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MOnday. September 9. 1986

PomerQy-Middleport, Ohio

Deadline near for food cards
'

Margaret E. Houdashelt
Margaret • E. Houdashell , 86.
Racine. a retired Meigs County
school teacher. died Sunday at
O'Bieness Hospital in Athens.
Mrs . Houdashelt was born March
18, 1899 at Pomeroy . a daughter o!
the late James and Mary Thoma
Will. She was a member of the
Racine UnitEd Methodist Church
and had.~0 years service as a school
teacher In the county.
Surviving are a stepson and his ·
wife . Milton and Annabel Houda shell, Gallipolis: a sister. Amber A.
Lohn. Pop1eroy: a sister and
brother-In-law. Ella
and Dale
Smith. Pomeroy: two grandchildren-and one great-grandso.
Preceding her in death besides
her parents, were her husband,
Dana Houdashelt, in 1953, and a son.
William Swauger, killed on lwo
Jima .
Services will be held at 3 p.m.
W('dnesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home wlt h Rev. Robert Miller
officiating. Burial Will be In ~h
Grove Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time alter I
p.m. Tuesday.

Hubert H. Bass
Hubert H. Bass, 70, of Columbus,
died Sunday at Mount Carmel East
Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. Bass was a coal miner for
many years and was retired from
the Kinnear Corp. in Columbus. He
was a World War II veteran and a
member of the Disabled American
Veterans.
Surviving are his wife, ~oianda
Taylor Bass. Columbus: three
daughters and sons-in-law. Patricia
and John Shaffrr. Obetz; Barbara
and Richard Chambers, New Orleans, La .; Karen Sue and James
Camaquin, Columbus: a brother.
Eugene Bass, Pomeroy: a sister.
Carrie Bable, Columbus: six grandchildren and several nieces and
nephPWs.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, JohQ Eber and Dora

Weather forecast
Partly cloudy a nd humid today,
with scattered showers and thunderstorms and highs near90. Mostly
cloudy tonight, with scattered
showers and ihunderstonns and a

tow between 65 and 70. Becoming
partly cloudy Tuesday, with highs
bet ween 80 and 85.
Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair throogh the period. with
highs In the 71ls Wednesday and
Thursday lUid ranging lrom the
upper 60s to the middle 70s Friday.
Ovemldtl lows will be In the 50s.

One lotto winner
CLEVELAND tUPll - There
was one ticket sold corn&gt;ctly listing
all six of Saturday's winning Ohio
Lotto numbers.
The player who holds the winning
ticket will receive a jackpot of
$1.47:1,166 from thE' Ohio Lottery .
The winning numbers were ·al, 22,
28, ilO, :l7 a nd .:l9. ·'!'her&lt;'·were 10.154 tickets sold with
four of the winning numbers. Each
will receive $69, a nd 218 people hold
tickets with live of the numbers.

This Is the last week the
Gallla-Melgs Community Action
Agency wUI he receiving appllca·
tlons for food commodity dlstribu·
lion cards for September's
giveaway.
Commodities to be distributEd
Include chees&lt;'. dried milk and rice.

Carsey Bass. thrEe brothers and two
sisters.
Services will be WEdnesday! p.m.
at theMaeder-Qulnt Funeral Home,
1068 South High St., Columbus with
the Rev. John Gilbert officiating.
Burial wW be In Green Lawn
Cemetery. Friends may call Tiles·
day at the fun&lt;'ral homefrom2-4 and
7·9.

Participants must have a food
distribution card before they can

Veteran~ Memorial

Carl D. Askew
Carl D. Askew, 68. of187 Adelaide
Dr., Gallipolis. died Sunday morning at Holzer Medical Center
following a long Illness.
He was born July 24, 1917 near
Southside, W.Va .. to the late Carl
and Lizzie Woyan Askew.
A World War lJ army veteran, he
operated Carl's Tavern in Gallipolis
for23 years and was a member of I he
Jackson Elks Club, Circleville Post
of the American Legion. Point
Pleasant Moose Club, Eagles Club
at Pomeroy and Post 4464 of the
Veterans of Foreign Wars.
He is survived by his wife,
Kathleen Scott Askew. whom he ,
married on Dec. 24, 1948 and one
daughter. Mrs. Jayce Montgomery
of Gallipolis.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
Wednesday at Waugh-Halley -Wood
Funeral Home tn Galllpolis with
Rev. Anhur Lund officiating. Burial
will be In Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral homefrom2 to4p.m. and6to
9 p.m. TUesday.
Elks service by the Jackson Elks
Club will be 6 p.m. TUesday . .
Military graveside rites will be by
Post 4464 if the Veterans of Forell!n
Wars. Pallbearers will be Vance
RL&gt;cs, Jake Snodgrass, Charles
Glockner, But Dawson, Andy Hotzaphel and George Woodyard.

Harold T. Hubbard
Harold T. Hubbard. 85. of755Park
Street. Middleport. died Saturday at
his home.
Born Dec. 15, 1899,inPomeroy,he
was a son of the late Thomas A. and
Minnie Bearhs Hubbard. For 52
years. he was employed as a
custodian at Middleport High~hool
and later in'the Meigs Local School
system. He was a memeber of the
Middleport First Baptist Church.
Survivors include his wife, Lime
Hubbard, a t home: a son, Harold E.
Hubbard, Middleport: a step son,
Ralph Grimm, Stow; two step
daughters, Mary Toth, Burlington.
Conn., and Linda Shelfield, Lake; 1l
grandchildren; and three great
grandchildren.
.
In addition to his parents, he was
prPceded in death by a son. William
L. Hubbard. and three sisters.
· Services will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at
Rawllng-Coats-Blower Funeral
Home with Rev. Earl Eden officiat ing. Burial will be In Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may ca ll at the
funeral home all day Monday with
thefamDypre;ent from2-4 p.m.and
·
7-9p.m.

POPULAR EVENT -Mick Reed and Dr. Craig Mathews, both ol
Mlddlepol1, were among the participants in the hor.oeshoecompetUtonat
Saturday's Mlddlepo111Jlock Party.

Emergency squads kept busy
Meigs County Emergency Medical Sl'rvic!' reports llcallsSaturday
and eight d•lls Sunday.
On Saturday, at 7:1l! a.m.,
Middleport went to 755 Park St. for
Harold Hubbard who was dead on
arrival: TuppersPlainsat 9:38a.m.
transported Evelyn Brickles to
Veterans Memorial Hospit al:
Pomeroy at 11: 26a.m. to Bailey Run
Rd . for Jimmie Joe Caruthers to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Middleport at 2:22p.m. to Story's Run
Rd. for Charles Frailer to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
3: 28 p.m. to the Pomeroy HE"allh
Care Center for Lo\!le Watson to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Also Middleport at 6:32 p.m.
treated but did . not transport
Christine Pullins; Pomeroy at 8:20
p.m. to Peach Fork for Estella
Condray to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 9: 12 p.m. to
Chester Road for Elizabeth Windland to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9: 19 p.m. transported Raymond Cunningham from

A marriage license has been
Issued in Meigs COunty Probate
Court to Michael W. Ruchti. 29, and
Cathy Jo Lipscomb, :ll, both o!
Shade.

.Served with whipped potatoes, chtcken
gravy , cole slaw. hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sotry. no substitutes except bevtrage·wrth
additional price .

WRANGLER JEANS
SPECIAL SALE PRICES
81J~s ·

sires 8 to 16 m IIIUiar and sltms. boys
Sll! 8to 1$ mhuskies . stu dent slus 26to JOwl ·
rst. men's suu 29 to •2 w.mt .

J

¥J ~~~Land
CJ p•oobol

C:ITV

Automoti ve

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY . OHIO

Medical

Carpentry

Welding

Occupations

Mechanics

[tr] [jjJ

Industrial
Maintenance

Office
Services

Electricity
-•

Industrial
. Electrc;mics

Minimum Wage
Au1o

High School Complttera

Body

$6.45

Ataodate Degree

---------1

$7.37

Long Term Adult Yoc:otlonal Educ:otion
Data
Processing

'

I

0

:~:
~·

4

5

6

7

•

9

On Vocoi;onul Educohon 1983

A variety of full-time adult programs are available. These programs
co n give you the skills and " know -how" to enter the job area of your
choice and lead loa rewording career. Now is the time to invest nine
monlhs to a year in developing your skills.

PHONE 753-3511, EXT.

Food

36

Service

FINANCIAL AID IS AVAILABLE
Fall Quarter

- - - s t a r t s Sept. 30th-----INFORMATIONI--'

405 N. 2ND

992•3741

MIDDLIPORT

CONVENIENT OFF THE STREET PARKING

and,.,..

Srop in
our dilpi4y. We'U l!ive youfr!e lirer~lure on lww
do
it.
Or.
we
con •uggell a controc:tor to uwaU 11jor you.
10

REGISTER IN PERSON OR
MAIL IN THIS COUPON
1 wovld like more information about your adult
'-'OCOtlonol programs . Cl1eck one or mOre.

.

Yeur Nome . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . ·. · · · · · · ·
Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Phone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . · - · ·
Moil to : Adult Education Center
Tri -County Vocational Schooi
Rt . 1, S!. Rt . 691 Nelsonville. Ohio4571&gt;4

FUll TIME ADULT PROGRAMS
- BUSINESS DATE PROCESSING
- WELDING
- AUTO BODY REPAIR
- MACHINE TRADES
- INDUSTRIAL ELECTRONICS
· - INDUSTRIAL MAINTENANCE
- ELECTRICITY
- CARPENTRY
- OFFICE SERVICES
- FOOD SERVICE
- AUTO MECHANICS
- MEDICAL OCCUPATIONS

The Adult Education Center-

Where We Care About You
And Your Future

10

"SOURCE · Ohio Advisory Council

THE ADULT EDUCATION CENTER
TRI-COUNTY VOCATIONAL SCHOOL

Mochme

[I]

3

START YOUR CAREER NOW AT:

.•• ··.0:
...
Trades

2

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Tuesday, September 10, 1985

CopvrlghtOd 1985

25 Cants

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Clatworthy joins council; .Little named chief
Hoffman noted that Chief Cremeans had been an asset
to the community, especlailyforthemany little things
he did to help people and that his death is a great loss to
the town. Little was commendEd for having done a
"flne job" filling in for Chiel Cremeans during hls
illness. Council appoint('&lt;! Bill Miller, a veteran of 10
years on the force, as assistant chief of pollee.
Commended for block party
Bill Blower, president o! the Middleport Chamber of
Commerce, was commended for the well organized,
smooth running block party held downtown Saturday.
Blower said the chamber had investiga ted the
possibility of purchasing a tent similar to the one used
over the stage area at Saturday's party and the cost
would range from $6500 to $8500 ..He said the cham her
would not want to make such an expendlluro for the

tent when It has the options of buDding a permanent
st.age at tlie old depot or having a stage built which
would fit onto the bed of a semi. Councilman Horton
said plans should be formulatEd with chamber
members and others on what direction to take and on
the development of the depot area ,
Blower reportEd the Middleport Chamber will head
the annual Hallow~n parade and party and asked
council to advise him of the date on which they would
like to have the party. Mayor Hoffman will check with
other communities on their planned Halloween
celebrations so that the Middleport event can be held
on the same evening. Officials also gave Blower
· permission to proceed w1th plans to place white mini
llghts on lhP small trees In the business section of the
town forthPChristmas holiday season. Theprublemof
hooking the lights into electricity was discussed and

.JACK..&lt;;ON, Ohio (UP!) - Jackson County commlssicmers have
been ordered by three judges to find
$57,:i!O to keep county offices
operating through thP end of the
yPar.
But Commissioner Ed Davis said
the county has no money to comply
with Monday's order Issued by
Common Pleas judges Thomas
Mitchell and Thomas Delay and
Municipal .Judge Roy Gilliland.
"They're putting the squeeze on,
but I don't think it wUldo any good ,"

courts, $3,617; treasurer, $1,321; and
$4,(0) for appointed counsel for each
of the three court offices, Davlssald.
The county's crisis stems from a
general fund budget o( $1.8 million
less than
for 1985, which is
last year's budget. Officials . have
said munty offices continued to
spend at 1~ rates, depleting the
general fund.
The judges earlier ordered the
budgets for their off!""' as well as
that of the county prosecutor
exempt from cuts, leaving the

m.ooo

said Davis.

auditor, rfforder, treasurer, clerk

The county government is in the
midst a financial crisis that could
shut down several county offices by

of courts and sheriff' sofflces to take
the brunt ol the cuts.
Both the recorder and clerk of
murts lald off all their employees
last week, but private donations
from county auto dealers enabled
tl"f&gt; clerk's thrre title department
employees to return to work
Monday.
SherHf Edgar Haybum said the
$25,(0) for his office "is for my jail

-..

The judges ordered commissioners to provid~ "reasonable ~nd
necPRsary funding" for the courts
and lheofflces that provide services
that affect the courts.
The orders specified the following
funding: sheriff, $25,000; auditor.
$1l.IW: recorder. $3.692; rierk of

only and for taking care of court
documents. not for road deputies."
He said he needed another $23,(0)
to keep his department at operating
at curreitt level s through
December.
Davis Said the court order did not
specify how commissioners should
come up with the money to keep
offices operating. ·
He said theonlyapparentoptlonis
an emergency sales tax. which
requires approval o! all thrEe
commissioners. Commissioner
Marvin Keller has steadfastly
opposed an emergency tax, saying
voters should he allowed to decide If
they want such a tax.
A proposal calling for a 1 percer.t
sales tax, which would raise$000,!XXJ
a year. will be on th&lt;&gt; Nov. 5 ballot.
Davis said he was mtsurprlsed by
the court order, · and predictEd
another one would be sought by the
county Board o!Electionsfor$25,(0)
needed for the November election.

Blowt&gt;r will investigate the alternatives available on
that problem.
.
.
Rug!'rManley , whoowris trash collection services in
both Pomeroy and Middleport, reported operations
are stU! being carriedoutbyonehauler. Man ley said he
has from $50,000 to $00,000 invested in his business.
Officials will look into the matter. Hysell announced
thaI his brother, Law renee Manley. also in the hauling
business, will be going out of business in the near
future.
Council commended Roger Manl&lt;'y for
excellent service being provided in lh&lt;' town.
Council approved the report of Mayor Hoffman
showing n&gt;ceipts of $4955.7U in fines and fees for the
month of August. Mayor Hoffman announced that lh&lt;'
deed to thE'C&amp;Odepot property has been received and
the property is now officially owned by the village.
(Continued on Page 5)

Felonious assault
•
case goes to JUry
A jury of 10 women and two men
was expected to begin deliberating
by noon today in the stale's case
charging Lindsay Taylor with
felonious assault against Jack
Scarbrough. of Long Bottom.
The chargC' stems from a Mi::!r·ch
30, 1978 incident on Long Run Road
in Meigs County, when Taylor
allegedly struck Scarbrough on the
hPad several times with

a hammt'r

and then left the scene with
Scarbrough's truck.
Taylor was indicted in Meigs
County on the felonious assault

charge and arraign('(] in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on
April 30. 1979. Taylor pleaded
innoct'nt to the charge at that time
and was relea"'d on a $alfl'lbund .

A trial never took place because
Taylor left the jurisdiction of Meigs
County. It wasafterhewasarrested
in connection with the October 1983
murdPr of Danny Melton that the
f0!onious a~scault charge was again
placed.before him .
Meigs County Pro&amp;•cullng Attorney Fred Crow, I II, repn•sent ing I he
state. and AltomeysSteveStory and
Don Cox, representing Taylor,
questioned witnesses throughout
Monday afternoon. The presenta tion of evidence concluded about
4:30p.m . The attorneys began their
closing arguments this morning
about 9 a .m.
Taylor is st ill pleading innocent to
thP S("V,f'n-year old chargE-".

Retail sales down
Ronald ~agan

COl .!JMBUS !UP II -According to a survey rol!'asro Monday b~
the Ohio Council of R!'tail Merchant s, r&lt;'tail sales in the stat" fPilll
percent in July from lhC"

p~vious

month.

President Reagan's pre-emptive strike stalls sanctions hill

INITIAL AVERAGE "OURLY WAGES*

Serving tho family of

King Builders Supply

I' HON[)

•

l __ j

.

~TAll

(Zrpcode mu s! be Included)

~ .~

enttne

.Vo1.35, No.1.03

Sept. 20.

FUNERAL HOME

Here's the way to add new beauty to your home . Replace that wooden
hatchway with a modern. all-steel Bilco Doc~. It's ruggedly built,
watertight. and so easy for everyone in the family to use' What's
more. it wilt make your basement more secure against intrusion. And it
will pay for .itself many times over by saving repair and rt~placement
costs.
If your home was built without the convenience of a direct basement
entrance. ask us for a copy of Sileo's Instruction Booklet for Adding
Outside Basement Access.

'

1.11'

!:lUI C hQS~

rf!ll

at

•

Judges order commissioners
to find money for offices

Reg. •14.9 5 Wrangler Jeans .... S1 17 9
Reg. '16.95 Wrangler )tans .. 13 39
Reg. '19.95 Wr1111gler Jeans .... S1 570
Reg. 122.95 Wrangler Jtans .. ..$18 39

PH . 992-5432

BLOWER

What a difference
a Blco Door makes!

MEN'S ' BOYS'

•

e
James Clatworthy, a Meigs County native and a
lifelong resident, was named to serve on Middleport
Village Council Monday night filling the unexpired
term of the late Carl Horky.
Clatworlhy was named upon the motion of
councilman Dewey Horton who pointed out that
Oatworthy is retired with time to give to the village
and that he Is interested In the community. Horky
was serving as president of council· at the time of
his death. Council unanimously approved Clat·
worthy for the post.
_
" Council also named Sid Little, a veteran d 16 years
on the police force, as new chief of police replacing the
late J. J . Cremeans. Before the appointment. a silent
prayer was lteld for the late pollee chief. Mayor Fred

JEANS SALE

$3 25

.....,.

By BOB HOEFLICH..
Sentinel staff writer

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

RAWLINGS-COATS

Monday 2·4 p.m.
7-9 p.m.
Tuasday Service 1 p.m.

.

A marriage license has been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Ben Harris, 34. Pomeroy.
and Barbara Jean Robinson, ;13.
Middleport .

......

Crash probe continues

MarTiage license

ELBERFELDS

the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
pomeroy at 11: 23p.ril. toOakStreet
for Carl Hendricks to Holzer
Medical Center; Mlddleportatll: 31
p.m. treated but did not transport
Heat her Boyles a I 297 Mill Street.
On Sunday, at B:ll a.m ., Middleport Jook Martha Howell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 1\tppers
Plains at 10:06 a.m. treatEd but did
not transport Lida Bennett;
TUppers Plains at 1:44 p.m. transported Dana Hoffman to CamdenClark Memorial Hospital; Racine at
1: 45 p.m. to Long Bottom for Mary
Wells to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Middleport at 6:53p.m. transported
Mirl Ratliff to Holzer MEdical
Cent&lt;'r; TUppers Plains at 7:41 p.m.
took Tim Chassee from the stat ion to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital ;
TUppers Plains at 9:07 p.m. transported Don Maxson to Holzer
Medical Center: Rutland at 10:09
p.m . transported Mary Gibson to
Holzl'r Medica I Center.

DINING ROOM OIU

Harold T. Hubbard

Marriage license

· ' Satu~d;y Admlsstons- ~ Harry
Easter. Ravenswood. W.Va.; Lovle
Watson. Pomeroy: Evelyn Brickles, TUppers Plains.
· Saturday Discharges--Robert Lewis, PeggyTayior.HomerRadford, ,
Leota Cooper.
Sunday Admissions--Martha
Howell, Middleport.
Sunday Discharges--Teresa
Cook. Garth Smith.

receive commodities in the dlsllibutlon according to CM aut horit tes .
ApPlications may be fUJed out at
the Gallla and Meigs Outreach
otnces and the Cheshire central
office. ·
Senior citizens rna} apply at the
Gallla and MPigs Seniot" Citizens
C£'nters or any of the CM offices.
Senior citizens unable to !Ill out
appllcations may send a note wlth
someone else authorizing them to fill
out an application for them. All
applicants must have proof of
Income, such as a statement from - · :
the welfare department, copy of a
· soclalsecuritycheck,copyo!awage
check, unemploym~nt bOOk, etc.

WASHINGTON tUPil - President Reagan's limited economic
sanctions against South Africa are
the opening salvo In a battle with
Congress over wha I act ion should be
taken against Pretoria's whiteminority government.
Supporters of legislation that
would impose toughPr measures

tion known as apartheid .
The president. veering from his
policy of "constructive engagement," &lt;&gt;mbraced portions of a
compromise sanctions bill in the
executive order In hopes &lt;i heading
off action on Capitol Hill on harsher

say. Reagan's

measures.

f'X('('ufive

order

Monday is insufficient to force

change in the racially . troubled ·

nation's system of racial segrega -

Hours later, theSenatevoted53-34

to uphold Reagan by defeating a
motion that would have brought to
the floor for a vote a ballot deferred
since last month by a threatened
filibuster.
The bill needed60votes to come to
the floor.
The Rev. Jerry Fal":ell, a c lose
friend of Reagan and the South
African government, said I he president had been "forced by a spineless

Congress and a biased media" into
imposing "relatively painless and
mild" sand Ions.
In Pretoria, South African Prest·
dent Pieter Bot ha said san~tlons
"cannot solve our problems" and
cou.ld fuel racial violence.
But the Rev. Jesse Jackson
denounced Reagan's order as "a
desperate attempt to rescue a fa iled
policy."
The bill has ~n the focus of a

Committee will study
needs of Ohio schools
COLUMBUS (UP[) State
Superintendent of Public Instruc-·
lion Franklin B. Walter will appoint
a committee to study the financial
needs of Ohio's primary and
secondary schools.
The · stat&lt;' Board of Education
authorizEd the action during a
meeting Monday along with plans
for a' multi-year study to research
the effects of preschool and kindergarten programs on students In
Ohio.
Walter said committee appointments will be made with consent
from the board, a nd will Include
representatives of the General
AsS('mbly and education, business.
industry , labor and parents.
The committee Is to rPport to
Walter by June 1, 1986, and the state
board will consider committee input
in formulating legislative recommendations to the governor and the
117th General Assembly. Board
President Wayne E. Shalfer, of
Brvan. said.
Shaffer said a number d funding
issues remain unresolvEd from the
board's legislative recommenda·
!Ions this year. and thE' committee
wm address ,these Issues and take a .
detailed look at the short and
long-range financial needs of Ohio
schools.
He pointEd out that Ohio teacher
salaries historically have been
below the national average, and
lltndlng lor adequale salaries must
be provided.

"The disparity between financial
r·esources of districts also must be
studied. Each district has varying
degrees of ability to provide local
resources, and the pre-pupil expen·
dltur.., needs raise another equity
Issue," Waller said.
The findings of the studY will be
rcportJieachyear, Wallersald.ltis
an outgrowth of earlier board ·
examination of early childhood
education needs and recommenda·
lions to the Legislature .•
"Additional information and data
about early childhood education
programs wlll be helpful to poliCY·
makers In the futureasweexamlne
needs In this critical area." said
state board memher William E.
Moore, ol Woodsfield.
Assistant State Superintendent of
Public Instruction ·Irene G. BandY
will coordinate the work of ad
advisory committee to be named to
assist with the project .
This study will look at results of
early education programs for the
shoo! pupulation In general. and It
will provide valuable Input for
future decisions.' ' Walter said.
Meanwhile, a public hearing is
schedulEd for Nov. 11 on revised
teacher education and certification
standards In Ohio.
The board Monday passed a
resolution of intent to adopt new
standards and to rescind existing
standards, Walter said. adding that
. approval ol the resolution was
necessary this montlt In order to set
theNovemberhear1nglnColumbus.

growing batt lP between Reagan and
Congress becauSP he sa id sanctions
would only hurt South Africa's 21
million blacks.
But the increasing violence in
South Africa, with nearly 700dealhs
in the last ymr. and no apparent
benefils from "constructiveengagemmt," or quiet diplomacy, led
Congress to come up with a
sanctions bill.
Administration aide-s fran'CI Con -

gress would muster l'nough votes to

OVC'rrtde any Reagan veto. Last
w('('k , the. president mPt with aides
to formulate a new strategy to deal
with South Africa - and with
Congress.
Reagan's order includes a ban on
importing South African gold Juuggprand coins and prohibiting the
sa le of computer and nuclear
!("('hnology- items that are in lh&lt;'

sanctions bill.

Tourism program
receives new life

GAINS TRAVELING TROPHY - Meigs, behind lis M-7 \'lctory over
Belp"' la8t Friday nlgbl ..,U to retain 1111\ MelpBelpre Football
Cltallenflll Troplt;y pea each year to lite game's winner. It was
lfiW"•aed by the Meigs Md Belpre Jaycees lor the oeoond consecutive

year.

