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                  <text>Page.:....1 0 The Daily Sentinel

I

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

IGillmor charges ·oDES contract .illegal

Area deaths
Margaret Lewis

Margaret Lewis

Reino Lind
Reina Lind. 71. of 254 Condor St ..
Pomeroy, died early Tuesday
morning at the Hoizer Medical
Center following a long Illness.
He was born Nov. 28, 1913 at
Brainerd, Minn ., to the late Emil
Gusta and Emilia Giunde Lind.
He was a retired brick mason and
a member and business agent of
Bricklayers and Craftm~n Union 32
for 40 years. a member of Trinity
Chunch of Pomeroy and the Finland
Society. A World War II veteran. he
belonged lo Drew Webster Post :B.
American Legion.
Survivors include a special friend,
Margaret Butcher of Middleport;
one brat her, Don Lind of Minneapolis, Minn.; two sisters, Ellen
Hoyhtya of Henning, Minn.. and
Sylvia Quint of Minneapolis; and
several nieces and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
wife, Maxine Hoeflich Lind; one
son. Tom Lind who was killed In
Vietnam, and two brothers.
Services will be 1 p.m. Friday at
!he Ewing Funeralllomewith Rev.
W. H. Perlin officiating. Burial will
be in Beech Grove Cemtery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 24 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Thursday and on Friday morning.

Margaret Ella Lewis, 72. of Route
4, Pomeroy, a school teacher In
Meigs County for 37 years, died
-Sunday at 'University Hospital In
Columbus following a short Ulness.
A member of the Mlddlepo1t
Baptist Church, she was born to the
late Harry and Ruby Fraley Hysell.
She was an active garden club
member and on numerous occa·
slons headed county-wide flower
shows staged at the Meigs County
Fair and special holiday shows. She
was a member of the American
AssociatiOn of University Women,
Return Jonathan Chapter of the
Daught!'rsof the American Revolution and the Retired Teachers
AssociatiOn. She was a volunteer art
teacher at the Meigs County SeniOr
Citizens Center and was act lve In the
Girl Scout program.
Survivors il!clude two sisters-intaw, two nieces and a nephew.
She was preceded In death by her
husband , Charles.
Funeral services wUl be 1 p.m.
Wednesday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home with Rev.
Earl Eden officia ting. Burial will be
in Gravel Hill Cemetery at Cheshire. Friends may call at the
funeral hom&lt;' from 7-9 p.m. this
evening.

Middleport man hurt
in single-car wreck
' Twocarsweretotaledandahome
damaged as !he result of a one-car
accident at the corner of Hartinger
Parkway and S. Second Ave. In
Middleport Monday morning.
Pollee said a car driven by John
Dill of Middleport failed to make the
tum from the parkway onto Second
Ave. It traveled acrossSecondAve.,
through two Iron posts blocking Its '
palh and struck a parked car
shoving It onto the nearby railroad
tracks. The car !hen back up and
struck !he home of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Sargent. The impact
·knOCked out power lines to the home.
pollee said.
Dill was taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospital by !he Middleport Emergency Unit. Both the Dill
car and the parked vehicle were
termed "totaled" by the pollcP
department. Dill will be cited on a
charge of failing to have his vehicle
under control, pollee report .

EMS answers calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports three calls
Moriday; Middleport at 6:36a.m. to
South Second Ave. for John Dill to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 8:33a.m. to Meigs Mine No.
1 for Frank Colwell to Holzer
Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at
6:37p.m. to Brannon Hill for Harold
Brannon to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Files for dissolution
Bruce Anthony Hysell, Pomeroy,
and Pamela Kay Hysell, Wilkes-

Clara Soulshy
Clara Jeanette Souls by. 74, of 784
South Roosevelt Ave.. Bexley, died
Sunday.
She is survived by her husband.
Lawrence; and one daughter,
Patrtcla Speakman, both of Bexley;
a daughter and son-in-law, Barbara
and Edward Morley of Springfield;
two sisters, Leona Booth of Middleport and Alice Szuk of Columbus;
one brother, Marion Hysell of
Columbus; one half-brother, Oliver
Shinn of Birmingham, Ala.; five
gr andchild ren and a great
grandchild.
Funeral services Will be 10:30
a.m. Wednesday at the Graumllch
and Son Funeral Home, 1351 South
High. Columbus, with Rev. William
L. Snider officiating. Burtai wUI ~
In Forest Lawn Cemetery. Friends
may call at lhe funeral home from
2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. today
(Tuesday).

Trial gets underway
A nine person jury trial In the
matter of Ira Russell Johnson.
Gallipolis, against Grace Ellis,
Rutland, executrtx of the estate of
Mary A. Darst, began Monday
morning In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court before Judge Charles
Knight.
A judgment of $129.986.51 is
requested In the act ion which stems
from alleged Injuries sustained by
the plaintiffs In an automobile
accident which occurred several
years ago.
The case was flied In 1983.
In other court matters, a premliminary inju.rtlon has been denied
by the court In a case filect by Milk
Marketing, Inc.. Strongsville,
against James W. Carnahan. Racine, doing business as Sunnysage
Farms.
Anent ry confirming sale has been
filed In a foreclosure actiOn by
Farmers Bank and Savings. Co ..
Pomeroy. against Anthony Eblin
and Patrtcla Eblin, Rutland, et aL
A case filed by First Federal
Savings and Loan Association of
Lima aga inst Alva B. Clark,
Langsville. et at. has been
dismissed.

Hospital news
VeterdiiS Memorial Hospital
Nov.4
Admissions - Gladys Dillon,
Reedsville; Bertna Brickles, Pomeroy; Truman Priddy, Rutland;
Juanita Chapman, Clifton, W.Va.;
John Dill. Middleport.
DischargES - None.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Senate President Paul E. Glllmor
says the Ohio Bureau of Unemployment Services broke !he law In
awarding an unbid contract to a
Columbus firm !hat was $13,00l
delinquent In unemployment com·
pensatlon tax payments.
. Gi!lmor. R•Port Clinton, said the
contract was clearly Illegal and
ca lled on Attorney General Anthony
J. Celebrezze Jr. to recover, as
required by state law, any state
funds paid to the consulting firm.
"It Is hard to say at this point
whether lhls Is another sweetheart
deal by !he Celeste administration
or just another ex~m pl£' of administration mismanagement," Glllmor
said Monday.
The Columbus Citizen-Journal
reported Monday !hat Phillips,
Harrts &amp; Co. received a $39,160
cont ract In June to handle computer
training work for OBES's Job
Training Parlnershlp Act and
another $165.&lt;Wcontract is pending,
the newspaper reported.
State records show !hat when !he
contract was awarded. Phillips,
Harrts owed $13,165 in unemploy-

ment compensation, some of it
dellnqueni since March 1981.
C. Michael Hams, vice president
of PhUllps, Harrts, declined to
comment on !he contract so~ status
of tax payments.
According to a copy of an Aug. 15
OBES lnter·office memo sent to the
· Citizen· Journal anonymously, !he
supervisor of the unemployment
compensation tax accounts receivable section said P)lilllps, Harrts had
made only two payments In 18
quarters.
"No money has been paid on the.
account since Jan. 13, 1983. At !hat
time !he delinquent 1981 and 1982
quarters were pakl- Five liens have ·
been filed," the supervisor wrote.
Alter OBES officials diScovered
the tax paymentS'were delinquent,
Robert M. Phillips, president of the
company sent a letter to OBES
offering to make paymentsof$3,&lt;m
a month untO the firm'sdebt Is paid
off In mid-December.

By HARDIAR KRL'iHNAN
DALLAS (UPI) -The nation's
thrifts made a strong earnings
re!J:&gt;und in 1985, but It was obscured
by publicity over the failures of
some institutions, the chairman of
the U.S. League of Savings Institutions said Monday.
John B. Zellars, speaking at the
annual convention of the group
representing 3,&lt;W institutions, credited !he Industry's reeovery to
declining interest rates .and low
in Dation.
Zellars said the Industry posted its
highest reserves since 1981, but the
debacle Involving prtvately insured
thrifts in Ohio and Maryland earlier
this year got ail the limelight.
"Overall, despite the unprecedented negative publicity, our
business accomplished quite a bit In
19Ri," Zellars said. "We made a

Marriage license
A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to James Mat !hew Bush, 19,
Racine, and Ruth Ann Fry, 19,
Pomeroy.

remarkably strong earnings rebound Bl)d liave done much better
!han we're being give credit for."
Zellars said the Industry will earn
$5 billion, even with a special
assessment of 1-32 of 1 percent of
quarterly deposits by the Federal
Savings and Loan Insurance Corp.
"Next year, If Interest rates
remain stable, the business should
have earnings easily exceeding
that," Zellars said.
He said mortgage loan activity
this year Is expected to be only
slightly below last year's record of
$165 billion.
Seyenteen to 20 percent of !he
nation 's thrifts are stili estimated to
be In deep financial trouble because
!hey have not been able to recover
from the high Interest rates of recent
years, which forced them to pay
high yield on deposits while being

By BUD NEWMAN
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
hearing Into Ohio financier Marvin
Warner's role in !he failure of two
thrifts and a Flortda securttles firm
was abruptly adjou rned after the
chairman accused a federa l regulatory agency of "Ignorance" and
poor preparation.
"You seem to be foundering In a

ho~+Ses.

The group also welcomed the
extension of the net worth certificate
program until April 15, 19!1&gt;.
The program was Instituted by
Congress In 1982. It allowed the
FSUC and the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. to purchase from
qualified thrifts Instruments called
net worth certificates. They were
bought with promissory notes
rather than cash.

swamp of darkest lgnoranceofwhat
your agency did with regard to this
matter," Rep. John Dlngell, DMich., tokl four officials of the
Federal Home Loan Bank Board
Monday. Agency olflclals sidestepped or claimed they did not know
the answers to sevPral subcommittee questions.
Dlngeli abruptly adjourned the

hearing of the House Energy and
Commerce subcommittee on oversight and Investigations unt II a later
date. instructing agency officials to
be better prepared next time.
Rep. Ron Wyden. D-Ore.. called
the agency's performance In the
Warner case "disgraceful" and .
accused the agmcy of "a pervasive
level of lethargy and inert ia" In

White House 'disappointed'
WASHINGTON (UPII - The
White House expressed disappoint·
ment today over how the Soviet
Union reported an Interview with
President Reagan, but said the
exposure nevertheless gave the
Soviet people "a better understandIng" of American attitudes.
White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said Reagan received "the
kind of coverage that we anticipated" when the Soviet government
newspaper Izvestia devoted full -

page coverage Monday to his
Interview with four Soviet
journalists.
Although Soviet censors omitted
some key Reagan statement s,
including sharp criticism of Mos-

before Controlling Board approval
"They had a verbal approval togo
ahead," she sald. "It's not some!hlng we shoUld be doing, but they
had helped from tbe beginning with
!he lmplemenlatlon (of the .11'PA
computer system) and the situation
was such that we didn't want to lose
!hat roomenturn.''
Phillips, Harris was a subcontrac·
tor to Peat Marwlck, Mitchell &amp; Co.
durtng Installation of the comput~r
system, according to matertal
submltted In support of the request
to the Controlling Board.
Paperwork was prepared In
August to award the firm a second
contract for $165,IXXI to continue the
work, but that trequest has not been
so!nt to !he state Controlling Board
for approvaL
Hammond said !hat contract Is
'~on hold."
Michael said the -firm's first
cOntract has expired.
"There Is no contract on right
now. We are not pu ttlng one through·
!he Controlling Board at this time ...
and I really can't discuss reasons
w)ly or why not," she said.

The thrifts were thus able to
Increase their net worth tx.~ausethe
promissory notes from the government agencies could be counted as
an asset. On lhe other side of the
ledger, the certificates were
counted as part of the thrift's net
worth or capital.
The prQgram helped the Industry
overcome much of the $9 billion loss
It suffered In 1981 and 1982 as a result
of the steep jumps In Interest rates. .
"Both Issues remain important,"
Zellars said. "The non- bank bank
Issue cannot he left to the courts,
where uncertainties stlli remain ..
And even though the net worth
certificate program hasn't been
used much oo far, It must be on the
shelf In case lnterst rates soar again.
"Given · the size of our federal
oodgel deficits, this posslblltly can't
be ruled out."

ELBERFELO.S
o"ember Sale,Days
Going On No

Today - Occasional rain, high
near CIO. Northwest winds 15 to 25
mph.
Tonight - Mostly cloudy, low
near -40. Northwest winds 10 to 15
mph.
Wednesday - Clearing, high In
the upper 50s.
Chance olraln -~percent today,
!0 percent tonight a nd near zero
percent Wednesday.
Extended forecast for Thursday
throulh Saturday- FalrThu rsday,
scattered showers Friday possibly
lingering on Saturday. Highs In the
upper 40s and .lOs. Lows In the 30s.

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
IN THE HEART OF POMEROY

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

. "tEniNO YOU THERE SAFEL~;·
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
.
OPEN : 8·6 MON. -SAT.; 8-8 FRJ.
PH. 742-3088
Muter Card and Vlee Welcome

Sports ...... ........ Pages,3, 4, 5

•

at y
Vol.36, No.142

By BOB HOEFLIOI
Sentinel News Staff
Pomeroy's one percent personal Income tax was
repealed by 17 votes and a 6.19 miii!J:&gt;nd Issue and tax
levy for a construction program In the Southern Local
School District hit the dust almost two-to-one,
according to the unofficial tally In Tuesday's election.
An Initiative action had been taken to Pomeroy
voters on the one percent Income tax which went Into
effect earlier lhls year. Pomeroy VIllage officials
asked residents to keep !he tax so that fund s would be
available to generally Improve the town. However, ·

some residents objected to the tax as did rut of town
residents who work in Pomeroy and had to pay the
one percent tax. In yesterday's election 381 residents
voted to repeal the measure while 364 voted to keep It
In effect.
In the Southern Local School Distrtct - despite a
strong public support which appeared to exist for the
6.19 23-year construction levy, the measure was
defeated yesterday, 1288 to .682. The bond Issue-tax
levy would have provided tbe necessary local funds
for !he construction of a new elementary school In
addition to Improving existing facilities In the district.

Around the county:

Racine returns four
to council positions
With seven caudldates to choose from lor lour seats on Racine
VIllage Council, voters of tile town retumed lour lncwnbents to
another tenn on oouncllln Tuesday's election.
Leading the way lor reeledlon was Frank Cleland who received
262 votes. Other lncwnhenls reelected were Scolt D. Wolle wlih 2%9;
Robert E. Beegle :at2, and CarroU I. Teaford, 177. Votes received by
the chaUengen Included Henry L. Moore, 107; Jack L. r.y,..., 118, ud
Orland Lee Floyd, 81.
.
In Syracuse VUiage, voters also had seven candidates to vote for In
selecting lour oouncU members lor the next term. Elected were
Ernest E. Sls!Mm, Jr., 213; WWiam 0. AmoU, 170, and .lolm T.
WUUams, 143, ln&lt;:umbents, and a fonner councD member, Kathryn
H. Crow received 167 votes to win the t&gt;urth seat. Unseated was
Incumbent, Kenneth H. Cundiff who received 128 votes. TaBles
received by other chalengen Include George E. Hobnan, 1M, and
Edwin F. Neulzllng, liS. Gordon Wlneb,_,r received 171 votes lor
election to the Syt'8CU!Ie Board of PuWc Allalrs.
Voters of Rutland VUiage gave James M. Fink l2'l votes In elect
1t1m 1111 mayor of the 1o- to mplace John MUler, tenn eKplring In
111117. Richard L Fetty who baa been eermc u mayor IDee Miller's
l""'lp•""" received «&lt;I voCes.
Four COWICU members were eleded In Rutland and they are
SlepiMin E , Jenldns. lSf; David Wllkes,l2'l; Guy E. Hunter, 108, and
Vlclde I. Fink, 104. The ftflh candlclaie was James I. Span~ter who
rec~ed~~.
In Mlddlepori VlUage there were live a~~tdldales for four se!ila 011
vUJase oouncU and elected were Dewey M. Horton, 428; Jack
Salterlleld, 422; ADen L. King, 407, ud Robert N. Glbnore, :114. AU
are Incumbents. The fUih candidate was YvCDJe ScaDy who
received 258 votes. W1Uis Anthony received 483 votes to he elected to
the Middleport Board ol Public allalrs.
Pomeroy had a shoriage of oouncU candldaleswllhloursealsto be
DIJed 011 l!te body this year. lncumbents reelected were Larry D.
Weltnmg, 443; WUUam A. Young, 441 and Betty A. Baronlck, 418. A
-tourilt lncumbenl, John Andel'!lOn had notllled for reelection but he
received 49 write-In votes tor oouncU In Tue8day's election and Is
eligible throulh that vole to continue oervlng &lt;11 the body. 'llleodore
T. Reed, 10 received 4112 votes to be elected to the Pomeroy Board of

All Meigs County armed forces
veterans should contact !heir con~sman in regard to a legislative
measure designed to cut veteran
benefits, Syracuse Councilman
Kenneth Cundiff warned today.
Cundiff reports that !he Gamm,
Rudman, Hollings Balance Budget
Amendment has already been
approved by the Senate and Is
approved by the House of Representatives, It could mean a three
percent cutin disability compensa-

A little over one-half of Meigs
County's registered voters went to
the polis In Tuesday's genera l

•woMEN·s WINTER SLEEPWEAR •KNITTING YARN
•GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR
*MEN·s WESTERN SHIRTS
•woMEN'S
WHITE UNIFORMS
*GIRLS' FALL TOPS
,; .
*CUSTOM-MADE DRAPERIES
*JUNIOR SLACKS
* CARHARTT WORK CLOTHES
*LITTLE BOYs· SHIRTS
*BOYs· SWEATERS
.
*VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS
*JUNIOR SWEATER VESTS
*WALLPAPER
•GIRLS• DRESSES
*WOMEN·s DRESSES
*MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS
*BOYS• KNIT SHIRTS
*MEN'S SWEATERS
*JR. WRANGLER SPORTSWEAR
*MEN'S THERMAL UNDERWEAR
*GIRLS' PANTS
•MEN'S BUXTON BILLFOLDS
*WOMEN'S BLOUSES

Layaway

For
Christmas

ELBERFELDS

····-

ElhtloMt
&lt;1101 . . . ~

~

...tl...

enttne

Voters of various subdivisions across !he county
. were support lve of cemetery and fire protection tax
levies In !heir voting Tuesday. In Olive Township
voters renewed a one-half mill fire protection levy 450
to 149 and approved a new one-half mOl, five year
levy, for fire protect ion 366 to 212.
Chester Township residents approved the renewal
of a .4 mill levy for maintenance of cemeteries, ~2 to
180 and In Columbia Township, voters put the stamp
of approval on the renewal of aonemUI fire protection
levy, 173 to 161.1n Orange Township, voters approved
261 to 99 a new one mlll levy for fire protection.

2 Soctlono. 14 Pogoa
A

26 Conti

Muttimodiotnc. Nowopopar

Middleport voters came up with a split decision on
two new levies In their town Tuesday. Voters
approved a new one mUI current expense levy, m to
314, but turned down, ll5to339, a second newonemlll
levy which had been designated for recreational
pu~ses .

In 1'\utland Village, voters gave their approval, 102
to 81, to a new 1.5 mill tax levy to be used In the
construction and repair of streets. In Rutland
Township, however, voters turned down a 1.15 mill
new tax levy which was designated for dust control.
The vote was 'U/ to 153.

Three Meigs school board races settled
Voters of Meigs County's three
local school dlstrtcts were faced
with a variety of candidates when
!hey went to the polls Tuesday to
elect board members In each of the
districts.
In the Eastern Local Dlstrtct,
eight candidates were seeking the
two seats on !he board. Incumbent
Dale Machir did not file for
reelection. Dorsel E. Larkins, also
an Incumbent, did, however, and
was unseated. He received 372
votes. Elected, according to the
umfflclal tally, were Kathleen
Manlcke with 612 votes and James

bent C. Arland King was unseated
R. Smith with 538. Smith defeated
David L. Chadwell by four votes
receiving 4Ri votes in his bid for
according to the unofflctal count
reelection. Votes received by other
with Chadwell receiving 534 votes. candidates Include Bobby R. Arnold, 1,019; James M. Souisby, 634;
The tally of other candidates was I.
0. McCoy, 454; Shirley L. Wells,203;
Iva M. Sisson, 491; George A.
Stanley Wells, 178, and David H. Hoffman, 396, and Gary G. Basham,
Mora, 169.
191.
In the Southern Local School
There were numerous candidates
Dlstrtct, five candidates were
for the two seats oo the Meigs Local
seeking the three seals on that
Board of Education. Robert E.
IJ:&gt;ard. Incumbents, Susie Grueser
Barton, Incumbent. received 1,693
and Larry W. Rupe received 1,463 and David Hill, did not file for
reelection. However, Incumbent,
votes to .win !he smts. Barton and
Gary D. Evans led lhewaywlth1,176
Rupe were endorsEd by !he Meigs
Local Teachers Association. Incum- · votes to win reelection. Scott D.

.

Wolfe won a seat on the board wllh
1,079 and Charles F. Pyles won !he
third seat with &amp;.KJ -votes. Pyles,
however, according to the unofficial
count, defeated Marty L. Morartty
by only 10 votes with Morartty
receiving 68J votes. The fifth
candidate, Dale F. Proffitt got 622
votes.
There was no rontesttorthe Meigs
County Board of Education. The
three Incumbents flledforreeiectlon
to the three seats. They Include
VirgUC.King,3,778votes; RobertS.
Burdette, 3,315, and Harold R
Lohse, 3,264.

Determine trustee seats in 12 townships
Races tor trustee posts In ail 12 of winners; Truman L. Grim, 46;
Meigs County's townshipS were Rodney Howery, 31; Allee M.
decided when voters of the subdivi- Llevlng, 103; Gordon Noel Perry,
95; William Stout, 56.
sions went to the polls Tuesday.
Lebanon- Eugene G. Long, 228,
Results, according to !he unoffl·
and
Morris E. Teaford, 213,
clal tally of the Meigs County Board
wlliners;
Max E. Folmer, Sr., 98;
of Eleetlons Include;
Two trustees elected in each James L. McHaffie, 46; Guy A.
·Rose, 142.
township:'
Letart - Don R. Hill. 246, and
Bedford- Robert F. Hawk, 181,
and David M. Brtckles, 158, Waiter Herbert Roush, 146.
winners; Robert G. Pickett, 116; winners; · Charles E. Burri, 103;
William Charles Cook, 45; Kenneth Christopher Tad Wolfe, 91; Phillip
Slnclali-, 85, and Ronald L. Wood,71. w. Wolfe.~.
Olive- Er nest D. Barrtnger, 784,
Cheller - Gary R. Dill, 403, and
Rodney G. Chevalier, 354, winners:. and Everett L. Schultz, 2IJ,
William Pooler. Jr., 245; Henry winners; Francis H. Andrew, 164;
Thomas, 105; George Alfred Wolle, JoeLantz,217; FosterG.Nlday,l14.
Orange- James E. Watson, 161,
297.
Columbia - VIctor Perry, 130, and Edgar J. Pullins, 145, winners;
and James Earl Gaston, 114.

Francis A. Benedum. 123; Charles Forrest VanMeter, 4GI, winners;
D. Carr, 72; Lester M. Hawk, !ll;
Roy E. Armes, 3'79; Dennie Edison
Robert Marcinko, 131.
Hill, 410; Larry R. Hubbard, 65;
Rutland - Charles D. Barrett, Henry A. Salser, 283; Don P. Smtih,
Jr., 402, and Charles E. Wtulamson, 125; Howard L. Wrftesel, 31.
316, winners; Roger L. Holman, Ri;
In three townships, unexpired
Leo B. Morrts, 211 .
terms were filled for clerk posts. In
Salem --'- Cecil L. Stacy, 176, and · Bedford Township, Barbara J .
Robert Beaver, 170, winners; Ha- Grueser received 200 votes to defeat
rold D. Lambert. 81; William L. Edith Ann Leach, 103, for tbe clerk's
Thornton, 98.
position. WOllam Michael Will .was
Salisbury - Richard B. Bailey, unopposed for lheunexpiredclerk's
695, and Nathan Biggs, 692, winners;
term In Ches!Pr Township receiving
Virgl V. Brown, 503; Gregory S. 378 votes. There was a three .way
Eblin, 604; George S. Hobstetter, race for !he unexpired clerk's tenn
513; Marvin W. McGuire, 254. In Olive TowP.ShiP and !he winner
Scipio- Eugene Phillips, 220,and was Barbara Ann Hannum with 232
Gary M. Welch. 182, winners; votes over 186 received by Ka lhryn
Harold D. Graham, 137; Raymond M. Fortney and 89 by Donna M.
A. Norris, 40; Jerry L. Tillis, 00.
Wolf.
Sutton- Otis F. Knopp, 510, and

Coal research funding wins approval

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Elated
supporters of Ohio's Important coal
industry prepared todaytocarryout
a mandate from Buckeye State
voters and Implement a $100 million
tion and almost 25 perclent cut In bond Issue to fund research and
these benefit s by 1991. This amend- development proj~ts on removing
ment also calls tor a cut of ll,(XX) sulflirfrom coal in pursuit of a clean,
Veterans Administration health . Inexpensive fuel.
care personnel and this would mean
A ronstitutlonal amendment al·
that 23pel'cent of ali doctors. nurses, lowing the state to borrow money to
psychologists and dent ists now underwrite the prtvate research and
employed by the Veterans Admlnls- development met wllh overwhelmt ration would be dismissed , Cundiff ing approval In all areas of Ohio at
Tuesday's election.
states.
,
State Issue 1, aimed at bolstering
"This would be devastating to the
Disabled American Veterans as we Ohio's sagging coal Industry, swept
the state on a margin of 2-1, with
Continued on page 8
· voters in ali but two counties Shelby and Paulding - voicing
approval. Eas!Prn Ohio coal counelection. The Meigs County Board of ties favored the Issue by margins of
Elections reported that 7,968 voters uptoS-1.
'f&gt;lans call for Implementing
out ofl3.225reglstered voters turned
legislation
to be Introduced In !he
out to cast ballots Tuesday.

