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                  <text>Pomeroy~Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant,

E-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

w. va.

Bank at Crown City elose.s ·
after three year-operation

...

LADIES' HEAVY WINTER

MEN'S

SLEEPWEAR

VAN HEUSEN ®

Long aowns, robes and loun1ers.
Brushed tricol. brushed nylon , flannel.
sweatshirt knit, woven knits, flee'ce and
quilted.

ST. 11. 160 "Next t.o Holzer's"

446-7504

PHONE

SELF

ltripe~,
toM~.

~~~

•leev•. no wrlnkll colll'l.

116.95

Van Heusen
Shirts ...... .. ............ 113.50
'19.00 Van Heusen
Shirts .................... '15.00
121.00 Van Heusen
Shirts .................... '16.70
122.50 Van Heusen
Shirts .................... 117.90

Sale Pried

$799 r.oS39'19

SAVE .50°/o

.

WALLPAPER

BLOUSES

DRAPERIES

llissy and eitra silt
stock
blouses. Clisual ., dressy
s~les In an array of colors and
pnnts.

Quality Oecorama drapes and bed·
spreads. Plenty of patterns and
colors. Any width. any length, 4
inch dOuble heading, permanent
pleats, lined or unlined. Brh1g in your
measurements. Seve Now.

Reg . '8
Blouoes .. ............. '6.39
Rag. '14
Blouses ......... ..... '11.19
Reg. '1B
Blouses ............. '14. 39
Reg. '21
Blouses ............. '16.79

SAVE 50°/o

2 Litre

MONDAY:

SATURDA~:

TUESDAY: Roll Paper Tawels

2 Litre

Colee

SUNDAY: Gallon Fruit Drink
THURSDAY: 12

WEDNESDAY: 2 Litre RC
Cheese

or.

Reg. or Diet

PEPSI
PEPSI FREE
MT. DEW

RC, RC-100

DIET RITE COLA
2 UTRE

an.

L.

Reg .
Reg.
Reg.

REG.

S9.00

CANS

GAL

$399

WINDSHIELD WASH
GAL

$129

S37.00

Sale$ 19 ·, 0 · $
foil gowno,

WORK CLOTHES

Insulated cOYeflllt, lined 1nd unMn ld bll ov•allt, dungtttel,
quilt-lin«&lt; or blanket linld colts ,,.d jacluna, ptua matching
snap-on hood a. A~gular 11nd till sb:ea, plus big sizes.

SAVE NOW

1 195.00 ...........

REG.
SALE '148.00
1
REG. 229.00 ........... SALE '171'.00
REG. 1239.00 ........... SALE 1179.00

Sweaters ....
Sweaters ....
Sweaters ....
Sweaters ....

i

2 to4, 41o &amp;x, 71o 14
REG. '4.50 to '20.00

Sale Prictd
$359 TO S1599

LITTLE BOYS'

LUJrurious VELVET swivel rockers by 8tyle-craft.
Sp~eially Priced

WOMEN'S

SHIRT
SALE

DRESSES

Nov•mber Sale price• of
knit lhlrtl, polo thlrtt, o"·
fard ahirtt, awe1t1hina.
topa, flann~ thins.
Rag . '7 ....... Sola •&amp;.59

Reg. '9 ....... Sole '7.19
Reg. '12 .... . Sole •9.59
Reg . '19 ... Sole '16 .19

No~embar

Sale

robeo, pajamu,

and nlteshlrto. Bruohed po~:ir.!:J·. aweatahin knits and

Mi•lf •ntl HDH Sirt fd drtll., All new sha..
CIIMI du.lp for thl ••s011. Mtssr lirn lit" 6
tt 20; Half 1i111 12111 to 241h,

Sale Priced

S1875 ToSSQ25

Sele!

GIRLS'

BOYS' DENIM JEANS

Lee and Wrangler boys jeans
pre-shrunk, straight lag style.
Regular, slims and husky
sizes B to 16, student sizes
26 to 30 waist.
'21 .95 Boys' Jeans .. .. '17.49
'18 .95 Boys' Jeans .... '14.99
'16 .95 Boys' Jeans .... '13.39
'14.95 Boys' Jeans .... '11.79

'11 .89
'12 .69
'13 .49
'14 .29

TOPS SALE

Blouaas. knij tops and sweatent.
Beautiful fall colors. Dn~av and
cuuat looks. Sizes: 6 to 24 mos.
, 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to 14.
Reg. '8.00 Tops ...... '6.39
Reg. •10 .00 Tops .. .. '7.99
Rag . '13 .00 Tops .. '10.39
Reg. '15.00 Tops .. '11.99

BOYS'

Save on jeans, cords and twill
slacks for girls. Beautiful fall
colors. Many with coordinating
tops.
Sizes 6 to 24 mos .. 2 to 4, 4 to 6x
7 to 14.
-7 Pants ....... s5.59
'12 Pants ..... •9 .'69
'17 Pants ... '13.69
•22 Pants .... •17 .59

S169
.

KNIT SHIRTS

KNITTING

Save on our excellent group
of boys knits in sizes 8 to
18. Solids, stripes in jeans
Big Selection of solid and va·
lo~ks. dressy styles, fleece
~~!e:an~fJ~;~o:sk~:~ •. 3'h
shsrts and novelties.
8oys '9 .95 Knits ...... '7.79
8oys''14 .95Knits .... •11.79
Boys' '16.95 Knits .... '13.49
t:=:--:==---::::::;r-~-.-"..,.:-~-:-·_-- r-·.-.--~--1-.!8o~ys~..;.
· •1. 8.95 Knils .... •14.99

ft
;
G
•

•

YARN

$

Nm111•er Sale

139
1

MIN'S BUXTON

BillfOLDS

COLOR tlon
Our new Chrlttmao setaein tri·folds, bi-foldaand
TELEVISIONS
low, low prices onev,

November Sale
FALL DRESSES JUNIOR SLACKS
SAil -

unu GIRLS

S1ve on our new dre11ea

~~~.:.~~· •• ~.f.~ .~:~

dre 11es, dres•v dressel.
thin folds .
AU genuine co•duroys.
leather in popular shades.
R
ag . ' 9 Drasses ... '7.19
ery RCA color TV in '13 to '14 ..... Sole '10.80 Reg. 812 o -.... '9.59

Quality Lord 1
stock junior

.::..~~ ~:

/ cotton blends,
corduroys, and poly/ ar:rylc
blends.

Sl 79

Buy Any ICA Color
TV . and lectin A
5 Year Extencltd

?

HERR'S

POTATO CHIPS
BUY

1 AT

REGULAR PRICE
'

GET 1

FREE

WESTfRN

Picturt lube Wtir·
r11nty .....FREE

FREE

PARKING

...p

otyle

placket

a

Reg. 125.00 lo 5117.00

w~h

on· each

14'1.t to 20 in olaevo••ntjthoo[
32 to 36.
·-

$)866

ELBERFELD$ am

-··-

Eih•lolh

""'_..,.

eiUIII U.

·•

to the meetings today and tomorrow
as part of our effort lo prepare
thoroughly and carefully for the
meetings in mid-November hetween President Reagan and General Secretary Gorbachev.

The United States ha s prJtested to
the Scviet Union and Afghanlslan
for rlnglng the U.S. EmbassY with
troops and cutting off electricity.
Shultz, accompanied by National
Security Adviser Robeti McFar·
lane. l~ the first secretary of stale to
visit Moscow slnCP Cy111s Vanc't' In
October 1978.
Shultz met for45minutesSunday
with Finnish President Mauno
Koivisto. State Department spokeswoman Rozanne Ridgway sald
Shultz wanted to draw on Koivisto's
experience ln dealing with Scvk&gt;t
leaders to help him prepare for
Reagan's meeting with Gorbachev
In Geneva, Switzerland. Nov.l9and
Nov. :ll.
Neutral Finland maintains
friendly relations with the Scvlet
Union .
A senior U.S. official told reporters Shultz and his advisers were
"looking fo~ seeds to nurture" as
they studied a Soviet proposal for a
50 percent cut in strategic arms.

MOSCOW !UP!) -Secretary of
State George Shultz, arrtving ln
Moscow to lay the groundwork for
the Geneva · superpower summit,
said today he hoped hls meetings
"Foreign Minister Shevardnadze
·.with Scvlet leader Mikhail Gorbaand
I in our meetings have had
chev and the Soviet foreign minister
discu
ssions that have been candid
would be "candid" and
and
productive
·and I suspect that
"productive."
Shultz was to meet later today our meetings here In Moscow will he
with Scvlet Foreign Minister that way as well," he sa id .
The meetings ln Moscow are not
Eduard Shevardnadze. On Tues·
expected
to produce any breakday, he Is to meet with Gorbachev
nadze
at
lise
Moscow
Airport
earllertliday.Shultzls
ln
throughs.
But Shultz hoped to
SHULTlARRIVES IN MOSCOW -U.S.Secretary
and again with Shevardnadze. ~
MO!ICOw
lor
a
business
at
the
lnvltallon
olthe
Soviet
of Stale Georr;e Shultz (left) Is shown here helng
"I look forward particularly to advance the summit process by
greeted by Soviet Forelp Mln1ster Eduard Shevardgovernment. (UPI~)·~=------::--- meeting with General Secretary clearing up details, enabling the two
Gorbachev lomorrow and I will leaders to give "polltlcallmpulse"
Polls open early
welcome this visit and hope that it to the Issue of arms coutrol.
U.S. officials said an incident in
Polls throughout MelgsCoonty
will be productive," Shultz told
wUl open at 6:30 a.m. tomoJTOw
reporters at Moscow's ,Vnukovo Kabul. Al.ghanlstan. in which a
morning and wUI close at 7: 00
airport after arriving on a flight Scvlet saldler apparently seeking to
return to the Soviet Union took
p.m. lor the oonvenlenre of
from Helslnki, Finland.
Referring to Shevardnadze. refuge in the U.S. EmbassY. was not
voCers casting ballots In the Nov. ·
5 election.
··
Shultz said, "We have had a number expected to play a major role in
'Ihe Meigs County Board of
of meetings now and I look forward Shultz's meetings.
Elect~ns reporiod.this morning
· that there wUl he no wet and dry
lsllue voted upon In Bedfonl
JACKSON, Ohio (UP!) - U lor $140,000. More than :Jl workers
Township as reported earlier.
voters ln Jackson County reject a had been laid ott, although some
'Ihe board earlier Invalidated the
sales tax Increase Tuesday, Auditor continued working without pay or
petition to place thai matter
Bennelt right after the special
Chester Wells and Everetl
"Such a vacancy should be filled
Don Clark says the community wlll with pay provided by private
before voters.
Schultz, Olive Township tru stees, by the ooat:tJ oftnJstees In thecaseof meet lng held att he meet lng place to
donors.
have to make cuts right away.
'Jbe board also reports that
said Monday morning I hat they will a vacancy in lheofflce ofclerk,orby fill the vacancy.
·Slnre then, all luli·tlnne emThe cuts, another olllclal says,
Howard L. Writesel Ill a candl·
This was done, I hey stat e, some13
fliP an appeal In the decision handed the remaining members of the
ployees
have
returned
to
their
jobs,
would not be as drastic as they w~
date lor a Sotton Township
down byJudgeCharles Knight ln the ooard of township trustees if the days after the vacancy occurred.
a few months ago when the )oll!e and the jall hasreopenedal.terbelng
Trustee post rather than Harold
Meigs Cou nty Common Pleas Court ' 'acancy occurs on the ooard of Both lnJStees agreed on the appoint.
office and even the jail were shut closed :rr days. Most officials agree
L. Wrltesel as reported earlier by
ment and Donald Bennctl was
declaring their 198l appoint menI of township tru stees. The board has
the best solution ts the pair of sales
down by the oodget shortcomings.
the hoard.
a trustee to fill an unexpired lerm the authortly to appoint a .person of sworn in within the30day perloQ, the
Clark and Deputy Auditor Rod tax Increases.
trustees report .
was invalid.
the proper quallnca tions to serve as
Winters warn, however, that fresh
The Court rev ll'Wed Donald
The two trustees stated that they tnJsteeon such board, or as clerk for
One 1 percent sales tax would be
round of layoffs will be In store for at
Bennelt 's oa th of office which was
feel they followed the guide lines the unexpired term."
least some county offices lt the tax effective through Dec. 31 and tne
obtained !rom the Township Manual
The trustees stated lhat ·they signed July 25, 1981 and was signed
other would becomeelfectlveJan.1.
goes down.
which Is prepared by ther Slate ca lled a special meetlng forrcvenue within the 30 day period. Wells and
Commissioner Marvin Keller,
Jackson county Is not alone.
Schultz state.
Meigs County residents will Auditor for the h1lstees to follow. It sharing and appointed Donald
Eleven other counties have sales tax who has blocked bnpositlon of a welcome a Big Wheel dlscounl sta tes, they repot1:
temporary sales tax Increase, has department store to the ar·ea on
issuci'on the ballot.
The County Comrnlsslon~rs Asso- argued cutbacks In services and Saturday, Nov. 23.
ciation of Ohio has said counties are payroll are prclerable to the
According to Store Manager Tim
lacing a fln~clal crisis because the proposed sales tax Increases.
Custer, the new store at 41300Laurel
But Keller said there's no opposi- Cliff Road, wUI offer many modern
state orders them to carry out
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I )- He's
Rhodes Is one of lhe lasl of the
Ask Rhodeswha l people want and
programs, such as welfare, but does tion to the tax.
the
proud
a
multi-millionaire,
features Including carpeted fashion
old-style polit icians whose formula
hr will take out his billfold, slam It
"Right now, the most Important departments, color-coordinated de- grandfather of eight, and has a for winning is: "Find ou t what onto the table ln front of him and
not support them. In addition, the
federal government has reduced thing ls that the people havetherlght cor and wide shopping aisles.
sta tue of himself on the Ohio people want , and give i11o them."
say: "You put money In there,
to say 'yes'or 'no' on it," he said.
revenue sharing to counties.
Computerized registers for fast StatehouSl' lawn, a testamenl to hls
He ca res 'uuie for lntellecl ual people wil l vole for you. You take
Keller said that It voters reject the checkout services, liberal exchange record 16 years as governor.
Jackson County was the first to
issues or Republican philosophy,
money out and they' ll vote against
sales
taxes, they may llnd them- and refund policies and a handy
receive widespread publicity about
In short, Ja mes A. Rhodes, a and has built a 50-year polllical you ."
severe oodget problems,and county selves facing · increased property layaway plan can also beutillzedfor Republican who served longer than career, born In the Great DepresThis time, as always, Rhodes wUI
officials · elsewhere admit they taxes. ·
customers' convenience. Custer any governor in the United States sion, on the maxim lhat "eveljl campaign aga inst high taxes and
watched the Jackson crisis as
noted that customers may pay for slnce 1789, has it made.
social ill in this countty slems from scandal in the government, real or
commissioners and other oftl.ce"Up to three weeks ago, all I heard their purchases by cash, personal
But next Saturday the 7G-year old the lack of a job."
Imagined, a pair of red flags to
holders wrestlEd with the problem.
was negallve," Sherltl Edgar Hay- check, or by VIsa or Master Card Rhodes. In excellent health. will
vo ters.
They were curtous what would rum said of public comment on the credit cards.
officially an nounce his candidacy
happen wlth . Jackson County's sales tax request, "but now It seems
Blg Wh!'E'I consists of over 80 for a fifth four-year term.
GOQdyear workers ratify new contract
request lor a $250,000 state emer- like It changed a lot. I think they departments filled with a large
He Is strainin g a t the leash toousl
Members of Local 644 Unit«! facility.
gency loan, but the State Controlling rea !!zed this ls thel fairest tax that variety of merchandise Including Democratic Gov. Richard F. CeThe agreement provides for wage
Board rejected the request Sept. 23. could be Imposed."
family .fashion , domestics, shoes. leste, you ng enough to be hls son, Rubber Workers al the Poinf
The county's lnnmedlate crisis
Hayburn has warned hem~y need health and beauty aids. records, whom he defeated narrowly ln 1978. Pleasant Goodyear · Tlre and lncreasPS totaling $1.45 per hour
ended Oct. 15 when commissioners a 2-rnlll property tax levy to support sporting goods, toys, automollves
Why rlsk It all when his place ln " Rubber Co. planI , Apple Grove, over the th ree years - 45 cents per
sold a former county home and site his depru1ment and keep the jail and more.
history Is secure? For the same ratified a new three-year contract hour this year and 50 cents per hour
ln both 19ffi and 19~. a Goodyear
to the Jackson City School District open.
Shoppers will discover the latest reason Rhodes gave 12 years ago over the weekend.
Thevotewas 213-421n fa vor of the spokesman sa id. Al so provided are
ln housewares, small appliances when an asroclate politely sugand electronics as well as famou s gested he play golf, clip his coupons agreement wh!Qh ryns to Nov. 5, ·Increases in the night·Shlft oonus
brand name Items. all alfordably and enjoy retirement : "Whattaya 1988. A total of 356 employees are and safety shDf' allowance and some
covered at the local chemical changes In work rub.
want metodo? Die?''
prtced, Custer reports.

JackSon cutbacks
planned if voters
reject tax request

Weekend ultJ prk:es on girls'

NOYEMIEI SAII-CAIHAm IIOWN DUCI

SALE
SWIVEL ROCKERS

59

2°/o MILK.
_GALLON

PRE-MIX

TO

Reg . •21 Stactcs .. .'16.88
lock. Choose from '16 to '17 ..... Sale '12.80 Reg. '18 o - ... '14.39 Reg . ' 23 Stactcs ... '18.48
... '19.19 Reg. '26 Stactcs ... '19.88
portables, table mo- '17"'to '18"' .... Sile '14.40 RRegeg. 4 o 34 0
10
1
dels
__
..._'2·2·-···-4·~R:::~~·;;2B:;s~:::'~:.:::.'~;2~!_8~l
soles.or big screen con· 11 .•_2,6~~ta~':2::7·::":;_S~··~Ie~'.~20~;·~BO~t·...:~·~-···:..,-,
-··
.. .
·
MIN'S lEG. 122.95
BLUE DENIM
S Year Extended
Picture
100'%
Tube Warranty

VALLEY BELL

$ 49
ANTI-FREEZE

99(

'12 Vests .... . '9.59
'15 Vests ... '11.99
'21 Vests ... '16.79

FREE

COKE, TAB
SPRITE
SIX PACK

Pepsi

By JIM ANDERSON

Weekend savings an 'our entire
stock of junior size sweater
vasts. Manv colors and styles
to choose from. Jr. sizes S. M,

Gl RLS' PANTS

FRIDAY: Heiner's Bread

Geneva superpowers

SWEATER
VESTS

Professional pantsuits, dresses, tops, pants,
skirts and lab coats.
Si1es 4 to 20 and 14 112 to 211 112 •

'14.95
'15.95
'16 .95
'17.95

o

lay groundwork for

WOMEN'S UNIFORM SALE

craw necks.

The First 50 Customers Each Day With $1 Purchase
Will Receive the following item FREE

20°/o

SALE

'Sen

26 Cantt

.

'

miniatures, plaids, sporting
other

CUSTOM .MADE

1 Section, 12 Pages

A Multimedia Inc, NawiPaper

Shultz in Moscow to

SALE
SAVE

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. November 4. 1~85

Vol.36, No.140

Copyrlghtod
1986
.

WOMEN'S

Sizes 8 to 20 . Sllpover styles in
solid colora and patterns. Van d

SOMETHING SPECIAL ON SUNDAY

. '6.00 Scarf ..... '4.20

Quality Wall Coverings in prints,

BOYS' SWEATERS

•GASOLINE •DIESEL •KEROSENE
AT COMPETITIVE PRICES

at y

. '4.00 Scarf ..... '2.80

. •s.oo Scarf ..... •3.50

8011d colore. tone on
lingle ne«Jie tailoring,

Rne selection in nU siz11 14~ 10
18. S'-e ltng1ho 32 to 36 .

SAVE NOW ON
WARM SlEEPWEARI

•

SAVE
30°/o
. *3.00 Scarf ..... •2.10

DRESS SHIRTS

Sizes Small thru 4XL

November

SER~E

WOMEN'S
SCARFS
and prints in cotton, wool or

Bunon down Oxford, tra:fitiollll

bltze orenQe vats and j~kett .

AR ET

By the Bend ............. Page 7
10
Coolies-TV ............. Page ll
Death~ .......... .......... Page 6
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports .................
Pages 3, 4
j
.
Classllleds •••••.• Pages 8, 9,

SALE ENDS SATURDAY NOV. 9

SALE PRICES .

BROWN'S

Inside:

c

November Sale Days

Sale also on our m.. ·, hundng clcnh~. vettl, coeu. overalls.

61snd Opening .Special!

•

1985 ~

ELBERFELDS

By JAMES SANDS
that there had been no attempt to the Crown City Bank that lt do Its
~lal Correspondent
defraud anyone, but that the bank own llqulda tlon, po•tlng a oond that
CROWN CITY- In 1910 Stanley had just not generatl,'d the ooslness would guarantee all depositors
Collins rooved to Crown City with that had been projectEd at Its would receive all their money. Thls
the Idea of opening a bank, and opening ln 1910.
Idea was n!Ked bythestateasltsent
before the year was out the Crown
THE GAU.IPOLIS TRIBUNE
ln lts own liquidators. One might
City Bank was ln
reported ln early 1914:
conclude, after seeing the fl.nal bUI
ol&gt;era tion with
"The last statement given rut by turned ln by the state llquldators,
the failed concern, bearing date rl that they regarded themselves
Stanley Collins as
cashier and L.D.
September 4, 1913, placed the
highly, given the rather exorbltant
Carter as assist·
deposits at $13,~7 ror check amount charged.
ant cashier.
account, $9,191 ln demaJid certlfl·
The fl.nal bank report showed the
· cates and $6,:Dl ln tlme deposits, on
reason the state closed the bank
There were ~
shares of bank
which they paid four perrent
back in October of 1913. The Crown
stock Issued with CoiUns owning 4:! Interest. •
City Bank had $45,1XXl on deposit
sha'res. The second largest stock·
" In addition to these there' W€1'1'
and only $1,100 ln cash on hand. The
holder was J .A. Liggett d. Waynes· $5,000, of oorrowed money and state law then required €'/ery bank
boro, Mlsslsslppl, who owned 25 $15,464 of public money, making a
to have a sum of. cash on hand
shares. Only 49 shares were total of $49,820 d. llabU!ty lor
amounting to 15 percent d. the
actually owned ·· by Crown City creditors.• the !tern c:t pu bile money deposits.
residents other than Collins; a; being secured by personal oond. Sc
DEPOSfl'S IN the bank did
shares were owned by a group d 10 thatthe total of unsecured claims at receive their money back but
businessmen who lived around that time was $34,li6. To m:et the stockholders bst aoout one:hall to
Parkersburg, W.Va.
clalms, there ls aboul$25,000 d. live
three·fourths of their money.
rr WAS OOUJNS' mtlon that assets, mtes and other credits."
Among the Crown City residents,
Crown City needed a bank, what
Among the bank's assets were the biggest bser (besides Collins)
with the expans~n of lhe toba&lt;x:o the buDding put up by them ln 1910 was Van Thomlley who ilst aoout
bt~ around the town. Toba&lt;x:o
and today used by the village of $.nl. The total loss for Crown City
farming had become Important 1o Crown City and thE! safe which· . people was only aoout $2,000 total,
the area, and Crown City In tills found Its way to another hank. The
which was not too bad in comparlperlod had at leas&amp; 1\W toba&lt;x:o rumor was that the safe had once
son to what Gallipolis people lost ln
warehouses, me of wtach was been used ln a Huntington bank and 1912 with the failure of the Farmers
operated by the giant American was robbed by Jesse James' gang. and Merchants Bank. Galll(lolls
Tob8coo Company.
It SEems highly unlikely, however,
losses ln that bank failure were 10
However, In the period rll909 to that Jesse James ever got ·this far
times $2,000 at least.
1915 the tobacco Industry was, 1n east. It was probably a gang that
H you wish, you may write to
some blt d turmoll with the imitated the James' gang.
James Sands, 20 North Buj:keye,
organization of co-operative burley .~ rr WAS THE original request of Crooksville, Ohio cl3'731.
associations and with the break·up
of the American Tobacco
Company.
What happened was that many d.
the tobacco people left Crown Qty
and moved to Huntlngton. Also In
1909 Gallipolis opened Its tl.rst-ever
tobacco warehouse, and thijs. the
competltlon was too s~ng ror
Crown City's tobacco market and It
began to decline. With lt went the
Crown City Bank.
ON OCTOBER 24, 1913, Ohlo
state bank examlners closed· the
Cq&gt;wn City Bank and the oclglnal
estlnnates were that depositors
would he paid In full rut the
stockholders would be paid back at
about 70 percent.
•
CROWN crrv BANK buDding Is nowJISed by the vWaceofCrown
The directors of the bank at Its
City. II was erected In 1910 by the stockholders li the bunk, and nearly
closing were Jack Lusher, Van
three-fourths ~the stock was held by folk from outside CroWD City who
Thornlley, Bob Moore, Roe Sheets,
lnvefited here thlnldng that the toWD would become an bnportant
James Fulks, W. J. Murray, S. W.
tobacco shlPplng port. On Oct. 24, 1913, the State ol Ohio closed the
WUllams and Stanley Collins. The
Crown City bank because li the scarcity of cash It had on hand.
examination by the state showed

•

•

Trustees will appeal decision

New store to
open Nov. 23

Rhodes ready for another.campaign

.

