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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Obio-Point Pleasant,

Page-0-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. Va.

October .13, 1986

U.S., Egypt will downplay plane interception··
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The States and Egypt over the hijacking
United States and Egypt will of the ship and the U.S. military
maintain good relations despite response.
The Egyptian foreign ministry
their differences over the U.S.
interception of an Egyptian plane · said It "has been surprised and
carrying the four Palestinian hi· greatly regrets" the U.S.Iictlon. On .
a scale of diplomatiC rhetoriC of 10,
jackers of a cruise ship. '
President Rea(;an said Friday the that would be about a 3.5, according
Middle East peace process Is too to diplomats In Wash!ngton.
Fonner Undersecretary of State
Important to . disrupted by a

Joseph Sisco said, "(Egyptian)
President (Hosnl) Mubarak wUI
have to makesomenolses, to protect
himself against those forces In the
Arab and Islamic world which have
never forgiven hbn for m8ktng
peace with Israel and stdtngwtththe
United StateS. 1 Would hope we
would understand this."
Sisco and other experts said that

EgyptlsArnerica'sstrongest!riend .
In the Arab world,an asset !hat must
be retained. Murbarak Is also a man
In ssomepolltlcal trouble- oomeof
them created by the economic
mlsmangement of his own government- and the United StateS' does
not want to add to his troubles.
Mubarak's problems came within
hours of the intercept when a top

Iranian official, Hojjat Rajsanjanl, negotiations, and the evldept corcharged the operation was an ruption that flourished under Anwar.
illustration of "the COil\lslon .be- Sadat as an outgrowth of the huge:
tween Egypt, the United StateS, amounts of U.S. aid that poured Into·
the country.
Italy and Tunisia."
In
the
current
year,
Egypt
Is
to:
Mubarak has been under growing
pressure from fundamentalist receive $2.3 billion In U.S. aid;
groups who are disillusioned with almost all of It In the form or:
·
.
Westem. Influences, the lack of a -repayable grants.
.Mubarak
Is
also
Increasingly:
-progress In .the Middle East '
dependent on the United States for·
h_ls military equipment, lnclli!llng:
modern aircraft. This year the U.S. :
inllttary aid to Egypt arrounts to ·
.. d
h
$1.3
b!JUon.
an now 1 aveaverdictofmynose
As a result d·urin the Isis .
Is clean"
•
g
cr ,
Wht~ House spokesm~ Mubarak was careful to separate :
Weinberg said the procedureThurs- himself from the Arnertcans, -and
day was sbnllar to the one especially the Israelis.
During one rally In the Egyptian
performed July 29
Welnbergsaldtheprocedurewent city of Tania, while the hijacking
"well beyond the margins to ensure ~as In progress, he told a crowd,
there was no spreading ..
We wlll not allow Egyptian dignity
·
to be Injured."

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1 Brown~,

Beng~ls . win

, NFL roundup on Page 3
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The appearance ora smallscaron
his nose In early August forced the
White House todtscloselhat Reagan
had undergone minor surgerr for
the removal d asmall patch of skin
containing a basal cell carcinoma,
the roost common form of skin
cancer and one often caused by
excessive exposure to the sun.
"The doctor has been keeping
track of me since the first operation
for skin cancer on my nose and felt
that there was some additional work
needed," Reagan said.

On July 13, Reagan underwent
colon surgery at Bethesda Naval
Hospttal, where doctors removed a
2-tnch cancerous growth and a2-!oot
OUt IDJUre8 e1g t sett!on d lower intestine. The ·
Ia
l diSC\lvery -and removal - nf the
f!rstsktncancercamel7dayslater.
Altha I lbne, Reagan played down
DETROIT (UP!) - A youth the significance fl. the sk!h cancer.
enraged by two arguments In a high He called the basal cell carcinoma
sehool hallway sprayed shotgun fire "very commonplace" 8!Jd noted his .
through a McDonald's restaurant wife Nancy had a sbnllar. patch of
jammed with students, wounding skin_removed from above her \IPper
eight teenage boys, pollee said.
lip tn late 1982.
Pollee said the shootings occurred
"They do not betoken In any way
just before noon Friday Inside the !hat you are cancer-prone," he said
restaurant a block from Cody High · in August.
School on the city's far west side.
qn Friday. Reagan did not seem ·
Noneofthevlcttmswerecrltlcally bothered by the latest finding.
Injured and pollee arrested three
"The biopsy revealed there were
teenage suspects near a house some cancer cells," Reagan S&lt;jld,
several blocks from the McDonald's
. less than an hour after the shooting.
No charges were filed bnm~ r;::::::::::::::::::::~
dlately against the suspects, lden tiWAREHOUSE
ned only as young males "17 or

h• •

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at pac· ked res uran

CLEAN NOSE - President Reagan wears an adbeslve patch mills
nose Friday at the White House. He dlscloeed that he had add!llonal
cancer cells removed from a patch of skin on his nose, but said doctors
told hbn "my nose Is clean."

Alaskan governor recovering
SEATTl.E (UPI) -Alaska Gov. Inflated to widen the artery and
BUI Sheffield underwent a dellcate permit blood to flow freely, English
procedu~ to correct a heart
said.
problem. then made plans to attend
the Seattle Seahawks game Sunday
and fly to Korea next week for an
International trade conference.
"Everything went very well,"
said Dr. Milton English, who led the
ttv~member medical team that
performed the three-hour procedure Friday.
English said the governor's heart
artery, which was 85 percent
blocked, is now only 23 percent
blocked, which is not considered
significant.
Sheffield, 57, a wealthy hotelmantumed-polittcian, was reported In
. .satisfactory condition.
English performed an "angtoplasty" to clear the right artery of
the governor's heart. During the
operation. Sheffield was given only a
CHESTER
Valium for pain.
Doctors Inserted a small, balloontipped plastic tube Into one of
Sheffield's blood vessels In the groin
area. When the catheter reached the
obstructed area, the balloon was

over."

CLOTHING SALE

"We feel that one of the three we
picked up Is probably the gunman,"
Deputy Clllef Richard Dungy said
late Friday.
The Injured were taken to two
Detroit hospitals.
·

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Story, photo on Page 10

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enttne

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Vol.36. No.126

1 Section. 10 Pagel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, October 14. 1985

Copy1ighted 1985

26 Conti :

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

U.S. wants PLO leader extradited
confirmed and CBS News, which Interviewed Abbas
Sunday, said they had spoken to him In Belgrade
,.
again today.
A White House spokesman said the administration ·
" has no official confirmation he has gone. If it turns
out he has gone elsewhere, we will have to assess the
situation."
Zarkovlc's promtse to answer the extradition
request came during a joint news conference with
Willy Brandl, president of the West German Social
Democratic Party.
"Yugoslavia Is a sovereign country which solves
such Issues after considering aU relevant facts,"
Zarkovlc said. "Yugoslav competent organs will
make a statement soon."
, FBI -Director William Webster, in an interview on
the CBS News program '1Face the Nation" Sunday In
Washington, said Yugoslavia had already rejected
the request

U.S. Ambassador to Italy Maxwell Rabb, In a
meeting Sunday ln Rome with Foreign Minister
Giullo Andreotti, voiced his displeasure at Italy's
decision to let Abbas and a colieague leave for
Yugoslavia.
The two flew by commercial airline to Belgrade
Saturday, shortly after U.S. '1-uthorllies had Issued a
warrant for his arrest.
"I polnled out that it Is Incomprehensible tQ the
government oi the United States and to the people of
the Untied States how Abbas could be permitted to
leave Italy," Rabb told reporters after the two-hour,
40-mlnute meeting.
The U.S. envoy, a personal friend of President
Reagan, delivered a strongly worded written protest
from Washington to the office of Prbne Minister ·
Belt lno Craxl following the departure of Abbas and
the other Palestinian official.
Craxl said Sunday Italy's release of Abbas wlll

seem "just and wise" when all the "facts are known
and examined."
Abbas, leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization splinter group, the Palestine Liberation Faction,
and another PLO offf!clal arrived In Italy a board an
Egyptian &amp;!ritner carrying tbe four hijackers of the
cruise ship.
The airliner was intercepted by U.S. warplanes
Thursday as It took the hijackers to what they
apparently thought was sate haven In Tunisia or
Algeria.
In Washington, FBI Director William Webster, In
an Interview on the CBS News program "Face the
Nation," said Yugoslavia rejected the U.S. request to
hold Abbas.
A source close to the Yugoslavian goverrunent said
lt was unlikely Belgrade, which has close relations
with the PLO, would hold Abbas. PLO sources In
Belgrade said Abbas woulq probably leave Yugoslavia within three days.

COAL hosts
workshop

Ohio accidents
claim l6lives

Citizens Organized Against LongwaDing IC.O.A.L.) hosted a trainIng workshop In Meigs and VInton
Coontles over the weekend r1 Oct.
4-6. The training, which was done
near active longwall mining sections,_ was pr6vkled by West
VIrginia Mountains Stream Mont·
tors,. Inc .. a volunteer non-(roflt
education organization, C.O.A.L.
members learned to measure:
- Water levels and depths In
drilled and dug wells
- Water levels, depths and flows
in developed and undeveloped

· Cincinnati, Ina two-vehicle accident
By United Press Inlernallonal
Sixteen people, Including two on I-711n Warren County.
Dayton: Brian E. MUby, 24,
motorcyclists, a bicyclist arid a
pedestrian, were killed In accidents Dayton, when his motorcycle
on Ohio roadways during the crashed on a city street.
Saturday
weekend, the state Highway Patrol
Delaware: Lawrence M. Han·
reported today.
A patrol spokesman said there cock, 40, and Anthony R. Horn, 24,
were seve11 deaths Sunday, eight both of Centerburg, in a· tw~H:ar
Satu!llay-and one Friday night. The accident on U.S. 36 In Delaware
County.
vtcttms died ml5 accidents.
'nlel[)at~llles· trafftc-fatallle!!

W~WUiian! &gt;E&gt; Glblon,

resulting tron1 accidents on the
state:s public roadways each weekend between 6 p.m. Friday and
midnight Sunday.
!&lt;llled were:
Sunday
HamUton: Jbnmle L. Howard,19,
Middletown, In a one-car accident
on a Butler County road.
Cambridge: Mindy L. Stone, 26,
Bye5vUie, In a one-vehicle accident
on a Guernsey County road.
Georgetown: Ruth M. Mlller, 65,
Cincinnati, In a two-vehicle collision
on U.S. 681n Brown CountY.

49, Woodsfield, wheh his bicycle
rolled over an embanlanent along
Ohio 536 in Monroe County.
Norwalk: Robert S. Wllllarnson,
Zi, Norwalk, In a two-car accident on
a Huron County road.
Cleveland: Joseph G. Green, 26,
Cleveland, In a one-vehicle accident
on a Cleveland street.
Zanesvllle: Charles W. Pryor, 21,
Zanesville, when his motorcycle
coiUded with a car on a Musldngum
County road.
Wellston: Tammy Henry, 18,
Wellston, In a on~vehlcle accident
on Ohio 327 north of Wellston In
Jackson County.
Canton: Kimberly Ann Sheets, 25.
Canton, when struck by a car on a
downtown Canton street.
Friday night
Cincinnati: Danny WIUman, 17,
Cincinnati, In a t\\U-car accident on
a Cincinnati street.

Citation issued after accident
AGuysville man was cited by the
Gallta-Metgs post of the State
Highway Patrol following a twovehicle accident Sunday afternoon
on Meigs County 4.
Troopers said a car driven by
Gerald R Fore, 22, of Coolvlllc was
eastbound on 4, about four-tenths r1
a mlle eastoftheAthensCountyl!ne,
when a farm tractor operated by

David C. Bradley, 36, of GuysvUie,
allegedly puUed from a private
drive onto 4 and struck Fore's
vehicle In the left side.
No Injuries were reported In the
noon accident, which troopers said
caused moderate damage to Fore's
car and light damage to Bradley's
tractor. Bradley was cited by the
patrol for failure to yield.

spr\n~

LOG-ROLLING - The Hank Peters lAunberjack
Show featured log rolling, log-chopping, canos
jousting, axe throwing and springboard choppl,gwon
the attention of many festival goen attending the lilth

annual Bob Evans Fa.'Ill Festival this past weekend
at Rio Grande. More than 100,000 people attended the
t~ayevent

Officials say festival was a success
RACINE - The annual Racine
'Fall Festival' held Saturday from
noon-to-midn ight In downtown Racine has been termed a big success
for the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department which sponsored the
day's activities In the small Ohio
River community.
Fire department spokesman
Scott Wolfe said the event was a
"gn'at success", and that next year
.a bigger festival wlll be planned.
The first annual "Racine Fall
ClJSslc" volleyball tournament was
a huge success and highlighted the
afternoon's program. Entertainment continued throughout the
evening hours was very popular
with Ihe large crowd In attendance.
A country band from the Racine
area was a .popular attraction In

add!t ion to the Fair Warning rock The sophomore class took second,
band from Mason; and Wind _ and Racine's Village Cut Rate took
Flame. a country band from Point third. Other winning entrtes were
Pleasant. Square andst reel dancing Letart's PTO, Southern's Junior
brought the streets to life lale Class, the Syracuse Brownie Troop,
and an entry by Howard and Herb
Saturday evening.
Various crafts, refreshments Ervin which received special
stands, games, acllvites, and other recognition.
A mini-band concert was per·
boothes lined the streets, stirring
formed by the Southern Marching
interest within the crowd.
A fun house for the kids at the Band. The band, under direction of
Racine Fll'e sta tion was a blc hit, John VanReeth, won special honors
while a teen dance was equally as .as a participant In the parade and for
Its fine perforrnanre and overall
popular.
A parade highlighted the evenings effort.
First place In the float CQJllpetltlon
activities at 6 p. m. Costume judging
was
a $50 prize 5ponsored by the
was concluded before the parade.
Racine
Home National Bank. The
while six floats received prizes·. The
Southern High School Senior class fire department sponsored the other
won first place In the fl9at division. prizes.

- Flow vlolumes In small
streams
- Water levels In ponds
Members learned to use photo·
graphy to document water conditions and how to systematically
record their measurements and
observations In field hooks and
journals.
Measurements made showed .
that roost water sources are
providing adequate supplies despite very dry weather for the past
six wooks.
C.O.A.L. members Intend to
measure their water sources
monthly or more often as necessary. Additional workshops will be
held to train more members to
monitor their water.

Commissioners
will vote on deal
JACKSON , Ohio (UPI l Jackson Cou nty Commissioners
vote Tuesday on the question of
whether to sell land to the city
school board In an attempt to help
ease the southern Ohio county's
financial problems.
The Jackson City School sys:
tern Is offering to pay $140,001 for
about 23 acres of land In Jackson
County.

~

Sale, too, on our selection of
•Carhartt Hunting ~lathes Jackets - Bests
Bib Overalls.
REG. $t021

PAiSON;S
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"Acron fn1111 G&amp;l Allte"
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Cleveland: Rodney Bryant, 25,
Cleveland, killed In a two-vehicle
crash on a Cleveland street.
Upper Sandusky: Bldde A. Burdeli, 93, Kenna, W.Va., In a
two-vehicle accident on U.S. ll In
Wyandol County.
Lebanon: Stephen G. Powers, 25.

(f\

Jackets and coats
.blanket or red quilt
lined, lined or unlined
bib overalls, pile lined
vests, work jeans,
·matching blanket or
quilt lined hoods. Complete selection of
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241 THIID AVE.

1984 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME

.

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even playoffs

Baseball's post season play, Page 4

BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (UP!) - Yugoslav
officials today promised to respond to a u.s. request
for the extradition of Mohammed Abu Abbas, named
as the mastermind of the Achllle Lauro hijacking, but
the PLO reported Abbas had already left Yugoslavia.
Vidoje Zarkovlc, president ci the rullngCommunlst
Party, said ~ar Iy today the government would Issue a
statement "soon" on the extradition request !Of
Abbas, whose flight from Rome to Yugoslavia
Saturday prompted a U.S. protest to the Italian
government.
An official at the Pales tine Liberation Organiza lion
office In Belgrade said Abbas had already left the
country.
"Abbas was just passing through Yugoslavia on his
trip out of Italy," said the official, who would not
comment on Abbas' destination. "He was not on an
official visit here and therclore It was not necessary
for him to meet any Yugoslav officials."
Abbas' departure could not be lndependen tly

•h

' It's apple butter time
Photos on Page 5

""'

Reagan: 'My nose_is clean'
WASHINGTON (UP!)- For the
second time In as many months,
President Reagan has undergone
treatment to remove a. cancerous
growth from his nose and says he
has been given a clean bill of health.
In a surprtse announcement at the
start of a news conference Frtday,
Reagan disclosed additional canrer
cells had been removed the previous
day from an area onus nose treated
for skin cancer July 00.
"There were some cancer cells
' found," he told reporters, "and now,
following that,._ following the minor
operation- I can stand before you
and say my nose Is clean."

'

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Radn~.Thtslloa1, arepllcaolagtantpumpkln,clll'ried

PRIZE WINNER- 'lbe VIIJaseCuiftaiela Racine
was one ol oeven lloal entl'llllls bt the lint annual

the theme ol the old-fashioned festival event.

RaclneFallFestlvalParadehllld~evmlng!n

I

AWARD WINNER - This beautiful hol'!le drawn
vehicle, ridden by the Ervin family and drtvm by
Howard and Herb Ervin of Racine, wall an award

winner lnSaturday'sFallFestlvaiparadeln Racine. A
large crowd was on hantl to participate In the evmt.

�..

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····•. ·--·--

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Pomeroy-Middleport,
Ohio
.
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The Dally Sentlnei-Page-3

.

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ......,__,.._....,.., ,.,......c;:~,.=,.

ts:m~

"l!V

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pub!lsher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All lf'tlers are subJect tqed ltlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number , No unsigned JeUE"rs will be published. Letters should be In

PomerQy-Middleport. Ohio
Mooday. October 14; 1986
:

Moynihan strikes back ___W_ill_iam_F_._Bu_ck_ley_J_r.
Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan,
D-N.Y., writes furiously to object. It
appears that at a town meeting In
upstate New York !llmeone asked
hlm to comment oo "Mr. Buckley's
(charge) that you used to be a
strong antl-eomrnunlst." A charm
of Mr. Moynihan Is that he always
Insists 011 taking rretortcal satisfaction from what!'£ does. Tills time!'£
writes, "My reply was · that I
couldn't quite understand. WhUst I
was shaking my fist In the face c1
the Commie dictator .Deng, you
were IoUygagglng aoout tile South
Seas on a luxury yacht with a bevy
of ladies, only ooe of whom could be
your wUe." The senator's reference

Is to ~ 3l days before tl'£ mast I

recently spent salllng from Honolulu to New Guinea, while Sen.
Moynihan was luxuriating In Oriental hospitality In II'£ Middle
Kingdom. ·
Sen. Moynihan's reputation as a
rellable anti-communist took a
most awful blow after the Grenada
liberation, wlllch he described as
"an act of war." It was after that
that I wrote .In E!ijulre of tl'£
senator's "geological slide In the
direction of an eristtc namby·
pambylsm." And only several days
ago, The Waslllngton Post, discussIng the new neo-conseiVative anticommunist quarterly The National

Interest, notes a conspicuous absence from the mastooad of a
journal whose movers and shakers
are liVIng Krtstol, Jeane Kirkpatrick, Henry Kissinger and Norman
Podhoretz of "the most eminent
and accompttshed Deroocrat on
whom the neo -conservatjve
counted to march In the front bl
their ranks." In fact. the wrtter
concludes, "Senator Daniel Patrick
Moynihan can now be seen on the
opposing ramparts." That Is the
view from Waslllngton.
But there wUI always be sparks
from that Catherine Wheel, and the
senator enclosed a couple d. Items
worth memortallzlng. The first is

good taste, addressing IssuE's, not personalities.

Capture of hijackers
seen as vindication
for Reagan's policy
For President Reagan, tlle capture oft!'£ four Palestlnlan.llljackers of
the AclliUe Lauro marla?d a iong·sought blow against terrorism and
!ultUled years of promises to bring terrorists to justice.
The nighttime Interception by U.S. warplanes of an Egyptian jet)lner ·
carrying the hijackers to freedom came only hours after Reagan described
terrorism to lllgh school students In Chicago as "t!'£ most frustrating tiling
to deal with."
And he spoke witll no shortage c1 personal experience.
Reagan was ooly eight days Into Ills presidency when!'£ seiVed notiCe on
terrorists that the United States, under Ills leaderslllp, would demand
"swill 'alld effective retribution" when the rules c1 International behavior
are broken.
But over the last 56 months, the specterct International terroriSm, which
has claimed several hundsed American lives and led to tl'£ kidnapping ol
six Americans held bostage In Lebanon, has come to haunt Reagan's
foreign policy.
The kidnapping of Gen. James Dorlier by Italian terrorists, bomb!Jigs c1
U.S. and NATO lnstauatlons In Europe and embassy compounds In Beirut,
the kiUings of 241 Americans In the bombing of the Marine barracks In
Lebanon and the hijacking of an American jetliner from Greece, allt"£lped
push terrorism to the top of the Reagan foreign pollcy agenda.
'
The deep frustration has not been llmlted to the White House, but was
seen In tl'£ gung-ho reaction In Congress to news the four Palest!Jilan
gurunen wbo seized the AclliUe Lauro and killed an American passenger
were In custody and facing possible prosecution In Italian and U.S. courts.
· When tragedy has struck In tlle past, the White House ~ponse has been
similar: a condemnation ct violence "In any form" and a vow to bring the
perpetrators to justice and take steps to stop terrorism In its tracks.
But each time, tl'£ administration's performance has fallen short of its
promises.
Reagan )llmself has complained that his efforts to combat terrorism
have been frllstrated by the nature of the beast ltsell: suicide bombers who
perish with their crimes and shadoiW fanatic groups that elude detection
and penetration by JntelUgence agencies.
. "Our problem In the post has not been a lack ct wUI," he said Friday.
But In tre case at tl'£ Achille Lauro, with tre hijackers alive. ldentllled
and In one location- aboard t!'£ Egyptian jetUner- Reagan said, "Here
was a clear&lt;Ut case lh which we could lay our hands on tlle terrorists."
In refUsing to divulge whetller he would have ordered tre F -14 Tomcats
to tire 11 the Egyptian aircraft had resisted Interception, Reagan left an
Implied threat tor other terrorists hanging In tlle air.
Sen. Daniel Moynihan, D-N.Y., warned at week's end that tlle United
•
States "must now expect some fonn of retaliation" for its action against
·'· the Palestinians. "Not to .expect It," he warned, "is almost to Invite It."
In a region so·prone to violence, the cost c1 Reagan's short-term victory
unclear. With the AclliUe Lauro llljackers not yet prosecuted or
.. was
punished, the latest battle against terrorism Is not yet over. much less tre

.

.•

war .

: Letter to the editor
Wants say in spending
•·

With reference to the dedication ASSISTANCE FOR
c1 the Bidwell-Porter Elementary THEMSELVES?
School, located In GaUta County ,
It lias always been my belief that
•. State Superintendent c1 Public non-property owners should oot be
' Instruction, FrankUn B. Walter was permitted to vote on taxes that
, ~~ and emphasized. "That apply to property owners.
each famlly Is charged with the
Schools and churches are tre
' i-esponslb!Uty of educating the next backbone of our communities. How
; generation, which I presume would wUI the loss of schools affect these
::.. be their own children. How many communities?
·, generations are the people responsi·
When welfare of our children Is
ble for? What about · our Senior concerned, how will tills extra time
Citizens, who have paid school tax spent riding buses, greater distan levies for three or lour generations? ces, affect them•
These people are now retired and
When It comes to "dlgg!ng a load
most Uve on flxw Incomes. How or money" out of my pocketbook, I
• will tl'£y manage to pay an want to be the one who does the
additional 6.11 mUis oo their "digging" and spending! There
property taxes? They have l)lllde comes a time, wl'£n a person has to
many sacrlllces down through the say NO, when It comes to asking for
years to 1'£lp bolld the existing more than most have.
Remember tills, If we "bite ·the
buildings we oow have In Southern
Local School DtstrlcL They also buUet" and pass "tllis tax levy for
• supPorted the continuation of the Southern Local In November, we
• existing tax-levy at Southern Local. will be paying for the next !l yearn,
Do we dare ask them for rmre, i-egardless fl. our Income and
·• wl'£n many have reached a time In wl'£ther we have a job or not! tbelr lives when they NEED Maxine Diddle SeUers, Racine,
Ohio 45771.

