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Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

'

Southern honors fall athletes
.

By SCOTT WOLFE ·
, Sentinel News Staff
RACINE - Combining Its
annual football and volleyball
banquets, Southern High School
honored its fall sports at hletes
With a fine banquet and awards
ceremonY at Charles W. Hayman
· gymnasium in Racine Saturday
evening.
, Following a premium potluck
dinner, the awards portion of the
banquet began. Legend ary
coach , Cincinnati Reds scout ,
and foFmer Ohio s-tate football
"Coach of th'e Year" Jim Ven·
narl was the special guest
speaker.
Vennari addressed the student
ath.letes on ·'what it takes to be a
winner. .. not on ly on the field , but
in life as welt." He cited va rious •
aspects of win ning and losing,
and lectured against the us e of
alcohol and drugs as an alterna:·

Monday, November 10, 1986~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

.

tlve to facing problems In life .
en ted awarm to the varsity and
Coach Suzanne Wolfe pres· reserve . cheerleadlng squads,
en ted awards to membf,rs of her Kim Adams · and Jlll received
reserve and varsity. volleyball mention as varsity co-captains,
squads.
while Monica Hill and Carissa
Becky Evans was hooored as HUl were Junior' Varsity co.
captains.
t he restr~e teams. top serv«&gt;r . · Reserve
'
football awards wer·e
J oyce Foreman , '!rae! Hubbard,
J'll
tr esented by reserve coach Bill
1 Nease • R ac he1 Relber • Hoback.
Tammy Theiss, Karla Smith
and Wendy Wolf«&gt; were honored ·
Varsity football awarm were
·
h
·
1
presented
by Coach Bill Hensler.
w1t spec1a senior awards :
Rachel Reiber claimed the
Senior Tim Smith was rec6g·
nized for making the. ali-SVAC
Best servtng
pe£"!',!1ta&lt;&gt;e
award .·· football ·squad: .sp··~ta.l~awar•
""
·
"'
~
u
wlth "'per&lt;Pntaccuracy: Wendy ·
Wolfe claimed the Most Points winners were Scott Griteser and .
Scored award with 121 points: Crage Bro. wn, Mo·st Valuable
and Becky Winebrenner was. ' Offensive Linemen: Pete Roush
named Mcst Improved .
and Scott Bw-rls, Most Valuable
and Tony
Crysta I HiII, Jennifer Arnold, Backs ·, Scott B""ris
~
and Jill N«&gt;ase were ronorable . ' Connolly, Most Valuable Defen·
and T1'm Smith, Most
I a II ·SvAC, while Rachel Slve Bac"s·,
menton
~
Reiber and wendy Wolfe w'e re Valuable ~fensive Uneman.
and Roush gained G28
B ·~rls
named first team aii-S'fAC. .
Advisor Sandra Baer pres- and &amp;18 yarm respectively In the
backfield for the Tornadoes.
Tony Connolly was named
Most Improved, and Mike Wolford claimed the Sean Grueser ..
llO perrent award. Coaches ·
Achievement awarm ·wl!)t to
Tim "Bo" Willis, David Deem,
Damon Fisher, and Pete
Johnson.
Booster president Sue Beegle
gave special thanks and recognltlon to those makingtbe banquet
possible and Rev . Roger Grace
gave the benediction.

Ten die on
Ohio roads

.

I

.

·Area deaths

Fay Pickens Sauer

. Fay Pickens Sauer, 65, Middle·
port, Route 1, died at her
residence Svnday.
Born In Reedsville to the Harry ,
Warren and Ruth Henderson ·.
p
Rlckens, she was a member of
utland United M.ethodist
Church, director of Meigs County
Cooperative Parish, lay leader
and past president of the United·,
Methodist Women.
Mrs. Sauer was a graduate of
Ch
· ester HI gh sohoo1. Ohlo un1verslty and Marshall University .
She was a member of Delta
K
appa Gamma, American Assoelation of University Women, Big
Brothers and Sisters, board of
directors of Community Action
Program, a Martha Jennings
Sch
olar and in Who Who's of
Outstanding American Educa ·
tors. She taught. !II Kyger Creek
High School.
Surviving are daughter Joy
Roberta Sauer, Pomeroy, Mrs .
J.A. (Ruth Ann) DeLamerens ,
Gallipolis; a brother, Warren
Pickens, and sisters, Maxine
Whitehead and Grace Weber.
Reedsville, Glady·s Meredith,
Beverly.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Harold, and an
infant sister.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
Wednesmy at Rutland United
Methodist Church, Rev. Chester
Lemley. Bw-lal follows at Beach
Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 10 a .m on Tuesday.
The family will be presm t 2 to 4
and Gto 9 p.m. on Tuesday.
Donations may be sent to the
Rutland United Methodist
Church or the Carleton School,
Syracuse.

By United Press International
Ten people, including two
pedestrians and a motorcyclist,
were killed' In traffic accident~
across Ohio during the weekend,
the state Highway Patrol re- Stella Layne
GUE'&gt;T SPEAKER- Pictured with Southern ColK:hes Darrell
ported
today.
Dugan, left. and head mentor Bill Hensler, right, Is legendary
The
victims
died in 10 separate
coach and teacher, Jim Venoarl, who spoke ·of the atllludes of · ·
Stella Mae Sayre Layne, 77,
accidents,
Including
one Sunday, formerly of Meigs County, of
"winning and losing" while serving as guest speaker Saturday at ·
seven Saturday and rwo Friday Beechview in the Pittsburgh,
Southern's Fall Sports banquet.
night , a patrol spokeswoman Pa., area, died Nov. 7.
said . Only one of the auto crash
Surwlvlng are three sons,
victims was wearing a seat belt. George and James of Pittsburgh,
Two or the victims remained and Lee of Racine ; .two daughunidentified early today . On e of ters, Carol and Sandy Smerecky,
them was burned beyond recog- both of Pittsburgh. She was
nit io n Friday night when a car preceded In death by her huscrashed Into a Plckawa y County band , Henry Layne and a son.
ravine and burst Into flames .
Jack Layne. Other surv ivors are
The second unidentified victim 21 grandchildren; 34 greatwas a male who died Saturday In grandchildren ; a brother, Lee
a ·hit-skip accident on a street on Sayre, Wellston, and a sister,
the south side of Columbus.
Margie Burnem, Rutland .
The patrol counts traffic fata liGraveside services will be held
ties that result from accidents on Tuesday afternoon at the Leta rt
the sta te's public roadways each Falls Cemetery with Rev . Cha·
weekend between Gp.m. Friday rtes Norris olflctatlng.
and midnight Sunday.
Killed were:
TeiTY Arnold
Sunday
Findlay: Cheryl A. Gossman,
Terry Wayne Arnold, 2ti, 58
23, Arllftliton, In a one-car ace!· Rogers · Ave., Columbus, for·
dent on Ohio Jl in Hancock merly of Meigs County, was dead
Coupty.
on arrival at Mt. Carmel Wes t
FINAL YEAR- Three senior cheerleaders wer e honored for
Saturday
Medical Center In Columbus
their final year of service during I his grid season as each reeelved
Marion: Eric S. Mcintyre. 21, Saturday evening.
special awards during th&lt;o Southern High School taU sports
Caledonia. in a two-vehicle co III·
Mr. Arnold was born In Columbanquet this weekend in Racine . Pictured are Jill Nease, Kim
slon at the Intersection of Ohio~ bus on sept. 23, 1960.
Adams, and Lisa Pape.
and Ohio 529 In Marlon County.
Cleveland: Joho C. Merickel,
:Ill, Lakewood, when his motorcycle collided with a parked vehicle
on 1-!ll In Cleveland.
South Central Ohio
San dusky: Tammy A. Krum·
Increasing cloudiness today,
!auf, 23, Huron , while attempting with highs between 50 and 55.
to walk across Obio 6 ln. Erie · Rain likely tonight and Tuesda y,
County.
with a low tonight near 40 and
Columbus: William M. Lem· highs Tuesday between 45 and 50 .
ley, 52, Newark, in a car- truck
The probability of preclpita·
accident on a Columbus street .
tlon Is near zero today and 60
Columbus: Amy R. Donaldson, percent tonight and Tuesday.
27, Columbus. In a one-car
' Winds will be from the northw·
accide nt o~ a Franklin County es t near 10 mph today and from
ro ad.
east at less than 10 mph tonight.
Newark: May F. Hynes . 45,
Ohio Extended Forecast
Roswell, N.M., In a one-car cr as h
Wednesday throu1h Friday
oo Interstate 70 In Licking
A chance of snow Wednesday
County.
and Thursday, with fair weather
Columbus: unidentified male on Friday. Highs will be In the lls
pedestr ian In a hit-skip accident Wednesday and between 25 and
on a Columbus street.
35 Thursday and Friday. Over·
Friday night
· night lows will be in the 20s e~rly
Athens: , Kennl th Stilson, 20, Wednesday, between 15 and 25
Logan, 'in a two-car accident on Thursday · morning and In the
U.S. 33 In Athens County·.
teens early Friday.
··
·
Cir cleville: unidentified per·
son when a car cr a&lt;ihed Into a
ravine in Pickaway County and
ex ploded In flames.
Saturday Admissions - Mark
Laudermilt, Middleport; Dwight
McDaniels, Pomeroy; 'Francis
Two share lotto pot
'Howery, Middleport; Avis HarSENIOR NETTERS - Senior netters honored lor their final
CLEVELAND (UP!i - Two tley, Middleport; Juanita Chap·
ycar'ln volleyball for Coach Suzanne Wolfe's club were, 1-r, lilting,
Ohio Lotto players will share man, Clifton, W.Va.
Saturday's jackpot of $1.3 milTammy Theiss, Jill Nease, and Karla Smith. Back Rllw, .J\I)Ce
Saturday Discharges - ~enny
Foreman, Rachel Reiher, Wendy Wolfe, and Tracie Hubbard.
lion, Ohio Lottery Commission Powell, James Lucas, Willard
officials said Sunday.
Hines.
Those play«&gt;rs had the numbers
Sunday Admissions--Jack
4, 11 , 12, 22, 23 and .28 on their Delph, Pomeroy; Margaret LalMeigs Coun ty Emergency a.m. to the Arbaugh A.ddltlon lor tlckets. They can redeem their lance, Syracuse; Cindy Stalans,
Medical Services reports 12 ca lls Mary B. Murphy whd was tickets at a regional lottery office Syracuse; Robert Morris, Pomeover the weekend ; seven on trea ted but not traJisported ; today . They each willget$654 ,179 roy ; Maril yn Shamblin,
'
Rutland at 12:33 p.m. to Langs- over a period of 20 years, before Hartford.
Saturday and five on Sunday.
Sunday
Discharges--Ronald
taxes
are
deducted.
Sat11rday at 2: 12 a.m., Pome· ville for Ma ry Riggs_tef, Holzer
Lottery officials said $3,531,198 Armes, Mary Bonecutter, Haroy transported Dwight McDa- Medical Center; Racine al 7:46
worth
of tickets had been sold for rold Fetty, Mary Pauley, Yvonne
niels from an auto accident at the p.m. to Letart Falls !Qr Benny
Walker, Margaret CauthOrn.
Intersecllon of Rout e 7 and Union Rhodes to Veterans Memorial the game.
Ave. to Veterans Memorial Hos· Hospital.
On Sunday, Pomeroy at 1:45
pital: ·Pomeroy at 2:21 a.m.
transported Marie Laudermilt p.m. to Route 7 for Louis Earl
.
from the scene oft he accident to Young to Veterans Memorial
Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Hospital ; Mlddleportat1:59p.m.
Middleport at 2: 43 a.m. trans· to Leadin'g Creek Rd. for Faye
"WE SPECIAliZE IN CARING" · ...
ported Kevin Thoma and Dwight Sljuer who was dead on arrival;
Halley from the accident to P6meroy at 4: 4G p.m . to Union
Veterans Memor ial Hospital; Ave. for Robert Morris to VeteMiddleport at 7:38 a.m. to ra.ns Memorial Hospital; Syra- .
•· Stonewood Apts. for Francis cuse at 5:45 p.m. transported , •24 HOUR SERVICE
•WE BILL ALL INSURANCE '
Howery to Veterans Memorial Charlotte Eakins to Veterans •FREE DELIVERY
•PURCHASE AND RENTALS
Hospital; Racine at 7:48a.m. to Memorial Hospital; Racine at
COMPLETE
LINE
Of
MEDICAl
CARE EQUIPMENT
Front St. for l-awrence Scar· 9:18 p.m. to Bashan Rd . for Don
berry to Veterans Memorial Stephenson to Veterans MemorlOll YiMd Stflll
hint
Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 9:16 ial Hospital.

Weather

, Surviving are . his motber,
Margaret Arnold Hartley, Columbus: a sister, Debra Arnold
'Buell, F'lalnwell, Mich., and
several aunts and uncles:
Graveside rites·wm be held at
·10 a.m. TUiesday at nte Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Ewing Funeral Home
· at~ a.m. Tuesday until the body
is take!l to the cemetery.

!Mary Buck
'
i

Mary Ewing~ Buck, ,68, Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, died Su.nday at Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Buck was born Aug. 24 ,
1918 In Meigs County , a daughter
of the late Ben·and Allee Downie
Ewing. She was a retired funeral
dlr.ector and cosmetologist.
Surviving are a son and
daughter-in-law, Robert and
Debbi Buck, Pomeroy; three
grandchildren, Jennifer, Juli anne and Jacquelyn Buck; a
sister, Helen Norris, Pomet oy,
and several .nieces and nephl!ws
Including Roger Reuter and
Larry Reuter. both of Michigan:
Eugene Norris of Kingston, and
Ben E.Wing of Pomeroy .
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by her husband, Fritz Buck, In April, 1984, a
sister and a brother.
Services will be held at 10 a.m.
Wednesday at lhe Ewing Funeral
Home with Rev. William H.
Middleswarth and Rev. W. H.
Perrin off.lciating . Burial will be
in Beech Grove Cemetery.
Friends may call at the fun«&gt; ral
home from 6 to 9 p.m . Tuesday.

Ladies Auxiliary at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Surviving are two daUghters,
Frankie Foster, Delaware, and
Norma Morris, Bowling Green; a
son, William Wheeler, Westfield,
Mass.; a sister, Rena Myers,
Columbus; live grandchildren,
Erin, Jason and Rachel Mllrrls,
and Leah and Marnle Foster, .
three nephews and a niece.
She was preceded in death by
her husband. Alex Wheeler, and
three brothers, Charlie Stitt,
Arthur Stitt and Alfred Stilt.
Services· 'W m be held at 2: 30
p.m . Wednesday at tlie Ewing
Funeral Home with bUrial to be .
In . Letart Falls Cemetery .
Friends may call at the funeral _
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m .·
Tuesda y.
•

Junior miss
deadline Nov.

12

,•
&lt;

.

Judgment sought

Plan Meigs elet&gt;tion

•

The Gallia ·Meigs Community~
ac tion Agency will hold election.
at · the Meigs Countv Outreach'
Office in the M«&gt;igs Cou ntJ(
Courthouse at 1:30 p.m. Wednes·
da y. Purpose of the election Is to·
nominate low income people to '
fill the ind igent vacancies on the
Communit y Action Agency's
Board of Directors.

599
PICK-4

5183

enttne
No.133
1986

1 Section, 10 Pages

erry service
options sought
By NANCY YOACHAM
Ronald Kyg~r. representing the
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Sentinel Staff Writer
Based on Intorrpation pres· and others, decided that more
en ted In a Mond'ay morning alternatives must be considered
meeting In Mason , W.Va., estab·
Kyger pointed out that If th~
llshment of · ferry service be- Mason landing Is used, the corps •
tween Pomeroy and Mason while onlY, concern Is that a $100,000
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge is performance bond be secured to
closed for repa irs Is still iffy .
cover any damages that might
More facts and figures will be occur to the landing during the
needed before a final decision time tbe ferry operates.
can be· made on esta blishing
It had been suggested at last
ferry service.
week's meeting! hat a temporary
Following a meeting last week sandbag and plank,type covering
at the Meigs County Courthouse, be const~ucted over the existing
it had appeared establishment of
levy to provide additional proteca ferry operation between Pome- lion "and better facilitate ferry
roy and Mason would be deslra· tanding.
However, McCoy, who is Interble, even though that route was a
. "60 percent solution," due to the ested In the contract to provide
amount of time the ferry would the ferry service.• as well as Tony
be unable to operate due to high Holbrook, of Amherst Industries,
water conditions on the river.
Charleston, W.Va ., who Is also
At Monday's meeting, a com- Interested · In the contract,
mlttee which includes Mayor pointed out that sandbagging
Richard Seyler, Pomeroy; . would not withstand the weight of
Mayor Agnes Roush, Maso n; a ferry. If a temporary covering
Councilman Jack Fowler, Ma- is built, It would have to be much
so n; Bill Nease, president of the more substantial, and therefore
Pomeroy Chamber of Com- may be more costly .
merce; Phil Roberts, Meigs
AlSo, If the ferry Is established
County Engineer; Doc McCoy, between Pomeroy and Mason, a
Point Pleasant ferry operator;
bond or an escrow account would

Goody~ar readies

anti-buyout moves
AKRON, Ohio IUP!i- Goo·
dyea r Tire &amp; Rubber Co. announced more anti-takeover
measures, including the sale of
an airship base In Italy and tbe
transfer of its Howdins Ltd.
operations !rom Great Britain.
Goodyear, the target of a
threatened takeover by corporate raider James Goldsmith,
once again was the most active
Issue on the New York .Stock
Exchange Monday.
Goodyear stock closed up \1j at
47 % with 6.23 million shares
traded . Jeffries and Co., known
as a third-party tradN, bought
4.8 million shares, but would not
comment on the purchase.
Goody«&gt;ar's stock price ha s
increased from just under $34 a
sha re Oct. 7, when thl' takeover
rumors bega n.

Akron. The action .Is designed to
increase sbareholdei' value.
·. Howdlns Ltd., which employs
about 'il) people, Is based in
Wlgan , England. Key employees
at Howdlns facilities In Bryn ,
Wlgan, Sutton Goldfield and
Brldgend will be offered positions at other Goodye'ar locations, the release said.
Goodyear purchased Howdlns
In January from BTR , a British
company that acquired It In 1985
while gaining control of Dunlop
Ltd. Howdlns formerly was
known as Engineering Consul·
tancy Service.
The company has been developing a fully au tom ated tire
building system for the past 10
years.
The other restructw-lng action
calls for the retirement of Goodyear's Ew-opean blimp, and the
sale of the blimp's base in
Capena , Italy. The move will
affect the 25-person cr«&gt;w of the
airship, company officials said.
The Europa had been in
service In Europe since 1972. It
()as been undergo lng repairs
since Sept. 24, when It was forced
to land over Southern France
after encounterilig severe down·
drafts and tlllnderstorms.
The blimp Will be shipped to theUnited States and a buyer will be
sought for the Capena base, near
Rome.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newll)aper

•

'

· POINT PLEASANT - An
apparent · error In recordin!(
votes from a tally sheet onto a
form handed to officials in the
courthouse election night has left
the race for county commission
dead even with 21 of JV!ason

·-

Council .
disputes
property
•
prtce· tag

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer .
The Chesapeake &amp; Ohio Rail·
road wants Middleport VIllage to
pay $67,000 for Its property
running along the Ohio River in
Middleport.
"No way, " is thl' answer of
village officials to the proposal.
Meeting In regular session
Monday
night, Middleport
LOOKING THINGS OVER - Following Mon- Charleston, W.Va., look a closer.lookattbe Mason
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman read a
day's meeting In Mason, ·Doc McCoy, ferry levee. Establishing a ferry service to accommoletter from the company setting
operator, Phil Roberts, Meigs County engineer, date local traffic while the Pomeroy-Mason
the price for land along the river
Bill Nease, Pomeroy Chamber president, and bridge Is closed for major repairs has turned out
from Leading Creek upriver to
Tony Holbrook, represenllnK Amherst Industries, to be a complicated task for those Involved In the
Beech Street at $25,000 and
project:
$42,000 for an island ·or 'land
be needed to assure that the Pomeroy-Mason route IS stili not pairs which would be needed if owned by the co mpany near the
street leading from the Mason the most desirable because of the the existing Mason landing is end of Hamilton Street.
The land from Leading Creek
damaged; to build an offslnot to
landing io U.S. 33 , if damaged, high water conditions .
to
Beech would be used as .a
the
existing
landing
for
ferry
would be repaire(;l once ferry
The Middleport-Clifton route
bicycle
path, according to village
service Is dlsmntlnued.
.
would still be the best choice, service only: and to resw-lace
plans.The
company Indicated
Another suggestion was that an according to both McCoy _and the Mason street leading from
that
the
latter
land Is 2.132 acres,
additional landing be con· Holbrook, because high water the landing to the main highway,
could
be
developed.
which
structed In Mason , to tie In with would not interrupt service at should It be damaged: and as
However, officials had a differ·
soon as McCoy learns the outthe road from the existing that bcation.
ent
Idea about the proposal,
come
of
his
e!forls
to
obtain
landing and to be used solely lor
McCoy reported he Is trying to
particularly
the ls .land of land.
financial
backing
to
develop
the
ferry service. Plans tor any secure private financial backing
Dewey
Horton
, council pres!·
cons !ruction of this type would to· upgrade the Clifton and Middleport-Clifton sites .
dent,
said
I
ba
I
price
would be fitic
Neither the Ohio Department
require approval from the corps Middleport landings, and would
If
the
property
were
located In
of engineers, just as plans to possibly know by late Tuesday of Transportation, nor the West
New
York
City.
Mayor
Hoffman
construct a temporary covering. afternoon If financial backing Virginia Department of Highques tioned not only the state·
ways sent representatives to
would need the corps' approval. will be forthcoming.
ment , that the Island contaihs
Monday's
meeting.
It
Is
hoped
. A~? whether a.n otfsho~t to the
,Another meetln&amp;:wlll be held liS
M.OU landhlg Is bunt, or tbo ooon as Ill*~ ·~tifMitl!ll are 1ll!ltl!oth of the'IU"t'tttee wn\,be . over two acr• but alao what
development ·could take place
temporary covering Is built, the obtained regarding possible re- represmted at the next meetinl!.
there.
"It's a ridiculous ·price," off!·
clals commented.
Council authorized Ma yor Hoffman to contact the Ohio Department of Transportation in rega:rd
to the matter and it Is expected
that as a result, the department
will be in touch with the railroad
company.
,
Ow-ing the meeting council
approved the October r«&gt;poi-t ol
Mayoc Hoffman showin~. re:
celpts of $4,816.16 in fin es and
fees and agreed to a name
change on a liquor permit from
Gas Plus to Chuck's Quick Mart
Inc.
Ma yoc Hoffman expressed
thanks to voters of the community for renewa l of a tax levy at the •
Nov. 4 election and reported that
plans for a nursing· home In the
community are movi ng along
fast.
Councilman Bob Gilmore sub·
mitted a traffic plan for next
year's block party which would
alleviate the use of numerous
workers In controlling the traffi c.
He listed the equipment and
signs
that would be needed to
TOYS GALORE - Local motorcyclists joined
county's underprivileged. From left, Bessie
carry out the plan so that any of
together Ibis year to collect toys tor the Pomeroy
Turley and Outpost Sergeant Dora Vlnlnr are
the it ems not on hand could be
Salvation Anny's Toys lor Tots program. On
pictured with just a fraction of the toys which
seo;ured
before the next block
Monday afternoon, four truckloads of toys were
were collected. '"We sure appreciate all this
party.
Co.uncilman Jack Sat ·
delivered by the motorcycllsls to tbe Salvation
help," said VIning. "In the past we've just had to
terfi
eld
discussed
·the need tor
Afllly ·quarters on Bu!temut A~enue. In addition
scrap and sc,rap to gel toys for Chrhttmas," added.
handicapped ramps In the busi. to the toys, over SSOO In cash was donated by the ·Turley. "There'll he even more next yeiU'," said
ness.'sect ion and Mayoc Hoffman
cyclists to aid the Salvation Army In making
the cyclists.
Indicated that the ramps arc
Christmas a little brl•hter lor many of the
needed and will be forthcoming.
.It was stressed that those bu ild·
lng new sidewalks should provide
for such ramps. Council man
In the vote total for Repub!IFan over Democrat Thom as county and circuit clerks' offices William Walt ers discussed . 'the
Earl Keefer In Precinct No. 21, "Tucker" Mayes. But yesterday, last Tuesday evening gave him need tor crosswal ks to bl' pai ntf'd
In the bu siness section and
one offour precincts with polling when Precinct No. 21 was can· 172 votes. That dlscrepency,
Mayor Hoffman said this also
places at Ordnance Elementary • vassed, commissioners diSCIJ· · along with the counting of sevwill
be taken rare of.
·
School.
vered the tally sheet there era! previous ly challenged bai!Continued
on
Page
'
&gt;
l
Unofficlal totals election night showed Keefer with 122 votes lots, has apparently closed the
gave Keefer a ~3.- vote victory. while · the form turned In to· .t,he
(Continued on Page 5)

'.

County 's 39 precincts canvassed.
Commission business manager Kevin Durst sa ld the Mason
County Commission , which bega n Its statutory duty as a Board
of Canvassers Monday morning,
discovered a 50-vote dlscrepency

Veteran reporter says Reagan credibility suffers

PLEASANT _

~
Drill

HOMt MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Helen Thorn•
'I

.........._

Clearing tonight, with a low
in the mid 20s. Increasing
cloudln&lt;·ss Wedne•day, with
highs In the upp1•r tOs . The
probability of precipitation is
nea r zt•ro tonight and Wednesday.

