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                  <text>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

�·.

~ornmentary

.Tuasday,

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

WASIDNGTON - Around the gets.
nation today a lew redoubtable
The most remarkable fact Is that
patriots - not nearly enough - will our Constitution ltas endured for
observe a splendid occasion. This Is ' almost ~years . Hallthenatlonsof
the 198th anniversary oft he day on the world have constitutions less
which a band of weary delegates than 10yearsold.Ours lsabout.togo
emerged from Independence Hall Into Its third century. The structure
in Philadelphia to announce that erected by our founding Ia !hers ,
they had drafted a Constitution for with one notable field of exceptions,
the United States of America. It Is a Is just as they left it back in 1787.
document that deserves . more
Yes, the Constitution has been
careful attention than It usually amended 26 times but the first 10

amendments, constituting the BUI
of Rights of 1791, were a condition of
ratification. The lith amendment,
having to do with suits against a
state, was added in 1795 to reverse
an opinion of the Supreme Court.
The 12th amendment corrected a
misunderstanding ·having to do
with the election of presidents and
vice presidents. This was In ll!Ol.
Sixty years passed, and In the
political chaos !bat followed the

LEITERS OF OPINION arC&gt; wPI&lt;'0mC'. Th£'~• shOuld b&lt;' lf'SS th~n 300 words
Io n~ .· All le tter s are subjt&gt;ct to «:'dltlnJZ and mu st br Sl!ml'd with namE', addrt&gt;ss and
tclf'phouf' number. No unsi~ml&gt;d Jpt lr rs wlll bt.• publ lJ;hl'tl . Lctl('rs should bf' In
tastE', addrE-ssi ng iSsU£•s, no t pt•rsonat!ti('s.

Crisis of plenty
With the autumn harvest now well underway, the good news for
farmers throughout the Midwest Is that they will be reaping
record-breaking harvests of corn, wheat, soybeans , sorghum and other
crops.
The bad news, however, is that both domestic and global surpluses are
accumulating at an unmanageable rate, exports are pJummeting and
market prices are collapsing.
Last spring's spate of publicity about the "farm crisis" has laded, but
the chronic problems in the nation's agricultural economy have not
dissipated.
In North Dakota, for example, grain farmers produce virtually all of
the country's durum wheat, used primarily to make pasta. One year ago, a
bushei was selling at almost $4.00. Today the price is below $3. 75. ·
Sunflower seeds, another major North Dakota agricultural product,
sold at $12 per hundredweight at this time last year, but now the price Is
slumping toward $9 per hundredweight .
The Impact of those depressed prices Is especially severe In the state
because the economy of three-fourths of its counties Is heavily dependent
upon agricultural income.
But other major grain-producing states In the Midwest - Including
South Dakota, Iowa , Kansas and Nebraska- also are adversely affected
because the proportion of their farm-dependent counties ranges from
one-half to three-fourths.
In those states, the price being offered by local grain elevator
qperators for a bushel of corn has declined from tnore than $3ayear ago to
$2.50 today. A bushel of soylleans that fetched $6.25 a year ago brings only
slightly more than $5 now.
·
One cause of those disastrous prices Is an expeded harvest of
unprecedented size. This year's corn crop, for example, Is projected to
total almost 8.27 billion bushels. eclipsing both the 1982 record of8.24 billion
bushels and last year's harvest of 7.66 billion bushels.
'
With the worldwide output of wheat and coarse grainssuchascornand
sorghum likely to total most 1.38 billion metric tons during the 1985-86
agricultural year, global surp[uses are projected to soar to 241.6 mllllon
metric tons at the end of that period - a 22 percent Increase over the
Current levels.
That situation - coupled with the high value of the dollar In
comparison with other currencies - has decimated the export market,
which this country's farmers rely upon to sell approximately one-fourth of
the crops they produce annually.
,
Agricultural experts this year are expected to total129 million metric
tons, the lowest level since 1977 when they amounted to only 112 mU!Ion
metric tons.
Citing "sluggish demand, increased foreign supplies and the ability of
competitors to undercut U.S. prices," the U.S. Department of Agriculture
has slashed Its estimates of the valueofthisyear'sexportsfourtlmes In the
past nine months.
The most recent estimate Is $33.5 billion, the lowest levet ·since 1979
when exports wer&lt;' valUed at $32 billion and fat below the 1981 record of
$43.8 billion. Even more depressing Is USDA's projection of only $.ll.2
blllton worth of farm exports next year.
The overvalued dollar has increa!;ed the cost of this country's farm
commodities to other na lions by more than 50 percent since 1980 and forced
those countries to increasingly look elsewhere lor their agricultural
Imports.
The result: This country's share of the global agricultural market
peaked at 40 percent in 1980, has slipped to 37 percent and continues to slide.
Even a decline in the value of the dollar mlght not fully remedy the
situation. however. Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada and other
grain-exporting nations have invested too much In agricultural expansion
to allow this country to readily recapture Its former share of the market .

a

I'M DoiNG
&amp;&gt;ToRY ON THe PRe~§. we'Re
oFTeN accu~eD oF iN~NSiTiViTy aND iNVaDiNG
PeoPLe'~ PRivacY, NoT To MeNTioN CHeaP
aeN5aTiol'laLi'aM. CaN I GeT YouR Reaclior-1?

~·---,

,(j :'J:I

t==:::=::::t

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t9~

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Curtis
Weathers switched from leading
cheers to receiving them Monday
night.
"As a backup player, I've always
felt my role Is to keep myself ready
In case something happens," said
Cleveland's seven-year veferan
linebacker, who found himself In a
starting role against the Pittsburgh
Steelers Monday because of Clay
Matthews' sore back.
"I play on special teams, and I
give the guys vocal support from the
sidelines."
·Weathers earned the cheers when
he Intercepted a pass to set up e
Earnest Byner's21-yard touchdown
run with 2: 37 to play to seal the
Browns'17-7vlctol)'overthelr AFC
Central rivals.
"I had a premonition before the
play that he (l&gt;falone) was going to
throw the ball at me," said
Weathers. "I don't know where or
who he was throwing It to, because I
was all alone out there. It was the
first interception of my career. •'
Browns head coach Marty Scl\ottenhelmer said Weathers' performance "Is a vlctol)' for the role and
special teams player.
"Curtis Is an example of the
character we have on this team," he
added. "He was thrust Into a
situation because of an lnjul)', and

Civil War, we got the 13th, 14th and
15th amendments. These were
indeed substantive. The original
Constitution had treated the Negro
slave as pro~rty - as merely 60
percent of
white "person for
purposes of representation. The
amendments set hlm tree, guaranteed his rlghtto vote, and prohibited
tlie states from depriving any ·
person of "life, liberty or property" .
without due process of law. Neither
could the states deny any person ·
within their jurisdiction of "equal .
protection of the laws."
These were significant amendments. The 11 amendments that
have come along since 1870 have
been small potatoes. The 16th
authorized a federal income tax.
The 17th required direct election of
senators, but this was comlng
anyhow. The 18th prohibited boo7,e;
the 21st brought It back. In between
was the 19th, guaranteeing women
the rlghl to vote - a right that
already exl•ted In most states and the 20th, fiddling with the dates
of presidential inaugurations. The
22nd amendment of 1951 put a
two-term limit on presidents; the •
23rd gave residents of the District of
Columbia a right to vote In
· presidential electons; the 21th
prohibited poll taxes, which were on
their way out; the 25th set uP
procedures in the event of presidential disability; and the 26th gave the
vote to 18-year-olds.
None of these touches the core.
We stlll have the basic concept of a
legislative, an executive and a
judicial branch. The provisions that
. make amendments so difficult are
stlll In place. The Blll of Rights
remains Intact.

a

I

he was outstanding."
~ Danielson, wbo tossed a
17-yard touchdOwn pass to rookie
Fred Banks at 11:04 of the second
quarter, said the Browns rebounded
from a dlsaJWOlntlng overtime loss
to St. Louts In the opener.
"Offensively, we're getting better," he said." buttbere'sstlll room
tor Improvement. Our defense was
just fabulous, though."
Oeveland's defense limited Pitts- '
burgh, which churned out 445 net
yards In beating Indianapolis In Its '
opener, to 216 yards.
"We came down to earth with a
crash,'' said Pittsburgh coach
Chuck.NoD, "The Browns deserve a
lot d credit
"(Pittsburgh wide receiver)
Louis Upps only -h ad hm catches
(for :I.'! yards) afternlnecatchesand
~ee TI?'s agalilst the Colts. What
happened? He got shadowed by
Cleveland's defensive backs."
Mark Malone, who passed for 445
yards against the Colts, was held to
18-of-45 passing for 178 yards, one
touchdown and two Interceptions.
Danielson finished with 18-o!.JO
passing for :n;yarcts ooetouchdown
and one Interception.
Oeveland totaled with 293 net
yards, 134 more than the Colts
managed against the Steelers a
week earlier.

Meet the Tornadoes

-

I

Caught in the cross fire lack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear
WASHINGTON -The seizure of fratricidal warfare of recent years Lebanpse trading company's pharAmerican hostages by Shiite Mos·
lntei!Sified, most of the Jews fled .
maceutical branch. Sasson was
!ems In Lebanon stole the h~adlines
By 1982, when Israel launched Its returning from a business trip to the
in 1985, but there's another story of Ill-starred Invasion of Lebanon, United Arab Emirates when he was
hostage-taking in that unhappy only a bout 100 Jews, mostly old warned that he was in danger and
country that has gone untold.
men, remained in the country. They should not go home to' MoslemWhile Christian and Moslem clung resolutely to their traditional
controlled West Beirut He had no
militias continue to slaughter each political neutrality, confident this
time to heed the warning - he was
other and "enemy" civilians, the would exempt them from the grabbed at or near the a irport .
remnant of Beirut's centuries-old
violence that had reduced Beirut to
- Yehuda Benisti, 68, a former
Jewish community has become the rubble and its citizens to victims.
manager of Bank Safra.
latest target of Shiite kidnappers.
But the Jews' careful non- Isaac Tarrab, 75, a retired
Seven elderly Lebanese Jews have partisanship was of little conse- professor.
.
been abducted on the street, and
quence to the Shiite extremists, who
- Ell Srour, 68, an impoverished '
are believed to be held by the swear fealty to Iran's Ayatollah Jew who prepared thc ·dead lor
Hezbollah, the same fanatical
KhomeinL The~ fanatic fu nda ·
burial. •
Shiite group that is holding seven mentalists lumped the Jews In the
- Halm Cohen. age unknown,
Americans.
same category as the Israelis and also poor, who delivered kosher
The State Department has been Americans. They began snatching meal to the Jewish community.
making behind-the-scenes appeals the elderly men off the street.
- Salim Jammous, agi&gt; unin supposedly influential quarters
The kidnap victims are a mixed known. secretary-general of the
for the release of the seven lot :
Jewish community.
Lebanese, along with Its continuing
-Dr. Eli Hallak , 00, a prominent
Sources told our associate
efforts to free the seven Americans. physicia n who mlnlstered to the
Lucette Lagnado they believe II
The Jews of Lebanon once · needs of Palestinian children. Last
highly likely that the seven are
numbered in the thousands. Avoid· March, armed gunmen bufsl into being h&lt;"ld bY the Hezbollah either
lng the Impassioned political battles his home and dragged him away, . In Beirut or in the Syrian-controlied
of their far more numerous Moslem he has not been heard from sinCP.
Bekaa Valley, not far from where
and Christian countrymen, they
,- Isaac Sasson, 68, who was the seven Americans are thought to
played a large part in making president of the Lebanese Jewish
be held. Reginald Bartholomew,
Beirut the commercial capital of community and the head of a major
the U.S. ambassador to Lebanon,
the Middle East But · as the
has held discussions on the missing

Beginning of the end ___

Jews with both Lebanese and
Syrian officials, according to our
sources.
Syrian Pesldent Ha!ez Assad was
Instrumental In obtaining the release of the American "TWA
bostages" in July, and Is believed
bY the State Department to have
enough Influence with the Sltllte
terrorists in the Bekaa Valley to
Intercede for the Jews and the
remaining Americans. Whether he
chooses to do so Is another matter.
THE FUDDLE .FACI'ORY: We
told you recently how the State
Department has responded to the
dangers our diplomats face from
terrorists; It set up anew bureau to
address the problem. Well, the new
bureau is already hard at work building itself up. It has quietly
advertised for 14 "security management professionals" to advise on
measures to mak&lt;' U.S. embassies
more secure. The bureau is also·
looking lor an experienced contract
officer to handle purchases of
security equipment. Now If the
terrorists wtu just hold off till u,.,experts ' advice Is studied and thr:
procurement procedure Is duly'
followed ...

Kelley Grueeer
ll-9, 1.55 pound
Senior pard

More than 500 people, all but two
of them black , have died in South
Africa sincr the current protests
against the whitP-supremaclst regime began.
At least another 400 have bePn
detained under emPrgency f.XJW&lt;'t'S

Catala, whose burned and mutilated bodies were found with the
bodies oltwocolleagues in the sand
dunes of the Indian Ocean.
Goinwe and Catala. both schoolteachers, were involved in South
Africa's longest school boycott The
pb!lce say the lour were victims of
the war between rival political sects
in South Africa, but blacks say
Inconsistencies in the official version of their deaths point to po!iCf'
involvement.

On May 14, a court and a court
·messenger's office in Brakpan
were attacked. On May 28, the
headquarters of the South African
defense forces and the Southern
Transvaal Medical Command were

bombed In Johannesburg, and two
days later, the offices of a fund that
provides financial and material
' Africa's securassistance to South
ity forces came under siege.
In Durban, on June 6, a police
station Jn Umlazi and the Natalia
Development Board offices In
Lamontville were attacked.
Eight security policemen in
Capetown were bombarded with
hand grenades and an electricity
sub-station In the suburb of Wood·
land was bombed on June 21. That
same day, the East London city hall
aiid a gas station were bombed.
On June 26, a power station, a fuel
depot and a water pipeline In
Umtala were attacked: leaving the
headquarters of ·. the artificially
created "homeland" of Transkei
without powet\
These attacks, the more than 500
deaths of blacks, and the newiy .
begun boycott of white merchants
In Port Elizabeth are responsible
for the state of emergency declared
by the government In late July.
South African leaders seemed
content to pennlt black deaths at

tht' hand:-; of othe-r blacks , or at lhl'
hands of white s('('urity !or&lt;'&lt;'s. But
whpn the rising. tide of black
discontent lx'gan to spiU over lo thP
prot ected whit£' minority, morP
drastic measures we1;e adopted.
South Africa ·s 72-percent black
majority has only two non-violent
weapons at Its disposal - withhold ·
ing Its labor and withholding its
patronage of white businesses.
The economic boycott has already had a devastating effect on

Jeff CooaoiJy
ll-11, 1:13 pound

Senior ballback -

"Their offense was strong and
their defense was stronaer," said
Upps. "We made mistakes that .
they burned usoo,and!heydeserve
credit."
Matt Bahr's earlier field goal
turned Cleveland's 7-0 llalftlme lead
Into a 10-0 third-quarter advantage,
but Pittsburgh rallied when Malone
hit John StaDIWrth with a six-yard
scoring pass 2:54 Into the fourth
quarler.
But three holding pe~~altles late In
the game thwarted the Steelers In
the nationally televised contest
before Weathers and Hyner Iced the
win . .
" We're· going to have to take a
hard look at the game films and
learn something," said Malone. "A
dropped pass here, a penalty there
... add the Interceptions and you're
dead.''
Cleveland took a 7-0 lead when
Danielson completed an 11-play,
Ill-yard drlv" by tossing a 17-yard
pass to rookie Banks.
The Browns upped the lead to 10-0
on Matt Bahr's 18-yardtleld goal at
11: 42 after a drive stalled on the ·
Steeler 1.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Gary
Redus is quietly emerging as ooe of
the best base-stealers in baseball.
The San Francisco Giants can attest
to that.
Redus used his running abilities
Monday to give the Clnclnniltl Reds
anll-lnning, 7-VwinovertheGlants:
With one out In the bottom of the
11th, Mark Davis walked Redus. On
the third pitch to Dave Concepcion,
Redus stole second. On the next
pitch, he stole third. Redus completed his ·c ycle on the next pitch
when Dav)s uncorked a wlld pitch,
allowing Redus to score the winning
run.
"When I was on second I knew
Davis kicked high and nobody was
holding me on," Redus said, "There.
was no question I was going to score
(On the wlld pitch). I was already
moving toward the plate when I saw
the ball kick away."
'Giants manager Jim Davenport
said Redus' exploits came as no
surprise.
"You know when he gets the

ties.

Smtt Wlddlne

WendeD Clark

fl..O, 245 pound
Senior Iackie

6-1, 163 pound
Senior end

I

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20
c0 IIege 8 op

,.· ----------~------

1

merchants In Port Elizabeth, bringing the harmful effectS of apartheid
home to South Africa's whites lor
the first time . This may prove the
most effective weapon in moving
the monolithic white regime.
But It has yet to be seen If It will be
possible to halt the rising tide of
black r·esentment that wUI demand
rPtribut ion for the harsh oppression
II has suffered at the hands of white
South Africans for so many years.

NEW YORK tUPI\ - Tlw' Unltt'cl P'rc'ss
lntN'naUonal Boartl of COIICht&gt;s 111rond
TVJ~Uillr· ll'lli!Q'l Top :in oolk"Mt' foolb.lt
' rOJiin$!!1, '41th flr!U ·plac'f' VOlts Wid n'COI"CL~ In
pormthrsM.. nlal points tbast'don I~ polnls
ror fltst plil('(' , 14 fol· lil"C''nd, l'4&lt;'.\. and l11st

O!hffs m;•l•MnR votrs: Air f'OI'l'(' , Ck.Tn ·
son. Crorala. Gcor$Tft'h. IIIIMlll. Kansa~.
MJrhiRilll Stat•'. Pilt, Tmi"I('5J('E', TeK.AN

C'hrbllan, Texas Tt:&gt;r-h and WastllnJllon,

.1. !'ootM·nO t5tii ·Ot

i

•

•'
'

!rom Dave Hatfield to Ty Tokl. A
pass failed for the extras.
Defensively, Meigs sophomore
Steve Tracey recovered a fumble,
Howard and Williams each Intercepted a pass, and freshman Ro·
bln Qualls blocked a punt. The
Meigs reserves play again next
Monday at home against Wellston
with a starting time of 5: 55.