COLUMBUS fUPli -A controversial tourism advertising program. knoc.kedout two weeks ago by
Statehouse Republicans, stirfl'd
with new life Monday as nt·gotlatorl;
worked toward a possible com
promise this W('('k.
Republicans conferred for two
hour.; with the C'eleste administra tion on thepossii:lilit yofrestorlngthe
promotlonal pmgram, until now
operated by Hameroff-Milenthai ,
Inc., th&lt;' Columbus firm which
pmduced Gov. Richard F .Ct'icslr's
1982 campaign media.
Republicans on the slate Control ling Board torpedoed I he pmgram
by geieatil]g _a new $6.2 million
two-yPar contr-drt forHamemf!MII enthal. Most of the money was
earmarked for production and
airing of media, although the firm
was to keep a commission.
Since then. the Department of
Development has been operating
the 1-!IJO-BUCKEYE tra11el Information hotline on funds left over
from a two-month extension of the
contract in.luly. ThemoneyL.,_dueto
run outthis week. '
"There needs to be a resolution of
this in the very near future," said
Marjory Pizzuti, deputy director for
markettrlg and research in the
department, who met privately with
Ohio Senate President Paul E.
Gillmor. R-Port Clinton, and two
key Controlling Board members -

Sen. Stanley .J . Amnoff, RCineinnati, and Rep. William E .
Hlnig, D-New Philadelphia .
" The issuC's haven'! changr'd in

two wO?ks - I ht• impnossion of
favoritism and cronyism,'' report('()
Aronoff.
"The department and I IX' Republican members of lh£' Controlling
Board are trying to mak&lt;' a good
faitheffor1 to put togC'therapackage
tho I works , and at thf' sampt ime lay

the groundwork lor competitive
bidding of thesC' pmfessiorml
contracts.''
· Neither Aronoff nor Pi1wti would
get specific about lhP discussions,
but it was bf.lieved a compmfni~ ·
called for parts oft he mntrar·t to he
awarded to ol tf:&gt;r firms , with
Hamerof!Milentha i producing the
media to attract tourists, which has
pleased the Cel!'ste administration.
The Republic•n s w~t'(' said to be
evaluating the idea of switching
political tactics and remov ing the
roadblock to the contract. which
they complain was not compelltlvely bid, allowing Hamerof!Mllenthal to retain a piece of it .
The administration maintains
contracts for professional services
require subjecllve judgment and c a
n no I be competitlvely bid. Pizzuti
said an alternative compelilivP
process was followEd and that
HamerotfMilent ha 1came out best.

�----------

~ber 10, 1986

Commentru:y
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
OEVOTF.n TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS'MASON AREA

.

'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WIIITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
!,.ETTERS OF OPINION arc wekome, They should bt&gt; lt.&gt;!!s than 300 word ~
long . A llli'tter~ an' sul:ljecttoPdilin~ and mus t be slg nl'd with naml' .' address and
trl('phonc numb('r. No

good ta .•ite.

un~ l ~nf'd IC' It ~n.

addrl'ssi n~ is~u es .

wlll be publl sht•d.

LellN~

should be In

not p('-r,sonalilies.

The Kucinich .
distraction
The entry of Cleveland CouncUman Dennls J. Ku~lnlch into the
campaign for governor Is just one more distraction the embattled Gov.
Richard F. Celeste doesn't need right now.
Kuclnlch, 38, who gained national fame ~eral years ago as mayor of
Cleveland , announced his intention last week to enter the 1986 Democratic
primary for governor. He then began a month·long walk across Ohio.
True, Kuclnlch was a bust as mayor. He presided over Cleveland's
financial default on hanknotes. He was antagonistic toward almost
everyone and earned a bad boy's reputation.
But he has changed his attitude. He says he wants to cooperate with the
business community, and he has reduced his campaign theme to Its
simplest terms.
There will he two issues, said Kucinich as he talked with reporters last
week In the shadow of Celeste's Statehouse office: cut taxes and
government waste, and have an honest administration.
Kuclnich is not going to win the Democratic primary because all the
party loyalists and money will he behind Celeste.
But the Cleveland councilman is a formidable obstacle to Celeste's
re-elec1ion chances.
First of all,.he finished a solid second in the 1982 Democratic primary for
secretary of state. He has run statewide and he seems intent on changing
the voters' perception of him.
Second. Democrats displeased with Celeste are going to vote for any
alternative. "They arc worried that the whole ticket Is going down (with
Celeste at the top)," said Kucinlch.
The former mayor should be especially strong in Cleveland, wPI!ch Is
Celeste's home base. If he gets more than 3l per~nt ct the statewide vote,
it will give Celeste a political black eye.
Third, a ny issues that Kuclnlch raises will be picked up by Republicans
in the general election campaign later in the year.'
Though he pledged to avoid talking about "the alleged misdeeds and
misconduct. of this administration," there can be little question at whom his
campaign plank of "honest 15overnment" Is aimed.
In the midst of the stormy atmosphere at the Statehouse over the ethics
of the Celeste administration, a Kuctnlch campaign can only hurt the
governor.
Meanwhile, another chapter in the fascinating pollilcs of government
·office buildings was written last week as Celeste broke ground for the new
25-story Stale Office Building on Capitol Square.
·
It was almost three years ago that Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes
was 10 lead the groundbreaklng fort he very same buUding but he pulled out
at the last minute.
Rhodes had a taller building, twice as expensive, on the blueprints but a
political spat do&gt;vPioped over the awarding of contracts to architectural
and engineering finns.
· Rhodes had plan ned to name the building after House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe Jr. , D-New Boston, and Senate President Paul E. G!llmor, R·Port
Clinton. who had laid the foundaatlon for Rhodes' monument on the
StatehouS&lt;' lawn .
.
Riffe and Gillmor, wary of the controversy over the building, had their
names removed from consideration.

In January 19S3, the day he was to leave office, Rhodes scheduled the
ground breaking. It was to pll'Ced~ Celeste's Inauguration, but he canceled
it.
Last week, Riffe and Giilmor were nowhere to be found when Celeste
pushed a silver-plated spade Into some imported dlrt that had been spilled
onto the gravel lot for the ceremony. Otherstateand local officials also sent
surrogates.
The building is scheduled to be completed in December 1987, time
enough. Celeste said. to decide whom to name It after. By then, Rhodes
may he back in office to make that decision . He had the first State Office
Tower, com pleted in 1974, na med after himself.
1

Berry's World

·'Remember when we both liked the same
inane and vacuous shows?"

•
In
history
Today

r

Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 10; the 253rd day of 19&amp;'\ with 112 to foUow.
The moon Is moving toward its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign or VIrgo. They include English
scientist and clergyman John Needham in 1713; German archaeologist
Robert Koldewey, excavator or Babylon, in 1855; Dim director Robert Wise
in 1914 (age 711. golfer Arnold Palmer in 1929 (age 56), and singer Jose
Feliciano in 1945 (age 40) .
&lt;.

· --. .. .

;..

Full house : assured as Rose
goes lor new record tonight

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Ohio
Tuesday, September 10, 1986
Pome~oy-Middleport,

.

Bankruptcy &amp; high productjvity.__M_cG_ov_ern_

The Daily Sentinel

By George McGovern
It Is one of the recurring paradoxes
of the Amerle an economy that
agriculture - perhaps the most
efficient sector of the economy - is
faced with bankruptcy at . the ·
moment of its most Impressive
productivity.
·
The tribulations 0{ Other in.dUS·
t lies. both al home and abroad, hal'e
usually been understood. American
auto manufacturers got Into serious
difficulty when they failed to keep
pace with the international competition fn !be development of smaller,
more energy-efficient cars. Our
railroads have fallen on bad times
due to a numberoffactors, including
· an uninspired management and a
national policy of building super·
highways and airports, rather than
super railroads. Thesteellndustry is
in trouble because it has not
modernized sufficiently and increased its efficiency to meet tile
competition from newer. foreign
plants.
In agriculture, by contrast, the
efficiency of the American farmer lc;

theenvyotmuch of the world. Aided
by fertilizer, hybrid seeds; modem
machinery and skllled, knowledgeable ta:nners, American farm
prodUC\Ivlty has dramaticallY. ImprovE:&lt;~. While t)le farm population
has been falling steadily since the
turn of the &lt;:entury, farm production
In the United States has steadily
increased. In 1900, one-third of the
American people were farmers;
today, In 1985, that figure has
dropped to three percent. Yet the 97
percent of the non-farm populace Is
eating better, with a lower percentage of their income devoted to food,
than ever before.
Just to underscore the dramatic
efficiency of the American farmer,
whereas three percent of our
population feeds the rest of us- as
well as millions of people abroad the nearly 50 percent of the Soviet
Union's peopiP woo are engaged in
farming are unable to feed the other
half. We export millions of tons of
grain each year to the Soviet Union
in exchange for Soviet gold.

-

-

But despite the remarkable
efficiency, or perhaps because of It,
Amerlc~~ fanners are In deep and
growing trouble. Partjy__beeause of
the depressing pressure of farm
surpluses on the market, !ann
prices have laDen below the cost· of
production. To meet this squeeze,
farmers have borrowed heavily in
recent years despitP high interest
rates. (Fanners nowowemorethan
SaJO bllllon, with Interest payments
runrilng In excess of Sal billion
annually. These shaky loans are a
threat to banks across rural
America.)
The result of all this is a
cost·prlce·credlt pinch that has
forced many onc~-successful
farmers to the wall. MeanwhUe, the
administration and Congress are
trying to find ways of cutting federal
spending, noting that agricultural
price supports and farm loans
represent a significant slice of the
federal budget pie. This makes It
politically and fiscally difficult for
Washington to mf'E't the farm crisis

economy,''

There was more along the same
line, every word of which could
probably have been written for him
by Consumers for World Trade,
which sees any trade restriction as
a hidden tax on consumers and
ultimately most damaging to the
economy that seeks tbelr shelter.
There Is no question, even Doreen
Brown admits, that many Amelican industries are In a bad way. In
part, especially with older, labor-

bY raising !arm supports or offering
more generous credit terms.
What then can he done? I would
suggest the following steps:
- 'A return io the successful
formula of the period 1933-1953,
which combined strong price supports under tarin prices ln return for
cutbacks In farm production to hold
It in lin~ with market demand.
- A bolder, more Imaginative
effort to use U.S. farm surpluses to
end hunger in the United States and
abroad.
.1
-A long-term public Investment
to encourage better land and water
conservation In rural · America.
America's topsoil and water are its
l)'lost precious physical assets. The
public must understand that preserving tltese assets, along with .
family farms, is the wisest possible .
use of publicfunds.
'
- We should establish, on the
farms, as a national policy, a
national grain reserve Isolated from
the market to meet emergency food
needs at home and abroad.

Parker.
Evm the Padres are getting
ready to be a part of baseball
history. Odds,aretha t ilit No. 4,192by
Rosf' will be a single, which means
San Diogo first baseman St~ve
Garvey probably will be the flr"t to
t'ongratula te tlim.
. ''Maybe I'll just give him

&lt;J

firm

·handshake, that will say il all," said
Garvey. "But I hope that after hP
~ts his hit, he~tsstrandcd"at flrsf
He will break I he record and WP will
win the game."
.John Franco. 12-2, pitchro thP
Jlinth inning of Monday night 's
game to get the win aft(•r Andy
McGalfigan was sparkling the first
f'igh t innings. permititng just four
hit s and one 1un, while striking out
flv&lt;:&gt; and walking two.
San Diego start er DBveDravecky
pitched slx steady innings. giving'up
only four hils and onf' run .
The Padr&lt;-s got their tone run in
tho fiflh whf'n Bruce Bochy singled ,
took S£'cond on Carmello Martinez'
fly

out

&lt;md scorf'd on Kf'vin

McRcl'nolds' doubleofftiP IP!t field
WiJI\ .

Ci ncinnati liC'd tht ' gam&lt;' in the
sixth whPn (;ary R&lt;'dus \volk~.
~tolf' St'(·ond J nd t hinl and sOJrcd on

Budd)' lk&gt;ll' s bloop singif'.

Fallen Angels bounce Royals
•

PRACTICE CUTS -Pete Rose takes his cuts
In batting practice Monday night. ROlle Is expected to play a packed bouse this evening at Rl-

verlront Stadium as ·he attempts to break Ty
Cobb's all lime bll reeorded. (UPI)

Southpaws spell trouble for Cards
. ..

'

~ ;~~~\'"""&lt;~ ~.. ..

Intensive industries such as tootwear, this must be accepted as
Inevitable when an industrial economy matures. But that does not
mean, She says, that we must or
should allow all our basic Industrial
capabilities to go down the drain
and become primarily a service
economy.
It does mean we should focus our
efforts In those Industrial areas
where our potential is greatest and
we can be competitive most
effectively without the prop · of
protectionism.
"I think," Ms. 'Brown says, "that
eventually we will come to our
senses and decide that there is

something besides foreigners that too strongly, especially in Congress.
Is making trouble for us. It's not just Bills are pendlng, bllls that promise
the Japanese. They are taking shelter !rom predatory foreign
advantage of the fact !bat tbere Is competition for some 300
something very wrong with our American-made products ranging
Industria,! sector, but they are not from electronic hardware to water
the cause of the damage."
beds.
Our worst problem may he, she
"There's no question about it,"
suggests, that we prefer not to Ms. Brown says. "We're going to
address the real causes of industrial have a bad year."
problems because it Is so much
There Is even the posslbltlty that
easier to put the blame on trade.
some form o' relief tor the
Welcome as It is, she doesn't hard-pressed footwear producers
think .t he president's refusal to might yet sneak through, attached
blame trade for what.'s wrong with as a rider to other legislation.
shoes Is going to do much by Itself to
She Is now waiting, you might
change that attitude. The tidP of · say, for ·other shoes to drop.
protectionist sentiment Is running

Man seeks tax audit ___________:_J_ul_ian_B::::....:o:..:..=nd
I know a man who's asking the
Internal Revenue Service to audit
his Income taxes. He's requesting
that the FBI ask his friends and
neighbors and enemies wbetber
be's reaUy a loyal American, or
whether his politics are suspeet.
He hasn't actually written either
federal agency asking them to look
at his spending habits, or check on
his patriotism. He's certainly not
flaunting sudden extravagant
wealth·. And he's definitely not
advocating the overthrow of the
u.s. government.
But he's going to Nicaragua.
Just by going to Nicaragua, be'll
join a long list of Americans who've
bad the FBI and the IRS look Into
their bank accounts and a\'er their
shoulders. They Invite this attention
bY visiting the site of their country's
secret war.
Findlng out the truth about
Nicaragua hasn 't been easy. The
United States has been deeply .
Involved in an undeclared, secret
war against the' present· Nfcara·
guan government since 1981, and a
war against truth here at home.

'

CINCINNATI (UPil ' "Pete
plate, their enthu siasm spUled over
Rose Fever" is contagious.
to players like Concepcion , whose
Evrn though Rose didn't play
game-winning single was his third
Monday night, his Cinclnnat 1Reds'
hit of the nilthl.
teammates cr!'dlted the upbeat
"I think all the interest in PNo
atmosphere surrounding Rose tor
helps our entire learn." fi!(llred.
· helping them beat the San Diego
Concepcion .· ''Ewry player has a
Padres, 2-1.
better attltldr because we're play."Everybody on our team is
lngln frontofbigcrowds that make a
pumped up because of Pete," said
lot of noiste. When you get that kind of
Dave Concepcion, whose ·two-out
crowd behind you, you gf't that old ·
single in the bottom of the ninth
ff'E'ltng."
scored DavP Parker from second
Parker &lt;'Cho('(] C'oncPpcion ·s
base with the winning run. "lt's
sentiments.
exc iting, just like the old times,
" lt'sa lot of fun to play in front of a
when we were playing in the World
lot of people," he said. · "And. it 's a
Series in the 1970s."
rPailhrill to play on th~ sa me t ~am
Rose, who shares the career hit
with P&lt;•lo . He ~-&lt;:&gt;neratesexcitPment
n"Cord of 4.191 with Ty Cobb, didn't
and it catches on."
play Monday night despite frequent
Monday night 's crowd of 29,289
chants from the crowd of 29,289 for
was much bigger tha n usual for a
him to pinch-hit. Rose plans to start
weekday night game in Sept&lt;:&gt;mber,
tonight against the Padres and
but tonight's h&gt;amP alreapy is a
predicts he wlll get "a couple of
S&lt;'llout and standing room tick&lt;:&gt;JS
hits. "
.
are being sold. in&lt;&gt;aning more than
Park~r opened the Reds' ninth
52,(KX) fans can be t'Xpcrted to cram
with a single up the middle off Goose
Riverfront Stadium for Rose's ne.xt
Gossage, 3-3, and took second on
appearance.
Eric Davis' sacrifice bunt . Aller
Park~r figured tha,l was part of
Nick Esasky flied out, Concepcion
the reason Rose did nQI include
delivered his third hit oft he game,a "'himself among s!'\ual pinchbouncing single to renter, to score hitters he sent to the plato Monday
Parker with the winning run.
night.
Although I he hometown fans
"I think he'd · rat lrr break !hi'
cheer
Rose
at
the
really. wanted
to
record
In fmnt of a full hcus~." said
'

Shoes help Reagan's popularity_ _
Do_nG_ra_iff
Ronald Reagan rates very high at
the moment In Doreen Brown's
book.
The reason Is shoes. The president, as you may have heard, has
rejected a request by the U.S. shoe
Industry to curb foreign imports
that in the past few years have
captured the greater part - more
than 70 percent - of the home
market.
He did so tor the right reasons.
saying most of tbe right t)llngs, in
the opinion of Ms. Brown, who Is
president oi Consumers tor World
Trade, a Washington·based lobbY
opposed to trade restrictions .
The proposed curbs would have
set quotas on imports of all but the
lowest·prlced footwear. Whatever
the specific mechanism, the pres!·
dent said, It was still protectionism
which "does more harm than good
to those·It is designed to help."
He estimated the probable cost of
quotas in hlgber prices to American
consumers at $3 bllllon a year, with
those with lowest incomes hit
hardest, and tlui damage to other
U.S. industries, as a result of
retaliation against American ex·
ports, at another $2.1 billion.
"AB president," he said, "It Is my
responslblllty to take Into account
not only the effect of quotas on the
shoe Industry, but also their
broader Impact ·on the overau

The Daily

Ohio

June. Congress - while insisting
Administration of!lclals Insisted ual, ghost-wrlttPn by the CIA for the
that the CIA stay out of the warfrom the first that the contras' contras, Instructing them in the fine
permitted $ZI mUllan in humanitarstruggle against the Sandtnlstas art of political murder. Then we
ian
aid to the groups fighting the
heard
the
false
report
that
Soviet
was an internal Nicaraguan affair
·
government.
way
to
ships
were
on
their
without any U.S. involvement.
At
the
same
time,
supervision of
Nicaragua,
transporting
sophistiWhen It became clear, however,
the
rebel
effort
was
shifted
from tbe
cated MIG fighters .
that the U.S. was involved CIA to tbe National SeCurity
Now we've learned that for over a
through the CIA - the Reagan
Councu. to give the president what
administration said American year, a member of President
Is called "plausible denlabiUty"
presence was necessary to halt the Reagan's National Securtty Council
about the · spy agency's role in
flow of arms !rom Nicaragua to staff has been directing the hidden
Nicaragua. Now If Reagan Is asked
war against the Nicaraguan
Insurgents in El Salvador.
!:
the CIA Is Involved, he can
vernment
from
the
White
House
,
That story collapsed w.hen few
honPstly
say no.
Itself.
arms and even less flow could he '
friend
Isn't looking forward to
My
The staff member, a military
produced.
having his taKes audited or his love
The next known example of officer, met often in Central
of the United States challenged. He
American Interference In Nlcara · . America with the leadership of the
doesn't want his private papers
gua 's affati-s QC!:'urred In 1984, when forces trying to topple Nicaragua's
seized at Miami International
Nicaraguan harbors were mined to government, helped to direct their
Airport upon his return. (That
operations within that country, and
disCourage shipping and to further
happened to another lnnocent
showed private contributors how to
destabilize the Sandlnlsta
visitor to Nicaragua.)
,
government.
add their dollars to the counterrevolutionary
coffers.
But
he
does
want
to
visit
The mining, the administration
Nicaragua
voluntarUy
before
his
This last news is upsetting
said, was carried out bY the
because
the
U.S.
Congresssince
are
forced
to
do
so
in
teenage
sons
contras. 'In fact, Americans acting
U.S.
Army
uniforms.
last November - has ordered a
In the name of the United States
And when the IRS and the FBI
planned, plotted and directed this - cutoff ·of American aid to the
act of war.
Insurgents and an end to covert U.S.
come calling? He's going to say be
management of the hidden war.
didn't do what they say he did.
That outrage was followed by the
That ban was altered slightly this
Back home , we call that "plausinew infamous assassination manble deniablllty."

go-

Protectionsini____:._________
In the auditorium of the old "PROTECTION
THE NA·
National Republican Club on West TION'S HOPE."
40th Street in New York City, there
I used to call that insct1ptlon to
used to I)\! a wonderful high-backed the a ttentlon of visitors, and we
chatr, no doubt used by tbe would chuckle at Its antique charm . .
presiding officer on suitably mo· · It never occurred to anyone tbat we
mentous occasions around tbe turn might llve to see a day when
of the century. It was made of solid protectionism would again become
mahogany, elaborately carved a respectable cause, politically
with all sorts ol scrolls and ~peaking. And II ft had, It would
curlicues and upholstered ln a never have crossed our minds that
durable green baize. Centered at Its most zealous advocates would
the top of tbe chair's high back, turn out to be, not today's equivalwhere It could easily be seen by all, ents ol the old moguls of the
was an fnscrtptlon In gUt letters, National Republican Oub, but

modish young members of the
Democratic Party.
The Democrats are casilng about
desperately , these days for viable
Issues and the conviction Is growing
In many quarters that "trade"
(which Is simply the mode'm tagtor
the whole subject~ Is just what the
doctor ordered. Protectionism appeals to the deepest Instinct sell-preservation - o! every businessman threatened by foreign
competftlon, and these days that'sa
beck of a lot or businessmen. Better
yet from the Democratic stand·
I

us::::.:,:·h~er

__,;R::.:,:;:
.

point, It appeals just as much to
those businessmen's employees
and tbe unions that represent !bern.
Rhetorically speaking, It can be put
forward as a statesmanlike response to the country's huge and
growing balance-of-trade deficit.
Last trut not always least, It can be
garnislled with a little dlscr,et
xenophobia: Congressmen, alter
all, aren't afraid of the Tokyo vote,
and some of them .aren't above
stirring up a bit of nationalistic
animosity toward America's overseas competitors ..

By UnlWd Press International
People are always poking fun at
1~!1 - handrrs. The St. Louis Card!·
nals fail to ""' anything amu:;lng
about them.
If it weren't for left-handers, the
Cardinals would be comfortably In
front in the National L~ague East.
Instead, they arc in a flat·footed tie
today with the New York Metsas the
two teams begin a three-game
seri&lt;&gt;s at New York's Shea Stadium.
L&lt;'ft ·handers are the Cardinals'
albatross. They are barely a .500
team against them. Ray Fontenot.a
lrft·handed stnk~rball speCialist,
beCame the lat est Ietty to stifle the
Cardinals Monday night by eombtn·
ing with Jay Baller and Ron
Mrridith to spark the Chicago Cubs
to a 3·1 triumph.
Font&lt;&gt;not, 6-8, pitched 5 J.3 innings
to help the Cubs record their first
victory in six games at Busch

Stadium this ,;eason. It dropped tbe Braun) andldidn'twant to walk him
Cardinals' record against left- in that situation. 1 figured if he got it
handers this season to 23· 22, hardly hit, it had to be a good pitch."
Kurt Kepshire contin~ed hi s
conducive to winning pennants.
Fontenot allowed six hlfs and one up.and-down season by lasting just
walk while striking out three before thrt'(' batters Into the second Inning
giving way to Baller, who ch&lt;'Cked to fall to 10·9. Th~ relievers
the Cardinals until the ninth when combined to shut down the Cubs,
they collected two singles after two who stranded eight in the game.
"The relievers all did a helluva
were out. Soul hpaw Ron Meridith
job,"
Herwgsaid . "But Kepshiro i$
relieved and threw one pitch to Ivan
a
mystery.
1 know he's try[ng llko
DeJesus, who filed to right to end the
hell."
game. It was Meridith's first save.
The
Cubs
took
a
2-Q lead in the first
"Baller was just outstanding,"
Chicago manager Jim Frey said. inning. Bob llernier drew a leadoff
"He did a good job the otber day walk, stole second, advanced to
(Sunday) too. It's hard to tell what third on a single by Gary Matthews
happ!'ned to him in the ninth . and scored as Ryne Sandberg
Sometimes. the other guy just gets a 'grounded out. Keith Moreland
singled to drive in Matthews.
hit."
Baller said he got too (:Aimped ur:
and knocked out Kepshlre. Leon
in the ninth.
Chicago madP it 3-lin the second
"!got little too excited," llesald . " I Durham singled, stole second and
got behind 3-0 Ito pinch hitter Steve scored on Shawon Dunston's single.

