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                  <text>•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

I

Dory M. Wolfe

Dol)' M. Wolfe,78, ofRt. 2, Racine,
died late Tuesday afternoon at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
A retired employee of the Union
Barge Line, he was born In Meigs
County on October 13, 1907 to the Ia te
William and Bertha Burns Wolfe.
Hew as a memheroftheChurchof
the Nazarene. and a charter
member of Racine's FirstChurchof
the Nazarene.
Survivors Include his wife, Mar·
tha Wolfe of Racine; three sons,
Morris M. Wolfe of Bidwell, Roland
W. Wolfe of Bradley, Ill., and Cecil
Edward Wolfe of Jackson; one
sister. Lily Calhoun of Canton; three
brothers, Dennis Wolfe of Strongs·
vUie, John Kenneth Wolfe of
Franklin and Hershel Wolfe of
Panama City, Fla.; six grandchUd·
ren and two great grandchildren.
He was preceded In death by five
sisters and a brother.
Funeral services will be I p.m.
Friday at the Racine First Church of

Weather forecast
Today- Showers and thunder·
storms likely. High 65 to 70.
Southwest winds5to10mph.
Tonight - Showers and thunder·
storms.
10 mph. r..owsoto55.Southwtndssto
·
Thursday- Rain likely. High in
th:eOO:iratn-70percenttoday,
!Kl percent tonight and 70 percent

Thursday,

Three defendants forielted booos
the Nazarene with Rev. Thomas and stxothe!'SwereflnedTuesday
Collier and Rev, Russell Downs night In the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Holtman.
officiating. Burial will be In Letart
Forfeiting were Troy Durham,
Falls Cemetery. Frlendsmaycallat Middleport, $450, driving while
the Ewing Funeral Home after 2 Intoxicated; Cliarles Whittington,
p.m. Thursday.
Mlddlepor, $100, disorderly
EMS mak- ~our run"
Ruth L.Maag

manner, and John DUI, Middleport,
$50,falluretocontrolvehlcle.
Flnedwerel;lrlanHawley,Pomeroy, $:.'5 lll)d costs, disorderly
manner; Ciu!rles McC!Qud, Middleport, $:.'5 and costs, disorderly
manner, and $100 and costs,
poSsession of marijuana; Robert E.
Lewis, Middleport, $2'i and costs,
disorderly manner; Don Lovett,
Middleport, five days jaU, dlsor·
derly manner; Robert Kenn""'•,
~,
Rutland, $2'i and costs, disorderly
manner; Robert J. Glass, Middle-

'

"" 1'

Ruth L. Maag, 86, of 485 Lincoln
St .. .Middleport, died Tuesday at
Holzer Medical Center.
A member of the Middleport
Garden Club, she was born March
28,18991n Cheshire to the late James
L. and Louella Coughenour
Butcher.
She Is survived by several nieces
and nephews, and a step-daughter.
She was preceded In death by her
husband, Dr. E.F . Maag, In 1974;
four brothers and one sister.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m.
Thursday at the Rawling-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home with Bob
Melton officiating. Burial wUI he In
Gravel HUI Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7-9 p.m. this evening.

RAWLINGS-COATS

BLOWER

·Black lung claim rep to visit

Nine cases heard in Middleport court

Area deaths

• ..,

F'ourcallswereansweredbylocal
un1ts Tuesday, the Melgs county
E mergency Medical Services reports.At7:04a.m.,Syracusetreated
Ra nda11 Tu cker, Route 124;
Tu ppers PIains at 5: 21 p.m. took
Glen Deeter from the Long Bottom
area to St. Joseph Hospital In
Parkersburg; Middleport at 6:52
p.m. took Raymond .Little from
Brownell Ave., to VeteransMemor·
tal Ho5pital and at 11:49 p.m.,
Middleport took Charles Wayland
from Village Manor Apartments to
Veterans Memorial.

$1
f

Ruth L. Maag

Calling Hours:
Wedna~:~i~et~ 9 p.m.

MANY NEW STYLES
AND COLORS.
FUN, COLORFUL AND
FASHIONARE
BODY WEAR.

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With Fries ........s1.59
.__,;,;;,;;;.;.;.~;;;;~~.;.;;;.;._...J

POMEROY, OH.

at y ....,..enttne

I

LEOTARDS
&amp; TIGHTS·

•

•

•

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PH.992-2556

.

'

action on immunity blll
"Immediate action" on stalled
legislation restoring partial sover·
elgn Immunity to Ohio's local
governments has been urged by
State Senator Oakley C. Collins,
R-Ironton.
"l .bave spoken with the majority
leaders of both the Se.tateand House
astpng them to act Immediately to
get final passage of sovereign
Immunity legislation," Collins said
In a ·statement released today.
"Without any reasonable follll of
sovereign immunity, all of our local
governments are threatened by a
potentially budget · bust lng
situation."
Because of . a series of Ohio
Supreme Court decisions In recent
years, local governments have been
stripped of their Immunity against
lawsuits. As a result, local govern·
men! units are faced with paying
Insurance premiums that havP

..

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Hospital

Nov.12
Admitted - Venmer Hart, Ru·
tland; Maxine Hobbs, Dexter; Sue
Ceog, Pomeroy.
Discharged- None.

DOWNING-CHILDS
AND

MULLEN INSURANCE
113 SECOND AYE.
POMEROY
CALL 992-3381
992-2342

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Rebate from Facet mfr. 75~ when you buy 3 filters .

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75W-151216
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Receptacle

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PimPARE FOR THE HOLIDAYS - Wllh 'l1ulllksglvlng just aroond the comer, Charlie Gettel,
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plants.

Made ol4' trim palmyra filling material, with 60" handle
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lndivklual dealets

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At this local partlcipaling·SERVISTAR®dealer:

MIDDLEPORT, QH ..
King Builders Supply
405 North Second Avenue
' ·

wz21 .

26 Cento

'

~=~~ ~~~J~::::Th:u:~:da:y:1:1:A.=M=·==~~C)~_.~_.~_,~~~~~~====~~!·~c&gt;~C)~~~~~~~~~~~P~O~M~E~IO~Y~~~~~

showers Friday and Satunlay, fair
Sunday. Highs In the 60s Friday and
In the upper 40s and 50s Saturday
and Sunday. Lows In the40sFriday,
35 to 45 Satunlay and In the lls
Sunday.

I
3 Sectiona, 24 Pogoa

Vot.36, No.148
Copyriphted 1985

EIherfeIds

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At the End of the Pomeroy·Mason lridge

Serving the family of

By the Bend ......... Pages 7, 8
Cl888111eds .... Pages 12, 13, 14
Comlai-TV ............. Plll(e II
Deaths .................. ,Pqe 12
Edliorlal ................. Page 2
Sports .............. Pages 3, 4, 3

..

Lottery winning
numbers: 966,' 5214

BBQ
09

FUNERAL HOME

'.

port,$10andcosts,squeal'"~ttres.

$PEC/At OF THE WEEN

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Inside:

u"'
Meetmg' chnnUPd
-~~

Thursday's meeting of the East·
ern High Band Boosters has been
changed to Monday, Nov. 18, 7:00
p.m., In the hlghschool.band room.

•

v.

The last visit of 19£6 by a claims representative from the S.
Department of Labor's black lung claims office will take place In
Pomeroy on Wednesday, Nov. 20.
The visit Is a part of the continuing program to assist follller coal
miners who have black lung disease. The representative wiD be
avallalbe from 10:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. at the Meigs Senklr Citizens
Center 1n Pomeroy. )'u~ of the visit Is to assist people In llllng
claims and appeals, to answer questklns, and to resolve any
problems or changes In the department's black lung benefits. The
1986 schedule !or visits has not been llnallzed but Is not ex!J!Cied to
begin untO March.

r---=--=--=-==-------------------1
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Wednesday, November 13/'1985 :

Day Parade Nov. 211. Gettel 11Mpalnledmorelhall2110
chlll'licters lor lhlll yeur'a parade. (Ul'l ).

Rio Grande Community College,
Ohio University and H~klngTech·

'

. Roadrepalrwastheinalntoplcof
conversation at Wednesctay's meet·
lng of the · Meigs County
Commissioners.
'The commissioners reported to
Phil Roberts, county engineer, that
they have received numerous
complaints about the conditions of
Union Ave., Forest Run, Flatwoods
and Middleport Hill Roads.
Roberts told the board he was
aware of the problems. He ex·
plalned tbat the roads In question
were all patched with cold mix
material within one or two days of
each other and because of recent
excessive rain, the patching mate·
rial did not have time to set up
properly.
Depending on the weather and the
avallabllty of materials, Roberts
said the county highway depart·
ment will try to repair Union Ave.
and Middleport H111 with hot mix,
andwUlgradeandpatchForestRun
and Flatwoods.
Roberts said he hopes to make the
road repairs rtght away before
winter weather.
During the wlnte~ be plans to
evaluate the different paving mate·
rials on the market to detelllllne
which might better meet the ileeds
of the county. Asolventlessmaterlal

· '

Higher Education Capital Budget

·

whlchjs,wpposedto~-lll!lilfOOtto , ~tyoo~ov. )ll-19.AI\YI!!WIIsit.IP' . rec&lt;lJII!IIel)dw-kby•~-Oth~~'BoaapprdrovofD~thlsts,

slx hours Is atso on the 1f!Brket
Roberts said.
-Ted Warner, county highway
superintendent, said tbatthedepart·
ment has putdownm~ytoilsofcold.
mix material this year and this was
the first time they've had any
sertous problems. Under approprtate weather conditions, cold mtx
usually sets up overnight warner
said. The matertal should JrQbably
oot be used thls late 1n the taU he
added.
. "It might behoove us," said
· Roberts, "to consider a bot mtx
program for highly traveled county
roads."
Warner reported tbat ooe 8J1done
halL Inches of hot mtx now costs
arouoo $24,00&gt; per mUe. Two Inches
of the material costs about $00,00&gt;.
Neither figures Includes tbe cost ot
labor.
In related matlers, Roberts
reported he wUI meet next Wednes·
daywlthafederalhlghwayenglneer
andastatehlghwaybrldgeenglneer
from ODOT' s District 10 office In
Marietta who will be reviewing
bridge inspections In the county.

wlib ildditlons or changes on
mUeage are to meet with the
Inspector on Nov. 19 to file their
reports.
Warner also reported that county
workersarestW cutting brush along
roadsides and that all brush which
was cut this summer will be bumed
later In the year. 1
In other bu$1eSS. as requl'!jted by
theOhloDepartmentofTransporta·
tlon, the commissioners passed a
resolution to cooperate with ooar
In the construction or a portion of
Bedfon1TownsblpRd.J67andanew
median crossover from existing
U.S. 33 to Carper's Nursery.
' In order tD meet a HUD
requlrment to receive grant tuoos,
the commission yesterday formed a
lair housing board for the oounty to
be headed by Assistant Prosecuting
Attorney Carson Crow as land
officer. Appointed as members of
the board were Elmer BaUey, Carl
Qualls ~d Roy Christy, ot the
county's housing rehab!Utation
board. This fair housing board wUI
meet tobearca.sesclunfairhouslng
practices such as dlscrlminatlon.

Roberts "tosaid
thenotrevl('Wers
Present
for Wednesday's
meeting
coming
assist,
criticize."are were
Manning
Roush, Rlchanl
Warner reported that a mUeage . Jones and David Kob~ntz.
Inspector from thestatewWhe In the

now In the best Interest of Ohio's
local governments and their clll'
zens," Collins said.
·
As passed by the Senate, the
legislation would restore partial
Immunity to local ·governments
related to baSic services SUCh as.
pollee and !Ire protection.
Cltlzenss would stUI be permitted.
to file lawsuits against local
governments in a variety of
circumstances, but limits would be.
placedonthemaxlmumamountsol
financial awards to the plaintiff. ·
Astate fuoo would be available to
help make payments in excess of the
llabUlty caps.
"The state legislature should noi
fall to reach a compromise and
address this problem. It would IX'
wrong to force local governments to
either cut services or raise taxeS
because of spiraling Insurance
rates," Collins concluded.

Boster ,says local colleges
~ will benefit from budget plan

Road complaints get
•
•
tt
t
•
COIJlllllSSIOD 8 a en. IOD ?.~~~:r;. al~d~~: =
·

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increased by as much as 1,&lt;XXl
percent.
"I have heard several examples
of annual premiums going from
$3,00&gt; or $4,00&gt; to $40,&lt;nl," Collins
said. "How can our local communi·
ties affonl to adequately provide the
services people expect when they
are forced to pay such inflated
Insurance premiums? 1Somethlng
must he done to alleviate this
problem."
The House and Senate have
passed different versions of a bill to
restore partial sovereign Immunity.
The House version, however, Is
bogged down In informal negotla·
lions by a House-Senate conference
committee.
"This matter Is far too important
to put off any longer. The conferees
should work diligently to Iron out
their differences and produce a blll

=
""'"' .,
'""'m
acconlrng to a statement released
Wednesday by State Rep. Jolynn
Bosll!r, D-Galllpolis.
"Included In the Regents' request
Is $12.4 million for Ohio University,
S!8l,OOJforRloGrandeand$837,700
for Hocking Tech," Boster said.
"The board has recommended
fuoolng for such specific proj('llts as
Memorial Hall Renovation ($1.3
mUIIon), utUity and renovation
projects ($152 million), utWty
tunnel renovatkln ($2 million ),
Clippinger Hall Renovation ($5.7
million) andS750,00JforlheHocklng
Conservancy - aU for the Athens
campus of Ohio University."
"For Rio Grande, $9Sl,OOJ Is
proposed for campus-wide renova·
tlons. At Hocking Tech, the board
has recommended $l)),&lt;nl lor
walkway and parking renovation,
$8,700 for the Natural Resources
Lab aenovatlon, $148,00&gt; for the
television lab renovation and
$l!1,00J for renovation of the
culinary lab."
"Almost all of these projects
Involve renovatkm of exlstlngfacili·

we are going to protect the
Investment In tax dollars than have
been spent over the years to buDd
these campuses," Boster said.
''Support by !be Boanl of Regents
Is a very lmportantflrst step toward
final approval," the Gallipolis
De~ocrat added. "The Governor
will make a recornmenda tlon to the
General Assembly early next year
and passage of a state Capllal
Improvements Bill wUI rank high on
~ul' agenda next spring. The capital

recommendatiOns of the Board of
Regents almost always are accepted by the General Assembly, so
you can see that this recommends·
tion Is a very Important ooe.''
"These capltalappropnattons are
vel)' Important to Ohio University,
Rio Grande and Hocking Tech,"
Boster said, "not only will thl'y
respond to critical needs on campus,
but the construction ot the projects
would be good for the economy In
southeastern Ohio."

Dam project in House approved bill
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -A 500 llPilion publlc works biD approved
by the House Wednesday lnc!udes s.lmllllonlortheG•l!lpollslocks
and dam projed.
1'1111111 call for the aging GaiUpolis locks t.o he replaced by 11. new
1,0011-loot Pock and eoo feet o1 a~n!llary Pock, co!donnlng to the s!ze ol
other lockll on the Ohio River.
The Inadequacy of tb!l cu!Tenl locks has resulted Pn Bhlpptng
delays on the river.
Rep. Bob McEwen, R-Ohlo, ~&amp;pplauded the Houae action, saying
the Galllpolls Pock Ps the "most critical water !nfraBtructure need fD
our nation...
Approval ol S!IOO,OOO for completion of the Ohio JUver brldfe
between Welnon, W.Va., 1111d S&amp;eubenvlle, Ohio, was 1IIIJIOUIICed
Wednesday by the Department of Transportation.
Transpol1at!on Secretary Elizabeth Dole said the ~~ wBI
come from the departmeni's dl8cretlonarY bridge lund.
The bridle Is a 111.3 miDlon pmjed.

~tes~.Thls~~ls~w~o~rk~lha~tm§us~t~be~do~ne~if:f:::::;;;:==============l

New Haven couple file $2.3
million lawsuit against firnt
A lawsuit for Sf310,00J has been
flied In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Richard and Pam
Roush, of New Haven, W.Va.,
against theW .R Stamler Company,
a foreign corporation, of Millersburg, Kentucky.
The Roushes are requesting the
judgment for damages Incurred as ·
the result ot an accident on or about
Sept. 5, 1984 at Southern Ohio Coal
Company's Meigs'Ml ne No. 1 where
Richard Roush was employed.
In his complaint against the
defendant, Roush· alleges that on
that date, while he was operating a '
"Stamler Feeder" machine In a
section of the mine, tbe machine
malfunctioned and crushed hlm
against the mine rtb.
As a direct result of thls accident,
the plaintiff alleges he suffered
severe personallnjurtes and Impair·
ment of function, lost in~me.
Incurred medical and hospital
expense, and will, In the future,
su!fer lost income, Incur medical
and hOspital expense, suffer pain,
anguish, and pe!111anent Impair·
ment of function and loss of

enjoyment clllfe.
The plaintiff also alleges that the
feeder · sold by the defendant to
Southern Ohio Coal Co. was Improperly designed ~d that the defendant
faDed to provide Inadequate safety
devices for emergency sbut down d
the feeder; and failed / to provide
proper and adequate warnings and
Instructions as to unsafe operations.
Further, the plaintiffs allege that

prior to Sept. 9, 1984, the defendant
bad actual ootlce and knowledge of

the defects of the equipment and
l!lllde a conscious business decision
to conceal the lmown defects from
users ot the feeder.
As aresultcltheileallegations,lhe
plaintiff suffered the injuries and
losses alleged.

The plaintiffs aredemandlngtnal
by a jul)' of eight persons as to all
Issues.

Group seeks consistent sentencing
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Ohio needll ccnlet«t llt'lllenciD« at the
n\ayor'a coon level 1111d a tax ol two ceala per lllcolllllc dmk to
compeuate ·vlctlm8 IDJUII!d by drunken driven, a lllak force m

clnanl«&gt;tt drlvlal baa daennlned.

'l1te ~County Tllk Force 011 OOI,!Nde up olllx mayorB
and a 1111111hfr ol Jadplll!lcl clltlelll, fouatllbat l!elllenelnl II fl
perceat o.l' p I • at the lluDIIoa Coualy IIJ•!... 'r I CGuri, but lbat
at 11111,\'or'a cooN, plea blrp!nllllld reduClecl 1 ent e oea ue often
-erted. 'l1te pvup PIe aea•.ed PlalhM!Iqp'l'IIM1 Qtolbe llamiiiOII
County Board of Commlll6oaen.
"MarOI'I often IICClep&amp; piM barplal," lllkl lllak force member
Qualtln Nelbltt ''We llave a dR!Jie
In....._ Cc~u~Q, It
deptnlda oa where you are 111'1 eated."
.

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WINNER ANNOUNCED - Charles McE!roy,
Racine, left, II pl'fll!llfed the Prey• to a WI Nash
sc.tmrn.n which he- Mille P'll!ld prize In the 19811
Nllllollll Dairy llle Qa!Jedor C. Sweepetahll. The
entry wu det'"•Hed at the Pomeroy

•·-dud

!I•-

-~··

-- --- -~

no-In-One Dairy lite operated by the Henhel
McClure Family. MaldnJ the presentation W~
day, on the rlj(ht, Is Jbn McClure, maaapr of the
Pomeroy ft&gt;Jitaurant.

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�~Th~u~~da~y~.~N~ov~am~bH~~14~.21!9!85~--------------~--------!P~om~M~oyt:M~idd~l~~rt~,~O~h~~~--------~---------------The~~D~a~il~y~Se~m~in~~~P~ag~e~3~.~~

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Commentary

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel .
Pomeroy:_Mid!f~. Ohio ·:

Bucks' bench -difference

Thursday. Ncivember 14; 1985·'
•

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court S4reet

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

~lb
cs:mi!:,l

.

........_.._..,..,,....,...c::~.&lt;=&lt;

qjv

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WJUTEHEAD
Publisher/Controller

Asslsla~l

BOB HOEFJ.JCH
General Manager

DAI,.E ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
LETI'ERS OF OPINION art&gt; welcome. They shou ld be less than 300 words
long. AJJ letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name, address and
telt&gt;phone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In

good

tastE:'.

addressing lssuf'S, not

personanu~ .

They want your
business . all .of it

1rax refornns ______~_________w_iu_w~-~-F._.B_u_~_ley__k.
It's probably too late to salvage
genuine tax reform from the
contusions otthis year. What began
by appealing to all to woom
simplicity appeals becameanot!Er
botchpotch: an exreptlon for John,
another for Jane, can't l:&gt;rget Jim,
which means we owe·one to Andy,
which means, the hell with II.
So very much gets lost In this
process ot ,confusion. For lnstanre,
there Is the matter ot the business
tax. Any Democratic polemicist
who ever roused hot-blooded antibusiness sentiment can do so by
some such a statement as this:
Standard 011 can deduct Its c~am·
pagne, but the jlmltor can't deduct
his pickle. All of which leads of
course to tiE sllbjeet of the
diminished contribution corpora·
!Ions are making to the tax coffers.
And before you know It, even the
Reagan administration Is propos-

lng an extta 25 percent Increase In ·
corporate business taxe:;. Why?
Because, they will tell you, corpora·
lions are paying only 8 percent of
the .tax burden now, which Is only a
third of what they used to pay.
It sounds all ve!Y menacing and
plutocratic, unless you analyze the
figures, which F\!ter Grace of the
Grace Commission has done, from
which we learn the following:
1. In 1984, U.S. corporations paid
a tax equal to one-quarter (24.7
percent) or their profits. The
average American pays In tax
one-tenth (10.2 percent) or his
Income.
2. When people speak of U,S. ·
corporations-paying only Scents out
ot evf!!ry tax dollar, they take a few
sho~ cuts. They do rot count
unemployment Insurance taxes. Or
wlndfaU proDts taxes. Or, most
Important, the employer's share~

Social Security taxes. Nor do they York:Stock Exchange stockholders
count state and local ' business reveals that the median Income &lt;1
taxes. U you do take t!Ese figures oouseholds owning stock In 'com· ·
Into account, you will find that pan!es listed there Is $33,200. And 4
corporate taxes comprehensively mUllan stockholders have Incomes
measured amount to just under below $15,001. One need only
one· third of the total tax consider the stock held by pension
contributions.
lund&amp;and Insurance companies to
3. But even then,, other data calm any fear that stockholding Is
should be taken-Into account Taxes an appan~e of the very rich.
are taken from pro!lts. And pre-tax
It's a pity that In his search for tax
corporate profits as a percentage of simplification Mr. Reagan has not
gross national product are about followed his own Instincts, which
one·thlrd lower now than In 1900. are to do away with the business
Back then, corporatlon profits tax. Yup, kllllt That, by the way,ls
cametoll.S percentof.GNP; today, the best way to avoid corporate
they are reduced to 7.8 percent. Yet ~:xtravagance. U corporate chamnotwithstanding diminished profits, pagrie Is paid for 100 percent by the
the percentage of corporate wntri· stockholders, tbere's going to be
buttons to the tax total (30 percent) less champagne drunk. But cl
hl!sn't changed In 15 years.
course the principal benefit would
4. When one thinks. of Standard come from lowering lhli price of
00, one thinks of Nelson Rocke- manufactured goods and of serv!feller. But a recent survey of New ces. If we are goliigto do rur best to

matter how small the total amount," Bennett said.
Banks have moved In a relatively short time from a hlghly-regulated,
non-competitive envirOnment to one In which they are competing mt ooJy
with other banks but with financial Institutions that offer many~ the same
services.
This new deregulated world has resulted In larger payouts m deposits at.
a time when earnings at many banks have been hurt by non-performing
loans from Third World countries and the farm, real estate and energy
sectors In the United States.

•

Bennett said he and Brown "spent millions to develop training programs
to Improve tbe performance of bankers on the job."
On the retail end, Omega works with senior management to help make
branches more sales and customer oriented. "Weare helplngt!Em retrain
branch managers to be-sales managers and to train their staff," he said.
On the corpor.tte side, the finn works with new employees and with
seasoned loan otflcers who need bruShing up on the new sales·or!ented
banking.
All banks are aggressively seeking business, but they are not seeking to
compound CUITent problems by throwing money at people.
The pnJRram teaches goldellnes, beginning with tiE puqJOSe of. the loan
- 1s it legal? within bank policy? reasonable?- through financial histo~
and analysis, loan structure and documelltat!on, loan monitoring and
tlnaUy how to structure It so It wiD be repaid.
.
"One of. our most Important contributions Is IEIIchlng how to analyze
cash !low, to determine whether a borrower can repay_a loan," Bennett
saki.
·
.
In tbe final analysts, oowever, a banker must make a judgment about a
potential borrower's ab!Uty to repay and can you IEIIch judgment?
"Bankers are laced with a contradiction In that they need a high Vf 'une
of loans but want to do It oo a quality basis," Bennett said.
.
"Banking means taking risks,\' he said. "But we believe we can lei II
people the bas~ skllls that lead to sound banking decisions."

WASHINGTON - The No. 1
concern cl the American people,
according to a confidential survey
by President ReagM's pollster, Is
the way the federal government
squanders their money,
Pollster ·Richard Wlrthlln found
that Americans are fed up with
federal splurging. They are. angry
about multi-billion-dollar &lt;:Ner·
charges tor weaponry; they are
tired cl rooting the ~ill for~ toUet
seats and $659 ashtrays; they want
an end to wastetrul procurement
practices.
The drive against government
waste Is spearheaded by J. Peter
Grace, a crusty Industrialist woo
knows how to track aooUarthrough
the federal maze. He has found
2,478 ways to reduce government
waste, Inefficiency and
overspending.
For his trouble, he has been
bitterly assalled by special Inter-

Message
~SH/NGTON -

ests that would lose renef!ts It
federal spending Is cut. He has been
savaged, too, by government ad,
miltlstrators woo would lose salary
and status If their bu!l§ets were
reduced.
But he has the support or
President Reagan, woo Invited him
to meet behind closed doors with
the Cabinet a few days ago. The
president said he lioped to lmple·
ment 83 percent or Grace's recom·
mendatlons. Reagan ordered the
Ca blnet to carry rut these reforms; •
he also 'asked his new budget
dlrettor, Jim Miller, to report to
him regularly on the !X'Ogress.
Most of the reforms, oowever,
will require congressional action.
Ana the special Interests have
usually been able to obstruct fiscal
reforms by bringing Intense polltl'
cal pressure on Congress. Grace
hopes to counter the special
Interests by appealing to the pu bile

t~

Preoidenl Rea-

gan upped I he ante Wodlieoduy - )U81
tun weehj before hU JUmmit with
Sovie1lroder Mikhail Gorooc/o.,•- f.y
JU#QfeiJtinl{ it U lime ro ..llop fur:in~

around." - Fmm front fH111e.of USA
Todoy. Noo.,.mber 7. 1985. ·

Interest; he will call upon the
American people to bring their own
pressure oo Congress.
"We want to bulld a broad
coaUtton of. concerned citizens," he
says, "dedicated to tiE ov&lt;;rall
well·belng of our nation, represent·
lng the rights ot the many rattEr
than the demands of the few."
Thus, members of Congress·will
be confronted with an uncomfortable choice: whetmr to succumb to
the pressure of the organized
lobbies or to race an aroused
citizenry. Many memmrs are
rushing to join the Grace Caucus,
which Is pushing legislation to
Implement Peter Grace 's
proposals.
Even some lobbyliig groups have
put the general Interest ahead of
their special Interests. For example, ll trade associations, under tiE
leadership of public advocate
Wayne Smith, are actively bbbylng

l

.,

0

., 1

on Capitol HJII for action oo grace's
r~ommimdat!ons.

