<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13241" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13241?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T05:40:12+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44213">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6f009357cee4f53644ba30426d938deb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>1282808a7d4c899d00d93d7bc6a72608</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41498">
                  <text>Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Steel strike enters 2nd week

•

BEECHBOTI'OM, W.Va. (UPII
Officials wouldn't say how many duled amid rumblings that stock·
- A strike against . the bankrupt strikers were arrested, but said they
holders might be hying to oust the
Wheellng-Pitlsburgh Steel Coil). allegedly violated a court order steelmaker's chairman.
over PI'O!X&gt;sed contract changes. allowing Wheeling-Pittsburgh ac·
Workers In Ohlo, .West Virginia,
already marred by a shooting cess to and from Its facilities.
and Penngylvanla struck the flrn'l ·
Incident at a West Virginia plant.
Among thOse arrested were Santo July 21 after the company vowed to
has entered its second month .
trim the wage and benefltcostsby$4
Santoro, president of USW Local
No one was Injured in the sniper 1190 at Steubenville, Ohio, and Pete
an )llur. A federal bankruptcy judge
Incident, but police officials ar· Petridas, president of USW Local
in Plttswrgh opened the door for
rested at least nine picketing 2256 1 Beech Bottom.
such action -by allowing Wheeling·
mem\Jers of the United Steel·
Wh&lt;'eling-Pittsburgh spokesman Pittsburgh Steel to abrograte Us
workers Union- including an Ohio Ken 1Maxcy refused to comment on
labor agreement with the USW to
official- after two shots were fired
the incidentsortoreveal the cargo of
better neorgan~ Jts debts.
Tuesday at a truck at the steelmak· the truck that was attempting to
Wheeling-Pittsburgh ftled for re·
er's Beech Bottom plant.
leave tbe plant.
organizational bankruptcy AprllJ6.
Witnesses said the s hots appeared
"At this point, neil her party has
More than 8,200 members of the
to have been fired from a hill USW launched a strike against the changed their position," sald Paul
overlooking the plant.
firrn a month ago. They rejected · Rusen, chairman o!USW District 23
Authorities said the incident came propoS&lt;'!! contract concessions the and head of the union's negotiating
shortly before 2 p.m: ,less than three · nation's seventh largest steelmakPr
te~m. "The only optimism ls that
hours after police arrested as many believes are needed to help It
there ls a very.strong movement by
as nine of about 150 striking union restructure a $514 million debt In a
the stockholders to unseat
members who tried to stop a truck Chapter 11 bankruptcy proceeding.
(Wheeling-Pittsburgh Chairman)
they assumed was loaded with
No negotiations have been sche- Dennis Carney."
equipment fro leaving the mill.

a

Divorces .~ought

Admissions--Nina Wagner, Mid·
dleport; Margaret Crane, Pcme·
roy; Truman Priddy, Rutland;
Helen Carper. Pomeroy; Gladys
Shumway. Long Bottom; Rose
Dearing, Middleport; Rosalie Pear·
son, Pomeroy; Dorothy J enkins.
Middleport.
blscharges .. Audrey Swett .
Sharon Smith, Char les Beegle.
Kermit McElroy. Geneva Conrad.

Divorce actions filed recently in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
include: Donna Lee Slaven, Middle·
port, against Gary Duane Slaven,
Four defendants forfeited bonds
Middleport , charging gross neglect and six others were fined In the court
of duty;' Eli72beth Sue McKnight, of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Pomeroy , against Nichola us J. ·.Tuesday night.
McKnight, Middleport, charging
Forleltlng were Rick A. Casey,
gross neglect of duty;; Monld L. Vinton, $40; Randall Whlted,
Good, Long Bottom, against Donna
VIenna, W. Va .. ·S42; Jerry Blair.
J. Good, Long Bottom, charging Racine, $41. all jxJsted on speeding
gross neglect of duty and extreme charges, and Altlna Crisp, Vinton.
cruelty; and I. Katherine Logan, $50, expired operator's license.
Pomeroy, against Dwight E. Logan,
Fined were Robert Parker. 24.
Pomeroy, charging gross neglect of Middleporl, $25, di sor derly
duty and extreme cruelty. A manner; Anna Bareswllt, Middle·
restraining order has been Issued by port, $25 and costs, disorderly
the court against Dwight E. Logan,
manner; Randy J. Lee, Middleport ,
pending final action in that case.
$10 and costs, illegal tags; Aaron
Hysell, Pomeroy, $42'; and costs,
driving while Intoxicated; •Tommy
Vellure, Pomeroy, $100and costs, :1! .
days probation, petty theft,andMax
Geary, Middleport , $100 and costs
each on two charges of disorderly
conduCt and~ ]Oday suspended jail
sentence.

Divort'e granted
A divorce has been granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
to Lillie Mae Adams, LMg Bottom.
from Clyde Ashley ,/\dams, Long
Bottom, on grounds of gross neglect
of duty.

Vol .35, No.91
Copy,lghtod 1985

To discuss party
A meeting to fuFlher plans for the
annual Middleport Block Party will
be held at 7:30 this evening In the
offices of Dr. Craig Mathews.

Couple wants
out of lease
Clarence E. Hill and Frances S.
HJll, Racine, have filed suit in Meigs
County Common · Plea&amp; Court to
cancel a lease with KaiserExplora·
lion and Mining Co., Ravenswood .
The plaintiffs a llege that terms of
the lease have not been fulfilled
since the defendant has failed to
develop production of ·e ither oil or
gas on the property located in Letart
Township.
An en! ry confirming sale has been
filed in a foreclosure aclion against
Jimmy Lambert. eta!. Rutland , by
Chemical Mortgage Co., Columbus.
The property. located in Rutland
Village, was sold to the plaintiff for
$1l,IXXl. A deficiency judgment of
$22,88().49 was awarded thrplaintiff.
The sale of property In Middleport
has been confirmed in a foreclosure
action filed by Diamond Savings
and Loan Co., Pomeroy. against
Kevin A. Dailey, et al, U.nc•aster.
The bank purchased I he pmperty in
Middleport Village for $8960. A
deficiency judgment of $71fMI.9owas
awarded the plaintiff in lht• matter.
Confiimation of the sa le of an
automobile has bN•n filrd in an

action against Gladys Sue Huddles·
ton, Minersville, by Michael C.
Huddleston, Pomeroy. A balance on
the lien of $2862.12 is to be paid the
Racine Home National Bank In
equal shares by the plaintiff and
defendant.
In other court bu siness, James
Conde and Rhonda Conde. Pome·
roy. have been di smissed as
plaintiffs in an action flied by the
Condes and State Farm Insurance
Co., Newark. against. Dark Dia·
mond Coal Coil) .. Abundant Life
Coal Corp. and Coal Power. Inc .. all
of Pomeroy .

CHARLESTON, W.Va-. IUPII.The license of an Ohio company that
supplied guards to strikebound coal
mines has been revoked by Secre·
tary of State Ken Heckhler.
Hechler said Southeastern Securt·
ties and Investigations of Marietta,
Ohio, has employed at, least six
convicted felons in Mingo County In
violation of West Virgin"ia law.
· Meanwhile, an attorney representing Southeastern says the company will appeal Hechler's decision
to Kanawha County Circuit Court
within 30 days.
The decision was prompted by a
complaint from the United Mine
Workers which Is on strike against
the A.T. Massey Coal Co, In Mingo
County where Southeastern has
more than 40 guards.
"Any outfit which hires more than
10 percent of its work force among
peop le with criminal records must
be either doing it deliberately or
gu Uty of gross negligence," Hechler
said.
He added Southeastern also
fumished false statement s a nd
infOJmation on its license appllca·
lion concerning the quallfica1 ions of

its

secretary-treasurer James

Four emergency runs
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Service reports four calls
Tuesday: Middleport at 1:01 a.m. to
974 Plum St. for Nina Wagner to
veterans Memorial Hospital; Mid·
dleport at 7:17a.m. toll!! Maple St.
for Lesley McDaniels to Holzer
Medical Center; RuUand at ll:5!!
a.m. to Bowles Rd. for Lois Cornell
to Vet erans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 2: l7 p.m . to Carpenter·
Dyesville Rd. for Robert Vogler to
O'Bienness ~emorial Hospital.

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy today and tonight,
with highs today in the mid 70s and a
low tonight between 55 and· 60.
Mostly sunny Thursday, with highs
between 75and 80.
Extended Forecast
. Friday through Sunday
Fulr Friday, wlth a chance of
showers and thunderslonns Saturday and Sunday. Highs will
from the upper 70s lo the middle liOs
each day, wlth overnight lows
ranging from the mld 50s to the mid

ran'"

Carr questions his accuser
During a pn'·lrial hearing Tues·
day morning in Kanawha County
Ci rculi Court, Point Pleasant osteopath David Carr questioned an
18-year-old Charleston woman he Is
accused-of' raping In August 1983.
C'arr is facing his second trial,
expected to begin Monday, and Is
acting a s his own lawyer. He was
preViously sentenced to a 60-year
p1ison term In a sexual assault ease
in Putnam County.

Carr is accused of raping the
Charleston woman on Aug. 8, 1983.

During testimony, the woman
said after she entered Carr's
automobile, he flashed a badge and
identified himself as a pollee officer
and told her shew as under arrestfor
prostitution. She said she was then
handcuffed and driven to 1\villght
Drive where she was sexually
assaulted.
Also, she tesmled Carr told her he
was David Grubb and a state
trooper. She added he pointed a gun
at her, s ide p~entlng her fmm
escaping.

HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS
-WE ARE NOW MAKING SEPTEMBER AND OCTOBER
At•POINTMENTS-

You'll like I he individualized attention you rect'ive when you
get your ~;enior portrait made at

THE PHOTO PLACE
-Ea c h pr&lt;:'vlew set Includes 10·12 different poses before tradi·
Ilona! nil backdrops and in attractive outdoor settings.
-We offer personalized wallets
-Our price s are reasonable
- Our full -color portraits hold a lifetime guaranteP

For An Appointment or More Information
Call After 6:00P.M. or Anytime on Weekends

The Photo Place
Bob &amp; Charlene Hoeflich

109

.

LOTI'ERY LINE - The ll"nlleman on llne is aJll
set with his LOTI'O selectloow, but the lady ln front of
him Is stW making her selections on 42nd Street
Tuesday. New Yorkers and ,Jerseyi!L'S and many

commuters from Connectreut were gripped wKh
W'ITO lever lor the $33.5 nplllon drawing tonight.
(UPI).

$41 million lottery attracts thousands
NEW YORK tUPll - They
walked, · took the bus, rode the
subway, and some even flew to New
York newsstands and candy stores
to buy tickets, and there were so
many of them that th&lt;&gt;y pushed the
lottery jackpot to a record $4.1
million.
Some took the day off from work,
dreaming they might never have to
work again.
Lotto m aniacs bought 18,900
1ieketsa minute Tuesday afternoon.
prompting one official to cry, "It's
going crazy a t the World Trade
Center." Thousands of office
workers at the two ll(J.story towers
walled hours for a chance to placP
their bets.
As ticket-buying reached fever
pitch, lottery officials decided to
shut clown early so their computers
could catch their breath.
"We want to be sure that we can
start sales a t the usual time in the
morning and the volume of sales
today wlll require extra time to
process," sa id Lotte1y Director
John Quinn.
"Our sales have been unbelieva ·
ble," he said. "The volume of tickets

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND tUPI) - Tues·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
·numbers: Dally Number
SG\,
Ticket sales totaled $1,035,105,
with a payoff dueof$317.910. PICK-4

mn.

PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$156,2ll, with a payoff dueof$'(0,3&amp;3.

indicates now that it will produce a

$41 mUllion jackpot, the largest yet
In North America," Quinn said.
The prl'Vlous record - a $40
million lottery- was won last y£&gt;ar
In Chicago.
Quinn said I icket sail's. halted an
hour early at 9::J(J p.m. Tuesday,
might bf• rut off earlier than the 8
p.m. Wednesday deadline "If tht'
system's rapacity to handle them is
reached before" then.
He said the odds of winning w!••·r 1
in 6 million .
"I can 't bother with thes&lt;' people
who keeping telling us thC' odds are
too much, '· said DaNella Va lasquez,
of Brooklyn, as she stood in line In
Manhattnn. "You don't win If you

don't get a ticket."
Mayor Edward Koch had hls
press aide stand In line to buy hlm a
ticket.
And New Yorkers were not the
only ones infected by Lotto fever.
' Loitery officials in Buffalo said
people were calling from Ohio,
Pennsylvania. and even Tennessee.
"People arl' flyin g In to place Iheir
lx'ts, and they want to know the
closest loH e1y offlc&lt;' or where they
can buy a lottery ticket at the
aill)Oii," Regional Lotto Director
Howal'tl Frankel said.
Michael Wittkowski, of Chicago,
holds the North American lottery
record with a $40 million win last
September.

•

Stvlettes
Twirling Corts

'

'
August
22. 1985

2 Sections. 16 Pqes

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

By Charlene HoeOich
Sentinel staff writer
Ready and walling for resldents .... that 's the
situation at "The Maples", Meigs County's $1.9
million elderly and handicapped housing complex on
Mulberry ijeights.
To date only 17 of the 45 apartments are occupied,
although Karen Matthews of Silverheels of Marietta,
the management agency, reports another half-dozen
are going through the appf(,val stages.
Rents In the complex are federally subsidized and
that means that "low Income" is the key for the
handicapped a nd persons over-62 to qualify. The
qualifying Income figure established by HUD which
provided lhe money for canst ruction of the complex,
Is $7,:1Xl from all sources - pensions, social security,
rentals. interest on money In 1he bank. etc.
Then :1! percent of the "adjusted gross Income" Is
the amount which the renter pays for the apartment.
To arrive at the "adjusted gross income" on which the
rent Is based, Mrs. Malthews says a $400 elderly
household allowance and a percentage of medical
expenses can be deducted. The rent figure Includes
utilities but not telephone service.
' Figures must be velifled to justify the portion of
taypayev monies which go to pick up the balance of
the rent and utility charges for the occupants.
.Evelyn Clark of Pomeroy has been hired as the
· bn:slte manager. She lives tn the complex and
manages the office which is located on the ground
floor In ·the new section. She has a pplications for
anyone interested In applying fo r an apartment. 11
takes up to three weeks to complete the Income
verlflcaiton and other qualifying proceedures, Mrs.
Matthews reports.

WASH!NG\ON t UP! I - Consu·
mer prices Inched up 0.2 percent In
July, the same as May and June. as
accelerating housing costs were
mostly bal anced by lower gasoline
a nd meat prices. the Labor Depa•1·
ment said today.
The mild upward movement of
the Consumer Price Index through
July of lhis year kept the annual
Inflation rate at just~-~ percent.
As the yea r progresses, the price
pet1ormance Is getti ng better, with
the most rec&lt;'nl three months
generating a 2.' percent Infla tion
rate. the best for any simila r period
In almost 2'h years .
The only big mover among th~
major categories was rent, up at an8
pen-ent annual rate in the most
recent three months, and0.6percent
In July. That factor alone accounted
for most of the July Increase.
Volatile vegeta ble prices bounced
up 65 perCPnt during the month but
overall food and beverage prices
were lifted only 0.1 percent, 1he

FALL CLASSES STARTING THURSDAY, SEPT. 5
REGISTER THURSDAY, AUG. 29
AT 5:30 OR CALL
304-675-1999
PEGGY GILLESPIE-INSTRUCTOR

From

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS
BREAKFASTBARFORTWO
ATSHONEY'S
DURING·THE MONTH OF AUGUST
THAT'S RIGHT ... with any windshield installed during the
month of August by our Mobile Service, or at ~ither of our
Three Convenient Locations, enjoy all the Breakfast Bar
you can eat on Point-Mason Auto Glass at y.our local
Shoney's
FREE!

'

One of the many advantages of the complex Is the
proximity to the Senior Citizens Center, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, and several doctor offices. Mrs.
Clark says most of the residents go to the Center at
noon where they can get a balanced meal for ·a
donation.
There are 11 efficiency apartments, 28one bedroom
apartments, five one bedroom handicapped equipped
apartments. and one handicapped equipped elf!·
clency apartment In the renovated former children's
home bulldlng and the new strucjure. Elevators,
wheel chair lifts, and ramps make It easy for the
handicapped and elderly to move freely all around the
bulldlngs.
Safety features Include tailings along the walls, 24
hour lighting In the halls, and emergency cords ln
'
each apartment which can be used to summon the
VACANCIES - Less than hall ol the apartments In
manager In the event of lllness or accident. The
Meigs County's new housing complex are CUITelltly
buildings, to comply -with safety codes, have smoke
occupied. Applications are available !rom Evelyn
detectors. fire alarms, and sprinkler systems, as well
as an emergen~y lighting system. Walls neartheexl.t s
are painted In darker shades of colors to harmonize
with the other walls but yet perrnlt residents to easily
Identify exits.
'
All of the outside doors are locked by the manager
at 8 p.m. and opened at 8 a.m.to keep non-residents
from wandering in and out. However, each resident
has a key and there Is no restrlcilon on when they may 1
have guests or come or go during the day or night.
The apartments are attractively decorated, fully
carpeted, have curtains at the windows, and are well
·~,.;-~:
/'t
lighted. Each has a new refrigerator, stove, exhaust
I
fan and garbage disposal. Window air conditioners
!
are to be added to each unlt .
·
(Continued on page 16)

same as June.
Tobacco prlcPS were among 1he
few remaining bad performers', up
1.6 percent.

Elsewhere, gasoli ne prices
dmpped 0.4 percent, helping the
major category covering all transportation costs to go down 0.2
percent.
Clothing costs also were down 0.2
pert'f'nl as end·of·the-season sales
on summer clothing cut prices more
than usual.
The Consumer Price Index was
319.11n July, equivalent to a cost of
~119.10 for goods and services that
cost $1001n 1%'7. Thedollarthatyear
Is now worth 31 cents.
Declines In beef and poultry
prices offset Increases for pork and
fish. Beef priees have gone down In
each of the first seven months and
are now 7.4 percent under their ll'Vel
In December.
The broadest Index of housing
eosts rose 0.3 percent, with the
Increase for rents offset largely by a
decline In furniture prices and a
slowdown In fuel and utllltles costs.
Elcctlicity cost O.b percent less In
July, making up for an Increase In
natural gas costs.
Medical care costs dropped 0.5
percent, a little less than the average
of 0.6 percent for the first half of the
year. The cost of hospital rooms

post~ an extremely rare decline of
0.4 percent.
The decline In gasoline prices
brought them 11.4 percent below
their peak In March 1981.
While new car prices went up
slightly, at the 0.2 percent average
so far In this model year, the cost of
financing a new or used ear dropped
0.9 percent.
That cost could keep declining
now that all the major automakers

ha ve announced clearance sale
financing niles for 1985 mode ls
through mid-October.
Telephone service kept getting
costlier, up a substantial 0.8 percent
In July, with local charges alone up
1.4 percent. But Interstate long
distance calls were 1. 7 percent
cheaper.
ThP 2.5 pere~nt a nnual Inflation
ra te for the April-June quarter was
the lowest three-month rate since
tbe one ended In March 1983,
department analysts said.
An accompanying price Index
covering city workers, used to
adjust cost of living Increases In
labor contracts. went up 0.1 percent
In July and was 3.8 percent higher
than July 1984.

_____

48 killed In British plane fire
MANCHESTER. England !UP! I
-A British Alrtoursjet carrylng137
people on a vacation charter to the
Greek Island of Corfu burst Into a
ball of fire on takeoff today, killing at
least 48 people.
Unconfirmed reports set the
death toll as high as 6.&gt;;.
A spokeswoman for the Manches·
ter Health Authority said "more
bodies" were still trapped inside the
alrcrafl four hours after the
incident. She said 48 people were
confirmed dead and thrff' were

care.

Gallipolis, Ohio

(614) 446-8144 (304) 773-5710
Call Collect

372-5804

Call Collect

International Airport. gathering
speed for takeoff. when one of its
engines burst ln.to flames.
Witnesses said the pilot brought
the plane to a hall- it never left th~
ground - but the aircraft was
quickly engulfed by flames. It took
1:!5 firemen 21&gt; hours to extinguish
the bla7.e and the jet was destroyed.
The airport was closed after the

some In serious conditions with

A spokesman for British Airways
said the cause of theenglnefirewas
not Immediately known.
A malntenanec hangar at the
airport was set up as a temporary
morgue for the bodies, lhe health

Alrtours

foam .

authority spokeswoman said .
"The Incident started when one of
the engines caught fire," a fire
brigade spokesman al the airport
said. "The aircraft came to a
slandstill and then the l'('ar burst
Into flames.
"It was then that the pllol pulled
I he plane off the runway." he said.
.. It was on fire all along the runway
as the pilot tried 10 gel the plane
nea1w to help.
"We have nrv('r sff'n anything
like this before. 11 happPned very
quickly."
Another wilnoss, a Dan Air flight
operator, said 1hc fire spread
despite foam- spraving eftons by
flrellghlers .
"Firemen pou&gt;'cd foam onto the
· plane but more I han half was on
fire." he said . ''The rear section
dropped down and the main cabin up
· to the forwu rd S('Ction was on firf'." ..

·Judge overrules dismissal request

365 West Main St.
Ripley, W. Va.

(~04)

down the runway at Manchester

fire and the runway was covered In

the blazing wreckage.
The plane, Brtti~h

POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS, INC.
Rt. 33
Mason, W. Va.

KT328. earned l:ll passengers and
six crew members. authorities sa id.
An airport spokesman said the
British Alrtours jet, which is owned
by British Airways. was heading

The spokeswoman said up to 00
people were takpn to hospitalS burns. Some passengers managed
to escape. sliding down emergency

1;\L CONARD, OWNER OF POINT-MASON AUTO GLASS, WANTS
YOU TO KNOW THAT HE IS VERY APPRECIATIVE OF THE
BUSINESS YOU HAVE· GIVEN HIS TWO NEW LOCATIONS AND
SAYS THANKS FOR YOUR PATRONAGE.

NEW RE'iiDENT- GayneU•
Clark Uved In Racine until she
moved Into "The ~Japles", Meigs
County's 1.9 mlWon dOUar senior
citizen and handicapped housing
complex on Mulberry Heights a.
few weeks ago. Mrs. Clark has
only to go down the hall to do her

•

fighting for their lives in Intensive
•

,;;....---

HOUSING MANAGER - Evelyn Clark of Pomeroy l• manager of the
Mulberry Heights hollSlng t'Omplex lor the lowlncomesenlorcitl7.cnsand
handicapped of the county. She's pictured In one ol the Idle! hens of the 45
apartments which all have new electric stoves, refrigerators, exhaust
systems, and garball" disposals,

chutes, but others were trapped in

1010 First Ave.

Clark in the office located on the gnmnd Ooorofthe new
structure. Low income, over 62, and-or handicapped Is
the criteria lor quaUfylng lor o"" of the subsidized
rentul units.

Consumer prices up in July

PARADE CORPS AND
COMPETITION
DANCE, TWIRL. &amp; POM POMS

Free-Free-Free-Free-Free-Free

Call Collect

Street, Pomeroy

O~!o, Th~rsday.

enttne

Housing
project
.
awatts occupants

60s.

Vucslc.

Pomeroy-:MiddlepQrt,

•

I

Hoffman finishes
I 0 court cases

Marietta.
firm loses
license

at y

e

Happenings around Meigs County•.•
Veterans Memorial

•

JEl' BURS'IS INTO FLAMES- A British Alrtotml
jet .bursa 1n1o IJames on lakeoll early today ldDins 111
leu&amp; -Ill people. The dlauler occuned Ill Manch5er

~

Alrpori wNcll Willi cbetl afterthllflre,

F1rellllhten ,...;.., on thllocenelmmecllately bul were
llll81tCCe8lul ln their elforla to halt the blaa. UPI.

Meigs County Common Pleas grand jurors were excused ImpropJudge Charles Knight hllsoverruled erly. Knight disagrees. ·
In explaining his drclslon, the
a motion by Attorneys Steve Story
judge
pointed out that in the
and Don Cox todlsmlssagra nd jury
argument, Cox was examining the
lndlc1men1 against Lindsay Taylor,
charging him wlth the October 1983 Septemberl9&amp;'lvenlrc. Thevenlreis
aggravated murder of Danny taken from the a nnual jury list
which In this Instance, was prepared
Melton.
The attorneys alleged ln a hearing the last two mont lis ln1982 from a list
Monday ln Meigs County Common of registered voters In the county.
Pleas Court, that there were The county Jury commission hast he
Irregularities In the grand jury right to detemlne who should be
selection In the matter. Cox argued omitted !rom the a nnual jury list
In the hearing that the grand jury list · before the venire Is prepared. It Is
was Improperly drawn and certain correct procedure for the judge to

'

•

determln&lt;' If poten&gt;lal grand jurors
may be e:scusf'd from lhC' venire
Knight said, not the jury commis·
slon as Cox a lleged.
Knight also ovrrru le&lt;l a motion
from the defensf' C"O\J nsel to dismiss

a firearms specification from the ·
Indictment because the judge finds
the languag&lt;' used in the document
to lx&gt; clear in meaning.
Cox argued In Monday's hearing ,
that the specification shou ld be
dismissed because the words "the
!(rand jury's further findings spec(Cont lnued on page 16)
1

�The Daily

Ohio

Commenlll!Y
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED 1'0 THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON ,\REA

.

Bm~ ~L.--,-·~d•~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

LETTERS OF OPINION are wekom(&gt;'. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters an? sub/eel to editing and must be signed wit h name. address and
telephonE" number. No unsigned Jet.ters will be published . Letters should 00 In
good taste, addressing lss ue-s . .not personalities.

Admits mistake
A former top official of the defunct Home State Savings Bank of
Cincinnati conreds during a table-pounding, obscenity-filled seven-hour,
confrontation with a state examiner In December 19&amp;3 that he had
"screwed up" by getting the thrift so involved with Florida sec:urttil's
firm.
David J. Schiebel. chief executive officer and a member of the board of
directors of Home State. admitted his instltu non " never shou ld have gotten
involved" with ESM Government Securities, Inc., Fort Lauderdale,
related Paul Albin, a former field examiner with the Ohio Division of
Savings and Loan Associations."
•
"Didn't Mr. Schiebel say that he screwed up?" asked Thomas D. Beal,
counsel to the special state leglslatlvecomittee investigating the collapse of
Home State.
" 'That's what he said," reca lled Albin, who attended the meet ing with
Schiebel and Burton M. Bongard, HomP State's chairman of the board, to
go over Albin's October 19K3 exa mina1ion of Home State's financial
condition.
"He didn't use that word," said Albin. "He said they neVPr stiould have
gotten involved with ESM."
Albin said he explained his examination report to Bongard and Schiebel,
s howing tha t Home State had Increased its borrowing from ESM by 000
percent from 1982Ievelsdespltepromises to rf&lt;!uce it, a nd that its exposure
to loss was 10 times its net worth.
Albin sa id the two Home State officia ls disagreed with his "&lt;lssessm ent
that Home State had purchased WXJ million worth of U.S. Treasury biils
Party in June of 1983 to conform with a directive of the Ohio Deposit
Guarantee Fund to reduce its potential loss to a maximum 5percent above
net worth, the federal limit .
" 'Thcy weren't pleased with thl' report," said Albin under questioning by
Beal. " 'They were very defensive, and veiy loud. They were red-faced and
povndcd the table."
Albin recalled that there were "quite a few" obscenit ies uttered by the
two.
He said Bongard and Schiebel "indicated they were going to get out of
these transactiOns as quickly as they cou ld ... that they would walk )o
. Florida to get out ot them."
•
But In March of 1985, Horne State was caught with a loss of $144 mi.llion
when ESM was shut down by the U.S. Securities and Exchange

a

·Commission. Runs on Home State caused thatlns!Jtuflon to Close March 9,

and Cov. Richard F. Celeste closed 10 other sta te-chartered, privately
insured Ihr~ts March 15 after 1'\lns began on some of them.
Under lengthy questioning by Beai. Albin said the warning s igna ls abou t
ESM dated back to 1900, a nd tha t he perSQnally had communicated Ihem to
the directors of the division under both the ad ministrations of Covs. James
A. Rhodes and Celeste.
· Albin said that two representatives of the Feder·al Home Loan Bank in
Chicago had warned at a conference in Columbus fou r years ago that they
had issued cease a nd desist ordcts against two savings and loans dealing
with a Florida firm
Albin said that during a break in the conference. he asked one of the
Chicagoans if the Florida firm was ESM a nd was told it was.
"We have a company th a t' s dealing heavily with them," Albin told the
FHLB repres,e ntative.