Berra outlines his
drug involvement
Pff'TSBURGH (UP)) - Dale • examtnat ion by def&lt;:&gt;nse attorney
Berra bought cocaine from defend Adam Renfr'!", who asked Monday
ant Curtis Strong in 19!llwhi)e!eliow
If his father was angered bY the way
Pittsburgh Pirates players and
Berra ''taintro his beautiful name
coachPS partied in anothC'r room of
he worked so hard to establish."
thP same Philadelphia hotel suite.
Like the three other major·
lhC' New York Yankees infleldN
lea~&lt;Uers who pft'C('{)ed him to the
IPstified in IN:!Pral COUI1 MOnday .
wi(ness stand, Berra described his
Berm. tradro from Pittsburgh to
introduction to, and use of cocaine,
thr Yankees lilst winter. also said he
nam!'d players with whom his
saw Strong ,·isiting ilis former
shared the drug, and identified
teammate Da,·e Parker in the
various men from whom he bought
Pirat&lt;:&gt;s' homP clubhouse at Thrft'
it.
Rivers Stadium in 1982, and was
He said he made one buy from the
warned by Man age r Chuck Tanner.
"clubhouse man" for tho Portland
"Don't talk to that gentleman."
Beavers during a short stint with
A!tC'r a s idPbar conference with
what was then the Pirates' Class
counsel, pi'C'Sidlng judge Gustave
AAA farm team.
Diamond in_structed the ju1y to
Of his Introduction to, and cocaine
disrega•·d Elena's statement repurchase from Strong. Berra
garding Tanner. apparently on
tcstlllro:
grounds it was Inadmissible hear·
"!met him tlu'Ough Dave Parker
say evldC'ncc.
and Jol)n Milne•·. In 1982, wp·were
Berm, appearing for the govem·
staying .a t the Franklin Plaza tin
ment unde•· Immunity from prose·
Philadelphia). We had just got off a
cu tion, giiVenotPstlmonyregardlng
flight, and Dave told me to come up
any of thC' specific crimPS for which
to his hotel room. I went up to his
Strong is on trial.
room, and Cm·tls Strong came up to
The 16·count Indictment against
tho room a few minutes.later ...
t hP .'ls. ymr·old Philaddphla cat'rrer
")..('(' Lacy, Wlllle Stargell and
alirgeS he sold cocain~ to major- several coaches were In the room,"
lea!(ll&lt;' baseball pfaycrs In PittsBerra added. "It was almost like a
burgh between June 13, l!l!ll and
gathering lx'cause we were going to
mld·May 1!184, and Berra said his eat some food Stargell had brought
only buy fi'Om Strong was in
up."
'
'
....
Philadelphia.
The actual drug buy, Berra said,
took place in a "side room of the
Rather, the prosecution used suit&lt;', the bedroom ." HesaldMllner,
Berra's testimony to try to establish Parke!' and Lacy were In that room
.Strong as a drug dealer who made when he made his buy .
"He asked me what I wanted . I
himself available to potential Pi ·
handed him $100. He handed me a
rates customers.
The son of former Yankees great gram. He also had more oo him," ·
Yogi Berra returned to the witness Berra said. "I used It in my room
stand today for continued cross· and Lee Lacy's room."

..

By FRED McMJ\NE
slammed a t k•·br&lt;:&gt;aking solo home1
UPI Assbtant Sport.• Editor
in t~ second inning, and \.('()rg~
.Just when everybody tabbed Bell and Garth lorg homered in the
the':' fallen Angels, ll]ey end up eighth,helpingt~Biue.laysprot!'CI
gettmg their faces dirty after alt.
their 1~-gamr lead over the
The California Angels, who had Yankees in tho AL East. .Jimmy
fallen fmm graee in the A~encan Key, 12·6, Wf'nt 81 -~ inn in!!:' for the
League West, took .their first step victory with Tom IIPDkP gl'!l ing the
toward regaining the command tina! two outs for hi s lOth save.
position Monday night by whipping Lane&lt;' Parrish and Chpt l.~mor.
the first -plac~ Kansas City Royals. homm'&lt;i for lX'tmit. Yankees 9,
7-1, m the fn·~t game of a k~y
Brewm~ ~
lhrec-gamt' srrie.l.
At Mllw~ukce, Mike Pagliarulo
John C~ndrlarta and Doug Cor· had four hils, lnc:uding a ti&lt;'·
beH co~bm&lt;...:i on a t WO·hltt er, and breaking; two·run singlt• th a t trig ·
Cra1g (.crher drove. in three runs to gNed a five -lun lOth innin!( to !Pad
spark the Angds' trtumph.
the Yank('(•s. New York ha s won 10
Ca ndel.aria, 5-l, stmck out four stroight _ it s longf'st such Sti'Pa k
and d1dn t walk a batter ov&lt;:&gt;r e1ght . sine&lt;' 1'!6R. Pagliamlo and Da\'C·
mnmgs to notch h1s third straight
Winfield homPr&lt;'&lt;l for r\cw York. ·
victory and enable the Angels to pull
Twins 5 \\'hilt• sox 0
within a half game ~!.the American
At ('hic•a!(o.
1y GaPtti hlr two
League West DIVISIOn leading ho mers, both ·to deep (/('n!Pr, and
Royals.
.John Butch1·r thrrw a four-hitlf't' 10
Candelaria allowed a S('('Ond- spark thf' Twins, Kl'fit . Hrl.x&gt;k also
homered to hf'ip the• 1\\'ins to their
inning double to Hat McRa~ and a
solo homP run in tlwf'lghth toDarl)•l . fourth straight vi&lt;'to 1y at comiske\'
·
·
Motley in helping the Angels to the
2.~rd virl01y in lhC'il' last ,'K! home
gam&lt;"S.
The io,;s snapped Brrt Saherhagpn's sc•ven·game winning streak
and put an end to the Royal•
olght-gamewinningstreak.
Ruppert .Jon&lt;" homered for rho
Angels and Darrd Motley cun nect&lt;'&lt;i fort he Rovals.
·
8 PACK- 16 OZ.
Elsewhere in theAL, T01'0nto beat
D&lt;&gt;troit 5-J, New York de.tcat!'d
Milwaukee 9·4 in 10 .innings,
Minnesota blankro Chicago 5-ll,
"S.•n irt• With A Smilo•"
T~•a s topped Oakland J.J and
Located In Racine, OH.

Park Tht• Whitr~x havf'yet to beat
lhf' 1\vins at homo this y&lt;•ar.
Rangers 3, A's I
At Oakland, Calif.. Don Sia ug ht
droVt• in two 111ns to lf'ad the
RangPrs to \'i!'lury_ ·Texas starter
,1,·1'1 llussPII. 2-5. stmck out fivf',
walk!'d lhrr.:•. and allow!'d fivp hils
and onf' 111n in ,..,.,,n innings. Grog
'Ha nis finis~d for hb ninth save.

Ga

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL

SpiCill

'PEPSI

$181

Innings. Baltimore at Boston was
Seattle
edged Cleveland 7 in 12
rained out.
Blue Jays 5, Tigers 3

a.

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STIHJ:.

�Tuesday, September 10, 1986

Pomaoy-Midc:lleport, Ohio

Cowboys rip Redskins, 44-14
IRVING, Texas (UP!) - AI·
though the Dallas Cowboys miSsed
the playoffs in 1984 for the first time
in 10 years, they obviously have not
forgotten what playoff foothllll is all
o
about.
Against the Washington Redskins
Monday night, they created tumov·
crs, sustained a 98-yard driv.,,
converted key third-down situa· .
lions; enjoyed an ...xcellent kicking·
game, and ))urled thf"ir blgg"'t
rival, 44·14.
"It was hot out there tonight," said
Dallas Coach Tom Landi)'." And we
were hot, too."
In the opening Monday night
game of the season, the Cowboys
crushe&lt;j the Redsklns , silencing
crit ics who cont...nded they are
has -beens.
Dallas won its season opener !or
the 20th time in 21 years and
produced the largest vlctol)' margin
In the · Cowhoys-Redskins s"rtes
slncel970.
"Ii was just a day wh.,re Dallas
deserv"' all the credit," said
Washington Coach Ja... Gibbs. "W"
made every mistakf,you can make.
The good thing Is that It was th... flrst
game of the year and we've got to
find a way to bounce hack."
Washington tumro over the ball
seven tim"' - five coming on
interceptions thrown by Joe Theis·
mann , a 12-year career high. It was
Thelsmann's 36ih birthday, one he
would just as soon forget.
"This was a badexp(.&gt;rience," sa id

Thelsmann. "When you make six or
seven mistakes Uk&lt;'wedld vou don't
deserve tn win .''
•
The biggest mistake of the night.
however, was mad" by rookie
Washington safety Bar!)' Wilburn
just before tbc end of the first half.
Washington trailed by only three
with time r.unnlng out In the second
quarter and ail the Redskins had to
do was prevent the long pass.
Wilburn went for a sideline fake
by elght ·year veteran MikP Renfro,
and suddenly R"nfro was behind
everybody, catching a 5.'\.yard
throw from Danny Whit" for a score
with just six seconds remaining.
"If was the bigg.,st mistake I
could havPmad ... ," said Wilburn. "It
was inexcusable. It was due to his
exp(.&gt;rience and my lack of it ."
Finding tbems.,lves down by 10
Instead of three at the half, the
Rl&gt;dskins collapsed.
Three Washington turnovers in as·
many PQSsesslons in the third
quat1er l"d to two Dallas field goals
and a touchdown .
Dallas' first -half pointscameon a
53-yard field goal by Rafael S&lt;opticn,
equaling the longest of his career,
and a 1-yard touchdown run by
Timmy Newsome at the &lt;'nd of a
98-yard march which took 8: :l9.
The Cowboys put away the game
in the t bird quartet· on a39-yat•dfleld
goal by Sept len afler Everson Walls
intercepted a pass, a 43-yarO....r!rom
Septlen following a fumble by

•

action of Monday night's NFL opener at Irving,
Te~as. 'The Co.whoys defeated the Washington
Redsklns. 44-14. UPI.

THEISMAN DO\\N - Redskin quarterback .Joe
Thelsman gets cnmched by Dallas Cowboys
Unebacker Mike Hegman (58) during second half

·sooners keep NO. I position
NEW YORK (UP! I -Oklahoma,
. unleSI('() on lhP field in 1\l&amp;'i,
· continued to benefit from the high
: pt'I'·SCason grad~s of tho UP! Board
·of Coaches.
• The Soon... rs, who Op(.&gt;n their
··. s.,ason Sept. 28 at Minnesota,
· reta inro their No. I ranking
. Monday, holding off a s trong
· challenge from Auburn in thl' first
· r(.&gt;!(Uiar-season ratings.
Accumulating :&gt;80 point s and 18
fi rst· plac&lt;' votes, Ok lahoma main ·
tainro the top spot attalnro in the
• pt"l'·season.

Auburn, which

ran

second to t h~ Sooner 0 in th" Initial
ba lloling, closed t h~ gap, but remain
second

Coming orr a 49·7 thrashing of
'

Sm~thwcstcrn

Rounding out the top live """
Southern Cal with441 pointsand!lve
first -place picks, Ohio State with 427
points and one top selection. and
Florida State with 418 polntsandone
No. I vote.
Sixth·rankro Oklahoma State
reccivffi the ott.&gt;r No. 1 vote. The
Cowooys are followed by Iowa,
UCLA. Pe nn State and Louisiana
State.
·
South Carolina and Notre Dame
are tied for 11th, fbllowed by
Brigham Young, Nebraska and
Arkansas. Alabama Is 16th, with
West Virginia, Matyland, Pitt and
TPxas munding oul the top 2il.
All 42 members or the Board of
Coaches votffi. Oklahoma and

Louisiana Saturday

Aubum wPrP the only teams to

· in whicl) Bo Jackson ran for 290
· yards and four touchdowns, the
. Tigers grabbed 5T7 poinlsand 16 No.

appear on evety ballot .
Un like Oklahoma , several top-20

l select ion s.

teams hnvC' s('{'n action and suffered

in the ratings because of it . Fellow

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l'u'I'ICIII.Y'·" fiame~ 1•\11 11nw..,; t; l71' 1
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on

Or. is it the fact he will be starting a
relatively new quarterback in junior
Jim Karsatos?
The answer: None of the abovP.
Jt's th" fact that Pitt, the opponent
in the first Buckeye night game in
Ohio Stadium histol)', already ha s
playro a game and also has had two
weeks to Iron out the rough spots

inefficient.
As!' result, Dallas was a popular

pick for fourth place inti.&gt; N FCEast
this season ~hind Washington, St.
Louis and the New York Giants.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IU·IItOl
A Dl\llslon of Multimedia, lac.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Se·
CQnd class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.

from a 31.,'~) win over Purdue.

"They (Pitt t beat Purdue in their
Op(.&gt;ning ball game about two weeks
ago and have had a good bit oft ime to
prepare for the Buckeyes." Ia ·
mented Bruce.
"They have som... outstanding
football players and demonstt·ated
they arp a very physical football
team In their game against
Pu\)lue." Bmce. as did his former
ooss, Woody Hayes. has long
claimed 1he biggPst impl'OvC'ment" a

team makes during the yea r is . ·
between its first and srcond gamc!-i.
As for Byars, who broke a hone• in

his right fool a week ago In practiC&lt;'
and wUI miss the Pitt gume and
possibly tho ttip to Colot·ado the
following w""k. Bn1cc talkro
glowingly .

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lH. Marylandl~ll

PLUS#1

7. 7% APR (48 MONnl) OR
8.8%APR (60 MONTH)
ANANCING.-~.,

Ot--.

~hi

fl

7

ve&amp;eol: Air t'un.~. Arfa.

Noral ('......... ,...... 0..,.... PuMM!,
Tel-. Tt~~• AIIM, 'l'n.M

-·

CASH ALLOWANCE
UP TO 51,000
ON SELECTED MODELS

PLUS 3 SPECIAL RED CARPET LEASE PLAN!

- . ..... C*lf. am... Grotlta.
t;,w... ~ 111111*. . . . . . KMhldq,

'hn-..............
~

PLUS#2

stock by October~· from a part~pating dtalor. Yoo may
~~P your allowance or apply h to' your purchase. The offer is
hmttecl to one purchase per retail customer. Theae are the
cash altowances available to you. Deeter contribution may
allecl customer savings.

2+1 17

211

w......,...

MILWAUKEE !UP!) - Ex·
p(.&gt;lled engine parts may have
punched the softball·s!zed hole
found In th" failed right "ngine of a
Midwest Expr ...ss DC-9 that
crashed , killing all 31 people on
board, f...Oe.ral officials say .
· ,Jim Burnett, National Transpor·
tatlon Safety Board chairman, said
Monday a br...ach In th" (.&gt;nglne
casing was fouod In the same spot
where parts broke loose from Flight
105's right engine. which fallro

WINNERS-Thetoptwowinnersofthe.horseshoepltchlngcontestof
the Middleport Block Party were presented.plaquesSatunlay en'fling.
Pictured from the left are Carl8earles, !ln&lt;t place winner; lfarl)' Bailey,
~econdplace, and Dr. Craig Mathews, Block Party Committee member,
making the presenlalion.

Meigs County Emergency Medi·
cal S...rvlce rePQrts 14 calls Monday ;
Middleport Fire Department at
12:19 a.m. to an electrical fire on
North Third in Cheshire; Tuppers
Plains at 5:05 a .m . transpotted
Mal)' Myers to St. Joseph's Hospl·
tal; Pomeroy at 8:21a.m, to Peach
Fork Road for Estella Condray to
Hoiz"r Medical Center; Racine at
9:31 a.m. to Fifth Street for Jess
Brinker to Holzer Medical Cent ... r;
Middl.,port at 9:33a.m. to390South
Seeond for Martha Taylor to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Syra·
cuse at 9:51a.m. to LongBottom for
Betty Young to St.'Joseph's Hospi·
Ia~ Racine at 11:11 a.m. to County
Road 50 for Edith Young to St.

fjrii~~~~~~~ij~~

Bumett said thepartsfoundon the

runway were traced to the ninth and
lOth stag" compressors of the right
engine. The hole was at the same

Emergency squads kept busy
Joseph's Hospital; Racin" at 12 :43
p.m. to Coolvijle for Brrnda
Sampson to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Rutland at 4:37p.m. toCountyRoad
JO for Mike Appel to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 5:12
p.m. transported Mal)' Ann My.,rs
to Hoizer Medical Cent ...r; Pomeroy
at 7:11 p.m. to 324 East Main for
Thelma Grueser to Veterans Mem ·
orial Hospital; Rutland at 8:07p.m.
to King's Ridge Road for Waller
KJng to Vet ... rans M"morial Hospi ·
tal; RaCine at 8:29p.m. took Brian
Di.,hl from the Southern foothall
field lo Veterans Memorial Hospi ·
tal; Pom"roy at 10:19 p.m. to
Enterprise Road for Sheri Wawroto
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

'
Weather forecast
Mostly cloudy today, with a
chance of showers and thunder·
storms this morning and highs this
after noon between 80 and S.o. Partly
cloudy tonight, with a low in the low
liOs. Pat·tly cloudy Wednesday, with
highs In the mid 70s.
Extendro Foreca•t
'Thursday through Satunlay
Fair throudl the period, with
highs nmglng from the mid &amp;Oslo the
mid 70s Thursday and Friday and
mQSdy in th... 70s on Satunlay.
Overnight lows mainly wUI he in tbe

50s.

WEDNESDAy I SEPT. 11 I 1985 IS

•
81 s

POWELL'S SUPER' VALU WILL RECOGNIZE OUR BEND AREA HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL PROGRAMS BY DONATING 3°/o OF GROSS SALES TO
THE AREA HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAMS

See Your Local Ford Dealer Today!

Admissions .. Charlotte Hess,
Pomeroy; Cella· HUe, Middleport:
Martha Taylor. Middleport; Fran·
C(.&gt;S Green. Albany; Sylvia Zwilling,
Syracuse; Michal'! Appel, Rutland;
Thelma Grueser. Pomeroy,
Discharges .. Daisy Schuler. Ta·
nya N. Nunn. Clarence·Proffltt.

Meels toJ:Iight

...

Prices Are In Effect Wednesda , Sept. 11, 1985 Only
MT. DEW, PEPSI-FREE
DIET or REGULAR

PEPSI-COLA
I Pack 16 Oz.
UMR 2 PLEASE

$109

BROUGHTON'S

2°/o MILK
GALLON
$139
UMIT 2 PLEASE

GROUND BEEF

89&lt;

LB.

YELLOW ONIONS
3 lB. BAG

39&lt;

Ohio Eta Phi Sorority will meet ·
7:30p.m. tonight !Tuesday), at the
S...nlor Citizen's Center. All
members are welcom....

29!li.

Rup(.&gt;t't P. Bailey of Cll'Veland has
claimed the top prtze of $1,473.166
from Saturday'sdrawlngortheOitlo
Lotto, lottery officials said Tuesday.
Bailey will receive 20 annual
payments of ~.926.64.
Wednesday's jackpot will be
worth an estimated $1 million.

WIENERS
12 Oz. Pkg.

2f$1

MIKE-SELLS

POTATO ·CHIPS

10 OZ. TWIN PACK-REG. S1.49

Reg. or Ruffles

79(

DAIRY LANE

FRESH-BAKERY

ICE CREAM

DOUGHNUTS

tf2 .GALLON

99&lt;

DOZEN

,$ 149

3°/o OF GROSS SALES
WILL BE DONATED

Lottery winners
CLEVELAND - The winning
number drawn Monday night's Ohio
Lottery dally game, "The
Number," was 134. In the "Pick 4"
game, the winning number was

KENTUCKY BORDER

We Rtst(lt The Ri1ht To
limit Quantities

STOR£ HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, .OH.

WEDS., SEPT. ll...;..MEIGS MARAUDERS
WEDS., SEPT. 18-WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS
WEDS., SEPT. 2 5-::n
WEDS., OCT.

SHOW ~OUR SUPPORT!
I

'

spot, he said.
"The breach was In line with the
ninth and lOth stage compressor,"
Burnett said. "We did find damage
to the ninth and lOth stage
compressors. Including missing
parts which were.conslst...nt to the
parts we found on the runway.
"There Is a breach in It, 41nches by
4 inc)les, In Its crumplro position ....
There were no other apparent
breaches In the enginecasing."

He said
the hoi"
in the 5.0JO.pound
before
Friday's
accident.
engin" could not have caused the
crash. But Burnett earlier had said
flying engine parts could have
damaged hydraulic lines, which
control horizontal and vertical
stabilizers.
, Theplanewasdeslgnro toflywlth
only one of Its two ...ngtnes.
Investigators have determined two
warning indicators- one for a stall
- also sounded befor'l' the plane
nOSP·divrd into a fm'l'st after taking
off at Mitchell Field.

I Area deaths I

Veterans Memorial

you a check tor up IO $1 ,QOO If~ take delivery from dealer

47 !I
J) 1

Pwmect

a

lfl.l.rAJ I!IIanal&gt;iltti}CI I 19911
1). ~Ill Carol In !2·111 lH8 18
11. Not "' Dttme tJl.fl \ 1881 2

19. Pi ll 0 ·01
'II. Tt')CaS tO·Ot
l Unran ilt'd.

Expelled engine parts
object of crash probe

&lt;Conttnued from page 1)
for funds to· lmprov" the marina
Public meetlnc
ar...a Is stlllln the process towards
Mayor Hoffman annourvced that approval and council passro a
the county commlsslon...rs wUI hold requirEd provision that the village
their hearing on the community wUlprovldeltspartofthegrantifthe
development block gram program grant Is approved. The local funds,
at 7 p.m. on Sept.l71n Pomeroy and which can be In kind, eould amount
plans were made to have village to ahout onE'-thlrd of the grant,
rt'Presentatlon on hand. Mayor Mayor Hoffman pointed out.
Council voted to advertise the old
. Hoff~n pointed'lutthat thev~lage
received $lJ,(lX) thl~ year from the .cruiser for Sale since a n"w vehlcl"
program usro to purchase the depot ha_s be!&gt;n dellv...red. The new vehicle
property.
· has been painted In black with
The mayor also reported · a orange accents to carl)' out 'the
meeting was to be held In Columbus colors of the former Middleport
today with principals Involved In the High School. Councilman Bob
Gilmo"" suggested that a wali In the
Ohio Department of Development
grant for the construction of the new council chambers be designed for a
Dairy Queen Brazier Restaurant in
memorial to deceased village
Middleport. The mayor said a grant
officials who have servro the
community. It was pointed out that
research and help from the com·
munlty wUI be needed to get a
complete list. It was agreed to
Mae Brewer
proceed with the memorial with
Horton and Gilmore to head the
Mae Brewer, 79, of the Racine
development. It was also agreed to
area, diro Monday morning at her
proceed with development of plans
home.
lor the depot a~;ea .
A housewife, shew as born July 31,
Councilman Gilmore also again
1900 in Meigs County, a daughter a
stressed the need to proceed with th"
the late Harl)' and Lenora (Eval
development of the block and crime
Ours Bush.
watch proglram and for an annexa·
Surviving ar" her husband, Ern·
lion program of · an area below
est Brewer, Racine; five daughters,
Middleport .
Ethel Gloeckner and Mildred Todd,
At the silggestion of Councilman
both of Columbus; Lucille Law·
Jack Satterfield, it was agreed to
renre, Proria, Ill.; Deloris Harrap,
request a street light at the
San Antonio, Tx.; and Sylvia
lnterseetion of Logan and Bosworth
Brew.,r,Racine; a brother.Edward
Sts. Also at the suggestion of
Bush, Racine; 11 grandchlldr...n; 8
Satterfield, it was agreed to hav"
great grandchildren; and 7 st(.&gt;p
Attorney Steve Stol)' wdte an
great grandchUdren.
Insurance eompany which carded a
In addltl&lt;in to her parents. she was
policy on a Pearl St. property which
preceded in death !&gt;Y three brothers · was struck by !Ire several months
and a sister.
ago. Officials ar" concernrd that
Visiting hours at Ewing Funeral
children might be lnjunro In the
Hom" will be from 24 p.m. and 7·9
guttro structure. No cleanup or
p.m. on Wednesday. Th" family
r(.&gt;palr action has taken pia c... at th"
requests flowers be omitted. There
sit" since the fir.... Council also
will be no funeral service.
approved lh&lt;' budget commission
figures for th!' eommunity for the
Edith Young
next year. A thank-you note was
read from the family of the late
Edith Young, 65, Eden RldgC'
Councilman Horky.
Road, Reedsvlll", dlro Monday
evening at St. Joseph Hospital in
Parkersburg .
Mrs. Young was born In Meigs
County, a daughter of the late
Warren B. and Martha KJbble
Hauber. She att...nded th" Gospel
Baptist Church In Little Hocking.
Surviving are her husband, John;
tour sons, Richard Swain, Merlin R.
Swain, Ronald L. Swain and
Lawrence W. Swain, all of Reeds·
ville; two brothers, Paul Hauber,
Long Bottom, and Chari"' Hauber,
Reedsville; four sisters, Louise
Glu.,.encamp, Portland; Betty For·
shey, Marietta; Lrona Hall. Torch,
and Opal Randolph, ReedsvUie; six
grandrhlldr"n and one great·
grandchild.
Besldcs her parrnts. she was
precedro in d ...ath by a brother,
Warren Hauber.
S...rvlces will be held at I p.m.
Thursday at the Whit" Funeral
Hom" In Coolville with Rev. Jeri)'
Wilson officiating. Butial wUI be in
Ed"n Cemetel)'. Frk'nds may call '
at the fun ...ral hom" after I p.m.
Wednesday.

