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                  <text>73

Ven1 &amp; 4 W.O .

198!iV2 S -1 0 Blazer 4~~:4.
loaded . 900 miles .

116.100. oell for $14,400.
Buy now. Call 614-446-

fill

\1j'}~~ fi}ll
THATSCRAMILEDWORDGAME
~ ~ ~~·
by Henrt Arnold and Bob Lee

79

Home•
&amp; Campara .

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

1977 Dodge 22 ft , motor
home, exc . cond. e10.500.
489 Maple St., Gallipolis.

lour ordinary words,

Colt 614·446·0711

evenings.

1978 Wilderneas camper .
Slaepe 6. carefree roll-out
awning. completely aelfcontelned . A-1 condition .

Call614-446-3563.

1951 Willy Jeep, runa good,
eJttra ,parts and new battery,

Camper 1811lft .. pull type,

304-675-1417.

1972, oteeps 6. e1.600. Coli
614-388·8664or614-682·
8347.

DID THE:

X- ~AI!~:' MOVIE
MAKE AN'( MONEY?'
N1 N arra.nge )he Circled letters 10
to .. n lhe surpnse answer, as s~g·
gesled by the aoove G&amp;rtoon.
~&lt;:11"'""'&lt;1

Motorcycles
Print answer here: "

Close- out All used Honda' t
at reduced offer. Can be
seen at Honda Shop. ·
' ".,;le&lt;dla) 5
Jl

KX f X j

I

17

"

10Y:tft. self-contained truck
cemper. Very good condi ·
tion: Willing to. negotiate.

Call 614-986-3839.

1974 Hannacraft camping
trailer. 24 ft., awning and

complete hitch. $2500. Coli
5~~~ay 614-567-3826.

(Answers
Jumbles PROBE USURY STRONG MUTION
Answer: How he worked his way " down·· in the
Camping trailer. 1974 VelHonda XR 100, XR 200. &amp;
world-FROM BOTIOMS ''UP"
lowstone . 22 ft. Self ·
CR 480. Call 614-388· ' - - - - - - . . . . , . . . . , - - , . . . . - - - - - - - - - ! c o n t a i n e d . good condition .

r

9938.

For sale 1974 Honda XL250
good co n d . . new tires ,

f450 . Coli 614-245-9503

Phone 614-992-3921.

75

eftQr 7PM .

Boats and
Motors for Sale

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

600 CC Susuki. $595 . Good

condition. 550 CC Yamaha

OOHC. $495. C•ll 614985-3839.
1982

Harley

Davidson

Dreuer. $5 ,000. Call 614·

742-2806.

1982 Ha r bour Mauer
houseboat, 38 fl . Flying
bridge, only 230 hours on
twih 470 Mercruisers Vdrive . 7.5 Kv Kohlef ~:~enara ­
tor. Boat like new, located in
Marfieta. Ohio . 304·428·

8114.
1981 Kowosoki 305 . 2.3001 - - - - - - - - - -

actual miles. New battery.
Like naw. $800 firm . 614992-3936 alter 4:30 &amp;

weekends.

75

Boats and
Motors lor Sale

14 ft . Starc raft motor,
trailer. all accessories. 304·

1978 Champion motorhome, e:w: . cond .• low mi-

laaga. Call 614-446·1299.

1973 Dodge mini motof
home. 20 h .. 6 new tires,
new air cond .. sleeps 6,

$7,000. Also 1981 Buick

Skylark, all power, 83,000.

Call 514-446-4230.

985-3808.
Camper insert unit for 8 tt
bed. complete with queen
size bed and table, exc

shapa. 6250.00. 304-8822002.

8 .9 per cent APR available
on all new mini motor homes
in stock. Hurry while supply
lasts. Seltz.ef'S World of
Camping, Huntington 304736-5287; Charleston 304-

348-CAMP.

675-4127.

I:;::;::::;:=::::::====
76

8 ft. truck camper. Sleeps
six. Refrigerater. furnace,
stove-oven . $1.000. 614-

Auto Parts

448-7345.

after SPM .

Home
Improvement•

James Bov• Water Service.

1---------8ASEMEN1"
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gUIIrantee. local reference•
furniehed. Frea eetimate1.

Coli collect 1-814·237·

0488, day or night . Roger•
Basement Waterproofing.
O.and M . co·n trectora. Vinyl
siding. replacement win·
dows, lnaulating, roofing,
nevv and remodeling, con-

creto. Call 304·773·6131 .

J .and L. lnatellation. Roofing, vinyl siding, ltorm doors
and windows. Free esti·

matas. Call 814 - 992-~772.
.
'
.
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

Pump ulea. service. Regiatared in Ohio. All work

guaranteed. ci.n 304-273·
2811 . Ravenswood. W. V1.

RON'S Television Service.
House calls on RCA, Quezar.
GE . Specialing jn Zenith.

Coli 304-576-2398 or 614446-24&amp;4.
Fetly Treo Trimming. stump

83

Atoo pooli filled. Coli 814268·1 141 or 814-448·
1176 or 814-446-7911.

Excavating

Good-1

Excaveting, b ....
mentt, foot..,l, drlviiWays,
eeptlc tanks, landse11plng.

Cell anytime 114-446-

4637, Jomoo L. Dovioon, Jr.

owner.
Dozer Work· land claering,
lendiCaplng. ate. Free tlti-

Construction

Co .•

Rutlond, Oh. 814-742-

2903. Baaements, Footlt'l.
Concrete work, Backhoe's,
Dozer &amp; Ditcher. Dump
trucks. 6 weter·gn-eewer·
electrlc•l linea.
.1-

85

MORTGAGE MONEY
No Mon-v Down For V•·
terana. Low •• 3% FHA, 15%
com,o•ntlo'iill. Fl•td and vari·
abl• ratea . Alto refinancing.

Ken'a Water Service. Well•.
ci1ttrn1. poole filled. Phone

7741 night or day.

VIckie HtUidfM-445-4042

Waugh's Weter Service ·.
WaUs, ciatema# pool1. Fait,

rolloblo Hnllco. Coli 814·
256·1240 or 614-256·
~eaaonable

Weugh'a Weter Service.
Walla, cla..rna, pools. Fall,

Upholstery

$SAVE'$

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP.

PLASTIC PIPE
PRODUCTS

Generel Hauling

4" Sewer ............. $3.70

11.63 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.

Haul limeatone, sand. gra- 814-448-7833 or 614-448vel,dirt. bulk or bag fertili1er 1833.

4" Ell ................... $1.00
I" 160# Water ...... 19•
I" Gas P'tpt
I a•
.. ......... .
.
Dlflw.tu,

ond lime. E•colslor Bolt
Works Inc . 638 E. Main St., R • M Furniture Manufac·
Pomeroy. 614-992-3891.
turing, St. Rt. 7. Crown
City, Oh. Call 614-256Will do water houllng, fill 1470, ,.11 Eve. 614-446ctoteni and fill owimming 3 4 3 8 . 01 d &amp; new

,.r,,
r•

•• 0
PH. 304·295·7145

=====.Jl=Mi:'•:;•;:r:ai===W=·~V;•:·;!.

rem
call 304.6 7 5- Ilo.:p:oo:':"·:C:o:':'8:1:4:·:99:2:·:5:8:58:.J:U:ph::o:•t:•::r•:d:.
1331ova!.
.
RINGLES"S SERVICE. ex·
perienced carpenter. electrician. mason, painter, fOOting (including hot ur
application} 304-676-2088

or 676-7368.
Starke Tree and Lawn Service, stun,p removal , 304·

576-2010.
Wallpapering, neat and pre·
cise. Refefences available.

&amp;. tires, 15 ',

82

Plumbing
8t Heating

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio ·
Phone 614-446-3888 or

614-446-4477

Ask Yourself lhis Question-Then list With Us
*Willis T. Leadingham, Realtor. Ph . Home 446-9539

SUNDAY PUZZ.LER

PH. OFFICE 4411-71199

ACROSS
1 Experience
6 Narrow, flat boards

11 Ogre
18 Mohammedan

BEAUTIFUL HOME
30 Acres - 15 tillable approx. 300 sq. It of living
space. Briar Hill stone and
cedar outside coverin&amp; 10
rooms, 4 bedrooms. 3 baths.
modern and lully equipped
knchen. real beam ceiling 'horn
Umon Cenlral, Columbus). 2
car garage. large screened m

back pOrch with barbecue.
located mGreen Twp. c~se lo
Gallipolis. lots more. Mull see.
Call now lor appointmenl
11629

I
•

5 BEDROOM 1\Q.I!.E tofa.!€!1 alOPj Gartield Ave Newlypamled

LUXURIOUS
Country estate with 3 Indiana
Stone lireplaces ;nciuding ooe
in masler su;te. 4 BR lola!, 21h
baths. ll2 acres m/1jusl short
d1stance from GallipOlis. This
cuslom buill log horne features
nearly 3700 sq. n.ol beautifully
decorated and well planned
hving. Stunning living and

dining area with beautilui
hardwood lloors. The lovely
krtchen is lully equipped and
d e~gned lor convenience.
Central healing and air.
Attached garage Includes 5
room caretaker home.
#510

NEW ON THE MARKET
Ideal home lor lamily: 7 rrns.. 3 bedrooms. 2 balhs, modern
krtchen. Nice landscaped lot County water and sewer. Qly school
distriCt CaH lor more inlormal;on. N ~e horne.
#530

inside and ool New carpet just waiting lor a new a.vner. Pr~e
$30.001.

IY&gt; ACRE WITH COUNTRY SETTING
Nice and solid 2 bedroom horne located on state highway w;th no
real close nerghbors. Rural water system ~u s dniled and a dug
well. Edra water lap lor a mo~ le home hookup. Nice resttul area
aner a day's work.
#574

OWNER FINANCING - HANOMAN SPECIAL
Make us an oiler. 810omhome in Ihe Heatley Addiilon lo 81dwell. 4
bedrooms, built·in cabinels, dbL s/ ~nk, shin~e mol, wood or coal
heater. apple trees. ~de porch. rural wafer system. Call us now.
#522

42 ACRES IN COUNTRY
5 rooms, remodeled l'om~ one lloor. bath, front porch. lllilled well
with electric pump. Pan~ed walls, carpeting and hno. Hurry. Prited
$26,900.
#635

noble

19 Unspoken
20 Enliven
21 Entreaty
23 Majority
24 Skill
26 Chinese wax

27 Nole ol scale
29 Publish
30 Dray
31 Fishing net
32 Entire
33 Ethiopian lllle
34 Harbor
35 Journey forth
36 Walkers
38 Sufferers lrom

Hansen's disease
40 Kind of curve

41 Spar
42 Prohibits
43 Short sleep
45 Proportion
46 Cooled lava
47 Light rain

48 Pilch
49 Cofleehouses
51 Fatstrter
52
53
54
55
57

A state : abbr.
In music, high
Urge on
Softens in temper
Unit of Siamese
currency

58 Frighten
60 Bumpkin
61 Meadow
62 More unusual

64 Steamship: abbr.

65 Compass point
66tsill
67 Untidy
69 Dwelled
11 Emmel

131 Rabbit
132 Toward shelter
133 Sons ol the
American

73 Summons
74 GOlf mounds

134 Seine
136 Covers
137 Rant
138 Abounds
139 Latin conjunction
140 Eskers
141 Sptgol
142 Small amount
143 Bog

33 Ne... network
35 Swift .
36Workman

85 Makes strong

144 Preface

87 Lampt'eyS

146 Angry

111 Conceded
47 Female horse
48 Those wno manage 112 Sui1S
property for others 113 Appoinlmen1
49 Stop
116 Auricle
50 Denude
118 Convey

76 Twain character
79 Part ofwindow
frame: pi.

B1 French summer
82 Mindiano
tribesman

84 Shovvery
90 Commemorative

marches

92 Toll
93 Lasso
95 Prophets
97 Hold on property
98 Saint: abbr.
99 Beholdl
·101 Breaks suddenly
103 Collection of facts

Revolution: abbr.

148 European capital

149 Swell
150 Famed
151 Wild buflalo of
India

25 Regret
27 Lassos
28 Classifies

94 Part of church: pl.
96 Sun god 98 Seasoning .
99 Privilege

30 Hurl
31 Conflagration

37 More secure

39 Crony
41 Distance measure
42 Dismiss
44 Pertaining to
punishment

54 Courteous

DOWN
mammals

person

59 Deer's horn
60 Animated
61 French article

104 Part of clarinet

2 Calkin
3 Chaii

105 Foundations

4 Far: comb. form

108 Suffix: tending lo
110 Far
112 Cooling devices

5 Teutonic deify

113 Pigeon pea
1 14 Selenium symbol

8 Perform

72 Insect egg

9 Agave plant

73 Land surrounded
by water

115 Give up
117 Acts
118 Warble
1 19 Small lump on skin
120 Tellurium symbol
121 Potential energy

123 Everybody's uncle
124 Frull seeds
125 Ketlles
126 Through
127 Approached
129 Boundaries

6 Lay away

7 Final
10 Siems
11 Motherly
12 Running
13 East Indlan palm

14 Odor
15 Higher
16 Greek letter

17 King: Ita!.

21 Comes on the
scene
22 Ummaginatlve

23 Place for trade

63 Rockfish
66 Article
67 Manuscript abbr.
68 Young horse ,
70 Tendencies
71 Beast of burden

75 Flight of slaps
77 Washington bill
78 Change color of
80 Hawaiian wreaths
· 83 Arabian seaport

86 Sedate
88 Inclines
89 Dispatched
90 Postscript: abbr.
91 To cover with :
prefix

109 Statuette given to
-mystery writers

122 Parts of cameras
124 Variety of apple
125Summon
126 Grallfy
128 Apportioned
130 Exlinclllightless
bird

131 Detested
132 Eagle's nest
t35 E•acl
t37 Ceremony ·
138 Ripped
140 Boundary: comb.
form

142 jlmall rug
143 Deface
144 Police Department
abbr.

145 Disconllnued
notice: abbr.
147 Artificial language

148 Ma's partner

FREE NATURAL GAS - 140 ACRES
Apptox. 10 miles from Galliool1s - lots ol Raccoon Creek lronta2e
-awrox. 60 acres til~bie and tobacco base. NICe 40'x60' barn. 6
rooms, 3 BR horne wnh lree natural gas lo heat your oome tn wmter
and cook yoor food. lois ol fru;l trees. Nice cnunlrJ settmg. See th1s
one
#419

ACREAGE: 46 aaes. adjacent to city ol Gaiipolis, $21,500.00.
68 ACRES, below Eureka, $13,500.00.
•
30 ACRES. lllwer Rtver Rd , $110,001.00.
.
4 ACR£S. lower River Rd., $60,001.00.
16 ACRES, along Rt. 554, near Cheshire. $10,001.00.
•
8 ACR£S. 2 lots, adjacent 1o Gallipolis. $6,tXXJ.OO.

e

•e

3 BEDRM. HOME WITH SIX ACRES - localed alOng Graham •
SChool Rd. enjoy the comlort ol rural livin~ 10 minutes from
Gallipolis. $30,001.00.

SELliNG YOUR RUL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS....
•
(All AN EXPERIEN&lt;ED WOOD R!ALTY SALESPERION •
C:.1ll WrJod RP&lt;~Ity lnr
'l? I r11 w.t St (J,tllipt!IJ',
446 1 OG6

26 Centa

A Muttiroedia Inc. Newapeper

Domestic, foreign isSues on Reagan's agenda
.

.

.

.

But · tax reform is ilkely to \)(&lt; eclipsed on tre
presilentlal agenda by other. Issues thai Reagan may
address Tuesday night in his first prime-lime news
conference in three months.
·
As he flew to Florida last week towhipupsupportfor
his tax plan, a senior presitjentlal asslsmnt described
the atmosphere In the While House as "extremely
positive" despite a flood ~f news stories crlllcal of lis
inner workings under chlef·of staff Donald Regan.
After an "August respite" that enabled Regan and
his lieutenants lo sit down ·and assess "where we've
been and where wl"re going," the asslslant said,
"We•re changing gears, getting Into a wiXlle host of
legislative issues."
He said the White House felt "asenseofsalisfaclion"

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presldenl. Reagan .
continues his push for tax reform In tax-free New
Hampshire Ibis week as his aldesanempt to juggle an
Increasingly crowded agenda of·domesfic and foreign
policy concerns.
Reagan will carry his lax reform campaign to New
Hampshire at midweek as the House Ways and Means
Committee begins work on whaf the president hopes
will be a satisfactory bill..:. onetha 1could be on hl.s desk
by Chrisfmas.
In announcing lhe presidential visit last week. New
Hampshil'!' Gov. John Sununu declared. "This Is
Reagan country:• and said his state - lacking a
general sales or Income lax- lsanapproprialeonefor
Reagan to promote tax reform Ideas thathavefalled to
sllr passions elsewhere.•

wilh the outcomcof Reagan'sdeclsion 10 compromise
on rather Ihan fight economic sancllonsagalnsl South
Africa.
Having abandoned a slralegy of confrontation
toward Congress lhls fall, he saiq, the I'Vhile House
outlook is "very posit lve and upbeat:·
Bul with Congress poiSed to move on such
controversial mailers as the farm bill, a $2 lrillion
nalional debl and protectionist Jegislallon, one of Ihe
most pressing priorities may be to help Reagan cope
with the fu 11 array of issuescompetlngfor his a ttentlon.
That task has been compounded In recent days by
plans for Reagan lo resume a personal role In efforts to
revive the Middle Easl peace pi'OC('SS and !he
counldown to his November summit with Sov ielleader

Glen Kerklan has been named miners back Into the labor market,
director of a multi-county Dislo- then we could establish dislocated
cated Mine Workers' Project, worker projects for other Indus·
announced Tri-County Comrtmltlty tries," Kerklan said.
Tony Bumblco, International ExAction Agency.
Originally from the Akron area, ecutive Board Member for the
Keridan Is a graduate ·of Ohio Unfted Mine Workers of America,
District 6, served on the steerln~
University where he received a
degree in Journallsm. He was committee that assisted In developformerly the Assistant Director of ing the project proposal. He feels
the Corporation lor Ohio Appalach- very optimistic abol\t' the projecl's
Ian Development•s (COAD) success.
Contracts must stDI be made with
Energy Office and was responsible
for the administration o! COAD's academic institutions throughout
Ohio Weatherization Training the lG-county region before services
can begin, but Kerkian predicts the
Center.
As the newly-named director, - project wUI be ready te enroll
Kerldan wUI be responsible !or participants by December.
The project Intends to serve 000
Implementing a two-year project
awarded to the State of Ohio by the laid-off coal miners over the
Department of labor -lo provide twO-year period. Services wUI
employment and training services Include assessment, co~llng.
to laid-off coal miners in a !&amp;-county classroom and skill training tal·
region In southeastern Ohio. Trl· lored to meet individual needs and
County CAA will administer the area labor market demands, Job
Clubs and job search assistance
project for the state.
"If we can make an impact with and On-the-Job Training contracts
this project by pulling laid-off coal with employers. -

The project's ultimate goal is to
move laid-off miners inlo permanent jobs. II has a mandated
placement rate of 00 percent. or .160
Individuals must be placed Into
employment.
Implementing the project won't
be an easy task. While the project"s
administrative staff will be based In
Athens, service centers will be
established throughout lhe targeted
region.
PROJECf DIRECI'OR Additionally, Tri·County CAA
Glen
Kerldan has been owned
has installed a toll-free number
director
of the dislocated coal
which will be \!sed exclusively for
miners' projed by the Trlthe Dislocated Miners' Project.
County Community Action
StalL members are on band tn
provide general Information aoout
the project, answer questions,
provide program updates and help
laid-off miners gain access to local
service.
·
The 16 counties served by this
project are Belmont, Jefferson,
Morgan, Washington, Noble, MonResidents of Jackson County will
roe, Guernsey, Columbiana. Cohave a chance to get Iheir minds off
shocton. Musklngum, Gallia.
Meigs, Hocking, Athens, Perry and · lhe financially-troubled county governmenl this week as the 4!ith
Harrison.
annual Jackson Counmly Apple
Ft&gt;Silval begins Tuesday and con'
llnues lhrough Saturday night.
Feslivllies begin with a preview
showing al 6 p.m. Tuesday and a
relicopters, a plane and tracking
mlnl-lractor pull afterwards.
dogs.
Wednesday's program begins al
"We're doing an aerial and 10 a.m . and fealures !he crowning of
ground search, house to house,' '
the 19!l51estival queen. Tammy Hill,
Stiles said. "We've gol three learns
a senior at .Jackson High School a nd
of dogs. We're working in different
her court. and the lillie queen
areas."
finalists.
The search was In tre same area
On Thursday, the cvenlconllnues
where slate Trooper Giles Hannon,
wilh music by lhe OASIS of
26, was slain In April. Five weeks
Columbus, various apple related
later, Trooper Raymond Earl
contests and square dancing. On
Worley, &lt;13. was shofdown in Halifax
Friday. an art and quilt show is
Counly.
·slated lo beginaflOa.m. with senior
Arkansas authorllles said Bray citizens enl erlalnmcnl for 12:30
and Rlos were among five prisoners
p.m. and the evening's show wUI
who escaped from lhe Franklin
fealureNashvillestar, Con Huntley.
County jail Aug. 26. hitting Ire jailer
Jackson will host Waverly in lhe
on ft.&gt; !»ad with a pipe.
Apple Bowllha I evening.
Bray, of Lexington, was jailed
The Apple Ft&gt;Sf ival closes on
Aug. 5 for recklessdrlving. fleeing a
Saturday wilh the grand finale
pollee officer, having a concealed
parade scheduled for 7:45 p.m . The
weapon and possession of a con - program also fea tures lhe making
trolled subslance, said Franklin
of apple buller on the midway,
County Sheriff Bob Prilchard said . quilting, craft demonslrallonsand a
Rlos, of Branch, Ark .• was jailed
volleyballloumamenl.
Aug. 22 for theft of prroperty and
forgery, Prifchard said.
Prifchard said re believed lhe
pickup lruck was stolen In Cecil ,
Ark.

....,...,..
Jackson Apple
festival begins
Tuesday night

Killers sought in cop's death
HOT SPRINGS, N.C. (UPI) Hundreds of lawmen with blood hounds and t.&gt;llcopters scoured
Doggelt Mounlain lor two "very
dangerous" fugitives wanted for
killing a state lrooper and believed
to be holed up In the rugged Blue
Ridge country.
Troopers wllh shotguns and
SWAT teams wllh high-powered
rifles searched lsolaled !annhouses. and pollce'switchboards lit
up with calls from residents who
thought they spoiled !he Inmates
who escaped lhe Franklin Counly,
Ark., jail.
.
But Ihe only trace of the fugitives
was a plckuplruck found abandoned
Saturday on a logging road near the
highway where rookie Highway
Patrolmen Bobby Coggins was shol
lo dealh, State Pollee Sgl . W.O.
Stiles said.
"They're holed up In those
mounlalns hoping we wUI give up
lhe search, bul lbal will never
happen,'' Stiles said Sunday night.
''They are armed and considered to
be very dangerous.'·
··we know thai they have a .22 rifie

and a .357 magnum revolver, the
lrooper'sweapon," he said.
Officers said fl»y believe William
Richard Bray and Jimmy Rios, bolh
23. fled into Ire B)ue Ridge
mounlalns after Coggins, 25. was
shot fo dealh Salurday when he
stopped lrelr 1976 Chevrolet pickup
truck for a routine lraffic check.
The trooper learned by radio thaI
Ihe lruck was stolen before he was
killed, SlUes said.
Coggins, the thlr~ North Carolina
trooper killed this Yl'ar, was found In
his patrol car by a passing motoris I,
who alerled authorities over the
car's radio.
· The search cenlered around o
20-mUe area of Doggetf Mountain,
some 20 miles southwesl of Hoi
Sprl~gs near where tre pickup Iruck
with Arkansas license plates was
found abandoned.
Aulhorltles believe the meo stUI
are In lhe area since ft.&gt;re has been
"no report of a stolen vehicle .or
missing person:· Stiles said.
A posse of 300 lawmen moved
painstakingly through tre tricky
terrain Sunday, aided by four

Mikhail Gorbachev.
The curtain opens on thai meellng ~xt week, wt.&gt;n
fu&gt;agan holds talks al lhe White House with Soviel
Foreign Minister Eduard Shevardnadze to preview
Ihe positions the superpoWt&gt;rs will have at their first
summllln six Yl'ars.
While Reagan has been given briefings papers and
pres lded over regular meetlngsofhis national security
advisers to prepare for the summil. administration
officials said he has yello come to a key decision Ihat
could lnfluenct&gt;theprospej:lsforsuccessal the summit
and in t»e arms negotiations In Geneva, Switzerland .
The queslion. officials said, Is wrether Reagan wUI
place elements of his "Siar Wars·· missi!Mlefense
plan on the bargaining table in exchange for Sovlef
offers of 'reductions In nuclear missiles.

