316 09;
tr anspor lali on. $10,562.16,
$16,683.75,$22,428.47 deficit; san·

_,•

.

;:..

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Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - An·
drew Miller, Long Bottom .
Tuesday Discharges - Wilham Frecker, Linda Adkins,
Hillary Turley, Betty Butche r,
Thomas Parker, Cat hryn Ervin,
Robert Wood , Edward Shaekel.

Reservations mu st be made by
Tuesday Oct 20 for th e Jay m ar
Golf Club Dinner·Dance to be
held Sunday Oct. 25 at the
Middleporl . Legion Hail. The
public is invited. Music will be
provided by . George Hall To '
make reservations or for more
Information, contacl Bob Freed
al 992-2044.

HAMBURGER

64(

Prices
Start
At

WITH FRIES ................
S1.19
.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLE~ .
"At the End of the Po-roy-Mason Bridge

I

$

••

Includes Freight

'
;JIM COBB· ,_

chevrolet• Oldsmobile-• Cadillac
614-992-6614

PH. 992·_2556

308 E. Main St.

~·tll••o.
•

•

Pamer

-.

._,'

Hospital news

Stecial 01 the Week

&lt;;ro+

"

ft

Reservations due

Chapter to meet
Harrisonville Chapter. Order
of the Eastern Star, will host a
reception hOnoring Charles King,
aide to the deputy grand matron,
at the Harrisonville Masonic
Temple at 7:30 p.m Thursday.
Ail Order of the Eastern Star
member and friends are invited
to attend . Members are asked to
take sandwiches and salads.

'. POMEROY, OH.

G:8SNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

Ohio

�Wednesday, October 14, 1987
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, October 14. 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Eastern·; to host Wildcats in hQme·c oming tilt Friday night
a

EAST MEIGS -Aided by boost
from homecoming festivities. the
Eastern E~gles hope to post their
fourth vic tory of the season this
Friday evening against the Hannan Trace Wildcats. ·
Eastern is now 3-3 overall and
2·2 in the SVAC, while Hannan
Trace is 5-2 and 3-1 in the league.
Last week Eastern posted a
stunning' 14 -8 come-from-behind
win at North Gailla after seem·
.... ingly being given up for dead
when NG's David Roush scampered into the endzon.e with just
three minutes remaining.
Eastern,however, fought back
las it took contro!for the last time ·

with l : 17 left in the game o.n the ir
own 20 yard line. This came after
th'e defense rose to the occasion
to hold NG on downs .
The game-winner was set up by
a tail back pass by Steve Horner,
who launched a " Hail Mary" .
pass to Kyle Davis . I&lt;lavis camP '
back to make a great ca tch t:&gt; n t' 1e
Sli[;htly underthrown ball to glvP
IEHS possession in NG territory
with under a minute left.
An obvious pass Interference
ca ll gave EHS an added chunk of
!yardage, setting the stage for a
Mark Griffin·to,Steve Horner
22 -yard . game-winning TD
com bin a&gt;! ion .

Earlier, with 20 seconds left in
the first ha lf. Steve Welch gave
Eastern its first score on a
17-ya rd interception ret urn.
Eac h tim e Mike Weber a dded
!the extra point kick.
, Jeff Johnson led the rushing
paraade with 73 yards on 16
car ries, freshman Doug Miller
ra mbled 40 yards on 7 carries.
a nd senlorKyleDavis30ya rdso n
6 carries.
Griffin was 4-11 pass ing for 90
yards .Horner nabbed one for 22
yards. Davis .two-for-41 yards
a nd Jeremy Barber 1·27.
Eastern had ten first downs
a nd 233 ya rd,s.

'
The Eastern coaching staff of Th ey a re a discipl.ined, we ll
In offense and defense. while
head Coach Arch Rose and coached team !that; makes very
Eastern Is 13th offensively a nd 16
assis tants Don Eichinger and few mist akes. They have a
pefimsiveiy.Senior quarlerqack
Ron Hill are somewhat con· quarterback "who is very dgile
Gra!ly Johnsoti is one Wildcat Ito
CE'rned abou t the sp,:ed of Han- and can throw the bali well to ali
watch Friday as hc loo.ks lor his
nan Trace,however, feel the two receivers."
favorite target in Scott Rankin,
teams are fairly even ln other
Rose countered by saying,"lf
who last week successfully made
aspects.
•
everyone stays healthy thi s week
the winning combo In a ·last
EHS also hopes to· esta blis h a and we can keep our mind s on the
minute 21·14 win over SWHS.Ea r·
solid running ghame to open up game, we will do well . We want to
lier the two hit on a 48 yard TD ·
its passing ranks, also hoping to be aggressive from the begin·
completion.
es tab !ish its goal of getting on top ning. It's my wish to overcome
The oiher HT TD was compli·
and staying for· the duration . the d!stractidns of homecoming·
mcnt s of a pass to Jack Swain
E HS 's three wins have . bee ,. ,concentrate on tM game, play
!rom 14 yards away .
come-from-behind wins .
aggressive footbail, then win the
. The rushing .tandem of Brad
Coach Arch Rose reflected that g am e a.n d c e I e b r a ·t e
Cremeens and "Todd Saunders·
·'Ha nnan Trace is very quick ho111ecoming.
rushed lor 55 yards apiece and
with much talent in the backfield. ' In a 26-team region HT is - have both been equally impres-

Southent hopes to return to win column
at Kyger. Creek Friday; Bobcats are 2-4
RACINE - Taking a 'Sink or
Swim' attilude into its remaining
games, the Scuthern Tornado
gridders hope to get their heads
above water this week against
the Kyger Creek Bobcats on the
road at Cheshire.
Scuthern is now 1·5 overall and
0.4 in the league.KC is '2·4 and 1·3
in the league.
The Southern troops have not
exactly given up the ship as of
yet, despite the loss of key
veteran player Pete Roush·, the
senior fullback who was well on
his way to a lOOOyardseason. But
as fate would have it Roush was
injured lor the third year In a row
to put a crimp on a fine career.
Roush rambled for Scuthern's
only two touchdowns last week ill

a 34-14 toss to Oak Hili.Rou sh ted .Other good defens ive e(!orts
suffered a broken collar bone in wre by Roush,Lisre,Didd!e.A·
·
mos, and Kevtn Grueser .
the fourth qua rter .
Southern hit a res pect a ble
Last week KC suffered a
12-0f-23 passes for 153 yards with . hard-fought 7-0 loss at home to
Roush,Lisle, and Sellers doing Symmes Valley after seeing
the passing. Chris Stout grabbed several good drives killed by
3 passes for 96 yards, Todd Lisle costly penalties.Kt was penal2-25, and Mike Amos 3-30.
ized 9 tim es for 95 yards.Aiso the
Bobcats lo st 4 of 5 fumbles,
Southern is ranked 17th of!en·
sively in the region of ·26 tea ms
Southe~n will have to watch the
and 19th defensively,ha ving its
accurafe throwing ar m of Mike
woes at both ends of the fie ld . Bradbury, who also is a key
Kyger Creek is 14th offensively
defensive figure for the Bobcats.
and 18th defensively.
Bnidbury is the younger brother
Scuthern played a creditable·
of Ohio University's J.D . Brad,but inconsistent defense with
bury, a former KC star.
severa l hard hits on the line of
In the KC backfield are Joey
scrimmage·. where linebacker
Edwards and Mike Tucker .
Danny Gheen plugged up the
Sou thern coach Bill Hensler
middle with 13 tackles, 5 unassis· says with the loss of Pete

:::::::::::::=,

r,;ran:::ked:::Sth:::an:::d7:::thr:::espe:::ctiv:::ely===sive:::in:::past:::
e!f:::o
rts:::
.

'
Roush ;Southern
will have to
work that much harder to over·
come tha t loss. Hensler also
indicated that the backfield · Is
now wide open,although several
possible replacements are In
order.
Again the veteran SHS coach
reflected that he is looking for
m ore consistency. a nd some
a dd ed effort at each end , where
SHS ·had trouble with the option
las t week.
Overa ll Southern's defense
was much improved against the
run , but yielded most of its
yardage around the end. on the
option and with deep . aerial
assa ults.
Game time Friday Is 7:30 ·at
KC.

co_nt_inu_ed_fro_m---p·g---e4_ __

* Save as much as $39 .50 .
* The color of gold* at an affordable
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Ratings

SALE ENDS NOVEMBER 30, 1987

rOLUM.BUS. Ohht WPII - This
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ation t'(lmputt'rtted fovthullru.Unrs (lhf'
top four wams In r ·a~ h rL•j~:ion Q1.1:411t:Y for
thr · playoffs) ;
Olvl:.kln I
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Kt·~on 12

I. Wt'stl'llrlsmoulh n.oo; 2. nruok\'lllr·
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flnflnnall Fort•sl Park 12.50; 5. C".-\PF.
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Rl'l{iOn 15
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Tur"'dav·!» Rr•.. utt
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\\r •dtWMI;I)'' . _ Gat! II"'
Hurtford al Nr•" ·h •r l"4')' , ~ ::1~ p. m .

STEVE HORNl';R

Two players
PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
earned Co-Player of the Week honors for the
Southern Tornadoes as both had ·impressive
efforts. P ete Roush, possibly playing in his last
game gained 101 yards on 25 carries, scoring two
touchdowns and passing lor over 100 yards . The
other co-honoree is ,Junior Chri• Stout,who
t;rahhed 3 important catches to sci up touchdowns

Tlt~u,.d;~y·~

Gunit'S

S \ ' Ka nttr•r)oal f'Ut ...hll rgh, ni,;ht
Ro .. Lu n ;d IAI!» t\ng"l'"'· nl~thl

Transactions
•

U.uwhall
( lndnnall -

~amt• d

r l'llll«' l' 8111 lk•rJI;:f"'ol' h

Murr.n Co+•li tu
11 ~ \'lt•t•'Jl r +.,;ld+•nl

and lfl'm•r:alnumaiiiYr.
J),•lr nil - Pt~n: h u ....,d pltdwr" r• 11111
(.lt""on and Ka rl R''"'' :wd Jnfi••ILh •r l "t· dru
( h ~' l'"l from Tul•·~• uf llw lnlt•rn:.•tlorud
l.t •ll j~: ll" tAt\ .\ I an d pltdwr Stan ( ' llll"k• •
lrom ('a l ,~tury IJ(tlw P ad lll:fot~ !Ool Lt• a~~tlu '
1,\ ,\ ,\ J.

GOOD USED
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GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

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PH. 446·1699
HOUR$: 8 A.M.·6 P.M. ·

lor 96 yards. Player of the Week honors this pllllt
week for the Eastern Eagles was senior
wide-receiver Steve Horner,who caught the
game-winning pass of 22 yards with less than :20
seco nds left in a 14·8 EHS victory at North Gallla.
Moments earlier the strong armed Horner,whlle
IInder pressure, hurled ~ 36 yard pass to Kyle
Davis to set up the winning score.
·

ST. LOUIS &lt;UP]) - The
bes t-of-seven National Lea gue
playoffs have been narrowed
down to a finale between one
team facing pressure and
another that ha s thrived on it ali

season.

..

The Sa n Francisco Giant s.
whose NL pennant chances
looked so good one da y ago, mu st
win tonight or suffer Ca ndy
Maldona do's blunder all winter.
The .St. Louis Card inal s, who
handled charges by Montreat
and the New York Met s ali
September , used Maldonado's
· misplay Tuesdaay night to avoid
e limination with a 1·0 victory and
move within a victory of their
second World Series in three
seasons.
Maldonado lost a Tony Pena
drive in the Busch Stadium light s .

TIME TO CHECK
THAT FURNACE!

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for a triple and the St. Louis
ca tcher scored on J ose Oquen·
do' s seco nd-inning sacrifice fly
for the only run of Game 6. John
Tudor picked up the victory over
Dave Dravecky, who had beaten
Tudor by pitching a s hutout in
Ga me 3.
Th e NL series is tied at 3-3 for
the fir st time since divisional
playoffs were ex pand ed to seve n
games.
The wi nner . of the decisive
game sc hedu led lor 8:25 p.m.
E DT tonig ht ear ns a World

Mason, w. va
773-5514

New Haven, W.Va.
882·2135

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Setltllctlon guarenteed or your money baek

RACINE
Kyger Cree k
c laimed both the va rs it y and
' reserv e vo lleyball crow ns in thr
SVAC with victories over South·
ern here recent!y,cl aiming the
vars ity tilt 17-15 and 15-6,
The Bobkittens won the fir st
game of the set a fter Sou thern
had led 14·8 with ju st one point to
go for a win. KC found n e~v life
and went to scorethew in in great
efforts by both clubs.
Ji!le Dr ummond had 12 points
a nd six kil!s.Missy Darst seven
points a nd Missy Kitch en five
points and three kills for the new
c-hamps, now 16·2 overall a nd 11 ·0
in the league.
Dawn Johnson scored seven
points for Southern. now 14·6 and
8·3.
Kv is now 11"0 in the reserve
level with its 15·0 and 15-9 wins
over SHS. Beth Bradbury pa ced
the win with 15 poin ts and good
line play , while Trici a Wolfe had
8 for Scuthcrn, now 12·8 and 8-3 in
the league.
Scuthern won the Jr. Hig h
match in three sets, 15·7,9·15,and
Hi-14 ,as Mega n Wolfe paced the
way with 13 points anp Agni~
Bush had 12 for Kyger Creek.

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in£' Dugan 488.
tND. HIGH GAME: Larry Roach 245:
Rr~;r Roach-Lar ry Sayrr202: Drbl HcnslC'y
202, M ax inC' Du~an 191 .
SEPTEMBER 30, t9i7
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The last day to make ·
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September_23. 1981

Thanks For.Banking
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Member F.D.I.C.

Tudor forced the Giants into 0 game.
"We've been coming back all
for 7 hittin g with runn ers ·in
year,"
Craig said. "You've got
scoring position wh ile striking
to
give
that club credit. They
out six . Dravecky was nearly as
went
out
and won a game, the
effective, striking out a season·
game
of
their lives.
·
high eight , allowing just two
"This club (the Giants) has
runners to get as far as third and
no Cardinal to reach second after been like thi s all year . It seems
, like we don't do anything easy.
Pena scored.
Even with the Iough loss, the But I was confident before and
Giants were optimistic alter the I'm conflden t nciw ."

EARLY WEDNESDAY MIXED

Series bert h agai nst the Ameri·
ca n League cha mpionM innesota
Twins. The World Series..is .set to
begin Sa turd ay in Minneapolis.
The Ca rdinals will put their NL
pennant hopes on Danny Cox
while Giants Manager Roger
Cra ig said his pitcher would be
"At lee Hammaker and staff."
" I just wishthegamewouid get
here as soon a s possible," Hamma ker said Tues da y night. " Thi s
pressure is part of the game. You
know it' s going to be het·e."
ron tinued on page 5

"The Better Bank"

The playoff pressure has not
bothered Pena , · who went
through a poor summer before
blossoming into a .353 hitter in
the post -season.
Pena led off the second with a
drive to right field . When the ball
got into the ligh ts , Maldonado
tried to make a sliding catch, bu t
the ball bounced by and rolled to
the wall for a triple. Alter an out,
Oquendo flied to right to get the
run home.
"It's ju st unfortunate that we
had to lose I he way we did
because of a ball that's norm ally
an out and was lost in the lights,"
Craig said.
Tudor and Dravecky both
pitched well for the second time
during the playoffs. In Game 3,
Dravecky pitched a two-hitter
while Tudor was vict imized by
two home runs .
"I thought I pitched well the
first game except for the 800 feet
of home runs I gave up," sa id
Tudor. "1 changed speeds tonight
and moved th e ball around well. •'
The Giants, limited to six hits
over Tudor's 7 1-:l innings, sa id
the pitcher's. strategy of stay'i ng
away from the fastball was the
difference in the two starts.
"Every time we had somebody
in scoring position, he'd stop
throwing 'the fas tball, " said San
Francisco's Will Clark. "Every
time we had somebody poten·
tially In scorin g position, he'd
throw the change."
·
"John Tudor . has been an
outstanding pitcher !or me for
three years," said Cardina ls
Manage r Whitey Herzog. " He
can dominate any lineup when he
changes speeds and moves hi s
fastball !Ike he did tonight. "

Bowling

Cards nip Giants _l-0, force
seventh game ·in NL playoffs

• Tnrontn ut 1\flnr~t •sot : l , 11.::15 p.m .
St . Lltut... ut Ch lr ·1tgo, !l:.n P-"' ( 'a l gnry nt t:d rm,nl!in, !+: :t,; p.m .
:'In' l o;\undl•r!» at l' lllhldh•pbi:t, liiK hl

PETE ROUSH

CHRIS STOUT

-~·

Cards j orce seventh... __

Scoreboard

I

Swiger, Heather McPhail. Back, I tor: Coach Kim
Phillips, Glenda Holter, Tammy Buckley, Marcy
Hill, Meg11n Wolle , Renee Russeii.Abesent when
photo was taken was Rebecca Wiles.

SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH VOLLEYBALL
- Members ol this year's Southern Junior High
volleyball learn consist of (front I to r) Stacey
Theiss, Laura Fryar, Kimberly Jenkins, Angie

,,

••

�.......