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CAlt'T fi~D

Yoo.

an account of Ills behavior wren,
with seven senators last summer,
oo traveled to China and wmt to too
Great HaD oft!'£ People to visit with
Clllna's spectacular 'new leader,
Deng Zlao-plng, who at age Ill Is
struggling to permit a.little liberalism to oil the ossiiled corpse of
Mao's China.
Sen. Mo)rnihan, woo, when !'£
served as our ambassador to the
United States, raised unholy reD
with ou'r putative aUies who
regularly voted against us ln. the
U.N., went right up to the Htlle
commie director and demanded to
lmow how come China at the U.N.
had voted 86 percent of the time
against tJie United .States last
session. Did China have a "two·
United States poUcy?" The wisecrack bounces nicely off Clllna's
tireless criticism r1 the United
States to the effect tllat we have a
two-China poUcy, one for the
mainland, one for Taiwan.
There are contradictory reports
over the response to this by Deng.
The New China News Agency,
which serves to report whatever too
party teUs It to report, quoted Deng
as replying, "Cel\aln problem; do
exist between us, but as long as we
have the desire to develop relations,
these problems can be solved and
solutions can be found." Moynihan's version of Deng's reply was,
"He loola?d at his watdl and
Indicated It was time for the
meeting to end." Since the offlctal
version sounds Uke standard diplomatic treacle, we can assume
Moyntllan's version Is the correct
one. Bravo Moynihan. It Is distressing tllat In our enthusiasm for the
dirEction Deng is taking, we forget
tllat he remains, In fact, a commie
dictator.

High ~ost of secrets __J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_&amp;~D_a_le_JI,_an_A_tt_a
WASmNGTON ' - How mum
does it cost the United States to buy
or steal a . secret from a fo~lgn
country? $10? SlO,mJ? Sl million?
It's one or t!'£ best-kept secrets In
Waslllngton, for unlike most otoor
entitles r1 the federal bureaucracy,
the hydra·headed inteUigence community gets to keep Its b.ldget
confidential. And no one In Congress seems to worry woother the
spy agencies are cost-effective In
what they do.
It may seem a hopeless quest, but
let's see 11 we can't do a pioneer
accounting of U.S. gathering, and
get an Idea of what It costs tl'£
tal!payers lor the secrets the
various agencies pry out of our
adversartes.
How much do we pay for tre spy
satellites, the human agents, too
analysts who weigh the Information
and tlle computers that collate It
all? And what do we get in return?
Except for the CIA and a couple
of obscure mUltary units, which·

devote some money and manpower
to covert action, the dozen·plus
federal JnteUigence bodies exist
prlmarlly to collect and analyze
Information. So their entire budgets
should be oounted on t!'£ cost side of
the ledger. ·
Easter .said than done, of course,
but from sources familiar with too
budget process and from ~l'£r
Information we've gathered, we
can make an educated guess.
The CIA's annual budget Is close
to $1 bOlton. The code-breaking
National Security Agency's lsmudl
lllgher, about $10 billion a year. The
Uttle-known National Reconnaissance Office, woose very existence
In tre Pentagon Is classified, spends
l!l least $2 bOlton and possibly as
much as $4 billion a year on spy
satellites.
Then add at least anotrer $2
bUllon for the Defense Intelligence
Agency and the tntelllgence gatoorlng arms of the four indivld -

ual mllltary services and the
departments of State, Treasury and
Energy.
A significant expense, but Impossible to calculate, ~ the man-hours
spent by ambassadors and Foreign
SeiVIce personnel, gathering lnfor·
maUon that Is passed alOng to the
Intelligence seiVices.
Adding it aU up, a plausible
estimate ts .that tre government
spen$ roughly $18 billion a year to
collect foreign secrets.
Now how oo we figure out the
number of secrets this $18 biiUon
buys? No ·one can say for sure, but
as luck would have It, there is an
obscure agency that provides the
material necessary for a reasonable guess.
The Information Security Over·
sight Oftlce makes an annual count
of all government agencies •class Ill·
cation decisions - how. many
documents they stamp confldenHal, secret and top secret. Its latest

report puts the number of these
"original classl11catlon decisions"
at-1181,943 last year.
The problem with this figure Is
that the great bulk of It refers to
made-In-U.S.A. secretS the agencies want to protect, oot secrets
coming from overseas. Domestic
secrets are usuaUy classiiied oonfi·
dentlal or secret, and these levels
comprise ~ percent of the dassiiicatlon decisions, according to the
oversight office's report. The remaining two pe,rcent - or 17,789 were classified top secret
Even making tre unUkely as·
sumptlon tllat aU 881,943 decisions
Involved foreign secrels, it would
factor out to $20,409.48 per secret,
according to our calculator.
But II we rate intelligencegathering agencies rnly by the
hottest stuff they get - the top
secrets - the cost works out to a
little more than a million bucks for
each one.

GRABBED FROM BEIUND -CievelandquarterbackBemle Kosar
Is grabbed from belllnd by the OUer's Rod Kush (37) In tlleflrol quarterli

Sunday'sgamelntheAstrodome.RooldeKosar,maklnglllsdebulasthe
Browns' starting quarterback led the team to an American.Conference
victory. UPI.
,

Simms sets record;
but Bengals win
CINCINNATI (UP!) - In a statistics that really mattered he
perfect 1llustratton of how hollow was better. Eslason had no turnovsome records can be, Ph II Simms set ers and fired three toumdown
New York Giants' reconls with 40 passes to Simms' one.
Cincinnati (24) jumped to a 21-0
pass completions for 513 yards
Sunday- and helped lose the game lead, but let It evaporate to 21·20
before scoring two touchdowns
to the Cincinnati Bengals.
As far as the outcome was within Ql seconds near tre end of tre
concerned, three turnovers by third quarter to put the game out c1
Simms outweighed all his passing. reach of the Giants (3-.1). Both
He threw two Interceptions and lost touchdowns came after turnovers
a tumble ·to set up 21 Cincinnati by Simms.
Although tre Bengals let tt"£trblg,
points In the Ben gals' 35-30 win.
early
lead collapse; Wyche noted
Simms completed 40 or 62 passes
for 513 yards to break the Giants' that his club again proved It could
record of 505 passing yards set by play well against a solid defensive
Y.A. Tittle In 1962. But Simms said team.
Estason, who completed 15 of 24
Ills misll!kes made Ills passing
passes
for 193 yards, had TD tosses
meanfugless.
of
16
yards
to Cris Collinsworth, '!I
Both of Simms' Interceptions
to
James
Brooks and five
_
yards
were picked off by James Griffin,
who returned one 24 yards for a yards to Rodney Holman. Brooks
touchdown and brought the other also scored a TDon a 5·yard run.
Simms' lone TD pass, a·24-yarder
back 29 yards from tlle Cincinnati
to
George Adams,camewithjust!IS
1·yard line to start a touchdown
seconds
to play - far too late to
drive.
matter. Jess Atkinson scored 1B of
Simms' fumble was recovered at the Giants' 3l points with field goals
the Giants' 1-yanl line to set up an of 33, 37 and 46 yards, three extra
easy Cinclitnatt ID. The fumble points - and a 14-yard touchdown
came after SimmS was sacked by run on a fake field goal play.
On a fourth and 10, Atkinson Uned
Eddie Edwards, one of seven sacks
for · 70 yards produced by the up for what appeared to be a32·yard
field goal try, but holder Jeff
Bengals' defense.
Although Cincinnati quarterback Rutledge ran about ftveyards, then
Boomer Estason passed for 3ll pitched out to the trailing Atkinson,
fewer yards than Simms, in tlle who ran untouched Into the end zone.

galnmorethan10,00Jyards,caught
a 56-yard touchdown pass and added
a 35-yard scorir\g run to clinch the
Cowboys' first victory over the
Steelers in 13 years. Dorsett gained
113yardsandjoJnedWalterPayton,
Jim Brown, Franco Harris, O.J.
Simpson and John Riggins at the
10,&lt;m-yard plateau.
Redsldns 24, Lions 3
At Waslllngion, John Riggins ran
for 114 yards and three touchdowns
to become the second player In NFL
lllstocy to rush for more than 100
touchdowns and pace the Redsklns
to their· second straight victory.
Riggins has101careerruslllngTDs
and trails career leader Jim Brown
by five.
Rams 31, Buocaneers %7
At Tampa, Fla.• LeRoy IIVIn and
Carl Ekern returned second-half
Interceptions off ~teve DeBerg for
touchdowns to raUy the sloppy but
unbeaten Rams over the winless
Buccaneers.
Packers 00, VIkings 17
At Milwaukee, AI Del Greco

ByDAVERAFFQ
UPI Sports Wl'ller
The Chicago Bears entered Candlestick Park Sunday as underdogs
aga!Jist the 49ers and exited as the
favorite to win the Super Bowl.
The Bears are riding high ~e
days, unbeaten after six games and
feeling good after a 26-10 rrianh:utdllngofthe49ers In San Franciscothe site 'of their bitter loss last
·
January.
"Today was our day," Bears
coach Mike Dltka said with a broad
smile. "We were not going play
them the way we did last year. No
more run, run, run, punt. We were
going to come out and chaUenge
them."
The 49ers defeated Chicago Zl-0
last January In the NFCChainptonslllp game. That defeat stUI stings
Waiter Payton, who saved Ills best
game of the season for Sunday running for 132 yards and two
touchdowns on 24 carries.
"Unfortunately, when the 49ers
beat us last year, they didn't show
much courtesy or dignity,'' Payton
said. "They said negative things
about our offense after shutting us
out. We thought aboutthataUduring
the off-season and the pf!!-season."
Chicago kept pace with the Los
Angeles Rams as the NFL's only
unbeaten clubs at 6-0 and !he Bears
lead the NFC Central by three
games. The 49ers fell to 3-3- three
games behind the Rams In the NFC
West.
Ditkaernphaslzedtrelmportance
of contalnlng49ersquarterbackJoe
Montana, wbo 'completed 17-of-29
attempts for 160 yards.
The 49ers committed an uncharacteristic 13 penalties for 94"yards.
ChlcagoalsosackedMontanaseven
times and held the potent San
Francisco offense, to just 183 yards.
Chicago, meanwhile, had just one
turnover.
Kevin Butler added four field
goals for the Bears, who sealed too
victory with a 66-yard,13-play.drtve
that used up7: 33. Payton capped the
drive with a 17·yard scamper
around end to make It 26-10 with 3:41
left.
Clllcago quarterback Jim McMahon, who missed the championship
game with a kidney !Jijury, completed llklf-31 for 186 yards and had
an lntercepttonretumed43yardsfor
a touchdown by Carlton Williamson.
In ctl'£r games, Dallas beat
Pittsburgh '!1-13, Washington
crushed Detroit 24-3, Cleveland
downed Houston 21-6, the Los
Angeles Rams shaded Tampa Bay

George McGovern

This Is oot an easy time tor
Democrats like Mitchell or Republicans Uke Matlllas. ConseiVatlsm
of tre Reagan variety does seem to
be "ln." I notice that the television
commentators are turning IncreasIngly for resource comments to
RepubUcans such as Henry Kissinger, AI Halg and Richard Nixon,
rather tllan to such Detroerats as
Cy Vance, Rorert McNamara,
George Ball or Jimmy Carter. .And
even a s~alled liberal newspaper
such as The Waslllngton Post is·-

jammed with the writings c1
pro-Reagan columnists - Evans
and Novak, William Buckley,
James Kirkpatrick, George Will,
Emmett Tyrell, Norman Podheretz, Charles Krauthammer and
now Jeane Kirkpatrick.
Nonetheless, I am convlnred that
there are mllltons of Amertcans
who are hungry lor a clear,
substantial alternative to Mr. Reagan's policies. Is the Democratic
Party capable of offering such an
alternative?

Berry's World

Today in history

•
"But, you see - not EVERYBODY can
become a rock star. That's why we
have SCHOOLS."

Rookie. Kosar paces
Browns' 21-6 victory
HOUSTON (UP!) - Cleveland
Browns quarterback Gary Danielson, sidelined wltJJ' a injured
shoulder, was asla?d last week how
long he expected to be out.
" It could be a week, or it could be
· 15 years," said Danielson. fully
'aware that rookie Bernie Kosar Is
. the Browns' quarterback of the
future.

. Kosar went 011 to direct two more
scoring drives that ended with a
4-yard run by Kevin Mack and a
5-yard run by Earnest Byner.
Houston, 1·5, suffered its fifth
stalght loss, and t!'£ Oilers' offense
continued to struggle. .
Quarterback Warren Moon completed 14-of-23 for 97 yards, was
intercepted once and sacked five
times for 28 yards.
Houston's two scores, field goals
by Tony Zendejas from ~ and '!I
yards. were set up by turnoversan Interception by Rod Kush and a
tumble forced by Frank Bush.

After Sunday, the future may he
now.
Kosar made his first start for
Cleveland, driving tlle Browns to
three second·half scores and a 21-6
win over the Houston Oilers.
"Bernie perlonned well," said
Cleveland coach Marty Schdtten"ll 's very frustrating.'' Moon
oolmer. "We dldo't protect him said. "Sometimes 10 guys will
early, but we won, and !hat's wrere execute and one doesn't do his job,
you evaluate a quarterback."
and that fouls up tre whole play. Ask
Schottenhelmer said he Is unde- anyone oo the offense, and he'Dtell
cided whether Kosar or Danielson you he's not doing nis job properly.
wlll start next Sunday's game with
"We all need to do some
the Los Angeles Raiders.
soul-searclllng,l know I do. We have
Sunday against the Oilers, Kosar good ga~ plans, we just don't
overcame a rugged first hiilf to help ~xecute. "
the AFC Central Division-leading
' But Houston coach Hugh CampBrowns win tllelr third straight bell said his team executed well In
game and raise their record to 4-2.
the first baH.
Kosar 'completed only . 3-of-12
"We did everything we wanted In
passes tor 44 yards and had one the first bali, and !felt like we would
Interception tllat led to a Houston be In position wrere we would smeu
field goal in the first half. He finished blood anq go after it In the second
. the game by hitting 8-of-19 for :u! half," resaid. "Somehow, they got
yaros and a 68-yard touchdown pass the upper hand on us. We actuaUy
to Clarence Weathers In the third had everytlllng. at halftlple pretty
quarter tllat put 91eveland ahead, close to wrere 11·e would've hoped."
7-6.
Houston's offense accounted for
only five first downs In the second
"I was more excited about tlle half. Oftl'£1relght possessions In the
points oo tre board than It being my second half, six ended In ~nts . Only.
first NFL touchdown pass," Kosar twice did the OUers drive Into
Cleveland territory.
said. "It eased us In the lllddle."

rushed for 107 yards and tWo
11rst·half touchdowns I!Dd mauanid
Marc WUson threw for an Insurance
score In the fourth quarter to lift tl'£
Raiders to tretr thlnl straight
victory.
Seahawka 00, Falcons 28
At Seattle, Dave Krieg threw for
405 yards and four touchdowns,
Including a 12-yard scoring pass to
Paul Skansi with 35 seconds left to
11ft the Seahawks over tlle winless
Falcons.
Patriots 14, Bllls 3
AI Foxboro, Mass., Sieve Grogan
came off the bench to replace
Injured Tony Eason and throw for
282 yards and one touchdown and
cornerback Raymond Clayborn
returned an Interception'!/yards for
another score to lead the Patriots
over tile winless Bills.
Broncos 15, f'Allls 10
At Indianapolis, Rick Karlis
kicked three field goals and Jolin
Elway compleled passed tor 239
yards to lead tre Broncos in a
defensive struggle.

Eagles :II Cardinals 7
At Philadelphia, Ron Jaworski,
starting his first game in fiv e weeks,
threw three touchdown passes to
fuel the Eagles' upset of !he
Cardinals. He tlirewTD strikes of 10
yards to John Spagnola, 17 yards to
MlkeQulckand32yardstoHerman
Hunter.
Chargers 31, Chiefs 00
At San Diego, former USFL stars
Tim Spencer and Gary Anderson
scored trelr !lrst NFL touchdowns
to lead the Chargers. Anderson
scrambledfora6-yardTDiatelnthe
ftrst half, and Spencer plunged over
from1yardou ttocap the scorlngin
tlle fourth quarter.
Raiders 23, Saints 13
At, Los Angeles, Marcus Allen

NFL game at Riverfront Stadium. Cincinnati won Its
second game of the seasoo, 35-30. UPI . .

COLLINSWOR'lll STOPPED- New York Giants'
Terry Klnanl pulls down Cincinnati's wide ~lver
Chris Cootnswortbj In too second quarier r1 Sunday's

Playoff .results

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

Sur.tay'a MaJor Le8(1H'
Pl-,yoft' ~ub
American leMpC
Gamf'5

Trrio
I4C

31,27, Green Bay edg1!d Minnesota

. Cincinnati dumped the' New
20-17,
York Giants 35-20, PhUadelpllla
stunned St. Louts 3IJ.7, San Diego
stopped Kansas City 31-20, the Los
Angeles Raiders w!llpped New
Orleans 23-13, Seattle. overtook
Atlanta :ll-26, New England
dropped Buffalo 14·3 and Denver
27, Steelers15-10.
ci Cowboys
reid off Indianapolis
At Irving, Texas, Tony Dorsett,
who becametheslxthNFI..runnerto

kicked a 22-yard field goal with
seven seconds remaining to climax
a 66-yarddrtve and lift the Packers.
The Packers and Vlltlngs are both
3-3. Minnesota lost In the final
seconds for the second straight
week.

VETERANS MEMORlAL HOSPll Al

•••-•u
_.Jit_.,.__,lt

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Kf'Y. Atkl.'l' 161 and Whln: .Jark.'IOn and
SUndl:l'rjl. W- Jack!illn cl ·OI: L- f\r:'&lt; 1().1l
Nlllooalll.f!IUI' COillllf' ~

lA

OMII!IIll(l- _z_u ,
Lo. ...MO 110 Ol..t - 1.2 U 0

~.
RaJ~.

Hortoyl'Uit 121, Castillo

1~1.

Dillllll.l
1111.~

a nd SckJ8tla. 'Vf'aR'N'; '1'\ldor. !Ionon

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

camptxa11 !91 and Nlf'lo. W- Thelor !I Jr .

L- RC\IS.'i 10.1 ). HR - l.ilS An£{' ill's, MildiOC'k
Ill.

rr;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;r;;~=============:;;i
WINDSHIELD
WASHER SOLVENT

Ohio college
grid _scores

69&lt;

&amp;liiiJ'dQMLII&amp;il

Ohio Stat(' -ta, Indiana 7

..

Ball Slatf' .l l, Ohkl Unl\.'t'rstty 23
Bowling Crem 42, F.a!ll.'l'n Mlch 2.t

'"

J&lt;mt StatP M. Tt'Xas·EI Paso 24

Democratic alternative------------------------------

The . announcement by Dem;:&gt;· log many Amertcans that selfishcratic Rep. Parren Mitchell, 63, of ness Is ootonly respectable but'is,ln
Mary land that re wilt quit Congress fact, th.!ir American birthright. He
after 16 years' setvlce comes as a has also appealed to tre macho
disappointment to me and to many jingoistic streak In our national
others acquainted with Mitchell's character, so that even the self.
tecord. Since being elected to defeating and bankrupting arms
Congress In 1979, Mltmell has been race with tre Soviet Union is oold as
an eloquent voice of conviction and a hlgllly patriotic priority.
Intelligence for traditional DemoThese are the reasons why the
cratic liberal values. As Illicit as voluntary departure of a oourage·
anyone In Congress, !'£ waged tre ous, common-sense Democrat such
battle to slllft ex&lt;rsslve mllltary as Mitchell Is bad news for those
spending Into greater lnveslment In who yearn for an alternative to
jobs, education, health care, and Reagantsm. Likewise, tre retire·
social setvlces. In soort, he Is nzy ment decision c1 another Maryland
kind of Democrat
polttletan - thoughtful, moderate
In leaving Congress, Mitchell RepubUcan Sen. Diaries McC.
say~ he Is "not at all happy" about Mathias - Is bad news lor those
tlJe conseiVatl\(e drift of tl'£ concerned with woore Mr. Reagan
Democratic Party. "The Dem;:&gt;- is taking the nation.
crats should stop trying to out·
Mr. Reagan Is said to oo ' the
Republican the Republicans. It's a "Great Communicator" and apparserious mistake for the party and a ently he Is, judging by the election
serious mlstake for the nation." · results and his obvious populartty
To this! say, amen. Congress is a with the · national press oorps.
dispirited place these days, with Certainly he is communicating
few effective voices being raised effectively with too economlcaUy
agalnsf the Reagan policies. The comfortable, the .whlte majority.
defeat of a numoor of articulate, and the macho crowd. Doobtless
liberal congressmen and senaiors tllese elements represent at least a
In 1978 and 1980, plus the over· temporary majority. But I cannot
woolmlng presidential election believe - despite Mr. Reagan's
wins of Ronald Reagan in l9lll and penchant for optimism and good
.,.. Today Is Monday, Oct. 14, the 287tll day of 1985 with 78 to ilUow.
1984
have apparently deinorallzed . cheer - tllat the present political
1be moon Is new.
the liberal center of-the Democratic trends deseiVe Deroocratlc accep1be mom!Jig stars are Venus and Mars.
Party. Beyond this, the enonnous tance, nor do I believe that they are
1be evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
federal
deficit stemming from the In tre Interest of the nation.
1bo9e born on tills date are under the sign d. Libra. They Include WUIIam
~agan·formulaof
hlgl'£r miHtary
No one can say.for certain what It
Penn, the English Quaker who founded Pennsylvania, In 1644; Irish
spending
and
lower
taxes
has made .wilt take for the Dem:x:rats to
• political leader Eamon de Valera In 1882; Dwight D. Etsenoower, 34th
It much harder tor congressmen to recapture the Senate in 1986andthe
; president of the United States, In 1890; poet E .E. Cummings In 1894;
actress U!Uan Gish In 1896 (age 89); actor Roger Moore In 1927 (age 58), support adequate funding for sodal White House In 1988. But the basic
and British pop musician and former teen Idol Cliff Richard IJi 1910 (age services and sudl concerns as the tu~~etion of a political party is . to
enviro~ment, transportation and
organize a group c1 voters around. a
45).
housing.
On this date In lllstory:
program that offers a meaningful
In domestic pllictes, budget contrast to the q&gt;posltlon party or
In 1066, WWJam, duke of Normaney, led Ills Invading anny to victory
· over England's King Harold at Hastings. He was crowned William I t!'£ prtorttles and foreign affairs, most parties. Utre voters do rot perceive
Democrats - after feeble resist- a signiiicant contrast and tt.e hope
same day and Is known to lllstory as William the Conqueror.
In 1912, former President Theodore Roosevelt, campaigning for a third · ance - have largely gone along ~ a better life with Democratic
term, was shot In Milwaukee, but refused to have tre wound treated untn with the popular president. Mr. leadership, wby change tre present
Reagan has succeeded IJi convlnc· 1 leadership?
I' '
he had flnlshed his SltefCh.

i

Bears, Rams keep winning streaks inta~t

Page-2.:...The Daily Sentinel

;;n.

Miami 26. Told 14
Akron 17, Mumly St. 10

Miami 1F1a1.
YOUIWSIO,~m

~. ctnctnnau 0
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F'!Miay 3'. Westmlns1Pr lf'a) 9

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••

POMEROY

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel .

