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I"'Uiillmly-Millo18p0rt, Ohio .

Monday, NoVember 17,1$86

r - - - - Local Briefs:---...
Racine employs police ch~f ·
Mayor Charles Pyles of Racine reports that Of(lcer Joe Kirby
has been hit:~ on a permanent basis to serve a~ chief of pollee
.
for the Village ol Racine..
Kirby has been filling the position for the past sever·al months
In a probationary capacity.

Officials discuss lice problem
Administrative representatives from the three local school
districts of Meigs County and the county office ef Supertntepd·
ent John Riebel rnet with Meigs County Health Department
staff members Friday to discuss a head lice problem In Meigs
County,
Meettn,g with the school representatives were Jon D. Jacobi;,
deputy health commissioner, and Norma A. Torres, R.N.,
health department nursing supervisor.
It was pointed at that most districts do have a nlt·free policy In
effect as recommended. The discussion brought out that
straining parent volunteers to assist with the rcoblem will not
Ill! feasible due to the issue of confidentiality. As an alternative,
Torres volunteered to conduct a series of awareness classes to
educate the general public on what people should know about
head lice and how to get rtd of them.
Attending from schools were Donald Hanning, Bradbury
School; Wendy Halar, Salisbury Elementary; Sharon Birch,
R.N., Meigs Local School Nurse; Greg McCall, ' Rutland·
Harrisonville Schools; John Riebel Sr., county supertntendent;
Richard L. Roberts, Eastern; Dan Morris, Meigs; John Mora,
Meigs Junior High; Charles Holliday, Salem Center School;
Robert Beegle. Southern Local; Bobby J. Ord , Southern; Joyce
Thoren, R.N., Southern Local Schools nurse, and Mary Price,
R.N., Eastern Local Schools nurse.

Squads answer 4 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
over the weekend; two Saturday and two Sunday.
Saturday at 10:20 a.m., Racine to Filth Street for Hazel
Carnahan to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 9:29 p.m. to
Ohio 681 for Arthur Shumway to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 5:52 p.m., Tuppers Plains to Ohio 248 for John
Hayes to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 10:13
p.in. to County Road 44 for Mary Putman to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital.
·

On t'he VCR scen,e
Beulah Ochier
Beulah Oehler, 77, of South
Front Street, Middleport, died
Saturday morning In Ohio State
University Hospital, Columbus.
A seamstress and a member of
Laurel Cliff · Free · Methodist
Church, Mrs. Oehler was born
Aug. 7, 1909, in Parkersburg,
W.Va ., to the late Benjamin ·and
Minnie Dowler Sheets.
She was a member of Clara
Edna Chapter 140, Order of the
Eastern Star, . Parkersburg,
W.Va.; · the Laurel Cliff Better ·
Heallh Club and ·the Women 's
Missionary Society oft he Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church.
She is survived by a daughter
and son 'ln·law, Jean and Lloyd
Wright, of Pomeroy; three sis·
ters, Marie Rollins, of Cairo,
W.Va., Lena Cooper, of Kls~lm ·

mee , Fla., and Jean Bushman, of
Seattle, Wash.; one brother,
Blaine Sheets, of Vincent; three
. granochlldreil, Mike and Bennie
Wright, both of Pomeroy, and
Rebecca Anderson, Cambridge;
five great-grancrhlldren and
· several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her hus·
band, William Oehler, In 1981,
and two sisters.
Services will be 1: 30 p.m.
Wednesday at Ewing Funeral
Home, with Pastor David Bell
officiating. Eastern Star servt·
ces will be conducted at the
funeral home 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
Burial will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home 7-9 p.m. Mon·
day and 2·4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Tuesday.

Official ballot count
reveals no surprises
The oflicial count of ballots ·lost one vote, dropping to 2,860 in
cast in the Nov . 4 election was Meigs County. Long's Meigs
conducted Saturday att'ernoon by County total vote remained un·
the Meigs County Board of changed at 3,935.
Elections.
All board of election members
The ballots have been placed in
were on hand along with Michelle a double padlock~d room pend ·
Jenkins, field representative for • tng a possible recount request
Secretary of State Sherrod frorn Collins. Such a request
Brown.
would have to be filed In the most
Only rnlnor changes were populous county of the district
found iD'Ihe.offlclal count. In the which is Ross County and Collins
senatorial race between incum· would be required to pay $10 a
bent Republican Oakley Collins precinct for each precinct In
and Democrat Jan Long, Collins which he requests a recount.

Marvin Wamer trial hegins

ACS chapter board to meet
The executive board meeting of the Meigs County Chapter d.
the American Cancer Society will be Thursday, 12 noon, at
Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Cub Scout pack meets Thursday
Cub Scout Pack No. 249 will have Its monthly pack meeting
Thursday, 7:30p.m., at Pomeroy Church of Christ. Scouts are
reminded to bring their art work for the art show.

Court issues marriage license
A marriage license has been Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Joseph William Pullins, 57, Coolville, and Edith Faye
Ashcroft, 58, Guysville.

Revival scheduled this week
A revival will get underway Wednesday at the Middleport
Church of Christ In Christian Union with different speakers
each evening. Services will start at 7:30 each evening and will
run through Nov. 23.
·'

0

CINCINNATI jUPI) - The The judge anticipates the entire
trial of former Home State
Savings Bank owner Marvin trlalcouldlastacoupleofmonths
Warner and two other bank orJ~~~~~: Ol, amuiti·millionaire
officials begins today, but It and former u.s. ambassador to
could be weeks before any Switzerland, is accused of help·
testimony Is presented .
lng trigger last year's Ohio
'T am prepared to spend a banking crisis by illegally funnel·
month picking a jury," said lng millions of dollars from his
Hamilton County Cornrnon Pleas bank to a firm that went.
Court Judge Richard Niehaus. bankrupt.
,
.
Jury selection Is expected to be
Veterans Memorial
a long and tedious process
because defense attorneys con·
' Saturday Admissions .- Cora tend It will be difficult - If not
Webb, Guysville; Waldo Neal , Impossible- to seat an unblasl'd
Pomeroy .
· jury In Cincinnati.
Saturday Discharges - Cindy
Cincinnati was the headquar·
Stalans, Elizabeth Horak.
ters of Horne State, w)lich col·
Sunday Admissions - Arthur lapsed In March of 1985 after a
Shumway, Coolville; Betty Mar· run by depositors who became
tin, Middleport; John · Hayes,
worried after learning Horne
Chester.
State had lo~t at least $144 million
Sunday Discharges - Mar· doing business with bankrupt
garet Nesselroad, Bobby RuJX',
ESM Government Securities of
Wanda Guinther.
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

..

"'

Having ·a good time .:
with scary releases

joining them together. George..
Romero, w~has madeoneotthe::.,
most famous of the low,budget
scare flicks called "Nigh! of til\!:
Living Dead," directed this an4' '
with a cast !!st of such rotables-as r
Fritz Weaver, Adrienne Bar :
beau, E.G. )lllarshal), Hal Hoi.
brook and others and a. thrllltn~.,
screenplay by King, who a!§~­
appears In a segment. Make sur&lt;!''.:
tba t you catch this one sometime•.
because it is a classic of too,o.·
genre. Some violence and pro fan ~
ity, but enjoyable nonetheless. ·~
"Somewhere in Time" (1 hour,,::
43 minutes, PG. MCA Video).,
stars Christopher Reeve of Su:.•
perman fame and Jane Seyrnoul')!
is ·a beautiful romantic fantasyJ:
about a lovestruck playwright..
w~ travels back to 1912 to rnee ,..
and fall In love with a beautlfu "
actress. If it helps, consider tht
"Casablanca" meets "The Twh ·
light Zone." In fact, the man wh&lt;fj
wrote this, Richard Matheson,,
also wrote for the series and "~!!::
famous for quality writing.
;.:
"War of the Worlds" (Sl&gt;i'
minutes. not rated, Parwnount ,:
is a marvelous adaptation o(;
H.G. Wells~ novel about th1'1
conquest of Earth by the Mar.:;
tlans. Somewhat predictable IIi
places and dated for a movl~.•
originally released In 1953, !he!
special effects are still just as~
spectacular as when I saw it as a':..
kid. Gene Barry and Ann Robin:,;
son are fabulous as the hero an •
heroine. Caich this sornetime'll
when you want to be entertained:~
"Creeps how" (120 minutes. R.
by the legendary George Pal.'.&lt;:
Warner! is flvr short stories with You won't be disappointed, 1:;:
an EC comic book Ira me work promise you.
-;:
"Critters" (86 minutes, PG-13, ..
Columbia 1 is a rnore adult;:
version .of "Gremlins" wtthou.t';
.
the cute and cuddly aspects:
presented by Gizmo. Instead we.'!
are treated to the appearance of...
the vicious, ravenously hungry;"
Crites who escape from a prison • ·
asteroid and come ·to Earth tn ·
A Reedsville rnan was cited by pursuit of freedom and (horror of
the Gallla·Melgs post of the Ohio horrors! food, namely us. Dee .
Highway Patrol Saturday rnorn- Wallace Stone of the much·
ing for fallurrto yield the right of lauded . "E.T." and the' much
way at a Reedsville Intersection. booed "Cujo" turns 1n a crecjtta• ;
resulting in a two-vehicle' ble performance bl!! for some .
accident.
reason it didn't fill rne with ~
Harold Smith, 43, was west- enthusiasm for the movie. ·~
bound on Fourth Avenue and Maybe they shOuld have let the
turned left onto Ohio 124, into the Crites eat the script before it saw
path of a northbound vehicle production?
t
. ,
driven by Jrrry W. Richards, :!9,
I don't exjX'ct everyone to '"
Long Bottom, according to the ·agree with meon'rny q~lnlonsl&gt;ut
patroL
1 do · expect that curiosity will
Richards struck Smith's vehi· drive you to rnake a trip to your "';
clc on the lett side, causing light video stores to see these and ·
damage to both cars, troopers other ftlms .
said.
Well, that's that ror' this time. •
•
· By JEFF HIILF;ARY
Happy Halloween, everyone!
OK, I know It 's November but I
was looking at the local video
stores' selections and saw how
scary and fun the movies were so
I had to Indulge In digging out a
cros,s-sectlon, so Shudder along
with me as I unearth some
goodies.
For example, here Is a movie
that everyone who loves old·
fashioned cliff·hangers will en·
joy, Harrison Ford is the intrepid
archaeologist he made famous In
"Raiders of the Lost Ark."
"Indiana Jones and the Temple
of Doom" (118 minutes, rated PG
and released by Paramount! is
exciting and lives up to Its
promise of entertainment by
appealing to the kid In ali of us,
which is what we have carne to
expect from its producer,. who
gave us "Star Wars:·· George
Lucas. There are sorne ., gory
scenes and quite a bit of violence,
but that is only to be expected
from an adventure rnovir these
days.
Here's two h)' the King of
Horror. Stephen King. "The
Shining" tl42 minutes, rated R,
Warner Video! Is an adaptation
of his novel about a haunted hotel
in Colorado. This stars Jack
Nicholson and Shelley Duvall
and has some very good performances bv the ennre cast. Some
nudity and violence. with a great
deal of tension thrown in for good
measure.

XL·100

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Theme:· "~~

OlD ~ASHION 'CHRISTMAS"

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NAME AND PHONE# OF PERSON IN CHARGE;
Dtscripiion of ,Entry ____ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __

__RCA

ENTRY IIEIIIIERS WILL: WALK

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(Cilclt)

·XL-1oo

'

ICA 25" diagonal ·
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LAYAWAY
FOR CHRISTMAS

(Circle)

COIIIIENTS:

Chombor Office, Courthou ... 2nd Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 48788 or phone 982·11008.
Rttum ontry to tho Pomeroy

I

Pomeroy fire department to buy adjoining I~J
About $40,000 worth of street paving was
completed last week In Pomeroy reported Mayor
Richard Seyler at Monday night's meeting of
Pomeroy VIllage Council.
Streets paved within the village Include Beech,
Osborne, Peacock, Mechanic, and small portions
of Maple Place. Rock St. and Pleasant" Ridge.
At the request of Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar, council extended permission for the fire
department to purchase a lot adjoining the fire
department's existing lot on Butternut Ave. The
department wishes to purchase the property,
which is already for sale, to allow for future
expansiop and insure that a driveway between the
firehouse and the adjoining lot will be maintained
for fire department use. The ~epartment has

made arrangements to borrow the neede~ money
for the purchase, and will pay the loan back with
fund raising proceeds.
Legar also asked council and the mayor to
consider giving the department permission to
have specifications prepared on a new custom·
built pumper which the department has plans to
purchase. A pumper will cost the department
about $120,000. Coun9il will address this issue at
the next meeting.
A letter from William A. and Sarah Gibbs, who
own the building which houses the Meigs County
License Bureau, was read at the meeting. The
Gibbs are concerned that the parking lot
adjoining the bureau is being used on a regular

basis by Individuals other than license bu·reau
employees and customers : They will be posting
signs to prohibit Jrn·proper use of the lot,· and
request help· with enforcement from Pomeroy
pollee. The mayor said the pollee will assist in
enforcing the signs.
,
A request for transfer of a CI-C2liquor license
from Beverly J. Hensley, Deborah L. Hensley and
Guido Girolaml, doing business as Shammy 's
Carry-Out, to Beverly J. Hensley, Robert D.
Hensley and Guido GiroJarnl, doing business
under the sarne name, was granted.
A hearing in Pomeroy with the Ohio Depart·
ment of Liquor Control was requested in the
transfer of a Dlllcense from John R. and Jean F.
Koehler, doing business as Rainbow Inn, to Roger

'

Lee and Ariwona Sue Walker, doing bust~~s
under the sarne name. Complaints received .by
council regarding parking problems at the
business will be addressed at the hearing..
:
Council reported that a piece of village property
in the Mechanic St. area , has been purchased for
$2000 by Bernard Fultz, on behalf of the Theil
Smith estate. Council will use the money t{l
purchase another piece of property, which !ldjol~s
the village's park on Mechanic St.
In other matters. council reported that this
again be
year's salt for snow and ice control
purchased frorn Excelsior Salt Works.
And lastly, council voted to give . all vlllag~
employees a $.10 bonus for Christmas.
·

will

President Kim alive and well .
I

.

'

SEOUL, South Korea iUPil cornrnent on the reports from !North! Korean Central New~
A healthy North Korean Prest- Pyongyang.
·
Agency in a dispatch from
. dent Kim It-sung greeted visiting
·"! .saw (Kim ! with rny own Pyongyang monitored In Tokyo:
· Mongolian leader Jambyn Bat· .eyes and he seemed to be in good
"Nothing extraordinary ha$
monh In Pyongyang 'today, for- health and smiling," said ALL'· occurred here that I know of,"
eign diplomats and news agen· Irian trade representative Wolf· Entrnayer said. "There has been
cles said. quashing South Korean gang Entmayer, one of about 35 nothing unusual on television or
reports Kim had been diplomats who went to the radio yesterday or today."
assassinated.
airport in the North Korean
The South Korean Defense
A photograph showing the two capital to see )f Kim would Mln~try earlier said the report
men shaking hands at Pyon· appear. •'•He was walking on his of Kim's death was announced
gyang airport was released by own and there was nothing Sunday, Monday and 'again this
the official tNorthl Korean Cen- unusual about it."
morning over military louds·
tral News Agency and aired by
Entmayer said in a telephone peakers placed along the 155:
Japan's public broadcasting net· interview that Kirn. 74, wore a mile Demilitarized Zone separat·
work, NHK, In a special broad· dark coat, dark trousers and his ing North and South Korea.
cast at 2: 30· p.m. (12: 30 a.m. usual cap as he greeted Bat·
Japan's Kyodo news service
EST!.
monh. Hundreds of children also reported Monday the pyonSouth Korean . officials sug- waved flags and flowers during gyang government had informed
gested a failed coup may have the ceremony.
Vietnam of the death of Kim, who
accounted for claims Kim had
Kim's appearance also was has ruled North Korea with an
been killed but had no direct reported by the official Chinese· iron fist since the founding of the
news agency, Xinhua. and the communist state in 1945.

Great American Smo.k equt Thursday

keout to be observed Thursday, posts a sign
promoting the day.

Meigs County ·smokers waho
want to give up cigarettes might
find It easier by joining up with a
10-year-old who's helped millions
of people prove )o themselves
that quitting Is possible - the
American Cancer Society's
Great American Smokeout.
On Th\l'rsday the lOth al)nual
Smokeout will be celebrated
throughout the nation with actlvl·
ties ranging from parades, ral·
lies and balloon releases to
elaborate festivities highlighting
Americans who have quit smok·
Jng for good since the Smokeout's

Inception.
All activities aim to keep
smokers' minds off cigarettes for
at least 24 hours, and stress the
benefits of quitting.
Although the Great American
Smokeout Is known as a "fun"
event, it has a very serious
purpose . Each year 350,000
Americans die of diseases linked
to cigarette smoking. The em·
phasls of the Smokeout is to
convince smokers that quitting is
the best thing they can do for
themselves and their loved ones.
The Smokeokut began In 19741n
Monticello, Minn . as D-Day.
Newspaper publisher Lynn R.
Smith started a grassroots rnove·
ment in his town to gpt all its

smokers to quit for a day. The
Idea was adopted In 1976 by the
Americ8)1 Cancer Society's Cali ·
fornla Division which renamed
the event. the Great Srnokeout.. A
year later, it became a national
program.
Last year about 23 million
smokers participate~ In the
Smokeout by quitting or cutting
down on their tobacco intake for
the day, according to a Gallup
survey.
,;The Smokeout's first 10 years
of success are just a beginning.
There are still a lot of smokers
out there, we'll just keep at them
until we get them all to quit,"
Barbara Mathews, chairman,
commented.

'

Chlrac and Defense Minister leaders - so-called symbols of
Andre Giraud, as well as Secur· capitalism - II) the last two
ity Minister Robert Pandraud years .
and Pollee Commissioner Jean
The assassination came three
Paolini, rushed to the scene,.
weeks before a Paris court Is to
' Pandraud later chaired a try a suspected Direct Action
meeting of anti-terrorism offi· leader, Regis Schleicher, In the
clals but no details were 1982 killings of two Parts
revealed.
policemen.
Terrorist bombings tn Paris , If Direct 1\ctionwas responsl·
linked to Arab extremists have ole. the assassination would be
killed 13 people and wounded the most recent In a series of
more than 250 since last De· terrorist attacks by the group
cember. The extremists are s lnce Nov . I.
demanding the release from
The·group set off three bombs
French jails of three convicted N6v. 11 at three French com pan·
Middle Eastern terrorists.
les to protest a visit by South
But police said the assassins· African President Pieter Botha
lion of Besse appeared to be the · and two other bombs Nov. 1 to
work of Direct Action, responst · oppose the French government's
ble for a series of assassinations expulsion of 101 Malians. The
or attempted killings of industry bombs caused damage but no
lnju rles.

WASHINGTON (UPO
cornpetttlveness.
WASHINGTON ' (UPI) - Fl·
Goldsmith, Goodyear chair·
nancler ,James Goldsmith, his America's future will suffer, as
· corporate raider tactics assailed well as workers and locaftties, If rnan Robert Merre r, economists,
. as ''industrial ..ptr..Cy," said · corporate- raiders are a bla. to both Ohio sen·ators and a Justice
today Goodyear Tire and Rubber take over targets like Goodyear Department representative also,
Co. Is a worthy takeover target Tire and Rubber Co., the mayor were called as witnesses. The
of Goodyear's hometown says.
Justice Department has not
because of poor Investments.
Goodyear, with .sales of $9.9 taken a position on the JTOposed
"It strayed Into Industries
billion In 1985, has adopted a takeover.
about which It knew nothtnr.
jeopardizing the very heart of restructuring plan to stop a
Goodyear was No. 35 on the
Goodyear's business and the hosttle"takeover by British Indus·
latest
"Fortune 500" list of the
trlaltst James Goldsmith.
security of all those associated
largest
U.S. companies. It had
Mayor Tom Sawyer of Akron,
wltli II," Goldsrnilh said In a
statement to the House Judiciary Ohio, called GQldsmtth's tactics net ·Income of $412.4 million In
"a genuine distortion of the type 1985 and assets of $4.6 billion. It Is
subcommittee on monopolies.
of
free eAterprlse that we value" a rnajor manufacturer of tires
Goldsmith said since 1983 Goo·
dyear put $2 billion Into oil and by valuing quick profits over the and a large -scale defense
contractor.
long-term vlablll'y of a firm.
gas llrms and a transcontinental
pipeline In the slumping energy 1 "We aren't going to be able to
On Oct. 31, Goldsmith said he
compete with the countries and
field. "That Is how management
had
acquired 11.5· percent of
companies that do,'the Japans of
lost lis way," he said, while
Goodyear
He has said he
.the world that plan for· the long · may make stock.
losing ground t·o tire Importers.
a
tmder
offer of $49 a
haul," Sawyer said I~ preparing
He said he would concentrate
...
share
for a House Judiciary subcom·.
on the tire business ~ "Thai
In a publls bed In tervlew last
means selling non-core diversifi- mtttee hearing today .on hostile weekend, Mercer said he ts
takeovers and thelr Impact o·n
cations."
conflde!lt of repellng Goldsmith.

RCA

XL-100

•

Does Entry Include a Flolll YES

1 Section, 8 Pages 26 Conti
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Akron mayor says America's future will suffer

•
Name __________________~--------------~-Type of Entry --- - - - - ---,-- - - - - - ___ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _ __

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 18, 1986

PARIS (UPI) - Two young bullets, police said. He died on
people jumped from a motorcy· the sidewalk.
cle and shot to death the .' Witnesses told pollee a man
president of the French auto· and a woman , both young and
rnaker Renault as he walked wearing raincoats. hopped off a
near his home after work but no motorcycle and opened fire on
one has claimed responsibility Besse. The pair escaped on foot.
for the killing, P.Olice said .
One witness said a third person
The Monday night slaying of fled the scene but pollee said
'Georges Besse. 58, who led a what happened was unclear.
1
financial revitalization of the
Moments later, one of Besse 's
state-owned firrn since taking five children, a daughter, ran out
over as president In January of the house to help him, followed
~985, appeared to be th~ work of
by other family members . Police
the leftist ·terrorist group Direct said he was dead when they
Action. police said.
reached him .
Besse's chauffeur dropped him
"He had always refused to be
off and he was walking the last 50
accompanied by bodyguards, "
yards to his apartment building Yvon Gattaz, head of a car·
on a dimly lighted street near
workers trade union, told French
Montparnasse Tower, the tallest
'
radio .
building In Paris, when he was hit
Prime Minister Jacques
tn the head and ch~st by several

RCA

Clearing tonight, with a low:
In the mid 30s. Partly ~lou.y:
Wednesday, with highs In the
upper 40s.