WIN

~-==---

The Daily Sentine·I

By The Bend

--

UP TO

~

Wednesday, October 14, 1987
-Page-7

'

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PRICES· EFFECTIVE TH~U SAT., OCT. 17, 1987

Installation of officers high·
lighted the recent meeting of the
Chester Garden Club held at ' th~
home of Kathryn Mora.
: Maye Mora was the Installing
gfflcer using pot pour! and
colored · ribbon In a tapestry
theme. Expressing appreciation
to the retiring officers, Mrs.
Mora compared the leadership of
the club to a tapestry created
with multi-colors in an Intricate
design and blend on a sfrong
ba~e.
·
She presented Maurita Miller,
president, with a red ribbon,
noting that lt Is the dominate
color of leadership; Eleanor .

BACK''
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(

3LB. CAN
•
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:

COFFEE

Lo.7 oz. 4{$1

•
'limit 4 Per (usfomtr
: Good Only at Powell'• Supermarket
, Offer Goad Thru Sat., Oct. 17, 1987
• • I • I I e I I I I I • I I I I I

MAXWELL HOUSE

JAMES GAREY, Middleport
MIKE HUNT, Pomeroy ·
·LEON McKNIGHT, Pomeroy
LOUISE SOULS BY, Pomeroy
CHARLES LEE, Syracuse .
PENNY POWELL, Pomeroy
VICKIE BARRETT, Dexter
B. COLLINS, Dexter
ANGIE ~cCLURE, Pomeroy
DELORIS SHEPARD, Pomeroy
ALICE RUSSELL, Pomeroy
'.•
DIANE BOWLES, Middleport
NANCY RADFORD, Pomeroy
BERTHA DIEHL, Pomeroy
MARY SPRUCE
M. BOWEN, Pomeroy
DORIS EWING, Pomeroy
.'
NARSA VANMETER, Clifton
'
SUE LITTLE, Cheshire
'
lOB MOORE, Pomeroy

