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:.~~:1~4~-:~~~~~~~t~in~e~I------------~--~======~P~o~~~~Y~~M~id~dl~epo~rt~.~~------::~----~--------~~~~~N=o:~::m:~:r:6~·:1::

~ $4.15 million sought in" IArea death I ~~!.~ihcP~!~ !~~~~~~~~~~ccident ~
and

:SUit against 4 finDS ·
:

~~~:~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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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

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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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Ask Meigs business lea~ers
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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;

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Vol.35, No.143
Copyrighted 1985

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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.

�'.
·•

Thursday, November 7, 1986

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, November 7, 1985

'No way' Reagan will give
up on 'Star Wars: program
ByHELENmOMAS
UPI White Hou.se Reporter

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan, anxious to "stop this
futzlni around" and get to tre
superpower summit, says there Is
"no way" he will gtve up plans lor
research on hls ''Star Wars" defense
program.
Reagan dug in his heels against
using his futuristic and controversial "Star Wars" program as a
bargaining chip with Soviet leader
MiXhall Gorbachev when the rwo
me(&gt;t meet Nov. 19-20 In Gen!'lla,
Switzerland.
'Ibe president made clear his
Intention to pursue research on the
space-based missile defense properly known as the Strategic
Defense !ntlatlve- in an Interview
We(lnesday with lour wire services
- · United Press International,
Associated Press, Reuters and
Agence France Presse.
U the superpowers both want
peace, he said, "there will be
pe3ce."
~agan was to meet today with
members or the prtvate sector who
support "Star Wars," and also
arranged to have lunch with a group
of Soviet experts.
'Ibe president also met Wednesday with Secretary or State George
Shultz on his return from his
pre-summlt mission to Moscow,
where U.S. officials appeared to be
stunned by the Kremlin's tough
stance on arms control.

RetreaUng from previous state- Yurchenko.
He confessed he was "perplexed"
ments, tbe Soviets were Insisting on
a total ban of research on "Star over the re-defectlon ct. Yurchenko,
Wars," U.S. ctflclalswithShultz told who returned to the Kremlin fold
reporters.
this week alter claiming he was
Asked how flexible he would be at kidnapped and held by the CIA
the summlt, Reagan said:
against his wut for three months.
Reagan suggested the Yurchenko
"The demands that have been
made on us alreadY with regard to. affair may have been linked by
arms control are that we stop the more than coincidence to two other
research and any effort to create recent cases where Soviets apsuch a defensive system. And I have peared to seek U.S. refuge and then
said that there is no way that we will returned home.
Soviet seaman Mtroslav Medvld
gtve that up .. : that this means too
much to the world and tot he cause or twice jumped shlpln U.S. waters but
peace If It should be possible to have was returned to the freighter last
week. In Kabul, Afghanistan, a
an effective defensive system."
young
Red Army prtvate holed up In
In a more·terse reply to reporters
following a speech heralding the the U.S. Embassy until Soviet
ftrst anniversary of his re-election, cificlals said he would be allowed to
Reagan said, "Hell, oo," when gobome.
"Coming as they do together,
asked II he would give the Soviets a
these
three particular incidents, you
veto pver deployment or the ','Star
can't
ruleoutthe
posslbllltythat this
Wars" system.
He said tbe Impression that he might have been a dellberateployor
would, dertved from his remarks to maneuver," Reagan said .
The president saki the top goals
four Soviet journaUsts last week,
for
the remaining three years d his
was erroneous, due to a
presidency
were to win approval of a
"misunderstanding".
"Someone jumped to a false tax refonn program and a plan to
eliminate the budget deficit.
conclusion," he chided.
In his interview, Reagan said he
was "looking forward" to tbe
summil meeting, and 'declared:
':It's tinne we stop this futzlng
SAN JOSE, Call!. (UP!) - An
around."
Ulegallrnmlgrant from Mexico who
The president was referring to won $2 mUllan in the Call!omta
defection controversies Involving lottery was faced with a night In jail
three Soviets, Including high· until his family posted the $5,00J
ranking KGB officer Vltaly bond set alter his arrest by federal
agents.
Jose Caballero, a $IDa-week
furniture store dellveryman, was
awakened by Immigration and
Naturalization Service agents Wednesday morning alter an all-night
party celebrating his bonanza, to be

By CATHERINE GEWERTZ

Islamic Jihad. threatens firing squad execution. of hostages
BEffiUT, U!banon (UPI) - An
anonymous telephone caller clainning to represent- the lslamie Jihad
terror organization said today live
Amerlcans held hostage by the
Moslem group would be killed by a
firing squad.
"We decided to ex~ute the
· American hostages by a firing
squad,'' caller told a Western news
agency. "Wattroranothercallfrom·
us all p.m. (6a .m. EST) regardirtg
1 the status of the cor-Pses of the
American hostagesandwherethese
corpses wW be found.' ' ·Before hanging up, the caller said
Islamic Jihad- ashljdowy Moslem
fundamentaUst orga~lzatlon - w111
send a videotape to,news agencies

STAR WARS - President Reagan fold reporters
1rom loor wire services Wednesday there was "no
way" he would compromiBe on his "Star Wars"
defense plan. Seated lacing the camera are ~h

paid In 20 annual installments.
He was arrested on.suspicion of
entering the country illegally, held
lor six hours at the INS office and
then released alter his family posted
tbe$5,001bond. Hlsattorney5aldthe
next step would be a deportation
hearing.
Caballero, 24, admitted to lottery
officials when he won the $2 mUllan
Monday that he came to the United
States about a year ago without the
proper documentation.

II convicted on all counts, remains In

LbsANGELES (UPI)- Federal
proSecutors, stung by a hung jury In
the trtal of the only FBI agent !'ller
cha.rged with espionage, say they
will seek to try Richard Miller again
aft~ jurors deadlocked despite
being overwheinnlngly In favor or
conviction.
ll.S. District Judge David Kenyon
declared a mistrial Wednesday, the
jury's 14th day or deliberations
to\lowlllg an ll- week trial. U.S.

custody.
The jury told the court It was
deadlocked 11·1 lor convicll9n on
four charges and 1().2 on the
remaining three. Mlllerwastrtedon
lour espionage-related counts Involving the passing of secret FBI
documents to his Russian lmml. grant lover, Svetlana Ogorodnlkova, and three bribery counts
related to his orrertng to tum over
documents for $65,001 In gold and

Atlomey Robert Bonner, who had

cash and for the ~ual favars of

personally led the prosecution,
asked Kenym to order a new trial
lor Muter, and the judge set Nov. 21
lor .a hearing on that and other
motions.
"I anticipate the government wut
retry Mr. Miller on all counts,"
Bonner said.
DefenSe lawyer Stanley Greenberg said he was "disappointed the
case was not resolved favorably to
Mr. Miller. '!bat's all I can say."
'Ibe juryol six men and six wornen
left court quickly, saying they had
"made a pact" not to answer
questions.
Bonni&gt;r had asked the judge to
give ihe jury a controversial
Instruction In whlch he would order
the jury to continue to try to break its
deadlock becauseofthe innportance
o!thecase.
But Kenyon refused, saying "I
think we have to race reality. If we
push these people any further ... we
run a clear risk of getting a verdict
oot based on the right reasons."
MtUer, 48, who faces tile In prison

Ogorodnlkova.
The Russian woman and her
husband, Nikolai, pleaded gullty to
conspiracy charges In the midst of
their separate trtalln June and are
sei:ving-prlson terms.
The case, which at first seemed
virtually open and shut, apparently
collapsed under the defense attorrw&gt;ys' lengthy list of questions they
said the prosecutors had failed to
answer.
Among the most Important, they
said, was tbe malter or Miller's
intent. 'Ibey said the government
sinnply had not proved beyond a
reasonable doubt that Miller In·
tended to become a spy.
The prosecution claimed Miller
had been seduced by Ogorodnlkova
in a classic Soviet KGBrecruitment
or a man made vulnerable by
career, marital and financial woes.
They made much or Miller's
admission alter five days or
interrogation by fellow agents that
he had given an FBI countertntelll·
gence manual to Ogorodnlkova.

What's InA

Drugstore?

We bell eve there's more w
a pharmacy than just fillIng prescriptions. Th at's
why we keep con cise records about your prescrlpuons, inclding vital information on any allergies or
drug interactions. A registered pha rmacist is always
on duty to be of serv1ce.

WASHINGTON I(UPI)- Fann
credit leaders, trying to build their
case for a federal bailout resisted by
the adminlstrattdn, warn a default
of the Farm Credit Systel'll would
generate an ecOnomic Udal wave
across the nation.
"The event of a default would
certainly be unexpected," Delmar
Banner, president of the Fann
Credit Counctl',·1he system'~ trade
association, said Wednesday at a
news conference.

of Reuters and Helen 'l1lomas of UPI.
Foreground, liacks to the camera, are Plen-e
RoU!!IIelin (Ielt)oiAll:enceFrance-PresseandMichael
Putl.el .. the Associated Press. UP!.
.

Bards

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

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SKYLINE LANES

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which have alreadY dropped 50
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another 40 percent.

Member: United Press International,
In land Dally Press Association and the
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units over two years.
Chase said default would reduce
commercial bank capital by $78
bllUon, slash the U.S. gross national
product by $32 billion In the ftrst year
and by~ bllllon in the second year
and raise the federal budget deficit
by $32bllllon In the first year and $53
bllUon In the second year.

People with Land

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
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The Islamic Jihad, which has holding five Amerlcan ho.Stages but hls corpse has not been found .
-Terry Anderson, Associated .
claimed responsibility for f!!e kid- released Jeremy Levin, the Beirut
The Amertcans stut held hostage Press Middle East Bureau chief, ·
napping of eight Americans sinC!! office manager of Cable News in Lebanon are:
kidnapped March 16, 1985.
March 1984, had demanded the Network,earllerthlsyearandfreed
-Peter Kllbum, librarian at the - -Davkl Jacobsen, administrarelease or 17 Moslems held in the Rev. Benjamin Welt Sept. 14.
American University of Beirut, live director of the American
Kuwaiti jalls for the release of the
In October, the terrorgroup said It kidnapped Nov. ll, 1984.
University Hospital, kidnapped
hostages.
killed U.S. Embassy official WU-The Rev. Lawrence Jenco, May 78, 1985.
Thel7areaccusedofearrylngout llam Buckley, abducted in west Roman Catholic priest,and Beirut , - TilomasSUtherland,deanofthe · .
bombing attacks against American Beirut In March 1984. 'Ibe group director of U.S.-based Catholic Agriculture Department or the · ·
and French Interests In Kuwait in released a blurred photograph of Relief serviaes aid organization, American University or Beirut, ·
December 1983.
whatltclalrnedwasBuckley'sbody, . kidnapped January 8, 1985.
kidnapped June 9, 1985.
The United States has publicly r;;=~=-~~~~~~~;;~~;;;;:~;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
refused to ~egotlate with the It
kidnappers, and the telephone caller
today did not elaborate on the
alleged Indirect negotiations.
'•
Islamic Jihad - believed to be

'Ibe council asked Chase Econometrtcs to do tbe study a couple
months ago to infonn the public of
the economic stgnlflcanee of the
system and to respond to congressional comments that system securIties holders should bear some or the
financial lOsses.
The study predicted a default,
although unexpected, would force
foreclosure of 88,001 farmers, wipe
out 1.5 million jobs, raise home
mortgage . interest rates by 3
percentage points and reduce
housing construction by 1 million

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sbow!ng the hostages before their
execution.
Officjalsatthe U.S. Embassy saki
they were aware of the threat but
refused to comment. "We heard
about It, but we have absolutely no
comment on It," said an official.
'Ibe anonymous caller said the
decision to kill the American
hostages was taken "because lndi·
reel negotiation" with the United
States "hasreachedadeadend."He
did not elaborate.
"We wish to tell America that!~
sad end of the Amertcan hostages
will not be the last," the caller saki.
"We shall shake the earth under
America's feet and the feet of Its
agents.'"

Impact_of credit system default

$2 million lottery winner held by INS

·Mistrial declared
·in FBI spy case

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3 ~ •

Pomeroy---:Middleport, Ohio

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Thursday, November 7, 1

::commentar~
..
.· .
.. ...
.... .
.-· ...
. .
..·
, ..

,r

~~·

-

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
~~~
Si!m1itl

..

....

...........,...___,...,..........,c:~,.,.

~v

.•

ROBERT L. WINGETT

.•

Publisher

.. .
.-...·
.·.·
.·

PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFUCH

Assistant Publisher/Controller

General Manager

,·

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LETTERS OF OPINION are we lcom e. They shou ld bl..&gt; )('Ss th an 300 words
long. Alllettt&gt;rs are subject to ed iting and must·Jx&gt; signed with name, address and
telephone number . No unsigned letiPrs will be publlshed . LellC'fS should be In

good

,.

.., •

t as t ~.

addressing Issues. not personalltles.

Letters to editor

,·

To those who really care- thanks!

A thank you to ·two pEOple who
care.
I come today to speak of the d2ad,
of funerals without hearse, and bu·
rials In graves hollowed out by
kindly neighbors, and rmurned by
loving hearts. The pioneers who
died were laid In plots of ground , of·
ten private burial places, convent·
ent to the bereaved fa mUles. In the
changes of ownership fl. lands and
.
the scattering of relatives these
places have often been lost and the
ftnal resting places a our anoestors
· been neglected.
One rl. these places Is bcated In
tbe Great Bend area of Meigs
:
County and contains the graves of
Mrs. Abigail Lindley, wbn drove
tbe Orst carriage from Athens to
Great Bend; Mr. Haviland Chase
and Mr. Isaac l.aveaux Roberts ,
both marked with the compass and
square - Mr. Roberts was the
grandfather of the well-known
Capt. William ROberts, steamboatsman, of Letart Falls, Oh.; Mr.
Smith and wife, and the· second
Mrs. Smith, wife of John Smith and
mother of Mr. Thomas Smith and
grandmother of Prof. Thomas S.
Carr of Syracuse, 0 .; Mr. Duncan,
a Scotchman. and his wife who
, came from Scotland with the fa.
:.: _: mous Nahum Ward colony. Mrs.
' McDaniel of the same company;
'
Mary Jane and Isabel, children ci
Charles and Lydia (Roush)
McClain; Mr. Artemas Johnson
and daughter, Margaret; and
Mr. George Warth, wife and

• 1

daughter. Part of the above was
extracted from the "Pioneer His·
tory of Meigs County" . Mr.
George Warth 's grave Is marked
with a stone with a carving of a
canoe Inscribed with "U. S.
Mail". Under the canoe Is his
name, and born 1775, died Dec.
24, 1838. "An Indian Scout and
mall carrier from the Fort at Marietta In 1795". He and his
brother were the first to carry
the mail between the fort at Ma·
rietta and Gallipolis, 0., In
canoes, traveling often at night
to avoid the Indians .
There are other cemeteries In
Meigs County just as Important and
In the same or worse condition as
this one WAS. Thanks to GUY
ROSE and a helper, this ·ooe Is row
cleaned of brush an debris. Also
thanks to STANFORD. STOCKTON
tor cleaning a neglected cemetery
In the Hemlock Grove area.
. If anyone would like to help with
the cleaning of some of the ether
abandoned cemeteries, . .or know
where any are located, please call
one of the people listed below.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ashley
Mrs. Sue Hager, Mr. Keith Ashley
Mrs. Margaret Parker, Livestock Rd., Pomeroy, Oh., 992-2264,
President of the Meigs Coonty Pioneer and Historical Society, Inc. or
Mrs. Karen Wei-ry, 21!8! Court
St. Rd .. Racine, Oh., ~9-2l::li, Presl·
d2nt of the Meigs County GenealogIcal Society, Inc.

Expresses deep appreciation

Page-4....;The Daily ~~
Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt; Oh10.
Thursday. November 7, 1985

Granted that any full-page ad
addressed to "General Secretary
Gorbachev" that urges oo him
anything less than that he resign
and go to a monastery misses the
point. But after all, there were
people In the late 'l:Js who
addressed tearful full-page ads to
"Neville Chamberlain and Adolf
Hltler" and no doubt It will continue
to be so, I.e., there wlll be those wbn
believe that Gorbachev is lnflu·
enced by a full-page ad that
appears In The New York Time and
The ashington Post.
In fact, the ad that ran last
Sunday under the heading, "End
All Nuclear Explosions" Is really
directed at Ronald Reagan - or,
more accurately, at the American
people. It Is an ad that asks that we

concern o~rsetves over the "grow- and then buy It," the late William
Ing risk of nuclear war" by Schlamm generall ed.
So that one isn't su,Prlsed to see
declaring a "mutual moratorium
on nuclear explosions effective" on the name of Paul Newman, who Is a
fine actor: or Jesse Jackson, who Is
Jan. 1, 1986, or sooner.
•
Now the sloppy thought revealed a line orator; or Richard Barnet.
In the language here quoted d:&gt;esn't who can lind a pro-Soviet pin In a
surprise, coming trom certain ' haystack; or George McGovern,
prople who tend to think ron· who mourns the foreign policy of
rigorously. The splashy ad is signed Henry Wallace; or Carl Sagan, who
by &lt;Ner 100 prople who classify· grows gaunt on perceiving nuclear
themselves as "dis tlngulshed winter next semester at CorneD.
But what are former secretaries
Americans." And r:1. course a lot fl.
them are exactly that, but distinc- of defense Clark Clifford and
tion In one field does not necessarlly Robert McNamara doing signing
bring distinction In statesmanship. that s!Hy ad? Or, Townsend
We are familiar wiih the awful Hoopes, who has studied nuclear
perlormance of so many sdentlsts statesmanship? Or, for that matter,
who specialize In documenting their Jimmy Carter, who was comgulllblllty. "Scientists are people mander In chief? And, for heaven 's
who first bulld the Brooklyn Bridge sake, a straight thinker like Ted

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AIDS 15 OBVIOUSLY

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IN 0\.R \,}V\.o••.::

Turner•
Robert McNamara siQ'ely knows
that when be was secretary of
defense we had bigger and dirtier
bombs tl)an we have mw ordered IJY. hlm. And the reo!OII we
now have a vastly reduced Inventory of weapons Is that we have
tested and retested In an etrort 1&gt;
diminish the holocaustal dlmen·
slons of a nuclear arsenal, whlie
maintaining an effective deterrent.
Who says there Is a "growing risk
of nuclear wai'"? Why Is the risk
greater now than yesterday, or tiE
day before? Don't these folk know
that It Is only because of testing
that, for Instance. we have been
able to compress nuclear weapons .
to fit Into smaller rnl$sUes that
serve tc deter yet minimize the
scale of potential nuclear exchanges? Surely they know that the
ongoing search for hydrogen substitutes for nuclear fission leaves us
with the desired deterrent, but
reduces the risks that attach to
radioactivity? Don't they know that
:a&gt; years ago we couldn't be 111re
whether an airplane tha !crashed to
the ground carrying a nuclear
weapon might run the risk ci a
detonation, bUt that such risks no
longer exist - because of testing?
That a nuclear weapon falllngtothe
ground at other than ~ specified
speed and angle wtll rot now go ctf
- because of testing• Don't they
know that the ron-MIRV'd, highly
touted, ll.®ton MIJ1uteman requires testing•
It Is significant that ronsplcu·
ously missing from the roster of
names was that of James Schlesln·
ger. And there Is a story of great
point going the rounds. It Is that
when President Jimmy Cartl!r
toyed with the idea of declaring a
total moratorium, Energy Secretary James Schlesln~r. woo had
served as defense secretary and as
head of the CIA, spoke very bluntly
to the president.

Mengele's fainily ____Ja_ck_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_Jo_se_p_hs_v_ea_r
South America was arran~d by lived under an assumed name In a Mrngele company's assets, as was
, done with property of major war
nearby vtllage for several years.
American authorities.
Justice Department sources say criminals.
It Is already clear beyood , any
Despite the technical breach,
d:&gt;ubt that Mengele got substantial there Is considerable evidence that,
help over the years from his faintly, once U.S. occupation forces learned Mengete continued to get money
which owns the blggest farm of Mengele's crimes, tbe faintly from his family. The fugitive's
machinery firm In West Germany. helped Mengele evade capture by personal papers suggest that a
Their help Is understandable, but pretending. he was dead. U.S. Mengele company executive, Hans
what bothers American Nazi- government documents of that time Sedlmeir, served as a go-between.
hunters Is that the protection givm reveal that Mengele was listed · - In the 1950s, according to the
to the war criminal Is not punlsha. officially as having died In 1946, and Wlesenthal Center, Mengele's fa·
ble under West German law. thus was not brought to trial with ther went to Argentina andgavethe
Indeed, to this day the Mengete other death camp doctors at fugitive I million marks to Invest In
family cannot be forced to cooper- Nuremberg.
a pharmaceutical company.
By 1949, renewed Interest In
ate with Investigating authorities.
- In the 1900s, according to the
Here's what our associate Menge1e prompted him to flee testimony of people wbn sl)eltered
learned about the Mengeles from Germany. According to his own him, when Mengele moved to
souroes In Germany and this . personal papers, the Mengele Brazil, money from the family
country:
family provided the money for his enabled him to buy a bouse. for
·-In the Immediate aftermath of escape to Argentina. ·
himself and a farm for one fl. the
- Before he left Germany, couples who helped him.
World War IT, Mengele's father
believed that his son was dead. The Mengele signed legal documents
- Throughout the years, the
young SS doctor's wife. Irene, "d~assoclating" himself from the Mengele family refused to cooperdressed In rmumlng clothes and family firm, according to the Simon ate with German au tooritles; lllller
had a hometown priest say a Wtesenthal Center. which Investi- German law they were not obliged
funeral mass for him. But the gates Nazi war crimes.
to. Nor did the family report his
This disassociation was to pre- death by drowning In 19'lt.
family soon learned that Mengele
was alive and well. He returned and vent the authorities from seizing the

WASmNGTON- Josef Mengele
may be d2ad, but the Justice
Department Is still trying to
!12termlne whether he cheated tre
hangman with the help of U.S.
authorities. The rotorious "Angelof
Death" sent huooreds of thousands
to the gas chamrers In tbe .Nazi
death camp at Auschwitz.
"We are combing archives
around the world , talking to. pEOple
In every contlpent, trying to put the
puzzle together and llgure out
w!Ether Mengele received any help
or protection from the u.s. government which enabled him to hide,"
Neal Sher, director of the Office fl.
Special Investigations, told our
associate Lucette Lagnado .
Sher characterized the Investigation as "extraordinarily complex ."
In terms of hard d:&gt;cumentary
evldenoe, he said, It Is far more
difficult than the case of Klaus
Barbie, the SS "Butcher of Lyon,"
who was found to have worked for
U.S. mllltary Intelligence alter
World War II and whose escape to

Shott and
lead:
Warriors over-Seattle

William F. 'Buckley }r•

More junk thought

Dear Editor:
Immediately alter the earth·
I would like to express rcy deep quakes, television said the Mexl·
appreciation to the readers of the cans were "too proud and nation·
. ~ .· Dally Sentinel lor the ~nerous sup- allstic" to accept help from the
port they sent to Friends of the United States. I'm sure there are
"
,.
Americas
on behaU r1 the victims such prople In Mexico, but 1 cer·
·
&gt;'. of the recent earth:juakes In Mex- talnly didn't meet them
•. · . leo City!
All of this has had unlntend2d but
:-;I went to Mexico City lmmedla· quite real liollttci consequences. A
• • tely after the earthquakes to 'assess headline on the front page of the Oc·
... " the needs and arrange a transpor· tober :a&gt;, 19ll5, Issue of the Miami
· ' ' tatlon chain for bringing IEip. Herald proclaimed, "Quake li!lps
' · Friends ci tiE Americas then dellv· U. S. Gain Leverage With Mexico."
erect 10,txXl "Shoeboxes for Lib- The article sald prompt and gen·
erty" worth over $300,® to victims emus public and Private assistance
• . of tbe disaster. These personal rei· from the United States played a
:-. · ief boxes prepared by Individual major role In changing tbe entire
·''
,. '• ·Americans contained toothpaste, thrust of Mexico's foreign policy.
.• .,• · toothbrush, soap, socks, uooer- During recent weeks, Mexico' has
::-.. wear, beans, rice, a small toy and moved farther and farther away
:; :JJ additional Items. We also from Cuba, Nicaragua and the Sal' Onassls
Years ago when Jackie
"Did you ever find out If It's the
brought tons of dried fruit, diapers vadoran guerrlllas and rruch
was
the
tlrst
lady
of
our
land,
she
original
'Blue Boy' or not?"
.·' . and personal hygiene articles. Two closer to the U.S. viewpoint oo Cenconducted
a
TV
tour
of
the
White
"The
man
wbn soldlttomesaidlf
~ ·: . weeks ago I made a second trip to
tral America.
House.
My
sister
was
so
Inspired
by
·
It
wasn't
the·origlnal
It came aw:-~- · MexiCO City to oversee the final dls·
Meanwhile, victims of tbe ·earththe
event
that
she
gave
me
a
tour
of
fully
close.
I'm
not
tbe
only ooe wtl:~ .: , . trlbutkm rl. supplies.
quake are sttll living In tent cities ·
IEr
three·
room
apartment
In
ling
to
part
with
treasures.
Doris
r&gt; All of Friends' aid got through to and will be for nine to 12 months.
Queens, New York.
Dembow wants to .send a needle·
··' : the neroy prople. Not me thing was Cold weather and Christmas are
I was under the Impression she point sampler which she made her·
, •, lost or stolen. Thanks are due .to coming, and Friends of the
had retired from the stately home. self, titled 'God Bless Our Home'."
:,
Continental Airlines, which Iran· Americas wants tocont!nueto help.
business until I received a call from
"That's classy. The only place
; , _sported 25 tons of supplies free fl. Your readers can help by preparher the other day_ "The British I've ever seen anything like il was
.' •• charge, and the ladles of the Junior Ing a Christmas box for a Mexican
swells have sent their greatest art ·tn a Hallmarkgreetlngcardsbnp."
~-.: LeagUe of Mexico City wbn handled
child. Friends of the Americas
treasurees to the National Gallery
"Barbara Lupin has offered to
.
·'- · diStribution. For many victims of hopes to bring 50,0CIJ such boxes to
In
Washington
this
month,"
she
part
w1th a color photo fl. her
:~ ~ • the disaster, this asslstanoe was the. Mexican and other needy chlldrm
said.
"What
are
we
sendlngthem!n
grandchild.
She says It has never
In Latin America this Chrlslmas.
.' ' Hrst help they received.
return?"
been
shown
In public before. But
:;~
'!be most amazing thing T w1t- These boxes, prepared by lndi·
:- · · nessed In Mexico City was the vlduals and groups all over the U.S. . "Nothing special that I know of," she won't lend It unless a guard is
I said.
stationed In front of It day and
•: ~ overwhelming gratitude of the , will contain new clothes and toys,
"That's what T toought. My girl- nigh\." ,
:~;. .Mexican people. I speni almost all as well as other personal items.
friends and I have a great ilea.1n
"The Tate Gallery has ,pienty of
Friends who desire to prepare a
:- :- my time distributing supplies In the
exchange
lor
the
English
lending
us
guards.
What other treasures
·: -: · ·tent cities which have sprung up In Christmas gift box sbnuld write to
heirlooms
.we
would
like
to
would
you
like
to send to London?"
their
::: . parks and oo neutral grounds Friends of the Americas, 912 ·N.
them
treasures
frm
the
bnmes
"Laura
Brown
has a pair of Ron
ship
' throughout the capital. Tens ci Foster, Baton Rouge, l.a. 70~. for
of
Flushing,
New
York."
and
Nancy
Toby
mugs which she
.•; tl¥lusands are living In makeshift Instructions. The deadline lor send"you
told
me
the
people
of
Flushpurchased
In
Atlantic
City. They
: . . .tents piece&lt;!. together from odd· Ing boxes Is December 6. So an In·
tng
would
never
let
their
heirlooms
were
crafted
by
skilled
artisans In
.- .· ·sized sheets of plastic. Middle-class structton sheet should be requested
out of their houses."
Hong Kong, and the shopkeeper
;: : ·and poor families alike have found immedlately. In addition, funds are
"We're now w1ll!ng to do It pro- told Laura that !bey were already
·: • themselves crowded Into tiny stU! being accepted lor our Mex ico
vlded they are Insured by Lloyds fl. collector's Items."
::: • spaces, destitute, homeless and Earthquake Fund.
London."
"I may be wrong, but I don't be·
Friends of the Americas Is con··: : without possessions, adequate wa"Who
Is
we?"
·
lleve
the British have ever seen a
,. : ter or sanitation. Many children tinuing Its work· In Mexico and
"A
few
homeowners
In
my
neighHong
Kohg Toby mug before."
.
:::.: .lack clothing and even a single toy. Centrql America, where we
borhodd{
We
q~U.
ourselves
'
the
"What
we're trying to do ls or:· · · When I brought supplies to these operate a hospital for Mlsldto In·
'Magn!flcent
Six.'
We
would
have
ganlze
our
treasures so that It gives
;: : :people, they hugged and kissed me, dlans, medical clinics for rebben
the
'Magnificent
Seven'
exthe
English
some Idea fl. oow the
-: • 'sang songs of appreciation, prayed, fugees from Nicaragua, schools,
&gt;· · and even gave Impromptu cheers. and self-help programs in agri - ceptt Martha Bordinsky's sllpcov- bluebl&lt;XX!S live In Flushing. We
ers won't be ready ilr tmnths. The have Myra Stieglitz nearly talked
Smiling boys and girls squeezed my culture and sanitation.
thought we had Is that If the British Into parting with her queen-size
neck. It was a moving srene which
Again, thank you for your geare
wtlllng to display what they sleeper sofa. It's an heirloom beoccurred time and again throu· nerosity during this time of crisis
have
In their stately homes we cause It has been used by three ~nghout the city. Everywhere the pro- In Mexico.
~houldglvetherrisomeldeaofwhat
erations In her famtly."
pie said to tell you - their friends In
Sincerely,
.
we
havj!
In
oul1l."
"What is so special aout It?''
Pomeroy and the rest of the United
Rep. Louis (Woody) Jenkins,
"What
art
treasures
are
you
pre·
"In
the daytime It can seat three 1
States - ·howgra(eful they were for
Chairman
pared to send to them?"
people and a\ night all you have to
the help they received. They espeFriends of the Americas
"I'm
wtlllng
to
lend
'The
Blue
•
ilo
is remove the cushions and It
cially liked the.SboeboxeS.Cor Lib912 .North Foster Drive ·
BoY'the
one
I
bought
In
a
garage
·
·turns
Into a bed."
'
erty, which they described as "gifts
Batpn Rouge. Louisiana 70806
sale
In
Astoria
lal!t
year."
·
''Why
ts
,Myra
hesitating?"
from tbe hearll"
'

..