Lawrence Countian
dies in accident
on W.Va. Turnpike
CHARLESTON. W.'VA. (UP!)A Lawrence County . Ohio, man was
among two peoplewhowere killed In
a two-vehicle accident on the West
VIrginia Turnpike during !he
weekend.
Authorities say Billy Burton, 23,
Rock Camp, Ohio. and Timony
Niswander, 28. Lesage. W.Va., died
when a car collided wllh a
lracfor-trailer on lhe West Virginia
Turnpike aboul three miles north of
Memorial . Tunnel south of
Charleston.
Authorities said Burton, driver of
lhe car. was passing a vPhicle in a
non-passing zone and collided wilh
the tractor-lrailer Saturday. Niswander was a passenger.
Another passenger, Cheryl
Knight, 21, Huntinglon. was In
sal is factory condil ion at a CharlesIon hospital. The driver of the
lraclor-lrailer escaped injury.
In Ohio, nine peoplt&gt;, including
lh...,., molorcyclisls and a bicyclist,
were killed In accidents on Ohio
roadways during Ihe weekend, lhe
stale Highway Patrol reportf"d
today.
Tht&gt; victims died In eight acci dents . There were five deaths
Sunday and four Saturday. Three of
thf' five auto crash victims werC' not

state•s public roadways each weekend between 6 p.m. Friday and
midnight Sunday.
Killed were:
Sunday
Warren : William L. Toth. 18,
Girard, in a l&gt;ro-vehicle accident on
a Trumbull Counly road .
Wllmlnglon: Kevin R. Mack, 24,
Middlelown, when the car re was
riding in crashc&gt;d on Jnterslate-711n
Cinlon Coonty.
Columbus: Kati\leen B. O'Neil,
22, Columbus, when the carshewas
riding in went left of center and hit
another car head-on on Ohio 745 In
Franklin Counly.
Troy: Charles E . Blodgell, 50,
Vandalia. in a car-lrainaccldenl ala
railroad crossing on a Miami
Coonly.road.
Columbus: Suzanne Rausch . 23 ,
Columbus. when her bicycle was
struck by a car on a cily strepl.
Saturday
Celina: Patrick Rindler, 20,
Rossburg. wren hl s motorcycle
crashed on a Mercer Counly road.
Balavia: Ronnie G. ·caroulh&lt;&gt;rs.
:ID, Am~lia, and Debbie M. Sanders,
19, New Richmond, when Caroulprs' motorcycle crashed on a
Clermont County road .
Cinclnnali: Bradley D. Beyer, :ID.

. Cincinnati, ina one·raraccident on a
wearing scat bells.
The patrol counls traffic falalilics Hamillon County mad .
resulllng from mishap~ on lhc

Plan interim appointment
GALLIPOLL'i- The first reading
of a resolulion appoinllngGaiHpolis
Recreation Director R. Keven
Wright as an Interim city manager
In the absenceofChrisMoniswill be
considered by the Gallipolis Cily
Commission Tuesday nigh!.
II his appolntmenl is approved,
Wrlghl will serve as city manager In
Morris' abseence while the CUITent
city manager is in !he pi'OC('SS of
moving fo a new poslllon In Carey,
Ohio, and until a new city manager
is appointed by Ihe commission.
Wrlghl was hired by lhe cily as

recreation director in April19!Jland
served on Ihe bargaining team Ihal
recently reached a conlracl agreem~nl with
Local 1316 ol lhe
American Federallon of State,
County and Municipal Employees.
The contraci was the !irsl .belween
lhe local and city under the stale 's
collecllve bargaining agreement.
In an Aug . 19 lell er lo lhe city
commission, Morris asked current
members and - and t rose Sl'l'king
lhrec commission srnts In the
November general ciC'CIIon - lor
(Continued on page 10)

Derailment forces evacuation

GREAT LOCATION FOR A NEW HOME
Spnng Valley Subdi'lis~n . Two ~rge lois, each ~I ~ 101.8 by
171 .2. Dly water. city sewer, and natural gas are ava;ob~. Spec&lt;al
this week Call now.
·
#456

••
••
••
••
•••
•

1· Sectkm, .10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, September 16, 1985

119 Had on one's

55 Remainder

56 Cuts
1 South Amer-ican

100 Eat to excess

102 Take unlawfully
104 Prohibits
105 Taverns
106 HOlds in high
regard
107 Prophetess

SOMEONE WANTS YOUR HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CALL US!!

NEAT 2 BEDROOM, one lloor home. along Chatham Ave.
Additional storage building along rear alley. Buy now lor
$25.000.00:

. Vol.35. No.107
Copyrightod 1986

•

enttne

·Name director for 16 county
project for laid-off miners

CARTER•s PLUMBING
AND HEATING

WHY
TElLING THE WHOlE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TEll THE
WHOlE WORlD?

at y

e

614-,J~~;~~~g~~

rallebla nrvlce.
Call
268-1240
or 814·258·
1 130. Relson~~ble retea.

87

•

retes.

304-895-3802.·

G6015. Call614·266-6836

Miss
America
....,...............

COLUMBUS
FIRST MORTGAGE CO.

614·317-0123 or 614-387-

motoo. Coli 814-448-8038 1 1 30.
or 814-992-711, onytlmo.
J.A.R .

flower shew

Business
Services

Gener11 Hauling

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
dey. Pump nles and 1ervice.

Wrecked left front 71 Che·
ville, 2 dr., hardtop, also
crager wheels

81

811

1986

Call 304-875-2001 or 304675-4683.

&amp; Accessories

15 h . Glastron with 65
Mere. and trailer, very good
cond . $1 ,900. Call 614·

JIM'I PLUM II NO. HEAT·
INCl. lit. 1. lox Ill, Otlll·
polio. Cell 114·387·0178.

St:r v 1t.1·:.

Motor~

one letter to each square, to form

7019.

74

·September 1

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Page- 0-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

COUNTRY STYLE HOME
In very good condillon. Corner lot, approx. III acres level land .
Metal barn, 45x45, 8 room home. 3 bedrooms. 2 bathrooms,
approx. 1750 sq. It of iiv;ng space, mod. kilchen, fireplace.
basement. rural waler system. family lype home cklse to grade
school. Phone now fo r apporntrnent

H633

HOME IN THE COUNTRY
7 room hoose wrth 3 or possibly 4 bedrooms, k1lchen with bui~·in
cabinels. Slorm windows and doors. located 0!1 stale highway.
Priced al $39,001. Will cn"'der trade. Call lor an appointment
now.
VACANT LOT - CITY OF GALLIPOLIS
40'x130'1ol H65 kx:aled on Madison Ave .. Gallipoi1~ ,IJI city utilities.
Only $5,900.
United Feature SyndiCal•

SAN ANTONIO (UP!) - A
freight train derailed and sen I elghl
cars loaded with sulfuric acid
crashing onto a river bank, spilling
at least lOO.tXXJ gallons of Ire highly'
, loxlc chemical into the river and
forcing more than 300 people fr:om
lheir homes Sunday, authorities
said.
''This was oorworst, as far as we
can lhlnk back, in magnitude,"
Bexar Counly Fire Marshal Carl
Mixon said of Saturday nlghl's
chemical spill. Dozens of workers
eased around clumps of acid st Ul
bubbling on the ground around I he
wreckage.
Three workers were treated at
hospitals for minor acid bums and
released Sunday but no one on the
train af theflmcoftheaccldent was
Injured, hospital officials said.
~

As much as 300,000 gallons of
sulfuric acid spilled when nine ears
of Ihe 28-car Silulhern Pacific train
derailed on a bridge over the Medina
River aboul a mile from the San
Anlonio city limits al 10:55 p.m.
Salurday. The train was en route
from Los Angeles to New Orleans.
"Maybe 100,(0) to aJO,(O) gallons
spllledlnto tre river,'' Mixon sald.
Minut~ after the derailment,
authorities began an eovacuallon of
SUJTOUndlni tomes. Mixoo said
"mqre than :IX)" prople were
evacuated, and Red Cross workers
at Somerset High School said 00
people would spenl Sunday night
trere.
Residents were told it would be al
least 8 a.m. Monday before they
could return and nearby Southwest
I'

High School was tole lo keep Its
dJors closed Monday as a
precaution.
Mixon said Investigators deter·
mined thai a shlflln oneof1he car's
loads caused it 1o till and strike the
beams oo ooesldeoltre brldgt&gt;,with
the cars behind tnpplingon top of one
another, crushing part of lhe _
struclure and landing In a tangled
heap .
Workers used a crane lo llft the
still-leaking cars "like pickup
sticks,'' Mixon said, whUe others
neutralized the acid with 275 tons of
lime spread over Ire land and
dumped In heaps upslream and
downstream from tre spill.
An earthen dam was buill across
the river downstream and railroad
c~sbulltanotherdarnaroundthe

tank cars to contain the spilL

FORCES EVACUA.TION- A. maa&amp;led heap ol
IIIII.Jealdq train CIU'II spilled mare thall 180,810
pllono or toxic llllfw1c acid Into a river julll oullllde

S. t\alonlo, Texa~~ ~Saturday and early Sunday,
forcing mO.e than 0011 people from their """-·

a

A.allllli'IIIM believe tbe welpt nf load In - car
cauolnC It lo lllrllle a beam oa a l'llllrolld
brtda'e. wllh lhe Cll'!l beltlnd Utoppling down behind 1&amp;,
crusblng part or the brtdge. (UJ'I).
llltlfled,

�....Monday, Septemta 18, 1986

Comment~y
111 Cyurl Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WJNGETf
Publlsher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETIERS OF OPINION are WC'IcomC'. They should be less than 300 words
All letters are subject to cdttlng aM mu st-be signed with name. address and
teleph onP numbM'. No unsigned letters will be publtshcd. Letters should be In
~~:ood ta ste. add ressing Issues, not Jl('rsonalltles.
Jon~ .

Bolling's plan: reforrn
or realignment?
Most member~ of the House or Senate learn just enough about the
labyrinthine rules to get along. Those who actually understand them are
rare. Those who know them so well that they try to change them usually
are considered half· baked.
That, sadly, is the way many of his colleagues regarded Dick Bolling
during his 34-year House career. Even those who conceded that the
Missouri Democrat was one of the most Intelligent and thoughtful men In
Co11gress thought he was either naive or arrogant for believing he could
improve its opera tlon.
BoDing was placed on the House Rules Committee in the 1950s as a
protegp of Sam Rayburn, E'Ven though he was Identified as a liberal and the
Speaker was anything but . There he saw how "The Coalition" of
Republicans and conservative Democrats could use the rules to throttle
legislation th~t had the least whiff of liberal ancestry.
When Rayburn died, Boiling tried to move into the Democratic
leadership. He was repeatedly rejected. He tried to work within the
committee system to reform the House. He won a few: he lost most.
When he fimiliy got to be chairman of the Rules Committee, he saw the
old GOP·Dixiecrat coalition reborn in 1981 to run Ronald Reagan's
program over the House Democratic majority.
Boiling finally gave up attempting to reform the House from the inside.
He retired in 1983 and has been teaching since. But he hasn't given up on
refmm.
Writing in the current journal of the Public Affairs Council, Bolling said
"the legislative mechanism that is the House rl Representatives does not
work" and "much as it pains me to say it, it is my party- the Democratic
Party- that Is responsible."
·
Bolling said despite recent refonns in such areas as seniority and
continued Democratic majorities. "members who think lille Republicans"
still control. the House.
"There Is no system that calls for support of J)artY on either issues or
agenda," he said. "There is. therefore, no agenda."
Boiling says what is needed is for the majority party In the House to
adopt a Ust of issues it wants to dPal with at the beginning of a session, an
agenda, and, with a "supermajority" of 00 percent or more in Its caucus, to
requb·e party members to supix&gt;rt It. Those who refused woukilose their
committee assignments.
BoDing's proposal is not new . The binding caucus vote was . used in
Con.wess for decades and it took yl'ars for reformers- then regal'ded as
radicals- to abolish it. A form of the practice is used in parliamentary
government stU!.
There is no doubt that Boiling's proposal would make congressional
work tidier. It probably even would give the liberal majority in the
Democratic caucus control of the legislative program .
· But, as Bolling surely has taken Into account, it might also encourage
political realignment by disintegrating the Democratic Party as now
constituted- generally liberal in the East and North. conservative in the
South and much of the West.
Inasmuch as Democratic liberals have controlled the nomination of
presidential candidates and the writing of partY platforms since the 19Jls,
the Bolling plan might just he the last straw for conservatives.
transforming a flight of a few Democratic elected officials to the
Republican Party into the political C&lt;Juivalent oft he autumn migration (hat
drives flocks of ducks and geese from the chilly North to the warm and
welcoming South.

Letters to editor
Education is for adults too
Education is not just for children!
In the Meigs County Adult Basic
Education Program, adults can:
- Improve reading skills
- Improve math skJIIs
- Improve English skills
- Get ready for a better job
- Prepare for the G. E. D.
All learning is at the student 's
j)WO level and at his own speed. This
program Is absolutely free.
• Fall classes are starting now, soo
Interested adults should come by
and see us soon. Day classes are
held at the Middleport Library

•

from 10:15 a.m. to 2:15p.m. qn
Monday and Tuesday and at the
Community Action buDding at ll7
W. 2nd Street In Pomeroy on
Wednesday and Thursday from
10: 15 to 2: 15. Evening classes are
held at the Community Action
building on TUesday, Wednesday,
and Thursday evenings from 5: Jl
until 9.
More Information Is available by
dialing 992·2222 or 992·5713. Kathleen Manlcke, Coordinator,
Meigs County Adult Basic Educa·
tlon Program.

Participants thanked

I would Hke to take this opportun·
lty to thank everyone who helped or
participated In the Labor Day
Hymn Sing at Syracuse.
·
A big special thanks to Sunrise
and Willard Ebersbach for the use
Q1 their sound equipment . and
pperat!ng It so everyone had the
best l!Ound possible.
: Thanks to Dan Hayman and the
:Country Hymntlrners, the Fred·
~cks family, the McDaniel Trio and
tipeclally Faith and Tamara for
1:Io1ng such lr'good job on the drums.
:· Thanks to the Victory Singers,
Debbie Powell, our singing beautl·
~ian of Syracuse, and George Muth
:who supplied two semi trailer beds
:for our stage, also thanks to Charles
·and Judy Lee !or the use of their
:Plano.
' Thanks to Mark Malson; he did a
great Job as our emcee and straight

Bengals' pass defense leaky;
Cardinals roll to 41-27 win

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
:y-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 16, 1986

mari for Haddle May, and thanks to
Larry Lavender for being Haddle
May's friend.
The police escort, Milton Varian,
for Haddle May safely off the field
was appreciated by all. If I have
missed thanKing anyone, please
forgive because we reaUy appre·
elated every one's help.
The Air Bag Trust Fund now
stands at $951.41 thanks lor each
donation. If anyone would still like
to donate, tax deductible ol course,
please mall It to Jan Lavender or
BUI Arnott, Syracuse, Ohio.
If you would like to book Haddle
May or Jan for an appearance for only a donation for tbe Air Bag
Fund - please call 992·5888.,Thanks
to everyone who attended. -Jan
Lavender, Chairwoman, Air Bag
Fund.

'

WASIDNGTON - Apparently
the KGB has been sprinkling "spy
dust',' on diplomats, dissidents and
other suspicious characters for
years. As far back as 1959, an
Infernal chemical was reportedly
used to track one of the CIA's most
valuable . "moles" Inside Soviet
Intelligence.
The, story of how he was caught
was brought to the CIA by a KGB
defector In 1964. Yet Adm. Stans·
field TUrner, director of the CIA
from 1977 to 1981, said he'd never
heard of "spy dust." Neither had
· Malcolm Toon, who was U.S.
ambassador to Moscow from 1976
untU 1979.
While they were kept In the dark,
the chemical dust was used to trace
the movements of U.S. diplomats
around Moscow. It has been
detected several times since 1976,
but Its use against U.S. diplomats
has Increased greatly since last
May.
The worry Is that the stuff can be
harmful to their health. It has been

identified as nltrophenylpentadle·
nal- or NPPD- which can cause
cancer.
The diplomats pick up the
surve!Uance chemical on their skin
from, say, a car steering wheel.
Then they leave an Invisible trail on
every·doorknob they touch or hand
they shake. The KGB simply
administers another chemical to a
suspicious hand or dOorknob, and
the telltale NPPD becomes
nuorescent.
This Is how a U.S. mole, known as
Col. Popov, reportedly was de·
tected. The story, which was both a
triumph and a tragedy for the CIA,
Is locked In the agency's "top
secret" lUes. But here are the
essential details:
Popov was an officer oft he GRU,
Soviet military Intelligence. He
made contact with the CIA while he
was stationed In Vienna In 1953.
Later he was transferred to East
Berlin, where he continued to pass
secrets to the CIA.

maDbox where the pollee found a
After he was called back to
note he had mailed to Popov.
MosCow, Popov continued to pro·
Footnote: We Interviewed tbe
\/Ide Important Intelligence to the
CIA case officer, George Klsvalter,
CIA through RusSell Langelle, an
who handled Popov In Berlin. Now
lnteUigence officer working under
75
years old, he said he couldn't
diplomatic ciw(&gt;r. On Oct. 16, 1959,
because he IS stW em·
comment
while exchanging a note on a
played
by
the
CIA.
Moscow bus, Popov and Langelle
THE
DOME: Congress,
UNDER
were arrested by the KGB.
widely
accused
of extravagance,
Langelie was Interrogated and
can
he
truly
tightfisted
when It
kicked out of the country. Popov ·
Involves Its members' own money: ·
was executed.
In 1982, the House Administration •
Not untU 1964, when KGB Maj.
Committee
began charging
Yurt Nosenko defected In Geneva,
members
for
extra
prints by House :
did the CIA Jearn how the KGB
.
photographers
after
the first. five .•\
monltorled Popov's movements.
move
was
Inspired
by audits ·
The
Among the wealth of Information
that
showed
some
members
had
Nosenko gave his debrlefers was
been
ordering
as
many
as
10,000
the disclosure that Popov had been
caught through the use of a free prints. The results were
revealing: The House doorkeeper's
chemical.
Nosenko didn't ltnow know the office netted only $5,600 last year
exact chemical agent used, but he from the purchase of extra pic·
reported that Langelle's Russian lures. Members' enthusiasm for
maid had dusted the diplomat's photos of themselves has obviously
shoes with it. The KGB, using a been dampened by the prospect of
paying for them.
sniffer dog, tracked Langelie to a

·Economy_________;_______A_rt_B_uc_hwa_ld
(Whilst Art Buchwald Is on .
"It means:" Mr. Goldhogen said,
"that the president of the company
vacation we reprint some columns
from the past.)
· has had to report to· the stock·
Companies throughout the world
holders that the profits are lower
are either In the midst o! expanding
than anticipated; there Is In fact a
or in the process of economizing. It
loss and he Is Immediately lnstlgat·
depends on what the last financial · lng the necessary measures to turn
report looked like. One major
tbe tide. As a start, he announces an
corporation has closed down all its
economy drive will be put In effect.
European supervisory offices In a
If be's still president after the
wave of economy the likes of which report he has to follow through on
hasn't been seen since the last
his promise."
economy wave.
"What does he do first?"
Since most people are Innocent
"He fires two men, one tn the mail
victims of economy drives, I have,
room and the elevator operator. " ·
as a public service, contacted Mr.
"But who runs the elevator?"
Robert GoldbQgen, who specializes
"At a cost of only $55,000, a
In studying economy drives and
self· service elevator Is installed."
41
their effort on the economy.
:rhat's all?"
"Mr. Goldhogen, what does an
"No, It reaDy isn't as economical
economy drive really mean?''
to fire the mall room employee as

one mlgbt think. Someone has to
deliver Important packages and
letters by hand, so a hlgher·prlced
employee Is sent l11$tead. This
person, not familiar with the city,
takes twice as long to do the job.
"When thE' president discovers
that the firing of the mall room
employee and the elevator operator
has not solved his problem. he
makes further economies.' '
"How does he do this?"
"Every large company has cer·
lain people Ibat they employ just to
blame things on. They have to be on
the job when things go wrong. Each
vice 'president might have one chief
blametaker •nd three assistants.
The chief blame·taker distributes
the blame among the others. Since
there are enough people to spread
~

the blame about, no one gets In ·
trouble. But then the president
sends down word to the heads of the
departments that they have to CJit·;~
their staffs and Instead of four ·
people, they can only have one."
"The 'department head naturally
• .;.
keeps the chief blametaker?"
· "Not necessarily. The depart· '
ment head keeps the one who takes
the blame the best. The chief
blametaker may be good at
dispensing blame, bul weak on
taking It himself."
"Then the economy problem ls .
settled? "
''On the contrary, this is the most r'l··
dangerous type of economy there ,,
is. Since the head of the department
keeps blaming one person for '
everything that goes wrong, even- ·::
tually the president asks why the .
head of the department doesn't fire ·:
him. We know the answer. If the ·
head of the departmen) fires him, , ,
then he will have to take the blame
himself.
"When he takes the blame, hewUI
be fired as well, and pretty soon the
president will have to take the
blame. Then the stockholders will
force his resignation. When you
start firing people who absorb
blame, you're really in a fix."
"What can one do to make sure .·
one is not a victim of an economy
cut?"
"Take the bull by the horns. When
.you smell an economy cut you must
Immediately go in to see the boss
and ask him to let you go. ·
"Tpll him you're exp&gt;ndable, and
you feel the company is not getting
its money's worth. The boss will.
Immediately smell a rat and decide
you 're hying to go over to the
opposition and you Will be kept on '
the IJ3Yroll until hell ireezes over. ·

Feuds vs cooperation ______R_ob_e_rt_W_a_lte__;__r:s'
BOISE. IDAHO !NEAl -In the
compendium of real and imagined
failings of government bureau·
crats, few criticisms appear more
freQuently than the claim that
lnterecine feuds Invariably take
precedence over . Interagency
cooperation.
There Indeed ls ample evidence
that petty squabbles a bout "turf" or
jurisdiction are so disruptive and
demoralizing that thPy routinely
kl't'p federal employees from work·
ing together for the bcnefil of thP
public.
But there are ex:ccptlons - and
none is more striking than the joint_
effort sustained throughout the past
two decades by six fedl'ral organ!·
zations at the' Boise Intcragcncy
Fire Center here.
Operating from a half·dozm
nondescript buildings on a 53-acre
site at the edge of the airport , BIFC ·
coordinates a nationwide program
that annually saves miUions of
acres of range and forest land from
being decimated by wildfires.
The participating agencies in·
elude four Interior Departmenl
units - the Bureau of Land
Management, Fish and Wildlife
Service, National Park Service and
Bureau of Indian Affairs. The other
two agencies are the Agriculture
Department's Forest Service and .
the Commerce Department's Na·
tiona! Weather Service.
The impetus lor the unique
combined campaign came during
the early 1960s, when two of those
agencies became entangled In an
lnter·agency feud concerning the
allocation of resources to fight
simultaneous fires.
Since 19re, however, the agencies
have worked in concert to dispatch
the perS&gt;nnel, aircraft, C&lt;JUipment
and supplies to suppress !Ires

I

throughout the country .
''We do not tell anybody how to
fight a fire," says Arnold F.
Hartigan, the BIFC public affairs
officer. "We do not have any '
authority to command rC'sources
anywhere - except in emprgE'ncy
situations, when we can set priorilies and allocate resourcl's."
One or these emergencies occurred this summer , when states,
throughout the West were ravaged
by !he most devest at ing series of
wildfires ln moll' than a quarlcrof a
centmy.

"We mobilized more people to
cover more fires in a widt'r
geographic area than at any lime in
our history," says Hartigan. At lhP
peak of the outbreak, in erly July ,
approximately 22,0CXJ men and
women were sttuggling to control
those blazes.
From New Hampshire, New
Jersey, Michigan, Minnesota and
other states In the East and
Midwest, 3,600 firefighters were
dispatched to the West . From
Georgia, Tennessee and other
states In the South, another 2,001
were summoned to provide aid.
When the resources in the
contiguous 48 states were depleted,
BIFC officials flew In 1,000 firefigh·
ters from Alaska.
During the hectic summer, the
BIFC contracted for four commer·
cia! jets and three propeller-driven
passenger planes. Also mobilized
for the massive effort was a fleet of
air tankers and helicOpters.
From a sprawling supply depot
here and from others scattered
throughout the Wes) came equip·
ment ranging from bulky portable
power generators and chain saws to
smaUer map cases and medical
kits.
With the summer at an end, the

outbrl'ak of fires now has abatedbut the statistics for thl' year arl'
imposing: Almost 2.8 million acres
of land have been blackened by thl'
more than OO,OOOwildfires reported
to the BIFC thus far in 19&amp;1.
Eliminating wildfires Is impossi·
ble because approximately two·
thirds are &lt;·a used by uncontrollable
lightning - and there are 6.000 to

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeeoy-Middleport. Ohio

KBG 'Dusted'___________J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ Controller

\

8,000 lighlning s11ikes throughout
the West during a singlehouronan 1
typical mid· summer day.
But the BIFC remains commit· ,
ted to detecting and suppressing :
those blazes in the most coordi·
nated fa shion possible. "We're not n
P"l1ect," Hartigan says with a ,
smile. "It's ilk&lt;' any good marriage. ,
We still have our fights."

