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Pllge"'-14-The. Daily S.Otinel

Pomeroy...:. Middleport, Ohio

1/Vedn"sday, October 15, 1.986

~----Localbrie&amp;--~~~----~~-~~
Firemen release monthly report

Local Glenn coordinator named

Foi;ty-four calls were answered ~ tlV! Middleport .AJUce
Department in septetnller, .Fire Chief Jeff Darst r¢lorts . .The calls ,
Included ~3 !Ire cans and 31 emergcpcy runs. All vehicles were
driven 1,424.5 miles In answering the calls.

sen. John Glenn, D.Ohio, announced T~mas Hart of Pomeroy as
hiS senate campaign coordinl!tor In ,Meigs Cou!!tY·
. ·
Hart joined the senator's campaign staff in early June. He wlll'be
responsible lor coordinating all field and wlunteer actlvttles In
Meigs County. Hart Is a trustee at Rio Gran!le College and Is .
Democratic Central Committeeman llf !lie East Beli!OM PreCinCt '
in Meigs County. His wife Is Cecelia Hart' Hart can, be reached
locally !lY calling 992·7078.
•
Glenn, .who hils served 12 years In the qs. Semite, I~ seeking
reelection this year.
,
·

Benefit bowl-a..thon scheduled
j

Pomeroy Bpwling LaPes wUI be cond\lctlng a boWI·a·thon durtng
the week of Oct. 3l•Nov. 8 for St. Jude·ChildreP's Hospital with Mrs.
· Betty slnlth serving as coordinator of the "lXlwl life" campaign.
The program Is dedicated to Terry who in March, 1978 developed
acute lymphocytic leukemia but now her disease Is In rernlsslon
after havmg been a patient at the St. Jude li&gt;spltaJ,

for

EMS responds to six calls
Meigs C&lt;iunty Emergency Medical Services reports six calls .
Tuesday. ·
.
.·
.
·
Syracuse at 8:48 a.nl: to Pomeroy}iealth Care Center for Hqward
Phillips to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Colum~a Fire Department
at 1: 00 p.m. was cililed to a car fire on County Road 55; Tuppers
Plains, at 1:45 p.m. transported Althea Barton to Camden-Clark
Memortal Hospital; Rutland at 3:01p.m. to Meigs Mine No.1 ft:lr
John Chapman to O'Bieness Metnortal Hospital; Pomeroy ·al 5:29
p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Howard Phllllps to
Veter~s Memorial Hosphal; Tuppers Plains at 6:40p.m. to M.lller
Road for Roy Miller to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
,·

Farm bureau slates meeting
The annual meeting of the Meigs County Farm Buteau wUI be held
at the Chester Elementary School Tuesday, Oct. 21, beginning with a
steak dinner served at 7:14 p.m.
The Sl!a~ Rlver Shutflers directed by Gerald Powell wlll provide
entertainment. All boiird members and the office have tickets for the
annual session.

Baseball group elects office~s ..
The Salem Center Baseball Assoclati:&gt;n elected new officers when
It met at the Sa)em Center Firehouse for Its regular September
·
meeting.
·
. Officers for the 1987 season wlll be Carol Ogdin, president; Ken ·
Kirk, vice president; Joyce Ervin, treasurer; and VIckie Metheney,
secretary.
• ...
In otberbuisness.it was voted totransfertheasoociafk&gt;n's banklng
to Wilkesville, for convenience; and a decision was made to maintain
the local !leld exclusively fo r Salem Center baseball. Allrutstandlng
bills have been paid and therewlll be m further assoclatk&gt;n~tings
until 1987.
•

Prank damages truck, .trairl·

Divorces filed

Winners named

Filing for divorCes in Meigs
Winners qf the numerous ctraw.' ·
County · Common Pleas Court lngs held by the Racine Merchants
charging gi'oss neglect of duty' and Association during saturday's
extreme..cruel!y are Robin Annette . Harvest Moon Fair Festtval were •
RJ!!le, Pomeroy, against Handy ·Doris Bailey, Pomeroy, . a · mink
Lee Ri!Qe, Shade, and Dawn Marte blanket; Bill Hayman, ~cine, a ·,
Collins: Portland, against Roger penlJY jar; Eddle M1lllron, Rac.ine,
Dean Col!liis, Portlana.
a ·portable TV; and Margaret ·
Flllng for qJssolutlons of mar· Powell, Racine, a pocket TV.
rlage are .Bryan A. G\bbs, ·Reeds·
Next year's festival ~s · been
ville, and Kenda Gibbs, ~ville; tentatively scheduled for. the J~rst ,
Sabra J. CIJl:k, Pomeroy, and Paul Saturday In October.
.
·R. Click, Pomeroy; Carolyn · J .
The next meeting of the mer·."
Reeve, Albany, and Ronald G. cha!ll's as!;Ociatl&lt;Jn wUl be Oct. ~at
Reeve, Whitehall:
The Club Restaurant.

INSURANCE
111 Sec•d St:• Po!Mroy
· YOUIINDIPENDENT
.AGENTS .SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1861

Super --Li~l~
lo
28-40-21-44-2-35
'

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.

•

at y

Elghty·six area residents re·
ported to an American Red Cross
Bloodmobile at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center Wednesday to
contribute 82 pints of blood to the
cdunty b!OC)d program.
Twenty-seven persons gave to
replace blood used by a relative or
friend and first time donors were
Vanessa Sidwell, Marla N. Roush,
David F. Lawson and Pam Hof·
fman. Becoming one-gallon donors ·
during the visit were Larry Fisher,
John S. Foster, David F . Lawson,
Darla N. Thomas, and Robert W.
Couch became a two-gallon donor.
Fred H. George became a four
gallon donor; Kenneth Imlxlden.
six·gallon donor; William H. Ho·
back and Geoffrey A. Wilson, seven
gallons and Ellison E. Myers
became an eight-gallon ~onor
Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
WUriia Mansfield were the super·
vising ·physicians and making up
the ·nursing staff were Leona
Leifheit, Beulah Ward, Carol
Adams, Naomi London, Mary Jane
Taloott and Emtna&gt; Adams.
Working with the unit from the
, Retired Senior Volunteer Program
were Thelma DUI, Florence Ri·
chards, Erma Roush, Doroti'IY
U:mg, VIrginia Buchanan, Philo·
mena Follrod, Bernadine Meier,
Marion Ebersbach, Lula Hampton.
Emma Clatworthy, Richard Bar·
ton, William Hoback and Mace!
Bart.on. Other clerical worke rs
were Peggy Harris . Mary Nease,

UILUIBLf r.OUPOII

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·

FOR$}5 OFF
ON A PAIR OF
FABULOUS
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flower 'em with low
on Sweetest Day.

conne·

NATURALIZER

Send rhe FTDII Sweeresr
Day Bouquet. Swee teSt D~y
is Sam rday , October 18. Ca ll
or visit us today.

VISA

enttrte

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, October 16, 1986

exhibited after the collapse of the summit Sunday
night when he rejected Soviet proposals to restrict
testing and development of the SDI, or "Star Wars,"
an all-out administrative blitz has been going on all
week to turn the results into a political plus.
Speaking Wednesday at Fort McHenry In
Baltimore, Md., to students from Southern Regional
High School in Manahawkin, NJ ., and later at. a
luncheon lor Maryland GOP senate candidate Linda
Chavez, Reagan chided Congiess for "promising to
take a meat ax and chop up America 's Strategic
Defense Initiative, which Is exactly what Mr.
Gorbachev Is hoping Congress wUI do."

A grade feeder calf sale to be held
at Producers Livestock in Lanca s·
ter has been Incorrectly advertised,
Rutland area cattleman Jim Lucas
said today. The sale was errone·
ously announced for Wednesday,
Oct. lfi, but will Instead be held on
Wednesday. Oct. 23, Lucas ·sa id.
Welgh·ln starts at 7 a.m .. and the
sale will begin at 8 p.m.

OR~'!'ITH
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CHOICE

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~~:;,.,­

i'OMIIOY, OHIO
PHONI 992-2039 ar 992·5721

•

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At theW-' the ,_,., .....n llrldtt
POMEROY, OH.

.

!'tiN'S BlANKET-Ir.ED
COATS

This lined, all-cotton
hip·ltnath coat with a
stylish corduroy collar
will keep you warm in
the coldest weather.
Available in sizes 38 to
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·••••o

oo+. .

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - L\'VIna Hayman,
Long Bottom; Steve Haning, Mid·
dleport; Lort Price, Middleport ;
Howard Phillips, Pomeroy; Roy
Miller, Pomeroy: William Whl·
tlbck. Syracuse.
Discharges - Steve Haning,
Barbara Talbott. Floyd Reynolds,
Agnes Brown, Marion Rayburn .

WASHINGTON (UP() - The
defense budget approved by Con·
gress and headed lor President
Reagan's desk .- even at a
whopping $292 billion - represents
far less money lor the Pentagon
than It has received in the last two
years.
That prompted retiring Senate
Armed Services Committee Chair·
man Barry Goldwater. R·Arlz.. to
warn of the beginning of a
dangerous trend - declining de·
fens e budgets.

MEN'S DELUXE
COVERALLS

Conllll, quality and con·
Ylfliencet come lopther
· in the$e ruged COV«&lt;IiS
of IOOllo cotton. The Ac·
lion Back provides free·
dom at movement and
lives you the right fit.
Backed by a one-year war·
ranty. Sizes 36 to 50,
sltor1s, rii\Jlars &amp; tails.

Wanda Imooden, Joyce Hoback.
Jeanette Radford and Arizona
Stewart. The canteen was served
by women of ffi:hllock Grange.
Donors by community Included:
Pomeroy -Debra Mora, James
C. Birchfield, Robert W. Vaughan ,
Fonna K. CUllums, Wallace Hat·
field, Brenda S. Cunningham,
Arlzooa Stewart, Pamela J. Mlller,
Janet L. Persons, Loretta A.
Brown, Lawrence D. Leonard,
Homer E. Baxter. Dan E. FoUrod.
Rlchard E. Swan son, RolErt W.
Couch, Dewey E. Autherson, Mary
K. Spencer, Billy J. Spencer, Pam
Hoffman, Pam Gllland. John S.
Foster, Susanna Heck. Wilma
Mansfi eld, Raymond Jewell, Geof·
frey A. Wilson, Gerald Rought,
Jeanne E. Braun, Janet M. .Am·
trose. Mary A. Sorden, William W.
Radford, David M. King, Patricia
J . Barton , Kelly R. Ginther,
Carolyn A. Charles, Larry G.
Fisher, Michael Smith and Anna M.
BaXter.
Long B:lttom- Vanessa Sidwell.
Harlan A. Ballard.
Langsville - Ellis E. Myers,
Karffi S. Clark. Alva B. Clark,
Patricia Morgan.
Reedsville- John C. RJce, Deryl
E. Well. Rlchard Barton. Roxie
Marcinko and J oseph Marcinko.
Portland - Stephen Nease.
Chester - Herbert Short , Clar·
ence C. Wolfe Jr.
Syracuse - Linda L. Friend,
Darla N. Ttnmas, David Lawson,

By ltli\NCY YO/\CIIAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Efforts are underway by the Ohio
Department of Natu ral Resources
to reclaim !he Coal Power, Dark
Diamond and Abundant Llfr coal
mines in Meigs County.
At the request of the Meigs
County Commissioners. Scott Kes·
ter, of ODNR's Division of Mine
Reclamation, attended Wednes·
da y's regular commissioners'
meeting to discuss Abundant Life,
which lies on county-owned pmp·
erty, adjacent to the land!IU.
The commissioners are con·
cerned with .reclamation of the
Abundant Life because If reclaimed
properly, tbe county landfill 'could
be extended Into the mine area.

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1'0 DAYS ONLY .

Ohio weather
Solidi Central Ohio
Generally clear tonight, with a
low between 35 and 40. Mostly
•liMY Thunday, with highs In the
14liJI!I' 508.
The IJ'OblbOity of JI"Edpltatlon Is
near zro through Thu!'lday.
Winds w01 be from the west at 10
to lll mph tlxiay and Ughr anll

WI!SteriY iJaliJtl,

GOOD THII OCTOm 2Ste.

. ·, .

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'.

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•

I

.---- -.. . -

' - -·-"":·

~-~-...-·

- they've agreed-to," he said. "SOl is one of the chief
reasons the Soviets went .to the summ it and one of the
primary reasons they'll come back again."
Asked at Fort McHe nry whether the summit would
help Republican candidates, Reagan said, ' 'I don't
know. I'm goingl9 find out between nowand Nciv. 4."
White House aide Haley Barbour said the president
was not attempting to make ti'e summit a campaign
issue beyond his normal rhetoric on behalf of SDI and
increased defense sjlendlng.
But House SP€aker Thomas O'Neill, D·Mass. ,
issued a statement complaining that Reagan had
"abused the bipartisan spirit oft he Iceland s ummit.".

-~""'""" -~· ~

SEVEN GALLON DONOR- WUUam Hoback, Racine, ls a regular
at the Red Cross Bloodmobile when It vlstts Meigs County. As of
yesterday he had donated seven galloRS of blood. Hob~k, retired from
the U.S. Army Corps ol Engineers, Is (IIStor ol the Penk'OOstal

Assembly al Racine.
Kathy J. Cummings.
New Haven. W.Va. -Darla N.
Roush.
Middleport - Kenneth E. lm·
lXlci'!n. Leafy M. Chasteen, Ellis
Clont h, David G. Dodson, Sarah J.
Fowler, Edward W. Durst, John P.
Hood, Gloria J. Peavley, Timothy
E. Smith, Gerald L. An thony,
Brenda Haggy, Maurisha Nelson.
Rutland - Dinah M. Stewart,

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.___ ,

· The House approved the measure
Wednesday - which reflects ·key
arms control agreements reached
between Congress and the White
House In the hou rs before the
weekend summit - on a 283-128
vote. The senate passed It later that
day on a voice vote.
The blll is SlO billion lower th.an
what Congress initially adopted last
year, although that !lgure later
sUpped to $286 billion with cuts
forced by the. Gramm-Rudman
budget-balancing law. In 1985,

Congress gave the Pentagon $297
billion. This year, Reagan had
asked for SJID billion ...:. $28 billion
more than he got In the bilL .
Goldwater said Wednesday that
once inflation Is taken into aceount,
Pentagon rudgets have fallen 7
percent sin ce 1985. Rep. Jim
Courter. RN.J .. put the loss over
two years at 8 percent.
Goldwater said the slippage has
"set in motion a dangerous !rend
which, If not reversed , may have
profound consequences on our

otl lgation wUl be to develop a lime
table on tnw k&gt;ng it will take to fill
the rest oft be area,lflt is being used
for a landfill, and then totally
reclaim the property.
.
Kester said ODNR "Is dolngw hat
it's supposed to be dllng" In regard
to aband:J nlng the mine sites, It's
"just a matter of time before
everything Is done."
The commissioners asked Kester
to notify them, by formlll letter, of
their plans for Abundant Ll!e. They
·can then go, with the letter. ID the
Ohio Environmental Prots:tlon
Agency for permission to extend
the landfUIInto the mine area.
In a her matters, the commission
heard Iron\ County Engineer Philip.
Roberts that the state has approved
revised plans ft:lr COffitructkm c:i
Kester reported that 10 acres of restroom facUlties at the roadsld!! ·
the mine property was bonded by park in sYracuse, and that quotes
holders of the mining permit at
$2,500 an acre, making a total of from prospectiVe contractors have
been received.
$25,0Xlwhlch will be usedtosealthe already
Clerk Mary Hotstetter reported
two entries at Abundant Ute.
to the commission and Roberts, a -.
Kester said ODNR engineers request from OliVe Township TruS·
have not yet determined the tees to reopen and maintain a part
method~ which the mtrles wlll be
of old Route !ill). Roberts wUI
closed.
e~ta mine the sltuatkm before the
However, once the state seals the . board takes formal action on the
entries, said Kester, the county's request.

!'tiN'S II.AHK£T·llfED

MOUNED &amp; BALANCED

'

.....

Avanell George, Fred H. George,
Mary E. Davidson, Donna M.
Davidson.
Racine - Charles W. Bush,
Marie A. Bush, Ru th E. Shain.
Robert L. Ritchie. Joan L. Tuttle,
Virginia M. Bland, David Aaron
Wolfe, William H. Hooock, Patty A.
Shain, Klm\J'rly J . Follrod, Karen
Werry, Dawna R. Grueser and
Paul F. Marr.

future. I have a terrible sense that
we are returning to the lrresponsl·
ble policies of the late 1970s."
"Anyone who thinks we can go on
cutting the defense budget to the
point where we actually have
declining growt h rates ... wltlXlut
undermining our defense posture,
Is indulging In a happy but entirely
unrealistic delusion," he said.
White House spokesman Larry
~akes said the till contained
ligures that were worked out "to
rur full satisfaction."

•

to reclaim area mines

"PASSENOER CARS OilY"
Marriage licenses have been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Crurt ~Paul Martin Ladd. ·32, and
Gay Lynn Pippert, 29, both of Rock
springs; Robert William Rlifle, 21,
and Wanda Lee Adkins, 18, both of
Racine.

2&amp; Cents

'• · .''·~

ODNR begins efforts

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work d111garees.

File for marTiage

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"Let me state it plainly," he said. "It would be a
terrible tragedy for this country and for our children 's
fUture If those on Capitol Hill are a llov.'ed to hand over
to the Soviet Union free of charge what we refUsed to
hand over across ttl:, regotlatlng table in Reykjav lk'. "
Before the summit, Reagan pleaded with Demo·
crats to support him In a show of unity he said was
important in lacing his Soviet counterpart .
But in his s~h to Chavez supporters. Reagan apparently buoyed by public opinion polls showing
support for his refusal to abandon SDI - seemed to
replace a bipa rtisan slant on the Issue before voters.
"SDI Is America's irisuranoe policy that the Sovle)s
will begin living to the arms control agreements that

Lower defense ·budget vexes lawmaker
•

nlg.IU, \\ilh a low In the low 4(i).
DeCreasing cloudiness Friday, .
with .-g~~s hetween 55 and 80.
· The probability of precipitation
is . near zero today, 20 percent ·
lorilght and nelll' zero again
Friday.

86 donate during
bloodmobile stop

..

--

· Becoming mostly cliludy jo..

' Daily Number
172

•

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan ,
continuing his· post-summit public relations barrage
and bolstered by the p:ll!s, is injecting support for his
futuristic "Star Wars" defense .program Into the
mld·term election campaign.
On a campaign swing through Maryland Wednes·
day, Reagan urged voters to ask candidates: "Where
do you stand on defending America? Where do yru
stand on SO! (Strategic Defense Initiative)?"
The president had a full schedule today, briefing his
cabinet on the W('fkend summit in £\eykjavlk,
Iceland, and arranging a meeting with young
astronauts who are leaving for the Soviet Union.
Despite ttl!' gloom Reagan and his advl5ers

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

POMEROY
FLOWER
SMOP
10UurTIIIoiUf

Ohio Lottery ·

Reagan ·injects 'Star Wars' into

Sixty-seven arrests were made ~ the Middleport Pollee
Department during the month c:i September, Pollee Chlef~id Little
reports.,.
The department Investigated seven accidents and aU vehicles
were driven 4,459 mlles during the month. Parking meter collections
totaled $877.50 wliiie merchant p&lt;)lice collections amounted to $48.
There were 5~ parking tickets wrttten.

Johnny Cleveland Eblin, 35. of
Pomeroy, was bOund over to grand
jury during a preliminary heartng
Tuesday In Meigs County Court.
Eblin Is charged with aggravated
assault In the shooting of Charles
Napper, 3$, of the Rutland area, In
the left leg, helow the knee, on sept.
19. Eblin remains free on a $5,&lt;00
bond.

It'll be an
East Coast
fall classic
-Page 4

..

Vot:36, J\lo.115
Copyrighted 1986

Middleport police activity listed

Case bound over

'

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'• /.

t1

'

' ... .J
L.1~

·

·
k
postercontmtheldlastwee
attheCarletonSchoollaSyracuselostresslhebnportanre .. schoolbus
safety week. Cash pi'Be8 were awarded at an a&amp;~~embly held at the
sdlool on F'J1da.y and durln1lhe week cl111181'00m dlsalllllolli were held
on lhe IAlplc. The pro(!l'lllll was under the direction o1 Keith Black,
lran!I(JOrtatlon director. Winners from lhe left are Ray bwdennllt, flr!i
place; CJuill Lee and Usa Montgomery, holllng the Intermediate dass
BfOUP entry, second place, and Annlntle cade, tili'd (!lace.

,.

WNGTIME VOLUNTEERS - Worldng at the Red CroM
Bloodmobile on its visits to Meigs County ~ "old hat" to Joyce Hoback,
left, and Mlll'Y Nease, of the Racine area. Both have been volunteering
clerical and related assistance for nearly 30 years. Here they are
. preparing the bags which are~ to receive the blood from the cbmrs.

Rhodes supports
domed stadiums
By ~DCHAEL O'MAUEY
CLEVELAND IUPn - The state of Ohio slXluld i'elp Akron,
Columbus and Cleveland build domed sports stadlums, ~ublican
gubernatorial candldate J ames Rhodes said Wednesday.
"Akron needs a dome and help from the state and I think
Columbus needs a dome and help from the state," said Rb)des.
"What we have to do Is bring Ohio Into the 21st century. And this Is all
with capital Improvement (funds!. Thi s is not (from) the general
fund ."
Rhodes, speaking In Cleveland Wednesday, said Cleveland needs a
domed stadium to help develop the city's downtown. He said the state
should contribute at least half the money to b.llld the !I'O!llSed $3)0
million facUlty.
Rhodes could not say whether !he state 'lllney should be In the
form of a loan or a gift to the non·pro!lt Greater Cleveland Domed
Stadium rorp.
"! W .,K the state of Ohio should step In and supply til e rmney,
start' .g out with what you need and start drawing the plans and rulld
the! adlum," Rhodes told a new.; confermce.
"I :hink you're looking at $75 million to $100 million, whether In a
·
loan ur the state giving It to you."
The Greater Cleveland Domed Stadium Cnl]l. Is trying to raise
two-thirds of the money from the prJvatesector. The rest would come
from a pOssible tax on cigarettes and liquor.
·
The former governor said he doesn't believe that the bulk of the
financing can be raised in Great.er Cleveland's private sector and
said the money that the state has contributed so lar to !he project ($2
million) "would not build a walkway." .;'
Rhodes said the state could cont riMe tot he dom e projects wlthou I
Increasing taxes and he reiterated his Tuesday prediction that Gov.
RJchard Celeste Is planning to raise taxes to.offset an anticipated
state deficit.
Though House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr. said Tuesday that Ohio's
corpotate, Income or sales tax will not be raised during the nex t
General Assembly, Rhodes responded by saying Rifle closed the
door on taxes for two years only. "I closed II for four cyears)," he ,
said.
.
The former governor predicted that he will receive about 42
percent of the 450,(00 votes expected to be cast In Cuyahoga Count y ~
Nov. 4. He said that percentage will give him a statewide lead over ·
Celeste.·
Rhodes also said a debate with Celeste will be ll'ld "soon" near the
farm of Cincinnati financier Marvin Warner, a Celeste campaign •
contributor who has been Indicted for his alleged dealings hi the
collapse of Home State Savings Bank.
Meanwhile, a group known as United Students Agajnst Rhodes
held a news conference at Kent State ·Unlverslty at the same time·
Rhodes was talking to reporters In Cleveland.
The group challenged Rhodes to debate Celeste at the Kent
campus, the site of a May 4, 1970 VIetnam War protest that left four
stu~nts dead and nine others Injured bY tlV! Ohio National Guard.
The troops had been· sent to the campus ~ Rhodes to quell tlV!
student protests.
"We want to ask him what be woulr:l til In a future, similar
situation," said group president Alan Canfora. "Would be again send
In armed troops to confroht unarmed demonstrators1 Would he
again provoke another student massacre as he did In 1970?"
Responding to the debate challenJll! at Kent State, Rhodes' only
remark was, "Dick Celeste's behind that." •
But Canfora said, "We have almlutely no ttes with the Ollestr
campaign. We are sbnpl)' attempting to reveal the dismal record of
James Rhodes." .

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Commenta ·'

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. . Thursday.

.. Where's the theme?_____·-._·--'-;-JeJ-,--'Y_Gr,;-ee--::nf=--iel_d

The ·Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street

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Ponie~oy,

Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE .lNTEilESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
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PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/Conlroll~r

BOB llOEFLJCH
Generill Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

•

LETTERS OF OPlNION, arp welcome. They :ilould be lcys than 300 word s
long. AU letters are subjec t toed lUng and·lJilst be slgnE!I with namf', address and
telephon e number. No unsli:nOO leuers will be JXI.bllshed . Letters should be lh
good taste, addressing Issues , not personalities.

NEW YORK ....: Wlliston Chur·
and the Year of tre Struggilng
chill once looked up from a
Farmer, theYearoftbeFuture, tbe
disappointing dessert and pro- Year of Character. It-Is a year when
nounced to the table, "This pudding 'the ' campaign,· like ChurchUJ's
has no theme."
pudding, has no theme. But politics
ChurchUI would have been tight
is not pudding; sWeeping themes
-at home among !he political · cannotbe·conjuredoutafthinairby
analysts of this current off-year a master chef. If the voters are
campaign. There seems to be a Instead' being offered a smorgasdistinct air or dlsap!iolntment that board, of issues and Images, It Is
the 500 or so races for senator,
because ttrere is no defining social
governor and rep~esentatlve have concern.
not produced a handy mega·
Perhaps we journaliSts Jrunger ·
concept by which to judge the for such a message because It
(pause for a faruare) Mood of the makes it easier to see · what's
American· People.
coming. In 1946, Republicans swept
Is this The Year of the Fiscally Into control of the Con_gress with a
Prudent? The 'year of the Family? single. message: "Had 'e" nough?"
The Year of the Holy ' Crusade That was an impressive clue to the
Against Drugs• The Year of the exreptionally mean-spirited do·
Negative Campaign• Yes, yes, yes mestlc politics of the postwar age.
and yes. It Is all of -those things Democrats scored huge gains In •

-T o tell the truth
About thn&gt;e months before Ibe 1884 election, a newspaper reported that
the 0!-mocratlc presidential nominee had an affair with a local woman and
had fatbered her illegitimate child.
Th&gt; Democrats .asked their candidate what they slnuld do.and Grover
. ·Cleveland replied, "Tell the truth."
·
The truth. Cleveland said, was that he had sexual relations with the
·:woman but did nol knowifthe chUdwashis. (Neither, says historian Stefan
Lorant In his booK, "The Presidency," was the woman sure w:to was the
_child's father. I
· The Republicans pounced on the issue, parading to tbe chant, "Ma! Ma!
Where's my pa? Gone to the White House. ha , ha , ha."
·: However. they also had a problem: the GOP candidate,. James G.
. ·Blaine, was accused by the Democrats of taking bribes. He denied it, but
::the Democrats had their own chant: "Blaine, Blaine. James G. Blaine,
· :rontlnentalliar from the state of Maine."
; ·• In wha t some histortans have calllli! tbe dirtiest presidential campaign in
· history, tbe voters had to chose between one candidate with a tarnished
:: personal life but an impeccable reputation as a public official. and anotber
:- with a questionable recol'd for honesty In office but a pristine peroonalllfe.
·. So they gave Cleveland tbe highest public cffice in the land and retu·ed
:: Blaine to private life. But It was a closequestion: 10 million votes were cast
• ·and Cleveland won by 23,001.
· : ·All this Is by way of noting that 102 years later a similar situation is
· unfolding in Baltimore.
·: Recrntly, tbe Republican candidate ilr tbe congressional seat being
;vacated by Ri'p. Pnrren Mitchell . D-Md .. produced documents relating to
-; paternity suit s filed in 1968 and 1970 naming his Democratic opponent,
. Kwelsl Mlume. GOP candidate St. Geo rg~&gt; Crosse said tbe suits slDwed
• .Mfumewas part of the problem.of teenage pregnancy and unfit to serve in
. ·Congress.
Mfume's response was much the same as Cleveland's. He toldtbe truth.
· which was that he not onlv had fathered thetwochildrrn named In the suits
.: but three others when he was lx&gt;tween 17 and 22 years old .
:' But there is moll' to the story. The jllternity suits were never pressed
· .because, in a statement filed b.v one of the women, Mf)lme "has been a
&gt;-loving, responsible and supportive father who has been a positive role
· '!TlOIIei and an Inspiration to his son." Mfurrie has said. "I have always
·.supported my children, both emotionally and financially. I'm proud of
them."
Mfume. who earned a high school equivalency degree and put himself
through coll~e. became a well-known radio talk slnw host in Baltimo•·e,
serveil on the ( ity Council and won the Democratic primary lor Mitcheil's
srot. At his victory cei&lt;'brat ion Sept . 9, four of Mfume's sons wer&lt;' on the
·
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stagl' with him. '
The distlict is solidly Democratic a nd Mlume is almost sure to 1x&gt; go in g
· to Congress in .January.
The moral of the story•
Obviously. il offprs no solut io n to tbe tcenagp prpgnaney problem.
. although some commentators haw suggested that it does smw somet hing
· constructive ran tx- salvaged when a young unmarried father o"ns up to
· his responibllltles.
But maybe there is a political lesson to lx&gt; learned. Will a ca ndidate who
tells the truth about past indiscretions lx&gt; forgivl'fl b)' the vo t ers·~ Th&gt;y did
Grover Cie1·eiand. Kweisl Mfume will get his an sw~r Nov. 1.