In a foreclosure action filed lg .
Meigs County Commol) Pleas Court
by Farmers Bank and Savings
Company against Roger E. Carpen·
ter, el al, for property In Salem
Township, the court finds the
defendant owes a balance of
$29,348.13on a previous judgment
$40,415.35.
In other court matters, a reclplllcal action for child support has been
filed bytheStateo!DiinoisandEthel
Marte Butcher against Wllllam
Leroy Butcher, Jr., and a divorce
action filed by Gary Lee Smith,
Rutland, against Catherine Smith,
Pomeroy, has been dismissed.

Here's a choice you can't get anywhere else. If~ choose
to arrange your own financing_or pay cash. Ford will write

1.1. Brl!(hlllll Yn~~:(l·l l 1ls ~
14. Nc brWika HH I
];,)f, ~
1 ~. r\rkamss lfl.O\
frl Hi
111. f\lahilma/1.01
81 1.
Jl Wf'Sf\'lrllbtla t 1·01 51 7

Clatworthy, Uttle~.-

Foreclosure action
filed in court

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Big Eight member Nebraska ,
ranked fourth In pre-season, was
beaten 17·13 by Florida StatP, and·
fell to 14th. Th" v!ctol)' helped tbe
Seminoles climb from 13th.
Penn Stat.... ranked, 17th In
pre-season, moved Into Mal)'land's
No. 9 position with a 20-18 victory
over the Terrapins. UCLA movro
from 15th to "lghth with a last·
minute 27·24 triumph over BYU.
The loss, which snapped the
Cougars' 25-gam... winning streak,
sank th" defrnding national cham·
pions from seventh to 13th.
USC jumpro ·from fifth to No.3
with a W-10 triumph over Illinois.
The Illini, lOth in the pr.,·season, f"ll
out of the ratings. Oklahoma Stat\&gt;,
whose Thurman Thomas joined the
cluiiC'red race for the Helsman
Trophy with a 237-yard showing,
def.,ated Washington 31-17. The
vlclol)' moved the Cowboys from
14th to No. 6, whll" knocking the
Huski"s from the ranklngs.
Also dropping from the original
top 20 are Grorgla and Boston
Coll~e. Pittsburgh and Alabama,
winners in opening games two
weeks ago, and Texas, which plays
Its first game Sept. 21, joined the
rankings.
Big Ten schools Ohio Stat.,, which
dropped one spot from Its No. 3
pre-season ranking, and Iowa,
whichgainroon... toNo. 7,openthelr
s.e asons Saturday against Pitt and
Drake, respectively .
Louisiana State, which Improved
from 11th to No. 10, plays Saturday
against North Carollna.
..,.
The Big Eight and Southeast
Conferenres each have three
members In the top 20 while the Big
Ten, Paclflc-10 and Southwest
Conferences each hav" two. The
Western Athletic and Atlantic Coast
Conferences (.&gt;ach have one, a nd six
Independents are rankro .

worried?

a

Member: United Press International,
Jnl11nd Daily Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sale5, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

Bruce's big concern
Pitt's one game edge
COLUMBUS (UP!) -What has
Ohio State Coach Earle Bruce most
concerned about Saturday night's
Buckey" opener against
Pittsburgh?
Is it the lnjuty to Keith Byars tha t
will k......p th" All· American tail hack ·
out of the gum"?
Is it an incxp(.&gt;rienced and
untested offmslv&lt;' line. which Bruce
admits has him the least bit

Washington's Grorge Rogers, and a
9-yard touchdown run by Tony
Dorsett three plays after Ron
Fdlows picked off a Th"ismann
pass.
Da lias' secondarY sronro two
touchdowns in the fourth quarter,
Victor Scott running 26 yards with
an interception off Theismann, and
.Dennis ' Thurman . returning an.·
interception off backup quarter'
back Jay Schroeder 21 yards. ·
Washlngi.on's touchdoWl)S came
on a 1-yatd run by John Riggins in
the second quarter, and 19-yard
throw from Thelsmann to Clint
Didier with 5:37 to ~ay.
The Cowboys struggled through
the 1984seasonwitha laclrofoffense.
Th"ir off.,ns!ve line was riddled by
injuries, Dorsett seldom had run·
ning room, and the lack of a deep
threat made their passing game

