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                  <text>:Paga 8-The Daiy SantinW.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 9, 1986 .

,...._-Local Briefs:-..... Reagan speaks out on reporter's arrest
DAR chapter meeting postponed
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters ol.

~

American
RevolutiOn, has postponed Its meeting !rom Friday i:l SWt. 19.

Buckley reunion loootion cltaftged
The 50th annual Buckley reunion will be ~ ~nlay at the

Belleville Dam Park In ReedsvUle, not ~ lire departJnent as was
earner announced, beginning with a JX!tluck dinner at 1 p.m.

Rock Springs Grange sets dinner
The Rock Spl1ngs Grange wUI meet at ~ hall Thursday for a
p:ltluck dinner at 6: :ll p.m. Fifty-year certificates will be awarded
and members are urged to attend.

Pomeroy squad answers call
The Pomeroy unit ol. !be Meigs County Erne11J!l1Cy Medical
Service was called to The Maples Apartments t:lr O!rlstlne Kessler
at 1: 56 a.m. Monday. She was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital .

Court issues marriage licenses
Four marriage llcenses have been Issued In ~ Meigs County
Probate Courl.
Ucenses have been Issued to Ronald Allen Holcomb, 'll, Rutland.
and Roxane Stanley, 25, Rutland; Danny Dwaln Brown, :11,
Pomeroy, and Bonnie Gla Morris, 26, Pomeroy; Charles Fran kin
Johnson, 35, Mlddleporl, and Cynthia Lou Sexton, 23, Mlddleporl;
and Ralph Gregory Gibbs, 35, New Haven, W.Va., and Robin Lym
Hawk, 22, Hemlock Grove.

Dissolutions filed in court
Entrtes on several domestlc Issues have been !lied In ~ Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Decrees of dissolution of ~ marrtages of Carl L. Wolfe and
Brenda S. Wolfe and Paula Jean Long and David Richard long have
been filed In the court, and an entry providing for the withholding ol.
earnings for chtld suppJrt has been Issued to Carl's Auto Sales In !be
case af'Wolfe dissolution.
Also filed In the court Is an entry vacaUng a divorce decree rued In
~ court on Nov. 12, 198J. The entry states that ~ judgment of
divorce has been found to be nun and wid UJX!n evidence to the rourt
that !be defendant was not properly seve&lt;! as prescribed by the rule
of clvll procedure.
In the action of BlUy Joe Butcher against Richard C. and Mary L.
Meredith, an entry has been !lied with the judgment In favor of the
defendants. It provides tor the payment of $750 by ~ plaintiff to the
defendants for damage to !be defendants' field, and further orders
that a timber agreement between ~ parties be terminated.

Firemen schedule tractor pull
A garden tractor pull will be held at 1 p.m. Sunday at HarrlsonvUie
by !be Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Department. 'fi'ophles are
being provided by the Rutland Furniture Store. Food will be served
on the grounds.
·

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Presi- late this year and It is up to Reagan
dent Reagan, expressing his first to l'l'Ciprocate.
public outrage at the Soviet arrest
"This Is why we believe thai tht'
of AmeriCan joumallst Nicholas ball Is not In the Russians' coun , as
DanlloU ·on sw charges, says the the !lllb White House heralds claim,
actlontal$1!!1 "a major obl!ltacle"ln but In RoOOkl Reagan's court," the
u.s. relations with the Kremlin.
· Soviet .leader said. "There Is ro
But !be president stopped short li' !IE!lse in ·llokllng a meeting li:&gt;r !be
suggesting It could wreck a second sake oi.I)Otblng. Maybe this would
summit between him and Slvtet suit ~ fine, rut ce•1.ainly
leader Mlkhall Gorbacl1ev, who mt us.." '
said Monday another superpower
Reagan planned to meet with
meeting should be held only If It can congressional leaders of both parbe productive.
ties today to assess the upcoming
Gorbachev said his government legislative agenda and discuss his
has tried to create a positive anti-drug campaign.
atmosphere tor a pvsslble summtt
Secretary of State George Shultz

Village council sells lot
rrortgage holder oo J;l"operty ri.
Greg GltiJs, whlle Fanners Bank&amp;
Savings Co., !be first mortgage
bolder, refinances the property
with the Idea that sHes above the
Sears Store can be !llld.
Hoffman reported that he received a communlcatkm from the
c.&amp; o. Rallroad In regard to land
!be village wants to acquire fur the
bike path. However, Hoffman
Indicated that Is apparently some
confusion on the mattor and he will
again contact railroad
representatives.
Hoffman was authorized to apply
for an Ohio Depa,rtmentof Development project grant for an Improvement In the central business dlstrtct
If It Is decided to proceed with thai
renovation project.
-.

A lettE!' !rom !be Big Bend
Cltl:lms Band Radio Club was read
anrouncing that the club will
donate a radill&gt;r use by the pollee
department with only the stipulation that the radlobereturnedtothe
club If tt Is rot needed at a later
tlme. A letter of thanks wUl be sent
the club.
A discussion was held on Saturday's block p.arty to be !taged by
ftle Middleport Chamber of Commerce. Gtlmore said that North
Second ivill be blocked off at the
rorner ri. Dan's store and downliver traffic wBI be routed out
Walnut to North Third Avenue, and
upriVer trafllc will be routed up
Front Street. Gllmore urged that a
rurlew t:lr ~th be strtctly enforced becausevandallsm, which Is

-----------

----

-

-

·Area deaths
James E. Blaker

&amp;trvlvlng along with his parents
are one sister, Carol M. Oller of

James Everett Blaker, 42, Santa
Ana, Callf., died Sunday In St. Joe's
Hospital In Orange, Calif.
He was horn Aug. 13, 19&lt;14, In

Stockport; and one lrother, John R
Blaker of.San Antonio, Texas.
Graveside savtces will be Wednesday at 1 p.m. In the ~nrlse
Merrortal Gardens In Letart with
~ Rev. Clyde Fields ofllclatlng.
There will be ro visitation. Funeral
arrangements are being handed by
~ Foglesong Funeml lilme.

Mason.
~rvlvtng are his father, Walter
Everett Blaker ri. Marietta, and
mo~r. Allee Kearn; Blaker of
Hartford, W.Va.

was scheduled 10 bri~f I~ Wflb•·t«·
slonal ~·a&lt;k•rs on the O.nUofl
mall&lt;'r.
Returning . Monday !rom his
2.3-dav """alton In Catilomla. Hea
gan made his first public comment
on the Aug. :lJ aiTest of Daniloff.
which administration officials said
was "trumped up" In an apparent
efli:&gt;rt to win release of Gennady
Zacharov, a Soviet U.N. employee
accused In New York of spying.
At a fund-raiser In Colorado for
Senate candidate Ken Kramer,
Reagan said the Soviet detention
"of an Innocent American Is an
outrage" that "violates the stand·

ards

of

dviliLt.'d

&lt;Continu&lt;.'&lt;l from Page

Middleport

•

Souill Cftltral Ohio

with a low near 60. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday, with a chance ri.
showers and highs In !be low 80s.
The probablllty of precipitation Is
20 percent tonight and :ll percent
Wednesday.
' Wlntls will be light and !rom the
south tonight.
Ohio ExiEJlded FOrecll!il
Thunday llrough Salurda,v
A chance of sho~rs Thursday,
with fair weather Friday and
Saturday. Highs will rang!! from 75
to 80 Thursday, dr~plng to te·
tween 61i and 10 Saturday and
~nlay . Overnight toM will be
between 55 and 60 Thursday
rrornlng and between 45 and 55
Frlday and ~nday mornlngs.

Jude said missing

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 10, 1986

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - Gov. Richard F.
· Celeste has promtsed 'llenlor citizens that a second
· Celeste administration would aim for lower-cost
: health care and prescrtptlon drugs, cheaper
· telephone service and greater Independence fi:lr the
: elderly Ohioans able to live on their own.
; The governor SJX!kes of "Phase II" Tuesday in
, addressing the 11th annual meeting of the Ohio State
: CouncU of Senior CitiZens. which registered solid
. support lor him.
· Dorothy Ryan of Youngstown, the org-•nlzatlon's
. president, told the 125 members present that
: Republican nominee James A. Rhodes "did nothing
. for us" when he was governor.