A dam .to offend
WASHBURN. N.D. tNF:Ai
Extravagant public works projects
financed by the federal government
come a nd go with relentless
frequency - bur none ca n match
the staying power of the Garrison
DivPrsion Unit.
For a lmost half a cent ui"V, a
small but determined group of
politicians here In Nort h Dakota
and engi nf"1'rs in · W&lt;.Jshing1on ha s
zea lously promoted the misguided
Missouri Rivf'r through tht~ stalf'.
ThP con('ept d ;Jtf's ·b&lt;Jck to the
l!lJOs. whC'n North Dakola andoth&lt;•r
. states at the northern end of thP
Missouri River b&lt;.~sin accf'ded to a
ff'deral pbn to construct a S£&gt;ries of

art' among the country's best

massive dams and vast reservoirs
to IT'gul&lt;.~t(' th&lt;' ri\·er's flm\·,

waterfowl brff'ding grounds.
ThP few farmers benefiting from
the .plan presumably would In crease their cTop yields - but the
f'f'dpra l govC'rnmPnt a lrPudy Is
pay ing the statP's farmers millions
of doliars a nnua lly lo limit their
production.
.
To make the project more
palatable, its oacket'S began emphasizing a compopent that would

That ambitious project created a
naviga tJie waterway and controlled
flooding In the lower Missouri
Valley states or Iowa, Nebraska.
Kans&lt;.~s and Missouri.
It also impound~d enough w &lt;t!('l'
to crea te sprawling artificia l la kes
behind the Fort Pe&lt;:k Dam In
Montana. the Oahe Dam in .South
Dakota and the Garrison Dam In
Nor·th Dakota.
In ret urn for \ acrl fic ing fertile
.agricultural la nd for thcOO!l-sctuaremlle Lake SakakawPa reservoir,
tqls state's farmers were promised
that the impounded water would be
used to Irrigate arid land near the
Missouri River in western North
Dakota .
But the soil . compacted by
glaciers during the ice age, was too
dense to Irrigate. Rather than
abandon the Garrison Diversion
Unit as unfeasible, however, its
promotPrs transformed II into a
senseless $1.6 billion extravaganza.
''The project was redesigned to
transport the water hundreds of
miles into eastern and central
North Dakota - which 'r eceives
more rainfall and thus requires less
lrrtgatlon. 'The elahorale network of

WASIDNGTON- "HI," says the
breathless voice at the other end of .
the line, " I'm Suzi&lt;&gt;, and I'm the sort
of girl who'll try anything once." If
U's nol Suzie, It may be Connie or
Sarah or Laurie or Allee. 'They're
· the voices of dial·a·porn, one of the
most lucrative rackets in the
underworld of sex for sale. A Senate
subcommittee two weeks ago held a
healing on a bill to ·prohibit this
traffic In lewdness, and in Utah a
federal grand jury has Indicted two
of the reported · kingpins of the
business.
The Senate b1ll L• soonsored by
Jesse Heims and John East of
North Carolin a and by J eremiah
Denton of Alabama. It would apply
both to dial-a -porn and to the use of
cable for the transmission of
sexually explicit m;~terial. In its
present form the blll Is patently
unconstitutional. It would proscribe
not only obscene material but also
any " Indecent or profane" matEL
rial, and when the government gets
into Indecency and profanity the
government is on exceedingly
shaky ground. If the measure Is to
get anywhere, it will have to be
revised.

'The July 31 hearings brought out
eloquent . s pokesmen . for · and
against the bUI. 'The subcommittee
heard from two lawyers representing Playboy Enterprise. They
agreed that "obscene" material
may perhaps be banned from cable
TV - Indeed, this already Is the law
- but they insisted that the First
Amendment does no~ permit censorship or the merely "indecent."
Barry W. 'Lynn, representing the
American Civil Uberties Union,
said that a · ban nn Indecent or
profane material "would effectively bar every R-rated, and many .
PG-3 and PG-rated !tlms from
cable, depriving viewers of one of
the principal reasons for purchas·
ing the service."
On the other side, the subcommit·
tee heard from Bruce A. Taylor,
representing Otizens for Decency
Through Law, and James A.
Clancy, a California attorney who
has led a crusade against hard-rore
stuff on cable TV. Taylor gnt a little
carried a way. He referred to
dial-a-porn as a "legal and ethical
catastrophe now Jacing this

nation."
It is hardly that, but the racket

appears to have reached propor- Suzie or Connie or Alice.
In Sali Lake City, . U.S. Attorney
tions s ufflclenf to justify rongressional interest. Dial-a-porn mes- Brant D. Ward Is ,relying on an
sages first were offered late in 1982 already existing provision of fed ·
or early In 1983. 'The operative erai law to gn alter Carlin
Communications Inc. and its two
telephone numbers were adverprincipals, Cart' Ruderman and Ira
tised in girlie magazines and
quickly were spread 'by word of · Kirschenbaum. This past AprU 25
he won a 23-rount indictmt-nt
mouth. Little hays getthe numbers
against
them. Other defendants are
off the walis of school bathrooms.
Kevin
GOOdman,
a recording techBusiness boomed. In February
nician.
and
Samantha
Fox, a porn
1983, Suffolk County, N.Y., fUed suit
s
tar
who
ailegedly
made
some of
to stop the opilratlon. In September
the recorded messages.
the Federal Communications ComI am of two minds on this trash.
mission began a look-see. On the
Part of me says that Congress
last da v of its legislative session of
should prohibit the use of telephone
1983, congress directed the FCC to
lines for dhil-a-porn calls and the
make regulations that woul&lt;j preuse of cable TV for explicit
vent or deter juveniles from dialing
depletions of sexual acts. II debases
the dirty numbers. The FCC gave it
a nd trtvlal12ed the First Amenda stab '&gt;'ith a time-of-day restriction
ment to cite Its protection for this
In June J$1. bUt a court challenge
material. Another part of me cries
Immediately de\•eloped and this
hurrah for the Supreme Court's
year the 2nd U.S. Ceurt of Appeals
1969 decision In Stanley v. Georgia:
sent the regulation back for further
"U the First Amendment means
consideration.
anything, it is that a state has no
Meanwhile telephone bills. have
business telling a man sitting alone
been rolling up across the country.
in his own house what he may read
RJ&gt;p. Thomas Bllley, RNa., heard
or what films he may watch ."
,from outraged constituents whose
Dial-a-porn is a profitable racket.
curious kids had charged $200 and
Evidence in the FCC's test case
S400 in telephone bills to hear from
Indicated that between February

erson
Osep pear ...:1~!J83~an~d::!:F~eb~ru~a~ry~l:!!.9&amp;t.!::,
three numbers In NE'W York
r_~_:t n-~---~-~-...:.._~-~:.._: :;C;:_City
ar-li'sn~

.Ho.t spots.------

JOC

WASHI NGTON - It's an annual
rite in W as hi~gton: Every

summer , the members of various
committees on Capitol Hiil play
spin-the-giohe to determine which
of the world's hot spits need their
personal attention during the

recess.
The locations tend toll'ard the
pleasure spots. Indeed, the unini tiated might he am azed to learn
hOI\' m a ny probl ems are screaming
for solutions in such places as Paris.
L&lt;mdon and Rome.
Tentative plans are dra wn up,
and staffers are dispatched to make
ar ra ngements. Air transporta tion
has to he requisitioned from the
Defe nse Department. Surface
transportation , hotel reservations
and luggage carriers have to he
lined up by the State Department.
The woebegone diplomats also
have to dredge up some officials of
the host governments who are
willing to give up few days of their
summer vcatlons to ''confer" with
the visiting dignitaries. Can't have
an "official business" tr ip without
some official bus ineas, you see.
We have bePn folloll'ing globe·
trotting lawmakers for 38 years as
they clamor across the ruins of
Mac hupiochu and float down the
Nile. We reported the amusing
an1ics of a Louisiana senator trying..
out his Cajun French on bewildered
natives in Timbuktu. We caught a
Midwestrrn Sf'nator taking ele·
phanl rides in Sri Lanka .

a

alone drew Jill nl1llion calis.

It's a story without an ending.
There Is no final chapter, only the
next one. An estimated 14 congressional delegations, for example,
trekked this month to Central
Am~rlca, Europe, Africa and tbe
Far East .'
Members of the House Armed
Services Committee. to name but
one, recently returned to the United
States after a two-week "facl finding" trip to several Mediterranean countri~. An Air Foree C-137
was required \O haul the party of 10
lawmakers, five wives, nine aides
a nd bureaucrats. a Navy ·doctor
a nd three Air F orC&lt;' "escort"
offiC&lt;'rs across the Atlantic. 'The
seven-hour flights to and fro set the
taxpayers back $102,IXXI in fuel and
maintenance costs alone.
'The congressional party used an
Air Force C·9 jet to hop from

pared by the State Department.
Here is the laborious schedule the .
diplomats set up lor the official
travelers at each of their stops:
- Yugoslavia: The delegation
was to set down in the resort town of
Dubrovnik on the Adriatic Sea in
time for a late lunch, hosted by the
mayor in the Hotel Belvedere. The
Dubrovik leg was necessary, said a
State Department official. beCause
Yugoslav officials are vacationing
on Ihe Adriatic in August .
Free time was scheduled thai
evening and the next day. but tours
of the nea rby viliagP of Chilipi were
availab)e so the deiegaton could
view the "native handicrafts and
folk dancing. "
Official talks were scheduled for
the morning of Aui!. 5 in Saraje\'o
with rt'presentatives of the local
province and later With defense

country to country. 'The taxpayers'
blll for the short-hop flights came to
another $88,mo'.
A· State Department official
sole mnly pronounced the trip "sc·
rlous." The delegation's chairman,
Melvin Price, D-111., added with
deep gravlly: "'The delegation 's
trip underscores the importanCe of
the region tplhe continued stabliity
of soul hern NATO, I hi' Middle East
a nd North Alrtca."
·
Our reporter Stewart Ha rris has
.obtained their itinerary. s tamped
"confidential." which was pre-

r~o~fft;:c:la~l::::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;;:ei

MOOSE PICNIC

SUNDAY, AUGUST 25

10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.
AT THE MOOSE SHELTER
FOR All OOSE MEMBERS

CHilD
'S PICNIC
SATURDAY, AUGUST 24
1 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
FOR All MOOSE
MEMBERS &amp; CHilDREN

T-he-Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-810)

A Dtvl~lon of Mulllmedht, Inc.
Published t•V£&gt;1'V afternoon, Monday
Throu~h FrJtjaY. 111 Court St .• Po- '
meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley PubJI~hlng

Compa ny; Mul11medla.

Ml'mbN: Unlrl'd PrPss lnterna )lonal,
Inland Dall v Pr('.!ls As"ocla!lon and the
'Ohio N(•wsPapcor Association. National
Advertising R('pf('SIPntatlvf'. Branham
Ne w sp;~per Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York , Nl'w York 10017 .
POSTMASTER: Send addf'('Ss changes
to 11\(' Da ilv Sr•ntinel. Ill Court St .,
Portll'ro~. Oh.lo &lt;1~769.

SUBSI:RIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

OnC" Wt't'k ... ... ......... ,,, .... .. ........... $1 .10
On(' !\.1onth ............... .......... ........ S4.RO

On(' Yl'ar ............ , ... .............. $57.20
SINGI,E COPY

PRICE
Di.illy .................. .. ............... 2~ C('nfS

Subscrlbt-rs not deslrin,l! to pJ)- thPl'ar ."
riPr m:~v r£&gt;mlt In adva nc-E' dlrl't't to
Th E' Daliy Scontin{'l on &lt;J 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Crrdlt will IX' ,l!lvcn ca r riM" caC'h
month .
No sul:l~cr lptl ons by mallp('rmii!C'd In
towns whl'rf' hom£' carl'lcr srrvic£&gt; Is
avallablf'

PITI'SBURGH (UPI) -Though
it was "Pete Rose Night" at Three
Rivers Stadium Thursday, the
Cincinnati lb!ds player-rnatlllll"r
' refused to stand alone In the
spotllght.
Instead of talking about the RBI
single that moved him to within 14
hits of Ty Cobb's career record,
· Rose.preferred to showet pral.le·on
, second baseman IWn Oester and
' relief pitcher . John Franco, woo
combined with Rose and Nick
Esasky to lead the Reds to an 8-5
victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates.
"Franco is having a great year,"

•

WANTED: GINSENG ,ROOTS
5200.00 lb. for top size &amp; quality, graded,
selected Ginseng Roots.
Averag~ Size and Qual!ty, Less
WE BUY ALL TYPES OF ROOTS.
WE WILL BE AT THE FOLLOWING LOCATIONS:
Fridays Only, 1:45·5:00 p.m. in Middleport, Oh.
Mitche's Fruit Stand
At The Village Pharmacy on Business Rt. 7

MAIN LOCATION
OHIO RIVEA. FUR CO., EAST LIVERPOOL, OH.
PH. 216·31'5-1832 FOR FREE INFORMATION
Please Cut This Ad il: Save!

by

1985

•
MADLOCK DECKEP - 'The Pirates' Blll Madlock was hit by a
pitch thr0wn by Reds' pitcher Tom Hume during the seventh inning as
trainer Tony Bartirome (lefO and manager Chuck Tanner help
Madlock to his feet. Madlock was taken to the locker room for x-rays
and did not return to the game. (UP!).

Reg. 21.15

Meigs preview
scheduled Friday
Friday night high school footbail,
which starts for real next week,
features Meigs vs. Morgan at
Marauder Stadium in the Meigs
Preview with three two-quarter
games being offered.
At 6: 30 p.m., the Meigs fres hmen
take on the Morgan ninth graders
while . the reserves from both
schools play immediately
following.
After the reserve game, the
Meigs oond will perform followed
by the Marauder varslly against
Morgan Raiders' varsity.
' Coach Charley Chancey, entering
his 22nd year as a head coach and
19th straight at Meigs, brings in a
Marauder eleven that could put
~me big numbers on the scoreboard with a potent offensive
attack.

Centered around Meigs' equally
strong running ~nd passing game
will he a pair of senior All·TVC
'
performers
from a year. ago,
quarterback Mike Chancey and
tailback Brad Robinson.
Both surpassed the 1,000 yard
mark last year, Chancey In passing,
a nd Robinson In rushing. ChanC&lt;'y
has tieen hobble4 slightly recenlly
a nd could see but llmlled action
Friday.
the Meigs Previewtakeson a new
look from the past two years. The
{ormer two previews had four
team s, all varsity, from n&lt;&gt;lghbor·
lng counties playing a pa!r of
games. Tills year's formah however, showcases the young as well
as the older Marauder gridders.
Admission Is $2.50 for adults and $1
for st udents.

Scoreboard ...
Majors
t;.a.'ll

Tt '!jlu
:\'Y

iii ·~ - ~~~

Dtrt

t\.1 !'f1

!YIIn!'
tNn

~li

. ~\IH

:11 .

"""

'!{, :~'ill W1~
h'1 , 1~1 1ti

Sl. t.ou.

fb ti:l A7l t 17 1:,

&lt;'llf,
Phl ta .
l 'lsbrj[h

lit
~I

7!1

:1:~

:l\1 1

i:! .iitif tO ~ .Wi 1' 1
·~t ;; ~'i.!~
~.
; &lt;!( :'f! . ~ II
)(

..:c

tlt;l~t

'"

;.., 1).1

Stt t

~7

1:.!

•,:\ Hl ~~ 11 1
-H ;~ ..t7:1 !I

:\tl llll .

Tr\IIS
\\'t-dnt~ay · ..

;\1ll11 . tUko~·

rt:~o·.

~~;

GR

.om ~r.

1•• ·

,. ·""
,." .., •'"
,;

ri7 '\\

~

. I'll. 1;1 1 1

.;