The U. S. Jaycees has received a
grant fl:om tbe J . M. Foundation to
educate the public oo government '·
waste. The Jaycees, according to
spokesman Mike fernandes, hope to
"wake up the nation to what's going .,.
on In Washington.''
Also, most of the watchdog "
agencies - the General Accounting
Office, Congressional Budget Office "
and tiE federal government's own '·
Inspectors general · - enoorse
Grace's obJectives, though they
disagree on some of the specifics. ' '
MeanwhUe, tiE voters now have
a way to determine whellEr their ';:
congressmen suwort the war on ' '
waste. They need merely to Inquire ·'
whether the congressmen belong to ,,
tbe Gracee Caucus.
Footnote: Jack Anderson Is "
co-chairman with Peter-Grace or ...
the campaign to reduce government waste.

'.

Moscow

studied the message and conclude It
bas to do with 'Star Wars.' Reagan .
was talking about the shield the U.
S. plans to buDd to prevent oor
missiles .from hitting them."
Gorbachev declared, "What Is
niy response If IE -tells me In
Geneva to stop futzlng around?"
"You tell him you'D be glad to
when he stops rutzlng around with
'.Star wars.' and mt a minute

"Our language experts have name was before he changed it to
tracked down the word.lt's Yiddish Reagan.''
and means 'fooling around, or not
"Yes, sir,)" the KGB director
being serious.' "
said.
"You're crazy. What Is Ronald
"ANd," Gorbachev continued,
Reagan doing speaking Yiddish?)" "also get me a Yiddish dictionary
the foreign minister said.
so I can answer him In kind."
"It makes you wonder," Gorba"We can't, sir. They've all been
chev mused. "Find out what his burned."

,.,,

"
'"

...
,,
"

Berry's World

.,"'

-~

w

".

•

"

.•

' •'

........•..
..
'·

gullty defendant ... walk away
scot-free.''
Although a three-judge panel on
the state 4th Circuit Court &lt;1 Appeal ,
agreed p~tors' actions had
been "deplorable," the judges said
Oser should oot have dismissed the
charges. Two of ,t hem . said Oser
should not even have declared a
mistrial.
"The court can easily empathize
with the trial judge, whose orders
were Ignored or even lntenltonally
disregarded by the state on at least
three occasions,'' the opinion said.
"His conduct throughout this bitter,
hard-fought dispute was profession~! and straightforward.
. "Nonetheless, after a painstaking
review ot the entire record of this

team unbeaten

,..

'~I

..

report, a taped confession and a
photograph - did not necessarily
have to be shared with tiE defense
under rules of evidence. One judge
dissented, however, saying the
material sooukl have been turned
over.

FLYING CELTIC - Indiana's Steve Stlpanov!ch
(40) sa11s paaUhe Celtlcs' DennlsJohnson, who goes In
ler a layup against the Paoers In llrst quarter awt!on

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In an appeal, Connick complained

'J
'

case, we conclude tha t there Is little
support for the trial judge'sconclu·
slon that the state employed a
strategy to provoke or goad the
defendant Into seeking a mistrial.''
Two of tre appellate judges said
the evidence at Issue - .a pollee

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tor the Chicago Bears. "

By ROBGLOSmR
NEW ORlEANS (UP!) -The
sports bribery charges against
Tulane University's John "Hot
Rod" WIUiams soould never have
been dismissed, a state appeals
court has ruled, clearing the way to
put him back on trial.
"I think It's absolutely a v~tory,"
District Attorney Harry Connick
said after the ruling was announced
Wednesday. "We didn 't have our
day In court. We're being given an
opportunity now to have that.''
Even If Williams' lawyer appeals
to the Louisiana Supreme Court,_
Connick said he hopes to have the
star center back In court before tbe
end of the year.
Williams, whose career 'In the
NBA hangs In the balance, was
drafted by the Cleveland Cavaliers.
The NBA has refUsed to approve his
contract with the ·criminal case
pending.
Team officials In Cleveland had
no comment Wednesday regarding
the ruling, spokesman Harvey
Greene said.
WIUiams and eight others were
Indicted for alleged Involvement In a
scheme to shave points In two Metro
Conference games this year In
return for cocaine and gambling
loot.
Following two days of testimony
at Williams'· trial In August, ·
Criminal Dlstrlct Court Judge Alvin
Oser declared a mistrial and
dismissed the charges againSt
W!lllams.
Oser said be declared the mistrial
because prosecutors had hopelessly
botched the case by refusing to
share · evidence with the defense,
despite court orders to do so.
Prosecutors later testified Oser
screamed and cursed at them, and
another judge removed Oser from
presiling at the remaining Tulane
trials.
Oser said prosecutors had goaded
the defense Into asking fora mistrial
by withholding evidence. And based
on a previous Oregon case, he said,
that meant Williams could not be
tried again -without violating the
constitution's double jeopardy
clause.

••
'

scored :n points and Sedate Threatt
and Julius Erving added 19 points
each to pace the 76ers. MterChlcago
. scored 8 straight points, Philadelphia came back .:ov!th 7 consecutive
points and never led by less than 4
again. Orlando Woolridge scored 34
points for Chicago.
Hawks 108, Sm11 Ul1 ·
At Atlanta, Cliff Levingston
scored 23 points and Dominique
Wilkins added 20 to lead thf Hawks . .
TheSuns,0-9,aretheonlyNBAteam
without a victory this season.
Phoenix was led by Larry Nance
with20polntsand Walter Davis with
17.
Mavericks 113, Jazz 100
At Salt Lake City, Roland
Blackman scored :rr points and the
Mavericks capitalized on poor Jazz
shooting. Jay VIncent and Sam
Perkins added 15 polntseachforthe
Mavericks, while Derek Harper had
13 and Mark Aguirre 12. Utah
managed only 40 percent shooting
from the field and 65 percent from
the line.
, Sonlcs 93, COppers Ill
At Los Angeles, Jack Sllona
scored 13 of his 20 points In tbefourth
quarter to spark the SuperSonics to
their first road victory. Already
missing three Injured forwards, the
Clippers lost star guard Derek
Smith with possible carlilage damage to his left knee with 3:05left.

Hot Rod to face second trial

Art Buchwald ::

.
'

.
·•
·1

Congress needs prod_'__Ja_c:_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_&amp;__Jo_se~ph~Sp_ea_r

When Soviet . leader MlkhaU
Gorbachev read tiE quote he called
In his Kremlin advisers.
"What does futzlng mean?" IE
asked them.
·
sooner."
"I don't know," his brelgn
"He won't go l:&gt;r It," Gorbachev
minister said. "We've asked the said. "Why don't I offer to cut back
'
White House to clarify it. Here Is oo lutzlng by 50 percent, provided
their reply: 'Don't play dumb. You Reagan does the same?"
Today 1s Thursday, Nov.14, the :rlOth day ot 1985 with 47 to follow.
do It aU the time.' "
The Soviet marshal said, "They
The moon Is moving toward Its Hrst quarter.
Gorbachev was furious. "The will cheat."
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
President knows we wn't know.
"Then we'll cheat, too. We wUI .
The evmlng stars are Mercury, Saturn and Jupiter.
Why would he send us a message match them rutz for rutz," GorbaThose born on this date are under the sign or Scorpio. They Include we don't understand? Can't anyme chev told tmm. "But I stUI have tiE
Robert Fulton, rnventor o! the steamboat, In 1765; French Impressionist In oor embassy In Washington Dnd feeling the President was talking
painter Claude Mooet In 1lWO: Belgian chemist Leo Baekeland, Inventor of out what It means?j"
abbout something else."
the plast~ Bakellte, In 1.863; indian statesman Jawaharlal Nehru In lll89;
"Our ambassador advises us
The foreign minister said, "Old
composer Aaron Copland In 1900 (age 85); Sen. Joseph McCarthy o! futzlng has to do with putting ~r you do any futzlng In yOur private
Wisconsin· 1n 1900; actor Brian Keith In 1971 (age 64) ; King Husseln·ot medium-range mlssUes along the life that Reagan may have been
Jordan In 19.1&gt; (age 50) ; and Prince ChaEies, belr to tbe British throne, In Czech border."
· · referring to?"
1948 Iage 37) .
A Soviet marshal said, "He's
Gorbachev shouted, "They're
On thiS date In history:
mistaken. It ref~rs to the buDdup ~ lies, aU Ues."
In 1832, the ftrst horse-drawn streetcar made Its appearanre ,Jn New conventional !Drees In Poland. The
The KGB director said, "I can
York City. It carrted al passengers.
Ainericans are saytng they want us ' attest to that.':
In 1940, German planes bombed Cwentry, England, destroying or to·!llll them out or they wUI Mz us."
The press chief said, "Perhaps
damaging 69,00l bulldlngs.
· "You're botil wrong,'' the KGB the President misspoke and didn't
In 1m, for the first time In Its 76-year history, the Dow Jones Industrial director said. "~tzlng Is anot!Er mean to use the word futzlng at aU.
Stock Averages closed above 1,001.
word for detecting. Reaaan He's been known to sa~ something
In 19'15, Spain agreed to abandon the Spanish Sahara, opening the way to couldri•t belleve It when our llllllf, an~ then take It back three hours
control of the North African territory by Morocco and Mauritania.
after delectlng, turned around and later."
In 1983, world leaders, Including Vice President GeoJKe Bush redefected to us. We futzed the CiA
Gorbachev was. getting !mpa.
repesentlng tiE United States, appeared In Moscow fortreruneral ~Soviet and the President didn't like It"
tlent, "We.can't speculate. We have
leader Leonid Brezhnev.
Gorbachev said, "You aU have to ftnd oot exactly what hts
1n 19114, former Israeli Defense Minister Artel Sharon went to court In uieortes but you oon't have facts. message meant or cancel • the
....
New York wit~SOO ml!llon Ubel suit against nme Inc. He lost !he suit How can I race Reagan ln Geneva Summit."
after a two-mo trial.
when I have -no Idea what he Is
A secretary came !lito the room
A thought 1 the day: Jawaharlal Nehru said, "The boundaries of . talking about?"
and han&lt;jed a cable to the KGB
democracy hav to be widened now so as to Include economic equality also.
The ~m-al Secrhlary's scteti- director woose eyes ahmst popped
This Is the great revolution through which we are all paSsing."
t1llc adviser said, "My people have out of his head.
·

Today in .history

'

ment, we should reduce the &lt;:Nerhead of commercial life. A corollary Is to reduce the burden on
saving. It Is the outstanding
paradox of U.S. tax policy that '
although we wish to enCourage
Investment and discourage consumption, we give tax advantages
to those who borrow (Interest Is ,,
deductible) and lnfllct taxes on
those who save (bank Interest
payments are taxable). So that
while we are using fiscal policy In
such a way as to rncourage certain
kinds of activity, we are In fact 1
encouraging the wrong kind of •·
activity.
'·'
One hopes Mr. Reagan wUI be off •
to a bet!er start on what one might
call Treasury ill, the third proposal, dated, say, In January qr next
year. It would make the flying leap:
Do away with all business taxes,
and 1et all Interest from savings lie
· free, beginning with $10,001 and "
rlsliig as prudenCe Informs us.
A dividend of such proposals as
these In the excitement they would
generate.

"If a bank has your-checking account, mortgage or personal loan, IRA,
student loan, perhaps a CD (cert1ftcate of deposit) or passbook account,
credit card, or even brokerage business you are a pref~rred customer no

The economy played a role, especlaUy the decline In some Industries.
There was In some cases a decision by management to lllrsue a certain
area. such as energy, he said, and "lending money has become much~
complex and risky while the ability to charge lor that rlsk has lessenelj.
Ben~. and partner Carter Brown, woo Is president~ Omega,llterally
began on a kitchen table, he said.
•
"We studied what the successful senior bankers did right, then we went
Into low· performance branches and observed wbat people were doing
wrong," he said.

•
·
'

and to encourage saving
r----------~-~---:----,---:---:::::====:::::-------, compete
and .Investment and high employ·

II! case you haven't gotten the message from a flood of promotional
material. your bank wants your business- all ~ It.
"Buslnes9es and consumers shouldn't be Intimidated by banks, they
should recognize that banks make money oo multiple-service customers; '
said David R. Bennett, chairman of San Francisco-based Omega
Consultants to Bank Management, which runs training programs for bank
personnel.

Thus consumer services "have become a major profit center and that's
changed the attitude of banks;" Bennett said.
•
The problem Is that years or being a conduit for !ow-cost deposits that
carne to them with no effort has lefi some banks Ill-prepared to compete
aggressively lor buslne$5.
·
Enter Omega, which lists 3,001 banks as clients for Its "Instructional
design" training program and also works with the Consumer Bankers
Association and Robert Moms Ass o c I a t e s, an Industry association.
''There were several factors at work In the current problems at some
banks," Bennett said.

By COlLINS YEARWOOD
Alton Uster scored 22 points and
UPI Sports W~r
hauled down 12 rebounds to pace the
The Bucks showed ~ Pistons Bucks, 8-4. Ricky Pierce of Milwauwhat a difference a good bench can kee . had 22 . points and Terry
make -about24 ·polnts.
Cumn\lngs 21.
That was the differential posted
Kelly Trlpucka led the Pistons,
by the Milwaukee reserves Wednes- · 74, with 32 points, Including 14-of-16
day night as they OU\SCOred their from the" line. Bill Lalmbeer added
Detroit counterparts 62.J8 for a 21 points and 17 rebounds but was
137-118 pounding.
held to 2 rebounds and no points In
"I am very pleased with our the fourth quarter.
bench," Bucks coach Don Nelson
said after MUwaukee's 137-118
The Bucks outrebounded the
victory. "They're all playing well. Pistons 51-ll. Detroit was hampered
This Is as good as I've seen Kenny Inside without Rick Mahorn, who sat
Fields play since he's been here."
~t with an Injured ankle.
· Thomas entered the game with a
Fields finished with 12 points,
lnclud!ng61n thef!nal2: 36ofthetlist 23.4 scoring average and was held to
period when the Bucks were putting 14 points, Including just a field goal
the game away.
In the first half.
"It was one of those nights for
In other NBA games Wednesday
them that everything was In their night, Boston decked Indiana 118rhythm," Piston guard lslah Tho- 114, Phlladelphia defeated Chicago
mas saki. "It'srare that you can get 110-106, Atlanta beat Phoenix 1~
everyone on the ~ Into their 101. Dallas toppled Utah 115-100 and
flOW.
Sealtle outshot the Los Angeles
The Bucks reeled off 11 straight Clippers 93-ll9.
point In the first perlod and never
Celllcs 118, Pacers ll4
looked back.
At Boston, DennisJohnsonscored
· "They just blitzed. us," Pistons 30 points, his career high with the
coach Chuck Daly said. "Our shot Celt!cs, to lead Boston to Its seventh
selection early In the first half and consecutlvevlctory.Johnsonscored
some easy mllssed shots allowed 11 poliits In the fourth quarter to help
them to ge\_lnto their running Boston _Improve Its record to 7-1.
game." '
Indiana dropped to 2·5.
And once the Bucks got running,
76ers 110, Bulls 106
they didn't stop.
At Phlladelphia, Moses Malone

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SEOUL, South Korea (UP!) - The .
United States men' svolleyhall team
defeated Canada 15-5, 15-12, 15-8
Wednesday to remain Wlde!eated In
the Korea Cup tournament.
The Americans are 2.0 after three
rounds- the only undefeatedsqul~C­
among the 10 teams In the
·tournament - and !li!Xt play
ThurSday 'against BrazU.
Middle blocker Steve Tlmmo!IS
led the United States with 17 kills.

'

DINING ROOM
SUITES

..

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

en unanimous
By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Spolt8 Writer
NEW YORK (UP!)- Someday,
there may have to be a Dwight
Gooden Award.
Gooden, the New York Mets
right-hander, yesterday added the
Inevitable to hts amazing strtng rt
accomplishments by unanlmousty
wtnntng the National League Cy
Young Award.
•'Things have been movtng pretty

rapidly," said Gooden Wednesday
at Shea Stadium, where the award
was announced. "Last year I won
the Rookie of the Year Award, and
)IOU only get one chance In your
career to win that. To wbt the Cy
Young Award the next year Is a
great honor."
Just Ibm! years out of Hlllsbo'
rough H.S. at Tampa, Fla., Gooden
has set a pace that could make h1m
one of the greatest pitchers In

Race fixing charged
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A taped
conversatiOn between a Lebanon
Racewaycookchargedwlthbribtng
drivers to !lx the outcomeo!trl!ecta
races and an undercover FBI agent
played In federal COUI'\ Wednesday
told how one horse was pW!ed up so
short he feD down on the track.
· Clu)rles Castleberry, a Lebanon
racetrack cook, Is facing charies fl.
!lxtng races at Latonia, Ky., and
I;ebanon, Ohio, ~racks In April,
r,1ay and July 198!1. Castleberry
described one race to FBI under(over agent James Carter In a
~retly recorded conversation
played Wednesda;Y before U.S.
OtstrlciCouttJudgeArthurSpelgel.
;: "He (the driver) let the hopples
Ollt about half an Inch ... and the
Iiorse got rough. He's ruruilng
Second, coming out of the turn and
~elooks like he'sjust trying ... going
to the top. And he (the driver)
tireaks h1m right before begot to the
ti&gt;te board .,. but II didn't hurt the
~rse." Castleberry said on the tape.
: The faD also pit two otber horses
oot fl. tbe race and left Carter

Thursday, November 14,· 1985

wlnnlng ahout $1,000 00 the race.
The taped ronversations detailed
how races were fiXed and payoffs
made.
"It's (the ttx) oo," Castleberry
said oo the tape. "The last race (at

N.~

What's InA
Drugstore?
We believe there's more to
a pharmacy than JUSt fiHing prescriplions. That's
why we keep concise records about your prescriptions, lnciding vital infor- matlon on any allergies or
drug interactions: A registered pharmacist is always
on duty to be of service.

Oalca(O 6, QuebeC' f
Winnipeg 3. Cslply 3 tOTI

WL P~ . GB
1 .8156 f .lm2

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7

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NY

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Boston 118. Indiana 114
Philadelphia 110. ChiCago 106
Atlanta 1(11, PIM1Prllx 101
f\tll~~o·at~kfoe 137, Dt&gt;trol! UR
Dallas tis, Utah 100
St-aHle 93, LA Ctlppen 8!1
'1111l'ldlijr'1 Gamea (AII11rnfl EST)
Ck'veland at Indiana, 7:30p.m.

from WinSton-Salem ~ Carolina League) ;
waived pitcher Davto S.ard of Iowa tAAI.
Cinci nnati - Adcied to I'Oite-r: tnfte-ldcrs
Kur1 Slillwe'IJ. L&lt;-nrtY Harris and Terry Lee,
outnejder 1)-acy JonP.S, ca~etw b (lfver
and (itchen Mike Konderla and Hua:h
l«rnp.
Detroit - Traded ln!'koldPr Barbaro
Garbloy to Oakland for oot11E'IdE'r Dav~

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112 2 4tlfli
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Houston - Waived &lt;lltfleltt"r C. Jones,
llrSI baseman Tim Tolman and lnrle-lder
Mike RIChardt : srnt pitcher Ron MaiNs lo
1\Jt!IOn (PC!.. I: drslgnatf'd for uslgnmtnt
p!tchPr Lan)' Acker.
I...o&amp; An.,les - SlgnKI catchl'f St.....-e
Y&lt;'SR\'T to a l·)lf.'llr contn1ct wtth an oplion
yE'8r; adde-d pitcher Hmor Hen.&gt;dla to thP ·

Boomer key to Bengals' year
By RICK VAN~
CINCINNATI (UP!) - 1\vo
months ago, Boomer Eslason was
the No. 3 quarterback for a winless
football team.
Today, he'sthesecond best passer
In the National Football League and
has led the Cincinnati Bengals to the
top ol the AFC Central division.
What has turned out to be one of
the best coaching decisiOns tn the
NFL -elevattngEslasontromNo.3
to No.1-was madedurlngtheweek
ol Sept. 16 hy Bengals' head coach
Sam Wyche.
After only two games (losses to
Seattle and St. Louis), Wyche
decided to jump Eslason ahead ol
No. l Ken Ander!l&gt;n and No. 2Turk
Schonert. Why? WhatdldWychesee
then that everybody Is seeing now?
. WycheexplalnedWednesdaythat

Schlrtl ldl and Wes Gardner and outfiPiders
John Chrl.!!en!!('n and LaSchtlle Tarvf.'l' to
lbt!ton for pitchE-rs (;lob O}eda. Tom
McCarthy, Jom Mltcilell' and Cllrls Bay£'1";
added to rost{'f': p6Tchers Joa&gt; Biwtllta,
~ Dobk&gt;, Kyle- Hanstmn, and Oevld
Wea1. wtl'lekk-rs Mal't'II S LaY.1on and

WIL'ih .

0&gt;1.
St. L.w .
Minn.

Comns.

NN York f NL I -Track'd pllchtrs Calvin

NATION.U JIOC][EV LEAGUE
w.ae. c-1 woe
Pabkk ()tyWon
W L T Pta. GF GA·
12202469 ll
PllUa.

Boston

~r. Marty O.try and

roster.

NHL results

' 'SI!vnq\tla:'VldOI'I~ rsMot ll' oYY'U'lll)("
r.c&lt;&gt;!«Qe&lt;~e ,1!ir&lt;.rll'ao ,..lh.,..II!JeOiliCI'I$

......

'

LA Ucrs

Della!
Scrml\!0

671L1~!'i3

FOI YHE AliA'S
BEST SELEECDON
OF
"
AYIIUTIC
FOOYWEAI

Transactions
Atl.anla - Added pitchers Paul AssenmCharliE- Puelo h-om
Rlcbrmnd llll to the n11~; watvt&gt;d
lrltk&gt;ldPr Randy Jotmson.
Ollcaao- Pun:::hased outnelder Ne-tlllnes
"Pookt-" Bemstine frCm Iowa fMl,
Jntleldeor Mike BrumiPY and pltdw-r Gary
P8f'TT'll'nlfor' tnm Pltl!ft~ld jEl.) and pitcher

S. A.nton. •
Utob

NPN Jeney 111 Dallas , night
Pori land at Utah, nlgbt
Sfoattle at J&gt;ho(&gt;nfx , night
L.A. l.aken at L.A . OipiX'rs , nlRhl

....,..20

, ...... a.,..,. (.U 'llmeii!XTl

s• .667-

1 ll .Ill
Cenlral Dlvlllkln

Mlwlft.

Atlanta

vancouver 3

Detroit 7, l.ai An~WI 2

26.""'

t

DetroU

Plttsturah 6,

EIOSUln at Toronto. 7:-!i p.m.
Edmonton at Phlbldelphla, 'J:l'l p.m
~tbec at St. Loots,-j: 3.S p.m.

f"rtdQ''• Gamel
Washington at Bo&amp;lon, flight
Drlrolt at AUanta. night
ChlcBRO at Mllwaui!N', nlgtlt

'On ~lro , _ 1!!81l ~ 00io¥1!0fl9 t&gt;y
l!lieo C&gt;tr-r&lt;rate:.!l\o/\ii,~ ltrms •&gt;r•

. .. . . . . .

A._.llt Division

EMitntCo~

Golil:on State al Sacr'amento, JO: ll p.m.

CAA FWJ'Tttn:lN

9

NATION..U. BASkE'I'BALL i\&amp;IOC,
By U111ed Prele lalemltklul

New Jersey at Hoo•ton. 8: ll p.m.

......,.,am
Sliot.U.

T;1l

Butfalo 6, lblan 4
Hartlonl 5, M~ :l
NY RaJ'I&amp;('rl 5; Mootn&gt;al2

Stant£&gt;:,· Jt'fff'rson, lnfteldt'i- Dave Magadan
and utcher Barry Lyons; !!('nf to Th:WwaterIIL ): pft('hers Randy Nk&gt;mann, 'l'frry
Leach and John Yourw and catchfor Clint
Hurdle; relea.sed InC. lOOT Kt'lvtn Cllapman,

ouffltl&lt;k'r Tom Packlrek and .Pitcher Brmt

Gaff:

~nch-

hlltcr RustySfaubanciJnncldt'r
Larry Bowa declared ffft' agmcy ,
Plllsl:llrgh- Sf:ont outflf'l~ 1t-mch Davis
to Hawa!l tPCLJ.
St. Louis - Named Rich Hackl'l" coac::h;

malnro Rick Leyva as ooat'h.
Tc11as Wal\'t&gt;d catcher Glenn
Brummer.
'l'ornrlto- Added torosterootrleldl&gt;rs OtiS
Grt'efl and Glenallt&gt;n HIU and ('a!cllf'r Jt&gt;ff

..........

Ot&gt;w !U is.

Los Ank'{'les - Plact'd starting guard
Byron Scclll on the lnjul'(l(l list : aetlvatl!'d
p:\Jal'd.Ronnlr !..ester.

r .....

New Orlf'ara - R.Pil'l.'ll'd widP recPfvr r
Lindsay Srott .
Sl. Lwls - Slgrll'd kicker Novo Bojovir.

...,..,.

.11'!.1~~

87 2 181BII!
84121810111
6fi 21416TI

SVAC preview .
pairings released

Sl. Louis jMlSLI - Ellteflded romra&lt;'t of

mldfltlci!'r or Daryl Doran lh rougn lhc
19lli-87 !l"a!On.

HURRY. 8.8% FINANCING ENDS NOV. 20.
"Servl111 rou l•tt•r"

' .

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URNPIKE
formerly llvauido

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Riter Rd.
r.! 11 iDOiis, Ohio

'1 Jeep.

EPLU8 ·0 HIOH ENERGY ·COST
USE PROPANE .GAS
Electricity is expensive. And will
cost more all the time•. Your
bills will be huge. Shocking.
Electric. To generate electricity in
most areas, monstrous quantities
of fossil fuel burn, and almost ·
87 % of the heat energy is lost
forever. It doesn't provide you
heat or hot water or cook your
meals. But you pay for all of it.
Use electricity where it should be
used - lighting and small
appliances. For all the

N.