The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

�\

Pomeroy- Middleport,

Ohio

1986

~~~!Se~p~tam~~~2· ~-~~~-------;~----~----~--~~~~~~~~0~h~io~~:,~~~~~~~---:::::~nw~~~~~~~~~·

Chester Council holds meeting
A reception bonorlng Dorothy
Ritchie, Chester. state councUor of
the OhloDaughtersofAmerlca, was
announced at the Tuesday night ·
mEeting of Chester Council 323, at
the hall.
The reception will he held at the
Chester firehouse on Sept. 14 at 6: 30
p.m. and members . planning to
attend are asked to contact j;:rma
Cleland for reservations.
The commlsslons·of Helen Wolfe
lor state law committee, Betty
Roush, deputy state councilor for
Chester Council 323, and Esther
Smith, district deputy state councilor, District 13, ivere read at the
meeting. Mrs. Wolfe reported on the
recent state session.
Fern Morris, councilor, presided
at the meeting which opened In
r itualistic form wlth the pledge,
Lord'sPrayerandnationalanthem.
Scripture !rom Jeremiah was read.
It was noted that a silent auction will
be held at the next meeting, along
wlth the. dbservance of quarterly
blr1 hdays. Refreshments wlll he
jXlUuck.
HJSI'ORJESAVAIIABLE - About&amp;,OOObrochures
on the four histories of Meigs County available through
the Meigs County Pioneer and lllslorlcal Society wW
go inlo the mall next week. A work 81!S81on to address

lhe brochures took place Friday momlng at the
Museum. The new publication on poD records and a
reprinting of the Pioneer llbtory of Meigs County wUI
be available In November. ·

A new publication, 125 pages in
soncover,is the "PollBook Records
of Meigs County, Ohio of the 1800's."
The book with a listing of the poll
book names covering the years,
18:1J, 1831,1832, 1845, 1846, 1847, 1863,
1864, 1884, and 1886 with an index,
will also he available in November.
The price is $15 which includes the
sales tax.
Also available are copies of the
1979 ."History of Meigs County"
which was reprinted In ~ by tile
Society. These books are available
for Immediate shipment at $l)
which includes the sale tax, as is the
Meigs County portion of Hardesty's

showing at the fait. Brent Rose did
a demonstratin on "Milk and You."
Jerry and David Smith served
refreshments.
Advisors will call on each
member to check animals for the
· fair at the next meeting.
The Aug. 28 meeting was held at

Bass birthday
~e and

Dave Bass entertained
recently with a party honoring their
daughter, Mia, on her second
birthday.
"Tiie children enjoyed party ha ts
and bellum filled balloons. Cake and
ottier ncfresbments served. AttendIng a nd presenting gifts to the
youngster were her grandparents,
Nl!llia Seyler, Bob and Paty Barton,
U)Onard and Ora Bass, Ardith a nd
Edjth Barton.
Others tllere were Scott Barton,
Brenda, Tara, Adam, and Michael
Wyatt , JOEY Barton, Barb and Mark
Brown, Bill and Wiliam Hayes,
Bte,nda and Serena Davis, Di ane
and E licia Rltchart. Kim and Josle
Jarrell, Betty Reed, Tyler Stewart,
~ndy, Crystal and Tyson Lee, Kay
Rupe, and Laura Horslev.

Public N otic a

Historical and GeographlcaiEncyc·
iopedla with the 1867 .tax map of
Meigs County and an Index at $25,
Including the sales tax.
Friday several memhers of the
Meigs County Pioneer and Hlstori·
cal Society met at the museum to do
a brochure mailing on the four
aYaliable histories. 1n the group
were Vada Hazelton, Karen Werry,
Eleanor Smith, Ellzaheth Davis,
Sherr! Hart, Dorothy Downie, Daisy
Blakelee, Helen Smith, Dorothy
Reibel, Pauline Roush, and C.E .
Blakeslee. Members of the Retired
Senior Volunteers are also assisting
wlth the mailing project.

Mia Bass

.

TO:
The unknown heirs, devisees. legatees, administrators,
executors. and assigns of B.M .
Tyree, deceased;
The unknown heirs. devisees, legatees. administrators,
executors and / or assigns of
B.M. Pickens. deceased;
The unknown heirs. devisees. legatees, administrators,
executors; and / or assigns of
A.A . Tvree. deceased;
The unknown heirs. devi sees, legatees, edministrators.
executors and / or assigns. of
Glenn Simpson, deceased;
The Unknown devisees, lega·
tees. Administrators. ekecu·
tors. ·and / or auigns of lsabeUe
Simpson, deceased;
The unknown heirs, devi·
sees, legatees, administrators.
executors and / or anigns of
E. A. McCullough. deceased:
W.N . Hovis, whose last
known addrest is 133 W.
Mark81 Street, Mercer, Pa ..

16137 Hlhnng, HdoceaMd his

unknown heirs, devilees.lega·
tees. administratora, executors
and / or assigns:
Joe Rubin. whOse last
known addreu is Parkersburg.
W.Va .. whose e:~tact address is
unknown if living, and if
deceased his unknown heirs,
devisees. htgatees, administra·
t ors, e11ecutors and / or
assigns;
Goldy Rubin, whose last

Chatter club
has meeting

Hoffman gathering
'pie family of Mr. a nd Mrs. Dana
HoHman Sr .. 'fupp&lt;'rs Plains, hPid a
g;,l-togel her a I the home of Mr. and
Mt's. Dana Hoffman J r .. Rutland .
Attending WPre Mr. and Mrs.
!)ma Hoffman Sr .. Thppers Pla ins.
thl!lr children, Mr. and Mrs. Da na
H~ffma n .Jr., Rutland; Mr.and Mrs.
Kenneth David son. Columbus; Mrs.
Stanley Gar&lt;'y. Clearwater, Fla.;
the ir grandchi ldren and grea t·
grandchildrm. Mr. and Mrs. Cha·
rles Hoffma n. Sarah and .Joshua.
T,iippers Plains; Mr. a nd Mrs. Mark
Davidson. Columbus; Mrs. Scan
Davidson and Ashley. Columbus;
Mrs. Brian Davidson a nd Melissa.
Columbus; his brother, Mr. a nd
Mrs. Lz. Hoffman, bellaire; her
nepheW. Charles Sliehm and a
friend , Est ~r. Pittsburgh, Pa .

Grover reunion
'The annua l CrovC'r reunion was
held Sunday at Forest Aer~s Park,
Rutland .
Attending wm• Virginia Grover
McC:Ielland. Norma Grover, Bob,
Joan and Robbie Eads, Jerry,
Louise and Shawn Eads, He le na
Riggs and grandson, Jason Christopher Riggs, Rutlar.d .
·Myrtle Grover , Ma rcia Houda·
shel1 and Br ian, Pomeroy; Dave,
Virginia. Stephanie, Nell, Matt a nd
O'Rion Barrett. Langsville; Gloria
Sl'ayion, Columbus: Roger, Patty,
Amber and Dottle McClelland,
GaWpoUs; Kelly. Debbie and Bran·
SQII DeLong, Lima; Bessie Grover

Athens; Linn and Rosalee
Keller, Chuck Gilkey, Llza Hall and
Lilli&lt;' Hickman, The Plains, Paul,
Joann and Amy Grover. Kelly
Ream, New Lexington. David Lee,
Janette. DrPama a nd Sherry Richards, Tony and Misslc Richat 'ds,
David L&lt;&gt;e Richa rds,.Jr. .and David,
Aaron and Brandon, Point
Pleasant.
The 1986 reunion wil iJf' held
Sunday. Aug. 31.

Martin reunion
. The 14th annual reunion of tile
descendents of Edward and ·Frances Martin was held at Forked Run
Lake State Park.
Following the plcn lc dinner a
business meeting was held with
l;:dward R. Martin and Joseph
Martin presiding In tile absence of
the president, Jeff Martin. It was
decided to relnstateasystemof dues
and to award prizes In the future.
Michael Martin was elected pres!·
dent and Coleen Martin was named
secretary . An entertainment committee was appointed consisting of
Tom and Susanna Kibble, Mike
Marshall and EdWdard R. Martin.
At the l'E\lnlon from out of tile
county were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E.
Martin, Hldekl and Angle, Fayetteville, N.C.; Tom and Louise
Mitchell, Columbus; Ron
and
Teresa Martjn and son. Jamie,
Middlebourne, W.Va.; Mike and
Renllda Marttn and daughter,
Sarah, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. ·
EmU Thomas, Norton; Gary and
Carol Ising, Eric and Melissa,

Char leton, W.Va.; Bruce and Ma·
dolyn Sandifer and daughter, Stefanle, Harrisburg, Pa. ; Mrs. Mary
Stover, Gallipolis; AI and Elsi&lt;:'
Mart in, Jeff and Jan, Vincent; Steve
and Jeanie Drown, Columt&gt;us.
Attending from Meigs County
were Mr. and lYlrs. Albert Martin
Sr., Pomeroy; Edward R. Martin,
Rutland; Sheryl Gibbs and son,
Brian, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Mik&lt;'
Martin and Angie, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs. Everett See, Middleport;
B.J. Massie and son, Jim Bob.
Middleport; Tom and Suzanne
Kibble, Long Bottom.
The 19116 reunion will he held on
Aug.31.

Pregnancy
center open
in Rutland

on Nov. 5, a 1ouror1he Pomeroy

known address il Parkersburg,
W.Va. whose exact address is
unknown if living, and if
~eased her unknown heirs,
devisees, legatee.. administ·
rtors , executors and / or
assigns:
Hovis 011 and Gas COmpany,
whose hilt known address is
125 E. N•shannock Avenue,
~ew Wilmington, ·Pa. 16142
whose exact address is
unknown;
Meigs Developing Company, whose l11t known ad·
dress is 1900 19th Street.
Parkersburg, W.Va. 26101
and whose exac1 address is
unknown;
You are hereby notified that
you have been named defend.,.. in a legal action entitted
Dwight E. RoSs, et al plaintiffs
vs W.N . Hovis. et al defendants. This action has been

assigned Case No. 86 CV 191
and is pending in the Common
Pleas Court of Meigs County,

Pomeroy, Oh;o 46769.
The obJect of the comptomt

is to cance4 oil and gas lease
and quiet title concerning oil

and gas undertying the following described rlW estate·
Srtuate in lebanon Township, Meigs County, Ohio; In

Secb&lt;Jn 31. Town 3 Range 11

of the Ohio Company's Pur·
chase. bounded and described
as follows: ·

PARCEL NO. ONE:
That is 1o say two hundred
forty (240) acres off of the
north part Sec. 31, Town 3,
Range 11 of the Ohio Com·
pany's Purchase, being 120
rods in width. ·
Excepting therefrom tony
(40) acres in a square, known
as the Ross lot in the northeast
comer of said Section 31 .
ALSO excepting 12 acres in
the northeaS1 corner of said

--~
I

I

Curb Inflation 1
I
I
l
Pay Cash for
·I
I
.
I
1
Classifieds
and lI
Savell!
l
· wr,te
awn ad and order by
this 1
vour

c oupon . Cancel

mail with

~our ad

by phone wflcn you get 1

I

. re&gt;utts. Money notretundable.

I

Name·------------ ·l
I

Address----------!

I

I

Phone
j

f

Print on• word 1n ea'h
Circle
tpou btlow . Eafh initial
or group of figure1 counu
as a word. Count namr
6
I
3
ond oddren or phont
numbtr it usl!d. You 'llqtl Word1 doy
days
cloys
better rt1ull1 if ~ou dt·
mibt f~o~lly . give pri{t. Tht
18 .00
tribune reurwu lht right to 15 Sl.Ou 15.00
lo danifr, tdit or u~jec:l
ony ad. Your ad willlu To h suo 11.00 St 3.00
put in th proper llassi fico han if yo~o~ ' ll chHk lh~
1o 35 51.00 sro.oo i l s.oo
proptr box b•low.

10

I

lllay1

I

I.

$13.00 I
$!1.00

!I

I
$!5.00 I

Thtn tasn ratts
( )For Sale

( !Announcement
&lt; lf'or Rent

I••
1I

1. - - : - - - - ' -

2J .: _ _ _ _ __

I 4.
I s.

I
I

6.
7.

II 8•---~----~
I •- - - - - 1 10 .
I 11.
• 12.

include dinounf

11. _ _ _ _ __
II .----~-

erty remaining on said r8al

Ross to Albert Johnson 1886
The amount of land being

plaintiffs' principle!' title to
said oil and gas be quteted.

conveyed in Parcel No. '1 being
one hundred eighty-eight
acres, more or less.

PARCEL NO. TWO:

Beginning at a poin1 on the

east line of said Section 31 .
one hundred sixty rods north
of the southeast cornet' of said
Section 31 : thence ni'!rt._ 40
rods; thence west 214 rods;
1hence south 40 rods; thence
BBst 214 rods to the place of
beginning, containing 53
acres, more or less.

PARCEL NO. THREE:

Beginning at a point on the
east line of said Section 31,
·one hundred twenty rods north
of the southeast corner of said
SectiOn; thence north on tM
east line of said section 40
rods; thenc8 west 214 rods;
thence south 40 rods. thence
east 214 rods to tho place of
beginning, containing 53%
acres. more or less.

PARCEL NO. FOUR :

BtJQinning at a point 120
rods south of the northwest
corner of a 53% acrBS tract of
land conveyed bv Edgar C.
Brown to Jared C.·Ross (v. 5
pg. 428) thence south40rods;
thence ea$t 54 rods : thence
north 40 rods; thence west 64
rods to the place of beginning,
containing 13% acres, more or

less
PARCEL NO. fiVE .

Beginning at the southw85t
corner of a 200 acre tract of
land conveyed by Douglas
Putnam to Jared C. Ross and
Ch8rles E. Ross (V. 59 pg.
275) abolll: 120 rods south of
the northwest corner of said
Soction 31 ; thence running
south to the northwest corner
of the 40 acres tract of land
and conveyed by Douglas
Putnam to Martin V. Bush (V.
61 pg. 352); thence east to the
west line of the tract of land
known as the John E. Rose
187112 acre tract (V. 20 pg.
262) in said Section 31 ;
then ce north fotlowing the
west line of the John E. Hose
187% acre tract to the south
line of the Jared C . Ross 200
acre tract; thence west following the south line of the Jared
C. Ross tract to the pl ace of
beginning, containing 521ft
acres. more OJ less.
Said real estate totaling
three hundred seventy·si:~t
acres more or less.
Ancl the prayer is that the
above described oil and gas
lease and all assignment
thereto be t;ancelled , adjudged
null and void and hetd for
naught; that all personal proo·

after the last
publication of this notice
which will be published once
each week for six consecutive
weeks The last publication wil
be made on September 17.
1985 and the twenty-eight
days for answer will commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise respond
as required by Ohio Rules of
Civil Procedure, judgment will
be rendered' against yoll for the
relief demanded in the
complaint.
larry E Spencer
Clerk of Courts
Meigs County
Common Pleas Court

Fill /(idhll

H•ll
• CUT &amp; Sl Y11...$ 7.SO

TRUCK LEASING
Box •.326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For FastorSarviee

'Call 614-992·6737

ICUT OUI FOR FUTURE USE)

THE QUALITY

Sign

Signs, Rubbor Stamps.
Busintss Farms,
Copy Services, Etc.

St., M;ddloport ·

992-3345

All STEEL &amp;

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
· l 0-6-tlc

DENNY CONGO
WILt HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
fiLL DIRT

BY· Marlene Harrison
·UNIOEN

•

cl~Ji~
........

·~· · · · ··•"'"
•.... .......1!

Public Notice

~PRO/SAT

•

· MNASONIC

.......... ,.,,. .• ".J
.,,., .,,, mN

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ESTATE Of WILLIAM UNDSEY WARO. OECEASEO
Case No. 24'854 Oodcet 12
Page 612
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY
On Augu1t 21, ,1985, in the
Meigs County Probate Court,

Ca.., No. 24.854,

Cha~es

F.

Ward, Box 81. Sharon. w Va.
25182, was appointed executor of the estate of WiHiam
Undsey Ward, deceased. late
of Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh10

45769.

and Planning
GREG ROUSH

PH. 992-7611

5-7-tfc

DUGAN'S
FRONT-END
ALIGNMENT

.~HO

for

$899

"W• Rlwt For Lm"

ON

'VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

MIDDLEPORT

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
PH: 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls
3/ 11 / tfn

Howard L. Writesel

992-3194

ROOFING

IOGEI MANLEY, JR.
ROGER MANLEY, SR.
OWNEIS .

(J I J IIi ·

Gutters - Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting

18)26 191 3. 10. 3tc
73 -10 Chevy Tr.

Public Notice

Fenden .........................148

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIOUCIARY
On September 6, 198&amp; ;n
the Meigs County

Probate

Coun. Coso No. 24882, T.,a
R. Rosenbaum. Route 4, Hy.

sell Run Road, Pomeroy. Ohio

46789, was appointment Administratrix of the estate of

Oougt• A. Rosenbaum, do·
ceaMd, late of Route 4, Hysell '
Run ·Road, Pomeroy

46769.

.

Ohio

73 -10 Chevy Tr.

·

Doort ......................... llOO

Ftnders .........................148

13-79 Ford 1r.

Ooors ......................... 1 13S

73-10 Chevy. Tr.

10-BS Ford lr.

lumpen ..................... $70
73 -79 Ch"Y Tr.

Grills ...................... $S2.50
IO·IS Ford 1r.

Hoodt ............. ,........... tlSO
73-84 Chtvy Tr. ·

Grilles .................... ,1J8 .SO

Ooon ........................Sl.tS
78-79 Ford lr.

Hoods ......................... •14S
73 -79 Cht•r· k
13-IS Ford Rangtr
locktr Pantls ...............
Haods ......................... '130
73 -79 Cht•y. Tr.
13-IS ford Rongtr
Cob Corners ..................t20
Grillet ...........................t7S
Ntw and Und Auto Ghns - late Modtl Partl

szs

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 NATIONAL BANK
CALL
21 0-Ask for Tim
SOME BREAD
WfTHAWANTAD
Business

Including
,
New Dundee Lata Model Replacament P1n1
For Trucks and Cars
Paintl, Body Fil ..rs, Filterglan Ae•in and
Kits, Flexible P•n Repatr Produc11, Polishing
Compand •nd Sand P•pera (Selling Wholesale}

t:l

z

~

z

21.
23.

21.

·BODY REPAIR SUPPLIES

73-10 GM PUDOOI SIIIIS-'99
73-79 fORtl PU181Dm .... &gt;45
NEW CHROIIIE STEP

-

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
licensed Clinical Audiologist
'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

B-13 tin

12·8-tlc

2.5. -_
-_ 26.
____

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio '

I
1
1

I

1.&amp;..--------------------~.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERAIOR
•SAIEWTI SAlES &amp;SlRYICE

Wt HIW.t AFill Tl••
Shp T••••ltlll
"Dtly

3

RIDENOUR
CHESTEI-915-3307

1/ 1/ tfn

,,

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash tor late model
clean uaed cars .
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

614-446-3672

WANT~D

wood

•

coal

Announcements

SWEEPER and Mwing mechine rep1ir, partl , and
IUPrJiiea.
Pick up end
delivery, Davis V•cuum
Cteaner. one half mile up

c . . k Rd.

can

t
t

' water

94

pills' .

&amp;

Fruth

Ph••moc:v
AA Criai1 Pregn•cy Center.
Confldtntlol.
Froo prog·
nancy tnt end-or informa·

-~·

bora Stronvth Cop-

-- 1
A 811911·.:.:Jl
i·~~~F~ru:t:h_::P:ho=rm:•:c:y·
I

Rumm1ge Sale Wed . Centenary Townhouse.

...... P.iimerov....... ..

Athens, Oh, 46701 , by

VETERANS : Do you wish
you had stayed in tho
military? Regret losing that
retirement income? Sorry
you didn ' t take advant1ge of
the Gl Bill to get your college
dagree? Maby It's not too
late . Join the Army NlJtional
Guard and receive a monthly
paycheck , life insurances;
retirement benefits. and the
New Gl Bill. It pays full time
1tudents $140 . 00 per
month. 3,4 time students
e1 05.00 per month, and
half time students 870.00
par month, up to maximum
of $5,040.00 . We have the
beat plrt·time jobs around!
1~

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
·- ··-··········· ···· · r. .. . .. . .
Bob Eads reaidence in R utland . fUcvcle , clothing ,
Chriatmas decoration• .
household items. Wednes·

614-446-3159.

All or part of retail, whole aala. or ..rvice business in
G111ia or Melg1 Co. Call

814-446-2639.

614-246-9376.

COMPARE! If vou 're think ·
ing about joining the mil ·
itary, check with the Army
National Guard first .
Monthly paycheck, training.
life insurance. and retire ·
ment benefits available .
Planning on college? We
have the new G I Bill that
pays full time ttudenta 6140
per mon1h, up to a maximury1
of $5, 040. The Student
Loan Repayment Program
rep1y1 a mejor portion of
out1tending Federal student
loans. up to $10,000 . You
may also be eligible for a

•1 .&amp;00 or a t2,000 onHst·

ment BOnus. All of this adds
up to more then 820,000 for
education. PLUS. we sche·
dule your buis and ad ·
vanced tr1ining around your
school obligations. Don't
commit year• ot your life to
the. militerv until you cell us .

wood, ' cupboard•. chairs.
cheats. buketl , dithes.
stone jart, antiques, gold
1nd 1ilver. Wrlta - M . D.
Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy, Ohio

Buying daily gold , silver
coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
w1re, old coins, lerge currency. Top prices. Ed. Bur·
lcett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

12

Situa.tions
Wanted

Would like to take c~re of
elderly in my home. Call (N 9

o 9971
614-256-61
.
_
__:_Call
__
_ _ _ leI h1ve roam in my home for
elderly people. Phona 6'14-

Mlddlepor1, Oh. 614· 992- 367· 7148.
3476.

Aluminum scrap. S~ll your
eluminum scflp direct to the
smelter. Buying 111 grades at
eluminum . Premium Pllid for
large loads. Cell for quote.
Scipio Energy, loCated 1'.4
mll11 11s1 of Pegetown on
Township Road 141 . Meigs

Want

to buy u"d truck, if

Schools
Instruction
Tri-State Semi Driver Treinlng . Enjoy two weeks of
Tractor-tr1Uer training con ducted 20 mllet south of
Daytom for p111 1I yeera.
Ae1l pl1cement strvk:e em·
pha•lnd. For comptete writ·

ton dttallo ... n: Friandly
be. Phone 304-6711- Travlo al I&amp; 13)424-41593
today.
1712 aftor tl p.m.
body Ia good. engine doean 't

lt8v. to

bedspread•. home interior,
dr1pe1, sink, cedar wardrobe. lounge c hair, dryer
and more.
Rain .or ahlne . Antique
cre·a m can . b1r stool•, crum
e~n floor lamp. Same tR1
tique dishea and otttei
dlthas. drenM 20Vt-241Ji.;
shoea size 10. bed 1preatl,
drepea, wh1t nots. men't

sh;na. Sopt. 12th ond 13th.

Behind grade school in Ru·
tland, Ohio. Phone 814-

742-2823.

.. ""pi 'piiiili'8'jii"".
&amp; Vicinity
····-··-·····-· · ---· ~ -·- · ···t"'

Yard Sala. Tues. Wed , Thura.

K Bl K Mobile Home. little bit
of &amp;VMything .
Yard Sale, Gallipolis Ferry
across from Beale School.
follow Jigna, hou ..hold
misc. clothes. Wed, 9 :00 to

Want Ads

Never lake a Vacation
They ~-AI Year1

1

Homes for Sale

Make offer 2 bedroom•. 1 .2
acres, 2 car garage, all
reasonable offers cons.i o~
dared . In Pomeroy. 614~~

1 B Wanted to Do

678-2613.

Will paint treiler rooh &amp; cut

House for aale. 4 large
rooms, Y2 bath, gu furnace,
new roof and sidinQ, storm
windowa. extra lot. LocateQ ·•
409 Broadway St., Middle-

tobacco . Call

t628 .

814- 256-

•

pon. can 614-992·2097.'

Painti ng. interior. exterior. ~------· lcroofing, ·general repair, 12 3 bedroom house on 4 .40
yra . e~~tp . Call 614-446- acres. central air. fuel oil
3759.
furnace. wood burner. aluminum siding, storm winMother of 1 will babysit dows, double-car g1rage. Ya
weekd1ys in my home, mile from Cheat• on Route
Vinton erea. Call 814 388- 248. Call 614-985-4294.

8184 .

Cakes by Carol. Birthd•y.
wedding, etc. Call814-446·

0661 .

3 bedroom home, ·1 6 acres.·
1 acre lake . New kilchen and
bath . Full b..ement. CeU

614-949-2603.

COLEMAN WATER WELL
ORILLING
P.ump sales, service . Regis tered in Ohio . All work
guaranteed . Call 304-273·
2811 . Ravenswood. W. Va .
Work Wanted , Carpenter
work, remodeling , room addition, plumbing, repairs.

Phone 304-676 -4322.

20 acres. 3 bedroom country home with 1 V: batha,.
fully carpeted, kitchen ap pliances included, full baH·
ment with firaplaca, family
room . 2cargarageattlched .

Cart 614-992-6084.

7 room house. 1 % bath,
garage on Gravel Hill. 4
bedroom•. Middleport. C11l

614· 992-5714.

.

6 rooms and bath . 1 VJ acrea .•

Colt 614-992-7453.

Ftlnnciol

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know, and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering.
Open an off-price apparel
store I Sell800 top brands at
20 to 60 par cant off! First
Oualitvl $19.975. includes
everything. For brochure call

1-404-469·4438.
22 Money to Loan

Vent nice hou" 1or Hie . 3bedrooms, bath , living,..
room. woodbuming stove,
dining room , kitchen, cefler. 6 acres. fenced in . Bar·tl, ·
chlcken coop, pony •~ad ,
work shop. McCumber Rd ..
Rutland. Priced to sell . 614· ·
992-2143 day and 614- '
742- 2289 after 4 : 30.
•
2 br house 1 -2 . deposit
S150. monthly . 304· 675-

4359.
Lunon quality built house, 6
rooms, b1th. basemclnt,
good location, 80 's. 3003 ·.

~;~~~h Ava . 304-676 -,
For sale by owner. real log
home and 15 acres, 3br, fr .
lr. 2Vt bath. full banment,
inground pool. setallte entenna . barn. other extras.
For more info call 895-

3666. 8121.000.

HOME OWNERS -Refinance
to low fixed rate. Use equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mortgege Co ., 614-592·

3051 .
23

heaters .

&amp; Oliva St. Gallipolis. Call

685 !lon. Hartinger Pkwy ••
M;ddlepon. Sopt.9 through
13. Clothing. blonkfta,

rl:d:a:y:.:S:op:t:.:t:1:th:.::::::::t-1:3. :::=======:;:

room houae and lot • .
S10 , 000 . 00. Arbuckle.,
W.Va . or will trade somathing . Phone 304· 9374

2972 .
Professional
Services

SWAIN 'S FURNITURE. 3rd. SHOP AROUND AND

~ t;on. Phano 014·742·2029, County. 614·992·3466.
collect If nece111ry.

,..

Hou rty Clinic Aide needed
part-time in family planning
offices. Must have high
JChool diploma or equival·
ency; good communication
skills, accuracy with figures,
be dependable. organized.
and responsible . Tr1ining
available for mature individual Who i1 sensitive to
reproduc1ive health needs of
clients. Must have reliable
transportation, be willing to
travel locally. Weekday. evening and Saturday hours
are to be expected . Send
resume, inclufiling two employment references to
Planned Parenthood of Southeaat Ohio, 8 N . Court St .•

Call 304-675-3960 or
TO BUY used 800-642-3619.

266-6261 .

I--Bur-ntr-1G_:_oba_:H_G-rap-o-

- - _ , . - ··· ·

6786 or 304-773-5430.

old wicker baakats. Good
condition only. Cell 814·

•111/ Sllttlllfldlfll

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO NEER SERVICE . Estate.

992-5875 Or

BLUE STREAK CAB CO. ' ::~::~~:::. ~ to•t wHh
I 07 Syca.more St., Pomeroy, Oh.
GoleH copouleo
E-vop
Dll/lfg

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

46769 or cat/ 614·992·
7760.

Pomeroy, Ohio

MI I'ill
a

8

Wonted to buy 1672-GHLJ

V. C. YOUNG Ill

PHONE 992-7075 .
&amp;llllf ~'
ltl""l~
AIIII O/
ffv
,..,

4

Secretary with previous
medical billing experience.
Full time with benefits.
Reply to Boll S- 7, care of
Point Ple1sant Register , 200
Main St .. Point Pleasant , W .

Call:

a-g••

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
H£ADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

~~; call today 614-388-

LOST. tinted glasae1 . bro\\j'n
fremes , around court house
Point Pleasant. if found
leave at Shop-A -Mini, Point
Pleeaant.

1974 or 1975 AMC Hornet
or Gremlin for parts. Call

A11 n nunc r·n1 en Is

28
__
_
_ 21._ -_
-'_
--

"·-------

toys for me now 1hrough

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS 304· 676 -3960 or 1-800·
FURNITURE. Beds, Iron, 642-3619.

AddonJ and remod•llng
Roofing end gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing •nd electrical
work
(Free Es1imates)

992·621S or 992 -7314

and

Medical office businna ••·
sistant needed immediately.
No week ends. Typing re quired . e11perience pre ·
ferred . Send resume to Bolt
C 6 , care of the Point
Pleaaant Register.

614·446-0175.

742-3195

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

tun

Lost in Stiversville. Portland
ere• . 3 dogs, 1 silvar male
Elk Hound, 1 silver femele
elk Hound and 1 black
female Retriever. All wearing collars. Call 614·843-

Und mobile homes. Call

WIRING NEEDS

YOUNG'S

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

1

Cai- aaleaperson. Ptck up
application at Pat Hill Ford in
Middleport . Will interview at
1 later date.

3769.

FOR ALL YOUR

I · I2·1

got

Female German Shepherd
loat et Supe; America, Middleport. Child' s pet. Re·

wanted old furniture , round
table•. cupboarda. chiers.
bookcases. cheats. wicker
furniture . Cell 814-448 ·

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

ROCKEl PANElS ................ 119
Ul t0RNIIS .................... t20
2S

·lin

Residential &amp; Commercial

:z:

2!.

1·

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

I 77-l!!

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
SINGLE S24.9S
•Live entertainment
• free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool
A.A.A.

Ph. 61 •• 992-6778
Now is Fully Stocked With All Your

16141 992-7754

8 miles hom

304-675-6276

31 7 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
IUSINISS PHONE
1614) 997-6550
RESIOINCE PHONE

RT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.

11 0'1• Wost Main StrHt
Ponttroy, Dh.

HEATING

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

~

3-D AUTO CENTER

I

profitabta job for you . Oamo

Rd .. Ft. P;erco . Fl. 33482 .

9

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1· 13-tfc

9-

HUDNALL-'
PlUMBING &amp;

Real Estate

4129/tln

PAT HILL FORD

Heve

1849 after 4:30.

farm. 1ntique, liquidation
sales. Licenaed Ohio and
West , Virginia . 304 · 773 -

949-2263
or 949-2969

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

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
lena K. Neuelro8Jd , Clerk

(9) 10, 17, 24 ltc

FREE ESTIMATES

R,ADIATOR
SERVICE

73 -79 Fard lr.

BORED. BROKE. 8LUE7

Septep1ber 19 •. 1986 .
LOST• red whiteface calf . PPSEO is an Equal OpporHeifer. About 460 lb. Vicin- tunity Employer .
ity of Graham School Rd . -~-~..:_---- tc ­
Call 614-446-7339 or 614- Eaay Assembly Work l
446·4889 .
$800.00 per 100. Guaran teed payment . No
LOST: male Siberian Husky eJtperience- No sales. Details
black &amp; white. Vicini1y Mill aend self-addressed
Cr..k Rd. Call 614-446· stamped envelope: Elan. Vi1642 ••t. 323. 614·446- tal •715 3418 Enterprise

6127.

3 Families Yard Sale TQys.
clottling. It miac. items .
17th Vinton St. Sept . 12.1 3
9 til 4 .

Free lingerie , good time,
undercover wear, party plan ,

Va . 25650

NEW-REPAIR

Robert E. Buck.
Judge

Colt 614-446-

bl~nda .

ward. Call 614-992-7863.

New Homes Built
&gt;#Free Estimates"

Servin Call

FOUND mixed Poodle ,
mala, approx. 1 yr. 20 lbs ..

0662 ask for Charlotte.

7/ 11 / tln

•
For Trash Pickup

call. 614-446-1 466.

266-6779 . or 614·446-

81lllpollt. Ohio

BUSINESS-RESIDENTIAL

742-2057

Lost and Found

LOST: light tan male Chi on
F1irview Rd. Mercerville. If
found Cell-Reward 614-

U·SA~E

Call after 5PM, 614-286&amp;237.

AVe .• Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .

1354.

MANLEY'S
TRASH SERVICE

,'\ppou1ttl't'J11

8/ 1211 mo . d.

446-4522

Beeline offers free t:lothes.
good money. no cuh invest·
ment. Work your own hours .

4 kittens 10 give away to a
good home. long haired , 8

LOST : orange winged
Amazon parrot downtown
Getllpolis, may respond to
name 'B.J.' If found please

RENT A CAR
CALL

286·6237.

Full time experienced recap tionist. Send resume to Box
300 in Care of the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune. 825 Third

6

6-19·tln

Drive a new car i n 90 days,
selling Tupperware parttime. C1ll after &amp;PM. 614-

give away. 8 year old speyed
femele. Y2 Norwegian Elk
Hound and Vt Irish Setter ,

304-676-6240 after 4.

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

CALL

GIVE US A CALL!

Help Wanted

Call after 5PM, 614-286 ·
3 month old mote puppy to 1_6_2_3 _7_·-~------­

Part Poodle puppiea ,
wormed and tiad ahota .

I

POMEROY

'· -

wh;te. Call 614·446-8268 .

weeks old, 304·676-6784.

742-2027

·"0111 ,.,,,, ,, 8111/t
. 0• $ml6t"

MAIN ST.
IN RUTLAND

SYSTEMS FROM

PH. '192-6931
Aftor 5 Cal

Night
1· 304
773-S634

6 kittens, 3 calicos. 1 gray. 1
tiger triped. end 1 black·

Colt 614-986-3808.

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

AND

Com{'fl'lt ft,·nl End
P?l ,, "'1"·'1'•'
~
LO(

ACCENT

Call or Walk In For An
A.ppointment and Prius
301 3rd Sl., Racine, OH.
Hamo: 992-6712
Or Ius. 949·3031
Altar Aug. 21
8-19-1 mo. pd

.

..) ' .• '

PERSONALIZED
POOLS

8-8· !mo. pd.

PHOTOS

Mad1 Cabinetry

.} J.

PH. '192-7201

Many P•ck•gel To Choon
From - lowftt Priced
SENIOR Pack1ge1 in Town
We da Wllldi"ts, Familits
&amp; (hilllren

De~gn

• '

Ph. 985-4141

PICTURE "JIERFECr'

Housing

'

Long Bottom, Ohio

OPENING AUtJ. 21

Commtrlial
•Developments &amp;
Commtrcial Sites
•Single and multi Unit

'

CONTRACTING
Free Estimates

Day
1-614
992-2549

•Residential &amp;

614-446-7841 .

MARCUM

HIS. 10 o.m. to S p.m.

lba .. blonde. Call 614-446·
1364.

.

Large V•rd Sale Lower Garfield ext. Thurs. • Fri . Home
Interior, drepeil. spreada.
dishes, lot glassw1re. nick
n1cka. training wheal blke.
too much to mention, gold
trailer.

Call 614-388-8449.

1 yr. old Australien Shepherd to good home. Call

Buildings

Middleport, Oh;o

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

'

•Garages &amp; Pole

4'1 Gtn. Hartinger Pkwy.

7I / tin

••

13th.

-, bags ot'Yerd Sele gooda.

Lllst chance free puppies
befor they ·go to shelter. 1
mi . Raccoon Rd.

•Roofing
•Siding

"SPAS"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 9112-2772

i

•Complete Remodeling

HJDIOlECH CHEMICALS

"FREE ESTIMATES" ·

• •.

f mpl ilynwnt

Giveaway ,

11

•Room Additions

VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
ABOVE GROUNO POOL
Over 400 Clloices

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

1 .'

Moving Sale 38 Chillicothe
Rd. Furniture, clothea, flawera, misc . Mon . 9th-Fri.

SLrvtces

7/!2

JIM CLIFFORD

VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING

10·8-tfc

4

,

Ph. (6141 14•-•=-••&lt;

3/2/lln

•Woad

Rootin·g of all Types
W orked in home area

Ianning Sptdal ........... $35
It laltlont- AH ...-•. "·.-c:•

104 Mulberrr Av., Pomeror

PARTS and SERVICE

Call 304"576-2336.

CALl COLLECT:

DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER, '
!lAS S. SEWER LINES .
RECLAMATION. PONDS.
SPRING OEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
S. OIRT

and Graduation
Stationery, Magnetic

~II

Complete RemodeHng
20 years

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

Furniture, Wedding

255

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO , 675-4581.

Insured. re..onable retea.

" Free Estimates"

days

Deputy
181. 13, 20. 2719) 3. 10. 17.
6tc

'I atd sales

Cute ffiendly milced poodle,
mile epprox. 1 yr. old, 20

f., All Ym P1/ttl•t Ntlit
PLU$: Olli&lt;e Supplies &amp;

985-3561
All Mtkt•

Stpt. 9 thru 20
uo and wrn a oroo .P'"

VINYL ·&amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter W ork

to the loc.a Hom.coming
Qamo of your oholoa.

PRINT SHOP

KEN'S
·APPLIANCE
SERVICE

You. are required to answer
the complaint within twenty·

eight

3rd St., Syrocuse, Oh.
PH. 992·3912

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;

Pitts &amp; Servlu
,.,..,,

to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

estate be the property of the
plaintiffs' principles; and that

!VOL 62 pg. 90J.

Eqal~ment

BUILDI~GS
Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

St•rvices

19, " - - , . . - - - - - ~- -----~~-

A iiew crisis pregnancy center has
been opened In room 10.1 at the
30. _ _ _ _ _ __
Rutland Civic C&lt;:'nter, Main Street.
All serv1ces Including pregnancy
31. - - - - - - - test lng, confidential help with or
'
13.
!13.
_ _ _ _ __
~-------Information about available me-di- I !A.
cal sources, emergency bousing,
~---------clothing, furniture or adoption are Its.
free of charge.
SeptemherhpurswUl he 10a.m. to
td . Mail Tills Caup111w::h RemiHllnce
2 p.m . on Thursdays, Fridays and
The Dally Sentinel
Saturdays! and !rom 6; ~to 8:30 on
111 caurtst.
F)'lday evenings. Special hours can ~
Pomeroy, Oh. 457"
he arranged by calling 742-2629.

~

seetion conveyed by Jared C.

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE

Ad Wanted

( )Wanted

GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Hollend, Bush Hoc
hrm Equipment
Dealer

POLE

Public Notice

wanted To Buy

NWWnV

cho;ce.
No Down Pawment
lower Monthly Payment

4·5·tiC

PHONESentrnrt
992-2156

9

Wanted:ald pianaa. Plying

•Washers •Dishwasher'
•Ranges
•Refrigerator•
•Dryers •Freeurs

Fire Hous&lt;' has been planned. At
thaI time t he girls will be
fi ngprprint cd.

Public Notice

,--------------------·

Families have gathering-L-----Wad~ .

Episcopal Church parish ha U..with
the first meeting to he h01d tonight.
To dote rhe troop has 22 registered
members.
P lan• call for a joint investiture
ceremony to be held on Oct. 13 at 1
p.m. at Grace Church. On Oct. 22
there will be a hi ke and cookout at
the Naylor's Run playground. and

Organiza tional meetings of two
Pomeroy E lement ary School Brownie troops will be held this WEek.
The t roop for first graders, Troop
1292, will be held at the Pomeroy
E lemen tary School Wednesday
afler school. To date,10first graders
have registcrro, according to Terri
Robinson, th&lt;• leader. Meetings will
be held ('V&lt;'I)' other Wednesday.
Rita Hayes' troop of S&lt;-cond ond
third graders, ·n ·oop 1271. will me&lt;'l
f'Very other Tuesda~ a! th" GraC('

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
OWIGHT E. ROSS, ET AL.
PLAINTIFFS
VS
W.N. HOVIS. ET AL
OEFENOANTS
NO. 85 CV 191
NOTICE 8Y
PU8UCAnON

attended the meeting. 'i'hey discussed the fair, handed out premlum money from the fair. and
thanked everyone for a good year.
The recreation was swlmmlng.
Refreshments were homemade Ice
cream and roasted wieners.

Lola Harrison hoste-d the August
mEeting of the Chatter Club held a t
the home of Lola Harrison with
Elaine Quillen as co-hos tess.
Birthday gifts went to Janice
Fetty and Linda Gheen. Hostess
gifts were presented to the has·
tesses. Games were played with
prizes going to Mary StarcHer, Mrs.
Fel ly, Mindy Young, Susie Cleland.
Brenda Bolin,and Mrs. Gheen. Door
prizes were won by Mindy Young, a
guest, . and Mrs. Fetty . Othc&gt;rs
attending werP Francis Carleton.
Dotty Jones, Doris Wilt, Delores
Whitlock , Dorothy Roach, Linda
.Jacobs and Ruth Young. Next
m""ting will he held at the home of
Doris Wilt wit h Dotty J ones as
hostess.

Brownie Troops organizing

3 Announcements

interested
NMdod Mriousty
tmmodlooetv:
100 •zo end t40 e1ch. Firat
;=========:;-tr==:;::;:;:;;:::::=::;-Tr=:;:~;;::====i1r==:::=:==~~=~~rl people
floor only. Write giving
INTERESTED IN A
FOI THE EUGENE LONG
In lolling weight. 1-800- directions.
Planaa.
NEW VEHICLE
lOTH
f.{jl
992-9911 . Roben &amp; Judy Box 188. Witten
BOGGS
Sardia, Ohio
.
SUPERIOR
Honooe. Rl. 1, Bo• 310.
...... Gaiiiiioiii....... -We'd likt to inlroduce you lo
OF YOU
, ~1
,
Crooton. NC 2881 ~. 1·919- 43946.
SALES &amp;SERVICE
Enp&amp;t·A·Cor, thomodorn way
....,_ &amp; •.....; ..,,..
SIDING (0.
385-6806
&amp;Vicinity
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
to drive the vehicle of your
..... """ 1
....vn
Old lndi1n motorcycle. 304-

hrm

Or Wnlt Darll~
Clanrfltd Out.
Ill Cou r1 St.. 'omtroy, Ollro 4576!

I ~~~~~~~:l~~~~~~~~ ~~~::~
residence of Jerry and David
Smith. Two advisors and three club
members were present. They
discussed selling ice cream and
milk at the fair. They also talked
aDQut .sweepstake awards for the
fafr . and members received T·
siJ!rts.

were Doris Grueser. Thelma White,
Sandy White. Mary Holter, Charlotte Grant, Alta Ballard, Mary
ShOwalter, Ada Morris, Ethel Orr,
Esther Smith, VIrginia Lee, Betty ·
Roush, Ada Bissell. Faye Kirkhart,
Opal Hollon, Lora Damewood,
Margaret Amberger, Leona Hensley, Mae McPeek. Goldie FrederIck, Cora Beegle, Beulah Maxey,
Marcia Keller, Doris Koenig.

Reported Ill were Sadie Trussell,
Gay Gaul, now hospliallzed, and
Nettle Hayes, recuperating at
home. It was noted that a flag which
has flown over the White House has
been secured for the Chester Park.
District meetingwasannounced for
Sept. 26 at the hall at 7 p.m. A
meeting of the past councilors will
he held Sept. ll at 8 p.m.at the hall.
Others attending the ineeling

The Daily Sentinel

Meigs history book is available
f&gt;OMEROY - Printings of four
refe(ellce books concerning the
ear~ and recent history of Meigs
Co'urity are belngmadeavallable for
purchase by the Meigs County
. Pioneer and Historical Society. Inc.
'The four books include the
"Pioneer History of Meigs County"
by StUiman Carter Larkin. The
second reprinting of the hard cover
book which has the original 208
pages plus a complete Index for easy
r&lt;jfercnce Is expe&lt;;ted to he available
in November.
The pre-publication price to Sept.
301s $17 which includes the sales tax.
A.«er Oct. 1 the book will sell for $22
Including the tax.

Business Senrices

3 bedroom home, 8112 pwcent assumabla loan , garden
spot. Reduced down to ·

849,000. 304·675-6047.

Water wells drilled and serviced. Prices on request. Call

614-742-3147 or 614-992500&amp;. ·

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

'•

PIANO TUNING ANO RE·

IIIEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
Ward's Koyboard. 304-675- lTV MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
5600 or 676· 3824.
RT 35. PHONE 614-4487274.
PAl R. back to school discounu. free estimatea,

Real Eslate

Rodney Home &amp; Supply
Center. Rodney , Ohio lo-

1------:--:::--:--

R~~ed5~eJ~eC~1~s6~= -~4s~: ,

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

5308.

31

Homes for Sale

Government homes from 81
IU repairl . Also deliquant tax
property . Call 805- 6876000 ext. GH -4662 for
information .

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

2 bdr .• fully carpeted. vinyl
siding, large lot, storage
bldg .. garden, restricted,

$27,500 . Call 614-256·
6200. .
Rio Grenda. new 3'bdr., full
basement. nice lot, large
rear deck w ith velley view.
Priced to sell $39 ,600. Call

614-446-8038.
1109 Adrian Ave. 3 bed ·
rooms Ia lot, &amp;39,000. Cell

614 -446·3718.
3 bdr, l1rge living room , full
basement. $29,000 or
t4.000 take over paymentl.

Colt 614·446-7360.
Houae for sale : Best offer.
garagit. garden area, Green
School District. Call 614·

446 -2025 or 614 · 2469160 .

1970 New Moon 12x6o' 2
b'dr. good cond with under'pinning, oil heat, $6,000..

Call 614·266-6647.

Owner in rest home . Great
buy on 1981 14x70 mobile .
home, 3 bdr ., 2 baths. •
equ1pped k•tchan, 2 built in
AC, s1orage building, in e•c.
cond .• on rented lot, Only
S12. 000 . Call Wiseman '
Real Estete. 614-446 ·

364 3.

1970 mobile home 12x&amp;O.

.

53,000. Call 614-367 0413 .
"
1972 Flamingo 3 bdr., 1 '1•
bath, tot1l electric, C)., '
refrigerator. some furniture.
8x10 deck. 81,400, t•ke
over payments. Call 61 4 ·

246-9847.
Cleyton

homet

on Selel '

t 986 Lakafront, 1476 sq. ft. ,

reduced to $27, 996 . We ' re
Elsea Home Center- Chilli·

cotho . c.n 614-772 -1220 .

4 bdr., bath, utility room , 1974 Celebrity, 12x60, ,J«: ,
living room. kitchen, and cond. Colt 614·246-9146 or
diningroom . Big 2 , Cir gar- 614-446-3445.
.
age with 1tteched greu - 1 -------------~
houae, on 3 acre1, fruk 197Z Atlant;c 12•00, for

cellar. Coll614-446·8181 .

oato. Calt 614· 388·9602 .

�..

Page- 8- The. Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A·DAY

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x70 mobile home, 3
bedroom•. 1 11J bath, wa~her

51 Household Goods

55 Buildhtg Supplial

Aefrklerator • ttove. C1ll
814-~17-0409 . . .

BUILDERS
Cloa•out'a - Surplus Salvage.
Roof tru.. (up to 20'·
11&amp;.00) 120' to 30'- 120.00)
130' to 40'- 126.00).
Aliminum aiding 8 ' woodgrain an twin 4' with f6tlm
bock 139 .96 oq.
Marble vanity' a tope. Seconds all alaaa choice
eJO.OO u .
Prehung 6 or 8 ~nel etMI
Insulated eJUariOr .doora
$89.96 .. . .
Prehung 9 ft. thermal glial
ateel door'1 cro.. buck: .or
panel 8139 .96.
1 pc. flberglall tub and
shower white and color
1199.00 to U29.96.
17'l'l 1 9' white gold vanity
with top $29.96. marble top
&amp; vanity 839.96.
3 or 5 pc. tub wall klt1, white
or color $39.96 to 189.96.
Embo11ed 2'x4' ceiling tile
some fire rated $1 .89 u.
Suspended ceiling gridal12'
main toe
12.50)
4' too(10'
90
eentll
(2' tee
40 cente~
wall angle 11.99).
Colonial "clear white pine
cooing . Window and door
trim 32 cent ft .
Veneered ir:tterior white pine
diOor Jamb's $8 .99 pr.
3'x16' foil faoa fibergiiSI
ln•ulatlon 88.12 1q.ft ..
115.95 roll .
lnColor longeted e,omodes'a
siphon jet 8B9.96.
4'x10' P.U.C. 1ewar end
drain pipe with ball {1 pc .
$3.49 oo.l 1100 pc-83.00
ea.)
·
4x8 wood an meeonita
paneling woodgrain and
prints, $6.99 to 812.99.
Valves to $24.96.
PENN'S WAREHOUSE.
Wellston. Ohio. houra 8·6.
CaJ\ 614· 3B4·3646c

and dryer. porchll. gas
furnace . Mu1t sel\. Call

54

81 4 -949 -2368 .

Firewood-cutup elabe, 1
truck load *100. 2 -t180.
Pickup load, you houl t1&amp;.
HEAP occop,.d. Coil 814·
245·&amp;804.

Furnished 2 bedroom mobile
home and lot . Ca11614-949-

2253 .
WHY PAY MORE l Mo bile

P•trlat Storage Buildlnp,
any ·•••· Dlaplav at French
City Mobllo Homeo in Golll·
polio, Oh. Coli 814-448·
9340 or 814-448-8038.
Free d .. lvery or built. on your
lot.

home additions a.nd mobile
Offices bY ROOM ADDI -

TIONS. · IN C . 1819 Wo ·
shington Blvd ., Belpre, Ohio

45714 . .Cal l 61 4 - 423 ·
5826 .
1970 PMC 3 bedroom . Tip
out. furnished , air. Washer
and dryer. awning. $ 6900 .

Compact &amp; spreading Yaw•

0~

Ce ll 814 -992· 7479 .
Nashua 1 4 x70. completely
furnished . Washer and
dryer . Call 614-949-2253.

;;;;te

~-

C&gt;-,
.

~
•
. _ ..

.,.

IJ·to

~ ~

Cllltil•"'f"..,,~,, ....u~..... ··~~~··••n••._...., ~ ~
''\Vh
d
ak
Y On t yoU ffi e meat
I

1975 12x55 2 badroom
mobile home on 6 acres of
land . Oouble gorageatorago
building . Kingsbury Rd ..
Pomeroy. Phone 614-992·
2564 or 614-992·2274.

loaf? An artist has tO suffer."

1 970 Shultz 12x80 mobile
home. axe cond, 304-676-

2962 or 576-2069 .
1970 12x66 3 br, 1 Y1 baths,
utility room , underpinned,

304-675-7968 or 304· 6 75·
379~ .

1981 Holly Park mobile
home. 14x70, must sell.

304-576· 294 7.

Rentals

•9 .99 / eoch. Shraadod borl&lt;
mulch t20 / PU load. 1 mi .
North· of Silver Bridge. Call
814-448-4630 .
White MWing machine pelnt
domov-d. rog. price U79,
now 095 . Nocchl reg. price
e489, now t198 . New with
26 y01r worronty. Coli col·

t----------r;:;;::~~::;::;:::=~==lloc1814·386·8026.

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO . 44
Insured, reaaon.able rates.
Call 305· 578-2336 .

Mi.,. Milrchendiae

~6

A partmen1

for Rent

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opport-unity)
monthly rent starts at S169
tor 1 bedroom and 8204 for
2 bedroom. deposit 8200.
located near Spring Valley
Piaza and Foodland. pool
and Cable TV available,
office hours •• pouible 10
am to 4 pmand 7pmto9 ptn
Monday-Friday. Call 614446 ·- 2746' or leave
meaaage.
Nicely furnished mobile
home, eff. apl .. central air
and heat in citv. adults only.
Call 614-446-0336 .

Furnished Rooms

King wood • cool burner.
"""· cond .. noo. Call 114·
388·9817.

For rent Sleeping Rc;»oma -:---------~
and light hoUse keeping 16 HP Uwn Tractor w -42'
rooms. Park Central Hotel , cut mower 1980 modet.
Caii814. 446-0766 .
excellent condition. 0950.
Coli 81 4·266·19&amp;9. ·
Furnished room, range. re- 011 fUI'ftllnce W · or W·O tank ,
frig . $12&amp;, share bath. tin- Coal stove never und $300
gle male. 919 2nd. AVe.,
Gollipolio. Call 446-441 6 new will ttke • 260. Call
614· 2&amp;6·1969.
after 8PM .
1- - - -- - - -- - Junior Girl Scout iniform
alze 1 4 . *20.00. Con trom ·
bone good condition *126.
46 Space for Rent
Coli 814-448-2823 otter 4.
Mobile home lot. 12'"60' or
smaller. $76 water paid, 4th
8t Neil. Gallipolis. Call .4484416 after 8PM .

ca•••

2
of Ice Milk $20 CIH·
Coll814-245-9512 .

3 pc . llvlngroom aulte.
wooher • dryor. Coli 614·
448-4277 .

56

Ohio

Tuesday, September 10, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

76

'N' CARL YLI!

oH No! N•1

CAt!

used tires
12-13-14· 15-16-16 .5 . CaJI
·614-256-6261 .

79

•

Tune

Pets for Sale

I .111'1 S1 p,1l11 •

,\ II VI ,,11111

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS. IONS
U.S. 3&amp; Welt, Jockoon.
Ohio. 814-288-8411.
Mo- Fwvv-· Now
Hallond. Buoh Hoo Bolol •
Sorv\... Over 40 UMd
tractors to chooM from •
complote Uno of now •
uood equipment. l.orgolt
oelectlon In S.E . Ohio.
Cub Co dot l~wn ond ;ortractor with b;elly mower.
Ex..Uont condition. t9&amp;0.
C.ll8l4·992·7401 .

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds . Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service . Call 61 4-4467795 .

71

Houses for Rent

S1:rvi ces

WJ (j?f; Ll KKE.R lD
MA'(£; IT &lt;:&gt;TRO~b,

· 1\lE~ ADD WAT~R.
TMJ~ IT W€AK ...

®1M 61"1 .,..,..__~o
DWo-..:1., liEA .Ifl&lt;

The correct;

The game oF

30•1!7.
30 • AL..L..,
lt-0. 30,

~ing o;':1,;t;em
19: IS ·L..OVE
IS ·AL..l. '

'l'OUR AD'4&gt;J'ITAGE I

FIDDL.ESTICI&lt;c.;:!
and GIW&gt;€

DEUCE

l?~IN~D0

Comedy'

SCORING

.,.,.
.

Q
(j2J
Entortainmont
Tonight
I'll WKRP in Cincinnati
B:OO D (1) CD A-Team ICC)
While ~rying .to enjoy a
mountain vacation. the. ATearn members find themselves trapped between a
gang of robbers and Col.
Decker and his soldiers. (Rt
160 min.)
C1J Oaktari
(]) Profeuional Wre•ding
()) Gl (l2J Who's the Ba..7
(CC) Angela insists that
Tony contact her at work
before allowing Jonathan to
do anything. (A)
I.
Ill Cll tlD MOVIE: "Kenny
Rogers as the Gan)bler-- .
Tho Adventure Continue•'
ICC I
. Cll
MacNeil/l.oltror
Nowshour
(jj) Neva CCC) 'Conquest of
the Parasites.· Medical re~
~earch in the stud-y of parasItes and parasitic disease is
examined. (Rl (60 min .l
fj) MOVIE: 'Romantic

iHBOl MOVIE : 'Tightrope'
(CCI
IMAXI MOVIE: 'My Favorite Wife'
8:30 Cll Ill (I2J Three'o a Crowd
(CC) A newspaper re\tiew of

.

Jack's Bistro upsets Jack
and Vicki's anniversary cele~

I

ALLEYOOP

bratiOn .

9:00

D

(R)

II) (1) Riptide An under·
sea filmmaker turns to the

Riptide Detective Agency af·
ter the attempted murder of
his son. (AI (60 min.) '

(I)700 Club
()) Ill.(l2J .Moonlighting An
•nves11gat1on of a collection
agency leads Maddie and
David into the path of mur ~
der. IAI C60 min .)
Cll Nova CCC) 'Canquesl of
the Parasite&amp;.' Medical research in the study of parasites and parasitic disease is
examined. lA) {60 min .l
(jj) Uieline (CCI'Dr . J . Alex
Hailer, Jr.· The Children·s
Surgeon-in-Chief at Johns
Hopkins Memorial Hospital
is profiled as -he treats his
voung patients. (R) (60 min .)
9:30 (!) Championahip Roller
Derby:
Bombers
vs.
Outlaws
(MAX]
MOVIE:
'The
Bounty' CCCI
10:00 D Cil CD Remington
Steele Rerpington lures
Laura to San Francisco on a
ficticious case that soOn
turns deadly. (A) (60 min .)
()) Ill (I2J Ufe' s Most
Embarrassing Moments
#4 ICC) Steve Allen hosts
this collection of filmed outtakes, presented by guest
stars Bert Parks and Tony
Danza . (RI 160 min .)
0 Cll ® West 57th This
primetime news magazine
offers four to six news and
feature segments weekly .
160 min .)
(I) Soundstage 'Loverbov. ·
The Canadian rock group
performs an evening of their
rock 'n' roll hils . IRI 160 m1n .)

didnt finish
your nap!

•
f GOOO T~ING I'M NOT FOLLOWING
PAT ON A 7~XC

SNAPPY ...-a!Utt:N

D~ING

\VOULD

FA5T, l'D •••

Gil

Newswatch

Ell Odd Couple

·· FER

THEM

STIFF LEGS
OF YOR'N,
.___...~,~'-

JUST MOSEY OUT
TH' BACK DOOR AN'
THEY'LL LIMBER UP

ON TH"WAY HQME

SNUFFY

IH80l America Under·
cover: UFO's Whats Going
On?
10:15 CD MOVIE: 'The Caddy'
1 0 :30 I]) Celebrity Chm
(!) Unlimited Hydroplane
Racing: Budweiser APBA
Gold Cup from Seattle , WA .
® Innovation 'The Face
Beneath .· Pioneering techniques in plastic surgery are
examined .

"'

• 1!11 INN News
11 :oo

u m Cll CDO Cll ®e

I

5 l.. IN6E~

KNEW HOW 10 PO.
Now arrange the circled lel1ers to

~a rm

the surprise answet", as sug·

gested by the above- car1oon .

(X XI

I JJ

)[1](

(An.swers tomorrow)
Jumbles: HOUSE NAIVE , VIRTUE QUAVER
Answer: Whaf Junio r was when Mom 2ccuse(t h1m of

breaking her favorite urn- "E· VASE·IVE"

I.
if

"
,h
:t
I,

e
f

.

Delicate
timing

CID

The

SNAKE!!
I HAVE "THE
HANDS OFA
eRil.L.IAN1'
SURGEON!!

l ALSO FORGOT M'(

~OW DID

I KNOW T~AT?

LUNCH AND MY
HOMEWORK, AND I'M

PfW8AilL'f SITTING
IN THE WRONG DESK ..

)'

war

Beyond
The International Physicians for the
Prevention of Nuclear War
~re honored in this sateHite
hnk ·up between Mosco""
and San Francisco. (60 min .)
1!11 Benny Hill Show
IHBOJ MOVIE: 'Under fire' .
.
ICCJ
11 :30 D ffi CD Tonight Show
Guest host Joan Rivers welcomes Erma Bombeck , TeUy
Savalas and Gallagher. 160
nwn)
ill Beat at Groucho
(!) Sportacon1er
Cll WKRP in Cincinnati
Ill Cll Magnum, P .I. Magnum enc_o~n.ters priVate eve
Luther G•ll•s 1n his search for
a missing girl . (R) (60 min .)
Cll IJI1enight America
(}Q Taxi
Gl (l2J
ABC
NeNi~h11ine

a

One Step Boyond
11 :45 IMAXJ
MOYIE:
'Siayll_nHind'
12:00 CJ) Best of GnHicho
(!) Unlimited Hydroplane
lloclng: Budwaiser Coium·
biaCupfrom Tri-Ci1iea, WA .

Cll Benny Hll Show
()I MOVIE: 'Dieno'

1·11-1&amp;

l
I

I

EAST

WEST

How often have you been declarer
at three no-trump and firsl attacked
the smt that would Cive you one trick,
savmc lhe SUit tlfat could give you six
or more tricks for later? Ralph Katz
of Chlcaco found just that play in the
~~~ndiBh Pairs last May, and he was