(

Monday, October 14, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Royals stay alive
behind 2-0 victory

Cards rout Dodgers;
eve~ NL playoffs 2-2

By The Bend

I

ST. LOUIS (UP! ) - If recent Coleman, Injured In a freak accident
runs alld seven hits In 3 2-31nnlngs,
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) history holds, the St. Louis Cardinals with the automatic tarp before the
remained
sea ted In the buUpen.
Danny Jackson's pitching kept both
are In perfect shape today for the ga me.
Jackson
wasatboth hls worst and
Dan Quisenberry and AI Oliver out
fifth .game of the National League
. of Game 5 of the American League his beSt In the fifth and slxth Innings
playoffs.
Valenzuela yielded only me run In
· Chall\plonshlp Series. As a result , of his flrst career jXJSt-season start.
The Cardinals, who admit to the Dodgers' opening 4-1 victory,
Garth Iorg singled toopentheflfth
there will be a Game 6.
)laving played poor baseball in the scattering seven hits over 6 1-3
off
Jackson and went to thlrd when
Jackson scattered eight hits and
innings.
opening two games against Los
stranded eight Toronto runners Ernie Whitt followed with a double.
Forsch, who made three relief
Angeles, squared their best-of·
Sunday to help the Kansas City But Jackson then retired Tony
seven series with a 12-2 rout of the appearances against Los Angeles
Royals stave off elimination with a Fernandez on a groundout to thlrd,
this year, is 8-lllifetime against the
Dodgers Sunday night.
.
2-0 victory over the Blue Jays. !twas Damaso Garcia on a pop out to
The Dodgers, who looked so sharp Dodgers.
the first' complete game perfor- second and Lloyd Moseby on a
in gaining a 2-0 lead In the series
Forsch got the nod from St. Louis
mance by either side In this year's groundout to second to preserve hts
alter triumphs at Dodger Stadium, . man ager Whitey Herzog over
2.0lead.
AL playofls.
look to their ace, Fernando Valenzu· Joaquin Andujar, who wasrougheaAnd that was good news for the
The Blue Jays then baded the
ela , to end a streak of home up In Game 2. However, Andujar
Royals, whose normally reliable
bases
In the sixth on singles by Jesse
domination In theNLCS.Valenzuela will pitch the sixth game and John
buUpen has become disaster prone
Barfield
and Willie Upshaw and a
was the winner in Game l •of the Tudor, the winner In the fourth
as Kansas City fell behind 3-1ln the
ga me, will again come back on three
series.
best-of-seven series. Twice Oliver walk to Iorg. But Jackson Induced
The last 12 games In the NLCS days rest if a seventh game is
entered games late and delivered a Whitt to bounce Into an inninghave been won by the home team. necessary.
game-winning hit off Qulsenbercy, ending groundou t to second base.
Herzog had considered not start. Ironically, thelastleamtowlnonthe
the AmeriCan League F!l'eman of
road was Philadelphia with Steve Ing Coleman, who suffered contu"Danny had a rough time In the
the Year.
KNOCKED OUT OF GAME - LGs Angeles starmg pltchfr Jerry
Carlton beSting Jerry Reuss on Oct. sioi)S on his left leg, against
middle
Innings," Kansas City manBut with the left-handed Jackson:
ReussdejededlywalksbymanagerTommytasordaandcatcherMiker
Valenzuela in the opener. Tito
4, 198.1
ager"Dick
Howser said. "Some guys
pitching his way out of jam alter
SclOIICla M he leaves lite JIBIIIe alter yielding sev.m nms and five hits to
St. Louis, whlchhasplayedaswell Landrum, who replaced Coleman In
jam, the left-handed hitting Oliver might look to the bullpen In that
tlteCIU'dlnals In theseond bmlngol Suii'Jay' sNLplayo!ls In st.Lools. The
at home as It did poorly on the road, the lineup, made the decision to rest
remained on the bench. And situation but not Danny Jackson. He
Cardlnah evened the series at ~2 with a 12-2 victory. Ul'I.
will go with. veteran right -bander Coleman today that much easter
Quisenberry, who has aUowed four wanted the ball."
Bob Forsch against Valenzuela. when he went 4-for:5, drove In three
Forsch hasn't pitched ln 10 days but runS and scored once.
CLASS A SECTIONAL VOLLEY BALL TOURNAMENT
Landrum and Jack Clark, who
his last outing was a 4-2 victory over
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1985
.
the Chicago Cubs that clinched a tie came to Ute with three hits, three
runs scored and a RBI, each bad a
for the division champjpnshlp.
of hits in the nine-run second
palr
"We're
down
to
a
best-of-three
.
(LOWER BRACKET)
(UPPER BRACKET)
series, " said Dodger manager that saw 14 men go to the plate.
Coleman should be ready for a
Tommy Lasorda, whose team was
Kyger Creek (14-2)
Mlller (5-11)
· victimized by a nine-run second sixth game in LA on Wednesday.
Reuss gave up seven ri. the nine
Inning In Game 4, the biggest In
The Athens Association of Basket-.
playoff history. "It was just another runs, leaving after 12-31nnings. He ball Officials is sponsoring an adult
9:00A.M.
1:00 P .M.
ball gam~ . We lost. Wearetied2-2." might have escaped most of the educatk&gt;n officiating class for any
The Dodgers figure to have an damage had Utlrd baseman Blll
Crooksville (2-16)
person interested in obtaining a Trimble (6-10)
edge with Valenzuela, even though Madlock handled a sharp grounder
permit to officiate high school
the Cardinals bats came alive by Cesar Cedeno after Clark had led
basketball.
without the presence of Vince off with a single.
The class wtll be held at Eastern
High Sc_hool beginning Oct.15 at7: 30
,•
'
p.m. Successful completion of the
3:30P.M.
II: 30 A.M .
class wtll permit the peroon to be
issued a Class 2 rating lor the
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI)-St.Lou is confined to the Cardinal bench lor current year. The individual may
Cardinals' speedster Vince Cole- Sunday's founh game of the
North Gallla (6-9)
thenofflciatealllevels of highschool Southern (5-12)
man terrtlled fans but escaped Na tional League playoffs.
basketball except varsity for the
The Cardinals learn doctor, Stan current year.
serious Injury Sunday·when he was
2:15P.M.
pinned beneath a 1,200-pound London, said Coleman suffered
10:15 A.M.
Any Interested person may registarpauUn-rolUng machine In a freak some tom skin from his ankle to the
ter lor the class by attending the first
Eastern (7-10)
mid-thigh area of his left leg, but meeting of the class. Further Fed-Hocklng(8-6)
accident at Busch Stadium.
Coleman was carried from the X-rays showed no evidence of a
lnf.ormatlon may be obtained by
field on a stretcher but later fracture. He said Coleman might
contacting David Jenkins at 992-3133
emerged from the Cardinals' exa- return to duty in Game 5 Monday
or by eontact!ng any other beat high
mining room on crutches suffering alternoon in St. Louis.
school basketball official.
(Top of bracket Is home team)
from only minor injuries. He was

Basketball
officiating
class planned

Monday. October 14, '1985

P·-5

Community calendar/ area happenings
MONDAY
MCARTHUR - Southern Hills
Arts CouncU meets Monday, 7:30
p.m., VInton County Community
Bl!llding.

' '

_

APPLE BUTTER MAKING TIME- Every year,
lite Meigs Senior Center spends most of two days
making :aJO quarts of apple butter. Proceeds from the
sale goes to the center's program for assistance to the
elderly In Meigs. Each quart sells lor$3.50,or$31fyou

Asbury UMW meets

New officers were n,uned at the noted .
recent meeting of the Asbury United · A thank offering wUI be taken at
Methodist Church, Syracuse,held at the November meeting. Mrs. Lisle
tile home of Linda Ferrell.
read .a letter from the Anderson
They are Beulah Ward, presi- family, missionaries In England.
dent; Helen Teaford, vice presiThe program, by April Harmon
dent; Opal Kloes, Irene Parker, and was entitled "VItal Wltress!ng."
Linda Ferrell, committee oo noml- Others taking part were Ann
n~tlons .
Other officers were Sauvage, Irene Parker, Mrs. Lisle,
retained.
and Helen Teaford. Mrs. Harmon
Mary Cundiff had the opening closed with prayer.
meditation using the topic, "Jesus
Devotions by Mrs. Lisle used
··"Character Challenges Us to Pursue
His Example" with scripture from scripture from luke 5, and Mrs.
Luke 5:18. Nine shutln calls were Cundiff gave the spiritual closing,
reported and the birthdays of "You Got to he There." Refresh Marcta Karr and Mary Lisle were ments were served bY the hostess.

MIOCIL81'0RT
MMILYPIU.CTIC.

Services Offered :

M. P, Dire, Jr,. M.D.

-flmity proctiee ot medicine
-Minor Suraery (S~turin&amp; and Excision )
-X-roy

CIINTIIR

I.

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION
1

2.

This amendment would allow pa~sage of laws permiuing the State
to borrow money for research and development of coal
technology that would encourage the use of Ohio coal. The State
could give or loan this money to individuals, groups, and corporations doing business in Ohio, and to educational or scientific institutions located in Ohio.
II would amend the Co nstiiuiional limitation on the Stale debt

to allow the Stale to borrow money for coal research and development . II limits this increase in State debt to $100 million for principal. not including interest.

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

3.

This amendment allows tax dollars to be used to repay this debt.

4.

The amendment allows laws to be passed to permit the State to
share in any royalties, profi .s, or other financial gain resulting
from thi s research and development.

To adopt Section 15 of Article VIII of the Constitu-

tion of the State of Ohio.
TO ENCOURAGE GREATER USE OF OHIO
COAL AND TO ALLOW THE STATE TO ISSUE
BONDS TO FINANCE COAL RESEARCH, THIS
PROPOSED AMENDMENT WOULD:

Ohioan s should VOTE YES ON ISSUE ONE to encourage the
greater usc of Ohio coal ~ Ohio's most abundant natural tesource.

1.

VOTE YES ON ISSUE l Io help :

PERMIT THE ENACTMENT OF
LEGISLATION TO PROVIDE FOR
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS TO
DISCOVER
MORE
ECONOMICAL, EFFICIENT, AND ENVIRONMENTALLY ACCEPT ABLE USES
OF COAL:
AUTHORIZE THE STATE TO BORROW
MONEY AND TO ISSUE BONDS AND
OTHER OBLIGATIONS FOR THE PURPOSE OF ENABLING OHIO INDIVIDUALS. BUSINESSES IN OHIO, AND
OHIO EDUCATIONAL AND SCIENTIFIC
INSTITUTIONS TO ENGAGE IN SUCH
RESEARCH AND DEVELOP~NT; AND
TO PERMIT THE STATE TO SHARE IN
ANY ROYALTIES OR PROFITS THAT
MAY RESULT FROM THE STATE'S
FINANCIAL PARTICIPATION IN SUCH
RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT;

J.

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

LIMIT THE TOTAL PRINCIPAL AMOUNT
OF BONDS AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS
ISSUED BY THE STATE ACCORDING TO
LAWS PASSED UNDER THIS SECTION
TO ONE HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS
OUTSTANDING AT ANY 11ME; AND PERMIT THE .FULL FAITH AND CREDIT OF
THE STATE TO BE PLEDGED FOR THE
REPAYMENT OF SUCH BONDS OR
OTHER OBLIGATIONS ISSUED OR
GUARANTEES MADE ACCORDING TO
LAWS PASSED UNDER THIS SECTION.

!Proposed by Resolution or the Gtneral Asstmbly of Ohio)
A majority yes

YES
1---1----1

NO

•ot• is necessary for passage.'

• Reduce the Cost of Electricit y to Resident ial and
Busmess Consumers. Coal IS the bas ic fuel which
generates the electrieiiy every Ohioan uses in their home
or business. Issue I can lead to Ihe discovery of cheaper.
more effi cient ways to burn Ohio coa l, and help reduce
the cost of electricity.

-

• Creat e Jobs For Ohioans. Issue I can help impruve the
job market for all Ohioans. Issue I mcansemployers can
keep their energy costs down . making Ohio firms more
competitive against businesses from other states or naIions. In souiheastern Ohio. Issue I can spark literally
Ihousands of new mining jobs for Ihis economically
Iroubled region .
• Improve Ou r Environment. making our air cleaner and
health ier. Research sponsored by Issue I can help
di ,cover new Iechnology to remove the polluiants from
high-sulphur Ohio coal.
• Boost Ohio's High Tech Industry. By sponsoring
sophisticated research and development projects, Issue I
will encourage growth in Ohio's high tech industry. This
will hel p open the door Io the next generation of Ohio's
econom ic development .
• Trigger Half a Billion Dollars in Federal Matching
Fund s. Congre ss recently auihorized more than Half a
B1tlion dollars in Federal grants for coal research and
developmeni projects. If Issue I passes, Ohio can appl y
for some of these Federal funds and multiply the impact
ur Issue l's $100 million bond issue rnr Ohi o.

Hours: lon., lu11. &amp; Fri.
10 o.m.-1 p.m. ond 2-5 p.m.
Cloud Thurs; Wod. J0-11:30 o.m.
ond 3-7:30
Sot. 10 o.m.· p.m.
Closed lost Sot in IYIIJ month

•

SHALL THE PROPOSED
AMENDMENT BE ADOPTED?

(Amended Substitute Senate Joint Resolution No. 28)

Carleton school

JOINT RESOLUTION

POMEROY - The menu for the
week of Oct. 14 at the Carleton
School-Meigs Industries Is
announced:

Proposing to amend Anicle VIII of the Constitution of the State
of Ohio by adding thereto Section 15 to permit the/ stare
to give financial assistance for research and development
of coal technology 10 individuals, associations, or corporations doing business in this state and educational and scientific institutions located in this state.
"'

Tuesday - ravioli, rolls, salad,
jello, rnllk.
Wednesday meat loafdressing, buttered potatoes, breaH,
s law, fruit, milk.
pigs-In-a-blanket,
Thursday

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROI'OSFJ&gt; AMENDMENT
The one member. of the Gene r~l Assembly who voted against
Amended Substitute Senate Joint Resolution 28 did not choose
to prepare or submit arguments against the propo500 amendment.

BARGAIN MATINEES SAT I SUN
All SEATS $1.11
EVERY TUESDAY $2

.

-H01t lomp ond Uttrosound lr11tment
- Pronotot
-EIG
-l:hlldron's ond Adult Yltcinotion
-Athletic Physico! (Free for Meics. Southern ,
Eastern ond Wohomo Hi&amp;h Schools )

-Referrots

Star Grange has meeting
A Halloween party was planned ties chairman, announced that
during the recent meeting of Star members oan now take orders for
Grange· to be held in conjunction household prnducts helng sold by the
with Columbia Grange at the Star ,. group. Nuts are also for sale by the
hall on &lt;:;ounty Road 1 near Salem grange. It was noted that four
Center, Saturday, Oct . 19, at 7:30 members attended the offi cers
conference held recently at the
p.m.
Those attending are to come In Friendly Hills Camp. They reported
costume and to take snacks for on various Items of business
refreshments. A decorating session discussed at the conference. Anna
was set lor Oct. 17 at 7 p.m. at the Halliday had the literary program
whlclllncluded readings and games
hall.
VlckiMacomher, women' sactivl- on fall and Halloween.

Be it resolved by the General Assembly of the State of Ohio,
thrcc-tiflhs of the memhcrs of each house concurring therein.
that there shall be submitted to the electors of the state in the
manner prescribed by law at the general election to he held on
the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November, 1985 a
proposal to amend Anicle VIII of the Constitution of Ohio by
adding immediately following Section 14 a new section as
follows:

ARTICLE VIII
Section 15. LAWS MAY BE PASSED AUTHORIZING
THE STATE TO BORROW MONEY AND TO ISSUE BONDS
AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS FOR THE PURPOSE OF
MAKING GRANTS AND MAKING OR GUARANTEEING
LOANS FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT OF COAL
TECHNOLOGY THAT WILL ENCOURAGE·THE USE OF
OHIO COAL, TO ANY INDIVIDUAL, ASSOCIATION, OR
CORPORATION DOING BUSINESS IN THIS STATE, OR TO
ANY EDUCATIONAL OR SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTION
LOCATED IN THIS STATE, NOTWITHSTANDING THEREQUIREMENTS, LIMITATIONS, OR PROHIBITIONS OF
ANY OTHER SECfiON OF ARTICLE VIII OR OF SECTIONS 6 AND II OF ARTICLE XII OF THE CONSTITU TION . THE AGGREGATE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF THE
MONEY BORROWED AND BONDS AND OTHER OBLIGATIONS ISSUED BY THE STATE PURSUANT TO LAWS
PASSED UNDER THIS SECfiON SHALL NOT EXCEED
ONE HUNDRED MILLION DOLLARS OUTSTANDING AT
ANY TIME. THE FULL FAITH AND CREDIT OF THE
STATE MAY BE PLEDGED FOR THE PAYMENT OF
BONDS OR OTHER OBLIGATIONS ISSUED OR
GUARANTEES MADE PURSUANT 1D LAWS PASSED
UNDER THIS SECT'ION.

Bookmobile route announced .
POMEORY - BookmobUe service In Meigs County is provided bY
t)le Meigs Crunty Public Library
·under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Llbrar1es.

There wUI bve no service on
Monday due to Columbus Day.
The schedule for Wednesday Is:
Tuppers Plains (Lndwlck's) 7:25
to 8: 10 p.m.; Riggscrest Addition,
8: 25 to 8: 55.

fries, salad, pears, mUk.
Friday - chlll, peanut butter
sandwich, carmi sticks,apple, mUk.

Meigs schools
POMEROY - In accordance
with the unlfonn school lunch
program of the Meigs Local School
District, the menu lor the week ri
Oct. 14 ls announced:
Tuesday - burritos with cheese
topping, corn, fruit, milk.
Wednesday - vegetable soup
with crackers, peanut butter sandwich, fruit , milk.
Thursday - pizza, peach halves,
snlckle doodle cookie, milk.
Friday- cooks' choice.

Plump shrimp. Filled with
crabm eat stuffing and a
delicate blend of herbs and
spices.
Served with:
• Rice or pmawes or corn
on the cob
• Shoney's All -You-CareTo- Eat Soup , Sal ad and
Fruit Bar.
• Grcciau bread
• Tangy cocktail sauce and
fresh lemon wedge. ·

AUCTION

ALL FOR ONLY

RUTLAND
CIVIC CENTER
OCTOBER 19

$5.49

7:00 P.M.
Something For Everyone

•

CO ESEE!

Introducing halian Nights at Shoney 's.
•
Mondar and Tuesdar. from 4:00 R· m. to I 0 :00 fl . m·.
Your choice of five pasta feasts :
·
• New Fettuccine with White Clam Sam e
• New Fettuccine Alfredo
• New Spaghetti with Marinara Sau er
• Spaghetti with Our Own Ori gin al Reu pc Sau.&lt; c·
and Mushroom Topping
• New Ital ian Sa mpl er • Fettucc mc w~rh a ge nerous
sampling of Clam , Alfrc&lt;lo anJ Marrnara Sauce
Served with
• Garli c Bread
• Shone{s better-than-ever aii -Y.o uca re-to-ear Sou p, Salad and Fru1t
Bar. Featuring Italian Tomat o
Soup and lots of ot her fresh new
surjJrises!

COME DRIVE &amp; COMPARE!
THE NEW '86 CHRYSLER, PlYMOUTH

LAWS PASSED PURSUANT TO THIS SECTION ALSO
MAY PROVIDE FOR THE STATE TO SHARE IN ANY
ROYALTIES, PROFITS, OR OTHER FINANCIAL GAIN
RESULTING FROM THE RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT.

. . ... ....

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF STATE

Representative Jack Cera
Representative Thomas W. Johnson
Senator Robert W. Ney

Phone 446·4124

Meigs county school menu announced

Coal is Ohio's most abundant natural resource. It's up to us ~o develop
efficie nt . economically-stimulating and environmentally acceptable
ways to usc it .
vm·E YES ON ISS UE I

JACKSON PII(.E · AT. 36 WEST

- laboratory and office strep screen

Zl"nltl 1. ~!l'• M.~.

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE No. I

ISSUE I
TEXT OF THE PROPOSED
CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

~31

306 North Second Avenue
Middleport, Ohio 46760
Phono(614)992 -3333

r.m.

(as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)

TUJ!SDAY •
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
meets at 7:30Tuesdayat the borneol
Libby Sayre.

starts Sunday at the Long Bottom
United Methndist Church, services
at 7:30p.m. through0ct.18; special
mu sic, Rev. Jim Stewart,
evangelist.

PT.PLEASANT,W.Va.-TheLa
SLINDEREUA
Leche League of Point Pleasant
Mary Lou Hawkins and Paula
. (lleets Monday at 7:30 p.m at the
. P ickens tied !or themostwe!ghi ,IQ.~.t,
home of Tammy McCormick, 410 • . ..,. " ' '· ' ' . .. '--'-----'
and KellyHawkins was runner-upat
WEDNESDAY
Cypress St., Point Pleasant. For
RIO GRANDE - OAGC fall the Wednesday night ~eetlng of
infonnatlon on the Point Pleasant
group to which Meigs County regional meets at Rhodes Hall, Rio Slinderella held at Five Points. At
mothers are Invited, Mrs. Matheny Grande College, Wednesday, begin - the Tuesday night Mason Class held
at the United Methodist Church,
ning with registration at 8:30 a. m.
may be reached at 675-4439.
Brenda Roush lost the most weight
and
there was a tk&gt; for runner-up
RACINE - OAPSE meets 7 p.m.
POMEROY -Meigs Chapter 53,
between
Judy Reed and Beth
Disabled American Veterans meet- Wednesday at Southern ljlgh
Weaver. Bobby Jo McClure lost the
ing, 6:30 p.m. Monday at chapter School.
_,_
most weight In the kJds class. Five
home, Butternut Avenue, Pomeroy.
new members were welcomed.
Revlvl\1 cootmues
LONG BOTTOM
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
provide jar and Ud. Above, Hazel McCiond, Ferndora
Revival r - - - - - - - - - - stOry; Eva Schrelver and Betty Maurer as"':sol In
peeUng :m bushels lo apples. Below, 'the open lire
cooldng L!! an all-day job using six copper·and brass
kettles.

.- Machine levels Cards' speedster

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATIONS, ARGUMENTS
AND RESOLUTIONS FOR AN AMENDMENT 1D THE
OHIO CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITIED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION NOVEMBER 5, 1985.

International Order ri. Job's Daughters, meet 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Middleport Masonic Temple.

SEE THE .NEW DODGE CARS &amp; TRUCKS!

I. Sherrod Brown , Secretary uf State, do ~rcby certify that the fmc~oing i!'
true copy of Amended Substitute Senate Jomt Resolution Nn. 2R. lilcd in the
ofricc of th e Secretary of State. propo~i ng to amend the Comtilulion Of Ohio
together with the ballot language and explanation cenificd to me by the Ohi&lt;~

il

$3.99

Cooper Chrysler Plymouth Dodge, Inc.

lklllot _Board und arguments for the umcndmcnt as submlllcd h)' the approprimc

commntcc.

'

399 S. 3RD 51.

IN TESTIMONY Wt:J EkEOF. I have hereunto subscribed my nume and affi xed my officirtl seal at Colu mbus th is 22nd da-y or August, 1985.
-

SERVICE HOURS

SHERROD BROWN,
S«retary of Sta~t

8:00-5:00

MON.-FRI.
I , .

"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992·6421 or 992·2594

WE IIAVE TilE CAR AND

Slll~!Y~
Dinner Table .

SALES HOUIS
8:00-8:00 Mon.-Thur.

.

8:00-6:00 Fri.
9:00·4:00 Sat.
t'

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Plga 8-The Deily Santinel

Public Notlot

\

Mondiy,' October 14, 1988

.

Business
tl)oakvr......,.ui•ICktor..
. Services
far fivl VII,.; ., ·' · · oiiiOUrltoquolto.
tt.o per- J--;...;;.
__;.____
Tho Polio far lilclllectlon
• P11bllo
'

'•

Notice
'

I

' ,

Public Notice ·

~:

MeiQoi
and · - of'
Ohio 1 CGuntv MfoloWI:
A tnMit of lind con!MIIntl tl3 wiR !IJI... 11 1 &gt;38 o'olo.ck A.' Of hlo bid. but in no -~­
c

. . .