•

Renault president murdered in France

One player nets Lotto jackpot

Parade Begins at 2:00 P.M.

Vol.36. No.138

, Copyrighted 1986

'

TELEVISIONS

Chester Council 323. Daughters of America, will meet
Tuesday evening at 7:30p.m. at the lodge hall. The charter will
be drapped for Hattie 'Frederick. Members are asked to wear
white.

The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
·Commerce Christmas Parade Form:
Date: Sunday, Nov. 30th
rime: line-up 1:30 p.m. behind old Meigs lf9l School.

PICK-4
5076

at y

SMOKEOUT CHAIRMAN - Barbara Mathews, chairman of the Great American Smo-

D of A council slates meeting

Officials said $3,352,124 worth
of tickets were sold for !be garne,

218

Patrol ti"cketS
area resi"dent

·ELBERFELDS
YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR

Graue II of the Presbyterian Church will have Its annual
Thanksgiving dinner at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the Christian dining
room In Middleport.
The group will have Its eettng at the church later. Mrs. Myron
Miller will' have book study, Chapter 8 ol Concern magazine.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall will have devotions.

creating tbe prize payout of
S2,161,!ll3.
Officials said another 352
tickets had five of the six
numbers, worth $714, while still
another 15,918 tickets had four
numbers, worth $42,
The estimated jackpot for
Saturday Ohio Lotto game Is $1
million.