---'i---,

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SUNSHINE

~~~B. .

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

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DOG FOOD

s·s69

limit 1 Per Customer
• Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
0
• . Offer Good Thru Sot., Od. 17, 1917

•

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.•

$249

limit 1 Per (u•tamer
:
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
• - Offer Good Thru Sat., 0&lt;1. 17, 1987

•

•

'

40°/0 OFF uxnuDING sALE mMs)
Come In And Check Out Our Special Salt lack
1us t
SOCKS, PANTIES, SUS.PENDERS,
Arrived! CARDS and SEVERAL NEW BABY ITEMS

incorporation of the Rock
Springs Grange.
Sympathy was extended to
Howard Smith and a thank you
note will be sent to Douglas '
Little. Program leader, Pat
Holter, had the program on
October using poems and readings by Nancy Morris, Mrs. Fry.
and Helen Blackston. Safety tips
were given by Bunny Kuhl and a
quiz wa s enjoyed by the
members.
·

STORE HOURS: MONDAY-FRIDAY 10 AM-6 PM
VICKI FERRELL · OWNER

_ lJ:r
992 5

•

from the secretary of state on the served. ~refreshments.
r~D~na~t~pa~p~e~rs~h~a~ve~~be~e~n~re~c~el~H~ct~~A~d~a
R~o~y~a~n~d~P:at~H:o:ll:er~~~2~2~0~E~A~S~T~M~A~IN~S~T~R~EE~T~~~~P~O~M~E~I~O~Y~,~~OH~IO~~

•
'

Gingerbread Boy Says

You're Invited
To A Party!
Celebrating
Our 2nd
Anniversary!
At Both Locations!

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REGISTER FOR

8

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

If you like the old menu, you'll
Along with the new improve- convenient. Now everybody'
ments, you'll find the very best
love our new one.We offer a
is gonna want to come here."
We sure hope so!
·
whole riew assortment of usual parts of the old place still heremeals. Yet. each is prepared the our smiling , friendly ~pie.
Yet, despite our best efforts,
same careful, homestyle 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 location is too
ing in new people."
Just a few smiles from home:

IN GIFT CERTIFICATES.
No Purchase N'ecessary. Need Nol Be Present To Win.
BIRTHDAY SALE IN EFFECT WED. • SAT.

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"It's newer, brighter and fancier.
But we like it

.DOOR PRIZES $50.-$25.-$15

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SAVE
OFF
VERYTHING IN STORE

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:z:UI

• •••••
COUPON ••
' •••' ''' •• COUPON''.''''
.
.
.
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....
•
•
•

representatives.
Barbara Fry . chairman of
women's activities, announced
that she is saving J?el Monte
labels and old. eye glasses for
special project work. he also
reported on the new grange
contests for the year. Acontrlbu ·
lion was made to the Rock
Springs Health Club.
New nalional and state grange
cookbooks are available now, it
was reported. It was noted that

Buy One Boys
or Girls Top at
Regular Price ....
··~~
Get the Second
One of Equal or Less Vai&amp;Je At

MILDRED HUDSON, Pomeroy
LINDA PETERSON, Rutland
,
lOLA COLLINS, Dexter
RAY JACOBS, Pomeroy
SHARON VANCE, ""rrisonville
BECKY SOUTH, Pomeroy
MRS. SPARKS, Gallipolis
RAY HARRIS, Pomeroy
RICK CROW, Syracuse
ANN LAMBERT, Pomeroy
R. FRANKS, Racine
N. JESESY, Shade
.. · BILL RICE, Syracuse
·' " BI,KBi"KA RIGGS, Pomeroy
.
PHIL FOLROD, P~meroy
1
DONNA McCLOUD1 Midcleport
KELLEE HILL, Pomeroy
LILLIAN MOORE, Pomeroy
BRENDA HAGGY, Pomeroy ,·•
CONNIE JONES, langsville
MILDRED SMITH, Middleport
PATTY tiUDSON, Middleport
' ED FAST, Pomeroy
•
CATHY MORRIS, Pomeroy

S».«nl

DOZ.

'be held at the Ohio Un iversi ty
Inn.
Mrs. Miller read a letter from
the newly insta'lletl regional
di rec tor , Betty Dea n. It was
noted that several members
attended the anniversary par ty
honoring Mace! and Ri chard
Barton , and that the club pres·
ented them with a gifl. A thank .
you note was read from Sieve and
Carol Erwin . Sunshine remem·
brance for October will be for
Howard Pa r ker by Mrs. Dean .
Refreshments were served.
Pauline Ridenour won the door
prize.

SlO.OO

~

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go~s. b~nk•s. q~lts,

$20.00

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the grange members and urged
that letters of support be directed
to Rep. Jolynn Boster and Sen.
Jan Long. On behalf of the
grange, Holter wlll write letters
of support for the bill to both

A harvest festlval will be held will be the speaker . Those
at the grange hall on the Rock attending are to take canned
Springs Fa'irgounds, Sunday be·
glnlng with a potluck supper at 6 crafts for their "first .fruits"
,nd
p.m. followed by a program at 7 • offerings. The public is Invited to
p.m.
attend the event which is span·
Dan Hayman and the Faith sored by the E nterprlse. Rock
Trio will be singing along with Springs, and Flatwoods United
the SUM !Swinging UnltPd Meth· Methodist Churches.
odist 1 group. The Rev. Jeff Adler

SHARON NEUTZLING, Racine

$1
·49
Donuts .................

TOMATO SOUP

~• 147 oz.$ 99
••

•

:

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•

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FRESH.. BAKERY

Knight, vice president, with a
land." Melanie Stethem and .
pink ribbon for ·loyalty; Clarice
Shella Taylor are the chairmen.
Kr.a utter, second vice presinet,
For the program , Pat Holter
with a rose ribbon for helpful·
made several beautiful arrangeness; Paula Mora, . secretary,
ments using roses , grapevine,
and Maidie Mora, assistant se- wicker baskets, money plant ,
cretary , with blue ribbons for
gtadlioll and sea fans.
accuracy; Dorothy Karr, ·t,reas·
Paula Mora was co-hostess for'
urer, and Twlla Buckley, assist- the meeting which opened with
ant treasurer, with gold ribbons
the gardener~ creed and
lor promptness and truth.
members giving lips on pu ttlng
Plans for the county holiday . the garden to ·'bed' · for roll call.
!tower show were announced 'by
Paula Mora's devotions . in·
Mrs. Miller. The show will be eluded poems on fall and a
held Nov. 14 and 15 at the Senior reading from the Upper Room .
Citizens Center with the theme Officers' reports were given, and
"Walking in a Winter Wonder- plans discussed for the annual
holiday dinner party this year to

·Harvest Festival planned

r

Family

CARNATION

Support was given to House
Bill 450 pertaining to a bottle and
can deposit Dill at the recent
meeting of the Rock Springs,
Grange.
. Roy Holter explained the bill to

Here Is A List
·Of Recent
Winners

$5.00

HARDY

.

Grange meets; will support House Bill 450

DETAILS AT OUR
STORE

$

.

Chester
Garden Club installs new officers
.
.

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l,oOt

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'

GINGERBREAD HOUSE
OF GIFTS
POINT li'IUSI'IlT

IIASQf, liV.

1102 Villrld/li'az:IW&gt;tJ in Side
703 2nd StHet
10-6 p.m. Noil.-sat., c~o•od SUn. P:30-5:30 Mlxl-·Sat., Clo•od Sun.
. I

675-7947

. 773-5977

.'

e 1987 Bob E'll\OS, Inc

�'

Beat of the bend,

1nhey need encouragern~nt
By JiOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Feel for the Stobart Family ."
Thomas Stobart II is confined to the Charleston Area
Medical Center,
General Div Is-lon, in Charleston, W. Va.,
as the result of injuries received
In an auto accident.
There's good news. however .
He suJfered no brain damag'eand
Is tully conscious now so is
making progress.
Thomas Stobart is confined to
the Memorial Division of the
same Institution and underwent
major heart surgery this week.

Souisby at 992-237i at oncl' so the
group can get going.
By the way, a backup ,·ocal
group will be formed fort he show
by Mrs. Roberta Maidens. South·
ern band and vocal instruct or.
The new group will make sever a I
appearances In the upeoming
show and shou ld be a nice
addition.
·I'm looking forward to Oc tob·
er's bright blur weather and
pumpkin pi e. aren't you? Do
J&lt;eep smil ing .

EASTMAN'S

Kenneth R. Cole is in the
movie, "Matewan, " which deals
with the mine 5trike of 1920 in
Matewan, W.va:; which resulted
In the unionization of the mining
Industry.
·
The movie premier was in New
York and has also been shown In
Beckley and Charleston, W.Va.
Kenneth is . the son of . Joanne
Pickens of Racine.

renee, .Jay McKelvey, Mandy
Mills, Samml Sisson, Rayan
Young.
Grade Five: Brian Anderson.
Randy Bing. Mason Fisher.
Aftdrea Moore, M att Morrow ,
Amy Weaver.
Grade -, Six: Andrew Fi elds,
Crystal !;Iarmon, Jodi Hobbs,
Michael· McKelv ~y . Amber
Ohlinger.
The first six weeks· grading
ppriod honor roll 'at the Southern
Junior High School has been
announced. Making a grad&lt;' of B
or above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:

ThP first six WPeks grad ing
period honor roll at the Syracuse
Elementary School hilS been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Grade Two: Erica AriJ,Oit,
Mick Barr. Cynthia CaldwPII ,
Valerie Cundiff, Shaun Harris,
Alicia l'tfulford, Li sa Russell ,
Pete Sisson, Evan Struble, Billy
Young.
Grade Three : Brian Allen,
Philip Hamm. Jason Lawrence.
Travis Li sle, Amber Thomas .
Grade Four: Robb~· Crow.
Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer Law -

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP
FABRIC &amp; CRAFTS
NOW OPEN

located on State Rt. 7.
Reedsville, Ohio, 6 miles N .
of Chester. Ohio

.'

Public Notice

Public Notice

1987, the qUestion of levv~
ing a ta)C., in exce:ss ofihe ten- .

fn pursuance of e Reso)Ution
of the Board of Township
Trustees of thwTownship',bt
Chester, Meigs County,
Ohio. passed on the 11th
dey of August: 1987, there
will be submitted to a vote of
the people of said Chester
Township, at a General
Election to be held in the
Township of Chester at the
regular places of voting
lh~rein, on Tu.esday, the
th~rd
day of November,

Evelyn Clark. Chairm an
' Jane M : Fryrnyer ,
Director
Dated August t 4. 1987.
(10) 7, 14, 21 , 28 , 4tc

not exceeding 0,3 mitt for
each one dollar of valuation,
which amounts to 60.03
fthtee cents) f9r each orie
hundred dollars of valuation,
for five (6) years.
·
The Polls fo1 said Election
will be open at 6 :30 o'clock
A.M. and remain open until
7:30 o'clock P.M .
By order of the Board Of
Elections. of Meigs County,
Ohio.

Public Notice

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ElECTION
ON TAX lEVY
tN EXCESS OF THE
TEN Mill liMITATION
Notice is hereby given ttl at

mill limitation, for the be-

nefit of Chester Township

hundred dollars of valuation.
for five (6) yearJ.
The Poll• fo• uid Election
will be opefl at 6 :30 o' cloek

AT THE CHECKOUT!!!

•

Said tax being: a renewal
of an ellisting tax of "h mill to

7:30 o•ctock P .M .
By order of ttle Board of

1

Ohio.
Evelyn Clerk, Chairman
Jane M. Frvmyer, . ,

run for five \'Bars, at a rate
not exceeding Yl mill for
each one dollar of valuation.
which .amounts to $0.05
(five cents) for each one

pireetor · ....
' '
(10) 7 . 14, 21 . 28 • .4tc . ·. ' \
•1 ~

Dated August 27. 1-987.

' .

•I ers

oree

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$

·

Retail Mil* Price

1

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-----------------------·------------------~

·Bi-Rite.... Sale! .• ~SA~E!
.
: ..:

BI·Rite

:g.: pure

Ice

:goo:

Cream

To Benefit Area·Childrens Services
Saturday-, October 17th. At 7.:00pm, r
M
eigs
High
School
Gyot
·
·
·
..

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CHILLED- REGULAR, COUNTRY
STYLE OR CALCIUM FORTIFIED

U.S. GRADE A

Mi-nute Maid
Orange Juice

Holly Farms
Breast Quarters
Pound '

.64-oz. .

•

KROGER

Frozen Young
Turkeys

Grade A
Large Eggs

... ·' ; ,

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Dozen

Pound

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COPYRIGHT 1987 · THE KROGER CO. IT~MS AND PR ICES GOOD SUNDAY, OCT. 11 , THROUGH
SATURDAY, OCT , 11, 1987, IN liAUIPOLIS AMD POIIIEROV STORES .

:...=..

•

'(~-·~-''

1/ : ...;

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS

1/

faCh Of Those !tdlltii11Sad 11em5 is r8QUirQd .10 be readily 8\IHIIOloiO l m !&gt;aLB 1n IIIICh Kroger SIOtO, illCBPI aS
:opt~Cilically no led 1n th 1s ad It we do run out ol an sdvcrt1stn! item. W1l w1ll offer you vour cho•ce ot il compl!rdbltl
i1t1m . when available. rel1ecTinR 1h11 1am" uvinus or 8 nunc hock wh iCh w~l ontnlll vou 10 pu1chasl:l •t•u arlvurt 1~ild
iltlm ut lha 11d11Urtn;ud price within 30 dlllys. Only one VIJI'1do• coupon w.111 be 11cc~ p tud 11"' 1tt1m pu rchusod

$ 99

Ros~

Bououet.:............... Each

Gold Medal
Flour

.

TENDERBEST QUALITY

Rib Half
Pork Loin

$

69

BENCO PEAK QUALITY

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FAl

"---

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IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE
SANDY MAC

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German Brand
Bologna ......... ..

lOW

FAl
MILK

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DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

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German
Potato Salad

BROUGHTON'S LITE 1%

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COUNTRY RECIPE OR POLISH KIELBA$A ·
U.S. NO. 1

Dairy Lane

2% MILK
$149

Yellow
Medium -Onions .................... Bag

c

Hillshire Farm
Smoked Sausage
Pound

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FOOitUMD
11»1'
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· FOODLAND
U. S. NO. 1 OHIO

White Potatoes

Orange .~
Juice - ~

..

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JUICE

•·

60 • 100 WATT

Valvoline
Motor Oil

-,---- --:-

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE

Big K
Soft Drinks ....... ;..

1

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'Kroger
Cottage Cheese 24-oz.

.

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2-Ltr.

' REGULAR OR LOWFAT

·~

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3-lb.

-··

Fifth Grade: Michelle Harris .
Sixth Grade: Christie Cooper,
Jamey Smith.
D.H.: James Parsons . ·

' r:l,"',

Vac ·Pak
$
Kroger Coffee .... Can

''

· *Fourth Grade: C .J. Harris.
.,

.. · ~-==-

&lt;.

6-- 12-

ROAST
tb. op9

ORANG~

'

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Diet Coke or
Coca Cola

Golden ·or Red
Delicious Apples
Pound

~-..1\..

Honor roll

'

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.....

.

49

Longhorn
$
Cheese ..._. ..............:10-oz.

WASHINGTON EXTRA FANCY

FROZEN CONCENTRATED

Second Grade: Jonathan Dal·
tey, Ashley McKinney, Jenny
Sellers, Lindsay Smith .
Third Grade: Jamie Evans.
Hillery Harris. Greg McKinney.
Amy Rizer: Terry Triplett. Sarah
Wallbrown, Joshua Roush.

;J

I

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a

The first six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Portland
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects io be
named to the roll were:

,_

' .I"'" '

KROGER COLBY SLICED
· OR CHUNK

3-lb.

Marcella Coleman. Faye Wal·
lace, and Carroll Ann Harper of
the Middleport Presbyterian
Women's Association att€'nded
the Scioto Valley Fall Prebyterlal Learning Opportunities
Workshop held at the First
Presbyterian Church In Jackson ·
recently. This year's workshop
theme'· was "A Journey." The
program Included
worship
service with the Rev . Robert
Gray, panel discussions on volun teertsm, special music, and
workshops.

. . ..

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE, SPRITE,

,4ft. .

Pinto
Beans

Boneless
English Shoulder

LB.

'

,-..

AVAJLJtiLE ONLY IN STORES WITH FLORAL
. SHOPPES
. . .

5-lb. Bag

,e:; . -

MilK
FRESH GRADE 'A'

,...:

SWEETEST DAY OCT. 17TH. ASSORTED COLORS
FRESH CUT

ADVERTISED IT!M POLICY

Cost Cutter
Bread ...................... 16-oz.
'
'
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I

39

l'

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Bi·Rite
Sugar

$

'.- ~ ~
" ".

U.S . GRADE A 12-LBS. AND UP

GRANULATED

Paper Towels

·~

••
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:....,;

:u..;
BI·RITE

•o l

:.,.:
:....;

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•VANILLA •CHOCOLATE

..

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Workshop
attended

.

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:.,_:pure
: ...:~

:. ,.: SllgCI'

Vanilla

Bi·Rite
Ice Cream

:.,..:

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&lt;

........ .

1

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RECEIVE: ONE FREE '12 GAl. FOODLAND MILK

r

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·'

•

11-17, 1987
1
Only At Your Loci!
I
Ohio Vall,y Supeimarket I
OCT.

FOODLANO

TASTER'S CHOICE COFFEE
PRESENT: Thi1 Coupon to the Ca1hier
Along With Purcho1e

Leg Quarters

'

JEiections, of Meigs County,

,J

Good Week Of

BUY: One 8 oz. Jar Reg. or De&lt;af.

Chicken

-- ~

A.M. and remain open until

for th e purpose of maintaining and operati ng

cemeteries.

Public Notice
-----------------

'

·FREE MILK

Mixed
Fryer Parts

in the Township of Rutland
at the regular places of
voting therein , on ruesday,
the third day of November, ,
1987. the question of lev-, .
ing a tax. in excess of the teO
mill limjtation, for the be - .
nefi r of Rutland Townsttip
for the purpose of maintain in g and
operating
·cemeteries.
Said tax being : a renewal
of an e~tisting tax of 0 .3 mill
to run torfive years, at a. rate

oa

ODL.

HOLLY FARMS GRADE 'A'

Public Notice

--

--~------~~~~~~~----~----L------------~~··--------~------------L--------~

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri.
10 A.M.-5 P.M.
Sat. 10 A.M.-2 P.M.