.· Opinions of other editors
.
TIK· Detroit l'iews
· . A hullabaloo was brewing this weekend when it was disclosed that the
: Reagan Administration used some"dlsinformation" techniques -leaking
· fa~!;(&gt; Informatio n - to keep Libya n strongman Moammar Gadhafi off
balance.
· The Jpaks were reportedly designed to convince Ga dhafi that he might 1x&gt;
·subject to renewed American attack, tlnugh the administra tion had no
:- plans to do so. The idea was to maket h(' mad co lonel ciTripoli vulnera ble
to a coup.
Now our colleagues In thc press are in high dudgeon. claiming the,· have
been "used."
And app.)rently they 1and wet have been. But r' mon guys. What kind of .
game do you think the government is playing'' It 's a danwrous world out
.there, anrJ th~ stakes are high ... .
·• . Sevcr~l major papers, It's worth noting. were wise rnough to spike their
. ,stories )\I hen they couldn't find confirmation. ThPre's plenty of blame togo
aroun¢ here. and thc Whit~ House doesn't appear to deserve all of it.
1
Minneapolis Star and Trlhune
. A parent of a child with a defrctive heart shouldn't have to appear on
, -natJ6nal telcl'ision to plead for a donororgan. But many fam ilies cf patients
. In l)eed of transplants have been driven to the airwaves -lar~ly l:l'cause
~t~re is no nationwide system to match prospective recipien ts with
·:available organs. A bill pending In Congress could put an end to such
. ·sp&lt;'!'tarles by crl'ating the needed network. Lawmakers slnuld make sure
it d&lt;X'Sn 'l get lost in the preadjournment shuffle.
In 19&amp;1 Congress passed tbe National Organ Transplant Act, which
: authorized a natioral computer network to keep trafk of organs and list
: would-lx&gt; rceiplents in order of need. Butt hat crucial eemeht oft re law has
: nt-vcr been Implemented. chiefly because of the Reagan admlnlstratbn's
· dista~ te for spending money on new kinds or federal regulatbn. Last
· ·summer's report by a congressional task force smuld allay admlnist ratbn
concerns: ThP panel concluded a federal role is essential to enha nre
• organ-transpla nt efficiency and fairness.
f

~= Today in history

Today Is Thursday, Oct. 16, !he 289th day of 1986 with 'Ill to follow.
. . 'The
moon Is approaching Its full phase.
\

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There Is no morning star.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars ,' Jupiter and Satw-n.
, . Those born on this day are under tre sign of Ubra. They Include
• lexicographer Noah Webster In 1758, English autmr and dramatist Oscar
:-WUde In 1&amp;'&gt;4, Israeli Prime Minister David Ben Gution In lBSG, playwtight
•l:"ugene O'Neill in )888, Irish n!volutlonist MiChael Collins In 1890, German
·novelist Gunter Grass In 19Z7 (age :6), and actresses An~la Lansbury in
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, 1925 cage 611. and Suzanne Somer·s In 1946· (age 401.
: On this date in history: .
, In 1800, abolitionist John Brown Jed an abortive raid on .the federal
~ arsenal at Harper's Ferry, ·Va. He was convicted ci treason and ~~d .
•' In 19«1, anticipating the Japanese war buDd-up, the United States banned
; )II shipments of steel and scrap Iron to Japan.
In 196f, China set off Its first atomic bomb.
, ,
· In 1972. a light plane carrying House Democratic Leader Hale lbjgs of
:Louisiana and three other men was reportedJlllsslng In Alaska. The (iane
; was nevet round.
·
· . In 1984, Black Anglican Bislnp Desmond Tutu ol South Africa won the
:Nobel Peace Prize for hiS struggle against apartheid.

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"He followed me home.

1958 py hammering away . at
discontent over a nationa l reces·
s!on; that s~ggested hard times
ahead (or whoever tr ied to keep the
White House Republican. The big
Republican gains of 1966 _smwect
that the mix of war abroad and
domestic turmoil at l-tlme would
make Democrats vulnerable even
though the economy was vibrant.
A/ld when 19'18 brought clear
conservative gains In Congress,
based both on Jimmy Carter's
unpopularity and on a strong
antl·tax, anti-government .toome,
the port~nts of a major change In
American polltl~s were apparent.
That's the sort of of!-year election
that brln·gs cheerto tbe press room.
By contrast, 1986 Seems - at this
stage, at least - to be a classic
mix-and-match sort of affair.

It's posSible to blame the polltl·
ctalis for this. The New Rig)!~ Is
onee agalri ·grumbling at tile White ·
Holl•e. wonct?ting why the presld? nt won't strap on his armor and '
.urw a vote for too unfln!s ~
agenda: abmt ion, school prayer,
.tbe gold stand ard.
Here is lhe ex ~lsltely subtle
reason: The president Is qnwU!lng
to tisk · hi~ political capKal · fur
causes with which he fi only
margi nally concerned, and his
advisers think those causes are
eltber diversions or politically
,
suicidal.
The left wants to know why tile
IA?mocratic Party isn'tsettJngoota
clear alternative to the Reagan
policies. The reason : As an instltu·
tion, tbe Democratic Party hasn't
the least idea of what I !'tands for,
and appears pettifled that voters
@I*~ ~~--re&lt;E6--E'TTA
still
regard it as an instrument of
II&gt;·A HUl-ME
profilgate public spending and
NiE A
weak-kneed foreign policies. In an
Intellectual sense, the Democratic
Party's messagP to Hs candidates
is, "Good luck, fo lks."
No wonder tbe message of this
campaign Is so diffu se. It is being
staged in the shadow of a president
who bestrides tbe political world
like a giant. There Is no war. no
depression, no scandal, no central
totem around which todanre. Thus.
we spectators. are reduced to
watching the ca ndida tes quarrel
over the prJce of wt1eat in North
Dakota , suspicious campaign COn· ·
tributions In New York, or drug
smuggling in Florida .
Of course, this qisappolntlng lack
of theme is coming from the
politicians. There is rne group yet to
be heard from: tbe voters. If tbey
produce a diflerent picture with
tbeir votes -say, a clearly more
populist, Democratic-controlled Senate- yru can disregard 1il of this,
(?n_
and prepare yourselves to learn
What It All Means from tlnse who
tolld you It wasn't go ing to mean
anything at all.
What a grea t way to make a
Can I keep him?"
living!
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Proof of arms deal."'-ls___J_a_c;k_A_n:__de_rs_on_&amp;_Jo_se...:._p_h.-!Sp_e_ar
WASHINGTON- The crash last
week of a "mystery plane" carry·
lng gullS for the Nicaraguan
cont ras shed some unweicome light
on the shady reality of international
arms smuggling.· !'he CIA stoutly
denied any hand In the incident, but
tbe denial was greeted with wldes·
pread skepticism.
.
It is ra re indeed that CIA
involvement in the murky world of
arms trading can be pinpointed
beyond a reasonable doubt. But
bills ci lading, purchase orders,
bank records and other document s
obtained by our associates Corky
Johnoon and Donald Goldbergsm w
conclusively that a respected Mary·
land bank was caught up in tbe web
of clancrstlne CIA arms deals.
The document s show that for
more than 10 years the First
National Bank of Maryland In
Baltimore has been the transfer
point for millions of CIA dollars
used to buy and ship military
hardware around the world. Two
transactions in 1982 and 19&amp;1 alone
Involved the shipping of about
100,00J rifles, worth $5 million, to
ports indicating that the weapons
may have been delivered to
CIA -supported rebel groups In
N icar ag ua. Angola an d

Islands, then to banks in Panama ident ifying Itself in tbe authorlza·
Afghanistan .
The two companies that carried and finally in Switzerland. The lio n. One telex from First National
out the transactions were Asso- point of the scheme was to make to the Pa.nama hank. for example,
ciated Traders Corp. of Baltimore arms purchases dlfficu H to trace.
ordered tbe transfer of $5.3 million
Maxwell said t be money launder· to a Swiss account "l:!Y order of a
and the Washington, D.C. office of
Sherwood International Corp.. a lng sidestepped rormat banking client .''
Los Angeles-based licensed arms procedures and may have ;ioiated
For his own protectbn against ·
exporter. Associated Traders used 'federal laws, Including tbe Ba nk ch ar~s of violating banking laws,
First National Bank to make Secrecy Act. requiring! hat transac- Maxwell demanded wtitten autrorpayments to Sherwood for handling tions of more th an $10.001 be lzat ion from his superiors to handle
r(J&gt;orted to federal regulators.
the arms shipments.
Asooctated's "rtoquests." When he
in a l)lemo to this superiors in failed to get tbe written authorlzaAssociated Traders Is a CIA
"front," our sources have con· February 1ggj, Maxm?U expressed tion, Maxwell res igned. He said one
firmed. It was lnCO!lJOrated in 19ffi his concern , wtiting: "Wben Bob bank o!liciai told him the CIA had
as a Baltimore firm, but now Benson (of Associated) dropped off blocked the req uest . for wtitten
operates In Vienna, Va ., not fa r his requ'&lt;St h'e CJqressed oo ncern at autmrity .. About the same time,
from CIA headquarters in Langley. having the compt roller of the . Max1~ll's boss, Senior Vice PresiThe front company's offices·are in a ru rrency of any type of federal dent John j3ond. also left !he bank.
bu ildlng that houses classifll'd InVestigation lea rning about Asso- Anot ber tank official who handled
ciated Traders. He wants us to the CIA account, Roy Teather,
federal government operations.
·
Robert Maxwell, a former First locate anotber bank ... in Panama , transferred to tbe bank's Pm nsyl·
National senior executive, acknowl- and he is boking to !&gt;'t up another van ia officr.
'
edged that tbe tank handed the account tor fear of investigation
Bond and Tea !her's names apAssociated Traders account· with Into the Cayman money market pear along with Max~ ll 'so n bank
the clear understanding that lbe accounts." ·
records dealing with Associated
Maxwell then wrote: "My con- Traders. M ax~ U 's name also
company was really tbe C1A.
Maxwell toldus hewas instructell versation with Benson has com- appeared on the CIA account , but
by his bosses to do "whatever pounded my concerns and fears he said it was listed without his
Associated Traders
uested .' ' n:garding this corporation ... I consent.
The requests Included hi n finan - question if oor bank should 1x&gt;
Footnote: The CIA , Associated
cial transfers or dubious egalliy. involved.' '
Traders, Sherwwd International
Maxwell also oomplained abou t and F'irst National Bank oHiclals
Associated transferred ge sums
to offslnre banks In e Cayman Associated Traders' pra,ctice Gf refused con.ment.
transferting large amounts wit lD ul

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Octubtf 18, '1 986

say I was one of t be great ear-lobe
kissers of tbe '00s.
Having read you r book about
Frank, I am worrted that yru may
be more Interested In ~andal than
history. Uke Warren lln-ger, there
are plenty of skeletons In 11iJ1 closet.
I've never claimed that I was a
saint, but I dl'd a lot more than fall
off the golden chairs at tbe White
House. Behind all this craziness
was a man wm knew lnw to make
Phil Donahue cry "uncle."
1 don't know why I'm even
wrtting this, since the only reason
you are Interested In me is because
my life sells books. Well, Ms.
Know-It-AU, just because I always
took the last lane doesn't mwnl
In tbe public domain. Win oc lose, I
had a good time, and yoo can check
that out with the Mlrmon Tabernacle Choir.
The reason why I rEfuse to
oooperate with you Is because you .
can mess someboey up badly. You
can take a little story about me
stifling a Vietnamese hatcheck girl
and rr.ake It Into a Gulf or 1bnkln
resolution.
·
Ms. Kelley, I can't stop yw from
wrttlng the lnok, but I will do
everything In rey pom?r to see that
no ooe buys it. I have friends among
the street people, and I'm going to
see that aD of them stretch ou t In
front of Waldenbooks store until It
closes for the night.
Don't think flattery wUI get you
anywhere eltrer. You can publish
that I am tbe greatest unmined
biographical subject In the rouHt fY,
1111d you can say tllat rey married
life -was vlvld and unlor~ttable,

and you can imply that I was a
woman izer arid wildly lavish )Vith
money. You can say I was complex
and misunders tOOd, and il wouldn't
lnther me. But toon you are going
to have to write aboul my private
life, and that's when you get to ta lk
to my la wyers.
So tbe purpose of this letter Is to
make sure you understand tha t I

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. By SCOTr Wor.n:
Sentmei-New!llllalf
Friday evening round seven of
SVAC football actJon wUl oommenoe ~stern me, to make.it
two ln a row at Kyger Creek,
Symmes Valley visits !buthwesta-n, l!l)d Slu\IEI'JI l-tlpes to dlmb.
out of tbe basement with a win rNer
Hannan Traee In Racine.
·
Meanwhile, Oak HW hosts North
Gallla In ~ SVAC readllner and.
probable league championship
game,
Last week the Eastern .Eagles '
posted tbeir first Jea:gue \vln of tre
year, a 24-29 ·triumph, aver mjury

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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

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plagu!!d lf!lrinan Trace.
Eastern, ·who · has ·.pot been
healtl\Y Itself, made several line-~
~anges and adjustments to rally
Its 'struggling offense.
Back-up Quarterback Mark Grll·
. fin . was sharp as re tl'l'ew two
touchdown· passei and netted 79 ·
.yard passing overall: Grl1fln threw
two TO passes to junior Steve
Horner, one ol which was a 33 yard
thrDier.
.
Anotber credit io tre Eastel'n
offense was the addition of converted end-to,fullback Kyle Davis.
who cru:rted 29 times fur 148 yards,
I be best Eagle .offensive effort lli · ·

date ihls season..
· Eastern wiD match forees with !Pod game.
Haltbe:ck Jeff Jolmson. another .· Kyger C~k. wiD gOt a scare at
This week Southern squares off
)lnior, added to his season rushing · Soutbem last week before pullil1g agaiilst Hannan Trace In a home
statistics with anot!Er &amp;900 game, orr a J3.6 wln.
oontest In Racbie.
scoring tbe Eagles' second TDon a .
Mike Brll(!bury caught bot)! KC
The big word at the slis camp Is
seven yard run. ·
touchcklwns, one an 11 yard aertal that Ire services of Pete Roush
~ark Griffin grabbed two Inter- ·. · rrom QB
Waugh and another oould be lost thlsw~k. If not·for the
reptjonsilrtheEaglesdefenslvely. rromDavld Pettryonlhehaifljack 'Season. At press ~me Roush was
T.re EHS ooach)ng staff lndicates p•s.
.
,
diagnosed as haVing a possible
that It, has seen much positive · Bradbury c;ollected over 90 yards hairline rractl.lre In his ankle,
progress In the last outings, and receiving and some additional .however, that was not yet
feels that Friday's win has boosted· yardage rushing; oompllmentlng oonfirmed.
tfllm eonfldence.
Pettry's 13-42 and Tim Gprdon's
RDush already had well over Ern
The Eagles have taken their .11-\15 y~rd night.
yards rushing for the season and
blows, but are now starting to gPI, . · KC Is ywng, multi-talented, and wruld be a ligloss as Southern's top
establishing tber!lselves as a team well-roached, lDwever, new life at worl&lt;hQrse.
.
of tbe future. '
tbe EHS C!lmp slDuld make for a
Much qJtlmlsm Is stlll present at
tbe EHS camp ai many feel that
SOutbern's backfield will be more
bal111 oed wit·h Rick Sellers , Scott
Burris, Chris Stout, Danny Gheen,
93
urnaita' agatn flnlshell with 161, 8.Cindnnat1Purc (Ill (1-0)
(D) (1-0) ·
36
followed In order · by Columbus , t.!ll"'beavUie
IO.Falrlleld (I) 111-1)
211
DeSales, Sl. Clairsville, YoungSeeoad ten: 11. Wooster 19: 12. Berea 14;
stown Cardinal M9oney. Wl)eelers- l l (lie) ClnciMali Mleller •d Daytlll
burg,. Garfield lfet~ts Trinity and Dunbor, II •&lt;h; II. BeloN Wnl Brandl
10: J&amp;:(tle) LUewood St. Edward and
Castalia Margaretta .
Bet-ea Midpark, 9 each: 18. (lie)
. M:&gt;oney, :&gt;2 after a 21·7 loss GroVepoirl·Madllc.. WestenUie North
. Saturday'nlght to Aus\ln!own Fitch, 111d z. ..vme, 8 ...,h, ·
CIMoAA
Is !he lone AA tcp ten team without Team
:
Polnts
a 7-0 n!rord.
I.CAPE till) ( 14) (7-0)
!24
2-lrmlon
(DI)
(I)
11·0)
181
No.1 In ClassA!orthelhirdweek :I.OrrvtUe (ID) (I) (1·0)
115
In a row was Delphos Jefferson, a f.Urbona (Ill) (3) 11-tl
t6r
46-0 winner over Cridersville Perry 5.Coll DoSaleo (II) (t) 11·0)
J:ll
116
Salur!lay night The Wlld:ats, with B.St. QatrAVUle (liJ)'(2) (7·0)
1.v
...
.,,
Mo•ey tiD) (l·ll
11
15 firsts and 197 poll points, were 8.Wheelor"'"'rr (Ill) (1·0)
53
well wt In · front of C!OOksvUJe, t ,Gor liP• TrtoHy_1111) m,c1-0I
~2
U
wlich ftnisbed NO. 2 llr the second IO.Cut Mai'p!'&lt;lla (IV) Ill (1-01
!l«ond len: 11. Thomv Dfl&gt; Sheridan 3$;
consecutive week with 137.
. 1!. lleD..,ue I); 13. Lldt1111 Valley IK; II.
Newark Catlnllc, which topped lk7oo 13; IS. Nopol- 10; Ji. E\yrta
the A ratings the first two weeks of CailloUet; 11, 0tll)(rlnFallsKen811118; 18.
Philo, Vaa Wert, LlmaBolh. W"'lcra
the voting, moved up a notch to (lie)
Browll and C•fi'Cibell Memorta1, 7 each.
third, followed l:!Y st. Henry In
OuoA
Polnta
fowih and 11Hin ·Calvert In fifth. Tnril
I.DoJp'OII Jet'oon IV) (15)(1·0)
191
Newark Catholic, at 6-lls tre mly l.Crooko'Uie (V) (I) 11-0)
13'1
team in tre AtqJ ten with a loss.
3.Newark Calh !VI III-I)
1211
t.SC.
llelley
(V)
tl·O)
121
Rounding out lhe Ust were 5.Ttltln Cal'rt ( V) I H)
114
Versailles In sixth, follom?dlnocder B.Vtro'Qieo (IV) (2) !Ml
. lU
by McDonald, B~rkeye North, 1.M&lt;IIGooatd (V) Ill !II-&amp;)
114
Nr'h lVI Ill (1·0)
65
GatES !',flUs Hawken andne~&lt;mmer 8.B1kileye
'
t.Galeo lfaw'n· (IV )(I)(l·Oi
l3
Ayersvllle, which took tbe place cf I&amp;.Ay.,...llletV) 11·0)
40
Mogadore.
Seeond tn: tt: Portsmoulh Notre Dame

:ron1

Ratin@s leaders same third cons_eeutive ·week
.

'

By GENE CADDES
uPI Spbits Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - for
the third week ln a !Ow, tpe No. 1
teams In the United Press Internal·
onal Ohio · High &amp;hobi 'Board of
Coaches football ratings remained
unchanged.
Last week's leaders ·.~ Canton
McKhiley In Class AM. Clriclnnatl
Academy of Physical Education
(CAPE) In' AA and Delphos
Jefferson In A - had only minor
challenges to their top spots. ·
McKinley (7-0). despite a narrow
26-23 d~lslon over Cll)lton Central
Catholic Friday night, Its second
:l-polnt wln•ln the last tllree games,
still commanded 17 d. 2l! tlrst place
votesfromtheAAAcoachesand257
poll points.
Centervllle, which ran Its rocord .
to 7-0witha 21-14wi11overKettering '
Fairmont, remained asolid second
With seven firsts and 2:!2 pobtts,
followed again In third liY North
Canton Hoover, a :fi.O winner over
. Canton South, with two first place
votes and 214 points.

'

Tolecto Wllltm~r claimed the No.
4 spot, breaking last week's fourth
place tie with Worthington. which
finished fifth this week.
Rounding rut tre AAA tOp ten
were Austintown Fitch In sixth, up
one ·from a week ago, Oeveland
Benedictine, Clndnnatl Pureell
Marian, Strubenvllle and Fairfield,
which Jeapoo ln!D tenthafte- a 21-19
win Friday night over Middletown,
which o&lt;ru~ied the posltbn last
week.
,
CAPE, wlieh rolled 5:l-7 over
Mariemont Friday night, held a
37-!))lnt ·mar!!!n over runnerup
Ironton in AA. butthat llattleshould
be tesolved when the two teams
meet 1n Ironton next week.
CAPE recelvfd 14 first place
votes and 724 points, compared with
a bne first and 187 points for tbe
Tigers, who went to 7-0wlth a 41-14
win over Lancaster.
·
Orrville, wh.lch had shared the
runnerup sp&lt;it with Ironton tiE past
two weeks. slipped to third despite
its 42-0 triumph over Wooster
Trlway with 175 points.

Eastern jui:lior high triumphs, 18-8
The Eastern Junior High Eagles
posted their second vlct&lt;ry ol the
season with an 18-8 triumph over
Hannan Trace.
-'
Eastern soored first on a :fi-yard
touchdown from quarterback Jeff
Ourst-to-Matt Finlaw. The PAT's
IaUro.
The next salre came on a one
yard plunge by halfback Jerrod
Barber tD give Eastern a 12-0 lead.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Tllll week'o . S7; 12. U~tbon Anderson :11; ·13. Coaouon
Untied Pr'"o lnlel'llllllooal Ohio Hlfh ·valley !7: 14. An:onum (I) 25; 15.
Sdlool Board of eo..h ... loolbotl rallop Mopdoro 20: 18. Rltlm., 19: 17. (lie)
cwllh OHSAA ptayoll dlvtstooo, nna ...... .tllffl l!ut and Edrerton, ltleaoh; It. tile)

Jeff DW'st capped the searing
with a nine yard run off tackle
Aaron Wilson and Matt Flniaw ·
had lnterceptions,lnosting a strong
defense Jed by Jason Hager, tbe
leading tackler.
HT scored on a 15 yard pass from
.Jarrell to Sheets.
Eastern, now 2-3, plays KC
tonight at home.

\'ol es

and

won-lost

records

In

Class Ai\.A

Team
parenthesH,:

Points

McK'Iey (11117) tHI)
l.CentervUte (I) tll t1·8)
3.N Canl.., Ho'ver IH (2) (7·0)
~.Toledo Whlt'er (I) (7-0)
I.Cantoo

l.Worthtn~oo (II (!)

251

Bene Unkla aad Arllnrton, 11 each.

~i~~~~~~~~ilij'

m

nt
1411
148 '

(1-0 )

&amp;.Auotlnlowo Ft'ch tl) (7-tl)

111

l .C teve Bened

Ill

tD )(7-tl)

SVAC standings

e31

(Overall)
W L PF PA
North Gallla .......... ...... ......6 I 140 5!

Tfam

Oak HIU ........ ....................6 I 156

1'1

KY(er Creel&lt;...................... 5 2 86' •

Soulhweatern ..................... 5 2 1%1 40
Symmes Valley .......... ....... 3 t lt6 145
Eutern ....... .. .......... .. .. .,.... 2 !I it
Hanna.o Trace ...................% !I 115
Southern ...... ........ .. ........ ... 1 8 81

w::

:.·~)\'EST

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY a
SUNDAY - ILL SLITS 12.50
AIJIISSIOft EVERY TUESDAY IZ.SO
LAST Ill!' - - 'IN SEARCH OF THE ---~::o-;·..:,"·
7:10P.M. ONLY .

(Conference)

Team
W L
North Gallla ....................... .a t
Oak Hill ............................. ~ 0
Solilhwestem ....... ..... ... ....... 3 1
Kuer Creek . ............... ... .. .. ~ 2

PF
111

I21

N
37
Sym...,. Valley .................. 2 2 10
EaHtern ... .. ................... ...... l 9 38
Hannan Trace ...... ......... ..... O .t 3H
Southern ............................ 0 .t .t4
FrklaJ'A ~COI't'!'i
No11h Gadllu 13., S®thweMtern 2
ky~er Creek 13, Southt&gt;rn •
Ea.~t('rn U. Hannan Trace 19

1984 FORD
TEMPO GL

1984 MERCURY
GRAND MARQUIS

Stock H69701. 4 dooffi, hardtop, """'"· tront
wheel drive. 4 c~ .. 31r cond.. auto. ~ans.. PS.
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'

31192. 4 door&gt; V-8. air cmd..
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AM/FM rad~. ~ereo ·~pe . "'" will(bo

~

root. auto. ~ans.. PS.

$6895 '5895
1984 FORD
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1982 FORD
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Slocli # 60891. 2 dooffi. hardtop, coupe. V-8.
air cond . 5 speed. PS. PB. ~~ wheel. crui.e
oontnj. stereo tape. radial tires. bucket seats.

