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                  <text>Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Hurricane Juan retains
strength, drifts eastward
LAKE CHARLES, La. (UP!) Hurricane Juan drifted eastward
today while It lashed the Louisiana
coast with B:).rnph winds and heavy
ralru; that overwhelmed unprepared oU rigs and boats and forced
tl!ousands from flooded homes.
Three people were killed and three
were missing.
.
Floods that washed up to 12 feet
deep through LeevUle, about 45
miles south of New Orleans, forced
the evacuation of some 2,(m coastal
residents, and rnot'l'than 2,(mother
people were stranded by high water,
officials said.
Coast Guard rescuers were expected to reswne searches at
daybreak today atterpluckingrnore
than 150 oU rig workers and sailors
Monday from violent seas churned
by the storm. which caught many
offshore interests by surprise.
Two men - one a board a small
boat and the other an &lt;il rig worker
- drowned Monday, while a third
was electrocuted by a downed
power line.
· Two crewmen were reported
missing !rom a sunken 160-foot
supply boat off Morgan City and
another from a grounded shrimper
off Southwest Pass. But some
autooritil.&gt;s warned it might he 'too

The new gym would be dividable,
to allow the kindergarten and
elementary students access to the
faciUty during r'ecesses at the same
time the junior high students would
be participating in P.E. classes.
Also, notesOrd, the kindergartenelementary area of the I&gt;.JUding
would be separate from the junior
high area, each with its own
entrance and fenced in yards. The
children would only be toget)ler on
the ruses, Ordsays, "justastheyare

school is buUt.
As brought out by Beegle,
elementary sporls cannot legally be
sponsored by the schooUtselt, even
though school facities are mlllzed.
P'fO's and booster orga.nlzatlons
must sponsor elementary sporls
programs and with the new school,
" It could even be a better operation," he adds.
Another point Ord makes is that
time spent by students en buses will
be equalized with a consolidated
facility because the "loop method"
of transportbtg would be used
instead of "backtracking." In most
ca~. Ord says, the first child on the
bus iii the morning would be the first
child o!fthe bos In the evening.
Another district benefit ot the new
school, says Ord, would be a
monetary savings en fuel and
electlcal costs to the tune c1 $22 per
pupU. According to district figures,
Southern Local spent $64,500 in l9Sl
for fuel and electricity. The proje-cted cost to heat and light the new
building is $49,000.
When the district was evaluated
by the state department of education in 1975 and 76, Ord reports, the
suggestion was made that the board
should see If was "economically
feasible" to continue operating the
four elementary schools.
Because oft he longrangp savings
in. utilities, Ord says an operating
levy "after"·completion d the new
school, "should oot be needed."
Also, it the levy passes, additional
typing, special education and art
classrooms, wtth storage, would be
added to the high school.
In regard to choosing a site next to
the high school in Racine for the new
buDding, Ord says that more went
into the decision than just the fact
that Racine is the center of the
district.
Because road' access and sewer,
electrical and water hookups are
already avallable at the proposed
location, he explains, "little sit
preparation would be needed before
construction could begin." '
AI a total estimated cost of
$5,208,000, wtth the State of Ohio
providlng$1,209,500ofthatsum,Ord
says coru;tructlon could begin in
October d 198i. Then, depending on
weather, the avallabllty of materials and otherdetermtningfactors,
the building should take 14 to 16
months to complete. The new school
could be ready for occupancy by the

I Area deaths I

Soviets offer swap

Walker to get life

Thor M. Nelson

Thor M. Nelson, 65, Route 2,
40th birthday." Actually Michael is GuysvUie, died Tuesday morning at
eligible for parole in eight years.
his residence.
Under the agreement, approved
Funeral arrangements are being
by Judge Alexander Harvey II, the lnade by the White FunPraiHorneat
Walkers also wlll reveal complete CoolvUie.
detalls of their spying efforts to help
the government assess how damag- Ray Williams
ing the secrets the Russians
Ray Wllllarns, 82, of GuysvUie,
received were io America's naval died Monday morning at his home.
operations, particularly its submaHe was born in Trimble to tile late
rine network.
James L. and Emma Skivers
Although Harvey approved the Williams. He was a former coal
deal, he will not sentence the miner and farmer and retired
Walkers until they cooperate with employee of the Ohio Department ot
government inquiries into John Highways.
Walker's actlvltil.&gt;s. Bennett said
He is survivro by his wife, Pearl
sentencing could be conducted in Atherton WIUlams; one son, Carl
four to six months.
and one daughter, Opal Castle, both
The fourth member of the spy ofGuysvUie; one sister, Lula Keirns
ring, John Walker's brother, Ar- Rainer of Chesterhill; one sister-inthur, 50, also a retired Navy officer, law, Ethel Williarru; of Shade; eight
was convicted in August of stealing grandchldren , 16 great secrpt documents from his em- grandchildren, one step grandson,
ployer, a Virginia defense contrac- and several nieces and nephews.
tor. He Is awaiting sentencing.
He was preceded in death by four
Investigators say J o h n Walker brothers, Fred, Leonard, John and
and the ring members obtained Charlie; two sisters, Eunice NicholInformation from the world's larg- son and Ada Van Meter; and a
est Naval base in Norfolk, Va., and son-in-law, Vernon Castle.
Navy Installations on the West Coast
Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
where Whitworth lives. They also Thursday at the White Funeral
say John Walker went as far as
Home in Coolvllle with Rev. David
Vienna and Hong Kong to meet
Axsom oHiciating. Burial will be in
Soviet contacts.
the Asi&gt;.Jry Cemetery at Guysville.
Officials have characterized the
Friends may call at the fu nerai
ring as the most damaging to U.S.
home after 2 p.m. Wednesday. The
security In ll years.
family wlll be there to greet visitors
from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.

district - both certified and
non-certified - are still not sure a
consolidated buDding Is the way to
go.
"If It's their jobs they're roncerned about" Ord says, "there
may be some shuffling of assignm~nts oo t no layoffs. Southern
District Is not that overstaffed," he
adds.
The construction process would
Ilkely provide some other jobs in the
community Ord points out "If It's their jobs they're concerned about," Ord says, "there
may be some shuffling of assignments but no layoffs. Southern
District Is not that overstaffed," he
adds.
The coru;truction process would
likely provide some other jobs In the
community Ord points out.
If the levy fails, Ord says, the
board will have to start over to
qualify for state funding and then
walt tiliSouthern'sturn comes up as
funding from the · state becomes
available. "Each year many districts in the state compete for a
limited amount of dollars."
Also lithe levy falls, the board will
be looking at approximately $80,tnl
in furnace repairs at Syracuse and
Racine Elernentaries and the junior
high, in addition tootherrPrnodeling
needed In an attempt to bring the
buildings to state standards.
"And there is no state assistance
for remodeling," Ord notes.
"Anything to do with repair and
rennovation would have to be done
with local money."
Another major need which may
befaCII)&amp;the board If the levy fails is
construction of sewage treatment

plants at the Portland and Letart
Falls schools which are botlt stW on
septic sysiems.
in October 1984, Ord reports, the
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency "strongly suggested" sewage treatment plants at these
locations. In both cases, easements
would have to be obtained from
private property owners to accornodate lines to carry treated waste
water from the schools to the river.
Beegle asks voters to note that
also included on their ballots will be
"construction of a bus garage."
As he explains. the garage is
Included only as a possibility. If
estimated costs would exceed
actual construction costs, the district could use the extra money to
construct a garage, but only wtth
prior voter approval.
Ord and Beegle both contend that
even l.f the levy falls, construction of
a new building "is inevitable" at
some point, again, because local
boards rnu strneetthestandardsfor
educat ion that are adopted at the
state levt-L

IDAHO

POTATO~~

PORK LOINS
II.

h

·

1
P Oils back to Tupp·
ers Plains &amp; long Bottom.

VOTE FOR

fRAN (IS ANDREW
FOR TRUSTEE FOR
OLIVE TOWNSHIP

ELECTION
NOVEMBER 5, 1985

tor

lrrors - Pricos EHKiiYt thrv Sit.. Nov. 2, 1915

DOUBLE SEECOUPONS
ALL
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STORES FOR DETAILS
.
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Poid tor by Franc11 Andrew

20°/o

$1.4 million suit filed in Meigs
Suit for $1,400,(m has been filed in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Michael Henry against
Aaron Sayre, vocational instructor
at Southern High School; James
Adarru;, principal; Bobby J . Ord,
superintendent of Southern District,
and Joseph Thoren, Don P. Smith,
Gary Dennis Evans, Janet Sue
Grue5er and David Hill, all
members or the Southern Local
Board of Education.
The suit was flied as the result of
an acci!}ent in the fall of 1983. The
plaintitl' charges that Sayre instructed, supervised and assisted
his vocational agriCulture class In
bu~ding a barn in the shop at the
high school and was negligent in oot
having the barn built on supportive
structures so that it could be moved
from the buDding by reasonable

ELBERFELDS

TUESDAY NIGHT
CHAIIUE &amp; LfNNIE
' P.M. 'nL 1 A.M.

POMEROY

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
HAllOWEEN PARTY and
Mill IIVII lAIII
9 P.M. 'nl 1 A.M.

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
' P.M. 'nL I A.M.
Mill IIVEII.llll

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

Save s319s

88Q9
Reg. 119.9!i

2 Sections, 20 Pogo•

26 Conte

A Multimedia Inc. Newsp1per

mpans. Ahout Oct, 7, 1983, Sayre
allegedly offered an "A" to any
members of the class who would
help him lift the barn onto sleds and
the plaintiff was among the volunteers. The plaintiff charges that
Sayre negligently placed the plaintlff and others in position to lift the
barn rather than using the hydraulic
jack which was directly available
from the ceiling above the ~rn.
Theplalntiffallegedlyfellbeneath
theweightofthebuUdingreceivinga
lifelong injury. Sayre allegedly
allowE'dlwoci!ISSIDernberstocarry
the plaintiff to the administrative
offices rather than seeking and
administering appropriate emergency medical assistant. The plaintiff charges that Sayre's action
constitutes willful, wanton and

malicious misconduct. Once in the
administrative office, Adams approached the plaintiff and asked if
he wanted him to call an emergency
squad whereupon thP plaintiff
requested he be allowed to call his
mother, according to the court
action.
The plaintiff charges that the
administration wronged In not
seeking innm!'diate appropriatE'
medical assistance. The plaintiff
alleges that all defendants were
negligent to adopt and maintain
adequatepollclesandproceduresto
provide first aid to serious Injured
students.
Claiming permanent Injuries
which have dlmished his life's
earning capacity, Henry seeks
$!XXJ,OOJ for injuries received and
$500,001 in punitive damages.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI statehotllle Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPII - Home
State Savings Bank owner Marvin
L. Warnertriedtolngratiatehlmsell
wtth a new Republican state savings
ano loan superintendent 10 years
ago by posing as an expert on thrifts
and an agent of then-Gov. James A.
Rhodes, . the official testified
Tuesday.
But the superintendent, Roger W.
Tracy, appointed by Rhodes, said
the ploy did not work.
"1 don't give a damn whether you
know Jim Rhodes or not," Tracy
quoted himself as telling Warner to
his face shortly after he had become
superintendent In early 1975. "I'm
going to regulate your savings and
loan just likP everybody else's."
Tracy, now a Franklin County
commi~ioner, was the fifth former
superintendent to testify befQre the
Joint Legislative Committee on
Savings and Loaru;, which · Is
attempting to get a handle oo the
collapse of Horne State last March,
resulting in theshutdownof70other
state-chartered thrifts by Gov.
Richard F. Celeste.
Also testifying was David J .
Schiebel, a Home State oHicer who
said Warner and President Burton
M. Bongard made all the investments in ESM Government Securities, lnc., Fort Lauderdale, Fla.,
which resulted in a $144 million loss
to Home State when ESM was
closed by the u.s~ Securities Md"
EKchangeCommtssion.
Schiebel was to complete his
testimony today.
Tracy said he "hadn't been
superintendent more than three
weeks" whPn hP was introduced to
Warner in the office of then -Senate
Minority Leader Michael J. Maloney, R-Clnclnnatl.
"Mr. Tracy, I'm glad to meet you,
we're going to get along just fine,"
Tracy quoted Warner as saying in a
charming voice with a southern
accent . "I'd like to meet with you
soon. I'd love to give you some
background on savings and loan
law. I'm here to give some petitions
to Jim Rhodes on the bond issues."
At that time, Rhodes was attemptIng to get a package of $4.5 billion In
construct ion bond issues oo the Ohio
ballot .
"l'm not going to hold it against
you that you're a member of the
Democratic National Committee,"
Tracy recalled te1ling Warner, "and
the top contributor to (former

· Democratic Gov.) Jack Gilligan.
And ldon'tgiveadamnwhetheryou
know Jim Rhodes or not. I'm going
to regulate your savings and loan
just like everybody else's."
Tracy told the committee he
learned quickly he would havE! to be

tough in order to avoid being
co-opted bythe S&amp;Lindustry, whicll ·
always looks "forwaystoget a 'y~' ·

answer."
·
He said he discovered j&gt;eople IIi
the industry were.wondering; ;·How
Continued on page 20 .

Racine may fonn
merchants group_
Racine Village Council and Ra,cine merchants met in a joint
session to discuss the formation of a
Racine Merchants Association at
the Shrine Park building Monday.
Mayor Charles Pyles presided
with councilmen Carroll Taford,
Larry Wolfe, Scott Wolle and Frank
Cleland on hand along with merchants, Edwin Cozart, Betty Sayre,
Jeanette Lawrence, Eber Pickens,
June Corbin, Ruth Brooks, Gerald
Simpson, Cathy Carleton, Beverly
Moore and Joan McLain.
The success of the recent fall
festival was discussed and It was
emphasized that more similar
events sbouid be scheduled and neKI
year festival plans should be
expanded to include more program

and activit les.
Council expressed support of the
merchants and encouraged tfle
formation of a merchants association. The village a~ to place a
Christmas tree in the business
section; add street lights in the
business section along with add4:d
decorations; place barrels for Utter
collection in theoosinesssectionali'cl
repair areas for parking.
.
It was announced that two new
businesses may be locating in t11f
town and c council wm make
contacts toencourage them to klcate
In Racine. A meeting was set for 7
p.m. on Nov. 4 to oranlze a
merchants associatiOn after which
time plans wtll be. madP for a
Christmas promot ion.

Prisoners find documents
-'D~"(Uiil ...!"l''\e llfti iiiid 1lie isll!lWY ~y iviit

"

launch separate investtgattom ·today to determine how sensitive
DefenseDepartmenldocumenlsendeds!Pinlhehandsolinmaleiala
West TClliL'! prison Industries unit.
'The documents were brought IAI their altenlion by United Preos
International, which received the items - including lechnlcal
manuals, personnel rues, a memo marked "classified" and maps ol
mUIIary bases - from the Inmates.
"We pian to do a too rough, oompleCe lnvesllgallon," said Matt
Perez, spokesman for the FBrs El Paso, Texas, office. "We've &amp;~~Ito
find out where lheselhings areoomlngfrom and whole gelling them.
'These are obviously documents that should not be in the hands of
Inmates. Somebody's obviousb' being lax In security."
Inmates said I he documents were left klsideofflce fumllureshlpped
from a variety c1 regional mUitary lnstallatlonslothe La Tuna federal
penitentiary near El Paso.
'The FBhald II was reopening the case, w(jch It had dropped, based
on the UPI findings.
"AI first we didn't thinklhere was much there," said Perez. "JWJI
desks tuB oflhings you would find In any desk. But we obviou81ydldn't
see all the papers."
Docwnents sent by Inmates to UPI inclllde a "Category II material
deficiency repon" marked classified and directed toolflcialsaiKelly,
McClellan, Langley and Berptrorn Air Force bases in the Unled
States, and Cologne Air Base In West Gennany. Another wBS a
leclulical order for pans for the F-15, one of the nation's moll&amp;
sophisticated warplanes.

l

Juan wavering over Louisiana
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) - Tropl- from Port O'Connor, Texas, to
New Orleans, where some residents
cal storm Juan wavered over · Apalachicola. Fla. Four to 8 inches have lived wtth 4 feet of water since
c,entral Louisiana today as muddy of rain was expected in portions of Sunday.
ftoodwaters several feet deep kept Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama
"We'reexpectingthewaterinthls
more trw 8,tnl people from their and northwestern Florida.
whole area to continue receding,"
homes and rescue teams prepar!'d
More than 8,(m people in sou- said Joe CannateUa, a sheriH's
tosearchforahalldozenmenlostat theastern Louisiana have fled the deputy in St. JoM the Baptist
sea.
rising waters for shelters or homes Parish. "We haven't had any rain
At least four people were kUled in of lrlends and relatives.
now In a couple of hours."
the storm. The six others who
As sandbagging continued, offlBetween New Orleans and the
vanished included three workers ciaissaldtheyexpectrothefloods- Gulf, however, high water swirled
trapped in a capsized oil rig in the called the worst in a quarter of a unhindered through levees
mouth of the Mississippi and three century - to begin receding near breeched by the storm.
men aboard industry supply boats in
theGullC(\&amp;St.
Rescue ·' teams, which have
plucked some 160 people from Gull
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. (UPI I nauts are commander Henry HartsCoast waters, were to resume - J record crew of eight crowded field, making his third shuttlefltght,
searching at daybreak. Rough seas aboard thespaceshuttleChaUenger co-pilot Steven Nagel, James
Tuesday night forced divers to for blastoH ' today on a historic BuchU, Guion Bluford and BonniE&gt;
suspend efforts to find the trio weeklong Spacelab flight chatered Dunbar, the seventh American
woman to fly in space.
believed trapped in the A.H. and managed by West Germany.
Joining them for the Spacelab D1
Howard rig.
The countdown went smoothly
mission
- the "D" stands for
"We had to ~op due to the ljeavy andofflcialssaiderratlc instrument
Deutschlandcurrents and the instability of the readings !rom one of the shuttle's
bargf," Coast Guard spokesrnaJ\ three electrlclty-produclng fuel were physicists Ernst MesserschKeitliSpangler said.
cells were not serious enough to stall mld and Reinhard Furrer, both of
· At 2 a.m. EST Juan, demoted the flight, the 22nd In the shuttle .West Germany, and European
Space Agency astronaut Wubbo
I·
from hurricane Tuesday . after program. ·
; !' . ·. making its second assualt on land,
Theonlyconcernwasl hethreatof Ockels, also a physicist, of the
was In central Louisiana between rain . and thundershowers from Netherlands.
The cr~ members, awakened
\~r '· Lake Charles and Lafayette. The tropical storm Juan. The morning
today
in the staggpred shifts they
National Weather Service said the sky was crystal clear, although rain
will
maintain
in orbit, lett their
storm was expected to weaken remained in the forecast and NASA
quarters
at
9:13
a.m. EST, sinillng
slowly oot that its direction was officials wereoptlmisticChaUenger
and
waving
to
photographers,
and
uncertain.
would be able to take off during Its.
went to the launch pad. They hegan
J~l,itldR
three-hour "launch window."
boarding Challenger at 9:38a.m.
mph, and gale war gs
'"'&lt;.-\1llf¥Jh~!l)e's five NASA astro-

Launch scheduled for noon today

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algh&amp;'s Halloween party In Pomeroy, Eight-year-old
brotl!er Travis was also pretty original as a soda pop.

AS NICE - Michelle and Marla Dntnlf:l,
left to rlchl, 13 month old twins of Max and Elel9e
'Dremler, Union Ten:ace, stole the sliuw al Tuesday

Hurry In And Save

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

enttne

Ex-loan chief Tracy says·
Warner tried to 'woo him'

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•

October 30 1985

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Ord says the old buildings in the
district, and the properties oo which
they sit, wouldlikelybeoffered tothP
cornrnuruties, or else sold. Whatevertbe board's deciSion on the old
oolldings, that decision woulct be
made based on Iocai Input from the
public, Ord adds.
But even wtth benefits to the
district outlined In detail, many
voters, some even employees of the

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Edllorlals ................ Page 2
Sports ................ Page 13, 14

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By the Bend .. Pages 11, 12, 16
Classlfleds ..... Page&amp;18, 17,18
Com,cs-'l'V ............. Page 19
Deaths ................... Pqe 10

rt==========;

COLOR
SALE!
BUY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS!
WHOLE

Inside:

Some Southern. "'-~----..:.:tc::on:::lln=u=ed:..:f::rom:.:.:.!:pa~ge:..:1~J- - -- - - - - - -- - -

early to count the missing.
"The big problem Is, we have no
idea of the number of people out
there," said Coast Guard Lt. PhWip
Fallis, whose crew Monday rescued
arigworkerwho stayed afloat forlB
hours by clinging to a slender
wooden plank.
At2a.m. EST, the massive center
of the hurricane was south- now."
southeast of Lafayette, La., near
Uncertainties have also been
latitude 28.9 oorth and longltude 91.5 voiced by residents of the district
west. Hurricane warnings reached concerning sporls programs at the
from Texas to the mouth of the elementary level if a consolidated
Mississippi, and gale warnings
ex tended from Texas to Florida.
The storm was drl!ting Past ward
at 5 to 10 mph, battering the
Louisiana coast with 85-rnph winds
and t kles up to 8 feet ahove normaL Dennie G. Barker
Juan was oot expected to lose
DenniE' G. Barker, 55, of Youngstrength because It was remaining
stown, died Sunday at his residence
over water, theNWSsaid.
following a long Uiness.
Six inches of rain drenched
He was born Feb. 17, 1930 In
Beaumont, Texas, threatening
Danvllle, W.Va., to Bernice Fox
flooding. NParly 5 inches of rain
Barker, who resides in Parkerssoaked siruthern Louisiana, flooding
burg, W.Va .. and the late Dennie
streets and disrupting electrical
Barker.
services. As much as 10inchescould
He was a maintenance supervisor
fall, theNWSsald.
for
J.C. Penney in Boardman for 15
"It's stUI got good circulation," an
NWS spokesman In Miami said years and was a formerempioyeeof
Monday night ot Juan. ' 'lt'sstUI well the Coca Cola Bottling Co .. for 17
years.
organized."
Survivors include his wife, Violet
Covey Barker, one daughter, Mrs.
Judy Minnich of Barberton; three
sons, Gary L. Barker c1 Columi&gt;.Js,
Dale E. Barker c1 Youngstown and
Paul A. Barker of Gallipolis; one
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The rnent d!lcial said of the oHer.
sister,
Mrs. Verna TlttisofChqrlesSoviet Union wants the United
The offer, described for the Times
States to cease modernizing two by U.S. and Soviet officials, was ton, W.Va.; one brother, Gerald
existing radar installations as the made ahout three weeks ago1at a Barker of Alabama~ and slx
condition lor its halting constuction special meeting In the Geneva arms' grandchildren.
One granddaughter preceded him
of a radar site In central Siberia, It
negotiations by YuU A. Kvltslnsky,
In
death.
was reported today.
who head~ the Soviets' spaceFuneral services wlll be 1 p.m.
One Pentagon official, not identi- weaporu; team.
Thursday
at Arner Funeral Chapel
fied by The New YorkTimes,caUed
The Soviets contend that upgradin
ChPSfl'r,
W.Va., where friends
the oHer "a non-offer, a sucker Ing of the two U.S. radar installacall
Wednesday
from 1-5.p.rn .
may
deal."
tions-at Fyilngdales In Yorkshire,
p.m.
Friends
rnayalsocallat
and
7-9
"We have nPither a positive nor a England, and Thule, Greenland negative attitude overall to the violates the Anti-ballistic Missile the Anstrum -Gustafson-Velker
Funeral Horne in Youngstown from
Soviet proposal," a State Depart. Treaty of19'7'.l.
7-9 p.m. today. Burial wUI be In MUI
Creek Hill Cemetery in Hookstown,
Pa.

ByCARLKORN
BALTIMORE (UP!) - John
Walker, mastermind of one of the
most damaging spy rings since the
Cold War, wlll get life in-prison as
part of a deal with the governmpnt
Monday that gave his son a lighter
sentence for hts role In spylngforthe
Soviets.
The elder Waiker, a retired naval
communications expert, pleaded
guilty to three counts of espionage,
including a new indictment that
accused him ol 20 overt acts of
spying between 1968 and 1985.
Walker's son, Michael, quietly
pleaded gullty tofivesirnllarcounts.
In return fora25-yearsentencefor
Michael Walker, the father and son
agreed to cooperate fully with the
government - Including testifying
against Jerry Whitworth, another
former Navy man, at his spy trial in
California.
John Walker's lawyer, public
defender Fred Bennett, said the
Sovlel spy accept!'d alifeterrnsohis
son can someday be free.
"John Walker loves his son very
much," Bennett said. "He Is more
concerned for his son's future than
for his own."
John Walker wUl be eligible for
parole in 10 years, but Bennett
acknowledged that he probably
would spend the rest of his lifP
behind bars. But, Bennett said,
"Michael will be out of jail before his

Tuesday, October 29, 1985

Pornaoy-Middleport, Ohio

16K Standard BASIC
Color Computer 2
Includes Tutorial Manual on BASIC

id:l.i .•

H41Y:!·Wu;i!i:.:

•

'

ability "' do just lhal, ooor annually IMpede local
MEIGS STATE mGHWAV DEPARTMENT
soow and ice removal equipment. Meigs County's
INSPECI'ION - 'The National Weather Service
State IUpway Deparimenl was inopecled 'l'1leMay
Reports that snow oould fall as Clll'ly as OciDher or as
by an elsht man Inspection team from
1
late as May. Since last Dec:emher and January
dlstriclgarage, headed by Gene Baker, OOOI"urea
ranked founh as lbe snowle8t months reconled in Ibis
superintendent. Nonnan Weber, Melp Count)' l
area, lbe Ohio Depu1meot ol Tranaponation Is
superintendent,
reportl the department has a fleet~
gearing up to the "max" lor tile coming winter.
Keeping all highways clear of snow :111d Ice 18 a top . . 10 lnsckA and lwo graders, and stookpOes of over 880
loll!l of salt and 700 tons of cinders.
priority or the
In an eflon lo Insure their

ooor

ooor.

�Page-2-The Daily Sentinel ;
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio · [
Wednesday, October 30. 1985 ·

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Cont~oller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

or

. • LEITERS
OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
~ long . Allletttors are subject to editing and must~ signed with name, address and
tfl£'phone numbt-r. No unsigned letters wm bf published. LettE&gt;rs should be In
good taste. addressing Issues . not personalities.

Capl)ol In Washington, and would
be gratified to lmowthatltdoes. He
would also be pleased to hear that a
man only 6 years younger than
himself - and cherishing most of
the same values - Is In the White
House today and at or near the peak
of his popularity.
Television, jet planes, compu·
ters, mxlern medicine - the
myriad wonders d. modern sclenre,
which were prefigured wal before
my father's death - wouldn't
surprlsehlrnatall. Butldothinkhe
would be Impressed Ill hear that
men landed on the moon in 1991, and
he would be proud Indeed .(tll&gt;uJlh,

again, not surprised) to learn that
they were Americans.
But Dad would be.quick to ootlce
certain other changes, too ~ an!l to
disapprove sharply of some of
them. He was oo bigot, and would
have no Intrinsic objections Ill the
ootlceable change in the country's
ethnic comjllsltlon: the shift away
from the WASPsandtreotherolder
Immigrant groups toward the
Hispanics. But he was a reallst, and
'M!uld be concerned about such side
effects of the ethnic shift as
btllnguallsm. "Make them learn
EngUsh," re would say, and then
add: " .. .for their own good."