Celeste received his loudest cheers when he said he
hopes to Induce certain physicians In every
communlly to accept Medicare coverage as full
payment for primary health care.
"Amen!" shouted one listener.
The governor also proposed:
-Slate-subsidized prescription drugs. such as
heart medication, for low-lncomesenlorcltizens. ala
cost to the state of $10 million a year.
-Expansion of the PasspJrt program, which
provides meals, homemakers and nurses lor seniors
to live Independently in nine counties, to 44 counties
during his next term at a cost of $8 million to $10
mUiion.
-Expansion of the homeowner's lax credit for

:Chamber
.
.
:honors
·backers
·of parks
Certificates of appreciation were
awarded to Individuals and businesses wbo have played key roles In
·. the devvelopment of the new mini
parks In Pomeroy when the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
. met for luncheon at theCourtStreet
Park Tuesday.
Ft!meroy O!amber of Commerce
.President BUl Nease made the
·presentation d the framed cert~l­
·cates which went to Pomeroy
·Mayor Richard Seyler. the Pullins
Excavating Co.; Sam Boston and
. ~Carpetttet:S' Local l!nlon 6511;
.:George Carper of Carper's
Nursery; tf.o Pomeroy Ftre De·
·.partment; brick wor~r Jim Johnson; Bob J&lt;of!ers Equipment; and
·Dilvld Gloeckner, head ol the
-GaUia-Melgs Community Action
Agency Job Training Partnership
Act program which used development of the parks as a training
program for workers.
- Nease extended thanks to a
·. numher of other businesses and
Individuals who have ethercontrlb~uted to the parks project or have
committed to donations In the
·future. Nease Indica led that there is
stUI more to be oone and urg»d
·Involvement oo the part ri. chamber
: members and residents.

low-income senior citizens, at a cost of$~ million a

vear.
- -A "lifeline" minimal telephoiX' rale for lowIncome senior citizens, to he paid lor by ot lx&gt;r pmn&lt;'

customers.
Celeste said he wanls security for older Ohioans and
will step up efforts to light crime. toxic waste.
domesllc violence and drug abuse.
Ryan said Celeste has done a good job for SPnior
citizens by making thl' Department of Aging a
Cabinet-level agency and hy expanding the Goick'n
Buckeye Card program, which Rhodes originated .
"You know why we're not lor Governor Rhodes."
she said. "Because hi' did nothing lor us."
The Council of Senior Citizens, founded in 1975. has

about 40.0CO members. mainly rctir o:l labor union
members.
Ryan said Rhodes has accused the Celeste
admlnislration of heing crookrd . ··1 don'l know who
would be belter off 10 keep quiel about being
crookrct:· she said .
Ryan urged members togolotbc library and read "
1969 Life magazine article PnliiiPd 'The Governor
and I he Mobster" about Rhodes' alleged I irs wilh lh&lt;'
Mafia. It also said he convcrled campaign fund s lo hi s
personal use in Ihe 1900sand '60s. Rhodes.1Jed We for
$10 million. but later dropped the suit.
Rvan said later I hat Rhodes calling Celeste a crook
was "like the JX!I calling the kettle block.'. Bul she
said she had no proof thai Rhodes was a crook. "!do
not know that he's a crook," she said .

Women net :r:najor victories
•
•
In VariOUS primary elections
By STEVE GERSTEL

,"........,,. · lhe Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, tUesday pre!leltted an engraved plaque to David
Gloeckner, director of lhe GaUJa-Melgs Commumty Action Agent-y
JTPA program, In appr&lt;elatlon for the exiEJlslve work and mmey
expended lltroogh the program in estabHslunenl of the mini-Jllll'ks on
Pomeroy'• Court Street.
Tom Reed highly commended
Nease for his Interest and contributions to lhe parks projects. While
everyone helped. the entire project
could nol have dPveloped U II had
not been lor Nease's efforts and
involvement, Reed said. Nease was
given a standing ovation.
The chamber discussed a new
counl which wUI be laken in regard
10 traffic on the Pomeroy-Mason

Bridge so that figures can he
secured In helping with the location
of a ferry service when the bridg» is
closo:l .
NeaSI' anoounced a dance for
Nov. 8 al Royal Oak Park and brief
discussions were held on Halloween
and Christmas season programs.
Reed and Paul Gera1·dwill workout
the details of the Halloween party.

United Press lnlemalionat
Women candidates, including the
daughter of Robert Kennedy.
scored major victories in landmark
primaries and set up an all-female
Senate election In Maryland - only
the second In the history of lhe
United States.
Republican Linda Chavez. a
lormer While House aide, and
five-term Democratic Rep. Barbara Mikulski swept to easy and
anticipated wins In their primaries,
trouncing male rtvals on lheir way
lo the November election.
Only once before have two
women faced each other In a Senate
election. In 19ro, Sen. Margaret
Chase Smith of Maine defeated her
Democralic challenger, Lucia
·eromter. •
The success·ofwomen candidates
- In Senale, House and governors
races - highlighted the biggest
primary day of the year Tuesday as
nine slates and lhl' Districl ri.
Columbia elected party candidates
for the general election .
New York. Conneclicut. Mary
land, New Hampshire. Vermont.'
Wlo;ronsin and Arizona nominated
candidates - some of them
unoppJscd- lor the S..nalc. House
and governor's mansion. Minnesota and Rhode Island Republicans

and Democrats picked House and
governor nominees.
There were no serious challenges
to most big-name lncumbenls, who
ran unopposed or brushed ofl
tntraparty squabbles.
Among lhem were New York
Gov. Mario Cuomo, a JX!SSible
candidate for the Democratic
presidential nominal ion in 19~. and
Sens. Allonse D'Ama to. R-N.Y. ,
Patrick Leahy. D-VI. . Warren
Rudman, R·N .H.. Christopher
Dodd. D Conn .. and Bob Kaslen.
R·Wis.
Although the ChavPz and Mi kulski victories highlighted the
success of women candldales,
others scul'f'd notable wins including Kathleen Kennedv Town
send, daughter of t~ tare Rober&lt;
Kennedy and niece of Presidrnl
John F. Kennedy and Sen . Edward
Kennedy.
Townsend, the fi rst of her
generation of Kennrdys to win an
elec tion, w111 fac e anol~r woman .
Republican lncumtEnt Rep. Helen
Bentley in the NovemtEr election
for the House seat from Ma1yland's
2nd dislrict.
Townsend·s brolher. .Joseph
Kennedy II , will &lt;ry next W&lt;'Pk to
win the Democratic nominal ion in
Massac huSPIIS' Hlh dislrict, a seal
once held by President Kcnncd&gt;·

and World Report correspondent
Nicholas Danllo!l has been charg»d

Sally Williams Lambert, Rock
VD. Edwards and his late wile.
working in Insuran ce in
Virginia , had operated the Edthe community for some 10 wards Agency for many years.
years, has purchased the V.D
Uke the Edwards Agency,
Edwards Insurance Agency, Jlo Lamhe11 wut continue concenE. Second St., Pomeroy.
trated affiliation with Motorists
Having been employed with Mutual and wUI offer all types rt
thl' Pauley Nationwide Insu- insurance to cu~omers.
rance Agency, West Main Street
In Pomeroy. for the past 10~
years. Lambe!1 is lhe daughter
of !be late Pearl Williams.
Pomeroy High School teacher
and for maily years an agent for
the Nationwide Insurance Co.,
and Helen Williams, Middleport,
long-time teacher at the Pome·
roy Elementary School before
her retirement
Lambert Is married to Clar·
ence Lambert, who Is employed
with Texas Eastern Gas Com·
pressor Statton In Athens. They
have two daughters, Natalie, a
senior majortng In business
Marietta College and Donna. a
senior at Meigs High School. The
famUy resides on Rock Sprtngs
Road
Pomeroy and have
been active through the years In
4-H club work and In raising and
training horse!;.
Employed at the agency,
•
. BUYER - Mrs. Salb' )\'IJU.
which will he known as the
ams Lambert, Roell Spmp
Lambert Insurance Agency. Is
Carol Jeffers. Roote 1, Middle- · Road, near Pomeroy, a veteran
bt lhe lnourance .bullni!M, has
port, who was also employed
purohased
11te ·v.D. E~~Wardl
wlth the Pauley Nationwide
Insurance
Agency
In al 1111 E.
Insurance Co. for several years
Second
81.,
In
Pomeroy.ll
wiB be
and was employed with the
renamed
Lambert
lnlurMtce
Edwards Agency when It was
Agency,
purchased by Mrs. Lambert.