Stock ~ 10590. 2 doors. hardtop, coupe. V-~.
air cond .. auto. hans. PS. PB. jXJWer win!bl~
~k wheel. cru~e con~ot. AM/FM rado. s1en10
tape. radial lira bud&lt;et ...~ . ""r win!bl

Od. l71ames
SouthW{'!rl.lern al Symml'M Vallt&gt;y
Ewd1~rn at Ky~er Crt'ek
Hannu Tr•ct llt Southt•rn
North Galli• al Oak Hill

Stock

..
$7795 '6795

~~~~

Oak Hill .tO. Symlllt!8 Valles I

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~

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$6395 '539
$7495
IMS

CRAGEBROWN
5-10, 2:11-Pound
Senior Tackle

TONY CONNOLLY
5-10, l45,Pound
Senior Ba~k
,

1981 CHEVROLET
CHEVffiE

llj

l't

Stock~ 63422 2 doo~. hO'dtop. coo pe 4 cyL.
PS, NM~ ·• iio. bucket seats

7;. / I

1980 CHEVROLET
PICKUP C·lO
Stocl R 69832. 2 doors. U , ~r cood .
PS. 1'6 . POWer windows. tilt
AM/FM radic. mdi•l tires. ~ too Ji&lt;:~up,
wile bed, rear step bumper, aux~ary
~au(II'S . ~idi n~ """ (joss.
WAS
~ ans .

i2.495 •1a9r $4795 '379

CHAIN. SAWS

-1980 OLDSMOBILE·
CUTLASS

1980 AMC
SPIRIT
StockH69322.2doo•. hardtop. coupe. 6 cyL.
air cond.. PS. PB. radial tires. white walls.
bud&lt;et seats.

Stocl H30333. 2 doo". hardttlll. St'dan. V-8
air rond .. ••vtrool. auto hans .. PS. PB crui«'
control. AM/FMtad&lt;
tiiAll

$a&amp;9s '2995.·

PAMON FISHER
6-3, 16.'&gt;-Pound
Senior i:nd.

NOW ON SALE

am

MODEL

REG.
PRICE

• • •

PB210E
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HAND HELD

.$479.99 $249.99

S1ocl ~ 3!261 . 2 &lt;b&gt;rs. hardt(l!l, St'dan. V-6.
PS. PB. Mt/FM rad~.
radial tires.

~nyl 10!11. auto. trans.

WAS

$1595

REEDSYIUJ
'

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Country Store ·

4th &amp; .In
371·6111

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restructuring my loan!?"

''

.. .
I•

1977 FORD
F-250

1979 DODGE
DIPLOMAT

REG.
·SALE
PRICE . PRICE

MODEL

SALE
PRICE

CS280E 12" $169.991139.99
CS440EVL 18" $329.99. .299.99
CS550EVL 20" $1494.99 374.99

,.

or Toey Connolly flltJng ln.
Soutberil has been "close" in its
last several ootlngs, but still h8sn't
limped over the hump. The Tdrnadoes played well against a solid KC
club, especially oHenslvely. '
The bosts adqed ."more passfng"
to Its offense with success to enable
the running game to get off: the
ground.
SHS wUJ have to stop : the
quickness of Brad Cremeans and
the running of C.D. Adkins, 'Yho
both salred l.ast week against ·
Eastern . Jason Jones added ; the
ot ber score on a seven-yard pass
play.
,
Both Soutbern and liT ;are
winless In the SVAC.
Game dmes are slated fur t::.!
p,m.

r------ ------------------

Meet the Southern
Tornadoes

will not cooperatr 'w ith yrur
biography even if it Is a fully
documented, highly detail ed, pene·
trat lng love story that will capture
tbe hearts and imagi nation of the
American people.
After this warni ng, if yoo in s L~ t on
going ahead with tbe project, my
wife would like you to title the book,
" I Did II Your Way.''

Berry's World

~- ~·¥

. Pomerov-Middleport, Ohio

Dear Ms. Kelley_·_____:, ___A_r_tB---..uc_hw_al----d
The word on the street is that
Kitty Kelley, Frank Sinatra's uno!·
ficlal blograpber, Is now looking for
another fa scina ting subject to write
about.
Well, Ms. Kelley, this is to warn
you !hat I'm not cooperating with
you. and you're just wasting yru r
time if you think you can do to me
what you did to Sinatra.
I've told all my clese friends not
to talk to you, and this goes for Ava,
Mia, Lauren, JUI, Victoria, Shirley,
Angle , Dinah, and Walter
Annen berg.
Unlike Frank, I do hold grudges,
and If I read one word in your book
about me going sklnily-dipplngwlth ·
Madame DeGaulle In the fountains
at Versailles, I sue.
You think, Ms. Kelley , toot jusl
because I am an ootstanding public
Hgure with a worldwide following,
you can steal my 'life story and
appropriate It as your own. Well,
you can't do It, and If I am unable to
stop you, I have ftiends wm can.
What If I told you tbe entire Chilean
navy owes me a favor? If you have
doubts, just wtite about the orgy we
all had with the Bartles and Jaymes
Brothers and see If someone doesn't
·slnot a torpedo up your word
processor.
I belieVe in freedo~T~ or the press
as much as the next woman, Ms.
Kelley. but there are certain things
better lett unsaid when wrttlng a ·
biography. And that Includes tbe
shouting match I had with Motber
Teresa when I jumped the Une In
Wagshal's Dellcatessen.Ms. Kelley, you have no more
right to Include that as yw have to

~ ~~

EagleS eye .second • straight. win; ..S.o uthem hosts Wildcats

Page- . 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thurrsday, October. 16, .1$86
I

.I

,,

NOW

'895

Sloe~ # 30802 V-B autb
pickup. ion~ Mde bed.

(!lU(II'S.

lnr1s .PS. P6 ~ ton
Mar step runw.
flOW

'1995

�~

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ol!io

Thursday, ~tober 16, 1986

By.The Bend

Meigs to host winless Rock Hlll Redmen in noq.-IOOp tllt
By KEI'nl WISECUP .
piece f1'om the Mara~ders' main ,teams.
Sentinel News Staff ·
objectives, which include a state · To jlolnt out the ciOSEI!ess of the
I&gt;.OMEROY- Undefeated Me~s plhlayofTf berth and a TV.C chai'hpiQn· rati!!!IS' race, Meigs would liive
(7-0) strays from TVC action this s p. he league crown could be been fOurth Instead ot second if Pt.
Friday against Ohio Valley Confer- yjrtually wrapped up as MHS hils Pleasant had not beaten Milton
ence· foe Rock HUI .(0.7) at "lliit lOwly Alexander (1-6) and Friday. Since the Big Blacks play
MaratiderStadlumwithachanceto Federal-Hocking (0-7) ·to - play. onJY -AAA size schools (other than
tie the school's all.tlme consecutive Those two . teams' records plus Meigs), the Maral!ders gain 2_
.5
unbeaten streak.
·
Rock Hill's 1). 7 make the Marauders points with each PPHS win. Meigs
Last Friday's 12-to· come-from- final three opponents with a wouidalso receive points from any
behind win over . VInton County com bin~ l-20mar'k, and that could Rock lliil win, lllt thus far this
gave tl'e Marauders their ninth play havoc with .a post'season . season there hasn't been one.
straight win dating· back to last · playoff berth,
And with three teams coming up
season, breaking the mark of eight
The Marauders are currenlly with rut one Win betv.:een, the
held between the final game of 1984 number two behind Ironton In the Marauder~ are a long way from
and the first seven in 1985.
Qivision III, Region 11 computer becQmlng a shOo-In for the pay&lt;tfs
Meigs went 10 games without a ratings. The top four teams · ad· deSpite should they win all thrEe
deleatdurtngtheflnaisevengames vance to the playoffs with number games and end the year 10-0.
of19W and first three of 1985. Along one meeting number four and too Altho11gh the rating format has
thatstreak_incll!dedninewinsand a playing three. Jrontonisa runaway changed, a few area teams In the
0-0 tie with Logan. A win Friday first place while the second, third, past fel\' years have went 10-0 hut
would tie that mark.
and fourth spots are clearly up !Or · could not qualify for the play&lt;tfs. ln
But statistics and records are far grabs with only seven and a ha~ Meigs' region, Bellall'l! tumect the
points separating _the next five 10-0 trick and so did Ironton )Vlth

neither miklng the playoffs a fe.;
years baq_k. Eastern (Meigs) also
wenfl(}.() but didn't quallly in !lie
early. ~·s. Many say the reason
Ironton pulled from theSEOAL was
_ becau$1! oft~ that season.
_
Due to elii:Jler contract arrange'
nwnts, Friday's gilJlle wjli begin at ·
8 p.m. fusteiul &lt;t the league starting
time of 7:30. It will also mark the
tina! appearance of 20 Marauder
selbrs at Marauder Stadium.
Among the 20 include end J. R. .
' Kitchen , wir\gback Phil King; end
Donnie . Becker, wingba~k Jay
Buskirk, fullbackTonySho~aker,
lj!Uback Huey Eason, fullback Pal!l
Dalley, center Jastn Bush, tackle
Mike Kloe!;, tackle Waiter Haggy,
guard Tim !Mrst: tackle Pal!!
Wolfe, guard 'Thdd Cullums, tackle
Denny Welsh, guard Don Bunce,
tackle Ra,vmqnd 1Rider, tackle

Mets outlast Astros for NL
titl~, 7-6; tilt goes 16 rungs
By MIKE BARNE'i
UPI Sports-Writer
HOUSTON (UP!)- This was Da
VInci on the diamond; bilsebaU's
version of Bach; Shakespeare
performed with strlkesand·stngles.
Game 6 of the National League
Championship Series was a classic,
destin~ to hold a special place bt
the annals or baseball's · most
dramatiC performances. .
Oil a Wednesday afternoon,
befOre a croWd of 45,718 at the
AstrodOme and mlliions more
watchbtg on national television, the
New York Mets ~ged the Houston
Astros 7~ in 16 breath- taking
innings to win the NLCS.
The triumph, coming In the
longest postseason game in history,
gave the NL East champions a
hard-earned ticket to the World
Series, which hegins Sat\Jrday night
at Sbea Stadil!m against the Boston
Red Sox.

"They sald we never played a
tough game all year,'.' 'New York
Manager Davey Johnson said after
calling lt the only game that ever
gave him a headache. "Well. the
pennant is the toughest thing to
get."
For those who need proof this
game. Is fit for your famUy's
videotape llbrary:
-The Mets, who trail~ 3-0 after
one Inning, ti~ the score with three
runs bt a desperate ninth inning off
starter Bob Knepper - who had
allowed just two hits through eight

- and ace reliever Dave Smith.
lrnm~iate celebration on the field
- NewYorktook a43~ge lnthe was a bit tame. They were just too
14th inning on WaUy Backman's tired to jump on each other.
RBI single, but the Astros ti~ It In
A long time ago, in a first 'fnning
the bottom ot the inning when BUiy · far, far away, the Astros scored
Hatcher homered oCf_Jesse Orosco, three runs ' off le'ft· . hander Bob
tbe ball · grazing off the screen Ojeda on an RBI double ~ Phll
attached to the ieft-!leid foul pole ..' Garner and run· scoring singles by
' Davis andJoseCruz . B.lttheycould
"!thought we were golngtowbi," have had more.
With runners at first and third
Hatcher said.
-New York scored three times and one out, Lanier call~ tor a ..
in the 16th, an outburst that began sulclci!·&amp;:]Ueeze bunt. It worked - It
when center flei~r Hatcher rnJs. meant suicide vr the Astros. ·
judged Darryl Strawberry's high
Alan Ashby missed the bunt and
fly and turned it in to a do11ble. Ray Bass was tagged rut il a rundown .
Kn ight drove In Strawberry with a Ashby then lined out to end t!'e
line&lt;lrlve single off k:&gt;ser Aurelio inning.
.
.
Lopez; another run scored on a wild
"Ashby has doneltforus before,"
pitch; and a third run came home Lanier said. "He just hit through
on Len Dykstra 's RBI single. ·
the pitch. \Yewantedtogetasmany
-The Astros scored twice In the runs as we wuld early. We ha:l the
lnttom of the 16th on run· scoring &amp;~uee:ze oo and we got the pe-fect
sbtgles by Hatcher and Glenn pitch ."
Davis, but Orosco fanned Kevin
Houston 11undered agaln In the'
Bass on a 3-2 pitch toendthe 4hour, fifth. With Doran on second,
42-rninute marathon.
f!atcher hit a slow roller to 'third
'Thss in another controversial call basemari Knight , who fielded the
by u~plre Fred Brocklander, single and feigned a throw to Drst.
another bonehead running mistake . Doran who had been doubled ott
by Bill !l:Jran and Ql!estlonable second base il Game 5 on a line
strategy by Houston Manager Hal drive to the outfield, carelessly
Lanier, and ... weli,yrugettbeidea. rounded third and was tagged out
"When 1 saw the last pitch, I was · when Knight threw back to Rafael
so afraid he wruidget a basehil and Santana covering the bag.
we would te playing all night,"
The Mets facbtg the grim
Knight said. "! went numb for a prospect of ' trying to hit the
second 'and It seemed my hraln unhlttable Mike Scott in. a decisive
stopped working."
Game 7, rallied for three runs In the
So forgive the Mets ~ their ninth.
'

R~ Sox crush Angels f~r AL titl~ ·
By ROBERTO DJAS
UPI Sports Writer
BOS1UN (UP!) - Marty Bar·
ret!, his face bathed In a blend of
tears and champagne that befitted
the American League playotf' s
Most Valuable Player, recaOed an
exhiblti&lt;Jn' game five weeks ago that
now has World Series lrnpllcatk:&gt;ns.
On Sept. 4 jlt FeJ1'Way Park, the
Boston Red Sox hosted the New
York Mets in a charity game.
l'llough the Mets won 7· 3, Barrett
warned that the Red Sox team that
played "was not doing it for the
standings. It wasn't an omen."
Barrett, Boston's second base·
man who led his team past
California and into the World Series
with a .li7 batting average and
flawless fielding, paus~ to
reconsider.
"We match up well wit h the
Mets," he said. "They're obviously
a quality team and we didn't need
that ·exhibition to know lt. I'm
certain they' ll be ready for us and
we have to be just as ready."
Boston certainly appear~ just
that Wednesday night as Roger
Clemens provided seven strong
innings that helped give the Rro·
Sox an 8-l decision over the Angels
In the seventh game of the AL
Championship Series.
The righl·hander, whose :IA-4
performance during the regular
season makes him the favorite for
the . Cy Young Award, received
plenty rl. batting support . Wade
Boggs ·lasl'ed a two-run single that
capped Boston's, three-run second
inning and Jim Rice ripped a
three-run homer bt a four-run
fourth.
"It's teen a magical year 'and a
grea{ finale." Sa.ld Clemens, who
had a touch c1. the flu. "I'm glad we

wereable tocomebackandwln this .!Or (team owner) Gene Autry. We
way at home.".
laid our hearts out there and they
Boston, which won the last three got stepP,ed on.
games of the series after being one
"My situation is 9lmetling I'll let
strike from eilrnlnatbn In Game5, you guys (the media ) handle. You
will meet New York in the "Shuttle seem to enjoy It 9:1 much. I'll let you
Series" beginning Saturday at Shea wonder what wUl happen tome and
Stadium. The Red Sox's Bruce I'll let yru describe how I 6?€1."
Hurst is ex)X'Cted to face the Mets'
John Candelaria, pick~ by
Ron Darling.
Mauch .to start Wednesday night
" It'll be a lot of fun, " Rice said. was victimized by poo' fielding ~
"The best team wins. Just try to . au seven of the runs re allo~
mak e no mental mistakes and were unearned .
we've got a chanre to win."
"It's very dlsapPJinting, rut we
One tradition was bypassed while only have ourselves to blame"
another was cont btued W~nesd ay An~is catcher B:lb Boone said.
. night. Boston ha!i participated in "We had them at our place and
just four Fall Classics si nce winning coulcm 't close the deal We were
ln-1918, when a left ·hander named capable of playing weli, (but)
Babe Ruth was In the starting didn 't."
rotation. This year's Red Sox are
the SE*.'enth team to rebound from a
~ 1 deficit to capture a series.
California Manager Gene Mauch
continued to be plagued ~ the
BUCHTEL- Meigs advanced to
curse he ha!i known t.hroughout his the Class AA sectional volleybaO
.25-year managerial career,- as yet finals with a 1~10, 11-15. 15-9·
another of his teams fail~ to wbt a lhnle·set win t:Ner Federal-Hocking
pennant.
at Nelsonville-York Monday.
Three Mauch-managed teams
The Marauderettes, now 164,
have had playoff bids disintegrate play Alexander for the sectional
·- the 1964 PhiUies, the 1982 An~is CJ:Own Saturday at 9a.m. at NYHS.
and this season's An&amp;eis. Ju st one A'Jexander pull~ a stunning upset
ou t from victory in Game 5. Mauch over number one seeded Belpre In
replaced starter Mike Witt with the tournament's first round .Meigs
Gary Lucas and the' move helped was to travel to Trimble tonight In
give the Rro Sox an eventual 7-6 TVC tUt. Belpre leads the league by
victory in 12 Innings.
a game over the ,second place
' "l don't have a whole hell c1 a lot' Marauderettes.
to say, " Mauch said. " I hl!rt like
Shannon Hindy was Meigs' lead·
hell fOr the players. I hurt like hell ing pomt·getter against Federal·

we

4

. of play.

TVC GAMJiS ONLY
Team
W· L
Meigs .... ......... ......... 6 0
Belpre ..... .. ,...... .. .. ... 5 I
Vinton ..... ................ 3 2
Wellston ................ .. 3 2
Nels-York ....... .. .... .. . 2 3
Mltler ..... ·.. .. ........... .. 2 3
Trimble ... ..... ........ ... 2 4
Alexander. .... ........... 1 4
Fed-Hocking .. ......... . 0 5

P
151
157
109
81
61
54
51
61
9

I

OP
28
61
56
135
139
107
131
184
172

OP
10
. 48
42
16

I

!llscounts. Tv.nol lntl c...,..

L.

.'

s~lll (~~lbe.sedwlti'I Oihf:r
~~OIJI'IIS Tn ool mcl COIIJtll

---

' 00\IO(S

IN..,~ &amp;ln.

l~ll not l/lct ~ lb

!If'"'

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pre-eooked WI

1

'loiWoMIII...,....

1111111 . .11.,_,

---

.· River Rd
IJppo:r

Jl

Oct. 10 R&lt;lsulo

Oct.

noan...

Miller at Betp..,.

..
Alexander at Netsoovute-York
Vbttoo Coonty at Trimble . ·
Federai·Hocl&lt;lng at Weltstoo
Rod&lt; HUI at Meigs (oon-leaguel.

Hocking with 18 pobtts while Jenni
Swartz had eight, Jenni Couch
seven, Julk! Mlllef six, and She}IY
Stobart thn!e. Stobart also had U
assists whlle' Julie Mlller had II
kills.
In an earller gameagalnst Vinton
County, Meigs won easily, 15·1, 15·9.
Hindy I~ Meigs wlthk UO points
while Jenny Muter and Couch had
six each. Julie Miller had six kills
and Couch four assists.
In the reseJVe gaf!le against VC,
the Lady VIkings won 15-7, 15-8.
Kelly Douglas and Leslie Carr led
Meigs with four points each and
Shlela Hendricks had three.

'"'-

COBB

These Special Apply to GM Owners 0.1ly
r--~------'---COl l PON-- ---------- 1

I1 GET YOURWINTER
COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL
I
GM VEHICLE IEADY FOil THE lONG WlNTEl HAVE 1.Test _coolant, or~ssure check entire s.ystem for leaks, drain and fill I
1 coo1t111 system tf needed wtth pnume·GM coolant. check hoses 1
1 clamps and drive belts .

tAll Added Labor 8o

Parts Extral

'

1

I1 REGULAR PllCf~-:
ux Special Pric'e $ 12 95 • TAX I
24 month or 24,000
c._) 1
milo intsrats)

llec011111111tdtd at

·"

(With

I
·
GOOD THRU NOV. 1, 1986
I
------------~OUPON------------1

ALIGNMENT SPECIAL

Get started on Ihe right track ftir winter with genuine GM front end
alignment.
$

REGULA'!)24!!: +TAX

1995

Special Price

,GOOD THRU NOV. 1, 1986

x

UX (With Coupon)

''
I
I

Spetial Pritt

GOOD THRU NOV. 1. 1986
i

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

COUPON

'

I·
I
I
+TAX I
(With Co'flon) I
I

$1995

------------tI

'•

COMPUTER ENGINE ANALYSIS

•'

Let us tiM your 1111ine's pulse with ovr smart Engine Analyzer.
(This is not atune-up and dbes not include tune ·up ttbor or tune-up
parts)
.

REGULAR_,.,.+ TAX

Spetial Price

I

95 • TAX
$19
!With Coupon

GOOD THRU NOV. 1, 1986

FLORIST

-----------------------------I

Me'«• County '• Olde11 FWrill

MONDAY THRU FRIOAY 8 TO 6
FRIDAY 8 TOts: SATURDAY 9 TO 3
308 E. MAIN
992·181·4
POMEROY, OH .

U! UST lUll

.......,,- .. u"
614/9ft·IM4

~ · '"

--- - -

" SERVICE THAT COUNTS"

~ ...

....

.

BARS

•

I EVANGELI&gt;T - Seventeen·
t ear-old evangelist Rick
Weaver, Mt. Alol, W.Va., a high
!khool senior and a dedicated
· jou~ ~angellsl, wBI conduct
revival services at the Pomeroy
Omrch ol the Narazene, comer
MMulberry and Union i\ venues
~onday throu&amp;fl Oct. 26. Servi·
oes wU1 be held at 7 p.m. each
~Miiig with special music each .
f\'enmg .. Pastor, Rev. 'Ibomas
b. McCiu~. Invites the public.

Publis hed ever~· aftN noon. Monday
throug h Frida y, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy. Ohi o. b,v the Ohi o \'a lll'y Pub·
lishin g Comp any! Mult lm l'din, tnr ..
Pome-roy, Ohi o 45769 . Ph . 992·21 56. Second class posta12 r pa id at Pom C' roy ,
Ohio.
Member: Uni ted Pr ess Internationa l.
Inland Da ll y Press Association and th e
Ohio Ncwspap('r Assoc iation. NatiOnal
Advrrtl s\ n ~

"

.

COOPER

Chrysler, Plymouth,' Dodge, Inc.
399 So.Third

Middleport

992-6421
'

Represent a live, Branha m

Nl'w spapN Sa les, 733 Third

Av~ nu (&gt; ,

New York. 1\:ew York 10017 .
to ThP Da ll~ SenlineL' l1l Court St. ,
Pon1C'roy, Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTIO N R.'\1'ES

.,

..''

By Carri er or Motor Route
Onr \Y ('('k ........ .. .. .. . .. ...
. . ... $]. 25
One Month ..
..... .. .... .. $5.45
Onr Year ..
................. ... . $65. 00
SIN GLE COP\'
PRICE
•
Daily ............ ..................... .. 25 Cents

'

.

Subscr ibr rs not drs lrl ng to pa,v 1he car·
rlcr IJl l"I Y remit In adv ance di r£~C1 1o
The D a l1~, Sent in el on a 3. 6 or 12 mo nth
OOsls. Cred ir will tX' ~ iven carrie r ea ch
Wf'C k .

No subscr iptions by ma il per mitt ed In
areas where homE' carri!'r sNvlci- Is
avallabh.'.
Mall S ubsc rlp l ion ~t

lnsld r l\1ellt!!i County
13 WN'ks ................................ $17.29

26 W('('kS .......... .............. .. ..... ... $34.06
52 Wf'f'ks ... .... .. .. ·····-· ........ .... $66.56
Outsldr Meigs Ctw nt}'
\3 Wreks..
. .................. $18.20
26 Weeks...
. ... . .. ..... ..... .$35.10

52 Weeks.... .......

. .... !G7.60

GOOD
THROUGH MONDAY
SAil PRICES

.,

40&lt; EA.

ENGLISH LEATHER

COLOGNE SPRAY

All PURPOSE LOTION.
4 OZ. - Reg. 16.50

5 OZ.-Reg. S7.SO

U-1 00 DISPOSABLE INSlR.IN
SYRINGE &amp; NEEDLES
l'ltg. of

10 $169

Reg. ss.OO

$259.

Pkg. of

.,
•,

ASPIRIN s GRAINS

100$16 29

by Major - tOO's

AFRIN 12 HOUR
NASAL 112 Oz.

HAU'S MENTHOL YPTUS

COUGH
TABLETS

PIN• &amp; MATCHING
EARRINGS

$419

$533

30's

OUR LOSS - YOUR GAIN
'

l

POSTMASTER: Send addrl'Ss rh nngcs

LADY STETSON

'

•'I

'

CANDY

SAL. ~!" ··

1977 FORD LTD AUTO., A/(, CRU1SE ............ S695
1977 CHEV. CAPRICE CLASSIC ..... S89 5
1977 PONTIAC GR PRIXsHARP......... S1895
"
1977 GMC PICKUP 3/4 TONroP .....S149S
1972 FORD 1 TON·TRUCK4SPo.... S199S
1985 CHEV. S10PIUUPONEOWNER .....S449S
1983 PLY.' HORIZON AUTO ................... $2995
1982 OLDS FIRENZA AUTO.................... $2695
1979 DODGE ASPENAUTO. A/(........... 5129~
1979 CHEV. CHEVEfiE (lEAN ............. SJ.l 95

$)295

--.... ----------.:::ouPoN------ ------1

REGULAR~+ TAX

'EM OUT

+ TAX

(With Ctuponl

AUGNMENT CHECK tNo adpr.t. .nts l

O~E

1

tUSPS 145·960 )
A Divis ion of 1\tultimedla, Ip c.

Moore family gathers at reunion

CHEVROLO
-OLDSMOBILE-CADIUAC
"fOIMIIL'I SIUOIIS 01DS..C:AD •.C:.. V."

Wr-ench oil alii AC filters. This is an honest to"goodness specialon qual
ity GM parts. No'substitue lor quaHty. limit 5 quat1s oil.

WANT ADS
AII.IJIPIIi
WITH BARGAINS

'J

The Daily Sentinel

Elizabeth Milan was elected and Job's Daughters are in vit~. to
wortlzy matron at a recent meeting attend. Those not coming in
of Evan~llne Chapter 172, Orderrl. costume wBI have to pay a penalty.
the Eastern Sta~. held at the The even tis being sponsor~ by the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
ways and means committee of
Other officers elected were Gary Evangeline Chapter.
Canterlllry, worthy patron; Teresa rr=~:::;::;:;::;~====;i
Canterbury, associate matron; RoTHANKING YOU AU
RE'iERVE CIIEERI.Et\DERS- Reserve cheer·
bert King, associate patron; Julia
Dear Folks,
and Melodl Carl, Kim Chiulwrll, Leah Doidge, and
leaders al Meigs Hig-h School are Slat't'Y Gihhs, front,
Sherrl Blair.
• K. Mitchell, secretary; Cheryl
Writing to let you know
Thomas, treas11rer; Sue Starr,
COndl!ctress; Linda Kramer, assohow very much I tJppreciate
elate conductress; and Steve Houall the get well cards, letters,
chins, trustee.
·
flowers, birthday cards and
Plans were made for a Halloween
pnyers ·
You made my day and
The annual reunion of the Keller, Rodney and Ruseil Keller. Betty Davisson, Alvin and Barbra
party
to
be
held
Wednesday
night
in
hllped
me on my road to re·
descendants of Jame C. and Marcia Keller, Dale, Jenny, Sara, Tripp, Larry, Patty, Shane and
the basement of the Middleport
EtheUnda Stone Mo&lt;re was held Shanna and Shaine Machir, Betty Grant Orcle, ~e Hager, Kim
Masonic Tempole, 7: 30 to 9:30p.m.
co.r:r,·k all you wonderful
recently at the Rocbtey Keller farm. Lou Dean, George Genhelmf5. Follrod, James H. Eiseistein, A. J. Games will be play~ with prizes to
people!
The Rev. Roy Bookman had grace Gary. Pat, Susan, Aney , and Anna Wilibar~r. Martha and Amy Lee, be awarded and refreshments 1\'tll
MAY GOD BLESS YOU ALL!
with a dinner being enjoyed by lhe Wolf, 'Melanie, Jeff and Lisa Ethel Orr, Rick Koblentz, Dorothy
beseJVed.Membersofthechapter,
Ma E. B11ck
~ famUy members and friends
Stetham. VIrgil and Kathryn Win- Booklhan Call, Joe and Sarah Masons, their families, Demoiay
a«ending.
don. Fred and Bertha Smith. Tucker Blazer. Verna Rose, Dou~ e Hager read a copy of a
Florence Circle, Aland Ruth Moore glas Circle, Roy Bookman , RoMnd
publication ~ The Anna Asbury Springer, Paul Mlore, Kenneth and Debbie Chevalier, Blair Windon.
Stan~ Chapter of the Daughters of
the American Revolution and a
lener dat~ 1892 written by Minnie
Moore Orr and Ethelinda Moore to
Miss M.A Stone. Paul Moore
presented pictures of the generation of the Moore families. The !987
reunion was set t&gt;rthettlrd Sunday
. in ·September at the Rodney !_&lt;eiler
farm.
REGULAR
Anending were Rosemary Rose

~.

.,

=;, =-=~~~

sister-In-law, Mr. and Mrs. Denver
Rawlings, Albany, visited wit h
their cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Talbot, at New Matamoras, on
Tuesday.

OES conducts meeting

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I

..
. PQIDEROSA
. . . . . ....-. .J.1"·--···
......
--POIDEROSA
POIDEROSA.J
1.M,..._..
J.· -""' ~-Spot• (all-ynu-can-eal)!nd bP.ed
potato tan no\ be ustG WRM olhtr

TOTALS .. ..... ........... 24 24 'TJ4 734

~e)

'
· Rev. and Mrs. Artmr Crabtree Joel called at a funeral
home in
a!ten~ the Bishop's Rally Day at Sprbtgfleld d11rtng visitation of the
the First United Methodist churdl mother of Sandi Oliver of Ashvllle.
in Athens on Sl!nday afternoon, Oct. . They also Were at the Oliver home
In AshvBie.
t
"
The October meeting of the
The Arthur Crabtrees vacatb n~
Temple United Methodist Women's for several days In Tennessee
Group was held at the home of where they visited places of
Hazel Stout In Albany. Kaley Interest.
Jordan, presdlent, was In char~
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Jordan spent
and Leah Crabtree gave devotk:&gt;ns. the weekend tn Monroe; N.C. where
The group voted to pay $00 on the they visit~ his brother and sistertuel oU for the church. The !lnal in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Jordan.
payment was mooe on the 1986 Both couples were at Myrtle BEach
pledge of $125 to the Distrtct while they were there.
Treawrer. Cards and letters, vistts
Dale Dye spent a few days with
and telephone calls were mted. his son-In-law and daughter , Mr.
Freda Smith wBI be lnstess for the and Mrs . Clyde Walker in
November meeting and Elizabeth Thurman .
Jordan will have devotk:&gt;ns.
Freda Smith and her brother and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan and

-St:kT:;;;-~TiiS~-f!get-.1

105
107
142
115

Meigs 12 Vinton 'C&lt;)Jnty 10 '
Belpre 55 Alexander :Ill
Wetlstoo 14 Nelsonvllll'-York 6
MIUef 26 Trimble 14
Wahama 42 Federai·Hocl&lt;lng 0 (mn -

•' '

By Cindy s, Oliveri
oatmeal, pl'llne or dried fruit s, .. ·and size of portions from the lunch
County Extk!Sion Agent
oran~ nutbread, brown bread, for a school child or working
Home Economlcs/4-H
banana bread, and muffins for woman.
l!aV!! your !amlly memters . variety.
