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Page~B-The Deily,Sa

1lii 1el

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

County Agenr·~ Corner
By .JOHN C.. RICE
Caunty Exl•llloa A,eat

Alrlculare

Due to an overs~Rttt m nw part, 1
!ailed to mention a week ago the
Feeder Calf Sale dates for the Ohio
Valley Uvestock Yarm at Gallipolis. The dates are as follows Saturday, September 'll, Saturday,
October 11, Saturday, October 25,
and Saturday, November 8. All
sales wUI be held at 11:00 a.m.
Animals for the feeder sales wUI be
accepted on Friday and early
Saturday morning. The regular
sale will follow the Feeder Calf
Sale. If you need more Information

•

POMEROY -That government
leila was back and I think he has
reaDy gone 'round the bend.
I was at home this time when he
showed up so all I'm telling you, I
actually saw and heard. Anyway he
shows up at about 8 a.m., wt this
ttme he Is not alone, he has another
!ella with him. He Introduces
hlrnself and his partner and says
that he was the guy that mapped the
farm earlier.
He told me that while he was
mapping over the place he came
across a good Sp:lt for a representa·
t!ve "pedon". He said a represmta·
tlve pedon was an area of a certain
soU type whlch best represmted the
cllaracterlstlcs of that soU for the
county. Anyway basically what it
came down to was that he wanted to
dig a hole In my pasture field,
describe the soil, sample It, then
they would fill It hack ln. He told me
that if the soU was as he anticipated
and met all the classll!catlon
criteria, it would be !'Jbl!shed In the
soli survey manuscript.

Monday, September 15, 1986

Use caution in corn storage; toxic gas may result

regarding til! sales )IJU can contact . 1987. Feeder calf prices tmd to
Tommy Joe Stewart at til! Ohio follow cattle slaughter prices so It
Valley Livestock Yards, 52 VInton looks Uke the prices lor the strers
Street, Gallipolis. Poore 4!16-1222.
this fall should be as good or better
Cattle Prices - Will They Be than they were In the fall of 1985.
Better? Cattle prices ilr 1986 were
I am starting to see rom being cut
oot as good as they were In 1916. tor silage now and th!s'remlnm me
However, cattle prices ar-e streng- again to warn you of dangerous
Ihenlng some. Tile low prices were gases that can result from fllllng
due to high slaughter weights and a silos. These toxlc gases are a result
3% Increase In the cattle slaughte- of the natural process that takes
thls year. ·
place when grain material Is put
Because of redured cattle supp· Into a silo. There are several gases
lies and a reasonably · bright that are produced but the one that
demand situation, choice steer causes the real danger Is nitric
prices soould average in the $6) to oxide and when this combines with
$65 range the first slx months of
nitrogen you get a nitrogen dioxide
and thls Is highly toxic and can

Taking soil survey
By GORDON GILMORE
SoD Scientist

·'

I

tS

cause death or permanent lung
damage.
These nitrogen gases have a
disagreeable odor and range in
color from red to orange to dark
brown. Also, because this gas Is
much heavier than air, It wUI settle
at the lowest possible level.
There are several preca utlons to
lake to make sure that nothing
happens to you.
1. Run lh! blower for 15 to 20
'T'Inutes before entering a partially·
filled sUo. Keep the blower running
while anyone Is within the
structure.
2. It Is best to stay out of the silo
for two weeks after filling.

3. Never enter a silo under any
circumstances unless someone else
Is nearby.
~ At the slightest Indication of
coughing or throat irritation, get out
of the silo and to fresh air at once.
5. Keep the door between the silo
room and til! IEm closed during the
dan!J!r period to protect livestock.
Implants Cleared for Replace·
ment Heifers (Synovex·C I - Re·
cently a growth promoting Implant
has been approved for use In beef
heifers. The Food and Drug
Administration approved the
growth lmplanl. Synovex-C,in beef
replacement heifer calves. Due to
til! )Xllentlal for decreased fertility,

'hole' other story, scientist believes

said It wouldn't he proper to have all
our neighbors sitting on the p:lrch
staring at them.) Anyway they dug
the pit, wrote a lot of stuff down,
took a small box of soil, said they
would be back In early June with
their o(her partners.
By gully, they did too. One day
about 3 truck loads, about 8 to 10 In
all, showupandd!gth!same hole In
til! lleld. Then each one of them .
climbed into It, poked round, wrote
a few notes, then climbed out. While
th!y were doing thls they were all
til! ttme talking about "agrllllc
somethings", color. pH and other
things. A couple of times they even
got close to arguing over colors and
depths to ooe thing or another or the
amount of clay "things". This was
even better than til! first time .
Before It was just two guys digging
a hole, now I had 8 to 10 dlgglng a

hole and arguing about the dirt .
(Where do they get these guys?)
They get these guys from ajoln·
lng counties w~ere soil surveys are
on going, the Ohio State University,
SoU Conservation Service state
office, and from the Ohio Department of Natural Resources DivIsion of Soil and Water. They are all
soil scientists and what they are
doing Is verifying that the soU
ex)Xlsed in the pit Is exactly what
we have said it is when we mapped
the farm.
In an earlier article I attempted
to Introduce you to the soil
classification system, Soli Taxon·
omy. One Important aspect of soU
classification Is that a soil classifl·
cation in a certain series, should he
the same oot matter where else you
find it. For example, a soli
classified as Vandalia In Lawrence

County, Is the same as Vandalia
mapped in Meigs County, Arizona,
or on the moon. It Is not likely that
you would find Vandalla In Arizona
or on the moon, but H you did, 11
would have the same properties
and Interpretations as the Vandalia
In Lawrenoe County.
That Is why we have field
reviews. A field review ts the
process where we dig soU pits .In
specific areas which we feel best
represent that soil type In the
county. The review teams purpose
is to makesurethat til! soil mapped
fits the classification.
The interpretations we give on a
specific soil Is based on samples
taken from all the areas where that
soli has been mapped. By spreading
the sampling out we are better able
to determine the full range of
properties for a soil. This way a soli

can more accurately be defined.
So the whole Idea of digging holes
and gathering 8 to 10 people to look
at and argue about It Is to maintain
the quality necessary to keep the
soU interpretations accurate for the
survey area. Also, by sampUag the
site once the classification Is
det ermined, the data base for that
soil can be Increased making our
Interpretations that much better.
Again, I would p:lint out that
though the actions of these soil
scientists arguing about soil In a
hole seems odd. It Is really a very
Important aspect of the soil survey.
It serves to maintain the accuracy
of til! soU Interpretations which are
necessary for good use and man·
agement of our soil resources. If the
review provides some entertain·
ment for you and your neighbors, so
much the better.

many cow; call producers do not
Implant their heifer calves during
til! suckling phase because tbey
don't know which will · become
replacements. AU heifer calves can
now be Implanted with Synovex-C,
starting at birth, without regard to
wheth!r they become breeding or
slaughter heifers. After weaning,
re-Implanting with Synovex should
Involve the use of Synovex·H, which
del!vers a higher dose of active
ingredient than Synovex-C.
In granting the approval, . the
Food ·and Drug Administration
noted .that the research presented
soowed thilre was no reduction In
final pregnancy rate among heifers
that had received one of tbe
tlllowing three treatment regimes.
Treatment I Involved Implantation
at 45-!Ji days of agewithSynovex-C.
n-eatment 2 was the same as
treatment 1 plus re-Implanted with
Synovex-H lW days later. And
treatment 3 was the same as
treatment 2 plus re-Implanted
again at 244 days from-the start.
Pregnaney rate for these three
treatments was 90 to 100%. However, it should be noted that the
onset of puberty was delayed by 00
io ~day,; In the two treatments that
were re-Implanted with Synovex-H.
Age at puberly among the heifers
Implanted once with Synovex-C
was equal to unireated control
heifers.
In conclusion, cow/calf producers should consider Implanting
their suckling heifer calves in·
tended for slaughter to enhance
weaning weights and utilize
Synovex-C If these heifers are
Intended for herd replacements.

tActually, I thoughl It would be
rather entertaining to see a bunch
of government men standing
around a hole In the ground talking
about dirl. Figures I'd invite some
oft IF neighbors over, they may get
a charge out of this.1
Well like I said, I gave him
permission and he and ~ parlner,
set off across the field~"Every so
often one of them would jam thls
probe In the ground and look at the
dirt. After 3 or 4 tries, thls one guy
signaled to dig at a certain spot.
Then, get this, they got oot a bunch
of shovels and starling digging.
(Can you believe It, government
people doing manual labor. This
was to good to be true. I yelled at my
wife to call the neighbors but she

New

Quote of the day
By United Press lntemational
First lady Nancy Reagan in a
nationwide address with President
Reagan, urging Americans to join
the effort to eliminate drug abuse:
"There Is no moral midd Ie
ground. Indifference is not an
option. We want you to help us
crea te an out spoken intolerance for
drug use."

The Publlc UtUittes Com·
mission of Ohio has set
for public heartng Case
No . 86-02-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procurement
prac\lces
and
policies of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company. the oporatlon
of its Electric Fuel Com·
ponent and related mat·
tsrs. This hearing Is
scheduled to begin at
10:00 a .m. on September
22. 1986, at the offices of
the Public U\111\ies Com mission, 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215 .
p&amp;l'Ues

ther information may be
obtainad by oont.aoting
the Commlssion.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann Orllnskt,

•

Daily Number

673
PICK-4
4853

-Page 3

•

Vo1.36, No .93

enttne

Regular &amp; Menthol.

Kings&amp;IOOs

J&gt;t\~11)

t.b'rlt Inc 1986

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your He~

Mlr.suggested rMailll(ica.
11 mg "Jar:' 0.9mg nicotine ev. per cigarette bv FTC method.

8eol'etary

By NANCY YOACHAM
· Sentinel Staff Writer
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co.'s operating franchise for
Pomeroy will expire Oct . 20 and a
new franchise ordlnance must be
passed before that time. Pomeroy
Village Council will be acting on the
matter before the next regular
meeting.
Ron McDade of Gallipolis,
C&amp;SOE's area manager, and Bill
Willis, Columbus, an adminlstra·
tlve assistant with the company,
were at Monday night's council
mretlng to request passage of a new
ordinance which would be the same
as the last one passed 25 years ago.
CouncU w!ll ask an attorney to
review the ordinance before action
Is taken at the next meeting.

The appearances of McDade and
Willis prompted discussion of tm·
proving street lighting in down town
Pomeroy by changing location of
poles and the type of lighting used .
It was noted by Councllman BUI
Young that high-pressure sodium
lights are cheaper to operate than
mercuiY vapor lights, and also
provide better lllumlnatlon .
McDade said a company represen·
tatlve would be in touch with
council to discuss the matter in
greater detail.
Also oo Monday's council agenda
was Steve Powell of the Meigs
County park district. Powell was at
the meeting to request council to
pass an ordlnance to grant the park
district permission to operate
within village limits.

By BOB HOEFlJCII
surroundings.
.
Sentbtel Staff Writer
These are just s&gt;me of til! scenes
You're walking down the street In that might greet a visitor to the
Middleport. Intent on your destlna· Budoryu Dojo of Tae Kwon Do,
tion, when Into ihe outer edges ol located at :a; N. Second Ave.,
your consciousness creep the rhyth· · Middleport, which will open for
-.mlc sourxls o! bare feet slapping on instruction on Oct. 2.
wooden floors.
Budol)'u Dojo is a martial arts
Intrigued, you stop to listen more studio with brG!lches In Gallipolis
attentively and hear the swift and Jackson. The Dol&lt;&gt; specialize In
sibilance of air being moved with teachlng TaeKwonDo, also known
great velocity, the sharp crack of as Korean karate, which will be
wood !Jejllg.. broken and the son Introduced Into the Olympic Games
sussurat!on of coordinated In Seoul, Korea In 1!ll!8.
movement.
According to Jerry Massie, head
Cutlou~ now, you peek through a
Instructor and owner of the estab·
window and are startled to see a l~hment, people study til! martial
young man with a piercing yell, arts for different 'reasms. Some
leap Into the air and smash several wish to learn karate tl r use as an
boards with a kick: two 1().year-olds effective means of self-defense.
engaging In a deadly duel, each of while others take classes to get In
their powerlul techniques stopping shape or to Improve performance In
only an Inch from their opponent: a other sports. Others wlsh to com·
grandmotherly lady appears In pete in tournaments while some are
grave danger from a husky assai· simply Intrigued by the mystkjueof
lant swinging a club at her, when the martial arts and wish to learn
with effortless ease she makes one for the arts' sake alone, Massie
movement and sends her assailant says.
tumbUag head over heels. And then
"Many parmts bt our other dojo
In contrast to all this action, a group have sent us their children In &lt;rder
of people are kneeling quietly In one to develop discipline, self·
corner of the room with eyes closed ronfldence, an 'Increased sense of
and breathing ·deeply, apparently acompllshment and self-worth or to
obliVious to all that goes on around Improve academic pe-formance.
them. And yet you know they are And others come to loom for the
acutely In tune with their sake or personal challenge, stress

f'llwell explained that the district
has placed a .5 mlll county-wide
operating levy oo the November
ballot. The levy, Powell said, if It
passes, Is expected to generate
$95,000 Into the park district to be
used as seed money for "toea I
matching" dollars, in grant fund ·
lng, and for "bare minimum"
personnel.
However, Powell added, even if
the levy passes, til! park district
cannot operate within any village
without a resolution to do so from
the village's governing council.
Powell explained that Ill! park
district Is, by law, a IDiltlcal
subdivision, with p:lwers of its CM'n,
however, council would retain final
say over any projects the district
would wish to conduct within the

village.
PIJwell said passage of the
resolution Is a fonnalily · which Is
required by state law and which
would aid the park district in
planning procedures.
Powell said til! park di strict' s
plans include development of
tourism-type recreational projects,
such as marina facilities, and would
not Interfere with council ' sdevelopment of village_parks.
The Idea of til! park district Is to
stimulate local enonomy, foster the
business environment and bring
more joil; to the county, he added.
Councll tabled Powell's proposal
until til! next meeting. In the
Interim, an attorney will review
and revise some of the wording in
the resolution presmted by Powell.

the Republican nomination.
In his prepared statement, du
Pont made It clear he was running
on the Reagan record, advocating
reductions In government spending
and the Strategic Defense lnltla·
tlve, or "Star Wars," anti-missile
defense.
Du Pont told of how his great·
grandfath!r, Pierre Samuel du
f'llnt, and his two soos left France
187 years ago and prospered in their
new home.
"I'm sure old Pierre Is smiUag as
he looks down from the heavens to
h!ar his namesake say, yes, I am a
candidate for president of the
United States of Atnerlca,'' du Pont
said.
Du Pont outlined a number of
p:lsitions on such major Issues as
fore! go p:llicy, defense, agriculture,

State Rep. Jolynn Boster wlll
recommend that the Ohio Envlro·
mental Protection Agency QOt
approve. a plan to use dioxin·
contaminated paperr:nlll sludge In
reclamation projects In southeaste rn Ohio.
Boster, D-Galllpolls, said today
she wm make the recommendation
to OEPA Director Warren 'JYier.
The agency has given draft approval to use of the sludge. a byproduct
of Mead Paper Co.'s Chillicothe
plant.
"It was clear, from the reactions
of area residents who attended the
Ohio EPA's Information session In
Rio Grande. that there are numer-

ous questions and concerns about
the p:lSSible adverse health effects
which may be created from lise r1
the sludge," she said.
"Until more Information can he
provided on how the sludge wlll
ulttmately 'affect the health, safety
and welfare of the citizens r1
south!astern Ohio, I will oppose the
use t1 til! material," she added.
A fllnnal public hearing on the
issue will be held Sept. 29.at 7 p.m.
at Logan High School. If approved
by OEPA, Gallla, Meigs, Hocking,
Peny, Jackson, Lawrence and
Vinton rountles will receive the.
sludge.
"The use r1 papermill sludge for
reclamation projects. has already

.J•·~

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

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

-~

........... - ........ ,..•~

...... _ .. ~ ... .,. . ....

,..4 .. .. .......

·· -- ··~·-· ~

In other matters, council gave
second and third readings to an
ordinance to sell a vlllage-owned lot
off Mechanic Street in the Sugar
Run area. Council wlll be advertis·
lng the lot for sale In til! near future.
O'Juncll also approved transfer of
a liquor license from Guido J.
Glrolaml and Henry L. Hensley.
doing business as the Rt. 7-33
Carry-Out, to Henry and Beverly
Hensley, doing business under the
same name.
In final business, council dis·
cussed briefly the posslblity of
installing guardra II along Main
Street from the parking lJt to the
Kroger store. Mayor Richard
Seyler p:linted oot that the village,
and not the Ohio Department of
Transportation. would be resp:lnsi·

ble for Installation of the guard rail,
even though it is a state route. The
mayor also noted that guard rail
would make il more difficult for
village workers to control weeds
and maintain the appearance r1 til!
riverbank along Main Stra:&gt;t. O'Jun·
ell took no action on the matter.
.Jane Walton, village clerk. reported $2,071 in fines and tees were
collected by the village during the
month of August.
Present forMonday'sll'l€etlng,ln
addition to the maya:, Walton and
Young, were councU members
Bruce Reed, Larry Wehrung and
Henry Werry. Council members
Joho Anderson and Betty Baron!ck
were absent.
The next regular council Jl'l€etlng
will be Oct. 6.

Candidates trade
barbs over jobs

DEMONSmA'DON - Instructor Jerry Massie and a student
present a demonstration at the Budoryu Dojo of Tae Kwoo Do, which
opens at 26 N. Second Ave., Middleport, on Oct. 2.
management . improved self con·
trol or mental-spiritual condition.
Some people learn karate as an art
form similar to ballet or music,"
Massie states.
The new Middleport business will
offer Instruction In traditional tae
·kwon do, tradltbnal weaponiY.
women's self defense and tourna·
ment competition. Classes are also
available for senbr citizens and
children, as well as adaptive

classes for handicapped persons .
As a public service, the Dojo will
also offer lnst ruction to law enforce·
ment personnel In hand-to-hand
combat and the PR 24.
"And we're wo&lt;klng wit hofflcials
within the legal system to develop a
pilot program for some juvenUe
and adult offenders," Massie
reports.
"However, we want to he more
(Continued on Page 81

Millionaire enters
presidential race

·.
.... , . . . . . . . . . . .

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspapllf

C&amp;SOE seeks new franchise with Pomeroy

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI)- The
Celeste and Rhodes camps traded
barbs Monday over who was
responsible for gaining or losing the
most manufacturing jobs over the
last eight years.
Roberta Steinbacher, adminis·
trator of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services, accused
Rhodes of deliberately trying to
mislead the public and said "to
obscure hts dlsmal record, Jim
Rhodes Is out badmouthing Ohio."
But James A. Duerk, a campaign
aide lor Rhodes, the Republican
nominee ·for goverttor, said dBES
figures show 41.1XXl manufacturing
jobs have been lost in the last two
years. He accused Gov. Richard F.
Celeste of running "a campaign of
distortion, misrepresentation and
lies."
"Rhodes has accused Dick Ce·
teste of chasing manufacturing jobs
oul of Ohio, " Steinbacher told a
news conference at re-election
campaign headquarters. "This is
simply not true.
"In Rhodes ' fourth term, Ohio
lost li:l,OOO manufacturing )oil;.
Under Gov. Celeste, Ohio has
gained back 58.1XXl manufacturing
jobs," said Steinbacher. "Across
til! nation, manufacturing jobs
have decreased.''
Steinbacher said It was true that
Ohio lost 41,(XX) manufacturing jobs
h!tween August 1984 and July 19ffi,

ACCUSATION- Dr. R&amp;berla
Slelnbacher, administrator ul
the Ohio Bureau ol Employmml
Sel'\llces, accused RepubUcan
gubernatorial candidate .James
i\. Rhodes of trying lo mislead
lhe public oo Ohio's unemploy·
ment record. (UPI)
according 10 statistics kept by her
own agency. "He Is using carefully
selected sUitlstlcs from OBES to tell
only part of Ohio's unemployment
story," she said .
,
Duerk said the statistics were
cllosen to represent the l~t two
(Continued on Page 81

AEP, 2 other firms
get coal study grants

Pierre S. du Poli IV
education and the war on drugs.
He prop:lsed mandatory drug
tests for teenagers In school and
loss of drivers' licenses for those

Pat R&amp;bertson
who fail, and stiff fines and jail
sentences for adult drug users.
"It's ttme to get tough with drug
tContinued on Page 81

Boster urges agency to deny OK to sludge use

c

2 Sections. 20 Pages

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 16. 1986

CopyriRhled 1986

Mostly clear tonight, with a
low In the upper &lt;Ws. Moslb'
sunny Wednesday, with highs In
the low 70s. The probability of
precipitation is near zero
through Wednesday.

•

at y

By ClAY F. RICHARDS
UPI Polillcal Writer
WILMINGTON, Del. (UPII
Former Delaware Gov. Pierre S.
du Pont IV, pledging he would
continue the record President
Reagan has established lor eight
years, today becomes the first
candidate to enter the 19ll8 presiden-.
tlal race.
Du Pont , who prefers "Pete" to
his formal name, launched his
long-shot bid in a hotel bearing his
familY's famous name. Another
Republican hopeful, television
evangelist the Rev. Pal Robertson
said he will announce Wedlnesday
he Is forming a committee to
consider a bid for the GOP
nomination.
Both trail far behind Vice Pres!·
dent George Bush in all the polls for

Taste breakthrough,
generic price!

LEGAL NOTICE

interested

KOS

ener1ccom etition!

The longest fangs of any snak&lt;·
are those of the Gaboon viper of
tropical Africa. In a 6· foot -long
specimen. the fa ngs measured 1.96
Inches.

will be given •n opportunity to be he&amp;rd. l"ur·

Mets lose
to Cards

Middleport 'dojo'
highlights interest
in martial arts

But first another bunch of other
government !elias oould have to
come In and look at this oole to
make sure It was just light. (Where
does the government find these
people? First he wants to dig a hole
In my pasture th!n 1!1111 ln. And on
top of that If he likes what he sees,
he wants to dig til! same hole 3
months from now and have some
oth!r people from Columllls and
other places come down and look at ·
it.) Well I told him It was alr!ght by
me, as It didn't look like It would
cause any harm.

All

Ohio Lottery

taken place In 17 strip mine areas
since 1919," Boster explained. "A
long-tenn ~valuation of these E!l&lt;ist·
Ing sites should he taken to
determine the full Impact or using
dioxin-cOntaminated ·sludge. The
safety of the residents or south!ast
Olilo Is my primary concern.
Addltl:lnal research Is crucial so
that we can be assured that we are
oot being used as human guinea
pigs In a long-term dioxin
expertment."
Mead Is seeking OEPA approval
or a sludge management plan
which wUI allow the state to use the
~!l"oduct In reclamation projects.
Desplle OEPA enthusiasm tlr the
greening benellls of the sluds_e,

arm residents are worried the
sludge represents another p:llson ·
ous material entering the arm's
environment.
The concerns were aired at a
Sept. 3 btformatlonai session at Rio
Grande, one r1 three held to present
both sides r1 the Issue. Mead
representative Russ Cross said at
the meeting that Mead had been
developing the sludge as a reciama·
tion material when It discovered It
contained small levels r1 dioxin,
described by the U.S. EPA as "an
unwanted but almost unavoldaWe
byproduct that comes from manu·
facturlng several commercial

substances."