M. and .' renilll~ · ilpen : unlll Wn lllty-.oond dollln, ar 1
7:30 c.'clock , P.M. of oold · bondfortonpw-ldhlobid.
doy.
.. ,• . pl'(lble lillho DlrciDr.
rnuot,opply. on tho
By order ~ tho Boo"' a1
Elocllono, of Meigl !orono. lor ..,.wtlcolllon
Coynty, Ohio. II IWI ..,. prior ID lho
.. Evtlyn l;:lork, Cholrmon """' Ill for opening bOlo In
occordonco with Cheplar
OoiOd October 1, 1885
Jono M. Frymyl¥, DlreciOr ' 15525 Ohio Revlood Code.
Plano end opocitlclllonl ire
(10) 7, 14, ~1 , 28, 41c
on · flle In 1he Doport.,.,l of
Trenooporiortlon end lho crlllce
of lhe Dlolrlcl Deputy
Public Notice
iooot I
OlnciDr.
A'.... ollho...,.,_....,.
Tht01roctor-1ho
'
bolng.w-.ct 1o C..rtoo Soyre NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON
rlgh!_
10 roioct ony and .. - TAX LEVY tN EXCESS OF
WARREN J. SMITH
flom
bolng· - HQmaotand...,.
to Chotta
THE TEN MILl
DIRECTOR
5oyre and E... loyoe by dood
LIMITATION
110) 7, 14, 2tc
In o..t Book 144, · NOTICE to .. rlby given
Poge 116 ol Mligo Oounly thel In purouonco of o Re ·
Dood"-.
ootulloil of the Vlllego Coun·
Public Notice
R.....,ca Dood: V'oomo ell oflho Village of Middle ·
220, - 813. Dood AI· port, Ohio. plouod on lho
~ Molgo Counly, Ohio.
8th doy of J,•ly. 1885,1horo NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
You ore notiflod lhot'I'IU.,. wltl be oubmlttod to 1 voie of' . TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
-iNd IO 1ho Cofn. tho pooplo of 11id Vlllogo oi
THE TEN MILl
ploinl · wllhln -ty·oighl Middleport at o Glll·oral
LIMITATION
dlvwlfW ... 1111
Elec11on lobe hold In 1111 VII·
NOTICE lo .. roby glvon
which will be ... _ _
.....e _ loge of Mlddloport,. Ohio, II lhll In purouonce of 1 Ro·
.................
1111 resulo• ptocoo of vollng oolution of l,he Boord of
-The ........... lhereln, on Tuoodoy, , .. Truotool of,.. Townohlp d
be mode on 1ho 41h doy of fifth dey of November.' o..ngo, Ohio, PI~ on 1..
- ...... . 1986, and lho 1985, lho quolllon of lovy.. fifth doy of Augull, 1886
-.tJ-olghl_..,. for - - ing. In ucaoo oft hi len milt there wHI be oubmlttod lo 1
llmilollon. for llio bonofll vi vole of tho people of Mid
wil OOIIII•tc:e on 1fwt elite.
In CIM of your flllure ID Current expenn.
Orengo Townohlp 11 1 Go·
Sold lol( being: an oddl· ' norol Etoctlon 10 be hold In
atiWII' or ~crtt.. ••• r-.poncl
• pormillld bylho Ohio Ruleo lionel Ilk of 1.0 miHo io run tho Townhlp of Orange,
of CMI Procod'" wllh flo for fivey•rt at • ·rate not ex· Ohio, 111.. regulor ploc11 of
caodlng 1.0 mllto for ooch voting thoreln, on Tuoodoy,
~by ono dollor of voluotion. lho liflh .doy of Novombor,
doloult
will be rondorod
...... you
lho ~ which omounlo to 10.10 1,985, tho queotlon of levy·
(lin conlo) for ooch .ono lng, In oxcaoo ollho len mill
domlftdod In lho Complolnl.
UrlyE.S..cor hundred dollo,. ofvoluollon. llmllldon. lor 1ha bonefll of
Clort&lt; of Courll, for five yuro .
Orengo Townohlp foe 1..
Meiga County, Ohio
Tho Polio lor oeld Etoctlon purpo11 of providing ond
will open 11 8 :30 o'clock A. moinlllnlng fire opporoiUo,
BY: Mootione Horrloon. M. ond remoln open until applloncoo, bulldlngo, ar
Deputy 7:30 o'clock P.M. of 111c1 tite1 therefor, or 10urcea ot
doy.
.
Vjollr oupply ond moiOnolo
(9! 30 (10) 7, 14, 21, 28(11)
By ordor of lhe Boord o1 tllorefor, or the oolobllah·
4,11c
Elocllono, of Molgo rnent end m1int••nce of
Couni\' •. Ohlo. llnoo of fire' olorm lologroph,
Evotyn Clorlc, Cholrmon or 1111 poymont of pormo·
Public Notice
Dllod Oclober 1. 1985
n.nt. pan-time, or volunt•r
- - - - -- ---·IJono M. Frymytt, Olroctor
firemen or flrfllghllng com·
ponloo lo oporaiO 1111 11mo
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON (10) 7, 14, 21, 28,, 41c
or to purcheH 1mbul1nce
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
oqulpmenl or lo provide omTHE TEN MILL
Public Notice
bulonco for firo flghllng
LIMITATION
comp1ny.
NOTICE II hlroby given
Sold tox .bolng: on oddl·
lhol In pursuance of o Ro- NonCE OF ELEcnON ON
TAX U:VY AND BONO
llonollox of 1.0 4nlllolo Nn
ootullon of tho Vlllogo Coun·
ISSUE FOR SOUTt£RN
for live yoere 111 fote nolox·
ell of 1.. Vlttogo of Roclno.
IDCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT ceodlng 1 .0 mlllo far eoch
Ohio, poiNd on t .. 6th doy
Notlcolo ..reby Qlvenlt.t one dotlor of voluotion .
pi Auguol, 1881, .there wiH
t&gt;~rouont 10 1 ,..,lullon of whlcll omounto 10 •0.10
be oubmlttod to 1 vote ollhl
poopto of ooid Roclno Vllloge tho Boord of Educallon of tho liOn , oonll) lor ooch one
11 o Gonorol Etocllon ID be Soulhom LO..I School Oil· ·hundred dollo,. of voluollon ,
hold in 1.. VHioge oi-Roclna, lrlct, odoptod on 1111 81h dOy for fivo Y• re.
Auguot, 1886, ,lho,. wll
Thl Polto for oeld Election
Ohlo.llthl resulor ploc11 of of
bo
oubrnltlod
IO o VOio of tho wilt open 11 8:30 o'dock A.
vollng lhoreln, on Tuoodoy,
tho fifth doy of Novombor, oloclort of Hid School Oil· M. ond Nmoln open unlll
1986, tho quolllon of levy· \'kl•llho gen.,.leleo11on lo 7:30 o'clock P.M. of nld
lie hlld ,lhlreln on Tueodoy,
lng, In
oil .. ton mill November 5, 1886. out. ,., doy.
By ordor of tho Boord of
llmltlllon, lor tho benollt of
Electiono, of Molgo
Raclno VHioge for 1he .., r· gulor plocao cit voting lhor·
Counly, Ohio.
po• of currant 11penae. , oln, lho following CJ~IIIIono
Evelyn Ctorlo, Cholrmon
Sold Ilk being 1 ronowol ao • olngto propoul:
1. Tho quolllon ofluulng Doled Oclober 1, 1985
of on oxlortlng tox of 3.0 mllto
bondo
of oeld Boord of Edu- Jono M. Frymytt. Director
to run for five v•ra •t 1 rete
co~n lor 1ha purp- of j10) 7. 14, 21, 28, 4tc
not oxcaodlng 3.0 mlllo for
•ch one dol lor of voluollon, conllrucllng o now ote. .nocho(!l, odmlnlltrodvt
which omounll 10 •o.30 llry
Public Notice
canlor.
ond buo goreso end
(thirty cenlo) for ooch oni
onlo~lng, renovodng, rehe·
hundred
dollaro
ofvoluotion
blllloting, remodotlng, Im- NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
for five yMrl.
The Polio lor uld Eloclion proving, oddlng to, fumloh, ·TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
ng and .equipping uiltlng
THE TEN MILL
will open •• 1 :30 o'clock A. tchool
f1cllhle1, and acquWM. and rilm~~ln open until
LIMITATION
Ing
ond
Improving
ochool
7:30 o'clock P.M. of oold
NOTICE It horoby tlven
litea in 1n 1mount aufticient th1t in pursuance of 1 Re·
doy.
By ordor of tho Boord d lo raloo 1111 not bonded ln- oolutlon of- 1.. Boord of
of 1111 Southern Trull•• olthl Townohlp of
Elecllono, of-.Molgo doblodnoll
Counl\'. Ohio Locol School Dlotrlcl to · RUIIond, Molgo Counly,
Evelyn Clark, Chairmen . within five lhou•nd dolloro Ohio, pouod on lho 26th
of percenl oflhl tollt doy of July. 1986, thoro will
Doted October 1. 19e5
voluo of oil property In llld bo oubmiHod to 1 voto ollhl
Jono M. Frvmyw, Director
School Olotricl 11 lilled ond pooplo of Mid Townohlp of
,110) 7, 14, 21, 28, 4tc
for tnation on the RUIIond, Ohio, 11 1 Gonorol
... dupllcota lor tho y•l Elocllon to be hold In tho ;,.
1886. wtolch omount 1o •• gulor plocoo of vollng 1..,.
Public NotiCe
timiltod to be U,t598.000. oln, on Tueodly, tho flflh
The mo•lmum number of
dey of November, 1986.
during which ooid tho quoltlon of levying, In
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF bondo oro to run II IWIIniY· oxce11 of I hi len milt II milo·
three YMrt. The eltirr.ted tion. lor 1.. benofk of RutTHE TEN MIU
tverage addition•l tea
LIMITATION
lend Townohlp for 11oa pur·
NOTICE lo hlroby givon , _ lho lln·mlll Nmlto· poa of preven11on, control.
th1t in pur1u1nce of 1 Rt- lion lo pay 1.. principal and
and abatement of 1ii"pollu·
ootullon of the VHioge Coun• lottorelt of ouch bondo. 11 lion.
ell of , .. Vllloge of Middle· cartlfied by tho Counly Aud~
Sold . IIX being In odd I·
port, Ohio, pallid on lho lOr. 111.18 milia for •ch one llonot lox of 1.16 mllloto run
dollor
of
voluotion,
which
8th doy of July, 1885.1..,.
for flvey•ra•t I rite not ••·
will be IUbmlttod 10 IVOIO of omounll 10 11.9 conu lor ceodlng 1. 15 mlllo for eoch
••h
one
hundred
doltro
of
1ho pooplo of llid Mlddr.ort
ono dollar of votuotion,
Viles_e II I Gen.... Eloolion volultlon; ond
which omounlo In f0 .11 Yo
2. Tho quootion oflhl tovy lolovon end 'h oonll) lor
to be hold In 1.. Vllleso of
'Middleport, Ohio, otlhl re- of on oddtionot I~&gt; outoide •ooch one hundred dollore of
gulor ploceo of voting lhlr· of tho ten-mltlllmltotion lor Vllultlon, for five y.ro.
lin, on Tueodey, lhlllhh doy tho 101rpo11 of poylng tho
Tho Polio for uld Etoction
of November.' 1986, tho coorto of purchaolng --•lo• will open 11 6:30 o'clock A.
•oom
flcllltloo
from
,
..
quootlon of levying, In
M. ond remoln open until
lkCIII of the ten mllllimill· Stoll of Ohio II 1111 1111 of 7:30 o'clock P.M. of altd
tion, lor 1he benofll of Ro· ..,....If mill lor oech ono dey.
cine Vlltogo for !flo purpooe doUor of YIIUI~n exe»pl
By ordor of the Boord d
lhel In thooo yoero In which
of recrNiionol purpooeo.
Electlono. of Mllgo
Sold tu being on oddl· 1111 lu rote lor dobl •rvlce
County, Ohio
llonol tax of 1.0. mill to run oullido 1111 lln ' mlll llmlto·
Evelyn Clorlt. Chelrmon
for five v•n 11 1 rata not ex- lion lo looe lhon 1hr10 ond · Doted October 1, 1986
ceeding 1.0 mlllo lor oech ono·hllf mllto, tho "rolo ohell Jono M. Frymytt, Dlroclor
ono dotlor of votuodon. be lncreolld ID I!Jol roll 110) 7. 14, 21, 28, 4tc
which omounll lo •o. 10 which 11 tho dlflorence bel·
lttn cents} for •ch one - · four mllto ond lho llx
Public Notice
hundred dollore of voluolion, 'rote for dobt oorvlco outolda
1111 ten·mlll tlmlto~n. unlll
for fiYI Y•rt.
Tho Polio lor llld Elaclion 1ha purcheM prlco lo paid,
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
will opon ol8:30 o'clock A. bUI In no ceoo longer thon
TAX LEVY tN EXCESS OF
M. and ren11ln open until - l y·throo y•ro.
THE TEN MILL
Tho
polio
tor
•ld
oloctlon
7:30 o'clock P.M. of oold
LIM11ATION
wll) be opon 11 1 :30 • •m..
doy.
NOTICE
lo ..roby · glvon
By ordor of tho Boord of and remoln opon until 7:30 lhol In . ~urouonco of • Rop.m.,
ol111d
doy.
Elocliono, of Melgo
oolullon of 1.. Council of
By ordor of tho Boon! of tho
Counl\'. Ohio
Vlllego of RUIIond. Ohio,
Elocliono
of
Evelyn Clork, Choirmen
pallid
on tho llh doy d Au·
flloigo County, Ohio
Doted Oclober 1, 1985
gull. 1185 thoro will be oub·
Evolyor
Clorlo
Jono M. Frymytt, Dlroclo•
IO e YOlO of tho piO·
Chelrmon mlnod
(10) 7, 14, 21, 28, 41c
plo ohold Rutland Vltloge II
..ld
Jono M. Frvmyer, Dlroclor oGonoroiEioctlonlobe
In lt\o Vllloge of Rullond,
Public Notice
Ootod:' October 1. 1985
Ohio, ott.. ragulor ploceo of
(10) 7, 14, 21 , 3tc ,
voting therein, on Tu-y,
tho fifth dey of Novombor.
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
Public Notice
1986, tho queotlon oflovy ·
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
lng, In oxcaoo oflhlten milt
THE TEN MILL
llmlto~n. lor 1ho bonoflt of
NOTICE' TO
LIMITATION
Rutlond
Vtltogo for tho' pur·
CONTRACTORS
NOTICE to ..roby givon
poll of goneril conortNC·
STATE OF OHIO
thlt In purauance of 1 At·
tlon, roconllructlon, roour·
DEPARTMENT OF
oolullon of 1.. Boord of
toeing, ond repolr of olrMII,
TRANSPORTAnON
Tru1t111 of tho Townohlp o1
roodo, ond bridgooln munlc ·
Columbul, Ohio .
Chlllor, Ohio, polled on
lpal corporollono, counltoo,
Stplornbor 27, 1886
tho 131h doy of Augull,
or townllolpo.
c..,... 1111oo Logot
1985 thoro will be oubmil·
Sold Ilk being: an oddl·
CGt&gt;v No. 86·914
ted lo o vole of 1.. peopto of
llonollox of 1.8 millllo Nn
UNIT PRICE
11ld Chlotor Townllolp ot o
CONTRACT
Genoral Eloclion 10 be hold
forlivoyoorootorolonoto•·
caodlng 1.5 mlllo lor NCh
In lho Townohlp vi Chootor,
'""""
.......
bo
Ohio, 111111 resulor pllcu of - · l h o - o f l h o ono dotlor of volullion,
voting lhoroln. on Tuoodoy. OlnciDr of lho Ohio Dop... whlc~ tme&gt;Unll lo .0.15
c:enll) (or Nch one
tho fifth doy of November, . . - of Tr_.......,, eo. lflltotin
hundred dotlorobfv-'uollon,
Ohio, untl 10:00 for
19B6, the quoltlon of lovy·
llvo YMrl.
lng, In oxceoo of 1.. len mill · A.M.. Ohio Silo oolth'CI 11me.
The Polio lor Mid Etoctlon
llmltotlon, lor tho benoflt d Tuoodoy. OciObor 22. 1986, will open II 1:30 o'clock A.
C.. oter Townohlp for lh
Ooltlro ond Mligo Counlloo, M. ond remeln opon until
purpo11 of molnloinlng ond
7:30 o'clock P.M. of Mid
Ohio. on Vlflouo IOUIII end do
oporotlng comellrlao.
Sold tok being: o ronowol ucllcino by guordrolt
Yay ardor of tho Boord"*
of on oxlltlng Ilk of 0 . 40 .-ollrucdon.
Elecllono, of Mol go
Work Longlh - 17.21 mlloo.
mil' to Nn lor fivo Y•,. oil
' County, Ohio.
"T
..
dote
Ill
lor
"'mpllllon
••• nol ••caodlng 0.40
Evolyn Ctorlo, Chokmen
mlllo lor Nch ono dollar of of thlo ..... be • Ill Ootod October I, 1115
vo.tuodon, which omoun111o forth In ... blddlna poopoool...
Eocll blddor .... be roquiNd Jono M. Frymyor, Director
,tour conto lor ooch ono
)
hundred dollore vlvetuotlon, to flo with hlo bid • cordftod 110 7 ' 14 ' 21 ' 21 ' 4 tc
ICI'II. baundlll N .......
• followo:
l.pco-.1 In 180 ..,. Lot No.
11931n lho Nrialll_,.,
and boundld on lho nonh by
1ho ....... line of180 ..... Lot
No. 1182; on lho lilt by 1ho
_,hof1,8701Crel.otNo.·
1180; on 1ho lOUth by lho
IIndo o1 WiCicln • Bum. and
on lho by IIndo vi Bunt.
coooloWntf 83 ocroo. ...,re or

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We ~an repair and re·
core · radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil--and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

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

oon.,.,...

·-dod

carrying out a theme, ''llallhe Bobcals", featured
the w&amp;gplg bobcallall alter II had been tamed by the

WINNING FLOAT - 'This neallloat planned and
; Jilade by seniors of Southern High School won llrst
• · place honors among the annual parade entries for the

Sou&amp;hem Tornadoes.

1loutbem High Homeeomlng Friday. The float

.T

Area deaths

·"•'

.

'

·Arthur C. Atherton

_. Arthur C. Atherton, 76, died
'"'Saturday evening at his residence,
RDute 2; CoolvUie.
- - Mr. Atherton was born at Eaton,
W. Va.,asonoftbelateByronG.and
.ldaMaeRDbtnsonAtherton.Hewas
..' a retJred carpenter and had been a
· mldent of the Alfred Community
·'since 1919. He was a member of the
Alfred United Methodist Church for
· :·-34 years and was a member of
• -'Carpenters' Local356, Athens,for40

lock Grove Cemetery, Friends may
call at the fUneral home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and imw
time of .~ernces on Wednesday.

ments were made by the Jagersand
Sons Funeral Home In Athens.

Lula Phillips

E. wvey Stanley
I

Mrs. E. Lovey Stanley, 78, o1Gold
Ridge Rd., Rt.4, Pomeroy died
Sunday evening at the home of her
son, Joseph J. Stanley, after a long
Illness.
Born In Meigs County, Mrs.
Stanley was a daughter of the late
years.
- Survlv!ngarea sonanddaugbter· Elva and Elizabeth Hartung Welch.
Surviving are asonanddaugb!er·
( Jn.law, Clarence and Lucille Ather·
: ion, Long Bottom; a daughter and In·law, JosephJ.and Ida M. Stanley,
Rt. 1, Shade; two grandchlldren,
:. lOll· In· law, Wilma Jean and Ernest
Wllllam S. Stanley, Rt. 1, Shade;
~- 'jBud) VIneyard, Reedsville; two
Mrs.
Terry (Nancy) Dillie, Ames; sisters. Fannie Barnhill and Pearl
ville;
a sister, Mrs. Beatrice
. ·:Willlams, both of Guysville; fou r
Milligan,
Athens; two brothers,
· I!J'SIIdchlldren, and four greal·
Frank E. Douglas, Harrtsonvllle;
; "IJ'8lldchlldren.
Preced1ng h1m 1n death besides Raymond Welch, Athens; and
his parents were h1s wife of 50 years, several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was
' Ollie Taylor Atherton who died In
: J~. this year; three brothers, preceded In death by her husband,
.•_. Cynls, Vincent and Ray, and a Joe Stanley and a brother, Earnie
Welch.
· Sister, Ruth.
There wUI be no vtsttatnn or
Sernces will be held at 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the bwh!te Funeral fUneral service. In lieu of flowers
:· Home 1n Coolvllle with Rev. Don contributions may be made to the
., , Archer and Rev. Richard Thomas Meigs County Chapter of the
·: !tf1clatlng. Burlalhw!ll be In Hem· American CancerSoclety. Arrange·

Lula PhUI!ps, 65, Snowville, died
Saturday evening at the Holzer
Medical Center.
BornlnRedCampbell, W. Va.,she
was the daughter of the late Louts
and F1orence GUbert Greenhill.
She Is suiV!ved by her husband,
Orville Phllllps; six sons, Earl and
Wetzel, both of Snowville; Orvllle
Lee of Albany; Eugene and Paul,
PagevWe, and V!rgll r:J Columbus;
two daughters, June Mayes, Pomeroy, and F1orence Couchte, Beverly
Hills, F1a.; 19 grandchildren, lour
great-grandchildren, lwo half·
brothers, Milton Greenhill and Red
Bryant, both of Logan, W. Va.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by three children,
one grandchild, three sisters.
Sernces w1ll be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Bogany-Jordan
Funeral Home In Albany. The Rev.
John Evans w!ll officiate, and burtal
w!ll be In the Wells ·Cemetery at
PagevWe. The famlly w!ll receive
friends at the fUneral home !rom2to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today.

? PREGNANT?

tar

_llo..tts in 30 MinUiosl

10011103

RUTLAND
CIVIC CENTER .
Mon. &amp; Fri. 1- 4 pm
T1111 &amp; Thurs. 7·9 pm

PH. 742·2629

10110/1 mo. pd.

IENIIITT'S MOilLE &amp;
MANUflCTUIID HOUSING

PHONE 992-2156
Or Wrilt Dailly S.ntifltl CIISI1hld OtJI.
Il l Court Sl .. POfiiiiOJ. Ollio 45"~

.
~

Public Notice
·. NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY tN EXCESS OF
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE to .. roby given
. 11oa1 In purouonca of 1 Re·
, •.,lullon ol lho Boon! of
,, T........ oft.. Townohlp of
,.Qivo, Ohio, ptolld on the
.'4111 dey of Auguol, 1986,
llooro wll be oubmltted to 1
••.vota oft.. peopto of 11id 01·
1vo Townohlp It 1 Genorol
. Etocdon 10 be held In tho
":.l-nthlp of Olivo, Ohio, ot
.r11w ragulor ploceo of voting
-roln, on Tu-y, the
filth dly
of November,
11ea. 1ha quoltion of levy·
.• lilt• In oxcaoo of lhe len mill
•.tlmllo~n. lor tho benoflt of
Olivo Townohlp lor lhe pur·
pow of provldlngond molnl·
'illnlng flrl apporaiUo, appll·
. '11111111, bulldlngo, or ohoo
.~for, or eourcaa of water
:.opply ond molorialo thort·
lor. ortheoltlllllthrnontend
-rulnt•ance of lines of fire
.111orm tolegroph, or lhe PlY·
-niord of pormonont, part·

·=II

tlrnl, or volun111r flrem1n or

fire llghllng componleo to
.oper- lhe llrnl or ' to
ombulonce -.u;p.
'· · ~ or to provkle ambu·
o or ornorvoncv medical
*vlc11 oporoting by o lire
:,)IIP"rtmonl or flro fighting
oompany .
Sold tox being: en oddl·
.•llonollox of Yo mllllo run for

".five v•n at • rate not ex·

·;....tng 1h mills for •eh one

' clollor of votuo~n. wloich
omounto to 10.06 llivo
qanll)lor ooch ono hllndrod
doljo,. of voluotion. lor five

....

)

Tho Polio lor oold Eleclion

wilt- 11 8:30 o'clock A.
, ... ond remoln open unlll
'7:'3o o'clock P.M. of oold

· order oflhe Boord of
•!#"Y
.By
·

Eloctlono. of Molgo
'1
Counl\'.· Ohio.
Evelyn Clark, Cholrmon
.DJOtlld Oclober 1. 188&amp;
J- M. Frvmytt. Olroctor
'110)7, 14. 21 . 28 , 4tc

..