We'd llat ID hM the opporUIIIy ., shoW you What ..
,.... ... with qualty pnlllt:·
lion llld IIIMce. Cll

-·

214 lAST MAIN
POMROY
H2-6617
llfllakAUto

..Vo

Freshman quarterback Scott
Nelgler hit freshman Kevin Oller
from three yards out for the
game's first points, capping a
long Meigs drive on their first
possession. Freshman Wes Howar4, who led Meigs In rushing
with 79 yards In 12 carries, ran In
the extra points for an 8-0 Marauder lead.
Williams scored again In the
third quarter, this on a 10 yard
run. A pass for the extras was In·
complete. Mlller scored In the
fourth quarter on a 14 yard pass

BLOWER
"

CName of Deceased)
Clime of Callo)g Hours)
(nme ef Service)
!Place of Sorvlce I

Many years aao families at the time of a death would
hire death cryers, which would ao out into the com·
munily and publicly announce that a death had taken
place. Then as time went by people bepn usina the
windows of local businesses to display death nottces.
In modern times the daily newspal)tr and now rad~o
have become lhe method to aive notice of death . Thrs
new display is just another method of elvin&amp; notice of
death.
We feel that it is very Important for all the friends
and relatives to be matft aware of the death of a loved'
one. llany times we have heard tho recrets of • friend
because they were not thete lo comfort a widow or wt·
dower. Friends and relatives are very important and are
needed to help comfort the survivors . ·

The torlowin&amp; are just two instances where we think this type ·hf di~Diav. would 'be helpfuL
~--------------·
1ar newsI) Many people in our community have trouble readina tltt smaller INrsrc pnnt found rn tltt
fiiU

paper obituary. This we k,_ by tltt many c:.rrlls WI pt daily aski"' about tht time and dey of servrces._
2) In today's tnt pact world 111ny people do not rnd tilt newspapers faithfully. Wt ho~~t thts drsplay
will brina aHenllon to tht death of lrltnd If some- Is just &amp;llncl"' thr01111t t~t pa_per .
.
This display will only INr publiohad in tht newspaper with tilt f_lrrlillts allthorlutron. Tht m~st •~!! ·
rt t thin&amp; to us at the lllwli"'s-Coats·Biower funtfll Home IS the family we are servrna. hat rs
~ ";. IJh tht time to plan tach and every detail the family has requested and then c:.rrrry out tht best
:C,Isible service WI t'now how. If you hllve any questions o~ comments please Itt us know .

..Sr•r·IJit:e

Plu.~ ... A

ttention To Detail!"

I••

Size

Price

P155/80R13 ...................... . $39.95
P165/80R13 ............. ... .... ..... 42.95
P175/80R13 ......................... 45.95
P196/75R14 ..... ,....... ..... ....... 44.50
P205/75R14 ........... ... .. ...... ... 45.00
P215/75R14 ..... ................... .48.00
P205/75R15 ...... ............... .... 52.00
P215/75R15 ... ..... ... ... ....... .. .. 54.00
P225/76R15 ........... . ,, ........ .. . 56.50
P236/75R15 ................. .. ... ... 59 .50

PH. 742-3088

RAWLINGS-COATS

1

Steel-Belted R11di111

Muter Card. and Viae Welcome

SERVING THE FAMILY OF

"How's the PR .campaign coming along vigorwise?"
'

John Stuper, 7-5, pltched the lith
to earn his first wln since June 25.
Davis, 5-10, the Giants' fifth pitcher,
took the loss .
The Giants tied the game for the
second time In the eighth. With two
outs, Mike Woodard singled and
scored from first on Ron Roenicke' s
double Into the right field comer,
making it 6-6.
The Reds took a 1-0 lead In the
first Dave Parker's single drove
home Eddie Milner.
The Giants came back totakea2-1
lead an Inning later. Chris Brown hit
a solo home run, hls 16th, to make It
1-1. Rob Deer doubled and came
home on Matt Nokes' single.

OPEN: 8-6 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

FUNERAL HOME

•••
•••

r--------------1

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
. *BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST .. RUTLAND. OHIO

I

•

"Gary knows howtorunand when

to run,'' Rose added.

MUner doubled and scored on
Pa rker's double.

'

WHAT IS THE REASON FOR THIS NEW DISPLAY
I HAVE SEEN ON THE OBITUARY PAGE?

""

to run,' • Rose sa1d .

"OEniNO 10U THERE SAFELI'
LOWEST PRICES
ON PASSENGER CARS AND
.
UGHT TIUCIC DIES

.

UPl

The Reds reclaimed the lead In the
bottom of the second. Ron Oester's
sacrifice fly scored Concepcion,
making It 2·2. Parker later singled
home Bo Diaz and Milner lo make it
4-2.
The Reds made Jf5-2in the fourth .

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

~

:t
... lrM·a (1·1))
-lOti 7
!'i. Ohio Slatr tl-Or
.WS 4
ti. Florida Stat&lt;' tll
400 ~
7. 0lclahmSrttl l1 2·1l\ ~~ 6
R. PCiln Slatl" 12- m
'!17 9
~: 1 .0\l l~lana Stat cJ.OI '217 tO
Ill. HrtJ,rham Yllj:! t:.!·ll 1!161.1
ll South Carollnt2-fh 1&amp;111
12. Alubam!l r2-lh
1ti11S
H:\ 8
1:\. UClA I WI\
Ill . Arlwnsa~ 11.01
12215
105 l
1!1. M!d"ll~tan ~ 1-01
lti. Mil-'' land ll ·H
88111
17 . N&lt;'tia~ka 10.11
Silt
18. \\"{'Ill \"lr.l{lnla t2·CII ii.'J 11
19. Arllona t2·01
12 l
19. Trxa~ tO-Ol
12 al
z-U nrankro.

Berry's World

~

chance he's going to run. You'vegot
to keep him close, especially at
second," Davenport said.
Reds player-manager Pete Rose
said he gives Redus a free rein when
It comes to running. " The only thing
I do Is tell him when I don'twant him

wt-.·~ !i· rdnkln~:

1. Au111rn tZH t:l·O\ ~9 2
2. Oklahom• dO rt(l.OI 52M 1

remaining nln the game Monday night. The 21 -yard
run Iced the Browns' 17-7 victory over the ~lers.

Redus' speed carries Reds ~o 7 ~6 win

ROCK SPRINGS - Sophomore Scott Williams scored two
touchdowns tn leading the Meigs
reserves to a season -opening 22-6
win over the Mlller reserves here
Mond&amp;y.
Coach Jon Arnott's Little Marauders scored a touchdowp in
each of the first three quarters
while Miller's six-pointer came
In the waning moments of the
fourth period. Meigs survived
nine fumbles and seven penal·

J_ul_ian_B_on_d

••
I

ENROt!TE TO TO - Cleveland numlng back
Ealwat Byner shakes loose from Plltsburgh defender
Sm Washington, crossing the goaDine wHh 2:37

Young Marauders ~ictorious

-=""_ _

adopted by the Pretoria
government.
Some of the dead died at the
hands of black Insurgents. These
victims have usually been whiteappointed black council members
In the townships that house the
low-wage labor force that fuels the
South African economy. Only five
.,. of 38 local councils are now
operating. Nearly ~black council
members, Including 27 mayors,
have resigned.
An estimated 78 percent of tbose
killed In the recent violence were
killed in clashes with the pollee or
armed forces, often at funeral
; ~.....,.._.U services for other blacks killed the
same way. On several occasions,
the pollee have fired , without
provocation, Into groups of peaceful
blacks. At least four blacks were
murdered by official or unofficial
:- ·- ...
agents of the white state.
The sometimes sketchy nature of
these figures Is proof oft he fragility
of black life In South Africa. There
Is rlgid white control of the black
population, loreed resettlement,
and a b.lza!Te licensing scheme that
requires blacks to carry a passbook
at all times or face eviction to
remote areas set aside to drain the
By United Pr""' InternatiOnal
black population from "white"
Today Is Tuesday, Sept.17, the 260th day of 1985 wlth105 to follow.
areas. But despite all this, no one
ThP moon Is moving toward Its first quarter.
knows how many black there are in
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Mars.
South Africa or how many have
The evening stars are .Jupiter and Saturn.
really been killed.
Those born on this dale are under the sign of Virgo . 1bey Include poet
Two of the four whose deaths are
William Carlos WIIIJams in lll83, actor Roddy McDowell in 197JI (age 57), · charged against a secret "death
actress Anne Bancroft In 1931 (age 54) , and actor John Ritter In 1948 (age
squad" of the white government
37.)
are Matthew Goniwe and Fort

Today in history

17,

I

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

~oo d

Sept=

Bro~s dump Steelers, 17•7

.

Constitution Day________Ia_rne_s_J--=-:·K_i_lpa_t_ric_k

The Daily Sentinel

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

~y ~;.,ily~~:

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�The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Beat of the bend

Shortstop.Tartahull flashes
his power against Royals
had I heir nine-game home w inning
streak snapped. The Mar iners heat
the Royals for theslxthtimeln seven
meetings this season. Jack Per·
conte opened the game for Seattle
with a triple and, alter a walk to P~ll
Brad ley, Danny Jackson wild·
pitched Per conte home and B radley
tosecond.
.
Catcher Ja mie Quirk was· then
charged w ith a passed ha ll a nd the
second run came. hom!' . on a
douhil'-play grounder b y Gorman
Thom as.
Ka nsas City got a r un back in Its
half of theflrst on a double by Georgi'
Brett and a single by Ha I,Me Rae, but
Tartabull belt ed his twO-run homer,
in I he second I o move I he Mariners
comment one way or another bu t if In fron t, 4-1.
Ka nsas City thinks that highly of
Sea ttle then chased .Jackson.
13·10, with another runinthethird on
m e, I'm flattered.
Tartabull had impressive stal ls· a walk to Davis and a double by
lies a t Calgary of the (AM 1Pacific . Dave Henderson for a 5-1 lead.
Coast League this summer, hitting
Ka nsas City loaded ihe ba ses with
.300 with 43 homers with 110RBI. He oone out in the ninttt, but Mikr
hit .300 with two homers and i RBI
Moore retired the next three batters
the previous Septem ber with the on [))P outs to end tbP ga me.
Moore scattered five hits , stmck
Ma riners.
Tartabull , originally the property out five and walked three to improve
his record to 15·8 with his lith
of the Cincinna ti Reds, was drafted
by Seattle from the free agent complete game of t he year. The loss
baseball pool after the Mariners lost was only the th ird In ·the last 16
southpaw Floyd Bannister to the games for t he Royals.
.
E lsewhere, Cleveland belted New
Chicago White Sox four years ago.
With just a two-game lead over the York 9·4, Baltimore dem olished
idle Californ ia Angels, the Roya ls Detroit 14·7. Milwaukee topped

By COlLINS YEARWOOD
UPI Spol'lll Wrller
Danny Tartabull gave the Kansas
City Royals a costly reminder
Monday of the Importance of a
power -hitting shol1stop.
Tartabu ll, the subj ect of trade
ta lks between the Royals and
Seattle Mariners In August, belted a
two- run, seeond·innlng homer to
send the Mariners to a S..l victory
over the Western Divislon·leading
Royals.
The Royals, whose shortstops are
barely hitt ing over .200 this year,
were nev!'r able to complete the
deal.
" I heard those r umor s when I was
in Calgary," saidTartabu ll. " I can't

HIGH HANDED EFFORT - An E;astern Eaglctte
has hoth hands In the illr as she attempts lo return a
serve In last week's SVAC encounter against
Southern. UtUizing a bala~ ood attack, Southern's ·

Tumadoeltes defeated the host Eaglettes, 15-6 and
15-11 in an important SVAC voUeyhall contest. Scott
Wolle photo.

Orioles 14, 'fiKers 7
At Detroit, Cal Rip,ken bit a patrol
home ru ns and highlighted a
six-homer attack that paced the
Orioles. Tippy Martinez evened his
record at 3-3. Rookie Chuck Cary fell
to 0-1.The Orioles lead the majors In
total home runs with 194, ·

SUN FUN

PENNZOIL
Sp•~l•l

PEPSI

8 PACK- 16 OZ.

$181
"Service. With A Smile~

Located In Racine, OH.

his career he has stlllck ou t a t least
10 In a game.
Gary Carter chipped in with an
RBI'single and a three-ru n homer.
Kevin Gross, 14-10, lasted J U

defeated Chicago 8-5, a nd San Diego
beat Los Angeles 4·2. Astros 7,
Braves 2
.At Atla nt a, J e ff Heathcock, 2·1,
hurled a !our-hitter for his first
in nings, sun'E'ndering nine hits and
major -league complete gam e a nd
six ear ned runs. .
Jose Cruz , J erry Mumphrey a nd
Denny Walling homered to lead the
After a J.S start, Tudor improv(i'd Astros. J oeJohrson fell to 4-1.
to 19·8 wit h an 8-4 victory In the
Expos 8, Cubs5
opener, and has supplanted Joaq uin
At Montreal, Scot Thom pson
Andujar as the ace of t hP Card inals sna pped a 5-5 tie with a sacrifice fly
staff. HisstringofscorPiessi nnJngs in the seven th and Tim Ra ines
was snapped a t :n by Bill Almon's added a two·nm single to [:OWer the
grand-slam in the four1 h.
Expos. Tim Bur ke. 9-3, worked the
Andy Van Slyke an d Ter ry last 2 1-3 innings of relief for the
Pendleton each knocked in two nms victory. George F razie r. 7-7, took
in the opener. Relievers .Jeff Lahti the loss.
and Ken Dayley and Todd Worrell
Padres 4, Dodgenr 2
fini shed. Won·ell pitch!'d to one
At San Diego. Ca rmela Mart Inez
batter for his second save. Pira te hit hi s JBth homer of t he season with
stHrt cr JoscDeLeon. 2·18, 1astcdj ust two on In the·s eventh to brea ka 1-1 t i£&gt;
1 2,3 innings.
and lift the Padres ..T he bl ast cam e
Willie McGee sin glr·d home Vince • off r£&gt;liever Ken Howell and made a
Cole man In thecighth inning to snap loser of Jerry Reuss, 12-10. Eric
a J .J tiP in the nightcap. Pa t PNry, Show, 10-10, went 72·3in nin gs, and
1-0, pitched the final 2 1·3 of hitless Rich Gossage !lni,hed for his Z:lrd
relief. Reliever Pat Clemcnt s. 0-2, save.
took
the loss.
EiS&lt;'wherP,
Houston downed
Atlanta 7·2, Cincinna ti topped San
Francisco 7-6 in 11 in nings, Montreal

Scoreboard ...
Majors

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I..=~=========-:-~
LEGAL NOTICE

The Public Utilities Com mission of Ohio has set
for public heariMg Case
No. 85·02-E L·Et'C, to
review tt.e fu el procu rement
practices
and
policies of Columbus and
Sout hern Ohio Electric
Company, the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com ponent and related mat·
ters . This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
10:00 a .m . on September
23, 1985. a t the offlces of
the Public Utillties Cortr ·
mission, 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus. Ohio
43215 .
All interested parties
wlll be given an oppor·
tunity to be heare!. Fur·
ther informaiton may be
obtained by con tacting
the Commission .

THE . PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY: Mary Ann OrUnski,
Secretary

II 1'. t '-' tn ilnll 1 \1;-c~i(- Plo a,,m1

1 1\

l kll&gt;l~

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Jjho _ \[ l if o jJOl

1m~lli

t~Oll i"ON

1il!'1 ,ftl'ot'l l'i :11 .111-'- 111 I l n·g•'

Uauws
,, , .\ ll, mtu. nlchl

HEARING TESTS
IN MIDDLEPORT

1'ill .. i'1. 11)-;h ,ol M l •llli\ •, ol lliJ.:[tl

( 'hlr · '~'' ,or 1\.t•ll \ 'rt r k. nl~ hl
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lft-..,,,11on [11 l .rts ,\nlolf'l r"o nlglll

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("lf"o••·t,md •t, 'i('\1' )' m'k fl
l'oltll lmrH·!• ll Dl'111llt 7
~'all~· "1. 1\ ;m..,, ~ City 1

who has trouble he•rlng or understanding conver·
satlon Is Invited to have a lrH hearing test to seelllhla problem can be helped! Bring t~ll coupon with you tor your FREE
HEARING TEST. Adults only, pte11e.

flo.IOfl .1

TtH&gt;!olciii,Y·~ Gamt'K !All
tr.ul~ 19 fil

dltrl ..... l -"

10 5t

1-11

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Ck•wl&lt;md

tWD I,lk' i 71. 7:,15 p,m,
M l)l.o.mJkN r lb.mi~ 'l--1\11 ill B.li1irwnr'
f!JI\nn i :11 , j ,l.O, p.m
Tmtonln tll;oll!. l i t trl Bo.&lt;.lnn t:'o.lj)j) 1
.lll1 1,-; ~ p m
Sr'att~· 1 Y~~ 111~1 trl

:! fli . H::t&lt;t pm

Come In the morning
ol Thursday, August 15th to
Dr. Rankin Pickens' Office lor
tree hearing test.

f&lt;iln!!l-I! Ci1' 1Fart

,,

·'

I

k•e Reyookls, regent of Return
Jonathan. Meigs Chapter, Daugh·
ters of the American Revolution ,
reminds you tha t the chapter's
meeting this Thursday Is open to
the public and ttere will be ample
parking at the rear of the former
junior high school auditorium In
Pomeroy.
The meeting at which U.S. Air
Force General James Hartinger
(Ret. ) will he speake r will be'!t 1: 30

p .m . a t Grace Ep iscopal Church
parl•h house. Hostesses will be
'Mtss Eleanor Smith, Mrs. Dale
Dutton, Mrs. Clinto n Fisher, Mrs.
Everett Hayes and Miss Lucille
Sm ith.
J ohn. and Marilyn F ultz pur·
chased ihe hom£&gt; of the latp Essie
Russell on Middleport's North
Second Avenue recently and a re
having ·extensive remodeling and
redecorating work done. ThP pla n Is
to own one of t hose. bed and
breakfast operations whieh arc so
popular in olher par ts of the
count ry.

1 know theweatter has been hot,
but on the other hand there's
nothing like looking ahead.
That' s what Ma rgaret I;: lla 1-E&gt;wis
is doin g. Ma rgaret E lla who is
recuperating from m ajor surgery
at a Parkersburg hospita l. has the
annual Christmas flower show of
Meigs County Ga rd(on Clubs a ll
planned and ready to pj. The shQw
will . be on Nov . 23ilnd 24 at the
Meigs Senior Cit lzens Cent er - a
nice· spot lor it .
A quot e I camc across the othe r
day says that to know the peace of
God. you must first know the God of
P eace . Do keep smiling.

Slinderella group
has recent meeting

Annual Yield.

Quarterly.

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So if you want to keep your retirement funds growing at a healthy
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IF YOUR IRA'S
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.
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IF YOUR IRA'S NOT AT
TRUST~ WE'LL MOVE n

(IJ8P8 ..... )
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·-

EDNESDAY; SEPT. 18, 1985 IS

Constitution week
POMEROY
Cons titution
Week. Sept. 17-23; Return Jonathan
Chapte r NsDAR.

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Prf'!s ~ssoclaUon and the

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Yo ur Co mplet e Beaut y &amp; Tann ing Salo n .

Home&lt;:omlng
MINERSVILLE- Hom ecoming
Sept. 22. Minersville United Met ho·
dist Church Sunday School . worship
setviee bPgln 9a .m ., bask&lt;'t dinner.
noon. Afternoon services . 2 p .m .

Ohio.

IF YOU DON'T HAVE MIRA, lOW'S I
TO START OlE.

304-773-5352

'DIURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Child Conser·
vation League meeting 7: 30 p.m .
Thursday at the Ohio Power Co.
offices. District President Cathy
Wray will insta ll new officers.

The Daily Sentinel

It's almost as easy to take advantage of our Special Account if your
IRA's not at Central Trust.
All you have to do is stop into one ofour mnvenient branches. We11
take care of everything.