•

----------------_;;_----,..---1

__..__

Daily Numher

Canvass leaves Mason commission race even

Squads answer 12 weekend calls

I

Ohio Lottery

Miami 26-16
.loss Monday
- Page .4

In a do cum ent filed Oct. 31 with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission, Goldsmith clalm«&gt;d
to have acquired 11.5 per rent of
Goodyear's outstanding s hares.
He has said he Intends to make a
· ' tender offer of $49 a share if the
company cannot raise the val ue
above $50.
Goodyear said Monday In a
news release It will close Its
Howdins Ltd. of Great Britain
;1nd transfer ~erations to techni·
cal cen ters In Luxembourg and

Hospital news

liJ

.

Browns hand

·Southeast Ohio Junior Miss ,
Inc ., announced Wednesday, ·•
Nov. 12; Gp.m., as deadline for .
Meigs County high schools' se'j
nlor girls to enter the 1987 Meigs
County Junior Miss Scholarship
Program.
A meeting has been set for 6 p.m. at lh«' Trinity Church in
Pomeroy for all high school
senior girls . If unable to attend
the meet ing and rehearsal, inter·
ested girls should contact the
junior miss boat;d at P.O. Box 2,
Pomeroy, or call 992-5480 by G
p.m . Wedn~s day .
.
Finals for the 1987 Junior Miss •
Program will be held Nov . 30, 3 ;
p.m., at the Meigs Ju)llor High
Mary Hood
auditorium In Mlddleport.w:
Wlnn«&gt;r of the local finals will •
Mary Lou Hood. 65, Crew represent Meigs County In early '
Road, Pomeroy , died Monday February at -the Ohio Junior Miss
morning at her home.
finals In Mt. Vernon.
Mrs. Hood was born at Norfolk,
Va., on March 25, 1921, a
daughter of the late Oscar and Lod~ to meet
Erma Hodge Moore. She was a
Racine Lodge 4G1 F&amp;AM will ·
retired telephone operator hav· meet Tuesday in regular session ·
ing been with General Telephone for election of officers.
•
Co. of Ohio for 24 years. Shew as a
•
member of the St. Paul Lutheran
&lt; '
Council
to
meet
Church and was a volunteer with
central supply of the Holzer
Regular meetings of Pomeroy
Medical Center.
Cha
pter 80 RAM and Bosworth
.Surviving are a daughter and
son-in-law, VIcki and Craig Nic- Council 4G R&amp;SM will be held ·
'
lnsky, Middleport: a sister, Ver- Wednesda y.
ona Holland, Mobile, Ala.; three
brothers . Dick Moore. Fullerton.
Calif., and Joe and Oscar Lee
Moore, both of Adams Count y,.
and severai nieces and nephews. J Central , Trust Company of
Besides her parents, she was Southeastern Ohio, Middleport,
preceded In death by her hus- has filed action .In Meigs County
band, Wilbur C. Hood, and a Common 'Pleas Court against
t rother, Jack Moore.
Paul Dailey, Middleport, and
Services will be held at 1 p.m. Yyonne Scally, Middleport, reWedn esday at the Ewing Funeral ques ting judgment of $8,360 plus
Home with burial to be In Beech Interest.
Grove Cemetery. Friends may
In other matters, a reciprocal
ca ll at the funeral home from 2 to action for child support has been
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
filed by the Washington County,
Ohio, Department of Human
Services against Ralph B. Wells ..
Anna Whet'ler
Anna Amelia Wheeler, 73,
Appll' Grove, died Sunda y In
Delaware, Ohio.
A homemaker and me rchant ,
Mrs. Wheell'r wa s born Oct . 25,
1913 in Huntington, W. Va., a
daugh ter of the tate Elza and
Bessie Nance Stitt. She was a
member of the Apple Grove
United Met hod is t Church, Racine Chapte r of the Order of
Eastern Sta r, and for several
years was a m«&gt;mber of the

I·

By KEVIN KELLY
ble In their coverage of efforts to nations.
re!resli ng if not so motivated,"'
OVP News Editor
free U.S. captives In Lebanon
Thomas ~It, however, that the Thomas said. "We were supRIO GRANDE - Veteran
"He (Jacobsen) told us to b~ck · Reagan administration's credl· posed to Ignore the look on
United Press International White off," Thomas said, "but mo-· · billty has been damaged by the George Shultz's face that Sunday
House correspondent Helen Tho· ments before he told us haw great dis Information campaign le- night and the angry words
mas defended the role of a tree I! was to be back in the land of the veled against Libya and by the President Reagan had for Gorba press Monday before an au· free, and that those freedoms " massive PR blitz" it launched chev when tbey departed and
dlence at Rio Grlmde College and shouldn't be taken.for granted." to tell Its side of the failure of the become believers again ... it was
Commun,lty College, noting that
One of those freedoms, she proposed arms agreement at the a campaign to ·turn a defeat into
the presidency cannot be allowed reminded the audience; Is free- Iceland summit last month.
victory.'' · '
to "dictate what to write and dam of the press.
On the latter subject, Thomas
Reagan · is " totally propublish."
· Altrough the White House's said It was decided by Reagan grammed," Thomas said, " and
Thomas, who has covered the refusal to discuss the circum- staffers ~ to devote their waking the White House has raised
White 'House beat since 1960, said stances behind Jacobsen 's re- rours to buttonholing the me- managed news to an art."
reporters were stung by the llease remains the "untold ' dla ," leading to quotes and Because of this, in part, Reagan
bitter criticism leveled at the !story," Thomas acknowledged dlsclosw-es by administration has had only seven news confernews media last Friday by freed that It Is difficult for a super- . figures who had previously re- ences this year "and that's tar
American 1 hostage David Ja· power such as the U.S. to .. fused to talk to the }X'ess or had too few," she said.
cobsen, but stressed that news negotiate with the factions hold- been shielded from the spotlight.
" We seek news conferences
organi.zations are belngresponsl- lng the hosta~es , rather than .
'.'This would have been so . beca)llie It's the only forum In our

society where the pres ident can
be qui'St.lo ned," Thomas said .
Of Reagan himself, Thomas
said he enjoys the presidency. "Is
aloof but remains In charge ," but
Is concerned that time Is running
out to gl't his programs Initiated·,
a concern aggravated by Ia's!
week's elections, which :- hav«&gt;
given the Democrats con trol -of
Co ngress. Thomas ·said she found
Reagan's en thu siasm for aMI·
lshlng the 22itd Amendment whlc~t:o'ltnlts presidents to two
term! In office - somewhat
Ironic because the amendment
was originally drafted in response to GOP complaints about
the lout terms of Franklin D. ·
Roosevelt .
lj

�'

November11,1986

Pag8.:_2- The Daily Sentinel
· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. .
Tuesday, ~m.ber 11~ 19~ t

; Cheers

The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
~~
.
ISl m~ '""'-''-""T"' ,..,......,d,.,..

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ Coritr~ller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager
•:

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press Int ernational, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

for ·,catfish

SCRABBLE, Va. - I see lly
U.S. News &amp; World Rl'port that
the catfish producer s of Mississippi are ,l(oing ail out to sell their
gastronomic delight. Through
the American Catfish Institute
they have retained a high powered advertisin g •outfit in
Daflas. A $1.5 million campaign
is under way .
,
Well. I'm for that, but It 's kind
of sad that my catfish friend'l
have had to resor t to such
measures. It ought not to be
necessary to hire admen andp.r.
types to promote the greatest of
all domestic ptscine delicacies .

The catfish ough t to be able to
stand, or to be fried for that
matter, on .it s own undeniable
merits .
Alas, the food-buying public
simply Is not in for med about the
catfish sold on today's market.
Most people, when they think
about catfish at all, which is
regrettably seldom. think of the
critters that feed off the lxlllom
of Southern rivers and bayrus.
As every schoolboy knows, thes e
cats are cats of tbe order
Ostai'iophysl, suborder Silurcidea, and while they make for
good conversation andareexcel-

lent in their own humbl e way,
they are not what the American
Catfish Institute has il mi nd.
No. indeed . The catfisht hal are
the objeet oft he saies ·campaign
are the elite of the br eed. They
are raised in the high-rent
dis triers of Mississippi. They
swim in spring wato:; they dine
on a balan ced diet of grain.
essentia l minerals and s!rllon
·Steak; they go. to hi gh-c lass prep
schools and the females make
fheir debu ts. These are nor
or dinary ca tfis~.
Webs ter's Third International
Di ctionary, in one of its rare

LETI'ERS OF OPlNION are welcome. They shook! be less than XKI words

long. All letters are su bjec t to OOtllng and

m.&amp;st

College ratin~·
'
T••:un
1 ~lllllnl (I() [8-ft)

be signed with name, address and

telephone number No unsignEd letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good taste. addresslng Issues, not persooalllles.

'

lapses from accuracy ,.says tha t
the fl es h of the catfish " is not of
the finest quality ." Fie upon
these witless lexicographers! •
The editors evidently never have '
met the JXJnd -grown upper crust. ,
The flesh of a catfish that' has
bee n gra duated from the Catfish
Ins titut e Is flesh hey.ond compar e. Ill; firm: It is lender; it is
flak y; it mus hes not. Of greater
moment, the flesh is supremely
tasty. Unlike the ubiquitous sole,
which has ail the flavor of a
sa uteed kit chen s ponge, the
catft s h has a flavor ail its own ~ ·
definitive but subtle. unm is takabl e and yet elusive. It Is like the
expensive fragrance th ~ t is worn '
lly a beautif4i woman: It tempts ,
it enraptur es. It ensorcelis.

...,. '

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!HI
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1 ~. Alah.lmu fll·'!l
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111.

"" ''

Ill Ra}'hlr [i-:\)

IN' f•illnl!

\' Oil"':

Color.tdo
I nd ian &lt;~ .

F toild u StH tP. Ftl'!.n o• !-i1aw

!own. M ls~l~~ lppl S,tn I(Is('
&lt;~nd \'h gi nIa 1b·h

Sl.tl ~&gt; .

UCI. A

I

The 99th Congress has been rightly praised fo r passing landmark
bills dealing with tax reform. immigration. Superfund, and ill egal
drugs bur so me other troublesome issues were not resolved and will
be around to bedevil the lawmak ers next year.
Among the bills not passed are ones that affect just about every
American -ba nking reform. a n omnioos hous ing measure, and the
highway a uthor iza tion bilL But there is1 no guarantee tbe IOOth
Co n ~tress will have any be tter lu ck trying to resolve the many
co nflicts involved in those measures.
Right up to the final hours before Congress adjourned Oct : 18,
var ious bankin g bills were the subjeet of negotiations between the
House and Senate. The chair man of t he House Banking, Finance a nd
Urban Affairs Committee. Rep. Fernand St Germain. D·R. I..
accused the Sena te of sta lling. but sa id he would launch a new pus h
nPxl yea r and hope "the new Sena te will be more responsive to the
public int erest."'
Some of the items the banl\i ng legislatio n dealt,with include. better
su pervision of banks a nd savings a nd loa ns. allowing banks to enter
nc w market s. limiting bank holds on checks. and requiring clear and
uniform disclosure of int erest ra tes a nd conditions on sav ings and on
credit cards.
Another bill tha t passed through St Germain's committee on its
way to doom was a co mprehens ive housing measw;e th at would have
signiflcantiv revam ped federa l hous ing programs. The measure
proposed a ma jor policy s hift toward renovation of exis ting public
housing rat her tha n co nstruction of new units.
.Congress has hot been able to agrre on a housi ng autoorization bill
si nce 1980. The bas ic progra ms continue - under old policy and at
current fi nancing levels - by virtue of the ca tch-ail money bills
passed ut the end of each session. bu t,thal does n{)t a llow action on the
kind s of reforms that have been discussed in Congress for severa l

:vea rs.

.

-

. Rep. Henr;· Gonza lez. D-Texas. chairman of the housing
subcommittee. said the failure of Congress "to set a clear hous ing
• • ·pe)icy " and the administrat ion 's opposition continuing the housing
:~"tograms ha,·e "created an accelerating crisis ."
::C•:Housin g for Hrst-tim e buyers Is increasingly unaffordable and
%.·rent a l unit s are becoming scarce a nd cost ly, Gonzalez war ned after
""' ) he bill di ed '" the Senate.
,
-~.. ~
.
.
..... On the fm al dav of the sess ton . th e House and Senate wer e close to
..:~.; greement on the highwa~· authorization bill, but ran out of lime
.O.:b!'fore the;· .could settle remaining differences. " We will tr y again
;:::early nex t yea r."' sa id Rep. James Howa rd . D·N.J.. chai r man of the
...... Hl!use Public Works and Transportation Committee.
disput e over proposals to relax the !iii mph spced law was one of
a~ (hE' major sticking point s.
.
::.~ ·:· As a resu l1 of the failure to pass an autoo rizat ion bill for the 1987
oos ~ca l yeu r. monc' for high way programs is limited to $6.3 billion.
- : ·about ha lf the level that would have been ava ilable had the bill
--~.
PilSS ed .
.
..,..: -:Another bill that got less public a ttention. but likely will surf ace
:;:·M:ai n next year. is the pesticide co ntrol meas ure that died in the final
- hburs of the sess ion. The meas ure would have reauthorized and
~ aramatic"lly strengt he ned the natio n' s pesticide law.
- ;. In clud ed w"s a provisio n sett ing a schedule for pes ticide companies
::O::tol test most of their products to see if they are a threat to human
w~; h~al th . something not required under curre nt law.

:r.:&gt;i\

~Letter to the Editor

Z:·:·
,,. . . .
........ .

-. .
..c._ . . ...

,.. .

Service available to veterans

FonU•Il
A.tllut..d dt•(rn ...lf l'
h ttd;~ Robert bduum tmd U11 ~lUlu"'
off t•lllrf'd rt'!wnr : relt'll!W'd dl'ltnMh' t'
b~tcb ,Jofwt Simm!Jft.ol ~&amp;n d .flmmyTurnt•r.
Cll'YI'IIUI. - i\l-tlvlltl'll wklt• rt'ti'IYrr
Ti1'11')' Grf'\"r (illnjttrfd

IUIIrd -k&gt;H "lslul ,

ru-.lnl lllt'lt N.atb:m Womdt•y,
tlrht l'nd .lf'rry Bl'll 11nd wldt• rt'l'l'l\t'r

l.toonurd H1111'~.

lttr of pllhllt rt'l.11.tln.,; Dennl~ Rudt&gt;n ,,,,..,.
n!Uht&lt;d tlr~·tor tl lnforJNIIun lor lbl'
1\'HL.
" '•uthlnl(lon - M11l(nl'll ,II'Qallmdt&gt;r AI
,JI'nNt'll to Rln~IITilon oltllr Amt·ric·un
H~K· kt•.vl.t•llru•··

:.:.-.o

.

JJoday in. history

•

more water. the Western Net- ·
work report notes. tll&gt;v ilc reas- :
ingiy come in conflic t ;,ith rural ';
fa rmers, Indi an trlbesandothers ·'
woo staked earlier c laims on'the. :
valuable natural resource .
•
Virtually ev £Ty major city in •
the regio n " has si gnificant prob- :
!ems e itbe r sec uring ne w. wat er :
supplies or. protectin g eXisti ng '
;;ources," ad ds tho 'report.lfthat :!
trend continues unabated , it can -;
only lead to n crisis.

TtiAtU&lt;a To '(oU, MY
I~ CON~TANTL.Y
EXPo~ED To AtiTI-

CHtlD

RELIGtotiS VALVE,..~..,!,.;. '{oU T/&gt;AJGHT

.---

-

To RIAP!

IL\SKETIIUL A."iSOC

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Redmen to
host Oakland
Wednesday

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DKII!Pi all ttili. !I: :it p. m
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( '11"\t•huulul Suo;•ramentu, • ::Ill p. nl
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Phll~tdt • lplli aal Stoallh•, 111 .:10 p Ill.
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:li*'"' fo:nKI.ntd ,11 1.,\ K.am~ . I p. n\
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IJ.tlln" al Sun Ul• · 1~u . I p. nl
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Tua~day

Sa n t' runtl~t~• .11 "a" hlnl(ltllt, 9 p. m.

Tl'llm

These multi -million dollar projects were finanred under terms
of the Reclamation Act of 1902but t he federal government is not
lo nger willing or able to co ntinue
that arra nl(ement.
Almost 30 million peopl e now
live in.I be West. following population Increases of '!l per rent in the
1960s and 29 perO'nt in the 19 70s
- growth that almos·t certainly
wlli be rna tched if not sur passed
in the 19&amp;ls and future decades.
As urban residents clamor for

Hotil t•y
•
- Announrt'd IIKI'IIIilllhl dlrf't ·

By t.:nlttod Pl't'!Oi lnternallunal

Yo I. T Ptl

Fight over title _____J_ac_k _An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_os_ep_h_S_pe_ar......

-western Water fight ______R_ob_er_t_w:_alt_er......;.s~

PIIM.I'd on ~Jurfd

Tllmpa Bay rt"Mn't'

~t\TIO!\'AL

F.;~st

The ca tfish has much in
co mmon with the black-eyed
pea , the noblest legume of them
aiL Tha t is to say. it is hard to
rook a catfi s h badly. It Is a n
accommod atin g fish. even eager
to please. ThP usual practict' Is to
dee p-fr y the fillet s after tumlilng them in a ba ttl'r of corn
mea l and eggs, but connoisseurs
tl'nd to prefer a simple braising
in butter .

WASHINGTON - The B' nai President Kurt \ Waidheim " for who fight for inc lusion in to . and
ali ens .. . one-wor lders and '
B'rith Anti -J)('famalion League his admitted Nazi past "never part owners hip of. everything·we usurpers. ''
s!l('nds most of its time battling uttered one word of oo trage got but at tempt tn retain every
The letter the n promises: "Our
ant i-Semitism whenever it rears against tMe nac hem ) Begi n's pleee of ground they have ever organization will henceforth alits ugly head. But rec ently the past" as head of the Irgun Zvai
gai ned At any rate . under the ways take that position that
Jewi sh orga nizat ion had to take Leumi , a J ewish undergr ou nd
presrn I circu mstances we felt we s('('ms best for America 's e thnic
rime to fi ght- and win- a legal guer ril la group in British-ruled
had no choice but to change the m ajority!" This Is an apparent
s kirm is h with a n ups t ar t Pales tine before the foundin g of ' name of our new orga nization . referrnee to Americans and
German-American group that Israel.
Fo r us ther e was no loss si nce so , German desce nt or "Germanic
had appropriated B'nru B' rilh' s
On. July 2.1, B'nai B'rilh ad· far few Americans knew 9f our heritage," which Sehmidt and
reglste,red "A'lti-Defamallon vised the German -Americ a n existence (lhe 'Ire&lt;&gt;' U.S. media Rt11en oous ~ claim Is the largest
League" titl e.
ADL that II was infringing on a saw tot hal!) ."
\
U.S. ml'nority, numbPrin g 52
It wasn 't mu ch_ of a co nt es t. federally reg istered name. Hans
In it s new in car na tio n. the million. Accordin g to one of \he
The German -American ADL. Schmidt. head of a sy mp athet ic German American Infor mation orga n iza tion's ads. Americans of
whic h had run fo ur fund-raising organization that s hares the a nd Eduction Associat ion sent Dutch. Belgian and Scandina ads in Was hington. D.C., news- sa me addr ess and telephone 'out a fu nd-ra isi ng leit er sign!'d vian background s are counted as
papE-rs. turned tail and ran when number , the German American
lly its president , Sta n Rill en - Germanic. and the "German "
the B'nai B'rith ADL thr eatmed National Political · Action Com- hous r . identified by B' nai B' rlth states of the union stretch fr om
IPgat action: The copycat group mittee. ex pl ai ned wh at happened officials as the author of an PennsylvanIa to the Dakot as.
quickiv changed its name to the next in a letter sen\ out to "Dear
ant i-Semit ic tr act ca ll ed "For
Rlltenoouse 's letter appeals
Germ an America n Inform ation friends ofGA NPACandGerman - Fear ~f the Jew s."
for co ntributions. say ing "we
and Edu ca tion Association.
it y." Our associate Lucette Lag In his leit er, addressed to ·n('('d $6 million to pstabli sh and
'The ADL banle began when nado obta ined a copy.
" friends of German culture and staff a TRUTH CENTER ... to
B' nai B'rith officials spotted the
spirit ... co ncerned Americans." inform the Americ an people of
first Germ an-American ad in t he
Ritte nhouse ra ils against the important news currently being
" Alas." Sc hm idt wrot e.
Was hington Times on July 10. " neither we nor the lawyer who usual suspects for what 's wrong withheld by. the liberal media ."
"There Is a desperate attempt by ctew up I he papers for our new .with the count ry: "a grotesquely When asked if the $6 million •
a certain group to keep World organization wa s aware that the bi ased ne ws media controlled figure was chosPn to correspond .
War II ev~nt s in the minds of Jewish ADL had leg_ally requisiti- be hind the sce nes by a tin y lo 1he numbe r of jews who died in •
peo pl e to retain their sy m- oned both the acronym ADL. as unrepr es entative m inority ... the Nazi Holocaust. Rittenhouse
palhv." the ad c h ar ~d. It then well as the title ' Anti -Defa- anti -German hale mqvies on TV · cb uckied and said it hadn 't even
complamed that " the verv sa me mation i.Rague' for themselves.
... almos t unh indered im mi gra- ON' urred to him .
people tha t lmpui(D tA'ustrian This is typical of the very people tion of (often\ una ss imil able

rl"' ln'f'i •al\ ·r d

.\mt'rit•, tn c·onft•rt•nt·t•

(;rn R

(First of two related col~mns)
ariy rainfa ll averages less than
NAMPA, Idaho - "Rain for 10 inches . ·
benefits.
- · tn observa nce of your day I am
Rent." proelaims the imposing
3. Securit y -your record will
O::.~ting you thts lett er. It is my
roads ide sign tha t promotes \he
Agricultur e accounts for 70
be in our safe-~ping. Any
:;: ~ wiiege as the Meigs County
wares of The Irrigation Store in perrent to 00 perrent of a il wat er
discharge recorded sin ce Noccorder to take this opportunity
southwestern Idaho's Treasure demand in the region, altoough
vember 1962 is ais'o on microfilm
; 1;; Inform a il veterans of a service a nd stored in til&gt; National Valley, where natural ra infa ll only about ha lf of ali wat er
""~lie Recorck&gt;r' s office provides.
ave ra ges on ly 11 in ches applied to crops under contemUnde rground Storage in Boyers,
milita ry records tDD2141 can
a nnuaiiy.
porary ir r igation practices is
Pa .
;:j,e: recorded at no char!(€. Our
Inside the s tore. area farm ers · l!e nefi ciali y used _ by 1he
4. Any Veteran living in Me igs
...,.oJ!icc hours are 8:30 to 4:30 County may record in ctlr office.
twhose principal crops are pot a- · piants.The remainder is wasted .
~Monday through Fri da y.
toes a nd sugar beets\ can rent or
The amount ol irrigated farm
You ar e encouraged to take
: :·: This service has been ava il able adva ntage of this sE!'vice.
purchase every imaginable wa - acreage in the West has steadily
,;; for many years to veterans. but
tering device, ra ngin g · from declined since the late 1970s.
Veteran s, I urge you to check
., .imtortunat e iy many have not
mass ive cen ter -pivot sprinkl ers however. Pressure for increased
your dischar~ and make sur e II
' •;):Jve tak en advantage of this is recorded.
to unobt rusive drip irrigation water supply now comes from
_.v ice
systems.
the cities.
The Meigs Count y Recorder's
: .; T herecordi ngofthi sdocu ment Office takes grea t pride in
From Id aho 's arid mountain
Continuin g rapid population
1S va lua ble to Ihe vet rr ans for the pr eservi ng the record&lt;; and do cu- plate#US to Arizona's reclaimed growth In the region " has caused
desert. mu ch of the West lacks alomost every city ... to import
, ~ following reasons:
ments stored in our office. My
l;" ' - 1. The military docs not auto· staff and I are happy to serve
sufficient natural supplies of water fr om great distances" but
..,. }i.ati ca ily record yrur dis charge
water to sustain hum an activity . those munic ipalities "refuse to to
you.
The region's survival long has accept the scarcit y of water ... as
%'papers.
Sincerely.
:f:;. 2. A certified copy is nee ded
depend ed 'llpon its ability to prescribin g limits to growlh,"
Emmoge ne Hois tein Congo
tr ansport water ave~ long says a report on "Water in the
~ ;~IJe n apply ing for school grants.
Me igs County Recorder
dis tances.
.. , nome loans under V.A .. a nd ot her
West " issued, last year by the
When The Economist maga- West ern Network, a research
zine recently re ported on the organization in Sant e Fe , N.M.
subj ect. it observed that "God
Denver, for exa mple. lias been
made the western United Sta tes haulin g wat er over the Continento be a desert and ma n mad e tal Divide to supply a population
.,...,: :roday is Tuesday. Nov. ll . the 315th day of 1986 with 31 to follow.
parts of it bloom."
tha t, in 1980, was siightly .more
,•:· 'l'lte moon is movin g toward its full phase.
Westerners have always been tha n 1.6 million . By the end of the
;t":; The morning star Is Venus.
aware of water's paramount role century, Denver's population is
"~ : .'rhe evening stars are Mercury, Mars. 'Jupiter and Saturn.
In shapin g the region's polilics expected to reach thrre million
~·; Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They include
and economics, the London- - but there is no known source of
;;-Cen. George Patton in 1885. actor Pat O'Brien in 1899. author Kurt
based periodical noted. " What is available water to support that
~ Vonnegut Jr. In 1922 tage 64), comedian Jonathan Winters in 1925
new," The Economist added , " is many people.
·•• age 611. a nd jazz mu s ician Mose Allison in 1927 (age 59) .
- that water is becoming a matt er
In Ca lifornia ,. an elaborate
¥ . .on this da te in his tory :
of national concern."
network of dams, aqueducts and
:;; 1n 1889. Washington was admitted to the Union as the 42nd state.
Average annual precipitatio n canals supplies water to the
..,:. · In 1918. fighting in World Wa r I ended with the s igning of the
in the eastern half of the countr y crops in the Central Valley and to
'":&lt;Armistice.
ranges from 30 to 60 tqches. With the people in Ibe Los Angeles
• • · ln 1921. President Warren Harding dedicated the Toml1 of the
the exception or the coastal areas area .
~; 0nknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery.
of the Pacific Northwest, it is
The Central Ariz6ii'a Projec t
~. ' In 1982. the space s huttle Columbia began the first commercial
almost universally less than 20 · wlli transport Colorado River
:;; !pace mission.
inches in tbe West.
water necessary to the su rvival
• , In 1984. the New Orleans World 's Fair closed. $100 million in debt.
In the deserts of Cal.lfornia,
of Phoenix and Tucson, while the
4. • A thought for the day : Gen. George Patton wrote, "Never tell
tirlzona and Nevada, as well as in Central Utah Project is smllarly
people how to do things. Tell them what to do and they will surprise
some portions of Washington , cruci!li to Salt Lake City and Its
you with their Ingenuity."
Id~ ho , Utah and Wyommg, ·yesuburbs .