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

got my leet wet;· said Mullin, who
added 2 rebouods and 1 assist In 21
minutes. "I didil't know the plays,
and my game really hinges on out·
· thinking ihe opposition, and I really
couldn't do that a lot tonight because
I was unacquainted with the
offense."
With a shot like Mullin's, however,
thinking sometimes becomes
secondary.
In other games, Portland nipped
Dallas lll.-109, Detroit smothered
Chicago, 122-105, San Antonio edged
Washington, 81· !ll, Philadelphia
whipped Indiana 105-97, and Atlanta
defeated Phoenix, 114-106.
Blazes:s Ill, Mavericks 109
At Dallas, Sam Bowie sank the
final free throw and blocked a
last-second shot to carry Portland.
The lead changed hands five times
In the last three minutes hefore
Rolando BlaCkman tied up Darnell
Valentine at halfcourl with 19
seconds left. Bowie then swatted
Dallas' last shot to preserve the
victory.
Plstom~l22, Bull9 105
At Pontiac, Mich. , Isiah Thomas
scored 16 points and Earl Cureton
added 13 during a fourth-quarter
surge to rally the Pistons. Detroit
overcame a I7-polnt third-quarter
deficit In winning Its third in a row.
The loss was Chicago's third
straight.
Spurs 81, BuUets 80
At Landover, Md., Mike Mit·
chell's 16-foot jumpshot with 41
seconds left lifted the Spurs, who
rallied from a 48-~ halftime d2ftclt.
Washington dropped Its fourth
straight game and Ihlrd In a rbw at
home. It was the seeond straight
game the Bullets lost after leading
by 10 points at the half.
Slxers 105, Pacers !17
At Philadelphia, Sedate Threatt
scor€d 13 of his 17 points in the
pivotal third quarter to power the
76ers. The Pacers leU to their 17th
stralght loss over two seasons on the
road , 40th straight over lourseasons
on the road against Atlantic Division
teams.
Hawks U4, Suns 106
At Phoenix, Ariz., Dominique
Wilkins scored 34 points, Including
121n the fourth quarter, in which the
Hawks outscored the Suns 27-15,
rallying from a 91-87 deficit after
three quarters. The Suns, ().6, and
the New York Knlcks are the only
winless teams In the NBA

NEW WARIUOR - Newly signed Golden Slate Warrior au1s llluDin
drives around Seattle SuperSomc Jack Slkma In the llrsl period
Wednesday. II was Mullin's 11rst NBA game after signing a Warrior
contract Wednesday aftemoon. UPI.

Brown and
Kosar
.
to he on opposite
sides of the field
By lUCK vAN SANT
deep on just ahou t anybody.
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Bernie
"He also can take a routine or
Kosar wut be back on the same field CQjlse!Vatlve five or 10-yard gain
withEddieBrownthisweekend.But and tum it Into a l:ig play. He has an
notonthesameslde.AndKosarsays assortment of moves and maneuvers to get out of bad situations."
that'svery unfortunate.
During the last couple of years,
Kosar said he's very Impressed
Kosar and Brown made the with ,speed because he's encounUnlverslty of Miami (Fla.) one of tered many faster defens.lve backS
the finest passing teams 1n college In the NFL than In college.
football.
"So many NFL cornerbacks c.an
, Now, Kosar Is a rookie starting handle wide receivers one; on-one
quarterback for the Cleveland and that allows the underneath
Browns and Brown Is a rookie coverages to do a variety of things,
starting wide receiver for the pass coverage-wise," he said. "The
'Cincinnati Bengals. When the · bestl'veseensofarlsMlkeHaynes
Browns and Bengals clash Sunday of the Raiders. He consistently has
It will be thellrst timethey'vemet~ his guy covered like a glove.''
opponents.
Kosar also ~dlcated that one of
"!wish he was still on my side," !he reasons he snottcedthe~peedof
Kosar told Cincinnati reporters In a · the pros Is because he lacks 1t:
conference call WEOnesday. "You
Aske&lt;! abolit complaints from
hate to tosearecelverofthatcallber. Browns coach Marty SchottenheiI felt he was without a doubt the merlhatheoftenhasproblemswith
best (Colleg~) receiver 1n .' the his "footwork," Kosar said, "I
country last year.
started playing football In the
"!understand IJI!'sdolngreal well sevenlhgradeandeverycoachfrom
50 far 1n the NF1... 1 think be's that point on could make that same
provtngthathe'sgo!ngtobethebest statement every week. So that
wide receiver In this league for .really Isn't anything new.
years to come."
"My speed Is, to
generous,
KosarsaysBrownhasthetwokey somewhat lacking. I m not a
Ingredients that often separate good scrambler, that's probably the
college players from great NFL easiest way to (lltlt."
Told that Bengal coaches have
perlormers _speed and moves.
been Impressed with some of
"He does a real good job of Kosar's scrambling, Kosar just
.destroying one-on-one coverage," laughed and said, "Thank them for
said Kosar. "He has tiE speed lo get me."

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"She Is afraid if the Tate Gallery
borrows It, her kids' friends won't
have anyplace to sleep when they
come home on school vacation.''
· "You seem to have everything
under control. Why did you call

me?"
"The girls wondered If you would
contact Prince Charles and

Princess Dl and ask them to stop by
to review our art treasures oo their
way to Kennedy airport.''
"I would be happy to. One Irore
thing. I'm curious about how you
selected the masterpieces for the
exhibit.''
I
"We all closed our eyes and
thought of England.''

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CHICKEN BREASTS .••. .... $5.95

446·29&amp;2

Gallipolis, OH

·1530 Eastern Ave.
Gallipolis
Route 35 ·
Rio Grande

'fwo plump chicken breasts with
Bob Evans special barbecue sauce.

CHARBROILED
HAUBUT . ....... ........ $6.95
Alaskan halibut steak. A great
' new 'taste!
.
SERVED AFTER 4 P.M..

THE MOTOR PARTS CO.

"

1

S~ia l cut pork chops se rved

Save 50% 'off manufactur·

Middleport, OH

uspA Cho ice

CHARBROILED
PORK CHOPS .... ........ $5.95

Belden
Battery Cables

922·2131

CHARBROILED
HALF SlAB RIBS : ......... $6.95

So come to
Bob Evans Rcstau,.
rant s and try our
great new cha riJroiled
menu items. It's a taste you
thought you cou ld only get from a
good old-fashioned summer cookout 1 '

Thick St. Louis style pork ribs topped
with our own special sauce.

SAVE

"THE STUFF THAT'S SUPPOSED TO GROW
HAIR- IT'S WORKING!"

Now Bob Evans
Restaurants olfer a
mouthwatering menu
of charbroi led selections
cooked lo your order every day
afler 4 p.m. Choose from :

.DOWN ON THE FARM

-s,&amp;evaMS.
RESTAURANTS

�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Cox, who resigned after the Blue
Jays lost to the Kansas City Royals
In the AL playoffs to become Braves
general manager, was the only
America .
Cox tends to agree with Detroit . manager named oo all the ballots
Tigers manager Sparky Anderson, castbythe26votlngmemhers-two
who believes a manager has never writers from each AL city.
The 44-year·old manager redirectly affected the outcome of a
ceived 16 tlrst·place votes and 104
game.
"Lots of times, a manager is points to beat Kansas Clty's Dick
Howser tor the award. Howser,
managing a last·place team or
finishing
second for the second
near·tolast-place team and ~·sane
straight year, picked up4tlrst place
of the best managers In baseball,"
votes and 63 poihts.
Cox said. "Wlthout players and a
Ironically, Howser's club destafi, a manager doesn't mean a
feated
Cox's In the playoffs and went
whole lot. "
on
to
win
the World Series. However,
Without a lop-flight manager,
all
votes
had tobeln beforethestari
however, talent can go unutlliled,
and personalities can conflict wlth of (I&gt;Stseason competition,
"I'm thrilled to death, and deeyly
performances. Cox's strength as a
honored,"
Cox said. "I'm not just
manager was his ability to communsaying
this,
but without the players
Icate with hls players and get the '
we
had thisyearlt wouldn't
and
staff
most out of his bench.
He left the Blue Jays as the most have been possible."
Each writer was asked to name
successful manager in the club's
tluw
managers In order of preferhistory, posting a four· year mark of
ence
and
points were awarded on a
355-302. Under Cox, the Blue Jays
5.J-I
basis.
won more games (991than any team
Gene Mauch of t~ Callfomla
in the AL this season.
,f)
Picked as a preseason favorite for Angels finished third In the voting
the dlvislon title, the Blue Jays took with 8 first-place votes and 57 points.
over first place on May ID and held It BUly Martin of the New York

COLUMBUS tUPi t - Thr final I~
Unitrd ~ lnlt&gt;rMtlonal OIUo H!Rh
Srhool Board of CO&lt;K'hfl! lootb&lt;lll ratLngs
(11'111\ OHSAA playoff divisions . Ill'!!
plan&gt; \'l1l"!! and won-lost ll'('(ll'd!; In
p;.m:~ l ~t :

P*-

Team
1. Cin J)yirlcl&gt;tm t It !27 t ilMt
2. Cln MCX'Ik'r !I I 19·11

l7J
216

l Can too McKink&gt;y ti l tlt l!l·l 1
t. 1\orlh Canton ClmOak !I t •9- lt
~ . laiU'"'-'OOd Sl. FAward llti9-ll
li f:11lkm 111 1 1lD-Ot
7. Ck'\·t&gt;Brnrolct lrw.•tlftt9-lt

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1&amp;.1
1.11
122
118

8. SloW Wal$h ~UII Ill 19-1 t

40
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Wrst BrniK'f'l 21: 1.1. tlk't Clnt:lnnatl
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&amp;lardmlUI 17: 16. CrnK'rVUk' 1~: 17.
Wl\lletlall U: 1@.. !1111'1 Tmedo Cmtnl
CatMik' aM WarlNI\IltOI\. \0 l'Kh: 'II.

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It Youres10wn Rayc&gt;ntlll i tS-11
81
' · You~I{N.' n MCIOrlf')' rill (2111\.1 1
41
lO.Canlon Cmlrnl C'alh (Ill 18-21
40
•~nd rrn : fl, ~ It: 12.
SINbmvUit- 32: ll. Dayton Oaln.,·ocd 11 I
J): 1•. St . Oalr!vllk&gt; 17: IS. Van W.,-1

Wash

NV

MI-...·...-.

Cftllr&amp;l Dh·

16. Wanm Kmnrdy 21: 17. ~1. Marn

MNnortll 19: 18. &amp;-llrlontaiiV' 1~ : 19.
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Bluffton «1: 1:'\_ Buck_,'(' /lk:l1'1h 2fi; 14.
Arrhtold 23: I!J. MIOdk'lown F'rnwlele t'l:
16. CadiZ 13: l7 llif'l A)('n~1l lr and
C'lnclnnatl Summit Count!') Ori.' , 12 rarh:
1!1, CrooksvUif !1: :Jl. f'r'(lmolll Rt .• l~h

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2 ~ .J,l3

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LA UU'S
Prttod
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Cldn St

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2 .667

J .m :! ~
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1:3 .400 3
I .1 .~1 .l'7

0 5 {0)
We tr

5

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PhlllldtlpNa 1~ lnd!ana '17

San Antonio 81. Washington 91
Ot&gt;lrol1122, Chkalll) 1&lt;1
,. Por1land lll . Dallal lCD

~ Slat!' tm, St-an~ 101

.,..,..,•• Gamet

(All tlmel t.SJ'j
Chlc1180 at NN JII"''W')', 7::11 p.m .
M l hvau~ at New YOrk, T: ll p.m .

LA Cllppen at HOUSton. 8: II p.m.
Dallas at Ot&gt;nvt'l', 9: :1) p.m .
LA Lakf'f'J at Utah, ~ :0 p.m .

G&amp;riM!S

Phomtx at Bolton. night
san Ant!IIIO ar Philadelphia. n!Rht
[)(&gt;troll at Washington. nl!i:hl
Denvt'l' at L.A . Laleen, ri~ t
AllanLa at Gokkon StatE', nl~tht

Sfanlf 11 Portland. nlgtlf

NHL results

,....,.,_

NA.TilNAL JIO(](EV LEAGUE
l"allrld&amp;DM161X1

AAA Volleyball
.All-Ohio Team
NEW KNOXVJLI.£ , Ohio l lJPI I - Ttw1~ OaKs AM AII·Ohk'l Vollrvb:rll 'Jl&gt;am
t.J&gt;k'l'lf'd 'b,\· lt~r Cillo Hl¢~ &amp;hoot
Vot-,·hall
C()ll('hr!l
AssociatiOn and

:a'

d lJi.tr i iAJ 1c'd · ~·

l'PI:
flRSTTEAM

WlnkJ...,.. Rock\ Rlvff, Sr
.ICihnson, &lt;'ln&lt;'lnn:tt l 00 HIU~.

Nan~";\

Mi"'~

Sr.
.\nj!l r Rl~n~ . £1)·rla , !'r.
Tn..,·a !'~~&gt;'f'a1 . Colnton MrK in~ . Sr
./Pan,.. ll olland, Hll~urd . Sr.
Jill MI'C'T'f'm')'. WC'XlS1rr, .lr
Bl!rb MMni:o. . &lt;1nctnnal i Srof on. :S r
SEC'ONDTF.AM
Chrt&lt;l M ilrud l l~. Par·ma llnl\ .~arrw . Jr
lff]Q.• Wrrllng. Hock\ Rh~&gt;r , Sr.
W i k;omrl~ .

{'inl'lnnarl O.ok Hil ls .

Sr.
Klisl lrll" Pou l"Dn, 8r('('ks-.·1Jk'. J r
Mk'hf't!(- J-lu'miln. srto.·un ia r-&lt; orrhvlrw .

Sr.
Kartn 1\Jrilln, Pf'rr}'Sbull! . Sr

1'11IRD TEAM
Milrv Prln('('. StOMo'. Sr
KruV KPmm. C'IIK'II1flilti Srton. Sr.
\'orda Brtx'r. DlH10n Way nr-, Sr
Srt,!hanlr Pf'!lll . Columbu_, \\'('ST [Illld

Sr.
K:~ t hy Knlh. Yourwstown Ursultnr. SL
Tr~·

Pap1?-.

Rc&gt;ynnld~IJ.Jrp:,

:Sr·

Kim St:hk' ll'l h, Laoc;uiPr. Sr.
OO~ORAJII.E

MENTION
Yi'hlli'Mu_'Of' Ant ltln~

.Jank'P Suablk.

Way nr : Mlchrlll• t'ark·. C I n r I n n a 1 I
Mcttw•r of Mr r£'\·:
Hf'ld i RtT'Ilhrl l.
(hlnMI I M OI!rr of Mf'n:y : ]-'IUfll

RJchrnond , Wooswr : Jo:/1 Wrl~~ - Gll't•n·
ville: Pam i\lpla . Dayton StfflbiM :
Dlttnll(' Okry. canton "-k'Kinlc,·: Lf&gt;sllf&gt;
&amp; hul 17. SkJ~;: Laura Ebcoolr . Shrlby:
Jill l-launlty, WorthlriRfon; Wrndy New
b.ay . Krltrrlnfl Fa irmont: Elmo f1rp1.
Uppt&gt;r ArllrWon: Rhonda Glln.~ kl . HoiIMd SprlllJ(fl'ld; Erin \'k·k, CuyahoAa
~Ill! :
UM Aldrlds;:t'. M1rplr- HMJlhts:
Wmd).· Dk'k. Tiffin Columbian ; Tracy
('\JyahO~ Falls, JPnny Smhh,

Ro¥,·p,

Mldv~· :

J{11n \l KlpWr , (Oium ·

00! WC!llland: Angk' Ba~Jl't , Lanra.'ilr r.

C~IM:Jf.Jhl&gt;·yl'ar - Mary Jf-11 . Clocln·

natl S(&gt;ton.

\\' L T I'll. GF GA.
1020:11 S834
7!12 16 ~49
64113 fi-Hi
li60 12.g&lt;l(l
56 1U 4.147
~Tl
9 ti:W
,w.,. Dt¥116tn
9 J' I 19 ~ 41
I! l I 17 ~ 3T
7 !i I 1~ 49 38
6 6 0 12 4S 00
~ 6 2 12
54 frO

Phlla .
Wa.~ h.

NV bm
NV Rna

~

Boston
Btflo
Hl'11rd
Mlltrl

Crunpld~

NCif"t'iiOiv.Sr too.

4S2103i4S

011.

471900~7

Mll'll.

.1 6 .'\ ~ I ffi Sl
2RJ7ll10

0'"
'J'rnto

1110 2 3'757'
SmyUW Dt\IIMon
1() 212'1 £?.47

Edmn

nm

7~

1

1~6l.IJ

\'fK'I,' T

6 5 2J4Mi7

wnnllli:

61ii · IJ

LA

3\0 I

57 00

T~7l

W~'1ReiW&amp;e

Buffillo 7. Wlftl\lpl'l!: .1

NY llland('n 5. Toronto 4
Phllatk&gt;lphia 5, NY RanRt'f'J 2
Ca l l!a~ ~-

Npo,r.· Jf'l'!f'Y 2

Wuh~gtoo

4, Plllsbr~h I

DP!rol1 t. St. Louis 2
MorvreaiJ. Minnesota J Ilk&gt;- 01' 1
Eii'!'IYI1on 4. 1.(18 Anlilf'l" t !lk&gt;·OT t

Thu'*'-f's GamNlAI 11na ~T )
Han lord .u Bolrton. 7:311 p.m.
C'llk'IIO at Phlladt&gt;lphla. 7:l'i p.m
~·.namm

Sf. Louis at Buffalo, NRht
NY Ranli:('l's at Wlnnipl'l. nlghr
Pfl!sbufll:h at NN Jt&gt;J'!ley , nl11hr
Toronto at DE.&gt;trolt, lilfhr
VanC'OI.Jvrr a1 Edmon!orr, niRhl

Tran8actions

......,.

Goldm Slatr- SIRflt'd flU&amp;rd Clui.~ MuUin
to a ' ·)'f'ar oontrat1: PXN&gt;rwhl ronr rnrt rJ
rorw;~rd Purvhl Short: walwd RonC'Il."till!r,
Cuy WIWams and 'ChOJtk Alrxslnls.
LA Olppl'tl - Off('f'('d a 1 )'('IU contruct
to frfe a~t R\f8rd Norm NOOn. ~

\Vfoslt'l'll Wuhlnf(lon -

Nami'C! i)·lfor

Myers llmTll'n'• crPNl"'llCh .

Chiefs Crown begins strul'roreer
By BRIAN MALLOY
MIDWAY, Ky. (UP!) -Chiefs
Crown, the beaten favorite In all
Trlple Crown rae~ this year and the
Breeders' Cup Classic, returned to
his natlv~ Kentucky Wednesday lo
begin his stud career at 1'brEe •
Chimney's Farm.

'

17

INDIVIDUAL ST .\1'8
ACES

AL MANAGER -

Bobby Cox, who led the Toronto Blue Jays to the
championship of the American League We!!lt, was named Wednes«By at

American League Manager of the Year by members of the Baseball
Writers ASIIOCiatlon ·of America. Cox, mw general manager of the
Atlanta Braves, bea&amp; out Kansas Clly manager Dick Ho1Wer for the
homr. UPL

Yankees was fourth with 19 points
and Jackie MooreoftheOaklandA's
was fifth with 4 points.
Tony LaRussa of the Chicago
White Sox and John McNamara of
the Boston Red Sox each received 1
point.
A former major·league Infielder,
Cox became manager of the Blue
Jays In 1982 after four seasons as

manager of the Braves. In his first
season with Toronto he led the club
to Its best season to that point (78-84)
and posted winning records the next
three seasons.
Howser, who won his second
straight division tltle, lost by a point
to Detroit's Sparky Anderson In last
year's Manafer of the Year
balloting.

GP ACE'! APG
Playet" (School)
Jody Harrlsoo (Mflgs ).........(l
8t 1118

Team Europe leads
By GOBOON SAKAMTo
KAPALUA. Hawaii (UP! )
Team Europe holds a one- stroke
lead over the United States entering
today' s second round of the $750,00J
Nlssan Cup World Champlonshlp ci
Golf and it Is Interesting to mte how
they got there.
Bernhard Langer of West Ger·
many, captain of the European
slx-man team went oo the offensive
to rout Japan 9-3, while his
American counterpart Raymond
Floyd played defense to turn back
the Australia·New Zealand com·
bine 84 Wednesday.
Both winning teams gained an
add\tlonal10 bonus points for totals
of 19 lor Europe and 18forthe United
States.