.:11(~

~~~~-

w...

71

tn7

-

('ll( •l\01

1&gt;-1 "f&gt; •,·t~~
l;i:.! 'ii ~,l:J

ll.' llll

~· l&gt;l

11'4; 11l 1t

~~

~?7

"The bases on balls kllled us
tonight," said Pirates manager
Chuck Tanner. "We gave them a
couple runs defensively, and that
was the dlfferen&lt;-e. ''
Rookie Denny Gonzalez led off the
Pirates' first with his second home
run. Tony P.,na, Sammy KhalHa,
Jason 'Thompson and Mike Brown
also drove in one run each for
Pittsburgh .

h"i

.Jii i:.! .:1!111

M

4985 ' PRICE
HALF

MC-1600 by Realistic

HALF

Our best! Dolby" 8 NR, auiiHIOp, metaV
CrO,..normaJ tape bias IIWiteh. 114-1022
"TM Oollr Lot -lw t.Jooooing &lt;Alp.
a a ""'· r a; ••....,.

Hurry in and !j9t a pair of these speakers for
the regular pnce of just one! B" woofer with
tuned port. 2112" tweeter. Genuine walnut
veneer. 18" high. #40-1989

Rei~- tus

Touch-Tone Telephone

By Reallstlc

31%0ff

ET-120 by Radio Shack

17goo
s~wa.

Al this prica, buy two or three! Onepiece design puts aU controls in the
palm of yout1 hand . "Hangs-up" on
any nat surface. Wh~e. H43-503.

L- All20
Per Mllnlll

On

Brown, 143-504

CIII.JM11'

Cassette Recorder Dual-Alarm Clock Radios
240
CTR-70
Realistic
36% 24tMI Yo':'r
£aclt
Off Off ChOICe Reg. 49.15
Chtonomatic"'-239 &amp;

by

ALSO •.•Congratulations to Our Winners THEY ARE:
FAMILY BIBLE.:....FRANCES KAUFF
PICTURE-DAVID DAVIDSON
GIFT CERTIFICATE-RUTH SIMPSON

Thank you all so much far youl' continued pa•
tronage, 1and we !ook forward to serving In
the fltrure.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
MIDDLE,ORT
992-2641

Save on our best sfim-Siyle

Separate "hiS" and "hers"

cuaette recorder! Auto-

wake-up limes, quick forward/

lev.l control for pertect.

wlume -dinge, audible
cuellevlew. llld-of-tape .
auiO-WIIlJl. , 4-1050

S.t n l)h&gt;J.:O li. MontJ1';tl:.!
·4
Stln F nlllt'L&lt;;("f' :t Nf",\· York:.!
t.os i\nKO•Ir;; 15. Phl!mk'lptlill ti
C1m1nn:l11 !1, Pltt!i!:l.ll"gh ~
t 'h lntj!.!l !!. AIIUill&gt;l ~
St . !~'lids 7, llnu~lon ~

We would like to thank each and everyone
wha stapped by our booth last w"k at The
Meigs County Fair.

3788

31!!t.95

~~ ~

BUlLE$
BOOKS, MUSIC, GIFTS
OFFICE SUPLIES, SUNDAY SCHOOL
&amp; EDUCATIONAL SUPPLIES

40•/o Off

14l~24.9s

by Realistic

reven~e lime set, battery
bltckup if AC fails. Your
choice of LED or ftuorescent
displays. AMIFM radio.

112-154611547 Back14&gt; battery ext"'

Booster/Equalizer
By Realistic

TRC-412 by Realistic

Cut 25~

13 Mill ST.

PRICE

Lightweight, 1-Piece

'!I

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Reg.

Speaker System

!!

F\id..¥'11 Ci1U11t~
S.m [lii'Jl:&lt;l :tt :-.t•·•r York. niJ.!hl
l .n&lt;i An~t~ •lrs o11 Momrr:tl. nij.:hl
S.tn ~·r .. ndS('I\ .11 f'hlt.tddiJhlu . lllf.!hl
lh~l~t f\ll :11 Pltl.~bi.UJ;h . nl"ht
Chlr,,j...'() ''' Clnc:lnnall, niJChl
Sl l • •ils .11 \lt ,m l;t. llll.!hl

4915
98.95

Stereo
cassette
STEREQ..MATE Reaiietic"'

W~aJ ·,.~ u~~~~

lk!;ultA

:1. Minm'!&gt;l~ .• 2
O~tl\l , liJH ~ . Dt•u·oil :1
1 T• ·'· " "t. Jlnsl t11J :1
n,.._,,l ,ond ~·. T" runtu ~
K. tn~a~ t "IT .\ ' :!. tlllr.tf,!u 1
:'It•·" \'ot·k J:( Co lllurni,t Ill !llllnntn~t
lk11Timon•l t. So•.tlllt • M
'l'hti~I~W ·s CiiUm'PI ( Ul nnlt'll t:D'I'~
'1'0:&lt;.: . •~ o \ u tt ·~ "' ·li ~ .11 l ~ ton 11\"lp~JO.·I 7\ll ,
!i p m.
Ko~n·m~ C'\1\ t.l:tek~on 11 it .11 ("'tltc".ll!~"~
1[):,.·1 , 1~11 . tt::11 p.m
;.;,.u y ,,,k 1C: ui th\ ltHt ,11 l " : •t itntnlo~

r·

I.A
s J~o

I,
:;~ IIi
il

:'vlnlrl

I,X

C ;tlll

'""'

\\'

:1

PRICE

ltetna"25t.IO

N ,\110N .\I. IF~\CiUt;

L l'1t. 418
~-1 -'1\ lilf -

HALF

HALF
PRICE

by

Pleg.

tWht )1).71. J!J: :rt p.m
tlf•lndt rT!lnaru• l·ll r a! Oakl.1nd tJohn
:l.'iJ. 10: !!"• p.rn.
·B.IIIImurT' 1Mf'(;n'I{OI l!Lllh al ~: on!('
rYounl! j l iL m ;v, p.ni

.\MERICA." U •:A.Cilflo:
Bv Unl&amp;f'd ~ lnl•nwdon.loll

Ml"kr"·
('1\'111(1

GOOD ON ALL '84 &amp; '85
RENAULTS IN STOCK

errors.

Direct-Connect·Modem
Cut SOo/o

Stereo
Receiver
STEREO-MAP AeeliStic

\\'

UP TO 48 MONTHS FINANCING FOR
QUALIFIED BUYERS

Though the Rt'lls had 12 hits, they
also bl&gt;nefltted from six walks, a hit
balter, two wild pitches and two. _

•

.

approve twp new work contracts

prillst'.
Equally lm(ll'eSSiw 'Thursday
nlghtwasEsasky, wbohallboenona
bolttllig tear $1nce the Reds moved
him !rom third !Jase, where he
pl;ltooned with Wayne Krellchlckl,
to lell !teld July 28. In the 19 games
he's started In . left since then,

Esaskyhas batted fora .292average
with WI home runs and 12 'RBI .
· He got two a! those RBI 'Thursday
nillitt with a towering third-inning
homerun- his 14th o!!heyear-ort
l011ing starter Bob Walk, 0.1. Esasky
also singled and scored a run In the
ninth.
· Besides his fourth-inning RBI
single, RoSe drove in a run ·with a
third-Inning groundoul. Dave
Parker also had an RBI ground-out,
and Dave Van Gorder and Eddie
MUtter got one RBI each by drawing
bases-loaded walks off Cecillo
Guante in tne ninth.

[

13 \rV£'t&gt;ks ........ .............. .. ......... $14.56

16 Wl'l'h ............... ....... ........ $29.12
52 W('l'k .~ ................ ................. S...S.24
Oul!ildP Ohio
1:1 Wt.&gt;l'k~ ..... .............. ...... .. ...... $15.60
:l6 W£'l'kS ...... .......................... S.l1.20
52 Wet'ki! .
.. .................. $59.80

Rooe saki of the yoong il.'!t -hander,
whO pitched himself out of a two-on,
twiHl\lt jam In the rtlnth to (';lrn his
sixth save ol the year. 'llte win went
to starter Tom BrowlliRI. 12·9.
Oetter, who had loot llngtes, two
runs scored and awalk in live trips to
tbe plate, drew even more lavish

.

Mail SuhscrlpUnn11
lnsklt• Ohio

provide new drinking water sys- '
trms for lll communities in the
state - but that would east more
than $.100 million, in addition lo $1.2
billion for the irrigation component.
The project rt'mains only 15
percent comple ted and has been
stalled In rcc0nt years because of
mounting congressional opposilion.
In 19&amp;3. however. Its proponents
convinC&lt;'d Congress to establish a
blue,ribhon commission to fashion
a "compromise" that would allow
work to proceed again.
Although the commission advanced a scaled-back pian, its
recommendations did not gain
broad accepta nce on Capitol Hili.
But that sta le m a te did not deter the
Interior Department's Bureau of
Reclamation from a tte mpting to

valued a t more than $18 million
earlier Ihis year.
That lnitiativ~ was foiled. however. and Congress again must
decide what to do with the Garrison
Diversion Unit when it returns from
its summer rec£'ss.

Inc ..

Pomf'roy, Ohlo 45769. Ph. 992·2156. Seo·
t'ond class pr,si;11H' paltl a l Pomeroy,
Ohio.

aii_R_ob_er_tW._a_lte_rs

canals. aqueducts , pipc"lines and
reservoirs requin&gt;cJ a new sacrlficl'
or 220.101 acres.
In return. the project wou ld
irrigate only 250.00J acres lx&gt;ionging to exaclly 408 farms - about
one percent of a ll farms in the s tate.
Thus. it's not surprising thai many
Nort h Dakotans neither know nor
care much about the scheme.
Ca nudians do care, however.
IJC&lt;'ausc they are convinc-ed that it
will flush pollution into the Hudson
Bay wat ershed. Conserva tionists
also care because II would obliterate one national wildlife refuge,
damage 11 ot hers and inundatC'
70.0CKl aerps of prairie wetl and that

notion of h&lt;Juling the water s of lhf'

Rose shines ~ri his night, Reds win 8-3

Dial-a-dirty racket . .:._______J_am_e_s_J._K_;ilp_a_tric_k

The Daily· Sentinel
~lb .

Pliga-2-The Dailv Sentinel
.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
·' Thursday, August 22, ]jf86

5!JI5

Reg. 7UI
Piece 11 del n'lll on
roof, ....... power
cord

By Realilltic

45~

Off

r;;;o·lifl*r

29!~54.95

. The inexpensive way to make your
CSI stereo "come alive" I 40-watt
booster dramatically increases out-

eockel,aeled •

clllrJi'lll and
you're on the air.
121·1606

--

. #12-1865

5-band

Headphones
R47XTbyReallatic/Shure

~1!JI5
Ott lteg. 21.95

Nova"'-50 by Realistic .

Cut45~ ·
.17.95
F118thery-light de-

sign. With foam

earpads and ad-

justable headband.
1/4" plug wtth 61/:&gt;-

n. cord. 133-1198

�..
Auaust

Ohio

Sentinel

The

BACK TO SCHOOL

Dodgers clobber Phils; Padres triumph
By lJSA HARRIS
UPI Sports Writer
The Los Angeles Dodgers bear
Philadelphia 15-6 Wednesday night

and after the garre Phlllies man agerJohn Felske said theflnalscorc
could have been even larger.
Of course. the Los Angeles batters
deserved attenlion on such a night,
out Dodger manager Tommy
I.asorda wasn't about to forget
Valenzut&gt;la.
The · Dodgers, leaders in the
National League West, have been
carried by their pitching " aff mos t
of the season.
Mike Marshall hit a first-inning
grand slam and Valenzuela posted
hiS: eighth straight victory to raise
hi~ record to 15-H. He left in !he eight h
andCarlosDiazfinished.
Los Angeles scored five times in
thie first off loser Jerry Koosman.
~and continued to pour it on
agai nst four Philadelphia relievers.
Marshall drove in five runs with
the slam. a doubleand twosi ngles
but had to share hitting honors.
Candy Maldonado had five hits,
iocluding a flrsr inning homer and a
dOuble. Boo Bailor walked once and
chlppPd in with four singles a nd
Pedro Guerrero drove in three runs
wit h his 29th home run of the y&lt;'ar.
Philadelphia scored all its runs on
a pair of three-run home runs . by
Von Hayes inlhPihi rd inning and by
Derrel Thoma• in thf' eight h. ·
In other NL games. Chicago
downed Allanta 9-5 . San Francisco
overcame New York 3-2, San Diego
stoppPd Montreal 6-2, Cincinnati
beat Pittsburgh 8·5 and St. Lou is
trimmed Houston 7-4.
Cubs 9, Braves 5
.AI Atlanta, RyneSandberg hit two
horn€'rs and drove in si.."X runs and
pinch
. hitter Chris Speier belted a

two-run homer in the eighth Inning,
lilling Chicago. Sandberg became
the flrst player In Cubs history to hit
20 home runs and steal30bases In a
single season. Sandberg has 38
stolen bases.

before Brenly unloaded his 17th
At New York, Bob Brenly's. home run. Scott Ga rreltsgollh&lt;' lasl
two-run, ninth-Inning horner rallied three outs for his 101 h '"""·
San Francisco and Dave LaPoint,
Padres 6, Expus 2
6-ll. Chris Brown singled off toser
At Montreal, Graig Nettles drove
Roger McDowell, 6-5, with one out in lworunsandcollected lhrec hitsto
r;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ highlight a 14-hit attack that paced
II
the Padres behind the eight -hit
pitching .~! Eric Show. Show, 9-7,
walked two and struck 0ut four In
.
U
completing his third game of the
·
,
season. Bill Laskey, 5-12, started for
Montreal and lastPd only 3 J.J
innings.
~

·siDEWALl( SAdiNIIS
1J

DR"AST Ic

'MARKD0 wNsI
.

Just In r.·me for
F•·ne Back 1.0 School
e
W_e ar 1ng Appar.al

FRIDAY AND SATURAY
ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS ·
TO MENTION
,

POMEROY

202 E. MAIN ST.

PH. 992-3516

a~

D
BEAUnFUl

7

DIAMOND
ClUSTER

NOW

SAVE
13000

56995

EI

-·

·

PIERCED EARRINGS
Now

20Of0

DIAMOND
. EARRINGS

oFF

NOW$1995
Woro 132.95 SAVE

100's To Choose Frqm

WATCHES

CLUSTER
NOW
D
,BIRTHSTONE

Among investors

NOW $ 1 2 9 9 5
Were 1169.95~SAYE 140

ADD-A-BEADS

ALL WOOLS
and WOOL BLENDS

;pJTfSBURGH (UP!) -Pirates
Manager Chuc k Tan ner has con·
flrmPd that he is among a group of
investors who flre interested in

LARGE GROUP OF

purchasing the Pirates and keeping
them in Pitlsourgh.
·

ASSORTED FABRICS

•HowevPJ'. Ta.nnPrwould not name

the ot her memlx'rs of the group.
~lh (ciuo treasurer! Doug M'cCor·
mlck." said Tanner. ' 'I think some
progress has been made, but there's
a long way to go."
Tanner said he has not been
actively involved in his group's
negotiating sessions.
McCormick admitted thai he had

2 5°/o

$2699

&lt;' ... 20% ..,
OUR ENnRE
COLLECTION

OFF .

GROUP OF WOOD

GROUP OF GIFTWARE ·

GIFTWARE

50°/o

s0°/0

NOW

OFF

NOW

GREAT SELECTION

CHINA
50°/o OFF

2
s
/o
O~F
SETS
0

1 1 3 Court St.
Pomeroy, Oh.
992-2054

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS

BACK TO SCHOOL

FREE RING SIZING
FREE ENGRAVING

IN.MEN'S FINE

QUALITY

AND

Broken sizes in a large assortment of slacks,
tops, dresses, sportswe ar.
Reg. '10.00 to '20.00 ....... Sale 14.00
Reg. $21.00 to S30.00 ....... Sale '6.00
Reg. 131.00 to f40.00 ....... Sale
Reg. '41.00 to ISO.OO ..... Sale f10.00

sa.oo

1 PAIR $13
2

PAIRS $2QOO

NA1UilLIZEI, CONNIE &amp; F001WOIK

'

TENNIS SHOES
by Nike, Kangaroo, Lagear

20°/o OFF

1 GROUP OF MEN'S

1 GROUP MEN'S

HUSH PUPPIES DRESS SHOES

SHOES
by N ike &amp; Con verse

1

TENNIS

30°/o

OFF

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SEE MATT FOR
ALL YOUR SHOE NEEDS

s

N'S S .S.

$1790
VALUES TO ' 26.00

SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS
1/2 PRICE

DRESS SHIRTS
40°/o OFF

MEN'S S .S . COTTON

MEN'S

MEN'S GOLF

SPORT SHIRTS
112 PRICE

TENNIS SHORTS
1/2 PRICE

SHIRTS &amp; SHORTS
112 PRICE

RACK OF

MEN'S

MEN'S CORDUROY

KNIT SHIRTS
112 PRICE

DRESS SLACKS

ODD LOT MEN ' S

SWEATERS
112 PRIC

LADIES WEAR
- 1/2 PRICE

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
ARROW

SPORT SHIRTS $99-0
lEG. $23.00

TENNIS
SHOES
_...S, WOMIII'$,

$ 1 2 0 0 PAIR
01

AIID CHJLDIIII'S

Sl ooo

2 PAllS S2000
c_.s

ssoo

SUMMER

PAIR

M~N'S

SHOES

saoo

PAIR .

PURSES

PAIR .

2 PRICE

Marguerite Shoes
"The Middle Shoe Store in the Middle Block."

Back To
School ·
·PRICES
GOOD THRU
MONDAY

POMEROY-992-5272
OP.ltl TILl 8 FIIOAr

NOTEBOOK

FILLTER PAPER

79(

115·'21

SAll'9 -1J2.1&gt;0

®

JEANS &amp;
DRESS PANTS

ALL
SWIMWEAR
112 PRIC

Sweat shirt vests, long sleeveshirts, short sleeve
shirts and zip front hooded sweatshirts.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14.
REG. '6.00 to s14.00

Sale
Priced

JUNIOR

SUMMER CLOTHING

SUMMER CLOTHING

50%
50%
50%
50%
50%

AND

.~!rt..JOrk Clothing H!~~!

SLACKS .................... 112 PRICE
DRESSES •••••••••••••••••• 112 PRICE

ssoo ·

11.59

ACTION SHORTS

TUBE SOCKS

CANDY BARS

.

-

-

$

REG. 40&lt;

9.49 ..UJm..ss.u .•.•••..... 6.00
S11. 993.fJ~U..SI.U •••••••...• 57.00
s1s. 993.fJ~'.f.SI.U••••••••••• s·a.oo

1/2 PRICE

1/2 PRICE

Limited quantity. Regular 4.95 to S6.95

Not all sius. Reg. Pri&lt;es SJ5 .9S to 126.95

$200

79&lt;

$600

$4

~oo~~~~.~.i~~~~~ETS 1/2
FREE PARKING .

SUMMER

·

PRICE

WOMEN'S
soo~O Off
.EAR
Devon, Blouses, Dresses,
W
Shorts, Steopwtar

LBERFELDS
POMEROY

$577

DISPOSABLE INSULIN SYRINGE
PKG. OF 10 WITH NEEDLE BOX OF 100

$169

. $1649

CIGARETTES

Mouthwash
Gargle
4

oz •• Trial

Size

I

LILLY INSULIN
NPHU-100
CP310
REGUlAR U-1 00 CP21 0
LENTE U·1 00
CP41 0

Reg. &amp; Kings .... 58.44 ctn.
100's ................ 58.72 ctn.
Plus I FREE
CRICKET LIGHER
CEPACOL

BOYS'

ONLY

99

U-1 00

AltO BOYS'

ACTION PANTS

90 TABLETS
PLUS 30 FREE

lOG's

Only

27(

UNICAP M

ANTACID
TABLETS

Reg. 17.95 to S19.9S

MEN'S

ONLY

GAYISCON

Knits and sport shirts. Sizes 8 to 20.

Boys sizes 7 tO 14. Springfoot brand.

'MEN'S AND

39C

BATH MAT SETS

SHORT SLEEVE SHIRTS

MEN'S ~ND BOYS'

PIIG. OF 10

RUSSELL STOVER

KNIT AND
SPORT SHIR-TS

1/2 PRICE

I 01f1"x8"
70 SIIUTS

SALE!

. BOYS

Your Choice

PENCILS

NOTEBOOKS

MATERNITY ............. •12 PRICE

$

OML~

REG. 58.29

BLOUSES ................. •12 PRICE

MEN'S 16.95 TO 172.95

Gaod Selection -

Not all si.., -Were IJ9.9S to 134.95

ODD LOT MEN'S

WINTER JACKETS
1/2 PRICE

PANTS
OUTFITS
SPORTSWEAR
TOPS
SLEEPWEAR

20°/o OFF

MEN'S FASHION JEANS

1our Choice

OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF

Special s.idewalk sale prices on our new fall
sweaters and sweater vests.
Come in and save this week-end. Use
our Lay-Away!

$479 to $11lJ1
DRESS SLACKS

INCLUDES: 3 Trapper Portfolios, Spetial Notebook Pocket,
Pinchless Notebook Rings. 36 Sheet Notebook Pad and
Pencil Clip, Veluo Tab Closure.

CHILDREN'S

JR. SWEATERS

SWEAT SHIRTS

ATURDAY

RACK OF

WOMEN'S SHOES

HARTLEY SHOES

CHILDREN'S.

$1790

1 GROUP

MEAD TRAP.PER KEEPER

OFF

' 1 GROUP OF LADIES'

• 23 ·&amp; 24

GROUP

CLOTHING

'

LEVI'S

fRIDAY &amp; SA

ELBERFEL

WOMEN'S CLOTHING

MEN'S BOOT CUT

•Adidas •Converse
•Footjoy •Nike

COME IN AND

Your Dep..ndable l••rveler

SPECIAL RACK

StrideRit~

.

•

&amp;

20°/o

WE HAVE THE
TENNIS SHOES
FOR SCHOOL

ssoo

LAYAWAYS WELCOME

SIDEWALK
SALE
SPECIAL FRIDAY SATURDAY

DRESS &amp;
CASUAL SANDALS

WOMEN'S SHOES

SIDEWALK s·Al.E

Owner Dan Galbreath has not
responded to thai offer.

1 GROUP OF LADIES

At K&amp;C JEWELERS

BACK TO SCHOOL

and private financing.

..

SELECT GROUP
OF

eflelen
212 E. Meln-

One of the groups has proposed to
purchase the Pirates with public

scH00L

r;====;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

11

POMEROY, OH.

SCHOOL IS IN AND THE
.SAYINGS ARE IN

Back to School Suings
Throughout the Store.

OF 4

•

NORITAKE

SlOOO

OFF

FOSTORIA CRYSTAL

OFF

MEN'S SHOES
$1 5 OFF FLORSHEIM
$1 0 OFF LEVI'S
$1 0 OFF HUSH PUPPIES

, WOMEN'S
SHOES

NEW SELECTION
1st BATTERY FREE

141 GOLD OVERLAY

SE~ECT GROUP OF

SELECT GROUP
OF

20°/o
f

announced plans to bring in veteran
quarterback Joe Plsarclk. Quarter·
bocks Dan Marioo and Jim Jensen
arestm holdouts.
Plsareik was released by the
Eagles last month and the Dolphins
tried to bring him to eamp after
)lllarlno walked out. No agreement
could he reached.
·

SHOES &amp; SANDALS

NOW

X~wmeiitz·

Singletary had already played one
year d his six-year pact.
Singletary, who initiated talks
with the Bears Tuesday, wUJjointhe
Bears at practice Thursday.
"It's tmportan! tobelncamp," he
said. "I'm a football player and I'm
ready and there is no way I won't
play (against Dallas) on Monday." •
Elsewhere, the Miami Dolphins

1 GIIOII' WOiml s 1

iiBULOVA
•SEIKO
•PULSAR

5

Was 5370°0 SAVE
FREE SIZING

SElECTED GROUP

New F11l••. :..
•Pitidt •St1ipet
•/Jeome#,l6s
..... Now In Stock

been talking with several groups
sint'c lhf' club was put up for sa le in
Novf'mber.

NOW

NOW

· 1/2 PRICE

:"They've had some discussions

and all-time leading rusher was on carry. Healsoplayedinthe1979and
the trading block -supposedly with 19!l0 Pro Bowls.
·
bad knees. He'd faUed his physk!al • "He's ~ great pass receiver and
with the Seattle Seahawks.
he's a good runner," Lions coach
The Detroit Lions also weren't Darryl Rogers said. "I don't think
hiding anything. Without injured that there's any questlon that
running back Bllly Sims, the Lions whoever has hlm- (Montgomery)
running game needed Instant help. that team wUI become better."
Wednesday, the Eagles and Lions
Montgomery passed an extensive
reached .a logic a.I agreement by physlcalln Detroit Wednesday and
swapping Montgomery and Detroit Is expected toworkoutwtththeteam
linebacker' ·Garry Cobb, another S~nday. Last week. an attempted
holdout.
trade of Montgomery to Seattle was
"It's a good deal for both nixed after the :&gt;-foot-10, 195-pound
organizations," said Eagles vice back faUed his physical beeause of
president and . general manager his knees.
Harry Gamble. ·•we feel we would
"That's the area that Seattle
like to improve our linebacker supposedly turned him down on,"
situation. We feel Cobb is an Lions general manager Russ Tho·
· outstanding outsldt&gt; linebacker. mas said. "Whenyou'reronsidering
He'sone o(the best."
a t:J;ade with somebody with a
Cobb, the Lions only remaining history (of knee injuries), we use·ali
holdout, was Detroit's fifth-leading of the information at our disposal."
tackler in 1984. The 6-foot-2, 'J:rl.
The Chicago Bears did I!Ot have to
pound Cobb. who's entering his resort to trading star linebacker
seventh NFL season, reached Mike Singletary to end his holdout
agreement on a contract with the status. Nellher did they · have to
Eagles Wednesday afternoon.
promise him the Lake Michigan
. Cobb piayed·out his contract with Gold Coast to do so. The NFC
the Lions In 1984 and had been Defensive Player of the Year In 1984
unable to reach an agreement this and the Bears agreed to remove the
season.
final two years of his six-year
Montgomery, entering his ninth contract. The Bears will then
NFL year, has rushed for 6,538 re-structure a new contract, begin·
yards, an average of 4.5 yards per ning with Singletary's 1988 season.

Dollar General Store

f----------------------l

OFF

Philadelphia Eagles.
He wanted more money and
Eagles didn't want to give it to him.
..SO 1he
star
back

~-------------------J

IN THE MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING

20°/o

UPI Sports Writer
There were no secrets surround·
lng Wilbert Montgome and the

s.rdews. I SaIe D8y

Was
t99"

DAN'S

.

By USA HARRIS

~-i;jjiiii;;;;;;ij!iiiii;;;;;;-iiiiiiiiiiii;;;;!::====OP=E~N~9=·9=M=O=N·=·S=A=T·=;:12=·=·=S=U=ND:A:Y====;

;1

•

SIDEWALK SALES

Eagles trade star running back Montgomery to Detroit

SIDEWALK SALE

Giants 3, New York 2

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. August 22, 1985

$759

LIMIT 4

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

SLUISHER LOHSE
Pharrnac y

--··
.
.
I
______________

K_.IIIMtl ~. " ·"' ·

a..-lll:ltfta. ft .Jitl

M., *- ht. 1:00 a.m . to I p . ~n.
1
....., 10:10. 11::10 eM I to I po,M
II Pflti:IC,_lPTlONI _ . , _
rtt. 112 -28&amp;1
E. lilllllln
I..__
.

Pto~MfQv.

0,... ...... "' 111 •

J

Oh.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, August 22. 1985

i·

... .

Yankees hit jackpot; · ...
....
lndi3ns iop Blue Jays ·-......

2~.1986

Numbers drawn for record New York-lottery

::.

NEW YORK (UP!) -Hundreds
of thousands of New Yorkers held
their breaths as a state lottery
official rattled off numbers like a
racetratk announcer desctiblng
thoroughbreds heading down the
borne stretch.
" And the first number In the Lotto
48 drawing is- 3Q. And the SCC\lnd
number is- 14," said the official.
Crowded into local bars and
community centers, or just sitdng
home nervQusly on the living room
couch, they waitedforwhatseemed
an eternily Wednesday night until
all six numbers and the supplemen tary number were pic ked.

~

By MIKE TULLY

UPI National Bueball Writer

Dave WlnDeld's .throw to third hit victory, handing the Red Sox their
the runner and rolled into foul sixth straight loss. Russell. 1·3,
territory. Carew scored, and when allowed 5even hi ts while walking
· catcher Wynega r ttied to nail . 'and striking out three in 51·3.1nnings
Benlquez at third. his throw went of work. Greg . Ha rris posted his
Into left allowing the tying ron to eighth save of the season.
'
Royllll! 2, Royals I
score.
At Chicago, George Brett's solo
In other games, Milwaukee
homer leading of( the fourth inning
shaded Minnesota 3-2, Oakland
a 1-1 tie and Charlie
snapped
nipped Detroit 4-3, Cleveland
Lelbrandt
allowed fi ve hits over
downed Toronlo 5-2, Texas' topped
eight
Innings
to pace the Royals.
Boston 5-3, Kansas City nipped
Brett's
homer
,
his 17th. came off
Chicago 2-1 and Baltimore blasted
Floyd Bannister , 5-11, who permit·
Seatile 11-8.
ted three hits in 71-3 innings. The Joss
Brewers S, Twins 2
At Milwaukee, Robin Yount' s was the seventh straight for
Bannister. Orioles 11, Marlners8
onl!i)ut bases-loaded single in the
At Seattle, Eddie Murray drove in
bottom of the ninth scored Jim
three
runs to highlight a 10-runthlrd.
Gantner and lifted the Brewers.
It
was
Baltimore's ninth victory In
With one out, Ganiner broke · a ri
Its
last
11 games. The first eight
0-for-34 streak with a single off loser
Orioles
to
bat In the third scored and
Steve Howe, 1-3. Milwaukee starter
the
10
runs
equalled a club record Sl't
Ray Burris, S-9, went the distance.
twice before.
A's4, '11gers3
At Oakland, Steve Henderson's
one-out run-scoring do~ble in the
ninth Inning and a subsequent
throwing error by fi~st baseman
Dave Bergman capped a four-run
rally that carried the A's, Steve
Mura, 1-0, worked the ninth for the
~31 JACKSON PIKE · RT.35 WEST
victory. Lou Whitaker bomered for
Phone ~-4524
Detroit.
BARGAIN MATINEES SAT I SUN
Indians 5, Blue Jays 2
All SEATS $2.25
' At Cleveland, Julio Franco and·
AIII!ISSION EVERY TUESOAY $2 : 25
Joe Caner collected two RBI apiece
LAST DAY:·
and
Heaton survived back-to"THE BLACK CAULDRDN"
back oomers to pitch a six-hitter that
7:00 I 9:00P.M . RATED (PG)
helped the Indians. Last-place
Cleveland won two of three games
from Toronto, which is battling New
York for the Ametican Leagoe East
lead .
Rangers 5, Red Sox 3
At Boston, Gary Ward belted a
three-run homer in the first inning
and Jeff Russell earned his first AL

While New Yorkers have been
wa tchlng a lottery prize grow past
$40 million, the Yankees keep hitting
the jackpot.
After a 13-10 victory over the
California Angels Wednesday night ,
the Yankees have won seven
straight and 14 olthelr lastl5 to close
within three games of the divisionleading Blue Jays.
It was a lOth-inning error by third
baseman Jack Howell tbat triggered the Yankees' latest triumph.
"All I know Is our ship came In,"
said New York manager BDly
Martin. ''The errors, they're just
part of the game. That's not the best
we've played, but that's baseball." ·
Ca lifornia's lead in the . West
drop~ to 1)6 games over the
Kansas City Royals.
"I'm going to try my hardest to
just forget everything," said a
simmeting California manager
Gene Mauch.
lute with the tag on Tabler In fourth Inning action. The
With one out, Baylor singled off
INDIAN RU N - Cleveland lndlans' Pat Tabler
Indians won, 5-2. (UPI).
Donnie Moore, 7-7, and went to third
is called safe at the plate by home plate umpire Larry
on Ken Gtiffey's single. Willie
Voung. Tonmto Blue .Jays' catc her Ernie \\'hilt Wa.'\
Randolph bounced to third, where
Howell picked up the ball and threw
wildly to first, allo,.1ng Baylor to
score and leaving runners on second
•
and third.
MASON , Oh io (U P! )
Joakim Nyslrom a nd eighth-seeded can handle in Wllander, I he 1wo&lt;
After Mike Pagliarulo was
time defending champ who is
Sov~ n teen .y ear-o td Wimbl ed on
llenrik Sundsl rom, all of Sweden.
walked Intentionally, Butch Wypla ying brilliantly - and thinking
cha m p Boris Becker shuns hi s
negar struck out and Bobby
new -fOu nd celebrity status. He
Becker, who plays unseeded J ohn about Becker.
Meacham hlooped a single to left .
Immediately after Wllander
prt'f0rS 10 play- a nd talk- tennis. Sadri of Cha rlone, N.C.,tonight, had
The winning pitcher was Dave
Becker bm l Brian Teacher, 6-4, a built-in e xcuse had he been upset roared to an easy 6-1 , 6-3 win over
Righetti, 10-7.
Pavel Slozil of Czechoslovakia, he.
6·4. In Wednesday nig ht 's S&lt;'Cond Wednesday night .
The Angels scored twice to tie the
round of thr $.'l7fi,OOJ Associa tion of
He had no""'!l to Los Angeles pulled on a "We Love Boris Becker"
score 10-10 in the ninth. Reliever
l'Pnnis Professio nals Champion- bet ween Monday 's !irst round T-shirt.
' Btian Fishe r ran' a 2{) count to
ship, but beca me dismayedwhen a ll
"Well." admitted Wilander , " I
ma tch and Wednesday nig ht' s
leadoff hitler Rod Carew, a nd
reportC'rs w&lt;J nt ru to talk about affer
ma tc h to appear on the Tonight don't really love him , but I like him
Righe t II relieved . Carew walked;
the ma tch was his a ppea ra ne(' on Show.
as a player. I saw Boris on the
pinch hitter Juan Beniquez singled
the Tonight Show the night before. ·
Johnny Carson Show last 'night and I
Care w to third, and right fielder
"He's a nice man a nd I had a lot of
" I was a little bit tired tonight ," thought he was good. So, I bought his
fu n." sa id Becker of Tonight Show El&lt;;&lt;: ke r said after bea ting Teacher. · T-shirt today."
host J ohnny Carson, "but do you " I got back at 2 a.m . (Wednesday).
All he lop seeded pl ayers turned in
1\'~m t to ask m(' aOOut my match or
impressive
second round vic tories .
"Sometimes I made some good
abou t thr Johnny Carson Show?"
sho ls and somelimes I played too J a rryd defea ted Ricardo Acuna of
When a re port er fi na lly inqu ired loose. I was jus t happylbeathlm so l Chile, 6-4, 6-4; Noah beat Hans
Schwaie r ofWest Germany, 7-5, 6-4;
abou t t he game of tennis, B&lt;xker ca n go to sleep."
smiled and said. '~Thank you."
Although El&lt;;&lt;:ker won Wim - Edberg eliminated Jay Lapidus of
In his match, the fourth-seeded bledon, many people' believe he P tinceton, N.J. , 7-5, 6-4; Nystrom
CINCINNATI (UPI I - Antoony
West Crrma n cracked booming must beat the likesofJohn McEnroe de feated Chip Hooper of Sunnyvale,
srn·rs- he piled ·up 11 aces- and a nd Ivan Lend! to be considered at Calif., 6-3, 6-4, and Sundstrom ousted Munoz, whose practices lately
consist of just running and working
zingrd pn""C' isr passing shot s to the top of the tennis world. Since Da nie VisserofSouthAfrlca,G-4, 7-5.
on technique, said he should be
met hQ&lt;lically whip the unseeded McEnore and Lendl aren't in this
In a- couple of mild upsets,
ready to play in the regular season
Teacher .
unseeded Terry Moor of Memphis,
tournament , Recker won't get a
opener despite not being able to
Joining Beckl.'r i n posting Sff.'Ond crack atlhem until the U.S. Open.
Tenn ., beat lOth seeded David Pate
round wins WC'rP lop-seeded Mats
practice In pads.
"I'm not even · thinking about of Las Vegas, 6-3, 1-6. 7-5, and
Wila nder &lt;J nd second-seeded And- McEnroe or Le nd! right now," he unseeded Bill ,Scanlon .of Dall as
A bothersome shoulder lnjury 'is
keeping lhe four-time Pro Bowler'
,.,., J arrycl. both of Sweden, No. 3 insJs led. '' All I wa nt to think about is defeated 13th seeded Jose-Luis
S('('d Yan nick N{)ah of F r ance, and this tournamen1.' '
from going all out with his
Clerc of Arge ntina, 7-6, 7-6.
teammates, who are preapring for
fi fl h-Sf'edc•d Stefa n Edberg. No. o
&amp;cke r might have as much a s he
Friday's preseason game at De·
troit . Munoz is listed as doubtful for
the game. He has not played in the
first two preseason games.
Munoz said the shoulder Is
place."
CLEVE LA ND (UPi i - C i~ve·
because Schottenheimer wa nted to "coming along pretty good, com·
lan&lt;l Browns roac h Ma rl ySchottenSchotte nheimer said tha t he will
take a close look at the rest of the pared to the way II was a week ago.
My ra nge of motion Is practically all
pay particular attention to wide
helml•r hOJ s a fl'w quest ions as far as
Browns ' running backs.
rC'Ceivers
and
running
backs
in
hJs startin g uffPnse goes.
In another move, the Browns there."
Preseason games are not vital to
Sat
urday's
game.
Ron kiP wid0 recf'iver F red Ba n k~
released free agent Steve Collier.
an
est ablished veteran such as
could provid&lt;' onE" a nswer Sat ur day
IX's plle the fac t tha t he is m a king
Collie r. a 3{}1-pounder out BethuneMunoz,
who Is In his sixth year. What
wh1•n lhr Brow ns 11-1 1 take on the
his second straight sta rl, Banks
Cookma n, was signl'&lt;l a s a defensive
the
games
do provide, though, is the
Buffalo Hills ({)-I· I I in a pre·srason doesn 't think he has vaulted to the
line man but was swit c hed to offense
c hanCP to get reacquainted with
· top of the• Browns' receiving list.
during training camp.
ga me ctl o p.m. in Rich Stadium.
" I'm a little surprised, " he sa id . "I
B•nks. picked in the eight h round
The Browns also placed offensive hitting a nd being hit .
don't think they plan on sta rting me
out of l.ibf'rt y Batist College, will
tackle Bill Contz on the physically
" You work out all off-season,
mak0 his sf'rond st raigh t star t for during the tregul a r ) season. l think
unable to pe11orm rr"Serve list,
lifting
weights and running, but
they just wa nt to ta ke a goo&lt;llook a t
the Browns .
whic h means he will not ix' eligible lo
're
not
ta king the pounding. So
you
Last wPek ag.tinst Philadelphia , me
r ejoin the team until Oct. 8.
has to make the
your
body
In other 1rain ing ca mp ·news,
the 2:1-y~ar·o ld cu ught 1hree passes
adjustment ," the27-year-old Munoz
tor 42 yards. With a similar fu ll ba c k Mike Pruitt Is expected to
said .
see a t least one quarter of action
perfol'm ancc agai nst the Bills,
COLUMBUS
(UP!)
Thorps
" It 's ma inly the neck and
Banks coulcl loc k up a starl ingbert h, Sa turday. Pruitt was held out of
Honey,
a
2-year-oldfllly,covered
the
shoulde
r a reas. Tha t' s basically
l.i ke 1he rest of C'lcvcia nd' s Cleve la nd's firs~ two ga mes be·
mile
in
a
lifetime
best
1:
59
4-5
wha
t
we
use - a rms, neck and
recei ver s. Banks slmggh"l() early in ca use of nagging , in juries a nd
nighttowln
the
featured
shoulders.
About three days into
Wednesday
camp. La tl'ly, however, !he 5-10.
pace
a
t
Sciot
o
Downs.
camp,
you
just
kind of fallout of bed,
177·pou nd speedster has been
Hosts
tournament
·rh
1
d
·
b
Will
'
hut
afte
r
about
a week of camp It
e w nner, nven y
wm
l m prc•ssivf'.
F a hy, came from fifth at the fina l
starts to let down a little bit ," he