It will even differ from man to
started compla)nlng about the
Submerge a franldurter, with a man, depending on whether his
same old thing In the lunch box or · string attach~. (dental floss works day's labors are chiefly physical or ,
hag each day? If so, tl1ls week's "In well) into an insula!~ container of. mental. Whatever the size, keep In ,.
The Spotlight" may help yrur
hot &amp; up. Tie tbe ether end of the mind t~ basic lu nch pattecn. This
family to beat the-brown bag blues!
dental floss around the 11m of the way, each lunchbox meal will
Everyone loves a surprise, espe- thermos. Seal and pack.
oont rlbute its fa ir share of protein , ,
dally chlldrm. Lunch can be fun
Here are a few ideas to help you vitamins, carbohydrates , and fats .,
and exciting. ~ some of these get mnch prepared easier.
For a reallunchbox treat, try this ,
ideas In mind when you pack your
Freeze small cans of Juice to pack thr f!" C bread.
. next lunch. Pack a surprise instead . ·with lunch. They make healthful
Three-C Bread
of the same old thing.
•Sipping aitd help keep other foods
2 ~ cups flour; 1 cup sugar; 1
Make a sandwich one day, a cold.
' teaspoon baking powder; 1 teasWash and save small plastic poon bakin g soda; ~ teaspoon ·:·.
salad on another; lncll!de hot or
oold IDup.
containers (lids.- too; from cottage ground nu tmeg; 'h leas):Xl&lt;ln salt; :;: .
Vary the bread, !lllings, · and · cheese, yogurt, and margarine to beatm eggs; 'h cup cookmg oil; 'h" •
combinations.
.
keep salads_and other moist foods. cu p milk; 2 cups ca rrots, shredded;
Cut sandwiches Into &lt;)lffermt
Th save morning time, pack all 1-1!3 c11ps flak ed coconut; 'h cup
shapes: sq11are8, circles, triangles, ooid foods as dlnrier is cleared and maraschinOcherries. chopped. . :·
&lt;r·roU tbem up. A cookie cutter can keep bt the refrigerator until
Stir together flour , suga r, baking •
do a wonderful job!
mornlnll,- Add hot or froze~ items powder, soda, nutmeg. and 'h
Add a snack of grapes or jl!st before you leave.
t,easpoon salt . Combine eggs, oil,
sunflower seeds.
When you have a half hour or so, and milk. Add to dry ingredients;
Tuck in mtes, ·poems, puzzles, most likely·on tl'e weekend, set l!P mix well . Stir in carrots, cooonut ,
comics, and special holiday an assembly line to make a batch of and cherri es. Pour batter iJtto one
napkins.
sandwiches for the freezer. To keep greased 9 x 5-inch loaf pan. Bake in
Use whole grain or enrich~ Ire bread from absorbing fillings, liO degree F. oven 45-50 minut es.
""' breads and rolls. Vary these in-the spr6\d evenly wit~ ' hu'tter or CoollOminuti's. Remove frompan;
lunch from day· to day. Whole . · margsrlne to tbe edge.
cool completely. Wrap and store . ,
wheat, cracked wbeat, rye, en·
Determine the amo11nt &lt;t food~or overnight before slicing.
S:jndy, and Dena Manley, second row, Kr6ta Roush,
rich~ white, pita &lt;r • pocket , each person according to the age,
Did You Know That: Ant s on a
· Joiue Ervin, and back, Kim Calvert, Amy Radekln,
oatmeal and raisbt bread are good size, physical activity, and lndivid· log ate a nutritious snack. Stuff
and Sherry Cooper. Becky Windon Is the advisor.
choices among the yeast breads.
1!81 appetite. The lunch you pack for
celfry 111th peanut butter an d line
Quick breads, made at home and a working man wUi vary In amol!nt up the ants (raisins) on the filling. . ,
used at once or frozen include

. [)inn£rinc/udes baked
potato andsalad buffet
with fresh fruit, fK&gt;t wgetahles and hoo hot soups.

1VC GRID STANDINI!l

P
184
169
'135
116
66
62
19
75
15

..

Carpenter community happeningS.

I
I
WBE , OIL AND FILTER
,I
lubricate suspension, drain oil alii replace fille r usinl Mr. Goodwrenc:h I
oil and AC filler. In this special• insist on usilll quality Mr. Good· I

,

,.

-Beat brown-bag ·blues

MEIGS JAYCEE "Player-of·
the-Week" honors belongs to
Meigs' iJ. ,R. Kitchen, 6-1,
168-pound senior end-safety and ·
captain, for Ids efforts in the
·Marauders' 12-10 TrJ.Valley
Coofereno;e vldory over VInton
County Oct. 10. Kitchen caught
four passes for 64 yards, and
soored the game's winning
touchdown in the final mlnulei

ALLGAMJiS
Team
W L
Meigs .. .. ...... .. ......... . 7 0
Belpre .. .. ... ........... ... 5 2
Vinton ..................... 4 3
Wellston ... .. ,............ 4 ·3
Miller ... ........ .... ....... 3 4
Trimble ..... ............ .. 3 4
Nels-York.. ....... ....... 2 5
Alexander ..... .... ... .. .. 1 6
Fed-Hocking ..... .... ... 0 7

Thursday, October 16, 1986

Page- 5,

competition at Ohio University's cheerleadlng clinic.
Left to right, they are front, Laura Cohh, Susan

standings .

The .Daily Sentinel

'

FmsT IN CONTEST - These Meigs High School

Meigs advances in volleyball tourney

a

Steve M~sSI!r. ·tackle Scott Po.well: quarter mciudlng a M·Oedge In tile
end. Jessll Howard, and end Jeff first, 63-19 1n theseconck41-6-n·the ~
Hoot
_
tl1lrd, and 46-3 durtng the burt h.
Eason remains the Marauder
The Marauders have outgalned
leading rusher with 'Sri yards In 96 their opponents :m!l-1224 Including
ti'lps - (5.5). while Wes Howard a 1327-!m rus~ng bulge and a Ill~
illlows with 249 · yards In 24 702-295 passing advantage. ~lgs
attempts (10.4) and Jeff McElroy l'ias turned tl'e ball over 14 tiines bu1
245 yards bt 41 trtes (7.0) . Fullback come up with 24 qJponent
Paul Dalley h~~2 yards in :11 tries turnovers.
.
(4.9).
Against the R~men, the MaMike Bartrum has passed for 581 rauders' wUI be at fuU stre&lt;tgth.
yards, oompletlng 31 of 81 (38 per Starting 00 offense wUI re -(year
cent) with six Interceptions and five and weight) J . R. Kitchen' (12-168)
touchcjowns. Back·l!P quarterback and BUI Brothers ·( ll·1.60) at ends: ,
(starting wingback) Phil King has ' Scott. Powell (12-:Jl7) and either
thrown only 10 times this year, but SteYe Musser (12•183) or Scott
llascompletedslxforll2yardsand Hanning t12-ll5) at tackles; Jason
two touchdowns, the second TD Bush 112·218) at center; Mike
pass the game-winner ilt ~ vtnton Ba1trum {ll·:a:lO) at quarterback;
County to Kitchen ilr 37 yards.
Paul Oatley (12-189) at fullback;
Kitchen is the cut and dfied Phil King (12-170) al wbtgbilck; and
leading receiver, catchlng~passes HupY Eason (12·169) at tall back.
fnr 358 yards.and !Ow TO's. King
On defense, Raymond Rider
has six re:eptions !Or 'iU yards while (12-194) and Jesse Howard (12·184)
Bill Brothers, Eason, and Donnie at ends: Bush and either Paul Wolfe
Becker hill! three each.
(12-Z,;J) or Po~ll at tackles;
King and Kitchen top the Ma· Dalley and Jeff McEIJ'Oy (10-155) at
rauders bt !hler~ptims with three linebackers; King and Eason at
apiece while Brothers and Eason cornerbacks; [))nnle Becker (12·
have two each. One of Brothers' 152) and Kitchen at halfbacks; an d
was a 96 yard TD run.
Brothers at safety.
Eason, who scored fow touch·
On the defensive side, Jesse
(ilwm it the openlnggame against
Howard leads all tacklers with 40.
Pt. Pleasant leads the scoring with solo stops whUe DaUey (l)mes In
42 points wtlie Dalley, who ha s with 36 _!0ilowed ~BuSh's 35 and
lnoted 16 of 19 extra points, has 31. King wUh 33·. Other totals include
McElroy has ~6 and Kitchen and Eason with a&gt;, McEh'Oy 25. Kitchen
Howard each 24.
an~ Brothers 19 apiece, Paul Wolfe
Meigs has outscored its' oppo· 14, Chris Smith 12 , and Scott Powell
nents by a tall order in eve1y and StevP Tracey 11 eac h.

vljl'Sity cheerleaders took first place In . ~nt

j· TVC

•

SPRAY

ONLY

•

••

~---' --------·-·-,

SWISHER LOHSE

HUMIDIFIER
by Hanlucraft
COOL VAPO*

1 Gallein

S1295

P l•orrll O( y
KtMMttiiMCufl~. I .PII.

CIYirltl R:lfflt. R . ~h .

ROMkl M....nt, R. Ph.

Mon. ttlniS.t, I :OI•.m. tot p.m.

j

WHITMAN
COOKIES .
TRIAL SIZE MINI CUPS

s..nuy 11: 30 hi12 JM•nd s tot .m.

fi'.JII.HRIPTtONJ
-

1. MIM

.

; rllftdly Strvltt
Open Mltlltl till f

PH.tfNtst

PoMeroy , 0 .

Reg; 25&lt;

17

FAcH

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•..................~;;;:::;:::::::-;-::;;-~-::-~-~-;;....................1 .

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Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

''

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

'

Thursday, October 16,

' lt.

198~ .
~

Calenci4r ; ·happenings
THURSDAY
•
MIDDLEPORT - The Middle·
port Cl!Ud Conservation League
wtll meet at 7: ~ p.m. Thursday at
the offices of The 'Ohio Power Co.
The program will be presented by
the staff of the Meigs Health
Department p~natal clinic on the
topic, "Teenage ~ancy".
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
SpringS Health Club wUI meet at
1:15 p.m. Thursday ·at the Rock
Springs Church. '
POMEROY - A free diabetes
clinic for aU ages will be
held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Cen ier in Pomeroy.
sc~eening

numbers. The public is Invited.

"'"SYRACUSEr; roast
The Meigs Asso·
clati:&gt;n i&gt;r Retarded Citizens is
sponsoring a hog roast on Saturctay
at Carletm School In Syracuse.
Advanced tickets may be pur·
chased at Hartley Sooes In R&gt;meroy, and at the Syracuse Dairy Bar.
Serving w!i1 be from 5 to 7 p.m. at
$4.:D pi!' adult and$2.50forchildren
under 12.
Bo\\1-a-lhon
POMEROY- R&gt;meroy &amp;lw~ng
Lanes will be .conducting a bowl-athon during the v.eek of Oct. 31·Nov.
8 for St. Jude Cblldren 's Hospital

.~

.."
I

•

ces will be held at the ad Bethel reillval ser.vl.ces Monday through attend.
Freewill Baptist Church at 7:30 Sunday, Oct.. 26, beginning at 7:30 Hom!JComlng
i,
each evening, Monday through p.m. each evening. The.Rev. EariJ.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Hom '
Saturday with Cbvls Van over as Haggard of the Salem Qiapel U.B. coming will be &lt;bserved at the Stt ·
Anmal session
tbeE'&gt;'angeUst. Therewtll.bespeclal Church of Bremen , will tF the Paul United .Methodist Olurch tn- •
CHESTER - The annual meet· singing by The Grubb Family n evangi!Ust, There will be special Tuwer$ Plalits Sunday. SundaY.:'
tng of the Meigs County. 'F arm . Monday and Tuesday nights; the singing nightly and the public Is school will be held at 9 a.m. wit
Bureau will be held at the Cbes.ter Echoes of Praise on Wednesday · Invited to attend. ·
church services to begip at 10 a.m;
Elementary School Tuesday begin- and Thursday, the Zion Inll Singers
conducted by the R,ev. Don Archer;
nlng with a steak dinner served at on Friday, andtheSptrtualHelrson .Gospl!l !Ulg
A carl)'·in dinner In 'the churctr
7:14 p.m. The Shade River Saturday. The public is Invited to
CARPTENTER - The Mason- basement will be held at 12: ll: ;
GaUia·Meigs Crusade for Cbrlst
Shufflers directed by Gerald Powell attend.
The afternoon JI'Ogram wUI beg!)\
Will sponsor a gospel sing at 7 p.m at 2 p.m. and will feature the gospe
will provide entertaionlent. . All
Saturday night at the Mlunt Union group.. "His - People" from ttw:;
board members and the office have Revival
tickets for the annual session.
POMEROY - The Mount Her· Baptist Church, Carpenter. the Porterfield Baptist Church. Dr.•
tnon United·· Bra hern In Olrist singers will include Kim WUII:uns, Dennis Randolph, an q&gt;tometrtst lli•
.
Qiurch In ·the Texas Community Jtm and Gwinn Cmft, "The Win· Belpre is the pianist. for the gospetl
Revival
GAWPOUS - Revival servl- near fumeroy, wUI be ooidlng nlng." The public is Invited to group. ,
•

with Mrs. Betty Smith serving as
coordlnatcr of the "bo\\1 for Hie"
eampalgn.
·

POMEROY - · Pomeroy Cub
Scout Pack 249 will meet at 7: 30
p.m. Thursday at the Church of
Olrist for its regular monthly
meeting.
RUTLAND- Rutland Olurch ci
God will be making apple butter on
Thursday and Friday at the church
on Ohio 124. For orders, call742·2000
or stop by the church.
SATURDAY

CHESTER- The !aU carnival ci
the Chester PTO will be held at the
school Saturday with a jitney
supper to begin at 5:30 p.m. and
.games beginning at 7. There wUI be
door prizes. a haunted house. fifth
and sixth grade dance, count!;'
sto~e. an auction and games.
·
FROST ·- A hymn sing will tx'
held at the Faith Olapel Church at
Frost beginning at 7 p.m. Saturday
featuring the Gabriel Quartet from
Dexter. The church is three mi les
north of Coolville.
SYRACUSE - A hOi( roast will
be held at the Carleton School from
5 to 7 Saturday. Dinners are $4.50
for adults and $2.50 lor children
under 12. Advance tickets . are
available at Hartley Shoes and the
Syracuse Dairy Bar. The dinner is
sponsored by MARC.
SATURDAY

MIDDLEPORT - Rev. Ca lvin
Minnis will preach Saturday night
at 7:30 p.m. at the Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church In
Middleport.
SUNDAY

POMEROY . - Meigs County
Genealogical Society will meet
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Meigs
Museum. Prof. Mary Bowman wUI
speak on researching First Family
In Ohio data.

· MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs Cou nty
Democratic Executive Committee
will meet Monday night at 7: ~p.m .
at the Carpenter's Loca!. East Main
St., Pomeroy. All interested Demo·
crats and committee people are
urged to attend.
Homocoming
POMEROY - Homecoming will
be obServed at the Morning Star
Unlt!!d Methodist Clmrch Sunday
with church sB"vlces to tFg!n at
9:45 a.m. Sunday school at 10: 45
a.m. will be followed by a carry·in
dinner at 12: 30 p.m.
An alterooon program beginning
atl:30 p.m. wUIIeatured the guspel
group, Shekinah. which Includes
Debbie l:lhnson Powell a former
member of the churc h. There will
be several othe r special music

Reunion held
The 19th annual reunion of the
Samuel Allen Eblin family was held
recently at the Meigs County
Grange hall. The group enjoyed a
covered dish dinner. Pictures were
taken and new officers elected.
Gifts were given to the oldest,
Arthur Eblin. Pomeroy, the young.
est, Kimberly Johnson. Mlddlepor1 ,
and the one traveling the farthest .
Jeanette Barrows, -Athens.

Slinderella meets
Tracy O'Dell lost the most weight
and Betty DUI was runner· up at the
Monday night mrettng of the Five
Points Class of S!tnderella. In the
kids class, Amy Smith lost the most
weight, In the teens class, best loser
was ML~y FostB", and In the men's
class, Olrls Nlools lost the most
weight with Gene Hudson as
runnerup. Receiving special rlbtxms and certificates lor bsing 20
pounds were Dreama Hudson and
Onis Nichols.

Lunch menu
announced
Menus for next week In schools of
the Meigs Local School Dlstrtct )l .
accordance with the uniform lunch
program policy will be as follows :
Monday, sloppy joes, cole slaw,
p:Jtato rounds, oatmeal cookie and ·
mD.k; Tueday, . toasted cheese
sandwich, corn, peach half, and
milk; Wednesday, beef and roodies, green !Jeans, hot rolls and
butter, applesauce . and mllk;
Thul'9day, pizza, peas, fruit salad, '
and milk, and Friday, cook's •
choiCe.

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,__~Ohio Briefs:-· ; . ;. . _.,;·, .Lies

ruined Presser case, laWyers ·say

Church bus overturns; 28 hurt
SPRINGBORO (UPI) - The driver of a chutch school bus klst
control of the vehicle Wednesday, and 28 school chUdrm suffered
minor.injuries when the bus overturned, state polloe i!ay.
The bus, carrying 43 chll.dren ranging In age from (J'e-schoolers to
lOth grade students, was .headed to the RldgeVU!e duistlan Chun:h
when the driver, Annette Colburn of Franklin, lost control oo Olio
ROute 48 near Springboro.
Colburn apparently lost eontrol while turning to bok at a child,
pollee said. No charges were flied·, and the accident remains urxl!r
investigation.
The students, woo suffered mainly bumps and bruises, weretaken
to three area hos~ltals where they were treaim and re~SE!d,

Liver donor sought for infant
Fl..ORENCE, Ky. (UPl) -The grandmother of a flve.month-old
Infant needing a second liver transplant sald Wednesdey !ile has klst
rope that the boy will survive.
.
·
Cincinnati Children's Hospital doctors said It 5 unlikely they will
find a second donor liver in ttme tosavetbe life of Brandon !OObely of
Florence.
"I don't lwlcl any oope now," Jeannie Souder, the baby's
grandmother said. "I did for a while. Just maybe Branc)Jn fin'!
made for this world."
Blood clots caused Mobley's first transplanted Uver to fall
Monday. Mob~~ wa~ born with biliary atresia, a liver disease that
affects the productton.of bile.
·
Physicians also said they have doubts whether the baby Is strong
enough to survive a second transt&gt;lant. Mobley's first donor lver
· came from a !&gt;week-old boy who died In a car accident ln'Calgary,
Canada .
.

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Three youths have been muntl~'~guilty of
compllclty to mu,rder In the July beating death of a 15-year·old boy.
The three, who wUI be sentenoed Oct.l6, could be lnstltutbnallzed
until they are 21 years old. The yruths Initially ·raced charges of
aggravated murder and aggravated robbery In the death of Robert
Cooley. They were convicted In Hamillm County Juvenile (burt
Tuesday.
A lqurth youth. Anthony Watson. 16. faces aggravated murder and
aggravated robbery charges and wlll be !lied as an adult In Hl\milton
County Common Pleas Court.
&gt;

OVER 30
DINETES

4 DRAWER

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

3 youths guilty in beating death

'

i.JAW, GM plant reach agreement
. LORDSTOWN (UPii - United Auto Workers uplon I.JJcallll2
.reached a tentative agreement Wednesday with the General Motors
Corp. on a proposal that wt11 restructure job dassiHcatlons and pay
raises for most workers at GM's Lordstown Bulck.Oids·Cadlllac
plant.
Union President Bill Bowers said the agreement should result In
greater job securtty for the local's 8,500 members . .
"We believe It's a SECurtty agreement to guarantee work lbr our
members for the IV'xt lour years unless market conditions affect us
drastically," Bowers said.
·
The union official said the agreement also would change the
"traditional guidelines" under which the employees have wcrked .
Bowers said the 40 job classifications Ulat now exist would be
consolidated into just four or flve classifications. 1
He also sald the agreement would provide a pay Ialse lor the vast
majortty of the union members.
Bowers declined to get into other specifics tithe dorument untU a
ratification vote Is conducted. He said that process should be
completed within the next 1\Vo weeks.
' .
· General Motors officials in Detroit and the International UAW'also
must give appl'Oval.
Another local union official indlc~ted thl\1 the agreement could
result In a redu~tlon o! supervisory PffSOnnel through attrltkln, but
he sald no union jobs would be lost.
.
Two other UAW locals. In JanesvUle. Wis .. and Leeds, Mo., also
are reported to be working on similar agrrements with GM.

Nuke plant becomes
issue in Senate race

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•

•

. rick and two other . FBI agents , opposed Fr!edrtck 's rmtlons asking
Sl;heme.
Frledrlck's attorneys argued that caused the collapse . of the 1982 tbat statemmts be male tO depart·
department officials had tricked federal investigation of the Teams. men! officials be suwressed and
ters' chief by conspiring to protect that · two !J)vernmenl (J'osecutors
the veteran agent ·lilto providing
Information with promises of lni· P r.es ser from Impending be disqualified trom the case.
Frledrlck, who took a polygraph
munlty; They said the o!flclals were Indictment. .
·
test,
was given Immunity ln seve~~~
"Defendant
Frledrlck's
and
the
embarrassed by their "mishan'
early
llltervtews, the [J'OSECUtors
other
handling·agent_s'
revelations
dling" of the prosecution of Presser
said,
during
which he·omitted key
a year ago and sought to single him caused !he JustiCe Department on
informatkm.
He was aware at aU
July
22,
1985,
to
decline
prosecution
out for blame. ·
·
times
that
if he · gave lals~
But department attorneys said o! Jack~ Presser," said the court
Information, he wwld be subji'!Ct.to
"not even a colorable claim of papers.
The department sajd It drgppect criJ!ilnal p~Eeutlon, J!ey ~!!ld , :
selective prosecution" was subs tan·
The p:~lygrap h [J'OVed he was
-ilated,'and they maintained Fried· the probe after Frledrlck, Martin
McCann Jr. and Patrick Foran said lying, th e documents said.
In later . Interviews, Frledrlck
the FBI had authorized Presser's
was
given no Immunity and
activities.
conreded
that his earllB" testimony
Frledrlck later admitted cover·
"was
·
a
fabrication that was
ing up meetings he held with
destgnecf
to
thwart the [J'Oposed ·
Preo;ser and two others to devise a
strategy for blo&lt;Xing Presser's Indictment against Jackie
Indictment, including lying about Presser." the oourt papgs satd:
The PrESser case was rropened
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The until after the eectkln. And the
giving him FBI permission as an
Fernald nuc~ar proCesSing plant, reason he gave was ·that my informant to pad the union payroll, when questions arooeover the truth
of the reports by Frlectrlck and the
an object of safety complaints for Republican q&gt;ponent this !aU, Rep .
the papers said.
others.
The Wastingloo grand jury
the past few years, now Is part of Tom Kindness, says that having a
Frledrlck, 42. the former head of
that
indicted
Frledrtck is still
the Senate race in Ohio with Sens. hearing on the roverup of that
the Cleveland Organized Crime
deliberating
and
may Indict
John Glenn and Thad Cochran radon retease laSt April would be squad who was llred by FBI
accusing each other of politicking. political," Glenn said in the Director .. William Webster tn Au· McCann and Fbran )l the case.
Presser, Indicted In Oeveland the
Glenn. D.Ohlo. criticized Coch· statement.
gust , was indicted for lying under
ran lor rejecting tits request for an
The radon emissions oa::urred on oath to FBI and Justice. Depart· same day as Frtedrlck ilr embez·
lmme&lt;jlate hearing into the release the day Kindness !Dural the plant. · men! Investigators. He pleaded zllng ml.IID In union funds , was
char[fd with running a scheme to
of radioactive gas at the plant.
Cochran .said he had spoken to lnnore nt In May .
pay
three so-called goost emGlenn accused Cochran of acting Kindness but Kindness did oot raise
His trial rn five rounts of making
ployees,
people who did no work but
with "blatantly p:~lltlcal reasons" the dlj ection of political Impact.
false statements I; g:,beduled [)&gt;c ,
received
salaries tom a Cleveland
- to help Rep. Tbm Kindness, the
"I don't remember his ·saying 2.
Republcan nominee against Glenn. anything about It being p:~litlcal.ll I • The Justlre Department also Teamsters b eat.
Cochran, R-Miss., chairman of told John that ... I. ttink he
the subcommittee with jurtsdlctlon misunderstood," Cochran said .
over Fernald, said Glenn Is the one
As for Glenn's offer to call
~
R51 Ser:onrl Avr: Oprn 9 ' 30 · 5 oo
playing politics.
Kindness ·as a witness, Cochran
Closrd fhur,
"If he wants to have a hearing so said, "That's pretty cheeky, Isn't
GiillipUIIS. OH
446·9):'3 .•
he can publicize what he thinks is It?''
h~ own personal issue ... I didn't
CoChran said the subcommittee
NEW 7 PC:. WOOD ·
agree to It," Cochran said.Wedne· held a hearing In Cincfnnati last
say. "We'll have the hearing later year about Fernald and considered
DINEnE SET ·
on.''
related tegislatbn from Glenn this
COMPARE 10 '4tUO
A Cochran aide said It also would year.
$29995 .'
be difficult to arrange a hearing In
Glenn said Cochran's offer of a
the few days left before Congress hearing after the Nov. 4 e lection Is
SAVE '120
adjourns for the year. Cochran said unsatisfactory.
IIW S ('(. WOOD
Glenn wanted a hearing in
A Glenn spokesman, asked If an
DINEnE'SET
Cincinnati.
lmmedlatehearlngoould have !Fen
Ct)MPAI! 10 '269 .00
"I think he wants to have the arranged in the session-ending
hearing for blatantly political rea· crurich, replled, "It il !Dmettlng ...
$19995
sons," he said.
that could tF done or the smator
SAVE '89
Senators usually treat each other would not have suggested it."
with decorum but Glenri, in Issuing
The Feed Materials Production
a statement. took the unusual step Center has been a key element in
A Bed and a
of critiCizing Cochran by nam~. as nuclear weapons [J'od\iCtklnsince it
well as Kindness, a congressman began operating in · the 1900s.
Bedroom In One
With Two urae Drawers Undtrneth Bed
from the Cincinnati area.
Fernald employs about 1,200
"Specifically. the Republican workers and m&gt;lds uranium metal
'Chairman ... Sen. Thad Cochran into fOI1ll$ that are used by other
told me this morning that no plant&amp;to produce plutonium and to
SAVE S60
bearing . will be held on Fernald generate electricty.

NEW YORK (UPI) - A group of 55 Americans, Including
Youngstown, Ohio, developer Edward DeBartolo, were named
Wednesday as recipients o! the Ellis Island Medals of fboor.
The medals, presented by the Statue of Llberty·E!Us Island
Foundation, are designed to honor "distinguished members" of the
various nationalities that make up the United States, said
spokesman Larry Weinberg.
The foundation wUI award~ medals at a reremony m Ellls Island
Oct. 27 as part of the Statue at Uberty's centennial. he said.
The first group sf 25 recipients was named last Monday,.
Those receiving the awards were chosen by the National Ethnic
Coalition of Organ~ !Ions. which scrrened some 15,1ID nominations
received from the eneral public. Weinberg said.

OF

$19888.

The Daily

•

By LORIS~
. WASHINGTON (UPl) - The
Justice Department has told a
federal court that Its tlr5t investlga·
tlon of Teamsters ~;'resident Jackie .
Presser collapsed because of lies
told to prosecutors by now·flred
FBI agent Robert Frledrlck.
. The department, fUing In u.s.
D!strtct Court Wednesday, deemed
"fatuous" a motion by Frledrtck to
dismiss his indictment on charges
o.f lying to prosecutors_ probing
Presser's role in a payroll-padding

Youngstown man wins medal '

lOO's

STARTING AT

Sentinei~Page~i

Thursd!ly, October 16, 1986

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-·--...... ..-' .....
·~

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HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER"

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. . . --f·· ···' ,....,..,,......... ~----:: -·

»-

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�•.

Page 8-The Daily Senti Mil

~-· Local · Briefs:-·· -....,
Mayor's court handles 20 cases
Twenty caiies were processed Thesday nlght In the court o!
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
.
Forfeiting bonds were Reva Walker, Rutland, $46; William White,
Middleport, $14; Theresa Rlfe, Oleshlre, $15; James Carsey,
Middleport, $48; Richard Bearoo, Pomeroy, $48; David File, _
Reedsville, $50; Charles Sullivan, West Columbia, W.Va., $43;
Kenneth Marklns, Reedsville, $46; Ro~r Hubbard, Syracuse, $1!;
David Sigman, Mlddlepot1, $51; Paul Whaley, Long Bottom, $45;
Pamela Siders, Huntington, W.Va., $45, all posted on speedlrig•
cl!~s; Antl!ony Bentz, Racine, $63, squealing tires; Cll!ford
Barrows, New Plymouth, $43, stop sign vi&gt;latlon; Tim Jenkins;
Pomeroy, $45, speeding; $63 expred plates and $63, nil operator's
· license.,