Public Notice

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
•'.
THE TEN MILL
'•
LIMITATION
'"' NOTICE to hereby g_\llon
•lhot In purouonco of 1 Ro·
.,lullon of 1111 Boord of
,TNII•I of 1111 Townllolp of
Columbia, Molt• County,
'Ohio, pootod on the lith doy
lrf A"'lull. 188&amp;. lhore wHI
be oubmlttod lo o vole of,..
pooplo of 11id Columblo
-• Townllolp ot 1 Genorol Elec·
tlon to be hold In 1.. Town·
ohlp of Columblo, Ohio, 11
tho ragulor ploceo of vollng
lhereln. on Tuoodly, , ..
llfllo dly
of Novombor,

Public Notice
1985, tho queltion of levy·
ing, In oxcaoo oflhoten mill
limitation, for the benefit of

Columble Township lor tho
purpoot of providing ond
mtlntainlng fire apparatus,

applilnces.

buildinga. or

litea therefor , or eourcea of
water auppty and matariala

Public Notice

Public Notice

- - - -- - - - - 1:--~:-:--:::--:-:-~lonce or emergency medical known: M11. Glenn H. tHor·
tnd Glenn H.
oervlceo oporoled by 1 fire kina) deportment or lire flghllng Holler, hor huobend. whooe
compeny.
Jolt known oddr- woo 4490
Said llx being 1 ronowal Lohm Drive, Turkey Foot
olon oxlotlngtu of 'h lnilllo llloncl Club. R.D. No. 4.
runlorfivoyooreotorollnol Akron, Ohio 44319. odd,_
exceeding 'h miU1 for uch

now unknown; K1thryne

one doller of valuation,
Holler wtoo• lilt known od·
thttofor, or tho ootoblloh· wloich omounll to 10.011 dreu w• 4490 lohm Orivo.
ment and mtintenance of lflve c:enll) · lor ooch ono Turkl'( Footllloncl Club, R.O.
linea of fire alarm telegr..,h, hundred dotloro ofvoluotlon, No. 4, Akron, Ohio 44319,
·
oddr- now unknown, · i
or lho peymonl of pormo · for five yooro.
nent, pan-time. or volunt.. r · The Polio for oold Election living, end W ctoc uorl lho
and odd,_ of firemen or tire fighting com- will open 11 6:30 o'clock·A. ponloo 10 -rote 1.. 11me M. end remoln open until of tholr unknown hllro, dlvior to purchue ambulance 7:30 o'clock P.M. of oold - · ..- . odmlnlllralore end ooalgno •• unknown;
oqu lp,.nl or to provide om· doy.
By order of 1111 Boo•d of end of Miry C. McKay, Ki11y
bulance or emergency medl ·
Electlono, of Moigo McKay, Chlrlone ·
~:~1 ..rvicea operating by 1
County, Ohio Morv K. McKay, Awl• Hoyfire deportment or lire flghl·
Evelyn Clorlt, Chairman men, Uno J . Burlingame. J.
ing company.
Angoh Bunlngomo. A. J .
Said tax. 'being: 1 renawal Ootid October 1, 1985
(A,.-) Buninglme. Ango·
of o port of o 2.0 mlllaxlltlng Jono M. Frymyer, Oiroclor
linl Burllngomo. Goorvo Bur·
lovy, bolng 1 reduction of (10) 7, 14, 21 , 28 , 410
1.0 mllllo conltitultollkof - --:=-:--::--:-:-- : - - -1 llngomo, John c. McKoy, Lin I
1.0 mill to run for fivo yoers
Public Notice
Poden, Uno J . - · Vlctlorio
at 1 rate not exceeding 1 .0
--~-----I E. Mcfeddon. E. Poden, Eloon
Podon. Mortho Podon. Eph·
mlllo for 01ch ono dotlor of
rolm J. Soyre. Mln ... Soyoe,
valuttlon, whk:h amount• to
IN THE
10.10 (ten cento) lor oech
COMMON PL£AS COURT, Thornoe T. Hopklno, Homon E.
Hopklno, Etlzlbolh Hoplclno,
one hundred dollore of
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Hopklno, Adlllo Hopvaluation, for five v•ra.
FREDERICK J . ST08ART.
kino. Amondo Hopklno,' WI·
The Potlo lor uid Eloction
Plolnllll•
11om Hopkinl, DIVId Hoptolno.
will opon ot 1:30 o'clock A.
M. ond remoln open until FRANKUN McKAY ond 00· Levi Hopiclno, Alfrod Hoplclno.
7:30 o'clock P.M. ol sold ROTHY McKAY, hit wHo. ort R..,. Hopkinl. Floyd Hoplclno.
Jamoo H. Porr, Slnoh Poor.
doy.
ol.
Spon- ~. Morv C.
By ordor of tho Boord d
Delondorrto.
Haymon, Vlceo McF-. J .
Eloctlono, of Meigo
CASE NO. 86-CV-147
D. McFoddon, Olivo HaymM,
Counl\'. Ohio.
- NOTICE BY
Ezro C. Haymon. M- E.
Evolyn Clorlt, Chairmen
PUBUCAnONOotid October I , 18e5
·
To F - McKay end Soyro, Jamoo Alhworth, Nil·
.,n Pod.,, Jomoo B. Aoh·
Jane M. Frymyer, D irector
Dorothy McKoy, hlo - · worth, Warrick Haymon. Mor·
110) 7. 14. 21 . 28 , 4tc
..._.IOI!knownodd,__
Mlomi, Florido. 33100, od· rick Haymon, Robocco Shdraa
now untlno"'-"1; Mn1. Molindo Hell, l-11oymon.
Public Notice
Orvilo J . (McKay) ll1d llloc P.,, lno Poor, Ire Pen,
Orvilo J , Bellio. hor huobond, Lolli Poor, Cothoorine flank.
NOTICE OF ELECTION ON ..._.lootknownodd,__ H - Poor, Anthony Porr,
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF 46 e..t 9th Sl&gt;'lll. Now York Wm. H. P•.and Joooph Parr,
City, N.Y., 10003, odd.- H living. odd- unknown,
THE TEN MILL
llOW IOiknown; Hoomore Cho· and H d« I I Tid the n8111• lnd
LIMITATION
NOTICE lo hlroby given riH McKoy whoul .. lllown ~ of of their
that in pur1u1nce of 1 Rt- odd.- wu P~ond. Conn. unknown loolfo. . - . -......
IDiution of the B01rd of 06480. oddreoo now ..,. utort. odnolnlobwiOro and II·
Tru11111 of 1111 Townohlp of known; John Claro McKay ll1d . . . . . dofondorrto, wilt .....
Olivo. Ohio. paotod on tho Muriel Aotoford McKay, hlo nolico lhll on lho 3rd doy of
flflh doy of August, 1985, wile, wllooo lilt kno""' od· Juno. 1885, frecorlclo J .
there will be oubmlttod 10 1 dre11- WOiheiollold, Conn. 8-rt. M t&gt;lolntllf, ftlod I
vole oflhl pooplo of uid 01· 06109 . oddre11 now un- Cornplolm 111111nort you ;, tho
lvo Townohlp 11 1 Genorol known; l.olll McKoy whoso Molgo Counly Common Pltoo
Election to be hold In tho loll """""' oddr- woo Fllr· Court. Pomeroy, Ohio, C111
Townohlp ol Olivo, Ohio ot mont. Wilt Vlrglnlo, 28664, No. 86-CV-147, de-ilg
tho resutor ploco of voting edclr.- mw unknown: Mlblo lhll plolnlllf, Frodorick J .
thoroln, on Tutodoy. tho (McKay) Hortdno whooe lilt Stobort. bo odjudicmd ...
fifth doy of November.
1n Olk· OWl* In flo llmplo, lnctodlng
1881, tho quolllon of lovy· Awnuo, Aleron. Ohio, oil and 1111 and •• lng. In oxceu of 1111 ten mill 44302, oddreoo now un· mlnnlo tiCOp1 cool In ...
llmltotion, for tho bonollt of known: Chorlto S. Soyre end horolnlflor doo,...... rill lit·
Olivo Townohlp for 1111 pur· Elon P. Soyre, huobend and ..., lhlt vou. .. - -..
poll of providing ond molnt· wile. whooo .... """""' od· be required to Mt up 1ny
olnlng tiro opjloraiUo. oppll· --ROUII2, Roclno, . , _ or you moy
oncoo, buildlngo. or 11110 Ohio 46n1 , odd- now clolm In flo horolnoftw doo·
...tonown; Mrs. Floyd W. crlbod rool- vr be...,_
therefor~ or IOUf'c.l of Wlter
oupply ond moteriolo thtro· Hortdno w and Floyd w..... birr• flom •• ta"U .ne;
for, ortheootobllohmenl end hor huobond , whooo toot
bo
IIIIo 10root
lho ollotl
·- ·
1988 deocrlbod
molnllnonco of llneo of flro known .._
olorm lotograph, or 1111 pay· Edgomont Rood, Coombul. CJ~iolod In plolnl!ff, FrodorickJ.
nwnt of permanent, Plrt· Ohio 43212. odd- now 8-rt ond lor .ouolo time. or voluntNr firemen or orinown; M....,o W IHor· reltol .. moy be - I n low
fire flghling componloo lo kina) whole loll ·"""""' od· or oquily, Including plalndll'o
oporo• tho oome or to dnao 1881 Edgornonl COOU.to-wit
Rood
,
Columbuo,
Ohio
purchtll ombulonco -.ultJ·
The following ... ment or to provide embu- 43212. oddreoo now un· In t.llrt T........._,,

c-

.....

known--

Ill.....,
tar,,...._,.. .,,

l

lj

'

107

t

Sycamore St., Pomeroy,

Oh.

PHONE 992-7075
No rr'" ,)ttel'''t'ntf
' 3 All o~
r
Mel6,)tfll ounfl/1

t.

I

..

-

-

t

e

tJnd

liU/'/'O

q

,)

A•ea
r

~

.1'

,j

UQq/n6

-&amp;
~

q 9/ 20/1

Ji m~]~~~::J~~~~~;·nl••·

ANGIE'S
PIZZA
" 12
of

R 124 s
t.
, yracuse, Oh.

Varieties

FREE Orignial Cabbage Patch Doll

WANTED TO BUY used
wood • coal hoatero .

Pizza"

:w~:~~ s~u~~,\T,'!~~-t~i
8

*SUBS *SANDWICHES
*LASAGNA *SPAGHETTI

"Register To Win"
OurChristmasToysAreln
Cars. D611s, Guns &amp; Much More
Gifts For Mom, Dad &amp; Everyone
10% Down Will Hold For Christmas Gifts
Shop Early and Sa
ve liJ.-3·1 mo.

349 N.

614·446· 3159 .
Went to buy manuel lire
changer . Call 614 · 266 ·
6261 .

2nd

Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-3559
Under New Management (formerly Giovanni's)
9-20·1 mo .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

Cl

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

Ann ounee111 enls
3

z

a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEED S
Reside•tial &amp; Commercia l
Coli:

:z:

z (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601

-

992·5875 Or
742-319 5

delivery, Devl1 Vacuum
Cleaner, one h1lf mile up

411 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

8-8- lfc

Georgoo Creek Rd .
814·446-0284.

Heat Pumps, Fum aces

Howard

L.

Writesel

ROOFING
~EW-REPAIR
Guitar! · Downspouls
Guuer Cleaning
Painling
FREE ESTIMATES

HUDNALL

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING
317 Norlh 50&lt;ond
l'lliddleporl, Ohio 45760

SAL~S

&amp; SERVICE

W e Also Carry

Fishing S upplies .
BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6SSO
RESIDENCE PHONE
{6 14) 992 -7754
1'? ? !It

949-2263
or 949-2969

4/29/tln

TOwN a·COUNIIY
VETDINAIIAN
CLINIC
PcM E. SMeby, DVM
Pl. PUASANT OFFKE
3305 Jackson Atrt.
SlUI1 AIIMJII.IIOIIIS
Mort ••wtti.-Thwo. 3-5
Tut1. 6:30·1; Fri. 1·2 PM

Sattrnlay 10·11:30 AM

- Addons and remodeling

- Roofing and gutter work
- Co ncret e w ork
- Pl umbing and electrical
work

(Free Estimaws)

YOUNG Ill
992- 621 5 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

V. C.

6111·61~1·6235

.

J&amp;F

CONTRACTING

5-7-1

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTER S FOR
• ZENITH
• SnYANIA
• SPEED QUEEN IAUND RI

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE

hb so lutcly the
Be st Al1 qnment
Mon In Ihe i\1 en .
Complrtr Cor
\rHICr, lube Job1,
Ool ChonqP,
Tune -U11S, Bruke
Jobs, Mufflrrs
Toy us, \'Jr wn do

11 l1c1tro.

MGM
FARM CITY
SERVICE STATION
991 -9932

W• Hue~ fill Time
Shop Tachniciu
en Du11
RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPLIAN CE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 9, 1985, In
lhe Molgo Coun1y Probate
Court, Cooo No 24 91 5
WorloyA, Rife, R.' o . 1: Mid :
dloport, Ohio 45780, weo
appointed Admlnlotrotor of
tho lltoto of Hull E Rift
docooood, loto of R · o 1'
Middleport, Ohio 4&amp;780. '
Robort E. Buck
'so.. d
' Probote Judgo
,.no by
Corolyn 0 . Tho moo
(101 .:!:1. 21 , 28, 3tc
Public Notl'ce
' ---~:;;-;=-=-=-I
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
0 0c
"
Iober 7, ·1 986 In
tho Meigo Counly Probcoll
Court, Cooo No. 24803
Aundeno Whoiolor, R. D. 1.
Oekttt, Ohio 467211 Wllap:
polfltodAdmlnlllretoroftho
ootoiO of Floyd o . Cloland
decoolld, lito ol 33eui
Do•ltt Rood. Box 118. Rutlind, O)llo 45775 .
R L-- E
o..... · Buck.
Signod b : Probeta Judge
c orolyn 'l
G. Thomoo
(10) 14, 21 , 2B, 31c

614· 742· 3147 or 6,14· 992·
6005 .
PIANO TUNING ANO RE·
PAIR , back to school disco unts , free eat imltll,

Wanted someone to stay
with oldory ladies. room. II&lt;
board &amp; small salary. Full

time. C.ll614· 446·2639 .

304-676· 4 1 64. Mowrey's
Upholoterv .

The DownUnder Rest . is
taking application fo r kit·
chen help , int e rv iew
Nquired .

Real Estat e

C.retaker to livo·in, Re· 31 Homos for Sale
gency Inc .. Pt. Ple11ant. Call - - - - - - - - - 304·676·6104 .
3 bedroom full basement,
eat- in kit c hen , c arport,

Baby1 itter refe ren ces. t ranaportetion, Bidwell School

$2 ,600 • toke ovor PIV·

Olotricl. Ca ll 614 -446 ·
7668.

menta, Plantl Subdivision.
Call 8 14· 446-1360.

Eoooy Ao10mbly Work I $600 .
per 100. Guaronteed pay·

4 bdr . house on 326 In Rio

oal11. Details oond self -

Every Sunday, beginning at

lddreued stamped enve-

1:00 p.m. Foctorv Choko12

lopa: Elon Vital-716 3418

Grande . Call 814 -246-68.23
or 814-446 -5345.
Beautiful view of Ohio River.
12 year old single family

bHevel home. Brick ond

Enterpri•e Rd .. Ft. Pierce. Fl

eppllcento for a Varolty

frame on 2 .9 acrea.'· 3
bedroom, 2V2 batht. Fireplace tn living and family
rooma. Two-car ~~rage . City
school di1trict in ~lay Twp .
5JA miles south from Gelli·

BaNball Coach and an A•·
siatan t Var1ity Softball

A11umable· fixed 9% loan.

33482.

73-80 Chnw Tr.

73 -79 Ford Tr.

73 ·80 Cht•w Tr.
Door s ......................... 'IOO
73 ·80 Chnw. Tr.
Hood! ......................... IISO
73 -14 &lt;ht•l Tr.
lumprn .,e................ $70
73-79 Chn(Tr.
G1iiiH ..................... 138.50
73 -79 Chn,. Tr .
Rocker Panol1 ...............
73 -79 Ch"l· lr.

73 -79 Ford Tr.
Doon ......................... t135
80·85 Ford Tr.
Doon .........................$145
11-79 Ford Tr. ·
Grills ..................... SSZ.SO
80·15 Ford Tr.
Hoods ....:................... 114l
83 -ll Ford Ranger
Hood1 ......................... •130
83·85 Ford Rongor"

ftnd t n ......................... '48

SHADE, ..OHIO

Anything That Has To Do With A
Mobile Home .
No Job Too Small or Too Big.
We Do Setups .and Underpinning
" Special Rates For Senior Citizens"

•zs

Fendtrl .........................' 48

Cab (orntrs ..................S20
Grillft ...........................175
Nt w and Used Auto Glau - Lote Model Parts

WHALEY'S AUTO PARTS

PHONE (614) 992·6100

9-13-Hn

Croll Shop, Third Sl., Ra·
clno. Ohio. Endo Sotunloy
12th. OMC flou 4· 11 .00 .
Savel
Neodod Immediately: 100

Roger -Hysell
Garage
12 4,Pon1eroy Ohio

Rt.

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
•,, -.

PIINT SHO, .

AUTO

F11 All Ym M~tliJ N11i1
PLUS: Olfict Supplies &amp;
Furniture, Wecfding

and Graduation
Stationtry, Magn1tic

Signs, Rubbtr Stamps,
Business Forms,
Copy 5enicn, (h .

.2SS Mill So., Middltporl
104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

992-3345

3/2/lln

3-24-tf c

CENTER

·atOY, Weal Main Street, Pomeroy Ohio.
Phono 614.992.6178

Your Compltlt Auto Body Repair Centlf
Bocly f l!ltrt, SondPQt)t". Polishing Compound•. Polnll
Urethane Hardnen . (Sold Un d~ Whol .. a lt To All )

Dundft New Reploc;ement Part1 For Truck• And Con
(Sotlsfo.ction guotarat..d)
~=~r

·q=lJ2tP.~.
gz:z~G~

RENT ACAR
CALL
446-4522

"Wt R.w Fit lm"

U-SA~E

AUTO ·:
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILDINGS

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

to 24'x36'
Dog Houses

Insulated

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh .
Ph. 614·843· 5191

consider mobile home trade

Oalllpollt, O~lo

I0-6-tfc

7111/lfn

!t:2N •

/i •
.......

\

·~--

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE
We'd like to inlloduco you to
• EnPI•·A·Car. the modern way
to drive the wehicle of your

c:hoic11.
No Down Payme•t
lowe r Moothly Payment

BLACKS10N
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEA SING

Box, 326
Pomeroy. OH. 45769
Call

614·992-6737

BOGGS

SALES &amp;·SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVI LLE, OHIO
Authorized Joh• Deere.
New Holland , Bush Hog
· Farm Equipment
Dealer

Farm Equipment
Parti &amp; Servlee

1-3-tlc

~
·
MOTEL ·
RT. 62 lOUTH
POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
· 8 miles lrom
Pomeroy-Maso• Br~dge

SINGLE 124.95
olive entertainment
' Free HBO •Restaura•t
•Olympic Pool

A.A:A.
304-675 ·6276
1· 10-lfn

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY
• All Types of
Exc avating
•Landsca ping

742-2407

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

SERVING TAl COUNTY AR EA RIDGl DR

GIFTS
349 N.

2nd

Middleport,

OH.

9-20·1 mo.

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992-6931
Allor 5 Cal!
742-2027

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

CALL COLLECT:

Factory Choke

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
12 Gau&amp;e Shot&amp;uns Only
.

9-30·11

"VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
1 BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Buill
"Free Estimates"

GUN SHOOT
Bashan Building

9/ IV2 mo. pd.

446-2062
ACCENT

Complete Gutte r Work
Complete Remode ling
Roofing of a ll Ty pes
Worked in home area
20 years
"F ree Est imat es "

(614) 843 -5425

L-1•.
Now Credit Cardl No one
refused . Vi11-M11tercard .

Call 1-819·665-1857 for
lnformolion . 24 houto.

PH. 949-2801
"Free Estimates"
lnstollation Available
414/ ln
ER WELL DRILLING

guarantee watet or
no charge. 30 years experilmce. Call 614-742·
dozer workat

ar 949-2860
No Sunday Calls
· l /11 /lln

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SE~VICE

985-3561
All Makac
•Was hers • Dishwas her•
•Ranges
•Refrigeretors
•Oryera •Fre8zera

· PARTS and SERVICE
4-S-IIc

J&amp;L BLOWN
I.NSULAliON
VINYL

ALUMINUM

&amp;
SIDING

•Insulation
•Storm DoQrs
•Storm Window•
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

"FREE ESTIMATES"
JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

in . Coll614-448-8038.

membera could earn more

180. Soiling cheap. For lnlor
call 1-304-273-6041 .

36 acres, house. e roomt,
btlth, workahap, g1r1ge, Rt.

thon $20,000 in oducotlonol
benefito. ENLIST NO WI Call
30•· 675·3960 or 1·800·
842·3819 .

By owner. Romodllod 3
bedroom hou11 on Rt.33.
New F.A. furnace. Large lot.

123,000. Collect 8,. ·423·
6289.

The Army N1tionel Guard
neada your prior military
aervice experience. Enlist
now for part-time montly
paycheck, educational op·
portun itiea, retirement in·
come, and much more. Call

By owner. Stately 3 bed·

room house at 1Q E. St ..
Pomeroy. 6 wooded a eYes.
Family room, dining roOm.
F .A. heat , 2 batht, base·

304-876· 3960 or 1·800·
642·3619 .

Free kitten I , yellow. bleck .

Working couple need o part-

4 month old m1le med . lire.
ml•ed breed dog to give

girl In our home . Mull be
, .... ,.. dopondoblcllndlvld·
uol willing to worlt lloklb18

ment, goroge . $27,000 .
Colloco 614-423·6289 .
6 room with bath. ' Oak
flo o rs. fam il y r oom

time blbytitterfor 4yearold

To soli Avon . Call Marilyn
Waaver. 304·882· 2646 .
2 6·monlh old killeno. 1
celico, 1 block and white .
304·675 ·2136.
7

Priced to 1111 139,600 . Will

The army National Guard
can provide you with 1
pert-tlme monthly PIV ·

Call 814-387-7116.

hourw-no eveningt, night1.

equipped lor wood burrilr.
12•24 dock potch. 80•100
corner lot . Noloon Rd .. Au·

or -kondo required. Cell
304-116·3214 oftor 6:00.

814· 742· 2007.
8 rooms and b1th

81111 Repretentuivaa
needed. Herbii· Nutrltlon•l

Four

open

Mason, price reduc1d, 30..4House and approximately 1
a cre for 11le Apple Grove,

304-676-6406 .

I==========
12

Situations
Wanted

our homo . Trolnod end flf .

lot

773-6681 or 773-5136. •·

territorial, 6

llortlng 'Tueoday. AVON .
C.ll 304· 676· 1429.

OR

80•150 , 3rd and HortCII&gt;.

Diet. 304·384-9157 , 1400·
t1000 port time: 15000·
t10.000 full lime .

V1e1ncy for the elderly in

Yard Sale

tland . cell Bill WIIUamaon at

Red barn alyle houoe, 1.225
aq. ft . living space, 4 acres,
total elec . fireplace, 2 C'a r
garage. shed and work lhop.

304-676-6739 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

teen Y•rt experience . Call

814-892·7314 .

........................ _--.... 1- - - - - - - - --

.

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicinity

Nursing ctre in private
home. Room for two pa -

tionll. 1600. e monlh . Call
614 ·992· 3696.

mlleo· Rt. 180 paot
HMC· old 180. Motemll\'.

infant•· bova 3, hou~ehold ,
honey. Tuet. &amp; Wed .

.. .... PfPieiisinf ....
&amp; Vicinity

1 B Wanted to Do
Cerpentry, peint ing, repair

work . Coll614-446-8668 .
landoceplng. painting on

·-· ·- -··-- -·-···-··---- --- ----

mobile home roo11, 860 .

Coli 614-448-4630.

1409 konowho St. Soturday
thru Wedneodoy.

,
8

614-992 · 2469 after e:oo
14x70

mobile homo. · 3

bedrooms. 1% baths. Ji~s
furnace. Price redu ced : CAll

614-949 -2 368.

1970 PMC 3 bedroomi, ai r.
wa s her, drye r. ewnirr.g .
Partly furnished . •a,160.

614·992 ·7479.

1981 mobile homo. 14•70
with 7&gt;24 oxpondor. Fire-

F1 no nci.1l

place. dilh-wuher, totl l
electric, located in Glilipo-

· Public Sale
&amp; Auction

lio. Cell 61 4-992-2364 o•
614-446-0037. ·21

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEE'! SERVICE. Elloto,
firm, entlque, liquidation
ulea. Licented Ohio 1nd

Wnt Vlrglnlo . 304· n3·
6785 or 304-n3-6430 .
Wanted To Buy

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE , lodo,' Iron,
t¥OOd, cupbo1rda, ch1ir1,
Chilli, bllkltl, dllhel,

otono jaro, ontlquoo, gold
ond oliver . Wriii -M.O.
Miller. Rl.2, Pomeroy. Ohio
46769 or con 614-992·
7760.

Business
Opportunity

c~;~r­

rency. Top prlcoo. Ed . Bur·
kott Iorber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Mldtl~port , Oh. 114·992·
3478.

MOBILE HOMES MOVE D.
lnaured , re11on1ble raiel.