" 1 was so nervous,'· sa id Ba nks.
GLEN VILLE, W.Va . !UPI I
turn to beat out J ef' s Spollight by3 ')!1
added . .
" ThPrr was so much pressure on
Glenville College will hosl a le ngths.
If Munoz plays in the Bengais'
me. Act uall y I don'l know if lhere
was prf•ssurc on me. but I felt there
four· team basketba: II tour na me nt r;:;::;:~~~~~~~:;::;::;::;::;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;~
Nov. 15-16.
I•
wa ~. Now. I 'm much more relaxC'd.
T he tourna me nl , sponsored by the
"Thf' CO~lC' h f'S hclpc'd mf' a lot.
E nd Zone Club, has Sa lem pilled
Thry just told mf' to do my best . And
agains t Dyke of Ohio In the fi rst
f'm a to! more comforla ble wit h t h~
game and Glenville against P ill ·
players . At lheb&lt;'fd nni ng, !felt out of Bradford (Pa .l.

.

Becker posts another victory

'*"I

Munoz' shoulder
slowly improving

Browns' coach still seeks answers

Scioto results

DR. J.O. WAUGH, D.C.
ANNOUNCES
The Opening Of

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC
CLINIC INC.
Call For Appointments Beginning
Monday, August 19, 1985.

ACCEPTING PATIENTS MONDAY,
AUGUST 26; 1985.

675-6433
Point Pleasant
2415 Jackson Ave.

Make
Heritage House &amp; Locker 219 .
Your Headquarters
For
.

Back-To-Scho.ol
Sh es

School Gym Bags
•MEIGS
•SOUTHERN
•EASTERN •WAHAMA

-'

OtN C.t.NOV ~ ,&amp;,llQUT 10
FK£ THE ~1 Q("V.r..STATI-G
UP[rl.(N([ KND.Vt-110 MAN-

II-£ fAMlYOCATO'I

final preseason game Aug. ~
(against Indianapolis) he said he
would be able to practice the
following week, which should make
him ready for the regular season,
which begins ~pt. 8 against Seattle.

BACK TO SCHOOL

·SUPPLIES
"NOW ON SALE"

Village Pharmacy·
N. 2ND AVE.

PH. 992-6669
MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Stt!li!e!LIIf:lt!
Allin 7!Je WAKTADJ

#l!.ll\llllllll\,_lll101l'lliiiiWII/III/H!////I/IIH/UII/HII//H///II/IHI//H/HfJHih/1111

IN AND
DO YOUR
BACK·TO-SCHOOL
SHOPPING
WITH · US
JR. &amp; MISSES WRANGLER
ARRIVING EVERY DAY

Jeans
Slacks
Skirts
·alouses
Sweaters
Also other name brand
merchandise for the entire
family.
lay-Away-Visa-Mastarcard.
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT UNTIL 8:00
ON TI-lE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

The numbers on the six ping-pong
ballsplckedwerewonh$41mlllton.
And there were 6 mllllon-to-1 odds
the winning numbers-~. 14, 2:1,22,
47 and 17- would bestow on some
lucky gamble r the biggest iolt ery
jackpot in North American hi story.
State Lottery Director John Quinn
predicted II may be known some·
time Friday whether or not there
wasawinnerof.theglantjackpot. He
said it could take seve ral days
before winners come forwa rd .
If none oi the would-be mllliO:
nalrespickedtherightnumbers, the
jackpot would hit $50 million in the

next drawing .
friends juggled number combinaThe likelihood of ix'ing ldlled by tions on a personal computer and
lightning was nearly three times plunked down S:UIOO for tickets .
grea ter than winning Wednesday's . - - - - - - - - - - - - jackpot .
Ve ndors were setting m ore lha n
~.OOJ tickets a minute just hours
before the te levised draw inA, New
York Lottery spokesman .J umPS
Nola n said.
· ·
Nolan said the sale of$li.5 million
352 East Main St.
inLotto48tic kets was assured by the
Pomeroy, OH.
rush for tickets, each of which sell
forSland providetwochancesat the
Meigs (ounty 's Oldest Florist
ptize.
A New Jersey dentisl a nd 29of his

9~~

FLORIST

.-:--=-----.;_______

__;.;.;..;.;..;;.:,;,;:;;;;..::::;:::.:::.;.:;::;.::.:.::.:::.::;;;:..~..

CLEVELAND (UP() - One
playe r who picked all six numbers In
WedneSday night's Ohio Lotto
will claim the top prize of
mlllllnn
The name of the player will be
announced after the ticket Is
redeemed at a regional lottery
• office. a lottery spokesma n said
'. today. The winning numberswere5,
•
' 10, 15, 19, ~and 26.
The top prize winner will receive
the winnings In ~ annual instalSHOPPING SPREE- Pauline Taylor, ol Middleport, was the winner
lments of $54,834.10; before taxes.
In the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce shopping spree giveaway.
In addition to the top ptize winner,
Taylor's spree was held Wednesday morning at the Pomeroy Kroger
store.
·
486 players selected ftve of the
numbers to win $401 each. Also , ·
20.4!E players had four of the
numbers; winning $26 apiece.
Ticket sales forthemid -week lotto
drawing totaled $2,598,lli. The
estimated top prize for Saturday's
drawing is $1 million.
Dally Nwnber: 149.
BOSTON (UP!) - Two tests
given to relatives of diabetics have

••
RC
ERCA. *
•

•

-

.• "•

_____________

**

One lotto winner

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

7

The

Ohio

~

¥

PERCAB ..

Blood test developed
to identify diabetes

proven

effective

in

identify ing

people who will get diabetes and
gauging how long it will take for the
disease to develop, researchers said
to&lt;lay.
"The ability to identify people who
are In the process of developing
dia bet es can be very importa nt. "
said Dr. Sri S. Srikanta, the primary
author of a repoM on lh~ l&lt;'sls
published in the New Engla nd
Journal of Medicine.
"First of all. it will enable us to
ide ntify people developing the
disease who previously might have
become very ill and requi red
hospitalization before a diagnosis
would be made.
"Secondly , this will ena ble us to
ide ntify people who should be
watched at regular intervals and
ke pt a ppraised of other research
advances that might lead to a m eans
of preventing the diabetes from
developing,' ' said Srikanla, an
Investigator at the Joslin Diabetes

DID YOU KNOW•••
"GaS' sltOCk absorbers are not filled with a

gaseous mixture. tnsteaa, tne air oratnarttv lnstae
ts replaced with nitrogen to keep the shock oil
from aerating, foaming, ana losing rtae control.

No. 22F ·50

No. 24 -50
No. 24F·50
No. 70·50

Center and an instructor in Medi·

cine at Harvard Medical School.
In the study. researchers used a
simple blood test and a glucose
tolerance test on I. 700close rei a lives
of diabetics.
The blood test searc hes for
antibodies that destroy the body's
insulin-producing cells. The antibo·
dies require several years before
1h£'y des! roy enough cells. called
Islet cells, to cause diabetes.
Of the re latives tested, 16 people ·
were found to have the antibodies .
Two ol the 16 developed diabetes
within two years.
Through a11other test. called the
glucose tolpr,,nce te st. researchers
we re able to predict how tong it
would take for the dia bet es to
develop.
Diabetes experts now believe
juvcnilc-onset or Type 1 diabetes is
caused by a defect in the immune
system . ~hich causes itiO maketh('
antibodies that destroy it s own
insulin-produdng cells, located In
Ihe pancteas . Insulin Is a hor mone
that helps Iile body break down
sugar for enf&gt;rgy.

Without sufficient Insulin, the
concenl ration of sugar in the blood
increases until the brain can no
longer function and the viet im goes
into seizures a .nd dies.
About 1 million Americans are
believed to have juvenile-onset
diabetes. Another 9 million have the
less serious form of diabetes known
as adult -onset . or Type 2. The report
conclud£'d that many first -degree
relatives .of d.labelics around the
world may . have tmmuriologic
a bnormalities but are not ;•et
overtly diabetie.

No. 73-50
No . 74 -50

Shocks
by Gabriel
HEIIVY DUTY

Limit 8
cxp. 812 8/S&gt;
- -- --- - -COUPON--------

11

LUMINIZED
STEEL MUFFLERS

ONLY

$191§

I
I SILaCRUI .
1 ••ncua..
I
I
I
I

77¢

TIRE PRESSURE
GAUGE
U92t

I

MORE THAN
,...,,,,.. .. AS LONG

~---------r-··~::::~:

ST

FLOOR MATS
• Indian blo~el
malerialtooks
and stands

gre~t I

th8

2Z
. 14

test

.

r•

---------· e xp. 8/ 28/85

Limi t 1

I

REBUILT

DISC BflAKE PA.DS

CALIPE.S

• NO HASSLE
GUARANTEE

NO HASSLE
GUARANTEE

l.

LIST . $54.80

of lime.

LIST ••. $36.40
CHROME

MODINE

ENGINE
DRESS. UP
PACKAGE

RADIATORS

A·1 Remanufactured

Ul'TO

45%tJIIF

BLOWER
.MOTORS

Wit RAVE A

• Bu il1 To E:ccetcf Tht Hivt'! ·
est lnduttry Stll'ldlrds

Weather forecast
Moslly sunny today. with highs in
the mid 70s. P :1 rily cloudy tonight
a nd Friday, with a low tonight nPar
00 and high temperatures Friday In
tile low 80s.
The probabili tly of precipitation Is
near zero toda;l and tonight a nd 20
percent Friday.
Ohio Exter.uled Forecast
Saturday tlu'oulh Monday
·A ch.....,., olsl&gt;owers and thunder·
8lonn8 Saturda:r and Sunday, with
fair weather on 1\fonday. IBIM wW
..up from lhemld'lOstothe mid 80s
eac:h day. Ovemilgllt lows wW he In
the upper 5011 orU•e6011Saturday and
Swlday mornings, faDing Into the
upper 40s or tile 3~ early Monday.

18•

I

Limit 4
IIH5001
N
IIH5006
with coupon
IIH4651
IIH4656
exp. B/28/ 85
- - - - - - -- COUPON -------

$133 89

OF HIGH
PEIIPORMAIICE

~NO

PARTS AliD

$

'

G&amp;J
t

2140.....
'

Parts Plus autostor•
MASON. WJ

GALLIPOLIS
240 THIRD AVE.
1704 EASTERN AVE.
446-1813
446-4204
AM 'Til 5:30 PM
8 AM 'TIL 7 PM

GMC C~RS
LIGHT TRUCKS

ROUTE 33

992·"39
. 8 AM •n 5:30 PM

773-SS 11
8 AM 'Til 5:30 PM

POINT PLEASANT.
515 MAIN ST.
675-1520
8 AM 'nl 5 PM

CS85-U90

WY

2611 JACKSON AVE.
675·2731
8 AM 'TIL 7 PM csa~-m

I

�,
. Thursday. August 22. 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page- S The Daily Sentinel

The Daily ·Sentinel

By The Bend
.

In the spotlight

more

the rescue.
Blanching vegetables in the
microwave may help you keep cool
and comfortable while you get the
' job done, especially !!you have only
a few batches to prepare. And food
salety Is not a problem using the
microwave method .

Frozen vegetables that have been
blanched In the microwave oven ·
wUI be safe to eat throughout the
year.
- But tlmlrtg, temperature and the
blanching procedure are Important
to the quality of the frozen product.
Because most microwave ovens
heat a bit unev(!niy, there's a
chance of over-cooking or undercooking theproduct during the
blanching.
Even though this doesn't affect
the safety of tbe food, It may
decrease the eating quality.
With over-cooking, vegetables
may get rather mushy. Underblanching will not Inactivate the
enzymes In the vegetables. Then as

Got your photos?
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Some 30 seniors of
School's graduatIng class have not
picked up their
graduation photos , Principal
James Miller
advises.
There 's no
all they have to do- or parents can
pick 'em up -is togo to the office of
the high school during business

hours.

, ,~··

' • '•

-:-

...

...

.·'· ...

,.,.. " '} ,.

Those who haven't picked up are
James Acree, Michael Cline, Mi chael Davidson, Ed Dill, Katrina
Donohue, Lorena Donohuc ,
Tammy Dorst, Bobby Foster,
Donald Hall . Mark Hammonds,
Timothy Jones, George Justice,
Vincent Knight , Elizabeth Lewis,
Scott McKinley , Terry Mullins,
Linda Noel, J am es Parker, Wesley
Preast, Maggle Reynolds, Matt
Rllfle, Eva Siek, Robert Staats,
Denise Stegall, Daniel Thomas,
William Weaver. Jackie Welker,
Pam West, Brlen Willis, and
Christopher Workman .

,. :,..,
__

Horat'£' Karr, Pomeroy, prf'sident of the KarT ConstmcUon Co.,

has been na~ed one of five new
members or the Board of Trustees
of Rio Grange College and will
begin his term in September.
The Central Regional Office of St.
Jude Children's Research Hospital,
New Albany, Ind ., announced that
Mrs . Roberta Nelson will chair the
hospital's blke-a-thon In Rerosville.
Proceeds go to the hospital which
combats catastrophic diseas£•s in
children.
·
One of Meigs County's nicest
couples, Dick and LeOna Karr of
Pomeroy, will ma rk their tiOth
wedding anniversary on Sept. I.
A family celebration will be held
at the home of ·their son-In-law and
daughter, Edward and Patricia
Bauer, 1900West Walnut St., Dover.

ar o

LlGHTS 25
LOWERED

TAR &amp; NtCOT

-

a~25s ora

.

, .•.

-·--

- ·'
,; .. .... :.:
~·

' . -• .f"'

~-;;;_:;:, =~::-- _!. .. ~-~ : .•

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
Lights : 10 mg "tar:' 0.7 mg nicotine- Kings: 16 mg "tar:' 1.0 mg nicotine av. per cigarelle. FTC Report Feb '85.

•

Sorry about that, and I do -feel
obllga ted to tell you. The author ol that nice letter to
the editor in Tuesday's . edition
thanking Individuals for their work
In ge!Hng the Marauder Stadium In
Pomeroy looking good and the
lighting repaired was Pomeroy
Postmaster James Soulsby, who Is
also president ol the Meigs Athletic
Boosters. Sorry 'bout that .
Meigs reside11t, Samuel Ralrden,
who is making his home at the
Arcadia Nursing Home in Coolville,
will be observing his 9.'1rd birthday
on Aug. :n He'd appreciate visitors
and cards.

•

Not available in some areas.

•::

Plli~O

Moms Inc 1985

The Ladies Auxiliary ol the
Chester Fire Department enjoyed a
trlp to Blennerhas!&lt;"lt Island recently. Prior to the trlp a short
buiness meeting was held at the
flrehou!&lt;". Members enjoying the
outing were Marcia Keller, Erma
Cleland, Opal Holon, Ethel Orr,
Betty Hawk, Bonnie Landers,
Pauline Ridenour, Dixie Bealr,
Lora Damewood. Cleo Smith, Betty
Newell, Clara Conroy, Margaret

Dues to be paid·
by Smith Capehart
members Legion.
Charles Dodd, adjuctant , asks all
members or Smith Capehart Post
140of the American Legion to begin
paying yearly dues as soon as
possible. Dodd reminds leglonalre~
that early rene-Wal of dues entitles
rnembl&gt;rs to benefits such as the
$1000 insurance poUcles: Two $500
scholarships and two paid up for life
memberslilps are awarded each
year lo members paid before the
deadlllles.
·

the product sits In your freeZer, the

·active enzymes keep on maturing
the vegetable. This may result In an
over-ripe "starchy" taste that's less
sweet than the garden-fresh food
you started out with .
So, the procedure you use for
microwave blanching cna lessen
the chance of over or under
cooking.
First, start out with a small
quantity of the vegetable. About
four cups or one quart Is enough to
work with at one time. Place the
clean vegetable in one and one-half
quart " microwave-safe .. glass cas~

Community calendar I area happenings
THURSDAY
RACINE - Racine Legion Post
602 will hold a special meeting
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m. , for Insta llation
of offlcers. Refreshments will he
served.
FRIDAY
RUTLAND - Dance, Rutland
Civic Center Fridayfrom8 to 11 p.m.
"Flashback" will provide the
music. Cost ls$2forslnglesand$3for
couples.
'
EASTERN - Parents and kindergarten students are Invited to
attend the Eastern Local prekindergarten meeting to be held at
Tuppers Plains Elemimtary Friday. Aug. 23, at 9 a.m.
The kindergarten program, conference tinnes, classes and requirements will he discussed. Shot
record sand biJ·th certificates will be
needed.
MIDDDLEPORT- Revival services will be held Friday, Saturday
and Sunday at Freedom Tabernacle, '1fi!l South Second St., Middleport
with Evangelist B.T. Weston, of
Columbus. Special singing wiU be
featured each evening. Pastor

Curtis

~vans

Farm.

Doesn't the exterior or Sacred
Heart Church look fantastic alter
all of the work during the past few
months? I understand some sort of
a sealing substance Is yet to be
added. I Imagine the congregation
will have some sort of special
observance to mark the completion
of the major project.
If you have the feeling that there
are some days when you can't win
- you 're right! There are. How·
ever. maybe no one will realize
you're losing, il you keep smiling.

weekend guests or Mr . and .Mrs.
Clayton Allen.
Mrs. Karla Chevalier and Mrs.
Linda Well have returned home
after spending severa I days in
Chambersburg, Pa. having been
called there by the serious illness of
their sister, Sandra Perdas.
Roeyn and Todd Toban, Blytheville, Ark., and Tramine Baldridge,
Denver. Colo., spent a month here
with Mrs. Cleo Smith.

Christy, Mary Hayes, and a guest,
Martha Lee.
·

.
.
serole with "t he _r£~Comm~nded
vegetables into ke watet.
minutl':;. AfH·r. t hilling is comamount of water. Cover the casseFor co rn cut off the ~ob, pleted, the corn can be cut off the
role and cook for half the blanching microwave lour cups lor a total of cob If desired. When packaging
time. If your microwave doesn't lour minutes. After the one-minute corn-on-the-cob, be sure to remove
have an accurate minute dial, use a rest, transler the corn !rom the all air !rom tbe package before
clock with a second hand.
· glass casserole to a meta l bowl. Jreczing.
Stopping the microwave hallway Then set tile metal bowl in ice . Spinach has a high water content,
through the blanching time and water.
so no extra water Is needed durlng
To blanch a poundolbroccoli (cut the blanching. Place aboqt orie
stirrlng the food helps distribute the
heat more evenly. 'Fhls may help Into two-inch pieces) or ca uliflower· pound in a two-quart covered
eliminate over or under cooking.
I_cut Into flowerettes), use one-third
· casserole and microwave for a total
At the end of the blanching time, cup of water a nd a six-minute of four minutes.
As a general rule of thumb, chill
allow the vegetable to stand microwave blanch . For corn-on- '
{covered) lor one more minute. the-cob, place six ears in a 12 x the vegetable the sa me a mount of
Then quickly cool the product. An eight-inch microwave-safe dish lime It was blanched. then use
easy way to do this Is to drop the with no added water. The total towels to remove excess moisture

-============================bl,:a::
nc:h:i::
ng==:ti:;m::e::i:;:s,;f:;iv,:;e,:a;::n::;d,:o::;n::P-,;:h::;a::,
if

Now you can get a wild horse
from Wyoming or a wild burro !rom
Arizona free of charge in the U.S.
Interior Department's Bureau of
Land Management program.
That is - If you have a good
enough reason for wanting one.
The bureau Is conducting a
contest. To enter you write down, .
The Curtis family reunion was
legibly, why you waant such an
held
Aug. 18 at the Alexandria
animal and send you entry to
Adopt-a-Horse and Burro, P.O. Box Service Club hall at Alexandria.
Kermit Anderson had th prayer
22357, Alexandria, Va. 223()1,
preceding
the dinner.
These are the same type animals
Attending
were Bill and Mary
which are put up for adoption
periodically, the most recent one in
this area being held at the Bob

Fire Auxiliary holds meetif!g

.

(

Ohio 44622.
I thought you would want to know
that .

Chester personal notes
Mr. and Mrs. John Benson,
Columbus visited Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Clayton Allen and Denzel
Cleland.
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cleland and
Diana, Duncan, Okla. spent several
days here with Mrs. Erma Cleland.
Debbie Cleland returned home with
them after visiting here with her
grandmother for a month.
Dr. and Mrs. Billy R. Allen, Katie
and BobbY, Westerville. were

Page-S

'

Microwave blanching for vegetables

Beat of the bend

.•.

'

'

..

By Cynthia S. OUveri
CD!Inty Extension Agent
Home Economlcs/ 4-H
Getting those fresh garden vegeta bles from the garden tot he freezer
calls for some work - and
traditionally, a boUing water or
steam blanching method. If that
thought smothers your food preservation splrlt on a hot, humid day,

your microwave oven ca n come to

... , ...

Thursday. August 22, 1985

Eugene Anspach welcomes the
public.

SATURDAY
RUTI.AND - A Class D soltball
tournament will be held in Rutland.
Entry lee is$60 and two red dot balls.
Ca ll 742-2948, 992-5528 or 992-6561 for
Information.
SUNDAY
CHESffiRE - Poplar Ridge
Freewill Baptist Church will celebrate Homecoming on Sunday.
Dinner wlll he served at noon and
singing bY The Heaven Bound Four
will be featured. Bud Hatfield will
present the afternoon message and
everyone is welcome.

Mud run
POMEROY - The Tri -County
Four Wheelers will sponsor a mud

f~mily~.reunion

Reedsville
•
commumty
happenings

·Mr. and Mrs. Charles Congrove,
Zanesville, visited . recently with
Mrs. Nell Wilson.
Mr. and Mrs. David Weber have
returned from a vacation In Myrtle
Beach, S.C.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown, Mr.
· and Mrs. Donald Myers, and Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Pickens of the
Community Builder's Club enjoyed
a cookout at Forked Run State Park
recently.
Mrs. Walter Brown visited with
Mrs. Steve Cowdery and family, and
Miss Naomi Pickens at Chillicothe.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hensch, Canton,
Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Whitehead,
and Sarah Frydman recently vacationed at Myrtle Beach.
Mrs. Llnnie Crary has returned to
her home after being a patient at
Camden-Clark Hospital and spending some time with Mr. and Mrs .
Terry Smith at Keno.
Mrs. Roger Chaney and Angle of
Tuppers Plains spent a day recently
with Mr. and Mrs. Bill Congrove.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Smith of
Akron visited Mrs. Leona Ruth and
Garth Smith recently.

is held

Powell, and Curtis Palmer, East
Liverpool; June and Bob Ashley,
Racine; PautaAnnKerns,Juddand
Stormy Weiland, Westerville; Dora
Crispin, Long Bottom; Hobart and
Inza Newell, Chester; Perry and
Sylvia Curtis; John and Marjorie
Brewer, Reedsvllle. ·
Ruby Bowman, Mr . and Mrs.
Harold DeWolf, Gordon and Betty
Rose, Randy Rose, Newark; Elinor
Rose. Mt. Vernon; Don and Yvonne,
David, Darin Griffith, and Sherry
Martin. Granville; Hubert Johnson,
Kenny and Betty Duke, Alexandria;
John Anderson, Christopher, Eric
and Evan, and the hosts, Mr. and
Mrs. Kermit Anderson, Alexandria; · and Mr. and Mrs. Perle
Anderson, Newark.

Microwave blanching is r onvc-

run on Mond ay, Sept. 2, Labor Day,
al l p.m . beglnningfromStateRoute
143 to the Zion Church Road. Four
classes 35, 38, 40 lire sizes stock and
modilled 40's an up will be included.
Cash awards will be given to two
places per class with prize money to
be $4(X)or higher. Relreshments will
be sold.

~lent il you have onlv a small
amount ol vegeta bles to p1·epare.
For large quantities, a bollihg
w"te1· blanch may be more
eflicient .
Did you know that ... thP
microwave oven is nol recommended for home canning. For
addilional information contact t he
Meigs Cou nty Extension Service at
992-6696.

OPEN 24 HOURS
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
STARTING AUGUST 16

Watch FDf Gttmd Opening Coming Soon

Movie set
LONG BO'ITOM - Monongahe·
lla Power Company will show a

the
movie,
regular
"Button
meeting
Up Your
of Home,
the Long
" at
Bottom Community Association to
be held Wednesday , Aug. 28, at 7:30
p.m. The meeting will he held at the
Long Bottom Community Building.
The public Is invited.

from the vegetable and package for
the lreezer.

FOOD SHOP

l~===~8~2~~===M~a~i=n~S=t~~==~=O~H~.===~

TICHY BUDCET?
RETREADS
RADIAL
&amp; NON RADIAL

$1995
AND UP

PlUS IXCHANGE

lau11t•d

GENER.AL
TIRE
SALES
Tilt
the Rod."

"-W~ere

H. 2ndjn.

&amp; Balanced Frer

R•~•., M~tte
991·7161

Middltport, OH.

TOPS FURNITURE GALLERIES
ONCE-A-YEAR
CUSTOMER APPRECIATION SALE-

Save Storewide

15°/oro 5 5°/o
REDUCTIONS

l

1

IN-STOCK MERCHANDISE
NINE DAYS ONLY
SOME OF OUR CUSTOMERS WAIT ALL YEAR FOR THIS SALE

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

9-5 DAILY
UNTIL 8:00
MON.-FRI.

CORNER SECOND AND GRAPE ST
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 446-0332 .

ONI OF THE TRI·COUNTIE ' TWO FINEST FURNITURE ST RES

'

�-•

11

Thursday.

.....

•

10-The

Sentinel

.••

Area minister honored
Several Meigs County relatives of
the Rev. Louis E. Campbell. a
former pastor of the Presbyterian
Chureh In Harrisonville. recently
attended the opening a new addition
to the First Presbyterian Church in
Delaware. The addition was dedi·
rated to Campbell.
Campbell, retired and living in
Belpre, was born in Jackson, Ohio.
After graduation from high school.
he -went to Rio Grande College
before transferring to the College of
Wooster. He graduated at Wooster
in 1936 and went on to Prlnceton
Seminary in New Jersey.
Campbell's early ministries included positions in . Albany and
Harrisonville. He came to Harrison·
ville in 1939 and was there for two
years. It was in Harrisonv!lle that he
met, Anne Coelle Alkire. his wife of

-•'
~

••

~

ll!t

•••
•
•

issuance of booklets containing

44y~ars.

Shortly after their marriage, the
young cou pie moved to Bellaire
where Campbell became the minister of the Rock Hili chureh. In 1943
they moved to Zanesv ille where he
served the Brighton Church during
World War I I. In 1948. theCampbells
moved to Blue Ridge Summit in
Pennsylvania. Then came themove
to Delaware.
The dedication in Delaware was
made in honor of Campbell's 25
years.a s mini,ter of the church. 1950
through 1975.
According to a Delaware newspaper's acc-ount of the dedication,
Campbell continues to be regarded
with aff&lt;'!'t ion and love by members
of the church who remember him

·· some 100 poems written by
Campbell.
'file loose- leaf book Is titled- ·
" Leaves from a Buckeye Tree."
These poems reflect Campbell's
interest , not only in matters of
Christianity, but also In nature,
wildlife (especially birds) and iii
history.
Campbell's poems have been
widely published, many In the
Columbus Citizen -Journal in Its
Saturday poetry column.
· Campbell, in poor health, was
unable to attend the Maydedlca lion.
A sori, Torn Campbell, and a
daughter, Anne, of Chelmsford,
Mass., represented their father.
After retirement, Campbell spent
five years in San Diego, Ca. He and
his wlf&lt;' have been living In Belpre
s ince 1981.
Att end ing the dedication from
Meigs County were Helen Alkire
Pickens and granddaughter Amy
Wagner, Virginia Alkire Burke,
Charles and Jean Alkire, Jan Alkire
Hlll a nd children J enni and Andy.
Also in attendance were James ~nd t
Lena Alkire Hewitt, of Columbus.
Other loca l relatives, a lthough not .
present for the dedication, include
Robert and Francis Alkire,
Harrisonville.

The annual reunion and picnic of
the graduating class of 1935, Chester
High School, was held Sunday
afternoon at the ReedsvUie Locks
and Dam picnic area . A covered
dl$h dinner a nd baked ham were
served.
Plcturesweretakenandthegroup
enjoyed reminiscing a nd visiting. A
business meeting was conducted by
Warren Pickens, with new officers
elected being Owen Damewood ,
president; Samuel Michael, treasurer; a nd Mildred Caldwell, secreta)'y. It was voted to hold the 19&amp;i
reunion at the same place on the
second Sunday In September .
Class members attending were

Edith Curtis, Akron; Evelyn Sedgwick. Mildred Caldwell and Gordon
f\idenour, Tuppers Plains; Marie
HauckandHarryBailey,Pomeroy;
WalterBrownandWarrenPickens,
Reedsville; Samuel Michael, Fortland; Ronald Osborne and Owen
Damewood, Long Bottom; Roy
Christy a nd Clayton Allen, Chester.
Guests were Ted Sedgwick a nd
Lucille Ridenour. Tuppers Plains;
Margaret Brown and Lilian
Pickens, ReeedsvUie; Lora Damewood and Ella Osborne, Long
Bottom; Margaret ChriSty a nd
Clarice Allen, Chester; Cora Mich.ael, Portland, and Margaret
Bailey, Pomeroy.

-..-••
~

•'
•

geocy Medicine Depa rtment of
Hoi7Rr Clinic and Holzer Medical
Center will be held Tuesday, Aug.
?:/,. at 4 p.m . in the P hysicians
LoUnge adjacent to thf- emergency
roq m.
The topic to be prcsentod is
"Management of Oral Facial
Trauma and Ot her EmergenciPs,"
by Dr. Thom as ·A. Skinner, a

memlx'r of the Department of
Surgery a t Holzer Clinic and HM C
medical staff.

Is
RICE

LARGEST INVENTORY
AVAILABLE- IN THE
Til-COUNTY AREAl

1985 FORD
ESCORT DIESEL
4 dr., air .cond .• stand. trans., PS,

1985 MERCURY
TOPAZ
trans., AM/ FM radio stereo,
radial tires. Stock# 2036.

WAS

.

WAS

NOW

1985 FORD CROWN
VICTORIA
4 dr .. V-8, air cond., vinyl roof,
auto. trans., PS, PB, power win·
dows, power seat, tinted glass,
tilt wheel , cruise, wire wheel
covers, remote m irrors, rear
window defogger. Stock N2174.
WAS
NOW

4 dr., 4 cy l-., air cond .. auto.
trans., PS, PB, tilt wheel ,
AMIFM radio stereo cassette ,
rear window defogger. Stock II
5847.
WAS

NOW

'1 0,3....:;1.=,
6_ ...;.;;:;..:..=...-+-'..;..
1 ;;;..:.;;..;....;..........;........;_
177
~
·
I1-1985 MERCURY
1985 FORD
COUGAR
THUNDERBIRD
V-8, air cond., auto. trans., P S,
PB, body side mouldings, tinted
6 cyl. , air cond., t inted glass.
Light Group. tilt wheel, c ruise,

remote mirrors, rear window

WAS

WAS

NOW

'12,968 ·-~·~=+~·~1;,.,;;,.r,....,'""""""' -~-

wheel, cruise,

..

rear window defogger. Stock' 5529.
WAS

'16, 197

NOW

7.7%

'1

'

10

•

CELEBRITY

ma:v be sent to him at Box 304,South
Ohio. 45368.

WAS

'

••'

'9995 -~

Open q Jo I oo
tlolf•li Thull
44b-9 5 23

1981 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SEDAN

1982 CHEVROLET

v)f.9!!E. a~~~19..

1

PS,

4 dr. sedan , V-8, air cond., PS,
PB, tinted glass, radial tires,

PB , tilt wheel. AMIFM radio
stereo tape, radial tires, white
walls . Srock N 51241.
WAS

·. 1985 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE

NOW

1979 MERCURY
COUGAR XR-7
V-8, air cond., vinyl roof, auto .
trans., PS, PB, power seat, power
door locks. tilt wheel. cruise,
AM/FM radio stereo tape, radial
tires , whitewalls. Stock N 21695.
WAS
NOW

NOW

Liv. Rm. Suite
Reg. •319.00 .

~- -

4 wheel drive, 112 ton pickup, 6
cyl ., 4 speed, PS, P~ , gauges,
rear step bumper, AM/ FM radio
stereo tape. Stock# 21001.

WAS

NOW

'1

1978 RAM CHARGER

1985 CHEVROLET S-10 1980 .CHEVROLET C-10
ton pickup, 6 cyl., auto. trans.,
If~

Aircond .. 4cyl.,4speed.PS.rear
step bumper. air cond ., AM/FM
radio stereo. Srock~ 21371.

PS, PB, gauges, rear step bum·
per, AM/ FM radio stereo cassette . Slock N21721.

WAS

WAS

NOW

NOW

· while walls. Stock N 58661.
WAS

•

NOW

4 wheel drive with topper. 6 cyl .• 4
speed, PS, PB, traction lock rear
a)(le, long wide bed, rear Step
bumper, au)(. fuel tank, tinted
glass, AM/FM radio.
WAS
NOW

•

..'•
•
'

"'

'.
••'

1f2 ton pickup, 6 cyl., auto. trans ..

PS, F»B, long wide bed, gauges,
rear ste p bumper, tinted glass,
AM/FM radio. Stock N58981 .

!t~~~~2!~~~~--~~~

OTHER SEALY MATTRESSES

TWIN

I'IJ. 114.91

FULL

It~.

lfDUS

QUEEN

1'1- 1171.10

$4995 S699S S899S

r•. ''·
••· ' '·
rIU
.. ''·
FREE
#'-__________________________
__.
!AVI 135

!AVI '60

!AYI

o:.~=$19
.

WAS

12 INCH
OSCILLATING

FAN

"Serving Y'ou . .rtf~•

be

Sl 4 9 9

CHARAOER

KITS with matching POP-TP

1

w

thermo Bettles

.,49

SCHOOL LUNCH KITS

Rq.'&amp;"

•

.•"'"

-•.•

.:;:"'

,.l:

SWIM MASK

'4"-

.

NOW

10°/o
60 OR
OVER OR
UNDER

..

...
..-••
""
...

BIG

16 OUNCE
.PLASTIC
STADIUM CUPS
~. Mtld

CoiDis

colored cups are wonderful
to take on picnics or to
uee In your home.

AMOUS MAKER Y A
50~ Acrylit • 5K Polyester
1% oz.
COMES IN

15 COLORS

2fOR$100

AND

SNORKLE SET
Observe the beautiful sea under-

No. 21762

~

...

•----~~~~--.JL- !6!~·--J These light weiaht, brightly

4 PLY

present to win.

.
•
...
......
•"'

IBQ GRILL

I

~N~o~pU:rc~h~l~le~--~:~d:o~n:or~h:ave to

•.

Pllltit Jug

..
PICNIC

come In and register for 1 pair of
FREE TI'C::KETSI
Drawing will be held Thursday, August 29, 1985
~

CHEESE

!-

•

S999S

-·~

OR

POOL

.

1

•CHEESE PUFFS
•CHEESE POPCORN
•BUnER POPCORN
'

RING INFLATABLE

•

· j rt.ts

•CHEESE BALLS

'

• ••

Wananty
Sets Only

CARAMEL CORN

?---"----

DISCOUNT

Reg. 1179

EA PC

PARTY Pat

'
.
Three
speeds for a coohng
breeze. lJL listed.

.;

,..'

50% $8995 '~';,~ ..

•nd cold liquid
d!a·persse1r. Capacity
1.9 litl!rs.

2 Pound Jar

1980 FORD TRUCK

'4495

RECLINER

POSTUREPfDIC

'

200 COUNT
5SUIJECT
NOTEBOOK

CABANA FOODS SNACKS

•

NOW

Game On
Sept. 7, 1985.

•

SALE!
WELCH'S
GRAPE
JELLY

•

1984 FORD F-250

WAS

Turnpike of
Gallipolis, 0.
Will Send 20

NEW

1984 FORD F-150
4X4

•

4 wheel drive, V·S, autO. trans..
PS. PB, gauges, air cond.,
AM/FM radi o, radial tires . Stock
N588A2.

New 2 Pc. E.A. ·

No. 21721

4

NOW

6 99

'

up to 211" s1nU
• Noft-lllp .......
• Ha;dwood Flnllll

®

.••'

cond., auto. trans., tilt wheel,
cruise, AM/ FM radio, radial
tires, white walls. Stock 1151461.

• MjUe......l'lls

One Gallon
. Size
Unbreakable

•
•

4 dr., front wheel drive. 4 cyl., air

'

stainless steel with
llE!atlher straps for easy

• $299

•
••

....
..

POT

JUG
WITH
SPIGOT

•

.

''

AIR

·-- Months Terms With Approved Credit

••

.

"

Each piece is made of oak

"-

A.P .R.
FINANCING

•CROWN VICTORIA
•LT.D.
•THUNDERBIRD
•GRAND MARQUIS
•MP,RQUIS
•LINCOLN TOWN CAR
•F·SERIES TRUCKS
•CLUB WAGON
•CONVER~ION VANS

OYer 111111
CUtting 1oan1s · .

99~ -2~

No.2 Lud

IN
GLASS JAil

TOOLSn

30 QUART

radio, radial tires, white walls, remote mirrors,

•

Ben Quisenberry, long-time resident of SyracuS&lt;', will observe his
. 98th birthday on Sa turday. Cards

- 'OFF

·YELLOW
PENCILS

•
"•

WAS

IUY ONE
LAMP
GET ONE

AM/FM

•ESCORT
•MUSTANG
•TEMPO
•EXP
•LYNX
•COUGAR