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COMPLETE LINE
OF .GAS SUNRAY
RANGES TO
.
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COOKING NEEDS .
LARGE SELECTION TO
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Meigs preview sei
THE PLAINS - The Annual · In a 9:15p.m. finale.
Admission will be $3!oradultsand
. Athens County Shrlne Oub basket·
ball. preview featul&lt;'s eight area $2 for students.
Trtmble handed· the Marauders
high school teams as slx TVC and
two SEOAL squads Will play four one of only five lje!eats last year.
games of two quarters each here Logan, who the Marauders have
battled IIi the previeW the past two
Friday night.
Defending TVC champion Meigs years, comes to Meigs Saturday
will face lnterleague rival Trimble morning for a 10 a.m. scrimmage.
Next Tuesday, Coach Carl Wolfe
In the second game; set to begin at
brings hts first-year edition of
about 7:45p.m.
Logan, expected to be a power- Waverly basket!Jall to Larry Momhouse, klcksolf the evening with a 7 son GyJllllll.Sium for a 5: ll p.m.
p.m. contest wlth Alexander. Fol· scrimmage,
Coach Greg Drummer's Maraud·
lowing the Meigs-Trimble game,
Federal-Hocking goes against VIn- ers open their season Nov. 22 at
ton County at 8:45 , p.m. and Athens.
Nelsonvllle--York faces host Athens

Judge upholds outcome
By MICHAEL BURNS
HAMILTON, Ohio (UPl)
Ruling that "there has to be some
finality In sporting events," a judge
Wednesday denied three actionS
flied by the Franklin School Board
over Its football team's loss In the
state high school f&lt;JOiball playoffs
last Friday.
The school board had asked the
court to revieW a controversial
decision by officials In Franklin's

game against Cincinnati Greenh~
In the first round of the Division II
playoffs, which Greenhills won,
21-20.
Oo the game's final play, Franklin
completed a ]).yard pass for an
apparent game-- winning touchdown . But an official ruled Franklin
had an bteUglblerecelverdown!leld,
nullifying · the touchdown . and
awahllngGreenbllls the victory.

Pairings for the annual Southern
Valley Athletic Conference basket·
ball previews seheduled
I
Friday and
Saturday were announced today by
Dan Brisker, Kyger Creek
prlnclpal. '

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FOI CHIISIMAS

POMEROY. OH.

OJt JACKSON PIIE·RUI WEST

league statisttcat experts. The
lefthander has completed more
than OOpercent of his passes, thrown
17touchdownsandbeenlntercepted
just eight times. Ooly Dan Fouts of
the San Diego Chargers, one of the
finest passers of all time, rates
higher than Eslason thts week. ·
Wyche, several years ,ago as an
assistant coach with the San

starl at wtoe receiver {Qr the Browns
this week, and Schottenhelmer sald
Banks and rookie Reggie Langhorne also will try to get open for
Bernie Kosar.
·
But the rookie quarterback says
the 4-6 Browns' running game is the
key against 2-8 Buffalo this Sunday ·
at Cleveland Stadium. ·
"Buffalo's 26th In the NFL in ·
defending the rush," said Kosar, ·
referring to the Bills' allowing 152.6 '
yards per game. "You can pretty
well guess we'll be going a lot to.
Kevin Mack and Earnest Byner.

· iF~ran~cls~co~49e---rs~
••he~lped~~deiiv~e~lo;p;Joe~~~~~~;·~~;;;;;;~
Montana.

1

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DATE: FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 15 &amp; 16

ALL

IF· YOU INTEND TO INSTALL
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HEAT WITM, SEE US rtOW. BOnLE GAS IS
THE MOST REASONABLE HEAT YOU CAN USE. ,

havemoblllty?Doeshehaveslze?ls
he IO'ady football maturity-wise to
handle it? From the leadership
standpoint?' The answer was 'yes.'
He qualified In all thosecategories."
Wyche said he really couldn't
fault Anderson and Schonert In
those areas, "but then you factor In
pure strength of the arm and, right
now, Boomer really has a rifle. He's
also a young player who has a long
future with us."
Eslason, 24, a second-year pro
!rom Maryland, Is rated the second
best passer In the NFL thts week by

IN LIVING

SPECIAL

•Ho•

Butthekey!actorappearstohave
beenthegreatstrengthofEslason's
passing arm.
"I broke things down and asked,
'Doeshehaveastrongarm?Doeshe

8110

.---------------00~1.----------~
WEEKEND
•GIAifl DIYifiG
•COOliNG
•HEAl YOUI WATER

0

PHOTO
SPECIAL

President-Baseball B111Lajole said.
By RICHARD L. SHOOK
"He is the kind of player who can get
UPI Sports Wrler
on
base, stealanotherandmakealot
DETROIT (UPIJ - The Detroit
of
things
happen. He adds another
Tigers. seeking more speed In their
dimension
to our team."
lineup to. generate more runs,
Collins,
33,
will likely supplant
Wednesday acquired former Cincinnati switch-hitting out11elder Larry Herndon In left field for
Dave Collins from the Oakland A's Detroit despite a reputation as a
In exchange to)' utlllty man Barbaro so-!l&gt; fielder with a poor throwing
arm. Herndon hit 12 home runs but
Garbey.
"We were looking for a player who drove tn only '!7 and became a
can steal some ba:;es and generate platoon player for tl\e second
some offense," Detroit VIce straight season before the year was

11EAT YOUR

durtng that ratetul week he asked
himself a vartetyolquestlonsabout
thetypeo!quarterbackhewanted?:"Edslasthen.~nswer each time was

Friday, at Rio Grande College, In
the boys division, Southern wUI
battle Symmes Valley at6: llp.m.ln
the lid-lifter. Eastern Will battle Oak
Hill at 7:ll. In the third one--half
game pre-season tot, Kyger Creek
wlll take on Hannan Trace at 8:30.
The nightcap, slated for9:ll , pits
Norih Gallla against Southwestern.
Saturday, In the gtrls division at
Kyger creek High School. Southern
meets Symmes Valley at 6: 30;
Eastern vs. Oak Hill at 7: 30; Kyger
Creek vs. Hannan Trace at 8: ll and
North Gallla tackles Southwestern
at9:30.

Tigers obtain Collins

'\

Schottenhelmer said rookie Fred
Banks would probably fill the roster
spot.
"We'll probably activate Fred
later this week," the coach said of
the Browns' No. 7plckout fl. Liberty
Baptist, who has been on Injured
reserve with a pulled hamstring.
"Fred has played very well In
practice, and has caught many
more passes than he'sdropped. He's
certainly Improved, tn my qJtnlon.''
Bank~;, who caught three passes
!or 41 yards and Is the only wldrout
aside from Claren~ Weathers to
haul In a touchdo\\11 pass, says he is
"waiting to go back In and
contribute." ·
"I'm feeling much better- .I had
hamstrlng problems my senior
year, and the rest has helped," he
said. "I was tense, nervous playing
In front fl. so many people tn the NFL
- the largest crowd· I'd ever seen
wasaJ,OOO at Georgia Southern.
"I don't seem to have problems
gettlngopen. butldlddroptoomany
balls. l'vecutdownthe drop~ quite a
bit."
Brian Brennan and Weathers wlll

By ROBERTO DIAS
a whole Improve, and our defense
UPI Sports Wrler
needs a shot of consistency as-well."
BEREA, Ohio (Uf'l) - Pat
:That statement naturally led Into
Schottenheimer gave some football the Browns' latestwldeoutcasualty,
Insight Wednesday morning to her which might explain why the team
husband, the head coach.
has had passing problems.
The recent damp weather renSchottenheimer shed little light on
dered the Cleveland Browns' prac- Tuesday's release of.veteran John
tice field at Baldwin- Wallace Je!!erson.
College unplayable, ·and adjacent _ "Youanalyzethlngsoveracourse
of time," he said ol Je!!erson, who
Finnie Stadium was unavailable.
only
caught three passes In seven
OVer breakfast, Marty Scholtenheimer complained to his wife that games. "He's a fine young man wblle the Big Creek Indoor raquet· he'sonly 29.
"It's unfortunate that things
bail facility In Parma was adequate,
It did not ol!er enough room for didn't work out the way we .had
expected. As far losing a draft pick
quarterbacks to throw passes.
Pat Schottenhelmer did not bat an (seventh-round tn 1987), well, you
have to take risks or you don'•t
eyelash.
"What's the difference?" she told achieve anything. "
Wide receivers coach Richard
her lite's partner. "You guys don't
M'!lln said Jef!er!l&gt;n, acquired on
throw the ball anyway."
Marly Schottenhelmer winced at Sept.19 from Green Bay, "seemed
to have trouble getting open,"
the time, but was able to laugh
"He dldn' tjump well off the llneo!
during a news conference
scrimmage or .elude opposing
afterwards.
"Pat's right," he sald. "We're defensive backs consistently," said
basically a running team ... but we Mann. "But I think he'll be able to
hook 'on with a team looking for a
do have to have the right blend.
"It's imporiant that our o!!enseas possession receiver."

312 1 7 M !I

LA

San Antmk&gt; at 081Vf't, 9::11 p.m.
Portland at LA LakE'rs, 10:,l) p.m.

LAYAWAY
NOW
FOI CHIISTMASI

Browns' rookie to take Jefferson's spot

Scoreboard ...
NBA results

The Daily $entinei-Page-5 .

. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'Thursday, November 14, 1985 .

Cy Young recipient ·

baseball history. Gooden, who turns Dodgers' Sandy Kou!ax, who ac- follOwed by Joaquin Andujar of St. Chicago White Sox, won lt three
21 Saturday, completed hts second complished It three times between Louis (6polnts), Fernando Valenzu- times (1900, '73, '75) as a Met.
season by becoming the youngest 196:1 and 1966. Others to do II were ~la d Los Angeles (4), rookie Tom
In two years, Groden Is 41 ·13. This
pitcher tn modern baseball htstory Walter Johnson, Grover Cleveland· BrownlngoftheCinclnnatiReds (3)
to wln :.»games' In a season, and the Alexander, Dazzy Vance, Lefty and Jell Reardon of the Montreal season he posted 16 complete
games, eight shutouts, had a
youngest to wln the Cy Young Grove and Hal Newhouser, who is Expos (1).
14-game
winning streak, a 31-lnnlng
Award. It seemed every Ume he not In the Hall.
Gooden hurled 216 2-31nnlngs and
scoreless
streak,' a strlng of .49
took the mound, he set another
Groden amassed the perfect total walked 00 batters while striking out
consecutive
Innings without allowl'I'COrd.
d 120polntsln ballottngconductedo! morethan260!orthesecondstralght
"Enterbtg the season, I was 24 members of the Baseball Writers' year. He ecllpSed many Mets Ing aQ.eaJ;)Iedrun,ll double-figure
shooting to win 20 games, and It Association of Amerlca - two records, most held by Tom Seaver, strikeout games (26 In 66 career
happened, but I didn't think I'd Jose writerS from each NLclty- to beat the only other Met to win the Cy starts), · and struck out the side 13
as few as four games, " he said.
lett- bander John Tudor of the St. Young. Seaver, now with ·the times for a 2-year total fl. ll.
Gooden recorded a 244 record Louis Cardinals, who was runnerup ~--------....:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
whlle leading the major leagu~ tn with Iii points. Tudot, who posted a '
strikeouts (:j68), victories and ERA 21-8 record with a 1.93 ERA,
(1.53) ·Only six ptchers have led the received 21 second- place votes and
majors bt all three categories, and two third-place votes.
Orel Hershtser fl. the Los Angeles
llvearelntheHaU?fFame.Thelast
Dodgers was third with 17 points,
to do It was the Los Angeles
. - - - - - - - - - - _ : : : . __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _-1

Lebanon on·Aprll 14, 1984). We're
taking out thm! - the No. 1 horse
and the four and five."
Carter testifled the three horses
named did not win that day. Carter
sald he won more than $1,000hettlng
combinations d the other six horses
In the race. The drivers were
allegedly pald $700 In bribes.
Also on the tape, Castleberry is
heard to say that "everybody's been
paid but me," and Carter agrees to
pay him "a couple hundred" plus$90
In expenses.
Slx other defendants - Ohioans
Michael Dean Radabaugh d Laurelville; Perry M. Carpenter of
Greenville; Dale Lee Hamilton of
Carrollton; and Keith Justice of
Hamilton; and Lewis Jack Russell
ol Molli'Oe, Mich., are scheduled to
go m trlal In December.

.

�..
...••
..

'

~.~

.

THERMOMETER

.

OR ·

ROAST MEAT
THERMOMETER
. YOUR

2501 Jackson Ave.
!?oint Pleasant. W. Va.

(2 PICk)

DELSEY
·BATHRO

TISSUE
~

4 ROLL
PACK

ReiiSible
Aluminum

HI-DRI
TOWELS
(2 Pack)

, In the spotlight
•,••

••

'

COOKIE
SHEET

By Cindy OUverl
• County Extmsloa Agent,
, Holile EconomkJs and 4-H
·Purtng a recent rainy weekend, a
soup and hot sandwich lunch rea_Uy
hit the spot at our muse. On a darq&gt;,
• day we really enjoy a bowl
dreary
o{ soup and grilled cheese sand·
Wlches. Using what was m hand, I
rdade a deUclous romblnatlon of
sWiss and grated cheddar on wooJe
wheat bread. Proper cooking Is the
key to satisfying results with
cheeses.
.
. This week we'll take a look at
cociklng with cheese.
·
m,e key to . successful cheese
~kery Is using low temperatures
f~t, a brief period oftlme. CQoklng at
hl.Jih temperatures can cause
cheese to become !Dugh and
stftngy. The fat may also separate
oU't and oome of the flavor may be
lo$1. The exception to the ruleoflow
temperatures ls tor brolllpg, bUt
again the length of time ls slm1.
For brolltng, the cheese should be
pi8ced 4 ID 5 Inches from the heat
ruid food broiled just untO the
Ctiuese begins to melt.
'Other cheese cookery tips are as
follows:
·• Cheese melts more quickly and

FOR
CHRISI'MAS

3"X6" SCENTED
PILLAR CANDLES
RED • GREEN • WHITE

$139
SHARP CAROUSE~ ll
MICROWAVE OVENS
TURN THE FOOD ·
SO YOU DON'T HAVE TO.

SHARP.

Elrthblts and Prints

AUTO-TOUCH® CAROUSEL II
MICROWAVE OVEN

• Auto-'rouch&lt;Pl Controls provide fingertip selec·
tion of all cooking functions
• Digital Display shows time·of-day clock , minute
timer, cooking times and vanable power
settings
• Programmable Cooking provides automatic
programming of two separate cookmg
sequences
Minute Plus'" sets a minute of cooking time
with each convenient touch of the panel
Electronic Timer shows cooking times in
minutes and seconds (up lo 99 mmutes .
99 seconds)
Variable Cooking Control with l~ve preset
microwave settings
New Design needs less than 14" of space

•••J

Powerful mot ori zt"rl
vehicle with full y
operated parts and
authentic details.
Slow gear climbing
action. No batteries
needed.

between
tertop and kitchen cab1nets y et
still
offerscoun
0.9 cu ft. mid size capactty

~(ttiC}

LONG
RUNNING
VEHICLES.

SHAVER ·

2

FOR

DANISH.
:aunER COOKIES
.

"

For Regular
or
Sensitive Skin

I .

.i'

.

aa~

$

SEMI-SWEET
MORSELS
12oz.

$188

.•

,!...

' ,'''1

..••

HOLMES.

CorD

(2s:.z:ck)

9Volt
(2 Size
Pack)

· llk PINT
LIPPED
SAUCE PAN

~7"

'1

49

REGISTER FROM 5·8
FOR FREE
MERCHANDISE GIFT

MYSTERY SPECIALS
FROM 5-8 FRIDAY
NIGHT ONLY!

Awai:~ble
4 'Colol1

$ 299

FREE 81FT WRAPPING!

dent. A meeting
of the by-laws
committee
was announced
for
Wednesday, Nov. 20 at 6:00p.m. at
the horne of Mrs. S!luer.Reports
were given on the recent visit to the
Gallipolis Branch meeting at which
Jolynn Boster, state representalive. talked on equity tor wmnen.
Attending from the local branch
were Christine Napier, Sibley
Slack, Terry Rlfe, and Mrs. Sauer.

..

..
..

..

· - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,. ·,

THE WWEST PRICES
THIS SEASON ON ·
STEARNS &amp; FOSTER
Selected Styles including famous Correct
Comforts priced at year end close-out
prices! Hurry in for the best selection.

• Rtad

'*' r'p grip

• CuiWd liNd lor .... IQI!IIng

• ltilpldlo n.~~s• along laud 'I ICigl

•
.,••

REG. SALE

,,•• '24

-

...."

•.

.

·.

·.
• 1

.''
..'

COMFORT CLOUD II
REG.
Ji'ull, each plece ... . 1289
Queen, 2-plece set....l799
King, 3-plece set.. .. 11199

REG. 'Z39

SALE

$149

1199

'499
'4199

'

TWIN, EACH PIECE

SPLENDOR,
CORRECT COMFORT®

'

Little Dan's Exxon
·,

REG. SALE
REG . 1309
Full each piece .... . 1359 1209
Queen. 2-plece set.. .. '999 1549
King, 3-plece set .... 11499 '749
~EACH PIECE

Pomeroy

$

159

..

CORRECT COMFORT
DYNASTY PLATINUM
REG . SALE

REG . 1369

1239

Full, each piece .. .. 1419 1289
Queen, 2-ptece set. ..'ll49 '749
King, 3-plece set.. .. 11649 '999

Share your f~ this holiday with friends
·
and f.unlly nell' or far with ail
AQteriam Greetin~ Thanksgiving card.

99

$99

TWIN, EACH PIECE

GOOD THRU NOVEMBER 30, 1985
.

..
.

REG. 1179

Full. each piece .... '275 1149
Queen, 2-plece set....'735 '399
King, 3-plece set.. . 1899 '499

A

WITH FAN
AND THERMOSTAT

TWIN EACH PIECE

CORRECT COMFORT
DYNASTY DIAMOND

REV LON

1 PINT
COVERED
SAUCE PAll

COMFORT PLUS SUPREME

Thanksgiving card is
food for the heart

HFH 103

'

V-7

SAVE 180 TO 1800

99&lt;

last Main

1500 WAn OUTPUt

WITH FAN

• TCIUF mal1lil pll de

•'

.

.,•

2 ·LITRE COKE .

PORT ABLE ELECTRIC
HEATER· FAN
HFH 102

··-

Fire
Department
social room.
Miss
Smith recently
returned
from a trip to Hawaii with the Ohio
Retired Teachers Association. She
sljbwed pictures, · maps, and
momentoes.
.
;fay Sauer presided at the
nieetlng and gave the legislative
report In the absence of the
legislative chalnnan. It was noted
that
,, the next Southeast Dlsbict

•

89$
AA
.
(4 Size
Pack) '119

FRIDAY NIGHT FUN

meeting will be held Dec. 8 In
Refresllmetns were served from Tuesday, Nov. 26 at the homeofLee
..
Clrclevllle In· conjuretlon with the a table carcylng out a Halloween Lee, Racine. The theme wUI be
holiday borne tour sponsored by the motif. Rachael Downie, Judy Ar· "Caring'' wltll Pat Carter, director ·
.'
Clrclevllle Branch.
·
mld and Lucille lf!lggerty were of Big Brothers-Big Sisters, Meigs·
,
Lee Lee bas replaced Maxine .hostesses.
GaUta-Mason Counties,_to be the
0• Tltf "T" /11 Mlddll''"
Philson as membership vice presl- ,.~N~ex~t~mee~~tlng!_wlll~~be~he~ld~o~n~s~ipe~ake~r::_._ _ _ _:__ __!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!'!!'!!!!'!!'!!~!!'!!'!!~ ••

-••
i
••
•••

'

NTHE ClASSIR~

"Memories of Hawaii" was the
program theme used by Helen
Smith at the recent meeting d. the
Middleport-Pomeroy Branch of the
American Association of UnlversltY Wo~n held at the Middleport

.

NESTLE

1

you want it ...
you ·ve got it. ..

wUI blend easier with other Ingre- version Is easy 1o prepare.
2 cups oolons, sliced, cut In ~----:--------------------dients If I~ Is diced or shrlrlded1
CHEESE ONION FONDUE
quarters
On~ half pound of cheese wUl yield
6 sl~ bread
1 Tablespoon Oour
about 2 cups of shrlrlded cheese.
2 Tablr spoons butte r or
1 quart milk
• Well aged cheeses such as margarine
1~ tEaspoons salt
cheddar, melts and blends more
1~ cups or 6 ounces of sha!ll
\II teaspoon pepper
readily than less ripened cheese. cheddar cheese. shredded
1 cup or 4 oonces sha!ll cheddar
Also, less cheese Is needed because
1 Tablespoon minced onion
cheese, shredded
•
It has a more pronounced flavor.
3 eggs, well beatm
Melt fat In a saurepan. Add onion
• Process cheese melts and
3 cups milk
and cook slowly and stir untO clear
blends readily but has a mild flavor.
% teaspoon dry mustard
·bUt not brown. Stir In ftour. Add 1
• For cheese sauce, stir shr!rlded
% teaspoon salt
cup milk, stirring constantly. O:lok
cheese Into the rompletlrl white
\f, teasj)oon pepper
• untU smooth and thickened. Add
sauce and heat only enough to melt
Grease an 8xl2-lnch baking pan. resl of rrillk gralually, stirring
cheese.
Spread bread with fat and cut each constantly. Add salt, pepper, and
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
• Cheese omelets are &lt;FUclous. slice In halt. Arrange In baking pan. cheese. Heat to serving tempera·
Add the shredded cheese after the SOrlnkle 71th cheese and onion. Mix lure; serve Immediately. Calories
•
'
omelet Is cooked, just before remaining Ingredients. Pour f!o!er per 5e1Vlng: About 235. For fewer
folding.
bread. Refrigerate lbr 1 hour. calories, omit butter or margarine
' .
• Bake casserole dishes contain· Pri!heat oven to 325 regrees F. andcookonlonln ~cupwateruntil
'•
lng cheese at low to moderate Bake 40 minutes or untD !11ffy and It ls barely tm&lt;Fr (about 5
temperatures.
browned. Serve at oo~. 6 servings, minutes). Use skim milk. Mix flour
• To prevent cheese toppings about 2/3 cup each, Calories per with a little ot the mllk until smooth.
.,
from !Dughenlng cr hardening se(VIng: about ll5. For i!wer
II you ·would like a recipe for the
during baking, cover them with calories, omit butter or margarine classic Quiche-Lorraine, contact
crumbs or add the cheese just and use •skim milk. About ~5 the Meigs ·County Cooperative
..
before removing tiE food from the calories per serving.
Extension Service at 992·6696 or
'
overt. 1
•
For a chilly day, cheese-oolon write to BOK 32, ,Pomeroy, Ohio
• Hot cheese dishes soould be soup might just ftt the bill.
45769. .
served Immediately.
CHEESE-ONION SOUP
Did You Know That About 10
Several years ago cheese fondues
2 Tablespoons butter or pounds (5 quarts) of mUk are
Layaway Now For Christmas - OPEN FRIDAY 'TIL 8 P.M.
were quite popular. This casserole margarine
/
required to make one pound of
cheese.

~anna Nibert, president. of tbe character, scholarship, lea~ershlp ,
National Honor Society Chapter at and IIE'rvlce. Small grwp sessiOns
KYier CrEek High School, Fay · for students focused on trends and
Saper, honor society advisor, Issues l!t elgltt major areas which
~ny Beebe member ct. the Gallla wUI affect these future leaders and
AcAclemy Natbnal Honor Society decislon·lllllkers.
CJili&gt;ter, and Ray Adams, advisor
Major speakers Included State
lhl!re, attendEd the Second Annual Superintendent of Public InstrucNatlonal Honor Society Recognl- tlon Franklin B. Walter,' Irene G.
tton Conference at Veterans Mem· Bandy, assistant state superintend·
orlal Auditorium In Columbus ent; Carole WIUlams, execulttve
recently. .
vice pres'ldent of the Columbuds
Sponsored by the Ohio Depart· Area Chamber ol Commerre, an
ment of Education, the conference Mark Scharenbrolch, humorist.
included fQ\Ir generai sessions
stt'.dent leaders were provided a
highlighting the National Hooor glimpse ot tuture challenges In such
So&lt;;Jety membership criteria ct. areas as communications, defense.

•
i

Successful ,cheese cookery

'

FAMOUS DAME

nn

Paga- 7 ··

NHS
chapter at meeting
.

Box of 25

1n one Pound
Rlllt!hle

Thursday. November 14, 1985

AA UW meeting·theme·.Hawaii memories

·.

$2 39"

~~------------;~::~-~-----.;
:;;

By The Bend

..

LARGE
HANOI-FOIL

PBARMA£Y.

..
.,

. , • • Ea.

CHOICE

.The Daily Sentinel

•

REG. SALE

Full , each plece .... l549 1319
Queen, 2-plece set..'1299 '799
King, 3-plece set... . '1799 '1099

'
. ''
'

'799

REG.Lt9~

1269

TWIN, EACH PIECE

You've Earned A

v~o ,

Steams &amp; Foster.

$19"

9"

·SKILLET

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

Reg. 12511
. -~

10" COVERED
SKILLET
V-10

.I

'13"

117110-n LE IWI NOIR
Inside tile hlgiHeeh llllt, astan-10-finlsh
manicure eel With nail enainels and
"Supershapela" EmefYI" Boards.

'

'

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
KennMh

Charlie Delights

•

Rea.
'lli'
"

McCulioup. R.Ph .

Ch•rt• Rltfll. R.f"h.

lton.td Htl'llllt. R. fth.

Mon. mn. Sit. 1:00 • .m. tot p.m .

Sundly. 10:3010 t2:30 W II tot p.m .
PAES CRIVfiONI
·' PK. ti2-2HI
Ftttndfv lervk:e ,
E. M•ln
Po~oy. Oh.
Optn Jflghh Ill t

.'

.

{

'

OPEN
9 A.M. til 5 P.M.
TUES.·THURS. &amp; SAT.
9 A.M. til 8 P.M.
MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY
446 -3045

•

�Bridal shower given WO,'fftan ___________....;......_
Abrldalshowerwasheldrecently
at the United Methodist Church at
ReedsvilleforTammyWeUs,brldeelect of Jeff Cowdery.
Hostsses lor the evening were
DollyReed,ThelmaSmlth,Marll&gt;ne
Putman, Sue Douglas and Carla
Soulsby. Mary Swain and Mindy
Welts received the game prizes and
Verna Rose won the door prize.
Refreshments were served.
Attending and sending gifts were

Verna Rqse, Mary Swain, Enila
Jean Connolly, Eloise Connolly,
Connie Connolly, Grace Weber,
Debbie Weber, Maxtne Wbltehead,
Sue Chevalier, Carrie Rucl\er,
Brenda Rucker, Angel Rucker,
VIrginia Carter, Frances HOlSinger,
Violet Smith, Mary Allee Blse,
Juanita Wells, Robert Mutj!hy,
Pearl Baker, Nell Wilson, Frances
Reed, Phyllis Reed.

area happenings

Community calendar I
THURSDAY
POMEROY - Maj. and Mrs.
Levi Olmstead (ret.) of Marietta,
will be guest speakers during
Thursday 7 p.m. services at The
Salvation Army, Butternut Avenue,
Pomeroy. The Olmsteads were
Corps ofllcers In Meigs and Athens
Counties about 35 years ago. Special
music will be featured. The public is
Invited.