near

with three counts of espionage, his
wife said today, but hi' still believes
the case wlll be solved diplomatically before it comes to trtaL
Mrs. Daniloff visited her husband
In his cell In Moscow's Lefortovo
prison Tuesday where he has been
held since his arrest Aug. :ll.
After reviewing the notes she had
taken durtng her visit, she told
reporters today that her husband
said the formal Indictment mentioned ·three specific charges.
She said one charge against her
husband was that he "used his
status as a foreign journalist to
convey lo tbe U.S. Centml lnteitl·
gence Agency and Special Services
of the U.S.A., Information harmful
to the security of lhe Soviet Union
between 1982 and 1986."
She said the second rount accused DanDo!! of working with the
OA lo "enllst or recruit" a Soviet
citizen to spy against his count I)'.
The citizen was identified only as
''Ramon.''
Mrs. DanUoff said her husband
had Indeed met "Ramon." who was
posing as a Russian Orthodox prtest
about two years ago, but broke off
contact after hi' suspected Ramon
was a KGB Informant.
The third count Is more general
and simply reads: "Conducting
other espionage activities."
"The third rountls thecalchaU.lt
Is so vague It Is meaningless," she
said.
"He believes all these legalities
are .Irrelevant. He does not want
legal help. This Is a JX!lltlcal case
not a legal one," she said.
The Izvestia newspaper Monday
said that a Soviet citizen, "Ramon,"
had received a letter from U.S.
Embassy Second !jecretary Paul
Stombaugh, who was expelled In
June 1985 for spying. The letter
mentioned contacts with a journalIst who was not Identified. Izvestia
said the journalist was Danlloff.

and now oocupied by ll'llring House
Speaker Thomas O'Neill.
In guhernalorlal races . lX'moera lie Gov. Madeline Kunin easily
won the lX'mocraTic nomination in
Vermont. deputy stale House Republican leader JuDe ll!'laga cap·
tured the GOP oominalion in
Connecticul and Carolyn Warner.
sla te superinten&lt;k'nl for public
instruction, defe ated Phoenix businessman Tony Mason for lhe
lX'mocratic nominat kl n in Arizooa .
Maryland Democrats also chose
Baltimore Mayor William Donald
Shaefer for governor over Morney
General Slephen Saclls. Rl'publican Tom Mooney was UlllPJX!Sed.
In Senale primaries: Consumer
lawyer Mark Green lral milllonalrc John D}"on to win !he
l)&gt;mocratic nomlnalion in New
York and a shol at D'Amato;
veteran Endicott Peabody. once a
Massachusetts governor, won the
New Hampshire primary and wUI
run againsl Rudman; form er four·
lerm Gov. Richard Snelling wont~
GOP primary and wUI go against
Leahy in Ve1mon1: HouSP Interior
Chairman Morris Udall. D-Arlz ..
won easy victory in his primary bid
for a 14th lffm and faces laces
Sheldon Clark in November. Rerublican Rep. John McCain and
!Conlinued on Page 121

"
r.....--.

-

NEW RESTAURANT Sli'E -This !lite off Ohio 71n
GaiUpolbi has been ""lected for the new Bob Evans

~

~
. /

Fanns restaurant thai ,.iH repla~ · •· the lloh Evan'
SleakhouNC al lil:ll Eastern Ave., eompany o!lkial!;

said today.

Bob Evans Farms planning
new restaurant in Gallipolis
By LEE ANN WELCH

OVP Staff Wrier
GALLIPOLIS - · A new Bob
Evans restaurant Is In the making,
to be located on Ohio 7,across from
~ Sliver Brldg» Plaza, according
to Bob Evans Farms Inc. officials.
The proJX!Sed $1 miiUon restau·
rant wUI be a traditional Bob Evans
facUlty and should seat approximately 150, lhe company said
today . Expected opening date Is the
summer of 1987.
Closing on the property, next to
Whittington's Sohlo station, 309
Upper River Road, should be
completed by !be end of this year,
with construction to start as soon
possible.
Other detalls, such as wnlng, are

being worked out at &lt;his lime, ness on June 10. 1~41i . as a lru ckPr's
stop on 7, with 1:! stools for sca ring
officials said.
Empklyees at the current Bob In 1958 and 19folllh&lt;&gt; stcakhousl' was
Evans Sleakhouse, 15ll Eastern remodeled, increasing the scaling·
Ave .. wUl be given first oppJrtunity capacity. A drive-In wa s es la bto transfer to the new restaurant, iished in 1!147. and In l!r.J4 lhr old
and after I hat, remaining openings buDding housing lhe drtve-in was
will be filled by new em(Jioyees, demolished lo make way lor a
officials said. The restaurant wUI larger and morr modern facllilv
need approximately 10 people to and parking lot. II is now the site of.
operate, they added.
the Kentucky Fr!Pd Chicken franNo closing date or future plans for chise, 1528 Eastern Ave.
the steakhouse have been
The steakhouse Is the ortglnai
determined.
restaurant in the chain, which has
Finley Colton, Hender;nn, con- grown over the years to include 160
firmed that he has sold approxl· In several midwestern states, with
mately 41!. acres ol.landoff7, within the newest opening In Bloomington ·
'.
the city limits, to Bob Evans Fanns Ind., on Mondav.
and that negotiations on !be sale
According to Otllclals, a Red Roof:
should be completed today.
Inn Is not lonnally a part gr the ·
·
1The steakhouse opened lor bust- company's development plans.

•
' . ...

~uwo• •r:o,

lhundcrswm._ likely. Higl" will
ht• nPar K5. 'fht• prohahili1.1· of

Celeste pledges to help state's senior citizens

Sprtng~.

¢"'

tonight with a lowlwar 111. Wind~

•

at y
Vol.36. No.89
Copyrighted 1988

Sca.tlt'l't.'d ..JIOwt•r.; and wind-'
'rhursday with

rtt:K-4
0561

•

Meigs resident buys
•
tnsurance agency

•
•

The Daily Sentinel

meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company!Mulllmedla, In~ .•
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769 , Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage patd at Pomeroy.

7:~6

-Page 3

By CHARLES Mn{;IIELL
MOSCOW (UP!) - U.S. News

•

Admitted -Golda Smith, Reedsville; Sharon Thacker, Ewlngton.
Discharged - VIrginia Hedrick.

