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                  <text>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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· · · ~-·-~-

Wadneaday,

Commentary
.

Ill Court Street
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~v

,.....,__,._-.-,~o:::~.=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WIIITEHEAD
·Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press In ternational, Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'T'TERS

or OPINION arE' welcome. They should

Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, ~tember 17, 1988

What has got Into the (usually)
good Sen. Warren Rudman cl New
Hampshire• Intheeventyouhadn't
ootlced, he has craftily attached a
rider to an approprations bUI the
effect of which would be to return to
the Legal Services Corp. the right to
continue its attempt to change the
American way of life, not an
exaggerated way to put it if you
study the activities of the LSC In Its
evolution since Its rounding In 1974.
Sen. Rudman is head of the
Comrnerce, Justice, State and
Judiciary Subcommittee of the
Senate Appropriations Committee,
and his rider would undo the careful
administrative work done by the
Reagan administration to attempt
to stop funding the revolutionary
activ it ies of ideologized young
lawyers who don't like the way the
Founding Fathers set up this
republic.
It is an interesting exa mple of
how an agency etablished to
transact one kind of thing ends by

Pomeroy, Ohio

~lb
ts:ml1tl

be i£&gt;Ss tha n :nJ words

long. AU letters a r e subjec t to editing and IJJJSI be signed wi th name. address and

telephone number . No wt slgned IE"tters will be published . Letten should be In
good taste , addressing Issues, not persooaUties.

Letters to the Editor

assqclatlng Itself most prominently
withaqultedlfferentsortctthlng.It
all began In the '60s when Lyndon
John$0n was kloking atnut for any
conceivable undone business that
could be called "social justice" and
decided that just as the affluent In
America have education, housing,
mooleal care and legal services, so
the poor should have aU of these.
The Idea was for the federal
goverment to finance the petition
by a poor person to rectify an
injustice, and to avail himself of
legal recourses available to others
throughout the service of lawyers.
The kind of thing Congress was
thinking about was how to fetch up
the Social Security check that
hadn't been Issued, or to get the
divorce. or get child assistnace
from the delinquent father - that
sort of thing.
There was much enthusiasm lbr
the program, exceptthat whatthen
happenoo Is that It was taken over
by tM_ Ideologues. Gov. Ronald

Reagan ct Callfornlafoughtbltterly
against the aggressions of the J..SC
In his own state, and at one point
declare:! that he would not accept
the federal money In CaUfomia.
When he bacame president, and
effOrt was made simply to ell)ni·
nate the J..SC. This was blocked by
the lawyers lobby, which Is as
powerful as any this side of Israel's,
the farmers and the teachers
lobbies. What the president had to
settle for was an internal reorganizatlon, the lllf!Xlse ci which would
re to restore the·J..SC to Its original
lunctkln, of sE!lding money tD poor
people with which to hire lawyers to
get tlleir work done. This is
different from sending money to
lawyers to celebrate Bolshevism.
Ah, y(IJ !By, there he goes again ,
exaggerating the actlvlty of the
I.SC. Here is what Utah Sen. Orrin
Hatch said, after Investigating the
methods and goals ci the LSC study
centers: "Their metiDd was elandestine; their objective was secret;

Cattle drives in Minersville
One would hardly relieve it but
Minersville did have Its eaWe
drives. Not the kind you read atnut
in the western novels or sre in the
movies, Involving hundroos of
cattle. But not all cattle drives were
reserved for the western country.
Here In our town 11 consisted of 10
• to 25 or more cattle, at tlmes,
: coming down the main highway on
··State Route 124, through the heart
··of our vUiage.
~ Prior to the era of the 1920s
J&gt;llnersville .had a mucky or du sty
. f!lad . The only road material
:: :~vailable was cinders, the by' ·f)ro&lt;luct of the two salt works
: :Ioca ted here. Cinders applied to the
~:moo suriace would soon break
:·:oown and pulverize, because of the
· :rorse and wagon traffic, along with
: mrmal weather conditions. II
: would never pack down but wou ld
: ;usually ·re a loose black dust three
:-or
.. tour Inches thick. You can
~-lrnaglne when this was stirred up
~ :the dusty condition that existed ,
: ;especially 11 a breeze was blowing.
: ·(One father said that his wife
· ~metlmes at the end of the day
:. Would wash the faces of tllrre cr
'~ur chUdren before she would find
: :tile of her own.)
~- : Now in regard to the rnttle drive.
; ~911 would be in the Illuse or rut In
~· 2it yard and in-till ~tan~ ;,:ru
·: wouril falriily hear the barking of a'
: {pg or two, then the ba wllng of
·:Pattie and the siDuting of men 's
: &lt;i.oices. These sounds would intm~ S1fy with volume, stirring you to
dash out into the front ya rd to sa&gt;
what was taking place. Looking you
:: would see coming down the high·
:· way a herd of cattle driven by men
·: on horse back, some times a man or
· two walking or running, with
: severa l catt le dogs yapping, bark: ing and nipping at t11t&gt; cattle's legs
· to keep them moving In a herci&gt;d
: condition wit hin the tnundrv of tiP
highway.
·
: . Vecy few people had tiPir yards
. fenced. In those days from 1iP
White Rock Salt Works klcata:l in
Jhe eas t end ul town to the west end,
the riv er bank was kept rleared of
brush and trees lor garden pur·
poses. Just here and t iPre would he
a tree. except the low growing
Willow trees tha t bordered IIJ&gt; river
shore. Each family in front of 1iPir
homes had Iheir own garden plot .

-

So with Ihe open vard and an open
. t lver bank these men. horses and
•. doi\5 had a job to do. The c;attle
:. would at limes gel out of cont rol:
: run up into and through the yards.
· some times across the st reet ca r
: track and over the river bank.
; There would be a lot of commotion
- In try in g to keep the cattle In a
:; packed herd with in the highway.

.

.

Down past your home wttn the
dust stirred up, the yelllngs of men,
neighing of tnrses, bawllngof cattle
and the barking of the rattle dogs,
joined by those dogs of the property
owners, would make an exciting
day for an ~n mouth dazzled eyed
boy standing and shouting, "Mamie
come look." She would already be
there by my side watching the
stnw. On down the road we would
watch them go, over the river bank,
In and out of the yards, until t11t&gt;y
were out of sight.
These cattle would come from the
farms up around the Racine area
and they were relng taken to
market at the slaughter houses
d:&gt;wn in the Naylors Run and lower
Pomerov area. There the cattle
would be butchered and sold at the
local butcher shops In Pomeroy and
also delivered by butcher wagons to
the homes in the surrounding
communities. The arrival of the
butcher would re announced by the
ringing of his bell. As he would stop
at eac h of the homes along the way
the lady of the house would come
rut and make her seiPCiions for her
meais for the next few days. The
meat was kept fresh by large blocks
d. ice.
The other method of marl&lt;etlng of
the cattle washy numerous packet ,
tnats plying the river.
One might as~ . what did they do
about the traffic of the auto? The
auto had not hecome of age enough
to he a hindrance to the rattle drive.
The auto did not make thei r
sho\\ing to any extent until the
laMer teens. When the aut o did
co me so did the trucks. There was
then no further need for a cattle
drive. With the coming of trucks a
new era of marketing cat tle
entered . Cattle buyers originated
and I hey would go to the farms and
bargain to buy or haulthe ra ttle. for
a fee, to the live stock auction bam
that was established at Gallipolis.
Ohio.
In those days many ra Mie were
raised in Me1gs County. Many of
our hl lls now over grown in brush
and trees were tMn cleared and
used for the grazzlng of cattle.
These clean and grass covered hi lls
make a vecy pict uresque picture as
one traveled around our count rv
side.
"
Today there are not many cattle
ralsoo In our area but those that are
go to market In special trucks
des lgnoo for that purpose. As they
go down through Minersville now ,
they look out at us as we used to
wa tch them, the real difference there are no exciting memories.
Written by:
Victor L'Berger Brown
429ro St. Rt. 124
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

/ foday in history
:. :
; :
- : :

..

Today is Wednesday. Sept. 17, the 260th day of 1986 wlth 105 to follow.
The moon Is almost full .
There is no morning star.
The PVenlng stars are Mercury, Venus, Ma rs, Jupiter and Saturn.

: . Those tnrn on this date are under the slgo of Virgo. They include 1940s
:· .radio news commentator Gabriel Heatter in 1800, Chief Justice Warren
•: ·Burger In 1907 1age 79), country mu sic pioneer Hank Williams Sr. in 1923,
:· actor Roddy McDowallln ~ (age 581, actress Anne Bancroft in 1931 (age
:· _551. author Ken Kesey In 1935 (age 511. and actor John Ritter In 1948 (age
• 38.)

: : On this date in history:
•
In 1'187. the U.S. Constitutlon, completoo In Phlladelphla, was signed by a
: ·majority of the 55 delegates to the Constitutional Conventkln. .
~· · In 1796, President Geot'g{' Washlngton delivered his farewell address,
-: warning the American people to avoid foreign atuances.
In 19:11. Russia Invaded Poland. 16 days after Nazi Germany moved Into
· the same country.
: : In 1!178, the Camp David summltended with Egypt and Israel IiB:!glng to
~ .sign a peace treaty In three months.
' ; In 198), depOsed Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somoza was
· ·assasstnatoo
In Paraguay.
.
,_
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I )

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~....;,: Local

Page-2~ The

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The Washlngton Legal Foundatlon brought togetrer scholars and
journalists to study the activlt~s of
the LSC. RaelJean Isaac, ooeclthe
autlxlrs of "The Coercive Utopians," collectoo a few exan,.xes of
the anlmatlng bias of the legall:llk
relng fulded by Congress to the
tune of atnut $.))1 million per year.
In Boston, Gary Bellow oft he Legal
Services Institute, and offslxlot of
the Grmter Boston Legal Services,
said in 1982, "Most of us agree that
... America maintains a deeply
stratified class system; changing
thls system, and Its most recent
manifestation In Reagan conservatism, Is a prlmary concern of most
ct us who do f!:al services work."
Another I.SC lawyer spolle of the
socond rrodel t&gt;r the I.SC, the first
ll'lng the direct aid 1br f!:ai
services. In this socond model,
"service to Individual clients is
provided ooly as ·a means l:lr
winning the confidence c1 the poor
community and ilr learning atnut
the problems faced by poor· persons." The true ot4 ectlve "of
practlcing poverty law must be to
organize poor people, mther than to
solve their legal (J'oblems. The
proper job for a poor people's
lawyer is helping poor people to
change this." So has It gone: I.SC
has recome a lobby of left-minded
lawyers to pool their resoums to
infiuence legislatures, congress and
the general public to rally around
tiP gxlalist Dag. The question is
why Sen. Rudman should give his
name to a rider that would
undermine. any efftlrt to restore
legal services to Its original role.?
The full Appropriations Conunlttee has yet to act on that rider, and
of course there is tiE vote bl the
Senate, and In the lbuse. And the
veto.

Lakin administrator resigns
POINT PLEASANT- Lakin Hospital Administrator Bob Howes
has resigned, effective Friday, to become executive director at the
186-bed Hillview Nursing and Convalescent Center bl Huntington,
W.Va.
.
Howes, who has been with Lakin 1br the past 15 yean;, serving as
administrator since June 1983, said the hospital's business rnana&amp;er.
Betty Sue Kauff, has been namoo acting administrator.
Ruth Ann Panepinto, coordlnato~ of lOIIfl·terrn health services for
the Wesf Virginia Department of Health, wUI serve ·as Interim
administrator, working part·Ume at the facUlty untO a permanent
replacement for Howes Is found. 1.
Howes and his wife, Inez, nu~lng director at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, will continue resldlni 1at their home on U.S. 35 in
Henderson. They are the parents Qf flve chUdren.
l

EMS units answer $ix calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Tuesday.
Middleport at 7:53 a.m. to 725 Chestnut St . for Clyde Ingl!ls to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10:50 a.m. to the Meigs
County Health Deparlment for Onda Klein to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Chester Fire Department at 2:31p.m. to a grass lire in the
Keno area; Tuppers Plains at 6:21 p.m. to Reedsvltie for JoAnn
Barringer to St. Joseph's Hospital; Racine at 8: 56a.m. transported
Clara Davis ID Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11: 11
p.m. to South Second Avenue for Jerry Coll ins to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·

Help for the brother__Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_on_&amp;_Da_le_V&lt;_an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - The Pentagon
has shown remarkable leniency in
dealing with James Aspln, brother
of powerfu I HouS&lt;' Armed Services
Committee Chairman Les Aspin,
O-Wls. , over a military fu eling
contract.
Federal ot!lctats and the Fm,
meanwhile. are checking ihto the
cont ract, which was awarded to a
bankrupt company owned by
J ames Aspln.
The eompan~ has defaulted
several times on it s obligation to
supply fuel for Air Nationa l Guard
planes at Stewart International
Air!llrt In Newburgh, N.Y , 00
miles north of New York City.
Aspin's firm, Air Vector Associates, had an earlier cont ract with
the slate of New York to operate tiP
airport , but it was cancelled due to
numerous safety viola tions and
failure to pay up toS200,000 in users'
fees to the state, court records
show

lr. the midst of a court battle over

the airport contract land after the could (J'Ove embarrassing, howcompany had filed for protection ever, since the congressmar is
under Chapter ll of the bankruptcy fighting off a !lXlve to oust him from
code), Air Vector was awarded the the chairmanship of the Armed
fu eling contract by the Defense Services Committee on )Xllitical
Fuel Supply, Center.
grounds.
Ed Biddle, deputy director of the
The ~6.5 million contract was
DFSC, defended the contract awarded . In Septemrer 1985 to
award. The government Isn 't de· supply fuel i&gt;r all Natklnal Guard
terred by a bankruptcy action; aircraft at Stewart. Pentagon
periormance Is wha t counts. he records show that contract ctflclals
said.
walved·the usual pre-award survey
No evidence has been turned up of the chosen company. Despite Air
tha t the congressman Intervened in Vectors' ongoing fight to stave off
the contract award for his brother 's bankruptcy, It was deemoo a
company. But Defense Fuel Supply "responsible" supplier.
officials acknowledged toourrepor·
The Defense Fuel Supply Center
ters Corky Johnson and David has finally regun its own lnvestlga .
Davis that an aide to Rep. Asplndid lion by Interviewing National
place a phone rail to the agency to Guard rifielals and top military
mqurre about the contract's status brass at Stewart. Pentagon records
after a default notice was issued to show a continuing problem In the
Air Vectors last November.
company's a bility to supply the
Lcs Aspln did not comment on the necessary fuel to the Guard's
stacy when asked. The problems planes.
with his brother's defense contract
For at least six weeks during the
contract term. Air Vectors has been

unable to refuel planes adequately.
On three =asians the government
thr eatened to terminate the
contract.
"We have been advised ... that on
14 February 1986 you were unable to
refuel aircraft." officials wrote to
James Aspln. "The Air Natlonal
Guard n:q uired 100,ml pounds
115,000 gallons ) of fu el tlr an
exercise on this date and Air
Vectors had only 1,100 gallons of
fu el. "
On Nov. H . 1985, j~ six weeks
aft er the contract took effect, the
fuel supply center warned Aspln
that he was in default and the
contract would be terminate:! In 10
days If corrective action wasn't
taken . The company asked and was
granted two time extensions, and
llnaUy resumed fuel[l)g on Dee.l8,
Pentagon oftlclals also wrote to
New York state auttnrities, asking
them to allow Aspln to subcontract
his fueling obliga lions

companies that are the largest
users of Western coal are, in the
words ri onelndustcy cbserver, "up
to their smokestacks in coal."
At the same tlme, the worldwide
collapse of crude all prices has
depressed the prices of other fuels,
leading to )Xlst)Xlnement of some
planned ooal development projects.
In the Tongue River Valley,
however, the proposoo Manteo
Mine, to be klcated between ·
Ashland and Birney, Mont., remalns the subject of a titter,
protracted dispute.
The amount of coal beneath the
grasslands at the site has' been
variously estimated at 120 million
tons to 185 million tons. The mine .
would strip It away at a rate ol at
least two mUllan tons per year.
However. the coal canmt now be
erommically and eHiclently transported to markets In the Midwest
and Northwest.
The proposed Tongue River
Railroad would ID)ve the (J'Oblern.
It would stretch along the narrow
valley from the mine site tD Miles
City, Mont., Ill miles mrtheast,
where it would ·IDllnect with the
Burlington Northern Railroad. It
also would e&gt;&lt;acerbate ranchers'
dl!!lcultles.
The Northern Plains Resource
Council, a· Billings-based coalition
of ranchers and environmentalists,
estimatES that the raUroad would
dlsprupt llle on 60 to 80 ranches,
~atlng many of them from the
river, their main source ·r1 water. ·
The railroad would not be
a;&gt;st-efticlent unless It IJaub! at least
tour million ·tons of coal annually.
Thus addltbnal mines - operatoo
by an lnlllstey ·mtortous 1br its
111smslllvltY to ·the havoc It often,
creates - almost certainly would

follow Manteo.
Plans to mnstruct a nlne-rnUe
spur near the 9luthern end of the
railroad to better serve Otter
Cr£ek, a tributary of tli&gt; Tongue
River, reinforce the ranchers' fears
that additional mines wUI be
opened.
U a 25-rnUe stretch cJ vallev was
eventually covered by strip
their acidic runoff could contaminate the area 's land and water. An

nunes,

"I

Clara Adams, of Racine, has
received word of the death of her
sister, Opal Brandenberger. Mrs.
Brandenberger died Saturday at
her home In Beaver Falls, Pa. In
addition to Mrs. Adams, she Is
survived by her husband, Ted; one
son, Gary; and a daughter-In-law.
Connie. She was preceded In death
by her parents, two brothers and
two sisters.

Abbie Strauss
Abbie Strauss, 89, Pomeroy, died
Wednesday morning at Veteran s
Memorial Hospital.
A homemaker, Mrs. Strauss was
born at Chester, Dec. 'll, 1896, a
daulll!ter of the late Dudley and
Anna Dean Hecox.
Surviving are a da ughter, Mrs.
Richard Leva. Mequon, Wls:; three
grandchildren, Mrs . Mic hae l
Schmidt, Stevens Point, Wis.;
Graham Side. New York City, and
Richard Leva Jr., MUwaukee, Wis.,
and two great-grandchildren, J a·
son and Andrew Schmidt, Stevens
Point.
Besides her parents. she was
preceded In death by her husband.
Otto Strauss in 1974.
Services will re held at 3 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
with Rev. James Corbitt officiating.
Burial will be in Mound Cemetery .
Friends may call at the fu neral
home one hour before the service.