Letters to the editor
Pride on line Tuesday
!&gt;ride's what It's all about!
-Children are taught some of life's
strongest lessons from the models
In their lives - their parmts, their
grandparents, members of ttelr
cotnmunlty. If our children see us
as ~thuslastlc supporters of educa.
lion they lmow education Is Important. If they see us as suworters of
edpcatlon only wren It's ronvlenent, they Jearn that Jesson just as
~- The millage for the new
eleinentary/ junlor high school in

.
Southern Is a chance to display our
prtde in oor community schools
with a minimum of cost tooorselves
as well as a chance to show our kids
how smart we are to channel state
taxes we have to pay anyway back
to our community. My parmts
raised me saying, "Have yoo no
pride?" I sure do and I think the
Southern community does too.
Eleanor McKelvey
P.O. Box 65
Syracuse, OH 45779

Likes current council
As mayor of RaciJ!~ Vlllage, I collection truck.
have seen much groWth take place
Three (3) years In a row, Racine
within the vlllage during the past has received valuable Community
four (4 ) years. Perhaps the most Development Block Grants through
growth I've seen &lt;lJ ring my reign as the state and rur county commismayor.
sioners. For the past tour (4) years
This growih may not always be Racine has participated in the
visible as physical growth, but Federal Revenue Sharing
more Important as finandal Program.
growth.
Just recently Racine necelved a
Foor (4) years ago Racine new rescue truck to haul m:m and
VUiage had financial problems.
U!e saving equipment such as the
Through prudent planning, much Jaws of Life. Through the rounty
hard work, and tinnited spending, commission and grant money this
the current council has established was made jllsslble.
a strong flnanclal base from which
W!thin !be next two (2) months
"I must do something" wUI
to operate. After tlur (4) years of ~clne will be gettlnga new FMC
always
solve more problem; than
hard work, Raclne Is now In a Omega fire engine. This truck was
"something
must be done." Does
position to rrove forward, perhaps purchased through the cooperation
this sound like us.
1
slowly but on solld ground. In a of village and township !tflclals and
I have always said we have a
time ~n many cities are facing a the passage of the township fire
great fire department In Tuppers
financial crisis this Is qu lte an lev:Y by the township mters.
Plains, but after going to a jllbllc
accomplishment
By December Racine should
meeting the other night at the fire
Tlnne and effort beyond t te call of have one rf. the most modern and
house
and going INer the needs of
duty. cooperation, Intelligence, and well-equipped fire departments and
the
fire
department. I can see
, ._ experience have led to a fine emergency squads in the area.
where "I must do something" to
· wofklng councll.
Councll has made plans to
telp up-grade the equipment to
During the past four (4) years establish a merchants association
protect Orange Township.
Racine has acquired cable TV and with the acquisition of the
I know we aU say what would we
service. bricked the fire depart- Shrine Park plan to bulld a badly
do
without the fire department and
ment building and town hail, added needed first class recreation faciladd
"Something ·must be done."
vlt;jl water line extensions, Im- Ity.
We have applled for a
proved the water treatment plant Community Development Block Well, we have a chanre this
and water works facilities. Pre- Grant to purchase playground
vious paving bllls, the 1972 fire equipment.
In addition, councU memrers
engine, and the IBck-hoe have heen
Southern Local S::hool District
have contributed mud&gt; voluntrer
paid off.
has
the q:&gt;portunity to help start the
A new-used pollee cruiser and tahor to village facUlties.
development
of this section rl.
I would like to see wr current
water department truck have been
Meigs
Coonty
by
passing tre bond
purchased. In planning for the councU continue the positive proIssue
for
the
construction
oftre new
future Racine has establlsted grams that they have started.
equipment replacement tuoos tor a Please give them that q:&gt;portunlty. elementary school tor Southern
Mayor Charles Pyles Local District.
pollee cruiser, fire truck, and refuse
According to the various artlcles
Racine, Ohio
In newspapers and magazines In
regards to area development,
industrial leaders look at the school
facilities as a major factor In
The Mayor and council of $200 a year, and I don't evm have deciding whether to locate In a
particular area. They want good
Pomeroy say that their Income tax the right to vote on it.
Is the only fair tax, but I've yet to
One reason the Mayor and schools for the children of their
figure oot their reasoning. It would council of Pomeroy decided to go employees that will manage the
plant.
seem to nne that a fair tax would tax for a tax like this Is because they
the people who live In Pomeroy, realize that an awful lot of people
are In the same boat that I'm in.
after all its their town.
The Income tax affects too many They work In Pomeroy, but live
We have read with great interest,
people who don't live In Pomeroy, elsewhere. This means that the the letter's regarding the 'Southern
lor Instance all the people who work · Mayor and council can take our School Levy," IITitten by Maxine
there, but Uve elsewhere. Why we money and we can't do one thing Diddle.
don't even have the chance to vote ahout It!
We adnnire her Intelligence on the
Maybe the Mayor and council of matter, and her courage In stand·
on It, for or against. Now to me that
Is taxation without representation, Pomeroy should go down to
lng up for what she believes ln.
Middleport and take lessons on how
twO hundred years ago that very
We also agree, .. that lilly tax
to run a smaU town from Mayor payer's should havetre IJ'IvUege of
same thing started a war!
About a year ago, I went to a Hollman and Middleport's councU. voting on this Issue. After all ... what
Look at all the things Middleport do the others have to loose, since
Ponneroy councll meeting and
has done for hoth young and Old, they own nothing?
voiced my opinion on tte tax.
Mayor Seyler told me that I drive on like the new water tank and the
This generation already have
Pomeroy streets to go to and from Improvements that were made m
much better facUlties than WE had
work, I answered, no I don't Page Street just a few years ago.
for eduction, WE got by. HowLook at the new housing project,
because I drive on a state highway.
Main Street Is stlll State Route 33 the expansion to the lire departand business Route 7, and tte state ment, the cleaning up of the river
stlll maintains it. So then the Mayor bank and all the things they
The question has heen placed on
said that he assumes that while I'm maintain, like the swimming pool,
the
Nov. 5th ballot, Shall Ordinance
at my place rl. employment that I park and marina.
#547
be repealed? Yes 163; No 164;
Don't forget the &lt;id dePQt which
flush tbe toUet a time or t~ro a day.!
Now,
I have no way r:A knowing the
answered yes and I'm under the Middleport just bought and Is
number
of words In the aver~e
assumption that my employer pays already in the process at. changing It
voters vocabulary, but I ell know
their wati!r and sewage blll. The Into a park, all without such a tax.
mine Is very sUm, according to
R.E. Goodwin
point Is, this tax doesn't do one thing
Middleport Webster the word (repealed)
for me other than cost me about
means 'abandon or renounce.
The words (Ordlnanre # 547) Is
. understandable to the tune of
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $160,00&gt; a year oot of the minority
wage earner's, already taxed
Income.
There Is also a statement, telling
the voter that: (a majority a!!lrmaAll "Letters to the editor'' pertaining to upcoming Nov. 5election Issues . dve vote Is necessary tor passage) .
must be received In our offices by noon, Thursday. None wUI be ~bllshed
Now the word atflrmaUve means
after Friday, Nov. 1.
yes, but Its rarely used. In oormal

By HElEN THOMAS
UP1 White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagari says the most he can
get out of the November summit
meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev Is to "eliminate some of
the ·paranoia" between the
superpowers.
In an Interview with the British
Broadcasting Corp., taped Tuesday
at the White House and aired today,
Reagan also said he believes the
futuristic "star wars" space defense
Is the "most momentous In the

One thing he would simply have
to get used to: the staggering
devaluation of tre dollar slnre 1947.
Essentially, of course the number
of dollars assigned to a given value
Is Irrelevant; only a change In that
number harms tor helps) the c•
dollar's owner. But It would take a . ,
while for Dad to get accustomed to .,
paying $50 tor a dinner that used to
cost only $5, or a buck fur a shine
that used to be only a dime.
•!
He·would also be astonished, and
grimly concerned, to discover th;lt •
the general level !1 violence In this
country has reached a jilin! where •
uniformed security guards nllst be :
posted In the lobbies d. major rl.!lce
buildings In every city, and every
aircraft passenger must re sub·
jected to body and baggage checks.
I suspect he would favor cracking ,
down hard on criminals - and
applying the death penalty more '
liberally, in appropriate cases.
"That's what we did In lilY day and It worked," he would point oot.
Perhaps most of all, te would
deplore what has happened to
America's general ~mral level In
the past 38 years: the huge upswing
In the use of drugs, the near-total
disappearance of the Institution of
marriage in many !llCial contexts,
etc. My father was no rrude - far
from It! - but he believed In the
Immutable relation of cause and .,
effect, and he would Insist that a
nation cannot !rifle with Its ooslc
mores without paying a serious
price. As a matter !1 fact, I relieve
he might claim to see a relationship
between this general moral decllne
and the less than glorious rutcome
of our mtlltary efforts In Korea and
Vietnam.
Allin all, therefore, I am Inclined
to think Dad would see a lot to worry
about In the main trmds of
American life since his death.

Supports fire department .
November to help up-grade Orange
Township Fire Department with
the one mill levy on tre oollot. What
Will the oost be to you If your house
Is burned or we have to pay higher
rates for fire Insurance?
After being at the jllblic meeting
and talking to some other prople In
the community, they all say, Yes,
Sure, "something must be done."
Well, I just want you to go to the
polls In Novemrer and say "I must
do something" to ~P the good fire
department we have and also
Improve the equipment.
Kenneth Hager
Coolvtlle, Ohio

Feels area needs new school

Can't figure reasoning

Our area needs development and

needs the new school!
I attended the Racine Elementary many years ago and It hasn't
changed in all those years, except It
has ony 6 grades oow.
I have grana: hlldren In this
district and I want ttem to have
better opportunities.
I AM GOING TO VOTE FOR
THE CHILDREN ....! WILL VCII'E
FOR TilE SOUTilERN LOCAL
BOND ISSUE on Novemrer 5th.
Jack Wolfe
Gen. Del.
Racine, Ohio

Agrees with Maxine
ever, ... we were fortunate to have
dedicated Teacher's who were
Interested In ooreduct!Onal benefit,
rather that Sport's and Social
events. ,
H the tax payer's end up broke
financially, without a roof over 'their
head, they cannot say !llmeone dld
not warn them!
If every Individual would stand
up for what they believe In, this
would he a much tEtter world to live .
ln.
Mrs. George Holter

Tell it like it is

Letter_advisory

'

conversations It wouldn'.t have
made the person who wrote It any
more or less Intelligent l! he or she
had written It: (a majority YES
vote Is necessary for passage).
Note: The word yes Is in the ~ncb
block, not the word affirmative.
Now It seems to me the l:xlttom line
Is to go to the polls Nov. 5th and vote
yes to get rid ol this Ordinance #547
or what ever "they" choose to call
II.
By the way, the only thing I know
about oor city government Is what I
read In the local paper. Right or
wrong, tell It like It Is.
!:!eo A. Young
· Pomeroy, Ohio

•

lie. that be was genuinely unaware
or what his hosses ln Moscow were
up to.
Whatever the case, Dobrynln
soon enjoyed aunlquestatusamong
foreign diplomats here. He became
the White House's chief contact
with the Kremlin (II a wide rangoo of
matters. President Johnson even
gave him his private phone number
- and Dobrynln used It at least
once.
Henry Kissinger elevated Dobrynln to an even more exalted
status when he was President
Nixon's national security adviser.
The two were on an easy, firstname ba$1s, and It was their secret
conversations that nailed down th€
SALT I and ABM treaties. Once .
Kissinger flew to Moscow secretly
with Dobrynin; the American
ambassador had oo Inkling of tte
visit untU Kissinger was about to
leave.
When Kissinger became secretary of state, he arrangood for
Dobrynln to re allowed to drive
right Into the department's underground garage and be whisked In a
private elevator up to tte secretary's seventh-floor office. This
privilege was continued during tte
Carter administration.
Former Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance credits Dobrynln with being
the Indispensable negotla tor of t re
SALT II lreaty. Then-national
security adviser Zblgnlew Brze· '
zinskl was another tan - evm
though the ambassador conststmtly beat him at chess during
hours-long IJ'ivate battles.
The big chill set in with the
suclden ferocity of a Russian winter
when Ronald Reagan was Inaugu- •
rated. In fact, Dobrynln learned of '•
the change In jlllltical climate on ••
Jan. 29, 1981, when he drove up to •'
Foggy Botton's underground m- •,.
trance Intending to pay his respects I
to the new secretary of state, Gen. .J
Alexander Halg. He was turned
back and had to use the main entrance like any other arnlalssa- ••
dor. His access to top administra- ••
••
tion officials Is now no greater than
any envoy's.
•

Today in history
Today Is Wednesday, Oct. :ll, the ll3rd day of 1985 with 62 to follow.
The moon Is moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those l:xlm on this date are under the sign d. Scorpio. They include John
Adams, second president of the United States, In 17li; Russian novelist
Fyodor Dostoyevsky, In 1821; poet Ezra Pound In IB85; etiquette authority
EmUy Post In 1873; strongman Charles Atlas In 1893: actress Ruth Gordon
In 1896; film director Louis Malle In 1932 (age 53), and actor Henry Winkler
In 1945 (age 40) .
On this date In history:
·
In 1817, Simon Bolivar established the independent government of
Venezuela.
.
In 1938, Orson Welles triggered a national panic with a realistic radio
dramatization of a ~artlan - invaslon, based on H.G. Wells' "War of the
Worlds."
In 1941, more than a month before the United States entered World War
,II, an American destroyer, the Reuben James, was torpedoed and sunk by
a German submarine.
·
.

century."
He said he wiluld be wtlllng to'
share thespaceweaponstechnology
with the .Soviet Union aM disclosed
that "leading scientists who are
Involved In this say they can foresee
achieving this ... in a matter of

of the paranoia," Reagan said. "If
we could reduce the hostility, the
suspicion that keeps our two
countlies, but pal,'llcularly the
Warsaw (Pact) and us, at D!lds with
each other ... this Is vital and
Important."
He reiterated his view that the
superpower arsenals are the resull
and not the cause of East-West
iensions.
''If we can reduce those suspicions
between our two countries, the ·
reduction of arms will easily follow
because we wUl redUce the feeling
that we need them."

years." ·

'!1le 30-mlnute interview with the
BBC was the first In a series of
Interviews with foreign news agen.cles before the Nov. 19-20 summit In
Geneva, Switzerland.
"I think themostwecan getoutof
It (the summit) Is toellmlnate some

Reagan said Secretary of State
George Shultz, who Is traveling to
Moscow this weekend, will discuss
the agenda with the Soviet leaders
"so neither of us will be caught by
surprise at the summit with having
a subject come up that ha$n't been
considered ."
Reagan said he is not yet In a
position to say at ,what point he will
reply to Gorbachev's offer for a 50
percent mutual reduction in offensive nuclear weapons.
Reminded that British Prime
1Minlster Margaret Thatcher told

Soviet defector
says ship is home

Dobrynin feels the chill lack Anlkrso~ &amp; Dale VanAtta
WASHINGTON - Anatoly Fy·
odorovlch Dobrynln, Soviet amlBs·
sad9r In Washington since 1962 and
an Intimate rl. high-level officials In
hoth Democratic and Republican
administrations, has been virtually
frozen out of current arms-control
negotiations by tte United States,
despite his years of deallng with
such matters.
The reason, we suspect, Is that
Intelligence reports have convinced
the hard-llne anti-communists In
the Reagan administration that
· Dobrynln Is the top KGB official In
the Washington embassy. And they
can't bring ttemselves to confide In
the bogeyman.
Normally, the KGB "resldentura" or chief Is among the top five
officers In a Soviet embassy, but not
the ambassador. Exceptions In the
past have included the amoossadors to Cuba, Indonesia, Afghanistan, Morocco and Colombia, according to oor Intelligence sources.
So Dobrynin Is a rarity among
top-flight Soviet dlplomals.
Of course, the genial Dobrynln,
who will be66m Nov.l6, has been a
rare bird In other ways, too. His
tall, portly frame and cordial,
almost shy demeanor don't fit the
mold of the dour, suspicious,
tlghtllpped Soviet envoy typified by
Vyacheslav "Iron Pants" Molotov
and Andrei Gromyko. Dobrynln
has long been a favorite oo
Washington's diplomatic party circuit and Is now the senior member
of the city's diplomatic oorps.
He Is always staunch and vigorous In his defense of the Soviet
Union, no mattpr bow Indefensible
the Kremlin's latest shocker may
seem to non-Soviets. But he usually
employs a puckish sense of l'llmor,
which combines with his goldrimmed spectacles to give him tte
appearance of an almost saintly,
latter-day Ben Franklin.
Dobrynln's debut In Washington
was hardly auspicious: He lied to
Attorney General Rorert Kennedy
In October 1962, when asked If the
Soviets were Installing offensive
nuclear missiles In Cuba. There are
sonne who stU! Insist that he didn't

..

Reagan calls for end to US-Russia paranoia

.
k
William A. Rusher
Came
hac
If Dad
.
- - - - - - - - - - - -··
My fa !her died 38 years ago next
month, .at the age of 52, and !found
myself 'Mlnderlng recently what he
would say about the United States It
te could see It now. He was what
today would be called a "moderate
conservative": a patriot who voluntrered In World War I (but
afterward retused to join any
veterans' organization, and op·
posed a bonus - te regarded
mtlltary service as simply one !1
the legltlmaU! obllgatlons of a
citizen); a businessman; and a
Republican.
He would want to !mow llrst, then,
If Old Glory still files INer the

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wadnesdiy, October 30, 1985

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By JIM ANDERSON ·
ment and · the INS ordered U.S.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Even officials to ask the seaman whether
though· a Sovtet seaman jumped he wanted to sign a statement In
.ship twice In the MissiSsippi River, Russian continnlng his wish to
exhaustive Interviews determined retur;n.'
he really wanted to go home, the
The seaman complied and Issued
State Department says.
a statement that said: ·
The standoff over Mlroslllv Med"1, Mlroslav Medvld, have devld, conducted agalnstthe backdrop cided to return to my country, the
of Hu!Ticane Juan, ended Tuesday - Soviet Union. I do not· request
afternoon when_theseaman decided asylum In the United States.
to return to his grain ship Idled for
~·1 make this decision voluntarUy
nearly a week lnaNewOrleansport. of my own frre will, after having had
Medvkl Jumped ship twice but full opportunity to discuss my
was returned to the ship by the U.S. situation with officials rl. the Unlied
Border Patrol, apparently because States, who have made clear that I
1
It was unclear whether Medvld was may remain in the United States If I
seeking polltlcal asylum or ·just desire."
trying to sneak ashore.
The statement did not explain why
A series of psychological and Medvld jumped Into the ~slsslppl
physical tests, conducted on shore RlVPr Thursday and Friday.
because Medvld appeared to be
· The high level of lntergoverrunen·
suffering from sea-sickness, Indi- tal decision making stemmed from
cated the sailor wished to return to the sensitivity of the case, which
the Soviet Union.
could have endangered the atmosMedvld was interviewed by phere of tte upcoming superpower
officials from the State Department, summit In Geneva. Switzerland.
the lmmlgratlon.and Naturalization
Medvld was given a preliminary ·
Service and an American doctor, physical exam Saturday, and u:s.
along with an Interpreter. Soviet rf.Dclals say-he asked to return to the
Embassy officials and ·a Soviet -Soviet Union.
doctor were allowed to accompany ' Tbe State Department said the
Medvld.
United States would,oot takethl\tas
The White House, the State definitive untll Medvld could be
Department, the Justice Depart- Interviewed ' In "a non-threatening
mvlrlorunent" someplace off the
ship.
The Daily Senti~el
Medvld was transferred Monday
to
the Coast Guard cut.ter Salvia,
(USPS lfli-NOl •
A Dlvhlon of Mulllmedla, Inc.
I where he was again Interviewed,
but when he suddenly became Ill, he
PubllshPd every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St .. Po·
was taken ashore where he was
mercy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
given another physical exam and
llsblng Company/ Multlmt"dla, Inc.,
permitted lo rest.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Se·

LIBERTY PARTY- Chrysler's Lee lacooca, cluilnnan d. the Statue
ol Uberty-Eiils Foundation, Inc., says a lalge'serles ti celebrations are
planned In July 1986 lor lhe centennial year of the Statue of Uberty.
(UPI)
.

Labor women at ·convention
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP!) -Even
though women make up nearly half
the American work force, most of
them are stuck In "low-paying,
·
dead-end" jobs. a natlona 1coa li toon
of union womensaldinannounclnga

•

Member: United Press International,
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. Nanonal
Advertising RepreAentallve, J;lranham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

Whal
, e won t go away

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St. ,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4571B.

has been golng-nowhereforthepast
twodays-liketheexperts
trying to I
of how to get the
4~ton leviathan to return to the
Pacific Ocean.
,
Conditions were deemed too
windy on the Sacramento River
Tuesday ·to carry out plans to tag
llumphrey with a radio transmitter
so he could be tracked more easilY.
Jay Zlegler, a spokesman for the
rescuers Involved In the drama, said
the choppy waters prevented biologists from determining where the
whale would surface.
He said an attempt would be made
Wednesday to place the instrument
on the whale uslng a 16-foot pole.
The transmitter Is ·In a stainless
steel box theslzeofasmallbrlckand
fastens Itself with a dazen barbs that
bury themselves 2 Inches deep. Its
signal is relayed by satellite.

SVIISCRIPTION RATI!S

By Carrier or Motor IIeure
One Wtek .. ... .............................. S1.10
One Month ....... .... ........ .. ............ $4.80
One Year .......... ........... ............ $57.20
~
SINGLE COPY ·
PRICE
Dally ..................... .......... :... 25 Cents
Subscribers not desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advance direct to
. The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis . Credit will be glvt'n carttt'r Paoh
month.
No subscriptions by mall permitted In
towns where home carrlf&gt;t' service Is
ava ilable.
Mllil Subocrlpltons
lnskle Ohio
13 Weeks ................................ .. 114.56
26 Weeks ............... ...... .. ........... 129.12
52 Weeks ....... ........................... 158.24

Outtlde Olllo
13 Weeks ............................. .. ... l!5.60

26 weeks ......... ......................... $31.20
~2 Weeks ............. ............ ......... 159.80

~olve ·the problem

the.HouseofCommonsReaganwas
Reagan said the Soviets have
"golngtocomeupwlthan Initiative" "gone through the biggest military
at the summit, the president said:
buUdup in the history of man" and
"We're hopeful, sbe'srlght."
they could eliminate suspicion and
But he gave no Indication that a fear by reducing their military
new U.S.lnltlatlve was In the cards. Involvement In regional conflicts.
Reagan said he relieves testing of
He sa ld re did not Intend to make a
"star wars" weapons Is permissible · blg Issue of human rights at the
within the Anti-Ballistic Missile summit and did not believe that It '
Treaty, which was negotiated with should be "a public discussion ...
the Russians In 1972.
with fingers jlllnted at each other."

Miss Liberty's I OOth birthday planned
By ESTHER PESSIN
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
restored Statue of Liberty will have
"one helluva" lOOth birthday party
- a four-day festival featuring
music, fireworks and a flick of the
switch by President Reagan to light
the Lady of the Harhor, organizers
say.
"Liberty Weekend '86" details
were announced Tuesday by
ChryslPr Corp. Chairman Lee ·
Iacocca, who heads the Statue of
Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation.
"We' Intend to throw one helluva
party In her honor," lacocca said,
noting the celebration will be
televised on ABC In the United
States and beamed overseas by
satelllte.
David Wolper, producer of ceremonies at the 1981 Los Angeles
Olympics, Is atso producing the
bash. He promised "It will be a 50
goose-bump event."
PreskiPnt Reagan, who has
declared the next 12 months "The
Centennial Year of Liberty In the
Uniled States'' In honor oft he ~ta tue
given by France In 18&amp;i, will help
begin the party by unveiling the
restored Lady Liberty.
On the night of July 3. Reagan will
push a button aboard the aircraft
carrier USS John F. Kennecjy,
lighting the Lady of the Harbor as a

•

500-voice choir sings "America the
Beaut lful," Wolper said. A new
torch will re Ut later that evening at a
finale to Include music and fill'·
works, he said.

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON, WV.

~+.....-++OCI

cond class postage paid at Pomt&gt;roy,
Ohio.

RIO VISTA, Calif. ked
(UPI Ih
Humphrey the landloc
w ale

..

drive for better worl&lt;lng conditions.
"Things have gotten worse" for
women, Joyce Miller, president of
the Coalition of Labor Union
worn
' en, said at the national
AFL-CIO convention.

~

SPECIAl OF TilE WEEK

\

FISH SQUARE

t

79&lt;
WitH FRIES.....$1.29

•

~

·~

~

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

. '.',

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason tridge
POMEROY, OH.

..

PH.992-2SS6

0 • • • • ----.. +00

-:=====================:=:;;! Mad-Mad oonlight
Special
RELIABLE i CAPAIILII

IILIICT

UNLIMITED TANNING

SSQ

..

THRU NOVEMIEI &amp; DECEMBER ........ ONLY
Condidalt For

REGULAR 10 SESSIONS-...$35 or $5.00 EACH

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

Come In October 31 from 4:00-12:00 Midnight
To Take Advantage of Our Fabulous Offer

'• • ,

Paid Ii'or By Candldatr . Laurt:l Clift Road - Pom uroy, Ohto
PhonP 992-tHS

'''

.

A SOLID ALTERNAOYE

SHRIKANT VAIDYA, M.D.
ADULT &amp; PEDIATRIC UROLOGY
•.URINARY TRACT INFECTION •INFERTILITY
•IMPOTENCY

VOTEFOI-

OFFICES AT:

George A. Hoffman

Pleasant Volley Ho1pital

Jackson General Hotpltal

675-6060

30.·302-5650

Even when the wnthtr Is fri&amp;htful, you1 tan can stay delightful. All it
t1kes is 1 few sessions in the patented Wolff Tanning System . Just
&amp;ive us 1 call. We'll show you how easy it can be ·to keep a little
sunshine in your life .

By Appointmtnt

Cond/dolt For

CUT and STYLE

MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
hl rl Fur By

Can~ldate ~

·saoo

25 Rivenlew Dr. .. Middleport, Ohio

PhoaetltUOtil

STOP IN FROM 4:00 P.M.
TO 12:00 MIDNIGHT

ATTENTION

Let us give you a new fall
style.
Our Staff has received
training in the UPTOWN
LOOK for fall and winter•

CHESTER TOWNSHIP
VOTERS

I would like to be one of the first candidates
to clarify my position with regard to the care
_
of all cemeteries in Chester Township.
If elected I will do everything necessary' to
·maintain our cemeteries at the current high
standards established bY' our present
trustees.

MoOI!Ir . . .ll:
I ·IIIIINf• II
LoRJW L•llnt

----------I
I FREE
I
~~-~'"'""'m'"''"'"''~'""'
1

~6UQ

EJ&lt;PIRES10131186I

'

BUY ONE, GET ONE

RODNEY G. CHEV-ALIER II

5

Ptid for by tht Clndidlte, 38641 Sumner Rd., Rt. 3, Chester

(MANUF~OTURERCOUPON!

rala11 UlhfiO puce l)h./t M ntnOitng poOY tdld
YOU and !ht COf'ltUf'l'ltf ntvt 00f11Pited Wt!h !!'lei
telmt Qltnt otter C•h •1111•1 /t ot)()lh ol 1C
Anwour.QIM, he.. 1011 :1021, liM Ctty, NC :11....

.'

- · · "lll
u servwe
.

011932

,u,.u

111 W. 2nd i. · · 992.-6720

I

-----------AITIIOIJr-Oial, Ire.

.··

Pomeroy. OH.
MON.-SAT. 9:00 TO 9:00
CALL FOR AN APPOIN~MENT

HOURS ·. .

Trudy Marihail, Sutan Sisson, Mary Powell, Brenda Janey,
Jant , Shtlla Powell, lit luros

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

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Page- 4 - The

·;

Sentinel

r.•.x·vJzr=••

:~=~:

:.....
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Wednesday, October 30,

Ohio

B.END AREA

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• •

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:'.
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POMEROY FLOWER SHOP

'' ,

••

106 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy, Oh.
PH. 992·2039 - 992-5721

,•

.. . -

..

.

.

''

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~ONLIGHT-

_ .'

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t&gt;_{)~

-

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THURSDAY, OCT. 31-7:00 . 10:30 P.M.

BOOTS &amp; SHOES

~',: ~H:~~TS 1/2 PRICE

•..
••
.•.•

..

•

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.
.

·,.

.
':I
.....
'

•'

,.,"'
.•

,.

.

I$ ' I

Out fnti11 StDck.D
'l Quelltg DlemDnd Ri11g1
end Colo11d $tons Rlng1
NOW REDUCED

$2 00

20°/o

GROUP MEN'S

SHOES

SHOES

PAIR

PAIR$

BEAUTIFUL SELECTION ON LEGITIMATE
LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
Also Check Our Special Bargains In Gift Items
Thursday Evening 10/31 Only

7 ~::~o

TH.SDAY
EVENING

"

'·-·

~~
\:'/Jettelen
212 E. Main, Pomeroy

LAYAWAY
FOR
CHRIStMAS

..

•'
'•'

DAN'S

. l

ssa ·to sn7so

L~ATHER

.

SAVE UP TO 50% ON VARIOUS ITEMS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE

.

'
•"·

ALL WESTERN BOOTS......;............. 2S% OFF
ALL LEE JEANS .............................. 2S% ·0FF
ALL GIRLS' SWEATERS (7-14) ...... ~5% OFF

•

-·.
'

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•·•.

•r
•

•

.

..
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CRICKET LANE CO-ORDINATES ...... 2S%
JR. WINTER 'JACKETS .................... 25%
MEN'S WESTER'N SHIRTS...........:... 2S%
ONE RACK LADIES' TOPS .............. 2S%
,ONE RACK

•

LADirS DRESS PANTS .............!Il'.J!.S0°/o OFF

•

' ''

...

OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF

.

•

SIGN UP FOR A
$50 MERCHANDISE CERTIFICATE
TO BE DRAWN AT MIDNIGHT
•

DAN'S

.In The Middleport Masonic Building

..

COATS

1/2 PRICE

ODD lOT

1/2 PRICE

Reg. SJOD to '150 1
·NOW ~so to s75oo

20°/o OFF

1/2 PRICE
Reg. sns - NOW SS7 .50

~TO

..

.

1OFF

'
.•..

·;

-RAINCOATS
Zip In lining

1

.

BOYS &amp; GIRlS

:.·
·•

MEN'S BOOT CUT

;..: DUTY SHOES
:: . NURSEMATES

LEVIS

'

'•

SJ790.

MEN'S PRE-WASHED

LEVI STRAIGHT LEG JEANS •••:........ $1990
'

•

·',

: 20°/o OFF

·

•

••

.
;
•

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KEIM'S ICORNEI
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

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ALL SIZES

•

_New York ·clothing House
·
126 E. Main St.

STARTS THURSDAY, OCT. 31 - 8:00 P.M•

ALBUMS

'
' '"'"

....

-·

I

WOfiiN'S CRICKET LANE

SPORTSWEAR .

FLATS &amp; SPORT
SHOES

SPECIAL LOTI'"'" CANNON

BATH·TOWELS
Dark colors. Many lV:
with matchin&amp; hand

~-' r:wel and wash

:. DENIMJEANS
Not all sizes - Your cboice

1/2 PRICE

30°/o OFF

HANG

SPORTSWEAR
Salmon. Mluve or Teal
Broken Slm
Reg. $19 to $34

WOMEN'S LEATHER

'

30°/o OFF
GREY, WINE, BLACK
imd TAUPE .

·lAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

CHAPMAN SHOES
.
,
•n TO IIIIIPILS IN POMEIOY

· ~~~-------------~
'
,,

0

• .,

..H .. .

SAVE

50°/o

SPORT SHIRTS
&amp;KNIT SHIRTS

$2 50

. SHIRTS
&amp;PANTS
Not Every Size.
Reg. '12.95 .. ....... .. . '7.75
Reg . '13.96 ............ '8.36
Reg. •14.96 ............ ' 8.96
Reg . '16.95 .... .... :. •10 .'0 0

SJI .95 Shir~s .............. '5.95
515.95 Shirts .............. 57.95

9

IRONING BOARD
COVER&amp;. PAD

Re&amp;ular price 112.95

;~d·~~- 98 ' s. M. l

MEN'S ond IOYS' CAMOUFLAGE

Long sleews. Good selection.

MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

MEN'S lONG, SLEEVE

b~~~~~~ quantity.

SPORT
SHIRTS
Sizes 8 to 20

WOMEN'S .
DRESS SHOES .

DRESS
BOOTS

2 PRICE

REG. 5599.00
SAVE $310!

$21900

MEN'S 511.95

FLANNEl SHIRTS
Colorful plaids.
Sizes Sthru XL

$766 .

UGHTWEIGHT

JUNIOR JACKETS

.,i~lr, 'S'$ 2488

Mo;:~''$1688

UNDEIGIOUND SHIRT .

BLOUSES
•-1" · J "

,. "''• stnpts. r. ~~~~ ~ M. l

117.00" 137.00

112 PRICE

JABL~ LAMPS

KROEHLER CHAIRS
6 to seN

40°/o OFF

S4,49 3-PIECE

Fils sltndard size

BOYS

CONNIE &amp; FOOTWORKS

ONE GROUP

SPORTSWEAR
Super SaYings!
M~~h'

FOOTWORKS &amp;
CONNIES

BLAKC, BROWN-, GREY
NAVY &amp; WINE

MISSY ond EmA Sill QIIEN CASUAl ~~

Teal or Fuschia- Broken Sizes

WHITE

•

•
•

.

ONEss · ·. _. _
__

. ~--~---.....o~t-------1
1 GROUP

'

•'

1/2 PRICE

,•

Reg. SJ20 TO SISO

SPORT COATS

CHILDREN'S
SHOES

..

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,.
••
'I,.'

1 OFF
'

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,.••
••
,'.
••
..•'. .

MEN'S

SIZES ARE IROKEN

1 GROUP

I '
II

1 .1

OUT~RWEAR

200/o OFF . 200/o OFF

.,••

ODD lOT MEN'S

MEN'S 3fc LENGTH

MEN'S CORDUROY

'~

I'

..

21 0 EAST MAIN

' ATrt~»m~ ot l lleSroot• Corrcl, '•

S42.99

.' '

JACKETS

MEN'S

CORDUROY PANTS

•

NOW S9oo to s12oo
WINTER

SWEATERS
. 1/2 PRICE
DRESS

: I

30°/o OFF

HARTLEY SHOESPOMEROY

1 GROUP

$1 0 APAIR
OR
30°/o
OFF
0
2 PAIR $15°
VAlUES TO

..'

Art lrohn-ltg. I II to 124

MEN'S ·

NEW STOCK MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS

VAlUES TO $42.00

DRESS SHIRTS

MISSES

'

·'

FOOTWORK$
CONNIE$
DEXTERS

••

$2 SOO

Ths Old Sh11 Sto~e With The New lod

-~

HOURS: 7 P.M. to 12 MIDNIGHT

1 GROUP

'
••••
;

. MEN'S

.•

"The Middle Shoe' Store In the llidtlle Block"
PO.IOY, 011.

..

NOW

MSA'

•'

Be Sure To Stop By To Register For A S25 Gift Certificate

NOW

THURSDAY, OCT. 31-8·12 P.M.

1
'

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$29 99

CHILDREN'S SHOES ...

'

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 31st-8 PM 'TIL MIDNIGHT

MEN'S SUITS SPORTMEN'SCOATS
1/2 PIICE
1/2 PRICE
Reg. '116.00 to '235 .00

-

20°/o OFF

L ;;;~~~~~;;;~~~~
...
...
madness
1
•

savings coining at you!

20°/o SAVINGS

NOW

5°0

Marguerite Shoes

••
•
••
,·
••••
••

Reg. S36.95

PAIR

GROUP OF LADIES'

ssoo.

LOW TOP NIKE

1

f
.

00 GHT
~- . . . ~N~..._1

ALL RINGS SIZED FlEE OF CHARGE

"r~

PRICE

•1

·.

•

1

HIGH TOP "IKE

CHILDREN'S SHOES

GIOUP Of MEN'S

~·

•

·~I

•.