TO JOIN CATHY YOUNG TO COMPLETE STAFF

Dining Room Only

PH, 992-5432

WEDNE&gt;DAY
, SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Firemen' s Association wUI meet at
the SyracuSE&gt; Fire Station, Wcdnes·
day , at 7:30p.m:

Omz~ruied

CAROL LYONS

world twice speaking to people in
Hawaii, Japan, Hong Kong, Singa pol1, Sri Lanka and East and WC'st
Germ any. Besides bei ng a speaker.
he has au thor!'d a number ollit er; ary
works in cluding a book, "God D&lt;)n 'I
MakeNo.Junk".

_

OWNER/OPERATOR

PROUDLY WELCOMES BACK

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Cha pter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Tuesday, 7:00 p.m. home of Mrs.
Evelyn Knight.,

RACINE- Singing rev ival at
Racine Church of the Na zarene
Wednesday through Sept. 22, 7:30
each e vening and 10: 30a .m . Sull!lay
with song evangelist Roge r Brown
and his wife brinlng the ml."sag£&gt; In
song; public invit!'d .

POMEROY Robert L.
Swanger , pastor of Christ the King
Lutheran Church,. Columbus, wi ll he
spca.ker when the Full Gospel
Business Me n's Fellowship Inlerna ·
lional meets Frid ay iri Pomeroy.
A diimer will be held a t 6: 30p.m .
with the progra m to be held at 7: 15.
Reservations mu st be in bySept.l7,
Tuesday, and call be made by
ca llin g an offi cer o f the
organization.
Swa nger. a !01mer professional
basketba ll player. gradua ted from
Capit al Un iver sity a nd the Evangel ·
leal Lut hera n Seminary. in Culum ·
bus. He has tra veled arou rid thP

the classroom. Help is also needed In
getting the library organized, he
said.
A film, "Safe is Smart" ·on bus
sa !ety, shown earlier to the studf&lt;Jts,
was shown at the meeting.
The prtncipal , who also teaches
sixth grade, introduc'l'd the teachers
and staff th£&gt;rt' including Patty
Stmble, first grade: Janice Curry,
second grade; Sandra Baer, !ounh
grade; DebbiP Sayr&lt;', fifth grade;
Shirl&lt;'y Sayre, title reading teacher;
and Barbara BearhS. secretary.

SHEER DESIGNS UNLIMITED

Choice of Salad, Roll &amp; Drink

SALISBURY - Salisbury PTO
meetlng7::1Jp.m . Tuesday In school
gymnasium.

9.04%8.75%
Effedive
Rate

mentioned that room mothers will
and VCR to be purchased "1th
be responsible (or parties at
school funds. Mrs. Drummer
Ha lloween, Valentine's Day. and
thanked those who sold cotton candy
Easter with each student tocontrib.. and pop com at various fu nctlons
ute $2 to the cost of the parties.
this summer. and Lawrence
It was announcedthatChrlsJacks
thanked 'those who helped paint the
wil l be fi ngerprinting new students . playground equipment.
as well as first grad£&gt;rs who have had
Each teacher will r&lt;X:eive $25 and
thP consent of th£&gt;1r parents some·
the South('rnkindergarten $50 from
time in NovembPr. Ath letic actlvl·
the PTO to purchase classroom
t les for the school will be coordinated
items. Mrs Green spoke to the
by Sally Ebershach and Corky
group about a bika·a ·thon. Law ·
Davis. La ura Swiger is the !11th
reneE' asked for voluntCPrs to help
grade cheer leader advisor.
students with readi ng and matp in
It was repcrted that four slriip
swings have bec&gt;n ordered. The PTO
also voted to purchase a readi ng
ETTA RICHARDSONtable and a VCR with another table

Fellowship speaker named

Served with
Mashed Potatoes,

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Meigs athletic
boosters Tuesday, 7 p.m . at high
school; Trimble game films will be
shown.

I SPECIILOIE·YEIRRITE FOR IRis OILY.

Plans for the school year includ·
lng a carnival on Oct . 5 were m ade
d uring a meeting of the Syracuse
PTO held recently at the school.
Joyce Sisson a nd Laura Green are
co-chairmen o! thewaysand m eans
com mittee for the carnival and
noted that pizza, hot dogs, and
s loppy joes wUI be sold from 6 to 7
p.m . a t the carnival with gamPS to
be held from 7 to 9 p.m.
At .the m eeting conductoo by
Teresa Drummer, president. it was
noted tha t Royal Crown bot! I~ ca ps
will be collect!'d monthly at the
school. Ramora Young is collect ing
Ca mpbell sou p labels for the school.
Sherry Harris is the room mother
coord inator and it was again

WEDNESDAY NIGHT

Calendar

11nll'll t:DT)
,ll Dfolltllt I

N 11 1. 7 :r, p.m
Oaklund

Most hearing problems can be helped today. Many people
who could be helped suffer needleaaly from this problem which
affects millions of people.
~nyone

Mlnrr-.ottt 7. Trxo" h. II lnnlnj\'1

Nl:•w r ork

The tests will be given by 1 llcensed Hearing Aid Specialist
Thursday, August 15th, from 9:00A.M. to 12:00 P.M. using
modern electronic equipment.

~~

M&lt;~ndlt,l''"

~!iiW,IUkef• ~.

Free Electronic hearing tests will be given by Bellone Hear·
ing Aid Canter at Dr. Rankin Pickens ' Office, 509 South 3rd
Avenua, Middleport, Ohio.

!

By BOB HOEFLICH
Senilloel Staff Wrller
Peace In the world begins with
peacP In lhl'
home and If we
can live peacefuUy . with our
families, we can
live peacefully In
the world.
This Is the ad·
vice of promoters of a program to
be observed during the month of
October, " Parrotly for Peaceful
Families" month . Your local librarIes will sponsor peace education
activities to teach famlli PS how to
havP harmony at home. P eace ..
they say, Is a lea r ned skill.
For details call your ioca 1
coordinators who are E sther Mays,
~4242 and Janet Koblentz, 9lfi.
:fl47 or 992-2192.

Elizabeth Vesellca and Jo Ann
Clonch tied for tbe most wt&gt;lght lost
and Malinda Casto was ruMer-upat
the Tuesday night Mason Class of
Sllnderella. At the Wednesday night
Five Points class, Helen Wilson lost
the most weight sncj Paula Plr.kens
was runner-up.

Tudor., Gooden continue race ·
for 1985 Cy Young Award
By GERRY MONJGAN
UPI Sports Writer
Wit hin the race fo r the Na tiona l
League Eas t title , Johr Tudor and
Dwight Gooden are waging a
·p rivate war for the Cy Young
Award.
Just weeks ago, it appeared
'certain Gooden wou ld add the
a ward to the Rookie of the Year
honpr e&lt;:~ rned last season. Now
Tudor i ~ vC'ry much in rhe pict ure,
and the division title as well as Cy
Young award will hinge on their
perfmma nces in the stretch run.
Both recorded victories y£&gt;ster ..
day. but the Cardinals. by virtue of
their double-header sweep of the
Pirates, ' gai ned grou nd in the
standings. moving a fu ll game
.ahead of the Mets.
Gooden cruised to 214 wit h a
two-hit.ll·strikeou t petiormance In
the Me" 9-0 thrashing of the
Phi ladelphia P hillies at ShPa Sta ·
dium, r·unning his streak of shutout
in nings to 31, two-thirds of an inning
short of the team record .
The 20-year-old is the first
21 -ga m£&gt; winner in the majors, and
notched his seventh shutout, tying a
club record. It was the 2.1th time in

Peace is learned

Boston 5-3 and Minnesota nipped
Texas 7·6.

Indians 9, y llllkees4
At New York, J ulio Franco hit a
two-run triple durtnga slx-run ninth
inning and Andre Thornton ripped a
pair mtwo·riiD homers towwerthe
Ind ians. Brian Fisher. 4-4, took the.
loss. J erry Reed. tbe fourth Clevela nd pitcher, entered in the Plghth
and raised his record to 1·5.

Syracuse PTO makes plans for carnival

•

We Reser,ve The Riaht To
lir11it Quantities

STORE HOURS
Mon .• Sat. 8 AM-10' PM
Sunday 10 AM·lO PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, .OH.

WEDS., SEPT. 18-WAHAMA WHITE FALCONS
WEDS., SEPT. 25-SOUTHERN TORNADOES
WEDS., OCT. CJ-EASTERN EAGLES

SHO YOUR SUPPORT!

�The

17 1985

Tuesday,

Ohio

Sentinel

·constitution week designated

The Daily Sentinel .

•
~anber17,

PHONE
992-2156
Of lrttt Da StfttiMI
D•P'-

1985

The

Business Senrices

Cln t ifil.

1!1y

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

lll Collf1 se.: PCMM:ftl¥· OM 4~ 7 1i!

The week ofSept.l7 through Sept.

a

Public Sale
• Auction

23 has been designated Constitution
Week by proclamations of the
President of the United States, the
· Gover nor of the State of the State of
Ohio, the Commissioners of Meigs
County and the Mayors of Pomeroy,
Middleport, Racine, Ru lla nd and
Syracuse.
Mrs. Melvin VanMeter, constitu·
tlon c hairman of Retu m Jonathan
' Meigs C ha pter, NSDAR, urges a ll
c it izens of Me igs County to display
the fl ag of the United Sta tes,
requests that all !iChools in Meigs
County advise their student s of the
. virtues of and a dedication to the ·
preservation of our American
her itage, a nd that a ll churches in
MeigS C6u nty he rem inded that the
Amer ican system of government
was esta blished on morality and
religious sentiment.

CCUT OUT FOI FUTUII USII
Public Notice

Funds distributed
State Auditor Thom as E. Ferguson reported the Septemher dis fli ·
· button of $18,656,015.12 in local
government m oney in Ohio. Meigs
County's share Is $25,00l.

CONSTJI'U'l10N - Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler s igns a
proclamation marking the observance of Constitution Week. Looking
on are left, Mrs. Ronald Reynolds, regent ol Return Jonathan Meigs,
Da ughter s of the American Revolution, and right, Mrs. Melvin
VanMeter , Coll'llitution Week chalnnan. The observan ce Is from Sept.
17 through Sept. 23 . .

C-J will stop publication on Dec. 31
COLUMBUS tU Pi l - Columbus
Cll lzen·Jouma l E d itor Richard
Campbell informed the newspa p·
er's s taff of more than 70 reporters .
editor s, photograp hers and office
workers that lle see5 little hope the
paper will publish a fte r i':l&lt;'r. 31 of
this yea r.
During a rare special staff
meeting hour'S a ft er a Newspaper
Guild rep resentative met with the
staff to discuss close·down negotia·
lions, Ca mpbell d escribed the
demise of the newspaper as
Immine nt . He urged t he staff,

however , to ma inta in its pro fession~

0

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alism "as we go throu ~;:h these
difficult a nd pa intu i last th ree and
one-half m onths ."
Campbell. who just ret u rned from
a two-week vacation in the Sov iet
Union , said t hat whe n he left fo r the
trip he expected tha t thesa leofthe
C·J to E quit y Planning Corp. of

Cleveland would be announced
Sept. 6.
.
But Equ ity said last week that it
e nded its negotia lions to buy the
newspaper from Scripps Howar d, a
Clnci nn all · b ase d pu bl.ls hln g
company.
"To say I was dism ayed Is an
understatement ," Ca mpbell told
the staff and added t ha t he does not
look for another buyer. He emphas·
!zed tha t he was not speak ing on
hehalf of Scripps Howard.
The C-J'S fu ture has been l!nCCr·
tain s ince the Dispa tch P rin ting Co.
announced in 19&amp;3 that it w ill not
renew the joint operating agree'
m ent between the C·J a nd the
Dispatch when it expires Dec. :n.
Terms of the 25·ycar·old agree·
· ment have never been made public.
The Dispatch P rint lng Co., owned
by the Wolf fa mily, pr ints delivers
and sells a dvertising for both

campaign are no longer organized,
a repo rt er fo r the Ill':Wspaper sa id.
They were active uniU E quity
P lanning announced Its int e rest in
buying t he c .. J' but disba nded after
s taff me m bers becam e bopefu l thai
the paper wou ld be bought.

Midgs County

....

,,

papers. Scripps Howard receives
part of the revenue under the
agreement. T heC·J 'sreportersa nd
editors are independPn t of the
Dispa tch .
Newspaper Guild 1nt&lt;erna llonal
represen ta tive Hanna h Jo Ray! also
m et Monday with about 20 sta ff
m embers.
The Guild 's negotia ting team
drafted a letter to Scripps Howa rd
officia ls req uest in g a meeting to
discuss w ha t will happen to em ·
ployees lithe Cit izen Journa l ceases
publica tion.
Staff members who had begun
organizing a "Save t he c.J "

_

happenings... ·
John E. Torrence

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John E. Torrenee. 79, 134 North
High St., Cana l Winchester, for·
merly of Me igs County . died
Monday a t Mount Carme l Hospit a l
In Columbu s.
Mr. Tor rence was born at Long
Bottom, a son of the latc J oseph and
Rosa England Torren&lt;'&lt;'. He was a
retired worker of t he Schr iner· Right
Co. , a nd was a m em herof t he First
Baptist Chu rc h a t Ca rroll.
Surviv ing arc Ws w ile. Winifred:
a son. Jam es Torrence. Ca nal
Winchester; three daug hte rs, Mar·
lene Bell. Canal Winchester: Jo Ann
Moore, Was Wngton, W. Va .: Pa t
Ryrombel , Columbus; a sister, Ona
Larkins, Belpre: several grandchildren a nd great·gra ndchildren .
Beside s his pare nt s, he was pre·
ceded in death by a brother, Van
Torrenee.
Services w ill be he ld a t 2 p .m .
Thursday a t the White-Ethridge
Fune r a l Home a t 125 Lee St. Belpre
with R&lt;'V. Julius Bounds officiating.
Burial will belnSandHIII Cem etery,
Long Bottom . Fr imds may ca ll a t
the fu nera l llomefrom 2to4and 7to 9
p.m. Wedne sday a nd until time of
sC'rvicPs on Thu rsday.

Meets tonight
Chester Counc ii 32J, Da ughters of
America. will m eet tonight a t 8 p.m.
at the ha ll . Quarterly birthd ays w UI
he observed a nd potluck refresh·
ments will be served. A silen t
auc tion will be held by .the
ml!iCPiianeous committee.

Veterans Mt&gt;morial
Admltted ..J ua nlla Haynes. Syra·
ruse: Lloyd Jenkins. Pom eroy:
Ernest Imboden , II , Middleport:
Cha rles Dill . Pom eroy: Kevin
Spaun, Racine.
D lsc ha r ged .. Sy lvla Zw illin g,
Har ry Ea s t('r , Everett Roush.
James Sm it h, Violet Sm it h. Char·
lotte HE&gt;ss. John Lowen , J uanita
Chapman .

William C. Mason
Willia m C. Mason , 57, Ha mlin, W.
Va. , fo rme r ly of Middlepor1 , died
Monday at Veterans Hosp ital in
Huntington, W. Va., followin g a
severa l years Illness.
A veteran of the Korean Conflict,
Mr. Mason was born March 24, 1928
In MlddleporL a son of the la te Earl
and l zora Eblin Mason.
Surviving are his wile, Margaret
Mason: a son, William C. Mason,
.Jr.. a nd a da ughter. BPth Ann
Mason. both at home; fou r sisters ,
MargucritoTiRflOl1&gt;, Dunedin, Fla .:
Mrs. Ellen Conkel , Tu ppe r s P lains:
Mildr ed DeWees. Middle port , a nd
Janet Snyder, Middleport. ·
Bes ides h is pare nts, he was
p!1'Ceded in death by a brother , Earl
Mason. Columbus, and a s is ter.
Susan Man ley. Tuppers Pla ins.
Services will be held at 2 p. m .
Wednesday a t the Miller F unera l
Home in Ham lin . Mlllrary ri tes will
be held . Fr iends may ca ll at the
funeral home this even ing.

Public hearing set
on community grant
The Gai lla·ME'igs Community
Act ion Agency w ill be condu cting a
public hear ing on the commu nity
services block g ran t at J: 30 p.m .
Friday a t the Gulidln g Hand School
in Chesh ire.
Active participation of Individua ls
from t he tow-incom e grou p, organ!·
za t ions repr1&gt;sentlng the poor. labor,
busint-ss and private scctor organi·
zarlons is rcqu('sted and these
persons a nd groups should make
thci r wishPS known on how the
commiJilily services block grant
should he administered to he su it th&lt;O'
needs of the com munity.
Once the m't'ds are Identified , the
agencywlllsummarizethelnform a·
t!on garhcr·ed prior to preparation
a nd subm ission of the fisca l year
1 9~ community services blank
grant application work plan a nd
budget to the Ohio Departm ent of
Development .

Weather forecast

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Today ...m oslly sunny with a Wgh
near !(), South w inds 5 to 15 m ph.
Tonig ht ... par tly cloudy. Low
around 55. South w inds less than 10
mph.
Wednesday ... partly s unny . High
In lh(' lowe r 80s.

Extended lontCIISt
'lbul'tlday t.llrougll Saturday
Fair and wann Thul'tlday and
Frtdl!.fwtlll hlpall0to8$andlowsllll
to 80. A chance obhowers Salurday
with hlpa Ia the mid to upper 70s
llld h i Ill llle mid !lOri to lower lltloi.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (UP! l - Man·
day's w inn ing Ohio Lottery
numbers: Dally Numher
819.
Ticke t sales tota led $1,11 ~,243,
with a payoff dueof$753,'78l. PICK-4

8199. .

Emergency squads
answer four calls
Four calls were a nswered by local
unit s Monday, the Me igs County
Emer gency M edica l Services

rPports.
At 12:01 a .m ., Rutland took JoAnn
Johnston from Sa nd Ridge Road to
O'Bieness Hospit al in Athens:
Racine at 4:05 a. m . took Mildred
Arnold from DeWitt 's Run to
Pleasant Va lley Hospita l: Rutland
at 5: 17 a .m., took Ga ry Woodr uff
from Meigs Mi ne 2 to Holzer
Medical Center a nd a t 9:56 a. m ..
Pom er oy took Brian Hartm an from
the Pomeroy Health Care Cen ter to
Veterans Memorial Hospit al.