Vc;.ur Independently Owned
Low-Priced Supermarket

992-6786. ...

Last call.
Rehearsal sessions for the the
annual Big Bend Varieties are
underway and the show will be
staged under the cosponsorship
of the Pomeroy Chamber o!
,Commerce and the Meigs At·
hletic Boosters. on the Saturday
following Thanksgiving.
A teen dance line will be
formed to be a part of the
production if there are girls whO
can dance and who are willing to
make the committmelit for prac tice sessions and of course, ihe
holiday weekend show date.
Those In teres ted should regis·
ter with Mrs. James !Sus!(')

Seventh Grade: Nick Adams,
Bethany Bass, Nicole Beegle.
Jerem y bill. Michael Evans,
Todd Grace. Tamara Hay man.
Nikki lhle, Angela Mills, Da rrell
Sayre, ftusty Smith. Michell&lt;'
Stobart, Keri Whitaker, K yle
Wic;k line. Kristy Rizer. Julie
Hill, Greg Garretson. David
Deem , Aleasha Custer .
Eighth Grade: Jason Arnott,
Carlton Dr ummer, Sarah Duhl.
Kellic Erviri. Michelle Friend,
Andy Hill , Velessa - Hunnell,
David lh'lc, Trevor Petrel, Jenny
Varney , Brenda Hunt.

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ElECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN Mill liMITATION
Notice is herebv given that
in pursuance ofl Resolution
of the Board o rTrustees of
the Township Pf Rutland .
Meigs County. Ohio. passed1
on the 30th day of July,
1987. there will be submitted to 8 vote of the people of
seid Rutland Township, at 8
General Election to. be held

•

And someone called In requestIng dates on the Pumpkin Festi·
val at Circleville and .perhaps,
you wanted to know also. It Is
Oct' 21-24.

Now what could be nicer than a
llttle jaunt to the fascinating
Boston area at this time of the
year?
Well - It sounds good on the
surface but It didn't workoutthat
well for Ted and Nancy Reed.
They were returning !rom Boston and in Albany; N.Y., were
stranded lor two days as the
result of the freak fall snowstorm
which battered Northeastern
New York recently. Th~ storm
left 250,000 homes without electricity besides creating other
havoc as the 19lnches of snow hit
the area.

Public Notice

Meigs County · honor rolls ________~-

Is your church athletic
minded? If so, remember that
tht&gt; Mt&gt;lgs County Mlnisteridl
Association is attempting to get a
program Including various
sports organized among the
churches. Representing the as so- ·
elation for the project Is the Rev.
Fred Penhorwood, pastor of the
Middleport Church of Christ,
Beech St., Middleport - so do
send him all of your info or
perhaps, call him to Indicate
your interest.·

Barbara Lewis and her six
children lost all of their furniture
and clothing by fire when the
house where they were living In
Syracuse burned Saturday night.
Help is needed. If you have
furniture and clothing - girls
and boys - bed clothes or
anything which might help the
family, you are asked to call

~VV=~~n;e;~~a;y~,;O=c~to~be~r11_4~.=19=8~7~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~P~o=m=e~r~o~y?.=M~i~dd~l~epo==rt~.~Olh~io~~-~~~~~:-,-~~~~~==·~Th~e-D1a_il~y=S=e~m~in~~~-~p=~~~9· ~~

Wednesday, October 14, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

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'·

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'

. ,·

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Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

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. ··-- ··-

·-~

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

'·--c-· -l
· - -

Community calendarI area happenings
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Church of Christ, at 7 p.m. on
Wednesday, will feature a program of sacred music performed ·
by Eastern Christian College
Choir, Bel Air, Md. The public Is
Invited to attend.
i

RACINE - Southern Junior
High Athletic Boosters will meet
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m ., at the
school.
MIDDLEPORT ;,.. The Ama·
leur Gardeners Club of Middl eport will meet 8 p.m. Wednesday

•

Festival Sale will be held all day ways. Everyone welcome.
Friday at the Athens Mall. Baked
JACKSON - The Communit y
goods, plants, crafts, jelly and
Assault
Prevention Services will
THURSDAY
ap~le butter wlll be sold . Probe
sponsoring
a bean dinner an'd
MIDDLEPORT- Middleport
ceeds from the sale will be used
festival
on Saturold-fashioned
Child Conservation League wi ll
to repair WoodmeniJall.
day,
starting
at
9
a'.m
.• at the
meN Thursday, 7; 30 p.m ., at the
Ohio Power office. Devotions and
Music
Park
In
Jackson.
Adena
SATURDAY
traveling prize wlll _be by Susie
· MIDDLEPORT - Gloryland Karen Wyant will be guest
Abbott. Hostesses wJll ·be .Ja net Singers will be slngln ~at urda y, speaker at noon, lo llowetl by the
Duffy and Sus it Abbott. Please 7:30p.m., at the Ash St. Freewill bluegrass-coun-try band "Rebound" at 1 p.m. Activities,
bring baby Items. ·
Baptist Church In Middleport.
-..,...Including a flea market, bake
FRIDAY
WEST COLUMBIA - West sales, games and clowns, will
BURLINGHAM
Bur - · Columbia Elementary S~hool's continue throughout the day. The
lingham Modern Woodmen Fall
annual fall festival will be held gospel group "Sounds 'of Joy"
Saturday at the school. Soup sale will perform about 5 p.m. Admls·
will be from 12 noon· to ·7 p.m. slon $2.50 for adults and $1.50 for
·
Games will be played from 1 to children.
2:30 p.m. and from 4 to 6 p.m.
There will also be a baked goods
SUNDAY
MORNING STAR - The ansale, cake and pie walks, a
concerts at colleges, high scools,
country store and prize glvea· nual homeco ming of Morning
lairs and conventions. In June.
1983, Perry becme the associate
director of Operation Evangelize
Ministries.
Aside from Perry's responsi bilities In helping direct and
oversee operations of 0 . . E .
Minis tries which is based In
Chesapeake, he Iravels approximately 115 days a year.
· Leo Lash. host minister, Invites the public.
at the home of Mrs. Eddie
Burkett.

Meigs crusade U11derway
A ·'Lilt Up Christ Crusade' ' Is
underway at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ with Ernie and
Pam Perry preaching and singIng at• the 7 p.m. services which
will continue through Friday
evening.
The husband and wi feteam are
both graduates of Kentucky
Christian College. located In
Grayson. For four years they
traveled · with the Watchmen
Quartet of Operation ji;yangelize
Ministries In Chesapeake. giving

$2.75 SAVINGS

ANDA
PLUSH OFFER:

Get a Friski~s Plush Pet for $8.95.

.

.

Mr . and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree
Mr . and Mrs. Bryan Jordan
were In Parkersburg recently spent a weekend with his brother
where they visited his aunt, Elsie and sister-in-law, Keith and
Davis.
Michele Jordan, Monroe. N. C.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Barrows
Glllogby have Included his par- have returned from Lakeland,
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold F\a. where they went to assist
Glllogby, Webster, Fla., Mr. and Mrs. Barrows' son-In-law and
Mrs. Jim Rutan, Columbus; Mr. daughter, Greg and Darlene
and Mrs. Ralph Frazier, Susan Carr and children, Greg Ill and
Frazier and Virginia Guinther, Christian, get settled In that
Galllpolls; and Mr. and Mrs. area. While there they visited
Arthur Crabtree, local.
plates o( interest in Florida and
Mrs. Daisy Glllogby , Mrs. followed the Blue Ridge ParkBernice Rutan and Mrs . Westlna way enrou te home.
Crabtree were recent visitors of
Neva Baker, West Jefferson
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Allen. Jason and Mr. and Mrs . · Bill Fisher,
and Jeremy of Athens.
Dayton, spent several days reDavid Glllogby, son of Mr. and cently with Mrs. Baker' s mother,
Mrs. John Glllogby, suffered a Vesta Conode, near Point Rock.
broken leg while working In the
Freda Smith Is reporteq to be
orchard. David. a freshman at improving following a heart
Ohio University, Is convalescing attack. She is confined to O'Bleat his home.
ne~s Memorial Hospital, Athens.

fnsktes
ThtOrre Division

Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman spent
Sunday afternoon vis iting Mrs .
Dorothy Reeves and Bryan
Reeves.

A.M.

and remain open until

7:30 o'clock P.M.

$2 .29

Bv order of the Board of
Elections. of Meigs County ,

Ohio.

.·

Evelyn Clark, Chairman
Jane M. Frymyer,
Director

Vac•Pak Bacon ••••••••••••••••• $1 •29

Doled September 16 ..1987.
1101 7, 14, 21, 28. 4tc

Public Notice
30 CT.

S&amp;F GRADE A

MED. EGGS .... !!~.L ...... S9 1

CELERY ............~~~..... :...~.69c

KRAFT

24. CT.

..

at tho regular places

ALABAMA WHITE

VELVEETA
CHEESE ............~L~~; .. s1. 98

SWEET

46769. was •ppointed Executrix of the estate of leo·
nard Earl VanMeter. de·

POTATOES ...........J.U.... 69&lt;

'

'
..
.

\1 Il l \\\Ill lltlK\11.!1

NeStle
'

ofNe~ll

FREE UP TO,:~
t~j

ToU

or

House Treasures

TO TllE DEALER. 'tau wll lit reJnbu~Md lot !he lace nlue ol thi!J coupon

TO THE OEALER: Yoo wil lit !!lmbut'sed 101 the !ICe Wikle ot lhls coopon •
plus 84 , II Jtilmftted ill complialltt Wltl1 Nesne fOOdS Corpoutl.)n ~­
lion Poky mcorpor1\ed herelnbyrvltrtntt Goocl only In u. s. ~ . CoMtrir
tnustpay S.ifls tu . VGtdwflere Prnhitlh~d/Toutd/Restrlcted Cuh Vtlue 11

piUs M. WSIJbmlltedln tori'IPIIIOOtwlth Ntstlt fOOdS COrDOI'liiiOn ~­
too PDiq JlCOfi!Dfltld lllfein bf reftrence Good only Ill U.S A. CGns!Knlr
mulit pa~ SaleS Tu VOid whera Prohlbr1ed!Tntd/11e!tncled. Cash VN

1111* FOR REDEMPTION, fAAIL 10: NESTLt FOODS tx!Rf'()ftAT!ON.

·
iltttll

P.O .IOX l0340, EL PASO, TEXASJ'tM
LUT ONE C(I(JI()Irj P£R PUIOIAS£

Prict·

I

or.

Wilen ybu'buy TWP 12 oz. size b:lf!S of
Nl$tl! ToU House Semi Sweet Chocohue Morsels

'

10DUOA REOE~PTION MAIL TO· NES TL~ FOOOS
COftPORATION, PO, 80X.203&lt;10, EL ~. TEKAS
7119!11 lltoiT ONE COUPON PEft "'--ACttASE

THELMA
MONTGOMERY
REALTY
1-614-385-6740

Collect Calls Accepted

.

'

PIZZA

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-6167
12) 11-INCH 8 ITEM
P.IZZAS . $q9 5

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

Green / Black Olives,
Pepperoni. Cheese ,

Onions. Green
Peppers, Sausage,

Ground Beef.

Business
Services

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On September 26, 1987,

John H. Gibson, 492 Es·
tates Drive,, Athens,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

OH .

45701 , was appointed Executrix of the estate of Lana

HALLOWEEN CANDY MOLDS
HALLOWEEN CUPCAKE STICK-INS
HALLOWEEN COOKIE CUTTER
THANKSGIVING CAKE PICKS
SEASONAL COOKIE CUTTERS
FRUIT FOR FRUIT CAKES

" .

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

DATES ···················~•A·······~··
LIGHT KARO ...........u.~n..... $159
Mow Carryl•g Cake Decorating Su.pllu
'

992-.. 10
1¥• A&lt;copt

SEND RESUME TO:
RHCNDA DAILEY. R.N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
116 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
· OR CALL
992-2104, EXT.: 213
E.O.E

- CAREER
OPPORTUNITIES FOR
REGISTERED NURSES
Pleasant Valley Hospital
and Pleasant Valley Nursing
Care ·Cenun are seeking highly
motivated· registered nurses
for full and part-time e!llployment. Current benefits include: medical and dental insurance, retirement plan, life
insurance, shift premium pay,
malpractice insurance. tuition
reimbursement and more.
Call or visit the Nursing
Service offices at Pleasant Valley ·Hospital, Point Pleasant,
West Virginia, for n:~ore information,
•
AA/EOE

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Housinq

H eadq ua rlcrs

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

BINGQ.
EAGLES CLUB · PCJIEROY, C&lt;HIO

THURS., 7 P.M.-EB 6:45
SUN.; 2 P.M.-E8 1:45

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

550 PAGE STRUT
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Authorizlt(J John Deere,

992-3537

Riverine Antiques
1124 Eost Moin Sl.
Pomeroy
Sundoj: 1 p.m,-6 p.m.
ly Chan~e or Appointment

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

HEATING

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

10-9-tfn

HAVE

A VIDEO

TAPE MADE •••
•Child's Birthday
Party
•Wadding
•Baby Shower
•Family Reunion
•Any Special
Occasion

&amp; SERVICE

POMEROY;O.
992-2259

NEW LISTING - RUTLAND
- 2 bedroom home on level
lot. Rental investment as it is
nowrented or will make a nice
cozy home. Walkrng distance
to shopping. $1 3,900.00.
NEW LISTING - OUT IN THE
COUNTRY. THE FARM YOU
HAVE BEEN LOOKiNG FOR
- 60 acres of ground with a 2
story farm hou se. Excellent
cond~io n. 3 bedrms., I \\
baths. equipped kithen w/ table &amp; chairs, FA.W.B. w/a
wrnter's supply of wood already cut, 4· outbuildings, I
w/ a summer kitchen. all minerals, new plumbrng &amp; wirin&amp; 2 water sources. ori ~ nal
oak woodwork. insulation. also
a front porch &amp; backcement
patio. MUCH MORE! ALL FOR
YOUR APPOiNTMENT. ALL
FOR $52,000.00.
ST. RT. 143 -A-frame and
· 2\\ acres of ground close to
town. 3 bedrooms, lull basement, woodburner hookup.
Looks good and has a great
localion. $29,900.00.
SELLERS RIDGE ROAO -

Approximately 150 acres of
vacant land. 17 acres tillable. bal an ce pasture and
woods. Electric available,
drilled well - royalty income an d free gas. Will spirt
acreage into separate parcels. $400.00 an acre. Ask
lor inlormation.
HINU l niLAND, .. ....,92·01'1
JEAN TRUSSELL ............ 949- tltbO

DOniE fURNIR ........... ,92-5092
TRA!Y RifflE .......... .... 9., · 3010
OFfiCE ......................... "1 -111'

AW

. &amp; Vicinity '
· · ·· - · ····· ~·~·-·--··--··-·-··---·

16141 997· 6SSO

Yard Sal e: In side 6: outside.
Thurs . 16th. Fri. 16th, • Set.
171h. lincoln Pikojust oH 1"41 at
Centenary . 4th &amp; 5th trailer on
left. Large ~assortment of items,

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUl
. JUST CALL!

RISIDINCI PHONE

16t41 997-7754

1121!/lln

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

and misc.

Garage Sale: Th"'" · 6 Fri., 9-4,
legion on Bob McCormick Rd .

liMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Now Open 7 Days
PM

Located at Corner of

Church Benefit Garage Sale:
15th17th,

Debbie. Drive-

9 :00· 6 :00. ln1ide. Good selec-

tion &amp; reasonable· prices.

2 mi. out L.incoln Pike. Fri. 10·&amp;.
Sweeper, bar stools, bicyc;le.
tricycle, clothes-infant to adult.
Lots of misc.

10-8-tlc

Rt. 143 and Rt. 7,

Pomeroy
Purchasing all
types of

SIGN

non-ferrous scrap

40¢

UP NOW FOR

BASKET WEAVING and
STENCILING CLASSES

.. ··· ··p·on;·e-rov·....... --

SHIRLIY HOUIION

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

JANEl VINOI

Et WJ:DOIIIG CONSULTANT

lb .

YVONNE SCAllY
Bridal Registry and
most complete line of
Wedding Flowers and
Accessories in this area

Friday, Oct. 16. Jean Stout
reaidanca, Seventh St., Svra·
cusa. 9 :00-5 :00.

LaSALLE GALLERY

Sat .. Oct. 17. 9 :00-? Ritchie

Lee and Ritchie carport ule.

residence. Tyree Btvd .. Racine.

Middleport-992{ _

Aluminum Cans

34C

4 Family : Oct. 1 &amp;- 18. 9-1. 5
miles nonh of Holzer Hospital
near Porter. Children &amp;. adult
clothing, tools. dlsh01.

BOW &amp; WREATH MAKING

GLASS ... .. 2¢ lb .
#1 Copper
Current 53¢ lb.
Top Grade
Aluminum Sheets

Garage Sale. Rain or shine. Oct.
16th. 9:00- 2 :00. JoAnn Crisp

tb. ·
9-11-1 mo.

residence, Apple Grove-Dorcas
·Road, Racine 11 mile past
Southern High School).

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

Margie Gruea•. Meln St .. Ru tland , Ohio. Thurs. and Fri ., Oct.

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

16th and 16th. Oil heatera.
· bikes. new ladies coat. much
more.

···--··pfPieasa·n-r···-&amp; Vicinity

PAT HILL FORD

SIDING CO.

992-2196

New Homes Built

Middleport. Ohio
1• 13-tf?

Estimates"

PH. 949-2860

..•

'

Yard Sale, Thurundfriday, 606
21st Stree1 .. 9:00 dll?. A Unle
furniture and lots of everything.

Public Sale

8 ·

~Auction

'IT'II©!EITS

No Sunday Calls

J.ll -ttn

~~If~~
••

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

FITNESS ClUD "C

FULL BODY TO.NING
and FIRMING

"'uu Too f.an l..ook &amp; Ft'1•l
llt·tlt"r r\1 Ti~•·r ·•'i1nr~11C lull !"
If~ Fun. Ht'uhhy &amp;· Loot~ 1-"or
Youl-Hrinl-( 1\ frl t'nd. ~

!PHIAl RAllS FOR STUDIN1!

PH. 992-230D Or Stop By
11 S W. Se&lt;ond, Pomeroy

10..5·1 mo.

"DOC" VAUGHN

Rick ~Pearson AuctiQ.O.~.Ir licensed in Ohio nd West Virgi-

nia. Estate, antique, f•m , liqui-

.

dation sales, 304- n3- 6786.

Big Auction , Fri. night at old
··Kings Arms Night Club, At . 7.
between Cheshire and Middl•

port . 7 :00
welcome.

9

We pay CISh for la1e model clean

used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnton

614-448-3672

9-10-1 mo. d.

NEWELL'S SUNOCO
11. 7, CHESTER
NOW THRU NOV. 14th
MON. THRU SAT.

9:00-4:30

$8°0 per 100 lb.
985-3350
tO-17-t mo.

RAILROAD
JUNCTION
CLIFTON, W. VA.

BEER &amp; WINE
Happy Hour

R1-0pen For llusl1eu

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY
Let Uc ft~u You In
FREE ESTIMATES

RESIDENTIAL/ COMMERCIAL ,.

PH. 742-2027

JO'S
GIFT SHOP
SYRACUSE, OHIO
•Ohio Souviners
•M usic Boxes
•CandleS
•Wooden Gifts

•Pictures

•Pottery .1

•Cement Products
..You :'lam,• h - \\'t"'H·
Gol

511/ lln

SERVICE

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
fattory Choke
12 Gouge Shotguns Only

614-367-0669.
We buy standing timber . Call

61 4-379-2758.

107 LOCUST ST.

POMEROY-985-356 I

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes·
•Washers •Dishwasher !;!
•Ranges •Refrigerators··
•Dryers •Freezers

WE SEll USED APPLIANCES

4·5·tlc

HILLSIDE
MUZILELOADING
GUN SHOP

Junk Auto's with or without
motors , Ca11814-388· 9303.

Announcements

RENT

late model truck. 4 wheet drive.
Low mileage. Call 614-4483860.