•TOPAZ
•CAPRI
•ECONOLINE VAN

PB, power windOws, tilt wheel, '
cruise, AM!FM radio stereo tape.
tradial tires, white walls. Stock II
21671.

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

••

V·B, air cond., lnl. &amp; eKt. decor group, auro. Irons.. PS. PB, power win·
dows. power sear, bocfv side mouldings, llnled glass, luggage rack, tilt

I '

BROUGHAM
6 cy l., air cond ., auto. trans., PS,

• SAVE '100

10 Pack of

NOW

S777

•'

1.9 LITIR

•CHOOSE FROM• _

1984
OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME

~199

WAS

SCHOOL
PENCIL
BOXES

. 4 PIICII.B.Q.

FOAM
ICE
CHESTS

remote

•

NEW 5 PC.
WOOD GROUP

95

tires, wheel covers,
mirrors. Slock M57~.

CIIROHELLA
CANDLES

STAIIWS STEU

99&lt;

4 dr., V-8, air cond., .auto. trans .•
PS , PB. power windows, power
door locks, tilt wheel. cruise,
AMIFM radio srereo, radial

1985 MERCURY
COLONY PARK
STATIOJi.WAGON

NOW

WAS

1985 FORD LTD LX

•

glass, tilt wheel. cruise, AMIFM
r.adio stereo cassette, radial
tires, white walls. remote
mirrors. Stock M2176.

defogger. Stock N2165.

1

1985 LINCOLN

V-8, air cond .1 coach roof, PS,
PB, power windows, povyer seat,
power door locks, floor mats. tin·
ted glass, rusr proofing, AMIFM
radio search, white walls, wire
wheel covers, remote mirrors.
Stock M 5776.

.

'

59e 99e.

Pkg. of 3

$109

20t8.

1985 FORD
TEMPO

1

.

rust proofing, till wheel, AMIFM
radio stereo, radial tires. Stock II

2 dr., Special Tutone, 4 cyl., auto.

-

CRICKET
SPOSA
LIGHTERS

COTTO NELLE
BATHROOM
TISSUE

•

t

2501 JACKSON AVE •
POINT PLEASANT, WV

4 Pack

.

Birthday set

854 Second
Galhpoli s

36 5 JACKSON PIKE
GALUPOLIS, OHIP

•

Physicians an d nursing person nel in area emergency departments
and nursing homes a nd emergency
mrdlca·l services personnel frorh
Gallia . Meigs. Athens . Jackson and
Maspn Counties are invited.

FURNITURE

-PBA

••
•
'

Emergnecy class set
The eighth In a series of monthly
programs presented by the Emer·

No. 5117

••

I

Class reunion conducted

• Durable It mainteD&amp;Dce free
• Wide extruded st.,_ for eure
footed eafety
, Light wei1ht for euy carTytJlB
• euy to store .- fol4h t() 2M •
tblcklwtee
'

~

for tlls wise counsel a nd hours of J
devoted chu reh work.
Dedication of the addition was
part of the !75th anniversary of the
Delaware church . Part of the
dedication festivities Included the

"
'...

•

:FREE .
.

p

A
R
K
1
N
G

CA~PER LIGHT
A terTiric light to take camping,
keep in your car and to have at
home. Features include a steady
or blinking main light and a
lighted handle that can be used
with or without th e main light.
Amber filter and main light'
shine white or in color,
Batteries not included.
No. 21650

S

world as you s wim. See clearl y
and breathe as you watch the
fish glide by .
No. 21634

•

.••
~

-•
&lt;

...

..•...'
,.·-'

••

~ ·

"'..
·~

...•...
•' ·

"·••.

INFLATABLE

SWIM AIDS
• 20" SWIM RING

•..
.•'
•'

~

••

••
•

•.••

••
1

• 16" BEACH BALL

~

...."

• ARM R.OATS

49!
j
~~--~~~~~~~ !
..

....•
~

~

....'

'

�I
Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, August 22. 1985

Karr, Eachus, Laughlin join
Rio's Board of Trustees
RIO GRANDE-The Board of Hereford Association, The Ohio
National City Bank, The Standard
Trustees of Rlo Grande Coll&lt;:ge has
Wildlife Council and The Ohio Rtver
Oll Company, Revco D S Inc ,
appointed five new members who
Task Force.
TRW Inc
and The City of
w11l begin their terms In ,
Harold Laughlin IS the ownet and
Clevela nd
September
Chtef Executive Officer of Laughlm
Laubscher's numerous profesWilliam Eachus of Gallipolis,
Music and VendlngServ!ce, Inc He
sfonal aff!Uatlons Include the Amer·
Horace Karr of Pomeroy, Harold
IS a life-long resident of Athens and
lean Institute of Architects, The
Laughlin of Athens, W ilham
member of n umerous profess1onal
Cleveland Orchestra M usical Arts
Laubscher of Cleveland and Ron
and social organizations He has
Association, U nited Way Group
Smder of Jackson will jom the 40 served as Director of the Ath~ns
Leader, Greater Cleveland Growth
member board.
Chamber of Commerce, Vice Pres iAssoclatton and Architects Soctely
William Eachus Is founder and
dent and Director of the Ohio Music
of Ohto.
majority shareholder of Diversified
and Amusement Association, Expo
He received hts Bachel or of
Investors, Inc. He has been m the Chairman and Athens County Architectu re f rom Pennsylvania
busmess oi structurtng and develop
Shrine Club President.
State University He attended the
ing real estate through the limtled
Laughlin M ustc and Vendmg
Advance Management Program at
part nership vehicle since 1975 His
Servtce, I nc. servtces commercial
Harvard U mverslty Busi ness
organization has raised over $12.5
and mdustrtal locatiOns m 12 • School
mllhon from Investors m acquinng
Southern Ohio compames. Area
Ron Snider ts prestdent of
over $3.1 million of real estate. The
clients mclude Robbms and Myers,
Jackson Corporation In Jackson. a
firm has offices In Galhpolls,
Federal Mogul, Holzer Medical
subsidiary of Lancaster Colony
Cmclnnati and Parkersburg.
Center, the Gavin and Kyger Creek
Corporauon. He has an extensive
Eachus gradua ted magna cum
power plant s, Oh1o Umversltv, The
career in management m the
laude from Cap1tal U nlvers•ty's law
Goodyear Pl ant in West Vtrglnta
manufactunng Industry wtt h com
school m 1974 He completed his
and the Gener al E lectric Plant In
pames such as General Motor s,
undergraduate st udies at Ohio
Logan Laug hlm Vending also has
Fort Motors and the parker
State University In Busi ness
offices and businesses In Biloxi,
Hanm fm Corporation
Adm i nistr ation
Mississippi.
Sntder oversees nearly 200 em
Horace Karr is president of t he
Wtlllam Laubscher ts Prestdent
ployt'&lt;'S at the Jackson Corpora tion
Karr Construction Company m
and Chief Executive Offtcer of
where he has worked for 12 years
Chester The m aj or constructiOn
Dalton Newport. I nc., an m terna
The firm makes pl ast ic products
com pany was esta blished m 1961.
Ilona! architectural firm headquar·
for household and mdustr lal
The company has constructed
tered m Cleveland He is currently
applica tions.
academic bUildings on the campus
involved In the establishment of
He attended Cornell, Baldwin
of Martella College, Oh1o U mver
proJect management stra tegies, Wallace, Kent State and Eastern
stty and Rto Grande College Other
corporate design phtlosophy and
M tchtgan unlverstlies Snider has
area pr jects Include the Galllpolis
long range p lanning for the Hr m 's
lived m Jackson for six years
Water Treatment Plant , Gallipolis
growt h He consults direc tly with
The Board of Trustees at Rio
Development Center facilities, a
mdust rial, commer ci al and public G1 ande Coll ege
is a
self
number of school bulldmgs and
cl tems on a project basis, ta iloring per pe t u a t1ng boa rd w h ose
area Pizza Huts
factl!Ues analyses and growth and
mem bers are nommated by the
K arr ts a m em ber of the
mat ket strategies to their pat l tcu
Standing Commtttee on Trustees
Parkersburg/ M ariett a ContracJar needs H 1s chents havP mduded Nommauons T r ust ees serve stag·
tor' s Assoctatton, Buckeye Polled
the Cleveland Clinic Fou ndatJOn, gered four-year tetms

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of atl Types
Wortted 1n home area
20 years
" Free Estimates ..

CAll COllECT:

Ph. (614) 843-S42S
711212 mo pd

MEIGS
EXCAYAnNG
COMPANY
•Landscaping
•Basements

•Sewage Systems
•Water l!o Gas Lines
•Water Well Dr~lhng
•Trucking

Call: 742·2407

- · 1 rno.

Chalrmtm of &amp; rlpps-Howard Broadcasting, presents
TV weathennan Willllrd Scott with one of the Orst
editions of the M useum of Broadcasting Master

The Daily Sentinel

cutbacks In corpqr ate history.
Information Sy stem s Chairman
Robert E Allen, who announced the
JOb reductions Wednesday m a
nationwide telephone call to groups
of employees from company head·
quarters In Morrt stown, N.J .. said
ihe paring down of the workforce
will lower costs and tmprove pt oflt

margms
Analysts s3id the move could save
AT&amp; T almost $1 btlllon a yea 1 and
allow the co mpany to offer cuslo

me r s bett t&gt;r pnces on Its comput er
and business t'Qlllpme nl products
The Commumca tlon Workers of
~merlca , one of A T &amp;T's two m ajor
uotons, demanded lmmedtate nego-

ttattons over the massive cutbacks.
Inform ation Systems, which empfoys about 118,000 people, entered
the computer and business eQUIP·
men! market after t he AT &amp;T
break up on .Jan l , 1984
"Since severa l d tfferent orga mza ·
t(ons were combmed mto Inform a·
llon Systems over the last twoyears,

up wtt h redundanctes, whtch are
bemg ellmmated, " satd Bar ry
Campbell, an I nformation Systems

were Jean Alktre, one

ga llon: Marv Voss, two gallons,
Davtd King, three gallons Ma ry
Sta t-chet SIX ga llons and Robet I
Vaughan, e1gh t gallons
Dr James Wll hcrdl d Od Dr
Wllma M.Jnsf iE'ld weret hesUIJ('I"'\is-

mg phySICians and making u p the
nursing staff were Ferndora Story,
Lenora Leifheit , Emma Adams and
Beulah Ward
The canteen was served by the

Women's C lub and c lerical
workers weff' Peggy Harns,

.... Cat holic

Jeanette Radford, Mary Nease

' Jean

Nease,

Wanda Imboden,

M accl Barton, Joyce Hoback, Betsy

••

liiii!pi!i!ii@IIN

November elect ton.
Bowen, 50, Wheeling, made the
announcement W ednesday In Morgantown while a ttending a training
session !or loca l union leaders.
There are no ot her announced
candidates
Bowen has been Dlsfrtcf 23's
assistant director for seven years

., . ......

U CI TII .RMI&lt;! I .... _

oa""'"'"'

. . . .... . ..., .... d ..

&amp;.M_A,,
lloolond f ou..O
1 ro"' hla (poKI n ·~•one. I
ll'u ..... Ul• I Aut! on

,

~ ... p

u

''~~~""- l•tlt41M
11"-to t&lt;lf &amp;.lo

.....

lu~

.. ,.. .... .,. ,,_

11 .. ~ ..... ,..,., ........
" ' Nito l \1.... .....

I

Cl~t:CJojcrd flltlfl!l

11 ..... .....
12 lnocU tao l •

full ~•n n,

7lYOMI 4 wD

71 •&gt;~~~o .-.no • ...,c.....,.,
71
"""""
71 .....
c......
ll h ....,_ ,
71

c.n,...................

..... c- •••

'

...._

u .., ........... .

Ito~"'

47

1711111-I ... OOUt

,,U

11Wo.,od To Oo

Publ ic Notic e

~loci

·-

IU-Mkl......,,

1 71 - 1"1 "'"-"•

J e 7 - Ch"'"'"
1- - V'onron
2'4·-IU&lt;I a. .....

I ll - ~

r.n -,.... o.-

Zt••-o. .,,

U H8fl l i -

U Sotd I

f..,~;o

..

Ut lolil l¥.,40 i " d t r - " "

. . 00

l&amp;o "-"1

of sacrifice."

Allen satd the cut backs are
targeted p rtmarily at 15,000 sta ff
and support posi iions natw nwtde.
Additional reduCIIOns or 9,(0) In
volve 4,000 e mployees m installd-

custom ers w ith 80 or more lines It
makes a famtly of 3B com pu ters
from desk top models to a powerfu l

m1m supen'Omputer and ma nufac
tures a broa d range o( residential
and business trl ephones

Herald, Bobby Geye1, Shawn Eads ,
Mahnda H i ll plus mem ber s of the
Rettred Senior Volunteer Program
Thelma Dill , F lorence R ichards,
E rma fulush , Vlrgl ma Buchanan,
Bernadine M eier, Philom en a Fol·
!rod. Naom t London, Mar lon
Ebers bach and Dorothy Long.
Donor s by commun it y were
- Pom er oy--Anzo n a Stewa t t,
Franklin H Casto, Evelyn Clark,
MarkS. R tggs, Janet M A mbrose,

TPrr y L

Watson, Sister J anet

RPclenwa ld, Phy ll is M Beorhs,
Deborah L
Gru~ser,
Nell V.
Proudfoot, Laura G Proudfoot,
Homer Baxter, Mary L Starc her,
Debra D Mora, Donald A. May,
Dona ld Arment rout, Conn ie Hysell,
Gary E. Snouf fer, Gerald E
Rought , Pennv L Brinker, Harold

W Brmkf'r, Loretta A

Brown,

Dorothy J
Oliver, Robert W
Vaughan, Homer B Smith, Coy E
Nitz, Nora R Nltz, Howard K
Logan, Vir gil K. Wmdon, Geoffrey
W ilson, Jackie Hlidebra nd. Wtl llam
W Radford, David M. Klng, Jerry
Sha wn Eads. Mary A. Sorden.
Carolyn A Jeffers. Rebecca L.

Ambl'CI!;e, Paul A Rice, Robert C.
Couch.
Middleport --Pah lela K Logan,
Bar bara F Mullen, Leafy M
Chasteen, RickY H
Schaefer ,
Nancy LaudermUt , Kat hryn D.
Johnson Char les F Johnson. Dorot hy C McCloud, Gerald L.
An thony, Gloria J Peavley, Judtl h
K Hunter
Long Bottom--Henry Bahr, Ha1
Ian A Ballard.
Rutland--Donme R Laudermllt,
M ary E Jacobs. Larry J Ball,
M arv E Davtdson, Donna M

Davidson, Robert Geyer
Langsville E: ihs E Myers
Hartford, W Va Ra m ona G
Jmdan
Racine- Dorothy M Sayre, Vtrglnla M Bla nd, LJsa R. Parsons,
Ka thleen McNic kle. Wtlllam H
Hoback, Jeanette M . Ra dford,
Dorothy Jea n Alkire, Paul F Marr
Mtnersvllle- Mary L Voss,
Vmton- Will iam R Anderson
Chester Cla 1~n ee C Wolfe, J r
Reedsv tllc Mace! Barton, RIchard Barton

Paul Rusen. the current director.
has Indicated he will not seek
another four-year term. The elec
hon wtll be held Nov. 26.
Bowen -said times "are critical "
for fhe steel Industry and noted a
month-old
strlke agai nst the
Wheeling Pillsburgh Steel Corp
could be r esolved w ith corporate
changes
The na tion's sevent h largest
steelmaker has been unreasonable
In t rying to force the USW to take
pay cu ts to help WheellngPltfsburgh teorgan!Ze $:\14 mtl llon

m long term debt , he sat d.
"We have In the past made
concessions wi th this com pany to
help them have their debt load
ll'duced," Bowen said. "The selfish
Inter ests of banks and Insurance
companies ri ght now hold that debt
load and they are refu sing to
restructure or r educe the Interest
rate of those debt s and w e think that
Is the m ain problem for Wheeling
Plttsburl(h Steel rtght now "

-

Wheellng·Pfttsburgh fUed for reorganlzaflonal bankruptcy A prill6

PR'09ATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHI O
ESTATE OF WILBUR 9 BAI
LE Y. DECEA SED
Case No 24861 Doc:ket 12
Page 509
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On August 9th 19 85 •n the
M e1gs Cou nty Probate Coun.
Case No 2486 1 Harold H
Bl ackston, 36 160 R ock

3 Announcements

REWARD
Ftfty dollar reward
for the safe return of
accurate tnformallon
as to the
whereabouts of a
ltttle 6 months old
Blue Tick Hound.
Answers to the name
Zeke. Last seen at
the county fatr or at
hi s home 34645
Crew Road , Pomeroy,
Ohto.

Please Call:
992-7633
GOOD US ED
Refrigerators, washers, dryers,

gas and efectnc ranges and TV

sets

OP EN 8 TO 6

Inc

54 Misc. Merchandise

Absolutely the
Best Alignment
Mon In the Area .

Complete Car
Service, lube Jobs,
Oil Change,

Springs Road, Pomeroy, Ohto
45769 w as appo1nted Executor of the estate of Wilbur 8
Batley, deceased, lata of Rock
Sprtngs Road. Pomeroy, Oh10
45769

Public Notice

Lena K Nessetroad ·
IBI 22. 29 (91 5, 3tc

Clerk

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tuppers Pla1ns Chester
Water D1stnct ts 1nvrting bidt
for a d1usel-powered electr1c:al
generating system, capable ol
producmg 275 k w at 0 8
Power Factor This generator
shall be continuout for standby power apphcatlons A c:opy
of the general spec:if1Ctions can
be obta1ned at the Tuppers
Plams-Chester Water ll1stnc:t
off•ce. 39561 Bar 30 Road,

Real Estate General

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
Geo S Hobstetter, Jr
Broker
ST RT 143 - ACREAGE 50 acres w1th gas well lor
free gas lo mobile home or
house A sk~ng $30,000 00

SERVICE STATION
992-9932

992·3410

1---------.. .--..------IENNITI'S MOillE &amp;
MANUfACTUIID HOUSING
HEATING &amp; COOLING SYSTEM5

$alas &amp; Service
Quality lntertherm
A1r Cond1tronara
Heat Pumps Furn•ces

446-9416- 446-2812
B/ 12'/2

lnUI

REED REFINISHING
New and Old

PH. 992-5125
222 N. 3rd Ave.
Moddloport, OH. 45 760

10-8-tfc

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992-6931

73·10 Chovy 1r

After 5 Call

73-10 (hnr Jr.

DDOn ....................... '100
73-10 Ch"Y Jr.
Hoods .. ,...
... 5150
73·14 Ch"Y Jr.

il

4/4/ln

Racme, Oh
Ph. 614-843·5191
10 6 tfc

Rt. 611 Wool Dorw1

*BlOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes

Built

" Free Est1mates"

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls
l / 11 / tin

J&amp;F

•ng and k1lchen comb , 1 car
garage full basement, swlmmmg pool Askmg $4 5,00 00
SUBDIVISION - Just out
of Rutland - N1ce corner
lot w1th three bedroom all

PEACH FORK RD. - B r~ c k

veneer, e1ght room home,
w1lh free gas, s1fs on 153
acres m/1, barns and sheds
Excelle nt ca tll e or horse
farm A sk~ng $73 DOO 00
Velma Nocinsky, AssoCIIte
Phone 742·3092

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters - Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Pamt1ng
FREE ESTIMATES

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•InSulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wmdowt
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

949-2263
or 949-2969

4/29/lln

YOUR
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

•SYLVANIA

•SPE£0 QUEEN LAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•~TELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

We H1u·AFall Tl!lt
She' T11~11e111
•• Dllf

BOGGS

RIDENOUR

TV &amp;

r

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

&amp;

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bed rooms, 2 complete baths, dining
room: living room and~ large recreation room. Located on 8
acres. Large farm pond. Racine
area.

HOME NAnONAl BANK
9'49-22

for

PHOTOS

'

HEATING

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
IUStNESS PHON!
16141 992-6550
RISDEN(( PHONE
16141 992-7754

Many P•c••u•• To Choo~e
From- Lowest Pnced
SENIOR Pld:.... i n Town

1ft tfo Wt4dongt, Famolo"
&amp; (~ ......
Call or !folk In for An
Appointment and Prien
308 3rd St., Ram•, OH

992-6712

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Or litis. 949·3031
Allor Aog. :ll

992·6215 or 992-73n

Hot~~~:

8 19·1 mo pd

Pornoroy, Ohio
12·8·tlc

3/22/ttn

PERSONALIZED

Ooors ......................... s1J5
10-IS Ford Jr.

VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL

Doon ...................$1~5

78-79 Ford Tr.
Grolls ....... . . ..
10·81 Ford Jr.

"SPAS"

HYDIOJECH CHIMICALS
491 Gen Hartinger Plr:wy.

992 -7013

We'd hk! to mtroduce you to
Enpae-A Car the modern way
to dnwe the veh1cie of your
ChOICI

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~

Middleport, Ohoo
HIS 10 a.m. to S p.m.
Day
Ntght
1-614
1·304
,992 -2549
773 s,H~
6

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;

TRUCK LEASING
~ox .

t

for Faster Serv1ee
Call 614-992 -6737

MANLEYtS
TRASH SERVICE
MIDDLEPORT
AND

6

Lost and Found

lost 6 mon old Blue T1ck
Hound, lost 1n County Fa1r
v1cln1ty 560 for tnforma tton Call 614-992 · 7633
Lost hght brown Cocker
Spa01el tn Me1gs H1gh
School area Hatr chpped
short Call 614· 992-6363
LOST tractor draw bar,
Carson Road vtcmtty, Ma·
son. phone 304· 882- 3102

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEE,::C SE AVICE
Estate.
farm . antique, hquidat1on
sales Ltceneed Ohto and
West Vtrgmia 304-7735795 or 304-773- 5430

9

Wanted To

Buy

8USINESS-RESID£NTIAL

All or pan of retail, whole sale. or serv1ce busmess tn
Gallta or Metgs Co Call
614-446· 2639.

"0" Btrlllll ,, Btllt
Or Sml,."
For Trash Pickup
Service Call

992-3194
IOGII IYIANLIY, JR.
ROGER MANlEY, Sl.
OWNEIS
1-7-1 mo.

EXPERIENCED UNDERGROUND
COAL MINERS NEEDED
SYSTEMS FROM

$899
7-24·1 mo

2 young cats, 1 male 1
female perfect for a farm
famoly, 304 ·676 1138

POMEROY

8·13 tfn

Applications Available :
417 Lincoln Street
Middleport, Oh . 46760

Mother cat With kittens , par1
S1amese, to g1ve awav C•ll
614 669 4985

Oodnll's Auto Parts Now
buying salvage cars Call
6t4· 388-9615

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

I I Certified Foreman
21 Certified Electricians
31 Cutting Machine Operators
41 Roof Bolters

Giveaway

614· 446 -4506

Pomeroy, OH. 45769

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

-

Blue Grass and 4 ~ountry
MuSic usually eath eac:h
Saturday mght 1 00 to
1 0·00, Shady Waters Campground. G•llipolis Ferry

8

326

~

z

Control hunger an d tose
w e ight ¥11th New
Grapefru1t-PPH Combo at
Fruth Pharmacy

Two Collte dogs, needs a
good home , 304 - 675 ·
5164

Ower 400 Choicts

9· 13-Hn

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,
msured, 20 vean e•pertence, 304-576·2336 or
576· 2866

Adult male dog , good w1th
children, 304- 895· 3027

POOLS

I

i

- Addon1 and rtmodellng
- Roofing and gu«er work
- Concrete work
~ Plumbing and alectrlcel
work
(Free Est1matea1

"FREE ESTIMATES"

Fenders ..... " .......... .....541
1J.79 Ford Jr.

Class C &amp; 0 Soh bait Tournament USSSA sanctioned
August 31 -September 1
Spontored by Racine Volunteer Ftre Dept .. 865 plus 2
balls For mora information
call 614- 949-3073

4 ktttens, litter tra1ned, male
&amp; female . 6 weeks old Call

facturers.

Now Setving All 01
f
Meig1 Countg
1nd Sut~oundlng

z

help you Iota
pounds 1n your
or your money
now 614 · 742·

We Use Von Schrader
!quipmont Rocommendod
by looding Corpot Monu·

73·79 Ford Tr.

Televtston Listening Devices
Computenzed Heanng Atd Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

gram can
1 0 29 plus
ftrst month
back Call
2328

Pupp1es-mother pure Beagle Call 614-446-2274

1122/ tlc

B/ 19/1

You c:an t hm up fo r summer .

All Natural We1ght· lon pro·

45 743
PH. 16141 985 ·4212
Long Bottom, OH.

Middleport, Ohio 45760

A,, d

Announcements

SWEEPER and sawtng mac:hme repair , parts, and
suppltes.
P1ck up and
delivery, Davis Vac:uum
Cleaner, one half mtle up
Georges Creek Rd
Call
614-446·0 294

4

3S185 Oak Hill Road

317 North Socond

PHONE 992-7075

Middleport
located Nut To Tht
Food Stamp Office

CARPENTER
SERVICE

PIONEER CARPET
&amp; UPHOLSTERY
CLEANERS

PLUMBING &amp;

I 07 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

0

YOUNG'S

3-24-ttc

HUDNALL

7 311 mo

OPENINC AUS. 21
PICTURE "PERFECT"

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

BLUE STREAK CAB CO. '

164 N. 2nd St.

" We Gladly Accept
Food Stamps"

Roger Hysell
Garage

1·3· tfr

Ohio -

3

8-S·tfc

7

..SJ9
73-79 fOlD PU FDIDEIS .. .S4l CAl CORNERS ..............'20
NEW CHROME ST£P IUIIIPERS ....... '125
1·12 ·I ....

4 5 lie

HOURS: Mon.· Sat.
8:00 AM· 5:00 PM

992-5875 Or
742-3195

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

WE

•ZENITH

Call:

Including
New Dundee Late Model Rapleeament Pan1
For Truckt fl r1d Cer1
Petnts Body Ftllen F1bergl111 Resin and
K1t1 FleKible Pert Rep•" Produc ts Pol~thtng
Compound and Silnd Peper• !Selhng Yfhole•ete)
73-10 f;M PU DOOit SIIIW..'99 ROCKER PANElS ......

PARTS and SERVICE

WHOLESALE MEATS
&amp; BULK FOODS

Re.s!denttal &amp; Commercial

BODY REPAIR SUPPLIES

&amp;

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Aefrtgerltors
•Dryers •Freezers

FDR ALL YOUR

" FR££ ESTIMATES"

An 11 uttt\c e111 e11 ts

Balloons for Get Well , Ar,nlversarys, Birthdays . parttes
Singmg Gorrilla Call Belloons &amp; Co 614- 446- 4313 .

WIRING NEEDS

Ph. 614·992-6771
Now is Fully Stochd With All Your

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

All Mtkt•

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

110'1• Wotf Main SlrHt
ro-oy, Oh.

DOZER. BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER ,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES .
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp;DIRT

985-3561

" 3/2/ttn

3·D AUTO CENTER

CONTRACTING

ROOFING

992 -3345

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

8/ 16/ 1 mo d

*VINYl SIDING

lusintss forms,
Copy Senic11, Etc.
2SS Mill St., Middleport
104 Mulb•ry b., Pemtroy

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

~

GIVE US A CALU
8/ 12/ 1 mo .

Super Four Day Labor o&amp;y
Ce~brat1on M• gs Fielfair.
Aug 30 &amp; 31 ond Sopt 1 &amp;
2 Dlsplayt ng 1 generat line
of Flea Market ite ms
lnc:ludang . anttques. collec
tablll. glaatw ere. Je welry.
tools, veget1ble1, artl 6
craft and much more A U
dealers wel come, n o reservanons req uired, f ree utahties and camping Set up
starts at 6PM Th,.. rsday.
Bnng your yard sale here.
Roc k sprm gs Fatrground s
Pom e roy , Oh
Call
(614)446-7037

t 2 ,000 guaranteed par
month tf qualified, and ac:- 1- - - - - - - - - &amp; fam1ly At 124, by Subcepted for our managera Have room tn my h ome for
stat ton
1 m1le east of
program For personal Inter- elderly people On Metgt- 1- - - - - - - - - - Rutl.,nd To ol s. tnfants.
view apply to Electrolux Galli• County line Call
Aug 21 ,22,23 B ttJ Sate. 6 chlldrens, adul ts c:lothes(
Corp 417 2nd Av• any 614-367 7148
m1 out 141 , 1eft 77 5, 3 mt summer and wmterl Monmormng from 9·30 t o 10.30
1_o_n_' _:'9:_h_t _9_-_1_ _ _ _ _ day t hrough Fnda y
uk for m•nager.
1 1] W ante d to D 0
Yard Sale Cloth tng. mise Garage Sal e Augutt 23rd
Off1ce Clerk Ambrous per·
itamt
24 Hankie Ave • and 24th 9 00-7 00 1 mile
son to work m Nltl office.
GaHrpolis. Fnday 8t. Satur- north of Bashan John Ro se
Requtres typtng expertence, Will pamt tra 1ter roofs &amp;
day. 8 t'o 4
residen ce
operat1on of general office plow tobacco C• ll 614- - - - - - - - - - - 1- - - - - - - - - lc:aquipment, exper1ence 1n 256- 1528
Garage Saht Aug 21 22 Saturday and Sunday, Autelephone sales &amp; Inventory
Kr1st1Or , off Rt 35 Acro11 gust 24th and 26th 9 00control systems helpful. Carpet lnttalled , new , used,
from Gallla Auto 9 10 5
5 00 p m Church St , SyraMuat be neat &amp;: acc:urat• rastretched, repatrad Call
c u ' e · M at t rea s • n d
wtth frgures. Fowardresume after 5 OOPM . 614- 446Open Labor Day. Galhpol11 box springs. bookshelf. curt o box 80 .., care of th.e 3282 .
Flea Market. open eYery Sat. tams, lawn- c:hairs, sectional
Gallipohs OallyTnbune, 825
&amp;. Sun Wdl be open Llbor couch, toy s, st ereo. chestThird Ava-.y. Gallipohs, Oh Wtll babyatt 1n my home. Day You have seen utat the of·drawers, T V , oven and
46831
Have ref &amp; exl)lnen ce Call
former Thater Ford property cook top range, clothmg
1- - - - - - - - - - 614-446·9345 8 -5 ask for every week end fo r the last (boy s, 6 8 s1 ze; ment, 34- 36
Bebysrtter in my home 840 Juanita
11h yrs New dealers &amp; SIZ e womens. llze 12, Jr.
per week Call 614-446merchand11e every week s1ze 1 0 ). bo oks. record
0696
t;OLEMAN WATER WELL
Brmg your Yard sate. Spec: 1al player
ORtLLING
de1tler set-up fe e thtS week 1- - - - - - -- - and only- $3 dav no &amp;pace -· · -·- - ---···-· - -· . - .
Turn your extra time into Pump salet, senn c e. RegiS·
c:ash . Sell AVON Start1ng tared tn Ohio All work hm1tatton-out11de only At
&amp; Vicinity
fee only 86 00 Call 614- guaranteed Cell 304-273· 35 next to Fruth 's
446· 21 56 or 614· 446- 2811 Raventwood, W Va
2 Fam1ly Yard Sale men .
3359
Special prices on labor for women. c:htldren c:lothmg. Garage Sale, Au g 19-24.
re .. upholstermg furniture t ove . J&amp;weklry Lake Dr. RJO Three m tles o ut Sand H1ll Rd,
Eat y Assembly Work:IIS600
turn rtght o n Shrme Club
Grande, 22-24th
month
of August 1986 ontv
per 100 Guaranteed payRoad, lampt Avon bottles,
ment
No experience- no Save $ call for estimate now
Yard Sale Sue. Family 1 Vz boy clothing 18 mo to 2 yra,
sales . Details send self- Mowrey' s Upholstery, call
mllesoutRt 218 Fr1 &amp;Sat girl clothing 8 10, ladie s
304-675 · 4154
addressed stamped enve·
drets pants 7- 11 . jeans
Aug 236 24 9- 5
lope, Elan V1tal- 715, 341 B
1· 15, womens 11zes 16-18.
EnterpriSe Rd , Ft Pterce, FL Will do baby Sitting in my
books, cabtnet st ereo, 8 h
Gomg
Out
of
the
Baby
home, Mason, W Va , 30433482
Bustness Clothes to 12 tr11ler. htgh cha1r, potty
773 -6165
months, baby furntture, chetr, Mtsc: Items
Mothers demonstrate our
toys and gifts now through McDamel Custom Butcher- desk , tupperwere, Avon.
Sale Thurs and Fri .
Dec: No cash tnvestment for mg. open 6 days a week, toys &amp; m ore Thur &amp;: Frt 2 Yard
196 Park Driv e, good
miles
West
of
Rio
Grand8,
304-882-3224
sample kit Our toys and
right on old Rt 35 Ram or clothes, gul s 5 and 6, Ram or
gtfts are fully guarantHd
Shme
shma
Top comm11110n &amp; Hartes
awards No cottect•ng or
Yard Sale, Aug 22 and 2 3,
delivering No tervtce
403 24th Str eet , Mtsc.
charge Call Frtendty Toy
Items. lot s ch1ldrens schoo l
Par11as now 614 - 992 - 1-- - -- - -- - clo t htng
3661 Also bookmg parties
21
Business

I==========

Wtdding

anti Graduat100
Stationory, Mognlllr .
fogm, Rubbtr Stomps.

lumptn ., ........... ..... $10
. $52 SO
73-79 Chtvr Jr.
Gr11les ............ .,.,., '31.50
Hoods.......... ........ .... t14S
73-79 Chny Jr.
13·81 Ford Rongtr
Roclr:tr Panels. . . ..S2S
Hoods.................. ...... •llO
13 -19 Chny. Tr
13·81 ford langtr
Cab Corntrs.. . . , .. ;~.S20
Gnlles ...... ....... . .._17$
New and Usttl Auto Glass- Late Model Parts

"Free Estimates"
Installation Availoble

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

roa ms la rge hvmg room. dm-

Fenders...................... S41

7.t2-2027

rooms, large ilvmg room, d1n
mg room and enclosed front

COUNTRY SETIING Ranch home , three bed

FILL DIRT

ACCENT

!CUI OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

porch Lot 45'xl46 PRICE
REDUCED - $1 0,000 00

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL

Services

Howard l. Wrilesel

Jobs, Mufflers.

MGM
FARM CITY

(B) 9 15, 22, 3tc

RUTlAND - MAIN ST One fl oor plan home, two bed

eQuipped k1tchen d1n1ng
room Askmg $39 500 00

it better.

loc:ation The D11trict reHrYel
the nght to re,ect any or all
bids

B USifleSS
•

*ALUMINUM SIDING

electric home llvmg roo m

us, we con do

Bids wtlt be opened Fnday,
August 23, 1985 at the OtfCce
of the 01strict at the above

Robert E Buck,
ProboteJudge

Tune-Ups, Brake

Try

Reedsville, OhiO at $5 .00 per

copy

furn1ture,

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
•
Insulated Dog Houses

· 10 tfn

Public Notice

PI,US: Offiu !uppli01 &amp;

farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Servlee

304-675·6276

Public Notice

Fot All VoM Prlllltf N1t8

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

spokesm a n

About 7,400 of the staff cu tbacks
"We're tryt ng to soften the impact
al ready are u nder way
by offering em ployees a nu m ber of
Most of the JOb cu tbacks w ill ta ke
fm ancml mcent tves to leave the pl ace t his year and the r est In 1986
company and hope t he actual
Allen satd some employees fn
num ber of l ayoffs w lll be quite
segments of the business wi th
sm all," Campbell said
surplus jobs wdl be offered transfers
About ll per cent of the staff
to other AT&amp;T pest~ or gtyen
red uctions Involve m anagem ent
flnanctal lncenttves to l eave the
pos t!ions.
company
Inf01 mallon Sys1ems satd 1t
Retll'em ent and restgnatlons Will
wou ld not have a sta te- by-s tate
take care of som e JObs sla ted for
breakdown on the layoffs for severa l • ex Unc tiOn and the rerna mmg pos1
weeks
!tons wllJ be ellmmaled thr ou gh
Morton Ba hr, presiden t of the
layoffs, A llen satd.
Communication Workers or Amer
Bernard Selz of FuJ man Selz
1ca, expressed "ou trage and dts
broke1age called AT &amp;T'sannounce,
m av" over the ~m nou ncement
ment a "positi ve m ove" that will
" I am demanding im mediate enable the company to be mm e
negohatlons with AT &amp;T over these
competitive on prices
layoffs," he safd In a s1atement
Inform ation Systems. formerly
Issued In Washmgton "I'm ca llmg
ca lled Amencan Bell, markets
for execu tive pay cu ts and equa lity
commumca t tons sytems to busmess

BUILDINGS

Also Transmission

A.A.A.

Yard Sale '21-22 Rain shine Tools, ch•m ••w.furntture, 1 6 pc chtpboard
clothes. diShes. Rt 218
behind Baity Chapel, 614
258-1788

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

All STEEL &amp;

SINGlE S24.95
•L1ve entertamment
• free HBO •Restaurant
.Olympic Pool

•eoo

., ln..,lu~

I O 11 ....1

(crv~nt

1400

Free EstimatH
B B lmo d

Authonzed John Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hog
farm Equipment
Dealer

11 1- ~lrt

u'"
o.....
u,.., ,,''"'•••
.,_ , ,.,.
••v~oo,.,.;,~

Ph. 985·4141

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

U7 - luH.olo

7 U - 11UIIond

111- c.....,.,

Lont lottoM, Ohio

U. S. RT 50 EAST
GUYSV! LLE, OHIO

RT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PLIASANT, W. ¥A.
8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Bndce

7n - Mo..,n
111 - N_ H......,

~l - hrt1011d

e

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•n - to..n

zo- t..t.n FMio
IHt - ll.cb•

Fnday 23, S1turd1y 24 at
Melvant
on
Fairfield
Centenary Ad Mtlf'lt t uitt.
women• t ize 1
d re11es.
kmck knacks. light f ixtures.
odds 81 ends Ewn the
kitchen stnk lota under
$1 00 Ratn date Monday

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

" POL~

-- -'~'

Help Want ed

&amp;Vicinity

~

U l--

44 Apo,..,.M I&lt;" ,..101
4B fw"~ ..... """"'"

... r. ......,

lil t

~.r:ch o n"'a

•• • - Od l'*l'

I I F...., ......,.
U Woo!M ia hw

...... ,.~

etwcr

IPitphtonr

aotao. Cuunt r

14 Motoroycl"
lll 'looon• • • ' "''