Hockingport man
arrested following
riverbank incident
Edward B . R ussell , Hockingport ,
was arrested Sunday evening by the
Me igs Coun ty Sheriffs Departme nt
and charged with possessing a
weapon while Intoxica ted.
Russell shined a heavy fl asWight
from the r iverbank towa rd the pilot
house of a passin g riverboa t. The
pilot of the boat then shined a
spotlight back to the shore and saw
Russell pointing a gun at the boat.
Russell followed the boat to the
BellevillE' Locks and Dam a nd
parked In the fJ'lrkinl( lui . The
sheriff's depart m cnt was notified
and Russell was arrested by
authorit ies a t the dam. A gun a nd

alliecutort and I or auigna of 'IICriL moreorlau;
Glenn Simpson, decMMdi
PARCEL NO. THREE:
The unknown deviMet, leg•
Beginning
• point on ""'
tees, edminitU'ators, execu- oost Nne of et
oold Section 31.
tol's, ond/ or uolgns oflubolle one hundred twenty
rods north
Simpson. deceued : ·
of the IOUth•tt comer of Slid
The unknown hairs. devi- Section; thenoe north on thci
see.. legatees, adminiltraton, ae• line of laid t.:tion 40
executors and/ or euigna of rods; thence WNI 214 codo;
E.A. McCullough, deceeood:
thence """"' 40 rods, thence
W.N. Hovis, whoM loot 0011
214 rods 10 tho pi- of
knOVIm addreu il 133 W. beglmlng, conteining 53'11

16137 ~living,

~-ood

his

unknown heirw, deviHH. Iega-

tees, adminiltraton:. aucutors
and/ or assigns:

Joe Rubin. whoH last

known addreu il Perkerlburg,
W.Va., whose euct eddr111 il
unknown if living, and if
deceased hia unknown heirs,
devi1881, legatees, adrninilh'lltors , execu1ors and / Or
assigns:

Goldy Rubin, whou loot

known addrMS il Parkersburg,
W.Va. whose exact addrau is
unknown if living. and if
decea~ed her unknown heirs,
devi1881, legatees. Mlministrtors . eJCecuton and / or
assigns:

Hovis Oil·and GaCompanv.
whose 1..-t: known addreat il

125 E. Neshe- A_,.,e,
Nww ~~~on . Po. 18142

whose exact addre.. it
unknown;
· Meigs Developing Company. whose last known eddreH is 1900 19th Street.
Parkenburg, W.Va. 26101
an'd whose exact addr.a is
unknown;
You are hereby notified that
you have been named defendants in a legal action entitled

I

Sold ,.., - t e tDteling
three hundrad seventv·six
.:,. more or leu. .
And the io lhol tho

null and void ond held lor
nought; lhot e1 - " " P'Oli"
erty rwmolning on - · reel
- t · bo ""' property of the
plaintiffs' prlnc:iplw; and that
ptolntilfo' principles' title to
sold oil ond gas bo qlliotod.
You are required tO • .,.....,.,
the complaint within twtntv•
eight days oltor the loot

publication of thia notice
which wiR be published .,....
-.ch w.k·for lix COOMCUtive
· Tho tat publication will
be mode on September 17,

1985 ..d the twenty-oight

days for antwer will commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwise T_,ond

oo raquinld by Ohio Rules of
Civil P""""""'•· judgment will
be-agoinotywfor""'
relief demanded
complaint.

in the

Larry E. Sponoar

Ctlll'l&lt; of Courts
Meigs County
Common Pteas Court
BY: Martene Harrison
Deputy

Judge Knight

. PARTS and SERVICE

CASE NQ ..85· CV· 234

fond conveyed by Edgac C.
Brown to Jmd C. Rosa {v. 5
pg. 4281 thence aouth 40 rodo;
thence east 54 rods; lhonce
north 40 rudo; - ... 64
rods to the ptam of·beginning,
cont81roog 13% ac1'81. more or

fond convoyed by Dougtao
Putnam to Jared C. ROll and

Chortes . Ec Ron tV. 59 pg.
2751 about t20 rodo -.th of

com•

the northwest
of said
Section 31 ; thence running
lOUth to the northwest CDI"'Mr
of tho 40 ..... - . of fond

and coriwyed by Douvl•
Putnam to Marlin V. Bush IV.

61 pg. 352): then co eeet to the

W8l1 line of the tract of land
known u the John E. Rosa
1 87Y2 acre tract (V. 20 pg.
2621 in cooid Secdon 31 ·
thence north followi!lg _ th~

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

and Jeffrey Scott Schultz,
Addrtll Unknown, and tht
unknown heirs , d•viiMI,Ie~
getHI, 8xecutora, adminil·
tretora, spouses end enigna
end the unknown guerdlaot
of minor end / or lncompe·
tent hairs of Carl Schultz. Jr.
8nd Jeffrey Scott Schulta,
ell of whoH relidencea ara
unknown, Will Ulke notice
that on the 22nd dey of Au-

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Ha&amp;
Farm Equipment

Dealer

F1r111 E••IP•••t
Parte &amp; Service
1· 3·tlc

tlonel Mortgage Corpora ·
tion filed ita certain Complaint in th Common
cOurt of Meigt County.
Ohio, in Cose No . 85-CV·
234 on the docket of Mid
Court, and the object and
prayer of which said Compla.int it to fe,ecloH aeid
plaintiff't mortgage
recorded in Mortgage Book

Pte••

136.

Page

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County. Ohio Records. upon
181. 13, 20, 27 t9) 3, 10. 17. the following described real
8tc
estate, record titlt to which
ia alleged t'o be held by Cirl
Public Notice
Schultz, Jr. by deed rt·
corded in Deed Book 267.
Page 1. Mejgs County, Ohio
85· 761·TP·PEX
Deed Records. t owlt:
LEGAL NOTICE
Beginning at en iron pipe
Notice io hereby gr.. """ located at the IOUthealt
Motv Jane T-llond numer- . comer of Lot No. 3 of

-

o - ouboc:riboro of ""' TYREE'S

Coolvlle Exc:honge of The

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SU8DIVISION

t91 t7, 24 :
1101 , 8, 15, 22, 6tc

better resulh if rou df.
miiM fully , gi•e pri,e. Tht

tribune nsenu the right hlS $l.Ou ll.OO 18.00
to 'lon ily, IHiit or rejtil
any ad. Your ad will Itt Tt h $4.00 $1.00 II 3.00
put in lh proper clanifin ·
lion if you 'll check tht
To JS $1.00 510.00 115.00
proper box below.
I

)Wanted

17.
II.

I

I
I

-

I
I
I
I

---

I

-=======

4 . _ __

I

S . _:..,_ _ _ __

2.
J. -

-

----

_

_

6 . _ _ .....__ _
7 _ _ _ __ _ _

8,-'---_
9 . _ _ _-__
10.

II.-- - - - - 12.------13.
!&lt; .

--

II
I

22.

23.
24. _ _ _ _ __
25. _ _ __ _
26. _ __ _ __

27. _ _ _ _ _
21. _ _ _ _ __

~

29-------

JO. _ _ _ _ __
31. _ _ _ __ _
32. _ _ _ _ _ __

33. _

_ _ _ __

J.l. - - - - - -

111 (lurt5t.
Pomeroy, 011. 457"

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Rapl•cemanl Windows
•New Roofing

" FRU ESTIMATES"

CHESTtR--915·3307

STYUNG &amp;
TANNING SALON

11

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFIED

FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES

f

" TOTIlL FIREPLIICE
AIVD CHIMIVEY WORK "

.

INSURANCE WORK

•••.
.....• .

••

,

Down Home Oayt, Steem·
Gat Engine Show Sept.

20,21,22 . Frezleu Bottom,
WVa . Enginat performing
thrething. uwmlll, shingle
mill , moleuet making .
Country music daily. Admission ·~ . 00 .

(9) 16,

POOLS

...

•

&amp;

•...

ANTIQUES : 9 piece dining roo m su ile very fan cy ·
beautiful 48" round oak tabte 1 mahOgany drum
table, carved shadow box. 2 piece living room suite,
brand new. upholstery; Quee n An,e chairs, new
upholstery , Mahogany table; oak si de board w 1·th
claw feet; 6 BentwOOd c hairs ; old rocker, Primiti ve

Wash stand (oak I ; 2 kitchen cabinets painted . claw

foot plano stool ; iron bed; ice cr-eam s tool ; quiits ox
yoke and much more .
'

HOUSEHOLD: 2 piece t)vtng ruom su ite 2 chairs
card table and 2 chairs, coffee table 2 meiat bed 2
chests; G.E . lr..,zer, upright of Madolin . Whirl~!
automatic washer, pictures. John Wavl"le p/ctu
lamps~st Iron figures , pots and pa ns, gl assw:i~

of ell kcnds. plow, lumJ&gt;er, shovel s, rakes

'

good

OWNER : Grace Morrison

AUCTIONEER: Rick Pearson
173-54:10

.....

l:

...•• .
....r.
....
.

: ..

••

::!

..
•
"•
...•
p.

•••

.

"VINYL SIDING
"AlUMINUM SIDING

VINYL LINER POOL
ACRYLIC WAll POOl
ABOVE GROUND POOL
o- 400 Chokes

"SPAS"

"BlOWN IN
INSUlAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

HYDIOTlCH CHEMICALS
491 Gen. Hortlngtr 'kwy.

Also Transmission

MhNieport, Ohio

"Free Estimates"

HRS. 10 a.m. 10 S p.m.

PH. 949-2101

o.z
1· 14

Hight

1-304

9U-2S49

773·St34

14x70 1979

FAIRMONT
TRAILER
24x7 TIPOUT
2 Bedrooms, 2
baths, fireplace,
ceotralair.
$15,000
Call 992··3859
or 992-3647

Ntw Homes Built

or

9~9-2160

No Sunday Calls

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FIL.l DIRT

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYl

I ALUMINIM

Complete Gutter Work
Complete R8modeliftg
Roofing of all Typea
Worked in l'lome area
20 veara
' 'Free EJtimetes '-'

CAll COLLECT:
Ph.

(6141 843-5425

7112/ 2 mo. pd.

10· 8-ttc

•Complete Remodeline
•Room Additions

•Roofin&amp;
•Sid ina

•Garaaes &amp; Pole
Buildinas

MAICUM
CONTIACTIIIG
long loHeM, Ohio

Ph. 985·4141
Free

Eatlmatoo

9·11 · I mo.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195
8·8·1fc

3111 / ~.

6-1 ·"•

Howard

L. Writesel

ROOFING
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters - Downspouts

Gutter Cleaning
· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2969

4/2 9/tln

CONTRACTING

JIM (llfFORD
PH. 992:1201

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bed·
. rooms, 2 complete baths, dining
room, living room and large re·
creation room. Located on 8
acres. Large farm pon~. Racine

area.
HOME NAnONU lANK
CALL
0-Ask for

WANTED TO BUY uHd
wood . &amp; coal he:~~ ten .

SWAIN'S FURNITU RE; 3rd.
6 Olive St. Gallipolis. Cell
II 4· 448-31 59.

Buying daily gold. tilver
coins. ringa, iawelry. sterling
ware. old coint. large cur·
rency. Top price&amp;. Ed . Bur~
katt Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

Middlepo", Oh. 814-992·
3478.

Aluminum scrap . Sell your
aluminum icr1p direct to the
tmelter. Buyingallgradatof
aluminum . Premium paid for
large loadt. Call for quote.
Scipio Energy, located P A
Milas e111 of Pagatown on
Township , Road 141. Matgt

County. 814-992-3486.
Wanted :old planoa. Paying
•20 and •40 each. First
floor only. Write giving
dlractiont. Witten Prenot.

Room -Board 'wit h family
willing to provide 1 uppon
ttrvicat for gentleman age
66 . Contact Joann: 614-

441-8145.

1------'- - Room and board for tenior
citizens, retirees and dit ·
ablad . Special care.' 674
Plum St., Ml~dlepon . 6 1 4 992-3596.

1- - - - - - - - - -

SINGLE 524.95
•live entertainment
' Fr11 HBO •Resteurant
.Olympic Pool

U.A.

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

317 North locontl
Ohio 45760

Coil 514-912 -8022.

Box 188. Sordi• 1 Ohio Vacancy for the elderly in
43948.
.
'·
our home . Trained and fif·
teen yeara e11.parience . Call

[t111JIIIV1111:lll

S1:rv1r.cs
11

Help Wanted

Beeline offera free clothes,
good money, no caah invest·
mont. Work your own hours.

Call alter 5PM, 614· 288·
5237.
FrH lingerie, good time,
undercover weer. party plan .

Cell efta&lt; 5PM, 614· 286·
5237.
Working Supe"'isor familiar
wfth janftori•l work. Rio
Gran de · Gall ip oil a ere a .
Send resume to : Box 400 in
care of the Gallipolit Daily
Tribune, 825 3rd. Ava.,

Will provide infant and child
care in my home. Lott of

T.L.C . Phone 814· 992·

••IIi•••
9·20·85. Cell 614·
448-2158.

Casting
Four regional TV commercial. Alleges. No axpariance
necesury. Will b1 interviewing in Sautt11aat Ohio area.
Week of Oct. 1. For appointment call between 1 O;AM-

~------· lc ­

Eaay

Aaaembly

Work!

1:00 p.m. Foctory Choke t 2

f&amp;OO.OO per 100. Guo ron·

guage

teed payment. No
experience-No ul ... O.t1il1
tend talf - addreated
stamped envelope: Elan Vital -715 3418 Enterprlta

l~tguna .

Noedod lmmodtatety: 100
people Mrlously Interested
in loting weight. 1-800·

992·9991 . Robort 6 Judy
Hert100, Rt. 1, Bo• 310,
Creeton, NC28615, 1-919·
386·8808

1 8 Wanted to Do

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,
lntured, rMaonable ratea.

the Gl Bill to got your college

Call 304·578·2338.

dtgrM? Maby lt'a not too
late. Join the Armv Nation11l
Guard and receive a monthly
paych.ck, life lnaurancet.
retirement benefitt, and the

Giveaway

7Va mo. old female puppy !n

Bird dog to good home . Colt
614-448-3564.
10 week oH mixed breed
puppy wormed 8. thott to

good home. Call I 1 4· 448·
7313.

5 Ktttono . 304-875-1928.

Lost and Found

LOST: moto Siborion Huoky
block 6 white. VIcinity Mil
Crook Rd . Reward . C.H
014-446· 1642 oat. 323,
014-446· 1849 oltor 4 :30.
FOUND omoll malo dog on
Portamouth Rd. Thun. I ·
1Z· I8 . Call altor 5. 614·
245·1501.
Lool: Red molo Oobormon, 1
yr. old. bod rltrht front log,
Colt 614·448·2281 or 304675·1880.

monttl old

you had atayed In the
military? Regret toling that
retireme!"lt Income? Sorry
you didn't take 8dvantage of

Boxer

pUf!f!Y· Fomolo . Brown ond
:..:,%:,_....;,._.,!il; i,W I._,,,.•. 11 4· 742·2218.

New Gl Bitt. It poyolulltime
students *140 .00 per
month. ~ dma studentt

Call 304·175-2001 or 304·
678· 4883.

Fin~nml

21

8usinen
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·

HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to ·low fixed rate. Un equ ity
for any purpose. Leader

Mortgege Co.,
3051 .

814· 592·

23

Professional
Services

Water well• drilled and serviced. Pricea an requett. Call

814·742·3147 or814· 992·
5001 .
PIANO TUNING AND RE ·
PAIR . back to school dit ~
counts, free lltimatea,
Ward's Kevboard, 304-676-

5500 or 875 -3824.
McDaniel Custom Butcher·
ing, open I daya a week.

304·882·3224 .

800-642· 3619.

31

WANTED : HIGH SCHOOL
SENIORS ANO GRAOU·

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

at

am will poy full timo

f10,000. You moy olso bo
oteglblo for o •1 ,500. or

Homes for Sale

f27,600 . Call 614· 256·
6200 .
3 bdr, large living room. full
basement, $29.000 or
$4,000 taka over payments .

Coll8t4· 446· 7380 .

4 bdr., both, utility room,

cellar. Catt814· 448· B181.
3 bdr., femily room. 1109

Pert time farm work. houH

lumlohed. 304·175·3030,
175· 3403. 175· 3431 .

In Pomeroy. 6 room home
with bath. carpeting. storm
windows. new gaa furnace,
partial batement, storage
building . Ree1onably prioed .
Mutt aee to appreciate. Call
3 bedrooms and bath . Larkin
St., Rutland . Can be sold on
land · contract w ith small
down paym'ent. Call 814-

992·5858.
Si.ll roo.m hou1e on 49 acres.
Full baaement, free heat,
private. close to towns. Call
3 bedroom home, 8Y.. per·
cent a11umable loan, garden
spot . Reduced down to

$49,000. 304·676- 5047.
By owner. 2 bedroom ranch .
704 Marietts Road. Point
Pleaunt. nice locetion. low
By Owner -- Fully furnished
2 bedroom cott•ga with
large living room. kitchen
and bath located on Union
Campground Road ., Union
Cemetery Road, two miles
from New Haven . Fuel oil
heat. Parcel conaiats of 2.75
acres with2 acres of fenced
patture . Price $26 . Terma

Avoilabte. 304· 773 · 9666 .
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 814·448 ·
7274 .
Rodney Home &amp; Supply
Canter. Rodney, Ohio located between US 35 &amp; St.

Rt . 588. Cell 61 4· 245 ·
5308.
Owner in re1t home. Great
buy ·on 1981 14a70 mobile
home, 3 bdr., 2 bllha,
equipped kitchen , 2 built in
AC. storage building, in exc .
cond ., on ranted lot, Only

t 12 .000 . Call Yllioemen

Sale on Clayton Home!
1148 sq.ft . Statesman ra·

receive a monthly payellhek,
lit. intul'lnca, and vou een
utili•• tho
training
option ond the opllt trolnlng

mt-o ochoot. Wa how
whot It flllcn 10 mako your
future! can 304· 171-3910
.. 1·800·842· 3111 .

7 room house . 1 "h bath,
garage on Gravel Hill. 4
bedrooms. Middleport. 614-

441-2025 or 814-246 8110.

tlonol bonellto, PLUS, you

lldvlnoed training whhout

.

3843 .

living room. kitchen, and
dinlngroom. Big 2 car garega with attached green·
house. on 3 acrea, fruit

option 10 attond boala ond

678-2613.

House for sele: Bast offe r,
garege, ga·rden area, Grifi.en
School Dl1trlct. Call 6 1 4·

• 2.000. enllttment bonus.
A combinetfon of Ou.rd
prognm cen provide mora
than •20.000. on educe ~

do...,_

Make offer 2 bedrooms. 1.2
acres, 2 car garage. all
reasonable offer• cons idered. In Pomeroy . 814-

60'1, 1· 609·453-2692.

beat part-time jobs around!

atudent1 •140. per month.
up to a mtudmum of •&amp;.040.
The ltudanl toan repayment
program repaYJ 1 major
portion of out.Unding Fed.,., student lotns, up to

2673 or 814-448· 1171 .

614· 992· 7082 .

of f5.040.00. We have the

ATES I The West Virginia
Army National Guard naadt
lndivlduala who 11'11 loolling
for • pen-dme job whh a
good future . Are you wondering where you will get the
money for college? The new

mont. Call 514·258· 6790.

614· 992-8783.

1- - - -- -- - - Rc~l Estate
to maximum

Colt 304· 175· 3950 or 1·

soli. &amp;29,900 . Catl 114446-2034 .

992·671 4.

•105.00 por month, end
half limo studenta t70.00
per month, up

3 bdr ., newly remodeled.
new vinyl tiding, shingles.
city tct,ool diat. Owner mul't

20 acres, 3 bedroom coun·
Will paint trailer roofs &amp; cut try home with 11h baths.
tobacco . Call 614- 266 · fully carpeted. kite her · apt528 .
pliances included. full.bua mant with fireplace. family
Cera painted . 8100 and up. room. 2cargarage•tti.Ched .
20 yurt e~tperience . Phone Cell614~ 992- 5084 .
814-985 -4174.
~-------6 room• and bath. Near
Wallpapering, neat and pre · Pomeroy -Middleport . 1 Y:a
cite.. Aeferencas avail1bla. acres . Call614-992-7453.