BRILLIANT. Ohio IUPII AmeriCan Electric Power Co.,
General Electric O'J. and Babcock
&amp; Wllcox Corp. are among the
recipients of the first phase of state
funds In Ohio's $100 mlllion search
tor ways to clean high-sulfur coal.
Gov. Richard Celeste appeared
Monday at AEP's T!dd plant to
announce the dlstlibution of $41 .6
mUlion to eight demonstration
projects and 16 research projects.
The money comes from bonds
authorized by the passage last year
of Issue 1, and Is designed to
prevent Ohio's electric utllltles,
coal mines and oth!r heavy lndustrtes from being decimated by
expected laws controlling acid rain.
AEP will receive SlO million to
develop a new pressurized, flul·
dlzed bed combustion process to
clean coal. Total cost of the AEP
project wlll be $175.6 million, with
the Department of Energy addlng
another $6) million In federal funds.
"Projects such as the one here at
American Eiectrtc Power place
Ohio at the cutting edge of new
clean-coal technologies that wlll
bring jooo back to tbls part of the
state," Celeste said.
"''m especially proud that our
rommltment to Ohio coal ... has led
to the largest federal Investment In
clean-coal technology ever made In
our state."
01 nine projects the Energy
Department said· it wUI assist, four
are tn Ohio and wlll receive $190
mll1lon.
Another $10 mllf!on In state funds
wlll go General Electric Co., lor an
Integrated gas!flcallon-steam In·
jected gas turbine process at Its

••

plant in the Cincinnati suburb of
Evendale. The GE project will also
rocelve $78 m!llion In federal funds.
Other recipients include:
-Babcock &amp; Wilcox 's LIMB
expansion at Ohio Edison's Edgewater station in Lorain, $9.8 million
In state funds, S7.5 million in
Energy Department funds and $1.8
mllllon from the Environmental
Protection Agenc&gt;·:
-Babcock &amp; Wilcox's postcombustl:ln sulfur dioxide control
project at Ohio Edison's Toronto
plant In Jefferson County, $3.6
million In state funds, $2.4 million ill
EPA funds and $57,248 from the
Department or F.nergy:
-Ohio Ontario Clean Fuels Inc.,
which is building a prototype
coal-oil processing plant in Warren .
$2.5 million In slate funds , $45
million in Energy Department
funds;
-Sclo Potle'!' Co. in Scio. which
is building a facility that wlll
generate electricity and steam,
$215,001 In stale funds and a $2.5
million state loan :
-Columbia Gas System Service
Corp., which l~ developing a
catalytic reduct ion proress In coal
flue gas. $612,000 In state funds:
-Battelle Memorial Institute In
Columws, which will determine
til! feasibility of spray-diY scrubbing or hlgh·sultur coal, $259,800 In
state funds.
"I believe tthese projects) provide an q&gt;p:lrtunlty not only to help
the coal Industry and roal miners,
wt also to begin addressing the
.environmental concerns that all r1
us share," said Vlnn! Lucido, vk;e
president of District 6 t1 the United '
Mine Workers union.
•

.. '

�The o·aily

Ohio

Commentary
.

lll Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVIJfED TO THE INTERES'l'S OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

IS:m~ ....,_.._-r,~o::::l.=

qjv

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROmGEB, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETrERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than

:m words

long . All J~tters aresubjec1to eel ltlng and rmst be signed wl!h name, address and
teleph one number. No unslgn£!1 lellers will be published. Letters should bE&gt; In

good taste. addressing Issues, not persona lities .

~ Reagan

relishes
:his last hurrah
"It's great to be out on the campaign trail, especially when I'm
campaigning for someone else," says President Reagan.
It ls Reagan's last hurrah. But the question of "what makes Ronnie run"
is another story. He has embarked on an all-out campaign In retain
Republican control of the Senate and has tloo the future of his own policies
to that effort.
"I didn't go to Washington to be a six-year president," he told a Denver
fund-raising gathering. "I didn't seek re-election just to trotect the gains of
the first term.
"There are too many exciting challenges still before America, and too
much business that still must be completoo in these next two years," he
added. "And I don't want my hands tioo by a totally hostile Congress."
The president abhors the possibU!ty that he might bse some political
ground during the remainder of his term. So he is hoping his popularity will
carry the day for GOP candidates who will be riding his coattails.
Reagan's speeches fall into a formula that has been successful for him.
They are light, or totally lacking in specifics, and heavy on generalities and
attacks on the Democrats with particular digs at the "liberalleadershlp"
vs. the rank tue who he is telling to chan~ their party affiliation.
The heavy emphasis on a drug-free society Is an issue all candidates can
grab with Impunity and be on the right side. That does not mean that the
Issues of war and peace, the nuclearthrm t, the deficit a nd South Africa wUl
not have a place on the hustings. But it is doubtful that the president wUl be
focusing on controversial subjects when it is easter to make the sweeping
charges that his opponents want to tum the clock back to the bad old days
when Democrats ruled the roost.
Between the political trips, once a week in September and twice a week
in October, Reagan has his campaign work cut out for him. But he
welcomes the chance to get out among his supporters and to promote his
Reagan revolution.
Other presidents who 51'1' their time in office sl ippin g away might be
thinking about their memoirs, and a future out of til' Whi te House. But not
Reagan. He has made it clear that he will be leaving with great reluctance
and only because a ccnstitutlonal amendment bars him from running
·
again.
Otherwise, lt is clear that he would be trying for a third term. Franklin
Roosevelt dld it four times, and Reagan , who was an FOR ad mirer at the
time, thinks It is wrong that he cannot make unlimitoo bids for the
presidency as long as the people want him.
In many ways it is refreshing to see a 75-year-old president still rarin' to
go. and relishing the moment s at tilt' bunting-rtrapf'd podium when he can
rally the troops for his final battlr.
The president will take a brieftlmmut on Oct. I when he helpstodooicatr
the new Jimmy Carter presidential library in Atlan ta , Ga. Politics will be
set aside for a few hou rs for two men who have bern morrloes than friends
in the past several years.
But Reagan soon will be joining that rmst exclusive clu b in the nation.
made up of past presidents, and t!J&gt;re may be &gt;Orne politically mellowing
as hC' tx&gt;comcs an rldPr statesman .

WElL, To ~HoW MY Col'l§TiTllENT~

I AM EVEN MORE ANTI - DRUG
THAN THE ~ENAToR FRoM IOWA, T
VIILL TAKE. MY DRU6 T£ 2JT RIGHT
HERE ON TV .. .

Tuesday, September 16. 1986

To· U gh Old

The Daily Sentinel

ZZZZZJPPPPP 1

•

;_T oday in history
Today is Tuesday. Sept. 16. the 259th day of 19tll with 106 to follow.
The moon ls moving toward its full phase.
There ls no morning sta r.
• The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars. Jupi ter and Saturn.
· Those born on this date are under ttl&gt; sign of VIrgo. They Include
))istorlan Francis Pa rkman In 1823, raliroad magnate James Jerome Hill
!)118J!. department store founder James Cash Penney in 1875, British car
designer Walter Bentley ln 1888, entertainer AUen Font k11914 !age 72),
actress Lauren Bacall in 1924 t age 621. blues mu sician B. B. King ln 1925
tage 611, and actor Peter Falk ln 19Zl(age ~I.
' On this date ln history:
~ In !620. the Mayflower left Plymouth, England, with 102 passen~rs
bound for America.
; In 1893, more than 100.1XXl people rushed tot he Cherokee Strip as alar~
area ot the Indian Territory, now Oklahoma, was q&gt;ened to IDmesteaders.
· In 1974, President Ford offered condltbnal amnesty to VIetnam draft
dodgers and evaders. He said they cou ld come home If they performed up
to two years of public service.
' In 1983. Vanessa Wllllams of New York became the Orst black to be
"anned Miss America. She resjgned the crown 11 rmnths later when
penthouse magazine published nude photos of her.
; In 1985, a near $32 billion balance of payments deOclt plunged the United
States Into debtor status for first time In n years.
: A thought tor the day: Historian Francis Parkman said. "Ther~ are no
l!Oiltical panaceas, except In the imagination ot political quacks.

Elway paces Denver's 21-10
victory over Pittsburgh team

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SALJSBURY, Md. - In this part
of the oountry, from Portland,
Maine, down to Richmond, Va., just
about everyone knows the name of
Frank Perdue. They know hlm
from 'IV as "the tough man who
makes a tender chicken."
I didn't think Frank was tor real.
Given that brooder-house beak, I
thought he came !rom Central
Casting. Hls television commer·
clals have become classics. The
good Lord scored Perdue's vocal
cords for a spllt·reed oboe and a
bass kazoo, and he delivers his TV
messages ln the mellifluous tones of
a rooster caught ln a Door fan.
"Don't wonder why my chlckens
are so yellow," he squeaks.
"Wonder why the other fellow's are
so whlte."
Like hls chickens, Perdue is a
low-fat blrd. At 66, he stands six feet

]ames]. Kilpatrick
bl.~d
• · ------------·

tall and weighs a trim i70 pounds.
When I saw him he had just
retumoo from Indiana, where he
had not bought a $00 million turkey
operation. He's still a little tentative
about turkeys , and he decided
against this purchase because
that's what this operation was : a
turkey.
Earlier he had enjoyed a three·
week vacation In Sante Fe, where
he walked four miles a day at 12.5
minutes to the rnlle. When he walks
he counts every other step, with an
eye on the second hand of his watch,
just to be certain hls stride
production is on schedule. Frank
just hates 10 waste time.
There Is an American success
story here, and such stories are
always worth repeating. Perdue
was horn in 19ll .toa dirt -poor farm

famlly in Salisbury. His formal
education, yru might say, was
minimal. His practical education
was ext.enslve. His beloved father,
of wIDm he speaks with toochlng
affection, taught him the rudiments
of the chicken business and much
more besides. "Mr. Art 11.11' •taught
him to hate debt, to deal fairly and
to market an honest product.
Thday Perdue presides &lt;Rer a
$Dl million enterprise with annual
sales d. $!110 million. HI' is the
flfth-lar~ st chicken rroducer in the
nation. About 25 employees own a
little piece of the business; he and
his famUy own all the rest. It is an
Immensely profitable mterprlse,
based upon marlo?Ung rmre than
:nJ miUion chickens a year. That's
six .mUllan chlckms a week, and
Perdue Is proud of every one of
them.

ruruc ~rm 1m m11 'rmR

A}U)- MO~ A

~

Clout benefits
WASHINGTON -The way to a
man's heart may, as the lady said,
he through his stomach : But there's
little doubt that the way to a
congressman's generosity 1with
til' taxpayers' money) is through
his wlfe.
Nine esteemed Institutions of art
and culture in Washington. D.C.,
have capitalized on nearness and
dearness to form a n unusual
"pillow talk" lobby by putting
congressmen·s wives - and the
wives of some prominent branch
officia ls - on their boards of
directors.
The results have been astonish·
ing: At a time of drast ic retrench·
ment by the National Endowment
for the Humanities. these crafty
few have seen their federal funding
grow significantly while arts
groups in the hinterlands have
suffered steep cuts In grants from
Washington.
Not only that. but $3.5 million of
the money earmarked for the
wives' pet artistic outlets didn 't
even require the bothersome com·
petition for funds that less well ·
co nnectoo supplicants must en·

What accounts for his success?
PertiJe could give lesso115 to every
business executive In the land. The
first factor Is quality control. The
gentleman Is obsessed by the
subject. Asecond factor Is constant,
unrelenting research and development. He spends $10 million a year
on his laboratories and research
farms , trying com;tantly to develop
a formula for {eed that will rroduce
a chicken with the least possible fat
and the roost possible meat. A third
factor Is aggressive advertising and
marketing. Put them to~ther, and
you have Perwe Farms Inc.
It Is a truism of the industry that
no one can say which comes first,
the chicken or tiE egg. Maybe the
feed comes first. Perdue mixes his
OWn feed from com and soybeans
that are milled ln his own plant. To
thls basic mixture he adds a little of
thls and a little of that, some
vitamins here and some extra
proteins there. A small platoon of
Ph.D. s Is constanlly sampling and
testing.
Perdue's laying hens occupy the
equivalent of condominium pent·
houses at Boca Raton. From their
:nJ mUUon eggs come the chlcks
that wUI he hatchoo at Perdue
hatcheries. The chicks are a careful
crossbreed d. leghorns and Cornish
stock, broo for fast growth and
broad breasts. The day-old chicks
go out to 3,000 gro..,rs who feed
them Perdue's feed. right down to
the measuroo oonce, and shlp
healthy birds on exacting schedules. At two pounds Dve weight,
the birds are ready for processing
as Rock Comls h hens; at 4.5 JDundS
they turn Into broilers. and at eight
pounds Ill roasters.
By 1900, says Per&lt;lle, chicken
wUl have wertakm beef as the No.
I meat on the American table. He
gives no thought to retiring. "I'm
not the retiring type." This Is a guy
who loves what he 00es ilr a living.
That's probably the fourth factor in
his success - or the first.

TORNADOETTE VARSITY - Mem!Ers of the .
1986 Southern Thrnadoette Varsity VoUeyball squad
include, front, 1-r, ,Jill Nease; Karla Smith, Wendy
WoUe, Tamnr.v Theis.•, Tammy Holter, and Angle

Mets still waiting; lose 1-0
tilt to Cardinals in 13th rung
By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer
Champagne. like the collective
ego of the New York Mets. can· be
brulsoo.
As long as the Mets delay
clinching the National League East
division title, they'd best be carefu l
transpor1ing the six cases of extra
dry champagne they've flown from
New York to Philadelphia to St.
Louis.
A better plan - for the cham·

d Art - and Is a volunteer
fund -miser br another, the Capital
Children's Museum.
Sens. Paul Laxalt, R-Nev., and
Ted Stevens. R-Aiaska, are on the
matching Senate subcommittee.
Carol Laxa lt is a director d. Ford 's
Theater, another beneficiary of the
special endowment. Ann Stevens ls
a director of Arena Stage and
another recipient, the Washington
Opera Society. while she and her
husband have served on committees ri the Folger Shakespeare
Library. yet anot!J&gt;r anointed arts
institution.
rord 's Theater a!so uses the
direct approach. Rep. Joseph
McDade, R-Pa., a subcommittee
member, Is vice president of the
theater's board ri trustees.
"What you're j;ping to find," a
candid official of Ford's Theater
told our reporter David Davis, ·•IS
that organizations that have con·
gressmen and senators oo their
boards use them lor their names.
We find that their wives have more
time. They work their tails off for
us."

l·

irregu larit ies were the result of a
departmental policy of ~nerally
leasing too much coal too quickly.
The department says it is now
ready to resume coal-lease sales,
probably late next year or In early
1988. under new rrocedures that
correct some obvious abuses but
fall to deal wlth many fundamental
issues.
There is, for exa mpl e, neither a
prohibition against strip mining in

1\y l"nlh•d

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mentioned, the nlne Waslington
entitles Include the New National
Building Museum and the PhUI!ps
Gallery.
Seven of til' nine institutions get
other, competitive funds ,from the
Humanities Enoowment. From
1983 to 1985. federal funding for
these seven rose 41 percent- about
the same percentage that the
grants to arts organizatlorLS nationwide have droppf&lt;i .
Acting Endlwment chairman
John Agresto Is not happy about the
special "insider" funding. With the
White House's blessing, he has tried
to kill the special program He
p&gt;lnts out that the favoritism ls not
just geographic but size-oriented as
well; only applicants that spend at
least $1 million a year are eligible to
receive money from the special
fund .
This led Agresto to use a sardonic
twist oo the Bible ln a letter to
Yates: "Freezing out the smaller
Institutions seems to imply that to
whom much ls already given, even
more shall they receive."

Berry's World

O i i&lt;'d).!O 7. Mu n!lv.tl .I
Sl l .&lt; oLtl• 1. ;.; ~- \'&lt;•rk ll_ J:i innin~"'

u~t

In addition to those already

national [»rks nor any acknowledgment that !he supply d coal already
being mined under federal lease
programs far exceeds the market
demand.
Perhaps tile roost important, the
Interior Department offers n6
evidence that it Is wUiingtoexerclse
care and restraint in Its role as
guardian of a valuable natural
resource.

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PASADENA, Calif. iUPli- An
annual drawing that determines
who will be eligible to purchase

The Daily Sentinel
t l iSI'S 14,_96111
A. Dl vbdun of Multlmedln, In c.

Published f' Vf'rv nftf'rn oon. Monda y
lhrouRh Frlda~; . 111 Court Sl .. Po·
m4•roy. Ohi o. by thr Ohi o Vall r y Pub·
ll s hln,~;t Company.1Mu1HmPdla . In c.,
PomC'ro)', Oh io 4576q, Ph . 992,2156. ${'cond da.ss po.s taJ!c&gt; pa id at Pomt'r oy ,
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Transartions
t••.,... ,rl lf1

,t m ulti 1rar mnr ral "f

tickets for the Rose Bowl will be
held Oct. 17. lt was announced
Monday.
Those who wish to be included in
the drawing are asked to send a
postcard wlth their name and
address to: Rose Bowl Ticket
Drawing, Pasadena . Calif.. 9ll84.
Postcards must be postmarked
between Sept. 15 and Oct. 15.
Of the thousands of postcards
expected to be received. 1.750 will
be drawn at the RDse Bowl.
allowing the sender to purchase two
tickets. All tickets are for seats at
the ends of the bowl and cost $36
each.
The 1987 game will be played on
Thu'rsday, Jan. I.

POSTMASTER: St' nd addri'Ss cha ngf'S
to The Da \l v St&gt;ntlnl'l. 111 Courl Sl..
Ponv'roy. Ohi o 45700.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
On e Yl&gt;"rck .. ............................. . .$1.25
One Month ............................ ... $5.4~

Onf' Y('ar ...

.. .... ........ S65.00

SINGLE COPY
PRICE

Dally ........ , ........................ 2~ Ce nt s
Subscrlbt'rs not d('S i rln~ to pay the car rier may r emit ln advanl'£' dlrrct to
Th e Dallv Sen lin PI on a 3. 6or 12 month
basis. cr'rou will be glvcn carrier ea ch
week .

No su bscripTion~ by ma ll permitted ln
area s wh en• hom£&gt; carrlt' r ll£'rv lc£&gt; Is
available.

"Already hankerln' to be back on the ranch?"

"

U·

Rose Bowltirket drawing set Oct. 17

Memb('r: Un ited Prf&gt;S ~ ln1rrn3tlonal.
In la nd Dally Prrss Ass (X·iatlon an d !h('
Ohi o Nrw sPapN Associ ation . Nati onal
Advprtlslnll RrprcsPn ta!lvr . Branham
N('V.'Spap('r Sal£'s, 7.1.1 Third Avf'nue .

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College ratings

To ·~ a.• 11-!0Uf:! h !'!-\I ll &lt;rl 0 ;1kLonrl , ,\nrll&gt;].ll

Cllll. ll!ll

166 leases were issued in the
ensuing 40 years.
From 1960 to 1970, however. 319
federal coal leases were lssuoo,
many of them to real estate
speculators who had no Interest in
developing the coal resrurces.
To halt that scandalous pract ice
and gain time to devise remooial
measures, the Interior Department
!mposoo a moratorium on all
coal-lease sales from 1971 to 1981.
After the program resumoo in
January 1981, 14 coal-lease sales
..,re held - but in November 19&amp;3,
Congress Imposed another morato·
rium (whlch ls stlllln effect I after a
new scanda I developed .
The current moratorium fol·
lowed the disclosure of multiple
irregularities and gross rnlsman·
agement in connection with the
lar~st coal-lease sale in the
nation's history - the AprU 1982
r:tfering of 13 tracts containing 1.6
billion toos of coal ~ the Powder
River Basin of Wyoming and
Montana.
Among the problems: The Interior ~partment inex~lcably
chan~d Its bidding system ooly six
weeks prior to the sale, and
valuable government data was
apparently "leaked" to bidders. A
congressional subcommittee
char~d that the winning bidders
hoo reoped "windfall profits"
because they received leases at
"lire sale" prices.
The General Accounting Office in
a scatting critique calculatoo that
the $67 million the government
received for the leases was $100
mUUOn less than their fair market
value.
Both the Office of Technology
Assessment and a special commis:
slon bnpaneled by the Interior
Department concluded that the

Monda~· ~ -~

Majors

Western COal rush ________R_ob_e_rt_W_al_te_rs
(First of two related colwnns)
CASPER. Wyo. - From the
ea rly !BOOs, when ccal became me
of thls ccuntry's major sources of
fuel, untU less than a decade ago,
Appalachia has been the nation's
most important coal producing
area .
As recently as 1976. Kentucky ,
Pennsylvania and West Virginia
were the three leading coal-mining
states, accounting for a total of
almost 345 milllons tons annually.
In the same year. Wyoming ranked
a distant seventh. yielding only
slightly more than ll million tons.
The past two decades. however,
have produced profound changes in
U.S. coal production. Only fi rst·
ranked Kentucky. expectoo to
account for 16.1 million tons this
year, retains Its former status.
Wyoming, whose projected 1986
production ls 148 million tons, has
taken over second place.
All four of the ccuntry 's lar~st
coal mines are loca ted in Wyoming
and the fifth biggest ls in neighbor· ·
lng Montana. Those two states
account for eight of the nation 's 10
most productive coal mines.
Montana ranks first ln demon·
strated coal reserves available for
future mining. Illinois Is in second
place, followoo by Wyoming while Kentucky, Pennsylvania and
West Virginia trall In fourth, fifth
and sixth place, respectively.
As coal mining continues In shift
markedly from the East to the
West, the federal government OW!LS
60 percent of all Western coal
reserves and Indirectly controls an
additional 20 percent.
The Mlneml Lands Leasing Act
of 19:ll autiDrized the Interior
Department In ot!er bng-term
leases to Individuals and companies
seeklng to mine the coal, but only

pagne ~ not Mets fans - would of
course be to drink it in St. Louis
rather than sending it back to New
York .
The Mets droppf&lt;i their fourth
straight away from home and six th
in seven ga mes Monday night when
the St. Louis Cardinals held on for a
I ~ 0 triumph in 13 innings. That loss
coupled wlth second-place Philadel·
phia's 5.0 victory over Pittsburgh
kept NewYork'smagtc number for

Scoreboard ...

arts~___J_a_ck_A_n_de_rs_on_&amp;Jo_se_:_p_h_:Sp~e_ar
_

dure. The House. deferrtng to the
husbands of the patrons of the arts,
set up a unique non-competitive
fund !The National Capital Arts
and Cultural Affairs Program I
tailored specifically for the nine
Washington cultural organizations.
It may be unseemly to drooge up
Byron's mocking couplet: "But Oh 1 ye lords of ladies intellectua1,/Inforrn us truly, have they not
henpeck'd you all?" Yet the
nagging suspicion arises that the
patrons' propinquity to power must
have had something to do with Itall.
ronsider:
The leader of the ltluse culture
wltures is Rep. Sidney Yates.
!).Ill., chairman of the Appropriations subcommittee that oversees
the Humanities Endlwment
budget. He gOt $2 million in
non-competitive funding for the
Nepotic Nine last year, and pushed
through the current $3.5 million thls
year.
Yates' wife, Adeline. is a director
of three of the recipients - the
National Symphony Orchestra. Ar·
&lt;na Stage and the Corcoran Gallery

Grueser. Back row-Coach &amp;zanne WoUe, Tracie
Hubbard, Joyce Foreman. Jennifer Arnold, Crystal
mu. and Rachel Reiher.

Mall Subscrlptlonl
Inside Mei&lt;S County
13 w..ks ... ............ .. ................. $17.29
26 w..ks ... ..........·.................. $34.06
52 w...ks ..... .......... ................... $66.56
OUtside Melp (:ounty
13 Weeks ....... .......................... $18.20
26 w.. ks . ................
.. $35.10
52 Weeks ............................... $07.60

. 't '

Friday's games

clinchin g the National League East
at two.
New York cou ld have clinchoo
with even one victory In three
weekend gam~s at Philadelphia.
Instead, they lost three In a row to
keep their magic number stalloo at
two.
"We're not a bad ballclub
because we lost four games in a
row," said RDger McDowell, who
walked in pinch hitter Curt Ford
with the bases Joadoo in the 13th to
fall 13-9. "We're 20 tactually 181
games ahead . We're as good as we
think we are."
Willie McGee who celebratoo
with the Cardinals when they won
the NL East over New York last
year. offered some advice to the
Mets.
"They go home after this !Tues·
day night's game I. let them clinch
at Shea," McGee said. "It's much
better to do it at home than on the
road ."
Actually a New York triumph
couploo with a Philadelphla defea t
would allow the Mets to clinch
tonight. No matter. the clinching
will come. What is of immooiate
concern to the Mets is their losing
streak.
"The key is to turn this around,
not just win one game," said New
York's Ray KnJght. "Weneedtoget
a winning streak going into the
playoffs."
McGee drew a leadoff walk ln the
!Jth and wa s sacrificedtosecond by
Andy VanSlyke. McGee moved to
third on an infield single by John
Morris and Terry Pendleton
walkoo on four pitches Ill load the
bases. Ford, batting for winning
pitcher Todd Worrell, 9-10, ran the
count Ill 3·2 before taking an inside
pitch that was calloo ball four by
home plate umpire Billy Willlams .
" It wasn 't anything I oould hlt ,"
said Ford. " It wasn't close. II wa s a
baU."
St. Louis Manager Whitey Her·
z~ sald he did not know lf the pitch
was a ball or strike.
"It was kind of close to take,"
Herzog said.
New York starter Ron Darling
allowed ju st two hit s after the
second Inning in checking the
Cardi nals on tour hlts in nine
innings of work. Darling struck rut
seven but walked four.
Rick Horton checked the Mets on
three hits through seven innings of
scoreless relief.
In the other games, Philadelphla
blanked Pittsburgh :Hl and Olicago
whlppf&lt;i Montreal 7-3.
In the AL it was: California 6,
Chicago 5; New York 5, Baltimore
3; Cleveland 4, Minnesota 0;
Toronto 5, Milwaukee 2. and Texas
6, Oakland 2.