1'\umhc•r

Soviets file spying charges
;against U.S. correspondent

'"

Veteram Memorial

Uail~

I)

told Wedge and Casto, "but look
what you spent trylngtogoafler lt ."
Lovell then ·seconded a rrotlon by
Rlllle to accept the agreement only
UJX!n tbe condition that the cable
company reimwrse the city lor tt
rosts. After some discussion, and
1Continued from Page 1)
comment by several other council
members and !be may(J' that
"malicious," Is taking place In the dragging the situation out may end
town.
up costing the city rrore In !be long
Councllman Wllllam Walters run to achieve the same result,
urged that a better watch be councll wted Riffle's rrotlon down .
maintained over !be b ur-way stop
"Our concern Is getting (WOUB)
at Lincoln and Pearl streets. The back on the air," Wedge reminded
Lincoln Street traffic many tlmes ts council.
not obeying the st~ signs and this · At that JX!lnt, Six moved to accept
could prove a dangerous situation the compromise settlement, Handfur children attending the nearby ley seconded the motion and councU
school, Walters said. Hoffman approved the settlement, 8-3.
agreed that a closer check will have
Consolidated Communications
to be maintained at the location. Group's franchise with the dty Is a
Satterfield suggested that the Co- J.O.year agreement stemming from
lumbus &amp; Southern Ohio Etectrtc 1!m. Recent leglsla!Dn In ConCo. be rontacted In regard to gress, however. will deregulate the
trtmming trees around street Hghts cable TV Industry In January 1987.
and JX!Wer lnes.
However, Hoffman Indicated that
the company normally ooes not do
such trimming except If Its main
llnes are Involved In the JI'Oblem.
(Continued from page 1)
Councll reported that It has not
received any word !rom the only bas It enabled the vutage to
Consolidated Communications ohseiVe the needs of those persons
Group Inc., as to whether WOUB- served by the welfare department,
rut It affords a modem and
TV, Athens, will be returned to !be
pleasant work place for the 34
baste savtce for the town. Removal
employees
who administer welfare
ol.the station has been the subject ri.
services
for
!be county.
numerous complaints and council
The
late
Mr.
Zerkle served on
has been determined to have that
coundl
for
many
years and was
station returned to basic service.
It was~ that !be rompany mayor from 1972 untO his death In
has agreed to return WOUB to ~ October JJJ74. Coincidentally, !be
baste service In GaUlpolls with the presenlatkln ri. the ruDding he
planned and saw ronstructed lor
dty dropping Its court action
Middleport
VIllage, was made
against !be communications group
Monday night on what would have
In return.
been Mr. Zerkle's 76th birthday.

Becoming cloudy late tonight,

6

Ohio l..otlel")

Cable suit

Ohio weather

Jimmie Jude, who has been
confined to the A!hens Menial
Health Center pending trtalfor rape
In the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court, reportedly walked away
from the facility late Frlday, the
·Meigs Coonty sheriff's . of!lee
·reports.
Jude earlier had been confined
tllere for competency evalutlon.
was determined competent to sland
traU, but was sent back pending his
traU date.

Capt. Crow's
predictions
for Friday

inlt•rnaiVnal

bdw'·tor...
''Then· will bt! ru Iraul.'," Hl'agan
d&lt;dared, saying Ill!' !'£1\'ll'ls an•
"aware of how seri:Jus tlr ('Onst\·
qupm&gt;•s will llt! for our relalklns II
Nlrk Danllof! Is no&lt; sellrre.

�Wednesday. September 1

Cornmenta
The ·Daily Sentinel
DEVorED T\) THE INTERESts OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
~._....,.., ,.......,c=~,=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manapr

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press Internallonal, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American NewspapPr Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoold be less than $XI words
long. All letters aresubjPCt toeiltlng and rruSI be signed wtth name, address and
, telephone number . No unsigned letters wUl be published. Letters should be tn
good taste, addressing Issues, not persooalltles.

Letter to the Editor
Memories of Portland
Portland near the tum of tlv:&gt;
century was a thriving community.
Dr. John Simmons settled there
prior to the Civil War. Recently his
grandson, John Simmons Adams.
aged &amp;i, returned to Portland for a
short visit. As he slood on the bank
ol the river at Portland, he told me
some of his memories.
Dr. Simmons, M.D.. was a
graduate of Georgetown University
and served as a surgeon during the
Civil War. At Portland he played
baseball and was the catcher oo the
team. For a catcher's mitt he used
an ordinary work glove as no real
mitt was available In tlvse days.
Dr. Simmons rode a horse sometimes to make professional calls.
One day ilr horse fell rn the ooctor
and broke Dr. Simmons' leg. Dr.
Simmons rode home, set his
leg and put it In a cast. In order to
doctor people tlr neighoors obtained a farm wagon and put some
straw In tlr wagon !rd. Around
190i tlr steamer Hoxie blew up at
tljo, Portland wharf. Some barges
were blown fi·ee from the boat and
people were blown from the boat
onto the barges. Many passe1gers
on the boat as well as those on the
oorws were badly scalded. John
Simmons Adams went with his
grand!atlrr. tiE doctor, to set" the
people. One man came up liP riv&lt;&gt;r
bank with his skin on his arms

own

oorely hanging on. Dr. Simmons
took the badly burned into the
Carney house. Mattresses were
placed on the floor on which batten
was laid. Tlr burned were placed
on that. There the ooctor treated
tl~m. He put a mixture of linseed
oil and something else oo tlr ooms.
Later boats came from Pittsburgh
and took the wounded away.
Dr. Simmons was an avid
gardener. He always strived to
grow tlv:&gt; lar!J!SI tomato. He had a
way of !X'eseJVing cucumbers.
Cucumlrrs were cut lengthwise
Into four quarters. Then a layer of
cut cucumlrrs was placed In ilr
bottom of a big stone jar. A layer d
salt was put In. tlv:&gt;n anotlrr layer
d cucumi:Prs. This was oone until
the Jilt WI!!!'- filled. Then all was
ptrtd iirrllf~suntowork . Those
cut!.nflbl!~€"'tpllte tasty." Dr.
John · Simmons moved to Middleport where he died in 1917 at age 81.
H.A. McDade had a store and
place to buy cattle and hogs In ilr
village. The lvgs were brought In In
wagons and weighed on a scale.
Oft€!1 ilr hogs were tolled off the
wagon onto the weighing chute by
tossing little lumps alcoa lin front ol
them. H.A. McDade are 12 eggs
every Easter. Van McDade could
stand on his head on ooe hand on the
bottom &lt;1 a chair and eat the pte out
oftlr ctlPr.
Gayle Priee

The Lighter Side

The wimp factor
ByDICK~T

WASHINGTON tUPI) -Regardless of how convincing tlr &lt;J"atory,
much of the logic of last month's Senate debate on President Reagan's
"Star Wars" proposals se€med to me misdirected.
The main point, as I see it, Is that tlr Strategic Defense Initiative
presumbly would move any future nuclear war away from wr cities and
into outer space.
Senators. however, dwell rmstly on the cost of tiP systP!Il, wtEtlrr it is
scientifically feasible. and tlr political potential.
'Atomic explosions in outer space might not be entirely harmless, what
with warnings of a "nuclear winter" and ail. But that would sure beat
having our cities blown to smithereens.
Given a choice between blowing up cities and a nuclear winter, I would
riot hesitate to choose the latter.
In fact . I have a little rule of thumb that I apply to nuclearweaponeersthe higher they go, the better.
If SDI beams would intercept and destroy inoomtng missiles beforettEy
hit our cities, that would he a distinct plus. If they did so while the missiles
w!&gt;re still in outer space, ilrn the nuclear winter lr hanged, I say.
: I, for one, would he willing to wear an extra pair d overslves. If need be,
I'll even take up skiing.
. There Is. of course, a consideration of what nuclear war In wter ~ace
might do to owne layer. But that Is small potatoes compare:l to what It
might do to me and other city-dwellers.
In Chicago last roonth, Rep. Robert Dornan, R-Callf .. reportedly advised
Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega against belnglnterv!ewedon the Phil
9onahue television show.
: He was quoted as saying Ortega wouldn't lrlp tlr Sandinlstas "by
Showing up with a boot -licking wimp like Donahue."
Do California politicians really talk that way? If so, the !XJlltlcal potential
might well Include a "wimp backlash" In the coming elections.
1 recall that when Sen. Barry Goldwater, R·Artz .. was running for
president. he took great delight In revealing that the middle H In the name
of Hubert H. Humphrey, an qJposlng vice presidential candidate, !toodfor
noratlo.
: The result was a "middle name backlash," many of us voters having
tiames the middle part of whlch we would just as 9JOn partly cover~ with
4n initial
I remind Doman that many of us voters also are wimps, trough &lt;J1 th€
"Star Wars" Issue we might come across as "devout cowards."
· In event cl a nuclea r attack, Dornan might not be there to protect me. At
last report, he did not figure In Reagan's SDI concept.
: The president may have considered ilr congressman nee~d roore
r~esearch. During a nuclear attack, Dornan might be down In the bomb
shelter, or some place. watching the Donahue show, or something.
: I personally would feel safer, and hence sleep better at night, If SDI
lhvolved launching Dornan, rather than flringlaserbeams, against enemy
missiles. But In these kinds &lt;1 times, what with Gramm-Rudman and all,
you take what you can get.

fl'oday in history
: Today Is Wednesday, Sept. 10, the 253rd day of 19!1\ with 112 to follow.
The moon Is approaching Its first quarter.
There Is no morning star.
· The evening stars.are Mercury, Venus, Mars and saturn.
: Those born on t hls date are under the sign of Virgo. They Include English
$clenUSt and clergyman John Needham In 1713; German archaeologist
RobeM Koldewey. excavator of Babylon, In 1855; X-ray pl\)lslcist Arthur
Holly Compton In 1892; film director Robert Wise In 1914 (~e 72); golfer
:Arnold Palmer In 1929 (age 57), and singer Jose Feliciano In 1945 (Qge41).
: On this date In history:
· In 1813, U.S. naval units under tlle command of Capt Oliver Perry
·defeated a Brltlsh squadron In the Battle cl Lake Erie.
: In 1823, Simon Bolivar, who Jed ltv:&gt; wars for independenre from Spain In
·Venezuela, Colombia, Peru and Bolivia, was named president ciPeru with
dictatorial powers.