•

.

flnl'lnn aU . -

,1\TUt'\'AI. f'OO'I'R ,\I.I. I.t:.Uil ' t :
B~· I nihod l'n"S~&lt; lnl t•rlllllhmlll

I I If

.

tbt• l!l)urrd llNI.
Mllwttukff - Pl~~el'd fenutrd Kll'nny
Fl.-ld.o; • wal\'en; twtlv~tlf'd a:uard Scott
"kill"~ from f hr IAjurrd 11!11.

NFL results

Much mor e mu st be said. The,
catfish has prac tically no bones.
· or at least it has no bones to speak
of - a sturdy s pine. a few ribs.
a nd that Is the size of it. The
calfish ' has a ia rg&lt;&gt; and brainy ·
head. adorned by barbels in the
fas li on of Da ll's moustach&lt;'. and
whlle tbe catfish is commonly
though t to be ugl y, it assuredly is
not ugly to other catfish. In any
event. todav' s catfish come
skinn ed and fill eted to the,
m arket.

~a·r Vet~r·ans.

..

•Hkrthal

lleMI.on - PlMced l't&gt;ntl.'l' Bill " 'llMutt on

NBA results

( •·,ntntl

Unfinished business
for next Congress ·

• !.'ftC)'.

ll~trllo'i'd

1!1 Rrlkhlllh \ '•mnll" (11-'!J
:!1.1 N.f .l'ih•h•(H·'l ·H
7. unrnnk••d
fl! lwts

By DAVE ltAFFO · UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPII - Let
Jimmy Johnson and Joe Paterno
worry about a lucrative nationa l
championship oowl matchup,
Michigan· Coach Bo Sehembechler just ~ants to get through
the Big Ten schedule unbeat en.
Schembl!chier's Wolverines
moved past Paterno's Penn Stale
to No. 2 in the la test ratings by
United Press Interna tional's
Board of Coaches. Johnson's
Miami is No. I for the seventh
straight wee k.
Michigan and No. 3 Pen n State
switched spots for the second
s traight week after the Wolv erines belted Purdue 31 -7 and the
Nittany Lions struggled to a 17·15
victory over Maryland.
'
Schembechier · Mondav said
winning the Big Ten title is more
important than playing for the
national championship. If Michl·
gan defeats No. 9 Ohio State Nov.
22, it will play fifth- ranked
Arizona State in the Rose BowL
The Sun Devils have aireadv
earned a Rose Bowl bid by
winning the Pac -10 title .
Mea nwhile, the other Jan. I
bowls are chasing independe nts
Mia mi and Penn State.
"Our goal this season and

C'ot·krPII: piltlttrVIdaBiu•·lllt'dlltl' lrl't•

t. .\tl chl~llll (11 (!1-u)
3. P r nn !\t•h· (II 1"-01
.&amp; , Ok lahoml&amp; (Il-l 1
ii. ,\rbonil Ht11.k (M·D·I)
fi. N••hrll,ka (IHJ
i. Tl'ICIIIi 1\•M (' · I )
K ,\uhurn 111-11
!1. Ohio Stah• Ill.'!)
10, \l:ashlnkf,on (7 l!J
ll . l.oubllana ~all' [ 6-~J
It ~ouUwrn rill t6-!J

J(imes .]. Kilpatrick·
.

Michigan moves to second in '(]PI poll :·

Scoreboard ...

..

"'''''hull

Outflt•ldt•r ·li m 0"'\'t•r

111•'1'1 fur fr•·•· ••J:••ntJ
Htllollln - Outfltoklt •r Tony •\rma .. and
rl'llr\' t•r ,Jm• , Samhltu lllt •d fur lr.&lt;t•
:11:"1' 0 1'\ .

t 'lftdn nall - Pit• ht•r oint• Prtt~ · tllt•dhtr
frt ~' UKI'ftl'\ .
lluu...t11n - I lllll)'man UtH t• lnpt'~'&gt; lilt•d
fur ft~•t • :tJtl'fM'\ .
Kan"'a" ( I t~ - Outfil•ldt•r l.onnh' l'imllh
fur (n'l' Oll(t:n t~· .
'
:\'1' Mt•h- .\cldt•d In rtNt·r· nulfit·ldt·r
Sltuwtt .\htwr, '"'-'~'~'nd h~aJot'fllt¥t Kt•lth
)11fh•r, and pllt'ht•...., ·lo,.t • Bllull!ltlll tutd

w.,t

StWidln~

1986

Bllnk .. ...... . .....
V11J agl' P izza Inn ...
Dow Cbomlral... ..
.. ..
Cl1lzt"n "l. No llon al Bank .
TholTl&gt;~n ·s AppllanCf' ....
000 &lt;on .ond Companv .. .. ..

W

L

5:1
44

10

&gt;II

:II

4)

~4

:Jl

:ti

~

:11

:11

:n

:n

~

li

:Ji
.. . .. .. .. .. .... . 21

Ill

Mayna rd'o: Bodv Shop .. ... .. :.......
Planl!t E""on .t...... ..... . ..........

Ca ri' ~Shof' Stort" ... . ...... , ........ .

1\t mplk(' . .
R T . Sl~n Comp anv ....... . ...... ... 21

:II

4:l

TNOT VTDUAL · Prop l~. 1 79 · ~11 Phyll l!i
Fl'rli[Uson: Villal!l' Piz.?.a . liW·!'\28, Ha.,.C'I
Marrum : Dow. Hl&amp; 490. Rub~· Hall: Clt l·
I.Ml ~. 220. Linda R~nolds. !ill . Vi('k\£'

1\rlmt (i I\, .•,. : mtlrl ~: hl•od nllt•\ l'r Kand,·
'\'lt •m:utn tu 1'hlt •"·att •r ''' lira• lnlt•ret"•
tlunul !..1 •tljtllt' I \ ,\ ,\ I.
:\'l' Y~utkt~·~ - Pih·hpr Hlon (Ouldr~

Ha uldrm . Thompson ' s. 160·4.15. ·EdM
Th0mp,.oi1: Dod"lon, 169·464 . Unda.Davts;

fllt •d fur li't•t• UjCt•nt ~·.

20R-~1.t Dorolh~·

~an

.,.,:m,..,.,~ , - K•·h·.t~t'd piii"IH•r Rill

l.a ..lw)·, fll lfl••ldt•r Kit k l .~•n• ~· ll11111 •d
lnllt •ldt•r l.uj., ttuln"'""'i ;ntd~·tll• rtfih•r :
plldlt'f"' ·l!lhn Rurk4otl . li••n~· ~· fo'••rrun ,
Ut•a n l&lt;·r,,·lund. S!:oll )tt•d\ln: C 't~IIR
M'~rd, •·ail•ht't' Ml•it t') ' ~•- •"~"· ..t•r1"'..p

TUR.\' l'••rt•lA'hlt a and nulllt•ldt•r , \l:u~

'

~1.

Propll'~

Transa«'tions
H:t.IUmort• -

Momina:

OctotK'r

.

.

Mn Ynil rd 's, lf10..44!l. Maf1.' ,J('Tiklns;

Plan! ~ .

Mullms: Carl's 11i.'HN.

.Judv Llndr r; R.T. Sign. 1t11·41fl, Bl'rl tw
S IOV('f

SPI.tTS CONVERTED: .I Hodgo. 5·7:
B. Rrown. V. Robin son . S-10: V. C.r!J\•rr, B
A li m , 2·7: S , Sholx'. -1·5: B. Balsdrn . P .
FC'rJNson .. /. Crm lhou~l'. 3·10 .

Oakland City College will in·
vade Rio Grande's Lyne Center
Wednesday for a 7: 30 nonconference basketball game with
Coac h John Lawhorn's Redmen
(1 -01 .
Lawhorn sa id today he expec ts
the Oaks to field a hot-shootin g
ball club. "Th~y like to run ."
Lawhorn said .
He added. "defensively. they
will use a thr re- quarters OO)Jrl
zone jresS a nd a twa -thrre zone."
He continued. "This 5 one of the
five top tea m s on our ·schedule
this winter ." The Oaks beat Rio
84- 'ill at Oakland City and Rio won
at home, 84 to 82, last year.
Starting for tbe visitors will be:
Bill Bigham . 5-10 sm ior guard:
Chris Allen, 6-5 sophomo re
guard: Sheldon Clay . 6-6 junior
for wa rd : Rohert Norris, 6-;,
sophomore forward and Richard
Goedde, 6-7 !res hman center.
Rio's probable Sl!lrter s will be
Antoony Raymore. 5- 11 sophomore guard: Mike Smil h. &amp;-3
senior guard; Ray Singleton . 6-~
junior forward: Joe Verto!l, 6·4'
senior forward and Ron Riltlnger, 6-7 junior center.
"The key to thi s game."
Lawoorn said. "11iil be IDwmu ch
jr essure Raymore puts on
Bigham ." ·
After Wednesday's game. Rio
will host Glenville Stale on Nov.
17.

every ~easo n is to win the
conference championship, ·'
Schembechler said . "And I don 't
wa nt .it underestimated. That's
whx I dori't like ali this emphasis
on the playoffs and national title .

"U:s mainly t~e independen ts
who want a na tional playoff.
They pla y for no confe rence
champions hip, no special bowL
They play for a national ranking.
Per iod. Tha t' s all they play for.

,Mirhigan. 9·0, and Arizon!lSta te. 8-0-1. could poss ibly play
lor the national title in Pasaden a .
CafiL, but the Wolverines must.
fir st defeat Ohio Stale a nd Miami
mus t lose for that to ha ppen.
STATE OF OHIO. DEPARTMENT OF IN·

SUAAHCE. CERTIFtc:AtTE OF COMPt.IANCE.

~

- Based on..! he theme, "A walk ln our
ancestors' heritage," Owen Da mewood IISSists one of the many
flrt'S a black powder muzzle
enthusiastic youngs ters as he
loading rifle for Ill&lt;• first time.
Bauer, ,James McDaniel,
lookin~ on.
a nd Paul Erwin are a few of the

~

Tile unelers.gned , SUPEFIINTENOENT OF IN·
$URANCE OF THE STATE OF OHIO rwt"tby
cerMes th11 MIDWEST MUTUAL INSURANCE
COMPANV OF WEST DES MOINES STATE OF
. 10~ nu cotnl)l led with the leW~ olthos State ap.
1 1)11cal)ltl to it 8/\d la a uthoozed dunng thei curren1
~ear to tranNoct '" this state 111 appropf\alll
Ot.iltntaS of lfl"-lrance on The Mulual Plan. Ill
Ftnlnctal cond•lton '' sho.,..n b~ 111 annual stat ..
menl\0 h1ve been as follows on DECEMBER 31,
1985 ADMITTED ASSETS $30.525.848.00:
LIAB ILITIE S U'l ,020,561 .00 , SURPLUS
10.505.285 oo· ,.,coME $28 ,142.893 oo: ex~
PENOITUAES $27,381 ,380.00: IN WITNESS•
WHEREOF. I haYe hereunto subscribed mf
name and eaused my $0110 bl annced at Colurn.'
bus, OhJO, thia day and ca1a. Jul~ 1 1986 :
Gtatg l!l Fabe SUPERINTENDENT OF IN·,
SURANCE Of OHIO. !SEAL)
STAlE OF OHIO. 0EPurltiENT Of IN·

SURANCE. CERTIFICATE Of COMPLIANCE.
The undet1!QI'IId, SUPEFtiNTENDENT Of IN·
·SURANCE OF THE STATE OF OHIO, hereby
eenll~ ltlat FIRST COLONY LIFE INSURANCE ·
COMPANV OF LYNCHBURG STATE OF '
VJRGINIA hal complied WJ!h the IaWI ol th1l '
Sttte appllceDie to 11~ t5 autl'tonze(l durtng tna :

current year to 1raneact In thla state Its ap-- ,
propriate btJIIr'ln&amp; of inlufl!lnce. tte Financial .
condl!lon Ia Shown by lis annual ttatement to •
have been u follows on December 31, 1985 Ad·
MITTED AS SETS $1 ,637 ,598 169 00 :
LIABILITIES $1 ,524,005,893.00, SURPLUi

$109 590,266.00, INCOME S554,228,244 ,00!
EXPENCITUAES Si99,035, 86 5 00 , NEf
$1 13,590.266 00 : CAPITAL
$(,000,00000. IN WfTNESS WHEREOF.. I
neraunlo subiCribed my name and caused my
seal lo bfl atfi•ed at Columbus Otlla. tnls day ano
date Juty t , ttefJ. George Fabe. SUPEAINTEN·
OE"fT OF INSURANCE Of OHIO !SEAL)
STATE OF OHIO . DEPARTMENT Of JH..
SURANCE. CERTFICATE OF COMPliANCE,
The undt rsi{Jned, SUPERINTENDENT OF IN·
SURANCE OF THE STATE OF OHK), hereby ctf'.
bfoes !h al WAUSAU UNDERWRITERS IN·
SURANCE COMPAN Y OF WAUSAU STATE OF
WI SCONSIN nas ct~mp lled wltn tne laws oltn ts
State eppl.cable 10 •I and is authOtlled d11nng tl'tv
eurrent year to transact '" ttus mne its approprtate bustness ot tnsurance Its Flnanell!lt -

AS SETS

.~.

ANXIOUS MOIUENT - 'this yo~ngster seems to he anticipating
his first shot with anxiety as john ,Jeffs carcfuily instruds him
during this moment of concentration. This trap soootln g
demonstration was one of many activitie~ at Royal Oak r""ort ,
•ponsored by the Ken Amh'Osry &lt;·hapter of Izaak Walton. Actual
"hands-on" experience is one of the exciting and important
tts p~cts of the day offered hy the group.

condltton rs sho.,..n

b~

tis annual "Btatement

MITTED ASSETS $113,906, 197 00: UoloBILITIES
$94,167,905.00, SURPLUS $11 ,238 ,291.00; IN ·
CO ME' $60,628 ,0 48 00, EXPENDITURES
$51 ,479 845 00: NET ASSETS $19 ,738 29100 ,
CAPITAL $2 .500 ,000 00 IN WITN ESS
WHE REOF , I IIIYII hereunto IUbscrlbed m~

name ar'ld cau1ed my seal to be afl•~ted at Cotum·
Dus. OntO. lttlll day and date July I , 1986.
George Fabe. SU PERINTENDENT OF IN,
SURANCE OF OHIO. (SEAL\
STATE OF OHIO DEPARTMENT OF INSUR·

ANCE. CERTIFtCATE OF COMPLIANCE. The
undars!Qned, SUPERINTENDENT OF INS,UR·
ANCE OF THE STATE OF OHIO. hereby eenihes

:AJ'TJVF AUDIENCE- George Morrison, pres ident of the Ken
Amshary Chapter of lzaak Wa lton, holds a ca ptiv e audi&lt;'n"'' ash&lt;'
presents a d ernon s tratio~ on fileting and ent'Ourage~ all onlookers
to " use what you keep. " (See addional photo on
t) .

that ~NVESTOAS GUARANTY LIFE INSUR'.
ANCE COMPANY OF LO$ ANGELES STATE •
OF .CALIEO.B.NIA has complied With the laws ol
this State aQP!Icable lo il and is authorized dum~
the current year 10 lransac::t m lhts slate its apprDpriale business ol in5Uf8nc:e. lts Ftnanctal cordi·
ton is shown by tiS ann ual statement to nave
beer'l as follows on Oecember31, 1985; ADMIT·
TEO ASSETS 161.327 335.00. LIABILITIES
$44,937,699.00, SURPLUS $15.283.332.00; IN1
COIAE 120.204,71&amp;.00. EXPENDITURES
116,26&lt;,425 00, NET ASSETS 116.38;.636.00.
CAPITAL $1 ,106,304 .00. IN WITNESS
WHEREOF, I haV9 hereunto aubecribld my
name ana CIUtld mv sea110 be afftxed 11 Colum- ·
bus, Ohio, this day and dl1t . July 1, 1986.
Geot'ge Fabe. SU PERINTENDENT OF INSUR· '
ANCE Of OHIO. (SIOAL)

!~~!!1Y~!!Fo!~l!~Do~~u~su~~!.!~a~~ c~!ml!~s~X

.tember 30, 1986, a state bultlng blstllutlon organized and operating under the
banklnrlaws of this stale and a member of I be Federal Reserve System. Published
In accordaace with a call made by the Slate Btlnldng Authority and by the Federal
Reserve llank of tiD Dilllrlct.
ASSETS·
Cas h and balances ~ue from depository institutions :
a. Nonlnterest-bearing balances and currency coin .. .. .................... 1,827,000.00
.b. In terest -bearlng balances ...................... ... ......................... ,.... ,.. ... 200,000.00
Securities .. : .. ..............•... ........................... .: ........ ................. ........ .. ..23,429,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchase d under
'
agreements
to reseii... .. ...... ... .......... .... .... ..I ... ........ ......................... 1,325,000.00
Loans and lease financlnf: receivables:
·
Loans and leases, net of unearned income ................ 20,352,000. 00.
LESS: Allowance tor loan and lease losses ................... 191,000.00
Loans and leases , net of unearned income
allowa nce. and reserve .......... .... ................. .......................... ........ 20.161,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (including capitalized leases) .... .......... .. ..... .475,000.00
Other real estates owned ................. .. .................................. ..... ..... ......... 9,000.00
Other assets ......... . ,.. ..... ........ ....... .... ... ,......... :........................... ......... .8691000.00
··Total assets .... ......... .. ... ; .. ,............... ................ : ..... .. ............ ........... 48 ,295,0oo ."OO
LIABIUTIES
Depos its
.
a. In domestic offices ............ .. ............... ... ... ......... ...................... .43,801,000.00
(1 1 Nonlnteres t-bearing ...................... ....................... 4,291,000.00
(2) Interesl-bearlng ....................... ......... .. ..... ...... .. .. 39,510,000.00
Other lflibliities .......... .. ............................. .. .. ........................ ..... ......... 510,000.00
Total Liabilities ............................................................ ,... .. ...... .. .... 44.311.000.00
EQUITY. CAPITAL
Common stock ................. .... ....................... ........................................ 400,000.00
Surplus ........................ .................................................................... ... 600.000.00
Undh·ided profits and capital reserves .............................................. 2,984,000.00
Tota l equity capital ....... ... ... ....... .......... ........... ................................. 3.984,000.00
To ta l liabilities . limited-life preferred stock.
and equity capital ...... .... .... .................................. .. .................... ..48.295.oop.oo

I. Roger W. Hysell, Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
th is Report of Condition has been prepared In conformance with the Instructions Issued by the Board of Governors oft he Federal Reserve System and the State Bank·
· lng Athor ity and is true to the best of my knowledge and belle!.

Electrifying deals on every new '87!

Elegant Chrysler Fifth Avenue

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Priced over $5,0011/BSS than Cadillac
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!Sticker price companson dl comparn~y·eQUIPPed models.
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Ferman E . Moo~,e
Richard C. Follrbd -Directors
Paul E. Kloes

COOPER
Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, Inc

Stair of Ohio. County of Meigs , ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 30th day of October, 1986.
JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public, State of Ohio
My Commission Expires July 11 , 1988

10

have Deen as tollo.,..s on DKembtr 31 , 1985. AD·

CONSOUDATED REPORT OF CONDITION

We . the undersigned directors, attest to the correctness of this Report of Condition and declar e that it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledl(e
a nd belief has been prepared in conformance with the Instructions issued by the
Board of Governors of the Federal ResE!'ve System and the State Banking Authorit)· and is true and co rrect.
Roger 'fi , Hysell, Cashier

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Sentinei- Page- 3

The

Ohio

:199 So. Third

992-642 I

Middleport

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Tuesday. Novemb8r 11, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuelday,

KQsar ·hot as Browns
dump Dolphins
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November 11. 1986

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

......--Local Briefs:,-____,

Reagan silent

.

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPH- Some
people have horseshoes and
rabbits' teet. Bernie Kosar has
his own good-luck charm,
When the Cleveland Bro\""s '
quarterback took off his jersey
Monday night. he placed it
carefully Into his locker so as not
to disturb the other unt!orm
already hanging there - the one
belonging to New York Mets
third baseman RaY Knight, the
Most Valuable Player of the
World Series ..
" ( Mets equipment manager)
Charley Samuels Is a Browns tan
and gave Ray's shirt to me,"
Kosar said. "I guess that makes
me a Mets fan . l don't know if It
necessarily brought us luck be.' cause I like to think hard work
paid off for us,"
Kosar outshone Miami COI\n·
terpart Dan Marino by a 401-295
.
ratio in passing ya~ds, and the
LOOSE BALL - Miami's Rena Thompson (right) and
Browns beat the DOlphins 26·16.
Cleveland's Mike Johnson (59) and Travls Tucker (87) attempt to
Kosar became the first quarter·
grab a fumble in second period of Monday night's NFL game In
back In NFL history to pass for
Cleveland. Miami recovered the fumble but lost the game 26-"'
400 yards without throwing a
(UPI)
;
. · '· ""·
touchdown.
" That's a very minor disapPointment," he said. "What's
Important is that we won, and did
on na tiona I television and
so
POMEROY - At a recent and Wells ton.
before
(77,949) fans.
mee ting of di strict volley ball
"We're
getting better with
coaches. eighteen players wer e
All girls chosen are seniors
sel ec ted for all·d is trict vollev ball except Missy Keffer of Alex· each game,! have nodoubi about
that at all. Our victory may not
IDnors from Dist ricl 13.
·
an der and Jill Drummond of
look
Impressive in seore alone, .
Player s from eleven sc hools
Kyger Cree k. .
but
it's
very satisfying."
wer e selec ted to the squad
Renee Ward of Kyger Crrek
in cluding two each fr om Al ex · was named to t he all ~stat e squad .. . Harry Holt and Curtis Dickey
added touchdown runs lor an
ander , Athen s. Ironton , J acks on. while Wendy Wolfe and Rachel
offensive
blend thaI pleased
K yger Cree k and Logan and one
Reiber rec Pived honorable men ~
Cleveland
Coach Marty
apiece fr om Eastern. Gallipol is , lion as did Kristl Hawk, Tonya
Schottenheimer.
Meigs, Southern . Southwes ter n, Savoy, and Lesa Rucker.

Name All District volleyball

19RG DISTRICT 1:1
.&lt;\11-Star Team
Nanw, Tt-am

Ht.

P011.

Dawn F arf'myrr. A!Pxandr'r .. .
Mi ss' Kt•ffrr. Alf'xa ntk•r. ................................ ..

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Sun)Ohin f' Grr ig. Alhf' ns .... .... .. ... ...........
.. ........ .
Tnn ta ~ ro hr l d ~f'. ArhC'n s.. .. ........... ...
Kristi Hau. k. Ea s lf'rn
.. .. .. ...
. ............ .
Kf'lli Brownr ll. Ga ll ipnli o; ______ _
Kri s McMillan. Tt·nnl nn ....... ... .
Toni Nr;il, I ronton .... ............................... ..
Rl'l h O st hnff. .lacks(J n .. .

Crr(.'k ....... , ... ....
Kl'lly Roush. Ky_grr f'rrf' k
K ~·g&lt;-r

5·N
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Rf'rk\ fn n!Pv, l..oca n ........................... ..
.J;tm if' 0!1\'rr. Lo,ean .. .
.lf•nnl C'nuf'h. Mr!gs .. ....

.

6-n
!l-fi

....... .

Wrnd.v Wn!rf', Sout hrr n....

5-4
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SH'Phanir Smith . ,)aC'kson ....
.I il l Dru mml"lnd.

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

5-tl
5-4

Vr .
Sr.
J r.

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.Joh:•nn ;• Don ra . Snu rh"'r'Strrn ..

5-7

Sha nn nn Hu:-;tnn. Wrll srnn............ .

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5-7

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Sr .
Sr .
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
Sr.
!';r .

Sr .
J r.

Sr . .
Sr .
Sr .
Sr .
Sr.
Sr .
Sr.

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SPECIAL AWARDS - Becky Winebrenner, left, was named
Most Improved volleyball player Saturday evening at the SHS Fall
SporL• banquet, while Rachel Reiber, center, won liE Highest
Serving Percentage award, and Wendy Wolfe, right , Most Points
&amp;ored.

Thirty-eight take
part in district
volleyball event
CHESHIRE - Sunday
thirty -eight seniors f r om
throughout District 13 parllcipatPd In a North-South ail -star
volleyball series at Kyger Cr('('k
High School.
The match for seniors only,
fe atured two matehes on a best of
two-o f-three format. The all ~ star
match featured top players from
Dis trlct 13 as chosen bv coa·ches
In the dJ,strict .
·
Coaches for .the contest were
Molly
Feesler or Mei!(S and
Chuck Dorsey of Jackson.
The followln~ seniors were
chosen to represent District 131n
the State All -Star match at Rlke
Center Otterbein College, on
November 16. 1986: BE'c~y Con·
ley of class "AAA" Logan, Beth
OstiDff representing" AA" Jack·
son. and Kelly Roush of Class
"A" Kyger Creek.
South squad members Include
Jennl Couch, Shannon Hinely,
Jenny Miller and Julie Miller of
Meigs; Shannon Houston and
Jodi Wood of Wellston: Kelly
Roush or Kyger Cr('('k; and
Johanna Donta, Krist! Lewis and
Karen Rose of Southwestern.
Other South participants will
be Teresa Edgington, Beth Osthoff, Stephanie Smith and Beth
Zachariah of Jackson; Ketli
Brownell, Natalie Wright of
Gallipolis; and RIDnda Gillen·
water. Krls McMillan , LISa
Miller and Toni Neal o!lronton .