Phillles 5, Pirates 0
At PhUadelphla, John Russell
drove ln four runs and D:&gt;n Carman
pitched a four-hitter, pacing the
Phlllles to their fourth stmight
triumph. Carman. 9-5. struck out
four and walked one in hls first
career shutout. Pittsburgh's Rick
Rhoden !ell to 15-9. Mlke Schmidt
hit his 36th homer d the season and
494th lifetime, moving past Lou
GehrJg into 14th place on the
all-time list.
Cubs 7, Exp&gt;s 3
At Montreal, OllcoWalkerwent4
for 5, scored twice and drove In a
run to pace Olicago. Jamie Moyer,
1&gt;4, pitched five Innings for the
victory with Scott Sanderson llnlsh·
lng for llls Orst save. Sergio Valdez,
0· 2, took the loss.

Ga ltlpolls at Wellston
Lucasville at Portsmouth West
Athens at Point Pleasant
..
Wheeling Park at Warren Local
Logan at ClrclevWe
John Marshall at Marietta
FAll HARDY MUMS .
Jackson at Waverly
ASSOrTED COlOIS
$225 loxh
Coal Grove at Wheelersburg
Rock ijlll at South Pojnt
·
5 01 ~II $200 Eo.
Kyger Creek at Southwestern.
(2 GAL SIZEI
Hannan Trace at Oak Hlll
10 tl.
North Gallla at Southern
HANGING BASIIETS $400
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Ironton St. Joe at Wahama
MlUer at Meigs
Trimble at Belpre
VInton County at Alexander
SyracUit, Oh.
992·5776
Federal Hocking at NelsonvilleOpen Dall 9·5, Closed S.ttlo
York

------------4

By POHlA SMD'H
UPI Sports Writer
PITTSBURGH iUPI I - Denver
quarterback John Elway, who
guided a 21-10 .victory over the
Pittsburgh Pirates Monday night .
sald the Broncos were about an inch
away from a big play all night.
According to the television re·
plays, the officials were about 72
inches away from the right call on
the Broncos' biggest trick play of
the night.
The Broncos were able to win
despite the fact that their biggest
trick play of the night, a 79-yard,
flea -flicker touchdown pass from
Gerald WUlhltetoSteveSewell. was
disallowed. The officials ruled erroneously according to replays that the flea-flicker was an illegal
second forward pass.
"I couldn't believe the call." said
Elway, who led the Broncos to their
first Monday night road triumph by
throwing for 235 yards and three
touchdowns.
The 34-yard ID pass Elway
threw to Sewell while the Steelers
ganged up on Sammy Winder
faking a dive play late ln the second
quarter was sufficient to put
Denver's record at 2-0 and ln a tie
wlth Seattle for the early lead in the
AFC West. That ID gave the
Broncos what proved to be an
insurmountable 14·3 lead.
"In a game like this, we have to
get some big plays to win, " Elway
said. "Because they (the Steelers)
bring the house after you time after

ruling illegal.
"l think the replay Is good,"
Reeves said. "but it's new, and we'll
have problems with it. It wUl get
better."
Reeves . unh appy with the
Denver defense in a J8.36 season·
opening victory over the Los
An~les Raiders. said he trought
the unit showf&lt;i marked Improve·
ment against Pittsburgh.
The dcfensr held the Steelers to
on ly 68 net yards in the first hall . In
the four1h quarter, with Denver
leading JJ.IO. Simon Fletcher
stoppf&lt;i a Pittsburgh drive by
r~overing David Hughes's tumble
on the on the Denver l'i. Later. Tony
U lly int erceptoo and returned a
Ma rk Malone pass four yards to the
Pittsburgh 31. and Elway cappf&lt;i
the Broncos' sccring six plays later
with a 13-.vard ·m pass to Winder.

Meet the Eastern
High School Eagles

Montana out for
year with injury
SAN FRANCISCO iUPii- Joe
Montana. the star quarterback who
led the San rranclsco 49ers to two
Super Bowl victories, may be back
ln 1987 alter most likely missing the
rest of this season.
Montana underwent two hours of
surgery Monday to remove a disc in
his lower back that was pressing
against the sciatic nerve. Doctors
said there was ' less damage than
anticipated in the area and did not
have to fuse Montana 's back.
"Simply put, the operatkln went
well," sald the team of ooctors
ll'adoo by Dr. Art White ln a
preparoo statement. "He Is doing
well and should be hospitalized
about seven days."
The news gratified 49a-s Coach
Bill Walsh. who said during halftim
of the telecast of Monday night's
ganne between Pittsburgh and
Denver the estimated recovery
period ls 12· 14 weeks.
"Joe came through the operation
nicely and we expec t him to be rn
the field again," Walsh said .
As i&gt;rthe near future, Walsh said
the 49ers would adapt their game
plan In make the most of llackup
Jeff Kemp's talents.
"We'll oo what we have to to
move the ball to score," he said.
"The emphasis with Jeff wUl be
more oown the field and we'll
emphasize the running ganne."

TERRY NEWSOME
100-Pound
,Jomior Tackle

DAN TJUPP

!50-Pound
Freshman End

....

DEREK YONKER
165-Pound
Frt.'Siunan Tackle

CHAD SINClAIR
111&amp;-Pound
Sophomore Tackle

Yankees trip Orioles, 5-3;
Indians blank Twins, 4-0
By United f'reois Internallonal
Don Mattingly probably fouloo up
f
tin
rt M nday
anight.
ew scou g repo s 0
Scoutsnowwillhavetoaddthisto
Mattingly's report: Can hit baUs
over hls head, with power.
Mattingly, dan~rous enough on
pitches thrown ln or around the
:;trike zone, belted a high fastball
for a game-winning, three-ru n
IDmer off Don Aase ln the seventh
inning to lead the New York
Yankees to a 5-3 victory over the
Baltimore Orioles.
In &lt;j her games, Callfomia ooged
Chicago &amp;5, Cleveland blanked
Minnesota 4.0, Toronto defeated
Mllwaukee 5-2 and Texas toppf&lt;i
Oakland 6-2.
In the National League. lt was:
St . Louis 1, New York 0 in 13
innings; Phlladelphla 5, Ptttsbu rgh

SHOTO-KAN

O; and 0\lcago 7, Montreal J
At Cleveland . Tony Bernazard
be lted a ~lo homer to back
knuckleballer Tom Ca ndiottl's
seven-hit pitching to help the
Indians earn their rourth straight
\octorv. Candiotti. 14· 11, hurloo his
teague -leading 14th complete
ganne. He is 12·2 In his complete·

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio ha.s sst
for public he&amp;rtns case
No . 86-02-EL·EFC, to
review the fuel procure·
ment
practices and
pollcles of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
of Its Electric Fuel Component and related matters. This hearlnS le
scheduled to beS1J! at
10:00 a .m . on September
22, 1986, at the offices of
the Public Utilities Com·
m!eslon, 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43218.
Interested

Start1'ng at

8·.00 P.M.

AT THE CULETON SCHOOL
SYRACUSE
Instructors
Mick Howell, 9'12·6839

Jg;am~e~
e~ff~or~ts~.~F~r:an:k~V:io=la~,~14~·=12~.r:::::E:d:C:o:za:rt:·:":":2:·:5:8'1:6:::::
the loss.

We'll install new brakes, add
brake fluid as needed and
road test your car. American
made and most imports.
(Metallic Pads Extra[

$2566

ALIGNMENT
We'll align your vehicle's front
wheels 11tting all adjustsle angles
to manufacturer's original spedfica·
lions. American cars and many im·

ic~~~atte toe only) $

1450
Pam extra
ifnoetletl

parties

w1l1 be given an oppor·
tunlty to be heard.. Fur·

thtr tnrormatlon may be
obtained by oontactlng
the Commission.

THE

KARATESept. 16

Beginning Classes

~took

LEGAL NOTICE

All

HUIBARDS
GREENHOUSE

time. it 's hard to make big plays.
We were about an inch away all
night long. "
The replays. shown several times
·after the Broncos complainoo.
clearlv showoo that the play startoo
with Elway throwing a latera l at
least two yards back to Willhite.
The officials. quizzed later by a
pool reporter. said they saw it as a
forward pass and did not ask the
new member of their crew - the
replay o~erver. Paul Trepinskifor his opinion. He. in turn. did not
sign al any objection to their call .
and Trepinski was mt available
after the game to explai n why he
didn't intercede.
Denver Coac h Dan Reeves even·
tually persuaded the officials to look
at the replay . But by that time . the
teanns already had run another
play, making a reversal of lhr

PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann Orllnsltl,

POMEROY
HOME
&amp;
AUTO
MAIN
992-6606

POMEROY

1966·1986

~

•

•

�Pomeroy- Midrllepon, Ohio

16,1986

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write D1itlr Sentinel Clmititd Dept
111 Cou1t St., Pome1or. Obio &amp;S769

Tuesday, September 16, 1986
Page-4-

J.l.'s IEPAIIS
SNAFUTMby Bruce Beattie

Public Notice

Beat of the Bend

Noting Christmas early
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel staff Writer
John Mohler has a way c1 making
me feel negllgent.
Would you helieve that John's
Cbrlstmas cards
are In the mall.
By the way, John
has moved from
Leading Creek
Road and Is now living in what Is
known as the old Wllliam Priode
farm . The house is owned by
Blanche Edwards. His folks lived
on the farm in the 19:al's and ll's.
It always good to hear from you,
John. But do you know whiit you
what a Christmas card in midSeptember does to someone who
'h as been known to he addressing
cards on Christmas E VP - or even
to shove them aside unt il anothe r
year?
The Rutland Emergency Sq uad
hangs right in there in an attempt to
get those air bags which they need
for accident runs .
The group does things the old
fashioned way - they EARN their
equipment.
So 00 Oct. 26. the group will hold a
Captain D's fi sh dinner at thf&gt;
Rutland Civic Center a nd on Nov. 8
the squad will hold its ilurth annua l
Christmas ba zaar at the center.
TI!ey'd like for all of yru craft and
sales people to take part. You can
rent a table lor $5 but you should
make arrangements right awav.
Call Marcia Elliott at 742-2233. or J o
Ann Eads at 742-ll78.
Suzan Thoma will start her
sophomore year at Rio Grande
College on Sept. 2.1. She is a mem ber
of Theta Phi Alpha Sorority - a nd
not a recipient of a scholarship from
that &lt;llrority as reportedly recent!,·.
And lor you hunters- hunters of
wildlife. that is.
The Ohio Department of Na tu ral
Resou=s will il:' sponsoring a

hunter safety course at Southern
High School beginning at 6 p.m . on
Sept. 23.
Class size will be limited and
anyone interested in taking the
course must register in advance.
You can do that by calling 843-5405
- before Sept. 20.
And something lor the pet
owners. Who says you don't get
variety here?
The Meigs County Humane
Society and the Meigs County
Health Department will hold thf&gt;ir
final rabies clinic of the season this
Saturday from l to 4 p.m. at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Dr. Carol Osborne will be the
attending veteranarian and other
immuniza tions will il:' availab le.
Rabies shots are $.3. Dogs a re to be
on a leash and cats in a container.
Maybe yru 'rr a card player-.
Perceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will be
staging a card party - all types of
eard games to be played- at 7: ll
p.m . on Sept . 25 at the Pomeroy
Village Hall auditorium . There will
be door prizes and refres lunent s
will be served.
An appeal has been issued on
behalf of Dimples Eakins whose
home in Minersville was destroyed
by lire Sunday morning.
Needed are women's medium
blouses. jeans in sizes 8 and 9. and
shoes in sizes fi or 7; jeans for two
teenage boys. siZe :t!-32. medium
shirts and sines. 8 and 8\1,: size 14
jeans. s•;, sines. and shirts lor a l2
year old boy, and size 3 trousers.
size ~ shi ns and size 8 shoes lor a
three vear old bov.
Items can be left at the i\pple
Grove Church . which will be open
all wf'f'k. If yw need somPOne to
pick up ycur co nttibutions call
247-2604.
There's no such thing as Blur
Monday - just blue people. Bette;·
keep sm ili n~.

Carl reunion is conduaed
The annual Carl reunion was held

Aug. 31 at the scout cabin on
Kingsbury Road, Pomeroy.
AMending were Bruce and Lor·
ena Briekles. Dal&lt;'. Ma rlene Scott
and Jodi ·Harrison. Lloyd, Eva.
Brian, Brlll and Phil King. Phil,
Paulena. Rodd and Trevor Harri·
son. Mona . J ason and Amy
Frecker. Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Brickles. Faye Pratt. Mr. and Mrs
Roy Brickles. Mr. and Mr. Olen
Harrison.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Riffle. lona
Brickles. Bud and Hazel Wilson.
Carolyn. David . Stephanie and
LoMte Darst, Virgil. .Judy. RandY.

Danny and Melodi Carl. J ulie
Wand\ in~ . Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Carl. Rodnev , Pau la and Nicole
Butcher. Oscar Scholl. Ronnie and
Ma tt R.tlfle. Chr istif' Hanes. all of
Pomcro)·.
.Roil:'!i. Stx&gt;ila and KP\ in Eastman. Ga llipnlis; J\·a n. Brenda and
Heattrr Carl. No wark; Del. Rod ·
ney. Debbie. Alldy, and Stepha me
Carl. Belpre: Terrv Coleen. Jav .
Jon. ann Jo shua. Zanf'S\'i:te; Cha ·
rles. Ftlleba .. lerem,· and Rvan
Hy sell. Mil bo•JrllE'. Fia : Miek a nd
De ni se Howell. Mi ddl eport :
Rhonda. Jodi. Se3n. and Dale
Gimon. 1\thens.

Organizations condua meetings
Chester UMW
"Education: An Opportunity for
Women," with John Riebel, Meigs
County Superintendent of Schools.
as guest speaker, was the program
topic at the recent meeting of the
Chester Unlt&lt;II Methodist Women
a t the church.
Mrs. Betty Roush and Mrs.
Bertha Smith had char~ of the
program ex plaining that the pur·
pose was to challenge and encourage women to take advantage of
opportuities offered by United
Methodist Women leadership development programs as well as
general education of institutbns in
the communities.
Scripture was read from the book
of Ephesians and St. Man hew, and
the group sang "How Great Thou
Art" with Mrs. ClariCe Allen· as
pianist.
In his talk, Riebel explained the
duties of the educators in his office.
He not ed the pa ttern where most
elementa ry teachers arp women. a
trend throu gh history. rut mentioned th at more women are now
rntermg the adminstrative lield . He
also spoke about the new program
on gift ed children which ~ being
in troduced into the Mei gs County
schools this year.
Mrs. Smith had the closing
prayer. Mrs. Denise Mora presided
at the mee ting attended by l4
members who reported 44 sick a nd
shu tin calls during the month.

D of A

Refreshments will be served.

POMEROY - XI Gamm a Ep·
sUon Sorority meets for a tea .
TUesday, 7 p.m .. a t the home of
Carol Crow.
LONG BOTIOM- Long Bot tom
rlame Fellowship will meet Tues·
day. 7:ll p.m., at the Mt. Olivp
Community Chu rch. Spea ker will
he Mark Mora from Mynle Beach.
S.C.
SA.L!SBUR Y - Open house wUI
he held at 7 p.m. TUesday at the
Salisbury Elemtary School with a
PrO meeting to follow at 7: ll p.m.

MIDDLEPORT- Th&lt;· Women's
Associatbn of Middleport First
Presbyterian Church will ho ld a
potluck supper and meeting at the
church . Tuesday. fi: ll p.m. Mrs .
Harley Brown will presrnt the book
study . Mrs. Guy Ha rper wUI have
rctn~t

Di\RW IN - A women's retreat
will be held Sept. 19-:al at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly at Da r·
win. Registration will be from
5-6:ll p.m . on the 19th wit h supper
at 6:30. Speaker ,will be Terry

By OPt\1.. DYER
Olllce Secretary
POMEROY- Wereyou thinking
about stocking your pond with fish.
rut didn't know where to g~t

Amsbary birth
Mr. and Mrs. James Amsbaf)'.
the former Merri Ault . Syracuse.
are announcing the binh of their
first child. a son. born on Sept ..1 at
the Pleasant Va lley Hosp ital. He
weighed seven and 12 ounces. and
has been named Kenlll'th Jerrod .
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. William Ault . Middleport.
a nd the m a ter na l grea tgrandmother Is Mrs. Elma Sindle.
Springfield. Paternal grandparents
are Mr. rtnd Mrs. Hugh Custer.
Pomeroy, and the late Kenlll'th
Amsbary.

wPrP

sPr vr-d

b~·

A dinner honorin g Esther
Harden. district deputy of District
13. Daug ht ers of Amer ica. and
A six wcek study program.
Eileen Clark. the council deputy.
"Fully
Human. Fully Alive." toil:'
was held recently b) Guiding Star
taught
bv Sister Margaret Rose.
Council 124. Syracuse. a t Crow's
willoc•g
in thr fi r&lt;~ week in October.
Steak House.
it
was
notr'Ci
111 1hr rr{'c·nt Sacred
Mrs. Ha rden and Mrs. Cla rk
Hf'art
C'
1
11
holir
Chu rch Parish
were pres en tt:'d red. white and blue
Cmmf'il mf'f•t ing
corsages bY Mar)· Donna Davis.
PI ail ~ wrrP dl s uru ~~Pd for organ councilor.
izing
d yuu th group and a get Following the dinner. ttx&gt; bdge
acquainted
part) was 92! l'or Sept.
convened for a regular meeting. It
28
at
6
p.
m.
fo r all youth of the
was announced that the district
meeting wil l be held on Satu rday. chu rch. The an nual Christmas
Oct. 4 at 10 a .m. at the Chester hall. bazaar wJs announced for Nov. 13.
Improvements to the cem eterv
A potlu ckdi nnerwillbeheld at noon
with tho se attending to take a road a&gt; well as refurbishing and
covered dish and their own table .rPimding somC' of the sta ined glass
windows ;md applying a prot ff'tive
serv ice.
cover
ing next month were
r rlendsh ip night will be ornerved
a t th&lt;' Chester hall on NO\· 6 at f&gt;: 30 discussed.
Attending were Sister Janet
p.m. with a potluck dinner . Sadie
Thuener. Pauline Moraritv. Eileen RPcht enW&lt;t ld. George Hackett.
Clar k and Es ther Hardf.n were Ca rrie Beegle. Bob Beegle, Pam·

Catholic Council

Duffy, Bernadette Anderson, Carol
McCullough, Emerson Heighton,
Richard Poulin. Catherine Welsh,
Diane Bartels, Carolyn Korn , and
Edward Burkett.

Preceptor Beta Beta
A card party was plan ned lor
Sept. 25 at Pomeroy Village Hall
when the Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi met
recently , at Grace Episcopal
Church parish house.
Members were reminded that
each is to .provide four dozen
eookles and a card table lor the
party with light refreshments to be
served during the evenin g.
Members are to meet at the hall on
the night before card party to assist
in setting up the tables a nd
completing other arrangements.
Tickets are $3. The mink blanket
wil be awarded that night .
Susan Jones. the Preceptor's
delegate to Buckeye Girls State. a
workshop in democracy sponsored
by the American Legion Auxiliary.
gave an enthusiastic report on her
experiences there.
Plans were made fo r an outing on
Oct. 9 to the Jindra Winery with
dinner at the Coloni al in Jackson.
The Christmas party and dance
was announced for Dec. 11 with
combined four sorority chapters at
the Senbr Citizens Center . The
dinner will be catered .
Attending were Jane Walton.
president. Donna Jolll's. Ruby
Baer. Betty Ohlinger, Clarice Ka ·
rutter. Vera Crow, Ann Rllpe . and
Roben.a O'Brien. with Mary Morris
and June Van Vranken hostesS('S.

nev.

'

Missionary Society
A program on "Fr iendship" with
Margaret Bailey, leader. highlighted the recent meeting of the First
Baptist Church Missionary Society
held at the church .
Caryl Cook opened the m""ting
with prayer. Officers' reports were
given. and Mrs. Cook read
"Thought s and Quotations." Other
readings were "A Jou mey of a
Thousand Miles Begin with a Single
Step ". "Today is the First Day of
the Rest of Your Life". "Hello". and
"So You Have Come Up." Taking
part were Nettie Barnhar t, Burian
Smith. Audrey Young. Mrs. Cook,
Phyllis Skinner and Maria Foster.
Mrs. Bailey had the closing prayer.
The love gift was dedicated by Mrs.
Barnhart. and a circle of prayer
c lased the meet ing.

Betty Roush and Cora El€t&gt;glc
were hostesses bra recent meeting
of the Past Councilors Club of
Chester Cou ncil 323. Daughters of
America. held a t tbe hall.
Mrs. Beegle presided at the
mff'ling using scriptu n:&gt; from St.
Mark R in her opening. Th&lt;' Lord 's
Prayer and pledge lo the flag were
given in unison. and Thelma Wh ite.
secretary, and Margaret Tuttle.
treasurer. gave report s.
Games were conduc!ed by Ada
Bissell and Leota Ferrell. a guest.
with prizes i;U ing to ttx&gt; winners.
R.elres lunents were served. Mrs.
Ferrell won thf&gt; door priZe.
Ot hers atten ding were Ma rga ret
Am il:'rg£-r, Go idi&lt;' Frederick .

"Invest In Exce llem&gt;e• .... Mow
wit h AAUW" was the theme of thP
Sou ttra st District meeting of the
Ohio Division of the American

Bradds. Cos t $2.50 per daY .
FamUy reu rion

RACl NE - The Gideon and
i\rtemesia Roush rN nion will be
reid Sunday. Sept. 21, at the
Shriners Park in Rac ine. Dinner at
1 p.m. Relatives and friends
invited .
CHESTF.R - The J ames C. and
Ethelinda Stone Moorp reunion has
il:'en planned for Sept . 21 at the
Rodney KeliN farm. just off Route
7 at Chester on 248 about a mile .
There will be a potluck dinner at l
p.m . and those attending are to take
lawn chairs .

County Fairgrounds on Thu rsday.
October 23. 1986 to pick up your fish .
Approx imatel y 10 gallons of water
per 100 fin~rlin gs should be
adequate.
We will be takin g orders until Oct.
14.
wUl
be between
l2 noon
andDelivery
1 p.m. on
Oct.
23.
If you would like more information concerning the fish sale, or to
order !Ish, contact the MelgsSWCD
Office at 992-ffi47 or stop by rur
office at 221 West Second Street,
Pomeroy, second fioor of the
Farmers Bank building.
All orders must be prepaid and
must be In by October 14.

Assoc iation of Universiy Women
he ld recently at Rio Grande College
in the James A. Rhodes Student
Center.
Gallipolis was the lnst branch
wit h Mrs. Pauline Smith and Ca rol
Ca ntrell. prcsident. in charg£' of
arrangements. Linda Waddell.
Portsmouth Branch. district coordi ·
nator. planned the meeting
ThP Gallipolis meet ing was one of
five fa ll district meet in~ being lv.'ld
in Ohio on the Excellence theme.
The program was followed bY a
lunchron and also included a tour of
ttx&gt; Bob Evans Farm.
The meetin g. conducted by state
officers and division chairmen , was
attended by 10 of l2 branches which

make up ttx&gt; Southeast District.
Represent ed we r e Marietta
Athf&gt;ns. Ironton. Portsmouth Wav·
erly , Ch.illicothe. Jackson .
Middleport -Pomer oy, Gallipol is
and Circleville.
The Mlddleport -Pomerov Area
Branch had eght members' attend ing, Christine Napier. president:
Fay Sauer, Helen Smith . Raehael
DowniP. Kathryn Kn igh t. Slblev
Slack, Virginia Carson. and DOrot hy Woodard, dlvisbn public
information chairman .