Lawrence Wells
LawrenC&lt;:' Wells, 65, 55621 State
Route 124. Portland . died Wednes·
day llXlmlng at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Mr. Wells was tnrn at Portland

Pomeroy clerk details funds

Rutland to

All Pomeroy Village funds as cl Aug. 31totaled $202,916.22, Vill age
Clerk-Treasurer Jane Walton reports.
Receipts. disbursements and the end cl the month balance,
respectively. In each of the funds mak ln g up the total Include;
general, $18,979.87, $22,391.98, $l5,246Jl2; safety, $'}00, $149.40,
$6,610.71; street, $13,443.51, $10,564.73, $12.532.00; state highway ,
$178.27, $374.04, $411.37; fire , $154.63. $2.860.!il. $561.20; cemetery.
$787.72, $!116.10, $1,675.72; water, $21,063.117, $13,1S1.67, $~.112 . 54;
sewer, $7,554 .40, $6,1173.86, $3,m.98; gua ranty meter. $1,00l, $587.!il.
$ll,207.50; utility, no receipts, $2,695.52, SJS,467.72; sale of building.
$382.45, $382.45, W.19: perpetual care. no receipts. no disburse·
ments, $4,815.89; cemetery endowment , no receipts. no disbursements, $17,825.16; pollee pension, no receipts, $2,:l'll.OO , 0; wUdlng
fund. $117.55, no disbursements, $1,~.1li; recreation fund. no
receipts, $549.33, $712.96; tnnd retirement, no receipts, no
disbursements, $13,495; reveune sharing, $500, $2,600, $572.10;
permissive tax, $439.04, $&amp;JHJ5, $727.61.
.
Receipts for the month totaled ~ .850.51 while disbursements
amounted to $66,555.01.

repairs will take place as money
recomes available.
Council meinrer Vicki Fink
reported she will be attending
Thursday's meeting of the Meigs
County Soil and Water Conservation District and asked iftiEre wer e
any vlllage matters to he trough! to
the attention of SCS olflclals.
Council . told Fink that village
creeks need cleanoo out.
Dan Enright appearffl refo!'f'
council, on rehalf of Buck Dewhurst , to discuss the laying of a
water line to the Dewhurst prop·
erty. After discussion, the village
agreed to pay for costs d.. the
waterllne,lf Dewhurst lays the line.
The village wlll then tap Rutland's
main Une and Install aU meters on

Sean!h C9Dlinues
''
Gallla County Shi!rttf s Depart·
niment ~utllodtles wt~re sc:ltlduled to

'

Syracuse Vlllage CtiuncU
mtnds residents that a curfew for
juveniles Is In effect within tiE
village. The curfew was enacted at
the Sept. 4 meeting of council, at the
request of Pollee Chief Jim
Connolly.
All youngsters under the age of 1S
must he off the streets by 10 p.m.
This will be effective untO Oct. 1.
Arter Oct. 1, and unt ll March 1987,
youngsters under 1ll must be off the
streets by 9 p.m.
Residents are also reminded that
yard sales and flea markets are
prohlbitoo at the roadside park.
Syracuse residents will be permlttoo to hold such events at the
shelter area below London Pool.
Anyooe wishing to use the area for
such events must call CouncUman
Blll Amott at 992-5818.

conduct an aerial se8rch tor 11 plalie
that possibly crashed In the area
oorthwest of V111ton, near the
Gallla-Jt~ckSOn countY line Tuesday
nlght, acmrdlng to Carl E. Lang·
ford , chief Investigator.
Gallia and Jackson autoorltles
turned up nothing after searching
untO early this morning followlqg a
report ~tt 8: l!i p.m., Laniford mid.

on Oct. 23, l!lal, a son of the Eva
Cochran Wells and the late Roy
Wells. He was a retired government
employee at the BeilvUle Locks and
Dam.
Surviving are his wife, Tessie
Virginia Congo W~lls; a daughter
and son·ln -law, Thelma and James
Cu ndiff. Syracuse; two IDns and
daughter s-In-law, Gerald and
DoMa Jean Wells , GaUipolls, and
Mario n and Linda Wells, Pickerington; three sisters, Helen Wallbrown, Gladys Weddle. tnth of
Portland, and Violet Wllford.
Tuppers Plains, and his mother,
Eva Cochran Wells. Tuppers
Plains. Also surviving are seven
grandchildren and one great·
gra ndchild .
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in deat h by his father and
a sister.
Mr. Wells was a veteran ri World
War !I and was affiliated with the
Church of the Nazarene.
Services will he held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Syracuse Church of
the Na?&lt;!rene with Rev. Glen
McMlllan and Rev. Bob Mad ison
officiat ing. Burial will be in Brown ·
ing Cemetery at Portland. Friends
may call at the Ewing Full'ral
Home from 7-9 this PVenlng and
from 2·4 and 7-9 p.m. Fridav.

Commiltee to meet
The Meigs County Executive
Democra tic Committee will hold
their monthly meeting Thursday,
7::!0 p.m.. at Carpenter's Hall on
Main Street in Pomeroy.
State Rep. Jolynn Boster will be
guest speaker. All Interested Demo·
crals are invited to attend.

The

Head teachers hire.....
d _ __
(Continued from Page 11
of the Eastern Local District as a
tuition student with Morris report tng that according to a ruling from
the state, Bissell has been released
by the Eastern Board. Recently two
members c1 the Eastern Board
voted to release Bissell while the
other three abstained. According to
the state ruling on that Vote, Bissell
was released fl'om the Eastern
DlstriGL
April Smith, secretary at the
Pomeroy Elementary School, was
autlr:lrized to attend the OAESA

Thirteen cases were processoo
Tuesday nlght in the court of
Middleport Mayor Froo Hoffman.
Forielting tnnds were Kenneth
R. White, Pomeroy, $fi0, driving
while Intoxica ted; Judith A. Holter,
Long Bottom, $43, speeding; Elmer
L. Spaulding, Bidwell, Sfl. speeding; Tina Louise Lee, Shade, $00,
failu re to yield the right of way;
Virgil Howard Jr., Middleport,$&amp;),
ex!ired operator's license and $50
running a traffic signal; Gerald E.
Freeman, Cheshire, $«1, speeding;
Charles M. Salser, Pomeroy, $«1.
speeding, and Otarles Whittington,
Pomeroy, $100. disorderly conduct.
Fined in the court were Robert
Scarberry. Middleport. $100 and
costs, possession of marijuana;
BrEilda K Pet rie, Middleport, $10
and costs. failure to yield the right
of way; Ricky J . Smith , Rutland,
$10 and costs, assured dear
distan&lt;P; Warren Hanning, Middle)Xlrt. S3J and costs. disorderly
manner; David Sigman, Middle·
port. two counts or disorderly
manner, fined S3J and costs on each
count.

,

-~IGS -~CO~.:~=~~t
MEIGS CO. IIAlTH DEPT.

5 milo• north of (•mr, Ohio

IIAIIES S3

SEWING NOTIONS
QUILTING SUPPLIES
HANDMADE CRAFTS
POUND GOODS

Otltor lllnoculatlons Available
DOGS MUST BE ON LEASH
CATS tN
RIERS

OPEN MON.·FRI. 10 A.M.·5 P.M.
SAT. 10·2

UTili

ROCK SPRINGS FAIRGROUNDS

SAT., SEPT. 20, I P.M.·4 P.M.
Dr. Cai'DI o•omo, Yotwrillarian

.

CHEVROLET-O.LDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
"POIIIII.Y

COMPUTERIZED ENGINE ANALYSIS

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IIJIOStic equipment with computer and dataloc capebilities.
IEGIIlAR 126.00
+TAX

f :

Speelal Prlee

.

$1995
+TAX IWITH COUPON I

Good thru Oct . 1

Get started on the right track for winter with a
genuine G.M. front end alignment.
IIGULAR 139.00

I

~

Three defendants were fined and
one !orieited a bond Tuesday night
In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler.
Fined were Raymond Klein J r.,
Middleport , $375 and costs, driving
while intoxicated: Victor Gillian,
Reedsville, S63 and costs, squeaUng
tires; Tamera Childress, Pomeroy,
S43 and costs, Improper backing.
Forfeiting a $52 bond posted on
speeding · charges was Charlotte
Patterson, Rou te 4, Pomeroy.

ALIGNMENT SPECIAL

I

All tnterestec1 p&amp;rt1ea
Will be !liVen an oppor·
tunlty tlil be heard. Fur·

tiler tntorrnauon may be
obtatned by oontactlng
the Commtaslon.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIBB
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann Orllnlkl,
StcNtary
I

Three fined by mayor

I •+•

•

The Public UUlities Comm1B81on of Ohio ha.s set
tor pu bllc heartng Case
No. 86-02· EL· EFC, to
review Uie !utll J)I'OCUl'e·
ment
praotloes and
pollclee of Columbus and
SOuthern Ohio Eleetrlc
Company. the operation
of Ita Electric Fuel Corn·
ponent and rei&amp;~ matters. Thla ~ 18 .
scheduled to beg1n at
10:00 a .m. on September
112, 1986, at the otfloea of
the Public UtUltiee Corn·
mlaalon, 180 Eut llro&amp;tl
Street, Columbus; Ohio
43215.

"1

Admissions - Roy Quails, Mid·
dleport; AMa Sidwell, Glenville.
W.Va. ; Janet Mc Kni g ht,
Middleport.
Discharges - Rosella Secoy,
Randy Riffle, Troy Qualls.

the property. The water tine must
he one and one half inches and 160
pounds per s:JUare inch it was
noted.
In routine malters, council acceptoo the county budget commission figures for the vUiage for 1987.
And tt was )Xllnted out by
Councilman Jerry Blac k that the
village ~ still responsible tlr
repa irs to a driveway on Salem
Street.
It was also notoo that property
owners are res)Xlnsible for maintaining sidewalks on their own
property.
Council membe rs Guy Hunter
and David Wilkes were also (J'esent
for the meeting.

Spee·l~'t Price $29 95
TAX I Willi CO..ON I

Alignment Check. ~ 1295

+

(No

&lt;o~ Notdtdl

Good thru Oct . 1

LEGAL NOTICF

I

Veterans Memorial

1Continued from Page 1)

Special Sale

RISING TIDE OF SP!ClAL
INl'ERBST CAM.PAlG.N
DONATIONS - -

Elementary School Secretary Con·
feren&lt;P on Oct. 9 and 10 in
Columbus. A services contract with
Therapy Associates, Ohio Univer·
slty, Athens, for p)\yslcal and
occupational therapy services required by a student at a cost of
$2,310 was ap!rQVed . The tnard
also appwed transportation ar·
rangemE!lls for one student to the
Ohio State School t&gt;r the Blind.
The board then moved Into
executive sessio n to discuss negotlatklns, finances and pending
litigation.
Altending the meeting were Bob
Snowden, lllard president; tnard
memrers. Rupe , Larry Powell,
Dick Vaughan and Bob Barton;
Morris; A$lstant Superintendent
James Carpenter and Treasurer
Jane Fry.

Middleport court

estlmated 15 to 25 trains, eacb with
100 cars and more than a inlle long,
would rumble through the valley
dally.
That' s not merely a worst-Case
scenario. lt has already oc6un-ed In
dozens of communities throoglr:lut
the northern Rockies - and the
Tongue River VaUey typifies the
areas Hkely to be sacrtflced in the
future to produce Western coat.

Berry's World

.'

~~

Opal Brandenberger

Curfew reminder

Coal mines threaten West----------------~Robert Walters

(Second of two related columns)
BILLINGS, Mont . - Nowhere in
the West are the towns more
remote and rugged than in Montana's Tongue River Valley. where
raising rattle or growing corn or
hay have been a way of Ufe for
generations of ranchers and
farmers.
In that part of the "Big Sky
Country," the streams hear picturesque names such as Hanging
Woman Creek, so called hecausean
Indian woman. forlorn over an
unhappy love affair. is said to have
hanged herself there.
Now, however, those traditions
and landmarks are threatenoo by
plans to open massive strip mines
to extract coal throughout the
Tongue River Valley. The valley Is
part of the Powder River Basin.
whose vast coal reserves are
estlmated at 75 billion tons.
The thickness of the basin's coal
reds - frequentty !il to 00 feet and
In some places more than 100 feetis unsurpassed anywhere In the
country. By comparison, coal
seams ln Appalachia typically are
· four to nve feet thick.
The Powder River Basin, locatoo
in southeastern Montana and nor·
theastern Wyoming, contains many
of the nation's largest coal mines.
, By tar the biggest Is the Black
Thunder Mine, which produces
more than 21 millions tons of coal
annually.
OllEr major mines h the region
- Jacoi:Ji Ranch, Belle Ayr, Eagle
Butte, Rosebud, Cordero · and
Decker- rank among the nation's
10 lar!J!st and each produces llXlre
than 10 million tons yearly_
But the country's coal-producing
capacity has far exceeded demand
In teoont years. The electric utWty

Area deaths

.

A political science course on Ohio IIQVemment will be tau&amp;ht this
fall at Ohio University by State Rep. Jolynn Boster, D'GaWpolls.
The live-week course, PoUtical Science 490, wlll focus on the forces
shaping tlie le&amp;IS!atlve and eovel'liiJlental process In Ohio, Boster
said. RegiStration for the pass/faD course Is open to non-political
science majors.
.
·
"This course will be a unique and Interesting experience for
students who are considering a career tn Ohio govl!l'nrnent," Boster
said. "My Intent Is to rifer a realistic andnon-tradltlonallook into the
governmental process, not a textbook civics lesson."
Guest spealt:ers have been secursl to give lectur.es on the state's
budget cycle, the role of the state senate, press relations in
government, the Influence of lobbyists and the state of higher
education In Ohio. In addition, Bostttr said she will lecture on the
· legislative process and campatcns and elections.
Boster said that a series of readlnp and articles wm be requited,
as well as a research paper. The course, whlch began with the
opening of classes at OU Monday, concludes Oct. 13.

and their actloM were repUilJiant.
And yet they fully expected the
federal government·to tlnanre their
cabal." Here Is what S€11. J_eremlah
Denton d. Alabama wrote, "I.SC
was to recome the taXpayer-funded
fulcrum for the left to leverage a
national )Xliltlcal agenda In the

Reagan era."

Ohio

Briefs: -----.

Boster to teach OU class

'Rudman's strange tum ___W_ill_ia_m_F_.B_.(,.uc_k___le:y_J_r._

The ·Daily Sentinel·

17, 1988 ·

LUBE, OIL AND FILTER

'fc:~::::•;u~~apenalon, drain oil and replace filter using Mr.
Oil and AC Delco Filter.
wt Insist on usinaqullity llr. Goodwrench Oil&amp; AIC Filttrs brand or ch•P filter 1nd oil. This is an IIJnest to (Dodness special
Gil Parts &amp; Gil Sol'lict, no ltlbSI~UII for QUIIity. Limit 5 qts. 011.

c;

Kllii~LAI

SORRY
,,.., Dickering

•No Trade • Prices

•NO
. ·o.aien
. -fi"ltisi
.
'

126.95

·'st..

95
S19
+TAX IWITH COUPOHI
h 0

I•' Prlee

Gooclt "' ct ·

,

An.NIION DIESEL OWNERS
We now hive a fully qualified factory trained
die11l technician.

ENGINE PERFORMANCE CHECK
REGULAR 152.00

_

• TASPECIAL

$2 595

· Good thru Oct. 1

�•
.;.

•'

"'

• • • •

·'

I

IJ J()E,RJUZP
UPt s,o.u Writer

,ge

.

'

Howlton Manager Hal l,.ailler aid

Had the Cincinnati Reels played
.!IOObaDagalnsttheHOUitonAstros,
they'd be tied f\lr !Irs! ~.
The Astros wldi!fted their lead
over the Reds to eJcbt games In the
NL West Tuesday nlght by beating
Clnelllnad for
12th time In 16
games this season.
"It was a very 14 win lor us,"

eoes

games.
The ole' bird fell to a 144 t.m)
mark last week after a pretty lair
17·2 (~) record the previous

BRYANDUBST

week. To date, a 44-11 (.lllO) slate
has been compUed.

16H'OIIIId

JualorQB

alter the s-1 vtctory. "The rtrit
~ ~ a series Is alway• the IIIDit
Important. I told our club In a short
precame meettna that we had to
take this one game at a time."
It the Reda Cl!llld lllve apllt their
11rst 16 eames with Houston, they
and the Astros wOIUI b&amp;ve lclelltlcal
78.fJ6 recorcls. lnsteBd, the Astros
can clinch the division with any

nail down tint win of III!IIQI.

WAVERLY 31, JACICSOO 8 -

'ngers (~) sporting playeft piten·
tlal team while 1rmmt11 (0..3) yet to
get urtmcked-.
WHEELING PARK 22,
WARREN LOCAL l5 -Warriors
(~) lace West VirPia 'toughie'
and fall after good battle.
SVAC

SYMMES VAU.EY 26, EAST·
ERN 14 - VIkings (1·2) picked lijl
first win last week and make It two

Yoril.

'.lEFt ROUSH

BELPRE 28, TRIMBLE 12 Eagles (1·2) picked up first win last
week and may not lose rest of the
year. Trimble (1·2) dropped two
straight at borne.
VINTON COUNTY 24, ALEX·
ANDER 6- VIkings (3-0) pUing up
big defensive stats in three straight
shutout wins . Spartans (l2) lose.
rut score on VC.

. JIN'OUBd
Seldor Guard

Scoreboard ...
..............

St l..oub a1 Philadl'lphla. n¥1:hl

NM...... IAIIIW
8)' l 'JUII.d '"""" .............

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12 ,"100 Z2
'il 11 ~'100 22

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Cloclnnal
S.\1\ F ro111
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Mlanla

R2 Kt .W
'l-1 1{) ."ilt
1 ~ 71 ...10
lit 76 .
li7 nc .R

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lk&gt; klr IIW.. tlilr ~·,.

Mofl1rt'll ~- O k'fiF..l

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Hou.•mn ~ - C'l nci n n;~t ll
A tl11n t~ .l lbi All,~rk-1; I

Dtli"OH
C'JNt'IM

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S.lllmor

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KC

""....
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63

&lt;..1 IJJui., oFor·'l('h 0 -~1 HI Pl\lladl"lphlll
• rt ullirl "'-.'1•. 7 l""• p.m
I AI' ,\nj.,'{'ir-. • Vahl/.I.IPI,I ~- !'II dl Allllfllll
.f\olm ·• ll '•1 7 Ml p.m

"-- n Fmn&lt;'l'&gt;~'fl rRlLK' tl. l Oi 111 S01n Dk'OJ
,\ 't"'b: 'Jl: IWI . f\:ffi p.m
Tlal,.ccJU''~ G~

!lou &gt;run

&lt;1l

('jn('rnl'liltl

r ·l\w.•f!ll lll !'o;N '

.•

comblnltm ef HOUitm vk:tDrles

.

Knepper and Larry Andi!rsen
. combined to ~tch a lour·hltter.
Knepper eave lijl three bits ootorp
Andl!rsen came on to earn his first
save.
In other games, New York beat
St. Louis 4-2, Phlladi!lphla dumped
Plttsllurgh 9·5, M:mtreal oowned
ChicagO 4-1, Atlanta ~ped Los

llld Ollcillllad ltJsl8 IDIA)In&amp; ll. U
111e Allro8 sweep the lel'lel.. tlleir

map: llllllllerwcukldfolltoaeven.

"1bll ·ltrles was much more
to them than H was to
us," said llob Knepper, who·~tched
5 1-3 lD- to.raise his ra:onl to
16-U. ''Now they have to win the
next two. I !Muehl they had to
sweep us.''
~~

IM/tftl Offer From

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

Anf!les' 3-1, and San Francisco
defeated San Diego 4-1.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

crown and prove It wttb close win
over solid Wllcrat (2·1) eleven.

In rowoverlmprovlngEII&amp;les (1·2) .

N&lt;R'Ilf GALLIA 27, SOUTH·
ERN 7- Pirates (2-1) out to ci&amp;Jm
SVAC dlamplonshlp ud open with
win CNer defending champion
Tornacilel (1·2) .
SOO'I'HWE!lTERN :D, KYGER
CREEK 7 -AU good thlnp come
to an end, and &amp;beats (~)
cinderella -1100 put on mid with
losa to Hl8hlllldii'S (2-1). ·

POWELL'S

We Reserve The Right To '
· limit Quantities

OTHERS

Jug has big field
DELAWARE. Ohio iUPil -The
41st running ol the LltUe Brown
Ju~ . the second jewel of this year's
niplc crown of J. year-old pacing,
has attracted a field of 1B and no
overwhelming lavorlte to grab the
wi nner's share of the record
$407.684 puT'S!'.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS !tr&gt;-. .)
A Olvbdon of Mulllmedla, Inc.

IMPORTED

- ~

STONE

WARE

OAKIUIL20, HANNANTRACE
18- Oaks (2-1) could challenge lor

·

-BtgBI.:kl

. ..........110.....
rC'om11 ~ \.1 1 at OakJand 1Ha&lt;1 s

i -21. :t l!'i p.m.
rlli:·U l).lr,

M Uv.-illull.,-.

011

:rr p.m

rBlrkbl&gt;rk

· ~I I

:-.,p,r.· \ 'nrk
at

&amp;:~iron

flo).'d lU i. i: ~ pm .
MlnN'IIItr 1 H~ IOfl 7-1.1 • a! ~·('lan d
'"w btct&gt;ll 2-l r. ';'::r\ p.m
Dt"''rtlll 1Morrto. Ti·lh ,,r Turonlo •riWl• ' ·
a -101. 7: l'lp.m .
Kari!IOI.' Cll\' •·lac" k'\On lfl-10 1 at r J l llomr:~
I

1):1'\ p.m .
! H;!nnbl('r !+·11 •
l lanlt!llon tl-11 1, Jl::t&lt;. p.m
• SUIIonl&amp;-~ 1 .