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SPICIA&amp; GlOW Of UD•s
MOIGAII 1111111.&amp; l.ADII10S

MEN'S

Reg. S46.95

WOOL and WOOL BLENDS

. THURSDAY, OCT. 31 - 8 PM-Midnight

.,. .

MEN'S

CLOSEOUT MODELS ON
SEWING MACHINES

'

WORK BOOTS

20°/o OFF

OFF

MOONLIGHT·
MADNESS
SALE .

'

'

PURSES &amp; GLOVES

ALL PILLOW
PANELS

.
.• '

''

I

l~NESS

•

ODD LOT MEN'S

20°/o OFF 50°/o OFF

A'\OOtillGHT

.

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".
~
''

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'

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NURSE
MATES

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BEND AREA

'. '.'
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&lt;

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

''

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1,.

Pomeroy . Middleport, Ohio

......

...r,.,...-. ..
•••
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Wedn~y. October 30, 1985

·

Wh~~' lf2 PRICE

Special Group

WOMEN'S JOGGING SETS
Rec. 122 in Sizes S, M. L

Red or Nny with White Trim

$1288

LBERFELDS

PISiels in Sizes S. M, L.
Reg. 131 and 132 .

PLAJTEX SUPER LOOK

PANTIES

Whitt 01 Beip. simS th" XXL.
11.75 10 $8.10

400/o

OFF

·

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Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio - - - - - - •

I

BIG BEND

Wednesday, October 30, 1985

BIG BEND FOODLAND
700 W. MAIN ST.
• POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2891
OPEN ·
MON.-SAT.

ODLAND

8:00 A.M.-10:00 PM.
SUNDAY I
10 A.M .-10 P.M.

·Page
.Paper Towels

•Weekly Specials
•Monty Saver htmt .

efnrydoy Low ,rim

•USDA (hoirt Meats

...

•h. .r Frtsh Produce
•Wt Wtkomt
Ftdtrol food
•Wt Stll Monty
Orders

, PLJ1

~1. ' ,.

Individual
Retail

sugar

44c

IITIT.IIII.

SALE BEGINS

FRIDAY, NOV. 1·thru
SATURDAY, NOV. 2, 1985

FRESH LEAN

round

Beef

ta.

TENDER BEST
. SELF BASTING

Turkeys LB.

GRADE A

9
8 (
99(

24-15
CANS

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

FUll CASE

24-15 OZ. CANS

Ind. Retail 89'.

Vegetable

TEN POUND SALE

. FUll CASE

Soup$952

24-101/2 OZ. CANS

Cube Steak

PORK CHOPS

Shellie Beans
24-16 OZ. CANS
MARTHA WHITE
COTTON PICKIN'

Country
Style

ASSORTED
SLICED

10.,~'$169 ~,~··$199
Mort
LB.

Mort

1 OH

FOODIAND

Saltines

12-111 OZ. PKGS.

QUAKER

$1 Q68

$18 9

$

FULL CASE

$828

FLANDERS

"~:-...:,:_,,,...,,.(,~:~~~r.

Groun
Chuck

Incl. Retail..... 2189'

49 .

Beef
Patties
. 20CT.$
BOX

499

Ind.
Retail

am.

$1

~.,~jiifo~&gt;MiJ

Scot

08

L~-- MEAT 'SALE

24-15111 OZ. CANS

GOLDEN RIPE
'

$

Bananas

Deli Roll .

69C

· Falter's Garlic links
or Frankfurters ......I!!.S1 69
Falter's Heavenly Ham
WHOLE ............. Jf\.S 189
HALF ..................JP..S 199

FALTER'S
FALTER'S BUDGET BOX:
2 lbs. Wierwn, 2 lbs. Bacon

$

2 lbs. Sausage ......................"..~.!!. 759

Polish Sausage

'

FALTER'S BREAKFAST BOX:

. . . . . . . . . .~.!l!. 7

$ I9

SLB• .
Bag LB.

99&lt;

FOOD.LAND.TRUCKLOAD OF SAVINGS
, oil

-

.

•Truckload Pricoo Effectlvo Frt., Nov. 1 thru Sot , Nov. 2. 198B••U8DA Food S,tompo Accepted •Not ,.tpOnolblt for typogrophicol orroro

••

~·:;-!
•• •

Manwich ·

~ :~:: :cu::..~~

'.....
·

..•
JUMBO
ROLL

Smoked
Ham
'

. 6 lb. box $649
FaIter 's S·k.1nIess. w·11ners ................
Falter's Roll Sausage .............:........ 6 lb. box $4 99
hiler's Slked Bacon ............:....:.... 6 lb. box $899

.......

~

Faler's Bratwurst ...................Jk~ ........ S119
Falter's Italian Sausage ...........~......... $189

LB.

'

~ ·

89•

FALTER'S OLD FASHIONED

(
9
9
·

...

....... .

....
....

Incl.
Retail

' LB.
Falter's little Pig Sausage ......~.......... $189

Whole or Shank Portion

.,

•

HUNT'S

FULL CASE

..... .·'.
... ,..,
~

vs1.oo

-

Chicken Broth
24-13'1• OZ. CANS
FULL CASE . $

..,.
"'•'

Towels

FOODIAND PIECES/STEMS FUll CASE H9LF
CASI
Incl ..
~
Retail

Mus hrooms $ 12 00. S6oo
24-4 OZ. CANS
~

...·"'
....
.......
. ·-..

• ASSORTED• DESIGN •DECOR ATOR

2/IIOO

COLLEGE INN

!~~$299

'

QUALITY

FULL CASE

k Oats$ 237
24-1 8 OZ. CTNS.

FUll CASE

· Apples

•Wo Rooarvo tho right• to limit 'quan!itloo

:·.:
...
!.::

;

~STLEAN

FULL CASE

12-32 oz.

· RED or GOlDEN
ROM£ or WINESAP

Yellow Onions

~=

~'"

LB.

Tomato Ketchup

$289

All PURPOSE

..

LB.'

HUNT'S

Potatoes
SO LB.
BAG

··FULL CASE

~o~~z~~~e~ s712

1

U.S.

LIMIT 2
PLEASE

Hams
LB.

oz.

$998
l~g~$900 ~:g~b$900 . ~~~~.
Ions

Ll.

·-'
·-.
,.
·..

3/S1.09

STOKELY

39&lt;

•;
..

.....

·
Incl.

BEEF
PATTIES

SAUSAGE

.Turkey

5 LB;
BAG

'~·.

FIANDER'S

OLE' VIRGINIA

F~tlh Frozen

'

..