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

Served with whipped potatoes. chicken JllyY,
cole slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
no substitutes except beverage with additional

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432

POMEIOY I OH.

frill! Chicken

upon psyment of $25.00 per
set. which will be refuro:led if
the COI11)ktte set is retumed in
usuabte condition .

A Periormana&gt; Bood of
100% of the contract will be·
required for the faithful perfor-

Wage

rates

are

be · clearly

marked

Syra::use.
The Board of Meigs Cwnty
CommiiiSioners may accept

1he lowest bid or the best bid
for the intended purpose, and

lnsumnce

ur~ , Home, Ca r.

Bus int'.s.
One name says it all.

have a tree hearing test to see if this problem can be helped! Bung th is coupon
with you tor your FREE HEARING TEST ol S50 value. Adult s onty Please.

COME IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

r- i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-

HOW DO I CHOOSE A CASKET?
Whether you pi tift in .tvance for a funeral , cr are selectmg
1 casket lo! •.loved one who has passed away. the choice
til ht&amp;ltiY_Indtvldual !~fie . We will present for your inspection 1 vanety of quahty caskets. The decision is entirely
yours, and you malte thtr cho;ce ofa f1nal res tin&amp; place in a
calm and unp1essured ati!Misphere.
Cnklts pnnlly come in lhree types. First. there are softwood and clotiKoverttl casltlts. Second, are solid hardwood
caskill. Finally, thtre are casltlts lttlde of metal; sturdy
still, copper, 01 bronze. The tlr• typts differ in IPPNrance
•d ln4i¥14Nalltltllr•, 11dr • structural str•tth. colOr and
crnarn•bfllorr. These dlfler11ces male thtr choice of a casket
0111 wtidl ttllould be m••lfllr careful consid1111ion and
COIIIIllltion wlttr your fu ,_1 directors.
Wt Clll provide information on typts IJI caskets and costs
to help you make •. raponsible choice. As ~meral direc·
tors, wt lrt COntrllttt• to servlnc your best interests in
ntl~lnc thlst import•t decisions. Please call us or stop
by 1f wt t:an help you it eny way.

"$1wloe Pl~t...AIItlltlo.ll to D•ttl.l"
BU BLOWER

Vlrginia Crew, Executrix

Public Notice

Public Notice

plaintiffs. A-v Gosgloin and IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Holeno Googlein. husboro:l Brld COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY.
wile, Atbort Goeglein. and
OHIO
Charles Goegteln and Moxlrle DIAMOND SAVINGS &amp;
Goegtein, husbend and wife,
LOAN' COMPANY
IWld, turther demanding that
Plaintjff
judgment be .,.,dared In
VS.
ptBintiffa', AYI!IfY Goegtoin 111d
CLIFFORD R. SMITH. et al
Helene Goegteln, huobond and
Defendants
wile. Albert Goegtoin, and
Case No. 86-CV-98
Chariea Goegleln and Moxeno
NOTICE BY
Goegtein, husbond and wWs,
PU.BLICATtON
favor agar.st defendant!, Dark
You are hereby notified that
Diamond Coat Corporation you have ~ nsmed Delandand Market Mining, Inc.. in the ant in the action entitled
amount of Forty Two Thou- Diamond SavW.gs Loan Comsend Seventy One and pony. PIBintiff. vs. Clifford R.
91 / 100 Dottars($42,071 .911 Smith. Bt st .. DefendBnts. This
together with interest and action has been assigned Case
for such other relief at law or No. 86-CV-98. and is pending

in equity as may be found to
be neceuary and proper to
grant plaintiffs full relief and
recovery of plaintiffs ' com

herein .
You are notified that you
are required to answer the
complaint with· in twenty·
eight days aher the last pu ·
blication . which will be pub·
lished once each week for
siK consecutive week6. the
last publication will be made

Plaintiffs

vs.
DARK OtAMOND COAL
CORPORATION, et at.

Defendants

in the Court of Common Pleas
of Meigs County, Ohio,

45769. The prayer of the
Complaint dsmando judgment
sgainst the DefendBnt. CtWford R. Smith. in the sum of
S22,011 .09. with interest
thereon Bt Brate of $5.38 per
day. from April 4. 1986. snd
costs of this action; that lhe

mortgsge be foreclosed snd
that the ltens and / or interests
in or on said property. if any, be
marshalled and the real estate

on tho 6th day of October,
1986 and the twenty-eight title quieted snd IBid proporty

days for answer will com·
menco on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise res-

dure whhin the time Ita ted .

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
AVERY GOEGLEIN and
HELENE GOEGLEIN . et st.

judgment

by dafauh will be
rendered againet you for the
relief demanded in the com·
plaint .

sold in the foreclosure action
and all amounts due Plaintiff

be paid from tho prooaeds of

the

sale.

You are required to ans'tMH'
the Complaint within

rwentv-

eight !281 days altsr the tall
public:ation of thi11 Notice,

wnom

witt be publiohed ooce
,.,ch week for si• (6) ouc..,..
sive weet.s. Tho last publica·
tion will Nmain on the 30th

Larry E. Spencer,
Clerll of Courts, day of September, 1986. and
Meig• County , Ohio the ~•ight t28) dayo for

Bv Marlene Harrison,

ans\N81' wil convnence on that
date.
In the case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond

Deputy
)9) 2, 9, 16, 23, 30:
f1 OJ 7, 6tc

Public Notice
tN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO
GEORGE LEMLEY.
PLAINTIFF

as ruquested by the Ohio Rutea
of Civil Procedum, judgment
by delau~ wilt be rendered
against you and for the relief
demand in the Complaint.
Oateol this 20th day of
August. 1986.
'

CASE NO . 86-CL-166
Larry SpauJJr.
NOTICE BY
C1ark of Courts
PUBLICATION
'IS .
(8) 26: !9)2. 9. 16. 23. 30. 6tc
To Dark Diamond Coal Cor- THE HOCKING DOMESTIC
poration, whose lost lonown
COAL COMPANY,
eddreu waa c/ o Dooald H.
DEFENDANT
Eacrlrt. 3360 EBSt Livings1on.
NO . 86 CV 241
Public Notice
CokJmbus. Ohio 43227. anSERVICE BY
d/or P. 0 . Box 129. Pomeroy,
PUBLICATtON
Ohio. 46769, addn.. oowl01tN llfE
The Hocking Dorneatic Coat
known, will take notice that t11
COMMON PLEAS
Company, NBisoovilte, Ohio is
1he 12th day of June. 1986. hereby notified th81 it has been
COURT OF
A-v Goegtein and Hstene nsmed daflndant in a legal
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Goegtein. husband wife. A~ BCtion 111t~led Geotge Lemley,
PROBATE DIVISION
bert Goegtein, and Cllartao plaintiff va. The 110CIC11g uo- VIRGINIA CREW.
and Maxene Goegleiri, t.Js- mestic Coal Company, lift. EIOICutrix of the
bend and wife. as plaintiffs, fendent. This action has been Eotate of Lettie M. Price.
riled • Complaint sgainst 'IOU assigned Case No. 86 CV 241 Doceoaed
in the Common Pleas Court, and is pending en the Commen
Plaintiff
Meigs County, Ohio, Casa No. Pleas Court. Meigs County
liS.
Tl£ FARMERS BANK ANO
86-CV-165. demandinR that a (Pomeroy). Ohio. 45769.
Ceat lease dated June 7 .
Tho objoct of the co"1'4oint SAVINGS COMPANY
1982 betv-. plaintiffs. Av- is to aatuire title to the Of Pornerov. Ohio. ot at. .
Dofendant
. f1fV Gosgteln and Halon BGoo- followWlg delcribed realesute
. gleln, husband and wife. AI- by order of the Court.
CASE #24432
. bert Goegtein .., d his wife. SuNOTICE OF
Said roal ostate is described
PUBLIC SALE
oan Gosglein. now deceaaed, as fottows:
Pu111Jant to 1he ordar of the
Being tho surface of 1he
· and Charles Goegteln 111d Mo·
•an• Googtein, husbend and following dascr- real ostate Probate Court of Meig s
wife, and Dark Diamoro:l Coal to-wit: A tract of land in 100 County. Ohio, in c- No .
COfJ)Oration, and an agree- BCre lot No. 383 in Satiobury 24432. I wilt offer for sate at
mont dated Apri 23. 1986 Townllhip, Meigs County. public auction on Ssptsmber
belw- A-v Goeg 1e1n and Ohio, cteoc:med •• fottows: 24. 1986 st 10:00 A.M.. at
Helllle Goegtein, huobond 111d Beginning a1 the northeast the door of the Meiga County
wife. Albert Goeglein, Single. corner of Elijah Frazier' a one
and Chartea Goegtein 111d Mo· snd et"""" on.,.hund"""hs ~'!::;.;~o:':i
'"'"e Goeglein. husbend and acre k»l said comer being in the eatato lituated in tha County
wWe, and dalandantt, Oarll Di- center of the public road of Meigs, In the Stat&amp; of Ohio,
amond .Coat Corporation and loading lrorn Midd!IIIJOrt to .,din the V~lage of Pomeroy.
Merkel Mining. Inc ., be Can- Gsltipotis. Ohio: thence north Md bounded and dascribod aa
. coiled and held for noul#&gt;t and 81 deg. 225 feet to' the folowa, to-wit:
lloginning at the Northwost
: that poueuion of said pre- edge of a cliff; thence in a
, misea be D'darad rQStOraj to northoaaterly direction 216 com• of a lot formeriy
feet along the edge of 1 cliff to belonging to the aotate of J .
the south line of 100 ..,. tot Vincent. dece11ed; thence
No. 380: thonoa eaot220 foot South 11·y, dag. Eost 11418et;
10 the center of the public road; then a&gt; South 86'1'o dB!I. WOII to
1 Card of Thanks
thana&gt; 24 dag. - t. the - -of a smaft str,.,t
242 feet along tho eonter of ti•ICII North 3 dog. 31
SBid public rood t~ the pl- of feet 1henca north n dog. oaot

The family of Richard
C. Meredilh would like
to than« Rev. Warren
Moyer, Rev. &amp; Mrs.
Wendall SMier, Dr. Villaneuva and his staff.
Drs. BeJtich, Blount,
Schmoll. Abels and
their staff: Holzer Hos·
pital's staff &amp;Veterans
Hosp ita I Home nursilll
,staff - nurses alii
aids. Meigs ~ EmerJ!ncy Ambulance Ser·
vice, Ewing Funeral
Home. and neilhbors
and friends who helped
in the long struakl
with his illness.
We appreciate all the
sympathy and kind·
ness shown during his
illness and ,at th~ time
of his death.

Electronic Organs

beginning.

containing

1

101100acroa
Rererence Volume 121
psga 609 Meigs County o-1
Reoords

64 Misc. Merchandise

BUSINESS
SERVICES
BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAG£S
" At Reosonoblo. Pri&lt;ts"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day

or

Night

NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-16-'86 1IR

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
Estimate~"

" Free

PH. 949·280 I

or 949·2160
No Sunday Calls

31 It/lin

THE QUAUTf
PRINT SHOP
F11 All Yw P•lwll•l Nu~1

C!tltimnry C!tarr
LICENSED -INSURED-CERTIFIED

FIREPLACES &amp; WOODSTOYES

-

TOH t. FtREP t.ACr AND

YOUNG'S

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS
INSURANCE WORK

Addons 1nd remodeling
Roofing 1nd guner work
Concrete work
Plw mblng end electri~td
work,

~

•Cleaning Inspection
•Flue Caps Installed
•Chimney Rebuilding

IIASONA8U • REUAIU
8-20-'86 tin

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I

;· •JR

HlMNEY WOHK'

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Stationery, Magnotic
Sign1, Rubber St1111ps,

Business forms:,
Copy SmicH, (tc.
75 5 Milt St., -ltpert
t04 -rry h .. Pomeroy

Winter. Have those
bearings oiled for

RUSS ELECTRIC
MOTOR IEPAII

lonlood Behind t.odint Crttlo
Water Dopt. Ofl !1 . Rl. 174

RUTLAND, OHIO
lox 27 I ltrnino ld.

PH. 742·2070

8117/H/ 1 110.

ICUr OUT FOI FUTURE USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

_,dant is required to

4

•

BUILDING

We Carry Fishing SuppiiiS

Pay Your Cable • ·
Phone Billa Here
'

Plllltl

si1e matttiiUI to give

7 Pul)l)iUL Moth., iii part
German S!Mpherd, re-.ly to go,
wormed ,

JM-171-1481.

B Loat and Ftund

L0&amp;.1 81eck mete. kids, CoraMill Rd. Call 814- 2116 - 6622 or

INTERIOR

PAINTING

EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. S.Cond
Middleport, Ohio
COMitiRCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMAltS -

Colt 114-:!58- t9&amp;1

614-245-5803 .
Lost at Kl'9gtr&amp;: 1-.M bfown file

box. Coll61 4·i!IZ-81t&amp; .

Lo•: s... -.. ......

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

puru

l::l&lt;l ..

--· - --C ol
.,._. ., _,.... .. 114-992 lOST. female OMmMion wear·

PHONE (614) 992-5009
$PEe/Alll/NfJ IN WINDOW i. DOOR REILACEMENT

ing red collar. REWARD. 304 676-4187.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cas h for ltte model clean

SATELLITE IS STILL THE WAY TO GO
unscrambled channels.
NOW A COMPLETE 10 FT. SYSTEM FOR

used ura.
Jim Mintl Chtw.·Ok11 Inc .
Bill Cl•• ..JohMon
61 · -446· 38 72

TOP CASH ,_ tor '8 3 model
Mtl - • ._.. ..... Smit h
Etstem
Ave.. Gallipolis. Caa 114·446·

$20 AMONTH

luidi -Ponti.c, 1! 11

We Also Update and ServicB
Most Systems

2212.

WANTED TO BUY' ...... wood &amp;
coal he1ter1. SWAtN'I PURNI ·

TUM . 3rd. • ot-. St. Chllipo111. Colt 61 ... _ , 118 .

9-8-86-1 mo .

STAR GAZER SYSTEMS

Ho-rd L Writ•sel

I 0' 2" All AlUMINUM BlACK MESH SEA BRUlE
SA 'ltlll'lt SYSTlMS. Full Remote. lmtollod ........ I 1,650

ROOFING

SAME SlSTUI AS ABOVE WITHOUT RUIOTf 11,250

IIEW - REPAIR
Gutters
Downapouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMA.T ES

949-2263
or 949-2168
2-17-86-tfn

nm &amp;AliMIIIM
Complete Outter Work
COII'IIflet• lleRIC)clttmg
Roofing .. Ill Types
WIHMd In' home ...
20,....
"Free Eatlmetn"

CALL COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843-5425
11 ·15-86

Altllwlzed ~ e...,
... lttltlltt ..... ..,
, _ ltjliflltiMII

flflll~.....

Pettt I Sa

Wowld like te buy goo4uled twin
ttroller . Calt 11 4·441- 31 et .

Buyint dal~ goN:t slt¥111' coi"ts
rings, jewelry, aerllnt were. old
coins, large c wrrency. Top priCII. Ed . Burken ktber Shop
2nd . Ave. MiddlflpOrt. Oh. 614 :
992· 3476 ..

DUCRAMILfRS WITH SYSTEM PURCHASf - $365

DESCIAMILER ALONE 1315
THlRE All STIU APPROX. 100 UNHRAMRED CHANNElS

CHAIILES WEBER
6U-6235

NORMAN WEBER
1167-3074
9·15.'86

E..,i_.C*f ., .......~

rehig ·

•ltlun ·- w.e "-n . Send re·
Nrnet to loa r . ., In •"'of the

!========:::;:========::! G~Hpoll1

Thtrd Ave..
Otl
DailyGlllipolit
Tribuna, 826

4563t .

NEW HOURS

BLUE STREAK
CAB CO.

· 107 Sycamore St.
PH. 992-7075
Pomeroy, Oh.
7:00A.M. to 1:00 A.M. Monday thrv Saturday

.

hp-.lenoad MecHe Sill• Rep,
Need. Ban fllul oemmillioft
Can lOot- 7&amp;7· 7881 Mond1 Y
thru Friday, 10 ., 4

TAXI TOKENS ON SALE AT
SENIOR CITIZENS
SWISHER-LOHSE
HARTLEY SHOE STORE
C&amp;K MARKET
VILLAGE PHARMACY
FRUTH Pt1A.RM

WE AI£ I'OUI SALlS
AND SEIIVICE
HEAbQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

•SYl,MI~
..S~£!0 OUUII

lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SMES &amp; SERVICE

We HtwJ AF11l Tl•
Sht Tt~~•lel..

"""

IDINOUI
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

Clllma.:...ti5·33D7

4/1/tfn

I '

tun

.

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

HAIT'5
CONSTIUTION

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Beagle! dog to gtve . . .,. . Cell
614-992-7165.

luncfl bv)l on 141 Call 614 446-01127 .

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

161 llorth Second ·
Midtlfeport, Ohio 45760

wormed . Cell 114-992-7539
after noon.

8-13 tin

PH. 992-9949

Now lecetiom

Bladl 8a wtl;g male c11 . C11t

614-446-7856 .

LOST ~....... ......_ lf1ct1 tan
&amp;.whbe .... trfY fa.. Answers
W name Off Mw. ttenn.n Si11on

SALIS I SIIYICI

PlUMIING &amp; HEAliNG

2 black &amp; while long hlired
kinens. CeH 814 -26 8 - 1765.

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

TUPPERS PlAINS, 011.

,.....,

witt oorrm- 8 1 - . . . .
In -olthe-..ofthe
defendont
Ill an- or - · .
wise IWipond • requioed by
Ohio Rullo of Clvt Procodln
judgment wilt bo randeled
against ~ lor the retlof dem.- in the complolnt.
Lorry E. s,..;.,,
Cttoll ol c......
Matto Counlv Common
PIIMCourt '
fB)26; f9)2. 9, 18. 23. 3D. lie

-z

I'OMIIOY, 011.

·

which witt be publlohor! onco
aach - f u r lbc ~
....... the 1811 publication ...
be mode 00 the 30th-day of
Septenibol, 1988, Md the •
~-4ight tleyl fDr ·-

% Licensed Clinical Audiologist

BOGGS

8127/K/1 ...

614-448-44n.

3 kittens 1 0 wwM okl Nntr
b'ain«t. 304--11&amp;· 12&amp;4 .

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

NG &amp;
GUTTERING
New 8o Aepsir
•SIDING SOFFIETT
•REMODELING OF
ALL TYPES
•TREE TRIMMING
•CONCRETE WORK
25 Ye1r1 E~parience

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Bob Barton, Owfltf

complaint within
-ty-ei~t dav• ofW thetaot

-

a:
~

992-6173
"free Estimates"
Installation AvaHabll

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO•

4·5·t1C

Giveaway

(With Larry's Carpet Outlet)

•Washer.- •Dishwasher•

PARTS snd SERVICE

z

LARRY'S SATELLITE SALES

EUGENE LONG

•Ranges
•Refrigar1tors
•Dryara •Freezers

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds · Inte!preting Services

o

741-2127

985-3561

All Maku

4

3

After 5 Cal

'15.00

190 MUlBE•Y AVE.

equitable.
The
an- the

FIMU CO.MIY
PH. 992·6931

ClEAN UP Willi
CI.ASSIRED ADS

I!Wiy . Call 814-916 · 6231 .

Over 100

ACCENT

HOUSE OVERFLOYIINC?

Ken more 9• range te giv81way.

992 -2196

Middleport, Ohio
l -13-tfc

R1cine Gun Shoot sponsored by
Reotne Gun C lub. I!: very Sundey,
beginnine_ at \:00 p.m . Factory
Choke. 12 g~;~ age ahotguns.

Colt 6t4-tea--

REPAIR
Aleo Trusmlulo11
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

furna ce motors

checked. cleaned Md

Emo,rqo•t&lt;~

Office 949 · 2438

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

3/U~n

s,.w
Get ahead of Old M011

RACINE, OHIO

· Rt . 124, PoiMroy Ohio

992-3345
Ftll o( '"' i'rfl'

RAYMOND E. PROFFilT (MAC)

Roger Hysell
Garage

PAT HILL FORD

1-800-282- 2167

Kinens to give tway to goo d
home. 9 weaks old. Shot1 1nd

10-8-tfc

Furniturt, Wedding

and Gradualion

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

99~-3410

liNter cores. We can
ai!D acid lloi I allll rotl
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Of

6 wka . old tat furry, blaek
puppiel . 92 CtliNicothe Rd . Call

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUSl CALL!

We can rep~ir alld r•
Ctft radiators and

2108

1H 1 L.UU~ IY 1\•HI'I HlfJ-...~t ]\i

V. C. YOUNG Ul

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Noah ' • Ark Animel Perk
Schools, t:hut'ot\11, 00"1'1nV
pimles, biTthd-ey partiM and
tamity reuntons. Call 614·384-

446-2062
SfiP.• IN l , 1Ht

992 ·6215 or 992· 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-tc

6· 17-t!c

448 -0294 .

9-4-11!10 .
rR':E ESTI MA TES CALL I ROV BICKL'

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

FILL DIRT

Cleaner, one half mile up
Georgn Cree« Rd . Call 614-

!

!Free Estimates)

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
' TOP SOIL

p...es. anllllltu_.... Pick

up &amp;l'ld 'deiNery, Dawit Vacuum

Mobile service
614-843-5248

PlUS: Offico Supplios &amp;

SUGAR RUN,
ASHLAND .

The prayer of said action is
that the abovB deocmed reel
estate be awarded to the
plaintiff. Goorge l.Bmtay. by
order of 1he Court and f11r ouch
other relief aa may be just and

publicltlon of thlo -

Estate of
Lealie M. Price, Decessed
t912 . 9, 16. Jtc

SWEEPER •d IM~ mtchine

rtpalr,

of the

Meigs Cwntv

Public Notice

to '::atherinB
Zweifel. by deed dated Docamber 19, 1882. aRd nr
corded in Book 68, at 111111•
380 of tte Deed Raoordl of
Meiga County, Ohio.
Being the aome real 811810
convoyed to Mns. James H.
Clifford. the Grantor heroin, by
J - H. Clifford, by doed
oecorded In Oeed Book 136,
page 405 of the Meigs County
Deed Records.
R-ce Deed: Vol. '1:17,
psge 17. Meigs County Deed
Raoorda.
Said premisea sre IIPP'•ed
st $16.500 .,d mu81 be lOki
fur not t011·than two·thlrdl of
said -raised vaue. The
to•ms of aate md paymSit of
1he purdleae rnonay shal be
UX ,

for cash, in full, at the time of
the sale.

college studentsl"

pond as permhted by tte
Ohio Rules Qf Civil Proce-

Mary Hobstetter, Clerk
(9116. 23 2tc

.Auto-Owner.~

"My best fraternity prank? I swallowed 50

reserves the right to reiect any
or all bids and / or My part
thereof.

CommissDners

Anyone who has trouble hearing or underslandmg canversatJOn IS mv1ted 10

IIUCE FISHER

tained from the office of the
Meigs County Commissimers

30 davs of Mard of contract
The work under this oontr~~:t
witt be Inspected by the project
enginuer and the designatOO
agent of the Villag e of

TH E TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICE NSED HEARING AID SPE CIALI ST

ff.,,_t .tftHIU

with Specifications. are available for Inspection at the office
of the Meigs county Commis sioners. Courthouse, Pome""1· Ohio. Ssid Plsns md
Specifications may be ob-

"SEALED 8!0: SYRACUSE
RESTROOM PROJECT" .
Work to be completed within

DR. RANKIN PICKENS
509 SOUTH THIID AVENUE, MIDDLEPORT
THURSDAY I SEPTEMBER 18
FROM 9:00-12:00 P.M.