C'hk'aj~JJ

GAU.IPOUS '!/, WEllSTON 6
- Blue DevUs miUng over everybody and that will Include Rockets
(2·1) t~s week. Many say this Is
most talented GAHS eleven In
several ~ars.
'

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters·~••••••• 49&lt;

The look you've always wonted
..,s close C$ our solon! Come In
' let ou• profeuionot stvtlsts
Ju a new. updated Image I

Fryer Parts ...'!••••••• S9&lt;

1S1/o Off All Perms

BULK SliCED

Except for lq Hair

·
Lunch Meat.~;~...... 15 9

11 TANS FOI S3500

a1 · ~anlt&gt;

p.....,y, OH.

l~~;;;~;~~~~~;;;;;;;·M;Ma~ll;•;'"';•;•;d~~~~~~~~~~~~

OPEN TODAY
·: · 'til 8:00 P.M. '

ONLY

*1.99

Ground Beef .... ~~ ••• 99·&lt;
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$
Chuck Roast ... ~~.... .159
~mr
.
$ 9
Cube Steak ••••• ~.... 19.
HOMEMADE

I

, .. """

:·

Sandwich SpteQd~:.. :l9'

Units in Stock!

.............""*'-

·DOWliNG CHID$
' MUUIN MUSSEl

·on·io.ns •••••••••••••••••• 59~

~II

3LBS.

1011 ...., . . . ..
A~IITS SnYIIG
.IGS (01111'1
SIJIO '1161

PARKAY . '

DRASTIC
REDUCTIONS!

lntere1t rete•
••low ••

Companv tMulllmPdla . Inc..

MINUTE MAID

Financing

1

·

BANQUET

Int~rnaflonal.

In la nd Dall y Press Association and lh~
Oh io Nf'wspapeor Auoc latlon. National
AdvE&gt;rtl slnJ?: Rrpresentallve. Branham
N~·s pa prr Sa les. 711 Third Avenue.
NN' York , Nf'W York 10017.

TV Dinner ••••••••••••• 79&lt;

POSTMASTER : Send address changes

Morton Salt •••••••••• '1 .9&lt;
Sl 09
. PRICE S~VER
.
oz
. $ . ORE-IDA CRINKLE C~TS OR
Mac./ Cheese ......... S/ . 1 French Fr1es •••••••••

or Poctory leltates
on
Chevy.Oid1•.Cadlllac

PoREroy, Ohio ~7tB .

SUIISCRIPTION BATE8

lmpresaiona by Daniele combine• the beautiful glaze of
fine china with the durability
of genuine ltDniWIU"e for a
look you'll trellure for yea~
to come. Each gtacelully de·
algned plec:a ia elegant en·
ough for formal entertaining
yet practical enough for Will'·
yday. You' lllovetheconveni·
ence of genulnutoneware: It
goee aafely from fr•zer to
oven to table, and into \he
dl1hwuher and microwave.
Our exclusive ·plan makP' it
euy for you to enjoy the ele·
gene, of lnipreuiona on your
table.

10-11 Oz•

26 Oz. Box

!o Thf' Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,

Subscrlbt&gt;rs not dt'llrln6t 4) PI:Y 1htcar·
rl.,- may rt'ITIII In l d\1' C't- dlrfCI IO

$

29
Orange Juice~!!~••• $1

APR

Ohio.

PRICE
Dally . .............................. . Z!i Crnts

•

Margarrne •••••'!.... 2/

· ~·%
•

Pom1' T'O\'. Ohi o &lt;15769 , Ph . 992·2156. SE'·
cond cl~ss postagr paid a t PoiTIE'roy,

SINGLE COPY

PATI'ERNS

•

through Friday. 111 Court St., PG·

8)1 Carrier or Mtlw BMe
One W('('k ................................. ..$1 . ~
On(' Month ...
.. ... ................. 15 . ~
Ohr Year .............. .............. ..... 165.00

FOUR LOVELY

YELLOW

.INSURANCE
·s.c... St., ,_,.,

mero:r.... Ohi o, by I hi' Ohio Valley Pub·

Thf' Dally Sentinel on a

$

SUPERIOR

Keep Your Sulr.nar T111 for tN llolidiiY Parties

lolig
year ID~f':;~:
13-0) lianct!d
I
two losses
last year lig upset. Tbls year,
winless Bl&amp; Blacks tum tables and
upset undefeated Bulldogs .
LOGAN 30, CIRCLEVILLE 13Chlellalns (~) continue to roll up
big numbers alter blasting Miami
Trace last Friday. Tigers put up
flrst hall battle, rut wear out late.
MARIE'ITA 21, JOHN MAR·
SHALL 12- Tigers 10·31 close ears
to aU of the teacher's strike talk to

.

Bacon Ends/Pes••....~ ~..... 79(

TAIININO SPECIAL

111 W. 2nd St .

tr1PR~5JIONS
~,o~u

MIXED

Per• Special

Publl shE'd E'very art ernoon. Monday

Mf' mber Unlled Pn&gt;Ss

GENUINE

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20~ 1986

ROCK lUlL 14. SOU1ll POINT7
~ Redmen (().3) pick up first win &lt;i
year over !truggllng Fl:llnters.
WAHAMA 18, IRONTON Sf.
JOE 13- Falrons (1·1) off to slow
start, rut pick up big win (lller third
straight Ohlo ~ponentFiyers (2·11.

SEOAL
PI'. PLEASANT 14, A'mENS 13

(\rllfnnia II. Nlololl~ Cit\ !I
S«&gt;aftlt ';. C't*;rRO 0
·

ITPolo'k.' OOI)· 1;.4 1, i:

over hapless
Lanrers
(0..3)
eyes
(1·2) sillw
muscle
In .running

nr.,

Torunrott. l':r!rol r ~

~

NELSONVILLE·YORK 32.
FEDERAL·HOCKING 0 - Buck·

:ll';

· TfAilll YI,OikWii
IDtoft 1. 1rQw........ 1. Iii
Hulllotli •• ,...••~no 1 '.!o.S
Nt-N Yen P. •nlniDn' 1
MlnnP!IMa i . C'k'l'larnd .1

learN." Cil)' at Calli:lnlla . nllr:hl
C'hic'W II SNI!Ir, rtWhl

,\n)J'~J I h rL •.n l. r

l lshln~

The

MIIwotull'f' al b1011. Nah r

Yak

f' lthlru i'J!h ~~ Mnn1rr111
1......

)q

r;:z .,;z ..Cl

Kalrlmorr

at C!trinrll!tl' W&lt;'bh

m .~7 !I
~ 7ti •.t12 1M~
Cl ?!l' ;41!4 l'"h

~

M""'

1. l'1 p.m

II T!U~ I on 1Da~1n 1 1•

113 to .'HI -

""""" ........,..........

rKlwr Hand Pall('f110f1 ~ -21

c"11io·ago 1Er kmll'" 1&gt; '1 1 al Nf'VI' York
1fiooa.&gt;n H..,,_ ; 1.'1 p.m

7:\ 71 .!1.1 t~
Ill Tl .-li9 :b)
Ill 17 _fi9 20

fil II .4111 . 20

M~IQ''IIflllln'tlftl

•11 Mnnt!Y'!il 1 Y ooman ~ 1 ~-10 and Srbra H l.

Ill 57 _{(17 '1!t liti ,"ll!'i ~
r.1 66 .\1."1 9
~ 6!f .'IH 11

Ne-· YOI"ii

Nf"'l.· Y(lrlc ~ - ~ - l.oul!i 2
Soon Frai1C'!Jro t Sa nDi~ 1
~~ ~~b.II"Rh

• . L Ptt. Gl

Tavalo

TrxB•

1;1\

1l-i.~

'

re-t. Gil

W L

"""

BG510f1

!N !10 .ti.tl -

x-Nr-· Yrk

...

P,..tlntlng An

GO For Jt!

TVC

MEIGS 46, MILLER 6 - Ma·
rauders (~l getting stronger and
run (lller outmanned Falcons (O.J).
despite Miller's strong showing In a
28-9 loss last week to Nelsonvllle·

-

_.

'Excuse
Me's'
were needed
tor;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;~
Athens,
which
clobbered
Fairland
II

m-13.
toHannanTracerorthelrwtn
over Green,
to Southwestern lor a
win over Alexander, and to
Symmes Valley lor their victory
over Huntington VInson. I seemed
to blotch trose four a week ago.
But chalk lijl one lor the ole' bird
for an ~ct 2S() prediction In
Wahama's win over Eastern. Frl·
day's upcoming games areundoubtably the toughest picks yet this
year. Watch for some SUJ1&gt;rlses and
many close games this tlme
around.

Majors

".)-

'

Tough picks coming up Friday for Ole' ·Bird
By Captain Crow
This Friday's football action,
week number lour, marks the
~lng week of league play lor
SVAC teams while the TVC
Into their third week· and the
SEOAL continues with non-league

..,

» ., ....,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

HQus-.,n winsJ Mets· ~lincH tie fo1 title
' .

• 1''

V!'adrJUIIIV. September 17, 1986

PonwoY-Midtlaport. Ohio

Meet the EtiStern ..
High School ~agles
.
. '

.

Ll .

7

•• '1,500°0
••

•uch

2

or l2 month

lilais. Crt'dll will bt Jiv• •rrtttrNd!

week .

THANK YOU

No aublcrlpuona by mall permUted In
.amu whf'fE' hoiTM' carrier Rrvlc. il

.:

.' .
-

availa ble.

Mall Stol!oerlfl...•

l•llle Melp c.-,

13 Woel&lt;s ............................. .. . 117.2')
26 WHkS ................................. $3f.06
52Woel&lt;s ................. .. ............... ~et.M

PIE FILLING

.

OL

Cant

Sl 09

liMIT 3
PUASI

.
'Unlit 3 hr Customtr .
Goell 0111~ At Powell's ~trmllrtltl

Oool-111.... ~

13 woe~&lt;s ................................. . nuo
26 w..... .................................. 135.10
52 Woeks ........... ....................... 167.10

~ II rll Sat. Stpt. 0, 1916 S

,,

'

1 . .'

TUNA
Packed
(

!111'1: 2 '
ftfASI

MAXWEU. HOUSE

PAGE PAPER TOWELS

INSTANT COFFEE

J:o 3/Sl

1

Uilllt S Per Cutt_,
Goed OIIIJ At Powtl's ~ermarlltt
Ofhr bplrn Set. Sept. 20, 1986 S

~a~1 ·

=

' ' , Limit I Por Cutta-

~
At Powtl't T.'l';rtltt
Ofltr II rn Set. s.,t. , 1986 S .

•-•
'
{&gt;

$4 99

,,

.. .
\

•••

.... ·• ""'+':"""'

See lfora
41splay for

••••u•.

~~·-· ·- ···.

-- ...

-

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddiBPGrt. Ohio
7,

By The Bend

OWIO ·

IotteR¥

.·

-

Page-7 _

Community calendar I area happenings

Beat of the Bend
J$y BOB HOEFLICH
Sentmel Stall wrtter
HaVe you seen
!hi! Quality Print
S h o p

I

•Money Saver Items.
•Everyday Low Prices
•USDA Choice Meats
•Tender Fresh Produce
•We Welcome Federal
Food Stamps and WIC
•We Sell Money Orders

BONELESS

(huck
Roast

YOUR
INDEPENDENTLY
OWNED,
LOW·PRICED,
·CUSTOMER SERVICE
SUPERMARIO

Yellow
Onions
GREEN
PEPPERS

3 lb.

lag

69&lt;

69&lt;

Sweet
Potatoes

3 $1

A&amp;W ROOT BEER
ORANGE CR,USH

FAMILY PAC.
ASST.

DIT OR Rfj.

lbs.

PORK (HOPS

Seven Up ·

S119

ar

·s1s1

Ripe LB.
Tomatoes

OR RED

Grap~s

$178

USDA CHOICE

Pepsi Free
Cherry Slire

Seedless Grapes
Tokay

11.

DIET PEPSI FREE

WillE

WHOLE BONELESS

_Rib ·Eye
RIB EYE
STEAKS

I

$3 99
FAMilY PACK
IOIEIISS REF

amY ClOCKER
CAKE
MIX

II.$, 89

77(

GRADE 'A'.MEDIIM

AmiEr McClelland. Kelly, Debbie
and Branoon Del..on!(. Gallipolis;
Bessie Grover Wade , Kenny and
Virginia Wes: . Jlli and Joy Atkinson, Athens: Earl. S~e. Andrea ,
Ro~n and Jo(\\· Barnes, Albany ;
Linn and Rosealec 1\e\ler and
Chuck Gilkry. The Plains; Hans
and Nancy HakP, Vtrginia Beach;
Gl('!1 Westfall. Urbana . Lillie Hick·
man, The Plains, and Ivan Searles.
Huntington , \\'.Va. The 1987 rrunion w!U br' held on
Sunday. Aug. 30.

oodland £ggs

IENO'S

PIZZA&amp;
PIIA ROLLS
6·10 OZ. lOX

99t.

Denny Welsh

ASST. FlAVORS

~ ~Velvet

Welsh .named
to.publication

SUrtiHINE

Super Dip

Hot Dogs

Dog Food

. · Ice Cream

.

4

VI£TTI

'

BIQ OR

SliCED
' A~..

10 OZ. CAN

' 12 OL JIIIG.

BEEF STEW

BOLOGNA

$119

$149 -

Orelda
French Fries
BAG

•BUTTERMILK •O~IQINAL

1U~1

•1*•

BOX

•REQULAR •BUTTER

'

BOX

.Prien efr.ctlve thN 81turclly. Sept. 20, 1 888

i

Denny Welsh, son of Denzil and
Barbara Welsh, Leading Creek
Road. Middleport, has been accepted as a member of Who's Who
Among American High School
Students. ·
Weish·-attends Meigs High School
where he earned a 3.5 grade point
average lor the~ school year.
He wUI be listed in the alth annual
editiOn of Who's Who which is ·
published nationally.
Only six percent fo all junior and
seniOr class students from the
nation's 22,1XXl high schools are
recognized and l¥Joored in Wpo' s
Who each year. Welsh is now
eligible to compete in the annual
scholarship program and is also
ellglble to use till! CciUege Referral
Service, a rEference service for
college-bound Who's Who stud~nts.

•CHICKEN •TURKEY

',.
•
'•

'..

.,,
•'

-~ ~

,.

aoz.
BOX

'

•USDA Food IIIII)DI Glldv Aolll!lled ·•Not Jllttpontlblt Por Typographical Errors
~I

'

..

-·

THURSDAY

POMEROY - The Middleport
Child Conservation League wiU
meet at 7: 00 Thursday night at the
Ohio Power Co. offices in Pomeroy.
MemiErs are to take an Item lor a
taby.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - A women's retreat wDl be held at the Ohio Valley
Christian Assembly at Darwin

Friday and Saturday. Registration
wUl begin at 5 p.m. with a supper at
6:30 p.m. Terry Bradds wUI IE
speaking on rock music and
renewing your mind. Cost Is $2.~
per day for the retreat.

•...

....•
-..

.

A PIB roast was hl!ld recently at
the home of Gene and Pat
HumphrEY hooortng JOflandJamie
HumphrEY wl¥J were here on a
~eek. leave from Mountain
Air Force Base in Idaho.
Atlerid!n&amp; were the hosts and
~noM! ~USts, and ~rtleGroyer,
Marcia Houdasheltc Rol:&amp;'n Venoy,
Grt~~ ud 1 Llhda Gl'O\Ier. Gene
HUJ11Phi'EY · Jr.; Gordon Warner.
Shell.l Harman.' Louise Bartels,
Clara , Humphrey, Hortense
H1lrtlplllw;- Anc:\V Gl'O\Ier, Randy
and Geaila Hysell. Brian Houdaahelt, · LesUe Carr, RaMie, and
llrellda Arms, Shal Noble, .Mark ·
Halnmonds. DoMie Folmer and

-- ' -·

--

.

at 6:30. Speaker will be Terry
Bradds. Cost $2.00 per day.
·

Carrier Needed

The Gideon and
Artemesia Roush reunion wUI be
Sunday,1 p.m., at Shriner's Parkin
Racine. Relatives and friends
invited.

BUTTERNUT AVE. AREA
MU-LBERRY AVE. AREA

CHESTER - The James C. and
EtbeUnda Stone Moore reunion has
been planned lor SEpt. 21 at the
Rodney Keller farm, just otf Route
7 at Chester on 248 about a mile.
There wUIIE a potluck dinner at 1
p.m. and those attending are to take
lawn chairs.

IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

DAILY SENTINEL

992-2156
set
HARTFORD- Hanford Church
d Chrtst in Christian Union,
Hanford, W.Va., will be in revival
Sept. 24 through Sept. 28 with Rev.
David McMorris , evangelist,
speaking. Special singing each
night with Wanda and Mike
Thompson on SEpt. 24; The Reflec·
tlons on Sept. 25; Dan Hayman and
the Faith Trio on SEpt. 26;
Glory land. BeUevers on Sept. 27;
Charity TriO on Sept. 28. Services at
7:30 nightly .
Women's retreat
DARWIN- A women's retreat
wUI be held Sept. 19-al at the Ohio
Valley Christian Assembly at Dar-

I

Revival

.I
ONLY

Sl 55
AGAUON

Quote of the day
By United Press Jnlemadonal
Sen. Barry Goldwater, R·Artz ..
dismissing talk that a legislation
calling for a sweeping restructure
of the m!Utary could . reduce the
effectiveness of the Martne Corps.
"The Marine Corps is something
like Notre Dame," he said. " I
wouldn't wony about the Marine
Corps at all."

'

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

The world's largest volcano
crater Is that of Toba. in Sumatra,
Indonesia, covering 685 square

rmne::::::·s.:________...L._ _ _ __.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _- : - - - ' - - - - -

FAU HARDY

$225
5 OR MORE $200 fa.

A'&lt;ft"ID COLOIS .

..,.,.,

E•h

12 GAL SIZE)

HANGING

10 11 •
'$400
IASIC~

Huaa•RDS
.A
,
GREENHOUSE

Syroture, Oh.

992·5776
CloYd

NO·
CHAROE
CHECKING

ACCOUNTS

'

NOW GET

2.4%

ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING''

OR $500 CASH BACK"

FOR

SENIOR

CITIZENS!*
I
I
-----.

'Must be 62 ,.rs of 111 or older

Home

Jl!Jt~. .

win. Registration wUl IE from
5&lt;i:31J p.m. on the 19th with supper

r-;:========:;1'
AIIMS

NO GIMMICKS! NO MINIMUM BALANCE!

Pig roast held

Pillsbury · PIIIsbu~
Popcorn-. CasMroe

Pillsbury

160Z.

'

-

3.5-40Z.
'

In Middleport lor a vJsit recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Lee McComas
were Mr. and Mrs. Edward
McComas of St. Louis, Mo., and
their daughter and her husband,
Diane and Jamie Burns and son,
Michae I Edward of Indianapolis.
The visit gave Mr. and Mrs.
McComas- the Middleport mesan opportunity to see their great
grandson, Michael, whowasbornin
late DecemiEr.

annual homecoming sunday with
dinner at 12:00 p.m. and afternoon
services at 2 p.m. Speaker ·wllliE
Charles Norris. Special singing by
"Shektnah" and othl!r bcal talent.
Everyone welcome.
RAONE -

Grover reunion is held

SHOll. DEll
ROAST

11 01.101

. This is about the last call -.
Middleport Trophies will sponsor a
softball _toumammt on Sept. ro and
21. Entrana&gt; fee is $00 and two
Steele taUs. For more info call
!ll2~ or 992-2754.

SYRACUSE - The Third Wednesday Homemakers Club of Syra·
cuse wUl meet .Wednesday at the
municipal buUdtng at 10 a.m. A
picnic will be held at noon at the tall
park.