Fined were Charlotte Patterson, Pomeroy, $41! and oosts.
speeding; Sandra Gilland, NeY&lt; Haven, W.Va., $43andoosts,lllegal
turn; Steven Gardner, Shade, $00 and oosts, no . financial
responsibility; $:!i3 and costs. leaving tre scene of an accl~nt, and ·
$163andcosts, reckless operation; Mark Fry, Mason, W.Va., S25and
costs. and Ronald Mast~rs, Columws, $48 and oosts, both on
speeding charges.

Kaiser losses decline in third quarter .
. Kalset; Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp. reports that Its net losses il
the third quarier and first nlne
months r1 1986 ~lined sharply
tram year-ago levels, due to
Increased fabrk:ated aluminum
production and shipments as well
as continued reductions. In aluminum division operating costs.
In the third quarter, the corpora·
tlo.n had a net loss at $2.2 million or
_ffl cents per common sha re,
compared with a loss r:l. $21.1
million, or 50 cents a share, In the
same pertod of 1985. These results
lnclud~ negative tax provisions of $2
million In the 1986 quarter and $13.3

Notices of appeal have been filed In Mags County Common Pleas
Court In the cases(/. MlnnleThornton, Langsvllle, against tre Meigs
Local School Distlict Board of Educatbn, and Charles WUllarnson,
Rutland, against the Meigs Local School District Board of
Education. The court has accepted the resignat bn of Roy Robert Vaughn as a
member of the leading Creek Conservancy District. Karen Clark
has been appointed by the court to romplete Vaughn's unexpired
term on the Leading Creek board.
In ot~r court matters, an agreement has been reached in tre case
of George D. Lemley. et.al., against Ruth Pauline Thompson, et.al.,
regarding property In Salisbury Township, and City Loan and
Savings Co., Timonium, Md., has been granted a judgment o!
$4,542.37 from Keith Cleland, Middleport.

Hallaween party date corrected
Pomeroy's Community Halloween Party, sponsored ~ tiE
Pomeroy Chamber r1 Commerce, wlll be reid Thursday, Oct. ll, and
not Oct. 31 as was reported in Wednesday's account of Thesday's
regular chamber meeting.
Activities on the Pomeroy parking lot will get underway at 6: 30
P-m. with music by the Meigs High School Band. ·
The party is being coordinated by chami:Prrnembers Paul Gerard
and Tom Reed.
Donations for the party are-needed.

EMS units answer four calls
•

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday; Syracuse at 7:52 a.m. to the Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Kitty Lowe to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
8:34 a.m. transported Paul Smith from the Middleport levee tD
Veterans Memorial Hospital; ~ddleport at 9:50 a.m. to South
Second Avenue for Lena Bailey to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport Fire Department at 6:06p.m. to a fire at an abanctlned
bouse on Leading Creek.
· ·

A coal miner from Point Pleasant
today won $5.6 mUllan In the West
VIrginia Lottery.
Glen Stanley; 51, was the last of
eight contestants to spin the lottery
jackpot wheel.
No one had won a jackpot since
May 2nd when Gloria Taggart of
Beckley won $1 .3 million.
Before spinning the wheel, Stan·
ley had said if he won he would buy
a new tv use, car and perhaps start
his own business.
Stanley was emotio nal . even
be!bre splnnlngthewheel, and even
cried. Afterward, he stood almost
paralyzed in disbelief. His family
rushed out to hug him andjoin In his
good fortune.
Stanley and his wlfe, Helen, have
six children and twograndchlldren.
He works for Southern Ohio Coal

By United Press International
Vice President George aush ·
visited Ohio to promote Republican
candidates and left with an €!1dorsement of his own for the next
presidential campaign .
Rep. Delbert Latta, whose reelection campaign was the focus of
Wednesday's visit to Bowling
Green, said Bush Is quallfled to
become the next president
"Our speaker oonight Is probably
morepreparedtobecomei&gt;resldent

Genealogical society to meet
Meigs Genealogical Society will.meet Sunday, 2 p.m .. at the Meigs
Museum.

Hymn sing slated for Saturday

Friday night's football game between Meigs and Rock Hlll wUI
regln at 8 p.m. Instead of 7:30 p.m. as was announced earlier.

Sale committee meets Monday
The Meigs County Sale Connmittee will hold a meeting on M:mday,
7:30p.m . at the oounty extension offi ce. Final reports for 19!liwlll be
given and plans will be made for 1987.
Sale committee meetingS are open to anyone who oold a market
llvestoct animal at the fair, plus their parents and advisors. New
members who plan to sell an an !malin 1987 areal so Invited to attend.
For more Information, call the extension office. at 992·6696.

Trust fund applications accepted
Applications for Children's Trust Fu nd monies are now being
a~cepted by the Meigs County Children 's Trust Fund Advisory
Board with t~ deadllne 'for such applications !l!t for Nov_ 10. ·
The Children's Trust Fund proVIde"s monies to reduce chlldabuse
and n~lect substantially in lu ture generations by providing
prevention efforts In every Ohio county. Allocatbn for Meigs County
has been set at $10,1XXJ with $9,700avallab le for the project (I" [I"Ojects
to be funded .
uri~r the regulations governing the lund, grants may be made to
public or private agencies or schools br the ~q:ose ri establishing _
child awse and child neglect prevention programs.
Applications may he obtained at the office r1 tre Meigs County
Commissioners at the courtbouse.
A public hearing for applicants and Interested pa rties wUl be held
in the offtces ri til' Meigs County JuvenUe Court In the courthouse at
7:30p.m. on Nov. 17.
Members of the Meigs County ChUdren 's Trust Fund Advisory
Board are James A. Diehl, John Riebel, Edward Banels, Carl Hysell
and Carol TannehiU.

Unstable dynamite discovered
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) About 1,300 people remained away
from their homes and businesses m
the city's east side today as
firefighters attempted to neutralize
WO pounds of unstable dynamite
dlsoovered in a storage shed.
Pollee ctflcers found the dynam·
Ue that "oouldgoat anytlme"ln the
self-storage shed Wednesday afternoon and I:Pgan evacuating people
tram businesses and apartments
1m yards.In all dlrectbns from the
shed.
Mayor Dana Rinehart ~Jared
tre area In a state r1 e,merJJ!ncy.
Evacuation centers were set up
at two nearby schools, but mly
about 50 pwple spent the night In

the renters, a Red Crtlls spokes·
man said. Offlclals said other
evacuees apparently stayed with
!rlends or relatives.
Ammg the evacuees were 96
residents of tre EastlaD&lt;I Care
Center nursing home. The rmstly
elderly residents were transported
to hospltals.or other nursing homes
In the area wltiDut lncl~nt,
offtclals uld.
A group IDme boustng 25 ITII!Il·
tally retarded residents also was
evacuated.
The ~mmlte, In a ct&gt;zen ~
pound cases, was stackal In the
4-~-4 bcker. Highly apl01lve
nttroglyoerlne had leakal from tHe
&lt;IYnamlta, which was manufac·
lured lli 19'78, officials said.

•

"com.

of the United States than anybody lri
history," Latta said.
Bush, who also spoke at a
fundra lser in Uma, told nearly 850
people at Bowting Green State
University that America 's strength
and pride are making the world
safe.
He said the United States and tre
Soviet Union remain close to an
agreemen t on arms reduct ion as a
result of last week's me!t~g In
lcj!land.
"As a result of hls meeting, we
are now. In my oplnlon, closer than
ever before to agreements that
could lead to a safer. world," Bush
said.
Bush also spoke -on behalf of ·
gubernatorial candidate James
Rhodes and called the·eiectlon of
both candidates Important to Republican Party's ef!brts to wntrol
government spending.

'

Prize unclaimed
CLEVELAND tUPI) -The top
prize In Ohio's Super Lotto drawing
went unclaimed Wednesday night,
Increasing the jackpot to at least $10
million for nelit week's game.
There were no tickets sold 1Isdng
aU six of the num bers drawn
Wednesday nlght, a lottery rom, rntsslon spokesman said today, The :
winning numbers were 2. 21, :Ill, 35,
40 and 44.
AltiDugh nC&gt;one cl3imed the top
prize, 172 players picked fi ve d the
numbers to win $&lt;&amp;! eac h. Also,
7.Jl9 players chose !bur of the
numbers, wlnnlng $44 apiece.
There were 121,394 tickets sold
with three of the numbers. Those
tickets are worth $3 each.

I

Ohio weather
&amp;uth Central Oblo

·Becoming mostly cloudy oonlght,
with a low In the low 40s.
Decreasing cloudiness Friday, with
highs between 55 and 60.
The prohabUity of preclpltatklnls
near zero today, 20 perrent tonight
and near zero again Friday.
Winds wUI be from the southwest
at 10 to 15 mph today, beromlng
northerly at 10 to 15 mph late
tonight
Ohio Exten~d Forecast
Slllurday ~ough Monday
Fair lhrougll tre period, wHh
highs ranging from tre upper OOs to
middle 60s each day. Overnlght ·
lows wUI ran~ from the mid :JJs to
the mid 40s.

Veterans Memorial

Public Notice

Admissions

....

Kitty Lowe,

Shop
Bahr Clothiers
For Narne Brand
Merchandise For
Men and Women

tr"'"'

"'"'•*

-••llu-

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT

beh•••

PorrteJW.
.
Dladlrqes · - Lawrencr Scar·
beny, Laven!a Hayman, RDy
Miller, William Whitlock.

8

Public Sale
· &amp; Auction

OFF RETAIL PRICE

Attomoy for Fa..,..
lltrnk &amp; Bank O.o
110118. 23, 30, 31c

MISCfllANEOUS, ANTIQUES &amp; COWCTAILES
SUNDAY, OCT. 19r 1916 at 12:00 Noon

At The Dolphus lurke Farm

tll!CTIONS: 4 Mil• tiiA,p...hloorHfllowoy-otiAtlsany.,

11. 143,thon ,.,...,.,.,.._.,co.toL 1•16niftulf
Itt. 1 111 t43 tloon Co. Ill. 1.

ITEMS OFFERED FOR SfU WI.L BE; Old poplar wardrobs,
meat block, set ol Bentwood ice cream chairs. round oak pe·
desta l table, sets of chairs, stands, rockers, ch~d's rocker,
washstand, 40's secretary, oak secretary,child's rolltop desk
(rough). wicker fern stand, old sled, iron bed, oak table-top
showcase, ad trunks, Alii! din lamp withcol batt blue bottom,
!Jue and white salt glaze saH jar, Indian 1111tery and Indian
pictures, buggy sea~ granite pieces licluding brown and
white, copper kettles, depression Ill ass, I pc. Roseville and
Weller, beaded purses, ~d cameras, tin type picture and pic·
tuoe frames, milk can and cream can, old bottles and can· ·
ning jars, stone jars and jugs Oar~ and small), crocks, car· ·
bide lights, kitchen pieces including cherry pitter and ice
cream scoop, miner's light, hay knife, corn sheller, planes,
wood bowls, horseshle hammer, iron kettle, iron slcillets,
blacksmith Iorge, ilr!l! anvil, SIUsage press. sctles, irons,
pot helly stove, iroolaundry stowe, horse hames, hom cot·
lar, good western saddle, 2 wheel lawn cart, 2 wlleel uMty
trailer IS'KB'I. 3 point d1awbar br tnctor.
ALSO: Min i1bs11 cut ioo ctlvary pltc111nd soldlan, old
dolls, 110rt mlnlatum. llnr.
noorecollectlbles too
numerous to mention.
1974 FORD PICKUP TRUCK F·100
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: This~ a nice sale wilh good collecta·
bies. Bring ywr lawn chair and enjoy the 111ction.
TERMS DF SAL£: Cash 111 dtac:k with Positive 10
Rhlltlanll Awlltblt

Landstrom's
ORIGINAL
BLACK HILlS GOLD

••Y

POMEROY

H2·2084

TYs, Antt1111a1 ·

- LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

SateRite Sales
lnstallatio•
S."lc•

.

a:

·:l:i

Electronic Organs
Mobile service ·

Licensed Clinical Audiologist .

~

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-66111
417 Sectllld Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

614·143-5248
IIASO"AILE •

.tin

THE QUAUTY
·PRINT SHOP

. ACCENt

FENCl CO.ANY ·
PH. 991-6931
. Afttr SCill

F•l A" y,, ,,lltllf fi""
PWS: Oflico SuPI'i• &amp;

741·2027

ftlfnitvr1, Wodditg

...,.,k
StiOjlps,

oMGr....,.lon

Slalion~~y,

Signs,

Ru~•

Copy StnkK, Etc.
2 55 Mill II., MWdloport

.

"frH fs.tima~s"
1Mtalla1iall Aftl111ble

104

•••

·-·oy

BOGGS
SAUS &amp; SDYICE
U. S. RT. 50 fAST
GUYSYIWr OHIO
Authoihod John Deoro,
Now H...nd, lush Hag
· Farm Eqlijllltont
Dealer

F•,. e,.,,.....

.

Ptttt
&amp; Se
.

'

•· . ..,

AUCTIONEER: IODfiEY HOIEIY-c91·7231
Auctlo-:

upon a J_.mort! ... do.... being
No.
88-CV-~. In tlliil Court. t ...
ollw for lllo, altho fnMtt door

c..

oftheCourthowooln PontiiO'(,
Motga Cwnty. Ohio, 111 1ho
21• day of Noo•olbtt, 19811,
a10 :15A.M. tlotfollowtng
IIndo ond l a r - loca1ed
an · 81811 ' Route 33, Bu-·
..,..,, Sloado. Ohio 4117711:
1n tho T_,.,. of
Bedford. Caurdy of Mligo ond
s- "' Ohio. 11-w11: ,
In Ohio C.....IIIY'I Pur·
dt- beginning four 141 oodt
of lite w1tldt ....
into ...... lllvor it 1ho ~·
.of~em; . -.lhl-...
part 'of Soc1ion 17. Town 3.
R0119113 Hbtlntllho-_,_ofolat-11&gt;
Wlliom Judoon b¥ LMoy
Jane """*north loa-·
whol'l • tno nrnnilg w11

leDon•ld-596-4405

8

YOUNG'S

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

CARPENTER

.Balhan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·62-15 or 992-7314

P-oy, Ohio

)rei mluthe " " " ' - of tho bam; than"" 11 o
creek; - thance it a -.oty

d-otowntho ....tatho
IOU1h fino of' Ollld tot, -4oodllldw.-eal
beginning. oont1lnlng one
acr&amp; moN or - .
Atoa dw folowitg 1nct of
lind ...,_ it Sactlon 17,
Town 3, R0119113 altho Ohio
CompenY' l Purch .. e~ In
T~ of - r d . Meigs
County, Ohio, baglnnlrtg 8t 1
.... 180 .... of lito
..........
of lind
by W, C. ' H.,.
1D
Leroy Jonoo: tlton"" 1111
rodt 1D.a oomor; lwicelllllilll&lt;a:-..,_ ...
·wil ) I l l - . . - ........ of 1hl btm ownod ..,
Maolotao Ewing. thence-to
the h ...... north to
the .,.._ of lrlghrlng. Wlt.....t by I block wlinut12 lndt• In dlarn •• 1 - g
narlh 47 dog- by 11r1
rno(fno1lc noodlo., 127 . . .
..__ ....._In ,- - - - - - . . ••
.....
of told SIICIIort. 17, Town 3,
R0119113 •d - M I '!iof

nDf'l.....

F•rm

.

ANNUAL MEETING

CHESTER GRADE.
SCHOOL

Tues., Oct. 21.
1986

. SER~CE
We can repair and rt'!
core radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .
PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middl1port. Ohio

7:14

STEAK DINNER
ENTERTAINMENT,
DOOR PRIZES
ADULTS 13.50
CHILDREN 11.00
EVERYONE WELCOME
992·2181 FOR
TICKETS OR
RESERVA nONS

1-13-tfc

PLU.ING &amp; HEAnNG ·
Now l.aallifll: .__

161 North Socantl
Mitftloport, Olio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We Cllt'Y Flllling Supplill

Pey Your Cable 8r

Phone BHis Here

..,.,.r-' IUSIIISS PHONE

UKE
DIAMO.NDS

16141 Hl-6550

tisiDam PHONE
(6141 HI·

. NOTICE
Tho Mligo Caumy Board of
Ro..dotloMO.. I ;r
lltllt1ol 01
wit hold •
pollltlc '-'"0 111 tho Molgt
Cau""'laordofMoortiiA-·
I

BLACK WALNUTS
Sta~~ Price.M.. $801
P1lr HundrMI Pounds

.....

.. .

=

oo-

Real E1t1te ·General

After Hutting on
Hammon• Hutter

SEPT. 29-NOY. 8

Jua1 Bring your Block
Wolnula 11111 in 1he hull
to

NEWELL'S SUNOCO
.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New llomtl Built
"Free Estimat•"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-1860

No Sunday Calls .

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
·SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; AWUUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complola Ramodttlng
Roofing of all Typeo
Worked In home oreo
' 20 yearo

''Free Eatimatn''

CALL COLLEC.T:
Ph. (614) 843·5425
11 -15-88

.DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FI~L DIRT .

AUTOMA11C
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

1111.••r AVI•
POMEIOY, 011.

190

Clsootw, Olslo

PH. 992-9949

985-3350

lab lartonr Ow111r
9/ 27186/ 1 mo.

.....Sat. .....

s,..

9-22·16·11110.

AllGS CO. HUMANE
SOCIETY HAS IEAUTIFUI.

IOmNS alii CATS FOR

.,i.. r.

ADOPnoN

ssoo ,•

lncludts Wooniod MOd first
lniOculllians
HALF COST of SPAY/
NEUTER II tin ~ Adoption
Balanco Paid monthly 1o
Hu1111ne Society

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
.STLVAIIIA

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON IIEF.IGERATott _
•SATQUTE SAW &amp;SERVICE

· Wt !leo AFIHTI•
Shp Ttthltltt

•DIIIf

RIDENOUR

l.ot:ated at 509 McN•I AYIIIue, Point Pleulllt, W.VI.
WATCH FOR SIGNS.'
Afll'IQU!S: 9 piece Mllhof!IL'Y D.R suite, llllnut .-tllole6Z' ietYtl
.d..'&lt;! Cir. 1870,Ovot Mohofiii'Y tJtlle, Elfty Sheraton Chat Cherry &amp;
Walnut 18Jl.IS.W, &amp;oil W1itut 11111tie top d'OSI caovod puis cir. lB«&lt;
lrolco Style, Walnut Rope bod cannon bill ~. ~ t.lly

cloti'I!S. antiq~ purses end hats, lrientat box, dd lnnlndmuch 1111111.
HOUSEHOLD: F""ch Pouvilal llfa, Ia! nice, wing bid&lt; d'M,' 2
tno!wood upiD!steed dl!irs, cherry marble insert rotlee tllbte, 3 tAd
tlbtes, brass br lamp, Oriental lamp, Whirtpaot fllrterlllr, Yollrtpaot
washer and ayer, ~ble and lour c11!irs, Queen Annellolll. cedar d1est,
maho!IIIIY Illite, lle!ressm d1est. birds !YIO rnapte~Vdcer, IDfl.50 piece
""'~i mMeriat, ltretd, butbos, zjppers, !&lt;ism, doilies. beds;nld,
lllle &lt;ilthes, J.nps, lap nb!, lidurelr..es, brass'edae~ (lir
Cill!oone vase's ~ngar jlr illl(le are yotlow and bile, PMre, )In~
~81Sion, nmw.re e- warwick dolna. Umoda hnc:t doinl.
l'ltotlo~ china, Qltlft !lie Bowl, £mpire dllna, tm111nt biM\ cltlna
bMOy !l!t tll'lllite - · 3 piece sMI II* set. Ntdoo!n -... !IllS and
flit~ b¥11 alllliflllltltiS, llllios, brief casas, MOd much mn •
AUCIIOIIEEn IIOTt: Th~ i! one o1 ttvl cbnei euctl!ns !Ill o1
IIIMd. The llrniture is io file CIJIICitiJn •d there's oo Junk .in tlis
auction, )110 don't •nl to miss ttols one.

TERMI: C:.Jo or-Qiocolr wllh prap1r 1.0.
NDirt~pt It tDrnaldlcllorlaelofp l; 'T·

c.-

114.-.
'

•

Glv.ltw•Y 1 flm•l• .,.._
-poter. Colt '8 14·441·U14.
8 wkll. old ........ Wll-1doQI . 8 ' monlll old CG*Or
ap ..lll, 1r1o11 ..... 11111 . · ~
114-317·0011 ' . •
1oa.dl fluffy ldnen.t , 1 wk1. Ghl,

litter tr.an.t,

10 ehld,.,

UM

troolittor • lood with-· 1:41

814 ·448·11 . . 1ftor IPM.

,

""'" 11o1ro11 • w1uo. old blaliO
~·· puppy, mi.lttd lned. cuM•
to IIO"d ho.... mly. Col 11•·
446·3718 .

c.-

FrH ldttlnl 8 wltl. old .

8t4-448·3111 .
Young

block dog with till
mtrttlngt. 13 .. 14 am......
Vtrv ployfuH. Coli 814·:141·

18t8.

-

a wk. old bltck pupp6n 111
ttN-v to good ho ..... Cd
8~0 p.m. 8t4-849·211U .

•'=

2 elwen WHk old allaD Wtt••
to give IW.y. fltmlttt. C•l

8t4-742-24H .

Fem•" BliCk Ltbrldor to give
.WWrl ID good homt. 3·yn;. 0111.

Het ,_,_,., Call 114 -liiS3366.

4t33.

.

1 couch lftd chelr to tlvtiW8y.
elso I . .ytd, whitt Cl1, C•l

8t4-982 ·7309 .

Mete blond ¥ • IIJMIII ta
vo•d homo. 304·871·2221 . ,
4 rnikld brNd pupp'-, 304-

875-4828 .

Deep treue 300 •· end 1-..
....._304·871 ·2104. .
1 18·rrionth old femelec.t, gaad
hunter. Cell efter &amp;. 304·f751281.
31cltt
....calico.
2 bl ....
-eM,
·
1 ferNie
1110- mother

2 111 biKk kitt'"'· mM and
female. Jen1. 30'·171· 2417 .

8 Lost and Found
rew~rd

•100

for rftlm or

intormatlon l_.ing to the whe~
reebou11 ot male bllek lib .• b•

it OJ Wh~e Rd. 1r01. Col
814·441·0370.
FOUND 8 • - hound. Col to
ld..tlly. Col 814·441·1314.

W-.

LOST - whlll, blocll• ..,
r.t aal..r, 1hy dog, N MM oal
-304·871·11484 or 304·171·
8844 . R-erd 1110. Loot ....
Ambralil.

7

Yard

S1le

······-GiiDTpotri·-··-··· -~
&amp; Vicinity
-

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

Flvo F...,lly

Ym • • Thun. •

Frid 1'1- 8tto hauoo '"' 11ft '"'
Roulh L..ne. Ch.....,t off Rt. 7;
All tttm1 prlold

tow.

.

G1rogo Silo AI -

211 -.t

...n. Frldoyi7, CIIIOI Metolorro
Dri¥o.

3FimllyPorlil &amp;•Tiouro..FII:
Jet. of old 110 • Rt. 114 In
Port..-.
F~.

Yord Solo Thurs. l

'81

Port11111Du1h Rd . Toya. b111oo.
hlndlnllde bllll«t.

ocfu• ..

• craa otltdl. ,__.,tum~
ture II mile,

81Htn1r'11 .... 212 Je:lwcn

1'1111. Thurs. • Frldoy 10·1.
Colecovltion .,..... . .. . .;

- ..

ILIPPit' ection oontroltrl• ,.. .
con1ntler 10 o-ne c.rtrtdg• • ·
- d . . . . . . ,... - . Ml OOit • • 20 IU ,_, ltlrd

-...........
dotlolroe • ..-

nuah more.

..,

-.

Pb"' eon.....,. 4tli-..,
lol1. Tools, fall - . -

~llorv. 111

ot c.... • ,_·

H-,._
dllihol, blue, 4 Fomlly Y1nl

· · --

• • Room ~
romonto. 2 mi. OUI 211.

-

a--,o... 11.

Yerd .... NIW tleml. ,..._.....

fetorlc,
- N""""""
" -"
&lt;II . Fri. ~~llot. Her.....

Aold

•

1t

c......,.

CUSTOM IIILT .

HOIMS &amp;GAUGES
"At Reasonable Prien"

PH. 949·2801

or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO ·SUNDAY CAU.S
4-16-'•

ICUT OUT FOI IUIUit£ USil

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

.• 985-3561

All M1ku

•WIIhlrl •DllhWIIIhln

•R•ng11
•Rofrolgwalorl

•Drv•• •Frttltrl

PARTS end

SE~IVIC:E

·

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

·

Hysell
Garage

.

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

Van:lnleOct. 17 •11. 4twu11f '
loolow Sld111 Jowaky, Gal. '

Forry. Loll of-·. tools.

·REPAIR
•1ee T•
..•-•t~lll
"
PH. 992-5612 .
01'

992•7121

,.

Yard lele, 111 4th &amp;t. New .,
Htv.,, W. Y1. 1:30 111'1 to 7. Fri t
ond lot Oct. 17·11.
1

r...11y

- · - ........

lllult ..ddll'*·
..........
·
lumloure,
. . .. ·
,~onct.

d -kOrtvo. •

W1ntld To Buy

::::~:"",..""'-- .
Jim Mink CM¥..01111 Ina.

3 Announcementa

11. 124, ,_,,Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

.

0004 • • · · -·

·· -~--- p-f . Pieiiiiiinf ·· · ·· :
lit Vic in lty

Sot17-II . Mo

A'llllllilli'l'llll nh

-~· - -~ --·

New Lime R-. Rutllnd. Thur.•
orod Fri. Oct. 11th lnd 17111. Loot'
thla yter. Little of ....,..,,~Ia.:
114· 742· 21102.

.9

Roge~

:

oma10y

------- ••• • · - - --

BISSELL
BUILDERS

_

.... ···p·· .................... ··-

10/ 5/ 1 mo.

10 a.m.

m.5715

1148.

Yora 8ole Fridoy17tli, IOOrnlq
11th. JUft off t41 .., Ltnaotr\

CALl 992-6505
992·5427 or 992·.3026

OWNERS: Lynn DIISt &amp;Nancy .IMII
AUCTIONEER: Rick PeiiSOit IIE6-I6

1 - l e r•bll.

Yerd Sato ~ri . Oct 17, 10·7 Hill
mile out OODfl• C - Rd .. Dlf
Rt 7

PUBLIC AUCTION.

m-5430

*llOWN IN
INSULAnON

Notice

two·lhlrde 12/ Jitho - • " '
on 917 Annuli
.......
.
.._ for lite Molgt
TERMS OF SALE: Coo1t on CauntylaordofM101111R-·
of ~ Bu...._ 111 dodoor/Oevotop- Dlodlhrf
- .· rat ,._,
OCCIUMI 19811
- . -±I"" . A oopy al -•• ~
~"""" Amuol Aallon -wit
......
- . t E. Ftank. be 01 . . . for , ......., by
"' Mligo lniM- poraofto 8t lite
C
~to
MligoCountylaordofMonlol
ounty,
""
Allor.llon/Oevllo-101
01 ......._ ..,__
AlDougla
tOrneV W.forLittle.
Tho From-•=-..
.._. '
lltrnk. Savi1go Co.
IMWs~ ••••·
(10) 18, 23. 30. 31c
Supu~•••Octobtr 9, 1911
110) 18, 11C
•

a. AuctiQn

*VINYL SIDIIG
• AlUMINUM SIDING

1/ 11 / llo

RADIATOR

:-0:,

October 18, 1986

Kilt., PlY ................
C!Oiorod , 8 wk old 1rolnod. Cell814·441·• •· • ·

304· 878-1289 .

A"-"" Doocl: VII!~~~~~ dodoor/010 I 1 Ola258, Pogo 889, Motga
~~
R
A P-P A A I·8 E 0 A T Now•r... 10, 11811 ot 230
:
•s.ooo.oo. Tho ..I ~~ :-re:rofm•=
CIIIIIOI be aotd for laoo .... ,_.,.. •
~

Public Sale

Factory Choko
12 Gauge Shotg11ts

4-15-'86-fc

s-.-

In . . . .

GIVMWI'(

,t.

SERVI~E
NOTICE OF SALE
.
- Addon• tnd remodeling
By vir1ua ol81 Order of Sale
-Roofing and guttt• Work
· -..eel out of 1!11 Common
- Concme wo.t
Plooa Caun of Meigs Caun~y,
-Piumbtnt end tlectriCIII'
Olllo, In lite .... "' Tho
work
F•nwo a.. &amp; Blllllngo
(free Eotlmolllj
C0f111111Y, P1olndfl, w. H Contoy, et at.. Do'-!idlolll.

Daugl01 W. Little,

PUBLIC AUCTION

•VISA
•DISCOVER
•MASTERCARD
. •LAYAWAY

FREE HEARING TESI'S WEDNESDAY$
Cl CollfU1erized Heari" Air Se~on
z Swim Molds • Interpreting Setvices ·

4

M•t• a..
dog. 1 ...., Did.
Gentle, timid. Good • · c..
8t4· 886· 4453 or 814 ·111·

Public Notice

'*"

20°/o

J;"

· Public Notice

-NOTICE TO BIDDERS
NOTICE OF SALE
NaTICE OF SALE
The Gattia-MeigaCommun- Bv wtuo of 'I' Order of Sale
By virtue of arOrderoiSIIe
ity Action Agenc:y, NOfth S• illued OU1 o1 tha Conmon illued OU1 of tho Co..,_
cond and Eoot Moln Sir_, l'leoo Coull of Moiga County, P1oM Caun of ~~ Collnty,
Cheohiro, Ohio 46820, a non- Ohio, In the · of 11re Ohio. 11 the . . . of Dilmond
profit organization, Is lllolng f...,.. Btrnk. &amp; Slllllngt Savi19' &amp; IDtn Co1111ary,
-led bids as of Oc- 8. eon.&gt;IIIY' ard Bonk One of Succeuor in lnloroot to
1986, on the following """i- Athens, NA. Plain-. vo. Athans County Slvlngo •
cte~ ton cab andchaolil.wlth Mlrjorio Gaetl
Marjorie t.oar A810Ciatir!n. Ptalnlilf, w.
cu body, spec~IC!Itlon, 11 Feny. out .. Dofendonll. ~ . G...,_ · A. Googh•. o1 ot•.'
follows: ·
.
J ...
~ ..
do~
-~
a u,.R*II "'"'•n· "" •-· llofendonts. ...,n aJu.-.11'111t
1.0net1ltoncabllldch•· beilgCM8No. 86-CV-198,1n therain ... -.being Cue
' lis w/ wbe body. (Wheel baoe llllid Court. t witt oHow fo1 ..... No .. 811-CV·66. it llllid Court. I
to accommodale 1• II. box)
111 1hl fnMtt door of the wil olfor for - . o11hlfr1Mtl
2. Heavy duty alternator. Courtbouaa ' in . Pomeroy, door of the Ooo-.oo In
-. " 3. Four (41 opoed
Moiga C,..nty, Ohio, on 11e Pomeroy. Molal County,
. mi~&amp;ion.
_
21o1 day of Nov.-, 1988, Ohio. on the ·2111 cloy. of
· 4 . 350-360 cubic inch V-8 o1 10:30 A.M. tha folowlng Novrmbtr, 1988, at 10:00
·engine. ·
IIndo ond laremento. bcaled A.M. tho fallowing tar do and
; 5. GaugosJor oil, tamper· 111830 E. Main St!eat. Po- 1111emen11. loca1ed 111 1882
• aluro, and altornotor.
• Ohio 411788, ard 983 Ulco\1 Rood. Po,ntlfOY,' Ohio
• 6. Heavy duty opring w / o- r~~:,.~s~tr~eeel, Middleport, 46789.
• verload .
ietpeCd....ef'{:
Situate i\ the County d
• 7. 10,500 GMW. _
Alalthetpertof Moiga. tn 1he s- a1 Ollio,
· 8. Power stooring.
lal No.
it told Vlt1111 of lild in lite Vlloge of Polllll))'l
· 9. Power brakes.
Pomaooy, Olllanditg back 170 llld bounded i n d - •
10. Heavy duty shocks 1eot. 1o wl1hin 10 leal of lho follOws:
(front &amp; roar) _
- o f lite rod&lt;oor dlff; being
11otng lcnown •d dolig·
' 11. Sparewhoei and tire. 118 fie! wide along lho 11r01~ noted on a ntiiP of Utcoit
' 12 . 30-gat. gas tank or ~ lito J•ditg In front HalghU, modo by ~ 111d
larger.
ofllllid lol. ·
~. R~ Clvl EnglElllllp1irtg
as, .,.... _,,, H...tinghiir , Wilt \/'or. 13. Dual '"'toido mirrors.
14. Rear stop bumper.
vioully -eel.
gil Ia, a oopy of whlclt map
15. Swinging raor doors.
·R"-ce Deed: Volume wu recorded In tho Ofltco of
16. Open bel-n cab 280, P1Qa163, Deed RM:Orde 1hl Roco1dor .of Meillo
and cargo body (no pel~ion) . of Molgo County, Ohio .
County, Ohio; on Doc . 1'),
EXCEPTING AND RE· 1942, which mop woo doted
These bids rnrot 101 fonh
'lull, acc:uroia llld DD11111oto SERVING. dw tolowing rOll Oet- t7, 1942, 11 ,._
Information 11 raqulred by
il Lot No. 283. corded In Pill Book No. 3 et
lhit invilltion ,of bids. Tho· Pomoooy VIIIQo. dalcrl&gt;od 01 Pegao 43 ard 4&lt;t u Lot No. ·
plllalty formoiclngfalanllll• f o -: Being 46 1111 oft the '.J1 and being moroluly dt·
monto In bid1 Ia II'OICrllod in fnMt1 or oouthorly end of thol ocrl&gt;ld oo fottowo: Beginning
~8 USC 1001 . ACCOIMUiao part of La1 No. 283 now lit a poinlln lho -lh lite of
. . dioa&gt;uregMI 111d luxury IMIIOd by llto,.. L, Goall Lincoln Road lit 11'8 comer
option• anr inappropriate. and Morjorie GOOI!. dalcribtd ba-n Lata 37 111d 36, 11
S'l"lod. bids wiN be IICCIPied
In dMd recordtd il Volume lhoVWI ·on tltlld ntiiP: lhanoe
until 4:00p.m .. Oclaber 25, 238, Page 397, Moigo County with llid tina of Lincoln Ro.t,
1986, al 1ho Gatlia·Maige Deed Rooordo. Baing a lolllll north 83 dog,... 61'.._ 150