Daily Number

~~~~~~~~~~~~­

Thanksgiving dinner slated Tues.day

CLEVELAND iUPII - Ohio
Lottery officials say a $1,242,009
jackpot belongs to one Ohio Lotto
player whose ticket has the .
numbers 6, 14, 19, 24 , 38 and 40
that were drawn in Saturday's
garne.

Ohio Lottery

Rio wins .·
third in
row
-Page 3

-

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BERFELDS
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•

•'

J

However, he said sorne ·of the
steps aimed at saving the corn·
'pany will wipe out some ventures
· that have made Goodyear a
world leaqer:
·
The restructuring plan In·
eludes sale of some businesses
and the ellmlnatlon of jobs.
Goodyear employs 12,000 people
· In the Akron area.
"We have a great deal to lose
directly," Sawyer said, because
state and local governments
often help businesses, thr~ugh
public works, schooling and help
In financing. Akron, for Instance,
rounded up $20 million for a
Goodyear technical center, he
said.
·

'

. Sawyer and other opponents
have tried to rally public opinion
as a spur to getting the Reagan
administration to block
Goldsmith.

FRENCH PRIME MINISTER VJSITS MURDER SCENE ~ ·
French Prime Minister Jacques Chlrac, right, an expr~ion of
grief on his face, speaks to .pollee olflclals on the spot where .
Renault chairman Georges Besse was shot less than an hour
earlier Monday In front of his home lil.lhe Montparnasse area of
Parl.t!. (UPI).
:
·
.
. I

�-

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Mid(l!eport, Ohio
-'

Tuesday;::-November 18, 1lJ86

Birds' :of prey -...,----...,-----...,--J~an_w_.~]-:-,_K__:,ilp-:-a_ln_'ck

The ·Daily Sentinel

.

lll Court Street
.Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~
ts:miii,l ......__.._....,..., ........... d.""'
~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

--- ···· - -- - -·-"'"

BOB HOEFIJCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

WASHINGTON - During Its
lat e and fairly unlamented se·
cond session, the Congress got
around to enacting somewhere
he tween 290 and 300 new public
laws. TN? final tally Isn't In yet.
Among these was Public Law
99·305, based upon Senate Joint
Resolution 288. The act creates
National Birds of Prey Month.
Let us hear It for the honest·to·
goo dn es~ hawks.
The astonishing fact -aston·
is hing to me. at any rate- is that

the national bird; of prey have so
vast an array of commemor at Jve
company. The 99th . Co~gres s
could not pass a single approprla·
tlons bill; It could not deal with
problems of the banking indus·
try; It could not enact standby
legislation for a potential constl·
tutlonal c"nvention. The Con·
gress had no time lor matte's of
so llttle moment.
What dld the 99th oo• In Its
second session It proclaimed five
designated years. It set aside 21

special mon ths, 46 spec lai weeks.
35 special days and onE' National
Family Reunion Weekend. That
Is believed to be tl&gt;eftrst weekend
so honored by act of Congress.
The years, so you wtll know,
are a National Year of Thanksgtving, the Year oft he Americas.
the Year'of the Te~cher .' theY ear
of the Reader, and the National
Institutes of Health Centenhlal.
We are a •people keenly con.
sclous of disease. Congress asks
us to obsa"ve awareness months

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and t he American Newspaper Publishers Association.
long Al l letters are subject to OOlting and lll.lst be signed with m~me, ad dress and
telephone number No WlSigned lett ers will bE' published Letters should be in
good HI Sle, addr~sing Issues. not personallttes
I

Voters will tolerate
only so much behavior

.

qpinions of other editors
The (Phoenix) Arlzooa Republic ·
U.S. District Cou rt Judge Thom as G. Hull ruled in laver of the
Greenvtlle. Tenn., fund amentalist parents who .. alleged the
sianda rd Holt , Rinehart and Winston reading texts and associated
bOoks. such as "The Wizard of Oz" and "The Diary of Anne Frank."
, antradicted their deeply held sectaria n religious beliefs .
lfhe court agrped, and ruled the state owed the parents damages,
aft hough thr judge stopped short of recommending how Tennessee
snould go about alleviating the sit uation .. .
,
Hull's ruling has the potentia l of creating chaos In the public school
classroom. How, In a pluralistic nation, can public school systems
accommodate themselves to the sensi tivities of every religion,
denomination. church, sect and cult? ... Therearelegltlmate grounds
ori which to ques tion the secular ist bias evidenced In many public
sc)loortextbooks ... Hull 's ruling, however. Is an open Invitation to
every sect In America to pick and choose whlch ·parts of the public
sc hool curricu lum It will accept, and which It Wlll reject.
'

Today· in history
Today Is Tuesday, Nov. 18. the .122 nd da y ol1986 with 43 to fo llow.
The moo n is moving toward tis last quarter.
The morni ng stars are Mercury and Venus.
The evening stars are Mars. Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on th is date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
Ger man composer Ca rl von Weber and English composer Henry
BiShop t"Home Sweet Home" I, both In 1786; French physicist Louis
Daguerre. Inventor. of dagu erreotype photography, In 1789; orchestra
conductor Eugene Ormandy in 1899; pollster GeorfiE; Gallup in !901;
comedic actress Imogene Coca in 1908 (ag0 78) ; songwrit er Johnny
Mercer 10 1909; astronaut Alan Shepard, the first American In space,
in 1923 tage 63), and actress Linda Evans In 1942 (age 44).
Dn this date In history:
1n 1477, "The Sayings of the Philosophers" was published , tl&gt;e
earliest known book printed In England to ca rry a date.
Jn 1874, the National Women's Christian Temperance Union was
organized in Cleveland, Ohio.
In 1883, the United States adopted Standard Time and set up four
zones- Eastern, Centra!, Mountain and Pacific.
In 1928, Mickey Mouse made his acting debut in "Steamlxl at WHile"
at-the Colony Theater in New York Cit y.

lor hemophilia , Down' s syndrome. lupus, diabetes, spina
blllda , developmen t disablllties,
Alzheimer's dis ease, alopecia
areata. aplastic anemia and
epidermolysis bullosa. OstOOJl(l·
rosls, skin cancer, asthma, men·
tal illness and digestive diseases
get special weeks. We also have
special weeks to hecome aware
of burns, chlldten's accidents,
nuclear medicine, critical care,
Infection coJ!tol, safety in the
workplace, and the barriers
faced by handicapped persons .

Congress had a sympathetic
eye for the old folks. Bllls were
enacted to designate Old,e r
Americans Month, Adult Liter·
acy Awareness Month, Adult
Day Care Centers Week, Adult
Immunlzallon Awareness Week,
National Senior Citizens Week,
Family Caregivers Week and
Nursing Home Residents Day

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome They M!oold be l~ss than :JX) words

Voters pul up wi th plenty of biza rre behavtor fro m the ir pubilc
ofltcials- frequently too much
They elect -and too often re·elect- crooks, chea ts, hars, bsers,
philand~rcrs, phonies. egoma niacs. eccent ncs, bumblers or boozers
who ei ther play last and loose with their public trus t or woo simply
don 't ha\·e the brams. background , dedication or dtscipline to serv e.
Idea lly. those Pleva ted to public office should reflect peopl e's best
in ,.. tin rls. nor the ir wors t ones.
We hope they work ha rd. are bright enough to co mprehend complex
ISSues, articulat e enough to explam the m, put public mt~rest before
private interest or ga m. reject temptations and refu se to abuse the
pr ivileges tha t are part of public life, place in proper perspecttvethe
dwards, acco lades or ceremonial aspects of office and try to remain
real ra ther than inventm g an 1mage to be maintained at all costs .
That. of course. is the ideal. not the rea lity, and few, if any, elected
offJcJals meet all those ideals. But when the public senses that one has
crossed over the invtsi ble lines separatm g the serious officeholders
from the superfi cial ones. th e superficial ones il.sually get tossed out .'
That is what happened in the Flonda Senate race on Election Da y
Republican Sen. Paula Haw kms was ~o ssed out a[ter one term by
vo ters who saw in her Democratic opponent, Gov. Bob Graham,
so meo ne who better symbolized those ide als of public servie&lt;&gt; t han dld
the maddenin_gly me rcunal. frequ ently tactless Haw kins.
She was swept out of office by 55 percent of the vote- by far the
largest losing margin of any of rhe seven Republican senators who
were se nt packing Nov. 4 by Democratic challengers .
Haw kins lost lor sevPJal reaso ns. including the fact thaI Ronald
Reagan was not head in g the GOP ticket to carry her to vtc tory as he
dld in 1980, even though he campaigned lor Hawkins in Florida fou r .
ltmes this year.
; Also. the state Democratic Partv was umted behind Gra ha m ra t her
l han hopeless!)' split, as 1n 19RO afier Democralic Sen Richard Stone
lost to hts arch -rival m a bitter party primary.
• But even more Importantly. Hawkins lost because m the publ ic 's
mind she stmply did not measure up to what i senator should be as
well as Graham did. Most observers who watched Hawkins
throughout her career would ac knowled ge tha t she seemed out of he r
league in the Senate. Over her six years, st.? made more lists of tl&gt;e
wors t or lea st respected senators than a ny of her 99 colleagues.
: On dozens of oocasions. she said things that wer~ provably false
Somet imes, she denied say mg them. even though they were on tape.
i&gt;.he shot from the lip and, frcquenl ly. wound up wounding herself
ins tead of her int ended target.
•: She cou ld show horrendous judgmen t, tike the time a mont h alter
she took olltce whe n she held a lavis h luncheon lor bbbytsts and
served steak, fresh aspa ragus and st rawbernes to a nnounce she was
filing a btll to throw food stamp cheaters in jail. That "steak and jail"
luncheo n is now legendary .
She made olf·thc·wall proposals to deal wit h serious JTObl cms , like
the time in 1983 she suggested that hea lth warnings like those on
cigarette parks be requ ired on a ll marijuana cigarett es
Not only was the Idea preposterous on its face. since marijuana
".Joints" are hand· rolled , bu t her suggested warning was 19 words
long. A joint tha t b1g would have gagged even a ganja -crazed
Ra stafarian .
Iron ically . Hawk in s helped create Ihe public's low expectations of
her tn her first sta tew1de race lor Ihe utili ty-regula tln g Public Servtce
Commissio n in 1972. She billed herself then as an unsophi stica tl'&lt;l
" hou sewife !tom Maitland ," a blue co ll ar Orlando subu rb.
' s!tc won in a stu nning upset but she ha s bumbled and stumbled her
way int o a nd out of various statewtde campaigns and offices ever
since. Her 1980 Sena te victory may have been a fluke. but her 19&amp;&gt;
- defeat was not .
' Paula Hawkins had crossed too many of those invisible lines that
separate thP serious politic ians !rom the other kind And on Elec tion
Oav. the voters told her so

r

N•

,,

• '- •·-·-~·

Tuesday. ~ovember 18. 1986

Commenta
.

.

Women 's Interests were not
wholly neglected . The coming
year will bring Women Veterans
Recognition Week, Women's History Week and American Business Women 's Day.
Congres s also was attentive to
youth Months have been off!·
cially marked lor ·child safety
and for youth suicide prevention .
Laws will designate Adoption
Week, School·Age Child Care
Awareness Week, Children's Tel·
evlston Awareness Week, and
National Child Identification and
Safety Information Day.
We wlll honor Pollsh Heritage
Month · and Jewish Heritage
Week. The llst Includes Black
History Month, Historically
Black Colleges Week and Immigrant Day

6ftUAMU:~~dafd;-f ~r.ivsr.":trA,
WASHINGTON -For nearly a
year, we hav e been reporting on
the secret deals the Reagan
administration was making with
Iran . We voiced our vehement
objections to the secret nego·
tlons, both In this column and In
pr ivate talks with administration
offlclal.
Because of constant warnings
from our sources that detailed
report s on the U.S .·Iranian contacts would endanger the lives of
American hostages In Lebanon,
we were circumspect In outlining
the exact nature of the negotiations. Even so, other journalists
told us they couldn 't confirm the
stories, and high administration
officials tri ed their best to
co nv ince us that we were wrong.
But we knew we were right and we believed t ghat the admin Istration's policy was wrong.
Here's what we wrote on Aug. 11:
"The United States and Western
allies co ntinue to conduct secret ·
talks and cut secret deals with
Iran while the Ayatollah Khomel ·
nl's terrorist lackey s control the
fate of three survivmg Ama"ican
hostages .. We've reported hefor e on Ihe secret tilt toward Iran
by the Reagan adm inistration's

top policymakers. We have de·
The present confirmed part of
,cllned to detail the extent and our story, but then made a
exact nature of the contacts statement that -on his condllion
because they are so closely - we will be able to report only
· intertwined with the fate of the after all the hostages are safely
remaining hostages "
home. But he made It clear he felt ·
Last January, we disclosed It was poss ible to deal with Iran.
that former high -level olllclals
Alter further inquiries, we
were conducting sreret talks \)'rote two columns last April that
with Iran over the hostages . Now began to pry the lld off the secret
that the cat Is out of the bag, we operation that has now been all
can reveal that two of the but officially confirmed . On April
negotiators were a one·tlm e CIA 28, we reported that the admlnls·
official and a high Pentagon tratlon "has been qUietly conclllofficial woo were closely asso· atory in behlnd·the·scenes nego·
elated with renegade CIA agent tiatlons with Iran wllh Iran over
Edwin Wilson.
the American hostages held by
On Feb. 24 , In an Oval Office pro-Iranian terrorists."
Interview with President Rea We added: "This dramatic.
gan, Dale Van Atla pursued the subterranean shift In policy
story on U.S. contacts with Iran. · toward Iran goes beyond the late
"this is on Iran," he said, of the hostages into the realm of
according to a tape , of tl&gt;e global geopolitics. President'
conversation. "For six years Reagan has been convinced by
they've been waging a terrorist his adviser s - trough there are
war against us and there are at still some dissenters - that an
least 264 American bodies they eflort 1must be made to es tablish
can count as being resJDnsibl e relations with (!ran )."
lor, Including, as we reported,
On April 30 we rep or ted Ihat
(hostage) William Buckley last the administration was using
year. whom they tortured merd - covert Israeli shipments to U S.
lessly. I know there are still four arms to establish relations with
hostages there now and I hat may Iran. We added that there had
preclude yo u from saying been heated discu ssion In the
anything"
National Security Council late

last year about " regularizing"
the arms flow; that Is , selling
Iran the weapons directly, not
thr oush Israel.
We learned that the arms sales
were part of secret dealings with
All Akbar Rafsanjani, speaker of
Iran's parliament. On Mayll, we
warned :
"(T)he president's advisers
should not lose sight' of the
dubious backgtound oft he people
they're cozying up to . .:. (They
are) dealing with a runch of
cutthroats."
We specifically warned about
Ralsanjanl, who was Implicated
In the myrder of two American
servicemen In Iran In th 1970s.
"U.S . officials have pinned a
substantial part of their hope on
servicemen In Iran In the 1970s.
"U.S. officials have pinned a
substantial part of their hope on
Ralsanjanl," we wrote, "and
have presumably Inspired sto·
rles In the press, which preferred
to him as 'moderate' and credited him with helplngtofree the
American hostages five years

WASHINGTON - "Costly.
The committee the n bund l~s
Nega trvc Congressiona l Cam · a ll the chec ks paya ble to' each
palgns Spur lmmedr ate Back - candidate and del1vers them to
lash tand ) Legislat ive Call s for
the politician . Thus, the commtt R~fo1 ms," proclaims the head·
tee can co ll ec t unlimited
line on on~ newspaper account of amount s of rroney and ide nt ify
this yea r's campaign flnane&lt;&gt; itself to the ca ndidate as th~
abuses.
.·
coordi nator of tl&gt;e lu nd-raising
But so me of the politictans eftOJI
quoted in that post ·clcction story
That remains legal only he
don't di splay mu ch enthusiasm ca us0 the orig 1nal donor ~xr r ·
lor th0 task. "We' ll he lookin g for ci scs lull "di rec tion or control "
a better solution." says Sen. J ohn in selecting the cand1da tes to
Heinz, R·Pa. " I'm nost sure we'll . receive I he money
lind one, but we 'll be looking "
In u mail in ~ t hJs vear that usrd
Th at casua l at titude is attribu- th~ lcltcr he ad of Vice Pres ident
tab le , In great measure . to the Geo rge BtLs h. the NRSC claimed
fact th at mu ch of thesa nclilmon - it was b llowmg the same procr ·
ious agonizing about this y~ar 's dureevrn though it told donors to
Joss of integrit y co mes from the " wrtt 0 out you r $1110 check
same polltlcians who prevrously dtr ec tlv to the NRSC." h then
and kno wingly corrupt ed the channeled the money to candi system .
dates whose names wB"e nqt
For Instan ce. if Heinz wants to mentioned in the letter .
lind one of the most sca ndalous
When donor'!; were told t hat the
new ca mpaign financing prac ti · NRSC had listed them in fin ances. he need look no fa rther than cial report s as contributors to
the orga nization he cha irs. the ca ndidat es they dld no t know , the
Na tional Republican Senatorial donors' reactlorts ran~d from
Committee.
asto nis hment to Indignation.
During the recent campaign,
"I don't Mattingly from old
the NRSC thorough ly corrupted Adam's lox ," ~aid an Oklahoma
the already questionable prac - man pu rpor ted to have directly
tice known as "bundling" or aided Sen . Mack Mattingly ,
"earmarking" of contributions R·Ga .
made to candidates through
A Michiga n woman identified
political parties or interest by the NRSC as dona tin &gt;: to Rep.
groups.
W. Henson Moore, R·La ., was
Federal law limits the size of equally adamant : "I live in
the contnbutions those commit - Michigan. No way I would have
lees can make to each indiv idual sent ,money to Louis iana to Sen .
ca n'dldate. Th ey can evade that Moore or whoever he is." The
requirement, however, by re· NRSC may have distributed as
questing that donors make their much as $13 million to Republl·
checks payable · to Individual ca n senatorial candidates h the
ca ndida tes but forwa rd the · names of pro pie who knew little
checks to the committee.
or nothing about I h e

By WILL llU:'IIJIAM
UP! Sports Wt·itcr
WASHI NGTO N (UP!) - Joe
Montana and Ihe San Franctsco
49ers , who amassed 441 yar ds
passing and 501 total 1 ards
against the Wa sh in gton Reds·
klns, have only frustration to
show for their elf01 ts.
Montana , in hts seco nd game
since retu rnin g from major hack
surgery Sept. · J!i, esta blished
personal and club recm ds fo r
passing yardage and passes
att empted, could not dnccl his
team ihto the end zone Monda y
, ni gh t.
_
Washington won , 14 -6, on llu;
strengt h of a 27-ya rd touchdown
pass from Jay Schroeder to Ga ry
Clark and l · yard sconng run by
George Rogers .
The Redskins , who were out gained by 235 ya rds, Improved to
9·2 and mam t ained a share oft he
lead in the NFC East with the
New Yor k Giants, two games
ahead of the Dalla s Cowboys

a

transactions .
Equally troubl esome wa s th&lt;•
growth of qu rs ti o nabl~ "tnd ~ ­
prnd?nJ expendi turrs" hy politteal action co mmltt ff's.
PACs and lnbb trs· newslelt er
identified lour groups whose
" independent ~x pen&lt;litur ~s" 1n

Six R10 Grund r College
Redmen , includ in g all five
slarters scored in doubl P
ligures Monda y night enrou tc
to a 115·84 ba sketba ll vwtory
over Glenvi lle (W.Va . ) St ate
College in the Pau l R. Lync
Cent er.
The victory pushes lhl' Redmen to :l·O on th e seaso n: the
contest wa s Glenv illes seaso n
openeP.
Mike Smith and Ron Rotttn·
ger paced thi' Redmen att ack,
each scol'i ng 20 poin ts, followed by Joe Ver hoff's 18.
An thony Ra.vmore and .Joe
Sin gleton ad ded 14 each. Jim
Kearns scored 10
Senio r shootin g guard Matt
Bu llett for the Pioneers scored
22 point s in the first half bu t
po int s

t 011 t

111

the fin al 20 minutes Glenl' ille
se nior big man Rudy Wa tt s
was held to lour points, all in
the first ha lf.
Rt o Led at halfttmP ol-.11
s hootm g 65 penx- nt f1 om thv
floor t20·of.:n )

y;rrds on a club-record 15 penaltics, breaking tl&gt;e previous mar k
ol l4 set three different times, In
a game tha t lasted three hours
and 53 minutes, finis hing shortly
after 1 a.m. EST.
'Montana became the first
quarterback ln NFL history to
throw lor 400·plus yards and not
have hls team score a touch down . He also became the second
NFL quarteroock to throw for
more than 400 yardS but not
complete a scoring pass. Last
Monday night, Cleveland's Bernie Kosa r threw lor 401 yards but
oo TDs In the Browns' 26-16
victory over Miami.
Montana, an eight·year veteran , underwent surgery for a
ruptured disc, but missed just
eight weeks of tbe season. Th0
two -time Super Bowl MVP wore
a protretlve flak jacket with an
ex tension covering the surgical
Incision Monda y.
It was the second 400·yard
passing pelformanCi' yre lded 'by the
Redskins in three weeks, as

II\ ( 'n l! o d

l 'ro ·'~ Jnll' l n.II IUil

The Bevo Francis Classic
opens Thu rs da y wtth tl&gt;e Redmen challenging Wilmington 9
p.m . aft er Urbana squar es oil
agams t Muskingum at 7 p.m .
The Redwomen face Pike·
ville at 4 p.m. in their opening
Jound. Missouri Wes tern and
Georgian Court face one
anot he r at 2 p.m.
The womens' championship
ga me Is slated for 4 p.m.
Sa turday; tl&gt;e mens' at 9 p.m.

.

STATISTICS
CLENV IL LE -Bullet 12 5
26; Watts 2 0 4; Hams 4 0 8;
Gner 6 3 13; Gande e 1 0 2;
Wil liams 5 2 12; Grover 2 0 4;
.Jiv iden 3 0 6; Aus tin 2 0 4;
Hughes 1 l 3; TOTAL 84.
RIO (;RANDE- Ra ymo re
7114 : Sm ith 9 4 2J; Stn gleton 5
4 li . ·ve r ho ff 8 318 ; Rittlnger 9
2 20; Kea rns 18 JD : Cluxton 12
4: Coo mbs 0 1 I; Clay 2 0 4;
L.a mbzke 2 :l 7, Fogt 1 I 3.
TOTAL 115
Halftime score
Rio
Grande 51, Glenvtll e 31.

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t

Nittany Lions jump up
to second spot in poll
By MIKE TULLY
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Penn
State seized second place in the
United Press International college football ratings today, set·
ling up the likelihood of Miami's
second 1·2 showdown this seaso n
The 10-0 Nittany Lions, despite
a narrow escape Saturday
agatnst Notre Dame, drew two
first ~pl ace votes and 676 points to
move up one spot and pull behtnd
No. 1 Miami In the opmlon of
UPI's Board of Coaches. Miami
drew 47 first· place votes, wlth49
of the :xl coaches participating.
If Penn Stat&lt;&gt;, 10·0, wins Its
traditional r ivalry against Pittsburgh Saturday, and Miami, 10·
0, triumphs a s ex pected against
East Carolina Nov. 27 , the top

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Publish«! P VC'r y a fl ct noon, Mond:1y
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4 PLY POLYS

BULLETIN
Starting qt

$1 25
$5 45
$fi~ 00

SINGLE t'OPY

PKtCt:

..

...

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.. 25

CNtl ~

SubsC"r ibcrs not des iring to pay I hi' car
rlcr may rem lt in advance di rl'CI to
Thl:l Dally Sentinel on a :1 6 or 12 month
basis Crrd\1 wi ll ix' given &lt;lll'llf'r l'&lt;lCh

"""'k .
No s ubscrlpl! ons by m a lt per mU ted In

area s where homi' tAl rter S('l vtce Is
availa ble

!A78x13l .

BEEF

LE

Forequarters ............. 11.19 Jb.
Hindquarters .............. 11.59 lb.
Whole Sides ............. '1.29 lb.
Whole New
York Strips ............... '2.99 Ib
CUT &amp; WRAPPED FREE

BIG BEND FOO.DLAND
992·2891

$4 sSO
Starting At

1165180 R131

It Pays
To Advertise

To. ·complement ·~our Thanksgiving Dinner We'll Oive ~ou APUMPKIN_PIE for every PAIR of
SNOW TIRES purehased now thru NOV. 26th.

CALL

POMEROY HOME &amp;. AUTO

fRL&lt;;Ltm

(Allow 3 to 5 Days)
"DON'T WORRY, Igor. I, Doctor Asssd, msde
• him whst he Is today and I CONTROL him."

S3J95

FOR THE WINTER COMPANION TO YOUR
HIGHWAY RADIALS-THE WINTER
MASTER MUD &amp; SNOW STEEL RADIAL

By Cllrricr or 1\lotor UouhJ

Dally . .. .. ..

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY !

~

SUBSCRIPTION nATES
~

~OVEMBER 14 thru ~

.liU
Ill

POSI'MASTER: SqJd addr rs~ r twn gj'$
ro Thl' Dally Sc&gt;n linel. ll1 Cmu·r Sl
Po~roy. Ohio 4fi7m

.

---·526

For Peop!e on the go. Gain more
mobility and self assurance on
hazardous winter roads.

Tup

Nt'\\' spupcr .sates. 733 Thh cl Avf'nue.
N('W Y 01 k, New York 10011

One Week ... . ..
One Month .
OnC' Yea r

Phone

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY I
SUNOAY · All sms 11 50
AOIHSS lON EVERY TUESOAl 12.50

SNOW TIRES

Ohto.

Advr11isln!! Reprcst•ni,Ltlve: 81 &lt;.wham

JACKSON PIKE · RT.35 WEST

:!fill

Uklahnm a (26 9)
K "'''"lm·k,, ta! '' •
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Ilshln·g Co mp;:c ny/Mul! lme~la. !tiC' ..
Pomerov. Oh io ~571:19. Ph ~2 · 2l'ih Sc&gt;·
cond clnss pos ta.~tc pa1d al Pomrt oy,

Membc&gt;r · Unit('{! Prc&gt;ss ln!rt iHlllonnl ,
Inla nd Da lly Prl'ss Assocln llon ancl rhr ,
Ohio Nrwspaprr A ft&lt;;ncla tlon Nu tlrm.rl

~J\

WINTERGUARD

I PI

Prt&gt;s~'llso n

H. Nun "a~ c.l3 I t

C:dKM) nl \ ' ,tn \1 111\l'r. Nl :l ~ fl 111
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vo i PS,

than 1\:o 2 Nol't h
Cc~ro l m d. but f m1shrd d Si nglr
pomt a hPad of the Tar Heels.
Coach Dr nm Crum 's team
carn&lt;'cl :&gt;Rl ou t of a poss ibi&lt;' ti10
points.
I ;oui~vd lfl is try mg to beeomr
lhl' fi rs t t ec~m sme&lt;&gt; UC LA in 197:1
to win baek to-bac k natr ona!
champ ions hips. Tha t Brui ns
tra m was lPd bv .John Wood~ n .
who coaehrd Crum 111 UCI .i\ and
Iaiel hired hi m as an a" is tanl
N01ada-Las V~gas . Indiana
.md Pu rduP rou nded ou t thJ• fi1st
live s!'lected by UPI's n.
mJ'm be r Bom d
The rest of t ~ Top 10 Wds

tk•h•ttd&lt;'r

t. lndhtna tl r C!l 111
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The Daily Sentinel

Kansas. Oklahoma. Kentu cky ,
Pittsbu1 gh and Georgt a Tech
George town \\ as ranked lith ,
followed bv Alabama, Auburn.
Na\'V, lo\\a. Sy1acuse and lllinots ti!'d for 16th. Arizona, North
C'aroiJJW State and Wvoming.

lew~r

h.L~I«· thall raUn~ hy l 'nlkd
l' rt'S-' lnlt•m llllona l' " An:trd o l ( ow·ht'l&gt;,
141111 lln.t-pl*'' ' ""'" • ht"l y••ar · " fl 't~trd ..
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( ,LIJ::oiM , .......

\1'\\

Ry DAVJJ) E. NATIIAN
UP! Sports Writer
NF. W YORK tUP II- Dcsptte
Josmg three 1,000-pomt scorers.
LOUIS\' ill&lt;' is fmorPd Jo wm rts
s eco nd s tr a tg ht natto n a l
champtonshlp
L ou isvlll~ was nam ed Jh e top
rea m m th r country Monday in
preseason Top 20 voting b\
United Press Int ernat ional' s
Boa rd of Coaches Tho Ca1dtna ls

:JI , .. tll l',(t'

l!ii UII

II

Elsewhe re in the Top 10. a 20· 17
loss to Minnesota dropped Michi gan from No. 2 to sixth and OhiO
State JUmped two notch~s to
scventh. The Wo lverin es and
Buckeyes play Saturda v, with
the winner capturing the Brg Ten
tltle and an automc~tic bid to th e
Rose Bowl.
Louis iana Stat e clt mbed thr ('('
rungs to eighth. Alabam a
jumped slx places to No 9 and
Soul !&gt;e rn Ca 1improved from 12 th
to lOth
Closmg out the Top~ wcr&lt;' No.
11 Texas A&amp;M, No 12 Was hmgton, No. J:l Arkansas, No. H
Auburn. No. 15 Arizona . No. 16
Stanford . No. 17 Ba\ lot. No IH
Clemson. No 19 Nor th Carolina
State. and co-No. 20s &amp;I n J ose
State and Georgt a.
San Jose Stati' and Gcorgw
joined the Top 2J. while Brigham
Young was tl&gt;e lone t ~a m to
tumble from thl' ra tings.
Earl10r thts seaso n, Mtami
faced Oklahoma In a showdow n
of the top two tea ms In the
country The Humca nes. then
No. 2, bea t th~ Sooners 2H- Ib Jo
grab the supremacy it still holds.

Louisville picked· to win 2nd
consecutive basketball crown

.... ...,

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hut lost . (UPI)

Collegt• Basketball

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two tea ms will play in the Sunkr st
Fiesta Bowl .Jan. 2 for th ~ t: PI
Coach~ s Trophy i'mblemalic of
the national champlonshtp
II an upset int ervenes. No .l
Oklahoma. No.4 Ari zona Stateor
No ' Nebraska are still m t h~

St l.oul.. - n.... a llt-d dt•f• n~t·mM \Ilk•
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llutkt•\ 1.1'111!;111'

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NOT TONIGJIT - •\ dl'jt•cl"d ,Joe Montana, San Frandsl'O
&lt;iuarlerhack. waldll•s the final mom cnls of IlK' 49ers 14·6 loss to
host Washin~ton Monday night. Montana pa-.ed lor 411 yar.._ but
thro" no touchdowns as tlu• fnrstr.rh'll l!!J•rs totaled 00 I yards of

l.t'lli:UI '.

NHL S tanding~

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Transactions

l &gt;.•n\ 1 r lU ~ y (,lant~ . I p.m
t .rttll U:t\' 111 ( ll hu~: n . J fl Ill
l mllan.l fliJ!IIo .1 1 llou ~oto n I 11 m
1\nfl .tkt al S t•ll t: n ~:land. 1 fl 111

Udruil 11

WashJngton ~rrend?red 490 yards
to Minnesota's Tommy Kramer in
a 44-ll victory . Montana's a«empts
and completions matched the most
Joield?d by a Redsidns defense. Both
marks had heen set by Philadelphia's Dlvy O'Brien in 1~40 and the
completions record is shared b"
Cllicago's Blll Wade, who reached
tl&gt;e total in 1964.
The last time the 49ers were held
wltlxlut a· touchdown was In last
year's 17·3 playoff loss ' to the New
York Giants; the last time they did
not reach the end wne during the
regular season was a J3.3Joss to the
Chicago Bears in !983.
"They're oo good that you know
that tl&gt;ey're going to make a lot of
yards and a lot d plays ." Washington Coac hJoeGtbbssa td "The goal
was to try and keep !rom giv ing up
the blg play." ,
•
Rogers gained J()j ya rds on 24
carries. including a !·yard . firstquart er score that gav~ him a
cars&gt;r·high and NFL sea son ·hl~h
14 TD's, aU rushing. this year. It was
Rogers' fifth lOO·yard rushin g rffort
&lt;f the season and 2oth of his carf'C'r
/

\\ :ls hlrll! lnfl II :&gt;illfl F'r.tnlr..t'O fi
I hltr,llll~ . :or.i1n '!II
I. \ IL thh•r. 111 l'ian l)h·~~~ .~~ Jl. IJL

NFJ1 Standings

It was Ralsanjanl who blew the
cover on the secret arms-for·
hostgages deal.

Berry's Worlc~

The 49crs fell to 6+ 1. a half·
game behi nd the 7·4 Los Ange les
Rams in the NFC West
"It's very frustrating and
unbel ievable that we got a ll that
yardage and couldn 't get it in the
end zo ne," said Jerry Rice, who
ca ught a career·high 12 passes
for 204 ya rd s. "It see ms every
time we got gomg, we were
pena lized "
"Th ere were ce rt ain passes
that I mtssed, '' Montana said. " I
don't know if I was r usty, I felt
more tired. They played us tough
when we got down to the goal·llne
areas."
Montana completed 33 of 60
passes, but threw th1ee interepptions - two inside the Washm gton 31 -and fumbled once to set
up Washingto n's first score.
Montana had held the team
records lor passmg attempts and
yardage, attem pting 57 passes
and throwi ng for 429 yards Oct. 6,
1985 against th e Atlanta Falcons
The 49ers were ass essed 118

Scoreboard ...

( ltit .u::n .

House and Senat e ronte;ts to taled more than $.1 million- the
Americ an Medica l Association,
Nat ronal Assoctation of Rea ltors,
National Rille Association and
Auto Dealers and Drivers lor
F'air Trade

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

All five starters hit double
figures in third Rio victory

ago.''

Campaign finance tricks ____Ro_be_,,_w_al_te_rs

- .

Frustrated. 49ers fall to Washington 14-6,,· ~,

was limllccl to

Iranian link revealed __Ja_cl-.:_·A_n_d_rr_.w_n_&amp;_·D_a_lr_J_'an_A_t_ta

...,

'

992-2156

600 E. MAIN ST.
AUGNMENT (most can) .... S14.50
Serving

992-2094

POMEROY, OH.

�..
TueiCiay, November 18, 1986

By The Bend·
.

••

! ol

The Daily Sentinel
-

Flower show plans finalized

&lt;

Tuesday, November 18, 1986
Page- 4

I -

Final plans ha ve heen comThe judging will take place at 1
pleted for the annual Christmas p.m. on Saturday with one blue.
flower show to be staged this one red, one yellow and one white
weekend at the Senior Citizens ribbon to be placed In each class
Center.
with the exception of the junior
All entries, and there ts no classes where the judge has the
advance registration required,
option of awarding more.
must be In place by noon on
Fourteen classes have been
Saturday and remain In the show · Included In the horticulture
through 4 p.m. on Sunday. Open division which Is open for
viewing will be held from 1 to 5 ex hibit to any Meigs Counttan.
p.m. on Saturday, and noon to 4
They .are Christmas cactus, ·
p.m. on Sunday.
African vlolels, blooming house-

Beat "0/ the bend

Christmas is coming
By BOB HOEFLICH

Senllnel Stall Writer •

also Is co -sponsoring ·the Big
Bend Varieties of '86 on Sa turday, Nov . 21: and will share
proceeds from that evelt with
the co-sponsors, the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.

Bill Blower, president of the
M I d d•l e port
Chamber of
Commerce, re- ·
ports that planning is underWanda -Guinther, Syracuse,
way
for
has been transferred from Vete-.
welcoming · the
rans Me morial Hospital to St.
Chris tmas seaAnthony 's Hospllalln Columbus .
son in the communi,ty on Sund ay, She's love to her from friends and
Dec. 8.
her address is Room 424, St.
Special activities are being Anthony's Hospital, 1492 E.
planned and Bill will be announc - Broad St .. Columbus, Ohjo 43003.·
Ing all of t he festivities as soon as
And Bob McDaniel of Middleplans are nailed down.
port is a patient at the Holzer
And--Pomeroy will be welcom- Medical Cen ter in Gallipolis .
Ing in the season on Sundays, He's going to be therefor 10 davs
Nov. 30, with a parade, Santa and &lt;r so and he, too, would like to
of course, the numerous open hear from you.
houses which have P.come an
a nnu al event on that day . The
In the birthday corner is Mary
florist shops. as I recall, started Bel h Brewer of Middleport who
· the idea of holding open houses will celebrate on Nov. 23.
with other merchants picking up
on the idea.
The Shady Valley Shufflers ,
I'm sure ot her communities directed by Gerald Powell asare planning spec ial events for sisted by Paulette Harrison.
the holiday season, do let mr entertain at the drop of a hal.
know . I' m always happy to pass They're absolutely everywhere
along the good word.
doing their active clogging these
days.
·
Speaking of the Christmas
They may be appearing as a
holiday season - no. I haven't part of the en tertainmen t at the
forgotten that Thanksgiving is annual meeting of 11.- Ohio Farm
yet to come - Muriel and .. Bureau Federation in Columbus .
Wallace Bradford are getting II A stale director was at the loca l
all together for Christmas and Farm Bureau annual meeting
.will open their craft shop and and indicated tha t she would like
'pick a Christmas tret' operation to have the group at the slate
on Nov. 29.
sessio n.
Wonder what kind of vitamins
Meanwhile, out Rutland way: those Shufflers take ·_ their
the Rutland Civic Center crgani- da ncin g surely looks as through
za lion will host Mr. Cartoon from II would be ex hausting - but it
WSAZ-TV on Saturday, Nov . 22, never sho¥"5 on thf:'m .
beginning at 2 p.m. Admission Is
$3 a person and proceeds will go
Does it Dgure tha t there are no
for ce nter operations and meain - dull days, just dull people? Do
tenance. The ce nter crganization ket'p smiling .
.

D of A has ·meeting
New officers were elected
when the Past Councilors Clu b of
· Chester Co uncil 323, Daughers of
America, met recently at the
hall.
Elected ' were Sadie Trussell ,
president; Ethel Orr, vice presi dent ; Betty Roush , secretary :
Erma Cleland, treasurer; Opal
Hollon, flower committee: Lora
Damewood, sentinel, and Mary
K. Holter. news reporter.
Fern Morris presided at the
meeting which opened with scripture from Luke 2. the Lord's
Prayer, and the pledge to the
American flag. Thel ma White
gave the secretary's report, and
Mary Showalter the trea surer's
report . A thank you card was
read from the ·Hattie Frederick
family and several members had
Thanksgiving poems. Opal Holan
and Erma Cleland were named
to make out the 1987 hostess

Plans for pre-holida y festivi ties to be held on Dec. 6 were
finalized when the Portland PTO
mel recently.
Mrs . Wanda Shu ler led the
pledge to the flag. Officers'
·reports were given . The unit
approved expenditures of $975

toward I he purchase of teac hing
supplies. New basketballs will be
purchased out of the athletic
fund .

Jan Hill reported that a book
fair will be held at the school the
first week in December. Mickey
Hollick thanked the mothers for
helping with 11.- Halloween party
and career week. Nex t met"tlng
will be on Dec . 9 at 7 p.m. at the
school.

Honor roll
EASTERN HI GH SCHOOL

Th £' f!rsl ~ 1:-1 W(lf'kS Wadln _e pE'riod honor

roll at 1)1(• Eus!("rn HIJZh Sch no l hm&gt; bf't'fl
announcro . Making a l!radr of B or abO\' I'

ln .a llt hrl r subj &lt;'Cis to b&lt;' namro to 1hr roll
W{"f£' :

GRADE 12: Robyn Barn('1t , Darlme
&amp;um . M(l!l s.~a Calaway. Todd flu~·. Erka
Kt'!&gt;sln~l'r . GrC'2 l.rarhman. Amy Lou ck ~.

Tri.i \!ls N('Y.•Iun , Brmr Norton . Brmda

R&lt;"t'd . Kirk Rf'f'd , Tamm'!' Robrrts. LNia

Ru&lt;'k rr. [){ol£'ah SandNs. Arl~ r Wf'!l l.
GRADE 11 : Mara lyn Bart on . Am\'

&amp;-rkhlmN, Lori Burkr . Ahl~a \1 Caul horn .
Rl'nf'f' Ka,\ 'lnr , Tim Lawson. l. arl!i!ia Lon~:: .

.
Stacy Dawn Pullins

Pullins birthday
Stacy Dawn Pullins; daughter
ol Steve and Teresa Pullins.
- Fi~twoods Road. Racine, _celebrated her ftrst birthday on Nov.
' 1.
A party
waswithheld
her
parmts'
home
her atgrand-

' .

'

-JCKI I Scha l'kC' L
GRAD£ 10: Lis&lt;~ D rl~~s. Hr:~t hN
Fl nlaw, Amy Ha ~ {'t" . Howlf' La wrr rH.'f '.
Tam my Lra c-hnwn. Mlkl" Manln .' A,\'
MOtJI . Llst1 POOh~r . Bol1&gt;1(1 Prl('(', Lt'a Ann
RM::l . Da viU Rit'('. J av JI(' Ann RJt C'hll' .
Chris SpPn N'r, Jris ha si&gt;rn('('r . Krndl U11.
GRADE 9: lk&gt;rh Arbau~h . Ernh• Buk('r,
F:Hznb£&gt;1h Bryant , Klm MclniJ&lt;yl'. G n •t a
Rlltl f' , Ambrr Shore Dan Tripp.
GRADE )(: Sm-:unnr Cl:w, ' Andr(';t
Cl&lt;'land . Stf'phanlc&gt; Gardn(1". Billy ,John·
slln. Tonya Mor,gan. Mark Murphy, ll'l ~h ·
Ann Rl'dO\'il\ 11 ,

GRADE, 7: S!f'\'(' Bal'l11"11 . Tina Con·
nolly, David Gumpf. Danny Lawrrn «'.
Toney M ax£1y, Julie RlrriC'. Am.\' W&lt;'ll

I

MINING TECHNIQUE- Sally Gibson, representing Southern
Ohio Coa,l Company , ex plains lo students at Racine Elt•mentary.
the techniques and procedures or coal mining. Gih~on was orw of

many speakers invited to the school during career week.

.FIRST-HAND LOOK - Barry Rlchard!ion, an ~soclate of
David Krawsczy n, DVM, discussed veterinary . medlel~e and
offered students at Racine Elementary a fir st hand look al ·lhe
v~terlnary truck. ·

What are you going to be whe n
you grow up?
Child ren are (requenlly asked
this question, but rarely do they
have an answer.
To give students a lillie ass ist ance in channeling their interests
and choosing a career, Racine
Elementary, and other schools in
Meigs County, celebrated career
week from Nov. 3 through Nov. 7.
On Monda y and Tuesday. stu ·
dents in grades one through six at
Racine. participated in act ivities
revolving arou nd a mock election. On Wednesday, gt·adrs
three, tour. five and six took a
fiel d trip to WOUB Radio and
Televisio n facilities in Athens .
On Thut·sday and Friday. peoph •
from various occupations sha n:&gt;d
Information about their res pective car('('J'S and students wrrc
given many opportuni ties to ask
qu es tion s and ob servr
dPmonstra lion.r; ;.

Speaking to students Thursda y
were. Mick Williams . barber;
J im Hill, re.'\taur ant manag er:
Bi ll F' ran cis.fl orist: Kelt h Wo od.
Meigs Counl v game warci:&gt;n: Ed
Cozart, John Casto. Chet-y l Sta pleton and Donna Hawle,·. karate: Sally Gibson. coal mining;
Nancy Yoacham. journalism;
Conn ie Aldridge and Debbie
.Iones, beauti cians: Bob Woods,
powPr plant workflr: Ba rry Ri chardson. veterinarian: Gary
Norri s, banke r.
.Speaking on Frida .\' were Joe
Stoba rt and frll) ' Wagner, on oil
and gas well leasing: Renny
Ewing, funeral director: Donna
lhle, on dait-_v farmin g: D3\· id
Fn'(: ker. att or ney: Brent Sisson.
Meigs Count y deputy sheriff:
Teri Carsey. hanklng: Marily n
Powell. cake decoratin g: Ike
SpenC€'r, meat cutting: Don
Beegle . airplane piloting: Stev e

..___

KARATE - Ed Cozart and students ~av e a demoll'itratlon on
karate techniques during last week 's caF&lt;oe r week activities at
Racine El&lt;•mentary. Ryan Holter, In the mlddh•, a ftfth gr:KI••r at
Ratln•• Elementar)&lt;' , de mon"'lratcd hi!&gt;~ karat e ability h,v hn'Uking

Randolph , car sal Nl man : Marvin Hill. denta l iaborat or ~ tc&lt;' h·

Not~ is hereby given that

no logy : an d Roy Bickte ,chimn&lt;'y

on

Ohio Power building . Speaker
will be from Carleton School.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Addona end remodeling
- Roofing and gulter work
-Concrete work
- Plumbing end electrical
work

(F;ee htimetesl

V. C. YOUNG In
992-6215 or 992·7314
Pomaroy, OhiQ

att end .
Revival
LONG BOTTOM - Lo_ng Bottom United Methodist Chu rch
will h!I\'P revival services Friday
and Saturda y at 7 p.m .. wilh Rev.
Jim Stewart. evang~&gt; ll s t. Ever:v onr welromr.

the right to bid 11 this ule.

~- 111)16,17,183tc

The .,nual report Form

990PF for December 31 ,
·19841or tho Kibble Founda ·

War fry
· MIDDLEPORT- The Ch ristmas War Cry of the Salvation
Army will be dis tributed this
weck In Middleport and next
weck in Pom eroy. Anyone
missed who wis hes a copy may
call !1.l2-04 7'2 or !1.12 -7480 .

"OETTIIIO "OU TIIRE SAfEL"