DlaMa Cleland (Belpre) ......:B
IMI Pyatt (Belpre) .......... .. .ll
Christl Williams (Belpre) ....1l
Molly Burchfield (N¥1 ......... 44

ti2

1.~

56
57

1. 43

Mary Jo Eckels jNY) .... ..... 44

~

Anita Spencer (MUierJ .. ....... 36
RoseDuvu~l !Belpre) ........ :Il
Lesley Silencer (Wel~tooJ ....10
Jenny Miller jMelgsl ..... .... .43

:17
40

611 1.&gt;1
l.!J
lll

41

J.Ol
l.C12
J.Ol

43

1.00

KILUI

.
Player (School)
GP KILUi KPG
Anita Spencer (MUier) .. .... .. .36 ll1 3.CE
Jfnny MUJer !Meigs! .... .... ... 43 J27 l96
Amy Dixon (~'Yl..
.... 44 107 2.43
Julie Miller £Melgs l ..... .... .. .43 104 241
Chrlsll Williams (Belpre) ..... .1)
B7 2.Z3

Tereso Boring iVJn. Co.) .... .. 55
Paula Rowan (Belpre! . ....... 38
Steph Tharp iMIIIer) ........... IO

1110
62
ri1

Usley SpenC'E"r (Wellston) .. .. 40

.'ll

Chr~

51

Selmer iMIIlerJ .......... 42

1.81
1.63
1.42
US

l.:!l

ASSISTS

Player (School)
GP
Lort Pyatt (Betp"'J .......... ll
Chr~ll Williams iBel.f ...... 39
Diane Smith tWarrcn) ...... 39
Jennl Couch 1Melg5) ...... .. &lt;13
Jodi Harrison IMeigs) ..... .43
Val To!h IMIIlerJ .. ...........33
Anita Spicer iMJJ Jen ....... . 36
Mary Jo Eck~s (Mil!er ) .. . 44
Karla McOoud (Wells. I .... 42

IRbbte- Dixon !Wells.) ....... 42

-'ST AS PG
t49 J.II'JI
137
3.512
117
3.(00
U6

2.744

U6
89
82

2.007
2.m
2.177

96

9t

81

2.181

2.1.66
1.~

DE KALB, Dl. &lt;UPI) - Northern member. Interested schools are
llllnols Is drapping out of the welcome to apply for membership
Mld·Amerlcan Conference, etfec· through t~ normal conference
live July 31, 198i. to become an channels.'.'
independent, N!U Presldent Clyde
Wingfield announced Wednesday.
N!U Men's Athletic Director
Robert Brigham recommended the
move to an Independent program In
a report io Wingfield. Brigham
INSTITUTE - Meigs gra·
criticized the MAC for being duate Bob Ashley Is currently
"eonservatlve and unimaginative". contlnulng his football career at
"Noribern has ambition and West Virginia State this season
we're not ashamed of It," Brigham after transferring from Utah
said."! don't think It's something to University.
be learjulof, when you say you want
Ashley started the season at Oneto be better than you are.' '
· backer for the WVIAC school, but
Brigham has been openly critical has recently returned to quarter·
of the conference's limit of 85 hack where he was a star tor the
football scholarshlps and N!U's Marauders.
lnablllty d. gettlngpubllcltybecause
In eight games Ibis year, Ash·
of What heclalms Is theMAC'sOhio ley has completed 17 of 48 passes
1fllt•
orientation.
for 186 yards and ha s had five
OIMtfhllnt
However, Wingfield was not
passes picked off while throwing
The'lliallloss
critical of the MAC .
. one TD pass.
"We're not leaving because we
As hley Is also the team's leadhas hands
think they don't play good athlet· Ing punter for average with a fine
Sun.
ics," Wingfield said. "We're leaving 39 .9 mark. The Middleport nabecause we think It ls In the best tive and son of Melgs golf coach
Bob Ashley, has punted 21 Urnes
Interest of this university."
Northern bas been a MAC for 837 yards with hls longest ef·
AND
member since 1975. Since then, fort being 47 yards.
SUPER CABLE
State, which has suffered
N!U's record against MAC teams Is
1'78-178-2. N!U has won one basket- through a 1-7 mark golngintolast
"Where It's More
ball and one football championship Saturday's game with Shepherd,
Than
Just Choice...
also features Pt. Pleasant natlve
as a MAC member.
It's
Your
Choice."
University officials said NIU's Kevin Smlth as a kicker.
CABLE NETWORK
Smith Is tled fcir team leaderIndependent status will mean more
Limited Time Offer ... Free Installation
flexible scheduling, more natural ship In scoring with ID points .
rivalries and more freedom from Smith has kicked a perfect five of
304-675·5055
travel squad restrictions and the live on PAT's and Is five of llln
field goals. Distance seems to be
scholarship limits.
Brigham said he hopes to eventu- ills iorte as he has kicked four of
ally place the N!U football team In six from beyond 40 yards but is
1410 Jefferson Blvd.
elther the Big Eight or Big 10 only one of five from Inside 40
Point Pleasant, W. va.
yards.
conferences.
'
NIU head football , coach Jercy
Pettibone said It might be sometime
before the Huskies join a conference, but ·he called the move oot of
the MAC "a very positive thlng.i.'
The Division I basketball p gram may attempt to join
.
@POMEROY
MldwesternCityorMetroConfe · n·
GALLIPOLIS
ces, Brigham said.
NIU basketball co~h John
McDouga Isaid he would he opposed
to Independent status lor NIU
athletics.
"It could vecy likely be devastat·
AT tuST
on
ing to our 'ikruitlng," McDougal
said, noting that as an Independent
CARAT
NIU loses Its chance for the MAC's
NCAA tournament bid.
SOliTAIRE
MIY WAJCH 1111 STOCK
Brigham's recommendation that
WAS 'U9S.OO
SAVE 14011.00
Shop and Calllpllrt, We Sa" You Monty
NIU qult the conference came In a
report released under the Freedom
or Information Act. In the appendlx
EVERY DIAMOND EARIIING
to tlle report was a Z7-polnt list of
At
disadvantages to Northern's MAC
WST
/0 OfF
membership.There was no "advan·
NOW
OFF
PIKES STAlliNG AT 119.95
tage list'' accompanying the report.
COMPARE
n,. S.. Dilme1 WI IJ
The report concluded by saying If
AND SAVE
Other Jewelers At lll1t 2S"'o 1M1
NIU chose to stay 1n the MAC, the '
athletic program would have ."no
'acceptance nationally, little recogDIAMOND lND
nition regionally and no q&gt;portunlty
tor success."
IIITHSTONEIn a statement released after the
AU 141 GOLD
NIU announcement, MAC commissioner James Lessig said: "The
· Mld·Amerlcan Conference has enjoyed Its afflllatlon wlth Northern
WAS '111.111
lAVE '40.00
Illinois. lt.ls obvious that Northern
Illinois has deCided to go ln a
Mllt. . •tiiACE
It 5'10(1,
different direction with its athle!lc
Pl'Ol(l'am.
WE SIZE 1'11SI
"The MAC wlll continue to be a
. IN 0111 STo;E.
fine major athletic conference with
nine institutions. At this dme, we
will not actively seek a I1!!W

members only are:
"TheGreatestGlft, theChrlstrnas
Madonna" In four divisions: mod·
ern, white; modern, other than
white; traditional, white, and traditional, other than white; and
handcrafted.
"Stars", a floor arrangmement
with candles.
"Family Tree", tall massed· line
design.
"Snow" , modern deign.

"Food", containing fruit s and
vegetables or grain.
"Youth and Age", fresh nowers
with weathered wood.
"Su~shine" , lots of gilt ter.
"Rain", water showing a.s part of
I he design.
"Hospitality", Christmas dining
table design to he staged on a card
table to be furnished by tlleexhlbitor
with a place setting lor one.
"Steep", blacklight.
The invltatlonal artistic design
classes open to anyone are:
"L ove " , warm co1ors, except for
foliage.
"Fa mily Traditions", inlerpre·
tlve design. ·
Junlor Division'
"School", containing a school
Item.
"Birds", containing a bird
fi gurine.
Horticulture
Classes for juniors are:
"The Out of Doors", in three
categories, berried branch, 12 to 1B
inches, ground cover, 6to 10 inches;
and roadside material, one stalk or
stem.

Plants, a dlshgarden with tllreeor
more plant s, potted plant, cactus or
succu lent.
The adult horticulture classes
are:
'
Flowers: potted plants, any
flowering plant, African violet,
single crown, any foliage house·

plant, cacti or succulent.
Serried branches, cultivated
dried rna terlals suitable for arrangements, such as straw flowers, or
baby's breath; or native shrubs,
branches, 12 to 18inches long.
Educational
Decorations which must Include
some plant material with classes
for;
:"Home", any outside door deco·
rations; any Inside wall decoration.
"Presenls". decorated packages.
"Beauty", tree ornament from
natural materials.
Special Exhlblts
Talents: 3-D picture contalnlng
plant material; and handcrafted
Christmas card containing some
plant material. (competitive)
Shelter: Holy Family In Manger,
including plant material.
Committees lor the show are
members of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners and Shade Valley, stag·
lng; Chester, entcy, classlflcatlon
and placement; Fernwood, entry·
way theme; Wildwood, judges'
clerks; Winding Trail, photo
graphy; WUdwood on Saturday and
Winding Trail on Su nday, hos·
tesses; Middleport, Star and Bend
0' the Rlver, guest registration;
Rutland, class name tags and
ribbons, and Middleport Amateur
Gardeners, special exhibit.

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH -BARGAINS

The

fi;· rt~!!jll!i(!f...)JntY!(J !lili(fJ.. !lf1JVJJJ/)J

*Wagoneer
*Cherokee
*Comanche

)

LARGE SELECTION OF COMANCHES IN STOCK
OFFER .E XPIRES 11/20/85

Ashley, Smith
leading State

••••n
aaa• coumry was
Geu•.gdwm dwreallve

his
fuH. 4:30PM Sat.,
4PM
An all:.famllysCMJCI•
CarchltO..CBN.
The Family

'

"

"lt'sa fantastic day," said Robert
Oay, Three Chimney's owner and
syndicate manager. He sald the
3-year-old colt was vanned from
Belmont Park Tuesday night arrd
arrived about midday without
Incident.

CONSOLIDATED
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(61~.

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YOU MONEY MRY DAY.

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Sentinel-

-

Entertallier

C'k'\lrland at Sacrammro. \0': lJ p.m.
Frtd~Q''a

Melgs :........................................... l

was

AtiP'III m . Photnlllllli

••

Gratton

4

wa.

'

Detroit
011.

•

M' L Pet . GJJ
1 .100-

.1 .571
l .501
2 4
0 i ,1)1}

r'hlla.

150

.'i, Caslalla M .:mc.aM'tllfVH~ l ll()-01
li Colwnbus DtoSalt'i!i Ill!\ tlll-01

~ f'

DIYIIklll

Sn-mnto

l. loubivlk' Aquinas li\'11 14tlll).() t
l . l.lma Ba th Hil t 1 ~ 1 tlO-Ot
.1. CAI'E t l\' t t2t 111).01

~;

N.4.TJ)N.U. &amp;\SKETIIALL A&amp;iJC.
B)' Un!IN f"'wwi*I'J•Ua.W
AIMnc~

. . . . . . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . .:

Northern Illinois
to drop MAC

NBA results

Artistic arrangements, holiday
decorations, tree ornaments, and
gift wrappings, will be featured in
the annual Christmas Dowers how to
be staged Nov. 23and 24at the Senior
Cit lzens Center by the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Assocla tion.
"The Greatest of Gifts" is the
theme of the show which will be open
for public viewing on Nov. 23 from 1
to 6 p.m. and on Sunday from 1 to 4
p.m.
Ten of the classes In the artistic
arrangements division are open for
exhlbit by Meigs County Garden
Club members, but all others are
open to exhibits from the public.
To exhibit no advance registra·
lion Is required, bu l entries must be
in place before noon on Nov. 23 and
' must not he removed from the show
area until after 4 p.m. on Nov. 24.
Oral judging will be held at 1 p.m. on
the opening day oft he show. In each
of the classes, a blue, red, yellow and
white ribbon will be awarded.
In the art 1st ic arrangement
classes, exhibitors are permitted
only one entry in each class. There Is
no restriction on the number of
entries in the other classes. All
entries must lnctudesomerealplantmaterial. Bases, mats, accessories
are acceptable In any class as are
baubles, glitter or artificial snow.
Several special awards will be
given. A best or show and reserve
best of show will be selected from
among the artistic arrangements. A
creativity award will be given for
the most creative and original
design whJie a hortlculture sw€Eep·
stakes award will go to the exhibitor
totaling the most points In hosticul·
ture classes. A junior hest of show
wUI go to the winning design In till'
junior artistic classes, as will a
reserve best or show.
Artistic AJTangement Classes
The classes for garden club

POMEROY - The slpgle most glon 11 belong to Galllpolls, Sherword In the English language has Idan, and Ironton. Gallipolis tra·
'vets to Ironton and Philo goes to
only two letters; the word IF.
U Meigs had defeated Warren Sheridan with both games Satur·
Local, the Marauders would day at 7 p.m. The seml·flnal palr·
have qualified for the Ohio state Jngs and sites will be determined
football playoffs by sllghtly more Sunday, Noveli)ber 7.
than a single point.
FINAL TVC
Meigs, who kist to TVC cham·
VOLLEYBALL STANDINGS
pion Warren 31-7 !or the only ~~;:e
~
blemish of a ·9-1 season, would Melgs ........ .. ..... ...... ......... ............ 15 3
have gained 15.5 fOmpu ter points Federai-Hocklng ... ... :.. ................... 9 9
... ...... .. .................. ............... 9 9
by defeating the 9-1 Warrlors. Mlller
Nelsoov Jl!e-York ............................ 8 10
The Marauders wound up with Alexander .. ....................... ......... ... 7 11
VInton County .. .... ......................... 6 12
74.888 points, seventh place In the Trlrllble
... .... .. .. .... .. .................. ...... ~ 13
region 11 ranklngs.
\Va r ren .. ....................................... 4 14
{Reaene)
Add the 15.5 points a win over
Team .................................. !........ w L
Warren would have galned and Alexander ................................... 16 2
Meigs would have tolled 90.ll8 Belpre......................................... 12 6
......... ................................. l2
6
points, enough to edge out fourth . Mlller
Nelsoovllle-York.:-: ....................... 12
6
place Philo who qualified for the Wellston ...................................... 12 6
ilnal playoff berth with 89.166 Federal-Hocklng ................. .. .. .... . ll 7
Trlmble ... , ... ,; ................................ 7 ll
points.
Vinton county .. .. ...... .. ................... 5 13
The three other berths In re· Warren ...... ... ................................ 2 16

the ~est otthe way. They fought elf a
late surge by New Yor!&lt; to win bY two
games.
"We knew the heat was on," Cox
sald. "Arid having· a great spring
made lt even harder. but we just ptJt
it out of our minds and did the job."

Final prep ratings

Flower show divisions announced

Marauder8 wondering what if

Cox chosen as A.L 's
top skipper by BWAA
NEW YORK (UP!)- Bobby Cox
assumes his new job as general
manager of the Atlanta Braves
knowing he left his managerial
career In style.
Cox, who led the Toronto Blue
Jays to the AL East title and the
club's first pennant of any kind,
Wednesday was named American
League Manager of the Yearby the
Baseball Writers' Association of

Thursday, November 7 1985

Thursday, November 7, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

FORD

7

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, November 7

Salem Center PTO planning fall festival
Plans have beencompletedbythe
Salem Center PTO for the fall
festival at the Salem Center School
to be held Saturday night.
Tina McGuire Is refreshment
chalnnan and currently accepting

It was noted that tnrougn the
efforts of Terrt York, Mary Ellen
Withrow, state tn&gt;asurer, wlll Ylslt
the school on Nov. 25fora breakfast
rect&gt;ption followed by a class
dlscuSslonwlthYork'ssreondgrade

21. The students of the month
luncheon will he held Oil Nov.16and
the Thanksgiving recess will be
Nov. 28 and 29, lt was noted.
Meigs Local Board of Education
candidates present wen&gt; Bob Ar·

donations
, paper
goods,
baked Itemsofandfood
money.
Volunteers
an&gt; to report at2p.m. to set up lor the
festlvalwhlchwillbefrom5to8p.m.
Numerous door prizes will he
awarded durtng the evening.

onAthebook
topicfair
of money.
Is underway at the
school. The second six weeks
gradlngperlodwHiendNoy. l 5wlth
grade cards to be released on Nov .

.nokl
andand
George
Hoffman,
Iva .
Sisson
Larzy
Rupe with
sending
prepared statements.
The second grade won the room
count with 56 percent of parents

attending. Of!lct&gt;rs' reports were
read and approved.
An open house was held with
parents of students in the fou rth
through sixth grades getting an
abbreviated version of a day in

h
·
Hi'gh te·.c
witfi aheart

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Literary dub conducts meeting

.,•• .._

St.Johh'sRiverabout:mmues~uth

Dodson birthday "Margaret's
Mrs. Marvin Wilson reviewed
Story" by Eugenia
Ryan N. Dodson observed his
ninth birtll:lay n:wntly with a party
hosted by his paren ts, Mr. and Mrs.
Daniel Dodson at Show Biz Pizza
Pa rlor, Pa rk~rsbu rg, W.Va. A
·weiner roast and slum ber party
followed the pizza party.
Attending and presenting gifts
were Trizah Dodson. his sister;
Ruth Anderson; his great grandmot her; Mr. and Mrs. Bruct&gt;
Zirkle. Rhonda, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Reinhart. Jason Barnett ,
Tony Roush, Brad Knotts, Jerald
Folmer. John Jeffers Matthew
Morris, Wil Ha iL Audrey Anderson
sent a gift.

of Jacksonvllle, Fla. The book Is ooe
of three, a trtblogy, based on a true
storyofthefamllyandthetrtlmesin
Florida between 1832 and 1817. It'
tells of the confiicts, battles, and
destruction of homes by the Semiml~ Indians.
Mrs. Wilson commented on the
family involvements wllh projects
and prosperity when Flortda be-

Price when the Middleport Literary
Club met recently at the Wilson
home in Rutland.
Mrs. Wilson noted that the book.
centers around Margaret &amp;&gt;ton and
her husband , Col. Louis Flemming,
their love and struggle In raising a
farnlly on their plantation at
Hibernia along the coastal waters of

cameastateandthechanges inthe
area and families. durtng the Civil
War .
·
Mrs. Dwlght Walla~, president,
appointed Mrs. Chester Erwin and
Mrs. Nan Moore to audit the
t;-easurer's books. Nine members
answ~red roll call wllh a favorite
novel. Mrs. Wilson served hom~made candy.
-

Grange meeting held, reports given

DUO

A report on tlle 1985 Ohio State performing tlle ceremony. 'It was asked to take a covered dish. Meat
Grange session was given by
announced tha t there will he a will he provided.
Pauline . Atkins at the recent countywide officers' conference on
Unda Montgomery gave a repon
meeting of the Star Grange at the
Nov. 11, 7:30 p.m. at the Rock on theprogressofthenutsa!es. Vicki
halL
.
Springs Grange halL
Macom.ber, women's activities
Kevin Napier. Meigs County
Th e annual Grange Thanksgiving chairman, gave a report Q11 houseGrange prtnce, placed sixth In the dinner wll he held on Nov. 16at 6:30 hold products for sale. Opal Dyer
state at this year's session, where p.m. at the Salem Township Fire had a report on youth activities.
Becky Rife serv£.d as Meigs County
Department. Everybneattending is
Mr. and Mrs. RusseiiStrahler, the Grange prtncess. It was noted that
former Teresa Spencer. Rock Hill, Anna Halliday, Star Grange's
•
S.C. announCE' the binh of their first lectcurer. received fifth place In the
g~ven
child. a daughter, Kristen Leigh, state with her grange yearbook and
In accordanct&gt; with the unlform . wlch, peach half, peanut butter
borv on Oct. 4. The nfant weighed also received th~ lecturer reoognl· lunch program In the Meigs Local cookie, milk.
nine pounds. 15 ounces.
lion award. Pat Dyer received
School Dlstrtct, the lunch menu for
Wednesday: heefaroni, salad, hot
Grandparent s ar~ the Rev. and second places In the black and white
Nov. 11 is announced:
rolls and butter, jello with fruit,
Mrs. Gilbert Spencer. Olester; and enlargement and color slide scene
Monday: fish sandwich, !lJtato milk.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Strahler, catatorlesofthephotocont!$1s.
rounds,chocofate!Judding, milk.
Thursday; pizza, peas and car·
Marietta. Great grandparents are
Installation of otriC'E'rs it&gt;as held
Tuesday; vegetable soup with rots, fruit, mUk.
Mrs.
Burgess
Wogan,
ChesterhilL
Dwight
Spencer,
Pomeroy,
and
_
___

Strahler birth

Meigs local menu

.-wl~th~M~ax~ln~e~,P~a~t~ty~an~d~Opa~l~Dy~e~,r _:cr~a~ck;ers~.~bre~ad~an~d~b~u~tt~er~s~an~d~-~~Fr~id~a~y~:coo~ks~'c~h~oi~ce: _.

"... 5 extra per pack really adds
up, but it's the taste that keeps
me corning back:'

We've lnves1ed in the very

rhar nurses have trusted for

latest shoe comfort rcchnology to creare ou r D ura Snft~

years.
Bur first we gavt! those
uppt:rs a luxurious full
lcmher lin ing. The resulr is
&lt;ln innn vati Ye new nu rsing

line-a unigue dual densit y

oursole similar to the kinds
used in runni ng shoes. And
"'e've comb ine d it v. 1th thl'

, same handst it ched uppers

20°/o.OFF ENTIRE STOCK
OF
'7h

SHOE ·

"To tell the truth, I don't buy
them because I get more, I buy
them because they taste good:'

for my money."

- RALPHS.!.~~

"With the price of cigarettes
going up, up, up ... Century is
the one value that I can · "

Spencer
Tiffany AnnSpencerobservedher
first birthday recently wilh a party
at the hme of her parents, Dan and
Sheila White Spencer. Cake and
other refreshmetns were served,
and gifts were presented to Tiffany.
Attending were her paternal
grandpa rent s, Richard and Flor·
enC'E' SpenC'E'r. maternal grandpar·
ens. Grover and Elsie White,
Syn thia and &amp;&gt;rena, Todd Wilson,
Jeff. Sonia. Nlki and Jay Circle. and
her brrot her. Kirt, and her sister.

992·51127

- VELMA MiLLER, GUTHRIE,OK

"Quality. That's what the taste
says to me ... and I get more

-HELEN GAINES,I:INCOLN, NE

~

hmta_gt hoU$~

"I prefer my Century. After all,
arette if I don't like the taste:'

-

NOV. 8·16!

·- GWYNE MAXWELL,
MONROE,OR

I Can't afford to smoke a dg-

shoe of unparalleled comfort
and durability.

j~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

"... there's more to a pack, but
that's not why I buy them. I
just like the flavor. And that's
all there is to it:' · , ,

- PATRICIA CAMERLIN,
WARWICK,RI

- WAYNE

Da n iell~ .

Girl Scout
Diary:
Racine Junlor Troop 1042
Investiture ceremonies for new
members of Racine Ju nior Troop
1042 were held Monday night at the
Racine Elementary SchooL Kay
Roberts and Ann Scarberry, iead·
ers. conducted the invest lt ure which
was followed by a party.
Plans were made for the troop to
tour the Racine Fire Department on
Nov. 11, with a visit to Virgi nia's
Nursing Home In Racine to take
placr•later ip the month.
Racine Brownie Troop 1259
Fred Scarberry and Nora Martin
are the leaders of the newly
organized brownie troop at Racine.
Meetings are held from 3:15 to4: 30
p.m. at the school with the first
meeting being held on Tuesday.
Tuppers Plains Brownies 1135
Pumpkins were decora ted at last
week's meetin g of the Tu ppers
Plains Brownies. Lisa Grossnickle
and Linda East man, leaders were
assisted by fi ve mothers in the
halloween project.
Chester Brownk.'S 11167
An Jnvestltu!'!' has been pla nned
lor Nov. 16for the Chester Brownies.
Holiday activities were discussed at
last week' s meeting and will include
a visit to the Pomeroy Hea lt h Ca re
Center to carol. and a used toy and
food drive for needy fam ilies In

school. Graide o11e tilrough
room presentations lllCtuaJrlg
VCR taping of Connie Gilkey's
grade in a dally clasroom routlllE
Next meeting will be Dec.
p.m.

- GORDON WILLIAMS,
SYCAMORE, GA

Thursday, November 7, 1985

Pomeroy

Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-'-Page- 9

Prenatal
program
available

Harrisonville happenings
......1~ ..- .. --------------------------------------------------------.....

i\

Clinics lor pregnant women are
still being conducted ·at the Meigs
. County Hea lth Department with
fees based on income and the
number of persons In the family.
Ann Blackwell, R.N., and certl·
fled nu rs!' practitioner, advises that
there are openings in the prenatal
program for res idents of the county.
Services include pl'!'gnancy testing,
complete lab work, medical and
soc ial history. physical examina·
tioqs by a doctor, routine checkups
by a nurse practioner, natrttlon
counseling, vitamin and Iron
supplements.
While fees are based on income,
no one is turned away because of
inability to pay, according to
BlackwelL All services are confi·
dential. Dr. Wilma Mansfield Is the
program physician.
Blackwell reports that prosper·
tlve mothers are seen atleast rnce a
month until the 28tll week at which
time vtslts a rescheduledfortwice a
month. In either the seventh or
eighth month. patien ts are transferred to a physician ol their choice
at either the Holzer Medl~al Center
or the Pleasant Valley Hoopltal.
Usually the . doctor who will be
delivering the baby is seen once
durtng the early months · of
pregnancy.
Bothrnedlcalcardsandlnsurance
ar o ac~pt"" by the Health Depart
c

' '

"'

Mr. a nd Mrs. Duane Stanley spent Sat urday at Lima.
a week vacationing in Florida.
Mrs. Mollie McGrat h and son,
Mrs. Donna Wineforner of Cha- Loga n, was theSundayd!nnerguest
rleston, W.Va. spen t the weekend of Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGrath.
here with her parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Waldo NeaL Also visit ing wit h the
Mr. and Mrs. Don Gibson visited
Neals were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Neal, their son, Mark,over the weekend in
Nelsonville.
Maryland.
Mrs. Pauline Atkins attended a
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball,
workshop at New Concord recently. · Columbus, spent the weekend here
She reported on her trip to the Ohio with Mrs. Frances Young.
State Grange convention at the
Mrs . Bessie Graham has returned
recent Star Grange meet ing. Mrs. home after spending a month in
Stella Atkins attended a reception Noi-th Carolina visiting her children
for the worthy grand matron and their families.

·

The pre-natal
program includes
mentforthe
servlces.
confidential pregnancy tests as well
as other examinations by appoint·
ment at 992·6626. Blackwell empha S·
lzes the Importance of early car e
ootlng that the first three months of
the pregnancy is as lmportanttothe
health of the baby as regular
checkups In the later months.
All laboratozy w'ork and related
procedures such as blood tests,
urinalysis, and blood pressure, a re
handled in the pren atal elinic, along
with nutrition counseling and information about breast and bottle
feeding . Referrals are also lJlllde to
the WIC suppplemental food pro·
gram for those who are eligible.
!'nclal service screening and refer·
raJare also a part ri the service.

ill:

1J'

..r·
''

j
THE MIDDLEPORT PTO WOULD LIKE TO
THANK THE FOLLOWING BUSINESSES
FOR THEIR DONATIONS IN SUPPORT OF
OUR FALL CARNIVAL.
Ace Hardware
LaSalle Gallery

PRENATAL PROGRAM _ Brenda Jones dis·

Mansfield who has just exwnlned the prospecllve

Middleport Dept. Store
Ginza
Bahr Clothim
.. Western
Auto
Fruth Pharmacy
Sears
Mr. Ellis, Ellis Sohio
Vaughan's Cardinal
Ben frnaklin
Middleport Book Store
Village Pharmacy
Dan's Boot Store
Locker 19
King Builders
Valley lumber
Firestone Tire
Sundry Store of Middleport
Wholesale of Middleport
S
' B ·

Crafty ladies
Foodland
Brenda 'sAidBoutique
Health
of New Haven
Elberfeld s
Dollar General Store
Kroger's
Chapman Shoes
Francis Florist
Pomeroy Flower Shop
New York Clothing
Piua Hut
Swisher &amp; Losh e Pharmacy
K'&amp;C Jewelers·
Hartley's Shoe Store
Empire Furniture
Clark ,Jewelers
Powells Super Valu
Simons Pick-A-Pair Shoes

the Meigs County Health e~of~t~he~p~r~m~·-t•~'serv
Department.
r-~c:u:sses:~he=r~exarn::lnatlo::n~re=po=rt~wl=th~Dr=.-=Wilrn:a_~rn~othe~r~taldn~~g~ad~van~tag~
__loos-o_fj~=a:n:dy:s::o:ut::tq:u:e::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Parts Plus

SURE WE HAVE LOW
DISCOUNT PRICES!!!
ALSO WE HAVE THE
LARGEST INVENTORY OF
AUTO PARTS IN THE
TRI-STATE AREA

autostoro
Batteries

Delco

o GSO cold cranking amps in
an 8-inch case.
o Avai lable with side or toppost terminqls.

8&amp;40 meets,
.
_tlt/!.Qr:JJ ..gwf!n .
,. on fund drtve

SSCJ!c!
72 MONTH

GUARANTEE

The final report on the annual
cystic fibrosis fund ·dylve shQwlng
collections of $819 IO{as given at
Mondl!y night's meeting of tl!e
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight and
Forty, held at the home of Rhoda
Hackett .
Julia Hysell,chaPeau, presided at
the session which oPened In ritual is·
tic form with Eunle Brinker as Ia
concierge. Lula Hampt on, chapeau
premier, and Catherine Welsh,
chape au deuxle me, reading
"Flanders Field." The Ia secretary·
casslere gave · her report and
cor.respondience was read from
Jane Willis, departem ~ntal cha·
peau. Atllankyoucardfrom the Van
Meter family was acknoweldged.
It was votoo to send a donation to
nurses schol~rshlp and children and
youth as m~morlals to Betty Van
Meter. It was also voted to pay du es
lor Gladys Mowery who Is confined
to a nursin~ facility.
Plans were completed for the
Christrnas1party to be heldatTrinlty
Chu!t!h, Dec. 2, at 6:30p.m. Mrs.•
Hackett was assisted by Mrs. Welsh
and Fionlnce Richards in serving a
dessert
which carried out a
motif.