FORCES FUMBLE - Bengals' Jeff Schuh, left,
ond Thn Knuruie, right, sack St. Louis Canllnals'
quarleriJaAlk Nell Lomax and he fumbles In tbe Drst

qwilier Sunday with the Bengals' Krumrle recover·
lng the !wnble on the Cards' 16-yard Une to help set-up
the Bengals' first touchdown. (UPI).

Missed field goal provides
winning margin for Redskins
Elsewhere, It was: Detroit 26,
By DAVE RAFFO
Dallas 21; the New York Jets 42.
. UPI Sports Writer
UntU the ball hit the upright, Tony Buffalo 3; Miami Jl, Indianapolis
Zendejas thought the game was 13; the Los Angeles Rams 17,
Philadelphia 6; Minnesota 31,
winding down tp a perfect ending.
Zendejas, the Houston Oilers' Tampa Bay , 16; St. Louis 41,
kicker, had a chance to tie the score Cincinnati 27; Chicago :!!, .Patriots
against the team that mided him 7; San Francisco 35, Atlanta 16;
alter a bitter preseason hattie Denver 34, Saints 23: Green Bay 23,
against Mark Moseley. However. the New York Giants:!!; and Seattle
Zendejas bounced a :J3.yard field 49, San Diego :fi.
Uons 26, Cowhoys 21
goal try off the right upright with
At
Pontiac,
Mich .. Eric Hipple
4:13 left In the game and the
for
a
TD
and ran for another
passed
Washinglon Redskins held on for a
to
the Lions cash in on two
16-13 victory.
the start of each half.
Zendejas also missed a 3J.yarder
Ed
field goals of 34
earlier in the fourth quarter.
James Jones
The Redskins gave Zendejas, a
the 1 to help
former USFL klckE'r, a $1'10,000
bonus to compete with Moseley but
~~~~~~~ 2;·10 under rookie
traded hbn during the week before
Jets 42, BOis 3
the season began.
At East Rutherford. N.J., Free·
The Redsklns, rebounding from a
44-14 whipping at the handsofDallas . man McNeil rambled for a team
Monday night, started fast Sunday regular·season record 192yardsand
two TDs to help the Jets score 42
but were held scoreless after the
straight points. The BUls, 0.2, have
first 6:28of the second quarter.
not scored a TD thls season.
The Redsklns scored on their first
Dolphins lll, Colts 13
three possessions in carving out a
At Miami, Dan Marino rebounded
11H) lead early in thesecondquarter.
Grorgr Rogers ran 31 yards for one from last week's poor Showing and
threw for 329 yards and two TDsand
touchdown, Joe Thelsmann con·
Fuad Revelz kicked three field goals
nected with Calvin Muhammad for
to
lead the Dolphins, H. The Colts
another and Mosel&lt;'y kicked a
fell to0·2.
34·yard field goal.
Rams 17, Eagle86
The Oilers, who upset Miami last
At Philadelphia, · Charles White
week, thought they should have won
rushed for 144 yards and scored a
again. Along with Zendejas' misses.
fourth-quarter TD to lift the Rams.
Houston was hm1 by a close calion
White, playing because of an injury
an apparent !ouchdown catch and
to Barry Redden and the 1'1'Ci&gt;ntly
untimely penalties. .
ended
holdout of Eric Di~kerson,
Hill's catch in theendzonewasone
scored on a 17·yard run with 5:21
of three apparent touchdowns called
gone in the fourth quarter. The
back by pmaltles or officials' calls.
On the previous play, . wldP Eagll"'s commi1 ted seven turnovf'rs
and have not scored a TD this
recelvPr Tim Smith's ll·ya rd touch·
down catch was nullflcd by an illegal season.
Vlldngs 31, Bucaneers 16
shift call against the Oilersoffensive
At Tampa, Fla., comerhack
line, Stevl' Brown's 29·yard Inter·
Rufus Bess set up two TDs with a
ceptlon f&lt;'tum for a touchdown was
fumble
recovery and a blocked punt
negated by an illegal block by Keith
to
overcome
a brilliant effort by
Bostic and a 51·yard Warren
James Wilder and spark the
Moon·to-HU! bomb that put the ball
Vikings, 2·0. Wilder rushed for 113
on the Washington 9 was wiped by a
yards on 22 carries and caught 13
holding call on Eric Moran.

1

~

',

Berry's World

•

•
•'

passes for 71 yards.
Bears 20, Patriots 7
At Chicago, Jim McMahon threw
for one TD and set up anottJer and
Mike Singletary led a ferocious
defense to help the 2·0 Bears.
McMahon hit DennlsMcKlnmnona
32·yard TD stl;ike on the opening
drtveand set up a l·yardrun by Matt
Suhey midway through the third
quarter by hitting Willie Gault for43
yards.
49ers 35, Falcons 16
At San Francisco, Roger Craig
scored on runs ri9 and62yardsand
Joe Montana added touchdowns on
a 1·yard run ,and a ,!).yard pas.~ to
Dwight Clark to spark the49ers, 1·1.
Atlanta felt to0.2.
Broncos M, Saints 23
At Denver, John Elway passed for
353 yards and fourTDs to Ignite the
Bronros.

Thorpe has
first PGA
•
tourney w~n.
FRANKLIN. Wis. (UPJ) - As
Jack Nicklaus and JlmThol')lE'were
walking down the 18th fairway en
routetoThol')lE''sfirst PGA victory.
Nicklaus exchanged kind words
with the man who had beaten him.
"! told him to enjoy it. You 'll
remember this for a long time,"
Nicklaus said after Thol')lE'·took the
$51,000 first·place prize in the
$300.0CXJ·Greatpr Milwaukee Open
Sunday.
'[hose were heady words indeed
from Nicklaus, a player who has
won 70 tour victories and 19 major
titles in hls illustrious carl't'r.
ThorpE', whotoreuptho7,010·yard
Tuckaway Country Club course in
the third round with a tournament
record IQ.under·par 62 to take the
lead. shot a steady 2·under·par 711 on
the final day to hold off Nicklaus and
th&lt;&gt; rest of the field.

-

ST. LOUIS !UP])- Earl Ferrell player."
stepped out of the shadows and Into
the spotlight Sunday fortheSt . Loots
MltcheD seconded that t bought.
Cardinals.
"He's theunsungrunn!ngback on
Usually, Ferrell does not get Into our team,': Mitchell said. "He runs a
the spotlight because the job 4.35 40so he can move fora big man .
prospectus for him with the Cardi·
He's a good back."
nals specifies his being able to block
Of:!enslve guaro Joe Bostic said
for halfbacks O.J . Anderson and
Ferrell qu letly does his job every
Stump Mitchell.
day.
But In Sunday's 41·27victory over
"Earl ha s got to beone ofthemore
the Cincinnati Bengals, Ferrell
shoWed what he can do with a unselfish pla yers on the team ,"
football when he gets his hands on it. Bostic said. "He's got all the ability
The four. year fullback rushed for 68 In the world . He usually blocks for
yards In just 7 carries and caught 4 O.J . and Is content wlthdolnga very
.passes for 61 yards and a good job. But he showed he can run
and catch too . That makes us a
touchdown.
"The coaches know my abilities," beltcr football team."
TraUing7·0, Ferrell caught a pass
Ferrell said. "When I play well. It
takes some of the burden off O.J .'s from Neil Lomax at theCinclnnat 25
shoulders. I thought I made some and roomed into thE' end zone to tie
good .moves In the open field today the game for St. Louis. He made a
but I'm still ayoungguywlth a lot to move that faked out Louis Breeden
learn and a way to go before I can and Ray Horton at the Ben!f&lt;!ls' 5 to
consider myself a ve1ygoodtunnlng score untouched .
"I exp&gt;cted to score on that ooc-,"
back.
"I know my job Is to block for those Ferrell saiQ. ''I got somPmovesand
guys. They still run the football. My I got a chance to usc them."
St. Lools led 17:'14 at halftime on a
greatest asset to this team is my
blocking and pass catching. If I can 46·yard field goal as time expired
contribute In those areas and we win from Nell O'Donoghu e, who also
kicked a 49-yardcr later in the third
the ballgame. I'm satisfied."
St. Louis coach Jim Hanifan said quarter.
qncinnati cut the St. Loulsto27·20
he knew all along Ferrell was the
early in the fourth period when Jim
right man for the fullback's job.
"We've always liked Earl," Breech booted a 46-yard field goal.
Thc- Cardinals promptly marched
Hanifan said. "I have known for
some Iinne how talented he is and 89 yards in eight plays to take a
what he can contribute to the I Pam. comfortable 34·20 lead with 9:50 left
He blocked well, h~ ran the ball well in the game. A :IJ-yard reception by
and caught some passes out of the Ferrell moved St. Louis to a
backfield today. His perfmmanct&gt; first ·and·goal from the 3-yard line.
·"I wanted to get in there for that
doesn't surprise us tx&lt;causc Wf'
know he Is a very fine foot ball one but didn't make it, " Ferrell said.

,
Nine run inning

.,!:

pitcher Tom Browning ends up
winning 20 games this sea son, he
can look back to Sunda y as a key
factor.
When Browning left Sunday's
game against the Dodgers, . he
figured he was on his w" y to his lOth
loss, not his 17th win .
When Browning was pinch hit for
In the sixth, theRedstrailed6·l.and
the Dodgers' Fcrnandp VaiC'nzuela
was cruising along, haVing given up

second and scored on I;&gt;a vP ParkC'r's
double.
The Dodgers made it 6-1 in thr
fifth . Landrraux and F:nos Cabf.'il
scored onBiiiMadiO&lt;'k's double .and
Mike Marsh all scored on Scioscia:s
sqcczc bunt.
MPariwhilc. the St . Lou is Cardinals and the N&lt;•w York Mets both
won Sunday. main't aining their 1·2
sta tus in the NL Eas t. a half.game
apa11 , two unlike-ly hPIUf's undf'rs·

onlytwohHs.Mh"aculousJy,aboutlfl

turA:I the import ance' of a good

single to drivP in PcrPz. Bo Dial

sror PWilsrm . H('(lpfollowrdwithhis
seven th hom er over th(• right 6C'Id

singled home Esasky to t ie the _gilm£'
at 6·6. Carlos Dlaz rclicV&lt;'II Va lenzu·
da. only to havf' Ron ()costC'r single
home Concepcion. making it 7-6.
Rawdon, batting for the second time
in the inning wa s safe on a ficdler 's
choice.
Redus thmcappro the uprisin g by
homering to left , his sixth . to make it
1().6.
Valenzuela said tiredness did not
cause his ineffectivE'I1PSS.
The Dodgers took a 3·0 le;"l in the
second. Mike Sciascia scored on
Candy Maldonaldo's trip!&lt;'. and he
scored on Valenzuela 's singlC'.
Valenzuela scored on Ken !.an·
dreaux' double.
The Reds closed to within ~· I in the

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VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

·WHAT IS THE REASON FOR THIS NEW DISPLAY
I "AVE SEEN ON THE OBITUARY PAGE? .

BLOWER

&gt;

~

.··•

FUNERAL HOME
SERVING THE FAMILY OF

•

(Name of Deceased)
(Tim• of CaHing Hoursl
(Time of Service)
(l'lace of S.rvicel

Many years ago families at the time of a death would
hire death cryers, which would go out into the com·
munity and publicly announce that a death had taken
· place. Then as time went by people began usin&amp; the
windows of local businesses to display death notices.
In modern times the daily newspaper and now radio
have become the ' method to give notice of death. litis
new display is just another method of giving notice of
death.
We feel that it is very important for all the friends
and relatives to be made aware of the death of a loved
one. Many times we have heard the regrets of a friend
because they were not there to comfort a widow or Wi·
dower. Friends and reatives are very important and are
needed to help comfort the survivors.

The followincare just two instances where we think this type of display would be heloful.
1) Many people in our community have trouble readitll the smaller basic print fo~nd m the recular n~ws·
paper obituary. This we know ~Y the ma~y calls we cet datly askmc abou.t the trme and day of semce~.
2) In today's fast pace world many people do not read the newspapers fatthfully. We hope thts dtsplay
will brine attention to the death of friend if someone is just alancin4 through the paper.
This display will only be published in the newspaper with the f.amilies authorization. The most im·
pomnt thtnl to us at the Rawlincs·Coats·Biower Funeral Home ts the famtly we are servtng. That ts
why we take the time to plan each and every detail the family has requested and then carry out the best
possible service we know how. If you have any questions or comments please let us know.

I

'

Published ever y after noon, Monday

through Friday, 111 Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
1\shlng Company/ Multimedia , Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy ,
Ohio.

waiL

RAWLINGS-COATS .

.

(USPS 14....1
A. Dlvl1lon of Mulllmedl~. Inc.

mi~utes later, Browning was In line · bench.
·
to record the victory.
The Mets got a thrC&lt;:' · run homer
TheRedsexplodedforninP11ln.lin
from Danny li&lt;'&lt;'p, " la st minule
ihcsixth toovercomcthedcficll and
replace men t for Dany l Stra wpost a 10·6victOJy.
bcn y . and defeated the Montreal
Ted Power recorded the last two
Expos, &amp;2. whiletheCardinalsgot a
outs to earn his "22nd save.
5- for·~ and four-RBI JX'Iiormance
Valenwela, 1(·10, took the loss.
from Cesar Cedeno and whipJX'&lt;l the
Wade Rowdon. pinch hitting fo r
Chi cago Cubs , :r t.
Browning, opened the sixth with a
Cedeno was acquired on Aug. 29
walk. Cary Redus struck out before
for the stretch drive and has been
Bill Madlock booted Budlly Bell's
hi t! ing ..~10 a s a Car&lt;! ina!.
grounder. Dave Parke•· singled io
At Mont real. the M&lt;'t s cha sed
smre Rawdon. making it 6-2. Tony,
Dopson in the first inning. Mookie
Per€'7. walked and Nick Esa s)01
WilsOn Jed off with i.l doublf' and onr
doubled to score &amp;II and Pa r ker , out later Ke ith He rnandez walked .
making it 6-4.
W!lson stole third a nd Gary CariN
Dave Concepcion followed with a
hit a sharp singk off Dopson' s IC'g to

'

"How can I become a professional talk show
guest who's famous lor being famous'?"

The Daily Sentinel

~!!~~s e~~~~~~ "0' ~5~2Wa·c·k~,~·. ~·. .~. .~. .~. . ~. . ~. .~. .~. .l:. . l~,9i.j8•0 .

•

\

"But w(• still srored (Mitchell's
l ·yard run) and that's what counts."
Lomax comple ted 17-&lt;&gt;f·31 passe!!
for 250 yards and two touchdown
pasS&lt;'s for St. Lou is. Roy Green had
six catches for 68 yards and a
touchdown,
Ken Anderson completed IO·of·21
for Ill yards before leaving late In
the third quarter in favor of Turk
Schonert , who passed forn1yardson
5-of·S passing.

SCOII.ES ON DOUBLE - Pirates' Mille Brown

tJ1k1N llome -'ely oaleaniinMe TettQo Peao'• buM.
lollded doullle, u 1'11111' cMcller Ollie Vlrall awlllta

lhrotllln tourill·innlnl of pme !1unt11Q'. Bu. will! on

"Service Plus Attention To Detail!"

to win '-4. (UPI).

JAMES N. ILOWEI

.,

•

BILL ILOWEI

..-.

·.

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

J

Monday, September 16, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -Ohio
State Coach Earle Bruce had saki
many times In recent weeks that
defense woold have to carry his
lllth-ranked Buckeyes early In the
SI'IISOII.

Well, the defenders shOOldered
their load Saturday night against
Pittsburgh and held tough untll
quarterback Jim Karsatos, operat. lng without Injured All-America
tailback Keith Byaars, could put
together a 64-yard touchdown drive
for a 10-7 win over the Panthers.
"I thOOgllt the defense played
trem&lt;&gt;ndous football," Bruce said.
"Pitt Is a very quick and powerful
football team."
Without Byars, the leading scorer
and rusher In the nation last year,
Ohio State got only 48 rushing yards
against Pitt's sometimes 8-man
front. Tbat' s the lowest Buckeye
total since the 381hey had In a loss to
Florida State In 1981:
"You saw something you've rot
seen too many times before," said
Bruce. "You saw a lot of yards ln the
atr by Ohio State and not very much
on the ground. In fact, It's almost

Jimmy Wolfe
IHl, Zl2pound
Senior center

Jay Protlltt
11-10. 181 pound
Seolor laclde

The Daily Sentinel

Defense key in Buckeyes' l 0-7 victory over Pitt .

Meet the Tornadoes

Carter had nearly a :&gt;-yard cushion
embarmsslng. We're a better
on Pitt cornerback Quintin Jones.
fool ball team than that."
"Crts Carter was mP-OD-on&lt;' with
But Karsatos, taking over as the
their cornerback," said Bruce," and
No. 1quarterback a!terfouryearsof
II was a mismatch. " ·
waiting, threw the ball effectively
Karsatos saki he Worried about
enough to keep the Buckeyes ln the
game.
mls~lng Cart&lt;&gt;r, but he didn't Ohio
He finished with 19 of 31 passes lor State had a 10-7 victory In the first
242 yards and a very blg 1-yard Buckeye night game ln the til -year
touchdown pass to splll end Crts
history of Ohio Stadium.
Carter.with 4:19left 1n the game.
Pitt, whlchhadopenedwllha31-.1l
It came on fourth andone to Jl(l and wlnoverPurduetwoweeksago,had
SI'Veral scorlrig q~po'rtunltles go by
capped a drive which Karsatos had
salvaged just moments before with !he boards, Including missed field
a 19-yard toss to John Wooldridge on goals of 31 and 32 yards by Mark
third and 16 to the Panther eight :
Brasco.
When the Buckeyes reached the .
There also was a tumble by one, Bruce took t1me and called his
tailback Charles Gladman on the
entire team to the sidelines. ·
Ohio state nlne on Pitt's first
"We just wanted to make sure (Xlssesslon oft he gam&lt;&gt;.
everyone knew what play we Wl'fe
Buckeye cornerback WIIU~m
golngtorun," saldKarsatos. "!thad White pounced on that fumble and
been working aU week ln practice.''
he also picked off a John Congeml
pass on the Ohio State 44 with 1: 43
The play had Carter spilt out to the left In the game.
right and come back towards the
Ohio State's only other score, a
quarterback. When the ball was 29-yard field goal by Rich Spangler,
snapped, he ran his pattern back to was set up Eric Kumerow's
the outside. .
Interception of a Congeml pass at
When Karsatos let the pass go, the Pitt 45. A 32-yard Karsatos to

MonCRJI(, September 16, 1985

Carter pass got the Buckeyes In fleld
Jl(lal position.
Tbe Panthers, thwarted the first
three quarters by missed field goals,
turnovers and an lncreaslnglytough
Ohio Slate defense, finally put
together a scoring driVe early In til&lt;'
llnal period.
Gladman, the game's leading
rusher With J03yards tnroattempts,
had runs of 14 and17 as Pitt moved to
th&lt;' Ohio State 14, from where
Congeml hit Chuck Scales with a TD
pass.
"Offensively, we made too many
mistakes," said Pitt Coach Foge
Fazio. " But give Ohio State credit .
They hung tough and look advantage of our miscues.
"We missed too many opportunities to score," Fazio added. "We
have to do something about our
kicking game! You don't misS chip
shots like we did tonight.
"I am disappointed," said Fazio,
"but I certainly can't be discouraged. I was satiSfied with John
Congeml and part leu larly happy
with the effort ri Charles Gladman,
a tough running back."

Page-5
•

Catenaar 1 oapyenmgr
MONDAY '
RACINE -Racine VIllage Council wUI m&lt;'&lt;'l Monday, 7 p.m., at
village haiL
TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs athletic
boosters Tuesday, 7 p.m. a t high
school; Trimble game films will be
shown.

I The Victory Circle..: · I

At Huntington, W.Va., Carl Fodor final play to 11ft Cincinnati to a wild
completed 33 of 54 passes for 287 29-27 wln over Youngstown State. It
yards and three touchdowns and was Cincinnati's third win without a
ruMing hack Randy Clarkson Joss.
.
caught a school-record 13 passes to
Taylor scored on a fourth and goal
spark unbeaten Marshall to a 31-7 play that started with one second
rout of Ohio University.
remaining. Cincinnati had mounted
Clarkson's 13 receptions totaled a first and goal at the one and
112 yards.
Youngstown State stopped the
Quarterback Dennis Swearingen Bearcats for no gain on the first
scored Ohio's touchdown on a 6-yard three plays befor&lt;&gt; Taylor finally
run around right end with little more cracked over_
than a minute left
Cincinnati's game-winning drive
At Akron, Mike Oark rushed 125 covered 8l yards In the final 1: 13
yards and scored two touchdowns to after Jerry Mapes' 2-yard TD run
pace Akron to a 24-{) shutout d Kent · had given Youngstown State a 27-23
State.
lead.
Akron. which scored In every
Danny McCoin completed passes
quarter, piled up 260 yards on the of 23, 31, :II and 12 yards to help move
ground to nly 93 for the Flashes.
ClnciMatllnto scoring position.
At Youngstown, Reggie Taylor · At Meadville, Pa., fuHoock Tim
ran one yard for a touchdown on the Norbut scored two touchdowns to

POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter , Beta Sigma Phi Somrity,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. home of Mrs.
Evelyn Knight.

RESERVE BEST OF SHOW- 'J'he red, gold and bronze ook&gt;rs •Ill llW
were featured In Ihis mass IU'rangement which won the "reserve best of
ohow" for Juanita Lamheri.

to make a move.

On a dirt track the racing Is mroe
Intense because of the shorter
straightaways and tight curves.
Because the races are shorter you
can't walt for a chance to make
your move."
As opposed to driving :II m.p.h.plus on a big track I asked Petty If
he could feel the sensation of speed
on a dirt track.
Petty commented, "Driving on a
dirt track at 90 mlles an hour feels
faster to me because your are going
sideways In the turns. On a
superspeedway you don't get a
sensation of speed unlll you spln,
then II feels like you pick up speed.
It !eels as I! you're going faster and
you don't think It's ever going to
stop!"
Petty lndtcate&lt;l'thattherewas not
much difference between dirt track
can and the grand national cars as
f1lr as structure and racing components go. He also Indicated that
rflfd safety requirements, weight
restrlctlona, and a completely stock
OOcly were !be main differences.

'r.l ti6 .5.1'.! jll t
7'J 10 .!m 12
11 n .500 1.1

C'nt'fln1

Hs1n

ROllo
Alint
S. F'rM.

lil S2 .42.1 24
.'\&amp; 86 .:IN !II
fillllhii'II.'MR4Mii

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EASTERN RE'!ERVES - Members ol this
yeiU''slJ85 Ea8tern VolleybaO team Include, front, 1-r,
Melanie Mankin, Kim Denl and Amy Berkhlmer.

Montwal 5, Nt&gt;Y.• York 1
San Frant'"l¥'0 ,1, Allanl.l l
U. Anarit'111, (b'lnnatl 0
PIIIP&amp;l'Rfl6. Phllack'lptlla J
Holltloo 4. San Dk&gt;Jio J

Kyle

oompetllor 011 tbe NASCAR
WlniiOD Cup .me. Ia llle Wood
BJ'Gihere Ford Tbunderblrd,

wu

•-Mb' 1a Parllenburr to

promote •

raciDa' beaeiM lor

w.. VJrPnla Special OIJmpl...

Petty's ••••, 'J.elevea, ud
W..C VJrPaia Mater Spulw_,
joined forcea to llld the loclll
beaelll. PeUy II pldJued wllh a
,.......,. ..... tba&amp; ilaa heM
aulopaphedbfiP d-.!ot,mpie