Here Is the line tlv:&gt; BVant -garde Is
taking on the Sandlnlstas. II Is all
laid out In tiE rolling, apodlctlc,
witty prose of ltv:&gt; suave an tl·
American Irishman Conor Cruise
O'Brien, wiD In tre "Ills went
through a brief period of sobriety In
Ireland, to rest up from his labors
on lrhalf of. the Osagyefo (The
RedE!emer, as tlv:&gt;y used to call
Kwame Nkrumah, dictator of
Ghana, before he was overt brown
while off In China fawning at tre
altar of Mao Tse-tung). O'Brien
served as vice chana!llor of tre
University of Ghana. Before that he
was a functionary of the United
Nations, active In anti-American
activity on all International fronts,
taking extracurricular time to
defend Alger Hiss and defame
Wblttaker Chamlrrs. He Is back
now. taking pretty much tlr Soviet
line on tre Sandinlstas. In a big
piece In The Atlantic called "God
and Man In Nicaragua," he Is
telling us what to think alvut our
policy In opposing tre Sandlnlstas.
The line Is:

1. The Sandlnlsta rmvement Is
100 percent nationalist, antiImperialist and Otrlsttan.
2. The Otrlsttanity of tre Sandi·
ntstas Is Incorporated In their
100tto, "El Dlos de Los Pobres" the God of tre Poor. He Is to be
dlstlngulslrd !rom ltv:&gt; regular God
of Latin Americans, wiD Is tlv:&gt; God
ct tlv:&gt; Rich.
3. When Pope John Pauliivtslted
Nicaragua three years ago, be
committed a terrible tjunder by
publicly castigating Father Er·
nesto Cardenal, ltv:&gt; Sandlnlstas'
minister of culture, while aligning
hlnnsell with Cardinal Obanoo y
Bravo, the outspoken critic of the
Sandlnlstas.
4. The Sanclnlstas have absolutely no Intention of becoming a
Soviet satellite. In tre event that
this should happen, why, tlr tjame
will clearly be that of Ronald
Reagan for supporting tre contra
movement.
All clear now?
Recent data !rom Nicaragua
document that the standard of

living ilrre has fallen to approximately 50 pera!nt of the economic
level of life under Somoza. Why
should that be? Well, President
Daniel Ortega has just completed a
tour ol the United States In which he
gives tlr reason for such reversals:
It Is as easy as that any country that
has to light a civil war backed by
Ire United States obviously has to
give first prlortty to the war lor
Independence. It Is not explained
why this should have been necessary given that the United States
actively supported a) the overthrow of Somoza, and b) the
Sandinlsta government - until It
became universally clear that the
Sandlnlsta movement had been
taken over by Marxlst-Lenlnists.
The Sandinlstas proceeded to
Institute a repressive government
Impeded only by the great defec!Dns of original Sandinlstas. These
deserted tlv:&gt; movement when it
!Pcameobvkms that it was bent not
oo 'instituting personal liberty,
political democracy and economic
p-ogress, but Marxist mllltarism.lt

THE NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD'S CHECKLIST

recame clear even to economically
stvrtslghted observers that the God
of tlr Poor, under the sandlnlstas,
was engaged In multiplying poverty. The only economic accomplishment Marxist socialism Is
capable oils the elimination of the
wealthy and the middle class . U
God Is Involved In helping the poor
In Nicaragua. there are unmistakable grounds for religious
agnosticism.
The line tells us that religious
persecution In Nicaragua is a trivial
thing: It Is directed merely at
persecuting overt enemies of the
Sandinlsta movement, such as
C~rdlnal Obando. Since Mr.
O'Brien's piece appeared, the
Sandlnlstas expelled Bishop Pablo
Antonio Vega . The leaders of the
Catoollc Church In Nicaragua are
not permitted to publish even the
sermons they deliver. And, as we
all know, the. principal antl-Somoza
organ of tlr revolution. La Prensa,ls now shut down, the country is
under martial law, President Or-·
tega slavishly supports the Soviet ·
line In all International affairs, ·
travels to tlr Sovlet Union for
counsel, and receives hugh military
shipments from Cuba , Eastern
Europe and the Soviet Union with
t lr aim In mind not only of
defending Nicaragua from the .
runt ras , but of exporting its revolution to neightorlng counflies.
While it Is true that there is much
popular support for the Sandlnlstas
v.;thln Nicaragua. this should noi :
surprise any cosmopolitan oiJ.
server of this century 's awful
neord of public support for tyrants.
Ortega is popular with Nicaraguans as Hitler was popular with
Germans. Stalin with Russians.
Mao with Chinese, Peron with
Argt&gt;ntlnes. That Ortega has been
shrewd enough to co-opt God for his
oordld €!lterprises perhaps adds
blasph&lt;&gt;my to his sins, but blasphemy Is a trivial offense for a
tyrant routinely engaged In torture,
genocide, the suppression of civil
rights, and military aggression.
Bu1 that Is the line, carefully
cultivated to appeal to exactly the
same weak of mind who appeased
Castro and, before him, Mao, Stalin
and Hitler.

from the prime mlnlstPr. who told
him, in the peculiarly stilted
languag&lt;" that se€ms to bP the court
dialect of Monaro: "Monegasques,
Including and perhaps PSJX'Ciaily
tlr princely family, felt both
tx&gt;wildered and hurt by this pro!XJS«l closing of the consulate,
which tt.·y lake as a personal
Rffront ."
DespitP the unmistakably menacing tone ol this rebuke, Prince
Rainier managed 10 smooth things
over with tlr kind of deft diplomatic
touch that has kept lhe Grlm aldis
on the thron~ ol Monaro since 1297
A.D. State Department cablPs se€n
~ our associate Lucette Lagnado
disclose that the prince arranged
ilr ttl' visiting senator lo play
tennis with the royal heir. Prince
Alix'rt .
~l

Yatani and the black hole _ _ _-=-:Do:.. :. :. ._n~
- ra"::!..:!_rff
u Cholchlro Yatanl knew tren
what he knows now, he might not
have oone what he did.
That was to partlclpale In a
demonstration against tlr VIetnam
War In Tokyo In 1968, whenlrwasa
21-year-old student.
Wbat he knows now Is that It was
enough to jail him eventually under
~rican "due process" as Interpreted by tlr Immigration and
Naturalization Service and tre
State Department.
For nine years. Yatanl has been
an Instructor and l'tl .D. candidate
In social psychology at tiE State
University of New York at Stony
Brook. He has a wife, Nanako, and
two children, l:oth born In tiE
United States and American
citizens.
On July 7, on his way back !rom a
conference In the Netrerland!l, 1r
arrived at New York's Kennedy
lnternatlonal Airport . His name
triggered a response from INS
computers. He was ~tained on
suspicion of being "a terrorist or
mgaged In otlrr subversive activities," apparently because of that
1968 deroonstratlon.
I say appatenUy, lrcause, to
date, no ooe has come up with any
otlrr explanation. The feds refused
to divulge specifically what ttEy
had against Yatanl. He steadfastly
denied that he had cr had ever had
any commualst afflllation, al·
though lr has been an anti-nuclear
activist.
Yatanl had been art'I!Sted In
Tokyo along with 70 other deiOOnstrators. He was convlcte:l II.
"violations of road traffic oontrol."
He was ~ton p-obotlonfora year,
and then, under Japmese law, his
conviction exJirEd and was ex~nged from the Japanese pollee
record.