Ohio General Assembly In January.
The first bonds may be sold

sometime In mid-year, allowing
research and demonstration projects to begin on reducing the sulfu r
content In Ohio coal.
With 11,197 of Ohio's 13,51»!
precincts reporting, or 83 percent.
umfflclai returns from the office of
Secretary of StateS her rod Brown
showed 1,187,548, or65percent, were
In favor, and 643,555, or .'15 percent,
w~re opposed.
Gov. Richard F . Celeste, who
joined coal compan ies, miners,
envtronmentaUst s and consumer
groups In support d. the issue, called
passage "a victory for jobs In Ohio."
"Ohioans have spoken loudly and
clearly that !hey want to Invest in
Ohio's future through clea n coal
technoloR)' that will save jobs of
miners and save rooney for utility
customers," said the ~vernor.
"This s!J:&gt;ws tha t the voters are

wllllng to make an Investment In a
resource that's Important to Ohio,"
said sta te Sen. Richard C. Pfeiffer
Ji-., D- Columbus, the original
sponsor of the proposal In the
Legislature.
Supporters said greater use of
Ohio coal wUI br ing down eiectrtc
bills because the pienllfulfuel will be
available to Ohio power plants
without exorbitant transportation
costs_
"The citizen Is going to be the
major beneficiary If we can hold
electricity costs down ," said
Pfeiffer.
"For direct job creation, there's
no doubt that sout heastern Ohio Is
going to benefit," said Sen. Robert
W. Ney, R· BarnesvUie, whose
Belmont Cru nty dlstrtct gave the
Issue a 6-1 endorsement. "It 's going
to help other areas d. the state, too,
with lower eiectrtclty costs.
Pfeiffer credited success of the

ballot Issue to legislators throughout
the sta!P wiD sold It In their klcalitles
on a bipartisan basis, and to the fact
!here was no a-ganlzed opposition.
David Berger, dlrectorcl.theOhlo
Coal Development Office, which Is
expected to pass OOIX'Qjectsellgible
for the stale funding, said some
coal-washing technologies can be
ready for commercial use In one
year to 18 months. Other methods In
!he experimental stage will take up
to five years, he said.
Pfeiffer said he hopes Berger's
office will begin toscourthesta te for
deserving experimental projects,
ellmlnatlng potential duplication.
A constitutional amendment was
rx.'eded to sell the bonds because the
state's basic charter limits the
porposes for which money may be
borrowed and repaid with tax
revenues. Issue 1 creates an
except ion for coal research and
development.

•

Jackson County .residents reject proposed tax mcreases
'

JACKSON (UPII - This tbne
whispering the word instead of
shouting It, as In the past, voters of
Jackson County once again have
said "no" to higher taxes.
The difference In volume today
was being taken as a good sign by
!hose who had hoped for more
money In the county's coffers.
Going down to defeat on Tuesday's election ballot were two
separate l percent "plgR)'back"
Increases to the state sales tax, one
an emergency hike to take effect
immediately and run untU Dec. 31
and the other a permane11t lncfel\se
to become ei'!ectlve Jan. 1, 191ll.
Before the election, Jackoon
County Commissioners Ed Michael
and Ed Davis approved a resolutiOn
promising to cut !he permanent tax
to0.5percentafteroneyear,butthat

I

apparently didn 't make the ballot
Issues any more palatable to voters.
Wlth'votes counted In all40ofthe
county's precincts, unofficial results showed the temporary proposal lost by 4,455- 3,156, or 58.5
percent to 41.5 percent
The permanent tax hike was
defeated 4,683-3,760, or 55.5 percent
to 44.5 percent
In 19!J:l, financially strapped
voters In a county where the
unemployment rate Is almost 13
percent repealed by a 3-1margin an
emergency rounty tax.
A 1 percent non-emergency tax
was approved by commissioners 2·1
last March, but !hat was blocked In
April when petitioners submitted 50
percent more signatures !han were
necessary for a referendum under
state law .

"We'llbe abletodoit (get 'passed
another ballot proposal for a tax
Increase), !here's no doubt, In
May," said Karen Wyant, chalrperoon of acltlzensadvlsorycommlttee
!hat supported the Issues defeated
Tuesday.
"It was sure a lot closer this time
!han three years ago," she sa id.,
Michael confirmed tlia t anotller
tax Increase will be sought In six
months.
"We'll just have to come back in
May," he said. "We've got to
educate the People" as to the needs
of county government.
The rural southeastern Ohio
county's financial woes came to a
head earlier this year when dozens
of county employees were laid ott
IPmporarlly, the sheriff was forced
to close his jail for more than live

weeks and services were curtailed.
The problem, however, goes biick
much further !han that. For
generations, the economy In this
county of more than IJ,(XX)resldents
was linked strongly to coal mining,
an Industry that's been dying in !he
southeastern part of !he state In
recent years.
The orga nizer of !he 1982 repeal
campaign, Oak Hill service station
owner BUI Warning, said county
offtciais beck then should have
received a message to hold the line
and balance the budget, but they did
not.
Operating on a $1.8 million
oodget, tlXI.&lt;m less !han last year,
county offlcebolders apparently
dldn 't pay much heed to anauditor's
cerlfftcate of anticipated Income
and In 1985contlnuedspendlngatthe

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Pomeroy repeals tax, Southern levy defeated

Urge all .veterans to fight
proposed benefit cutbacks

ALL THIS WEEK SAVE ON:

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, November 6. 1985

Copyrighted 1985

More than half of voters tum out

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST .• RUTLAN\), OHIO,

row, Speakes said, "We consider the
Interview to be a positive
achievement."
"However, we do regret and are
disappointed that the Soviets lett
compellro tocensorcertaln portions
of the interview," Speakes said.

protecting depositors.
· The hearing was called · to get
more Information about the failure
of ESM Government Securttles Inc..
of Fort Lauderdale, F1a., and the
role played by the FHLBB, the
federal agency that regulates savIngs and loans.
ESM's collapse last March led to a
crisis among privately Insured Ohio
savings and loan associations. The
securities firm 's bankruptcy led to
the failure of Cincinnati's Home
State Savings and Loan, controlled
by Warner, because oo much of the
Institution's assets were Invested
withEsM.
HomeState'scoUapse, In turn, led
to a run on several ct the privately
Insured savings and loans-In Ohio.

By the Bend ............. Page 6
Classllleds .... PaFS 10, 11, 12
Comics-TV •••• •••••••.• Page lS
Deallis ............ ..... .-. Page 14
Editorial ......... :....... Page 2

L-~_an:._Afl·alrs_.'lbere-were-two-vacan_cles_oothat_ho_anlbu-ICIII,y-one--J

Weather forecast

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squeezed by klw return on klng-term
fixed ratemortages.
However, the growth of secondary capital markets and adjustable rate roortgages have helped
some thrifts recover from ea,rller
losses, Zellars said.
Zellars said other favorable
developments Including court decisions llmlting the inroads of
nonbank -banks, such as brokerage

Inside:

of the contract.

Halt. hearing on Warner's role in thrifts

SHOES &amp; POCKETBOOKS

Lottery winners

A spokeswoman for the OBES
said .she could not verify · the
accuracy of !he memo sent to !he
newspaper or discuss the current

status of !he Phillips, Harris' tax
payments.
"We are covered by a separate
contldentlallty code and cannot
discuss Individual records of Individual employees . or Individual
claimants," said Karen Michael,
the OBES spokeswoman. "Even
!hat someone sent !hat memo Is a
violation c1. the code."
Franklin County Recorder Joe
Testa said !here are currently six
liens amounting to $11,708 against
Ph!Uips, Harris. The first were filed
In October 1984. Thelastestwas!lll!d
last month.
On June 20, Phillips, Harrts
submltted Its first bUI for $26,455.
The Invoice said Phillips had
worked 3Xl IJ:&gt;urs at $55 an lllur, and
Harrts had worked 1811Durs at $55
an lllurfor$9,955. Nodatesordetalls
of when !he work was performed
were submltted with the Invoice.
Joan Hammond, OBES deputy
administrator, acknowledged !he
two men could not have worked 481
hours In 14 working days. She said
PhUllps, Harrts had signed the
contract In February and had
started Working on the project

Thrifts report strong earnings rebound

ville, have filed for a dissolut iOn of
marrtage In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Wayne T. Cleland and Margaret!
A. Cleland, both of Racine, hhave
been granted a dissolution of .....----------~--------------1
marrtage.
An amended entry restoring Nora
1 TABLE OF BOYS', GIRLS, &amp; LADIES
Bissell, Tuppers Plains, to her
former name Cassady has been filed
In a decree for the dissolution of her
marrtage to Brian Douglas Bissell,
also of Tuppers Plains.

CLEVELAND (UP)) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number - TIL
Ticket sales totaled $1,306,685,
wllh a payoff due of$700,626.
PICK4 - M70.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$187.188.50, with a payoff due of
$31,518.

Tuesday. ·November 6, 1986

previous year's level.
The county's three commissioners had been deadlocked all YI'!Jr
over enactment of an emergertcy 1
percent sales tax Increase, which
would have required unanimous
approval, to raise an estimated
$900,(XX) annually.
Michael and Davis voted for .the
proposal several times this year, but
!he third commissioner, Marvin
Keller, repeatedly refused to go
along.
Keller, elected In I!&amp;! on an
anti-tax plalform, was one of the
leaders in !he dr ive to repeal the
emergency measure enacted by
commissionerS earlier tbat year.
"The people have spoken," said
Keller. "'Livewithlnyourbudget' is
what !hey told us. We'll just have to
tighten rur belts."
&gt;

Faced with litt le prospect of .the
money being repaid and fearful of
setting a beUout precedent, !he State
Ccrllrolllng Board earlier lhts year
refused to grant the county a $262,500
emergency loan.
And the Supreme Court of Ohio. ·
while Sept.12 granting a temporary
Injunction to stop ail non-mandatory
spending In Jackson County,dld not
rule on a request by the county's
thr"!! judges to order that commissioners pass the emergency sales
tax.
Sale of 20-odd acres d. rounty land
for $140,&lt;m to Jackson City schQOis
-coupled with volunteer labor and.
prtvate donations from a "Save The
County" campaign - brought
courthouse stsfflng levels back t9
near normal before the election, as
Continued on page 8

�\

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Page-2-The Daily s.rtinel

Pom::v-M;·po~rt. Ohio
Wednuday, November 6, 1986 .
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111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Oblo

WASHINGTON -Recent weeks deciding constitutional questions, accuratelY the Intent rt the framers
have seen a remarkable exchange should Ill! court abide by the on · application of ~lnciple to
d. views, at once both novel and lntentklns of Ill! !ramen and the specific, contemporruy questions.
fascinating, oo Ill! role d the ratliytng states, as best tll!se All too often, soul'(les of potmtial
Supreme Court as final arbiter of Intentions can be determined, or enllghtenment such as records of
constitutional questilns. In ooe . should Ill! court apply contempar· the ratificatiOn debates (r!JV!de
mrner, we have the Conservative ary social and ·moral Values sparse or ambiguous evldenre of
Attorney ·General Edwin Meese; in instead?
·
·
the original intention. Typically, all
Ill! otll!r comer, the liberal Justice
Meese holds to tbe c6nservatlve that .can be gleaned is that ttl!
· Wllllam Brennan. In this dispute, view. He advocates a doctrine of framers tll!mselves did not agree
Meese ts right as a matter c1 Jurisprudence that places a ·high about Ill! application or meaning of
principle; Brennan ts right as a value on "original intention." Bren· parllcu,ar colistitutlonal JI'OVI·
matter of fact.
nansaysthatpos!Uonls"Uttlemore , sions, and hid tll!lr differences in
The argument has been raging than arrogance cloaked as cloaks of generality."
for at least a hundred years, though humility."
This being so, Brennan con·
sitting justices rarely have debated
"It is arrogant to pretend that ciures, "Ill! ultimate question must
it beyond tll!lr courtrooms. In from our vantage we can gau!J! be, What do the words of ttl! text

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ..........,._-r,~doo=o
•

ROBERT L . WINGETI'
Publisher
PAT WIUTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ControUer

f

JIOB HOEFLICH
General Manager'

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
LEn ERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be less ttlan 300 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and must be slglled with name, address and
[eJephone number. Nb unsigned letters wUI be publlshfd. Letters should be In

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.~upreme Court
reviews abortion
The Supreme Court Is considering two cases involving a woman's right
abortion, an Issue that has plaguedtll!court~ceitshistoricdeclslon
lnJ!oe vs. Wade 12 years agli.
The justices heard oral arguments '1\tesday in cases from lillnols and
Pennsylvania. Both states passed Jaws regulating abortion that were found
· ' to be unconstitutional In lower courts.
the Pepnsylvanla Jaw required a pregnant w&lt;:man walt :ll IJJurs to give
her consent to an abortion, and said all second·tr1mester abortions must be
PEiformed In ho$p!tals. It also strictly Umlted abortions after a fetus could
b(vlable and required efforts to save ttl! aborted fetus.
'l1le llllnols Abortion Law of 1975, as amended In 1979, had similar
prVvlslons, requiring doctors to use Ill! same care in performing an
al:ilrtlon of a vJable or possibly viable fetus that would be used if they were
deJiverlng an Infant for live birth.
Also before the court are technical aspects of Ill! cases. Pennsylvania
ariues Its Jaw was found unconstitutional without being given a full ll!artng
ln;tower courts. The illinois law was again a.mended In 1983 and 1984
following lower court rullngs and Ill! amended versions were never
re¥1ewec1 by the courts. In other words, ttl! Supreme Cwrt is reviewing a ·
Jaw no longer on ttl! books. TheoreUcally, the court could limit its rullng to
the'.pl'OCl'dural questions.
'n1ose opposed to abortion view the murt's review of ttl! cases as a new
chailce to restrict the approximately 1.5 million abortions performed
allliliallY in the United States.
.
1be Justlce Department has also taken the unusual step of asking ttl!
court to overturn Roe vs. Wade and return Ill! authority to r~iate
aliortlon to the states, a step many see as tantamount to banning abortion.
~ Frelnd, co-autoor d. the Pennsylvania 1982 Abortion Control Act
bi!;fore .the '&lt;fl'lr!, said he did not expect ttl! court to overturn Roevs. Wade,
bUt added be did think there would "be a chipping away, a softening up.''
·Eleanor Smeal, president of the National Organization for Women, said
~ court's acceplance d. ttl! two cases worried her, but added that she
bftleved the Jaws would be struck down.
;!rhe Roe vs. Wilde ruling said abortion decisions in the flrst trimestertl)tee mon~ - o1 pregnancy are between a woman and her doctpr. In the •
Mj.'ond trimester~ states can regulate abortion but ;,only to protect the
mother's health. Once the fetus Is viable, meaning it could live outside the
wilcnb, states can more severely llmit or ban abortions.
·
Since the court Issued the rullng in 1973, the justices haveftrmly stood by
lt. Most recently, they reaffirmed the decision In a case from Akron, Ohio,
~-1983.
.

an

Thanks, folks!

By RICK VAN St\.NT

other one, this onerea!iy makes you
feel the difference between winnl!ig
and losing," the Cincinnati Reds
playPr· manager said Tuesday.
"Its a great feeling to win this
award."
In the UPI balloting by~ baseball
correspondents, Rose 'collected 12
votes. Whitey H~rzog of St. Louis got
10 votes and Tommy Lasorda of Los

revolutionary mii!Jants.
Presumably, he remembered
that his Old enemy, .Egyptian
Presk;lent Anwar Sad at, was assasslnated while reviewing a rnllllary
parade, and Qaddafi didn't want to
risk the same fate.
In his speech to the celebrants,
the distrustful dtctator put Ill! best
face possible on thls curious
absence of military m~scle. "The
Revolutionary Committee Movenient," he said, "w,hlch we parade
today Instead of tanks and alrcraft,.
which are standing In their bases
and camps, is anotll!r display of
p:.wer."
Qaddafl knows he can survive as
long as he has the military ll!hind
him. But a secret CIA report states
bluntly: "That support Is no longer
assured."
The CIA report notes that trouble
"has been brewing witllin Ill!
officer corps," and adds: "Qadda·
ft's !XJllcies have caused bitterness
and friction, especially among the
Free Officers, a loose organization

Angeles had two. Davey Johnson of
the New York Mets and Chuck
Tanner, formerly of Pittsburgh, got
one vote apiece . .
In the Baseba!i Writers Associa·
tion balloting, Herzog edged Rose
86-85. One of the most controversial
ba!iots In that voting was cast by
Pittsburgh writer Charley Feeney,
who didn't include Rose in hts top

three. Feeney voted for, In order. different reasons put into 11. 1 think
Herzog, Lasorda and Buck Rodgers Herzog and I would he close In any
of Montreal. Had Feeney picked vote."
Rose t)llrd instead ofRodgers, Rose
Rose, who has won dozens of
would have tied Herzog for ttl!
award.
"player" awards throughout his
"I think Feeney just forgot about 23-year career, said he felt espeme," said Rose. "But, when there cially gratllled to be chosen UPI
are different votes taken for ttl! Manager of the Year in his f~·st lull
same award, there are going to be

·~
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•,

season of managing.
··
"Whether you're a player or a
manager, you want to heatthe top o(
your profession," said Rose. "lthlnk
anytime you win a manager of the
yea r award . it'sgo!ng tobring a very
rewardin g fee ling because it mPans
a team under your contro l had
success."

'
COfiYRI GHT 1985 · THE KROGER CO . ITEM S AND PRICES GOOD
SUNDAY NOV . 3, THROU GH SATURDAY , NOV . 9. 1985. IN

G!I.UPO US &amp; POME RO¥

W£ RE SERVE THE RI GH't' TO liMIT QUANTI TIES . NONESOLD TO
DEA LERS

Brennan is quite rlght wben he
speaks d til! ''clOaks of generality"
in 'which ttl! Constitution is garbed.
What is meant by such terms as
general, welfare, contracts, necessary , proper, extaordlnruy? In Ill!
amendments, what IS meant by ·
establishment, abridge, freeOOm,
unreasonable, Uberty, due process, ..
public use, speedy and public tr!al?...

,

MNifiTISED mM I'OliCY

Each ol these ed veniaed items Is reayirtd to be tetdily ava1lable tor u le in etch
Kroger Store. e u :ept illi sp!!ci l ica ll~ no ted in th(t t d II we do n.m out cl an
advenrsed item , we w ~ l on er vou J'OUI cttOICI of i comp.trable ite m , when
a~ailllblll, ref i8Ctf1(1 the samo N'o'~gs or a raincrteck w rtich will enti tle vou 10
purc hat.e the ldll8nised item 11 the •dot«!iMd price wil hin :rJ day~. Onl.,. of\11
..-~mdor ccupan wil be eccepted per ittm purchiHd.

Second Harvest. Kroger.
And You. Together, we
can help the hungry. ·
SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

Kroger Gladly
Welcomes Your
Federal Food Stamps

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W£ G!AOtl WIICOM£

·-

ALL WEEK

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Springdale

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·.

2% Milk... . .... .

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Gal.
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00

FROZEN SPAGHETTI &amp; MEAT CASSEROLE OR

Morton
Pot Pies . . . . . . .

Manufacturer's

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.,

''

a-oz.

I,~------------------------~-·•
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With $10.00 Purchase

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of about 00 officers wh:l broogbt
Qaddall to power and hold key posts
in Ill! armed Alrces and security
apparatus."
.
Consequently, Qadda!i has "reduct'd his rellance on the oalcer
corps. .. gambling that liE nmkand
filed the afllled forces (along with
ttl! East German l!odJIIlllard) .can
protect htm from cballenges.'' In
hopes of ·cementing Ill! lower
echelons' loyalty,: "II! has sug·
. gested to his fellow Bedouin
tribesmen, who mS~~,e up the rank
and Die, that Ill!)' should be
suspicious oftll!lr largely city-bred
oftlcers."
Thougll.tll! CIA cautiously warns
that "Qaddafl has a remarkable
abll!ty to patch up or smooth &lt;Ner
apparently trreconcUable dlflerences," other Ubyan experts predict
that his days are numbered.
"The time is ftpe," ooe lnteW· .
gence source said. "His mmestlc ·.
base is eroding fast. There will be
greater upsurges and attacks
against him." And sooner or late:,
one wOI succeed.

See Store
r Details
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Cost Cutter
Shortening . . .

42-oz.

SELF-RISING OR ALL PURPOSE

Kroger
Flour . . . . . . . . ... 5-lb.

Big oil on tria}_________R_ob_e_rt_~_al_te_rs. :

Fantastic job

•

:1 would

like to thank Joann
diaway for the fantasUc job sll!
d(d In organizing our recent school
carnival. Aspecial note of thanks to
J~ Sandy Bowen and Kenneth
Qi!flth for laying down Ill! mats
p!'klr to the carnival. Thanks also to
Ill! volunteers wtJJ worked eitll!r
~day afternoon or Saturday. A
fORI' VI01l'l\l ~11\IFTeUii,__

final note of appreciatiOn to au th:lse
wh:l donated eitll!r m:mey or food
to help make wr camlyJ!l ...ll
success. The money we made wUI
ll!lp purchase suwlles t&gt;r the
classrooms and equipment.
Wendy Halar, Principal
Tuppers Plains School

t.

LOS ANGELES (NEA) -"This "extravagant antics" and "unjust!- that "industry in California works
court case," says one lawyer here, fled intransigence," wllile defense tngetll!r very closely."
"has everything except sex attorneys have alleged that the
Similarly; a 1981 Mobil internal
secret meetings, anonymous lnfor· states have produced ooly "sweep- memo said Marathon, PhUUps and
mants, vast amounts d money, ing, unsubstantiatm generaliza- Shell were "seriously rocking Ill!
awesome displays d. rorporate lions" and "a fabrication of mis· fuat" becausl- tll!y ~!in~ to
power- and price - t r x ·ng Jeadirig!nnuenm:"
adhere to the industry's un!foiln
consplracies."
The case dateS back to rnld-1973, pricing pollcies.
A 1976 Unocal internal memo
That's probably an understate- when Connecticut and Florida
men!. This decade-dd clvD suit has Initiated court action against the oil outlined a tactic "to suggest to rur
ll!come a forum t&gt;r Ill! resolution companies. Connecticut's suit competitors that tll!y keep ttl!
of virtually every reij or imagined charged that, beginning in the prtce of heavy oils low" - a move
grieVance agalllsf' ' IIE nation's mld1950's employees c1 vS:rtlm-~.
·--•·· ·~.., :'
petroleum industry that has sur- .ttrms "conlacted one anotll!r for
faced durtng Ill! past quarter of a the purpose ot fixing prices... oo
century.
gasoline marketed in the states of
The &lt;Efendants have included all New Jersey, Pennsylvania and
of ttl! country's major oil compan- Delaware."
ies- Exxon,.MobU, Sll!U, Olevron,
In the ensuing years, similar
Texaco, Atlantic Richfield, Sun, action was taken by CaUfomla,
Amoco, Unocal, Gul!, PhUI!ps ·and Oregon, Washington, Kansas
Conoco. Their accusers have been ·(which subsequently witlld~ew
ttl! attorneys general d sevat from ttl! Utigatlon) and Artzooa.
states stretching from Connecticut
In autumn 1975, a Calliornia
to Cai!fomia.
deputy attorney general received
The legal costs probably exceed the first of about 16 te!eph:lne calls
s:m million, with most d that "' from an anonymous Informant
money going to more than two "who Identified himself as a person
dozen law !Inns in Los Angeles, San . employed in ttl! petroleum industry
Francisco, San Diego, New York, for many years."
Washington,
Philad~!phia and
The whistle-blower never tn·
I
•
otll!r cities.
vided furtll!r identification, but told
The case has 'generated millions state law ent&gt;rcement ofttclals
of pieces ot paper. U the crtglnal "that tll!re was a group of
copies of the thousands of legal high-echelon executives from varmcuments oo file at Ill! U.S. ious oil companies who continually
·District Court here were placed oo communicated with each t11l!r
topd eachotll!r, the stack would be concerning ttl! pricing of petroleUm
more than 00 t1et high.
products."'
The lliegal activities ascribed to
According to the informant,
the on cornpll!lles Include consplra· ''vlrtually .all major and minor on
cies spaWI)ed by joint exploration corripanles" operating in tbe West
and production Vl!ltures, contrlvm ."wl!'e involved ln... this price
shortages deslgnm to maxlmlze Information exchange system" for
profits, and manipulation d trices the ~rpose d. illegally wwressing
and suw!Ies to destroy lndepenll!nt competition.
_
petro,eum marketers.
Indeed, qne 19ft/ Exxon Internal
Lawyers for the plaintiffs have memo produced durtng ttl! pro·
accused the oil companies of tracted legal proceed!nrs ftlted
I
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U.S. NO. 1 ROUND WHITE

that "would be to our corporate
advantage."
A 1963 ARCO Internal memo
showed that company was Jn.
formed . by Mobil of its pending
price changes several days before
they were officially announced and a 1974 Chevron lntetnal memo
indicated advance knowledge d
prtcing decisions to be made by
Gull, Sll!ll, Texaco and Mobil.

'

'~orget.lt, Buster, no substitutions on the power lunch.'~
.