"Bernie had an outstanding
per!orrrtanc~ as he read Miami's
defense very well," he .said.
"We're headed in the right
direction, though we (jropped
lour or five touchdown passes.
The Dolphins have a lot of
weapons, but we got it done ."
Marino threw for 295 yatds and
two touchdowns. He completed
22 of 39 passes but could not
sustalnlfllgniflcant momentum.
"It's obvious (Kosar) · played
excellent -and executed the game
planll'ell," Marino said. "Unfortunately.for us, thatls. We' re just
not playing very well."
Matt Bahr added lour field
goals as Cleveland, 7·3, won Its
third straight game and moved a
game ahead of Cincinnati lor
first place in the AFC Central
Division. 'Ibe Browns have won .
six of their last seven games.

Holt and the usually rure·handed
Ozz le Newsome dropped passes
In the end zooe. Cleveland was
forced to settle lor Baltr's 19-yard
field goal with 2:06 remaining..
Miami kicker Fuad Revlez
trimmed the deficit to 6-3 with a
al-yard field goal oil sreonds In to
the second quarter.
Kosar responded by taking the
Browns ff7 yards in 11 plays, with
Holt dashing 16 yards around left
end lor the touchdov.n and a 13-3
. lead 6:13 into the quarter.
. M!IT.ino then extended his
touchdown streak to 19 straight
games, tossing a 24 ·yard bullet to
Mark Duper that trimmed the
Cleveland lead to 13-10 with 3:39

'

The Office of the Consumers' Counsel, a state agency
representing resldentiQI utlllly consumers, will· challenge .the
Syracuse H.o me Utility Co.'s proposed emer~ncy rateln~t·ease
at a public hearing on Nov. 19 at 9: 30p.m. at the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio o!!lces In Columbus.
The utility wants to hike the monthly gas bill approximately
34.5 percent. Currently, the average bill is approximately
$102.46 for a customer using 13,000 cubic feet of gas per month.
Under the proposed ~ates, the custorrler's monthly bill would be
approximately $137.86 lor that amount of gas.
The company has Included a request to raise its customer
consumption charge 153 percent, according tot he counsel. This
would result in an overall 34.5 percent Increase for customers
using 13,000 cubic feet per month. the counsel maintains.
The PUCO is expected to make a decision this falL .
Syracuse Home Utll.ittes Co., which serves 332 Meigs County ·
customers in the villages of Minersville and Syracuse, was
granted an $18,000 Increase In ils base rates in 1985. The
companihad requested an Increase of $27,825.

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A Fairfield County man was riled lor lnsocure lo ad by the
Gallia·Melgs post of the Ohio Highway Patrol Monday following
an accldPnt on County Road 1 In Salem Township.
The. patrol said Mark V. Shoemaker, 34 , Baltimore; was
driving a tractor trailer carrying pipe. 4.7 miles north of Ohio
124, southbound at 8:20 a .m . when the pipe fC'Il from the lop of
'the truck onto a northbound car driven by Anthony E . Meek. 34 ,
Rt. 2, Athens .
The arrldcnl caused slight damage to Me ek 's vehicle ,
lroope rs said.

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Chamber to meet Wednesday

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WEL(O ENEW

PomNoy Area Chamber of Commer!P will m!'&lt;'t Wednesday,
12 noon, at the Pomeroy Trinity Church .

Dance'

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CUSTOMERS ·AT OUR

.~eL Friday at fh.utland
.

ThNC' will be a dance Friday. 8 to 11 p.m., at the Rutland Civ ic
Center. Music.will be provided by Music Express . Admission $2
single and $.h'ouple. Everyone welcome.

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Volunteer.., plan turkey dinner

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WILKESVILLE BRANCH BANK

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Orange Township Volunteer Fire J)(&gt;partment's annual
turkey dinner will be held Saturday, at the fire house, with
serving beginning at 4 p.m. MPnu wl(l Include turkey, dressing ,
ma shed potat()('S, gravy, homemade noodles, green beans, role
.- 1w. roll. pie and beverage .

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The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lfJ.. .)
A Dlvloloo of Mlllll-11, Inc.
Published every aft('rnoon, Monday

through Friday. 111 Court Sr .. Pomeroy. Ohio. by lh• Ohio Vall ey Pub·
llshlng Company/Multimedia , Inc ..
.Pomoroy. Ohio 15769. Ph . 992·21l6. So·
' cond class postagt~ paid at Pom(lroy,
Ohio.

®

Member: United Press International.
Inland Dally Press Allsoclatlon and th('
Ohio N!'Wspap('r ASJoclatlon. National •
Advertlslna Representative, Branham ·

Our Lowest Price Ever
for This Pop~ ~puter

Reg. 159.95

Low A. $20 Per Month*
.. Feature• Packed Penonal Computer

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PosTMASI'ER: S.nd addr.,s chan~es
lo Th• Dally SO!!!Inel, Ill Court St,
PomerOy, Ohlo 45700.

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SUBSaiiPTION UTES
By Carrier or Molw a..te
One w..k .. ................................. $1 .25
On£' Month ....... .. .... .................... $5.45

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Save $60
99~

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units log 212 October runs

N("Wspal)('r Sales1 711 Third AV('ftUP,
N~ York , New Yorll10017 .

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Qn(' Year .. .......... ... ................ .. 165.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .... ...... .... .. .. ...... ........ ... 25 C£'nls
Subsc.'r lbfrs not desiring to pay thtcar·
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til sis. Credll will be jliven ca rM('I' each

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•CUI Line reYolvlnJI credit rrom Cili b111nk. Payment may vary dependh11 upon balance.

• •

Ohio weather

THE VINTON COUNTY
~
NATIONAL
y
BANK

~··CitJI"
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(Conllnued from Page 11
John Koebel, manag er of Co·
lumbia Gas, met with coun cil
briefly to answer any qu estions .
council members had in regard
to his company .
Attending the mee ting wNr
Mayor Hoffman , Cl e rk ·
Trea surer Jon Buck . Chief of
Police Sid Little and Councilme n
Horton, Satterfield, Gilmore and
William Waiters.

SW PRICES IOOD DRU IIOYEIIER 11111
WE RESERIE THE RIIIT TO LIIIT QUIITIDES

TH·ANK vou
FOR YOUR VOTE
OF CONFIDENCE
IN THE NOVEMBER
4th ELECnON

~~~COLlA

TARTAR COITROL GEL

uez,

__ggc

MANNING K. ROUSH

1 '

Paid for by' Manning K. Roush

OUI I~W SUI

*ALIGNMENTS *fiONT END WORK
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAN~OHIO
OPEN: a·-e MONI.•SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
PH. 742-3088

t~~~~~~M~•;•t;er;C~ar~d~an~~V~Io~o~W~e;l;co;m;•~~~~~~~
HURRY !

SOUTHEASTERN

BUSINESS.COLLEGE

· 24 TABLETS

LKA SEL

529 Jackson· Pike, Gallipolis
Vt&gt;teran~ Memorial

... 121

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CALL TODAY 446-4367

CORRECTION

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

'86 CHEVY
CHEVmE
NOT '8 7

GRIBBLE CHEVROLET

111 L State St.

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Council disputes

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LI.GHT tRUCK TIRES

northeastern
part flur
of rthe
state
A chance of snow
ies In
the .
Thursday, ·with fair weather
e lsewhere through the period.
Highs will be bet wren 2.i and l'i ·
Thursday and Friday and rang· !
lng from the upper .10s to t.he
middle 40s Saturday. Overnight
!om will be between 15 and 25
e arly Thursday, In the teens
Friday morning and in the 20s
early Saturday.

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Canvass leaves

"8EniN8 YOU THERE SAFELY"

Olilo Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday ,

i.ltaAY'S ADVEmSEAINT
SHOUlD HAVE READ

~~~·~,~~~
~·~~::&gt;~,,

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Wilkesville 669-4651
FDIC

~~tiJII',

Arthur E. Wilson, 74, ofl03 Dye
Circle, Marietta, died Monday at
his home.
. Mr. Wilson was born Feb . 5,
!Contin ued fro m Pag P II
"Whil e specifi c dec is ions dis· gap between the candida tes,
1912, In Meigs County to the lat e
Mr. and Mrs. W. Frederick cussed at the meeting ca nnot be Durst sa id.
Wilson. He was a resident of divul ged, " said Whil e House
Prec inrl No . 21, a dOubl e-bo ard
Marietta for the past 10 years and spokesman La rry Speakes, "t he
jl"ecinct . was the 12th to report
a retired fireman for the P.en- pres ident did as k tha t it be elect ion night.
nsylvanla Ra:tlroad . He wa s an re.emphaslzed that no U.S. laws
The com miss ion has not yet
Army veteran of World Wa r 11, a ha ve been or will be violated an d str uck a tota l in the race. Dur st
32nd degree Mason and had that our poli cy of not mak ing sa id ,
attended New Life United Pen- c on c~ssions to terrorists remain s
· Both Keefer and Maves wer e in
in tacl. .. .
tecostal Church,
att endan ce a t tre · Monday 's
The stat ement failed to ad· ca nvass which has been recess&lt;'d
Survivors Include one sister,
dress incons istencies betwt&gt;cn until 4:30 p.m. Thursday.
Opal Sweeney , of Tampa , Fla.;
two half-sisters. Betty Rogers of official policy a nd a see n •!
Mayes had indicat ed the morn·
Westerville, and Allee Beougher progr am, in pl ace lor more l han ing aft er the elec tion that he
of Reymldsburg; three half· a year , that ofrered Iran milit ary would pro bably seek a rec ount.
brothers , A.B. Wilson, of New
Lex in gt on, an d Fred and Ulr ic r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;~
Wilson, both of Columbus; sev ~
eral nieces and nephews.
He was preceded· in death by
. his wile, Mollie Ra st Wil son , on
Ocl. 26, 1969.
Services will be 10:30 a .m. ·
Thursday at the Marietta Chapel
of Cawley and Peoples Funeral
Home, 408 Front St., with Rev.
Victor A. Bentley offici ating.
Committal services will be at
1:30 p.m . .at Letart Falls Ce me ·
tery In Meigs County. Friends
may call at the fune ral home
from H p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Wednesday. where Masonic se rvices will be held at 7 p.m.

*UmiiES irn&amp; REPAIR

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hardwa re in exc h a n ~:e for U.S.
hos tages held by the pr o-Itanlan
Isla mic ,Jihad.
It also skirted ques tions rais ed
by cri tics on Ca pitol Hill and
appeat·ed designed. a t least In
part, to placa te SC'cretary of
Sta te George Shult z, who was
rumored a day earli er to be
co nsider in g resignat ion because
of the Wl1ite H ouse ~run lranlan
operation .

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

Winds will be light and westNI)' tonight.

Admissions - Fannie Ma y13 w..ks .... ..................... .. ...... . l 17·29 j nard. Racine; Lucille Brandt,
26 w.. ks .... ........ ................... ... 134.06
52 w.. ks ............... .......... .. ....... l(l(l.!6
Coolville: Louis Young, PomeO.&amp;olde Melp co..&amp;y
roy ; Elizabeth Horak, Pomeroy .
13 w..ks ............................. ..... ll8.20 ·
C
Hd
26 w.. ks ........................ .......... $35.10 ,
Discharges a ssle u son ,
52 w.. ks ..... ...... .................... ,.. $67.60 , Ja.ck ])(&gt;!ph, Lorena Frecker.

'

WASHINGTO N 1UP! 1 - Pres·
ldent Reagan , prom·is ln g not to
break the law or give In to
terror ists, s tea dfas tly refuses to
expla in the secre t Iranian link
that has spa rke d a furor over
e ffort s to free U.S. hos tages in
Lebanon.
•
The White House. pressured to
defend its actions, offered a
res tatement of poli cy a nd little
else Monday aft er Rt•aga n con·
suit ed hi s top advis!'rs in a cr isis
a tmos ph ere on the fallout from
his hostage· re la ted dea lings wit h
Iran.

bargaining

r;rec~e~i~v:e~v:ls~lt;or~s;f:r:om::2:·4~an~d:6-~9~~::::::::~~~~;;~,

South Central Ohio
Clearing tonight. with a low In
the mid 20s. Increa sin g cloud!·
ness Wednesday, wi th highs In
the upper 40s.
The probability of pr('('iplta·
lion is near zero tonight and
Wednesday.

MallSaboftlojlooa
Inside Metp t ....,

I'

the Rev, I Mussman,

Friends may call at the
Rawlings-Coats·Blower Funeral
Home ar~r 10 a .m . on Tuesday.
The lamfly will be present to

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subscrlpt!ohs by mall permltt£'&lt;1 In

areas wher(' home carfler N'rvlre Is

OPEN: 1·5 ~T-Th.·Fri .....Saturday I·Noon
'

Fay Pickens Sauer, 65, of
Middleport Route 1, a well ~
known educator, died unexpected at her home early Sunday
morning.
Mrs . Sauer, who rec ently underwent surgery, had returned to
her teaching position at the
Kyger Creek High School on
Thursday.
Born In Reedsville, the eldest
daughter of the late Harry
· Warren and Ruth Henderson
Pickens, she was an aclive
member of the Rutland United
Methodist Church, where she
served in various capacities. She
wa s director or the Meigs County
Cooperative Parish, and a lay
leade r and past president of the
United Methodist Women .
A g•·aduate of Chester High
Sc hool and Ohio University, Mrs.
Sauer rre eived her ma ster's
degr ee from Marshall Unlver·
slly , Huntington, W.Va . She was
an active member of Delta
Kappa Gamma, 1&lt;:-achers hOnorary, the American Association of
Unive rsity Women, Big Brothers
and Big Sisters , and served on
the bo ar d of directors of the
Community Action Program .
Mrs. Sauer wa s a Martha
Jennings Scholar and is listed as
an outstanding teacher In Who
Who's of Outstanding American
Educators . Her 42 ye ars of
teaching were In Ch es ter. Jack son, Rutland and Kyge r Cree.k
High Schools.
Mrs . Sauet J s survived by a
daughter, Joy Roberta Sauer,
Pomeroy, a daughter and son · ln~
law, Mary Ruth and Dr. \l.A.
l)eLameren s, Gallipolis; a
brother. Warren Pickens, and
two si s ters. Maxine Whitehead
and Grace Weber, Reedsville,
another sister, Gladys Meredith,
Beverly, and a brother- ln ~law ,
Richard Sauer, Route 1. Middle·
port . Also surviv ing arc thr€('
nieces and four nC'pbews .
She wa s preceded In death by
her husband , Harold, in 1981, her
parm t s and an in !ant sister.
Funeral serviCt&gt;s will be held at
2 p.m . Wednesday at the Rutland
United Methodist Church with
the Rev . Cheste r Lemley, as-

Patrol issues citation .

Holiday Savings from Radio Shack

'.••
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Fay Pickens Sauer

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Fay Pickens Sau8'

A total of 212 ruhs were made by local units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Serlces during October, Aamlnls·
trator Bob Byer reports .
There were 154 emergency calls and 58 transfers. Emergency
runs by the v~rlous unlls included Pomeroy 28; Racine 23 ;
Syracuse, nine; Rutland, :n: Tuppers Plains , 21, and
Middleport, 42.
There were 131 persons transported by the units during the
month with 87 of them going to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 24
to Holzer Medical Center; one lo Pleasant Valley Hospital and
19 to other Institutions.
All vehicles of fhe service were driven 8, 100.6mllesduringthe
month, an average or 38.21 miles per run.

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Arthur E. Wilson

Counsel to challenge rate proposal

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COUPON
HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

p.m. ' on Tuesday. Internment
will betn BeechGrove Cemetery,
Pomeroy.
. Donations may be sent to the
Rutland .United Methodis t
Church or ;the Carleton Sehool,
Syracuse, In memory of Mrs.
Sauer.

Melvin R Smith, 33385 State Route 7, Pomeroy, Is the winner
of the Nov. 2 mystery farm contESt In the Sunday
Tlmes ~SenUnel . There were five entries In the contest all
correctly ldenti!ying .the farm as that of Woodrow Mora. The
winner of a ~ prize was selected by lottery among the l!ve ,

..•'

Kosar completed 32 or 50
passes to tie Otto Graham's
401·yard effort on Oct. 4, 1952, as
tti second·best passing game in
Cleveland history. Brian Slpe
threw for 444 yards ·against
Baltimore on Oct. 25, 1981.
The 32 completion&lt;; are the
most since Sipe had 33 on D.!c. 5,
1982 against San Diego.
Miami !ell to4-6withthe loss as
It allowed Cleveland 558 yards,
ARCHERY TECHNIQUES - , Danny Will of the Otester ,:;
the fourth-highest total In DolBowhunlers
and Archery Club is ... own discussing one oft IE many .:
phins history. The k&gt;sers manfeatures
designed
to make archery a safe andenJoyablesport. Thls •
aged 353 total yards.
such demonstration was orpnlzed in an dlortto educate! IE many '!
"They did a tiDrough job on
the young people, in attendance during the 1986 National Hunting :: .
us," Miami Coach DOn Shula
and
Fishing Day aclivlties held at the Royal Oak re,..t. (See ~
said. "We got stuffed a few times
additional
photos on page 3).
·
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and didn't measure up. Kosar
looked great and we didn't by , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ---.;.
comparison. We needed to win,
so we're in tough shape."
Cleveland dominated the first
quarter. but could only man age
6-0 lead on a pair of Bahr field
goals. Temperatures i!lllnto the
Free Electronics hearing 11111 will be given by Bellone Hearing Aid Center ·
low 30s but forecasted rain and
snow did not mater lallze.
On their first possession, the
DR. RANKIN PICKENS
Browns drove to the Dolphins' 4
before rookie wideout Webster
509 SOUTH THIRD AVENUE, MIDDLEPORT
Slaughter fumbled, The ball
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13
rolled ihrough the end zone and
the DOlphins took possession.
FROM 9:00-3:00 P.M.
Slaughter dropped a pass In the
•
end zone on Cleveland's next
THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY ~ LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIALIST. ;:
drive, and Bahr kicked a 32-yard
Anyone who has trouble hearing or understanding con~ersation is invited to
field goal ilr a 3-0 lead at 7:07 of
have a tree hearing test to seal! this problem can be helped! Bring this coupoil
the first quarter.
with
you for your.FREE HEARING TEST of S50 value. Adults only. Please. !
The Browns again went deep
into DOlphin territory but both
COME IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST
'

a

Mystery farm winner named
,-·

left.
.
' The' Browns brought ·their next
possession to the DOlphins' 1, but
Kosar threw three lncompletions
before Bahr's 18· yard field goal
with three SEConds eft extended
the advantage to 16-10 at
halftime.
Cleveland opened the third
quarter by attempting a fake ~~
field goal, and holder Jeff Go~ » ,
sett's hurried flip off the snap:;:
was Intercepted by Miami nos
·~
tackle Mike Charles,
The Browns regained posses•".
sion and improved the lead to
23-10 after Frank Mlnnlfleld
recovered a Ron Davenport
rumble at the M!ami29.

~n

Atlltn1, OIJia

"We Can't Wait Any longer!"
Con You AHord To Wait?"
Come In and Apply Early For Financial Aid.
Find Out What You Qualify For But Don't Wait!
O.I.G, I Ohio Instructional Grant I
Extended Dtadlint 11-28·86
REG. NO. 1055 B

AICS ACCREDITAnON
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By The Bend

Tut~sday, November 11, 1986

The Daily Sentinel ·.

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D of A .conducts reeent meeting

&lt;

Tuesday; November 11 ,. 1986

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PaQe,- 6

of District
surgery,
andCouncil,
Faye IllHoselton.
·
13Friendship
Daughtersmeeting
of America
was ,Belle
Prairie
.
held recently at the Chester lodge
Mary C.M.oose, Perry Council,
hall.
thanked the 'members who sent
Themee_tlngwas (l'eceded by a card; and those that came to the
potluck supper with Esther funeral home at the time of her
Harden, District 13 depuiy, glv - husband's death. [))rpthy "Rit·
ing the blessing. Elieen Clark. chle, junior past state councilor.
district councilor, presided at the installed Mrs. Moose as a na •
meeting. The' national and state tiona! repre~entaiive frolh Disofficers and · commitiees re· trlct 13.
celved officially wB'e Esther
Esther Harden. district depHarden, district deputy; Doroth_v uty, installed the new officersRltchle , jltnlorpast 'statecounci· Erma Cleland, Chester Councli.
lor; Helen Wolf, a member of the Cliuncilor; Ma,.Y Moose. Perry
state finance committee , and Council, associate counclior; .
Betty Wolfe, a member of the Lora Damewood, Chester Counstate publicity committee. A eli, vice councilor; Margaret
communication was read from Cotterill, Guiding Star Council,
Ruth S.h annon, national associate vice councilor; Betty
secretary.
tWolfe. Perry Council. conductor;
Reported ill were Helen Bauer, Eileen Clark, Guiding Star CounPerry Council. who recently ell , junior . past councilor;
underwent heart surgery, Mary Thelma White, Chester Council,
Donna Davis, recuperating from associate junior past councilor;

•

DAR chapter gathers Items for ·schools ·-

REVIVAL- Revival servi·
ces will begin today (Tues-

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day) and continue through
Sunday at the Racine Cburch
of the Nazarene. The Rev.
Linard Wells of Grand
Prairie. Texas will be the
evangelist. Services wil be
! held each evening at 7 ·p.m.

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: and LJ,t 10:30 a.m. on Su nd ay.

iMARC

:meets

•i A report on playground devel•opment at the school was given
y Lee Wedemeyer, superintend -.
en t, at the recent meeting of the
Meigs Association for Retarded
Citizens held at the school.
'l'he Rota ry Club is working
with the MARC in developin g the
pl~yground. A report was given
on •the Halloween party given by
Rhonda Koch. Officers' repor ts
were given along with a report
from the nominating comm ittee.
It was noted that Ruth Karr Is
•making a comforter for the
MARC to use in a fund raising
'project. The death of a home. bound student was noted. Keith
~ ~Jack reported on CB radios fo r
·the busses and the group decided
to pay half on the five radios.
•. The workshop had the most
_parents present .
· David Mi!ahan di s pla ye d
landscaping fence made by the
"j¥qrkshop for a co mpa ny in
Columbus.

Six iariw boxes of used clothing
have heen shipped by RetUrn
Jona than Meigs Chapter. Daughters of ihe American Revolution,
to the Tamassee and Kate
Duncan Smith schools supPorted
by the DAR.
A report on various projects
was given at a recent meeting of
the chapter presided over by
Mrs. Ronald Rey no lds, regent.
Members brought Items for
veteran pa tients and it was
reported that six bags of envelopes with cancelled stamps have
been g-iven to the chapter to be
sent to the "Stamps for the
Wounded." Mrs. Gene Yost an nounced that the chapter is stUi

collecting -soup label~ which can
be redeemed for premiums and
noted that she ' is accepting
mag azine subs criptions,
· Mrs. Clyde Ingels, Waldschmidt House trustee, reported
that the state regent's project is
to build a barnonthepropertyfor
storage and use for the annual
picnic In case of inclement
weather. A pin has been designed
to defray expenses of the barn
and the chapter voted to purchase one in its name to be worn
.
with other chapter pins.
Mrs. Dwight Milhoan was
elected as vice regent due to the '
resignation of Mrs. Roger Luck -

eydoo who has moved from the
area. The regent announced that
it now has 66 members and w111
have one evening and one.Saturday meeting. The ehaptei' has
received awards of 100 percent
State Regent's Fund; outstand·
ing for Constitution Wee k,
Veteran-Patient Committee
work, and first place In· -~he
Southeast Oistrlct for publicity.
An Invitation was read to the
50th anniversary of the Ewing
Chapter, Sons of the American
Revolution at Athens on OCt. 30. ·
Mrs. Joseph Cook, chaplain, had
the prayer in the ritualistic
opening. It was decided that from
now throug-h 1989 the chapter will

the supersonic Bell X·l. He was
considered a dare-devil , Mrs .
Hackett said of the man who
throughout his life sets new
stands of excellence. whether
commanding a fighter squadron
in Europe. flying tactical
bombers in Southeast Asia, or
supervising military defense in
the Pakistan-India area.
For roll call members named a
famo us astronaut. Faye Wallace
presided at the meeting leading
members in singing "America,
the BeautifuL" Jean Fisher and
Clarice Erwin gave the secretary

.-

Cheryl and Joanna Gumpf,
Jenny Parker, Sally Caldwell,
Barbara and Angie Young, Nadine Goebel, Merri Amsbary.
Gla-dys Spencer, Opal Eichinger.
Marvene Caldwell , Amy Well,
Roberta, Ker!. Cynthia, Amber
and Natalie Caldwell.
Sending gifts were Esta Lamp,
Slna and Amy Murphy, Betty
Gaul, Joann Francis Pam Douthitt , Rick and Mickie Holon ,
Carol and Steve Erwin, Chloris
and Roger Gaul, Jan Eichinger .
Kenny and Sue Caldwell, Tom
and Diana Karr. Maid! and
Larissa Long, Jenny Jackson ,
Avis Hartley, Dave and Nancy
Smith, Lucy Gaul, and Margaret
Bailey.
Games pr izes we-e won by

the Meigs Cou nty litter control
program . and Dan Levingston,
law enforcement officer for the
program. Both spoke on the
problems In the county and' the
ex pense in\.IOived in.cleaning up
the litter and tracking down the
lit ter offenders. Each of those In
the congregation was pr ~sented
a bag of litter information.