Teresa and Dian Blse, Susie
Swain, Melissa Nutter, Shirley,
Lesa, and Julle Hawk, Sue, Angle
and Andrew Reed, Shirley, Mindy. .
and Missy Wells, Paula and Jean .
Cowdery, Ellen Showalter, Margie
Connolly, Bobbl Reed, Sally Smith,
Lottie Lawson, Barb Hannum, Joy
Swain, Dorothy Welts, Angie and
MlchelleMurphy,NancyBurkley.
Betty and SheUa Buchanrion,
Mamie Buckley, Bonnie, Amanda

Community Action Agency office in
Pomeroy.

at the Ubrary on Nov. 21 with
registration at the library necessary
and a $7 charge lor supplies.

Palnlln&amp; ...__

Coullly-wlde dinner
MIDDLEPORT- Acounty-wide
Thanksgiving dinner, sponsored by
theMelgsCountyMenandWomen's
Fellowship, will be held Monday,
6:30p.m., at the Middleport Church
of Christ. Matt Archibald, of
Operation Evangelize, wUI be the
speaker.

POMEROY- LoisPauleywUlbe
conducting painting classes for
children at the Pomeroy Ubrary,
Nov. 19 and 20, trcm 6 to 8 p.m.
Reglstratim Is necessary at the
library and tbere is a $4 Charge for
suppUes.
AduitpalnttngclasseswUJbeheld

andBeckyRichads,JanetCOII!lolly, '
Mary Frecker, Yvonne Driggs,
Theresa Smith, Marilyn, Kay and
Joy Coulson, Barbara Masters,
ConJ\Ie and Carolyn Bowman, Pat
Martin, June Matheny, VIolet
Satterfield, Elfie Hauber, Lucille
Smith, Sue Suttle, Krist! Shepherd,
Usa, Becky an~ Edna Driggs,
SherryMUler,DeloresFrank.
Ferra Lou Barringer, Dianne ·
White, · Mildred Ellswlck, Rose
Chevalier, Erika Boring, Dorothy
Hall, Virginia Walton, ~Susie
Cowdery, Kathy Spencer, cOolly
Reed, Nita Jean Ritchie, Archie and

DebbieRose,KimReed,RuthAnne
Balderson, Kay Long, LUUan
PICkens, Debbie Spurlock, Evelyn
Barringer, Margaret Brown, Opal
Randolph, Flossie Dlll, PauUne
'Barr, Hattie Rockhold, Alberta
Edwards, Mrs. EverettShultz,Jean
Swain, Jo Ann Lawrence. Mary
Grace Cowdery, Ellen and JosephineWellsMaryChester andChris
Wilson, Sandy Landon, Patty Cala- ·
way, Kay and Darlene Barton, Lori
Calaway,JennyKelbmeyer, Denna
Davis, Barbara Barber, Jlrti and
SandyWright,andMarthaandEdla
Bailey.

14K
GoLD ·

By ElAINE s. POVJCH
WASHINGTON
_
H
(UP!)
The

"Once Upon a Shoe," a theater
production written for and performed by children, will be pres··
ented on Nov. 22 at 7p.m., Nov. 2'lat
10:30 a.m and Nov . 24 at 2: 30p.m. tn
the Fine and Performing Arts
Center at Rio Grande College.
Tickets are $1. More Information
on the storyo!MotherGooseandber
children being evicted from the old
shoe of nursery rhyme fame may be
obtained by contacting th college,
245-5353, or Ohio toll free, l-lffl.282-

d::~~=~ ~~o~'fc.agreethenallonal

Pr
be extended so
esJ?entReagancangotoGeneva
without worrying about a fiscal

~r~~~!~~isconfllctoverhowtodo

TheTre sue unresolved.
money byas~:~l~wil~~n~u~
House dSe
on
an na1ecannotse~tlethelr
:~~~ncesd.~~xt~~ing~heilldebt
be
~n
ra c ec w not
1ssu .

nn.

REG, 1169.9,5
SAVE 1 •40:00

$1 ·2995:..
·

·,

.

RINCI OR PENDANT

THANKS

To all· who voted for,
nd
upporMU me,
.fhe recent eJection.

-LYDIA LEWIS.
SAGINAW,MI

- JO BRADY, LOUISVILLE, KY

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Open lnstaUa·
tlon Evangeline Chapter 172, Order
of Eastern Star, Middleport meets
at 7:30p.m. Friday at Middleport
Masonic Temple.

"The savings are good. The taste
is great. You've got a·goOd thing
gomg, don't change a thing:'
.

- GORDON WIL[IAMS,
SYCAMORE, GA

c;ellent taste for your money.
I haven't found any better."

-BRENDA DRAKE,

KETTERJNG, OH

"... I made the switch. For my
money, you can't beat 'em:'

"Even
. if I

-NORMA LONG,
BATON ROUGE, LA

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, wll1
observe past masters' night starting
at 4 p.m. Saturday with work In the
rpaster mason degree. Dinner wUI
beservedat6p.m. All members are
asked to attend.

PAGEVILLE - Turiley shoots,
sponsored by the Scipio Township
Volunteer Fire Department, wUl be
held the next two Saturdays, Nov. 16
and 23, 11 a.m., at Pagevllle. The
shoots wlll be for 12. 16; ll and 410
guage guns. Refreshments will be
available.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Genealogical Society wUl meet
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Meigs
Museum. Herbert Lee RDush Sr. of
Little Hocking wUl be tbe speaker.
MONDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Civitan
Club wUl meet Monday, 7:30p.m.,
for "Monday Night at the Movies."
The meeting will be held at tbe

SAVE ON ALL 3........$285

20°/o OFF ALL PAnERNS

I WOULD LIKE TO
EXPRESS MY THANKS
TO EVERYONE WHO
VOTED FOR ME AND
HELPED IN ANY WAY
IN MY RECENT
ElECnON TO
ORANGE TOWNSHIP
BOARD OF TRUSTEES

'

DAN'S

RU'JLAND - Square dance
Saturday, 9 p.m. to 1a.m. at Rutland
American Legion HaU; all types of
dancing.

~SALE

Wilson, 47001$1. Rt. 611,
Coolville, Ohio 45723

This European inspired design is
bold ond contemporary, on ottrocti•e
odd ilion to your decor. And the plush
cushions seot you very comfortably!

25extra

·•'

per carton
at no extra cost!

''·

's

MenthOl ovalllbte In Nlectod arHL
~ u&amp;gl'~ttd

.

retail prict \t&gt;rsus uthrr

n~ ri una l 200 Cl,ll:lll'eUI! carton oount n11me bnmc.b.

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

PLASTIC$
GAL.

149

39&lt;
S2.50 OFF LABEL

•

'·•i..,.,

!•. '

·a
~

MENTHOL100's: 13 mg."tar". 10 mg. nicotine.
FILTER: 15 mg."tar". 1.1 mg. nicotine, av. par cigarene DY FTC method .

2°/o MILK

CHICKEN
LEG
QUARTERS
LB.

worth.
•fl;.at'ot'd fll

VIVA

HOLLY FAlliS

SANJOSE,CA

a

TIDE
DETERGENT
FAMILY
SIZE
Wt Reserve tilt Ri&amp;hl to limit

$49
for

IErrors-Prices

thro Sit.. llov. 1&amp;. 1915.

DOUBLE COUPONS ALL WEEK
SEE STORES· FOR DETAILS

'r

..•

Reg. '539

"The Dreamer"
Recline-Rocker• recliner

'

"Thke it from a smoker... you've
got a very pleasing and satisfy·
mg taste here. They've saved
me some money."
,
-ALFRED J. SPITZLBERGER,

$39'9

eurostyle collection

JAMES
E. WATSON
P1id for by c1ndid1te Jtmes E.

IN THE MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING

CHESTER - Chester Church of
God wm be In revival through
Sunday with Evangelist Harry
Wingler. Services begin at 7 p.m.
nightly and Gilbert Spl'llcer, pastor,
invites the public to attend.

STOOL ~k

I 0
nu::..c". McCOY

SHOP DAN'S EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT
UNTIL 8:00 .P.M.

'.

TUPPERS PLAINS - Turiley
supper saturday beginning 4: 30
p.m. at Tuppers Plains Fire Station
. sponsoredbyOrangeTownshipFire
Department Ladles Auxiliary;
complete turiley dinners with des·
sert, $4 a person.

RU'JLAND- Christmas bazaar
Saturday, 9 a.m. toG p.m. at Rutland
Civic Center sponsored by the
Rutland Emergency Squad. Craft
Items, baked goods, flower arrange·
ments and other Items.

sso

LA'IAYIAY NOYI
FOR CHRISTMAS

"... Pure and simple, ifs an ex-

POMEORY - ReVIval at 7 p.m.
nightly through )llov. 17 at Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene with Rev.
Rny Dunn, formerly of the' Akron
District, now a member of the
Central Ohio District, speaking.

$27SOO

$3999 1

•OPALS •LINDE STARS
•BIRTHSTONES •MASONIC

"The savings are appealing, but
it's the taste that keeps me com·
ing back. Century's a quality
cigarette:'

· 13 deadline
Rudman said the ·Dec.
red t be the fln 1
ap~~ther~epass it~ .;:~·or ltwUl
dl
tural de th " h said
~:tant ~ 't eRe · bll
leader Alan sm::,~n of .Juo~an
saldReagannlUstbeallowJtogo':
the Geneva summit "In the essence
of strength" that the short-term
extension would provide
·
Reagan ordered the ~ernment
to stop Issuing checks Friday rather
than have them bounce If Congress
does not extend the nation's debt ·
ceiling. But he ordered the govern- ·
ment to keep functioning with
employees expected to report to
work.

;;u'.JI..Ii,~

-

Reagan signs overtime bill

"Century's a great cigarette and
!.get 5 extra cigarettes per pack.
Thafs getting my money's
worth:'
· ,

in a '·mini group" Thursday put
together .by conlerence chairman
Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill. andconlerees reported they were "making
progress " but had failed to finally
agreeon'any Issues.
"We're making tremendous pro·
gress on our bUJ," said Sen . Phil
Gramm, R-Texas, one of the
autoors of the "Gramm· Rudman"
baiancedrudgetmeasure.
"There's movement in a direction
that's kind rJ. healthy," echoed Sen.
Pete Domenlcl, R·N.M.,
But none of the conferees pre·
dlc;ted agreement would come by
today,
the short term
hike in the

CABINET

U~3~0~2:N~·:2H~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~tu~~~~~~~~li~Wiiiiiiii~~ENg~~~~~S~E~U~Cn~O~N~•~CA~M~EO~•~SI~GN~E~n~~

DORCAS - Meigs chapter of
Make Today County meeting at 7
p.m. Thursday at the Bethany
Church in Dorcas; all persons with
life threatening Illness, their relatives and friends Invited.

nesday night, dropping Its threat· to
reject the one-month extension
while stressing the Importance of
the balanced· budget legislation
"The president accepts the 'obvlous sentiment of both houses of
Congress, but he wlli continue to
urge Congress to deal with our
federalrleflcltonceandforall,"sald'
White House spokesman Edward
Djerejlan.
House-Senate cooferees on the
balanced budget continued to work

SALE

Earrings also av~llable

20°/o
OFF

SANDY'S BOUTIQ'UE

, ·
as the House measure.·
The Senate action was taken late
Wednesday on a voire vote with no
debate. Both-moves were necessary
becauseayear' longextensloninthe
debt ceUlng - up to a record $2
trUUon- ts stalled over balanced
budget legislation attached to it.
Reagan leaves Saturday !or his
summit in Geneva, Switzerland,
with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba·
chev and returns to the United
·States Nov. 21.
The White House relented Wed·

RE~E

NOW ·

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans of Meigs
County will meet Saturday, 1-5p.m.,
at the D.A.V .Hall on ButternutAve.,
Pomeroy. Letters to legislators
concerning proposed cuts in veteran
benefits will he signed.

The House ""''........... to an"""
"'"'"'Ul
v• on
increase in the debt ce!Ung - .
pushing the ceDing up to$1.9tri1Uon
- which they said was enough to
coverthenatlon'sblilsthroughDec.
13.
But the Senate, citing routine
Treasury Department actions tliat
also raiSe money, approved an
extension only to Dec 6. Senate
leaders said that move, combined
with regular revenue-raising measures, would In .effect cover the
nation's bills through the same date

LAYAWAY FOR CHRI
NOW AT SALE PRICES

FANCY STONE SET
-RINGS-

•

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

.

By IRA R. ALIEN
lor the last time before he and
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Presi- Gorbachev sit down for their first
dent Reagan's nationally broadcast East-West summit and the first such
speech tonight marks lhefinaleofan meeting in six years.
High hopes that the summit would
administration effort to scale down
the once- lofty expectations for his produce substantive progress have
summit with Soviet leader Mikhail diminished so much in recent weeks
#6105
that the only positive prospect ·
Gorbachev.
A seniOr administration olflciai · trumpeted by U.S. officials Is that
said Reagan's speech at 8p.m. EST both sides wUl agree to carry out
tonight would be "a comprehensive their political, economic and milreview of how the United States Itary competition peacefully.
Reagan already has said there
should conduct its affair~ with the
#110
REG.~
Soviet Union," with particular will be no joint communique at the
attention to defensive weapons and end of the sulnunil, and spokesman
pointing out the Soviets' record on Larry Speakes has said, '.'We wlll
SALE
INman'rlghts.
not measure progress by counting
-....
Tonight's speech wlli be the 24th pieces of paper" that have been
time in' nearly nve years in office signed.
I
that Reagan ' has delivered a . The president has been stt1dentiy
I•
,antrigonlstlc toward the Soviet
nationally televised address.
The official also said Reagan Union ,on Ideological grounds SALE
would repeat the call from his once calling It an "evil empire"
speech last Saturday to the Soviet ..-----------1
·people for wider cultural and
"human exchanges" between the
two countries.
otticlats said Reagan ts expected
REAGAN S~ -I'Hsldenl Reagan has acheGlled anatloaally
to discuss In his speech tonight the
telev~ speech lor 8 p.m. tonilbllo dlscwJs hb upcoinlngsiunmlt wllh
draft of a cultural exchange
S
........
•
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. II wll be the admlnlslratlon's llnal
SIMPLKITY • VOGUE • BUTTERICK · MtCALL'S
agreement, completed by the Unl· .
I
In
publlc relations pu5h before the summit. (UPI)
tedStatesandtheSovletUnlon, that
is hoped wUI fac!Utate a major
exchangeofyoongpeopie, The New
Yoril Times reported today.
•
•
But the senior aide. woo asked not
By ROBERT DOHERTY
cities and states."
to be identified, said it was "a very
RIU
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Presl·
The legislation was introduced In
~===Pd:f:or:b~I-:O·:'ll:•:c':ll:cC:o:·~~:...;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~:.J2
dent Reagan signed into law a biD response to a Supreme Court ruling • superllcialnollon"toexpectthatthe
meetings next Tuesday and Wed·
allowing states and muniCipal early this year that public em- nesday -In- Geneva, Switzerland,
governments to pay their em· ployees must be paid cash for would "fundamentally alter tbe
pioyees overtime with elthercashor overtime work rather than tie gl\(en situation" between the two
time o!f, superseding a Supreme compensatory time o!f.
superpowers.
Court rleclskm earlier this year.
State and municipal officials
It could take months to determine
"This law once again permits lobbied Coogress for a change in
whether
the summit was a success,
state and local govermnents and federal labor law to counter the
the
omclal
· said, based on Soviet
IJie!t .et)lployees the ftexibility to effect of the ruUng, saying It would
behavloratthe
arms control talks In
serve their citizens effectively," substantially 'increase· !heir labor
Reagan said In a statement after costs it they wereforcecl'topaycash Geneva and in the regional wars
Reagan accused the Russians of
signing the biD Wednesday.
for all overtime.
'The bill would allow state and supporting In his speech to the
Reagan said without the legisia·
tlon, which had broad support In the local governments the option of United Nations last month.
The president was meeting this
House and Senate, costs to state and paying their employees overtime in
local guvernments toprovldepoUce, either Compensatory time off or afternoon with his anns negotiators
firellghting and other services could cash, both at 1~ times the regular r----------....1
have Increased by as much as $3 rate. The arrangements will be
bllUon annually.
worked out between the employee
Sen. Don Nickles, R-Okia. and a and empklyer.
key proponent of the legislation,
The measure restt1cts the amount
called it "vital for employees and of compensa lory lime accumulated
by each worker to 41Kl hours

ALL , MONTHS . ARE AVAIAiai,E. APRIL IS
SUGHnY HIGHER. AVAILAIII YEUOW OR
WHln GOLD. FIE~ RING SlllNG,

8:0tD-:SA1rUAIDA.V 9:30-11:00
LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

.

Reagan speech to
mark PR finale

Her
and Diamonds

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter or Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority wUl meet Thursday, 7:30
p.m.,atDiamondSavingsandLoan.
ROCK SPRINGS- Rock Springs
Grange meets Thursday at 7: 30
p.m. at the haD.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Congress pushes ·debt ceiling to $1.9 trillion

A SMALL DOWN PAYMENT WILL HOLD YOUR
SELECnON UNTIL CHRISTMAS. SHOP AND SAVE.

QUE

SYRACUSE - Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental DlsabUUies meets
Thursday, 7 p.m., Carleton School,
Syracuse. Open to the public.

Children's Th~atet'
production planned

,

Christmas ~ayaway Sale

CHESTER- Tbe annual friend·
shlp meeting rJ. District 13, Daugh· '"jiiiiiiiiiiiii~iPf;!i,!Piij~~~ii!!i!i!!!!ii!!ii!i!ii!!iiiiiiiiiiiii-.i
ters of America, wUl be held II
Thursday attheChesterLodgeHall
with a potluck dinner to be held at
302 N 2 d
,
6:30.Membersaretowearwhitetor
• n
MIDDLEPORT
Initiation. New distt1ct ofllcers wUl
be Installed.

LAUREL CLIFF - Laurel Cliff
Health Club wiD meet at Jean
Wright's 7 p.m. Thursday.

Thursday, November 14, 1985

. Thursday, November 14, 1985

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Page-S The Daily Sa ttitHII

'

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Thursday, November 14, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-1_1:

Congress ·pledges support for Geneva summit:

oo·
'599
. I
-

By S'lEVE GERSTEL
WASIDNG'l'ON (UP!) - Congress Is glvlng strong bipartisan
support In President Reagan's
mission at the Geneva summit, but
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole Is Warnin~ against unrealistic
hopes I or any . ''majo r
breakthroughs."
The Senate approved, 99-{), a
resolution We&lt;)nesday pledging its
backing for Reagan's meellng next
week with SQviet lea&lt;)er Mikhail
GorbachevlnGeneva,Switzerland.
House Democratic leaders also

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pack tax on cigarettes, therallroad ;
retirement program and Medicare .·
paymentsto hospitals, which expire ·
today. The Senate also passed
extensions lor the t)lree laws but .
attached It to the short-tenn debt
cellingbillandretumedthepackage ~:
to the House.
,
-The Senate approved and sent•
to the House an ex tension untO Dec. ~
13 of the dairy price suppdrt '
program, scheduled to explr!&gt; ·
Friday night. Withouttheextenslort, •
the support price, now$11.60 per 100;:
pounds,wouidclimbto$15.94. .: ••

vote a short-term extension of the
national debt limit through Dec.JJ,
which would keep lhe nation from
golnglntodefault Friday for thefirst
time In history. The Senate approved asUghtlydlfferent version of
thesamemeasureandsentltbackto
the House.
.,-The Senate approved and sent
to the White House a continuing
resolution allowing federal depart·
men~ and agencies that have not
received their fiscal 1986 appropria·
lions to keep spending at current
rates untU Dec. 12. ,
-The House passed legislation

•; &lt;

'5,582.

00

framework In whlchnegotlatlonson
these matters can Proceed. If we
accomplish that, It wUI be a lot."
In a flurry of activity, Congress
decided to delay a showdown ort the
Gramm· Rudman balanced budget
proposal by approving an interim
extension of the debt ceiling.
Congress also hustled In other
areas to~tthecountry'sftnancesln
order before Reagan's departure,
assuring that the govenunent wUI
be able to borrow nnon_
ey and pay its
blllsduringhlsabsence.
In rapid order:
-The House approved by voice

The Daily Sentinel

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•
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present the Senate resolution. Dole
said the leglslatlon "offers us the
vehicle to make clear our support of
the president, as he approaches
these · Important meetings In
Geneva."
But Dole also said that, "Major
breakthroughs, wh!chmtght lead to
easy solulions, are just not going to
happen In Geneva.
"The best we can hope for- and
whatwecanrealistlcallyhopeforis that our national leaders wUI
confinn that our countries have a
reallnterest In finding solutions and
can set up some general kind of

months of 1984, at a total oo far this
year of $1.145 trillion.
Sales for October were 6 percent,
or S&gt;.53 bllllon above October 1984.
During the month, sales of
building materials, hardware,
garden supplles and mobile homes
rose 4.7 percent, while drug store
sales also rose 2.3 percent.
Sales In grocery stores declined
1.5 percent, and gasoline service
stations felll.4 percent.
General merchandise overall
dropped 0.1 percent.

A Commerce Department economist said the last lime there was
such a sharpdecllne In overall retail
sales was In March 1975, when sates
dropped 2.2 percent during the
height of the 1975 recession. The
October drop was the biggest for any
month In the post war period, the
economist said.
The 14.6 percent drop In au to sales
during October also set a record for
the past 40 years. The previous
record was 14 percent In March 1975.
Excluding auto sales during the
month, retail sales for October
climbed only a slight 0.5 percent.
Furniture, home fumtshlngs and
equipment stores showed a 0.1
percent drop In sales while department stores climbed only 0.1
percent.
Retail sales overall rose 2.1
percent In September.
Sales for the year are still running
6.4 percent ahead of the first 10

'

.

._

"They're not going to·come away
from there empty handed, but are
coming home with some kind of
success," O'NeUI, D-Mass., said.
Dole and Senate Democratic
leader Robert Byrd joined forces to

Retail sales fall
3.3 percent in Oct.
By SUZANNE 'DUMEL
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Retail
sales fell a whopping 3.3 percent In
October- the biggest decline since
the end of World War II - as
consumers put the skids on their
auto- buying spree, the Commerce
Department reported today.
Retail !;ales for the month totaled
$115.5 bllllon, a $3.119 blllion drop
from September.
Auto sales registered a 14.6
percent decline from September as
consumers stopped the buying
spree spurred by end-of· year
clearance sales and attractive
financing rates In the 7.5 percent
range.
Auto sales had rlsen8.0 percent In
September and 6.1 percent In
August, following a rise of only 0.2
percent In July.

·~---·--...-~----·-··~-..

voiced thelr.SIIPport.
.
House Speaker Thomas O'NeUI
told a news conference Wednesday,
"!truly l)elleve that the president ...
Is corning back with some kind of
victory. I believe Gorbachev Is
coming back with some kind of
victory."

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PARTICIPATING STORES AND OEALEAS

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Otlio

Meigs Common
Pleas Court calls
270 forjury duty

Study finds 'severe'
Wife beating d~wn
tng attitudes and harsher treatment
of men who assault their wives have
belped reduce severe cases of wife
beatlngby21percentslnce 1975, two
unlYet'Slty researchers reported.

LOtto, Daily winning
ticket numbers drawn
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Wednes·
day~s

winning Ohio Lottery
•
nurtlbers:
Dally Number: 010.
Ticket sales totaled $1,254,009.50,
with a payoff due of $481,358.
Lotto: 2, 10, 11, 21, 24,ll.

.,

But while the most violent forms
of wile beating declined In the last
decade, the researchers said Wed·
nesday lessseverefonnsofviolence
against wdrnen by their husbands
had not changed significantly.

..