'today in history
lfocsay Is Wednesday, Nov. 6, the 310th day of l98i with 511 to Alllnw.

:Jbe moon Is In Its last quarter.

!i11e morning stars are ·venus and Mars.

·

'i)le evening siars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
.)

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Potato

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Sale.... . . ...lo~~g
20-LB . BAG .. . $1.49--50-LB. BAG . . . $2.99

AVAILABLE ONL Y IN STOR ES WITH DEll / PASTRY SHOPPES
HOT FOOD S AVAI LA BLE 11 am TIL lpm DAILY

Berry's World ·

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Qaddafi ready tO .fa}} __.t_ac_k_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;~D_ale_Jt;_a_nA_t_ta
catiln, for lear that ooe c1lds many
enemies may !Xlison him.
The most serious coup attempt,
last August, got little publicity in the
Western media, but Its stgnlllcanci
was not lost oo Qaddafl·watchers In
the intelligen&lt;I' community. In ooe
of his all-too-frequent fits of I*Jue,
Qaddaft ordered his generals to
Invade Tunisia. Instead, they
mutinied.
It was only by Ill! skin of his teeth
that Qaddaft suiV!ved this attempt.
His loyal guar&amp;. including East
Germans, v.iere able to bah the
planes and tanks that the mutinous
olflc rs had ordered to attack
Thlpol!. At least 13 senior air brce.
c11lcers and ll army officers were
subsequently arrested .
Without Ill! loyalty c1 tiE mtutary
colleagues woo put him in !XJWer,
Qaddall is on a slippery slope. Just
how slippery was demonstrated by
tiE Sept. 1 anniversary celebration
of his 1969 coup. For the first time
ever, the great parade contained no
.mU!tary units, tilly a rabble of

... ,.

••.,.

Rose: 'Great' to be picked as UPI Manager of the Year

Another example; The same
Congress that submitted Ill! 14th
Amendment simultaneously
JI"'1
v!ded for racially segregated
schools In the District d Columbia.
Most of the states that ratlfled that
amendment followed the same
practice. Eighty years later, 17
states stul had segregated schools.

WASHINGTON - Col. Muam·
mar Qaddaft, ttl! desert fox wtJJ
has ruled Ubya with .increasing
lnstabutty since M, ts ltkely tl be
toppled by a mtlltary coup wttlin a
I
year.
During Ids 16 years in power,
Qaddaft has wtmne the (X'OVerb!al
nine-Uved cat. By our count he has
survived at least 22 attempts to
assassinate or otll!rw!se unseat
him. He has been nicked by a bullet
but has never been seriously
wounded.
Yet the time has nevEr been riper
for either a S!XJntaneous coup from
Ill! Inside or ooe orchestrated from
outside, according to our sources,
wtv Include Ubyans stu! in ttl!
•
country as well as In exile. The CIA,
in a recent top-secret evaluation,
ra
tes Qaddafi as "very
•
· On behall of ttl! stu&lt;Ent athletes, helped instill pride in the athletes vulnerable."
His physical condition may be as
roaches, faculty ' and adrnlnistra· which reflected in tll!lr attitude and
dedication toward Ill! game.
~n at Meigs Junior High School, I
precarious as his mental ll!aith.
For the record the eighth grade The CIA reports that Qaddafl has
&gt;+:&gt;uld like to express a sincere
'"''hank You" to aU ttl! people wtv team completed a ~1 season while ll!en Ingesting large arrounts c1
Worked so dellgently tl make the ttl! seventh grade finished at 5-1. sleeping pUis lately. His wife
Again an apprecla ttve "Thank oversees the desert dictator's medi·
1985 football season a great success.
You"
to everyone who helped wt
nie cleaning up d the stadium
area, purchasing new equipment, during Ill! season.
John Mora, Principal
painting and physical improveMeigs Junior High School
ments to the concession stand

Letters to the editor

mean in our time?" .Til! genius of
the Constitution, be says, "rests oot
in any static meaning It might have
had In a world that is dead and gone,
but Ill! · adaptabWty c1 Its great
prtnctple to cope will! current
problems and current needs."'

Brennan tsqu!tewrong,howev~r, .;
In exaggerating the difficulty in ·
determining "original intmtlon."
To cite a specific example, Ill!
framers and ratifying states clearly
saw nothing unconstitutional In
capital punishment as such. Til!
Fifth Amendment !tsell speaks of
"capital" crimes. BrEnnan takes
ttl! "fixed and tmmutable" view
that in forbidding "cruel and
unusual punishments.'' Ill! Eighth
Amendment lllday forbids capital
punishment. But In this view we see
not Brennan the Interpreter, but
Brennan the amender. He proposed
to substitute his own view c1
compassion social !XJilcy for Ill!
plain language d. the Constitution.
Who Is. arrogant here?

1'\IILME IO · t
"E"'

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CINCINN ATI (UPI ) - Pete
Rose, after just barely missing
being named National League
Manager of the Year by the Baseball
Writers Association of America,
says it feels "great" to win United
Press International's balloting for
the same honor.
"After fi nishing second in the

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ft'rA (£)19SS' fO~WO~ ~-11:LE~

cood taste, addrt&gt;Sslng Issues, not personalltiH.

to

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'Brennan right, wrong_....;..____Ja_me_s_J._K_ilpa_tnc_·k

The Daily Sentinel

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The Daily Sentinei- Page.:.,-3

• P.omeroy- Middleport, Ohio

· Wednesday, November 6, 1985

PLAIN, SOURDOUGH, WHOLE WHEAT
AND RAISIN

U.S. G()V'T

GRADE A
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Muffins .... . .

With The purcna~:~ked aoneless \

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PINT RETURNABLE BOTTLE, RC 100,
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T 111JV. t. ltl!i

00

English

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PLUS
DEPO SIT

Pak

11

�..
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy.:....Middleport, Ohio

·-

· Wednesday, November 6, 1985

.
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Wednuday,

The Daily Sentinel- Page ~5

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Scoreboard
Ohio~s

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3 3 0
4 4 0
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3 0
3 5 0
3 . I
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0
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Oborlbl

ALLTVC -

Seven members o1 the Meigs
Marauders'lootball team were chosen to the AII-TVC
team. ·Honored at the school's fall sports banquet
Monday night were, seated, left to right, DenJW Welsh

Weathers expected
to return to li~eup

CROSS COUNTRY - Two members o1 the Meigs Wch School !rOfl!l
AlJ...TVC squad·thhl faD. Wendl Kloes
1111!1 Rex Haggy were honored by lhe school Monday at the laD sports
banquet.

co(mtry team were chosen to the

.

GOlF - Meigs Wgh School pl~ed two members of Its golf team on
the rerently chosen AIJ...TVC team. Honored by the school Monclay
nlpt at the fall sports banquet were, from left, Parker Long and Rod
~rison-

-

,.

New Jersey voters approve .simulcast of races
TRENTON, N.J. tUPI) -New
Jersey residents voted Tuesday to
approve simulcasting of horse races
at tn;slate race tracks, reversing a
rulinJ by the state Supreme Court.
Under provisions of the constitutional amendment approved election day, top races UketheKentucky
Derby and Belmont Stakes .and
racei; from other ln·sta"tetracks wlll
on&lt;:e" again be broadcast to New
Jer"!!Y race courses.
TheraceswUibebeamedtoclosed
circUit televison scrwns and will be ·
available for betting.

Voters were approving the strnul·
casting question by a margin of 66
percent to :W percent, with 78
percent of Tuesday's votes counted
by early Wednesday.
During the 18 months simulcast·
lng was permitted, .officials estimated It pumped $11.4 mlllion into
the state's five tracks .
Simulcasting proponents said
without voter approval of the
measure, financially ailing Freehold Raceway and Atlantic City
Race Course would have been
doomed.

WINTER IS COMING •••

By RICH EXNER
BEREA, Ohio (UP!i - The
Cleveland Browns have been with·
out both the big pass play and wide
receiver Clarence Wea !hers the last
two weeks.
Weathers is expected to return to
action Sunday In Cincinnati, and he
hopes to bring with hhn the longpass
receptions that have made him the
Browns' big-play threat.
''I think Bernie (Kosar) Is a
big-play quarterback and that's the
type of receiver I am," Weathers
said.
"I'm not satisfied with catching a
20-yarder. !want to score."
Weathers caught passesf0r 68and
57 yards against the Houston Oilers
Oct.13. One week later, he injured a
hamstring against the Los Angeles
Raiders and has not played sln&lt;P.
The longest pass play the Browns
have had In Weathers' absence wa s
a 31-yard screen to running back
Earnest Byner.
Without the long pass. the
Browns' offense has sputtered,
scoring only one touchdown bt the
last two games while resorting to
running plays and short passes.
Paul McDonald, last year' s
quarterback who now is playing
behind both Kosar and Gary
Danielson, refused to find laull with
the play selection.
"Last year in the the first eight
weeks, we were a 'throw· it.&lt;fownthe,fleld' team. i\S a result . we had a
kit of Interceptions and sacks,"
· ' McDonald said.
Coach Marty Schottenhelmer
also defended his offense, saying
execution Is the key and Weathers
may prove to be the difference.
"We just haven't made any big
plays," Schottenheimer said. "We
need to make some big plays like we
did against Houston."
"The absen&lt;P of Clarence Weathers has adversely effected our
offense."
ThestatistlcsagreewlthSchottenheimer's thinking. Weat tl'rs averaged 29.4 yards on his 10 recepl lons.
The rest of the team averages ll.4.
" ! don't know what kind of
reputation I've gained ," Weathers
said. "But I hope I can take some
pressure oft the running game."

-Fiesta Bowl officials
are still looking
PHOENIX (UP! ) - Fiesta Bowl
officials, saying a number of teams
are-snll in"'therunntngtor a bid to the
New Year's Day game, announced
Tuesday they will be scouting 11
college football games this
weekend.
Hteadlngthe list aretwoPaciflc·10
Conference matchups lnvolvlhg
four of the five teams at the topofthe
standings. Bowl officials will be at
both the Washington-Arizona State
game at Tempe, Ariz., and the
UCLA-Arizona contest at Tucson.

ARVIN ELECTRIC HEATERS
110

v. &amp;220 v.

:PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

and Brad Robinson, and standing, left· to right,
Raymond Rider, J.R. Kitchen, Mike Chancey, Kevin
Meadows and Huey Eason. ·

By MIKE WED..
UPI Sports Wrller
The Los Angeles Lakers prepared
for Tuesday night's home opener
against the Cleveland Cavaliers
with speeches and ceremonies.
They should have stuck to tradition a I pre-game layup lines.
"We were playing a team hitting
45 percent," Laker coach Pat Riley
said after watching the Cavaliers
shoot 67 percent in upsetting Los
Angeles 129-111. "We wanted them
to beat us over the top. They did the
job in the trenches."
The !.akers, who celebrated last
season's NBA title with a ring and
banner ceremony before the game,
lost lor the first time this season
aiter four victories. The Cavaliers
notched their second victory against
four losses.
"It 's kind of exciting knowing
you're playing the best team In the
league," said Cavs gaurd John
Bagley, who scored 20 points and
added 11 assists. "We' re trying to
establish ourselves."
The Cavaliers sank their first 13
shots of the second quarter to take a
commanding 6542 lead. Edgar
Jones , who finished with 24 pobtts
and 12 rebounds, came of! the bench
to hit five shots In the quarter.

"You can't make mistakes
agalnstthem," Jones said. "We kept
our mistakes to a minimum
tonight." .
Cleveland maintained a big lead
through the rest ofthequartertakea
75-57 halftlrrie lead. The closest the
!.akers pulled In the third period was
91-75 wlth 5:511eft.
World B. Free added 20 pobtts for
the Cavaliers. Magic Johnson had23
points, 8 rebounds and 8 assists and
James Worthy scored ro points for
Los Angeles. Elsewhere In tbe NBA,
Utah beat Golden State 118-!ll,
Milwaukee routed San Antonio
1.26-97, Denver downed Atlanta
128-113, New Jersey defeated Washington 112-106. Houston topped
Portland 127·113, and Seattle edged
New York~.
Jazz liS, Warriors 00
At Salt Lake City, Adrian Dan tley
scored 27 points, rookie Karl Malone
grabbed 10 rebounds and Mark
Eaton blocked seven shots to power
Utah. Joe Barry Carroll led Golden
State with 26 points.
Bueks 126, Spurs 97
At Milwaukee, Ricky Pierce
scored 26 points to lead Milwaukee
to tts third straight victory. The
Bucks sealed the triumph In the
second quarter, outscoring tbe

l

t

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!)Fifteen Marshall seniors say ·rarewell to Fairfield Stadium Saturday
afternoon when the Thundering
Herd tackles East Tennessee in a
SOuthern Conference rontest vital to
Marshall's hopes of finishing In the
first division for the first thne.
Marshall, &amp;-2-1 overall, carries a
2·2·1 conference record Into the
skirmish . East Tennessee, 0.7-1
overall , stands ().5 bt the SC. The
Buccaneers came close to scoring a
big upset last week, leading
Kentucky 13-10 after three quarters
but succumbing 23-13.
Marshall's final game next week
is at Appalachian State, 3- 1 in the
conference and 5-3 overall. Although
the Thundering Herd has experienced an exhlllrating season and
chalked up its second straight
winning record for the first time In
two decades, the goal of finishing In
the conference's first division remains to be achieved.

,.

lead. Mike Mltchellled San Antonio
with 17 points.
Nuggets 128, Hawks 113
At Denver, Alex English scored 33
points to lead six Nuggets in double
figures. Mike Evans srored 18
points, 12 on four three-point shots,
to help Dever, 5-0, remain undefeated. The Hawks, 2-4. were led by
rookie Jon Koncak with 21 points.
Nets 112, BuDets 106
At East Rutherford. N.J., Buck
Williams scored 25 points and Mlke
Gminskl added 22 to pace New
Jersey. The Nets went on a 21-4
surge at the end ofthethirdperlodto
hand Washington ils third straight
loss. Jeff Ruland led the Bullets with
21 points.
Rockets 1.27, Trail Blazers 113
At Houston, Akeem Olajuwon
scored 41 points ;md grabbed 18
rebounds to lead the Rockets to their
fourth victory. Portland. 4-2, was led
by Klkl Vandeweghe wlt.h 28 points.
SuperSonics 84, Knlcks *l
At Seattle, rookie Xavier McDanlel scored 21 points and grabbed 14
rebounds to 11ft the ,Sonlcs. ·.Tom
Chambers added 15 pobtts and 11
rebounds, as the Knlcks fell to 0.6.
PatrlckEwlngledNewYorkwlth22 .
pbtnts.

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Wl!lhlnaton 8. Ollca«&lt; 4
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Montreal at MlnrlttOia. a::m p.m.
NY lalan*"t a1 Torol\to. 7::m p.m.
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Calpl')' 11 New Jer!Jl'Y, 7: ~p. m.

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Hai"'IOtd at Bolton, nfil'll
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NBA results
NATilN.U.IMJIIBTIW.L A880C.
I!'M&amp;ml Calfa a10t
Allllt&amp;le ....._

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Houston 127, Porrland 1IJ
Mllwautttt 126, s.n Amonlo 97
oenwr 12&amp; Atlanll113
Ulah ll8, Goldl!n Sl:lle 99
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Portlllld at Dalla.. II: .1) p.m.
Atlanta at Ptxlfhlx. t.ll p.m.
Sei!Hir at~ Statt". 'Mt::JI p.m.

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.....

.'

tull. Credit wiU be Jlvft'l carrier each

No subo&lt;rtpttou by m11l permitted In

_.....,......

tGWU where home carrier teTVIc~ ll
avaUable •

-·OIIIo
uw..u .....-·OIIIo
,............................11uo
13 w..u .................................. $14.116
26 w..u .................................. $29.12

52Weei&lt;J ............... ....... ......... ... I:IS.II "

26W..U ......·............................ $3t.:ll ,

.. ··;...·";...·..;...·";...
""-·"-·.._1&amp;9_.11....~..1
L.::a~w~..u=::..::;:·..::;:.. ·:...:;:;;,;

..
"

\

PIUClll

Tbo DaUy Sonttoel041 a 3. 6or 12 monlh

".''

BANQUET

f

Dally .......... .. ....................... 2:! cen1o
sUt»crtber• not detlri.DI to pay the car-

'

•
;

"Under lngel's Furniture"

~ Send addres• chanrs
to Tile Dolly Sentlael, Ill Court Sl.,
Po_,.oy. OhJo 45781.

ALLWAYS FRESH

'

f

rier may remit 1ft advance direct to

SlYIIST: Mtrri Amsbary
OWNER: Ma&lt; Mtdity

,-

New York, N.,. York 10011.

aiJJIICIIIP'ftON a.tn:s

AU PERMS, HAIR COLORING
&amp; HAIR CUTS
THROUGH DEC. 31

1

~ac·.

PubiLsbed every anernoon, Monday 1
through Frklay. Ill court St.. Primtroy. Ohio, by lhe Ohio V1lley Pub- '

''

$

The Daily Sentinel .•
(VIPSIU. .~

LEAR.

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
POMEROY, OH.
PH.992·2SS6

PKG.

TI'IUl8aclions

A Dlvllloo oJ lltdllmodta,

J

$ Q9
1

KENTUCKY BORDER

· (Earlier if you plan to
mail them.)

•

•

FRESH PORK

NHL resul18

9
9
1

BROUGHTON

'

0 •••• ....__.+00

''

,

(lNrland 11 Sltrammto. 'nlab1

..
•

Round Steak ••.•~~ .•

'' •
•

""'"""

$

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

,,

LA O!ppl'f'S 111t Hwsron. nl,dll

SPRING VAUEY PI.AZA • GAWPOUS .
ClOSED MONDAYS

992-2342

••

Dlillas at llrrlwr. n.rJ!t
LA l..alcfn at Utah, n.atat

PHOTOGRAPHY

CALL 992-3381

• •'

MllwauRf&gt; at Ntw York. nl«bl

••'

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AVE.

0

Oliciif;O at Nl'W J~ . nlj!l\1

•

CHRISTMAS
PORTRAITS

'

0

7 0
7 1

I

cw;..,..

l

suffered a season- ending knee
Injury In the VMI game.

ADOLPH'S-

.

•

Marshall to tackle East Tennessee

fPEC/Al OF THE WEEK
With

Spurs 32-17 to open a 6849 halftime

•

0

2 0

••• • ••
• • •' •

........
""""'"
.,

' •'

...,..lldeyeC.Iereaoe
0
7 0 0
Butfton
1 0
I 0
WUmlnglon
I 0
I 0
3 3
I 3 0
3
0
MMCht&gt;slf'l'
I
0
0
3
0.
0
1
Dell"""
01-.
Central State
8
0
0
Dlykln
7
0
Alaoo
6
0
0
4
0
Yo.u-own ~&amp;It'
0
lfuam
.1
0
John Carroll
7
0

Flbdlay

Cavaliers spoil Lakers' party

.,._.. +----... + Ot.&gt;

.. STAY. WARM THIS YEAR WITH
•
•

I
I

Ohio WE!'!IIeyan

the lall sports banquet." Pictured, from left lo rtght,
are Cindy Soulsby, Debbie Wyatt and Beth Blaine.

•

•' •~ !
' •• •00 '2 '' •

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

:CHEERLEADERS - Meta's three senior cheerleaden were honored by lhe school Monday night at

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY•

'•

0
0

I
1
I

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH .

8

3
2 3 0

Indiana

0
0

4
I

0 7 0

ll1b&gt;ols

STORr HOURS"
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM · .

0

I

I
1
1
1

We Reserve The Richt To
limit Quantities

' ,0I 0
•' 2 0
'3 '' 00
'7 •0
0

••
• '' •
•
'' ' ""o•
.....
•• ••
3
•
' ' •
•••
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Billldwtn-Walie
WIIIE'nbE!rl

MariP!Ia
Captlal
OtlloNoMhPm
Oltm&gt;ob&gt;

' '

•
'
' •

''
''
'
I 'Mount Union
-~-c
&amp; 0
Wn1erllMICh
O.U Stale
'!blob

Mrh. Sl

•
•
•
•

..

•

PAPER TOWElS

3/·Sl

ROLL

, limit 3 Por CustOmer
,
Gatti Only "At Powtl's . .nt111rlttt
Offtr Expirts Sat, ""··7, 1915
'

. -....

TIDE DETERGENT
IJ7 OZ.

$4 99
I

limit' 1 1'tr (ust01111r
Goo4 Only At Powtlt's s.nnartttt
Offer Expirtt Set. Now. 7, 1915

MAXWEU HOUSE

COFFEE ·
3 LB. CAN

S629

limit 1 Por Customor
• Goed \)Illy At Powell's Supormarlttt
Offtrbpirts Sat. Nn. 7, 1985

••••

DOMINO SUGAR •
SLB. BAG

$149

Limit 1 Per Customer

Good Only At Powell's Supermorlltt
OHtr bpiru Sat. No•. 7, 1915

•'

•

�The Daily·
Sentinel
.

•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
•PRICES ·EfFECTIVE WEDNESDAY, NOV. 6 THRU SATURDAY,
NOVEMBER 9, 1985oUSDA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED
•NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL ERRORS .
•GOOD AT OHIO VALLEY, GALLIPOLIS , AND BIG BEND F08DLANDS

(

.

"':

By.The Bend

. .,. _

Yredhesday, November 6. 1985

Page-6

.
Calendar ( happemngs
'

Beat of the bend

There are honest folks

WEDNESnAY
IVIIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club wll meet Wednesday
afternoon at the home of Mrs.
Chester Erwin. Mrs. James Clatworthy wDI review the hook,
"Giants in-the Earth" by Rolvaag.
For roll call members are comment
on "The Frontier."

By BOB HOEFLICH
Boot Shop In Middleport.
Sentinel Slalf Writer
Todd Spaun, 14, son of Dick and
You may be more alert than I am
Betty Spaun, Ra·
(I hope so) - 001 I can'tlmagi1Je
cine, has been
· that November Is moving right
hospitalized at
along - where does time to?
Children's Hospi·
If you would Uke to be a do It
tal in Columoos
YOUI'l&gt;l'if Chrtsbnas person the
and Is undl'rgoing
Metis County Cooperative Exlell·
treat ment for
sion Service has planned a holiday
leukemia. Todd is
workshop to get you started.
prl'tty homesick and needs cards
Some quick and easy Ideas on
and letters from home.
hoUday decorations, crafts and gifts
You can help out. The addrl'ss is
wiD he shared with you during the
Todd Spaun, Room 5006, Children's
workshop which has been set for
Hospital. 700 Children's Drive,' next Wednesday, Nov. 13, at the
Columoos, Ohio 43200.
extEnsion service office on Mul·
berry Heights, Pomeroy.
Diane Walker of Rutland can
vouch that there 8rl' still honest
Class tJmes are 10 a.m. to noon; 1
people around.
to 3 p.m. or 7 to 9 p.m. and
Thursday night - that was the
participants wiU make three craft
evening of the moonlight sale In
Items to take home and wlll pick up
Pomeroy and there were people some other Ideas which they might
everywhere - Diane lost her want to try. Registration fee Is $2
billfold In Elhet1eld's. It was found
and that can he paid on the day of
by Maxine Tucker, Pomeroy, who
the class. However, pre·
got In touch with Diane and the registration Is needed m Ia ter than
bliHold was rPtumed Friday. En· Nov. 12 so that adequate supplies
cou raging In lhls day and age, to can be ~rchased .
say the least.
If you're Interested, you'd really
Kim Nelson and Ruth Ann and
Tammi Taylor wtlllll' staging their
annual country and Chrlsbnas
craft show from Nov. 8 through
Nov. 17 at F1atwoods. Signs will be
posted on the road to mark the way
and hours wlll be 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, 10 a.m. to
3 p.m. on Saturday and 1 to 5 on
Sunday.

Thl' Rutland Firl' Departrnl'nt
hasSI'tNov.21forltsannualturkey
supper - always a biggte lor the
department - at the Ruthlnd
Grade School with serving to start
at 5 p.m.
Dinners wUI Ill' $4 and advance
'
tickets are
now available
the
Rutland
Department
Storeat and
MUter Brothers In Rutland; the
New York Clothing House and G. &amp;
J . Auto In Pomeroy and at Dan's

Service meeting
Meigs County Girl Scout service
unit meeting will be held Thursday
at 7 p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church, Pomeroy. Speaking at the
meeting will he a representative of
the Community Action Agency on
the food pantry. New leaders wlll be
Invested and a craft and games
workShop will follow.

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Revival at Keno
Christian Church, Thursday
through Nov. 10, 7: llp.m. wllhDave
'lYsinger of VIrginia Beach, Va.,
speaking.

REV1VAL SET -1be Rev. and Mrs. Ben ,Cillbum, Bedford, Ind. will
be oonductlng revival services at the Pomeroy Wesleyan Holiness
Church, Nov. 12-17, at lbe church located m State Route 143, one-baH
mOe olf Route 7 by·pass. 'lbe Rev. David Ferren, pastor, Invites the
public to attend.

Pop bottle drive
Pomeroy Elementary Cheerlead·
ers wU he holding a door-to-door pop
bottle drive In the Pomeroy area
Satunlay 9 a.m to noon. Residents
wUI be asked to donate pop bottle.
Proceeds will go to the cheerleaders. For another time pickup
residents may call 992·6598 or
992-21M.

better hustle, however, since each
class size Is limited to the ftrst 15
who register. If you need any
additional Info just c~ll the exten·
slon office, 992-6696.

Craft sale
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy, will have a
crafts fair, Friday 1 to8 p.m. and 10
a.m. to5p.m.Saturday; handmade
crafts, candy, plants, for sale by al
area craftspeople: door prizes.
Food available.