Comroonity Action Agonc:y. tMt alc!ntl .Eliot Mlin S!rto~ loot; thence wi1h lite lito
Nonh Sacond llld Eaat Main 111d 411 loolbtc:k. Subjac:tto a
Lola 38 111 d :J7,
Slreota,
Cltoohire. Ohio rigid of woy ,......., by dog,_ 09' - 46.620. At that ~ .... oN bids Morjorio G-.
·200 foot: thence IQU1h 83
wil be opened end revlowpl.
Rolonnce Deed: Volume c~og,.. &amp;1' 110 hrllt
Purchase is ... bject to ap- 2io. Pege165. Deed Recorda lhln&lt;:e wfth.,.the line
proval by the Departmant of of Meigs County, Ohio.
llkt Lot1 :J7 and 36; lhonce
Energy and Ohio OepM't·
Porao1 Two: Being tho mrth 2S dogr- 011' - 200
ment of DBYetopmant .,d one 1-.11 of Lot No. 306 •d • loot to tho polnl of begilnlng,
should occur within 2·4 P•,.. of lind 17'/o feel by
. . - g, '""-•· tho
wooks of tho opMing of tho -tv leal off tho n o - coat and ott ritnto 11
, bido.ThoGaltia· MtigeCom· COIIIM"aii.DtNo.303illo- 111d undootytng tho ....,..
munily Acllon Agency ••· """-oy, now iiCOijMIIed ~ 11'--'Y. ~og~~tt~t 1
orvos the right to accepl or itla lito lllltoge of-teport. withlhorigtrltoritelhoiOma
Ohio.
will"oul ....... - .. 111 1ho
reject anv and all bids.
The Qafijo-Moit CommunBeing In 111 ondr«v a PM'OOI .. rlooo. end • 1111of111 and
ity Action Agency io an Equal of lind 70 loot on Loar• dooatbtd it fill lnllnrm.,l
ond oxlm&lt;lng lit lltet btoritg Nowor ... 21,
Opportunity Eft'4'ioV•I Equal ·PooviderofSorvicoo-·1~lealolongtlto...., 1943, ond ...,rdtd it aoid "
(10)13. 14.16 , 1841c
ond btlntllltho NOt IMIItt Ror:ordt(e 9f1tco it Dood
now l)lf HII!Y R. Book 151, Pogo 178, on
. . , _ ou1 of la1l No. 306 Oocomber 3, 1943. - .
.,d 303.
Rot""""" Dood: Volume
Ro!wrence Deed: Volume 274, Page 13. Motgo Caurrty
153, Page 43: Volume 210, l!leoci'Rocordo.
IN MEMORY OF ASA E.
Page449;
ardVolume298,
APPRAISED AT
JORDAN WHO PASSED • Plge187, MoigsCountv
Deed tiD,OOO.OO. T1re ,., AWAY OCT. 16, 1981
Racorde.
C811not be M&gt;ld for ltu than
Deys of sadnns stilt comeslo
One beilg ....... eel - ·lhirdo (2/ 3) tho epprolted
mo.
o1 t18,000.00, ard Plrroet votua
Sterol !Mrs do often flow.
Two being eppralted It
TERMS OF SALE: C""' on
•11.000.00 . Tho ,., ootllte dolilory of dMd. Subject to
Memory bops IOU n•r 1111.
Tho IOU left fivo 11111 liDbe oold tor laa than OCCNed 19811 r•l - •
-·1hlrdo (21 3) tha oppr... ......
You will nmr be lorcott111
ntua
Howard E. F,.,k.
NOYoo will your memoLJ IIIIa,
TERMS OF SALE: C..h
of Mo1go
And I find my tltolaftll flO .
~
of
dMd
.
Subjecl
1D
County,
Ollio
w1nderlna
OCCNMI 19811 r•l -~stel Douglao W. Unto,
To the PIICI whlll you 111
Ill d.
-·
Anomey&amp;lorLD.,
Diomond
Howard E. Fl'll\k. Sovlngt
Co.
Sadly missed .by wHo, llo11.
.
Sh8rill of Malo• (10) 18, 23, 30, 3tc
County. Ohio

SAVE

't!)t(}/1\",

J.R.'s REPAIIS

tlt ecW. St .. PoNroy.0116D 4!769

LARGE SELECnON
OF LANDSTROM'S
BLACK HIUS
GOLD JEWELRY

GALLIPOL1Stf1/
446-2891

.

PHONE
992-2156
01- Ooilll S..tiMI Cturiitd o.,t. "

New At Clark's·

•RINGS .
•NECKLACES
•BElT BUCKLES
•BRACELETS
•EARRINGS
•Special Order
Service

cropland at tvme, . which would
bene!lt fanners while reducing the
governnient's costs of current
suwty-control programs.
The study ldj!ntlfled 62 countries
that "have both \be p-lvate and..
public sector capabWty to ~!fee.
tlvely use additional rommodltles
to stimulate econoinlc developf!l€!lt; develop lar!J!r rommerclal
mar~ts for u.s. ronunoi!ltles, and
to c ombat hunger and
malnutrltbn."
The oommodltles examllled In·
· elude wheat and p-oO!cts, feed
grains and Products, rice, !IJ)'beans
and products, and dairy products.
Developll)g oountrtes have the
larlJ!st mar.ket potential for U.S.
agricultural goods, the report said
-based on currE!lt (rOjeetlons'that
In the next 15 years, the population
of developing countrtes wDI · .In·
crease by-1.2 bUIIon.

~

GALLIPOLIS - POMEROY

, HOME - Mary Ann Rankin,
who WIIS struck by a car on
Route 7 In Tuppers Plains on
June %7, has been retumed to her
home In Tuppers Plains after
been hospltallzed for the past 3\1:
months. Mary Am is doing well.
She is now taking several steps
and Is talldn1 some.

very compelling klglc . In .using
surplus farm commodities as resources to .feed pEDjlle and develop
overseas rnarkets," Leu tiD lei said.
The slx·month study. p-epared
jointly ~ tile growers association
and otrer farm and food assistance
groups, projects that tre United
·States co:&gt;uid Increase Its exports of
grain and otrer farm_products by·
17.4lnllllon rretric'tms annuallyan _amount ttl! repon said wo~kl
save the federal government ~
mlllion a year In storage rosts
alone. _
. The study was released In
preparation for today's global
olEervance ot World Food Day, the
41st anniversary of creation of the
U.N. ' Food and Ag&lt;lculture
Organlza lion.
·.
·
'
Aroong otrer bene!lts to the
United States would be the U.seof lin
additional 10.6 mUllan acres of

lusin•s Forn,

CLARK'S JEWELRY

A bymn sing wUI he held Saturday evening at Freedom Gospel
Mission Church, Bald Knop. Services, featuring the Unroe FamUy,
will begin a t 7: lJ p.m. The church Is located on the Bald
Knob-Sttversvllle Road. Everyone weloome.

Meigs game time changed

compared with losses of about $36 include $32.5 million received In the
million In both the second quarter r1 first quarter and rertaln other
1986 and the third quarter ol19ll:i- conressfons received In const~ra
"Through the first nine month'; of tlon for the canoeUatlon of a ·
this year," he said, ",the aluminum long-term natural ga5 supply ,
division, InCluding all and gas, has oontract . .
" .
reduced its operating Joss by about
Sales in the first three quarters of
$130 million compared with the 1986 were $17 tilllon, compared
same peJiod of 1985. This sizeable with sales of $15 billion a year ago.
reduction' in the division's. loss has
Maler said the oompahy'scheml-.
been achieved even thbugh U.S. cals division recorded a profit In the
fabr icated products plice teaUza· thi rd quarter compared with a loss__
tlons are down about five percent In the -1985 quarter dUe tD better
from the first nine months of last results from Harshaw/Filtrol, the
year.
specialty chemicals partnership
"The major factors causing the managed by Kaiser Aluminum.
aluminum division's Improved per· "However, these gains were par·
forman ce a,re lower qJeratlngcosts tlal ly offset by weak .prices In
in the raw materials and primary caustic soda, fluorocarbons, and
metal areas and, in• the third tbe general commodity chemicals
quarter, Increased "output and arm. We elf peel Kaiser Chemicals'
reduced rosts in · fabricated pro- results to improve further In the
_
wets," Maier said. "We will fourth quarter," he said.
Kaiser Development Co. expe·
continue our cost redU£tlOn pro·
Co.
grams In, the rourth q\larter. But, rienced a loss In the third quarter
Stanley purchased the ticket because of an expected decline In l ar~ly because of Teduced sales
from the Point Pleasant SIDp-A· shipments and price~ and a less· activity and the recording of
Mlnlt Store at Main and Sixth favorable product mix, we have one-time chari,"'S related to Its
streets.
some ooncern about aluminum Hawanan operatio"' and to an
"I'm sure glad he won It," said dlvlslori cpera,tlon results in the _ unexercised option tD pu rchase
Mary Pearson, cashier at the store·. fourth quarter."
land In Sout hern California.
"I am happy for him. I ctln't know
The company's aluminum ship-·
In the Hrst nine months of 1986,
him personally but I'm sure glad he
Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical had ments In the third quarter wre
won It being from this town." . a ret bss of $24.6 mUllan or 62 cents 219,8JO mns, up 13 percent from the
Pea~son added.
·
per share, a significan t improve· 194,WO tons shipped In the 1985
Stanley Is the second person with ment from the comparble 1985 quarter_ Shipments in the first nine
Mason County ties to win blg In the pe-bd loss of $78.7 mlUion or $1.86 months this ·year totaled 632,WO
West VIrginia Lottery.
per share. These results include an tons. 16 percent above shipments of
This summer, John Flowers, a income tax provision of $4. 5 mllliori 547,IDO tons in the same perbd last
school teacher In · BarboursvUle, in the third three quarters of 1986 , yer. About 92 perrent of shipments
won over two million dollars. The and a negative taJt provtsbn of$55.6 in the 1986 third quarter were In the
son of Laura Ann Flo-rs of Point mllllon in the same pe-ild of 1985. form of fabricated prodUcts, comPleasant, he was a res l~nt r1Polnt
The oompany's pre·tax results pared with 94 percent In the 1985
Ple~~sant and a graduate of Point
for the first three quarters of 1986 quarter.
Pleasant High School.
The drawing was held at ttl(&gt; , - - - - - - - - - ' - -- - - - - ---'-""---::WSAZ tel~lslon studios In Charleston at 10 a.m. today.

The Daily

u.s. could expand expOrts :Business _Services

WASHINGTON (UPI) - - The
United States could expand Its
agricultural export potential In the
next two decades with tre
peUing logic" ot Increasing ' food
sales and donations to developing ·
countries, a new report says.
The report said Increasing food
donations to .poor countries would
~tlmulate the economies within
those natlollS, making them ftnanclally able to bi!Y ~r QUanlllles
· of U.S. Iarm goods In the future
while easing .current huJliWr to
SO!l)e of the-poorest countrte5.
· In releasing the report Wednes· .
day, Bud Leuthold, preSident of the
National Assoclatlon of Wheat
Growers, said such a program
·could boost U.S. agriculture out of
the current slump causro ' by
, decreased American farm exports
'· a broad and falling grain prices,
' "For U.S. farmers, · there Is a

mUllan In th.e 19ai quarter. Also
Included In last yea!' s quarter Is a
loss a! $3.5 mllllon on the sale of
Kaiser Aluminum's International
trading business.
·
Sales In the third quarter this
year were $592 mUlion, compared
with sales of $526.4 million In_tre
year-ago quarter.
Chairman Cornell C. Maier said
that alumtnumoperattons, exclud·
lng oU and gas, made a small profit
In the - tl!lrd quarter this year.
Including oU and gas, the aluminum division posted an operating
lo~. of ~-8 rpllllon ~ the quarter

Bush stumps for Ohio GOP .

16,1986

\Report:

Mason County .man
wins lottery jackpot
By United Press International
OVP Stall Reports

Appeal notice filed in court

•

Thursday,

Thur&amp;day, October 16, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1110-Jal 114-441·•72

Tlll' CASH pold IN ' I I IWEEPER•doowngmiOiono

~~.=..,~.~·.::= ·

"PPil'. Pert~ 1nd10~111. ~'~• Aw .. GeHIIIOIII. Calll14-441·
.. .,d -.ry, D
VIOWm 2212 .
Cl11nor. ono hoN mila up - - . , - - , - - - - - - Goa- C - Rd. CaR 114· WANTEOTOIU~---·
44t-OZI4,
.... · IWAIN'I I'UIINI·

.....

11-o.... _ _ ..... by ru
.. :.~:,....on~
R-uG..,Ciub.l-lundoy.
'
· •
•
'
bagtnntng ot 1:00 p.m. F1010ry w- to buy toytnl- Col

&amp;·.17-lfe
Clialoo.ll guogoohatgun1.
___,H---.:.:.::...::.;.J,U

114·•1-7111 .

.,

•

�-

, I

_,,~-----'-----~

'

Page-10-l'he Daily Sentinel
9

Wanted To

Buy ·

42 Mobile Hom..

2 IMI• .. ol util- pold etec. , fum , or unturn., MO.

WMt to buy a l)lce 71 Or.nd Piht
PMtiK •J or ~- Call 814· 281·

diJotft fiCIUn-1. Conw:en..,,_

'
2 bdr. fullyfurnieftld edultnnly.
u~l. pold. C.11.1'4'445·4110.

Buying deitY gokl. titvll' coWu,
rlngt, j.welfy, lttrling wart. otd
colnt, lartt cUrrtney. TOp pricet. Ed . lurtc.ett Berber Shop,

2 bdr. unfum. 121110. 1 on
Oeorv• C,_ Ad. 1 In Ch•
shira. Dep. • ref. requlrad. C.l

Oh. &amp;14·
.

f 111pluv 1111'111
~t 1 11/l i .PS

99~: :::.- Racine. Ca!l 61•·

6

NIce 2 Wdroom trllltr for rent in
Chuhire. On nlee lot . Call

Help Wanted

304-773·5828 . .

1 2,.86. 3 bedroom. fumiihed.
At Country MobHe Home Perk.
1210 . PI' month plus 1.1tiliti•
and deposit. Call 11•·91~·

Malle Chriltm.s money, ""
Awn. Make 46 percent. Call

814-441-3358.

7479.

10 · 16

~rehw1y Cookiet hu distribu·

, ... hlp ovoilable in tho

Gsllipollt.Jtckson araa. Ius \-

"It must- be another example
af the 'greenhouse effect'
•
h avoc Wl•th th e
p } aytng

""' -n. """von...... earth's climate."
warehause r.quired. HotPitali·

zatlon.provkltd.
Ntirement
life insursnoe
Send&amp;·resume
to:

P.O. Box7. Aohlond, Oh44806

32 Mobile Homes

••v with elderly lldv.
Coll814-44&amp;-2181 .
Lldy to

Wood CUUM' must hllve own saw
S175 to 8200 i week. Call

614-256-8&amp;89.

•
31

Homes for Sale

3 bch. d air. pool, garage. Nic:e
Commercial property, corner
lots &amp; highway frontage. Liat
with us . We have buyers. A-One
Real Estate-Broker. C'all 304·

674-6104 .. 304-674-5386.

Position now avaiiMie in auto
aala1. Long tDurt . Good benefill. Apply now for a rewarding
career. Send resun.s to Jim
Mink Chavtoltt · Oidsmobila,
1816 Eettem Avll'lue, Gallipo·

Ii i, Oh 46831 .

3000- 'crov~ Joba Liat.
$1li.040· •&amp;9,230 Vf . Now Htr·
ing Ctll 805-887· 8000 E11.t .

R·9806.

Country home 2 sto"' 9 rooms.
remodeled, new cerpet, hitchen
&amp; bettl. t37,000 . Call614·446-

2359.

House &amp; 3 .2 11cres for sele
Neighborhood Rd. Call 614·
446-7468 aher 5:30.

Hou ae for sale. LR. 2 bdr ..
kitchen, bath $18 ,800. Call
304-676 -7.23 .

LN•in r Need awom~~n 50 yra. of
age to live in. Take care of 2
children. do lght house work,
moderata cooking , Room ·
botrd-MI.ry. Call .tter 7 :00

p.m. 614-742-2050.

Anemblers Wanted , earn 141 to
8180.00 P• dty 111embling
dllplav clowna. Mtteriel IUPP·
lied. Sand acamped ~elf ad ·
dr•Hd .,veMJpe, Hawks landing, P. 0 . Boll 13413, Orlando,

2 bdr. house full basement. 2
baths. 1 anached garage 1

unattached, outbuildings . 13 A.
m-1, new fenc:e. lots of pine
tr.ees, pond . Call days 614-4462107 or eves. 61 4-2•6-6600
6 rcom house. 1.2 ecrn . Double
car~gertge . locaHtd on Rose Hill.
Bargain priced 820.000 . Call

614-678·2613 .

Fl 32869.

Government Homes from t1 . !U
reptirl Delinquent tlx property.
Blby litter needed in my home. RepOIMitiOns Call 806·687·
Park Drive are.. Dependeble, ' 6000 Elct . GH9806 for current
able to work evenings. 30•· 676 - repo list.

11834.
Awn . Open t~nitories . Ina
l'tllillbla . 304· 675-1429.
Clretlk•tolivein.,t co~l1.11
i)r It• , ..t . Must be honeat and
bondable. Preflt elderly couple .

304-&amp;75-!180&amp;

Part·timt, waning• 8 -10 p.m.
Cltrlctl potition . Some typing
requir.t . No prwlous exp. req.~ired Send R"ume to Box
PU, in mre Pt. Pleasant Regis·
ter , 200 Main Sc. Pt.PI. WV .

REPS NEE OED tor butineu
accountt. Full-Time. t60 .000·
tBO,OOO; Ptrt·Time, t12 ,000·
118,000-NoSelling, repeat bus·
inH&amp;. Set your own houn .
Trtlnlng provtded. C•ll ~ 1 -612931 -ti?O. M-F, 81m to 6pm
(C~ntral Sttndud Time).
THE OLYMPIA. ~w acc:ep~lng
lfJplicationt tu employment It

U14 Jeektan Ave .. Waiten,
kitct..-. help , bus boys.

Situations
Wanted
~nd

614-992-6173 . .

In Middleport, 3 bedroom. 1'Ia
story llouSt. Completely ramo·
deled , fully insulated , carpet,
forced air "•• fumtee . low
utilities, fenced -In back yard,
ttorage building . Asking
$21 ,500. or m•ke oHer. Call

304-173-111136 '

18 Wanted to Do
Etectrical worlt, free lltimttt&amp;.
lndustrill, Camrnarclal, Rtll·

3·4 bedroom houae netr school
an(l hospital Priced to sell,

614·448·9340.

1974 Hillc:rett 14x70 3 bdr..
redueed, $6.500 delivered .
FriiHictl City Mobil• Homet,

814·446-9340.

1989 Hotly Park 12x80 2 bdr.,
din in groom, refriu . a. sto'tlt, ·AC.
porch, underpinning, askin;
14,000. Caii614'· 446 ·7020.

'

Priced to 1111 , 2 beet room mobile
home, large lot 2•,.28 ft. mllal
pote building, eAttt mobile home
hookup. f20.000 . Call 114·

379-2282.

1973 Gren11ille 1•M70, 3 btd·
room, turnlthld. loceted at
Country Mobile Home Perk.
S6960. Phone 814-992·7479 .
'81 Windsor 2 br 5trga living
room &amp; kitchen , 2 porch• •
underptnnfna, g,.et cond. Must

..n. 304-882-3716.

12'M86 tralllf, utility bldg .,
storage bldg.. an . ecre land.
Route 2 · 4 mil• North, from
Point Pleasant. Anne SchmiH .

304-676-6422 ., 876-7976.

as4 1••64. M•nslon mobili

home, lived in ona vear. excellent condition, •9.700. 304676-6039 atter 6 p.m.
·
U.118Q .• 2 bt,dtoom mobile
home. furnished includes
wa•h• and dryer. Mey l'lntaln
on rllnted lot. n.ooo 00. 3o.t 676· 1982 or 675 ·1699.

33

Farms for Sale

t23 ,000. Cal l614-992· 6060.
2 br. kitchan , bathroom, with
leundry room, living room &amp;.
dining room. all elec. Approx . 7
miles from Pt. Pl. on Rt. 62 . 2
traetsappro~t . 1 acremore0fl81t
Ollll!lrlooking bnawhe River.
••o.ooo. Call 304-676·6440
between $ :30 and 4 :30.
log home , 3·4 br, ell elec:. fully
cerpeted, finisl1ed btHment.
Ambrosia. 7 milt1 from Pt. Pl. on
Rt. 62 . City wattr. ptved
driveway &amp; Septic tank. situated
on '12 acre. overlooking Kanawha
River, •eo.ooo. Call 304·8766440 between 8:30 and 4;30.

For sale - Muon . 2-nory , 3 br, 2
full bath1, corner lot, patio, gu
heet . t32 .000 .. Only seriou1
inquiri• . Ph. 304·773·5148 '?'
Small 2 br hOUII, apprOk. J
•eras Land bealde letart grade
school . 304·895 ·3857.
S1le or rent. New Haven, 3
bedrooms. 2 beths. fir..,lac:e.
garage, 138,500 r00 or 1300.00
month plus deposit. 30•· 273·
2.71 .

dln11ol. C.III14-441-302B.

f lrl itnl.l dl

57 acre farm county water, 2
bdr. tnobile home, b•m. out
building, •varal plecet of farm·
ing equipment, end m. . for

169,900. Co11814·258-8074.

for Sale
Busineu
Opportunity ·

Op., your own bttutlful shot
ttort.
chlldrtns. mens.
AI firM quality mlrChtnditt.
Ov• 200 top nem• bfMde. over
1,100 .-,1•. Oktrl• V1t1dtrbiltt,
8 W•t. E~ Plc:one. Andrew
Q.U., Lil Clalbome. CIPeizO.
larut~Nno. 8111. 811r Tr.pt,
C.lico, RNbok. Stride Rit1,

Lid....

Iutter Ito_., Cl.ndill, LA

Oe.,, Cherokee, Flonhllm,
Fr•I'IWI. IHionlon, end manv
more. •12.100 Ia t39,900
lneludll ... Inning lnv~ntory ,
trlllnlng, 'fl•turtt. end grtnd
GP•In• promotkma. C•li todey.
Pratigl F11h~n1 101 · 329 ·

2312.

23

197114,.70 Getty&amp;burg, 2 bdr.,
2 full b1ths. porch &amp; awning, 2
AC '1, atl alec,. eMc. cond. Belt

.e~:~25~~=6g~::~66 -8620

1973 Freeman 1211&amp;0 'tlery good
c:oadition. IOta! elec. 16,000.
Call 114 ·2•15 -6818
1871 Manson 12MI5 2 bdr.,
total electric:, new carpet,

Mobllo Homoo, 814 · 446 - 93~ .

Hedgu . thrube. buthet
wimrntd, a.ndlceping. stu1111'
.,d ltef temGVII, 304·1!578•

342 .. 871-2010.

Jlm'o C.... Ollllot. Corpo1

1971 Fltetwood 14M815, 2 bdr ..
lerge kitchen, ready for wood

burner, 10. 800 d1Uvered .
Frenctl City Mobllt Hom...

514-445-9340.

Schuh 12•80 with expando, 2
bdr.. good condition. U .981
dellvtrtd. ~rtnc#l City Moblle

"'"' •z.• ••.oo
· -·•·• r.......,, :so•-•z- . Homoo. 514-448·9340.
.,d

In·

Jleo., 773-!1861.

..

Rlfrigere"'r Z dr. $715. Kennura

'

Nicely fumilhed moblla home
CA &amp; hett. excel. loc•dan,
edults only. Ctll 814-441·0338.
1513% 3rd. Ave 1 bdr. privele
bath. $140 per mo. Deposit
required . Clll 81:6·4'S-4222
between &amp; 6.

a

Fumiahed lpt. t2311i . Utilitiea
paid . 1 BA, 920 4th. Oalllpalis.
441·4416 lffer ·7pm.

992·3901 .

pm.

Fumlllhed 3 room• end ·bat".
dun , edults only, no pels. Call

814·448-1619.

f'

SmaM furnlthed ept., utilitltl
t:)lid , would like mature ledy.
CloH to town ref. required. C1ll

814-448-4083.

Unfurn, .2 bedroom. r8t. It

rtn'ge. 1 or 21duhs. no peta. Cll

814-448-4338.

1 bedroo"' 1pt. for rent. Basic
rent ttana J2.1&amp; . • mon~h 1hat
Includes aH utllittn. Deposit
Nquired of tZOO. Congct Yill~e Mtnor Apt. Midd1eport.

ll4-992·7787. E"""1 Houolng
·

Aptrtmentt for rent In Pomeroy.
One · and IWO bedraoms . Cell

814 -192-8216 .

1 bedroom 1partment. Newly
c:arpeted . HUD lpprovtd.·402 1h
2•th St. , &lt;Pt. Plea11nt, Cell

614-992-6868'.

Z bedroom.lurnithad apartment
tor rent . , Adults only. Call

114-992·Z749.

Pt. Pl...ant and Oallipo·

Renlol s

For rent Sleeping Rooma and
light hoult kaeping rooms . Park
Cenual Hotel . Ctll 61 • -448·

0758

814·949 -2801

2 bdr. furn ished duplu In
RecW'Ie. I 200 pet month. Dep·
otit &amp; reference required. Call

614-949 -2801

2 bdr. ho\lte wh:h gll'age Clr·
pettd. c:ur11int, dithw••h• It
rtfrig. N..r new. city poot 106
Kinton Dr. Rent •300 mo. dep.
&amp; leeet required . Cell 814·441·
4347 .

cloae to echool. very nlae. Pay

own utllhi" and depottl r•

Rooms for ~ent, dav. week.
monttl . GaDia Hotel. Call 614·
446·9SBO. Rent 11 low., 1120
month'.

I:;;;:;;:==;::::;;;::::=
46 Space for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Po"'-

Aoute 33, North or Pomeroy.
·L~rgllott . Call &amp;U-992 -7479.

8pBioutlrailerlota for rent with
pltyground tnd ~ic fec:iliti ...
at flihitv Pride Mobil• Home
Ptrtl:. Rt . 2, Gallipolis Ferry. W.

HOUN for rent It 1589 Oentttl
Htrtinger. ParlnNay. uoo. .,.,
month. Call1514 ·982-7883.

61 Hou,ehold Good1
'

Only. 304-175-2111.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
Mobile homtforrent, 2 bdr., KC
achool dittrict. Ctll 814· 448·

0722.

2 bdr. 12•81 oompl•aty fur.
.nithtd, +ow utJihl•. large lot,'

Coli 114-441·1i04.

FirMood split t\ t-teuled ell
h,erdwopd. PU load 140 dtli·
vered. Call 8.14-446-3028, or
81~·446 · 2223 .

a.

Stove for sale, coppertone
eon . 'self cleaning oven. Cail

'autkeye rnodel236 Wood 6 coel
•to'lfa. eood eond, e160 . Cell

614-268-1739.

Cabinet Zenith style ttereo
S276. Call 81~·367· 7211 .
CempM treiler for ule, couCh, 2
bdr .. eooking,equlp . a. blth . Cal

304-&amp;75-7423 .

Flrtwood fDf ule mind &amp; split
116 pickup Ioiii. Cell 814 -2561768 effer 15~r,t . 1

tAI2J2i.,l

~

Dodrill's Auto Perta. 2'h mi.
North of Vin ton on St . .At. 180 it

ID l•~ "".o.,lroc

t~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~==~ the
place
to buy
your ul!ld flit,
auto
Ptrta
. You
' ll recei111
56

Pets for Sale

· 'SWI\IN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 12
01i'tle St .. Gtllipollt. New I u1td
wood·coalstov•. 8 pc: Wood LR
toite U99, bunk beds 1199,
1nuon reclin•• •se. MW a.
used bldroom suitn, rang.. .
wringer walhera, lla shOM . N.lhlingroom suhes •199· 1699 ,
lamps, etao bwying co11 &amp; wood
ftOVII . Ctll614·448-3159 .
County Appllll\ce, Inc. Goad
..~ apptlencea tnd TV eets.

Open lAM to' IPM . Mon thN

.... 114-441-1899, 827 3«1.
A110. Golllpolho. OH.

a.

Vllley Fumlturt, new
uselll .
la'91 leCtton of • "eltty fuml ·
ture . 1211 hltern Av• .•

Geillpollt .

8451 .

Sote1 and chai'f. priced from
1396 to 1995. hbt• •eo ~nd
up to 1125. Hlde-a· bedt 1390
to •696, Reclinert' •225 to
U16 . lamps 128 to $121 .'
Dlnert11 •109 tnd up to Mil.
Wood t1b.. W·l dtlin 1281 to
'711. D•k •100 up 10 137!.
Hutch• '400 end up . 8unk
btdt cOrripltte w · mtnrMMI

old

Bugle~,

en

ea.

Reg . Be~gle puj)s, 8 wkt . old, 3
mtl•. 1 female. Call 81 4 -246•

9578.

AKC Reg . German Shepherd
pupa. Chtmplon bloodUn•. Sire
• deme. Rtldy tor Immediate
1ala. Call 61 4· 448· 4211 .
AKC Regittered Boiton Terrter1.
Blick arid white. Wormed and
stiot. •150 . Guenmta.:l healthy.

Ct/1 :j04-613-8378.

Mu1ical
Instruments

Saltl 50 per CIIHit off! Fluhlng
arrow •ian 127SU Lighted. nonarrow•82891 Non lighted 1239J
Free lmertl Few kttt. Stt
loca lly . 1 - 800 - •23-0163 ,
•

Seltantd fifiWOOd tor1ale. Call

614-742-2646.

SALE ! 50 per c:ent offl Flnhing
arrow lian t2791 Lighted, non·
srrow t2891 Nonllghttd t2391
Free lettttrtl Few kltt.... taca lly .

1(100)423-01 &amp;3, ony11mo.

1971 Ford 310. dull-wheel •
wheel drive welding lruck whh
welding bed tool boa• .. d new
200 amp Lincoln Welder .
n .ooo.oo: eo •.,... Ditch
Whch , good condition.
$11.000.00 ; 7.0 Fi1t Allis
Dour new, cell304-273-3186

o• 304·273-8830.

Tappan eltetrlo rtnge. 304-875-

1965.

7mm

304-882 -2041 .

4396.

76 Ford carrl• plck"J' •aoo. ·
Body good cond . Goo running 9185.
cond .. 4. aplld; Himelly•n c:et - - - -- - - - - 1110. GOQd' with ~lldren . 304 - 1879 Ford Mullang . Auto, PS.
&amp;75-1148.
PI, 302 engine. 2 door. aun
roof. AM ·FM 8 tr~. runsliood.

01200. 614, 986·4302.

r 11111 Su piJII'''

1918 Trans Am 400 engine,
automatic, $21500. Excellent
oondhion. 1187 Chevy ttuc:lt.
1973 .360 angina. Standard
Trtns. Good lhape . . . &amp;0 . Call

C, LIV e,llli.K
61

814-286 -IM51 .

Maney F~guton, New Holl•nd.
BUih Hog 811• &amp; SlfVIce. Over
40 ueed trectora to ~aota frcm

6 OOfT1)1eteltne or na • uled
CM~Uipment. Largest

S.E. Ohio .

•tection in

JIM' S FARM EOU1PMENT
CENTER . SA 311 W. Golllpolll,

Ohio. Call 114 -"1·9777, eve.
614·448 -3192. Up front trac tors with werranty OVM 40 ustd
vee: tors, 1000 tool e.

ton metal bind saw 78· 240 Ford
vuck kJw mlleege goad cond .,
74 LTD cov. low mileegle, 2
thouaand bale's hay 1· 2· 3·
wtting alfalfa clover. Cell 614-

Ut18 Ford Torino, 70,300
mllu, 1400 .00 . 304 - 6 '15·

3734 .

•nlmel theltltt, garegM. frM
ntlm•t•• · Phone 1514-384·
1782.

,_...:,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Commercii! llctv. 34140 cletr
tpln lflmetatbtdg . Huvy.11
oldlng,
"'lit, ln.,lotocl

in-•

72

Trucke for Sale

2986.

Livestock

814-258-1313 .

'71 Dettun pldcup, eMc cond,

t5 rtglttertd Polled Hereford

115,000 mlloo, •1.1100.00. 304575-7375.

bl.ok Bttdle Heifen 1Vtrlgt825

'73 Dodge Club Clb pidt· UP tor
1111 or wtn lrlde for good ctr,

Joaa• heifer c:elvet evtrage
500 lbo . ooch. f350 ooch. 2

~e 837 . llby mmr•..

17.
eaczh Cell
010.
··"'··2101.
1110
Rototllfr.
814-941·

·1182 Sui:III'U 4 WD WIQOfl, VG
oond. 83 ,900. Cell 114 ·44S•1•1 .

a

a

5PM. Mon. lhN ln.
1u--Ms-on2. . '

. .

pupploo. Con 814·441-3844
oflor 7PM.

Htilf Lolnoclot • h411 Qold.,
- · · C.III14-241·NI7.

Uv81tock; 20 head croa-bttd
ttock c:owt, vet chDed for
e•rtv Cllv81 &amp; 111 ftll. Vac:clna· '
llont. 304·273·2848 after 8

p.m.

12 ltrll Hereford Slm,...nttl
croll cowl, bred ChMOialt bull,
to nort ~tlvk!a Jon ond F....

P~ootf UIO.OO - · Phone
104-578-2810.
. .

.

Vane &amp; 4 W.O.

1181 CJ ·&amp; Jeep 38.000 ac:tu tl
mil... Cell eft• 9:00P.M, 814·

245-9497, U ,OOO .

1172 FO&lt;d y., .,. 10n. l h lnlkle. Just drove hom Fla.
tiOO 080 . Consider •ny lrtde .

814-941-2805 .

IT'S
£XCITIIJG I

cove•y . {60 min .)
@MOVIE: 'Fun with Dick
and J~~no'
8:05 Cl) MOVIE: 'World War Ill'
Part 1 of 2.
8:30 8 (]) @ Family Tieo
Steven realizes that his lett·
wing

rltncad cerpenter, ·elettrida"maton. Pll.,tlf, roofing (ineludinv hbt tar appllcatk»nl 104-

9:00

St1rk1 Tree and Lawn Serv+ce,
Hedges . shrubs . buahn
trimmed, landlctping end
nump remov11 . leaf removal.

MORTY MEEKLE AND W;.:IN:.;..T:..:H:.:.:R:.:.:O:.:P_--'-~---,

Rotery or ctble tool drilling.
Moat
co~ same day.
Pump Min tnd slfVioe. 304·

we••

SALAD- TLJI&lt;KEY, "

SAI..A.MI .. .

PASTRAMI ...

DIETIN~A~AIN.

A
•

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·IITS ANSWERS
Fondly - Obese - Hmh - Uzard - SOLD FISH
After paying over $200 for fishing equipment the man said ,
"~would be a 1o1 easier and cheaper if they SOLD FISH here. ''

BRIDGE
Mysterious
disappearance

and

a

•

1.

L------- ---:7

6itNJrlfVJttt'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 39 Under! Nabokov
gannent
novel
DOWN
4 Endure
I Venerate
8 Mine
2 Kaufman
entrance
and Ferher
9 Oahu
play
farewell
3 Grecian
11 Occipital
deity
4 Calif.
I
a
or u m
Yesterda&gt;·'s Answer
12 Types;
resort .
classes
5 Syr1an City t• F
h
25 Short roat
"Ed ·ard
" rene
14 Marine bird 6
~ "
pon.
28 L.aria1

:: ~~=:~d

7