3 Announcements
HUNTERS

Huntlrlg rights to properties in
. Washington. Gall ia and Meigs
Counties available for lease.
Call {3041428 -4739 weekdays,
8 ~ 00 - 5 : 00 .

No hunting or trenpassing,
Pickens farm . Flat ro ck. all violators w ill be prosecuted.
GRAND OPENING

WILLA'S BIBLE BOOKSTORE
Oct . 16 and 17. 9:30 till 5 :00.
416 Main St . (formerly Tiflins),
Point Pleasant, W . Va .
3 04-675 -5833 .

4

Small bl8ck malo Terrier 1VP8
dog. Housebroken. ·call 614·

Rl. 124 Across from
Hoppy Hollow Rd.
RUTLAND

Little Benji type p~ppy . Black &amp;
white. Call 614- 388-8510.

614-742·2355

9-24-1 mo.

10·7-tln

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio ·

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trusmlcrlon
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
•

6-I7-ttc

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTU, OHIO

•HQME BUilDiNG
•ROOM AOOITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING •G ENERAL
REMODELIN G &amp;
REPAIR S

REFEREN CES
Phont Day or" Evenings

985·4141

GINIIAI CONTIACTORS

9· 28·1 mo. pd.

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts,
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
949·2~63

or 949-2168

4-22·8)-lfn

·,

992-3476 .

Wanted to buy, standing timber .
Call AI Tromm at 61 4-742 -

2328.

QUILTS
High prices paid tor pr•1950
quilts. Applique , pieced, any
condition. Call 814-992- 2101
or 61 4 -992 -5667,

Cash for standing Umber. We
buy weneer white oak and
walnut. Call AI Tromm, 614-

Employment
Servtces

256-6739.
Sears Kenmore wather . Needt
work. Call614- 256- 1436.

4 orphaned kittens needs good
home. Ca ll 614-446 ~ 7152 or
446-2368 .
T .V. to giveaway. Call614· 446·

Roger Hysell
Garage

Buying daily gold. silver coins,
rings, jewelry, aterling ware. old
coins, large currency. Top pri·
ees . Ed Burkett Barbif~ Shop,
2nd . Ave. Middleport , Oh. 614-

742-2328 .

Giveaway

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUN
•MUZZLE LOADING
SUPPLIES

OPEN I to 9 P.M.

newer used cart. Smith

Buick · Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614- 446 2282 .

Wanted to buy: Long wood. Call
anytim• C &amp; R Firewood. Call

8-13 tfn

HOUSE FOR

and .

ture, 3rd. &amp; Olive St . Gallipolis.
Call 614-446· !1169.

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

9-11-1 mo.

RA(INE
FIRE DEPT.

367-0322
9-23 -1 mo .

~

TOP CASH paid for '83 r'fiOdel

WANTED TO BUY: Uaad wood
&amp; coal heaters. Swain ' s Furni-

~ licensed Clinical Audio.logist

RUSONABI( PRICES- TRI US!

GUN SHOOT

REPAIR
•ALL MAKES
•30 YEARS
EXPERIENCE
•WORK GUARANTEED
•REAS,ONA8LE RATES
CHESHIRE

-~ liSA M. KOCH, M.S.

It ~ · ·

APPLIANCE

&amp;

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
~ Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

b-8 pm-Drinks SO•
VCR TAPE RENTAL
W, VA. LOTTERY
CARRY-OUT
9-18-1 mo.

PM . Everyone

Wanted To Buy

Certified licensed Shop

NOW HULLING
BLACK
. WALNUTS

Behind American

First time.

992-3410

CALL 992-6756

\

-

:······Gallipolis--··------

Pomeroy, Ohio
.
4-15-'86-lc

BUSINESS PHON!

A Week
DAILY I 0 AM-6

Yard Sale

7

992 -6215 or 992 -7314

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

aquirr~.

trained to hunt

304-882-2662 .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

BISSELL

Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Mechanic

FOUND Broa d Run, amall brown
do~;~,

w ork

*VINYl SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

E.Main

Lost: Fo" Hound, rtddi1h and
black. Exua1arge. lolt in Racine
Gun Club area. G•ll 61•· 247264t .

(Free Estimates)

9-18-1 mo.

Most Foreign and

614-448-7821 .

- Concrete work ,.._
- Plumbing and electrical

We Carrv Fishing StJpplies

PH. ·992-6959

"Free

FOUND : Whhe Penian male c...

- Addons
- Roo1ing and gutter work

New Location:
168 North Setand
Middleport, Ohio 457 60

10·9-'87-1 mo.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

614-379-2606 .

CARPENTER
SERVICE
and remodeling

1-3-'86 tic

PLUMBING

LOST: 2 blec:k &amp; white Wltlk•

coon hounds on Sf . 233 . Call

. Y(JUNG'S

Farm Equl~ment
Parts &amp; Ser11ice .

ALL
&amp;

Lost and Found

Eastern Ave . Area . 1 blue eye, 1
brown e-ye, blue c:ollar. Call

· Dealer

SALES

HOpRS: Mon.-Tues:-Wed.
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

601

NEW LISTING - R~TLANO
- 3 bedroom newly rem odeled with central arr. electric heat. garage with workshop, carport, concrete pa·
tio, fully insulated. level lot
wit h fen ci ng. Nice Condi·
tron! $32,000.00.

-1 1

Giveaway

6

9· 18·81

New Holland, Bush Hog
Form Equipment

SYRACUSE, OHIO

NEW LISTING - STORY'S .
RUN ROAD- A3 bedroom
ranch home with a 12'x65' 3
bedroom mobile home that
rents lor $210 per month.
Garage workshop mostly linished, and has approx imately 2 ~ acres. $35,000.00.

4

GEARY
BODY SHOP

or 949-2801

4-16·86-tfn

Real Estate General

$225

(304) 675-4340

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

•Parents' Anniversary

Public Notice

Immediate opening for full time and
P.art time R.N.'s to work in Special
Care•Emergency Room
•Skille&lt;t Nursing Facility
•Medidal, Surgical Units
Salary comparable with experience.
Excellent fringe benefits.

\

SAVE 50

Bu ild your hom e or cabin on
thrs lovely land jusl one mile
!rom Ohio River. Woods, seclusion, and cleared land. 2
acres up. A real ·bargam.
.
' ~
Tw o I acre building sites on
Wnght St Water and sewer.
Make an offer.
6 ACRES - SPRING STREET
- Nice rolling land. $6.000 ..

Date Aug. 27, 1987.
110)7. 14, 21 , 28, 4tc

REGISTERED NURSES

Free Nestle.Cocoa, Baking Bars
· or Choco Bake

•BOGGS

10· 8· 1 mo.

LOTS &amp; LAND
FOR SALE

Evelyn Clark. Chairman
Jane M . Frymyer.
Director

POMEIOY

NESTLE BAKES THE VERY BEST

The Daily Sentinei- P

DONELLirS

NO SUBSTITUTIONS

Real Estate General

By order of the Board of
Elections. of Meigs County,

51. EAST MAIN

.J'

of

OUR SINCEREST
THANKS!

The Polls for said Election
will be oPen at 6 :30 o'clock
A .M . and remain open until

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

Potato
Chips
••••.••••.••.
/.~2.~.1;.-•• S1.59
KELLOGG'S
Frosted Flakes ..........l~.qh •• $1.99
VAN CAMP
Pork &amp; Beans •••••• J.b.~.lo-... 2/S1.19

appointed ~:~,Executrix

Organizations, and all our
friends and neighbors for
their concern and g[lfl·
erosity through our loss.

Holiday Baking Time Is Near

'•

was

The Ron Bachtel Femily.
would like to express
their sincerest gratituch!
'· to the Pomeroy Fire
Department Meigs High
School Feculty and Students, Old Uberty Petrons. Meigs Mine #3,
Area Churches and Civic..

54 Misc. Merchandise

•

Linda S, Pullins. P. 0 . Box
207, Pomeroy, Ohlo45769,

Lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk

~,.=-='-0::.:.,
. G::i:b::.s
: o7.n~.deceased. late of

'

On September 23. 1987.

in the Meiga County Probate
Court. Case No. 25637,

19130; 11017. 14. 3tc
1 Card of T~ank&amp;

in ~he Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 25640,

.

~

Full sire
canopv bed.
IL;========~rr---::::":::-:=-::..;..-rT---------"1 repair
, 304-675·6937
. · need•

APPOINTMENT
FIDUCIARY OF

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge

for flv~ 151 years.

191 30; 11 0) 7. 14. 3tc

•

-

·Business Services

the estate of John P. Frick.
dacaosod , late of SR 33,
33330, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

of

Food Sta111p1

on any variety

Real Estate General

therefor, or the establishment and maintenance of
lines of fire alarm telegraph.
or .the payment of perman·
ent, part-time, or volunteer
firemen of fire fighting comPflnies tQ operate the..aame,
including the payment of
firemen employer's contribution required under section 742 .34 of the Revised
Code, or to purchase ambolane equipment , or to provide ambulance or emergency medical service
operated by a fire department or fire figh,ling
company.
Said tax being : a renewal
of an existing·tax of 2 . 0 mills
to run for five yeats, at a rate
not exceeding 2.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation ,
which amounts to $0.20
(Twenty cents) for each one
hundred dollars of valu4iition,

PRINGLES REGULAR

~

191 30: 110)7. 14, 3tc

tus, appliances, buildinge. or
sites therefor, or sources of
water 'Supply and materials

St . Pomeroy, Meiga County,

~·

Maney Black and son and John
Clo nch were Tuesday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Knapp.

lena K . Neuelroad. Clerk

for the purpose of providing
"Bnd maintaining fire appara~

Probate Judge .
lena K. Nasselroad, Clerk

Aimee Mitch, Shawn Mitch,
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, and
the Rev.' Robert ·Purtell were
Thursday evening visitors of Mr .
and Mrs. Charley Smith. Other
' recent visitors of the Smiths were
Tom Lavender, Syracuse; Mrs.
Kevin Knapp, Michelle and Amy
Johnson, Racine.

E. Buck,
Pro bote Judge

Rob~rt

m'ill limitation , for the· be·
nefit o$ Middleport Village

ceased. late of 104 locust

MORE LEGALS ON
PAGE 9

· ·

ing a tax, in exce'ss of the ten

.Ohio.

KRAn

~~·~.

Pu:~i;.c: ;~ce

4, Pomeroy, OH .

voting therein. on Tuesday,
the third day of November,
1987, the question of levy-

Marthl Collen Van Meter,
104 locust . Street, Pom·
erov. Meige County, Ohio,

HEAD ·
LETTUCE ..........~!~.~ ........ 69'

GENERIC

.
Introducing
Nestle. Toll House Treasures

45769.

Village of Middleport, Ohio

7:30 o'clock P.M.

Court, Case No. 25639,

Coffee
Creamer
•••••••
1.2.~.z•... $1.29
VANILLA &amp; CHOCOLATE .
,
Thank
You Pudding
••• u~~.91•••• 99&lt;
JIF SMOOTH
·
Peanut Butter .•.•••.••••!i.21••• $1.69
ARMOUR -"IS&lt; OFF"
Beef Stew .•••.•..•••...•.•~~.21•• ~ $1.49
OCEAN SPRAY
CranAaale Juice •••..•••H.21
••• $1.69
MORTON Hotist~ W/GRAVY
.
Sliced Beef •.•••.•••••.....!m.q!. $1.39
HILTON
Ovster Stew ·~····•••.....• m:.q!•••• 99&lt;
REYfiOLDS - 75 FT. ROLL
freezer Paper ................... S1.59

Route

El,ction to be held in the

in the Meigs County Probate

WHIPPED
TOPPING .........~.~-~; ... 51.39

·~-

0

County, Ohio at a General

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On September 23. 1987.

CALIFORNIA

Garlic Bread ..••••..•..••L.~~t ••• S1.3 9
BUZZ BUTTERED
·
.
Beef Patties •....•••.•..••~q.q! ••• $2.89

Wolfe Pen
happenings

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bailey were
recent visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
Rober t Bailey, Sr.

will bo open at 6:30 o'clock

NEW YORK

Long Bottom area notes

..

which amounts to. $0.10

(Ten cents) ·for each one
hundred dollars of valuatton,
for five (5) years.
·
The Polle for aald Election

LB

oz.

- - - - · · - - - -

Public Notice

Notice is hereby given that
in pursuance of a Resolution
of the Village Council of the
Village of Middleport, Meigs
County, Ohio, paUed on the

Ohio. 45769 .
Robert E. Buck.

.

By Melody Roberts
allowed some leisure tlme to
Four Meigs Countians joined a gather shells on Virginia
group of Daughters of America beaches.
sisters recently for a fall sightMary Andrews also recently
joined a touring group to the New
seeing trip to Virginia.
Mae McPeek. Leota Ferrell, England States with highlights
Mary Andrews and Ada Bissell being visits to West Point, the
e njoyed the sights of Williams- Cornelius Vanderbilt home, and
burg, a tour of Monticello, home the Hudson Valley. There was a
of Thomas Jefferson, with Its luncheon cruise at Weirs Beach.
spacious rooms and underground N.H. andalerrytrlpacrossLake
tunnel with wine cellars. The tour Champlayne in Burlington, Vt.
Visitors at Ernestine HayIncluded side trips to Charlotteville and Norfolk where they took man's home recently have been
a Chesapeake Bay·· cruise, and Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Fitzpatrick.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Bitler and
Sarah, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Fi tzpatrick and family, Mr. and Mrs .
Steve Fitzpatrick and son. and
Mrs. Linda We ber. all of
Lancaster.
Ches ter Wells advises that H.
and H: Cable Vi sion Co. ha s
signed an agreement with Olive
Weekend g uests o!Mr and Mrs. Township to provide cable serCharley Smith were Mr. and
vice along State Route 248and 681
Mrs . Doyle Knapp, Langsville;
Including Reedsville and Long
Charles and Michelle Knapp,
Bottom.
loca l, and Mrs. J;&gt;~'niel Worley .
Stacy and partie!,' Daniels, W.
Va.
.

Pepper Loaf •.• .'.•:.••...l:~....... .3.29
HOMEMADE
.
,............... .89C
Meat Sa.,ad ...........
1-LB.PKG.

Theyre s.o loveable. Huggable.
And ideal for holiday gifts. Theres a Friskies
Plush Cat and a Friskies Plush Dog. Adopt either ·
one or both and help us find them a good home.

.

County. Ohio at a General
Electton to be held in the
County of Meigs at th8
regular places of voting
therein, on Tuesday, the
third dev ., of November,
1987, the question of levying • tax~ in exceaa: of the ten
mill limitation, for the benefit of Meigs County for the
purpose of supplementing
the general fund for the
purpoM of making approprl ·
ations for the Meigs County
Health Department .
Said tax being: a renewal ,
of an exiating tax of 1 . 0 mills
to run for five years. at a rate
not exceeding 1.0 mills for
each one dollar of valuation,

$ .·

16

p

Ohio, passed on tho 12th 1Oth day of August, 1987.
day of August. 1987, there there will be submitted to a
will be submitted ' o a vote of vo.~ of the people of said
tho people of said Meigs M\lldleport Village, Meigs

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.. OCT 17. 1Y87

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

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

of tho Board of County

Phone 742-2100

Meat Wieners

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY
IN EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMITATION
Commi11ionert of the
County of Meiga. Pomeroy,

DEPARTMENT STORE

OSCAR MAYER

Public Notice

Notice is hereby given that
in pursuance of a Resolution

RUTLAND

·

~-

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Public Notice

KAHN'S KRISP &amp; SERVE

($20 value, see details in order form.)

Carpenter community .events

Star United Methodist Cllurc)t group will go to the Sacred Heart
will be Sunday. Morning worship Ce.metery lor a work session.
at 9:45. Sunday school at 10: 45.
.
Carry-in dinner at 12:30. Bring Dinner-dan ce
MIDDLEPORT
·
Jaymar
tableware. Afternoon service to
• Go lf Club Is sponsoring·a di~ner- ..
·follow .
dance on Sunday, Oct. 2.5. at the
POMEROY
The Meigs Middleport Legion Hall. Music ·
County Genea logical Society will will be provided by Geor~ Hall.
meet Sunday at 2 p.m at the Reservations rnust be made by
Meigs Museum. There Will be Oct . 20. 'I'he public is Invited. Fo r
elecllon · of officers during_ a de tails and reservations, call
meeting after which time the Bob Freed at 992-2044.

SWin ECKRICH

..

Wednesday, October 14. 1987

Wednesday, Octc:iber 14.' 1987 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·

0927.

3 bags of Children's c lothing.
Call 6t 4-448-4942.
Pupp ies 1.0 give

away .~

Call

614-992 -6St 3.
Kittens to loving ho..mes wilh
c hildren. accompanied by parents picking them out. Call

614-84 3-5446.
Gentle male dog needs a good
home desp era tely :304-675 6416 atter 4 p.m .
· Full blooded black Lalna~ro
Retr iever 10 months old. 30 4·

882-3176 .

11

Help Wanted

Avon-Se ll Avon for Christmas .
Make 40 percent . Ca ll614-446 - '

3366.
EXCELLENT WAGES for spare
tlme assembly work; electron•
ics . crafts. Othan . Info (5 041
. 641 -0091 Ekt. 2987. Open 7
days. CALL NOWI
WANTED: Energetic, p8opla oriented team moml)er/ dental as 11stant to join our practice part
time. You 'll want to have all the
necessary qualitie1 of a topnotCh dental a11istant (exp•
riante helpful bU1 not noeesury}1Willing to work h•rd? Send
us your rea;ume and salary
history to: BoJI Cia 108. G"allipolis Daily Tribune 825 3rd. A110.
Gallipoliil, Ohio 45631 .
Sitter in my home In town. Ca11
614 -446-2163 .

_,

'

....

�.·
Page-12-The Daily Senti el
11

uu

Stylist needed with man-s••
hcen .. Call 114-446-3703 or

-

· 8821 .

Ee'm otra money for Christmat
Sell It WGI'k. to fnMKI•. or a
territory A'olon . Call 814· 446·

44

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

Furntthed apt 2 br. 1136 2nd
Ave. Gallipolis 8196 Weter
paid C. II 614-446 -4416 after
7 ·00 PM

2158

Newly -redecorated apartmentt
for rant. One-bedroom, unfur
nish•d. ncond floor . From
1176. to t226 per month. Call
evenings. 814-446 -4426 or
446-2325 .

RaUable babysitter in my home -

one kind111garten age child Ref
requtrMI, Call 614 -448 4834

.tt•l 00 PM
GET PAID lor ruding books!
t100.00 p., title. Write. ACE33C. 111 S lincolnwey . N.
Aurora, II 80542.

Urge two -bedroom unfurnished
apartment w1th stove, retrigera·
tor, wisher and dryer Overlook·
ing Ctty Park U26 per month ·
Calleven1ngs· 614-446-4426 or
446 -2326

We nMd a constructiOn for•
m..,. Netda to be experienced in
commercial &amp; industnal h..tmg
6 air lnsulatton &amp; piptng We
oftlr good pay, vac.tion. holiday
pay, unHorm allowance &amp; tnsu-

Tara Townhouse apartmentsFurnished or unfur'nished 2 br..
1 'h baths. PriVate entrance.
Enclo18d pat1o Call 814-387-

rance allower'ce Wtll move the

78&amp;0.

right man. Write to 1 Rhodes
Heating &amp; Atr Conditioning,
lncorp. P.O .Box 548, Marion,
Ohio43302
Government Jobs. $18.040$69. 230 yr. Now h•ring Call
805·887-6000 Ext R-9805 for
current fedetalliat

"Would you mind putting the
smoke detector in the hallway?"

Hiring! Gov•nment jobs-vour
area. t11S.~Q .. 868,000. Call

31

Homes for Sale

41

Hou9es for Rent