D htrle~
14 ::11 - "'obloD irttlct
J 7a - Walnoo

12 ll!otlla~ ""'"'"~
13 ... ..... c.

,.. -

*FA"*

.. _ _ 1&lt;1 _

l 0110 ol TO!anltolpolll •• od•-•1
lin '-'""'or¥
IPOoll o Oldv ..eol
34~ ............. .., ••

hour ly factory work ers

Bowen seeks Union District 23 post
M ORGAN'j'OWN , W Va (U Pi t
-Jim Bowen, the assistant director
of the United Steelworkers Umon's
Dist rict 21, whtch covers all of West
Virginia and portions of Ohio and
KentuckY, said Wednesday he Is a
candtdate for d trector In the uruon's

992 -2196

St , PllmtiVI Otuo.5769

1· 13-tfc

111t-. TY. Cl

I

the vtst l

Co~t

PAT HILL FORD
Middleport, Ohio

uon, mam tenance and ot her support
jobs, 3.000 per sonnel who handle
productton dlstr ibuhon, and 2 OOJ

69 pints of blood given Wednesday
Slx ty·nlne pints of blood were
given to the Meigs Cou nty Amenca n
Red Cross blood program , at
Wednesday's vls tt of t he Huntm gton
Regwnal Bloodmobile to t he Meigs
Semor Cttlzens Center
Sevenly·lht ee people reported as
donors and 21 of t hem were ma ki ng
rr placemen ls
First time donors were Kat hleen
McNic kle and Barbara M ullen.
Becom i ng multiple donors du nng

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid bot land rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnll Oadl, Sent1"1l Cbssif11d Dtpt
Ill

151cl&lt;tolo

we would end

RADIATOR
SERVICE

Collection Series during ceremony at the Museum of
Modem Art Wednesday. 'l'hls series of 20 video
c8ssettes selected from the museum from procrams
already avallable in the home video market features
landmark and classic television programs. (UPI),

FIRST EDITIONS - Jack R. Howard, right,

11

---·--Giiiiii&gt;oir&amp;·---·----

' UTI Ll TY BUILDINGS

Excavating

W • nted To Buy

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

•Complete Remodeltn&amp;
•Room Additions
*Roofing
*Stdtng
•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'

•All Types of

AT&amp;T eliminates 24,000 jobs
It was mevllable that

9

Business Services

t Wo nlod IO

NEW YORK CUP! ) -Amen can
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. ts
ellmmallng 24,000 JObs m 1ts
Information Systems com puter and
business communica tions equip
m en I group m one of t he la rgest staff

Pomeroy- Middlepon, Ohio

d.

Garage or large t torage
bu1ldmg m Galltpohs or
Galhpohs area Call 814 266-6261 after 6 30PM

Pt Pleasant

Poriieri:iv"

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Opportunity

Need transmission, d•esel 1- - - -- - -- - and general techmc1an s at
S1m m on s· Oids- Cadltact NOTICE I
Chevrolet Two vear a expertence Aplhcationt may be THE OHIO VALLEY PUB LISHING CO recommends
ptcked up at service dep1
off1c:e lntervtews arranged that you do business w1th
latar. Will have to apply in people you know, and NOT
person
8am - 4 30pm to Hnd money through the
matl until you have mvest•Monday· Frtday
gated the offering
Habthtat1on specraltSt Mtn·
•mum requtrementt hrgh
school degree adult' servi ces certiflc:atlon. or Wllling nes&amp; to obta1n. and a valid
Ohto drtver't hcense Expe nence preferred 1n JOb an•ly·
SIS, wntmg and Implement·
mg tratnrng prpgramt for
adults Call or write Meigs
County Board of Aetardat•on. John Sl . Syrac:uae.
Ohto 45779 Phone 614992 -6684 or the Ohto Bureau of Emptovment Servtces 1n Pomeroy.
Nud baby11tter for after
school hours Portland, Sttversvllfe area . Call614-8435127
Baby11tter for 2 chtldren .
Mon through Frt begmntng
Sept 1Oth Provtde work
experience , references
P 0 Box 15, Pomeroy. Oh1o
45769 .
Own your own Jean
Sportswear, Lad1es Apparel,
Chtldrens. Large Stze, Com·
btnatton Store, Accessones,
Jordache, Ch1c, lee, Lev1,
Easv Street, lzod, Etprtt,
Tomboy Calvtn Kletn , Sergto Valente. Evan P1cone, liz
Claiborne. Members Only.
Organically Grown. G•ao hne. Helthte-.. Over 1.000
others. 87,900 to 024,900
anventory Tram mg. ftxtures,
grand opemng. etc Can
open 15 dayt Mr Keenan
(305)679- 3639
Own your own Jean
Sportswear. Ladies Apparel.
Chtldrens, large S1ze, Combtnltton Store, Accessortet,
Jordache. Chtc:, Lee levt ,
Easy Street. lzod. Esprit ,
Tomboy. Calvin Kletn, Sergio Valente, Evan P1cone, ltz
Claiborne, Members Only,
Org•mc alty Grown, Gasoline, Helthtex, Over 1 ,000
others S7,900 to S24,900
Inventory Tra1n1ng, fixtures.
grand opening . etc Can
open 15 days. Mr Keenan
1305)678-3639
Your prior mthtary expenenc:e tS needed tn the army
national guard Monthly
paycheck , life 1nsurance,
rettrement income. and educattonal auistance avatlable Call 304- 875-3950 or
1-800 642 3619

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE Bed s, ~ron ,
wood ... cupboards, chatrs,
che t ts , bukets d i thes , 1- - - - - - - - - stone Jars, anttques. gold ' REPS NEEOEOforButtness
and Sliver Wrate - M 0
Accountt FulltlmaS&amp;O ,OOO
Mlfler. Rt2. Pomeroy, Ohlo
to 580 , 000
Parttm e
46769 . or call 614 992 - $ 12.000 to S18 000 No
7780
Selling Repeat Business
Set your own h ours TranI
Buymg da11ly gold , t~lver mg Provided. 1 812-938
coins, nngs, jewelry, starltng 6870. Mond•y-Frk:t•y. 8
ware, old coins, large cur- 1m. to 5 p m . CST
rency Top pracet Ed Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd Ave
Phny Truck Stop Restaurant
M oddleport, Oh 614·992- 11 taking application• for a
3476
co ok and waitress Call
noon- 5, 1 304-767·8367.
Alum1num scrap Sell your
alum1num 1crap d~rect lot he Green Acres Reg1onal Cen·
smelter Buying all gradet of ter currently hu the positton
aiUfTJinUm Premium paid for of " Hygienic Atde" open '"
large loads. Call for quote
Point Pleasant group houH
Sctplo Energy , loc•ted H i
The position will contlst of 7
miles Hit of P1getown on days on 7 days off If you .are
Township Road 14.1 Meigs lnterasted pla•n cont•ct,
Countv. 614-992-3466
Kathv Hann•n. Green Acrea.
304 782· 2622. oqu•l OP'
W1nted· well bred Stack portunity employen. Min·
L•brador m1le One to four 1mum qulliflc•teons High
years old . Plchn• hrma, School D1plom1 or
Roodovollo, D. 814 378 - IQUIVB..nt
8289

New
won as, prize
1985
Buickcar,
Skyhawk
AC. c:ruise.tJit wheel, 5 speed. AM -FM
cass•tte. d1g1tal r•dto Selt
for under dealer's cost Also.
1977 Goldwtng , ' 33,000
m1les, fully dressed, new
tires. new ac:c: .. mint c:ondl tton. $1,700ftrm 614-992 2381 day 614- 99 2· 2509
noght

Own your own Jean
Sportswear, ladies apparel.
chddrens, large s1ze . comb1
nat1on store. pet1tes. mater·
nity , acc:essonee, Jordac:he,
Ch1c. Lee, Lavt. E Z Street,
lzod , Espnt, Tomboy, Calv1n
kletn, Sergto Valente, Evan
P1cone ltz Claiborne
Members Only, Gatohne
Heallhtex, over 1 .000 oth
ers. t13 000 to $24 900
inventory. tnumng. fiJ:tures,
grand opemng, etc Can
open 16 days Mr Loughlin
1612)888-6555

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS ·Refonance
to low f1ud r1te Use equ tty
for any purpose Leader
M ortgage Co , 614-5923051

23

Professional
Services

Water wells drrlled and ser
v1ced Prtceeonreque.st Call
614-742 -3147 or 614-992
5006
Mr. Bu sinessman hav1ng
problems With your roofs?
"Call us" for guaranteed
flU - gravel - metal roof
rep at rs - me 1nta 1nance
replacement Expenenced
Insured Bonded. Referen ces. Phone 614-949· 2763
PIANO TUNING AND RE ·
PAIA . back to school dtScounts , free es timates.

~;~1,'~~:~~~':2:04 " 675

31

Homes

for Sale

1 --------~-

Extensrwety remodeled ret1rementorstarterhome1n
Gallipolis Furniture tn eluded. 64 Mtll Creek St.
C.ll 6 14-448-2539 .

House for sale, Vtnton Can
be bought with two extra
Iota or 1epara1e Call 61 4
388 -8343

Thursday, August 22nd at
John Ash reSidence, Salem
S.t , Rutland Ponable dryer.
mise

Yard Sale, 1008 S ~rn p s11 11
Pl itt" ! r.rl:ty Au •1 ?3 1) 00
til l ~ Lo t!\ o f h:~hy l lo t hAs
w l lk• r .tn d ·wv1nq G11 ls c lo
th ') I
.l dul t rli f"!r\ find
w n wn s lot s nf kn11 knar ks

Rt 7 by Kmgs Arms August
20th through 23rd Mtsc: ,.
tem t , some furmture

Yard Sale, 2327 Uncoln
Av e. Fr1 . Aug 23. 9 00 till 7
Pape rb ack s, glas sware.
used c:lothtng, auto tuneup
tool s

31

32 Mobi le Homes

L=========:.~=========
Homes for Sale

for Sale
2 bdr 1 '12 bath FR. garage
basement Sttuated on lot m
Crown C1ty, S42 ,000 Assumable loan at 10% Call
614· 256· 1389
3 bdr, large living room. full
basement $29 . 000 or
$4.000 take over payments
Call 614 ·446- 7360
4 bdr house 2 car garage
wtth attached green house,
frutl cellar, 3 acres Call
614 446 8181

1 984 Fl ee twood mob1le
home 14x70 underptnned,
storage bu1ldmg &amp; tratlrt
sets at Green Terrace Call
614· 446-0137 after 5PM
14x70 Festrval 2 bdr , 2
bath, laundry room Call
61 4-446·3120 or 614-4466241
1974 12x64 2 bdr Buddy
unfurmshed Call 114 446·
9219

3 bedroom hou se. large
k1t c: hen , famrlv r oom ,
$39,000 Call 614-4463718 or see at 1109 Adnan
Ave

1976 14x 65 'Hofler Parh ,
7 x24 ft exp • 2 bdr , CA .
redu ced to $9 ,000. Call
614-446-7358 daysor614·
256- 1524 eve

House for sale Cheshtra.
take over my loan, 8 5
Interest. 1mmed1ate pvssn"on Call 614· 387- 7553

1969 Elcona, 2 bdr wood·
burner, good c:ond. $4 ,500
Call 614· 256-6068 of no
anwser 614- 256-8580

Make offer 2 bedrooms. 1 2
acras, 2 car garage. an
reasonable offers c onlt ·
de red In Pomftf'OV 614
678-2613

1972 New M oon 2 bdr ..
laundryroom Cell814-4460722

20 ac:re. 3 bedroom country
home with 1'12 bath, fully
c:arpeted, kttchen appliances
mcluded , full basement w1t h
f~repla ce and fintshed famtly
room . two-c ar garage att
•ched 614 -992-5084 aher
5 00 p m
4 bedroom. hvtng room
dmmg ro om, kit chen, butlt ·
tn c ebrnets. sc reen ed- tn
porch , wuhroom • be ·
throom Lot 100x 100 5th
St . SyraCUII\Ii Can be teen
614-992 2239 .
Two l•ge bedr~m home,
basement, ger. .e. lrerge Jot
Just remodeled wtth new
kitchen &amp;: laundry Fermer
M cBrtde reatdanee, College
Rd • s,yracu,sep Shdown by
appotn men
ne e on tn
spectton 614-992 -5324
5 rooms , bath. uttlity, centrel he1t, ltr condition.
storm wmdows, doors, ger
age, alumtnum Sldtng Call
614- 992 5204

1- - - - - - - - - -

Chalet log home. 2 miles
hom town. 3 acres, 3
bedroom, full b1sement, to·
tal elec, large deck. 5 yean
old, $64.000 00. 8 '1&gt; per
cent loan, 304- 675-&amp;622

2 bdr . expando on LA, all
apphances. CA. underplnhmg, ready for occupancy in
ntce local park Call 6 1 4 446 -0 254
Rodney Home &amp; Supply
Center Rodney, Oh1o loc:ated between US 35 &amp; St
Rt 588 Call 614· 246·
5308
1975 m o b1ie home AC.
w oodburner. dryer, blocks&amp;.
underptnn1ng. $7 BOO C all
614 379 2418

1- - - - - - - - - 52x26 double wtde block
foundatton 3 bedroom 1
bath. hvtng room sutte. gas
hot water heater &amp; furna c e
1 2 acres on Hysell Run Rd
27,600 as ts or 20,000 to
m ove 614 992 3843 o r
4 9_9_2_·5
_6_9_0_ _ __ _
1·_6_1 _
1
M OBI LE HOMES MOVED.
Insur ed. 2 0 ye'ar s e-. pe
n ence 304-576 2866 or
576 -233 6
1- - - - - -- - - 1979 M anchm 1 2,x6 5 mo
btle hom e on rented lot.
57900 or bes1 offer Pho ne
304-576· 2010
1 97 0 1 2x6 5 three bed
room s. 1 % bath s, utll1t y
room, underptnn ed Call
304 675 7 968 or 304-6753797

Farms for Sale

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

2.812 ft . ofhvmg spac a, 3-4 1- - - - - - - - - bedrooml, family room, tormil dining, •at-m kitchen, NEW AND USED MOBILE
c1ty schools, 10 ft 11telhte HOMES KESSEL'S QUALdtsh. 20x40 fenced m - ITY MOBILE HOME SALES ,
ground pool Barg~tn bee· 4 Ml WEST, GALLIPOLIS ,
ment price Cell 814-4415- RT 38 PHONE 814·441
3199 after 5 30.
7274.

Beaut tful 7 yr bnck ranch, '
bdr C A, heal pump , c:ountry ktt ch en woodburner.
ba•ement. 2 c ar g•raa-.
20A
p asture . b•l ance
w ooded, barn, cattte wate r·
tng system, orc:hard , beautl·
ful vtew. adJoms US Iandi.
m1neral r1ghts Hou~e &amp;:
2 79 acres From •69,000.
614 -379 -2605

I

�..

..

.......

•

Page- 14-The Daily Sentinel
33

Pomeroy-Midd

LAFF-A-DAY

Farms for Sale

Patriot Storage BuHdlngs.
any lizl. Olaplay et French
City Mobile Homoaln Galli·
polis. Dh . Colt 1114·4•89340 or 614-446-8038.
Frlttl delivery or built on your
lot .

f
'

11 .5 A. w-14~70 mobile
home, cellar. 2 tobacco
barn$. 1,500 lb. tobacco
base_ Call614- 379-2798or

t
'••

614-256-9392.

!

40 acre . very nice 4 bdr .. 2

bath house. F'a rmequip . tob.
base. 2 lg. barns. other out
buildings . Call 614-2566790 .

1

42 acre farm with gas well , 2
bedrooms. 1 bath, paneled.
insulated vinvl siding. •'IC'it ·
ch en, appliances, 3 gas heat-

oro. $45.000. Call 614 - ·
742-2778 .

-

2 c1f2 acre lots. One with
35~~:36 'garage , $3 , 000

Call 614 -446- 3243 eve's.

coon Rd. access to Raccoon
Creole . Call 614-446-2568 .

~~rt
8t2-

~~0-JlO•~c:=&gt;

down, take over paymants.

~.----------------

Half acre lot on Rodney Cora
Road, Rodney, Ohio. No
reasonable offer refused,
ca ll 304-675-5196.
Rentals
41

Houses for Rent

large 3 bdr. house in Rio
Grande tor lease with option
to buy . Call 614-446-6594
or 614-446-4897 .
4 bdr . ranch in Charlais Hills
with Lake Frontage $500.
Call 614-446-6610. Century 21 , Southern Hills Real
Estate.

3 bedroom house. College
Rd . Syracuse. $300 plus
deposil . Call 614- 446 1478 .
2 bdr. close to town. $260
mo. dep. &amp; ref. No pets. Call
614-446-1502 alto• 9 o30,
Thurs., Fri .,Sat.
2 bdr. completely furnished,
total electric. 458 2nd ..
S225 mo .. sec . dep. &amp; ref.
Call 614-446-2236 or 614446-2 581 .
3 bdr . ranch. located on Rt.
160 near North Gallia HS .
$300 mo .. $150 dep .. no
pet-no pets. Call after 5.
614 -388-8711 .
Furnished house 2 bdr., 241
J'aclcson Pike, S200 water
paid . Call 446-4416 after
Bpm .
2 bedroom , unfurnished
house for rent in Middleport.
Call 614-992 -3457 .
For rent. cottage, 1 br
furnished. utilities pd . $55 .
week . 304-675-3100 or
675-5509 .
2 bedrooms. full base·ment.
carpet. AC. close to North
Point School, 5225 .00
month, deposit. 304-6752651 .
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr . furnished , all utilites
pd .. exce'p t elect ., conve nient location . security deposit reuqired . Call 614-446 ·
8558.

614-992·6140.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Merchandise

Furnished apt .. 920 4th
Ave., 1 bdr .. $225. utilities
pd .. adults. Call 446 -4416
after 8pm .
740Vz 2nd. Ave .. 3 bdr.,
$190 mo. deposit required .
Call 614-446- 4222 between 9 &amp; 5 .
Upstairs 2 bdr. · apt .. axe.
cond.. itqui'pped kitchen.
centr. air, $225 mo. 821 v,
Second Ave. Call 614-446·
215B .
Fui-nished downstairs 2
rooms &amp; bath with shower,
clean. adults, no pets, ref.
required . Call 614 -4461519.
Oakwood Apt. modern 1
bdr. apt .. stove &amp;: refrig.,
AC, no pets, security dep.
Call 614-446-2055.
2 bdr. AC apt .. large rooms,
near Pizza Hut. water paid,
$250 mo .. immediate occupacny. Call 614-446-7025 .
New 2 bdr. 41h mi. from
Gallipolis. $200 plus elect .
$50 dep. No pets. Call
614-446-8038.
Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for · Senior
Citizens. S130. Equal Housing Opportunities . 614992 -7721 .
2 bedroom apartments.
Now Haven, WVa. Newly
remodeled . In town. 814992-74B1.
1 bedroom apt. for rent.
Nicely located. Contact Village Manor in Middleport.
614 - 992-7787 . Equal
Housing Opportunity.
One or two bedroom apartments in P.omeroy. Furnished or unfurnished . Rent
negotiable. Call 614-9926723 .
One bedroom, totil electric,
newly panelled. carpeted,
Cable TV available. 614992-2094 .
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolia . 614-4468221 .

Furnithed. AC. cable. no city One bedroom. furni1hed
taxes. beautiful river view. in · garage apartment, air condiKanauga. Fo1ter 's Mobile tioned, complete privacy.
Home Park. 614-446-1602. No Pets . Phone 304-6751400.
3 bdr , trailer on Patriot Gage
One bedroom furnished
Rd . Call 614-446-4253 .
apartment, air cond. ground
Trailer tor rent. Call attar floor. private entrance and
parking, utilities included.
4PM . 814-446-4226
304-675-6730.
Mobile home for rent. 2
bedrooms . 10x60. No pets. Nice 2 bedroom apt In
Henderson, 304-876-1972.
614-949-2424 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
Racine area . Call 614-992 5858 .
2 bedroom trailer, carpeted,
on lot in Racine . Call 614949· 273B .
44

Apartment
for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equa l
Housing Opportunity)
monthlv rent star1S at S1 69
for 1 bedroom and S204 for
2 bedroom, deposit 8200,
located near Spring Valley ·
Plaza and Foodland, pool
and Cable TV available.
hours as possible10 am to 4
pm · and 7 pm to 9 pm
Monday-Friday. Call 614446 - 2745 or leave
me!Jsage.
Ni ce ly furnished mobile
home. eft , apt .. central air
and heat in city. adults only.
Call 614· 446· 0338 .
Furnished e fficiency 8150
mo . utilities paid, 7 Neil
Ave., GallipDiis . Call 4464416 after 8PM .
Furnished efficiency $160.
utillies paid. share bath, 607
2nd. Ave . Gallipollt. adults.
Colt 446-4416 after 8PM .
2 bdr. apt ., good location.
redecorated, $149 mo., utilities partly paid . Call 304·
675 -5104 or 304 -675 53B6 .

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel .
Call 614-448-0766 .
Furnished room, range, refrig. $1 26, share batt!, single malo. 919 2nd . AVa.,
Gallipolis. Call 448 -4418
after 8PM .

Mobile home lot, 1 2'x50' or
smaller. $75 water paid, 41h
&amp; Neil , Gallipolis. Call 4484416 aher SPM .

Hide-a -bed in good condition. Priced for quick sale.
Colt 814-992-3120. ·

Pots for Sale
56
- - - -- - - - - - -

Large Traiter space on
Bulaville-Addison Rd. Call
614-367-0232 .

Firewood -cutup slabs, 1
truck load $100, 2 -$180.
Pickup load, you haul $15 .
HEAP accepted . Call 814245-5804.
~andscaplng,

top soil, good
f•ll dirt, m&amp;nure. reseeding;
COUNTRY MOBILE Home · ehr~bs &amp;: flowers, lawn
Park, Routn 33. North of mamtenance, Bruce DaviPomeroy. large lots. Call son, 614 -256-1427.
614-992-7479 .
Hardy Evergreen shrubt
Mobile home space for rent. 84.99 ea. also Shredded
Rt.143, all utilitieaavailable. bark mulch $20 per pickup
Call 614-992-5B5B .
load. Colt 614-446-4530.
Trailer spaces, small child·
ran accepted, out locuat
Road. Rt. 1, back of K&amp;:K.
30~·676 - 1 076 .

Queen . . quilted bed
spread &amp; shams. Norman
Rockwall tray. Candlewick
Imperial cryttal. Call 614245-5274.

47 Wanted to Rent

Nicely furnished apt, central
heat, air, perking, next door
to library . Ono profenional
adult only. Call 614-446033B.

1978 8 -210 Datsun, fair .
King wood &amp; coal stove. Call
614-448-1389.
Garage or large storage 1- - - - - - - - - - building in Gallipolis or 2 huba for 79 Ford ·&amp; one
Gallipolis area. Call 61 4· Reese hitch tor PU. Call
258-6251 after 5 o30PM .
614-379-2692.

Furni1had apt . 701 4th Ave.,
Gallipolis. 2 bdr. $250 utili·
ties paid. Call 446· 4416
aher 8pm .

;want tq rent barn in Mercer· Se11on.ed oa,k firewood for
villa area to hang small crop · aelit. tll pickup .loed. deli·
of tobacco. Call 614-256· vered. Specie! price on 6
6251 after 5 :30PM .
toods. Colt 814-448-1B59.

8riafpatch Kennels Professional All-breed grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spaniel puppies. Call 614-3889790.

August 22, 1985
1977 Olds Cutlall wrecked,
rear damaged. well not part
out. *400. Call after IPM . ..,.
814-266-9318 .

DICK TRACY

THURSDAY
B/2'2/85

sale. Colt 61&lt;1-992-7015
after 5:00p.m .

77

IIJ Hot PQtato

62 Wanted to Buy

63

Livestock

M0 t

1
orcyc es

82

IMINOOTj
(1 K

XI X J X]"

•

Plumbing

I

1976 Mercury 2 dr. laden, 1980 Hondo C8750K,
low mileage, good cond ., 13,000 miles, exc. cond.,
e1.500. Call 814-448- t1.260. Colt 614-4464967, oflor 4 814-448- 3050 after 6PM .
0946.
'
1--:...-------1 984 Hondo CR 500, dirt
1979 Rabbitt. Coli otter blko. Colt after 3 :00PM.
6PM, 814·38B·B823.
614·448·3231.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614'446- 3888 or
814-448 -4477

1983 Honda 600CC
Shodow, t1,376. Call 6143B8 -B746.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. flt. 1. lox 355, Golll·
polio. Colt 614·367-0&amp;78.

197B Honda Hawk CB 400
T- 2, motorcycle. Vetter
quick silver, ferrlng. luggage
reck &amp; back rest. Cruise
control. electric kick 1tan,
19.78 Pinto Pony, t896 . Call 17,000 mi., axe . cond .,
t600. Call 614 -&lt;148-8261
Bf•-286-6522.
eveningli.
77 T-Bird e1,200. 72 Dotsun 240Z make offer, needs 19B4 Honda TAX 200 4
work. 74 Pontiac Catalina wheeler 81,600. Rings eme t1.000, good ahopo. Call rald or diam·ond •100. Dia mond old lilting $75. Call
614-448·B591 oftor 4PM.

Good-1 Excaveting, bile·
ment1. footer•. driveway•.
aeptlc t1nk1, landacaping.
Call anytime 614-441·
4637. Jame1 L. Oevlson, Jr.
owner.

1 97B Dodge Aopen. oneowner, 23,000 miles. e~ec. 1976 Kawuokl KZ750 .
cond. Colt 61 4·446·B2B8. ·Good condition. $500 or
mako offer. 304·8B2·2391 .
1971 Ford LTD~ '2 door hard
top. Power steering, power 1973 Super Glide, ott new
brakes, air conditioning. or· ports. t1900. Soe at T. and
ginal owner. 6 7, 200 actual G . Auto Sales- under
mllao, 8BOO. Colt 814·4•6· Pomeroy- Mason Bridge .
Phone 614-992-8B48 .
0123 after 5:00PM .

J .A.R. Conetruction Co .,
Rullarid, Oh . 114-742· ' ·
2903 . Basement•. Footen.
Concrete work, Beckhoe'a,
Dozer &amp; Ditcher, Dump
trucka, &amp;: water-gas-sewer·
electrical lines.

1977 Volare AC. PS, PB.
runo good. t&amp;OO . Colt 8144&lt;18-3093.

814-~79-2745.

1984 Pontiac Fiero red, 4
spd.. exc. cond., low mileage, with AC, stereo·
casntte. luggege rack , Can
be. aeen at the Jumbo In Rio
Grande or call 814-2469634.

1980 Yomoha 1100 Midnight Special, &amp;, BOO miles,
axe cond. $2,300.00 . Call
304-BB2·2737 after 1:00.

1976 Harley Sportser.
1,000 CC, wilh electric
stan, 7,500 actual miles,
1970 MGB with 1979 en· 304-676-6424.
gina excellent condition.
Colt 614-246·5130 lor '74 H.D. Sportster. ex.
details. .
chrome, 304-676-6233.

EC van 2 horse trailer, new N8w car won as prize. 19861:;;=:=.;=======
chroma. new tires. new · Sulek Skyhawk, AC. cruioe. 75
Boats and
paint . Call 614-286·6522.
till whaof. 5 spd. am-fm
Motors for Sale
casHtte, digital radio, Selll - - -- - - - -- - Dragonwynd Cattery Kan- Simmantal bull -Polled, 17 for
under dealers cost. Also
nel. CFA Himalayan. Persian mos.. aired by Archillies,
1977
Wing. 33,000 14ft 1
t
and Siamese kittens . AKC Grand Sire was Chausl. miles, Gold
fully .drelled, new
. .f berg all with 10 HP
1
gas motor with new Skipper
Chow puppies. Call 446 - S 1.000. Call 614-379· t fes, new ace., mint cond.. B trailer. Call 61 4 · 2863B44 .a fter 7PM.
2606 .
$1 , 700 firm. 614·992- 6622
------1
Puppies for sale V:! Dober- 3 club calves: Chianina- 23B1 doya, 614-992-26091 - - -·- - - - - - nights,
12 ft . John boat. 1 % HP.
man &amp; "'h Pit Bull. Tails&amp; due Hereford. Simmentai claws cut &amp; wormed . S20 Angus, full Simmental . 1980 Silver z28 . T·top. everything goes. George w.
aa . Call 814-3BB-9969 after Sires : lldeno, Proto, Prince . E~ecellent condition . Ortoko Well•. Pleasant Valley Rd .
4PM .
Ca11614-379· 2605.
over paymonll. 304-n3-l_c_a_n_1_1_4_-2_4_6_-5_0_2_5_._ __
6348.
12ft. Searl V-bottom boat,
8 week old female Bassett 4 Hereford cows and 4
2 1wivel ants $200. Call
good blook lln11 no papers . calves for sale. Call 614·
1975 Corvette. Rod with 8 1 4·256·6027or614-258..
Call 814 - 246 -5130 lor 986-3908.
•ilver interior, T-top, auto- 86 46 .
detaila.
3 year old Baefalo cow with matlc. tilt &amp;. t e l e t c o p i c l - - - - - - - - - - Tri-colored Bassett puppies . heifer coif. $435. Call 614- wheel. AC. 63.000 actual Baja bow ride 19" with 176
miles. Jenaon Jtereo 1 Y•· hp Mercury, drive ..on trailer.
AKC Regi1tered with pap- 742· 3033.
tom. t7,500. 614· 992- oxcollont cond. 614· 286ers. Championship blood4183 or 11B7.
lines, Vet. checked with Horae and taddle. 304-876- 5620 oftor 6:30pm.
thou and wormed. Call 5350.
1970 Corvette . GOod condl·l ==~========
614-862-5143.
. Soe at T. ond G. Au1o 76
Auto Parts
Hoy for oato, 304· BB2· tlon
Sates under PomeroyAKC registered Toy Poodle 2537 .
Mooon B~dge.
8o Accessories
puppies. Apricot . 1 mele, 1
female. Also, on a 1 year old Reg . Arabian Gelding. 8 yrs 1 979 Mercury Cougor XR7,
white male. a 1 'h year old old, will tr•d• for horses.
apricot female poodle . Price Addles, tack. trailen. etc. fuU powar. air, tilt. 8 track . ·Dodrill's Auto Parts. We've
t11100. Colt 814-742- ,Vot111e parts you need. Call
ro11onable. 614-843-5274 . 30&lt;1-875-8799.
3048.
814-31B·981 6.

B3

•

e

ANNIE
YES. T~Et17EA
OF HAVIN(l A
!ION WITHOUT •
ANY Of T~t'

RESPONSIBILITY
10 HIM.

A chance for
a discovery play

wow-He
.HE CAME BY WHEN
HUCI\Y WAS AOCUT MUST'VE
EIGHT .. GAVE HIM
f!EEN A HERO!
THAT HNI~E ANI7 - -OR ARE ALL
TH/5 STUFF!.
THOSE MEllAL5
~IIHE?

~PPEALEP

.7

...NO SENSE LElTIN'
ANYBODY KNOW

WE'RE COMIN'!

GASOLINE ALLEY

WPB~

BARNEY
WHA'r

\

800 HOO HOO!!

AILS '-/QU,

TH' BARLOWS CALLED OFF
THEIR FAMILY REUNION

SNUFFY?

(IJ MOVIE: 'Victory at Sea•
[HBOI
MOVIE;
'The
Woman in Red'
9:30 D (]) (!) Night Court
Mac's in -name-only wife ap·
pear~ in court charged With
prostit~ion . lA)
(lJ) Myoteryl !CCI 'Reilly :
Ace of Spies-Shutdown.'
Reilly and Ozerzhinsky play a
psychological
CBI· andmouse game while in a Russian prison. (A) (60 min .)
[MAXI Maxtrax: Special
Edition
10:00 D IIJ (l) Hill Street Blues
A pregnant woman is injured during a confrontation
at an abortion clinic and
troUble erupts when a bJack
familv moves into a white
housing project. (RI (60
min.) ,
CIJ Gl ~ 20/20 (CCI

CBS

0

Waugh's Water Service.
W~lls. cisterns. pools. Feat,
rehable service . Call 814· ..
256- 1240 or 614-266 · '.
1130. Reasonable ra1e1 .
..

•.

Haul , limestone. sand. -gravel.d•r~ . bulk or bag fertilizer ~­
and hme. Excelsior Salt
Works Inc. 638 E. Main St., .
Pomeroy. 614 ·992· 3891. •

,.

SNAKE!!
MY~D

WAS IN 11--110
AR:MY... HE

GOT-rHE
MIL.. I"f'ARY

Upholstery

e

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis
6 1 4 -448 -7833 or 614-448 :
1833.

PEANUTS
LAST 'lEAR WHEN l WENT
TO SC~OO!. . I WA.S IN THE
IIJWII6IWOM FOR TWO WEEKS

R ~ M Furniture Manuf 11 c .
1l!"ng, St. Rt . 7, Crown
Coty, Oh . C•ll 614·U6·
1470. call Eve. 614·4•6·
343B . Old &amp; now
Uphottered .

t

I WAS IN THE BANP
FOR THREE DA'(S BE~ORE I
Dl SCO~EREP OUR SC~OOl
DOESN'T HAVE A BANP!

r

"

...

I Tl11NK t'LL SIGN UP

FOR STAviNG I«&gt;ME ..

a

®T..i

ACROSS
3 Playing
1 Tomboy's
marble
memento 4 Wager
5 Zenltll
5 Emulated
9 Uke zoo
Brando
animals
' 6 Common
11 Ef!mnswill
tery (sl.)
7 Noshed

13 Speechify
14 ERYPttan

8 Beauty
adherent

&lt;"fff city
10 Overwhelm
15 Youngling ~2 12tll US. 16 "Destty
president
Rl17 Hairdo
24 Unruly •
Again"
pad
25 Eru.nsive
heroine
19 Put on
projJertie:s
18 Execute
tlle fire
26 Fall color
20 ChUd of 22 Card game 28 Steinbeck's
Loki
28 Travoltawayward
Zl Conswne
Newton·
vehicle
ZZ Prohibition John
90 Z3 "The hit
Cassino
Gatsby"
.,.;.::.;,....,.......,......;.
Z6Ciauae

3I'Oissolve
(Chern.)
32 Western
show
34 Worsted's
bane
36 Marine
bird
39 Cut off

Z7Take

•hreak
item

zs·c·Adv.

(J) ® Hometown
(PREMIERE) A couple decide to marry after living together for 15 years. and the
ceremony brings together
several of their friends . (60
min.)
[MAX] MOVIE: 'The lady
Vanishes'
10:151]) MOVIE: 'True Grit'
10:30 ()) Garden Uno
Gll Tony Brown' s Journal
81NN Newe
[HBOI MOVIE : 'Hanky
Panky'
11
CIJ
CIJ ® a~
(lZ No..,
.
ill Bill Cosby Sltow
CIJ Capitol Journal
(lJ) Foil "-ram Previews
Benny Hill Show
11:30 II 1IJ (!) Tonight Show
Tonight's guests are Arnold
Schwarzenegger. holterer
Ginger Mclamb and flutist
Jean·Pi"!'re Rampal. (60
m1n .)
IIJ Bn1 of Groucho
(]) Sportocenter
(IJ WKRP In Cincinnati
(IJ Columbo 'Old Fashion Murder.· Columbo investigates a robbery killing
and uncovers some familv
secrets. (A) (60 min .l
(IJ Latenlght America

:oo u (])

CROSS~

THOMAS JOSEPH

28 Bakery

• Flare When Friends
Reunite! Premiere

Waugh's Water Service.
Wells. cisterns, pools. Fast.
reliable service . Call 614·
256-1240 or 614 -266 ·
1130. Reasonable rate1 .

B7

by
Ad11.

II Hometown/Love &amp;: Anger

K_en's Water Service. Walla,
c•sterns, pools filled. Phone
614 -367 -0623 or614- 367·
7741 night or day . .

-;-;---:---:--------

••5.

(j) 'VICTORY AT SEA'I
• Great WW2 Oocumentarv

James Boys Water Service.
Also pools filled . Call 614·
256- 1141 . or 614 -446 1175 or 614·446-7911.

,.s•

3.

•J

Excavating

General Hauling

•s

.K

Do1er Work land clearing,
landaceping, etc , Free eat I·
mates. Call 614-441·B038
or 814-992-7119 anytime.

85

Sur.:

a

&amp; Heating

1 97B Chovv ••4. •A ton.
1977 Giond Prix, good
cond. Colt .,.1WHn 5 &amp; 9,
61.·446-47.5.

I ()

(!I Fiahln' Hole
I]) Andy Grlffi1h
()) N1111onol G-raphic
Special
(lJ) Voyage of tho Mimi
Sl Hogan's Herooa
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Zollg'
[MAXI MOVIE; 'Cham·
HOW 'TH05e FOL..K6
pions' ICCI
1
WHO eNJOYED
6:30 8 1IJ (!) NBC Nightly
EAiiN6
Gfii.1"T'S 5AN6.
New•
()) Rifleman
C!l 'Down Tha Stretch'
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise ·answer, as sug·
())G....., Acretl
gested Dy the above cartoon.
()) 8 ~ABC No- (CCI
Ill ()) (j) CBS Newa
(lJ) Body Elflc:1ric
Print answer here: IN " [
8 F-Troop
(Answers tomorroW)
7:00 BIIJ PM Magulna
()) Guns of Will Sonnett
Yesterday's Jumbles: SOOTY OAKEN RATHER MUSTER
(]) SportacentOf
Answer: What. ~ou might get from astronomerS " NO MORE STAAS"
()) Sanford Son
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(l) Wheel of Fortune
Join thl Jumbl1 Lonn fin Club 1nd r-Ift 111. ~t&lt;W(M"d
Jumb•• ,.,.,.,.
CIJ.Wheel of Fortune
month. F01 lm llmP'el, MnG I potiCird to: Jumb" LOMII an Club, clo 111M
-••per,
P.O. Bo.w. 1501, P11m~1, N.J. 0108!.
Cll SecOnd City TV
®I Now•
(lJ)
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newehour
Ill ~ New Name That
Tune
Great&amp; of the Game
7:30 D IIJ Tic Tac Dough
()) Ciaco Kid
(]) ESPN's Speedweek
I]) Major League Baseball:
Chicago Cuba at Atlanta
James Jacoby
(IJ Q (IJ Family Feud
(l) Jooperdy
CIJ
llllglitry- Business
Report
NORTil
8-22-85
® Wheel of Fortune
.QJ 3
Ill ~ Entertainment
.AKQ
Tonight
• 6 54
(HBOI Coming Attractions
.KQ4
2
B:OO D (]) (l) Cosby Show Denise's new boyfriend irritates
By James Jacoby
WEST
EAST
Cliff and Clair when he critiHJdle hands are the devil 's
• A 7 52
cizes their professions. (R,
workshop" is a good Puritan saying.
.Jt09542
• 863
.JI0987
(]) Here Come the Brides
If you think of your opponents as dia.96
• J 10 8 3
(]) Motorcycle Racing:
bolical defenders when ,you're in a
1985 Stadium
Super
slam contract, take the idle cards out
SO UTI!
cross Coverage of this race
of their hands and you ma"y see a dev.K I0984
il transformed into an angel.
is presented from Pasadena,
CA .
·
Play for slam was quite good,
• AQ32
Cll MOVIE: 'Meteor' (CCI
depending on the clubs splitting 3·3 or
.A 7 5
0
Cll I1J Magnum, P.l.
th d'
d f'
k'
S th
Magnum faces a moral die 1amon
messe wor mg . ou
Vulnerable: Both
lemma when he must prove
won the opening lead in dummy and
Dealer: North
.that a woman's death was
started the trump suit. West held off
West
Nortb East
South
caused by suicide and hoi
taking his trump ace unli1 three
I
NT
Pass
murder. (R) (60 min.)
rounds were played. After winning
Pass
4+
Pass
4t
(IJ
MaoNeii/Lehrer
the ace, West led a second heart.
Pass
Pass
Newahour
. Declarer won in dummy and came to
Pass
Pass
Gll MOVIE: 'Tho Com is
his hand with the club ace to draw the ·
Pass
Pass
Pass
Green'
last trump. Then he played lo the club
~ !lZ MOVIE: 'The_ ~her · king, and cashed the last heart and
Opening lead:
S1do of the Mountain ,
the last high club. When clubs did not
~~~ Daryl Hall &amp; John
split, South played a diamond to the
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Curtaina·
q!'een, unf?rtunately losing to West 's
smgleton kmg.
.
8:30 D IIJ (l) Family Ties
. J:low can declar~r acqu1:e X-ray
Steven and Elyse dEtsperatelv try to arrange a quiet
visiOn? Not by puttmg on h1s Super·
man cape. Instead, he s~ould take the two-card ending, he leads dummy's
·evening alone together. (RI
9:00 0 (I) CD Cheers Sam must
idle cards out of the defenders! hands. diamond. When East follows with the
be married by midnight 1o
He does so by playing ~is fifth spade, jack, he remembers that East has the
honor a. long-forgotten bet
discarding a diamond from dummy, remaining club and so cannot have
or he w1ll lose the bar . IRI
before playing to lhe club king. He the red king. When he rises with the
IIJ 700 Club
.
, now plays as before, cashing his 'high ace he is rewarded by the fall of the
(]) Top Rank Boxmg from
heart and the last high club. At the king.
Las Vegas, NV A 12 round
ESPN Junior Middleweight
bout
featuring
Roman
George vs. Darnell Kno1c
(LIVEI
0 (IJ ® Simon &amp; Simon
(CCt A unKm leader who desert ad the Marine Corps 20
years earlier hires the Si·
mons to find out who is ,
blackmailing him. (RI (60
min.)