• A 10
.K 8 6 3
t A 8 42
+10 9 3

• J 9; 2
.109542
• 10 9 5

+K
SOUTH
• K85
.QJ
tJ
+AQ86 542

Katz, South, bid his hand in a normal

manner. He was a little nervous about
the Q-J doubleton of hearts as a stop-

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

perm that suit, bul did not feel that his
cards lent themselves to delicate Sci·
entific probing for the best cont~act
When the three of hearts was led de:
darer played low from dummy' and
won ~he jack. As soon as the opponents
regained the lead, they would of
course dislodce the heart ace. If de-

.....

Nor1b
1+
2+
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

2.

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

South

3NT

Opening lead: • 3

p

enough tricks established for his contract, down he would go. Maybe the
club suit would behave, with the K- With the king appearing, all would be
small on Side. It was more likely that . well. When West actually played low
the club layout would be unfavorable. ?n the spade , declarer won the queen
If he gave up a low club immediately m dummy and played the jack of
he would have on)y eight tricks
' clubs. Up came the king, but this was
. Finally, Katz led a law spad~ lrom allowed to hold the trick. The defendhiS hand. If W~t rose with the ace and en were helpless to prevent de&lt;:lare ,

cleared hearts right away, decJarer

could play

from making two hearts. six clubsr

a low club from dummy. and lhat lone spade trick for his 1hr..;
no-trump game.

r
y

ol
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s
n

"
~,_,,.~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Yearn
5 Put
toge tiwr

39 ~aluhnc.us
40 Analyze
41 To he (Fr .l
DOWN

10 Man 's

1 Ilook

of maps

nicknam('
13 Ve netian

2 Nei~hhur (Jf
Arw•nt.ina

hea&lt;: h
14 Shrnudetl

3 Was ill-brt•d
4 Tarn roo1

11 Distorted

in mystery . 5 ArouSt'

15 Chur&lt;·h

6 .la••k
i)enny's
wifl'

vPstment.
16 Empyreom
17 Twil
18 Certain
Navy man

7 Curvf'
8 Agital.ing

9 Almost
grads

20 Hawaiian

marks

12 Campai~n

tret&gt;
21 "Giant"

16 Pao;;tf' n
25 Sin~in~
19 l'v•• --:coupl('
l.hinkmg
27 Soporilic
22 ( 'onsarn il! 30 Voi&lt;-~
23 Pun&lt;·tll·
31 Hadial e
at ion
33 Cruising

a&amp; f{om an

24 Opt•rali('

cli s~us."iion

song

hronzt'

37

star
22 Gos.,.,ip
Z3 na&lt;:t.rian

25"Macahrc n

26

Al~rrian

dty
27 "Song -

lllue"
28 60 S&lt;'&lt;:S.
29 Emissary
32 Brando's
"The _,
33 or lhe age

34 King (Lat.)
35 Boot-camp
command
37 Japanese
aborigine
38 "Krame•"

b.++ -

co-star

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how lo work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

One leiter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali

hints. Each day the code letters are different.

r
I

r

CRYPTOQUOTE
9- 10

MV
VPF

I P .I

L K .J

M II E X H .I X .1

FKYMHI,

IMGXH

LMZ

LX

VPOF

ZKH

APOR .I

LKGX

RXIN

RM UX

K

LPFNX .
" FXJ " NZMEL
Yeeterda)''a CrytOOIUOte: DO WMAT WE CAN
SUMMER WIIJ. HAVE ITS FIJES. IF WE wALK "IN
WOODS, WE MUST FEED MOSQUITOES . - RALPH
WALDO EMERSON

THE

Stor Huotler/1119n Off
G llt Eye on Hallywood

()l)

'

y

clarer did not at thcd time have

(Lat.)

Cll Tony Brown's Journal

~pacebridga

NORTH

• Q7 6 3
.A7
tKQH3
+J 7

By James Jacoby

[lZ News.

I]) Man From U.N.C.L.E.

1----------

•

Yesterday's

Report

..,-:------ - - .

I

WHA'T iHE.

I
KJ

Answerhere :

. '.

® Wheel at Fortune

M•tt"""'

I

J

Eet

Lo1 An!l!'leo at Atlanta ·
()) Ill llJ Family Feud
11)J-rdy
Cll Nightly Buoineas

1---- - - - - - -

I

~

HA5H

tCINUDE

Cil Major league Baseball·

Home
1
1980 Dodge Colt RS, 1600 8
Improvements
cc, 4 ap, alum. whNII. Eagle

1-------- - -

t1
.

-

tSTf txJ

0.11181

Autos for Sale

STs. 1un roof, not p l a l n i i - - - - - - -- - U995.00 304··676 -&amp;306 .
BASEMENT
WATER
PROOFING
1983 Dodge 800 ES. 4 dr,
2 .2L 6 epd. ailver avery Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local rlferances
available option. *7996.
furniahed. Frea eatimatea.
304-675-5306.
Coli collect 1-614-237·
1976 Dodge Coronet. 2 0488. day or night . Rogers
door. 318 engine, runt Ba•ment Waterproofing.
good. exc. gae mileege,
11,200.00. Phone 304- D.and M. Contracture. Vinyl
tiding. replacement win 876-4203.
dows, inaulating. roofing.
1982 Pontiac J2000, new and remodeling . .c:on·
U,800.00. Like now. 304- creta. Coll304-773-5131 .
876-3693.
J .end l. lnatalletion. Roof·
1083 Chryllor E-c\o11, AC. lng, vinyl1iding, atorm doors
AT. PS, PB, cruiae, tilt and wlndowl. Free asti·
wheel. AM·FM,atereo. front mo1oo. Co\1614-992· 2772 .
wheel drive. 39,000 .mllae.
88,800.00 . 304 - 875· RON ' S Televiaion Service .
Houaa calla on RCA, Quazer,
5479.
GE. Speeieltng in Zenith .
'77 T-Bird 302. auto, AC. Coli 304·576-239B or 614crui1e. power windowa. new 446-2454.
point, mufflor and toil pipo, 1- - - - - - - - - 11.200 . 00. 304· 676. Fetty Treo Trimming, stump
4331 .
removo\. Call 304- 675 1331.
1973 Oldo Dalto. 4 door.l--- - - - - - - new ltickar. good tran1por· RINGLES'S SERVICE , extation. t&amp;&amp;O . 304-676· perlenced carpenter; eleetrl2001.
cian, m11on . painter. roof·
ing pncluding hot tar
1970 Ronoult, 8260 .00 . . application) 304-615-2088
GE. 2 apeed. ' dilhwaahar or 876 -7368 .
t100.00. 304-675 -7224.
Starks Tree and lawn Ser1978 Dotoun 200SX, 5 vice, stump removal. 304·
speed. axe cond, low mi· 676-2010.
loogo. 82 .700.00 . 304·
Building end remodeling.
875-5689.
roofing. masonerv . elactri·
197$ Ford LTD ttatlon cal, framing, flooring. drywagon. air and cruiM, good wall , bathrooma, kitchena,
doors &amp; window installacond, call 304-67&amp;-1988 .
tion . C~ll 304-676 -2440 .

.

(!) NFL Arm Wreet ling

10Y:tt. self-tontt~ined truck
camper. Very good condi·
tion . Willing to negotiate ,
Caii614-9B6· 3839 .

19B1 Plymouth Horizon, TC
3 low mileage. 4 apeed.
ao..,. oxtroo 12.500. 304·
876-3137 or 89&amp;·3886.

I KJ
.

.