Point Pleasant woman dies
from wreek·injuries Sunday
A s:;.year-old Point Pleasant

woman died Sunday night at St.
Mary's Hospital, Hun(lngton, from
multiple Injuries resulting from a
two-vehicle accident earlier in' the
day on Rt. 2 near Henderson.
Garnette E. Nevllle, 2410Madlson
Ave., died at 11:05 p.m. a St. Mary's
spokeswoman sald this morning.
Seven other person~ Involved In
the wreck, which occurred around
2:50 p.m., were also Injured, the
'sheriff's department repi&gt;rts, Patticia E. Neville, 25, 2410MadlsonAve.,
the driver of a Volkwagon that the
older woman was a passenger In, ls
listed ln satisfactory condltlon for a
broken arm att Pleasant .Valley
Hospital, a nursing supervisor said
this morning. A passenger ln the
' · car, Joyce Wr:lght, 16, Columbus,
· Ohio, was treated and released for
contusions. John J . Wright, 19,
Paden City, the driver of a Ford
Escort In the'accident, was treated
and released lfor a laceration and

sprain. Other passengers In hls car
who were reated and release(! were
Brian Feldmeier, 18, neck Injury,
Jarilce Utt, 18, bruises, Karm ·
Harlen, 41, neck Injury andMicheile
Fargert, 18, bruises, all of Paden
City. The Injured were transported
by Point Pleasant Emergency
Medical Services to PVH .
The Volkswagon was northoound
on Rt . 2, a sherllfs department
report disclosed, and the Escort
heading south. Wrlght ilstcontrol of
the car on the wet highway and the
vehicle slid sideways and coUkled
with the Volkswagon.
The Volkswagon was totaled and
the Escort sustained approxlmately
$1,500 In damage.
The Point Pleasant Volunteer
Fire Department was on standby at
the scene providing general assistance, FlreChjel.Jlnn Wood reported.
Funeral arrangements lor the .
deceased will be announced later by
the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home.

GAINS YARDAGE - Southern's f'ete Roush lowers his head ud
struafes lor yardage as two unldenllfled Eastern players tmve In for
the tackle Satunlay night. 'Ole Tomadoes won lhelr second SVAC

championship, defeating the Eagles 18-6 at Southern. Converpng on the
pip.Y lor Eastern are Mark Grlllln (23), Trent Upton (52), Steve Homer
(~2) and Ryan Bearloi (20) .

POMEROY

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Commenta

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monda~N~ber4,1986

•

Making things worse·____w_.~l_lia_m_'F._.B_u_ck_ley_J_r.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
~

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

rs:~~
m~
~v

r"'"r'--1.__--r-, ~=· ~

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
I." AT WIIITEIIEAD

Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

,

If 1 were P. W. Botha, which spoken without apparent Inhibition,
thank God I am not, I would hire the reaching an apogee of rehetorlcal
South African secret IXJliceto put up recklessness on Monday morning
hugh hidden purses around the when be spoke before the United
world !or tbe purpose or Inviting Nations, Informing that body that
Bishop Tutu to speak against the president of the United States,
apatheid. There was a golden as also the leaders 0! Britain and
moment, a couple of months back, West Germany, were "racists."
U ever:Yone woo opposes ecowhen the blsbop remonstrated
against black . violence at the , nomic sanctions again$! South
expense of other blacks in South Africa Is a racist,ilhen Alan P.aton is
Africa, threatening, if such fratri· a racist. And if. the autoor m"Cry,
cide continued, to remove himself the Beloved Cwntry" is a racist,
and his family ID the United"States then we sboulcl'all seek to be racist,
to live. But ever since then he has and conscript another word to

describe racial lnvldiouS!less. What
is the matter with Bis)lop Tutu?
His line of argUment is embar·
rasslngly simpleminded: , "Ger·
talnly the support of this racist
policy. (South Africa's) is racist, "
he says.
What is wrong with that
generality?
1) To maintain diplomatic rela·
!Ions with a country and to trade
with that country is not necessarily
to endorse the domestic policies of
!Mt country. with .whom does the
United States trade? With almost

UTr E RS Of O PI NION are wekoniE' . They should be less than 300 words
16ng. Alllrtu?rs art' subj('CI to Pdltlng and mu st be Signed with name , address and
tC'lt&gt;phonf' numbN . No unsigned IE'tters wl!l tK&gt; publis hed . Letters should bf:&gt; In
g-ood taste, addressi ng lssut'S , not pC' rson allti~ .

contribution

But of courseTutu'siXJint, though
morally arresting, is historically
groundless. Six million (white)
Jews were killed by Hitler In a
supreme act of pinnacle genocide;
and yet the war the West finally
fought against Hitler was not
animated to save the Jews. The
death sentences imposed by Stalin
on white kulaks came to 10 million.

NRA caSh &amp; votes___Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;~D_ale_Va_n_A_tt_a_
WASffiNGTON - Seated at a
desk just below the House Speaker's
imposing rostrum, a "journal
clerk" ha sheenpresldlngforthe last
couple a! weeks over a piece of
legislative legerdemain titled
simply, "Petition No.4." From time
to time, a memher quietly slips up
and signs the petition, and the clerk
meeks off the name on a secret tally
••,·
t
sbe,et.
f
Under House rules, no one may
linger over the petition, or copy
down the name r:l. the signatories.
The clerk's office wilt divulge
neither the names nor the number of
members who have signed.
What is this document that
requ ires such tight security? Petl·
tlon No. 4 is a discharge petition
prepared by the National Rifle
Associ a lion·s friends In the House. If
,it hits its target of 218 rremhers'
signatures, Petitio n No. 4 will blast
an NRA·back!.'d bill rut of the
Judiciary Committee directly to t he
llluse !ioor for a vote.
The legislation would weaken the
1968 Gun Control Act, and the
discharge petition would prevent a

~sons

Grenada."

···.

J'oday -in history
: Today is Monday, Nov. 4, the :llSth day o! 1~ with 'SI to follow.
·. The moon is approaching its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
•
1bose born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
British King William Jil (Will tam of Orange) In ~00. humorist WIU Rogers
f11l879, television news anchor Walter Cronkite In 1916 (age 00), actors Art
Carney 1n 1918 (age 67) and Martin Balsam In 1919 (age 00) , and actress
Loretta Swltt In 1937 (age 48) .
On this date In history:
.
In 1952, Republican Dwight D. E isenhower was elected president, ending
20 years o! Democratic administrations. He defeated Adlai Stl'\lenson.
In 1956, Russian forces rolled Into J;ludapest, crushing the
anti-communist revolt In Hungary.
.
· In 197'3, Moslem militants seized the U.S. Embaksy in Tehran, Iran,
t!tklng some 70 people hostage- 63 of them Americans.

!uU hearing by the committee. The House members who signed or said
bill could he sneaked through the they would sign the petition In the
House as quickly and quietly as the first two days In lay on the journal
purchase o! a Saturday Night clerk's desk.
Federal Election Commission
Special.
..
In July, the r1fle association 's records disclose that the petition
friends In the Senate pulled a signers have received a total ot
different but equally effective $275,002 In direct or indirect dona·
parliamentary procedure to get the tions !rom the rifle association's
bill to a floor vote without Judiciary political lund during the past 30
months. Here's the breakdown:
Committee hearings.
- Of the 12 signers who received
The bUI, sponsored by Sen. James
contributions
In the first six rmnths
McClure, R·ldaho, and Rep. Harold
Volkmer, D-Mo., has been con· of 1~. tbe top armunt of $4,\liO
demned by the Fraternal Order ct apiece went to Reps. Tommy
Police, the Nati naiSherif!sAssocla· Robinson, ]).Ark., Beau · Boulter,
lion, the Police Foundation, the R-Texas; Larry Craig, R-Idaho;
International Association o! Chiefs Bill Schuette. R·Mich., and Paul
of Police. and the National Organ!· Kanjorski, D-Pa.
Rep. Tom DeLay, R·Texas,
mtion o! Black Law Enforcement
received $3,(00; Rep. John Grot·
Executives.
Arrayed against the law enforce· berg, R-Ill., $2,000; Reps. John
ment community Is the National Dlngell, D·Mich .. and Larry Comb·
Rifle Association, its huge nation· est, R-Texas, $2,(00 each, and Reps.
wide membership and its Political Volkmer, Alan Mollohan, D·W.Va .,
and Charles Wilson,]).Texas, $1,(00
Victory Fund .
Our reporters Tony Capaccio and each.
The Victory Fund had already
Jenny Cunningham have pierced
the veil of secrecy shrouding the shelled out a total of $.ll,ffi7 during
NRA·backed discharge petition. the l!m-84 ca mpalgn pertod to
They have identified 31 of the first !B Craig, Dlngell, Grotberg, Mollohan ,

to be

On Ckt. 24 I debated Georgia's
feisty young congressman New!
Gingrich at George Washington
University on "The Lessons r:l.

He HaD §o M\K.H To
Live FoR : FbVeRTV,
Di'iJCRiMiNaTia-l,
CRiMe, aLCoHQ.i~M ...

2) There are men ctunimpeacha·
ble ra~ial toleration (I have cited
Alan Paton) who cppose the
Imposition of sanctions. Are we to
call Chief Buthelezi of the Zulus a
racist because he opposes
sanctions?
But Bishop Tutu, he nowrevools,
has been harboring suspicions for a
ve.Y long while. "I'm supposed now
as a Nobel laureate to speak
responsibly and aJil that sort of
thing, and I tried to, but I just think
we're seeing closet racism coming
into the open ... it is highly unlikely
(that Mr. Reagan) would have the
sa me. Indifference if the.casualtles
had been white." Bishop Tutu's
referenct: here is to 700 people killed
during tile violence of the last year
In South Africa. Tu~ forgets that
only a few weeks ago he was
bemoaning the violenm being
inflicted on blacks by blacks, on
Indians by blacks, on blacks by
coloreds.

Meaningful
In the Ohio General Assembly. freshmen are mainly seen and not heard.
Only after they get a couple of sessions under their hell can they ex pect to
start having an impact.
But two first-year senators demonstrated last week that they are
capable o! doing their homework and making a meaningfu l contribution In
the legislative process.
Sens. Mi~ha el While. D· Cleveland, and Eugene J. Watts. R-Columbus,
both worked hard to change a bill on domestic violence, specifically to
include a provision to discourage unwarranted sexual attacks by a
husband upon a wife.
.
Marriage is a hallowed institut ion. entered voluntarily by willing
partners, and not easily invaded by the law. Forced sex is an imposition
leading to serious assaults, perhaps more prevalent In homes !han we
know.
In between. there's a fine lineseparatingthe private affairs of consenting
adults and the duty of society 10 protect women from violence. White,
Walls and the rest of the Senate Judiciary Committee walked that line In
amending the House-passed domestic violence bill.
Whlle had his own bill, which was going nowhere, to allow a wile to file
rape charges against her husband. When he began a !ew weeks ago trying
to incol]JOrate his proposal into the domestic violence bill o! Rep. JoAnn
Davidson, R Reynoldsburg, he was given little chance o! success.
Through effective persuasion, Whlle convinced the Republican·
dominated committee to go for at least a modified version of his plan.
The rest was up to Watts, who was not at all convinced women should he
afforded the right to file charges against their spouses.
But after some study, this political science professor drafted a
compromise amendment permitting women to !ile the charge against
"violent , forcible'· rape and not in cases where there is misunderstanding
or just passive resistance. .White accepted the amendment as a partial solution.
The battle Is !ar from over, as the Senate and House both have to agree to
the striking new concept. Maybe there will be more compromise.
But the initial e!lort was a clear case of outstanding work by a pair r1.
lltst-year lawmakers whO demonstrated they will not he on the back bench
lor long.
: Meanwhile, the state legislative connrnitt€e investigating the savings
aild loan debacle of last spring is gett ingdown to its last precious witnesses.
·The spectacle will he capped Nov. 26 with the anticipated appearance by
Marvin L. Warner. erstwhile owner o! the defunct Home State Savings
Ba nk.
:For weeks. a pa rade a! state regu lators ancl Home State of!iclals has
sl)unted the blame !rom one to thP other about why Home State wasn't
made to get r-id o! risky investments in ESM Government Securttles, Inc.,
Fort Lauderdale. Fla.
:Last week. David J. Schiebel. the last president of Home State, pushed
the responsibility further up the line to his superiors. Burton M. Bongard
and Warner.
.Now if Warner can pass everything off onto Bongard, the great escape
wjll be complete. Bongard. now a New York consultant , refuses to appear
and the committee has no subpoena power to reach him.
With a slick performance by Warner. it 's possible that no one wlll
shoulder the blame !or the savings and loan mess.

every country (there are a few
exceptions, histortcal anomalies
like Cuba, North Korea, Vietnam).
U Bishop Tutu's iron· generalilty
held up, then it could as easily he
said about President Reagan that
because be deals with Iron Curtain
countries he Is pro-communist.

Gingrich and his · sup!XJrlers
believe that the Reagan administra·
lion's Invasion of Grenada, on Ckt.
25, 1983, represenls a positive
tu mlng point In American tJreign
policy and is a model !or the future
on how the 'United States soould
react to the communist challenge.
I take the position now, on the
second anniversary of the l'IIEIII, as
In did two years ago, !hat the U.S.
invasion was an unnecessary and
unjustified jingoistic fraud and a
violation o! U.S. law and lnterna ·
tiona! law. The Grenada exercise
strained relations with, our allies
around the world, Including President Reagan's friend British Prime
Minister Margaret Thatdler.
The Invasion was sold to the
American public by r:l.tlclallles and
distortions and represented a low
point in U.S. policy in recent years.
The press was excluded from the
Invasion for two days while the
administration brainwashed the
America n public with a deceitful
account of tre reasons lor the
Invasion - all of which quickly
proved to be groundless.
But many Americans were so
hungry for an American "victory"
that they swallowed the mtion that
the Invasion was designed to rescue
endangered American medical stu·
dents on the Island and trevent the
communists from completing an
airport runway !hat threatened
American security.
As we now know, there was no
threat whatsoever to the American
students, and the runway, designed
by a respected British rompany,
was being bunt to assist Grenada's

Volkmer, and Wilson.
- Among the discharge-petition
signers woo benefited most from the
rifle association's largess~ during
the 1983·84 period were Reps.J . Alex
McMUl.an, R-N .c., Sl5,819; Jim
Lightfoo~ R-Iowa, $28,145; Dan
Schaefer, R·Colo., $:D,!l!8; David
Moru;on, R-Utah, $19,340: Rober!
Smith, R·N.H., S17.~~andllarbara
Vucanovich, R·Nev .. $11,!!;7.
Almost as generously treated
were Reps. John Kaslch, R-Ohio,
$6,339; Ron Marlenee, R·Mont.,
$8,019; Bob Stump, R·Ariz., $7,507;
Jack Fields, R-Texas, $6,524, and
Dan Burton, R-Ind., ,;,140.
Signers getting less tban $6,000
from the rifle association during
1983-84 Included Reps. Tom Foley,
D-Wash., $5,924; Arlan Stangeland,
R·Minn., $5,!&amp;1; BUI Emeijfon,
R-Mo., $5,257, and Thomas Daschie,
D-S.D., $3,250.
Footnote: Handgun Control Inc.,
a public-Interest group, has asked
legislators not to sign the discharge
petition. So far , ll!O members have
given their pledge.

le~ed _________G_eo~~_eM_~_:_
~_er_n

little tourist industry.
Lost to most Americans, appar·
entry, was theoverwhelmingvoteat
the United Nations which can·
demned the invasion as "a !lagrant
violation of International law." The
United States was deserted on that
vote by every memher of the
Security CruncU, all of our European allies and nearly all of the
states In our own hemisphere.
· Tl•eReaganteamtrtedhardtoput
a cloak of legality oo the invasion by
claiming it had been requested by
the Organization r:l. Eastern Carib·
bean States. but the United States is
not a memher o! that organization
and the treaty which guides the
organization legalizes its requests
for help only if the ra:juest is
unanimous. In this Instance, oolysix
of the eight memher states re·
quested U.S. intetventlon. What's
more, The New York Times
subsequently revealed that the
request was drafted by the Reagan
administration and pressed onto one
or more of our tiny EAst Caribbean
clients.
Grenada, an obscure little Island
of 111,(00 Inhabitants - about the
size of Sioux Falls In Soulh Dakota,
my home state- was a threat to no
one. 1t had been ballyh:loed by the
Reagan administration Into a
mighty Russian-Cuban bastkm of
terrorism alld violence that threa·
tened the free world.
Partly with tongue In cheek, I
wouW offer the following oOOerlra·
tion to those wbo are searching lor
"The Lessons r:l. Grenada" :
Uyou want to successfully Invade
a country, pick one that Is small,
poor, ilefenseless and nearby, one
whose Marxist head of state has just
heen assassinated by another band
of Marxists.
To Insure good public relations,

try the following: I) Keep the press
out so that you can plant your own
version of events; 2) Launch the
attack just after you've suffered a
stunning blow elsewhere, such as
the loss o! 241 Marines unwisely
deployed at the Beirut airport; 3)
Give everybody wbo participatesfrom the pencil pushers to the r1fle
toters- a medal!orheroism; and4)
Have the commander call a press
conference aft er the deed Is done to

announce "We really blew them
away this time."
This final pronouncement, by the
senior Naval officer directing the
Invasion, prompted former Secre·
tary o! Defense Clark Clifford to
obsetve: "Thlsiscomparabletothe
Washington Redsklns reating the
Little Sisters of the. Poor Ill to 0 and
then having Joe Thetsmann announce, 'Well, boys we really blew
them away this time.' "

Monday, November 4, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentiniii-Page- 3

Browns, Be~gals, ·Steelers and Oilers tied for ·1st and.last
Tile American Football Confer. ence Central is tarrying tlle good
news, bad news joke a little too !ar.
· Cleveland, Pitlsburgh, Cincinnati
and Houston all awoke this morning
in first place in their division.
Unfortunately, they all also faced a
new day in last place.
With the Steelers beating the
Browns Sunday while 1be Ollersand

Bengals registered victories, all
four AFC ~entral members' had
their records move to 4·5. The
four-way tie w!ll be history next
Sunday after Cleveland plays at
Cincinnati.
The.divislon was almost won by a
team with sub-.500 record last
season. The Bengals, who lost their
first five games in 1984, won their

final four to finish 8-8. They would
have captured the Central if
Pittsburgh had lost to the Raiders In
Week 16.
This season, the Steelers had
struggled to try to retain their
divison crown. However, over tlle
years, there has always been one
cure for ,Pittsburgh: a home game
with the Browns.
Gary Anderson connected on a
29-yard field goal with nine seconds
left Sunday, lifting the Steelers to a
10.9 victory over the Browns.
Cleveland ·has never won in Three
Rivers Stadium since It was opened
In 1970, including a 23-20 loss last
year when Anderson cracked the
winning field goal with !ive seconds
left.
"I was jusi thinking of last year.
Bainbridge Paint Valley by just .34 We were moving the ball downfield
o! a point .
just like last . year. going for the
Final Division V, Region 19 score," Anderson said. "I tried to
!lgures found defending Class A think back to better days and
state champion Newark Catholic concentrated. I never felt better
first with 103.50 points. Frankfort after a kick. I've beenstrugglingthis
Adena placed second with 50.00. year. I just felt like the burden was
Ross Southeastern was tllird wlth45. lifted !! my shoulders."
0
followed by Bainbridge Paint Valley
Trailing_ Buffalo 10-6 at halftime,
with 44. The Highlanders were fifth Cincinnati put the burden on the
with 43.00 points.
·
Warren Local, a current member r-------------1
of the Tri-Valley Conference but a
future member o! the Southeastern
Ohio League (next year) replaced
Logan In the number eight slot in the
Class AAA, Division II, Region 7
standings. The 9-1 Warriors had 76
points.
Minford won the Oass AA,
Division IV, Reglon15titiewlth77.50
points. Caldwell was Sl'eond with 76.
Crooksville was third with 70.49,
followed by Amanda Clearcreek
with 68. Wheelersburg finished fifth
with 65.33.

•

shouWers o! Larry Kinnebrew.
Kinnebrew rushed for 128 yards to
lead the Bengals balil· control a !tack
that outgained the Bills :;myards to
89 on the ground and controlled the

GAHS to face IHS,
Meigs finishes 7th,
SW just misse8 berth
It will be Gallipolis vs, Ironton at

Ironton at 7p.rtl. Saturday in the first
round of the 1985 Ohio High School
Athletic Association's 15th annual
Class AA post-season playoffs.
This was determined Sunday
afternoon after the final computer
ratings were released in Columbus.
Southwestern just missed a berth
in the Class A post-season playoffs
as Bainbridge Paint Valley edged
the Highlanders by .34 of a point.
According to !Ina! o!llctal.flgures,
Ironton, 8-2, won the Dlvlsio.n 10,
Region 11 titlewith102.73polnts. IllS
had been fifth last week before its
14-12 victory over Gallipolis Friday
night.
,
In the other Region 11 tilt
Saturday, Sheridan will host Philo at
7p.m.
Winners of the Gallipolis-Ironton
and Philo-Sheridan tilts will collide
in the regional finals on Nov.15, with
the site to be determined later.
Thornville-Sheridan finished se·
cond with 99.16 points. The Gener·
als, H. and !irs! last week, will play
league rival Philo, also 9·1. Philo
!inished fourth with 89.16 points.
GAHS, 8-2, second a week ago,
dropped one ·notch to third an&lt;)
finished with 93.05computer points.
Dresden Tri-Valley, fourth last
week, was eliminated from !be
playoffs. TVHS finished fifth with
84.50.
Meigs Seven~h
Coshocton was six th with 82,
followed by TVC member Meigs,
with 74.88.
Southwestern was In the top !our
most of the season. but lost out to

r-----~------L.-----~-.....,---'-i

ball for 40 minutes and 37 seconds
compared to 19: 23 in a 23-17 victory
at Orchard Park, N.Y.
"We did what we had to do to win."

said Boomer Esiason. who threw for
ttwo touchdowns. "We just gave the
ball to 'Brute' (Kinnebrew) and let
our big old linemen do the rest."