Miss Rummel talked aou t the
offering and gave the offeratory
prayer. Dues were collected
from variou_s ,.. churches and
blanket ' certificates ' were purchased by several. Mrs. Wallace
and Mrs. Ed Spencer took up the
collection. Mrs. Horace Karr was
organist and Mrs. Mora had the
benediction .

YOUR FIRST LINE

Grange meets

DEFENSE

,_ the recent meeting of the Meigs
' 'Countv Pomona Grange held
;,, 'Friday night at the Star Grange
Hall .
Installed were Pauline Atkins,
' .'master; Ziba Midkiff, overseer;
·· Arthur Crabt ree, lecturer; Patty
: : Dyer, steward; Norman Will .
' a':!§.ista nt steward: Maxine Dyer.
c lady assistant stewa rd ; Wes tin a
Crabtree, chaplai n; Helen Qui •• ve;t. treasurer; Dorothy Smith,
-'.'- secretary; Ray Midkiff, ga te·
keeper ; Linda Montgomery.
'-"l:&gt;oinona; Doris Eastm~·n , Ceres;
~ Ghristlne Napier. Flora. and
Eldon Barrows , Hilber Q'uivey,
•"and Stanford Stockton . exec:·u tive
- · cdlnmittee.
.
Galiia County Pomona
' members were guest s and a
' : potluck dinner preceded the
business meeting. Chester King ,
delegate to the State Grange
· convention gave a report.
E lizabeth Jordan , county
chairman of women's activities,
gave her report and announced ·
the winners from Meigs County
in the stale contest.
~ The Gallia County members
presented th e literary program
' with Vicky Poweli in charge. Her
1heme was "For All These
· Things We Are Thankful'' and
the program consisted of rea d.. lngs, poems. a special feature
with a clown. singing and prayer.

Harrison
. birthday
The first birthday of Laura K.
~Harrison, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. StevPHarrison , ws recently
·celebrated at her home in
Cheshire.
A "Raggedy Ann" cake and
J)ther refreshments were served.
Attending' besides her parrots
were her sister, Megan, her
grandparE!lts, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Harrison and Mrs. Roscoe Wise,
·, Kathleen . Sqott. great •gqmdmother, an'd Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff Alleman.

CHEC~ ·

WITH ANY OIL CHANGE SPECIAL
·OR TUNE-UP SPECIAL- '

Engine Tune-Up
VALUABLE COUPON

.

well, Linda Wilson, Barbara
Hoffman, Stephanie Hoffman,
Maxine Hoffman, Kathryn
Baum, Slna Salley, Binice Tut tle, Phyllis Newland, Sheila.
Wendy and Abe Rach , Rubai
Caldwell. Doris Davis , Violet
Millhone , .Mildred Caldwell, Ml·
chele Caldwell. Bobble Karr,
Debbie Weber. Marlene Kuhn,

,. Meigs Pomona
New officers were installed at

FREE 'ANTIFREEZE

OIL CHANGE ·
$1295 4CYL.

Layette shower held in Tuppers Plains
A Iavette shower was held
recently for Martie Baum 1n the
fellowship room of the .Tuppers
Plains Church of Christ.
Terri Caldwell and Doris Well
hos ted the- sho wer In which a
Teddy Beddy theme was carried
ou_t.
.
Attending were Ceci ila
Murphy, Sarah Caldwell . Sara
Ba l!ey. Kay Balle;v. Sandv Chad-

"•" =

=

and tr easurer 's reports . Mrs .
Wallace reported on "Friends of
the Library" 'noting that memberships of $3.50 are now du e.
Refreshments were served.
At an earlier meeting Mrs.
Marvin Wilson reviewed the
book, "Severe Mercy ," written
by Sheldon Vanauken and published in 1977. She detailed the
lives of Vanauken and hi s wife.
his teaching career at Lynchburg ·
College, and later at Wal!bash
SchooL The book deals wIth
Christianity and Its role In the life
of the author.

·Churchwomen observe Community Day
World Commu nity Day was
_o\lserved at the ·c hes te•· Met hodist Church on Nov. 7 with Mrs.
Mora as the program
'•(' Richard
...
leader.
Theme was "Look to the
', Mountains" and -the program
was written by women from New
•- Hampshire. Participa ting were
• Miss Rhoda Hall, Mrs. Lula
Hampton , Miss Glenna Rummel.
. ~Mrs. Dwight Wallace, Mrs . Arnold Richards. Guest speakers
were Steve Powell . director of

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=§§§§(~· "'§§

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literary Club conducts meeting
Phyllis Hackett reviewd the
book, "Yeager," the autobiographyofChuck Yeager, the first
pilot to break the sound barrier.
when the Middleport Literary
Club met recently at the home ot'
Phyll is Hackett.
In her review, Mrs . Hackett
commented on Yeager's West
Virginia background and his
father's rol e in teaching him
mechanics. He enlisted in the Air
Force in 1941 and after World
War U captured world-wide
recognition as the first test pilot
to break the sou nd barrier. fl ying

his torical sites and buildings·.
and help busineses.
Next meeting will be. held,
Friday at 1:30 p.m . at the l)omeof
Mrs. Reynolds. ·
·' ·
A dessert course was served by ·
Mrs. Harold Sargl'nt, Mrs. · Ge·
raid Powell , Mrs. Theron John son. Mrs. George Morris' and
Mrs. JamPs O'Brien. ; ' ·

Include the preamble to the
-Constitution in the opening
ceremony.
Stephen Powell, Meigs Co unt y
Park District Commissioner.
was speaker and talked about the
park distri ct and Its objectives .
Us ing slides he told how the
district can work to provide
recreational fa cilities, preserve

TUNE-UP .
$2 895 4CYL.

OTHIR URI SltGHitY HIGHER

• New oil Iup to 5 qts .
cars / 6 qts . trucks I
•New Mopar oil filter
•Check fluid levels
•Check battery •Special
or additional oil slightly
, , higher. ,

Price includes Mopar

Champion .spark pttugs·
"

COOPER
Chrylser•Plymouth•Dodge, Inc.
(614) 99 2-(ii 2 1
~99 S. Third

Elii\OPQr

St.

Mi:ldlennrt,
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·

Sandy
Chadwell
and was
Cheryl
Gumpf. The
door prize
won 1
~
by Mildred Caldwell. Refreshments of were served by the
hostesses.

Margaret
Coon·
ell;
outside Tuttle,
sentinel;Chester
Opal Hollon,
Chester ·Councll, o·casw-er.
Mrs. Harden appointed Everett and Charlotte Grant as
distri ct color bearers , Esthe r
Smith, district captain and distrlct Initiatory captain .'
!tel en Wolf was pianist for the
meeting. An auction conducted
by Mrs. Moos&lt;' was held at the
close of the meeting with proceeds going to the district an d
state wa ys a nd m ea ns
committee . ·
·
Others attending were Robert
Harden ,' Betty Sp~ncer, Betty
Biggs, Guiding Star Council,
Syracuse ; Sadie Trussell, San·
draWhlte.MaryK.Holter,Doris
Grueser. Ruth Smith, Faye Kir khart, Ethel Orr, Jo Ann Baum.
Elizabeth Hayes. Marcia Keller,
Corq Beegle, Doris Koenig, a nd
Charlotte Grant, Chester Council

:r.l3.

Alfred United .Methodist .lfomen meet
-Alfred UMW burned a candle
for Peace at their meeting Oct.
23. Nellie Parker ,led the program
The Invitation with all taking
part in Bible readings and
discussion. The program closed
with tbe ceremonial washing of
hand; in preparation for service.
Ten members were present
and a guest, Marguerite Stearns.
Fifteen sick calls were reported .
Florence Ann · Spencer was
elected to the Nominations Committee. Nina Robinson and
Thelma Henderson reported that
the District Annual meeting on .
' Sept. 27 was spiritually uplifting
an_d Informative. Rev. Fred
Shaw, Shawnee StoryTeller. was

,mission report on Southern Asia
the featured speaker.
Nellie Parker reported on the where many different cultures
Jurlsdlctlo.nal meeting at India- and the caste system make life
napolis Oct. 10-12 . At this meet - difficult . One-t hird oft he world's
ing Athens District officers de- people live in India where 80
cided on help to battered people perce nt of t he people are
and suppression of pornography farmers.
Florence Ann Spencer ass isted
as their goals for 1987.
The society -decided · on the by Charlotte VanMeter served
Christmas gifts that they would applenut pie, Halloween candies,
send to shut-ins and service · and soft drinks to those mentl·
oned and to Gertrude Robinson,
people.
. Martha Elliott had the prayer Anna Thompson. Kate Rodecalendar apd reported that s['le . have-, and Osie Mae Follrod.
Thanksgiving meeting will in had sent a birthday card to Joan
Cut or . Howard University, Balli · clude a covered-dish supper at
tbe church November 18. Maltha
more. Maryland.
Poole
will lead the progra m.
He-nderson
gave
a
Thelma

. Alfred community happenings

•Inspect emission
components ·~et tim_ing ,

•Idle adjustment (Eng1nes
IIIUiPP'ld with greater
than 2-bbl. ca1b and
sta ndard igjition slightly
higher .l

OhiO

Sunday school attendance Oct.
19 was 19; church attendance, 23 .
On Oct. 26 Sunday school attendance was 34; church attendance.

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Church visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Elliott, Columbus;
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Weber and
children, Eagle Ridge; Mr . and
Mrs. Kenneth Strausb_augh,
Athens Rt.; Mr. and Mrs . Stepben St. Clair and Stephanie,
Lancaster.
.~
Thanksgiving meal at Alfred
" Church wlll be a carry-In dinner
on Nov . 16, at l2:30p.m. Dorqthy
, Robinson and Dorothy Calaway
• will prepare -the turkeys bought

,.•

by the church.
Alfred Youth attended the
festivities at Bob Evans Farm.
Leaders were Ruth and Lloyd
Brooks and Marilyn Robinson .
Sunday , Oct . 19 guests of Mr . ·
and Mrs . Clarence Henderson
· were Edith Harper, Tuppers
Plains; Paul Wright , New York
City; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wood,
Zanesvllle; Mr. and Mrs . Dave
Wililams and Aaron , Belpre.
Members of the lamlly group
visited the old Harper family
home on Sliver Ridge.
Kate Rode haver. Green Acres,
Florida. Is visiting her mother.
""---

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Anna Thompson , and other re latives and friends in the area .
Mr: and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
vis !fed with her aunt, Mrs . Edna
Reibel. at Veterans Memorial
Hospit al. They also called on Mr.
and Mrs. Avery Goegleln, Rock
Springs Rd.
•·
Mr. and Mrs . Delbert Yost,
Lancaster Rt .. are visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Yost and
Aaron and are helping them
move to their new home .
Mrs. Mattie Pullins Is moving
to her trailer home near Alfred .
Richard Yost had the misfo rtune to break his )~ at work on
Oct. 25.

Daily Sentiqel

PHONE
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Ottt.
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ENERGY SAVERS

NOTICE OF

FIDUCIARY
On October 31 , 1986, in the
Meigs Countv Pmbote Court.
Case No. 25322. Patsv G.
Ingles. 725 Cheotnut Str..,t
Middleport, Ohio, 46760, was
appointed EKOCutrix of the
-te of · Clyde J . ingots,

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Robert E. Buck.

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11114. 1t . 18, 3tc

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$3 3995

I

74AA, Langsville, Ohio ,

'

,~~-~~ r.,.,_~
'

I

1/_ ------We also carry a complete line of Stove,.Pipe
and Amerivent Triple Wall Pipe and

Acceuorles.

O'DELL 7iuiY'* LUMBER
634 EAST MAll ST.
POMEROY, OH.-Ph. 992 -SSOO
OPEN: IIION.·FII. 7· 5:30
S~T.

v

8:00-3:00

was appointed ad -

74AA, Langsvilla, Ohio
4574t '
• Robert E. Buck.
Probate Ju~e
lena K. Nesaelroad, Clerk
111111, t8, 25 , 3tc

bidt l'n.llt be basad

of the Board of Truatees of

Public

Affairs,

In Memoriam

In memory of my ·
loving hus !fand,
Waid leonard, on his
birthday, Nov. 11 .
A heart of gold stopped
beatinc.
·
Two shining eyes at rest.
God broke my heart to
prove,
He on iy takes the best.
To some you are forpJtt .. ,
But to me will bved and
lost you ,
Your memory will always
last
For my life and home is rll!
the same without you.
But some day we wili m"t
apin.
Sadly missed .. d loved
by y!!Ur w~e. Lois K.
·
"Rigs" Leonard

copies of

which spocHicllions will be

prospective

bidden upon application .

.The right ii reserved 'kJ
reject any and all bids ..
By order of the Board of
Trustees of Public Affairs of

tho Village of Pomeroy.
Ohio .
Pat Thoma
Cte'rtc of the Boord of
Trustees of Public Affairs

j1t) 11,18, 2tc

R~DIATOR
SER~ICE
We can repair and re"

, Rt. 12 4, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCKREPAIR

core

and
heate7 cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also

TrtnCflllllo•

992-5682
or 992-7121

PH.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AN 0 SERVICE .
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
.SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR '
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

BISSELL

SIDING CO.
Homes Built

•Basements

•Trucking

Call:

repair Gas Tanks.

'

.

992-2196 Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

Window · Wood - Paper
·Plastic ·Truck
Silk Screening.
Boat lettering · Realty
Jackets· T-shirts
JERRY'S

OLD
HEATING CO.
701 2nd AYI.
Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN DAtL Y9 AM- S PM
10123/ 16/ 1111

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

Adults $3.511...
Children S2.w
Crafted and Bahd ods

CAN IE PURCHASED DAlY AT 'THE
DAllY SENTI~l Til 3 P.M.

QUAUTf
PRINT SHOP

F1t AH l'trt '"''Ill Nlfir
PWS: OHi11 Supp Ntt &amp;.
furniture. lftdding
and Graduation
Staliontry, Mognoli&lt;
Sign1, Rubber Stamps,
lusin111 Forms,
Copy Strvicts, !tc.
255 Mill St., Middl. .rt

104 Mvlborry Av., Po011ror
992· .... ~ ...

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI
. 992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL '
FILL DIRT ,
•

.

742-2407

10/27/ 86 / 1 mo.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Memory Garduns Call614 -&amp;82 16151
,
Raelne Gun Shoot aponSored by
Racine GL.Il Club. Every Sunday,
beginning at 1:00 p.m . Ftctoi'y
Choke, 12 9uage shotguns:

No hunting or tre1pas~i nU .
Mynes Farm located Chestnut

Ridge Road .

•Replacement Windows

Visa·Mutercard-get your card'TO·
DA Yl Also NeoN Cred!t Card. t.(O
ONE REFUSED! Callt -518·469 -

•New Roofing

"FlEE ESTIMAtE 5"

JAMES

KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

• •

3546 ext. C 1980. 24

4

~urs . ~

Giveaway

11 -7·86· 1 mo.
4 velltJw 1triped kitten• 2v2 mo.
okt nHd • hOme . Pb . 61&amp;~1 A4t · .
3551

992-7460
SIGNS OF ALL KINDS

Kittens to a good nome 1 guy
male. 2 black &amp; yellow females.
Ph . 614 -379- 2435

@l_l;=::j~~

Rt. 1

Middleport
11-7·86·1 mo .

JACK'S SEPTIC
TANK SERVICE

LIM~STONE

4062S St. Rt. 68t
Pomeroy, Ohio
24 lt(H ·n SF. R\'1(}~

HAULED

614/992-7119
W. VA. Residents
Coli Colle&lt;!
11 -4-86-1 mo.

TROMM
EXCAVATING

8 wk . old puppiet, par1 Beagle. 4
male. 3 female. Call 614 -3&amp;7-

0tBS.

Stray cat. -% Siam Me, deci.Wed
&amp; neutered . Needs good hcum .

Call 614 -.379 -2435 .

Solid blaelc 6 month old kitten
with green eyes . 304-67S-SZ66
or 676-7330 . .

•

1 long hair Persian Guinea Pig.
Good home . 2 yeara old. 304-

676· 6535 .

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

742-2328
11-7-86-1 mo.

985·3561
All Maku

BOGGS
SALES

Call now for brochure. Ohto

Valley Memory Gardens. c••
614·446-3616 . Meig1 COUn-y

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows

SIGN SERVICE
SIEGFREID

Save your loved on811 mnw bf
the sorrow &amp; expenu. PurdftJ·
ing memori al proJ)erty be{ore
need Is just goodeomliloniMIB.

•lnsul at~on

&amp; SERVICE

•Washers •DishwaShers

U. S. IT: SO EAST

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

PARTS and SERVICE

Autharind John Deere,
Ntw Holland, lush Hog
Farm !qulpment
Doa!tr

4·5·11t

r

.

6 Lost and Found
$100 reward for rerufft' or
information luding to the where
&amp;boots ol male black LMroador
klst in O.J . White road arae . Call
614 -446 -0370.
"
Lost small black mik bread dog
rema la wearing ilea eollw, ldng

t_,,,

haired white chest and toe
Missing since Oct. 29 from
Raccoon Creelc Rd . 'She need•
medicin&amp;. Pl&amp;ate call 614. 4;48·
7133 or 61" · 446 -7&amp;41 with
1ny inlorrnatk&gt;n.
Found -

Men.'•

.,eket

S.

c,.p, 11

Addison townhouse on Nov. 4.
Call814~ 367 · 7734 1o idtntlfy.

F1r111 E•al~111enl
Put• &amp; Service

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

1-3-'86 He

New l0&lt;11HDrr.

168 North S..ond
Middleport, Ohio 4S76D

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Found; White gelding pony .on
Rocksprings Rd. Sunday mom.
ing . Call 614 -992 -7300 .

IIISINESS PHONE

I!Si!IENCE PHON!

7

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
,..,, -

Los1 Jmall Bettgle childs • P.t.
Reward if you -.owtht wiNK ...
bouts plaaae c•ll 814 · 381 B734.

White male dog lott in vicin~'( ot
Con dor St and Spring Av• . All
while wit h c urly tail andans'Nerl
to~ Brandy. Family pat. AnyQna
with information call 81.4 -992·
2065. S50 reward .

· We Carry Fiahing SuJ)plies·

YOUNG IR
''2·6215 or 992·7314
Pomtroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-tc

THE

3 Announcements

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

PAT HILL FORD-

6-17-tfc

Owner

radiators

Y4Y'- n

Announ ce rnc n1s

•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Wet! Dritiing

V. C.

THURSDAY, r«JV. 13
Dinner 4:30 p.m .

..

11 -16-81

work

USES EOR AlUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING
HAMERED LA"' SHADES.
.,

til7 p.m.

CALL COLLECT;

(free Estimates)

~NLY 2S&lt; EACH

SACRED HEART
CHURCH
Mutbony Avt., Pomeroy, OH .
BAZAAR

''Free Estimates''

Emergency

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY
•Ail Types of
Excavating
•Landscaping

- Concrete work
- Plumbing Md elec::triG~~I

SIZE 23X30X007

3 Announcements

Complete Gutter.Work
Complete Remodeling
Rooting of ali Types
Worked in home area
20 years

Roger Hysell.
· Garage

loll

RACINE, OHIO
Office 949-243B

\VJHYL &amp; ALUMINUM

Ph. (614) 843-5425

PH. 9U-. .49.

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MACJ: !

SUPERIOR
SIDING ·co.

. NO SUNDAY fALLS

190 MU~··y AVE.
POMEIOY, 011.

•Residential ,,
•Commercial . ..
..
•Industrial

EUGENE LONG

949·2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

n;

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR •

REAiONABlE RATES
10·30 -'86-1 mo .

PH.

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC,

CEMENT HO~SES ,
DEERS . RABBITs . OClGS .
CATS. EAGLES. VIRGIN
MARV , WHitE ANGELS
ALSO (AiH)E BIRD BATHS

- Addon1 and ramodaling
..-Roofing and gutter work

.

Nov . 24, 1986. end now on
file in the office of the Clerk

•LIGHT

L•g•w•g Fot Chllttmst

"At Reasonable Prices"

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

-

Debbie Meadows-Owner: tmojean E!levins
Lorena Holiinger, Shelly Ohiin,get
Melissa Dov.:"ing. Merri Ams

CARPENTER
SERVICE

COf11Jany interested in ihnd
be accompanied by a cenl fied check in tM &amp;Jm of
$50 .00 drawn on 1 solvent
blnk . as a guarant• that it
the bid is accepted a contract will be Mtered into. All
sptteific'a ttons adopted by
the Council of said VIllage on

·

In Syracuse, Ohio
"YES, WE AI( OPEN."
THURS.-FRI.-SAT.
9 to S

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES .

Al•o

Walk-ins Welcome

JQ' S GIFT SHOP

BISSELL
BUILDERS

YOUNG'S

furnished

2

AUGNMENT MOST CARS SJ4.50
SERVING .MEIGS COUNTY fOR 20 YEARS

.

· Joyce Jewell, Rt . 1, Box

.

OR

HOME
&amp;
AUTO
.
992'·2094
POMEROY

the Meigs County Prolate

Court. Case No. 25329 .

ceased , late of Rt . 1, Box

.

Factory Cilal&lt;o
12 Gauge Shotg"'!!

Village at the office of the

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
3rd doy'ol November; 198&amp;.
FIDUCiARY
Each bid must cOntain the
On N011ember 5, t986, in full nanws of every peraon Of

miniatratri~e of the eatate at
Benny H. Goodman, de-

.f

6:30P.M.

3111 /Hn

teet of Public Affairs until
12:00 o'cloclc noon on tho

46741,

KING .MOBILE HOME
WOOD HEATER
.

EVEn
SAT. NIGHT
I

No Sunday Calls

Cleric of the Board of Trus-

$3 399·5

Bashan Building

the water works and sewage
disposal systems in tha

Village of Pomeroy, Ohio,
will be recoivild by the said

·

•AUTOS

PH. 949·280 I
or 949·2860

electric equipment used in

. with a King

EAR PIERCtiG, MANICURING, PERMS AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS

4

8.

"Free Estimates"

LEGAL NOTIC~

w11 mth,

Ph. 742·2592

614·843-5248

Ne~

KCC 200

271 N. 2nd, Middleport
992-5766
OPEN:Mon.-Fri: 8 am-9pm-Sat. 8-6

R£ASONAILE. ~EU.lBU

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

1H~

24 Hour Wrecker Service ·
full S.rv~t &amp; Repoir
35809 Titus Road
Micldleport, Ohio

Mobile .service

GUN SHOOT

"H" .

AUTO

Service
Electronic Organs

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

Sealed btds for electric
engery to operate mumicipal

enJor

Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation

CHESTER-985-3307

.I

Bum less

TVs,

. RIDENOUR

County. Ohio.
'

.

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

rut Str..,t, Middlorl9rt, Meigs

®
H

~F.=;=::=::::=;::;;Tr=:~~~~:;:;i==j"t;:====:;;;;;~:;;;;,;;;:===i
J,R. 's REPAIRS
CIRCLE

Wt Hue Ahll Tl•
Shp Tuh•lelll
. I• Dalf

APPOINTMENT OF

AGAINST

Business .Services

JERRY
Senlinel CI1Uili1d

O'DELLS

The -Daily Sentinei- Page-7

(614) 992·65l0

16141 •.,._,,.

Yard Sale ·

·· ...Gam-pons· ..._. ...
BUILDING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING
. INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTtON CO.
317 N. Second

Middleport, Ohio

COMMERCIAL
. ' - RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMATESPHONE

&amp; Vicinity -- .. - ·-· -· ·.. ....... ·-·-·· ·-· -· --First time sale Cent entry Toytn.
hou se Nov. 13 &amp; 14 br.,dnaihe
cloth ing, toya, jewtlery, niw
auto radio .
, ,
Ba ck porch Rummage Sale Wild .'
&amp; Thur . Nov. 12. &amp; 13 91ill ?tlri9
l ariat Dfive.

9

.(614) 992-5009

Wanted To Bu'f',

We pey cash for lete modal eteen

$PECIAtiZIN6 IN WINPOW' {)()OR REPlACENENT

used c:ars .

'

Ji m Mink Chev .·Oids Inc .•

6B11~ -~~ieo~2aon

mo.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESOAW
CJ Co•erized H•ri" Air Selection ·

-az: Swim Molds -

ln1llfllrelifll Services

~ LISA M. KOCH , M.S.

:E: Licensed

z

-

Clinic:!. f.t!tliologist

Us8d Mobile Homet. eall 1·614 .
446 -0175.
'
'

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

""

Buying daily gold. tllvar eolt\ 1.
rin.ga, jewelrv, sterling ware. dtl
co1n1, large currency. Top pri·

' CH. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop
2nd. Ave. Mlddl..,o•l. Oh 8!'4:
992 -3476.

I'

'

�•

Page~s-The Daily

9

Sen1iriel

· Wanted To Buy

42

LAFF·A·DAY

51

·Mobile H ornes
for Rent

Call 814-742-2328

2 bdr. fullyfurni1hedadult1only,
util. paid Call 614-446-4110

Header panel. gnll and front
bu~er .

for 1981 Gr.n Ply·

Car

3 bedroom, Bullville Ad Call
• 614-441-0627 .... 2 pm

from

UH

1979 -19 82 . Cttrysler New
Yorker. New Pon or Pty. Fury.