HALF

$ 00 3/Sl
~~~~;~1
oo

oz.

·'·
'·• .

Mini-Ravioli $2136

FOODLAND

SAVORY
BACON

. FULL CASE

.·...
...• .

69

Pork &amp; Beans 1er

;:::~~••Wh11&gt;le Kernel
•Cream Style
24-15 oz.
CANS

~:·:
...

·Tavern

.

Corn

•.

:·

WHOLE BONELESS

Tenderbest .·
Turkeys

FOODLAND

No Coupon
Needed

39

w1e
.'

•.
•

'

ICOlorual
.
ec

Stomps &amp; WI(

10:•·
Mort

Colonial
Sugar

..

. ',

IDAHO

Potatoes

FALTER'S

Braunsch weiger

59(

LB.
Half Stick .... w lb.

Baby Swiss Cheese
lB. $239
Yellow Amtrican
Cheese ................ ~$ 189
Colby Cheese .... ~:$1 19

39
r

10 LB. -·,

BAG

'

�i·~~=The~~=~~~=-:;;:-=-::-=:-:--_.:o_~-;~!,!!!~~~~;;;o;h;io;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·WedJ'Iesday, October 30. 1985

H
. ALLO EEN.

~ari~e industry may have
~pact

on proposed farm bill

; WASHINGTON (UPI ) - A
pOliticallY potent maritime Industry
IS clOSI' to winning the first battle~
farm bill conslderatkm: a provision
~ , Increase American food asslst-~shlppedtoThlrdWorldnations
~slve U.S. vessels.

on

: Key test votes Tuesday paved the
way lor expected approval today of
a: compromise between the marl·
lime Industry and some agricultural
groups to phase In over thrt'e years
3!1; Increase In the share of food ald
shipped on U.S. vessels from 50
•
percent
to 75 percent.
:1n return, the maritime Industry
would back~ attempts to require
half of government-!lnanced com·
mJ!fCial farm exports be shipped on
American vessels.
. Senators were then exPected to
haggle over levels offarmsubsklles,
riom dairy price supports to cash
subsidies to grain and cotton
(ljrnlers.

ShJpplng food aid on U.S. ships
~t are at leas! llO percent more
expensive than foreign vessels adds
about $150 million to food aid costs
aDd the compromise would add $41
rdllllon tosro million more.
,lbe compromise was worked out
~ some farm groups and all
e~nts of tbe U.S. maritime
· ll)dustry. But AiJ'lcultureSecretary
J!ilm Block and many agricultural
gwoops refUsed to endorse tbe deal,
ai-gutng against any expansion of
tl)e 31-year-old cargo preference
•'

law.
"I've voted for every farm
program peanuts, tobacco,
wheat, com," sald Sen. Daniel
Inouye, D-HawaU. "It's about time
these farp1ers began to support.
cargo preference."
Sen. James Abdnor, R·S.D., said
dlvldingtbeexlstlngsubskly arrong
about seamen who work on U.S.
ships equals $198,00Jperlndpvtdual,
compared to an average subsidy of
$22,!0! per dairy producer or $4.700
per com producer.
"Let's look where subsidies are
really going," hesald.
Since 1954, cargo preference laws,
requiring half r1 government cargo
be shipped on Amertcan vessels,
have been applied to Food for Peace
shipments. In Fei,Jruary, U.S. Dis- . rr:;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;i
hie! Court Judge June Green ruled
cargo preference should apply to a
government-financed commercial
saley program.
'
AND
At a time~ faDing farm exports,
Block canceled tbe affected blended
credit program, cutting out $536
mllllon In expert sales, after the
113 SECOND AVE.
court decision. He said applying
POMEROY
cargo preference erased the program's financial benefits.
CALL 992-3381
Agricultural groups were overwbelmlngty defeated when the
992-2342
House attachedhto the farm bill a

DOWNING-CHILDS

MULLEN INSURANCE

provision upholding the court dec!·
slon. Powerful maritime unions,
which contributed $3 million to

tr:========;l
II

RIVERBOAT INN
MIIDIIPOIT, OHIO ·

~ockwell makes gui.lty plea
·WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Rock·

WEDNESDAY NIGHJ
HAllOWEEN PAID and
Mill llvtl lAIII
9 P.M. ·n1 1 -A.M.

PATWIL PROGRESS
Here's Some .Good News!ll

"-·Iii

__

OUTSTAND.ING FEATURES IN MOST .HOMES

.
II!Mmber

the man that got
woting places back to Tupp·
.,s Plains l long Bottom.
~

von FOI
...
fRANCIS ANDREW

''SPECIAL
COUPONS"

STORt HOURS
Mon.·Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM·10 PM

GOOD ONLY
6 P.M. 'TIL
12 MIDNIGHT

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

. PRICES GOOD ALL DAY THURSDAY

THURSDAY,
• 31

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 2, 1985

RE WILL BE OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT

I

"

2°/o
MILK

$139

•Rtdt11cntd k1tchtn cob1nets. with "'""
uul•l S\Drllf 'PIC'· lnclldlnlluy su·
sons, uson,ooll, hiCkOfY, nhand moplt
' woods sb1nod in various shades.
•Rtdni1ntd bathrooms with cullurtd
morblt vanity tops and 10 ,.., Wlr·
r~nttd . Owons Coroin1 Fibtrpos tub.
somo baths also hove skylipts.

oSkylipls
-Aluminum columns on porticos
•C pt
·
· ·
Oil lilly clod •nsulotocl Windows
•5-Ytar oorrantocl corpotinl and vinyl.
•£ntro Shiolds
•Footor Drains

FOI TIUSTEI FOR
:. OLIVE TOWNSHIP
ELECnON
·. NOVEMBER 5, 1915

MODEl HOME &amp; OFFICE

¥• MILE NORTH OF 1·77
NEWPORT PIKE, MARIETTA, OH.

161

Paid lor by Frands Andrew

OPEN

374·4344

· SAT. 10·6

•

•

Ground Beef ••••• :. Sl 09

COTTAGE
CHEESE

MIXED

Fryer Parts •.•..•• ~•• 49&lt;

..

.
.
·39(
Drumsticks •••••••• !~.
·

YELLOW
ONIONS
THURSDAY ONLY

Pork Loin •••••·~. $149

1/4

GROUND
BEEF

,.

.

THURSDAY ONLY

'

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99(

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$ 39
o a oes ........ ~~~!·. 1

Up.S. NtO. tl RUSSET

GALLON

MIKE·.JII:Iolo.J

FISHER'S

II .1·,.

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2 lifER

2 LITER

MINUTE MAID FROZE~

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

MAXWELl HOUSE

STOR[ HOUR S
Mon .'Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM -10 PM

INSTANT COFFEE

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

Llmt I Per Cu1t011111
Good Only At Powell'I Super1111rktl
Ofltr hpllll Sit., "ov. 2. IUS

120Z.

,.

•

•

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VELVET

TOILET TISSUE

$39 9

IIOLL
PIC G.

•

99&lt;

Limit I Plf Customer
Good Only At Powell's Superllllrket
Offer hpires Sat.. Nov. 2, 1985

I

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16

CREAMEnE

SHURFINE

NOODLES

SUGAR

oz.

2f$1

5 LB.
BAG

limit 2 Plf Customer
Good Onlw At Powell's Suplfllllrket
Olllf Expires Sat., Nov. 2, 1985

limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powlll's Superm~rtet
Offer bplru Sat.. Nov. 2, 1915

·~······~··~·········

'.

$139

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BANQUET GOURMET

•
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Sancwich Mate~::-.· 99&lt; S n
PARKAY JUMB~ SPREAD
a $
9 lluw&gt;81
14
Margar1ne •••.••• ~~·••
0
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1-:&lt;

POTATO
CHIPS
PEPSI

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WIENERS
THURSDAY ONLY

112

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KY. BORDER

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...

111:

$229
21
Orange
Ju1ce
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••••••
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Dog

Paid for by Committee for a Better Pomeroy, C.

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20LB.

Lef'l Keep The p,,,,,,, (Jolng/

1-:&lt;

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Is_..._._.

PORK

~

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• •
P1cn1cs •••••••••••••••L:.•• 79.&lt;

HYLAND

on NGvember 5

~~co=

I'"'

SMOKED

~

NO on the Initiative Petition

I

lw
1I~
1-e
I I

3 LB. BAG

.
..•
•

Vote

-

I

TURKEY

7-UP
THURSOA Y ONLY

~

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lc:&gt;

or

•
•
•

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l~iwto

GALLON

LB.

Don't Kill The Colden Oo·ose!

...,

lo.-p~•-

WOOD HANDRAILS AND BAUISTERS IN CERTAIN MOD.

INDIVIDUlU YHAIIIC~mD ON YOIll LOT
IY lOCAl CRAFTSMEN

II

I

CHAIIIE &amp; IIIIIIE
9 P.M. 'nl I A.M.

Some government sources ques II·
oned the Justice Department's
!allure to prosecute any Individuals.
They noted the final prosecution
decision was approved by Assistant
Attorney General Stephen Trott.

...... ....-...,_,

We Reserve The i
Limit Quantities

'

TUESDAY NIGHJ

to plead gullty to 20 criminal counts
cllilrglng It submitted falsilied time
cal'ds for miUtary electronics work,
FRIDAY l SATURDAY
f~rallnvesllgators say.
9 P.M. 'nl I A.M.
:Sources saki Tuesday the Justice
Mill IIVEI lAIII
J:l!!Partment was expected to filet be
charges as early as today In Dallas ~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;1
or Fort Worlh, Texas, against I~
Rlickwen. the government's largest
'
coiitractor with $8.4 billion In
retenues In 1984.
!!!'o company officials wlll be
p~ted as part of the plea
a_veement, but the investigation~
the company Is continulng, sources
WE HAVE THREE NEW SERIES OF HOMES
fainlllar with the inquiry told United
THE CUSTOM SERIES
PNss International.
We
hm
5 difltrltll hoas in 111 is
'They declined, however, to conseries
w~h
ovw 5 difltrllll floor
!II1]l a Wall Street Journal report
pl1ns 1nd tools to choose from.
~ the firm had agreed to pay $1.5
THE FREEDOM II
m;tlllon In fines and penalties,
0 911 ~II. oU'I"di'O" or .. _
!root
Including tbe maximum $:lXl lXX) In
..
loodo
.......
~
·-Ioiii(
low•
crlmlnal flnes for UXJ,IXXl ~ false
. 1...1471 o-. II.
IaIiar bills. The Journal said the rest
ofthe fines stem from civU penalties
311(,1 reimbursements for the cost r1
Tf!is Slfits hn ·u different homes
the: government investigation.
woth over 65 floor pi Ills and nrious
. A S!Xlkesman for Rockwell sald
style fronts from which to choose.
!be firm would have "no romment''
THE LANCASTER 11
and Justice Department lawyers
01,100 ~ft. o.l4'0''116'0"
~sed to discuss tbespecillcs~the
1oor• · - '""'' low• loool 516 "1· II.
c~. being handled by tbe U.S.
attorney's ~flee In Dallas.
THE PRESIDENnAL SERIES ·
·The case Involves Collins ComOur Prtsidential Series h11 6 diller,
ent homes with over 10 dilftrltlt
munications Systems Division of
floor pl1ns and difltrent style fronts.
Richardson, Texas, a part of
THE JACKSON II
Rockwell's Defense Electronics
•Ji'r '.SI'O" of,OIIIIf II. •S • 4 ......
...,
Queratlon that has worked on Air
FCfce weapons contracts, sources
said.
•

.

congressional campaigns in 1983-84,
were able to nex their muscles In ihe
House.
In key votes Tuesday, the Senate
voted 66-34 against a measure by
Sen. Rudy Boscbwltz, R-Mlnn., that
would have limited extra costs for
American vessels to 75 percent this
fiscal year, Ill percent next year and
40 percent In flscall988.
By a 6'.1·36 vote, senators rejected
Iowa Democratic Sen. Tom Harkln's effort to shirt all costs of the
subsidy to the Pentagon budget.
Then senators also turned back
71·22anattempt by Sen. Alan Dixon,
D-lll., toguaranteethatGi'eatLakes
ports, served nearly exclusively by
foreign ships, maintain their share
of food aid shipments.

••

Well International Corp. has agreed

.•

iF~~~O~~~bM~30:·:19~8;5~~~~~~====~~~~~~~~0~hio~~~~~,~--------~--~~~~=:~==~·
HALLOWEEN
MOONLIGHT
MADNESS

1,.

~

�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, October 30, 1986 l

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~--------------------Localbrie&amp;:--------------------~
Five fined in Pomeroy court
Five defendants were fined In the court d Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
They Include William Hayes, Syracuse, $57 and costs; Anthony
Jones, Pomeroy. $43 and costs; Charlesa Luellyn, New Marshfield,.
$45 and costs; William Roush, Letart, W.Va., $48 and costs, all of
speeding charges, and Richard Riggleman, Pomeroy, $163andcosts,
receiving stolen property:
Forfeiting bonds in the court were Brent Arnold, Pomeroy, $49;
Delores Donohue. Pomeroy, $52; Hen!)' Price, Tuppers Plains, $13;
Hilton Wolfe, Jr .. Racine, $47; Kim Eaton, Somersei, $44; Twila
Childs, Middleport, $52, all postedonspeedlngcharges; Linda Friend,
Syracuse, $43, stop Glgn violation; Joyce Taylor, Syracuse, $43,
assured clear distance; Dayld Slgroan, Middleport, $63, disorderly
conduct; Dale Riffle, Pomeroy, $63 driving under suspension, and
$375, driving whlle Intoxicated.

Stolen car recovered
A1900 Ford two-door sedan. stolen 1n November 1984 from Parma,
was recovered last night near Sliver Ridge by CoontyShertf!Howard
Frank. Other details were unavailable at press time.

Foreclosure action_ filed

Meigs EMS makes three runs

Aforeclosure action for property In Sutton Township has been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas Court by the Home National Bank,
Raclne,agalnstDale WallaceHillandAmyft.HUl,Ractne,andThorp
DiscOunt Inc., Columbus. Requested by the plalntltfln t)lls matter ls a
judgment rt $U3,122.51 plus Interest.
An action to quiet title and cancel an oil and gas lease on property ln
BedfordTownshlphasbeenfiledbyJamesH.Hoyt,Cheshlre,agalnst
l.R.D. Corp., Chagrin Falls, Sloan Land and Leasing and Aqulsltlon,
Inc., StrongsvUle, and Royal Petroleum Properties, Inc., Cleveland.
The plaintiff asks lor $al,OOlln damages. A temporary restraining
order has been Issued by JudgeCharlesKnJghtagalnstthe plaintiffs to
prevent them from coming on the property or about the wells located
on the property ln question. The restraining order Is lor a two·week
period unless extended by the judge.
In an action filed by Ashland Petroleum Co. against Coal Po~.
Inc., Pomeroy, et al, the plaintiff has been awarded a judgment of
$10,615.60 plus interest from two defendants ln the matter, Larry Hunt
and Patrtck H. O'Brien.
In other court business, a reciprocal action lor chDd suwort has
been filed by Janet Juanita Cremeans against Garry Lee Cremeans.

Three calls were answered by local units Thesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports. At 2; 59 a.m., Racine
went to the Portland area for a structural fire at the RichardsSandand
Gravel Co.; p Pomeroy at 12:49 p.m. took George Lester fromm llO
Pleasant Ridge to Holzer Medical Center, and at 6:50p.m., Rutla/ld
went to the Raymond Lambert home on Dye Road where smoke had
filled the house due to a malfunctioning furnace.

•

Two marriage licenses issued

/ Area deaths
Frances V. Schmidt

I

says.
"What I am proposing ls ·that tllf
nation's 91 mlltion credit card·
holders put their plastic In their
pockets and leave them there until
Interest rates drop," Rep. Frank
Annunzlo, D-Ill., chairman of the
House consumer afairs subcornmlttee, said Tuesday at a hearing on
high consumer Interest rates.
"If enough consumers take their
credit cards out of circulation or,
better yet, if they cut them up and
mall them back to the Issuer, not

only wlll rates go down but you will
see credit card Issuers vying to see
who can cut their rates to the lowest
and to ,attract the disenchanted
credit card users."
Annunzlo sald even though Interest rates paid by banks for the
money they loanouthavedropped to
about 8 percent from their J9llJ peak
of about 20 percent, credit card
Interest rates have risen sharply tO
an average of 18.6 percent.
Some credit cards, such as th9SE'
Issued ey Sears and Montgomery

Marrtage licenses have been Issued 1n Meigs County Probate Court
to Ted Lane Dexter, 18, NelsonvUle, and Crystal Dawn Manley, 16,
Middleport; Keith Alan Hayman. 25, andLeslleCarolRoberlscbothof
Racine.

Final hearing underwav

A final hearing was underway Wednesday morning before Judge
Charles Knight In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court man action
filed by Francis Andrew against the Olive Township Trustees ln
regard to an appointment to the township board of trustees.
Andrew alleges that an appointment was made improperly and
requests that a declaratory judgment be Issued upholding his charg!'.

Ward, charge more than 21 percent
Interest, according to recent
surveys.
The subcommittee Is consldertng
two bills requiring lower Interest
rates.
A blU by Rep. Marlo Blagg!,
D-N.Y., would cap credit card
interest rates at 5 percent above the
federal discount rate- the interest
rate charged by the government to
lendlni! Institutions.
Blagg! said consumers are being
overcharged "to thetuneof$2ijJUon

nors, however, said the board
believes "it would be lnapproprtilte
to Impose a federal ceiling on credit
card rates."

a year" and called the hlgh credit
car:d rates "gouging, pure and
simple."
The other bill, by Rep. Charles
Schumer, 0-N.Y., would cap inter·
est rates at 6 percent above the
Interest rate for three-month Treasury bllls, adjusted quarterly.
Under either bill, the interest rate
on credit card use would fall from
the current 18.6 percent average to
about 13 percent, sponsors said.
Martha Seger, a member of the
Federal Reserve Board of Gover-

Insulator Kit

SPECIAL ~49
PRICE
~11/E, mm

available. Tight-fitting lid locks in odors.

SPECIAL PRICE $10.99
Less mfr. rebate $2.00

Thor M. Nelson. 65, died Tuesday
at hls Route 2, Guysville, residence.
He was born ln Athens County to
the late Frank and Martha Russell
Nelson. Hewas a retlredtlmberman
and logger and a World War II
veteran.
Surviving are · his wife, Norma
Bond Nelson; lour sons, Billy Ray d
GuysvUle, Hank Nelson of Columbus, Mike Nelson of Reedsville and
Mark Nelson of CoolvUle; slx
daughters, Sharon Brothers of
Columbus, Ruth BoggsoiGuysvllle,
Delores Calvert of CoolvUle, Rebecca Barber of Long Bottom,
Wanda Mays of Belpre, and Lisa
Nelson of Little Hockil)g; one sister,
Carma leta Hilton ol North Dakota;
14 grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded In death by one
son, Robert; two brothers and a
sister.
Graveside services will be 11 a. m.
Friday at the Fairview Cemetery
with Rev. Lloyd Middleton olflclallng. Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home ln Coolville atter2: 30
p.m. Thursday.

Press-In-Place"'
caulk
Permanent, for Indoor/outdoor uae. Easy to use-

•a•

Cost after
mfr. rebate ·

SPECIAL PRICE 11/E, 152728

•

, SEIMSJM.

In the spotlight

By-The Bend

CGuaty ExtensiGn Agent,

Home Eoonomlcs/4-H
Halloween magic - It's almost
here - that magical, .bewitching
Ume that children klve - called
Halloween.
Make sure your
yongsters llnd it a time ct. fuji and
surprtses- and not a hair-ralslngor
frightening experience.
Preschoolers often get really
scared by the witches, ghosts and
other ugly creatures. So stick to
costumes depleting ~mre harmless
creatures. Young children are
likely to have more fun dressed as
pomklns, clowns a fairy tale
creatures. Leave the real smry
stuff to the older klds.

;~:~::;;•?~~

SPECIAL PRICE

aspect ol the Halloween lace before applying the make-up.
Then don't expect the child to
costumethatoften lrightensayoung
chlld ls weartng a mask, evroll the wear the make-up for ~mre than
about half an mur.
costume Is of the mn-scary type.
Another option ls to make your
Masks restrict the vtslon and are
own
face paint. the only ingredient
uncomfortable to wear no matter
you probably don't have ln your
what the age of the "child."
So Instead of a mask, consider . kitchen cupboard ls glycerin. Thls
painting the child's face. Several Ingredient Is ~vailable from Imst
options are available. for a few pharmacies. For white make'up,
dollars you can buy "clown white" blend two teaspoons of white
make·up ifyourdrugstorecarrles lt. shortening, five teaspoons of corn
One.jar will cover 00 or more faces. -starch, and one teaspoon of white
Then over the "ciowwhlte," youmn nour. Blend until the mixture forms
use rouge, Upatick, eyebrow pencil a smooth paste. Then add three or
four drops of glycerin lor a creamy
and eye shadow lor details.
These ingredients
Or use regular cosmetic make·up. consistency.
Be sure to apply a thln ooat d hand should not cause a reaction unless a
lotion or cold cream to the child's person has sensitive skln. Caution
One

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Ticket sales totaled $1,00,120,
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Today - Periods of raln. High 60
to65. East to 8outheast winds 10 t~l5
mph.
Tonight _ Raln likely. Low 45 to
50. East winds '10 to 15 mph.
Thursday - Raln with the high
near 60.
Chance of raln SO percent today •70
percent tonight and 80 percent
ThursdaY·

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marks, wrlnkles, freckles, etc.,

don't use an eyebrow pencil with this
make-up. '!'hE! pencil will tend to
push the make-up away Instead of
marking on it.
Instead, use a sol! paint brush and
the lollowlng brown make-up formula for details: one teaspoon white

J,

King Builders Supply
405 North Second Avenue

sbortenlng and 1Wo and one-hall
teaspoons unsugared cocoa. ·
And how could any witch or
monster appear ln pobllc witmut a
few warts. Just mix !Dme coconut
with a little peanut butter lor those
perfect final touches. Then don't he
surprised 11 the "creatures"· return
borne wlth tales of sharing their
warts with their friends!
Halloween Safety Tips When possible, trick-or-treaters
should have some reflective tape or
fabric on their costumes.
Contine trick or treating to
neighborhoodS andfamlties that you
know.
Adults should accompany young

trick or treaters on their rounds.
Older children should travel in
groups, never alone.
F1ashllghts are handy l&gt;r walking
in the dark and as a sign for
on.comlng traffic. Candles are a
dangerous way lor trick-or-treaters
to light their way.
When you get mme,cbeck treats.
Be sure that no packages have been
tampered with, before giving tiE in
to your children.
Dld you know that .... People in
England and lrel~d once carved
out beets, potatoeslilfiltumlps to use
as lanterns on Halloween. After this
custom reached Amertca, pompklns were used.
·

Friday -Quilting, cards, games
TheArtsandCraftsShowandSale
sponsored by the Center ls scheduled for the weekend of Nov . 8 and
9. Inaddltlontocraf!sandceramlcs
to be sold bytheCenter,l5 other area
craftspersons will be present for the
sale.

The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Thurday · Cube steak, mashed
potaoes, green beans, applesause
cake
Frida y· Vegetable soup, pimento
cheese sandwich, pear halves
Choice of milk, coffee, or tea
available with meals.

Barnes, the club llbrarlan, was
given several reference books on
Dowers to keep for the club. The
hooks were donated by Judy
Snowden.
The Christmas meeting was
discussed and on Dec. 12 members
will take a trip to Columbus to be
followed by a meeting that evening

at the home of Judy Hill ln
Columbus. Members were reminded of the Christmas package
decorating contest. Gift packages
should be decorated using some
kind of plant material. such as plne
cones, llve or dried flowers.
Materials to cover program books
were glven to the memhers. ·
Refreshments were served.

Alfred community happenings
OOS'ruME WINNERS - Rush party Ollllume
winners were left to rtgbt, Dadrla Staals and Marty
. Ferguson. .astronauts, most original; Judy Wllams.

VIctorian dress, bestlltl-aroundCORiwne: Beth Theiss,
pllgnn, most authentic: and VIckie Eads, a coal
miner, cutest cosQune.

{Sotor:ity holds rush party recttntly
Costume prizes were awarded at
the annual rushhparty of the Ohio
Eta Phl Chapter rt Beta Sigma Phl
Sorortty held recently at the LaSalle
Restaurant banquet room.
Members and pledges dressed for
the party theme, "My Style of
Renaissance." Prizes were

awarded to Judy Williams, best,
all-around costume; Darla Staats
andMartyFerguson,mostorlglnal; .
Beth Theiss most authentic,
andVlckleEades,cutest.Giftswere
potte mums.
Others attending were Cathy

outreach during the holiday season.
A special session to work on the
prayer bears will be held Nov. 7at 7
p.m. at the home of Donna Wilson.
Olive Page had charge ol the Bible
studyusingthetopic, "God's Ideal of
the Perfect Woman." Scripture
focus was Proverbs 31 , and a

roast and campfire songfest at the
home of Steve and Wanda Eblin.
Attending were Steve and Wanda
Eblin, Jim and Donna Gilmore,
George and Ruby Nlclnsky, Rl·
chard and Shirley Friend and Mark,
Bob and Mary MlllerandScott, Bob
and Scott Barton, Brenda, Pam and

Sunday School at1endance Oct.l3
was li; church attendance, 21 . On
Oct. ro Sunday School attendance
was 32; church attendance, 2i.
Nr. and Mrs. Arthur Spencer and
Mrs. Keith Weber attended the
funeral of Spencer's brother-ln·law,

Holman birth

Johoson, Theresa Kennedy, VIcki
Ault, Kathy Cumings, Linda Bowers, Kaye Walker, Sonja Wolfe, Ptty
Pickens, Connie Dodson, Judy
Cowen, Pam Diddle, Barbra Matthews, Janelle Haptonstall, Shar.on
Stewart, Linda Faulk, Brenda Hill,
and Rhonda Davis.

comparison of the modern woman
to the biblical woman was drawn.
Refreshments were served to
those named and Frances Hendrix,
Rachael Lefebre, Sylvia Zwtlling,
Josephine Mallory, and Sandy
Needs. Next meeting wUl be held
Nov. 21 at 7:ll p.m. at the church.

KlmHaggy, Rick,Missy,Eddieand
Jenny Friend, Belinda and Bille
Soulsby, Ka ren, Kristen and J . P.
Stanley, Sandy and Jessica Wright ,
Misty Lane, Jan ice, Deanna ad
Allcla Haggy, Bonnie. Amle and
Travis Friend, Iva Powell , Sharon
Wright, Evelyn Young, and Lloyd
Wright.

Recognition service lor octogen·
arlans at the Middleport Church rt
Christ were planned for Sunday,
Nov. 3, when the Philathea Women
met recently at the church.
The recognition wU1 ta1&lt;e place
durtng the Sunday school hour wlth
Phyllis Glikey, Sharon Stewart, and
Maryln Wilcox ln charg!'. Mildred
Rlley presided at the meeting wlth
Dorothy Roach, Farie Cole, and
Thelma Boyer giving reports from
their respective offices. For roll call
members answered with the names
o1 a bOOk in the Old Testament.
Donna Hartson read scripture from
PsalmsandMatthew;Shealsogave
a reading "God's Beauty Around
us." Poems by GraceHawleywere
"I Have Heard the Song" , and "God
1s Everywhere'~ with Mrs. Hartson
closing with prayer.
·
Thank you letters were read from
Ron and Ruth Moyer and the
Grundy Mountain Mission School
forcontrtbu !Ions from the group. On
the prayer llst are Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Gardner, Martha Haggerty,
Helen Reynolds, Genva 'l;uttle,
Harrison Robinson, De.n White,
Roher! Pickett, Lawrence Stewart,
Ruby Diehl, Lula Mae Qulvey,
Collleen Van Meter,and Bud Wilson.

0

An art demonstration was given
durtng the program hour by Betty
McKinley and Delores Long.
Thelma Boyer, Nettle Boyer, Grace
Hawley, and Donna Hartson served
refreshments. The November program will be given by Denver Rice
who wU1 show slides of chu reb
actlvltles. Hostesses will be Clarice

0

Davld R. and Sally Jenkins,
Middleport. are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Ashley Nicole.
The baby weighed seven pounds,
seven ounces and was born on Sept.
16 at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Maternal grandparents are Caryl
and Martha. Welsh, Londonderry.
Maternal great-grandparnets are

Ashley Nicole Jenkins

Fred and Nelti£'1 Dean, Kingston,
and the late Earl and Juclnita
Welsh. Paternal grandparents are
Cecil and Erie Kirk, Mason, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins have a son,
Aaron and a sister, Alysia.

WEDNE'iDAV
POMEROY- Wildwood Garden
Club meets Wednesday 7:30 p.m.,
home of Marcia Arnold.

at the Salvation Army, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy, 10 a.m. until noon
Thursday; all area resldentsln need
of clothing are wel come.

LONG BOTI'OM - Community
7 30
'

TUPPERS PLAINS - Trick or
treat night will he held Thursday, 6
to 7 p.m in the vlllage. Theslren will
blow to start and end the event.

MIDDLEPORT - Chamber of
Erwin, Debbie Melton. Rose Rey·
Commerce
community Halloween
nolds, Clara Conroy, and Margaret
party,
Wednesday.
with parade to
Butcher.
form
at
6
p.m.
at
Fruth-Sears
Others attending were Clyda
parking
lot
area;
move
to junior
Allensworth, Regina Swift, Mildred
Hawley, Clarice Erwin, Dorothy hlgh football field; prizes lor best
Baker, Delete Forth, Colleen Van costumes and treat bags to those
Meter, Phyllis Gilkey, and Jennifer masked under 12 years of age.
McKinley.
'111URSDA);
.
RACINE - Tr.lck' or treat
Thursday, 5: 30to7p.m. Followed by
party, 7 p.m.a t Racine Volunteer
Bob Hllls had charge of devotions Ftre Department wlth games,
using scripture from St. Mark. costume judging and fun hou se.
Others attending were Duke
Kennelly, Marty Spangler, Jeff
PORTIAND - Trick or treat
Needs, Sonny McClure, Ed King, night for Portland ~mmunlty, 6: 30
Mike King, and Troy Zwilling.
to 7: 30 p.m. Thursday wlth residents
wlshlng to take part to tum m porch
lights.

SALISBURY TWP - Trust"'s
meeting, Friday, 7 p.m. al home of
clerk Wanda Eblin. Laurel Cliff
Road.
SCIPIO TWP- Trustees to meet
at 7 p.m. Friday at town ship
building In Pagevllle.

SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE .- Fall Festival at the Harrtsonvllle Elementary
School, Saturday, 1 to 7 p.m. Talent
show at 5 p.m. Ga mes, baking
contest, and refreshments.

POMEROY -Trick or treat will
be observed In Pomeroy Thursday
from 6 to 7 p.m. A siren will mark
both the beginning and the end.

Alfred personal

SYRACUSE - Elementary
School Halloween party, 2 p.m.
Thursday; parade to take place
near the schooL

SYRAUCE - Asbury United
Method ist Church, Syracuse, will
have a soup supper Satuday, 5 to 6
p.m. before the Southern game.,
Vegetalbe soup, corn bread, pe, and
beverages. Bring containers for
take-out orders.

POMEROY - Free clothing day

BRADBURY- Bradbury School

KY.

Kristin MarJe Torres observed
her eighth birthday recently with a
party hosted by her roother, Norma
Torres, at the Show Biz Pizza Parklr
at Parkersburg, W.Va.
At1endlng were Mr, and Mrs.
Joseph Delgado, grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny Cordero, an aunt
and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Jon D.
Jacobs. Mary Jacobs, Marlon
Michaels, Nancy Ackerman, Debbie Cundiff, the Rev. and Mrs.
Andrew Rubenklng, Amy Rubenking, Emily Asbeck, Emily Johnson,
Becky Ackerman, Leeann Cundlt!,
Kelly Smith and Dusty Andrews.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs.
R Torres and Mrs. Diana Carrero,
Puerto Rico, Mr.andMr.J. Delgado
and Mr. and Mrs. Couriney Roberts,
Flortda; Mrs. Mary Dorta of New
York Clty, and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Lopez, Alexandria , Va.

fall carnival will be held Saturday, 4
to 8 p.m. The public is invited.
REEDSVILLE - A bazaar will
be held Saturday from 9 a. m. to 4
p.m. at the firehouse in Reedsvllle
by the Reedsville United Methodist
ChUI;ch Wom en.
Vanlsale

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Pomona Grange wlll met at 8 p.m.
Friday at the Rocksprtngs Grange
Hall. Star Grange will host the
meeting.

birthday party was held for Vlrgtnlil
Dean following the meeting. WeighIn tlmels6to 7p.monTuesdayswlth
meet lngS to follow.

MarUyn Robinson and Janet
Cooolly visited their brother, Randy
Koehler, and family at Morehead,

Randolph 'ioung,.Creslon, Oct. 21.

Community calendar/ area happenings

TOPS names winners at meeting
Dreama· ·Pickens was the top
loser, and Judy Holter, runner-up at
the Tuesday night meeting of TOPS
570 held at the Word of Faith Church
in Middleport. .
.
Brenda Robbins was the bestteen
loser. Llnnle Aleshire presided at
tlie meeting with Bernice Durst
winning the fruit basket. Members ·
were urged to send cards to Linda
Hunt whose rather Is Ill. A surprtse

'

Leonard and Danny. Five Points, at
a dinner, Oct. 13.
Mrs. Doris Avis ls recovering
from a badly sprained an kie .
following a fall at her home.
Pearl Randolph and Roberta
Henderson accompan'led Bernice
Meeks, Shade, to the funeral of Ruby

Torres 'birthday

Jenkins birth

. Men's brotherhood gathers
The parable of the sower was the
topic of devotions at the recent
Brotherhood meeting a! the men r:l
the First Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy, held at the McClure
Farm on Skinner Road.

Elmer Meadows, at Spencer,
W.V.a., Oct ll. Other relatives
attending from Meigs Coonty were
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Spencer, Mrs.
Marlon Parker, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Spencer. and Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Midkllf.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Poole and WUl
entertained Mr. and Mrs. Nick

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph W. Holman
of Racine, are announcing the birth
of a son, Joseph Adam, Oct.l7, at the
Holzer Medical Center. The Infant
weighed thre pounds, 10 ounces and