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Loc h ~a l plus dlladbolt il1 0111! P•onJts t• Otadboll
SIICUI IIy No nHO W dr~l I a.. dtlall htlle

~~~49

DINING ROOM ONLY
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken
gravy. cote slaw, hot roll. butter &amp; coffee.
Sorry. no substitutes except beverage·with
a ~ditional price.

$3.25

SPECIAL PRICE /GIG ., ••

KING BUILDERS
SUPPLY INC.
405 N. 2nd, Middleport, OH.

..

.

ON THE

POMEROY INITIATIVE PETITION

Help Continue The

Berry's World

Improvement In Your Community
•

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no crossing

'

Paid for by Committee for a Better Pomeroy, C. E. Blakeslee, Treas.
'

1635 LINCOLN HEIGHTS, POMEROY, OHIO

�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

NFL resul18
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lndlanllpoll~ 011 NI'W. En!Vand , 1 p.m.
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Union.

11~.'11~

LARRY RUPE

7. Grm1ll0f1 ·madison.
!fl.ro.

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LOOKING FOR HOLE - Southern's Pete Roosh
to he looking for a place to run as
Eastern defenders read to the play. Roush led
Southern to an 1~ vlclory over l!le Eagles, handing
(47) appears

NATDN.U. IWJKEI'ILU.L ASSOC.
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\ ·all(•y. 44.00: S. Pllrllt SGuthweWm.
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BOB BARTON

Mcromb, 62.'W): 2. Sc-nf'ca F..ast .
bl }£1: J. Fn&gt;-mont St . JOM'ph. lll.lD: 'i .
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12100: 6. M('lfltcr. 117.00: !l C'k'V(IIand
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I

"'IT'!·

PLEASE VOTE
FOR

DIM

4 2 .9i7 -

MIW,..,.

4

Cbl.
AUnt
Ind.

3 1100
2
1

2 .lii7 -

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5 0 l.IDJ &lt;I

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4 .200
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!'horn.
Boflron 118,

1!,

1
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SMurtl-.r'• Reat&amp;lla
W as hlnR~on

73

llE'Irolt a!. Indiana 117
Houstnn Ill . San Antonio~
AIIA111i1 114.

~hiladl-Jpl'lla

113

Dalla.• U9. SiiCI'ammtc 11.1

The Daily Sentinel

Mlt.·au!R&gt; tJS. NI"N J(lfS(')' 1JJ

L.A. CliPPl'TS 100, Ntw York 95
Ponland IJ\ Utah J(IJ
Srattlf ll8. ChiCIRQ llll
LA . LakPrs Ul), Goldtn Statl."ll6

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Sual~~t~'• .......

Published ev('ry afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Sl., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-

MIM·11ulft lXI. Clevt&gt;land 110
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No 11omrs scbedUINt
1\IM~k,'a GanWa.\hlngton at Nt"W" Jl'ney, nlaht
San Anlonb at Mltwau~ . ~RI'It
Pun land at Houston, nll!l'll
AUant~t at om...rr. 11~1
ColetTI Sta ir at Ulah. nl,a:ht
Clt'\·f'iand al L.A . l.akm , niRht
Nrw Vork at Sl&gt;altll", nl111'1 t

lishing Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
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Ohio college

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. In(.

IOWA CITY, Iowa (UP!) -Aloud
partisan crowd was the 12th man on
Ohio ,State's defensive unit and
maybe the best athlete in Ohio
Stadium on a dark rainy afternoon
that saw No. 1lowa fall22-13 to the
No. 7Buckeyes, lowaCoachHayden
Fry said.
Fry blamed crowd noise, or more
accurately, the officials' inability to
control it lor much of his team's
frustration in Iowa's first loss of the
year.
He ~aid Big Ten officials wrongly
interpret the crowd noise rule and
refuse to penalize the hornet earn for
the din of its fans . That left Iowa
quarterback Chuck Long operating
without his best tool- audibles, and
Fry said he often saw half of his
offensive line jump off the snap
whlle the other half stood around
straining lo hear the count.
"I'm not blaming Ohio Stale or
their fans and I'm not using this as a
crutch but they just got to change
this Idiot rule," Fry said during a
Sunday teleronlerence. "Crowd

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

Otilo Stah• 22.

())lo

Whether it was the wet ball. the
crowd or OhioState'sdefense, Long
had a miserable day against the
Buckeyes, throWing for only 169
yards and lour interceptions, all of
which prompted a stern lecture on
the sidelines from Fry.
But Sunday the coach defended
the Helsman Trophy candidate.

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

t;:======================:;OAP·SE Chapter 17
ENDORSES

LARRY RUPE &amp;
ROBERT.BARTON
Paid for by OAPSE Chapter 17

FUR Tin; n•;sT INTt!R•: ST OF 1'HI': STI!nEN1'~ OF

SOUTHERN LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
"OUR CHILDREN ARE OUR FUTURE"

I~ a 1~

Uni\'(ITsJl}· :Ll, Kf'nl Sf :J3
Mkh!litM 18. Toledo IJ

W~tt'rn

9J0-6&amp;j atno.ld
Candidate Fat

'

Southern High Valedictotian . Racine Vol. Fireman
Racine Emergency Squad Member
lifetime District Resident· Southern H.S. Graduate
Meigs Co. School Teacher· Graduate of Rio
Grande

Meigs Local School Board
l'ald ForRy Candldotf'- 57493 Uorner IIIII Ud. - Pom1•roy, 0 .
Phone 911-82115

ELECT

SINGLE COl'\'
PRICE

BARBARA A. HANNUM

Dally ... .. ............ ......... ... ..... 25 Cents
Subscribers nol desiring to pay the carrier may remit In advance dlr~ct to

The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
montn.
No subscriptions by !llall permUted In
towns where hom£' carrier service ls
available.
Mall

SCHOOLS

FOI

~

Green 24. N !lllnol! 14
Miami 1!1. Cmtral MIChigan 1-1

One Monlh .......... ............. :......... $4.80

the
Purdue
couldn't
even
hear
signals called
In the
huddle
durlng
its game at Minnesota's
metrodome.
"We didn't become No. 1 without
utilizing our audible system," Fry
said.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

Scott D. Wolfe

Bowlin~:

One Year .. ........ ....... .... .. ......... S57.20

Big Ten. This is just going to happen
around the country unless something is done."
The Iowa coach said the Saturday
contest was "without a doubt " the
loudest game he's been associated
with In a 22· year head coaching
career. Butlowa'sproblernsarenot
unique. Fry said he understood

VOTE

Sl!iunl-.y't ReiiUib

SUBSCRIPTION RATES

ooi.se has become a big Ioree in the

IUP:JO~ UlUAL

Ohio Collf&gt;Ke Flllldt.U ~

BJ Carrier or Motor Ro•te
One Wt&gt;ek ....... ........... .. .. .. ........... Sl.lO

Pd. for

Fry raps crowd noise

grid scores

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to Tile Dally Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
PomE'rOy, Ohio 45700.

lhe Tornadoes only their second SVAC champlonshlp.
Moving In for the tackle lor Eastern are Ron Maxson
(64), Steve
(82) and Trent Upton (52).

MEIGS LOCAL
SCHOOL BOARD
Meigs Local OAPSE
Chapter 17

VOTE

PRESENT CLERK OF OLIVE TOWNSHIP

Charles D. (Red)

YOUR SUPPORT WILL HELP ME KEEP
MY POSITION

CARR

Sobo&lt;rlpllons

lnilde OhJo

13 Weeks ....... ... ..... .'... ........ .. .... . $14.56
:ffi We&lt;ks ......... .. ...... .. .............. . $29.12
s2 Weeks ................. .. ........ u .. ... ~. Zf
0UI81de Ohio

20 YEARS EXPERIENCE
Paid for by the candidate, Stale Rt. 248, Long Bottom.

ORANGE
TWP. TRUSTEE
Paid for by candidate, Charles D. Carr, Rt. 2, Coolvjiie, Oh.

13 Weeks' ................ ..... ... ... ....... $15.6()
26 Weeks ....... .. .......... ............... $31.20
52 WOeks .... ....... .... .. ............... .. $59.80

ELECT

VIRGIL V.
On Nov. 5, 1985 a 1 miR operating levy will be
befort the voters of ORANGE WOWNSHIP for FilE
PROTECDON. Your continued 1Upport would be
very much appreciated.
~~

I

Please Vote
Thank You
by

!

ELECT

BROWN
FOR

STANLEY WELLS
TO

EASTERN LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
AMAN WITH EDUCATION
FIRST IN MIND
Paid for by the Candidate. Rt 1, Long Bottom

"Boe"

Salisbury Township
TRU,STEE

Paid for by the candidate, Vir&amp;ii V. Brown. P. 0. Box 352, Pomeroy, Oh.
Ph.992·5414

The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

'Jinx' continues., Steelers edge Browns
PITTSBURGH (UP!) - It had
nothing to do with polltics, but
conservatism was the word of the
day at Three Rivers Stadium
Sunday.
With a steady rain pelting down,
making the ball and the artificial
turf an adventure, Chuck Noll olthe
Pittsburgh Steeiers and Marty
Schottenheimer of the Cleveland
Browns opted for a basic, workmanlike approach to the American
Football Conference Central Div·
ision showdown.
When It was over, the Browns'
'Three River Jinx' wasstlllallveand
the Central Division was tied in a
four-way knot , thanks to the
Steelers' 10· 9 victory.
"We were conservative mostly
because of the mistakes we've been
making on offense," said quarter·
""' back David Woodley , who directed
the Steeiers' game-winning drive
that ended with Gary Anderson's
25-yard field goal with nine seconds

Wisconsin wins lilies

my. Tr.OO: ~ ' 'f'l'sallk'S. 7:1.00; ~- W&lt;'SI
Jt•ftf'I 'SOn. &amp;;,50; _6. ColUmbu s Ha11k'.\ ',
fi.l m: 7. Wllliarns1Xf11 Wf'!itfall. ~ . fil: B.
Ammum. ~ . ~-

r l~t

Monday, November 4, 1985

ley Grueser, and Wendell Clark led
the Winners with nine tackles each,
while Freeman and Danny Wolfe
had eight each. Boso had an
interception and Grueser a fumble
recovery.
Bearhs led Eastem with 11
lackles, while Kyle Davis, Kevin
Barber, and Tim Dorst recorded
nine each. Steve Horner added
seven.
.Statistics
Department
E
S
First downs ...... ....... .. . 11
19
Yards rushing ............. 222
3!)5
Pass attempts ....... .... .. . 7
1
Completions .. ............... l
0
Intercepted by .. .. ........ o
1
Yards passing .............. 8
0
Total yards .... :.. .......... 2ll
365
Fumbles .... ..... .... ...... .. 2
2
Lost fumbles .............. .. 1
1
Penal! ies ...................6-28
7·75
Score by quarters:
Eastern ............... 0 0 0 6- 6
Southern .............. 6 0 6 6-18

ANN "ARBOR, Mich. (UPI!
Wisconsin captured the Big Ten
Men's and Women's Cross Country
crowns Saturday for the third
straight year, while the Ol)io State
men placed fourth and the Buck·
eyes' women's squad finished last.
The Badgers won the men's title
with a team score of 26 and the
women's championship with a·score
of22.

Crook.wtlk&gt; , 71U~; ~ . Amanda Clt&gt;arnt'\"k,
lii.OO: s.
liJS: l llu*eye
l"ortl'l, !I.JJ; 7. Llbrrry Union, ~UO: S.
LlrklnJi!: Hf'ljlhls. of.l.ID.

l\'tstorl I

Massltbn

point pass failed:
Southern's Kelley Grueser reco·
vered an Eastern fumble on the
Eagles' second !Dssesslon, stopping
one threat.
Leading 12.j) going Into the final
period, Southern added the clinch·
lng score with 4: 38lelt on a run by
Roush. The 'extra '!Dint kick falied
and Southern led 18.j).
Eastern's on)y score came with
tlrne running on a two yard run by
Rice. The score was set up on a 32
yard iun by the senior. Eastern's
extra point kick failed.
Roush, only a sophomore, ended
the season uno!Jiclally with 922
yards. Bosoended his career wtth82
yards on 14 attempts, while Freeman, who left the game wtth an arm
Injury gained 39.
·
Rice led all rushers with 174 yards
on 26 carrles. Ryan Bearhs added 35
yardfs on six canies and Kevin
Barber chipped in with 13 yards In
thl"€{' attempts. Barber caught the
lone EHS pass for 8 yards.
Defensively," Jimmy Wolfe, Kel·

Reftlon 15
t. C...,_d 11.18: S..

1-fi,a:l'l Srlnll AthlP!Ic' A.s.D'Iatlon romp.~t ·
fOCllbilll 11111~ . Thl:o lop four
quailfk.d for tht· N'J{Ion.:ll pla ~'Oifs:

Gln\Qak. 14:"i.n

senior fullback John Rice, who
ended his career with 174 yards
rushing, nearly broke a big gainer
lor the game's first score. Rice
rambled 47 yards deep into Southern
terrltory before being tackled by a
Tornado defender. The drive stalled
and Eastern's David Edwards
missed a 24 yard field goal attempt.
On Its first possession, Southern
used a deliberate ground game With
seniors Charlie Boso and Brian
Freeman joining sophomore Pete
Roush In churning out big chuJ$5 ri
yardage. TheTornadoesscoredona
live yard run by Roush. Th~ extra
tDint attempt failed and Southern
led 6-0.
An Eastern threat late in the
second quarter ended when South·
ern's Charlie Boso picked off a pass
by the Eagles sophomore quarter·
back Mark Griffin on the last play c1
the half, preserving Southern's 6-0
lead.
Southern upped its lead to 12-0
with8: 03left in thethirdquarterona
five yard run by Roush. The extra

I . Mlnlurd. TUt;;

tt'&amp;ms In {'8('1'1 rrjl1on Jn thr fN.l Oh io

rrllro

I. C'olwnb.Js lRSall'l, ltl't.OO; 2. Da}1on
Oakwood , 99.00; l Urbana, II!.!D; -&amp;.
Onclnnnall Mc!"llr:ltolas. IMC: ~. C'lrld n·
Mil Wyonlna. ~. ~ 6. Eh:.lry. ~. W: 1.
Mlctltetown Madl.!on.. 7l.~: B. 1'\onh
Rr-nd Taylor . TUO.
DtYIIIo• IV

RACINE - After learning of
Southwestern's victory over Hannan Trace Friday evening, the
newly crowned svAC champion
Southern Tornadoes were out to
prove just one thlngagalnstEastern
Saturday night- that they were the
best team in the league.
The Tornadoes did just that as
they rolled to a convincing 18-6
triumph over the Eagles In the
county rivalry here Saturday even·
ing In front of a large standing room
only croWd at Southern Stadium.
As a result of the win, Coach Bill
Hensler's Tornadoes finished 5-0 In
the SVAC and 5-5 overall. Eastern
settled lor a 2-3 league record and a
4-6 overall mark.
!
The win marked the first time
Sou them has gone undelea ted In
league play and was only the second
SVAC championship for the Toma·
does. Southern won Its first title
under Coach Bill Jewell in 1972,
tDStlng a 5-IJ.l league record and
7·2·1 overall mark.
· On its first possession, Eastern's

Norv.-ayl'l". 1.!.72

Computer ratings
COLUMBUS tl'Pit -

I.
~...
lit"*; 2. 'T'OOrnvillf&gt;
Sht&gt;rldan, 9!U6; l G....... lUI; 4.
Philo, !1.16; ~. Omd£ori Tri-Va[)(oy. !M!!O;
ti. Coshocton. ~- 00: '7. PomeraJ Mdp,
7UII: R Licking Valll'y. '10.50.

272

1 0 .IHJ 191 127
s. Fran.
54 0 ~rl81S7
1'\. Orlns
3 6 () ::.n 173 2l'i
Adnt
1 8 0 .llltn21W
Suni!U''I ~­
N'J' Glams Z!, Tampa Bey II
WashiiR!On 14 , Allan!a 10
Chk'aJQ 16. Grwn Ray 10
Clnclnnatl 2.1. BuffalO 17
Rms

I. Onvlil&gt;. 121.12. 1 UINI Bath, ll9.00:
3. Van Wf'ft, 90.50; t St. Mary~- f
M&lt;&gt;m011a l, 81Jlt; 5. Etyr1a C8thOIIC , tli:H; ,
6. ttk'l wmard and CitX'rlln Fin'lands.
b1'.00 rat'h. 8. Spar1a Jilgtund. 16.66.

5 0 .M4 i2ll'W

N6rWC'o~

Dallas
l'&gt;"Y Gnts

t~\

-·

2. Dayton Olaml·
nadf'.JuUennr. ~3k l anrtnnall Forni
Parlt U4.:10', 4. qncmatl GI'N'Illillls.
11l!D: ~. ('tnclrmatl ~I Marian.
109.00: 6. ~rrbus Wattt'fSOil, 104 .~ 7
i&lt;t&gt;tll•rlnj: Aller, 96.00: 8. NotWood, lll .~ .

4 .'i 0 .Ho&amp; l&amp;1 L\3

Monday, November 4, 1985

Southern upends Easteni 18-6, wins title

126. ~

1. FrankiJn,

NATIQNAJ. t'\N'RAL.L LEAGUE
I) Vllkil Pn!M lnkr'MIIiiiiiAI
Amt:rt-~n

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

left .

KEY PIAY - Unable to hear the count from quarterback Bernie .
Kosar, Browns center Mike Babbsnapped the ooUpastKosarln lhelhird
quarter. Kosar reoovered the ball for an 18 yard loss and the Steelers
srored the game's only touchdown moments later. (UP!)

Browns a 6-0halftlrrie lead with field
goals of 34 and 45 yards.
The play of the game, however,
came in the third quarter. The
Browns were backed up In their end
of the field and were laced with a
third down and four.
Rooklequarterback Bernie Kosar
went into the shotgun , but was not
able to convey his signals because of
the noise of the crowd of 51,976.
He complained several times to
referee Bob Frederic, but to no
avail. Afler the Browns rehuddled
several times, they opted to stay at
the line of scr immage, hoping the
noise level would drop.
Center Mike Baab mistook Kos·
ar's complaining to Frederic as a
signal and snapped the ball. Kosar
had his hands on his hips and had to
scramble to recover the ball.
After a short punt , tIE Steelers
scored on a 32-yard burst off left
tackle by Walt er Abercrombie.
'"I thought Bernie was line (in that

Abercrombie's touchdown run in
situation)," Schott enheimer sa id."I
the third period gave I he Sleelers a
told him nol to snap the ball until he
could hear and I told the officials a lead th&lt;·y held unlil4: Ill was left in
couple times I wanted a dry ball.Tho . the final period when Bahr banged
home a lJ. yard field goaL·
whole offensive line should have left
Rul lhc Sicelers, who have been
the line of scrimmage. The crowd
criticized
for the1r lack of ability to
precipitated I he whole incident."
come
from
behind, put togelhor a
"He (Baab) thou ght I was calling
signals," said Kosar, who was 13 of clctssic game- winning drive.
"II was going through everyb·
19 for 9£ yards. "I had stopped
calling them and was talking to I he ody's minds," said Louis Lipps, who
ref. Was it the big mistake ol the drew a 30-y ard intr~ierence penalty
on Frank Minnifield on the first play
game? Obviously ."
Noll was pleased wilh many of the drive. "We had to get it going.
aspects of his team's play, bul would We had 1oscore I hat time. David did
not be smug about how the fans a good job. We jusl kept pounding
and !DUDding at them."
keyed the win.
Anderson's 25-yarder kept al!ve
"It's a two-way sword," Noli said .
Cleveland'
s streak of not having
"It's nice when it's for you and hell
won in Three Rivers Stadium since
when it 's against you."
il 'sopeningin 1970.

MOVIE RENTALS

99(DAY

"We felt going Into the game if we ..--------------1
could stay away from mistakes,
we'd he In It at the end.' '
The Steelers did not turn the ball
over to the Browns as Woodley
completed nine of 17 passes for 91
yards . Just as lmpm1ant was the
play of the defense, which shutdown
Cleveland's vaunted running game.
Earnest Byner (15 carries, 45
yards) and Kevin Mack (11-ll)
came Into the game as the sixth and
fourth-leading rusher In the AFC ,
but found thegolngtoughagainsl the
Steelers.
Ex·Steeier Matt Bahr gave the

Second half surge
propels Bengals
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (UPI)The Cincinnati Bengals didn't take
the Buffalo Bills l!gbtly, it just took
them a little while to figure out how ·
to heat them
The Bengals, t railing the lowly
Bills 10-6 at halftime Sunday, turned
to the Boomer arid "Brute"· Show In
the second half to score a 23-17
victory over Buffalo in a game
played In a steady rain.
'"They played us tough in the first
hall," Bengals Coach Sam Wyche
said of the 1-8 Bliis, "and we were
able to :orne back and play a l!ttle
tougher in the second half.' '
The re1son the Bengals were able
to come tack and boosttheirseason
record to 4-5 was due to a shift In
offensive strategy. They decided to
mix the passing of Esiason, the top
rated passer in the AFC, wtth the
running of Larry "Brute" Kinne·
brew and James Brooks.
"We did what wehadtodotowln, ''
said Eslason, who completed 11 of 21
passes for 193 yar~s and two
touchdowns. "We just gave the ball
to 'Brute' and just let our big, old
linemen do the rest. "
Kinnebrew, a · bruisirig 255·
pounder, ram bled for 128 yards on ll
.carries, most In the second hall .
"We decided at halftime that we
should go after them with the run,"
said Kinnebrew, who said he doesn't
have anickname. but the Cincinnati
fans have tagged him with the name
··Brute." "I had a few good runs,
thanks to my offensive line.
"The backs were blocking lor me
too, so I had a nice second hall," he
added.
Th e Bills. following a Kinnebrew
fumble, got orr to a 7.0 lead on a
14-yard scoring run by Bills running
back Greg Bell at 8:45 of the first
·quarter. Bills linebacker Guy Frazier picked off an Esiason pass,
setting up a 43 yard field goal by
Scott Norwood to givP Buffalo a 1M
. lead at 2: 15 of Ihe second quarter.
The Bengals did not go Into the
locker room at halltime empty
handed, however. Esiason fired a
pass to rookie wide receiver Eddie
Brol'lll, who made a leaping catch to
complete a 68-yard scoring play at
11:22. The point-alter attempt by
Jim Breech was blocked.
What proved to he the clinching
touchdol'lll for the Ben gals came at
8:03 of the third quarter whe.n they
drove 91 yards In 12 plays, capped by
Eslason's 22-yard scorlng pass to
tight end M.L. Harr1s. Eslason
faked a reverse to Brown on the
play, and then fired the ball to
Harris. who was left virtually
uncovered by the Bills.
''It's oneolthoseplayst hat when it
works, it looks great," Eslason said
of the fake reverse play. "But if It
doesn't , It couidreallybeoneofthose
flops. It worked well and M.L. was so
wide open."
The Benga Is then drove 65 yards
In 14 plays In thefourthquarter, with
Kinnebrew going over from two
yards out to glve,Cindnnati a :11-10
lead at 6:22. Bulfalot appa~tly
rattled, tumbled theensuingklckoff,
wlthh Cincinnati recovering the ball
and turning the turnover Into a
31·yard field goal by Breech.
Bills Coach Hank Bullough replaced starting quarterback Virtce
Ferragamo with three· year pro
Bruce Mathison in the fourth
quart.er, and MathJson threw a
live-yard scoring pass to tight end
Eason Ramson with just · two·
seconds lefi in the game.

•'

'

'

ItS a whole new world.

•
'

''

'

•

•'
'

16

mg,"t~r". 1.2

mg. ntcotinc av. per cigarette by FTC method.

Todays
Camel Filters,
surprisingly
smooth.

,,

.••
w
~

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: O~itting Smoking
Now Greatly Reduces Serious Risks to Your Health.

'·

-~
~

~ -

·'

�Page-6-...:The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Area deaths

Meigs EMS makes 15 weekend runs

Monday. Ncivember 4, 1985

f
"

The Daily Sentinel

Open house scheduled

Meigs County Emergency Medl·
Sunday, at 1:43 a.m., Tuppers
cal Servlc(!reports lOcallsSaturday
Plains went to Long Bottom for
An open house for the public. to . Crlmbi~l Procedure In Law School,
Clayton H. Russell
Margaret
LewiB
and
live
calls
Sunday.
Elsworth
Crispin
who
was
dead
on
vtew
the renovated quarters of the
He completed his undergraduate ·
1
Saturday, at 1:01 a.m .. Pomeroy
arrival. Middleport at 6:43 a.m. law firm of Porter, Lillie, Sheets. studies .at the University of South
Clayton H. Russell. 85, of West
Margaret Ella Lewis, of 37242 transported Paul McElroy, Sr. to
went to Custer St. for George and Ftecker, Second St., Pomeroy, Flortda.
Columbia, W.Va. , died Sunday State Route 143, died Sunday at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Syra·
Johnson to Holzer Medical Center. and to meet the new partner, David
Frecker is the great-grandson of
afternoon atn Pleasant Valley University Hpspltals, Columbus.
cuse at 10:29 a.m. transported
Rutland at 12:56 p.m. went to Frecker, wlll be held Wednesday Susie Fisher, and the nephew of
Hospital.
She was a school teacher In Meigs Walter Harris to Veterans Memor·
Carpenter HUI for Herbert Cornwell from 1 to 4 p.m.
Frank W. Porter, an attorney of the
A retired coa l mtner, he was born County for many years.
ial Hospital Tuppers Plalnsat10:29
but did not transport. Middleport at
Ftecker, son of Larry Frecker, a finn. other members are Jennifer
June 6, 1900 in Clifton to the late
Funeral arrangements are In· a.m. was called for Ruth Smith who
3:15p.m. went to 702 Sycamore for native Meigs Count ian, Is a gradu - Sheets and Douglas LitUe.
Henry and Mary Dodd Russell.
complete and wUI be announced was treated but not transported.
Mary McCarty to Holzer Medical ate of the Cleveland-Marshall
Survivors Include his wife, Stella later . by Rawllng-Coats-Blower Pomeroy at 10:44a.m was called to Center. Middleport at 7:37 p.m. College of Law. He has worked for
M. Johnson Russell of West Colum· Funeral Home.
108LegionTerracelorBessRudlslll
went to ~ North Third for the prosecutor's office In Lake
,
bla; three daughters, Mrs. Lesley
who was dead on ar rival. MiddleRaymond J ustis to Veterans Mem· County, and was associated with a
CLEVELAND tUPI ) - Satur·
(Peggy) Roush and Mrs. James
port at 12:03 p.m. went to 95 Custer orial Hosoltal.
legal Intern at Cannon, Stern, Aveni, day's winn ing Ohio Lottery
(Ruth) Weaver, bothofNewHaven.
St. for Ruth Gosney to Holzer
Election day dinner set
and Krlvok. He has been published numbers:
W.Va .. and Mrs. Marvin (JoAnn) Ellsworth Crispin
Medical Center. o6J 6:19 p.m.,
and has written a brief which was
Daily Number: 217.
Roush of Grants, N.M.; five sons.
Middleport transported Debbie
The Forest Run United Methodist taken to the Supreme County of
Ticket sales totaled $1,533,822,
Herman E . Russell of Chicago, Ill.,
Ellsworth IRed ) Crispin, 77, of King to Pleasant' Valley Hospital.
Ohio Ft k
I "" th Am I
· Juri
ec errecev=
Donald 0 . Russell, Lester R. Russell Long Bottom, died Sunday morning Middleport at 7·. 32 p.m. went to ""7 Church wlll have an election day
d
A e d er
' - withapayoffdueof$1,254,696.50.
"'
dlnneratthechurch.
Vegetableand
can
spur
ence
war
.or
Lotto: 9,18,W,26,28and~.
and Harvey G. Russell, all of Mason, at his residence.
Palmer· St. for Noah Haskins who
·- - - - - - - - - - - - He was born in Butler to the-late was treated but not transported.'At 8 bean soup wlll be served along with r
W.Va., and Robert R. Russell of
sandwiches, pie, cake and hever·
Akron; one sister, Naomi Edwards CornellusandCarrie CorblnCrlspln
and was the retired founder of p.m .. Middleport was called to the ages from noon to 6 p.m. The Ladles
of Marietta; one brother, Lester R..
sheriff's department for Randy Aide will have a miscellaneous
Shields · to Veterans Memorial
•
'
Russell of Pomeroy, Ohio; 28 Crispin Auto Wrecking of Newark.
SUivlvors include his wife. Dora
baplar in conjunction with the
gra nd children; 20 great L. Swank Crlspfu, at home; three Hospital. Racine at 9:1 7 p.m. was
dlrtner with praceegs .to go for
grandchildren and three step-great·
called to the Southern football field church carpet.
grandchildren.
step daughters, Linda Reyes of forBrlanFreemanwhowastakento r--~--------1
Funeral ser.v1ces wlll be 1:30 p.m. Grand Bay, Ala., Dolores O'Neill of Holzer Medical Center. Syracuse at
Fla., Paula Kerns of
Wednesday at Foglesong Funeral Macclenny,
Wes terville: fou r bro thers, 9: 48p.m. was called to the Southern
Home with Rev. Bennie Stev~s
football field for Carissa Hill who
officiating. Burtal wlll be In the Chalmers and William Crispin, both
Graham Cemetery. Friends may of Barberton; Frederick Crispin of r--w:.:as__,tre:.:.a:.:t:.:ed_b_ul_n_ot_t_ran_s..:.po_rt_ed_.-1
call at the funeral home from 2-4 Athens and Emerron Crispin of
Newark: one sister, Virginia Saffles
p.m. and 7·9 p.m. Tuesday.
, of Akron: 11 step grandchildren and
four step great grandchildren.