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial Boepltal

Nov.13
Ethel Corulrt,
Portland; Juanita Olapman. CUt·
ton, W.Va.; Ham.ieCrabtree,Pomeroy; Shirley Frazier, Middleport
l&gt;l8charzes - Wilbur Hanning,
Pa111 McElroy, Edna Walker.
Ac1m1811o118 -

Thursday, November 14, 1985

,.---Local·briefs:-------------,

Names ri 270 residents have been !lam E. Rizer, Syracuse; Lawrence
drawn In the office of Meigs County S. Ebersbach, Syracuse; Judy S.
Clerk of Cou~ Larry Spencer for Holler, Long Bottom; Lilly M.
the January ,198&gt;, term ri the grand Marklns, Rutland; Emalene Pratt,
and pettltjurlesr1the Meigs County Middleport; Bonnie L. Dalley,
C&lt;mmon Pleas Courts.
Pomeroy; Sonia S. Ash, Syracuse;
r&lt;ames drawn for duty on the Mary L. Hoover, Middleport;
grand jury are Hobart 0. Cozart, Dorothy L. Parker, Pomeroy;
ROute 1, Portland; Danny · R. 'WOllam C. Wise, Middleport; GusSlivers, Dexter; Homer AlhertCole, sie Dalley, Portland; John R.
'nlppers Plains; Elmo Francis WUberger, Portland; Erruna E.
Slnlth, Pomeroi'; Glenn H. Brown, Fox, Pomeroy; Kenneth H.
Rutland; Unda M. Vanlnwagen, Wheeler, Dexter; Lucy A. McKinPomeroy; Landy D. Davis, Route 1, ney, Middleport; WUkle Holman,
Rutland; Linda L. Holter, Racine; Middleport; Judy K. Ginther, Long
Jack E. Morris, Pomeroy; Ava Zo Bottom; Paul M. Kauff, MlddJe.
Slison, Syracuse; Tina M. Collins, port; James A. Miller, Jr., PomePomeroy; MaxA.Eichlnger,Route roy; Donald W. Barn&gt;tt Sr.,
7, Pomeroy; Wilma H. Casto, LangsvWe; Clyde J . Ingels, MiddleP\lrtland; Ann A. Sauvage, Syra- port; Rosemary Pierce, Mlddlecuse; Marilyn V. Hannum, Long IDrt; Christy E. DaUey, MlddJe.
J;lo,ttom; Robert D. Blankenship, IDrt: Ersel Blevins,' LangsvUie;
Albany; Cynthia A. Case!, Middle- MOdred Ingram, Middleport; Mary
port; Lawrence Hysell, Middleport; E. Gibson, RuUand;
r:.::·. • J . Anderson, Langsville; Evangeline Montgomery, PomeRObert W. Smith, Syracuse; Dallas roy; Edna F. SchoEnleb, Pomeroy;
K: Weber, Middleport; Rebe&lt;:ca A. Lester D. Keaton, Coolvllle; An·
Romine, Pomeroy; Francis M. drew B. Campbell, Middleport;
·Kauff, Pomeroy; Stephen Edward Beverly C. Wyant, Albany; Rosalie
HoUman, Long Botmm; Nonnan G. Sayre, Route 1, Rutland; Scott
Olln Weber, Tuppers Plains.
Folmer, Pomeroy; Larry W. Birch·
Named for pOssible pettlt jury field , Albany; Carol L. GUmore,
duty were Charles M. Werry, Rutland;; Phyllis E. Rice, ReedsPomeroy; Larry R. Mees, Por- ville; Ruth E. Shane, Racine;
tland; Geneva F . Tuttle, Middle- Harold E. Hubbard, Middleport;·
port; MargaretA. Bishop, Rutland; Ruby A. Baer, Pomeroy; Carrie L.
Chester R. Foutty, Long Bottom; Deem, Racine; Jean Elaine
-Thelma L. Moore, Rutland; Robert Spencer, Tuwers Plains; Chester
Vance, Route 2, Albany; Larry Rex V. King, Pomeroy; James M.
Batley, Chester; Wanda L. Teaford, Haning, Albany; Stella L. Jarrell,
Syracuse; Elroy E. Kayk&gt;r, Reeds· Racine; Marvin L. Friend, Pomeville; Doris 0. Eastman, Route 2, roy; Rodney A. Nelgler, Racine;
CoolvWe; Jeffrey A. Masters, Route Norma Jean Sex~n. Pomeroy;
1,. Reedsvllle; William A. Schultz, Anna M. Baxter, Pomeroy; Charles
Pomeroy; Wanda M. VIning, Ru· W. Edwards, Middleport; Arthur D.
tland; Bernice E. Wllam, Middle- Roush, Racine; Mane. B. Hauck,
port; Anna L. Frank, Route 4, Pomeroy; Carmen K. Brlnager,
Pomeroy; Loren W. Lee, Route 2, Racine; William F. Sorden, Jr.,
'AlbanY: MarvlnAUenOller,Shade; Pomeroy; Ben F. CottertU, Ru·
BrettA.Jones,Pomeroy; CharlesJ. tland; Brian Teaford, Chester;
Bakel', Racine; Clolst E. Teaford, Telltha J . Casto, Long Bottom;
Ractne; Patdcla D. Hwnphrey, Robert W. Barton, Middleport;
Poineroy; Nancy J . Snyder, Route Kathleen M. Smith, Pomeroy;
1. Middleport; Anita K. Shlppard, Robert G. Marcinko, Tuppers
Reedsvllle; Harold R. Jewell, Plains; Barbara K. Davis, Long
Pomeroy; Clair E. Swan, Dexter; Bottom; Brenda S. HUt, Pomeroy;
Doris E. Snowden, Pomeroy; Terry Sidney L. Branch, Reedsvllle;
J:· Knighting, Racine; Elmer C. Richard J . Shultz, Route 2, Albany;
F'rnlaw, Jr., Pomeroy; Doris C. Charles W. Gloeckner, Pomeroy;
Ramsburg, Middleport; Shennan Maurice E. Dun.t, Pomeroy; RoL; · nuts. RuUand; Richard L. bertP. Wood,LongBottom; ElzaW.
Bearhs, Pomeroy; Dorothy Irene Bartlmus, Route· 1, ReedsvUie;
Siout, Route 3, Albany; VIcky A. Rose E. ThorniDn, Langsville;
Abbott, Racine; Bobby E. Dill, Jr., Clarence C. WolleJr., Chester; Carl
Pomeroy; Jane Ann Karr, Pome- T. Roach, Pomeroy; Brenda S.
!W; Joan M. Sellers, Racine; Leah CUnningham, Pomeroy, Kenneth D.
J . Ord, Syracuse; Catey D. Clifford, Koehler, Pomeroy; Evelyn M.
Long Bottom; Lynne D. Oliver, McCaskey, Rutland; JuUaAnn WID,
Pomeroy; Patsy A. Warner, Syra· Pomeroy; Lisa E. Thomas, MlddJe.
cuse; John W. Davis, Syracuse; IDrt; Wl!Uam Arthur Ohlinger,
Vincent J. Lacomb, Tuppers Pomeroy; Ethel C. Jacks, SyraPlains; Klmllerly Ruth Jones, cuse; Linda L. Pridemore, Ru·
Shade; Josephine White, Reeds· !land; Ro!JE,rt Vic Laughery, Reeds·
vtile; Carolyn Louise Lewis, Por· ville; Marvin W. Morris, Dexter;
tland; Louella Kathryn Flck, Long JanlCI.'K. Mash, Pomeroy; Brian E.
Bottom; VIcky L. Russell, Rutland; Whaley, Route 1, Shade; Paul E.
Hell!n M. Hicks, Pomeroy; Gregory Will, Jr .• Pomeroy; Della c. Smith, .
S. !}rover, Pomeroy; Kevin Eugene Pomeroy; Roberta M. Murphy,
'Woodgerd, Pomeroy; Gary L. Reedsvllle; James R. Simms, Jr.,
Chasteen, Rutlan~; BUiy Joe Pomeroy; Larry D. Kennedy,
BiUwnlng, Pomeroy; Ivor Nolan Middleport; June s. Kloes, MlddJe.
Farrar, Pomeroy; Mildred L. IDrt; CarolynSuePayne,Pomeroy;
Moore, Pomeroy; Pauline F. Harold WUllam Fetty, Sr., Langs·
FieldS. Middleport; Rosemary vOle; Ingrid Paige Winebrenner,
Cook, Pomeroy; Etta L. Will, Reedsville; Janice Sue Woolard,
Pomeroy; Douglas c. Reed, Ra- Porperoy; Herman C. Michael,
cine; Joy Wiersma, Syracuse; Middleport; Viola M.Moon,Middlecharles H. IOeln, Pomeroy; Ed IDrt; Kimberly Grueser, Pomeroy;
Templet6n, Middleport; Don M, Sarah J. Mahlman, Long Bottom;
Anderson, Pomeroy; Jeffrey M. Kevin L. Hetzer, Reedsvllle.
Long, Pomeroy; Lola Belle HampLois G. Bailey, Route 3, Albany;
tOn, Pomeroy; lrls A. Payn&gt;, John F. Werry, Pomeroy; I,uzon L.
Middleport;
Juanita
V. Wells, Lqng McQuaid, Vinton; Kenneth C.
,
I
Bottom; Oarence G. Lawrence, Wyant, Pomeroy; Lajean Arm·
Portland!; Robert E. Green, Ra· strong, Middleport; Thomas R.
cine; Tammy L. Pettit, Pomero)i; Harris, Middleport; June E. Riden·
Julla A. Payn&gt;, Rutland; Mar'garet our, Chester; John G. Hayes,
S. Weaver, Long Bottom; Herbert Middleport; Keith A. Cook, Syra·
D. Noel, Pomeroy; Roger M. · cuse; Ruth AM Taylor, Pomeroy;
Charles E. Rathburn, Rutland;
Davklson, Pomeroy.
Susie M. Fischer, Route 1, Racine;
Rhonda S. Snider, Middleport; Connle M. Tucker, Racine; John W.
Connie K. Soulsby, Pomeroy; Tillis, Middleport; Mary H. HagMarjorie J. Manuel, Syracuse; gerty, Pomeroy; W!Ulam E . Rice,
James Oren Hoffman, Pomeroy; Middleport; Denver R. Biggs,
Jodeena M. Hysell, Pomeroy; Pomeroy; Jerry E. Knight. Route 1,
Kathryn L. Powell, Middleport; Langsville; Michael E. WineMarla A. Snyder, Pomeroy; Ezra E. brenner, Racine, and Grace A.
Slieets, Route 1, Reedsville; Wll· Pratt, Middleport.

!)URHAM, N.H. (UP!)- Chang·

Thursday, November 14, 1985

The Daily

Business Services

Meigs woman cited by patrol
AMeigs County woman was cited Wednesday by the Gallia·Melgs
post of the Ohio State Patrol following a two car accident on Ohio 7.
Troopers said James T. Carsey, 22, of Middleport, northbound and
slowed to pull off the highway when a car driven by Robin
Buffington, 20, of Middleport, allegedly faUed to siDp and struck
Carsey's car froo! behind.
No Injuries were reported In the Incident, which troopen; said
caused light damage to both vehicles. Buffington was charged by the
patrol with failure to siDp In an assured clear dlslance.

1713 Cheatnut St•eet In
rear, many Items. Rain or
shine, Thurs., Fri ., Sat.

SAlES &amp; RENTALS
614·446-7283

All Meigs, Eastern anM Southern FHA·HERO members are
Invited to an FHA·HERO meeting at Eastern High on Saturday at a
cost of 50 cents. The meeting wU1 get underway beginning at 9 a.m.
and guest speakers and workshops on such topics as grooming, teens
and alcohol, and stress wUI be featured. Refreshments w1U be .·
prov.~ed and door prizes will be gt.ven away.
. ~·

Marriage licenses issued

Dance scheduled

Out of Town Customers Call ColiKt
•,!lome _Oxygen
•Hospital Beds •Wheel Chairs
WE 1111 MEOKA. ANI OTHEI INSURANCE
CAIIIEIS WHEN EUG.I£

A foreclosure action for property In Sallsbury Township has been
filed In Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Diamond Savings and
Loan Co., Delphos, against Marcia M. Spaulding, also known as
Marcia M. Terry, Tell City, Ind .. and GaryT. Terry,Dale,lnd., etal.
A judgment of $50,026.54 Is requested In the matter.
An action to quiet title to property In Sallsbury Township has been
flied by Richard Stewart and Betty Stewart, Cheshire, against Ruth
Pauttne Thompson, Cheshire; Lora Maxine Little, Middleport;
WUma L. Parker, Long Bottom; Karen S. Austin, Inverness, Fla.;
Peggy A. Thomas, Cheshire; and the Chesapeake and Ohio
RaUroad, Columbus.
In other business, a notice of appeal has been filed In the matter of
Wanda Dixon, Jackson, against Southern Ohio Coal Company and ·
James L. Mayfield, administrator of the Bureau of Worker's
Compensation and the Industrial Cormnlsslon of Ohio, Columl:IJs.

Fire department answers 43 calls

.death )

Weather forecast
Today - Cloudy with chance of

rain. Continued mild, hlghlnthemld
70s. Light and variable winds.
To,qhl- Cloudy with chance or
rain. Low near 50. Light and
variable winds.
Frklay - Rain. High In the mid
608.
Chance !111'11111 - 50 percent today
and tonight, ~percent Friday.
1 Exknded forecul for Saiurday
tllraulh MO!Ida.Y -Achanceofraln
Saturday andSunday,f~lrMonday.
Highs In the upper 50s and 60s
Saturday, In the 50s and low 60s
Sunday and coollng to the upper 40s
and 50s Monday. Lows In themid40l!
to mid 50s Saturday, In the 40s
Sunday and In the 30s Monday.

Current Account of Fonpio
Miler, G - ol t h e onc1
or G....
CASE NO. 24393 - Thinl
Ponill Account of•Judy Gti&gt;o.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Accountl ond wuc:l1en of· Guordion of tho ond
tho following .. mod fidudor· Eatotoo ol Hlll1herLynn Rou ..
iel hove boon filed in tho ond Jouph F,... Roo.,, Jr..
•
Probote Coort. Meigo County, Minorw.
. CASE NO. 24715 - Fnol
Ohio. lor opp1ovat and
ond Distributive Account of
wu,...,...t:
CASE NO. 244:70 - FO.ol Ko1hloen M. Holter. Executrix
and Dlltributivo aocaunt of .of tho E11010 of Clyde H.
o-.d.
Jonnilel L Shoot&amp;, Adminiltra- w....
Unloa
excoptlono
are trlx of the ENte of Aywanl C.
thoroiO, lllid ecoounta will bo
J o n • . -·
CASE NO. 24771 - FO.ol ., heorina - · lllid Court
ond Dirtrlbutivo Account of on tho 18111 doy of Ooc.nbol,
1985. ot which timo lllid
F.... W. · Exoeulof of
the Eltlto of K.thtoon Fr.,do. IC:C:OUIIII wilt bo conlidored
ond ccnlinued hom cloy to cloy
Ow c:t1.
CASE NO. 24668 - FO.ol until llnolty dilpoiiOd of.
Anv penon .,_od may
ond Diltrlbutive Account of
Maurita L Miler. Admlnilt,.. lilo writton oxcoptiona 110 lllid
trix with Witt Amexod ol the ....,.,nil or t o , _ , portlin·
Eatallt of Mlbel H. Lee, ing to tho oxocutioh of tho
lnllt, not ton .... . , doyo
o.-Md.
tel tor
CASE NO . 24210 - 1'0111 prior to tho ond Diltributive Account of h•ring.
Robert E. Budc, Judge
Robort E. Rullll, Admililtnl·
Common P._, Court.
tor of 1ile Eatato of Eari E.
Probote Dlvlalon
Ruuel~ DecooiiOd.
Meigo County, Ohio
CASE NO. 24646 - Fnll
ond D i - - Account of
Mory M. Sooman, Executrix ol 111114, 1tc
the EIIOIO of Addilon A .

c. o-.

e-

PR~~~U~~RT

s •..

Seeman. D......,.
Union oxcopdona ore -

Public Notice

for hearing - · lllid c...rt
the 18111 ctoy of
1986. at which time uid
...,...nil wll bo oonoid-

PUBLIC NChtCE

theroiO. llid oc:counta wil bo

on

o-1,.,,

ond con- hom day to cloy
until finally diopoaod of.
Arrv penon I n - may
file ox,..,_. to lllid
...,...ntiOito- portlin·
ing to tho oxocutioh Of the
INII. not lou 111M tlvo doy1
prior 110 tho dote oet tor
hoe ring.
Robert E. Budc, Judge
Common Ptooo Court.

" - ' • Divloion

Mtigo C&lt;01nty, Ohio
111114, ttc

Tho following Wile 111C0i·
ved/ - - by Tho Ohio
Enviro-ntol
Protection
Agency IOEPA) loll w ..... Ef·
foctlve dotoo of final octiono
and -..nc:e dltoo of propoNd octlono oreltotod. Finll
octlono moy bo lppooted. In
writing. wlthn 30 ctoys of the
doto of thil notice, to Tho En·
vironmontol Boon! of Rovtow,
Rm. 101. 250 E. Town St..
Columbua, Oh. 43216 . No·
tice of anv IPPotl &amp;hell bo filed
with tho director within 3
daya. Propoood actions will

Public Notice
become final unless 1 written
odjudic:otion hearing requaot
it aunittod within 30 cloys of
the iaouonc:e dote; 01 1ho eli·
rector revisel/ withdrMI the
propoood oction . Any PI"""
moy
conwn.,tl and·
,for requ81t 1 mooting rogonl·
ing tny non·finll IICtion
withn 30 doya of the dltoln·
dicated. "Action", • uood
above don not include ,..
ceipt of o verified 0011'4'Ioint.
If oignlficont public lntOtelt
oxlllo, 1 public meoting moy
be held. As to any action, in.
c:klding receipt of verified
c:omplalnta, ony penon moy
obtain notic:o of lurthor ...
tiona. and oddltionat lnforma·
tion. Unless otherwite pro·
vidod in noticoo of portlcutor
actions, all communicetiont
lholl bo ~«~t to: Hooring
1049.
Clelll, OEPA. P. 0 .
Columbua, Oh. 43218. Ph .
(814) 488·8037.
Conouh
ORC Chip. 3745 and OAC
Chepa. 3746-47 end 3748· 6
for requirements.
Application for Certfflca·
lion:
Huntington Dlatrlct
Corpo. of Engineers, Lobo·

wttlwnent:

CASE NO. -22471 - Flnt
ond Flnol Account of Patrick H
O'Brian, G..rdlln of the Ell:
ate of Eati J . R.-. .
CASE NO. 241582 - FO.ol
and Dillrl&gt;utlvo Acooum 'of
R - W. DIVII, Eucutor of
the Elllloof Loronao D. Drm.

Sr.• 0.

11 d.

·

CASE NO. 23460 - Thlnl

Account of Nelle Mirto w...
kOla, Guonllln of Alco MM

-·

Brlcklta, an Incompetent
CASE NO. 16146 -

Fifth

24 Hr! ,. 11-•-~~lco

9

Wanted To Buy

ledy nftdtd to live In with
oldorly woman . Cooking ra·
qulred . Cat161 4·992· 3704.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

18 Wanted

a..

627 Tli1id Ave.. Gallipolis
446·1699

I

"'Free Estimates"

73-10 GM TRUU FENDERS.h..h....... $39.00

PH. 949-2801
ar 949-2860

Howard L. Writesel

ROOFING

Moig1 County, Oh. Pertoin1
to 401 cortific41tion. Public
Notice No. (H186·96. Ge·
neral permit for inlttlfation
end maintenance of blink
protec1ion in Ohio RWer.
Al10 Salisbury and Sutton
Twp.
Finol ~once pi ponnit 110
lnotllt: filhe(a Big'Mloel, Sal·
i1burv TW.,.. Meigo County,
Oh. Eftoctive Date Nov. 4.
1986. Facility dncriptlon:
011·1495.
ThillAppllcolion
final action No.
rot
Wartowaw.
prwcodod by propolld action
end 11 - - ., E8R.
B.ooo oatton ...,. ctov oxtsuled
eerllion plant. oulfaco und
filters ond chlorination.

WITH O.PTION TO BUY ...
COMPLETELY REMODELED HOME
'
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ove~ooking Ohio

'River at 300 W. Main Street Pom'

OPEN HOUSE

SUNDAY, NO¥EMBD 17th
1 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
CALL 614-837-8820 OR
992·3841 FOR INFORMATION

FOR THE BOTH
OF YOU
STYLING SALON
OI'IUTORS

tinlla o•m a Doltllio r.wo1
Mon. lflru Sat. 9 AM·S PM
Tuos. &amp; Tlt1ro. NighiJ
• , Appt.

DYNLITE BODY FIWR ................«\!!, ...... S6.50
lf• INCH MASKING TAP£ ...........F-~!...........99(
DUST MASK .................................;;;;... :~:·.:':'u

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196
Middleport, Ohio

1·13-tfc

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Deere,
New Holl1nd. Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment

better .

(Free Estimatea}

V. C. YOUNG Ill

MGM

992·b215 or 992-7314

FARM CITY

Pomeroy, Ohio

Contracting S.nice

r-------~-------

B u !ol i nt'SS
~

,

:'ll" r VI(' e S

~~======::;
EUGENE LONG

SUPER lOR
SIDING CO.
Complete Guttar.. Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of ell Types
Worked tn home1 area
20yoars
"Free Eotimetes"

Ull (OllECT:

Ph. (6141 843-542 S

· 1·12·2 mo.

•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATEUITE SALES &amp; SERVICE
Wt Hen Af•ll Tl••
s~., Ttthteiu •

•• Dtlj

· RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985·3307
4/ l / tfn

? PREGNANT?
fBI COIIFIII!InAL
PIIGIIAIICY liST

l....lh "' 30 ••tMI

lOOM 103
RUTLAND

long Bottom, Ohio

J.J,rh

349 N. 2...
IIIHioport
•POTTERY

•CLOCKS
•TOYS
•IMPOR:TS

lH·IIC

PH. 949-2649

· 11·12·1 mo.

RENT A CAR
CAlL
446-4522

"WI Rill F, liU ..

U-SA~E

AUTO
Sl.RENTtL
Rt. t&amp;D .,,.
•I•

81111~•11•,

MOIIday2to4
Sat., 10 •·•··12 Noon

PH. 742·2629

1011011 mo. pd.

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Additions
•Roofin&amp;
•Sid inc
•Gancges &amp; Pole
Buildinas

ACCENT

RT. U lOUTH

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
PH. 992·6931
Allor S C.U

' 742·2027

MARCUM
CONTRACDNG
long Bottom, Ohio

Ph. 985-4141

"free Estimates" .

Free Estimates

Installation Available

10.111!•

WANT ADS
FOR GAEAI 8UYS
A1111111111u: li l t! II Is

Recine Gun Shoot lltCJn ·
10red by Recine Gun ClUb.
Every Sunday; beginning et
1:00 p.m. Factory Choko12
guage thotguns.

..;._:..___.:._ _ _.,tc-

Notlco:Thore will bo no
hunting or treep111ing on
1!1o old Eber Rouoh form,
now the Mlr·Pat firm in
sy{ocuu, Oh. Old pennia·
sion 11ip1 1re no longer
occoptod . Marjorie A. Durat
and Rolph D.' Llvondor.
MOBILE HOMES MOVED,

lniUI"Id, reaaonable r•t••·
Coli 304-578-2338 .

No hunting or treiPIUing on
Myn11 Farm located on
Cheatnut Ridge Road. Ma·
10n County .

.4

Giveaway

Fox Terrier: mete. white wit
brown spota. Approx. 7
moo. old. Coli 814· 379·
2546 .

SINGLE 124.95

To glvoewoy whho kitten .
Coli 814·448·9287.

•Live entertainment

•free HBO •Restaurant
.Olympic Pool
A.A.A.

304-675-62

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

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

4· !h 8oogto pupploa. Coli
814·448-0229 .
FrH to good homo 8 mo.
fomolo Bonlll Cotllo ml•.
Coli 814· 24&amp; ·9842.
Mate plrt Terrio• dog to give
to good homo . 6
month• old. Colt 814·992·
3671.
IWOY

Port Gorm1n Shop held, pan
Collie pupa to glvo awoy.
814-949-2908 .

c.u

41ong hair klttena. 7 weekt
old. To good homo. Coli
614·949-2794 Ifill 5:00
p.m.
Free pupplo1. 8 wka. old .
Ellthound &amp; Collie ml•ed.
Colt 814 -985· 4312. '

IQ.8·tfC

NHd I good homo for I YNr
old malo Ph Bull . Coli
304-875·81 03 .

TOWN &amp; COUNIIY

to good homo muat bo for

4/ 1 n

Mole whHt •obblt, btuotyol,

(CUT OUT fOR FUTURE USE)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
All Mtket

•Wethers •DIIhWIIhlrl
•Ranges .
•Refrigeretort
•Dryer• •Freezers
PARTS

end SERVICE
H ·llc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124,Pomoray Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Trinsmission
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

VmiiNAIIIN

CUNIC
Paul E. Sho&lt;kty, DVM
n. PUASAIIT OfFICI
305 ladt1011 Awe.
SIIAU A,_ALIIOIIIS
.........11tu... 3-5 ...
Tlluls. 6:30·1; fll 1·2 ...

Sohlrtloy 10·11110 . .
UIGI A-Al&amp;
SUIGIIT If AWl.

PH. 304-675-2441
liND ABA CALl

mer.:~

304·372·!1709

111·14-1 mo.

Buying dolly gold, oliver
colne, rings, jewelry, starting

ware. old colna, l1rge currency. Top prlcoo. Ed. Bur·
kott Barber Shop, 2nd . Ave.
Middleport. Oh . 614· 9923478.
STANDING TIMBER . AI
T.romm. Coil : 814· 742 ·
232" .
Would tlko to buy bumpo1,
grill, heldtlght caolng end
radietor for 79 Mutteng .
814-992-8279 or 814· 247·
2884.
Wonted ulod wolhlro, dfV·
era, refrigerators, rengea,
.weeptrl, wortdng or not .
Call304· 878-7144.

SWEEPER and oowlng ma·
chine repair, perta, and
aupplloa.
Pick up .,d
dollvory, Davia V1cuum
Cleaner. one heH milt up
Goo1geo C-" Rd. Call
814· 448-0294.

Clothoo to givMwoy. Coli
614·446· 4807.

8 miles from
Pome1oy·llason Brid&amp;e

7111 /tfn

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

EYE THE

POINT PlilllHT, W. YA.

J&amp;F

985-3561
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

992-2725

Ftrlll Equlp1111111

SERVICE STATION
992 9932

Middleport, Oh.

JEFF CIRCL£, SR.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Concrete work

....

Complete Building

1119 N. 2nd Awe.

Dealer

YOUNG'S

- Plumbing 1nd el•ctric1l
wol'tl
,

CIRCLE
CONTRACnNG

ANY PERM

Efftctl'fl Now: 1 lloun

Complete Car
SPrvtCr, lube Jobs,
Oil Chonqe,
Tune -Ups, Brake
Jobs. Mufflers
Try us, we &lt;an do

- Roofing 1nd gutter wortc

8·8-tlc

10% OFF

CIVIC CENTER

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POnERY &amp;
GIFT ·SHOP

- Addona and remodeling

Residential &amp; Commercial

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON

992-5875 Or
742-3195

mo. d.

3 Announcements

NOW Tlln DEC. 4

Call:

ll-5-1

Raeine, Oh.
P~. 614-843·SI91
l0·6·tfC

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

. FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

CAU II 14·311·81n

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

(Free EStimatesl

Parfl &amp; Ser•lee

YINn &amp; AWMINUM

(11114, 1tc

4/29/ lln

FALL SALE

Speclotlzlng In Build-Up
CornmtiCiol Roo.flng
20 Yro. experlonco

Start From 12'116'

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

PH. 992-3982
1- .

1f

Sizes

, ..... 614·..2-6771

hbsolutely the
Best hliqnment
Mnn In the Arro.

non, letart and Olive Twpa.,

FOR RENT - FOR SALE
OR FOR LEASE

eroy, Ohio.

CouniY Appliance, Inc.

AUTO
CENtER

UTILITY BUILDINGS

Misc . Merchandise

OPEN 8 TO 6

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

110'/r Wen Main Str..t, P-roy, Ohio

949-2263
or 949-2969

sets.

3·D

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built

...............

IOWI IOOFING

•VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN JN
INSULAnON

Ff!EE ESTIMATES

GOOD USED
Refriceratm. washers. dtyerS,
ps attd olectrie '"'""' and TV

ing . Call 614-992-2039 foi;
appointment.

loundry. R01oonablo. 614·
992·8022 .

200fo OFF
SELECltD PERMS

"""'"h

Public Notice
IN THE MATTER OF
Sffit£MENTOF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts ond wuch~r~ of
the falowina Nmod fiduclar·
1oo hew boon fllod n tho
Probote Court. Molga Clllnty
Ohio, for approvol and

54

5 rooms &amp; bath in Pomeroy ..
Option to buy adjoining
large concrete block build ~

RACINE
FIRE DEPT •

'

Public Notice

Nurting c.re in private
home . Room for two patlonto. $500. e month . Call
814-992-3695.

Brick ranch for sale in
Tuppert Plains . EJttrl} nice. 3
bd .rooms, 11f2 baths, gar·
age. full basement, level lot:
new chain link hmce. fi·,
nancing aveilable to quali -..
fled buyer. Price reducid tor·
immediate sale. low 40's.
Call 614-423 ·4169 for
futher details P.. ask for Mt.
Mallett'.

2 or 3 bd .room older home.Good rental property · in

Painting

Ill Court St.. P.cmeroy. Dt110 07"

Vacancy for the elderly In
our home . Trained and fittam ye~~r1 experience. Call
614-992· 73t4 .

614-992-2976 .

Have vacancy for elderly in
my home. Room, board S.

Gutters · Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wr111 Da•Mr Sel\lintl Clmilltd Dtpl

Situations
Wanted

3 bd .room home . Full ba•e-,
ment, garage, newly ramo ...
deled . Rocksprings are•·

GUN SHOOT

. NEW-REPAIR

The Daily Sentinel·

To ooll Avon, coli 304-676·
1429 .