Judy King Coomer, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King, Kingsbury Road, near Pomeroy, now
ltving at Bourbonnais, Dl.. is the
first rociplent of the Saga .Educa·
Wonder how many patients
tiona! Food ServiCes manager of Louisa Johnson has seen over the
GALLIPOLIS - Mark Mora will
the year award in her region.
long years ofheremployment in the speak at the GalllpoUs Chapter of
Judy has been manager of the olftces of local physicians?
Flame Fellowship meeting to IE
food service at Oltvet Nazarene
Tbo many to count, I'm sure.
held Friday evening at Dale's.
College since she graduated from
At any rate, Louisa wUI hi! Dinner al 6: 15 p.m., meeting at
the school in 1.971. Incidentally, she retiring the last of October. She has 6:45. The publlc Is welcome with a
graduated from Pomeroy High been with the stall at the dHces of special invitation to ali young
School in 1967'
Dr. John Ridgway lor the past 24'h people.
The presentatiOn of the award
years and was with the office of the
was made at Saga's regional late Dr. TA. Hewetoon many years
SATURDAY
meeting in South Bend, Ind .. and before that.
·
Rl!I'LAND - There wUl he a
Judy was selected for the honor for
Dr. Ridgway and his ~aft wUI be picnic Saturday, 5 p.m., at the
the midwest region, which includes
entertaining with an open reception Firemen's Park in Rutland lor aU
11 states and 2&amp;l to lXl managers. honortng Louisa's retirement from individuals who worked at · the
The icing on the cake for Judy was a 24 p.m. on Sunday. 'Oct. 12, at the annual Ox Roast and Turkey
cash prize of $1,(00 which accom- · multipurpose building on Mulberry Supper.
panied the award.
Heights. Pomeroy. and yw're aU
At Olivet, Judy directs the invited . Refreshments? Of course!
POMEROY - A family history
kitchen that . leeds l,a&gt;o students,
worksl¥Jp wDl he held Saturday, 1 to
three meals a day, seven days a
Then there's the mail. It' shard to · 4 p.m., at the Meigs County
week. She also directs ca terings on keep the l¥Juse free from tbe clutier Museum. The workshop is open to
campus lor 9JCh activities Uke ct the mailbox contents. Naturally, ali individuals interested in submithomecoming, the president's you've become an expert sorter by ling family histories for publication
dinner, graduatiOns and on-campus now. First you throw out the junk in Volume II "Meigs County
weddings.
stuff, sometimes without opening HistOJy"
Judy's marrted to Obie Coomer it; then there's thl&gt; stuff you have to
and they have one daughter, keep, like the lills. Last is the
CHESTER - There wUl be a
[)elj)Je, 15.
problem pile. This ·offers the big special meeting ct Shade River
jackpotpr17.eswhichcanbeyoursif ~e &lt;153. Saturday, 7 p.m. W~rk
Folks at the Rutland Civic Center you do !his and that - now that's will be in the master masmdegree.
are going to start having roller where the clutter starts. That plle
skatlnl( on a regular basis but would has to stay around lor a lew day s for
SUND.AY
like to lJ!o&gt; able to provide skates for due oonsiderati:&gt;n- a ndconsklera·
CHESTER- Shade River Lodge
those who don't own their own . If tion - and tot.sideratiOn. Do keep &lt;153 will have its annual chicken
anyone has skates socked away smiling.
barbeque for memiErs and their
famUies Su!Klay at Royal Oak
Resort. EVeryone should trlng a
covered dish, table service and
The an'nuai Grover rrunion was Virginia Grover McClelland. Patty drinks.
held recently at Forest Acres Park Grover Humphrey. ~arcia Grover
RAONE Morse Chapel
Houdas belt, Bo~. Joan and Robbie
near Rutland.
Church
on
County
Rd. 35 between
Atlendin!( were Mytle Grover. Ends, Cindy and Aaron Krautter. Racine and R&gt;rtland. wUI hold its
LaDe ana
Norina GrovPr. aU locaL ,
Thos£· from· out 'll - town at till!'
reunion
were Ro(ll'r, Patty and lr

lB.

YAMS OR WHITE

WEDNESDAY

that are m lOnger needed the renter
people would ap!J'eciate them. If
yolu can help call 742-:1861.

Middleport?
The large
building at . the
comer ct MDI and
Fourth has beeli
painted In sand
dime with wlndow·trtmmtng done tn
California poppy. I would have
sworn It's Ugh! tan with orange
accents. Looks great - and I like
till! sign at the front of the buUding
which says, "dare to hi! different."
The buUding is different - but
eye-catching and attractive. ·

. TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE

Wednesday, September 17. 1986

-

Facelift an eye-catcher

RED

The Daily Sentinel

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

PEOPLES
'
Ba,N K

lanldnt 0" Ma1on Co.-nty'l Future
5th Street
New HIYIII. W. VI.
882-2135
y

' AwnUe
2212 ' JICban
Point 1'11111111. W. VI.
&amp;75-1121

SICGt'rd Sbltt
Mnoll. W. VI,

NEW ·1986 C. .YSLER
OIRYSLER'S 5150

SUPER SF' FCJION ·
.IMMEDIAtE
DFUVERY

PROIECTION PLAN

See limjted warranty at dealer. CIMIIs engine,

· ,

and against outer-body rustthrough. Restrictions apply.

~rain

GOES•

IMIWAYWI'I,

·Cooper Chrysler,

~lymouth,

S9t 'Seuth 'llllnl _

ftl-6421

Dodge, Inc.

m-5514

.

llldtl.,.rt

.

- ... . .. . .

- .........

_ _ ________•

,

'

�'

,._ '

........,..

.

·~

'

'

•

•

,.. ... ,

~

·•

-r- .. ·• , .....

i .:. '

.

~

. .'

·.

.,
17 ~ 986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio

. Page-S- The Daily Sentinel

;Ferrell birthday is observed

Harrisonville happenings _ _ _ __

Twin births
announced

Stella and Pauline Atkins visited
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Atkins and
sons who live on Mercer Island In
Seattle, Wash. They went to Mt.
Rainer, took a boat ride, visited
Carnation Farms and Market and
attended one of the largest dahlia
shows In Seattle. They traveled
through Minnesota, North Dakota
and Montana. Enroute and back
they went to Salt Lake City to visit

Karla Demoss and Tracy Hysell
are annoucing the birth ott mn sons
at the Pleasant VaHey Hospital on
Aug. 17. The infants have tEen
named Justin and Jason. Maternal
·grandparents are Richard and
Esther DeMoss of Pomeroy, and
the paternal grandparents are
Aaron an Grace Hysell. Syracuse.

,Jason and Justin HyseU

the capital and the Morman
Tabernacle.
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Siep!e of
Wllm!ngton spent the weekend
visiting Mrs. Frances Young.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Alkire were
recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.Homer Belt of Long Bottom.
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Bishop have
returned !rOm a two-week vacation
In Flortda.

'

I

Heather Michelle Ferrell re- Hysell, Beatrice Smith, U&gt;is Gibbs,

!centiy ollserved tier fourth birthday and Jlbrma Goodwin.

Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stelmentz
visited Sunday \\1th Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Payne, C.olumbus.
Mrs. Lola Clark was the recent
guests of Mrs. Zelda Davis.
Chery) Lynn Jewell celebrated
her seventh blrtlllay Saturday with
a cookout given by her !llrellts, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert JewelL Attending
were her grandmother, Pauline
Atkins, Norma Lee and Misty
Frum.

' W1th a party 1\eld at the home ct. her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Grate, RuUand.
A She-Ra theme was carried out
for the party With all 'the guests
receiving a ilft. At ~ !llrty were
Heather's si£ter, Hollie, herKJ'andmother, Beulah Grate, her mother,
Vicki Ferrell, Tamara Grate, Brad
Baylor, Crystal Anderson, Jennifer
Mllier, Heidi and 4'ndsy Stewart,
Brlanna, Brandle and Justin Gil·
more, Amanda and AUSon Hays,
B.J. Kennedy, Jennifer McDaniel,
Ertn Harris, Shanwn Enrt&amp;ht,
Violet Grate, Debt GUmore, Linda
Stewart. Lily Kennedy, and Sandy
McDaniel.
Sending girts were Mary Ferrell,
Ola Bayes, Connie Graves, Amy

Headier Michelle FerreU

Gaddy birth

IM OUT FOI FUTUIIIi USEI

J.R.'s REPAIRS

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Michael and Teresa Gooch
Gaddy ol Archer, Fla., are announcing the birth ol a son, Michael
Drew, July 21, at the Alachua
General Hospital. He weighed
seven pounds, 11 ounces and was~
Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are J anet
Theiss of Racine, who spent three
weeks In Florida with her daughter
and her family, and Robert Gooch,
Gautpolts. The paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. David
Gaddy, Archer, Fla. Greatgrandparents are Kerr and Margaret Gooch, Gallipolis, and 'Mrs.
Stella Irene Gaddy, AshvUle, N.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Gaddy have
another son, Billy Joel, [ive.

TVs, Antennas
Sateftite Sales
Installation
S.rvke

985-3561

All Meltls

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

•Washers •Diahweahera
•Ranges

•Dryers •Freezera

REASONABLE - RIUAILE
8-20.'86 tfn

PARTS and SERVICE

4-S·tk

CARPENTER
SERVICE

SUGAR RUN

PHONE
992-2156
Clr Wtitt Oailly Stntinel Cllnified Dept.

RADIATOR ·

-Concnte wort.
-Plumbing 1nd electrical
work

(F...., Estimateaj

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PH. 992-9949

c-

APPOINTMENT

Wnn.
X... Ia.
oppolnted
oltla
-oiCia-oK.W...
d•••.t. '-t8 of M' ' 'Tart.
Melgo County, Ohio.
Robert E. Bud&lt;.
Ploblte Judge
Melgo County. Ohio
Lono It N....,ad, Clook
191 3, 10, 17, 3tc

OF FIDUCIAllY

E - of C..o It w...
...
ad, c.. No. 21.089.
0n ~ za. 1981. "'111e

COPYRIGHT 1986 · THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY , SEPT. 1• TWROUGH SA TUR·
DAY , SEPT. 20, 1986.1N POMEReY ANOGAllii'QIJS,OH STORES

1 Card of Thank•

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLO TO DEALERS.
1/4

trim means 10-JO"oless fat
on Kroger beef.

The tam ily of Dan
Cotterill would like
to acknowled1e to
our friends and
neiahbors al.l of the
kind remembrances
and el!Prlisions of
sympathy in our
recent loss. Your
support, love and ·
prayers will not be
for&amp;otten.

With Proof Of Purchase
If you're not completely satisfied with any

meat or seafood purchasa from this storM,
simply bring in proof of purchase and we
will gladly refund double your purchase
price.

.

.'

·. ----- - ..

..· ·

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless
Ribeye Steaks ...........................

$ 99
lb.

)4"

TRIM

MEAT lNfORMAllON
ttOTUNE
1-800-Q32-6900
0
call This ~umb! ~ ~ 8~~e~o

4-15-'86-tc

Split Breasts.............................. lb..

$ 69 -

on

SPRINGDALE

Milk ...

9

........... the -wing
ooloMnol to wlt:
1 1981 OecfeeMiredoXS22

2 Dt. Speclohy Sor. •
2138J&amp;2KOBR134833
The C - TNII Co., NA of

Middlaport. Ohil ,...,.
right to bid at thil .....

21

BUy

WANTED TO BUY
WID GltSENG 1001'
WET OR DRY

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·Gal.

We 111 peyilll $120 to
$130 per pound for cood
11'11111 dty Gimrtattd

up to $200 per pound
for Jl'lded top quality
selected Glnstrw root.

IN OIL OR WATER CHUNK LIGHT

Star-Kist
Tuna .......................

s.s-oz.

LIMIT 2 PLEASE

All other roots bouaht.
Brirw your Ginstlll to
the followillllocati:~~~s.
Every Thursday 9 e.m. to

PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLES, MTN. DEW,

12:30 p.m. at Villaat
Phlrmacy parti11lot at
271 N. Second INt..
Middleport, Oh. Also every Thursday 2 p.m. to 7

Diet Pepsi or
·Pepsi Cola ......

p.m. al Certified Gas
Station .lot. Rt. 35.

PLUS
DEPOSIT

8-Pak

Oh.
For more information
Cl\1 Ohio River Fur
CO., E. Liverpool ,
Ohio 216-385-1832

Jackson,

Country Club
Ice Cream ................................ .. 'h -Gal. F-REE!
BUY ONEGET ONE

Fresh
Broccoli ............ .

..,

.a.

W1nted To

·Kroger
$
Cheese Food ................... :.......... 12-oz.

e E. 2nd si..

1-(614)-1192-3325 ,·

l'lllSTINll-'\)upt~x ~

(cOO condftion.Gas lurnace.
2 baths, 2 kitchens, preae
and Ia ~t with river view.
GOOD CONDITION - 3
BRs. bath, new gas lumace,
ranae, refriterator. carpet·
. ilj, 1111&amp;6 &amp;riverview.Only
$29,900.
&amp;5 ACRES - All minerals
andyouna timber.
$2,500 - Small 5 rm.
home. Edee ol Pomeroy. AM
utilities.
MIDDLEPORT- 2BR older
home hi&amp;h on 4th St. La.
lamily rm, gmae &amp; 1&amp;. lot
IIODERN 3 BR ranch with
4.76 acres near coal mines.
BRADBURY - La. 4 B~
home w~h aas fum ace,cook
&amp; bake units, carpeting, pa·
tic &amp; 2 porches.
CHEAP - One to work on.
All utilities. lots of rm., 2
baths. us lurance &amp;carpetina. Pay off balance.
IIULBUIY HTS. - heel·
lent 20 yr. old 2 B~ ranch.
gas lurnace, amce. carpeting, patio &amp; lot 90xl45.
43 ACRES - 9 rm. home, 3
car amae. barn &amp; olher
build in as.
lllDDLEPORT- Modern 3
BR one ffoor home with
swim. pool, trees &amp; 1&amp;. carport. Has full basement.
8U ILDING LOT- 200xll0
in Baums Sub. Div.
INVESTMENT - Business
pius land &amp; bidl-Very rea·
sonable.
S.llinc Problttns

Clll 912-3325

Hou ~.l tr q

rlr •.Jd(llldl II- r ·,

PUBLI'CAUCTION

SATURDAYt SEPT. 20, 1986
10:00 A.M.

29

This is the personal property of the late Hayse
· McMurry. Locallll on Co. Rd. 35, Portlattd-Sti·
versville Rd. W.tc~ for sian on St. Rt. 124.
'iRACTOR &amp; TRUCK"

'

John Deere H, cultivator &amp; plow. 1978 GMC Scerra 15
piCkup, auto., 53,000 milts.

NEW' 12-CT. CHECK-UP GUM,
6.4-0Z. TUBE OR

Check-Up

·•

ALL WEEK

Double

~'

•

·

"HOUSEHOLD:'

livina room suite, G.E. refrigerator \alppertone), electric
rlfl~. breakl11t set, metal dish cabtnet, double &amp; sin&amp;le
bedS. dressei'S.' chest of drawers, sweeper, dishes, potS &amp;
~ris;- misc. lirien, thairs, desk, sew~1 machile, Mtidll
whnaer washer &amp; more.
ll~le saw, all

'MISC."

kinds of hand tools, anvil,erinder, la~ht. !add·
ers, ·lot lumber: old lurniture pieces. pipe die, vice. misc.
/cylinder motors, &amp; more.

j

.Toothpaste. . ~~~ .
•

·

I

Cash ·
..

OWNER, PAUL' McMURRY
Eats

PasHivt 10

DAN SIIITH-AUCnONEER
• 1, 614-992·7301 or 614·949-2033
, · 6) rtSIIOftliblt lOr eccidtlt• or loll of PfOIIIf'IY."

., '

Phone Bills Here
.,..,. - IUSINESS PilON!
(6141 "2-6550
lflDINCf PilON!
16141 "2-77!4

NOTrce oF

APPOINTM'ENT OF
FtDuciARv
On Sep11111b11 4, 1986, in
the M oigo County Probeu
Court. Co10 No. 26248. R.

"lliRtiMAN'S

After 5 Cal

675-&lt;le~~.

FILL DIRT

10-8-Hc

We~
Stock ·
Mobile Home Parts
.,_ _ _ _ _ _ ___.

NORMAN WDER
667·3074

.'86

992•6
BUILDING

SYIACUSE - Beautilul river
l'itiw &amp; river l!ontace. plus a
·cute little 2 bedroom house
with iltina porclt &amp; stora(le
sheds. Forced li' llllllral IJIIS
Mit til' Y11U can UStwood &amp;
Cllll for efficiency. AiD 110111
of wMd IIIII coal 11 with il
$14,900.00.

.

Milly E. Clltllnd, Jr.
!112-1191 .

,_ Tlllltlll ..... 14~2660
DottM ,..., ..... •a:..su

AW

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYl &amp; ALU-UM
Complete Gutt11 Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of ell Type•

Worked

~8-li - 1 mo.

CAll COLLECT:

GENERAL REPAIR

....

Ph. (614) 843-5425
, .,

PlllftiiiG EXTERIOR

BOGGS

317 N. Stc•d
Mirldleport, Ohle
COMMERCIAL • RESIDENnAL
-FREE ESTIMATES-

Bleck &amp; white male eat. Call

614 -.. 8-7858 .
1 male betge kitten. 2 fem~~le
tiger ltriped. Liner trained . AI 7
weeki old. Call 814 -448· 91536 .
011 dryer -484 Upper Rtver Rd .
Lot 3, 814-446-0356.
Beegle dog to give f!Way . Call

614-992-7165 .
Kenmore gil rengeto giveaway.

Cell 614-992· 6006.
3 full 1ize mettreu• tJ give
BlueTickpupltoglveiiWay . catl

61.·992-3813 .

7 Puppiea. Mother il part
German Shepherd, r. .dy to IJl ,
WOimod ,

304-675-5&gt;166 .

3 Ieinen• 10 weeki old litter
trained, 304 -675-1264 .

LOST BliCk male, kid1, Cora-

Mill Rd . Coil 614·245-5822 or
61.·2·5 - ~803 .

friday •round 6 :30 at
Powells on Sen1in el reck . Call

614-992-7548 •• 814- 992 9923 uk tor Sally.
Lot1 Of ttrayed , brown fam1le
TetTitr. h11 teo and collar on .
Dilappured tram Lincoln St.
.,.,. of Middleport. RWt1rd. Call

614-992 -52&amp;2
6276.

01

614- 992 ·

Found: Child• change purte et
Middleport Blodo: P1rtoy . C1ll

614-992·6122 .

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cuh tor late model clean
Ul.d ctrl.

614-446 -3672
TOP CASH plkl tor '83 model
and n•er u11d c:1n. Smith
lufck -Ponllac. 1911 Eutem
Avt~., G•llipolia. c.u B1•-4te·

2282.

WANTED TO BUY used wood &amp;
coal hutert. SWAIN'S FURNI ·
TURE . 3rd . • Olivo 51. Galilpo ·
Ill . Calil14-. . 8-3169 .
Would lllce to buy 101M mile: .
br~nd name hend • power too11 .

Coli &amp;14-44&amp;-4081 .
Would like to buy good u1_. twin

o1rolior. Coll814· .. • · 3111 .

Buyi1f d•ftv gold, altver coins.
rings. jewelry, derling w•re. old

tarv•

currlflcy, Top prl-

c•. Ed. lurkm llrber &amp;hop,.
2nd. Ave. Mkldl~ort . Oh . 11• 992-347&amp; .

SALIS I SRVICI
U. S. It 50 EAST
GUYSVIIE, OHIO

PHONE (614) 992·5009

! 1 11[1111!1111~111

Authorized John D•ro,
Now Holland, 1us1t Hog

mCIAl/ZINS IN WINDOW l DOOR REiiAW4EiiT

Si!fVII:I~'

Farm Equipnotnl

110 .

Dlaltr

E••IP•••t
Put• &amp;Serwl11
1-3-'16 He

Ftrtl

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Co~erized Heari11 Air Selection
z Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

.,d

-

ba11lngo oiled for

'16'. 00

a:

IUSS EIICRJC:
MOTOI KPAII

i3

:t

iocOIIII ltlirlrltnoliog ,,...

IIII'LA.., 01110
lu JJIIo. . oll

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Yi£ ARE YOUR SALES

AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

licensed Clinical Audiologist

•ZENITH

•SYLYAitA

•SI'EED QUEEN lAUNDRY

417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

PH. 741·2070

I mo.

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

•GIBSON R!FIIGERATOR
•SAfnuTE SALIS &amp; 5£RY1Cl

W1 HnJ AfllrTI•

s••••T11~1l1l
..
Oltf

GREAT BEND ELEORIC, Inc.

F11 A" 1't11 Ptl.fllt NIHt
PWS: Olfica Su .. W• &amp;

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Furnituro, Wttllling
ond Graduation

11

Help Wanted

M1b Chriltmal money , 1ell
Avon. Milke 46 plfcent . C1ll

&amp;14-.. &amp;-33 58 .

- (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
z

Water Dtpl. OH St. II. 124

!I'll/

2 black &amp; white long h-'red

kittens. Coli 814·256 · 1785 .

oaln1,

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.

BUSINESS
SERVICES
F•ll it ,., y.,, s,,J,,

In home • •

20yaors
"FrM Eatimotn"

R~MOD!iliNG

INTERIOR

Giveaway

Jim Mtnk Chav.-Okb Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

(With lorry's Cotptt Outlet)

Ott oheod of Old Mon
Winter. Hovo thou
furnace motors

IJIIGSVILLE - One floor
plan wilh 2 bedrooms, aluminum sidina. new roo!.
Larce bltll with utility room.
1\\ acre lot. Screened Side
PGr4t· $18,!110.00.