~~~J­
f};~ .Yfome ,

_____;. ,_
•

!610) tN-1141

MIDDLPOtrr, OHIO
'
-~

Clerto of tho a..rd ol

t11)11.18.2tc·

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
Public Notice
On0CIIIIIIor31 , 1986,in tho
Meigs County t'lobate Court.
LEGAL NOTICE
C... No. 215322, Pllly G.
Sealed bids lor electric lngloo, 725 a..tnut Slr•t

en gary to operate mumicipel
electric equipment uatd r.
he water w orlc undsewage
t
diapoul IYitema n tht
Village of Pomeroy. Ohio ,
will be received by tho oaid

Village ot tho office of tho
Clerk ol tho Board ol Tn&lt;s-

tee~ of Public Affairs until

, ' 12:00 o:cloclt noon on

tho

We are deeo~ p~telul .,d
wish to thank all the -der.. 1 IIIII corinc PIDflle rrhD
slttred our triel It tho loos of
our flthor. Lewis (SIItou)
lluris. All of the ftonl or·
ranpmtllts, foods, cords and
upressions of sr11111t~
•ere deeply spproc~lerl
Special lhlnls to the
nurses and lidn of the
Skilled Nursinc facility, the
doctors and nursn of the
Emeraency Room and the Intensive Care ~*tit of Ve·
'terans fltmoriol Hospital.
llany thanls to 1111 Po1111roy
lltd lliddltport Emer11ncy
Squids for beina thlre when
• · netrltd them. Special
thanls to the
Funeral
Ho.. .,d

IH

theil

-e

Mlddllpon. Ohio. 46780, wu
appoi'lted Eucutrix of tl'e

of Clyde J. tngeto.

• • • • · a.te Df 726 Ch8l1nut Sb'•t. Mlddlepor1. Meiga

Ccuniy, Otlio.

Robert E. Buclr,
Probate Judge
IMta K. Neuelrold. Cln
i11 14• 11 · 1B· 3"'

1- - - - - - - : - - Public Notice

Card of Thanks

Defendants in a legal action
entitled Rtchard Kibble,
Plaintiff, vs . Ernest L. Kib·
ble, Et AI ., Defendants. This
action his been assigned

and In the Township of Olive
,and bounded and described

as ioUowt, viz:
Tht weit half of the welt

hoH ol 160 Aero Lot No.

11159, Secttons 4 and 10,
Township 4 , Range 11 of
the Ohio Company's Purchase, containing 40 acres.
,
more or leu .
OE~O

Ptalntlfl

- VSEA NEST L. KIBBLE. ·
Oahondont
Cue No. 85-CV-334
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To JMn Turnev.Chamber·
llln and theur*nown heirs,
deviiMI, 1nd leglt•t of
Jean Tum1y Ch1mberlain. H
she bl ct.ce..ld , whose last

Union Ave.

Lay to Rest Nov. 18.

1975-1986

S-Siwl PHctfll bt thy r•l.
T-TOMOrriiO anotllor ton~y
day without you, Old,
E-Elntn YHII hiYO puled
since rou lett
¥- Victory b ~ • . proy lot it.
MHI ¥UiCI,

Did,

,.

"Sewloe Plui ... Aif111flo11 tti 011111"
BILl BLOWER

boll.
Stelly mimlf by children, five

dll[fltwo, two sons: pndchil·
d1sn. arut-pandcllildrtn.

990PF tor December 31 ,
1985. for the Kibble Foun·
dation , Bernard V. Fultz,

Trustee, is available forpublic inspection 11 Bernard V.
FUitr Law office. 111 % W.
Second

Street,

Pomeroy ,

Ohio 45769, during regular
business hours tor a period
of 180 days subsequent to
publication of this notice .

111)18,19, 20, 21,
23. '24, 25, 7tc
•

HOUSE OVERFlOWING?

CLEAN UP WITH

ClASSIFIED ADS ("?

"A1 Reasonable Pri,es"

·PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Also Traumlttlon
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-' 116 tfn

6- 17 -tic

Window - Wood - Papet
Plastic - Truck
Silk Screening
Boat lettering - Realty
Jackets - T-s hirts

JERRY'S
SI.GN SERVICE
992-7460
SIGNS OF All KINDS
JERRY
SIEGFREIO

Rl . 7

Middleport
11 -7-86-1 mo.

L1gswsg Fo1 Ch1inmu

RIAIONAIII RAllS
10-30 -' 86 -1 mo.

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

24 Hour Wrecker Service

Authori1ed John D•ro,
New Hollond, Bush Hog
farm Equipmonl
Ilea lor

35809 Titus Road
Mi"dloport, Ohio
Ph. 742·2592

full Service &amp; Repcir

4

KINDLEWOOD
STOVES
11'.\DE IN GAlllPOII I
'&gt;OlO IN GAlliPOll\

\fRVICfD IN GAliiPOlll

Joyce Jewell. Rt. 1, Box
74AA. Langsville. Oh io,
46741, was ·appointed ad·
minlstratrix of the •tate of
Benny H. GoOdman , deceased, late of Rt. 1, Box

FIRFPLACE INSERT

74AA,

Bli!INI WOOD OR COAl

SIZE 23X30X007

2' s(

EACH

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE ·

Stationtry4 Magnltic
Signs 4 Rubber ·Stomps,
· Business Forms,
Copy Services, fie.
2ll Mill St., Milfclloporl
104 Mulberry A~t., Pomeroy

992-3345

3/2/Hn

WE ARE YOUR SALES
A~D SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZEN ilH
•SYLVANIA
oSPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON mRIGERAlOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wa Hm AFuiiTlMt

Shop Teehftielu
01

Dutt

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

•All Types of

Excavating
•Landscaping

•Basements
•SeWage Syst.e ms
•Water &amp; Gas lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

Coli: 742·2407

CHESTER- 985 -3307
4/1/ lfn

10/2718611 mo

-GUN SHOOT
-

LIMESTONE
HAULED

'RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

TROMM

EXCAVATING

far1ory (hol&lt;o
12 Gaugo Shorg111s Only
10-8-tfn

742-2328
· 11 ·7-86-1 mo .

Announcements
1;=~~0

J'CIC'S SEPTIC
TANIC SERYICE
4062 5 St. Rt. 681
Pomeroy, Ohio
H HOt R Sf~ H\If:f:

614/992-7119
W. VA. Residents
(ali (ollo&lt;l
11 -4-86 -1 mo.

3 Announcements
Sav e y011r loved ones 10rne of
the sorrow &amp; ellpense . Purchal ·
ing memorial prop ert¥ befora
need is just good common sense.
Call now for brochure . Ohio
Valley Memory Gardens . Call
6 14-446 -3615 . Metgs Count y
Memory Gardens Ca ll 614·692 -

6151
Recine Gun Shoot sponsored by
Racine Gur~ Club . Every Sunday.
beg1nning al 1 :00 p. m . Facto~
Choke. 12 guage shotguns.

J&amp;L BLOWN

Piano lessons at my ·home near
E011stem High Schoo l. Nancv

INSULAnON

Schul

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•lnsul ation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows ·
•Repl acement Windows
•New Roofing

JAMES KEESEE
• 11-4-86-1 mo.

6 1 4 - 667 ~ 3336 .

No hunl ing or trespassing ,
Mvnes Farm located Cheslnut
Ridge Ro&amp;d .

Santa for hire, Evenings, Sat and
Sundays. 304 -!73 -6892 .

4

Giveaway

PH. 992-2772

Beautifu l 4mo. old female pup ,
house broken , will give loa good

home . Ph. 614 ·446· 7904

11-7-86-1 mo.
614-4-06 -8699

NO MONEY DOWN
90 Onys lnmr
As Cosh

OLD TIME
HEATING CO.

• 701 2nd Ave • .
Gallipolis, Ohio
OPEN DAILY 9 .AM-5 PM
10/23/16/tln

Business
Services
EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO•

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM

USES FOR ALUNIINUM SIIETS -RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES .TO
MAKING HA-RED LA'-" SHADES.

Compteta Gutter Work
Complete Romodoting
Roofing ol all Types

CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT THE
DAR.Y SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

"Free Estimates"

Worked In ho ma • •
20 yeart

CALL COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843·5425. '
11 -Hi -le

Female Great Dane to giveaway,

271 N. 2nd, Middloport
9'12·5766
OPEN:Mon .· fri. 8 am-9pm- Sat. 8-6
IIYalk-ins Welcome

EAR PIERCING, MANKURING, PfRMS AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS
Debbie Meadows- Owner: lmoiean Btavins
Lorello Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
Melisse Downing, Merri Amobury
10-17-1 mo.

We can repair and r&amp;'
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas .Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD·.
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

o

f:
a:

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Cofl1luterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds - lnll!fllreting SeiVices

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
l: licensed Clinical Audiologist

z

To 11 good home, 2 litter trained
kittens. Call 614 ·992·1382.

Fiye kinens . 304-675 -1138.

6 Lost and Found
lost · Small , black , curly Terri poe . 4 years old . Answers to
Polly. Kelton Rd . area off 16 0.
Call 614 -446· 7533.'

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

PAINTING EXTERIOR

317 N. Second

•Ranges

·

PARTS and SERVICE
4·5·tk

CARPO
UPHOLSTERY
. PLUS
.

22 57
lost -Redmond Ridg e . All wtite
fema le German Shepherd. bl1ck
coll ar, rab ies lag . Rewflld Tony

7

COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL
, - FREE ESTIMATtS.
.
-

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity ·

PHONE (614) 992-5009
SPECIALIZING Ill WINDOW I DOOR REPtACEMENr

GREAJ BEND ELECTRIC, Inc. :

Sa.l e . 10 - 15 ln rmhe s.
Ewlr;q ton Townflousn. 10 min
out ol Vinto n on 160. lh u1s Nov
20 . Fro "'o v 21 , for info rm11t10n
call Donna Elliott 61 4 · &amp;69·
4881
'

Y i!rcl

Pomerov

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Middleport

&amp; Vicinity

446-6323 Dav or Evenina

1 rno _11·17-86

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CAW

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Yard Sale

· Micldltpott, Ohio

mo .

L&amp;W CLEANING

614 · 245· 9578 or 614 -245 ·
5404,

Roac h, 304 · 675 -5433 .

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.

All Meku

Lost 1emele walker coonhound ,
white with black &amp; brown sjlots,
last seen on Games Ford Rd.

Missing fro m l ong St. in Rvlland
sincfl Nov . 21st . Gray and white
long -hAired male cat AnsWers
to Pe ltchv Baby . Call614 · 742 -

INTERIOR

•Washers •Dishwashers

Ad ., REWARD Ph 614 · 4463780 or 614-446-JOn as.tl tor
Elaine Mufl1)ower

8-13 tln
BUILDING

915-3561

lost 'h Irish Setter, v, C ocker
Spaniel. 2Yl ft . tall. brown ,
ans wers to Bridgat, In area of
Ra ccoon rd &amp; Shoestring· Ridg e~

Has a collar on with 1.0. Ph .

Second
Box
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

around Hotter Medi cal Cant er
Ph . 614 -446 · 2222 .

- (614)
446-7619 or {614) 992-6601
417
Avenue,
1213

ICUI OUT FOR FUTURE U5El

•Refrigerators ·
•Dryers •Freezers

goad with kids. Ph . 614 -258181 3 .

fou'nd a pair of l adies gloves

FREE STANDING
OR

condillon .

1H~ ~~ff/c 'fA~~~

SER~ICE

Melga County

Common Pteas Court

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

Furnifurt, Wtddtng
and Graduation

"FifE ESTIMA115"

•AUTOS •LIGHT TRUCKS

RADIATOR

Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Courts

DIAMONDS

New location:
161 North S..ond

SuppliK

l/11 / tln

AUTO

Bob Barton, Ownar
10-27-86-1 mo .

Dated : November 14,1986

Uk( .

'

·® C!~H~~E

BOGGS

the Comp'laint.

vlsees. 1nd l~~g•t•• of lawrence Van Amburg, if ,. be
dece..m. whuul11t known

New Home1 Built

PH. 949·280 1
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

MARY , WHITE ANGELS
ALSO lARGE BIRO BATHS

PH. 992-9949

dure, judgment by defauh
will be rendered ~gainst you
for the relief dl mended in

Oflio

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

"·Free Estimates"

190 MUlBERRY AVf.
POMEIOY, OH.

Ohio Ruleo ol Civil Proce-

langsville ,

"VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

CATS , ENGLES . VIRGIN

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

caae of your fa ilure
to answer or otherwise respond 11 required by the

Court. Coso No. 25329,

REASONABLE · RELIABLE
8-10-'86 tin

OEERS. RABBITS. DOGS .

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

In

On November 5. 1986, in
the Meigs County Probate

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
614·843-5248

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

tor answer witt commence
on thu date .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

y,,
Pmlill N.U1
PW$, Olli&lt;1
I
F11 All

Cat been declawed &amp; neutered

23, 1986, and tho 28 days

Public Notice

J.R. 's REPAIRS

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

1-3-'86 tlc

&lt;

ONLY

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

Farm Equipment
Paris &amp; Sarvlee

You •r• re:aulred to answtf the Complaint wittin
28 daya after the la11 publication of this no1M:e which
will be published once •ch
week
for sbt aucce11ive
weeks . The last publication
will be made on December

known .oddreu was 4318 45741
Robert E. Buck,
Crooked La no Rood, HQwell,
Po-obate Ju~a
Michigon; and
K. Ness;etro1d , Clerk
To Lawrence V1n Amburg
11, 18, 25, 3tc
1nd the unknown heirs, de ·

E-Eirt, wtiOVIID hllr ro•r

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Rt. 124; Pomeroy Ohio

ume 294, P1g1 9 , Melga
County Deed Records.

In Memoriam

Memory of Steve Eblin

report Form

The annual

REFERENCE : Vol·

You •• hlrlby notitild
thlt you have bien named

2

PUBLIC NDTICE

111)18. 25: 1121 2, 9, 16,
23, 6tc

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RICHARD KIBBLE,

BIS-SEll
BUILDERS

Roger Hysell
Garage

CEMENT HORSES .

eddrRO WOI 1285 N. SM
Gobrlel Blvd., Aportment
1B,.Arull, Collfomio;

0- 0td, you are lilt btsl.
A- Atono wit~ Jnn.
0- 0qwn to 11e Cross can
load 1o Calvary. ·
God knows ,..r Lou Dod
But for mo 1o wish,,.. back. I
coulchl'l.
'CIIIH our G..t knows the

BRUCE FISHER

By orcin of thl Bo.-d of

Trustees of Public Aff1irs

SHOULD I CONSIDER ANYTHING lESS THAN -A FUll-SERVICE F~NERAL?
Generally, the full -service funeral best meeis the needs ol
the bereaved . as well as [IOVid ing for the deceasaLII is a
declaration ol death. as well as testimonial to a lile.
The full-service funeral is also a ritual of deeply [lolound
psychological significance in our civ ilized society.
It was Gladstone. the famous English sta tesman . who wisely said. "Show me the m11ner in ..tlich a nation orcomrmnity cares for its dead and Iwill meaasurowith mathematical exactness the tende• sympaiNes of its people.
their respect lor the law of the land, and their loyalty to_
hill! ideals."
We ate living in an age of &amp;real change and p1ogress. While
many customs are influenced~ the limes , the full-service
funeral has not b1111 much altered . Progress has refined
techn~ues and procedures, but the hi~ ideals to ..tlich Go. IIdstone refers have not been minimized or COllllromiserl .
Man still buries his head w~h ceremony and dign ity.
Call or stop by rot our literature concerning our lull-service capabilittes and counselin1.
·

reject any and ell bids.

.... Law office , 111% W. Sa ·
cond Str11t.
Pomeroy ,

HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

COME IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

of

tion , BernardY. Futtz, Trut·
tee, Is available for publtc inspection at Bernard V. Fultz

1

Anyone who nas trouble hearing or understand ing conversa11on 1s mv1teo to
have a lree hearing test to see U this problem can be helped ! Bring l h1s coupon
with yell l or your FREE HEARING TEST of $50 value. Adults only . peaSe .

cop~a

111112. 13,14,16, 17.18,
19 7tc

•'

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIAliST.

Affairs.

Trustees of Publtc Affairs of
1he Village of Pomeroy ,
Ohio.
Pat Thom1

' Ohio, 46789 'during regular
buline11 houn for a period
of 180 days subsequ1nt .,
pubtication of this notice .

ltcvlvul
MIDDLEPORT - 1\ revival
will grt unde rway Wednesday at
the Midd leport Church or Christ
in Chr iS tian Union with different
SPf'akers eac~ even in g . Services
will start at 7:30 each evenin g
and wil l run through Nov. 23.

DR. JIANKIN PICKENS
509 SOUTH THIRD AVENUE, MIDDLEPORT
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 20
FROM 9:00-12:00 NOON

of the Board of truneea of
which 1epecificatkJnt will be
furnished prospective
bidders upon applicatton.
The right II ra11rved _,

PUBLIC NOTICE

Christma~

Free Elecrronics heaMng tests will .be given by Bellone Hearing Aid Center at

COIY1)1ny intereated in It and
be Ktompanied by 1 certi-

Publici

Public Notice

r-~------------------------

Plans for a bake sale to be held
Friday were mad r at a recent
met" lin g of the Women's Auxi lIary of Veterans Memorial fj ospllal held at the hospital.
A report was given by 1he
flower chairman. andc an;is wi~rP
sent to now In active memb2 rs
giving them honorary memberships in the group and ln vitiog
them to be guests at the Christ ·
mas party and family summer
picnic .

November 28.

Each bid mu11 contain thl
full narhea of tvlf'V person Of

Sentinel-

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

4-15-'86-lc

In Syracuse, Ohio
"YES, WE ARE OPEN."
THURS.·fRI. -SAT.
9 to S

Public No1ice

1986 at 10 A.M. a )l'lvate fied check in the a.~m of Coso Number B&amp; -CV-334
•le will be hold at tho olfoots $60.00 drawn on a IOivent and is pending in the Court
of Tho Control Tn&lt;Ot Co.. NA bank , 11 a guarantea that I of
Common Pleas of Meigs
of Middlaort, Ohio to 101 for the bid ia eccept.t a con- County.
Pomeroy, Ohio
011h the foltowing colatnl tract will be entered iruo. All 45769.
to wit:
rn.~lt bl bend upon
The object of the ComHomolita Riding Mo,_ bids
spec ~icatlons adopted by plaint is to partition the fol M#T165, Serial #32101071 the Council of sllidVillage on l'owing described r•leatate:
Tho Centro! Trull Co., NA Nov. 24, 1986, and noW on
Situlte in the County of
Middleport, Ohio reoorveo file In tho office of tho Clerk Melga.
in the State of OMo

sweeping.

COUPON

Friday,

Public No1ii:e

3rd day ol Nooomber, 1986.

NOTICE OF A
PRIVATE SALE

Legion has Veteran's Day program ·

AuxiliLI.(Y conducts
meeting at VMH .

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write D1illw
Dept.

Public Notice

Public Notice

a hoard with hiN hand .