Government Homes from
S1 . (U repair) . Also delin·
quent taK property . Cell
806 -687-6000 Ext. GH·
9805 for information .

Will boby·•lt in my home,
beside Eeotem High School.
Anytime . Call 614- 986·
3907 .

6J Plllo St., Gltllpolk
We Dolivor

No Sunday Calls

A total of 43 calls - six fire calls and :rr emergency runs - were
answered by the Middleport Fire Department during October, Chief
Jeff Darst reports. All vehicles of the.department were driven 999.1
miles during the month.

•

IN THE MATTER OF
SmLEMENTOF

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE . Elloto.
form. antiquo. tlqutdotlon
aatea. Liconoed Ohio and
\!Volt Virglnlo . 304· 713·
6786 or 304-n3-543D.

9-30-tl

Adivorce has been granted In Meigs County Common Pleas Court
to Sheila J. Roeltker,.Galllpolls, from Timothy A. Roettker, Athens,
on groUnds of'gross neglect of duty.
·
Filing for divorces In Meigs County on grounds or gross neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty are Eddie Bigley, Reedsville, from
Jacqueline Bigley, Reedsville; and Janet L. Morris, Pomeroy. from
Jack E. Morris, Pomeroy.
A restraining order has been placed against Jack Morris during
the pendency of that action.

By owner 2 bedrqom house.
gar1g11, mobile home, IPd
out building on 1 acre, on
Flroboll Rd . noar Gotllpona.
$28 ,000 . Call 614 ·2&amp;:81335 or 614·446-7697 .

Homes for Sale

2 bd .room house on Broad·
way, Middleport . Larg8
roo ma, encloaad porches.
range, disposer, ample ca:binoto. Robert Wlnn. 2740
Crone. Xenia, oh . 45385·.'
(613 ·426·0426 oveo.). ' ..•

Divorce granted

Public Notice

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Factory. Choke
12 Gauee Shotguns Only

.foreclosure action filed

To tell AvoA. Call Marilyn
Woovor, 304-882·2646.

1;;::::;:;==.===

Bashan Building

Marriage Ucenses have been Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Kenneth Michael Roble, 19, Mason, and Jennifer Lynn Dye,
16, Syraeuse; Charles Jackson Handley, Jr., ts: Langsville, and
Brenda Joy Jones, 19, Racine.

There will be a Friday night dance from 8 to 11 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Center with music by llomlc Sounds. Admission wiD be $3 per
couple and $2 single. All ages, grade school and up, are welcome.

8

BOWMAN'S HOME CAB MEDICAL SUPPLY

The Middleport Pollee Department made 45 arrests during
October, Chief of Pollee Sid LltUe reports.
Nine accidents were Investigated durtng the month and parking
meter collections totaled $1,003.85. There were 626 parking·tickets
written and merchant ponce collections totaled $50. All vehicles oc
the department were driven 4,794 miles during the month.

31

12

Middleport police arrest 25

FHA-HERO meeting set

11 Help Wanted

Join tha Wast Virginia Army
Natkmal Guard . You receive
a monthly payeheck. life
insurance. educational opoo
portunitiea, retirement pay
end other outstanding benefits. Coli 304-675·3950
011 ·800-642-38t9.

3 1~ mltoo- Butavllto Rd .
Watch lor itgn. Lot• clothes,
110y1, odd &amp; ond1. Fri. &amp; Sat.
9 110 6 .

•

Emerson E. (Vic) Sherow, 79,
fonner editor of the Galllpolls
Tribune and weekly GaiDa 'times
(1953-57) died Tuesday In O'Bleness
Hospital, Athens . .
BornlnMUlbrook,N. Y.,onJan.3,
1900, to the late Taber and Mabel
Drum Sherow, he Is survived by his
wile, Marjorie, Athens; fourdaugh·
ters: Yvonne Emer~n. Lexington,
Va.; Myrdlth Sherow, .Tustin,
Callf.; Carla Levien, Weston, Conn.,
and Stephanie Goldsberry, Athens;
one son, Greg, Athens; five granddaughters and two grandsons.
Abrother and sister preceded him
In death.
Memorial services will be held 3
p.m. Saturday at the First Presby·
terlan Church In Athens with Rev.
Ralph Kler and Rev. Ken Macklin
officiating. In Ueu of nowers, the
!amity requests contributions to the
VIc Sherow Memorial Fund, In care
of the Ohio University Fund. There
will be no calling hours.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Jagers and Sons
Fun&gt;ral Home, Athens.
Sherow began his 38 year newspaper career with the Poughkeepsie, N.Y. Evening Star In 1921.
A 19II Ohio University graduate,
he also held positions with papers In
Springfield, Lima and Athens, and
from 1948 through 1953, prior to
coming to GalllpOlls, was Ohio
University's. first fulltlme news
bureau director.
After retlrlng from newspaper
work In 1962, he managed a family
lumber business In Lima ttefore
returning to Athens In J.91l).

·

Don 't k!tt your military lkillt
go to wa1te . The W.eat
Virginia Army National
Guard hat vacancies for
qualified prior service individualo . Call 304-675·3950
or 1-800· 642 -3619 .

Twenty-two cases were processed In the court r1 Pomeroy Mayor
Rlthard Seyler Tuesday night.
·
Becky Davidson and Julie Will, Pomeroy, were each l)laQ!ld on six
months probation on assault charges:- Fined were Steve Powell,
Middleport, $213 and costs, menacing threats; Joel King. New
Haven •. $63 and costs, traffic light violation; Carl Hendricks, Jr.,
Pomeroy, $375, driving while Intoxicated; John Ginther, Pomeroy,
$375, driving whUe Intoxicated; Roy EbUn, ReedsvUie, $375 and
costs, driving while Intoxicated, and $63 and costs, no operator's
license; Sonja Wolfe, Middleport, $44 and costs, speeding; Frank
Ellis, Bowling Green, $46 and costs, speeding; Tl,mothy Klein,
Pomeroy, $48 and costs, speeding.
. Forleltlng were Cheryl Huber, Mason, $43, failure to yteld right of
way; Donald Arc~r, Racine, $\IS; Linda Priddy, Pomeroy, 46; Gary
Foley, Syracuse, $43; John Foreman, Syracuse, $44; Roger Beegle,
Racine, $44; Eunice Cook, Middleport, $46; Robert Will, Pomeroy,
. $43; Diane King, Racine, $43, all oo speeding charges; Randy Lee,
Pomeroy, $43, assured clear distance; Mathew Dillard, $213,
menacing threats, and Lydia Fraley, Gallipolis, $63 failure ID
register motor vehicle and $55 speeding.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Center reports four calls
Wednesday; Racine at 8:07a.m. tD Letart Falls for Velma QuWen
who was taken to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 8:36 a.m. ID
NeW' Lima Rd. for Joanne Fetty to Veterans Memortal Hospital;
Middleport at 10:59 a.m. ID 738South Fourth Ave. for Betty Denney to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 8:09p.m. ID Stonewoods Apts.
for Shirley Frazier to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Emerson Sherow

Yard Sale

Pomeroy court hears 22 cases

Meigs EMS answers four calls

Area

7

pot only. 304·882· 3104.
Nino ml•ed Coltlo puppilato
givo away to good homo,
304·878· 4883 .

6 Lolt end Found
FOUND Rt. 31NorRodmon
Inn. lllock fomolo tlog. \!VItlto
cltoat a. powa. Brown collar.
Ploooo call 814· 448·3217
oftor 5.
LOST block, fomolo Rot
torrlor. t;loorgoa c - . . . .
PlooH call 814·441· 3472.
LOST, block and whlto fl.
moloWI.IIInthevlclnltyol
Rt. 2 and Rt. 112. eolt

304-876-1788.

10

Do

Nel1on'1 Hardwood floor
sandtng, finishing. repair
work, free eltillllltts. Call
814· 268· t842 .

Will do houHC:Ieaning in
Gelllpo6o orea . Call 814·
446 ·0602 .
Will do houuclean lng Monday, Tuesdly, Thursday
a. ovary other Saturday.
614-986· 4174 ovoo. oft. 7
p.m.

Will do house cleaning. Call
614· 949· 3084.
Wanted to do:lroning in my
homo . Rouonablo. Call
814-992· 6189 .

1- - - - - - - Piano lauons i'l my home.
limited openings after
ochool.,d Sotunloyo. Expe·
rlonced. 814-949·2614 .

[ •II IJillyllll'lll
SIIVIt.l::,

11

Help Wanted

One cartfflod Modlcol Tech ·
nologlot. wookdoyo. Sen~
rooume 01 1pply 110 Modicol
Plaza. 203 Jockoon Pike,
GoltlpoNa. Oh 46831 .

Mature dependable lady to
care for inflnt end toddler In
our home. Muat be a nonsmoker. afternoons and ev·
~nlngs. Reply with reftrenc:es to box 700 m mrd of the
G1ltipoNo Dolly Tribune. 825
Third Ave .. Gottlpollo. Oh
46831 .
Wanted : Woman to live in to
coro for eldorly lody in
Jackaon trN . Reasonable
aalofV. Colt 614·2B8· 5379
or 814-288-2280. or write
Joan Hammond 2474 Pot·
tonavHio Rd .. Jackson. Oh
46840 .
Part· time mail or female.
ftexlblo houra. No lnvoot·
mont. Eornlnga oppOrtunity
1160·t300 per wooil alert·
lng. Apply Mon .•Sit. To
Eloctrolux C01p., 417 St·
cond Avo .. Room 18, Galli·
poll~. Ohio. 8:30 · 10:00AM .
Chriatmat halp -atan immediately. Full-port timo. Car
naceaory . U . 10 hour. Colt
814-245-9697 .
AVON Start up fee 16.00,
Nke 45% for Chrlatm11 .
Call 814-448-3368 .

Wilt toke core of elderly
people in mv homo . Coli
.14-387-0t 2t .
On colt nurolng 1111111nt
politlon ovalloblo. Contoqt :
Plno Croat Coro Cont1r. No
lltlophono cella ploou. e..
porioncod only.
·
Cook full timo fob pert timo
hours. Nice wortling condi·
dono. Call 814 -448-8224
!1-4. Thuro. a..Frl_
Genorol Office poollion
ovolloblo lor hlrd--lltlng,
dopondoblo lndtvlduot.
PltaM Mnd rt~~ume to bo•
T ·800 In COle of tho Qolllpo·
ill Dolly Tllbuno, 8211 Third
Avo ., Gtlllpolla, Ohio
46131 .
Eooy Anombty Work I
.. 00.00 pe1 100. Guoron·
tood Peymont. No Expo·
rion .., No Sot... Dotollo
aend atlf · addresaed
atamped .,volope: Elan VI·
tel -7111 3418 Entorprln
Rd, Ft. Plorco, FL 33482 .
AUTO MECHANIC:Apply in
poraon at Pot Hill Ford,
Middleport, Dh. Experience
noce. .fV. Stop In and pick
~ application.
Port time R.N .o, 3 :00 ·
11 :00. 11 :00· 7:00 . Willing
10 wortc In long term care.
Muat: be able to coordinlte
ox..llont potlontcaroforour
lelidllltl who ••• vory .,...
dlf peoplo. Accepting oppHC8tlonl MOn. thn&gt;ugh Fri. ot
Pomeroy Health Caro Con ·
tor. E.D.E.

Opportunity
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommends
1ilot you do bu1inooo with
people you know, and NOT
to •nd money through the
mall until you have lnveltlgated the offering.

1- - -- - - - -

BU1ine11 for ..Ia In Pomeroy. Reaaonab .. price. Good
oppOrtunity. Colt 814· 992·
6937 011 814· 992· 3520.

Open your fashion store
with profeutonal help from
Llbony Faohlono. Ono time
fee , different programa to
match your investment
plana. 900 plus not'! brenda.
lnfar.t to size 52. ecce11o·
ries. cosmetict, Inventory,
fhctures, instora training,
buying trip, grand opening,
more. Atoo bo firot in your
arera with color· coded store
and cerdfied color enelvz·
lng. DonKoatocky601 ·327·
8031 .

Pomeroy. Aoking $8000.
Coll614 ·992· 6937 or 614·
992-3620.

62•24, 2 bedrooms, inside·
remodoled. Rt. 2. Rolli~.• · ,
ville, 304-895 ·3349 .
.
3 bedroom bi -lewal wft:h
fireplace. 3 .3 acre lot. Send
Hill Road . approhed
875,000 . 00 , reduced
862,000 . 304-875-6183.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE .
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL~
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES, '
4 MI. WEST, GALLIPOLIS. :
RT 35 . PHONE 614·448"
7274 .
1969 Vindolo 12x60 on •
rented lot . New electric ·
fumace, AC, outbuilding,
loW utilitiet, a11c. cond. Call
61 4-245-9638 otter 8PM . '
1 973 New Moon 12x8.6. :
pert . furnished, wood'·
burner, ceiling fan, AC , ·
underpinning, porch ~ ·
U ,800 . Coil 614 · 4411-9290 .
.
14x70 Footivol 3 bd• .. 2 ·
beth. oil carpeted. air. 111
electric. large porch, llkt .
new. Coli 814-446-3486 . '

Repoueuedl 77· Bendix ,
t 4x70 throe bedroom . $166:
per mo. 74 Gowernor 2
bedroom 1162 per mo . en
Patriot 14x88 throe bod'
room $195 per mo . t60d
down. take over payments.
Mid Ohio Financial Service
1· 800·826-0762 or t614 ..
772-12201.
10x60 New Moon 2 bdr .. ·
new carpet, like new
through out. Must see to .
opprocioto. Coli 614-448 ·
0176 .

For tale or rent 65•14
Schult mobile home. For
uto 56x1 0 mobile homo.
Call 814-379 ·2659 .
Broadmore mobile horM
14x70, 2 bedroom wllh
8Jt12 upando , total elect· -'
ric. equipped for wood· .
burner, 2 full baths. good
c:ond. Call 814-379 ·2426 ·
after 4:00PM .
1970 Now Moon t2x60 .
underpinning a. porch, new
carpet S. hot water t1nk .
14,600 . Coil 614 · 256·
8647 .

Mull Solt : 14x70 mobllo ·
homo . J bd .1oomo. t 'It
22 Money to Loan
baths. wuher 8t dryer.
porches, gat furnace . Call
HOME OWNEA S:Rofinonco i -8_ 1_4_·9_4_9 _·2_3_68_·_ _ _ _ •
to low fixed reto. Use equity MOBILE HOMES MOVEP:.
for any purpose. Leader insured. reasonable rates.
Mongage Co.. 814-592- Coli 304-578 -2336
3061 .
1972. 12x66 Sehullz mo·
bile home, ••c. cond . Mutt
23 Professional ·
sea to appreciate . $6,000.
Services
Call after 5:30 p.m. 304676 -6972 .
PIANO TUNING AND RE·
PAIR , bock to ochool diocounu, free estimates,
Word'a Keyboord, 304·8758500 Of 875 -3824 .

Rt:ol Esla le
31 \ Homes for Sale
By owner. Muat sell-moved.
3 bdr. ranch, one oargaraga,
welking diatsnce from North
Goltto High School. Reduced
to t29 ,900 . Call 6t4 -388 ·
6711 .
1 ecre with houee. 2 bdr ..
rural water. septic tenk .
mobile home hookup .
tt2,600 . Coli 814· 388·
9868.
A handyman'• opportunity
for profit: Green Sc:hoot
dilt•ict. 2 otory houu with
pr1ge , 1torm windows, re·
frlg .. stove 8t washer
130,000 or boot offer. Cell
61 4-448·2026 or81 4·248·
9160 .
32 acre• 3 bdrms. nice
condition . county water, oil
httt, on Rt . 7 , in Eureka.
Colt 614-448-2206 .

1- - - - - - - -

3 bdr .. full bloomont, lg.
llvlngloom, Plantz Subdlvi·
alon, It .500,- toke ovor
poymonta . Colt 614· 448·
7380.

1980 Tidwatl 14&lt;70 3 bed-'
rooms, 1 'h baths, all elect·
rit. 9x10 building and 2
porches. S11 .000 . 304 875 -7829 .

3 bedroom mobile home,
helf acre lot, 1 car garaQ8,
New Haven, WV. 304 -7736942 or 304· 882· 23B4 . ' ·
BY OWNER , 1982 . 14x70
HOLLY~ARK , ALL ELEc:·
MOBIL E HOME . ORIGI NALLY SOLD NE'I\'."
$24,500. OWNER MDV. ·.
lNG. HOME LIK E NEW
8500 CASH PAY OFF BAL·
ANCE DUE $14.406.44 . .
304· 762 -2228 .

..

14.~~:70 , '81 Windsor, e"c
cond. 2 bedrooms. 1 bath. 2
porches. underpennlng. par•
tially fu[nillhed , c1ll 304- ..

713 - 50~ 6 .

33

Farms for Sal&amp;

62 acres, 3 bedroom farm
houte !needs tome rep1ir)
large barn and out buildings, "
tobacco b11e and mineral •
•lghts. Located off· Blad&lt;tn, ·
Mercerville Rd . 823,800 .
Call 614-446 -8361 .
32 acre farm. 3 bedroom ,
homo. born. 2 outbutldingo • .
304· 675 -3419 after 6 :30 . •
1970 Schult t0111 electric,
12x80, 304·882-2422 of· .
tor 4:30 .

�,..

Page- 14- The Daily Sen,inel
34

Business
Buildings

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

KIT ' N' CARLYLE ®by L1rry Wrighl

North Point Pleasant on Rt.
2. 304-675-226 9.

&amp;

•

Acreage

3 acres M -l . trailer hookup,

garage . Call 614 -446 2568 .

64 Misc. Merchandise

and floor , elec . hook up.

septic tank , water. Call
614 -247-3B61 ,

Firewood-cutup slab1, 1
lruck lood $100, 2-$ 1BO .
Piekup load, you haul $15 .
HEAP oecopted . Call 814·
245 -5804.

Renlals
I

Houses for Rent

4 bdr. house in country,

$250 mo .. plus $260 dop .
Call 614-446-4664.
2 bdr., unfrunished haute
with garage. Ref . &amp; Oep;
re qui red . Call 614 · 446 ·
9686 .

3 bdr., utility room, si~gJe
car garage, large kitchen.
electric range, $326 month.
ral . &amp; dop. Coli 614-446·
135B.
8 room house country living
in town . B 76 mo. Call
304-675-6104 or 304-675 ·
5 3B6.
Furnished 4 rooma &amp; beth,
736 rear 3rd. Ave .. adults
only, 875 dop .. S125 mo.
Call614-446 · 3870 or 614·
446-1340.

House coal. Lump &amp; stoker .
Zinn Coel Co. Call614·446·
140B .

"

fl

~Q2..4.....

Oiltl&amp;f!l

ri&gt; ,,m~ l&lt;j[.a.