Don't

•

· ~~--==--

Ill Untamed World
7:30 D (1) Tic Tac Dough

ill, _Please

r )

I I

(1) PM M-ine

Gl lit New· Name That

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

3 bootor Bodgor onllloge
Mobile home lot 1 mila out
wagon wttfl roof. Price
Neighborhood Rd . $60 mo. 3 Triple track 1torm wint1000 .00. Aloo grodor
Cell 614-446· 1340.
dow• 32Y.. X 71 . Call after
3 bdr . 2 bath, Cheshire.
blodo, now. Prico t200.0Ci,
Furnished
efficiency
8160.
1
-4:30 1114-448·2818.
Available 9 · 1. Sec . dep. &amp;
Phono 814-912-8111.
paid. share bath, 607 large trailer lot for rent on
ref . required . Call 614-367- utilliel
2nd
.
Ave
.
Gallipolil,
adults.
Bulaville-Addi1on
Rd.
Cell
(677-CHWI Good uood tiro•
7567 or 703-256-0169 .
Co\1 446-4416 after 8PM .
614-367-0232 or 614-446· 12-13-14-15-16-16.5 . Call Briarpatch Kennels All- Qrovoly riding trector. 12
breed grooming . Indoor- hp, mower attachment,
4265.
614-268-8251 .
3 bdr. full basement. central
outdoor boarding facilities . 09&amp;0.00. 304-8711-1578 or
2
bdr.
apt.,
good
location,
air. fireplace. Green school
English Cocker Spaniel. 876-7898.
2 bay block building. could
diatrict. available imme- redecorated . $149 mo., util · be uaad 11 garage or body Huvy duty Case front and 388-9790.
diately. S325 plus dep . Call itiea partlv paid. Call 304- shop in Kanauga. Call 614- loeder. e"cellant condition.
New Hollond 707 3 pt, hitch
675 -5104 or 304-676 ·
&lt;lollipolil Block Co.. Pina Oragonwynd Cattery Ken· corn chopper; New Holland
614' 862 -1357.
446
-7406
6386 .
St.. &lt;lollipo\io, Ohio Coli nel . CFA Himalayan, Persian 3&amp;3 grinder mlxor, &lt;lohl hi
3 bdr. house. rat . &amp;. dep . in 1- - - - - - - - - - COUNTRY MOBILE Home 614-446-2783.
and Siamese kittens . AKC throw blower. All equipment
Gallipolis . Call 614- 446· Furnished efficiency 8160
Chow
puppies . Call 446· aKcellent condition. 30433,
North
of
Park.
Route
8076 :
mo. utilitie1 paid. 7 Neil
17,500 STU oir cond ., 30
273-4216.
Ava ., Gallipolla . Call 446· Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call pc. of underpinning. UHF &amp; 3844 alter 7PM .
614-992
-7479
.
channel 23 antenna. Cell Male blonde, Cocker Spa 3 bdr . ranch. located on Rt. 4416 after 8pm .
160, near NGHS. $300 mo .. 1-----:.._____
614-446-8544.
niel, one yr. old. shots. AKC
S160 dep ., no pets. Call 740112 2nd . Ave .. 3 bdr .• Trailer apacea, small Child·
Uve11ock
Reg . 8176. Call 814-245- 63
ran
accepted,
out
locust
614-388 -8711 after 5PM .
8190 mo. 513 3rd. Avo .. 1
Regulation 1ize pool table .
9647.
Road.
Rt.
1,
back
of
K&amp;K.
bdr ., 8136 . 'Deposit re·
ex.erciH bicyte. Call 61 4 304-676-1076.
448-3006.
4 bdr. house on Bulaville Rd. quired . Coli 614-446-4222
AKC regittered Miniature Ladles or chlld'a gentle
atove furn ., S325 •plus dep . betWeen 9 &amp; 6.
Schnauzer. 8 waaka old. riding horN. Part Morgan
Firewood 100% clean hard- 614-992· 5296 .
Ca\1614-446-0276.
1- - - - - - - - - (moro). 814·843-6418.
2 bdr . AC apt .. large roomt.
wood . 135 - Delivered
near
Pizza
Hut.
water
paid.
pic:kup. t2&amp;· you haul . Cell AKC registered Brittany 8 yNr old Querter horM,
Small house 4 rooms. gar·
alter 5, 614·448-7524.
age attached , dep. &amp; ref. 8260 mo .. immedia1e oecuSpaniel pups. Exc:ellent uaed for trail riding,
req . 816 Firat Ave .. rear. Call pacny. Co\1614-446-7026 .
hunting atock. $1 &amp;b. each. 0400.00. 304-773-5081.
Mere 11 o lllll sc
Tanning booth for ula . 614·992-2627.
614-446-9779.
2 bdr. apt., 1 1 Court St.,
Priced to 1011. Co11304· 682·
Butchering llize hog•. L.erry
2863 .
Modular with garage. Syra- S326 mo., ief. &amp; dep. Call
AKC Siberian Husky pup- Soyre. 304-181-3319.
l-;:-:--;7'-'--:--:-:c-::--..,cuse. Available 9· 1 . Oep ., &amp;14-448-4926.
51 Household Goods Firewood. Seeaoned alaba, pies. 2 male.. 1 fa male, Call
ref's, laaaa required . no pstl.
Jult
Available.
Unfurn'ed.
1
•eo. 1 cord. delivered . 7 ln. 304-8B2-3268.
$300 mo. Cell 614-992·
64 Hay &amp; Grai11
Wallpepering , neat end preBR . utilities paid, S2&amp;0/ mo.
72 Trucks for .S ale cile
by 9 ln. blockl, $86. a cord.
7032 or 614-446-2340.
. References available .
Fish Tank and Pet Shop. ~ ~--------Coli 614-448-9244 9-5 .
delivered.
Sleb1
picked
up
at
SWAIN
24 1 3 Jackaon Avenue, •
Cell
304-675 -2001 or 304·
House jACT-921) for rent 8
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE tho mill. 116. a bundle. Point Pleasant. 304-676- Ear com •2.36 buahel. Alao 1977 Dodge 22 ft. motor 875-4683.
home, axe. cond , •10,500.
south of Jackson or 3 milea Upatalra 3 rooms &amp; bath. 62 Olivo St .. Gollipoi11. Now Approx. 11h tor\ per bundle. 2063. Fish. birds and more. 1traw
available. Butler HeN- 489 Maple St.. Gallipolis.
above Thurman in Jackaon, Clean. no Peta, 1dulta. ref. &amp; uaed wood-coalltovea, 8 Coll814-742-2473.
ford Farm. Rt. 7, 8 mll11 Coli 61 .4-446-0711
2 bdr .. $200 mo. 8200 dop. required. Call 6,14-446- pc wOQd LR IU~O t399,
1% year old male Poodle. below &lt;loll\po\1. Coli 814Plumbing
82
1619.
evenings .
Cell 814 · 256-6251 .
bunk beds *199. entron Hayandcornelavator. 1973 304· 875-2110.
2118-8618.
&amp;
Heating
Ford
pickup.
1988
Codilloc:.
recliners 199. new &amp; uaed
1986 Chevy pickup truck.
Houae for rent in Middlei- Furnished, $175 mo . pay bedroom aaltea. ranges. 1970 Chevy pickup. Extra 3 female Beagle pups. 8
Alfalfa hay. pure and mind
port . Call 614-992-2606 own utilities . Call614· 446- wringer waahen, • thoes. nice . Coll614-742-2231.
weeka old. 826 .00 eac:h or 82.2&amp; to •2.76 bolo. Col\ PS. PB. V6. Auto. Only 900
9244
.
miln 89000. Call 614·
CARTER'S PLUMBIN G
after 6 p.m .
New livingroom eu1te1
860 .00 take• all 3 . 304· 814-258·1959.
Ktroaene heater for ule . 458-1583 .
AND HEATING
949-2650.
o199-o599,
lompo,
oloo
Cor. Fourth and Pine
House and bath, largeyard in 3 bdr. elr cond .. wi1hin city buying coal • wood atove1. 11.000 BTU. Coll814-992·
Shollod corn, 304-175 - 1976 Chevy 1 ton dump
5989.
Gallipolis. Ohio
Racine area . Call614-992· limiu. CoJ\614-446-4110 . Callll14-448-3169.
2&amp;88.
truck . $2,200. 1978 C60 2 Phone 61 4 - 446 ~ 38 88 or
5868 .
Ex . Location , 2 bdr. partly
Hardboard wood for ule. 57
Musical
'on Chevy truck with 14h. 614-446 -4477
von body. &amp;3,200. 614·
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Coli 814-742 -2&amp;4&amp;.
Instruments
2 bedroom home . Fur· furn .. utilities pd . Call 614·
JIM 'S PLUMBING 8o HEAT992-3194.
niahed . Real nice . Rt. 1 24 446 -1467 after 5PM .
Solo• ond cholro prlcodfrom I:-:---:--::-: - - - - - - ING. Rt. 1. Box 355 , GalliMinersville . Overlooka Ohio
828&amp;. to t89&amp; . Toblol, o&amp;O Now L.P.N. Modicoi bookl Bundy Alto uxaphona
!1 illl~lilil Li t IIIII
'82 Chevrolet pickup. 4 polio. Coil 614·367-0676.
River . Call 614-992-3324. Furnished apt., 1 bdr .. 920 and up to e126. Hide·•- fqr Buckeye Hilla. 1240. $360 . Artley cl.,inet $160.
4th Ave .. Gallipolis. Utilities bodo,l390 . and up to cuh. Coll614-992-5207.
wheal drive. 304 -676 Both ex. cond. Call 6142164.
446·4881 after &amp;PM .
Three bedroom ho.u se. car· paid . Call 448-4416 after 1660., oofo bod• t1411.
peted, full basement. excel· Bpm .
83 Excavating
Roclinoro. 8228 . 10 0375.. TONY'S &lt;lUN REPAIRS,
Autos for Sale
lent condition. quiet neigh· 1- , - - - - - - - - - - tampa hom •za. to 112&amp;. hotdlpreblueing.elltypeaof 2 trumpets . 1 King and 1 71
'79 Chevy pickup
borhood . References 2 bdr. partly furnished. . pc. dinettes from *109 ., to gunamith work. faat eervlce. Bundy good cond . Cal\614·
eJ. 700 . 00 . 304 - 675 ·
required . 304-676 -4680 or downtown Gallipollt, water 435 . 7 pc. o189 ond up. 304-876-4631 .
2494.
446-3461 .·
Good · 1 E•~eva.ting . b8!1e ·
675-1962 .
paid. 1175 mo. Coli 614- Wood table with ahl cheir1
TOP CASH pold for '80
men~a . footers, driveways,
446· 3919.
1981 Chevy pickup, air ~pt1c tanh. landscapin g.
121&amp; 1o 0745 . Oolk 8110 Fell Hunt Clinic. Sunday, Plano for sate. Aseume •mall modet end newer uMd cera.
Sept. 15th, 12:00 till 7 :00. monthly payment on mod· Smtih Bulck-Pontl8c. 1911 conditio':', AM-FM stereo, ~,all any1ime 614 - 446 ~
J rooms &amp; bath for rent up to t226. Hutchea, $610. repreaentllivee from Bur- ern atyle piano , like new &amp;aatem Ave., OalllpoHa. Cell automatiC, 304-676-6431 .
42 Mobile Homes
Sunk
Md
comp
..
te
with
4537, James L Davison , Jr.
furniahed. utilities furniehed
Jannlnga Archery. PSE ccndition . Can be seen 614·440·2282.
mattretMS,
1271.
and
up
to
for Rent
owner
.
8200 mo. Coli 614-446 ·
03911 . Boby bodo. 0110 . Archery, US R epa1t Arma, locally . Write . including 1-::-:-:::--:-------3793.
Taeec
Thompaon
Center.
Vans &amp; 4W.D .
Dozer Work lend c learing.
or box apringa, Black Powder Guna, Wln- phona numer to: Manager. 1973 VW Iuper Beetle ex. 73
200 Athlono, C01evvlllo, Ill aond. Coli 114·441-3028.
lull
or
twin,
183
..
firm,
873
.
2 bdr . furnished . all utilites 1-R-,.....-e-ro-,.d-e- A-pt_s_M
_'d
_
d
_l
-rt
landacaping
, e1c. Free aati·
•
t
epo .
che81er. Pennswood, Kal- 62232 or call (61813461981 Chevrolet van . cus- mates. Call 614-446 -8038
pd ., ucept elect., c:onve· Spec:ial rates for Senior ond 083. Quaan oato, o,22&amp;. pln. Chlrl11 Salley. Fred 6927.
1978 red • whlto Bronco 4 tom . Cali 814-448 ·2518 or 614-992 · 7119 anytime .
nient location , security dep· Citizen•. &amp;1 30. Equal Hous- 4 dr. choirto, o49. 6 dr. Beer bow hunt filrin.
whool drive, PI, PB. outo aher 3:30PM .
che.te.
t59.
Bed
frarrias,
osit reuqirad . Call61 4 -446· ing Opportunltiu . 614 ·
novelty ehoot. door A
11
t20 .ond e26 .. 10gun - &lt;lun Arch.,.,..
J .A.R. Construction Co ..
pri:raa every 16 mlnutls. Trl
.. ume ama mont!liY pay· tnno, good cond. Coli 814·
8568 .
992· 7721 .
cabineta, •a&amp;o. Oea or County Sportl: Shop, Pt.Pit . menton modern atyle piano, 24&amp;-&amp;818.
Rutland, Oh . 614-742 ·
like new t;onditlon. Can be
1976 Jeep Cherokee four 2903. Basements. Footers,
Furni1hed , AC , cable. no city 2 bedroom apartments . electric rongo• 0371. Boby 304-876·2988 .
seen locally. Write. Including 1978 Corvatte axe. cond. wheel drive. Want to seil or Concrete work, Backhoe's,
taus. beautiful river view. in New Haven , WVa . Newly mattra11a1, t215 • t315. bed
trade for Plymouth Horizon . Dozer &amp; Oltcher. Dump
Kanauga . Foster 's Mobile remodeled . In town . 814- from•• 020. 826, • no. SLIGHT PAINT DAMAOE. phone number to: Menagar, Coli 814-448-0228.
king
fromo
no.
Qood
oolocCall614-985-4227
.
truckl. 8t water-vas-sewer·
Home Park. 814-446- 1602. 992· 7481 .
Flalhlng errow sign ~gg3~hlone.ICiai••V"8ille.ll
81
1989 Plymouth 8otolllto
tion of bedroom sult81, 0259.00. Sovo o2841 Ugh·
electrical lines .
I
.
or
co
3466927
34,000 ectual mil... new 19B3 Toyota SR -5 4X4. rad ,
2 bdr . air co nd ., new carpet, 1 bedroom apt. for rent. rockers, metal c;eblnete,
ted non-arrow, $237. Non-~ ;;~==;:;==== th'lil, cerburetor. tiOO. C1ll axe. cond .• low miles. fiber - l --::c:---::-- - - - -- gea heal, private lot in NicelY located , Contact Vil- headbolrds e38 • up to lighted
1189. Unbolievoblo
of1or 8PM, 814·388-8043.
glall cab; running boerd1 &amp; 85
185.
Gallipolis . Call 614· 446 · lage Manor in Middleport.
q u o I i t y I L o c I I . 58
fruit
bruoh guord1, 814-98 5 .
General Hauling
614 -992 - 7767 . Equol
1409.
1970 Ford 4 dr.. 302 4400.
Uaed
Furniture
-·
Metal
=~;'t~::.':.:11BOOI423·01
83.
&amp;
Vegetables
Housing Opportunity.
on gino. Coli 814-888-7722.
office deska. 3 mllea out
Furnished 2 bdr. on Eastern
19&amp;1 Willy JNp, runs good. Jemas Boy s Water Service .
Ave. 8175 mo ., &amp;1 00 dep . One or two bedroom apar1· lulavme Rd . Open 9em to Queen lize book caee head· Red ra~pberries Taylor's
Also pools filled. Call 61 4 ·
1181 Plymouth Roliont AT, utra parte and new battery
&amp;pm,
Mon
.
thru
Stt.
Coll614-2 56-1187.
mants in Pomeroy . Fur·
~56 - 1141
or 614- 446 ·
bo•rd water bed, axe cond, Berry Patch. 614-448·8692 PS. AC, 4 dr. oodon, high 304-675-1417.
•
814-448-0322
or 614-246-5084. No Sun- mJ\ooge, t1,896. Coli 814nished or unfurnished . Rent
1175 or 614-446·7911 .
304· 418· 1917.
Mobile home. Call eve'1, negotiable . Call 614-992day Calla.
448-0110.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
614-446 -0508 .
6723 .
Ken's Weter Service. Wells
Waehers, dryers. refrlgere· Full alz:e hide-a-bed, off Y, runner green be1na pick
74 Motorcycles
white and beige atripe •.very
cisterna, pools 1illed . Ph on~
12x80 2 bdr .. 2 mi . ·from Unfurnlthad apartment for tora, r1ngea. Skagg1 Ap- good cond. t75.00, 304· your own 30 cents a ppound 1881 red T ·a.lrd Town lin·
614 -367-0623 or 61 4-367·
or $7 .00 bushel . Cell 614- daueKcallentcondltlon,new
Holzer at Evergreen . Child - rent in Syracuse. Call e 14· plioncoo, Upper lllver Rd. 876·6e22 .
7741 night or day.
booido
Stone
Cnot
Motel
.
446 ·4599 .
tlru con ottor 11:30 814ren accepted . Call614 -446· 992 · 7689 oftor 6 :00pm.
1981 Hondo XL&amp;OOS very
245-9450.
814-446·
7398.
3697 or 614-245-5223.
· good cond. Coli 614·258· Waugh 's Water Service .
Uving room auite •100.00.
1 000 lbs . potatoea for aele.
Apartments for rant . 1 with
1260 after 6PM ..
Wells. cis1erns. pools. Fast,
Wallher.
work•
e25.00
.
Tl·
19117
0\do
for
oalo
or
tndo,
2 bdr. mobile home for rent. 4 room•. 1 with 3 rooma. County Appliance. hie . blo 4 choln 050.00. 5 ft. S7 .00ebuahel . Riding lawn
reliable service . Call 614 eZ&amp;O.
Boo
Jomeo
Koontz
ot
Good
uHd
•pplllncea
and
Call R &amp; ~ Mobile Home Securitv deposit required .
Cloaa-out All uaed Honda '• 256·1240 or 614 -256 ·
coffeo toblo •20.00. 304- mower and g•rden tractor. Vinton.
TV
Mtl.
Opon
8AM
to
IIPM
.
Pari&lt;. Call 614-448-0527 Col\ 614-992· 5908 .
GMC 66 pic:kup truck. Call
at . reduced offer. Ctn be 1130. Reasonabl e rates .
Mon thru Sot. 814-448- 1176-6943.
614-667 -8516 •fter 4 :00 1111 Newport t40o. Coli sM,., at Honda Shop.
after 3PM .
.
1899, 627 3rd . Avo. &lt;lolllOne bedroom . totaleleetric , pollo, OH .
p.m.
Waugh's Water Se rvi ce
814·24&amp;-937&amp;.
Nice 2 bdr. trailer wliter- carpeted. Cloa, to I hopping .
55 Building Supplies · Winter potato11: Wa have a 1-:-:-=:--::--~--''--'­ 1979 CR250 Hondo. Excal - W~lls. cisterna, pools. Fast: '
traah paid . Oep. &amp; ref . req, Cell 614· 992-2094.
lon1 condition . e&amp;oo. Cell rehable service. Call 614·
Valley Fumlturt, new &amp;
good oupply of good Ken· 1179 Ford LTD l.ondou 4 614-992-7401.
Cell 814-446· 2637 .
256 - 1240 or 614· 256 •
uMd
.
Large
notion
of
qualnebec's on i'la'nd. tB .OO per door. low mileage. Cell
APARTMENTS , mobile
1130. Reasonable rates. ·
Small 2 bdr. trailer, water home1 , houaes. Pt. Plnaent Ity furni1urw. 1218 Eootom Building M1tarials
hundred . Your contolnor1 . 1_11_14_·_44_:.:8_·3:.1:.&amp;:.3:.;._ _ __
1979 Yomoho 1100. low
Block,
brick,
aewer
pipes,
Avo
..
&lt;loM\pollo.
paid, 1136 mo .. $125 dep ., and Gallipolis. 614· 446Humphrey Farms, Reeda- 1·
windows , llntala . etc . v\1\o, Ohio . 814-378-8295. 77 Chevy % ton pickup. mileage. Must sell . Cell Haul . limestone , sand , gra · ..
eir cond . Call 614 -446· 8221
814-892· 7582.
vel,d1rt, bulk or bag fertilizer
O.E. W111Mr • dryer Ml Cleude Wlntar1, Rio Grande. CloiOd Sundayo.
82.200. CoM t-814-112·
1364.
and lima. Excelalor Salt •
381111.
*2110
.
Kenmore
Waaher
0
.
Call
814-246-5121
.
Leureland Apartments, New
500 CC Suoukl. 8695. &lt;lood Works Inc. 638 E. Ma in St .,
2 bdr. mobile home on Bob Haven. Equal Houaing Op- t911, Whlrlpool2 door rotrlg-.
Canning peaches now eva II·
. condition. 610 CC Yameha Pomeroy. 614 -992-3691 .
McCormick Rd . Furnllhed. portunity. H11 vacancy. For er~tor ess. Kenmore dryer Utility bldg . ·~oclol : able. open 7 doyo waok, coli 1971 Dodge Colt. &lt;lood DOHC. .491. Coli 814o711,
Konmorw
goo
dryor
30'x40'x9
'
with
track
door
for prlce1 11 1upply Ia work car. Cell 114-812~
Co\1 614 -446-9689 .
· mort Information call 304·
•all. o .E. gel dryer o121 . • aerv . door , US266 limited , 304 - 773-6721 . ,_7:-&amp;:::1=2:::.7':-~---­ . 918 ' 3838.
882-3716 .
87 Upholstery
Skagg• Applloncoo, Uppor erected. Iron Horae Buildera
Mobil home unfurniehed.
Bob '• Market. Meson. W. 1
1982
Horley
Oovldoon
River
Rd.
Coli
114·448·
814-332-9746
coliact.
'
Vii .
1877 Vol,._gon llobbltfor
C•mP Conley arera. 304· Furni1htd one bedroom apt,
Dre110r. U,OOO. Coli 814·
- · Air oonditionod, Pl. 742-2808.
676· 1371 or 676-3812 . ·
adul11 onty, no pets, call 7388.
'tRISTATE
&lt;lood
condition.
Ph114Building m1terlal, concrete Half runners, logan Glentl,
otter 6:00 304-87&amp;-3788.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
948-2381 otter 12:00
blockl
all
aiaes.
lentila.
flu
Woohor-dryor ol78. Con bo
pumpkins. Leniara at Beech
1971. 1180 Kowooakl, 304- 1 1 83 Sec. AVe ., Gatlipoli l .
noon.
clay tile . Delivery
Hill, 304-67&amp;-1247.
87&amp;·11184.
.1 - · In .._,. Ploo18nt. ...n 11 HCond hou• lett in bloc:ks.
614-446-7833 or614-448·
44 Apamntmt
304-1175· 7112.
Vinton Corporation on Rt. Gallipolis 81oc:k Co ., Pin8
1833 .
1812 C.moro ZZI, lndion•·
for Rent
St..
Gallipolis.
Ohio
Call
110 for mora information
'73 Horloy Dollidoon Sport•·
polio
&amp;00
_
.
,
40,000
614-446-27B3 .
Furnished 1 br opt. Mt. call 304· 273-11048 .
59 For Sale or Trade mllol, oxc cond, ti,IOO.OO .... 304-8711·2484.
R ~ M Furniture Manutac ·
One bedroom apartment, Vernon Ava. 1-c, carpet, 2
turmg,
St. Rt. 7. Crown
firm.
304-112
·
32113
or
Block,
brick,
mortar
end
1171 Horloy lporotor , City, Oh . Coli 614-258carpeted, wuher · dryer utilitiea furniahed . Aduhs. Ueed Mayt•g wringer
812-2811.
m•aonry
1upplle1.
Mountain
01
8&amp;
.
304·676-2651
.
woohor,
.,to
bod,
rongo.
1111
7.100 ectUII mU.1, e•c 1470, coil Evo. 814. 446 .
hook-up. newty remodtltd,
C11e tractor for ule or tr1de
quiet neighborhood~ priv1t1 2 br oportmonu In Hondar· C-n • Snyder, 11511 So- S1o1o Block, Rt. 33, New for equal value. Call &amp;14 .. '72 vw 01,200.00. 304- oond. t1,100.00. Ploono 3438 . Old &amp; now
Hovon, W. Yo. 304-882304-171-15424.
entrance. 304·8715-41110 or
992- 2664 .
Upho1tered .
n. 304-876-1972 .
cond Avo .. &lt;loiHpollo, 114- 2222 .
8715·21 18.
lo
448· 1171 .
31t4-1175· 1982.

41

.~APTAIN EASY

•

.

D

(I)
CIIUrtahip/Eddie' o
Father
C!l Sportscenter
Cil Mary Tyler MOO&lt;o
()) Entertain..,.nt Tonight
CD Vl!heel at Fortune
0 ()) Wheal of Fortune · ,
()) Second City TV .
®News
(jj)
N
MacNeil/lehrer
ewshour

1978 Champion motor home, e" . cond., low mi·
loage. Coll614-446 -1297.

r-----------r-------;...---1

••

EVENING

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

(N ~ 6U6r;:t) GQod

•

9/10/85
7:00

75

Sentinei-Page- 9

Television
Viewing

Boats and
Motors for Sale

15 ft. Glast.ron with 66
Mere. and trailer. veJY good
cond . t1 ,900. Call 614·
446-7345.

AH•fHiilt

The Dei

•

l

r

�Tuesday, September 10, 1985

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Legion Auxiliary meets, awards Bennett Memorial Scholarships
Thret• s:IXl scholarships from the
Cora Bennett Memorial Scholar·
ship Fund were awarded at the
recent meeting of the American
Legion Auxiliary . Feeney Bennett

Past matrons
have meeting
·The Past Matrons ot Harrison.:
ville Chapter 255, Order of the
Eastern Star, rPCently attended the
outdoor drama . "Tecumseh, " aJ
Chili icorh~. Attending werP Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Rice, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine, Mr. a nd Mrs. Don
Wilson, Mr. a nd Mrs. Fred Geroge,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman Jr.,
Mrs. Eugene Atkins. Mrs. Virgil
Aikins, a nd a guest, Mrs. Garnet
Bachner.

Hospitalized
MicJ&lt;ey Werner, Lincoln Hill.
Pomeroy , remains hospita lized in
Missouri. Cards may be sent to her
in care of her son, Rick Werner,
15805 Old J a mestown Road , Florissant , Mo. 63034. Mrs. Werne-r is a
surgical patient at thl' hospital
there.