r1

--------------------- .·•··

74

I HOOTT
·I I I

~New.

conaole
very t : : : - - - - - - - l r - : = = = = = = = : : : = = 1 1 9 13
6 8teet,
Shasta
travGI
Lowerycond.
good
Callpiano.
614-317sleeps
4, trailer,
1tove.,
7822 or 614- 367-7689.
Autos
for
Sale
oven,
pump
water
system
. ..
71
64 Hay &amp; Grain
$995, oxcollont condition- . _.
Bundy Alto Saxaphone. very
inlide and out . Call 114· ...;:
good cond., 8176. Cell
•-.
Fiat X1-9. Excellent, 6 245-5271.
614-446-2741 .
Ear corn good clean corn, no speed. lift off top, 61,000
husk, *2.60 e bulhal. Cell miles. $2.500.00 . 304Bundy alto aaxaphone 614-448-4599.
675-1212 before 4o00, Camp,r for sale. Sleeps six. ·;:
8350. Artley clarinet, 8150.
Sea at County Road 26, 1
Both excellent condition. Hay for sale. *1 .26 per bale. 675-2372 after 6oOO.
mile from Meigs High
Colt · 614-446-4881 aftOf
Colt 614· 247-2575 or 614- 1974 Pontiac, 4 door, good School. $350.
6;00.
247-3972.
cond. $460.00. Call 304·
676-6412 alter 3 PM .
Services
Hav for sale. Out of field.
58
Fruit
Call for next cutting dale. 1978 Kawasaki 1000 LTD,
&amp; Vegetables
814-949-3069.
14,000 miles, good cond,
new rear lire, $1,096.00.
81
Home
Straw for sale. $1.60 per 304-676.-8530.
Improvements
Red raspberries Taylor's bale. Call 614-949-3069.
Berry Potch. 614-446-8692
'78 GMC Spirnt 360 autoor 614-245-5064. No Sunmalic. 304-675-1690.
day Colts.
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Winter potatoes for sale.
Unconditional lifetime gua72 Trucks for Sale
$8.00 per 100 lbs. Call
Transporta11on
rantee . Local references
614-247- 2142.
furnished. Free estimates.
1966 Chevy Pick-up. 350
Call collect 1-614-237auto, ex . cond . $1 BOO . Call
Canning peaches now avail·
0488, day or night : Rogers
aftOf 7pm. 304-675-7109.
able, open 7 days week, call 71
Autos for Sale
~asement Waterproofing .
tor prices as supply is
1983 Chevy l,4 ton. auto,
limited, 304-773-6721 .
PS, PB, am-fm tape. topper, D.and M. Contractors. Vinyl
Bob's Martr.eJ, Mason, W. TOP CASH paid ·for '80 $6499. John's Auto Sales, siding, replacement win~
Va.
model end newer used cars. · Bulaville Ad. Gallipoli·1, dows, insulating. roofing,
new and remodeling, conSmith Buiek-Pontiac. 1911 Ohio.
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis. Call
crate . Call304-773-5131.
59 For Sale or Trade
614-44B-22B2.
1977 Datsun PU truck runs
good. body needs work. cap J .and l. Installation. Roof·
80 Pontiac Grand Prht exc. top, fBOO. Colt 614-245- ing. vinyl siding. storm doors
For sale or trade for lives· cond .. $4.600. Colt 614· 66BB.
and windows. Free estitock. Locust posts . Call 379-2314.
.
1----------------- mates. Call614-992-2772.
61 4 -446·4298.
Baker tool b9x bed for 1 ton
69 Chevy Imperial EC. 79 truck. good cond. Call 614- RON'S Television Service.
1976 Coupe De Ville . Good Dodge Aspen wagon GC, 80 2B6-6622 .
House calls on RCA, Ouaur.
transportatio·n . Sell or trade Toyota Corolla GC. 80 Ply.
GE. Specialing in Zenith.
for riding mower-tractor. Arrow truck 4x4 GC . Call 1976 GMC PUPS. PB, V-8, Call 304-576-2398 0. 614Call 614-992-3733.
614-446-7414 9AM-9PM.
auto, camper top, $1.350 . 448-2454.
Call 614-448-4053.
1967 FIBtttwood Cadillac
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
Farm Suppltes
Limoaene. 3 seats. fair con· 1986 Chevy pickup truck. removal . Call 30,4- 675dition. $1,600 or best offer. 900 miles. $9.000. 614- 1331 .
&amp; Ltve s tock
-Call 614-446-1197.
949-2660.
RINGLES'S SERVICE. axSa,b2.fclas06
1983 Dodge Charger
perienced carpenter. electri40,000 mi., good cond. Call '72 Chev pick up, 4 WO, c:ian. mason. painter, roof·
61 Farm Equipment
614· 25B · 176B or 61 4·256- 81,200.00. 304·675-60B3 ing (including hot tar
8215.
call aher 4 q'clock, 1ee at application! 304-675-20B8
CROSS &amp; SONS
or 876-7368.
1001 22nd S1roet.
U.S. 36 Wast. Jackson,
1983
Chevette.
e~ecellant
~~;::::===~===~
Ohio. 614·2B8·8461.
condition. aut"Omatic, AC,
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Massey Fergu1on. New
PS, PB. 19,BOO miles. 73
Vans &amp; 4 W.O.
Most wells c:ompleted same
Holland, Bush Hog Sales 8t transferr:ab&amp;a w•rranty. Cell
day . Pump sale1 and servi·
Service. Over 40 used
614-266-8744.
1981 Chevrolet van. cus- COl. 304-B95-J802.
tractors to choose from 8t
1979
Fiat
X1-9Conv.,
runs.
tom.
Call 614-446·2518 Starks Tree and Lawn Sercomplete line of new &amp;
after
looks exc. $1750. Coll ,6 14· _
_3:30PM.
_ _ _ _ _...;..__ vice, 11ump removal, 304used equipment. largest
1
selection in S.E. Ohio. "
446-0705.,,
676-2010.
1977 Dodge Colt. 'good
cond. t750. Call 614-2566704.

()

I I

'8 ;00 DIIJ())(J)I!J())(l)Gl

Auto Repair

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Trombone, exc. cond. , ex.
price. Call 814-446-911311.

r

EVENING

Transmlsaions rebuilt., Gua· .,.,•
rantead. $200. At T. and o . ~;..
Auto Sales. under the
Pomeroy - Muon Bridge .
Phona 614·992-6B46 .

5 string banjo. Call 614256-6417 baforo 6 PM .

15

The

Television
Viewing

------~----------~
1979 L.T.D. 302 motor lor

,r
/

Ohio

Good 400 smell block Chovrolat. t250. Colt 614-4467572 ask for Jeff.

Musical
Instruments

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding ell breeds. Heated Want to rant barn in Mercerindoor-outdoor facilities . ville aru to hang small crop
AKC Doberman puppies: of tobacco. Call 814-256Stud Service. Call614-446- 8251 after 6:30PM.
7795 .