""'

~~~:::::======;::========~
44

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant
child . No pets. t150. per
month plus utilitiea and

deposit . New Haven. 304·
882· 2466.
Mobile home for rent, 2
bedroom. Crab Creek Road .

8145 .00 month, 304-5762219. County water .
2 acre .mobile home lot on
Greer Road, water &amp;: septic

system . $50 .00 month .
304-B36-6937 alter 7 :00
PM .

2 br apartment• in Hender·

14x66 2 bedroom mobile
home in Henderson, unfurnished with washer and
Middlaport-2 bd .room, 1st. dryer.
depoait and reference
flOor duplex . Yard. $200. required . 304·676-1730 .
pius deposit . 614 -992 ·
7177 oft. 6 p.m.
2 bedroom mobile home.
1200.00 month with utili·
2 bd .room, 1 'h bath home ties paid. 304-676-2479 .
on Pleatant ridge in Pomeroy . $250. per month plua
Apartment
utjllties. Reference and dep- 44
osit required . No petl. 614for Rant
949·2646 .

son . 304-676 -1972.

1- - - - - - - - -

9~2- 3981 .

3 ·bedroom wi1h get. hot
water tank, cook atove and
halter. 1% miles oH Rt. 7 on
Rt. 33. No pets. $250. per
month plus deposit. Cell
6)4-949-2057.
For rent or rent with option
to buy . Meigs Co. Chester
TWP. 4 yr. old 3 bd.room
houae with 2 car garage .
Beautrful rural setting on
250 acres of land . $300.
mo . 614·592 -4471 deys or
614-592-4524 ovas.
Efficiency cottage, 166.00
week. utilities paid, phone
304-675 - 3100 or 675 5509 .
Home and trailer spot, 3046711-6720'.
3 bedroom houae in country.
no pets, $250 .00 month,
refrences and deposit, 304·
676 · 7937.
3' rooms and bath, 3220 1/z
Franklin Ava. Pt. Pleasant
W.Va.
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished. AC , cable, no city
taxes. beautiful river view in
Kanauga . Fosten Mobile
Home Park . Call 614-4481602.
2 bdr. 14x60 all electric
trailer. nice wood burner In
livingroom, on private lot.
On Rt. 218 , 6 miles from
town. Call614-256 -1393.
2 bdr . 1 mile from Hoapital.
wether-dryer , water 9 trash
paid. $200 rent and deposit.
Call 814-446-1354.
2 bdr. with 12x16 add-on
room. utility shed &amp; garden
space, rural area, 2 mile
from Centenary . Call 614·
446·0282 .
Furniahed 2 ·bdr. trailer on
Old 160 near Porter, private
lot. married couple no kid or
pets. 8200 mo. *100 dep.
wotar paid . Call 614-388 9060.
2 bedroom turn., air, ulilitiel
paid. adults only. Call 614·
448·4110 .
2 bdr. 2 mile• tram Holzer
Hosp ital at Evergreen .
C hildren accepted . Call
614-446 -3697 or 614-245 ·
6223.
Spotleos 2 bdr., 12x60,
kitchen appliancea. fur ·
nished, large private lot. 1 Yl
mi .' from t oWn. t 200 mo.
plua sec . with reference•.
Call 614-446 -2236 or 614448 -2681 .
12a:60 2 bedroom untur·
niahed mobile home . 1 mile
from Rt. 1 on Georges Creek
Rd . Call 614-446-4369 or
304-675-9760.
3 bdr ., 1 bath , mobile home
available Dec. 1, furn . or
unfurn . $300 mo. including
Water. sewage &amp; truh
pickup, plus depos it. Call
614-446 ·4208 .
2 bdr. $160 mo. Call 614·
379-2436 .
2 bedroom mobile home.
Recine area . Call614-992·
6868 .
3 bedroom, expando. woodburner. garage, fenced yard,
ga rden . fr ui1 trees. Dep osit
and references. Call 6149 49· 3031 .

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent aterts at 8169
for 1 bedroom and $204 for
2 bedroom. depoait 8200.
located near Spring Volley
Plaza and Food land, pool
and Coble TV available.
office houra aa possible 1 o
amto4pmond7pmto9pm
Monday-Friday, Call 6144 46 . 2 7 4 6 or leove
measage.

Apartmen1
for Rent

Warm Morning wood burner
like new, dinette set, 2
wheel trailer , pop - up
camper, no top, make eK .
utility trailer, draft beer
system, odds &amp; ends furni·
turo . Call 614-256-6413 .

Mid November Special. 600
The Mopleo . Elderly &amp; Han· lb. protein blocks, $67 .60 .
dicapped Housing. All utili- Gu8rsy gloves 99 cent a pair .
ties paid . ConvenientlY lo- 6 tn . stove pipe $1 .76 a
cat&amp;d for Senior Citizens. section. Found only a1 Bid·
Off street parking. Security well Ceah Feed Store, 614 ·
.
&amp; Fir&amp;~ protection. Live In 38B-96B8.
Resident Manager. Rental
auisunce availale . Call Large band saw. Iorge muKi
614-992 - 7022 . Equal ·drill presaer, 7 ft . metal
lathe . 73 Trans Star lnternaHousing Opponunity.
tkmal full screw, 40ft. flat 9
APARTMENTS, mobile h . spread, 38 lt. fiat J exloo
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant on air. 360 Hondq bike .
end Gallipolis . 614 -446 - Pans GMC drums. hubo &amp;
misc. Caii614 · 379-232B.
8221 .

2 bedrooms, furnished. 1

1---------614-

4 room house for rent in

Syrocuse, Ohio. Call

-

Nice 1 and 2 br apartments
downtown . 304-676· 2218
. 8-6

Private garage apt. Mt.
Vernon Ave, adults. no pet1.
304-676-10&amp;5.
45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houae keeping
room1. Park Central Hotel .
Coli 614·446-0756.
46 Space for Rent
Mobile home lot, 1 2'x60 ' or
smaller. 176 water paid. 4th
81 Neil. Gallipolia. Call 446·
4418 after 8PM .

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

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perk. Route 33. North of
Pomoroy . Largo loll. Call
Nicely furnished mobile _6_14_·_9_9_2·_7_4_7_9_
. ---home. eff. apt., central air 1
and heat in city, adults only.
Merchantllse
Call 614·446·0338 .
Redecorated apt ., 2 bdr.,
8150 to S260. Call 304·
675 -5104 or 304-67653B6 or 304-675-7898 .

51 Household Goods

largo 2 bdr. apt., 2 beth,
fully carp'eled, rolrig. &amp;
ltove, 11 Court St .. 8325
mo .. ref. &amp; dap. Call 614446·4926 .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gollipolio. New
8t used wood-coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR ouito 8399,
bunk beds t199, antron
Upstairs unfurnlahed apt .. recliner~ $99, new &amp; utad
carpeted. all utilltiet pilid, no bedroom auires, rengu .
children . no pets. Call 614- wringer washers, &amp; ahoea.
448-1637.
New livingroom auitea
8199 · $599, lamps , also
Furnished apt . 2 bdr., 131 1iz buying coal &amp; wood stoves.
4th, Gallipolis, $196 water Cell 614 -446-3169 .
paid . Coli 446-4416 olter I- - - - - - - - 7PM .
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Furnithed 3 rooms &amp; bath . Sofa• and chairs priced from
clean, no petl, adults. ref . S. $2B6 . to t895. Tables. $50
deposit . Call 614-446 - and up to 1125 . Hide·• ·
1519.
beds . $390 . and up to
8550 ., sofa bodo S145,
New efficiency apt. Call Raelinera. $225 . 10 1375 ..
614-446-0390 .
lamps from 128. 10 $125 .
pc. dinettes from *109 ., 10
Furni1hed efficiency apt .. 436 . 7 pc . 8189 and up.
private &amp; quiet, single work - Wood table with six chaira
Ing person only. Call 614 - 82B5 to 8746 . Oesk 1110
446-4607 or 61 4 -446 · up to $225 . Huteheo. $550.
2802 .
Bunk bed complete with
mahr11ns. $276 . and up to
Furnished apt.. 4 room &amp; 8396 . Baby bods, $110 .
bath, 1 It floor. 1 058 1st. Manresses or box aprlngs,
Ave ., Gallipolia, Ph .
full or twin. $63., firm , $73.
and 883 . Queen oats, 8225.
Brook1 ide APartsmanu . 4 dr. ehesto, $49. 5 dr.
Call614-446-3003 or 614· chests. t59. Bod frames,
446- 1599 or 614 -446 - 820 .and '26 ., 10 gun · Gun
3474. One bedroom apart- cabinets. $360 . Gas or
ments with large country electric range1 8375. Baby
kitchen. new appliancea. mattre11es, $2&amp; &amp; $36 , bed
utility room. Water nwage frames 120, 126, &amp; $30,
and trash service provided. king frame $60 . Good aelec·
Quiet area .
tion of bedroom auitea,
rockers , metal cabinets .
6 rooms &amp; bath: Located headboard• 638 &amp; up to
Crown City. Newly deco- $65 .
rated. electric stoveS. refrig .
No pols . Call 614·25 6· Ulld Furniture .. Bedroom
1222 .
auite . 1 set of tablet,
dresser. S. bed , metal office
Small off. apt .. 1 adult . Call desks. 3 miles out 8ulaville
614-446-3356 .
Rd . Open 9amto 6pm, Mon .
thru Sot.
2 bedroom apartmenu . 614-446-0322
New Haven, WVa . Newly
remodeled . In town. 614- GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
992· 74B1 .
Washers, dryer1. refrigera tors, ranges. Skagg1 ApFurniahed Apartment 1or pliances, Upper River Rd .
rent, no children . Available beside Stone Crest Motel.
alter Oct.3. Coli 614-992· 614-446-7398 .
2749 .
County Appliance , Inc .
2 bd .room furnished Ap!. Good used appliances and
814-992-5434 or 304· 8B2 · TV seto. Opon BAM to &amp;PM .
2568 .
Mon thru Sat. 614· 446·
1699, 827 3rd. Avo. GaUlStone Wooda Apartments. polis. OH .
Senior Cili•••• on mobility - - - : - - - : - - - - impaired units. 1100 Powell Valley Furniture , new &amp;
St., Middleport, Ohio . Equal uaed. Large 1ection of qual·
Houaing Opportunity . lty 1urniture. 1216 Eutern
Farman Home Administra · Ave., Gallipoli1.
lion . Managed by Arthur _ _ ___;__ _ _ __
Howard Winer and Assoc. E-Z Credit Mollohan Furni ·
P.O.Box 1007, Marietta, ture. Rt, 7 North of GallipoOhio 46760 . 1-814· 373· lis. Ca11614-446·7444 .
6111.
King size wotorbod, book In Middleport-1 bd.room eaaa headboard, wavafe11
Apt. Uti lit lea inc .. 8220. per mattrell. mattr111 Pld &amp;.
month . plus deposh . 614· oido pads. t376 . Call 614·
992-7177 aft . 6 p.m.
256· 660B after 7PM .

a

3 bd .room Apt . for rent in
Svracuoe. 614 -992· 7689
3 bedroom. eompleioly fur· 1 _• f_t_. 6_;_p_
.m
_._ _ _ _ __
nllhad . No pets. Call 614· o·
949 ·2263 .
2 bd.room furnished Apt.
Real nice. Adulls only. No
2 bd .room mobile home near peta. Rt. 124. Mlnersvl!lo.
Oh . 614-992·3324.
Raclno . 614-949-284B .

Country atyle oek furniture ,
hind craltad and finished .
tntlque reproduction•. Paul
Conkel. Rt. 7 . Tuppero
Plolns .

1- - - - - - - ' - - - -

6 pc. dlnene aat, $75 .00,
304-676-2617.

Callahan's Uaed Tire Shop .
Over 1,000 tlros. !izes 12.
13, 14,15, 16, 16.6. Bmiios
out Rt. 218 . Call 614-2566251 .

26 . cu.ft . chest freezer, 1
baby bod, drop loaf mahogany table extends to 8 ft .•
Maytag wringer washer &amp;
tub, bedroom suite com·
plete. 30" !OIIawoybod. Call
61 4·446·0B36 or 614·446·
1214.
For Solo : split firewood . $40
per pickup load delivered. 2
mi. N of Silver Bridge on
Upper Rt. 7 . Call614-446 ·
9646 after 6pm .
Usad hospital bod. $30.
good cond . Call after 6.
61 4·3BB-8838 .
Wood &amp; · coal King stove.
$200 . Call ahor 5 . 614·
446·1763 .
1 Reese hlteh. large dog
houae. handmade doll1. Call
614-367-0166.

56

79 Motors Homes
· &amp; Campers

1

Dl&amp; we

9 inch swirlg. Southband
bench lathe. 1 1 5 volt or 3
phase motor with tooling
1800. Call614 -245-5671 .
60 per cent offl Flashing
arrow signs 8259111lighted,
non·arrow $247 . Unlighted
8199 . (Free lonersll See
locally. limited quan1ity.
Hurry! 1 ( ~001423 - 1063 .
Mix ad hardwood slabs. S12 ,
per bundle. containing appro~ . 1 Y, ton. fob . . Ohio
Pallet Co., Pomeroy, Ohio .
Phone 614-992 -6461 .
Rem. 742 -30 .06 . sling Red field Acco Track scope . LN'.
$500 . 614-992· 3861 .
Atari T.V. game . 13 new
cartridges &amp; acceu's. $100 .
Call 614 -992-2631 ah . 5
p.m.
1976 GMC 'A lon truck .
1968 Ford Broneo. Old roll
door kitchen cabinet. 7 H.P .
Gibson garden tractor with
plow. Call 614·9B5· 4353 .
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS ,
hot dip reblualng. all typos of
gun1mith work, fast service,
304-675·4631 .
Serious about los ing
weight? Contact Gloria
Grate. R1 . 2, Box 2B2,
letart, WV. 25263. 3048B2 -3152.
Lump house coal. deliver any
amount. 304-675 -7397 or
676-1247.
SURPLUS, regular army ca ·
mouflage, denim clothing,
boota, packa, accenorie1 .
Camouflage insulated cove·
ralls $30 ., kidt camouflage
all sizes. Sam Somerville ,
East-Ravenawood, junction
lndependance Road-Old Rt.
21 , Fri. Sat, Sun, 1:00-7:00
PM . Free delivery Point
Pleasant area . 304-676·
3334.
30.08 automatic rifle w ith
scope . 304-675-3B76.

81

Newo
(1J $100,000 Noma That

Tune

•

.

.

'

Cl"n "" ·"4 ~U'••H \,~~·'"' ' 10'1( wo- ld&lt; · ~~" ' •w-o..-.:1

"I think we can do without
that, Grimsby."

~;=:;=.=:;:~~::-~~=====;:=:Autos for Sale

19B3 Pont~.:- Poriolenno
mint oond, low mileage,
loaded. Call 814-367-7225
after 6PM.

Ra1 Terrier puppies. 1976 VW B · 1o
d
Wormed and 1st shots. 3
oat lltw roo,
body good shape. Coli 81 4 ·
fomsleo , 2 moles. Ready to 448· 7879 after 6PM.
go. 860. 614 -689-4138 .
_ _ _...:_..:.:.....:_...:._ _
1978 Dodge Aspon, PS, PB.
AKC:: registered German AC , new rediols, AM·FM,
Shepherd pupptea. shots stereo; low miiHgo. Body &amp;
and wormed , ready Nov. 26. en gina perfect . Locally
19B5. 304-46B·1626 ofler owned. Mull •II. Call 61 4·
4:00.
446·0946 .
57

Musical
Instruments

1977 Ford Granado, 302
angina, V-B. automatic. Call
614-388· 8629 ohar 6pm.

19B2 Silver Camero, am·fm
At Brunicardi'I ..... No repoa- 8-track. auto. tran1.. AC.
sesaed piano gimmicks. Ju11 new tires. $5800. Call 61 4·
honeat piano valuea. We are 448-3769 after 4pm.
never under sold! Brunlcardl
Music Inc. Corner 3rd. &amp; 19B2 Chevette 43.000
Court St .. GaUipolls. Ohio.· miles. PS,PB, AM·FMrodio,
RWD, air. 4 dr .. 4 cyl .. outo,
Wurlitzer Studio piano. exc . gray color. See al 642 Fihh
eond . Call614 -388·9790. Avo., Gallipolis. Coil 614 ·
446-1607.
Remington upright · JNano.
$160 . Call 614·446-2025 19 69 Corvetto, 350 4 spd ..
·air, Hop, PS . PB. PW.
or 1;14-245 -91 60 .
AM- FM radio, radial tlreo,
exc. cond., *7,600. Call
614-379-2433.
69 For Sale or Trade
FOR SALE: Liquor permit in
Middleport. D2-D2X. Any
reasonable offer will be
considared . Call D. Hunter
at 614·469 · 1700 or 619·
992 ,2720.

FMm Su ppl ies
&amp; L iv t~s lnck

19B2 Chevy Chevono 4 dr.,
euto., air, 49,700 miles,
*2.300. Call 614 -37926B2.
.
Chrysler 19B4 Filth Avenue.
LUXUIY package. all optiono,
boige, low miles. ,,1,500.
Call 814•256-1379 oher
SPM .
1979 Buick Rogol Umitod,
power lilts. windowa, .unroof, tilt, air cond., AM-FM
oouono. *2.900. Call 614446·0504 .

61 Farm Equipment
- - - - -- - - - 1979 Cornaro Z-2B, new
CROSS &amp; SONS
~roo. now point, AT. PS. AC,
U.S . 35 Wost, Jackson,
excellent condition. Call
Ohio. 614-2B6·6451 .
614·446· 8201 or814 -446·
B113.
Musey Fergu10n, New
Holland . Bush Hog Soloallo 1 - - - - - - - - -1976 Monto Carlo exe .
Servlce . Over 40 used
tractora to choon from &amp; cond. Roily whaolo . Call
complete line of new &amp;.
614-446·70'48.
usod equip mont. Largest
selection In S .E. Ohio.
19B3 Z·2B Camaro t-top,
Special 10% discount on all 10,000 mllao.lika now. Call
part• for cash ulas only.
614-446·B2B6 ..... 5 :30
•until Nov . 16.
call 61 4·446·B127.
4x4 tractor, 1600. Call
614-38B· 8246 .

19B6 Buiek LaSabre 2 dr ..
like new, 6,800 miles. Call
814-446 · 82B6 ofler 5:30
Good IH single row corn· caii614-446·B127.
pickar. Call 614-379-2424.
1978 Nova, 1700, 2· 16"
Bens Livestock Trailers. Hur- ralley whaelo. Coll614 ·446·
ricane, WV . 304·757· 6644 8031 .
or 757-6399 .
1970 Buick · Electro cleen,
New Holland 354 grinder good work cor. Call 614·
mixer. Uaed very little. E•c 256·88B3 .
oond, 304-273-4216 .
--------19BO Chovelte, 4 dr., AM·
Now Holland 487 hay bind, FM CIIIOitO, AC. V-8.
axe eond, 12,400.00 . 304· 82 , 000 negotiable. Cell
273-4216 .
614·446-8049 aher &amp;PM .

63

livestock-

1974 Chevy Impale. 4 dr ..
350 engine. 47,000 ocl.
miles. PS, P B. AC, good care
81 . 500 . Coli 614· 245 ·

5 Polled Charolaia bullo _5_5_6_9_.- - - - - - probrod. 700-BOO lbs.
Woodward 's Ohillco Formo. 19n Toyota Corollo good
Call 614· 379-2597.
cond ., AT, AC, AM·FM
radio. *1.300. Call 814Purebred , polled, Simmen- 3BB· 8649 .
tal bull calf, 5 months old .
1975 Ponllac, 1971 Nova,
Call614-387-7419.
$360 ooch. Call 614· 38BFor Solo: Hereford bull . Call 9669.
614· 949 -2368.
1977 Ford LTO, good work.
body good ohape. good tlru .
Call 614·446-4617.
64 Hay &amp; Grain
Hay for 1118. Call614-3792424 .

(]) Mazda Sporuloolc
(1J 3· 2·1, Contec:t ICC)
® Ey-ilneu News
(jj) Electric Company
• Dlffrerrt Slnlkes
jMAX] MOVIE: 'Max Du·

CAPTAIN EAS'V ·
. IF T~IS 1:$
PAFtTOF THe

p1

~~~~~~A':~

Home
Improvements

71

Autos for Sale

1968 Chavelle Super Sport,
good cond . Call 614-6694623.

1976 Chevy Novo •T. runs
Mi•ed grats hay for 1111, exc. *975. Coil 614-446·
Call 614-949 -2237.
7441 , alter 6 call814· 446·
7942.
Firot quality mixed hay.
large baleo . Coli 614-949- 19B5 Pontloc Fiero loodad.
3069 aft. 4 p.m.
under warranty. Must sell.
Call 614 - 992 - 562B
Good hay, fl.OO and 81 .50 anytime .
per bale, Redmond Ridge,
304-875 -5604.
19B4 MercuryTopaz. 4 dr.,
pa. pb, auto. air, am-fm
radio, lront whl. dr . White
TransporlaiiOn
whh gray int. 15750. 614·
949-2B94 .
.
1970 Cutlou Sports Coupe.
Now paint job. Call 614·
867 -6261 or 61 4 -992·
6864.
1972 Opal GT. Collacloro
item . Only Mveral to bleeen
in thi1 1re1 . Rune good .
8ody-EC. Now pslnl, llreo &amp;
brok01. 11000. f(rm. Non
Negotiable. 614· 992·2786 .
1973 Codillec Coup da Ville .
Call 814-992·3337.

19B1 Chevrolet CapricCios·
sic, low mileege, AT, AC,
AM-FM tape, Cruise, 304875·6696 or 676-6440.

ISOOD JO~ ,

'73 vo•sw-aon with newly

~":t~ ~or.

9

m .oo. 304-

'73 Olds, 4 door, 304-676·
1264.

1979 Milibu Wagon, IUIO
trono, PS, PB, AC, axe con d.
*2.300. 1976 Toyota Calico
GT, four speed, n~ns good,
looks ohlrp, $1,000 . 1971
Chivy truck Cheyenne pkg,
62,000 miles. PS, AC, tilt
wheal, no ruat. no body
filler, ouper sharp truek
*3.800. 304·675-3641 .
72

Trucks for Sale

1976 Ford F-100 standard
Irena, air, new paint, good
tires. t1 .600. Call 814·
446-2300 .
19B5 Chov : C-10 pickup
(4WD) blaek with charcoal
Int., SAverado. AC, PS, PB,
auto •. sliding rear window.
eruloe. AM· FM tapa, electrie
windowt and door locks.
bad liner, V-8, aux. gil tank,
now $16,000 uking
*11,800 . Call 614·446·
9364.
1974 Suburban high mi·
l01ga, avery option, good
oond, runs axe. Coli 614·
256-1526.
1975 Chevy Silveredo 1ton,
dually wllh King cob.
$4,800. Call 614 -446·
2107 or 814 -246·6600 .
1985 Ford PU '-' tuo F-260.
Call 814-446-8286 ohor
5:30 cal 814·446·8127 .
1974 PU, new tans, good
tire1. new brakes, good
transportation . 81,000. Call
614-245·5659.
1980 Dotoun. auto. radio,
topper, amroof, $2 ,599.
John's Auto Sales. Bulaville
Rd., Gatlipolio, Ohio.
1967 Chevy truck. Good lor
hauling. Call 614 -992 3236.
1979 ~ord 302 automatic,
new pamt , new camper top,
304-876· 4210 after 6:00
PM.
'73 F800 Ford truck. Edison
Mayas, 304· 675-185B.
Vans &amp;

79 Chevy convtrtion van,
76 Ford PU. Ce!l814·446·
2568.
78 Ford Bronco 4x4 V-B,
361 engine, extra sat 4
whhe spoke rims. AM-FM B
trock, PS, PB, U,OOO. Call
614-367-0201 busi·
nou 614 · 448-9743 .

ho...,_
______
.
74

2- 19B3 XR 100 Hondo
motorcycles. ex c. cond. Call
814-446-B247.
Honda 60 , good cond ,
$17&amp; .00. 304-87&amp;-3698 .
Boau and
Motors for Sale

John boat for solo . Call
614· 268· 8417.
Auto Parts
&amp; Acceuories

&amp;lc3 bdr . C8rpeted, natural gu.
'Ia mi. out&lt;rlcltyon Rt. 141,
1226 mo . Coli 614· 4462034 .
3 bdr., utility room. slngla
car gorege, !ergo kitchen.
liect~c range, U2&amp; momh,
•-'· &amp; dop. Coli 814-448·
1358.
8 room hou• country llvinu
In lown . HI mo. Call
304-67&amp; -51 04 or 304· 676·
5388.

56 Building Supplie s

1979 Mustang, 81 , 960.
Call 614-388 -9856.

Building Material•
Black. ·brick, 11wer plpea,
windows . lintels, etc .
Claude Win tara, Rio Granda ,
can 814 -245-6121 .

1980 Plymouth TC3 47,000
mllao, 4spd . 1982 Oodgo ,19B2 Toyotoototlonwegon , Furnished 4 rooons &amp; belh,
Omnl 2 dr .. 58.000 miles. PS. PB, oulo, oxc cond, . 7311 :•ar 3rd.- Avo., edulto
1 9B6 Plymouth Touriomo, $3,400 . 00 . 304· B98 - only, t711 dop., *12&amp; mo.
Coli 814·446-3870 or 1114'
2 .2. 6 spd .. 4,000 milos.
3422.
448· 1340.
Call 614-379 ·2726.

19B3 Ford Folrmont, 4 dr.
automatic . ac , pa, pb.
14,300. 304·675· 8429.

1

• Jefferoono
IH80Jinolda. the NFL
7:05 (I) Mary Tyler Moore
7 :30
New Newlywed
Game
(1J Plene Oon't Eat Da!•·
loa
(I) New Price Ia Right
Joopardv
([) Nightly Buolneso Re·

·a ())

Fetty Tree Trimming, ltUmp
removal. Call 304-676·
' 1331 .

m• m

RINGLES'S SERVICE. ex· .·
perienced carpenter, alectri- ""'·
cian, m11on. painter, roof·. :
ing (including hot tar ~,
opplicotlonl 304-676-20B8 •
or 675 · 736B.
_;

IJr
WhHI of Fortune
• (jJ Price Ia Right
•

B:OO • ()) ID The Colby Show

~

Aher Denise eams her driver's lieense, Cliff buys her a
23.-year-old reNe automobile .
(1J Wack101t Ship In the

vice, landscaping. 304·6762010 .
Rotary or cable tool drilling .
Most wells completed s1me
~ay . Pumptalllandservica .
304 -895-3802

=(B)
ABOUT HIM, UMPA.l SOME·
THING MUST'IIE HAPPENED
ID THEM OUT THERE l

.

N-hour

Ciil Greet

Gat your carpet in ship ahape
with Captlin Steimer, furni·
ture cle~ning-water damage
work, 304·876· 2296.

ter: A.Jon Copland Aaron
Copland joiols Zubin Mehta
and the New York Philhar·
monic for an 85th binhday
celebration featuring only
his composilions. (2 lws.}
• MOVIE: 'Walking Toll'
IHBOJ MOVIE: 'The Deep'
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Tollr To
Me' CCCI
8:05 C1J MOVIE: 'World War Ill'
Port 2 &lt;rl 2
B:30 D (II CZl Fomily Tioo While
Sleven lries 10 place lhe fa·
mily on a new budge!, Alex's 13-yoar·old malh tutor
develops a crush on Jennifer.
9 :00 D ()) ID Cheers When no
one answers Carla's personal ad, the guys in the bar
make up a ficticious
response--with unexpected
results.
(1J 700 Club
(]) Colega F..-1: South
Carolina State ot Grom·

Pip, never mind 4our ·

_______ .,.
Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Groucno imitation!

'

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Golllpoilo. Ohio
Phone 614·446·38BB or
614-446-4477
JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
lNG . Rl . 1, Box 366, Golli·
polis. Call 814 -387·0676.
Excavating

.

='CIJ=~~Simon .

.. .ED'S UFE5TYLE

(I) Wild AmeKca

IS 6UCH TAAT..
THAT...

Good · 1 Excovotlng, beH·
menta, footera . driveways, · '
oeplic tsnks. londseaping. ·
Call anytime 614 · 446· ·;;.
4637 , Jomesl. Dovloon. Jr: • •
owner.
· V'lli

Dorer Work land clearing, .:
londocaping, ate. Free olll· ,
mateo. CoH 614·448-B038
or 614-992·7119 anytime.
J.A.R . Construction Co.,
Rutlond, Oh . 814 -742 · '
2903. BaHmomo, Foolors,
Concrete work, Backhoe's,
Dozer &amp; Ditchor, Dump
trucks, • water·a••· •wer- • ~
elactricallinaa. ·

BARNEY
I'M HONGRV AS
A BEAR. MAW··
WHAT ARE WE
HAVIIII'

General Hauling

James Boys Water Service .
Also pools filled. Coli 614- •
256 -114.1 or 614· 448· · • ·
1176 or 814 -446-7911 . '::f!
Ken ' a Water Service. Weill •.
cisterna. pools filled .· Phone
61 4 -367-0623 or614 -367· ;
7741 . night or day .

force'

Waugh's Water Service. ·
Walls, cisterns, pool1. Fast. .....
reliable service . Call 614256- 1240 or 814 -256- ·'
1 130. Reasonable rates.

SNAKE!!

,•
,!
•
'

'

• Independent Newa

11 :00 D(lJ(I)CllDCII®a~

News

•

.,.•'
·•

•

PEA~UTS

TO 1/E, ~FAST IS
Tl-IE BEST. TIME~ DAY

-~
- - ....

:-

11- l't

~-~ ·-·

.

!?lEN WHEN VO\J LIVE
ALONE ON THE DES&amp;f

...
~·

... .

~

(1J MM from U.N.C.LE
([) Cepltol Joumel Hodding
Carter hoslo this weekly
news magarine whtch reports on Congroasionel ac·
tivities.
Ciil Mystery!: Oellth "' on Expert Witneu ICCJ Port
4 o;r1 8 Stella Mawson tells
Oalgio(sh lhat she knows
who the murderer Is. (80
min .}
• Benny Hill Show
11 :30 D ()) 1D Tonight lhw
([) N- Newlywwd o.m.
D Cll Night Heot O'Brien
and Giamboiio mult - Comn)Unieate with a mento!ly retarded leonogeHha only
witness to a war-atylo kii-

touch her han4 llld ooy 'Wbat
beautllulllncen you hPe! ·

!
••
•••
•

Limeatone, sand, gravel
hou1a coal. 1 ton It up:
614-367·7760.
'

(

[MAXI MOVIE : 'Toll In the
Saddle"
10:05 CIJ MOVIE : 'Gunamoke'
1 0 :30 (l) Jock Bonrr/ Show
(J]J Tony Brown's Joumel
Tony Brown discusses issues of special interest to
lhe block community.
.

LIS1EN."Theaec:r!t to a 1irl's
beart '' to !latter her about her
- t endear inc feature , •·•·.

'•

Haul limeatona, sand, gravel. dirt, bulk or bag fertilizer
and lime. EJ&amp;:celslor Salt
Works Inc. 63B E. Moin Sl.,
Pomoroy. 814 -992 -3B91 .

R &amp; M Furnhuro Monufecturlng. St . Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh. Coli 814· 2881470, call Eve. 1114-44 6 •
343B . Old &amp; new
Uphostored.

a m m Nluht

Court
When the Slate runs oul of
money, the Court staff does
not get paid, loading Harry
to make en unusual decision
concerning a boy's robbery
charge .
CIJ Prvfiln in Neture
IMAXJ Crazy About tho
Movies: Greet SerHn
Movies
1 0 :00 D ()) CZl HHI Street Bluoa
Renko and Hill invostigale a
heavy bum infestation while
Balker mus1 deal wilh lwin
brothers on a diamond rob·
bery case. (80 min.}
Clla (jji 20/20 ICC)
D Cll ® Knots Landing
ICC) Val and Bon plan their
wedding while Joshua's
momal problems loads to a
frightening blowup. (80
min.)
([) Wo'N Meot Again
Ciil Newswotch
• Odd Couple
(HBOj MOVIE: 'Oeedly
9 :3o

..

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 163 Sac, Ave .. Golllpollo .
614-446 -7833 or614-4 46
1833.
•

P8ffortMnceo

Uve ftom the Uncoln Cen-

Residential Windo"6 &amp;
Awning. 20 Pc-. off on
insuleted replacement win·
dow. vlnyl•nd ateel Mding .
406 Moin St. downtown Pt .
Pleaunt. 304-676-6252 .

Upholstery

Shadow ChMero

ICCJ Two unlikely pirtners
combine their talents to investigate the world Of unexplained .P.henomena. 12 hro .)
D Cll (JlB Mognum, P.l.
([)
MacNell-lehter

t 11-41t.!K SHE'S WRONG

Fred's Bldg. and Remodel -ing. b11ements, porches,
roofing, aiding, .-inting,
leveling trailers, utilfation
guoronteod, 304-773 9116 .

B7

WKRP !n Clnclnnoli

CIJ Sanford ond Son

7:35

--------··
Starks Tree and lawn Ser-

Cool delivered, .,.42 .00 per
ton. 304-526-2512 .

1

·

ii-IE BEIST WAY TO

!5iii.TT!il&lt;' YOU I&lt;' LOT
16TOPOTHI~ .
Now arra:ngethe circled letters lo
form the surprise answer, as sug-

gested by the atx&gt;ve cartoon.

Answerhere:
Yesterday's

A(

I I)[ XI XI X]

I JumbiOs:
DOWNY
Answer. Whal scandal

(Answers tomorrow)
OBLIGE

HAVOC C AND ID

has to be-BAD TO BE GOOD

Join Ill ~UIIIIMe LD'M'I FM CU.Inll rwalfwol Ill •lahl-word Super Jumblet; ...,

month. for fJw ...,..., _,. • ~ lo: Jumble LQVIIII hn Club, e10 ltllt
,......,.,, P.O. loa len, P•lmyn, N.J. ODJ.

.BIIDGE

James Jacoby

Newahour

• !lll Divorce Court

Motorcycles

16 h . 8010 bool, 60 HP,
Evinrude, Tanneuee trailer
whh lots of oxtrn, 11 ,960.
Caii814-388·B711 .

76

Flllher
(]) PGA Golf: Nluan Cup
World Champlonthlp of
Golf Second Round compe·
tilion from Maul, Hawoii. (2
hrs.}
Cll Entertainment Tonlght
John James talks about his
new character in the upcoming TV SOfies, "Dynasty II:
Tho Colbys" .
(!) D (I) WhHI &lt;rl Fortune
Cll SCTV Notwork
® Eyewltnest Newa
(jj)
MocNeli-Lehrer

BORN LOSER

RON'S Taleviolon Service.
House calls on RCA, Quazar,
GE. Specloling In Zenith.
Caii304-676-239B or 614 446 -2454.