Rd .. Ft. Pierce, Ft. 33482.
VETERANS: Oo you wish

81 4· 448·8038.

7632 . References provided .

Gellipolis, Oh 45631
Start tailing Avon now while
starting fH it only $6.00,

In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr,
just finithed, full ba-ment,
nice lot. large n1111r deck, with
valley view. priced to atil,
t39.600. Will consider mo ~
bile home trade-in . Ctll

Modern 3 bdr. home frame .
large kitchen, plenty of
cabinetl, refrigerator &amp;
electric range, ditpoaal, din·
lngroom. 2 full beth, car·
peted. full basement finithed. central air, new va•
fumance, fenced in back
yard, large carport. ready to
move in to. good location on
Sunset Drive on Upper Sa·
cond Ave. C•ll 614-448·

81 4 ·448-8550.

FOUND on Cora MMt Rd.
B_..lai1 001 choir, Colt
814·371· 2388 ora14· 371·
2757.

14

8t Vicinity

Have vacancy for men Or
women. Elderly only. Care ,
room ,. board and laundry .

Racine Gun Shoot tpOn·
aored by A.:ine Oun Club.
Every Sunday. beginning at

Lott:3

.......P1.Pieiisalnt·····

Mutt sall--40 acre, 4 bdr., 2
baths. haute, farm equip·

Babysitter for 10 yr. old boy.
Father works ahlftwork . Call

6

814· 742· 2502 .

Will care for elderly people in
my home. 24 hour care .
Phone 814· 367-7148.

Middleport.

2 whlto, 1 block. 814-985·
4120.

IT.

Sopt. 18th, 19th, oneS 20th.

9th houH em right. Glassware. what- nota. ford 15 in.
apoke whaelt, c lothing .

Middleport

22 Money to Loan

3 femaltlong-halred kittens.

POINT PlUSANT, W, YA.
8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridae

New Lime Ro1d, Rutland.

8t Vicinity

Sell AVON make 45%. Cell
814-448-3368.

4

wood "•· Baby fur nitu re.
clothes, maternity c lothes,
ttereo. mi.c.

······ ii'c&gt;.illilri&gt;ii·········

Fat Burner! GobeN Grapefruit Extra Strength .Captul81 . Fruth Pharmacy,

Real Eatate General

REAL ESTATE FOR S~LE ·

white houoe. Sheela, cur·
t.ins, clothes, thoet, twee t·
era. camer11. bookt. ma ny
more. W~ . Sept. 18; 9·6.

7 :PM, Mon.-Fri. 614·890·
0222.

tion. Phono 614· 742·2829,
collect If necanarv.

J&amp;~
DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER,
GAS 6 SEWER LINES ,
RECLAMATION, PONDS,
SPRiNG DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
6 DIRT

814·441·3872

LISHING CO. recommends
that you do butineat with
people you know. and NOT
to tend money through the
mail until you hive invetti·
gated the offering.

AA Critia Pregnacy Center.
Confidential . Free preg nancy teat end-or informa-

REPAIR

FOR SALE

Announcements

Reduce 11fe 8t f..t with
GoBeM capaulea • E· vap
'water . pillt". Fruth
Pharmacy.

INDUSTRIAL
·,_ _,../ STAINLESS STEEL ~INERS

992-3410

Located In the Lyons Additlo~ . In M~son
Vo . fllghl below Wohoma High School. O.;,ne~
sold her home and lhe following will be sold .

TERMS: Cash or chack with positive 1 0
Nat re~ponalble for otcidents or loss of proPe~ty .

i\

1

U-SA~E

54 Misc. Merchandise

The Henderson Family of
Atfr~ would like to express
thllir mott sincere thanka to
The Tuppers Plains, Cheater
and Coolville Fire Departmanta and also to the many
friends and neighbors who
e~~ma to our aid in our time of
need . Thank You, Mr. and
Mrs. H.L.(Bim) Handerton
and Famnv.

814-448-0294.

~

• CLEANING INSPECTION
• FLUE CAPS II&lt;STAUEO
• CHIMNEY REBUILDING

"W• R111 F11 L111"

Card of Thank•

SWEEPER and sewing machine repair. parts. and
tupplies.
Pick up · and
delivery. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, ana half mila up
Georgeo CrMk Rd . Call

· 7111/tfn

SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 21
10:00 A.M.

License No. 6685

20

thru

81lllpolls, Oltlo

.."' •
...
...-.
..•
... .

MASON , W. VA.

.PH. 992-3982

ltimney Qtare
/ ' a·'\.

month tnctudel woter 6
garbage. Celt 814-387·

614·992· 7314.

3

· AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rl. 160 'Nortlt

PUBLIC
AUCTION

773-5715

1

HAIR (UT &amp; STYLE... $7.SO

446-4522

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

assortment of tools and much more.

Announr:1: 111 en Is

Fall Kickoff- Sept. 9

lntertherm

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

_...

l · ll tin

FOR THE
BOTH OF-YOU

Treiler apace tor rent e86 a

Thuradly t hrOUilh Saturday.

Co. Rd . 28 at John Damo·

8/ 19/ 1 mo.

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

Taming Spei:ia l.r·-.,·.-"'"""'~,:.:~~~............ )J

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

35.--- ----

M.a il This CGUpGI Willi Rlllllittance
The Dally Sellflnet

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

-

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE

8t Vicinity

.

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

z

Wanted To Buy

...... Giiiiipoiii....... ..

We p11y cath for . .e model 7267. .
·
clean ut.d can.
1- - - - - - - - - Jim Mink Ch... · Oido Inc. Porter off Rt. 110-Fioyd
Bill Oane Johnaon
Clark Rd., 1A mile, 2 ttory

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~%

•• D1ty

CALL

I

20. 1.
2t.
tv. _ _ _ _ _ Il

J.

I
I
1
I

- -

Racine. Oh .
Ph . 614·843·5191
10-6-t!c

z

Sltep T11hlel11

Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

c

PH. 992-2172

EYE THE
WANT ADS

$7t.00l
S7l.OOII

}For Sale
I Announcement

to 24'x36'

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUUN lAUNDRY
*GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
*SATElUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Hlr.t ~Fill Tl•e

992-3345

Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohia

.9

Television Ustening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearine Evaluations For All Ages

Sign up end win 1 free pus Ia the local Home·
coming Game of your choice.

FOR GREAT BUYS

Thtu tash rafts
indvdt discount

Sizes from 6'K6' Up

3·24-lfc

$11.00!

.Now S~trlnf All OF
Melft Countg
tnd

._ __ _ AP811

btimatn"

RENT A c·AR

ISA
WANT AD

I

PHONE 992-7075

AND
HEADQUARTERS FOR

811212 mos.

Circle

days

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

PERSONALIZED

8

'

JAMES KEESEE

Roger Hysell
Garage

WHt VIrginia . 304· 773·
5785 or 30'4· 773· 5430.

WE ARE

4U-94U- 446·2112

THE BEST

I

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

'
'

IMtallatlon Aralloble

Aif Cond itioners

••

farm. a ntique. liquidation
aale•. Ucanted Ohio end

73-J9 for4 Tr.
- . , ,_ ................... ' 135
10-15 FN• Tr.
- . ....- ...........-.$145
71-J9 For• Tr.
Grilh ......- ............. $52.50
10· 15 for. Tr.
Hoo4s ..............,.......... I1U
u Hoo4s
.as Fot4
•........_ ............. •130
U-15 For4 . _

l

104 Mulberry b ., Po"*;OY

I

10
days

.l

"Free

Heat Pumps. Furn1cu

Phone----------------------

..,

301 3rd St., Radnt, OH.
Homt: 992·67J2
Or Ius. 949-3031
Alttr Aug. 21
8· 19·1 mo. pd.

Quality

THE PUBUC UTtLmES COM·
MISSION OF OHIO

Ad Wanted

c•

742-2027

MANUfACluiiD HOUSING
HEA11HG I COOUNG !YlliMl
Salas I Serrict

Attorneys for Plaintiff
Cincinnati. Ohio 46202

•

6
dOJ5

&amp;ftar 5

F-. .....,___,,.....•41

raLUE STREAK CAB CO. ·

ACCENT

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992-6931

IENNm'S MO.ll &amp;

191 17, 241101 1. 3tc

3

992· 2196
Middleport, Ohio
1·13-tfc

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Wt do Weddings. Families
&amp; Children
Coil or Walle hi For An
Appointment anti Prices

3/2/ tln

Sec-cy

1

PAT HILL .FORD

SENIOR Pack•gel in Town

Signs, Rubber Stomps,
BusiMis form~:,
Copy Serwicts, Etc;.
255 Mill II., Midclloport

By : Mary Ann Orlinski,

Print one word in each
j 1pau below. (ach inititl
ar group of tigurn counu
as a word. (ount namt
ond addnu or phont
nvmbtf if uJtd. You'll gt t Words

We can repair and re·
core radtalors and
heater cores. Wa can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Sizes Start From 12'K16'

furniture, Ws4tling
and Graduation
Stationtry, Magnet ic:

Utilities Commltaion, 180 ·
Eut Brood StrMt. Columbus,
Ohio 43215.

I

RADIATOR
SERVICE

M1ny Packages To Choo..
From- Low ..t Priced

PIUS: Olfi&lt;o Supplios &amp;

furthor tnlvrmotion ,..
gardng this,.,...,. by 8dd sou
ing 1n inquiry to the Public

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PHOTOS

f., All Ym Ptllllltf N11ir

LERNER, SAMPSON
6 ROTHFUSS CO .. L.P.A.

~

OPENING AUG. 21
. PICTUIE "PEIFECT"

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

-em

Fire Department, Route
881 , Tuppero Plcoinl, Ohio
45783. At the hearing, a1
porlies of inter811 will bo
ollocdod . .. opportunity to
evidllf!OO colevont 10
""' opoclfic i - oflhil case.
Alfr IM14 ted ,_tty may

"2· 62JS or 992-7314 ,
Pomeroy, Ohia
12·8·dc

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RICK PEAR80N AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE. Eototo.

73· 79 fwd Tr.

Ra&lt;k•
l2l
73-79 ct..,,. Tr.
Cab CorMrl ..................'20
Grilt. ...........................'75
New and U.R Auto GIGst-lote . . , Peru .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

gust, 1985, Federal No ·

Thurodoy, 0 - 24, 1985.

corner of a 200 acre tract of

SALES &amp; SERVICE

355, Racine, Ohio 4&amp;771

et 9 :30 e.m., et ""' Tuppen

Beginning at a point 120
rods south of the northWIIIt
corner of a 63VJ acr• tract of

BOGGS

Carl Schultz, Jr. and Jettrey ScoH Schult!, whoae
la~t knoWn residence Is Carl
SChultz. Jr .• Rout• 3, Bo•

'•ntk . . . .........

(Free Ettimatett

4·5·tfc

NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE,

lease ll!nd all assignment
- o be cencelod, odjudgod

- Co~cret• warlt
WO. .

Etol
Defendants

CARL SCHULTZ, JR . (dec, I

above doocrihed oil end u•

- Addon1 1nd remodeling
- flooflng 1nd gutter work
- Plumbing 1nd electrlc•l

•Wnhars •Diahwa shera
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryera •Freezers

Address--------------------

15. - - --

Wednesday

- v&amp;.'-

01 ' -·

Name-----------

ld . _ _...,.._ __

Mee~

more

73·10 Cho•y Jr.
f - s ........................•41
73-10 Cho•y Jr.
.
Door• ..._ ................:.. •100
73-10 Cho•y. lr.
Hooch ......................... I1SO
73·14 Cllo•y Tr.
lu._s ..................... $70
73· 79 Cho•y Tr.
GrlltK .....................31.50
73, 79 Che•r· lr.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

985-3561
All M1ku

Plaintiff

• Beginning at tho -

PARCEL NO . FOUR :

, results. Money notrefundabte.

)For Rent

Meigs County Com m on P leas
.Judge Charles Knight has deemed it
necessary to cons ider m ore fully
motions to suppress evide nce In the
state's case agains t Joseph Taylor.
A hearing on the m a tter was he ld
last week In Meigs Count y.
Th e motion for suppression was
made by Herman Carson, a ttorney
for the defenda nt.
Th e judge's r uling was to have
been flied Moriday. It Is now to be
filed by 3 p.m. Wednesday.

~ret,

· Wr ite vour
id and order by mail wiTtl this
c oupon . Cancel your id b't' phone wnen ~ou get

of the vch)cle.
Russell ·posted bond a nd was
released from custod.v. H(• will now
appear befor1&gt; .Judge Pat rick
O'Brien in Meigs Cou nty Cour1.

Motions under review

line of ""' ~ C. ROM 200
ecre trKt; thence welt folow-ing ""' lOUth tina of ""'Jmd
C. Ron troct to the piiii;O of
beglooing. contoining 52'/J

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
CORPORATION .

'""·
PARCEl NO. FIVE:

acras, mont or leu.

Curb Inflation
Pay Cash for
Classifieds and
Savell I
own

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I

.. ..... ine of the John E..Hooe
187'/J acre tract to ""' oouth

within Racine ViHage: thence
Wootem R...., Telephone n - 333.2 foetiO the con·
Compeny hevo filed a com· tar of State Route No. 124;
plolnt with ""' Public Utitiziel thence eett 114 feet with
Commloaion of Ohio request· State Route No. 124; thence
i"'l ""' -mont of two· aouth 21 ' 30' ont3681eot;
._.,, nonoptionat -dod
thence wel't 246 .2 feet to
.,.. ll8nlice betloueen the the place of beginning. con·
Coolvlle Exc:henge of The (aining 1 .4 acret, more or
ROMW Telephone
com.,.,, and the Pomiii'Oy leas.
All of the above name de·
bch.lnge of Tote- fendllntt are required to an·
pilone c..._.v of Ohio. The twer on or before the 20th
Commiaion has sc:ha::l~.t day of November, 1985. or
lhil motlllr, C111e No. 85·768·
might be denied a hear·
TP·PEX. for public hOaring on they
ing in this ca...

··--------------------~ ...
I

shells were recov('red from the seat

P JCK-4 ticket sales tota led
The Mei11s County F irem en 's
$167,125, with a payoff dueof$75,259 . . Associa tion wlll meet a t 7:30 p.m .
P ICK-4 $1 s traight bet pays$5,520.
Wednesday at the Syracuse F ire
PICK-4$1 box bel pays$460. - - Station.

•

NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT Dwight E. Rou, II of plolntiflo
VI W.N . Hovil, et of dolonclOF FIDUCIARY
On ~ I, 11811, In - · Thlo IIC1Ion hoo boor&gt;
Mligned C- No. fl!; CV 191
""'
- Tina ond II ponclilog In""' C.ommon
Coun,Melgo
c... County
No. 24882,
c .... of Molao Ccunty,
R. R
1•-m, 4, Hv· ool R101 Rood, Putr•oy, Ohio Poc•-Y· Ohio 41'188.
The otlfec:t of th. COIJ"p'rint
46718. w. appuiubiWil Adminllllwtrbt of tt. -... of to to concot ott ond goo Ooeoglto A. R_,boum, do- end quiet IIIIo ooc-nlnu oil
ond goo oodaclylcog tho folfow•.
- · lout of Route 4, Hyootl ingdoocribodNII-:
Run Ra.d, - o y , Ohio
SituMe in L.ebenon Town46789.
Robert E. Suck, llillp, Mlllgcr County, Ghio: In
Proboto Judgo Section 31 , Town 3 Range 11
Len• K. Na. .lroad, Ca.rk of ""' Ohio c..._,., p...
" " -· bounded ond doocribed
' (9) 10, 17, 24 3tc
•follows:
PARCEL NO. ONE:
Thot lo to uy lwo hundrod
Public Notice
forty (240) - - off of the
north port Sec. 31, Town 3.
IN THE
11 of ""' Ohio Com·
COMMON PLEAS COURT, Rengo
pony's Purohoso, bolng 120
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
rods In width.
DWIGHT E. ROSS, ET AI.,
Ex_.;ng """"""e"'h"'om forty
PlAINTIFFS
(401 ocrM In • ....,.. known
vs
as the Rou lot in the I'IAOI'tt I'
W.N. HOVIS, ET AL
comllr of Section 31 :
DEFENDANTS
ALSO excepting 12 acrM in
NO. BSCV 191 the ..-.... comor of ..td
NOTICE BY
conveyed by Jared C.
PUBUCATION
Rosa to A - Joh,_ 1888
TO:
The IMlknown heirs. devi- (VOL. 82 PiJ. 901.
The amount of land being
- · toget-. odmlniotrators. con\1'8'¥Wd in Parcel No. 1 baing
executon. and autgna of B.M .
one hundred eighty-eight
Tyreo, deceeood;
. The unknown heirs, devi· acrw. more or lew.
PARCEL NO. lWO:
sees, lagatMI, ed.,..,.li810f'l,
Beginning at a poiirt on tho
a~tecuton and/ or uaigna ,of
0011 lne of cooid Stoction 31,
B.M. Pickens, deoeaood;
one hundred sixty rods north
The unk~ heirs, devi·
sees, klgat8ltl, admlniltt'ltort. of the toutheest comer ot aekl
Section 31 ; thence north 40
e•ecutors, and / or alligns of rods; thence WMi 214 rodo;
R.A. Tvr•. doceaood;
thence IIOUth 40 rods; thence
The unllnown heirs. deYi- 214 rods to tho ptam of
· logeteoi, odminitlnltors, beginning, containing 83

Market Street, Mercer. Pa.,

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

YOUNG'S

Adrfon Avo .. f38.000 . Call
614·441·371 8.

1---- -----Roducod ., 0,000 multi·
unit apenment compl••~ all
1 bdr., oomo lumlshod,
relldant manager, Mnt. .

poy ott utllltlos, approx.
•1 .400 mo . income. Owner
will pay closing coat . Call

doyo 614· 512· 1 181 or e vo.
114· 584·2874.

Real Estate , 614 -446 -

duced to U3,996. Modi·
aon. Yorkshire, end Lakefront at similar uvings. We
h1ve 1 Brookwood and
Elkton on dltpi•V· We ' re
Eitel Home Canter- Chilli·
co the and Circleville. Open
late-Open Sunday. Both loti
conveniently located on US

23 .
1974Colobrlty, 12x80,0lc.
cond. Calt814·2415-1146or
814-448-3445.
1979 Liberty t4x85 2 bed·
room. furnished mobil•
home. excellent condition.
gas furnance . Mutt Hll,

•6.&amp;oo . Cott
3681.