partlclpllllla. PeCQ ..-.. filterviewed by lleltt~oeiiiiiOI'II wrtler
ScGtt Wolfe. Scott Wolle photo.

PtiUIIdrlphla IGI"O!II H - 9~ at NI'W York
tGoodfotl 2J-4 1. 7: ~ p.m.
Olk:lf!U tAtn,roGm at M0111n&gt;4111 tGWI~k ·
!1011 J3.111, 7:l'! p.m.

S.n Franl'IKv

IC'~I

Hoolllon

IHfoalhrock

7-10\ a1 C'lndnnuTI

J.,

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91 5I! .!i..lt 116 .i6 .006 41-'z

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Bltrru

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Mlwki't•
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2•1

CAROL LYONS
TO JOIN CATHY YOUNG TO COMPLETE STAFF

304-773-5352
Your Complete Beauty &amp; Tanning Salon

~

tl
16
18
.11

Toronto t NNI York-'
&amp;slon 10, Mllwaukf&gt;(l8, 11\nni!Wl'
Tt'XU 8. Ca llfornlli S
Sealtk&gt; 6, C'hk'I:II(O ~

......,.........

DP.trott 4, &amp;lllmon"o 1

Mlnruota 5. (.1cov('Jand l
BMton 4, Mltwal.lkw 2
Toronto 8, Ntw York~

Oakland 4, KanM.S City 2. lht Kltm(ll

at Arlanla

tJotmon 4-0), 7:&lt;KI p.m.
U. An~ IRI\I~ "1'1-!11 at ~n
,.,_. t-10) , JO:CB p.m.

1~ .

Tf!Xtls 4

Odc1110 6. Seattle 3
MHdq'• 0~ (,\II 'J1mM Elrl')

ClcYeland (Euterl,y f-Ot at Nf'W York
rCow)ry 10-6,, 2 p.m.
Baltlmln&gt; (D.Martlnez 12-91 ill 01.'4roll
t"fmt&gt;lllJ-91. 7:35p.m.
Dolton (O)fda 7·91 at Mllwauk"t• jHaus
SN.t!lr tM~ 14-8~ at Kansa1 City
13.ti, 1:~ p.m.
Ttxu jMIIJOn 7·L11 at Mlruw•na l~ltll-

tJack~m

1:Jit&gt;K0

1100 14-l:tl, 8:Z p.m .

......,.. o......

......_,.• a...,.

Ntow York II Detroit, niJihl

S.n Frmtillco at Clnl"ira~ll '
II Moftm.J, ..,,
Ph. . . . . ar Nf'W Yor1c, firht
St. 1.4111 It Pt1tltiU'Jth, lllJht
Hwllrln 11 Ad.lnla, liKhl (A Allll('ft at

Oakland If Clevdand,

Odt.tt~D

nl~l

MII'Wauw 11 Ballln"lcre. nl&amp;hl

1\wvnto If lblon, lQ:h.t
StaMIP •t Ka!IMI City, n!Pl
Texa II MlnnetOta, ldcht
C.Uitlmla II Chk:&amp;fO, nlfhl

San Dtflo, matu

.,

"25 Years of Memories" was the ·
theme of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners' sliver anniversary
flower show staged over the
weekend at the Rutland Civic
Center.
Joan Stewart took the "best of
show" award In artistic design with
her four foot floor arrangement of'
pink gladioli In driftwood, while
Juanita Lambert was the winner of
the "reserve best of show" In d&lt;&gt;slgn
with a blaze of fall colors in a mass
arrangement. Janet Bolin with
numerous specimens and plants
accumulated the most points from
ribbons to be named the "hortlculturl_.sweepstakE"S award winner.
As a surprise to the group, the
Rutland Garden Club which organIzed the Friendly Gardeners 25
years ago, presented a gift certificate for a tree planting to the club,
along with African vlol&lt;&gt;ts to each
member of thecelebratlngclub. The
charter members stU! active were
recognized. They are Jaget Bolin,
Marte Birchfield and .Judy
Snowden .
Ribbons for the show created with
dried flowers were made by.Sandra
• Titus. Special exhibits Included
books and specimens of herbs by
Judy Lynn Hill, Mrs. Bolin showed a
variety of modern containers, and
Mrs. Snowden and Charlotte Wilford displayed unusual items suita ble for arrang&lt;&gt;ments.
Joanne Fetty and Margaret
Edward were co-chairmen for the
show.
Winners in the various clas.scs,
listed, first through fourth, respec tively were as follows:

Bolin, fourth.
'Blooming plants, first class: Judy
Snowden, Joan Stewart. Lorte
Barnes; second class: Judith Hill,
Judy Snowden, and Sandy Titus.
Non-blooming plants, first class,
Joan Stewart, Lorle Barnes, Kimberly Willford; second c lass: Joan
Stewart, Janet! Bolin, Judy
Snowden, and Judith Hill.
Succulents and cacti: Janet Bolin,
Judith Hill, Kimberly Willford, third
and fourth.
Junior Division
Winners In thhe artistic design
classes were as follows:
"Bird Feeders," Including a bird
or blrd-llke object : Ann Bishop,
Zackary Bolin, and Missy Sisson.
"Beginners," a favo,ue arrangement: Missy Sisson, Anne Bishop,
Zackary Bolin.
Specimen winners were Zackary
Bolin, Missy Titus, second and
fourth, and Anne Bishop, potted
plants; Zackary Bolin, Ann&lt;' Bishlp,
and Missy Sisson; annuals; and
Missy Sisson and Anne Bishop,
roadside materials.

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Firemen's Association will me..t at
the Syracuse Fire Station, Wednesday ,at7:30p.m.

Song revival
RACINE- The RacineChurchof
the Nazarene will be holding a
singing r&lt;&gt;vival Tuesday through
Sundoy at 7: 30 l'ach &lt;'Vening and at
10:30 Sunday morning with song
&lt;'Vartgellsis, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Bmwn bringing the message in
song. The public is Inv ited.

COME IN TWICE A WEEK
AND KEEP YOUR TAN LOOKING
NICE ALL WINTER

Four Seasons Tanning Salon
Sandy Jannarelll &amp; Judy Flagg, Owners

CHARTER MEMBERS - Honored
of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners were lwo chartel' members, Janet
Bolin, left, and Juojy Snowden. A thlnl charier member .am active with
the cluh Is Marie tl!rchlleld. Tbe Rutland Garden Club which organized
the Friendly Glll'deners 25 yeal'!! ago presented each member with an
African violet and also a glftcenlllcatelo he usedforatreeplanllng. As
a part of their annlvi!I'!IIU')' activities, lhe Rutland Friendly Gardeners
have organized a new club for lhe young women of the Ru~d
community, Friends and Flowers.

LEGAL NOTICE

The Public UtUitles Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No . 85-02-EL-EFC, to

review tt.e fuel procure·.
ment
practices
and
policies of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Compe.ny. the operation
of Ita Electric Fuel Component an&lt;1 relatad matters. This hearing Is
scheduled to begin at
10:00 a. .m . on September
23, 1985, at the offices of
tbe Public Ut11111es Com mission, 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus , Ohio
43215 .
All Interested parties
will be given an opportunity to be heard . Further lnformalton ma.y be
obtained by contacting
the Commlsslon .
THE PU13LIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY : Mary Ann Orllns)&lt;i ,
Secretary

MEIGS HEALTH SERVICES
JAMES WITHERELL, M.D.
WILMA MANSFIELD, M.D.
LAURA KRISTER, M.D.
Announcing Extension of Hours
MONDAY-FRIDAY 8 A.M.-7 P.M.
SATURDAY 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
FOR APPOINTMENT CALL

992-6601

Anlstlc Arrangemenls
"Convention Time." a modern
ct&lt;o;;tgn showing motion : Janet
Bolin, Joan St..wart, Marjorie
Davis, and Suzy Carpenter
"Flower Shows," small designs
not more than six Inches tall:
Margaret Edwards. Kimberly Willford. Joan Stewart, Juanita
Lambert.
"Tours." using grC'&lt;'ns, tints and
shades: Joan Stewart , Charlotte
Willford. Sandy Titus, and Margaret Edwards.
"Civic Beautlfcation," mass, hold
featuring fall colors: Juanita LamOO:rt, Judy Snowden, Iva Sisson, and
Suzy Carpenter.
"Past Members," floor design,
treasured wood, four foot tall: Joan
St..wart, Judy Snowden. Joanne
Fetty, and Janet Bolin.
"Hostess," donr decoration: Judith Hill, Joanne Fetty, Joan
Stewart, Iva Sisson.
"Holiday Rl'membrance" own
Interpretation: Lorie Barnes, Marie
Blrchfl&lt;&gt;id, Juanita Lambert , and
Marg-df'('t Bishop.
" Roll Call," moblles: Marie
Birchfield, Janet Bolin, Lorle
Barnes, Kimberly Wilford.
"Garden Therapy." basket container using roadside matPrlats:
Pauline Atkins, Juanita Lambert,
Neva Nicholson, and Binda DiehL
"Gardeners Day Out," a modern
design : Brenda Bolin. Prar!eCanaday, Pauline Atkins , and Kimberly
WI!Uord .

• Country-fried steak, lightly
breaded and topped with real country gravy
• T(flder com on the cob
• French fries
• Hot dinner bread
Shoney's famous all-you-care-to-eat Soup,
Salad and Fruit Bar.

Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar
• Lots of fresh vegetables

• Fresh fruits everyday
• Homemade salads
• No preservatives
• Hot homemade soups

l&lt;.llnua Clly 7. Oakland l. rlnd .llllnC' ~
Clllbnia

8-7~.8:-:Bp.m.

~

PROUDLY WELCOMES BACK

Beltlrnon&gt; !'J, DMrott4, 1200 .llarTIC'I

Nfow y,.k ' · Montn•11 l 2
Plttllbulllh S. Phlladl&gt;lphla 4
A.tlula 4, San Frlftd!;('oo l
(."'bK'hu•tllO, la A.nll'!'ll'l 6
Sl . l..oull s. CJ!olc:t«&lt; 1
.
Hwlllon 2, San 0~ 1
......,., Gtlma c.u nnw EM' I
St. !..()Ub. f'l'udor 18-11 and Horton 2·21 1111
Pllllllui"J(b !DrLPon 2·17 and Rmdm 9-131 , l,
I p.m.

rm• S.J~ ~ . 1:.l5 p.m.

SHEER DESIGNS UNLIMITED

KIIMU City 2. Oakland l

--·-

PETTY VI!IIT8 -

EnA RICHARDSON-OWNER/OPERATOR .

AMERICA.N LEAGUE
Trnto

Back - Trlsh Spencer, lea Ann Robinson, Amy
Connolly and Debbie Lee. Cun-ently the quickly·
bnprovlng reserve squad Is 1-4 on the se1111011.

HORTICULTURE SWEEPSTi\KES WINNER- Janet Bolln was
the winner of the horileuiture sweepstakes award at the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners 23th llnnlversary flower show, "25 Years of
Memories" held over the weekend at tile Rutland Civic Center. Mary
Ellen Miller, accredited hy OAGC judged the exhibits with Mrs. Bolin
accumulallng the most rlhhons In the specimen and potted plant
division.

SalwdQ'KRe!MdtA
fk'Yrtlllld 11 . Mlnnr&amp;Ota9. rht ftiUI"It' l
Mlnrnola $, Ck'VI'Iand J, t2[1d IIIIITWI
Dt&gt;frolt 10. Baltlmoi'C' l. n st J:~~mr\

S!. I .nul• ~. ('hlca,ll;o I

PeUy,- ofiUchanl PeUy _.

· BE'!T OF SHOW -Pink glad lolls, dusty miller and !em were used In
this modern designed floor arrangement In a folll'-foot piece of
drUtwood won the "best of show" award for Joan stewart at the
weekend show of the Rutland Friendly Gardeners.

~­

Majon

I

Flower show notes
club's anniversary

'

Scoreboard ...
....

lead Dayton to a 28-0 victory over
Allegheny. The win was the second
In a row for the Flyers who kept
Allegheny outside the Dayton 00.
In other games Saturday: Wittenberg edged Butler (lnd .t 24-23;
Baldwin-Wallace beal.Ashland13-3;
Denison used th&lt;'slngle-wlngformatlon in a 49-6 romp over Kalamazoo
(Mich.); Albion (Mich.) stopped
Ohio Wesleyan 17-7; Alfred (N.Y.)
blanked Otterbein 31-0; Bluffton
beat Oberlin 32-12; Case Rl'serve
defeated Kenyon 31 -10; Defiance got
by West VIrginia Wesleyan 12-3;
Marietta edged Capital 13-11;
Mount Union rolled over Hiram
51-7; Wilmington bea.t Earlham
(Ind.) 30-0; Wooster downed John
Carroll 17-7; Heidelberg edged
Adrian (Mich.) 15-14 -and Muskingum beat Ohio Northern 21-7.

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

SALISBURY - Salisbury PTO
m&lt;'&lt;'t Jng 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday in school
gym":'s ium.

BG upsets Kentucky; Marshall defeats Bobcats
By United Preas IDiemadonal
Bowling Green quarterback
BrlanMcCiurecameoutontoplnhis
battle with Bill Ransdell of
Kentucky.
McClure, chasing Doug Flutle's
NCAA career passing record, led
Bowling Green to a &amp;l-26 upset oyer
Kentucky Saturday with an 11-yard
pass to Greg Meehan with 23
seconds left.
Pele Roush
Eric '111oreu
McClure connected on 00 of 38
IH1, 192 pouud
~IMpound
pasges
and chalked up 309 yards to
Sophomore fuUback
Senior IJWII'd
give hlm8,p7 career yards. Flutle's
record Is 10,579.
McClure needs to average 275
yards for the remaining 10 games
this year to catch Flu tie.
' R;msdell actually outhrew
McClure with 313 yards on 15
By SC01T WOLFE
In NASCAR racing the driver completions out of 34. Both he and
A couple of weeks ago I had the must be so far away from the donr
McClure threw one Interception.
pleasure of meeting and Interview- and roll cage unlike dirt track
Adding Insult to Injury, Kentucky
Ing Kyle Petty, a talented young . racing. No offset chassis or Megaye up the final two points on a
race driver on the Winston Cup thanol fuels (Alcohol) are allowed
safety wh&lt;'D Cornell Burbage, who
grand national series.
In NASCAR either.
had trouble handling theballallday,
Petty, lh&lt;' .On of NASCAR's
Petty concluded that his busy threw the ball Into the end zone on
a!l-Ume great Richard Petty, was · grand national schedule didn't
the final kickoff, apparently atIn Parkersburg to promote the
tempting a backward lateral.
allow much time for dirt racing but
"Hillbilly 100," which In conjunc- says he races on dirt every
Joe Worley kicked a school record
tion with West VIrginia Motor opportunity he has. "l lov&lt;&gt; to race
four stmlght field goals for the
Speedway and 7-eleven Stores on dirt. I just do It for pure Wildcats, but even that wasn't
benefited West VIrginia Special enjoym&lt;&gt;nl. It's challenging, but yet enough as BG's Denny Stolz got his
Olympics.
relaxing and provides a lot of 100th career victory.
· Kyle Petty currently drives the excitement."
Kentucky head coach Jerry
Wood brothers Ford Thunderbird
In closing Petty saki that he Claiborne said McClure's sparkling
grand national racer, which dis· Intended to pursue his grand
passing made Bowllng Green dlfDplays the 7-eleven sponsorship. In
national career and probably would
cult to beat, but said KentuckY lost
just a few short years Petty bas
the game.
not h~ve time off from his busy
already attained 26th on the all-Ume schedule to compete on a local dirt
Stolz said t~ victory proved
total earrdngs Jist
track, however, If the opportunity • McClure was capable of competing
Petty was excited by the fact that arises don't be surprised to ~ In bigger conferences.
auto racing, a major sponsor such
Petty at the wheel of a dirt tracker.
The wln was the second without a
as 7-eleven. and West VIrginia
Joss for the Mid~ American ConferSpecial Olympics could work toCongratulations!
ence. team, while the game was
gether for such a benefit Petty
Congratulations to Meigs High
Kentucky's season ooen&lt;&gt;r.
stated, "l am very pleased to be
for Its outstanding start on the local
At Muncie, Ind. , Miami running
here today to promote such a
gridiron. HopetuUy this will be the
back George Swam stormed S7
worthwhile program as Special
banner season the Marauders have yards In the third quarter to lead til&lt;'
long-awaited.
Olympics.''
Redsklns to a 17-13 Mid-American
It marked the first time in history
Despite a shocking loss to Conference wln 011er Ball State.
that auto racing and a major Parkersburg Catholic, Eastern
Miami tralled 13-10 before Swarn
sponsor have ever joined forces for
should again be a powerful force In
took the handoff, shaking off
such an event.
the area with a lot of young talent
tacklers at the line of scrimmage
I asked Petty how driving on the and much potentiaL The combining
and ran untouched for the Til.
big two-and-a-half mllesuperspeedof youth and e•perlence should
Ball State scored earlier In the
spell the key for success at the
ways dlfferl'!l from driving the
quarter on a four-yard run by
smaller speedways, especially
Eagle camp.
tailback Burt Austin In a see-saw
those races held on dirt ovals; and
Although winless In two starts gam&lt;&gt;.
also how the relative speed tnnuSouthern has looked somewhat
Ball State placekicker John
Impressive with Its single sing
enced his driving style.
Dlettrlch hit field goals ri 44 and 28
Petty replied, ''Of course speed Is
yards 1n the second quarter, but
offense. With a little luck the
relative to each situation. On a
Tornadoes could very well be 2-0
Miami's kicker Gary Gussman split
superspeedway you're traveHng
and It all falls Into place Southern's
the uprights with a 50-yarder.
over 220 miles an hour, and on a
determination will pay off In the
half-mile dirt track you're going
end.
about 90-100 miles per hour!"
Until next time set your sights
high and reach lor the victory
"Surprisingly enough, however,
circle.
bOth driving styles are basically the
same. You have to find the groove
and be smooth and consistent to be
fast.
NATIONAL I.F..AGUE
a, UwMN Praull.,_.tDMI
"On the superspeedways you
have to be more precise. There's
W
LPd.GI
~ . Lw .
llli M .fi\0 very little room lor error, but once
NY
86 :"18 .0
1,0:,
you get going and set your pace, you
Mmrl
'ffi lli .5.1'1 101'!1
Phlla .
w 7] .493 hi1..,
just sit back and really don't feel tbe
Chi.
l*i 'In .4611 J'l
"
speed. In your mind you know that
PTW·,Ith
f1 !t2 .:n1 '~
w..
there Is plenty of time and 500 miles
LA
14&lt;1 :'J8 .'i!f.! -

Homecoming
MINERSVILLE- Homecoming
Sept , 22, Minersville Unit('() Methodist Church Sunday School, worship
service begin 9 a.m., basket dinner,
noon. Afternoon services, 2 p.m.

Horticulture Division
Hybrid tea rose, first class: Janet
Bolin, Judith Hill, second and third,
and Judy Snowden.·
Hybrid tea rOS&lt;', second class:
Judith Hill, first and third, Lorle
Barnes, seond and Judy Snowden.
Other roses: Janet Bolin, first.
second and t bird, and kimberly
Willford .
Zinnias: Sandy Titus, all four
places.
Marigolds: Iva Sisson, Sandy
Titus, Janet Boln, and Juidlth HUL
Chrysanthemums: Judith Hill,
first, second and third, and Janet ·

Dinner Table,.

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

•

Johnson reunton held recently
The annual Johnson family reunIon was held at the Racine Locks and
· Dam Sept. 1 with about 75 fam)Jy
members and friends attend ing.
Recognized and presented gifts
were Cu rtis Johnson, the o ldest
man; Esta Roush, the oldest
wom an; Et hel Cozart, the most
family members present ; Gary
Johnson, the one who traveled the
farthest;
Curtis
and AnnPite
MeConlhay, the newest married;
Sommer Joy M cConihay, theyoungIISt girl, and Roger Wood, the
youngest hoy.
- Door prizes were awarded and an
auctlon of hand m ade Item s was
conducted by E ula Redma n. Four
blrths and tw o deaths were
~rded .

· . New

of ficer s elected were Doris
Ifalley, pres ident ; J udy Brace, vice
president ; M ary G illilan, secretary-

..

Monday. September 16. 1985

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

treasurer; and Margie Reeves and
Lori Redman, game committee.
The 19&amp;5 reunion will be hel d at the
Racine Locks and Dam In West
V Irginia.
Attending were Mr. and M r s.
Roger Johnson and Dawn, Mr. a nd
Mrs Bill Roush, Es t&lt;~ Roush , Ethel

Cozart and Emerson Johnson,
Portland; Eu la Redman, Lori
Redman , Pau Une Cunningh am.
Earl and Mary Davis, Kathryn
Johnson, Ka thy Johnson and fami ly, and Linda Johnson and B r ad II ,
Mason, W.Va.; ·Mrs. Judy Brace
and fam ily, Crown City; Raymond
Johnson an d Mr. and Mrs. Wayman
Johnson, Parkersburg, W.Va .
BettyCombso!BrookPark; Gary
Johnson, Phoenix, Arizona; Jim
Johnson of Dallas, Texas; G lenn
and Carrie Atkinson, A then s;
James and .lean Wallace, The

Thomas
births
..
• · Mr.

The Daily Sentinel

Plains; Carole" Gillilan of Can ton;
R uth Johnson Cuher. Toledo; Aar on
and Shirley Sayre, Stephanie,
Jessica and Lon, Syracuse; Glen,
Patty Doug and Brent Johnson,
Letart. W.Va.
Su rvllla Gilland, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Gllland and Be!~any, New
Haven, W.Va.; Mary and F loyd
Capehart , Moundsville, W.Va.;
Lorna Joh nson, WQst Colum bia,
W .Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Curt is
M cConlhay and Sommer, Point
P leasant , W.Va.; M r. and M rs.
Curtis Johnson, Robert. Jonetta and
Tina Davis, Racine; T am my · and
Steven Bachner , M iddleport; Brian
·E. Johnson , Charles and Doris
Bailey, Tiffany and Stephanie
Ga rdner and LeeGillllan, Pom eroy,
and Margie, B r andi, and R obbie
Reeves, B ill and Ca rrie A nn Glllllan ,
Tim and Luanne Gillilan, and
Stacey and Mar y Gillilan, Chester.

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•Springfield. over t he wr&lt;'kend .
.. 1,

Mr. a nd Mrs. Cla ir GilE-s wrre ln

.-- Springfield for the H art r!'ll nion. All
~~"", §ix

sisters and two brothers wrrr

_'able to be tol(('thcr a t the reu nion.

.-

'~ 'Portland .

" ' James

'_'.'tinma

W. OgrUn, deceased,
E. O g dln , aff i d avit ,

· .Pom eroy.
·E: mma E. Ogd l n to Steven D .
"Craig, F ae K. Craig, Lots, Pomeroy

.vmage.
Bernar d V. Ful tz. Betty J . Fultz,
•,..l,Y. Hall Jr., Lilli an Mar lene HaU,
I'" Frank Herald Jr., to Ga rd DrUllng
Co., Parcels, Sa lls bury·Rutland .
K enneth W. Ca rtmill . J oan E .
: .. Cartmill to Jan E. Nilsen, Angela
K Nilsen, Lot, Columbia.
Donald Frederick Runy on, de·
'1:1' ••.
II

d ep ar tm en 1s fr o m C hes t er,
Tuppers Plains a nd Coolv ille assisted and prevented t he fire from
spreading to other buildings.
Mrs. Howa rd Dveeher , Chippewa LakP, r eturned home Labor
Day after a two weeks' visit with
he r sister . Pearl Randolph.

communzty notes
M r s. Ca rl Tay.lor ,
Rutland, wC'rr recPnl \~sitars of Mr.
and Mrs. Clair G ileR
Mel t a Rho ton a nd E mm a Whitted, Lucy Wi nkJN and .Junior

Rhoton. Dayton.

wer(' Sunday
\is itors of Mr. and M rs. Clair G iles .
Cl'Cil Giles, Summer, Dona ld and
Neil. F r ank and Cheri Giles enjoyed
a fa mily ga therin g to celebrat e I I¥'
birt hday 'of Thelm a Gites at the
home of Mr. and M r s. Cla ir G iles.

~::Meigs County
• - flandy E. Green , Laura M . Gr een
-.'to: Ohio Power Co., Ease., Sutton.
r· •" United M ethodist Church , West
• •phlo Annual Con!., to Grace E.
P AiJ en, J am es L. A llen, Lot 5, New
- Portland .
' • United M et hodist Church , West
·•· Ohio Annua l Cont., to Grace E.
-Allen, Jam es L. A llen, Lot 7, New

O'Brien, Columbus.
Mr. and M r s. W arr en Van M eter
and Mr. and Mrs. Jer ry Burke
attended the funera l of Mr. Van
M eter 's brother, H arvey, at Day·
ton, Sept. 4.
Fire destroyed l he dai ry barn of
H arold L ee Hender son Sept 6. Fire

and

Mr. and Mrs.

Le~ liP

F ran k Sarah

BP!h of Texas _Road w&lt;•r e WPdnesday visitors of M r. and Mrs. ~:uge ne
H a ning, Ro nald and G ladys
Tuckerman .
M r. and Mrs. Jo hn Davis and

Melissa were Sunday visitors of Mr.
and M r. J.ames Johnson and
Teressa.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle K napp :
Langsv Uie, spent Su nday w ith Mr.
and Mrs. Cha rle_v Sm it h.

property transfers

ceased, John Craig Runyon, Dorothy E. Norm an. Joseph G.
Runyon, Opal Pearl Runyon , Cert .
of Trans., Olive.
Brynn K Su tphi n, Cindy F.
Sutphin to GaiL Co. Rural Wa ter
A ssoc. In c., Righ t of Way,
Sa lisbury.
Roger E. aka Roger E ugene
Ca rpenter , Linda K. Carpenter aka