• All-CLIMATE

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10Wo40

69¢u

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wo. oN 11 QT. PUUM.m

limit 12

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•HEATER .CORES REPAIRED

p

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,

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Wiper Blades

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- MARY STARR, MONROE, LA

$269

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per carton
at no extra"cost:

Mini Pi&lt;~ · Up • 53"

Branco/llaur • 611/1"

$5

rnrn11PKK.
TAIL GATE
PROTECTOR

.

ssggs

Std. Pick-up • 5.6"

DEFLECTOR

{ /

, cj;;,AR/'

7]

52395

GLASS SHOP
SERVICE

w/ brac .. t

$19.95 RED • ILUE • GR!EH • &gt;1\0k ED

•WINDSHIELDS
•WING GLASS
•DOOR GLASS
•REAR WINDOWS

WRANGLER BENCH
SEAT COVERS
LI ST

. $54. 80

Mentholeweilllble in Mlected areas.

S3383

• A 11•9 11 SC&lt;!blun1 1or gun' o r
lri tlH'!Q QC;tr 51011118

• Ha~t·d 1111 "li l('!t'~h' d n·tai! pn::r •t•f!o u~' ~ht'l

n,,fl••nal :!! "'l t: tl(art• tk CArl &lt;lfl tl .unt n;unr l)~; md •

G&amp;J

De&lt;'~mber.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth, And Low Birth Weight.
•

'

..

·,

l'lr1J ,_ J1i11 et.rl"r flfund 01
llldWWt ., ... in rMIW! COII-

MENTHOL 100's: 13 mg."lar". 1.0mg. nicolinp,
FILTER: 15 mg."tar". 1.1 mg nicotine. av. per cigarene by FTC melhod .

diliOIIWtllft~PIIIIIIIPf'JIIIOI
pu'tllllll {I I - Nft$ 'lfticll 1\rH

111111 NtiW

-

o)ft .,...

"llG hluli polq.

cal). ~· ,

GALLIPOLIS
240 THIRD AVI. 1104 IA!I!RN AYI.
.446-1113
446-4704
I AM 'nL. 5:30 PM I AM 'Ttl 7 PM

CS85-t20

Parts Plus au
POMEROY

MASON, WV

119 W. 7nd AVI.
97·7139

ROUTl 33

I AM 'nL 5:30 PM

13-5511

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515 MAIN ST.
.675 ' 1520
lAM 'Ttl HM

26 tt JACKSON AVI.

61!-2731
lAM 'Ttl I PM

�.•
'·'

November 7, 1985

Ohio

..LaSalle Gallery has a

Thursday, November 7, 1985

''

By MAT111EW C. QUINN

SILK FLORALARRANGEMEN'IS areapopularlealure .. l.aSal!e
· Gallery, Middleport. Employee SheUaCurtlsadds flnalloucheslomeof
a varlely of arrancements di!played allhe store. laSaUe Gallery wW
~ make deliveries ~ Dowen.

-- Local briefs·.------.
Jury awards $85,000 judgment

A Meigs County' jury awarded a judgment ci $60,!XXl to Ira Russell
Johnson,' of Ga!Upolls, and $2;,!XXl to his wife, Flossie E. Johnson,
also of Gallipolis. from~race Ellis. Rutland, executrix of the estate
of Mary Darst, following a two and a half day trial in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.
The judgments were awarded for damages to the plaintiffs which
allegedly stemrned from a June 17,19&amp;! automobill'accident on Rt. 7,
one mUe north of the Gallia-Meigs Une.
Mary Darst was the driver of a vehicll' in the accident.
EX(ll'rt medlcal testimonies were presented by IDth sides on
Monday and TUesday. Closing arguments hy lhe attorneys in the
case were presented Wednesday morning.
Dean Evans, Gallipolis, represent€.:! the defendant.
Bernard Fultz, Pomeroy, and Wam&gt;n Sheets, Gallipolis,
represented the plaintiffs.
On lhe jury were William R. Arnott, Elwood Howard, Jr., Arthur
H. l)eegle, Jody GQeglein, Wanda Lee Slone, Paul E. Harris. Virgil L.
Carl, Joseph Aaron Gaston, and an alternate.

WASHINGTON IUPI)- Former
KGB defector Vltaly Yurchenko
returns to the Soviet Union today,
leaving the administration with a
major embarrassment but facing
an uncertain future at home.
Yurchenko, who had been prized
hy the administration as a top-level
defector from the Soviet spy agency,
declined comment to reporters ashe
left Dulles International Airport for
Moscow late Wednesday afternoon
aboard a special Aeroflot jet.
But a statement Issued later in his
name by the Soviet Embassy
reaffirmed his chargeS of being
"kidnapped and forcibly detained
hy the American secret services,"
and said denials from the admlnis·
!ration "do not correspond to
reality."
President Reagan, in his ·nrst
public comment on Yurchenko's
charges, referred to the cases of
three recent would·be Soviet defec·
tors, lncludlngYurchenko, andsald,
"You can't rule out that this might
have been a deliberate ploy."

In another development, ABC
News, quoting anonymous State
Department offtclals, reported the
wife of a Soviet trade official who
apparently committed suicide in
Toronto Tuesday was the same

ENIOR CITIZENS CE

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, Oh•..

FEATURING 20
AREA CRAFT MAKERS
NOV. 8, 1985-1 to 8 PM
V. 9, 1985-10 AM to 5

122*

Hamie Crabtree to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11:43
a.m. to Vine St. for Roy Riffle to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at I0:15 p, m. to 674 Plum St. for Margaret Goett to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport altO: 18 p.m. to 186 North
Second St. for Jean New to Veterans Mernorial Hospital.
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports six calls
Tuesday; Racine at 3: 3I a.nl. treated but did not transport Norm
Thayer, Syracuse at U: 05 a.m. was called to the c:orner of 7th and
John Sts. for Leota Cooper to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 11:16 a.m. transported Opal Cummings from
Stonewood Apts. to Pleasant Valley Hospital: Rutland at 12:59 p.m.
went to Salem Center for Nina Burgess to O'Blenness Memortal
Hospital; Middleport at 10:03 p.m. transported Evelyn Mains from
Stonewood Apts. to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11:13
p.m. went to Main St. for Danny Crisplett to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.,

Machines &amp; Cabinets
REDUCED FOR
CHRISTMAS GIVING

. Nine were fined In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
· Tuesday night.
· Fined were I,arry A. Rider, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, spiningtlres;
Patty L. Landacre, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, fail•re to maintain
control, and $2; and costs fQr disorderly manner; Ronald E.
. Landacre, R•tland. $25 and costs, disorderly manner: Vincent
: Stone, Middleport, $100 and costs, assault.
. Also fined were Michael A. Tillis, Rutland, $100 and costs, driving
· under suspension; Timothy Thomas, Pomeroy, $IO, expired tags:
Raymond Little, Middleport, $250 and costs, disorderly manner:
Howard Ferguson, Pomeroy, $~ and costs, no operator's Ucense,
and $42j and costs, plus three days in jail, driving while intoxicated;
and VIcky Payne. Middleport, $~and costs, disorderly manner.

GOOD &amp; U.SED SINGER
$6995

•PJ's

•LINGERIE

Allin llolid•g
Co/011

• Darlt·LIIe black metrhc picture tube
• E·UXXJ enesala
• Mechanical tuning - 82 channel
• Autom•tle line tuning

• Sharpne·ss control
• Highly elllclent 3' 1&lt; s• speaker

• VHF/UHF anlennu

13 IN. ElECTRONIC TUNER CAC 122 ................... $2 58
191N. PUSH BUTTON CXC 149 ......................... $338
19 IN. REMOTE CXB 158 ................................... $398
(ASH &amp; CARRY l'RI&lt;ES ON THE ABOVE MODELS

CLC226PE-StNGLE KNOI

$

'

1

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

985-3307

CHESTER

Local Representatives of Sarah
Louise Co. will once again be at the
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE with a
WIDE selection of 14K Gold Jewelry.

ALL AT 50°/o SAVINGS!!
Extra Special Values Include:

Built better than it has to be.
• Heavy duty 100% cotton Brown
Duck

'I

\

• Water repellent
• Wind re sistant and snag proof

ONE DAY ONLY!
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8

24" ROPE ADD-A-BEAD CHAIN ....... .. '28.99
18" 2mm ROPE W/SAFETY LOCK ... '110.00
4mm GOLD BALL EARRINGS .. ............. ·~.99
SERPENTINE B.RACELET ................. .. . '13.99

All Sizes and Styles of Add-a-Bead will be available
ALSO: A large selection of many styles of
Chains, Earrings &amp; Rings

• Red nylon lining quilted to
polyester
• Extra strong, triple -stitched

Pf111 IIDir ID

main seams

1ome Chtllftnll Shopplnfll/ ·
For Your Shopping Convenience We Are
Pleased To Make This Special Sale Available To
You Until 8:00 P.M.

• Thread bar tacks at stress points
• Heavy duty two way zipper front
• Heavy duty two way leg zipper
wa1st for easy on and off

to

• Bi·swing action back

REMEMBER.

• 'TWo front zip c hest pockets
NEW HOURS

9·5 Mon.-Sat.

OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL I P.M.

9-B Friday

$6 899

. Avel••• "'
1b.H.
full• ..Union
•···
mldtl~

USA.

:z
Without

Leg Zippers

Rugged as the men who wear thern.

DAN'S
•

flop bg lfld flf Ul 111111 gou irlfh

IN THE MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING

ONE DAY ONLY!!
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8th
50°/o Off, ON ALL 14K GOLD
· . At the

Middlep~rt
83 Mill St.

Book Store

Middleport

992-2641

Ten cases heard in

I

'

Donald E. Hartley. 54, of 1\ew
Haven, W.Va .. died at Pleasant
Valley Hospital Wednesday.•!
He was born· March 18, 1~1 in
Poca, W.Va .. to the late Upton and
Nevada Steele Hartley.
J
He was a retired malntlnance
mechanic at the Kaiser Aluminum
and Chemlcill Corporation'wlth 27
years service. He was a mtmber ol
the Broad Run Road and Gun Club
and Smlth-Capehart Amtrlcan Legion Post 140.
!'
Survlvingarehiswlle rothyA.
Hart ley of New Haven; ne daughter, Mrs. Dave (Sherry,~. ] Buskirk
of Syracuse: one s , Dana E.
Hartll'y of Point Pie ant, W.Va.;
four brothers. Jam of TitusvUle,
Fla., Charles of Nit W.Va.; E~sel
of Winfield, W.Va.. nd Douglas of
Inverness. Fla
and two
grandchildren.
Funeral service will be I p.m.
Saturday at Fo esong Funeral
Home in Masonwith Rev. John
Campbell offida g. Friends may
call at thP fune I home from 4-9
p.m. Friday. 1
"

Margie v~· obinette
Margie v. blnette, 58, of 43429

r

Dutchtown, P mercy. dledWednes·
day evening the Pomeroy Health
Care Center.
She wa~rn at Keen Mountain,
W.Va., to t late Seth and Maggie
Altizer M ey. She was a home·
maker and member of the United
Methodist Church.
Surviv~ are her husband, David
w. Robltftte; one son, Nathan
Robinettqof Pomeroy; one brother.
ShermaqMosley of Abingdon, Va.:

Pome~oy

court

Mike Darst, Liberty Lane, Pomeroy, was fined $63 and costs !or no
operator's license and $375 and costs for driving while intoxicated
when he appeared in the court of MaytJr Richard Seyler Tuesday
night.
•
Also fined were Timothy Herdman, Pomeroy, public intoxication,
$113 and costs: and Charles Aelker, Laurel Cliff, public intoxication,
Sl13 and costs.
Fotfelting IDnds on speeding charg~&gt;s were Thomas Quillen,
Middleport, $46; Cynthia I;'atterson, letart, W. Va., $52; Lawrence .
Holt2, Jr., Cameron, W. Va., $49; Clark Baker, Long Bottom, $45;
Sherrie Douglas, Wlbfleld, W. Va., $43; and William Mentzer,
Louisvllle, $50.
Timothy Wayne Smith, Point Pleasant, forfeited a $63 IDnd on a .
traffic light violation.

continuedfrompagei

Meigs district files application

I

Area deaths

ROAD WIDENED -The Rainbow Ridge Road in
Lebanon Township of Meigs County has been widened

one sister, Pansy Stamper of
Abingdon, Md.; and several nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded in death by ooe
brother, Lee Mosley: two haU
brothers, Bob Altizer and Bill Van
Dyke and a half sister, Joan Mosley . .
Funeral services will he 2 p.m.
Saturday at the Hurst-Scott Funeral
Home In·Richlands, Va .. Burial will
he in Green Hill Memorial Garden at
Claypool Hill, Va. Friends may call
at the Ewing Funeral Home In
Pomeroy from 7·9 p.m. Thursday.
The body wUI be taken to the
Hurst-Scott Funeral Home where
visitation will be Ftlday afternoon
and evening.

'

Pomeroy chamber to meet
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce wlll hold its monthly
meeting at noon Thesday at lhe Ohio Power Co. office.
Lunch wll! be provided at $3 a person. Guests for the meeting wlil
be John Rose, offlce ·o! conference workSIIopS, Ohio University,
speaking on a conference to be held concerning small claim suits and
the business owner. andTomSerey, Mid-West Steel, whOwUI present
a brief program. A guest also wll! be Randy Marnhout, M. &amp; M.
Medical Equipment Co.

H~use

Inez May Wemmer
lnPZ May Wemmer, 83, of
Lancaster , formerly of RuUand ,
died Wednesday at Veterans Mem·
ortal Hospital.
She was IDrn to the James and
Rachel Payne Adams.
One daughter, Imogene Bell of
Florida survives.
Shewas preceded In death by ooe
brother, Jim Adams of Meigs
Coun ty.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m.
Friday at the Frank E. Smith
Funeral Home. 405N. Columbus St.,
Lancaster, with Rev. Antoony
Ruble officiating. Burial will be in
the Obetz Cemetery. Friends may
can at the funerallnmefrom 7·9 thls
evenlnganduntll timeofservlceson
Friday.

The Meigs Local School District Is making application to the State
Department of Education, Division of Educational Services for
federal funds available through Chapter I! of the Educational
Consolidation and Improvement Act of Public Law 95-35. The
application and all related documents are available for Inspection
and comments to parents and the general p.~blic . Persons Interested
in viewing or discussing the appUcation should contact Jolhn Lisle,
Federal Programs Coordinator, S;llisoory Elementary School, 41675
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.

No flood predicted in Pomeroy
Pomeroy wlU not have a flood , according to word received at
Pomeroy Vlllage Hall from the U. S. Weather Bureau.
The bureau predicted that the Ohio River would crest In Pomeroy
at 1 p.m. today ill 44 feet. Flood stage Is 46.5 feet , according to the
village hall report.
Meantime, Sheriff Howard Frank reported road closings due to
high water and these Include Route 124 above I1lrtland; Route 338 at
Antiquity, and Route I24 near Forked Run State Park.
•

Meigs EMS October report
There were 214 runs - 170 emergency calls and 44 transfersmade by units of lhe Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
during October, Administrator Bob Byer reports.
There were 135 patients lransported during the month with PO
going to Veterans Memorial, 36 to Hol2er Medical Center, seven to
Pleasant Valley Hospital and 12 to other institutions.
Runs made by the various units include Pomeroy, :IJ: Racine, 23:
Syraeuse, 10; Rutland, 29; Tuppers Plains, 21; Middleport, 37. and
transfer units, 44. All vehicles were driven 6,692.2 miles durtng the
month.

Golden Buckeye Card sign-up
Meigs County residents may sign up for Buckeye Cards at the
Middleport Library, Monday from 12 noon to 8 p.m. and Tuesday
through Friday from 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Those registering must
show proof of age, PO or older! and may usc their driver's license,
birth certificate or other proof. Disabled persons need two proofs ot
their disability.

Racine Legion to meet
Racine Legion Post 602 will mwl tonight (Thursday!. 7: .l l p.m., at
the legion hall. Refreshments will be served .

starts work on budget

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalehouse Reporter

COLUMBUS (UP[] - The Ohio
House Finance Committee ha s
begun work on a supplemental
mini-budget bill that sets aside a
reserve fund of SI4 million for
industrial development grants and
higher pensions for widows of pollee
officers and fire fighters killed In llne
of duty.
William J . Shlrurtl, director of the
stale Offie&lt;' of Budget and Manage·
ment, presented the bill Wednesday
and cautioned the lawmakers
against spending more than the $I4
million.
Shlrurtl said the fund also may be
tapped for vocational · education
construction projects.
The "corrective" budget also
allocates another $3 million in

wukry winne.:S

excess loltery profits from I984 to utility excise tax . which is running
the school loan fund , which has $I6 million below Pslima les "for no
become depleted, and appropriates apparenl reason," and an impend$6.6 million for thP stat&lt;' attorney
ingchange in the federal handlingof
general to install a new computer· Social Security and MedicarP for
!zed system for collecting back
sta le and loca t government
taxes. generating an estimated$~ employees.
miliJon to $.ll million in revenues.
He said legislation under consid·
Shkurtl said the extra $14 million eration in Congress would require
St. Rt. 7. 196 Upper River Road
came from revenues beyond esti- the employees to pay Into those
Gollipolis, OH. - 446 ·1665
mates that accrued between the systems. creating an add II ional cost
Wook
time the existing budget was
finalized in June, and the end of the .------------1----- - - - - - last nScal year June ll.
The oodget director said revenue
estimates for the first quarter of I he
current fiscal year are up slightly.
but within one-half perrent of
projections. Spending Is 1.1 percent
below estimates. he said.
Shkurt I said there are serious
warning signs about the public

TENDERIEST GRADE A
WITH POP·UP nMER

CLEVELAND I UPIJ - Wednes·
day 's winning Ohio Lottery
I
numbers:
Dally Nwnher- :Jffi.
j
Ticket sales totaled $1,328,737.50,
wlt,h a payoff due of $555,962.50.
Lotto- 33, 3, 5,ll, 11, 27.
Lotto ticket sales to Ia led
$2,786,I46 ..

FOODLAND

2°/o Milk
..

Plasti(
Gallon

.,

Turkey

1

160Z.
AVG.

$149

LB.

99(

Weather forecast
NORTHERN

Today - Cloudy with a chance of

rain. High in the lqwer 50s. Winds
becoming northwesi 10 to lJ mph.
Tonight cloudy. Low in
the mid 30s.
IO to I5
mpli.
Friday - Mosflv SUMy. High in
themld50s.
~ ~
- ' 50
percent todlly, ' percent tonight
and near
Friday.
Exlended
lor Satunlay
through
- Fair Saturday.
A chance
rain Sunday and ·
Monday.
In the upper 50s to
lower 60s SihJrd!IV. in the 50s
Sunday and
mid 40s to mid 50s
In the 30s Saturday
In theupperllsand
and
30s

and Improved. Plclured on the equipment Is Guy
• Rose, township lruslee.

r-Area b r i e f s : - - - - - - - - - - - - .

••• - - - - - - - -

Donald E. Hartley

19 IN•. REMOTE CXC 159 .......................:........... $398

I W. MAIN

Brown Duck Insulated
Coverall With.Zipper
Leg to Waist

Veteruns Memoriw Hospital
Nov.6
Admissions- Elvira Barr. Syra·
cuse: Rita Stobart, Pomeroy; Roy
Riffle, Racine; Beatrice Ralrden,
Hartford, W.Va.: Olan Hysell,
Racine; Margaret Goett, Pomeroy.
Dlscharges Virgie Fetty,
Truman Priddy.

I

131N. REMOTE CAB118WR ................................ $328

80LD!OOLDI80LDI80LD!

• Corduroy collar

Layaway Now For Christmas -

Model CXE141WA

RIDENOURS

ATTENT.ION EN! Carhartt

"Within the last week, news
media and governmental bodies
have produced information which
suggests that state laws may have
been violated in Franklin County by
lllegally permitting or causing
political influence to determine
hiring or advancement in state
government," Miller said.

Hospital news

public perrelves as rot just a
registered Democrat but an active
Democrat," Mlller said. "And
everybody knows tha t Bill Is a
Democrat."
Miller also assigned assistant
prosecutors Joan Grant Robinson
and Patrick ''Duffy" Sheeran to
assist Boyland. Miller said Boyland
probably would he paid his normal
hourly rate of $100 to SI25.
Boyland said he would begin his
task bY meeting wlth his staff,
reviewing newspaper articles a IDut
the allegations and also meeting
with the special legal counsels hired
by the Senate Judiciary Committee,
which is also looking into lhe
allegations.

end of November the m!lyor said. year was used to do just that the
Although the tax books are kept up to mayor said.
date on a dally basis, October taxes
Since that time , Improvements
are still coming in he pointed out. have been made to the village in
Also, some people may have paid in several forms, including the instal·
advance and would therefore be latlon of guard ralls and paving of
entitled to rebates. These matters streets.
wlll have to be handled by Long.
The Initiative petition to repeal the
Pomeroy's Income tax was Income . tax measure passed on
enacted January 1 ot this year as an Thesday by 17 votes.
The repeal wUI he effective five
emergency measure to bring the
vlliage funds back Into lhe black. days following the state's official
Revenue generated from the tax ' verification ct Tuesday's election.
during the first s!J&lt; months of the

SYLVANIA t9' DIAGONAL

AUDIO· VIDEO

1 16 WEST 2ND STREET
POMEROY

Eoyland, who sat oo the Franklin
County Municipal Court bench from
1974 to 1979, said he wUI conduct a
thorough Investigation and added ·
that -be is not concerOOJ aoout
possible criticism from members of
his party.
"We're really trying to keep ·
politics 'out of this," Boyland said.
"Law is different from politics."
Boyland said II wrongdoing
exists, he will not hesitate to
prosecute.
Miller - ~id he chose Boyland
pecause of his "impeccable reputa·
tlon " andbecausehe'lsaDemocrat.
"! wanted somebody who the

I

SYLVANIA

MACHI~ES

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPl i Former Frankllp County Municipal
Judge William .Boyland has been
named as a special prosecutor to
Investigate allegations of Illegal
hiring and promotions of state
workers.
Boyland, a Democrat, was appointed Wednesday by Franklin
County Prosecutor Michael MU!er,
a Republican.
·
Miller said a thorough investigation was needed because of reports
of wrongdoing In tile Democratic
admlnistra tlon of Gov. Richard F.
Celeste.
MHler said he chose to appoint a
special prosecutor to avoid charges
that the probe was politically
motivat€d.
1

TY/on't
be
w

499
25 IN. PUSH BUTTON CLC256P.......................... $548
25 IN. SUPERSET REMOTE RI.C378 .......'..~~.!... ... $698

SELECTED GROUP OF TOY CUT·OUTS
AND CALICO 1f2 PRICE
60" BALLET-SUITABLE FOR PAUY
DRESSES &amp; BLOUSES &amp; ETC.
1/2 PRICE .

; Nine fined in Middleport court

•TEDDYS
•GOWNS
•ROBES

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;

25 IN. ElECTRONIC TUNING ...............................

LA'IAVIA'I NOW!

.

Stop In and Shop For The
Ladies In Your Life

amada food - Door Prize

cxc 141 S29'

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports four calls
Wednesday; I1lmeroy at I0:27 a.m. to
Butternut Ave. for

•

to investigate state ·workers

a

SINGER'S
Closeout Models

'

'

:&amp;CRA
SHOW &amp;SALE

woman who reportedly ended a love
affair with Yurchenko. contrtbutlng l1
to his decision to return home.
Department spokesmen declined
comment.
Pollee sources In Ottawa said
Wednesday the woman -!den tilled
hy the Embassy as Svetlana
Dedkova, 48 - apparently killed
herself Tuesday by jumping olf the
27th floor of
posh Toronto
apartment building.
ABC News quoted anonymous
State Department sources as saying
she is believed to have been the
woman who had an affair with
Yurchenko and then ended it
abruptly, prompting him to decide
to go back home.
Eugene Popazd~yakov, a spokesman for the Soviet Embassy, denied
any connection between Yurchonko
and Dedkova.

Meigs EMS reports 10 runs

.

.,

Yurcheliko heads
back to Russia

lhe Daily Sentinel Page 11

special prosecutor appointed

wide variety of items
LaSalle Ga llery of Middleport, ments which can be made and
owned and operated hy Yvonne delivered on request .
Scally, provIdes slnppers with a - In addition to aU this, LaSalle
pleasing atmosphere as wen as a Gallery carrtes craft Items for the
variety of gift and decorative Items. . do-It-yourself person. and a country
Prospective brides will be pleased style furnitu_re line that Is designed ·
to know that the store offers a to please the pocketbook, as well as
complete line of bridal necessities to the eye.'
Only In business a few months,
take them through an entire
·wedding and reception in elegant local residents and residents from
'
style.
surrounding 'areas are finding
Another pOpular feature of La· LaSalle Gallery Is an Ideal place to
sane Gallery are silk nora! arrang~&gt;· browse and buy.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Bath Tissue
HOLLY FARMS

ROLL~

Fryer Pa

II.

49&lt; '~

4
PACK

100

7

RIB EYE DINNER
WilhFREE
Freshlastlk,. Food Bar
and Soft·Strve Delle~

2/S7.99

01111 lncludtt tntrH, I)Ottto. plpii\IIIOt

brtldl, tnd 111/ouun Itt from our tlbutout
ll~thl11llh•

ood 81r Including dtllelou•
hol.oup&amp; and IOII•Mr'lt dHMrl. Coupon
good tor 111 m•mbtn ol p•rt~ ont., 11
ptr11c:lpallnt eonan11 F•m ll)' Altllurlntt,
Coupon ••pl~t 12/ IStiS
Good 111 dly 1 dlr• 1 . . . 11 •

•

•W• r,..,.. right tolimH qo111rtHI.. &lt;Not r..onolblt for typographical trron..Pri&lt;tolffKti,. tl"' Sat .. No•. '· 191S

JACKSON,OH

DOUBLE COUPONS ALL WEEK
.

FORD~

SEE

Route 93

In The Heart 01 Jackson

•

286-6386
II

•

........