In Eureka nic• ind dean adults
only No pett, deposit required.
180 00 mo. c1ll 114-218· 1131
before10a .m

Coli 614-992 7078.
Wanted •o Buy stlndlng t1mt:ier,

phono 304· 87!· 4412 . 8:00·
5 00 PM after 5.00 PM 304-

2 bedroom trader , located at
·Bidwall call 614-448 ·9669

675-3924 o• 304· 372-5192

oc

2 bedroom trail'"" located at
Bidwell Cllll 814-448-9869

F111ploymen1

2 Bedroom trailer at Porter
$176 00 mo. water furnished,
adult1 l'f'ly, Ph, 614-3B8 - 937~

Scrv 1ces
11

2 Bedroom furnished Y:. mtle off
160 on 654, e150.00 mo. plus
dep011t Ph. 614-388-96&amp;1

Help Wanted

Excellent ilcomB for pan time
tn mll MHf1'bly work For info
call 312 -741 8400 ext 313

Enthuiast1c - 8f'1tlfgetic person
with go o d commun1cattons
sktlls Position !IVailable to work
to r Southeasletn Otuo 'a linnt
outdoor recreetion firm No e11.p
necessaryCall
, willbetween'
tratn , start
dately
10lmme&amp; 4,

"''"P'
Mon
286· 224B .

~ Tu .. Col 614·

Wanted Pan tune admmittrat•ve

BUIStant Must type ISO WPM
accurately Good VBf'"bal skills &amp; '

wr•ttm
requ~red

rI

o

under pressure Knowledge of
sho rthand, corq,uters. &amp; word
processors benef1cial. Job sharmg pos1110n Hours are 8am 4 ·30pm every Monday &amp; Tues day &amp; every other Wednasdey

Salespeople-Full or pert hme to
sell cemetery &amp; march Call
614 - 446 ~ 3615 or 614 -5926151
CASE MANAGER to work wilh
mentally dtsabted adults at
Woodland Centers Bachelor 's
degree in social work or equNal·
ent educatiOn hpenence with
chronic mentally til or P!IYchiat·
ric clients helpful
For more
m'ormation contact! Sandra
McFarland at Woodland Cen·
r&amp;rs, 614 -446-5600

Financiol
21

32

Mobile Homes
. for Sale

Business
Opportunity
I

NOTICE

I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recomTienda that you
do busmeu with people you
know and NOT to send money
ttuoug. the mail until you have
tnvesttgated the offtrl'lg

" Used homes " Lerge aelect10n
prtce reduced on all home•.
French City Mobile Homes Inc

6t4· 446· 9340,
Fall sale, no payments til Feb.
1987. We wtll mak~ the fttst 3
months paymenu on any new
mobile hom~~ . French City Mobile Homes, Inc call 614-446-

9340

23

Professional
· SeNices

' Lawn Serv1ce
Starks Tree and
Hedges , shru..,ba, bushes
trimmed , landscaping, Sluft'9
end leaf removal. 304-5762842 or 576-2010
W•ll care for elderty i1 my home.
Expertenc:ed. r81tonable ratu.
304· 676 -7737. No An1wer

304· 882·327t

Real Eslale

Bebysttter 1n my hotne , referen ·
ees reqUired S45 week Call

814 446-0696

31

'

Homes for Sale

2 bdr 1 2x50 Ex Condltton 1
owner. Call 614-446-3006
Nu::e , clean 2 bdr furmahed
water p11d, con..,en1ent locatJOn,

MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. AT 35.
PHONE 814 ·448·7274

614·447·0175
19B3 Shult 14x70 all electnc, 2
bedrooms , 2 full baths, 2 wood
decks, underpinning, central at
r.exc:ellent cond1t1on Will also
sell land 814-379-2351
2 bdr in Crown Ctly, corner lot
Call 614-446-7806 work. or

6t4-446· 1900 homo.

3 room fumished apt . 2 bdr
houH. no pets Call 304·1711i·

2463
9277.

18

Wanted to Do

Septic Tank Pu,.,ing. Commerciel &amp; rnldentlal. 2 •ucka for
pron1)t Mrvice. 180 per 1.600

gal ID .. . RON EVANS ENTER ·
Pri!SE9. Jock-. Of&gt; . Call
coloct 814 ·288· 11830.
T,..h h.tulng, honnt, dependa ble. " You peck It we stack lt. "

C.M 8t4 ·388·8813
'

Repoanued . 1983 14x70 .
Thtte bedrooms, 2 bat hs.
1500 00 down take , 8236 pet'
month Free delivery. We haw
H¥eral. Mkl Ohio Flnanclel
Service 800· 828·0752.
14JC70 Fleetwood 3bdr: 2 beths,
Mu1t ute. for more Info. call
$14-388-8833 •.efter 4 p m
Great Buy· 12a80 2bdr. motMie
hOmt 241t21 rMtal pole build·
ing, appro,c. 11' cleerance, e,.tra
hook up for moblehotM~ . garden
space, aH thit on large cornet' lot,
Jill 8h172. No htlf1to mow,ln
Patriot. 1elllftg btcauae of

.

hooHh Call 8t4.!J79-2282

2 bedroom trailer for rent Close
to schools and stores Call after
6·00 p m 614·992-59t4.
Taking appliCat•ons on extra
clean 3 bedroom. total elec,
70x14 mob•le home, eecurtty
deposit required, S300 00 304·

675-3002
Taking apphcat•ons on four, 2
bedroom mobile homes
8180.00 l)er month plus gas,
8 200 00 depo1it , 304 · 67~ -

3002
Nice 2 bedroOm trailer , 1 small
chdd, referenced and depo11t.
Everen Swam, At 1 Locust Rd,
Pt. Pit, Back of K &amp; K
2 bedroom mobile hame. Mid dleport , 0 Reference with sec:unty dep'o11t 304-882-3267
For rent 101t60 trailer t50.00
depostt 8136 00 month Water
and trash pickup included, 304-

c.,

Wlfltld Dirt'&amp; Rodt1 for fill Call
814-oMS-o\8&amp;6 or 614 -446 -

304·882-2466

1972 New Moon 121160 total
electr~c, 2 bedrooms, new
carpet , ucellent cond1t1on
Must see th1s . 84,960 00 Ph

Hetp wanted tathlring, sewing, 1
ITIJ st be expert &amp; ll'lnovative
3 bdr , air. pool. garage Nice 1972 liberty, 2 br , stove &amp;
Cell 446-3844 between BPM &amp;
Commercial property, corner re1'rig . Underpr~ning, fuel tank
10PM
lots &amp; highway frontage L•st 04200 Coli 614-6B2·6760 "'
w1th us. We·tlave buyers A-One 614· 246-9284 .
Janitonal mamtenanea 1 full Rear Ettate:Broker. Call 304· 1--.,------:--::-:-:--::
time , exp preferred . Appty ui
674-5104 or 304-874-5386
Brandnewdoublewtde. 3bdr .. 2 ·
person at Murphy 's Mart Sliver
baths, fum1shed. double Insula·
Bndge Plaza
Small 2 bedroom house 6 miln lion, large lot. 821.900 Call
.
touth of Gallipolis on Krtner 514· 446·3040 .
Aeg10n11l Snack Cof11)any 11
Ridge Road flrtt house from Rt.
lookmg for an aggreulve sales
person to distribute thetr pro- 218 Pr~cedtogo . Call814 - 446 · Must aelll 12x65 Vindala .14•70
exp total elec cent . 11r. d1s
2911
duCls ., ttle eree Established
hwasher , 2 decka -awntng ,
temtory for rmre than thtrty
Clayton 1982 12x60 2 bed- woodbu'rner, &amp; underpinnmg,
years. Sales e11perience necesroom, total electric, e~tcellent Must see to appreciate Call
a.ry Sale person apply~ng must
condition Frana. C•ty Broker- 614· 266·1808 .
own or be .,le to buy route van
ago 6t4·446-9340
Of &amp;qual equipment. Send re 197B Govemot Tra1lf!lr 12x65
sume to Bo• T-500 care of The
Br1ck home in Centen•rv 3 for u le. 2 bedroom, full bath,
Gallipolis Da1ly Tribune 825
Bedrooms, 2 baths, forfNII dtn· living room, dining room and
Thhd Ave Galhpolis , Ohio
ing room , brukf11 t nook , flra ldtc:htn c:ombtnad, refrigetator.
456!1
P'IICe In INing room, tun b••· .tove and mk:row.w Oftn, '
m8flt , over 'h an ecte. above Undf!lrpmning Front and back
I Maintenance person to live 1n
apartment CO ITJIIex Call 304- ground pool Ph 814·446-1736 porche1. Call 814-742-3075
after 5 00 p.m or contact John
675-5104
In Aio Grande, FA gal. LG kit , Ash
lotsofc•bmetl, 40gal HWtanll, 1- - - - - - - -- - XJOO Government Jobs List
S,16 040-S59 .2JO vr Now Hir- 4 bdr., w1111 tn)ulatftft extra lots. 14•70. 3 bedroom Skyline Moclose to school. bank, &amp; college b1le Home House lap Sidtng,
ng Call 806-687-6000 EJ:t
Rental potenttal Call614-24&amp;- shingled roof Cell 614-992 A-9805 .
6823 after 5 30 or 614-446- 6305
5346 days
Part-t11ns R N positiOn ava•lable
8x38 ho\188 trailer 1 bedroom
at a 100 bed sk11led long term
6 room house 1 2 ac:rn . Double $700 . Can be 1een ~A miiM on
ca re lactl•ty opet"ated by a
lead.,g rt.ustng home oorpora- car garage. loeated on Rose H1ll AI . 143.
Barg11n priced UO.OOO Cell
tion . Excellent opportunity for
1981 Shannon Mobile Home, 2
614-678-2513 .
thoae who may be attending
bedrooflll,
14x58 , e11.c cond
school 011 have family commit·
3 ' bedroom brick house for sele Many extras 304-937-3214. ,
tments. Position Ideal for capable geriatric nuf'les or nurses or rent 8400 per monttl plus
ut1ht1et Dapos1t requtred Call 3 br trailer for sale or rent in
who would ltlle addi1tOnalexpeMa1on 304-nl-5812 .
6t4 -843·5t38.
r•ene&amp; tn long term care Excellent bl!ll'lefits. salary comrnonsu4 bedroom home, 1Y2 blt~a Le s!19e. W Va . L1ke new 1984
rate w1th e~tpertence . For
Located on Gravel Hill 770 As h mobile home 14x.70 on two level
add1t10nal nformation, contact
St . Mtddlaport. Ohio. Call 614- Iota 304-675· 7600 or 304Nancy Van Meter Director of
762· 2517 .
Nurar.u Pomeroy Heahh Care 992-6714
Center , at 614 -992 · 6606
For aale. 8 room ~ouae . 41ots E
E 0 E.
Me in St Pomeroy Call 614·
Lots &amp; Acreage
Applications tor the polthon of 985 4427 after 6·00 pm
Aettvlttet D1rector at Pomeroy
N1ce 2 bedroom home 1t 301
Health Care Center are being
1 acret, 2 bam1, 1 aept•c: tank
Wrtght Street, Pomeroy Ae1i·
accepted . Graduates from acand rural ' water for 7,000
dance of the late Herbert and
c:ud~ed sctlools maiOring .,tn
814-446-8699.
GIMiyt Moore May be seen by
rec rea tiOnal therapy are delired
1ppointment.
Ctll
614·992·
but considerations w1ll be giv11n
6689 8 30 AM · 4 00 P.M
to rrot•vated applicants ellpe·
Immediate occupancy
r~enced •n recreational &amp;tlvltiet
wtm posaess drive , inovation
2 b,. kitchen. bathroom, with
.,d a COITPIIIIOn for caring and
laundry room, living room &amp;
• understandtng of the eklerty
Applications 1 ra awilabla at The dtntng room , all elec . Approx 1
41 Houses for Rant
mtles from Pt PI on At 62 . 2
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
t
racts
approx
1
ac:rf!l
more
or
lf!lll
Monday through Friday
over looking Kenpwha River
2 bdr. house with garage c:erSecretary. lingle female , Carl's 040,000 Coli 304·676-5440 peted, curtains, dlahwasher &amp;
refrig. Naif new city pool, 106
Auto S.ln Hours 9 00· 5 00. betweeft 8 .30 and 4·30 .
Klneon Dr Rent UOO mo dep
Send resume to 36846 St At
a lease required. Ca11114-441124. Middleport. Or call 614- Log home , 3-4 br, 111 elec. fully
carpeted . f1n11~f!ld batement, 4347
742-3096
Ambrosia 7mJietlromPt Pt on
At 62. City water. paved 3 Bedroom home In country,
Avon Open territories . Ins
drtveway &amp; septiC tank, situated ,plrtly furnished , bottlid gas
available , 304-675-1429
on 'h a ere, overlooking K1nawha hut, water and trash furntlhed
MOM AN 0 DAD · loolung fo r River. t60.000 Call 304-875- 200.00 por mo . t50 00 Dop. pli.t. Children allowed. ref•·
college fundi for vour ,an or 5440 between- ~. 30 ahd 4 ~0 .
ance required call 61 4·388daughte{ 7 The Army NatiOnal
3 bedrooms, 1112 blths, formal
9888
Guard ean prl'lvide more than
t18.COO i1 educ1tion aasistance dm1ng, rec room , 2 e~r garage,
waNt to town 304· 676· Office space · Store 1pace
» (J.Iatifitd lndlvMiuals s.niort can
A·One Real Estate Ph . 304-876 ·
enlist now and begin Min· 4804
5104
ings $81 ,00 for one IN8ell -end
Hou se for sale, price reduced
per month 1nd 6elay Ba1k:
and will price on inspection.
Rent with option to buy. ExcepTratnll'lg ~~ttll June 1987 For •
tionally good 3 bdr. home New
flUE INFOAMATION.PACKET. 304·675 -2130 .
carpet plus nny more e1ttras
callt · B00-542 · 3619
3 bedroom, one third acre, 4 % City school• Under 140,000
VETEA ANS · Your prior military mtles oul Sand Hill A011d , air V.L. Smith , Realtor. Call 814388-8828
tervice is worth MONEY. An E 4 cond, kttch en applianc.., 304·
675-2698 .
in the Armv NatiOnal Guard c:1n
BnutHut 3 bedroom hau• In
nm up to $131 . ~ for one
6 rooms. bath, fuH 1111 b•.. ment
SYfiCUie. Deposit and refaren·
week -end pet month en E-6. up
cas required Call 614-992·
to t163 80 Other benefitt on 4CJII160 lot 311 22nd Str"t.
8218. 9-6, Monday through
include i $50.000 lite insurance, 304-578·281 0 aft .. 4
Saturday.
education funding a11iatance
Ashton, W Va. Ntce 3 bedroom
ratiranent. and much more Call
2 bedroom. carpeted, washer
horM level tot 304-875-7600
304·875· 3950 o• t · B00-542· or
304-762· 2687
and drytf hook up , llfge yerd
38t9
Ref reqwred 814·742-2641
w.,tad registered nurse for
32 Mobile Homes
Small 1 bedroom houH. Tot•!
pert·tnne work ., a gariatr~c
tleetfiC In MintfiVIIIe bnidt
intermMilate care unit. Call
for S8ie
Bulk Plont. Coll8t4-992·82t6.
per.onnel offtc:., LPm Hospital,
Lakin, W Va 304-676-3230
2 bedroom, furntah.t, cltln, 1
NEW AND USED MOBILE child, no pall NewHeven 1115
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY per month. 304-882-2461.
12
Situations

Wanted

3 bedroom, sem1-furnished,
clean condition, 1 child. no pete
New Haven 8176 per month

o• 304· n3 - 502~

Rentals

.

7479

0200 mo Ca11814· 245 -5818

!is

'

1 2x65 3 bedroom, furnished
At Country Mobile Home Parll
$~0 per month plus uiillh81
and depostt. Call 814-992-

~:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;-J";;::;";::;:;:-:;:;:::;;::==1

Send resume to SEO EMS Rt 4
Box 144 Gallipolis. OH 45631,
by Nov 10th

~HiT

"Now comes the,crucial part,
trying to· downgrade her
from a hurricane to a tropi·
cal storm."·

co mmumcat10n 1klll1
Good flhng lkills re-

QUired . Must beableto work well

,, ,,

All elec, lurn~shed , 2 bdr.-. no
pets, adults only . TV-cable 11
available Call 814-367-7438

675-2247

44

Apartment
for Rent

Regency Inc 2 bdr ., k•tchen,
nlc:e, good locatiOn, furntshed,
reasonable Caii304-676-S104
or 304-676-7437.

'

Nicely furnished mob1le home
CA &amp; heat, e1tcel location,
pdults only carr 614-446-0338
613112 3rd, Ava 1 bdr prhlate
bath, 8140 per mo Depo1it
required Call 614-446-4222
between 9 &amp; 6.
Furnished apt S226 Ut1httes
paid 1 BR. 920 4th. Gallipolis.
446 ·4416 after 7pm.
Fumishad apt 1 bdr 8225
utihties paid. 701 4th Gallipolis
Caii446-.W16aftar6 pm
Furnished efficiency •1 50 utili
t•es petd, share bath, 701 4th,
Gallipolis Ceii446-.W16 after6

pm.

Furni1hed 3 rooms and bath.
clean, adult1 only, no pets Call
614-446-1519
Ntcety furnished 2 bdr apt.
Adults only InqUire at corner
Flrlt &amp; Oltve St at Sheppard!
Sales 6 Serv1oe
1 bdr apt overlooktng city park
K-0 • 180 per month can P J 's
614 -446-1819 OJ evenmga

614 ·446· 2325
Fumithed apartment up1tairs.
A.dultt only, all uttllties paid. Call
614 -448-9523
2 bc!r newly redecorated , all
utilities paid , near Mc Oonalds

Co11814 446-7026

1 bedroom apt. for rent. Basic:
rent starts 8215 . a month th1t
includes all utilities DepoSit
required of $200 . Contact Vii·
lage Manor Apt Middleport.
614-992 -7787 Equal Hou sing
Opportunity
Clean , 10omy 2 bedroom 8Pif1·
ments New H&amp;"llen. W Va Call
614 · 992-7481 Al10 commer·
Clli spliCe
2 bedroom, partly forn11hed
apartment off Spring Ave
Pomeroy, Oh1o. largf!l patio and
yard Call 614-992-6886 eUer
6 ·00 p m
2 and 3 bedroom apartment•
and housaa in Pomeroy or
Middleport. Furnl1hcid or unfur.
n11hed Pay own utihti" Call
days 614-992;2381 ,

.

. .·

1 bedrOOm aPartment tn Paint
P1 eatan~ Unique carpeting Call

1-8t4-992-5868
2 bedroom, . turnil hed , new
carpet t2~6 par month Deposit and refererce required
Glenn 811tell 614-949· 2801 ,
APARTMENTS. '"obile homn
hOliHt PI Plea1ant and Galhpo111 . 614-.W&amp;-8221
large Viand Street apart!Tif!lnt.

a••
and water paNt, unfurnl•hed,
304-895 ·34&amp;0
46

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
hght houH keeping rooms. Park
Central Hotel. Call 814-446·

0756.

Rooms fo ( rent, day week.
month. Gallla t.Jotel. Call 614448·9&amp;80. Rent·allow •• 8120
month

46

Space for Rent

42

Mobile Homes
for Rant

Route 33 .. North of Pon.roy
Large lots. Call614·912-7479.
Traitet 1p1cefor rent. Located on
Rocilspnnga Aolld, 1 mile f10m
M•iu• High School Call even-

ing• 814 ·992 · 2941 : doyo 814992·8411
•
Mobl home lot1,.1m1t1 childr.,
acc:eptld, At. 1, Locun ADed.
Mobil home lots, Ohio Aivar
Roal snd Poner•C,...k Route1 .

304-1115· 1078.

Z bdr.• ell utilitln Plld acept
eltc.. furn . or unfum., Me .
depollh .-qulred. Convenient
locatkJn. Call 114-.U8-8118 or

8utln111 or Offka Spece tor
rent. Ntw Havan . 304-773-

8 14·441·477B.

&amp;024 .. 304-892·3287.

KIT 'N' CARLYU 'i'llr Lllrrr Wrtgtit

vember 11. 1986

rue~y.No~ber11, f~SG

Var~s &amp; 4)1V.D.

73

The Daily

'

Television
·Viewing

'89 Chevy StBP' van , 8760 00,

304·t75 -7440

wood-coalltov•, 6pcwoodl.R
.suite *399, bunk beds 1199,
ntron recllnws
new &amp;
used bedroom Milt•. rM1ges.
wringer washf!lfl, &amp; Jho.. New
llvtngJOom arit• t189- tl99,
Iampi, a lao buying coal• Wood
•oves. Call 814-446-3159 .

•11.

'72 Chevy three quarter tons, 4
wheel drive, real good cond with
eXtras, 81 260 00 304-576·

Motorcycles ·

. ·EVENINQ

U'(])(J)D())IJIII!i(Jj) (JJJ

8:00

N-•

'cycles &amp;.rebuilt cycles &amp; part s
for sute Call614-446-7414

Sol 614·446· 1899, 627 3&lt;d.
Ave. Galltpolla. OH

Cil Big VelleV
III Mazda Sportolaok

~

198"4 3 wheeler 70 ~elmet,
Honda sh•rt. hke new sspo

Va..y Furniture, new &amp; ~o~Hd.
Large tec;tion of quality tuml·
ture. 1216 Eastern Ave ,
Gallipolis:

'

••

*?

,,.,,

76

T onsportat10n

·uo.oo

1125aac~

.

Ule size Bearskin in good
condition Ph 614 -446 -1948
eher 4p.m.
~-----:-- · lc ­

F.,ewood for 1lle. 835 pick-up
load . Delivered Heap Vouchers
accepted
~--:-:--:--:--:-::-:- ·lc-

Firewood for sat•. $36 Plck· up
load Delivered Heap Vouchers
accepted Calf ~14 - 742 - 2486 .
Mixed hardwood I labs. *12y p,r
bundle. Containing appro• 1'12
tons FOB Ohio Pallet Co .
F'Gmeroy, OhiO Call 614-992·

8481 .

Half Price! Flashmg arrdw ligna
t2991 Lighted , non-arrow t2891
Unhghted $2391 Free len•ul
Sn locally . Call toCiayt Factory :
1(800)423 -0163, anytime.

Coll814· 448·7372.

0160 00 Ph 814-448-4680

3128

Toy Poodle puppies call 614-

Mercedes 1978 460SEL 4·door
XX Sharp kladed will trade

448-2598

t ·8.1 4·888· 731 1.

Two Aeg . Beagle mal" 6mo .
old, also have so'me younger
pupa available Ph 614-245-

1976 Cordova $300. 00 runs
~od Ph 614-446 -8272

Female Chihuehua 5mo . old
w1th cage t76 .00 Ph . 614-441-

1986 Ptymouth Turiamo , 6
IPMd 16,000 mites . Manv
extras 84500 Call aftet" 4 .00

9578

.

1211

6t4 992-6837 .

Reg laterad Pit Bull puppie• 11
wkl. old. Champion sired . UO
aaeh Clll 614-843 · 5164

1967 Plymouth one 440 four
lfleed , also 1976 Mu sta ng 2
eutornetic four cylinder Phonf!l

St.200.00 Ph 814 -256·t756

.

Milton Spin net Plano il r ta le

.
&amp;

. Fruit
•
Vegetables
~

APPlES - Ptenty apples, large
1ile, aU variety AU fruita and
produce. JACK 'S MARKET. At
35, Henderson

f drill Supp l 11~s

Tony 's Gun Repaln, hot rebklemg , Open 9·00 AM to 7.00 PM
Call 304-875-4131

,~

61

L1venock

Farm Equipment

Upright pi1no mtke affer. Woad

~22~!~ P~!~:~:~~~-~Bi
or 675·7147 .

1965 Eoglo mopod *300 00.
Vtrv old claW fo'ot bathiUb
faucet inc:tuded 1100.00. 304·

875·&amp;e38 ofl• &amp;·oo.

cond. 304-876 -3097 .

·

traces the history of the
cast•ng couch myth from
hollywood 's early days to
present ,

fenden S35. Doorli S99 We
now have short and tong P U
GM bad side, ' blaler ,~des and
early and late Ford bed sides in
stoc;k Also parts for cars and
vans , bedlinets, nep buff11en,
~ sharp 776 spray gun and cup
$99, while they last 8aHene1
Md ect Also eva•lable a 3 year
rust through warrantY on our top
4J•Iity body part1 Outside West
V1rg•n•a Call 1-800·523· 20 13
In West Virg•n•a 1-900-664
4657 ., local calls 304-882

Nowshour
1D llal Clll Wheal of Fortune
@ Bamev Miller

7:05 ([) ~nford ..d Son
7:30 D
(J] New N-lvwed

Gam
•
III NFL' s Greatest Mo·
ments: Football Follin
1!11 ffi Too Close for Com·

FRANK AND ERNEST

Auto Repair

We r&amp;patr automatiC transmtS·
Stons Call 614 -446-0966 ·

l

PALINDROME
SOCIETY

79 Motors Homes

&amp; Campers
Tow bar assembly for rowmg
eo"lJaetcar be~lnd moto r home
or truck. 304-773-9556

A~AGt:

Mt:MBJ:R I~ A

~

puP ANP THE' PReSIPEN'f
1$ A gooB, BU,. :r Me,- A
GI/&lt;L tiff~f? WHO!$ A ~EAL­
prp. MY MOM ANI&gt; t&gt;AP
g~t..ONGEP 'lb li,ANI&gt; l:''Vf'~ffN
A MeM8~R SINCt: J:' W.AS
A TbT····

.'
'

Serv ices

fort

WHAi A f'J.AC::f?'! rHE-

'
L

D Ill THE JUDGE DE·

CIDES

@Benson

7:35 ([) The Honevmooners
B:OO B CIJ (jJJ Matlock Ma11ock

defends a mlld-manntted
man framed for h1s w.fe 's
murder by htS two conn!Vtng

BE V.'!.P, COUNTRY! I'D
10 LISTEN IN ON THII.T
GET· 10GETHERI

SWEEPER and s ewing machin e
repair, parts, and supplies . P•ck
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner . one half l'nlle up
Georges Creek Rd Call 614 -

mecos .' (60 min )In Stereo
Cil Hall Town

H&amp;y"-WAIT A MINUTE! .
MA'J"JO THERE IS A WAY!