Linda K ay, to Farmers Bank and
Savings Co .. Sheriff's deed, Salem.
Jerry L. Dalley , M arilyn Dalley,
Jerry E. P ape, J udy 1A. Pape to
Harriette Sinclair, Lot97, Syr acuse
VUiage.
David L. Decker , Glort a C,
Deck er to Hom e N ational B a nk, 1
acre, Ollve.
Warren Rose, Paullne Rose to
Ralph E. Rose Sr., 1.114 acr es,
Sutton.
Donald R. Hobbs, Maxin e A .
Hobbs to Donald R. H obbs, M axine

•._ _ ~_ ,_.,

I

" TOTAL FIREPLACE

ANO CHIMNEY WORK"
INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is hereby given that
Merkel Mining, Inc., P.O .
Box 33 , Middleport. OH
45768 is applying for a
tranlfer ot strip mine permit
D-011 1and D-0111 -1 from
Dark Diamond Coal Corporation No. 3 Country Lane
Rt . 1 Shade, OH 45776. The
permit is in Section 8 ·and
Fraction 2 Salisbury Township Meigs County. The site
is located on the West Chester and Pomeroy quadran gles of the 7 .6 minute U.S.
G.S . topo map series . A
c:opy of the tr ansfer applica tion is on file at the Meigs
County Recorder 's Office,
M~igs County Courthouse,
CourtStreet, Pomeroy. OH
45769 . Wriuen comments.
objections or requests for in ·
formal conference on the
transfer of the permits may
be sent to the the Division
of ReClamation . Fountain
Square , Building 8 · 3, Columbus, Ohio 43224 .
191 16 1tc

-

o. $twl~t"

•
•
•'

'

'

IUSINESS-RESIDENDAl

SYSTEMS FROM

S899
GIVE US A CALLI

I

·I
I
I

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homts Built
•"Free Estimates"

I

I

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

- ··w. ,. .,

-

I

Address•---------- t

992-2259
"OWNER INTENDS TO S£Ll in
September'" Make an offer'
Property will be purchased for
hall the appraisal made 4
years ago1This, close to downtown Pomeroy, needs work
but could be good home or inveslment Call tod ay and
make your oiler'

Phone

I

$16,900 .

v,

NICE I STORY HOME in Pomeroy on a good street Basement, ga rage, other features.

$28,900.
BEAUTIFUL OLDER HOME
wilh up Jo 4 bedrooms, parlor , sun porch, basement all
•n good condition. On a good
street $39,900.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cl1lond. Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949· 2660
Dottie Turner 992· 5692

A

to drive the vehicle of your
clloice.
No Down Payment
Lower Monthly Payment

Circle
Ad Wanted

Pfinl one· word in eoth

initial

01 growp of figures rou11h
as o word. Coun1 ne~me
•nd address or phone
11umfM.r if used. You' It gel Words
Ntti!t re,ults if you dt·

I

...,.
3

ioy

BlACKSTON

..,,

6
do,,

10

NEW CAR

J

Box. 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769

I

I
I

( JFor Sale

tl _ _ __ __

( JAnnouncemenr
( !FOr Renl
·

614-992-6737

PERSONAUIED

POOLS

tl. - - - - - -

VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WAll POOL
ABOVE GROUND POOL
Ovor 100 Cheltts

1!_ _
---~-22.
__
_
_

••sPAS'"
NYDIOTECN CIIMICALS

5. - - - - - - 25.
,,__
-----_ _ __

491 Gtn. N011i.,.. Pkwy.
Mid41eport, Ohio
HIS. 10 o.m. to 5 p.m.
Nillht

I

I
1

for Faster Strvict

Call

I

lhen 'ash rates
indude diuount

&amp;

TRUCK l£ASING

uri be fully, giwe prire. The
tribune r•strwes lht riflt To IS Sl.O~ 15.00 11.00 $tl.OO
to danify, rdit or reject
anv CHJ. , ••, ad will k .. Tt 2) 14.00 11.00 I I 3.00 $!1.00
put in th prOP,tr dossifica .
fion if you II chedc tht
1D J.S $1.00 110.00 ,, s.oo $15.00
p1Dper box below.
C !Wanted

2 RENTAL UNITS IN MID·
DLEPORT . Need some work
but will produce income.

£nP&amp;•A-Car, Ute modern way

I

1pou btlow. (CKh

COUNTRY ESTATE - Over 4
acres of ground with a beau ·
!lful new home. 1~ story
home, full basement, 2 car
gara ge, m-ground pool. and
man y other featu res. Call today. $64,500.
FARM - 98 acres. hou se,
barn . olher buildings, and
mmerats, etc. $48.900.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICI E
We'd like to introduce you to

I

1. - - - - --

--

2.------

I
1
1

l4 .. -_ ___
_

I
1

6. _ _ _ __

7. -__
- -_ -8,
__
_ _
9.
10.
11 . - - - - - -

19, -----20. - - - - - n _____ _

_______

16. _
21. _

,.

_ _ __
_ _ _ _

_
_

·
·
=====
... --------12.
13. = = = = =

15. -- - - - 16. - - - - - -

JO.

] I _ _ __ __

_

l1. _ __ __

_

3l.====

3&lt;.
3S. _ _ _ __

Mail This CGIIpGI Willi Remittlnce
Tlta Daitr Sentinel
111 CGurUt.
Pom-r,OI1.45719

~14

992-2549

1-f04
mssJt.~

ICUT OUT FOR fUTUH USEJ

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
915·3561
~II

M1ku

•Waehlra •Diahw.....,.

•Renea•

•Dryers •Freez.,.
7

ROGER IIANliY, Jl.
IOGEIIIANIIY, Sl.

OWNIIS

-

CONSTRUCTION
•Rtsidtntial I
Commercial
•Dewtlaprntnh &amp;
(omrntrcial Sites
•Single told multi Unit
H-ing
•Woad Modo Cabinotr{
Deoign anti Plonn1ng

GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7611

5-7-tte

PARTS and SERVICE
4·5-tlc

Roger Hysell ·
Garage
Rl. 124,Pameroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tran.smission

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

.Olympic Pool

A.A.A.
• 304-675 Ulrl.

Sept. 9 thru 20

·

lftor 5 C,.l

CARPENTER
SERVICE

742-2027

-Addon1 end r•modeUng
- Roofing end guHer work

t

- Concn1te work
-Plumbing end electrlc•l

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Installation Available

4/ 41 n

"2-6215 or 992-7311
PotMroy, O~io
12-8-tlc

MILLER .
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

WE ARE YOUR SAlES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

•ZENITH
•SYLYANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SAIEWTE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

WI ""-' ,. Fill Tl••

s•••. II''"
r..••••l••

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

317 North So&lt;ontl
Mitldlopart, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.

ll

tUSINIIS ,HONE
1614} "2-6550
IMENCE PHONE
16141 .. 2.7754

Residentiel &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195
8·8-tfc

INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•lnlulallon
•Storm Doers
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing
"FRIIISTIMATIS~ '

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

DOZER. BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER,
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES,
RECIAMAnON. PONOS,
SPRING OEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
OUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Sizes St1rt From 12'x~6'

UTI UTY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Do&amp; Houses

P&amp;S .BUILDINGS

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992·2772
7

Racine, Oh.
P~. 614·843·5191
l0·6·JfC

RENT A CAR
CAJ.L
446-4522
u~kw

•Co"'plete Remodtlin&amp;

AUTO

MARCUM
CONTIACnNG

.

St.RENTtL
Rt. t60

a~

Otlllptlll, •1•

7111/ tln

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Compa.te Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roof!ng of all Typal
Worked in home area
20 yura
' 'Free Eatimatea"

UU COlLECT:

Ph. (6141 843-5425

9113/ 2 mo. pd.

112iltlc

doom Additions
doofi~
.Sidi~
•Gir~ps

&amp; Pole
Juildinp

...... lotte-. Olttle

Ph. 915-4141

FreeEitl9·11· 1 IIICI.

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; AlU.NUM

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worlled in home area
20 years
"' Free Estimates'"

CAU COllECT:
Ph.

Wanted To Buy

WANTED . TO Bl,IV uood
wood • coal heaters.
SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd.
• Olive St. Gallipolia·. Call
614·446-3169.

AH or pan of retair. wholeMit, or service busineas in
Gotlio or Melgo Co. Colt
614-446-2639 .
Uaed mobile homea. Call
614· 448·017~ .

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Beds, Iron,
woOd, cupboards·. chain,
chettt 1 bukett. dlshet.
stone jera, antiques. gold
and silver. Write-M . D .
Miller, Rt .2 , Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or call 814-992 ·
7760.

16141 B43-542S

7/ 1212 mo. pd.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and tod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas finks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
.LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-1-tfc

f llliliOylllf!lll
S1:1 vlt:t:S

Ann uu nc em en ts
2

In Memoriam

work
(Free Eatimalesl

Estimates"

9

Wantad:old pianos. Paying
$20 end *40 each . First
floor only. Write giving
directiona. Witten Pianos.
Boa 188 . Sardis, Ohio
43946.

1-e-1 - ·

11

The· fimily of John Siupn
withes to expreat their
appreciation to The Rutlend
Emergency Squad, Or.
P.ickens, Veterana Memorial
Hospital and to al tho•• who
brought food. aent flowert
and cards. A 1pecial thankt
to our friends and neighbort
' on Depot St.

3 Announcements

··············---~-·· - ---- :.-~\\

·-····Gaiiij)oiii·········
8o.

Pomeroy
.,
Middleport · . ·
8o. Vicinity ·• •,

Vicinity

---·-·-··-·----·-······--··-··

Aluminum scrap. Sell your
aluminum scrap direct to the
amelt•. Buying all gr..Jes of
aluminum. Premium paid for
large loads. Call for quota.
Scipio Energy. located 1~
milet east of Pagetown on
Township Road 141. Meig•
County. 814· 992·34118.

PH. 992-3912

YOUNG'S

J&amp;l BLOWN

.

•Live entertainment

' Free HBO •Restaurant

AA(.i''

ACCENT

"FrH

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE . Eotote.
fllrm , entiq~e. liquidation
ules. Licensed Ohio end
Wool Yl rglnlo . 304· 773·
67811 or 30&amp;· 773-11430.

Buying dolly gold, olivet
coins, rlnga,)ewelry, sterling
w.re. old coins, farge currency. Top prices. ed. Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Mlddlepon, Oh . 81&amp; -992·
3478.

ROUSH

3/ 11 / tfn

I

SINGlE S24.9S

{~
t ...~
i&amp;#'

&amp;11/ trn

"VINYl SIDING
• AlUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

Pomoror·lllson Btidae

.-Used

CHESTEI--915-3307

•Refrlgeraton

••

For Trash Pickup·
Service Call
992~3194
8-7-1 mo.

I

8 milts from

Gril.., ,.. ,..,,,, ......... '31 .50
Hoods ......................... '14S
73·79 Chewy. Ts.
13·15 Ford ltsntor
•
lodl• , ....., ..............125
Hoods ......................... 'I 3D
73-79 Chivy. Tr.
13-IS lord h11911
Clb Cwntrs ......... ,........l20
Grill• ..- ........- ......... ,_S7S
Htw
Auto Glos1-Lote ...W Parts
WHALEY'S AUTO PAITS
9-13-ttn
II. 611 WHI Dttrwl Ohio - 992·7013

u mont

I

POMEROY,O.

ao~f5lhF;;;j"f;:- ....... $52.5° ·

TaiWiing Speciaf_........li.. "1.!.~............$35

~

MIDD~EPORT
AND

~Ul

IT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PUAlANT, W. YA.

HAIR CUT &amp; STYLE...$7.50

MANIIY'S

•

ma il with ft1is 1
c oupon. Cance6 your ad by phone when you get 1
, results. Money not refundable .
I

Name

. ..... .....s

n.~1::;-1;:

70

"0" ,,.., ,, B-Ill

b~

Write your own ad and

E. Ma i ',L,WijgrJ.I..I

............................... •150

73·14 Ch11y Tr.

Doors ......................... '135

POMEROY

1 Curb Inflation
I
.
1 Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savelorder.ll

Public Notice

10-15 Ford Tr.
Door. ......................... $145
71-79 Ford Tr.

D-s . . ...............:.. l lOO

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992-6931

I
,----------.
-------------.,-

Crochet ripple topper of
worsted In 3 colors
neck down. Pat . 7276:
Misses Sizes 8-141ncl.
Send $3.00 plus 65e
postage, handling for
each pattern .
Sind tO: ·

73-10 Chlwy. Tr.

Sign up and win • fr.. p•u to the local Homecoming Game of your choice .

INSURAIICE WORK

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

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice is fleraby given that
Markel Mining. Inc ., P.O.
Box 33, Middleport, Ohio ,
--~:---------,I transfer
45788 is applyii1g for e
of mine pe. mit D0206 from Abundanl Lite
Coal Corporation . 32878
Ro1e Hill Road, POmeroy
11 1 Couldn't ~w:: h lfjm
What would II bt&gt; ll kt•ln l h£.' world todav.
Ohio , 4 6769 . The permit 1i
f1 you could n't n&gt;ach God when you !Ui£.'!1 10
in Fractions 17 and 18 of
pray:
Salisbury Townehip, Meigs
If he tuml&gt;d away as if not to hear,
County . The site ia located
But you know !hat He dkJ for }UU felt Him so
on I he P~meroy quadrangle
N'ar?
of the 7 .5 minute U.S .G.S .
topo map series. A copy of
\o\'hen _you !('II Him your troubles and ~"Oll
the transfer appliution 11 on
know Ilia! He hf'ard.
file ot tho Mtligo County Re·
And you stiU have ttl£&gt; fl'E'IIng He missed every
c:ordor'o Office, Meigo Cwnty
word;
CourthotJ..., Coun SlrMt, I'D·
You ~n then to wonder If tK&gt; really did care,
meroy, Ohio, 46769. W When he said " If you need me, l 'll always bt!
commenta,obftctionaorrarhf&gt;re.•.
questa for informlll conference
on the tronofer of the permM
Oh, there's so much today to hl'lp cloud lhf'
moy be .., to the Divtoton
mind,
of Raclametion, Fountain
So much for the weak and ll's not hard to flnd;
But one thl111 J know when He said J was tn:oe, Square, Building 8 ~ 3. Col.
umbuo, Ohio 43224 .
.
U Heaven ls lOst. the fault is In me.
- By Olen 0 . Harrt.on.
191 16 1tc

Poet :rcorner

8112/2 mos.

\.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

54 Misc. Merchandise

Public Notice

A. Hobbs, Lot , Sal em.
Wllllam B. L edlle, Emm a A.
Ledlle, Dorothy B arnes Woodard t o
John Ha le, L ot, Rutland.

I'

&amp;46-9&amp;16--446-2112

HOME NATIONAL BANK
CALL 949-2210-Ask for Tim

•

Mr.

Heat Pumps. Furnaces

•101 ,., ,

;.

Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Va n M eter
an d Mr. a nd Mrs. E d wa rd
Tschanen, Bucy rus, visited Mr.
Van M eter's birthday. War ren Van
M eter. and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks spent
Labor Day W&lt;'&lt;'kmd with her
parent s, Mr. and M rs. Car sey,
Columbus. Bob Brooks, who had
been assisting in his grandfat her's
care. r eturned hom e with them .
Ga r ner Griff in return ed hom e
after a v isit wit h his daughter a nd
family, Mr. an d M rs. Charles

•' -

Real E1tate General

Morris and family.

'

;\ i I\
...-:-·

Air Conditioners

4129/ ffn

010 .

73 -79 FiNd Tr.
Ftndtrs ...............~.........141
73-79 Ford Tr.

Fall. Kickoff

TRASH SERVICE

;Alfred
community
happenings
...
SE'rvice.

IINtiE1T'5 MOitU &amp;
MANIUCtuRID HOUSIIIG

1-12· I

73·10 Chivy Tt.
Ftnclers .........................'41
73 ·10 Chlwy Tr.

TANNING SALON

~

• CLEANING INSPECTION
• FLUE CAPS INSTAllED
• CHIMNEY REBUILDING

• • ,;;PAQIIAT

Ande•·son, Roland, F~r n and M atthew Morris. M ar y ShOwalter, Jeff
New~ ll . R onnie Eblin, and B ill , K ay

joined in hymn singing and i n t he
Lord 's Prayer which closed the

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFIED

'85 Needlecrafl Catalog

Morris, Carol, .Jim , and .Jimmy

Shawna Ann Manley

8-19·1 mo. pd.

949-2263
or 949-2969

ROCID PA1tEU ..........._ s19
CAl CORNIIS ..........- .....120

FOR THE
BOTH OF YOU
snuNG &amp;

&lt;!Utimney

After Aug. 21

14x70 1979
FAIRMONT
TRAILER
24x7 TIPOUT
2 Bedrooms, 2
baths, fireplace,
· central air.
$15,000
Call 992-3859

J 17
The Daily Sentinel

cakes w ere served with other·
refreshments.
A ttending and presenting gi ft s
wer e Betty. L.aw renC(', Ba rb, and
Mike Triplett , Phy Uis and E ldon

!lu\d

W• t1o Weddings, F...ilits
&amp; Childrtn
Call ot' Walllln For An
Appointment and Prir~s
301 3rd St., Rti&lt;ino, OH.
Home: 992-6712
Or Ius. 949-3031

Wes I Strwke

R01d11 Milt

Manis. Birthday a nd anniversary

;i!andparent s a re Mr. and Mrs.

PHONE 992-7075

Quality lntenherm

Attc1 Brooks CIIHS ,

ho nored guest' s w ife, A ngel a,
hosted the party. Al so observed
during the... day w as the fi rst
anniversa ry of Mr. a nd Mrs. Danny

t
t

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

HUTING &amp; COOliNG SYSTEMS

7240

their son, Dann:v.
Mr. and Mrs. Morris, and 1he

SENIOR P.ck-.gn in Town

54 Misc. Merchandise

CRAFTS

A surprise 251 h birthday part y
was held r ecently a t the hom e of
Walter and Nancy M orris, honoring

Packages To Choose

From- lowett Priced

Gunero • Oownopoutl
Guner Cleaning
Pointing
FREE ESTIMATES

..

FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES

Allee Brooks
Danlelle Marie Md
Michelle Uegh Thomas

PICTUIE "PEIFECT"
PHOTOS
Many

·-

Now s,rlng All 01
. M•lll Countg · '
end Sunoundlnj!
A,.ll 8119/~mo pd,t
~-·----

OPENING AUG. 21

furniture, We4cling
and Graduatton

150 designs. $2 + 65C.
Books $2.50 + 65C p &amp; h.
129-Dulck 'n' Easw Transfln
123-Stffch 'n' Potcll Quills
115-Ripplo Crochlt
105-tnstant Croctiet

M r. and M rs. R odney Manle)•.
JiQDieroy, are announcing t he birth
of'B daughter , Shawn a Ann, born on
Jlug. )7 at the Pleasant VaUry
, 'llospltal . She wa s 19\llnches long
'and wei ghed seven pounds, four

By Nellie ~arker
-" ·Sunday School a ttendance Sept.l
"-was 'll; church a ttenda nce, 18. On
_Sept 8 Sunday Sc hool attendance
·F"was 22; church a tte nda nce, al.
;.' ' Alfred UMW he ld servi ces at
:·; Arcadia Nursing Center Sept . 10.
Thelma H enderson , leader , opened
the program with prayer . Theme
•• w as
. Ha rvest Time. M rs. Henderson
c •r ead scripture f rom Job, Proverbs,
M atthew and L u ke. Nina Robinson
r ead• Thank God I 'm Alive. Nellie
. ,1 .
•- parker r ead A Talk With Gnd .
.." Gertrude Robinson sang Jesus 1s
Coming Again . Sammie Ralrden
' _gave testimony. A ll at the se•vlce

8-8· l mo. d.

y,., Plllllltf N01il

.

t
.t

Free Estimate•

Your

NEW C..OMI STII' ~IS --·· '125

BLUE STREAK CAB CO. '

Ph. 985-4141

PlUS: Olfitt Sui'tllios &amp;

The Daily Sentinel

;j

.r'

Long Bottom, Ohio

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

7WO GMPUDOOIIIIIIS.....
73-1'1 1C1D PU ••145

Public Sale
Is Auctl9n

NEW-REPAIR

......... 8
N~ D"n* Lat• Moct.l R-.,IRefMftt Pertt
For Truclct and Ctrt
Plllntt. lody FIM.ri:, FIMrglut R..in tnd
/ Kit.. Flulble Ptrt R_,.lr Productt. Polithlng
Compound end l•nd Ptpen lleiHng Wholelal•l

6·13 Un

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

ROOFING

IODY IEPAIR SIPPUES ·

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

•Siding
•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

Equl~1111111

Station•y, Magnetic
Signs, RuWtor Stlt8jK,
lusinen Form1,

Rlldlr MaN

Morris birthday

•Homer H ysell, Pom eroy.
Maternal grandparen ts are M r .
M rs. Dav id Pratt . Pom eroy .
and the m aternal grea t grandpar-ents are Mr. and M rs. Ali r ed Pra tt
_.'and Willi am Jones. Pom eroy.

Do " chicken scratch"
embroidery on 4-to·lnch
gingham. Pattern 7240:
chart for 14 ' pillows .
Send $3.00 plus 65e
postage, handling for
each pattern,
d to:
Allco Brooks Crtlt&amp;. • ,

s..

';Manley ·birth

an~

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO

Howard L. W.ritesel

110'11 Wolf ..... Stroot
, _ . , , Olo.

Ph. 61t·ft2-6771
llow Is ftillr StiKketl With All

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

*Room Additions
*Roofing

SALES &amp;SERVICE

Fer111

Mr.

Heanne Evaluations,or. All Aps

•Complete Remodeling

BOGGS

B

3-D AUtO CENTER
.

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

Authorized John Deere,
New Holl1nd, Bush Hoa
Farm Equipment
Dealer

CNIIs Now

Television Usteni• Devices
Computerized Helil Aid Selection

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

·Business
Services

1-3-th

•

MO!lday. September 16, 1985

Of Wr ilt D••llr S.nti11tl C:lmiti•• Otpt
111 (a u•t St. r allllftf, Ollio 457"

'

"Paterna l grandparPnts

PHONE 992-2156

P1rt1 &amp; Ser•lee

and M rs. Daniel Lee Thomas,
40M3 Park ROad , Shade, are
8/lnounclng the bir th of twin
~a~ghters at Un iver sity H ospital,
Columbus. Aug. 16.
• p an ielle M ar ie Weighed three
p&gt;~~nds, slxouncesandwas 161nches
long. and Michelle Leigh w ei ghed
·ro~r pounds, one ounce and w as 17\1
lilches long.
M ichelle cam e home from the
hQ'spital on Sept. 1, and Danlelle on
sept. 9.
.
• -Maternal gra ndparents are Mr.
•afid Mrs. Lar ry Rapp, Pine Grove
fiQad, Racine, and the paternal
wandparent s are
and M rs. Don
'I'Itpmas, Pomeroy. Maternal great
grandparents ar e Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Rapp and Mrs. Thel m a
!lftnks, Shade, a nd Mrs. Phala
'ffi'nos, Cottle, W.Va. P aternal great
grandpar ents ar e M r. and Mrs.
,Ralph Graves, Pomeroy. The twins
-~VI? one grea t grea t grandmother,
Mrs. Sallie Cadle , Shrewsbu rg,
W.Va .

.

Help Wanted

Beeline offera free clothea.
good money, no ceah invelt·
ment. Work your oWn hours.
Colt ,.Iter 6PM . 614-286·
6237 .
frBII lingerie, good time,
undercover wear. party plan.
Call ofler &amp;PM. 814-286·
5237 .

.

··················------------

Trtiler space far rent 186 1
month include• water 6
gorboge . Colt 114- 3877267.

F... merket. Frlday-&amp;undai:-

11

31

Sept. 20 -22. I 612 Powoll
St., Middleport. Rain or
lhlne.

Help Wanted

WANTED: HIGH SCHOOL
SENIORS AND GRADU ·
AlESI The Woot Virglnlo
Army National Guard nMCie
individu111 who ere looking
for • pert-time job with •
good future. Are _y ou wond·
ering where you Will get the
money for cotl~~ge1 The new
Oi Bill win pay full time
atudentt $140. per month,
up to a maximum of $6,040 .
The student lo1n reptyment
program repave • major
ponion of outstanding Federel student toant, up to
$10.000 . You may alto be
elegible for a •1.600. or
$2,000. enlistment bonus .
A combination of Guard
program can provide more
than $20.000. on educa ·
tlonal benefits, PLUS , you
receive 1 monthly paycehck,
life insunnce, and you can
utilile the delayed training
option and the split trllnlng
option to attend ba1ic: and
ldvanced training without
missing school. We have
what it tak81 to make your
futurel Cell 304-675 ·39110
or 1-800-6&amp;2-3619.

Homes for Saltr ··"

House for ..le : Belt otter:
garage , garden area. GrMn
School District . Colt 8,1&amp;448·2025 or 814 -245;
9160 .
. •
•
4 bdr ., bath , utility room,
Uvln·g room. kitchen. · ~hd
dlningroom . Big z car g~~r·
age with anachll!d greenhouse, on 3 acrea. ftuit
caller . Cell814· 441 · 8181 ~

3 bdr ., family room, 110i
Adrian Ave .. •39,000. CeM
814 - 44~ · 3718 .

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