~~~\~ci ~~ g~~vitate

~~~~~;:~

mler
22 Top of
the head

scores

..
•

27 Put up
30 Pacific

their

neckw ear

31 Procure

•

tn

Gary s

32 FavorilP
· 33 Inundate
35 llridge
36 "- Faces
of Eve"
37 Greek

..

mountains

38 Pinafon•
-.1.-.L-..J-- ,
DAILYCRYPTQQUOTES-Here's how
A'XYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW -

gale House tries to live and

work normally . but it seems
that the murderer's mission

One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
for lhe three L's X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
postrophes the length and formati on of the words are all
~nts. Each the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE .
10-16

..
.-

day

two young cops join the pre· ·
cinct and Jablonski faces
dangerous heart

29

11 Become
8 h~~tin: 22 Procreator 31 M e~rinwnt
complex 10 Biblical
23 Alfred- 34 Sw1ss
19 N1ger1an .
mountain 24 Lose
canton
20 Donizetti 13 Love (Sp.)
color
35 Cry
opera
21 Russian

is no1 yet comple1e. IflO
min.l Par1 2.
9 ,3o 8 (}) (jJ) Night Court In
Stereo.
Ill! Hill Street Blues
1O:OO
The Hill feels the effec1s of
lhe public defende•s' strike.

SNAKE!!

+K Q9

the murder tnvestegat!On,
the nursing staff at Nightin·

HEE HEE--VOU'LL LOVE IT!!

+Q3
,8 632
t8 7 6 4

EAST
If the opposing diamonds were di- WEST
+ 10 9 4
+J86
5
vided 4-4 three no-trump would be the
• Q 10
'K
J
7
5
right ga,;,e contract. Because the bidt AK953
• Q J 10
ding by South indicated only on• dia- +s 3
+8 7 4
mond North suggested clubs and
SOUTH
South' bid game in that suit. AI first
+ AK7 2
glance, there are three losers - one
'A 9 4
diamond and two hearts. But legerde• 2
main made one of those losers disap+ A J 106 2
pear, not without a few squirms of disVulnerable· Both
comfort by West.
Dealer South
South !law immediately !hat 11
trickS would be hard to find . but he
North East
was familiar with dummy reversal West
play. Since a squeeze was also needed, , Pass
Pass
declarer laid the groundwork by play· · Pass
Pass
1 NT
ing a low heart from his hand after Pass
4+ Pass
rufflng the .second diamond. East · Pass
Pass Pass
smelled a rat, so he won the heart I 0·
.
and played back a spade. Decla~er
Opening lead: +Q
'WOII the queen in dummy, ruffed a dlamend with the club 10 and cashed the
ace ol hearts. He played a low club to his last . high heart, dummy's eight
dummy's nine, ruffed the last diamond would be a winner. If he shed a spade,
with his club ace and led the Jack of declarer would pla y spades and ta)&lt;e
clubs to dummy's K-Q. When the last the last trick with his Jowly seven:
high club was pl~yed from dUmmy . spot.
, 1, 16 NEWSP•r'R ENTERPRISE .,;N
South discarded htS Jostng heart, and
poor West was in the vise. If he threw

Senate race. (60 min.)
® Myotorv: Shroud for a
Nigh~lnfllll• (~CIIn spit~ of

WAI1 TILL I TELL 'IOU ABOUT
SAIRV AN ' BUFO~D, MAGIIIOLIA--

NORTH

By James Jacoby •

a (])

.

the chvckle QI.IOfed

A PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~ . THESE SQUARES

26 "C hances

(j}) KnotS Lending
(CC) Karen safely re1Ums
tiome ahe• being kid·
napped , Greg is trapped by
his plan 10 catch 1hit kidnapper ,and Abby bac~mes ~­

.......,.

Complet~

by fil ling in th~ miss ing words
L.-l.-.J.l-.l.._J.-...1.. ....I. you deve lop from step No. 3 below.

lows the work of a forensic
anthropologist, geneticist,

®l

~aneral Hauling

..
.

TYHR G KIH

{60 min.)
Cl) MOYIE: 'Willard'
Ill (!] Odd Couple
C1J African• ·(CCI This pro-

AT P KU H

social organtzatrons and II·

T E A

AE

I W

c; s

lli'AT .

J W W .B I' K U • A T \1' \ '

WDWK

Q GA W IJ

I'

K

lii' SS

feswles have been affected

v .G .J W

by the triple heritage of indt·
genous , VVestern. and Is·
Iamie factors. (60 min .)

®!

.

PEANUTS

1163 S ec . Avt.. O•ftipolls.
814· 448- 7133 or 114-448 -

HOLD THE BALL,
51~ Al&lt;ID '10\J KICK IT.. .
•

R a ivl Cu1tom Couch&amp;~ and
Fleuphol1tery, St. At 7 , Crown

Cl1y. Oh. 014·258·1470. Eva.
614-448·3431. o,.., doily81iJ

a. new
•

...

11LL BET THE
ICESOX WOULD

@@News
10:30 CIJ .Enterprloe USA
Ill(!] INI\I Newt
@ Tony Brown'• Journal
11:00. (}) Cll 1.!11 .. (DJ Ill!
Now•
ED Hardc11t11 and McCor·
mlck
(!) llorm Wrestling
• (!] M'A•s•H ·.

illl Constitution: That 0111-

cata Balance
@ The HoniiVmoonen
1·1:05 CIJ On Stage It the WoH
Tt-ap: Tho Golden lloyo of
Bandotand Frankie Avalon,
F'ablon, and Bobby Rydell
perlorm together on 111ge
lor tha fitst'lime .
·
11:30 8 ffi @ Tonight Show

...

A \\' 1\ I II' I'

A T W V

-

V GU C
RY X.J S II' l'
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: A w:. TII OL' li ll 11 liE
KILLED AND [)~ll . CAN ;m NG SOMETIMt:S. LIKE A

III(J}) Kov O'Brien 160

min.)

TAl STATE
UPHO.LSTERY SHOP

"

surgery .

gram looks ~t ~ow Afric a~

Upholstery

tn fumlture upholsterint , Cal
304 · 8715 · 4154 for fr11
"'lmttel. . ..

MUBJEL

sappoa•ed iCC) Nova fol-

matety involved

.. f111J ' LEFT .ME H~l;lE
ALL 8'1 M'ISELF WITH
NOBODY TO EAT
WITH A.ND
NOBODY TO
TALK TO ·

I0

day," she - - harshly.

23 Latvian
24 Airway
25 lla.seball

min .)

BARNEY

Ooo d· 1 EXcavating. ba1ementt,
tootert, df'lveways, septic tanh,
11nd1ctping . Cill tnytime 614448 ·41537, Jamn l. Oaviton,

trteountyareaZ1 ye1n. Thebelt:

@ Chee,. !CCI.
Norm risks his friendshiP

'disappeared'

""""

*"''"~

I1

After paying tor mv purchases

~ 1asked the ciiShler to repeat what
~ . she had said. "I said, have a nice

1 15

I

children in A•gen1ina. {60

•

PAW TOOK TH'
F6LLERS OFF
FLOAT FISHINJ'
FER THFIEE _DA'IS

I'

t

L-~:..:...::.1..:..;.1:.....:;1~6..:...,1~

and others who are helping
to document the fate of the

•
I

Excavating

Mowrev' s Upholstarlno

II

~

I

H E MT Y

(f) Nova: Search lor the Dl·

i

448-4477

Uphostered.

1~

CD 700 Club

l

Cor. Fourttl and Pine
Galllpoll1, Ohio
Phone 814-441 ·3888 or 614-

5, 81t. 9 ;30 to 1 30. Old

II

I
I i

HEBCL

Stereo.

THE BRID!:iE CL.LlB
· LADfE5 MWST E!E

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

87

2

I

salon and laundromat. In

0

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

304-676 -]190.

I.I I I 1 I

in a combiriation tanning

MACARON I

L.. IYERWLJRST,
BOL06NA, HAM,

cem'ent block work. roofing.
Interior and e•terior plintlng.
siding . Roofing. Free HtlmAtel.
304-176-5445 or 8711 -11!2 .

llm•tone end Coal Delivery.

II iJJ

with the Cheers patron&amp;
when he 1nvests their money

304-575-2010 .. 578-2842.

83

have

asks him to help revive a col·
lege publication . In Stereo.

676 -ZOBB "'87&amp;-7147.

82

attitudes

changed when an otd friend

1833.

ljt.-------- --

program introduc~s how a
culture's v,•ew df Itself and
the world are reflected by
the smallest details and modified by innovatton and dis·

~AVJY£RS ..

304·175-21 07.

4 horn tr1iler 11 ,000. Ctll

73

Dregonwynd Cmlf\' kennel.
CFA Himaltyan, Plrtltn and
81~m•t kiH••· AKC Chow

MARRIED PWPl£ f'W?.E. AWAVS
ARGUI~ A8a.Jr r-.ta-:£Y A~
. FIGHTlf£ AEOJT .SPf.(E. AND
MAKI~ ll-\REATS AIVOCAlJ.i~

Oltltrd' t Water Delivery. Cilt·
"'11nli, pool , a wtfl, Anyt ime l:lut
1974 Ford FJ50 tong wheefb11 11 Sunday, 61•·448 :7404 .
ton truck , 18 ,000 ~etual miles .
Perfect conclhlon . 30~ · 273 - Waneuon ' s Wa,e r Hauling,
4216.
reuonabie rate1. immediete
2,000 gallon delivery , ci•ternt.
1976 GMC pickup w ·toppar, pools: well. etc . eeH 304 ·676 ·
3150 eng .. ps II a1· Mekt Offer. 2911.

fhbbltt, .,_d.,. tnd butcher.

U1.:t Furniture: Wuher a
dryer. electric: rtnge, QM tenge,
wood t.ble 2 bend\N, btclt,
clrtt~.
r10Unw1 3 mil.. out
8UIOYH1o ftd . Op., lAM to

· I'M GE:nliJ?J TIRW cr
., 1l-'E. LOOELY UFE Of
' 11--\E. &amp;XHUCR .

304·578-2398 .. 814-44824&amp;4.

7911.

GOOd ........ Aft• I p.m. Cllll
304·8'78·1111 .

•ee.

'

RON ' S Televlt~on Str'tllce.
Houtt callt on RCA , Quuer,
GE. Specidng in Zenith. Cal

1985 Ford Ranger truck. 1tkl~g

304-115-7649 .

Peta for Sale

·

Jame1 Boys Wtter Sen.ice. Also
poots filled , Cell614 · 268· 1 141
or 814-448-1175 or 614 ·446 -

KintUIO . 4 -•cfl•tol5.

66

Coli &amp;14-446-9648.

86

lbo. oocft . foiOO ooch. 814 -7422753.

fJII • MI. loci hm• UO,
tJO • King treme teo. Good
Mleclion of bedroom .,.ttn.
met11 eablnett, heedbo•ds e30
end up to

broken leg . 160 min .)
illl DIIV the Universe
Chenged: A Personal VIew
bv James Burke (CCI This

f;EK ·&amp; MEEK

814 -992-IM21 .
I

'Our

help him recuperate from a

Jr. owner.

.,ltoble fo• oflloto; 450 gollo~
hotwo1•hoot.. 1203·11h1101n

o,.
.... fll . a ... ooblntto 1.
10, a 12 r1n. O• ar lllcrtric.

Evergreens a. blue s pruce
•12 .50 . Tree a. 11ump remo111~
mulc:h. ttone. firewood a coal
deil'tltred. Oon's Landtc.,... -

'72 Ford ton truck. Flat bed. Call

corn . Call forlat.. tqUottl. Riwr

ga~

A .J. and Rick learn the real
reason why Downtown
Brown will not allow them to

Waterproofing .

79 GMC pickup htiV'f h1lf. 350
V· 8 engine, 1uto. tir, crulae,
runniflg board. tide relit. e•c:.
ctun, 13 ,800 will lake trade.

n.ooo . co11 &amp;14-44&amp;-9257.

necessarv,

Nawshour

Co11614·319-2122.

62 Wanted to Buy

not

House,' 'The . Colbys' and
'20/20' will air . {3 hrs.)
Ill (!] MOVIE: 'The
McMaste,.·
C1J
MacNeil-Lehrer

,

Ashbyo ConatrueUon, c:erpentery, remodeling, room adcUtion,

paymentt, 304·876 · ~23 .

is

Uncondfttonal llfetlmt guartft- ,
tee. Locll raferen c11 furniahacl. ,
Free tltimattt. Call c:oneat '
1· 61 4 -237·0488. day or nfght.· 1
Rogttrs B•sement

Z7&amp;2 .

Z73·4216.

63

Pole Bulldingl by Quelit)'
Build••· Workthopt, c.-porte.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

good CO'nd . 01400. 304·882-

'71 Ford 2.000 tractor, bruth ·
hog , greeter blade, plows. boom
pole, manure spreadtt. 304·

City Farm Supply, 814·446·

championship. If this

IJ§IID (jj] Simon 8o Simon ·

19» Oldt. Good ctr. 1800
0 ao . Will consider eny trade?

1988 Ford Escort. 4 door sedan.
want tOmtOfle to ttke over'

Cll Major League

Califomia Angels compete
for the National League

Home
Improvements

896.']802

,97• Buick Ctntury 360 V·B,
netdt blttery . 107,582 e c:tuel
milet. Thi1c1r ialn my way. Htul
it 0' dtiva it eway far t75. FIRM.
3)4-882-233• after 6 p m

a

Baaeball: National League
Championship Game 7
The Boston Red Sox and 1he

MISTUH OOP, AH'D

job, e&amp;o. Co11514-742 ·2323.

1979 Iuick Elec:tra. all extret,

New and u lid parts tor Whltet,
Oliwers, M· M, Deutz tractors.
Sldera Equipment Co., 304-

r.., State at Akron {3 hrs .)
Live .

ALl.EY OOP

575-71142.

,.. Now buying thell corn or eer

2783 . .

Auto• p.tint.td. •175. 2 1ona
your exilting tingle cotor ,..,,

1978 Buick Sko;htwk Awns
good. IUIO. V-6, t500 . 304·

teu, Rio Grende, 0 . Call 114·
Concreta b.ku::ks ell1ize1 Ytrd or
delivery. Maeon sand. Gallipolis
Block Co .. 123Yll Pln1 St.,
Gelllpolil. Ohio CaM &amp;14 ·446-

wtth urav plush velour Interior,
white pldded vinyl top. AC ,
power wlndowt. power 1111t,
AM ·FM cu1ette sttteo , 1iU.
cnrile. iJddng witt ~HI eovtrl end more. 14,000 milieu·
lout mU.. C•ll 814-992-8468.

814-949-2805.

387·0242.

66 Building Supplies

188.5 Oldt Cutl111 Clera
Brougham 2 door coupe, whhe

(!) College Football: Mur-

"'·

'n

CROSS. SONS

'0500. Call614-192·8044.

In Stereo .

CII Coral Jungle

C1J

Ford motor home, 24 h, setf :
contained , gan41'110f, elr end •

RINGLES ' S SERVICE . 111.p•

Wilt; Jeck10n, Ohio.

a

.

197!S Chevy Nova. AC , AM ·FM 1 •

u.s. 35

7:05 CIJ Sanford and Son
7:30 8 CD Cll New Newlywed
Game
(!) Speedweek
Ill CD Too Close lor Com fort
(f) Judge
(f) Fall and Rise of Reginald Perrin
®J WhHI of Fortune
Ill ® (ll) Jeopardy
@Benson
7:35 Cll The Hon..,mooners
8:00 8 iJ)@ Cosby Show ICCI

Tt-ft:" GOoP .51LV~~w-\~f'.

Fieetwlng , true.. e3mp11 8'
fumac:e. sink, water ttnlc porta· •
..,rly, sleeps 4. 1800. 304 892·

814 -992-8&amp;24 .

'

AT Tt-fA'i LITTLe

Ho..S"r 11AC~R•A · · .
HE?-:&gt; GETiiNG our

1631 :

Firm Equipment

International 1210 grinder
mbutr. Excellent conditkin. 304-

Bladl , brick, IIWtr pip•. windows. lintela, etc:. CJ.ud1 Wln -

,,

Fetty Tree Trimming, ltu~ ~
removal. Cen 304-175-1331 .

173-5157.

1

1980 Oldl Omegt. V6 , auto,
82,000 milts, good clean oar.

1974 Volka W1g0n , 1971 Pon·
tiiiC Station Wagon. Both In
good condition. Call 304·773·

Alurm pttio . Cover 10x18. tv·
pewrltar manual office, typewrittr manual portable. c:ar fldlator,
Mldua toad ahoctu ftt '79
Bonneville, 30•· 882-22Q4.

Building Mtterials·

LOO~

Serv1 ces

$1100. Roger Kerr 614 985-

Meg. Wlndl•tlf 70XTR

Firewood. 304 ·112·21537 .

FRANK AND ERNEST

ei rpet, beth w ith ahower,

Winter potlto, onions for lilt.

Homtlite d1-'n uw tale, Super
XL · AO 3 .6 cu lndl engine.
menutl and auto. oiling, 11 in
pow• I~ blv t288.00. Weheve
over 30 good u~ecf 1nd rHuHt
IIWs if' stock from 171 .00 to
$160 .00. We will give 1 free
chein or elec:t chtin uw ehar·
pener with the purchllt of eny
used uw. Kaefer Servlca Ctn·
ter. Sl . Rt. 87, leon, W. Ve.
Phone 304 ·196 ·3874.

up to 28 inch• ever~ge height
11150.00 Installed . K • K Mobile
Homas, Inc:. 304-116·3000 .