ls ln the neonatallntenslvecare unit
at Children's Hospital. Columbus.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Waldnig and Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Holman, Racine. Mr. and Mrs.
Holman have 1Wo other children,
Crystal and Bobbl Jo.

Phtlathea Women plan recognttton~~~~t~:~~~·nl~~~=i·

1s2rn

Lottery winners

sbould be exercised in using any
type of make-up on youngsters' skln.
This amount of make-up will be
enough lor one chlld's face. You
may color the make-up by adding
drops of food coloring until you get
the desired shade. to apply the
make-up, use your fingers and '
stroke 1n one direction.
U your "character" needs some
facial details like a scar, beauty

Judy Hill gave a demonstration on
making comhusk flowers at the
recent meeting otthe Friends and
Flowers Garden Club of Rutland
held at the home of Brenda Bolin.
After demonstrating mwto make
the flowers, then Mrs. Hill showed
the members how to use them to
decorate straw wreaths. Lorrl

•

sanding.

Wednesday. October 30. 1985

Garden Club holds meeting in Rutland

The Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church Is implementing a new
program for its Wednesday evening
service. One night a month wlll he
designated famlly night wlth some
special observance being planned.
Last Wednesday a cottage prayer
meeting was held at the home of
Tina Jacobs followed by a weiner

metal, plastic or composition. For hand Of machine

.

Page- 11

The Meigs CoontySenlorCitlzens
Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, has the following a::ttvltles
scheduled lor the week of Oct. 28 Nov.l;
Thursday - Ceramics 10-2, Halloween Party - come in costume,
grand march at 10:45, Entertain·
ment at 11 a.m.

Church plans special Wednesday night
Assorted

,

Senior Citizen Center activities set

At a rcent meeting of the Baptist
Women of the First Southern
Baptist Church of Pomeroy, the
study topic was on the "Perfect
Woman." Jeannie Owen had the
qJening prayer.
Progress was given on serveral
projects as well as Ideas lor

Made of super strong linear low density polyethylene.

The Daily Sentinel

Make your own makeup for Halloween

Baptist Women hold meeting

Extra Large
Lawn/Leaf Bags

Hosnital news

·'

$~97

nocleanup. 22ft.

•s2'm

- -·

Sege~sald .

A"ll"v64"

Thor M. Nelson

-, -··

It Is the board's conviction "that ;
financial markets distribute credit ·
most efficiently and productively ,
when Interest ra.tes are determined
1n markets that are as tree from '
artUlclal restraints as possible,"

Frances V. Schmidt, 60, of
Sycamore. Ill., died Saturday at the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . , . . - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - Swedish-American Hospital in
Rockford, IlL
She was born Dec. 13, 1924 at
Pittsburgh, Pa. to the Alta A.
Blessing and Taylor C. Roush Sr.
She was a member of Graham
Baptist Church. Letart.
Su rvlvlng are her husband, Ronald C. Schmidt of Sycamore; one
sister, Mrs. Betty J. Webster of
Pomeroy; three brothers, Clai'ence
Cecil and George W. Roush, both of
Letart, and Taylor C. Roush Jr. of
New Haven, W.Va.; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wlll be 11 a.m.
Thursday at the Foglesong Funeral
Home In Mason, W.Va., with Rev.
James Lewis officiating. Burtal will
be In Hoffman Cemetery ln Letart.
Friends may call at the funeral
rome froin 9-11 a.m. Thursday.
Clear·as-glass film stops
drafts, prevents frost.
Toughest, most durable trash container

Roughneck Tras#J Can

D

By Ondy S. Ollverl

Cotmnittee head says consumers should stop using plastic
By BUD NEWMAN
WASHINGTON (UP! ) -Ameri·
cans should stop using their credit
cards or' 'cut tllem up and mail them
back" until charge card companies
lower their excessive interest rates,
a House subcommittee chairman

'

BURLINGHAM - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Burlingham Com·
munlty Church will have a yard sale
Friday and Saturday from 9a .m. toJ
p.m. at the church, rain or shine.
Glassware. clothing, books and
fumiturc areamong themany Items
which will be offered lor sale.
Fair boanl meeting
ROCK SPRINGS - Annual
election of director for the Meigs
County Fair Board will be held
Monday from :; to 9 p.m. at the
secretary's office on the fairgrounds. Running for the flve seats
are five Incumbents, Bill Downie,
Ben Slawter, Bob Lee, Dan Smith,
and Addalou Lewis. A meeting wUI
be held on conjunction with the
election.
Election day dinner
FOREST RUN- The Forest Run
United Methodist Church will hold a
soup dinner at the church, from noon
unt il 6 p.m. on Election Day,
Vegetable and bean soup, sand·
wiches, ple, cake and bevE'!'ageswlll
he served. In conjunctkln with the ..
dinner, the Ladies Aide wlll have a
miscellaneous bazaar wlth proceeds to go toward carpel for the
church.

•

�Family medicine:
By EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
Asst. Prof. Family Medicine
Oblo University College
of Osteopathic Medicine
~

.Question: My 3-year-old ~ughter
i.!; pigeon-toed. Is this a problem that
needs medical treatment?
Answer: TUrning the feet Inward
while walking is a common charac-

Wednesday, October 30, 1985

Wednesday, October 30, 1985

POnieroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

chDdren will outgrow the JI'Oblem
within the first year.
Problems in the lower leg hone the tibia - and in ~ hlp joint can
also lead to pigeon IDes. A baby's
tibia can twist from something as
simple as the child's habitually
sleeping on the stomach. Twisting
of the hlp joint sometimes occurs
· during pregnancy, but doctors
aren't sure why. Children who
prefer to sit on the !klor with thelr
legs folded backward In a "W"

UJustrate this condition.
~ion: How should pigeon tiles
be treated?
Answer: Most cases ate better
lett untreated during the child's
1!rst year. As they become more
mobUe, children often walk the
problem away.
Sometlmes,
though, a simple cast il needed to
make sure the hones in feet and legs
are properly aligned. Special shoes
might he necessary In oome cases.
Other times the solution to pigeon

IDes may be putting shoes on the

wrong feet or tying a chlld's sleeper
heels ingether ID prevent. the tibia
from twisting while the youngster
sleeps.

At age 3, your daughter may need
oome treatment to correct her
pigeon-toed walk.
Make sure, however, that she
sees a doctDr before you use any of
these methods. A physician should
complete a thorough exa mlnatlon
of her feet, ankles, knees and hips

In a week fllled with traditional a two-yard run by Roush with 8:29
season-ending battles, when ·East- lett In the contest.
ern travels to Southern Saturday
Roush scored on the thlrd play of
night, It will he more than just the
the overtime from 10 yards out to
annual backyard brawi. The SVAC glvetheTomadoesthelead. Jn their
half of the overtime, the Highlandchampionship wi!J be on the line.
Despite an overall 4-5 mark, the ers moved the ball four yards before
Tornadoes are perfect In the an apparent IDuchdown catch by
conference &amp;14-0 and have already Tim Burnett, signaled good by the
clinched at least a tie for the back judge, was ruled Incomplete.
championship. Avictory woulll give
-Eagles Try To llelfOUp
Meanwhile, Eastern (4-5 overall,
Southern the undisputed champlonshlp aJ)d can still win the title 2-2 In the SVAC) will he trying to
outright If they IQse and Southwest- regroupfollowlnga40-9defeatatthe
hands of North Gallla. The Eagles
ern defeats Hannan Trace.
The Tornadoes are coming off a rallled from a 13-0 deficit to pull
controversial21-14 overtime victory within 13-9 with 8: 26Iett in the third
over Southwestern. The Highland- quarter before the roof caved ln.
ers jumped to a 14-0 halfllme lead Taking advantage of Eagle turnovbehind the running and passing of ers, the Pirates scored fourconsecuquarterback Justy Burieson. Burle- tive times to puU away. ·
The Eagles puUed within 13-3 on a
son passed to Benny Boyd for
34-yard
second quarter field goal by
Southwestern's first score and ran
for the second.
David EdWards and within 13-9 on a
But Southern came back in the twO-yard scoring run by John Rice
second half behind the running o1 in the thlrd quarter. However, the
Pete Roush and Sean Grueser. Eagles could get no closer as the
Grueser started the comeback with Pirates pulled away. Rice was
a one-yard run with 1: 33 left in the !):astern's leading ground gainer
thlrdquarlerandRoush tleditupoo with 128 yards on~ carries.

!&gt;'!fore deciding the cause of the
inward turning. Only then will you •
know that no serious problem (such
as clubfoot or hone injury) exists
and together you and the doctDr can
decide on appropriate treatment:
"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions, wt1te
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio
University College of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor HaU, Athens,
Ohio, 45701

DAR meeting topic · 'threat of humanism'
The Rev. Steven Nelson, pastor of
the Central Cluster of Methodist
Churches, talked on the "Threat-of
Secular Humanism" at a recent
meeting of the Return Jonathan
Meigs Chdpter of the Daughters of
the American Revolutiln.
Held at Grace Episcopal Parish
House, the speaker was Introduced
by the regent, Mrs. Ronald Reynolds. In his talk, the minister
commented on human justice, the
Importance o1 youth recognizing
digni~ and being worthy of thelr
fellowmen. Using scripture from
Romans 1, the Nelson talked about
people giving themselves to other
philosophies, leaving God out of all

things such as school, play and
entertainment. He referred to
certain TV producers and programs
that belittle people of faith, and
commented on the Immorality
being taught In schools includlngthe
support of abortion. '
He commented on tactics for
separating church and state, prayer
In the schools, and putting up
religious decorations for Christmas.
and charged that children are
getting a slanted view of re!.lgk)n.
The minister challenged the DAR
members to work towardwaklngup
America, to in!onn others, ID
support churches, to pray and give,
and to reflect on the pilgrims who

·Chatter Club holds meeting

FIVE GENERATIONS- Branden Black, being heldherebyhisgreat
great grandfalher, BurdeD Black, is the ftfth generation In the family.
Manozy Black is BunleU's great graaddauglller, Jerey Black, rtght, his

graacison, and Warren Black, BurdeD's oldesi!IDn.

Plans for a holiday dinner party
were made when the Chatter Club
met recently at the home d Linda
Hubbard, Syracuse.
The dinner and gift exchange will
be held at the Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. Riverboat Room. Birthday
and annlversry gifts were given to
Linda Hubbard, Dottle Jones,
Elaine QuUJen and Dorothy Roach.
Games wei'{' played with prizes
going to Dottie Jones, Janice Fetty,

Frances Carleton, Ruth Young,
MaryStarcher,andLinclaHubbard.
Mary Starcher and Elaine Qulllen
won the door prizes. Next meeting
was set for Nov. 21 at the home d
Dorothy Roach.
A bake sale was held as a
money-making project. Refreshments were serve by Mrs.Hubbard
and Doris wDt to those named and
Lola Harrison, Susie Cleland, Allee
Jacobs and Brenda Bolin.

Auxiliary ·donations go to-numerous groups
Numerous contributions were
made when the American Legion
Auxlliary ot Feeney-Bennett Post
128, met at the hall last week.

The group contributed $133 to the
Marie Moore fund, $10 to the
Prisoner of War and Missing in
Action lunds; $alto the Xenia Home

Eskew named
school queen
Beth Ann Eskew, daughter of
David and Joetta Eskew, 575
Hudson Ave., Newark, and granddaughter of Charles and Francis
Eskew, Pomeroy, and Harvey and
Ruth Erlewine, Rutland, was
crowned the 1985 Newark High
School Homecoming Queen durtng
pregame activities at White Field.
Beth is a member d the National
Honor Society, Cup and Chaucer
and Engineering Explorers Program. sponsored by Owens Corning
Fiberglass. She is listed In Who's
Who'mong American Teenagers
and has beenselectedasgoodclttzen
of the month three times by the
teaching staff.
She competes In the fine arts with
the Joan Garrett Wine Dancers.
Employed at Licking Memorial
Hosplt al, she works in the medical
records department.

Beth Arm Eskew

Robson birthday
Justin Bryan Robson, son of
Jerrena Robson, Pomeroy, and
Kelly Robson, Jackson, celebrated
his thlrd birthday recently.
A theme &lt;1 He-Man was carried
out with cake, Ice cream, chips and
koolald being served. At the party to
help celebrate the birthday were
Irene and Jerry Dlll, maternal
gradparents,_ DeWayne Dill, Lee
Dill, Matthew Ault, Vickie, Valerie
and Jason Cundiff, Terry and Chris
Stobart and Tamiko Deeter.
Sending gifts were Kelly and
Sherty Robson, Ronnie and Brandy
Wilson, Roy and La Veta Robson.
paternal grandparents and Sait!JY
and Aaron Fairchild.

for Orphans; $10 to ChUUcothe V.A.
Hospital for candy; S2i for Chid
Welfare Foundation; $10 for Radio
Free Europe; $10 for the Chapel d
the Foor Chaplains; and S2i for the
Gifts tor the Yanks.
The unit also gave $25 on the
community halloween party to he
held In Middleport. Becky Tyree
presided at the meeting during
which time It was noted that Renee
Stone's mother died In South Dakota
recently. Don Roach thanked the
unit lor help during his recent loss
and Injury In a fire. Heidi Mae
Gilmore, live days old, was welcomed as a new member. Mrs.
Edna Trace of Wellston was a guest.
It was decided that again this year
the unit will provide 250 poinsetttla
for the patients at Arcadia, the
Meigs County Infirmary, the Pomeroy Health Care Center, and to Post
and Auxiliary 'members over So
years of age or lll.
It was noted that 16 cakes were
provided for the Arcadia Nursing
borne bazaar being held this week. A
total of$292wasspent on the Arcadia
party in October. Attending were
Nettie Hayes, Ethel Hawk, Reva
Beach, Etta Wlll, Enna Hendricks,
Janice Gibbs, Gertrude Preston,
Belva Shuler, Jean Gilmore, Gall
Ferry, Diana Jarvis, Shellle Fox,
who crocheted 75 pumpkin face pins
for the patients, and Vlrgil and
Gerry Parsons.
A report was given on the fall

Slinderella
class
held
Nellene Pethel and

Carolyn
Jeffers tied for the most weight lost
when the Sllnderella Mason class
met TUesday night. Malina Casto
was rurmer-up. At the Five Points
class, Helen WUson and Brenda
Venoy tied lor the most weight lost,
and Diana Herdman was runner-up.
JoAnn Newsome istn'chargeo!the
sessions.

conference which cost $268.
A dinner PI €Ceded the meeting. A
door prize brought by Diane Jarvis
was won by Becky Tyree.

came to America for religious
beliefs.
The national defense report was
given by Mrs. Pearl Mora who
stressed beingproperlylnfonned. to
exercise the right to vote,· and to
recogotze that "Indifference· to
evll..... is evD."
Members were asked to re
member Margaret Ella Lewis who
remains In University Hospital,
Columbus. The Chapter extended
thanks to the Pomeroy FlawerShop,
Melvin Van Meter, lor the window
display and for an arrangement for
Constltl!tlon Week. Members were
reminded of gilts for veterans
patlents and also items for the DAR
sponsored schools.
Mike Gerlach, Meigs High School
teacher, was nominated for American History teacherdtheyear. The
regent reported that she has sent for
copies d the resolu lions for1985. She

also sent a copy of the newpaper
item of the SePtember meeting to _
Washington, D.C. and the Publlc
Relations chairman replied that It
ivlll he posted on the bulletin board.
A note of appreciation was sent ID
Charlene HoefUch who wrote the
material. Three applications formembership were approved.
_
A memorial at Waldschmidt.
House for Clara Lochary. Soup
labels are being accepted b)' Mrs.:
Gene Yost. Eleanor Smith reported
on the American History essay
contest. The regent postponed her_
tea until later.
Nextrneetingwill beonNov.ll ad
p.m. at the home of Mrs. Larry :
WDey, New Haven.
Refreshments were seated from
decorated tables hy Mrs. James
O'Brien, Mrs. Thereon Johnson, ,
.Mrs. George Morris, Mrs. Gerald
Powell, and Mrs. Harold Sargent. '

SVAC standings
ALLGAMD&gt;
1EAM

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AT THE

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804 Main St., Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.

Browns'
•
receivers
•

NOV. 1, 1985-10 A.M.-4 P.M.

•

Holiday Stitching • Quilt Raffle

•

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overlooked
By ROBERTO DIAS

Crafts

her manager's license. She is
available Tuesdays lhroullh Saturdays, 9 a.m to 3 p.m. and
'1\aesday evenlnp by appolnt-

Jilenl for penns, coloring, fi'OIIIIn(lll, preclsloocuts.andariUiclal
nalls,~

PTO holds
recent meetmg
•

I

Support of the6.19schoollevy to he
voted on in the November election
was pledged by the aclne PTO at a
recent meeting.
, Bobbie Ord. superintendent of the
Southern Local School District,
spoke (o the group on the levy and
also answered questions !rom those
attending. Robert Beegle, aso
participated In the discussion.
Information sheets were
dlstrllKlted.
Plans were made for a ham and
turkQY dinner on#ov. 3 at the high
school. Jan Norris' third grade won
the room count.

Justin Bryan Roll60n

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Harrisonville news
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Sleple of
Wilmington visited Mrs. Frances
Young recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Sydensdricker
of Mason, W.Va. was the recent
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mrs. Leaha WUJiams spent a
week wlth her niece and nephew,
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Chapman at St.
Henry . .
Mrs. Juanita Richards, Dayton,
spent the weekend with her sister,
Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
·Mrs. Jaunlta Richards, Dayton,
spent the weekend with her sister,
Mrs. Virginia Gibson.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins, Meigs
County Grange delegate, attended a
four day Ohio State Grange convention at Wadsworth. She also vislted
her . cousin, Ralph Anderson in
Akron.

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Southwestern .......... . 7 2 143 . 95
Hannan Trace ........... 6 3 204 10&gt;1
Symmes Valley ......... 5 4 175 139
Eastern .................... 4 5 ITT 160
N_orth Gallla .............. 4 5 138 151
Southern ................. 4 5 95 172
Oak Hut .................. 3 6 98 183
Kyger Cl'eek ........ .... 0 9 33 290
•
SVACOnly
Team
WLPOP
Southern ........ ........ . 4 0 82 35
Hannan Trace .......... 3 I 96 47
Eastern .......... ......... 2 2 78 56
Southwestern ........... 2 2 65 45
Norih Gallla ............. I 3 77 82
~yger creek ............ 0 4 ~ 153
Qd. 25SVAC resUlts:
Hannan Trace 47 Kyger Cl'eek 2
Southern 21 Southwestern 14
North Gallla 40 Eastern 9
Chesapeake 44 Oak Hl1121 -Symmes Valley 36 Huntington
Vlnoon8
J\!ov. I games:
Hannan Trace at Southwestern
Kyger Cl'eek at North Gallia
Eastern at Southern

BAZAAR - BAZAAR - BAZAAR
Homemade Food - Needlework
Ornaments

LICENSED - Unda O'Brien,
who l'l employed at the For lhe
Bo&amp;h of you Tarumg and S&amp;yllag
Salon, Syi'8CU!Ie, has received

The D,aily Sentinel Page-13-

Southern needs ·one triumph for undisputed SVACcrown

Does pigeon-toed child have problem?
teristic of many young chUdren.
There are various physical-reasons
for the condition.
Sometimes an unborn child lies
with insl&lt;le of the foot against the
opposite leg. Over several ' month,
the inside of the foot and the toes
bend inward, giving the foot a slight,
kidney-shaped bend. Usually. these

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

;·;
'"
d

UPJ Sports Wrler
aEREA, OIUo (UP!) - With all
the' controversy surrounding the
Cleveland Browns' . quarlerback
~bymystery, the wi&lt;le receiving
~rps has been overlooked, overshad&lt;lWed and at times overthrown.
•"Receiver-wise, we're not where
We'd like to he," $8YS head c;oach
Marty Schottenhelmer. "Maybe It's
because of injuries, maybe It's
because of yooth and inexperience.
; There's no question we need
~re consistency. And that's hard
tO'dowhen our numbers are down."
:Clarence Weathers, the only
Diet-tooted wideout that poses a
d&amp;ep threat, aggravated a right
lulmstring pull in Sunday's toss tD
Wpshington.
•Weathers' practices will he rest rj,cted the rest or this week, and he is

Pirate. Seek Revenge
Last year, Kyger Creek defeated
North Gallia to claim a sbareoftbe
league crown. Friday, .the game is
ooing played for prld_~TheBolrais (O-S overall, 0-4 in the
league) havehadtheworstseasonln
thelr hlstory, scortng only 33 points,
while giving up 290. But they played
Southwestern tough before last
week's thrashing by Hannan Trace,
so the potential is there for the
Bobcats to pull out their first victory
of the season. With only five senior

Fry says Hawkeyes are underdogs
By MANDY MUELLER
IO)VA CITY, Iowa (UP!)
Coach Hayden Fry disagrees with
the Las Vegas bookmakers - be
thinks unbeaten and toP:ranked
Iowa is the underdog going into
Saturday's game agalnst No.7 Ohio
State.
"I don't think there's any queStion
about that. We haven't defeated
them since 1959 in Columbus," Fry
said Tuesday during his weekly
news conference.
The Hawkeyes are a 1.5 point
favorite to beat the Buckeyes but
Fry said it will he another tough one
for iowa.
"Each week from now on Is more
difficult than the previlus. Number
one, the quality of the opponent is
extremelY tough. And number two,
each week there are more and more
ln)urtes," Fry said.
If quarterback Chuck Long fell
victim to an injury, the Hawkeyes would be In trouble since back-up
quarlerback Mark Vlasic is stlll
wearing a leg lmmoblltzer alter
being · hurt in the celebration
folloWing the Michigan win.
"Vlasic-is stUJ very questionable,"
Fry said. "He's stUJ In the

By lARRY LEVINSON
SOUTH J'!END, Ind. (UP!) Football fanaticism: a way of life in
South Bend, has not waned during
the 193ls despite Notre Dame's
mediocrerecordthepastllveyears
under Coach Gerry Faust.
Consider, ror example, this oft• told tale going aroundcampusabout
twofonnerNotreDameclassmates
who meet many years after
graduation.
,,
Thefirsttellsthesecondthatslnce
leaving school he has been converted and now his weekends are a
joy and he feels closer to hls family
and God.
"You ,mean," the second asks In
awe, "you've given up football?"

,j

· 'llheBrownshavetriedtoaoquire _
otlir wide receivers. They talked to .
the. New York Jets about then~ed rookie AI Toon, and b'ont,
otf!!:e representatives still wince
when asked why Cleveland passed
up~oow-Pittsrurgl! wldeout Louis

upj,s..-

offense bas plagued the Highlanders
all year: and without Burnett, could
'
muster
only !18 yams rushing
against Southern. However, the
Southwestern defense is the strongest In the league, only giving up 95
points in _nine games.
Hannan Trace, on the other hand,
is on a rou.
·
Jarrell piled up more than 267
yards In total offense, Including 155
yards in four carries, and threw for
two scores and ran for two more
against the Bobcats. The Wildcats
ope!ied a 28-0 halftime lead and
coasted to the victory.

tmmobDizer, we just took it off for last weekend, and' Fry is preparing
him to hold for the extra points (in his team for that possibility.
the Northwestern game.) ''
"I don't know how be could he
The Hawkeyes were forced to better (than he was last year.) I do
practice indoors Monday because of know if he's healthy enough to play,
muddy field conditions.
he's really going to he playing," Fry
"We'd rather be outdoors this late said.
In the season, but there was noway,"
Fry said the Buckeyes defense
Fry said.
isn't better than Michigan's, primIowa Is enjoying Its fifth week as arily because Ohio State's usual
the No. :lleam In the UPI poll, and concern Is scoring points.
national recognition is groWing.
"They're usually happy to just
"The amount of mall we')'{' outscore everybody, which they've
getting has quadrupled, from people do~ this year except against
wHoarewatchingthe games or have Illinois. They've led the Big Ten In
seen us play. They send In plays, offense and scoring, or they've been
nice comments but I've been No. 2slnceBruce'sbeen there," Fry
disappointed because nobody 's sent said.
a red cent yet," Fry jokell,
But he admitted Ohlo State's
While Fry stlll downplays the ability to hang onto the baH (they
Importance of national rankings, he haven't lost a fumble this season)
said he knows it's good recognition could make the difference in the
for the program.
game.
"It's got to he someone at No.1, so
"They have a big strong football
it might as well he us. They just got team and they haven't lost the ball
hooked on the Hawks early this year this year," Fry"Said.
and they're hanging on," Fry said,
Another factor is playing at
The Buckeyes, with a 6-1 recOrd, Columbus, where the Hawkeyesare
will offer Iowa a ~tiff test for its suffering a 26-year Victory drought.
young defense. Ohio State coach
"It's an intimidating place. Every
Earle Bruce said aU-America stadium bas It's own personality.
rurmlng back Keith Byars will be I've never won there, and I'd sure
ready to play &lt;lesplte a foot injuJY · like to," Fry said.

on the squad, Coach Mel Coen bas to · overall record and a 1-3 league
he thinking about the expertence his mark.
team has gained this season. .
But everything came together
Also thinking about expertence Is
last weekfortheP!ratesduringthelr
North Gallia Coach Dave Angles. 40-9 victory at Eastern. David
This season has also been a learning Roush led the attack with 312 yards
experience for his young Pirates. rushing, whlle Richard Hurt added
With only three seniors on the squad, 84. The defense fOrced six .Eagle·
Angles' Plrates have been inconsist- turnovers, three interceptions an_d ent rmst of the year in posting a 4-5 three tumble recoveries.

For many In this northern Indiana appears to he shedding some
Catholic college town, football is early-season woes and upped Its
close to a second religon. There is mark to 3-3 with Saturday's 37-3
intense rumor, scrutiny and specu- crushing of Southern cat.
lation these days centered around
The fans are not hesitant about
Faust, who holds a 28-23-1 record at making their feelings known, and
the Golden Dome and Is in the fa st many talk of relief in the knowledge
year of his contract.
that this Is the last year of Faust's
Fans are accustomed to teams 'contract. They figure he won't be
that do better than finish the season asked back.
with records just over the .500mai-k.
Posters from past seasons that
The Notre Dame they worship was read "Oust Faust" have been
declared the No.I team in the nation replaced hy signs calling on the
17 times from 1919 to thepresentand coach to "Resign with Dignity," but
played In nine major bowl games Gerry Faust continues to exudl&gt;
optlmlsm at every opportunity.
from 1969 to 1981.
" If we win all of our remaining
In Faust's best seasons, 1983 and
1984, the team finished with 7-5 games we'll he ranked and go to a
records. This year's squad finally major bowl," he sald recently.

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Bengals are on "alert"
this week.
"The first thing !did when !got the
ballclub together this week was tD
issue an 'alert,"' Bengals' head
coach Sam Wyche said Tuesday.
"I'm going to make sure we're not
flat this week."
Wyche issued the alert because he
doesn't want a repeat of what
happened justacoupleofweeksago.
Alter the Bengals whipped the
New York Giants 35-30. they didn't
get overly excited about playing
their next opponent, the then 1-5
Houston Oilers. The Oilers des·
t rayed the Bengals, 44-27.
This past Sunday, Clncinna t1
played its best game of the year in
heating the Pittsburgh Steelers,
26-21. Up next the 1-7 Buffalo Bills.
So, It's "alert" time.

"We are not," declared Wyche,
"going to go into this game Oat. "
Wyche said his first speech oft he
week to the team went like this:
"Sit up straight- In your chairs,
guys, and listen very carefully to my
opening comments to you. They're
not going to he related to the victory
over the Pittsburgh Steelers.
They're going to he related to the
upcoming game against the Buflalo
Bills.
"The first thing I'm saying to you
is that thls Is an alert that Buffalo Is a

•

good team, maybe as good on thl!

day we play them as the HoustOI\.
Ollerswere. !don't know, bulwewtil·
find out Sunday.
·
·; ·
"We can never, ever let hap(Jell:
again to us what happened 1n:
Houston. If a team'sgoingtoheat US::
let's have them heat us at our hes1;
not when we're flat."
Wyche said he then went into
detail about the Bills. Only after '
-that, he said, "did I pause andcongra tulate them about their win :
over Pittsburgh.
•
"Then, I repeatedmyalen,justsQ
nobody would miss it . Now, I'm not .
worried about them being flat like
they were at Houston ever again.'' . '
Because theAFCCentraldlvtston ·
is so logjarnmed (Cleveland leads :
with a 4-4 record, whlle Cincinnati,
Pittsburgh and Houstonarealljusta
game back at 3-5), the'!;econd halfot
the season Is going to he much more .
Important for all four teams than the •
first half.
"We just don't have any games :
left that we can say don't count,"
said Wyche. "All our remain inS: ,
games are going to have li
tremendous impact on theoutcome."
..
Although Buffalo is only 1-7, :
Wyche Is concerned because the •
Bllls are coached by !onner •
Bengals' defensive coordinator
Hank Bullough, who left ClncinnatL
when Wyche arrived two years ago.~

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·Bengals on 'alert'

Faust doesn't worry about future

doubtful
for next Sunday's visit ID
Pittsburgh.
' 'I'm hoping rest eases the
muscle," said Weathers, who has
clj)Jght 10 passes for 294 yards
lr¢ludlng a 68-yard touchdown
bqmb from Bernie Kosar. "My leg's
pn'tty sore right.now. "
:SO is the rest of the cast: both
WDils Adams (knee) and rookie
ned Banks (hamstring) are on
injured reserve.
Brian Brennan (9-1411 is coming
oft a separated left shoulder and
G!en Young t3-491 has dropped
pa~ses . .
:"Basically, we are a rurming
team with Kevin Mack and Earnest
BYoer," said Schottenbetmer. "We
don't throw wide as much as we
throw narrow.
:·Mack (23-274) and Byner (161861 each have good hands for the
51t!&gt;rt gain as does (tight end) Ozzle
Newsome (35-3731.
~eteran wideout John Jefferson,
aoqulred in a tradefromGreenBay,
has not produced much - two
l'EI1epttons for 2li yards.
~·J.J.' didn't pllf(icipate In trainin&amp; camp, so be's stDI sbaklngofftbe
rust, " says wide receivers coach
Richard Mann. "StDI, he's running
hl; patterns better and better and we
caa expect him ID contribute more
tl»second half d the season.
Jelferson exhlbited the bravado
th(t has been his trademark.
~1 can stU! catch the ball - I can
stiDiead a team to victDry ,''he said.
"IIiJshakeloosesoon. Youcancount

on:ft.

In a contest that midway through
the season looked as if It may he for
the league crown, Hannan Trace
wUJ visit Southwestern Friday.
Ol)e team is up whlle the other is
down.
Wildcats SliD Hopeful
The Wildcats (6;3overall,3-lln the
league) behind the running and
passing of freshman quarterback
Jay JaiTell, bombed Kyger Cl'eek,
47-2, last week. Hannan Trace can
stUJ tie· for the croWn If they heat
Southwestern and Eastern defeats
Southern.
On the other hand, Southwestern
(7-2 overall, 2-2 in the SVAC) will be
trying to recover from a demoralizing loss ID Southern.
The Highlanders wlll probably be
playing without leading rusher Jlm
Burnett, who also sat out the
Southern game. Burnett suite red a
broken hand in the Highlanders
25-12 win at Kyger Creek two weeks
ago.
Southwestern had the Southern
game in control during the first half,
but a low snap from center In a
punting situation led to the Tornadoes tying score. An inconsistent

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Bucks revenge loss ·

NB,.\ results

BuJf.;ak&gt; at C•lgary, 9:'3S p.m.
1bron10 at W.nt'OU\'fr, JO:l\ .p.m.
~'IGimel

NATI)N.U. M8KE'111AU. ASSOC.
By U*4 Pr..illtenlle.._.

~ Angek's

atllo&amp;ton , night
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Hruston ut, SeattiP 99
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Chk:'ago tA.Lt -

Olieqo INLt - NamPd ~Pr Duno