614· 448 ·

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Tuesday, September 17, 1985

·T elevision
Viewing

~~~~~~=---~~~~~==r-------~~~~~.
LAFF-A-DAY
61
54
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Household Goode

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sofia end chaJra priced from
end up to t1215. Hide·•·
bed a, *390. and up to
•510.. 10ta Hds • 141,

1966 New Moon 10•66,
good cond., SZ.500. Call

614-379•2 830 .

Bunk bed complete with
mattraaHI. t276. and up to

1966 New Moon 10x60
partially furnished, $2,600.

1396.

19""2 Flamingo 3 bdr ., 11/:r
bath. total electric, CA.
refrigerator. some furniture,
8x10 deck, $1 ,400. take
over paymonts. Call 61 4·

•sa.

UO.ond 126., 10 gun. Gun

cabinets, *360. Gas or
electric ranges *376. Baby
rnattreH&amp;I, t26 • *35. bed

245-9647.

fram01 S20, $25, 8o $30,

Nashua 14x70. completely
furnished. Washer and

dryer. Call 614-949·2263.

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44

4 2 Mobile Homes

Partially furnished with un61 4· 992 ·

8283 or 614-992-2478 .
.
12)(65 Eleona Trailer. Good
condition. 1 mile east of
Chester on St. Rt. 248 .
Make offer. Call evenings

1 966 fleer , 1 Ox50. 2 bedrooms . Good condition .

992-7721 .

Homo Park. 614-446-1 602.

Phono 614· 986· 3882.

2 bedroom apartments.
New Haven. WVa. Newly
remodeled. In town . 6~4-

- - - - -- - - O-le2 1bdr . air cond., new carpet,
1975 1 2J~:65 2 bedroom gas heat, private lot In
mobile home on 6 acres of Galtipolie. Call 614- 448land , Double garagettorage 1409.
building . Kingsbury ·Rd .• ~~--------­
Pomeroy. Phone 614-992- 14x815 mobile home on 1
2664 or 614-992-2774.
acre lot t250 mo. plus
utilities 2 children 1ccepted,
t 971 Fleetwood mobile avail1ble Oct. Vinton area .
home. 12x65 with large Call 614-388-9881 .
room on front . 24x24 gar·
age. Two lots on Main St .. 2 bdr. AC, fully furnished,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio. Phone utilitiet paid . Call 614·446·

614-687-3769 .

992·7481 .

a.

reasonable rates.

Coli 305 -576-2336.
1981 Holly Park mobile
home. 1 4x70. must sell,

304-576-2947.
197'1 Flamingo 12x86. 3
bedroom. AC, axe cond.

614 · 992-7787.

'
Kirkwood,
12x66 mobile
home . Good condition.

Eq~ol

Firewood-cutup slabs . 1
truck load $100, 2 - $180.
Pickup load. you haul $16 .

614-448· 7044 9·5. or 61 4·
446-8080 6-10.

and Gellipolio. 814-4488221 .

1- 3 bdr, &amp; 1- 2bdr. mobile
homes for rent. Call 814-

lauraland Apartmentl, New
Haven. Equal Houling Op·
portunity. Has vacancy. For
more information call 304-

mo . ell utilities paid . Raccoon Rd . Call 614-446-

6723.

homes, housea. Pt. Plea.. nt

2066.

Trailer for rent. Frae
Phone 814- 843· 5334

u••·or

614-949·2008.

' 35 Lots ~ Acreage ·
-..
Lot on Bear Run Rd . Rae·
coon Creek. $3,500. Call

304-522-2076.
Lots for sale on land contract
with small down payment.

2 bedroom mobile home in

2 br apartments in Hender·

7148 .
2 bedroom fwnished mobile
home, *76 depo1it required.
Utilities , partially paid .
Phone 304·876-6612 after
5 p.m .

44

taiv . Phono 304-675-1126.

Apartment
for Rent -

14 acres and 6 % acres on

Kanawha River . 304-6753202.

Rentals
Houses for Rent

3 bdr. ranch , located on Rt .
160. near NGHS. &amp;300 mo.,
8150 dap.. no pets. Call

614·388-871 1 altor 5PM.
3 bdr. full basement, central
air, fireplace. Green school
district , available immediately. S325 plus dep. Call

814-862 · 1 357.
3 bdr , air con d ., within city
limit1. Call 614-446 -4110 .
Like new, convenient location . 2 bdr .. S260 per
month. &amp;160 deposit.· Call
evenings 614-446-9328 for

appoin1ment .
bdr ..

double garage .
breezeway , College Rd ..
Syracuse. $300 plus de"p-

oolt . Call 81 4 -445· 1.478.

House 4 rooms &amp; bath .
furnished , 736 Rear 3rd .

Avo. Call 614-446-3870 or
614-448-1 340.
2 bdr. furnished near"town .
Coli 614-446-0143 or 51 4·
446-0571 .
Eureka. nice one story 2 bdr.
rent. lease or land
contract. Deposit &amp; referen ces required . Blackburn

will

Realty, 81 4· 446·0008 .
3 bdr. ranch on Jay Dr ..
kitchen , livingroom , family·
room with fireplace, utility
room , 2 car garagt, $44 gat
budget, $375 mo. plua dep.

One bedroom apartment,
c:onvenient location, cell

Call 614-446-0429.

304·876-2441 .

Kindlewood burning stove

$660. Coli 614-446-8681 .

Furnished Rooms

45

For rent Slkplng Room•
and light houae k"ping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS !Equal
Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent stans at 8169
for 1 bedroom and &amp;204 for
2 bedroom, deposit S200.
located near Sp,ing Valley
Plan and Foodland, pool
and Cable TV available,
office hours as possible 1 0
am to4pmand7pmto9pm
Monday-Friday·. Call 614446 - 2745 or leave
me11age .

446-4630.

46 Space for Rent

Moving Sale, Spinet Piano,
living room suit, beds. Call

Mobile home lot, 12'x60' or
sm1111r, e76 water paid. 4th

Trailer apace for rent 886
mo. includes water &amp; gar-

room

unfurnilhad

opt .. e200 mo. Call 614·
446-7572 or 814-446·
1980.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, ROute 33, North of

Nawty redecorated 2 bdr
apt. with AC, large spacious
rooms, immediate occu-

pancy. $260 mo . Coli 814·
446-7025 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

2 bdr. apt ., 11 Court St ..
e326 mo .• ref. &amp; dep. Call

614-446-4926 .
Upstairs 3 roo~• &amp; bath.
Clean, no peta. adults, ref.
required . Cell 814 - 448 -

or

warehouse

25ft.x60ft., $60 mo . 311
Condor St .. Pomeroy. 814·

992-3325.

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolit. New
&amp; used wood -coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR suite $399.
bunk beds S 199, ant ron
recliners $99, new &amp; used
bedroom suite., ranges .
wringer washen, &amp;. •hoes.
New livingroom auiles
$199 · 8599, lamps, alao
buying coal &amp; wood stoves.

Call 814-446-3159.
Valley Furniture, new &amp;
used . Large section of qual•
ity furniture . 1216 E11tern
Ava., Gallipolit.
Refrigeretor &amp; stove . Call

Col 814-446-4829 .
2 bdr , Plentz Subdivision &amp;
new 3 bdr. 2 bath house in

9244 .

11858.
3 br hou•e. garage. 4 mi.
lbov• New Haven. no child.
no lnolde peto. Rot. Req .
304-4118·2793.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Troller for rent, 2 bdr. C•ll
814-441-4480.

3 bdr. duplex, new carpet,
new bath , new eppltencet,
644- Second Ave .• 8275 mo.

Call 814-441-0890.
2 bdr. ept., Crown City,

1175 mo. Call 814-266·
6495 .,.nlngo.
2 bdr. apt. central air,
refrigertor
stove, *226
mo., plus depotit, renter
peya utllitiea. ref. req. Call

a..

814 -448 -3888, alter 5
114-448-4491 .

UIO.

ea.)
4x8 wood an masonite
paneling woodgrain and
prints, $6.99 to $12.99.

Valves to 124.95'.
PENN'S WAREHOUSE.

HorM very gentle, bay color,

4-H copablo. Coli 614-2455038.

Coli 614-384-3646.
Building material~ concrete
blocks all sizes, lentils, flu
blocks. clay tile. Delivery.
Gallipolis Block Co.. Pine
St.. Gallipolis, Ohio Call

Fottiong hog, 304·6752038 .

614-446-2783.

State Block, Rt. 33. New .
304-882-

614·992·7789 .

a.

•s5 .00 for tho polr . Coli
814-448· 2917.
UIMd Refrigar1tor. roll away
bed. gee renge and dinette
11t with six chain . Corbin
and Snyder Furniture, 966
Second Ave.. Galllpoli1.

614-446· 1171 .

w..her

and dryer for tale

e16o.oo. 304-57111-2878.

Por11bla color Quazar TV.

wood. 614-742 -2473.
3 handmade q,uilts . Regular,
queen and ktng size. Call

61 4·992-7666 or 61 4 -992·
2318 .
TONY'S

hot dip rebluaing. all types of
gunsmith work, fast service,

304·675· 4631 .

1- - - - - - - - - -

Air tight wood and coal
stove witt'! fan. good cond .

304·676· 2606.
While gold and diamond
necklace and ring tet; paid

$326. will tell $200.; '73
Dodge Monaco 5400.; '74
100 Kawataki 8200. 304·
XL12 Homelite chain uw .
176.00. 304·675·6762 .

Wood burning pedestal
ttove with 3 speed blower,
See through glen windows
on doors . Very good cOnd,

Transporl3tlon

388·9790.

3844 after 7PM .
Male blonde, Cocker Spaniel. one yr. old, shots. AKC

Reg. $176. Coli 614-246·
9647.
Male Bluellck, 1 year old .
Not regi1tered. $35 . Call

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for '80
model and newer used cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac. 191 1
Eastern Ave., Gallipolia. Call

614-446-2282.
1981 red T-bird Town Land_au excellent condition, new
t~res . Cell after 5:30 814-

246-9460.
1 980 Oldl Cutlon LS, V-8,
auto. 4 dr.. new tir11, good
cond. Call 614-446-4171
after 6PM.

58,000 mil••· t1,850. Coli·
114-288·8822.

8:30 IJ ill CD NBC Nightly
Nowa
Cll Cerol Burnett and
Friend•
(JJ Revco'• World Clno
Cll~Bumett

work cer, •soo. Call 614·
256·9367.

62232 or coli 16181 3456927.

ohope. $2,000. Call 814·
266-6417 .

58

1972 Oldomobile 98 white
Ac. PW, PS, on
ownor. Coll814·256-1066.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

77 Mustang new parts, naw
tires, new paint, excellent

side walls,

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Konniboopota1oos$10-100

1979 Rabbit. 1976 Ford
LTD. Coli after 8PM. 614lb. will deliver if not too fer. l-:-3::8::8:·8~8:-2_3_._ _ _ _ __
Call614·367·1230.
1980 Toyota Corolla many
Winter potatoes: we have a

extra• ex. cond. Must sell

good oupply of good Konnoboc· 1 on hand. IB.OO per

~~8-:-1-::4--4-4-::8-·_7_4_14 - · - - ' - -

hundrad . Your containers.
Humphrey Farms, Reeds·
villa. Ohio . 614-378 -62 96 _
Closed Sundays .

t2.800 or b01t offer. Coli

1977 Chev. Monte Carlo,
ralley wheels. air. cruise.
stereo. no rust, nice car. Cell

614-448·0498.

milee, Good condition!
1980 or newer truck bed.

dows. insulating, rooting,
new end remod8ting, con·

Coli after 8:00 p.m .. 614992-8587.

creto. Coli 304·773-6131 .

1967 Mercury Villager stl·
tion wagon, runs but need•
to be reltored. 289 engine,
auto trans. PS &amp; B. alking

$195.00. Call 304-882·
2694 between 4·6 PM, Mon
through Sat.
81 Olds Cutlass Supreme.
d·6 engine, crui" control,

a-c. 304·875·7476.

Pump Nles, service. Regiatared in Ohio. All work
guaranteed . Call 304-2732111. Ravenswood. W. Va -:

1331.

has no momory of the previous night. (R)
0 (]) (!Q MOVIE: 'Sunoet

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ex·

Limouoino' !CCI
(])
MocNeii/Lahrer

perienced carpenter, electri·
cian, mason, painter, roofing (inc.ludlng hot tar

which c_hildren acquire lan·

guago are explored. (R) (60
min .)

Starks Tree and Lawn Service, stump removal. 30~ -

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MOVIE: 'Code 7.
ViC11m 51'
IHBOi MOVIE: 'Night-

1982 Toyote 4x4, 5 opd ..
longbed, 40.000.' AM-FM
stereo~ bucket Hats, cuitom
camper top. Aaking $5.900.

Coli 814·268·9387.
dr.. camper specie!, dual
wheels, 1uto, clun inside

a.

out, 13,200. Coll614·446·
4219 .

Rotary or cable tool drilling,
Moat wells completed aame
d1y. Pump sales end tervice .

(MAXI MOVIE: 'Bringing

8:30

Building and remodeling.
roofing. masonery, alectri·
eel framing, flooring, dry·
wall, bathrooms. kitchens:
doors &amp; window installa·

l told you Gr&lt;~mps wouldn'l:
here! This place is
creepy! Let"s qo!

Every bone in mLJ body
achesf I don'tl:hink

l can

up'

tion. 304-875-2440.

19$6 Chevy pick-up truck .
PS. PP. V6, automatic, 900

miles. t8.900. 814-9492660.
1976 Chevy

v,

Chevy

Ford 302, good condition .

304-676· 2080.

·

1:;;::;:;=~;::;::::;::=
73

Vans &amp; 4 W . 0.

'74 Dodge Van 31 B engine,

runs good. $700.00. 304671-2738.
1988 Willey Jeep pick up.
farm use only. 8400 .00.
304-675-8762.
74

Motorcycles

Cor. Fourth end Pine
G111ipolis, Ohio

Phone 614-446-3888 or
614-446-4477

83

min.)

Construction

Rutland, Oh.

Co .,

614 · 742 ·

2903 . Basements, Footer.,
Concrete work , Backhoe's
Dozer &amp; Oitcher, DumP
trucks. &amp;. water-gas-sewer·
electrical lines.

85

actual mlle1. New battery.

lowmiiHga. nawcarb., n.w
tires, good running cond .•

Uko - · taoo firm. 114·
892-3831 ott. 4;30 •

Boeu and
Motors for Sale

AM-FM

t2,996. C.l 814·
288 ·8522.
t&amp;O. 304·175·2815.
441· 7123 oltor 6.
111 ft. Gl.,.tron 11
1970
Novo
UOO.
1
171
Mera.
•nd
traHor,
.,...,
11Copy
mechlno
$40.
Old
tlmo
One 275 bu "Morldgo"
Naughahyde sofa. lovenat.
Coll814·448 • =~;.~·.100. Coli 114oholr, good condition, 1275. cash register, 810, . 304- groin dryer 12,000.00. 304· Duolor
875-7980.
675-4308.
9153.
J
304· 875-5088.
.
I
COIIOttO,

1---:.._____

ELVINEV WHEN IT

TELLS IT
LIKE IT IS

COMES TO GOSSIP

IRI !60 min .)
(}II Weot 57th This

0 (])

primetime news magazine
offers four to six news and
feature segments weekly.

(60. min .)
(])
Soundstage

and pop selec1ions. IRI (60
q . r1

SNAKE!!
WHY DIDN''f
"l'OU L.IF'f YOUR

NOSE A 1..1-rrt.E
HIGHE.R?

_ ----

Y..-y'sl Jum-: WAGON POR&lt;IY BOUNCE WIZARD
Anawer.: Whit bO~I_dO When they grow upGROW ''DOWN''

_... _.._ ... _.... .. __
.

. . . . . , . ............... • .................. ...._. i:M Club.,
iNA 5 I ,P.O. . . IOt, ......... t u . - .

11 :oo IIi Cli (I) m a mllJ •
Ill Newo
Cll Man From U.N.C.L.E .

PEANUTS

IN

OUR SOCIEW...

WE SHALL

t:IISCU55

THE IMPORTANCE

OF MARRIA6EMENT..

78

..,

M FSurniture Menufacu ng,
I . Rt. 7, Crown

new

(]) Tony Brown' • Joumlll
(jj) Non F.._ Television
''I o Soy.' The isaueo and
concems of the Mexican·
American minority are ex·
amined . (60 min.)
• Bamy Hill Bhow
(HIIOl MOVIE: 'All the
RlghtMwMo'
11 :30
ill CD Tonight Bhow .
Tonight's guest• ore Michael Landon and Phil Dona·
hue . (60 min.l

e

r,.•

Cltv. Oh, Coli 114. 286 •
14_.70. con Ev.. 614 . 441 _
3•38. Old •

[H80l MOVIE; 'hi and
Ton; The Slump'
[MAlt) MOVIE; 'Gorl&lt;y
Park'
10;16 (I) MOVIE ; 'QB VII' Part 1
1 0 ;30 Cll Celebrity Chefo
C!J Unlimited Hydruplene
Racing; Greater Oklahoma

[HBOl Not Neceooerily the
News

01-1 HUMA~ BEHAVIOR

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
~l:~.J~ Avo .. Gollipolia.
_
33 or 114-4461833

min.)
(jj) Newswatoh

(ll)IIVIO'tl'ation 'Get the Picture! ' TechnokJgtcal advances in the wortd of
photography are explored.

MY REPORT TODAY IS

Upholstery

An end play
creates an entry

•Kn

By James Jacoby

.AH
.J&amp;5 4

GirD;

WI

'.

NORTH
·Q~4

The late Eugenio Cbiaradia was one
of Ute great playen of all time. At the
start of Ute era of the lamed Italian
Blue Team, be ·was their undisputed
leader. His nicmame, "The Profes·
aor ." stems from his actually being a
professor of pbilosopby. Today's deal,
from the 19o9 European champion. shipo, shows declarer Chiaradla at his
best.
Three rounds of spades were played
by the defense. the Professor trumping in with the ace of hearls. He played
the king of hearts and then the 10,
which was allowed 1o hold. A third
heart went to the queen of hearls in ·
dummy, picking up the last trump
from West Now it would seem that
the contract could be made simply by
play!::,\!"'t for the club ace, but the
Prof
knew better. II Eas1 had
that card, he surely would have
opened Ute bidding. So he played a dia·
mond to the jack. When that trick bad
won. he played out au his trumps,
leaving Ute diamond ace, a small diamond and the club jack in ' dummy.
...
1 • ""' left declarer with the lone king of
diamonds and the K-7 of clubs. What
about the defenders?
. West did nC!l wan1 to blank his club
ace, 10 he kept only one diamond. East
bad to keep the diamond queen guard-

.J

WllST

•n

!lAST

.AQI0986

·---

32
• 10 9 6 3
.A 9 3 2

• Q 872

.Q 108

.43

SOUTH
• A K 10 9 8 7 6

tKJ
+K 7
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
Wesl

Nortb
Pass

Ea1t

' Pass
Pass
Pass

I NT

Pass
2.

4•

Pass

Opening lead: • J

ed, so he. was down to the club qu~
alone. Reading the situation 1 the PrOlessor cashed the diamond king and
exiled with ·a low club. East won the
9ueen and had to give up the game-gomg trtck to the diamond ace in
dummy.

6i~cM· VJtr
by THOMAS JOSEI'H

ACROSS

39 Rind
DOWN
only
1 Initiate
2Jewish
· 5 Mennonill'
scripture-s
- group
3 Wide open
10 Garb for
4 Chatter
Pompey
II Right away 5 Mountain
Cfi'Sl
12 Semite
13- Pearson 6 "Old Man
- Is ll•ad"
14 .lail
7 Part of
t'esterday's Answer
sentence
(sl.)
the Ma.o.;s
15 Legion8 Furtivr22 Making 27 English
nain•
ness
or
riwr
9 Wasp
monPy 28 f'rt&gt;neh
16 Burton
film (l!lf&gt;3) II V.M.I.
23 F'rame
river
undergrad
of mind 29 Dog's ski n
18 Bullfl(!ht
cry
15 Ballot
24 Turki!:ih
ailmem
19Sufflx with 17 Nepal
inn
30 Praise
dtKtor
pcoph·
25 Native
32 Ares' Joibl.l'f
20 British
20 Sulk
of
35 &lt;Jeneration
slaLel'iman 21 n•xa.':i dty
Uotcborg
21 Pn•nch
rr-r.-...-....-.,.-,
lady
1 For mt-n

friend

231iYP''Y Z4 E!tYptian
godd•ss
25 Frem·h t·nin

26 Part or
an hr.
27 ~ unfaith·
fulto (sl.)
31 ReiJiilored
33 Wind

b-+---+--

a• :;~::;~~~;dj;-f-+35Ciassy
fellow
36 Railroad ·

locomotive

bz-+-+-f-1-+-

37 Jason 's
ship
38Small
anvil
DAILY CRYPTOQVOTES- Here's h"" lo work it:

Thumderboat Classic from

Pomeroy. 614-992-3891 . ·

Upholtared.

ONE

(Anawet~ tomor~

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

Ol&lt;lahoma City, OK.

1130. Reasonable rates.

poolo. Coii614-992-68 6 B.

'Tho

Roches.' The three Roche
sisters perform jazz. blues

266 - 1141 or 614-446 1175 or 614-446·7911 .

87

1 919 Plymouth Sotolllto,

'IEP .. SHE

James Boys Water Service.
Also pools filled . Call 814-

1911 Kowoookl 306. 2.300

&amp;

NOBODY CAN OUTDO

Steele While Laura finds
romance in Me)(ico, :Reming·
ton must deal with a state
investigator threatening to
revoke the agency's license.

General Hauling

Haul, limestone, ~and. gra-:
vel.dt~. bulk or bag fertilizet
lftd hme. Excelsior Sail
Worka Inc, 838 E. Main St.;

76

(60 min.)
9;30 (!) Championship Roller
Derby;
8 MOVIE; '20.000 Years
in Sin_t Sin_g_'
10:00 D Ill C!J Remington

or 614-992-7119 anytime.

1978 Triumph 750CC Bon·
novlllo 11,000 mllu, good
cond. $1,300. Call 114441-7137 otter &amp;PM.

79 Cutlou Supremo AC,
AT. PS. PI, V-8. now tlroo.

(jj) Ufeline ICC) 'Dr. Roger
Freema" . · The Chief of
Emergency Obstetrics in
Long Beach Memorial Hos·
pital is observed handling
hazardous pregnancies . !R)

Dozer Work land clearing
landscaping, etc. Free esti:

256 -1240 or 614 -256 1

w.allend1.

The different methods in
whiCh children acquire IBn·

Excavating

•4&amp;0. Call 11114-246-9503
otter 7PM.

Blackburn R10lty. 114-4480008.

'(A)

atfoir. (2 hrs.l
()) Nova !CCI 'Baby Talk.'

Good-1 Excavating, batemants. footers. driveways-,
septic tanks. landscaping .
Call anytime 614 - 446·
4537, Jamesl. Davison. Jr.
owner.

J.A.R.

·r r r I I r

9:00 . D ill (1) Boll Hope Buyo
NBCI Milton Berle, lucille
Ball and Johnny Carson are

guago are explored. IRI (60

Close-out All uaecl Honda's · 814-367-0623 or 614-367·
at reduced offer. Can be 7741 night or day.
aeen at Honda Shop.
Waugh's Water Service
For oolo 1974 Hondo XL250 W~ll1, cisterns, pools, Fas~
good cond .. new tirea. rahabla service. Call 614·

e100 "' boo1 olfor. Cell
614· 388-9043 •tt•r lpm.

WINNIE

JIM'S PLUMBING 8o HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 355, Galli·
polio. C~ll614-367 - 0676 . .

K_en's Water Service . Wolls,
Cllter.ns, pools filled . Phone

Fm11

when Jack welches Vicki

filrn .an airline commercial.

York families cross paths
from opposite sides ot the
law, while a son and a niece
from the different families
carry on a star·crossad love

matos. Call 614· 446-8038

Dodge 4x4 1973 topper
Incl.. new tires 8850.00.

304-675-4216.

CARTER'S PLOMBING
AND HEATING

ton. Extra

pickup, air

fCC) Compltcations arise

mody special. (60 min .)
@700Ciub
(]) . . (jJ Our Family Honor
!PREMIERE) Two Now

e.

110,300. Coli 614-4488096 leave me~aege.

111' lleby'
CIJG (jJ Three'• a Crowd

among Bob Hope's guests
on his season premiere co-

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

1982 GMC van 'Londo Dosign' c:aptain chairs. duel
heat
eir conditioning,
power windows &amp;locks. tilt,
cruise. AM-FM cassette,
306 cu. in, with direct driver
transmiation 44,600 miles,
new tir81. Cen be seen at
Pic-Pee Supermarket.

marea'

304·895-3802.

cistern end fill swimming

------

Newshour

(jj) Novo !CCI 'Baby Talk .'
The differem methods in

application) 304-676-2088
or 876-7368.

rode. Bova e100. Colll14441-0808.

uoo.

C
.
JJ

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304 - 676 -

Will do water hauling, fin·

exhault.

competition. (R) (60 min.)
Cll Dllk1ori
Profw1oional Wrea1tinv
Cll• Ill Who'• the 808o7
ICC) A tipsy Tony and An·
gela share a passionate kiss.
~ut the next morning Angela

Call304-576-2398 or 814·
446·2464 .

1915 110 Hondo ATC three

new

operator battle his ruthless

RON'S Television Service.
House ~alison RCA. Quazar.
GE. Speci_aling in Zenith.

whMier, new never been

a.

a ())

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

1980 Chrysler 6th Avenue,
good condition, one owner.

3000 Ford tractor • on• row
corn pickar. Grain bed
grain efevetor, Call 614-

ANNIE

mot01. Coli 614-992-2712 .

2346.

Farm Equipment

•
'
L.lc;i~~___j ! ~~e::....:~~
'

•Jettenon•
7 :30 D ill New Ne~wed
Game
Cll Pleaoe Don'1 Eat
Daisies
(JJ NFL A1111 Wreot liitg
Cll Major League Baoeboll:
H.,...ton Ill Atlartta
I))
Family Ffucl
(!JJ-dy
(])
Nightly
Buoine"'
Report
'
CIQ WMel of Fortuno
D
Ill Entertoinment
Tonight
• WKRP in Clncinnllti
8;00 DillC!JA-T...,ICCIThe
A-Team helps a tow-truck.

5?6-2010.
Trucks for Sale

Pm, _ _.,_, A

Now wrange the clrcted lettll'l to
foom 11M ourprioo . . - . u suogeotod 1&gt;7 the .00.0 cenoon.

r.-

Cauette. Must aell Imme-

Lt. gray with luggogo rack.
$2,100. 814-986·4418.

ICADETHj ()
IIr

'
MocNeii/LohNewshour
D Ill New Name That

J.and L. Installation. Roofing. vinyl aiding, ttorm doors
and windowt. Free esti·

limited, 304-773 -672 1

Supp l11~s
LiVI~SIIIi:k

AIJD TI&lt;I&amp;D. ..

NJD ~OU IQ.(JW WAAH 1\IEii W~
bf\Tl

(])Dr. Who
(jj) Body Elec:tric
•Taxi
.
7;00 IJ ill PM M_.,.
Cll
Coumhip/Eddio' •
Father
(JJ Sportoconter
(I) Mary Tyler Mooro
Cll E..-lrwnont Tonight

t)

(llJ

Call collect 1-814· 237-

1977 Monte Carlo, good
work car. C1ll 814·379-

·

~I TRio;oi\\lDlRI~f.i:O Tl&lt;le;()

Mq K~W I M10HT.. .

D.and M . Conlractora. Vinyl

diately. Call 81 4-992·5502
or _
614-992·6379.
_
_ _ __:__ _ ·lc-

I I I

1J (]) (II CBS Newo

Coli 814·448·4482.

1973 Dodge Chollonger.
Good ohope. 340 488L.
A.T., P.S .• P.B.. AM-FM

rURYGH, .

(!JNewa

Canning peaches now avail·
able, open 7 daYs week cell
tor prices as supply is

W.

(]) D Ill ABC Newa ICC)

)

(]) Second City TV

0488, day or night . Rogeri
Banment Waterproofing.

Oldo

automatic, 304-676-6431 .

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

·

Women

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Cutlau

1981

'!lent on modern style piano.
hke new condition. Can be
sean locally. Write, including
phone number to: Manager,
200 Athlone. Caseyville. IL

61

Musketeer'

CD Wheel of Fottuno

Brougham 350 auto ,
loadiNI, 4 new tire• Seer•
radial, looka!rune goode.

1977

·condition. AM·FM stereo.

Bundy trumpet. ltand 8o 40 MPG, 11,000 flrm. Coli
books. Call 614·448,-0366. l-:-6-::-14::--:-4_4_8_-9_5_1_3_
. ---Auumo om all monthly pay- 1976 Cordoba very good

Vo .

Df

.J I I

a (]) Wheel of Fottuno

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local refareences
furnished . Frftft estimates. •

please.

1980 Fiesta air cond .. over

Bob's Market, M1son

AN Dr eE5- 1DE:J, IF THAT ~HEll IFF
GEE$&lt; 'r'OU 8ACI' 1~ 10WI'J 1HC'l.L.
~~~~K 50 METHIN~'5 UP,
I