Pi~

pt81o and ready for operation.
Copies of the Plans. along

must

COUPON

FOR JUST

ment, specified materials .
WN« connection, and engineeri1g feet for the a&gt;nstruction of said restrooms; com-

Bidder m.Jst use own btd

r-----------...1.___________. .:._

..

tumishlng all tabor, equip-

form . The front of the envelope

Deferred annuities
from Aut o ~ Owners g1ves
you more than a good retum on your money.
They pro vide taxsheltered interest on your
savings .
Just ask your AutoOw ners age nt about
them .
He's your best bet fo r
annuities.

.

.

als are invited consists of

Opportunity employer.

Free Electronics hearing tests will be given by Beltone Heartng AtO Center at

The fi fth annu al Pavne reun1nn
was held recently at Grow Ci t\·
Attending were Mrs. Freda Pa\-nr•
Ca rsey. Midd lepon: Bob and J~d'
Jacobs. Grove City; Kenneth and
Lois Payne. Grove City; Bob and
Sally Welsh. Marysville; James
and Joy Payne. Reynoldsburg;
Wayne and Patty Payne, Scott and
.Jackie. Columbu s; P~nny Spradiln
and .Julie, Obetz; Lisa and Eddie
Marcum, Obetz; Donald Payne.
Grove City. Rob welsh, Jamie and
Bonnie, Marysvllle.

and at 2:00P.M. on that date

Prevailing

HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

Payne reunion

ers, Courthouse. Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769 until noon oo
Wedneoday, October 1. 1986,

applicable to this btd invitation.
Meigs Cot.mty is an Equal

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

Blggl, at

Meigs Countv Commission-

bid. Meigs County Federal

Williams

property convoyed by 8 . F.

be received at the office oft he

mance of the contract The

Judy

110 to the place of
beginning. being the north part
of tot No. 474 in laid city of
Pomeroy, and being tha -

oonstruction of restroom~ at
the Syracuse Community Picnic Park, Syracuse, Ohio, will

witt be publldy opened and
road aloud. All bids witt be
considered valid ..,til fourtyfive days after the openin g
date, althou~ rot accepted or
rejected .
The worll for wlidl propos·

TVs, Alftenncn
Satellte Sales
lnstahtion
Servke

Public Notice

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
Seated proposals for the

contr.::tor shall save the Meigs
County Conwnissioners ll'ld
1he Vittsge of Syracuse hBrmless in and actOn resutti'lg
from his / her ~orations. AH
employees llhall be awered by
Ohio Workur'S CoqJmsation.
Risk rumber to be furnished i1

Past Councilors

Plans completed
Plans have heen completed for
the open church wedding of Melinda A. Mankin and Brian E.
Whaley.
The wedding wlll be held Saturday, Sep~ :al, at the Forest Run
l!nlted Methodist Church with the
Steve Nelson officiating.
Music wul begin at 1 p.m. with the
eel emony to. foDow at 1:30 p.m. A
receptiOn honoring the couple wlll
be held In the church social room.

Laura Mae Nice, Pauline Ridenour.
Erma Cleland, Mary K. Holter.
Jean Fr&lt;IIerick. Sadie Trussell.
Opal Hollon . lnzy Newell. Ethel
Orr. Lora Da mewood, Charlotte
Grant. and Sandra Whit e. a gu est.

AA UW chapter attends district meeting

StC?ck ponds with fish from SWCD
Hngerllng fis h?
The Meigs Soil and WaleConservation District (SWCDl are
offering fin gerings for sale. The
District will have largemouth bass,
channPI ca tfish, and a oomblnat ion
of blu eg·Ul and sunfish.
Fin gerlings can be purchased in
lots of 25 only or any combi nation
thereof.
Prices are 4()¢ eac h fo r 2-4"
la rgemouth bass; 55¢ each for 5- T'
channel catfish ; and 30it each for
3-5" bluegill and sunfish.
Please provide you r own oon·
talner tuled wit h water from yrur
pond. when you come to the Meigs

Committees lor the annual school
carnival -which will be held on Oct.
11 were named when the Riverview
PTO met recently for its opening
meeting of the school year.
At the carniva l numerous games
and other activities will be featu red
and a full course dinner wil l il:'
served . Presiding officers were Sue
Reed. president; Teresa Evans.
vice president: Sue Suttle. secretary: and Mary Newlun. treasurer.
Grace Weber. head teacher.
introduced tlv.' staff along with new
paren ts of ttx&gt; school. The first
grade room was recognized for
having ttr highest percentage of
parrnts in attr:ndance .
Roommothcrs tn Sf'I'V(' this
school .vear were announced. Re·
freshmcnts

devol ions.
\\o'omt'fl's

· Riverview PTO

officers.

Community calendar / area happenings
~DAY

recognized and presented pins.
Mrs. Thuener, long-time recording
secretary, rocelved her :D year [in;
Mrs. Morarlty. her 25 year pin;
Mrs. Clark, her council deputy's
pin, and Mrs. Harden her district
deputy's pin .
At the conclusion of the meeting,
a cake Inscribed "Esther Harden,
District Deputy, District Thirteen"
was served to Eileen Clark, Sadie
Thuener. Margaret Cottrlll, Nancy
Neutzling, Mary Donna Davis,
Betty Spencer, Bob and Esther
Harden, Bette Biggs, Pauline Morality, Jean Hall and Janice
Lawson.

The DaAy Sentlnei- Page-5

-- - -Giillipons ------ --·
&amp; VIcinity
Co..,.. Solo. 1 8 7 -...
Tuaa. a Wid. 9-ti. ~
cloth•. crllfb . NM • · ..._.,
I whhe olghonlo ..,Jtlplo color
baby afghlr'l. lots of ooocu...

....,... __

V atd

~BI

.... ·It

MuiDe Midl~el
17-tl Clo·

Ctlll . ....t .

.. ... -,fl'lllaanf··· ..
•vlctnitv

·... --·p·om·erov..... ---...

7 P:amllv 'Yard • •· ht time.
111 Fifth Str..t N.-, H...-en.
WV, Wid . • Thurt.. lopt. 17.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
··-·-- -· .. --··--· .. .·· ··· ........ .

I 8.

Yord Sate Mondo1 Set. 1•.
SPMtiiT-dlyt Mdll . . ..

unUIIId ..,.. twnd . . ...

billy .,..... • ...... ·
D1vl1 r•ldlntl . Ro•• H ••

-

lack yard 11... 14 fO"'ter Orin.

MIIOf'l. Wed a,.. 17 11W1 Thu r1
Sept 11. ltbw. "'._.,.. ll'ld
ldwh ........ Ptimttwl'8, IIIC1·

.................... .,....
.:;:r.,u.f1~· - ·moe.
... :a W •

,.......,,, Ohto.

.,

-··

..

~

. ,A .,.••m.

�-Page- 6 The Daily Sentinel
11

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

Help Wanted

Mak e Chrilt mn money , sell
Avon Make 4&amp; percent Celt

614 44 8·3368 .

2 bdr. unfumilhed apt. In Crown

Chy. Coli 814·256·1520.

hpeneo oa d Med•a Salas Repa
needed Ban plus eommiuion.
Call 304-757 -7881 , Mon .-Fn ..

Furn, 4 room~ • blth claan No
pett, aduh• only. Ref. &amp; dep.
raqulrll;t. Cell814-441-11519.

10 -4
g::~ve rnmont

3000

Regency Inc. epanment 2 bdr ..
utilities penty paid. nice. Cell
304 -876-&amp;104 or 304-675·

JObl liat

516 ,040 -$59. 230 veer

Now

hiring Call 805 - 687 -6000 E•t

7928

R·9805

Babys1ner

wanted

2 bdr 2 be1t11. kitchen fur·
nlthed, 1 1 Coun St t326 per
mo . plu• utilities. reference &amp;
deposit. Cell 614-446.4926

beginning

Oc tober 14 for 7 week old
Oays end eventngs. tf
interested . ca ll 814 -992-3979

lll fan t

after 6 00 p .m . Sunday end
~~nyt•m~

Furnished .rficiency $160 mo.
utilltiM paid . 7 1h Nell Ave. Call

dur•ng the week. Refer-

Couch. coffee table, 2 ct.11rt. all
tn good cond Call 614-4464423 be1ore 6. 814~ 2&amp;6 - 1&amp;&amp;6
efter 6

f\

Furnithed a.pt . adults only Call

f ·"

614·446·9623.

Uted portable G.E. dishw11her
S76 . Cell614-446-3667

~

Duplex for rent 646 Second
Ava., Gellipolit 3 bdr. ltvingroom. diningroom, nfMI kii -

Guatove. washer &amp; dryer. table
81 6 chairt. plus mise Call
814 -258-1462 .

chen,
refflg&amp;. &amp;tecurity
range.
12915 backyard.
plus utiiitiM
deposit . Ca11814-446-0690.

Pickens Used Furniture Good
quality uaed furniture. Open 9 to
6 or call for appointmen1
304-676-6483 or 676-1460

32859

AVON . open temtories,
3 04-675 -14 29

call

hper,91•Cfld medra sales repre-

~

o,•"'~..o. rnc

Sfttltat•
e~ neededBase7881
plus~~~~=======~~;=:;~;;~;;~
oo rnm 1vss1on
304-757
.
Monday thru Frtday 10 00-4.00

AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS
utranCfl' e~am •nat10n now open
For futher 1'1 fo wrtte P .0 Bo•
275, S ter hng, Va . 22170 .
OPENINGS AVAILABLE selling

Men • Ma c's guaranteed line of
toys g•fta. home decor 1tems,
ate NO dehvenng colleeting or
nves t ment Your hours . Call
304· 675-5758 or 1-800-992 1072
RACI'tp iiOnt!t needed for phySI Cians off 1ce Mon thru Fr1 10-5
Must be ab le 10 type, file
Insurance &amp; have pleasant telephone manners Send resume to
P 0 Bo~~: 350 , Pt PI WV 25550
Someo ne to stay With elderly
gen tl eman m Pomt Pteasant,
pho ne 304 675 -3696 or 675-

2032

---Pe!Sons needed tor child care.
Washmgton D.C area, live m
w1th good famth es. room bOard,
good selary. no fee write P 0
So:oo 1502 . Bethnda , Md .
208 17

EX PERI ENCE D T ELEPHONE
SOli CITOR to work watts line
cove11ng muh1 - ~tate area Must
be aggrt~Utve and ambitious
Ca ll 614 992 3283 6 PM to 9
PM eve~1fngs .
FUN-TIME PART -TIME JOB
Now h1nng d emonstrators for
House o f l lo yd toy &amp; g1ft part1es
No mvestment. co llec'lrng or
dehverll'l Q For furthet details call
CA rolyn 304 727 -4490. 3 PM
to 9PMioo t oftownPMto9PM
CALL CO LLEC T(

12

Situations
Wanted

Chrld care lor pre-schoolers Age
2 5 Men Fn 6 30 &amp;m 5 30
pm . Rehable references fur '"~hed Call 614 667 -6732
Vn cancv for an elder ly lady in my
homfl
Sta.t e licensed. experiAn~d lots o1 T l C t600 . per
rm r1tfl C11 ll 614 -742-2292
We are now acceptrng elderly
rms rd en ts rn our home Expe nence an d rmerences ava1lable
u pon reques t Cert1lr8d by the
St BIR Re~le r&amp;tes . lots of
TLC. !"Ofe!i ~.. al ca re and good
home coo ked meals ' 614-9492463

18 Wanted to Do
Will do hlh ·se cleaning hav e
raf erencrn C.11 614-446 -7525
~aw n ~ mow~ bv th e hr or by
th e tob Also lnwn mower repa1r
Call 614 446 -3176

bebysrtllng rn my
home Converuent bcateon on
Second Avenue Reference:a
ava rl able Cell 614 446 -n82
E~tpew~nood

Wo cleAn t-omes &amp; off•ces Call
between 9-1 tor free est1mates
Referen ces on reQues t Call
614 388 -9027
Pro lessm nal Sew1ng m my
~me 15 ye tu sexperrence Call

614 992 3543 .

·- - - - -

Wo rk wAn ted . a.peuen ced farm
nand wants lOb m to bacco.

61 4·446·6266

Wrll do babySittin g m my home
fu ll or part t•me Behrnd school
304 -67 5-2764
Guit ar lessons , can after 4 00
PM. 304 675 7550

Financial
Business
Opportunity

NOTI CE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO reoo mmends that you
do busmMs w1th peo ple you
lcnow. and NOT to send mone-r
t hro ugtl ttle ma11 until you tlave
Jn ves ttgatfld tl're otfermg
I

.... Green L.tntern tor sale Has
liqu or li cense Inquire at Green
lAntern

23

H omes f or S a Ie

Convenient location ott Upper
Rt 7. 3 to 4 bdr F P 1n LR.
cofT1)1ete kitchen. build In dishwasher. range, oven, micro·
wove &amp; washer-dryer. TV room,
1BOO or 2700 down ' 30 years
hnancemg available Kyger
Creek School S46,000 ••tra
land available. 614-446-7827 .
4 room house and ton propeny
runs from nreet to ttreet in
Crown Ctty. 516.500 Call
614 -886-8222 or 814 -888
6470
32 acres 4 miles outside city
hmitsl Seven room, 1 story
home Popular Addison School
dis t Fishing pond b11rn. outbuildmg McGu~re Realty Co.,
1402 4th Ave , Huntington,

26701 o• 304·529·8033.
Only 2 month old 1986 Sunwood . 24•44. 3 bdr . 2 batha,
OW, AC, atl furnished, alec
t19 .900 Call614-446 3040or

513·653·6909.

Log cabm hand cut &amp; hand hewn
oek 16k20. 2 story. Bern 11ppro•
24~t30 oak wood ~tinned Call
614-446 -4307 after 6
6 room house 1 2 acres Double
cer garege Located on RoseH11l .
Bargam priced UO,OOO Call
614-678 ·2613
7 room house 1 'h bath, 4
bedrooms. garage no Ash St .
Middle port Call 614 -992 5714 .
Conventently located Low utililies. Must see S22. 700 Wrll
negot•ate. 614· 992·3798 even·
tnga or 614 992 3345

W1ll bAby !Ill ., my home. have A
years old playmate. reasonable
rates Rro Grande &amp; Vrnton area
Call 614 245 9157

21

31

Professional
Services

No dOwn payment needed
Pomeroy, good lot. 3 bedroomt.
carport, basement. equipped
kitchen. AC Call 614 -992 New House 3 or 4 bedrooms. 2
baths, family room. eat in
k•tchen . format dinning roc).,
with french doors leading to
deck , full besement, lerge gar age 11ntique br~ck front, vrnyl
Sldtng. metal thermo pane win dows. well insulated. Mt Var·
non Ave.. need to tee to
sppricata qualhy of this home
Wtll rent wtth opt1on to buy

304·875·4580 o• 8'16·1962

3 Burdette Addn. 3 tadrooms.
e•rtra lot. e11c col"ld. phone
304-675-1070

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOB ILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBIL E HOME SALES , 4 Ml
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 35.
PHONE 614-446-7274
1976 Genysburg. 14 11 70. all
e lectr iC, 2 bdr . 2 full baths,
gerdan tub . 2 air cond1t1oners.
porch and arwning. b e; . cond
Cat! 256-6620 or 266· 6602.
1972 12•50 liberty mobile
home 2 bdr , woodbumer,
underprnning , fuel oil tank new
ca rpel in br , good cond
54.600 Call 614-245-9264
1 21160 mobile home e.c cond
wtth appl end underpinnmg
len than $4,000. Call 614446 -9601
Must sell 1969 Holley Park
12x60 2 bdr . dtntngroom, underpinning. porch. AC . refrigera
tor . stove &amp; askmg 85,000 Call
614-446-7020
7 6 Rosemont 14• 70 AC. WB
hookup. underp inn ing. porch
C all 614 -379-2B65 or 614379-2608
1984 Oakwood 1 4 x6D 2 bdr
elec, good cand . 110.00 or
assume theloanpymts t157 31
per mo Call 614-246-9693
aher 3PM .
1970 NfMI Moon 12•60. B~~:12
e.11pendo 8JC14 add on, woodburn er mostly turn . on rented
lot $4,500 ftrm C.all614-266-

9305

For S•le by Owner 3 bdr home
tn town C11ll 876-1028 after

5pm

3 bdr 1 % bath. l•rge Uvingroom
with 1ireplac:e Walk in c:loMts,
kit chen cablnett, heat pump,
w .. her 8r dryer. Average elec.
bill t1 00 month. large gar~ge,
pool 12•24. fruit trHI. grapu,
large flower ;arden. Almolt 1
acre ground. Will con1idlf' lllnd
contract with down pr;'rnent ot
can Msume loan . c,:ll mornings,

614·446·4703.

3 bdr new g.. furuce I. htll
pu,..,. % acre t39.000 - Cell

614·266·8694.

614·446·2369.

60 acre fenn 8 tillable. 40
pasture &amp; woodland Farm pond
a. green house Good 3 bdr.
houae. central atr, rurtl water.
redUced. prica to tell. t62 .500.
Call 614-387-0136 .

34

Business
Buildings

749 Thrrd Ave. 1600 sq ft
Commercial or warehouse .
Parking on side Adjacent to
thtrd &amp; Ptne St Call 614-4462382 for eppoinement.

35 Lots llo Acreage
land to bwld on very ntce &amp;flat.
convenient locetion. 2' lott 400
h by 166 ft 260ft by 166 "
Cal1614-446-7827 .
5 acres wooded, city schools ,
beautiful home site. Call 614-

1982 Clayton, 12xl0. all elect·
r1c, e11c cond, bMI raMOnlbla

Must sell ! 18 acret.
for hunt1ng or mobtle
home or camper parking TP
water and olae1ricity availebht.
Call814 -985-4310
Urgent

e.~~cellenl

Aahton building lots with pubh c
weter, mobtle homes permitted.
304-576- 2336 or 304 676-

2267.

2 level lots, 6 miles from town .

304·876·5689

Rent als
41

Houses for Rent

House 3 bdr stove &amp; ratng.
Rodney VIllage II t276 mo.
References Call446·4416 after
8PM .
2 bdr homeiocetftd2mllesfrom
Gallipolis St. Rt. 5B8 . Referen ces &amp; depos it required. Call
614-446-3413
N• ca 3 bedroom house. family
room, geraga. basement. FA
heat. 5 wooded acres barn.
S2&amp;0 per month. $100 depo11t
No tnsrde petl 10 East St
Pomeroy. 614-423 -6289
3 bedroom 2 bath. all eleetric
home 111 New Haven , W Va .
Showl"l by appointment Call
614-949-2470 af1at f; p.m.
Beaut1ful 3 bedroom house in
Syracuse Oepotit and references raquir&amp;d Cell 614-992 6298 . 9 00 -5 00 , Monday
through Saturday.
House for rent. Pottera Creek

Rood . 304· 675·6769.

Conage. 2 rooma; bath. fur
nihed. utilrt•es paid, *55 .00
week. 304 -676-3100 or 676-

5509

2 bedroom unfurnished houu,
507V::~ Second St .. New Maven.

9248.

1 bedroom apt for rent Balle
rent starts t215. a month that
includes all utiht1es. Deposit
requ~red of 6200 Contact VII
lage Manor Apt. Middleport
014-992-7787. Equel Hou11n g
Opportunity
2 bedroom furnished apertmenl
for rent Adults preferred 614-

Apartments torrent tn Pomeroy.
One and two bedrooms . Call
814-992-6215
1 bedroom apertment upS1arrs
Newly cerpated throughout
Panly furnished Call 614-992-

5908

For rent furnished 1 bedroom
ept m M•ddleport Call 614-

992·5304

Unfurntsh ed, 2 bedroom apt
Completely carpeted $136 per
month . Call 614 -949-2263
Furnithed . 3 room apt . Ground
floor I 1 35 per month Call
614 -949-2253

One bedroom furnished apt on
Mt Vernon. lower duplex , very
ntce, prefer smg le working adult.
S200 00 tncludes heat and
water Deposit and references
304-675-2661

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleep1ng Rooms end
light house keeping rooms Park
Centr~l Hotel Call 614-4460756
Rooms for rent. day week.
month Gelha Hote l C&amp;11 614·
446 9580 Rent as low as $120
month

46 Space for Rent

Mason County Fe1r, storage
space for rent , boats, cempen.
cars. etc. Oct 1, 1986 to Mev 1,
"1987 54 00 per foot. contact
flllr ground• 304 675 5463
SpaciOus tra1ier lots tor rent wtth
playground and picn1c facilities.
at Family Pride Mobile Home
Parle . At 2. Ga llipolis Ferry. W
Vo 304·676·3073.

All electric home for rent ,
S250.00 month. phone 304-

676·3217

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Mobile home tor rent. Uppf)t'
River Rd . Call &amp;14 -448-0497 or
6, 4-446· 0608.
Treiler 141165 tituatad on approx 1 acre noo mo plus
utilitiM in Vinton erea. Call

614· 388·9881 .

w•o

2 bdr turnith.ci trailer
close to HMC a town Rafaren·
ce1 required. small child ac-

12x86 Winsor fumithed. o•
heat, central air. Rou1h Lana.
Cheshtre. Caii814-J87-0221 or

114·367·7242

Nice cltan 2 bdr. Upptr At 7,
furnished. wettr paid, t200 par

month Coii814·24&amp;·BB18.

Nice 2 bedroom mobil• home for
rent . Near Rectne. Cell 814-

992-58&amp;8.

1 2x85, 2 bldroom. fumllhtd.
t181 p• month plus dlpoah
and utlfltil1 . Call 814-912 ·

614·992·nl4.

For rlr'lt trail•. depo1h raquk'ed.
ldult1 onty. you PlY utllltl•,

phone 304·t?e·213t.

Mobla home for Nnt, 2 Md·
rootnl, loct*l on Alhton Upton
Rood. •no.oo month. Pluo

utiiHioo. 304·175·4011.

PHARMA£.Y

Kenmore 17 cu ft refrtgerator.
freezer. 3 yrs old. $360 00 . Full
size tofa bed exc cond $200 00.

304·895·3422
53

76

Pla1tic cistem state approved .
plast1c sep11c tanks , plastic
culverts. me111 cutvens RON
EVANS ENTE~P~ISES . Jock·
son. on 614-286-5930
Full 5118 box springs &amp; manress
firm like new . only 2 months
old Cost 1800 wtlltell ror $350
Call 614-256-8261 .
Firewood Call 614-446-1437
or 614-266·1812 or 614 -446-

lassen babybed good cond
wrth maltreu $46 Call 614-

448 ·3492.

For sele good varrety color
ponable and ftoor model TV's
Call614-446-1149

"That'll be $1.20 for the pills,
and $246.88 for the tamper-"

proof packaging."

r5;6;:::;P~M~s=f~o=r~S~a;~~~7~1~::A~u~t~o~s~f~or~S~a~le~
Purebred border collie puppin
from working dogs. Three male,
two fema le, wormed &amp; shots,

1126. Cell 614·448·2369.

1 AKC female Pelc.ina~e puppy
t100. 3 AKC Reg . Beegle pups
535 each Call814-268·9391
AK C miniature Schnauzer puppies end mother. t200. each
Reglnered Lllec Point Siemote
for stud. Call 614-992-2607.

614·867·3e82

Baby bu ck woodbumer fireplace
rnsert . S476 New Sean
corract-o-type typewrrter S120

Used Riterwav wood lr coal
heeter. lerga Firelex thermostat
control. eA. cond. Call 814-2561772 efter 6 pm.
200 amp ditconl"lect rain hub.
nipple, 30 ' lelld in Wire 1100. 30
amp square 0 breaker panel

030. Cell 614·317·01182.

Mixed hardwood tlabt. *1 2 par
bundle. Containing appro.11 . 1'12
tons FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. Cell 814-992-

6461 .

saxaphone

1126.00. 304·876·5752

Washburn acousHc guitar.
Bundy clairnet, band check 11\d
ready . both e•c cond. 8100.00
each. 304·876-1907
PIANO FOR SAI.E. wanted
reponsilbe perty to usumesmell
monthly p8yments on tpln01 console piano . Can be teen
loealty Write· /Include phone
numberl Credtt Menager. P
0 BoM 520. Beckemeyer, II

62219
58

Fruit

llo Vegetables
Red ro1berrin . Taylort Berry
Petch Cel 614· 446·8692 or
614-245-66064
YellOw Free Stone Canning
PeachM now aveilable Call tor
pricea and varietiet. Bob's
Merltet, Muon. W Va . 304nl -6721 . Open 7 days.