Call 306·676· 2336 .
I NOTICE I
14x70. 3 bedroom,
TJ!E OHIO VALLEY PUB· 1980,
1'
1
:.
botho,
9x10 bldg, mu ot
LISHtNG CO. recommend• • 1111. 112.000.00
o• bu t
t h1 t you do bualn••• with offer. 304·676-7829,
pooplcl you know, end NOT
to 11nd money through the
Kirkwood Mobile Home,
moll unlll you hovt lnvootl· 12x66,
lull reflniohed real
gotod 1111 olftrlng .
nice t4.000 .00. Pitllt.coll
Stell building doolorohlp eltor 4:30 PM . 304-676with mojor menulocturor- 1108.
ulea a. englnMrlng 1upport.
Flamingo 12 'x85" ~
Stertor odo furnlohod . Some 1871
br.
refrig
, stove, a.c.
or111 Ioken. Coli 303· 769·
cond.
Mull
Sell. 614-446·
3200 lkt . 2401 '
0684.

,;c.

------22 M r. ucy '" •

"'\&lt;'

Buying dolly gold, oliver
colno, rlngo, jowolrv. oterilng
ware, old coint, large

On rented lot. h .cenent
condition. Clean . With ' Or
without AC. furnl•hin Ga.
washer-dryer, awning . Cell
p.m.

I

w,

9
(CUT OUT FOR FUTliRE USE)

Giveaway

AND

VINYl &amp; ALUMINUM

Ph.

1 AND CHIMNEY WOR/f "
'
•
INDUS'rRIAL
.. .,../
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS .

POnEitY

9-2l-tfc

EUGENE LOfJG

" TOTAL FIREPLACE

LINDA'S.
MEXICAN

• Sewage Syste ms
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Wate r Well Drilling
Call:

.~

INSURANCE WORK (9) 16, t1c
FOR FREE ESTIMATES CALI •ROY BICKLE

•Basemtin'ts

•Trucking

Abaolutly no hunting or
tre1p11sing on Old Town
F1rm . Vlol1tou will be
proaecuted . Charlet C .

4

Gailio High School. Roduood
to $29 ,900 . Call 814-388·
8711 .

chock . PLUS QUIIIIIod

bury Rd ., Middleport . Call
814-992-58':14.

~!!!!!!!]

By own&amp;r. Mut t aetl· mowed.
3 bdr. ranch, one ctr garage,
walking diatanca 4rom North

MONEY, MONEY, MONEYI

FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES
~

6PM or weekends.

in Middleport, Ohio.

Puppies to give awty. 1h
German Shepherd . Brad -

• CLEANING INSPECTION
• FLUE CAPS INSTALLED
CHIMNEY REBUILDING

Call 614· 446 ·2000 ofter

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,

Eblin preoching , Spec lol
oinging nlghlly.

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFIED

~

polio City limltoolf St. Rt. 7.

insured, r11sonable rates.

Chri.t in Christian Union .
Pearl Street. Rev. Keith

2 ocirv·looklng block call to
give owoy. Call 614·742·
2480 .

~imnry

tppUcatlona from certified

In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr.,
full bnment, nice lot . L1rga
rear decks with walley vtew.

Rovlvoll
Oct.9· 18 . 7:30
p.m. Middlaport Church of

owoy. Lovoo chlld,.n . Coli
1114-992-3877.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

Meigs local School

Diotncl Is currently oeeking

teaching certifictte and for
coaching po1ition1 must
meet certificatiOn requirementa of Ohio for 1pont
medicine and CPR . Persons
interested should contact
Dan E. Morri1, Superintendent of Maiga Locel Schoola.
at 821 South Third Avenue

property.

THE QUALITY

The

people seriously interested Cooch for tho 1986·86
in loolng weight 1-800·892 school veer. Applic ation•
9981 .
mult hold a valid Ohio

Cell 304-678-2336.

CHESTER - 98S -33 0 7
4/ 1/ tfn

For Faster Service

Public Notice

W1ter walla drill1d and Mr·
vicad . Prices on raquut . Call

f all Special furnit ure ~u·
pholltering , This i1 our 211t
year serving tri-county ~lth
the best in reuphollterlng .
Call now for Free Estimate

oorod by Racine Gun Club.
guage shotguns.

Professional
Services

AVON. Sell Avon make
46 %. Ca ll614·446 ·3368.

1&gt;3 Plno St., Gollipolls

httllfllt lhCOR!t h ltnlil l
[lililllt lnsl ll11ion lor ft4ttel l0fn

.

23

Word's Keyboord , 304-676·
5600 or 676 ·3824.

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

Notice. no hunting or trespasaing on Dana C. Durst

O.O.T. Clfli11u tlon
, iiiMC li! Alii$!• ! .-valla-lt ~
lblt $1 t~/ •nident Tr1ini"l

UNITED TRUCIC lASTER
Rt 14 lintrol Wolls, W. V1.
Phone 304/489·2027
Homo Office, Cloorwotor, Fl

Ave .. Gallipolio. OHio -614·
446-0840 .

une. 826 Third Avo .. Gallipolis. Oh 45831 .

ment . No experience-no

24 Hr, !&gt;_e.o:vi&lt;:e

out red tape of the large loan
lnstltuttona7 On the spot
loans with no Wilting or
credit chec ks, .u1ing . you r
personal balong!nga at col ·
lateral. Only 6% intl rel'l.
Call or vllit todly. Fr•nk' t
Pawn Shop. 430 Second

Help Wanted

Racine CJun · Shoot apon-

We Deliver

or 667-307 4

property behind, Golllo Co.
olrport.

Receivers

12·8-llc

JIM CLI FFORD
PH . 99 2-7201

Troinina Men/Women II Up

You

Abaolutaly No hunting or
trtiPIIsing on Williem Wut

WE BILL MfDKAR£ ANI OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN ~LIGIB~E

GIVE US A CAll

REPAIR SERVICE

Nlllon•lllocal job pllctlltflt IS·
slstant &amp; au•rnl11d Student
loans.

Help Wanted

A System Can Be Designed For

Bevttly Garrell. Call 614·
448-9228 off Rt. 7 on
Georges Creek Rd .

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs

We Have Many Oltter Dishes To Ch.Ost From

CARPENTER
SERVICE

SEMI DRIVER

11

TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME

DOZER, BACKH OE.
TRENCH ~ R . SE PTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER,
GAS 8. SEWER LIN ES.
RECLAMATION. PONDS.
SPRING OEVELOPMENT.
HOM E FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STO NE
&amp; DIRT

304-372-5709

.

9' SPUN ALUMINUM .. .......................... 11265
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... 11350
10' ALUMINUM MESH ...................... .... s1395
ll' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... '1595

YOUNG'S

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AIEl CALL
For Hours

_SYST EMS

Mine a.. Yours Beeuty Shop
advanced training, latest
GUtes, perm1 ... Family htlrnyllng . Owner-operator

HOSPITAL SUPPLIES 'FOR
SAlES &amp; RENTALS
614.-446-7283

borrow $1 .00 . 810 .00 .
81 00 .00, etc .. onlly wilh·

Cloaeout Sale at Te11ie' a

LAIGI AN.lL &amp;
SUIGEIY IY APPT.

lipley OHI-:e ,

5AZERl

•

.,.......r-.

Coli

Shooting motch Gallio Co.
Gun Club. Every Sunday
1 PM. Buckrldgo.

8·13 t1n

Air Conditioners

446-9.16- 446·2112
8112/2 mos.

Announcements

Loan

Need money? Did you know
that there ia a pl1ce in
Gallipolis where you can

One certified Medical Tech ·
nologi1t, weekdays. Send
resume to box 300. in care
of the Gallipolis Daily Trib-

SWEEPER end oewing me·
chino repolr, porto. and
lupplleo.
Pick up and

~ ·- Licensed 91inical Audiologist

22 Money to

Employment
Servi ces
11

Quality lntenherm

••••lid

I'll•

JO'S GIFT SHOP

rBLUE STREAK CAB CO.

S.ltl I Stnict

""'i!"

VII"

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7 '

Ohio

Pomeroy- Middleport,

:-~_;;_.._____T _____.,Ir:':.:u=s:::.:in:.:::e::.:s:::.~sr-:S::::::e:::rv:...::.•::·.!c:::::e~s:....__...,..._..,..._ _ ____j ;:.~:~:~~~~:,~:del

H!AnNG I COOliNG lYSTIMl

:-:------ --- ------------------ -----------·1
The Daily Sentinel

Monday, October 14. 1985

FilE CONFIDENftll
PIEGNANCY liST

toC:'"IIon,

-· JudD....

"

1973 Ge me ron 2 br .'ali
electric $ 6 ,3400. New un-

derpinning . 304·8B2·2688
efter 3 p.m .

HOMEOWNERS -Refinance
ID low lbiod roto . Un equity

L --------~

1976 Holly Hillo 12•66. :3

for 1ny purpo11 . le1der

br. wood burner, underpen-

Morlgogo Co.. 614-692·
3051.

ning ond porch. Muat oell.
M.oko olfor ~304-882 - ~249 .

�•
•

.

.
Pitge-8- The Daily Sentinel
32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

51

Household Good$

VtUey Furniture, new &amp;
used. Large section of quality furniture . 1216 Eutorn
Ave., Gallipolis.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS,
RT 35. PHONE 814-446·
7274.
.

Mollohan Furniture, Rt. 7,
K•n•uga. 1 yr . free fintnce.

Coil 814-446-7444. 6 pc.

down, tlike over payments.
We' re Mid Ohio Financial

with podding. 61 4-992·
3877.

months old . Giboon rolrigor·
Iter. 8 months old . Carpet

anchored down , private

53

614 - 448 · 7200 after
5 :00PM .

44

Call 614-379-2798 .

Apartment
for Rent

Convenient loc1tlon 1 bdr .•

2 bdr, turn. or unfurn., good
location, Socuril'l dopoolt
required . Coli 814·448·
8668.

1 2•60 trailer with 12x7
expando, AC, oil heet.
rented lot, wtttl garden
spaCe, rur1l water. Call
61 4 -266· 1713 or614-3792707 .

12x80 2 bdr. on Clark
Chapel Rd with Iorge yard.
Coli 8\4-446-3897 or 114·
246-6223.

1970 Ritzcraft Ventura,
12X60. 2 bdr. on rented lot.
t3496 . Call 814 - 446 ·
6322 .
'

Mobile home lor ront. 2
badroomo on Bullville Rd .
U60 plua depoalt. Coli
614 448 9204
•
·
·

1974 Bonanza, 12X65, 3
bdr. 2 bath. AC. OW. porch,
Cell

6-14-388-8794.

Mobile home 2 bdr. fur·
nlohod. Coli 814· 448-4480.

1'968 Royal mobile home lor
1110. 1 2&lt;40 . u.ooo. 614949·2998 .

2 bedroomo. No poto. 114·
949-2424.
1 b60, 2 badroom. fur·
nllhed, In Syrocuoo. No
more thin 2 children. U26
per month plu1 dtosit end
utllitleol wotor poldl. Coli
614-992-8867.

1Ok&amp;S Libany. AC, 2 bad·
roomt, neW gal furnace,
metal utility 1torage building, porch with awning.
E•cellenl . Coli 614-992·
3410.

3 badroomo. AI Country
Mobile Home Pork In Shodo.
Coli 814-992-3858.

Farms for Sale

55 acret. 9 year old, 3
bedroom home. 44a72 bern

44

tnd geraga, go~d fence,
water, plenty of puture end
woods, will take trade netr

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equel
Houalng· Opportunity!
monlhly Nnt 111no It n 89
for 1 badroom ond U04 for
2 bedroom, dlpooh 1200,
located noor Spring Volley
Pf&lt;oze and Foodlond, pool
ond Coble TV evollebla.
office houra 11 pollible 10
om to 4 pm and 7 pmto 9 pm

Busineu
Buildings

Syc•more

StrMt, Gollipolio, Ohio. Foetul"'l include: co~ial
garage. thrM to•Ciing ctocka.
ond o Viking dry plpo
1prjnlcler .Ya~am . For more
lnlormollon coli 18141448·
81141 or 814-448-7180 or
814·245·5146,

8o.

Lots

Mondly-Fridey, Call &amp;14·
• • e - 2 7 • 5 o , ae a v •

meooogo.

1-::-:--=--------

Nicely furnished mobile
home, eft. opt .. control elr
ond hut In city. odulto only.
Coli 814·446·0338 .

Acreage

0r)e acre with Hptlc tenk,

electric pole, well·houae
with deep well. Blue IAko
Or. off Bear Run Rd. Reduced .a.ooo cuh. Coli
1 -304· 522-2076 .
2 level Iota for nle. Greer
Rd. 7 milel from town.
304-875-6889.

Ren la lo

Houses for Rent

Near Waterloo· farm houae,

5 rooms. bolh, 1 child,
f125, references &amp; deposit.
Co11814·143· 2644.
Furnished house 131 Anr

. 4th Ave., Gollipolla. 2 bdr.
1200 pluoe utilities. Call
446· 4416 alter 7PM .
6&amp;.55V. Gorfiold 7 rooma,

unftunlahad , 4 rooms Wr·
nlahed. Inquire at 67 Gar·

field Avo.
3 bdr. houll goa heat. Coli
814· 446 · 1875 or oflor 8,
614-448 -1889.

Eureka. nice one story 2 bdr.
will rant, le11e or land
contract. Oapoalt &amp; references required . Blackburn

Roolty. 814·446-0008.

Ndecorotod. utllitleo ponly
paid. Cell304·876·6104 or
304-875-6388.

Riverside Ap11 . Middleport.
Special ratea for Senior
Citizens. •130 . Equal Hou•
ing Opportunitlel. 814-992
7721 .
2 bedroom aptrtmenta.
New Hoven. WVa . N-ty
remodeled. In town . 8 14·
992-7481 .

2 badroom . lurnlahed. A.C: . menta in Pomeroy. Furalactlrc he~t . Good clean nlahed or unfurnished. Rent
condition. •115 par month. negotloble. Coli 114·992·
New Hoven . 304· 882· 6723 .
2466 .
2 bedroom Mcond floor apt.
4 room. Vine St.. R1cine. Totol electric. Acroao from
Bath, v•rd. g1rden, sewer,
Pomeroy Fire Stolion. Coli
goo hool . 814·992· 2768
doyo . 614 · 9811·4231 114· 992 ·7314.
evenings.

Furnished

2 badroomo, unlurnlohad.
n - point, fully corpetod.
No Inside pltl. Deposit
required . Coli 614·992·
3090 .
Efficiency cottogo, U6.00
week, utilities pold, phone
304-875· 3100 or 675·
6609.
2

story houl8 in

~~E'AT
T~EMNOW.

{D NOWII
(I) $100.000 Name That
Tune
•
CD Mazda Spoitslook
Ill Down to Earth
()) 3 -2 -1. Contact (CCI
(Jl) Electric Company
1!11 Dlffrent Strokes
[MAxi
MOVIE:
'Old
Enough'
. 6:30 D (l) (!) NBC Nightly
· News
(I) Carol Burnett and
· Frionda
(1) Bodi" In Motion
Ill Solo at Home
()) Gl ll2i ABC NOWII (CCI :
0 ()) 111 CBS News
(])Dr. Who
(Jl) Body Electric
fiiTaxi
7:00 D (}) PM Magazine
(I)
· Counohip/Eddle'o
Fother
·
C!l Sportocontor
CD Rocky Road
(])Entertainment Tonight
(!) Wheel of Fortuna
0 ()) Wheel of Fortuna
(]) Second Cily TV
®News
liD
MacNeii/IAhrer
Newahour
Q ll2i Divorce Court
tlli) Joffenono
-7:30 D (}) New Newlywed
Game
.
(I) Please bon't Eat
Oaloieo
C!l NFL Fllmo Preoonto
Ill Sanford and Son
(]) OIIBi Price lo Right
CD Jeopardy
0 ()) Family Feud
(])
Nightly
Business
Repon
111 Wheel of Fortune
tlli) WKRP In Cincinnati
IHaOI Froggle Rock (CCI
IMAXI Album Flash: Pete
Townohond Pete Townshend performs from his
new solo album. 'White
City' .
8 :00 D (l) (!) TV'a Bloopen
and Practical Jokeo Marie
Osmond, Kari Michaelsen
and Lara J ill Miller are this
week ·s practical joke vic·
tims. j60 min .)
· (I) 8om Frn
C!l NFL Yearbook 1984

greooo ollliltingolor $0.&amp;0. ,Call614·949·2044 or 614· ·.;
992-5637 for on appoint· "
ment end directiont .

79

Furnished Rooms

I-------For rani Sluplng Rooms

ond light houoo kooplng
rooms. Pork Control Holel.
Coli 814-448·0768 .
Furnlohod room • 1 25 ulill·
ties paid, 919 2nd. Ave.,
Golllpolio, olngle mala. Coli
446·4416 otter 7PM .

48 Space for Rent

Firewood-cutup sltba, 1
truck lood 8100. 2-1180.
Pickup load, you haul $15 .
HEAP occoptod. Coli 614·
246· 6804 ..

CAJ&gt;TAIN
EASY
.
'
. --··· .

Motors Homes
&amp; Cam!'ers

"

- ~·-···· --

···.

Apartment

for

Mobile homo lol, 12' x60' or
ameller. t75 wotlr paid. 4th
&amp; Neil. Golllpollo. Coli 446·
4418 ofter 8PM .

HouM COli. Lump

a. atoker.

Zlnn Cool Co. Coll61 4-448·
1408.

King wood 8o cool stove with l -0 -ct_o_ba_r_S_p_oc-,.•-,.-,-8-uy-ceg:
ton. good cond . Electric and food kit, got poreknt for
furntce with heat pump. • 9 98 Fl h 5
,.
CA. Clel814-446·626 6 .
· · I
poc.lo. Hamotera ' e1 .99 every day; Oer·.
bill • 1 .29 every day. Fish
Shredded bark $20. pickup Tank, 2413 Jackson Avo.
load . Hardy evergreen Pt. Pleaunt.
lhrubo 110 each. 5 ft.
Scotch pin a U4 each . 2
mlleo north of Silver Bridge 57
Musical
on upper Rt. 7. Ohio. Call
Instruments
81 4 -446· 4630.
blower, oil 1 1 ft. lriplo
wollplpe 8o through wall kit.
Sell oeporoto or ell. Call
614·446-1763 altar 5 .

Old upright piano, completely roflnlohed. Coll614·
379-2642 altar 4 :30PM.

--------TOP CASH paid lor '80
model ond newer uood coro.
Smith Buick-Pontiac. 1911
Eootem Ava., Gollipollo. Call
814·446·22~2 .

77 Muotong new peno. riew
tires, new paint, excellen1
ahopo. U.OOO. Coli 114·
256·8417.

1974 Buick Electro 26. 4
door HT. brown body, ton
tup. G .c . •1oo. 304-875·
3624.

1979 Buick Skyhlwk, outo,
air. PS. PB. prlco reduced.
mull ooll. Coli 814·448·
4491 or 81 4·448-3888.

72 Volkawogon, runs good.
extra trono. pluo 72 Super
Bootie for porto. All lor
uoo. 304-876· 7241.

Choot typo lroozer 22 cu.ln ..
19 in . color TV, both in vary
good cond. Coli 814-446·
7026.

Splnoi· Con.Oie Piano Bor·

1978 Chovv Comoro AC.
PS. PB, AM-FM rodlo, tilt,
good cond. Cell 8 14-448·
8209.

TraUer epece available. Aqu•

Llvo turtcoy'o. Coll614-446·
9682.

Write Crodlt Monogor; P. 0.
Box 33, Frledona. Po . 15641

Double llolnleoa olool kit·
chon oink ond dlopooel. (Uko

Muak:al • Gibaon Cuatom
Lea Paul. Exc. cond. Serious
inquiriea only. 304-6758817 .

.

-

Vlora Troller Coun In SyroCUII. Coli 814·992·8887.
Trailer •P~•·· 1m1111 child·
ntn acc:.pted, • Rt. 1, out

Locuot Rood bock of K 8o K,
304·176-1076.

Merr:h~iHii st:

51

H_o uaehold Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE
82 Olivo St., Golllpolla. Now
&amp; ulld wood·coolltovoo. 8
pc wood LR .,ito U99,
bunk bado •1 99, ontron
recllnera •99. now 8o ~od
bedroom

su1t11.

ranget,

ntwl

•&amp;o or beat affer. Call

814-441-2129.

3 piece French Provontiol
badroom furniture . UOO.
Coli 814-446-4413.

68

Largo ochool typo dlak,
good cond . Call 814-3888734.

Apples. All varieties. $6 .00

G11 double oven atove. $76 .

fruits, vegetables . Jacks
Market, Rt. 36, Hendenon.

448-1313.
G11 double oven 1tove. 876 .

Ph . 448-1312 .
Mlxod hordwood slobs, $12 .
par bundle. conloinlng opprox. 1 Y2 ton, fob. Ohio
Pollet Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 814·992·8481 .

tion of bedroom auttes.
rockera. metll cabine11.
heldboordo t38 &amp; up to
$85 .

Uaed

Furniture

••

Met1l

office doaka. 3 miles out
Bulovllle Rd. Open 9am to
&amp;pm. Mon. lflru Sot.
..
61 4·448-0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W11h1r1. dryera. refrlgert·
tara, ranges. Skegg1 Applloncoo. Upper River Rd.
baoido Stone Croll Motel.
614-'448-7398.
County Appllonco , Inc .
Good Uted appli1nc11 and

TV 1011. Open 8AM to 6PM.
Mon thru Sot. 814-448·
1199, 627 3rd. Avo . Galll·
pclla, OH. .

Country ltytl Olk furnltura.

hind C&lt;oftod and ftnlahed,
ontiquo reproductions. Paul
Conkel. Rl .7. Tuppers
Plolno.
PICktnt U"d Furnlture.
King -od atove, dehumldl·
liar, Nlriaorotor.. olec . 8o goo
range. 304·17··8413 or
876·1480 .

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

buohel. Now opon daily. All

69 For Sale or Trade
1975 1 2x55 troller, two
badrooma, all oloclrl,c, un·
dorplnning and block . Will
consider trade on cer or
truck . 304· 876 -3988 or
676 -6936 .

Fa rm Suppli es
&amp; Llves lo;.k
81

Farm Equipment

CROSS 8o SONS
U.S . 35 Woot, Jockaon,
Ohio. 814-286-8451 .
Ma111y Ferguson, New
Hollond, Buoh Hog Sales &amp;
Service . Over 40 uaad

tractora to choose from &amp;
cc mplote line of new 8o
uaed equipment. Lergeat
selection in S .E. Ohio.

1---------1978 YW Rabbit. good
cone[ 1988 Comoro; 1916
GTO. 304·875·4072.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Pork. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Lorvo loto. Call
814·992· 7479.

gain . Wanted : Reapontible
party to take over low
monthly payment1 on aptnet
piano. Can be teen locelly.

1985 Ford Eocort 4 op.
oppro• . 19,000 mlloo. om1m co110no. $4,500. or will
take lrodo·ln older model in
G. C. 304-937-20211.

Autos for Sale

Rd . Coli 814·448-7911 .

•as.

3

instrument• good

cond. Coli 614-446-0640 .

71

1977 Cutloao Supreme PS.
PB, AC, cruise. tilt, ••c.
cond. Colll14-448·4872.

of1er Ocl.3 . Coli 114-992· Goo dryer. t85 . Electric
dryor.
Gold oeH-detroll
2749 .
refrlgereter fre11er . • 1 60 .
APARTMENTS, mobile Side by oklo rolrlgorolor
homea. houoeo. Pt. ~lo11ant freezer . •a&amp;. Electric clryor.
ond Gelllpolla. 814· 448· noo. con 814-742 -2352.
8221 .

Middleport. $200. monlh. II All new ground floor
rm
inlerutod 304·882-3722 . . end bath opt. Corpeted, ·
wuher 8o dryor hookup,
2 br houoo. gorogo. 177 Perk ltDVI • refrig. furnilhed .
Or. UOO. month . 'Coli Mra. 304· 875· 41180 or 876 ·
Lonhom. 304-875·4692 .
19112.

Bend

81 Dotoun 200 SX opon
pack1ge, flltc. controls,
42,000 mileo . Aaking
•s.60o. 304·882·36,2.

T r~nsp o r l o l iii ll

AKC Roglotored mlnieiUre
Dachshund pulfploo 8
wooka. Call614· 379· 2273 .