But not , as It turned out, from the
records of tlr U.S. Immigration
and Naturalization Service.
Eighteen years later, he was
detained under provisions of the
McCarran-Walter Act, an odious
legislative relic of tlv:&gt; . political
witch hunts of tiE 1950s.
Fortunately, there are still those
committed to keeping this a
reasonably free country. Attorneys
with the New York-based Lawyers
Committee for Human Rights
ca me to Yatanl's defense.
At a hearing on Aug. 19, they
made tlr mildest response !XJSSi·
ble, requesting a simple waiver on
Yatanl's admittance to the country,
as provided lor by the McGovern
(lor former Sen. George McGov·
E!'n) amendment to the original
McCarran act. INS and State
tjocked It
Yatani's attorneys tlv:&gt;n flied suit,
demanding that the government
ex pain wl\)l ft was holding Yatanl.
That did lt. TwodayslaterYatanl
was released uDder a McGovern
waiver. The feds were acknowledg·
lng, In effect, that tbey couldn't
[I'OVe anything. So, after six weeks
In the federal slammer without ball
and witlvut being charged, Yatanl
was released withollt so muchliS an
apology.
But tt's not over yet. Yatani oow
wants his name removed from the
USt that caused that computer bleep
In !he am place. Officially known
as the Automated Visa Lookout
System, It lists, according to ttv:&gt;
State Department, 2mllllon lndlvld·
lllls wiD may be excluded from ltv:&gt;
United States for 33 reaBOns from
terrorism to carrying an Infectious
disease.

Understandably embarrassed by
ttv:&gt; affair, the feds still aren't
saying much, oot one anonymous

official admitted to the New York
Times that during the 1950s and
'OOs, "a lot of nam~s were put In
witlvut a lot of checking on who
tlry werP."
"The list is a black hole," says
one of Yatanl's attorneys . "Once
you fall ln. you can't get out."
Cholchlro Yatanl's trial by bureaucracy vividly makes several
points:
One, It is a national disgrace that

-

tlr McCarran-Walter Act remains
on the books.
Two, wtEn bureaucrats make an
error, they'll ix' the last to admit it,
no matter how inn()C('nt Individuals
may suffer as a result .
Three, they might never he called
to account If organizations such as
tlr Lawyers Committee weren't
available to come to the assista nce
of flvse like Choichiro Yatani.

ISUicllffc H1l.

AMERICo\N U :AGUE
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Southern at home Friday; Eastern on
road as SVAC teams end non-loop play
By SC01T WOLFE
Sentinel staff Wrlltr
Friday evening all SVAC football
teams will enter their final round of
non-league play during the infant
season's third week.
Southern hosts Huntington-Ross,
Eastern travels to Wahanna, and
Water1ord comes to Kyger Creek.
Hannan Trace, North Gallla, and
Symmes Valley are at home
against Green, Ross-Souttv:&gt;astern,'
and Huntington Vinson (W.Va)
respectively.
Oak Hlll is at Ironton St. Joe and
Southwestem travels to Alexander.
Thus far, Kyger Creek, an
unlikely candidate to be a dark
horse bid In tre SVAC, has
surprised everyone with a perfect
2-0 record over wortl\)l opponents.
Coach Mel Coen has developed
his young KC troops Into a
contender for tlv:&gt; SVACs top spot.
The Bolrats are far from
overpowering, however, persist·
ence and the keen ablllty to never
give up have brought tlrm home
victorious twice. Last week after
taking advantage of Wahama
miscues, David Pettry and Tbm
Waugh bulled Into the endzooe for
touchdowns. '!"hi! fourth quarter
scoring drives were set up by big
plays by Mike Bradbury, BobiJy
Gordon, and Waugh.
KC w\11 host an 0-2 Waterford
cl'!'w that Eastern battered 28-6 two

111

Sl

Defensively, Durst, Horner, and
.Johnson have let their mark an~
plan to get In gear for a tough battle
with Wahama .
·
Eastern will have to watch for
soptomore Chris Jewell who led all
ruslv:&gt;rs last W&lt;'&lt;'k v.ith 90 yards ori
just six carries for th!' Falrons.
Scan Gibbs hit lour of 11 aet i als a;
vms quartprha ek. hitting leadi ng
neeiver J.T. Llovd.
Eddie Starcher ami Jewell had
TO's last week, while Bill Marshall
was a defensivE' standou t with an
lnterCPption .
A young Wahama hopes to tx· i~
the thlck of things by mid-SI'ason a9
it works hard to Improve on it s
backfield losses from one year ago;
Hannan Trace, a 34-0w\nnerol c·r•
Hannan, W.Va. last week, will face
Green. who dropped a 9-0 tilt to
North Gallia.
_
Iff will again depend on its
combination of youth and expe·
rtence. Last week sophomore Ja~
Jarrell ran for one touchdown:
passed for another, andretumed an
interception 100 yards for another
score. Sophomore fullba ck Brad
Cremeans rambled for the other
two scores to propel a potent HT
offen se.
North Gallia and fieet-lootro
runner Richard Hurt host Ross Soutlrastern. an 8-0 loser to
Southwf'Strrn la st Friday.

Meet the Eastern High School Eagles

il

pi,,,.,.,., ' '

;r

Southern has been consistent on
tlr ground, gaining 234 and 287
yards In Its first two outings on the
ground. SHS has lacked much of a
passing attack with only 42 yards on
3-7 attempts, alttough It did get two
big pass plays Friday. One such
play was to sophomore Chris Stout
and the other a Roush-to-Mlkc•
Wolford TD play In overtime.

Tim Smith, Tony Connolly, Scott
Burris, Tim Willis, Dan Ghem, and
Crage Brown all starred defensively for SHS. Smith, Burris, and
Connolly each had nine tackles
each.
Meigs County's other class "A"
grid squad packs up its boots and
travels to Wahama to renew the
cross-liver rtvalry on the big hend .
An astonished Eastern crew
suffered a 48.0 drubbing at the
hands of another · West Virginia
tea m In Parkersburg Catholic last
Saturday.
Eastern has I'!' grouped and hopes
to rome out on the better end of
things this week against the White
Falcons.
Alt lvugh Eastern wasted lit lie
time scoring In its opmer against
Waterford, the Eagles have yet to
get togetrer their rlfensive weapontry, running for 122 and ~ 3 yards
respectively as a team .
Fullback Brtan Beeler has earrled 21 times lor 82 yards 14.0 avg. 1
and halfbaek Jeff Johnson is next In
line with a 15-76 clip.
EHS, wiD had a successful
passing game In the opener gained
ju st 11 In the air last Wt'E'k. In game
one qua11erback Brian Durst was
4-ll lor 103 yards and two touchdowns. Steve Homer and Mark
Griffin both juniors hauled in thosr
roceptions.

C ~ u t ·l..

~ignr&gt;tl r·pnr;•r .l rM ' MurphY

~

weeks ago.
A "never-say-die" Soutlrm crew
will return home for a bout with
Huntington-Ross, wiD had lvpes of
a banner season, but remains
winless at 2-0 against tough competition. Southern Is 1·1 after a 31 -25
double overtime win over Fort Frye
last Friday.
Soutlv:&gt;rn lost its opener 13-6 to
Ross-Soutlv:&gt;astern, while Huntington fell 26-13 to Minford, then won
28-18 last week over Portsmouth
East.
Junior all-state candidate Pete
Roush scored four touchdowns,
Including the game-winner In the
second overtime, whlle also rushlng
for 181 yards on thirty carries to
lead the Tornadoes. Roush has
already rambled fur 283 yards this
season on 50 carries, gaining a
!XJlent 5.6 yards per run .
An up-and-coming soptomore
Danny Gheen has sea mpered for
100 yards on 23 carries, Senior Scott
Burris Is 12-!ll, and Rick Sellers 9-49.