�.v
•

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

In the spotlight

Thursday, November 7, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Imagination~

In natural cheeses alone there
are over 400 varieties, several to
please ~very taste. Cheese contains
a lot of food value In a small
package. It contains most or the
nutrients that milk does, though In

different amounts. Nutrients in· can differ from one type to another.
Calorie watchers should re·
elud e calcium , protein . and
riboflavin.
member that Neufchatel cheese
The protein In cheese is of the same has fewer calories than c(ea m
high quality as the protein In meat, cheese. Hard cheeses, however,
fish and eggs. Cheese servings can contain more protein th;m cream
be considered as a protein serving cheese or Neufchatel- cheese.
Choosing the right cheese for
in the diet, but can oot be counted as
both a dairy source and protein your table is mostly a matter of
preference, but don't be afraid to
scurce at the same time.
The calorie content In cheese try something new (In small
varies so that calorie watchers can quantities at first) . Children gener·
find ch\:&gt;eses to SJit their needs too. ally like milder varieties of cheese
Cottage and flcotta cheeses for and adults more flavorlul varieties.
example contain fewer calorie than One of the 'cheeses that I enjoy most
other cheeses because they are is bleu cheese, especially (11 salad s,
higher In moisture and lower In . and even on celery stick~ for a
milk fat.
pre-dinner snacK.
Cheese Is available bi several
Also on the market are cheeses
labeled as diet cheese, which are !llfferent forms including natural
lower In milk fat. Be sure to read cheese. processed cheese 1a blend
labels carefuily as caloric content of natural and fresh cheeses tltat

has been.. melted, pasteurized and the cheese. Pon 't throw away
mixed with an emuislfler), pasteu· cheese however that has simply
rlzed process cheese spread, cold· become hard, use it for grating.
pack cheese sometimes called dub
Cottage cheese and rlcotta will
cheese, and coldpack cheese food
keep for 5-7 days In the refrigerator,
(similar to coldpack cheese but has cream cheeses are best If used
added milk or whey solids). Once within two weeks. Hard variety
again the choice is up to you, but it is cheese such as cheddar will keep
a good idl?a as always to read the for several months unless mold
labels carefully before rriakingyour develops. Cheese spreads and
selection.
cheese foods will keep for several
Cheese should be stored in its weeks after opening, stored In the
original wrapper when possible.
refrigerator.
Cover cut surlaces tightly to ptotect
For an after school snack or
the surface from drying out. Any
appet_l,zer, these cheese-olive balls
surface mold that develops on hard might be a different treat.
cheese should be trimmed off
1 cup sharp cheddar cheese,
completely before the cheese In
finely shredded
used. If mold penetrates the interior
Y. cup _softened butter or
of the cheeses that are rot rtpened · margarine
by mold, such as Cheddar cr Swiss,
%cup flour
cut away the moldy area or discard

-::::;;;;;;;;;;:;:::;:::ifj=:::~:::~===:=:=;Tr===:::::::::::==:;r;:::;;;;~:;~==~
r
..
Y.

INJ~:E~~~~C~~A

t. paprika

1 T vvater
24 medium sl:ze stuffed olives
Preheat oven to 400 degrees . Mix
all Ingredients except olives. Form
dough into balls with an olive In the
center of each. Bake 15 minutes.Serve hot, 55 calories per cheese·
olive ball.
For a chart on ch~ selection
including ways to use various
cheeses contact the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Service,
Box 32, Pomeroy, OH 45769 or call
992-6696. Next week scme tips on
cooking with cheese.
Did you know that : Uyou want to
store a large piece of cheese for an
extended time, dip ·the rut surface
in melted paraffin. before storing in
the refrigerator.

Community calendar I area happenings
THURSDAY
POMEROY -Catholic Women's
Club of Sacred Heart Church will
meet Thursday evening with mass
at 7 p.m. and the meeting at 7: ~HYSELL RUN - Hysell Run
Holiness Church will have Its
monthly meeting at the church, 7: ~
p.m., Thursday. Speakers will be
The Beckers. The pubilc is
welcome.
POMEROY -Meigs County Girl
Scout service unit meeting will be
held Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Grace
Episcopal Chu rch. Pomeroy.
Speaking at the meeting will be a
representative of the Community
Action Agency on the food pantry .
New leaders will be Invested and a
craft and games workshop will
follovv.
·

COMMUNICATOR - Ohio Power Company's
Pomeroy Area Communicator, R. K. Ash, presents

one ol the many programs that are available through
the oompWly's communicators program.

Ohio Power program. reaches 500,000
More than :&gt;Ml,!XXl customers
haves been reached by Ohio Power
Com'pany's Communicators Program since Its creation In 1971,
according to R.K. Ash. area
'manager at Pomeroy.
"This milestone, reached this
month. represents the efforts of
literally hundreds of Ohio Power
employes who give of their lime to
go out and talk with the people we
serve," Ash said. The company
provides electric service to more
than 621,!XXlcustomers In &gt;.~ofOhio' s
)I! counties.

The communicators program
offers. at no charge, a variety of
presentations to groups of any age or
sl:ze. When the speakers bureau was
created. 10 different subjects were
available. Tod;ly, there are more
than 40 different topics, ranging
from "home town" talks which
discuss the history of many of the
communities served byOhioPower.
to the "acid rain" controversy.
.
· The format of the talks include
slide presentations·, films. video·
tapes. and working demonstration
models. The "Play It Safe" pro-

gram. for exa mple. uses a display
unit that depicts a typical residential
area to promote electrical safety.
Each program Is approximately :Ill
minutes long.
"We are always happy to have a
chance to communicate with out
customers. These talks not only
provide a service to our customers,
but they &lt;tferaq Important learning
opportunity for us as well ," Ashsaid.
Information on the communica·
tors program is available by calling
Ohio Power's Pomeroy office at
992·3786 during regular business
IDurs.

CAP project meeting planned
A public awareness meeting on
thlltl assault and its prevention will
be held Monday at the Community
Action Agency JTPA building at 117
W. Second Street In Pomeroy. 7 to 9
p.m.
Task force members of the Child
Assault Prevention tCAP i Project
of Gallia. Jackson and Meigs
Cou nties will present information
·about child assault. including matI'
rial on missing children and child
abuse statistics for Meigs County.
ChUdren are assaulted In a
variety or way. Assaults can rangl'
from Incidences of bullying on the
· playground to Incest. Issues sur·
rounding missing children are of
concern to all members or the
·community. yet children are rarely
well prepared to recognlz~ danger·

ous situations. Teaching children to
prevent assaults arms them with
practical teehniques for deating
with crises.
Laws against chid assault are
relatlv~ly new . The first law to
proteet children from assault was
enacted in 1974.1n 1984,112reportsof
suspected child abuse were made to
Meigs County Children's Services.
National experts on child abuse
estima te that the number of
reported cases is just a small part of
the actual Incidence of assaults
against children.
The phlloscphy or the CAPproject
starts with the statement that "all
children have rights." To Insure
their right to personal safety. CAP
presents workshops to both adults

and children. The public awareness
meet lng wUIInclude an overview of
the CAP Project and Its nationally
proven prevention techniques.
In addition. a videotape of the role
plays done In children's workshops
will be sho,wn. There will be ample
opportu nity for questions and an
open discussion following the
presentation.
The public is invited to attend the
meeting and learn more about
personal safety. training for ail
children. Material will be dlstr1b·
uted so those in attendance will be
able to begin developing a safe,
st ~ng and free community in Meigs
County. Child care will be provided
and refreshments served. Further.
information Is available by contact·
lng CAP through CrlslsUne.

home of Florence' Richards.
Annette Johnson and Lula Hampton
will have charge of games.
During the evening members
worked on report forms to be sent to
the Eighth District chairman . Mrs.
Hampton gave the legistat ion repori
from the National News concerning
priori! ies to come before the 99th
Con·gress such as economics. for·
elgn relations. national seclllity,

int&lt;:&gt;rnal affairs. and veterans af·
fairs and rehablllatlon.
It was noted that Nov. 17·23 is
National Education Week. Dorothy
Casey. second v lcepreslden!, gavea
report on veterans affairs In the
absence of Tomiko Lewis. Next
meeting will be with Mrs. Ruth
Brown of Gallipolis. A prayer for
peace and singing of "Amertca"
clost'll the meeting. Refreshment $
were served bY Mrs. Bowles.

Gallery exhibit is announced
show.' with Acock providing another

Watercolors bY George Acock.
some of which are scenes from .14 of rural Ohio scefies to complete
Southeastern Ohio. wUI be on the show.
display at the Milton Bank Ga llery
Acock who is a graduate or Ohio
In Jackson through Dec. 6.
State University School of Architec·
Most of the paintings are locally ture and. School of Landscape
owned, several having been among Architecture, taught tor oc'Vera l
those sold when Acockdonaled 50 to years at OSU, and is registered with
the Jackson County BoardofMental the National Council or Architectu·
Retardation lp a fund raising · ral Registration. He has received
program. The50paintlngsweresold two J unior League Plan Awards an
for $100 eachwith the result lng$5,!XXl . two AlA awards ~ one of which was
used to secure an additional $&lt;l5.lXXl for the corporate headquarters of
In st.ate money for the Hope Haven The Limited.
School in Jackson.
Acock's Interest in the Hope
Twenty-two of those donated by Haven School came about when he
Acock have been looned tor the was hhro as architEtt tor the Hope

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Senior Citl:zens
Center. Mulberry Heights. ?orne·
roy. will have a crafts fair, Friday 1
to B p.m. and 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday; handmade crafts, candy,
plants, for sale by 20area craftspeople; door prizes. Food available.
MIDDLEPORT - Evangelist
Herb Inscoe wUI speak at the Word
of Faith Church, Middiepori, Friday
at 7: ~ p.m. There will be special
singing bY .the Pleaant Valley trio
and the public is Invited to attend.
RUTLAND-Adancewillbeheld
Friday night, B to 11 p.m., at the
Rutland Civic Center with music by
Jtomic Sounds. Admission $3 per
couple and $2 single. Everyone
welcome.
NEW HAVEN. W.Va. - Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daugh·
ters of the American Revolut ion,
wUimeet Friday, 7p.m.. atthehome

Haven School. Donation of the
paintings was his response io the
financial problems being faced by
the Jackscn County Board and
Marjorie Wellers. superintendent.

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

SATURDAY
LONG BO'ITOM - Mt. Olive
Community Church will have a
gospel sing. 7 p.m.. Saturday.
featuring the gospel group, Saved.
The pubilc is Invited.

Enpa...A·Car, the mOdern way

to drive tho vehicle of yoUI
choice.
No Down Payment
lower·_ Monthly Pavment

RED BRUSH - Red Brush
Church of Christ will have special
weekend services, Saturday at 7
p.m .. Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m.,
with Drnver Hill. Foster, W.Va., as
gui'St speaker. Tht&gt;public ls Invited.
POMEROY- Pomeroy Elemen·
tary Cheerleaders wil be holding a
door-to-door pop -bottle drtve in the
Pomeroy area Saturday 9 a.m to
noon. Residents will be ask.ed to
donate pop bottle. Proceeds will go
to the cheerleaders. For another
time pickup residents may call
992-6598 or 992-2104.

SYRACUSE - Carleton Church
Is having a hymnsingSaturday, 7: ~
p.m .. with special singing bY the
Gabriel Quartet. The public is
Invited.

Regular meeting
of Twin City
Monday, 7
p.m. at thr club\to.use; all members
and those
for membership
asked to au end.

RUTLAND - Rutland Bowhunters' Asscciatlon will hold their
monthly meetjng Saturday, 8 p.m ..

ROCK !iPR INCl~-MeigsCounty
Conferp.m. at Rock

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE 992

Or Wntt Datl!y StnHnol Cl11"1""''~1
I It Ccu1t St . Pomtror. Ohro

RENT A CAR

SALE-S&amp;SERVICE

CALL

U.S. RT. 50 EAST

446·4522

G

992·3410

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
Fl LL 01 RT

.

Far• Eqaitllle•t
Parts &amp; Smlee

20% OFF
· SELE(TED PERMS

? PREGNANT?
F.E COIIFIDIImll

r•GIIANCT lEST
llnolh In lO llioutool

FOR THE BOTH
OF YOU
STYLING SALON

OPIIIATORS
linda O'Jrion &amp; DoWoit lllwol
Mon. ltlru Sat. 9 AM-5 PM
TuH. &amp; !hun. Nights
.,

~t.

lOOM 103
RUTLAND
CIVIC CENTER
Effectiw llo•. I "'"'"
Monday 2 to 4
Sat., I 0 0.111.·12 Noon

PH. 99H982

CONTRACTING

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

RT . 62 SOUTH

NOV. 10, 1985
' locottclat Racine. Ohio at Ra·
cine fire Dept. Bid&amp;.
(Tndloads) of Christmas
items to choose from. Shop
the usy way in the comfort of
a cltair at lite auction. Cash
Drawina &amp; Door Prizes.

8 miles from
Pomeroy-Mason Br idge

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

Auctioneer. Lon Nea 1

. 367·7101
(Nowl EYe!)' Sat. N~e Auction
at Hartford Community Bldg..
7:00 .m. Ev one welcome.

Countv Appliance, Inc.
627 lltrid Ave .. Gallipolis
446·1699

FOR RENT - FOR SALE
OR· FOR LEASE
WITH OPTION TO BUY •••
COMPLOELY REMODELED HOME

OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY, NOYE.ER 1Oth
1 P.M. YO 4 P.M.
CALL 614·837-8820 OR
992-3841 FOR INFORMATION '

17 North Second
Ohio 4!7H
~A~u &amp; SERVICE
Also Carry
Fis~tinn Supplies.
BUSINESS PHONE'
16141 992-USO

•1M

PIUS: Offiu Supplies &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationery, Magnetit

985-3561

All Nebs

(Free Estimates)

•Washers •Dishweshers

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•Refrigerators

255 Mill St., lltidclopOtl
I 04 Mulborrr A•., Pomoror

•Rangel

Factory Choke

ACCENT

3-D

Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2101

CENTER

' Ohio
I 101/t West Main Street, P-roy,

lmtallatian bailable
4/4/Hn

.

P~

or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

"4-9tf.6771

FALL SALE

l/ t II !In

73-80 GM TRUCK FENDERS .."""'""' $39.00
DYNLITE BODY FILlER,_ ...........!!'!!....... 16.50
'I• INCH MASKING TAPE ...........:-~:............ v•

Roger Hysell
Garage

SER~ICE
We caQ repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boi I and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks:

DUST MASII .................................~.~:·...:-.:·

Rt. I 24,Pomeroy Ohio

· AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

SALES &amp; RENTALS

614-446-7283

PAT HILL FORD

Out of Town Customers Call Collect
•Home Oxygen
•Hospital Beds oWhael Chairs
WE IIU MEDKAI£ AJtl OTHER INSIIUNCE
CAIIIIIIS WHEN EUGIIU

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1· 13·tfc

BOWMAN'S HOME CAB MEDKll SUPPLY

Sizes Start from 12'x16'

We Ootivor

63 '"'' st:, Gallipolis

9/ 12/2 mo. pd.

. MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
Residential &amp; Commercial

Mldi~ltport,\1 oh.

TOWN &amp; COUN11Y

VmiiNllllN

24

CUNIC .

Paul E. Shockey, DVM

Cl

z

992-5875 Or
742-3195

8·8·tfc

SANDWICHES
Subs • Steak • Stromlloli
Ham &amp; c;:heese • Pizza B{~'ed

FREE Local

DAltivAtrv''

7t1t1d1g S,1~111

LG. PIZZA wI one Item .........

IOWT IOOFIIIG
"Prafw11Ht11''

Sp..:lollzlng In Bulld·UP
commorclol Aooflnu
' 20 Yro. ,.perio•nco

CAll

PT. I'UlSAIIT OFFICI
305 Jackson An.

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
He;~ring 'Evaluations for All Ages

SMAll A-Al HOlliS
Man ••wlll.•

THIMI. 6:!0-1; Fri. 1· 2 pm
Saturday 10·11 :30 am
' LliGI A-Al &amp;
SUIGEIT IY APP1.

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
:z:

z

PH. 304-675-2441

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·6601

BEND AREA CAU
Ripley Office

417 Second Avenue; Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

8-13 tin

fii.U(STREAK CAB CO~

t
t

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

PHONE 992·7075

t

For Noun
304-372·1U4~9mo
Ann ou ncemenl s

n4·~·!1~11•U

FOUND Young German
Shepard mix male dog in the
vicinity of Burkhan lane.
Owner or so me one who will
provide a good home please

SWEEPER ond Mwing mo·

H,;,.,,.-•10~·21·1 pdjt
mod.

chine repair. pana, end
Mlppliea .
Pick up and
d•liverv . D1vi1 Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georgoo Creek Rd .
814-448·0294.

Coli

R1cine Gun Shoot tpon-

oorod by Racine Gun Club.
Every Sunday, beginning at
1:00 p.m. FIICtoiy Choke 12
Munlo loodlng Shoot. Nov.
9 ond 10. 11 11 A.M..
Loading Creek Rd. F"' moro
Info . cell 814·742· 28&amp;3.
Tho lz•k Welton Club will
hove Shotgun Slug Shoot•
on Sundays, Nov. 9th, 16th.
23rd. ond 30th. Mitchel
11~11 It 1:00 p.m. 11 club
form on Shade River Rd ..
31; mil.. lOUth of Chootor.
Pri•••inckuloturtley. bocon,
and c11h.

614·992·73t4.

Electrician&amp; needed . Top
pay. Send resume to P.O .
8011: 457 , Pt. Pleasant, WV

614·992-3595 .

No

e~~:perience

..

necessary .
be available tor imme employment . Hours

1PM til 10PM . S1 ,200 per
7441 .

effectively with JTPApanic·
ipants seeking work or train ing. Must be able to com municate well to clients with

Huge 2 Family Yard Sale varying skill levels and back·
Thurs. &amp; Fri. only 8-6. Stata grounds. Ability to present
St. by Headstart . Furniture ,
boys sizes 4 -7 , mens &amp;
womens clothing , misc.
&amp; Sal. 9·3,. Fairfield
Centenary Rd . Womens
clothes (7-9 ' s med.] exc.
cond ., some maternity,
mens jeans 36-lg . T shirts,
baby swing. fuzz buster.
much more.

Garage Sale-Moving out of
town . 47707 Morning Star.
Nov.7 .8 . 9 . 9 11 m to 5 p.m.

---------·······----------·--Pt Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

By owner . Remodeled 3
bedroom house on Rt .33 .
New F .A. furnace . Large lot.

805 -687 -6000 ht. GH·
304-675· 7991.
15

Schools
Instruction

$20, 000 yearly possible .
Prepare ·a t home for Post
Office job tests . Write: Fed

17 Miscellaneous
Lady needs ride from Camp
Conley to Muon Bridge,
Monday thru Friday around

5 rooms and bath in Pomeroy . C l ose to school ,
churches and downtown.
Option to buy ajoining large
co ncrete block building with
plenty of off street parking .
Block building has been a
body shop, repair garega and
now a warehouse . Ca11614992-2039 for appointme"t .

2 story . 9 rooms wi1h 2
batha. located on corner of
4th &amp; Palmer in Middlepon .
Within walking distance of
school and shopping . 614-

698·6817 oft. 5 p.m.
2:00 PM. phone 304-675· Or rent , 2 story 6 roo m and
6451 .

bath in Mason, large lot
20.~~:28 block garage, wood

18 Wanted to Do

and gas heat. 304· 773·
5401 .
3 bedroom house in the

Nelson 's Hardfloor sanding,
finishing. repair work , free
estimates . Call 614-256 -

t 642.

General house cleaning. can
give exc references , also
have room in my home tor an

country. 304·675· 7937.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

!- - - - - - - - -

,.derly person. 304-675· NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
6874.
lTV MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35 . PHONE 614·446 ·
Ftnancial
7274.

self weUto employers necessary . Must have reliabl e j..,..,----..,.---transponation . Send cover 21
Business
letter and resume to the
0
rt ·t

Gallia·Meigs CAA JTPA , ____
PP_o_u_n_ '_Y_ _
Program.

9805 for information.

3 bd .room home. Full base(35135-JI. P.O. Box 3006. ment.
garage, newly ramo·
Haniesbutg, MS 39403.
deled . Rockspringl area .
614 -992-2978 .

month . Call Thurs. or Fri.
only from 9AM to 3PM for
personal interview 614-4461

&amp; Vicinity

Yard Sale

In Aio Grande . new 3 bdr.,
full basment. nice lot. large
rear decks with valley view .
Priced to sell 839 . 600 . Will
consider mobile home trade

S23.000 . Collect 614 -423·

E)jperienced Mother will
baby sit in her ho"me, any
ages, any days , any ho urs,

quired. Call 61 4·446-8665 .

...... GaiiiP'oiis....... ..

7

Homes for Sale

in. Call 614·446·8038.

Nursing care in priva te
home .. Room for t wo pa tients . $500 . a month. Call

Call 614· 446· 3358 .

Positions Openings . The
Gallia - Meigs Community
Action Agency, Job Training
Pannerahip program jJTPA)
has two posittons OP.enings :
Assessment Counselor: M A
preferred, BA required . Abil ·
ity to deiNer in-house as sessment program to JTPA
panic:ipafns. Must have ef fective group -individual
ooynsellng skills. Duties will
includ8 test ing and interpre tation . Course wortc in test ing techniques and counseling required . Counselor; BA
required , Ability to work

Bo.11. 272, Che- ~ -

24x4B Schult sectional
" Special Edition ". white
vinyl siding, plus many 8.11.·
tras . Special price . French
City Mobile Home&amp; . Call

614·446-9340.
I NOTICE !
7342 for more information . THE OHIO VALLEY PUB· 1979 Bayview 1 4X70 .

shire. Ohio 45620 or call.
61 4·99 2·6629 or 61 4·367·
Ck&gt;sing date for application

Is November 22. t985 . EOE

employer.
Positions Openings . The
Gallia -Meigs Community
Action Agen cy, Job Training
P•rtMr.tt~ progr•m tJTfiA~
has te,..,orary openings:
Clerk -receptionist; Temporary position exist in Gallipo lis JTPA Office for 8 Clerk receptionist . Typing and
excellent telephone skills
required. Work processing
.skills an added pius . May
tead to permanent position
for right perso n. Send cover
letter and resu·me to the

Gollia·Meigs CAA JTPA

Program , Bo~~: 272, Che shire. Ohio 45620 or call,

USHING CO . recommends
that you do business with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mail until you have investigated the offering .
l·""':......•_ot_....
- .-,-.A-o-n-te-t'"'ot-,0-pe
_ rtv
_
for sale. 1)&amp; unit combine·
tion residential -commercial
rental property in Middle·
pon. Priced in the low
forttes . 2)2 unit duplex
house on a lot in a nice area
of Middleport . Priced in the
mid twenties. Both proper ·
ties generate positive cash
flow and are fully occupied .
For additional information

7X24 expando , 3bdr, 1 V2
bath. fireplace , CA, under pinning , 2 porches, free lot
option 6 mo . only. Call

6t4-367·7406.
For Nle or ren' with optio n
buy: £\con•. 3 bdr, 1'h
bath, e" . cond .• owner 11 nanced . Located in Green
Terrace mobile home park.

10

Coli 614-446-0254 .
12X60, 2 bdr, large lR.
refrig ., dishwasher, coun ter top range with built in oven.
new carpet S. wallpaper in
bath , new underpinning .

54600. Cot1614-446 ·3417
call 614 ·992-7t77 alter 6 after 5pm.
p.m .

MUST SELL IMME ·
DIATELYII 1973 BARON
22
Money
to
Loan
CROWN
. EXCELLENT
7342 for more information .
Closing date for app lication 1- - - - - - -- - CONDITION . $7,000. CALL
614-446 -6577 or 614-446·
is November 22 , 1985 . EOE
2905 .
HOME
OWNERS-Refinance
em.Sioyer
,
First time , Nov 8th - 9th. At .
to low fixed rate . Useequitty
62 , 13 Mile Creek Rood ott Assist,nt Manager Trainee . for any purpose . LeeJjer 1969 Vindole 1 2x60 on .

Tribble or Rt . 68. Arbuckle .
follow signs, hours 9 to 4
only. large women 's layne
Bryant blouses, other sized
clothing. household. fishing
equipment.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

61 4-992·6629 Of 61 4·367·

We have 3 openings for
aggreuive, rna lure individu ·
ats who qualify to ttain as
assistant managers . Oppor ·

tunity to earn

$ 250· $300

week. Major company. No
experience . Prefer our own
methods. Car a must. Apply
in person at 417 Second
Ave .• Room 18 , Gallipolis ,
Ohio. Ask for manager

Mortgage

3051 .

Co..

614 -592-

aakts . licensed Ohio and

rience. No Sales. Details

Wool Virginio . 304· n3. send self·addressed
6785 or 304-n3-6430 .
stamped envelope: Elan Vi·
tal · 716 3418 Enterprise
Rd. Ft. Pierce. FL 334~2 .
9 Wanted To Buy
- - - - - - · l c-

Wanted : Aggressive person
to menage the day-to-day
operation of a rapidly expanding Home Care Compa ny in the Pomeroy area .
Sill Gano Johnson
Mecltcal background is pre614· 446·3672
ferred bu' will train proper
WANTED TO BUY used applicant , Applicant must be
wood &amp; coal heaters . able to take control of
SWAIN'S FURNITURE, 3rd. responsibility of managing a
&amp; Olive St. Gallipolis. Call Home Medical equipment
614-446-3159 .
organizatton . Apply by send ing resume to Continuity of
We pa~ cash for late model
clean used can.
Jim Mink Chev .- Oids In c .

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS Cora. 826 Coodson Ave.
FURNITURE. Beds. iron, S.E.. New Philadelphia.
wood, c upboard s. chalri, Ohio . 44663 . ATTN : Ri chuts, baakets , di1hes, chard Bradle v.
stone jars , antiquea. gokll- - - - - - - - -and silve r. Write-M . D . To sell Avon. Call Marilyn

Miller. Rt.2. Pomeroy. Ohio Weovet, 304·882-2645 .
45769 or ce ll 614· 992·
Lady to live in with elderly
7760.
~ tvor

coins . rings , jewelry. aterting
ware. old coins. large cur·
rency. Top prices . Ed. Bur·

lady. room end board with
smell selary . 304 - 576 -

2523.

Sales clerk and cashier part

Professional
Services

Water wells drilled and se rviced . Prices on request. Call

PAIR , back to school discounts , free estimates.
Ward ' s Keyboard , 304 -675-

5500 Of 676 -3824.

Fall Special furniture reu pholstering. TI-lls is our 21st
y8Br serving tri -count y with
th e best in reupholstering .
Call now for Free Estimate
304-675 -4154. Mowrey ' s
Upholstery .

Real Estale
31

Homes for Sale

Bv owner, Muat sell-moved .
3 bdr. ranch, one car garage,
walking distance from North
Gallia High School. Reduced

to 829.900. Call 614·388·
8711.

Government Homes from
$1 (u · repair} . Also delin quent tax pfoperty . Call

806·687·8000 eAt . GH ·
4562 for information .

kett Barber Shop. 2nd. Ave. time for new Christian Re Middlepol1. Oh. 614· 992· cord Shop . Send resume to
Box P-6 , Point Pleasant
3476.
.

3 bedroom full basement,
ea1 -in kitch en . carport.
S 1,500 &amp; take over payments . Plants Subdivision .

STANDING TIMBER . AI Pleeoant. W. Va. 25550.
Tromm. Coli : 61 4 · 742·
Earn free ChriStmas gifts. by
2328.
having a Merri Mac home or
200 locust posll. Call 614· carolog party . 100 per cent
992-2B41 or 614· 992· guarenteed lline of gifts.
toys. home decor ftema . Call
8040.
304·676·6768 for d,eteils.

Coli 61 4·446· 7360.