3 horoe bruah cutting $75 .
Frenkllne woodburning
ltove 8100, walnut 8 gun 1 Tama tnare drum, 1 Peavy
"'binot •100 . Call 814-367 260 ompllllor, 4 micro·
phones, 1 fender preciakln
7238 .
ball guitar, 8 chennelttereo
Firewood oplit, llocked 8o Poovv mixing board, oul·
delivered UO lergo load . llondlng buys. Coli Log
Coli 814·448 -9743 or 814- Cabin Recordera, 814-4464313 .
448-7993.

1 mile from hoapltol. Kyger
Creek School, weter &amp; trash
pold. •66 mo. pluo dip. Call
814·448·1364.

83 ·c amoro Z28, low ml·
leogo, mull soil. Mokeoffor.
304-676-2799 of1or 7 p.m.

1----------

King wood I coal stove with

rent, no children . AVIIIeble

2 br eportmanta In Hondlr·
aon . 304-876-1972.

Service s

Rog. American aoddlo brod
horoeo for oole. Call 8 14·
258·6461 or 614·446 ·
HCMI'oo OOJI. Lump 8o otokar.
bred Rot Terrier pupzl nn C ool Co. Cell81 4-446· Prue
pleo, bob loilod . Coli ova. or 1 142 ut. 478.
1408.
wookondo. 814· 268-1487.

72

1969 Stud. for porto, 8100.
Coll814-387-7118 .
77 Chavv pickup. 8 cyl ..

atd .• tow mlluge. new tires.

~1.995.

o865 .
1 967 Plymouth GTX, 440
meg .. 4opd .. bloch. u.eoo
or tr.tefor amll car of equal
volvo. Coli 814·448-8073.

1979 Chlvv Luv. 4 opd ..

topper.

82.399. John'o Auto Soles.
Bulovllle Rd., Gelllpolio.

•zzoo.

19 Ford Ringer Y.l ton runa
good, looks good, $860 .
Coli 814·441-0706.

1981 Oklo Cutleao Supreme
Brougham dleoel. loaded
with occ .. ••- cond . oeooo.
Cell 614-448·3944 of1or
5pm .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
!
Unco.ndilional Ufetlme gue- ,.
rantee. Local reference•
furniahed . Free utlmates.

•
~

j

Call collect 1·614-237·
0488. day or night. Rogers ~
B11ement Waterproofing.

ANNIE

O.and M. Contnctoro. VInyl
liding. replacemen.t win-

1978 Chovmlel 1 1on dump
truck. $1800. Coli 814-992
3194.

78 lmpolo V-8, PS, PB. olr,
good body 8o engine. Coli
614·441-4477.

'80 Ford F100 Lulu
Rongor, 51,000 milea, AC.
cruloo, CB, AM-FM, tapa,
new point, 304· 876-2130.

1971 Volcowogon Footback
neoda on gino o 100. Coli
614-367-7118 .

77 F-150 Ford Ranger.
AM-FM, PS, sliding back
gloao, good cond . Call 304·
875-7279.

1978 Ford Fironzo o•c.
cond .. low miloogo, PS, PI,
AC, AM-FM cuoetto. Coli
814-446-8124 .

1983 Silvorodo Chevrolet
pickup, po, pa, V·B angina.
new tiret, fi 1,000 plus
miloo. $8125 . L. L. Smith.
905 Moaomon. Pt . PL. WV.
304-175·3222 .

1979 Thundarblrd PS. PB.
AC, good con d .. 82, 300.
Coll814·367· 7238 .
1976 Mullong II Foot back.

a.

bohery, otc . Good con d. Coli
614'· 446·4171 of1or 8PM .

1960 Int . 2 ton flotbad
truck, good oond . Coli 30•·
896· 3082 otter 4 p.m.
-kdlyo. •aoo .

1977 Chovv truck, 3&amp;0
tran1. C1l
6111·446· 3243 ev'!'inga.

engine. , auto.

77 Ford V. to.n pickup like
new; 77 Mon1aCono. ahorp;
77 Bonneville. 304-675·
6281 .0

1981 Chovotto 4 door, AC,
4 opd .. U.195 . 1977 Coprice Cluolc 2 door, AC,
$1.866. 1877 Ford 3 opd.,
24 ft . corn elevator. Call hoovv duty, V. ton, •1 ,385.
614 - 4387-7706 after Must 1111. Coli 114-268·
5:30PM.
1261 or 614·26,8·51174.

73

Vans

&amp; 4 W.O.

crete. Coll304·773· 6131 .
J .and L. lnllallltion. Roof·
In g. vinylaldif'!g,ltorm dooca
end wlndowa. FrH eltlmotoo. Coll814·992·2772.

aervice.

Regi•-

lered In Ohio. All work
guorent..d. Coli 304-273·
2811. Rovenowood. W.Va.' •
RON'S Televlaion Service .
Houoo cello on RCA, Ouour.
GE . Spoclallng In Zonllh . ·
Coli 304·676·239B or 814·
446-2454.

Miami Dolphins.

ALLEY OOP

(]) MOVIE: 'This Propeny
Ia Condemned'
(I) Iii {D Hordcattlo and
McCormick ICCI
0 ()) ® Scarecrow and
Mn. King
(I)
MacNeii/IAhrer
News hour
liD Wonderworks ICC) Pan
2 of 2. 'Konrad .' A factory·
mada child is accidentally

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump

removol. Call 304·675·
1331.
RINGLES 'S SERVICE, ••·
porlencod corpontor. oloctrl·
clan, maton, painter. roof~
lng llncludlnz hot tor
eppllcotlonl 30 ·876·2088
or 876· 7388.

delivered to the wrong ttd-

dross. 160 min.)
• MOVIE: 'DI¥oo:e Hio,
Divorce Hero'
IHBOI America Under·
cover: Tho Search lor
Mongolo Family members.

Sta""• Tree 1nd lawn Service, stump removal, 304·

676·2010 .

Auschwitz survivors, colleagues, hfs trackers and
friends help reveal the truth

My pipell
cameawdy

about Dr. Josef Mengele .
(MAXI MOVIE: ' Dr. Gold·
foot
and the Bikini
Machine'
8 :30 [!) NFL Monday Night
Metch-Up
9 :00 D (l) (!) MOVIE: 'Silent
Witnon'ICCI
(1)700 Club
(]) lnoidl Boaeball
()) Gl ilJ NFL Monday
Night Football: Miami ot
Now York Glents
0 (]) 111 Kate &amp; Allie
When Allie's wont ad for a
job is mistakenly placed in
the personals section, it
prompts a number of .diverse responses .
(]) Tenko
(j]) Brain !CCI 'Tho Enligh·
1ened Machine .' The brain· s
functtons are demonstrated
and the mysteries of consciousness are explored. {R)
160 min.l
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Seemo Uke
Old Timeo'
9 :30 (])Auto R10lng '86: CART
P~lx 160 Phoenix, AZ.
0 (I) (!0 19th Annual
Country Mulllc Auocia·
tlon Awordo Anna Murray
and Kris Kristofforson hoSI
this awards show, featuring

without

=A=d~·=E=xp=l=ro=o=8=6='·====
82

Plumbing
8o. Heating

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Golllpollo, Ohio
Phone 614·446·3888 or ···
814·448·4477
JIM 'S PLUMBING 8o HEAT·
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 355, Galli·
pollt . Coli 814-367-0576.

83

EKcavating

,,
J

Oood-1 Excavating, bate- :
menta, footer~. drivewaya, .
ooptlc tonko. lendiCiplng:
Coli anytime 614 -448·
4637. Jomoa L. Oovloon. Jr.
owner.
Oo1er Work land CIHring.

lendoceplng, etc. Fr" oatl·
molls. Cell 614-448·803•
or 814-992 -7119 onytimo.

BARNEY
DID

TATER ACT

UP WHILE I WAS

such presenters

OH, HE WAS A

ANGEL,
GONE SAMANTHY? MIZ SMITH·· HE
'
DIDN'T SQUALL AT
ALL WHEN ·I GAVE
HIM' HIS BATH
LITTLE

as

Ala·

tiama , Waylon Jennings and

HE PUT
ALL HIS TOVS
AWAY ALL BV
HIMSELF AN'
TOOK HIS NAP
LIKE A GOOD

Kenny Rogers. (90 min.)
1 0 ;00 (l) News
()) Brain ICC) 'The Enligh·
tenod Machine.' The brain's
functions are demonstrated
and the mysteries of consciousness are explored. IRI
(60 min.l
liD Newswatch
(!II Omnl: Medico! Mire·
cles
!MAXI Comedy Expert·
mont: Flr11lgn Theatre A

BOY

small town decides to get
tough with kudzu In 'Eat or

Be Eolen'. ·
10:16 (I) MOVIE : 'The Advontur·
ero'
10:30 (l) To Be -Announced
(j]) This Old Houoe !CCI
!MAXI MOVIE: 'The Frioco
Kid'
"
11 ;00 U (I) CDO ())®News
(I) Man From U.N.C.l .E.
(]) Action Sports of tho
'80's Fronlior 500 from Las
Vegas to Reno.
()) Mcloughlin Group
liD VIetnam: A Telovlolon
Hiotorv !CCI ·America
TakesChargoi1965· 19671'

SNAKE!!
1HEKE!
SEE WHA"f

•

WOUL-D HAVE

HAPPENED ..

-. .

62

I'

AN ANTIQUE!

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

1975 Ford von good cond .. · J.A.R . Conllrucilon Co ..
•1
. 200 . Coli 614-446 - Rutlond. Oh . 614 -742 ·
JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIP- 1976 Novo 8o 216 rolloy 4313
.
2903. Baoomen11, Footora,
MENT
wheals. Coli 614-448 - 1.--------- • Concrete work, Backhoe's,
61 4-446 · 1876.
8031 ·
1980 Jeep Ronogodo CJ · 6, Dozer Ia Ditcher, Dump
5% interlt on long trtctorJ
$2 ,600. Coli . 614-367 - trucks, &amp; weter-gaa-aewergroin bin a 8o lull line of Agr: 1980 blue Turbo Trono Am 7672 or 614· 367·0488.
electrlcalllnea.
equip mont. Complete line of 31,000 milea, auto. tr1ns.,
Vermeer hay equipment, many opliono, price •&amp;.800.
Poria Crib , baby bod , round bale loedora •78., Cell814-245, 5078 .
1984 Rom Cherger 318. 4
85 General Hauling
grinder mixer1. 3 pt . hitch
playpen, tr~lning chair,
opeed . 14.000 miles .
rotor;
tillar.
1
1
ft.
load
1979 Corvollo. Lou lhln Smoked gino . AM -FM
phone 304-876· 3098 .
bunkl $1015. post driver• ~0.000 roilea. Fully loaded.
clock focllo. 814·949·3093.
Jamea Boys Weter Service .
Firewood for 1111 e25 . deli- H60, 8 HP woodapllnor L· B2 onglne. T-1opa block on
Also paola filled . Cell 61 4·
vered not lllckod . 304-875- $950, pickup truck racka, block. Cell 814· 992·2635.
seeders. mineral feeders. 9 -li. 304-862-3407 altar 5.
256 · 1 141 or 614 -446 4373.
Wheal Harte lliwn mower. 1 o ;ooo firm.
1175 or 61'1·446-7911 .
74 Motorcycles
Surplut, Regular Army Ca - Woodburning stovea, • free
Ken' s Water Service Walls
mouflage · denim clothing, llondlng, fireplace lnoort &amp; 1976 Pontiac otetion
add on fumance. Check our wagon . 8 fl. truck topp11s.
cisterns. pools filled ." Phon~
boots, pecka, ecceasorie1,
Movlng·mull •11·1981 Ya · 814-387-0823 or614·367Sam Somerville' • East of pricoa on pipe go lao 8o corral 614·985· 3838.
rmoho 125, 3 whoeler. 814· 7741 night or doy.
panels. Good eelec1ion of
.Ravenawood, Junction lnuaed tnctore &amp;. uaed 1 984 Chovrolot Covellor 742 -2274 or 614-992·
dopondlnce Rood - Old R1
Waugh ' s Water Service
with mony oddod llootureo. 8280.
21 . Fri . 811, Sun. 1;00 : equipment I
Well1, ciatema. pools. Fast:
7;00 P.M. (Delivery 30488,000. 8314·949· 2890.
1981 Kowouki KZ440 . reliable service. Cell 614- ·t.
For sale. New Holland super
875· 33341
717 forogo horveator wkh 1979 Folrmonl. 14•70 with 9DOO mil II, new r. tire, 266 · 1240 or 614-25 6Warm Morning_ 911 hetter like new 770 R corn httd . 1 24•7·Tipout. 3 bedrooma. chain ond batlary, 1 ownor. 1130. Reaaonable rates .
with blower .,00, 304-675 New Holland 3 62 grinder 2 lull botho, on rwntod lot. 0800. Coli 814-982·5919 .
mixer. E•c . cond. 304-273· Excellent condition. Clean.
Heul . limestone, 11nd, gra7771 .
l- : - - - - - - - - - 4215 .
With or without AO. Coli 1983 Hondo 1 1 0 three vel,dlrt, bulk or bag fertilizer
Couch end choir. 304·676·
814-992-2261 or814· 992· wh1eler. exc cond , and lime . Excelsior Salt
Ulo.oo . 304-676·3751 or Worka Inc. 838 E. Main Sl. ,
3417.
3869.
81 4·448· 20,7 2.
·vyanted to Buy •
Pomeroy. 614·992-3891 .
Seart micro electric range
1 979 Ford Fairmont ototlon·
wagon . Coil 61 4 -949 ·
and oven Corning top aeH
75
Boats and
87 Upholstery
cleaning of1er 5 . 304· 773- Wanted to buy: Wood or 2388 .
6758.c
·
Motors
for
Sale
wood &amp; coal burnat'l. Call
18B3 Pontiac tooo. P.S ..
614-593·8836 .
•
P.8.. Auto. tJIIOO. Coli
14 I'Oir Sooro Flex-EX ponto,
TRISTATE
tome new, eo me worn. Size
61 4·949·2850.
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
John boot for aolo. Coli
38l30 . t10.00 polr. 3041163 Soc . Avo., Gallipolis
81 4·266-8417.
83
Llveetock
876 -3638.
1979 Trono Am. Gold inll·
614·446·7833 or614-446:
•
1--------~
nor, 400 englni. Good
1833 .
60 PERCENT OFFI Floohing Simmental X Club calves. condition. Coli 814-742- 78
Auto Partir
orrow olgno $2691 Lighted, Red &amp; block , aloo 3 yr. old 31119.
R &amp; M Furniture Manufac:.
8o.
Acceaories
non-arrow o247. Unlighlod Simmontol bull, hoy for aolo.
turing, St . Rt. 7, Crown
1980 Monti Carlo. P.S ..
t119. !Free lettorell Soe Coll614-386-8178.
City, Oh. Cell 614 -255P.B .. A.C .. Tilt Wheel, AM- Sand bleat cabinet. Racy· . 1470, call Eve. 614 -44 6 . •
locally. Llmitld quantity.
Hurryl 1 18001 423· 01 63 , Young roottert for 11le, FM Cooootte. Cell 814·849· cling, oolf· liltorlng lypo. 3438 . Old &amp; now
Uphoalored.
·
anytime.
2059.
'300. 304·862·2488.
304-676· 3639.
\

so- THIS TOP
THAT ~ELONGS TO ANNIES NEW
I.ITTLE Ff!IENI/ tS

WELL, iF THAT 170CSN'T .
5EAT ALL! 1\MITV. All{)
TO'IISEPI.WEIIE Pli&lt;i!iT
BEHIN{) ,\\E A
5/!CON{) MJO!

dow•. lnaulatlng, roofing.
new and remodeling, con·

1977 Chovv .,. ton pickup, Rotary or ca~le tool drilling.
*1 .800. Coil otter 5PM, · Molt wells completed 11me
day. Pump ooloundoervlco.
814·446-7637.
304·896· 3802
1986 GMC V. lon PU, 31
mlloa. •9.240 . Coil 614· Get 1 room of carpet cleened
for t22.96 . Coptoin St...
446-2633 8AM-6PM.
mar. 304·675·2295. Save

1977 Oido Cull au
Broughom 3110 auto,
loaded, 4 new Seer• r11diel
tiree. runs exceUent, looka
good. Coli 814·448·4482
alter 8PM .

auto, new tires

Coli 814-245-

radio. wire rima,

1 979 Ford Gronodl. navy

V-8.

Tnrcks for Sale

Loer co mper lop lor long bad
,mall aize PU. Alto camper
top for ahort bad lor lullolzo
PU. Cell814·256-9367.

1978 Cutlo.ao Supremo
Brougham t3,000. Cell otter 6, 814·379·2668.

ex. c:ond..

Home
Improvements

P~mp 11111,

1983 Chovotto, ox. cond .
Coll614· 245·6243 otter 5.

blue,

·•..
•
--------- .: :
81

lour Oldlnor; wordL

- s:oo o rn rn ma rn 111 •

For aolo1968Troutwood 16
ft, camp or, $1,500. Call '·
614-446-4113.

Pets for Sale

Antiques

wringer walhera. &amp; lhoet.
Now lvlngroom .,1111 •199
t699. lempo, oloo buying Teklng ordera for fire wood.
·
cool
8o wood otovoo. Coli Specify which longlh . 8301
Furnished opt. utlkleo paid,
trucklo•d. Dilivered within
U36. 1 bdr .. edulto, 243 614-448-3169.
5 mile limit. Daniel Hensler.
Jockoon Pike. Golllpolio.
61 4· 949-2722 .
Coli 446-4418 of1or 7PM .
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Furnlohld opt. 1138V. 2nd. Solooond chalro priced from Largo now quill. S1 66 .
Gelllpollo. 2 bdr. woter paid, *286. to •895. Tobloo, t&amp;O Double Wadding Ring.
t1 16. Coli 446-4418 alter ond up to t126. Hidl·•· ~hite flowered Fenton
bed a. •390 . and up to lamp. Old. Good Condition.
7PM.
U60 .. octo bado •1 46, •10. lArgo luded honging
Furnlahld opt. 919 2nd. Rocllnero. '22&amp; . to U76 .. light. Very old. Fine oondl·
AVo .• 175 utllllloo paid . Lamp a from U8 . to *125 . lion. Hoo gropoa. $460.
Shore bath. Mon preferred. pc. dinettes lfom •1 09 .. to 814-992-2981 '
435_. 7 pc. t189 ond up.
Cell 448-4418 of1or 7PM .
Wood teblo w~h li• cholto 60 par cent offl Floahlng
Furnished 3 roams &amp; Nth, US&amp; to •745. Delle n10 orrow signs '269111 Llghlod .
cle1n, no pt~lt, aduht, ref. &amp; up to U26. Hutch11, tUO. non-orrow •247 . Unlighted
dopooil. Coli 814-448 - Bunk bad complete with 0199 . (Free lottoroll Sao
mottreoaoo, U75. and up to locolly. Llmilod quantijy.
1619.
$396 . Boby bado, 8110. Hurryl 118001423-1083.
Newty redecor•ted 3 rooma Mattreaaes or bo,.; aprlnga.
&amp; bath, ell new carpet. lull or twin, *63 ., firm, t73. TONY'S GUN REPAIRS.
convenient to ahopping, util· and 083 . OuNn aeto, U25 . hot dip roblulling, oil typeo of
ltloo partially paid. Ref. 8o 4 dr. chelto, 049. 5 dr. gunsmith work. toll oerv Ice.
dep. required. Coli 814-448 chooto, o69 . Bod frames, 304-676-4831.
•2o.ond US .. 10 gun . Gun
7516 .
cobinoto, t360. Goo "' Serious about loaing
2 bedroom apartment , t330 electric rongoa *376. Baby weigh!? Contact Gloria
Bo• 282
utilities pold or U20 no monreoooa. U6 8o U6. bad Grote, Rt. 2
utilitiea paid, depoalt re- !romeo UO. U&amp;, 8o o30 Lotort, W. Vo. 2&amp;263, 304:
quiroa. Coli 814· 448· 2129 . king frame UO. Good aolec: 182-3152.

One or two bedroom apart-

Clean

46

1---------2 bdr. opt:. good locotlon,

Lorgo 2 bdr. opt .. 2 bath,
tully corpetod, rofrlg. 8o
Lootl for ule on land llqvo. 11 Coun 51 .. t326
contract with amall down mo., ret. 8o dop. Coil 814·
poymont . Call 814-388· 448-4828 .
8711 of1or 5 .
Upotolro unlurnlahed opt.,
3 ~~ere1, gerage, trtller hoo· corpotod, oil utHitieo paid. no
kup for aole. Call 8 14-448· children. no pets . Colll14·
448·1637.
2568 ,

41

For rent oman turnlahod
1p1rtment. Pt. Pleasant.
Aitoronceo . No Poto. 304876· 1386.

acre. county water. cable TV
availtble, Atccoon Creek

For ule or leoll, 18,000
oquore loot worehouoo lo·

35

Apartment
for Rent

lumllhod opt. Coli 304-876
2441 .

Mobile homo lot for rani, V.

Eureka, Ohio. 814-258·
1348.

Tavern for oole In Mlddloport. D· 1. 0 -2, D-3. Coli
614·992-9976.

Wll't M

Un0&lt;:r8111blelheaolour Jumble&amp;,

orie letler to each square, to torm

EVENING

~:;:~:::=:;:::===T:;=~=====:-164
MiiC. Merchandise
---------

derpinning 8t woodburner.

1t 47

Auto Repair
. .•
--------~-;!

Mr. Auto Repair Ia having a ~
before winter special. We · •
will clean inllde end out plua ~
WIX for S26. Alao, WI will :S

lltliM NiiAY ?

IDft&gt;

filrll~
-~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD QAME
, ~ ~ ~~·
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

10!14/85 .

77

chino coblnol. Affordable.
Cell 614·446-8263.

197714•70mobilohome.3l ·
odroomo. 2 bltho. 1otal 42 Mobile Homes
electric 10x20 awning . .unfor Rent

ceted

Nn. Call 614·388-8706, • ·:;

with leaf, 4 chairs, matching

2 bdr. New Moon $2,600.
Coll614-388-8711.

34

Television
Viewing

1830 era dlnone oak 1~ble

t 977 mobile homo. t 4X70,
with 12 It oxpondo. good
cond . Call 614· 367-7528.

33

DICK

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

••

Block, brick, mortar end
masonry suppliea. Mountain

56

rented lot, Centenary. Can
stay if 10ld. Interested call

.

0 . Coil 614-246· 61 21 .

State Block, Rt. 33 , Now
Mogle Chat gos range. 2 Haven, W. Va. 304·882·
yeera old. Can be seen after 2222 .
6 p.m . al 166 S . 3rd,
Middleport.

1983 Joy Skyline 2 bdr ..
total electric. underpinned,

clean .

,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

--------...
250 6 cyl. engine. Can hoof •

wmdowa , lintela, etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Grande.

Ken R\ore hot water tenk . 8

8400.

Wright

Bl~ck, brick, aewer pipea,

blocko, cloy tile. Oellvor;.
Gallipolio Block Co., Pine
St., Gollipolla. Ohio Call
614 -448-2783 .

livingroom

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

78

Building Materiels

Building material. concrete
blocks all 1i1ea, lentils. flu

wood

u~derpinning,

Building Supplies

suite

Big down payment, ahort
time emptoyrilent, or past
credit history ttopping you
from buying a home? Consider 1 reclaimed aingle or
doublewide . low money
Sarvico 16141772-1220 or
773-3926.

56

Monday, October 14, 1985.

Monday, October 14, 1985 .

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

-

PEANUTS
'IE5, MAAM .. 1 '
WALKED TO SCHCJOL J
IN TflE i&lt;:AIN ...

I I-lAVE A SAMPLE
BOTTLE OF
IN

S~AMPOO

Ml' PURSE, SIR ...

II

tXI
IENVORG~

rJ

THI!! "OJ&gt;.IE
TH AT 60T AWAY"

WOULD HAI/E &amp;EEN

5166E~ IF iHE
FI&amp;I~UMAN HAD 'TH I5,

Now arrainge the clrcl«&lt;leUers to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

IJ

I

Answerhere:K I I l l X1K xxI 1
•
Sat urday s

(Answers tomorrow)
OUTDO PIGEOI'I TOUCHV

IJumbles: i'IATAL

Answer: What form of

locomotion 11 drag rsc:ing7-

A "LOCO" !'lOTION

Join h Jumbtii.O'IItl Ftn Club and rteefwlllb t!atlt-ward ~per Juml*a '"'"'
month. FIW 1M ~ ..-.1 I poo~tclrd to: Junibl. Lown Fan Club, C1o ltlll
newt..,.,, P.O. 1101 101, Ptlmrrt, N.J . 01016.