travefln8 ~retary, John Cox assistant
g.meral manager, Scott Reid dlrfrcttr ot

scouting, Scott Netson assl&lt;ltant dlrectcr or
$CCIUII.ns. Jim Snyder ~&lt;r plllyeor
dt'\·t"iQprnent. Bill Harbn.l, dlrectc:r minor
l..agup !JJI'ratlons, Bob Ibach, dht'Cicr or
publications. NC'd CO!k:'1U, dlr'E'Ciorot ml'dla
rt'latbns, Sharon Pannozm, assl!tant dlrfoo.

tOr of rredla t'Piations.

Pacini; Coast Ll'agul'.

PhoPnlx - RPachl&gt;d a rontract a~ I
with fo1wa1'd Larry Nance and p~guard
&amp;!rnard ThJmpson on thf injured list.

Wash!Difon and placed tight end Don Kf'rn
on the lntult'd I'E'9{'rvl.' list.
Oo.llas- Reactl\•a!f'd running bock TOdd
Fbwler and rt'~MP.d I'\IMin.g badt Johrl
WWlarm.
St. Lwis - PIIICt"d ldckl'r Nt'll O'Donogta.K&gt; on waivers and s~ rookie kk'ker
.IM~ Atldn!lln Of'l walvm trcm thl' Giants.

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Washlnaton 6, sr. Loub J
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Plllst:anth at DMro\1 , 7: :m p.m.
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John Carroll

$10 million Breeders'
Cup set for Saturday
By POIUA SMrm
UPJ Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - U the $10
mUIIOn Breeders' Cup Championship Series were the Olympic
Games Io which Its founders
compare It, the stable or trainer D.
Wayne Lukas would he forced to
~ !rom the Upited States and
compete as an lndependentcountljl.
Lukas Is the trainer of record for
10 of the maximum 98 horses from a
half dozen nations that will go to jX)St
In the seven Breeders' Cup championships Saturday. He can't sweep
the card, rut only because his 10
oorses are running In just lour races.
Lukas says he Isn't thinking that
way.
"'The Bl'!eders' Cup is another
means of getting a return for the
Investments of the owners, and
that's what we're In business for,"
he said Tuesday alter !tying In from
his California trainlngcentertotake
over final preparations at his New
York center in nearby Belmont
Park.
"You don't want to go out and
embarrass yourself In front of the
world," Lukas added, "but if we
don't win any of them, I won't feel
like a failure. Our year already has
been a success."
'That is putting It mildly. To date,
the 118horsesLukas
has been racing
.
this year have earned a woopplng
$8.4 million and won 61 stakes,
breaklngthereconlof46stakes wlns
In a year set nearly 40 years ago by
Jimmy Jones.
Odds are Lukas will win at least
one of the races.
His best chancels In theSlmilllon
Breeders' Cup Juvenile Fillies, in
which he has vhree probe ble
starters: Arewehavlngfunyet,
FamUy Style. and Twilight Ridge.
Arewehavlngfunyet, a daughter
of Sham owned by Spendthrift
Farm, has won rtve of eight races
and $475,7ll. Eugene Klein's Family Style, by ~ta te Dinner, has never
finished out of the money. with four
firsts. two seconds and a third and
$541,1731n earnings.Jn seven career
starts. Klein's Twilight Ridge has
raced onlY three times,but two firsts
and a second have earned her

.

$73.~.

.. n could oe that we have another
year like when we had Altbea,
Lucky LUcky Lucky and Life's
MagiC," Lukas said. "Twilight
Ridge might be the best rJ. all three,
'

'

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-~./.:;- ~

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SURROUNDED - Philadelphia's Moses Malone (2) loses the baD
between MUwaukee Bucks Craig Hodges (15) and Terry Cummlap (R)
as Randy Breuer guanb from lite rear durin!! the Bucks 119-117 win

Dllll.~~ Fllfldlall

though she's less seasoned and
experienced. But we're not stepping
out of bounds or over the fence In
entering her. All three are good.
solid, division champ-type fillies."
Lukas also likes his lightly· raced
tw~me or Ketoh and Louisiana
Slew in the $1 millionJuvenile.
Helen Alexander's Ketoh won his
first two starts and $131,1ri0 before
finishing a dlsapjX)lnting fourth in
Belmont's Champagne Oct. 19.
Louisiana Slew has two firsts and a
second and mD""Yearnin gs in four
starts.

'fuesday night. (UPI)

Mancini: one regret
about early retirement
ByDAVERAFFO
When he's not acting, Mancini's
UPI Spons Writer
talking. He makes motivational
NEW YORK &lt;UP!) - The only speeches to company employees
regret Ray "Boom Boom" Mancini · and he'll he the commencement
has about retiring from boxing Is SP,eaker at Merrywood College In
that he waited so long.
Scranton, Pa., next May.
"If I knew things would have been
He also works as a boxing
this good, I would have retired a commentator once a month .
year ago," said Mancini , the fanner
"After the first oH he year. I'll
World Boxing Association light- relax," Mancini said. "I'll do some
weight champion who retired in of the things I always wanted to do
September at age 24.
when I was fighting, like go to
Since then, Mancini says he's Europe. Life's beautiful."
done "a little ·acting and a lot of
Mancini said he never considered
acting up."
acting WJtil he was approached
Among the acting he's done are about doing some roles after he
roles In the television series "Who's became champion.
the Boss" and "Amazing Stories."
"I didn't go to acting, actlngCame
In the "Who's the Boss" episode to me," he said. "It's a whole new
which will run Nov. 26, Mancini challenge for me."
plays a boyhood friend or Thny
Mancini hasn't received any
Danza 's from Brooklyn. In Steven lonna! acting training, opting for
Spielberg's "Amazing Stories," on-the-job exqerlence In the rolzs
which will run Dec.!. Mancini plays he's taken. He also talks acting
a soldier called "Irish."
frequently with Mickey Rourke, a
"They wan'ted an ethnic-looking close friend who starred in "Diner,"
guy, muscular, but not a moose." "The Pope of Greenwich VU!age"
Mancini said of his role In" Amazing and "Year ci the Dragon."
Stories." "They said a Charles
Rouke and Mancini became good
Bronson-type, I said 'You mean. friends after the ronner champion
strong but silent.' Now that was moved from Youngstown, Ohio, to
acting. I'd begigglingheforescenes. Los Angeles.
•
then had to be serious when we
"I pick his brains about acting.
started."
he's one olthe beSt young actory in
Mancini, who Is on a l &lt;klty tour to the world," ManclnisaidofRourke,
help promote the Nov. 14 Marvin wbo promised the former champion
Hagler.John Mugabl middleweight a pa,rt in his next mivie.
title fight In Las Vegas, Nev., also is
Mancini, wlxi had a ~-3 record
coming out with an exercise video with 23 knockou ts, still gets his
(he says It's the first geared brains picked about boxing. fie
prtmarUy toward men 1 and has a thinks Hagler will have little trouble
motivational video out called defending his tllle next m&gt;nth.
"Straight From the Heart."

· and
Jolm Long each had 24 to lead
in thesecondhalf,andB.liiLalmbeer
the Pistons.
Laken 13.1, Mavericks lUi
AtDallas, RookleA.C. Green and
Mike McGee teamed for20polnts in
the fourth period to llft the Lakm.
Green, who led all rebounders with
16, and McGee keyed a 14-2
fourth-quarter streak.
Hawks 102, Knlcks 97
At Atlanta, Domlnque Wilkins
scored 22 points and grabbed a
game-high 13 rebounds to power the
Hawks, who outrebounded the
Knicks 6044. New York
center Pat Ewing polled down 10.
Rookets lll, Sonia! 08
At Houston, Ralph Sampson
scored 15 ol his 24 jX)ints during a
third-quarter rally to carry the
Rockets. Sarilpson and Akeem
Olajuwon each hauled down 12
rebounds.
Spuurs 12f, Jazz 112
At San Antonio, Texas, Alvin
Robertson scored 23 jX)ints for the
Spurs, who took command behind
17·flrst period points from Mike
Mitchell. The Jazz were outrebounded 'by the Spurs 57-37 with
David Greenwood snaring 20.
Nupslt%, Suns 127
At Phoenix, Ariz., Alex Engllsh
scored 34 points to power the
Nuggets, who outscored the Suns
69-45 In the soo:Jnd half in raising
their record to3-0. TheSunswereled
by returning holdout larry Nance

ow::

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BOLOGNA •••••••••••••••••••• P••••• S1.59
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who score«! 22 points.
Cllppen 118, Trail Blazers 1lll •
At Los Angeles, Derek Smlt '
score«! 10 of his game-high 28 pobttl!'
In the fourth quarter and Frankliii:
Edwards had 17 to ralsetheCllppe~s~
to a 3-0 record. 'The triumph tied ~
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The Daily Sentinel Paqe-15

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

"

C1ndnnal l - Slgrwd cH'PMIIIP back Sam

Wlrhlta tMISU -Sil!l'lf'd Danl!hfOrward
Keld Bordln(Utl:aard.

••rici Dlvlllae

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Purcha.¥d ttr contract d

lntk:&gt;ldPr Bot:by Misclk (rom Hawaii ot thP

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w-.c......"

NJ
4SOR
PlibrRh

scout, :

Pittsburgh -

30, 1985

Bulls 111, Wantors 105
At Oakland, Calif., Jawaan
ham and Gene Banks hit consecu:::
tlve field goals ltl the final mlnute tli~
lift the Bulls.Orlando Woolridge ha&lt;l
?:1 jX)lnts for Chicago.
;:;
Bullets 97, Cavaliers 90
··"
At Richfield, Ohio, Dan Round"
field scored 13of his 17polntsin t~;
third quarter to pace Washington; .
Roundfteld helped tum a 49-46 ~
remaining.
halftime advantage to a 75-59 bulge ;
. Pls!DnslU, Nets m
At Pontiac, Mich..-Kelly Tripucka at the end of three periods.
.,
,,
scored 19 of his game high ?:1 points

Pl1tsbuf'Rh - St&gt;n! lfott wing~ Nolan to
Billtlmon&gt; d ~rt:'an Hockey l..eaguP.

t NA,TI}NAJ.. JIIXaEY LI!AGUE

Wash.
NY lsln

l&gt;S~KUC

major

NHL results
Phtla.

IN&gt;Ir II.Orklng

........

DfofroJt at Philadelphia, 7: XI p.m.
SIUI Ant~mkl al Utah. )I); J) p.m.
'nlllnda, '1 Gtmt~
Ckovl'land at Washlnl{kln. ~~~
SNttlf. at Oenv('f, night
L.A. Laten at Phol&gt;nb:, niRht
Olk'CtUI LA C11pptrs, nlgtu
Nl&gt;w Yorlt I I Gotifn Sl:alf&gt;, nljthl
Houston at Sacnmen to, night

NVRn~t

ftm(w,v('(j

iiRI'l"mmettt with 8.111alo ol tIt' An'll'!'~an
Association for thP 1!186 !iE'II.SOh; anrDJrol'd
that first bltll&gt; C011Ch Je» No5sek WIU bE.&gt; a

.

W-....,'aGamet
MUwaulft_11 Boston. 7: .ll p.m.
indiana II NPW Jt'I"W)', 'r. :l) p.m.

II

-...

Transactions

D£1frolt - Rfc:ai!Nt riRht v.1na Jot&gt; Koo.lr
ftom Adlroldark d t tr Amt'lican HOCkey
Ll&gt;ap: Tl'tUI"i1Pd I'E'ftlf'f Bruce Eakin and
ten 'Nin~~ BasH McRae to AdirOrldack.
HanfOrd - Suspenlil'd ctek'ME'man Mark

l.A CUppm 119, PortiaJid IIl
Ollcaro lll . Goldetl State 100

I

. By COUJNS YE,uM'OOD
UPI Sporis Writer
Perhaps stU! smarting from last
year'sHlsweeplntheNBAEastern
conference semlllnals, the MDwaukee Bucks exacted a measure of
revenge Tuesday night, holding off
the Phlaldelphia 76ers 119-117.
With one second left, Sidney
Moncrief snapped a 117-117 deadlock with a 15-foot jumper that
eclipsed a score-tying basket by
Jullus Erving.
'J'1le victory improves the Bucks
rooird to 2-1 while Philadelphia
drops to l-1. The 76ers had rallied
from 117·111 deficit In the final1: 31 to
tie the ganie at 117·117 on a 10-foot
jumper by Erving with 17 seconds

Wednesday. October
•

m

0

Today's woman can have it all-career, husband, family, independence.
But she's got only 24 hours a day. The daily newspaper helps her make the
most of every minute ... with information at:&gt;out shopping ... money...
vacations .. : health and nutrition ... jobs ... fun. That's why 67% of working
women find time to read a newspaper in their busy day.* .
If you have to reach her, its time to think about the newspaper.
•SMRB. 1984 SMM

•

1

..•.
•

•

e

•

at y

•

enttne
I,

Ne~papers. Our time has come.

.f
r

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••
J •

�Wednesday, October 30, 1986

Wednesday, October 30, 1986

Jacobs birthday
"" j

ACCENT

.,. Ten representatives of the Meigs
Local School District attended a
- Mid-Southeast Ohio Chapter I
'Jnservice Association meeting held
· at the ):lollday Inn In Marietta for
·Cbapter I teachers.
;" · Speaker for the meeting was Dr.
:l&gt;hyllls Pringle, Educational Servl·
• -ces lnstltue, Inc., Cincinnati.
Ten school district participated In
, -the lnservlce sesslon of which Meigs
·•..Local Is a part. Representatives
·trom here were Jamie Blaettnar
_"and Jon! Jeffers, Pomeroy Elemen. tary: Mary Brauer and Rita
·Simons, Middleport Elementary;
Rebecca Crow, Salem Center Elementary; Barbara Matthews, Salls·
bury Elementary; Kim Ohlinger,
· Rutland Elementary; Linda Stan,_ley, Harrisonville Elementary;
. John Lisle, Chapter l Coordinator,
• an.d Dan Morrts,. Meigs Local
·. Superintendent.

..

Justin Ray Klein

SINGLE $24.95

A.A.A.
304-675-62

rctl .....,-c:

Second Grade.

Bernice Blake, Butdi
Bradshaw. Chad Bunoo. Tara Fitchpatt1ck,
·fllldlael Franckowiak, Donald Goheen, A..-u
UaUey. Bmlt Hansoo. Tony Harrl&lt;i, Jt'remy
,t\artson, Wlllif' JohJ'\s&lt;r'l. Ellen Lewis, Grfli!
Peck, Crystal Runyan, Allcla Russell. Ertn
Smith, Dodger Vaughan. ChriS Olapma n,
Stacy Davis, Todd Davts, Alison Gerlach.
.:Nicky Good\vin , JD . K!'eSef'. Michael Little,
,Totiya Phalln, l&lt;t"nda Reynolds, Sara Roush,

Grate. Maggie Kennedy. Lori McGhee, Shen1
Ramsburg. Cynthia Roush, Miche-lle Ward.
Carrk&gt; WUI\ams
Fourth Grade: Lorr1 Burnem, Bobbl Jo
Dld~se, Amlo EU
iott, Jason George, Rachel
HY5("11, Aimee LemJey, Jasoo Miller, Bolby
Moodlspaugh, Joy O'Brien, Scott Pete-son,
Rebecca WUllams ·
. Flrth Grade; Jennifer Chastem, Rusty
Edmaonds, HoUy WUllams.
Sixth Grade: Tammy Miller. Kevin

Musser, Mlr anda Nicholson, JasM Reyoolds,
Marjolita Tromm
·
Primary DH : James Harmon

Wrndl Smith
• ·'Third Grade: Becky DUes, Chuck le);{ar,

... ftebecca Meier, Jacki E'

~artz.

Nirole

Warner, Wall W\lllam.'l, T)'lf1" Wolfe, Adam

Wyat1. Robby Baker, Sam ClM'Wh Lisa
-Honaker, Kf"vln l.llgan. CrockeH Roush,
·~n RowP, Cory Seymour, Melissa W\llong ,

.l!ltinrnJ• Wollo

Fourth Gra~ Amlry Db:oo, E:Usha
M!"adows. Angela WhilE', Kevtn Whobrey,
Terlcta Cogar, Mega n Evans, Jenni fer Fink ,
James Crueser, Erin Harper. Lcslle Quails .
Ann Riffle. O:ra SN&gt;. Matt Stew an

.•
t. ',
I
· ~

nrst s ix WN'ks grading period honor roll
' ~t l heo HarrlsonvUleo Element ary School as
"bren announced. Making a gradr of B or
above In alllhelr subjects to be namC'd !ott.:&gt;

roll wt'rt':
•-First Grade: No Grades
"'' ·Sfocond Grade: Ambt&gt;r Bermc:•tt , Mtchellc
•SOmervtlleo. Gary Stanley. f'Eotrova StfgaU ,
•:IPabltha Swearin~n. Steven Vance, D::lnald
, ,y{)Sf
Third Grade: Rogeor Arb:, B\Ui(I JoButdrer,

Bobble Jo Butcher. Brandy Grover. [)coan
, fiankla. Michael Norris. Ekllda St('Jl:all,
-111e1~sa

Valll'O

.,&gt;Fourth Grade: Mcron Grueser. Shawn
· ~Is, Jona than Vance, Timmy Va n«&gt;
1 'Fifth Grade: Coortney Riggs. Bf&gt;cky

Snowck&gt;n
- Sixth Grade: James HCM·crton. Pnul
·Antll:lny Sl.x, Bobby Vanre

~arp.

The first six weeks grading pPriod honor roll
attht• Pofl}('roy ElcJTl('ntary&amp;hool ha s~
anooui\C'f'd. Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to the roll were:
Serond Grad£&gt;: Annf' Brown. David Cun·

nlngham, Corey Darst, La!Ra na Grove,
Allcta Haggy, Amy Harrison. Monty Hunter,
Palma Wll€'5, Travls Abott, Becky Acker·
man, I srael Gtimm. Hca tt¥&gt;r Knight, Erica
Phillips, Jessica Stobart," Terry Slobart .
Kristina Warner
Third Grade: Sarah Anderson, David
Carmlcha('l. Jered Hill , Kattina Andf'rson.
Tony Brow n. Tara EN :ln, Denise Hayes, Lisa
Ycauger, Jerod Cook, Reggie Pran. Jason
Taylor, William Chlldrf'!iis, Jefr Darnell,
Benny Ewtng, Gwe-n Johnston, Totti Mitch.

Ad am Sleets. Lisa Tancrson.Opal Whlllatch
Fourth Grade: Brad Anderson, Treruon
Cleland, Daniell(&gt; Crow. Tracv Flfe, ~a n na
Boo the, .John Pa ul Davis, Sh&lt;innon Nltz, Jeff
Tracy, Let&gt; Hendersm , Stephanie See
F'lfth Grade: Debl»e Alk:lr(&gt;, Megan Bar·
teots. Kelly Doidge, Denise Hysell, Jodi
Imtxxlen , Charlie King, ~ly Phelps , KeUy
S.a tt er11Pkl. Rusty Trtplelt, Katrina Turner,
Leann Cunditf. Kevtn lambert, Stephanie
PriCE'. VIcki Warner, Beth Roush , Chrlstln
Buzzard, Melissa Maynard · '
Sixth Grade: Julie Buck. Micah BW1ch,
Jeremey Heck, Tammy Klein. Missy Neul·
zlln~. Racharl Roush, Kflt h Smith, Barbie

Andc&gt;rson, Stephan~ Haggy, John Harrison.
J01:~

McElroy
D.H.: Jason Klein. Darrell Let?, Joey
S)X'rlcer, Larry RUtter

.IJ'he' flr!il six wl't"ks grading perbd honor roll
at tbe Bradbury School has tJ:&gt;en announced.
.-MlJklng a grade of B or above In all thelr
,!iublects to be namOO to Ihe rdl were;

. FUih Grade: Abby Blak&lt;. Linda Chaprron.
·Wendy Clark, Ue-a thl&gt;r Franchowlak, U&gt;e
·,L(Ickeydoo. Kyla Sellors
.
Sixth Grade: Trlela Baer. F'rank Blake.
Ckoland, Shari a Coo\X'T', Heathc.&gt;r
Davenport, Stacy Duncan. Tara ~rl a ch ,
)\ngk&gt; Goody, Darin Logan. Lisa Poulln.
Mk'hat'l Thomas. ChrLssy Wenvff. RoliJy
[)odk&gt;

wyatt

· ~m

ChrL~

La ne, Rogt&gt;r Partlow ,
Precious Moore. Er1(' Whitt'

.The-

Class:

.
flrsl six weeks grad in~ period honor roll

&amp;t 1-h€&gt; Soul hem

JuniOr Hlflh School has })e(-n

announced. Making a gradt' of B or above In

a·u jhelJ" SUbjects 10 IX' named 10 Ihe roll WPre:

Se\•enth Grade: Jame; Andt:&gt;rson, Jura:Beegle, Jarred Circle, Jayson Codner.
"Sbarmon Counts, Jennifer Damron, Chrlsllne
k armon. John Hoback, Tonya Ingels, Ml·
Jooes. Jennlrer Lisle, Colin Maidens,
NOrman Matson, Cheryl PaJX•, Joyce
Plckem, .Joet la Pl.zzano. HC'llt~r Roush.
jas&lt;J1 Shain, Jennller Smith, Ang('l Snider
kot;yn Stoul , Andrea TheLss. Janelle Willi·
ams, MlcheUe Winebrenner, Mayla Yoa·.
mam, MIChael Russell, Jason Circle
, ·.Eighth Grade: Harold Blrd,l&lt;evirl Bur~ ,
A.my Harrison. Nancy Hunt, Kathy Ihlc.
Chaslty Jacks. Rebecca Roush. Sher1 Roush,
Shelley Sawyers, Jane AM Wllllams, Trlcla
Wolfe, Brenda Zirkle, Am my Roush
~haell a

'•
The nrst siX weekS grad ing perk&gt;d honor roll

at 1ne Rutland Elernrolary S.hool has been
-ahnounced. Making a grade of B or above In
altthelrsubjects to be named tot he roll were:
-~nd Grnde:

Phyllis Clark, John Cloland,

The firs! six: weeks grad in~ JX'fiod honor roll
al tht&gt; Salem Cl"mer Elementary School has
tx&gt;t&gt;n annoonct"d . MaklnR a grad(&gt; d B or
above In a ll t~lr subl['('ts to tr named to th£&gt;
roll were:
Second Gradf': Gary CnntcrbJT)', Bryan
Colwr \1 , Cynlhl a Cotterill. Mlllssa Ear\(Wine,
.lack Gannaway, Michael Jarvls
Third Grade: Lori Braden. Klmberly
.Janey. Manc.ly .Jones, Tabitha U rge, Susan
Paj!!l", l&lt;t•rry Sexton. Michelli' Shuler. Brian
Smith. Crystal Vaugha n, Timothy Workman
fourth Gradl": Jason Dl&gt;Uavallr . Andrea
McD:ma ld. Jrss\ca Ml!r hell, Denise 9\enefleld , Tonya 1bJrnton
Filth Grade: Nell 8Jn'C'I1 . All ison Ganna·
way, Ranrl&lt;1ll ,Johnsoo, Lort-'rla Oller, Tara
Sht&gt;pherd, Virginia Shuler, Jessica Sllv('t's,
Mtchcllr Yoong
Sixth Grad(l: Sha}'TI(' A!ipln, Arxlrm Ha le,
&amp;&gt;lh Clark, Mall Hayrs, Becky Ockermann

The first six: Wl&gt;eks gr&lt;W:IIng period honor roll
ut tht&gt; Sallsbll!'Y ~:le mentary School has ~(In
announcro. Making a grade or B or above In
all their subj('Cts 10 ~ named to the ron were:
Second Grade: Nicole Bentley, Dorothy
l.t.'lfllrlt, Bert Mash, Mindy Panerson,
Natasha Slater, Billy Smith, Kary n Thomp·
son, Tonya Waugh, James White
Thlrd Grad ~: .Jarrocl Folrr.er, Kelley
Cruser. Rotx&gt;rt Jones, Joey Lipscomb,
Charles Martin. ShJJo Moorr, Matthr:w Morrts
Four1h drl\(!e; Ryan Conde, Rebecca
Hottman. Brad ~ Knotts, Jason Morris. Trvts
Shockey, Marlo White, Jason Witherell
Fifth Grade: Natha n Baloy, Carrie Bartel'i,
Elizabeth Downie, Trevor Harrison, Jason
Hu ffman, Courtney MldkiU, Mlstl Powell,
Shelly Smith, Yvette You!'@:, Misty Hayman

.

Sixlh Grade: Rebocca Ba.olers.

.. :rhird Grade&gt;: Nlrole Bell, M15ty Blrchneld,

1

v

fhiUip Edmonds, Beckie EUioll, Travis
• " •

Mlsl)'

ButCher, Connie Sauters

Jeremy Coleman, Krl!Jten Dassytva, yanessa
H.orl.,., Angle Powelll . Timmy Priddy, Lort

RIJB.6eU. Clndl StewarJ, Roxane WUIIams

RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPliANCE
CHESTER-985-3307
4/ 1/tfn

A FAMILY PROJEcr- Don and VIvian May and
son Donnie, of Unooln Hill, worked hard to create a
prize winning jack·o-lanlern at .P omeroy Uuunber of

EvaM, K.Jmberly Ewing, Eric Heck. l:ebra
Lambert , Jamey Llttil!, Jeanen·c McDonald,
Mlchellr Matthews, Aaron Shet&gt;ts, Kristen ,
SlaWier, Joseph Smith, Ke-lly Smith, Sf('·
phaniP Walker, Darcl Wolfe. Daymond Wolfe
Eighth Grade: Jotm Andersm. Nancy
Baker. Melanie ~le, Cary.Bt&gt;121ng, Dennis
Boothe, David Buchanan, Jenny Buck, Heidi
Ca ruthers, Ktm Olapman . Hank Cleland.
BarOOra Coleman, Mark Conley, Eddk&gt;
Crooks, Leah Daniels, Lisa Q:r.rst, Kelly
Douglas. Jimmy Durst, Amy Epple. Pt100·
Eslt&gt;p. Mal)' Hale, Ryan Harp&amp;, Wally
H&lt;~tfleld, J ay Humphreys, Tina Kautf.
Tammy Lambert. Mike Parker, Shannon
Newsome, Hea th Richmond, Rarhel Robin·
son. Terra Schoonover, Dee Shane, 'Jbd:l
Smith, Cheryl Stevens. Mike Walls, Tom
Wcrry. Sandra Whaley. Tara Wolfe

The rtrst six weeks grading period honor roll
lhe Meigs Junlor &amp;hool has "been

'

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

PH. 304-295·7845

Call 61 4·446·36 13.

Y~lntty

of Centerpoint

Road. Roward. Call 614446·1943.

,...,....,...,...,....._.._....J Kemper Hollow Br Bulaville
Rd. area . Reward. Call614·
446-9780.

LOST· Hereford bull aolf.
around 400 lb. Evergreen .
K!!tn Community. ,If 1een,

Addonl and remodeling
Roofing and guner work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electrical

please call, 6t4-446·1627.

Jim Mink Chov.·Oidslnc .
Bill Gene Johnson

614-446-3672

WANTED TO BUY used
wood &amp; coal heaters .
SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd .
Br Olivo St. Gatllpollo. Call
614-446-3169.

work

PHONESentiatl
992-2156
Clm1 hed t)tpt.

'

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Beds. iron.
wood. cupboards. chairs ,

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

Buying daily gold, silver
coins, rings, jewelry, nerllng
ware, old coins, large cur·
rency. Top prices . Ed. Bur·

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

,
LEGAL
NOTlCE: John C. Bacon, Jr.
and Judith A.· Bacon, wllooe
last known llddr.,. is 3691
Paril Boulevard. WHIIIIVilte,
Ohio 43081 ond tho Unlalown
Heirs, D.W.s, loga·

S-.

teal. bacutors. Administra-

tors and Assigns of John C.
Bacon, Jr. and Judith A.
Bacon, H any. haw _ ,
ordered to oppoor or plead by

December 31 . 1986 to a
complaint filed in Civil Action
No. C2·B5-134B in lhe Unitod
Public Notice

NOTICE OF
DRAWING JURORS
Office ·of Commissioners
Of Jurora
Meigs COunty, Ohio

Ph. (6141 843-5425

Public Notice

Public Notice

Slates Dislrict Court for tho
Southom District of Ohio.
Eastern

Division.

United

States of America, Plaintiff, ..,,

John C. Bacon, Jr.. ot ol ..
Dolandama, pnying lor foreclooura of a
dead
recorded in Volu'"'! 124. Page
147 of tho mqngoge records
of Meigs County, Ohio. whicll
deed is a lien on the
following deteribed rool prop·
erty situated in lho State of
Ohio. and County of Meigs
and doscribod as follows, to
wit: Being Lot No. 16 of

mon-

mon-

46760. FaHure to respond lo
the complaint will resuh in an
EntiY· of Dolauk. Judgment

and Decree in Foreclosure,
sale of the mortgaged property
and extinguishmenl of all
inter811S in said property,

JOHN D. HOLSGHUH. Unilod
StaiM District Judge. Approved: CHRISTOPHER K.
BARNES, United Smlas Attorney. ALBERT R. RITCHER,
Aslin.lm United St- Allor·
ney, Room 200. U. S. Coort·

the
Commiuioners
of
Jurors of Meigs County,
Ohio, Jurors will be publiclY
drawn for the January 1986
Term of the Common Pleas
Court Of aaid County.
Wallace Bradford

I. 0 . McCoy
Commissionen of Jurors

t10130.1tc

SMALL
WANT ADS
PACK
ABIG PUNCH!

Lelart Honor Roll

Th(' first six weeks grading period honor
roll at the Letart Falls Elemmtary School has
OC&gt;en an nounced. Making a grade cl B or
above In all thelr subjects to b? named to t~
roll were:
First Grade: No hooo'r rofi for the first
grade.
Second Grade: Jason Barnett, Bqbbl King,
KJm Roush, Jason Shuler, Kirk 1\irle)'
Third Grade: Sabrina Congo, Justin HUI,
Tra~· Pic~. Brandy Roush, 9Jannon
Staats
"
Fourth Grade: Brandl King

Fillh Grade: Nickle Beegle. Darrell ~yre.

Shulf"'", James Walls
Sp. Ed. Primary: Noll&lt;'

No.

2492B, Cloranc:e L. Atherton, 6t700 Stato Routa
124. tong Boitom, Ohio.
45723 WIO lppoinlod Executor of the estlte of Ar·

on Platrecot'ded in Volume 13,

Page 31 . Meigs County Re·
cord of Plats. PROPERTY

ADDRESS: 70 Riverview
Middleport.

Ohi o

I

Real Estate General

Southern Honor Roll
The first six weeks grading period honor
roll at The Southern High ~hool has been
announced. Making a grade of 8 or above In
all their subjecls to benamOO to lherollwere:
Seniors~ Todd Adams, Becky Adktns,
Becky Allm, Theresa Bing, Cllartlo Bo;o,
Alana ·8Jner, Gina Davis, Dixie DJgan,
Richard Gilbride, Kelley Grueser, Scan
Crueser, Jodie Harris, Mindy Hill, Mell!isa
Ihle, Pam J ohnson, Ryan Oliver, Lisa
Parsons, Kelly Rlzer , Kenda Rizer, Robin

992-2156

Savage, Teresa Shuler, Shen1 Ssson, Becky

Best IIIJqnment
Man in the Area.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Absolutely

VanMeter, Scott Wickline, Paula Winebrenner, Tanya Young
Juniors~ Cindy Arnold, Carol Bumarrl,
George"'-'· Mike O..m, Chris O..mer.
Regina Eakins, Tim Gilbride, Mlstee
Grueser, Matt Harris, Legina Hart, Jamcy
Hemler, Tracie Hubbard, Pete Johnson, U sa
Pape, Rachel Reiber, Krlsla Sellers, Diane
Slmpsoo, Karla Smith, Marvin Teaford,
Tammy 'l'hetss, KJm Willford, TammY Wolfe
Sophmoces: JennUer Arnold o Shawn Ar·
mtt , Pam Ash, Chris Ba.er, Brtdget Btng,

t~e

Complete Car
SrrvJte, lube Jobs,
Oil Change,
Tunr -ups, Broke
Job1, Mufflm.
Try us, WI' ton do

Ronnie Burkhamer, Patrece Circle, Leanne
Clark, Richard Cummins, Wendy Fry, Angle
Grueser, Dolly HW, Tarmny Holler, Dendi
Hudson. BIU Hupp, MoUie Kimes, Larissa

II bPtlrr.

Lara, Sam McPhail, Dontta Manuel, Shan·
non Riffle, Klm Ryan, Heather Shuler, Tina
Sioter, Jamie Wolle
Chr~lina
i

MGM
FARM CITY
SERVICE STATION

Tosha O'N&lt;:JI, Kristen Pape, Sarah PhUsoo,
Herbie Rose, Ellzabelh Smllh, Chris Slool,
Melanie VanMoll'r.

992 9932

'

PT. PUlSltn OFFICE

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

305 Jack111n ln.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9-30·11

PIUS: Office Supplies &amp;
Furniture, Wtdding
and Graduation

3/2/lin

Clerk
110)23 . 30: (1116 31c

1979 Cougar XR7 12.000.
1978 Baja Jot boot 464
3 Announcements
cu.in. 16,000. t4K80 Sch .
mobile homo . a10.000 .
1984 Chevy 'A ton dleoel
SWEEPER and sewing mo· n0,600. 6 yr. horse 11100.
chine repair, p1r11. end Oct. 30 to Nov. 2. Behind
ouppllos.
Pick up and Old Blue Willow Club Ka delivery . Davi1 Vacuum nauga. Call 614·448· 8341 .
Georges Crook Rd.
614-446-0294.

Call

1:00 p.m. Factory Choko12
guege shotguns.
Reduce 11fe and fa.t with

TEAFORD

rn

Real Estate

REAno'

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1·161 4}-992-3325
NEW LISTING - 3 yr. old
bi -level. 4 BRs, family rm .,
central heat, sundeck. for mal din in g in Baums Sub.
Oiv.
NEW LISTING - SYRACUSE - Small 7 rm . home
be[ng renovated. Nice level
lg. ~~ &amp; 2 porches. Asking
just $16.,000.
NEW LISTING - 2 BR,
carpeted home near grocery
in Middleport. Carporl, gas
furna ce and in good repair.
Only $18,000.

POMEROY, 0.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Home in
Middleport. Pa rtly remodeled bui1eady lor !he handyman this Ill story home
is in a good neighborhood
and has 3 bedrooms and a
level lot with a garage. Asking $17.000.00.
POMEROY - One floor
ran ch with 3 bed1o'oms,
deck area, l ca1 garage Of1
approx. I acre. $48,000.00
LONG BOTTOM "" Neat 3
bedroomranch, lam1iy room,
approx. I acre wilh garden
area. $32,000.00.
ST. RT. 7- Approx. 2 ac res
wfth nice big yard, garaden
area, fruit trees, I ~ story
home wilh 3 bedrooms. lamily room. lireplace, lull basement, and equipped kitchen
$26,900.00

NICE OLDER - In good
condition with range, refrig.,
carpeting, storm windows,
hot water heat, nea r the
court house. 20's.
INVESTMENT - Buy this
one and renovate to suit
yourself. near Middleport
sto1es.
STURDY - 65 yr old, 2
story , full basem ent, formal
dinin g and small fa mily rm.,
lg.lot with 2nd rental. Gas F.
1&lt;. furnace .
RUSTIC HILl - Modem one
lioor, 6 rms. plus office. 3BRs,
family rm. 12x l9, relrigera- '
tor, stove. washeo &amp; d1ye1,
dining area and 2 porches. 10
yrs old.
YOU ONLY eET .WHAT lOU
PAY FOR.

'

FREE PARKING '~
Sue Murphy, ~i~On Roush,
• Htl1t1, Vi1111 &amp; Bruce.
.

Housmg
Headquarters

RACINE - 3 bedroom, 2
story home situated 1111 2
lois. Original oak woodwork,
nice kitchen w1lh appliances, vinyl sid ing, basement. storage shed . lovely
home. Askin g $39.000.00.

'.
COUNTRY ESTATE and a rabbit hunter's parad~e. Nice 3
bedroom ranch cype home
wrth a full basement. Over 26
acres of ground plus "FREE '
gas. $54 ,900.00 .
NEW LISTING - Eastern
District - A very nice 3
bedroom ranch with a large
family room on appro• . 2
acres' of ground . Priced to
sell at $45,000.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dollie Turner 992· 5692
Jo Hill 985·4466

fiiut STREAK CAB CO~

· ·r~~~~~~ l

PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

317 Norlh IO&lt;ond
Middleporl, Ohio 45760

9' SPUN ALUMINUM ............................ 11265
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... 11350
'
10' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... 11395
11' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... 11595 .
Wo Hovt Many Otber Dishes To Choose From
A System Can It Designed for You
g '

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
aU~Nili PHON!
16141 992-6SSO
RIIIDINCI PHON!
16141 992-7754

GIVE US l _CAL1

_
~

614·667-6235 or 667-3074

1' 1'2111c

Receivers b P1n11onic Unlden. Mexum Mal Com -

'VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
'BlOWN IN
INSULATION

Television Ustening Devices

e

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

z

Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For.AII Ages

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a Licensed Clinical Audiologist
or
-z
Avenue,

New Homes Built
"Free Estitnates"

PHONE 992-7075
Don.'f W~lk, Wtlf 01
Ch~nee

(614) 446·7619
417 Second

(614) 992·6601
Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

t:~ Hsflf~fs.

10·21 ·1 mod.

pdj

PREPARE FOR WINTER
HAVE YOUR FURNACE
SERVICED NOW

NEW MOIIlf HOME FURNACES AVAILABLE

WHERE TO BUY?

Lonely, need a date1 Moat
that specialtomeona today\

----

awarded on Sunday. Reglt·
tratlon ends New. 1tt. ~nter~
etted contlc1 Sheron

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
9-301 mo .

MILLER '
ELECTRIC ••'
SERVICE I'"
t

Residential &amp; Commercial ;

:

992-5875 Or t
742·3195
1

!

&lt;lr •

fumiture, toys, avon, ate .
This is our big one .

1----_:.____

Frid1y, November 1 at Ma ·
St. in

Nov. 1tt and 2nd . 1 mile
south of Cllnet Fruit Farm on

henglngo.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Jackson Corpor~tlon ia hav·
lng thtir 2nd. Annual Ware ·

houoe Soli November 2,
1985 from 9:00AM till
2:00PM ot 275 S. Bennon
Awe •• Jackson, Oh.

antique, llqukf1tlon

home. Black Scottish Tar-

Full size m11tre11 and
springs to give IWiy. Call

Wanted to buy. Topper for

short bed Dotsun true!&lt; . Call
614·992-7822 .

614-992-2879 .

Electric toy trains. Uonol.
Americon Ftyor. Any ohepe
8 yftr old black opoyod or condition. Call 814-992·
female . I!J elkhound , Y, Irish 8368.

99J~61

~aner .

3-D
AUTO
CENTER

Col. Bluish gray c:olorlld.
304-876-3985.

8101/t West Moin Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
Phono 614 -992 -67711

1 male Boogie puppy. 304·
676·6937.

SALES &amp;RENTALS
614-446-7283

Out of Town Customers Clll Collect
•Home 0Kygen
•Hospital Bed• •Wheel Chairs

WEIIU MEDICA. Ale OTHER INW.ANCI
CUllERS WHEN E~all

lOWMAN'S HOME CAB •DtCAL SUPPLY
U Piroo St~ Gallpolh

.We Oollver

24

mobile homo. 304·871·4t 54.
Uted underpinning for

FALL SALE

.

73-10 GM TRUCK FENDERS .............. $39.00
DYNLITE IODY FILLER ...............!!!h...... S6.50
11• INCH MASKING TAPE ..... :..... ~!'!........... 99'

DUST MASK

,..

people you know. 1nd NOT
to een~ money through the
mail until you have invaltl·
gated the offering .
Own your own je'an sponswaar, ladies app1rel.
childrens, large size, combination store, petites. mater·
nity . accessorie.s. Jordeche.