In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr,
just flniahed , full ban~t.
nice lot. large rear deck, witt'
valley view . priced to Mil,
*39,500 . Will consider tnO•
bile home trade-ln . Cell
814·446-B038 .
Roduced • I 0.000 multi·
unit apartment compleit, •II
1 bdr .• eome furnished .
resident menager, ren'~
p1t ell utilities. approx .
$1 ,400 mo. income. Owner
"will pay closing coat. Cafl
dayo 814·592· 1189 orne.
614· 594·2874 .
'~l

Part time farm work.. house · 3 bdr.. newly remodeled.
lumished, 304-676 -3030, new vinyl eiding, shinglft.
676·3403. 8711- 3431 .
city school diet . Owner mutt
nil, t29,900. Colt 61&amp;·
446·2034.
12

Situation•
Wanted

Room-Board with family
willing to provide 1upport
servk::es for gentleman age
5&amp; . Contact Joann :· 114·
4&amp;6·B145 .
Room and board for senior
citizens , retirees and die·
abled . Special care. 674
Plum St .. Middlapon. 614·
992-3695.
Will care for elderly people in
my home. 24 hour care.
Phone 814-367-7148 .

Have vecency for men or
women . Elderly only. Care.
room. board and laundry.
Colt 614·992· 6022 .

Mu1t eell-·40 acre, 4 bdr .• 2
bathe house. farm equipment. Call 614-266· 8790.
Make offer 2 bedrooms. 1 .2
acres. 2 car garage, ,alt
rea1oneble offers eoneidered . ln. Pomeroy . &amp;'t.a 678·2513 .
20 acres, 3 bedroom coufttry home with 1 VI betha.
tully carpeted. kitchen appliances included, fuH ba~­
ment with fireplace. family
room , 2 car garage attached.
Call 814·992·5084 .

6 rooms and bath . Neer
Pomeroy · Middleport , . 1 V:z
lcreo. Call 614-992·746~.

Very nice house for ule~ 3
bedroom•. beth,• livirig
room, woodbuming stotM,
·dining room, kitchen. ce.l,ler.
Vacancy for the elderly in 6 acres. fenced in. Bam.
our home. Trained end fif- chicken coop. pony ahed ,
teen yean experlence . Catl work .shop . McCumber Rd ..
614-992 ·7314 .
Rutland . Priced to 1811. 61•992·2143 doy and 61&amp;.
742·2289 alter 4:30. 18 Wanted to Do
7 room house. 11!J bath,
garage on Gravel Hill . 4
Will peint treiler roofs &amp;. cut bedrooms. Middleport . 614tobecco . Call 614· 266- 992-5714.
1628.
In Pomeroy. 5 room hGtne
Jobs working in tobacco . with beth, carpeting, storm
Call Mike 614-446-8531 . · windows. new gas furnac..
penial bailment. storage
Can painted . $100 and up . building . Reasonably priced.
20 yeara experience . Phone Must see to appreciate. Call
614-986 -4174.
614· 992 ·6763 .

Working Supervisor familiar
with jenitoriel work . Rio
SWEEPER and aewing me- : Gran de· Gallipolis area .
chine repair, parts. and ' Send resume to: Box 400 in
tupplies.
Pick up and c.re of the Oallipolit Daily
delivery. Davia Vacuum Tribune, 826 3rd. Ava.,
CMener, one half mile up Gotlipotio. Oh 46631
Georges Cr111k Rd.
Call
Start setling Avon now while
814-448-0294 .
ttarting fH is only &amp;6.00.
Down Home D•ys, Steam· expir11 9·20·85. Call 614·
Gas Engine Show Sept. 446·21 66.
20 .21.22. Fraziera Bonom,
WVa. Enginils performing Catting
threshing, sawmill. shingle Four regionel TV commermill , molaasu making. cial. All ages. No experience
Country mu•ic daily. Admis· necesnry . Will be interview·
ing in Southeast Ohio arei.
sion 82 .00 .
Week of Oct. 1 . For tppoint- Wallpapering, neat and pre- 3 bedroom• and bath . larkin
AA Crisis Pregnacy Center. ment call between 10 :AM - • cise. References aveileble . St .• Rutland. Can be sold on
Confidential. Free prtg · 7:PM . Mon.-Fri. 614-890· Call 304·676-2001 or 304· land contract with amall
nancy teat and·or informa- 0222 .
675 -4883.
down paayment . Call 614·
tion. Phone 814·742 -2829,
.
992· 6858.
Sell AVON make 45%. Cell
collect If necesaery .
614·446·335B.
3 bedroom home, 8 V, per·
Financial
Fat Burnarl Gobeae Grapecent auumablaloan. garden
fruit Extra Strength Cap. Bebyoiner lor 10 yr . old boy.
apot, Reduced down to
aules . Frutfl Phermacy. Father work• ehiftwork. Call
$49,000. 304·675 ·5047.
814-446-6550.
Middleport .
21
Business
By owner, 2 bedroom ranch,
Opponunity
Needed Immediately: 100 Planner I Rural. multi 704 Marietta Road, Point
people 1eriously interested county. regional planning
Plea11nt, nice location •• tow
in losing weight. 1 -800- and economic development
60 'a. 1-609· 453·2692.
A
I NOTICE I
992-9991 . Robert &amp; Judy commi11ion seeka entryHartsoe, Rt. 1. Box 310. level planner with research THE OHIO VALLEY PUB · By Owner -· Fully furniehed
Creston, NC 28616, 1-919· and 1tatiatica akillt. bache· LISHING CO . recommends 2 bedroom cottage with
lor's degr" required. urban that you do busineu witfl large living room. kttohen
386-6806
and regional planning, pub· people you know. and NOT and bath located on union
MOBILE HOMES MOVED. lie admlniatration • .political to Hnd money through the Campground Road at.Union
ineured, reasonable rates. science. geography and re- mail until you have inve1ti· Cemetery Road, two 1'1\ilet
lated course work preferred. gated the offering .
Call 304·676-2338.
from New Haven . Fuel oil
excellent fringe benefits,
heat. Parcel eon1itta of 2 .76
ootorv '1 0,000· * I 2,000,
acres With2 acres of fenced
send resumes including 22 Money to Loan
4
Giveaway
pa1ture. Price 126. Terma
three (3) references by OcA~oiloblo . 304-773-911611.
tober 4th to Ohio Valley
7 Vt mo. old femate puppy lh Regional Development HOME OWNERS-Refinance
Bird dog to good home. Call Commission , 740 Second to low fixed rote . Use equity 32 Mobile Home1 ••
St . Portsmouth . Ohio for any purpooe. Leader
for Sale
814·448 ·3684.
46662 . 'Equal Opportunity Mongoge Co .. 614 -592· 1 - - - - - - - - -- -- 3061 .
. ,1 0 week olf mixed breed Employer'
14x70. 3 bedrooma with
-·lcpuppy wormed &amp;. shots to
central ai r, new carpet, new
good home. Colt 6 I 4-448 · Eesy Auemblv Workl
*600.00 PO&lt; 1oo. Guoron · 23 Professional
roof . Price reduced . Call
7313 .
teed payment . No
614·992· 3119 alter 4,:30.
Services
4 puppies. 6 weeks old, part eKperlence-No 11111. Details
1974 Hillc rest 12x66. 2
Beagle. p1rt Cocker Spaniel , aend self · addreased
stamped envelope: Elan Vi - Water wells drilled and Mr· bedrooms. Good condilon .
814·992 -7868.
tal · 716 3418 Enterpri.a viced . Prices on request . Call Partially furnished with un814· 742-31&amp;7or814-992· derpinn ing and 2 p"'"~hes.
3 female long-haired kittens. Rd., Ft. Pierce. Ft. 33&amp;82 .
U,BOO. Colt 61 4· 892·
2 white. 1 bloch . 814 ·985 ·
6008 .
.
Earn •4.87 hr. We nHd
6263 or 614-992·247B .
4120 .
aasistence in evaluating and PIANO TUNING AND RE·
rftponding to deity work PAIR, back to school dis· 12x65 Elcona Trailer. Good
Top ooil. 304·875· 7065.
repons submitted by our counta, free eatimetea, condition. 1 mile east of
~ts thr-oughout the ttllte. Ward's Keyboard. 304·676· Cheater on St . Rt . 248 .
Make offer. Call evenings"
No experience neceaury; 5600 or 876 · 3824.
6 Lost and Found
814·9B5 ·4466 or 61 4' 91111Paid to comphtte training.
Work It home . For informa - McOtnlel Custom Butcher- 3841 .
tion send Mlf·addreased,
open 6 daya 1 WHk.
LOST: male Siberian .Hu1ky stamped env•lope 9 Y, Ing,
1985 Etcar. 10x50. 2 bed·
black &amp; white. Vicinity Mill lnche1 long to : AWGA, 304·882·3224.
rooms. Good condition .
Creek Rd . Reward. Call Dept . E. Box 49204,
Phone 614 ·986 ·3882.
814-446 ·1642 .... 323, Atlonto, Ga 30369.
cRr!al Estate
614·448·1849 . ,.. 4:30.
1975 12• 66 2 bed•oom
VETERANS : Do you wloh
mobile homa on 6 acres of
FOUND smtll meht dog on you had 1t1pd In the
land. Double garaga aton~ge
Portsmouth Rd . Thura. 9 - mltitOI'I 1 Rograt losing I hat
building . Kingsbury Rd .,
12-86. Colt oltor 5, 814· retirement income7 Sorry 31 Homes for Sale
Pomeroy , Phone 1111-982245·5508.
you didn't takeldvantage of - - - - - - - - - - 2664 or 614 ·992 -2774.
thoGI Bitltogotyourc:oll- 2 bdr .. f~lly carpotod . vinyl
Lost: Red ma._ Dobermt~n , 1 degrl81 Mttby it's not too aiding. large lot: etorage MOBILE HOMES MOl/EO .
yr. old. btd right front tog. lett. Join the Army National bldg.. garden. reetricted, Insured, rusoneble ..tes.
Colt 614·448-2281 or 304· Guordondrocolvoamonthly 127.500. Colt 81&amp;· 2118· Colt 305-576 -2338.
675·1880.
paychec:k, lit. inaurancee. 8200 .
retirement benllfita, and the
t 981 Holly Pork ·moblto
Lost : Pitbull puppy . 4 Now Gl IIIII. It poyo full time 3 bdr. large living room, full home. 14x70. muM ' leU,
months old . Brown and atudentt *140.00 per basement. $29 .000 or 304-678-2947.
whit,, Last ...n Wedne1day month . 3,\ time students 84,000 take over pay menta.
evening on Brownell St., 11011.00 par month, ond Celli t 4·446 · 7360 .
I 971 Flamingo 12•65. 3
Middleport. 814·982·2031 hoff tlmo otudonls t70 .00
bedroom, AC, exc Cond.
or 814·992-2034.
per month, up to ma~dmum Newly remoct.ltd, carpeted, porch, 614-448 -0684.
af 11,040.00. Wo how the fumance, bl8ement , Clr·
Loat:3 month old Boxer boot pon-tlme lobo ora~nd I pon. , Hck, new windowa Kirkwood, 12•&amp;11 mobllt
puppy. Famale. Brown and Col 30&amp;-8711-38110 or 1• ond dooro. 84 Mlll c . -. 'home . Good condition ,
white. 814-742 ·2218 .
Gottlpallo.
1100-842-3819.
. ..ooo . 304-8711· 11011.

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

�Page-8- The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for .Sale

LAFF·A·DAY

NEW AND USED MOBILE
IIOMES KESSEVS QUALlTV MOBILE IIOME SALES ,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 614-4467274 .
Rodney

Home &amp; Supply

Center. Rodney. Ohio lo·

CJ
0

cated between US 35 &amp; St .

Rt . 588. Call 614. 245 5308.

CJ

61

64

Household Good•

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS,
hot dip ,.blueing, eUypeeol
gunamith work. faat Mrvice,
304-67&amp;-4131 '

Valley Furniture, new &amp;
uaed. Urge 1ectlon of quality furniture. 1218 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis .

1- - - - - - - - - -

66

0

812.000 . Call Wiseman
Real Estate, 614·446·

53

Clayton homes on Sale!
19B5 lekefront, 1475 aq.ft .

1974 Celebrity, 12x60. axe .
con d . Call614-245-9146 or
61 4 -446- 3445.
1979 liberty 14•65 2 bodroom, furnished mobile
hom&amp;. eKcellent condition,
gas furnance . Must sell,
06,500 . Call 814- 446 3681.
1982 14K70 trailer. 3 bdr.,
1% bath . stove &amp; refrig ..
washer &amp; dryer hookup.
8x10 wood storage build·
ing, BK 1 0 wood porch deck,
012, 500 . Call 614- 4466231 .

"Financial experience? l'm

supporting a $60,000-a-year
wife on $30,000 a year!"

64
4Z Mobile HomBs

44

for Relit
2 bdr. furnished, all utilitits

Apartment
for Rent

2 br apartmanlt in Hender·
110n. 304-676-1972.

pd ., except elect. . conve·
nient location. aecurity dep- One bedroom apartment,
osit rauqlrad . Call814-446- convenient location, call
8558 .
304-876-2441'

Furnished, AC, cable, no city
texas, beautiful riverview, in 46 Furnished l'!ooms
Kanauga. Foetar's Mobile
1965 New Moon 10x5.5 , liome Pork, 614-446-1602 . For rent Sluping Rooms
good con d., S2,500 . Call
and light house keeping
6 ,1 4-379-2830.
2 bdr. air con d., new carpet. rooms. Park Central Hotel.
g11 heat, private lot in Coli 614-446-0758.
1965 New Moon 1 Ox60 Gallipolia . Call 814-446pertiallv furnished. $2,500. 1409 .
Call 514-388-9644.
---~~---'-- , 46 Spece for Rant
1 4K65 mobile home on 1
N'a shua 1 4x70. compl&amp;tely acre lot $250 mo. plus
u1ilitie1 2 children accepted. Mobile homelot,12'K50' or
f~rnished . Washer and
drver. Call614-949-2253.
available Oct . Vinton area. amallar. •76 water. paid, 4th
Call 614-388-9881 .
a. Nail, Oollipollo. Cell 4464418 oftor 8PM.
34
Business
Mobile home lot 1 mile out
44
Apartment
Buildings
Neighborhood Rd. 850 mo.
for Rent
Coll614-446-1340.
Commercial building tor sale
or rent on Main St . New
Haven. W.Va . Call304-882·
2.056 .

35
'

Lots

&amp; Acreage .

I.A;,t on Bear Run Rd. Rae·
'-"&gt;on Creek, $3,500 . Call
~04-522-2076 .

16 acres. 50360 Bigley
Ridge Rd . in long Bottom.
l!xcellent for hunting . Call
614- 986-4210.
Burial Lois, Concord Cametorr. Phone 304-675-1126.

Reninis
'• '

4'1

•

Houses for Rent

~ bdr . ranch. located on Rt.
160. near NGHS, 9300 mo .,
$150 dep., no pets. Call
· 6,4-388·8711 after SPM .

3 bdr . full basement. central
air , fireplace. Green school
district . available imme·
diatelv. S326 plus dep . Cell
614-852 -1357.

Trailer apace for rent t86
mo. includes water &amp; gar·
JACK SO Ill ESTATES bego . Coll614-367-7267.
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunity) 3 officaawith amallkitchen ,
monthly rent stansat e1&amp;9 1218EasternAve*200mo,
for1 badroomand*204for 5 room unfurniahed
2 bedroom. deposit $200. apt .. •200 mo. Call 614·
located near Spring Valley 446-7572 or 61 4·446Piau and Foodland, pool 1980.
and Cable TV available. 1 - - -- - - - - - oflice houre as po11ible 10 COUNTRY MO.BILE Home
am to 4 pm and 7 pm to 9 pm Park. Route 33. North of
Monday-Friday. Call 114· Pomeroy. large Iota. Call
446-2745 or leovo 814-992-7479.
me11age.
Trailer spacee. small child·
Nlc81y furniahed mobile ren eccapted, out Locuat
home, aff. apt .. central air Rood, Rt. 1, bock of KloK,
and heat in city, edulcs only. 304-676-1 07&amp;.
Coll614-446-0336.
1--------Furnished efficiency *180,
utilties paid. ahara bath. 107
2nd . Ava. Gallipolia. adutta.
Coli 446-4416 oftor 8PM.
2 bdr . apt., good locetion,
redecorated,_ utilitiaa partly
paid . Coi1304-875-5104 or
304-675-53B6.

Furnished efficiency S 160
mo . utilities paid, 7 N ..l
Ave., Gallipolis . Cell 446·
4418 after 8pm.

3 bdr . air con d .. within city
limiu . Call614-446-4110 .

740Y:! 2nd. Ave., 3 bdr.,
S190 mo .. 1 bdr .. $135.
Deposit required . Call 614446-4222 between 9 &amp; 5.

Like new. convenient toea ·
tion. 2 bdr.. S260 per
month, $150 depqsit . Call
evenings 614-446-9328 for
appointment .

Newly redecorated 2 bdr
apt, with AC, large spacious
rooms, immediate occu·
pancv, e 250 mo. Cell 614446-7025 .

bdr. apt .• 11 Court St ..
3 bdr ..
' double garage , 28325
mo ., ret . &amp; dep. Call
breezeway. College Rd .,
Syracuse. $300 plus dep- 614-446-4926 .
osit . Caii614-446-147B.
Just Available. Unfurn'ad. 1
House 4 rooms &amp; beth, BR , utilities paid. t260 / mo.
furnished , 735 Rear 3rd . Coli 614-446-9244 9-6.
Ave .' Call 614-446-3870 or
Upstairs 3 rooma &amp; beth .
614 -446 -1340.
Clean, no peu, adults, ref
2 bdr. furnished near town . required . Cell 614 -446 ·
Call 614-446-0143 or 614· _1_5_1_9_· _ _ _ _ _ __
446-0571 ·
Furnished, $176 mo. pay
Eureka , nice one story 2 bdr, own utilities. Call 8 14-446·
will rent. lease or land 9244 .
co ntract . Deposit It referen·
ces required . Blackburn Furnished apt. , 1 bdr .. $226
mo ., 920 4th Ave .. Gallipo·
Realty, 614 -446-000B .
lis. Utilities paid. Call 446·
House and bath. large yard in 4416 after 8pm .
Racine area . Call 614 -992 ·
3 bdr . duplaK. new carpet.
585B .
new bath. new appliances.
Second Ave., $275 mo.
2 bedroom home . Fur· 644
nished. Real nice. Rt . 124 Cell 614-446-0690.
Minersville . Overlooks Ohio 2 bdr . apt., Crown City,
River . Call 614-992-3324. 8178 mo . Call 614-2866496 evenings.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr . AC . fully furnished,
utilities paid . Call614-446·
4110 .
'

2 bdr. apt. centre! air,
refrigerlor &amp; stove . $226
mo.. plut depotit, renter
peya utilities, ref. req . Call
614 -446-3BB8, ofter 5
614.446-4491 '

49
Businesa building with large
parking area . Renovated,
new paint. carpet, etc. First
floor-siK rooms and bath for
offices or apta. Top floor· big
storero'Ome 25ft.x50ft .,
basement( Main St. level)
2Sft.x60ft. for shop or stor·
ego. 812 E. Moln St .-311
Condor St .. Pomeroy $250
1 inonth. Lean pan or all
lower rent for chores do·
na(mowing gran, minor
maintenance, etc .) 614·
992-3326.
Mi:rc h nnlli sr.

61 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION 1o FURNITURE
82 Oli'lle St .. Gallipolis. New
&amp; Ul8d WOOd-COli IIOVII, 6
pc wood lR suite $399,
bunk bada *199, antron
recliners $99. new A used
bedroom auitas, ranges,
wringer waahers, 8t shoes.
New livingroom suites
t199-t&amp;99, lomps, olso
buying coal • wood stoves.
Coll614-448-3159 .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chair~ priced from
8285. to S895. Tobleo, t50
end up to •126. Hide-a beds, 8390. and up to
t660.. aofo bodo $145,
Raclinera, 8225. to e375 .,
Lampa from •21 . to *126.
pc. dinettes from t109 .. to
436. 7 pc. t189 end up.
Wood table with six chaira
*285 to $746. Dolle "10
up to *225 , Hutchea. *650.
Bunk bad complete with
mettrtsHs. 1276. end up to
$396 . Boby' bodo, t110.
Mattre11ea or box springs.
full or twin, 863 .. firm, S73.
and •aa. Queen 11ts, t225 .
4 dr. chaste, 149. 6 dr.
cheats, $69. Bed frames,
$20.and •26 ., 10 gun - Gun
e~~bineta,
t3t50. Gat or
electric ranges 1376. Baby
manres~as. *26 &amp; •36, bad
fromeo UO, t25, a. •30,
king frame e&amp;o . Good selec ·
tion of bedroom suites,
rockere, mettl cabinets.
headboardt • 38 &amp; up to
tl8.

Rivaraide Aptl. Middleport.
2 bdr .. washer &amp; dryer, Spacial rates for Senior
lanced yard. behind Zinna Citizens. $130. Equal Houslanding $196 mo. plus ing Opportunities . 614 ·
deposit. DoJIIol gas. Call 992-7721 .
614-446-70449-5 , o r 6 1 4 · 1 - - - - - - - - - 2 bedroom apartments .
446-8080 6 -10.
New Haven. WVa . Newly
1 . 3 bdr, &amp; 1 - 2bdr. mobile remodeled . In town. 814homes for rent . Call 614- 992-7481 '
446 -3371 '
1 bedroom apt. for rent. Und Furniture .. Metal
Trailer for rent, 2 bdr. Cell Nicely located. Contact Vii· office deaka. 3 milae out
614-446-4480.
laga Manor in Middleport . Bulevllll Rd. Open 9am to
614 - 992 - 7787 . Equol 5pm, Mon. thru Sat.
114-446-0322 '
2 bdr 8170 mo., or $336 Hou1ing Opportunity.
mo . all utilitiDI paid . Rac- 1-_:__:_..:...:__,._ _:__ _
coon Rd . Call 814-446· One or two· ~room apart· 0000 USED APPLIANCES
9348 :
menta in Pom•roy. F,ur• Wathen. drylf't, refrlgeranlshad or unfurnished. Renl tora. rangea. Skagge Ap·
Trailer for rent. Free gas. negotiable. Call 61'4-992- pHences, UPP« RIY• Rd.
.,.lido Stone Creot Motel.
Phono 614-843-5334 or 6723.
614-949-2008.
1- - - - = = - - : - : 614-441-7388.
APARTMENTS , mobilo
2 bedroom lnobile home in homes. houMa. Pt . Pleaunt Weiher and dryer for Hfl
Racine . Phone 614- 367· end Gollipoile. 614-446 - • 1 &amp;0.00. 304-&amp;78·2171.
8221.
7148 .
Portable color Ouezer ,. TV,
2 bedroom furniah8d mobile Laureland Apartmerns. New •eo. 304-878-2816.
home, •75 depoait required. Haven . Equal Housing Op·
Utilitlaa. partially paid. portunity. Haa vacancy. Fqr Noughehyde aofe. lov•-•·
Phone 304-675-6512 a.ftor mora Information call 304· choir, aooc1 condhlon, •27&amp;.
882-3711.
304-6,&amp;-&amp;068.
6 p.m .

Misc. Merchandise

Firewood -cutup slabe, . 1
truck lood •1 00, 2 -tt 80.
Pickup load, you haul t16.
HEAP accepted. Call 614·
245-6804.
Compact Ia spreading Yewa
$9.99/oech. Shrudod berk
mulch S20/PU load. 1 mi.
North of Silver Bridge. Call
814-446-4530.
Firewood 100% clean hardwood . t35· Delivered
pickup. *26- you haul. Call
otter 6, 814-446-7524.
Myert submergible pump, 2
HP, 2000 gol. utility tank.
Coll614-256-1206.
Stovea Ashley wood 6 coal,
King wood &amp; coal. Call
614-388-6564.
•
1 2 ft. duck boat with electric
motor, t600. Coleman
trailer $200. 86 Blazer 4x4.
Coll614-446-7019 .
Baby stroller. good cond .
Call 614-446-0429.
Kindlewood burning stave
$560 . Coll614-446-8681.
Shredded bark 820 pickup
load. Yaws 810 each,
Scotch Pine $24 each, 2
miles North of Silver Bridge
on Upper Rt. 7. Coli 614446-4530.

Marble Vlnlly's topa. Sa·
conds
all sizes Choice
bockt39.95oq.
SJO.OOea .
Prehung 8 or 8 penal oteel
inaulated exterior doou
'89.95 oo.
Prehung 9 ft. thermal glau
lteel door's crossbuck or
panel 8139.95.
1 pc. fiberglass tub and
ahower white and color
S199.00 lo 1229.95.
17'x19' white gold vanity
with top t29 .96 , marble top
a. vanity f39.95.
3 or 5 pc. tub wall kita, white
or color t39.95 to $89.95.
Embossed 2'K4' ceiling tile
some fire reted $1.89 ea.
Suapended ceiling grida (12'
moin tee U.50) 4' tee 80
conto112' tea 40 conta1110'
woll engle 41 .99).
Colonial clear white pine
casing . . Window and door
trim 32 cent ft.
Veneered interior white pine
door Jamb'• t8.99 pr.
3'x1 6' foil face fiberglass
insulation 88 . 12 sq.ft . •
115.95 roll.
·
In Color longlted comodea's
siphon jet $89.95 .
4'x1 0' P.U.C. Hwer and
drain pipe ·with ball {1 pc.
f3 .49 oo.) (100 pc- tl.OO
eo .)
4x8 wood an masonite
paneling woodgrain and
prints, 85.99 to *12 .99.
Valvea to t24.96.
PENN'S WAREHOUSE ,
Wellston, Ohlo. hours 8 -&amp;.
Cell 614-384-3645.
'iJulldlng material. concrete
blocks all sizes. lentils, flu
blocks. clay tile . Delivery.
Gallipolis Block Co.. Pine
St., Gal.lipolis, Ohio Call

Moving Sale. Spinal Piano, 614-446·2783.
living room suit. beds. Call 1 - : : - : - - : - : - - - - - 614-367-1248 .
Block, brick, mortar end
ma1onry supplies. Mountain
Jenny lynn baby bed with Siat8 Block, At. 33. New
manrete, good cond . $70 . lioven, W. Vo . 304-8822222.
Cell 814-446-3492 .
1977 CJ5 Jeep. $1 ,200.
Upright piano. 5125. Metal
building . S260 . 614-9863968.

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppie1:
Stud Service. Call614-4467795.

Used garden tractora. 1 983
111iP Simplicity. e995 .
1969 1 OHP Wheel Horae.
$79&amp;. 1983 18HP Twin
Roper. $2,695. 1965' 8HP
Wheel Ho•ao.$495. 1980
SHP Wheel Horse. Needs
work. $200. 196B SliP
Wheel Horta. Needs work
$276 , Baum Lumbar, Chas·
tor. 814-985-3301.

Briarpatch Kennels All breed grooming. Indoor·
outdoor boarding facilities .
E ngliah Cocker Spaniel.
3BB-9790.

Wl!lk~~·Turner 6" planer·
jointer, free standing wood
cabinet uniU . 61 4· 742·
2877.
Six Hat water rediatora .
Phone 614-992-7853 or
614-992-5354.
For Sale: King coal and
wood burner with blower.
$250. Coli 614-742-3092.
Slighl paint damage. Flashing arrow sign. t269 . Save
e2&amp;41 Ughted non-errow,
*247. Unlightod $199 . Unbelievable quality I Local.
Factory: 11800)423-0163,
anytime.

3 handmade quilts . Regular.
queen and king size. Call
614-992-7666 or 614-9922318.