1102)838-8886. EXT 1449.
RN. LPN , or EMT to perform
m1urence e111aminations in Mid
dleport, Pomeroy, end New
Haven areea Send resume to
PMI, P 0 Box 2267, Hunting·
ton. W Va 25723

Get paid 'for reading books!
S100 pertltle Wrhe ACE -31C,
111 S.Uncolnway, N Aurora, IL

005'2
AVON · All ~reas . Call Mar1lyn
We.ver 304-182-2646
AVON. alh. •ron. call Shirley
Spe••· 304-87&amp;· 1429 .
Radiologic TechnologiSt
Immediate opemng for regts·
tet"ed radiologic technolog11t
Evening 1hift, 2 30-11 00 pm
Mondaya thru Friday Send
resume to PleauntV....., Hotpl
1al. Director of Personnel. Valley
Drive, Point Pl . .ent. W Va.
25660 304- 875 -4340 ut .
307. 0AA-EOE .
''HIRING"!!
Government job• •• vour 1rea
$15,000 · &amp;68,000 Call
!802}838·8886 eltl1203.
lit A1r Conditioning
Man w1tf1 5 years
experience Apply Orman Mall
Inc. , 1317 Otlio St ., Pt
Ple......t .

Hellting

Servl~

&amp;.by litter in my f1ome, 6 days a
weft. phone 304-875-8022.

Delivery person needed. apply m
perton. 3004 JackJon Ave.. Pt
Pit.
R N Supervisor
One full t1me nursutg 1Upervisor
posit1on available. 11 ·oo to 7 00
sh1ft, wlttl our htgh mecbcare
censu1 we need an AN supervisor with experience in slulled
long term cere and rehabllition
nuN1ng. Contlct Hlll\llew Nuulfll and Rehabilitation centOJ,
1720 17th St.. Huntmgton,
w v•. 304-629-8031

12

Situations
Wanted

Have room in pr!VIte home tor
elder person Good care Reason•ble Call 614·266·6509

Will help f1n1nce or land con·
tract 10 yr old house 3 Br .
Pacnot V•llage Call 614-446 1340, 446·3B70

4 BR . house on 1 acre EJtcel
locatiOn , Ref. Call A-1 Real
Estate Broker., C11! 304-675·
5104 or 675-7738.

4 BR , 'firoplace, full basement 3
mi so of Gallipolil 834,900
Call Days-614-446 -1615, after
5 :00· 44&amp;-1244

Unfurnltlled house, 3 br Rod·
ney Village II $275 Call 614·
44~ - 4416 attar 7 00 PM

Hou111 at 80 Chillicothe Rd Very
Cheap Call 614-446 -2404.
19B4 Tnumph II 14x70 All
electr~c · Cuttom made Excel·
lent shape. $9000. Phone 614596-4429

All

brick, 3 br.. 1% bath,
'fireplace, laundry room Own8f
f1nanc1ng Call 614-446-0722
Hand• Man Spac1al· 6 room and
bath, attic. basement. 110 State
St. Price negot1able. Call 814-

992·3726.
Middleport. Lovely Interior.
close to stores and sctlool. Pr~ce
reduced 614-992-5709 after
600pm

3 bedroom, partially furmshed
In Pomeroy, close m. Available
Oct. 17. Muat be employed
Depo11t required Send apphca·
t1on to The Daily Sentinel, P.O
Box 729 Y, P.omeroy, Oh1o

For Sale:Land Contract 3 bf'
house, 2-story with basement.
Nice 1h acre lot 2-car garage.
nit:::e view In New Hav&amp;n. Terms;
$300 down; $300 month. Call
304· 882·2339 after 5 p.m .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
2 br new wall -to-wall carpet, alf
cond Parked 1n Johnton ' s Mo· b•le tiome Park Will tell on land
contract Call614-446-4110 or
446 -1409

12x55 Mob1le home, good con·
d1t10n, gOOd priCB 304· 6755546
Holly Park 14x70, central alf,
porch. shed . underpenn1ng
se.ooo or best offer 304-6755417 after 4 p m ,

Financial

19084 Nash a mobile home
lurn1ahed. 1 acre ground wltf1 2
drilled walls. city water &amp; large
upt1c tank 304-882-2684

Own your own apparel Of shoe
store. cf1oose from Jean sportswear . ladu!l apparel
men 's , children-maternity, large
sizes . petite , dancewear ·
aerobic, br~dal . lingerie or accessories store Add color analysis
Brands· L1z Cla1borne Gasoline,
Hulttltex, Levt. Lea, Camp
Beverly H1lls. St Michele. Chaus,
Outback Red. Genet1s, Forenza.
Organtcally G~pwn , over 2000
others. Or Sf3.99 one pr1 ce
dnigner , mult1 tier pncmg dis·
count or flm ily shoe store Retail
pnc" unbelievable for quality
shoes normally prtced from $ 1 9.
to $80. Over 250 brands 2600
•tvles. $1~ BOO to S26.900
~nventory ,
training, f1xtor es ,
grand opemng alffare etc Can
open 15 d-vs Mr Keena n

33

Farms for Sale

71 acres 1Mouse, barn, outbutld·
ings Located 1n Glenwood area
Includes all mtnBf'al r~ghll Poltlble owner ftnanetng Call 'for an
appomtment Dave O' Neal Reel
Estate Broker 304-675-1580,
Jim Staats 304-675-3313, J 0
Staats 304 675 8898

34

Business
Buildings

Co mmercial buildings for Ieese
Downtown Pt Pleasant Stores,
oHicos A-One Real Ettate
Carol Yeager. Broker Call 304675· 5104,
749 Thud Ave. Presently Th&amp;
G1h Sllop 1600 sq ft Commllf·
c1al or warehouse Parking on
Side AdJacent to Th ird &amp; Pme St
C all 614 · 446 · 2362 for
. appomtment

RP.ill EstatB
31

Homes .f or Sale

!

7 room house In Mlddlepon
Option to buy Cell 614-9922363 or 614-992-7521 .
2 bedroom house for rent
Reference required Reasonably
prtced Call 614-992·2974

2 . 3 , or 4 bedroom houses and
apt in Pomeroy area Pay own
utilities.' deposit required Call
614-992-6113, 614-992-6723
or 614-992-2609. Call after
5 .00. please.
3 bedroom tn Middleport Oep·
011t required . Call 614-992·
2606.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 br .. 2 very good mob1lehomea
for rent Dep and ref . requ~red .
Call 614-446 -0527 after 2 00

PM

12x60 Mobile home 'lz m1le
from Cit'( hmits No pets Adults
preferred Call 614·446· 1 158
12x60 unfurniShed With waaher
&amp;: dryer hookup lf2 m1 put
HMC Ref &amp; Dep requued Call
614 -446 -4369 or 304-6769760
·2 ·bt tratler for rent in Cheshire
$150 a month Call 814-367-

Ac reag e, land contract or tra1ler
lot for rent o n Rt. 160 Call
614-JBB-9354
94 acres m Me1g1 County, 0hi0·0
Gr~mm Rd oft county rd 36
Portland ma1l route Minerals
w1th free gas 6 m1les from
Ritchie br~dge Hunters par•·
dtse &amp;400 p~ aCf'e Cell 614843"-5185
2 Bu1lding lots · 1 V2 acres eacf1
with county wl!lter. Jerry&amp; Run
Rd . Apple Grove. W lla Call

304· 676-2383.
Two lots, 2 acres or more, ph one
304· 675-4208.

Furnished apt . 3 room• lit bath.
1 OB locutt St Dep required.
See after 7 00 PM
Gracious
living. 1 and
bed·
room apartments
at 2Village
Manor and RIVerside Apart·

menu '"

Middleport.

t216 inciudmg utilltlll
61.·992-7787 EOH .

F•om

Call

N1ce one bedroom apartment
Nawty carpeted. upstairs 402Ya
28tf1 St , Point Pleasant. Cell
614-992· 6858
2 bedroom ept Nice aetting.
convenient to 1hopplng Ap ·
pllances furnithed, carpeted.

Coli 614 992· 6026

EHO

2 bedroom apartment In Syracuse. $150 per month plus
utilities. Deposit Call614·992·
5587 or 814·992· 5732
In Middleport Third floor. 6
room and bath, clos~ · ln back
porch. Oepo111 and reference
requtred Call 614-992-8026
One bedroom furnished apartment in Middlepor1 Call 614·
992-6304 or 814-446-8198
APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
houses. Pt Pleasant and Galhpohs 614-446-8221 .
2 bedroom furm1ed apt, ref and
dep011t, New Maven, W Va,
304·B82·3267 or 304·773·
5024
Apt . in Middleport, 2 br furnished apt also two room
efflclencv apt 304-882-2568
Mt Varnon Avo Ground floor
apt . 3 rooms &amp; bath, stove&amp; ref.
furnished. pr1vate entrance &amp;
parking. large porch. a"c . cond &amp;:
neighborhood. Quiet Single or
couple 304-675-4580 or 6751962
One bedroom furniShed apt .
Extra clean and mce Adultl
Onty No Pets 304· 675·1386.

Room• tor rent , day weak.
month Gallia Hctel Call 614·
448 -9680. Rent at low as 8120
month
Furntshed room $ 100. Utlht1es
pa1d. Share bath Single mala
919 Second Galltpolis Call
446 -44H5 after 7pm

46 Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North o'f Pomeroy.
Rental tra1lers Call 614-992
7479
Space for 'small trailers All
hook · ups . Cable. Also effictencv
rooms, air and cable Mason.
W Va Call 304-773-6661 .
Trailer spaces for rent fully
equipped m Mason, W. Va.
304-773-5319 after 7 00 pm

2 bedroom mobile home m
Syracuse. $160 per month,
$60 depOSit plus ullht1es. Call
614 -992- 5587 or 614-992·
5732
Two bedroom mob1le homes
furniShed, $1 B5 month plus
$75 deposit 304-675-6512
Two bed room mob1le home
M•ddlepcrt, Oh•o Reterence.s
and depoSit requtred 304-B823267 or 394-173- S024
2 bedroam, completely fur nished. prtvate lot, washer,
dryer, ac No Pets Adults
Pre'ferred 304-773· 6751 or
773 6174

44

Apartment
for Rent

Baa1c rent tot 1 bdr ,
rent
$18300, 2bdr , S21900 Alto
required a $ ~00 00 security
deposit CONTACT Jackson
Estates Dept Ph 446 -3997
Equal Housing Opportunity

49

For lease

Hunters Hunt1ng righ11 to prop·
erties in Washington , Gallia &amp;:
Me1gs counties available for
lease Call 304 -428 -4739
weekdays, 8-5

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
Bedroom su1te. hving room
su1te, dmette set. 304· 675 ·
1386
Coucf1 for sale. $60.00 304676 · 2194
Household - tr~ple dresser w1th
mirror, 11eadboard &amp; bed frame ,
full or queen S120 304 -6764B49

Sofas •nd ch1lrs priced from
$395 to t996 Tabl81 860 •nd
up to $126. H1de·a -beds t390
to $696. Recliners $226 to
$375 . lamps $28 to f12&amp;
Dmettet $109 and up to f496
Wood table w-8 chairs f286 to
$796 . Desk $100 up to $375
Hutches •400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w-m•t1re11es
S295 and up to &amp;396 Baby beds
8110 Mattrestes,flr box spflngs
full or tw1n $68. f1rm $78. and
888 Qu.-n set• S226. King
1360 4 drawer ch"t 169 Gun
cabinets 8 gun Gas or electric
range $376 Baby maure•se•
$31!5 &amp;: 846 Bed frames 820,
830 &amp;: King frame $50 Good
selection of bedfoom suite•.
metal cebinotl, h&amp;adboards 830
and up tc $65
90 Days same as cath with
approved cred1t 3 Miles out
Bulavtlle Rd . Open 9am to 6pm
Mon thru Sat. Ph. 614-446·

0322
PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc 11\/lng wood
sultet. 8399,96; chest of drew

ers , 4 drawer - 848, 6 drawer·
$59 96 ; mattra11 &amp; box springs
full size. 312 coil, 1149 96aet,
twm mattrn1es, f96
set
THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND
Valley Furmture
New and used furniture and
appl1cancu Call 614-446·
7572 Hours 9·5
2 sohd Cherry twin beds. &amp;75
each Football drape• lit twin
bedspread Rainbow stripe curtains &amp; twin bad1pread Other
var1ous curtains, drapes, &amp; bedspreads. 41" base cabinet witf1
butcher block top . 16"x 30"
wall cab1net. Call 814-388B476
Carpet, 86.50 &amp; up l•vmg room
suites. 8326 &amp; up Mollohan
Furmture, Upper River Rd 4467444
Couch &amp; chatr·leutllan a yr old
Writing desk &amp; chatr Lots of
household 1tems Call 614·446·
4914
Navy ao'fa bed like new &amp;300
Call 614-446-7892 after 6
G E portable japanment size)
washer &amp; dryer, 8125 Hum1di
tier, t26 Electronic air cleaner,
826 Call814·268-f720.
Wocden table with 4 chalfs, 2
end tables , Wicker stand w1th
glass shelves Call 614·•46·
1158

Callahan' s Uted T1re Shop Over"
1,000 tires. S1Zes12, 13, 14, 1 5 ,
16, 16 5 8 m1les out Rt 218.
Call614-256· 6251
Plastic cistern state approved,
plasttc septiC tanh•. plasttc
culverts, metal culvens RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack son. Oh. 614-286-F;930.
Ouahty ftrewood. all hardwood,
tor sale. &amp;25 e p1ck-up load Call
614-367-0669
Catalvhc converters , only
S89 95 Most models. lnltalla·
tton alsc available Muffler Man ,
9 Stimpson Ave , Athens. Ohio
1 -800-843 -3767
M1.ad hard wood slabs S12 per
bundle. Containing appro• 1 1h
ton. FOB Ohio Pallet Co
Pomerov. Oh1o. 814-992 -6461
Firewood for sale. Cherry, Oah,
Sasoafras. H1cko~ $0\0. Pick
up load. Spht and delivered Call
614-992· 6335

Mot Point Self·Oetrostmg Aa·
tr1garator, S100 5 p1ece break·
fast set, 835 Truck tool bo,.,
840 614 .992-7641
12 ft lake johnboat, , 7 % HP
Sears Motor , 3 HP Sears Motor,
oars, tool bo .. tor back of ' 81
Datsun, camper top tor ' 77
Dodge. Call 814-843-5175
White' oak firewood for sale
S25. per load. Call 814-2474024

Ir"'·--------==:...L:;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;:~

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

41

Houses for Rent

Nicely furnisf1ed smell t-louse
Adult s only. Referen ces re·
quired. Off Jtreet park1ng Ph
4 BR hou se for rent 3 ml s o , of
Gallipolis t 300 a month plus
dep . Ref required Call 614448-1615. After 5 ·00 PM , call

446. 1244

..
CAPTAIN EASY·

)!, length m10k coat. Worn about
6 time• Call after 6 DO PM.
614-245-5046

·.

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 35 West, Jackson, Oh1o

614 286-6461
ElectroluX is hiNtng e Fall Sale
Super discount. Call 304-7683213 for further information
Seasoned oak firewood. Call
304· 676-2757 after 4 .40
Firewood for sale. dehvered
$30 00 load, 304-895-3446
Monroe coptllf Model RL·612,
under 16,000 COpieS, 304-676·

4067
Wood bum1ng 'f~replr•ce insert.
electriC blower , axe e,ond ,
1600 00 Phcne 304 676 -

2927
Tampco 75,000 BTU LP floor
furnace, thermostat &amp; vent pipe
&amp; cap Exc. Cond. $100 304 ·
675·8173.
Comple'te k1tchen cabmett m·
eludes range. sink&amp;: microwave,
Sold a• 11 304-773-5706 after

5pm
Sltd1ng 6 ft patio door, ladle!
w•nter clothes. Size 8 -7 &amp;{some
nftW) 304-67!5 -6676 .
TeleJcope. rug shampooer. Boar
compound bow. full sin canopy
frame, 26 gal aquarium, 304·

676· 6S37

56 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Bleck. brtck. sewer p1pes, win
dows, hntels. etc. Claude Wm ters, R1o Grande. 0 Call 614245-5121
Concrete blocks ells1zet yard or
delivery Mason sand Galhpohs
Block Co, 123 !12 Pine St .•
Gelllpoh1. Ohio Call 614· 446 2783
Ready mix concrete and all
concrete supplies Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies.
304-173-5234

Pets for Sale

56

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming All breeds All
's tyles Julie Webb Ph 614-446-

Massey Ferguson, New Holland.
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractors to choose from
81 complete line of new Ia used
equipment Largest ••lect•on 1n
S E OhiO
1978· 1070 Cue tractor With
ac, no till , 4 row corn planter
85950 Call61•· 286· 6522
Bidwell Cath Feed Store O~t
Special On Sale now - 6ft - 6ft
&amp; 6 V1 ft . tteel post Galcho barb
wire Call for the latest pr1ces.
614- 388-9688
New Ideal one row com pick6f
Frick 3 block aaw mill, power
unit MM Needs restored Call
614-388-8478.

Motorcycles

·.. .....

76

Now buying shell com or ear
corn Call for latest quotes Rtver
C1ty Farm Supply, 614-446-

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Htmalayan , Persian and
Siamese k1ttens AKC Ct.ow
pupptes. New kittens. Persians
Cali 614-446· 3844 after 7PM .

PR-Rag Plott Hound pups.
Ready to go W1ll make it m the
brush or on tf1e bench $100
each Call614-388-8476
German Short hair Pomters·Bird
dog• Call 304-67~ - 2159
Peacocks for sale. Cell614-446·
0159 afteer 8 00 PM
AKC Bassett pups 8 weekt old.
Vet chacked and shots. health
guaranteed &amp;125 Call 614667·6957
2 year old Pekmese. Reasonable
pt~ce to good home Female Call

614-992-3088 days and 614 985-4397 eventngs
E.cellent squtrrel dog 8500
Serious Inquiries only Call after
' · 1 -304-45B -161B
Beagle pups for sale, call aft e r
6 00. 304-675 7187

57

Musical
Instruments

Struts, $119 95 pa1r, InStalled
Molt models Muffler Man. 9 ~ • ; '\..,.. .
St1mp1(ln Ava . Athens, Ohio " ..........: .,.:11'
1 -800-843 3767.
.;·, ... "'
:·~·-·

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

ScholuUc Sporto
America (T)
CII Newlywed Game
Iii (I) Judge
llll Wheal of Fortunel;l
I!)) Crossfire (0·30)
Ill 1121 (!J) Jeopardyii;J
lHJ Berney MHler
fll (!) WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 m Sanford and Son
8:00 (]) Sac:ond Honeymoon
I) (2) I!)) Highway to
Heaven Elderly doctor's
@

.....
. I.--:

-·...

Insulated 8 1t trUck topp~. new
porta potty, camperaiu retriger·
ator , all for 8300 00. 304-676·

5299

..

large round bales of hay Call
614-256· 6011
M1xed hay for sale · round bales
Call 614-245-5117
Straw for Sale- 81 50 per ba'e
Call 814-388-8267
M1111ed hay, $1 25 May for
bedd1ng SOc. 304-675-5679.
15,000 plus 2 {4000} bushel
grain b•ns for rent, Morg111's
Woodlawn Farn" , 304-675 ·
1286.

Tr ansporlalion
71 Auto's For Sale
1984 Dodge Colt N1ce aeon ·
umv car. No rust Stereo cass
player 92500. Call 614-286·
6522.
1983 4 dr Celebr~ty . Black w1th
red IMtenor Auto , ps, pb,
am ·fm , a1r, luggage rack. Sharp
S3595 Call 614· 286-6522
1975 Dodge Charger SE Less
than 70, 000 m1le1 Call 611l379-2652
1985 11~

Ford Escort hetchback
Am -fm , 4 spd Very good cond.
Call 614-388-8178
1981
tires

comm1tment ts dnv1ng h1m to
·'

Home
Improvements

Turbo Trans-Am New
Sharp Call 614 379-

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, peltls. and supp!ln P1ck
up and dehverv. Oav11 Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georges Creek f!.d Call 614·
446· 0294

Sta1nless steel exhaust systems
Now custom made for your
truck. motor home or class•c car
W•th h'fe-tlme warranty Muffler
Man , 9 S11mpson Ave ; Athens,
OhiO. 1 -800-843-3767
'81 Datsun 510 Wagcn 4 sp
Good mechamcal cond itrnn Gall
ehor 5 ·00 p m., 614 992-6041

1978 Camaro Rally Sport, auto,
AC , t1lt , AM· FM stereo, a1r
shocks, 350 four barrel!, 304675- 1139
1984 Delta 88, loaded, 4 door,
VB . garag e kept, $7, 396 00
304 675-6085
1984 Ford Tempo Clean
$3 900 304 675-4480
1978 Ford Thunderbird new
front tires &amp; brakes No rust
304-675-3639 after 4 p m .
1978 Chrysler LeBaron, creame
color, ell leather interior, hke
new tires Very clean car
Loaded. $1800. Call 304-6751906 after 4 p m
•

'78 LTD 4 dr auto, air, new
exhaust, exc rubber 304-67&amp;·
2645 after 4 p m 2906 Birch
Avo

1976 Ct-lrytler Cordoba. PS, PB,
good cond, 304 · 675~ 7504

i 976

Datsun 2802 , runs good ,
good cond, 82,000 00 Call
304-468-1871 Of 468· 1074,

72

Trucks for Sale

1982 Ford F100. 6 cyl ., e111cel
• cond . low mileage. f4300 Call
614-446 -0644 or 446-7602
1974 1 ton Ford 12 h flat dump
for sale or trade. Call 614-3B8-

- - - - - - - - ·lc.,

1

company for showdown with

the president. Q
Greet Perlonnancos
N.Y.C Opera produces one
of Mozan·s most beloved