Chic, lee, Levi, E Z Strea1,
lzo d, Esprit. Tomboy, Cel'llin
Klein . Sergio Valenle, Evan
Picone, Li t Claiborne.
Members Only, GasoUne •

Healtht&amp;K. over 1000 'oth·
ers . $13,300 to $24,900
in..,entory. training, fixtures,
grand opening etc. C1n open

16 days . Mr. Loughlin (B12)
B88 6666 .
Own your own jean ·
sportswear, ladies app1rel,
children• . large size. combi·
nation store, petites. mater·
nity, eccessoriet. Jordeche.

Wanted used washers, dry·
era, rtfrlgeretort, rengaa.
twetpart, wortlng or not .

Coil 304-6711-2921 .
' " ws buy the bell. poytop
dollars. Soil what you don't
wanl . Get CASH for paint·
ings. dolls, jewelry and

pottery. 1·304·343 -1867
1 solid black lemole cat, 2 collect. Wrila B. Prlco , 1658
yro old. with fluffy toll. 2 Kanewhe Blvd East. Cho·
kltlono, 304·468· 1825.
rlooton. W. Vo . 25t311 .

ars. $13.300 to H4.900
inventory, training, fb.ture&amp;,
grand opening elc. Can open

16 days . Mr. Bing t404) 262
4489.

Own yourJean -Sportswe'ar,
ladies, Children s or Urge
Size Store. 1OO's of Net'l

Brandl. $15,900 lnctucioo
$ t 0,600 invontory, fl•l\lres.

supplies and more .. C1II to ~

doyll Mr . Tate 704-274 6965.
22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS·Raflnince

Payment . No Expe-

rience . No Sale1 . DBteils

equity

tend self-addressed

for any purpose . leader
Morlgage Co., 614- 692·

tiona for a full time book keepar potition . Applic;a tion&amp; .will be t••n fr9m

Water wellt drUied 11\d •r-

stampnd envelope: Elan VI- 3061 .
tal -716 3418 Enterprise 1-:;:;:::::;=;==;=:;==::
Rd. Fl. Pierce. FL 33482. 1.
23 Professional
Pomeroy Health Care Center
S
•
lo now accepting appllca ·
erv1cea

8:00-4:00, Monday through

viced . Prices on requ11t. Call

Friday 11 the Cehter. Mutt
ha\11 knowledge of Medicare
and Medicaid billing. ac counts payable, receivable
and payroll. No phone calfs ,

614· 742 -3147 or 614-992 6006.

please .

counts .

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR, beck lo school disfree

es11mete• .

Ward's Keyboard. 304-87(;S 16,040 6600 or 676-3624.

Government Jobs.
$69,230 year . Now hiring .

Responsible adult to be full
time dairy hand . E.11cellent

bonofito. Sotory negotlobte.
Please tend resume to The
Daily Sentinel , P.O .Box 729

Fall . Special furniture 'l-eu·

pholstering . This is our 21.t
year 11rvi1g trl-county Whh
the bell In reupholstering .
Call now for Free E1tlm.te

304-676·4164. Mowroy 'o
Upholotory.

D. Pomeroy, Ohio 46769.

Real Eslale

MONEY, MONEY . MONEY!

benofiiS. ENLIST NOWI Call
304·676·3960 or 1·800·
642-36 19 .
The Army Nalional Guard
needs your prior military
service experience . Enliat,
now for pan-time montly

paycheck, llducotionol op·
ponunl11es, retirement in·
co,.., 1nd much more. C1ll

304·675·3960 or 1·800·
642 ·36 19 .

To sell Avon . Call Marilyn

Waavor. 304-882 ·2846 .
To sell Avon. Call Shirley

31

Homes for Sale

By owner. Must sell-moved.

3 bdr. ranch , one car garage,
wa lking distance from North

Galli• High School. Roduced
lo $29,900. Call 614·388 ·
B711 .
.
In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr .,
full basment, nlca lol . Large
rear decks with v•ll•v view .

Priced to ooll f39,500. Will
contldar mobile home tr1de

ln . Coll614 -446-8038.
Go\lernment Homat trojn

f1 (u·ropoir) . Aioo delinquent tax propeny . Cell

806 -687 -6000 oKt. GH 4562 for information .

Spears. 304-676 -1429 .

Beautiful view of Ohio River.

Baby titter needed in my
home for infant . Hours 8 :00

bl · level home . Brick and
frame on 2.9 acres. 3
bedroom . 2'11 baths. Fire place in livi ng and family
rooms . Two car garage. 'C ity

AM to 4:30 PM . Monday

thN Fridays, may al so in ·
elude an occasional wee -

t2 year old single family

ochool district In Cloy Twp.

refrences. Send resume to

!PA milet aoulh from Galli·

Box C·29 . Pt. Pit. Register.
200 Main St.. Poim Plea·
sent, W.Va.

Assumable fixed 9% loan .

12

Situations
Wanted

polio City llmlu off St. Rt . 7 .
Coil 6\ 4·446 -2000.
3 bedroom full batement .
eat ·in kitchen, carport ,
S1,600 &amp; talce O\ler pay·
manta. Plants Subdivition .

Call614·446 ·7360.
Vacancy for the elderly in
our home . Trained and fif .
teen Yllrl experience. Call

614-992-7314.

Nursing care in private
home . Room for two pa-

tiento . f&amp;OO . a monlh. Call
614-992 -3596.

Three bodro o m herd wood
floors, insuleted, new gas
.furnace, one nlille from GeUi·
polls . A · one co ndl11on
$ 16 ,000 no down payment.

Call 814-367-0262 .
By o wner. Remodeled 3
bed room hou se on Rt .33 .
Now F.A . furnace . large lot.

Room end board for elderly.

S23 ,000. Collecl 814·423 Roasonoblo prices. Call 6 t 4 6289 .
992-G022.
By owner. Stately 3 bed ·
room house 11 10 E. St.,
ExperJenced babya lttlng f o r
toddlers or itfants, day or
Pomeroy . 5 wooded acr•• ·
nigh1, hourly rates. Cloae ) · Famoilly room, dining room .

town . Call814·992·75666 .

F.A.

2 baths. booe-

ment, garage.
Will care for elderly person in
their home dlly or night, e•c

roleroncoo. phone 304-6762060.
15

Schools
Instruction

•20.000 yearly poslible.
Prep1re at home for Poat

Yount rwglotorod Walker 20 gauge olnglo ohot. PhoM
Coon Hound, 304-875· Mowrey's Upholstering.
304·676·4154.
16484 .

Picone , Liz Claiborne,
Members Only, Gasoline,
Healthtex. ower 1000 oth •

to low fi•ed r•-t • · Use

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE . Eotota.

ooleo. Llc:enolld Ohio and
Woot Virginia . 304-77 3Pit Bull puppies end mother 57B5 or 304· 773· 6430.
to give away. 614·992·
!I
2881 .
'
9 Wanted To Buy
Dog to give away to good
!Yior. 814·992· 7836:

Business
Opportunity

teed

Saturday Nov. 2nd., 9-4.

alze bed aheet set&amp; , 2 nice
ladles winter coats. old
1ntique clock. misc. item1 ,
home Interiors and wall

MoJo . 4 mon . old. mlxlld

21

Assembly Work l

members could earn more
than 520 .000 in educational

No tr11paaslng or deatrov·
ing. Ed Shomblin proporty
onn Oshel Rood. Will 8o

Giveaway

Finan cia l

S600 .00 per 100. Guaran·

838 E. Main. Pomeroy. Oct .
31 &amp; 2nd. $1 .00 bags,

t.rm,

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"

PHONE (614)

Easy

1-------'---- chock . PLUS qualified

St. Rt. 7 . Antlquoo. quoon

breed . Lovea children. Give
1w1y to good home . C1ll

SHADE, OHIO

3-24-tfc

in core of tha Galllpollo Daily
Tribune. 926 3rd Avo. Galli·
polis. Oh 46631 .

The army National Guard
can provide you wilh a
par1 -1i me monthly pay·

Rouoh. 304·882·3346 .

Now open!\ New and Used
Rumm1ge Room, Monday
thru Friday, 6 mllet out
Jerry&amp; Run at AppM Grove.

Medical Secretary with pre·
vlous medical billing expe·
rience . Full time with benet ita . Send reaume to box 600

Tupper• Plain• It Gordon
Caldwell's. Nov. 1st and
2nd . Lots of nice Christmas
decoraliona. what -nota . clo ·
thing , much more.

will hold • one -day hum rilyn Powells on Vine
Nov . 2nd with prlzn Roclna. 9 :00-3:00.

4

REPAIR SERVICE

REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Antiques. collectables. fur·
nitura. winler clothes (baby
thru adult), misc . 9:00 ·

Call DATETIME TOLL· Rollin Radford. t mila pBit
FREE . 1-B00-972· 7676, Rockoprings lair groundo .
anytlma day dr night.
Old 33.
Muon County Field Archers

Rinky Oink INIOn . Contact
the Galllpollo Parko &amp; Re·
creation Dept. 11 61 4-446·

kend 11 or2 a month!, Need

JEWELL'S

PH. 992_- 6030

Farm . Viola tort will be
proucuted . Charles C .
Lewl1 .

Prosecuted .

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

...__ _ __!.;:8-8~-t~fc

f

We Won't

no hunting or
oresponlng on Old Town

Abaolutly

614-992·31577.

Rl. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

Call:

I

B·lllln

Roger Hysell
Garage

FOR ALl YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

'

Being [qfl -

~~/Qg,

X

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

'

rtle&amp; .

needed for tho 1985-96

9805 for oorrent federal lilt .

GoBeu capouloo and E-Vap 3:00 . College Rd. and FKth
"wolor pllio". Fruth Phar· St .. Syrocuoe. Oct. 30 thru
macy. Middleport .
Nov. 2 .

Call 304·676·2336.

Youth Baaketbull referees
and scorekeepers are

Call B06·687·6000 E•t. R·

Every Sunday, beginning at

Are In
Cars. Dolls. Guns &amp; Much More
Gifts For Mom, Dad &amp; Everyone
1O"lo Down Will Hold Far Christmas Gifts
Shop Early and Save

HUDNALL

608
E . Main

MiddJeport

&amp; Vicinity

!IOred by Racine Gun C.. b.

insured, reasonable

Real Estate General

··--· ·;;(;;n,,-;av·--------

Racine Gun Shoot apon·

Our Christmas Toys

Busint'ss
St'rviees

2nd. Fri . &amp; Sat.

appllanco, odd &amp; ondo.

Cleaner. one half mile ,up

FREE Orignial Cabbage Patch Doll
"Register To Win"

Garaga Sola 328 &amp; 335
LeGrande Blvd . Nov . ht &amp;
Warehouse Sale 4 7 Syca more St . Wed.·Thura .- Fri .
10·6. All typos of furn . &amp;

Ann oun cemenIs

Rt. 124, Syracuse, Oh.

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

992-3345

Coll614-446-3368 .

1789 lmmodiataly.

...... Giiiii"iloifii········

2SS Mill Sl., Middleport
104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

JO'S GIFT SHOP

Lena K. Nesselroad,

FOUND truck title in the
name of Rogir (.Brown , call
304-675 -11647 .

lulintu Forms,
Copy Servicn, Eh.

ili-14-1 mo.

4/29/ttn

FOUND gray block spotted
Blue Tick hound. 304· 676·
7233.

7

Stationery, Magnetic
lig111, Rubber Stomps,

304-372-5709

94~·2969
·

Fot All Ym PI/MIMI N11l1

For Hours

949-2263

naka 45% for Christmas.

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Offke

NEW-REPAIR

or

Ph. 985·4141
ID· l1tfn

:

a Chic. Loa. Lavl, E Z Street.
pouible $200-$260 per lzod, Esprit, Tomboy , Cll'llin
week. Coil 614-266-6689. Klein, Sergio Valente, E'lt'an

AVON Start up leo 85 .00.

Free Estimates

246-9472-Connle. Clooo lo

hospital.

Cut firewood in woods.

long Bottom, Ohio

SURGERY BY APPI •

-ROOFING

PAT HILL FORD

una , 825 Third Ave., Galli·

polis, Oh 46631 .

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

SMALL AN.AL HOUIS
Mon.-Wod.-lhurs. 3•5 pm
IH111t. 6:30-8; Fri. 1-2 pm
. loturdoy 10-11:30 om
LliGI ANIMAL &amp;

Howard l. Wrilesel

Gutters • Downspouts
Gutter Ctaaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

3/ 11 / tfn

Sp. Ed. Intermediate; Jerry Lawson,
Mellssa Teaford, Eddie WUIIs

Racine, Oh.
614·843·5191
10-6-tlc

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
· heater cores. We can
·also acid boil and ro.d
oot radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1 -13-tfc

Bashan Building

of the Gallipolio Doily Trib· .

•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,

LimE HOUSE -One floor ,
lg. level lot. 2 BRs, pane lin g,
carpeting &amp; carpo1t with
utility .

Mary Smith, Kyle Wickline
Sixt h Gra de: Kelly Baltic, .Carr ie
Gloeckner. Jody Hayes, Jodi JWI, Dawn

bate Court. Clse

191 25 t10i 2. 9. 16, 23, 30.
61c

of lho Village ·of Middleport,
Meigl County. Ohio, as shown

RADIATOR "
SERVICE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Oclober 17, 1986
in tho Meigs Coonty Pro:

Riverview Acrei SubdMsion

Oct. 29. 1986
To All Whom It May Con·
On Thurllday. the 7th day
of November 1985. at 9:30
O'clock A.M. 1t the office of

9/12/2 mo. pd. -

. Public Notice

thur C. Atherton, De·
ceased. late of R.O. #2,
Orange Township, Cool·
ville.
Ohio.
house, Columbus. Ohio
Robert E. Buck.
43216 Telephone: 16141469·
Probete Judge
6716 Counsel for PlalntiH
.

Place .

P~.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y
VmRINAIIAN
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM

Help Wanted

One certified Medical Tech nologiat , weekdays. Send
resume to box 300, In cere

•Sid in&amp;

10·8·tfc

GUN SHOOT

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
insulated Dog Houses

CALL COLLICT:
Public Notice

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
UTILITY BUILDINGS

SIDING

"FREE ESTIMATES"

PH. 992-7201 -7-

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

"Free Estimates"

ALUMINUM

•Insulation
•Storm Ooors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

JIM CLIFFORD

Sizes Start From 12'x16'

Worked in home area
20 years

VINYL &amp;

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Additions
•Roofing

Babysitting In my home any
hours at Rodney. Have references, e:~~:perience •.can 614-

I NOTIGE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
CO. recommends
45769 or call 614-992· LISHtNG
that you do butineas with
7760.

Employmenl
Servtces

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

Coli between 6PM-10PM.
814-448-9480.

chests , baskets, dishes,
atone jars, antiques, gold
and silver . Write - M . D .
Miller. Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio

V. C. YOUNG Ill

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Odd jobs-have references .

changer. Coil 614 -26 6·
6251.

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12-8-llc

7/ 11/ Jln

18 Wanted to Do

Want lo buy manuel tire

kelt Barber Shop, 2nd. Aw .
Found: Khton. Around Nei - Middleport. Oh . 614· 992·
IOnville, Ohio. Call 614·992 3476.
2631 after 5:00p.m.

tFrao Estimates!

Oalllpollt, 0•1•

Mineral Wells, W. Va.

SIDING_CO.
Complete Gu11er Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types

Ill Cowrl St .. Pomttoy, 0-io45759

James Parsons

...

EUGENE LONG

()1 Wrdt D11t1r

Jessb Eyans, Carol F'l!lher, Judy Green,
al

MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT ADS,

The Daily Sentinel

L.D.-Cralg Wclfe
D.H.-chris Hamm, For~! Teaford,

Shawn Diddle, Leslee Dudding,

Box, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
For Fuler Service
Call 614·992·6737

SUPERIOR

Po rtland Honor Roll
The first sbl: weeks grading Pl'riod honor
roll at the Ponland Elementruy School has
been annoonL'f'd. Making a grade fl B or
alxlve In all thelr subjects to tx! named tot~
roll were:
Grade 2-Robin GIU~ple. C.J. Harris,
Woodle Richards, DenLse Roush , Gabe Smith
Grade 3-Miche\Je Himis , Davld Pickens
Grade &lt;&amp;-christie Cooper, Jamey Smith
GradE&gt; ~Nic k Adams, Shawn Wolfe
Grade £-Joshua Codner, Hea tb?r GlbE&gt;aut,
Gl&lt;.'11da Holler

Cooper,

annu&amp;l community HaUowoon pariy
held Tuesday night on the upper parking lot. Mom
drew the face, Donnie can'ed It ou~ and dad
supervised their efforts.

Frll TN£ Bill

cern :

Fr&lt;shmen: Sheily Connolly,

clllllllleice• s

ClA~~IFIED AD~

Sixty-six members and officers
represented local UMW.unlts-from
Athens, Meigs, Hocking, Washington, Galtia,Hocklng, Morgan, and
Vinton Counties.
The group toured the Middleton
Doll Factory, CoolvUle, following
the meeting, and viewed the
learning resources table arranged
by Jean Mowry, Logan, and
MarUyn Harris, Gore.
· Hostesses from the CoolvUle unit
were Joanna Weaver, Inez Bentz,
Miriam Blbbe, Roberta Kercel,
Gladys Russell, Brenda Day, and
Dorothy White.

Sevmih Grade: Clwe Cleland, John

Wa'd llka to inlroduea you to
Enpat-A·Cor. the modem way
to dlivt the vehicle of your
choice.
No Down Payment
lower Monthly Payment

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

and Let It Be, C'onsecreted Lord to

announced. Making a griJdeof B cr above In
all tt¥&gt;itsub)ects to be named 1o1he rcil wr.re:

U·SA~E

Found : 2 footbell picture
badgea for young child , in
envelope at football f ield .

LOST 2 Coon dogs. 1 black
Br tan female the letters ST

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

right ear, missing 800 block
2nd Ava . Ploaoe call 814·
446-2189 .

branded on side . 1 red· tick
male. Lost Tues. night on

YOUNG'S

"We Rnl F11 lm"

"Fn• P•flr"g"

PH. 742·2629

4·5·tlc

Rewardmala
: large
&amp;
while
cat, yellow
withered

in

Tuu &amp; Thurs. 7·9 pm

PARTS and SERVICE

CALL
446·4522

Sewer .............$3.70
Eli...................$1. 00
160# Water ...... 19•
Gas Pipe ........;.... 18•

CIVIC CENTER

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
elean uaed cars .

LOST 2 black &amp; white
Beagle dogo, malo Br female.

Mon. &amp; Fri. 1· 4 pm

9

11

INTERESlED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Thee."

-Meigs school honor rolls
The first slx WeE'ks grading period honor roll
··at the Mlddlepcr1 Elementary Scnool has
bet&gt;n annoonct'd. Making a grade r1 B or
above In all their subjects to b? named totht'

oi D•tr

4"
4"
I"
1"

RURAND

•Dishwashers
•Ranges ·
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

RENT A CAR

PLASTIC PIPE
PRODUCTS

ROOM 103

•Washers

1·3-lfc

$SAVE$

llosulls in 30 lltillulos)
'

985·3561
All Makes

Far111 Equltmenl
Parts &amp; Smlee

"Free Estimates" .
lnslollation Avo•il.~~~~-

WE ARE YOUR SAlES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
*SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGIRATOR
*SAT!WTE SALES &amp; SERVICE
'We HnJ AFall Tl••
Sh~ Tte.lleie•

UMW district meeting
held in Coolville church
"Threads of Life" as the theme for
the day as Athens District United
Methodist Women met for' spiritual
enrichment at the Coolville United
Methodist Church.
Devotions, a litany of purpose,
and group singing were led by Jane
Bowman, Christian Personhood
chairman, Chesterhill; Jean Mock,
membrshlp chairman, Logan; and
Marjorie Malone, CoolvWe.
Sallye Born, Marietta , vice presl·
dent, narrated a style show of
lea rning resources. New officers
were Introduced and Vlvan Robin·
son, president, addressed the group
on the topic of stress. The prog!-am
closed with singing or "Take My Life

Authorized JohQ Deere ,
New Holland. Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

•Live entertainment
'Free HBO •Restaurant
olliympic Pool

FlEE CONFIIEN11ll
NEGNlNCY JEST

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

742·20~7

? ,.EG.!II. ANT ?

(CUI OUI FOR FUTURI US!)

SALES &amp; SERVICE

After 5 Call

Rl. 62 SO.UTH
POIHI PlfAIANI, W. YA.
8 mites from
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Klein of
Welchtown Road are announcing
the birth of a son. born at the Holzer
Medical Center, Oct. 12. The Infant
weighed seven poo!lds, 13 ounces
and was a! Inches long. He has been
named Justin Ray.
Mr. and Mrs. Klein's other sons
are Robert Allen and Brian Scott.
Maternal grandparents are Beaulah Mae and Ross Shuler of
_Langsville. Maternal great·
granilmother Is Vivian Coy of
Rutland, and paternal grandparents are Lawrence and Patricia
Klein, Welchtown Road, Pomeroy.
Paternal great-grandfather Is Ha·
rold Will, Pomeroy .

: Inservice
:conducted

BOGGS

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992-6931

MOTEL.

Klein birth ·.

Rachael Ann Morrts, daughter of
- Mr. and Mrs. Steve Morris, Ru• !land, observed her first birthday
~~ ~ntly with a party.
Cake and ice cream were served
to Ann and Scott Bearhs and
,. Anthony, Dorothy Ritchie, Betty
·. _Spencer, BUI and Florence Wood,
• Pete and Betty Bearhs, Ruth
:·. Morris. Sending gifts were Jim and
., PhYllis Bearhs.

6 Lost and Found

,;:;:::;;:;:=;=::::::j1j:========;r;::::::::::::::::::::::~r;========::;-r.:========ti

Rachael Ann Morris

··_·Morris birthday

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 17

Business Services

· Christopher Todd Jacobs was
honored on hjs first birthday with a
party hosted by his patents,
Christine and Brlan Jacobs, at the
home of his grandparents, Roger
and Helena Riggs.
A caterpillar cake was served
with other refreshments to his
grandmother, Linda Priddy, great
grandparents, Betty Musser and
Ro~lle Sayre, Sharon Riggs, Karen
Hawhtorne, Carol, Courtney and
Stephen Riggs, Vicky and Tommy
Priddy, John, Pat and John Patrick
Moore, Jason Riggs, and Diana and
Ashley Whaley. Sending gifts were
Mr. and Mrs. Dale J acobs and
Allegra and Norman Will.

·•·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

$27,000 .

Collecl 614-423 -62B9 .
Se ll or lease , option to buy. 2
bedroom rl\l&amp;rfront . Fire place , gas furnace, alec; .
r~tnge. di shwasher, refrlg ..
dee p freoze. washer. dryer,
water &amp;o ftener, fruit treei.

garden
6343.

Call 614· 992 -

Gowernment

Home, from

f1. tU repair). Aloo dolln·
quont II• property. C•11
B05 ·6B7·6000 E•t. GH -

OHJca job teats. Write: Fad
f35135-Ji. P.O. Bo• 3006.
Hottlosburg , MS 39403.
198!15

for information.

·lc -

..

�...1
Page- 18- The Daily Sentinel
31

'

Homes for Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

3 bedroom home on 4 acre•
Full buomont, new
vinyl oldlng ond new roof,
located an Rockoprlngo Rd.,
opproxlmotoly 5 minutoa
form Pomeroy. Coli 814·
882-2978 lftor 8 :00p.m.

at lond.

. -

.

46

64

Spaca for Rant

October

'

Wednesday, October 30, 1985

. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Misc . Merchandise

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by L1rry Wright

75

1985

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Television
Viewing

UP ANCHCR ...

~

Socond floo r atllce. Court
St., Pomeroy, ecroaa from
Coun Houoo. Corpot ond olr.
f200 . por month . Call doyo
114·992· 2064 or atop ot
Clorlc'o Jewelry, Pomeroy.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 maple bor atoolo. Call
814·448·2222.

J ohn boat for sale. Call

76

61

Household Goods

10/30/85
-·.. -·
EVENING

:oo u rn mcv o CIJ em ilil

D

79 Motors Homes

&amp; Campers
15 11. camper. Coli 8 .1 4·448·
2222 .

50 par oont olfl Floahing
arrow aigno f269111Lightod .
non-arrow *247. Unlighted
t199 . !Froo lottoroll SH
locolly. limitod quantity.
Hurryl 11800) 423· 1083.

Service s

Fire wood for tale. e86 cord
1 977 14x70 mobilo homo, 3
bodroom, 2 bolho. 1 Ox20 41 Houses for Rent
owning. King woodbUmer, - - - - - - - - 111 underpinning 18,700. Smoll houooforrent 3 bdr, 2
Co11814· 371·2798.
both, mootly furnlohod ,
- -------:-::-2.• UOO por month pluo oloct·
1973 Now Moon 12xl6.
ric. Acrooo from Blue FQun·
bdr .. portlollyfurnllhld, AC. 'tlln Motol. Coli 114-448,
woo411umor, coiling flln, un: 1822 col botwoon 5 •
dorrlnnlng. porch. ea.eoo.
PM.
10
Col 814· 441·1290 oftor l- - - - -- - - 4 :00.
Noor Buclloyo Hlllo 2 bdr.,
1983 FIMtwood, 14x70, 3 fomlly room, WB, U25 mo ..
bdr .. 2 full botho. portllllly clop .. no poto. Colla 14-448lumlahld, like . -. Coil 9476 or 81 4·246·5097 or
· otter 4PM, 114·311·8133. 11 4-248·5381:
1 2XIO. 2 bdr. Iorge LR,
mrlg .. dlohwoohor. counter·
top rongo with bUilt In oven,
, _ corpot • wollp- in
both. new underpinning ,
t4800. Coll814·448· 3417
otter &amp;pm.
1870 Crlri11on Citation
12xl0 mobllt homo. new
corpot, na-tly ronovltld.

3 bdr. houoo unfurnlohod, 1
bdr. cot11111 lurnllhod. Coli
814-441-0321 or lnqulro ot
57 Gorflold, Golllpollo.
2 bedroomo. unlurnlohod,
now point, fully carpeted.
No lnolde poto. Dopooit
roqulrod . Coli 814· 992·
3090.

qwner flnanclnv •v•l•ble. Nowly docorotod. 2 bod·
Coli 814·246-9596 oftor
I PM .

24a40 Schult sectional
"Spocltl Edition", whlto
vinyl oldlng. pluo mony ox·
trll. Spect•l price. French
City Mobile Homoa. Coli
114· 441-9340.

room houu. Fully corpotod.
Unfurnlohod. Storm dooro
end wlndowo. Wllloccopt 1
or 2 ctolldron. Dopooit ro·
qulrod . 81 4·992-3090.
Efficiency cot11111, f58 .00
- k . utMitieo pold. phono
304· 87&amp;-3100 or 878·
6509.

1981 Schult 14x84 2 bdr.
totol oloctrlc, priced reduced In Point PlooHnt, 3 bod·
f2,000. Fnanch City Mobilo room houoo , 304 · 875·
Homoo. Coli 814 -448 · 4024.
9340.
For rent with ·option to buy.
Uood mobllo homoo. largo 4 bedroom, 2 cor gonago.
ooloction ofolzooondprlced. built In kitchen, Iorge lot,
All homoo prlood to ooll. rent U1 5.00. 1100.00
F'nanch City Mobile Homoo. dopoolt . Solo price
eon 81 4-448·9340.
t25,000.00 or on lond
con1roct with down PlY·
llko now 1979 14x70 mont NowHovon, coll304·
Schult 3 bdr .. 1V. both. goo. BB2·2888. ·
oklrtlng Included. reduced hoven . .,.__ __ __ _
for quick ulo. French City 2 bedroom, lui booomont.
Brokoroge.' Coli 814-448- AC. 2317 Mt. Vernon Avo,
9340.
f225 .00 month dopoolt.
Coli Mro. Iuxton. 304-175·
1981 14x70 Woodb&lt;oolo. 2 2151 .
bedroom. oxcellont cond., 1 - - -= ::-:-=::-::-::::::-::
oil oloctrlc. Including under· FOR RENT WITH OPTION
pinning , Coli 11 4 · 441· TO BUY, nice 3 bedroom
1311 or 114·448·4982 of· houoo, 9 mlloo lrom Sho·
tor 8:00PM.
noy'o Point Plouont, lOtting
on lovol ploco of ground,
1988 two bedroom Schultz U9,000.00 . 304· 712 ·
Mobllo Homo, 12xl0. Corn- 2221 or 304-578-2441 .
plotoly furnlohod. Including
mlcro· wovo. AC. nowcorpot 2 bedroom pon fumlohod.
throughout. EJlcellent con· nice locatkJn, re..oneble
dltion. 11700. Colll14-992 rent. Coli 304·882·3722 or
2881 .
882-2798.
10x44 mobllo homo In Mo·
oon. w. Vo. New un-lrt·
;1111 ,. otopo ond dooro. Nooda
oomo napolr. Ponlolly fur·
nlohod. 113110. or-af1or.
Muot Mil. Cd 304-372·
3785 or 304-372-8286.

4 room houoo both, locotod
1 milo off Rt. 87 . SchoolbUo
a moH routo. Coli 304·895·
3886.
1-=====::=:::::=:::

I·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
1980 Tidwell, 14x70, 31 - -- - - - - bodroomo. 1'h both. totol
1 1 1 c . 8 o o k P ric 1 Mobile home• evelleble
113.000.00 will oocrifico NOll. 1. Foatoro Mobllo
for f11 ,000.00.
Homo Parle. Coli 814·441·
18
Flootwood tnllor. 56x1 o. 1- _0_2_· - : -: - --:--:-;with pull out room 8x10, 2 bdr. U45 mo .. 3 bdr.
phone 304-876·8980 oltor l426 mo. Both furnlohod,
5 PM .
.... dop,. no poto. Coli
MOBILE HOMES MOVEO: 114-441 -1386 oftor &amp;PM .
lnounad. roooonoblo rotoo, 2 bdr. 14x58 totol oloctrlc
Coli 304-578-2338
troller, 1226 per mo . plua
electric ond dop. Rtf. roq. on
FrH I month• lot rent. 78 privete tot . 10 min. from
14'x70', oil oloctrlc, control town. Coll8~4·268-1393.
I •C, 304·876·3981 .
1974 Crlton houoo troller.
12x70. oil oloc, good cond,
f6,000 .00 . 304 · 895 ·
3895.

33

Fermt for Sale

By owner 93 ocroo, 5 yoor
old houoo, 2,200 oq It, 4
bedroom. 2 botho. 24x38
g orogo, mlne&lt;ol, Southoldo,
W. Vo. 304·871· 2034.

34

Buain1111
Buildings

Apt. building for ule in
Middleport. ContoctJohnor
Vicky ot 814·797-4880.

36

Duplox troller. 1 bodroom
ooch. Both furniohod. Ront
one for 1140. ond other
l125 . Wotor, IIWIIIO In·
eluded. 160. dopoolt ro·
qulrod. Coll814-992-2394.
2 bedroom mobile homo.
Burdette Addn. 1175..00
pluo utllitieo ond dopooit.
304·176· 2484 or 876 ·
2048 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

moUIIII·

uoo 1 month , plua utMitloo.
Cloon, woll kept, 3 BR
homo . City ochool diafrlct.
Dopoalt • Rof. noodod. Coli
814· 245·9536 .
1 room unfum, houu, utll,
not fum , nant f130 o month.
9 Gorfleld Avo. Coli 81 4·
448-7544.

Upotolrs unfumiohod opt ..
corpotod, oil utllltloo pold, no
chlldnan, no poto. Coll814·
U8· 1S37.
Furniahod ottic opt. utlltloo
pold. 1171,919 2nd .. Shore
both. men profaned. Coli
448· 4418 otter 7PM .
Furnlohod opt. 2 bdr. , 131 'h
4th. Golllpolio, I 1 95 wotor
pold , Coli 441·4418 oft or
7PM .
Fumlohad 3 roomo • both,
cloen, no pota, oduHa, rof. •
dopoolt . Coli 814-448 ·
1619.
Duplex. 2 BR. rofrlgorotor,
otove. 813 Third Avonuo.
f2110 / month. Dep. Req'od.
Coli 814-245-91196.
Modern 1 bdr opt. convo·
ntent location, tingle person
profornad, Soc. Oop. Coli
814· 448·2066 oltor 2pm.
2 bdr. furnlohod. PlY own
goo • elotrlc. f300 mo. 3
bdr. unfurnilhed. pay own
olotrlc, 1350 mo. Both ooc.
dop., no peto. Coli 814·448·
1 3B6 oltor &amp;PM.
2 bdr. oil utilitleo pold f360
mo. 2 bdr. poy own oloclrlc.
1350 mo. Both fumlahld.
ooc. dop.. no poll. Coli
814· 448-1381 ofter IPM.
2· 2 bdr. oportmonto.down·
town. f190 with no udlltloo
pold, 1295 utlfltloo pold.
Deposit roqulnad. Coli 814·
448-2129.
Nowly romodolod 3 roomo •
both, Upper with prlvote
entnanco. St011o • nrlrlg.
furnlohld, utHitleo pold. Off
otroot perking, convonlontto
downtown ohopplng. Nlco
neighborhood. Coil 81 4·
448· 7116 bo-n 7 &amp; 11
PM.
Rivoroido Apto . Middleport.
Special ratea for Senior
Cltlzeno. 11a0. Equol Houo·
In; Oi&gt;Ponun-. 814-982
7721 .
2 bedroom epartmenta.
New Haven, WVa. Newly
romodolod . In town. 814·
992· 7481 .

One or two bedroom apart·
menta In Pomeroy. Fur·
nlohod or unfurnlohod . Ront
nogotltblt. Coli 814·992·
8723 .
Furnlohld Aportmont for
rent no children . Available

ofto; Oct.3. Coli 814·992·
2749 .

LAYNE' S FURNITURE

Sofia an(dlairar.k:ed from

1288. to 1896. obleo, $60
ond up to e121. Hldo-a- 3,4 drive air impact wrench.
bod'a ,l380 . and up to Chlcogo Pneumatic. Good
f550.. oola boda f146, Condition. f100.00 . 614·
Racllnoro, f226 . to 1376 .. 992-8832 .
Lompa from $28. lo t125 . 1- - - - - - - - : -pc. dlnetteo from f1 09 .. to 20 ton Porto Powr. Com,
436. 7 pc. 1189 end up . plete with hond pump ond
Wood toblo whh olx chalro ho11. like Now. $600.00 .
U85 1o f746. Dook t110 814-992·8832 ovea.
upto1225 . Hutchoo, t560. 1- - - - - - - - Bunk bed comptete with

Nicely furnlohod mobllo
home, eft. 1pt., centre! elr
ond hoot in city, odul(o only .
Coli 814-441·0338.

tion

of

bedroom

auitea,

rockere, metal ceblnets,
hoodboordo $38 &amp; up to
186.
Uood Fumlture .. Bedroom
aulte, 1 set of ·tables,
dr-r, • bod, metal office
deoko. 3 mlloo out Bulovillo
Rd. Opon 9omto5pm, Mon .
thru Sot.
814-448·0322

Seriou s about

lo sing

weight1 Contact Gloria
Grato. Rt. 2. Box 282,
Letart. WV . 26253 . 304·
B82·3152 .
Pickens Uted Fll'niture. Oak
china cloHt with claw feet.
Oak rocker. 9 pc. Duncan
Fffe dinni"g room suit. T.re·
die Singer ~awing machine.
Old ook bod. Call304-876·
6483 or 876 ·1450.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Welhere, dryers, refrlgera· SURPLUS, regular army Co·
toro, rengoo. Skoggo Ap· mouflogo, denim clothing,
pllancea, Upper River Rd. boots, packs, acce11oriea.
be1kl1 Stone Crest Motel. Camouflage lnauleted cova814·U8· 7398 .
rollo 130.00, klda comou·
flage all alze1. Sam Some·
County Appliance. Inc . rville, East- Ravenawood,
Good uood opplloncoo and junction lndependance
TV Hto. Opon BAM to 8PM . Rood·Oid Rt . 21, Fri. Sot.
Mon thru Sot. 814· 448· Sun, 1:00-7 :00 PM . Froo
1899, 827 3rd. Avo. Galfi· deiNery Point Pleannt arM,
polio, OH .
304-675· 3334.
.
VaiJey Furniture• • new

a

57

71

Musical
Instruments

1974 Chivy Suburban 9
pepenger wagon rune good,
many extras. $860 or bast

At AruniCardi's .... . No rapoaaeased plano gimmk:ka. Just
honooi plano values. Wo are
never under sold! Bnanicardi
Muatc Inc. Corner 3 rd. &amp;
Court St .. Gl llipolia, Ohio.

offer. Coll614·246·9157 .
82 Chevette auto air, AM·

FM, 4 dr .. new point, all now
~rea, t2,760. Coli 814-379
I~28_8.:_2_._ _ -:---:-:-::1976 dodge Aspen, slant 6,
special Edition, cloon. now
tiraa, good gu milaa~e. Call
614 •446 • 3010 anytime .
1 979 Monte Carlo. VB.
automatic, air, good tires,
ohorp car. Call 614 -992·
.
2849

1 Tama snare. 4 microphonoo, t fonder procla~n
btll guitar, C1ll Log Cabin

Rocordoro. 614·448· 4313 .
Tllcam porta 1, 4 track
recording machine. brand
now. Call814·448· 4972 .
Klmboll Whitney piono lor
oalo. t1200. Call614-742·
2812 .
Alto lOX for Hie. 2 yoero old.
1600. Coll814-742· 288 2 ·
KIMBAll SWINGER OR ·
GAN , ropououod . low
monthly poymonto, frooloa·
oona Included. Coli 304-463·
1163, Dan Ferguson Mutk:;
At. 60, Ceredo. W. Va .

58
8o

Fruit
Vagatables

Apple. All varieties. 16.00
buahol. Now Open dolly. All
frulto. vegoubloa . Jacko
Market, Rt. 36 , Hender10n .
Honey, f1 .00 box . Call
304· 896· 3404.
59 For J)ale or Trade
For sale or trade 19n 1A ton
Chivy PU, 360ongine, auto .
trano. Call814·446· 3243.

Applo II E, includoo mou10.
uood. Lorge aoction at qual· 80 column card. diac drive.
ity furniture . 1216 Eaotom le11 th1n 1 yMr old, beautiAve .• Golllpolia.
ful cond, 11.200.00. Applll
F; r111 ~'il ill l i l! ~
logo II; e50.00. Apple
New queen alze waterbed, 6 Poocal 1.2 t80.00 . Applo II
&amp; L;vesluck
pc, LR ouito, like now. C. diac drive 1200.00.
moving mull ooll. Coll814· Scribe Printer t200 .00 . Call
251·6672.
304· 876-8700.
1 -::-::--::--:-~===61 Farm Equipmant
Country style oek furniture,
hind crafted ond finiahld . 60 Percent Offl Fl.. hlng 1- --::-::-::-:-::-:-::-=::;:-- CROSS &amp; SONS
antique reproductions. Paul orrow aigno t2831 lighted,
non
-arrow
$247
.
Unlighted
U.S
. 35 Woot, Jackoon,
Conkel. Rt .7. Tupper•
8199 . tFrM lottorsl Soo
Ohio . 814· 280· 8451 .
Plolna.
locally. 1 (8001 423· 0183.
MoHOy Forguoon. Now
(Aioo
GIANT
BLIMP
oaloli)
Holland.
8uah Hog Saloo &amp;
Whirlpool Sida· by-Sido RoSoNico. Over 40 uood
frlgerotor, $128 . Call 814 ·
Brown leather couch, 304·
tractors to chooH from a
992-2782 oftor 6:00 p.m .
876· 1175.