Wlllll~

Home
Improvements

81

owner,

nice. e1700. Coll61 4-9492801 . No Sunday colla.

ble. 1260. Coli 814·448·
4972 or 614-446-4117.

Sovo $2641 llghiOd non-

10 ft. truck camper. ba·
throom, stove with oven
refrigerator. sleeps 4, S9oo:

71

74 Monte Carlo despende·

Musical
Instruments

Fluhing arrow sign 1289.

f199. Unbelievable quality!
Local Footory; 1 (800) 423·
0183, onvtlme.
,,

one

1976 1 ton GMC pickup 4

Briarpalch Kennels All bread grooming . Indooroutdoor boarding facilities .
Engli1h Cocker Spaniel .

SLIGHT PAINT DAMAGE.
e247 . Unlighted

fot sale 75 centa

Shelled corn. 304-8752586.

7795.

1376.00. 304-876-3778.

arrow ,

m~lch

• bole. Coll614· 446·1411.

Pets for Sale

675-7690.

1 - - - - - - - -- -

Nova

72
Hay

GUN REPAIRS,

1979

64 Hay &amp; Grain

2222.

$247. Unlighted $199 . Un·

10 inch Craftmen radial arm
saw. Good conditon . 8250
or bell offer. Older MOntgomery Ward lathe . $76 . Call

1972 Ronchoro IIOod ohapo,
eaoo. 1971 Nov• ill cyl., 3
opd .. tiiOO. Coli 114-4462000 01' 614-448·4614.

1974 Dodgo Dart, good
condition. $300. 304-6765995.

Block, brick. mortar and
masonry auppliea. Mountain

57

·M EET!NG5 \N
.V.ONTRE:P.L,

1\l!:i.i SAIO IT CDIJWt.I'T BE: [;()f.)~, BUT

cond, 304-676·4359.

or

believable quality! Local.
=~~t~~:.: 1 (800)423-0163,

Autos fOr Sale

1978 R1bbit. good running

Chow puppies. Call 448-

Slight paint damage. Flaah·
ing arrow sign. $269 . Save
$2641 lighted non-arrow.

Call 814·288-8622.

Reg. 6 yr. old Tennauea
Walker gelding. Coli 81 4·
446-9219.

Moving to Florida 14 HP
Bolens tractor with 42 in .
mower. brand new appro)(.
30 hr. utedwithw8gon. Call

For aala:Firewood . Cut youf
own. $1 6. a load. All hard

Furnished, t175 mo. pay
own utilities . Call614-448-

lio. Utllltlu paid. Coli 4484416 attar Bpm.

13.49 oa .) (100 pc-83.00

Fish Tank and Pel Shop
2413 Jackson Avenue:
Point Pleasant, 304·6762063 . Fish, birda and more.

For Lease

71

1910 Chevette . 4 'door.
automatic. Oood condition.

Livestock

Larga 2 horae trailer ready to

$260. Call 614-742-3092.

Autometic Mayteg wether
dryer . Both are old but In
working order. They are still
in use and may be tilted
before disconnected .

HOuse and beth. large yard in
Recine ere1. Cell 614-992·

63

lnColor longated comodes's
aiphon jet 889.96 ..
4'x10' P.U.C. sewer and
drain pipe with ball (1 pc.

614·986·3640.

1619.

Furnished ept., 1 bdr., 8226
mo., 920 4th Ave., Gallipo-

1 36 MF tractor. Now Holland bolor 8o Allied bolo
thrower, $3,796. Coli 614·
286-6522.

For Sale: King coel and
wood burner with blower.

redecorated. utilities partly

$190 mo .. 1 bdr .. 8136 .

Colonie! clear white pine
casing. Window and door
trim 32 cent ft .
Veneered interior white pine
door Jamb's e8 .99 pr.
3'x16' foil face fiberglass
insule1ion 88.12 sq .ft ..

304-676-1078 .

2 bdr. apt., good location,

Deposit required. C1ll 614446· 4222 between 9 &amp; 5.

814-281-8622.

Dragonwynd Catta_ry Kennel. CFA Himalayan, Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC

614-992-7663

~Ft.M~l&lt;EE 15 GOING TO '
~EED YOU FO~ THE7e

SP.rVICI!S

1982 Chovotte. 46,000 · siding~ replacement win·

Killbros 276 grain wagon
with grain elevator. Cell

6 ft . Zenith console stereo

$75 . Coli 614 -367-7881.

Coli 614-286·

165 M.F. diesel tractor.

Jenny Lynn baby bed with
mattress, good cond. 870 .

814-992-5364.
Rood, Rt. 1, beck of K&amp;K. 1 - - - - - - - - - -

Storeroom

7401f2 2nd . Ava.. 3 bdr ..

$2,296.
8622.

Phone

-It-

Furnished efficiency $160
mo. utilities paid, 7 Neil
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 446·
441 6 after 8pm.

340 HI tr.:tor. 3 point hitch,
PS, live pwer. 2 bottom
plows, J.D . corn planter,

Trailer speca1. small childran accepted. out Locuat

Call 61 4 ·446-0338 .

paid. Coli 304-676· 6104 or
304-676· 6386 .

MaiMy Fergu10n. New
Holland, Buth Hog S1l11 &amp;
Service. Over 40 uMd
tractor• to choo• fram &amp;
complete line of new •
used equipment. Uraest
selection in S.E. Ohio.

Boarding all breed1. Heated
indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Cal\614-446·

Slate bottom. Call614-446-

Farm Equipment

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 35 Willi, Jackson
Ohio. 814-281·1451 .'

HILLCREST KENN'ELS

Pomeroy. Large Iota. Coli 1 ~6-14_·_3_8_8_·9_7_4_1_. _ _ __
614·992· 7479.
I
Si• Hot water radiatort .

49

Call 448·44 1 8 oftor 8PM.

61

cents) (2' tao 40 contsl (10'
wall anglo $1.99).

Haven, W. Va.

SA~'i ~

choice

614-367-7248.

_9_6_60
_._ _ _ _ _ _ __
bogo. Coli 814-367-7267. 1 Bunk beds 8o desk$ 175. Call
3 office• with smell kitchen, _6_1_4·_4_4_6_-9_65_3_._ _ __
1218 Eastern Ave 8200 mo. 1
6

book $39.96 oq .
Marble vanity'• tops. So-

56

8o Nail. Gallipolis . Call 446- _c_a_ll_6_1_4_-4_4_6_-_3_4 _9 _2 ._ _...,.
1
4418 after BPM .
Large bumper pool table'.

Nicely furniahed mobile
home, eff. apt .• central air
and heat in city, adults only.
Furnished efficiency e160,
utilties paid, ahara bath, 607
2nd . Ave. Gallipolis. adults.

Shredded bark 82~ pickup
load. Yews $10 each,
Scotch Pine *24 eech .• 2
miles North of Silver Bridge
on Upper At. 7 . Call 614·

Call 814-446-0758 .

614-367-0409.

Pomoroy . Coli 814-448 ·
1 562 after 5 .

Call 614-256· 1 208.

ohopa. t250.00. 304·8822002.

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

Aliminum siding 8' wood·
130' toan40twin
'- t254'.00).
grain
with foam

Wellston, Ohio, hoUrs 8-5.

son . 304-675·1972.

Racine. Phone 614- 367-

Coll614-388· 8711 oftor 5.
Burial lots. Concord Ceme-

614-446-4630 .

Baby stroller, good cond.

8260 mo. Coli 614-446·
_2_3_o_o_
. -------

1

Compact &amp; 1praading Yews
$9.99 / each . Shreadad bark
mulch $20/PU load. 1 mi.
North of Silver Bridge. Call
Myers submergible pump, 2
HP. 2000 gal. utility tank .

882-3716 .

9348 .
14x70 2 bdr. auper nice
adults only, no pall, near
Holzer hospital, private lot,

$16.001 (20'to30'-UO,OOI

$15 .96 roll.

HEAP accepted. Call 81 4245-5804.

~OU 5URE 1
CAN'r COME
WITH 'iOU1

• Olff'ront S~eo
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Ueo My
Flrther Told Me'
[MAXI MOVIE; 'Tho Fifth

Complng. Huntington 304- ·
736-11287; Chorlooton 304· .
341-CAMP.

C loseout ' s-SurpluaSatvage.
Aoof tru11 (up to 20"·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

negotiable. Coli 814-992·

Camper ihaert unit for 8 ft
bed, complete wi~h queen
size bed and tabfe. axc

8.9 per cent APR available
on all new mini motor homes

BUILDERS

.,_,.._~-

Wildlifll

':'Theatre
(jj) Yay_,.. ol the Mimi .

in 11ock. Hurry while sup-plv
lasts. Seltzer's World of

insulated exterior driora

$360. OBO. Call 614-9492801 .

Cll Andy Griffith
(])
Audubon

CAPTAIN EM¥

614-332-9745 c:olleot.

I I I ... )

(JJ Flshln' Hole

f7.000 . Alto 1981 Sulek
Sjor.lork. ell power. 13,000.
Ci111614-446-4230.

erected. Iron Horae Builders,

D ill Ill CD D (]) Cll D
111Cil.__.

e

Utility b'ldg. opoclol ;
30'x40'x9' with trock door
II serv. door, $&amp;255

61 4-446-0322

1 oak tabla, I mahogany drop
leaf table with 5 chairs. Both

8;00

1973 Dodge mini motor
home, 20 ft.,
rtew tirat.
new air cond.. aleaps 6,

o. can 814·245·6121 .

ai·zes

EVE NINO

leogo. C•ll 114·448-1299.

Building Meterlels
Block, brick. sewer pipe1,
windowa, llnlela, etc .
Claude Winter•. Rio Grande.

conds all

9/17/85 -

1978 Champion motor·
home, ex. cond.. low mi·

J.ovHHt couch end rftatchlng chair whh onom.n, exc.

830.00 •• .
Prehung 6 or B panel steel

54 Misc. Merchandise

1-----.,.----APARTMENTS, mobile

34

Used·
-- Metal
office Furniture
deakl. 3 miles
out
Bulaville Rd . Open Sam to
6pm. Mon . thru Sat.