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

&lt;

YOUNG'S

JO' S GIFT SHOP

Stnlin!l Clmi11td
Ill Caurl St .. Pa111roy. Ollia m6~

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
POMEROY- Cub Scout Park ·
249 will meet Th ursdav. 7::111 Springs BPI IPr Heal! h Club will
p.m .. at 'Pomeroy Church of meri _Thursda)·, J:Io p.m.. at the
Chris t. Boys arc reminded to hom r of Phyll is Skinner.
bring art wor k for show.
FRIDAY
RUTLA ND - There will be a
POMEROY
Ame ric a n
Cancer Soric t~· ExC'Cutive Board dan ce 1his F'riday. 8to D p.m.. at
mec•tin g will be Thursda v. 12 th&lt;' Rutland Civic Cen ter. Music
noon. at VctC'rans Mcnlorla l will be provided by flomic
Hos pit al.
Sound s. Admissio n ~2 single and
$.0 couple. Everyone welcome.
HARRISONVILL E - Harri - Due to ba skPiball gamr.s. the
sonvillr Senior Cit izrn~ will mee t nex t da n('(' al t hP elv ic cenlPr wtl l
Thurs da y. Z to 4 p.m .. at lhe be Dec . 19 .
townhou se ror elec t ion of officers. All me mbe rs urge d to Thank•~v ing dimwr
att en d.
EAGLE RID GE - Eagle'
Ridge Communi!)' Chu rch will
M-IDDL EPORt- Midd leport hold its annual Thanks givin g
Ch il d Conser\'a t io n l.ea g uC' wi ll dinner this Sunda y all p.m. Rev.
m('{'t Thursday, 7::W p .m ., a l thr Ca rl Hirks, pastor . in vilf's a ll to

Veterans Day programs werr Pos t. the group then joui'RCI'&lt;'d to
presented by the Racine Ameri - the LetH rt F'a lls school where 1he
can Legion Pos t 602 a t the fl ag of the late Fran cis weoo.
Portland and Letart F'alls Ele- give n to hi."" family at his dea th ,
mentary schools.
was present ed 10 the sc hool b~·
The Rev. Charles Norris was thP famil v . A 1·i rJr sal ute wa :-guest speaker for the 11 a.m. gi\·rri th r .bug\P rs soundPd l &lt;.~ p s .
service on Nov. 11 and co m- Again u drmo nstrat ion on foldin g
mented on the obse rv ance of lhe flag and a t a l~ on flag
. Veterans Da y and the impor- rtiqucltC' was givr n.
tance of reverance'for the fl ag. A
Leg ionn aires par ti c ipat in g
demonstalion was gi ven on holl' were Carrol Tea ford . Eiso n
to fold the flag and fl ag etiquett e Spencrt', Bernard DiddiP. Elmer
was discussed .
Pickens, !'red Gibbs, Don R. Hil l.
Following a dinner at the Clu b To m m~ Hi ll, RogN Hili , Prle
Res taurant sponsored by 'l! hc Bcarhs. Vi rgil Wa lker. Buglers
wcrc Lrr Spaun ttnd Lorrll a
Sm ith . Mrs. Elson Spencer was a
guest.

would be planted In front of the
school , preferably before wint er.
Problems with the qualil y of
work sheets from the Thermarax
were discussed and il was voted
to repair the cotton candy
machine.
·
James Lawrence reported tha t
there will .be a Christmas gift
shop again thi s year for the
childr en and also a Christmas
program although a dat e has not
been set. A new program will be
started throu gh Ponderosa re·
warding perfect attendance for a
six week period with a ce rtifi cate
for a kid's meal.
Lice in the school was di scussed by Lawrence who said
that Syrac use has no greater lice
problem than 11had last ye ar. He
said that if cases of lice are found
In more than one room. parents
are notified.
Lura Swiger t said thai the
sixt h grade cheerleaders did well
on tag da y and noted that the
Middleton doll drawing will tak e
place In February.

___

The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar / area.happenings
Admiss ion is S4 for adults and $.1
for children.

Super Vatu cash register receipt
program has been ex tended
through the rest of the year.
· Reports were given on the World
Book reading program and the
selll_ng of holiday trays with the
sponsors. of the various projects
being asked to ex plain to the
parents the number of fund
raising projects.
It was decided that shrubs

Mark Riggs, who has been
VIsitors over the wet"kend of
stationed In Virginia, has been Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil King were
transferred to Denver, Colo.
Mrs . Judy Coomer and Mrs .
Before making the location Geneva McE lroy and son, Illi·
change, he visited In Meigs · nels, and Miss Gracie King,
County with his parents and Mansfield.
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Blackwood
Mr. and Mrs : Charles Alkire, visited su'nday with their aunt.
Racine, visited Tuesday evening Mrs. Ellen Burgess, Portsmouth.
with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mrs. Minnie McGrath spent
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Christian, several days wtlh 'Mr. and Mrs .
Wellsion,-were Sunday visitors of Otis McGrat h and daughter, The
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Christian.
Plains.

Sh&lt;'rrl Wolf.

•.

plants, foliage houseplant s. and
cacti or succ.ulents in the polled
plant category; berried branch ,
broadleaf evergr a? n, narrow
evergr ee n. one stem naturally
dried plant material. and one
stem trea ted plant material In
the specimen category: and
dried roadside material. berried
branch 18 inches or less. dish .
ga rden and potted plant In the
junior division.

Harrisonville happenings

Career Week observed
.
with Racine Elementary

parmts. Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Pullins and Sue Rlce, her greatl
l"
grandparmts,Mr.andMrs.Paul
LOWEST PIICES ON PASSENGER CARS
Frtcka attending. Also at the .
AND UGHT TIUCK niES
party were DonnaandJo~yRtce, l
Paula and Jason Hall, Rod
*AIIGII.IJS *'IOIT· liD WOIIC
Pullins, BrandY King, rer par*IAmiiiS *'hB IIPAII
ents, and a sister, Stephanie
LOCATED: ~AIN 81' ·• RUTLAN~ OHIO
Pu llins. Sending gilts were Jerry
OPEN : 8·6
-SAT.; 8·8 FRI.
PH.MO~.
7 4 -3()88
Ball, Jacksonville, Fla .; Velma
Ma11er Cord ., VIII Welcome
.Winland, Racine, and Lori a nd
Ernie Miller, Pomeroy.
LlJ-----------~-;;:,.;:::::::,

9

Work completed at the school
was noted and continuing fund
raising projects were discussed ·
at the recent meeting of the
Syracuse PTO held at the school.
Jill Hobbs, president, thanked
those who helped with painting at
the school and noted that a thank
y9u letter will be sent to Vall.ey
Lumber for loaning scaffolding.
It was rported that the Powell

D~ily

Business Services

:-:· Syracuse PTO conducts meeting

co mmittees.
TUESDAY
The Christ mas supper and
CHESTER - Ches ter Council
progra m with gift exchange will
be held on Dec. 10 at 6:30p.m. at 323, Daughters of America, will
Mom Perry's Bounty Table, ' meet Tuesday evening at 7: :JO
Ravenswood. W. Va. Anyone p.m. " ' the lodge hall. Th e
unable to attend is asked to charter will be drapped for
contact Ma~y K. Holter. 949-2960 Hattie Frederick. Membe rs a rr
by Dec. 9.
asked to wear whi le.
•
. Refreshments were served by
the hostesses, Erma Cielaild and WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Windin g
Laura Mae Nice. Games were
Trail
Garden Club will meet at
conducted by Charlotte Grant
and Margaret Tuttle. The door 7:30 p.m. Wednesdday a t thr
prize was won by Mary K. Holter. home of Marcia Arnold .
It was noted that Belly Rou sh
THURSD .~\'
had attended the recent friend RUTLAND
- The annual
ship met"ting of District 13.
tu
rkey
supper
sponsored
by the
Others at the Past Cou ncilors
Club meeting besides those Rutland Volunteer Fire Departnamed were Pauline Ridenour. ment will be held Thursda y
Inzy Newell, and Go ldie Freder- beginning at 5 p.m. in the grade
Ick. Sandra While and Shelly school auditorium. Tickets can
Wooley, New Carlisle , were be purchased at Milleri's Store.
guests .
Rutland Department Store. G&amp; j
Au to Parts or from any fireman.

Portland PTO holds meeting

.The

Movmq Sa le . 5 HP Rototllle r, 20
ft . IIPIIQhl fff! P. ltH . !J..i lky for
I•~.' ~ "'" , 1986 Whe el h Or se
w1th snow blal'l e. dining
room sui te Call614-985 · 4405'.

W e pav cash tor late model clean

used cars
Jim Mink Chev .· Oids In c

Bill Gfine Johnson
614 · 446 · 3672

RAYMOND E. PROFFin (MAC) ;
RACINE, OHIO
Offiu 949-2438

Emergent¥ 949-2516 ,

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
And newer used c a rs. Smith
Bui ck· Pont i ac . 1911 Easuwn
Avt~ .. Gallipolis. Call 614 -446 22~2 .

&lt;

�··~

·----.

' -

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel
9

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

WANTED TO BUY used wood&amp; ·
coal heatera . SWAIN ' S FURNI TURE. Jrd. &amp; Olive St. GaHipo-

3 bedroom huni1hed trail•" on
Crab Cretk Road , married cou-

lia. C•llll14-4411-3159 .

ple only. children welcome. no
pets. $100 ,00 per mo11th, dep·
Ollt requlr«t. uti\itiea 11u.tra.
304-875 -1206 .

Will buy scrap metal
Short Iron U .10 per cwt

Motor Cast $3.00 per cwt
Aluminum ' 22 per pound
Radiator. 1.20 per pound

Call 614-682-7576.

44

Buying dally gold, •ilver coins,
J&amp;welry , lterling ware. okl
coins , large CUIT.,CV Top pri·
ces Ed. Burkett Barber Shop ,
2nd . Ave . Middleport, Oh . 614 992-3476 .

Regency Int. 2 bdr .. kitchen.
nice, good location. furnished,
rea1onable. Call 304-676-6104
or 304-675-7437.

Apartm'e nt
for Rent

r~ ng s .

Wanted to buy. Standing timber.
Call 614· 742-2328:.
Header panel ; grill and
bult1l'er, for 1981 Gran
mouth Fury . Car use
1979 - 1982 . Chrysler
Yorker, New Port or Ply.

Nicely . furnished mobile home
CA &amp; heat, eacel. location,
adult• only. Call614-446-j)338 .

front

Plyfrom
New
Fury

613Vt 3rd. Ave. 1 bdr. privat"it
bath, $140 per mo . Deposit
required. Call 614-446-4222
b&amp;hWIBn 9 &amp; 6.

Cash paid for standing timbtf

Furnithed apt. &amp;225 . Ut1lit181
paid 1 BR . 920 4th. Gallipolis.
446-4416 after 7pm.

Call 614-992-7075.
1111

Phone 614 -992-3861 .
Wan ted to Buy rcanding timber,
phone 304 -675-4412, 8:005.00 PM after 5 :00 PM 304675-3924 or 304 -372 -5192 .

Ernplovrnenl
Serv1ces

"Look at the bright side! If I

Furnithed apt. 1 bdr 4225
utilities paid. 701 4th Gallipolis.
Call446-4416 alter 6 pm

were a genius, you'd probably be spending all of your
paychecks on my psychiatrist bills."

Furnished a1ficiency $150 utilities paid. shtre bath. 701 4th.
Gallipolis. Call446-4416 after 8
pm.

Furni1hed 3 rooms and bath.
clean. adults only, no pets. Call
814-446-1519 .

11 .Help Wanted
Make Christmas money , sell
Avon . Malle 45 peu:ent. CaM
614-446-3358.
Salei,paople-Full Of pert time to
sell carne lary It march . Call
614- 446-36 15 or 614-592 61 51
Maintenance person to ~ve in
apartmlllfll con-plea . Call 304675· 5104.
Sub Bus Driver · murc hold but

ctrver hcense or willing to
obtain , and a physical eum
Salary $5.05 per tnur . Contact:
Mr. David RatliH , Principal,
Guiding Hand School, P.O. Box
14 . Cheshire. OH 45620 or call
(6 14) 367-0102

HELP WANTED
No e11peiience necnurv. mull
be available for immediete employment, major medical benefits &amp; paid vacation. Call 814446-7441 10a.m. to 4p.m
Nted Btbytitter 2 nights a week.

Ph . 614 -388-9862 .
Applicahons lor tlla po1ition of
Actlvi1ies Director at Pomeroy
Hea\tl-1 Care Center are being
accepted . Graduates from accredited schools majoring in
recreational therapy are desired
bJ t considerations will be given
to moti~aled tpplicanta eltperienced in raereational actiYities
whO posse1s drive, inovation
llf1d a CO "lJIISsion for caring and
anderstanding of the elderly.
Applications are available alTha
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Monday through Friday.

Homes for Sale

3-bdr .. elr. pool, gerage. Nice.
Commercial propeny. corner
lots &amp; highway fmntage . Ust
with us . We have buyeJI. A-One
Real Estllte-Broker. Call 304·
674-5104 or 304· 674·5386.

3 Bedroom. breeze wey. 2 car
garage, 1'h acre epp. 6 mil•
from Holzer Hospital route 160
cal\614-388·9301 or 61 4-388·
9706.
.
Beautiful home in f lat woods
area of Pomeroy a'llailabla. New
kitchen. bath . &amp; Clrpttir'Q· Call
814-448-2359.

6 room house. 1.2 acres. Double
car garage. Located on Rose Hill.
Bargain priced $20.000. Cell
614-878-2613.
I
For sa le: 8 room houae. 41ots. E.
Main St. Pomeroy. Call 614986·4427 aher 8 :00pm.
Middleport, 8 room. bath, garage, good locatton . 123.700.
Make offer. Ctll614-992-2802 .
6 rooms, built in porch, norm
windows. natuPlll gas, utility
building. 0 .728 acr• localed
Rutland. $24.000. 614-6826738.

Houl8 for sale by owner. Located in Tupp111rs Plains. Ohio, on
State Route 7. Seven rooms.
bath, full btsement. large lot.
Pr iced to sell Mutt HI to
SIHit ime to t\aye youro\lll'n Awn · appreciate Call814·6157-3400.
Christmas. 35 10 50 percent
discount . Free sign l.4l if you call 4 bedroom home. 11/r baths.
garage. IQcated on Gravel Hill.
by Nov 22 . 614-992-7180 .
770 Ash ·St. Middleport, Ohio.
MOM AND DAD - looking for 842,600. Call614-992-&amp;714.
co llege funds for your son or
dauljtter? :The Army National House partlv furnished. 6 acres
Guard can proYide more th1n on Rainbow Ridge , Good hunt·
S18 ,000 -in education a11istanee ing &amp;1&amp;,000. 1514-8153-&amp;440
to qualifi.t individuals. Seniors
can enlist now and begin eam- 2 br, kitchen , bathroom. with
mga 186 .00 for one week-end laundry room. living room &amp;
pet month and dally Basic din"lng room. til tltc. Appro~e . 1
Training until June 1987. FDI' a milea from Pt . Pl. on At. 62 . 2
FREE INFORMATION PACKET': tr11cts appro•. 1 acre more or less
overlooking Kanawha River.
call 1-800-642· 3619 .
S40,000. Call 304·675-6440
VETERANS · Your I)Jiormilitery between 8:30 and 4:30.
service is worth MONEY . An E-4
in the -Army National Guard C llfl 3 bedroom ell .tectric, air cond.
earn up to $131 .96 for one attached gar-ae. 2 6ot•. Ge\lipoweek-end per month ; en E-6, 141 tis Ferry, 304-876-2932.
to $163.80 . Otller benefits
include : S50. 000 life insurance.
education funding 1uistance. 32 Mobile Homes
retirement , end much more. Call
for Sale
304· 875· 3950 or 1-800-'6423619 .
NEW AND USED MOBILE
Airllnejobl S17. 747to $63.459 HOMES KESSEL"S QUALITY
year. now hiring I CALL job line MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
1 -518 -469 -3635 ext A-1980 WEST, GALLIPOLIS, RT 36.
PHONE 614-446-7274.
for •nformation 24 hours

12

Situations
Wanted

Wanted Dirt &amp; Rocks for fill . Cell
614 -448 -4665 or 614 -446 9277 .

17 Miscellaneous
1 pair ol Pet Clippers Ph.
614 -266-1989 aft8f 6p.m.
Sawmill 3 Block standard size,
new wood , good co nditwn'
$1, 500.00 with out blade or
power ~it . · Ph .614·446-9038
Craftsman 4 V. inch jointer
plll"l ner S125 00 eacell.-.t condi tion . Small drill press. S75 .00
Ph. 814-446 -0671 after 5:00.

18 Wanted to Do
Septic Tank Purf1llng. Commercial &amp; rftlidentlal. 2 truckt for
prorf1ll aet"~lce , t 80 per 1,500
gal. load . RON EVANS ENTEA PRISES. Jacllson , Oh. Call
collect 814 -286-5930 .
Will do cleaning, home and
office. Cell 614 -742-2310 or
614 -742 -2214 .

F1nancial
21

BusineSs
Opportunity

1 NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends tt1at you
do bvainen with people vou
know, and NOT to And money
t hrou~ the mail until you hava
•nvestigetftd thll offering .
ATTENTION INVESTORS

Take .:!Yintage now before the
new tax law a. 8 ~it epenment
COrfllleJL:, loc8ted n Wellston,
Oh . fully rflnted , renteu pay ell
ut i\it ill8. Income OWIJ e1 ,400
per mo . Sell price e96.000 call
Days 614-692- 1189 or lvtn·
ingl 614-594-2874.

23

Professional
Services

Stllirkl Tree and Lawn Service.
' Hedgu. shrubt. bushu
ulmmld . landscaping._ nump
¥1d leaf ramovtl, 304-578·
21!42 "676-2010 .

14•70 fleetwood 3bdr. 2 balhs.
Mutt sale. for more info. c111
614-388-8633 after 4 p.m.
Great Buy- 12J60 2 bdr. mobile
home 24x28 metal poll building. approa. 11 'clearance, eJIIttll
hook up for mobile home, garden
1pace. 111 tl'lis on largecomerlot.
size 8511172 . No hilts to mow. in
Patriot , 1elling because of
health Call 614-379-2282 .
1972 New Moon 121t80 total
electric. 2 bedroom•. new
ca rpet , ucellent condition .
Must see this. 14,950.00 Ph.
814-448-017&amp;
1974 12)(65 Cani~ge House,
total electric, 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, co mpletely carpeMd, very
n1ce 16960.00 Ph. 814-448·
.0175 .
Why rent when yoo cen own?
With small down PI!Ymlnt and
S276 . per month you c1nown; 4
bdr. 11V: baths, living room,
dinmg , family rm., kitchen.
212 Rock St .. Pomeroy. Call
614 -446-4222 from 91 .m.·
6p .m.
2 bdr. mobile home In Evergreen . Call 614-448 -7032.
1984 Schult 3 8R , 14X70 . with
7h.X20 e11p1nds on l R &amp; DR,
has s pace aa~rer mi c row1ve in
kitchen . Total electric. 2 lull
bath1. Owner wiU help finance. If
interested call 1514-448-8725
Must Sell.
'79 Victorian mobile home, 1
acre, 12JC16 room addition. lront
deck. t2&amp;.000.00. Glenwood,
W. Va 304-676-2018.
'71 two bedroom mabjle home,
helf tcre l1nd, Leon. price
es . ooo .oo . Call 304-&amp;756349

33

Ni cely furnished 2 bdr . .ept,
Adults ontv. Inquire at corner
First &amp; Olive St. at Sheppards
Sale&amp; &amp; Serviei!

Renl als

Real Esla le
31

:.

...

- ..

Farms for Sale

Office space • Store apace
A-One Real E11111 Ph. 304-6766104

35 Lots 8o Acreage
7 acres. 2 bem1, 1 teplic t1nk
1nd rural Wltar for 7.000.
814-4415 -8899 .
100X300 has Gellia county
water . loclted AI. 160,
U.OOO.OO f\11 lot . Ph , 1514387 -7890.
Total electric Iota evaUiblt in tf11
k &amp; K Mobile home Plrk on
2146 Eesttrn Aw. Move In now
pay no rent until Jan. 1987. Ph .
304· 17&amp;·3000.
Lot approx:lrnat1ly 1 acre. Ctty
we .. r aveileble. At. 52 N.
304· 875-2911 after IS p.m.

41

Furnished apartment. up st11rs.
Adults only. all utilities paid. Call
614-446-9523 .

Houses for Rent

2 bdr. house with garage c8rpeted, curtains, diahwashlf &amp;
relrig. Near new city pool. 106
kin eon Dr. Rent $300 mo. dep
Ia lea1e required. Ca\1614 -4464347.
1 bedroom new house. furnisi-ted. a~tcept utilities. Water
lumlshed, 1225 .00 mo . Ph .
814-448-1759
Houae in city, Patio. porch built
in kitchen Ph 614-256-6338 .
Furnished house, 4 rooms &amp;
bath located at 736 rtlf lhird
ave. $130.00 mo . $76.00 dap·
oait Ph . 614-446-3870 or 614446-1340.
2 bedroom house for rent Ph
814·446·0722 .

5 room houte, 928 fir1t ave Ph.
814-448-3946 after 4p.m.
2 Bedroom ell eleclric, with
woodbumer. 3 mi. from Holzer.
adults only, deposit required Ph.
814-448-0876 .
One bedroom house furnishod ,
one small child, no pets. Three
bedroom house unfumi1hed . ph .
814-446-0321 .
Effiency apt . completelv furnished. utilities ptid. Ph. 614·
446-1323 or 614-246 -9170 . •
Beautiful 3 bedroom hoou in
Svracuaa. Dapotit and rlferen cea required. Call 614 -992·
6298. 9-5. Mondav through
Saturday.
Small 1 bedroom hou11. Totel
electric. In Minersville beside
Bulk Plant. Call614 -992-6216.
2 bedroom house for rent in
Middleport. Completely remo·
deled. New oerpeting throughout New cabinets. t275 per
month plus depolit. Call 614992-6868.
Small 2-bedroom home in Middleport. Bath " with tub and
shower. lltaehtd garage. yard.
Carpeted. new s1ove and refrigerator Jutt right for single or
working oouple. Sorry, no pats
or children acceptld . 4175
month p\ut Neurlty deposit ,
Phonel514-992-5292.
House for rant on 5th. St .
Racine. Call 614-949-2234 ,
3 bedroom house with garage
lor nmt or aale Call 614-7422427.
2 bedroom house in country
pertly filllshed . eso deposit.
1150 montl-1 plus utilities. 614 843-6440.
2 bedroom house, furnihsed
with stOVI end reffigerator only.
fully carpeted and clean. 60Th
Second St.. New H1~,ren :' 304·
882-2606 anytime.
15 rooms and bath, rtlerance and
deposit ftquired . phone 1'-304676·1090.
3 bedrooms. full basemen t.
304· 676·3030 or 876-3431 .
Cute 2 room cottage wl1h blth.
furnished, utilitln JNiid . t\515.00
week, depo1it required, 304675-3100 or 676-5609.

2 bdr. futlyfurn lahed adultsoi-lty,
utll. paid: Clll614-446·4110 .
In Eureka ni ce end clean adulta
onl~ . No pets, deposit requir111d,
180.00 mo. catl614· 266-1 636
~ore 101.m.

2 bedroommobilehomeforrent
Ph. 614-..6-0722 .

Mobile Ho"" 2 bedroom, fur nished in gallipolis , rent
1200.00 mo. t200.00 depo ait .
If intereued Ph. 814-448 ·71599
deya or &amp;14 - 448 - 9539
e"Uenings. '
2 bedroom tfliler for rent. Close
to school• and nor11. Call after
5 :00p.m. 814-992-15914,
Unlurnislled 2 bedroom fn Syra cuu . Wllher hook-up, cable
$180. per month plus
utililies end depo1it. Call 814 992-8238.

Sofa Bed s one like new
$250.00 , cost over 6500.00
~~ ~ :: _u ;o: s_hope $65 .00 ph .

1 9

Used couch &amp; chair $75 00 Pll .
446"-0749

52 CB.TV, Radio
Equipment
Commadore 64 Computer, Disk
drive. key board moniter . &amp;
printer &amp; sohware for rmre
information Cat1614-256-1989
after 6p.m.