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mull! ,·rar r'l'lnll'lJI'!

Houston all but
wraps up West
title; Bosox win
By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer

In 1979, theHoustonAstrosled the
Na tiona! LRague West by 10 games.
and lost the division to the
Cin cinnati Reds. fu ~Uiin g Tom
Seaver's prophecy.
Payback was a longtlmecomlng.
but Tuesday the Astros gained the
second double-digit divisiona l lea&lt;.!
in their 25-year history by trouncing
the s..eond· place Rl'ds, 9-2.
"That wa s the year Tom Seaver
said we would fall like a lead
balloon," said Astros catcher Alan
Ashby, one of five players l'!'maining from the 1979 team that
oollapsed. "But you ha11t&gt; to rememlx'r. that tthe 1979 Ill-game
lead) was on July 4th. and this is
Septemix'r 9t h. I don't th ink we'll
Iall like a lead balloon this year."
Pitching has precluded a ny
Ast ros' collapse this season. Tuesday, Mike Scott improved to 16-9
struck out seven In eight innings
without a walk. He leads the major
leagues wilh 200. In two nights,
Nolan Ryan a nd Scott llmiled the
Reds to eight hils in 14 Innings.
"They have a predominately
right -handed linPup,' ' Hou ston
Manager Hal Lanter said. "But
when those two are pitching like
they have, they're pretty tough to
!rat."
Billy Hat cher and Kevin Bass
each had three hits to pacP a 15-hlt
attack that made a loSI'r of Tbm
Browning, 12-1 2.
"I felt we'd get to Browning
eventually," Bass said. "He's the

The Daily Sentinel
1USPS 115-9410)

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

Tlur.iday'"

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1\:l~ l&lt; m

Nipped in the bud___J_a_ck_A_n_de_.n_·on_&amp;_J(_,se_p_h_Sp_e_ar
WASHINGTON -As chairman seemed to command tre greatest views rpgardlng the issu~ of small
of tiE Senate Foreign Relations amount of the senator's att€!ltlon states and their relations with the
subcommittee on European At· was - are you ready? - Monaco!s United States," Pressl&lt;'r di sclosro .
fairs. Sen. Larry Pressler, R-S.D .. unhappiness over tlv:&gt; State Depart- "Prince Rainier emphaslzro that
has many momentous matters to ment's planned closing ol tlv:&gt; Monaco and the Unitro States have
oceupy him. These run the gamut American consulate In nearby lon!(standlng ties of family, friend from Soviet-American relations to Nice. Pressler learned all about this ship and commerce datln!( back to
anti-American terrorist attacks crtsls In U.S.-Monegasquerelations 1874."
He then quoted th&lt;• prince as
and assorted ottEr problems across In a private Interview with Prince
the continent.
Rainier Ill and his prime minister, saying: "I am presently most
ooncerned and disappointed to
But ilr weight of these awesome Jean Aussell.
responsibilities hasn't led the periRainier, the widower of learn that the United States will no
patetic 44-year-old !Dian to Ignore Phlladelphla-born Princess Grace, longt&gt;r be represented In the
the vexatious issues that are not is apparently not yet ready to brE&gt;ak principality from Nice."
The royal dudgeon continued
likely to make headlines and might off diplomatic relations with oc
therefore he overlooked by a less ~clare war on the United States. with a reminder that 150,00
dedicated lawmaker. In fact, But Pressler's official report makes Americans visit the Riviera each
Pressler made a spec:; tal trip to tlr clear that the prince was terribly , year. and a hope that the United
continent last Eastprflme to com- terribly hurt over the decision to States was not "sending a signal of
pile an d!lclal report on tiE travails close down the State Department's lessrning ol intt"rests in this area of
of what he calls "the mini-states of Riviera outpost.
tlr world."
Pressler heard even tougher talk
Europe."
"Prince Rainier .. . has strong
The "Bilatera l issue" that

W~l,\''11 Gamet'~

Majors

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...

Misinterpretation ahead___W_i_llia_m_F_._Bu_ck_ley.:......~]r.
I

U1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~lb
IS'iffi~

·~

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday,
September
1 0, 1986
, . .
.

o. 1986

Dl\l~lon

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type of pttcher that comes light at
you. and I he way we're hitting right
now, it's not a good idea 10
challenge us.
Scott and Browning dueled
through !i 1-2 Innings, but Hou ston
sent nine men to the pla te and
scored four runs in the sixth.
"I was as di sappointed today as
I've been all year." Rose sa id . "I
figured we 'd comt• in here and play
well, but we didn't. I ju st hope we
haw enough professionalism not to
collapse after two losses. I can 't
worry a tout catch ing Hou ston. The
way we played, I'm worried a tout
catching (last-place! San Diego."
In oth!or NL games, Montreal
topped New York 9-7, Chicago
edged Philadelphia R&lt;i in 10 Innings,
and St. Louis defeated Pitt sburgh
H.
E•pos 9, Mets 7

At Ne\1' York. Andre Daw&amp;m's
two-ru n homer in the ninth inning
lifted Montreal to victory. New
York's loss kept the jj~t s' magic
numlrr for rlinrhing the NL East
title at four. The Mets lead the
seco nd- place Phillles by 21 games.
Dan~d Strawbeny homered for the
Met s.
Cut.. K, Ph!Uies 6
At Chicago, Leon Durham's
two-run homer with one out In the
lOth Inning against Philadelphia
gave the Cilbs tlrir third straight
victory, ty ing the season high set
April 22-24. Lee Smith, 9-9, the last
&amp; five Cubs pitchers. pitched two
scoreless innings to pick up the
triumph.
Canllnal• :1, Plrales I
At Pittsburgh, Cllnl Hun:lle homered and scored another run In
the sixth innlng on a v.1ld pitch,
pacing St. Louis. Ricky Horton
went five Innings, allowing one run
and Sl'atterlng seven hit s to Improve hi s record to 3-:1. Todd
Wor rell went the last two Innings to
notch his 32nd save.
Oo~ers 9, Padres 5
At Los Anwles, Alex Trevino
singled in two runs to key a live-run
outbu rst In the first Inning.
American League

The California Angels blossomed
In the second half of the season and
are running away with the Ameri·
can League West title while converting early- season skeptics.
The latest to lrlleve are the
Cleveland Indians, who lost to
California 8-1 Tuesday night.
The triumph gave the Angels and
8~ -garne lead over the Texas
Rangers In the AL West . The
Angels, 79-58, have woo three
straight games and 12 of their last
14 In breaking tlv:&gt; race qlell.
Kirk McCasklll,16-7, fashioned a
six-hitter while striking out seven
and walking two In pitching his lOth
oomplete game. The right-hander,
who lost hls shu tout bid on Julio
Franco's sacrifice 11y In the sixth,
has won his last four decisions.
Cleveland Manager Pat Corrales
Is certain the An!lf!ls have won the
West
"McCaskill and (Pitcher Mike)
Continued on page 4

MIKE FROST

(Manager)

DAVID FROST
(Manager)

Captain Crow predicts:

.JAY REYNOLDS
140-Pound"'
Sophomore lffi

KYLE DAVL~
195-Pmmd
.Junkor f:nd

Ole' bird tries to improve last week's .895 mark
Feathers off and humble apologies to some animal "buddies" of
mine, a bunch of proud Boix'ats
!Kyger Crcekt, who clawed to a
15-12 win over a flock of highlyfavored cousin Falcons !Wahama 1.
The ole' bird had Wa hama winning,
40~1 .