85

76

8:35 CIJ C810I Burnett
7:00 • CD PM Magazine
(1J Cou.-,.hlp &lt;rl Eddie's

4 W.O.

1978 Ford Bustlobock
camper van, 46 ,000 miles.
good gas mileage, guaran·
tesd 30 deyo, 14000. Call
614-387-0491 .

t
t

I RECLEY
rJ J
I TORETT

• TIIXI

COLEMAN WATER WELL '
DRILLING
Pump sales. service. Regis·
tared in Ohio, All work
guarenteed. Call 304-273- •
2B11 . Ravenswood, W. Vo .

82

[) K I

(jj) Body Eleclric

D.and M. Conlroctoro. VInyl
siding, replacement windows. inoulol(ng, roofing,
new and remodeling, con·
erato. Co11304-773 -5131 .

83
73

(]) lporlaCenter
(I) a (jJ ABC Newa
D (I) &lt;I§ CBS Newo
Cll Doc:tor Who

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guo.
rantee. Loc1l reference• ~
furniohed. F - ostimoteo. '
Coli collecl '1-1114-237 •
04B8, day or night . Rogero·
Buamonl Woterprooflng.

J .ond L. lnotollotlon . Roof·
ing. vinyl siding, storm doors
and wlndowa. FrH eltl motes . Call 614·992·2772.

Ratum
. s'

8:05 (I) Andy Griffith
8:30 • ()) ID NBC News
(1J 01'111111 Acreo

•

~46 - 2222 .

Save .5 0 per cantil Fiaohing 71
Autos for Sale
arrow signs *269 11 Uyhtad. - - - - - - - - non-arrow 8249 . Unhghtod
8199. (Free lettersl) See TOP CASH paid for '80
locally. 1 (800}42 3-0163 . mo~el and newer used can.
(Aioo GIANT BLIMP u!olll
Smoth Buick-Pontiac, 191 1
Easlern Ave .. Gallipollo. Call
Dark blue vinyl recliner axe 614·446-2282 .
cond. 4 inch thick foam
mattrtls fits full size bed
never been used, 304-675· 1983 Dodge Colt 4 dr.,
34.000 miles, 4x2 trans.
1760.
.
Call 614· 448 -7414.

o.

8:oo • m m m • Cll • !Dl

S er v1~c s

Puppiea
'h blue From
heeler,exch. 1
Border Collie.
working otock. Col! 614· 71
3 adorable AKC Reg . Pekin·
gese puppies, 2 male, 1
female . Call 614 - 2689391 .

eyEN_
!NQ

'·

1976 , 20 ft Fleatwlng ,
01mper. full size awning, ·
U , BOO . OO. 304·B8.2 ' '
3180.

Briarpatch Kennels All breed grooll)(ng. Gordon
Setter female obedience
trained . Englloh Cocker Spa·
niels. 3BB-9790.

AKC Reg. Toy Poodles. Call
614-446 -66B9.

11/14(85

'

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Canary Kennel. CFA Hlmeloyon, Peralan
and SlameM kittens. AKC
Chow puppi01. Call 446 ·
3B44 ohor 7PM .

THURSDAY .

-========== "

------

19B6 Honda 250 CC Big
Red, 3 wheeler . used very
little , S 1 ,475. Call 6143BB-BB01 .
Nikko 7076 roceiver AM·
FM, 48 watta. l 2· Frazier
Spks, 26 watts, Super
Monte Carlo . 2 · AKAI SW·
13111 spkl, 3 way, 40 watta.
Thorns TO 146 turntable .
Channel Master 8 track
ploy-record. Coli 614-446·
4517.

•

Wanted: 1964 Dodge Dan :·
paru . Preferably hard top or
convertible . Will conoldar ,
olhars. Ca116'14-949· 2693.

J

15

Sentinel-

Television
y_iewing

A'uto Parts

&amp; Acceuorlea

MU~T

90 ft.x 300ft . lot in Racine
with 28 ft .x44 ft. basement

41

76

LAFF·A·DAY
aat.(LNI . 8125 . 614-742- building materia( . Golllpolio
Block Co., Pine St .. Oollipo·
3092.
lis, Ohio Call 814-446·
2783.
6:3
Antiques
Block, brlek, mortor .,d
masonry supplies. Mount1in
For .-Ia, a four tin antique State Block, Rt. 33, Now
pia safe. axe. cond .. $200 . Hoven, W. Vo. 304-882·
2222.
Coll614 ·446·3227.

Ohio

November 14, 1985

White bd.room suite. Inc. Kentucky Lump, Ohio lump,
dresser, chest of drewera, Ohio Stoker. Yard or deliv-.
d•ik, queen size matt . ery. cement biOckt and

Maplewood Lounge, 7 miles

35 Lots

Thursda

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

~-~'J;;l~merlca

®TMI

..

• (!II ABC Newa Nlghtllne '

• One SUp Botoold

.Uc

.,
\

Backward runs
the finesse

NORTH

+K 10 9 7

11·14·"

• 6~4
K73
+A 7 3

+

By James Jaeoby

EAST

WEST

An elementary rule states that you +B
should respond to partner's opening 'IKQJ102

+6~

YA 7
bid when you have six high-card tQBH
• 10 52
points. It's a good rule, but it has a dis· +KQJ
10 9 as 12
advantage . When you don't respond,
SOUTH
your opponents as well as 1~1r parttAQJ432
ner will know you don't bave as much
yg 8 3
as an ace and a queen. Watch how thla ,
t AJ9
knowledge belped today's declarer to ;
+6
play his contract.
·
Vulnerable: East-West
South jumped to two spades when ·
Dealer: West
West's opening heart bid was passed
around to him. He meant tbat bid to
North Eall
Wesl
S.olb
show opening strength •nd a six-card !Y
Pass
Pass
2+
suit, a reaSOIIable way to bid In the Pass
Paos
Pass
passout position. North raised 1o four,
Paos
11!10 OK.
West led the heart king. East over- .
Opening lead: • K
look with the ace and returned the
suit. So the defenders quickly took the
lirat three tricks. West then played the
club king. whicb declarer won with the
ace. Now a declarer just pilsblng cards
around to pasa the time would proba·
bly draw trump and afrer a wblle take
the diamond lineAe, hoping to lind the
queen with EasL But our declarer West covered with tb2 queen. Declarer .
knew better. East could not hold lbe won the king in dummy and led a dia· ·
diamond queen In addition to the heart mond back, putting in lhe nine when
ace or he would bave responded to the East played low. Remember this play.
.one-heart opening bid. Accordingly It's called a backward finesse. Please
South pulled trumps, ending in his don'l try it unless you're 90 percent
hand, and led the jack of diamoncb. surethalthequeenisintheWestband.

+

,.

L-----------

A.Au'"r'"tt"
~wv•
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
8 Indian
1 Show fear
language
6 Stockings
7 Yoko 10 Unforgotten 8 Medieval
I I Sluggish
slave
IS Caesar, e.g. 9 Gaelic
14 Scandi·
12 Duffe r's
navtan
· · need
I 5 Conclude I 7 Garlunkel
I 6 Suffered
I 9 American
from
clergyman
18 Ch11111e
20 Pernilssion
18 Jeopardy 21 Quourel
29 Rev.
2llt.eraW
22 Mem War
U Ireland
orable
foe
28 Mounlain
time
31 June
nymph
23 Fencing
beetle
29 Airport
dummy
33 Opposite
25 Wedding 34 Poorest
need
30 N.Y.C.
phrase
fleece
street
26 Traitor
35 Fish
31 Consecrate 27 Before
36 F.qualize
32 Lyric poem
34 Golf score
87Grampus

r:-....-...-....-....-

38 Wcighlcontrol
guide
39 Sicilian
city
40 "Bud"
Oscar
winner
42 Dutch cily
44 F'avori ng

38 Cozy room 6--+--l--l--+-41 Sloping

43 Think
411 Dutch city
46 Sports

setting
47Sunday
punch ( sl.)
48Count up

hr-+-+-+-+-

DOWN
1 CoQialner
2 "The Good

EW"

heroine
3 Feral·
4A Gabor
5 Verdon
Broadwoy
show
DAU.YCRYPI'OQUO'I'ES-Here's how loworli II :
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

One letter stancb for another . In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoalrophes, the length and formaUon of the words are all
hlnta. Each day the code letters are dlfferent.
CKYPTOQUOTE

11·14
FRU

BTDO

RSWV

ZRY

DRRX

KRQ

OWUEIJ C,

UTJDROE C

IR N

IJ IVI-'VWW C

L NQ

z nv

WD L WV Q
Y N L L E y: u
Yeate.-..,'• Cl')')ltDqaote: IT IS AS liARD FOR TilE
I GOOD TO SUSPECT EVIL AS IT IS FOR TilE BAD TO
SUSPECT GOOD. -CICERO
C P EV C . -

�Ohio
•

Inside:
By lhe Bend ......... Pages 6, 7
Claasllleds ....... Pages 8, 9. 10
Comlai-TV ............. Page 11
Deallls .................... Page 8
lfAIItorlal •••....• .••••• ,•• Page 2
Spo"" ................. Pages 3, 5

SAVE ON QUALITY MERCHANDISE FRIDAY, NOV. 15th A~D SATURDAY, NOV. 16th.
USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN FOR CHRISTMAS GIFT GIVING. .
LADIES'

PAJAMA
SALE
nybn, brushed ,

MEN'S QUILT LINED

I!NIRGY·IAVINQ 3CY I!LI!CTRIC
ICONOMY RANGE

i

Po~/cottoo

blendS,

trtot, flannel, brushed nybn and
thermal knn.
'
Sizes 32 to 4a and S, M, L '
leg. 114.00
Pajama ••••• Salt s11.19
lltg. $11.00
Pajama ••••• Salt S14.39
lft.IH.OO
Pajama •••• Salt $17.59
130.00

• Woad!Oilt 1114 t.li:lri!QI\t

8fown bi~QIIIII~

• Cleek Witn Ollt·I'O.f tinltr
• Full·widttl chrome 1t"'tvt
dr•••• hn~

• LIQMMI IMn IWlOOW
• 12 1tand1rd leat\lfts

Now only

$458

..... Sale
MEN'S IIG liN
IYW~r

''li11.'

'---~·-·--·--·-~..-~-·-·-..--JI.
•-

(}__ IT
SLIPPE-R.
uwpl , .. SPECIAL

NOW
RCA w 4iagooal n-1 00 Colar TV with
C~nnelock D!gital lemate Control
Bnlltlnt color Ptrform~nce f~turin1lht dt1irside
convtn!tnce of 1111011 control end mulli·blnd ca·
ble tunm1.
.

114.95
S16.95
2.95
S14.95

Work
Work
Work
Work

Pants .......... S11.95
Pants .......... 11"3.50
Shirts ......... 110.35
Shirts ......... l11.95

MISSES

MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS

Choose your lavor~e style
from our fine selection. Dressy
jeans shirts, oove~y styles
sweat shirt looks. Sizes S M L
XL
. '

SPORTSWEAR
Blouse$, sweaters, vests, pants

jeans and knij tops. Sizes 6 to 20.
lEG. $16.00 It 140.00

Sale $12 79
To $31 99

Knit Shi1s ...
Knit Shi1s ... $1
Knit Shi1s ... S1
Knit Shi1s ...

unu BOYS'

'
·' 1-

n,

I
I

LmLE

SHIRTS &amp;
KNIT TOPS
Polo shirts, flannel shirts

\

I

I;; ~;i:9~~~::

and knit tops, dress shirts
and sweatshirt kn ~s. Sizes 6
to 24 ms., 2 to 4. 4 to 7.
SJ Shirts ....... 15.59
19 Sh'lffl """'
.. 57.19
I 12 Shirts ..- .. 59.59
519 Shirts .. "S15.19

S11
S16

PANTS

TOPS

OUTFITS

Knit tops, blou~s. oxford shirts,
sweater knits and sweatshirt kn~ s.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2to 4, 4 to 6X, 1
to 14.
Tops ........ S6.39
Reg.
Reg. 110 Tops ..... S7,99
Reg. 112 Taps ..... 59.59
Reg. 114 Tops ... S11.19

One and two P.iece outlils
and corduroy brbs. Srzes NB
to 24 mos., 2 lo 7.

Save on jeans, cords and twill
slacks for girls. Beautiful fall colors.
Many w~h coordinating tops. ·
Sizes 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4, 4 to 6X, 7
to 14.
· s7 Pants .............. S5.59 .
112 Pants".......... 19.59
117 Pants .......... S13.59
S22 Pants"........ S17.59

$1 ••00

· .r

~~

SALE I

SAlE I

DRESSES

JUNIOR

MEN'S

SPORTSWEAR DRESS BELTS

Reg. 19.00
Reg. 114.00
Dresses ........... 111.99
Reg. 120.00
Dr.esses ........... 115.99
Reg. 121.00
Dresses ........... S22.39
Reg. 135.00
Dresses ........... 127.99

POSTMARK!
Visit our Santa Post Office and
I

LADIES'

Drlllll ............. 17.19

FROM SANTA ·~LAUS
SANTA CLAUS, INDIANA
THE PROOF IS IN THE

flU!

. Reg. 116.00

FALL HANDBAGS

Sportswear ....... 112.79
Reg. $19.00
Sportswear ....... 515.19
Reg. 122.00
Sportswear ....... 517.59
Reg. 125.00
Sportswear ....... s19.99

Specill twt-dly Slit prices on our new f1lt handba1s.
Nylons, vinyh, to1thtrs, denims 1nd twftdl in shoulder
11111 1nd clulcllslylts.

aG. •a.so ..,............................. sau s6.79

IIG. 111.50 .............................. 5111 19.19
. s12.79
BG. 16.00 ............................SAU
BG. 124.10 ............................SAil 119.19

'

hildr,enoi Merry

MISSY AND DYIA SIZE

OPEN ROCI

SLACKS
SALE
Many colors

SWEATSHIRTS

in twill slacks,

$26.99 HOODED

SWEATSHIRTS_

Good selection of solid colors.
Crew neck styles, raglan slee..es.
S (34·36), M (38-40), L (42·44)
ard XL (4.6)

Style as pictured with zipper front.
front harll warmer pockets, at·
!ached hood. Small, medium,
large, large plus 2X. Solid colors.

sn.oo to $12.00
BELTS ............... 59.19
' .1 2.50 to S14.00
BELTS " ............. 59.99

S14.50 to $15.50
BELTS ............. 511.99
116.00 to 117.00

BELTS~············ S13.19

Package of 20
Ol!orted Hallmark
Christmas cards.
Worth at lea it $1 0

per bag.

Slacks .... S11.99
Slocks .... S18.39

Makhing 19.95

Slacks .... S25.59

Sweat Pants ........ 17.88

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DEN~M ·JEANS

S1zes 29 ~o 42 watst Pre-waShed heavy ...o;,,ht.t
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S13''
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FREE 8110
PORTRAIT
PHOIOGIAPHEIS HOURS:
FIIDAY 11 A.M.-7 r:M.
.SAIUIDAY 10·A.M.·4:30 P.M.

GALLIPOLJS- TheestateOscar
Odd Mcintyre bought as ananniver·
sary present for hlswlfe, Maybell, in
1933ls now her gift to Gallipolis.
Mcjntyre, considered to be the
city' s most famous resident, was
one of America's first syoolcated
columnists. His column "New York
Day by Day" appeared In hundreds
of newspapers during the 1920s and ·
19:lls. .
Mcintyre died in 1938- before he
had a chance to live tn the restored
1800's manslononStateStreet. but It
served as his widow's home Cor
many years before her death last
AprU at the age of 101.
Maybelle Mcintyre bequeathed
the house- knpwn as Gatewood to the 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park District.
The deed was signed over to the park
district Wednesday by the wtll's
executor, according to a published
report.
Ohio Valley Bank's Chairman of

Richard F. Celeste.
The General Assembly adopted a
compromise "sovereign tmmun·
tty" bUI Thursday, ending !or the
lime being a three-year hassle over

House rejects seatbelt law

OF 20

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The Ohio Gmeral Assembly has adjoumed
lor the weekmd, stW awaltlngtherlghtoomblnatlonolvotesto macta
pair of controversial bills mandating the use of auto sea&amp;hells and
requiring mGCor vehicle exhaust system Inspections In the Cleveland ·
and Cincinnati areas.
The seathelt bUl, cleared earUer tiM year by the Senate, leU two
votes short of pa811age Thul'!lday In lhe House dellplle claims II would
"save thousands II. lives and serlonslnjUrleA."
I!Alp. EdwardJ. Orlett, D-Dayton,Mtthesll!lefora votenextweek
on the emlslllons bUI, defeated Waesday, As chief !IJIOIIIIOr, b.i Is
laced with l!eCUrlng a half-domt votes to a-re p81188ge. 'Ibm the
Senate must act on the plan.
.
'llie ml\lor accompllshment of the week was approval II. a joint
conference conuntttee report restoring Umfled soverelp lrnmtdl)l
lor local governments and school dlslrtclll !oroed to pa.v exorbllalll
premiums lor liability insunlnce or tmable to lei covera,e a&amp; aD.
'Die plan, which la~l'fll agreed Is 111ly aatoppp llleUIJ'e, was
senttoGov.RichardF.Cell!steforslgnalureona91-2volelatheHCIUlle
and a 2&amp;hole
·
-.In the
. Senate.

SPECIAL SALE
CANNON

BATH TOWELS.
Heavy weight, solid colors and white. Gen·
erous size.
·

$229 .
Matching Hand Towel ...................... 11.49
Marching Wash Cloth .......................... 99•

BERFELDS

the Board Morris Haskllis, who Is the Mclntyres' 25 aruuvesary, at
executor of Mrs. Mcintyre's estate, whlch Mr. Mcintyre was said to
reportedly said the Gatewood have given Gatewood as a present to
property Is appraised at $00,00l, hlswlte.
The home was purchased in 1933.
while the entire estate Is valued at
Its renovation was completed just
about $1.5 mUUon.
No plans have yet been made lor . prior to Mr. Mclntyre'sdeathatage
the Gatewood mansion, ParkDirec· 58.
The horne's furnishings wm be
tor J&lt;isette Baker has been quoted as
saying. Besld~ the home Itself, the sold at auction November 22 by
district was also bequeathed many Garth's Stmtford Auction Center tn
o! Mcintyre's papers, pictures, Delaware and the proceeds wm be
part of Mrs. Mcintyre's bequest to
paintings and book collectlon.
The district must raise funds to the University of Mtssourt School r:t
Journalism for scholarships and an
maintain the property.
endowed faculty chair tn her
The county park district formed 10 years ago - was named husband's name.
Roy Fisher, a fonner dean of the
after Mcintyre because he was the
University of Missouri School of
area's most famous resident
The Mclntyres were part or New Journalism who helped Mrs. Mcln·
York society and friends of celebrt· tyre wtth arrangements for her
ties and politicians such as boxer bequest to the colll'ge, sald the
Jack Dempsey imd Mayor Jimmy money would be used as an
Walker. Fonner President Herbert endm\:ment for a faculty position
Hoover reenacted the role of best and for post·graduate fellowships
man at a mock wedding to celebrate lor joumaUsls. .

General Assembly adopts
limited ~unity legislation
,,

A lAG

'
l't'JIIdent. Mr. Mc1Dtyre'1 ll)'lllllcMed coUnll "New
Yosil Day by ~" appi!U'tlll Is! lundredll of
newapapen In the 111011 111111 18IIB.

MARlQUITA, Colombia
Rescue workers mounted a search
today lor survivors of flooding and
mudsUdes triggered by the eruption
of a snow-shrouded volcano In
western Colombia. Officials said
4,000 bodies were found but 25,001
people were feared dead.
Officials prepared etght U.S.
Army helicopters ·based In the
Panama Canal Zone to lift supplies
and medical teams Into Colombia
today. AVenezuelan alr force plane
loaded wilh relief supplies landed In
Bogota late Thursday.
Twelve Colombian helicopters
shuttled suppUes Into the strtcken
region !rom a base In Bogota as
o!flclals pleaded lor food, clothing,
blankets, lanterns and blood.
Alberto Vasquez Restrepo, gover·
nor of the Colombian state of
Anlloqula, said efforts today would
center on caring lor the Injured.
"Those who are dead are dead ,"
he satd. "We have to takecareof the
Injured."
Officials !eared more fiooding and
mudslides today. In Marlqulta, 18
miles north of Afl11ero, officials
evacuated resklents because of
possible flooding from the 'swollen
Guall River.
The 17,716-foot volcano Nevada
del Rulz, about 100 mlles west of
Bogota, erupted at about 11 p.m.
Wednesday. Heal from the blast
melted Ice and SI)OW that covered
the volcano, sending a torrent of

water and mud rOAring ihrough dead," said Gustave Esguerra:
governor of the stat~ o! Cuoolna~
nearby towns.
Hardest hit was Armero, a city or marca. "But we hope that manY. o!
45,00l, 93 miles west r:i Bogota In the the mtsstng people saved ttre"m:
nation's coffee- growing region. · selves by climbing nearby
Only rooftops, the steeple of a mountains,"
church and a cemetery bcated on
Many people In the region refused
high ground were vtstble above the to leave the area despite warning
' mud that covered the town.
Frtday that an eruption wa..
U.N. DlsasterRI'IIefOrganizatlon . Imminent.
.
officials said tn a statement that
"The Colombians were attempt·
"4,00l oodles have already been lng to become prepared," u.s.
recovered and the eventual deat!l Geological Survey offlcal Derrell
toll may reach 15,000 In the town of Herd said tn Washington. " As best
Armero."
as I can tell the eruption occurl'd
"God, what haveyoudonetous?" before their plans and activities
satdone resldentoiArmerowhoOed could be fully Implemented."
to Marlqulta and took refuge In a
Ofllcats said the meltlngsrowand
treetop.
"Armero has disappeared and Ice caused ltttledamageclosetothe·:
there is only mud," Osberto volcano, but gained Ioree as If
Hernandez, a resident of the town moved down the Chtnchlna, Langu."
known as the "White Ctty" for lis nllla, Gualt, CloroandMollnorivers;'
cotton and rice production, told a sweeping away trees and causing:
Bogota radio station.
widespread damage.
··
The powerful eruption was the
"A wave of trees, people and:
deadllestslnceNewGulnea'sMounl furniture hit my building and:
Lamlngton exploded In 1951, kUling knocked It down," said Lozanobetween 3,00J and 5,001 people.
Pacheco. "It carried me to the ctty:
It was the Western Hemisphere's . llmtts, where I saw the top r:i a tree:.
deadliest eruption this century. 'flle and I climbed. I was there all night:
worst before was tn 1968, when and all I could hearwereshoutsand·
Mount Arena! in Costa Rica erupted cries."
·
and kllted&amp;l. The explostveeruptlon
Mud from theoverOowtng Langu-:
r:i Mount St. Helens In Washington nUlaR!verll'veledAnnero.'l'heRed·
left 63 dead.
Cross said the towns o! Chtnchtna,:
President Belisarlo Betancur. Honda and Llbano also we~·
who new over the region Thursday, flooded.
called Itan "unimaginable tragedy"
The volcano's Iakt majoreruptkm
and placed himself In command of was in 1595, according to Hen!. The
retle! operations.
volcano emitted smoke and ash tn
"There could be :ll.OOO to 25,(00 lJJl:i, l8!Wl and 1916.

Gallia's OOM Park District
receives "Gatewood' as gift

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Leglsla·
lion restoring limited Immunity
from negligence lawSU its to local
governments and school dlstrtcts Is
on Its way to I he desk of Gov.
...

$22''

$locks ...... S7.99

.

BuKton and Leegin fine quality
dress belts, reversibles westerns and basic belts in 'all the
popular widths. All genuine
leather.
.

CHRISTMAS
CARD
GRAB BAG

MEN'S WRANGLER
&amp; SPRINGF OOT

$9.95

polyester slacks and knit
slacks. Missy Sizes: 6 to 20
Extra Sizes: 3 to 38

Reg. S10
RI!J. Sl5
Reg. 523
RI!J. 132

$750

Pants, jackets and skirts by
Catnip and Carousel. Jr.
sizes 3 to 13 and S, M, L.

BEQUEA'nl - Maybelle Mcintyre, who died !.a
AprB a&amp; Use age of 101. has bequea&amp;hed her
Gatewood, to lhe 0.0. Mdntyre Park Dlstrtcl, whlclj
was n~ed In honor of the GaUipolls' most famous

Helme.

UmE GillS'

,, 61, 7 It 14.

~A!••

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S11 Outfits .... S8.79
S14 Outfits .. S11.19
517 Outfits .. S13.59

SWEATSHIRTS

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•
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GilLS'

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SPORT COATS

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Vol.36, No.149
Copyrighted 1986

DRESS SLACKS

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'
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Ef6.,ftlit
I'OIIEIOl,
OMIO

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-

CHARGE CA!O

,.

the matter.
Alanned by reports that local
governments and school districts
can no longer afford UabiUty
Insurance or cannot obtain cover·
age, the House adopted the joint
conference committee settlement
91·2and the Senate ratltled tt 2!H;.
The proposal had been stalem·
ated since last June, when lobbyist~
for lawyers, local governments and
Insurance companies became In·
volved In a tangle over provisions.
Even though the bill passed and is
expected tobeslgnedlntolaw. ttwas
adyertlsed only as a stopgap
measure at best.
'1 just have to feel that Insurance
rates wUl have to come down some
as a result r:i this bill,' •said Sen. M.
Ben Gaeth, R-Deflance.
Some lawmakers said that II Ihe
ne.w llmlted liability plan does not
rEduce .insurance rates, they will
propose a joint Wtderwrittng associ·
atlon wxler which the state would
provide pooled insUral1ce coverage
for local govermnent and school
districts.

MUD COVERED SURVIVOR RE'!CUED - A
soldier and ClvD Defense volunteer carry a mud
covered survivor from the town of Annero thai wo.s

Celeste says care

has improved for
mentally retarded
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
Richard F. Cetestesayshlsadmlntstmtton has m a d e "great strides"
during lhe last seven weeks In
provkllng quality care to the
mentally retarded and developmentally disabled, and wUllntroduce a
legislative package of further refonns next week.
"There's stUl a great delil to be
done and goals to be met.

destroyed by a mudslde following the erupllon o1 the ::
El Rulz volcano In Central Columbia. More than ::·
25,000 people DUlY have 1081 their lives in the +e·~r. ·•
(UPI).

.

Syracuse awarded grant
The VUiage of Syracuse has been awarded a S22, 194 lfllllt for
hoMing access Improvements Into I he Ohio River a&amp; the viiJaae park.
Stale Representative Jolynn Bcl!ter said the grant, admlnlnsWred
by.lheOhloDepartmentoiNa&amp;urallle!iourcesDivtslonofWatercralt,
wUI assist the city In oonsirucllon II. a boa&amp; launch ramp Into the river
and provide adacent boat docks. Boster wosiled 1o supportSyracwie'
grant application In order to promote watercraft recreation on Use
Ohio River.
' Grant funds were derived from lhe Waterways Safety Fund w!Kh
Is supported solely from boat reglslrallon lee~~ and a portion of the
itate gasolnesates tax. The monies aredlstrtlufed fort he Dlvhlon o1
Watercraft's enfon:emenl, capital tmprovemmls and educational
progl'flllls.

.
•

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