Register. 200 Main St, Poinl

Opening• available for dem Wanted used w11hers, dry onstrators , no Investment .
ers. refrigerators, ranges,
aweeper1, working or not.
RN'1 application a now being
Call 304·678-2921.
accepted for part-time employment . Call Pleasant Val-

we buy the boot. poylop ley Hospllol. Personnel Oe·
pal1mant. 304·676-4340.
ext. 308.
pottery. t-304· 343· 1857
collect. Write B. Price. t 666 12
Situations
Kanawho Blvd Eut, Cha ·
Wanted
rluton, W. Va. 26t31 1.
Ul

dollara . Sell what. you don 't
want. Gat CASH lot paint·
ings, dolls. jewelry and

House, 3 bdr, 1% bath. FR .

fenced yard. lg. lot. hard ·
wood floors &amp; carpet. fire ·
place in LR . copper plumb·
ing, natural gas furnace,
window AC. city water. city

schools. S42.000. Call 614·
448· 7109 alter 6pm.
Near Crown City, Ohio . 4 A,
M-L. with 6 room new
edition , well intulated .
needs some minor finish
work &amp; 6 rooms of old part
needs ramod eled with large
rap aroun d ~ orc h Lnrgr
50x36 concrato block stru c
ture, garage with concrete
floor &amp; upstairs &amp; some
other out buildings . Beauti·
ful view of Ohio River. along
St. Rt . 7 , rura11 water with 2
walla available . asking

Boby clothoo and up lo Wanted : Someone to 11:ay
nighlo &amp; Uve-ln tcan keep
317 Main St, coll304· 676· doy job olnwherol. Call 836.000. Coli 614·266·
6247 alter 6:00 o'clock.
6t4· 446·3419 .
1 1684.
twelvayra. Orandma'iAttlc ,

rented lot. New elec tric
furnace , AC, outbuilding,
low utilities, e.11c . cond. Call

614·245-9536 attar 6PM .
23

61 4· 74 2-3147 or 61 4-992·
RICK PEARSON AUCT IO· Easy Assembly Work ! 5006.
NEER SERVICE. Esteta, 8600.00 per 100. Guaran- PIANO TUNING AND RE·
t.rm. anttque, liquidation teed Paymen1 . No E~~:pe ·

Buying dolly gold.

3 Announcements

Oon 't W1/k, W1lt "
Ch•n~• IUing l•tJ C11/ U1, We Won't
--

n.un. s.s pm

gu8ge •hotguna.

Coli:

992·3559

~·

RADIATOR

Vacancy for the elderly in
our home . Trained and fif·
tBBn years ex perie nce . Call

31

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

I C:~_,u

Saturday only! 9 to 5 p.m .
Golf clubs &amp; bag. electric
range, tots of goodies! 414
Spring Ave ., Pomeroy . June
Van Vrank en .

New

AUTO
"Free (stimotts" :

Lost and Found

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Situations
Wanted

Help Wa nted

· ~:~8~~J=

-

Ph. (6141 843-S§t$_

304-675-3798 .

.......P.omiirov........ .

*VINYL SIDING

*ALUMINUM SIDING

After S Call

" Free Estimates"
CAU COllECT:

gray and white mate. phone

12

Page ~ 13

One certified Medical Tech - Room and board in private 6289 .
nologilt. weekdays. Send home for non -ambulatory ·
resume or apply to Med ical and ambulatory patients . By owner. Stately 3 bed·
Plaza , 203 Jackson Pike, 6t4-992·5654or614 -992- room hou se at 10 E. St ..
Gallipolis, Oh 45631 .
7553 .
Pomeroy . 5 wooded acres.
Family room. dining room.
Excellent Income tor part Get a head start on your F.A . heat, 2 baths , basetime . horne assembly work . holidaY, house cleani ng . ment. garage. $27.000 .
For info. call 312-741 · Reasonable rates. Evenings Collect 614·423 ·6289 .
8400. ext . 313 .
or week -ends . Middleport·
Pomeroy area prefered . Call Government Homes from
AVON Stan up fee $5.00, 614· 992-6t89 alter ,5:00 S1 , (U repair). Also delinnake 46% for Christmas. p.m.
quent tax property. Call

Ho us ek ee per - b a bvs itt e r
needed . References re -

Fri.

11 /411 mo.

FENCE I SUPPLT
PH. 992-6931

Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in hom e area
20 yeau

4·5·!1c

992-2725

3/2/lln

742-2027.

PARTS and SERVICE

1119 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh.

12 Gauge Shoi1&amp;Uns_

Help Wanted

Ona fenll!la tabby kitten, t

•Dryers •Freezers

10% OFF

6:30P.M.

11

25550.

Novembet 1. Call 6t4-992·
7079 alter 4:00 or 614-992
3012 during the day .

ANY PERM
KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

SAT. NIGHT

Employment
Services

home. Call 614-992· 3577.

$100 . reward to whoever
found a 30 inch bamboo
barstool along Rt. 7 near
Five Points. Friday evening,

Bashan Building

Ius inns· fCM"ms,
Copy Stnices, Etc.

good home. Cell 61 4-446·
7027 .

call 814-448-1119 or 614·
446-0644.

NOW THIU DEC. 4

EVIIY

4 mo. old female kitten to

6

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

992·6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohia
12·8-ttc

ttng 2 meat.
aft.
p.m . 614 -992-63
. 36

Need 8 good people.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

SigM, Rubbor Stomps.

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

ANGIE'S
PI ZA
349 ·N. 2nd,

Yellow &amp; white kittens . 7
weeks old . Cute &amp; playtu1.

5 month old male part
Terrier to give away to good

GUN SHOOT

F" All Ym Pt/11111 N11h

992-3345

L. Writesel

t CUT OUT FOR fUTURE USE!

work

· 10-Hn

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

HEATING

349 N. 2nd
Middleport
•POTTERY
•CLOCKS

Giveaway

4/29/lln

CARPENTER
SERVICE

304·675·6276

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

HUPLUMBING &amp;

7/ 11/tfn

F me Estimates

YOUNG'S

A.A. A.

EI!GENELONG

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POnERY &amp;
GIFT SHOP

St. Rt. 160 North
(hlllpollt, Ohio

10-17 tfo

•Live entertainment
' Free HBO •Restaurant
.Olympic Pool

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

GOOO USEO
Refriaeraton. washers, d/Yfrs.
gas and electric 1anes and 1'1
sets.
- 1 ··
OPEN 8 TO 6

4

949-2263
or 949-2969

- Concrete work
- Plumbing •nd electric•!

SINGLE S24.9S

i

54 Misc . Merchandise

___

anytime day or__:
night.

NEW- REPAIR

- Addon• 1nd remodeling
- Roofing and gut1er work

POINT PlEASANT, W. VA.

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

1:00 P.M. SUNDAY,

Call DATETIME TOLL ·
FREE. 1·800·972· 7676,

ROOFING

long Bottom, Ohio
Ph. 985-4141

~

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Christmas Auction

lonely. need a date? Meet
that special someone today I

MARCUM
CONTRACnNG

1011011 mo. pd.

Insulated Doc Houses

fatten YOll wallet
with awant f\d

~ant~ : Band saw for cut ~

Call304·676 -2336.

U-SA"Y.E

Howard

to 24'x36'

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

No hunting on the proper1y
of
, Ebersb-.
achFrank
or and
TomHelen
Autherson

Wanted To Buy

insured, reasonable rates.

Gutters · Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 742-2629

I·

J&amp;F

*Complete Remodelin&amp;
*Room Additions
*Roofing
*Siding
*Gatages &amp; Pole
Buildings

Sizes from 6'x6' Up

Busint'ss
Servi&lt;'es

9

Call 614-446-3551 .

UTILITY BUILDINGS

CHECK THE

3 Announcements

MOBILE t\OMES MOVED.

AUTO
RENTAL

FarmDE!~~ment

The Daily Sentinel-

Viotatorswillboprooocuted .

"W1 Rfll F~t /.Itt"

UYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized Johq Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog

1-l·tf&lt;

at the clubhouse. New officers will
be elected .

POMEROY -Round and square
dance Saturday at Meigs Senior
Citizens Center. Mulberry Heights,
PAGEV~LE - A smorgasbord. \ Pomeroy. 7:~ 10 U p.m. Music by
sponsored bY Scipio Volunteer Fire Stringdust ers. admission $1 .
Department . will be held Saturday, I
--5·7 p.m., at the Pagevllle
LONG BO'ITOM -A tl'!'n dance
Townhouse.
Will be held Saturday. Sto 11 p.m.. at
tlw Long Bollom Community
SYRACUSE- Meigs Association B~lding.
of Retarded Citizens is sponsoring a
\
jitney supper and country store.
SUNDAY
Saturday, 5-7 p.m., at Carleton
P0MEROY ·- Pomeroy Church
School.
of C~·ist will be In revival Sunday
throu~h- November 19 with services
LONG BO'ITOM - A teen dance • at 7::tl night ly. Evangelist Gus
will be held Saturd ay, 8-11 p.m .. at Andrelis, Beallsville. W.Va., will be
the Long Bottom Community guest S!faker. Everyone welcome.
Building.
OAK - Royal Oak
LETARTF ALLS- A fail festival BalllroJm]pantCt' Club members are
and chicken, meatloaf or ham
will be a tea dance,
dinner will be held Saturday, 5-9
afl&gt;rnn&lt;ln, 4-7 p.m ., at lhe
p.m. at Letart Falls Elementary.
PIE•a\ant American Legion.
Adult dinners, $2.50. Children's, Music by
Gentlemen Three.
$1.25. Children under six will be Admission. per couple.
served free.

3 bedrooms, 2 baths. ove~ooking Ohio
River at .300 W. Main Street Pomeroy, Ohio.
. '
\

-e·d like to inttoduceynlitn

. BOGGS

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

3·24-tfc

8

..Auxiliary conducts meeting
· A contribution was made to the
Chillicot he Veterans Hospital
Christmas party to be held Dec . 19
- when American Legion Auxiliary
· ·263. Lewis Manley, met at the home
, of Margaret Bowles. president.
Plans were discu ssed for the
annual Christmas party for Auxil . tarymemberstobeheldat6: ~p.m .
:on Dec. 10. A dinner at Crow's
•' Family Restaurant will be followed
by a party and gift exchang&lt;&gt; at the

POMEROY - Revival at Keno
Christian Church, Thursday
through Nov.10, 7: ~p.m. with Dave
Tysinger of Virginia Beach. Va.,
spea king.

of Mrs. Larry Wiley, New Haven.
Carpools will be arranged and those
needing rides should call M~.
Daniel Thomas, at 992-5696; Mrs.
Melvin Van Meter, 992-3984; Miss
Patty Parker, 992-2264; Mrs. Keith
Ashley, 992-7874; Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds, 992·2600; or Mrs. Robert
Ashley, 247·2344. Members are
reminded of items for veteran·
patients for Immediate shipment.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Business Services

Cheese: a, good and' nutritiouS snack

By Cindy S. OUveri
Home Economics Agent
A real favorite at our house is
cheese. I use It In a variety of ways
Including cheese and crackers or a
cheese ball before dinner, cheese
sauces for potatoes and vegetables,
macaroni and cheese and even ilr ·
dessert in the form or cheesecakes
or with fresh fruit. Not tD mention
it's use as a topping on pizza, a
surprise center in stuffed chicken
breasts. or just plain in chunk form
as a snack. Its versatility Is limited
only, by the family c~~lls

Thursday, November 7, 1985

1979 Windsor 14• 70 3 bdr.,
2 baths, CA . all elect ric ,
e~~:tras insulation , ca rpeted,
microwave. Call 614~ 379 -

2417 or 614·379 ·2641 .

- - - - - - - -0
1978 Bayview 14~~;70 , 5
rooms 1nd bath. total electric , windowaircond .,lh acre
ground. 17x22 outbuilding .

Call 614·446 -1425.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED:
insured , reasonable rates ,

Call 304-576·2336

1982. I 4x70, 3 bedtoom,
prac tically new . Call 614-

446-6231 .
1971 Va ndil ia house trailet ,
60 " .11. 14 ", good co ndition,
v, acre ground. good out

bu olding . 304,458 -1517.

.
.
t 972. 12•66 Schultz. mo·

bile home with 7,11 e• ·
pando. wood burner, lir
cond . washer &amp; dryer , ell
appliances. living room su ite . 2 porch and underpen·

ning. $7.000 .00. 304 ·882·
2886 .

New 1985 Shannon . 14~~;70
with 7x24 e~~:pando. 3 bed room . 2 full baths . ca thedral
ceiling , microwave . dis ·
hwasher, washer-dryer, liv ·
ing room suite, dining room
suite. ce ntral air, 2 sun
dec ks . vinyl underpennmg,
special ord ered w it h 6 Inc h

walls . Call 304-675· 6373 .

1971 Flam ingo , 12~~;65 , 3
bedrooms. AC. rofngeretor.
sto ... o. exc cond , deck plus
other features . 614 · 446-

0684
33

Farms for Sale

Farm for sa le or rent .
McCu mber Rd . Rutland .

Call 614-992·2724.

60 % acres, 4 bedroom farm
house , barn. pond. tractor
a nd equi pment .

S4B.OOO .OO. Only thooa In·
ter ested . D. freeman, Box
240 . Mt Union Road, Pliny,

W. Va. 25 158 .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 lois. 100x1 50 eoch, Rot.
· Acres. 16,700.00. 30442 t 0 alter 4:00 PM .

.,_

�Thursday, November 7 1985

Page 14-The Daily Sentinel
Rentals
41

LAFF-A-DAY

Houses lor Rent

~----------~
- ~~ ~~~~~--~54 Misc. Merchandise

Firewood-cutup slabs, . 1
truck toad s100. 2-sr80 .
Pickup load , you haul S16 .
HEAP occeptad . Call 614246-6804.

4 bdr. house in country.

1250 mo ., plus 1250 dep,
Call 614-448-4664 .
Eureka nice 1 story, 2 bdr .,
wil rent, lease, or land

Siegler fuel oil siove. dinette
table 4 chairs. lemon tree.
wooden chum. flat wall
cupboard. Call 614• 2661529.

contract. dep. &amp; ref. req .
Blackburn Realty. 448 0008.
Modern 4 bdr. split tavel.
fireplace, Jay Dr., $400 mo .

2 livlngroom suits good
oond, Coll814-448-4113 .

Call614-446-3919 oYo'oor
446 -0021 '

Octogon wood tabl e&amp; leafs
with 2 chairs, t25 . Recondltioned . Kirby vaccuum with
111 ettachments S.5 0. Battery·
operated motorcycle $16 .
Call 814-446 -8080 after
6PM,

3 bdr. 2 fireplacao, 3 batho,
within walking distance of
schools, $360. mo. Call
614-446-4061 .
3 bedroom houae for rent

• and 1 0•60 mobile home.
614 -949-2424 ,

56

KIT 'N'

CARLYLE ®by Llirry Wright .

Building M.aterialt
Block. brick, aewer pipes,
windowt. lintels. etc .
Claude Winters, Rio Granda,
0 . Call 614-245-6121 .

"'f'HIS iS ~f1HtW:! You Sf\OO~W'T
()o Ill ~t 11\~1111 W~tl Yw till'If
1"o WNI AU- t&gt;AV ~ ~ON€ 'To
(}$; HoME ~ W~ \o IEf
-------~-----.-...

~~'----''--_....

Apartment
for Rem

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
Nicely furniahed mobile AUCTION l!o FURNITURE
home. tff. apt., central air 62 Olivo S1., Gallipolis. Now
and heat in city, adults only. &amp; useCI wood -coal Jtovaa, 8
Call 114-448-0338.
pc wood LR NHo $399,
bunk bods 8199, ontron 26'" RCA XL -100 console
Radocoratld apt., 2 bdr., reclineu 899, new &amp; used color tel.eviaion, good condi·
8150 10 S250 . Coli 304- bedroom suites. ranges. tion, $100. Call 614 ·446week . Plus utilities or will
675-6104 or 304-876- wringer washera. • ahoes. 9827 .
sell on land contract. Lease. 6388 or 304-676-7898.
Now lvlngroom 111H11 81991 - - - -- - - - - ---- - refarencet &amp; deposit re·
$899. Iampo, also buying
quirad. Call 614-423-8267 Lorge 2 bdr. apt .• 2 both, oool l!o wood otovao. Call 14"12 Velectric chain aaw
good cond . Works off cer 01
or 614-949-2946 for ap- fully carpeted. refrig. l
814-446-3169 .
!ruck battery, $75 , Call
pointme-nL Available otovo, 11 Court St., $326
614-446-0108 .
Nov.1st.
mo.• rof. &amp; dop . Coli 814 ·
446-4926 ,
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
1970 Cadilllac Convanlble
Efficiency cottage. $55.00
Sofool;,;d
choirs
priced
from
13,000,
16 HP Dynomarlt
week, utilititl paid, phone Upstalu unfurnished apt,
8286 . to 1896. Tables, 850 mower, S1,200. Call 614 304-676-3100 or 676·
carpeted. all utilitiea paid. no ond up to 1126 . Hlda·a· 446·3669.
5509 .
children, no pall, Call 114· beds, 139 0 . on d up I o I- _:_.::_:___________
446-1837,
8850.. oola beds '$1 46, Grain fad fn~ezer beef, Call
For rent with option to buy.
Recllnero,
1226. 10 1376.. 614-446-0760.
4 bedroom, 2 car garage,
Furnished attic apt. utiltiea lompo from $28, to 8.126. 1 - - - - - - - - - built in kitchen, large kn,
paid. 8176. 919 2nd .. Shore pc. dinette• from 8109 :, 10 Mixed hardwoodolabo, $12 .
rent $216 .00, $100 .00
bath. men preferred. Call 43&amp; . 7 pc. $189 and up. per bundle, containing ap·
.deposit . Sale price 446-4416 oftor 7PM .
Wood table with li~t chalra prox 1Yz. ton, fob . Ohio
,$26 ,000 .00 or on land
S286 to 1746. Desk 8110 Plllot1 co .• Pomeroy. Ohio .
·contract with down payFurnished ipt. 2 bdr.,1311h up to $225 , Hutches. 1660. Phone 814-992 -6481 ,
. ment. New Haven. call 3044th, Gollipollo, 8196 water Bunk bed comp~te with
882-268B .
paid . Call 446-441 8 oftor flllttreana. $276. and up to 60 per cent offl Flashing
haven.
7PM .
8396 : Boby beds, 8110 . arrow oignol269111 Lighted ,
2 bedroom part furnithed.
M1ttre111s or bOx aprings, non -arrow $247. Unlighted
nice location, reuonable
Furnished 3 rooma ·• bath, full or twin, 183,. firm, $73 , S199 . (free lotte,.. I] Sea
ronl. Call 304-882-3722 or
clean, no .-rs, aduits. Nt. &amp; ond 183, Quaon oeto. 8225 . locally, Limited quantity .
882- 2798 ,
deposit . Call 814-446 · 4 dr. cholto, S49 , 6 dr. Hurryl 118001 423-1063.
1619.
chaots, 169. Bad frames,
·Attractive 4 bedroom home
t20.ond U6 .. 10 gun· Gun Remington Modal 4, 308,
·near High Sc~ooland Hospi2 bedroom largellvingroom. Clbinelt, $360. Oa1 or Monte Carlo stotk whh 3x9
'tal. 2'11 baths. large family
large kitchen. all electric.
room two kitchens . completety furniahed, newly electric renges $376. Baby variable power .L yman
monrooHo, U6 1!o 135, bad Scope . 8600. Call614 -992·
S350 .00 monthly . Call304redecorated. t226 per frame• 820, ' 826, l!o S30. 2066 .
675-4340 , axtanalon 368,
month plus dep. Raf., king frame 850. Good oelec- 1- - -- - ----------weekdays between 8 a.m. odulto, 468 2nd . AYB. Coli tk)n of bedroom atitll,
_and 5 p.m.
614-446-2236 or614-446- roc:kers. metal Clblnetl. 450 John Deere Dozer and
R66 Ditch Witch Trencher.
2581.
headboordo I 38 l!o up to Call814-694-7842 01614S66 .
6~4- 6008.
·42 Mobile Homes
Lorge opt, between Ook Hill
l!o
Thurman.
Call
614-246for Rent
Used Furniture •· Bedroom Oelux wetght bench . Leg
9316.
tuite, 1 set of table a. lifts&amp;: stand up bar &amp; several
drouar, l!o bed, metal office weights. $90.00 . Coli 6141
6 room• &amp; bllth. loceted • • •· 3 mi.. • out lulavitle 742-3074.
•MobU'e.· h~l .1'olallable
Crown City, Newly deco- Rd. Open 9omto 8pm, Mon .
Nov . 1, Fuaten .MObMe
Homo Part&lt;. Call 614,-446-,. rated, electric ttove &amp;refrig. thru Sat.
Boys size 8 Lee jeans It
No poll, Call 114-268 1602.
614-446-0322
Ladies Qingo boola, ·size 6.
1222.
-9_9_2 -_34
GOOD USED APPLIANCES _V_G_c_._6_1_4_
_ 29_-_ _
2 bdr. 14x60 all electric
1
New
efficiency
apt.
Call
Woohoro.
dryan.
refrigera
trailer, nice wood burner in
For Sale :freezer beef. $2.46
614-446-0390.
tor•. rangaa. Skagga Ap· lb. side of Harford beef.
livingroom, on private kU.
pliencet,
Upper
River
Rd
.
On Rt. 218. 6 miles from
2 bedroom apartments. beside Stone Crest Motel. Grain fattened for 8 weeks.
!own , Call614-256-139~ .
Cut and wrapped $1 .26 . lb.
New Haven, WVa. Newly 614-446-7398.
304-773-5131 romodalad.
In
town,
6142 bdr . 1 mile from Hospital.
992-7481 .
washer-dryer, water 9 truh
County Appliance , Inc . Gas range. dehumidifier.
paid. $200 rent and deposit.
Good usad appliances and kerosene heater. Call 614·
Furnished Apanment for TV 1011. Opan BAM to 6PM , 992-2764.
Call 614-446-1364.
rent. nO children. AVIilable Mon thru Sot. 614- ~6after Oc;t.3. Call 614-992· 1699, 627 3rd . Ava, Galli- TONY'S GUN REPAIRS ,
Furnished 2 bdr. trailer on
2749 .
Old 160 near Porter, private
hot dip reblueing, ali types of
polis. OH .
lot, married couple no kid or
1 bedroom. Total eiiiCUic Valley Furniture, new &amp; gunsmith work , fast servCe.
pats. $200 mo . S100 dop.
Apt.
Well oven counter top used. lllrge section of qual· 304-676-4631 '
woter paid . Call 614· 3B8·
range, carpet , 614-992- ity furniture . 1218 Eastern
9060 .
Serious about losing
2094.
Ave .• Gallipolis.
weight? Contact Gloria
Gas heat jutt out of city
2 bd .room furnished Apt. 30 in . electric range white Grato, Rl . 2, Box 282,
limits, $126 mo. plus S100
614-992-6434
or 304-882- $65. 30 in . eleCtr~ range Letart, WV , 26253 , 304dep . No pe.ts, adults only.
882-3162 .
2568
.
harvest gold S95, 30' in .
Call 614-446-3587.
electric range coppertone
APARTMENTS. mobile like new 1126, 36 in. Lump hou1e coal. deliver any
12•60 2 bdr. on Clark
amount, 304-676-7397 or
Chapel Rd . Large privBte lot . homes. houaes. Pt. Pleasant electri-c range white $96 , 676-1247.
Call 814-446 ·3697 or 614- and Gallipolis . 814·446· Whirlpool wather·dryer tet
8221 .
1190, GE waohor avocado
246-5223 ,
- - - - - - - - ---- I graen $160, Ken""'re dryer ARMY SURPLUS! We hove
2 br apartment• in Hender- 896, Speed Queen dryer full line of Army Surplus .
2 bdrm .. partially furnithed
son, 304-675-1972.
$95, Kalvlnalor dryer $66 , Mens and childrens camou ·
mobile horTMt for rent in Rio
flage. all sizes. See us for·
Gibson
refrigerator ·white your hunting needs. 0 &amp; J
Grande . Carpet, natural gas
Nice 1 and 2 br apartmanto $96, Gibson refrelgarator
and storm windowa. Call
downlown , 304-676-221 B whltofrootfroe $160, relrig· Savemore Mart, Muon, W.
614 -246 -9467 aftar6PM or
Va. 25260. 304-773 -6222.
, 8-6
erator tide by side white
614-446-4733, 8·6PM .
Kelvinator a'olotado 300 Six cycle engine parts. 6
Furnished 2 bedroom apt, $196.
2 bdr. furnished. near town.
green $126. portatable months old . Drakes . 3 pair of
utilities paid, $80.00 week. disher washer t95. •mall wood ahutters, never used,
$185 mo. plus deposit. Call
phone 304-676-3100 or wuh8r-dryor $190. Ktn - 304-675-6428 .
614-446-0143 .
676-6509,
more gas dryer •95. freezer
upright white 18 cu .ft. Warm morning wood
3 bedrooms, furnished,
large
2
bedroom
apt,
downS160 . Skoggo Appliance, burner . good cond.
w11her and, dryer. No pets.
$200 . plus deposit and town Point Pleasant, 304- Upper River Rd .. Gallipolis. $16~00 . 304 -675 -6023
896-3450.
614·446-7398 ,
utilities . Call 61 4 -992 ·
anytime.
7479.
E-Z Credit Mollohan Furni46 Furnished Roams tun&gt;, 403 41h AVa.. Ka - King coal upright S1ove. Gas
Trailer for rent, 661 Beech
range. Call after 4:00, 304nouga, Oh. !446-7444 ,
St., Mlddlaport. $185 . p_luo
676-6412 .
For rent Sleeping Rooms
8100. depooit.
and light house keeping Weterbed Super single, Realistic stereo , turntable.
rooms. Park Central Hotel. bookca1e headboerd, ttor- AM·FM radio C8118t1e
14K65 2 br, Henderson with
age pedutool, baffle mat- player, exc cond, $126 .00 .
washer &amp; drver furnished or Coll614-446-0756.
treu whh mattrest cover &amp; Typewriter manual, $10 .00 .
unfurniahed . Dep. Required.
2 Mtl sheets. 6 mos. old, Brown leather couch, 3
304-675-1730.
1600. Coli 614 -446 -0920.
46 Space for Rent
cuthlon, $86 .00 . Young
2 bedroom mobile l'lome,
men clothes size S. shirts,
Whirlpool
automatic
washer
Burdette Addn . 8175.00
28 waist pants. eK-c t:ond.
plul utilities and deposit. Mobile ho ma lol. 12 '•60' _or 1176. Call 61-4-446- 3738 , phone 304-676 -7436 after
304 -676- 2464 or 676·
smaller. $76 water paid, 4th
4:30.
2048 .
l!o Nell, Gallipolis. Coli 446- Country style oak furniture,
hand crafted and finished,
4416 after 8PM ,
set of n~w lug·
antique reproductions. Paul Complete
2 bedroom trailer. 66x12,
gaga, regularly 8300.00
14 Burdette Addn anytime . Trailer space for rent. Call Conkel. R1.7 , Tuppeu now $126.00 . Salad Master
Pie ins.
·c all 304·676-6372.
614-446-1062 after &amp;PM.
waterless cookware com·
plate with electrtc tklllet.
2 bedro9r'n mobile home. COUNTRY ' MOBILE Homo
10lls lor $1,100.00 priced
completely furnished. all
Park, Route 33. Nonh of 53
$660 .00 . Black rocking
Anti~ues
utilities paid. refrences re · Pomeroy. large loti. Call
chair, rust cushiOns $66 .00 .
quired . rent $200 .00, 614-992-7479 .
1973 Monte Carlo, make an
across from Goodyear Plant,
oflar. phone 304 - 876Antique
Seller
kitchen
caphone 304-676-2479.
90 ft.x 300 ft . lot in Roclno
Orginal finith. Call 6874 .
with 28 ft.•44 ft. booemonl binets.
2 bedroom allelac. 8136 .00 and floor. alae. haok up. 614-448-3803 .
Grain fed Holstein •tears, 60
plus utilities, 304-676- ieptic tank. wettr. Call
ForSolo;A Iorge building lull cents' lb on foot, $1 . 17
40B8.
614-247-3861 of primitive tools, embo11ed hanging wal9h1 . 1976 Merbottlel, WIX llllert fruit cury Marqu11, 11 ,000.00.
B. &amp; D. Trailer Park.' trailer
jara.
Mason patentdd fruit 304-676-9704,
Apartment
44
loti lor rent, 304-676·
jere,
arit~ues, old rtltaurant
2644,
for Rent
ware, many other itenw too 3T girl• Winter Weather
numeroua
to mention. Must Tamer snow suit, toddler
Mobile home lotforrent,exc
swing, 304-676-6606 ,
location opposite Sandy - t o oppreclato. 814-9492342
or
614-949·'2338.
1 year old 8 ft . spun alumn
JACKSON ESTATES Holghtl, 304-875-7884 If·
•
APARTMENTS (Equal tor 3:00 PM.
Buying depreulon glau, satellite dish, Drake receiver
Housing Opportunityl
milk bottloo, stone jars, and· rotor, will set po~ and
monthly rent starts at $169
Jewel Tta . Cell 614·'694- inltall. $1.600.00 . 1 year
Merr.IJandt se
old 6 pc. Bassett wedgefor 1 bedroom and &amp;204 for
2771 OYanlngo.
wood blue sofa . love seat.
2 bedroom, deposit $200,
chair, octagonal ,table and
'
located near Spring Valley I---;;:;----;-:-,---;-~~--­
Houoa
cooL
Lump
l!o
stokar.
end
toblo, 81.600.00 oiigiPiazo and Foodland, pool 51 Household Goods
linn Cool Co. Call614-446- nolly paid 14,000.00 . 1 yeor
and Cable TV av1ilabla,
1408.
old Zonhh floor modal rooffice houri 111 pouible 10
•
mote control TV. push but- 1
am to 4 pmand7 pmto9pm
1
Monday-Fridoy, Call 614 · Wizard CitaUon clotheJ Hou10 cool. J-ump &amp; otolcer. ton chon not sol actor
446 - 2745 or laove dryer. Elaclrlc , · 8100, Coli linn Coal Co. Call 814 -448- $600.00. 304-675· 7229
304-882-2326 .
message .
14f&gt;B.
r _•n__:y:t_l_
m_• ·_· - - - --

For rent with option to buy.
2 bd.room home In Racine
with large lot on dead and
street. All electric, fully
insulated, city water &amp;
sewer, fully carpeted, and
cable hook-up. $46 :00

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

C.------------

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

•

i!
rl

J

B1

Pets for Sale

'-....,.=...,l:&lt;~.e2_:c:;:_

i/ ·J

....,

lii!W.
IJ)flOO'
111115

•

'-.)