Bessie Rudisill
CANDIDATE FOR
He was preceded In death by four
Bessie Elizabeth Rudisill, 82, of brothers and two sisters.
Funeral services will be 11 a.m.
108 Legion Terrace, pomeroy, died
Wednesday at White Funeral Home
at her home Saturday.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Serwing the family of
A member or Sacred Heart with Rev. Roy Deeter officiating.
Your Vote Apprwated
by
Catholic Church, she was born Nov. Burial will be in the Barnes . Bessie Elizabeth Rudisill
Pa·&lt;l to&lt; bY B·tl rii '.JI ••! J&lt;
29,19021n Clarksburg, W.Va. , to the Cemetery on Rt. 79 North, Newark.
Calling Hours:
!Ate David and Mary Joyce Vadlsh. Friends may call at the funeral
Monday 2·4- 7·9 p.m.
Survivors InClude one brother, home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
Joseph Vadlsho!Sandusku; several Tuesday.
Tuesday Service II A.M.

By The .Bend

RE-ELECT

C. ARLAND KING

RAWLINGS-COATS

BILL
POOLER, JR.

FUNERAL HOME

TRUSTEE

BLOWER

-Meigs· Local
Board of Education

HON!)RED - Robert Barton, left, a membe( of the ~ Weal
Board of Education, is lhe first reclplenl of the "Friend of Educallon"
·award given by the Meigs Local Teachers Association. The award was
presmted In recognition of Barton's community serv1&lt;:e toteachersalid
the ~hools. Making lhe presentation to Barton Is David Bowm,
president of MLTA.

You1 Suppo1# snd lnfluen~e
Will Be App~e~is#ed
Paid for

Calendar I happenings

Candidate. 42024 Seneca Dr.

MONDAY
SYRACUSE - Sutton township
trustees meeting, 8 p.m. Monday at
the Syracuse Municipal Bulldlng.

nelces,nephews.
nephews, grand nieces and r ----------.1=========~
grand
She was preceded In death by her
husband, Lee Rudisill, on Jan. I,
1~. 311d several sisters.
Funeral services will be 11 a .m.
Tuesday at Rawllng·Coats-Biower
Funeral Home with Eugene Under·
wood and Father Anthony Glanna·
more officiating. Burial will be In
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral borne all day
Monday (today), with the family
presettt from 2-4 p.m. and 7·9 p.m.

COOLVILLE - Orange township
trustees will meet at 7 p.m. at the
home of the clerk, Nina Robinson ,
Route 2, Coolvllle.

VOTE FOR

KATHLEEN
MANICKE

The stated meeting of Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wU! be
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Officers will be
elected and all members are asked
to attend. Refreshments wUI be
served folloWing the meeting.
·

TUESDAY
POMEROY - Oyster dinner,
Drew Webster Post 39, American
Legion, following meeting at 8 p.m.
'liiesday; World War I veterans
Invited; those needing transpc.rta·
lion call Mickey Williams or
Leonard Jewell.
Bake sale

POMEROY- Big Bend Clvltan
Club meets Monday, 7:30 p.m ..
Community Action Agency office,
Pomeroy.

CANDIDATE FOR

Lodge meeting

Page- 7

Racine student state FFA winner

Lottery numbers:

IImEl

Monday. November 4, 1985

Eastern Local School Board

POMEROY - Bake sale, rum·
~mage sale, Monday and Tuesday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m. at Grace Eplsropal
Parish House, E . Main, Pomeroy,
by Grace Episcopa l Churc h
Women.

Andy Rose, son of Lawrence
Rose, Racine, place first In the State
of Ohio In the area of urban 'soil
judging when the Southern-Racine
FFA team participated In sUi te
competition held Saturday near
ClrclevUte.
The contest' Is designed so that
each student evaluates the soil and
determines the best use for the soil in
. the areas of buUdlngs, with base·
ments, septic tank absorptionfields,
driveways and local roads In
addition to lawns, gardens and
landscaping.
The urban team from Southern·
Racine placed seventh In the sUi te
with Rose, Harold Roush and
Herbert Rose making up the team.
Both the team and Andy received
plaques for their achievements.
Southern was also represented at
the state level In rural soil judging
with team members Including Scott
Bickers, Kevin Grueser and Mickey
Eakins.
According to Aaron Sayre, Racine
FFA advisor, the process of

teaching soDs began with the help of
the Meigs County Soil and Water
Conservation District. Bob First
and his staff conduCted a county roll
judging contest. In the urban
contest; Southern placed first .
Herbert Rose and his brother, Andy,
placed first and second, respec·
tlvely, on an Individual basis. Ray
Riley of Meigs placed third.
Meigs Local won the rural contest
with Betty Jo Hunt. George Parker
and John Carl, all of Meigs, scoring
the highest In the individual scores.
Both teams and individuals wiU be
recognized at the annual soli and
water conservation banquet on Nov.
19.
Next came the Distrtct 14 judging
with Southern sponsoring the contest with the help of voca tional
agriculture teachers, Brian Windon
of Eastern and Kevin Sheppard of
Meigs. Bob First and his staff from
the local soU and waterconservation
office
The winner
the
dlstrtctofficiated.
wa s Chief
Logan, ofNew
Lex ington was second; Racine-

SoiJj.hern, third, and Symmes Val·
ley, fOUI1h.
In the urban contest, New
Lexington placed firs t; Rac in~­
Southern was second; Lawrcnt'e
County JVS, third and Southwest·
ern, fourth. Lori .Jackson of New
Lexington was high individual with
Andy Rose of Sout hern, second. and
Harold Roush from Southern , third.
All of the above schools and
Individuals will be recognized at the
District 14 banquet to be held in .
March and all were invitc'&lt;i into the
statelevelcompetlt lon.
Andy Rose
At the sta te level, the four highest , - - - ---scoring teams in eac h of the 15
distrtcts were invited to that event.
F' lfty-two teams took part in the
urban contest with New Lexington
coming In fift h and Southern·
Racine, seventh, from District 14.
Andy Rose won the distinguished
~ 31 JACKSON PIKE · RlJ S WEST
hooor of having Ihe high,est lndivid·
Phone 446 · 4524
ual score in the rontest.
suN

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 ~~~~~~~~~~
sus

yo1E

Open holise announced
An open house to view the
renovated quarters of the legal firm
of Porter, Little, Sheets and
Frecker, Second Street, Pomeroy,
and Introduce the new partner,
David Frecker, will be held Wednesday, from 1 to 4 p.m.

FOR

Cannon, Stern. Aveni, and Krivok.
He has been published, wtitten a
brlefforthe SupremeCourt of Ohio,
and received the American Juris·
prudence Award for Criminal
Procedure In law school.

OLIVE .
TOWNSHIP
VOLUNTEER
FIRE DEPT.
LEVY
[ij 112 MILL RENEWAL

VOTE FOR

Frecker, a graduate of the
Cleveland-Marshall College of Law,
Cleveland, joins the firm effective
Monday. ije is the son of Lar!j'
Frecker, a native Meigs Countlan
now residing In Paynesville, the
great-grandson of Susie Fisher,
Morning Star, and \he nephew of
Frank W. Porter, attorney In the

BILL
POOLER, JR.

00

CANDIDATE FOR

TRUSTEE

firm.

Pa id for by the candidate, 40769 Vineyard Road , Reedsville, Ohio

Your Vote Appreciated
Pa&lt;d for by B1ll Poote r. Jr

R. G. "Bob" PICKETT

Vote For

Candidate For

.Charles F. ·Pyles

'

BEDFORD TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE.
Pd. for by Friends of Candidate, 41816 SR 681, Pomeroy, Oh.

I

VOTE

I

KATHRYN M. FORTNEY
FOR

1

OLIVE TOWNSHIP CLERK

Southern Local School Board

B.B.A. In Accounting .

You

Thank You!

Paid lor by candidate Charles F. Pyles. Box 278. Racine

TO THE VOTERS OF SUnON TOWNSHIP
RE-ELECT

OTIS F. KNOPP

· FOR TRUSTEE
Vout SuppDH Will &amp; 6mll11 Appte~ltted
11

THANI(S''
Paid for by the Candidate Otis Knopp,

Racine. Ohio, Ph. 949·2680

VOTE FOB -

.SAVE I0%0FF APR.

• Light Package • Deluxe Intermittent Wipers • AM StereoiFM Stereo • Electronic Speed Control
• Power Liftgale Release • Luxury Steering Wheel • Floor Mats • Deluxe Sound
Insulation • Soo-Amp Battery • Dual Outside Remote Mirrors • And more!

r.!~,UE
OMY

$125

Based oo st&lt;ke&lt; P"" ot opl!ons,r pu&lt;Chased separalety

Base model shOWfl .

PWS, GET CHRYSLER'S
5 YEAR/50,000 MILE
PROTECTION PLAN.

annual percentage rates (APR)
on installment loans that are as
good; if not better, than
anybody's.
But that's not good enough.
So we've knocked 10% off
our APR.
But wait, there's more.

George A.. Hoffman

YOU SAVE.

SEE

Our big sale starts with ·

SE DISCOUNT CONVENIENCE PACKAGE:

Candidate For

Assume a 12%* APR. Here's lww'mrr
Money Sale would work.
,\ n nu:tll't·rn• nta~t·

12•0
', \ lim&lt;- \ll",. ,.ff -12
10.8
\linu~
-0.5 fr u·
Fmal m
10.3%

1

.\1'1~ =

().:,' ', =

!i\1 '1&lt;1

Paid Fur Ey CantJidatc - 20 Rivervte• Dr. - Middleport . . Qhl o

•

Phone

:1111r fl ll alil ·

d~·cl!ltii• 'll

992~

Please Re-Elect

ROBERT (Bob) BARTON

l o/millillo·, 1111( 1' l'o/1\

CANDIDATE FOR

See limited warranty at dealer.
Excludes leases. Reslrictions apply.

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD
1. Served as Board President for 2 years, gaining valuable eKperience.
. .J
2. Served on negotiating team with Mr. Morris, Mr. Carpenter
and Mr. Snowden the pall4 yeera negotiating contracts with
both MLTA and OAPSE, ·saving the IChool district thouunds
of dollara in attorney fees .
3 . I have never missed Roll Call at any ragularboardmeeting , this
showing thlt I am a dedicated board member and concerned
lbout thl buslneu of the district.
4 . Havet'erved all perto of the districtthru the entiropall4yeara,
taking part In school functions, attending PTO meetings, meet·
ing the people that I aerve, and wfll continua to do 10 If re·e·
!acted.
6 . I hope that you, the voter, will agree with me that the experf·
enc:e I haveia very Important. I have receiVed thlauperience by
being a very active Board Member the pelt 4 yura. I tlk you,
the voter, to re-elect me another 4 yuro, giving me the oppor·
tunlty to aarve you , as we strive to reoch higher goals In educe·
tion for all tho students of Meigs Local.

COME IN lODAY!
GET THE CAR FOR YOU AND SAVEl

Cooper
Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge, Inc.
992-6421

Middleport, Oh.

You1 Vo" Will /J8 App,~letld
Thank You,
Robert Barton

UBER'IY
t886·t986
• • ltitlill'll(

-.

- -· ..---.-----·---..--.

.....

.

~.......

- .......

I

. TO ALL CHESTER TOWNSHIP VOTERS•••••
As a candidate for

CHESTER TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE
I am in full support of the way the ceme·
teries have been taken care of. (Thanks to
those people who have worked hard and
taken pride in these. cemeteries.)
If elected I will do my best to keep and
maintain th~se cemeteries to the high
standards that they are today.

Paid for by Bill Pooler, Jr., 38020 Spencer Rd., Pomeroy, OH .

· After a lengthy discussion with Southern
School Board member, Gary (Dennie) Evans
concerning school issues, I am convinced he
is doing his best to right 9 lot of wrongs
that have taken place in the district but he .
can only cast one vote so without support
from other boqrd members, his hands are
tied. His interests are strictly for our chil·
dren. Previous experience serving on the
school board gives him background in
school policies, which is a good asset; I do
intend to support Mr. Evans on November
5th and urge others to do likewise. Iam not
for consolidation of our schools nor do I in·
tend to support or vote for the school tax
levy.
A vote for Gary D. Evans is a vote for
our children.

MAXINE DIDDLE SELLERS

Paid for b the c. didate, Robert Bob Blrton Union Ave. Pomero Oh .

Pa id forb the candidate, SR 681 , Reedsville, Oh.

.

Bill Pooler·, Jr.

MEIGS LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION

H:1t1 ·

QUAUFICAnONS

- 399 So. Third

COI1 rHG SOON: "THAT WAS THEN ...

TH IS IS Nllli ."

For

Thfn~

-'

BIJIIQ

VOTE FOR ·

Your Vote Appreciated

PLYMOUTH VOYAGER

111lt'111

MILL NEW

TUESDAY
NOVEMBER 5

CHESTER TOWNSHIP

Whlle In law school. Frecker
worked for the prosecutor's office In
Lake County and as a legal intern for

1/2

STEPHEN ~INGS

Paid for by Maxine Diddle Sellers, 30480 Valley Belle Rd., Racine.

VOTE FOR

RICHARD B.

BAILEY
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
TRUSTEE

'

I

l &lt;l (\

He Will1. Improve Township Roads .
2. Hold open meetings at township hall.
3. Make more use of state, federal. and county
programs.
4 . Provide year-round attention to township
work .
Pa~d fa&lt;by th e r~nd1date. 463 Hooker St.. M&lt;ddleporl. OH.

VOTE FOR AND ELECT

Rodney G. Chevalier
CHESTER TOWNSHIP TRUSTEE

•Graduate of Eastern High School
•Attended Mountain State College,
majored in Business Education
•Engaged in Parternship Farming operation
•I believe firmly in a balanced budget
•Strong supporter of cemetery maintenance
I have the time anti ability to give
the taxpayer good township
government.
Paid for by Rodney G. Chevaller
38648 Sumner R.d.. Rt. l , Pomeroy

-

•

I

•

�Page:__8- The.Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- MiddlePort. Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Riverview
Garden Club notes·
.
25th anniverjary during dirtner
The 25th anniversarv of the
Riverview Garden Club was obs~rved with a dinner party at the
Ohio University Inn. Athens. Thurs·
day night.
Theclubcolorsof green and white
were used in the place cards made
by Mrs. Roy Hannum and her
daughter . Mt;s. Brad Whitmer. for
the dinner served on the enclosed
patio at the Inn.
Mrs. Hartis Frank. president, had
the prayer before dinner and also
presided at the business meeting.
Members were reminded to take
gilts for Athens Mental Health Care
Center
to the

meeting. Scrapbooks of club acttvl·
ties over the past several years k ept
by Mrs. Clermont Harris were
displayed and enjoyed by the
members along with past program
books.
Mrs. Lawrence Rose and Mrs. C.
Ed Humphrey, members at the
time the club was organ ized,
attended the dinner. Active
members who were charter
members of the club attending the
dinner wer e Mrs. Denver Weber.
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Mr~. Donald Myers, and M rs. LylE' Balder·
son. Others at the dinner were M rs.

,,.f &lt;.
"/:,~~

,.

-· •

': •
. -.

_,f~

j.' :,.:
? .•

..= ,,

1

../·'

.

-~

I

/

~~--"

. Kerb! Jovonne Buzzard

Buzzard birth
a

Kermit and Kelly Buzzard are
announcing the birUt of a daughter,
Kl?r bi Jovonne, born Oet. 6 at the
Pleasant Valley Hospital. She
weighed five pounds, 7 ounces and
· was 18~ Inches long. Ma ternal
grandparents are John and Delores
'j'yree of Middleport. Pa ternal
grandparents are Carl and VIrginia
Buzzard of Newton. W.Va. Mr. and
Mrs. Buzzard have another child,
J.C.

Jenkins birth
.David R. and Sally Jenkins,
Middleport, are announcing the
birth of a daughter. Ashley Niccle.
Sept. 16 at the Pleasan t Va lley
Hospital. The Infant weighed seven
pounds, seven ounces.
Maternal grandparentsareCaryl
and Martha Welsh, Londonderry ,
an d th e maternal great grandparents are Fred and Net tie
oean, Kingston. and the late Earl
and .Juanita Welsh. Paternal grand·
mother is the Iate Cressa Shain.
Paternal great-grandparents are
Cecil and Exie Kirk. Mason, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins bavea son,
Aaron, and a daughter. Alysia.

(CUI OUI FOR FUIURE US!l

A.A.A.
304 - 1175~""r"

GARY R. DILL

BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
. TRUCK LEASING

the church andaglfi from the United
•
Methodist Women .
Later In the day she was
entertained at a dinner hosted by
Martha Moore. She received nu·
merous gilts and cards !rom trtends
and neighbors throughout the week
of her 9;th birthday.

•

children, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Van Meter, Mandl and Mlkle,
West Columbia; Mr. and Mrs. Jim
King and daughter, Pam, Long
Bottom; Terry Smith, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Hysell and son,
Stephan, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Arnold, Teresa and Angle,
Henderson, W.Va.; Stace Edwards,
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Jeffers and son, Bobby, and Mr. and
Mrs. Shaun Bell and daughter,
Stephanie Nlccle, Pomeroy.

now unknown ; Kathryn•

Hollor whoso 1111 known od·
- . woo 4490 lahm Drive.
Turkey Foe&gt;t tolond Cklb. R.D.
No. 4.
Ohio 44319.
odd,_ now unknown, H

Ak..,..

living, end H doc , d tho
nomos ond odd- of of their unkno""' heirs, dovi·

-

/nf /tw ncr• Appreciar t•d

end of Mary C. McKoy, Kitty
McKoy, Chotlotto Aleunder,

1

proper forma. for quolifitation

LEGALIIIOTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set for p~blic

holring Coso No. 85-21 ·GA·
GCR. to review the gas cost
recovOI'( ratoo of C&lt;*&gt;mbio
Gas of Ohio. Inc., the operation of Its Purchlll«&lt; Gao
Adjustment clause and related
matters. This hearing Is tche·

duted to beg in at 1000 AM .
on Tuesday, Docerrber 3.
1985. at tho Offices of thf
Commission, 180 E•nt Brood
S t raet ,

C olum bus.

Public Notice ·

Ohio

432t6.
An int..-ostod pe110n will be
giVen ., opportunity to be
hea rd. Further information

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
October 26. 1986
Contract Solos Legal
Copy No. 86· 1029·
UNIT PRICE
CONIRACT
Sealed pmpo.. will be
received at tho offic:e of tho
Director of tho Ohio Dopott·
m.,t of Tr111sportetion, Co·
lumbus. 0111o, ~ntil tO:OO
A.M .. Ohio Stondord Time,

ot foootton dty prior 10 the dote
l8t for opening bids in accor-

do""' with .Chopt8f &amp;626
Ohio ROYIIad Code.
Plans and opecilicotions ore
on file in the Depanmont of
Tranoportaion .,d tho office of
tho Diotrict Depul\' Director.
The Director reaerv• the
rigltt 10 rejec:t ony and ol bids
WARREN J.SMITH
DIRECTOR

Public Notice
Situated in the Village of

Middleport, County of
Moigo ond State of Ohio.
Being lot No. Five 161 in
Heedloy ond Rusoelt Addi;
tion to tho llforesaid VIllage .
REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
lume 287, Pogo 41 , Moigo
County Deed Recordo.
Property

•ppr1il8d

at

$26,000 ond connot be sold
lor loio than two·thlrds of
tho opproloecl price.
Terms of Sale: Cash on

111 14. 11. 2 tc.
Public Notice

Tu11day. November 19,
1986. for if11Jrovements in:

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
•mfl\' bo obtained by contacting
COURT OF MEIGS
Meigs
COUnl\'.
Ohio.
an
the Commission .
COUNTY, OHIO
MEG -114.86-16.68)·Stoto
I
Coso No. 85-CY -5
Route
143;
MEG
-881
·
111!4. 1 tc.
THE
PEOPLES
BANK OF
121.24)·Stote Roulo 881; ond
Moigo Counl\' Garego Lot, by POINI PLEASANT,
Plaintiff,
resurfacing with uphett con vs.
crete.
Pavement Width ~ vorios. THURSTON STONE, JR.,
et e1..
· Pmject end Work Longth Dolendants.
.
66.419 faot or 12.39 mit•.
Purouant to on ORDER OF
' The date oar lor 00"1'1otion
ot this worf&lt; Nit bo as oet SALE iauad by the Court of
forth in tho bidding poopooat." Common Pte11 in tho above
. Each bidclor Nil bo required otylod 0110 being No. IIII·CV·
to fila with hlo bid a cortiflod 6. and upon judgment ....
check or caohlor'o cfleck for on dorod therein, I willoxposofor
amount equal to five poroant oolo ot public IUCtion on the
of his bid, but in oo ..,..t more front stopo of tho Court Houoe
than fifty thouoond dollIll, oro In Maigo Counl\'. Pomeroy.
bond lor,., peroant of his bid, 011io st 10:30 a.fll. on Friday,
tho 22nd cloy of Novambor,
poyabte to tho Dlractor.
Bidders lOOit apply, on tho 1986, the fotlowilf9londo 111d

.WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money

tenement•~

to·wil:

hand.

HOWARD E. FRANK,
SHERIFF
Molgo County. Ohio
1101 21 , 28: 11 1I 4, 3tc

Card of Thanks
CARD OF~THANKS
We wioh to expreiS
our sincere gratitude
lor all your prayers in
the time of •our ootrow
and .lou. Thank you
for the flowers, food
and cards you sent .
is
Your kindne"
deeply appreciated .
Perhaps you sent a lo·
vely card,
Or 18t quiotly in a chair.
Perhaps you Hill e fu ·
. neral apray,
If 10, we
it there.
Perhaps you said the
kindest words
As ony friend could 18y,
Pamaps you were not
there at all,
JUII thought of 111 that

"w

dly.
Thank You.

Dee and Charles Vro·
man, Mark Vroman.
Mary and Michael Hap.
nay, daughter, oon·in·
law ond grandchldren
of Roma Hawkins

J - H. Port. Sinoh Port,
Sponoor Heyman. Mary C.
Haymon. Vlcca Mcfadden. J.
D. McFoddon. Olive Hoym.,
Ezra C. Hoyman. M~ E.
Sayle, Jomoo Aohwolth, Nol·
.,. Podon, J - 8 . Ash· ·
wolth, Wanick Heyman, Mar·
rick Haymon. Rebecca ShMa- Holt, t - Haymon.
IOMC P.,, Ina PIIT, trO P11r,
Lotto Port. Cltharino Fronk.
Hamilton PIIIT, Anthony p.,,
Wm. H. Parr. and Jooeph P~~r.
~ tilting, odd- ooknown.
and Hdtco•od the n.-n• and
o d - of eoch of their

unknown"'""' .......
utors. odminiotrotoro and ee·
OXIC·

ligna. oo dofwndtnto. w11 like
notice !hot on tho 3rd dey of

Mioml, Ffo!ldo, 33100, od·
d,.. raw unlrnown: Mra.
OMit J. (McKoy) llltllo oftd
OMit J . Belle. !tor hullbond,-

'

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992: 7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
12·8-tfc

ana-

You are notified thllt you ••

required to
the Complaint within twenty·olght
days the !lilt pubticotton.
which will be publiol1ed onoo
week for llx conoecutiilo
&gt;jeoks. Tho lost publication wil
be mode on the 4th doy of
November. 1986, ..d tho
m.1ty·light doyt for .,._
will commenoo on !Nit data.
In cue of your fa.. re 10

or ott.wile re.pond

u pormlttod by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Prooodun~ with the

stated. judg ....t by
default wilh be rendtrod
egoinll you for tho ratio!
dtmonded In the Con.,&amp;oint.
Lmy E. Sponoor
Cletk of Courts,
Meigs County. Ohio

time

.

VETERINARIAN
. CUN.IC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 JtKkson An.
SMAU ANIMAL 1101115

PH. 3D4-67S-2441

BEND AREA CALL
Ripley OHice
For Hours

304-372-5709

10-14·1 mo.

MGM
FARM CITY

1

Card of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Beullh T. Kep-

ttiRI, Who PBMd M-v Mondly, Oct. 21. 1985 ••.,..

·~ ond thonb
10
!hoi&lt; - whovleHed
· noighbon
lnd..
rtCitivel
her in
holphat, •nt get-wei ards,
thole whO ...t 1YrJ1)1thy
cards and flowers for tt. funetW, and all thtl mln'-tert
who lo'ilitld her at
Memorial Hoepbl 1nd Po-

v..._

meroy H..tch C.re Cemer;

!h....... boought lood ond

Clllled on phone. We w.-.t to
think Dr. J8m• Wiltwell, Or.
t.e.nU. tt. Pomtro~ Emergency Squod, the IIIII. Pit·
tonoeltnd nurHI It VltarMI
-~ Hoopitll lnd Pomoroy
Clro Clntor.
Ewin~ Funtrll Home, Nlr
t..uticlln, Pomt.ov Flow•
Shop, offtcloting Alton
Bllclowood of Colvory Bll&gt;lo
Church. Pettor Bob Pwtt11 of

-h

for""''"

ZionChurchofChrin
icll M11ction "Haw OINt
Thou Art" . Molgo MornDrf
Gor!lono, Mlcldloport Church
ot thl Nara,.... .nd H•ni·
........ Prosbyt- Church
ond tOIwordl
· - of
whocomfort
holped end
ond
gwe
kindn.-1 to u1.

The child,.,..: Mlld,..J Alkire;
Charlet • Roy &gt;k~pt-'n1. rt·
lltiv .. •nd flmilift

PRE-WINTER SALE

WOOO I COAl ,
STOVES, •Sim, r•ACIS

OLD n• HEAnNG CO.

It, 7, ,Ill, Wow a.p.Hi
o,.. •- to 7; 1111. liMn to S

TEAFORD 'm

LJ::!

'IUUOII '
216 E. 2np St.

Real Estate General

Phone
NEW LISTING - Re modeled one tloot 5-rm. home.
New kitchen slove and re·
trig., 2 BR, full basement,
garage and lg. levellol in Sy·
racuse.
LIKE NEW - Counlry, 2BR,
bath, central heal, catpel·
in g, outbuildin gs, and 2
acres on hard road.

2. 53 ACRES - Near Southern
ttgft. 3 or 4 BR~ Eat-in
kdchen, nat gas furnac~ full

MOBILE HOllE - Custom
built , 12x28 addition with
sliding glass door, 6 rms in
all. Gas fu rn ace plus elec.
JBB heat and about 'A acre.
Only $10,000.
REMODELED - Pomeroy.
8 rm. frame, 1~ baths, gas
heat, woodburner, carpetin g
and 3 outbuildings on 21ots.
NEAR WIIPO - 7 rm. orick
veneer, 4 BRs, nice kitchen
wilh cook and bake units,
carpeting, paneling and gat·
age.
SMALL - 2BR fram a lull ba·
semll'll with garage-a nd almost
one acre. On~ $17,500.
MIDDLEPORT - lg. level
lol on Grant. 6 rms., din ing,
!urn ace, ca rpeting and gar·
age. ASking $25,000.

wan UtmL

Wllllnl -

IUY NOWIII
'

.

s.. Murphy, Milr111 lou1h

I

lllt.n, Yirtil...r l&lt;uctloalord.

Housing
Headqu,:rters

Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio

Ph- "4-992-6771

FALL SALE

.

73 -80 GM TRUCK FENDERS .............. $39.00
DYNLITE BODY FILlER ............... ~L..... S6.50
3/4 INCH MASKING TAPE ........... ~.~1!........... 99'
DUST MASK
S

REPAIR SERVICE

SHADE, OHIO
Anything That Has To Do With A
Mobile Home.
No Job Too Small or Too Big .
We Do Setups and Underpinning
PHONE (614) 992-6100

Muzzle loading Shoot . Nov.

9 and 10. at 1t A.M ..
l eading Creek Rd . For more

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

info. call 814· 742 -2863.

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

Call 304-576-2336.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,
insured, reasonable rates.

I 0% Down Will Hold For Christmas Gifts

Shop Early and Save

IO·J.l mo.

Furniture, Wedding

and Graduation
Stationery, Magneti'
Signs, Rubber Stamp,,

tft 11•-J AFull Tlt111
Shtt Tnhniella
Oft D•lt
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE_

llS Mill 51 .. Middleport
104 Mulberry lv .. Pomoroy

CHESTER-98S -3307
4/ 1/tln

312/lln

£ASTERN DISTRICT Beautiful Ill acre lol wilh a
newer 4 bedroom home in
excellenl condition. Spaciou s kitchen wilh nice ca binets. Attached garage, large
storage bu1 ldin~ lru it trees,
ga rden space. Also mobile
home hoo kup. $54,900.00.
POMEROY - In ICMn and
convenient - Nice 3 bed·
room I\\ story home, newvinyl
sidll&amp; Palio and front porch. F.
A. gas heat. Sl'x100' ~­
$29,900.00.
RIGGS CREST ADDITION Beautilu l newer split foyer
home in a great neighbot·
hood plu s an in-grou nd
swimming pool. Very atltac·
fi ve and in great condition'
Priced to sell al $54,900.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland , Jr.
992· 6191
Jean Trussell 949·2660
Dottie Turntr 992· 5692
Jo Hill 985·4466

A
~

m
IEILIOR )

~lver

Middtoport. Oh. 614-992·
3476.
Wonted to buy: Standing

Call DATETIM E TOLL ·
FREE. 1-800 -972· 7678,
anytime day or night.

---

Now o penll New and Used
Rummage Room, Monday
thru Friday, 6 mil11 out

Chestnut Ridge Road . Ma -

614-742-2328.

Wanted used wa shers. dry·
ars, refrigerators, range1,
sweepers, work ing ~ or not .

$$$we buy the boat, paytop

Businns forms,
Copy Servi"'• Jt(.

992-334S

Rd . Ft. Pierce. Fl 33482.
12

Sit uat ion s
Wanted

Empluymenl
Scrv ccs

Sears con sole colo r, TV,
needs minor repair. Call

-----Blue Parakeet with cage and
11

Help Wanted

l

PLAINS. OHIO

2 famolo puppies. 1 block

9' SPUN ALUMINUM ..................... ...... . 'I265
10' 2" DOUBLE DIPPED STEEL MESH .... 'l350
10' AlUMINUM MESH ......................... . 11395
11' ALUMINUM MESH .............. ............ 11595 .