54 Misc. Merchandise

1 bedroom apt . for renl . Besic Call ahon's Used Tire Shop Over
renl starts $215. a month that 1,000tires.siZBs 12 . 13 . 14 , 15,
includes all utilities Deposit 1&amp;. 16 .6. 8 mi ln out At. 218.
required of $200 Contact Vil - Call 614-256-6251 .
lage Manor Apt. Middleport.
614-992-n87 Equal Housing Plastic cistern state approved.
plastic
Opportunity.
~ plastic septic tanks,
culvarh. metal culverts. RON
- - - - - - - - -lcEVANS ENTERPRISES. JackCit~n , roomv 2 bedroom apart manti, Reduced New Haven , son . Oh. 614-286-6930 .
W.Va. Cal\614-992 -7481 . Also
Firewood fur 1ale t30 .00 PU
commercial space.
load . Call Roger Maade, 614 388 ·8417 .
2 bedroom. partlv furnished
epartment off Spring Ave
Pomeroy, Ohio . large patio end Firewood delivered Oak &amp; hick yard. Cell 614-992-6886 after ory, split , HEAP voucher, pickup
lo.t 536. Ceii\S14-446 -2223or
6:00p.m.
614 ·446-3028 .
2 and 3 bedroom apartments
end hou11111s in Pomeroy or Fall Landtcaplng. includes
Middleport. Furn ished or unlur - mulching, tree &amp; ahrubplantlng,
nithed . Pay own utilities Call fill dirt &amp; topsoil Davisons
Landsceping Ph . 614 -268· 1427
days 814·992 · 2381 .

I

Zenith lumtable, ceuette tape
deck , turner amplifier, 5300.00
llghtld steriD cabinet $100 .00 .
614-367· 0394 ,

L1v11 Xmas trees, stone. mulch .
6 room unfurn ished apt . for rent .· firewood. S35 . coal, delivered .
Call 614-992-5434 or 304- Heap vcuchers accepted . Dan's
landscapes . Call 614 -446882 -2668.
9046 .
•
APARTMENTS. mobile homes ,
houtes. Pt. Pieanntand Gallipo - Winchester ca rbin e 30 - 30
model 94, ea. cond . Moslberg
lis. 614-446 · 8221 .
12 guage pump gun, C-LECT
model 500 ex. cond . Buckeye
45 Furnished Rooms wood 6 coal stove. model 236,
ver goOd condition Call 614 ·
266-1739 after 12 noon .
For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light houae keeping rooms. Park - : : c - - - - - - -·lcFirawood for sate . e:ts pictc -up
Central Hotel Call 614-446 toad . De livered . Heap Vouchers
0768.
accept~ . Cell614- 742-2466.
Rooms for rent. day. week . Mi~ed hardwood slabs . $12 , per
montl'l . GaNia Hotel. Call 614·
bundla. C9f1taining approx 1%
4415-9680 Rent as low as $120
tons. FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
month .
Pomeroy , Ohio. Call 614-992Furnished room 919 2nd, Qialli- 8461 .
Ashley '" wood Burner with
blowar. &amp;200 . Call 614-992 ·
3301 or 814-992 -6461 .
35 mm. Cannon AE1 Program
CemBJa. Regu lar lent. zoom lena
and flash attachment. Cal\614 985 -3969 .

County Appliance, Inc Good
used applllnces and T\1 sets.
Open 8AM to 8PM . Mon thru
Sst. 614 -448 -1899. 627 3rd .
12x85, 3 bedroom furnished . IA
::""-:-'-G
-:':-11-"-:0_11'_·_0_H_._--:--W· D. awnlf\9 tnd underpinning . Valtey Fu.-nhure. new &amp; used .
UOO plus depolit end utllltlet . Large section ol qullity fumi 814-992-7479.
ture . 1218 Eastern Ave .,
Gellipolls.
2 bedroom mobile home, Mid dlepon, 0 . RefllnlnCII with security deposit. 304-882-3267 Pickens Used Furnltura. Good
q.111ity used furniture. Open 910
or 304-773-6024.
or call for eppointmenl .
304-ff1fi-8483 or 876-1460 .
Mobile homu , t200 .00to
t275 .00 month, water and
Green rug with pad , appro~t
aewar included: 814-448·0497, 8 'x13 1(1 ', 304-676-1966.
448-2430 or 448-0808 .
Hotpoint washer .,d dryer,
K &amp; K Mobile Homet, 2 and 3
waaher new and dryer ultd 3
bldroom mobile hornet, 304timet, heavy duty. phone 304·
67&amp; ·3000.
175-2130.

r.v.

1---"---- - -- - -

e

\'

11/18/86
6:00

6:05
6:30

1970 Ctllf!VY lA ton flatbed
pickup . Auto .. V8. good tires .
eeoo.
1514-986-4302 .

~
·
~

~

'

•

..
6:35
7:00

Truck - 1986ChevyS-10Mui,
8 cyl ., automatic, 304-676, 6375.

mick

5. 5 Building Supplies

Pole Buildings by Quality
Builders. Workthops,· ctrpons.
animal shelters. garages. Free
estimates. Phone 8 14 -3B4·
6782

56

Pets for Sale

Field Regittlfld English aettert .
One pup, 7monthlokt. One dog,
3 years okt. Ca\1814-245-6697
alter &amp;.
8 Boaer puppies, 5 female, 3
mate. Will be retdy Nov. 21 . Ph.
61.·256·6887 .
Groom &amp; Supply Shop
ProfessiOnal Service, all stylet,
all breeds. state At. 141 Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 . JulieWebb , Ph .
614 -441 -0231 .
AKC regittered Shetland Shetl)·
dog puppy, Cocker Sp~nlel.
Miniature Sch nau zen . No
checks. Cal\814-992-2607.
Canaries and CIQH, 304-895·
3062
Price Reduced II Cuddl8't Teddy
Beart. AKC rt(jistered Chow
Chow puppiet. Reidy to go
home Nov. 19. Red .-.d black,
e .. c blood line, payment plan
available. The perfect Christmas
Gift, 304-876-6799 •fter 6:30

PM .

57

Musical
Instruments

Kimbal Celntra Orgen with pro
entertainer. exc cond. 304-458·
1666 alter 5:30 PM ,
Surplus regular army camou- Kimball piano. art i&amp;l coneole.
flage , Cerhartt , Denim , Rental call 304-675 -25 11 aiter 4:00
clothing , camouflage co~,reraltt PM .
$30.00. H. 0 . "'Sam " Some - '
rvlUa. ISgt. U . S , ~ . Ret .) East of
58
Fruit
Ravenswood. Fri. Sal, Sun,
12:00-8:00 PM. otherdavsafter
8o
Vegetables
4 .00 PM 304-273 -5655

elevon gun case
hold! 24 arrows, double doon.
four drtweu. walnut finish .
Homemad e. 304-675· 1229
Corn 1ed .turkey• for Thanksgiv ·
lng, 304-895-3926 .
RCA 46 inch projection ookued
televi sion •et. \Ike new , mu It
sell, If intere~ted cell 304-6762280.

D~rovin

Fri.Jir Farm will clo11
Nov. 28. Gat your 1pples while
lhey last Ph. 614-898-6298
Hrs. 12 ·00 to 6:00 cloted on
Monday• . St . Rt 681 South of
Albany.
We can now accll\)1 food ttampa
for all fruita and produce we sell.
Jack 's Fruit Market. Rt. 315 ,
Henderaon , W, v • .

59 For Sale or Trada
Electric ~itart , IUbe type e"1).
161n . IPIIktr In ~se. Wllltrada
lorcamcorct.r. orVCR Aeconter
•c•m..-a.

Shop for Chrlttmas wllh
FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS,
Clll304-676 -1090.

f :11111 Supp\11''
/; l iVI:SIIIi.k

55 Building Supplies

61
Building Malerlala
Block. brick. sewer pipes, win dowt. Untels. ate. Cltude Wln ler•. Aio Grande, 0 . Call 814246-6121 .

64

Hay 8o Grain

Farm Equipment

15.000 bulhel9'11n bin for rent.
Morgan ' aWoodlawnF•rm, 304-

117&amp;-12SS" 1171·227&amp;.

-:-:c:-T-:--:--:--:---:~

--;:;;::::::;:;:=::;::;;:;;;;;::

WOK loi~.I.T I fOVND
\_IN~IIIt.. f".Y fOOT&amp;AlL'

Iii ffi M'A'S'H

D (!) People's Court
Cil Nightly Business Re·
port
®I News

®

1974 CheveyVen Ph. 614-2561989 or 614-446-1663 after
&amp;p.m.

Ill (jj) (jl) Wheel of Fortuna
Barney Millar
7:05
Sanford and Son
7:30 U ClJ (!) New Newlywed