".-:•.w

Home
Improvements

CAPTAIN EASY

J .and L. Installation. Roof-

BORN LOSER
fAH !'l:lOR IRIJOI3Lo ~ 11-IAT
COIJ'T K/-PJJ Tile !'ENJI~
Cf HAW
lOCli&lt;K !

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS l!o SONS
U.S. 36 Weat. Jackson ,
Ohio. 614-286-6461 .
Maisey Ferguaon. New
Holland, Bush Hog Sol01 1!o
Service. Over 40 used
tractor• to choose from 81
comp'-te line of new &amp;
used equipment . Largest
selection in S.E. Ohio.
Speciel10% discount on all
parts for cash sales only,
until Nov . 15 .

1978 AMC Concord station
wagon, exc. cond., new
tires. air, auto, stereo. Call
614-448-7904,
1977 Mercury Cougar 4 dr64,000 miloo, AC. AT, CC.
llereo exc. cond., new tire1.
Call614-446-7904.
1976 Plymouth Valiant
Scamp. 2 dr .. radio, Mull
see to appreciate. Call 614·
245-9698 .

The following described
~am will be offorld lor
public oalo 10 tho highut
bidder on tho 91h of NoNaw Idea modal 323, one •ambor. 1984FordTtmpo4
row corr1" p'ickar. C811 614- dr. Sor . No. 2FA8·
P23R6EB227433. Sale will
256-1144,
be hold at tho Commarclol l!o
Massie Harris 666 tractor Savings Bank. Main Office,
new motor, new battery, for 26 Court St., Golllpolio,
1818 ortrlda . Ctll614-446- Ohio . Terms:cuh. Seller
raserves the right to bid and
1 052 ofter &amp;PM ,
lha right to rejactony and all
Used 460 John Deere dozer bid•1!o R65 Ditch Wilch
Trencher , Call 614-694- 1980 Chevatto, 4 dr.. AM·
FM Clloetta, 82,000 nogotl·
7842 or 814-694-5008,
oble . Call 614-448-8049
Dewalt 1.0 '' radial arm saw. .!tor 6PM .
2 bladea, Dado and sanding
an . lika new. $400. Triple 1973 Pontiac Venturi body
box air cylinder tobacco oxc .. now paint, PS. PB, olr.
beler. complete., used once, 360 motor. Coli 614-268S400 . 60 plu• round bales. 1922 .
good mixed hoy 812 .00
each or $600 for all. Call 1977 Grond Prix , ex c.
cond .. PS, Pl. good tires.
614-379-2768 .
AM· FM rldlo, tilt whaol.
John Oaare 4020 tractor. Col1614· 446-1387,
Good rubber. EC . 614-949- 1 - - - - - - - -2437 ,
1978 grand prix. Po. pb,
p,d,l .. p.w.. crul11. On&gt;ot
Bent livestock Trailers. Hur· lhapa, Gn10t price, Call:614
rica no. WV. 304-757-6644 742-3169.
or 767-6399 ,
1966 Pontloc con•artlble.
New Holland 364 grinder Good condhlon . t900 .00.
mhulf• Used very lnle. Exc Coli 614-24.7 -4292 ,
oond, 304-273-4216.
1980 CheYOitO 4 dr., IUtO.,
am
.. l .m., lugg. rock, llood
Allis Chalmers 7030 dlaool
farm tr.:tor, 130 hp. good cond .. 60,000 mllu .
oond, S7.000 .00. Sldero 11900.00 . 614· 986·4418 .
Equipment, Henderton. W.
1978 chovittto. 4 door, 4cyl.,
Vo . 304-676-7421.
auto., air .• new tires, brekes.
battery. exaust. Great gil
mileage . Sllvar wHh rtd
63 livestock
interior. No rutt. Exc. cond.,
614-949-2558. t1400.00.
Selling family ticknett. Reg.
Oual1er horse gentle ., Pallmao mara lolled Moy 81
1260. Call 614· 379· 2144.

Horn small 'vary gentle bly
color.- Coll614-246-6149 .
Angus bull 4 years old, very
gantle, 'Coli 614·246-9143
sfler 6 .
Registered Hereford spring
calves, buHs and heifers,
304-662-2385 .

1984 Opai-EC. 64.000 orlg·
lnol miles. 46 mpg , *660.
Call614-696-13&amp;8
1984 Mercur( Toptz. PS,
PB. outo. oir. AM-FM rodlo,
front wheel drlva, White
with groy Interior. 88760.
Call 814·949-2894 .
197B Novo, In good condl·
tlon, with new tkes. No
reaaonable offer refuNd.
Call 814-949-2841.

1984 Chevy 4x4, % lon
chuoio. 27.760 miles. 6
cyl .. 4 op , 87500.00 firm.
614-992-6278.

Tree· trimming and removal,
insured, free eatimatet,
raasonablo rotas. 304-8767121 .

1976 Ford% ion truck . 390
engine. Good cond. 614 742-2421 .

Get your carpet jn ship shape
with Captain Steamer. furni·
ture cleaning-water damage
work, 304-676-2296 .

1983 D· 60 !ruck. $3500 .
614-742-2461.
19B2 Chevy SIIYerado. '!.
ton 4x4. 6. 2 dlo101. EC.
48.600 miles, 614-949 ·\
2437 ,

73

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

19n Dodge Sportoman
van. captain• chairs, factory
hhch, oxc. cond . 69.000
mllu. Call614-367-7262 .
19n Dodge Sportsman
van. captalnfchaira, factory
hitch, axc. cond, 89.000
mllu. Coli 6148o,fodtemp
1986 Bronco II. 6 opd., O.D.
tranl. AM-FM 110reo, YOiouo
..... and much more, 28
MPG. t9,600. Coli 614379-2788 .
1978 Chavy 4 WD. FWS,
Many extr11. New tires and
shocks. body good. E•collent running cond. Coll614949·3087 oft . 6 p.m.

••n 318. PS. PB,
captain chain, pa·

78 Oodgo

cNiJe.
neled, exc. work van. Call
Oannlo 304-676-7820.

82

ANNIE

(1J

448-~884,

1980 Kowooakl LTD 1,000.

••c
cond, many utras,
phona 304-876-6433.
-75

Boats and
Motors lor Sale

·I'M GLAD! I AEI&gt;.LLY
MISSED THIS PLACE !

T~'

JUNGl.E , TW ANIMt)J.S
AN' A.LL.~ ISN'T IT
GREAT T'BE BACK?

lection.

(I) 700 Club
ffi CFA College Football:
San Jose State @ Cal State
Long Beach
® 0) @ North and Soulh
Part 41CC] Orry ·s evil sister
Ashton
plors
revenge
against George's brother
Billy, Virilia marries a slave.
and Madeline confesses a
shacking secret to Orry. Patrick Swayze. James Read,
Lesley-Anne Down . 1965.
0 Ill @ Simon &amp; Simon
Ill Wild America (CC)
(fi) Mystery! ICCI Pan 3 of
6 . 'Death of an Ex pen Witness.· Dalgleish searches for
two missing pieces of ovid·
ence in Lorrimer' s murder.
(60 min)
(MAXI MOVIE: 'She Wore
a Yellow Ribbon'
9:30 0 CD (1J Night Court Dan
is shocked to learn of his
college buddy's sex-change

Excavating

~eration.

[t] Profiles of Natura

Good· 1 EKcavating, basements, footers, driveways,
septic tanks. landscaping.
Call onyllme 614-4464637, Jamesl. DavisOn, Jr.
owner.

10:00 0 CD (1J Hill Street Blues
Washington deals with his
relationship with his new
girlfriend. Buntz collars a
thief. and an artist take s refuge in his controversial
sculpture. (60 min.)
CIJ News
Portrait of America:
Hawaii
0 ® ® Knols Landing
(CCI Joshua walk s out on
his own show . Jill has stunning news for Mack, and
Abby tries to cover her
tracks at Empire Valley. 160
min.)
Ill We'll Meet Again
(fi) Newswatch
f!l Odd Couple
10:15 IHBOI MOVIE: ' Finders
Keepero' (CC)
10:30 (I) Fitness Magazine
(fi) Tony Brown' s Journal
fj) INN News
(MAX]
Album
flash
Special: Daryl Hall l!o John
Oat as
11 :oo
I])
Ill
® News
(I) Man From U.N.C.LE .
CD MOVIE: 'Tho Lllsl
Delall'
Cil Capitol Journal
(fi) Walk Through 20th
Century with Bill Moyers
(CCI 'Post-War Hopes,,Cold
War Fea rs.' Bill Moyers examines the nostalgic and
neurotic 1950 's. (R] (60
min.)
fj) Benny Hill Show
11 :30 0 (}) C1J Tonight Show
Tonight' s guest is j:l!rdening
elipert ·rliatassii CruiiO. i6o
min.)
Ill New Newlywed Game
0 (])Night Heat Kirkwood
realizes that a violent death
during a strike at a shipping
plant is acruallv a. careful!-;
planned assassination. (60
min.)
•
Ill Latenight America
®Taxi
Ol
® ABC News
Nightline
Ill One Step Beyond
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Hardbod- leo' ICC!
11 :45 (HBO)
MOVIE:
'Fort
Apache, The Bronx'

Dozer Work tlnd clearing,
landscaping, etc . Free estimateo. Call 614 -446-803B
or 614-992-7119 anytime.

rn

J.A .R. Construction Co.,

BARNEY
LOOKY WHAT

I GOT FER
OL' B.ULLET- -

General Hauling

WHEN WILL VOU
EVER L'ARN
TO STOP
GULPIN'
VORE
FOOD

James Boy1 Water Service.
Aloo pools filled . Call 614266 -1141 or 814-4461 176 or 614-446-7911.
ken' s Water Service. Wells,
cllttrna, pool, filled. Phone
614· 387-0623 or614-367·
7741 night or day .

o rn

Waugh ' s Water Service
Wells, ciatern1. pools . Fut:
reliable service. Call 14·
2&amp;6 -1240 or 614 · 266 1 130. Reesonable rates.

e

John boat for sale. Call
814-266·6417,
76

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuoriea

•
Old style CHevy Rolloyo,
304-878-8868 .

Newly robulll 307 CID
Chevy motor. 400 T.H.
tranamlation alto rtbulh 1
304·678' 8868,

1977 Ford LTO . 4 door, V8,
Purebred Yorkthire Bores. 7 · body In good oond .. 11385.
79 Motore Home•
wooko ald. 826.00 eoch, 614-949-2689.
304-676-36.34,
&amp; Camper~
I
1984 Ply. Grmd Fury, 4 dr..
8 cvt.. 4 bbl., oil oxtr11.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
14600. Also 1980 Chryllor 1172 Kayot camper, loll
LoBoron, 2 dr.. 11100. contoln_,., 318 Dodgo tn•
814·742-2461,
gino, 22ft. long, lloopo tlo.
Largo round bllooolhay 820
ae.ooo. Coli 614 · 44e.
ea. Call 614-446-1062oftor 1978 Ponllac Bonneville. 2077.
'
&amp;PM.
uc cond. mull 1141 tg
~..::.--------:---:- approcleto, t2,000.00 01 1968 Trou1wood ""ll'lllor
Mi•ed gross hoy lor aale , ball oHer. Troy Krebs, 304- folr cond, t700, Coli 814 .
Call 614-949-2237,
67&amp;-7127 0~87&amp;-1185.
1.4_4_8_
·4_1_1_3_.- - --

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

HAul limestone. sand, 9,..
vel.dlrt, bulk or bsg fertilizer
tnd li'!'fl. h celslor Salt
Wor~olnc , 838 E, Moln St,
Pomoroy. 814-992·3891 ,

Oump fruck, hauling ser·
vlco, 304-878 3190,

87

-

Uphol1tery

TAl 8TAT E
UPH O~STE AY 9 HQP
1163 Boo AYo,. Golllpollo
814•44 6 1H l3or &amp;14 446 ·
1&amp;33
.
•

-

LIFT ME ~~6~ER .• WilEN
AALLEV'5 COMET COMES

8V, I WANT TO SEE IT...

-nt.

,. PI M FurnlttHe Manutao·

lurlhg , St
7, Crown
Clly, Oh Coli 814 · 2&amp;8 .
1470, eoll £yo &amp;14 -446 •
3 4 38 IJi d "' 11 0
Uf&gt;ho lorod
w
Porgu11tm'o Uoh!iiot, ,.., 304_
&amp;76 6471

-

-

K] KJ t j ~ .............
tRAYLEY
) KJ

u-r

I [J

A C: ONPI FtMED
NI(;H"T OWL 15 A

MAN WHO 5iAY:S
UP ALL N IGHT-

J [J

[]

Ans~r: KI
Yesterday's

I

Now arran ge Ihe ci rcled lette rs to
form Ihe surprise answer, as sug·
gesled by the above cartoon.

I Jt X1 XI

t'

•

J(

I XJ

[Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: JETTY NOOS E TURKEY RECTOR
Answer: What he got when he bought lhat stockSTUCK

Jum!M Book No.. 17 1nd 18 1rt lnllablllot 11.95.,ch plut 55 ctnlt tach pot iiQI
.rid lwndllft!llrom Jwt~blt, Clo lt111 newtptper, P.O. BOll !531. Ptlmvra. N.J. ()l10115.
lncludtt your •llml, •ddr•n, t lpcode 1nd m1k1 ct.Kk ~Yiblt 10 NIWI JIIPtrbookt .

BIIDGE
James Jacoby

mo

oo o

.,

Aid and comfort
to the enemy

rn

JIM'S PLUMBING l!o HEAT-·
lNG, Rt. 1. Bo• 366. Gallipollo, Call 614-367-0676 .

a.

~

0 Ill Jeopardy

Nightly / Business
Report
@ Wheel of Fortune
!II WKRP in Cincinnati
(MAXI MOVIE: Pudd'nhead Wilson' (CCI
C1J Cosby Show (CCI
B:OO 0
Cil Wackiest Ship in the
Amny
CD MOVIE: 'The fighting
Seabaes'
CII Gl ® 20/20 (CCI
0 (II ® Magnum, P-.1 .
Magnum must catch a group
of cattle rustlers on a
Hawaiian ranch. (60 min.}
Ill
MacNeil/Lehrer
Nawshour
llD Forum
f!l
MOVIE:
'Forced
Vengeance'
IHBOI MOVIE: 'The Uttla
Drummer Gi~' ICCI
8 :30 0 [}] (1J Family Ties Mallory shocks Steven and
Elyse by announcing her intention not to attend college.
llD International Edition
9:00 0 [}] (1J Cheers A small
accident has Sam frantic after Diane entrusts him with a
vaiu8ble book hom her col -

Plumbing

Rutlond . Oh, 614 -7422903. Basement•. Footert,
Concrete work. Backhoe's.
Dozer &amp; Oitcher. Dump
trucks,
water-gat-sewerelectrical line•.

_

I........
I [
....-.. -.-.. . . 0

CII

Motorcycles

1982 Kowukl stn10t blko,
8800, o•c- cond. Coli 614 -

EVENING

CD Sanford and Son

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gollipolio, O~io
Phone 814-446-3888 or
614 -446-4477

85
74

11/7/85

CII Gl @ Price Is Right

&amp; Heating

83

THURSDAY

Daisies

8
1-----------:----:-

FortH Suppl tes
&amp; Ltve slock

~HIP·

1

m;r.,

dloool onglno. 35 MPG. uc.
cond. 86.600. Coli 614-446
0840 01 446-1429 .

GUARD HAS FOUND OUR
SO· CALLED "~IC:A"

15

Television
Viewing
' 6 :00 0 00 (])(1J 0 ®@ Gl
@ News
Cil $100,000 Name That
Tune
(!) Mazda Sportslook
@ Andy Griffith
® 3-2-1, Contact (CCI
llD Electric Company
f!l Dill' rent Strokes
6 :30 0 00 1IJ NBC Nightiy
News
(1) Carol Burnett and
Friends
@ Sportscenter
@ Carol Burnett
CII Gl Wl ABC News ICC]
0 Ill @CBS News
CI1 Dr. Who
llD Body Electrio
f!l Taxi
7 :00 0 [}] PM Magazine
Cil
Courtship/Eddie's
Father
(!) PGA Golf: Nissan Cup
World Championship of
Golf from Mani, Hawaii
® Mary Tyler Moore
([l Entertainment Tonight
(1) Wheel o,l Fonune
0 (II Wheel of FortuQe
® Second City TV
@News
llD
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
Gl @ Divorce Coun
fit Jeffersons
IHBOllnsida The NFL
7:30 0 00 New Newlywed
Game
Cil Please Don't Eat

D.and M. Contractors. Vinyl
aiding, replacement ~in·
dow•. inaulating, roofing.
new and remodeling, con·
erato . Call 304-773-5131,

"'

TRI&gt;C{, THE CCASr

'

Servi ces

siding,. storm
Oragonwynd Cattery Ken- I~iiiiiiiRiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiT========;=:"j ing,
and vinyl
windowa
Free door.•
estl·
71
Autos for Sale
mateo . Call 814-992-2772.
nel . CFA Himalayan. Peroion
and Siamese kittens . AKC
Chow puppies. Call 446COLEMAN WATER WELL
3844 altar 7PM .
DRILLING
1979 , Ford fairmont,
A
S
I
71
utoa for a e
Pump ooleo, service. Ragio·
6•u,OOO m 11 as. auto trana, terad
T8ddy 8eart- -AKC Reg.
in Ohio . . All work
·
Ca11
new tires, newexhauat,new guaronlaad . Call 304-273Ch ow Chow pupprn
614-266-1271 .
brakes, AM ·FM oterao, vinyl 2811- Ravenswood. W, Va,
TOP CASH paid lor '80
81,500.00 . Phona304model and newer used cars.
6 • 1139
American Pitt .,
Dull Terrier
u•
RON'S Telavr'o1'on Service.
1o
Smith Buick-Pontiac. 1911
pups. Purple ribbon b od · Eeotom A••- · Gallipolis. Call 1979 Che~ene, 4 door, AT. Houoe calls on RCA, Quazar,
d ,
GE . Spacialing In Zenith.
line. Beoumully marked reg- 614 _448 • 2282 ,
!sterad AOBA 8200 each.
axe con • 1•060 ·00 · 304 - Caii304-676-239B or 614·
Call 304-662-6976 .
676-6644.
1979 Rabbit. 1976 Ford
446-2464.
AKC Reg. Pekanesa pup- LTD , Cell altar 6PM, 614- 1983 Dodge Charger
pioo, ba ready in 2 w80ko, _3_8_8_-88
__2_3_·__________ Shelby, blue silver, 6 speed. Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
AC. AM -FM oloreo. 29.000 removal. Coli 304- 675taking deposits now. Call 1
1981 Dodge Chorger, 2.2, mlleo, 16.200.00 . 304-882 _1_3_31_·- - - = : - : -614-266-9391 .
51 .000 miloo, oharp. 1982
2286 '
RINGLEs·s SERVICE, ax·
AKC male English Springer. Dodge Omnl 2 dr .. 64,000
miles.
Coli
614·379-2726,
perienced carpenter, electri·
wanted · for stud service.
cian, meson. painter, roof72
Trucks for Sale
week of November 10. Li«er
1980
Chevy
Monzo
hatching
(Including hoi tar
choice. Coll614-388-9904.
back. good cond. Call 30404 676 208
1980 Dotoun, auto. radio. ~~~~~~~o;J ~ '
- B
Registered Baegloo lor 18le, 675-6943 oltor 6PM or oil topper. S2599 . John'sAuto
day
waekendt.
'
Call 614-992· 7883 altar
Salea, Bulaville Rd, Gallipo- Starks Tree and Lawn Ser6:00p.m.
vice. stump removal, 304·
Dodge Charger 2 .2 1984, lia, Ohio.
.
_... only 14.067 miles, payoff
676-2010
,
For sele or trade. reg11terV\I joan approxlmatety t4, 700. 86 Ford Ranger 4x4, Ps , PB. 1__:__:__:__.:___________
black and tan female Coon
5-_9_5_8 9_·_ _ 4 apd .• standard with over· Rotary or cable tool drilling.
dog. 14 months old . Call _c_ol_1_&amp;1_4_-_2_4 _
drive. V·8. 50.000 war· Most wells completed aame
1
614 -949-2338 .
1980 Chevetlo, otandard ranty. Cell814-448·0061 . day. Pumptalatandaervice.
89
AKC reglolerad Beagle pup· trans, AC. good shape. Call 1975 Chevy Silverado 1 ton, 1--30
_ 4_-_
_ 5_-_3_80
_2
_:_______
pies, good blood lines, 304· 614-446"2169 anytime.
dually with King cab.
Frad'o Bldg . end Ramodel·
676 -6886 .
1985 Cougar. t12, 988 S6.000 . Cell 814-446 - ing, basements, porches.
2107
Of 614-245-5600.
payoff. or may arr1nge tak'
roofing,. siding, painting,
over
payments. Owner leld:
leveling trailers. satisfation
57
Musical
1978
Dodge
pickup
wide
off. Call 814-258-8034.
bed 8', club cab. AM-FM 8 guoranteed , 304 - 773Instruments
track,
CB, PS. PB, AC, till 9116 .
19 83 Pontiac Parlolenno
mint' cond, low mileage, wheel, good home modo B. &amp; 0 . Home Improve·
At 8runicardl"o .. ...No rapos- loaded. Call 614-387-7225 toppar,goodcond .. $1,796 , menta, vinyl siding, alumn
Call 614-446-0108.
sassed piano gimmicks.Juat efter &amp;PM.
siding, continuous gutter,
honest plano valuaa . We are 1 - - - - - - - - - - room addition•. soffit and
1976
Datsun
PU,
AM-FM
nave&lt; under ooldl Brunlcordi 75 Chevy pu e400. 72 Ford
replacement windows, 304MuoiC Inc. Corner 3rd . 1!o von 8400._ Call 814-388- tapa. CB. radials. white 676-2644,
apokea
.
good
cond
.,
Court Sl ., Gallipolis. Ohio. 9303 ,
S1,200 . Call 814- 379 Carpentry, Remodeling ,
Suaphone alto eK. cond . 1983 Niuan Son1ra 61 ,000 2768.
Room Addition, All building
King instrumentt . Call614· mi.,. 83,900. Call 614-448 1986 'chevy P.U, !ruck. Po, • repairs. Cement &amp; Block
245-5149 .
1662 .
pb, V-6. auto, $8800.00 . work. Free Estimate. 304675-4322.
1983 Oldomobila Delta 88 614-949-2660.

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

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

•

WE 13f:LIEVE OIRSE WAS
WAITING FoR A BUYER WHEN
WE INTERRUPTED
-·
HIM-

1977 Prowler. 20ft. Too
many extr81 to lilt. EC. Call
614-949-3087 aft, 6 p.m.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gue·
rantee. Local ,atarences
furniahed . Free e&amp;~imates.
Call collacl 1-614-2370488, day or night. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

Block, brick. mortar and
masonry suppliea. Mountain
State Block , ·RI. 33, New
HaYen, W, Vo . 304-882·
2222.

''

44

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

TRACY

You ooT.

Key Lump. Ohio Lump. Ohio
Stoker. Yard or delivery,
cament blocks and building
material . Gallipolis BkJck
Co., Pine St .. • Gallipolis,
Ohio Call814-446-2783.

56

79

Building Supplies

Briarpa1ch Kennels All·
breed grqoming . Indoor·
outdoor lioarding focilitlel.
English Cocker Sp..,ial. 3889790.

2 bedroom house in country.
On County Road 18. Dapooit n&gt;rquired, Call 614-992
7201 .

Thursday, November 7, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily

Ohio

NORTH

11 -7-li

+J 4 2
• J 10 8 2

.A9764

By James Jacoby
.