We Hove Many Other Disho1 To Choo11 From
· A System Can Be Designed For You
GIVE US A CAU

•

•

One certified Medlcel Tech ·

one year old end 1 ten five
year old . Very gentle. Muat

notoglst. woekcloys. Send

go. Cot1614·992 ·7458.

of tho Gallipolis Dally Trlb·

4 Puppioa. 304-675·4308.

une , 826 third Ave.• Galli·

polis. Oh 46631 .

Frie ndly female tabby car to

Federal, S tate and Civil
Servk:e jobs now available in
your area . For info . Call

a good homo. 304· 882·
3672.
2 white pig eons. 304-676·
1408.

5 or 667-3074

resume to box 300, in care

Room and bo ard in private
home for non-ambulato ry
and ambulatory pat ients.

By owner. Stately 3 bedroo m house at 10 E. St.,

614-992 -6854 or 614-992 7 553.
Wanted :ma le ro ommate to
share la rge house in Middle·
port . $226.00 month, utili ·
t ies Included . Own bd.room
and beth. Re1e rences re-

quested . 814 -992 -5468

Schools
Instruction

520.000 yearly possible .
Prepare tit home for Post
Office job test a. Write: Fed

t351 35 -J), P.O. Box 3006.
Hattiesburg. MS 39403.
18 Wanted to Do

Financial

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

DOZER. BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS II&lt; SEWER LINES .
RECLAMIITION. PONDS.
SPRII\IG DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
DUMP TRUCK STON E
&amp; DIRT

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

71 I In

·1·

? PREGNANT?
fBI CONfiDENftAL
PIEGIIAJICT liST
llllults in 30 ........,

ROOM 103

RUTLAND
CIVIC CENTER

DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

EUGENE LONG

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

Sizes Start From 12 'xl6 '

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

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

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine, Dh.
Ph . 614-843· 5191
I 0· 6·1fc

PH. 742-2629

FILL DIRT

21

ID·B·IIc

GUN SHOOT

DUGAN 'S

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

FRONT -END
ALIGNMENT

Bashan Building

CALl COLLECI:

Factory Choke
12 Gauce Shotcuns Dnly

(II 14] 843-5425
9/ 1212

mo : ~pd'.

found please contact laura

Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio

Small reward .
4 yea r old Appaloosa. brown
w ith white s peckled coat.
Wit h foal. In the Dexter.

Investment-Rental Propeny
for ale. 1 )6 unit comb ina·
tion re•idential-convnercial
rental property in Middle·
pon. Priced in the low
forties. 2)2 unit duplu
house on a lot In 1 nice ar'ea
of Middleport. Priced in t he
mid twent ies. Both proper·
ties generate positive cash
flow and are full y occ upied .
For additional information
call 514-992-7177 oltor 6

Rutland oroa . Call Appafoch ·
ion Stove ot 61 4·698·8121 .
Found. Black puppy. Ap·
pro•. 10 wko. old. Behind 5
Points. 614-992-8676.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
'

1 .' y..

. 'I I t ' l l "

collect are a code 606· 437·

8067 or 437 -8481 . Tho dog
has

collar. Rt. 1 So• 205,
Shelbiana, Ky. 41682, RE·
WARD $IDD.DD.

" .•

Complete F1onl E111i
PiHfS ,lrJ(,

Sf 1 fVIf.l''

J! ,,, ! ' : J , J I\

I

1.,..1/&lt;iro... ', 1
I i\ HI

f

•Jf

]I ,'\ r,; J

1\l'i'" rlt•lll'lll
( I· I l
l4/J(I!l/

9- 30·11

this addre.. on hiJ

Found. Mens glaa ea. Jr.
High area. Or. Buxton'&amp;
name Qn case. 304· 676-

hrs. day. Call 614-992·
6883.
live-in help for o ne elderly

tidy. Coli lor Interview :
614· 367·7360.
Help Wontod
' Naod 8 good people.
No experience nece11ary.

Must be tvolleblolor lmmo·
diate employment . Hours

1 PM til 1DPM. • 1.200 per
month. Call Tu11. only from

2693.
lOST aet of keyo II found
ploo so call 304-675·1333.

Pte..e ~and reaume to. The

Da lly Santino I. P.D.Bo• 729
D, Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.

Teachlf needs baby litteiin
her home for 4and 6 yr. olda.
Reference• reqalred . Five

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

317 North Se&lt;ond
Middleporl, Ohio 4S760

All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
FOR

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Residential &amp; Commetcial

Call:

992 -5875 Or
742-3195

B-8-lfc

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

,

We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.
IUSINESS PHONE
16141 992 -6SSO
RI!IOENCE PHONE
16141 992 -7754

1122/tlc

or 992-7121
3·24 -tlc

PLASTIC PIPE
PRODUCTS
I" 160# Wator ...... l9'
1" Gas Pipe ............. lac·

AUTO

"Fm /)1/lmg "
PH. 304-295-7845
W. Va.
Minsral

PH. 992-6931

SALES &amp;SERVICE

7~2-2027

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized Johq Deere.
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
, Dealer

"Free Estimates" ..
ln•follafion Available
4/ / ti n

CALL
446-4522

"u~sK~i,

BOGGS

After 5 Calf

RENT

4" Stwer ............. $3.7D
4" Ell................... $1.00 ,

ACCENT

FENCE &amp; SUPPLY

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

$SAVE$

Far"' e... ,,., ••
P1rt1 &amp;·S;r•lee

1·3-tf&lt;

...... aiiiiliioils.........
&amp; Vicinity

.

REl4T
St. Rt. 160
hlll•olla,

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

TRY AVON . Extro Chrlot·
m11 money. Sell independ ·
ent. $6 .00 atart up fee .

6 14· 992· 7180.

- - - - - - - ·ICGiga nlc Garage Sale. Everything goes. ra in or sh ine.
Douglaa Routh,. reaidentl,
near Union Campground s.

Nov . 4th·9th.

Wented : Agg re 11ive person
to m.nage the day· to·day
operation of a rapidly ek·

pondlng Home Cora Com·

p1ny in the Pomeroy are a .

Medical background Is

P••·

·.... l,.i;m&amp;rov·· .......

ferred but will tra in prope r

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

responsibility of managing a
Home Medical equipment
orgon jutlon. Applybyoand·

6 family yerd 1111. Skate·• ·

woy. Chootat. Thuro., and
Fridoy 7th and 8th. 9·5.
Clothing. 1urnlture, avon,
toya, miac .

... -~-- ............... ·-· ... .

Pt Pleasant
&amp; Vicinity

oppllcont. Applicant muot be

ebfe

to

take

control of

Nov. 4th·91h.

Water wells drilled and se r·
vice d. Prlce a onrequeat. Call

c ounts,

free

Weevor, 304·88 2· 2646.

814-448-9340.
total elect ric, priced reduced
82 ,000 . French City Mobile

Call614-448 -9340.
like

new 1979 1 4 x70

Schult 3 bdr., 1Y, both, goo,
skirting included . reduced
1or quic k sale. French City

Brokerage . Coli 614-448·
9340.
1981 14x70 Woodbrook 2
bedroom. excellent cond.,
all electr ic. incluc(ing under·

pinnin g. Call 81 4· 446 1311 or 614-446· 4982 af·
tor 6:00PM.
1979 Bayview

14 ~ 70 .

7X24 expando, 3bdr, 1%
bath, fi replace , CA. underpinning. 2 porches, free lot
o ption 6 mo. only. Call

614-367-7406.
For sale or rent with option
to buy : Elcone, 3 bdr, 1%
blth, ex . cond., owner financed . located in Green
Terrace mobile home park .

Call614·446·0254.
pfetely furni shed. Call 614949·2263.
1980 Tidwell, 14x70, 3
bed rooms. 1% bath, total
el ec . Bo o k pr i ce

tltlmatea, j

phol1tering. Thlall our 2111
veer terving t rl·county with
the beat In raupholttering.
Call now for Free Estimate

1974 Criterio n house trailer .
12 x70. all alec. good cond ,

$ 6.00 0 . 00 . 3 04 - 89 5 3655
.
304·876-4164. Mowrey's
Upholstery.
198 2. 14"70 . 3 bedroo m.
practi cally new. Call 614-

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

By owner. Mu1t Hll -moved.
3 bdr. ranch . one cargar1ge,
walking distan ce from North

446·6231 .
1971 Vandilia house t raile r.
60 " x14", good condition,
1
h acre g rou nd, good out

building. 304·458· 1617.
33

Farms for Sale

Goltio High School. Reduced Fa rm f or sa le or ren t .
to 129,900. Coll814·388- · McC umber Rd. Rutla nd.
8711.
Call614-992 -272 4.
In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr .•
full b11ment, nice lot. l arg e ·
rear decka with valley view .

Priced to oell 139.500. Will
co nsider mobile home t rade

6 ac res land, 7 mi les from
town. wate r and elec, do wn
peymenl an d &amp;flUme loan,

304-675 -2449.

in. Call 614-446·8038.
34
Sell or Ieese. optio n to bUy. 2
bedroom riv erfront. Fire ·
placa. gas fum ace. alec .
range, dis hwasher, refrig .,
d eep freeu. was her, dry er,
water softe ner, fr uit t rees,

garden. Cell 814 · 99 2·
6343.
Government Ho mes from
property . Call

806·887 -6000 h t. GH ·
9806 for information.

6 room• end beth In Porn•·
1976 ch ovetto . seoo .. · roy . Clo a e to s c hool.
1971 chevy coprico. 1560., churches and downtown .
Opti on to buy aj oinlng large
1978 pontiac S.W.. 614·
985· 43 5 8 or 61 4·986· con crete blo ck bu ilding with

1-------To 1111 Awon. Call Marilyn

24 .11 48 Schult s ect ion al
"Special Edition ", white
vinyl siding, plus hlany ex ·
tras. Special price . Fren ch
City Mobile Homes. Cell

Ward 'o Keyboard, 304-675· • Free 6 months lot rent. 78
6600 or 876•3824.
14 'x70 ', all electric, centra l
Fall Spec ial furniture re~ · a-c. 304·675 -3981 .

s1. IU ropalr) . Aloo delin-

3839.

Call 81 4-245·969 5 after
&amp;PM .

$1 3.000.00 will sacrifice
for 811 ,000.00. Co li 304·
614-742-3147 or 61 4-992- 675·78
29 .
6006.
I
HOMES MOVED:
PIANO TUNING AND RE· ! MOBILE
insu red. rea sonable rates,
PAIR . back to school dia- l Call
304·576·2338

quent tax

Glgonfc Ga rage Sole. Every· attached. Call 814·843·
5346.
Douglas Rouoh roolclonto.

near Union C1mpgrounde.

Professional
Services

ing reaume to Continuity o f

Gentleman wants houn·
kepper. live ln. No string•
thing goes, rain or ahine.

23

Coro,
S.E..
011io.
chord

826 Coodoon Ava.
Now Phllodolphio ,
44883. ATTN: Rl·
Brodlay.

C rimso n Citati o n
mobile ho mo. new
resently renovated,
financing available.

1974 Na1hua . 1 4 x70 . Com·

Respons ible adult to be full

Polnturoo . 61 4·985·4398.

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERYI(E

Mortgage Co.. 614·592 ·
3061.

9AM to 3PM for peroonot
interview 614·446·7441.
tfmo dairy hand. E• cellont
benefits. Solery nogolfobte.

.,

to low fhc.ed rate . Use equity
for any pu rpo1e , llllder

46631 .
help elederly w o man, 1· 2

1 9 70
1 2 x60
carp et.
owner

Used mo bile homes. large
s election of s izes and priced .
All homes priced to sell.
Frenc h City Mobile Homes.

Gallipoll o Daily Tribune. 826

Wanted : Chriotion lady to

2 bdr. Now Moon 12.600.
Coli 61 4· 388·871 1.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommenda

22 Money to Loan

l ost:lad iea gold wrist Witch

I\IEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOM E SALES,
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS .
RT 36. PHON E 6t4·446·
7274.

Homos. Ca ll 614 -446 ·
9340 .

AVON Start up foe $5 .00.

Buckridgo Rd.

32 M o bile Homes
f o r Sale

Business
Opportunity

p.m .

P1rt time S ale t:lerk. Lldiea
apparel shop . t;end resume
to Box 600 , in c are o1 t he

,.--- - - - - ---; I• .,.............W"!F"'....I ~~g,~;~~ ~:~~~: r~r'.!.~ c!ti

Complet e Gutter Wo rk
Complete Remode ling
Roofing of a ll Types
Work ed in home area
20 years
" Free Es timates"

Ph.

and

Circle at 614-949-2349 .

Mllltlar 2 to 4
Sat., 10 a.m.-12 !loan
10/10(1 mo. pd.

Rutl'and

near Souther High School. If

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

fffO&lt;tin llov. I Hows

Between

IAngovillo on Rt. 124. 814 742·2703.

Collect 61 4·42'3-6289.

1986 Schult 14x64 2 bdr.

Coli 814 -446· 3368.

Found :Horlord yoa~fng bull.

Po meroy. 6 w ooded acres.
Fa mily roo m, d ining roo m,
F. A. heat. 2 baths, basa.me nt, garage . $2 7 ,000 .

eft . 6 p.m.,

1602)837 - 3401 Dept .
1201 .

AN 's needed , applications
available at Scen ic Hllla636

$3 9.900. Call 614-448·
0388.

5289.

nake 46% for Christmas .

6 Lost and Found

Bv ow ner. 6 roo ms. 2 baths,
gara g e, fire pl ace, exc .
neighborhood, walki ng dis·
te n ce of c it y sc hoo ls ,

992·60 22 .

that you cto business with
people you know, and NOT
to 11nd money through the
mail until you have invelt i·
· gated the offering .

1

81 4-448 -0770.

Ca ll 614·446 -7380.

House, 3 bdr, 1 1h bath, FR .
Vacancy fo r the elderly in tfenced yard, lg. lot, hardour home. Tra ined and fif- wood floors &amp; carpet, fireteen years ex perience . Call place in lR , copper pl umb·
614-992- 7314.
ing. natUral gas furnace.
w indo w AC, city water, citY
Nurs ing ca re in private schools. $42.000. Catl814home . Room for t wo pa · 446 -7109 after 6pm.
tienta. $600. a month . Call
614·992· 3696.
By owner. Remodeled 3
bedroom hou se on Rt.33 .
Ro om and board
N8w F. A. furnace . l arge lot.
Reasonable prices.. Call
$23 ,000. Collect 614·423-

.

9.30.1 mo.

6

teed Payment . No E,;pe·
'rience , No Sales. Detail s
s end s elf - a dd r e ssed
stamped envelope: Ela n Vital · 716 3 41 8 Enterprise

Railroad 't ioa. 304· 676·
4439.

Giveaway

80 6-687-6000 ext. GH·
3 bedroo m full baseme nt.
eat·i n kitc he n, ca rpoJ t,
$1 ,60 0 &amp; take over PlY·
menta, Plants Subdivision.

son County.

4

Government Ho mes from
$1 (u-repai r}. Also deli n·
quent tax property. Call

Eas y Auembly Workl
S600.00 per 1DO. Guaran-

pottery. 1-304 -343· 1867 Odd jobs- have refere nces.
collect. Write B. Price, 1668 Call between 6PM·1DPM •.
Konawho Blvd East. Cha · · 614-446-9480 .
rlooton, W. Vo . 26t31 1.

WANT ADS

i't om es f or Sale

46 62 1or info rm ation .

15

200 locust polls. Call 614·
992 -2841 or 614· 992 6040.

31

446-8898.

t imber . AI Tromm. Call:

No hunting or trelfllllingon
Mynes Farm located on

t~~~·~p[*l~UM,*B*I~Nt~G~&amp;
. . . -· PH. 992-6030
1~H~E~AtT*I*N~~GH*d
· TUPPERS

Wanted- Church or serv ice
g roup to u ndertake mo ney
mak i ng pr o je ct du r in g
Christmas sea son. Catl 6 1 4 ·

Things ... buzzln' in the

992·2259

CHESTER - Deer season 1s
the right time lo own th is
tract of apptoXI mately 34
actes. Includes minerals.
Pl us 2 bedroom mobile
home with addition. Also a
block building. $22,500.

Buying dally gold,

coins, rings, jewelry, aterling
ware, old coint, lerge cu r·
rency. Top pricaa . Ed . Bur·
kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave .

Help Wanted

HOM EOWNERS -Relinonco

POMEROY,O .

NEW LISnNG - Lone Bot·
tom - Alhree bedroom home
w~h unlinished lamiy room.
Forced ar hea~ T.P.C. watet
w~h approx. 8~ acres d
wooded land.}Jso garage plls
storage. A&gt;k1ng $1 5,500.00.

Miller, Rt.2. Pomaroy, Ohio
45769 or cell 614 -992·
7760.

614-949 -2071 .

PIUS: Office Supplios &amp;

•GIBSON REFRIGERAIOR
•SATELLIU SALES &amp; SERVICE

wood. cupboardi. chairs ,
cheats. buketl , dis hes ,
atone jars. antiques. gold
and silver . Wri te · M . O .

lonely, need a date? Meet
that s pecial someone today!

NEW-MOBILE liOME FURNACES AVAilABlE

F11 All Your ,PIIrrtltg N11~1

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Bodo, Iron ,

dollars. Sell what you don't
want . Get CASH 1or paint·
ing1. dolls, jewelry and

Jerrys Run ot Apple Grove.

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENIIH
•SYLVANIA

Want to buy manuel tire

changer. Cali 614· 256·
8251 .

Call304-678-2921 .

PREPARE FOR WINTER
HAVE YOUR FURNACE
SERVICED NOW

JEWELL'S

10·2· I mo.

coa l heaters .

Absolutly no hunting or
trespassing on Old Town
Farm . Vi o lators will be
prosec uted . Charles C.
l ewis .

stand to give aw1y. Call

PH. 992-2772

E . Main

" water pills" . Fruth Phar·

macy. Middlepon .

24 Hr. Service

WHERE TO BUY?

'.'Special Rates for Senior Citizens"

JAMES KEESEE

608

Redu ce safe end fast with

GoBose copeulos end E-Vap

... *.. *****'*'*fh I•••• ** u •• u ....

B&amp;D MOBILE HOME

" FREE ESTIMAIES "

basemll'lt and garage.
NEXT TO BUSINESS SEC·
liON - 3 BR, 2 story remodeled home, furnace, sun·
room , carpeting, stove, re·
frig., and lull basement.

810 1/2 West Main

•lnsuladon
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Repla cement Window s
•New Roofing

H6141·99~; 332f;

DOII't

AUTO .

Mon.-WIICI.·Thurs. 3·5 pm
IH1111. 6:30-1; Fri. 1·2 pm
Satorrlay 10-11130 am

LAIGE ANIMAL I
SUIGEIY BY APPT.

1:00 p.m. Factory Choke 12
guage shotguns.

JO'S GIFT SHOP

3-D

4/29/tfn

TOWN I COUN1RY

63 Pino St., Gallipalh

Call

I will not be responsible for
any debts contracted for by
anyone other t han myself.
Steven 0 . Stout .

CENTER

220, poge B53, D-.1 Re·
cords. Moigs County. Ohio.

II'ISwer

We Deliver

949-2263
or 949-2969

-oft•
-oft•

64 Ml1c. Merchandise

-lallltnown--

(free Estimates)

Juno, 19B6, 1'1-.ick J.
SIObort. u plointill. filod 1
BY: Maliano Horrioon,
Complaint ogeinot you in the
Deputy
Moigo County Common Ploos
Court, Pot •• .,.. Ohio, c.. !9130 (10)7, 14, 21 . 28)111 64 Misc. Merchandise
No. Bli·CV-147, damonding 4. 8U&gt;
that plaintiff, Frodorlck J.
SIObort, bo odjudlcotod tho
1 Card of Thanks
own1&lt; In fao oifl1ilo, inc:kiding
Absolutely the
oil end gu and o1 minnlo - ' cool in the
Be st Aliqnm ent
CARD OF THANKS
- - ......,_ rMI oat·
ate; thot vou. 11 dafandento,
The family of Mrory E.
Man In thr Arro.
bo ·required to set up any.
Sovel wishes 10 exp,...
i n - 01 ootato you may
our thanks and apprecio·
Cmnplrtf' Cw
cleim in tho
doo·
lion to the Tuppers Plains
r . r - 01 be""Scrv•ce, Lube Jobs,
Emergency Squad. tho
t.rod from OAirting ume;
Veterans Memorial Hoe·
Otl Chunqc,
that titto 10 tho
pital, White Ethridge Fu,
d11Crlbtd rNI 11t1te be
Tune -Ups, Broke
rioral Homo, Rev. Roy
quiotod In plaintiff. Frodork:k J.
Jobs, Mufflers.
Stobort; and for .. cit other
DeeiBf 101d to all htr
roliof u may be - i n low
frionda and oura lor tho
Tr y us, we &lt;ctn do
or equity. inc:kiding plaintiff's
beautiful floWIInl, food,
COlli. to-wit
1t better.
c:ards and kindntiiiS at tho
Tho f91owing r•l Illite
time of her deeth. It will
ohuotod in, latar1 Townohip.
ne- lor forgotton .
1193 In tho Northoul comer,
and bounded oo thf lroilh by
tho sooth Nne of 180 .::re lot
Real Estate General •
No. 1192; oo tho out by tho
ineilf 1,670 .:rel.ot No.
SERVICE STATION
1190; on the oouth by the
992 -9932
lando of Wictdi{ II&lt; Buni. and
on the WOOl by lando of Burri.
Real Estate •
containing 83 ..,,... more 01

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
FREDERICK J. STOBART.
' Plaintiff,
·v•
FRANKUN McKAY and DO·
ROTHY McKAY, hlo wife. et
ol.
Dtrlandarrto.
· CASE NO. 811.CV·147
- IIIOTICE BV
PUBUCATIONTo Fllllk.. McKoy and
Dorothy McKoy, hlo """·

- Concre1e work
- Plumbing and electrical
work

Public Notice

Ma!Y K. McKoy, Agnoo Hoymen, Uno J . llul1ingomo, J.
Angolne Burlingame, A. J.
t~l Boliinglml. Ange.
... Boringome, George Bur· toea.
tingomo. John C. McKoy, lino
AportoltheoomeroeiPod.,, Uno J. Podon, VlciOrio being wlflod .to Charlet Sayre
E. McFoddM. E. Podon. Eloon from Aun• Hayman .,d port
Podon, Morlho Paden, Eph· being convoywd 10 Choti•
111m J. Sayre. MinotVo Sayre. Sayre end e... Sayre by deed .
ThomooT. Hopkint, Ho..;ettE.' 1!iCO&lt;dod in Deed Book 144.
Hopkins, Elizabeth Hopldno. Poga 016 of Meigs County
Chorloo Hopkins. Adallo Hop· Deed llooords.
kino. Amondo Hopkins, WIR.,_,co Deed: Voklme

Pd. for by Nat~an Biggs,
Rt. 124, Rutland, Ohio

All ads paid 101 by candidate
48190 R10bel Rd., long Bottom, Ph.

oxacutoro. odminloln!:

lOri and ouigns oro unknown;

NEW- REPAIR

SWEEPER and sewing me·

SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd.
II&lt; Olivo St. Gettlpolio. Call
614-448·31 69.

wood 8t

Racine GUn Shoot apon ·
sored by Recine Gun Club.
Every Sunday, beginning at

BOWMAN'S HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

Gutters • Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting,
FREE ESTIMATES

WANTED TO BUY used

Georges Creek Rd .
514·446·0294.

WE BILl MEDICARE ANI OTHER INSURANCE
CARRIERS WHEN EliGIBlE

ROOFING

3 Announcements

chine repair. parts, and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

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

Howard L. Wrifesel

- Addona and remodeling

Public Notice

whole loot known odd-- liom Hopkins. DiVId Hopkin a,
46 East 9th Streot. Now York i.o11i Hopkins. Allted Hopkino.
City, N.Y.. 10003, odd,_ Roy Hopkins. Floyd Hopkins.

now ~nknown; Hoomore Cho·
rloo McKoy whose tastlolown
oddr• woo Poitland. Conn.
08480, oddre.. now un·
known; John Clont McKoy and
Ml.liol Ashford McKoy, 1t1o
wile, wh- tall known od·
d - woo W-ofiold, Conn.
06109, oddreao now un·
known; Loliol McKoy whose
loot known add..., woo Fai'·
man~ Woar Vkginia. 28654,
oddr- now io!known; Moblo
tMcl&lt;oy) Harkins whoso foot
known oddrwo woo 1n Olk·
dolo Avenue, Ak.,.., Ohio,
44302, oddreoo now un·
known; Cholloo S. Sayle .. d
Ellon P. Sayle, husband and
wile. ..t.ooo loot kno,... od·
woo Route 2, Racine.
Oltlo 46n1. odd,.. mw
~nknown; Mro. Floyd W.
- B o l l and FloydW. Boll,
her huobond, whose lost
....... od- 1988
Edgoroont Rood, Cofumbuo,
Oltlo 43212. odd,.. now
unknown; M-o Boll(Hor·
kino) whose loot known ad·
woo 1988 Edgemont
Rood . Columbus , Oh io
43212. oddre.. now un·
known; Mro. Glenn H. IHar· •
kins) Hotter end Glil&gt;n H.
Holler. !tor huobend, - .
toot torown oddr- wu 4490
lahm Drive, T...t.ay Foot
lotond Cklb, R.O. No. 4,
Akron, Ohio 44319, odd,_

11/ 4/ 1 mo.

8111 Gene Johnson
614-446-3672

Ann ounceme nts

SAlES &amp; RENTALS
614-446 . 7283

992·2725

- Roofing and gutter work

!/II / lfo

Public Notice

TRUSTEE
Public Notice

PH. 949-2101
or 949-2160
No Sunday Calls

Call 614·992·6737

Carxlidate For

Public Notice

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

Box, 326
Pomeroy. DH. 45769
For Foster Service

SALISBURY TOWNSHIP

Yrm r S upport and

BISSELL
SIDING CO. '

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·
3 tin

o..

llidtllepert r

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash fo r late model
clean us,cl cars.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oids lnc .

169 Ill. 21111 be.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

INSULAnON

9

West VIrginia. 304-7736785 or 304-n 3- 543D.

KAY'S
I
BEAUTY SALON .:

YOUNG'S

*BLOWN IN

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

ANY PERM

Frue Estimates
111-17 tin

*VINYl SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING

No Do•n Payment
lower Monthly Payment

10% OFF

Long Bottom, Ohio
Ph. 915-4141

•Dryer• •Fr~zera
PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-llc

choice.

ATHA
BIGGS

CHESTER TOWNSHIP

•Ranges

-z

NOW THill DK. 4

CONTUCnNG

•Refrigerators

to drive the vehicle of your

VOTE FOR

TRUSTEE

•W•ahers •Diahwa1hera

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

::z:

MARCUM

All M•h•

•Live entertainment
' Free HBO •Restaurant
.Olympic Poo !

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

farm, antique. liquidation
sales . licens ed Oh io and

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist

*Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
*Roofing
*Siding
*Gara,es &amp; Pole
Buildmgs

985-3561

SINGLE S74.95

We'd like to introduce you to
Enpae-A·Car, tile 11odern way

Buck birth

RE-ELECT

KEN'S .
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Marcia Karr

c
z

CIC

Pomeroj'llason Bridge ·

8

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERV·ICE . Estate.

-

RT. 62 SOUIH
POINI PLEASANI, W. VA.
8 miles from

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Business Services

PHONE
992-2156
OrWri lt lfa1llw Stnti1!1 Clluititd Dept.

Business Services

Terry Cline. Mrs. Herman Grossnickle, Mrs. Okey Connolly, Mrs.
Ray Young, Mrs. Harris, Mrs.
Hannum, Mrs. Frank, Mr s. Ronald
Cowdery . and Mrs. Frank Bise.
Mrs Ronald Osborne, M rs. Walter
Brown, M rs •.Gene Wilson, and Mrs.
R.E. Williams, members for 25
years, were unable to attend the
dinner.
The Nov. 21, meeting will be a
Christmas workshop at the home of
Mrs. Weber . Mrs. Wilson and Mrs.
Balderson wW havE;&gt; charge rt the
workshop. Program books made by
Mrs. Young and Mrs. Connolly were
distributed ·
members.

,.------------- ---------.. . .:---1

Doug and Brenda Boy les Buck,
Route 1. BellevUie, W. Va. are
announcing the birth of their first
cHild, Heath Douglas. Born on Oet. 9
al Camden Clark Memotial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va. he weighed
seven pounds, nine ounces and was
20 Inches long. He is the grandson of
PhiUip and Sharon Boy les, Tuppers
Plains, and Roy and Anna Lou Buck.
Belleville, W.Va.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'

Bell birthd4y is celebrated
Rhonda Jeffers Bell was honored
on her 19th birthday Wednesday
with a surprise party hosted by her
daughter, Stephanie, at the home of
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Jeffers, Pomeroy.
Refreshments were served. and
gilts presented to the honored guest.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. J erry
Aleshlre a))d son, Jerry, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Durstandson, Todd, Mr.
and Mr. Robert Jeffers, Syracuse;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Peyton and

Monday, November 4, 1985

t II Cou rt St., Pomt~or . Dll io 4S1"

Karr95th
birthday noted
Celebra tion oft he 9;th birthday rt
Miss Mar cia Karr was highlighted
last Sunday with special recognition
at the Asbury United Methodist
Church Su nday.
The congregation sang "Happy
Birthday" , Dick Ash and Ann
Sauvage gave tributes for Iter years
of service In the church ol which she
became a member bt 1912. Owing
her years In the church she has held
many offices In the church was a
longtime Sunday School teacher .
M iss Karr joined the Methodist
Church at F latwoods In 1904, and
then transferred her membership to
the Syracuse when she moved to
that community.
MissKarr, a schoolteacher, was a
charter m ember of the urltted
Methodist Women's organization
and president of it for nine years.
Aft er Mary Cundiff gave a poem of
tribute, M iss Karr was presented a
basket of red silk carnations from

~

Monday, November 4.

Bu si ness
Buildings

Apt . bui ldi ng for sale in
Middleport . Co ntac t J ohn or

Vi cky ot 61 4-797-4860.
36 Lots &amp; Ac reage
Farm for sale: no hou ae. 8
acrea, 2 barn s, cou'nty water

II&lt; septic tank. Call61 4-3792258.

Rental s

plenty of off shoot. parking .

Block building has boo n a
body s ho p. repair garage and 4 1 Houses f or Rent
now a warehouse . Call 8 14 - - - - - - - ;- - 992· 2039 for appo intme nt . Near Buckeye H·;u, 2 bdr ..
family room, WB. $226 mo.,

Houoo,2yeoroofd. 1,700 sq.
ft. owner fi nanc ing, 304·
882-2999 .

dep., no pels. Call614·448·
9476 or 614-246 -5097 or
614 -245·5389.

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 4, 1985

~~;;~~~~~~~:::::_----------------~--------~5~4~M~i~~
. ~M~e~rc~h~a~n~d~iM~.~5~4~M~i~~~.~M~e~~h;an~d~i;M~-KK~"~~·~N;.~;;~~~~~;;~;!;;~;~~~~~~~~
~~~~7~9~·~M~o~t~o~~~H~o~m~e;s== ,
LAFF-A-DAY
r
41