1-17 -86-lfn

LARRY'S SATELLITE SALES

Home ftational
Bank

RUTIMD- Here~ a nee 10
yr. Did ranch type home with
line t.Jrooms, blth, garage
on1 IMI Itt Many new fell·
Illes. W1nt $36,500.00.

949-2263
or 949-2168

$20 A MONTH

Chuttr TOI!W~ip.

IIIDDUPORT - Approx. 12
ICres ol WIIOdlartd plus a seven rvom br~k home. 4 bed·
rooms, FAF.O. heat ~u s
woodburner. Enclosed porclt.
Privacy! $27,000.00

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMA.TES

0Hr I 00 ll'lstrambltd thamels.

Rainbow Ridge in

EASTERN SCHOOL DISTRICT
- ~ large modern home in a
&amp;ood neiaftborhood. Up to five
bedrvoms, located on ~pro• ·
imately one acre 101 ~ l!le
Rius Crest Subdiv~ion . Apfi'D•. 9 yrs. old w~h 2 baths.
Many ~er nice teatures
$54,900.00.

ROOFI"G

NEW- BPAIR

SATELLITf IS STill THE WAY TO GO

Unimproved
Land For Sale
uo·acrefoti. ,

floor plan home in town. 3-4
bedrooms, 2 baths, lull ba·
~ment, Indian Sandstone
fireplace. Extra lots lor parking, all in eood cond~ion . For
$39,900.00.

Howard L Writttll

UNS!IAM~ QIANNIIS

THIRf All STill APPIOX. 100

We Also Update and Service
Most Systems

IIEW LlSTIIIG - Nice 1

3080.