~~~~~~~~==:;~~~==~~~~~~~~
61

F

E 1"pment
_ _ _•_r_m
__q_:_u_
___

71
Autos for Sale
I---------~

18&amp; M.F. dleael · tractor,
Klllbros 276 grain wagon
with grain elevator. C•ll
614-281-6&amp;22.

speed, axe cond, low mi-

Ford 800 trector. •1 ,875.
Pull-type. I' bruoh ' hog.
•aoo. Maaeey-Ferguaon
175 Diolll. 814-742-2877.
One 276 bu "Morldge"
groin dryor 12,000.00. 304176-4308.

63

LlvBitock

lar.., 2 horae trailer ready to
uoe. Coil 614·2B6-6622 .
Reg. 5 yr. old Tenn81Ha
Wolklr gelding. Coli 814446-9219.
"12 Semintal Polled, YJ Polled
whlto flood bull. Will be 2
yro. old Fe~. 86. Carl Gllleopie. 614-448-3969.

Suffolk ram. 3 veers. 61469B-6418.
Pige tor sale. $26. each.
304-176-6492.
Fettleng hog, 304 -6752038.
3 yr. old Quarter HorH type,
filly, green broke, uddle and
bridle included, 8400.00.
304-675-1712.

I-;;:::;;::::::;:=;;::::;===
1·
64

Hay

&amp; Gra. in

I -- - - -- - - - Hay mulch for sale 76 cenu
a bolo. Coli 614-446-1411.
Shelled corn, 304·876·
2686.

Tr,; nsporI n111111
71

Autos for Sale

TOP CASII paid for '80
model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ave .. Galllpolia. Call
814-446-2282.

Mala blonde. Cocker Spa·
niel. one yr. old. shots . AKC
Reg. 8175. Call 614 -2459647 .

1980 Dido Cul1111 LS, V-8,
auto, 4 dr ., new tires, good
cond . Coli 614-446-4171
after 8PM.

Mele Bluelick, 1 year old.
Not registered . 835 . Calf
614-985-3640.

1977 Toyota Colico GT
coupe, AC, AM·FM &amp;·track.
bucket oats, 92,000 good
cond ., uklng t2, 100. Coli
614 -446-0028 oftor &amp;PM.
74 Monte Carlo deependablo. $250. Coli &amp;14-4464972 or 614-446-4117 .

197B Oollun

200SX,

Air tight wood and coal
atove with fan , good cond.
304-678-2506.

Win,t:er potatoe1 : We have a
good aupply of good Kennebec' s on hand. 88.00 per
hundred . Your containers.
Humphrey Farms, Readsville, Ohio . 114-378-6295.
Cloted Sundaya .

White gold and diamond
necklace and ring sat; paid
t325. will ooll $200.; '73
Dodge Monaco $400.; '74
100 Kewoaeki 8200. 30467&amp;-7690.

Canning peaches now available, open 7 days weak, call
for prices •• supply ia
limited, 304- 773-5721 ,
Bob'a Maricet. Mason, W.

SURPLUS · D~nlm-Army·
Carhart • Kids Camouflage
clothing. Sam Somerville'sEAST of Ravenswood . 1
Miles, Route 21 NORTH.
Fri. Sat, Sun, 1 :00· 7 :00
P.M. Call in ordara 304·
675-3334.

v•.

Half runners, Logan Giants.
pumpkins. Laniers at 8Hch
IIIII, 304-676-1247.

XL12 Homellta chain aaw.
.75.00 . 304-675· 8782 .
fMIII Suppl11:s

'Wood burning pedestal
stove with 3 speed blower.
See through glass windowa
on doors. Very good cond,
t37B.OO . 304-675-3778.

I&gt;
61

SLIOIIT PAINT DAMAGE.
Flashing anow sign t289.
Sovo ·~541 lighted nonerrow. *247. Unlighted
t199. Unbelleveblo quolltyl
locol Fectory: 1 18001 4230113, onytlmo.

liVI:SIIII:k

Farm Equipment

1978 Buick Limited. low
mileage. very good cond.
Coli 614-446-1288 oftor
5PM.
·
77 Muetang new parta, new
tiraa, new paint, excellent
ohepe, U ,OOO. Coil 614266-6417.
1 972 Oldsmobile 91 white
aid~ walla. AC, PW, PB, an
owner. Cell814-256-8085.
1879 Robblt. 1976 Ford
LTD , Coli ofter 8PM. 814·
388-8B23.
1980 Toyota Corolla man~
axtrea ex . cond. Must eell
*2,800 or bell offer. Call
814-441-7414.
1977 Choli. Monti Corio,
ralley wheels, air. cruite.
ttereo, no rust, nice car. Call
814-441-0498.
1977 Monte Corlo. good
worlt cor. Coli 614-3792348 .

CROSS lo SONS
U.S. 35 Wool; Jeckoon,
Ohio. 614-2B8·14&amp;1 .
Meany Ferguson. New
HoHend, luah Hog Salea &amp;
Service. Over 40 UNd
tractors lo choo11 from &amp;
compt.lallne of new &amp;
uaed equipment. 'Largest
aelection In S.E. Ohio.

1969 Plymouth Sotalllto,
low mll..ge. newcarb.,. ne*'
tlraa. good running cond.,
UOO or ...., offer. Coil
814-388-9043 oftor 8pm.

10 ft . truck camper, ba ·
throom, stove with oven, 340 HI trector, 3 point hhch,
4, UOO. PS, live p -, 2 bottom
roftlgerator,
Copy mochlnot40. Old limo plowa, J .D. corn planter,
U,296. Coil 814- 281 c.. h regi1ter. t10. 304•
17&amp;-7980.
. 1&amp;22.

1912 Chevotto . 48,000
mllea . Oood condltlont
1 980 or no-r
bod.
Coli oftor 1:00 p.m., 114982-1117.

Warm Morning wood atove,
304-17&amp;-7982 .

-P•

•

'

J

9116/~5

1

EVENING
I '

In
-

1987 Mercury Villager station wagon, rune but .neada
to be reatored. 289 engine.
auto trana, P$ &amp; B. asking
'196.00. Coli 304-882·
2694 ...1_n 4 · 6 PM. Mon
through Set.

(J)
( I) Down to brth
(J)
Audubon
Wildlife

IHl v - of the Mimi

• OIWrent Sttokes
[HBOI MOVIE: 'The luge

!MAXI MOVIE: 'The Kina

&amp; 4 W.O.

1985'11 S -10 Blazer 4x4,
loaded. 900 miles .
$16,100, aell for t14,400.
6uy now. Coli 814-4467019.
1983 Tovoto SA -6 4X4, red.
tJIIC . cond .. low miles, fiber·
glaas cab, running boards 8.
brush guards. 614-9864400.
1961 Willy Jeap, runs good,
eKtra parts and new battery,
304-575-1417 '
'74 Dodge Van 318 engine.
runs good, $700 .00 . 304576 -2736 . '
1968 Willey Jeep pick up,
farm uae only, $400.00.
304-676-6762.

74

19BO Chryllior Bth Avenue,
good condition , one owner,
BIIOCkburn Reoltv. &amp;14-4410001.

•""*

81

RON'S Televiaion ·Service.
House calls on RCA, Quazar,
GE. Specialing in Zenith.
Coll304-576-2398 or 614446-2464.

75

Bo.ata and
Motors for Sale

14 ft. Starcraft motor,
trailer, all acce11ories. 304·
67&amp;-4127.

76

Auto Parts

&amp; Accaa1orias
Wrec•ed left front 71 Che ville. 2 dr.. Mrdtop, also
crager wheels 6 tires, 16'.
G8016. Cell614-266-6836
oftor 6PM.
79 Motora Homes·
llo Campers
8 ft . truck camper. Sleepa
aiK. Rtfrlgereter, fu!"nace,
OIOVO•OVen. f1,000. 114·
98&amp;·3808.
Camp• .,...,. unit for 8 ft
...d. ' aompllte whh queen
lize bed end lable. exc
ohepe, U&amp;O.OO. 304-8822002.
8 .9 por APR evolloblo
on •• MW mini motor homea
In etoak. Hurry whit• supply
lo- leltaor'o World of
Complnl, Huntington 304·
731-&amp;2 7; Chorloeton 304·
341-CAMP.

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m1alcb between Auatria and the U.S., I
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new and returning NBC ser- 1Stau• would have to create a game ;
or the equivalent. At the time,
Dealer: South
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brtdce joarnalilts co11erlng the event
spacial. 160 min .)
analyzed the final balld as flat, with no
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Nortla Eaol
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was four spades, made in
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ralther rootine fashion. Only much !at·
Pass
Pass
Paas
anyone
realize
that
a
sensation(I) D (]JI Herd-* McCormick (CCI A country
al def0111ive play could have set the
Opening lead="• Q
singer once con~tcred of
four·lpade eoalract. Since the play
murder by Hardcastle is now
was miued at both tables, the com·
being hunted down by the
menlators Initially overlooked it. Can
singer's former associates.
. you 188 it now?
IRI (60 min.l
Suppose the defense proceeds along
Ill ([I liD
and
normal lines. Declarer will probably
Mrs. King Amanda is arplay low from dummy on the opening
rested for murder when a
lead. West will CObtinue with a second
security analyst is found
dead following a private din~
heart ruffed by declarer. Nest the 10
~nor with her. 1111180 min.)
: cl~bs will he played to dummy's iol diamonds. II be assumes that much; .
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MKNeii/JAhrer
jack and the opade jack11ed from dum- 1 he will overtake the queen of hearta
Newshour
...my. Dec!Jrer will pick up the kine of with the ace even though dummy's
IHl Survival Speciolo ICCI '
and acore five spade tricks and kine may not be played, cash the dia'The Amazing Wo~d ol Spi·
tricks to make bi! contract. mond king and shoot back his remainders.' A lew ol the 30,000
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the conlract. East must de· . lng diamond . That great play would ·
species of spiders are eKamthat
his best cbaDCe of setting have set the contract and would have
ined . 1Ril60 min .)
fourapades ls_to lind West with the ace !&gt;Ut our .U.S. team in the finals.
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Ill (I) (jJ Kete lo Allie To
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fastener
break themselves out of a
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depression, Kate and Allie
decide to throw a big party .
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13 Yield a
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6 Small dOR 21 Zhivago's 27 "Pine Tree"
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(law)
7 U.S.A.F.
love
state
species of spiders are exam· 1~ Stag par1y
stalwart 22 Manc hester 29 Thorny
ined . 1Ril60 min.)
·
members 8 Impatient
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30 Racket
IHl auost tor the Killer8
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song
31 Savor
ICCI 'Vaccine on Trial.' A
"hell"
11 F.ccentri c 23 Electra's
35 U.S.
new vaccine for a strain of
18 JG Berlin
brother
missile
hepatitis is tested on a large
standstill
barrier
2~ Shreds
37 - green
group of volllnteers. (60
17 Dictator 18 Whirl
25 Plunge
38 Soft diet
min .)
18 Return
9:30 Cl) Auto Racing '85:
blow
Formula One Belgium
20
Wapiti
G'""d Prix from . Spe,
21
Tennis
Bolgium
term
Ill (I) llD Newhon Dick is
22 Staying
pressured 10 jazz up his
place
show in order to win a local
25 Challenged
televisfon award. (A)
28 Epochal
MOVIE;
'To.._
, 27 Me (Ger.)
Millionaire'
28AIIow
[MAX] Comedy Experi"29 Wise one
ment Amerian Canutt
32 Follower
1 0:00 Ill (I) llD Cagney a. IJicey
of an ism
CCCI Cagney is threatened
33 Bakery
by a suspect she appre-.
hends in a stabbing. (RI C60
item
min .)
34 Cereal
(I) Roundtable
plant
llJl Newswetch
36 lnlervene
lHIOI On loclltion: Steven
38Sound of
Wright
contempt
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Home !rom
39Tranquil
the Hill'
~ Regarding L-.1-.1-.1-..1.10:15 (I) MOVIE: 'None But.
DAILYCRYPTOQUOTESHere's bow to work it:
Brave•
10:30 ())To 8o Announced
llJl Thlo Old Houn !CCI
AXYDLBA,\XR
1 1 :00 D CIJ (Il
(I) llD News
iaLONGFELLOW
(]) Man From U.N.C.L.E.
I
([I Mcloughlin Group
1 ' One letter stands for another . In this sample A is used
(jj) Amortc:a at Rlok: A
for the three L's. X lor the two O's,, etc. Single letters,
Hltotory ol
c:on.um.
; apo11tropbes the length and fonnation of the words are all
Protest Edwin 1\iewmon
hosts this special chroni' hints. Each
the code letters are different.
cling the birth and growth of
CliYPI'OQUOTES
the American oonsumer
' 9 · 16
movement. jBO min.)
Benny Hill Show
IH80l MOVIE: 'The Wild
PUM,
STRDU
J II
8 I WU
ZTU
Ufto'
'
11 :30 • (I) (Il Best o('c-oo
RM
WBUAFDRZ C,
lBU
' HTUUY
Tonight' • guests are Bil
Murray. Dan Avkroyd end
WJMVJBPRZ C . ·S JDKUH
RM
Bruce Mohiet' . IRI (60 min.)

••

!

••In&amp;

ALLEYOOP

z•s•

1

"

s-ecrow

e

.

t!!ldl• r• VJW

1
Excavating

Good-1 Excavating, basements, footers, driveways.
llptic tanka. lendacaping.
Call anytime 614 - 4464637, James L. Davison , Jr.
owner.
'
Dozer Work land clearinq.
landscaping, ate . Free .a1t1·
mateo. Cell 614 -446 -8038
or 614-992·7119 anytime.

LUI&lt;EY!!
WHAT ARE 'IOU
SNIFFLIIV'

ABOUT?

I LOST MV
CHECI&lt;ER·PLAVIN"
MONEV SOMEWHAR··
BUT I 001\J'T
I&lt;NOWWHAR

(SNIF)

PAW!!
WHAT ARE

'IOU
SJIJIFFLICIJ'

ABOUT?

Ken 's Water Sttr'llice. Wells,
ci1terns, pools filled . Phone
614-367-0623 or 614-36 77741 ' night or day.
Waugh 's Water Service .
Well~. cistarn1, pools . Faat,
reliable service. Call 61 4·
256 -1240 or 614 -2 661130. Reasonable rates.
Haul limestone. sand, gravel,dirt, bulk or bag fertilizer
end lime. EKcalsior Salt
Works Inc . 638 E. Main St ..
Pomeroy. 614-992-3891 .

(SNIF)

:X JUST

LOST MV
PIGEON·

e

a

~ill do wate~ hauling. fill
Cistern and fdl swimming
pools . Cell 614-992 -5858 .

R • M Furniture Manufac·
IU~?g, St. Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh. Call 614-2581470, cell Eve. 614-44&amp;3438 . Old a. now
Uphostarad .

chance
be a hero

Eet

e

JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt. 1, Bo• 355, Gallipolis. Call614-367-0576.

TRISTATE
UPIIOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis
814-446-7B33 or 614-446:
1833 .

Don't

1

614-44~-4477

Upholstery

Pl....

e

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND IIEATING
Cor, Fourth •nd Pine
Gallipoiia, Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or

87

(I) Now Newlywed

liD Wheel of For1une

'---,.. SHERIFF•.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

James Boys Water Ser'llice .
Also pools filled . Call 614256-1141 or 514 -446 1175 or 614-446-7911 .

e

'·

Dolsles

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat walls compteted tame
day. Pump sales and service .
304-B95-3802.

General Hauling

'7:30

())

Starks Tree and Lawn Service, stump removal. 304·
576-2010.

J.A.R . Construction Co -.
Rutland, Oh . 614-7422903. Batemantl, Footers,
Concrete work. Backhoe's,
Dozer &amp;: Ditcher. Dump
trucks, &amp; watar· gas·sewerelectrical lines.

'

Geme

e•-

82

·Je

RINGLES 'S SERVICE,
p:ariencad ccerpen't er, alec·
trician , mason, painter, roofing Oncluding hot tar
oppilcalion) 304-675-2088
or 675 -7368 .

86
15 ft . Glattron 'wilh 66
Mere. and trailer, Very good
cond. t1,900 . Cell 614446-7345.

Cil NBC

Nowa
()) C8IOI llumelt ohd
Fri(J)Mazdas_.._
(I) et lion.
(I) D IBI ABC N - jCCI

Fatty Tree Trimming . stump
removal . Call 304- 676 ·
1331 .

83

liondo Xl1 100, XR 200. a.
·CR 480. Coli 814·38B9938.

(I)

6:30 •

Home
Improvements

Motorcycles

Cloae-out All used Honda's
at reduced offer. Can be
••n •t Honda Shop.

WHAT &amp;OY&amp;POWMEN

of Comedy'

Cll Rocky Rood

1980 Chevotto. 4 door,
automatic. Good condition.
.Lt. gray with luggega rack.
12,100. 814-985-4418.

Vana

•

Fether

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump ulea, service. Registered in Ohio. All work
gu•renteed . Call 304-2732811. Ravenswood. W. Va .

73

'

(J) Sportoc:enter

J .and l. Installation. Roof·
ing, vinyl aiding. atorm doora
ilnd windows. Free eltimateo. Coll614-992-2772.

1981 Chevy pickup, air
condition, AM·FM stereo.
automatic, 304-675· 6431 .

.....

IUNBOCEj
() K I

A-

Bunny/Rood
Movie'

Sr.rv1~:es

19B2 Toyoll 4•4. 5 epd .,
longbed, 40,000, AM-FM
lt&amp;reo, bucket seats, cu1tom
camper top. A1klng 15,900.
Coil 614-258-9367.

1976 Chevy 1(a ton. EKtra
nice. t1700. Coli &amp;14-9492801 . No Sunday collo,
please.

. I I ( J

Theatre

I.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua·
81 Okt1 Cutllll ·Supreme.rantee. Local reference•
d-8 angina, cruiM control.
furnished . Free eatimatet .
Coli collect 1 -814-237• ·c. 304-175-7478.
0488. day or night. Rogera
1978 Rabbit. good running Basement Wate~:proofing .
oond, 304-675·4369.
D.and M . Contractors. Vinyl
aiding, replicemant win·
dows. inaulating. roofing,
new and remodeling, con·
72 Trucks for Sala
crete. Coli 304-773-5131 .

198&amp; Chevy pick-up truck.
PS. PP. VI, automatic. 900
miloo. $8,900. 614-9492650'.

•.

CilD (I) Ill.

(l)lllodcbusl8ra

Camping lrailer. 1974 Yellowltone . 22 ft . Self·
contained, good condition .
Phone 814-992 -3921 . . :

loogo, •2. 700 .00 . 304·
675-6189.

(I) (I)

6 :00 •

lit News

&amp;

Musical
Instruments

Kennibac potatoes $10-100
lb . will deliver It nol too far .
Call614-367 -7230.

Vi_ewing

Comper 16'hft., pull typo,
1972, lieepo 6, $1 ,600. Coil ,
614-38B-B584 or 114-6826347.
'

1980 Fiesta air cond .• aver
40 MPG, tt,OOO firm . Coli
For ulo1974 Honda XL250
• good cond .. new tires,
614 446 961 3
-::::--·::-·--:--·----: t450. Coli 814-245-9503
Bundy trumpet, stand &amp; 1976 Cordoba vary good after 7PM .
cor, 8600. Coli 614books. Coli 614-446-0365. work
258-9367.
1981 Kowoukl 305. 2.300
•ctuel mil11. New battery .
Uke new. $800 firm . 8141 970 Old• Firenza, exc.
58
Fruit
cond .. low mileage. PS. PB. 992-3936 otter 4 :30 a.
llo Vegetables
air, AM·FM callattt . Call weekends.
614-446-B1 24.

For sale: Firewood . Cut your
own . $16. a load . All herd
wood. 614-742-2473 .

ff

1878 Wilderntll camper.
SINpl 6, carefree roll-out
awning, completely selfcontained. A-1 condition .
can 614-446-3553.

1981 red T~bird Town Lan·
dau excellent condition, new
tires. Call efter 5:30 e 14246-94&amp;0.

57

10 inch Cref1man radial arm
sew. Good conditon . $250
or best offer. Older Montgomery Ward lathe . 876. Call
614-992-7789.

••

1977 Dodge 22 fl . motor
home. uc. cond. •10.1500.
489 Moplo St.. Golllpollo.
Coil 614 - 446 - 0711
evenings.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kannel . CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siamate kittena. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 446·
3B44 after 7PM .

Fish Tank and Pet Shop.
2413 Jackaon Avenue,
Point Plaaunt, 304·6752063. Fish, birds end more.

~e=~~~~R~~~
- ~~~·~
~
. ''
Television

1873 Dodge mini motor
home. 20 ft., 6 new tires.
new air cond., 1leep1 6.
f7,000. Alao 1g81 Buick
Skylark, oil po-. U,OOO.
can 614-448-4230.

BUILDERS
Closeout's · Surplus ·
Salvage.
Roof truss (up to 20' ·
$1 5.00)120' to 30' -$20.00)
130' to 40'-$25.00).
Alif1'inum tiding 8' wood·
grain an twin 4' with foam

Antiques

1 oak table,l mahogany drop
leattable with 5 chair~ . Both
$350. OBO. Cell 61 4 -949·
2801.

Bulldi"g Supplies

Utility bldg . IPtc::lal ; .
30'x40'x9' With track door
&amp; aerv . door , e,5255
erected . Iron HorH Builders.
614-332-974&amp; collect.

3643.

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1978 Champion motor·
home, ex. cond., l•w mi·
loogo. Coil 614-448-1 299 .

Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pip...
windows, II ntele. etc .
Claude Wintera• .Rio Grande.
0. Cell 814-245-6121.

Automatic Maytag WBihfn
&amp; dryer. Both are old but in
working order. Tttey ere slill
in use and may be tatted
before disconnected.
885.00 lor tho pair. Coil
614-446-2917.

cond ., on rented lot. Only

79

Misc. Merch1ndl11

County Appliance. Inc .
Good used appliance• and
TV Htl. Open BAM to &amp;PM .
Moo thru Sot. 814-446 1899, &amp;27 3rd . Avo . Golllpolle, OH.

Refrigerator &amp; alove. Call
114-367-0409.

Owner in rest home. Great
buy on 198'1 ·14x70 mobile
home, 3 bd;r., 2 .baths,
equipped kitchen. 2 built in
AC. storage building. in ex c .

reduced to $27,996. We're
Elsea Home Center· Chillicothe. Call614-772· 1220 .

Monday, September 16, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

day

. -u.
WE NEE!' YOUR
DONATIONS ...

e

WE DON'T HEAR
FROM '(()U, WE'LL ~AVE
TO 60 O~F TI-lE AIR ...
IF

(]) Best of Onlucho

~~~=-·Simon
WhHe lronaponing 1 classic
car to Sen Francieco, A .J .
end Rick unwittingly pick up
an eecepecl murdet'er. CRI
(60

mjn.!

WIBD
I

•

•

•

' ., y-..,•e

A J BUM

KIM
'

"

C.-,ptoq-: YOU'nl IS A BLUNDER; •

MANHOOD A STRUGGlE; OW AGE A REGRET. -

BENJAMIN DISIIAEU

__

.