4 bdr. houM In country.
UIIO mo .. pluo f260 dep.
Coll -61 4-446·4884 .

Firewood ·cutup sla bs. 1
truck lood 1100, 2-1180.
Pickup lood. you houl 116.

--~--------~~ 0

HEAP occeptod . Coli
246-5804.

Eureka nice 1 story, 2 bdr ..
wil Tent. lease, or l1nd
contract. dep . &amp; ref. req.
Blockburn Roolty , 448 0008 .
Rent or tale. on Rt. 218, 3

Houu cool . Lump 8o stoker.
linn Cool Co. Coll614 -4461408.

Gu heat juat out of city
llmito, 1125 mo. pluo 1100
dep. No pots. adults only.
Cell 814-446-3587.
l

i

Newly docoroted. 2 bod-

l

room house. Fully carpeted .
Unfurnished. Storm doors
and windowa. Will 1ccept 1
or 2 children . Deposit re-

'l

~~

quired. 614-992-3090.
re~)

end 1Ox60 mobUe home.

614-949-2424 . .
3 bd .room houu on Lllrkin
St . in Ruttond . Call 614-992
5858 .

3 bedroom houae in Middle·
port . Dopooit required.
$225.00. month. 614-9928841 9 to 5 p.m.
Efficioncy conogo, f55.00
week, utilitiH poid, phone
304-875- 3100 or 875 5509 .
For rent with option to buy.
4 bedroom. 2 cor goroge.
bulh In kitchen, Iorge lot,
rent f2 111 .00, f1 00 .00
deposit . Sele price
f25,000.00 or on lond
contract with down pay·
ment. New Hoven, call 304882-2888 .

1/-J/

l
r
•
1
0

"Everything is going so well
I'm worried sick!"
~:;:::::;::::::::::::::=::'1r-;;~;::::::;:::;:;:;~;~
44

Apartment
for Rent

51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION 11. FURNITURE
e2 Olivo St .. Golllpollo. Now
11. uaod wood-cool otovoo, 8
pc wood LR ouho $399.
bunk bedo f199, ontmn
recliners f99, now II. uood

J A C K S 0 N ESTATE S
APARTMENTS (Equol
Houoing Opportunity)
monthly rentotorto ot $189
for 1 bedroom and 8204 for bedroom suites, range1,

2 bedroom. depo1it •200. wringer waahers.

a.

shotl.

located noor Spring Volley Now ivingroom auhoo 1199
Ploza · ond Foodlond, pool' '699, Iampo, oloo buyilg
and

Cable TV available.

toll &amp; wood stoves. Call

office hours oo pouiblo 10 614-446-3159.
omto4pmond7pmto9pm
Mondoy-Fridoy, Coil 8142746 or loavo
LAYNE ' S FURNITURE
haven. co-- - -- - - 446"meauge.
Soflle and chairs prlrced from
2 bedroom part furniahed,
f285 . to f895 . Toblos. 150
nice locetlon. reasonable Nicely furnithed mobile and
up to 81 26. Hide·• ·
rent. Coll304-882-3722 or homo. off. opt .. control olr
bodo.
f390 . ond up to
882-2798 .
and heat in city, adutta only. 1650., oofo bedo 1146,
Coli 814-446-0338 .
Rocllnoro. f225. to 1376 ..
2107 North Moin St, 4
lompa from 128. to 1125 .
bodroomo, 120~ . 00 month, Redecorated opt .. 2 bdr .. pc . dlnottoo from 1109., to
t100.00 dopooit, coli 11 :00· 1150 to 1250. Coli 304· 435 . 7 pc. 1189 ond up.
&amp;7 5 -&amp;104 or 304- 876 - Wood tlblo whh lix cholro
8:ooPM. 304-875-9726 .
1285 to 1745. Dook I 110
5386 .
up to f225. Hutches. f660.
42 Mobile Homes
Lorge 2 bdr . opl., 2 both, Bunk bed complete with
for Rent
fully corpotod. rofrlg . I m~ttriiHt, t276 . and up to
otovo, 1t Court St., U25 1395 . Boby bedo, 1110.
mo .. ref. I dop. Coli 614- Mattreuea or bo11 1pring1.
Mobile hom•• available 448-492&amp;.
full or twin, 183., firm , 173.
Nov . 1, foaterJ Mobile
end t83. Ouoon 1011, $226 .
Home Pork. Coil &amp;14-44&amp;- Upltaira unfurnilhed · apt.,
4 dr. chOIII, ·~~ · 5 dr.
1802.
corpoted, oil utll~loo paid, no choato, t69 . Bod !romeo.
children. no peta. Call 614- 120.ond t25 .. 10 gun· Gun
2 bdr. 1345 mo.. 3 bdr. 448-1637.
coblneto, 1360. Goa or
f425 mo. Both lumiohod,
oloc:tric rongoo 1375. Baby
ooc. dop.. no poll. Call Furnithed attic tpt. utihie1 monrouoo, U5 I&amp; 136. bod
814-446-1385 oftor &amp;PM .
pold, t175, 919 2nd .. Shore fromoo 120, f25. a. no.
bath, men preferred. Cell king fro me 150. Good ooloc2 bdr. 14x56 lOIII tloc:tric .448-441 6 oftor 7PM.
tion of bedroom IUitlt,
troller, 12211 por mo. pluo
rockeu, metel cebineta,
electric ond clop. Rot. req. on Furnlobod opt. 2 bdr.. 13H1 hoodbolrdo U8 a. up to
)H'ivoto lot. 10 min. from 4th, Gollipollo. t 195 wotor 1&amp;5.
town . Coll814-258·1393 . pold. Coil 446-441 I ofter
I .................
7PM.
UNd Furniture · · Bedroom
2 bdr. unfurnilhed w11her·
oulte. 1 oot of toblu.
dryor hookup. 11 mi. pool Furnlohod 3 roomo II. both, dreooor,
II. bed, motol office
hoopltol, odulto only. Coli cloon . no polo. oduho. ref. I
dooko.
3
mlloo out Bulavlllo
61 4-448-4389 or 304-876- dopoolt. Coli 814-448- Rd . 0pon9omto5pm,
Mon.
9760.
1619. .
thru Sot.
614-448-0322
2 bdr. oil electric with Ouplox . 2 BR. refrigerator, 1- - - - - -- - - woodburner. cerpet, thru· atovo. 863 Third Avenue. GOOD USED APPLIANCES
out, air cond.. decll with 1260/ month. Dop. Roq'od. Woohoro. dryero. refrigoroowning. 211 mlloo, Rt. 688, Coll814-245-9596 .
toro, rongoo. Skoggo Apno chlk:Jren or lntide pets.
plloncoo, Upper River Rd.
Coil 814 -448-4807 or 614· Modern 1 bdr apt, conve- booldo Stone Croat Motel.
448-2802.
nient loc•lkfn, tingle peraon 614-448-7398.
preferred. Soc.· Dop. Coil
2 bdr. 1 mite from Hoapit1l. 614-446-2066 ohor 2pm.
County Appllonce, Inc.
waahtr· dryer, wet..- 9 tr11h
Good uood oppllonceo ond
pold, 1200 rent ond dopoah. 2 bdr. lurnlohod, poy own TV uto. Open BAM to &amp;PM .
Coli &amp;14-4415-1354 .
goo II. olotric, tJOO mo. 3 Mon thru Sot. 614-448bdr. unfurniahed, pay own "1899. 827 3rd . Avo. Golli3 bedroom, furnished mo· eletrk:, e350 mo. Both tiiC. pollo, OH.
bile home, located in city. dep., no polo. Coll814-448Coll814-448-1232.
1385 liter &amp;PM .
Volley Furniture. now II.
uaod. Lorge ooction of quo l2 bedrooms. extended living 2 bdr. oil utllltleo paid fJ&amp;O ily furniture. 1 21 8 Eutarn
room , atep -up kitche~ • . mo. 2 bdr. pay own electric, Ave .. Golllpollo.
U30 mo. fl 00 dopooot, f350 mo. Both furnlohod.
314 3rd St. Konougo. Coli ooc . dop., no polo. Coli 30 in. electric range white
814 -4.4 8-7473 .
I 814-4415-1385 oftor &amp;PM . f85. 30 ln . oloctrlc rongo
horvoot gold 196, 30 in .
3 bedrooms, furnithed . 2· 2 bdr. ap1rtment1 down· electric range coppertone
waaher and dryer. No pett. town, t190 w~h no utllitleo like now 1126, 38 in.
UOO. pluo depoolt and pold. f2911 utllltl01 pold . electric ronge white
utllltloo. Coli 814 -992- Depoolt requlrod. Coli 814- Whirlpool wooher-dryor 101
7479.
f190, ClE woohor ovocodo
441-2129 .
grMn 8160. Kenmore dryer
14x85 2 br, HondOfoon with 2 bedroom lergellvingroom, f95, Speed Ouoon dryer
waaher • drver furniahed or large kitchen, all electric , 196, Kolvlnotor dryer 185,
unfurnlahed. Dep . Required. completely lurnlohod, newly lllboon refrlgorotor white
304-876- 1730.
redecorated . t226 per 196, Giboon rofroigorotor
month pluo dop . Rof .. whito frost free 11110, rohig2 bedroom mobile home. oduho, 458 2nd. Avo. Coil erator tide by tide white
Burdette Addn. f175.QO 81 4-448-2236or614-446- 1195. Kolvlnotor ovocodo
pluo utllhleo end dopoo~. 2581 .
green fl25 , portoto~lo
304 -875- 2484 or 875 dloher waohor f96, omoll
2048 .
45 Furnished Rooms · woohor-dryor 1190. Kenmore gil dryer t96. freezer
upright whltl 18 cu.ft .
For rent S ...ping Aoom1 1150. Skoggo Appllonco,
Apartment
44
and light hOUH kMping Upper River Rd ., Golllpollo,
for Rent
room1. Park Central H01el . 614-446-7398.
Coll814-448-0758.
Lorge opt. between Ook Hill
Gat 1tove. continuout
1 Thurmon . Call 814-245cleaning, harv11t gold.
46 Space for Rant
9315 .
UOO. Hand mode horvoot
toble : 7ft. fiOO (no cholro).
2 bedroom apartments.
Coli 814-388-9079 .
Now Hoven, WVo. Newly Mobile home lot, 12'x60' or
remodeled. In town. 614- omollor, t75 wotor poid, 4th E-Z Crodlt Mollohan FurniII. Neil, Golllpollo. Coli 446- ture, 403 4th AVe., Ko 992-7481 .
4418 after 8PM.
nougo , Oh. '46-7444 .
One or two "bedroom apart·
menu in Pomeroy. Fur- Trailer epace for rent. Call Country style oak furniture,
niahed or unfurnished . Rent 614-44&amp;-10112 oftor &amp;PM .
hand crafted end finished,
negotiable. Coli 814-992antique reproduction•. Paul
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Conkel, Rt . 7, Tuppers
8723 .
Porte, Route 33 , North of Plolno.
Furnished Apartment for Pomerny. Largo Iota. Coli
rent. no children . Av1ileble 81 4·992-7479.
Good uood Gotolog dining
after Oct.3 . Cell 114-992·
roomtebl•~ b:tendato78 1n.
Second floor oHice. Court with 8 upholotored cholro.
2749 .
St .• Pomeroy, 1cro11 from 175 .00 . Aloo good uood
Aportmento: 1 and 2 bod - Court Houu. Corpotond olr. brown 94 in. oofo. 160.00 .
rooms. In Pomeroy. Coil UOO. per month. Coli doyo Coll814-985 -3949 .
814· 992-2084 or otop ot
814-992-5908 .
Clork'o Jewolry, Pomeroy .
1 bedroom. Total electric
Antiques
Apt. Wall oven counter top 90 ft.x 300 ft. lot In Roclno 53
with
28
ft.x44
ft.
boooment
ron go. car pot . 814 -992and floor, elec. hook up,
2091 .
teptlc unk, water. • Cell ForSolo:A Iorge building full
of primitive tools, embosted
APARTMENTS . mobile 814-247-3861 .
boUiet, WIJII; Mll•ra fruit
hornet, houus. Pt. Pleaunt
ond Golllpolio. 814-448- B. I D. Trollor Pork, troller joro, Mooon patontdd fru~
loti for rent, 304-1178- jert. anttqu11, old relltaurant
8221 .
ware, meny other ltemt too
2844.
numerout to mention. Mutt
2 br apertmentt in Hender·
- t o opprecloto. 614-949oon. 304-1575-1872.
2342 or 814· 949-2338 .
Merclidtllll ot:
Nice 1 and . 2 br oportmonto
Buying doproooion gluo.
downtown. 304-875-2218
milk
bonloo, atone j~ro.
• 8-8
51 Household Goods Jewel Too. Coil &amp;14 -5942771 ovonlngo.
Furnlohod 1 bedroom opt,
in c lud~ • all utilities ,
1210.00 per month. adulto WI u rd CIIIII on c I o thoo 1-=-:-::-::---'-:::--:-;-:-:-::;:-::
only, no pots, 304 -675- dryer. Electric . 1100. Coil 54 Ml~. Merchandl18
304-882-2328 .
3788.