(!I AWA Wrestling (60

m1n I
Ill I I (I) Who's the Boos?
!CCI Whtle partteipa1ing tn a

,
)',
.,•

friend's weddmg, Tony and
Angela daydream abol!t get·
mamed to each other.
1111 ffi MOVIE: 'DHth

446 -0294

llniJ

..

Hunt'

:.

Newshour

(jl • (jj) Downtown Den·
i1is becomes the prime suspect when a number of
young women are mur·

••

VJIATs HAff.WIIJ6 IS 1HIS.. .

OOR ~ DtALS Wt1H . ,
I~()Jtt.L R:tf11C&lt;:&gt;
P5 If IT WERE

RON 'S Telev1110n ServiCe
House calls on RCA , Quarar
GE Specialing in Zenith Cell
304-576-2398 or 614 ·446 ·

WHIL£ 1li, ::a/lffi

Fetty Tree Tnmmmg, ltump
removel. Catl 304-675 -1331

AR~

MAKI~G. ~

SPY
FILM .. .

y

AU:S~
MOJt~ .. .

2454.

MJD 1Ht 1HE.Pi~E

~ ~k&gt;GOOf
CF~~

y

rtenced carpenter e lectr~ cren ,
mason pamtet, roof1ng (InClud ing t'iot tar application) 304675-2088 Of 675-7147

1982 Pont18c Gr~nd Prix
8fou\1tam 84,600.00 19BO
Pontiac Bonneville 82,600 00
Both eJCc mnd . 304-895-3820
or 11!-3881

72

Trucks for Sale

t978 Collom 4-opeod Aodlo,
topper for 8999 00 . Johns Auto

CA09S lo SONS
U.S 35 Wnt, J1ckson , Ohio.

614-288-5461
MIIMY Fervueon. NIMI' Holland,
B ~h Hog Sal• &amp; Service Over
40 uaed tractors to cftooM from
• e»""letelile of new &amp; used
equipment. largest aelection In
S E OhlG

JIM'S FAIIM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 315 W. Golllpooo,
Oltlo Call e14-441-97n, •••·
8t4·441 ·31582. Up f&lt;ont •oc·
ton with wenanty over 40·Uitd
•actors. ~000 tool1

Ford 8N Tractor .with loader
1.800.00 .
Call after Op:m.

114-24&amp;·9185
Doz• 800 case tradls lA, QOOCI
condition 18,500.00 • 1882

Buick Rogal lmltod oil power.
Coll814·441·3040

,..a

'New and uilld
for Whit..,
Ollvwt, M·M, Dtutz trtctors.

Sldoro ~lp""'!l Ca., :104·
87&amp;·7421.

John DHre ao rnb~t with com
NMl.,dg•oln platfo•m, •1200.
:104-4118·1031 .

Of&gt; .
1971 Ford Qlper Cab with
topper. Need1 little body work.
Runs good. Calll14·141 · 2166.
1971 GMC SA ton, 354 eng.,e.
A11o 1974 Prowter C1mplf, air,
1V anterlna. Sleeps 8 Self

comalnod . Call 814-742-2577
t9n Fo&lt;d old&lt;·up twck 302
tnalne. Standard trans P.S

IUD. Call 814-992·3763 o•
814·992-7841 .
1971 Chevy :14 ton pickup, good
cond, tuto tranamittlon, 350
motor. good "'"· e996 00.
304-468-tl2t.

I 1M 60 QCOD AT
P/Nq-R:?NEHHAT I MAY
MAKE IT MY CAREER.

I 'LL BE /HE PERFECT
PROFESSIONAL

r M GLAD HE WASN'T
EATING ~TATO CHIPS

PING -RJNG PLAYER .

'wHEN HE SAID THAT.

73

Vans

lit 4

W.O .

1982 IublN 4 WO wagon , VG

- d. $3,4110. Call 61 4· 441·
4t41 .
1171 Jeep I cylinder good
oondHion *2.800.00 Pit. 814·
1446-4292

t

-~-~ ~~.

~·-~

.....

By Jam01 Jacoby

4&gt;Q9

'
11·11·8·

• 6 32

• 10 75 3

Do you defend part·score contracts
as vigorously as games or slams? U
not, you can learn to do so by pretend·
iq tllat you have doubled the con·
tract. Today's West might have profit·
ed from this advice.
Aplnst two ao-trump, the defend·
en started with four opade tricks. On
the fourth spade, East flagged the nine
of hearts~ jl)st to let his partner know
tllat he bad that suit eventually con·
trolled. Meanwhile dummy 'discarded
a diamond and declarer shed a heart.
Complying with East's suggestion,
West now led his heart 10. Declarer
woa dummy's ace and smoothly
played .a diamond to his eight West
woa the nine and played a club. Dum·
· my's ~ took the trick and another
diamond was played to the ace. Now
declarer played dummy's king and
queeo of hearts, throwing his last dia·
monel. West bad to discard twice. It
was euy to let go the lliamoad jack,
but what next? U West threw the dia·
molld klnl, dummy's 10 would make a
trick. U be threw a club, South would
I'WI the A·K.e.
A111wfll is not euy to aee, the
kllllllg d l!nse lor West was to play a
club after taking his four spade tricks.
When he gets in witb a diamond, he

Nova· Can Aids Ba
Stopped (CCI The spread
•nd treatment of A1ds 1s the

~MJIICfHt!l'

focus of Intense 51udtes and
searches for a vacc 1ne (60

by THOMAS JOSEPH

9 fhhl wal
hrntlw

EAST
+Q J 10

WEST

.,0
t

+ A,,K84

.J9 875

KJ 9 d
... 10 8

+Q4

3'2

4&gt;J 7 4

SOUTH

..

• 975
• 682

"

+A 8 2
4&gt;A K 6 5

Vulnerable: East· West
Dealer South
North

Wet1

,

East

Soutb

Pass
Pass

1 NT

...

Pass
Pass
Pass

"'

Pass

Opemng lead: • 4
'

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

.

can then play another club. Now there •
is no way to squeeze West, because the' ·
declarer's commumcatton in the club .,
suit has been destroyed. How can West ,.
tell that it is safe to play clubs? South :;.
must have the club A·K for bis opening -~
·btd, aDd West must hope that his partner has the jack to have any chance o(' ·~
setting the contract.
, ;:

Coal. limestone, gravel, etc
Df!llivered 1 Inn and up . J im
LAnt er 304-675-1247 or 676 -

7397

Coal An d limestone d 111!ve;y
service 304 -675-3190

Upholstery
TRI STATE

sluggt&gt;r
13 Uncut
14 Tokyo ,

lo you
4 Puh
favorll l'
II RNurn
5 Do.':: ' ~ ~km
in kind

.

jUdKP

nemel!i"~

26 Cuckoo

- '

27 llefeal
30 Slowllr
·· (mus.)

.

'

31 Granary •
me nar l'
32 Htsfeature
33 Coll ege
in Mlrh.

..

311 Pelee
product
36 Gory

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's ho\1 to ~Work it :

I I ' ll

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFEL.LOW

One letter st.nds for another. In this samp le A 1s used
for the three L~s, X for the two O 's , etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes~~ length and lonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE

11·11
L.FC

w

L EM

T l WE

G HKI - KLDH

XPQUZ

KLCT

sanal atde. (70 mm.l
12:00 ()) Buma li Allen

..

(Jordon '!-:

FG

rtng wnen m8v ·.;,vas·

"'"

25 Flash

actor Jaff Dan1els and natur·
aH~t George1lel'ro1here. (60

dea1h of a rode singer's per·

•

'l'tm

cal personality Anita Baker.

ptracy

......."

24 Moslem

CIJ M'A'S'H

tigate the bizarre gutllottne

''.

29 Rank

Down
21 ('olor
34 ( ;r rm an
8 Rrave nn£&gt; 22 Ice-n eam
name
10 flistn·
l'hoicr
prefix

23 Mulrl

21 -

W M T

DHQ K
L F C

.•

c,

YIIXEHIIM

IW F KXti

UPHGXHC'i()IJKT
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: OUR OOt. S WILl. LOVE

.'

AND ADMIRE THE MEANEST OF US , ANil rEED Oll l!
,COLOSSAL VANITY WITH THEIR UNI 'HIT/l'AL 110MAGE. - AGNES HEPPLIER

ma•ueu-•

l-IE USED

15 Vmou s

18 Sonora
Indmn

JCCii60 min I
(l) MOVIE: 'Saboteur'
iJID Ill @ MOVIE: 'Geo19a
McKenna Stol'f' (CCI
(jj) Africans : In Search of
Stabilitv (CCI Un1lateral
parttsansh1ps ,
nirhtarized

D ())ABC Newo Nlghtllne
Rlmble
llJI @ Magnum, P.1.
D CliJ Hot Shots Amanda
and Ja s on uncovar a racord-

AWAKE AS LATE AS

7 Sec :1

24 Mrrh1 hean
25 Suhstan11 al
27 llull'h t'II Y
28 - oran~e

..~,

22 Flare

emTul

' STf:«
OL' BILL CANT

6 L1ke/y

.

'

able
19 "Aunl"
in Tuuarta
huted
23 ll&lt;•cree
35 You th
20 Mar on
,.......,.....,.,...,r.-r.r-r;""'!ia &lt;'ar .

()) WKRP In Clnclnnoti

I1LL PROSABLI(
BE J.IO~E EARLY...

ailmcnl

17 Stretch·

min ) In Stereo.

WE QUAFF A FEW
ROOT BEERS AND
TELL WAR STORIES ..

mark

16 Surpass

ffi SportoCentar Live

PEANUTS

I J·:dnnrial

llltiM

(l) Countl'f Expreos
(jj) Managing Our Mire·
cleo: Health Care in Amer·
lea Government regulo1ion
• of tobacco products 111 the
toptc addressad tn tontgln 's
panel d1si::uss10n featunng
the U S. Surgeon General C
Evere1l Koop 160 min I
@ The Honevmoon.,.
11 :30 D · IJl (jJ) Tonight Show
Tonight's guests ere muJ.I·

UPHOLSTERY SHOP

DOWN

dlcted in a federal tnvesttgal•on. 160 min )In Stereo
CII 700 Club
ffi Top Rank Boxing from
Las Vegas, NV 12 hrs . 30
mtn .)
,
(I) D (J] Moonlighting

Ill

- '

.'

2 Tolerate
3 Your c htld

15 Farceur

News
CIJ Hardcastle and McCor·
mick

SNAKE!!

Ma~nan1

10 .Jau nty
12 llnslon

tn~ forc

1 0:20 ill MOVIE: 'The Fighting
,..
Sullivans'
10 :30 CI1 Celebritv Chefs
1!11 CIJ INN News
(jjJ Gallel'f
11 :00 D IJl (I) D ()) ®l Ill G2i IDl

VETERANS DA'i
I 60 OYER TO BILL
MA,ILVtl'l' ~OUSE .

NORTH

(jj)

III NFL Fllmt I'No-IRI .

.. . .--·

.AKQI

mtn I
.
()) D (J] Jack and Mike
JCCii60 m1n I
1!11 (lJ Odd Couple

·

EvE~~

.,

No timeout
for defense

lllJ@ News

~

,,,

James Jacoby

cqnlrasted /60 [liin I
·' ·
10:00 D CIJ Clll 1986 !CCI (60

'

~---'--------· --·---

BRIDGE

zones , and thetr succeases
failures wnhtn talamte
and Western•zed states are

2919

Mowrey's Upholatering serving
tncountyaree21 year1 Thabest
In furniture uphol1terlng Call
1JM11 fo• ult •!,1100.00 call 304 - 876 - 4154 t o r free
8t4-387· ~03 Mlytlme .
, •stlmattl .

can do nothing wllh, and ENJOY it. "

and

Dillard ' !!. Wat er Delive ry Cisterna, pool &amp; well Anyttme but
Sunday, 614 ·446-7404

A &amp; M Custorrt Couchet and
Reupholatery, St At 7 , Crown
City. Oh 614 256-1470, Eve
614-446-343B . Open dAily 8 to
6, Sat 9 i3D 1(1 1 30 Old &amp; new
Uphostered

Fondly - Jingo - Nylon - Felony - ENJOY .
Wt hllc:lspant a quiet avenin~ wilh our neighbors. After they
had left my husband mused, ' Friends are those people you

D CIJ (jJ) Crime Stol'f To·

BARNEY

James Boys Water Serv1 ce Also
poot!l fi ll ed Call 614 266 -1141 ·-.
or 6 14-446-117 5 or 814 -446- ~
7911
~

,,

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-._TS ANSWERS

39 ( 'ross nu l

Hauling · ~

Ave , Gft lhpohs
,~~3446 - 7833 or 614-4 46 :

?v

TO GET ANSWER

who has been fronting loans

Furnace epd stove repaln Day •.
or Night, 304-675· 6073

Sec

'

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE ~ETTERS

to the mob. and luca plans a
ser1e s of nsky cnmtnal acts
after he and Bartoli are m-

' ''
~----~----~~ ·

1163

'.

NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

reUo confronts hts old fnend,

448 4477

87

far, but

P~INT

· housf"
5 Hl•dU ('('
to pul1•

MOR'T Y MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Watt e rso n s Water" Hauhn,g
rf!lasonable rates , tm medie t~
2,000 ga llon delivery CIStern s
pools well, etc: call 304 576 -

..

Complete rhe chuckle quoted
•.-..~............_ _.___.,_~,.__.J
f•ll.ng in the missing words
yov develop from step No 3 below.

Antonio Spurs at HoiMIOII

1980 Oodgo 0 -SO 4-opood.
Rad io, topper $1,699 00 .
Johns Auto Sale1, 8ulaville Ad .

I

DILANI

lets'
8:05 ([) NBA Baskatbell: Sen

Plumbing
&amp; Heating.

General

"Reason can only go so
faith has no - . "

37 Malun•d
38 A«"l rt' ~ s

Ashby Construction. ca rp entery , remodel ing, roo m addition.
cement block worll, rooftng,
intertor and elte rlor pain ting,
siding . Roofing Frea estimates
304-676-6445 or 675-5152

86

"Faith is a sounder (IUide than
reason," stated the old gent.

h5...,.,....,,r.6-,-1-,1-,.1-i Q

number

896· 3802

AND HEATING
Cor . Fount\ end P~ne
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ph one 614-446-:tesa . or 614-

I I I 1

~

. ""-.

f

':~;=;t;:;:~::;::_..,

I

''

ACROSS
I :-,pamsh

304·676· 2010"' 576 -2842

1978 Mustang. eacellen1 eondrtion , 4 new radials.. 4 IJ)eed,
standard 1hitt, 304-676 -6536

rr

.••
~

mm.l
@ MOVIE: 'Love and Bul·

9 :00

Rotary or cable too l dr~lhng
Most wells c:o~leted same day
Pump aales and servtce. 304-

·'

...,.F-,LrE~T~Ct"""il
-.·
4

b1ll by calltng a 'sax fllt1taay'

·St1rks Tree and Lawn Service,
Hedgea, s hru bs, b ushel
tnmmed land s cap 1ng and
stuiT't) removal. leaf removal

CARTER'S PLUMBING

2

t-,. .

Roclce1s 12 hrs . 15 m•n·. )
8 :30 Ill 0 (J] Growing Paino
(CCI Jason and Maggte ara
shocked to laam thai Ben
has amassed a huge phone

~

AINGLES ' S SERVICE . upe·

82

I I I 1I
UROES
,r-,,r.-;,lr-iI i
I
I

dered. /60 mtn I

EEK &amp; MEEK

614·448 ·9846 .

MecNeii·Lefnr

[JJ

Unconditional hfettme gueran l'~
t&amp;e Locel references furnished
Free eshmatea Call collect
1-614-237-0488, da'y or night .;~
A o g e r s 8 a 5 e me n t ~ ..
Waterproofmg
ChriStmas trees. stone. mulch.
gravel, coal. firewood, $35
Delivered Heap vouchers ac:eepted Don ' t Undscapin g Cell

FATE OF ·LITILE BOY
OUTCASTED BY AIDSI
.WCHS •••
D()) Judge
[JJ Bl..s Me, Father
GID Wheel of Fortune
ID Gil IDl JIIOP'*ft

ALLEY OOP

Home
Improvements

WA~::~~~~NG

' Casung

•

MISCAO

Ill Nightlv Buotneoa Re·
port
00 News
(jj)
MacNeil -Lehrer

3729

81

"The

Couch· Fac1 or Ftctton?"
1!11 CIJ M•A•S•H
II()) People's Court

$39 GM doo•s $79 73 · 78 Fo•d

77

form four simple words

Leeza G1bons hosts a apec•al
three-pan ser)es wh1ch

"""

'

four ocrombled words bo·

mick
III SportsCentar Ltve.
([) Entertainment Tonight

'
Mountaineer Auto Body Parts, ~ '
1318 Sth St New Haven W Va
has the lar~MJ5t tnvuntory of after
market pertt In the area et low.
low priCfts 73-80 GM fenders

auto. air , make your own deal,
phone XJ4·875· 2680 .

Sties. Bulavillt Ad Gallipolis,

304·882-3796

HALF PFhCEI Fla1hlng a"ow
•iant 12991lighted, non-anow
82891 Unlighted 12391 Fr•
letter11 SH locally. C•H tod1yl
Factory · 1 (800}423 · 0113,
anytime.

~od

.:1r

'!l'ansmss•ons, used &amp;
rebuilt Tool converters &amp;
transfer C8181 . Will deliver Cash
&amp; Carry or Install call814 -446-

4870 or 614 379-2220.

Nawo •

III NBA Todav
Cil I I (J] ABC News .
1!11 CD Hogan's HOfOe&amp;
ill Doctor Who
00 GIIUJ CBS Newo
lllJ Body Electric
@ Gciod Timas
8:35 ([) Safe at Home In Stereo
7:00 B Cil PM Magazine
CIJ Hardceltle and McCOr·

,.,'
•

671 Super charger, for e BB
chevy engine mn1)1ete system

B Cil IDl NBC

t980 Oldo Omega, 4 cyl, FWO,

58

8 ft wide x 1 ft. high wood
garagf!l door with track and
hardWare w-6 giMs window•
*60 00 Ebco Oa1il hu mldlfltr
in good co nd , t 6D.OO . Phone

1970 Camero , 11,500 00, vo'V

Musical
Instruments

bO&lt;d. Coll814·992-70t5

Surplus regular army camouflage , Carha"'nt, Oentm, Rental
clo thing , camoufi8Qe coveralls
130 00. H 0 " Sam' " Some rville, 1¥ U S A Ret. 1 East of
Raven1wood. Fri. Sat. Sun,
12 ·00-B:OO PM, other daytaftef
4 :00 PM 304·273-5666

7841

OONE

Coll8t4-992-61i69

1 new Ac'A Modei1B Kerosene
heater. 304-176 -2806

1980 Datsun ptclt: -up A~na
· e~cellent . $1500 Call fS1 4-992-

742-27t8

Woodburner for sale. 81 DO 30
acrf!ls of land in Orange Town lhip off At 681 1979 Thunder·

Kindlewood wood'burnlng lnsef1
tor fireplace Md ' f•rewood fOr
tale. Phone 304-896-3808

614 -985· 4306.

Wanted : Registered W•rfield
Aedt Be~gle Hound Call 614 ·

F11her Wood or Coal S1ove,
0200 Coli 614 -992· 2997.

Surpkl"s · A.rmy ,' Danim, Aentlll.
Carhart Clothing, Ktdt Camou·
llage {Fr• Helmet with Com-·
plate Suit Purcbase with copy
this AD at Regular Price). Fri.
Sat Sun 12 .00-800 pm
Other 01y1 lfter 4 p.m Eut of
Ravenswood H 0
" Sam "
Somerville. CT:Sgt U S.A F
Aet I
,.,

1973 Plyrpouth Satahte 318
Auto. trent , runs good, body
rough . $150 Call 6f4 -446-

AKC minl1ture Schnturar p.tp·
pie sah &amp; pepper male 8 weeks
o'd on Nov 6, shots and wormed

57

8 : ~0

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1 Budget

Wel1h baby crib and mattratl
excellent cond1tlon 8515 .00 call

@ Facts of Ute
6:05 ([) Andv Griffith

·''

*296anduptot39&amp;
.BIIbybadslf---------~-r---------...
e110• $175 Mattresaesorbox
sprtngs full or twin $63 , firm l='""""'""="-==..-::-:$73,and$83 Oueenaats*225, 55 B 'ldt'ng Supplt'as
61 Farm Equipment
K;ng $360. 4 d•owo• dlBOI SS5 .
Ul
Drttaers $89 Gun ceb~nets 8, 1 '-''---~~----1
10, &amp; 12 gun Gaa or electric
Ttire8 new tobacco ba1lers.
range t376 . Baby mattres111 Building Materlall
$t08.00 304-876-&amp;e46.
835 &amp; S46 Sed framn UO, BloCk: brick, sewer pipes, win·
UO &amp; King frame •5o Good dows, lintel•. etc Claude Win·
aehtctlon ot bedroom MJiles, 1en. Aio Grande, 0 . Call 614·
62 Wanted to Buy
metal cabinets. headboards 830 246·51 21
and up to 865
/ - - - - . , - . , -- . , -- , . - Concrete blocks all aizes vard or
delivery , Mason sand Gallipolis
Used Furniture. Washer &amp;
Now buymg ahell c:o.rn or ear
dryer, gas range, wood table &amp; 81ock Co, 123Y, Plnf!l St .,
com Call for latest quotes. River
2 bflnchat, beds, dreuer,..wood GoiUpoUo. Ohio Call 6t4· 446·
C1ty Farm Supply 1 614-446·
2783.
wtrdrobe. 3 miles a.it
2985
.
Bulavlllt Ad Open 9AM to
4 ~quare teet of 1Cafolding. Call
SPM . Mon thru Sof
w.. ted To Buy. CCC Generic
614-3417·0632
614 ·446-0322 .
,,
O!rtHicatea Ph 304 ·675-1807
evanng1
Building Supplin
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Surplu s·Ckl seoutt· Buyouts
W11hen , dryars , refrigerators,
range s Skeg91 Applta.ncu, 1 Wood burn1ng sheet metal
63
Livestock
Upper River Ad beside Stone ttoves ltmllar to Franklin
$69.96 eac:h or 2 for t100 .00 .
Crest Motel. 114-446 -7398
2 Steel Insulated ptehung
Bilby Hol1tetn he1fer calves All
Good used color televiSIOns for door'1, no briek mold 69 96
bred . Call 614 -388· 8524 no
sale or trade Cal' 614-446- 3 Interior prehung door's all
Qlnday calla.
sizes and finilhat 129.9&amp; each
1149
4 42" Vanity wrth (BI marblf!ltop
6 year old Quarter Horse.
Electric heet pufT1&gt; 8100 00, *14996each. ~ ·
6 6" by 20' Whtte commercial gtldmg. has bf!len shown 4-H.
Roller e11erC11,er •46 .00 Ph
$6&amp;0 00 f~rm. 304-875-6799
gutter S1 00 per ft
614 .255· 1257
DONE 8 1 and 21)c Fiberglas• tub 'sand ofl .. 5 30.
Ptcilens Used Furmture Good showers white and colors
quality used furniture Open 9 to 0169 95 to 0199 95
Hay 1&amp; Grain
7 Preflnilihed oak flooring ,/.t" T 64
6 01 call for appoll'ltment
x 2%"W random length T G
304-676-8483 o• 675 1450 ,
Gunatalk and natural fimsh
S176sqft
Large round baln of hay, •10
8 60% off Vinyl sithng tnm each: Squarf!l balM, $1 25 each
52 CB.TV, Radio
0 S Corners S4 00, InSide C.ll ln-448-1052 at... 5
Equipment
Comers 83 00, 12 -J Chane!
•150.00 (61 colors.
Complete Satelite Dish for sa le 9 Wood Roof Truaa 20' to 20 '
1
moving 81 ~ 600 Ph 614-246· S10.00 to 26 00
·
5294
10 . Temperat Insulated Glasa
Panels lfl" T ~~; 32"W, 11 76" H
829.95' f!IICh
54 Misc . Merchandise 11 Scrubbeble prepanad vinyle 71
Autos for Sale
wall Qi)VtJing ~ub!e roH t8.99
12 Insulated wh1testormdoor't
Callahan' s UHd T1re Shop Over 1 lJtT x 36"Wx80"H Rag
1974 Cougar XA7 2 dOor very
1,000 tires, siles 12, 13, 14 , 16 , 0129.96 Now t89.95
good condi110n for tBOO.OO call
16 16 6 8 mllet out At 218
13 4"x8"x 1h " R. Guard Foam
6 14· 245·9163 after 5 00
Call 614 -258-6251
Board Fo•l Face 83 99pc
1980 Tr.,a AM low mileage,
14 · Decorator Wood Paneling
Plast•c c11tem rtate approved. $6 69 Seconds $4 .99
auto , PS, PB, air ll•eo. CB.
plastle septic tanks, plastic 16 Keyed or Bed ( R) lock's
•king 14,500. Ifnot soldwillbe
culverts, metal cutvens. RON 13 99 Itch
..,.lod In C.ll6t4-446-2745
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack· 16 5pc. Hight Glosatub wall kits
l&lt;ln, 9h 6t4·288 ·5930
with shelves 829 96
1982 Dodge Dtplo met. auto , a1r,
PENN'S WAREHOUSE
wire rima , good tires, low
F~rewood to r ule
PU
mituge, $2699 John'• Auto
Wellston . Ohio
load Call Roger Meade, 614·
614·384·3645
Saln, 8ulaville Rd . Qallipohs .
388-8417
60aya8to6
80 Ford Mustang , U50D. 12 HP
Firewood delivered Oak &amp; tick - Pole Buildmgs by Quality Jacobian mower&amp;. cart . $700
Of\' , split, HEAP vouch It', pltkup
Call 114-441· 7371 .
Bulldtta Workshop•. c.port•.
load 836 Call61 4 -446-2223 or animal aheltera. garlges ~ Free
6t4-446·3028
est•metes Phon• 614 -384 ·
1973 Ford LTD 350 autom1t1c,
5762
n.ns gt;~od UOO 00 call 614A)dtng lawn mower elac. Lowrey
448-6601 ~nytime
organ 3 wheeler Call 61 4 -446 ·
74t4.
56
Pats for Sale
1973 Cad•llac Sedan Deville
67,000 miles very good c:ondiFurnished 2 bdr mobile home on
t•on silver with black top
comer lot in Crown City Call
.Ot,950 00 Ph 814· 448-0577.
Oragonwynd
Canerv
Kennel
6t4· 448· 7806 o• 614 · 2!6 · CFA Himalayan . Persian and
1900 after 6
Slamne kitten• AIC.C Chow 75 Cordova, $300 Runs good
Coli 814 -446-8272
fMov.-.gl Nice big couch &amp; dtair pupplf!IS Call 614-446-3844
after
7PM
for sale, 8200 Call 614 -441826 Cash paid fDr junk cars
7517
C:Ofll)lete. Body'• towed I'Nay
AKC blonde poodle pup• Cham·
Call 614 -882· 6750 or 61,4·
King Wood Stove t160 .00 Ph . ptan tined Wormed &amp;. tailed.
2145-9254

6t4·256·1766A

•

'84 Honda XR-80. axe cond,
8400.00 '86 HOnda ATC -200X, 3 wheeler, '5 months old
8t ,400 00. 304-675· 2988

rn JeffertOno

CJJ 3·2·1, Contact (CCI
lllJ Secret Cltv

614·985·4301

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chllllrt priced from
$396 to S99fi. Teblet tfiO and
up to $125. Hide-a-beds $390
to *596 Recliners *226 to
$375 Lamps 828 to 1126 .
Dinettes 8109 and up to $496 .
Wood tabls w-6 d'telfa *286 to
1786 o.. k I too up ,. $375 .
Hutcha t400 end up . Bunk
bedt cofT1)1ete w-mattrftMI

1111

...