Monday, of course, Is Veterans
Day and you can expect various
public offices Ill be closed In
observance ol the day - knowing
that might just saveyru some effort
and energy.

SPLA.S HI
IT'S TIMBERLAND TIME AGAIN.

through t.hecold wetrni8ecyofb8d

The Glllio Cllristilo School will not dis·

criminote oo the bosls &lt;I roce. color. or
ethnic ori&amp;inin the hirin1 of its ctrtHitd or

non -&lt;trtlfltd pmonntl.

FREE

MUFFLER

12·17 oz.
CANS

INSPECTION

If your muffler's making way too
much noise drive into The Muftler
Bay and get'a free, professional in·
spection for muffler leal&lt;s, holes,
damage, broken hangers or clamps ·
and for weak or corroded pipes. If It
needs replacing, we'll Install a
tough durable Walker" Tru-FI~.
muftl~r at a very competitive price.,

DINNER BELL WHOLE

BOB EVANS

Boneless
Hams

Pork

Sausage

~.169

~.169
ROLL

•REGULAR •SELF-RISING

WALKER®·

Martha White
Flour

they're Timberlands. So why not step up to &amp; paJ.r of
'Ttmberla.nd'e t:.oclq?

AYAIUIU IN LEAlHEI
AND SUEDE UATIIII
THE OLD SHOE STOlE

99

WITH THE IIEW 1001

~----------1

....., ordtrld, or pHIIc sdrool district
iR"Iotld, dtscopt10n.
·

POMEROY - Mary Shrine of
White Shrine 37 wUI meet Friday, 8
p.m., at the masonic temple.

say they're overbuilt. But then t h&amp;t'e w.hy

the Eastern Star will meet Tuesday
at the Masonic. Temple. Past
d warder
matrons, past pa1rons, an
will be honored. Officers are to wear
chapterdresses.

The Glllio Christiln Scllool rtcN~s 111d
odonHs students &lt;I lilY riCO, color, cr llhnlc orllin to oil the rlchb, privloces. If~
pillS and Kti¥Hits. In odditioR, tho
sdloot will not di1crirooitllt on tht irllb ~
roct, color, llllnlc orifnln ldtnlnislrltion
of its tclorclliOtUI policies, sdroilrs~ps­
/lollll/'" wiYtn, tduuti0111l propn
and lltrftlies/tllraeu"leuilr octiv~lts. In
ld~ion, the school is not intandtd to be
-.. llttmllin to ...rt or odmlolstllllvo

Green Giant
Vegetables

fort or Timberland boots? Every p&amp;lr IB thoroughly
lnBulat.ed and &amp;beolutely waterproor. Some even

Harrtsonvtlle Chapter, Ordl'r of

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

7 VARIETIES

MUFFLER INSTALLATION
SPECIALISTS

OESmeering

1 imow that Into 1111' some rain
some rain must fall - oot does it
have to Ill' so much so manydaysln
keep
Uln
a row? Oh well '"'"
sm g.

GAWA CHRISTIAN
SCHOOL - SEIYING THE
TII·COUm &amp;lEA

MIDDLEPORT - Evangelist
Herb Inscoe will speak at the Word
of Faith Church, Middleport, Friday
at 7: lJ p.m. There wUI he special
singing by the Pleaant Valley trio
and the public Is invited to attend.

RUTLAND~Adancewtllheheld

Friday night, 8 to 11 p.m., at the
Rutland Civic Center with music by
Itomlc Sounds. Admission $3 per
couple and $2 single. Everyone
welcome.

.:,

Hartley
~;;;:::;=;,::;;.;::.-::::;;?·:.:;• Shoes
-" • ,. ,. f', ,

j'

'

A..

~

lllillll

21D UST .. IN
POMIIOY
"1-1171

•

~C

&amp;A

25 LB .
BAG

AUTO REPAIR
PH. 949-2777

ARMOUR LARD 26 lb

3'0 5th St Racine, Oh.

PAIL $ ,

2.99

DINNER BELL '

~~

' SUPERIOR

Smoked
Picnics

·Frankies

IN'86WITH
DISCOUNT-OPTION

1;oz.99•

I

PKG.

•

LB.

age

CONSOIJDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic Subsidiaries)
.
State Bank No. 223X

FOODLAND

Brown &amp; Serve
Rolls

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company
Federal Reserve District No. 4
ol Pomeroy, Meigs County, In the State ol Ohio at the dose ol business m September 30, 1985.
ASSETS
Cas h and balances due from depository lnstsltutions:
.
Nonlnterest-beartng balances and c~rrency and coin .. ............. .. .... . 3,040,000.00
Securlt les ........... .... ... .. ..... ... ...... ........ .... .. ,.. .. .... .......... ...... .......... .....20,746,000.00
Federal funds sold and secur ities purchased under
agreement s Ill resell .. .. ...... .. ... ......... ,.. .. ... .. ................ .... ..... ... .. ...... 775,000.00
Lo8115 and lease flnaneing receivables
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income .. ... .18,939,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses .. .......108,000.00
Loans a nd leases, net of unearned Income,
••
,
allowance, and reserve .......... .. ..... .... ...... ... ........ ...... ... .. ... ..... .....18,831,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ... .. ........ ...... .. .376,000.00
Other real estate owned .. .... .... .. ..... .. ...... .. .......... .. ... ...... .. ... .. ...... .. ... ... .. 40,000.00
Other assets ..... .. ........... ..... ... ..... ..... ... .. ...... .. ... ...... ...... ... ...... .......... ..... 789,000.00
Tota l assets .... ... .. .... ..... .. ..... .. .. .. ... ..... ... ... ..... ..... ... ....... .. ...... ..... .. .... 44,597,000.00
LIABIUTIES
Deposits:
In domestic ofllces ... ... ............. ............ ........ ... ....... .... .... .... ....... ..... .40,361,000.00
(I ) Nonlnterest·bearlng .. ... ..... .. ... ....... ...... .... .. . 4,76(),000.00
(2) Interest-hearing ............ .. ..... ... .. ... .... .. ..... .. 35,601,000.00
Ot her liabilities ........... ... ..................... .. .......... .. ......... ..... ......... ...... ..... 555,000.00
Total lia bilities ... ...... ...... .. ............. .... .. .... ...... .. .. .. .. ... .. ... .. ......... ... .... 40,916,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock . ... ..... ..... ......... .... ... .. ..... .. ..................................... ..... 400,000.00
Surplus .. ......... :. ::....... .... :... .... .... .... .... .... ....... ... ..... ···· ··... · · ... · · ·.. .... .. · · ... 600,000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves .... ..... ...... ... .......... ...... .... ........ 2,681,000.00
Total equity capltal ....... .. .. ..... .. ........... ................ .......... ............... ... . 3,681,000.00
Total liabilities, Umlted· llfe preferred stock, and equity capit al. ....... 44,597,000.00

'::&gt;

PLYMOUTH CARAVELLE

RENT A

POWER PACKAGE INCWDES:

DII'Pit llllli ·

""ltBHI.. IIIhiDI

SAVE

'

'-----~~------------~.----------------~,

ROME, RED. or
GOLDEN DELICIOUS

Apples

MEDIUM SWEET

~~

v

Yellow
Onions

Ice

S2!~

1

.

I , Roger w. Hysell, Cashier , of til&lt;' above named bank do hereby declare that
this Report of Condition has bl'en prepared In conformance wl th the Instructions Is·
sued by the Board of Governors olthe Federal Reserve System and the State Bank·
tng Aut hority and Is true to the best ol my knowledge and belle!.
Roger W. Hysell

We, the undersigned directors·, attest to the correctness of this Report o!Condi·
lion and declare thalli has been examined by us and to the best o! our knowledge
and belief ha s been prepared In conformance with the Instructions Issued by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State Banking Author·
lty and Is true and .correct.
RICHARD C. FOLLROD
LESlJE F. FULTZ- DIREcrORS
FERMAN E. MOORE

10 oz.
PKGS.

BAG

"

, .

$SOOOFF
COUPON

PEPSI COLA

lhls c:OtJpon anutles the bearer to S5.00 off
lt1e regular S14 ,09 rental cl a

CAII'ET MAll: "STEAM" MAalf
OFFER EXPIRES NOV. 9. 1985

COME IN lODAY!
GET THE CAR FOR YOU AND SAVE!

0

( 11 r y'&gt;kt
Plymouth

992·6421
'i

Middleport, Oh.

oz.

BTLS .

I~!.' I II$

~ · "r

Cooper
Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge, Inc.
399 So. Third

16

STORE NAME AND AOOIIESS

00014 \1

•

MT. DEW, PE~SI FREE
DIET OR REGULAR

$

•
•

29

•

•

Plus
Depo si t

~

s.c;~·~~

Limit 2
UflER'IY

1886-1986

..-~ ~· - \

..
'

•

Additional Purchases *1 .69
•

�' .
Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-MiddlePQrt, Ohio

r kson ... - - Continued
from page 1
JUC
------

well as allowing the jail to he
rropPned, but layoffs once rrore
could become a possiblllty in Ught &lt;t
Tuesday's defeat.
."We'll just have to wait and see,"
Michael said of any future ·
furloughs.
AI; the eleclion outcome became
apiiarent late Tuesday night,
though, one employee &lt;tth9.rounty
auditor's office said she expects to
he on her job only untU February'
19l'Ai.

"The sheriff's cruisers are worn
out, and deputies need walkietalkies," lamented Michael. "Out
emergency medical ambulances
need replaced. The courthouse and
jail need new heating plants and
pain ted."
Defeat was made all the worse.
sa id Wyant. bY the fact that federal
revenue-sharing money will be lost

next yearbecauseoflt.
"The 'people jusl don't seem to
care," she said.

Urge ...
Continued [rom page l
would suffer financially from this
amendment. Tehre are some who
!depend entirely on this com pen sa·
lion [or their survival. We should all
call our Congressman and let him
know that we oppose any tampering
with veterans disability
compensation.
"Since this measure is to come
before the House of Representatives
at any time. it is Important that we
call Congressman Clarence Muter,
phone 200-22a-5131, immediately
and express our opposition to this
amendment," Cundiff stated.

The Daily Sentinei- P-aQe-9

Wednesday, November&amp;. 1985

.

Dems sweep Virginia, GOP claims New Jersey
By ARNO[J) SAWISLAK
general and Douglas Wilder lieutenUPI Senior Editor
ant governor. Terry was the first
VIrginia, once a rock of tradition woman and Wilder the first black
in a sea of change, has shed Its ever to win statewide office in
deep-dyed conservative political, Virginia.
image overnight by electing a black
In Virginia, with 97 pPrcent of the
and a woman to two of Its highest precincts reporting, BalUes, had
statepfflces.
721,341 or 55 pereent of the vote,
New Jersey re-elected Republi- Republican Wyatt Dlirrette had
can Gov. Thomas Kean with a 5$2.368 or 45 pPrcent.Terry had
thundering landslide
that also gave 791,723 or 61 percent; Republican
.
the C.OP control of the state W.R. O'Brien 497,351 or 39 pPrcentAssembly In the only other state- .Wilder had 665,459 or 52 pPrcent;
wlde election in off- year balloting Republican John Chlche$ter had
Tuesday.
618,111 or 48 percent.
Democrat Gerald Baliles won the
In New Jersey,
with only today,
a few
Virginia governorship handily, preciricts
left unreported
leading a Democratic sweep that
elected Mary Sue Terry attomey

.

786,432-vote lead over the underft nanced Shapiro.
Kean outpolled Shapiro by
1,359,334 to 572.002 to become the
first Re{!Ubllcan returned to the
New Jersey's governor's olflce
since 1949. Statewide Republican
Party olllclals quickly began toutIng the popular governor as a
possible candidate for the vice
presidency in 1988.
The Virginia and New Jersey
results meant the Democrats wut
hold 34 governorships and the

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

SHIIKANT VAIDYA, M.D.

PH• (614) 992 • 72 70

Accounting
- Internal Control
- Tax Planning
- Sales Analysis

-Computeriz~

•URINARY TRACT INFECTION •INFERTILITY
•IMPOTENCY
OFFICES AT:
l'ltasant Valley Hospital
Jackran General Haspit~:.
675-6060
304-302-5650
By AppointtMnt

-

Payroll Processi ng
Federal &amp; State Reports
Profit &amp; Loss Statements
Financial Statements

THE PROFESSIONAL SERVICE FOR A
SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS

..

PRODUCE

· SKYLINE LANES

ST. IT. 7

OUR SERVICES INCLUDE

ADULT &amp; PEDIATRIC UROLOGY

Veterans Memorial Hospllol
Nov.5
Admissjons - Inez Wemmer,
Pomeroy; Leota CoopPr. Syracus,e; •
Timothy ljearhs, Pomeroy; Evelyn ·
Mains, Middleport.
Dlschargt&gt;i - WU!tam Barnhart,
Veleeta Rowe, Homer Smith, John
DIU.

ATTENTION SENIOR CITIZENS

ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PROCESSING
618 EAST MAIN_STREET
POMEROY. OHIO 45769

Hospital news .

r.;::;:;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;:~~~~~~;;;~

::n::~~~~r::~::::

A SOLID ALTERNATIVE

Republicans 16 going Into the 1986
elections.

.

IIANAUGA

IS FORMING A SENIOR CITIZENS
LEAGUE FOR ANYONE
·55 AND OLDER
BEGINNING WED., NOV. 13, 1·5

TRUCKLOAD DATES &amp; HOURS

SPECIAL SENIOR RATES

NOVEMBER 7th, 8th &amp; 9th
' · THURS., FRI. &amp; SATURDAY
HOURS: 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.

JOIN THE TURK E Y ROLL
PHONE 446-3362 FOR MORE I..FORMAnON

-------------~------------.'..••..
JUST

IN

TIME

FOR

&lt;

CHRISTMAS

.

Ingels Furniture &amp; Jewelry's

7™

l I 2 PRICE

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Pomeroy~Middleport,. Ohio

: Page-10- The Daily Sentinel

Fami~ mOOicine

Wednesday; Novem~ 6.1985

Collese rl Osteopathic, Medicine
Question: How does my body

process chemicals from things Uke
plUs?
Answer: Your body doesn't know
the difference between manma.:le
and natural compounds or between
useful and harmful chemicals. In
all cases, It reacts in the same
general way - It brea~s down

matter, uses ~me lor energy
production and excretes the rest.
When yoo take a blood pressure
pill, !or example,ltdlssolves In your
stomAch and Intestine. Before
reaching l he target lor controlling
high blood pressure, the solution in
which the pill dissolves must pass
through several membranes.
One of the first barriers to cross Is
the Unlng that separates the
contents of the intestinal tract !rom
the blood strea m. This lining Is

largely composed d tat cells, and
molecules of the chemicals In the ·
blood pressure pill that dissolved
easUy bt fats wU! now treely
through the fatty portions of the
Intestinal tract. Other molecules,
however, dissolve more readily In .
water than In lat. These molecules
Will pass down the intestines ~nd be .
excreted.
Question: What happensa!!erthe
chemicals are absorbed by the
blood stream?

Question : How long do chemicals
remajn active In the body?
Answer: Some dtemicals are
reJ110Ved from the body In minutes;
others take weeks. Usually chemi·
cals stored In fat take longer to be
processed and excreted . .
For example, some sleeping plUs
are }Ong•ac'tlng and stay In the body
tor 12 to 24 !JKJurs'' while so~
penicillin Is ex~reted In $lx to eight

SlindereUa
Dixie Bowls lost the most weight
and the runner·up was Rhonda
Roush at the Tuesday night meeting
of Slinderella at Mason. Maxine
Jordan was the top loser and Cindy
Aelkcr was the runner-upat the Five
Points class on Wednesday. JoAnn
New 50me Is lecturer and members
are 'lx!lng accepted Into oothclasses.

Pythian Sisters
Rockland Temple 615, Pythlan
Sisters, hosted the dlstrtct convention held at the Long Bottom
Community Building recently. Sis·
ters ci the Wilkesville and Gallipolis
Temples, along with officers and
dlgnatarles from across the state
attended the convention.
Alta Ballard, district deputy,
presided at the conventkln and
extended a welcome to Sheila
.Boren, Findley, grand chief; Julia
Burton, CirclevUle, grand junior;
Pauline Trickey, Cincinnati, grand
protector; Diana Reed. Stoutsville,
past grant chief; Beverly Hammond, Columbus, grand guard;
Betty Reynolds, past grand chief of
Seven MOe; Eunice Harne, past
grand chief, and her husband,
Frank, Pataskala; Comer Wood,
past grand chancellor, and his wife,
Jane, district deputy, Wwanton;
Oral Storts, district deputy, and his
wife, C311al Winchester; Kenneth
Bartillemew, grand prelate and hls
'wife, Pansey, Groveport; Willard
;Ruoff, Harr!sbu rg, gra nd
cltancellor.
Following the dinner one
members was given the Grand
degree which entitles her to
·represent her home temple at the
' Grand Temple session In
September.
At the evening session, five
candidates were brought Into the
.order In rttuatUstlc form.
WUkesvUle Temple wUI host the
1986 conventkln. Refreshments
. were served.

with Kathy Johnson at the plano.
Mrs. Purtell read a poem, "Wants
and Needs; Dos and Don'ts" and .
Virginia Wyatt had devotions on
"Home and the Woman".
It was noted that the Men and
Women's Fellowshp wUI meet on
Nov. 18 at the Middleport Church of
Christ for . a potluck dinner. A
donation was given on the oven for
the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
Camp. A revival at the Pomeroy
Ch\lrch was announced for Nov.
11).15 with Gus Andrews· to be the
speaker.
Mrs. Purtell gave a summary of
officers over the past ten years with
special recbgnltion to the 1985
officers.

Rutland garden

PartiCipation In the Christmas
flower show of the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Association, Nov. 23
and 24, at the Senior Citizens Centzr
was planned when the Rutland
Garden Club met Tuesday night at
the home of Pearle Canaday.
"The Greatestho! Gifts" Is the
theme of the show. Classes were
discussed and memters assigned
for arrangements. Club members
are to provide cookies, candy and
sandwiches,
Binda Diehl reproted on a trip to
the Bob Evans Farm taken byher
and Perl Canaday and Neva
Nicholson, It was noted thai Mrs.
Canday, Mrs. Diehl, and Mrs.
Nicholson tended the locus meeting
held In Athens and Mrs, Canaday
reported on that '
Pauline Atkins, Mrs. Diehl, Mrs.
Nicholson, Ann Elzabeth Turner,
Mrs. Canaday, Eva Robson, and
Rolx!rta Wilson attended the regional meeting at Rio Grande at
which time It -was noted that. the
Rutland Club received the' award for'
the "Outstandln Garden Oub In
Region 11," The club also received a
supertor rating on program book,
excellenl on publicity book and
excellent on flower show. It was
noted that the spring regional
Hope Baptist
meetlligwlll be held inMelgs County
AprU 19, and that a spring focus
A fellowship dinner with a note meeting wUI be held at the grange
burning ceremony was held follow· hall,May3.
'Ing a recent worship service at the
It was noted that Mrs. Atkins,
Hope Baptist Church, Middleport. Mrs. Nicholson and Eva Robson
Dale Colburn showed slides of the
attended the regional board meet·
Chapel's renovation over the past lng held at Chester, with Mrs.
·seva-al months,
Robson being appointed regional
At a recnet meeting of the salesperson for the garden club
Women's Missionary Union, sev· convention to be held In Cincinnati,
:era! &lt;;Ommunity projects were July 23 an 24.
discussed. There were readings on
It was noted that Ruby Diehl,
·missionaries, at home and abroad, Binda Diehl, Mrs. Canaday, Mrs.
and an exchange lor secret sisters. Atkins, and Marcia Denison had
.Refreshmetns wwere served In the furnished flower arrangements for
telbwshlp room to Mrs. Mary churches durlng the month.
Bryan, Roseann Bailey, Mrs. JuanPlans were made to J:ll t new bulbs.
Ita Griffith, Mrs. Avis Lawson, Mrs. In the planters In the village. New
Held! J. Smith and Eugia Johnson.
program books were distributed
Juanita and Gary Griffith re- and It was announced that the club
cently hosted a weiner roast and members wUI tour the Stahl
hayride at thl'lr Eagle Ridge Road Nursery on Dec. 6. Oct a Ward and
home, Attending were the Rev. and. Miss Diehl thanked memlx!rs for
Mrs. Dave Bryan, Anne and Dale Dowers and cards during their
Colburn, Avis Lawson, Helen hospitalizations.
McClellan, Roseann, Joey and BUly
Dorothy Woodard, program
Ballev Tina and Richard Wolfe, chairman, introduced Margaet
Chrts' 'and Brian Dixon, Shannon Belle Weber who gave a parper of
Scott, Randy, Heidi and Ashley terrariums ,using miniature plants.
Smith, and J ason, Jarred and Held! Miss Dhehl had a pape·un peren·Bryan.
nials for long run color, and Mrs.
Woodard on persnnlals, the how to's.
Preceptor chapter
Horticultu re hints were given by
Mrs.
Robson, and Mrs. Atkins had a
Members of the Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi demonstration on making con.
Sororlty, enjoyed an ali-day trlp to rnhusk roses. She also displayed an
the Amish Country, They visited arrangement using cornhusk roses,
Suga rcreek, Walnut Creek, Berlin An arrangement of mums was
and Millersburg, and tou~ an brought by Binda DiehL
Deyotlns by Mrs. Canaday were
authentic Amish fatm, home and
barns. The group enjoyed a dinner entlteld "An Adventure" with
at the Ocr Dutchman and visited scrtpture from John 3. The creed
and collect were given and
many shops durtngtheir outlng.
Those on the tour were Janet memlx!rs answered roll call by
Theiss, Norma Custer. Oarlce naming a favorite autumn tree,
Krautter. Maidie Mora, Jane Wal· Officers' reports were given and
ton, Rosie Sisson, Donna Jones, Ann refreshments served.
Rupe, Velma Rue, Betty Ohlinger,
Reva Vaughan, and Ruby Baer.

I

Fellowship

'

Officers were elected at therecent
meeting of the Women's Fellowship
of the Meigs County Churches of
Christ held at the Bradbury Church.
Elected were Eileen Bowers,
president; Martha Wright, vice
president; Phyllis Gilkey, second
vice president ; Dreama Pickens,
secretary; Jane Hazelton, treasurer; Eleanor Hoover, card chair·
man, and Ida Murphy, news
reporter. Installation wUI take place
In December· at the Bradford
Chu rch.
Marge Purtell was song leader
1

'

Psalms 132 and PhU.I2,

Hospital auxiliary

Better Health Club

A bake sale was planned for Nov.
22 In the Veterans Memortal
Hospital lobby when the Auxiliary
met recently. Juanita Norman
presided at the meeting. Next
meeting will be held at 1p.monNov.
26in the conference room.

Betty Conkle and Lculse Bartels
hosted a recent meeting d the Rock

Grange
Grange members !rom Meigs
County have returned from the 113th
annual session of the Ohio State
Grange which was held at the
Holiday Inn, Hudson.
Pauline Atkins, Meigs County
Pomona Grange master. attended
the session as the elected delegate
!rom Meigs County. Mrs. Atkins,
former deputy, served on the public
affairs committee and was part of
'the voting group at the meeting.
Becky Rife and Kevin Napeir,
Meigs County youth princess and
prince, pprtlclpted In the youth
pageant on Sunday. Rife was also a
candidate for the degree rt Flora,
and In the grange quiz, Kevin was In
the top 10 prince contestants.
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan,
Meigs County deputy master and
junior deputy, were In attendance.
At the meeting discussions · were
held concerning legtslatlon of inter·
est Ia grange members and sugges·
tlons for the good of the order. A
resolution submitted by a Meigs
County Pomona Grange committee
of Chester King, EldonBarrowsand
Arthur Crabtree, concerning hunt·
lngon Sunday, was presented tot he
delegate body, and an ' overall
recommendations calllng lor abo!·
tshlng hunting on Sunday will be
presented to the state legislature.
An officers'- conferenre wiD be
held at the Rock Sprtng5 Grange hall
Nov. 11 at 7:30p.m. when the year's
ivork will be planned. Deputy
Master Mendal Jordan and other
officers will havP charge.

Job's Daughters
'
Julie
Byer was Installed as
directress of music, and Mike
Walker, promoter of fraternal
relations, at the Monday night
meeting ci Bethel 62, International
Order of JOb's Daughters, held at
the Middleport MasoniC Temple.
Sherri Sisson presided at the
meeting. Mike Buskirk, associate
guard, was Introduced. Melalne
Arnold, senlorprincess,reportedon
the reat!irmatlon Sunday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Plans
were made lor a bak~ s~ e and to
participate In the Order of Eastern
Star Installation on Nov. 15.
Holiday activities were discussed
and will Include a caroling party.
Tree ornaments wIll be sold by the
group. Participation In the "adopt"
a grandparents program was
planned, Initiation was announced
for Monday night at the temple with
a practice to be held at 2 p.m.
Sunday.