Why bid a second suit in competitivt
auctions when you have already found
a fit with your partner? There are
·three reasons. First, the hand may
play better with the second suit as
trump. Second, you may want that
second suit led if the opponents buy
the contract. Third, telling your partner about your second suit might help
him make a crucial decision about
whether to bid on. If none of those reaapply, it's silly to tell your opponents about that second suit lurking in
your hand.
In today's auction, South knew that
he was going to bid to the five-leveL If
the opposition bid five spades, he
would try to defeat that contract.
Surely he did not want his partner to
lead diamonds, and he certainly did
not want to play in diamonds rather
than ill bear!JI. But he atiU bid five dla·
monds. Look what that bid created .
' West doubled, and then doubled five
hearts. He led a heart, and upon regaining the lead , he played another
heart, Because declarer was now unable to ruff out all his diamond losers,
he had to go down a trick. Suppose instead that South had simply bid five

WEST
+AQ 9 86
• 54
t A K 10 5
+ 53

EAST

+K 10 7 5

.3

t 9 84

+KQ J82
SOUTH

+3
'AKQ 976
tQJ6 32

+to

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer : West

4.5' 4. 25t.
Nortb

West

I+

Pass
Obi.
Obi.

Easl

2+

Soulb

Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pass '
Pass

Opening lead: • 4

-·

hearts over East's four spades. He
might well be doubl ed, but West, with
no knowl edge of South 's secondary di amond suit , might just select the diamond king for his operling lead. That
lead would wrap up fi ve hearts doubled for South.

•

br THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

39 Likely

I Fit -

DOWN

fiddle
4 Gullet
8 Lopsided
9 Salome's
stepfaU•er
II Rosl&lt;ln
slugger
12 Dinner
course
14 Cuckoo
16 Teacher's

I Straighten
2 Parvenu
3 Zoo dweller
4 Dansnn -Lung
TV show
5 Landlord's due·~6 Garfunkel
7 Progress
8 U.S.S.R.
inland sea
10 Muffie , 24 Young
29 Challcngr·
3J Prrs. Ford's
13 Pitcher
salmon
au.-gr11.
16 Kansas
15 Nuisance 26 Exern ph~l
3• An lt;llian
river
18 Condemn
from
17 Co nducror21 Likewise 28 NavraCh CI'St'
22 Bar
til ova's
19 Poem
36 Brazilian
20 Depriva- 23 Outbu rst
oppon_•.,n,.l-,-,tr,o
rc_e
~

tion

21 City nf
Manasseh
22 Celt
23 Valley
24 Hand

feature
25 Backtalk
26Ar•b name
27 Farmed
30Gypsy
31 New

Ouinea
town
32 Actress
Gardner

33 Thief
35 Town in
Mass.
36 Effrontel')l
37 Unsullied
38 Foray
DAILYCRYPTOQUOT&amp;'i - Here's how to work i t :
AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes the length and formati on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTE

ll -7

A YI N
AY RK R Z,
FBRIP F

E YAA

II W I.

H K H ll

•
L UR

LJ H
1·: I' I&lt; II

lJ ll

t. NTLli . - II&lt;FWil

Yestenlay'o Cryptoquote: PRF:JUIJlCF: S(I UINTS
WHEN IT LOOKS, AN D LIES WHEN IT TALK ~ - DUCHESS DE ABRANTES

II

�.•
16- The

Ohio

Sentinel

ELBERFELDS

Inside:
By lhe Bend .. ........... Page 5
Classllleds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8
Cornia!-TV .............. Page 9
Deo.lhs ........... ........ Page 10
Edllorial ................. Page 2
Sports . ................ ... Pages 3

MISSY - OPEN STOCK

LADIES' HEAVY WINTER

SKIRT

SLEEPWEAR

Lone cowns, robes and louncen.
Brushed tricot, brushed nylon, flannel,
sweatshirt knit, woven knits, fleece and
quilted.

SALE
Buv Now ••• Sue!

-...... --.....

Button down ~d. tr.tftioNI

DEVON SPORTSWEAR
Petite, Missy and Extra Size Dewn blouses.

11. s,_ ._., 32 eo 311.

116.95

Shirts .................... '15.00
121.00 Van Heusen
Shirts .................... 116.70
122.50 Van Heusen
Shirts .................... 117.90

Reg . ' 17.00 ........................ ..... Sale '10.20
Reg . •2o .oo ............................. sale •12.00
Reg.'28 .00 .... ........... .............. Sale'16 .80
'36 oo
R
eg.
. ............................. Sale '21 .00
58
34 80
Reg. • .oo ... .. ... ....... ......... .. .. . sale • .

styles In en emy of color11nd

pnnts.

1

Waekand aevlngs on our entire
1tock of junior 1iza awestor
veats. Many colora and styles
to chootelrom. Jr. oiz11 S, M.
L.
Reg. •12 Vests ..... '9.59
Reg.'16Vests ... '11.99
Reg •21 Vests •16 79

..,,.;.,·-w·--·-"--'--··__
WOMEN'S UNIFORM SALE

"'*'

Professional pantsuits,

SIIRTS. VESTS. SWEATERS. JEANS

ALL LIVING ROOM SUITES

Save ezoo.oo on2 or 3 pc. llvlng raomou~... Mony

,.w

MJrtes have 1"ived. Qu1lity brend1 include Norwalk,

.,d Berl&lt;llne.

HURRY IN AND SAVE $200.001
IOYS'

Sale $ 19 TO $

Sizes 8 to 18. Good oelection
of plaid patietns. Seve this
weaken d.
Boys '9.95 Flonnelo ......... "'·'""'

~~~

SALE
SWIVEL ROCKERS
LUJuJrious VELVET swivel rockers by style-craft.

Spteially Priced

Bovo' '11 .96 Flannels ...... '9 .49
Boys' '14.96 Flannell .... 11.
Boys' '16.96 Flannels .... '13.
1

1195.00 ........... SALE 1148.00
1229.00 ........... SALE '171.00

REG.
REG.
REG. 1239.00 ........... SALE '179.00

CHILDREN'S

SWEATSHIRTS
&amp; SWEATPANTS
SALE

Many. many colors in
hooded jackets. vests,
long 1laave 1waetohirta
.,d sweatpants. Sizes 8
to 24 mol .. 2 to 4, 4 to
8x, 7to 14.
. 1 6 ....... .. .. Sale '4. 79
Reg. •a ........... Solo '8.39
Reg. 1 11 ......... Sole
Reg. 814 ...... Solo '1 1 ·'"'"""

59__ _

N•-•••tr S•lel

WORK CLOTHES

359

flANNEl
SHIRTS

pants,

Jr. Sius 3 to IS
Reg. '14.00 Sportswear ..... Sale '11.:.1 :~-----...L~-..-.;__.,.....,_,...
Rag. '17.00 Sportswear ..... Sale 1 13
Reg. $23.00 Sportswear .... Sale
GIRLS'
1
29.00 Sportswear ..... Sale "23.1
MEN'S SWEATERS
._,w.._ _...;.......;_ _ _ _....,...,.....;.._._.-1 WHkend oole prlceo.., glolo' R..... and •••,. ._.,. •lnl in co.t
ttylel, WNtl, plu1 llfnlndouUH·
IIOVIMIII SlU-CliH&amp;m I.WII OUCI
fwll vowno. robeo. pojamos. do•ofY·Mdt
.ndertw ,.cllt, sllpovond nlteohlrto. Bruohed po- .,.,
lold cektrl, •rtr'fltt, ttrlp• and
lyootor. oweotahirt lolit11nd novettv (INitltrM.
Men'a •12.96
lnsulatlld cov.r•lfl, ln., •d unMnld bll ov.llllt, dung•rwt,
quRted.
qullt·tintd or bllll-l't llnld COI'tl lftd Jeclcttl, ,.UI matching
2 10 4, 4 tO 8X, 7 CO 14 SWEATERS ....... '10.29
MIIP-on hoodt. Aeoullr tnd til linl. plus big ttl.. .
REG 4 50
•20 00
Men' a 1 19.95
SWEATERS ....... 115.79
rriced.
Men's '24.96
SWEATERS .. ..... 1 19.89
611tallo on ourm.,'thuntingcloth•. Wits. co1t1. owerallt,
$
$
Men' a '29.96
bloo••••••••••11ondiockm.
TO
SWEATER$
..... .. 123.89
SA¥1 NOW

SALE PRiCES

1599

LITTLE BOYS'

'SHIRT
SALE

NOVOtnber Sole priceo of
knit .ttlrta, POlo lhlrta, Oll ·
ford ahwta. IWMtlhlnl,
IOp1, fl8M .. IhirU.

Reg. '7 ....... Sole '6.19
Reg. '9 ....... Sole '7.19
Reg. 't2 ..... s.s. •9.69
Reg. '19 ... Sole•15.19

November Sale

Nova111ber Salel

BOYS' SWEATERS

BOYS' DENIM JEANS

Sizes 8 to 20. Slipover otyleo in
solid colors end patterno. Van d
crew neck1.
'14.95 Sweaters .... '11 .89
'15.95 Sweaters .... '12 .69
'16.96 Sweaters .... '13 .49
'17.95 Sweaters .... '14.29

Lee and Wrangler boys jeans
pre-shrunk, straight leg atyle.
Regular, llims and husky
lizes 8 to 16, student sizes
26 to· 30 waist.
'21.96 Boys' Jeans ....-•17.49
'18.96 Boys' Jeans .... '14.99
'18 .96 Boys' Jeen1 .... '13.39
'14.9&amp; Boys' Je1n1 .... '11 .79

WOMEN'S

/ / Good selection of solid colors.
Sl~as 29 10 42 plus extra sizes 44
I to 50. Makes excellent Christmas
Gift.

.l

I

1

fl

'19.95
'21 . 95
'23.96
'29.95

SLACKS ....
SLACKS ....
SLACKS ....
SLACKs ....

•15.87
•17.47
'19.07
'23.87

Tremendous selection in both
flannels and poly cotton bkilildl.
Authentic Wastem style
snap front, snap flap pocketa.
Wrist snaps.
Regular, Talis and Big Sizes
1 14.95 Westerns ... '11.88 .
'17.95 Westerns ... •14.28
'19.95 Westerns ... '15.88
'22.95 Westerns ... '18.28

Reg. 125.00 to 167.00

SALE! DINOTE S~ETS

Laminated Tops - Glass Tops- Wood Tope
Nice Group to Choose From ..:_ Free Delivery

Reg. 1198.00
Reg. '291.00
Reg. 1349.00
Reg. 1439.00

laminated Top, 4 chairs
Glass Top, 4 , ....n ............... •&lt;cn..uvl
Rectangular Table, 6 chairsS2JY.IIVI
Rectangular Table, 4 chairs•H''.Vll'll

SALEI MEN'S

WINTER JACKETS
Regular and E11tra large Sizes.
You'll like this selection of
styles and colora. Leather end
suede jackets included.
s22.95 Jackets .. 1 17.ou'•
'34.96 Jackets ..
•49.95 Jackets .. ·~ts.~n'•
'79.96 Jackets .. '62 ..:tu•

Package of 20 aaoorted Hallmark Christmu cards.
Worth et
10 per bag.

BOYS
SALE - LimE GIRLS

WINTER JACKETS

No-eMblf le

Sizes 8 to 20 in a fine selecdon of
styles and colors. Select yours
now and be ready for colder
weather .
•22.96 Jackets ..... '17 .85
'24.96 Jackets ..... 119.45
•29.95 Jackets ..... '23 .35
•39 .96 Jackets ..... '31 .15

FALL DRESSES JUNIOR SLACKS

Seve on our new dre. .,

for Foil.

2 pc. lnfont
dre. .a. vehulte. amock
dreAel, dreiiY dr11111,
corduroy1.

Reg. '9 DreiiH ... 17.19
Rag. f12 0..0. .... '9.111
Rag. •ta o - ... '14.311

Outlity
Lood lllclca.
· - l'olv·
open
lltOCk
)mior
1 - bisnds.
obrduroyw. and poly/ a::rylc
blsndo.

Rag. '21 Slacks ... 0 \B.E
Rag. '23 Sllclca ...'18.48
Rea. '24 o - ...'19.18 Rag. 0211 Slacks ...'19.E
Rleg. •34 o - ...•22.48
Rag. '28 Slacks ...1 22.48

Regular tiiH and alirno 8 tD 18;
Huoky tizes 8 to 18 and Student•
28 to 30. Excellent •election of
10ild colors.
log. 118.95 Stuslent Sizll....... 114.99
Rag . 117.95 Husky Sizn-......... 113.99
$15.95 ... '

Shop Friday
Night

-

CHILDREN'S

COAT SALE
a.. -

CORDUROY JEANS

,._ ..,.'12.69

on

-

toII' -

loll

ond ·
...jodiMI
thlo · Mill\'

. . - otylol
loom.
MOlt . . machine •#illlllll*.
c......,.,..rr~m._.,

luy

1Y
halve A
5 y.., Extllldetl
Pkture TuM War·
ranty..... FBI

CRFETS - An ugly looking Ohio River
moved over the edge of the upper parldng lot In

-

REO. '28 to 188

SAVE 25%!

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

SALE 1194' to '50"

SATURDAY NOV•.9

Pomeroy 'Dtursday aftemoon. However, at 7 Friday
mom1ng the river had crested at 41.5 lee&amp; and was
1~.

26 Cents

J.

Residents In four states and the
nation's capllal struggled to recover
from raging floods that killed at
least 41 people and l.ett many without
water or power today, while the
Pacific Northwest and northern
Plains braced lor snow.
President Reagan declared eight
counties In flood -stricken West
VIrginia ellgible lorfederai dlsasler
ald Thursday night, and Pennsylvania Gov. Dick Thornburgh said he
probably would ll'QUesl a similar
declaration.
Four days of heavy rain pushed
rivers In the Middle Atlantic states
to their highest crests in morelhan a
century, forcing al least 20,000
people to flee their homes . and
inDicting more than $450 million In
damage.
Most rivers ·in the area slowly
receded today, but flood warnlngs
continued along the Potomac River
In Washington and along the James
in VIrginia.
The death toll stood at 41 - 20 In
West VIrginia. 17in Virginia, three
In Pennsylvania and one In Mary·
land. Autholitles In West VtTgmla
said theystlllcouid notaccounl for39
people In flooded areas.
Fleets of waler trucks and tons of

food were sent to aid victims of the
floods In West Virginia. Many
counties had no telephone service,
eieclliclty or ·sewage systems, and
thousands of people were homeless.
"I don't knowwheremyhouse is,"
said Ray SoWers- while standlng
near the swollen Greenbrier River.
"I figure by now It's just a bunch of
l:x&gt;ards."
In North Dakota, temperatures
Thursday fa iled to climb above
freezing In the wake of an Arctic
fronl expected to spread snow loday
from the mountains of Ihe Northw·
est to Nebraska and Ihe Dakotas, the
National Weather Service said.
Wlnler storm watches were
posted In Utah and South Dakota ,
where up lo 6 inch es of snow was
ex~cled today and high winds were
·ex~cled to combine with Ihe snow
lo cut visibility to near zero.
In the nation's capital. flooding
. from the raging waters of the
Potomac River fe Ushorl of predic·
lions, but many parts of the city.
including upscale Georgetown,
were submergpd Thursday under
the murky water.
However, one waterfronl pub,
Chadwick's, reported brisk busl·
ness despite sandbags at the fronl
door, 40feet from theragingwaters.
"There's lots of fresh sealood on

the menu," owner Joe McGuiness
said.
In Virginia , where flood damage
is eslimaled al Sl:iO million, authon··
ties predicted mos1 of the state' s
more than 10,000 evacualed resi·
dents would be back In their soggy
homes today.
"There is mud, there Is mud , and
lhen there Is mud," said Nelson
County Sheriff Bill Harris.
Richmond · clly officials said
cleanup operations would begin
loday, wllh I he lop priolity being to
hose away mud laced with raw
sewage.
West Virginia Gov. Arch Moore
said he would seek federa l ald for
count ies nol designated by Reagan.
Anolher 14 count ies are being
considered.
Moore estlmaled lhe floods
caused damage of $100 million and
p:&gt;sslbly up to $:.lXl million.
In Pennsylvania, more than
825,000 people in Allegheny and
Washington counties, Including
some Pittsburgh residents, were
ordered 10 boillheir water because
of flooding.
In Maryland, mayors of some
Polomac lawns said they will ask
the goverrm lo declarl&gt; their
communities di saster areas.

eolley, Ruvolo trade barbs on 1986 campaign
By lEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Democratic State Chairman
James M. Ruvolo said Thursday that Gov. Richard F.
Celeste has done a "tremendous" job In bringing jobs
to Ohio, Increasing aid to schools and cutting utility
bills and wUI be re- elected once that. message is
delivered to the people.
But Republican State Chairman Michael F. Colley
said the Celeste admin istration has driven Industry
from the stale, overtaxed Ohioans, mismanaged the
government and taken parlin kickbacks and coercion
for political gain.
The IWO party chairmen squared off followin g a

.

Sale Prle.. ·
$18 75 To$5025

o......,

omo

UPI Statehouse Reporter .

........
'"··-lilly ........ 6
to 20, llolloiJio I I'll 11 It'll.

TOPS SALE

....

WESTERN
SHIRTS

DRESSES

BlouiM, knit topt and • - t. ..
BaautHul fill colors.
.,d
ceMAII iookt. Sizes: 6 to 24 moo.
, 2 to 4, 4 to &amp;x, 7 tD 14.
Reg. 08.00 Topt ...... '6.39
Rag. '10.00 Tops ... . •7.99
Reg. '13.00 Tope .. '10.39
Reg. '16.00 Tops .. '11.99

-

MEN'S

..., . . llllllllllel-.. · · - .....

GIRLS'

By United Press lnlemallonal

' Ii
\

1 Section. 10 Pages

A Multimedia Inc:. Newspaper

Floodwater receding,
death toll reaches 41

1
(

ent1ne

Pomero -Middle ort, Ohio, Frida , November 8, 1985

DRESS
SLACKS

HRISTMAS CARD
GRAB BAG

BOYS'

Voi.J5, No.144
Copyrighted 198.5

MEN'S

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•

at y

-

Cherry
$
Clock ........... Sale 945

I I

26111
Sim 4 to 20 and 14'/r 10
REG. S9.00 TO 537.00

SLEEPWEAR

S2000FF

dresses. tops,

skirts and lab coats.

BLOUSES : KNIT TOPS • SLACKS

I

Reg. Sll SO

SWEATER
vESTs

Reg. •a .
Blou1n .. ...... ..... .. •e· 39
Rag. '14
Blou... ...... .. .. ... •11 · 19
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Reg. '18
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14
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LAV ONE AWAV FOR CIIRISTMASI

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JR. SPORTSWEAR

Dev~le

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BLO.USES

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Rowe,

SALE

WOMEN'S

SAVE S

,.,. "1""

Mahogany
$
Clock ........... Sale . -845

in prints,
sportinc

Quality Decorama drapes and bed·
IJ)reads. Plenty of patterns end
colors. Any width. any length. 4
· h do ubl e ....
•- d'mg. permanent
snc
plea to, lined or unlined. Bring 1n your
meuuremenll. Save Now.

SAVE 40°/o

Reg. SlOSO

WALLPAPER

Shirts .................... l13.50
19.00 Van Heusen

DRAPERIES

ken sizes.

Van Heusan

1

CUSTOM MADE

1 jltcktlts, pants, vasts, knit tops and skirts. Bro·

Oak
$
.
Clock ........... Sale · 795

--.ro-ldoc:olara.
Ano-in--141\0&gt;

SAVE 50°/o

SPECIAL GROUP

Reg. 5995.00

- . lone on

Olripoo. -

Sale Pried
$799 To$3919

'11 Skirts ... ..... '8.79
'17 Skirts ...... '13 .59
$22 Skirts .. ... '17.59
'26 Skirts ...... '20.

·---!t!'?!!~l'~!..--­

DRESS SHIRTS

Sizes Small thru 4n
SAV,E NOW ON
WARM SlEEPWEARI

Wool blends and polyester.
Plaids or solids. Missy sizes 8
to 20.

Reg.
Reg .
Reg.
Reg .

SALE
GRANDFATHER
CLOCKS

luncheon al the 6.'1rd annual meeting of the Ohio
Council of Retail Merchants, representlngg 2.000
large and small rei aliers.
·
"This administration has demonstraled incompetence In managing the day-I&lt;Hiay affairs of state
government and Indifference to Ihe ethics ll'QUlred in
a position of public trust," said Colley, the leadoff
speaker.
Ruvolo retorted that Democrats "took over a state
that was wal lowing In problems" In 1982 and will
receive a vote of confidence next year after a
"vigorous, aggressive and sometimes nasty
campaign."
Colley faulted the Celeste adminlslration for failing

Celeste looks forward to·'86
bankruplcy through jobs and I he first term governor said.
"Thlrty-lhree school distlictshad lo
education."
OVP News stall
borrow
nxmey to keep their doors
Celeste accused Rhodes of ieav·
"You can run, bul youcan 'thlde."
open.
Ohio
lost Dl,OOO manufactur·
lng office'in January 1983 with a $528
That was a message delivered by
million operating dellcllln Ihe state lng jobs and three-quarters of a
Gov. Richard Celeste lo former
budgel, $100 mUllan In unaudited mUUon people were out of work.
Gov. James Rhodes ala fundraising
CETA funds, $00 mill ion In unpaid Today, wehave500,00lmorepeople
dinner Thursday night sp:&gt;nsored by
bills In lhe state liquor department, working (than In 1983)."
Gallla Counly Democrats.
Rhodes, Celeste charged, "builds
an unpaid ~.000 telephone bill in
While neither Celesle nor Rhodes
highways
that go oowhere." Celeste
the
Ohio
Department
of
Natural
have officially announced lhelr
said
that
under
his administration,
Resources and a $2 bUlion bill from
inlenllons Ia run for Governor In
Ohio
"has
started
the largest road
the federal governmenl for loans to
1986, both have apparenlly slarled
·
eonstruclion
program
since the
pay unemploymenl compensation,
lhelr campaigns.
costing Ihe state s:ro.&lt;m per day In 19005. And that means that Route 7
"I'm looking forward lo I he light
lnleresl. Under his administration, will be widened and the Jackson
next year," Celeste said. "! can'l
Celeste said the loan deficil has been by-pass will be built."
wait. We don't need to apologize for
. Under his administration, Celeste
reduced lo about $1blilion and now is
whal we'vedone. Ali we need lodols
said
state grants to Gallla County
paying $100,000 per day In Interest.
ex plain and lell lhetrulh,"headded.
schools have risen tram $3.8 million
"James Rhodes lefl this slate Ina
in 1983 to$5.8 million In 1985.
"We
need
to
remind
people
abou
l
mountain of debt. Ohio has been
"But il's not enough to s~nd
happened
(uooer
Rhodes)
,"
whal
broughl back from the brink of
money (for schools)," he said,
"we've gOt to expect more from Ihe
system."
When asked about legislation
concerning the 10-ll power planl
property tax bUI, Celeste ad mllted
be "needed to be educated" on the
matter. "Our policy," he said, "wlll
be to provide stable funding for
schools."
He also said oo decision has been
made on the future of tbe Gallipolis
DPveloprnental Center. "We are
: working to staballze tbe sltualion,"
he said. He facility, he said, would be
open "one way or anotber." !lit Is
eventually closEd,lt would be used In
some fashion as a put!llc ~Ice
lac!Uty, he added.
Celeste also attacked the Reagan
administration, charging the presl·
dent with "being as strong as a bag
of marshmellows" on foreign trade.
"We are suffeling under a lrade
p:&gt;'ucy that makes us look like
patsys," Cele8te said. "Everytlme
PJIE'ISING FLESH - Gov. Richard Celeote1a·WJOIIlclal campalp
he (Reagan) meets with foreign
for reelecllon came to GaiDa County lall alcht whelllbe lint tmn
leaders on trade, be llys tbe white
governor spoke to area Democrats at a fliudralmg dinner. Celeste said
Dag ct surrender. With a $153 bl!Uon
be "needed to be educated" about the 'lll-3l lax s ... JII'DIIO!I8I and lbe
trade dellclt, we are ex!X&gt;rtlngjobs,
state had no cumnl plans to ·cloee GOO.
oot products." '
By JOHN FRIEDMAN

to adhere to the economic principles of President
Reagan, which he said has brought national
unemployment lo a heailhy 7 percenl rale. while
Ohio's jobless figu re lingers at 9.2 percent .
"ThPre Is in Ohio a negatlvebusinesscllmale," said
the Republican chairman, adding thai a GOP
ad ministration wou ld encourage Investment by
business, particularly In the areas of plan t
modernization and expansion.
Colley said I he Republicans will make issues of thP
Celeste admlnlstralion's "mismanagemPnt" In men·
lai retardation and youth services programs. It s
bungling of lhe savings and loan problem and lhe
"kickbacks and coercion thai have shocked
everybody."

Bul Ruvolo cautioned lhal ethics In governmenl Is
"nol going to be I he issue they hojl(' It will. They are
going to have lo cmw l oul of Ihe mu~ and address the
Issues of jobs and educa tion."
The Democratic chairman said "more jobs lefl the
slate under lhe previous ad minislrallon" than under
Ceiesle. and lhal Celeste has golten school funding
under conlrol.
"Those lwo issues are going to predomlnale in lhe
campaign: jobs and edu ca tion," he said.
Ruvolo said lhr Democrals plan lo use heavy
television adverlislng In Ohio's major media markets
Ia get their message across. "We think we have a
lrack record lo.carry to lhe people," he said.

Meigs receives $3,754 for projects
Meigs County will recelve$3, 754 in
federal funds from the Emergeney
Food and Shelter National Board
Program to supplement programs
In the area .
A local board conslsling of
business, church and community
leaders wlll determine how the
funds will be distributed among Ihe
emergency food and shelter programs run by various local service
organizations.
The local bOard will be responsl·
ble for recommending agencies to
receive the funds and any additional
funds that may be available Under

the program.
Under the 1erms of the grant ,local
governmental of private volu ntary
otganlzations chosen to receive Ihe
funds musl meel live qualifications.
-Be non-profit .
- Have an accounting system
and conduct an annu al audll.
- Pracllce noooiscrlminallon.
- Have demonstrated the capa·
blllty 10 deliver emergency food or
shelter programs.
-If a privalevoJunlaryorganlza·
tlon, should also have a voluntary
board.
Organizations which qualify.

PORTABLE OFFICE ARRIVES - BW Childs and
John Musser of lhe Downlng-o.nds Insurance
Agency check out a ladoey buill portable olflce
buDding which was moved Into 1111 location on East
Second st., Pomeroy, 'l'llul'lday, to serve lhe age~~cy.
. Childs, agency,owner, Indicated that lhe fac1U!Y. will
I,

..

'

should submll appllcallons by Nov.
15. For more information, conlact
Ihe Meigs County Commission.
The selection was made by a
nalionai board made up of affiliates
or national voluntary organizations
and chaired by the Federal Emer·
gency Ma nagement Agency
IFEMA) . Unlled Way of America
will provide I he ad mlnlslrativeslaff
and funcllon as a fiscal agenl. ThP
board was charged to dlslrlbutc $XI
million appropriated by Congress Ia
help expand the rnpacll y of food and
shelter programs In hlgh·needareas
arouoo lhe counl ry.

be ready lor occupancy next week. The lonncr borne
and buslni!IIS location of Mrs. Nanna Goodwin,
Pomeroy florist lor many years, owned by
Elberfelds, was tom down to provide the location lor
the new Insurance agency facility.

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