�Page-1 o-The Daily Sentinel

Monday. September 16, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Area deaths
Grace M. Fisher
Mrs . Grace M. Fisher, 75, of
MlnE'I'sville, died Sunday morning
a t Ve terans Memorial Hospital's
Skilled Nursing Facility after a
several years' Ulnels.
Mrs. Fisher was a llfethne
m ember of the Wildwood Garden
Club, a member or the Forest Run
Me thodist Church and a member or
the Tri-City Women's Club lor a
number of years. She was also
active in many SOCial and community affa irs in years past.
She Is survived by her husband,
Hiram T. Fisher; two sisters, Mrs.
Mary E . Grueser, Condor St. ,
Pomeroy, and Mrs . Louise
Gloeckner , Maple Drive, Pomeroy;
a grandson, Mark C. Fisher, Myrtle
Beach, S. C.; a granddaughter, Mrs.
Jan K. Skardahl, Newbury Park,
Calif .; two great-granddaughters,
Christy Lee Fisher of Myrt 1e Beach,
S. C., and Suesan Diane Skavdahl or
Newbury Park ., Calif. Also survivIng are 11 nephews and four nieces.
Preceding Mrs. Fisher In death
wer e an Infant daughter, a son, Ted
C. Fisher of New Richmond, Ohio,
and her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Christy Baer, Minersville.
Services wUI he held at 1 p.m .

-Personal tragedies
,have dotted life of
new Miss America

I

Wednesday at the Ewtng.Funeral
Home with Rev. Steven L. Nelson
officiating. CalUng hours at the
funeral hOmewUI he 2 to4 and 7 to9
p.m . Tuesday. Burlal wUI be In
MlnersvUie Hill Cemetery.

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI)- her past to he embarassed about,
" although everybody has skeletons
Miss America 1986 Susall Akin said
pursued stngle-mlndedly the dream In their closets."
Pledging to work with hand!-,
or wearing the crown despite
capped children In the Special
personal tragedies since she was 4.
Akin. 21. a blued-eyed blonde from Olympics, Akin's voice ached with
emotion as she r('Called tbe death d.
Meridian, Miss., said she had
her younger sister at the·age of 11 •
sacrificed much of her social life and
from
Down's Syndrome.
a boyfriend In pursuit of the title,
"She
loved me In pageants," Akin
which she won Saturday night after
said.
"
I
would see her smiling face
being declared the handicappers'
down
there
whet her I won tbecrown
·
favorite .
or
came
In
last
place.
Miss Ohio Suellen Cochran of
Heath, who played the plano, was
"lgetemotlonalheeauselftbere's ·
among the top 10, but did not make
one thing I could change about my
the four runnersup.
Smartly dressed In a blue wool life I wiSh that I could have her todaY
long-sleeve dress trlmrtled with wJthme.''
Akin said the divorce of her
black, black shoes, pearl and gold
Pi'rents
When she was 13 was •
bracelets and her rhinestone crown,
but both her mother and ·
Jblaumatlc,
Akin said she was politically
father
have
since remarried and, In
conservative, although she said the
their
case,
"It's
better to be divorced
issues of abortion and premarital ·
and happy now."
sex should be left to the Individual
The 5-foot-9 beauty, who was
and declared her support for
named Little Miss America In a :
, sanctions against the South African
cont.est when she was 6, said beauty
government .
pageants "have been my life since I;
She said she had never had
was
4 or 5 years old ."
•
cosmetic surgery and has nothing In

Clarence E. McDaniel
Clarence Eugene McDaniel Sr.,
53, Rutland, died Saturday In
Veteran's Memorial Hospital In
Pomeroy.
Born May 6, 1932, In Mason, he
was the&gt; son of the late Eutha E .
Grimm and ~bert Eugene McDa.
niel Sr.
He worked as a heavy equipment
operator and was a member of
Victory Baptist Church,
Middleport.
~g are his wife, Rita J.
Smith McDaniel; two sons, Clarence Eugene Jr. , The Plains; and
Dwaine K., Rutland; three sisters,
Mrs. Ada E . Johnson and Mrs. Alice
J. Clark, both of Mason, and Mrs.
Louise Darst of Racine.
Funeral services wUI he at 1: 3)
p.m. Tuesday In Foglesong Funeral
Home, Mason, with the Rev. James
Keesee offleia ling. Burial wUI follow
In Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6-9 p.m . Monday.

, .. r'

EXERCISE FOR MISS
- Ml8ll America IBI!8, SIMM
Aldn of MIMIIIIIppl, 8ail8 through air as !!he """" eariy momlng
IWilfiiDI on lbe beach eariy Sunday after beiDg croWDed late Sllturday,
(UPI).

Pomeroy police probe mishap

Driver charged after accident
A GallipoliS man was cited by the
Gallla-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol following a two-car
accicknt Saturday afternoon on
Ohio160.
Troopers said a car driven l)y
Maudlne Minnis, 40, of Bidwell, was
southbound on 160, about four-tenths
of a mile south of U.S. 35, when a
northbound car, drive l)y RandeiiJ .
Patrick, 21, of 220 Jackson Pike,

allegedly made a left tum In front of
Minnis' vehicle. Minnis could not
stop in time and struck Patrick's
vehicle in the right side, troopers
said.
No serilus injuries were reported
In the 1: 25 p.m. accident, which
t mopers said caused heavy damage
to Minnis' car and moderate
damage to Patrick's. Patrick was
cited for an improper turn.

Meigs County happenings•••
Four emergency runs
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports four calls
Saturday and four calls Sunday.
Pomeroy at 4 a.m. Saturday went
to Pomeroy Cliffs' Apartments for
Lucy McCune to Veterans MemorIal Hosiptal; Racine at 1: 50 p .m.
went to Portland Road for Bernice
Smith to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal; Racine at 6:01 p.m. went to
Bas han Road for David Smith whO
was treated bui not transported;
Sym ~use at 10: 19 p.m . went to
Minersville for Brenda Davis to
Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday, Pomeroy"' 3:13a.m .
went to 205 Butternut for Sarah
Pierce to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 7:01 a .m. went to
30060 Joe Boring Road for Drusie
Whit e to Holzer Medical Center;
Pomeroy at 6: 13 p.m. went to
Naylor' s Run for John DeMoss to
V!'te rans M!'morial Hospital ;
Tuppers Plains at 7:11p.m. wentto
· the Arbaugh Addition for Brent
Bissell who was treated but not
transported.

Two lotto winners
CLEVELAND (UPI ) -TheOhlo
Lotte ry Commission says two
ticket s sold for Saturday night's
Ohio Lotto drawing had t.hesameslx
numbers on them as were pulled In
the drawing- 8, 21,ll, 21. 35and38.
Holders of these two tickets can
tum them In to any regional lottery
office today and will share the top
prize of$1,485,778.
The LotteryCommissionalsosald
$3,519,938 worth of tickets w ere sold
for the drawing. How many tickets
had four of the six numbers and five
of the six numbers will he announced today .
The jackpot for Wednesday
night' s drawing will he $1 mUllon .

Weather forecast
Today ... sunny . High in the mid

70s. Light south winds .
Tonight ... clear. Low around 50.
Light south winds.
Tuesday ... more sunshine. High 75
to !1).
Chanceofraln ... nearteroperrent
today .. tonlght and Tuesday .
Extended forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and 'lbu....tay
and a chance of showers Friday.
Lows Mlo 110 and highs 75 to 85.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Lucy
McCune, Pomeroy; Virginia
Lightner, Reedsvllle; Rosalie NIcholS, Rulland; Bernice Smith,
Racine; Martha Runnel,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges--Cella Hlte,
Christopher Roush.
Sunday Admissions--None.
Sunday Discharges--Rosalie Ni·
chois, Wilbur Rowley, ScottOkey.

Tournanlentunderway
JayMarMen'sAssoclatlonChamplonshlp and F11ght Tournament
.started today (Monday). The tournament, open to all male members
21 and older with a . paid-up
membership, wUI consist or 36 hcles
to be played anytime prior to
September 29. A $3 pre-paid entry
fee Is required. SeeorcallBUIChllds
or Bob Freed for details.

Files for divorce
Beverly Ann Morrow, Middleport, has flied for divorce in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court from
Danny Carl Morrow; Middleport,
charging extreme cruelty. A res·
training order has ·been Issued
against the defendant pending final
action by the court.
Brenda Lou Rowe, Reedsville,
has !lied for divorce from David Lee
Rowe, lronton, charging gross
neglect d duty andextremecruelty.
The marriage of Cheryl A.
Harmon. Middleport, and Terry J.
Harmon, PomE'I'oy, has been dissolved In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
A divorce actiln flied by Shirley
Jones, Tuppers Plains, against
Willie Jones. Tuppers Plains, has
been dismissed.

POMEROY - Pomeroy Police Department reports a two car
accident at 4:47p.m . Friday afternoon on East Main Street. Involved
In the accident were Edward F. Cooper, Athens, andT.e rry R. Farrar,
Bradbury.
C-ooper, traveling west oo East Main, brought his vehicle to a stop.
Farrar, traveling west behind Cooper, failed to stop his velj\cle and
struck Cooper In the rear.
·
Farrar was cited for faUingtostopwlthin an assured clear distance.
The Cooper vehicle was not damaged . Damage to the Farrar
vehicle was listed as moderate.
No Injuries were reported.
The pollee department also reports property damage at Little
Dan'sExxon station on East Main at 9:07p.m. Friday night.
Roger M. Clark, Portland, drove his vehicle Into an ice machine
causing damage to the machine.
Clark was charged by Pomeroy Pollee with driving while
Intoxicated.

Interim••
(Continued from page 1)
lnputoo hlsfutureasthemunlcipal!·
ty's chief administrator.
· City voters will chose three new
members to sit on the five-person
board In November. Only commiS·
stoners Dow Saunders and Richard
Moore wiD continue In their post·
lions In 1986. With the election,
Morris faced a potential change In
his base of support.
ln that letter, Morris acknowledged that during his nearly
eight-year term, "many projects
have caused controversy as they
have been Instituted.
"The current controversy concerning water rates has generated a
great deal of hostility toward me,
some oft he prominent citizens of the
community would Uke to see me
go," Morris wrote. "Because of the
controversy, I believe my effectiveness has been reduced."
A citizen-initiated referendum
vote In June, by a 4-1 margin,
rejected an October 1984 ordinance
that would have raised municipal
water rates by an average of 38
pereent.
· The same citizen's group has
presented a petition containing
approximately 900 signatures cal·
ling for a referendum action against
an ordinance enacted In August that
would raise water rates by 25
percent over the next two years.
That petitlonlsonTuesday'sagenda
for possible action.

Meiets Wednesday
Meigs County Firemen' sAssociaUon wUI meet at the Syracuse Ftre
Station, Wednesday, at 7:30p.m.

-You're holding
onto a
precious freedom.
A free press only stays that way
with your support.

Velvet covers in an array of colors. Featuring
Marflex cushions with individually pocketed
coil springs..

Reg. Sl95.00

Swivel Rocbrs ... S148
Reg. S229.00

Swivel Rockers ... S171
leg. S239.00

.Swivel Rockers ... S179

Meets Monday
Racine VIllage Council will meet
In regular session tonight (Mon·
day), 7 p.m. , at village hall.

LAYAWAYS WELCOME

ELBERFELDS
POMEIOY

The. American Dream
ACCORDING TO KAISER ALUMINUM
AND CHEMICAL (ORP.

P.S.: FREE CHEESE IS GOOD,·BUT
WE'D RATHER WORK FOR $.BREAD $
The Daily·Sentinel

Vol.35, No . 108
Copyrighted 1986

Concerned Steelworkers

en tine

.

·.

•

1 Section , 10 Pag es

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. September 17. 1985

25 Cents

A Mult imedia Inc . N ewspaper

Jackson officials to seek court aid
JACKSON, Ohio I UPI) - A technical problem
delayed an application fo r a 'court -ordered tax
increase by financially stmpped Jackson County
officials Monday.
The office holders, who planned to make the
application to the Qhio Supreme Court Monday, said
they will make·the request today .
Office holders want the high court to order county
commissioners to raise the sales tax from 5 to 6
percent to avert a f!nanciat ' criSiS that could close
several county offices l)y the end of the week .
Meanwhile, county commissioners voted 2-1
Monday to ask the State Controlling Board for a
$21l2.500 loan.
The request will be presented the controlling board ·
Monday .
A similar 11'(jUesl was rebuffed last year and some

state officials have said granting the loan would set a
precedent and result In the state's emergency fund
being drained by requests from other county
governments.
"To open the emergency fund to the ~ counties
would potentially drain the fund leaving no monies for
state emergencies," Lee Walker, then president of the
board, wrote In May 1984 after Jackson County
officials had inquired about such a loan .
Jackson attorney Richard M. Lewis said Sunday
the request for the court ordE.'I' would be filed after he
nollfied Cornmfl'sloners Ed Michael and Marvin
Keller. II would take a unanimous vote of
commissioners to hnpose tlie tax immediately , but
Keller has "Oied against It ~en times.
CommlssionE.'I's already face a similar request for
such a Supreme Court order from Common Pleas

provide about$18,00Jto pay for the Nov. 5elec11on , for
which commissione rs said they have no money.
Voters will he asked to approve owo requests for a I
percent sales tax increase to fund county government s, one to he effective through Dec. 31 a.;t d a not her
to take effect Jan. 1.
Officeholders a lso want an order comp&lt;-lling
commissioners to pay their health insurance
premiums, a fringe benefit mandated by sta te law.
Lewis planned to ask comm issio ners Monday to
approve an appJication for him to represent
officeholders in the action a t the sam&lt;' $50 per hou r
rate normally provided by the ~oun ty for defense of
indigent people.
If the CO!J1missloners refu se, Lewis said he will
repres~nt officeholders fr('('.

Judge 'j'om Mitchell, Probate-Juvenile Court ,Judge
Tom DeLay ahd Munidpa i Judge Roy Gilliland. Last
Wednesday, the judges asked the Supreme Court to
order commiSsioners to pass lhe tax to provide money
for operation of county court s.
The Supreme Court is sued a temporary injunc tion
Thursday prohibiting the county !rom spending
general fund money for nonessentia l operations until
the court determines what is necessary to keep local
courts running .
" What I'm aksing for is broader ," Lewis said of the
action he is filing on beha lf of e lected officia ls. The
officeholders want a general order from the Supreme
Court Compelling commissioners to provide money to
operate the entire county government, not just the
courts, U!wis explained.
They want an order compelling commissioners to

Reagan prepares
text for press
conference tonight
WASHINGTON (UP])- Preside_nt Reagan w"s rt'ading up for his
first na tlonally televised news
conference In three months tonight
with the November summit, South
Africa and trade issues C'xpecl«i \O
dominate the questloning.
Reagan, who will he quiz7.ed at 8
p .m _EDT in thfo East Room. told a
White House media lunchron Monday that he did not hold a summit
during his first term because the
Kremlin leadership "kepi dy~g on

me:.:.

~

Three Soviet IPadl'rs - Leonid
Brezhnev, Yuri Andropov and
J&lt;onstantln Chernenko - died in
offiCI' in thP past three years.
With preparatkms undPr way for

OUR JOBS
OUR WAGES
OUR BENEFITS
NOW WE'RE GmiNG OUR BENEFITS FROM
UNCLE SAM:
WELFARE CHEESE
WELFARE BUTTER
WELFARE DRIED MIK
WELFARE RICE
REDUCED SCHOOL LUNCHES .
UNEMPLOYMENT COMPENSATION
HELTH DEPT. MEDICAL ASSISTANCE
GOVERNMENT HOUSING

ar y

e

THIS MIS-MANAGED COMPANY
TOOK AWAY

CAN EBE
HUMLIATED ANYMORE?

GAWA CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL - SIIVING THE
Til-COUNTY AHA

Tht Galli• Chrialion Sc~oot rocrultaond
ldmits studonts of 101 race, colo!, out~·
nic oricin to all tilt ripts, fill•"-· fiiO·
p11m1 and aeHvillos. In additfon, tho
school will nat discriminatt on till blsis
of race. color. or ethnic ori1in in tdmin·
istration of its ldtocatlonal policla, scflo·
larshipa/toons/IH Wliwn. lducatlonli
ptOJflllll and athltticsltrtriCurrkullr
actiYitlos. In ldditlon, tho school Is not
l~tandod to bt 1ft oltomat!Yo to coart or
oamonostretiYI _ . , ordtrld, or public
school dlatrict lnitiatld, dtsfllllllion.
Tilt Galli1 Chrilllon Sclooet will not dia·
crimiOIIO on tht blsla of rect, color, or
ethnic oricin in tho hlrioc of ill certHild
or non-ctr!Hitd -""'·

ROCKERS .

•

MEETING PRESS TO·
NIGIIT - President Ronald
Reagan wDI hold hi~ first press
conference In three months al 8
p.m. tnnight.

his Nov .'19-2o summit with Cherncn ko's successor, Mikhail Gorbachev
.
'
Reagan was philosophical about
what he hopes to accomplish in
Geneva , Switzerland.
He said his objective ivut mt he to
seek chang&lt;'S in the disparate
political systems but to emphasize
su jlPrpowl'r coexistence.
Quoting former President Ri ·
chard Nixon. he said: "We want
peace. The Soviet Union needs
peaCP.
""·
"What we would hope to do Is
make them recogniz£&gt; that we both
have to live In the world-together,"
J.b:',a gan said. "and it doesn't mean
that we have to love each other or
that we have to change each other's
system.
•
"We're the only two nations In the
world that could start a not her world
war, " he said. "We're also the ·two
that could prevent one from
starting. And we're going to try to
find a way to deal with them."
Reagan 's observations on the
limitations of summitry and U.S.·
Soviet relations bore close resemblence to Nixon's writings on the
subj~t In the latest issuP of Foreign
Affairs.
Reagan's p&lt;-rsonal contact with
Nixon. who presided over the era of
detente and met three limes in as
many ymrs with Brezhnev, is not a
maiiPr the While House has been
mger to discuss.
Wmming up for the prime-limP
news conferenCP, his first since his
July 13 colon cancer surgery,
Reagan also criticized Nicaragua,
charging II has "preyed upon:'
neighboring El Salvador. Honduras, Costa Rica and Guatemala.

I

' "'·'
~......

•

of approxlma fly 4,00J.
Th~ final day of Morris' nearly
eight-year · administration will he
No\1 . 15, rut he will he absent from
the city periodically during the
transition period.
The new city manager will step
Into a controversy concerning
municipal water rates; which Mor·
ris said In an Aug. 19iettertotheclty
commission has reduced his
ef!E'CIIveness.
A cltlzen·lnlllated referendum
vote In June overturned - by a
four-to-one margin -an ordinance
passed by the city commission that
would have raised municipal water
rates l)y a'n average of 38 percent.
At the Sept. 3 commission
meeling, tbe same citizen's group
presented a petition to the commission calling for a referendum
election on an ordinance passed in
August that would ralsewaterrat.es
l)y 25 percent over the next two
years. The commission Is expected
to take action m the petition during
tonight's meeting.

•
•••
•

•

--

VOLUNTEERS - Members of the Melp County Retired Senior
Volunteer Program were al several stations Monday perfonnlng the
clerical wort for an baOuenza clinic held for senior clll:rals and disabled
pel'llllll8 at the senior center. 1be clinic was held by Ute Meigs County
Department of Healt.h with 498 visiting to receive their shots during the
day. RSVP worters, Emma Chapman, left, 3Dd Helen Fisher, are
pictured ni the registl'atlon desk. TheOu vaccine will he administered to
Ute general public ailhe henith deparlment offices from 9 a.m. to 12noon
and from 11of p.m. Friday. No apJMJintment Is necesssary. ·

•'

t

'

'
FLU PREVENTION - Jackie lfildebrand, seatL-d,look timenutfrom
her duties as a Retired Senior Vohmteer Program worker, at Monday's
Ou bnmunizatkln projed carried oot at the Meigs Couoty Senior Citizens
Center by the Meigs County Departrnmt of Health to .rece ive her own
immunization. Administering the shot fiNorma Torres, R.N .,directorof
nursing for the health department.

Additional$$$ needed for Union Avenue project
Pomeroy Village Council passed a
resolution Monday night obligating
themselves to come up with an
additional Sll,llXInE'eded to fund the
Unioo Avenue slippage repa ir.
Just where the addltioiUll money
will come (rom is not known at this
time. Council indicated it may come
from this year's allotment of Meigs
County Community Development
Block Grant funds, or from the
Department rl. Development.
The resolution was ac~pted

pending approval by .Jennifer
Sheets. village solicitor.
In other matters. council a ccepted a bid of $37.75 a ton from
Shelley Company, Gallipolis div·
ision. to blacktop several seclions of
street s in the · village. Approxi·
mat e ly 2,1lXitons of bl ack top will he
needed said Mayor Richard Seyler.
The company could begin work
within a week to 10 da ys the mayor
added. Council 'lndicated In previou s
meetings that Income tax money

would he used to pay fo r the
blacktopping.
·
Council also , accepted a bid of
$U,295 from Pat Hill F ord lor the
purcha se of a 1986 pollee cruL•er.
Revenue sha o·ing funds will pay fo r

the llE'W cruiser.
The mayor commended the
village street departme nt for their
V\'Ork in I'(l('E'nt weeks . The m ayor
reported that 18 c"tch bas ins and.
manhOies havehcen repaired l)ythl'
department at a savings of $IO,OOJ to

IlK' village si nee the work did not
have to bC' mntraC"tOO.
The mayor Hlso n •portcd the
s!f'('('! dPpa rtmrnt is making repairs on PIP&lt;~ San ! Ridge and Willis
Hill in preparation fo r bad wml hcr .
Present ror M onday's rrtf.'C'Iing, in

a ddition to Ill&lt;' m ayor , were
members Bruce Reed. He nry
Werry, Betty Baron ick. Larry
Wehrung, J ohn Ande rson and Bill
Young. an d J ane Wa lton. c lerk·

treasurer .

Racine council
conducts routine
business Monday

Applicants sough'
for management
post in Gallipolis
GALLIPOLIS - City commis·
sioners he r&lt;' have officially begun
the!r SCilrch for a new city manager
to replace Chris MorriS, whose
resignation was accepted Sept. 3.
The city has started placing
adverliseme&gt;nts in trade publica·
lions and newspapers throughcut
thcmuntry .
In the meantime, the commission
will consider toni~thl hiring R.
K even Wright, the city 's recreation
director. a san interimcltymanager
1n Morris' absence.
. Among the requisite quailflca 1ions is a degl'('e in public administration or its equivalent with at least
· five years experience as a city
, manage r; flveyparsasanasslstant
city manager with an addiliolllll two
years as a city manager; proficiency in grants management ; and
good fiscal management skills.
Morris tendered his resignation
Aug. 'll in order to at'ccpt the
position of village administrator In
Carey, Ohio, a starutory village In
Wyandott County with a population

-

Racine Village Council agreed
Monday night to sell at public
auction an old rescue equipment
truck - a 1956 Ford step van - at a
minimum price of~ The truck is to he sold Thursday
evening, 7 p.m., at Southern High
School when the school district
auctions off surplus buses. Dan
Smith will he the auctioneer.
Counc ilman Dick Wamsley reported that repairs to the s teering
pump on the backhoe have been
completed. Other minor repairs to
the bac khoe are to he completed In
the near future Wam sley said.

NEW PAR'INEB811lP- Pomeniy aitomeys, WUBam Frank Porter,
'Ita dlnlc. Jftmlfer Sheets, and Douglas Ultle, have fonned a
pa&lt;"tnea
Olftces of the three attorneys wDI remain m Ute same
locatioo on Second Street with extenSive remodeling underway to
oombkle lbe facllltlpp An opeo hou8e for the finn to be known as Porter,
IJitJe and Sheets, .. belnll' planned.'
.

,.,lp,

Councilman Ca rroll Teaford reported that the sumpatthe cornerof
Main a nd Broadway has bE'en
cleaned and a new cover Installed .
Work on sumps at Second and Main
will be started tills wrek he added .
Councilman Scot.t Wolle has been
working with Beverly Moore in
planning the community fall festi val. The festival Is scheduled lo
lrgln at noon on Saturday, Ociober
12, and the committee will be
announcing further de&gt;talls as plans

...

develop.
Counc il d iscussed briefly the
Communi t:-- Developmen t Block
Grant hea ring schedu led for tonig ht
!Thesday) all he coUJ1housc . Counc ilman Bob fu•g lc was appoinll.'d
l)y co uncll lo&lt;~II Pn d I he hearing.
Beegle is also to cont"rt thl'
county hig hway department re·
ga rdlng c hip and sea l work fort h~
village.
· Councilm an F i·an k Clela nd re·
minded m e m bers of thl' importa nce
of voters· renew a I of 1he t hr€&lt;' mill
levy for cutTen 1 op&lt;-ra ting ex p&lt;-nS&lt;'&gt;i
for I he village.
Council reminds res idents that
I rash for v illage pick -up scrv iC&lt;'
must he In suitable conlainers for
loading on irucks. Wo rkers w Ul not
pick-up litter that has not been
Improperly bagged .
Council also discussed a number
of future projecos including utilizing
the na tura l resource of th&lt;' Ohio
RivrL
Cou:1cil ' \ :J ' ..l,.·,:!wg dl 6 p.m .
tonight to look a t a tractor it is
considering to buy .
. I

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