Alpha Omicron

Theresa Tucker, director of the
Community Assault Prevent ion
Service, Meigs GalUa and Jackson
Counties, talked on "Personal
Safety, Personal Assa ult Preven·
tion" at the recent meeting of the
Alpha Omicron Chapter, Delta
Kappa Gamma held at the LaSalle
Restaurant.
Mrs, Tucker who has a back·
ground as an early childhood
specialist, community activitis, and
free lance educator, presented
Information on how children can be
safe. She give specific techniques for
precaution and defense against
personal assault In the street, home
and In the car. In conclusion, Mrs.
Tucker gave basic procedure to use
In reporting an assault.
Fay Sauer had the Invocation
preceding the dinner with Lee Lee
providing dinner music on the
Rutland PTO ·
antique plano. Jean Ward extended
PIIVls for the annual fall festival to a welcome to · the 45 member
be held on Nov. 15 at the Rytland attending from Meigs, Jackson and
Elementary School were made at a Vinton Counties. Donna Jenkins
recent meeting of the Rutland PTO. spoke on Issue I. Next meeting wlll
The kltchen.wU beopenfordlnner be Nov. 25.
Altendlng from Meigs County
from 6 to 7 p.m. with games to be
were
Mary V. Reibel, Rosalie Story,
held from. 7 to 8: 30p.m. Margaret
Rebecca
Zurcher, Nellle Parker,
Johnson and Judy Eblin are the
Ethel Chapman, ,Ann Webster,
ways and means chairman.
Presiding officers were Lady Margaret Parsons, Christie Rouse,
Davis, pres ident; DannyT!UJs, vice Joan Hayes, Donna Jenkins, Marjopresident; Kay Frederick, lreas· rie Fetty, Marlnda Young, Nan
Moore, Lee Lee, Carolyn Snowden,
urer, and Kathy Rice, secretary.
An open house was held following Dorothy Woodard, Eleatrlce Rinethe meeting, Thesecondgradehada · hart, Olive Page, Anna Turner,
program on Christopher Columbus. Fern Grimm, Fay Sauer', EmUy
Sprague, and Robert Wilson.
Refreshments we!) served.

Springs Better Health Oub held at
the Conkle home.
The community halloween party
was discussed and a donation from
the Rock Sprtngs Grange noted,
A thank you note was read from
Louise Folmer for remembrances
during her hospitalization. Aclmowledged was a donation and
thank you from Louise Radford for
use of hospital equipment Phy Uls
Skinner led In the prayer and pledge
to open the meeting. Frances
Goeglein had devotions using "Les·
son on the Years" and Nancy
Grueser read "Thanksgiving." Lenora Leifheit had the scrtpturefrom

The program by Helen Blackston
Included readlhgs, "Blood Trans!usi:msand AIDS" byPhyUisSklnner;
"Improved Joint Heallng"by Agnes
Dixon; "These Feet Are Made tor
Walking" by Nancy Grueser; 'The
Quiet Heart" by Helen Blackston[
and Mrs. Grueser, "Thinking Out
Loud.
Louise Bearhs had the contest
with Agnex Dixon and Mrs. Grueser
lx!lng the winners. Frances G&lt;Je.
gleln wUJ have the next meeting,
with Mrs. Conkle to give the
program, and Mrs. Blackston, the
contest.
Pumpkin pie was served and
crocheted (:limpkin and cat favors
were given to those named and
'Phyllis Skinner, Teresa Abbott,
Beuna Grueser, Nancy Morris, and
Michael Leifheit, a guest.

'

SPUT LEVEl HOUSE w~h 3
bedrooms, 2 complete blllfls,
dinina room, livin&amp; room and
laFJII 11!Cttltion room. J.o.
cattd on 8 acres. 1M&amp;~ farm
pond. !Qcine ar01.

Long lkmom.

011~.

45723 Will lfiPj!Oitod e..
ecutor of the Olloto of Ar·
thur C. A - , De·
CNoed, Iaiii .of R.D: #2,
Or.,flll T - I p• . Cool·

CUSI!,

HOME NATIONAL
·BANK
949·2210

HUDNALL
PLUMIING &amp;
HEATING

317 Noith Second
Mititll.«l, Dflie 45760

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
IUllltiSS I'IIONE

IESIOENCI I'IIONI

Real Estate General

(6141 H2 · 17S4

TEAFORD·
Real Estate General

216 E. 2nd St.

Phone

1·1614)· 99~· 332fir '.

NEXT TO BUSINESS SEC·
T!ON - 3 BR, 2story remo·
· deled home, furnace, siloroom, carpeting, stove,. re·
!rig., and full basement
MOBILE HOME - Custom
built, 12x28 addition with
sliding glass door, 6 rms in
aiL Gas furnace plus elec.
JBB heat and about ll acre:
Only $10,000.
REMODELED - Pomeroy.
8 rm. frame, Ill balhs, ~s
heat, woodburner, carpeting
and 3oulbuildin gs on 21ots.
NEAR WMPO -1 rm. brick
4 BRs, nice kitchen
with cook and bake units,
carpeting, paneling and gar·
age.
ven~r.

SMAll - 2 BR ham~ full ba·
semmt v.ith garagnnd almost
one acre. On~ $17,5011. .
MIDDLEPORT - tg, level
lot on Grant 6 rms., dining,
furnace, carpeting and gar·
age. ASking $25,000.
DON'T WAll UNIIL
WIN111BUT NOWIII

.

'
Svt 'Mvrpliy, Mlkoo loush
,
Htitft, Virgil ........ , loolord

rlousing
Headquarters

Racine Gun Shoot apon·
sored by Racine Gun Club .
Every Sunday, beginning at
1 :00 p .m. Factory Choka12
guage shotguna.

992·6215

or

Ph. 915·4141

Farm Equl~ment
Paris &amp; Servlee

Lon&amp; Bottom, Ohio

99,2·7314

Fme Estlmatee
10-17tfn

10% OFF
ANY PERM

lAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

"Free Eatimetes"

PH•• 4.·2801
or 949·2860

Probuo Judge,
Lon• K . NeaoalriNid,
· Clorlr
(10123. 30: (1116 3tc. ·_

No Sunday

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

PAT HILL FORD

992·2196
Middlepon, Ohio
1· 13·tfc

169 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh.

c,lls

992-27

U-SAVE
AUTO
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lonely, need a date1 Meet

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tGIISON REFRIGERATOR

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IIIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPliANCE ·

CHESTfR-915·3307

(!Jitfn

J&amp;L BLO.WN
INSULATION·'

Howard L. Writesel

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

ROOFING

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•Washers •Di1hwaahera

•lnaul•tion
•Storm Door1
' •Storm Windows
•Rapt.cement Window&amp;
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•R1ng11'
•Rofrlflllratort

6 month old male par1

MILLER
ELECTRIC
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"FaEE ESTIMATE!"

PH. 992-2772 ·;

AUTO
CENTER

FOR AU YOuR
WIRING NEEDS

Residenlial &amp; Co11m1Fcial

Call:
E . ~i;.,L,gjiQW:.,U

992·5175 Or

742-3195

. POMEROY, 0.

Hys•ll::

Garage· :·

124,Pomtroy Olio&gt;

AUTO &amp; TRUCK :
REPAIR
Also Transmission :

PH. 992-5682 :
or 992-7121

s.B-tfc

992-2259

IIO!ft W1st 1111111 $traet, Po11111'11r, Ohio

FALL SALE

room.
forl;ed air heat lP.C. water
with .approx. 811 acres d
wooded land. .tko garage pus
storage. 1\sking $15.500.1XL
CHESTER -Deer season is
the right time to own this
tract of appro1imately 34
acr~s . Includes minerals.
Plus 2 bedroom mobile
home with addition. Also a
block building. $22,5QII.
EASTERN DISTRICT acre lot with a
·newer 4 bedriXIm home in
excellent condition . Spa.
cious kitchen wilh nice cabi·
nets. Attached garage, large
storage buildin~ frutt trees,
garden space. Also mobile
home hookup. $54,000.00.

ALL STEEL &amp;

POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start Frotn 12'116'

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'x36'
Insulated Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Racine, Oh.
Ph, 614-843·5191
10-6·tfc '

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

!

PH. 99Z-6030

POMEROY - In town and
C04W11t1tnt .- Nice 3 bed·
room I~ story home, new vinyl
sKlil~ PIOO and frool porch. t.
A. gas heat !'il'xlOO' lot

$29.!KX/·!Xl·
RIGGS CREST ADDITIONBeautiful newer split foyer
home in a great neighbor·
hood plus an in·ground
swimming pooL Ve~ attrac,
tive and 1n great cond~1on!
Priced to sell at $54,900.00.
REALTORS
. Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992-5191
Jean Tt11saell 949-2660
Dottle Turn11 992·5692
Jo Hill 985·4466

AW

SUPEIIOI
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VINYL &amp; AlUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Romoclollng
Roofing of oft Typu
Worked in home .,..
20 v••r•

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9·30·1 mo.

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FENCE &amp;' SUPPLY ;
PH. 992·6931 1
7&lt;12-2027

i,•

I

,''

"Fret Estimatn ... : •

SHADE, OHIO

Anything That Has To Do With A
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No Job Too Small or Too Big.
We Do Setups and Underpinning

lOWMAN'S HOME CAB •DICAL SUPPLY
,, Plolo

PHONE (614) 992·6100

24

Installation Anilalile ·

.

ht All Ynt Plllllltf NIM :
PLUS: Offiu S.pplios &amp;
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· "Register To Win"

and Graduation
llolion•y, •Mo"olk
Sigfts, lublltr Stamps, ·

Our Christmas Toys Are In
Cars, Dolls. Guns &amp; Much More
Gifts For Mom, Dad &amp; Everyone

•••"'•• Forms,

Copr Sonitll, Elt.
255 Alii! St., Ml.....,..t

104 Mullltrry

Ay,,' Pom«oy

992: 3345

'

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

10·2· I mo.

I

I 07 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

Rt. 124, Syracuse, Oh.
FREE Orignial Cabbage Pakh Doll

100ft Down Wiii.Hold For Christmas Gifts
Shop Eorly and Saw 10·3· 1mo.

Huga 2 Family Yord S.le
Thurs. &amp; FrL only 8-6. Stoto
St. by Headatar1. Furniture,
boyt sizes 4-7. mens 1St
women&amp; clothing. mite .

········ ···· · ····· ·· ··· · ·· · ·· -

fii.U£ STRE-AK CAB CO~

JO'S GIFT SHOP

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

Giganic Garage Sale . Everything goes, r•in or thine.
Douglas R.o uah realdents,
ne1r Union Cempgrounda.
Nov . 4th· 9th .

"Spe!ial Rates For Senior Citizens"

St., G..lpeth

We Ootlver

&amp; Vicinity

FrL &amp; Sal. 9 ·3, Fairfield
Centenary Rd . Womena
clothe• (7· 9'o mod.l oxc.
cond .. tOme maternity.
mana }eana .36·1g. T shirts.
b•by awing, fuzz buster.
much mora.

REPAIR SERVICE

Out of Town Cust0111111 Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Bed a •Wheel Chairs
WE IIU •oKAIE ANI OTHER IHSUIIANCE
' CAIIIIEIS WHEN EIIGILE

After S Call

.

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME

SAlES &amp; RENTAlS .
614-446-7283

:

PHONE 992-7075

t

a

Oon 't Walk, Walt ot (
'
Ch1n~e Being L1te t~IU1, We Won't
t~ Hlllf8fe'_:;H mod. pdj

t

5 family yard 1ale. Skate·• ·
way, Chaster. Thuu .• and
Fridoy 7th and 8th . 9·5,
Clothing . furniture , avon .
toy1 , rt:li&amp;c.
Thuro .&amp; FrL Nov, 7th &amp; 8th.
TWP. Rd. 79 . 1ot . mabilo
homo on left behind Molgo
F•ir Grounds.

DOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER.
GAS • SEWER LINES,
RECLAMATION. PONDS,
St'RING DEVELOI'MENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STONE
• DIRT
1

JIM CUFFORt

PH.

'l'll'.l7n1

RN ' s needed, applications
available at Scenic Hills 638
Buckridgo Rd .
Wanted· Church or nrvlce
group to undertake money
making project . during
Chrittmaaseason . Call614446·8698 .
Govllfnmont jobo . $16.040 859,230 yr., now hiring .
Call 805 · 687·6000 o•t R·
10189 for current federal

Not.
Electdcians needed to pay.
Send resume to P .0 . Bo~~:
467, Pt. Ploaoont, WV
26550,
Ho usek ee per -babysitter
needed . References re quired. Coii614-446·8665 .

Need 8 good people.

No experience neca&amp;aary.
Muot bo evallabte for Immediate employment . • Hours
1PM tii10PM . 81 ,200 per
month . Call lhur1 . or Fri.
only from 9AM to 3PM for
personal inteNiaw 614-446
7441.
Euy Assembly Work!
$600.00 per 100, Guaron·
teed Payment. No Experience , No Sales. Detail•
send s elf - addressed
stamped envelope: Elan Vit•l ~ 716 3418 Enterprise
Rd. Ft. Pierce, FL 33482 .
GOYommont Jobo. $16 ,040
$69,230 ye11r. Now hiring.
C1ll 805, 687·6000 Ext, R·
9B06 for current federal list.
- - - - - - - ·ItWanted : Aggressive person
to m•n•ge the dey· to· day
opar•tion of a rapidly 011 ·
panding Home Cere Company in the Pomeroy area.
Medical background ia pre·
ferred but will tr•in proper
applicant. Applicant muat be
able to take control of
responsibility of managing a
Home Medical equipment
organization. Apply by oending re1ume to ContinuitY of
Care, 828 Coodson Ave.
S .E.. Now Philodalphia ,
Ohio . 44883 , ATTN : RI chard Brodloy,

Gentleman want&amp; house ·
kepper. Live ln. No strings
attoched . Cell 814 · 843·
5345.
To ooll Avon . Call Marilyn
Weaver. 304·682 -2845 .

· ·- · ·····- ~ ---·· · ·· · ·· · - · ·· ···

Pt Pleasant

&amp; Vicinity

12

Situations
Wanted

················r · ·• · ·· ••• · •• •

Gigan lc Garage Sale. Everything goe~. rain or shine .
Dougln Rouah rolidonto,
naar Union Campgrounds.
Nov. 41h·9th.

Wantad : Someone to 1tay
night&amp; &amp;: live -In teen keep
day job oloewheroJ , Call
614 ·446·3419 .

312/lfn

B

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

AVON Start up fee 85.00 ,
noka 45% for Chrlnmu .
Call614·446· 3358 .

Help Wanted

Gorego S.lo Next to Cloy
SchooL Lower Rt. 7, Fridoy
Nov . 8 .

3·24-tf

Beautiful! ~

. ~UGENE LONG

•

************!*************

LISTING - Lq lot·
tom- Athr~ bedroom home
unfin~hed ~mly

WHERE ·TO BUY7

~

JEWELL'S

imV
with

•
:

N£W MOBILE HOME FURNACES AVAILABLE

Phone 611-992-6778

73-10 GM TRUCK FENDERS .............. $39.00
DYNlllE BODY FIUER ...............f.'!!, ...... suo
J/4 INCH MASIIING TAP£ ...........P.f!........... 99 1
' DUST MASK
•••

HAVE YOUR FURNACE
SERVICED NOW

One certified Medical Tach·
nologist. weekdays. Sand
resume to box 300, in care
of the Gollipolio Daily Trib·
una, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis. Oh 45631.

Yard Sale

t••uu.JICU8JICUUUU•••***
PRENRE FOR WINTER
~ ...... Giiiiiiloils.. _.... __

3-D

7

Rt.

7 '

I

JAMES KEESEE

Roger

4129/ lln

4-5·11C

Lost and Found

$100. rew•rd to whoever
found a 30 inch bamboo
barstool along Rt . 7 near
Five Point&amp;. Friday evening,
November 1, Call814 · 9927079 oftilr 4:00 or 614 ·992
3012 during the day.

949-2263
or 949-2969

•Dryer• •Freezers
PAR S •nd SERVICE

Help Wanted

Giveaway

Found. Slack puppy. Ap ·
prox, 10 wko. old. Behind 5
Poinll, 614· 992·6575 ,

Gutters . Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FA EE ESTIMATES

All Mek••

EmploymP.nl
Se rVIC es

No huntingortrespallingon
Mynas Farm located on
Chestnut Ridge Road , Mason County .

6

NEW-REPAIR

9h~3561

Baby clothes and up to
twelveyra. Grandma'1Attic,
317 Main St, call304· 676·
5247 after 5:00 o'clock.

Cal1 DATETIME TOLL ·
FREE , 1 -800 -972 · 7875 ,
anytime dey or night.
·

2 female puppleo. 1 black
one year old and 1 ten five
year old . Very gentle. Must
go . Call614· 992 · 7468 ,

7/l t / lln

ICUT OUT FOI FUTURE USE!

1- -- - - - - - -

that special someone today!

4 mo. old flunale kitten to
good home . Coli 614 · 446·
7027.

8tlllpolls. Ohio

3/11/tln

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,

insured , reasonable rates .

Yellow &amp; white kilteno. 7
woeko old. Cute &amp; playfuL
Coli 614·446· 3551 ,

"Wt R111 FQI Lm"

· "'"' Oallmg"
PH. 304-295"7845

Buying daily gold , silver
coins , rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins. large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop. 2nd . Avo .
Middleport. Oh . 614· 992·
3476 .

Wanted to buy : StMiding
Muzzle loading Shoot. Nov . timber. AI Tromm . Call:
9 and 10 . at 11 A .M .. 614·742· 2328 .
loading Creek Rd . For more )- - -- - - - - info. call614-742-2863.
Wanted used waahara, dryers, refrigerators. rangu.
The lzaak Walton Club will sweepers, working or not .
hove Shotgun Slug Shooto Call 304· 578· 2921 ,
on Sundoya. Nov, 9th, 18th. l ---~----23rd, and 30th , Matches sss wo buythebost, pay top
start at 1:00 p.m. at club doliaro. Soli what you don't
form on Shode River Rd .. went. Gat CASH for paint·
l Y1 milaa south of Chester . lnga. dolls. jewelry and
Prlzao include turkey, bacon, pottery. 1· 304· 343·1857
and C81h .
collect. WWrite
Price ,
1656 Kanawha Blvd Elot.
No hunting on the property Charleston. W. Vo . 251311.
ot Frank and Helen Eberab ech or Tom Autherson . Rollroad tioo, 304· 675 ·
Violators will bo prooocutod . 4439,

4

446-4522

4" Sewer .............$3.70
4" £11 .....,.. ,.......... $1.00
1" 160# Water ...... 19 1
I" Gas Pipe............. 18&lt;

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bods. iron ,
wood, cupboards, ch11ira,
cheat&amp;, baskett, dishes.
stone jara. antlquee, gold
and silver . Writa · M .O.
Miller, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46769 or coli 614 ·992·
7760.

11

RENT A CAR
CALL

PLASTIC PIPE
PRODUCTS

WANTED TO BUY uoed
wood &amp; coal heaters .
SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd .
&amp; Olive St. Gallipolis. Call
614·446·3159 ,

200fo OFF
SElECTtD P£1MS

FOR THE lOTH
'QF YOU
STYUNG SALON

._.,....,DoWio .....
OI'EIATOIS

•.... thro Set. 9 MI·S PM
T011, &amp; Ilion, Nlfllls

.

M'fi'iiS PLAWS. OHIO

l

I .

9' SPUN ALUMINUM ............................ 1265
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... ;mD
10' ALUMINUM MESH .......................... 1395
11' ALUMINUM MESH ........ ,.......,......... 11595 ·
1
w1 Hawt Manr Other Dishes To ChooM From
ASystem COli 1e Dllignlll For TOtF
GIVI

61

IS

A CALl

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearmg ~valuations For All Ages

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213..
· Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-13 lfn

12

Situations
Wanted

Gat a head start on your
ho liday house cleaning.
Re aso nable rates. Evenings
or week -ends. MiddleportPomeroy area prefared. Call
6 14·992·6189 oftor 5:00
p.m.

15 .

Schools
Inst ruction

$20 .000 yearly possible.
Prepare at home for Post
Office job test a. Write: Fed
(35135-Jl. P 0 . Bo• 3006,
Hattiesburg. MS 39403 .

17 Miscellaneous
lady need s ride fro m Camp
Conley to Mncn Bridge.
Monday thru Friday around
2:00 PM , phone 304· 675·
8451.

18 Wanted to Do
General house clea ning , can
give exc refe re ncea, also
have room in my home for an
oldarly person. 304· 676·
6874.

Financial

a.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

1·3-flt

NOW IHIU DK. 4

Nt'Y Homes Built

'

10-8-tfc

$SAVE$

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•

FILL DIRT

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE , OHIO

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Iatlc

Buck ,

GRAVEL · SAND .
TOP SOIL

Nov. I Hours

Authorized JohA Deere,
New Ho!!and, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
· Dealer

· Pomtroy, Ohio

'

992-3410
LIMESTONE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Garaces &amp; Pole
Buildings

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.'

JUST CALL!

BOGGS

•Siding

Reduce safe and feat with
GoBeae capsules and E-Vap
" water pills". Fruth Phllrmacy. Middleport.

WILL HAUL

Moosday 2 to 4
Sot., 10 a..... 12 Noon

*Roofing

- Concrete work
- Ptumbing •nd electrical
wort&lt;
' (Free Eotlmotosl

"

2.53 ACRES -Near Southen1
High. 3 or 4 BRs, Eal·in
kncheo, nat gas furnace, full
basement and garag~

Effect!"

•Complete Remodeling
doom Additions

- Addont end remodeling
- Rooting 1nd gut11r work

Public Notice

WE All YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTE.SJOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

tn U1ft

LIKE NEW- Country, 2 9R,
bath, central heat. carpeting, outbuildings, and 2
acres on hard road.

I•

DENNY CONGO

10110/1 mo. pd

CARPENTER
. SERVICE

Business ·Services

(6141 992·6550

NEW LISTING - Remo·
deled one floor 5-rm. home.
New kitchen stove and re·
frig., 2 BR, full basement,
ga rage and Ig. level lot in Syracuse.

Jil l'

Terrier to give away to good
homo. Cell 614· 992· 3677.

We Alao C1rry
Fishing Supplies.

Real ·Estate ·'

CAlL

742 2057

PH. 742-2629

YOUNG'S

3 BEDROOM MOBILE HOME
on 3 lots in Sytacuse.

OLDER HOUSE with 3 bod·
rooms on cornfr Jot in Syr·

For Appn11llnw11 !

lOOM 103
RUTLAND
CIVIC CENTER

SINGLE 124.95

•live entertainment
•free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

*AlUMINUM SIDING
*llOWN IN
INSULAnON

Rollen E.

MA!f\, ST

IN RlJilAJ\if)

llosults lo JO llinulnl

RT. 62 SOUTH
POINT PliASANT, W, VA.
8 milts from
Pomeroy·Mnon Brid&amp;e

*VINYL SIDING

ville, Ohio,

SWEEPER and sewing ma·
chine repair. pert1, and
su.pplies.
Pick up and
delivery , Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one hal1 mile up
Georgu Creek Rd . Call
614· 446·0294.

I OCAHD ON

Fill CONFIDEN11AL
PIIGNAIKT TEST

il!·l4·1 mo.

-'
124~

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

? PREGNANT?

PH. 304-675-2441
. BEND AQA CALL
llplty OHice
For Hours
304·372-!70.

•

REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE

F1 on l fnd
Pari s and Se rv1 ce

!). 30·tt

-GIIY IY APPT.

itt

ton. , 81700 Sl8te RoUte

3 Announcements

f XP• ' I II'Il'

Cornplefe

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only

SIWL AMMAL IIOUIS
Mon.·Wttl.·11tun. 3.5 pm
Jtluoo. 6r~O·I; Fri. 1· 2 pm
Sotur4oy 10·11 :30 ...
UIGI/"MAL&amp;

Ill Court St. . ,OMtflf. l*io •5759

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 17, 1985,
in the 'Meigo Cwnty p., .
bote Cwn. Cue No,
24928 . Claronce L. Ather·

ALIGNMENT
1/ Yro.;

305 Jocluon Art.

oo

Public Notice

Annou nee men ls

FRONT·END

Basha-n Building

Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PUASANT OfFICE

·PHONE
992-2156
It OIIJr Statinei'Clnsifitd Dett.

Public Notice

No Down
lower Monthly

CUNIC

'

Real Estate Gener11l

~ Cwiiuwidal.nng
20 '"· lxpori....

Wanted To Buy

We pay caah fo r la te model
clean used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.- Oida lnc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614· 448- 3872

DUGAN'S

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

TOWN &amp;COUNIIY
• VmiiNAIIAN

Octogenarians were honored at
Sunday's service at the Mlddlepo_rt
Church of Christ by the PhUathea
Women.
'
AI Hartson sang "How Gl'ellt
Thou Art" with Marilyn Wll~x
reading the poems, "The Human
Touch," and "New Friends and Old
Friends," Sharon Ste\vart read tl)e
names and ages of each of those
honored with Phyllis GUkey
behalf of the Phlathea, . presentlrjg
gifts to each one present, lncludl!lg
Wilbur Theobald, Ted Riley, Mar·
· garet Lallance, Mildred Hawley,
Grace · Hawley, .Marie Francis,
Martha Haggerty, JessleSaunder,,
Louise McElhinney, and Martha'
Childs.
,-Others recognized but unable to
· attend were Blanche Gilkey, Helen
Reynolds, Blanche Wolf&lt;!, Carrti
Roush; Nina Bland, Edna Walker,:·
Eula Wright, Audrey Sweet, F1o;
Strtckland, Freda Welling, Eva:
Struble. Margaret Johnson, Ro!te:
Reynolds, and Mabel Walburn. '. · .

Or

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11
9

GUN SHOOT

We'd llkt to Jntroduca you to
Enpc•A-Car, the modern way
to drive tho Wlhicle ol your
choice.

CAU 6'14·311·1162

Church honorS:
octogenarians

'

The Daily Sentinel

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

"Proftslional"

It's Important to follow dlrectlol)s
when taking medication lx!caute
optimum treatment can occur ooJy
when the JrQper dosages are
mallitalned In the body. Olgltalls,
tor Instance, a common heart
medication, must remain at a
constant blood level ot congestiVe
heart taUure can result.
'

urine.