1--- - - -- - --

•e5 .

Furnished 2 bedroom opt,
utllitloo pold, 180.00 wook,
phone 304-87&amp;•3100 or
675-6509 .

Television
Viewing

King olze bod. complotl with
box tprlngl. menreu, 2 uts
lhooto •175 .00. 304-6768753:
.

liE refrlgorotor, typowlrtor,
oet bunk boda •. gome Jot
Hockly, booko, 304·8752536.

1978 Champi on Moto r
Homo 18 ft., flbergla11, oolf
cont.. oloopl 4, 39,000
mHeo, 17,200. Call 814448-1299.

814- ~ ~P~ho=r~m=o::;cy:;.:==:==;:==

Houu coal. Lump &amp; ttoker.
Zlnn Cool Co. Coll814-4461408.

bdr. 2 botha. Coll614-4467208 .

Reduce 1afa and felt with
GoBoao Tablets and E,Vap
" w.otar p
" lllo " Fruth

Cabbage Patch doll dre110o
and Premiee outfits, hand
modo. $6 eoch. Coil 814388-8166.

2 new metelbeatos chimney
venting pipe 6x30 $40.
Speed Queen wringer
wooher '85. Coll814-3792144.
Firewood for 11le $30 PU
lood. Coll814843-2264.

55 Building Supplies

Building -rteterial, concrete
blocks oil alzea. lontila, flu
blocks, clay tile . Delivery .
Gollipolio Block Co., Pine
St., Golllpollo, Ohio Coli
614-446-2783 .

Octagon wood tebl a&amp; leafs
w~h 2 choirs. t25 . Reconditioned Kirby vaccuum with
allottochmonto 150. Battery
operated motorcycle $16 .
Coli 814-448-8080 ofter
&amp;PM .

81

'

•

•

~.:::========:;:=====•:••::~:-:·:"':·~
64 Hay &amp; Grain
- - - - - - - --

20x100 metal frame greenhouN. Everything included .
12000.00 firm. 614-9492342 or 614-949-2338.

Aohley C-80 wood burner.
Auto . control, Good
cond .. l200 . 00 . Aloo
Tempca LP gas heater.
186.00 . Call 614 -247 4292.
Commodore 64d computer
monitor, ditk drive end
cobloo. f360 .00. 614-992 3194.

w~h

House calls on RCA, Ouazar.
GE . Spocialing in Zenith .
Call 304-576-2398 or 614448-24&amp;4.

1959 Stud . for porto, 1100.
Call 814-367-7118 .

Tran sporl al1 un

57

TOP CASH paid for '80
model and newer used can.
Smith Bulck-Pontloc. 1911
Eoatom Avo .. Gollipollo. Coli
614-448-2282.

1 eun lamp on metallegt. 1
electric adding mechine. 1
llble aun lamp. Cell 814992-3031 .

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS.
hot dip rebluolng , all typoo of
guntmith wotil:, fatt •rvk:v.
304-875-4831 .
Serious about los i ng
weight7 Contact Gloria
Grote. Rt. 2. Sox 282,
Lotort , WV. 26253. 304·
B82-3152 .

SURPLUS, regular ormy comouf)age, denim clothing,
boots, · packs, accesaor&amp;et.
Camouflage insulated coverollo 130.00. kldo cemou flage all sizes. Sam Some·
rvllle. Eat1 · Aavenawood ,
junction Independence
Road-Old Rt . 21 , Fri. Sot,
Sun, 1:00-7:00 PM . Free
delivery Point Pteuant arM .
304-876-3334.
Uaed MatHie Home windows
and door1, vtrioua tilot, 2
uud gas furnaces for mobile
homes, one uted etectr~
furnace for house. Used
gelvanlzed underpennlng .
K&amp;K Mobile Homos Inc.
304· 875-3000.
lump houll coal, deliver any
amount. 304-676-7397 or
876-1247.
Christmas: Y.. Price Sale. Mr.
T Dollo. Cobboga Patch
Dollo. 304-875-6480 .

Seers 8 ft. pool tsble, bello,
reck I cue tdcks. very good
cond .. e125 . 304 -882 3236 .
Alumn awn ing 20 'x9 '. Five
alumn posts 7 ' 3". Storm
door whh fromo 80 " x36".
Phone :.04-675 -5811 .

1979 Ford Pinto porto.
onglno rebuilt, body good
shape. floor model ltereo,
good condition. 304-8758377.
ARMY SURPLUS! Wo hove
full line of Army Surpluo.
Mens and children• camou·
flogo. oil olzn. SH uo for
your hunting noodo. D II. J
Savemore M1rt. Mason, W.
Vo . 25280. 304· 773 ·5222.

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS I SONS
U.S. 36 Welt. Jockoon,
Ohio . 814-288-6461 .
M111ey Ferguson , New
Hollond, Buoh Hog Soloo II.
Service. Over 40 uaed
trac:tort to chooM from &amp;
complete line of now II.
uMd equipment. U.rgeat
aoloction In S.E. Ohio.
Spoclol 10% diocount on all
pana for cat h ulet only,
until Nov: 16.

J .and L. Installation . Roofing, vinyl aiding, storm door1
and windows. Free etti·
mateo. Coil 614-992-2772 .

1984 oorn f2.25 bu. R.&amp;J. I-::~-::--:-:,..--::--:-Form, Clair Cottrill, Sr.. 72
Trucks for Sale
304-675-2707 .

71

Fmn Suppl11~s
&amp; LIVIlSIIIl:k

Autos for Sole

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING
Pump tales, service. Regis·
tared In Ohio , All work
guorenteed . C•ll 304-2732811 . Ravenswood, W. Va.

Autos for Sala

1979 Rabbit. 1978 Ford
1 lama snare, 4 micro· LTO . Call ofter &amp;PM. 814phones, 1 fender preciskm 388-8823.
ball guitar, Cell log Cabin
Rocordero. 81 4-446-431 3. · 1981 Oodga Chorgor. 2.2.
61,000 miloo, ohorp. 1982
Oodgo Omnl 2 dr.. 64,000
58
Fruit
mlloo. Coll814-379-2728 .
&amp; Vegetables
1980 Chevy Monzo hotch·
bock, good cond. Call 304Apples. ell varieties, $5 .00 876·5943 oftor &amp;PM or oil
buohel. Now opon dally. All dey wookonda.
fruita, vegetables. Jack '1
Merkel, Rt. 35 , Honderoon, Dodge Chorgor 2.2 1984,
only 14,057 mileo, poyoff
W. Va .
· loon opproximately 14,700.
Coll814·245-9589 .
59 For Sole or Trade
1980 Chovotto, llondord
trono, AC. good ohopo. Coli
814-448-2169 anytime.
For sale or trade 1974
Plymouth Fury 89.000
mileo. 1968 Oldomobilo
442. 1977 Vega t400. Coli 1986 Gouger, 112,988
payoff. or may arrange take
814-448-0352.
over pavmenta. Owner laidFor ule ·or trade 2 heaters, off. Call 81 4-256·8034.
fireplace insert aqulre. FkJridaauto. 1977FordLTD
woodburner, auto. or ma- wagon no rult loaded.
n~ol control fan, uood .1 · u 7 &amp;.' Rifle 308 col .
w1nter, new whh ceremte
11 614 448
log. Coil 304-875-7439 .
~~,~~or) . Co
·
•

joretu , football . lion ,
mouse, bunny, lamb, out·
fitl, fur coati, for Cabbage
Potch. 814-992-7532 or
814-992-6379 .

71

O.and M . Contractoro. Vinyl
aiding, replacement windows, insulating, roofing.
new and remo e ng, concreta. Call 304-773-5131
.
d II

'
1987 TR4A Triumph
. Boot
Conlornoin' o Spoclol 250 lb. Offer . After 6:00 cell 304protein blocko 131 .25 eo. 676-1839 .
found only at Bidwell Cooh
Food Store, 814-388-988B. 1978 Pontiac Bonneville,
exc cond, must , aae to
Lorge round bolooofhoy 120 opproclote, 12,000.00 or
eo. Call614-448-1062ofter boot offer. Troy Krobo. 3046PM .
876 -7127 or 875-1185 .

Firewood $35 PU load,
ohroddod bertc $26 PU lood,
hardy evergreen shrubs $10,
landacaping 6 trimming . 2
mi: N. of Silver Bridge,
Upper Rt. 7. Ohio. Coil
614 -446-4530 .

For ulelCheerleeding, ma ·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gua·
rantee. Local references
furnished . Free estimates.
Call colloct1 -814-2370488, day or night. Rogers
Baaament Waterproofing.

1/·Y

At Bruni~ardi's ... .. No repot·
aessed piano gimmickt. Just
honeat piano values. We are
never under sold! Brunicardi
Mutic Inc. Corner 3rd . It
Court St .. Gollipolio, Ohio .

60 por cent offl Floohing
arrow oigno t259111 Ughtod.
non-arrow $247 . Unlighted
t199. (Free lottersl) Soo
locally. Limhod quantity.
Hurryl 118001423-1083.

.

,,

.,

'

AKC Samoyed white anow·
boll puppieo 1160. Roody
Doc. 111. Deposit will hold
till Chriotmu. 304- 6762728.

Musical
Instruments

Home
Improvements

n Muatang 111w JNrtl, new
tiret, new paint. excellant
ohopo, 12,000. Call 814268-6417 .

1979 LTO ronch wagon. Coli
814-446-0881.
1983 Pontiac Parltllnne
mint oond, low mlloogo,
loodod. Coli 814-367-7226
oftor &amp;PM .

82 Chovy Chevotto, 43,000
miles, air cond.. am·fm
radio, PS, PB, auto. trana.,
reor window dol. t2780.
Coil &amp;14-448·1807 oftor
6:30pm.

BORN LOSER
DO '6J f!OM!:MSE.R

~MRI PEI'Pioi&lt;Ft:;ffi161&lt;:&gt;s 0

RON 'S Television Service.

Please Don't Eat
Daisies
(!) NFL Films Presents
(Marcus Allen) .
(I) Sanford and Son
Cil &amp;l lill Price Is Right
[J) 0 (I) Jeopardy
(I)
Nightly
Business
Report
® Wheel of Fonuno
fll WKRP in Cincinnati
[HBO] Fraggla Rock (CC)
8:00 II ill (IJ TV's Bloopers
and Practical Jokes Ed Begley, Jr. and singer l aura
Bra nigan are this week's
practical joke victims . (60

Ill&lt; U - 4

ANNIE
NOT A BtT. DID
YOU HfNE A
fo(ICE TIME AT
THE' DOOSON!J,
I.ITTLE_ MiSSY?

m in . ~

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

1977 Dodgs Sportoman
Yin, ceptelns chairs, factory
hltch, axe. oond. 69,000
mlleo. Call 614-387-7262.

83

ALLEY OOP
i!&gt;OCIOR VJONMUG
AND HIS I&lt;SSQCIATE,
OSCAR BOOM ,
FINALLY L.OCAT~
ALLEY OOf' AND
T0K0 IN MEDIEVAL
ENGLIWD, ,AFTER
A. SUDOIEN POWJ;R
OUTAGI' OISRUPTED
THE TWO SCI ENliSTS'
IN&lt;TIAL ATICMPT TO
TRANSPORT THI'

PAIR AWM ANCIENT
MOO INTO THE

PRESENT.

-

"
GASOLINE ALLEY
'

Fine! I'll throw you
down abanana at
dinner
time'

liHiequy was placed
in my care. Phl!llis! He's
notqoinq
to any
1

zoo.1

Excavating

1----------

d
E
·
b
Goo • 1 xcovotong , ooo1978 gron'd prix . Po. pb.
ments.
footers.
driveways,
p.d.l., p.w .. cruloo. Greet
ahopo: Groot price. Co1:814 1977 Dodge Sporttmtn teptic tanks. landscaping.
onytlma 814 - 446 1 " · f ectory Call
742-3159 .
van, capta Ins chI
4637, Jemesl. Davison, Jr.
h~ch. exc . cond. 89,000
Krewsczvn family old faith· mlloo. Call 814fo.fodtomp _ow
_ no_r_.- - - - - - 1
full978 dodge oopln . cyl ..
Doztr Work land clearing,
uto .. p.o.. p.b., oir. f900.00 .
landscaping. 8tc . Free esti· ..
Now Ideo model 323, ono 614-992-2717 .
74 Motorcycles
motoo. Cell 814 -446-8038
mw corn picker. Coli 614or 814-992 -7119 anytime.
256-1144.
1978 Chryolor Newport.
1800.00 e&lt; boot offer. Coil 1982 Kowookl otreot biko,
J .A.R. Construction Co.,
Meuia Harris 666 tractor 614-949-2829.
1600, exc. cond . Call 614- Rutland, Oh . 814- 742 -.
new motor. nfW bonerv. for
2903. Basements, footers,
oolt qr trodo. Call614 ·448- 1988 Pontloc convortlblo. 4411· 3&amp;84.
Concrete work, Backhoe'S,
Good condition . f900.00.
1062•oltor &amp;PM.
1979 Harley Davloon Super- Dozer &amp; Oitcher, Oump
glide. 5800 mlloo. Call304- trucks, S. water·gas ·aewer·
Now ldoo 324 2 row corn- ,C•II 814 " 247"4292 '
picker excellent. Now Ideo 1980 Chovotte 4 dr .. auto., 387 ·7750 or 304-387- electrical lines.
No. 10 1 row picker. Oliver om .. f .m ., lugg. rock, Good 7214.
No. 5 1 row picker. Gravity cond .. 80,000 mlloo . 76 Horloy Sportoor. 1,000
General Hauling
85
bod WlgOnO, 19 ft . groin 11900.00. 1514- 985-4418 .
CC.
Eloc.
otort,
very
low
auger electric motor. excel·
lont. 30 ft. hoy or groin 1978 cliovono. 4door, 4cyl .. mllooge . •1500. 304 -676James Boy1 Water Service.
elevator PTO driven. Wheat auto., air., new tires, brlkll, 6424 otter 6 p.m.
Also pools filled . Call 614·
drillo on rubber fertilize bantry, exeult. GrMt gtl
266 -1141 or 614 -448 spreaders . .4\11 machinery mllaoge . Sllvor with rod
Boa.t s and
1175 or 614 -446 -7911 .
field ready. Howe'• Farm interior. No run. Exc. cond., 75
Machinery. Rt. 124 II. May- 61 4·949·2558 . t1400.00.
Motors for Sale
'Ken's Water Service . Wells.
how Rd .. Jockoon, Oh 814cisternl. pools filled . Phone
288-5944 .
1976 Chovotto t800. 1871
614·387-0623 or814 -387John
boat
for
sale.
C1ll
Chevy Coprice 1660. 19715
7741 night or day.
Ulod 450 John Dooro dozer Pontiac ototlonwogon. Colr 814-258-8417.
11. R65 Ditch W i t c h 614-98&amp;-4358ore14-9B6 - - - - - - - - - - - Trencher. Coli 814-694- 3839.
24 ft. HorrJo Floto Bote, 50 Weugh ' • Wa t er Service .
ci sternt, poolt . Fast ,
7842 "' 814-894-5006.
------:- - - - -·1 Johnton . 1r1Uer. all ac· W•lls,
relieble
service. Ca ll 61 41984 OldaCutJasaSupreme 1 ct11.'a, tent enckJaura for
266-1240 or 814 -266 Pole buildings, many colors Broughom. low mlloo. oxc , camping. 1· 692· 2781 .
and alzoa rlvolloblo. 304-676 cond with ell GM optiono ' -~------­ 1130. Reasonable rat81.
3981 .
pooolblo. Muot ooll 304-676- =:-:-:-----:-:-- - - - Haul limestone, n od , gra·
2863 oftor 5 PM .
79 Motors Homes
vel.dirt, bulk or bag fe rtilizer
Sana Livestock Trailers. Hur·
&amp; Campers ·
and lime. Exceltior Salt
rlcono, WV. 304-767-8844 83 Tronl Am, fully looded,
or 757-6399.
Worko Inc. 638 E. Moin Sl. ,
22.000 mlloo . Coot
118.000. Will toke 19.800. 1972 Koyot compor. Self Pomeroy. 814-992•3891 .
Now. Holland 354 grinder Mull ooll. 304· 675· 5870. contolnod, 318 Dodge onmixer. UMd very little. Exc
gino, 22 ft. long. oleopo olx.
cond, 304-273-4216 .
Upholstery
77 Chevy Monzo. outo, oc, 4 16. 000 . Coli 814-446 - 87
cyl. om -fm canon. now 2077.
bollory, oticker II. tlroo ---:--------::-:-~
63 Livestock
1796. 304-&amp;71-2218 or Holldoy Romblor 21 ft.
TRISTATE
743· 5839 .
oloopo B. 12,4911. Viking 19
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
ft. pop-up toni compor, 1163 Soc. Avo.. Gallipolis.
Soiling fomlly olckneoo. Rog. Muot Soil. 1985 . Nloun olllp• s . ., .eoo. 1110 odd·• · 814-448-783 3 or 814-4461833.
Quarter horoe gontlo 1525, 200SX . Loodod. &amp; Yoor room. Coli 814-448-7019.
Pall moo more follod Moy 88 Worronty . Cheapl 6, 100
t280. Call 614-379 -2144.
mlloo. 614-448 -8674 oftor 1986 Troutwood compor
R &amp; M Furn iture Manufac•
folr cond, t700. Cell 814turing, St. At . 7, Crown
6:00p.m .
448-4113.
City, Oh. Call 614 -26632" hog wire; 48" woven
I wire, many other types wire
1470, cell Evo. 614-446 34 3 8 . Ol d 8o n e w
I ony typo pmduot portoln- 1983 Plymouth Rood ·
Uphoatered.
lng to animal care found very Nnnor. 318 on gino bulh. 1OV. or 11 ft. truck camper.
low priced ot Bidwell Cooh - auto. trono.. 4515 gooro' Soli cont., aloo 8 ft. truck
Food Store. Coli 814-3B8- poohlon trock , t810 or boot topper. lntorootod portloo
Ferguoon's Upholotory, 304moko offer. 814-985· 3839.
676· 5472 .
9688.
offer, 304-875-8377.

e

---

!

I'PROWE

I K]

II

I I r · tJ
I

ILITGUY

I KIJ I

t
JI I J

tQUIROL

Saturday's

SOME

~I

CLOSE TH e i ~E YE~
WHI~E 1&lt;:1551Ne, e!UT
OTHE ~5

DO THIS.

Now arr ange the circled letters to
lorm the surprise answer, as sug:
gested by the above cartoon.

I Jumbles. Beginn ingKNEEL
hOrseback

lAnswers tomorrow)
UNFOLD FORG OT
Answer:
rrd ers oft en do ll th is
way - ON" AND OFF
BLANK

Joln thl Jum bll lo,_l fi n Club aad f9CIIVI IIJ el!;llli·WOfd Sur. r JumbiU IYI"f
month. FOf lrH ea mp1t1, u nd 1 pottura to: Jumble loverl an Club. clo thll
P.O. Bo• 1101 , Palmyr1, N.J. 03CMI5.

~ paper,

BRIDGE

James Jacoby

Cil

Fony Troo Trimming, stump
removal . Call 304 -676 1331 .

198511 S-10 Blozor. 4x4. 82
Plumbing
looded. very option, 2.100
&amp; Heating
mi .. boat offer, Co11814-446·1 - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - 7019 .
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
Fa&lt; oale or trodo foro 4-WD
ANO HEATING
PU or Trant Am for 1977
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Joop CJ -5 60,000 mi., V-8,
Golllpolla, Ohio
now top I&amp; bikl lop, block Phone 814-448-3888 or
wlth whtte spoke whHis, 614 448 4477
12,800. Call 814-446 · 1- - - - - -_ _ _ __
0352 .
JIM'S PLUMBING II. HEATING. Rt. 1, Box 356, Galli1979 Oodgo von. good polis. Call 81&gt;1-367 -0678 .
cond . Coli 814-246·6096
eva. .

UnsCramble these ·tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinil)' words.

Game

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

1978 Chevy 8 cyl., 3 opd..
now point. 11 ,800. Runs 1 -----~-:=-­
good, excellent milage. Soe RINGLES ' S SERVICE, exHunt's Grocery. Rt. 160.
perienced carpenter, electri·
cian. mason, painter, roof·
1976 FordPU, 9oodcond .. ing !Including hot tar
8 ft. flborglall PU topper application) 304-876 -20B8
t100. electric houoe fur- or 875-7368 .
naco t100. Coli 814·446· 1---:::-----:-::---:-6286 .
Starks Tree and lawn Ser- - - -- - - -A2 vice. stump remove!, 304·
19BO Datoun. outo. radio, 576-2010.
' .
topper, 82699 . John' s Auto 1- - - - - - - - - SIIet. Bullville Rd. Gallipo· Rotary or cable tool drilling.
lis, Ohio.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump saleaandservice.
78 Ford pick up. '-' ton. 390 304-995 -3802
engine . Good engine .
81600 .00 . 814 -742-2421 . Gotaroomofcarpetcleanod
for 122 .86. Coptoln Stea1982E1Comlno, \\ ton, V-8, mer. 304-675 -2295. Save
ucellont cond .. with high Ad. Expires 85' .
mlloogo. 11000.00 under 1- - - - - - , - - - bookd. 84850.00. 1-592· Fred' o Bldg. and Romodel2781.
ing, buements, porches,
roofing. aiding, painting.
1973 chevy '12 1on P.U. leveling trailers. satiafation ·
truck. Po, pb, olr cond .. tilt guaranteed . 304 - 773 whl. t4oo.oo . 814-98&amp;- 9118 .
4418.
1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 8 . &amp; D . Home Improve·
1985. chevy P.U. truck. Po, menu. vinyl siding. olumn
pb. V-8. outo , UBOO.OO. oiding, continuouo gutter.
room oddltlono. ooffit and
614 -949-2660.
repllcement windows, 304·
1981 Ford F-160, 33,000 578-2844.
mlloo. 15 cyl. 4 opood. A: 1 1- - - -- ::--::-::-ohopo, 13,800.00. 304-576- Carpentry , Remodeling .
Room Addition, All building
2689 .
· repairs. Cement &amp; Block
1982 Silv~rldo, new tire1. work. Free Estimate. 304·
pt, pt. pb, clean, new 676-4322 .
brokoo. now plugo· polnta, 1 - - - - - - - - : - - - - : 11111 than 'tJJ: of new. A new Tree trimming and removal,
one. 304· 6715·3222.
insured. free estimates.
reaaonable rates. 304·875·
7121 .
73
Vans&amp; 4W.D .

ftfli)N}

fii}\l ~ THAT SCRAM BLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ il
by Henri Aroold ano BOb l ee

II ill CIJC!l 0 Cil ® El
lill News

(Il $100.000 Name That
Tune
(!) Mazdo Sportslook
Cil Down to Earth
(1) 3 -2-1. Contact (CCI
liD Electric Company
fll Diff'rant Strolces
[H80) MOVIE: 'Hot Stuff'
[MAXI MOVIE: 'On the
Waterfront'
6:30 II (}) [IJ NBC Nightly
News
(Il Carol Burnett and
Friends
(j) Aerobics-Bodies in
Motion
Cil Solo at Home
(I) El © ABC News !CCI
0 (I) ® CBS News
(I) Dr. Who
liD Body Electric
fll Taxi
7:00 II ill PM Magazine
Cil
Courtship/Eddie's
Father
(!) Sportsconter
Cil Rocky Road
I]) Entertainment Tonight
[IJ Wheel of Fortune
0 (I) Wheel of Fortune
(I) Second City TV
® News
liD
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
&amp;l ®l Divorce Court
fiJ Jefferson&amp;
7:30 I) III New Newlywed

..,
-;:-:--;-;---:--- ,

Browning 12 auto-Belgium.
Remington 700 ADC 243,
Smith- Weuon 916 12
gauge with quick point
1&lt;:0po. Coil 814-446-1060
after 6pm.

Mixed hardwood olobs, $12 .
por bundle. containing opprox. 1 Y, ton, fob. Ohio
Polloi Co .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Phone 614-992-6481 .

EVENING

•
•
.'

Services

B&amp;ock, brick, mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block, Rt. 33, Now
Hoven. W. Vo. 304-8822222.