Sale! 50 Per cant oft! Flllhing
arrow sign t2891 Ligh1ed, nonarrow 12691 Nonlighled t22$1
Free lenera! Few left Sft
locally . 1 - 800 - 423 - 0183,
anytime.

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

Round galvinized tub. 10 h . ~~: 20
1n Uted~tkld'tswimmingpoot

Cell 014·992·3814.
SWA IN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St . Gallipolis New &amp; utld
wood-coal stoves. 6 pc wood LA
1uita 1399, bunk beds $199 ,
antron recliners S99 . new &amp;
u1ed bedroom suitas, ranges.
Wrtnger washers. &amp; shoes New
livingroom suitn t199 - t699.
lamps, alto buying coal' wood
ttoves. Call614-446-3159

United McGill proftn1ional
docks. 7 sectional• 4ft wide
tote! 102 ft . long &amp;-4 fl . form
plut 3-7. Ideal for l1ke river or
marina. Lifetime material . C1H
614-B76-1988 814 -272-7088
after 6.00 p.m.

GOOD

SALE II 60 per cent otfl Flnhlng
arrow tign 12691 Light ... non arrow t2181 Nonllghted t2281
Free letteral Few left! See

USED APPUANCES
Washer~. dryers. refrigerators,
ranges Slcaggs Appllancet,
Upper Ri\ler Rd beside Stone
Crest Motel 614-446-7398.
County Appli .. ce. Inc Good
used appliances .-.d TV 1et1.
Open &amp;AM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat 614-446 1899 . 627 3rd
A~e Gallipolis, OH .
Vtlltv Furniture, new lr uud .
Large section of qualltv furniture . 1216 Eastern Ave .
Gallipolis
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

Car trailer whh wr~nli't . duel
axle, t900.00. Phone 304· &amp;7&amp; -

Fc~r111 Sup pl11: s
&amp; LIVP.SIIll:k

61

Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
36 West. Jacklon , Ohio.

u.s
614·286·11451 .

Massey ferguson. New Holland.
Bush Hog Sal11 &amp; SarYice Over
40 uted tracton to choosa1rom
lr C:Of11)1ete line of new a ul&amp;d
equipfN)nt largest aelection in

S.E. Ohio.

•zee ondupiO •385. Boloybodo

t11Qa t175 . MattJ•••or bo~~:
sprlnga full or twin 183, firm
173, end t83. Qu.., , ... t225,
King 1380. 4 drtw• ch•t M&amp;.
Dr. .en til . Gun Clbinltl I.
10, • 12
Ou or eleclflc
range e37 , llby tnanr11111

f."

e35 • ••e. Bod t.om• no.
•30 • K"'t tot ... no. Good

lllectlon of bldroom auttas,
mo111 .,..,,., .... hlldbo•dl
end up to 181.

no

UHd Fumhure: Wuher •
dryer, elactrlo range. v• rMgl
• refrlg.-ator, wood tlbtl • 2
blnch•. 1Md1. drHHr. •
tacllnw. 3 mil• wt lulevJIII

Rd. Open tAM 10 BPM. Mon.
diN Sol. 814·441·0321.

614·446·4316

84 Dodge Daytona PS, P B. aut9.
etr cond . tilt wheel, AM'&gt;f'M
stereo. 838,600 11'\ilet, aalcing

06,060 Cell 814·379·2346.

814·367·7671

Ferm Supply. Sale at Bidwell
Cash Feed Store on Gaucho
•rbed wire. Sept. 25 . C1ll

614·388·9688.

1973 John Deere 350 dozer
powertlke off 6 way blade. Call

814·245·6812

Coli 6T4·882·3993.

•8o.oo. 304·676·11485

55 Building Suppllet

.

8:05 (() Andy Griffrth
6:30 D IIl @ NBC News
ffi The Rifleman
(!] Ouldoor Ufe Magazine
Hosted by W1/ham Conrad
(I) 0 (I) ABC News
ill CD Hogan's Heroes
Ill Doctor Who
00 Ill (HI CBS News
® Body Electric
tBI Welcome Back, Kotter
6:35 (() Beverly Hillbillies
7:00 D IIl PM Magazina
ffi Alias Smith and Jones
(!] SportsCenter
Ill Entertainment Tonight

TO $ UJl.VIVE.

.

.

Mountaineer Auto Bodv Pans,
Inc. 1318 Ftfth St , New Hav•n.
W Va Phone 304-882-3729
has a full line of body pans for
cars, truck• end vans. Sep·
tember Specials · Escort ,
Chevette. 720 Datsun. '79 -'83
Toyota 4x4 p u . fenders,
t39 00 ' B1 -up Ford and G M
p.u. fenders, t45 .00 Moods.
199 00 '73·'80 G.M teilgates
and bu~en , 856 00 '81 -up
G M. tai~ates and bu"1J8t'S ,
165 .00 ' 73 -' 79 Ford tailgates
end bu""ers. 865 ' 80-up Ford
tailgates and bufT1)ers. $75 00
Only a limited quantity to be sold
at thBSe prices. 10 f"A.Irry' DeliYery available .

Two Olds 360 transmiSSIOn and
angina. 2 Chevy 4 spfl8d
transmtlllOO , 304 · 458-1806
after 6:00

1980 Pont. Firebird . Ford Feirmont, Dettun PU. n Chev.
Monn 72 Oauun 2402 Catl
614-245-9693 after 3PM

77

lnterv1ew With Amy lrv1ng.

AND A"-NORAMIC &amp;A
VISTA ON liiE OliiER ...

,

2763.

DE~ERT~D JEACil'

79 Buic:ll Regal Black- red seat
Cl11n . PS, PB, sir. Good condition . 304-773-687()

One owner 1980 Datsun 210 2
door. 6 tpeed. 35-40 mpg. Good
condition. Ca ll 614 -992-2413
after 5:00 p m.
' 82 Pontiac Bonnwilte, 4 door,
Vinyl top, V-6, A1r. Auto. PS . PB.
AM -FM ttereo. tilt. rear window
defogger, velour interior, body
e•c cond . high mileege, 3041988 Escort . cruttecontrol . new
radio. exc. cond •4500. 304-

675·8700.

1979 CadJIIac Elderado . vary
cleen and aharp. 304-676 ·

3841

' 8&amp; Alliance, 38 MPG. under
warr•'lty. Pa1d $7,200 00 new

port
@News
®
MacNeil·lehrer

:

7·05 [IJ Sanford and Son
7:30 D IIlllJ New Newlywed
Game
·
(!)Inside Baseball
Ill CD Too Clo6e lor Com·
fort
0 Ill Judge
CIJ Bless Me. Father
@ Wheel of Fortune
Ill @ @ Jeopardy
@ Major League Baseball:

·

·

FRANK AND ERNEST

WELL., THE

~cONOMYS"

1-tUMMINC; ALONG.
w~·~e

Chicago Cubs at Montreal

{3 hrs I
7:35 ® Major League Baseball :
los Angeles at Atlanta 12
hrs , 30 mtn I L1ve

Ju;-r Noi s-uR~

WHAT iUNE? IT:.&gt;

PLAYING.
'-If.

8:00 D C1J National Geographic
Special 12 hrs I
ffi Hell Town
(!) Superbouts Curry vs
Hwang {fl Wonh , Fe·
bruary, 19831 160 mon I
@ 0 IIl Who's the Boss
(CCI Tony' s enthusoasm
over Samantha's ballet skrlls
fad e when he hea rs the
sales p tlc h of her dance Instruc tor. (A)

ALLEY OOP

Ill ILl MOVIE: 'Shoot the
Moon'
IIJ (jjJ Great Performances: Uve from Uncoln

Center: New York Philhar·
monic Opening Night wilh
Zubin Mehla and l1&gt;hak
Perlman The 1986·87
openmg ntght gala concert ts

'

presenled

1979 Buick Electra. all power.

good cond, •1.800.00 . 304·
882·2762
1983 Olda Cu1tass Supreme. air
condition, cruile, new tires.
automatic trent .. V-6, t6 ,995

304·176·2692.

1983 Dodge Charger Shelby. 5

273-4216 .

Dodga Shelby Chargllr. priced
reetonable, 304-882-3145 .

One &amp;.000 Md 4,000 grain bin
for rent, Morgan ' • "Noodlewn

tilver. 14.000. Phone 304-882-

2286.

@ Ill @ Wizard S1mon and

Services

Alex are summoned by a
fnend to Hong Kong , where

they confront Stmon's arch-

Home
Improvements

enemy. (60 m1n.)

EEK &amp; MEEK

Dangerfield
welcom es
gues ts Bill Murray . Valene
Pernne and Aretha Franklin
'" a collecrton of mus1c and
comed y sketches (60 mtn )

.-

IAI
8:30 (!) 0 ® Moonlighting
(CCI Madd1e and Davod 1n· ·
vest1gate a murder case
from the 1940's tn this ept sode contatmng black -and whit e sequences (60 mtn )

2454.

IRI

9:00 ffi 700 Club
CIJ AWA Wreslling 12 hrs I
(!) Ancient Uves (CC){RI
® IIi) @ MOVIE: 'Oceans
of Fire' {CCI
@ Cheers When Doane

Fatty Tree Trrmming, stump ..
1
removal. Call 304-675-1331
RINGLES 'S SERVICE, expo- .'
rienced carpenter. electrician. •
m11on. peintar, roofing (includ·
ing hot tar epplicationl 304~ ·

stnk s mto a depresston be·

YOL.Jb HAVE FRIENDS ALLOIER

Starks Tree and lawn Serv1ce.
landacaplng . 304-676-2010.

THECQ.JNTRY'IFYOLJ JOINED
THE FRI5ND6HIP CLUB .

Rotary or cable tool drilling'
Mott wellt completed same day.
Pump lilts and service . 304-

THE CL.UB

HASME:Me~~51

IN ALL 50 5TATE6.

THERES

cause she feels she doesn · t
be long to the bar's "chque,'

rwo IN IOAI-t0,51X

IN NEWJS&lt;SEY,ONE INTE.XA5.1
THREE IN 50LJTH Q.I!,KOrA. ..

Fras1er comes up With a plan
10 bnghten her sptnt s {A) In
S tereo

9:30 (!) D Ill Jack and Mike
PREMIERE {CCI While col·
umnrst Jack1e Shea be-

896-3802

Athby Con1truction, Cllrpent- ·
ing. remodelmg, room addition s.
cement black work. interior and
nterlor painting, •Kling. Free
ettimates 304-676-6446 or '

676·6T62.

Plumbing
llo Heating

/

570 GT grain dryer, 800 bu thefl, good oond. Morgan ' •
Woodlawn Farm, 304· 676·

1288"' 304·1523·8843

1976 Dodge D-100 pickup with
cap, runt good. engine good,
boby good, 318 twa barrefl. auto
1rana. S1.460 or b11t offer. Cell
614 - 44&amp;· 4422 or 614-446 -

11600.

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buyklg lhell eorn or ear
com . Call forlat•t quotet. ~lver
CitW Ferm Suppty. 814·448·

2886.

Po11td CharoiM bud A-a. g~·
tla. 2000 lbl. plua. Top btoodlln•. Reg. MHett. FFA, 4· H,
ptOjiCit, 2 acllllr'lt clubcllvtl
Young buN prOIPIG11. Gtorlt
Woodw"d Cell 114 · 37 ·

MWtf • • • Win·

1971 GMC hMf ton wtth topper
call 304-875-2107.
1104 Ford 1hon bed truck. runt
good. Body nllds work. 304-

Livestock

178·1028 .

1973 Fard F-280 pick up truck,
71.000 act mll81, 390 engine,
lulomatic, •1.000.00. 304175-44315 lfttr 15:00 PM .

1871

Ford Step Van King,

••oo.oo. 304·175·1383 o•
178·11412.
Concrete
eNta.. v•d or
ond htlftr club
....... 114·141·21122.
dollY...,. Mooon nnd. Ollfltoflt '"""'"""''llo'* Ca., 123•;, Plno lt .,
74 Motorcycles
Oollloollo, Ohio CoR 114·441·
2783.
I
[,,, [11111.1111111

Wo••

1184 CR80R ex

71

7121 .

Auto• for

114·441·21116 .
Sale

-n.

:,:,c.

"1 4·""·.,.-

85

.

•

1111 KXIO IKe. oond. t800.

1;;;::::;;::;:::::;:::=

MESS!!

of a Woman'

News
10:05 (!) MOVIE: 'Guns of lhe
Timberland'
I 0:30 (l) Celebrity Chefs
@I CD INN News
® Roughing It
IBI News
11 :00 D IIJ(1) 0 11J®l iii ©Gil
(!) NFL Arm Wrestling
fJI m M'A'S'H
Cil Cinema Showcaie
® Hiopanus: Tho Emerg·
ing Force 1986 (CCI A d•s·
cusston on the surge of Hts·
panic leaders and lmmtgrauon within the U S 1s

A
MII... K SHEIK?

featured {60 m1n.1
11 :30 D !ll I1IJ Tonight Show
Landesberg . Jason Bateman

and musicia ns Wild Bill Dav-

idson and Segal Wilcox . 160
m•n .)ln Stereo.
(l) Beo1 of Groucho
(!) SportsCentor
CD WKRP in Cincinnati
em Taxi
D Cll ABC Newt Nlghdlne
00 Alice ·
• &lt;m Simon &amp; Simon Rick
and A.J. qu1ckly find !hem-

..•
•

R &amp;. M Cuttom CouahH and :
Reupholstary , 11. Rt. 7 , Cf0'4'n ~

YOU GOT ME A JOB ?
ntAT'S
I

A PERSONAL AI'PEARANCE,
~U~? WOW!

Chy, bh. 814·211·1470, Evo. •
114·446·3431 . Op'" dolly 8 1o
I , lol. 1:10 to I :30. Old • now :
,

Mowrey ' I Upholet.,tng MtVIng
ltlcountver1121 vtart. Thtb•t :
In furniture ufholttarlng . Call ,

204 · 118 · 4 U

''0PENIN6 CEREMONIES
AT TilE OLYMPIC 6AME5
IN LOS ~N6ELE ''

selves in a cloak-and-dagger

game when ehey 1lke on a
routine

mtsstng

persons

case. {70 m'" ){A).
IBI Tr-r John, M.D.
12:00 (I) Doble Gillis
(!) NFL Yellf'book
Cll MOVIE: 'Detective
Story'

Ill Jtffertonl

eCDRawt11de

lo• I rtf '·

- - - - - ··
11tfmtr1t.

I0

C A ST 0 C
f-,~..;;..-'TI...:,I..,;S,....:TI...:,I_~

I

My son had not seen me doing
household chores In quite a long
t1me. While sweeping the kitchen
floor he came in and asked me,
"What got - ?"

Complele lhe chuckle quored
by Id ling 1n lhe m1 ssrng words
'-.....L-...&amp;.-.L........JL.........L---J you develop from step No 3 below.

_

.

e

_

.

_

_

.

PRINT NUMBERED l ETTERS IN
THE SE SQUARES

@)

UN SCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTE RS
TO GET ANSWE R

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·LETS ANSWERS
Factor- Elder- Laugh - Trusty - TEARFULLY
My slater discovered a comical misprint In a magazine. It
raacL. "H not comP,Ietely aatlslled, your money will be TEAR·
FULLY refunded. '

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

The case of the
overlooked clue

NORTH

'·16-81

.QJ4
'K 7 6 5
+AJ 10
+K J 8

By James Jacoby
South always took !messes with assurance, certam that his air of smooth
confidence unnerved the oppositiOn
He quickly played low from dummy
on the opening diamond lead. East
won the queen and returned a spade.
Again declarer played low, and West's
king won . So far declarer was not
playing in great luck. When a spade
was returned, he won the queen and
played another spade back to his ace,
drawing trumps. Now came a heart
toward dummy. West played low and
the king won. That was better. Anoth ·
er heart was taken by West's Jack. But
when West tried to cash tbe heart ace,
declarer ruffed. He now crisply played
a diamond to dummy's jack. When
that held, declarer was home 1! he
simply guessed the location ol the club
queen. Not wishing to seem the slightest bit unsure of himself, South qutckly
played a club to the ace and back to
the jack, losing to the queen .
"Well," he lamented, "I needed to be
lucky at the fimsh to catch the heart
ace, diamond kmg and club queen all
in tbe right hand."
"MaybeSCJ," snapped North , "but af·
ter West had played the king of spades
and the jack and ace of hearts, and

E,\ST

WEST

• K87

+3 2

'A J 2

'Q 10 9 B
• Q93
Q93 2

+K 8 4 2

+

+651

.SOUTH
A10965

,4 3

+ 765
+ A 10 7
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer· West
~North

West
Pass
Pass
Pass

4.
I

NT

Soulh

Eas t

3+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Open ing lead· +2
~_

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __J

was known 1o hold the kmg of dta monds, wouldn't it seem a little
strange for him to also hold the club
queen and no1 have opened the bidding
as the dealer'" And the confidence
that South so prided himself upon went
the same way as the four-spade contract - down.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I-

Calt

:J9 {"t.••c ·h
fl \( ' f

DOWN
I Si '"

2 ll•·hiut•

12 Sk1rt
h•illliH '

Hf Woo l ! ~

l'ortu~tt r·..,t·

3 St!IJ• 'nllli

~wa p1

4 /.•k• ·l.v

rrl

14 llt'n ary
I !l Bahy 's
ci !S\ ' (IVPIJ

16

"l'wn ll ·
playw n ghl

38 I Jlrt dann·

fr lfllld

!l Suhdw·rl
9 I &gt;roo pttr ~
10 M"t11 1
fl')-!10 11

13

:J7

Jap ant•:-.~ •

tllt 'a..'illfl '

17 l..ac

5 Homf' ol
llw hnJ.\.-t'

6 T nnn r l'~ l '

arnur ul
19 llu mh h·
hom&lt;'

II Fan~
15 TP :-iSt "ftl
1811ad nn

25 \olushroorn
27 1•\JIIil &lt;t
nu•ntal

21 M af!:ll llt 'llt 28 ( lv t•rfill

' ' ( 1111

7 M••k•n~

22 Jusl ahk•· 29 Sf'l fnn t 111
23 P la uf~
34 ~j()&gt;"

pro~n·:-i~

t•

Ye sterday's Answer !)•16

8 Sl11 •w

J'l l! n1 1". 1

hant•

ardm
10 "C ral"kN.., ..

24 TPnd
3G b"or
thr planb

20 Word wll h
mack t•rt •l

2 1 lh•stn•

22 Wuhf'r&lt;'d
23 Kulfh•r

d y nast ~

26 "/ ( ·am f'ra"'

30 French
s hool mg
11aL' h
31 Colummst

Buchw,ll il
32 Alon •o
to pab

33 Sl1p h.v
36 M ilitary
Sl'lli n~

361'yp(• of tlrP

DAILYCRVPTOQUOTES - Here's how to work i1 .
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for anolher . In thts sample A IS used
lor the three L's, X for lhe 1wo O's, cte S1ngle letters .
apostrophes, the length and forma tion of thr I' Ords are oil
lunts. Each day the code letters are dlfferenl
CKYPTOQUOTE
9·16
VM

,; E M \,/

V X II V

AIIWIBV

NA

M F II

X 11 A

Tonight 's guests are Steve

TAl STATE
UPHOLBTEAY SHOP
· '.
1 163 lee Ave., Gallipolis.

Uphoattrld. ·

I. I. .I

.

News
(l) Bums &amp; Allen

..••

614·448·7133 or 614·448· ,
1833.

m@ 1986 160 mon 1

mOdd Couple

(jj)

•.

Upholatery

~I

27 S lavl'ry

1IJ MOVIE : 'Tycoon: Sto.y

•

87

·':

. ~_~!
....,.=-E...:.rK-=E:.,.:c:...;H~~
~

r

@ Nigh1 Court When Har·
ry·s childhood magiCtan 1dol
IS hauled 1nro cou rt , Harry
sels out 10 reform h1m fA ) In

fJI

Watterson ' • Water Mauling. •r. ,
reasonable rat... lmmediat e •
2.000 gallon dtUvtry, cisterns. '
poolt, wall. etc. call 304 -5 78· :

2118

.~ I I I ·1 . 1

f1l1n ro le
24 C'h•an 11f1
25 ( · tu nf'~"~' "

10:00 D

General Hauling

tond . Cell

Coli 114·44S·3118 ott.. 5:30.
77-toCIIIDCh... o l l -. 71. Hondo CL460 eood oond.
68
Peta for Sale
IIDH
IIDod tiNI, M&amp;O. Call 114·2118·1112.
.... , - · Coli 114- I•
'M·AM
• .. lUI.
Dn•eonwvnd Cott..., K•nol.
76
Boatl and
CFA Hlmtll'lll'l, PMIIn and 71 M- Carla ll.ooo ·pluo
Motora for &amp;ala
Slam•• ldntne . AKC Chow
-~~-.
PI,o
I&gt;UPillll. Coli 614·441·3144 AM··M
~~t. CNito,
'brtnd '
, .-- - - - - - - ottor 7PM.
,.,,.,., llody ....... ..._
WODdl LDio of - partol Nooclo 1171 Qlool,.n 17 ft. - '"'"·
Rog~torod ....,otPug. Fownwor11. n.40o. CaM 114- 140 MwcN . .. lxfrH. hall·
bleak mak. 1 veer oW. Cell 441·1022 M·f olllr 1:00. Sol.• lent -~lon. MIOO. Coli
B14·1111-414J of1lf I :OO,m.
lun enrttn-. .

VORE TONGUE,
WOMAN!!

UGLV

Good -1 Excavating, basement a,
footers. driveways, t epttc tenkl.
lendsceping Call anytime 614-·· \
446 -4537 . Jamet l Daviaon. :
Jr. owner .

Dillard's Wattf OtUvery. Citt- :
ltns, pool, l well. Anytime but "
Sunday, 814·441-7404.
•

Vans llo 4 W.O .

WATCH

Excavating

10 month okt poled HMtford 1879 Chevy 12 pantnget will·
bull. 0111 irl ..od llfllot.. od IMIII. dow van. AC .. Cn.tl11, 1Jh wheel,
A· 1 oondhion. t3000 . 814UOO. Cllfl 114·112·7481.

3072.

Pole lulldlngt by Ouellty
lulld•e. Wort&amp;lhops. urpane,
enlmal lhttWrt. " ' " "· Fr•
etlimatat. Phone •"114 -111 -

1

21117.

1 """' lo• Nlo. Coli 114·742·

24&amp;·5121 .

WHAT AN

Jame1 Boys Water Sarvrce AlsO~
pools filled CsUI14-256-1141
or 814-44&amp;-1115 or 814 -448- ...,
7911
- ..

73

112· 3194.

dows. Nn1tt1. tto. Cl~de Win·
ter1, ~kl OrMde, 0 . CMI 11.t-

PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Founh and Pine
Galljpoli1, Ohio
Phona 614-44&amp; -388B or 614-

83

' .,..::-L-'TA...:B.,.:O;_,T.:,.-.jl

comes overly •nvolved wnh
the story of an accused rapIS1. her husband Mtke Brennan hastily prepares to open
hts new restaurant (90 mtn I

S tereo

CARTE~ ' S

448·4477

1983 Maida tru clc topper. good
wndh:ion. t3 ,800 . Call 814-

I

RE 0 I NG

Rodney Dangerfield
Show Co mediBn Rodney

RON ' S Tel e vis ion Serv1ce
Haute ealla on RCA . Ouazar.
GE. Specialing 1n Zen it h Call
304- 576-2398 or 614 -446 -

Trucks for Sale

I

@

eASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un co nditiOnal lifetime guaran t ee Local references furnished
Free estimatet Cell collect
1-614-237-0488, dey or n1ght.
Roger s Basement
Waterproofing.

82

fl•m. At. 35. 304·675·12Be., 72
304·1523·8843.

(60 min I In

Stereo

81

low to form four simple wo rds

tBI WKRP in Cincinnati

B foot Flee tway truck camper.
stove, ICe bo11 and porta potty .-"
sleeps 4. e11c cond. 6800 00 ·~~ ·

1977 Ford Granada . *700.
Good work car Runs good Call

POLLAN

Rearrange letters of the
0 four
scrombl_. words be!