Organizations conduct meetings _________

ROLLIT ROOFING

hours.

solubli! compounds excreted In the

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'

Business Services

•

Answer: MediCation (In the case
of the blood pressure pill) Is
distributed throughout the body
once lt' ls absor,bed into the blood
stream. Soon It reaches Its target,
but In the meantime, your body has
already begun to eUmlnate chemi·
cats. The kidneys (iller oot water
soluble molecule~ and the liver
breaks down fat·~luble elelll€11ts.
In fact, your liver Is the major
chemical processing plant tor
transforming chemicals Into water·

1986

'

Processing &gt;chemicals through your 'body

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Asst. Prof. Family Medicine
Ohio University

,,

November

Public Sale
' lk Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEEII SERVICE , Eoteto,
term, antiquo. llquldltion
11111. licensed Ohio and
Wool Virglnto , 304·
6786 or 304· nJ.6430.

n3.

9

Nursing care in private
home . Room for two pa tlenta. 1600. a month , Coli
614-992. 3595 ,
Room and board in private
home fOr non-ambulatory
and embulatory patltnto.
614 · 992-5854 or 614· 992 ·
7553 ,

Wanted To Buy

Experienced Mother will
200 locuot poott. Cell et4· boby ait In htr homo. ony
992· 2841 or 614 · 99~ · lflat. any doya, any houro,
6040 ,
' 304· 676· 7991.

21

Business
, Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know, end NOT
to ~end money through the
mall until you have investigated the offering.

Investment-Rental Property
for sala. 1 )5 unit combinat ion res idential-commercial
rental property in Middle·
port. Priced in the low
lonios, 212 unit duplex
house on a lot in a nice area
of Middleport . Priced in the
mid twenties. Both proper·
ties generate positive cuh
flow and are fully occupied.
For additional info rmation
call 614· 992· 7177 after 8
p.m.
Own your own jean ·
sportswear, ladhts apparel,
childrens . lerge size. petite.
combination store, mater·
nity , ac ceuories. Jordacha,
Chic , loe, Levi, E Z Stroot,
lzod, Eoprit. Tomboy, Calvin
Klein, Sergio Valente, Evan
Picone , liz Claiborne ,
Memben Only, Gasoline,
Heelthtex, over 1000 others . 113.300 to S24 ,900
Inventory, tnining, fi~~:turea ,
grand opening etc. Can open
15 cloyo . Mr . Loughlin (6121
888 4228.
Own your

own Jean ·
ladies Apparel,
Chlldrena, large Size. Combination Store, Petites. Ma·
ternity, Accessories. Jord·
echo, Chic, Leo, Levi, E Z
Stroot lzod. Eoprit. Tom·
boy, Calvin Killin , Sergio
Valente, Evan Picone, liz
· Claiborne, Mombora Only,
Guolino. Healthtex, over
1.000 othoro. 813 ,300 to
824,900 inventory. train·
ing, fl.xutret, grand opening,
ate. Can open 15 deyo, Mr.
Sing 1404)262· 4489 . ·
Spo~tawear .

22 Money to Loan
HOME OWNERS·Rofinonco
to tow tlxad rate. Uoo equity
for any purpose. leader
Mortgage Co .. 814· 592·
3051 '

23 Professional
Services
Water wells drilled and ser·
vic ad . Prices on requer.t . Call
814 · 742· 3147 or 614· 992·
6006 .
PIANO TUNING ANO RE·
PAIR , bac k to school dil·
counts, free estimates,
Ward 's Keyboard, 304-876·
5500 or 875· 3824 .

Fall Spacial furniture reu·
pholotarlng . Thlo io our 21ot
year serving tri-county with
the beat in reupholstering.
Call now for Free Estimate
304 -675·4154. Mowroy' o
Uph olltery.

31 Homes for Sale
3 bed room full basement,
e a t -in kitchen . c arport,
$1 .500 &amp; toke over pey- ·
menta, Plants Subdivision.
Coli 614·446· 7360.
Government homes from
$1 , (U-rapeirl . Alto delin·
quent tar. property . Call
805 ·687·6000 oxt , GH ·
10189 lor lnfoormotion .
House, 3 bdr. 1% b•th, FR .
fe nced yard, ig . lot. herd·
wood floors &amp; carpet, firepla ce In LR , copper plumbing, natural gas furnace,
window AC. city water. city
schools. $42,000, Coli 6 14·
446· 7109 after 5pm,
By owner. Remodeled 3
bedroom house on Rt.33 .
New F.A. furnace . llrgelot .
$23,000. Collect 814·4236 2 89 .
By owner. Stately 3 bedroo m houae a1 10 E. St.,
Pomeroy. 6 wooded acre1 .
Family room, dining room.
F.A. heat. 2 bathe, bolO·
ment , garage . $27.000 .
C ollect 614-423 ·6289 .
Government Homu from
e1 . tU repair! . Alto dolin·
quent tu property. Cell
805 -687 -8000 Ext. GH 9806 for information.
6 room• and bath in Pomt·
ro y . Close t o 1chool.
churches and downtown.
Optton to buy ajoining l•rge
co ncrete bl ock building with
plenty of oH street parking.
Block building hu been a
bo dy shop, repair garage and
no w a warehouse. Call814992-20 39 for appointment

3 bd .room home. Full base·
ment, garage, newly remodeled. Rocksprings area .
614-992-2978,

House ,2yearsold,1 .700sq.
ft , owner financing , 304882-2999,
Or rant. 2 story 6 room and
bath in Mason , l~rge lot
20x28 block goroge, wood
and gas heat 304· 773·
5401 .
3 bedroom housf!.ln the
country, 304 - 676 - 1~37 ,

32 Mobile Homea
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 ML WEST. GALLIPOLIS. '
RT 36 . PHONE 614·446·
7274 .
24x48 Schult IOCIIOnll
" Special Edition ' ' . white
vinyl tiding. plu1 m•ny extr•s. Speci•l pries. French
City Mobile Homu. Call
614-446-9340 .
1979 Bayview 14X70,
7X24 axpondo, 3bdr. 1V.
bath, fireplace, CA. underpinning, 2 porches, free lot
option 6 mo . only . Call
614·367·7406.

For aala or rent with option
to buy : Elcona, 3 bdr, 1%
bath , u . cond., owner fl.
nanced . Located in Green
Terraca mobile home park.
Call 614·448· 0254 .
12X60, 2 bdr. largo LA ,
refrig., dishwasher, countertop range with built In oven,
new carpet a. wellpaper In
bath , new underpinn ing,
S4600. Coli 614·446· 3417
after 5pm.
MUST SELL IMME ·
DIATELYII 1973 BARON
CROWN, EXCELLENT
CONDITION, $7,000, CALL
614·446 ·6577 or614-446·
2906 .
1969 Vlndolo t 2x60 on
rented lot. ~ew . electric
furnace, AC, outbuilding.
low u.tilltiea. eKe. cond. Ctll
614 ·246 ·9536 after 6PM:
1980 Tidwell, 14x70. 3
bedrooms, 11h balh, total
alec . Book price
$13 .000.00 will oocriflco
for 11 1,000.00 . Coli 304·
675 ·7829.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED
Insured. raeaonebla retaa
Coli 304·676· 2336

Free 8 month• lot rant. 78
1 4 ' tl70 ', all electric. centre!
O•C. 304·676· 3981.
1974 Criterion houaa t railer
12r.70, all elec, good co nd
15 , 000 . 00 . 304 · 895
;!656 .

Rea I Estale

1982, 14r.70, 3 bedroom
prectictlly new . Call 614
448·8231 '

31 · Homes for Sale

1971 Vtndilia houaa trailer
60 " r.14", good condition.
% tcre ground, good ou1
building , 304·458 · 151 7 .

By owner. Must sall-mo'llad.
3 bdr. ran ch. one car garage,
walking distan ce from North
Gallia High School. Reduced
to 129.900 , Call 614 ·388·
8 7 11 '
In Aio Gra nda. new 3 bdr ..
full baament . nice lot. large
rea r de cks with walley view.
P•icad to M il $39.500 . Will
co nsider m·o bila home trade
in . Call 614 -448 ·8038 .
Homes from
Also delin·
Colt
GH ·
Near Crown City, Ohio. 4 A.
M· l . with 8 room new
edit ion , well in1ulated ,
needs soma minor fini1h
work &amp; 6 room• of old part
needs remodeled with large
rap around porch. L•rge
60.x35 concrete block structure, garage with concrete
11oor &amp; upstairs &amp; some
other out buildings. Beauti·
1ul view of Ohio River, along
St. Rt, 7, rural wetor with 2
wells 11\lailable. ask ing
135,000 . Coil 614 · 268·
1584 .

1 972, 12x65 Schultz, mo·
bile home with 7 • 11 Ill ·
pando, wood burner, ai•
cond. washer &amp; dryer. al
appllancet. living room tu
ita, 2 porch end underpan·
ning, $7,000 .00, 304-BU
2888,
Now 1986 Shannon, 14x70
with 7• 24 axpando, 3 bod·
room. 2 full ba1ha. cathedra
ceiling . m ic rowave , d il · .
hw11har, washer·dr;er. liw·
ing room suite, dining room
tulte, cenrral air, 2 . sun
deck•. vinyl underpenning.
epecial ordered with 8 inch
walio. Coli 304·675·6373.

33

Farms for Sale

Far m for sa le or rent .
McCumber Rd. Rutland .
Call 614·992 ·2724 .
6 0 Y, s crn , 4 bedroom farm
house. barn . pond . tractor
•nd equipmen t.
84a.ooo.oo . Only thooe in·
tere1ted. D. FrHman, Box
240, Mt Union Road. Pliny',
W. Va . 251 5 8.

'

�..

Pa41t

12- The Daily Sentinel

S -

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

LAFF·A·DAY

Farms for Sal8

61

lind. 7 mllel from

• - Mler end olec. down

Pl't"*ll ""d - - loon,
304·1'78-244$.

3A

Household Good•

64 Mi8C. Marchandi•

Country llylo ciok furniture.
hond crollod ond flnlohld.
ontlquo roprod~ctiono . Psul
Conkel, At. 7, Tupporo

King cool upright otave. Goo
range. Coli ofler 4:00, 3048711-5412.

..Jiepart. Contect John or

Vlclly 11114-797-4880.

53

Acreal!'

Antiques

2 loti. 100x1 50 ooch, Rol·
lio!g Acru 15. 700 .00. 304·
1715· 4210 otter 4:00PM .

ForSole:A lorgo IM!IIding ful
of prlmltlvotoolo, ombaiNd
bottlea, wax ellltn fruit
joro, M11on potontdd fruit

H1: n! a ls

jere, antiquea. old r81taurant
~are, rNfty ot .. r ltlme too
numeroua to mention. Must

/1 -i

41

Houses for Rent

79

_"It's
the latest accessory for
• •
nuruature TV's!11

'---------,---------1

4 bclr. hou• in country.
U150 mo ., pluo U60 dep. r
c.ll 114·441 ·4814.

Mobile ~omea
Eureka nice 1 story. 2 bdr .•
for Rent
wil ront, leooo. or lond 1 - - - -- - - - - controcl. dip. Ill ref. roq.
Blockburn Reolty, 448· 2 bedroom troller, 85x12.
OOOB .
14 Burdotte Addn onvtlmo.

42

46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot, 12'x50' or
omolllr, 175 woter pold, 41h
lo Noll, Goliipolls. Coli 4484418 otter IPM .

- lo opprocilto. 814·949·
2342 or 114-949-2338 .
Buying deproaion glen.
milk bottloo, llano joro.
Jewel
Too. Coli 614-694·
2771 ovenlngo.

54

Misc. Merchandise

FireWood-cutup slab1, 1
truck loed $100, 2· U80 .
Pickup loed. you houl 816.
HEAP occopted. Coli 814245· 6804.

Rent or ule. on Rt. 218. 3
bdr. 2 botho. Coll614·441· 1·7:'
•• --:--...:.....---- Troller opoce for rent. Coli
7208 .
...,
Apilrtment
814·446·1 0&amp;2 oftor &amp;PM.
for Rent
Hou11 cool. Lump lo olokor.
Modern 4 bdr. oplit lovol, 1- - - - - - - - - - COUNyRY MOBILE Ho""'. Zlnn Cool Co. Coii814-448flroploco. Joy Dr., '400 ino.
Porto. Aouto 33, North of 140B.
Coli 11 4·441-39 19 ovo'o or
Pomeroy. Lorge loto. Coil
446·0021 .
HouM coal. Lump &amp; stoker.
JACKSON ESTATES 814·992-7479.
Zlnn Cool Co. Coll614-448·
APARTMENTS {Equol
3 bedroom houM for rent Houolng Opportunity) 90 ft.x 300 ft. lot In Roclno 1408.
ond 1Ox50 mobile ho""'. monthly ront 11.-11 11 1119 with 28 ft.x44 11. booo-nt
814-949-2424 .
for 1 bedroom ond •204 for ond ftoor, olec. hook up, Firewood lor ulo uo · PU
2 bedroom, depooit doo, ooptlc .tank, wotor. Coli loed. Coli 114843-2264.
3 bd . room houoo on Lorltln locoled neor Spring Volley 814-247· 38111 .
St .•ln Autlond. Coli 81 4·892· Plozo ond Foodlond, pool
Siegler fuel ollllove. dlnene
5811B.
. ond Cable TV ovolleblo, B. Ill D. Troller Pork. troller tlble 4 choiro. Limon 1r11,
offlce houro 11 pooliblo 10 loto lor rent, 304·676· wooden chum, flat wall
Homo on N. Front St. In om to 4 pmond7 pmt0 9 pm 2844 .
cupboord. Coli 614-256·
1529.
Ml~llpon . 1260. month Mondoy·frldoy, Coli 114pi'* utllitllo. Aetorenco end 441·27415 or IIIVI Mobile ho.,.lot forrl!lt. oxc
locolion oppooite Sondy 2 livlngroom ouho good
de'-"oit required. No plio.
Helghto, ,304-875· 7884 of· cond. Coll814-448-4113.
Phino 114·742·2308 or
814-742 -31 71 .
Nicely lurnl..,od mobile tor 3:00PM.
Octogon wood tabl e&amp; leefa
,
ho""'· elf. opt .. control air
wHh 2 cholro, 1211. Aocondi2 bedroom hou11in country. end hoot in city, odulto only.
tlonod Kirby voccuum with
On' County Rood 1B . Dop· Coli 114·448-033B.
.
ollottochmontol50. Bonory
011{
Coli ., 4-992
operated motorcycle at 6 .
72~1 .
Aodocoreted lpt., 2 bdr ..
Coli 11 4·448·8080 oflor
1180 to t2&amp;0. Coli 304·
&amp;PM .
Efljr:loncy cottogo, 155.00 1711-5104 or 304· 87&amp;·
- k . utilitlel poid. phone 1131.8. ;
304·87&amp;·3100 or 176· I--.-...,..,._~-..:.....,--­
51 Household Gooda Browning 12 IUio·Bolghrm,
Remington 700 ADC 243,
SIII)9.
targo i!' bdi. ' opt:, ·2 'batlt;·
Smith-Wuoon 818 12
f\dly ; i:•orpeled, rolrlg. lo
gougo w~h quick · point
F.. ronl with option to buy. oibVi, 11 Court St .. U2t
SWAIN
ocope. Coli 814·446-1080
4 r.room, 2 cor gorogo, mo .. ref. • dop. Coli 814AUCTION • FURNITURE ofler 5pm .
bu
In kitchen, lorgo lot, 448·4928.
..
1215.00. 1 1 0 0 . 0 0 1 - - - - - - - - 12 Olivo St .. Oollipollo. Now
d o)u ol t . S alo P ric • Upllalro unfurnilhld opt .. lo ulod wood·coolllovoo. I Firewood . 1311 PU - ioed,
12-.000.00 or on lend corpoted, all utllitllo pold. no pc -od LR ouKo I 389. ohrodded borto 1211 PU lood,
corjtrect with down PlY' children, no poto. Colil1 4- bunk bodo t199, ontron hordyovollirMn ohrubo t10,
reclinoro Ill, new • UNd ltndocoplng lo trimming. 2
1111111. Now Hewn. coll304- 448· 1837.
bedroom auit11, rangea, mi. N. of Silver Bridge.
88.· 28BB.
ho-. - - - - - - Furnlohod ottic opt. utlltlel wrlngor woohoro, Ill oholl. Upper At. 7, 'Ohio. CoU
2 bedroom pori fumiohod, poid, 1175, 919 2nd .. Shoro Now lvlntroom arK• 1189- 814·448-4830.
nicf locotion. reuonablo both, ""'n profwrrod. Coli 1599, Iampo, oloo buying - - - - - - - - cool &amp; wood otovoo. Coil Searl coal &amp; wooclbiJmer.
rent. CoM 304-882-3722 or 441-441881tor7PM.
. 814-448·31119 .
Truck lood wood, oil 1200.
882·2798.
Furniohld opl. 2 bdr.,131'h 1 - - - - - - -- - - Eleectric dryer, electric
llove. Coli 814-317-7460 .
2107 North Moln St. 4 4th, Bol~polio, 1198 wotor
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
bodroome, 1200.00 month, pold. Coli 448-4418 oltor
Sofound choiro priced from AKC Rog . B11gll moll, 1'h
UGO.OO dlpoolt, coil 11 :00 7PM.
8 : ~ PM. 304-11711-9728.
- - , - - - - - - - 12111. to t896. Tobllo, tiiO yr. old, fully trllined robbit
..
Furniohld 3 roomo lo both, ond up to 1126. Hide·•· dog. Chompion blood llnoo,
clun, no poll. odulto. rof. &amp; bodo, 1390 . ond up to 11110 or tilde. Col 814-44&amp;·
4¥ Mobile Haines
dopoolt. Coli 614· 441· 1580., oofo bodo 1148. 43211.
Aocllnero. 1225 . .10 1376 .. 1 - - - - - - - -1519.
,.
for Rent
Lompo lri&gt;m 128. 10 1125. 25 " RCA Xl· 100 conooll
Duplex. 2 BR. relrlgorllor. pc. dlnottoo from 11 09., to colortellvloion, good candi·
435 . 7 · pc. t189 ond up. lion, 1100. Cell 814-448Mobile hom•• 1vailable IIOVI. 113 Third Avenue. Wood toblo wHh olx choirl 9827.
month.
Dop
.
Aeq'od.
U.liO
/
Nov. 1, Foiloro Mobile
12B5 to 1746. Dook 1110 1 - - : - : - - - - - - Homo Porto. Coli 814 ·441· Coli II 4~ 2411,9!&gt;,5 .
.
up to 1225. Hutchll, 111110. 14" 12 V oloctric choin nw
1802.
Modern 1 bdr opt, coove· Bunk bed compllll with good cond. Worlco off cor or
nitnt
location. lingle peraon monr11111, .1275. ond up to truck · bottoiy, t76. Coli
2 bdr. 1 4x58 totol oloctric
profwrred,
Sec. Clop, Coli •395. Boby bodo, 1110. 814-448-0108 .
troller. 1228 per mo. pluo
Mottrao- or box oprlngo, 1- : - : : = - - : : - - - - - r i c ond dep. Rlf. req . on 114-441· 2055 ofler 2pm.
full or twin. 1113 .. firm. 173. 1970 Codlllllc Convlrllltll
privati lot. 10 ' min . from
ond t83. Quoon Mto,l2211. 13,000. 18 HP Dynomorl&lt;
toWn. Coil 814-286-1313. 2· 2 bdr. apartments down· 4 dr. chooto, 141. 5 dr. mo-r. 11,200. Coil 114town, t190 with no utllitlll
cholll, 158. Bod lromos. 448-3859.
2 bdr. unlurnlohld Wllhor· pold. 1295 utilltieo . poid. t20.ond 125 .. 10 gun · Gun 1-:::---~-----­
Deposit
required.
Coli
614d,..,.. hookup, Y, · mi. poll
coblnllo, 13110. Ooo or Mixed hordwood ollbo. 112 .
hoipitol, edulto only. Coil 446·2129.
floctrlc rongoo 1375. Boby per bundle, contolning op814·441-4389 or 304-8769780 .'
2 bodroom lorgellvlngroom, mottrooooo, US • 135, bod prox. 111 ton, fob . Ohio
Iorge kitchen, oil electric, lromoo 120. 125. lo 130, Pollet Co .. Pomoroy, Ohio.
klnglromo 1110. Goodooloc· Phono 814 -992-8481.
2 bdr. oil electric with compllllly lurniohed, n-ly lion of bodroom ouitoo, 1- - - - - - - - woodburnor. corpll, thru· rodocorotod, 1225 por rockon, motol coblnoto , 110 per cont olfl Floohlng
oul, oir cond., dock with month plus dep . Ref.,
owning, 2'h mlleo. Rt. 588, edulto, 411B 2nd. Avo. Coli heodboordo 138 lo up to oiTow oigno 1259111 Ughted.
non·orrow 1247. Unlighted
no chlldron or lnoide plio. 614·448·2236 or814-448- 165.
1199. (F,.. loneroll 811
Coli814-448-4107 or 814- _2_8_8_1_
. - - - - - - Uood Furniture -- Bedroom locolly. Limited quontity.
1
446-2802 .
Lorge opt, botwMn Ook Hill ouito, 1 oet of Ubloo, Hurryl 1{100) 423·1083.
drouor, Ill bod, motol offico
2 bdr. 1 mlll'from Hoopitol. lo Thurmon . Coli 814-2411- delko. 3 millo out Bulovllll RemingtOn Model 4, 30B,
woohor-dryor, wllor 9 trooh '-9_3_1_5-'.- - - - - - - Ad. Open !1om to 5pm, Mon. Monto Corio llock with 3x9
polil, 1200 rent ond deposit. 1
vorioblo power Lymlll
5 roomo &amp; both . locotod thru Sot.
Coli 814-441-1354.
Scope. 1500. Cell814·992·
Crown City . Newly doco- 114-4411-0322
2 0 11 8
2 bodroomo, extondod living roted, electric otove lo rolrig. GOOD USEDAPPLIANCES 1- - - _ ·- - - - - room, etlp · up kitchen , No polo. Coli 614· 258· Wolhero. dryoro, ·rlfrigoro· 450 John Deere Dozer and
1230 mo. 11 00 dop'!lit, 1222 .
loro, rongoo. Shggo Ap· AI&amp; Ditch Witch Trencher.
314 3rd St. Konougo. Coli
2 bedroom 1p1rtmenu. plilncoo, Upper River lid. Coli 614-694-7842 or 814814-44~· 7473 .
New Hoven, WVo. Newly booldo Stone Creot Motel. 694· 6008.
814-441· 7398.
Furnlo..e.. 2 bdr. trollor on remodeled. In town. 814TONY' S GUN REPAIRS.
992-7481
.
l
--=J
Did 180 neor Porter. prlvoll
County Applionco, Inc, hotdiprobluolng,olltypeoof
lol, morrlld couple no kid or
Good uMd applilnctl and gunamith worll, fait 11rvk:e,
poll. 1200 mo. $100 dep. Onr or two bedroom apart· TV 1011. Open BAM to 110M. 304·175-4831 .
mentt
In
Pomeroy.
Fur·
woter pold. Coli 814·3BB·
nlohod or unfurnlohod . Rent Mon thru Sot. 614·44&amp;· 1 - - - -- - - - 1699, 627 3rd. Avo. Golli· Serious ebout losing
9080.
nogotllblo. Coli 614-992· poHo, OH.
weight? Contoct Glorlo
Ooo hoot juot out ol city 1723.
Groto. Rt. 2, Box 282.
limill. 1126 mo. plus 1100
Volley Furniture, now " lllon.
26263. 304tor
Fumlohod
Aportmont
•P· No polo, oduija only.
. -. LorgoiiCtion of quol- 882-3152.
rent
no
children.
Avolloble
Coli 814·448-36B7.
ity furnituro . 1218 E11torn
oflor Oct.3. Call 814-992· Ave .. Golllpolio.
SURPLUS, regullr ormy co· 12x80 2 bdr. on Clork 2749 .
moufloge, donlm clothing,
Chlipol Rd.'Lorgo prlvllolol.
30 in . electric rongo whlto booto, poclco. occeooorleo.
1
)&gt;Wr!';O'!!·
Totli
eloctrlc
Colll14-448-3197 or 614·
1811, 30 in. ollctrli: rongo Comouflogo lnoulotod covoApt. ,Wf11' Cf.;tl P."l.'l!.~ hervHt gold 195. 30 · ln. rollo UO.OO, kldo comou2411-5223 .
r1nge, carpet . . lf'f'l . 1 electric range coppertone
flogo ell olzeo. Som Some2094 .
•
.
2 bdrm., porlillly lurnlohed
llko now at 25, 38 in. rville, Eut-Reven·swood ,
mobile ho""' for ronlln Aio
oloctric rongo white 196, junction lndependance
Grande. Carpel, n1turel ga1 2 bd.room lurnlohed Apt. · Whirlpool woohlr-dryor oot llood·Oid Ill. 21, Fri, Sot.
814·992-&amp;434
or304-BB2·
end otorm windowo. Coli
*180. OE waaher avocado Sun, 1 :00· 7:00 ~M. Fr11
114-2411·94117 ofloriPM or 2588.
gr11n 1150, Kenmare dryor delivery l'olnt Pleloont 1r11,
814· 448-4733. B· IIPM .
1911, Speed Qu•n dryer
APARTMENTS, mobilo 185. Kolvinotor dryer f85, 304-8711·3334.'
3 bedrooms, lurnlohed; ho""'•· hou111. Pt. Ploooonl Oib110n refrigerator white Lump houoo cool. deliver ony
Gollipolio . 814-448- •11. Oibeon refrelgerator
wtohor and dryer. No polo. ond
amount, 304-876· 7397 or
8221.
.
UOO. pluo dopooit ond
whho froot frll 1150, rofr.lo· 8711·1247 . .
utllilioo. Coli 814-992· 2 br oporlmonlo In Han•r· orotor oldl by oide whito
.,911 . Kelvinllor ovocodo 1979 Ford Pinto peno,
7478.
oon . 304·1711-1972.
green ., 211 , ponoloblo engine . rebuilt, body good
Troller for rent, 851 BlOCh Nlco 1 ond 2 br oportmonto dlohor wuhlr 198, omoll ohope. Floor modol otoroo,
St .. Middleport. 1185. pluo downtown. 304· 8711-221B wllhlr-dryor 1180, Ken- good condition, 304·871more goo dryor 195; fr11zor 8377.
1100. depolil.
. 8-6
upright white 18 cu .fl .
14x8112 br. Honderoon wijh I -F-u_rn_l_ohl
_d_2_bo
_d-roo-m~o-pt, 1110. Skoggo. Appllonce. ARMY SURPLUS! Wo hove
Uppor River Ad v Golllpollo, lull llno of Army Surphro.
woohlr • dryor furnlohed or
k
1 • 0 00
11
1
1
un1urniohod. DIP• Required. uti Ill PI d, v . • 114-448-7398.
Mono ond chlldreno comou•
_
.
phone 304-175-3100 or
304 871 1730
flogo. oil 11111. Soe uo for
8711-8609.
E-Z Credit Mollohon Furnl· your hunting -do. D 111 J
2 bedrOom mobile ho""', Lorgo 2 bodroom opt, dawn- turo, 403 4th AVo.. Ko· Sov-. 'Mort, Mooon, W.
•urdlltl Addn. 1175.00 town Point Pluoont, 304- nougo; Oh. 441· 7444'.
25280. 304-773·5222.
pluo u111itlel ond depooit. 890-34110.
Wllorbld Super olnglo. 300 Blxcycllonglnoporto. 6
304· 875·2414 or 175·
·bookCIOI hlldbolrd, ltOr· inonlho old. Drokoo. 3 plir of
2048.
46 Furniahad Rooma oge podlotool. bolllo mot· -od ohuttero, never ulod,
treN with manreu cover l
304·878-5428.
2 bedroom moblle ·'~o~.
ca~ fumlohod. oil
2 1111 ohootl. I moo. old,
udideo pold. relrencoo ,.. For rent Blelplng Aoomo •aoo. Coli 114·448 -0920. Werm morning wood
qulrod. rent 1200.00. ond light houM keeping
burner, good cond,
IOfOII from Qoodylrlr Plont, roomo. Pork Control Hotol. Whirlpool outomotic woohor t1110 .00 . 304· 87&amp; -8023
Coli 814-441-0?H.
.,71, Coli 814·448 · 3731. onytl""'.
phone 304·1178·2479.
\

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.