One or two bedroom apart·
ments in Pomeroy. Fur·
nished or unfurnished. Rent

2 bdr., washer
dryer,
fenced yard, behind Zinns
landing 8196 mo. plus
deposit, Doxol gas. Call

2 bdr $ 1 70 mo .. or &amp;336

14.000. 304-675-1108.

$86.

Housing Opportunity.

446-3371 .

porch.' 614-446-0684 .

42

Werm Morning wood 1tove,

Washers, dryers, refrigera - $89 .95 ...
Prehung 9 ft . thermal glasa
tors, rangas. Skaggs Apsteel door'a crosabuck or
pllances. Upper River Rd .
. panel•139 .96.
beaide Stone Crest Motel. 1 pc. fiberglass tub and
614-446-7398.
shower white and color
County Appliance. Inc . $199.00 to •229.96.
Good used appliancet and 17'x19' white gold vanity
TV seta. Opon BAM to &amp;PM . with top $29.96, marble top
Mon thru Sat. 814-446- &amp; vanity •39.96.
1 699, 627 3rd. Avo. Galli- 3 or 6 pc. tub wall kits. white
or color $39.96 to 889.95.
polis, OH .
Embossed 2'x.4 ' ceiling tile
some fire rated $1 .89 ea.
Antiques
53
Suspended ceiling grids (12'
main tea t2.601 4t tee 80
1 ------~--

1 bedroom apt. tor rant.
Nicely located. Contact Vii·
lage Manor in Middleport.

4110.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED .

3

for Rent

2 bdr. furnishad, all utilites Upstaira unfumished ept..
pd ., e•cept elect., conve- carpeted, all utilities paid. no
nient location, security dep· children, no peta. Call 614osit reuqired . Call614-446- _4_4_8_-1_6_3_7_._ _ _ _ _ _
1
8658 .
Riverside Aptl. Middleport.
Furnished. AC. cable, no city Special rates for Senior
tues, beautiful river view, in Citizen!. $130. Equal HousKanauga. Foster's Mobile ing Opportunities . 614·

814·985-4466 or 614-986·
3841.

Commercial building for ~ale
or rent on Main St, New
Haven, W .Va . Cal\304-882·

Apartment

for Rent

derpinning and 2 porches.

41

king frame 860. Good se&amp;ection of bedroom 1uitas,
rocken , metal cabinets,
headboards 838 &amp;. up to

"Please, officer, can't you
gi"ve him
a tl"cket too?."
.

roof. Price reduced. "Call
814-992 - 3119 after 4:30. r
1974 Hlllcraat 1 2)(56 , 2
bedrooms. Good 'c onditcn.

rnsureJI,

Baby bodo. f1 10.

Mattresses or box spring•.
full or twin, •&amp;3., tirrn, $73.
and t83. Queen sets. *225.
4 dr. chelts, $49. 5 dr.
cham,
Bed fr•mes.

Call614-388 -!l644.

Call

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
-------- ~

Roclinoro, 1225. to U75.. condition. Con 304·175·
Lompo from $28. to e12l. l:;
12;3:8;:oft:;=«;:4:
:30::;p:.m;:
: . :;==
pe. dinette• from •toe .. to
B
435. 7 pc. t189 and up.
Wood table with llx choiro 6 6 ulldlng Supplies
1286 to t745. Dolllt t 110
up to f22B . Hutchos. e&amp;60.

t1 2.500. Call 614-4466231 .

54,800.

'N' CARLYLI ®by

MIIC. Marchand!. .
-,

t281i. to •all. Tobloo, 1&amp;0 1-30_4_-_1_7_1_
-7_8_1_2_.- - - -

1982 14x70 trailer. 3 bdr.,
1 Vt beth . .atove Ia refrig ..
w .. her &amp; dryer hookup.
8x 1 0 wood atorage building, 8x10 wood porch deck,

14•70. 3 bedroom• with
control air. now carpal, naw

Tuesday, September 17. 1985

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PLMN OU

Crytoqaote: THE RACE OF MEN ,
WHILE SHEEP IN CREDULITY, ARE WObVES IN
. CONI'QRMITY.- CARL VAN DOREN

�Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 17, 1986
•

•

•
•

Vol.36, No.109
Copvriphted 1985

ent1ne

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•

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P•o••

2 Sections, 1 4
25 Cent•
A Multimedi• Inc. Newll)tper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, September 18. 1986

Meigs ,school hoard reinstates athletic passes
By BOB HOEFLJ&lt;:il
'
sentinel staff wrllet
Passes for free admission to athletic events for all
employes of ·lhe Meigs Local School District revoked a couple of years ago when tbe athletic
program was In financial problems - were
reinstated Tuesday night when tbe Meigs Local
Board of Education met In regular session.
The pasSes were reinstated by a unanimous vote of
the board at the sugges\1\)n of member Robert
Snowden. The reinstatement is effective lmtnedlately. It was the board's consensus thalli Is guod to
have employes on hand for athletic events and that
·the passes should be reinstated since the athletic
program financial woes have ended.

In a relatively routine meeting, the board employed
Mary Beth Musser as a klndergar~ aide for this
. school year and employed Joan Edwards as a cook.'
BUl Smlth was hired lor a kindergarten bus route
vacated by Bill Ratlilf. On a recommendation that
David Chase be employed as a bus driver pending
certlllcatlon and county board of education approval,
the board moved Into a on('ohalf hour executive
session and then returning to open session tabled the
recommendation.
Frances Runnel was employed as a reader guide
for a vtsually1mpaired student at the Melgs Junior
High School for four hours a day at $6.27 an hour. Her
duties 'with the student were outlined In the htrtng
agreement.

The board authorized Sharon Birch to attend the fall

district Ohio School Nurses meeting In Athens on Oct

3; Linda Yooker. Dale Harrison, BUl WUllamson,
Richard Fetty and Ronald Logan, vocational
Instructors, to attend a convention In Dayton, Oct. 3-5;
Logan to attend an OWE Council meeting In
Columbus on Oct. 29; Eleanor Blaettnar to attend an
orientation training session In Zanesville on Sept. 27;
Martha Vennarl, John Redovlan and John Amott to
attend a vi('W career development meeting In
NelsonvUle on Oct. 2 and an All Ohio Guidance
Cooference in ColUf'lbuS on Nov. 5 and 6; Greg
Drummer, Mlck Childs and Cliff Kennedy to attend
the NIKE Championship Basketball Clinic in
Cleveland, Sept 27-2\1; John W. Blaettnar to attend

the Ohio DECA executiVe councU meeting In
Columbus on Sept. 26 and 27 and the dlstrtbuttve
educatiOn district c coordinators' meetings for the
new school year, approximately six session. ·
Resolutions extending to all non-certified exempt
employes those appropriate wage and tringe benefits
afforded to OAPSE and extending to all certified
exempt employes those appropriate \leneflts afforded
to MLTA In newly adopted contracts were approved .
The board adopted a cheerleading constitutiOn before
moving into execu live session to ' discuss a
transportation problem with Janice Hankla and
personnel, finances, pending litigation and other
appropriate matters. All members of the lx&gt;ard were
present for the meeting.

Jury acquits

Projects
outlined

POint doctor
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Reagan Press
Conference

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"We lake this summit very scriously. '
Ami . we ;m: going to try to ):!el itllo rc;tl
uisutssinns ... This has gnt In hc mnrc
than get acquainted."

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Fiilllll "Star
wars"
"The research lo scc if sud1 a weapon is

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lawyer, was asked why he didn't
CHARLESTON , W.Va. (UP! take the same approach in his first
All during his trial on kidnapping
trial. He answered by saying that he
and rape charges, says David Carr,
didn't
know as.much alx&gt;ut the law
noonebellevedhlm-noone, that Is,
·
two
years
ago.
except the members oft he jury.
"I
really
believed I would have a
The former Point Pleasant osteojudge who would give me a fair
path, making his second· court
trial," he said. "As far as I am
appearance in asexual assault case,
concerned, Judge (Andrew) Macerupted into tears Tuesday1when the
Queen has given me a fair trtal. He
Kanawha Circuit Court jury abo
has bent over backward to give me
solved him of charges that he
justice.
abducted and raped an 18-year-&lt;&gt;ld
"If lt hadn't been for a fair judge, I
Charleston woman two summers
would
have received a life sentence
ago.
on
top
ct
what I already have."
"A man's freedom 1s the most
With
a
long prison term allead of
P!'e9i®S thing in the world," Carr
hlm for tbe first case, Carr sees his
said.
life as "ruined. ••
"Nobody believes you . I made one
"I 'II never be able IIi practice
mistake and that was plcking up a
medicine again," hesald. "Even If!
~ prostitute. That was the truth. She
move to another state, I'll be
trted to extort me. And all through
· recognized.''
the trial no one believed me."
· Carr attacked the medical tests
Jurors considered the evidence
used to prosecute him In this week's
for a period of several hours. spread
trtal, saying they couldn't prove he
over two days, before agreeing on
h&lt;&gt;d raped the woman. He told the
the verdict.
jurors
lt was a matter of his word
The woman had charged that
against
his.
Carr of plcking her up in downtown
man Is capable of rape,"
.
"Any
Charleston ln August 1983, pu lllng a
Carr argued . "Just because that
' gun on her and handcuffing her. She
woman said that man raped me, ls
said he later raped her three times.
that enough to send me to the
Carr admitted picking up the
penitentiary? I hope there are
woman but contended she was a
peoplewhobel!evetberearewomen
prostitute who later trted to extort
who
lie as well as men who lie.
money from him because of his
Women
are not excluded from
earner charge.
lying."
At the time, the fonner osteopath
He also said his accuser lncor·
was out on bond awaiting trial on
rectly identified the gun she said he
similar charges in Putnam County.
pointed at her, and he questioned
He was convicted In 1~ of burglary
why she had not fought her attacker
and sexual assault In the Putnam
or trted to get away.
County · incident and ls serving a
Assistant Prosecutor Tom Casto
6().year prison sentence.
told
the jury that Carr fabricated the
"! didn' t do the other crime (in
extortion
scheme and said the
Putnam County) ,"Carrsatd·. "!was
try to flee because she
woman
didn't
oomc with my children when that
feared for her life.
happened."
Carr, woo served as his own

'-:---

ti.::tsible ... it's ):!Oing to L'Ontit'!Y.e.... l stop
short of lkploymcnL ... I'm willing lo
talk ... if it (ould hc used in such a way as
h' riJ the worlu &lt;If the nudcar thrcaL"

South Africa
"You must he doin):! something ri):!hl ... lhc
wry lacl thai both lite! ions arc unhappy.
One: says it gncs too· Jar, the other says il
···, ll&lt;ll!sn't gq lar enough . I must be prcny
ncar 1hc middle."

1'ade Imbalance

Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined
Thai Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

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Lights: 10 mg "tar;· 0.7 mg nicotine- Kings : 16 mg "Ia( 1.0 mg nicotine av. per cigatetle. FTC Report Feb.'85

Not available in some areas .

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C PtiiiiD MOH,. IrlC 1985

"I lhink this lalsc impression's being
given that a lradc imbalance means
dch1or nation. This isn't our gnvcmmem
thm is cxpcndin):! more .. ..The American
people arc buying more lhan the
American people arc selling."

BLOCK GRANT HEARING - Mary Beth BID, of
lhe BDeye Jlllltt.Hoc_.r valley RePonal Developmeat District, ComrnlMioner Richard Jones, at rlghl,
and Coounlllsloner Manning &amp;wih, at left, answer
quesik!li8 from llfteen potential applicants at Tuesday

nlgbl's Corlununlly Dtwelupo•- lllod&lt; Gnat
hearmg at the Meigs County Courihouse. Meigs
County Is eligible for $103,400 of llllcal year 11185 CDBG
funding from the Ohio Deparlnient of Development.

•

PUCO sets ·phone service hearing
Since last AprU, efforts have been
underway In Tuppers Plains to
secure extended area telephone
service to and from Pomeroy.
The proposal, spearheaded by
Tuppers Plains resident Mary Jane
Talbott, has been presented to the
state public utUitles commission.
PUCO has scheduled a hearing In
the matter for9: 30 a .m ., October 24,
at the Tuppers Plains Fire Station.
Telephone customers ln Meigs,
Athens and Washington Counties
would be affected If extended area
service were granted. Represents·
lives from General Telephone
Company and Western Reserve
Telephone Company, the two companies providing service to the
affected areas, are to be present for
the hearing. PUCO reps are also to
be ln attendance.
Talbott, a notary public, will be
stationed at various Tuppers Plains'
businesses on Friday and Monday to

obtain afflda\its for the extended
service from local telephone customers. These affidavits will then be
presented In the upcoming hear ing.
Forms wUl be provided for those
wanting to sign an affidavit and
those doing so wUl be required to
write their reasons for wanting the
extended service.
On Friday, Talbott will be at
Cole's Sohlo from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
and at Keebaugh'sRestaurant from
2-6 p.m . On Monday she will be atthe
Tuppers Plains Hardware from 9-1
and at Lodwick's Market from 2·6.
Talbott will also be going door to
door In Tuppers Plains to make sure
all residents are given a chance to
make their desires for extended
seiV ice known.
\
Sometime next week, Talbott will
be visiting businesses in Pomeroy
and Middleport. She notes that
many Tuppers Plains residents
must conduct business in Pomeroy
makln!l' telepoone contact neces-

sary from both directions.
Petitions with more than 250
signatures In favor of the extended
service have already been submit·
ted to the PUCO for review. The
signatures were gathered In less
than two weeks Talbott says.
Tallx&gt;tt feels Tuppers Plains has a
good argument for the extended
service since all government off!.
ces, doctors and attorneys are In the
Pomeroy-Middleport area of the
county. Tuppers Plains residents
with children enrolled In \OCational
education at Meigs High School
must also call long distanoe when
trying to reach their children du ling
school hours.
·
Assisting Talbott In her efforts to
obtai!) extended area service are
Darlene Bissell and Betsy Herald .
I think we have a guod chance."
Talbott says.
She Is hoping for a good turnout at
the October hearing.

Fifteen people attended a public
hearing Tuesday night at !'*' Meigs
County Courthouse to review re- '
quirernents for this year's MeigS
County Community Development
Block Grant lunds.
Meigs County Is eligible ' for
$103,400 'of fiscal year 1985 CDBG
lundlng, providing the county meets
applicable program requirements.
A maximum of eight projects could ·
be lunded from this total allocation.
This was the first of two public
hearings In the matter and Mary
Beth Bill. of tbe Buckeye HlllsHoc'klng Valley Regional Development Distrtct, was present to
explain the eligible activities and
program requirements.
The CDBG program, through the
county commissioners, can lund
such activities as economic development projects, street, water supply,
drainage and sanitary sewer improvements, park acquisition and
improvements, demolition of un·
safe structures, and rehabllita\lon
of housing and neighborhood faclli·
ties. The activities must be designed
to benefit low and moderate income
persons, aid in the prevention or
elimination of slums and blight, or
meet an urgent need of the
community.
Possilile projects mentioned by
those at the meeting Involved park
improvements, acquisition of im·
proved fire fighting equipment,
road projects, water line replacement and river access for
recreation.
Commissioner Richard Jones
stressed to appilcants the bnpor·
lance of clarifying proposed projects in detail.
In the past, Jones said, the
COI'l'rrussJoners have normally
lunded four or five projects in the
county. "We will probably be
looking in that direction again this
year,"headded .•
(Continued on page 14)

GDC staff dispatched to Cincinnati group home
GALLIPOLIS - Eight men who
lived in a Cincinnati group home
operated by Westfield Service
Management Inc. have been moved
to the Gallipolis Developmental
Center following the closing of the
tnme by state officials .
The Pippin House ln Colerain
Township was ordered closed
Saturday because It "needed re·
pair" and did not meet minbnum
health standards according to GDC
acting superintendent Pam
Matura.
The house was closed one day
following a court-ordered takeover

by the Ohio Department of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities of Westfield group
homes In Cincinnati, as wrll as two
in Columbus and two in Lebanon .
The eight men , profoundly mentally retarded and ranging In age
from their~ to 40s, were bused to
GDC following t be closing.
Matura, wbo heads a team of 15
that was sent from Gallipolis late
last week to supervise the Westfield
oomes in Cinclnnall and Lebanon,
said she recommeded the Pippin
Home be closed following an
Inspection last Friday. The closing,

she said, may be temporary until
repairs are made.
"The closing Is only until the tnuse
can berepalred," Maturasald. "we
don't knowhowlongthatwill be. We
wUI be meeting this week to
detennlne the luture direction all of
the Westfield tnmes should take."
Charles Grun'kemeyer, who supervises state licensing of group
homes, said he was told one ol the
men transferred was diagnosed as
having a parasite lnlestatlon. Because of the problem, he said, tbe
lx&gt;use may have to be fumigated .
James Seminara, a state licen-

sure specialist, had inspected the
Pippin House less than a week
before Its closure and said that he
had been satisfied by Westfield's
attempts to improve structural
problems.
Westfield had operated six group
homes in the &lt;:;incinnatl area until
Sept. 5, when one In Mt. Auburn was
shut down and seven residents
transferred, to the Southwest Res!·
dentlal Center in Batavia.The home
was closed because ofHclals said It
was poorly maintained and residents were not receiving proper
care.

President refuses to yield to Soviet demands
WASHINGTON (UPl ) - President Reagan, two months away
from his summ\t with the Soviet
leader, Is refusing to yield to Soviet
demands that he trade an embryonic U.S. space defense system fol
deep reductions In ~uclearmlssiles.

night If It was necessary that he and
Gorbachev like each other before
progre!&gt;s could be made.
"It isn't necessary that we love or
even llkeeachother," he said. "This
has got to be more than get acquainted, although that's important too.''

He also believes he and Kremlin
leader MikhaU Gorbachev should do
"more than get acquainted" when
they meet Nov. 19 and~ In Geneva,
Switzerland.
"I wasn't going to give him a
friendship rtng or anything," Reagan joked when asked Tuesday .

In the37-minute nationally tiroad·
cast session with reporters - his
first In three months and the 32nd of
his ad min lstrat~?n - Reagan ad·
dressed subjects ranging from
AIDS to trade but concentrated
most on the summit and lis

mindless stampede toward protectionism (that) wUl be aon('W&lt;!Y trip
to economic disaster .''
Reagan called AIDS research "a
Reagan, appearing healthY and in
top priority with us" and
command of tbe podium lf not tbe
rrltlclsm of the
Issues, spoke publicly for the first
time about the growing problem of half-billion-dollar
deadly acquired immune deficiency ·through next year as
syndrome and gave a muddled a vital contrtbution" oonsldertng
explanation of government statts- "our budgetary constraints."
On arms control, Reagan accused
tics Showing the United States has
become a debtor nation for the first the Soviets of using public relations
before the summit "to build an
time since World War I.
.He also repeated his warnings bnpresslon that we may be the
that trade legislation brewing on · vUlatnsln the piece and that they're
.
Capitol Hill ooukl lead to "a the good guys."
lmpUcatlon for superpower arms
control.

~

.... --·

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41563">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41562">
              <text>September 17, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1217">
      <name>mason</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4447">
      <name>torrence</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