L01t: Small black zipper pu11e

Reel Estate General

992·2259

"Fr11 Estimates"
Installation AYallablt

DISCUMIIEI AIO. 1315
CHAlliS WEill
667·6235

c:heckod, cleaned

~~~ . ake1chWig. water colora .
acrylics. macrame. etc. For more
information , cell 614 - 949 -

last

NOW ACOr.t»LETE 10 FT. SYSTEM FOR

Mainl..... iiiiWooll
POMEROY,O.

Coming aoon , art c:lan81. Or.w ·

Lunch bo111 on 141 . Call 614 ·
446-0827 .

Rob Oil ·E. Buck,
Pro;,t e Judge
Lent K. Nenalrood. Cl11k
191 10. 17, 34 3tc

E.

beginning at 1:00 p.m. Factory

Choke. 12 guege 1hotgun1.

6 lost and Found

10' 2" All ALUMriUM ILACI MESH SEA BREEZE
SAIULITE SYSTEMS. Full Remoll. Installed ........ 11,650
SAllE SYSTEM AS AIOVE WlfiiOUI IUIOTE '1,250
DESCRAMIIERS WITH SYSTEM PURCHASE - S36S

IANo, Ohio, 46741, oppoinled ' Admlnlotnlrilt of the
oatott of Ciao onoe 8. Hoffman, dec-ad, !MeofRoute
1, t..ongMI!e, Ohio, 48741 .

Rill El'tatl Gentra.l

742-2027

TUPPERS PLAIIS, 011.

Mario Tum er, Route 1, Longa-

RACINE, OHIO
PH. 949-2210

FENCE CO..ANY ·
PH. 9'2-6931

STAR GAZER SYSTEMS

Phone

• Auction

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES

Public Notice

11/ 30/81 II 16 A.M. 1

................. hald at ...
of"- of The Central Truat
Co., NA of Pltdtlrplirt. Ohio to

SUCCtSS II till Fair.
Don laaon, Ptts.
Jim Caldwell, Viet Pns.
Pam Haawr. Trtas.
Becky laN!in, Stcy.

HOT FOODS AVAI~BLE 11am Tll 7pm DAILY

6-Ct.

PRIVATE SALE

811111 Luaterfor 31 dcJna.
tiOIIS alii supplies, also
Elbllfelds alii foodlalll
b' their dcllltiOIIS.
Apln thaN!s to all who voltlllle!ed lleir time m
110rt alii IMU ~is year a

AVAILo\BlE ONLY IN STORES WITH OELI ·PASTR'I' SHOPPE'S

:Fresh Baked
Kaiser Rolls.

19)10, 17, 24, 3tc

4

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

Pay Your Cable &amp;

Ohio 41171.

r--~-C.,.C""E.,.NT-----trl

992-3410

SALES &amp; SERVICE

mee, deceased, late of
32867 TR 100. Recine,

Notioe II ....., t11von -

Plinlirw 11111
up alllle fastem
BoOSie!s booth II the Fair.
A specill llllnks ps to

•lliiW

,-

IN THE DELl

NOTICE OFA

R1cine Gun Shoot ll)onsorld by
Club. Every Sunday.

R1cineG~

owov. C•li 614-986·4231 .

Jusr CALL!

We CarTY Fishing Suppliu

Racine, Ohio, 46n1 , woo

Neuotrood, Cieri&lt;

WILL HAUL

Ntw la&lt;o~on:
161 North Secontl
Middleport, Ohio 45760

100.

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

Pomeror. Ohio

8/27/8611110.

oppolntod EKecutor of the
eatote of Clinton H. McNo· 64 Misc. Merchandise

Lone K.

1ht Ellllm Alhlttk: Boostets IIOUid lilte to thiN!
11111115 1111 COIChn who

hti!lld

Pout Mooto, 32786 TR

Robart E. Buck,
Proboto Jucgo

18117, 18, 18 3tc

Questions n
rt 1
Our Trained Meat Expe s

Holly Farms

Public Notice

3 Announcements

A•:•h

U.S. GRADE A

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Septom•r I, 1988. in
the Moiaa County Pro..te
Court, eou No. 26,231 ,

PAT HILL FORD

992·6215 or 992-7314

lob Barton, Owner

HOUSE OVERROWING?
ClEAN UP WITH
ClASSifiED ADS

SER~ICE
We can repair and re:core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

- Addon1 and flmodeliRg
- Roofing and gutter work

DENNY CONGO
NOTICE OF

SchOOIJ.

6-17-tfc

YOUNG'S

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

I

Public Notice

Animal P1r~ .
churchtt, C:Or'f1l'tn¥
pienle~ , birthdev panle~ Md
femily reunion•. Call 814 -384·
2108"' 1-800-282-2167 .
Noeh'l Ark

4

190 MULIEBY AVE.
POMEIOY 01.

Public Notice

Alto TIIDtllllttlon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

614-843·5248

· •Refrigerator•

Ill Court St .. PoiiiiOJ, Ohio 4~769

Public Notice

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
. REPAIR

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

ASHLAND

The Daily Sentinel

. Roger Hysell
Garage

CN£~1--915-3307

4/ 1/lfn

Stoliontty, Matnoti&lt;

Experi ... Oid Med ii S1l .. Rep,.
nwded . Baae pkn commlsaion.
C1ll 304-7&amp;7 -7881 . Mon .- Fri ..

10· · ·
Experienced commercial refftg .
...ion aarvice man. Send r•
tumtl to Bo• T- 90 In cere of the
Galllpoll1 D•ity Tribune. 125
Third Ave .. Gtllipolll, Oh

.5131
Exp•lenOid Medii SliM Rep•·
Need . Baae plu1 commi1aion.

C•ll 30'- 757-7881
thN Frid1y, 10 10 4.

Mond~

3000 IJ)Vemment jobl lilt.
11&amp;.040-169. 230 year . Now
hiring. Call 806· 887·1000 Ext.
R-9805.

Sigm, lobbtr Sf1111ps,
lusin111 For1111,

Copy Soi'Yktt, ltc.

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

255 lilt Sr., Middleport
10• Mollotrrr b., ,.,..,.,

992·33453/2/tln
•VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
8 ll0WN IN
INSULADON

Sales

RAYMOND E. PROFFm (MAC)

BISSELL

e

Family 81le lnf.nt 10 .t1.11t
clolhilg. Anllqu•. toOII . II·

RACINE, CillO
Office 949-2431

.......GiiUTpoll8........ ..
8r Vicinity

Emt'!lllftCY

tween Vinton • Ellllington on
110. 11 I 2(). Aainl CWIOIII to

flnt Tlma Sill 3 mi111 out 141 .
Thurtday • Frtday. 18 &amp; U .
Clolhn. elecuic 1lcillet1. 9-

4:00PM

··· · ·Pom·erov........ ,.
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

n.nwetk•d.

SIDING CO.

New Homn luilf

Moving Sill Ail oondHionlf.
lUng waterMd, petlo llmtbHI,
WDOdlft dllb. IIWn care equipment. INiclric ........ uercile
bllto. dot! flnoo. naw twin bod,

"Free Eltimat•"

PH. 949·1101
or 949·2160
No S111clay Calls

lmell chill tre.er. meny, many
,_,. ittlltl. Thun.. Fri.. lat.
noon·IPM. Topol C~olo Dt. aft
klov . . Rd. 114·441·20M.

L!CENSED,INSURED•CERTIFIED

VOid

FIREPLACES &amp; WOODSTOVES

BISSELL
BUUDERS

/\\;;;I 'J SfAINLE~ mn

C-

. . . - . drapoo • ""'"' ......

CHIMNEY WORK"

"At Rtasonallle Prices"

.\

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

..D.USTIIAL

INSUIAIKE WOIK

.._,r..,.;
f, f

Day or Night
NO SUNL'n CALLS

lltEIS

I

,

'

r,·
-

,., ' •

110

\

I

•

·'

I

I

3 fllftllty G-o Solo I 0111
· - Avo. T...... a Fri.
1:00AM 10 4:00PM. Nloo ct.n
clathlng • nUIMfOUI I'IWC .
ttemt. Rein or thine.
VOid Solo Trollor Plril an lob
McCormld! Rd. Toyo, toolo,

I

clo1hoo, llohlnt. oqulp,_l,
mloc. Flldoy • SoMdoy.

·l·lh- .-:'O b i!
I

Sept. 11th •d 20th. Lots at
good clothing, beby bod ond
cloth", ml1c. Y~low lush Ad ..
Racine, e.tty IIYfl rMidtl\ ..,
Fri., S1t., Sun. Sept. 19th, 20th,
2111 . 320CondorSt.. Pomeroy.
Furniture. cloth•. craft lten"'l.
mite.

Solo 151 Gatflold hi .
Thun. • Frt. •8· 6. Home klt.tor,

"TOTAL FIREPLACE AND

-

• Fd. t -1 . 7

-.
.........
Ole. Clolfloo olroo o-5.

•Cletrilng t.,1pectlon --~
•Fiut Ctpl lnetelltd
·
•ChlmniY Rebuilding

CUSTOM IIIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

..,_.-...

Solo Thun .

mlloo- of Oolllpollo an e . .
""" Rd. Follow ligna. Nloo boby

Ytrd 1111 It Muine Mic:tlati .
Laur1l Cliff. Sept. 11· 18 . Clo·
thing 1nd m .. c.

o

•

..... ··pt ·"Pieiisanf ·····
&amp; Vicinity
..·-· -·· ··- ·- ... ······-. ----- -· ·-·
7 flml~ Yerd Slit, 111. tirM,
Ill Flllh liT"', Now Hovon,
WY. Wod . • Thurs .. Sot&gt;t. 17 •

le.

.

•

�'

"

·.· ..

Ohio

17

W8dnesdav. September 17,

mw

.....

~

........... " ... ,. .,;..:; ••.+111-, ,,.-.,r, ••. ~ ..... ... .. .. .

•8oo.

001 VX:U.D ~
~roues

\lllfH 10 IKM2(

715 • Boatl end

I • 0111 tor ...,au::a:t.
304-871-MII • 87.. 1410.

9!17/86

'

oiolrtg-...- -.... ,..
- .. Mo~ooto. 304-88. . .12.

EVENING

1810 lo...., .bMo boot whh
M..-cury motor. Fully
equlppld. Coal "hlmace • heu
aloe. r•go. c.. 114·3117·0244
oftor B'OOPM .
80H'

llooll ¥inyl - -• 71.01). 'MIIto , _ l o - With ·-· --

*••·

TELL

ln ...lltd. P. 1&lt;. · - · 304. . . .
1071.

8:05

8:30

1!7-

ENTE~PRISEI.

EVANS

Jock·

oon, Oh. 114-:116·W30.
F~a•e~··~··~

firm. Lilla MW, anly 2 monthl
old. Co1UIOOwlloolllort:JIO.

36

Lote

&amp;

Unfumithed, 2 bedroom apart·
IMRt in MlddiiPDrl. t115. per
month. Depo~tt required . &lt;(ell

Acreage

lend to build on very nice &amp; flM,
c:onveni~rtl tocetlon. 2 lot• 400
ft . by 111 ft. zeo II by 18&amp; ft .

Coli 114-.WI· 7827.

1fl aGrt lot wilh mobil• home

Log Clbln htnd CUI • hand hewn

o.i 11&amp;.20, 21tDfy. llfllleppt'OX .
24x30 •

wood ptnnld. C•ll

&amp;14·441·4307 ..,., e.

I room hauu. ........ hlrdwood ttoor.. NMm.nt. lltt-

lchlld ..,.... lbout 54 mi . .
from town. Call 114-441.t1181

or 114·441·3137.

12

Si:uations
Wanted

Child cere for pre-IChoolert. Age

2-6. Mon .-Fri. 1 :30 am . 5:30
pm. Aeliebhr rtrf.,.naa fur-

riahed. C1ll 114-M7·1732.
V1cancy for en •derty ledy In my
honw . Stele HcenHd, •P•
ri.,..c:ed . lots of T.L.C. 1100. Ptf
month. Catll14·742·2282.

W. ere now KCepting eldlriy
r•idtntt in our home. E~q~•
rience tnd ,.,. . .eM nlhblt
upon raqu•t. CenHltd by lht
Stele. Fte.onlbtt ret•. IDia af

c.,.

TLC. prof•etonal
end good
home oooked m11t1. 114-S..t-

2063.

18

Wanted to Do

Will do houM cleaning haw

3 bdr. bath &amp; Yt, total lfectri~;: .
hNI pump, WIIMr • dryer,
av..-.gt aile. bUI 1100 month.
Gerega, ~. fruk ...... large
gerdtn IJIICe, elmolt 1 tcre
ground. wtll CGnlider l•d conerect with down paymam or Clll
IMUtnl lo•. Cal mominp:

614-678 ·211~ .

7 room houn. 1'h b.th. 4

bldrooma, 1•-e•- no A1h 11 ..

troctl lf lll. 304-&amp;75-8807.

21

n1111otlata. 114-182 - 3711ev~r~­
ingO or 114-112·3341.

612 ·888·4221 .
19.99 Onaprlcethoa store tram
Uberty Fashiona. Inc:. Unbeiii'Va·
ble l)fieea for quality tho•
normal¥ priced hom 119 te
110. Ov• 1&amp;0 brtnd nam•250 ltyl•. Ona-tlme f11 Inetudes invantory. buying trip,
filttur•. IIJPPII•. 1n11ore train·
ing, mora. CMt combWte wtlh
ower 1000 br.nd• of fathlont
111d acc•to,.... OM K01teefl:v

41

House• for Rent

Houst 3 bdr. ltove a refrig.
Rodney VIHtge II 127&amp; mo.
Refer•CM . Ct11 . .8-U111ft"

114·.W6·3413.

32

iewtlful J Glf

..... -

In

rlqUirwd. Catl 116·H2·

Cottage, 2 room~, bath, furnihld , utilittw paid. tii.OO
~1ft. 304-671· 3100 or 175-

&amp;509.

NEW ANP USEP MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUALITY
MOilLE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WElT. GAUIPOUI. AT 35.

3 bedroom houst. 304·171·

bdr.. woodbumer,
undlfJII"niftg, full oU ..,.., nil*

304·882·280&amp;.
3030 "' 675·3431 .
3 bldroom ranch. b-.n•t.
g•egl. IKUfity depolit. New

Ho-. 304·882·2941 .. 812·
2430.
lltctric homt lor rent ,
*250.00 · month, phone 30•·

176·3217.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

14,1100 con 614·24&amp;·1214.

12d0 rRDbUe home. lhc. cand.

Mobile homa tor rent, Upper
River Rd . Calll1•·•••·0497 Of

wtth eppl. and underpinning.
L111 then 14,000. Can 114·

114·44e.!)608 .

1tll 1HI Holley Park
12x00 2 bdt.• dlningroom, un·

Trailer 14xll tituatM on IP·
proa. 1 acre t200 mo. plu1
utiliti• WI Vinton • • C1H

...• . 9101 .
Mr.~1t

derplnnlng, porch, AC . ..triO••·
tor. stove • liking 11.000. Call

e 14-448·7020.

70 RaMfftQftt 1•x70 AC. W8
haokup, undefpinnlnv. porch.

e14·388·1881 .

2 bdr. fumiat'tld trail• on 514 \1
mi . off 110. t115 plu1 dttpotlt.

C1ll &amp;14·381·8151 .

Coli 614·371·21111 .,. 114·
375·2108.

121111 WtniOI' furntlhld , 1•
hell. central air. ADUih lane.
Chnhife. Ceii114· 317·0Z21 or

1914 Oollwoocl 14a10 2 bdr.
-aaurne
·· good
oond., •10.00 or
the loan pymta 1167.31
por mo. Coli 114· 246·8193

114·3417·7242.

llftar

3PM.

1970 New Moon 12x80. 8•12
exptndo, lx14 ldd on, wood·
bum If. motdy furn .. on r.,ted

lot. 04.800 f"m. Colll14·211·
8301.
1111 Mon.-ch Crelt 12xl0
nllfll CtfPtil, woodbumer, 2 bdr.,
rae' nicl, U,OOO firm. Call

114·317·0112.

Nic:t ctt¥1 2 bdr. Upp• Rt. 7.
turnlthld, watar paid. tZOO per
""'"t~.
N~

Coli 814·241·11111.

2 bedroommobilahomefor

rent . Nllf" Aeclfte. Call 114·

992·&amp;1158.

1971 lkylioo troK• 12Ket. Z
bedroom, fulty c.,..... 1•
tumaca. I ICN&amp; t210 month
pluo uutllhl•. 114-HZ·2011or
114·112·77tt.
For rent t•hr. depotlt r-.ulred.

fOf' lilt 2 bllr. 12xll treHif •

llllullo ooly, you pay

ut-.

·111·2131.

roornt • ..,_...OR Athtoft Upton
Aollll, 1110.00 · Pluo

IIIHitleo. JN.I71-40H.

whh Glldrll air. C.U 114-..1 2118.
MOIIU HOMEI MOVED' In·
...,.., re•onllll• ..... Call
31)4.17..2131

.A

Fum. 4 ·• ·" -· No
- · ...Colll14-44t·111
"" ""'· ~ • • dop.
,._lrtod.
••
1111 Oat

lfu J

llli100111 . . .

pu.,.. . . . ·-=-··

...,..._ lifO illk:f1M .,..-,
3 bdr. 1"11 b.ch. I. . . Nvw.aroom bllo - - -"" - · wtth Mreplece. Wlfk tn ...... ·
00.
304-17.. 31.
kitchen cM~ill• . hMt

.4.....

lite.

bill •100 montll. l.oleopool 121124: f N i t - - · .

-1
IC,......,....· W•oonlj
...

l o r t o - ......

oontf8Ct wtth dOWn '""""' 1r
c., ...,.,.10.,, Coll_,.lop,
114·441·4703.

33 F•m• fOf ....

"'"lo.

... roln hub.

-

:IO'Iotdln wlrto noo. 30

-

Ul- - ,. -·
.. lfll't¥ tM. F LiEU 2 •

.,

J04·171·1104 .. 304-171·
Cal
7121.

1), ........ ,... ..

*30. Colll14·301-lll12.

Wood bunolnt !urn-. 8 ft.
tnu:ll · 11 ft. iluniturn
boOI . Colllogoodcend-.c.tl
e14· 2. .·1111 .

1.oo0 pion wat• r.nk an
1kldo. Coli 614·2111·8801 """'
I PM.

ta41.

·

uoo. - ·

3 purobotd

17

7

Wuh.unl" ICOUitiC gult., .

IIM&lt;Iyo- bondollooll ond
....ty, both •o ..... •100.00
- · :J04.171· 11U7.

PIANO FOR IIALI. _

.. ,

-0

IQJ 1111111-'Yto . . .IMIIMI
......... . . . . . hi . . . . . . . .
conoolo plooo. C.. bo -

looolly. : Cloolude
.._ , CnoiM ....... P.
0 .1• 120". le ..ucapa:, II

12219.

118

~ad

P-

,......,,, Olllo. Coli 114·W2·
6411 .

61

Hou . .hold

Good•

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE e2

Olive St. . GolllpoHo. NIW. uNCI

S.lel 50 Pll' c.nt afll F*hing
atTOw sign Ulll Llghtlll. nan -

• ...,... 12111 Nonlllhtad 02211
Free lnt1r1! fiW left.

s ..

locolly . 1· 100· 423· 0113 .
.nytlrne.

&amp;V~~~table•

-LJ- -

c-~nv

-lo.. Cal
lort
prilat eRd Vlfieltet
lob'
Morllot. M..... W. Vo . aMnJ-8721. o,.. 7 drt•·

County Applilnce. Inc. Good
uald eppllenOM end TV uta.
Open lAM to IPM. Mon lt\n.t
Sot. 814·441· 1818, 827 3rd
A,., G - I l l. OH .
Valltly' Furnlturt, new a uald .
Llru• Melton of CJ.ttlily .fumi·
lure . 121&amp; Eutern Ave ..
Gallipoli1.

Ktu..

Iwh""' •-• •-·

4 0 _ ,_ _ _ _oloo.,.lolollnoof_l_
....,...,.t,
I.E . Ohio .
~

tt'tiUOft .._

SALE II eo,_

Oln~

loo•ll• . 111001423· 018 3.

*'"·
1371. I.e-

121 .. *121.
1108 •d up to 048&amp;.
Wood tlllle w-1 dtlif1 1215 to
0781. ONk •1 00 up 10 037&amp;.

Hut.aft11 1400 1nd .... Bunk

~w

-t olll FIMhlng

lian ·•2111 Lightlll, ...,..
onow 02181 Noolllhtllll t2211
freo 1011. .1 Fow llltl enytime.

USed 110

c..

blcthot _. ..

billa co,.t.te w·mntr•._ All Phoh Wltoh -dlor. 1 ·
IZtl.,d up to *391 . 8*' - o 614·194-7t42 or 884·1008.
1110 a 1171. Menr. . .., IDx

...... tutl or twin tal, flrm
•n.""" fl3. o - - u 2 1.
Kln8·Ueo. 4 dr_oh_, fll .

-lc

o,....,.
til. Gun clbillltt 1.
10, • 12 .... Gilt ..

r - t37t . . . . - •31 • 041. hd " - IZO.
UO &amp; Klnf fr-o •eo. Good
..._io•f of ballroom •Ilea,
moto1 . .looto, hMIIbo•ch 030
. . . . . to . . .

UNd Fumtture: W•h.- &amp;
dryer, .._..ic r1nge. a• ranee
• rohfg....r, - - . 2

.......... btdo.-• •

NCNfl•. 3.Mi._ out lutnMie
~d. 0111" lAM to IPM, Mon.
tluu 101. 114·.. 1·0322.

..
lvahln•.

no.oo.

Ajay Octo
- · IIIIo 304-871·11411.

c .. 114·:141·1241 .

·--Call

... lo..... "'"" · t4100. 304·
87.. 8700.
11'111 Cedllloc Eliloroolo, very
ole., .,d oh.,. . 304·171·
31141 .

St:rvtce~

=-:--:--------'-'·
170 GT ............ liD llu-

-·good- 10•·111·
-·o
Wootll•wn '""'·

,2N or 304-UJ· IIU.

2 tolooooo ol fo; ..0 .00.
304-871· 1041.

81

u•.

- -· U ,IIOO.- 304-112·

Peolilo · - Cllorgoo, prlcod
1
o•lo, 304-882·3141.

ALLEY OOP
YOU WERE RIGHT!

Fr11 •tim..... can coUaet:
1-114-237-0488. day o, ntght .
Rogart Bateman1
Wot..,._flng.
RON ' S Television Serv ice .
Hou• caRt on RCA , Ouetlr,
GE. IP~Gialing in Zenith . Cell

Fetty Tr11 Trimming, ltump
AINGLES'S SERVICE. expo·
rienotd ClfP.,t•r. electrician.
maeon. i)linter. roofing (lnelud·
Inti hot tar eppllcatioft) 304·

ARE 'lOLl STILL

ONYOLJRDI~ ?

111·2088 or 87&amp;·7147.

HOW
COM 51

LA5T WEEK I DISC'O.IERED
00/..JBL.E CHOCOLATE
MOLJSSE.

Stlril1 TrM and l....,n Service.
londiC-g. 304·611·2010.
"otary or cable tool drilling.
MOlt wetla compiMed 11me dey.
Ill• and twvice. 304-

Pu.._,
111·3802
82
11'111 I IJI.. c:Mvy. 1179 Ford
V·l - -· E... lng 114·
41e.SI43.
1t71 O...o C"'b Colt. \1 10n.
4x4. PU. low
olr.
llldl·•ll. ••• nwt .,_ a out.
MuOI ooll, bouflot hou•, Olklog
1oM """o of •4.100 or boo1
· Ctoll14· .. 1·21411.

""loot•.

. 111• Qovy \i 100 PU.lUIO, PS.
1'8,- · Col 114· 311·
.,71,

I '

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
COf'. Fourth and Pine
Oallipoli•. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614·
446-.U77

83

1873 Mui Vtn t10od DOnd
11200,00. CIMplng treller
1921.00. 17ft. llot boll , _
1800.00. 304-871·7147.

BARNEY
WHICH

ONE?

E11cavating

Good -1 h cwating. basemnnt s.
footer~ . driveweve. aeptic:tank t.
land1caplng. C•ll anvtlme 614·
446 -4637, Jamas l. Davison,
Jr. owner .
·

Hett cam~d f0k1 ring, uc
cond. U.ZOO.Ot;l . 304·171·
6807.

116

Building Supplies

••·

P8il for S1ie

11M ForlletDrt bed truck, """
· ilotly 871-1021.

10 ~ltlNl-llooll.
.... " ......~
UOO. Cal 14-UI·l411.

bull. Out col

1 . . . for 3072 . .

c .. 114-741·

woo\,

oct-·

...
- •. •1 .ooo.oo. i04·
87 ....:1!1_ 1:00 ,M.

a.wr

llldoup 307 ..... 0

-101 .... llld - - · 304-871-2478 ol·
·
·;-;1::00:;:;;"'PM;::
. ::;:::;;;:;::;::

114·148·B~.

13 ·Vana• • W.D.

Cal_..

86

General Hauling

Jam" Bov1 Watlf' Service. Also

poD11 fiNed . Coli 114·2116 ·1141
or 614·441· 117&amp; « 814·448 ·
7511 .

DM&amp;atd' a Wattr D1liverv . Cistlml, pool, a well. Anytime but

lundoy, 814·.We·7404.

Wttt•raon '1 Water Hauling.
raaeonlble
immediate

r""·

2.000 geltori delivery, eltttrna,
pool1, wtll, ate. call 304-676-

c.....

1110 z..
lioollld.
lii'loool ...... Clllll1ot.441· 7471

-1:110..

•• -·

87

•-.00.

117'1 v. • ....
•ot.&amp;'71· 131J or
l'l'lo!M11.

Ttll STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 83 Bee. Aw.. Ga1Upoli1.

......
""" 1 lt ,JOO.OO.

114· 441· 7833 or 614·441·

11111, .... ..
••hu.v.tt:roRt•
wh••l•

A • 11114 Culhlm Couch• 1nd
RIUitholtterv. lt. At. 1, Crown
City, Oh. 114·211·1470. Eve.
114·.WI·3438. 0pon dolly a to

"Ill

DotiiO v...

Upholatery

..... wtl

I

114-m.IMI-.
~-

·····~··· - 8 7.. 1731.

" ......,••..
.....,.

IIU.

• I. Ill. 8:30 to 1:30. Old &amp; now
l .. hO .... Id.

·

. ~. .

--~~

......__.

.

Gll:iZI illl Jeopardy
Clll Major League Baseball:

7:35
8:00

Chicago Cubsal New Vorl&lt;
Mets 13 hrs .)
(I) Major League Baseball :
Los Angeles a1 Atlan1a 12
hrs ., 30 m in.) Live .
II Cll @ Highway to
Heaven Thanks ,o Jona·
than 's angelic powers , Mark
and a beautiful female ac·
tress suddenly sw itch physical im~ges. (60 min.l (R) .
(]) Bring 'Em Back Alive
C!J McDonald's Junior
Tennis (60 m.n .)
Cll 1!1 CIJ Perfect Sttan·
gera SEASON PREMIERE
ICC) Larry panics when a
pregnant friend of Balk i ·s
goes into labor.

Great
Train Robbery'
(I)
MacNeil· Lehoer
Newshour
GID Gl Cfil Clue : Movies,
Murder and Mystery Mar·
1in Mull hosts ,his look a1
America 's fasc ination 'with
mystery in games. books
and lilms. (60 min .)
(jj) Chance lo Learn/
lllileracv
(CCI Barbara
Bush. national spokesper·
son for Project literac y US
IPLUS), explores Americ&lt;,. s
ilov- problem, lllltei'IICy.
(60 min .I
8:30 (])DIll Head of the Clan
PREMIERE ICC) Substiluto
teacher Charlie Moore at·
tempts to g ive ·his over·
achiever students a more
rounded education by taking
them to a high school dance .
9:00 II Cll @ Gimme a Break
After s he rec eives an unex·
pee led inheritance. Nell div·
ides it up among the family.
urging them to indulge their
every whim . (R) In Stereo.
(]) 700 Club
(!) National High School
Dance Team Championships
(]) 0 Ill Dynasty (CCI
Blak e vents his rage o n AI·
axis,
while a
je alou s
Amanda and Sammy Jo
fight it out at Dominique 's
engagement party . {60 min .)
(AI .
CIJ Chance to Learn/
Illiteracy
ICCI Barbara
Bu sh, na tional spokesperson for Project literacy US
(PLUS). e xplores America ·s
invisible problem. illiteracy
(60 min.)
®J e (ft) Mag~um. P.l . A
female repon or involves
Magnum in the search for an
assassin. (60 min.)(R) .
(Il) Fighting Torroriam: A
National Security View A
si mulation of a closed· door
White House Nation.!) Sec urity Council Session ts
presented. (60 min.)
9:30 U (l)@ You Again7 Mat·
thew .'marries' a girl as pan
of a cla ss experiment while
Henry begins a rolalionship
w•lh her w ealthy mother. (A)
In Stereo .
10:00 • Cll lBl St. Elsewherw
W es,phall and Novino al·
t end t he Doc tor of the Year
a wards. whHe an angry
Craig , expecting defeat ,
smashes his hand in fru stration. 160 min .) (R) .
C!J 1 988 FO&lt;d College
Cheerleading Chall)lliot\·
•hips Coverage from San
Diego, CA . (60 min.)
'
CIJ D Ill Arthur Hal lay' 1
HOieiiCC) As Chrisline pre·
pares to leave lhe St. Gre·
gory, Peter gives her old job
to Julie, which draws resentment from .Chrlstine and
jealousy from Mogan. 100
min .IIRI

•(1) rnWnt
Odd COIIple
Virvinia:

PEANUTS
we'DBETTER 'SAV
600DI!VE, SWEETIE ..
I L£AVE FOR FlANGE
AT MIPHIM. ..

A

Chlncemi.Nm
lEI 8

(ft) The Equalizer
M c ~ll tries to prevent an

aspiring actress from falling
vi ctim to a· proslitution ring,
while trying to entrap the
'orchid killer'. (60 min.) IRJ.

UlJ

Lemon G..... Incident

ICC) Interviews, dramalizad
scones and historical foo..
tage are fealurod in lhil ex·
amina,ion of a U.S. school
desegregation case.

______ ________
111M CIIIOII • · -d. Col

---------------------------------------:!_!. .. __.

SNAKE!!

1177 lot'l. 1 - H. 7t.- 2818.
-_ , . 4•4
4:JOC1111114·882·1111t
'"' or 114·1141· II~;;::;;:;::::;::::===:..

,. u........

..

304·

117J FordF ·ZIO pi.... INck,
71.000
JIO .,olno.

.'72

Win·

G-.

II

LlveltOck

S3

(Il)
MacNeil· Lehrer
Newshour
81:i21lBl Wheel of Fortuna
(g) WKRP in Cincinnali
(1) Sanford and Son
II Clllll New Newlywed
Game
C!J Major League Base·
boll's Greales1 Hits : 1977
World Series IRJ.
8 CD Too Close for Com ·
fort
D (I) Judge
CIJ Molher and Son
®l Wheel of Fortune

1!1J (I) MOVIE: 'The

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditlonll lifetime guaran·
t". Loca• ref.-enc• furnithed .

r-ol. Coli 304·8?&amp;.1331 .

AM·FM. blue ""d

•

Home
Improvements

11113 lloolt• C h - ·lholby. B

- · Air,

I

l
!'

EEK &amp; MEEK

304·178· 2398 or 614 ·4412464.

t"•·

~

8711·.W14.

1113 Oltlo Cutloa .,.,._ ol&lt;
ODMttiDft.
MW
trono .. V·l . •1.181.
304-87.. 21112.

,....loin

Olio 1.000 ..~ 4.tor rent, MorJift'l 'l"*'tdiiWft
l'or111,ll1. II, 3Q4.871·12Mot
304·12J·88.U. ·

·

· OlD. Clouilo Win·
Duo to. - - t1&lt;1. ~10 Gr•ote. O. Coli 114·
...... touoh ·• iow ... 0 of 1.2:-4_1_·1_1:21-:-.:-:--::-:-- llnton flrot - h i - l o • . I .
Zll•ll· .ver telt. lluttoft hale, ~~MbloclkleleU.y•der
..,. ............. lftd,...,... _....._y, • IIIRHrbd. llllllllll
lolol ,.,., ..00. till llo.. Co., IZJ~ 'loo a ..
to1oo ovor INIY·
Oltlo Cal 114.....
" "y "" ~oo~~oo .. of 27U.
.,*7.70
- 11111 · TVIto
·· Pol• lulldiRII t.ow Ou1llty
C
... 1fto r -......
·
· '
IJioe,t-.. lu_.. ,Wool I p ..........
Ctlft.loo-loiOI. olllferCNII~ ~
. . . . . . . . . . . . Ohla
--.~~
1-- D I·IOA, W.Voi · IDO- ootl-•. Plio"" .114·•1·
UI·IOU.
7111.

-ty.

11•1.1C1Mt, CNiaiCOIItfOI, ntW

~

Auto Fhc It Shop for tome minor
• Mljor NPiirt. All work gutrentMd. Cal1114·446·4081 .

W.Mt good 306 or 360 Chev
an;lne for "T7· "78, call l04-

.

T'l-ff? PE=AP. •••
:r: HOP~ MY poc:ro~
IS' WA'lt=HIN6 i'HI.).

ARE WAY OFF!

'II l..,..o. 2 oloor, 327, 1111. po.

VInYl .... V•l, Air. AulD, Pl. Pl.
AM.fM • • •· tlh, rMr window
- . .•• - · ln-r. llody
-d. IOgll lftlloogo. 304·

"'ill

BACfC

TWO SETTI IIIGS HER~'

Jlm'1 Foreign Ctrt. VW work
endothara. Ceiii14-.Wt -•792.
H'"oro 1 '00 10 5,00 PM .

HI-. N•.JI-. Ueo. CoM
114· •2·2111.

~M

COME$

Auto Repair

1177 Oolto 88 ~. outo·
ltlllllo. ·"'Pit
radio, 3110
...... .... collilltlon. ·coH
11~·14 7-4212.
. '

...,.fm

...'

304· n3·11UI.

NIW ~.. ltPIItn·
011. II lat .. Fwmilurl- Jlt.. 7

.-

n

.2 RemingtOn 7'2 Clllber 30.01
ond 243 whh 3al · II•
mlngton 170. 12 ...... Wlo·
ch•t• model 37, two ll•tg&amp;~ge end one 20 IJIUtll'.

w-•

Cl:tok ut out c.. aur liviRg room
~~oo. •348 • up.

11 fl. _ _ o,.. 121011u.

Club Celt 10" LIINU.Ih\·
- - - J · I D·W•illlllr:t Pi-lot CMieftwt MPIII
u-oln, 114·211· 1111.

2814.

IIlii.

I.;._;..;.;;____ ___

I'JOW WE FINP OUT
HOW BOBBY EWING

bu.,.,.,.,

11• l'lymouth. Runs greet.
"-cllblo. UIIO. 080 . 1817

JI7•.UIJ,

7:06
7:30

MountalnNr Auto Body Part t,
Inc .. 1318 Fifth St .• New Haven.
W. Vo. Phono 304·592·3729
hat 1 fulllint..ot body Plr1t for
em, IIUeb lind vans . Sep·
temb1r Sp•clelt : hcort,
Chtvette, 720 DltiUn. '79-' 83
Tovou 4x4 p.u . fanden.
038 .00.'81 ·up Ford end G.M .
p.u. t.nct.rs, 148 .00. Hooda.
t91.00. 'n .·ao· G.M. tailgates
and bu"ttlfl, 115&amp;.00. '81 -up
G. M. tlllgeiea end bump.-s,
1115 .00 . ''t.l -'71 Ford tlilgat81
tr1d buft1'1fl. til . '80· up Ford
llitgltel and
175 .00
Only I limited qu..,tltyto btaold
It m.. prices. ID hmvl Oeliv·
fllf'II'VIIIabll.
Two Old1 380 trantmittion .nd
angW\•. 2 Chevy 4 •Peed
tran1mi11ion . 304-458-1806
oft• 1 ,00,

oru....
--lc
-wtth __ ...,40_

JIM'I 'ARM EQUIPMENT

742·2187.

Sofa Md chlira priced from
un '" •1&amp;&amp;. T•~oo •eo ..d
. . t0 t121. Hid1·1-bad1 •310
to
Rocw.... 12211 to

1171 ~oUkytoowk. Foont .,d

· Ohio.

MMooyf--. - H -

ulibur Mua.. lotd.,. 11 4·

Car treiler _ . wnn ct.. dull
axle. •aoo.oo. Phane 304-57•·

I

R AL ME v

·--··
I

8

PRINT NUMBERfD lEnERS
IN THESE SQUARES

f) ~~ic!~~!i~ LETTERS TO

1 1 1

j

YESIEIDAY'S SCIAII-im ANSWEIS
lgnote- Bklet- Cheek~ -BROKE
My son had not- me dOillll hoUII
~ ~ In qutte
a long time. While IWI~ liltchen "-.he came In and
ulted 1118, "What gDI
?"

BRIDGE

port

814·.. 8·41514 """ &amp;.

882·1714.

1172 Jolooo D..,. JIO . . .
po-IOicoofl.
114·241·8812 .

Warm Morning woodburnar
wh~
3 •""' - · t - l o
.,, """' well ,.,.. 0221. c.tl
114·247·4212.

to form four simple woraa.1

(B) News

1870 Chl'#etl1, good front end .
Chwy • 1Pd.·to"1'lltl. 1973
Chevy INdl·griH .. buJT1)er. 302
Ford tngi,t•good c:ond. Call

011011. SONI

1971 Chovy I"''' lila. 4 *&gt;or, 380
tNI-..
Tho~•n Cent• Arma 10

auto ., 113.000.

16on for 318 engtne. will fit
rldiator for
Oldt .05 angina UO. will fit
Chrnoll'l. 1973 FDrd 400 atar·
ttr •n • wMer pu,..., ., o &amp;
mile. perts. Can bl ...., 430
Flamingo Dr.. Gellipoli1 near
Kan .. ga Sup.,Ar~~•lca .

Ooda•. 171. 1973

··---4-.

U.l
. 31 114-21e.l411
.-

HEREi

T7 Chryller automatictranlmis-

Farm E~lpmem

. . . . ,.. 1010 .....

.,.., 1 :00 p.m.

1t7'1 !*ov'IIIIIPoiO. Coil 814·
W2·W72 - 8:00p.m .

1171 Annlver. .ry Edition
cer.,ettt. haalltRt •hepe .
30.~ ........ 2 Mtl of top1.
no.-.llr... •-olnqulrl•
""'· 114·141·2224.

p&amp;u1 3-7. ldtel for like rt¥• or

l~tnpl. alto buying coal • wood
•ovea. Cllll14· ...1·3111.

1877 . Ford G-adL *700.
Oootl·- ' ••· Run1 g~U . Cell
114·W2·7411 .

tit
- · -•10H.
- Cen
·· vood
OIR.IIIDtt.
814·

uMd bedroom IUftel, rengH,
wrin.- waMers. &amp;
New
lhtlneroom .. tt. 11H· tlll ,

114·11'11·1HI. 114·272·10·

11'111 Uoaoln c ..tloMIII Morl&lt;
IV. 1111 II....... lol Doolltlon.
M.ooe rnflll, Exeetl-. Condl·
tlon. t2100. Coli 114· 742·
2713.

oloua.
!..,n,
-·
tolh. ctd• II ......
D\IIWDYWI
FNR hntl. AI loutllo. . of
· "'"· ..... I dolly.
clooooi M•.

Unlt•d McGill proffeulonel
dockt, 7 IICttonall 4f'l. ·wfda

marina. Llfltilna "*"Ill.' Cetl

-d. Cal

, . . _ ltatlon w.gon. Auna
- · *210. 010. &amp;14· 812·

CINTIII . 111 30 W. Gollipollo.
Ofllo. Coil 11"4•44 .. 1777 ...o.
114·41•••1z . u, 11ont . . .

tho•.

MI-.

11.CIIowotto.401Pwll. 4-r,

, _ "'• llto•o

'tl?ll~ING IT A !!IT

-·--·-·-·
1877 Moroury Cou. .. XR· 7.

- · ·· Oil••• porfoct.
ve._ .3 ..1. ·lf4·
-·
on
.
141·2202
""'
- l n t - t.

fruit

wood·collltOvll, I pc wood LA
IUite *381, bunk bedl 1198,
a.-tron Ndlnlfl tiB. new •

totll 102 ft. tono 1·4 fl. for"'

•..., - • .,.,ty,

Otll·

&amp;1

bllodlo. Corltolnlog - ·· ~~
tono. FOI Oltlo
Co ..

1177 l'iyMoutll Vol- 11ont I.
lolr
· e. mo.IIDold
&amp;
doyor ltoo ...Int llo""V
CoN 114·
441-:1723. 114·S71-2110.

· - of i4.200 or
- ·
- loon
·'.Collllot.446·274&amp;.

Mixed hanlwoodll4lbl, 112 . ...,
l lolllltot·

1811 TC.3 Horiz... . Con 114·
311· 11241.

(Il) Body Electric
Clll Welcome Back, Kotter
(I) Beverly Hillbillies
• Cll PM Magazino
(l) Alias Smilll and Jones
(J)SponaCentor
(1) Entertain men! Tonight
Aclor/singer Ar1 Garfunkel
talks about his role in the upcoming film " Good to Go, ..
a suspense musical .
1!11 CD M*A*S*H
,
D (I) P-Ie's Court
C1J Nightly Buainoas Re ·

IT LOOK~ AN€, BUT AREAl'T

114·379·2220 .

11• Trlflt AM IUto. air, •c.
Ollfttl.• ...... ...... ltoullhl ......

Vo. 304-17r.3013.

M•:r,

Trantmlaalonl, all typet. over,
frrlnt. rHr. 4 wheel drive. prices
lltrt •100. wUI deliver . Cell

low ·
Mool.
114-. . .·1140, .

M•lolll
lllltrumente

play.,...n4 llld plaolc fociUtl•.
at Fef'Aity Prid• .MoWN Home
Potk, lit. 2 , G .._
'orry, W.

~laM.
......
,...., ...........
...
- 1- P..-.
.. -

1 ........, ... ,.

-old._-It..... -..,.

1n2 oftor 1 pm. ·

200 -

min-

R
g-L
ioc_l_
plot o
"""
·
for otud. Coli 114-·2· ·07.

th•mo•••

-~ -

2 bdr. unfufn-opt. InC,_
City. Coil 114·1tt·ll20.

AKC

hill•. ..,., Flrllu
control, ••· oond. C•lll14-21t-

=::~,~·~*'11· Cll 814-441· =~:~c:..-.:.

1
1*tment
for' Rent

RllbbiiO bill • 1ituo lo ...... Call
114·441·1148.

coet

c.,., otc. Oct. 1, 1111toMoy1 ,
1117. 14.00 pw foot, contaet Fif..,aod fDr ule 130.00 PU
load. Col Aogor Mollllo. 814·
flllr gnou,. 304·1111·1483.
388·8341 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Uberty Troll or for Mle. 1ZaiO,

A~

ttor~ge

All

cerpet In br .. voad aond .

I q,,lt'

wash• 6 .,...,

Lo'IOioll. Colll14·182·7475 .

Hou11 tor ""''· Putten CrHk
Rood. 304-17&amp;·1758.

Mobile Homa1
for S•le

nw MdrooMa. tOIII 16tctrlc

Hom11 for S1le

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom• Pork.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.

Rltewey wood •

UMd

1211. t :OO· I :OO, Monday

2 bed;oom u"turnl1hld houn.
507% Second St., New HtNtn,

2

plc:lwp, wtlhe. likeft•, 170. C1l
814· Jl'l· 211211tor IPM.

throutft SeturdiY.

23

31

Space for Rent

·-·.,_""" -·

A«Nn. 3 btclrooms

P-roy. I14·42S·8ZH.

•'"*"'·

-

41

lpecloua tnil• k)IJ tor rent with

No IMW• .,_.,, 10 E• lt.

Mobile homo far ...t. 2 bed·

Ht·,JI

Clllll14·441·1148.
,------Opl070
FiriWood tor Mle. 100'MI ....
toned olll tpftt, MNv•«f Mid
304·171·2111 .
•38 . Coli 114·.. 1·
0373.
46 Furnished R o o m s i - - - - - - - Truck mMt toot boll for ......

2102.

- ·bwn.

1173 Arllnflon 12110 2 bdr.
·furnlohocl. Col 114·251·
1112.

15001"' 114·742·3147.

For Mit good veritty ootDr
portllble lftd floor model TV't.

IINte "" ••· f:N)eCa, camp.,.,

&amp;01 &lt;127·8031

Water wtllt ttrYiCid ...cl drihd.
Fr.. •tlmatea. Call 114-812·

Ont bedroom fumlthad apt on
Mt .Vemon. ·Lower duplex. very
nic:e, pr.ter1ingleworking ldult.
UOO.OO includM hNI _,d
wttlf. Depotil tnd rlftrenCN .

M110n County Fe if.

-·-

ServiCes

1~ . 114· 44t·l221.

Centrel Hot1l. CeU I 1··441-

lot. Cll 114-317·7412.

Profeuional

.......
--145.goodc.n ...,lOCI....
with mettrlll
441·3412.

For rent Sleeping Rooma end
light tJouH k-.ina roomt. Perk

o,..

2 yr. oltl llllnlotlire Nil
1hund. lvooloto . 1n.....
3243.

lttnding wood

APARTMENTS, mobile hornM.
hou. .. Pt. PI1M1nt and Gallfpo -

Nice 3 laellroom hou11. femlf\'
room. g.ega, U..m•t. 'fA
hHI, II woodod
ueo,., ononth, 010!) """"'·

home.

Own yoor own je81uport1wear,
ladin apperal , children• ·
matemltv. large lites. petite.
dlnOIWelt'-III'ObtC Ot KCIIIO·
rl• •on. Jordactle. Chle, LM,
Levi. lzod. Grt~no . Quea:e. Cttvin
Klein , S..-gio Val~nte. Evan
Picone, lil Claiborne, MeMbart
Onfv, Guoline. Heehhta over
1000 otMu . t14 , 300 to
126 ,900 inventory, training,
fi ~t tures. grand opening, etc. C1n
op.n 15 dayt. Mr. LoughUn

304·171·11188.

frta

t410. Coli 814·241·1234.

No ciGwn peymlftt nlldec:l.
PorMnly, fOCHIIot. 3 bldfoo.ma.
cerpon, b
"'"'· ........
~holt ... AC . Coli 114·882·

1172 1ZxiO Uberty mobile

Gr•n L.antem" for ule . Ha1
liquor lic.~1e . Inquire at GrHrt
Llntem .

e mil• from tawn ,

2 bdr. homt ktelted2 mil11 trom
Galllpotia. lt. Rt. !188. A_,•en·
Cll &amp; depo1it raquirtd. C1ll

Call 2&amp;1·6520 or 216·1102

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUbLISH·
l~G CO. recommends thlt you
do buaineu with people you
know. and NOT to send monev
through the mail until you htvt
inve~tlgeted tht oHering .

2 level fott.

Convtnltntly locllld. Low uttlitill. Mutt IM. 122,700. Wltl

1871 Gettyeburg, 14 • 70, all
ll.atrlc. 2 bdr., 2 full b11th1,
o•dtn tub. 2 H condhion••·
porch .nd M~Wntng . E•c. cond.

Bu1ineu
Opportunity

304 ·171·2336 or 304·171·
2267.

8PM.

PHONE 11 4·. .1· 7274.

Fm anm l

Athton IMdkUng tot1 with public
wttlr. mobtla ho,.,. perrnilt.t.

Mlddloport. Coli 1114·892·
1714.

.. nw . 15 vun •P•rienct. C.ll
(14·912·31143.

ltbY lining in my hOfN, Fle-

Coli 114·915·4310.

Long,

114-182·2014.

I room houH. 1. 2 acrea. Doub.,
Clf'" gtrega. Loc.ttd on Roa. Hill.
BOrtoln priood uo.ooo. Coli

·14 ·318·90 27.
my

UfQiftl . Mutt Hill 18 Hret.
excellent tDr hunting or mobile
horM or c~mper parting. TP
wetw end etMtrldty av•ilabla.

bumer, flaw ldt for moWit ttorM,
tripl• well. UNci ona wtnt•

Roo,.. tor rant, day. welk.
month. Gellie Ho1el. Catl 114441-1110. Aent .. low • 1120
mo"th.

g..,•.

in

3243.

One bedroom unfumilhld IPI'I·
mtnl. Your ltc:Urity depotit now
will hold 1pt. untH Oct. Call

814·448·4703.

Llwn1 mowed by the hr . or t.y •rtrJ ktt. •a DONI, jthoN
ohoo job, Akoo !Mo -•ri!Polr. 1 304-.:.;,;_1;.,7..;1_·1..;0,.;7_;0;_.- - - -Call&amp;1• · 468 · ~ .-.- ...:..~ ~'
I•'
bedroom home &amp;..tertappro1l
Eaperi.,atd Hbylitting In rrr., ICNI. write Mn. GunnH, 404
ttonw . Convenient bc:Mion on Orand llvd., ttuntktgtoft, W.Va
$ tcond A\lltnut. Rtftrtnctl 21701, 304·122·3128.
~llllble . Call 614-641 -7712.
3 bedroom.. 2 blthe. "alf acre lot,
wiM con..._ rnoiMit
We ciNn ro nws • offic•. CeH homt trld•
304-171-3030
btlwten 9-1 tor fr• Htimetea. or 115 · ~31 In,
.
fll'l'fer.n 011 on requ•t- CtN
Sewing

31Sx35 garq•. For
MleoriiiM. Eveningsl14-.t41·

114·892·1111 or 614·892·
1713.

Fl-ood . Coli 614·441· 14:17
or 814·211· 1112 or 114·441·
928e.

01111.

rateunCM. Calle14-448·71U. 3 aurMftl

~trote11ionel

a

hookup

Coli 114·2118·8251 .

low

Humphrey•

8:36
7:00

piMtlc

~

C1J Reading .Rainbow ICC)
(Il) Uving With Anlmel1
Clll Ono Day ·a~ a Time
(I) Andy Griffith
• Cll (i) NBC News
(l) The Rifleman
C!J Fly Fishing With Joe
CIJ 0 Ill ABC Newa
g CD Hogan's Heroes
CIJ Doclor Who
® 8 (ft) CBS News

t.,b,

•

C!J Mazda Sportal.ook

BUT IT 'l l TOO

,...lc
culvena. metet cutvertt. JtON

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

• rn Jefferson•
BAD YOU WO~ 'T
8E AROUNP TO

plootlc

"L

.

__ 1Jle Daily Sentinei-PP-U

.. .. "'....... ....···'•
~

.... .. '-.......~ . ·

... . .

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GreenAcres

c-... dr-. llndl-~

pt•tlc ciltem ltat• 1P11rov.d.

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K..,..,. 17 eu " ilfilfilwtor.
- · 3 YN olol. •uo.OO. Full
okuofobtd •c_.t 1200.00.
304-881·:142Z.

C•llah•'t U..t Tlr•lhop. Over
1.000tlr... lll.. 12. 13.14. 'Ill.
16. 11.1 . 8 mlloo ..,, Rt. 211.
Coli B14-2tle.e251 .

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t40.00. 304-871·88•.

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0 four
ocrombltd words

I

WEDNESDAY

Motort for Sale

F« M1e Gl wl\ho M !toOl

,. . . . . . _,,

.

Television
Viewing

V''AIAT KJIJDCfA

71' - o CL 480 good oond.
MIC), Calll14· 211·1111.
P I - Uoool Fwn!Wre. Gqullllty--re.0... 81D

..... . .,...

POITieroy- Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER
il88 liteo. uc. cond.

-

•

198~,.

· 1:1111114~ .... ,111 oftor 5:30 .

bl-. v11111ool lou..,

~

James Jacoby

End play
for a rainy day

NORTH
8 A65

' I

1· 17·11

.K 74 3
1513

By James Jacoby

88 6 3

I'm sure you've beard about good · WEST
EAST
89
days and bad days. In that sense, 8 Q 10 8 71
U965
bridge i! like the weather. In today's • 10 8
• J 10 8 2
deal, on a good day, declarer would · t K 9 6
• J 10 7 5
make three spade tricks and four·· +K 9 I
heart tricks (the suit splitting 3·3), and
SOUTH
both minor suit kings would be with
8 K J 32
East, giving declarer four tricks in the
• AQ2
t A Q7
minors. That would be II tricks, and
8AQ2
the sun would be shining.
The careful declarer not only brings
Vulnerable: East-West
hb raincoat and umbrella to tbe game
Dealer: South
but also his galoshes. If hearts do not I
split. and those misSing minor suil 'l West
Nortb EaSI
Sou1h
2 NT
kings are with West, then there are
3 NT
Pass
Pass
only eight tricks. The right thing to do Pass
if possible is to protect against even Pass
the ugliest of breaks. Here it's easy to
Opening lead: 8 7
do that.
Declarer should win the jack of
spades and play the bigh hearts. They
do not split. Then, instead of taking fi·
nesses in both minors, he should play
tbe ace and king of spades and put ther of hb small minor suit cards.
West on lead with the fourth spade. Now defender West must give up the
West. will, of course, cash the fifth ninlh trick by leading away from on~
spade, on which declarer can pitch ei· of bb minor suit kings.

.L...------------l

~1-~t:(
by tHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Napoleonic

5 J ew el
weight
10 Fresllly
II Kansas
~ ity

12 Cross oul
13

Tooth
substance

If Wear away

16 Rero... ·
17 Entreat
19 Obstinalt'
21 Puzzle·

doer's aid

23 Frolic
2'7 Liquid

3 Emissary
• Water

pitcher

5 Crete's
c:apilal
IJ
Wing (Lat.)
7 Frost