-Ired.

.

.

wv.

v•.

.......
"

Building Supplies

Building Mollriolo
Block, brick, oewer plpoo,
windowe , llnt.lll, etc .
Claude Wlntero, Rio Grande,
D. Coli 814 -245-5121 .
Koy Lump, Ohio lump, Ohio
Stoker. Y"'d or delivory,
cemont blocko end building
mellrlol. Golllpollo Block
Co.. Pino St., Gollipollo,
Ohio Coli 814-448-2783.
Block, brick, mortir 'ond
masonry euppli11. Mountain
Stoto Block, AI. 33. Now
Hoven. W. Vo. 304· 882·
2222.

81

Pets for Sale

Brlorpotch Konnolo All ·
breed grooming . Indoor·
outdoor boarding fllcillties.
Englloh Cocker Sponlel. 398
9790.
Drogonwynd Cottery Ken·
nel. CFA Hlmoloyon, Poroiln
ond Silmoso kittons. AKC
Chow pupploo. Cell 446 3844 otter 7PM .
Toddy Beoro--AKe Reg .
Chow Chow pupploo. Coli
814-25&amp;-1271 .
Amerlcon Pitt •Bull Terrier
pupo. Purple ribbon blood·
llno. BoliUiilully morl&lt;ed regiotorod ADBA 1200 ooch.
Coli 304·1182-5975.
AKC Reg . PekoneM pup·
plio, bo -dy In 2 woeko,
liking •poslto now. Coli
814-266-9391.

Mueical
lnstru menta

At Brunicerdi't..... Notepos·
111Hd pie no gimmicks . J u1t
honeot plono voluH. We ore
never under eokll Brunic1rdl
Music Inc. Cornor 3rd. lo
Court St.. Golllpollo, Ohio.
1 lama enare. 4 micro·
phonoo, 1 londlr precloion
bon guitor, Coli Lag C,1bln
Recorlloro, 814-418· 4313 .
S.xephone alto tJ~:. cond .

King lnttrumento. Coli 614246·5149 .
58

&amp;

Fruit
Vegetables

Appleo, oil vorietlu, 111.00
buohel. Now open dally. All
lruito, vogolobloo. Jock'o
Morket, Rt . 35, Henderoon,
W. Va .

f .Ifill Suppli i!'
~ liV I!SIIIi.k

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS lo SONS
U.S. 35 Well , Jockoon ,
Dhio. 814-28&amp;-64111 .
Muooy Forguoon. New
Holland, Buoh Hog Soloo &amp;
Sorvico. OvN 40 uold ,
trectora to choon from •
co .,.lite line of new·&amp;
uHd equipment. Lorgool
Hllclion in S.E. Ohio.
Spoclal 10% dlocount on all
porta for cuh uloo only.
until N.ov. 111.
Now Ideo modol 323, one
rvw com plckor. Coli 114·
268· 1144.

WEDNESDAY

11/6/85
6:00

Home
Improvements

71

Autos for Sale

New Holland 3114 grinder 19BO Chlvttto 4 dr., outo ..
mixer. Used very lttle. Exc am., f.m .. hrgg. rock, Good
cond, 304· 273· 4215 .
cond ., 80.000 miles .
t1900.00. 814-986-441B.

63

Livestock

197B chevttto. 4 door, 4 cyl.,
auto .• 1lr.• newtWII, brakea.
Selling lomlly oickneu. Reg. bonory. exoutt. Groot gao
Ouorlor horoe gentle , Poll· mllugo. Silver with reel
moo more foiled Moy 81 Interior. No run. E•c. cond .,
1280. Cell814 -379-2144. 814 · 949·258B. 11400.00.
32 :' hog, wire, 48'' wovon
wire, m1ny other lypel wire
Ill ony "'PI product portoinlng to .lnimol corolound very
low priced ot Bidwell Cooh
F11d Store. Coli 814-38B·
9688 .

1984 Opoi·EC. 64 ,000 orig ·
lnol mlllo. 46 mpg. "50.
Coll814-698-1365

1--------1984 Mercury Topoz. PS.

PB, outo, olr, ·AM-FM redlo,
front wheel drive. White
with groy Interior. tll780.
Horoo omell wry gentle boy Coll814-949-2894.
color. Calll14·245-&amp;149 .
1978 Nove . In goad condition,
with new tir81. No
Reglotered Hereford oprlng
colvoo, bub end holforo, reuonable oHer refuNd.
Coli 114·948·2849.
304·882·2385.
1978 Pontiac BonnovHie,
exc
cond, mull: see to
64 Hey &amp; Grein
opprecillo, t2,000.00 or
boot offer. Troy Krelio, 304Lorge round bolooofhoy •20 676 -7127 or 876-1185.
11. Coll6"·448· 1052 oft or
&amp;PM.
19B3 Plymouth Rood·
"'"""'· 318 engine built,
Mixed grou hoy for ule. outo. trono.. 456 gooro
Coli 814·949·2237.
pooltion trock, 11150 or boot
offer, 304· 878-8377.
1984 oom 12.26 bu. A.&amp;J . 1 - - -- - - - Form, Cloir Cottrill .. Sr., 1979 Ford Folrmont,
304· 875·2707 .
515.000 miles. euto tren1,
new tirea, new 11Xt.UI1, new
brlkes. AM•FM ttoroo, vinyl
T spo Lil lllll
mp, f1 ,600.00 . Phone304876·1139 .

ran

71

r

Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for ' SO
mo•land newer uoed coro.
Smith Buick-Pontile, 1911
Eootom Ave .. GolllpoHo. Coli
114-448·2282 .

72

TlUcks ' for Sale

CAPTAIN EASY

Dodge Chorgor 2.2 1984, 197B Do""o pickup wide
only 14,067 mlleo, poyoff
..,.
loon opprvxlmotoly 1 4 ,700. bod 8 ', club cob, AM-FM 8
Coli 814-245·9189.
trock, CB, PS, PB, AC, tilt
whool, good flo mo mode
1980 Cblvotto. llondord topper. good cond .. 11 ,7911.
trono, AC, goad ohope. Coli I·C-:o:--11:-ll-1_4_·_44_._·_0_1o_a_._ __
81 ~ ' 448 ·21&amp; 9 onydme.
1971 Datoun PU , AM-FM
19811 ·COU(IIIr, e12 ,9B8 llpl, CB, rodilll, white
opokes, good cond ..
peyoIf'or moy orronglloke .,,200. Call 614 · 379over poymonto. Owner lold·
off. Coli 814-2511·8034.
2788.
1983 Pontile Porloienno 1986 chevy P.U. truck . Po,
mint cond, low mlleogo. pb, V-8. outo. 18800.00.
loldod .•Colll14·387· 7225 ~.•_1_4_-94_9_-2_8_60_._ __
lfter &amp;PM,
I ~
1984 Chevy 4•4. 14 ton
82 Chevy Chovotte, 4 3 ,000 c:lloulo. 27,760 mlloo. 8
miloo, olr cond., om-fm cyl .. 4 op. 17800.00 firm .
814 -892-8276.
radio, PS, PI, auto. tr1n1., ' ~--------­
,..r window del. 12780. , .
1980 Ford dump truck, with
Cell 114-448·1807 otter
4 opood tronomloolon ond 2
15':30 pm.
speed rear lor peru,
75 Chevy PU 1400. 72 Ford t400.00 . 304-876-3190.
von 1400. Coli 814·38B· 1- - - - - - - - 9303 .
73 Vans &amp; 4 W.O. "
1983 Niooon Sontro 61,000
mi .. 13,900. Coli 814·448· 1977 Dodge Sporlomon
von, coptoins cholro, factory
1552.
hitch . exc . cond . 89 ,000
1983 OldomObile Dolto BB mHeo. Coll814-387·7262.
dilul engine, 311 MPO, he.
cond. 18.500. Coli 11 4-448 1977 ' Dodge Spanomon
ven, ceptaina chaira, factory
0840 or 448 · 1429.
hitch , IXC . cond . 89,000
78 lmpolo 4 dr., lomilv cor, mMeo. Coli 8141o,fodtemp
PS, PB, oir, new tlrH, 19BII Bronco II, 6 opd .. O.D.
bon,ery lo oxhlull. good tranl, AM·FMatereo, veloua
cond . Priced to tell. Coli -ts ond much more, 2B
MPG, .9.600. Coli 814814-446-4477.
379 -2768 .
1978 AMC Concord 11ot1on
w~gon. axe. cond., new
tirea. air, euto, stereo. Call 78 Oodgo van 31 8, PS~ PB,
cruloe. coptoln cholro, pa614·448-7804.
neled, ••c. work ven. Call
1977 Mercury Cougor 4 dr. Donnlo 304· 675 -7920.
54,000 mlleo, AC, AT, CC ,
stereo exc . cond .• new tiree.
74 Motorcycles
Coli 814·448-7804.

Bono Llvootock Trolore. Hur· 1988 Pontile convorliblo.
ricono, WV. 304-757-1144 Good condijion. 1900.00.
Coli 114·247-4292.
or 757'·1388.

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump Ulll, Arvlca. Regis·
tored In Ohio. All work
guoront11d . Coli 304-2732811 . Rovenowood. W. Vo.

\1.11\EIJ
'

RON'S Television Service.
Houoo collo.o n RCA. Quozor,
GE. Speclaling In .Zenith .
Cell304-678-2398 or 614 ·
445-2454 .

100 S'&gt;.ID1 'tm

Nl ~'ICL~1 lit CAIJ
EAL!1 ~ IT~ I ~V~!':.
~

11\AT \IJAAT

'PI! ~.AD lf-l Mlt-\0 v.M.

Fatty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Cell 304 · 676·
1331 .

CD NBA Today

III Sanford and Son
(l) 0 ID Price le Right

ANNIE

Stortoo Troe and Lown Sar-·
vice, ltump removal . ·304678·2010 .
Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Moat wells completed same
dly. Pump 11111 and tervice.
304-896 · 3BO~ '
Frld'o Bldg. ond Remodel- · :
ing, b11ements, porches. ·• : ·
roofing , oldlng, pointing, •
leveling trolloro. Htisfation .
guoronteed , 304·773 9118 .
B. Ill D. Home Improve-

ALLEYOOP

ments. vinyl liding,- alumn
aiding, contlnuCMII gutter,

.,

room oddltlono, oolflt and
replacement window•. 304578·2844.

19B2 Keweokl ll ...t blko,
1800, oxc. cond. Coli 614·
448 · 3184.
1980 KowolllcllTD 1 ,000,
eac cond, n11ny extrae,
phone 304-878. 5433.

75

Boellend
Motora -for Sale

John boot for oolo. Coil
614·258·8417.

79

Motor• Homu
&amp; Campere

•
1872 Koyot compOJ. Soli
contained, 318 Dodoo on·
gino, 22 fl. long. lllopo olx,
18,000. Coli 814-441·
2077 .

(!) 0 '(1) Jeopordy
(I)
Nightly
lius'i ness
Report
00 Wheel ol Fortune
&amp;I WKRP In Cinclrineti
IHBOI
MOVIE :
' Buga
Bunny'o 3rd Movie; 1001
Rabbit Tales'
IMAXI Mox Heedroorn
8 :00 I) (I) (!) Hlghwey to
Heovon {CC) Jonathan and
Marl&lt; try to help a young
football player hooked on
pain killero. {60 min .)
(])Flipper
CD PKA Full Contect
Korate:
·
(]) MOVIE: '36 Houro'
(I) GilD lnsldorw ICC)
0 (I) ® You're • Goorl
Mon. Chlrflo Brown {CCI
The 'Peanuts' gang returns
in this animated special

basad on the stage musical.
· {60 mini
(I)
MocNell/lohror
Newohour .
(fi) Rivor Joumeyo ICC) ' A

Ctrpentry , Remodeling,
Room Addition, All building
· ropelro. Cement l!o Block
work . FrM Eotimoto. 304·
875-4322.

Ri'Ver Journev bV Christina

Oodwell.'

GASOLINE ALLEY

Back in' 7Z
we helped qet ·
them on networ TV!

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Th1s liHiequy reminds
me of Sugar! Does some
oHhe same
tricks!

l wonder

tribe in Papua New Guinea.
{60 min .l
fJII MOVIE; ' Hong 'Em
High'
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Sixteen
Candles' ICC)
9 :00 0 Ill (!) Hell Town Father
Hardstep intervenes when

violence threatens to erupt

whatever

harpened

{60min.)
(I) 700 Club
(!) Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City
(l) • 1D North end South
Pan 3 {CCI While tho slavery issue is furiously Qe·
bated.
Virgilia
Hazard

to them!'

becomes an prominent abol·
itionist while George and
Orry form a partnership in a

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. At. 1, Box 385, Gollipolio. Call-1114-367·0671.

cotton mill . Patrick Swayze,
Jamgs Read, Lesley-Anne
Oovfn . 19B5.
·
0 (I) ® CIIMio Ill
Compeny ICCI A ner~~ous
Charlie faces an Imminent

•

hernia operation .

(I) Grell Performoncoo:
Live From Uneoln Center
'New York Cily Opera : La

Good- 1 Excovoting, boot· · '
ment1, footers, driveways,
ooptlc tenlcs. londocoping.
Coli anytime 614-446- •
4637, James L. Davison. Jr.

Rondine.· AleSsandro Sicili·
ani conducts Puccini's op-

owner . .

Dorer Work land clearing,
llndtcaping. etc. Free eeti·
mlleo. Cell 814-446-8038
or 814-992 -7119 onytlino . '•

------ ·

J .A.R. Conltructlon Co.,· _..'
Rutlond. Oh . 81 4 · 742· ,
2903. Booemonto, Footoro, • .
Concreto work, Backhoe's, l
' Doze; lo Oltcher, Dump •
truCkl, II Wltlr·gii· HWif·
electrical line•.

86

BARNEY

•

SAKES ALIVE!!

HOW MANY
BOOSTER SHOTS
DID I GIVE TODAY,
NUSS?

General Hauling

Jemat Boy1 Wtltr Service.

Aloo poole filled. Call 814256 -1141 or 814- 448 1176 or 114-448-7911 .

COMPUTER
JAR?

"fEP .. vou

ances

10:00

U lll (!) St.,Eioowhere Dr.
and Mrs . Craig attempt 10

claim their granddaughter,
Wostphall pushes his new
hospital reforms and Fiscus
is sympathetic to the plight
of a young patient. (60 min.l
CII Newo
0 (I) ® Equollzer McCall
is Jorcod to team liP with an
professional killer in order to
save the life of a former

Weugh't Water Service .
Wtlll, ~istern1, pool1. Fest,
rolioble oervlco. Coli 814 21i.6 -1240 or 814-26 6 ·
1 130. Re11on1ble retea.
Houl llmootone, oond. gro vel,dirl, bulk or bog lorlilizer
ond lime. Excelolor Solt
Worko Inc. 838 E. Main St.,
Pomoroy. 81 4 -892 ·389 1.
Dump truck , h1uling ,,,.
vice, 304:875 ·3190.

Upholstery

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
11 83 Soc. Avo .. Golllpolie.
814-448·7833 or814-446· .
1833.
•

Forguoon'o Upholotery 304
&amp;75·5472: .
. .

career.

(MAXI Crazy About the
Movies 'Great Screen Rom·

LOLLIPOPS LEFT

clotemo, poolo lfli,rl. Phone
e14-387-ot23 clr614 ·367·
7741 night or day.

A Ill M Furniture Monufocturlng. St. Rt. 7. Crown
City, Oh . Coli 614·258·
1470. coli Eve . 814-4483438 . Old lo new
Up hollered.

era. (3 hrs .)
(fi) Andrea Oorle: Tho Flnel
ChopteriCCI The eftona to
recover the sunken fortune
of Jhe Andrea Doria are
chronicled. {90 min.)
IHSO) MOVIE; 'City Hoot'
(CC)
9:30 0 (I) ID George Sumo
Comedy Week A depreasing playwright is urged to
publish a series of animal fa ·
bles in order to salvage hi&amp;

ONLV HAVE TWO

K111'1 Weter Service. Wells,

87

by Henri Arnold and Bob lee

;;

UniCromble lheoe four Jumble$.

oneeHertoeach aquare,to form
foor onllnlry words.

JYTET

II I
..

-1

I

I

)

I KRUTEYj
() [
ITORREC

I KJ

II

WHAi H! 60T

PEANUTS
ILL HOLD '(()U lJP, A~D
W~EN 1-lALLEV'S COMET
COMES SV, YOV BARIC.
_

•
•

•
•
•

SORRV, rr WAS JUST
REFLECTING

~E MOON

OFF M'( SOPPE!i:. DISIL

-

WHEN H! !OUSHT

THAi STOCI&lt;.

III

Now arrange the circled letters 10
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

Prlnranswerhere: [

XI I I )
(Answers tomorrow)

Yeatorday'•l Jumbloa: BEGOT ORBIT FINISH PLOWED
Answer. That after-dinner speaker always knew when
to rise to the occasion - but 't!81dom this-

lova . (60 min.)
(f) Andre• Dorio: The Final
ChlptoriCC) Tho eftorts to
recover the sunken fortu na
of the Andrea Doria are
chronicled. {90 min .)
Ill Odd Couple
(MAX} MOVIE: 'Beck to
Bellin'
10:30 (I) To Be Announced
1
(]) MOVIE: 'Who Is Horry
Kellemtlln7'
(fi) High Wire Tighllope artisl Philippe Petit prepares
for a highwire walk above
the streets of New York .
.INNN11 :00
Cll
~NIWI
.
(I) Men Frvrn U.N .C.L.E.
.(fi) Nowowatch
• Bonny Hill Show
(HSOI MOVIE: 'Curllins'
11 :30 G (I) liJ tonight Show
Tonight's guest is Julio Iglesias. {60 min.)
(!)Sportacenter
(I) Now N~ Glmo
0 (I) T.J . Hookor

ern

m am® •

....
. &gt;

.....
.. .
~

WHEN TO SIT DOWN

Join lhl J~ ~ F1n ClulllnciNOihlil •ll Nhl·won:l SiiDtl' J~Mftb!tt lvtfV

montn. for lfll umpln, Mnd 1 po111e8fd to: JumlM l~ hn Club, do lhll
AIWIJIIper. P.O. leu 101, P11111Vfl, N.J. DION.

-

....
.
· ~'i ·

.,IJGE

. ..

'

James Jacoby

·}

,.

. - - - - - - - - - - , .•.

A dilemma:
cash it or stash it?

NORTH
+862

u ...u

.K

.·

+AK8742
+Q 10 3

By James JacobJ

EAST

~.

...' .

...

' V'i'

It's not· a good idea to lead unsu~ · =~ 3
+KI
ported aces against game or part.!; • ~ 4 2
•ean
score contracts. Those aces are better I • 6 &amp; 3
• QJ 10 9
UJed to gobble up the opponents' kings
AJ 81
+94%
and queens, so t¥1 your side can take ,
SOUTH
as mauy lrickl u possible 111 those · ,
+J lU 75
aults. But bridge Is Ulte so many other i''
'AQJ IH
endeavon combining art and science .
...
- you never 11y never. Look at to- ::
...
• K7 6
day'a bidtiiDg.
Vulnerable: East-West
Wt!llt was on lead and had nothing in !.
Dealer:
South
tbe red suits, both of which had been I
bid by his advenarles. He assumed
Nortb Eul
that bis ace and queen of spades would · WHI
take trickl, but was It possible for tb~ 'p ...
Pass
club ace to go away if he didn't take i . Pus
Pass
p.,.
·;-immediately? Probably not, be I Pass
thou8)lt, and led the diamond three. ·
••
·-,.·
Declu'er took the ace and king of dlaOpening lead: 3
'·
monds, throwillg clubs, overtook dum·
my'• king of bearts with bls ace, and
coaUnued with the queen and jack, dl&amp;carding clubs from dummy. Now
came the 10 of hearts. U Wt!llt ruffed
i'llo .il
with the spade queen, dummy's Jut
Tbe
opening
lead
of
tbe
club
ace
li
·~
club would Kfo away. West finally dethe
winner
on
this
hand.
Note
that
W"
cided to ruf low and wu overruffed
In dummy. '111en, in two leads of would also be the right lead U Soulli ·.
trumpa, the king and ace of spades fell had the spade king and · no king of ·;;
together. Declarer thus lost only two clubl. Then, too, It Is Imperative for;:.
trump lrickl and the club ace to make the defenden to grab club tricks
quickly.
his contract.

+

j

.

....

..••

+

•

1------------.J. '"

..

~-

._,.
... .

,between rival street gangs.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth ond Pine
Go!lipoNo, Ohio
Phone 814·441·3BB8 or
814-446·4477

Excavating

Wrher/axplorer

Christina Oodwell revisits a

in1ured. fre·e eatlm1tes.
roooonoblo roteo, 304-&amp;787121 .
--------Getyourcorpotlnohlpohopo
withCopllihSIOomor. ~urniture cloonlng-woter domago
worl&lt; , 304-876-2295.

83

0 (I) ® Ill

ID'ft 1i' THAT SCAAMBLEO WORD GAME

Daisies

RINGLES'S SERVICE. experienced Clrpenter, electri- ·
clan, mi10n, p1intar, roofIng {Including hot tar
epplicotlanl 304-675-2088
or 875· 7388.

1975 Ford PU, good cond ..
8 fl . fiborgleoo PU topper
1100, electric hau• fur·
noco 1100. Coli 814· 441·
8288 .
· Tree trlmming end removol,

1980 Cblvy Monro hotch- 1976 ChovySIIvoredo 1ton,
bock. good cond . Coli 304- duolly with King cob.
875-11843 otter IPM or oil I5 ,000. Coli 614 . 446 •
doy wookondo.
2107 or 814·246-HOO.

1976 Plymouth Vollont
Muoio Harrlo 6&amp;5 lroctor Scamp, 2 dr .. redlo . Mull
new motor, new b1nery. for - t o opprocloto. Coll814·
1111 or trldo. Coll814-446 · 24&amp;-9188.
10521fter 5PM .
1- - - - - - - - The following doocrlbod
Uoed 480 John Doore dozer ijem will .bo offered for
Ill RIll 0 II c h WItch public ulo 1D tho hlgholl
Trencher . Coli 814· 894 · bidder on tho 9th of No·
7842 or &amp;14-694·6006.
vemiMtr. 1984FordTompo4
dr . Sor . No . 2FAB ·
Dowolt 10 " redlolerm oow, P23A5EB227433. Solo will
2 blodlo, Dodo end oondlng be hold ltlhl Commercii I•
en. lito now, 1400. Triple Sovlngo Bonk, Moln Office,
box olr cyUnder tobocco 26 Court St., GolllpoUo,
bollr. complete, ulod onco. Ohio. Tormo:cooh. Soller
1400. 50 pluo round beloo, rooorveo tho right to bid ond
good mixed hoy 112.00 tho righltorljeclonyondell
ooch or •800 far oil . Coli bids.
614· 379-2788.
1 -----~-....,.
1978 grand prix. Po, pb,
Poll bulldlngo, mony coloro p.d.l ., p.w.. cruloe . Groll
ond ovolloblo. 304·876 npe. a .., price. Col:814
742-3189.
3981.

lnotollotlon. Roof· ·
lng, vlnyloldlng, 11ormdooro
ond wlndowo. Freo eotimotoo. Call '814·992·2772 .