Newshour

Auto Repair

:ll4·882·2762

GAM I

Edllld by CU. Y I .

Ill@ @ Wheal of Fortune

1981 TC· 3 Horizon Call 614- Jtm 's Fore1gn Cars VW work
and others Call614 -446 -4792
246·9241
Hours 1 00 to 5 .00 PM
1977 Plymouth Volaire tlant 6.
fair cond. 6 mo old washer &amp;
dryer like niM' Hotpofnt heavy 79 Motors Homes
duty with warranty. Call 614·
&amp; Campers
446-3723 or 614 · 379 -2590
1976 lincoln Continental Mark
IV. 8111 Bless Special Dedition.
&amp;4.000 miles . EKcellent Condition . S2600. Call 614· 742·

Ill ILl M'A'S'H
U (1) People's Court
Ill Nightly Buoiness Re ·

A'-10 FJ..9i ACCE% TO A.

1978 T-bird toeded. 87.000 Auto F111 It Shop for some mmor
miles. e•tra clean. S2.000 Call &amp; major repa1rs All work guaranteed . Call 614-446 4086
614 ·367-&lt;1682

speed, AC , AM-FM. blue end

Building Mttarlall

llodt, brick,

li~TEND TO GTEAI. Al.l. THE OH, BROTHER!

1974 Dodge, eutomatic. new
benery, good 1tr81 Must sell.
make offer Call814-256-1772
ahar 6 pm .

New Holl1nd 717 Forage Harvlltar wtth 1 IUW corn 11ead.
International 1260 Grinder
mixer, bOth good cond. 304-

USed 180 Ce11 backhoe and
R61S Otten Witch trtndl• . 1 -

Ai-r OC1a gymn , ln•t new.

tBI One Day at a Time

1111 05.100.00 . 304·875·73T6. 675·2088 or 676·7368

18 ft . wire oom crib, 1280 bu.
Call 614 · 245-9241

83

814·894·7942 .. 884-11008

®Back Pain

19n Cedillac Del new peint, 1980 AMC Spirit been wr&amp;&lt;:ked.
new tires 81,200. 1986 Elc• good 4 cvl engine, transrRstion.
mino load ad t7 , 200 Call 614- front end. etc 1978 Ford
446- 1662
Grenada. 304-882 -2852
·

882·2796 .

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SA 35 W. Gallipolis,
Ohio Call 614-446-9777. eve.
614-446-31592. Up 1ront ttactor• with warranty over 40 used
tractors, 1000 to(ltt.

•

Sofas and chairt priced from
8395 to $995 Tlbl• tl50 .,d
up to t1 26 . Hide-a-beds 1390
to 15915. Rectlnert t228 to
t37a, Lampa t21 to t1215 .
Dln.nw t109 and up to M95.
Wood tabte w-1 c:helra t2115 to
t798. Da1k t100 up to t375
Hutch• t400 •nd up . Bunk
bedt complete w-mattr•••

19B5 Dodge 600 loeded . 2 .6
litre engine, 8 ,000 mila~ . like
new condition Call after 6 30

245·54130.

anytime.

fll mJefferson•
(JJ 3·2·1. Contact (CCI

1970 Chevelle, good front end-.. .. •
Chevy 4 spd -co~lete. 1973
Chevy truck-gnll &amp; buf1'11er 302
Ford engine-good cond Cali •
614-446 · 4614 efter 6

1971 Chevy lmpela Call 614992-6872 after 6 ·00p m

2814

locally . 118001423· 01 u ;

(!) Mazda SportsLook

77 Ctvysler autometJc lrensmi•· : ·
Ilion for 318 engine. will ftt.,. •
Dodge, S75 1973 radtetor fOT.J&lt;; ·
Oldt 455 engtne S20. will 'if":
Chevrolet. 1973 Ford 400 star~ .r .
ter 815 a water pufT1) 810 • ., m1sc parts Can be uen 430 • •
Flemingo Dr.. Gallipolis nejtr'" ·
Kaneuge SuperAmerica
·"•

614·992· 7458. ___ .,&lt;_....:.._....:......:..

'

'

Musical
Instruments

t76 .00,

1980 Z-28 Camaro loaded,
priced right Ca11614-446-7471
after 6·00

1988 Cavalier Z-24 . charcoal.
mawy utras, 8JCtended warranty , low mileage . rt ' s a
beauty!! Call 814-367-0167
after 6PM on weekdays or

Bundy Clarinet for ule. Good
COI"Iditten . Conn Truft1)et tor
sale. Very good condition . Call

0373

1 0 ft settelita dish, Amplice
receiVer Tracker Ill Satellite
locator Sat of bunk bed• Call
after 6 30 614-446 -4311 .

News

ffi Green Acres

ON L~ ROBOTG WILl. BE- ABLE

Firewood for ule 100% seasoned oek split, delivered and
stacked. 136 C1ll 814-ot46 -

Truck made tool box tor small
p•chup, white. hkenew, 870 Cal
614 -379-2152 after &amp;PM

6:00 D IIl (I)U(JJ®ll!l &lt;Yl@

Auto Parts

014· 379·2220

S@ ~4\\lA- L£ £trs· WOlD

'::~~;~'

EVENING

Transmissions. all 1ypes. over. ·
front. rear. 4 wheel drive, prices ·
start noo. 'Nil\ deliver Cell :

9266

Lon{! , tree standmg wood
burner. flew kit for mob1lehome.
triple wall Used one winter
8450 Cell 61• · 246-9234

9/16/86

FOOD FROM THE HUMANG, GO

Trumpet
Callehan't Used Tire Shop . Over
U&gt;OO trres:. Sltel12. 13 , 1• . 16 .
1&amp; . 16 .5. 8 miles out Rt 218
Call 814 -268-6261

TUESDAY

~rn

~.

llo Accessories

57

54 Misc. Merchandise

6r6J..T! 111AT'S 1lf- Kl~
Cf smf 00-~TIERS ,.......~
Met; OF, .. IP.\l
1&gt;- DI.D '1tl\.J

we~ our --AWr.:or'!WE

ter 6:00

Television
Viewing

16 It eluninum canoe, new
ptddlet. new ve1ts , S55 00
:JJ4-675- 6875

Antiques

8 rooms anttques. collecttblas.
used furniturelincludtng piano} .
Call for more rnformat10n larry,
614 ·698-6163

MY

AI..LO.\l6J.l~...

04,600 oo. 304·576·2006 ef.

1984 Conroy Glaatron 17 ft
170 McCnuaer In -board-o utboard, AM -FM cassette. _full
covers, custom drtve on tratlar.
E•cellent condition, t7996 00 .
:1)4-675-4450 after 4

Ford 9N tractor for ule t1050

Small furnished home ideal for
one person. 304-773-6183

2430

Black vinyl couch and loveteat
with wood end1ebln anach.t
S75 00. Whtte leather loveseat
140 00 304·676·8869

King wood &amp; eoal 1tove excel lent condition, t250 . Call &amp;14 388 -9771

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy
large Iota Cell614-992 -7479

3 bedroom house. 304-6763030 ~ 875-3431

3 bedroom ranch . basement,
gerage. securitv deposit , New
Havarr, 304-882-2946 or 882-

For sale GE wh1te no frort:
refngerator, power saver and Ice
maker hookup. 304-896-3662

Call 814·379·2745 .

304·882·2605

1971 Skyline treller Ux88 2
bedroam, fully carp1t1d, g•
fumace, 5 acr•. UIO month
plu1 utititl•. 814-182-2018 or

30 Acret. Haa tllllbll land,
hou11, barnt, pond. louthwnt·
em School Oi1trict. Ctll 2415·

Nicely furmshed mobile homa
CA &amp; heat, excel locatron ,
edults only. Call614-446-0338 .

APARTMENTS. mob1le home• :
house• Pt Pleasant and Gallipo lis 614-446
-8221 .
.

1983. 14•70 Commodore 2
bedroom. 2 full bathl, utility
room. underpennlng. cantril air
unit. tottl llectric. unfumllhld.

Farm• for Sale

' 1 peraon.
Small furnished apt.
utilities paid. References re·
quired Call 614-446-4063

month 8100. deposit Call
614-992-6811 day• and 614992-6763 evenmgs

7479.

33

1513'Y2 3rd. Ave 1 bdr. private
beth, $1 40 per mo Deposit
required Call 814-446 4222
between 9 &amp; 5

25 ecras woods. ctty schools.
Call614 ·446-3027 .

offer. 304·67t·2415. ·

304·nHtU.

Call 614·

1 bedroom apartment m Middl•
port All utthtles pe•d S200 per

For 1.111 2 bdr. 12x65 trallttr &amp;
lot. Cal814·387-7492 .

304-678·233t

opt

446·3027 .

2 bdr. turnlah~ trallllf on 554 'It
mi. off 180 . • 185 plua dfi)Otit.
Ctll &amp;14 -388· 9&amp;51 .

MOBILE HOMES' MOYE&amp;.· t••
sured. reuontble rat•. Call

Modem 1 bd•
446·0390.

992·2749

oepted Coli 814·441·4063.

614·367·0882

1979 Buddy Trailer F11r condition . Carpet , underpinning .
t7500 firm . Call 814-949-

Homes for Sale

Beautiful home in Flatwoods
area of Pomeroy . 17 acres &amp;
aprmg ftd pond availeble Cell

1969 Monarch Cr1111 12•60
new carpet, woodburner, 2 bdr .
real n1ce. 13.000 firm Call

2470.

31

Farms for Sale

2602

liberty Trailer for ula. 12x80.
Wat er wet lt SltfVICed and dr1lled two bedrooms, lOtt i elactrtc
Free e!t tmatML Call 814 992- w1th central eir C..l 614-9495006 ~ 614 -742-3147
2568.

Real Estate

33

I Q'T lliZD Til/o.T·"---~-.....,.,
Ar:JI~CitJ

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

Boats end
Motors for Sale

21 ft . Went. 450 hp Chevy
engine , Berkley Jet Drn,a.

Due to divorce repo11e11ed
Singer toush • • • one of
Singen first aewing mtchinll
Zig zag. over celt. button hot.,
even trench design and m.tch
more Sold new oP~~er 8600, 11:111
under Warrenty. take over pay·
ments or pay off belen oe of
s 147 .70 cuh. Vlu or MasterCard excep1ed . Trade excepted.
Can be seen local, ask tor C~it
Manager ·call toO free Ohio

Furnished apanment, tecond
floor. 3 room1 with private bath.
fhferencu required. Cell 61 444&amp;· 2216 .

addressed env elope : Hawks
Land10g , P 0 Box 13493. Or -

75

7444.

1·800·331·9068. w.v. 1·1100·
331 ·9062.

ASSEMBLERS WANTED · Earn
up to 560 per day usambling
cis "l ay clown s Matetiel1 .uppl te d Send stamped nit lando

Check us ou1 on our living room
11.utes 1349 &amp; up . Webber &amp;
lulhlin11. New Gibson epplian·
en . Mollohan F...-nitura Rt. 7
nonh , Kanauga. Cell 614-448-

448·4418 otter BPM.

ences roqutred .

LAFF-A-DAY

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

44

Tuesday. September 16. 1986

Tuesday, September 16. 1 986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

8 Cll Tilles of the Unex·

''

,..

,,

0

X 0 H II

V X ll

VM

AIIWIIIV

&lt;;EM\,/
~

v

Xl!EI Z
\,/
f'II IIW XIII
Ye81erd•y'8 Cryptoquote: ALL l'HIMI NAI..'i TliRN
PRt:AC HERS WHEN TilEY ARE UNDER TilE (;AI.IJ IWS
- ITAI.IAN PROVERB
Allllll .

paeted

®l MOVIE : ' Killer by
Night'
12:30 e 1IJ111J Late Nlghl with
David l.atterman Ton1ghf s
guest is actress Diana Scar-

wid. {60 min.lln S1ereo.
(I) Father Knowo BHI

(]) Top Rank Boxing !rom
lao Vegas, NV (90 min .)
IRI
Cll ABC Newo Nlghtllne

Ill Cll More Aeat People

@ MOVIE: 'The Third
Day '
12:40 I!) @ MOVIE . 'Nasty Ha·
biiS'
1:00 ffi Bachelor Falher
Cil Archie Bunker's Place
Wild, Wild Weat
1 :30 C1J I Monied Joon
(JJ News
2:00 (I) 700 Club
(!) Mazda Sportal.ook (AI .
e mMOVIE: 'Hurricane•

• m

�Tuesday, September 16, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-S The Daily Sentinel

r---Local Briefs:-- No movement seen in Marietta teachers' strike
swcn sponSoring fish sale
The Melgs SoU and Water Conservation Dlstrtct will again this
year sponsor a llsh sale. The district will olfer for sale large n¥&gt;uth
bass, channel cal1lsh and bluegtll.
FlngerUngs can be ordered In Jots o! 25 only or comblnatkms
thereof. Purchasers will need to provide their own containers filled
with water from their ponds. Approximately 10 gaUons of water pe100 fish should be ac!equate. Orders will be taken untn Oct. 14andthe
fish will be at the Rock Springs Falrgrrunds between lllOnand 1 p.m.
on Oct. 23 to be picked up. Largemouth bass are 40 cents each;
channel catfish, 55 cents each and bluegUlll cents each. Orders may
be placed at the district office In the Farmers Bank BuUding,
·Pomeroy.

Mystery farm winner named
Yvonne Persinger, 48700Townshlp Road 100, Racine, ls the winner
of the Sept. 7 Ttrnes.sentlnel mystery farm contest.
She was the only entry in the contest and correctly identified the
farm as that of Thereon Johnson, East Letart. She will receive tIE $5
prize given to the wtnner of the weekly contest being held in Meigs
and Gallla Counties.

Styling salon opens for business
The Added Touch Styling Salon, located on North Second and
Walnut in Middleport, opened lor business Monday.
Debbie Meadows is owner and manager of. the beauty shop, which
is open from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. lor styling, permanents, manicures and
tanning. Monday through Saturday. The telepoone number is
992-5766. Operators are Imogene Blevins, Loretta Holsinger, Shelly
Ohlinger, Melissa Downing, Merri Amsbary and Mrs. Meadows.

By Unled Press International
Teachers walking picket nnes In
Pa!nesvUie and Marietta say they
are waiting lor federal mediators to
restart stalled contract talks.
The 155 member o! the Patnes·
vUle City Teachers Association
began their strike Monday, while
the 240 Marietta teachers have been
out since Sept. 3.
Painesville Superintendent Fritz
Overs said buses made their runs
and classes were held for the
dtstrlct's 2,600 students, but be
admitted attendance was low.
Administrators and substitute
teachers were summoned to conduct classes.
Overs said the board offered the
union a 9.8 percent pay increase
over two years, which he termed a
fair offer, but union spokeswoman
Nancy Cruikshank said the offer
would not place teachers' salaries
and beneflts in line with area school
districts.
Painesville has the second-lowest
salaries among 13 northern Ohio
dlstrlcts, she said.
·'The board does have the money,
because there was a $1.2 million
carry over from last year," said
Cruikshank.
The union spokeswoman said
only five union teachers reported to
work on Monday. ·She said picket
lines were In place at all of the
distrlct's stx school buildings and

Squads respond to 11 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
Monday.
Rutland at 1J:06 a.m. to Beech Grove Road for Francis Darnell to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 10:45 a.m. to Meigs Mine No.2 !Or
Samuel Kamen to to O'Bleness Memorlal Hospital; Salem Township
F'ire Department at noon to a brush flreon0hto325; Rutland at 12:28
p.m. lo Meigs Mine No. 2 for Bob Koons to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 2:311 p.m. transported Dennis McKinney to
Veterans Memorlal Hospital; Racine at 5:02p.m. transported Ethel
Cozart from an auto accident on Old Rlrtland Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:26p.m. transported Lola Zwilling
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:55p.m. to the Meigs
football field for Kevin Azbell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·
Pomeroy at 8:23 p.m. transported Jerry Thabet from a motorcycle
accident on U.S. 33 to .Veterans Memorial Hospital: Micklleport at
8:58 p.m. to Leading Creek Road fo r Robin Quails to VetErans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:50p.m. to the Pomeroy Health
Care Center for Ruth McElroy to Veterans Mt&gt;morial Hospital.

Rutland church conducts revival
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church wUJ be In revh,al Wednesday
through Sunday evening with Rev. Carl Hicks.

Jury trial underway in court
A jury trial is underway In Meigs County Common Pleas Court in
the case of Robert C. and Sandra Wright, HamUton. Ohio. versus
Slurry Seal of Southern Ohio Inc., also of Hamilton.
The case was filed Aug. 15. 1983. and stems 'rom an accident
during construction of the Appalachian Highway. A large money
judgment for personal injurles is requested by the plaintiff. The trial
before the eight -person jury began Monday and is ex~ted to end
Wednesday.

Organization meets tonight
Alpha Delta Kappa will meet at the home of Jan Hill Tuesday
lt onil(htl, 6 p.m.

Deputies transfer prisoner
Meigs County Sheriff Howard Frank reports the transfer Tuesday
morning of Jerry Allrn Stone. Orient. from the Meigs County Jail to
the Chillicothe Correctio nal Facllil)l .
Stone ent ered a voluntary plea of guilty to a ch a r~ of. trafficking In
marijuana and was sentenced last week in Meigs County Common
Pleas Coun to 18 months In prison.

John E. Gerlach
Services were held at 2 p.m.
Monday In the Casto Funeral
Home, Evans, W.Va ., for ·John
Elbert Gertac h, 55, Rt. 2, Letart,
W.Va .. who died Friday in Holzer
Medical Center.
The Rev. Lawrence Parsons
officiated and burlal was in Evergreen Cemetery. Letart.
He was barn Aug. 16, 1931, in
Jackson County, W.Va., the ODn of
Clyde E. and Vella Howell Gerlach
of Letart. He was the founder of
Gerlach Concrete Co. and was a
Korean War Army veteran.
Also surviving are his wife,
Barbara Halfman Gerlach; two
'sons, Randall Date Gerlach and
John Stephen Gerlach. both of
Letart; a daughter, Darla Ann
Hatfield of Letart; six brothers.
Ray Ge rlac h of Powell. Gerald
Gerlach of Lakemore, Harold
Gerlach of New Haven, and Clyde
Gerlach Jr .. Sherman Gerlach and
Rohert Gerlach, aU of. Letart; three
sisters, Elsie Pratt of Columbus,
Velma Burris of Mason. and Ruth
Wallenhaun of LaPorte, Texas;
and eight granochlldren.

an investigatio n into whether the
.
union negotiators wel'f' walling to clasS&lt;S.
The union has a;ked state schools are being kept open
hear from a fedt&gt;ral mediator 10
Superin tendent Franklin Walter for illegally.
resume contract talks.
"We're very anxious 10 negotiate,'' she said.
Teac hers In Marietta were also
waiting Monday for word from a
federal mediator.
"We're just In the process of
holding our own and waiting to see
if the mediator decides to call us
!'\t W Vrinda bcm. was r·Ound shol to
By COLIN McNICKLE
together," said Olaf O'Dell, spokesdeath in a van.
ELKINS, W.Va'. iUPli - An
man lor the Marietta Education
"The l'i' have been a lot of
Assoctatim. "Of rourse, theycaUed ofHcial .lnqutry aimed at learning if
allegations,"
Kolibash said in June.
us together twice before and there a Hare Krishna commune deals in
when he announced the grand jury
were oo results, so people are death and drugs, or is a harmless. if
inquiry.
" It's in everybody's hest
unusual,
religious
retreat
where
the
emotionally exhausted at this
interest
to ftnd rut U there Is
only
goal
is
to
"serve
God."
has
point."
.
anything
there."
Marietta teachers began their been launched by a federal grand
strike CNer class size, the length of jury.
instructional time dur1ng a school · U.S. District Judge Roher! Max·
Authorities already have
day and the dlstrlct' s policies on well Issued a long list of instructions
charged Thomas Drescher of Ra·
Monday to the 23 members of the
transfers and dismissals.
venna. Ohio, in Bryant's death, bUI
Teachers are also asking for a jury. which could sit for a year.
officials want to determine whether
Sources said nearly 30 members the slaying Involved a ('l)nspirac:,:
two-year contract calling for a 12.7
percent Increase In their base pay of the fundamentalist Hindu sect.
by Krishna tead e~s.
and improvements in tiE salary half of them from · the New
Drescher also faces trial iii
Vrindaba n community near
index.
Preston County for the death of
The last bargaining session Moundsville. about 80 miles
another Krishna devotee in June
ended Friday, with no reports of southwest of Pittsburgh, have been
1983.
any progress. Negotiations broke subpoenaed.
Charles Saint Denis allegedly
Klrttnananda Swami Bhaktip- was killed in retaliation lor raping
oil Sept. 4 and resumed Sept. 12,
breaking off again the following ada. the commune's spiritual guru. the wife of another devotee, Daniel
was not summoned. but a source
day.
Reid of Los Angeles. Reid also has
said
the past president was subpo- been cbargt'd with murdering Saint
Superintendent George Kingsmore has kept the schools cpen, but enaed. Kuladrl das. also known as
Denis. whose body was neve r
less than aJ percent of tiE dtstrtct's Art VIUa, had traveled to India this
recovered.
4,:nl students have attended s ummer but was reported back at
No trial dates have been set.
New Vrindaban last week.
New Vrindaban leaders have
staunchly dented any wrongdoing.
In the initial leg of what could
prove to be a lengtcy investigation. charging, Instead, that the news
media and local and state officials
the jury wUJ meet through Wednes·
are "out to get" the Krisbnas lor
day and will roncentrate at the
their unusual beliefs and lifestyle.
outset on the Hindu beliefs overall
(Susie) Balles, both of Leon, and its history in West VIrginia.
"Our only activity '' to serve
Vtrgfnta Friend of Manchester. said U.S. Attorney Willi a m God," Swami Bahktipada said In a
Pa .. Hare! Thacker of Grimms Kollbash.
rff&gt;t•nt interview.
Landing, W.Va., Shirley Damalo ol
From there. he said. the grand
San Francisco, CaW., and Patricia
jury will telescope its work into
The Krlshnas last week laid off
Gordon of Grimms Landing; a son, recent history - s~ UicaUy. the 00 workers to shore up a legal
WUliam Gordon of Arbuckle. May 22 murder in Los Angeles of defense fund .
W.Va.; three sisters, Minnie Ed· Steve Bryant. a disenchanted
Factions inside the Krishna
wards of Columbus, Zelda Stanley Krishna who had char~d the organization are jockey ing for
r:l Columbus, and Desste Klffle of Krishnas dealt in drugs to finance
power in self-desc ribed turf wars ,
New Haven; three brothers, Steven temples such as the Pal,.,e of Geld, but Swami Bahktipada has viewed
RoUins of Porter. Howard RoUins of a major tourist ·attraction In West the st ruggte as .mere differmces of
Orient, andBlliRollinsdLeon; and Virginia.
opinion - not a holy war as some
26 granochlldren and ai greatBryant. 33. an rutspoken cri ti c of have characterized it .
granochildren.

Grand jurors probing
• • •
acttvtlles
at commune

SPRfNGFIELD. Ohio 1UPI1An acting Springfield cit v manager
is ex)X'Cted to he appointed tonight
to fill the position ~x'ing vaca ted by
Gregg LaMar who resigned "for
the good of the comm unity."
LaMar submi tted his resignation
Monday at the request of city
commissioners. The resignation is
effective at 5 p.m. today.
LaMar "willingly gave his resignation for the good of the com munIty. " said Mayor Eugene Kunk.

"This commission feels I must do
anything In Its power to ensure the
passage of a tBJ( issue oo the
November ballot.
"The commission felt LaMar
didn't have the citizens' co nfidence
in administering the ci ty," the
mavor said.
City commissioners are schP.
duled to name an acting city
manager during a meeting tonight.
A search for a new manager ;; to
begfn Immediately.