rn

Game

PJl ffi Too Close for Com-

FRANK AND ERNEST

Motorcycles

fort
CIJ Judge
(I) Bless Me. Father
®I Wheel of Fortune
Ill @ @ Jeopardy

·o

If J: COUL..O L.~F?-N TO TIIIN~ ON

MY Fft=T I.'P seA

~~~-c-=:-:=----~i

1980 HondeCA -80 motorcy.::le
12715.00 . 1984 Honda Z50R
motorcycle $275.00 . Call 304 ·
876-2039 .

GeN•u.s!

@ Benson
7 :35 CIJ The Honeymooners
B:OO U ClJ @ Matlock A 1oug~
cop must turn to h•s long·
time foe Matlock for de--

fense when he IS accused of
murdenng a hood . (60 m•n.)
In Stereo.

1986 Fat Cat Honda 200 dirt
bike e86Q.OO . 304-675-4257.

ClJ Hell Town

Auto Parts

(!) NHL Hockey: S1. Louis

8o Accessories

· Blues at Minnesota North

Stars {3 hrs.) L1ve.
CIJ 0 CIJ Who's the Boss
!CCI When he feels that

Budget transmissions. used &amp;
rebuilt . Tool converters &amp;
trlnslar ea1es. W11\ ell liver Calh
&amp; Carry or in1tall call 814-446 ·
4870 or 614 -379 -2220.

Jonathan is becoming too
intellectual, Tonv enrolls 1he
.y oungster m a gymnilstics

competition.

1974 Chevy Impala parts 1or
sale. Call 614-949-2361 .
,·.

Ill Cil MOVIE: 'Forced
Vengeance'

CIJ
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
®I Iii ® Fresno {60 m1n .)
Pan 3 of 5.
lllJ Nova: Is Anybody Out
There ICCI Lily Tomhn

Services

Tr~nspor1~11on
71

Autos for Sale

19 82 Subaru 4 WD wegon. VG
cond . 83.350. Call 614 -44.6·
4141
Mercedfll 1978 460SEL 4 -door
XX Sharp loaded will trade
1-814-886-7311 .
1973 Old1moblle Wagon &amp;
1975 Chevelle $300.00 each
Pll . 614-388· 9303
1967 Ctlwev Impale 391 -326
HP . red with black Interior .
fender skin , very good eondition
t1 ,900.00 Ph. 814 -245-9609.
1981 Buick Skylark, power
steering, brekn . air conditiOn.
front wheel . •drive, 4-cyNnder
13,250.00 Ph. 614 -387-7209.
_1978 MerCtJry CougarXR7, new
ti re~ , wire wheels, very good
condition $1 ,400 00 Ph . 614 446-0504.
1982 Ford Esoon. 4-speed , air,
wire rim•. new tires 81 ,999 .00
Johns Auto Sales Bullabil\e .
1974 Dodge · elec. Hits ex.
running oond. body great 1hape.
New battery, ju1t winterized.
AM -FM Cassette. •II new tires.
Asking 1600.00 will take gun on
l'lde . Can be seen enylime 11
536 Jackson pike Apt,
acron from Donnelli 't.
1959 Ford 4 - wheel , 1973
Chevy pickup, 1986 Honda CR
500 Ph. 614 -388-8368 .
1979 T-8ird. 77.000 miles, PS.
PB . AC, Cruiu, AM -FM
cassette. 11 ,900.00 Ph. 614 258·6267 alter 4p.m.
1978 Linooln Town Car, 51 ,000
mi .. new ires. like new . priced
resonable. Ph. 448-7904
1986 Silllflrado 4X4, 1owmiles,
excellent condition, loaded with
ex1r1s. Ph . 614-245-6138 efter
5p.m.
1973 pinto run1 good U75 .00
ph ."614 ·448-0183.
1973 Sedan DeVille 67,000
milel. new radi411s. many new
parts. VtfY good condition.
11 ,800.00 Ph . 814-448-0577 .

Home
1r1lprovements

I HAV£ 10 smRr
LOOKIIJG fOR AJre.. _

blackmails Torello's

In Stereo

1982 Chevrolet Imp .... 1982
CheYroltt C.prica. 304-6-751811,

.,

(!) D

CIJ Moonligh1ing
(CCI A stunned Maddie sets

out to investigate her own
mvstery when she learns
that Dav id was once mar·
(jJ MOVIE: "Rope·

RINGLES 'S SERVICE, expe- '
rienced carpenter\ ejectm:ian,
mason, painter, roofing !including ho t tar application} 30467\S -2088 or 875-7147 .

WHERE ARE: 'lUJ
GOING?GA.N I
GO WITH '\OJ 'f

IM NOr GOIN610 ~E

®1 111 (jj) MOVIE: "PenaltY
Phase' ICCI
lllJ Africans: Garden of
Eden in Decay ICCI A look

I WONDER Wf-+AW
CN TV:;l

ICE CR51v\'\ 6IDRE AND I
CON'T HD.YI= ANY lv\CNEY.

mto the problems that besets a coUntry wn ich prod·

Stark• Tree and Lawn Service.
Hedges , shrub• . bushe s
trimmed , lsnd1caping ond
stump remoYal . Leaf removal.
30.4-576-2010 or 676-2842.

uces · o ther countries ne cessities rather than its
own . (60 min.)

10:00 II CIJ@ 19B6 iCC! {60

Rolarv or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed samedav.
Pump alea and service. 304896 -3802
Athby Construction . c arpen·
lary, re modeling, room addition.
cemanl block work, roofing ,
in le1ior and eateJior pa inting ,
siding . Roofing. Free estimates
304-675-5445 or 675-5152 .

min.)

til

D Cil Jack and Mike
ICCI 160 min .l
Iii CIJ Odd Couple
lllJ llll News
10:20 (I) MOVIE: 'The Mal1ese
Falcon'

BARNEY

10:30 Cil Celebrity Chefs
PJ) (IJ INN Newt
CIJ Cinema Showcase
(jj) Gallery
t :00 U ill CIJ D CIJ ® Ill (jj) (j)
New•

-•• AN' THANKY
FORTH'

Plumbing
8o Heating

BODACIOUS
VITTLES WE
ARE ABOUT
TO RECEIVE··

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipoli s, Ohio
Phoml 614 ·446 -38B8 or 614 446 -4477

(Il Hardcastle and McCormick

(!) Bowling Green National
TraC1or Pulling Championship
PJl Cil M't\'S'H
[]) Coumry Express
(jj) Managing Our Mira·
clea: Health Care in Amer-

General Hauling

James Boys Water Servlcl! Also .
pools f•lled Call614 -256-1141
or 614· 446 -1175 o r 6 14 -446 7911 .

ica Panelists debate the
doctor -patient confidential·
itv in ch•ld abuse cases . (60

SNAKE!!
NOBOD'(!S

PERFECT

m in .)

llll The Honeymooners

NOBODY!:;

.

11 :30 ·U CIJ BaskatbaH: Yugoola·
· ·via at Kentucky I~ hrs.l
(!) SportsConter Live. •
CIJ WKRP in Cincinnati
Ill CIJ Taxi
0 Cil ABC Nawo Nlghtl,ine
CIJ Bluegrass Ramble
@ llll Magnum. P.l.
Gl (jj) Ho1 Shots When

1'HE WORL.D 15
FUL-L. OF FAL.SE

PERFE:CT
'

ANNOUNC~M~N1'S!:

Amanda and Jake invesligate 1he murder of a wealthy
s how manufacturer, they
lea rn ·that the 1prime suspect
suffers from total amnesia .

Colli , limes tone , gra vel, cle.
Delivered 1 ton and up . Jim
Lanier. 304-675-1247 or 675 ·
7397
11· 18

Coal and limesto ne delivery
servi ce , 304-675-3190.

170 min.)'
Oll.Tonigh1 Show Tonighr s

PEANUTS
\

71 Chrylllt N.wport. t300 .

1980 Plymouth Horizon TC3.
11 ,100.00. 304-4158· 115159.

rn 1oo c1~b

ned . (60 min .)

Watt,e rson 's Wat er H aulms;~ .
reasonable rates , immed ia'te
2 ,000 911llon delivery, CJstiJ rns.
pools. welt , etc c4111 304 5762919

1975 Plymoulh, 4 door. air ,
CNitt. PS . •PB. good cond,
1800.00, call 304-875-6303 .

best

w ith illegal loans. (60 min.)

1976 lincoln Mark 4 . On ly
64,000 miles. Good condition .
Firat t1750 takn it. Cell 614742 · 27&amp;3 .

304-17&amp;-2377.

Torello heats up his relationship with Inger while Luca

Feny Tree Trimming. stump
removal . Cttl 304-675-1331 .

Upholstery

•

..,..,.'T",.....,,...,...

..

s ws fi
I I 1 I
6

Billboard used by an edvanlslng agency: "We Tell Everybody

'

Your--...
Com plolo tho-h chuckle quotedd

by 1illir.g In I e missing wor s
L...-1.-.I......JL.....I..-1-....1 you develop from step No. 3 below.
_

.

·8

.

_

.

.

_

Pi INT NUM8EiED
LETTEiS IN SQUAIES

•

~ UNSCiAM8lE FOR

A &amp; M CtAstom Couche1 and
Reuphnl stery St . At . 7 Crown
City , Oh . 614 -258 -1470. e~,~o.
814 ·446-3438. Open dally 8 to
15, Sat. 9:30 to1 :30. Old &amp; new
Uphostered
·

guests em:t animal trainer Jim

A CODFISH MA'( LA'(
AS MAN'( AS NINE
MILLION E665

AT ONE

•

ANSWEi

YESIEIDAY'S SCIAJI.IETS AISWEIS
Gopher- Putty- Gauge- Tyrant- HAPPY
Cute sign In the window of a ne!!lhborl1ood fish market "Eat
Fish And Make A Cow HAPPY.'

BRIDGE ,,
James Jacoby

Struggling
in a 4-3 fit

.

NORTH

II·IW.

tAKH

•Qen

With a loa of bidding room, players
frequenUy Wid ill unusual contracts.
For tile intrepid declarer, such a con·
tract IJ a challenge tbat can often be
aU&lt;C Mly met See wbat bappened
In IAMiay's deal. Soutb was correct lo
double three diamoDdl for takeout but
was up oplnat it when North bid four
dlamoada, Oltellalbly askiDg llim to bid
a four-card major. Since he didn't
bave one, be bid 1111 thn!e-&lt;ard heart
suit - a reasonable choice.
The play bepn wltb West lescllng a
slnpeton club and getUng a ruff. Nell
came the kin&amp; of diamonds. Declarer

+Jill

::ro

EAST

, 10 8 1
.
t K Q J 10 7 1 3
• 2

+9843
.K7%
• $2

tAIOB

SOUTH

tJB2
fAJI

t A9 8

tKQ7 3

Vulnerable: Nortb-8oulh
J?ealer: West
Wt~t

Nortll

~:.
woa and played a spade to dummy's Paa

Pass
It
' Pass

kin&amp; and a heart to bls jack. Even
tbou&amp;h tbat drew the eigbt from West,

Eul
Pass
Pass
Pass

+

Opening lead: z
declarer sUII persllted with the ace of
bearla. The contract sun could bave ' - - - - - - - - - - - '
been made, but declarer foolishly
played two bleb clubs, ending 1n dum· er can play a spade 1o dummy's ace
my and then played a low spade to- (dropplnc the queen), and tbeD back to
wUd biJ jack. That IIIII 1o West's biJ apade jack. Nell will come two
doubleton queen and declarer sun bad clubs, endJni In dummy, and tile ruff
to 1- 1 bear! iact another spade, so of tile lut spade with b1s amall bear!.
be wu doWII two
The queen and Dine of bearll, wblch
After playing
ace of hearts, de- are aUU fn dummy, must make one
clarer bu a rhance oaly if West holds trick. Tbat will be enough for game.
tile dCMibleton queen Of spades. Declar•
'lOll NEIIIPAPIRKIITIRPIIIIU. ..

the

!!16,,...,..,
b1 THOMAS JOSEPH
42 Sicilian
ACROSS
I Pirates'
city
hideaway 43 Five for5 German
DOWN
city
I Junto
9Seed
2 Univ. or

after his divorce from Julie ,

RON'S Tele~,r1s i on Service .
Haute calla on RCA. Quazar.
GE . Speeialing in Zenith . Call
304 -578 -2398 or 614 -446 2454.

87

!•

1

BLEMIR I
_I1--r,?rrl
"-lli'i.,..,-r,-1 O

B:30 CIJ D CIJ Growing Paint
' iCC)
9:00 II Cil@ Crime Story Soon

OVuq;xJALlFlE..D

fnend to supply the mob

Dillard's Water Dehvery Cis terrls, po ol &amp; well. Any hmf~ bu1
Sunday, 614-446 · 7404 .

1976llncoln Merk.IV. Yery good
oondition . Priced reuonably
304-876-5090.

11111

KREEWS

1

5

Mavericks (2 hrs ., 15 min.)

t-a'J
CCM€?

1979 Bonnevitle 4 doorA .T. AC:
AM -fM . 302 entrne, good tir11 ."
excellent conditiOn. Call 814·
982-7207.

1874 LTD Ford, 400 engine.
nrteds some work. As Is t200 .
1974 Ford F160. 351 engine.
e~ec . work vehicle with like new
aluni'"'m topper, need• •me
bOdy work. As Is 1995 . C1ll
614-742-274&amp;.

THE-Y SA'{ tM

W£ GOJ€.I&lt;!JMEIJT CMICE.l.LED
MY ~E!JT CHECKS

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair , parts, and supplies. Piclc
up snd delivery. Devil Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd . Call 614446-0294 .

85

WOIO

•

{60 min.)
llll MOVIE: "Blazing Soddies'
B:05 (!) NBA Basketball: Loa
Angeles lakers at Dallas

EEK &amp; MEEK

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifatime guaran tee. Local references furniahed.
frH altimates . Cell collect
1-614 -237-0488, day or night.
Rogers Basement
Wf!:UJrproofing .

82

I

hosts this look into space
and the possibility of inlel!igent life on other planets .

ttav for sale. t1 .00 per bale , Call
614 -949 ·2273 .

81

letten of , the
four scrambled words be- ,..,,..-·low to form four simple words.

men1s: Son of Football Follies

Stapleton's Cycle RebuJidab\e
cycl81 • parts. Call 614-4467414 after 5 p.m. on weekdays .

Large round bales of hay , t10
eech . Squire bales. 11 .25 eech .
Clll614· 446·10521ftor 5.

O Rearrange

ffi NFL" s Greatest Mo-

'86 Chii\IY 510 truck , 4 wheel
drive. 4 speed, $7 ,450 00 ,
~4- 675-6843 after 5:00.

76

~.

MacNeil-lehrer

@

1978 Dodge Power Wagon for
sale cell between 8-6p .m. 614·
388· 96e8 .

74

·PVIILII

Newshour

3150 engine and transmission , .
52 ,000 actual miles UOO .
::1)4-675-1852 .

ea.a

Spinet pieno for sale. hcellent
cotldition. $660 . Call 614-9926559.

17 "x44 " ~t81 "

qUipment

(!) Entertainment Tonight
Larry Hagman guest hosts a
special
five-part · series,
·'Great Cowboys: They
Went Thal· A -Way " a look
at the legendary · western
hero es of film and television

304-875-2107.

• 1950 Ford pidlup Fle1head six .,
CROss &amp; SONS
good cond. ' -t1;200.00 . 304u.s. 3 5 W111t, Jack"1bn, Ohio. 15715-8 123.
614-288-6451
-::
ManeyFerguson. NawHolland. 73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service. Over
40 uted tractort to "'0011 from
• cof11)1ete line of new &amp; used 1982 Subaru 4 WO wagon , VG
.. uipmtnt. Largest aelection In cond . $3,350. Call 614 ·4464141 .
S.E. Ohio .

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CF A Himalayan. Pars ian and
Siamne kittens . AKC Chow
puppiet. Call 614-446-3844
after 7PM.

Vltamaster eurciaa bicvcle and
OP Bodvtone Plus Multi Gym
Both brand new. Eltcellent con dition. Call 614·247-3896 .

Used Burnham 200 ,000 btu gas
furnac e with controls. Manford
Bl.,.sii\g , 304-675-2116 .

arm

E •

Concrete bloclls1111i:r:es yard or
delivery. Maaon sand Galllpolil
Block Co .. 123'12 Pine Sl ..
Gallipolis, Ohio Cttl 614-4482783 .
1 ------,----:~----:---:---Building Supplies
• Surplus-Closeouts-Buyouts
1 . Wood buming sheet rnetel
stoves similar to Franklin
Jl M'S FARM EOUIPM ENT
t59 .95 e1ch or 2 for 1100.00.
CENTER . SR 35 W. Gallipolis.
2 . Steel insulated prehung
Ohio . C.ll 614 · 446-9777, eve .
614·446-3692. Up front tuc door 's, no brick mold 19 .95 .
3. Interior prehung door' I ell
IOrs with w."an1y over 40 used
sizes and finishes &amp;29 .96 each .
bactor1, 1000 tools .
4 . 42 " Vanitywith (B I marble top
'149.96 each .
New 1nd used part• for Whites,
5. &amp;" by 20' White oomm~tclal
Ollv•s. M-M, Deutz tractor~ .
gutter S1 .00 per h .
Skiers Equipn-.n1 Co.. 3046 . 1 and2pcfiberglaatub'lllf1d
676-7421 .
showers white end co lo rs
$159.96 to $199 .95 .
lnternet10nal 1260 Grinder
7 . Prlflnished oak fkloring l4" T Miur . a,.c cond, 304-273·
4215 .
" 23A"W random length T.G.
Gunstalk and natural finish
S1 .76 .. . ft.
8 . 50% off V1nyl 1iding tr1m
62 Wanted to Buy
O.S . Corners e4 . 00 , Inside
Comers 83.00, 12 -J . Chane!
$150.00 (61 colors
9. W90d Roof Truta 20' to 20'
Now OOying shell com or ear
110.00 10 26 .00 .
•
com . Calllorlat•t quotes. River
10 Tempered lnaulated Glass City Farm Suppty, 1514-446Pantla . %" T K 32"W. x 76" H. 2985 .
$29 915 uch .
11 . Scrubbable prapaated ~,rinyle Want to bJy pickup load of corn,
wall co~,rering doublerolll8.99 . :IJ4-882· 3110.
12 . Insulated whhutormOOor's
1 1f4 T . ~~: 36 " W,.80 " H. ·R ag.
8129.95 Now U9 95 .
63
Livestock
13 4".S"MV2" R. Guard Foam
Board Foil Fece. e3 99pc.
14. Decorator Wood P1nellng 3 CWartet" S1mmental Bull and
$6.59 Seconds S4.99
Hiefer ca\~,res . $360 each. 61415.Keyed or Bed IRl Locks
943-5253 Gayle Price.
e3 99 each
16 5pc. Hight Glon tub waU kils
6 year old Quaner Horse.
with shelvu S29 .96 .
gelding, has been tllown 4-H,
PENN'S WAREHOUSE
$660 .00 firm. 304-676 -8799
Wtlltton. Oh~
· after 5:30.
61 4-384 · 3845
8Days8to6

Nice Electrical Guitar. e~~:cellent
qual ity, nic e condition,
1100 00 . Pl-1 . 614-446 · 7904

Black "After Six:· TUXE'oo with
t ~ils, cu mmerbund . shirt and he ,
IIZe 40 A, eac COnd, 304·676·
6211 .

F

·

C!l SportsCentar Live:

1

61

EVENING
U (l)CIJ DCIJ®J.(jj)(j)
Newa
Cil Big Valley
ffi Mazda Sportsl.ook
Jafferaons
(!) 3-2-1 . Contae1 iCC).
llll Secret City
llll Facta of Ufa
C!J Andy Griffith .
U {]J (j§) II!BC News
(!) NBA TOday
CIJ 0 CIJ ABC Nowa
PJl CIJ Hogan's Heroea
[]) Doc1or Who
lEI Ill (jj) CBS News
lllJ Body Electric
llll Good Times
(!) Safe at Home In Stereo.
U {]J PM Magazine
CIJ Hardcas11e and McCor·

~@R4U~-~£~S"
- - - - - - ldltod
CU.Y I . POLLAN
1111.1 lAilY

- 7

mm

'

tr· rr

Firawood. Saaaoned hardwood,
split and delivered $40 . Ex -large
P.U load . 614 -992· 3110.

Bu tinell or Office Space for
rent. New Haven . 304-7736024 or 304· 882·3267.

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Oli ve St .. Gallipolia. New &amp; used
wood -coal stoves, 6 pc wood LA
euite 1399, bunk beds $199 ,
antron recliners 199, new &amp;
ut~ bedroom su1tes. ranges.
wr.,ger washera. &amp; shoes. New
livingroom suit" S199-1699,
lamps, alto buying coal &amp; wood
Jtoves. Call 814-448-3159 .

L l~

'815 Chevy S -10, 4 cyl. 4 speed .
AM-FM c:aaaette, 26 .000 miles.
304-882-3487 .

AKC Reg . Oobermen puppMts, 8
weeks old, eacellenl pedigree .
$160 .00 Ptl . 614-266-6403.

51 Household Goods

LC01'5~A

c.u

Firewood. dry hardwood. split.
stacked. dell\'tred . $36 .00 a
large loKI Ph. 614-446· 7993 .

Merchandise

,.

Il

AKC registerftd female Germen
Shepherd puppy . champion
bloodlines. shots given Ph 614448-4211 tfter 4p.m.

6

...ll1AT llllll'&lt;:&gt;

1976 ~MC l,i ton, 364 1n9lne.
Also 1974 Prowler Camper. air.
TV ·a ntenna . Sleep• 6. Self
contained Call 814 -742-2577.

I !,

PiStoi 1Smith &amp; Wesson, model
586, nickel, 6 -1nch . brand new
shoulder harn ess $300.00 Ph .
614-367-7690

Mobil home loll. small child ren
accepted. Rt. 1, Locutt Road.
Mobil home lott . Ohio River
;g:~ a;:. ~d~:rs Creek Rou1 8 1.

.Television
Viewing

1986 Ford Ranger in good
condition. asa~me loen, Ph,.
&amp;14-21&amp;-11887 .

1 bedroom apt. in Middleport
All utilities paid . &amp;2 10 per
month. $100 deposit. 614 -9928811 deys. 614-992-8763 ev·
enlng1 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy.
Large loll. Ca11614-992-7479 .

BORN LOSER

Trucks for Sale

1978 Ford F-160 custom, 8
cylinder, 361 engine. crew eab .
air. AM·F M Rldlo . cap with boat
tack built to puH treilor. Ph .
1514-448 -9849 .

2 bedroom, furnished, new
carpet. 8225 . per month . Oap·
osit and retererce required .
Glenn Bissel\614-949-2801 .

polil. e115 Utilities pd . Share
bath . Singl e male. Call 4464418 alter 7pm.

72

The Daily Sentinei-P

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

1986 8 ·10 buck bad and 2.8
V· 8 moter, other pans call
814·251· 6439

Rem ington 1100. 20 sage.
skaot barred. vent rib, $300.00
firm. Ph. 614 -245-5697 after
5p.m.

2 bedroom treilet locatlild at
Bidwell caH &amp;14-446-9889

•

4 Poster bed with box springs
and mattrelt. e~tcellent condi·
tion also antiques call 614-446- ·
1617 or evenngs 614 -2469372 .

Nice large 2 bedrooms, Main st.
Cheshire. clean, furnished , wa ·
ter paid noo.oo mo. Ph.
614-246-6818 .

3 room apt . lor rent. Call
814 -992 -5434 or 304-8822666 .

Tuesday, November 18, 1986

GMC 3110 . AT, PS gOod
APPLIANCES~~~~·~-~-~~~·~~~===~=~~~~;::~::~::::~ '16
peint, cemper top, make offer,

Washers
dryers, refrigeratOrs,
GOOD •.USED
rangas . Skaggs Appliances,
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
c.. ot Motel &amp;14· 448-7398.

26 inch color TV. 304-6752816 .

42 Mobile Homes

2 bdr .. all utilities paid except
elec .. fum . or unfurn .. sec.
depol!it requ ired . Convenient
location. Call 614-448 -8658 or
814-448 -4778

Used Fumituie: Washer &amp;.
dryer , gas range . wood table &amp;
2 benches, beds, dresaer. wood
wardrobe. 3 miles rut
Bula~,rille Rd . Open SAM to
5PM. Mon. thruSat.
614 -446-0322.

Washer and dryer, 1160 Up right freezer, &amp;126 . Gas drver,
$125 . Call614-742 -2362

New one bedroom apt . in
Middleport. Call614-992-6304
or 6 1 4 · 446 ~ 1652 after 6 :00
p.m,

-·

1976 3 q..~erterton ford piCk-up ,
V-8 · a~tomadc $600.00 Ph .
614-388-9303

Sofas and chairs priced lrom
$396 to t996. Tables $60 and
up to S126 . Hlda-a-beds $390
to $695 Reclin•s t226 to
1375. i.a mpl '28 to e125.
Dinettes $109 and up to 1495.
Wood table w-6 dullr• 1285 to
t791S Desk t 100 up to *375.
Hutches t400 and up . Bunk
beds CO'J'l lele w - ma"resse~
$295 and up to $395. Baby beds
$110 &amp; 1175. Mattresses or I:Dx
springs full or twin eel. firm
173, and &amp;83. Oueen~ets U25,
King $360 . 4 drawer d'l ..t 165 .
Dreners 889, Gun ciibklets 8.
10. &amp; 12 gun. Gas or electric
range 8375 Baby mattreuas
$36 &amp; $46 . Bed frames 120,
$30 &amp; King frame $60. Good
selection of bedroom a~ ites,
metal cabinet•. heldboardl $30
and up to S66.

1 Bedroom, utilities paid, partly
furnished, ned door to Rio
Grande College Ph . 614·446 1323 or 614-246·9170.

3 rooms furniShed upstairs 94
Locust St. S200.00 month
$60.00 deposil , utilitie&amp;paid. Ph
614-446- 1340 or 614 -446 3870.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®br Llrrr Wright

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

China buffet · solid wood, fruit wood finish . 7A"K62"M 18 .
&amp;276 . Ca\1614-446-1038 .

46 Space for Rent
for Rent

51 Household Goods

2 bdr. newly redecorated , all
utilitias paid , near McDonalda.
Ca\1614 -446-7025.

Furnished Apt . for rent. 1 or 2
adults only Water and trash
pick-up included.
You pay
electric, e200 .00 per month
plus security deposit. Call 614448-8296 after lS:30.

'

Tuesday, November 18, 1986

Pomeroy-Middlej:Jort, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Wanted To Buy

'

coating

10 Virtuous
II - beer
12 NJ. city
14 Emmet
U Embrace

Maine site

3 W.W.II
backyard
planting
4 w 1·
,.,
ap li
15 vardening 30 I.Q. club
5 Overfill
need
32 Choice
16 Buddhist 6 Memorable21 English
seat
deity
years
river
location
17 Card game 7 Ronald
22 Doll
33 Wyoming
18 Wallet bill
Colman
23 Roman
mountain
19 Y?u. can
Him
ruler
ran~e
d1g It
, 8 Neighbor 24 Foo1 lever 38 Author
20 c ogege
of Lihya 27 Amalgamate Fleming
m ~egon 10 Heap
28 Summer
39 Feather
22 Mus 1 tm
13 All
arf
Lille
sc
23 River
in Hades

25~,~~a~~~eio·nt=t=t=t:

26
27 Arizona
city

29 Grassland
30 Chanced
upon ·
31liili animal
34 Malay
gibbon
35 Before
36 Contend
371'otaling
39 "- Foot
Forward"
40Tenancy

contract
41 Norwegian
seaport
DAJI:oVCRVPTOQUOTES-Htre's bow lowork It:

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands for anolher. In this sample A is used
for lhe three L's, X for lhe two O's, elc. Single letters,
apostrophes, lhe length and fonnation of lhe words are all
hinls. Each day lhe code letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTE

11-18

cy

UEUIJRPU

UEUIJRPU

L PUN

M0 CZ

NA 0 K

OVRGK

•·
U E U I J .R P U
M T U 0 L

PR

K R

RPU

NRGQZ

OP.IRP U

X .
WOVI CU (,!
AUPHKOGF
Yeoterday'a Cr)'J&gt;toquote: LOVE IS 1l1E MUST FIJN
YOU CAN HAVE WITHOUT LAUGHING. - ANONYMOUS

'

L
t'

f
•

Fowler and actor Stephen

NO, CONRAil.. IT
DOESN'T SA'( W~O

Lang. (60 min.) In Stereo.
12:00 (I) Bum&amp; 8t Allen

COUNTED THEM

(!)NFL Filma Presents{RI.
CIJ JeffOIOOnS
&amp;I CD Rowhide
D Cil Taleo of 1he Unex!"'clod
CIJ SClV
12:26 (I) MOVIE: 'Flowing Gold"
12:30 I]) B01t of Groucho
(!) Top Rank. aoxlng from

TIME ''

Mowr ey's Upholstering sar~ring
trl county area 21 yeart, Th 1 best
in turn ilura uphol s tering. Call
304 · 676 · 4154 for free
ntimate1 .

•

lao Vegas. NV {90 min .)
{R)

Cll ABC Newo Nightllne
D CIJ More Reel People
®J Banecek
illl MOVIE: 'Dooporate ·
Journey•
(j) late Night wi1h David
Letterm1111
Tonight's

guests are Ann M•ller. Jeff
Altman and JBZZ singer Phyl·
lis Hvman, {60 1 m in .) In
Ste reo .

·

12:40 Gl ill MOVIE: "Heartbreaker'

1 :00 (I) Jack Benny
(!) Dick Cavett
Ill CIJ Wild, Wild West

'

''

''•
'
I•

,•.
••

�.'

'Page- S-The Daily Sentinel

,
T~esday. November 18, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,......._-LOcal -briefs--....,

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM ESTtt-19-86

Meigs County. agent:~ corner

..

•

Mailing lists being_updated

. :;quads get four calls Monday

How to tell
.

•
pneumonia
from a ·cold

Mei\(s County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Monday; Middleport at 8:52 a.m. to Noble Summit Road for
Nora Cambron to Holzer Medical Center: Rutland at 9:21a .m. ·
to Main St.: for Julla Stewart to Veterans Memo.rial Hospital;
Po~eroy at 3:03p.m. transported Christy Pullins from an auto .
acctdent at the intersection of Court and Main Sts. to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 9:18p.m. to Route 7 for Bob
Halley to Holzer Medical Center.

direct costs. We've assumed a
By Jolm C. Ric~
140bushel yield, 125 bushel pay
County Extension Agent
ylelq, aQd $155 per acre In dlrecl
Agriculture
The fOllowing is an excerpt costs. Using that same example,
from Doane's regarding 1987 the paid diversion opllon will
participation In the grain result In a $195 per base actl&gt;
program.
·
return over direc t costs.
There are a couple advantages
Participation in the basic
acreage reduction programs will for elecllng the optional paid
LOWEST
0 VEC sets safety record
be essential for 1987 crops. As diversion, even though economl.c
TEMPERAJURES
tO
10
was the case this year, benefits to returns are very similar. Most
It has be~n annou need by R. H. Blowers, Jr., plant manager of
participants
wlll- far outweigh importantly, diversion lncorne
3(1
the Ohio Valley Electric Corporation's Kyger Creek Station,
likely· returns : to, fu il production. wlU be received earlier than
,that a record of one-year without a dlsabllnginj~rywas reac.hed
so.....:-.H~--,~;;:::;:: ~?"so
This Is true for · all major either· deficiency payments or
at midnight, Oct. 26, 1986. This record involved approximately
program crops. ·
crop income. The time value of
65_4.400 hours of work by the 334 employes of Kyger Creek
Corn -You must go with the money argues for the diversion.
wtthout a lost-time acciden t.
basic unpaid acreage reduction This will be particularly lmpor;
UPI WEATHER FOTOCAS T '"'
program, which . means idllng tant if cash flow Is a problem:
D'ii- of your acreage in the The optional 15% paid diversion
WEATHER MAP - Rain and strong winds will e likely across
Acreage
Conservation Reserve will reduce the total production
the
l'acilic
Northwest
and
parts
of
the
norther
Intermountain
Cited after auto accident
(ACR). If you remain om of the cost outlay, as well : Paid diver:
region. Snow will he scattered over mrthern portlo111 of the
program, you 'II need a market sian will also reduce risk a!ld
Rockies and Plains and from the Great Lakes Into weslernsectlor~~
Christine Pullins. 27. Middleport, was cited f~r failure to yield
price
of about $2.ID ·per bushel. stabilize returns by lessening
of New England. Ralnshowers will occur from tt.e southern hill! of
right of way in an accident which oc.curred at 2:59p.m . Monday
Assuming corn prices wUJ re- your dependence upon Mathe~
California across Arizona and from the central Gull Coast stateS
at the intersection of Main and Court in Pomeroy.
main at or )lelow the $1.82 CCC Nature. Half the diversion payacross
much
of
the
southern
and
centra,!
Atlantic
Cout
stales
and
Pomeroy Police reported that Pullins, traveling east on Main,
loan rate, returns to the basic ment will be In PIK certificates·,
the
upper
Ohio
Valley.
Rainshowers
wUI
be
widely
scattered
over
was making a left hand turn onto Court. She turned into the path
program will exceed full produc- Certificate premiums mean ··.a
the southern and central Rockies.
of a car traveling west on Main driven by Rodney Ferguson, 32.
tion by at least $100 per acre In slightly higher payment rate
. Flatwoods Road. Pomeroy. There was moderate damage to
-most cases.
than the $2 per bushel base rate.
both vehicles. Pulllns was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
The major decision Is whether So there are reasons to elect ti)e
for trea tment of minor injuries by the Pomeroy unit of the Meigs
to participate In the voluntary additional 15'ii diversion if the
County Emergency Medical Service.
15% paid diversion. The optional arithmetic Is close. ·'
15% Paid Land Diversion (PLD)
Projected corn and soybean
is a tossup for the typical Corn yields are at record levels
Belt producer. According to our despite an exceptionally wet
Board discussess project
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (UPil Lakefront residents near Ro- - analysis, the basic program will