Raarronge letters of tho

•

I

11/11/86

74

'::~~:~' S@\\qf}lv\-..J&amp;ttfSe ::::

- - - - - - - Edlrod by CLAY I. POLlAN ---,:-''' - ; - - -

low to

2704

County Appliance, Inc. Good
' •eel appliances and TV 1111
Open BAM 10 IPM Mon thnJ

•

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo PMk,

304-182· 2405 o• 304·875·
&amp;540

!

6t4-446-0930
Oak Apts now accepting appli·
cation! for 1 or 2 bfldroom apu
For more mformation call 614·
682· 7570 call collect if out of
town E H 0 ManJged by U S
Shelter Corp, Call enytime day
or night

•

New Hnen, very nict f 3 bad·
rOOm hou1e, 21h balh.,, family
f'OO'J', Mat pu fl'l), 2 car garage,
refarencu. Hornalteld Realty,

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
OliWe St, Galtlpolil , NevvA ullid

Wanted to bu'i Standing timtJ.r

mouth Fury

Tuesday.~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

()) J.tf8fSOI11
emllawhlde

.
Ill (J] Tales of the Unex·
pected

()) SCTV
12:30
(f) (jJJ Late Night with
Devld L-man Tomgh1' s
guest is R•chard LewtS. !60
m1n lin Stereo

e

.,•

I]) Best of Groucho
(!) Truck and Tractor Pull·
lng: Battle of the Monster

Trucks IRI

Cil ABC News Ntghtline

D (}) More Raal People

®l Banacek: Fiv Me if You
Can Find Me
@ MOVI E: 'Torn Curtatn'
I'

"

...
••
'•

�' .
.

Pag11 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomaroy-Middlepori. Ohio

TUESI)AY
POMEROY - Sam and Nancy
. Davis, missionaries to Mexico,
will present a program ·on their'
work at ·7: 30 this evening at the
Calvary Pilgrim Challfl, k;lcated
on Route 143, one-balfmlleoffthe
Route 7 bypass.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship trustees will meet at 7:30
p.m. ·this evening at· the town
halL.
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet .In regular
'· session 1)lesday for ~lectlon of
officers.

POMEROY -Boy scout Troop
249 will meet at 7 p.m. Wedries: ,
day at the American Legion hall
In Pomeroy. All boys, ages 11
through 13, Interested In scouting
are Invited to attend. ·
THURSDAY
RACINE - The American
Legion Auxiliary, Racine Post
602, will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday
at the hall.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange will meet at 7:30 Thurs·
day ·night at the grange hall.
Keith Wood, game. protector, will
be the speaker.
·

-~-

RUTLAND - Rutland VIllage
Council meets Tuesday, 7 p.m. ,
civic center.
HARRlSONVILLE- Practice
for Harrlsonvllle Chapter, Order
of Eastern Star, has been
changed to Tuesday night followIng the regular meeting.

Family medicine:
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University CoUege
of Osteopathic Medicine
Question: What's the ' difference
between
osteopathic
cine and
regular
medicine?medl·
Abswer: The answer to this
question Is not simple, but Jet's
look at some aspects of the
osteopathic approach to health
care.
Holistic medicine. the philo·
sophy that no one part oft he bod,y
c;1n malfunction without disturbIng the whole bod,y , is the basic
concept behind os teopathy.
Andrew Taylor Still, a Civil
War surgeon In the Union Army,
founded the discipline as a
profession distinct from other
healing arts, and started the first
osteopathic college at Kirksville,
Missouri, In 1892.
Still's philosophy . now followed by osteopathic physicians
throughout the world, 'was that
emphasis should be placed on the
relationship be tween the mu seu I·
oskeletal system and lntE!'nal
disease.
To do this, D.O.s use "osteopathic manipulative treatment" to
change the physiological state of
Internal organs . Osteopathic
physicians also use palpatory
diagnosis -touching the patient
and feeling lor abnormalities to detect disease In these organs
by noting subtle changes produced In the bod,y's structure.
Osteopathic manipulation Is
helpful in detecting and treating
many Illnesses, not just those of
the back or bones. But an
osteopathic doctor Is trained In
all accepted forms of medical
diagnosis and treatment, not just
manipulation.
He or she Is a complete
physician who can prescribe
drugs , perform surgery and care
for ali forms of Illness. D.O.s are
fully licensed to practice medicine and surgery in ali 50 states.
They take stringent state llcen~·
lng examinations, just as M.D.s
do.
Question: What sor t of education do csteopathlc doctors have?
Answer: Before applying for
admission to an osteopathic
medical school. students are
required to complete a bache·
lor's ct'egree from accreiltti&gt;d
rollege or university. ·
The medical education of a
D.O. takes another four years.
The first two years Include basic
training In medical biology and .
simulated clinical practice In a
classroom setting. In the third
and fourth years, students obtain
experience with patients at hospitals and outpat.ient care
fac IItties.
After receiving the D.O. de·
gree, the osteopathic physician
usually co mpletes a one-yea r
lntermhlp. Most states, In fact ,

Melissa Wells, freshman, most lmpreved flag
corps member; Tina )\lssell, a junior, outstanding
.majorette; . Melissa Hensley, a Junior, auxUiary
spirit award; Amanda Blssell,a frMhman,
auxUIIary leadership, · back, Lorre Osborne,
seventh grader, most improved mardler; .
Heather Flnlaw, sophomore, hand leadership;
David Rice, sophomore, band spirit; Susie Kimes,
eight grade, most Improved musician.

·What is osteopathy?
require M.D.s and D.Q.s to have
a one·year hos pital-based Intership before tbey can be licensed
to practice. If an osteopathic
physician chooses to be a speciallst, one to five years of additional

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter Ill RAM and Bosworth Council 46 R&amp;SM will meet Wednesday In regular session.

.

For more Information about
the profession of osteopathic
medicine or the osteopathic
medi ca l school in Ohio, write to
the Office of Communication, 234
Grosvenor Hall, Ohio University

REEDSVILLE - Revival at
Reedsville United Methodist
Church through Nov. 15; special
singing; 7:30p.m. services, John
Gibson evangelist.
•
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of E1eta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m., at ' the Episcopal
Church Parish House In
Pomeroy.

clothing day . for low·lncdme
persons will be Thursday, 9 a.m.
to noqn, at tbe old high schogj
building ln Cheshire. '

-~-

FWDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonii·
thait Meigs Chapter, Daugbter,ll
of tl)e American Revolution. wll,l
meet frld,ay, at 1:30 p.m.at tbe
home of Mrs . Ronald Reyoolds,
Prospective members and gg•
ests are Invited to attend.
..u

Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy,
cole slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
no substitutes except btwrap . with addi-

State Allte
l~&gt;tli • •

By PAM MURPHY
United Press International
The nation's Veterans Day
parades and ceremonies honored
those who defended the country
In battles . :•you never want to
remembe r, but you never want to
forget " and paid special tribute
to women, gays and those miss·
lng In action.
President Reagan Issued a
message Tuesday saying: "Our
veterans ... are the heroes a mong
us. On this Veterans Da y, le t us
pa y them tribute. And let us
resolve to live up to their
example."
.
·
In· Atlanta, a parade was held
in honor of women who served In
the military, mostly durtng
World War II, and some felt the
recognition wwas long overdue.
"I'm an ex-Marine and the
daughter of a World War II
woman veteran. " said S¥.san
Hendrickson , a parade specta·
tor. "I wish my mother could be
here toda y. It's raining but It's
not dampening my spirits. I
guess it was a long time coming
... but I feel terrific."
At a traditlqnai parade in ·

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Mfr's. suggested pricing basad oo full-price brands.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer. Heart Disease
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pr,egnancy:

Ki ngs: 10mg "Jar;' 0.8 mg nicotine- tOO's: 12 mg "tar;' 0.9mg nicotine av. percigaraua by FTC matliod.

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-

version of the bill passed In early September, and
send It to .the conference committee, which has
gotten a head start. :
One part of the bill penalizes frivolous lawsuits,
encourages out-of·court settlements .and changes
the v;ay damages are awarded by discounting
recovery from collateral sources and limiting
awards lor fulure and non-economic losses.
The other part gives the Ohio Department of ·
Insurance additional tools to regulate the
insurance industry, and requires Insurers to
furnish detailed Information on their claims,
payouts and reserves.
The·· Industry and Its adversaries worked out
compromises on most . of the House·passed
language, Including a major stlckhig point on how

Independent agents may be terminated.
They split their differences on maximum civil
penalty for violation of the' fair practices law,
making It $3,500 per violation with a llmll of
$35,000 for aggregate vlolatiOQS. Existing crlml ·
nal penalties will be kept.
Rep. Michael P. Stlnzlano·,- D·Columbus,
chairman qftbe House Insurance Committee, and
Sen. David L. Hobson, R-Sprlngfleld, negotiated
parts of the insurance portion.
They agreed to allow the state Insurance
commissioner t() issue emergency cease and
desist orders against harmful Insurance company
practices.
Stlnzlano and Hobson also agreed oo language. . ·
requiring advance notice, In certain cases, of an

Multi~dia

25 Cents

Inc . Newspaper

insurance company's Intent not to renew a policy.
They said nine states have such requirements .
Stlnziano and Hobson said that despite the
industry's complaints It cannot furnish advance
notice, small businesses need such ootice so they
can. seek other coverage.
The Senate Is scheduled to vote Thursday on
legislation reducing the state personallncometax
rates across the board by 8.8 percent to offset
revenue to be gained from the elimination of ·
certain federal tax exemptions.
The Senate also has pled~ed to approve
House· passed bills expanding real estate tax
relief for low -Income senior citizens and provld·
ing a state Income tax cre(llt lor child and.adult
day care.

French
hostage
reported
deceased
and the American public to honor the nation's veterans by
maintaining the military strength needed "to stay free and at
peace." Here In Melr;s County, members of Drew Webster Post ill
of the American Legion commemorated Veterans Day from the
steps of the courthouse In Pomeroy,

SOLEMN OBSERVANCE - All across America yesterday,
small groups and large groups assembled lo oommemorate
Veterans Day. In remarks at Arlington National Cemetery In
Virginia, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger urged Congress
Providence, R.l., a VIetnam
veteran, who wished to remain
anonymous , said: " This is a day
to salute us . We '!Jelieved In this
country . We fought for lt . You
never want to remember, but you
never want to ·lorget. "
; .The parade began at City Hall
and concluded at the Wotld War I
monument In Memorial Square
at precisely 11:11 a.m., the
moment the Nov . 11 , 1918, armlst·
ice ending World War I was
signed In Complegne , France .
Armistice Day became Veterans
Day In 1954.
In New York, for the first time,

A Korean War vetE!'al, Cha·
homosexual veterans joined the
American Legion parade and rles Hyder. fasted In front of the
marched In the rold, driving rain White House to communicate his
under· their own banner. John · "profound rejection oft hat In tim·
Paine, a memrer of the Gay !dating and growing nuclear
·
Veterans Association, missed the threat."
About
a
half
-mile
away,
Brig. '
parade because he ran aft'er an
antagonist wbo had slasted the Gen. Patrick Brady, chief of staff
banner with a knife and held him of the 1st Army, ended rains wept
ceremonies at the Vietnam Vete·
until pollee officers arrived .
Still, Paine said, It was "a rans Memorial by inserti ng a
single red rose Into a 15-by-:!5 foot
fantastic day for all veterans."
Protesters briefly Interrupted flag of flowers on top of the black
ceremonies alter tbe parade to granite structure. Each of the
decry the Vietnam War and 58,132 flowers tucked Into tte flag
attack Veterans Day as a glorlll· represented tbe VIetnam War
dead and missing.
cation of battle.

· The missing In actio n In
Southeast Asia were not forgot ·
ten . There were protests and
arrests at the memorial over the
MIA issue on the eve of Ve terans
Day, and actor Chuck Norris,
who atlended cerernonles Tues·
day at the memorial. said:
"We've got to get these people
back home. Whether they 're
alive or they're dead, let's get
them back home. That's all that
.
rna tters."
In Connecticut , 108 towns flew
black flags next to stars and
stripes to honor the missing from
the Vietnam War.

Union, civic leaders will fight Goodyear takeover
i

'I

A

Nation
salutes
veterans

992-6687

I

•.•.,.

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 12. 1986

.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

(ROW'S FAMILJ RESTAURANT
POMEROY, OH.

~.~ ·

•

3 Sections. 20 Pages

Vol.36. No.134
, Copvrighted 1986

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPII - The Ohio General
Assembly was to reconvene today for a two-week
post-election session finishing business for'l986.
The Senate and House were to meet at 1:30 p.m.
Meanwhile, a Senate-House conference com·
mlttee met Tuesday and Informally ironed out '
most of the Insurance language In a civil justice
and Insurance reform bill . .
The six-member panel was to continue today to
amend the House-pa~sed version of the leglsla·
tion, which Is designed to provide commercial
!lability insurance at reasonable cost to bus!·
nesses and local governments.
The Senate still inust officially reject the House

PH. 992 •5u 2

. '

2881

Partly cloudy tonight, with
a &lt;hance ofsnow flurries and a
low between 20 and :M. Mostly
sunny Thursday, with highs
near 30. The probability of
prec ipitation Is ~ percent
lonlgbt and near zero Thurs·
day.

Panel irons out refonn measure's language

0 Phi lip Morris Inc. 1986

j

Pa~Q ~

298
PICK-4

at y

r~res~lde~n~c~y~t~r~al~n~ln~g~i
.Hb~~~~~~F~ea~t~ur~ing;;;;;fF;ritd;C~hi;·c~k;•n~~~~~~~~~~~~::~r~•~·;~~~~~~~~
after the Internship. s·~n~ec=e=ss=a~ry~-Co~l~le:g~e~o~f~O~st~eo~p~at~h~lc~M=ed~l~c~ln~e~,
Athens , Ohio 45701.

..

'Daily .N umber

•

Bazaar
,
. HA.RRISONVIJ..LE - . Harrl·
sonvUle Brownie Troop 1116 wtjl.
have a Cbr~tmas bazaar at II\!!
Athens Mall Friday, Nov.14 and
15, from 9 a.m to 5 p.m.
•~

FOR JUST

$3•25

Wahama
·will
'
face Pineville
in playoff.s
-

CHESHIRE - Gallla-Melgs
Community Action Agency 's free

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY .
DINING ROOM ONLY

.

.•

•

I

.

Tuesday, November 11. 1988

·community
caler,.d4r
/area happenings
.
.

SPECIAL HONORS- These eight memrers of
the Eastern High School Marchio&amp; Band were
· presented special engraved plaques Friday nlr;ht
when a banquet was hel!l for mardllng band
members. The band has earned a place In !tate
CGmpetitlon and tbe band received a rating of
excellent. William Hall Is the new director.
Pictured with their awards are: .front, from left,

'

•

. AKRON IUP!) - Civic and
.union leaders. ready to tackle the
Reagan administration to save
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.,
say the threatened takeover of
Goodyear is comparable to rape
and " an act of war."
Representatives of 36 United
Rubber Workers locals in the
United States and Canada ga·
thcred In Akron Tuesday to
discuss ways of combating a
Goodyear takeover attempt by
British -French industriali st
James Goldsmith.
In a n Oct. 31 filing with the
Securities and Exchange Com-

mission, Goldsmith claimed to
have acquired at least 11.5
percent of Goodyear's stock.
The union leaders, joined by
local politicians, vowed to seek
nationwide support to force fed ·
era! protection for Goodyear .
. Goodyear Chairman Robert E.
Mercer told the emotionally
charged crowd that government
regulation often delays friendly
mergers for months, yei hostile
takedvers are tr ~ated with
Indifference.
"It can re months before a
merger betwee n consenting
adults can take place, but In the

case of a hostile takeover, there moral - and one that , II it were cr even for the country as a
Is nothing done, really," he said. carried out by a nallen sta te, wbole."
"We must bring press ure to
"The · government Investigates would be viewed as an act of
and legislates marriage, but war," hesald. "The thr eat to this bear on (memrers of) the Rea·
gan administration to use some
totally Ignores rape."
.. country is just as great."
of
the legislative power they
Akron Mayor Tom Sawyer,
Sawyer,.who was to appear on
recently elected to Congress, the CBS Morning News today ID already have," said Selrerllng, a
said he ~ organizing a nation· discuss the takeover attempt, former Goodyear employee
wide teleconference scheduled called It an ·~exinrt of profit" whose grandfather founded the
for 2 p.m. Thursday, by which he that would contribute to the company. "We must demand
action now by the administration
hope s to reach city, county, state foreign trade Imbalance.
Rep. John Seiberling, D·Ohlo, to block this takeover and others
and federal leaders to achieve a .
broad·based pressure on the addressed the group by tele· like It"
Rea~an administration.
phone !rom Was hington , calling . Mercer, Sawyer and URW
. "I view this (takeover bid) as a Goldsmith a foreign corporate leaders agreed that the economic
predatory act - one that Is raider "who has no co ncern for Impact of a Goodyear takeover
obscene, despicable and lm· the employees. the communities, would be far-reaching.

White House briefing laWmakers on~ release deal
WASHINGTON (UP)) - Ad·
ministration briefings to select
members of Congress a bout a
secret deal with Iran to free
American · hostages have not
strayed far from President Rea·
gart's decision not to divulge
details of the operation, an
administration official said.
The official, sp!'aklng on condl·
tlon of anonymity , said Tuesda y
that national security adviser
John Poindexter had Informed
key members of Congress about
the hostage deal,, but In general
terms only, and stressed a need
lor continued secrecy in the
matter.
The New York Times reported.
today that Reagan has decided to
persevere with Iranian contacts
lor at least another week In the
lace of criticism, because he was
advised there Is still some hope ·
that Americans Terry Anderson
and Thomas Sutherland may be
freed soon by the pro-Iranian
group holding them.
Reagan , who remained Inside
th~ White House during Veterans
Day ceremonies, has no lmme·
diate plans to speak publicly. He
plans to meet Saturday with
British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher at Camp David, Md.,

I rim In exchan~e for the bostages
held by the pro-Iranian Islamic
Jihad In Lebanon.
"IPolridexter) explained that
appropriate congressional com·
mlttees will be briefed In full
later," the administration off!.
clal said. " But at present', the
very sensitive nature of the
channels being used prevents us
from providing details.
"The welfare of the hostages,
as well as our efforts to free
them, would be jeopanlzed If
what we told Congress were to
become public," he added .
In addition to Anderson and
Sutherland, Americans believed
being be ld hostage In Belru t
Include Joseph Clclpplo, Frank
Reed ·and Edward Austin Tracy.
Another Amer.lcan, William
Buckley, was reported killed by
his captors last year.
Congressional leaders have
where they are expected to
criticized
tbe administration's
review results of the "Ic'eland
failure
to
keep
key commlltees
summit and allied attemptS to
Informed of the rontacts that led ,
curb terrorism •
to last week's 'release of bostage '
The Poindexter briefings were
David
Jacobsen after 17 months
aimed at putting a lid on a furor
In
captlv
lty.
touched off by. dl~losures, first
to~ continued
The
argument
In a pro-Syrlan magazine and .
secrecy,
and
the
lmpllclt
plea lor
then from the Iranian governCongress not to Interfere, came
ment , that the administration
one day after Reagan
offered military hardware to
. . met with

I

.·

-

top advisers to assess fallout
!rom revelations abou t the IranIan dealings.
One result of that meeting was
a presidential admonition,
echoed by White House spokes·
man Lrrry Speakes, that "speculative stories" of behind-the·
scenes moves to free the
hostages "may put them and
others at risk."
But while tre exposure of a
secret visit to Tehran by former
national security adviser Rorer!
McFarlane brought the opera·
tlon to a temporary halt, officials
Indicated the Iranian connection
could still prove useful If tte
current uproar subsides.
Administration officials said
Poindexter did· not mention the
McFarlane, mission In briefings
to Congress about the White
House program, which had met
with objections from Secretary
of State George Shultz and
Defense Secretary Caspar
. Welnrer.ger.
They also Insisted the dec~lon
to run the operation out of the
National Security Council designed for maximum secrecy
- Instead of out of the CIA was
not Intended to bypass req u(re·
ments that Congress be Informed
I

I.

of CIA activities .
"Nothing ha s been done lor the
purpose of circumventing Congress," one official asserted .
"All appropriate agencl~s have
ll?en Involved In the efforts to
tree the hostages."
But The New York Times also
reported today that White House
counsel Peter Walllson was not
consulted In thf operation and
ha s begun In the last lew days an
examination Into the legal Issues
Involved In the arms· for ·
hostages deal.
His questions Include whether
arms shipments to Iran would
violate the Arms Export Control
Act or an executive order ban·
nlng such shipments that was
Issued In 1979 by Presjdent
Carter after the SEizure of the
U.S. Embassy In ·Tehran -and
was rimej&gt;ed by Reagan.
lrt addition, Reagan has vowed
on repeated occasions to neither
bargain with terrorists nor give
In to demands concerning re lease of the hostages In Lebanon.
One unidentified White House
offlclill told the Times that
Attorney General Edwin Meese
had provided a legal opinion
's upporting the Iranian
q&gt;er ~tion.

PARIS !UP)) - One of two
Frenchmen freed unharmed by
Le banese militant s In Beirut said
he was told another French
hostage. Michel Seurat, died a
natural death in Lebanon as a
captive of the pro-Iranian Is·
Iamie Jihad.
Marcel Coudari, 55, who ar·
rived in Paris from Damascus,
Syria, Tuesday night with Ca· .
mille Sonta~. 85, expressed op·
tlmlsm more hostages In Beirut
would be freed soon.
·
"I can tell you there are things
that are gqing to happen soon,"
he said . .Coudarl said he was told
that Seurat, who the Islamic
Jihad said It executed March 5 to
protest French expulsions of two
Iraqi dissidents , was dead . The
group produced a picture of him
at the ttme but his body has never
been recovered.
"According to what I learmid
from an official source, a credl·
ble source, Michel Seurat Indeed
died a natural de ath," Coudari
said. There was no Immediate
comment from the' government.
Seurat. 39, a Belrut·b·ased
sociologist. was kidnapped May
22, 1985, with French journalist
Jean-Paul Kauffmann, wiD re·
mains a hostage along with two
French diplomats and two
memll?rs of a French television
crew.
Asked If he was held with any of
seven American hostages. Cou:
darlsald, "Yes, buticouldn 'tsee .
them . I don't know who tbey
were. I couldn't talk to them."
The two men, smiling and
bear ded, appeared in good health
on their arrival. Sontag was
swept Into the arms of his wile,
Blanche, 84 , on tte airport
tarmac . He had been held cap·
tlve six months , Coudarl nine.
Prime Minister ,Jacques
Chlrac, who met ihem at · the
plane, told reporters the govern·
ment "Is do ing all It can" to
obtaln the release of more
hostages.
"I would like to thank tho se
wiD permitted this llll?rat ion,
Including th&lt;.' gover nme nt s. the
authorities of Syria . Saudi Ara·
bla and Algeria. " Ch lrac said .
It was the first time Saudi
Arabia had b?en mentioned a~ an
Intermediary In the hostage
cr~ls and Chi rae did not ex plain
how Riyadh helped .
·
French Foreign Minister Jean·
Bernard Ra imond said Tuesda y
"no deal" was struck with Syria
for Its help In the freedom for the
Frenchmen and. said France had
engaged In no negotiation.~ with
terrorists .
When American David Ja·
cobsl!lll\'as frel'd Nov . 2, reports
emerged that the United States
was furn is hing military spare
parts to Iran in exchange lor Its
help In seeking frledom fo r
American hostages.
.
Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk AI Sharaa told a Damascus
news conference French policies
In the Middle East had played an
Important role in securing the
releases and Damascus "will
continue efforts to secure the
freedom of foreign hostages held
In Lebanon."

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