Tilt bod trollor. 7ft.x7ft.
Pets for Sale
wide trackt, with fold down 56
romps, 2,000 lb . copocity, - - - - -- - - ooking 1650. books for
81 ,200. offers or trade. Call Briarpatch Kennell All7PM to 10PM 814-446· brood grooming. Indoor2745.
outdoor boarding focllltloo.
- - - - - - - - - English Cocker Spaniel . 388
Pre-72 Soko 243 cal. cua- 9790.
tom, oloo Ruger 270 LW
new in box . Coil 814-448- Drsgonwynd Canory Kan7019.
nel. CFA Himalayan, Pertian
and Siameoo klttono. AKC
Sligler fuel oils1ove. dinette Chow puppies. Call 448tobla 4 choiro. lemon tree. 3844 after 7PM .
wooden chum, flo! wall -=---::------:--::-::-::-cupboord. Coil 614-256- Toddy Beoro -- AKC Reg .
1 629.
Chow Chow puppieo. Coil
814-266 -1271.
Marlin lever action 30-30,
ohot 5 timoo. $100. 16 ft. American Pitt Bull Terrier
Bell bolt 66 HP. Johnson pupo. Purple ribbon bloodmotor. 12.300. Coli 614- line. Booutlfully marked rog 256 -6027 or 614 - 256- iatored AD8A 1200 ooch .
Call 304-582-6976 .
1554&amp;.
2 livingroom auitt good
cond . Call614-446 -4113 .

11/4/85
6:00

Building Materials
Block, brick. sewer pipet.
windows . lintels, et c .
Cloudo Wlnt"'O. Rio Gronde,
0 . Coll814· 246-5121 .

nie Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Ohio

&amp; Campers

HOUSII for Rent

3 bedroom houoo for

f

Monday, November 4, 1985

BARNEY
HANG ON

··TH' VERY

TIGHT!!
RUN
GITSOME
HELP

SECONT I
FINISH MY

I' LL

SUPPER

1/- #

SNAKE!!

•

5HU1'UP!
S'fOP

'T'HE GREAT

REMINDING

DEPRESSION?

BESIDES

. AND

MEOF
1'HING6'!

U·Y

T11AT'5 NOT ~ALLEY'S

COMET.. T~tiT 'S A
STREET .LI6~T...

SEE IT! I SEE IT!
I SEE HALLE\''5

STREET

L/ G~ T !!

(Il Born Free
(!) NFL Superstars: The
Men Who Played tho Game
(Sieelers History) .
@ MOVIE: ' With Six You
Get Egg Roll'
(I) U1 lill Hardca• tlo and
McCa&lt;mick iCC) Convinced he o nly has s i)(
months to live, Hardcastle
adopts an angelic dis posi·
ti on and heads out on a buying spree. 160 min.)
0 (I) ® Scorocmw end
Mrs . King A routine mi ssion
leads Amanda and Lee to a
secre t waepons arsenal. 160
min.)
(I)
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
liD Wonderworks iCC) Pari
1 of 2. 'Seal Morning.· A
sens it ive gi rl an d her recluSIVe aunt come to unde r·
stand each other through
rheir shared love of nature .
(60 min.)
fll MOVIE: 'Comeo a
.Horseman'
[HSO] MOVIE: 'Eddie and

Maneuvering
around a pre-empt

NORTII

+J B4 2

.t 6

'

J B 76
• 10 8 5 3

By James Jacoby

WEST
EAST
• Q 10 6 3
Pre-emptive bids by the opponents • 7 5
are a nuisance, unquestionably. Look . Q J1 09 5 1 32
• 10 9 5 2
at South's hand, which James Tucker t Q
+14
+
KQJ9
of Abilene, Tens, held at the St. Louis
regional tournament last August. He
SOUTII
had plenty of high cards and if he had
+AK 9
been dealer, there would have been a
. AKB
t AK 43
way to show 25 high-card points. Not
+ A6 2
any more. A takeout double by South
might bring a bid of four of a minor by
Vulner able: North-South
North (not on this hand), and then how
Dealer : West
could the good doctor get back i nto
ihree no-trump? He found the right West
North Eas:t
South
answer when he bid three no-trump 3 •
Pass
Pass
3 NT
Pass Pass
right away. Notice, however , that it Pass
would have been OK for him to double
Opening lead: • Q
if the pre-empt had been i n clubs or diamonds. Now partner would bid a ma. jor at the three-level, and the doubler IL-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- .:...1
could get back into three no-trump.
In the play, Tucker ducked the opening heart lead. On the heart continuation, he won his ace and pitched a club which declar er ducked. On the club ·
from dummy, East also discarding a continuation, South won the ace arid ·
club. South next played his diamond cashed his last hearl, throwing a dia- .
ace, then A·K of spades and a small mond fr om dummy. That brought in
spade. East won with the tO and then the contr act , since East was forced eicashed the spade queen, Tucker ther to unguard lhe diamonds or ' to
throwing a club on the fourth spade. make ,dummy's club 10 a winner by .._
· ·
East lhen switched to t he club king. letting go the high club.

.7

the Cruisers·
IMAXI MOVIE: 'City Heat'
(CCI
8:30 CI1 ESPN' s Monday Night
Match
9:00 II I]) (IJ MOVIE: 'This
Child Is Mine' (CC)
()] 700 Club
(!) Auto Racing '85:
Formula One Austra- lian
Grand Prix from Adelaide.
Australia.
(I) G) ll1i NFL Monday
Night Football: Dallas at
St. Louis ICC)
0 (I)® Kate &amp; Allie As a
birthday gift , Emma rece ives
a mys terious MeJ~ ican present from her fa ther.
(I) Tanko
liD Brain iCC) 'S1ress and
Emotions .' Two separate
cases of persons suffering
from pain and an J~ie ty are
examined. IRI (60 min.)
9:30 0 Cll ® Newhort !CCI
Larry decides to run for
mayor. but is s hocked when
Dick refuses to endorse him .
10:00 ()] Newo
Cil Honeymooner' • Anniversary Celebration .
0 (I) ® Cagney end
Lacey Cagney Is accused of
possible police entrapment
follo wing a na rcotics 'sting '
operation. (60 min.)
(I) Brain (CCI 'Stres s and
Emotion s.· Two sepa rate
case s of persons suff ering
fro m pain and anJ~iety are
examined. IRI (60 min.)
liD Health Care on the
Critical List Jack Klugman
narrates this e)(amination of
health care cost containment
initia tives
ac ross
America . (60 min.)
IHeOJ
MOVIE:
'Fort
Apache, The Bronx'
IMAXI MOVIE: 'On -Golden
Pond'
10:30 (Il Jack Benny Show
fi)INN Newr

6ltUJJtr~ eut'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Slringed
1 Type
instrument
offence
IH}VVN
5 Guinness
I "It Be You•
of films
9 Field
2 Scottish
10 I.C.B.M.
;.land
12 Liquid
3 Beatty fil m
measure
4 Air-lo-air
13 Beverage
missile
source
(abbr.)
Yesterday's Ans we r
15 Hebrew
5 Be present
let:U!r
6 Gennan song 20 Misrepre- 30 Doorway
16 Minced oath 7 Greek
sent
greeling
17 Call - day
letter
23 Reversion 31 Peewee
181ndlvid8 Ethel Waters 24 Lustrous
or
ually
ftlm
26 Use less
Della
run
11 Indigenous
plant
33 Sonora
20 Small
14 Stared
27 German
Indian
amount
16 Celt
P.O.W.
36 Spoil
21 Require19 Denoted
37 Lamprey
ment

22 Exist
23 Regional
25 Subsided
26lrish
islands
27 Dismissed
28 Pub

measure

29 Conslrain
32 Stitch
33 Lamentable i..-++-+34 Compass
reading
35 Paint
37 !tal. city
38 Crowr
39 - out
Uust
gels by)
40 Branch
of math.
DAILV CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how to work it :

Wagner switch
HOLLYWOOD (UPI )
Anemic r allngs forced ABC-TV
and Columbia Picrures Television lo puU Robert Wagner 's new
series, " Lime Slref\1," from t he
alr uniU afl er the first of the year.
When It returns, " Llme
Street," In which Wagner stars
as a wealthy Insurance investigator , will be moved from Its
present Salurday night time slot
lo anoU1er lime and eyenlng .
Said Bar bara Corday. president of Columbia Pictures T elevision, " In the meantime w e
w ere f acing sever al preernptlons,due to the World Series
,garnis and the 'North and South '
mini-series. "

11 -4-RS

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A IS used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formati on of t he words "re all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
11 -4

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IS

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I! X ll N II H I"
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Yesterday's Cryptoquote: NEVER G l\~ AN YONE
FRAN I\&gt; ADVICE UNTIL YOU'RE OUT m' llF.ACI I.
SOURCE UNKNOWN

�.•
: Page- 12.:_The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'}4 killed in Weekend accidentS
By United Press Internatlonal

Summit County road.
Fourteen people, Including six · New Lexington: Jeffery C. Estep,
pedestrlans, were killed in accidents 19, l.ancaster, when struck by a car
on Ohio roadways during the as he walked along Ohio 345 in Perry
·weekend, the state Highway Patrol County .
.reported today.
Salunlay
: Ontytwoofthevictlms, whowere
.Cincinnati: Dania! P. Carroll, 24,
drivers or passengers in motor Cincinnati, in a one-car crash on a
V,ehictes, were wearing sea t bPlts, a Hamilton County road . '
patrol spokeswoman said.
Toted6: David E. Crandall, 20,
· · There were four deaths Sunday, Sylvania, in a head-on car- truck
live Saturday and five Friday night. accident on a Toledo city s!n&gt;et.
The victims died in 13 accidents
Ravenna: Michael K. Oberwhich occurred between 6 p.m. holtzer, 32, Ravenna, when hit by a
Friday and midnight Sunday on the car on Ohio 59 in Portage County.
state's public roadways.
Ripley: LeRoy Sweet. 40, Dover,
Killed were:
Ky., when struckbyacaron0hlo 52
Sunday
in Brown County.
New Philadelphia: Steve W.
ZanesvUie: Clndi L. Swope, 'n,
Potllngton. 17, Dover, in a two-car Dreesden, In a one-car accident on
accident on Ohio 39 in Tuscarawas Ohio 666 in Musktngum County.
County.
Friday night
eanton: James w. Frederick, 34.
Jackson: Anna Marie Fielding,
Br!'wster, ina two-carcrashonOhio 20, Jackson, in a one-car crash on a
93in Stark County.
Jackson County road .
Akron : James P.. McA\1new, 87,
Xenia: Dejuan Anderson, 19,
Akron, In a two-car collision on a Detroit , when struck by a car on a
Greene County road .
Toledo: Chris Entsminger, 32,
Radnor. and Manuel Mala. 40,
Weslaco, Texas. when they were
Today - Rain. High in the tower st ruck by a car while they stood
50s. Northwest wtnds 10 to 15 mph.
along 1475, west of Toledo.
' Tonight - Occasional rain. Low
Uma: Samuel M. Bullock Jr., 21,
near 40. Northwest winds 10 mph or Lima, In a two-carcrashona Toledo
tess.
street.
Tuesday - Cloudy with a chance
of rain . High in the mid 40s.
Chance of rain- Near IOOpercent

Meigs man cited
A Meigs County man was cited by
the Gallla-Mt&gt;igs post of the State
Highway Patrol following a two-car
collision Saturday morning on
Meigs County 1.
Troopers said a ~ar driven by
Robert E. Miller, 38, of34700Whites
Httt Rd., Rutland, wssouthboundon
1, about one-tenth of a mile south of
Ohio 124, when a car driven . by
Rocky C. J ohnsOn, 21, of 32485 Meigs
County 1. . l.angsvllle, allegedly
backed from a driveway into the
path of Miller's vehicle. Miller
apparently could not stop in time
and struck Johnson's vehicle tn the
rtght rear, troopers said.
No injuries were reported in the
11:50 a.m. accident, which troopers
said caused madera te damage to
Johnson's car and tight damage to
MUter's. Johnson was charged by
the patrol with failure to yield.

Monday, November 4, 1985

H08pital news ConsultanJ finds fault
Veterans Memorial Hospital
with Zimmer agreement
Nov.2
Admissions - Abbie Strauss,
Pomeroy; Paul McElroy, Sr.,
Pomeroy; Walter Harris, Syracuse.
Dlschavges - Orland Cremeans.
Nov.3
Admissions - Veleeta Rowe,
Racine..
Dlschavges- William Rife.

Inside:

Paql Komanoff, of Komanoff
. COLUMBUS (UPII-Anenergy
·
Energy
Associates, an ·energy and
consultant says electlic company
economic
consulting firm in New
customers in Columbus, Cincinnati
York
City,
has been hired by
and Dayton wUJ "pay dearly" if a
Cincinnati
city
officials to testify at
negotla ted settlement regarding the
cost of the Zimmer Nuclear Power Public Utllities Commission of Ohio
hearings. Cim;innati's counctt voted
Plant is adopted.
6-lto

By the Bend ......... Paged, 6
CIMsllleds ........ Pages 6, 7, 8
Coolk:s-TV .............. Page 9
Deaths ................... Page 10

Editorial ......... ~ ....... Page2
Sports ................. Pages 3, 4

•

at y
COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*

AnENTION
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
perience. let's all vote for

GEORGE WOLFE

A lifelong Chester Township resident. I will do all I can lor all residents of Chester Township.

By LEE LEON;\RD

United Press International

Paid tor by t~e Candidate
6882 Texas Rd. Pomero Oh :o 45769

::m~~~~r:nt
tonight and 40 ~ELBERFE. LDS
.: Extended forecMt - Wednesday
ihroogh Frilay- Fair Wednesday,
a chance of rain Thursday and a
chance ollingertngshowers Friday.
tilghs in the 50s Wednesday and
Thursday and in the upper 40s and
lowe~ 50s Friday. Lows mostly from
the mid 30S to tower 40s.

Gloomy skies and the threat of
rain greeted Ohioans today as they
cast their ballots in an "off-year"
election highlighted by a statewide
coal research and development
bond Issue and sever-al big-city
mayors' races .
It was possible the inclement
weather would depress the turnout,
pegged by Secretary of State
Sherrod Brown at 3.1 mlllion, or52.1
percent of eligible voters.
Ohio's 8,250 polllng places open€&lt;!
at 6: ~ a.m. and wlll close at 7:30
p.m.
Some 1,600 local Issues ranging In
subject from street. repair to
pornography SPiced the ballot,
accompanying the normal tax
levies, bond issues and contests for
local elective office.
State Issue 1, the only common
Item on ballots throughout the state,
is a constitutional amendment
permitting the sate of up to $100

s

BIG
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CAfioLATE
ALMOND.
MILK CHL MR ao6Dt!AR

CHRIS1MAS
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fOR

IT'S ELECTION DAY -InsplleofTuesday'sraln,
Oscar Qualls was out brlcht and early to exercise his
privUege of voting. Mr. QuaDs signs the poD book for

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Automatic t1mer proVIdes up
to 25 minules ot com1nuous cooktng •
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lutc~en

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SUAVE
COCOA
BUTTER OR
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TRUSTEE

IVORY

OF

SALISBURY TWP.

•RITE AID
COl ION
SWABS

Son of Steve and Wanda Eblin
Employed by Kroger Store of
Pomeroy
If elected I do not promise
to do everything that each
voter would like to see ac.complished on their township road. I do promise to
inspect all roads and to 'alk
with you about your problems and to do my best to
improve the type of service
you have been receiving.
Paid for by
candidate, Gregory
!Greg) Eblin,
. Ohio

59

10 oz.
BOTTLE

19

DENTAGARD
FLUORIDE TOOTHPASTE

, Diet or Regular

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the Pomeroy 1st Ward as directed by Mary McAngus,
presiding judge. At 9 a.m., McAngus l'I!POited only 19
. voters In her ward, probably due to the Inclement
weather.

milllon In bonds lor the development
of a commercial- scale process for
burning abundant high-sulfur Ohio
coat without polluting the atr.

The closest race appeared to be in
Toledo, where Democrat Michael
Rankin challenged Republican
Mayor Donna Owens.

A constitutional amendment is
needed to sell the lnnds because the
Ohio Constitution limits the pur·
poses for which money may be
borrowed and repaid with tax
revenues. Issue I creates an
exception for coal research ·and
development.
~
The bond proceeds wut be used to
take proven laboratory sulfur·
removal processes to an industrial·
size demonstration project to con·
vince electrtc utUUies that Ohio coal
can be bumed cleanly and
inexpensively,
Cleveland Mayor George V.
Voinovich, a Republican, was
heavily -favored to win a fourth
consecutive two-year term over
Democratic Councilman Gary Kuctntch, headlining a series of
mayoral contests in Dayton, Youngstown and Toledo.

Topping a ttst of 180 p1bllc school
issues was a 12.1-mlll emergency
property tax levy in Indian Creek
Local School District, Jefferson
County. The$1.4 mllllonraisedfrom
that levy is .needed to pay back a
state loan to keep schools open in
that Ohio River town near
SteubPnville.
Elsewhere, there were 103 school
operating levies, 16 of them viewed
as emergencies and three needed to
prevent distrlcts from seeking stale
loans to keep schools open through
DecembPr.
In Jackson County, voters de·
cided on a one-half percent sales tax
which a majority d county commissioners say Is needed to keep the
county government operating. Em·
ployees already have becn laid off
and the county jail closed to
conserve funds .

Final attorney fees for Taylor trial $12,480

model MW3200XP.
l nc l u~es

G,.gory IG11111l Eblin. wHo Jono1,

26 Canll

A Multimedia

.Ohioans go to po s
in off-year election

let's elect a TRUSTEE with ex-

Weather forecast

1 Section, 10 Pagea

November 5, 1985

• AS PER POSTED SCHEDULE

votns

entine

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OF 24
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POMERC' " ... .
4
. PHARMACY PHONe : 992-.::i!l6

SEE STORES FOR DETAILS

.-

Final attorney fees of $12,480 tn the Lindsay Taylor
murder trial have been submitted to the Meigs
County Commissioners.
An Initial request of $18,&lt;00 was trimmed down
$IDOO by Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight, before the . final blll was given the
• ' cl)ml'l\tsslon~-.
Knight based this determination upon applications
for tees and the maximum fee schedule certified by
the commissioners lor court appointed attorneys $ll out of court and$50ln court for homicide cases and
SIOOO for felony charges.
In explaining hts determination, Knight said he
charged the county $1001 for each of t~&lt;U ptior felony
charges against Taylor, and divided those amounts
between the two attorneys, Steven Story, Pomeroy,
· and Donald Cox, Gallipolis.
Acconltng to Knight, the normal fee in an
aggravated murder case Is $10,001 so he awarded that

amount, considered each attorneys' hours spent on
Taylor's defense, and awarded each attorney a
percentage of the total.
Story received $5,400 on ·the murder case; Cox
received S4,600.
Knight pointed out it is the obligation of the oounty
to provide the Indigent with the same dE'tense as
someone who can afforcJ to pay lor tbPir
representation; "no more, no less."
The commissioners have stated that there Is no
money approprtated into accounts at this ·time to
cover the $12,001 plus costs, however. after the rudgel
commission has completed the county's October
settlement figures, the board can then pay the fees.
Another murder trtal with court appointed defense
counsel is scheduled to begin in Meigs Cou nty !n early
December. Because of this, the commissioners are
becoming concerned that the county wut bP unable to
foot future bills should this trend continue.
With this thought in mind, the board discussed last

week the posslblity of creating a public defender 's
position in the county. Said Commissioner Rich
Jones, "It's reasonable to at least explore the idea."
Judge Knight is In agreement that the commission
should think about creating such a position within the
county and said he suggested the posslblity a yearago
for several reasons:
I. The county knows from day one what costs for
court appointed counsel will be; "no surprises;
2. The lawyer or firm serving in the position can
concentrate efforts on criminal taw, probably giving a
better defense since more time is spent in tllat area;
3. The judge has an advantage because he doesn't
have to search for attorneys who are wllling to take
criminal cases.
In addition, Knight said, a county public defender
would bP entitled to assistance from the state public
defender's office, Including the forensic division.
Since the position of public defender wouklbP just

parttlme, Knight feels the county would bP able to find
someone wtUing to accept the responslbllity for
around $15,001 a year.
A secretary, at least parttlme, and office
equipment would also probably be needed the judge
said.
Of the $12,41rl to be paid by the county in the Taylor
case, $48! goes to Charles A. Knouse. D.O., of Athens,
an expert witness for the defense.
Not Included In the $12,480 Is a bill of $1400 from
Professor James Haueter, Marietta, also an expert
for the defense. That bill had not yet been approved by
the judge when the fees were submitted to the
commission last week.
Haueter's but will bring the total owed tJy the county
to $13,881
Of that amount , the county wlll be reimbursed tn
part by the Ohio Public Defender's Commission- not
to exceed 50 percent of the total costs.

ALL TVC - 'lbree Meigs volleyb!lll players were
nwned to the AU-TVC teague squad. Honored at the
Meigs sports banquet were, from left. Coach Kim

Adkins, Jennifer MIUer (third team I, .Jennl Cooch
(second team I and Jodi Harrison (flrsl team). See
slory on page 5.

KGB ·chief claims he was
kidnapped, drugged · by CIA
WASHINGTON IUPI) - The
Kremlin has delivered a . presummit bombshell by producing a
top KGB official who claims he was
kidnapped tn Rome, spirited to the
United States and drugged by tlle
CIA.
Vltaty Yurchenko startled the
U.S. intelligence community Monday with his claim that he spent
"three horrible months" helng
questioned tn a CIA "safe house"
near Fredericksburg, Va., bPfore
sUpping away to the Soviet
Embassy.
The bizarre tum of eventscreated
yet another strain on U.S.-Soviet
relations, as Secretary of State
George Shul12 prepared to meet
Soviet leader Mlkhall Gorbachev in
Moscow today to make final
preparations for the Nmi. 19-20
summit.
Yurchenko' s revelation comes on
the heels of recent U.S.- Soviet
confrontations involving a Soviet
seaman who jumped ship In New
Orleans and a soldier who sought
refuge Jn the U.S. Embassy tn
Afghanistan.
The Soviet Embassy lodged a
formal protest at the State Depart·
ment over the · incident and de·
manded Yurchenko be allowed to

return to the Soviet Union. ·
But the State Department, brandIng Yurchenko' s allegations "completely false and without any
foundation, ," said that bPfore he wilt
he permitted to leave the United
States. "we wlll Insist on meeting
with him in an environment free of
Soviet coercion to satisfy ourselves
about his real Intentions. "
Yurchenko, 49, appearing at an
hourlong news conference, claimed
he had not defected but had bPen
"forcibly abducted" in Rome in
August "by some u n k n o w n
persons" and "brought unconscious
to the United States."
The CIA decllned comment. But
Sen. David Durenberger, R·Mliln ..
chairman d the Senate Intelligence
Commtttte, said the case "was a
setupfrom,the beginning to make us
look bad."
Speaking a mixture of broken
English and Russian through an
Interpreter, Yurchenko described
his "helpless" condition. He said he
was drugged, deprtved of steep and
denied requests to , see Soviet
Embassy officials.
'
He said he spumed a contract
offer as a "consultant" with a $1
million down payment, $62,500 a

year for llfe and $48,000 worth of
furniture .
He said he was told he had spllled
cruciallnfonnation. "They showed
me documents that were written tn
my hand," he said, but he
maintained he gave away no secret
lnfonnatlon "in the po!rtod when I
was conscious and controlled."
"When I was druggedwlthspeclal
drugs, I don't know what I was
seeing or what I was dolng,"hesaid.
"Only on November 2, due to the
momentary lapse of attention on the
part of persons watching me, I was
able to break out to freedom and
come to the Soviet Embassy," he
said. "I am very proud that I
managed to escape, but I won'l tell
you how."
State Department spokesman
Charles Redman in a statement
firmly denied the acccount.
"At no time was Mr. Yurchenko
held or coerced by Improper, Illegal
or unethical means," Redman said.
RedmansaldthatYurchenkohad .
"defectedofhtsown volllton " Aug.1
at the U.S. Embassy in Rome. "He
requested asylum In the United
States and signed a statement to that
effect and asylum was granted," he
.said.

J

(:able TV is Pomeroy Council topic
Mondaynlght'smeettngofPomeroy VIllage Councll was brief, with
cable TV the matn topic of
discussion.
Several counctt .members reported they have received compialnts from village residents concernlngaspectsofthevlllage'scable
TV service from Consolidated
Communications, a Point Pleasant
basedftnn.

Mayor. Seyler said he will ask the meeting on NovembPr 18.
Consolldated Communications to
In other business, the mayor
send a representative to the reported S!'ii06 tn fines and fees wa s
November lB meeting of councll to collected for the month of October.
give an explanation of the comCouncil also agreed to hold · a
pany's services, Including senior contingency meeting Wednesday
citizen's rates and ' billing . evening, 7p.m., todlscussupcomlng •
plans lor the vUtage. The Wednesprocedures.
Mayor and councll encourag-: daymeettngwut bPhetdwhetheror
village residents with questions not the vlltage's Income tax ls
concerning cable TV to al&lt;O attP.nrl repeated In Tuesday's election.

.

'

defen.'"' and Brad Robinson · offense; (standing,
left) Brian Conde of the Jaycees, Coach Charles'
players were pl'elellted with the Roberill Award
Monday night by the Meigs Jaycees,' honoring the lop , ,Chancey, Mike Chancey · offense and Dick Owen ~
the Jaycees. See story on page 5.
ollmslve and defensive players on the Marauders
~uad. Plctuf!ld are (seated from left) Huey Eason ·
-

'l1tree Meigs football

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