~~~"~~~~~_j!~--~~~--~

C1mplf 1977 20ft. Nomad self
contained . awnings. AC. duo
aMits. Can l'fter &amp;PM, 114 -441·

f&amp;BOO. Coli 114-742·3142.

304-612-3835.

SPECIAL, VinWI Skirting. 70M14

~

•

Call. e14-256-1393.

1982 Olds Cutla11 Celals, 1
owner. eMcellent condition.
tolded, glall T·topa, ~o~ery th1rp.

tow to form four simple words.

R~­

(jj)
MacNeii-Lehr.,
Newshour
'8J(ji) (jJ) Wheel of Fortune
(H) Bam.., Miller

V ft . Trotwaod c•mpe• setf
contained, eood 1hape, &amp;2.000.

81

1111 CD M•A•s•H

®!News

i

----

POU.AN

Rearronge letters Of the
four scrambled wordJ ~

port

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

2712 .

0

Ed~od

WOlD
GAM I

Q (f) Poople's Court

CIJ Nightly Bualness

111 .ooo.oo 304-n3-5986

575-1421 .

22 t)ittol 12" barreiMd 1eop•.

for tale or trade. Cali 814·44&amp; -

1972 VW good condition. $f160.
Ctll614 -446·1511 .

Fruit
Vegetables

MotoJ puller 2 ton H-preu. 30l-

Delul!le Burris scope 3x8 power,

79 Chevy van. 79 Chevy step
van . 79 Chevena. ott-tar old cars
2568 ave.

Rough cut lumber, llltontd
walnut 60 cents botrd' foot .
White oak •126 per tt.ouund .
Can be 1111n Welker Wreck•,

8:00AM 1o 5:00PM. 304-676·
4412.

40" .

...LINGtRIE Cl.m~...

':~:~:~' S©~g{}lw\-~£trs•
by CU.Y t .

_...:..,_ _...:..,_

age differ·

ences, the subject of her up.coming TV movie , "love

a••

Pllrm. upright,"good conditton.
will deliver. 304-67&amp;-2088 after ,1975 Grtnd Prix, 2 dr., PS, PB,
7p.m.
AC. lookl good . Cell614·. . 6·
341M .
FOf 11le Lowery L70 debut.
oro.,. '1600. G.C. Ctlt..:t04· 1878 Chevy Monzt good c:ond.
882-2296 oft.. 4. .
Call 814 -25&amp;-11592 olto• 7PM.

., &amp;

views on relationships in·

volving vast

't

. 1980 ChevY Citation no Nit.
good work c:er, fron1 wtllll
driVe. Ctll &amp;14· 367-7225 .

Hammond organ spmat ftKldet
M·3. Perfect meChanical condition, t860 . Cell 81 4·441 ·0648 .

68

Ellen Bumyn shares her

Mount•ineer Auto Body Pertt.
'
Lerge r0t1nd bllet ot h"'' • 10 u . 1318 6th St. Naw Haven W.Ve.
Square blln •1.26 ea. C11f hll the largest inventory of after
614-446-1062 after 5.
m~rket parts tn th arM
low.
low prjces. 73 ·80 OM' fender•
U9 . GM dooral79. 73 -79 Ford
fendere t35. Doora •&amp;9 . We
II
011
rJow have ttlort and long P .U•
GM bed side. ~lazer tid• and
71
Autos for Sale •trly end late Ford bed 1tdl!tl in •
'Moc:k.AIIo part1 for cars and
vans , bedlin•a. lttp bumpeu,
Sherp 776 spray gun and cup
1986 Chevrolet Sprint plus. 5 *99 , while they lett. lattariel
ll)d . tranamiuion, rtdio, u
end eet. Also evailabln a 3 v••
c:Ond. Very tow mileage . Excel· rust ttlrau~ w11rrenty on our top
lent
mileage. C•ll614·245 - 'Jiality body per11. OutsideWett
9898
Virgini• C~M 1·800·623· 2013.
In Will , Virginia 1-800·654·
Mer~edes 450 111 78'1M sharp 4867 . loeal eeH1 304 ·882·
wtlltrede. Call614·886·7311.
3129 .

Squirtel dog, n\11e 2 yeatt old . .1984 Fotd Eteort wagon , auto,
Price 1300 . 304·176·6132 .
eir, AM-FM. wtrtrima. 82,999.
John' s Auto hies. BulavHte Rd,
Gellipolit, Oh .

57

CIJ En1ertalnment Tonight

pono avolloble. CoM 614-3889&amp;15.

Tr o sII or! ol i

69 For Sale or Trade

245-5121 .

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

z. a mo.

,Coii614-44.8·830B otftOf &amp;PM.

mick
· (!) SportaCentar

triendtv MrVice 9 the bert ullld

Hay &amp; Grain

64

258-6660.

Mixed hardwood sllba . t12 . per
bundle. Containing tpproll . 1lh
tons. · FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 814· 992 ·

t-~IGHn

"

KNODYE

a

DOWN FOR THE

nw.

Freezer belitf gr~in fed frUitr ·
MelroH. Wlnaap. RorM, Red &amp;
boel. C'all 514-448-0780.
Golden Oelicioua. Jonathon applu. Cider, P'ift11.kint,torghum,
Double barren 10 9.. 111 shotgun, top ~»ndit.km. toM model B.• honey, apple butter, jam •
C0"1)1tte with CM,e, e11cellent jelll11. Dunro'vin Fruit Ferm,
12-8. Ctoseet Mon . 111 8 . E11t
bird and rabbit gun $225 . WWII
of Albany, Oh. &amp;14-898-8298.
M· 1 eerbinl, with btyonet and
bo• of tmrnunition, good condi·
C1nning toR\Ito• dellv•ed to
lion $18&amp; . Cell114-446· 4681
GIHipolil. Call tfter 7PM. 814 ·
after 10:00AM .

304-578·2581 .•

hout~ln

2 utllhl• tumllhld. Atluttl

EVANS ENTERPRISE9 . Jock·
ton, Oh. 614-286-6930.

WI . ..

w. Yo. 304·875·7441.

400, 2ht au- *210. month.

Plettic clstem stare appro'lfed ,
pllltic: •optic: \enka, plutlc
culverts, mete! culverta. RON

Firewood. Hardwood delivered
• otockld t30.00 •uck lold .
304-173-8165.
Tr1ller IPIC". 1""11 child..,. · .:_:..:.___:_...;.._.:.:_ _ _ _.;:1L
ecceptld. At. 1. Locue1 Rold 66 Allia Chalmera tractor. 6 '
beck of I( a. J( Mobile Homes,
pull·type brush-hog; alum.
304-175-107t.
topper for thortbed . S · 10
pickup, 1&amp;0 gel. fu1l oil tlnk.
2-one ac:re Iota io Polectt Rd.
M l ~l,.li d lld l :· l :
Addl&amp;on Townlhip, Ohio . Rurel

Hendenon, ' ~288 end up to 1381 . Blbybede
1110• •111. Mtttr ...•orbo•
••lnp fuU or fiJ, flr01
1 btdfOOm tum6ehld dupl111 f73,ond fU Ou-ottol221.

3 bedroom

Call 614-266-8261 .

~18 .

v• . 304-&amp;78-3073.

quired . Dey 814·912·2381 or

814·992·2720.

18, 16 .6. 8 mllet out Rt.

anytim•.

APARTMENTS, tnobi1o ho.,.,

45 Furnished Rooms

2 bdr. furniehed duplex in
Ricin e . noo per month. Otp·
o1it • reference required. Call

Callahan' • Used Tifl Shop. Over
1,000tlrea. aizet 12 . 13. 14. 11i .

F'urnilhld efficiency 1150 utilitltJ paid, 1hare bath. 701 •th.
Gallipolis. C,a114ot6·4f18 1fter6

fio. 614-448-8221 .

HOUBBI for Rant

•

Apple 2·E RGB color, dul ditc:
drive, VGC . •1 .60 . Comes whh
mln'f gemes. Cell 814-388·
9976.
)

Jerr;' 1 Run Rd· 1 ecre witt! '
septic system, good well. metal
building. Call 304·87&amp;-2368.

41

54 1\11 isc. Merchandise

WHY DON'T
YOU MEN 8ED

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Transl'l'liuionl, eH types, over,
front, rear: 4 wheel d~ve, tnd
parts. Win l;tell11er. Call 814-379·

~ ·b

'

.6:00 DCilCilDCIJ®J.Ilil(ll)
News
CII Big Valley
(!) Mazda Sportol..ilok
&amp;I m Jo(fersono
CIJ 3-2: I, Contact ICC)
illl Under Sail ·
(H) Facts of Ufe
6:05 Cl) Andy G•iffith
6:30 8 I]) (II) NBC News
(!) Best of Bill Dance
(f)
(I) ABC News
Ill CD Hovan's Heroes
CIJ Doc1or Who
® IIIIUJ CBS News
IIi! Body Electric
(H) Good Times
6:35 Cl) Beverly Hillbillies
7:00 8 (f) PM Magazine
CII Hardcastle and McCor-

30•-

-

Border Collie puppy, purebred
from wo"'ing doga, •126 . Cell

814-246-9677.

houte~ .

76

1JA'2!(5\.(f

'

•soo

.

EYENINQ

82 v . 45 Mtgnum Hondt .
•1800. Low mitet!IQe. 304·811·
8874.

SmtH WOOd·COII Uo'(e like new
aaldng •400. Sewing machin~
btautfful · woo.d ceblntt. like
n~ . Call 61 4· 448· 7312.

Fllriillhocl opt. 1 IMI•. '236
ut:illtiei ptld. 701 4th Gtlllpolis.
Ce11448·4418 after 6 pm.

OpportUnity.

675-5208.

Rd .. 814-446-7398 ..

Linco ln Ave.

10/16/86.

Honda CX600. 1979 Model.

E~teenent condition .

dryer heevy duty t?S ~ w11her •
dryer ut OE white •ss ea.
S!41gg1 ApplianCH Uppttf River

Mitgt utility cabinet, throw rugs .
Refrigerator and stove. 231 1

Motorcycles

1981 HondeY·86 Magnum. Cell_

wether hetvy dUty 17&amp;, e lectrh;:

sprlngl &amp;.: mattress,
dark pine
headboard
146 304-676·
2517

Television
Viewing

304-675 -5360 ., 304:8753842

Oh. 814-441-7444.

Pickens U1ed ·fu,nitute . &lt;lood
CJ.Iallty used fumhure , Open 9 to.•
IS or call tof ·appolntmtnt.

LOSER

'

514•448-2359 .

16 ac:rn. Beech Grow Rd .
Rutl•nd, with glt well. Mult
sell. •n.ooo firm. Phone 114·

3-4 bedroom houN in Pomeroy,
fully furnlthtd , w-d. mietOWt\11,
81 Oakbrook expendo, ex c. nawtv remodeled, rec . room. P1'1
eond. Mutt aell. C11t eu.-379 - own utlllti11. deposit r.quired.
2687.
j::ell deye 814-992 ·2381 or
1984 Shultz mobile home . 'ft14-992-2720.
.::_:._:_::..:_:_:::.__ _ __
1•11.10 with 10K20 eMpendo on 3 bedroom home in Oexttr,
INingroom 6 h1tchen ll'le. tot•l eloae to coal miMI .. If interelttd
elec., 3 bdr.. 2 baths, GE spac• call 814-742-2'?28 . 1
uver mic:rowe11e tn kitchen, will
let unde~innng go whh trailer. e room house in Pomeroy. 2
Call 814-379-2726.
bedrooma, 1 beth. laundry room.
1 c:er gartte. built· in kitctlen,
Big t~vlng • big Stltction of eo"1)1ttely ctrpeted. dr.ptrita
uNCI a. bank repo11nsed mobile fum lthtd. Ytrt printeltftlng, fi
home. Call Kanauga Mobife min. from town. No pete. t2711i
Hornet. 614·446-9862 .
plus utilhi•. D1poth r~~q-.irtd .
Send rnume and rtf•tnc• to
Mutt sell, moved will not rafuM •The DIHV 8tntin ... loll 729 I ,
eny re11oanble offlf. Brand new Pomeroy, Ohio '
1988 24x40 Sunwood AC , OW,
extrts inlulttion Furnishe-d. 2 bedrOom . Fun' btsement,
nNt Gr..., School. Cell 513· newtv remodeled . Free gas.
653-6909.
1300 per month. No deposit.
1983 Clayton mobile home Coli 814·843-5309.
12M60 &amp; 1 .3 of an acre el1tlar~ell Smell fumllhed . Ideal for 1
together or teptrltt. Call 614- person . Ctll304-773· 151 03.
246-5689.

1973 Mon•rc:h 12•815 ." 2 bdr.
plu• util. mom, good eondhion,
•&amp; .181 dellvlftd . Franc, City

llertll Tt.e i.nd Lewn Service.

&amp;14-446-9623 . .

Coli 5 4-192-5882 af"' 5:00

' or

•e.99&amp; deltvertd . French City
Mobile Homes, 814·-448· 9340.
Profe•lonal
Service•

Ontv. Cin

Furntshed apt. eduttt

p.m.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
ap.
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY 614·448·3870.
.
MOBILE
HOME
SALES.
4
MI.
I NOTICE I
WEST,
GALLIPOLIS,
RT
36.
2·3 bedroom houM in Pomeroy.
THE OHIO Y~LLEY PUBLISH- PHONE 614-448-7274.
Unfurnished , Sugar Run area.
ING CO. reconwnendl th1t you

all typet of IPPirel 11or• Our
molt popular llorn Ire; 1 )Ca·
,..r dr•ta. tuita md sports·
w.er for tha worldng woman
2)High vDiume off-price lldl"
aore fuwring over 1000 lOp
br811dS It 20 to 10 pereent
uvingl 31 Yourtg junfor ceaual
war tu ltle 1&amp; 10 31 y..r otd
41Ltr.. lbe IIICU.. dre11 and
apor11WMt' l)lnr•t 110 Prtteen
ChHdrtn ' l •ore 1)113.99 (tnd
11111 on•prJct llditl ltOra feet·
urlngvlllu• ~ Ia MO .OO . Totti
emit •11.111. YeN Clf'l beop1n
within 2 - •· con 1-~4 -4419 ·
4438 ... ytimt.

304-87~·6104 ' o• 304-1757126.

1 room. t,.ll'ftllhed eflld.,cy 1p1.
In Lon,tv~lle. •100 per month.

Hou11 completelY fumiahed, 2
bdr. td~o~lta only loctted 140 4th
Ave. e260 mo .. •100
Ctll

FREE IIIIOCHURE - Wo Oflon

utilities p1rtly paid, nice. Cell

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

1 bdr. unfurn. 1•2 •th AYt.,
Gelllpolls. Oepollt req. 1116 Ptr
month. Call614·448-3817.

~2 Mobile Homes

do butln•s with people you
ll:now, 11\d NOT to send manev
throu~ the mtll until you have
ln'lf•tlgat_. tha ofterin".

Regency Inc. apanmont 2'bd• ..

'lnll'·

614-992·6018.

876·6698.

Fia·lt Man . No job too lar"e or
too amaM. Jim Brant-tam . Call

21

uaed ..tria .. r.nsr-.
wnher1 • dryet'l, 8 pc. wood
L.I'DOm auite UOO : Mollohan
'Fum.. Rt. 7 N(lrth. Gallipolis,

Household twin size btlcl. boM

DUple,. for rem 141 Second
Ave.. Oalt!Poli•~· 3 bdr. llvlngroom, (iinlngroom, new kit·
1979 libenv 12,.60, 2 bdr .. chen. beckyerd. refria ~ &amp;
reduced , 13.996 deHwered . $286 plus utiliti.. l teeurity
Frendt City Mobile Homes, depoait. Cell 614·4"'6-0690.

Ranch style, 3 bedrooms, family
room , goo'd location . New
Ha'tlen, 304-882-3620.

l:iO•d for senior
citizens. Special loving care. Call

Room

'7 4

a

304·876-6483 .. 876-1460.

Apartment
for Rent

for Sale

C~retMer J) ~ve in tpanment
C0"1) ..X. Call ~4- 876-6104 or

304-616-6386.

44

t::::::::::-,--:;:;;;:;:;:;;::===:"1

OfC:aii419-Z89. Q787 .

12

c - Motot 514-441-1398,

814-448·4389 o• 304-675- rtnge 30 in. harvett 9Qid 17&amp;',
9780.
wtlh• dryer set 1J9rtlble e76
ta., HO(IIver dtyer 175. gMrange
Nice 2 bedrOom mobile home tof 30 ~. •76, dilhwuher $78,

8AM-5PM.

· t:~ORN

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1973 Dodge Yen, I eyl, MJto~
NM pod. •eoo.oo. 507 Hend.arson St,

Wllhert. dryWI. r.trlg•etors.
rengts . Skaggi Appllance t9'
Upper River Rd . bteide Stone

,.,_, Coiii\4-441-IIH"'
114·441-4171.
New

1374.

EKPeri";'et lxtdy m1n needed to
buid Mlvege ca,-., Tool• reQU.irtd . Call 614 · 388-9616

Vans. &amp; 4 W.O.

73

CIOOD UIID APPUANC£5

+!e·01n.

11

KIT. 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ Llrry Wrlflht

61 Hpueehold Goods

~u~~~ber16,1986

. for Rent

Uud mubll• hom.1. Call 114-

2nd. Avo. Mlddlopon,
992-347&amp;.

Thursday. October 16, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

LAFF-A-DAY

~-

DEAO WASP -

ANN A .JAMESON

Tonight's gues1s are Cyndi
Lauper, Woody Harrelson

and comic Ritch Shydner.
160 min.) In Ste•eo.
I]) SportaCente•
(f) WKRP In Cincinnati
(!] Taxi
II Cll News
®!@Magnum. P.l.
G(J}) Night Heat {70 min.!
12:00 (]) Burna 8o Allen
I]) NFL Filma {Rl.
([J MOVIE: ''the Hun1ed

e

lady'
([J Jo'ffe,.ons

••

Iii CD Rawhide
CD ABC News Nightline
(!) SCTV
12:30 II CD [i}l Late Night with
David letterman Ton1ght's

a

guests are Bonnie Ra ttt and
ftlmm aker John Wat e rs . (60

mm I tn Stereo.

Cil Best of Groucho
(!) Pm Championship Ka.ate Coverage from Denver,·

CO. 160 min,) IRI .

Cil ABC News Nightiine

a

CD Tales of the Unexpected

I

..'

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