54 Misc. Merchandise
lots available. Green Terrace Mobile HOme Community . Call 614-4460.254. 446-3643 or
446-7749.

57

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessorlea

8

4 ft . Mott-Knife mowe.- and
1 Jeep top, slant back. Call
51 Household Goods · 614· 992· 6229 after 5 :00.
1----------lawn mower. 60 Inch. 3
SWAIN
point hitch, Radial Arm
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE Saw·Crahsman 9 inch. Call
62 Olive St .• Gallipolis. New _6_1_4_·7_4_2_·_2_8_7_7_._ _ ___
1
&amp; used wood-coal stoves. 6
Wood-burning Warin Mornpc wood LR .s.uite 8399.
bunk beds $199, antron ing ~tove for sale. Call
recliners $99. new &amp; u1ed 614-247-3272.
bedroom suites. · ranges.
.
.
wringer Wllhers, It shoea,.... . F~rewood $ 20. ~0 p1ckup
New livingroom suites load. $30.00 delivered. Call
$199 · 8599. lamps. also 304-676~6762 .or 676buying coal &amp; wood stoves. 1_2_9_9_1_.- - - - - - - Call 614-446-3169.
1·
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS,
hot dip reblueing, all types of
gun1mith
work. fast service,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from 304-675-4631.
S2B6. to fB95. Tables. 860
and up to $125. Hide-a- Pole buildings erected,
beds, 8390 . and up to many sizes and colors. Low
S560 .• sofa beds 8145, prices. Free Estimates. Call
Recliners, &amp;225. to 8375., 304-675-39B1.
lamps from S28. to $125.
pc. dinetles from $109 .. to Firewood $30.00. pick-up
435. 7 pc. $189 and up. load delivered, mostly hard·
Wood table with six chairs wood. 304·458-1638 or
$2B6 to $745 . Desk $110 1-3_0_4_-4_5_8_·_1_7_28_._ _ ___
up to $225. Hutches, 8560.
Bunk bed complete with PRICE WAR! Deluxe flashmattresses. $275 . and up to Ing arrow sign, $259 com$395. Babv bods. $110. plata. lighted, no arrow
Mattresses or bo~e 1prings, $237. Nonlighted $189.
full or twin, $58., firm. $68. Warranty, See locally. Facand $78. Queen sets, $225. toryo 1 (BOO I 42~-01 83,
4 dr. chests. S49. 6 dr. anytime.
chests. $69. Bed frames,
8:20.and 825., 10 gun- Gun 1 5"'h ft . fiberglass boat, 80
cabinets. 8360. Gas or HP Evinrude. $950; 1983
electric ranges $376. Babv Ford pickup, black; 1983
mattresses, $25 &amp; $35, bed Thunderbird. excellent. Call
frames $20, $26 , &amp; $30, 304-675-6858.
king l'r ame $50. Good selac·
tion of bedroom suitaa, Camper add-a - room
rockers, metal cabinets, 820.00. Dryer 85.00. Eloc.
headboards 838 &amp; up to range $46.00. gas stove
(antique) $20.00. Church
866.
pew $15 . 00. 304 - 675Used Furniture -· Metal 6316.
office desks. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to Sur pI u s~Army- Denim ·
Rental clothing. Sam Some5pm, Mon. thru Sat.
rville's East of Ravenswood,
614-446-0322
Frl, Sat . Sun, 1:00-7:00
GOOD USED APPLIANCES PM. (Friday's Aug. 23. Aug.
Washers, dryer,, refrigera- 30 only open after 5:00PM) 340 International tractor,
tors. ranges. Skaggs Ap- Children's camouflage. PS.Iivepower. Killbro1grain
pliances, Upper River Rd . Phone 304-675-3334.
bed. New Idea lime
beside Stone Crest Motel. One new 10 inch Wards spreader. 82995. Call 614814-446-739B.
tabla saw. 2 hp, $200.00. '_2_B_8_·6_5_2_2_._ _ _ _ __
304-675-353B.
'.
COunty Appliance. Inc .
9N Ford tractor, plu1 7 pes.
Good u1ed appliances and
equipment, ex. cond. Call
TV sets . Open SAM to &amp;PM. Coal stove, good con d. 614· 3B8·B861.
Moo thru Sat. 814-446- 304-45B· 1 667 call after
1699, 827 3rd . Avo : Galli- 4 :00PM .
Manure spreader. Call 614·
polis, OH .
992-69B9.
Valley Fumi1ure. new &amp; 66 Building Supplies
MF 176 Dtosat. 800 Ford
used. large •action of qualTractor, Pull · type 8 ft.
ity furniture. 1216 Eastern
brush-hog, 12 ft. Eze-Fiow .
Building Material•
Ave., Gallipolis.
Fertilizer-Seeder, 80 Inch 3
Block, brick, sewer pipe1, point hitch mower deck. Call
Trade Center. New furniture windows, lintels, etc. 61 ,4- 742-2B77.
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,
&amp; appliances, sales &amp; ser·
0 . Colt 614-245-5121.
vice . Kanauga, Oh . 614·
6 ft. heavy duty bruth hog
448-7444.
wl1h throe point hl1ch,
Utility bldg. special: $275.
Antique farm wagon
30'x40'x9' with track door with spoke wheels. noo.
Kenmore washer &amp; dryer,
• 1erv . door, $6255 275 got. fuolllnk. t50. Colt
•150 poir. Call 614-388·
erected . Iron Horse Builders. 614· 742·3033.
97BO.
614-332·9745 collect.
Large oak desk. 8 drawers,
4,000 Ford tractor with end
matching chair. good condi · Still looking for your dream loader, J4. 700. Colt 304·
Home?
tion, $126 firm. Call 614676-68oB.
-·
See our huge lakeside
446-6573.
retreat, 3 or 51Jdr., built on B ft. Now Idea pull typo
yoJ,n lot, t17,900 &amp; up.
26' color Philco TV. walnut
manure spreader, e&amp;OO.OO .
finish. electronic tuning, ex- Catt· 814-B86-7311 .
1976 half ton pick up truck
cellent condition, $160. Call
Block, brick, mortar and $500.00. 304-87&amp;-3834.
a14-446-1869.
masonry supplies. Mountain Approx 1200.tobecco 1tlcka
State Block. Rt. 33, New
Drapes. 1 pair, 120~e81 and
Haven, W. Va. 304-882- 15 cents each. 3 tobacco
one pair 45~e81 . Self-lined.
prenes $35.00 each . Phone
2222.
like new. Call 614 -992304-875·2B4B.
5583.
8 piece living room suite.
Good condition. $300 .
Phone 614-9B6·3BBB .

46 Space for Rent

Good used baby bad. complete. $40. Colt 614-9926115.

76

Fish T•nk and Pet Shop.
2413 Jaekaon Avenue •
Point Pleaaant. 304-87620&amp;3. Fiah. blrda and more.

Zenith AM -FM 8-nack stereo &amp; phone. Call 814-4487315.

"No, you may not make
poison arrows by dipping All sorts of items to sell to
them in my gravy."
flea morket doalor for onl
..___________,...____.;..._____.j lump lum of 860. Call

Wrlgllt

1

3 female black Garmen
Shepherd puppiel, full
blooded , 8 weeki old.
;~~ oo aach, . a304-6711-

1 4x70 trailer frame &amp;
wheels . 1980 Malibu
wagon. good cond. Call
614-446-2668,

'KIT 'N' CAlli. YLa ®!tr

Pure bred Pit Bull puppie1. 8
weeks old. •so.oo. Call
_8_1_4_·9_9_2_·7_7_1_5_._ _ ___

Ba11tttt Hound Pupa.
UD.OO eoch, phone 304·
675-2671 .

Chevy Vega engine. Antique
quilt holder. 'Call 814-2473824.

Choice corner lot . . 28 of
acre on Gravel Hill in Middle- r
port. Oh. Call 614 -9923359.

Pete for Sele

66

1 8x4 ft . 1wimming pool. ex.
cond .• sand filter. 2 deck•.
and all accessories. Call
61.·44&amp;-7315.

RCA Xl100 for ule, exc.
cond. $300 or best offer.
Colt 614-446-2122.

35 Lots &amp; Acrqage

3 acres, septic tank, county
water. trailer hook-up, Rac-

54 Mite. Merchandiae

Thursday, August 22, 1986

rt,Ohio

la vie"

30~rult

SS Perple:xed

I I Destiny

87-on

(ob~nte)

38 Dodge
40 Occurrence
41 Carrier
42 ThiB

b+-+-

($p.)
UT\Iuana
loborer
DOWN
1 Highlander
2 Medii.
bean
DAILV CRVYrOQUOTFS- Here's how lo work II:

ma

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
ap&lt;~Strophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .
CRYPTOQUOTE
8-22
EQ

SDDJQO

HQFQ

p

PB

VWOQ

ZQ

OWVE

P\'

wu

EQ

EPOA'B

w

DFOQFQO . - FWAM
SPFOAQF
Y-nlq'a CI'J')Jtoq110te: IF YOU CANNOT CATCH
A BIRO OF PARADISE, BE'ITER TAKE A WET HEN. NIKITA KHRUSHCHEV

�Thursday, August 22, 1985

Falwell embarrasses Reagan
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Pres!·
dent Reagan Is Inclined to veto
economic sanctions against South
Africa, but eould order milder
punltlverneasuresonhisowntostep
up pressure lor racial reforms,
administration officials said today.
With Senate action expected next
month oo sanctions legislation, the
officials said Reagan could accept
prohibitions on computer sales to
agencies enforcing apartheid and
loans to companies denying equal

NEW CAR DEALER- Clll'Ol Harper Is now lhe
owner of Cooper Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, Inc.,
fonnerly Tom Rue Motors, of Middleport. Harper wU1

be joiniDg her sales Ioree In sbewlng cars .lo

prospective buyers.

Columbus woman buys car business
Tom Rue Motors, a longtime
Middleport business establishment,
is under new ownership. Carol

Harper, of Columbus, purchased
the Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge
dealership from Rue on July L1. The
bu'stness will now b;e known as
Cooper Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge,
Inc.
Harper says that Meigs County
car buyers can expect to see new

cars sitting In the showroom floor of
the South 3rd Ave. business by the
end of September, If remodeling of
the building goes forward according
to schedule. Harper Is hoping lor a
September completion date to be In

time for this year's new car
showing. A grand opening will be
upeomlng about the same· time.
Harper adds.
A recent truck strtke has prevented Harper from filling the lot
with new vehicles sinee she look
over the business but She's expect·
lng a shipment any day. She notes
that trucks will he sold on the lot for
the first time.
Harper's expertise in the new car
business came with years of
on-the-job training. She says she's
been in the car business since she
was 17 when she was hired as a
switchboard operator for a dealer in

Colwnbus. Since that time, she has
had employment with several
successful Columbus dealers, in·
eluding Trader Bud's Westside
Dodge, which, Harper says, Is the
No. 1 dealer In the Cincinnati Zone.
Of course, Harper would like to
change that situation since Meigs
County is also part ofthe Cincinnati
zone.
. A friendly and personable young
woman, Harper is now living In
to
Middleport.
establishing
She'sCooper
lookingChrysler,
forward
Plymouth, Dodge, Inc. as a great
place to buy a car.

Happenings around Meigs County...
Volunleel'!! sought
Jim Lawrence, principal of Syra·
cuse Elementary, Is asking Interested parents to come to tile school
all p.m. on Friday to help paint the
playground equipment. Those parents who would like to help paint
should bring brushes with them .

judgment sought
Grace L. Clark, Coolville, has filed
suit in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, requesting a judgment of
$171,447.75 from Edna F. Harmon,
TUppers Plains. Clark requests the
judgment as compensation for
damages and Injuries sustained in a
Nov. 9.1984 tra!flcaccidentonRoute
7 near the Intersection of Rl. 248 In
Chester Township.

Judge ..•

Mayor concludes
seven court cases

Veterans Memorial

Four people were fined and three
forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night.
Fined $50 for falling to pay
parking meter tickets plus assessed
the unpaid amount due on those
tickets were Sherry Hollen, Pomeroy, a total of $120, and Lor.rie J.
Foster, Pomeroy, a total ot $&amp;3;
Randy Warden, Mason, W.Va. , $63

and costs, no operator's license, and
-Richard Beddand. Mannington, W.
Va .. $44 and costs, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Marjorie
Gibbs, Shade, $43, and Gary Vicks,
Ctresapeake, $48, both posted on
speeding charges, and Bruce DearIng, Union Furnace, $63, traffic light
violation.

Admissions--Homer Young, Mid·
dleport; Gladys Frye, Pomeroy.
Discharges--Iva . Logan, Tanya
Nunn, Gladys Taylor, Truman
Priddy, Taunda VanMeter.

opportunities
blacks
whites.
The officialstosaid
suchand
steps
would
not abandon the principle of
"constructive engagement" that
has guided U.S. policy toward South
Africa under Reagan.
Reagan remains opposed to a ban
on U.S. Investment in South Africa
as detrimental to the Interests of
blacks in that country, sayo!ficlals,
and the White House has hinted he
would veto the sanctions now before
· the Senate.
But a veto override by Congress Is
likely, top administration offlci.a ls
alSo acknowledge, without marked
progress toward reforms In South
Africa.
White ltouse spokesman Larry
Speakes emphasized Reagan has
reached no Jlnal decision on the

White House, on 1he situation In
sanctions Issue.
He and other offlci:.ls, Including South Africa.
Speakes refus&lt;xl to commmt on
National Security Adviser Robert
McFarlane. haV&lt;' sa.td Reagan's Falwell's chura clerlzatlon of the
decision would be h1fluenced by Rev. Desmond Tutu- a winner of
developments both in South Africa the Nobel Peace Prize and a leading
voice of black opposition to the white
and on Capitol Hill. ·
minority- as "a phony" who does .
Discussion of aft ernatives to
sanctions before Congress surfaced · not speak lor South Africa's black
·
·
majority.
amid signs of administration dis·
Privately,
however,
offi~lals
said
pleasure with statements by the
the administration was embar·
Rev. Jerry Falwell, a eonservatlve
rassed
by his attack on Tutu ·
evangelist with CJQS(' ties to the

20°/'o to.70°/o
BAHR CLOTHIERS

A marriage license has been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to David Alan Burt, 24,
Pomeroy, and Lila Lynn Young, 23,

MIDDLEPORT

r~G;a;U;Ipo;;lls;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;~;;;;;;;;

DOG DAYS

-~

'i ~
aACK

to SCHOOL
' Only

$399° 0
Fromer.f in oil 1 " •6·.. rugged pine ond

.... lth lu:.

vrious cv1hions in o core·frt·e Iabrie. It's the
•Solo •Lounge

oMSwtr to yo u1

l!''&lt;~er.,. need lor com lo rl, style ond voluef And. il's oil your)

C~i( •Ro,~er

at o price you·cf never dream pos~ible !

•2 end tables

(Continued from page II
.
lly," were not used. Cox felt the use
of these words was essential to
indicate the grahd jury did consider
the specification as a separate
matter.
Knight said he found the phrase
"do lind and present" adequate in
conveying the message that the
specification had been considered
independent of the aggravated
murder charge.

$7900

filing include William 0. Arnott, Kenneth H. Cundiff,
Ernest E. Sisson, Jr., and John T. Williams. The other
three candidates are Kathryn H. Crow, a former
council member; George E . Holman, former clerk,
and Edwin F. Neutzllng.
Voters in Meigs County's 12 townships wUI have a
wide selection of candidates when they cast ballots in
the Nov. 5 election to elect two township trustees.
Filing deadline lor the trustee posts was 4 P,-m.
Thursday and there are races in every township .
Candidates Include:
Bedford - David M. Brickies, William Charles
Cook, Robert F. Hawk, Robert G. Pickett, Kenneth
Sincair, and Ronald L. Wood.
Chester - -Rodney G. Chevalier, Gary R. Dill,
William Pooi!'r, Jr., Henry Thomas, George Alfred
Wolfe.

II tax measures
on election ballot
levies, will be voted upon In Meigs
County subdivisions at the Nov. 5
election, the Meigs County Board of
Elections reports.
1 In addition, measures to repeal .
the one percent lneome tax In
Pomeroy and a weat anddt'yissuein
Bedford Township were filed at the4
p.m. filing deadline Thursday.

ROUP

. . .

New tax levies In the subdivisions
are: Olive Township, one-half mill,
fiv&lt;' years, fire pro teet ion; Orange
Township, one mill, five years, fire
protecilon; Rutland Township, 1.15
mWs, five years, dust eontrol;
Middleport Village, one mill, five
years, recreational purposes; Mid·
dleport Village, one mill, five years,
current expenses; and Rutland
Vlllage, 1.5 mills, five years,
eonstruction and resurfacing and
repair cl roa'ds and bridges.
Renewals earning before voters
Include Chester Township, .4 ot one
mill, five years, maintaining ceme-

Salisbury - -Richard B. Bailey, Nathan Biggs,
Virgil V. Brown, Gregory S. .Eblin, George S.
Hoootetter, Marvin W. McGuire.
Scipio- Harold D. Graham, Raymond A. Norris,
Eugene Phlllips, Jerry L. Tillis, Gary M. Welch.
Su~on- Roy E. Armes, Dennie Edison Hill, Larry
R. Hubbard, Otis F. Knopp, Henry A. Salser, Don P.
Smith, Forrest VanMeter and Harold L. Wrltesel.
In three townships voters will fill the ·unexpired
township clerk post. These are In Bedford Township
where the candidates are Barbara J. Grueser and
Edith Ann Leach; Olive Township where three
candidates, Kathryn M. Fortney, Barbara Ann
Hannum and Donna M. Wolf seek the post, and
Chester Township wherE' WiUtam Michael Will is
unopposed for the clerk's unexpired term post.
(Continued on page 12)

Piggyback
tax not
acted upon

terles; Columbia Township, one
mill, five years, !Ire proteciion;
OUve Township, one half mill, five
years, fire protection; Racine
VIllage, three mills, five years,

current expenses.
In the Southern LOcal School
District, a new 6.19 mill bond Issue
and tax levy will be decided on by
voters. The Issue would be In effect
lor 23 years. Its puflJOse would be to
provide funds for construction of a
new elementary school, adminlstra·
Uve ce!lfer, and bus garage and
entafli!Dg, renovating, rehabillta·
lion, remodeling, improving, ad·
ding to furnishing and equipping
existing school facilities and acqulr·
tng and Improving school sites.
In Bedford Township, votes .wUI
decide on the sale of beer and wine
the Sunday sale of beer.
Pomeroy Village voters will
decide on whether or not the Income
tax which went lntoeffectJan.l, this
year, wUI be continued.

JACKSON, Ohio iUPI) - An
emergency measure Imposing a 1
percent "piggyback" sales tax
failed to he enacted Thursday by the
.Jackson County commissioners
even though the county wlll run out

(

Index

Percent Change

vU~na:d~ju:s:te~d~=

Seasonally adjusted

of money in a month.

325r-

(1967 = 100)
.6% ~--~-~up

o.2%

.5%

ana

Michael said eounty officials will
meet with a representative from the
state auditor's office Monday to
review the county's financial

situation.
K~ller said . Thursday he might
reconsider his vote on th£:&gt; emer·
gency measure, if state officials tell
him the coupty has no olher~hoice.

Seasonally adjusted
new factory orders
ip billions of dollars.

JASONDJFMAMJJ
1984

1984

1985

UP SUGHTLY- Conswner prices Inched up0.2
percent In July, the same as May and June, as
accelerating housing costs were mostly balanced by

Down 2.8

107r------~===a
1051-- - - - -

5 PIECE DINETTES $ '19900
7 PIECE DINETTES $49900

COOPER C YSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE INC.
AIR CONDITIONER SERVICE'
•Tighten fittings
•Check systems for leaks
•Includes freon up to 2 lbs.
•Check drive belts
•Check condenser fins
•Evacuate and recharge

$2995
992·6421

•

CARPET SALE .

97

"Sculptured or Plush"
1OO"'o SCOTCHGUARD NYLON

$999
SQUill

S YEAR WEAR
GUARANTEE

95

BRING. IN THIS

COUPON

YAID
WITH INSAUATION &amp; 1/1 PRIME
PADDING, UfmME GUARANTEE.

$13 99

Cash &amp; Carry

SQ. YD.

SAVE

Sl oooo.

ON ANY 2 PIECE
LIVING ROOM SUITE

REMNANT
KITCHEN CARPET

Town &amp; Country Furniture

$69 9 SQ. YD.

"FREE DRIVERY"
"FINANCING AVAILABLE"

PRICES GOOD THROUGH SEPTEMBER

EXPIRES 9/15/86

399 S. 31D

101

WALL TO WALL

$1 999 SQ. YD.

·cooper Chrysler Plymouth
Dodge, Inc.
MIDDUPOIT

SERVICE HOURS 7:30 A.M.-6:00 I'.M.

---

Choice of Maple, Pine, Oak
Chinettes Priced Separately

VINYL EASE

I

103 1-

,TOWN &amp;COUNTRY DISCOUNT FURNITURE
c:o

2 'It MIUS IOUI'H ON In, 2

fiiOM IAVINIWOOD
fORMIIL Y IN TMI COUNTRY lAIN.
HQURSt MOM, TMIU SAT. 9·5

- __

J A S 0 N D .) F M·A M J J
1984
1985
UPI Graphic
.
'
FACI'ORY GOODS 'DOWN - New orders for "big ticket" factory
goods feD 2.8 percent In July after two months of !lUong Increases,
dragged down by faDing defense orders, the Census Bureau said
Thursday. (UPI).

OSP cites man after accident
A Gallla County man was cited by
the Gallla·Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol foilowlng a · twovehicle eo!Uslon Thursday evening
on Galila County 6.
A plck-updriven by Don B. Hodge,
39, of5BelmontDr.. was southbound
on 6, alld a pick-up driven by
Terence E. Elliott, 18, of Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, was westbound on 5Bil.

~

By United Press lntemalional
Grocery food prices In the Cleveland
area advanced 0.9 percent in July,
following a 0.8 percent increase In
June. At the same t lme, Cincinnati
area consumer prtces 'declined 0.1
percent from May to July, the
Bureau of Labor Statistics of the
U.S. Department of Labor said.
Officials said that nearly half of
the Cleveland food price Increase
was due to a rise in the price of
meats, poultry, fish and eggs. An
additional two-fifths of the Increase

UPI

lower gasoline and meat prices, the Labor
Department said Thursday. (UPI).

was found In the dairy products .
The Cincinnati consumer price
Index and the foods-at-home index.
index ·to th~ 12-month period ended
Lower Cleveland-area prices for in July showed an Increase of 2.1
fresh ground beef, sirloin steak and percent - which was considerably
some of her cu Is of beef were offset lower than increases of 3.5 percent
by highPr prices for chicken, eggs and 6.5 percent during I r.o two
and some pork products. Higher preceding 12·month periods ended
prices for soft drinks and prepared In July 1984 and In July 1983, in that
foods caused most ot the 0.8 percent order.
increase in the foods-at ·home index.
Officials said lower prices for
Energy eosts In the Cleveland apparel and upkeep. both down 4.6
area remained unchanged in July percent, and food and beverages,
and were up ooly 1.8 percent during down 0.6 percent. caused most oflhe
the latest 12-month prlod.
overall decline In ,the Queen Clly.

In separate Issues on the Nov. 5
ballot , county vot~rs will decide
whether to reinstat e the tax and
whether to impose a permanent i
percent lax beginning In January.
"! don't think legally we could
have enacted an emergency sales
tax today," said Keller, noting that
such a lax eouid have been
challenged in court ~ause of the
pending referendum on the lax
approved
ear li er
by

commissioners.
Keller said he also opposed the
emergency mC'a~urr because
county officials "have made no rml
effort to live within the budget."
J"he 1 J)ei'Cent tax would genf'ratf'
about $900,00la year, Michael said.
If the emergency proposa I had been
approved ' ThuJ~day, he said. ' the
eo\lnty eould have. borrowed mon&lt;')·
to keep offices open.
" We can't C\'C'n borrow rnoney

now," MichaPl said.

Eastern hoard okays several contracts
Severa! eont racts were approved
when the Eastern Local · School
District Board of Education met in
regutar session Thursday night.
The board approved Siorek's
Bakery to provide breads and other
items for the now school year and
Bank I was accepted as the
depository of district funds.
Abbott Foods was approved to
supply food for the cafeteria. The
board Increased I he price of lunches
lor students by 10 cents for the
upcoming school year which gets

'·
Troopers said Elliott allegedly went
left of center while making a right
tum from 588 onto 6 and struck
Hodge's vehicle in the left side.
No in)urtes were ~eported In the
7:35p.m. accident, which troopers
COLUMBUS (UP!) Nine
said caused light l)amage to both
vehicles. Elliott was charged by the . people were stU lin the running today
patrol with making an improper for one or more endorsements by an
'OhioRepubltcanscreenlngcommlt·
tum.

underway Monday with teachers ·
meet lngs. Classes begin on
Tuesday.
.
Approval was a new refrigerator
for Tuppers Plains School and
Wendy Haler was approved to
attend an elementary principals'
conference to he held in Columbus.
A 1985-86 handbook for students was
approved ..
Beth Ritchie was named junior
high cheerleader advisor and
named to the substitute teachers ilst
were John Barcus, Janice Groggle,

Valerie Hanestine, Jon! Jeffers,
Vicki Johnson, VInas Lee, George
Nichols, Dorothy Petrel, Barbara
Sommei, Michele Mowrey. David
Weber, Harold Graham. Jennifer
Machlr and Nancy Washtes . Pay for
substitute teaching was set for $50 a
day .
The resignation of Barbara Wesei
as a D.H. teacher at the high school
was accepted andCarolBrewerwas
employed on a temporary contract
to fill the post . Hired as library a Ides

were Judy Wolf&lt;' a nd Margaret
Cauthonie.
The board voted for membership
In theTrloCounty Film Llbrar:-·and
renewed membership in NAIR
Robert Grossnlckel was given
permission for hi' child to attend
Tuppers Plains Elementary rather
than Riverview School for the next
year. All board members were
present. The next r&lt;&gt;gu Ia r meeting
will he 7 p.m., &amp;opt. 26, at the high
school.

Ball, Veidt seek support for district positions

•

•
.._

1985

Food prices up in Cleveland;
decline in Cincinnati area

COMPLETE

$3 7 900

Earlier this year, the commi~ ­
sloners approved a non-emergency
measure imposing a I perCI'nt
piggyback sales tax. But a (lf'filion
drive kept the measure from taking
effect on June I and placed the
proposal on the November ballot .

J ASONDJ FMAMJ J

0

BEDROOM SUITE

Commissioners Edw~rd Michael
and Edward Davis voted in favor of
the proposal, bUt Marvin Keller
voted against the measure, which
required unanimous approval .
"September 2Jlth Is the last day
county offices can operate," said
Michael, adding that the county is
expetfted to fall $350.001 short of the
.funds required to krcp the offices
open through December.

320 ....___ _ _ __

Durable Goods

u ·o using••
(Continued from page It
There Is. a coin operated laundry
just of! the large activity room on the
ground noor of the new part of the
building, several landscaped patios
with seating, and adequate parking
lots. As yet the furniture for the
aclivfly room has not arrived and
some Interior planlings have to be
completed. There !sa kitchenette of!
the large room making It a place
where residents can gather for
social events .and serve
refreshments.
Plans are being made by the
Meigs Elderly Housing Corpora lion
for an oj:Jen house to be held in
mld·September or as soon as the
· furnishings arrive.

Columbia- James Earl Gaston, Trli!Dan L. Grim,
-Rodney Howery, Allee· M. Lievlng, Gordon Noel
Perry, Victor Perry and William Stout.
Lebanon - Max E. Folmer, Sr. , Eugene G. Long,
James L. McHaffie, Guy A. Rose, Morris E. Teaford.
Letart - Charles E. Burri, Don R. Hill, Walter
Herbert Roush, Christopher Tod Wolfe, Phillip W.
Wolfe.
Olive- Francis H. Andrew, Ernest D. Barringer,
Joe Lantz, Foster G. Niday, Everett L. Shultz.
Orange - Francis A. Benedum, Charles D. Carr,
Lester M . Hawk. Robert Marcinko, Edgar J. Pulllns,
James E . Watson .
Rutland - Charles D. Barrett, Jr. , Roger L.
Holman, Leo B. Morris, Charles E .. Wl)llamson .
Salem- Robert Beaver, Harold D. Lambert, Cecil
L. Stacy, William L. Thornton.

EACH

STARTIN~ AT

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newapliper

Consumer Prices

A new motion in the case has now

bef.'n filed by Cox and Story, this
time asking the court to order an
evaluation of Taylor to determine
whether or not he was able to
Comprehend his !lith amendment
right against self·lncrlminatlon,on
or about Oct. 11, 19&amp;1.
11 was at that time that an alleged
statement was taken from the
defendant while In the custody of the
West Virginia State Police, Parkersburg. In that alleged statement,
Taylor admitted to the shooting and
described circumstances leading up
to the killing.
Counsel for the defense moves the
court to determine if Taylor
understood his right to have eounsel
present prior to any questioning or
statements by him.
Aceordlng to the defense eounsel,
becauseTaylorwasorlglnailyfound
Incompetent to stand trial, the issue
of his understanding of his right to
counsel and his right against
seJf.Jncrlminatlon and the waiver of
these matters must be addressed by
the court before an adequate
defense may be prepared.

2 Sfcttons, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, August 23, .1985

The Nov. 5 election will see races for village posts In
Racine; Rutland and SYracuse and races for board of
education posts in the three local school districts of
Meigs County.
This was disclosed Thursday at 4 p.m . which was
the filing date for candidates at the Meigs County
Board of Elections office.
. In Racine Village, seven candidates are seeking
eleetlon to the four villag&lt;' council posts. Filing were
Incumbents, Robert j;:. Beegle, Frank Cleland,
Carroll L. Teaford aJ\d Seott D. Wolfe with other
candidates filing Including Orland Lee Floy, Jack L.
Lyons, Jr., and Henry L. Moore. No candidates filed
lor the one seat on the Racine Board of Public Affairs
to be filled this fail.
In SYracuse Village, sevencandldateshaveflledfor
the four eouncil seats opening this fail. Incumbents

Eleven tax measures, seven new

Hot Weather Bargain Craze!

6 Pc. WO .

enttne

Village, board races highlight ·general election

REDUCED

Maniage license

•

at y

Vops, No.92
Copyrighted 1986

MANl' ITEMS- FOR
BOTH
MEN&amp; WOMEN

Three calls
Mel!ll' County Emergency Medical Service reports three calls
Wednesday: Middleport at 8: 'l1
a.m. ' to Brownell Apartments for
Homer Young to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 12:56 p.m.
to Bailey Run Rd. forGladysFryelo
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syra·
cuseat 1:26 p.m. transported David
Lawson from the fl~ stallon to
Veterans Memorial Hospltaj.

e

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

Ba~k To School
$,gvin~tl

•

tee as candidates for the post of U.S.
attorney for the southern district cl
Ohio.
The four candidates set to be

interviewed for the first time include
former slate Rep. Claire Ball, of
Athens; Hocking County Pf0S€1'Ut·
lng Attorney Christopher Veldt ;

Michael R. Barrett, assistant Ha·
mUton County prosecutor; and
Edward W. Erfuri 1!1, a Columbus
..lawyer.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="179">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2769">
                <text>08. August</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41500">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41499">
              <text>August 22, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