complotollno at now &amp;
uted
equipment. Largest
Whlto Fronco Provlncill with
Hlllction in S.E. Ohio.
mirror. f86 . Coil 614·986· Wood for aole, $26 .00 pick
up load . Hauled -· not Special10 % discount on all
3510.
ports for cuh 11loo only.
otockod. 304-875· 4373.
until Nov. 1 6.
Unico upright frnzer and
wood burning stove with Junior Girl Scout uniform: l-=-=-------:-:-::--blower . Cell 814 · 992 · blouoo. jumperal!o8;, ponto Now Ideo model 323, one
lize 10 . Never worn $20: row corn picker. Cell 614·
7822.
304·875-8844 .
256· 11 44.
Sharp Carousel micro wave.
Very good condition. 1176.
Call 814· 992-6276 .

Autos for Sale

1985 Ford Station Wagon.
28 000 miles. Rear 111t1,
powordoorlocka.windowo.
oir condition, LTD odltl~n .
t11 , 000: with Ctr~d;;•~ ·
112 •600 · cuh. a
·
_9_92
_·_6_9 _52

_·----=---

1984 Olda Cutlast Supreme

Broughom, tow milet •. e•c

Aportmontl: 1 ond 2 bod·
roomt. In Pomeroy. C•ll
814· 992·690B .

Spartan radio with schemat·
k:t . good cond .. bett offer.
Co11814-448·2184.

1976 Chevy lmpalo. 400
engine, automatic. $300.
After 5 , phone 304· 895 ·
3638 .
1987 VW von. good cond.
t1200. 18ft. canoe $250.
304-875 -7634.
1980 Monzo. PS. PB. AM·
FM collltto, I 1,800.00 .
304· 468· 1501 '

72

Trucks for Sale

1959 Stud. for pons, t100.
Coli 814- ~7- 7118 .

ond Golllpollo . 11 4-448·
8221 .
2 br epertmentl in Hender·
oon. 304·876-1972.
For rent omoll furnio,..d
apartment. Pt. Pleaaant.
Reftrences. No Pets. 304·
875 ·1386.

64

o .and M. Contractors. Vir_wl
siding. replacement ~ln ­
dowa, insulating,, roofing,
new and remodeling, conerato. Ca ll304 -773-6131 ,

BUY SO
SHA~ OF

ATiT.

J .and L. Installation. Roof·
ing, vinyl tiding, storm door.s
and window•· Free est•·

0

motoa . Ca11814-992 -2772.
COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump salee. service. Regis·
tared in Ohio. All work
guarontNd. Call 304-273·
2B11 , Rovanawood, W. Va:i

0

ANNIE

RON'S Television Service.
HousecallsonRCA, Ouaz111r, ,
GE. Specisling in Zenith.
Coli 304· 676-2398 or 81 4 ·
446· 2464.

NO! NO! YOU T\1\Q
OloN S IT LATER/
"ET'S GET GOING!

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most well• completed ume
day. Pumpsalesandservice.
304-896 ·3802

Get a room of carpet cleaned
for t22 .96 . Coptoin Stoo· '
mir. 304·675 -2295 . Save
Ad. Expiroa 86 '.
Tree trimming and removal,
ins ured . free eatimatet,
reaoonabla ratao. 304· 675·
7121 '

82

GASOLINE ALLEY

\

And he obviously, ah .. :
knows a few tricks!

Plumbing
&amp; Heeling

cisco tryst . 160 min .)
(I) CD Charlie
Company ICC)

0

• From Uncoln Center/
Puccini's La Rondine

Zlnn Cool Co. Colll1 4 · 448·
1408 .

Building Materials
Block. brick. aowor plpeo.
windows , lintel s. etc .
Claude Wintera, Rio Grande.
0 . Coli 814-246-5121 .

Cottlllmon 'o Special 250 lb.
protein blocko 131 .26 aa.
found only ot Bidwell Caah
Feed Store, 814-388-9888 .
Hay for Hie. Coli 81 • · 379·
2424.
Eor corn f2 .25 bu . cell
bofore 8 :00 AM or otter
10:00 PM , 304·458· 1501 .

r r~ n s p or l o ll llll

1978 Ford, 8 cyl., Econo·
line. one owner. Phone
304· 87&amp;· 1312.

Fumi1hed Room1
- - - - - - - - - · 82 Koweoki 760 LTO, u c.
cond new partl and l c,
TOP CASH pold for 80 0111 "movlngmuotiiii. Call
;:.,.8· 2811 or 814· 446·
model end nowor uaod coro.
Smith Buick-Pontile, 191 1 81 4 9
Brlorpat ch Konnolo All ·
822
Eootom Avo., OolllpoHo. Coli
breed grooming . Indoor1979 tio~oy Dovioon Super·
outdoor boordlng focllltieo. 81 4 · 448· 2282,
Englloh Cocker Sponlol. 388·
•·
glide . &amp;800 mlloo. Coli 304·
77 Muotong now porto, new 387 . 7750 or 304· 3&amp;7·
9790.
.
tlro1, now poln1. oxcolltnt
7214
lhlpo,
f2
.000.
Coli
614·
~-----:---:-;:;::
· Dragonwynd Cattery Ken·
nol. CFA Hlmoloyon, Porolon · 266· 8417.
78 Harley Sponur. 1 ,000
and Siamese kittens. AKC
cc. Eloc. otort, very low
Chow puppiea. Coli 446· 1977 Coprlco Cloulc white mliHIII · 11500. 304·176·
on blue, body oxc. cond .. 54241fter 6 p.m .
:i844 oltor 7PM .
runo like now. All power. I .:..:-:'::-:-:-~::;-:;:::;-:::::­
Pure bred rat•terrler pup· Coll814·441· 1758.
1971 Honda CK 100. CUI·
ploo. lob·tollod 150. Coli
tom shaft drive. wat~r
814· 268· 1487, ove'o or 1988 Corvok 2 dr. coupe coolod, good cond.
oxc. cond.. 11,000. Coli
304 875 1771
weekends.
otter 3PM , 814-245 -5873. 1700 ·00 ·
·
•
·

66

fireWood IIIIOned Olk .
125 you pick up 130 pickup
lood, opllt. dollvorod ,
otockod . Coil 814- 448 1127.
Cobbogo Potch doll drou11
ond Promloo outfitl, hond
modo, f6 ..oh. Call 614·
38B· 818&amp; .
King olae wotorbod book·
CliO hoodboord, WOVololl
mattre11. mattre11 pad ,
volvot lido pod, f37&amp; . Coli
814·268· 880B lftor 8PM .

Pets for Sale

1..::=.:..·-;:--:-'-:::--:---;:-:::-=:-

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service,

Alao poolo filled . Coli 614·
256 · 1141 or 814 - 446·
1175 or 614-446-7911 .
Ken's Water Service. Wells,
ciste rn•. pools filled~· phone
614-367·0823 or614-3677741 night or day.
Wa ugh 's Wa t er Serv ice.
Walls, cisterns, poo11. rast,
reliable aarv ice. Call 614·
268· 1 240 or 814 ' 2 56 ·
11 30 . Reuonlble ra tes.

SNAKE!!

You
SOMeONe

•

ME: AN,

MKSH1' 1.-11&lt;£:
MIS-IN

Ha ul limas tone, sand , graval,dlrt. bulk or bag fertili'er
and lime. Excelsior Salt
Works In c. 638 E. Moin St.,
Pomeroy. 814-992·3891 ,

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP .
1163 Sac. Ava .. Ga lllpolia.
614 ·448·7833 or8 14·446·
1833.

A S. M Furniture Manufac·
turing. St. Rt. 7. Crown
City •• Oh. Coli 814· 2581470, c oli Eve. 8t4-446·
3438 . Old &amp; now
Uphostered ,

W

PEANUTS
MY

GRMPA IS A
FLIER" SO
l-IE WENT

woman takes in a hobo after
striking him with her car. 160
min.)
0 (I) (Jl) Equalizer
&amp;I Odd Couple
,
[HBOI MOVIE: ' Karllte Kid
ICC I
IMAXl MOVIE: 'Chriotlne'
ICC I
1 0 :30 (1) To Bo Announced
@)INN News
1 1:oo
®•
il2l News
(IJ Man From U.N.C.l .E.
(j]) Newawotch
&amp;lllitnnr_ HIH Show
1 1 , 30 11 I]) (l) Tonight Show
Guest host Joan A1vers wei·
comes Julia Child and Mich·
ole Lee . 160 min.)
Sporn;cemer.
·
()) New Newlywed Game
0 (I) T .J . Hooker A
veteran police offiCer assists
Hooker In invelligating 1
gun-smuggling ring. lA) (60
min.) ,
® Taxi
(jj) Penn S. Telltr Public
ICC) Comedian/maglciana
Penn and Tellor perform
sleight·of·hand and other ·
various routines .
il2l ABC N.W.
Nlghtllne

u rn mmo ())

Dump truck ta rvice, 304 ·
676-3190,

87

WPBV Aflv

(I) Great Performance ~:
Uve From Uncoln Center
'New York City Opera: La
Rondine.' Alessandro SicHi·
ani conducts Puccini's opera . 13 hrs.)
9 :30 . 0 (I) @) George Bumo
Comedy Week
1 0 :00 0 iii (l) St. Elsowhe&lt;e Dr.
and Mrs. Craig attempt to
claim their granddaughter,
Weslphali pu shes his , new
hospital reform s and Fts.cus
is sympathe tic to the phght
of a young patient. 160 min.I
(]) News
.
(I) MOVIE: ' Donovan s
Reef'
•
(I) ilil (jJ Arthur Halley s
Hotel ICC) A rapist attacks
Megan and a wealthy

HouN coal. Lump B. stoker.

85

•

(I) GREAT PERFORMANCE

BARNEY

19BO Chevy von. E•c .
Con d., a/ c. cruise, tilt. 8
peaoongor, $8 ,796. Call
814-379-2341 . No Sunday
Colla.
1 971 GMC 1 ton otop van,
c 11 814 448
good cond . 1
·
•
8034.
1-19- 8-=0-=c:-h-o vy-::4:-x-:4.:on
-- g-.3
=6;:0:-::.
:4
borrall, Ioiii . Price reduced .
,·_Col_l 6_ 1_4_·_
3 7_ 9_·_2_7 0
_ 8_._· _ _
,.

Tune
CII Mazda Sportslook
ill Andy Griffith
(I) 3· 2· 1 . Contact ICC)
(j]) Electric Company
@) DiH'rent Strokes
6 :30 11 I]) (!) NBC Nightly
News
(IJ . Carol Burne.~ . and
Friends
(!) Aerobics-Bodies In
Motion
'ill Carol Burnett
C1J i1iJ (jJ ABC Newa ICC)
0 (I) ® CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
llll 110c1y Electric
.
@)Taxi
[HBO) MOVIE: 'The Ufe at
Riley'
7 ,00 Il l]) PM Magaalne
(I)
Courtship/Eddie' •
Father
(!) Sportscanter
(I) Mary Tyler Moore
(I) Entertainmem TMight
(!) Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheel of Fortune
(I) Second City TV
® News
(j])
MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
ilil (jJ Divorce Court
@) Jefferson•
7 :30 11 CD New Newlywed
Game
,
(I) Please Don t Eat
Daisies
CI1 NBA Today
ill Sanford and Son
(I) Iii (jJ Price Is Right
Cil 0 (I) Jeopordy .
(I)
Nightly
Busoness
Report
® Wheel of Fortune
@) WKRP in Cincinnati
[MAX) Headroom
8 :00 11 CD (l) Highway to
Heaven ICC) Jonathan ani·
ists the help of a con man to
rescue Mark , who has been
tricked into selling his soul
to Satan . 160 min.)
(I) Fllppor
(!I PKA Full Contact
Karate:
ill MOVIE: 'Big Jake' .
CIJ Q) (jJ lnoldero ICC) NJck
and Mackey attempt to
prove the innocence of ~ unjustly imprisoned fnend
found dead in his cell. 160
min.l
0 (I) ® Garflald' s
Halloween America's fat
ca1 celebrates Halloween
with a special adventure.
Cll
MacNeil/lehrer
News hour
® Groat Performanceo:
Uve From lincoln Comer
'New York City Opera: La
Rondine. · Alessandro Sicmani conduc ts Puccini's opera. 13 hrs.)
Ill MOVIE: ' Beneoth the
Planet of the Apoo'
[H80) MOVIE: ' Finders
Keepons' !CCI
!MAXI MOVIE : ' Firat·
tarter' ICC)
8 :30 0 (I) ® It' s the Greet
Pumpkin The Peanuts ga ng
celebrates Halloween while
Li nus awaits the arrival of
the Great Pumpk in. IRI
9 :00 11 I]) (l) Hell Town A
group of women threaten to
leave their husbands for los·
ing their money gambling in
a corner bar. (60 min.)
(1) 700 Club
(!I T11p R - Bolllng from
leo Vegas
C1J i1iJ (jJ Dynasty ICC) Joel
launches
an
eJC ton1on
scheme, Alexis receives astonishing news, and a mystery man trails Claudia and
Adam on their San Fran-

WINNIE

Dozer Work land clearing,
landscaping, etc. Free eati·
motoo. Coli 614-448-8038
or 614-992·7119 anytime.

Firewood · cutup slab&amp;, 1
truck lood f100 , 2·S180.
Pickup lood, you haul $15 .
HEAP occoptod. Coli 814·
246 ·6804.

- ----:::---:--:::-=

Space for Rent

BroKER~
TeLL~IM 10

Will do backhoe work on
wookonda. Coli 81 4 -388·
9248 .

Furnlohod 2 bedroom opt,
utilities pold, 180.00 woek.
phone 304-8711· 3100 or
876· 5609.

46

1'\IDRIJAPPLJ::,
GALL M'{

Good-1 Excavating, base·
menta, foo1et'l, driveways,
septic tanks, landscaping.
Coil any ti me 81 4 · 446 ·
4637, Jomaol . Davloon. Jr.
owner .

Lump hou11 coal. deliver any
amount, 304· 676· 7397 or
875· 1247.

Furnlohod 1 bedroom opt,
lncludu oil utllltlu ,
121 0 .00 por month. odulto
only, nc poto, 304·875·
37BB.

For rent &amp;looping Rocmo
ond light houoo kMplng
roomo. Pork Control Hotol.
Coli 614·44B·07111.

BASEMENT
WATER PROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua·
rantee. Local refe~~ncet
furnilhed . Free ei t1matea.
Call collect 1-614·237·
0488• doy or night. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Misc. Merchandise

uppor duplex, newly doco·
rotld, prlvoto, odultl, 304·
676 ·2861 '

46

-----

Kenworth tractor, Fruehaf
aluminum dump trailer. new
tires. V.G.C. Together or
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ooporoto . Call 814· 288·
AND HEATING
83 2
Cor. Fourth and Pine
8
·
Galllpolio. Ohio
1979 GMC 427 dump. oir Phone 614·446 ·3888 or
lilt, chootor . 1977 366 , _
8_
14_·-::-4-::46::-·-4:-:4::77:::-:-:-:-:::~;
dump, che~ter a"le . C•ll r·
814· 256-1270or614-258· JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
1970.
lNG. Rt. 1, Box 355 , Galli·
polio. Call81 4·387· 0676;
77 Chevy hlovy duty PU .
Coli 614· 446· 3824.
83 Excavating

APARTMENTS . inobllo

ho11'1ea, houMa. Pt. Ple11ant

Home
I
lmprovemants

Fetty Tree Trimming , ttump
cond with all GM optoona removal. Call 304 · 675 ·
pooolblo. Mull soli 304·676 1331 ,
2883 alter 6 PM .
--:--:::~-:::::::::;--:::RINGLES 'S SERVICE, ••·
1981 Datsun 200 SX, perienced carpenter, electr•·
apons piCkage. auto, e~ec cian, ma son , painter, roofcond, muot soli, 15. 100.00. ing (including hot tar
Phone 304-882-3532 .
application) 304· 676· 2088
1974 Chivy Nova SS 307, 4 or 675 · 7368 ·
blrrell. good tirea. rally rims Starks Tree and Lawn Sarwith capo, 8300.00 . 304· 'vice, stump removal, 304·
882-2B90.
678-2010 .

1 ond 2 bodroo"' furnlahod
apto. for rent In Middleport.
All utllltioa pold. Cfll 814· 63
Antiques
992· 5084.
1- - - - - - - -

2 bdr. opt .. good locotlon, .
rodocorotod, utilitioo portly Mobllo homo lot, t2' d0' or
pold. Coll304·876· 5104 or smollor,l71 wetor poid, 4th
304·11711-8388.
• Noll, Ollllpollo. Coli 448.
4418 oftor 8PM .
Lorge 2 bdr. opt ., 2 both,
fully corpotld, relrlg. a COUNTRY MOBILE Homo
otovo, 1 1 Court St .. 1326 Perk, Routl 33, . Nor1h of
mo .. naf. • dop, Coli 814· Pomeroy. Lorr loto . Coli
44t· 4921.
814·992·747 .

.

Wood or coal burner. 2 years

I'Niftre•••· 8276 . 1nd up to old, 8260. or trldefor gun of
f395 . Boby boda, t110 . oquol value. Coli 814-985·
Mattrooooo or box opringo, 4133.
full or twin, 183 .. firm, t73. 1- - - - - - - - - - :
ond 183. au- ooto. t221. Man ond womano 10 opood
4 dr. chooto, t49. 6 dr. bikoo. Now . Child carrier
choota, t69. Bid fro moo, with one . 814-99'2·8379.
UO.ond t25 .. 10 gun · Gun
coblnoto, f360 . Goo or TONY' S GUN REPAIRS.
electric rongoo t376 . Boby hot dip roblueing, alltypoo of
monreoooo. f26 &amp; $36, bed gunomlth worl&lt;, foot ION Ice,
!romeo ezo. t26, a. t3o, 304· 676·4631 .
klngfrorrie t&amp;O . Good aolec· 1- - - - - - - - -

Furnished 3 rooma, bath,

Lots &amp; Acreage

Housea for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

Nice 1 ond 2 br oportmonta
downtown. 304-876·2218
• B·
8
1 ------~:-:::-::- 1- -M:---:-Io- -::0:h:1-:
2 -:b-o:-d:Troilor for rent Golllpollo In lcld pori,
O,
•
Ferry, deposit .nd reteren· room fumilhed eper1ment.
coo roqulrod. no poll, phone 1 ·304-882-25811.
304·1175·1887.

JACKSON ' ESTATES
APARTMENTS IEquol
Houolng Opportunity)
Form for ulo: no houu, 8 monthly ront otorto ot f 1 19
ecr.. 2 berne, county water for 1 bodroom ond 1204 for
• ..Ptlc tonk. Coll814·379· 2 bedroom, dopooh 1200,
2288.
.
locotld noor Spring Volley
Plozo ond Foodlond, pool
2 lovol loti for Hlo. GrHr ond Coblo TV ovoiloblo.
Rd. 7 milts from town. office houro 11 pooolblt 10
304·875·H89.
omto4pmond7pmto9pm
Mofldoy·Frldoy. Coli 8'1 4 ·
4 4 8 • 2 7 4 I o r loov •

41

44

~~==;:~=.::::::r::::::=~~~~~ 81

by

Henri Arnold and Bob Lao

I
fM~9r/-=;r=·~'"--\

I ()

(jJ News
(I) $100.000 Na me That

Top lor CJ 7 jeap, 304-876·
4095 .

Mixed hlrdwood alobo. $1 2.
per bundle. containing BP·
prox. 1 'h ton. fob . Ohio
Pollet Co., Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phono 814·992·8481 ,

814-742· 2473.
dollvorod. eeo pickup. cou
Cougar Me,gnum Com pound Bow. like now.
1180. Call814·742· 2182 .

?RIA!

--~

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

fil THAT SCRAM8L£D WORD GAME

Unocramll!Otho8afourJumbioo,
one..nar to each square, to form
Jour ordlllll)' wcrds.

&amp;

•

'
Firewood oil hardwood f26
PU load. U· ho ul. Coli 814·
448·2663 .

li'Jj'}!lN} ffi\1

19'

~ \!:II~~·

WEDNESDAY

614· 258·8417.

10 op~d blcycio oxc. cond.
1 80 . AM · FM ltoroo
CIIMtte phonograph , duel
opookoro, t 75. Coli 814·
379· 2613.

Tlie

Ohio

THE LAD\" BEHIND TI&lt;E
TICKET COUNTER SAI D,
YOU'VE Ai.REAPV

FLOWN A HUNDRED
ntOUSAND MII.ES"

~· YOU DOti'T HAVE TO
MAKeT~I S TRIP,'' SHE
SAID..'' ~OII CAN 60
SO HE WENT I-lOME !

•

'(OUR WHOLE FAMILY'S
WEIRD, MARCIE ..

e

I KI I I
IMADOR~

r t)

(J

WHAT He 'UFFE~EP
FROM WHEN
THE ~EI. ATJV!:I5

t

ILENKEN
I KJ J I
Answer here: "(

,

A~R IV!.P .

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above canoon.

I I )-( XXXX)"

(AnSWBfS tomorrow)
LILAC JADED PIRATE INVERT
Answer. He fall the only way to multiply happlnen
was this-TO DIVIDE IT

Jumble~

Yesterday's

I

MINI

James Jacoby

South's balloon
gets popped .

NORTH

It-JI-ll

• A K 10 4
'Q 10 7 J

...

+KQI0 9 6

By James Jacoby

WEST
EAST
Your partner has made a pre-emp832
+J 65
live bid of tour clubs ove r your left·
• 52
+2
hand opponent's opening bid. Next • J 7 5 4 3
.AK Q75J2
· player passes and you help the pre· . J 10 9 8
empt along by bidding five clubs. That
SOUTH
is doubled by North, but South, vulner·
+Q 9 7
able, bids five hearts . Usually you ·
.KJ 9864
have done we ll to get your oppone nts .
+A 8
to the five-level in a major. Some·
+ 64
times you beat them. If they are .gomg
Vulnerable : North-South
to make five hearts, it can eas1ly be
Dealer: West
right for your side to save at six clubs.
The problem is: Could you be pushmg West
North East
Soulh
them into slam that \hey can make'
Pass
4+
Pass
That was the dilemma confronting · 5
Obi.
Pass
Pass
Pass
Dick Yarrington of Seattle in a r~gion· · 6
Pass
Pass
al tournament In Eugene, Oregon, last Pass
August. Compounding his difficulty
Opening lead: 4
was the stature of the opposing part·
nership - Grant Baze and Fred Ham· L- - - - - - - - - - - - - '
ilton, both top professionals on t~e
bridge tour. Ya rrington fmally dec1d:
ed be had a good chance to beat s1x
hearts by leading diamonds and catch·
,
ing partner with a singleton. He there- suit after winning the heart ace.
That wu the lint deal of the open
fore did bid six dubs, North·South du·
tlfully went on to six hearls, and the pairs and Daze-Hamilton got a bot· ·
diamond lead resulted in a one-trick tom ~re. Let me quic kly add that
set when Yarrington continued the tbey won the event anyway.

+

'A

+

a:

,.

+
+

5'
s•

+

..

...
~wd
by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACROSS
DOWN .
1 Distributed I MeaBunng
6 Beyond
device
2 Wed o n
10 Bring joy
II Son of .Jacob the run
13 Memento
3 Try one's
14 Dinah
luck
4 Garcon's
or song
15 Dutch
summe r
commune
5 Toolll
18 Make lace
subslance Yesterdoy's AMwe r '
18 Grampus
6 White-faced
l9 Aulllenll·
7 Rowan tree
city
8 Go for
23 Transmit 30 Philippine
21 Aunt (Sp.]
broke
24 Choochoo
island
22 Heredllary 9 Dog
and
31 "Die Flederfactor
12 Certain
bridal
maus"
23 Footprint
Ures
25 Greek
maid
24 Landholder 17 Had lunch 26 Football 32 FUnctions
26 Ovens
20 Type
player
37 Spec k
27 San -.
of weave 281ncrease 39 Yoko Italy
28 Cru's yie ld
29 Priest's
.. garb
30 West
Pointer's
subject
33 Badly
34 English

..

..

..

h-+-++ -+-

river

311 Ew-ly
Fr. king
361mpover lshed
38 Edible
mushroom 1=-t--t-40 Nose
(sl.)
41 Leg part
42 Graft.ed
(he r.)
43 Count (add)
IHO
. DAD..Y CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how lo work It :

-'
•'

AXYDLBAAXR
ls L ONGFELLOW
One lett~r stands for another. In this sample A is used
f the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
or tr hes the 1'ength and formation of the words are a ll
apos
op '
clifferent ·
hints. Each day the code letters are

•

C RYPTOQUm'E

NU I

Q D GE

NU HBW

HB

T O I Z II VT
f" I QI'G I

N UT N

FZQO H C I C

NUI

0 QZI

NUT B

FQG H N H VHTA

XQI C

H C

NUI

T

..

..·'

VQOOIZV H TG. -

T B Q B E 0 QP C

....

Y-rdar'• Ceytoqaote: POLITICIANS DO MORE
; FUNNY TIUNGS NATURAJ.,LY THAN I CAN TIIINK Of'
DOING PURPOSELY. - WilL ROGERS

'

�Wednesday. October 30, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-20- The Daily Sentinel

/(()r11ter.,, ____________________________~c~on~tm~u~ro~f~ro=m~~~ge~l~~----------------~~-,
do you get to Roger Tra~y ?"
His response, he said, was to "get

the word out that I made the
decisions" and would make them
agamst the mdustry II there was any
pressure.
He said he learned that Warner
was "an extremely ·bright Individual who had a great grasp of
financial dealmgs."
He demonstratro this, Tracy
recaUro, durtng a two-hour meetmg

m the superintendent's office whUe
the staff "gave him a pretty good
working over" on savings and loan
law to the point where Warner
"mopped his brow with his
handkerchief."
A wary Tracy then put his top
examiner on Home State "and It
took him six months to get through
the lxJoks," so complicated were the
transactions.
Tracy was asked who ran Home

-VOTE FOR

Inside:

State.

Mr. Bongai'd," said Schiebel, a

'"!~ere's no question that Marvin
Warner runs every show, every
personal relationship he enters
Into," responded Tracy. " It
wouldn't be any other way."

self-described "conservative accountant," addffighewouldnothave
lnvestro his personal funds In ESM
If he had had the money. ·•

BILL POOLER, JR.

"My only goal was 'to get Home
State out of those transactions," said
Schiebel. "I reaUy don't think ESM
knew what the BU!y-be-darned they
were doing when they structurro
those transactions."

CHESTER TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
' Appreciated"
"Your Vote

Schiebel, who earlier balkro at
testifying wltoout immunity, later
recanted and signed a waiver.
"The decisions to Invest In ESM
were not my decisions, but those ot

By the Bemt ...... Pages 6, 7, 8
Classified§ ..... Pages 12, 13,H
Comlai-TV ............. Page 15
Deaths ................... Page 11
Editorials ................ Page 2
Sports ...................Page 3, 4

CANDIDATE.FOR
Paid for by Bill Pooler, Jr.

•

at y

e

•

enttne
2 Sections, 16

'
'

26 Cent•

A Multimedia

Hobson rail
•
crossing gets
• •
toppnonty
By NANCY YOACHAM
Roberts is in hopes tl1at County
Sentinel NewsSialf
Rd . 21can be resurfaced and striped
Theextent of repairs to be madeto
from the Middleport rorporatlon
the Hobson r ailroad crossing on
limits to Route 7, if the secondary
County Road 21 will be decldro by a
funding is allowro.
Commissioner David Koblentz
froeral highway engineer according to PhD Roberts, Meigs County
reportro that t.heboard has receivro
Engineer.
complaints that the road to the
Roberts repo11ed at Wednesday 's
heliport behind Veterans Memorial
meeting of t.he Meigs County . Hospital is too steep.
Commissioners thai Howard GlfRoberts sa id hE' would check the
ford, of the Ohio Department of
sitetosee~theroadcanbererouted,
Transportation's Marletla office,
however, he beiJEoves tl1e county is
will be arranging a meeting with a
limitro as to what can be done
lroeral
representative
to
discuss
because
of underlying water lines In
chamber's
lint
annual
J.
J.
Cremeans
HaUoween
Party.
Chamber
ASSEMBLY LINE -Middleport Chamber d Commerce members
just
what
ca
n
be
done
to
remedy
the
that
area.
members
used
an
assembly
Une
process
to
get
aU
of
the
"goodies"
Into
were doing double time Wednesday night preparing treat bags "on the
hazardous situation at Hobson.
Commissioner Rich Jonef sugbags while the children walled.
spot" for several hundred oosrumro youngsters attending lhe
Gifford met at the crossing on
gestro RobertsaskReedWill, ofthe
Tuesday with Roberts and the
Pomeroy Water Dept. , and Robert
commission. At that time, accord ·
Byer, of the Meigs County Emering toRoberts, thegroupwatchedas
gency Mroical Servll'€, meet with
him when he checks the site.
vehicles . came to complete stops
before easing across the tracks.
Roberts also gave reports of his
Roberts said a check wDI be made
meetings with members of the
to see If Meigs County Federal Aid
Chester Fire Departmrot, regardSecondary Funds may be used to
ingexpanslontotheflrestation, and
pay lor the project. These are the
David Brickles, Broford Township
same
funds
that
were
channeled
trustee, regarding the addition of a
COLUMBUS iUPl l - Legislabridge and 350 ft . of former Coonty
tion to curb habitual wife-beaters, through OOOT to pay for75percent
of
the
funding
on
Pomeroy's
Union
Rd. 41 to Broford Township
complete with a provision allowing
Ave.
· Continued on Page 11
Ohio women for the first time to file
charges after forcible rapes by their
husbands. is ready for a floor vote in
the Ohio Senate.
Thl' domestic violence bill, ai·
ready cleared by the House, was
unanimously adqptro by the Senate
Judiciar y Committee Wronesday
evening after the controversial
By LEE I..EONARD
" Mr. Novick told ustimeand time
spousal rape provision was added.
UPI Slatehou!ll' Reporter
again. 'we will gE&gt;t you out of this
SponSored by Rep. JoAnn Dav id·
COLUMBUS 1UP!) - A top whole, but you have to give us time.
son. R-Rey noidsburg, the bill is an officer of the ddunct Home State
Your involvement Is so great that It
outgr0\11h of a Columbus case in
Savmgs Bank says he askro a
will require time."'
Florida SffUrities finn last yPar to
which a woman was murderro by
TimP ran out on March 4 when
her husband aft er authontles re, ,. •• allow the Cincinnati thrift to divest
Continued on Page 11
peatroly turned him loose following
of it s repui'Chase agreements after
a senes of beatrng incidents.
Home State owner Marvin L.
Davidson's bill requires tl1 at when Warner ca nceled $3.7 million worth
selling bail in such cases, a judge of his personal investment s tn 1he
must consider whether the suspect
company.
was prev iously convicted of assault
But David .J : Sc hiebel said
or or violating a protection order or
Wronesday he was told Home State
consent agreement. It also In· had too big an investment in ESM
and Josh Howard. Coslumes were judged in the
UGLIEST AWARD - Among the ugliest at lhe
creases t11e pena lties lon1olatlng a
Government Securities, Inc., Fort
varklus age groups and prizes were awarded the
Middleport Chamber of. Conunerce Halloween
protection order or consE&gt;nt
Lauderda le, to pull out all at once.
COLUMBUS (UPI )- The Jack.
winners
in
several
categories.
Dr.
Cralg
Mathews
parade and party staged Wednesday nlghl at lhe
agreement.
Schiebel,
who
was
the
last
son
County Board of Elections wDI
was master of ceremonies wllh sound provided by
junior high football field were these two youngers.
Much
of
the
deba
te
over
the
presiden
t
of
Home
State
before
it
have
enough money to ronduct next
Jolm Werner. Middleport Chamber members, many .
Undernealh lhe ugly exteriors were Brooke Howard
legislation
revolved
around
an
closed on March 9, 1985, teslilied for
Tuesday's election, complete with a
In cOstumes, as9sled with the evenl.
attempt by Sen. Michael White.
a second day before the Jomt Selec t
controversial sales tax increase rir
D-Cieveland. to Incorporate his biii Committee on Savings and Loans, a
theballot.
_
providing for spousal rape.
·
state legislative panel.
TheOhluSupreme Court WronesAfter several weeks of discussion,
He said Home State was con· day ordered Jackson County com:
the committff'voted 6-1 Wronesday · s1ant1y " flexing our muscles" to get
missioners to appropriate an addi·
for a compromise amendment by out of complicatro reverse repurtional $8,00J to the board to pay
Sen. Eugene J. Watt s, RColumbus. chase agn'€ments wllh ESM but
election expenses.
patternro alter California law.
"there was nolhing we cou ld do."
The commissioners, involved in:a
Watts said his amendment would
Schiebel said a lawsuit against
dispute over the sa les tax increasl!,
allow a woman to file a rape charge ESM might have driven the
had refu sed 10 allocate more than
aga inst her husband, even ~ they company out of business "and what
$10,910. which the board .-.idwas 001
are living together. lilt is a violent. happened In March probably would
enough.
forcible rape to which she obj«:eted. have happened in 1983 or 1984."
COLUMBUS (UPil - An innoThe one·hatl percent sales tax
or threal of the same.
cent contest lor Columbus city
Schiebel said he repea troly as k!'d
hike is on the mu nty ballot, since the
Thr committee voted 2-4 agamsl a Alan R. Novick, vice president of rommisslonPrs have been unable to
attorney has turned into a savage
stronger
amendment by Sen. Lee I. ESM. "why we couldn't be out since
battle among heavyweight Ohio
reach unanimou s agreement to
Fisher,
D-Shaker
Heights, which Warner was our. "
politicians, possibly for control of
impose 11.
would have permitted t.he rape
the prosecuting mechanism on
Lack of revenue has impedro
" He said we were too big (had too
charge In Instances where the wile large an Investment), but said.
mini-scandals within the adminiscounty government , forcing the
was asleep or under the influence of 'don't worry, we'll get you out
tration of Gov. Richard F . Celeste.
Jayoll of cmptoy('('S and the closing
alcohol
or'ilrugs
when
assaulted
.
David J. Leland, a former
oft he county jail.
whole.'" related Sc hiebel.
Democratic state representative.
has hamm~red his opponent, Republican city prosecutor Ronald J.
O'Brien, lor being soft on drunk
•
drivers and plea-bargaining with
PRESENTED PlAQUE - On behalf of Middleport VIllage, Dewey
wile-beaters.
Horton, president of Mlcidleport VWqe CouncU, presented a plaque In
With three weeks to go before the
memory of the late Middleport Pollee Oriel J. J . Cremeans to his
election,
Leland had collected
widow, Theresa, at the first aniMJal J. J. Cremean.• HaUoween party
$148,105
from
a list of donors that
staged by the Middleport Chamber of Commerce Wednesday night. The
The mayor coni inued, " Providing
Middlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman Hoffman . "Meanwhile, expenses
reads
111\e
a
who's who of Ohio
plaque has a picture olthe late Chief Cremeans along with an Inscription
today urged vUiage res idents to
have continued to cli mb," he basic recreation activities at the
Democratic politics, Including state
recognizing his 17 years of service to the toM~ as "our clilldren's
sw imming pool ~Sas resulted in
support
the
one-mOl
current
ex·
continued.
lawmakers from Ashtabula to
protector''. According to plans the plaque wUI later be placed al
deficits
In !he swimming pool fund
The
existing
cu
rrcnr
expense
levy
pense
levy
and
the
one-mill
recrea·
Cincinnati. One contribution came
Middleport vmage Hall.
lor
sever
al year·s, with no funding
tlon levy which will appear on the
lor street light s produces $8.00J per
from New York.
available
to provide ncedro mainte·
mUi while the cos t ols t reel lights has
ballot Tuesday, Nov. 5.
O'Brien has retalla ted by saymg
nance and improvements In our
in creased to approx imat ely $21J,(XX)
Hoffman said with the loss of
Leland has no experience In
ea tion facilities for both young
recr
per
year.
All
surplus
funds
in
t11e
federa
l
revenue
sharing
ful)ll
s
prosecuting cr iminals and linking
and
old."
street
lighting
fund
have
been
used
($15,000)
and
Increased
costs
of
him with the unpopular Celeste
street lights and recreation faclll· during the past SE'vcral years to pay ,,. Hoffman concludro, "Both these
administration and with Marvin L.
levies arc certainly neEded to
ties, these two levies are vit al to the
the cos1of the street light s.
Warner, ownPr d. the defunct Home
" In the past severa l years, the provide funds for I he coni inuation Of
continuro operation of street tight·
At th~ first of four days of House State Savings Bank.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Law·
village has been very generous m programs which have beneflltetl
ing and the swimming pool.
O'Brien raised at least $01,182
makers appear willing to back a and Senate hearing~ Donald Wiltrymg
to provide llghtmg In various hoth lheyoungandolderresklentsof
The
present
current
expense
levy
request for a mu ltiblllion-doliar kinson, thechielfroeral regulator of from the Columbus power structhe communily and to continue to
areas
as requested by local resiwhich
has
been
used
to
pay
for
the
ihe system, Wronesday proposed a ture. tncludlng the Galbreath and
lederal bailout of the financially
Improve Middleport and make II
dents,"
the
mayor
sla
ted
.
"Thl~
has
street lighting and some street
$5 bllllonllneof credit be put in place· Wolfe famllles, Kathryn LeVeque
beleaguerro Farm Credit System,
more
attractive lor both new and
resurfacing has remained the same Increased thevillage's electrtc bill, ''
for use after the system exhausts Its and John H. McConneiiofWorthingbut President Reagan has yet to
older res idents."
fQT the past 10 years accordm g to Hoffman remarked .
Contlnuro page 11
Continuro on page ll
decide If he will support II.

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Domestic
violence
bill clears
Senate

COPYRIGHT 1!115 HU KROGER CO ITE MS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY OCT '11. THROUGH
SATU RDAY NOV ? 1~. IN Cr\I..LIPOUS &amp; POMFRO&gt;
W[ RE SERV E TII F HIGHT TO tiMIT OUANTillf S
NONE SOLO ro DEALERS

Schiebel wanted
out of loan deals

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Jackson will
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KROGER

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Larg.e ~g·gs ....

Pork &amp;,"
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Hoffman urges support of
expense, recre~tion levies

Lawmakers weighing
farm credit bailout.'

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