~~~~~

8 Clcy or

Manasseh

9Yam

II P1188Dver

Yeatertlay'o Aluower 9117
24 Wealth
35 Standard
25 Mother(Fr.) quantity

meal

15 European

river
26 Appeal
36 11 n.
17 Ameche
28 Ukraine
• mployed
film ro le
legislature 38 Soupcon
18 Great Lake 30 At no time fO Yellow
20 Get peevish 32 Equalize
bugle
22 Medieval 3oC Hardy
42 Sailor

slave

measure

heroine

43 Nigerian

28 Pul to
flight

29 Nasty look

30 Mother 31 Took oil
33 Fallow
land
34 Parson
bird

37 Oodge
39 VegeU!ble .
41 Stage org

«Famous
horse

45 Cicatrix

48 Filch
47 Medal
winner
DOWN
I Rounder
2 · - Night
or Love"
DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'FS -Hen's bow loworlo it :

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fom~~~tion of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
for

CRYPI'OQUOTE
9· 17
FQRVALNI

S Q A I
M L N U

LF

LK

0 V R ll
FYO(,j .IYPI

YAPLKOAI

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M ll Y

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MLK N (,jAF
Yesterday'o CI'JIItoqUote: TO KNOW TiiAT ONE
HAS A SECRET IS TO KNOW HALF THE SECRET
ITSELF. - HENRY W. REECHER

10:05 (I) MOVIE: 'Springfield Rl ·
fie'
10:30 (I) AmeriCIIIt SIIIIPiholt
INN News
(I) MoMe. Andre lind Tina:

•rn

The New"Ra1d1n Thi• do-

cumentary exploreslhe livea
of lhree tulors and lho illhorate adulls ,hoy leach ,o
read.

(fi)@N-

11 :00 •(I)CIJ·(I)~·Clll~
Newa

(I) Burna &amp; Allen
CD Splaah ' 88

•rnM•A•s•H
Ill SCTV
Gil ' - - '

Goove Incident
(CCI lnlerviewo. dramatized
scenes and historical footage ere featured in this &amp; K·
amination of a U.S. school
deaag1egation case . (60
min.)
11 :30 D Cll illl Tonlgh1 Show

�'

Paga-1::..12:--The Daily Sentinel

.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

-,.

Wednesday, September 17. 1986:=

T~Jlers still striking. in Marietta, 2 more school. districts

.·

.

By Uniled Pres&amp;1ntenauonaJ
A Lake COI!nty judge )1as ordered
negotiations to I'ESIIme between the
strlklng PainesvUie teachers ·and
the school bpard, while the two
sides ln teaclier strikes In Marietta
and Columbiana are waiting lor
federal mfdiators to get talks
started again.
Painesville and Columbiana
teachlirs entered their third stilke
day today while Marietta teachers
have been out of the classrooms
since Sept. 3. The primary Issue In
each of the strikeS is salary.
Those actions a!lect 473 teachers
aJtd 8,900 students.
Administrators and substitute
teachers aret rytng to hold classes
In each d. the three dlstrtcts, but rot
many students have been attending
classes.
In his order Tuesday calling for
the resumption of . negotiations,
Lake County Common Pleas Court
Judge James Jackson also limited
the rwmber of pickets to six at each
school building, except Painesvllle
Harvey High school where he
allowed eight pickets.
Jackson said representatives
from both sides, along with their
federal mediator, must report to
him Thursday to outline the
progress of the talks.
"We're very pleased with the
wisdom of Judge Jackson In his
order," said Painesville teachers'
spokesman Nancy Cruikshank.
"We feel strongly encouraged. It
was our only assurance that the
board would meet with us."
Cruikshank said the board's
latest o!ler r1 a 9.8 per rent Increase
In the base pay over two years Is
unacceptable. She said Painesvllle
has the second·lowest salaries
armng 13 northern Ohio districts.
The district has 2,1JXI students.
Cruikshank said St. John Baptist
Church in PalnesvUle has offered
its focllltles as a strike headquar·
ters for the dlstrlct' s 155 teachers
and since teocbers are oot recefv.
tng pay checks, the church has also
been turned Into a day care center
and cafeteria .
"People In the community have
brought In cash and groceries,"
said Cruikshank. "It almost looks
like a family reu nlon with a huge
b.lffet."

South Korea
(Continued from Page 11
the farmer taking his grain and
produce, or even Hvestock, to the
dty to sell. The main mode of
transportation is lXJbllc busing. It Is
not urust1ai to see as many as lO to
l5 ruses lined up on the streets
waiting lbr passengt&gt;rs to Iioard.
South Korea Is still a country of
rice paddles. 112y also grow
IEautlful vegetables and fruit. We
buy artUiclaillowers that are made
In Korea, but there, only fresh
nowers were oold and u&lt;;ed tn
arrangt&gt;ments.
Along the Han River in Seoul, you
can see massive parks and heautifi·
cation. They have hundreds d.
tennis courts, and tennis Is played
on day courts. Golf Is relatively
new, and all the caddies are girls.
Lar!J!drlving rangt&gt;s are located In
the downtown areas.
We stopped in Hong Kong on our
way home. The British influence
can be seen everywhere- In cars,
buildings, doul:!ledecker streetcars
and buses and very clean Stlbways.
I mtlced that they sold California
orangt&gt;s and Wastington apples.
The O!lnese and British are
preparing their new O!tnese go.
vernment. It will go ilto effect in
1997 when Hong Kong is returned to
Olin a oount ry.
June 14th was Queen Elizabeth's
birthday and In oll!ervance d her
birthday, nearly everything came
to a holt .
We took the ferry boat to Kol&lt;ion,
China, which is k&gt;cated on the
mainland Yoo are only allowed to
go Inland a lew miles without a visa.
Kowlon is an lndu st rial dty where a
rumber d. Items found In the U.S.A.
are made.
We are hapw 10 be safely home,
and we do have a great aptrecla ·
tion of the United States of
America.