MIDGE

James Jacoby

Operation
overreach r r

.AKQI 07

By James Jacoby

• 9 8 53

I

NORTH

0

11· 14-1$

+Q2

tJI
EAST
When the opening lead of the spade =~~ 8
+KJ 753
10 brought the queen, klpg and ace, de- . ' 9 8 6 5 4
clarer w~ In trouble. II clubs divided· t Q 6
t\097 32
3·3 and the club king was onslde, he • 7 4 2
+K 10 6
might just be able to catch five heart
1
SOUTH
tricks, four club tricks, the spade ace
+A 6 4
and the diamond A·K to make his
32
contract.
t AK85
What about the bidding? It's cer·
+A QJ
talnly OK for North to invite with f011r
Vulnerable: Neither
no-trump. To ask for aces, North could
Dealer:
South
have bid a suit over South's two notrump and then bid four no-trump, or Weol
Nortb East
Soulb
he might have jumped to four clubs as
I t
Gerber over two no-trump. Should Pass
Pass
2 NT
South have accepted the invitation? Pass
4 NT Pass
6 NT
Although South has 19 high-card Pass
Pass
Pass
points, he bas no five-card suit and no
lOs or nines to help take tricks .. Fur·
Opening lead: • 10
thermore, South quickly showed why :
he should have been conservative: He
botched the play.
After winning the spade ace, he
played a low heart lo the queen and
was finiShed. He could take a successful club finesse, but be could no longer
make all five heart triclta and still get line? The firs~ heart declarer Ieath
to dummy enough times to take a sec- must be the jack. When Weal folloWI
ond club finesse and then cash the long it's safe to overtake with an honor i~
club. If he plays a second low heart to dummy. Even thou1h the suit splits 5·
dummy, West will split his 9-8, pre- 0, South can play toward the A·K·l0·7
venting declarer from taking all the later, and West cannot hurl him by
heart tricks. Do you see lhe winning splitting the 9-8.

··--

I

'J

I'

•1 ------------J

~L..Wtl
by THOMAS JOSEII'H
ACROSS
46 March 30,
I "The Naked
1986
47 &amp;ys' school

(1959 film)
5 Premarital

DOWN
I Actress
Adele

affair

II Asian river

2 Egyptian

12 Grapefruit
13 "The Tattoo"

3 Wacky
4 "Chances - " '::-'"-"''-'CJI!.!

(1955 film)
14 Egg
specialty
15 Formic acid
source
16 Sirain

deity

5 Notice

6 Tribut..
21 Pacify
34 ilare
7 Cockney's 22 Exclude 35 Athena's
"castle"
23 Mexican
title
8 What
lree
37 European
a nerve! 25 Night
river
- gnat
9 Robert before
39 or aircraft
17 Grassland 10 Church
26 Father
40 Presage
18 Sylvan deity
Ulbunal
of Kish
42 Morse code
20 Meny (Fr.) 16 Some
30 Cling
sound
22 Ruffian
19 Straighwn 31 Spoil
43 Rcverenrc
24 Scott
heroine
r-r.--r.-r:,.....-,.,...,
27 Jai 28Abide
28 Rockfish
31 God ,
the creawr
32 Man's
nickname
33 Yes vote

34 "A - for
AD Se880ns'
36 Jordanian
mountain
38 Philippine
peasanL
n Dodged
.:1 Pardon me! ~r:-++44Head for
bed

45 Word wllh
china
or table
DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work It :
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for anolher. In this sampl e A is used
for lhe three L's, X for lhe two O's, e tc. Smgle letwrs,
apostrophes, the length and formation or the word' 'are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CKYPTOQUOTES
10· 14
WUZ

NGYU

SZLZN

VZZE

OR

The Johnson Administra·

tion dispatches 1. 5 million
Americans 10 Vio1nam . IRI
160 mln .l
fll Benny Hill Show
fHiiof Noi-Neteounly tho
Newt
11 :30 il ell (!) Boot of Ceroor1
Tonighl' s guesiS are Charles
Grodin , Brad Garren and
Merle Earle. 1111160 min .)
(]) Sporucenter
a()) RemingtOn Steele A
CIA agent enlists the help of
Laura and Remington

DON'TLOOK ATME LIKE

T~AT, MIIAM;LII5T VEIIR 't'OU
SAIP NOT~IN6 WOULD EVER

SURPRISE VO\I A6AIN!

•

HRRF

10

OTZIQGSH

0 Z O ·O G R S 0

CUZS
RV

I 0

AGEGWGZO . -

WUZK

WUZ GN

I NZ
TRO -

NZ O TRSO G -

NRAZNW

E K S ~-

Yeaterdar'a CI'J'Ptoquote: GOLF CART: A MF.TIIOll
OF TRANSPORTING CWBS- THAT liAS ONE RIG
ADVANTAGE IT CAN'T COU NT. - .JOAC liM
HEINRICH

�I

•

•

I

"FALL ClASSIC" TOURNAMENT ACnoN 1be ftrsl annual "Racine. FaD Classic" voUeyball
1oun1arne111 was a laage success and provided
spedBioni wllh a lot~ COI1Ipl!tlloo and excitement as
this ScGit · Wolte adloll photo of Saturday's
cl!amplon*lp game lndlcates.Eieven teams participated In the event which was part ol the annual Fall

Festival sponso!Jd by the Racine Vohtnteer Fire
Department. Pam D1mcan and Beth Bum field ol 'lbe
N.E.T.' retumaserveagalnstEastern-KoumryKlub,
a team sponsored by John Tealord, Chester. 'The
N.E.T' 1111 all-womens team from Parkersburg won
the lnnaugural event.

Parkersburg team, classic winner
The first annual were furnished by the Kountry Club
'Racine Fall Classic' sponsored by 1
the Racine Volunteer Fire Depart·
men! Is now history, but the
excitement of the lnagural event
was still In the air early Saturday
evening, when the 'N.E.'I:.', an
all·women's team based In Parkers·
burg, W.Va., was crowned cham·
pion after defeating the Eastern
Kountry Klub In the exciting
championship match.The N.E.T.
!foam defeatfod four teams to earn
the title, defeating many all men
teams In the process to win the
championship trophy and bragging
rights to the traveling trophy.
The competition throughout the
day was Intense and exciting as well
as much fun for the players and
spectators wlK&gt; llned tiE sldellnes to
watch. The Initial excitement began
during warm·ups w!En eventual
champion, 'The N.E.T.' displayed
their talent and gave an Indication
thattheywereateamtobereckoned
with.Members of the N.E.T. team
were formerly West Virglnta State
Volleyball champions.
Eleven teams participated In the
event Including • J.D. Dr!Uing of
Racine. the Volley Vandals, the
Drones,Rutland,the Cove,the Ra·
cine Loafers, Eastern Student Coun·
cU,Eastern Koontry Club, Nor·
theast Cluster of United Methodist
Churches,tbe Racine Fire Depart·
ment,andtheN.E.T.
All teamsJ ere surprisingly
tough.
Tournament direCtor Lee Floyd
commented, "1be tournament was
a huge success. The traveling
trophy was sponsored by the Racine
Emergency Squad, tbe llrst place
trophy sponsored by the Sun Fun
PennzoD In Racine, and second
place was sponsored by Roses'
Excavating In Racine. Trophies
RACINE -

In Chester.

.. El~e11 calls were answered by .
local unit$ over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
Calls on Saturday lncl~ded: 8:03
a.m., Pomeroy to Village Green
Apartment$ for Lawton Templeton,
Jr., toVeteransMemorialHospltal;
TUppers Plains, 8: 53 a.m. to Route 7
lor Kenneth Grove, to Holzer
Medical Center; Rutl;md at 10:59
a.m. to Depot St. lor Howard
German to Holzer Medical Center;
Pomeroly at 12: 56 p.m. to Butternut
Ave., for Dawn Thomas to Veterans
Memorial; Syracuse at 6:52p.m. to
Second St., lor Debbie Hawley, to
Veterans Memorial; Racine at 7: 10
p.m. 1ll Route 2411 for Lisa Wawn,
taken from the scene of lm auto
accident to Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday at 1: 23p.m.,Pomeroy
took Ellen Wilson from State St. to
Veterans Memorial; Middleport at
4:43p.m. tookShaneEngl~fromthe
Middleport Marina to Veterans
Memorial; Rutland at 8:13 p.m.
took Sandra Boring from Route 684
to Veterans Memorial and ath9: 15
p.m., Rutland took Bruce Davis
from the !Ire station to Holzer
Medical Center.

•

WALLPAPER
SALE
QUALITY WALL COVERINGS IN PRINTS,
STRIPES, MINIATURES, PLAIDS, .
SPORTING EVENTS AND MANY OTHER
. PATTERNS.
MOST ARE PREPASTED AND WASHABlE ·

.

'

.Inside:

...

•••:t~:•
• • . ~··
•• *

....

~

,

Clas8lllecls '"" "'Pages 6, 7, 8
Cotni~Js-TV

............ .. Page 9

Deal;hs ................... Page 10
l!'.dltorlal •
Page 2
By the Bend ............. Page 5
Spona ............ ..... Pages 4, 6·
0 . . . . I • •• • •••• I.

•

•

at .Y . . . . -e nttne
Vot.3tl, No .u7
Copyrlftld 1985

A meet the candidte night will be
held at 7 p.m. ·tomorrow night
(TUesday) at Eastern High School
to give district residents an oppor·
tun!ty to meet candidates running
for the Eastern Local School District
Board. of Education at the Nov. 5
election. A forum will be conducted
and the meeting lsopentothepubllc. ·

POMEROY

WAIT FOR TRANsPoRTATION - Two famllle8 wall to be
il'aalpolie!l to Parkenbur&amp; South HJch Scbool'a ftelclhcge lollow1ng a
chemlcltlleak at the DuPont Chemlcallmclltermlnal at Larlanead on

•

ItS awhole new world.

LARKMEAD,W.Va.(UPI)-Du . skin Irritant, but families llvlng , carrying~ the one cyllnder and
Pont crews early today capped a within a half· mile of the facility, was parked at the time.
"A relief valve Is leak.lng,"
leak;y valve on a cylinder that were urged to evacuate as a
9\'li)Wed a' 'cljjiirot toXJiffunies'1nto precaution.
DINIIXl~sald. "Tbevalvetop-evllllt
the cycllnder lromoverpressurtztng•
tile ali- and lotted the'e'vacuaitolt r1
Pollc.e said the leak was plugged If It becomes warmed up.
abou! 400 to 500 people from their
DINicola said the truck was en
homes.
at about 2:20a.m.
"No one was Injured. ·we have all route from a Du Pont plant In
About 100 of the homeless went to
South Parkersburg High School for ldndli of help here at the site," sald Louisville, Ky., to the llrrn's
the night while the rest apparently Jerry DINicola, an envirOnmental ' Chambers Works disposal faclllty at
Deepwater, N.J. He said he didn't
found shelter with friends or family. ofllcer for Du Pont.
"There Is high hurilldlty aJ)d when know what the chemical was used
The Wood County Sheriffs Department said the ·100 residents who It Is coming out ol the eyllnder It Is lor.
'l1ll; facUlty Is located about one
stayed at the high school went home generating a cloud. It's a little bit
at about 5:15a.m.
llke (Iff acid cloud. II extends about moe frol)l tiE Ohio River and about
A spokesman for the sheriffs 400 to 500 yards and then seems lo '10 m1les northwest of· West Vlrgl·
nla's Kanawha Valley, where
dfPllrtment said today "the wlK&gt;Ie dissipate," DINicola said.
He said' the eyllnder held about several chemical leaks occurred
area was cleared atabout5:15 a.m."
this summer. A leak of aldlcarb
Officials said there were no 2,1ro pounds r1 the material.
The leak was discovered about oxime Aug. 11 at a Union Carbide
reports of Injuries from the leak r1
antimony pentachlor1de, an eye and 9:20p.m.The tractor· trallel'rlgwas pesticide plant sickened 135 people.

Weather forecast
Ton!ght...raln llk\'ly. Low 55 to 00.
Winds beCOming northerly 5 to 10

mph.

DINicola said the antimony
pentachlortde Is "Irritating to the
eyes."

.. "lt'a an ac:kkversus a bale,'•,he
said. "It's a material you shouldn't
get Into your eyes and that Is why we
evacuated."
O!flclals at the Wood County
emergepey operations center.said
people had been evacuatfod tJ:om
three neighborhoods along with
campers oo Blennerhassett Island.
Gall Hartshorn, Wood County
emergency services director, said
the estimate he had of the numlX'r
evacuate&lt;! was 400 to 500.
"It's nothing really bad but
!llmethlng to be concerned about,"
Hartshorn said.
'
The leak was "only about tiE size
of a pencD," he said.

guards released unharmed today

By MICIIAFL BURNS
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
Two guards who were held hostage
for about 15 hours by Inmates at
Ohio's only maximum·security prl·
son were released uriharmed early
today, and their captors surren·
dered without Incident.
The guards at the Southern Ohio
Correctional Facility were freed
, after tt(lclals agieed to temporarily
transfer four Inmates to another
facility and to allow a list of their
grievances to be read over a local
radio station, said Bob Prosser, a
spokesman for the Ohio Department ol CorrectiOns.
.
Prosser said the guards, Randy
Mehaffey and BUI Dunn, were not
harmed during the ordeal. They .
· were taken hostage shortly at about
12:30 p.m. Monday In the J.l cell
block, which Is reserveil !or unruly •
Inmates.
,
Dunn was released by the Inmates
at 2: 53 a.m. In exchange for a radio.
Mehaffey was released at 3:46a.m.
afterthelnmatesheardthegrlevan·
ces broadcastby theradlostatlon.
The four inmates, JayScot~33, ot
Cuyahoga County; John WOllam

Revival services scheduled to be
held at the Middleport Church of
Christ In Christian UnkmwW be held
Instead at the Middleport Nazarene
Church. The Rev. Keith Eblin Is the
evangelist. Services will continue
through Wednesday evening. The
public Is Invited.

Rl. Bllln Weat Vlrpda Moncla.v night. About MO people were evacuated
from their homes In the PI!Jker!burg area III'OUI1d t p.m. No Injuries
were reported. (UPI).

Leaky,.chemic~} valve capped early today

~son

Revival announced

Byrd Jr., 21, ol Hamilton County;
Wllllam G. Zuern, 26, of Hamilton
County; andErlcM.Swd!ord,24,r1
Clark and MontgOmery counties,
left the prison about 4:30 a.m. en
route to the Franklin County JaU.In
Columbus, Pro5ser said.
Bynl, Scott and Zuem all have
been sentenced to death for aggra·
vated munler. Swrl.ford was serv·
lng a sentence for aggravated
robbery and attempted murder.
Bynl, Scott a~d Zuern eventually
wW be returned to the Lucasv1lle
faclllty, said Prosser. It was not
!mown I! Swofford also will be sent
back to Lucasvllle.
PrlsonsuperlntendentTerryMor·
rls said the only weapons found In
the cell block were the guards' night
sticks and a pair c1 "numbchucks"
made of two magazines rolled
tightly and tied with a cloth.
He said a thorough search ~ the
cell block would IX' conducled today
for any otber possible weapons.
Prosser sa1d the Inmates were
upaet by living conditions In the J.1
cell block. Their complaints In·
eluded Improper medical treat·

ment, Improper diet and lack of

access to newspapers, magazines
and radios.

A few hours before the siege
ended, one of the Inmates had
threatened the IK&gt;stages with death
after five members of a specially
trained disturbance control unit
entered the prison.
"There's going to be some dead ..~
(hostages) going to hell.' ' one
inmate shouted through a window.

Morris said the Inmates' com·
plaints were unfounded.
"We feel we give the best medical
care possible and the food Is checked
dietetically," Morris said. "We
serve balanced meals.''
He said an Investigation would be
Prosser said a team of negotiators
conductfod to determine how the
were In contact with the Inmates
guards were overpowered.
Offlclalsalllrstsaldelghtlnmates throughout the ordeal. They con·
were Involved In the takeover. Two dueled negotiations through a door
Inmates gave up about three hours to the cell block and vla the
after the Incident began. A third, tetl;&gt;hone..•
1be J.l cell block has al cells but
who apparently was not Involved,
ooly
houses eight Inmates at a time
was releasE!! Monday night In
for
Inmate
safety, and Is segregated
excbangt' for food. Another Inmate
was In tiE cell block during the siege from other areas. Therearealways
but did rot participate In taking the two guards In that area. prison
IK&gt;stages.
ofllclals said.
The prison, designed for 1,6~
Morris said tbe Inmates des·
Inmates,'
opened tn 1972. lt now has
troyed several sinks, commodes
and an electric console during the an Inmate population d 2,278.
Another Inmate was found dead
siege. No estimate d damage was
·earlier Monday, apparently of
Immediately available.
The superintendent said It will be natural causes- and ofllclals ct tbe
up to the Scioto County prosecutor to .Prison stressed that his death was
determine what charges wW IX' llled rot related to the hostage-taking
Incident.
against the Inmates.

Some say Rhodes, 76,. too old for another
~enn
.

Ohio lotto winner
SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Quitting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

26 Conlt

A Multimedia Inc. Newapapar

I

--------------------------------..L--------------------..,..-

16 mg. ~tar".1. 2 mg. nicotine av. per cigarette by FTCmethod.

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tue1day, October 15, 1986

Forum set Tuesday

Saturday AdmlssJons .. Lawton
Templeton, Jr., Pomeroy.
Sa5urday Dlscharges..Terry Powell, Walter King, Margaret Goet t.
Sunday Admissions- Hugh Lelf·
belt, Pomeroy.
Sunday Dlscbarges .. warren
Black, Donald Bailey, Effie
Edwards.

~LAND (UP!) - Satur·
·day's winning Ohio Lottery
numberS: Dally Number ·
933.
Ticket sales totaled $1,317,0l7,
with a pa,Yolf dueof$779,176. LOT1'0
2, 8, 22, 26, 31 and 33.

i ,; \

New Diles
park plans
are revealed

Veterans Memorial

Tuesday ...cloudy with a chance of
morning rain then partly cloudy In
the afternoon. High 65 to 70.
Chance of rain ts 00 percent
loday..70 percent tonlght .. and 40
percent TUesday.
Extended loreeast
Woo.-1&amp;11hrough Friday
Achanceolraln Wednesday. Fair
ntunday and Frld&amp;1· Highs In the
881 WIDte8daY lllld'l'bul'!lday.. lllld
70 to 75 Fiiday. Lows In the 46§,

t

Monday, October 14, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Emergency squads
answer 11 calls

~

Todays
Camel Filters,
surprisingly
smooth.

, COLUMBUS (UPIJ -More than ' 1986 election.
Sixty-one percent of the men who
am registered Columbus voters
The mall poll was conductfod by responded and 70 percent ot the
were asked about fonner Gov. the Columbus Dispatch between women wlK&gt; responded sald they felt
James A. ·Rhodes' aae In a recent Sept. 30 and Oct. 3. Of the 844 be was too old.
mall poll, and twOothlrds said, at76, regiltered Columbus voters asked
On a racial tx:eakdown, 63percent
ite Is too old to hold that dftce aaaln. about Rhodes' age, 827 responded,
Rhodes. who bad toor four·Yfl!T with 66 percent saying they felt he ~ the white voters who responded
·and 7!1 percent of the black voters
terms as the state'schlefexecuttve,
was too old.
who answered said they thought
plans to annouf!Cf hls.candldacyfor
In the poll, 78 percent of the Rhodes was too old.
a fifth term Nov, 9 at a luncheon at
Scioto Downs. Monday he got his Democrat$ who responded said . Just prior to his 76th birthday last
llrst formal opposition when State · Rhodes wa5 too old, whlle49percent month, Rhodesdlstrtbutedresultsol
Sen. Paul Pfel!erri.Bucyruasaldhe ot the Republicans felt that way. Of • a medical examination that showed
was running for the Repubican those who listed-no party afflllatlon, , h1m 10 be in excellent health. A
statement by Dr. Waldemar Bergen
gubernatorial nomlnatl!ln lor the 68percent!elt he was too old. '

that accompanied the report read
that Rhodes appears "to be much
younger than the stated age of 75

Plans for the development of the wilt be voted upon. He said that the
new Diles Park- the former C &amp; 0 elect ric bUlls now running $a!,1m a
depot property - were unveiled by year and the one mill levy now In
Council President Dewey Horton effect to pay the bill brings In ooly
Monday night when Middleport $8,000. Through Increased costs and
Village Council met In regular the lnstallationolnewstreetllghtsln
session.
various parts of town, a surplus tn
Horton reported that the Middle- the street llghtlngfundwiU bewlped
portChambero!Commercehashad out by the end of the year. Horton
a plan drawn up for ljle development commented tba t good street llghtlng
of the park area which was inthetownlsadeterenttocrimean~
purchased by the vlllage from the indicated that he believes voters of
railroad company for W.OOO. Re· the town wlll support the new levy.
presentattves from council, the Council also discussed a one mill
chamber and the Middleport Re· recreat!On levy totiedeclded upon at
creation Comffilsslon are working the Nov. 5 election which would
together towards the developmenr provide money for repair of the
of .the new facility on Front St.. swimming pool and Improvement
Horton said.
and development of other recrea·
Plans call for an attractive tiona! facilities. Mayor Hoffman
wooden fence with planting areas pointed out that the recreation fund
built In and for the development of Is now $5,000 "In the red". The
shuffle board areas, construction of dl&amp;cusslon brought out also that
a stage area for performances at swimming pool personnel are paid
events like the block party. a less than the minimum wage during
playground area, a picnic area with the summer months. Again Horton
abarbecueplt,stepsgolngtoarlver said that he also !eels !hal
boat dock and other accornmoda· recreationallacllltiesreducecrlme
lions, Horton satd. Many of the in the vUiage bl'cause through the
Improvements wUI be donated .lzy recreational activities young people
Individuals and businesses, accord· are kept occupied.
lng to the plans, Horton pointed out.
One resident discussed damages
The vUiage will be expected to being Incurred to hts home by motor
provlde certalr! basic features llke vehicles In anarrowal~behlndthe
watf.r.dn~mrtroord taCI11t1eo wtilll!•' ·Sundry SIOI'e. He asked that &gt;101!\e
the group working on the develop-. protective guard be placed near his
ment wlll be stressing more visual home to protect the structure from
Improvement. The group envisions vehicles. Council agreed to look Into
the lnterlorolthe depot as a meeting the maUer. Another resident was on
place and Information center, hand to complain against the Cable
Horton reported. He Indicated that Communications Group - both
within a year many of the planned bllllng and service. He said that
reception on Broadway St. bas not
developments wUI be completed.
Village workers have been work· been good and he objected to the too
lnglntheparkarearemovtngtracks month billing policy of the cable
and a roadway, It was reported. television group. Mayor Hoffman
During the report Mayor Fred and several council memlX'rs
Holtman stated that the vma·ge bas Indicated they had received calls
made appllcatlon for a $10,1m about the company and Mayor
community block development Hoffman Indicated he wlll try to
grant which would be used for have a representative of the
restoration of the depot structure company present for the next
and the purchase of playground council meeting.
equipment.
Council approved the September
Council passed a resolution In report of Mayor Hoffman showing
support of State Issue I which would receipts of $4862.50 In fines and fees.
provide $100,000,1ro for coal re· Mayor Hoffmanreportedtbatanew
search and development to find flagpole has been Installed In
methods of using Ohio's high · Riverview Cemetery by the family
sulphurcoal.
of the late Pollee Chief J. J.
Council discussed tax measures Cremeans and a letterofthankswlll
to be voted upon at the Nov. 5 be sent to the family. Mayor
election. Mayor Hoffman said a new Hoffman announced the approval of
one mill
expense tax levy
Continued on page 10

'·

i
I •

'

.l

years."
"The question Is not who's the
youngest or the oldest or wlK&gt;' s the
best looking," Rhodes said. "The
questlonlswhocandothejob. (Gov.
Richard F.) Celeste has shown he
can't handle the job."
His aide James Duerk said
Rhodes wW overcome the ag~lssue.
"The Issue was there In 1974"
when Rhodes deteatfod Gov. John
Gllllan, Duerk said.

GUARD - Prli!On guardl slalld outside the Southem OhiO
Correctional facility walling for progreas In the hostage situation Inside
the prllon where two guards were beln« held hostage by Inmates In a high
security area ol the prllon.
: :

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