(fJ (!J)

WE ... MADE
IT.'

. .. I
...

• •• ,I

..

the day's world news and In

depth teature repons. (1:00)
lHJ MOVIE: Eyewitnell (A)

.·.:-:.j
...

(1 :42)

~ "" ~..,.

·-c-:-.1

MOVIE: The Critiell
Uot, Part 2 (1 :39)
8:05 &lt;IJ MOVIE: Midway. Part 1
fl) (!)

".:·· . ~·
'. '

..·''. . r;..
~'

(PG) (1:06)

"

'

.·'
•

•

·'

8:30 Ill Lalt Frontier
l!l Splalllt "87: Summar

EEK &amp; MEEK

.

Edition Sw1mwear Fash1on
Show (T)

f-lf.Y, WHAT'S 1H£
MAmR LUCTH &lt;rl:XJ '?

. '·

CII Iii ((] Head ol the Class

After a lesson on the
rebeiiiOIJS '60s, Oennts

RON'S Television Serv1ce
House calls on RCA, Quazar,
GE. Spec1almg 1n Zemth Call
304 -576· 2398 or 614· 4462464

stages a demonstration. 1;1
9:00 (]) 700 Club
D (2) f!SJ A Year In the LHe
A v1s1t from

Fetty Trett Tflmmtng , stump ·
removal Call304-676· 1331 .

"

feelings.
@ Top Rank Bo•lng
Cll 0 Ill Hoopa.....,

Rotary or cable tocl drilling '
Most wells completed same day •
Pump sales and service 304- '

Smartmouthed rapiSt turns

out to be a federal!~

..-·-·
... '.
.

Starks Tree and lawn Serv1ce,
lawn care, landscaping. stump
removal. 304 - 678 2842 or

676·2903

protected w1tness.

llll Ill 1121 Megnum, .1. The

•

Carpet mstalled, work guarantoed. free estimates. 304-675·
1020 or after 5 DO 675· 2288

82

THE VET SAID HE DIED

DID YOLJ HEAR THAT
NASTY MCNAI&lt;FS
PET FROG DieD'&lt;'

.

Plumbing

OF FLATTENING OF

, THE ARTE-RIE5.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pmo
Galhpolrs. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 814446·4477

I

shot tn a brawl between two
students .

'

CII Iii Ill Dynasty Blake

hiS campaign into
prlmar~ear, which upsets

Alex1s.

The Equslizor
Genet1c scientiSt from an

llll Ill
~

~

FINE AN' DANDY !!
· I'M ON MV WAY
DOWN TO TH'
~,f{tl'#:::, LflUNDRY ·MAT

'

·.
.
. '
'

Re&amp;tdenllal or commerc1a1 wn· - •
mg New serv1ce or repa~rs
L1censed electrtc1an Esumate • ~ • ..
free Ridenour Electri cal 304·
675 -1786
•

85

9:30 CII 0 CII Slap Maxwell
Story Slap, fighting a self

puts

APPALACHIAN WOOD STOVE .
Wood and coalstovet, furnaces ,
and mse11s 8runco, Ashley ,
Consolidated Dutchwast. Buy,
sell, trade 10 yu experience
Rt 143, Carpenter, Oh1o 614·
698-6121
•

Electrical

1nterv1ews w1th 1op
newsmakcis and celebnt1es

· lethal game ot bali.
10:00 (]) Straight Talk
I) (II f!SJ The Bronx Zoo
Joe Oanz1g s accidentally

--- - - - - - - - --- 1.

&amp; Refrigeration

abrupt personality change,of
H1gg1ns beflles Magnum.
I!)) Larry King Llvol ln depth

esteem slump, plays a near

•

&amp; Heating

84

SfW "HOWDY" TO

YORE MAW

East European bloc country
defects to West. .
.._
I!)) Evening News A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news

stones. (1 :00)
@News
01 (!) Benny Hill
10.05 &lt;IJ MOVIE: The Omega Man
(PGI(t :38)

10:30 (]) Amorlcan Snapshots
fll (!) Hogan's Heroes

•
'

o rn rn m ((] ®J

fH)
I!))
D1lla rd W ater Servtce. Po ol s.
Cistern s Wells Oehvery Anytime Ca ll 614-446· 7404-No
Sund 11v call s

...
.. ,

Weuerson 's Water Hauling
reasonab le rates , 1mm ed•a te
2 ,000 Qllllon delivery , Cisterns,
pools well e tc c all 304-576-

2919

87

Upholstery

CE Sign 011
llll Magnum, P.f.
(!J) News
1!11 Sports Tonight Action
packed sports highhghts with

~-

Nick Charles and J1m Huber

'

..

A &amp; M Custom - Couches and
Aeupholsterv . St Rt 7 , Crown
C1ty. Oh. 614 256· 1470, Eve
614-446 343~ Open dally 9 t o
4 :30. Sat 9 ·30 tc 1 30. Old &amp;
new Uphouered
Mowrey 's U pholuer~ng servmg
trl county Are a 22 years The best
m fusnlt ure upf1 o lstenng Call
304 · 675 4164 f o r tree
ettlmates

iJ

I

I
.-:.-;,:..:.....:;.,-=.,,.,.G-1 Q

~-.,,.::...;y.l

Cornp lete

the

chuckle quoted

c._..J.t........J.I.......I.-..1..-..J...- ·.J.
by f1 !l1 ~9 1n 1he m1u 1ng words
you develop fr om step No 3 bt~1ow

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES

6 .u~~~~~!:S~~~E LETTERS

I I I I I I --]
..

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Unwt'I{J - Ripen - Bleak - Distal - WERE SA TS
1had hung my new wallpaper upalda down and the litlla birds
in the print ware dangling from the tree limbS. I decided to tell
everyone thev WERE BATS.
NORTH
ll·lt-n
+A863

BRIDGE

.AJ 1063
• 62

Bridge blddloa would be easier If
partners could read each other's mind.
BecaUJe North bad a skimpy overcall, ·
he would have passed Sooth's onespade bid, .but opener West bid two
clubs. In the spirit of competition,
North raised spades. South thoupt the
overcall and subeequent raise showed
80ilDd hip-card values, so be bid four
spades. Making game required a lot of
luck'and the ability to sniff out an un·
I U!IUBlendplay.
Declarer woo the ace of clubs and
I ~~j~~~~~ to dummy's heart ace and
II
Next be led the niDe of
Is~1des and finessed. He played a oecspade, winning with dummy's ace
when West's king came up. Another
bear! nil! disclosed that nothing good
was happening In that suit, and declar·
er now played a club. West won the
queen IIDd continued with the 10. Declarer could ruff that In dummy, but to
what avail? Eventually be would have
to lead diamonds and surely looe three
more tricks to be set. Then South saw
the endplay possibility. He discarded a
diamond from dummy on the 10 of
clubs. West continued with the club
Dine, lllld declarer discarded still an-

+H
WEST

EAST

•s5

.KQ972
• J 10 9

+K4

t5Z

tAQ143
+KQ.J09

+&amp;43

SOUTH
+QJI097

••

+K 75
+A87Z

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West
W..t

It

FMt
Pus

Pus

PUB

z+

Paa

-••,.

.,

OpeninJ! lead: + K
other diamond. That was book (three
lrlcks) for the defense, but West was
on lead with nothing left but dla·
monda, and the two diamonds original·
ly In dummy bad disappeared. U Weal
played a low diamond, declarer would
ride It around to his king. U West
played the ace, declarer would ruff
and still have a trump left In dummy
for his last
diamond.

(0:30)
Ill 1121 'Adderiy' CBS Lata

STUPID CH ICKEN ! GO
ON &gt;lOME W&gt;!ERE
YOU BELONG!

5!-lE15

ACROSS
1 Tooth
problem
5 Philatelic
item
10 U.S.
painter
11 Music
room gear
1Z Alaskan
seaport
13 Hub
.14 Matricu·
late
16 Had dinner
17 Garment
border
19 Sicilian
city
21 Biblical
mountain
23 Food fish
27 Autumnal
beverage
28Amass
29 Acute
30 Mariner
311nform
3a Cathedral
city
34Actur
Steiger
37 Servant
39 Egg foo
yong, e.g.
41 Theater

z Aviary
sound
3 Uke mom
prepared
4 First place
5 Ship part
6 First-down
yardage
7 Greek river
8 Encounter
9 Skin
opening
11 Perfume
15 Sunder
17 Horse
or writer
18 Pa. city
ZO Movie dog
ZZ Budget item
24 Plains, Ga.,
to Jimmy
Carter

BEEN RUNNING
AROUND SAYING T~E
SK'&lt; IS FALLING ...

WHO'S GONNA BELIE~E
AN'/niiNG LIKETf&lt;AT ?

Night Greenspan scores a

attends an embassy pany.
IE Magnum, P.t. Limited
Engagement
Ill Cll Late Show
12:00 (]) Bums end Allan
(!) Schol81t1C Sports
America (R)

ABC News Special

Satellite television d1scussion
(L)

Iii Ill Fall Guy

. ' •.
Yesterday's Answer

25 Soviet
inland sea
26 Belie
28 Deal in
30 Shade
of gray
32 Happenir,tl!
34 Ne&amp;p9jitan
. .
pamter
~

35Arab
land
36 Cross out
38 Different
40 Waterfall
(Scot.)
42 Pistol
(sl.)
43 Watch

box

44 Salty
45 Oscillate
46Ahout
47 Being
(Sp.)

DOWN
1 Wheat
bristle
DAILYCRYPI"OQUOT~-Here'showtoworklt: 10114

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
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 fonnaUon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different. .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOI i!S- Here'&amp; bow to work It:
CRYPTOQUOTE

F E

AFXUM
KIXU

M N U G J

H U
FG
GZ

w.

H U

AUFMRWU

L Z

SZONAIFG

E U U A

Z R

AZXF .G T,

coup soc1aHy when he

(II

..I,,

by THOMAS JPSEPH

Satellite te!ev1ston discussion
(L)

'

...·.-.
- ..
-. ..."

1....

News
Moneylinl Currant

@ Honeymooners
01 C!J Love Connection
11:30 I) [lJ f!SJ Tonight Show
® SportsCentar (L)
(iJ Cheers
0 I)) ABC News Special

J &amp; J Water Service Swmlmmg
pools, Cisterns. wells Ph 614 245· 9285

Paul Rupe, Jr Water Serv1ce
Pools, dsterns . wells Call 614·
446· J171

When coming hOme very late

7 one night, the man trippelj over

-'-'--.J.-..1.--.J..--'. ~ the bedspread. "Is that you
.-------------, dear?" mumbled the wile. The
NTHAG
man roared, "It bel"

111 1121

reports on world econom•cs
and financial news w•th Lou
Dobbs (0:30)

...'

••

I

~

I;

RE E MT

1---,jr"-"ij....;;,,;:;•.,,sri

11:00 (])Remington Steele

General Hauling

R &amp; A Wate r S e rv• ce Ho me
c1ste rs, wells, pools f1ll ed Fo r·
marly Jilm es Boys Wat ers Call
304· 675-6370.

a former flame

rekindles Anne's romantic

896 ·3802

I

threatens to lead to a strike,

lke os torn. 1;1
I!)) Prlmanewo Wrap ups of

••

' I •' ' '

HURCEB

When 8 contract dispute

, .~!'

.

I'

llll fll 1121 The Otdelt R-l.e

GROUND!

•'

':

com1c operas. (NR)

WE'RE ...

ON •.. SOLtP..

9303 .
1977
Foi9 truck with bed.
Replaced motor Runs very
good , no rust Call 614·992·
6421 .

I I I 111

ALLEY OOP

Elactrolux Sales and Service- all
machines roducod QJ . t649
now on sale 1499; New Di1cov
ary upright $429 now on sale
$349. B-9 Shampooer 8399
now on sale 8299 . Euy payment plan available. Call 614·
388· 9918

2620.
1977 Ford Thunderbird Excel
cond. Call 614-245-9667

•
I

..

V1nyl S1d1ng, over hang and
guuers Call 614-446 -6634
Free Est•ma1e

ruon. (May be preempted) []
Wlndourllng No Wind, f'lo
Waves. No Future (R)
CI1 0 ((] Perfect Strange,.
Saiki and Larry go to cereal

@

,. ..

'

M•A•s•H

7:05 I]) Andy Grillittt
7:30 I ) (2) Hollywood SquarH

•i".-

BASEMENT
Stallion 'for aate 4 vear, black
Reg. Tenn Walker, 15 3 hands , '
WATERPROOFING
Info 614 992 5611 after 4 •00 Unconditional lifetime guaran
614-742-2077
tee Loc•l references furnished
Free estimates Call collect
1-814-237-0488, day or mght
64 Hay &amp; Grain
RogarsBasement
Waterproofing.

58

·lnternational1 050 grinder mixer
magnet. Hav feeder 3 screen•.
good cond. 304-273-4216.

fl) CD

•• ; '"' II '

.. -":~
·~!....
~
:

6 yr old· 58" Bay Mare $500.
Call614· 388·8476

19B1 Olds 98 Regency Good
cond1tion ·PS , PB , PS, auto,
AM ·FM radiO, Bit, newtlrBI Call
614-992-5870

304-675· 41B2

icheera

-,

Auto Repair
~

81

like new Peavey T· 16 electric
gutter and contour case
8200 .00 Phone 304 · B82 ·
2548
.

698-6298

Dobbs. (0:30)
111 1121 f!SJ Wheel ol Fonune

Livestock

63

Upright plano for sale $50. You
haul away. C811614· 992·6769.

W1ne1ap , Rome , Melrose, Super
Gold, red &amp; yellow DeliCIOus
Apples Honey, sorghum, apple
butter, pumpkins &amp; assorted
food nems Ounrov•n Fruit Farm
681 S . of Albany Weekdays
9 -6 , Weekends 9 -6 Call 614 ·

reports on world economics
and hnanc1al ne-Ns w1th Lou

SBrvices

Wrecked 1978 Dodge Charger
motor rebuilt $500 Call 614992· 5891

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

CE (!J) MecNeH/ Lehrer
NowaHour (1 .00)
®)News
I!)) Monayllne Current

Ohoo. 1·800· 843· 3767.

2986

•

6:35 I]) Carol Bumett
7:00 (]) Remington Steele
D (2) PM Magazine
l!l SportsCentor (L)
CII Entertainment Tonight
Iii Ill People'o Court

Budget TransmitSions Used and
rebuilt, sll types Guarantee 30
days Call 614·379-2220 or
304·675-4230
- . . . , - - - - - - ---:-.· ICOu81 exhaust kits, 899 95 In·
stalled Most , Ford•, Chevy
trucks, Vans, 4x4's. Muffler
Man, 9 Stimpson Ave , Athen1.

77

)etters of the
four tcromb led words below to form four simple words

I I 1~ I I

York. (0:30)
lHJ WKRP In Cincinnati
fll (!) Too Clooo lor Comlort

~

Auto Parts

O lteorrange

, THONC

the entertafnment world lS
anchored live from New

"

62 Wanted to Buy

0231

61 Farm j:quipment
"Darn this wallpaperllll've been waiting
45 minutes for that roach to move!"

..

&amp; Accessories

Form Supplies
&amp; Liveslock

Furnished apt · 4 room• and
bath Centrally loc:ated Ref. and
Sec dep requ ired Call 614446-044:4

Ill llll 111 1121
Newo
@ SportoLOOk (T)
CE Dr. Who
(!J) Square One TV 1;1
tHJ Facta of Lila
Ill (!) One Day at a Time
6:05 I]) Alice
6:30 I) (2) ~ NBC Nlghdy NIWI
@ Inside the PGA Tour (A)
CII CJ Ill ABC News t;l
CE Nightly Buslneu Report
llll Ill 1121 CBS News
(!J) Degra11i Junior High 1;1
I!)) ShowBiz Today News of

•• fo..

61 Farm Equipment

~y

~

: :&lt;"-

54 Misc. Merchandise

WOlD

• rn rn u

-~ -

Pe•• p1ck your own, 85.00 per
bushel, Mace! Gandee Eddy
Chapel Road

Furnilhed apt . next to library
One profeuionel adult oni._Parking Cell 614·446·0338.

IT"=&gt;
NOT llle ;::nu-teN I
IT'~ 'Tll6 6ALLe:'t'!

-..

Winter onions. phone 304· 8822041 .

furnished Apt · 1 Br 8200
Ut11lties pa1d. 701 4th Ave
Gallipolis. Call 614-446-41-416
after B 00 PM ,

2 br. apartment Adults only
lnqutre, Sheppard' • · First &amp;
Ohve St Galltpohl, 01110

""TE!~ Af,ID

UMI
'~~~~:~' S©"\\~lA-lG£tfS®
ldltod CLAY • • 'OLLAN _.:__ _ _ __

•

WED., OCT. 14

EVENING
6:00 (]) Crazy Like a Fo•

,:•-

Freezer Beef
Carl Kinnaird

2 BR apts 6 closets, kitchen·
appl furnlth&amp;d, Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww c arpet, newly
p~1nted , deck
Regency , Inc
Apts Call 304·676· 77~8 or

•

FL~, IT'? Th~
~.nlAT'~ lll~

sow, "!HAT'&lt;$ nu;;

1986 R:IC200R Honda trail bike.
*800 oo, good cond. 304-875 2496

Truck load apples , Ida Red ,
Golden Oelictous, ell frwts a nd
vegetables. Jacka Market. Rt
36, Henderson. W Va,

Upstalrt unfurni1hed apartment.
Utilities paid Carpeted. no child·
ren or pet• Cal\614· 446· 1637

y

1986 Monda CR 125. Good
condition Call 614-379·2862 .

Quality Fruits and Vegetables
retail and wholesale 8 &amp; S
Produce acrots front Pine Hut,
Gallipolis, Ohio

Furmthed E'fflcleney t145 Utili·
ties paid. Share bath 607
Second A'VII .. Gallipohs Ph.
446-4416 after ?PM.

!2:i!&gt;HT,?T~

y

1977 Chwrolet pick up truck,
••c cond, t2, 000 00 25 to 30
locult potiJ. $26.00 for all.
304· 676· 1239.

-~------·lc -

Lennox 1 10,000 BTU natural
gas forced atr furnace Good
condtt•on. $125 614- 992 6851

'71\I~FJQ\.~, ~U?, ..

1978 Chevy ,A ton. heavy duty,
good cond, 11 .9!0.00 1973
Chrysler Newport , 4 door,
busted fander, good motor, new
e•haust, 1250 00 Call 304895·3001 or 304-876-4131

2 baby female Ferrets 6 wka
old 1J.25 each Call 614-446
1364

54 Misc. Merchandi$e

I'"~..EFT I? Ft.CT,

I c;,~'f rwN -tv Wfft A

•

Television
Viewing

... IT'O:. f.l?f lH~

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

676 6104 .

Rentals

...

198• Chevy truck S -10, V-6 ,
auto . trans . a c . ps, pb. am-tm,
good condit1on. 83,250 304·
675· 33154 or 676-4437 1

Washers, dryers, refr~garators ,
ranges Skaog• App1t1ncu.
Upper Rtver Rd. bHtde Stone
Crest Motel. 614·446-7398

New 16 lb. Hot Po1nt Washer
and elec. dryer with vent k1t and
pig tail for 8850.00 304 676·
5750

Ground floor level· Appro .. 660
sq ft Commerctal space Lo·
cated at 417 2nd Ave Call
614·446-3432

•.'

.. '

Trucks for Sale

74

The Daily

Ohio

14, 1987

1978 Chevy Silverado J.4 ton
4 x4 Call 614· 986· 433!1 after
5 ·0o p m.

0000 USED APPLIANCES

Mobile Home lot 60 ft or less
920 4th , Gallipolis 875 Water
paid . Call614 446-4416after7
Trailer pads w1tl1 tie downs
Large garden lit yard on AI 160
S100amo. Call614-388 9364

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

Countv Appliance, Inc Good
uted appliances and TV aett
Open BAM to 6PM Man thru
Sat . 814-448-1899, &amp;27 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

G E. Washer for sate Looks and
runs like new 8126 firm Call
614· 367-0322 .

PM

72

SWAIN
AUCTION lit FURNITURE 62
Olive St , Gallipolis.
NEW- 8 pc wood group- t3&amp;9
U1J1ng room 1uite1· t199 - $699
Bunk bedt with bedding- t199
Full 1lre mattrall Si foundation
1tarting - t99 . Recliners
ltarting- t98
USED- Beds, dressers. bedroom
auite1. ' t199 -U99 Desks.
y.t_ringer w.,h • . a complete hne
of Uled furn1turt
NEW· W"tsrn boots· $30
Workboot1 818 &amp; up {StHI &amp;:
soft toe) Cali 614-448 - ~169 ..

Office Space tor rent Excel
downtown Galhpoltt location
lnquir~ea call 614-446 -4222

0181

'! and 2 bedroom apartmtmts for

614-446· 0338
Home for Sale by' Ownltf.
Greenbrier Ett., 3BR , bl· levef
on .2.4 acrH , AC , W.B.F P , wet
bar. 2 car glflge Ph Before
4 .00PM 814-448-4009 After
4PM Ph. 304· 6?6-3816.

Shown by appointm&amp;nt 3 bed·
room, 2 bath home 507 4th St .
New Maven. W Ve S250 a
month plut $ 1 00 depoSit Call
614-949-2470

35 lots &amp; Acreage

1305)368 8606
Own your own apparet or sho e
ttore , choose from Jean
Sportswear , Ladies apparel
men'•. children-matermty, lar9e
•h~ea , petite . dancewear ·
aerobic, bridal, lingerie or accet·
sories store. Add color anlly111.
' Branda: L1z Cla•borne, Gasohne,
Healthtex . Len Lea, Camp
-fle\lerly H1lls, St . Mtchete,
Chaus. Outback Red, GenesiS,
Forenze, Orgamcally Grown,
over 2000 others or $13 99 one
price destgner , multi tier pr1clng
di1count or tamttv shoe store
Retail Pf"ICes unbeiii!Nable for
qu11ity shoat normally pr1ced
from t19 to &amp;80 Over 250
brands 2800 1tyles. $14,800 to
t26 , 900, tnventory , traming.
h .. tures, grand opening airfalre,
etc Can open 15 days Mr
Sidney '

4 br house m downtown Galli·
poha. $300 per mo Call 614·
446-0644 or ~46· 7602

Muon County on Rt . 35 South·
tide. excellent 1, 650 sq ft farm
houte, large barn pond, 50 acres
with timber, pr1vate country
llvtng 882 ,000 304-675 5420

FIREWOOD! Locust, oak ,
dlerry. $36, per pick-up load
dehvered B1ll Slack 614 9922269

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO . recommends that you
do business With people you
know. and NOT to 1end money
through the mad until you have
1nvett1g1ted tt'le oftenng

3 8R hs Located at 861 Fourtf1
Ave Stove lit refrig . furmthed.
$186 mo $76 dep . Call 814 448-3870 or 614-446-1340 .

3 Br with garage Option to buy