82

(I) (I) (!)

Tune
(!) Mazda Sportslook
III Andy Griffith
(1)3·2·1, Contect {CC)
(fi) Electric Company
&amp;I Dlff'rent Strokes
IHBO) Family Playhouse;
Hockey Night
6:30 U (I) (!) NBC Nightly
News
CII Carol Bumett and
Friendo
(!) ESPN's Horae Racing
Weekly 'Down the Stretch .'
III Carol Burnon
(I) IIIID ABC News {CC)
, 0 (I) ® CBS Newo
(I) Dr. Who
(fi) Body Electric
!Ill Taxi
7:00 U (I) PM Magazine
CII
Counohlp/Eddie's
Father
(!) SportSconter
III Mary Tyler Moore
(I) Entertainment Tonight
(!) Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheal of Fortune
(I) Second City TV
®News
(fi)
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newohour
Gi lD Divorce Court
&amp;I Jefteroons
7:30 0 Ill Now Newlywed
Game
(I) Pleaoe Don't Eat

~~~~~;:=.====r~==~~~~~~~ J.end L.
Farm Equipment

u

Cl2l Newo

~~f.\.0

~ ~ ~~·

(I) $100.000 Name Thlt

D.end M. Controctoro. Vinyl
1lding. repl~climent win·
dowa, ln•ulltlng, roofing,
now ond romodoilng, con ..
crete. Call 304-773-6131.

For oelo or tredo, roglllered
block ond lon femoll Coon
2
dog . 14 months old, Coli ---'c:;-------~--------1979~
Robbit
.
1978
Ford
1980
Dotoun,
outo,
redlo.
614-949-2338.
.
LTD. t:oll ofler IPM. 814- topper, 12699. John'oAuto
38B:9823.
Soleo. Bulovllle Ad, OoiiJpo.
Four Beogloo, 304-676·
111· Ohio .
4154.
1981 Dodge Chorgor, 2.2, 1- -- - - - - - - AKC rogillered Boogie pup· 51,000 mlleo, ohlrp. 1982 66 Ford Rongor 4x4, PS, P8,
pioo, good blood lln11. 304- Dodge 0 1 2 d 5 4 ooo .4 opd .. llondord with over·
.'mileo. Co~~14· 3~S-2J28 . drive. V-8. 5o;ooo wor676-H8&amp;.
ronty. Coli 614-448-0061 .

57 •••

ATOMIC BOMB-

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guo·
rantee. Locel rlferencea
furnished. FrH ettitnataa.
Coli collect 1-814-2370488 , doy or night , Rogero
Baiement Waterproofing.

1---------

56

239.
E:NOL6H FOR A SMALL

EVENING

cury
honglng
Marquis,
weight. 11
1976
,000.00
Mer-.
304·875·9704.
61

56

Television
Viewing

mcK TRACY

St:rVICeo

Complete 101 of now luggogo, rogu lorly $300 .00
now 11211.00. Soled MoliN
w1tlfleu cookwere compllll with electric okHiot,
IIIIo for $1.100.00 pr~ed
$5110.00 . Block rocking
choir, ruot cuohiono '85.00 .
19 73 Monte Corlo, moke on
olfor, pho.no 304-87118874.
Groin led Hollloin IIMro, 60
cento lb on fool. 11 .17

Motora Homes
&amp; Campers

19&amp;8 Trout-nd comp•r
folr cond, t700. Cell 81 4·
448-4113.

RHIIIIic lleroo, turntobll,
Wlzord Cltotlon clothoo AM-FM radio cosselto
dryor. Electric . 1100. Coil ployer, oxc cond.,l125.00 .
Typewriter monuol, •10.00.
304-982-2321 .
Brown leothlr couch. 3
King olzo bed, complete with cuohlon, 185.00. Young
box IPringa, mattna, 2 11t1 mon clotheo olzo 8 , ohlrlo,
ohootl "71.00 . 304·675-. 28 Wlilt PilOts, IJI:C cond,
phone 304·176-7438 oftor
87113.
4:30.

A/:. building for ulo In

~W~ed~n~e~s~~~Y~·~N~o~ve~m~oo~r~~9~8~5~--------------------~~~~~~~~~0~h~~~---------r----------------~~~~~~~~~~!! O'

Wednesday, November 6, 1986

Plaint. ,

Buainaaa
Buildings

3! Lote &amp;

•

•

I

.•. "
by THOMAS JOSEI'H
ACROSS
I Fann
structure
5 Push
10 Olfactory
sensation
II Impassive
12 Exploding

star

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16 Craving
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96 Biblical
17 Prohibition 17 Defiant
aperture
mounlain
19 •- Kleine 18 Celebes ox 28 Liquid
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of
21 One kind
carter
30 Pig
exile
of band
22 Repast
32 Moun lain 40 Large
23 Drooping 24 Parlor
crest
container
27 Also-ran
piece
34 Present 42 Nigerian
28 Utah city 26 Having
35 Turkish 43 LA.
29 Pertinent
surpassed
flag
pro
faciS
30 Famous
white
stallion
31 Sheer fabric
33 Before
34 Chinese
dynasty
37 Ceremonies
39 Late
news hour
41 Shakespearean
king
44 Partial
refund
45 Polish cake
46 Tread t he
boards
471on

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and

:SUit against 4 finDS ·
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~~~:~M~;~~:~ ~:m: ~:;~=-~~a~~,~f~~~ud~e:~~

Geneva I. Dillon

·

A $4,150,00) law suit for property
damages allegedly caused by
· longwall mining ltas been filed in
: Meigs County Common Pleas Court
~ by Ivan Wallace, of Route 2,
: McArthur,agalnst American Electric Power Co.. Columbus; Ameli·
can Electric Power Service Corp.,
. Lancaster; Ohio Power Co., Canton; and Southern Ohio Coal Co.,
: Wilkesville.
: Ivan Wallace is the owner of
· approximately 40 acres of property
in Columbia Township and, accord·
lng to the complaint, the defendants
have caused the coal under his
· property to be mined by means of
: longwall mining since 1!&amp;.
· This mining technique, the com·
. plaint says, remowd five hundred to
seven hundred feet wide and one
mUe long blocks of the coal seam
: under the plaintiff's property,
- removing ·the subjacent suppm1 to
~ the property.
The removal oi the subjacent
· support and mining of the property
-bY the longwall caused permanent
· and slgnlfcant damage the plaintiff
: alleges.
: Theplalritiffsaysthe act ions of the
: defendants caused a pond on his
· property to drain entirely; the
: demise of all wildlife. aquatic life,
• fauna and nora connected with the
: pond; ~ loss r1 fire protection and
· the aesthetic value r1 the pond; the
: Joss of a perennial stream through
: the property by cracks in the stream
· bed; drops In the entire water level
; of the property; draining of aquifers
: and destruction r1 springs; and
: Impairment of the watershed and
- water retention capabil ities or the
: property.
: The plaintiff alleges that further
. property damage continues to
· occur.
: The plaintiff further charges that
- the !lefendants, in mining the coal
seam. under his property in such -a
manner as to cause damages. have
violated state and federal mining

laws and regulations.
Wallace claims that morP dam
ages were caused to his property by
remedial measures attempted by
the defendants.
He also alleges that the damage to
the surtace and subsurface of his
prop¢rty Is not the natural result r1
the removal of coal, but was caused
by the removal of the subjacent
support to the property. He alleges
that that support was removed
without right by the defendants.
A judgment of $4,150,00&gt; and a
trial by jury have been requested 'by
the plaintiff In the matter.
A pennanent injunction has also
been requested against the defend~
ants to stop all trespassing on the
plaintiff's property; further remo·
val or coal orsubjacent support on or
below the plaintiff's property;
further damage toplaihtlff's person
or property; and to restore the
plaintiff's subjacent support.

Meeting scheduled
A meeting of the Local 32,
Interna tional Brotherhood of Brick·
layers and Allied Craftsmen will
meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
Riverboat Room of the Diamond
Savings and Loan Co. Following the
meeting, the group will go to' the
funeral home to pay last respects to
ReinoLind .

wtlery winning

numbers: 787, 5146

Geneva I. Dillon, 47, of Mason,
W.Va.,diedTuesdayeveningatthe
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis.
ShewasbornAug.8,l~inShade
to~ late Blaine and Garnet Willis

Evener Sr.
She was a former nurses aide at
the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Survivors include her husband,
Kenneth R. Dillon of Mason; three
daughters, Teresa J . Hoschar of
Albany, Kathy Sue Dillon of
Pomeroy and j)lana K. Bowles of
Middleport; one son, John R. Dillon
of Mason; two siSters, Juanita Kay
White of Cvlumbus and Wanda J .
Sayre of Okeechobee; one brother,
Blaine Evener Jr. of Uklsh, Calif.;
and six grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by a
daughter, Rachel Lee Dillon, who
died in 1971.
Funeral services will he 1: :ll p.m.
Friday at the FOglesong· Funeral
Home with Rev. Bob.HolllsandRev.
Marsha Hollis officiating. Burial
will be ln Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from &amp;-9 p.m.

Pleas Court against Floyd Avis and caused by the accident.
•
Doris Avis, Coolville. A temporary
The trial began Monday morning
~training order for 14 days has
before Judge Charles Knight' and
been granted the plaintiff by the expert testbnonles from medical
court, to allow the continuance of personnel have dominated the
necessary operations regarding an proCeedings.
oU and gas well on the Orange
The case was to go to the nine ·
Township property of the defend- · person jury by noon today
ants. A hearing for a permanent (Wednesday).
Injunction in the matter has been
scheduled for 10 a.m. on November
7.
Inotllercourt matters, ajurytrtal
In a case flied by Ira Russell and
Flossie E. Johnson, Galllpol.i.s,
againstGraceEIUs,Rutland,execu·
trix olthe estate of Mary A. Darst,
continued Wednesday morning in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
I
The case stems from a June 17,

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HISTORIC PARK INUNDATED - Harpers ·
Ferry, W. Va., National Parle, visited by more than
one mUUon annually, was covered by Rood water

Meigs County area business son, indicated that "much of the
leaders will be given an opportunity economic we.ll-belng of our county
to share their Ideas and vo~e their de(lends~ .on the growth of o~r ..
'ooiiCefOs as part of a romprehen· t&gt;xlsting husllfesse!. Because 'o t , s
importance to our county, positive
sive business·retention and expansion effort. The project Is being · steps are being taken to identify and
conducted by the Meigs County meet theneedsofthesellrms."
~ In-depth surveys of Meigs County
Retention and Expansion Team.
Jennifer Sheets, team•chalrper· firms wlll be conducted under the

s
Year

12 OZ. COLUMBIA VACWM PAC

SLICED BACON ....................... 79&lt;

QUMTEIS

MARGARINE ................. 89&lt;

APPLES ......................... 97&lt;

OHIO COllY

40 CT. MARSH RlO RA.

GRAPEFRUIT.. ..................... 3/89&lt;

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'
The Meigs County Council on . of existing programs and tech"lcal
Aging will receive $87,267 to fund
assistance. The need for long term
local programs for senior citizens. care options I~ also increasing, she
The funding plan was approved in said. as the number of citizens over
September by the executive com· 751ncreases.
mit tee oft he Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Also receiving funding were:
Valley Regional Development Dis·
Athens Coonty -United Seniors,
trtct and at the October meeting of
Inc., $41,210; 'flo! County Communthe general policy council.
ity Action, S87,391; and Worker
The programs funded will include Owned Network. $.3,700. Total transportation, home delivered
$132,:lll.
meals, congregate meals, informa·
Hocking County - Senlc Hills
tlon and referral, homemaker- Senior Center , ~.180 and Trl
chore, adult day care and legal
County Community Action, $43,68!.
services.
Total- $79,1*i0.
Buckeye Hills, which serves as
Monnte County - GNM Comthe Area Agency on Aging for
munity Action, $33,412; Monroe
Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, County Commission, $31,295; and
Morgan, Noble, Perry and Washing- Monroe County Health Departton counties Is required to develop a
ment, $6,000. Total- $70,707.
plan l'\/ery two years.
Morgan County - Ka•te Siler
Funding for the programs Is
Coulson Senior Center, S31.250 and
provided by th&lt;' Older Americans
Washington-Morgan Community
Act through the Ohio Department of
Action, $31.758. Total- $63,ro!.
Aging, The area plan oullines how
Noble County - Noble County
the funds will be used by local
Senior Center, $34,(1l() and GNM
service providers, as well as
Community Actton,$24,114. Totaldetailed census statist ics and pro·
$58,134.
jectiOns forcilizensover 00, descrip·
Perry County - Perry County
lions of existing services, an
Senior Center, $40,620 and Trl
analysis of special topics such as
County Community Action, $65,005.
Alzheimer's Disease and elder
Total- $106,425.
Washington County - O'Neill
abuse.
According to Cindy Farson, the
Senior Center, $42,193; Washingtondirector of the Area Agency on
Morgan Community Action,
Aging. funds for services are not
$120,721; and Southeastern Ohio
Increasing with the need for
Legal Services, Sl'i.OOl Total services. Many agency goals are
$17l,914.
focused on advocacv. coordination

sponsorship of Middleport and
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce in
COQPerati.Qn with-the Qhi&lt;o C""""rao
tlve Extension Service of Ohio Sta te
University and the Ohio Depart·
ment of Development~
Sheets said . that eight local
business people have been recruited
to conduct intervlewswithanumber
of firms targeted for the study.
Members of the team, in addition
to Sheets. are Ron Ash, Bill Blower,
Gene Facemeyer, Tim King, Bill
Nease, TomSereyandJimThomas.
The surveys will be oone overt he
next few months.
"We have a small team so It may
take us awhile to reach some firms."
Sheets said.
"Businesses can ca lltheCoopera·
live Extension Service if they want
additional information," she added~
"Our survey has several objec·
tlves," said Sheets.
"We want to understand better
how local business ·people view
Meigs County's economy and how
we can improve the county as a
place to do bu siness.
"A major focus of the program is
hrlping local firms use state and
federal programs that might give
them a competitive edge and thus
lead to further local groMh.
"Also, we hope to establish a
system that provldesearlywarning
of local business problems to
prevent needless business losses
and to retain jobs and tax dollars.
"It's a fact that the majority of
new jobs created In communities
like ours comes from expa nsion of
existing successful businesses," she
commented.
The Business Retention and
Expansion Model was designed by
Ohio State University's Cooperative
Extension Service. The Ohio De~
partment of Development is work·
ing with the Cooperative Extension
Service to asSist small and medium·
sized communi! ies on retention and
expansion.

By United Press International
Pollee closed monuments in the
nallon's capital and Virginia merchants secured their wares today
against raging rivers gorged by
Appalachian floodwaters that killed
37 people, swept away entire towns
and lnfiicted more than $350 million
in damage.
In the Northwest. snow blanketed
the Cascades in Washington, where
travelers' advisories were Issued.
Winds gusting! o65mph howled over
parts of Wyoming.
At least 20,000 people were
evacuated In the four days of heavy
rain that pushed rivers In the middle
At !antic states to their highest crests
in more than a century. The rain
ended Wednesday and Appalachian
rivers began receding but the water
rolled downstream toward Rich·
mond, Va., and Washingt.on, D.C.
The death toll stood at 37 -18 in
West Virginia, 161n Virginia, two in
Pennsylvania and one in Maryland

-and authortties in West Virginia
said they could not account for
another 43 people in flooded areas.
West Virginia officials appealed
for federal aid for towns with
dwil)dling supplies or' food and no
water. For towns in Grant and
Pendleton counties, there could be
no help because they had Jx&gt;en swept
away, officials said.
"The whole county is a mess,"
Reese Otts, spokesman for the
Office of Emergency Services, said
of Pendleton County. "Circleville is
in terrible shape and Riverton has
disappeared."
Gov. Arch Moore's pr-ess secre·
tary, John Price. said people in thr
county "are living In extremely
plimltlve conditions."

In Washington today, the rising
Potomac River threatened to crest7
feet above flood stage. In Virginia,
Richmond's commercial district
prepared fort he JamcsRivertorlse
to more than 15 feet above flood
stage.
Richmond merchants Wednes·
day packed goods into trucks or
moved merchandise to upper floors.
and two Phillip Morris plants in
Shockoe Bollom were evacuated.
"We have secured everything. brought the tobacco to higher
ground and secured things like
boilers," said company spokesman
Robert Bateman.
Richmond city olficials were
optimistic the cit y's water plant
could be kept mnning.

Officials · estimated there had
been $243.5 million damage in
Virginia, $100 million In West
Virginia, "milliOns" In Pennsylvania and $500,000 in Maryland.

"We feel as though we've gol
adequa te protection at this point,"
said Daniel Lynch, city public
utilit ies direct or ~ "lt looks a lot
b&lt;·tter than it did (Tuesday 1."

Meigs commissioners amend
animal' shelter fee ·measure
heat, hot water and new fencing
Meigs County Commissioners
have been 'in stalled at the sheller,
Wednesday voted to amend an
and
lnsu Ia lion Is being Installed.
October reso lution regarding fees
She a lso reported the humane
charged at the Meigs County Dog
society has purchased a tranqu ilizer
Shelter.
gun for the dog warden at a cost of
The recently enacted adoption fee
$ffi.
was raised by the board from $2 to
The ooard Issued a rem inder that
$.'i, as requested by Do rot hea Fisher,
1986 dog tags will go on sale
of the Meigs County Humane
December 3. The boar·d will mrct
Society, and Bill McKinney, county
next Wednesday with the county
dog warden. .
McKinney told the board it wou ld auditor to dPirrmine a policy on
kennel licenses. An expl anation of
be "to the county's advantage" to
that detcrmiration will be published
raise the fee. McKinney said he
prior to Decemlx&gt;r J.
thought the $5 payment by those
Commissioner Rich Jones re·
adopting dogs from the shelter
ported
the budget commission has
would prove those individuals to be
Issued
a
new certification of Sll,OOl
responsibl e pet owners.
for court costs for thP Lindsay
Also as requested by McKinney,
Taylor murder trial. Total costs to
the board approved the establish ~
the county for the trial totaled
men! of new hours at the facility.
$13,380.
The remainder of the costs
Effective immediately, McKinney
will
Jx&gt;
made up from delinquent
will be on duty at the dog shelt er
from 9 to 10 a.m. and 4 to 5 p.m. personal property taxes from com·
Monday through Friday; 1 to4 p.m. panics working at the coal mines.
along with a balance In Common
on Saturday and Sunday .
McKinney reported a total of 6ffi Pleas .Judge Charles Knight's
dogs have been through the shelter budget for court appointed
since July 3; of which, :ll3 have been "'attorneys.
Jones said Attorney Robert Toy,
euthanized. 86 adopted; 36 re·
who assisted the prosecution In the
claimed . A total of$63wascoliected
Taylor trial, was paid from already
in adopt ion and rec)aim fees.
Fisher reported to the board that appropriated funds In the budget or

Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow.
Upon recommendation from the
Emergency Medical Setv lcc Board
of Trustees, the commission accepocd a $t!,ISO bid from Pat Hill
Ford fora 1986 Fordon('-tonchassis.
and rejected all other bids for an
Pmergpncy vehicle body. The EMS
board said the bids seemed high and
detailed descriptions were not ·
provided as needed. Bids are to be
readvert\sed by the commission at
the earliest date.
Phil Roberts, Meigs County
engineer, reported lh&lt;• countY
highway department plans to hot
mix Union Ave. before Thanksgiving. Rolx&gt;rts said he was aware that
many complaint s about potholes In
thai ro~d have been received from
residents.
Rolx&gt;rts said cold mix patching
marerials used rt'Cently on the road
have not held because of the rainy
weather .
In routine bu siness. the hoard
approved an interdepartmental
transfer of$.'!(!) within the mmmon
pleas court budget.
Present forWcdncsda y'smeeting
wcrr Commissioners Rich Jones,
Mannin g Rous h and Dav id
Koblenlz.

'Won't be any better off now,' says
Pomeroy mayor in regard to repeal
"We won 't be any better off the
first of next year than we were the
first of this year," Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler said Wednesday in
regardtoTuesday'selectlonandlhe
passing of the Initiative petition to
repeal Pomeroy's one percent
lncometax.
Seyler and Potneroy Council met
Wednesday night in a contingency

session to discuss the village's
financial outlook and, said Seyler,
"what wc&gt; could do, couldn't do and
had to do."
Seyler says village services will
have to be cut back and that five
village employet'S, two from the
stJWI department and one each
from the clerical and cemetery
crews. were laid off this morning

(Thursday 1.
Scyll•r voicl'd pat1icular concern
about fundin g snow uncl icr remo val

this winter, anti upkt'&lt;'P at the
cemetery .
Pomeroy Tax Atlministrator
TrtTi Long will llr employed with
the village until all loose ends are
completed, pmbably through thr
Contlnu&lt;-d on page II

·

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TACO SAUCE ••••••••••• !.~; ........... 89&lt;
.

INSTANT COFFEE •••• !~!........ S4. 99
61/2 OZ. CHICKEN Of THE SEA-IN WA1£R

CHUNK LIGHT TUNA~A.~...........99&lt;
LUNCH MEAT •••••••••••~~~ ....... S1.79

TOILET SOAP ..........!.~~~ ..... 2I 99&lt;

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from the Potomac and Shenandoah Rivers Wednesday. The rivers join at 'the lilstoric Moontaln State
oommunlty,located In the eastem panhandle. (UPI ).

Ask Meigs business lea~ers
for ideas, support on project

PIMENTO LOAF ••••••••~~........ 1.89.

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Flood death toll jumps
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CHRISTMAS

Today - Mostly cloudy becoming
pat1ly cloudy in the afternoon. High
in the upper 50s. Variable winds Jess
than lOmph.
Tonight - Mostly cloudy. Low
near 40. Light variable winds.
Thumay- Mostly cloudy with a
slight chance of rain. High near 00.
Chance of rain - 20percent today,
10 percent tonight and :ll percent
Thursday. Extended forecast for
Friday through Sunday - Achance
of rain each day . Highs in the upper
40s and 50s. Early morning lows in
the~ to mid 40s.

£CHRICH PICKLE &amp;

u.

Vol.35, No.143
Copyrighted 1985

FOR

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CHEESE ...............~: .... sI. 9 7

By the Bend .. Pages 7, 8, 9, 12
Classi!leds .... Pages 12, 13, 14
Cvmi~-TV ............. Pagel5
Deaths ................... Page II
Editorial ................. Page2
Sports ............. .... Pages 5, 6

773-5977

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OVP Stllfllkports
Ohio voters came through with moi:P o.Jn an apple
for the teacher this week. They prese~tea=lhe schools
with 56.5percent approval ofschoollssueson the ballot,
the highest success rate In 10 years, according to the
Ohio Department of Educat Jon.
t..Ocauy, l)owever, voters turned thumbs down on
school construction levies In both Gallla .and Meigs
Counties.
In Gallla County, voters rejected an 8.4 mllllevy to
provide for~ construction of a new GaJUa Academy
High School by a vote of 2,948 (62.8 percent) to 1,742
(37.2 percent) margin.
The $9.8 million levy - which would have also
provided funds tot the conver~o~ of the CUITl'llt G~S

building into a middle school and Improvements to Rio
Grande, Clay and Washington elementary schoolscarried only four of the 25 precincts In which the
measure was on the ballot,
In Meigs County, Southern Local School Dtsirlct
voters rejected a 6.9 mlll, 23-yearconstrucllon levy by
a voteo!l.288 to682.
. The bond Issue would have provided funds !or the
construction of a new elementary school, in addition to
bnprovingexisting facilities in the disll:lct. WilHam L. Phillis, deputy superintendent of p.lbllc
'tnstructlon, reported Wednesday that 104 of t.he 184
schoo11ssues passed in Tuesday's election.
"People are coming to an understanding, It appears,
that school funding Is a partnership between the state

and local communities," said Phillis.
There were some costly defeats. Indian Crcrk 'Loca l
School Dlst.rtct In Jefferson Cou nty lost a c rltical
12.l·mlll one-year operating levy which would have
raised $1.4 million to pay off a state loan approved two
weeks ago.
Four other school dlstrtcts which lost operating
levies wU! have to go to the state to borrow money to
keep schools open through December. They arc
Buckeye Valley School District, Delaware County;
Hubbard Exempted Village School District and
Farmington Local School Dlstrtct, both Trumbull
County; and Springfield Local School Dlstrrtct,
Suinmlt County.
The state already has used Its $4 million
;yJproprtatlon forschoolloans this year, and the House

Fi nance Committee went to work ll'l-dnrsday on a
supplemental appropriations bill alloca ting another S3
million In excess lottery profits to the state loan fund .
The Indian Creek levy failed on a 2, 0flli to 4,520 vote,
and Superintendent Joseph A~'Uir said the Board of
Education will meet Nov. 211 0 discuss money-saving
options.
The huge levy was required brcause the district' s
largest taxpayer, \Vhel'ling-Pit sbu rgh St&lt;X'I Co., has
reen Idled by a strike and has not paid this year's
property taxes. The company ha s reopened and .
employees arc back at work .
Agulr said the district traditionally "Is not totally
support iveof levies." He attributed the defeat to voters
waiting to see If Wheeling-Pitt pays its taxes.

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