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Increasing cloudiness tonight,
with a chance of showers after
midnight and a low In the upper~.
Mostly cloudy Thursday, with a
chance r1 showers and highs In the
upper 70s.
The Jrobabillty of treclpltatlon is
30 percent tonight and 50 percent
Thursday.
Winds wllJ be light and southeas·
terly IDnlght.
Oldo Eldmded FOrecast
Friday throllgh Sunday
Generally !air . each day, with
high ranging from 75 to 85.
C&gt;/ernlght bw.i will be between 55
and 00.

. ....

111'111 8IIIAIIS

Strlklng teachers In Marietta and
school board ~lclals were waltlng
word from a federal mfdlator as
attendance by the district's 4,aJO
students remained below W
percent.
"112re hasn't been anything
. trelklng, mthlng at all from the
medlatoc," said Olaf O'Dell, spokesman l&gt;rtbe Marietta Education
Association. "A citizens committEe
tresmted the board wU h a proposal
to mediate the strike, but that's an
illegal procedure."
The union has asked state
&amp;Jperlntendent Franklin Walter for
an investigatkln Into whether the
schools are being kept open
illegally.
O'Dell said he expects to bear
from the state superintendent's
office by today or Thursday.
"112 attendanre .In the system
hasn't improved at all," be said.

Bike-a-thon
for Reedsville
A "Wheels For Life" Blke·a·thon,
on behalf of St. Jude's Chlldrens'
Cancer Research Hospital, will be
held Sept. 27 in Reedsville.
This year's blke-a·thon homrs
Jaime, a leukemia patient at St.
Judes, and Madeline Buchanan,
chairperson, encourages all blke
riders to participate .in the event
which she descrlhesas a "vital part
of the Oght against childhood

canCEr."
Sponsors donate a sum for each
mile completed by riders. All riders
turning In money will receive a
certlfica te. Those who raise $25 wlll
receive a St. Jude's T·shirt and
those who raise $75 will receive a
harrel tote bag, Buchanan a pains.
For rmre information on ll!lng a
rider, sponsoring a rider, or
assisting with the bike-a ·thon In any
way, contact Buchanan at 52856
Stare Rt. Gil , ReedsvUle, or call her
at 3'78-6117.

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS.

To Me~~:d • hea•lifully
at
doooiped
llfrlll,emenl, jull f'lll
... vilil

ru ...

l

~

we are facing such deficits," hli',
said.
...
Stiller said attendance In tho;!;
1,100.student district is about 25
percent The district employs 73~
certified teachers.
,.

two years and $17,100 in the final
year, said Stiller, noting that the
district faces a $320,000deflclt in the
cuiTent fiscal year.
"l don't know how we can
iJ'OmiSe oomethtng like that, s !nee

"Nor are. they meetihg state
guidelines for science, math or
english cuiTiculums. They don't
have enough qualifiect people to
teach tiDse cc;mrses."
O'Dell said science labs have
been closed since the strike began
13 days ago.
·
He also said miy two of tile
strikers have returned to work,

+-----.+o·c;

Speelal Of the Week

, ..

\

PIZZA BURGIR

·

t

s1.19
With Frits .................. S1,7 4

CINNAMON
RED HOTS

5150 li.

•

Foods

Ohio Valley

oc•~••••o

hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.j

ELBERFELD$

514 EAST MAIN

We A"'P'

POMEROY

Food SlaiJIIJI

said.
As for cost, ·it is much less
expensive to go through the urgt&gt;nt
care department ($Jlfortreatment
room and examlnat"'n). than the
"'
emergt&gt;ncy room, if the patient's
condttiln Is of an urgent but not
emergt&gt;ncy nature.
The urgentcaretreatment rooms
are on one side of the hall, along
with the receiving desk, all attrac·
tlvely decorated In a rose and white
decor, and the emergt&gt;ncy rooms
are on the ott~r side, in a blue and
white color scheme. The hospital
laboratory remains at tbemdofthe
wing.
In talking about the new urgent
care service, Lucas said that the
hospital tried It several years ago
but it was dlsrontlnued after a few
month!; because of a troblem about
reimbursement through Medicare
and Medicaid, a situation since
solved.
With the addition of the new
urgt&gt;nt care department, the hospl·
tal now has the d tverslty nreded to
make it stable ftnanciaily. The
administrator recounted the prob·
lems of the past several years as It
has become harder and harder lbr
hospitals to survive as rules and
regulations of federal and lnsu·
ran&lt;P agencies regarding lengths d
hospital time and amounts of
payments have changed.
"It's been hard , and we've aU had
to sharpen up, Improve the staff,
offer more services, but I think
we're better for it, and It 's tEen a
real benefit to the public," Luras
commented.
"Here we were ... a IDspltal wltb
'10 \led&amp; br acute care'IJitlent.s, and
a poor census. So we sat down with
our consultants and last year
opened the skilled nursing, lnterme·
diate and extended care !acUity
with .D of thoSe beds. Today they're
alllllled, and the .D remaining beds
for acute care are adequate."
The administrator went on to
"Urgt&gt;nt care is something less ex(iain tha t the southwest wing,
than that which is considered an which was the ollstetrics ward In
emergt&gt;ncy. It can be general the early years of the hospital's
illness, minor lacerations, bee operation, has l&gt;r many years now
stings, a sprain, oomethlngllkethat tEen used ilr b.lslness offices. By
-but actually the determlnatiln as converting that v•lng In to the
to whether emergt&gt;ncy room or · emergt&gt;ncy room·urgent care de·
urgent care services are required Is partment, It Is better utilized, and
made after the patient arrives," he combined with the acute care and

Levi~· ClasSic Denim Jacker. ..

Years 01 111m wort ...and sU/1 alii!
Lilli.- r1otim /ICklll ~ M aman.

111111 011~" QOOtl Sfll 01100/s. •
Nt IIUilt /a I illtll -~ 1!«1.Whh QU~ify
leattmliiB~I derllm. OOulrlt!
Uilclf«&lt;-, $/lltf)OCi!/S andCJJWC•
i1llfMS anriUri's" 1amoos Iii
lllllfl you're Q6llili/rklWrl ro wtJI.

IT'S HOLLAND
PLANTING TimEt
Crocuses, .Daffodils,
Hyacinths, Tulips and
other imported Spring
flowering bulbs are here
to give you spectacular
colors next Spring!
• Eaey·t0111ent
• Sur•tcHIIoom
• Wide 1uortment
IVIillble
• We'll help you select

ONLY

$3 499 UNLINED

$48 9 ~ FOR THE HEAVY
FLANNEL LINING

II!IIIJ

Stop in on the 1st floor - See our excellent assortment of
Holond Bulbs. Buy whpt you 111111 while ielec:tion is best,

290 N. SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

IN POMEIOY

W.IENERS.........................r.A.•••• 79&lt;' .·
JUMBO FRANKS ............. ~~£. S1.89
SUPIIIOI
S2 .39 LB. SNRfDDED
$
BOILED HAM ..............wm». 2.19
HO-ADE
·HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••••••u•• 89C
MUioi"·~

tUfT · roz. YBYmA

SliCED
CHEESE .................. S1.89

30 CT. CALIFORNIA

OliO Clllll

CARROTS ...................29&lt;

I~

OZ. CELLO PACK

3 LB. NEW RAMBO

COOKING
APPLES ••

u .........

ru. S1.09

JIM
· CO.BB

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile-Cadillac
308 E. Main St. · Pomeroy, Ohio

614·992-6614

again Friday with scat·
ltel'1ed showers. High wBl be In
""'' 'lllo and lows wUl he In the 50s.

2 Sections. t4 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

COOL WHIP ................... ~••••99c
16 oz. •osrn
BROC.COLI SPEARS ......... w $1.49
2 1.1. IAIIIOUIT 10 PC. FliED
CHICKEN DINNER ••••••••••• w S3.99
12 OZ., 12 PACK CAINA110N IICHCHOCotAn

COCOA MIX •••••••••••••••••••NH S1.79

1 1.1. ~IWIIL HOUSE VAC PACK

COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••JM S3.29

19 OZ. DU.,Cll ..INZ lEG.

CAKE MIXES ...................~m S1.29
u oz. s• filE
POWDER SUGAR •••••••••••• JM. S1.19
16 OZ. DAfT
.SANDWICH SPREAD .......J». S1.49
300 C1. JUliO
BOUNTY TOWELS ............ ROU 9·3(
1OIM
CAIIPIIU 'S
TOMATO SOUP •••••••••••••.tUN..79c
31 OZ. YAM CAIIP
·PORK' &amp; BEANS .....................89c

RAISIN.SQUARES .....~••••• w S2.29
16'11 OZ. DILOGG'S

oz. DCIU

PINEA

.

·

.

JUICE ••••••••••••••• S1.39.
..
\

is

being placed on

a patient is treated for a wound,
there is no charge fi:&gt;r a follow· up
check. In addition the staff will be

doing call·backs on all of the

checks on walk·lns. A community

patients within 24 hours to deter·
mine their conditilns .
Another service to be offered, she
said, will be free blood pressure

teaching program oo health related
Issues Is also ll!lng planned as a
part of the hospital's new uroont
o•
care program.

I
ON DUl'Y 24 HOURS- A dactor Is m ... ly In the emergency room at
Veterans 241Dprsa day, and that same ... ctorserves patlenls the new

m

urgent care department which is open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., weekdays
and weekends. Here Walter S. Lucas, hospital admlnlstmtor, right,
confers with Dr. James McMullen, ER director lor Veterans.

By NANCY YOACHAM
months later and could be included
Sentbtel Staff Writer
In county budgets for 1987. The
The Meigs County Commission· payments would be pooled to draw
ers learned last Thursday it will Interest from Investment. As years
cost the county $42,!DJ to partie!· pass, a county's annual payment
pate in the Buckeye Jolri t·County could Increase or decrease. based
Self·lnsurance Councll.
upon claims made.
The question now. said Commls·
If Meigs opts to participate In the
stoner Rich Jones at Wednesday's self· insurance program, the cover·
regular commissioners' meeting. Is age woold consist of general
"Can we afford It? And we 'll have to comprehensive, officer holders'
ma ke that detenninat lon in the errors and omissions, law enforce·
immediate future, .. he added.
ment professional and automobile
The Buckeye Joint·County Self· liability.
Insurance Council was fonned
"This cost IS42,!mi for llabllty
AWARD ·- Dr. Roberta Steinbacher, administrator o1 the Ohio
earlier
this
year
In
a
n
effort
to
coverage
' is higher than past
Bureau of Employment Services, lelt, Tuesday alterroon presented an
combat
skyrocketing
liab!lty
insu·
Insurance,
"
Jones said, " but lower
award to Edith F.Adldns, person mchartll' dlhe llle~K!CountyOI!lceol
ranee
costs.
It
is
the
only
self·
than
what
we've been quoted
the Bureau, bt recognltloo of achievement accompllshment.s during the
Insurance
group
In
the
state
at
the
reeently."
joll!i for veterans program.
·
present 1lme. although self·
Meigs County has been without
liablity
Insurance lor some time
lnsu rar. te has for some time been
vlewed by all of Ohio's fl8 count ies row and the last prices given the
as an alterna1lve to expensive county were "in excess r1 $100,000,"
conven1lonal liabliry Insurance Jones said.
Before making their final decl·
coverage.
The move to fonn the council was slon, the commissioners will attend
By BOB HOEFIJCH
Increase for the Meigs · County spearheaded In Lawrence County a meeting In Athens next Wednes·
Sentinel staff Writer
office. Several employers are listed by attorney Randall Lambert, day to hear Information ahout a
administrator of the program. Nine self·lnsurance program being or·
The Meigs County Office of the exclusively with the bUreau.
Ohio Bureau of Employment Servl·
Despite b.ldget cuts from the other Southeastern Ohio counties- ganized by the County Commission·
ces is apparently functioning well, federal goverJUlleDI with Ohio as Meigs, Gallla, Atllens, Vinton. ers' Association of Ohio.
Jones reported that Lamber1 , of
not only In processing claims of the state receiving the smallest Jackson, Hocking, Ross, Washing·
the
Buckeye Joint-County Councll,
ton
and
Pike
soon
joined
the
fold
residents. but In locating jobs for amount d. money of any state
with
Lawrence.
All
these
counties
.
gave
testimony In Columbus before
the unemployed.
·
making up Region 5, Dr. Steinbthe
CCAO,
regarding development
are
geographically
the
same
size,
This was disclosed Tuesday acher reports that so farthe bureau
of
tbe
more
localized self·insurance
afternoon when Dr. Roberta Steinb- has been able to kl!ep all of Its noted Jones, with basically the
program.
acher, Columbus, administrator for . employes an their jobs. Several same problems .
In other matters, the board met
Costs for ,each county to partie!·
the bureau and a member of tbe times over the past few years also
cabinet of Gov. Richard F. Celeste, the Meigs O!llce has been sche- pate In the iJ'Ogfamvary, based oo with Kevin McGrath, of the Buck·
eye Hills· HOCking Valley Regional
· visited the loCal d.llce.
duled tlr closing because of lack ct a study by the council's actuary .
Jones said It was his understand· Development .District, and Jess
AltiDugh Meigs Coonty's unem· funds. That, too, has been avoided.
ployment rate is running at 11.3
Besides offering referral to jobs lrlg at least eight o! the 10 counties Davis, of the Shelly Co., Thornville,
percent compared to the statewide and accepting claims for ll!nellts, must participate In the iJ'Ogfam to · for a pre-construction confermce
average of 8.2, the local d.llce so far the local dflce is Involved in testing make it a~. Their payments would on the Rutland street paving
this year has placed 166 ()EPple on programs and can even handle job be due ill two half·lnstailments, he project being funded through Com·
job sites. in 1985, 250 were placed retaining through It asooclation . said, ore when the program Is munlty ~elopment Block Grant
while In 1984 only 42 persons were with agencies such as the Commun· enacted, which is tentatively sche- funds.
The vlllage portion of New l.Jma
placfld on job&gt; l~catlng that the tty Action Progl'all!;and the Private duled for ~t. 1.
f,
R
oallln
R)ltland is being paved at a
The second would be due three
Plll!!ement function is on the Industry Council.

Meigs . OBES office
wins official's praise

0~.

46

empha~ls

"getting a patient m, treated, and
rut" in as short a time as possible.lf

DIRECJ'OR - Beth Stivers, R.N., is director of the new Emergency
Room-Urgent Care Department at Veterans Memorial Hospital. AD
equipment lor the urgent care treatment rooms Is new and here Mrs.
Slivers checks out an otoscope.

RECEP'l10N AREA -Sherrie Wllcox,lront, Is a recepton'lst !or the
new emergency room-urgent care department which opened last week
at Veterans Memorial Hospital. With her are two other department
staff members, Soe Zirkle, R.N., center, and Bomle Boso, a medical
•s•klant. The area Is decorated In the rose and white ooior scheme cl
the urgent care depal1rnent.

Officials eye cost of insurance proposal

I Ol. .DSIYE

Plus Rebate!

extaided care sections, stabilizes
tile overallJJperation he ex(iained
As for the new' urgent car~
section, Mrs. Stivers said that

EMERGENCY ENTRANCE - The new entranre to the emergency
room·urgent care department is al the back of the southwest wbtg. The
Meigs County Emergency Medical Servlres worked with the hospital 's
consultants on deslgnbtg the entnmre where emergt&gt;ncy \'ehlcles wUI be
loading and unloading patients.

CELERY ...................... 59&lt;

LONGHORN
CHEESE .............»... 51.97

Low, LOW Prices

~~~~·':! showers. Mostly

I&lt;

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. September 18, 1986

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentbtel Staff Writer
Another step to tailor the medical
services o! Veterans Memorial
Hospital to the needs of Meigs
Countlans has been taken In the
renovation and expansion of emer·
gency room faclllties and the
addition of an urgent care
department
The new emergency room·urgent
care department, located In the
southwest wing of the hospital,
opened last week.
It Includes three emergency
treatment rooms, three urgent care
rooms, a large waiting room, a
patient receiving center, and an
office for the director, Beth Stivers,
R.N ., longtime employe of the
hospital.
Emergency room facilities had
previously been located In the
mld·sectlon of the hospital. Moving
It to the southwest wing provided
the additional space needed for the
emergency room service, as well as
making the facllltles more easlly
accessible to emergency vehicles
bringing In patients. Hospital con·
sultants worked with representa·
tlves o! the Meigs County Emer·
gency Medical Service In the design
of the exterior entrance where
patients are loaded and unloaded.
The emergency room continues
to be open 24 hours a day with a
doctor on duty at all times. Dr.
James McMullen, who joined the
staff In ·July, has charge of the
emergency room physicians which
the hospital contracts for from
Acute Care Amerlc&lt;~.
'me h!iw lf!lietll care departmeht
is operatb)g on a 9 a.m. to 9,p.m.,
sevell day~ a week, basis using the
same physicians who are on duly In
the erilergency room. As explained
by Walter S. Lucas, hospital
administrator, the difference between urgent care and emergency
room care is degree.

c:aoiM anriiUib/1/ti"',... ''""juS! fiO/XI

Take .Advantage
of the

: Vol. 36·. No .96
Copyrighted 1986

Mos&amp;Jy cloudy tonight wllh ·

Veterans expands ER; adds urgent care unit
i!lea£ T/l'l'raloo/S a/lire/fade.

ELBERFELDS

at y

992-6910

1.r.:===~~=~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

PH. 992-2556

Daily Number
307
Super Lotto
l 7-43-28-16-6-33

1 fL DUM

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
"At tM End of the Po•rey-Ma... lridgt
POMEROY, OH.

Ohio Lottery

Marauders
host Miller
on Friday
·-Page 4

•.

cost of $11,84.1.22. Davis said paving
would be done within thrre weeks
and would take a half day ro
complete.
The board also met with Salls·
bul)' Township resident Delores
Long to clarify a quesUon of the
courity's responslbllty to repair a
bridgeo on tbe Long roperty on Ball
Run Road. Long sa id that in 19Jl,
the county signed an agreement
with the original landowner to
maintain a right of way to a pubtlr
pond, b.IUt by the National Youth
Administration, on the, property. A
bridge across the right ·of·way is in

need of repair. Long had copies of
the original deed and easements lor
the property . ShE&gt; said she and her
husband, Roger, were not trying to
gt&gt;t the county to pay fort he repairs,
but merely to assis t, sin~ tbey 1the
Longs) do not have tbe equipment
needed to repair the structure. The
commlsslolK'rS agreed the matter
needs to be clarUied and are
meeting today /Thursday) with
County Engineer Ph!l Roll!ns.
County Hlghwav Superintendent
Ted Warner. and County Proseru ·
tor Fred Crow In . to determine the
(Continued on Page 31

Investigators find no sign
of supposed plane crash
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County sheriff's inn•stigators found
nothing after searc~tng an approximately 40·mlle area around
Thurman by air Wednesday after authorities wPrP Informed d a
possible plane crash.
A department spokesman said a check with Federal Aviation
Administration officials In Columbus showed that no flights were
missing or overdue from area airports.
The spokesman said investigators were taken over the area.
around the Gallla·Jackson county line, In a plane operated by Jim
Saunders, manager of the Gallla·Meigs Regional Airport. The
Investigators had "100 percent visibility" during the. search, the
spokesman said, but located nothing re&gt;embllng rl'i' remains of a
crashed plane.
Area authorities went into action Tuesday night when a 12·year·old
girl living In Huntington Township near the Jackson County line
Informed deputies she saw smoke coming from a small grey plane
sometime around 8 p.m. The plane was descending, west of Rlo
Grande, and was described In the report taken by deputies as an
orangt&gt; ball, gathering more smoke as tt fell.
DeputlesJrom both counties and the Gallia·Melgs and Jackson
highway patrol posts searched the area during the night with the aid '
of a Lllefilght helicopter from Wellston.
Nothing was found and a spokesman lor tile Jackson post said
Wednesday morning there were no plans to press a search 11 tbe
area .

•
•

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