C1ty schools 8260 a mo Oep
requtred Call a'fter 4 ·00 PM
614-3B8-8624

18 Wanted to Do

·I NOTICE !

For rent very mea 2 br house1n
Middleport. Full b..ement, dll·
hwuher, garbage d11poul. atr
cond Excellent locetion No
petl &amp;250 a mo Call614-4469205 after 5 ·30 PM

2 bedroom 'home 1n Pomeroy 2
baths. landscaped pool. set1hte,
cloae to achoofs. Call 614-9923254

Immaculate conditiOn 19B1 Victorian 14'x70' , 2 bedroom.
garden, tub central a~r. f~rt'·
place. den , $13,900 304-6751317

Business
Opportunity

2 Br homB for rant .Kyger Creek
Sch OISt. Sec. dep . required.
$260 a mo Cell814-446 -0848.

2 br house near Washington
Elem School Covered deck,
carpeting $225 per mo, Call
614-446 -0644 Of 446·7602

1970 Ritzcraft 12x7'o 3 br
trailer $5500 Call 614-2561613

21

Two Bedrocm farm house.
newly restored Adults only No
pets Fa irfield - Centenry Rd ..
Green twp . Call814· 446 9442.

Government homn from $1 lU
repair) Foreetosuret, Repot , Tax
Delinquent Properties. Now selling your area Call1 · 316-7387376 Ext 3P -OH, H for currant
hst. 24 hrs

Have opentng 1n my home lor
etderly Reasonable rates Call
TLC, 614-992· 7044 or 614·
992-6817

Can do Ugtn hauling and roofmg
Reasonable rate t Marton
Snider 814· 949-2629

=-~~------~-- 2

-

1 br . apt. near HMC . Stove,
refng., drapn fumi1hed $~25 a
mo. Oap -Ref requited Call
61•· «6·4782

J.,.-----------.,.------------1

ExceMent wages for spare time
auembly
work;
craftt, others.
Info electronics,
(604) 641· T
0091 EXT 3026. open 1 days

Wednesday, October

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY.

Help Wanted

)

zw

L Z

RGKINNFGU¥M.

CZMUN · K
CZ' RDUWL
YeeterdaJ'I Cryptoquote: WE MAKE PROGRESS IF
AND ONLY IF, WE ARE PREPARED TO LEARN FROM
OUR MISTAKES.- KARL R. POPPER

•

�0

Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 14, 1987

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Major
Hoople's

.

Daily Number
• 170
Pick 4
0055

pic~s

Page 4

tO HELP CELEBRATE OUR
.

THURSDAY I OCTOBER 15th

ONLY
9 P.M. UNTIL MIDNIGHT

Old Fashion·p,ice1 In A

8- J 2-14-27 -;28-39

.1

Vol.37, No. 111
Copyrighted 1987

•

•

at y

e

.

TH ANNI~ERSAR~

Super Loto

I

Pomeroy-MiddiP.port. Ohio,

- MosUy sunny. Partly cloud.y
tonight. Low between 40 and
15. · Highs Friday 65 and 70 .
Chance of rain near zero ..

enttne

T~ursday,

October 15, 1987

2

Section~.

14 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ust proposals for development block grants
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
The Meigs County Commissioners announced
Wednesday the eight proposed Community
f?evelopment Block Grant projects they Will be
submitting to the state.
Included in the group of eight are Sutton
Township, $10,719 for road paving on Welshtown
Hill Road; Middleport Village, $9,200 for sidewalk
handicap access ramps; Racine Village, $4,863
for park equipment; Syracuse VH!age, $6,400 for
improvements to London Pool; Rutland EMS, .
$9,624 to improve the E;MS building; 'Chester Fire
Department, $7,680 for !irefighting equipment;
Pomeroy Village, $9,800 for sidewa lk improvements in the business section; a nd $24,873 for a
revolving loan fund for ·a possible new county
business.
According to state regulations, only eight
projects could be included in the 'CDBG proposal.

Those projects denied were Rutland Village's
request for $9,630 lor road· paving and Scipio
Township Fire Departments'·s request lor $6,260
for breathing apparatus and air tanks.lthoug\1 the
commissioners regretted having to deny these
projects, they pointed out that both entities have
received CDBG funding fm· other projects the past
two years.
The commissioners also denied Pomeroy
Village's request [or $6,239 to pave Pomeroy's
portion of Welshtown Hili Road. This project was '
submitted initially as a combined project with
Sulton Township, however, the commissioners
explained, the state specified that the two
requests had to be classified as separate projects.
The commissioners gave Pomeroy Village
officia ls the choice of which project they would
rather have funded at this time.
Final proposal for the CDBG funding must be
submitted to the state by-the end of October.

•
Bids for dump trucks and a six -passenger
automobile lor the highway department were
opened yesterday. Pat Hili Ford submitted two
bids, $29,300 and $21,839, for single axle trucks .
Gibson Truck Parts, Athens, submitted a bid of
$48,527.52 ·for an International tandem. Jim Cobb
'Chevrolet entered a bid of $13,639 lor a 1988
Caprice, and Pat Hili entered a bid of $13,500 lor a
1988 Crown Victoria.
Vehicle payments will be due after J~n. 1.
Bids were tabled and turned over to county
engineer Philip Roberts for review.
Roberts reported that the state has recognized
Olive Township Road 273 as a township road and
has reopened the road to public travel. The road,
which leads to Forked Run Lake, was closed and
barricaded earlier this year by state forestry
personnel, causing protest from area residents.
Roberts said he gave OiiveTownship'Trustees a
copy of state procedures forregulating speeds on

township roads. Recently changed state law
allows trustees to set limit s of not less than
25-miles per hour on unimproved roads a nd within
platted subdivisions, if a subdivision is located
outside an incorporated municipality.
Roberts also reported that one of the. la st
wooden deck bridges on the county 's road system,
on County Road 76, Childrens ' Home Road , is
being replaced with steel decking.
The board announced 1hat the I]love of the
county's Bureau of Support frottrthe jurisdiction
of Common Pleas Court to the Department of
Human Services shall be made no later than Dec.
1. Decision to move the support bureau to human
services was made following a change in the
state's support enforcement law.
Finally, as requested by Prosecuting Attorney
Rick Crow, a law enforcement trust fund was
established by the board.

Iraq strikes British tank~r;
United Nations told of attack

/I
I

MANAMA. Bahrain iUPII -A
suspected Iranian-fired missile
slammed into a U.S.-managed
supertanker in Kuwaiti waters at
dawn today, hours after lraq
a I tacked a Brilisll tanker at
Iran's Kharg island oil terminal ,
shipping sources and Kuwaiti
officials said.
There were no casualties in
today's sttack on the U.S .operated, 124.085-ton Sungari,
which was moored at Kuwait's
Shuaiba anchorage, shipping of·
ficials ' said.
The Lloyd's of London shipping
intelligence unit said thP missile
hit the tanker at 5:04 a.m.
Firefighting tugboats brought
the blaze under control within
two hours. the Kuwaiti News
Agency said.
"The fire · is under control
completely," Kuwait Oil Tanker
Co. Cha irm an Abdul Fallah
al-Badr said in a telep hone
interview.
Also in the northern g ulf.
shipping sources said a n Iraqi
warplane struck a Liberian·
!lagged supertanker, the 231,990ton Pegasus 1, with a French·
made Exocet missile.
The Pegasus 1, operated by a
London-based company, was hit
late Wednesday in the waiting
zone at Iran's Khari Island oil .
terminal, the sources said:
Al-Badr said four re-flagged

Kuwaiti tankers that arrived in
Kuwaiti waters under U.S. navy
escort Tuesday were moored 12
to 15 miles away from the
Sungari's a nchorage and were
not affected by the' attack.
Kuwaiti For_eign Minister
Sheikh Sa bah Alahmad ai-Sabah
sent urgent messages to U.N.
Secretary-General Javier Perez
de Cuellar , Arab League
Secretary-General Chadli Kieibi,
Gulf Cooperation Council
Secretary-General Abdullah Ya·
qoob Bishara and the Islamic
'Conference Organization inform·
ing them of "the new Iranian
aggression against Kuwait and
shipping in the gulf." a ministry
spokesman said.
"Sheikh Sa bah Alahmad urged
the world comm unity as rep res. e nted by its ~ario u s organizations to shou lder its responsibility in deterring surh
aggression." .the spokesman
said.
A Kuwaiti De(ense Ministry
spokesman said his country is
holding Iran responsible lor the
Sungari attack and "calls on theworld community. particularly
the United Nations Security
,Coupcil, for a speedy implemen-.
tation of its Resolution No. 598
calling for an end tothelran-Jraq
war.''
Diplomatic sources said the
Sungari was hit by a suspected

Silkworm missile. If true, it
would mark the first lime Iran
has used the weapon to attack an
oil tanker. The sources said the
missile caused little damage for
a SiikwQrm, but it could have
been fired without a warhead.
"It seems a bit of a waste of a
missile," one Wes tern military
expert said .
Kuwaiti official s h~s previously s aid Iran fired Silkworms
at Kuwait, and that at least one of
them hit the tiny gul f nation this
year. Earlier t his year, a Silkworm missile fired by Iranian
Revolutionary Guards from the
Iranian-occupied Faw Peninsula
hit the southern Kuwaiti coast,
prompting a protest by Kuwait to
the United Na lions.
Lloyd's also blamed Iran for
the attack on the Sungari. Which
the agency said is managed by
the Omi Corp. of New York and
owned by Omi Sungari Transport
Inc·. of Monrovia, Liberia.
A U.S. diplomat in Kuwait said
no American warships were in
the immediate vicinity at the
time of the attack.
"No U.S. Navy ships enter
Kuwaiti waters, " he said.
The Kuwait Oil Tanker Co .
chairman also said he doubted
the Iranian missile was aimed at
any of the U.S."escorted re. flagged tankers that arrived
Tuesd ay .

-S eek regulation of takeovers
. ,I "' "

.. ..,.

·''

BUILDING RAZED - Another well-known
Pomeroy building Is coming down. Actual
chipping away of the structure, initially known as
the Owen building, began Wednesday morning.
Later the building became best-known as the

.

residence, located upstairs, of the late Judge and
Mrs. Frederick Crow I. Over the years the
downstairs housed several different businesses.
By Wednesday afternoon more than half of the
building was ori the ground.

.CBO revises deficit .estimates
The Ways and Means Commit WASHINGTON tUPI) - The
Congressiona l Budget Office · tee expected to vote t od~n its
proposal to raise more thaii"$'12
raised its estimate of the federal
billion in new taxes in fiscal1988,
deficit today to $179.3 billion,
which began Oct. I.
about $1 billion more than
Democrats on the Senate Fi previous forecasts, and attribnance
Committee, meanwhile.
uted the increase to h~avier
were
nearly
finished with their
spending in the last fiscal year.
own
lax
package,
but said they
The new estimate cou ld be a
still
needed
to
find
ways to raise
key element in .ca lculating mandatory a utomatic budget cuts in another $1 billion to meet their
nearly ali spen\ling accounts in goal of $9.5 billion.
The CBO presented its revised
case Congress and President
Reagan fail to agree on alterna- figures this morning to the
Senate Budget Committee,
tive deficit reduction plans .
whose chairman, Sen. Lawton
A new law requires the harsh
Chiles, 0-Fla., said the numbers
automatic cuts unless Reagan
shou ld provide a new incentive to
joins lawmakers ih approving a
$23 billion cut in the deficit. The encourage agreement on a pack· $23 billion figure was specified in age to avoid harsh automatic
earlier legis tat ion; but according spendi ng cuts.
"Can it be so hard to find a
to CBO calculations, an extra $1
billion in cuts is needed to rational way to find $23 billion in
compensate fo~ spending in· savings out of a $1 trillion
creases since the first of the year . budget?" Chiles demanded. "It's
The House Ways and Means not an Impossible.task. We're not
Committee and Senate Finance talking about Lindbergh on half a
Committee are nearly ready with wing or anything like that. We're
separate plans aimed at raising talking about something that's
at least $23 billion by prescribing doable."
The $12 billion Democratic
varying amounts of new taxes,
plan
sent ·to the full Ways and
spending cuts and other economy
Means
Committee included sevmeasures.
eral
controversial
provisions.
Reagan. despite his perennial
call for a balanced budget, has Including limits on mortgage
vowed to fight efforts to meet the interest deductjons for people
deficit goal with the unpopular whose homes are worth more
than $1 million and on home
step of raisfng taxes.

equity loans used for other
purposes.
Other provisions would continue the telephone excise lax
scheduled to expire and would
subject corporale raiders to a 50
percent non -deductible excise
lax on their gains .
T)lc Finance Committee "Democrats tentatively agreed during private meetings Wednesday
to plans to begin collecting diesel
fuel taxes at the wholesa le level
instead of at the retail collection
points now used. The provision
would raise about $200 million in
1988 and similar sumsdn the next
two years.
A second provision would end
the "completed contract method" Of collecting taxes from
defense and building contractors
at work on multi-year jobs.
Under current law, they are
permitted to delay some of their
lax payments until their projects
are completed. Committee ana lysts calculated the provision
would raise $800 million in the •
current fiscal year.
Earlier this week, the Senate
Democrats had approved tenta·
lively another $7.5 biliion ln new
taxes. With Wednesday's sum
added in, the $8.5 billion total was
about $1 billion short of the final
goal.
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Gov. Richard F. Celeste and
state Attorney Genera l Anthony
··J. Celebrezze Jr. have joined the
battle against a federal attempt
to pre-empt state laws against
hostile corporate takeovers .
Celeste and Celebrezze told a
press conference Wednesday
they worked too hard on Ohio's
anti-takeover law to stand by and
watch the federal government
~vein .

"We gave Ohio companies the
tools to fight takeovers, " the
governor told a press conference
attended by former New Orleans
Mayor Moon Landrieu. "We
launched a friendly takeover- a
takeover of our economic
destiny."
"Federal pr!' -emplion ol
states' authority in regulating
hostile corporate takeovers
would be a tragedy," said Lan drieu , a former U.S. secretary of
housing and urban development

and currently c hairman ol the
Coalition to Stop the Raiq on
America!
Celeste, Landrieu and Cele- ·
brezze said the House Enet·gy
and Commerce Committee is
about to vote on legislation
allowing the Securit ies and Exchange Commission to replace
t he states in regulating takeover
defenses .
" That would be like the fox
guarding the chicken house, "
said Landrieu .. "They (the SEC)
have no intention of stopping this
game."
.
Landrieu said the "game' ' Is
for a handful of cagey executives . brokers and attorneys to
make money without producing
anything of value and without
consid~ring the impact of hostile
takeovers on workers , their
families and communities.
Celeste pointed out that Ohio
was in the forefront of enacting
legislation giving companies the
tools to fight hOstile takeovers

when the Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. was in danger ol
being taken over by James
Goldsmith of Britain .
Celeste said that law could be
cn(Iangered by the federal legis"
la tion under consideration. He
said he prefers a bill, s ponsored
by Sen . William Proxmire of
Wisconsin and recently passed
by a Senate committee, maintaining state authority in the
area , protecting share holder s
and requiring earlier disclosure
of a raider' s takeover tac tics·.
"Our business lea de r s and
employees need to be a ble to
devote the ir e nergies to fi ghtin g
competitive challenges th ey face
rather than lighting the takeove r
sharks who feed on othe rwise
healthy companies," said Ce iebrezze, "The Wall Stree t ba nkers
Who only wa nt to spin the m a rket
to increase their alread v hu ge
profits mu s t not be allowed 10
ruin Ohio's sta ble, we ll -run
companies ."

More sewage going into Ohio River
CINCINNATI (UPIJ - A malfunctioning pumping station is
sending aboul3 million gallons of
raw sewage it day into the Ohio
River near downtown, and officials said it could take five days
before the problem is corrected.
Metropolitan Sewer District
Director Tom Saygers said the
equipment broke down Monday
night.
"II was a station mechanical
failure and regrettably the entire
station Is flooded with sewage.
We have to bypass the flow (Into
the river ) until we can pump out
the station," he sa[d.
Saygers said there is no danger ·"
from the spill because of the

strong river flow and the lack of
recreational activity on the river
at this time ol year.
In a similar incident les s than
two months ago , up to 15 million
gallons of untreated sewage
entered the Ohio River daily for
about three weeks . City health
officials were not told for several
weeks that the se~ge was
spilling into the river . The sewe r
district spent more than $500,000
to clean the debt-is :
Alan Vicory , executive director of the Ohio River Valley
Water Sanitation Commission,
said his agency has not tested the
water for bacteria since the
latest spill began bu t planned to

do so later this wrek.
" We will look at th a t th is w'ee k
and see w ha t the m ea surp of

impact might be,'' Vicory sai d.
" I don't a ntici pale dea lin g with
an y potenti a l probi,e ms with th e
water supply ...
He said 'th e lwos pills show " the
cit y does need to 1urn a higher
level of att e ntion to th e opera tio n
of it s colle ction S.\'S tcm ...
Vicory,sa id no a rea communities have drinking wat e r intak e
systems downstrea m of t he spill
on ' the Ohio s lue of til e river. Hr.
said sewa ge collec·ts o n the bank
of the rive r a nd doP~ not fl ow
across to t he othe r si d&lt;•.
·

.,

'

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