Calendar

Post128, Middleport .
The unit voted to contribute SlOto
Recipients of the scholarships are the muscular dlstrophy fund, and to
Jody Miller, daughter of Mr. and give to two famliles in distress.
Reported ill we..., Irene Christy.
Mrs. Bill Miller, whowUlattendRio
Nettle Hayes , Patty Mossman,
Grande College, and Mike Thomas,
Ralph Miller, and Mae Swisher.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Thomas,
Food for the farnUies of C.O. Fisher,
who will attend Hocking Technical
Harty Wyatt, Carl Horky, and .J.J .
College. The third schola rship will
Cremeans werP prepared by the
go to a college bound student from
the Xenia Veterans Orphans Home. auxiliary during the month.
Present at the meeting to rPport
.. Becky Tyree
- . presidect at the
on their actiVIties .at Buckeye'
m eet ing with a report beingglveh
the party at Arcadia Nursing Home, · GGirls' State we..., Polly Chadwell,
Coolville, on Aug.· 19. It was noted daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Paul
that $ll7 was spent on the party. Chadwell who served as a policewoCoing to assist with the part.\' were man and also on Ihe County Board of
Elections in the mock democracy;
Mrs. Tyl'l'e, Jean Gilmore, Pauline
Greathouse, Spanky Tyree. Diane Amy Molden, who served on several
.Jarvis, Trisha Tobias, GaJI Ferry, committees and was appointed fire
Reva Beach, Ethel Hawk , Gerry chief of her city; Daphane Dillard ,
Parsons, Vi rgil Parsons , and Fred daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Dlllard, who was elected to the
Hanel.

. Once children enter kinderprten, they spend as much
time learnin&amp; from their teacher u they do !earnrn&amp;
from their parents. Teachers play a lar&amp;e part rn shap·
in&amp; their pupils' attitudes, toward death and toward
many other subjects.
Children oft~ are anxious about d~ath . If a teacber refuses to discuss it the taboo rs retnforced. If, on. the
other hand, the teachtl makes unml!stic axplanatrons
of death, studies havesho~n that chrl~ren can become
even more anxious. They mrpt have nrchtmares or~~­
come frightened when someone they love takes a trrp.
It is best lor teachers to be IS honest as possible when
children ask them about death. Dyinc is. a pa~ ollr!•·
and treating it as such can help allay chtldren s anKreties. We, as funeral directors. often lecture to .school
and orpnizations about death and funf!al ser~rces . II
you would like more information on thrs, please call

'

''GETTING YOU THERE SAFELYt
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCK TIRES

us ..

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END-WORK
*BATIERIES *TIRE REPAIR

Pl~- rt'oats~~~~

LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND. OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON.-SAT.; ·B-8 FRI.

J/urr-/ .Ytme

Sml~e

PH. 742-3088

(6141 112-1141
101-ll'OIIT, 0!110

James N. Blower

I............~M~a:·s~t:er~C~a~r~d~a~n~d~V~i:sa~W~e~lc~o~m~e~. . . . . . . . . .~ '

Plut. . .Aff1ntlon fD Ostsll/
Bill Blower

TUE.')Dt\ y

POMEROY
Chapter, Beta
meeting, 7:30
pufllOse room
Center .

- Ohio Eta Phi
Sigma Phi Sorority
Tuesday in mull I·
of Senior Citizens

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet Tuesday evening,
7:30p.m ., in regular session.
POMEROY - Meigs Athletic
Boosters will meet 7 p.m . Tuesday
at the high school. Belpre game
films will be shown. Junior High
parent s are invited to attend . 1.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Preceptor Chapter . Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. Thursday in Riverboat Room
of Diamond Savings a nd Loan Co.

~OFA

51L.UPfll.

•Brown Plaid
Hercuton

DINffiE SETS

5 PIECE SET

•

36"X60" Trestle Table

And Four Choirs

Plus Six Choil"'

RingJN.c.kloc•
Holdet- 9"X31ft ")(2"/, "

~ · -""': ·:~ f ·tul~i&lt;lflll &lt;lftCI !IHp · l&lt;&gt;e~H
looo:h ••~•• r:'" ., &lt;IOmfattablo ..,., "'" ...II
""" comlorttlblo look . "~d woth th kit"·
driH Mllll '-&lt;elwood lttllloo oncl Ooct.,.
"''.,...:! tiltrlll.u• cO&lt;o rUoiiiOfto ,

(II&lt;CIIIIy II bo.o~l rlefl!l" r'

RECLINERS

Besl Buy of The Year!
ANNIVERSARY SPfCIAL

In September 1950. Malon Furniture started In business
w ith two floors and 5,000 sq . It, of floor space . Since then,
we hove expanded to 10,000 sq . ft. and four floors of
display area. We ore celebrating our 35th year in business.
We are offerlnp outstanding discounts on furniture , op·
pliances and TV s. We wish to thanlc the public for their fine
support throughout the years .
Come visit us during our re)ebrof ion

Rog $118'

'l39...

....

-

J

I

ft

$78.
CIEI!· IlllT OUR

LoQ

•AYollabl• In

/

1'W"'• -

~u.PER

!'RIO! 01; Till!!&gt; .souo l&amp;lapO
"l·IIM ..ll&gt;liijETTE
Oak or Pin. Finlah.

:::,~,._
't.o...

•

Available In Herculon

REG.
1

POMEROY- School of Instnwtion will be conducted when Ma1y
Shrine. Whiti' Shrine of .JflrUScl lem
meets al R p.m . Friday a t the
Pomeroy Ma sonic Temple.

299 ."

SEALY

BEDDING

BY BASSETT

AMERICAN WAY SERIES

!179" Set
.,.'229"
Sol'
SOFP.· Sl.E(P£11.
,, Quoen ...... !299" Sol
Kin• , "" • ., .'449" Sot

QtW!L•flt&gt;e

Birthday noted

Twin ........

Fu11 .......

SETS ONLY !!!

'60."" Eoc:h

~,~.::,;;
REMOTE cOtm!OL
COLOR TV

.
-,
_........... ..........,...... ..
.............
...
.._.. ......, ,._,....
~L"rr~w-r-.o..

I·''""'·-··
I"'""'' ""''· ~1101
·-·
''" ~

" fNO Tl\&amp;lf
otl COFFtt ll'&amp;£
'It H£'1( Tl\131.£

YouR.
CHOICE...

. • ':&gt;···

~~#

~f

$79

..
............
... .... . ......
......._,,_..............
.....
.
,,
.. .. .. ...
................. ,,.... .,,
~

~

• fliOf''""' " ~· "-~

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MASON FURNITURE CO.

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HERMAN GRATE, OWNER

(304) 773·5592

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enttne
. 2 S8ctions, 16 Pages 26 Cent~&lt;;
-.. A Multi~edia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Wed.nesday, September 11, 1985

Former insurer s8ys Home State had buyer
IJy LEE LEONARD

Hunsche said Fil'st National made the offer on
March 7, say!ng it would assume all Home State
liabllitles, pay off the debentures (higlr-lncome,
high-risk investments) and pay a 4percent premlum.
The ODGFwas to back the thriftwithits$81mWion
Insurance fund and the state was being asked to ldck
In $!1) million to protect against runs on the institu lion,
which had just lost $140 rnlllion In the closing of a
Florida securities firm.
"Marvin (L. Warner, Home State's owner) was
agreeable to It," said Hunsche. "I understand he
would have given up his stock for $1."
Hunsche sald that the Celeste administration was
able to come up with $50 million in funds from the
state Commerce Department but they and the Ohio
attorney general's oftiee "had difficulty (with
providing state funds fOr) backing a collJOrate
entity."
Hunsche said that on Saturday, March 9, First
National was "rPady to close on the deal that was
made Thursday. He (Waddell) had the personnel in
place and was rPady to charge ahead. They were
ready to tal&lt;e over every branch, every sign,
everything."
Bul Celeste went to 'Cleveland to meet with major

Ul'l Starehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The Flrst National Bank of
Cincinnati' offered to buy the Home State Savings
Bank two days before it closed last March, but state
officials couldn't round up the required $8) mUlion and
chose to look for a better deal, according to Home
State's former insurer.
As a result, said Donald R. Hunsche, executive vice
president of the Ohlo Deposit Guarantee Fund, First
National officials became "provol&lt;ed" at the
administration of Gov. Richard F . Celeste, therP were
no further offers and Celeste ended upcloslng70olber
savings and loans a week later.
It was mid-June before Home State reopened as
.Hunter Savings Association, at a cost ro the state of
$120 million.
Hunsc)le testified Tuesday before the· Joint Select
Committee on Savings and Loans. which is
investigating the cause of the savings and loan crisis
of last spring.
·
The offer for Home State, made by First Na tiona I
president Oliver Waddell, had been reported last
April but never described in detail under oath, as
Hun'!Che did during his testimony .

A decision on Monday from Meigs
County Common Pleas Judge
Charles Knight will determine if
evidence wUI be suppressed in the
trial of 40-year-old Joseph Taylor,
charged with aggravated murder In
the July 21 shootingdeathofhlswife,
MarUyn Timmons Taylor.
A hearing on the motion to
suppress evidence was held Tuesday in Meigs County.
Athens Allorney Herman Carson,
representing the defendant. is
requesting that any and all state·
ments made b~ Taylor to law
enforcement ofticers on the night of
the shooting be excluded from the
court file. Carson alleges that even
though Taylor was l't'ad his rights,

REVOLVING

7 PIECE SET

36"X48" Trntle Table

THURSDAY
POMEROY ~ Rock Springs
C ra ngewili mCPI at Bp.m. Thursday
night all he hall .

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gilmore,
Bloomingsbull(. entertained re·
cently with ·a celebration in obser·
vance of the birthday of hls mother.
Mrs. Leola Gilmore, Beach Grove
Road . Rutland .
Attending werP Kevin Wllliams,
Chris Williams , Sandy Thompson,
KJm Thompson, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Carroil Gilmore, Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Lee Gilmore. Travis and
Stacey, and Gary Gilmoll' , Mr. and
Mr. Ronnie Starcher, Abby Thompson, Cindy Hutton , Lloyd and Angel
Harmon , a ll of Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs . Everett Gilmore.
Jared and Charlie. Edna Nancy,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Nance and
Mickey, Mrs. Gina Davis, Syra cuse: Mr. and Mrs. David Nance,
David. Jr.. and Jessica, Letart
Falls, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bolin,
Martin.

Vol.35, No .104

· Copyrighted 1986

and were rPported to have an
Informal agreement on the framework for a solution.

bankers, who wantt;d more Information on Home.
State's finances. "It was a $600 mllllon purchase and
the bankers said there was no way they were going to
make a purchase based on a scribbled-out balance
sheet," said Hunsche.
Hunsche said the adminlstrallon's communication
with First Nallonal ceased on Saturday night , after
Home State had closed voluntarily.
"We had the answers to the problem if we could
have had the money to do it," said Hunsche. "In
retrospect it probably would have been much
cheaper fort he state. II could have come off Saturday
morning. Mr. Waddell was rPady to do it"
Much of the queslloning of Hunsche centered
around the ODGF's approval In August 1984 of a
merger of Home State. a m e mber thrift, with Home
State Financial, Inc., a Warner holding company.
Thomas Ileal, counsel for the joint committee,
questioned why the ODGF would approve the merger
when Home Stat e officials were Ignoring advice to
reduce their investments In ESM Government
Securities, Inc. , Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
Hunsehe said the ODGF approved the merger ,
hopeful that Home State would incrPase its income
and get out of the problem.
· ·

he was stUI unclear as to who hewas
talking with on that night Both
Sheriff Howard Frank and Paul
Gerard, investigator·for the Meigs
County prosecutor, had conversations with Taylor.
Carson alleges that at one point
during the evening, Taylor asked
Gerard If he was his attorney. To
prove his l"'lnt1 Carson attempted to
play a tape ~rding of _the
conversation, however, !he recording was nearly Inaudible. The judge
said that unlesstberecordlngcan be
enhanced, ·It cannot be used as
evidence and he (the judge) cannot
·make an evaluation on thai part of
the motion.
The second part oft he motion asks

that ail physical evldence taken
from Taylor's residence on the night
of the shooting, including pictures,
be suppressed because the authori ties had no search warrant .
Called to testify, Sheriff Frank
said he did lal&lt;ea gun from the scene
and ,that blood samples were
gathered from the doorway by
Gerard. Tlie sheriff said he did not
obtain a search warrant that night.
According ·to Fred Crow, UI.
county prosecutor, l't'cent case laws
aliow authorities to preserve a
crime scene without warrant.
Judge KnJght wlll provide a
written decision on this matter
before noon on Monday .

Taylor said guilty on ·lesser charge
Lindsay Taylor was found inoocent of a charge of felonious assault·
but guilty of a lesser charge of
assaull when a jury returned to the
Meigs County Common Pleas
Courtroom about 4:15p.m. Tuesday
afternoon.
The jury deliberated about five
and one half hours, breaking for
lunch and twice to have specific
points of law explained more fullyfelonious assault and the lesser
included charge of assault- and the
burden of proof.
At the request of Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Fred Crow,
JJJ. each jury member was polled on
the verdict . Each member said yes.
Taylor was remanded to ihe
custody of Meigs County Sheriff
Howard Frank until sentencing.
The maximum penalty for the
conviction is six months in the
countr jail and a $100l fine, or both.
The37-year-old Taylor has been In
custodY for several months on a
chargoi of aggravated murder In
connection with the deatl) of Danny
Melton in October 19&amp;1.
The felonious assault charge
stems from an Incident onMarchOO,
1978, involving Jack Scarbrough, of
LongBottom. Taylor was arraigned
on that charge on AprD 00, 1979, al
which time he pleaded Innocent. He
; was released on a PJOO bond and a
trial date was set for June 1 of thai
year. Taylor then left the jurisdiction of Meigs County and the trtal
never took plaee.lt was oot until his
arrest In connect ion with the Melton
death that the assault charge was
again before him.
Taytor•s murder Ilia I is scheduled

to begin 9 a.m. Sept. 21, in Meigs
CO!lnty Common Pleas Court.
In I'Pgard to Tuesday's verdict,
Taylor's altomeys, Steve Story and

Von Cox. said they were pleased
with the result and felt the verdict
was consistent with the evidence
presented in the case.

-

FOUND GUD.TY ON IJ!1lSI!:R CHARGE - u. ' -~ Taylor was
found p8ly &lt;#.a._. clutrp of
•Mia a ~~evea-)'I!U'&lt;IId caae wbi.Jh
wl'llpplid up .........., aft - I n Melp Cowlt7
PleM Court.
Ta)'lor, pldured here Ill M _ . . .-It llpJlMI'M&lt;le wl&amp;h one of hit!
alloraeys, Sieve staey, ci Poii&amp;ot, ntnl8blla CUIIDil,y ~ the Melp

ec.,.,...,

COliMyJall. Hepes•tltlll~. IISforiDII'IIer.

'

'

'

"Did It ever occu r to you to say 'no' ?" asked Ileal.
"We were looking a t it, not to deprive them of
earnings but lo allow them to work their way out ,''
responded Hunsche. " We were trying to work with
them to accompllsh an objective."
Though the merger was consummated in August
1984, Warner never signed the papers until Feb. ro,
1985, Hunsche said.
Under questioning, he said he did nor believe
Warner changed the contract to rid himself of
personal llabllity in any Home State collapse.
"As far as we were concerned, Marvin Warner and
Home State were bound together by the merger,"
said Hunsche.
Represent a lives of Arthur Andersen &amp; Co. testified
that their firm audited Home State In 1981-&amp;'land went
beyond generally accepted standards In pointing out
the dangers of Home State's investments in ESM.
Lee B. Brown, pa riner and a regional director ~f the
firm, said an auditing firm evaluates financial
statement s but does nol " manage Its client's business
or parllcipate in investment decision-mal&lt;lng." That,
he said, was up to Home State'sotficers and board of
directors.

Note no progress
•
• •
m negotiations

followed through.
Marjory Pizzuti, deputy directQr
for marketing and research in the
department, said she was -~ ' not
surP" If the matter would be ready
for tbe scheduled board meeting.
"We are still negotiating and are
very close 1D an agreement," she
said.
Republicans complained of "favoritism and, cronyism" in the
administration's awarding of the
two-year pact to H~meroffMil­
enthal Inc., Columbus, the firm
which produoed Celeste's 1982
campaign media.

Decision expected.· M~nday

POMEROY The Ca tholic
Women's Club will mP&lt;'t Wednes·
duv in the activities building with a
roS.,ary a t 7 p.m. and the meeting at
7:30p. m . Thcotficcrsoflheclubwili
be the host~sscs.

FRIDAY
POMERbY -Trinity Chu rch in
Pomeroy will serve lunch and
evming m eals Friday betw&lt;&gt;en 1l
a. m .. and 7 p.m . Sandwic hes,
chicken a nd noodles, I'O lis. coles law,
potato salad, baked beans. desS!'rts
a nd beverages will be availabi&lt;'.

•

at

If the agreement is finalized it
could end, for the time being, the
political squabbling threatening to
halt the Department of De&gt;velopment's plans to attract travelers to
the state in tbe fall and winter.
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, RThe Controlling Board was to
meet at 9: JO a.m.. but it was not Cinclnnati, who holds a key vote on
the Controlling Boafd, said !le had
certain that a reviSed contract
carrie to terms with the depart!IIPilt,
re&lt;J!!es.lftpm.J he Ohio Deparln)ent
· and that the Issue would be beforP
of De&gt;velopmenl would be ready.
The two sides negotiated Tuesday · the board again If the department

POMEROY -The regular meet . ings of Pomeroy Chapter 81 RAM
and Bosworth Counci146R&amp;SM will
be held a t7: 30 p.m . Wednesday.

LAUREL CLIFF- l.aurc l Cliff
&amp; •rrer H~a tth Club. 7:30 p.m.
Thursdu~· a t home of Iva Pow&lt;'il.

e

COLUMBUS (UPI)- The state
Controlling Board was prepared
today to consider a compmmise
agree~ I between Statehouse Republicans and the administration of
Gov. Richard F. Celeste on how ro
restore a $6.2 million rourlsm
advertising contract rebuffed by the
GOP two weeks ago.

CUEEIJ- SIZE

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Amateur Gardeners meet 8 p .m .
Wednesday, Middleport PresbyterIan Church, Mrs . Elizabeth Burkett
will be hostess for Ibe m['('ting.

RACINE- Racine United Metho·
WomC'n an• stx&gt;nSOtiQ,g a
chick&lt;'n nood iP dinner a t the church
on Wednesday. Serving will begin at
4p.m .

..

Agreement near on contract

BRADBURY - Bradbury PTO
will mf.'f't Tuesday evening at 7: 30
p.m.

di sl

eather _map
........

SHOULD ·TEACHERS TALl ABOUT .D.EATH?

on:

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

33178 Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
992·3169. Jt was reported that -the
new eighth district pll'Sidenl is Mrs.
Catherine curl, Crooksville, elected
at the summer conference.
.
Katheryn Met?ger. chaplain, ha&lt;
prayer for the meeting attended ~
26 members and lhr«' guests.

system.
The door prize sent by Etta Will
was won by Bonnie Dailey. The fall
conference school of Instruct ion will
be held at Middleport on Ocl. 3wlth
registration to begin at 9 a.m.
Dinner reservations must be rnadr
by Sept. 28 with Mrs. Albert Roush ,

Boar·d of Elections. and also se•ved
as a secretory In Ont&gt; of the county
offices; Anna Gil}&lt;cy , daughter of
Mr.andMrs. Fran}&lt; Gilkey, Jr. ,and
Terri Starcher, daughter ci Mr . and
Mrs. Roger Starcher, who held both
elected and appointed positions in
the workshop on the democratic

NAMED Tj) COUNCD.. JamesCiatworthy,llfeiime res~
dent ol Meigs Counly, has been
appointed to . serve on Middleport VWage Council ro flU the
unexpired tenn of the late Carl
Horky which expires on Dec. 31,
t987. Retired, Clatworthy is
active in civic affairs IU!d in
Ma.•oolc Lodge activities ol the
area. He and his wife, Emma
Kay, reside at 730 High St. In
Middleport.
·

House panel puts
OK on farm bill
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Hou se Agriculture Committee. ending months of haggling as the farm
economic crisis wo•·sened, sent the
Hou se a farmbili(hat would cut crop
supports to m ake U.S . exports more
competitive with foreign product s.

WASHINGTON (UPI J - NPgotiators for the United St('('lworkers
union and Wheeling-Pirtsbull(h
Steel Corp. met under lht' wa tchfui
eye of a federal mediator but no
progress was rPported on a new
contract tor 8,200 striking steelworkers in three states.
The meetings broke off about 6
p.m. Tuesday when the . union
r€1Jresen1atlves left : There was no
Indication wbelhPr other meetings
would be held .
Paul Rllsen . director of I he USW's
District 23, had little to say ro
reporters .
•·we had a mecting," he said.
" The mwting was. at IX's1 ,

lnforrn&lt;:~tivl'. "

"We'1e talking," wa s the only
comment from Joseph Scalise, vice
pres ident and chief negotiator tor
Wheeling-Pittsburgh.
The meetings were called by Kay
McMurray, director of the Federal
Mediation and Conciliation Service.
An FMCS spokesman said the two
parties met first •in a joint session,
chaired by McMurray . After lunch,
the union and management negol!a rors adjourned to separat&lt;' moms
whJI P McMurr·ay shu tiled between
them .
The meeting was the first between
the two sirn's since ,July 20.

Thunderstorms cool some sectors
By United Pres.•lnt~nwtlonal
(',ool tempcralun_" had much ol the North shivering early inday
after earlier thunder.tonns bringing high winds barreled into
Oklahoma, hlowing down power Unes and Injuring five Oklahoma
National Guard memhers.
In Fabia:&lt;, Va. , one soldier died and five othefli were under
observation alter helng struck hy tightnlng in a stonn that hit the Fort
Belvoir Army ha.•e Tuesday evenlnll'.
A Fort Belvoir spokesman said six soldiers werestru.c k hy tightnlng
about 6: :.1 p.m. EDT Tuesday while they were playing soccer at the
'hase, Names were helng wllhheld untU relatives were notified,
Washington, D.C .. sweltered in94-degree heat Tuesday fora record
eighth stt".aight day, breaking a seven-day Septemher heat wave
n...:ord that had stood since JSSI.
A violent tltunderstonn hit the nation's capital Tu&lt;!iday evening,
roppllng utility Unes IU!d uprooting trees, including one that leU acros.•
a subway ti"JCk in RockvUie. Md., and halted rail service brleOy hut
caused no damage.

Chamber officials get more
information on center project
Pomeroy Chamber ot Commerce
members heard aspec ts of !he
Flicker 's Cinema Pub Entertain·
ment Center concept when Alber1
Ackerman, of the Ackerman Brokerage Corporation, spoke a t Tuesday 's regular meeting.
The lJleetlng was heldal the Ohio
Power Company office in Pomeroy.
In June, Flickers sent letters to
chambers of commerce statewide
in an effort to introduce their
operation and. generate Interest for
expansion to other areas. Pomeroy
Chamber answered the iettPr and
requested more lnfonnation.
As explained ty Ackerman,
Flickers Cinema Pubs combine
going to the movies with eating and
drinking. The pubs are family
oriented and care is taken to select
only outstanding movie altractlons
that can be e,nJoyed by all' ages.
Family nights and senior citizen's
nights are part of the concept, as
well as nursery care for children.
Flickers Cinema Pubs are open
dally, year round, except for
Christmas Eve, and low admission
prices have helped to make the
company's pilot operation a huge
success.
The pilot operation is located in
the Cotumoos area or Worthington
wherp an average of 4000-500!

people a week are attracted to the
business Ackerman said. The pilot
has been in business for I he past five

Invest m ent fi rm which provides the
financial ba cking. The pubs may be
fin anced one of rlu·ee ways Ackrryears.
man said, including. ou tright buying
At this time, Ackerman has a list by the joint vcn rurc; limited
with morP than 90 possible locations partnerships wil h loca l investors
In the stat!'. Although Pomeroy, nor buy ing shares; or franchising an
any other location in Meigs County , alrPady ex isting tht•ate r.
is on the preferred lis t, Ackennan
Ackerman said the joint ventui'P
did not rule out Pomeroy as a decided yesterda y to purchase two
possible locaNon . " We'll go any - already existing theaters, onP in ·
where anyone can assure us Dayton and the oth&lt;'r in Columoos.
potential bu-s in ess .." said .
Questions from chambN
AckPrman.
·
members werl' answer({) b~· Ack~r­
Athens has d&lt;'finar eiy been man foilowjng his presentation and
s ingled out as a possible local ion a nd questlonairl's werP di s tributed .
Ackerman said tbe company Is
among the group for completion.
eonsidering convert ing the Athena
In other business , Chamber
Theater to a Flickers.
President Ron Ash announced thai
As explained by Acket'tl1an, Pomeroy ChamlX'r will be applying
community Interest, as well as
for travel and tomism funds from
population , plays a big part In
thP state, perhaps In conjunction
choosing a location .
with Middleport Chamber, to deAccording to Ackerman, an
VE'lop a brochure to highlight local
existing building may be converted
attractions. Ash Introduced Steve
or property maybe purchased and a
Powell , of Meigs County's Parks
new building constructed for
and RecrPation Committee, to the
Flickers. Ten lhousand squartoo feet
group.
of spaC&lt;' are needed for each twin
Ash also announced that Tom
c inema facllily and the average cost
Reed would again head Pomeroy's
to build or convert Is In tllf' $.l!O,OOJ community Halloween party:
neighborhood.
Next month's chamber meeting
Flickers Is , a joint venturP
will again be held at the Ohio Power
between G.T. Flickers, Inc., which
office.
manages the operations, and an

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