Candidates trade
years. He sa id the numher o1
manufacturing jobs was "starting
to go up In mtd -1983. That was
before theeffi&gt;ct d Celeste's Income
tax and increased business taxes
began to be felt. "
Since then. sa id Duerk, manufacturing jobs have left Ohio. "This
shluld not happen In the mlcklle of
the greatest national recovery In
the last 25 years. They obviously
have set out on a campaign of
distortion, misrepresentation and
lieS. You wruid think with a
buUding !uU of rompu!Ers they
could get tiEtr facts straight. "
StetnbaciEr agreed that manu·
racturing jobs are an Important
part o! a state's employment
strategy. She said Ohio still ranks
third in the nation In that category.
But she said the administration
haS a dlversl!ied jobs plan, seeking
growth-industry jobs in service.
retail and woolesale trade, ~nd

tconttnued from Page 1!

finance. Insurance and real estate.
" Three-fourths o! all new jobs In
Ohio are created by small bus!·
nesses," said Steinbacher. "Smokestacks are line. but they are not
enough."

than ;c.st a karate studio. As a new
business in town we want to do
·more than just survive and prosper.
We want to contribute to the Ufe d
the community. We want to be
involved In sponsoring dances and
other events lor area young JM!lple.
and to assist in rommunitydevelopment and civic projects. The
ultimate aim of any legitimate
martial artist is to enrich the lives d
the Individuals with whom he
comes Into contact, and the com·
munlty In which he Dves," comments Massie.
Massie is a third degree black
he lt In tae kwon do, ooids a brown
belt In kodokan ;c.do, Is trained in
sbotokan, alkldo and shaoUn kung
lu. He began his training In 19Qiand
is Hsled In Who's Woo in American
Martial Artists. He has coached .

jt: •-"·

*n•

IEPA• .

LOCATED: MAIN S .. AUTi.ANDt OHIO
OPEN: 8·11 MON.·SAT.; 8·8 FRI.
PH. 74 ·3088
VI.. Welcome

.....

~--

~··-,

·--

DEVIL- The .Red DevU emblem ~ Rutland lligh Scllool da.YJI Uves
oa tit tbe Rutland Elemenlary School - lhanks m tbe concen&amp;raled
elton&amp; of tbe 8Chool's PTO which has converted the schooii)'IIIIUIIUm
from a daik, drab laciUty Into a lively spot over the summer montiB.
Aceen&amp;s of J'!!(l and black, the ooklrs of the fanner Rutland ID&amp;h Sdlool,
have been tilled In tbe auditorium with walls and ceUinp done In 111
ofl-wltlte. Elevated sealing In the audltlrium Is In red and black and
m••8 ~ .large Red DevU emblem, heiag' observed In tbe piDio by
Janile WIUiamson; serond IJ'&amp;der and daugltler of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
WllllarMoo. Rutland, tbe bankboards feature small devD emblems on
~ romer.tbe auditorium Door sparkles after having been redone by
!he PTO II'OUP· Responsible lor the p-oject has been Max W._Ua&amp;ch,
PI'O pi'E altknt, who palnled the emblems, with PTO members pitching
m.to lieljt wMh tbe king size project. In addllkln, liE PTO group has
railed money lor new basketbaU and dleerleader unllonns and

equipment.

OW PHONES - 'There are
the type of telephones that were
tilled Ia tbe Ponland area during
the Wortd War I era.

Mrs. Jane Walton. her daughter-

PAID PRESCRIPTIONS, INC.

c_
n .,.. iuttte, R.Ph.

AoMid Hll"'lng, R. Pfl.

Mon. thN l•t. 8:00a.m. to I p.m.
I
SundiY 10:10 10 1l:JO •nd e to • p.m.
·
PREICRIPTIONI .
PH . 112·21&amp;1&amp;
fritndty8•MH

E. Mltn
\

Open ~tl dl I

By G~YLE PfUCE
gradually went up, ending at one
Country people had difficulty dollar. The namesofthesecretarles
obtaining reliable telephone service in order as listed were John
in former days.
Simmons, M.D., D.E. Hoback,
From the records of some of the L.W. Gandee, C.L. Young, Hays
old companieS in this area getting McMurray and Fagan Price.
telephone service was a do-lt·
The Citizens Telephone Co., tine
yourself project
6. was organized AprH 20, 1!Kl4, to
How line 6 of the Citizens construct a telephone line from
Telephone Co. of Lebanon Town- Portland to Dorcas. A branch was
ship operated Is found In a tobebuUttoprovldeaconnectlonto
hand-written journal loaned to us Ravenswood. This line was an·
by Maxine Shain of Racine.
chored on a stout pole on a hUJ In
The journal extended Its records Ohio above the Ravenswood Ferry
from Aprll aJ. 1904, to AprH 4, 19ll. landing. From this pole a wtre was
The names found In this book ate a strung across the river to RavensWho's Who of the ·tocality. Not wood. The expenses !or building
many women's names appear. All this line were divided up evenly
through the journal, the getting of among the charter memhers. Each
material and keeping up with costs . membercontroUed one shareo!the
was evident Some of the notes of company. Sbareswerevaluedat$2
!he meeting were a little comical. each.
The phone bUls were paid by the
The following persons were the
Quarter and started at 00 cents and original ocganizers of the com·

pany: D.O. Webster, John Stmmons, M.D., N.W. WIEeler, Wll·
liam Adams, Jame; HaU, Crow and
Richey, J .H. Grimm, WOllam
Rose Asbery Smith Erastus
You~. Daniel Sayre,' Sylvester
Grim and Art Richie. G. Walton
became a stockholder In 1900
On Aprll Zl l90I Crow. and
Richey offered ' free ~f char!J! to
make a telepbo~crosstngover 'the
Ohio to Ravenswood and give 2l
free poles. The d!er was accepted
by the rompany. La tO' friction
developed with the ftrm of Crow
and Richey and t!Ey sold their
share of the company hack to the
oc!ginal sltareool~Ers lor $20.
From the above named It 1s sale
to as!Ume that there ~re some
family ociented !actors involved.
Dr. Simmons tlved across the road
!rom WIUiam Adams and Simmons
married an Adams· relative. N.w.

IBUII WIEeler lived only a few records:
.
yards away and J.S. Hall married
-"Exa mination of nne 6 was 1Q
Into the Wheeler family. Wheeler be made and bring a statement 111
was said to have served In the tlte President - bow many poleS·
Confederate Army. The Rtchtes' was needed and whereabouts they
had a nice borne very close to wer~. needed."
·
Adams and Dr. Simmons.
- Notlty - thathepayhtspb:&gt;~
The newty-&lt;rgantzed rompany bill (caU switch ooard duesJln tun
elected D.D. Webster to buy the or be cut a!!."
.
wire, Insulators and brackets to
-"All the rmney taken rut of the
start the line. The Initial purchase treasury and ~W had to meet the
was $75.47 and each stockholder rest .~t of pocket."
.
chipped In his share. A pair of. piers
- Take what money we have
and a pair of. snips were bought a t a and. buy WU'e and come this way
cost of 50 cents each. Various lstnng It! as tar as possible."
.
stock holders got out and worked on
-"Meeting called to order. First
and repairE:d the line. At one time, thing on the 'c:bcot' -pay dues." ·
Dr. Simmons made some rtpam .
"-The company - I do noi
Doctors were not specialists In consider that I am a rnemherd tJrKr
tiDse days.
6 - ~. as vru like with my ·
To give yru some Idea of the Interest.
.---.
decisions made by Citizens TeleAnd the last notation in the booiC.·
pbane Co. consider these notes
:
·
copied verbatim !rom the rompany
"Balance in tr&lt;'asury Sli.35. Book ·
closed ADril 4. 19.~ ...

Meigs residents share impressions of modem S. Korea

WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO FILL
PRESCRIPnONS FOR

'ttitnmh Mo~ll~flh. R.Pt..

was hired as a reader guide to assist .
a . blind student at the junior high
school.
Given professional leaves were
Eleanor B!aettnar, Oct. 31 and Nov.
1. to attend tiE Ohio Educational
Library'Media Association Convention In Columbus and Sept. 19 to
attend a media !p!CiaUsts orienta·
tlon training session at Marietta;
Jolm Blaetinar. to attend market·
Jng education district coordinators
mrettn,gs, 8P!I'OX!rnately six during the year; Mlck ChUds, Bob
Ashley, Rusty Bookman and CUll
RIVER SCENE - These two !iemwheelers
alter being in Marietta. taking part In river actlvMietJ
Kennedy to a !tend the NIKE
created a picturesque sight on the Ohio River In
there over the past lew days.
basketbaU clinic in Cleveland, Oct.
Pomeroy Tuesday momln~t as they moved do~miiver
3. Board Memher Larry Rupe cast
a negative vote on the lour coaches
a!tending · the NIKE basketball
clinic, sating thathedldnotbelleve
It was necessary for all four to
attend.
Treasurer Jane Fry was autho·
Rutland Village Council Meigs County Park District, pres· document.
rlzed to appropriate $ll0 to the
members were pleased to hear enled a slide presentation outUng
Town Marshal Clinton Patterson
Meigs High School Tri-Valley Quiz !rom Councilman Herb Elliot that tiE park commission, and its need asked that speed limit signs be:
Bowl Team, which was of!iclaUy
Rutland has a "good chance" of lor a .5 mill county-wide qJerating posted rn Brick Street. CouncU wUI
establtsiEd as an activity last night,
obtaining Community Develop- levy to develop tourtsm within the pay forand erectthree~mphslgns
and Advisor Rita Slavin was
ment Block Grant fUnds to repair a county.
and ooe 35 mph sign, l! street.
autiDrized leave to attend a
sewage problem on Salem Street,
PoweU asked council to pass a supervisor David Davis cannot lind
meeting at WTAP on bowl
sjnce the problem Is considered a resolution to aUow the park district spare signs on hand.
activities.
health hazard.
Davis reported that several ftre
to operate within Rutland VlUage
· The dlstrlct's fieet insurance
EUlot made his report at Tuesday limits. Council was in favor of the hydrants and catch basins within
poUcy with Downlng-Citllds-MuUen
night's regular meeting of councU.
resolution but specified a few the vUJage need repair. CoUncil said
was c~anged !rom a six-month
Rutland wlll be applying for block cban~s to the wording of the
tContinued on Page 3l
policy to an annual policy with the grant fUnding through the Meigs
premium changt'd !rom $8,&amp;13 to County Commissioners.
$17,286 for tiE longer period. A
EUlot also reported the village
contract for services !rom the may be eligible lor a s~ial grant
Educational Media Resouroe Cen· to repair the sewage problem, but
ter ol the Trt-County Joint Voca- did not go Into great detail on the
Ilona! School was renewed at a cost matter.
ol $4,917.aJ.
It was noted that a lEavy truck is
POINT PLEASANT - City Holding Company, ooldlng company
A services agreement with Ule· stU! heing parked on New Lima
of The City National Bank of Charleston and The Bank o! Cross
touch Senior Portraits lnc .. Lancas- Road, within village limits, causing
Lanes, Cross Lanes, has signed a letter of Intent to purchase aU the
ter, lor senior class· ~tography
dt~~TU~ge..to tbe catch basin In that
.shares o! Peoples Bank of Point Plee.sanll .. . ·' • •.. · · •.
services to Uti! Mel&amp;io~
area. J!e~lult!tbls-11 c~ettriiCiton ot
~~Bank ,.-oufd become a wholly-owned subsidiary of. the ·
School and its yearllook depart· vlltage pl'operty, Mayoc Jim Fink
hlikl!ng company pending approval by regu!at&lt;ry autmrlties and
·ment was approved. However. suggested a $25 ftne be enacted for
shareholders o! The Peoples Bank.
answering a question lor an the ct!ense, In addition to payment
The affU!at!on wouk;l bring assets of Oty Holding Company to
explanatkm of "senior class photoby tf!e of!ender of repair costs.
more than $185 million and deposits of $165 million, said James L.
graphy," Superintendent Dan E. Council moved to enact the ftne.
Burns, president of City Holding Company. "The acqulsitbn wUI not
Morris explained that the poUcyo!
Fetty also pointed out that
a!!ect . the operations, personnel or mard of directors of 1\!oples
thepistperrnlttingmembersofthe anyone moving In or oot rt the
Bank. We feel the bank has done an excellent job in tiE wmrnunlty
senior class to have their senior village must contact Clerkand we expect that to continue," Bums said.
portraits made at the studio of. t!Eir Treasurer Greg VanMeter to have
Forrest Clark, chairman o! the board d The Peoples Bank, said,
coo tee wUI continue.
water turned on or o!!. Individuals
"This action wUl enable us to be more competitive in ru rderegulated
Handbooks for parents and stu· rEfusing to do so wUI be ftned the
banking environment, and we oope lt,l offer our customers even
dents at the Bradbury, Harrison- mayoc said.
better service In the years to come.
vUle, Mlcklleport, Pomeroy, Ru CouncU moved to bold a com"We look forward to our association with City Holding Company."
tland, Salem Center and SaUsbury munity party this Halloween, in·
The Peoples Bank was estabUsiEd in Point Pleasant in 1965. In
Elementary Schools were stead d trlck-or-treat.·A date was
1985, the bank acquired the Mason County Bank and now has
8P!I'CNed.
not decided upon but the party wlll
locations In Point Pleasant, Mason and New Haven.
The board accepted Brent Bissell
Ukely be held at the civic center.
!Continued on Page 31
Steve Powell. representing the

Rural phone service linked Portland with region

EAGLES
' 7:oo a

Phar rnac 'I

26 Cenb .

Holding company to buy
all Peoples Bank shares

LEGAL

LOWEST PIIOS ON PASSENGII CAU
AND UGHI IIUCI DIES
*AUG-IS *fllONT DID WOII.

coach; Rick Edwards, eighth grade
ooys basketball coach at the junior
high; Mitchell Meadows, seventh
grade boys basketball coach at the
junior high; Rick Ash, girls junior
high basketball coach.
The mard accepted tile resignation of Mrs. Ida Diehl, who Is
retiring from her duties as a
long ·time teacher at the Pomeroy
Elementary School effective Oct. 31
and It was agrtied to send her a
tetter of commendation.
Karen J. Stanley was hired as a
kindergarten aide for Rutland ill!d
Carol Phillips was hired as a
substitute bus driver. Uoyd Turpin
was . named to the substitute
teachers Ust and Yvonne Young

(Continued from Page 1)

ROBEIIT . DEBRA
REDFORD WINGER

SUJ I5HER L0H5E

2 Sections, t2 Pageo

A Multimedia lne. Newepaper

Rutland seeking block grant -

Ohio Extended Forecast

"OmiiiO VOl TBE SAFELY"

Matlll' C•rd M

By BOB HOEFUCH
Semmel Stall Writer
~lEad teachers were named
and several employees were given
other supplemental contracts when
the Meigs Local School District
Board o! Education met In regular
session Tuesday night.
Named head teachers at their
respective schools were Deborah
Lowery, Harrisonvllle Elementary; Ron Drexler, Salem Center
Elementary, and Ed Bartels, Salls·
buJ'Y Elementary.
Given supplemental contracts
were Eleanor McKelvey, high
school yearbook advisor; Ro!ll! r
FCBter, head varsity basebaU coach
and assistant varsity basketball

Veterans Memorial

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

enttne

Pomero -Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, September 17, 1986

Ohio weather

A chance o! shl\&lt;ers 'Illlrsday
and Saturday, with fair weather
Friday. Highs wU1 range !rom the
upper 70s to tiE middle Ills
Thur.;day and Friday and in the 70s
Saturday. Overnight lows wUJ be in
the 00s or lower OOs.

•

Meigs board :employs
three head·teachers

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

Admissions - Charles Blake,
Steinbacher said Rbades, when Racine.
be was goveroor from J.979.82, had
no plan to prevent loss a! Industry.
Discharges - Ralph Sisson,
"We knew we were a manulactur- Benjamin Smith, WUbur Haning,
Golda Smith, George Kuhn.
)-tn_g
:_st_a_
te.:..,"_s_he_sa_ld_._ _ _ _ __.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--1

*IAm•s

Vo1 .38, No.94

Copyrighted 1986

Increasing cloudlneu lonJIId,
with a chalice ~ showers alter
midnight ll!ld a low mtbe •per
50s. Mostly cloudy Thunday,
with a chance ~ showen aad
highs mtbe upper lUs.

035
PICK-4
2442

at y

users." he said.
'"l'hlsetwo states (Iowa and New
Du Pont proposed the govern- Hampshire! are ·very similar in
ment gel out of the agricultural
their political process," Perkins
Nunln Court, Marton.
marketplace over a five-year pe- said. "A politician there gets his
Mr. Shenefield was bam Oct. 10, rtod, making direct payments to
votes one handshake at a time."
1900. at Salem Center. a son of the farmers during the transition.
Du Pont is a direct descendant of.
late Haren W. and Sara White
He said his programs will not
E leuthere !renee du R&gt;nt, founder
Shenefield. He was also preceded In need more government money ora
of the D.J Pont company.
death by his wUe, Lela Bell Claggltt tax Increase.
Educated at Princeton and Har·
Shepefleld on March 2, 1983; and by
"Government doesn't need more
vard as a lawyer. du Pont served
a son, a sister, and two brothers.
money until II does better with the
three years in the Navy and several
money
it
already
has.
"
du
Pont
years
witth the family company
A self-employed carpenter in
before embarking on his political
Pomeroy for 21 years. Mr . Shene- said . "Teaching government that
career. He served two terms In the
field Is sutvived by two sons. Clair Jesson was the challenge of the
state legislature, three terms ,as
E. of Marlon, and Lucien S. of Reagan administration. Applying it
Delaware's lone congressman a nd
Arcadia. Fla.; two daughters, Mrs. Is the challenge of the next one."
Uke most of toose likely to run in
two extraordinarily popular terms
Parker (Helen l HaU, Marlon. and
du
Pont,
51.
has
made
tlttle
as
govenor until 1984.
19tl8,
Mrs. Rod (Betty I Metcalf, Manssecret
d
his
presidential
ambitions.
,_
_
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
field: two sisters, Mabel Payne,
Marlon, and Evelyn Tbomas, Jack- His presidential campaign commit·
soo; 14 grandchildren and aJ tee has been active for months and
has raised $500.000.
great-granochlldren.
The mutt tmUllonalre knows his
Services wlll be held at 10 a.m.
Thur.;day at the Boyd Funera l run for the White House wHI be
Home, 122 W. Columbia St., uphill.
"We've got more work to do than
Marton. with Dr. Richard Fry
officiating. Burial will be in VInton the rest," du Pont spokesman
Memorial Cemetl!)'. Friends may Robert Perkins concedes.
But du Pont ls hoping his
caU at the luneral home !rom 7-9
p.m. Wednesday. Contrlbutlons In luture-oriented mix of ronservative
his memory may be made to the economics and moderate social
philosophy will make him an
American Cancer Society.
attractive alter native to Bush,
altoough ~me say the vice !I'esld·
ency or a Ca binet post Is his real
goal.
Du Pont. who held a fund -raiser
lor political friends and family
members at the Hotel du Pont
South Central Ohio
Monday night, said be needs about
Mostly clear tonight, with a low in $8 million going Into the 1988
I
the upper 40s. Mostly sunny
primaries.
Wednesday, with highs in the low
After his public announcement.
70s.
du Pont will fly to Iowa and New
Hampshire. the first caucus and
primary states. as well as
CaWornia.

'Oalnday lhrough Saturday

Daily Number

•

Clair F. Shenefield, 85. formerly

~dojo'

Ohio Lottery

4

of Meigs County. died Tuesday
morning at hls residence at 366

Services were held at 2 p.m.
today in Crow-Russell Funeral
Home. Point Pleasant, for Delcta
Rollins Gordon, 79, Rt. 1, Robertsburg, W.Va., who died Saturday in
Pleasant Valley HospitaL
The Rev. Verlin Hart officiated
and burial was in Smith Cemetery.
near Leon.
She was bam Sept. 10, 1907. she
was the daughter of the late Art hur
RoUins and Nellie ChUders and was
theWUeofthe tate Floyd H. Gordon.
Surviving are six daughters,
Mary Agnes Stover and Charlene

A grand
opening will be observed
AAU.
karate.
at the dojo on Oct. 4.

Millionaire enters

Clair F. Shenefield

(Continued from Page 1)

Springfield official resigns

~Page

•

1

Delcia Gordon

Middleport

Capt. Crow's
picks for
loop openers

·

flalftlfov , Oh.

,,

in·law, Mrs. Geri Walton and son.
Shawn, recently were In South
Korea io spend some time with
F!nt Lt. Scott Walton. who Is
statio~ at ~ Yang-San Army
Base in Seoul but will be returning
to the sll!tes about mld.OCtober.
. While a· common Impression may
be that South.Korea Is a backward
· country~ tl'r accouni d Jane Walton
!rom IEr Jo\lmal kept o! the trip,
dellcl1bes moderJ• progressive ac·
tton which has taken place. Mrs.
Walton comments:
South Korea of tiE l9llls Is not the
South Korea d the 19005 when the
Amerlcan .IIO!dters !ought and died
for a country they hardly knew
exlaled.

The larger cities were heavily "barter." You always say, "best
damaged dur1ng the war, and the price.'
rebuilding that has taken place In
Driving in SOut·h Korea can be
the past 10 years Is phenomenal. dangerous. The right of way
The Western Influences are every- belongs to the driver woo has tbe
w!Ere: western style clothing, "guts" to take It. They have only
buUdbjgs, super highways, sub- driven by traf!Jc laws and street
ways, transportation artd fast food markings lor the past live years.
chains such. as Wenttys, Kentucky There are no women drivers In
Fried Chicken, Btll'g'er Chef and South Korea.
Pizza Hut. Even 110, South Korea Is
We wW have a greater apprec!a·
trying to preserve Its ancient tbn o1 the Olympic aames m1911!
culture.
since we have seen the beautifUl
The South Koreans are very new llladlum and sports complex.
courteous and eager to please. The Constnlctbn ri the sports villlllle
clerks In the department store wUI continue untO time d · the
would bow when wewallted by even Otymplcs. We were not allowed to
thopugh we were not stopping at tall~ pcturel of thi! ljiOrts complex
their counter. In some soopplng II' of any d. the publlc Ill Ddlngs.
areas, the merchants Uke to They UVe in tear of tiE North
•'
I

•

'.

.·

men of all natk)ns who bught and cars have white seat covers and::
Koreans every day.
"Hodori" ls the official emblem died In South Korea. General fancy Ussue boxes In the back ·
of the Olympics. He looks much like · Douglas McArthur Is sill spoken of. window. Boys at the gas station( ·
"Tony, the Tiger." TIE South with the greatest d respect We wear white gloves to pump gas ari(t
·
were,, given a guided toor of the to clean ywr windsiield.
Koreans, oowever, do not agree.
I
have
made
ll'&amp;'seH
a
promtse::
memorial.
General
McArthur's
The l&gt;rest was 100 percent
destroyed dur1ng tiE Korean con· invasion is.slllwn and explained In never to stare at a foreigner again: :
filet They have a virgin IDrest, and , detaU. The men¥&gt;rial CNerkloks We were usually tiE only Amert .. ·
It Is against the law lo cut do1m a '"Blue Beach," the beach where cans I!Yerywhere we went. School.:
tree. The v.md that Is 111ed Is bought General McArtlllr landed in South chUdren that were laking tours ~
were very curious about us, an&lt;j&gt;
!rom the states o! Wasltngtoo and , Korea.
they wwld rome up· to us and;:
South
Korea
has
tlte
tallest
~n. Tliere are oo wooden
~slcalJy touch us.
llllldlng
In
Asia
96
stories
the
oous(!ll. An hluaes and buildings are
They have a blue super train ::
larjJ!st
Earthen
dam,
the
larjJ!St
buD! rt trick, cement block or
healed
b tiE Winter and a~·:
Christian
churchseating
:!1,000
In
marble. ·They have mountains cl.
conditioned
In tiE summer. The:.
the main auditorium - and I truly
marble.
At Inmon, witch I am sure is a belleve, the lariJ!st intersections In green train Is the commuter train, ~
comfortable but crowded. The·::
farnWar name to a lot of1Korean Asia.
Vehicles llllst be kept clean - no &lt;ran!J! train you avolded.ltcarrtecb :
servtceml!l, there Is an oltstandlng
(Continued on Page 12)
:Z.
mirble memorial to the service· rust ljiOts and no dents. Most of tiE

\

. .·'

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....··

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