Midwest harvest and a hot. dry
Great Lakes water levels are at chester are particularily fright- return about $198 per acre over summer in the Southeast
The proposed asbestos removal project in the Southern Local
their highest in years, prompting . ened about the prospect of spring
School Dist rict was discussed with Frant.,J.ee, Marietta
officials to dole out free sandbags flooding. The area suffered mllarchitect. at Monday night's meeting of the Southern Local
to lakeshore property owners
School Board.
and update · flood evacuation ~~~~a~~do~ar(e:i:r~ag;;dnds~~!
~ Th e work will be primarily in the high school and the Portland
plans . officials said Monday.
disaster area alter being
Elementary School and arrangements were made to begin
With the level of Lake Ontario, pounded by a storm on St.
Henry Hunter ,· Meigs County Mulberry Heights. State Repreadvert ising for bids. Squire, Sanders and Dempsey were hired
the last link In the chain of five Patrick's Day in 1973.
Democratic Chairman, announ- sentative Joiynn Boster a'\d
to do the legal work on the project which Is.expected to begin
freshwater lakes, ar :M5.75 inches
The November before the ces that the Democratic Execu - State Senator-elect Jan Michal
right after the closing of school in the spring. It was noted that
above sea level, federal and local storm. the lake water level was tive Committee will host a Long will be on hand for tne
about two months will be required to complete.the work.
officials warn the potential for 242 .4 inches - more than three post-election potluck dinner . 6 get-together. The public Is in- '
Fern Grimm . Franklin Petrie, and Mark E. Null were
serious flooding is real.
Inches below the current level, p.m .. Thu'rsday, at the Meigs vited to·attend.
employed as substitute teachers, Tessie Evans as a substitute
· "There are a Jot of property ·said Ralph Bates, dir~tor of County Senior Citizens Center on
cook, and Arnold L. Yarrington a.s a substitute custodian.
owners to protect," Thomas
The board voted to advertise for a pickup for use at the bus
Yonker, town supervisor in Monroe
emergency
preparedness 'in ~p~;!~~;!~;;;;!!~!!!!~~;;;~~~~~~,
County.
ga rage. Discussed was the possibility of printing and mailing
Parma, said. Parma is on the
"If we have a severe winter
out to residents of the district a copy of the annual progress
Lake Ontario shoreline west of and a great deal of snowfall and a
-report. Cost would be approximately $750.
Rochester.
lot of rain, conditions are going to
Attending the meeting were Don Smith, president; Joseph
Monroe County and five be ripe for some potential disasThoren , vice president, Denny Evans, Scott Wolfe, board
Rochester-area communities ter along Lake Ontario," Monroe
members: Bobby · Ord , superintendnet, and Dennie Hill ,
along Lake Ontario are partici- County Executive Luden Morin
clerk-treasure r.
pating in a $16 million federal said at a news conference Monprogram to minimize property day. "It is Imperative that our
damage in the coming months. community prepare l.tself."
Towns in Chautauqua and Erie
Among the preparations are
counties on Lake Erie are also the updating of a plan to use
taking part.
public transit buses to transport
Can't wait ~o get you started in one of our
Burial. was In Beale Chapel
Similar programs are under residents from flooded homes to
many job skill training programs such as:
Cemetery, Apple Grove.
way along lakes Michigan, Su- Red Cross shelters, Bates said.
Contributions may be made to perior and Huron.
In Chaut~uqua County a major
ASSOCIATE DEGREE
DIPLOMA 'COURSES
the Childrens Hospital, 700 Child·
flood potential exists until Lake
•
Micro-Computer
•
Medical Office
rens Road, Columbus, Ohio .for
Erie freezes over. said Civil
• &amp;,.int~t~o Administrator
Secretary
the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.
Toledo man winner
Defense D.irector Wanda
• Executive Secretarial
• Jr. Accounting
Gustafson.
CLEVELAND (UPII - A
•
Accounting
• Secretarial
Under the federal self-help
Toledo-area carpenter won last program. the Army Corps of
· South Jjentral Ohio
week's Super Lotto jackpot of $5
Mostly cloudY. today, with million, state lottery officials Engineers will give sandbags
and plastic sheeting to towns !Or
highs In the mid 50s. Clearlqg said Monday.
protecting
lakeshore properties
"We Can't Wait Any Lon~rl"
tonight . with a low In the mid 30s.
Ohio lottery officials said Ro- from floods , said Capt. Michael
Partly cloudy Wednesday, with nald A. Stubleski, 43, of Berkey,
. Can You Afford To Wait.?"
Roemer, a Corps spokesman
highs in the upper 40s.
purchaSed his ticket at a conven- from Buffalo. Homeowners .will
;I'he probability of precipita- Ience store near his home.
Come In and Apply Early F9r Financial Aid.
get the supplies from the towns
tion is 50 percent today and near
Stubleslii, who is married and free of charge.
Find Out What You Qualify For But Don't Wait!
zero tonight and Saturday.
has three children, will receive
Applications
for
the
sandbags
Winds will be light and from $200,000, after taxes each year
and plastic should be available
the east today and from the for the next 20 years.
O.I.G. (Ohio Instructional Grant!
by Dec. 1, Roemer said.
northeast at five to 10 mph
The winning' numbers in the
tonight.
Extended Deadline' 11-28-86
game were: 21 , 31 , 32. 39. 41 and
42 .
LEONi\ KOHL
AICS ACCREDITAnON
REG. NO. 1055 B
Weekend revival set
In thp same game, 96 players
chose fiye of the numbers to win
Leona K. Kohl
Hazel Community Church, on $787 each. Also.- 4,990 players
Leona K. Koh l , ~- of Grant St., Route 124 between Long Bottom selected four of the numbers,
Middleport. died Sunday morn- and Portland, will have a wee- winning $58 apiece.
I
~
I
ing at the Pomeroy Health Care kend revival Friday, Saturday
Lottery officials said this WedCenter.
and Sunday with Homer Stevens nesda y's Super Lott.o jackpot will
Born Nov . o, 1906 In Pomeroy, as speaker. Special singing will be $5 million.
she was a daughter of the late be featured each night at the
Arldy and Maude White KohL A services which begin at 7:30p.m.
businesswoman, she owned and Pastor Edsel Hart invites the
Louery numbers
operated Becky's Baby Shop in public to attend.
Middleport for a number of
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monyears; and was employed at
day's winning Ohio Lottery
various times by local newspap- To end maniages
numbers with ticket sales and
ers. The Democrat. The Tribune
payouts:
and The Athens Messenger.
Christopher Paul Haye, RuDaily Number
Survivors include cous ins, tland, and Harriet Sharon Haye,
218.
Mrs. Kermit (Ruth ) MrE iroy, Rutland, have filed for a dissolu Ticket sales totaled $1,210,404,
Syracuse, and Jack and Joe tion of marriage in Meigs County with a payoff due of$1 ,029,732.50.
Mcbonaid. Ma rysv ille.
Common Pleas Court.
PICK-4
In addition to her parent s, she
Granted a dissolution of mar5076.
was preceded in death by one riage were Karen Lynn Haines
PlCK-4 ticket sales totaled
· brother, Arthur Merle Kohl.
and Dana Eugene Haines.
$173,176, with a payoff due of ·
Services wi ll be II a.m. WedGranted a divorce was James $78,007.
nesday at Ewing Funeral Home Michael Bentz Jr. from Sue Ellen
P!CK -4 Sl straight bet pays
wit h Rev. James Corbitt officiat- Bentz, on -grounds of gross $7,656.
PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
ing. Burial will be in Beech Grove neglect of duty. The defendant $319.
Cemetery. Friends ma y call at was restored by the court to her
the funer al home anytime.
former name Donahue.
w·

Great Lakes area
preparing for floods

Committee will host post-election dinner

llfiRRY!

HURRY!

HURR\' :

SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS COLLEGE

Area deaths

529 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis

Weather

CAll TODAY 446-4367

.

------------------------------------,

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.HURR\'! I

I

Plaee vour I
d
I
a vertising .1
message in 1
our I

1
1
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r;;:::::=:-::;;iiiRiiiiii..-11

Aimee Williamson
Services were held Mondav for
Aimee Lynn Williamson of· 54
Kittle St .. Williamstown, who
died Friday at Childrens Hos pital. Columbus.
She was bQrn lit Beckley to the
daughter of Ney R. Williamson
Jr. of Parkers burg. and Virginia
Aten Williamson of Williamstown. She was a member of the
Cross Lanes United Methodist
Church, a cheerleader, a girl
scout. a member of the school
chOir and softball team.
Surviving are two sis ters.
Suza n Renee Williamson and
Sherry Ma rie Williamson; maternal grandmother Virginia Aten
of Gallipolis Ferry; paternal
grandparents Ney R. Williamson
Sr. and Sylvia Eckard Williamson of Southside; several aunts,
uncles aryd cousins in Mason
County .
She was preceded in death by
her grandfat her Edward Aten .
The Rev. Earl Perkins officated the memorial service.

II

•

Granted license
A marriage license has been
Issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Robert Eugene Ball , 28,
Gallipolis, and T~mmy Lou
McDaniel , 24, Middleport.

Finn granted sum
City Loan and Savings Co. has
been gra nted a judgment of
$4542.37 in Meigs County Common Pleas Court from Keith
Cleland.
In other court matters_, an
appeal has been filed in the case
of Charles F. Sargent, Coolville,
against the Board of Orange
Township, Coolville.

Plan spticial meeting
. Shade ·River Lodge No. 453,
Chester, .will hold a special
meeting Thursday, 7:30p.m., to
work in the E.A. degree.

II

t

r1stmas

II

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I

.. ".,..... I GIFT GUIDE EDITION -~
-,... tllld ....., ...
...... will jiiGI:,:~....
01111111 - · ·
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214 EAST lAIN
'OlE ROY
992·6687
•

StvteAvte
lr--.ce
cI Fl lrr

1 Wednesday~ November ~6th 1

·I

COPY DEADUNE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 21st

·.!

Call THE· DAILY SENnNEL 992-215 6

,

j .and ask for display advertising

I

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L....................~••••••••~••••••

Ohio Lottery

.

.

Daily Number

991

'

PICK-4
2386

-Page 11
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Cloudy tonight, wllh a
chance of rain and a low
belw~n 35 an'd 40. Windy,
Thursday, with occasional
rain and higlw near 50. The
probability of precipitation Is
40 percent tonight and 10

•

enttne
Vol,36, N.o.139

2

Sections, 16 Pagoo

25

Cents

.~co;p:y;rig~~~~~19~8=6~--~~--~------~-.---------~·P.o~rn~e~:o:y~~M~id_d_l_e~p-o_rt~,~O-h•i~o~.-VV_e~d~n~e~s~d~a~y~,~N~o~v~e~rn~be~r·~1~9~.~1~9~8~6~-:~--~----------~:A:M~u~k~im:•:m~·~tn~c.;N~aw~s~~~·;;; •

Board a~cepts Chancey resignation
'

By BOB HOEFLICH
Bob Barton stated that the rest of
Sent In til Staff Writer .
the board felt the same way .
The resignation of charles
Move to borrow
C)1ancey as -head football coach
In another action, thi&gt; board
of the Meigs Local School Dis- passed a resolution requuesting
trict was accepted with regret that the State Department of
when the Meigs Local Board of Education authorize the district
Education. met In regu tar session to borrow $177,075 on the second
Tuesday night. ·
half of 1988 personal tangible tax.
· The resignation of Chancey money.
the on_Jy football coach the
Morris reported that the dlsdistrict has had since Its forma· ·trlct needs the amouunt in the
lion in 1967 - Is effective at the general fund to meet obligations
end of his current supplemental lor the 1986-87 school year. Board
contract.
member Larry Rupe voted no on
Chancey has just completed a the · resolution while the other
champions l!lp season. The popu- four m.e mbers, Richard
lar ·coach was at the Pomeroy Vaughan, Barton. Powell and
High School from , 1961-64 and ' Robert Snowden voted · In
then coached at Marshall Univer- approval.
The board also ·authorized
sity be~ore ret~rnlng, to Meigs
County to becometheMeigs High Morris to request the Oifice of
football mentor. The resignation School .Management .Assistance
does not affect his remaining ot the Ohio Department of
status In the district as a teacher. Education to conduct a financial
Board member Larry Powell analysis and a staffing analysis
last night commented that he wh.hln the district.
was accepting the resignation
A freshman cheerleading
with rel(l'et and board member squad was established for all

home and tournament games
and It was agreed to hire an
advIsor lor the group.
Motion falls
Amotion by Rupe to establish a
second junior high girls basketball team and hire a coach for the
new gro\lp failed by a 3-2 vote
with Barton voting In favor of the
action, while Powell, Vaughan
and Snowden v'oted against' it.
The discussion brought out that
the formation of a second team
would create additional expense ·
not only In hiring a coach but the
expenses involved in travel.
Snowden reprimanded Rupe
'for not checking with thesuperlntendent -on the feasibility of
forming a second junior high
girls team and for recruiting a
coach when the pas It ion would
have to be posted In accordance
with the negotiated agreement.
Rupe said that he was. not
concerned with who would coach
the new group but was concerned
because four of the 24girls out for
the one team'had to be cut to trim

down the team roster and It had
been Indicated that the four girls
do have athletic ability.
Resignations accepted
' The board accepted the resignations of Naomi Floyd Miller as
a bus driver as of Nov. 4 and
Jenny L. Manuel as a substitute
teacher as of Oct. 26. Ronald
Jutton, Mark E. Null and Franklin Petrie Jr., were added to 'the
substitute teacher list.
Treasurer Jane Fry was authorized to pay Molly Feesler the
stipend as per the negotiated
agreement for handling the as'
sistant girls'
vol,leyball .coaching
· reswnsiblllties for the current
school year. The name of Denise
WUiiams was removed from the
approved aide-librarians list and
her name was placed on the
approved Jist of secretaries.
The board appointed Ben H.
Ewing ·to serve as a noncertificated volunteer 'to assist
Rick Ash with the Meigs Junior
High girls' basketball program
lor the current school year.

Ewing will serve as an unpaid
volunteer and niust possess valid
current CPR and sports medicine certifications.
Professional leaves
Given professional leaves were
Gordon Fisher to serve on the
North Central Evaluation Team
for Alexander High School; Dana
Kessinger to serve on the North
Central Evaluation Team for
Ripley High School: Jeannie
Taylor to attend a teen-age
Institute for the prevent ion of
alcqhol and other drug abuse;
Fts'her to attend the Ohio High
School Athletic Associ at ion
Board of Control meeting; Ron
Logan to attend the occupational
work experience fall ~dvisory
commit tee .meet in g.
Revisions were approved for
reimbursement In the travel
agreement between the board of
Ed Baer for transporting handicapped students to out-of-district
low incidence classes and the
board ,authorized transportation
for a student to and from the Ohio

Industry and on overzealous trial
attorneys.
The General Assembly has
been trying all year tocopewlth
complaints from businesses aocal governments about unavailable or unaffordable 'commercial
liability Insurance.
'!;he package, actopted In different form by the Senate and
House. encourages out-of-court
settlements and discourages
rrlvolous lawsuits and unrealistic damages awards. It also gives
the Ohio Department ot Insurance greater regulatory powers
and requires Insurance companies to disclose detailed financial
information, Including claims,
payouts and reserves.
"We want a bill that has
Insurance and tort reform as a
balance and at the same time,
allows plaintiffs to recover their
justified losses,'' said Hobson.
The Insurance portion of the
packagj&gt; had lieen agreed upon,
but Sen. H. Cooper Snyder,
R-Hlllsboro, a businessman and
one of the original Instigators of
changing the Civil recovery system, wanted a stronger tort
reform section.

Multiflora rose -cost-share
deadline slated by S WCD
·Friday is the fin~l day to sign up for cost-share on control of
multiflora rose, according to David Gloeckner, chairman !&gt;f the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District.
Eligibility requirements lor the program are: cooperation
'with the Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District;
willingness to follow a conservation plan for the llelds In which
the roses . are treated; attendance of a training session
sponsored by the Meigs SWCD and the Cooperative Extension
Service; appllcat19n of herbicides and treatment according to
recommendations by the e~tension ot!lce; maintenance of the
practice' for a minimum of two years following the Initial
treatment.
•'
To be eligible, you must have at least one equivalent acre of
multtnora rose In pastureland and surrounding areas.
Cost-share will be at a rate of $100 per equivalent acre with a
maximum ot$200 per landowner application.
The Cooperqtive Extension Service and Meigs SWCD will
conduct at least two training sessions on the selection and
application of control methods. The first meeting wUI be in
mid-December.
To sign up, stopbytheMeigs SWCDo!flceat 221 W. Second St. ,
Pomeroy, on the s~ond floor ol the Farmers Bank &amp; Savings
Co.

State School for the Blind for up
to 36 weekend trips for the
current school ,year.
Lice problem
Norma Torres. R.N., nursing
supPrvisor of the Meigs Couniy
Health Department, metwtththe
board to discuss the head lice
t Cant inued on Page 161

to face
·•
questions
tonight

WORTHWHILE PROJECT - "Coats lor kids" .
are bein1 collected at Pomeroy, Tuppers Plains
and Rutland Bank One locations, to be distributed
to needy Melp County schoolchildren. Left to
right holding coats are, Marlyn WllcoK, project
chairman and an employee of Bank One,
Pomeroy, and Shell a Rach, of Bank One, Tuppers
Plains. Ruth Graham, Bank One, Rutland, posts a

sign explaining just· what large boxes In the
lobbies-of the banks are lobe used lor.•WIIcoK says
that right now, smaller sizes, 10 through, H, are
needed. She reports that schools are now in the
process of determining how many coats may be
needed. The coats wUI be repaired and drycleaned before distribution.

Goodyear chief . calls for tak.eover laws
ByCHARLESJ.ABBOTT
UPI.MidwMt Corret~pondent
WASHINGTON (UP1) -Congress must take away someolthe
weapons of corporate ralpers,
congressmen said, slapping the
Reagan administration for a
do-nothing policy when firms like
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.
are under attack.
Goodyear chairman Robert
Mercer endorsed federal Jaws,
Including so-called economic lm· .
pact statements, to clamp down
on hostile takeovers Tuesday.

CHARLES CHANCEY

Reag~n

Vote slated today
on tax relief bill
COLUMBUS (UPD - State
lawmakers were to reconvene
today, hoping Io put the 1986
session behind them by the end of
the week wIth act ion on tax relief.
Insurance and clvll justice reform. and a high-s peed rail
financing plan.
Both t.he Senate and House
scheduled 1: .30 p.m. floor
sessions.
The House was to vote on a
cqntroversial $2 billion financing
plan Involving the saleoftax-free
bonds and the purchase of
higher-Interest treasury notes to
generate $100 million in the next
three years for development of
the high-speed rail network.
The Senate was to vote on a
pair of tax relief bills. One offers
an income tax credit of25percent
of the cost of day care lor
children or dependent adults in
families earning less than $30,000
a year. The other expands the
in~ome tax break for elderly,
low-income homeowners.
Legislators struggled Tuesday "
to assemble an acceptable package on clv II justice and Insurance
reform. f'! joint House-Senate
conference commlltee met
briefly and dealt with amendments to the civU justice portion
of the bill, but made little
progress.
Key lawmakers continued to
work in private 'with Interested
parties on the heavily-lobbied
package, Including representat tves of the manufacturers and
business community, the trial
lawyers. the Insurance companIes and agents, and consumer
groups.
"Our goal is to come out with a
balanced bill," said Sen. David
L. Hobson, R-Springfield, one of
the six conferees working on the
package, which attempts to
clamp down 'on the insurance .

,

Sen. Howard Melzen baum, D·
Ohio, said he will try to ban
"greenmail" and some "junk"
hand schemes used to finance
takeovers.
"This committee hearing Is the
first step In asking you for
protection from the free capital
market, " said British-French
Industrialist James Goldsmith.
"The appropriate response to
competition is to compete, not
seek art lflcial protection."
Goldsmith says he ,owns 11.5
percent of Goodyear and may·
offer $49 to buy more shares and
complete a takeover.
Goodyear, with headquarters
In A~ron and 100 plants around
the globe, has about 23 percent of
the world tire market, according
to one analyst. It has assets of
$4.6 billion.
Congressmen described corporaw- raiders as profit-seekers
who engage in "corporate stripmining" by selling off assets,
eliminating jobs and leaving
behind financially weakened
companies. The.takeover threat,
they said, wUJ force U.S. firms to
locus on short· term profits Instead of long - term
competitiveness.
"That's rot," Goldsmith responded and said spun-off firms
allen prosper.
Goldsmlt h said Goodyear
made bad investments in oil and
gas, losing $214 mllllon, and he
would concentrate on the tire·
business by "selling non-core
diversifications." Mercer said
the $2 billion In investments will

"The laws have to be changed
to eliminate this approach ·to
American Industry," Mercer. a
39-year Goodyear employee, said
after criticizing raiders.
Mercer recommended laws to
require "economic Impact statements" to list the Impact of a
purchase on workers, communitles and the economy. The
Securities and Exchange Commission should take Into account
the impact of a hostile takeover
when It reviews a bid, he said. He
also ,called for earlier and fuller
· disclosure of takeover plans and
said "It is reasonable" to require
anyone who buys 5 percent of a
company's stock to hold It for a
year before selling.
Goodyear has adopted its own
restructuring . plan to . repel
Goldsmith. ·, ,
"What we think we are going to
do is stop short of• suicide,"
Mercer said. "We're going to lose
the synergy we have had through
the years" with branches in
aerospace, energy and a Motor
Wheel division.
.
"The administration's 'hands
off' approach doesn't make
sense," said Metzenbaum, who
may get a key Senate Judiciary
subcommittee chairmanship.
"There are specific steps Congress can take early next year."
Metzenbaum "sald he wUI file
bills to "eliminate the worst

takeciverabuses,"'suchasgr ~n-

mall- forcing a company to buy
back Its stock at a high .prlce two-tier tender offers and some
kinds oi"Junk" bond plans.
"I hope the least we can do is
pay off and they have not
pass
legislation that requlj'es a
Interfered with Goodyear's Jeadlengthy
dela)' before things llk_e
er~hlp in the tire Industry.
·

WASHINGTON iUPil -President Reagan, pinned between
his secret deal with Iran and his
administration's credibility,
may face some' Iough questions
from those he blamed for "false
rumors .and erroneous reports"
concerning his actions.
Reagan scheduled a nationally
televised news conference today
at 8 p.m. EST - his eighth of the
year but his flrst .since Aug. 12and reporters were el'pected to·
locus on the Iranian deal exposed
publicly this month.
White House &amp;pokes man Larry.
SpeakeS said Reagan was preparing for t.he news con terence In"
his usual fashion.' though. and ·
had kept his calendar free today
with the exception of a regular
meeting wit.h Secretary of State
George Shultz.
Tuesday night , Rea~an addressed the lOth anniversary
dinner of the Ethics and Public
Policy Center. a conservative ·
research organization, and
avoided any mention of the
se~ret arms · deal with Iran
purportedly aimed at securing
the release of American hostages
being held by pro-Iranian groups ;
in Lebanon.
Reagan also did not mention :
the diplomatic and adminlstra- :
live flap over his clandestine •
approaches to I ran to improve :
relations that began 18 monltw :

'' this (a Goodyear takeov er) can
go thro)lgh." said Sen. John
Glenn, D-Ohi_o. who also mentioned the possibility of changing
tax laws to discourage
takeovers.
"It Is high time the government made this kind of activity
ill egal," said Rep. John Seibe- ago.
~
rUng. D-Ohio,' grandson ol GooDes pit c Democrat _ic charges of
dyear's founder.
disarray and dPception in h·is .
Three bus loads of Goodyear conduct of foreign policv, R~a- :
retirees ..:. nearly ali wearing gan told his audience hP hoped-"11 :
dark blue caps with the Goodyear wU! someday be said that one of··
logo - came from Akron to the enduring legacies of our •
attend the hearing. Goodyear· administration was that in th~se .
employs 12.000 people· In the years. America at last put in the •
Akron area.
past the divisions of more than a •
They applauded when Selbedecade ago and united in a new :
rllng, noting Goldsmith has little · blpartL,an consensus on foreign ~
experience in the tire industry , policy ."
said. "My question is , wbo the
' l;teag~n revealed some of the :
hell are you?" ·
'
details of the rovert I!'! it iat ivr in a:
"I am an active inVestor" who · televised address last week- to ·
wants top-notch management,
quell. he said. speculation and :
Goldsmith replied.
Inaccurate repOrts of paying :
Other congressmen suggested
weapons as ransom for hostages. •
congressional lnve5tlgatlon of
"So extensi1·e have been the :
hostUe takeovers or tougher
false rumors an&lt;1 . erronel)us :
action by regulatory agencies. reports that the risks of r·emalh- -:
Rep. Don Edwards, D-Callf.. said lng silent now exceed th£&gt; rtsi( of :
hew as concerned by complete speaking out, " he said,
:
dfsregard for the antitrust princlSen. Lowell Weicker, R-Conn., •
pies that have served this coun- told a news confetence Tuesdav :
try for 100 years."
that he llopes the Iran cont rov- :
Economist Murray Welden- ersy will prompt a public de- •
baum said Congress should be mand for greater accountability :
cautious - "Sensational cases
by the White House, which he :
make bad law."
said deceived the American ·
. Washington · lawyer ' A.A.
people al)d news media by failing ~
Sommer, familiar with merger
to be candid about Its policies. •
tactics. said American enterAn outraged Welcker sug- •
priSe "Is being driven by a
gested Reagan could not ade- ~
handful of opportunists into a quately reconcile the deals with
massive restructuring with conIran and previous statements ;
sequences that may be
against negot la'tlng with .,
disastrous."
terrorists.

"a

•

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