Th at misfire and tlv:&gt; 26-12Ironton
St. Joe win over Symmes Valley
were the lone blanks among 17
buUseyes lor a deadeye .895 pet. for
the week . To date, a 30-7 record has
been scavaged cSll pet. 1.
Friday depicts tlr Infant season's
period when 2-0 teams have began
the long "no-tomorrow" state
playoff trail, 1-1 clubs have found
the scent . and 0-2 squads are still on
a leach.
Four 'IVC games are on tap in
week number three whlle the
SEOAL and SVAC continue haUling
ron-league opponents. The forecast
goes ....... .
TVC

MEIGS 26. TRJMBLE 7 Marauders 12-0) In driver's seat
with big win over Belpre last week.
Should take care of shell-shocked
Tomcats (!-!) , losers to Wellston
last week.
BELPRE 14. WEL!.'i'I'ON 12 Eagles 10.21 just don't lose three
games In a row. Rockets (2-0)
proved they 're for real with win at
Trimble.
VINTON COUNTY 14,
FEDERAL-HOCKING 0-Vlkings
12-01 make best of easier early
schedule while Lancers (ll-2) lose
third straight home game.
NELSONVILLE:YORK 38,
MILLER 6 - Buckeyes (0.2) and

Southern volleyball
team loses to AHS
Southern won tlle game-opener,
oot fell to defeat In three sets In a
high school volleyball match to
visiting Attv:&gt;ns,l6-14, 8-15 and 10-15 .
Leading servers br Souttv:&gt;rn
were Wendy Wolle with 14, J€!lnller
Arnold with 8, Jlll Nease with 6,
Joyce Foreman with 4, and Tammy
Theiss with 2. Atlrns was lEd by
Sunshine Gerig and 1bnya Stro·
bridge with 10 each.
The Southern High School reserve volleyball team picked up Its
fourth win of tre young season
against just one Joss. SHS 11!00 wltb
ldentlcall5-9, l5-9wtns over Atrens.
Leading
In Southern
were Debbie GreatiDuse with 11 ·
and Dawn Johnson with 5.
Athena was led by Brltt Wate'S
with 10.

men

Falcons !0.2) both eye first win.
N·Y reportect to have solid ooll club.
ALEXANDER 15, SOUTHWESTERN 14 - Nail -biter here.
Spartans (1-11 tasted win last week
but have work cut out against
Highlanders 11·1).
SEOAL
GALLIPOLIS Tl, PT. PLEASANT U - Blue Devils !2.0)
revengE' one ol two losses last year
In grudge match at GAHS. Big
Blacks 10-21 play thlrd straight of
an endless line o! "toughies" .
WARREN LOCAL 54, FORT
FRYE 12 - Mayhe tlr biggest
mismatch ell tv:&gt; €!ltlreseason lv:&gt;re.
Warriors 12-0) looking good while
FF (0 -2) have allowed 81 points In
two games. Warren Coach Robert
Hlll won't run score up on anybody,
rut can't help It Friday.
LOGAN 24, MIAMI TRACE 14 Chiefs t2 -0) continue toward 0:!.17
siDwdown with Gallipolis with win
at ex-Art Schl!cter's old stomping
grounds.
PARKERSBURG 31, MA RIE'ITA 6- Big Red just too much
for Tigers (0-2) despite cross-river
rivalry.
FAIRLAND 16, ATHENS 7 Dragons !2-0) grind It out against a
Bulloogs 12-01. Athens has oot
played on road untO Friday while
Fairland picked to sucessfully

defend OVC title .
PORTSMOUTH WEST 3.1.
.JACKSON 0 - Senators t2 -0t ou t to
grab play d. I bid with strongest
team In years whiiP lronmen (fl-2t
heading ottEr way.
SVAC
HUNTI NGTON !RaiSI Jl.
SOUTHERN 7- Hunt smen tl -11
treat Meigs grod Coac h Ted
Lehew's rPt urn to Meigs County
with a win over 1I-II TornadO&lt;'s.
Huntington pi ckro to win SVAC
after winning Pigh t games in 10
years lrlore LRhew's reign .
WAHAMA 28. EASTERN 0 Real Falcons tO-Jt come on SCPne at
Mason aller stunning loss las I week
to Kyger Crcek . Eagles t1 -1t
looking to Jt-gmup ruming off hugP
loss.
KYGER CREEK 8, WATERFORD 6 - Bobcats t2 -0i kCI'p
lEads in the clouds with win over
winless Wllcats !0-21 .
NORTH GALUA 18, SOU
THEASTERN 12- Pirates tl -11
came to life with shutout win Ol'cr
Green last Friday, but have to keep
fires burning to knock off Panthers
(l-1) .
HUN TI NGTON VINS ON 22,

SYMMES VALLEY 6 - VInson
ha v('(' one of lrst bands in West
Virginia and football tram getting
ll'tter. Oprned with 22 -Jl win ow•r
LL'nore. Vikings !0-2) still trying to
gel unt rarkr'&lt;l .
GREEN 7. HA NNAN TRACE 0
-Tomcats !0·21 haven' t scored a
po int yet in losses to n ·Imble and
Not1h Gallia. But light =rel:oard
once to top Wildcats !1 -1).
OAK HII. I. 20, IRONTON ST.
JOF: 14- Oaks 11-11 edge Ohio's
smallest football-playing schooL
Flyers 12-01 suffer first loss after
wins ovf'r H;mnan Trace and

Va lley . ISJ's
straight home game.

Symm~s

third

WITH THFLOWERS
"md • huutifuJJ'
•lt-MI(I'nf"fffurw·ral
;1rr rm •t&gt;nwnl, ju MI r1tll
nr \'illll

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
I

· "'·· lim J,,.,,n·,... 'ol•rub

un•"

"'-

Ho For It!

Softball tourney set

The look vou ·ve o 1wovs wonT ed
'1S close as our salon 1 Come 1n
·tel our professtonal sty lists

Mlddleport Trophies Is sponsoring a softball tournament on Sept.
20 and 21. Entrance lee Is $00 plus
two Steele balls. For more loforma.
tlon Interested teams are to call
992-2754 or 992-6890.

\

JU a new updated 1mage 1

Perm Special
,..

1S0/o Off All Perms

1&amp;........3

Except for Long Hair

(

TANNING SPECIAL
18 TANS FOR

EASTERN .KILL
FABRIC SHOP
5 llliM Mrlh of (hnttr, Olit
SEWING NOTIONS
QUILnNG SUPPI.IS
HANDMADE CRAFTS
POUND GOODS
OPEN MIIN.•FII. 10 A.M.·S P.M.
SAT. 10·2

$35°0

Keep Your Summer Tan for the Holiday Parties

1 t 1 W. 2nd St.

Pomeroy, OH.

�Paue-4- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 10, 1986

PQmeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~w~nallbutw~s~title., ___________
~=m~=~~f=~~p~~~3---------~
Witt aretwoofthemaln reasons the
An~ls are go~g to win the
&lt;!lvlslon," he said.
CaUfontla scored two runs in the
!Irs! Inning without g~&gt;lting a hit.
~ary Pettis led off wtth a walk, stole
Ills 38th base and took third on
'&amp;rally Joyner's groundout. Brian
!)owning walked and took second
~Reggie Jackson's groundout as
t'ettls held at third.
. Pettis scored and Downing went
'

to third on a passed rnll before
Doug DeCinces was hit by a pitch.
Second baseman Tony Bernazard
then bobbled Rupperl Jones '
grounder, allowing Downing to

score.
After DeClne&lt;&gt;s and Jones advanced on Candiott i's balk, Bobby
Grich walked to load the bases
before Dick Schofield flied out to
end the inning.
"That was bizarre," said Ca lifor-

nia Manager Gene Mauch. "Eight
guys went to the plate and none got
hits. That was luck. But McCasklll
wasn't luck. He pjtched great."
The Ang~&gt;ls made it 4-0 In the
second on Joyner's RBI double and
.Jackson's run-scoring single. California broke the game open with
three runs In the S&lt;'Venlh and
capped the scoring on Bob Boone's
double- play groundout in the ninth.
'"Jltis

is

an

pxtra-confJdent

team," said loser Tom Candlottl,
13-11. " They're getting timely
hitting, and they're patient at the
plate."
In other games, Boston beat
Baltimore 7-5, New York dropped
Toronto 3- 1, Mi lwaukee trimmed
Detroit 3-1, Chicago downed Oakland 4-1, Seattle toppled Texas 3-1,
and Kansas City routed Minneso ta
U-3.
Red Sox 7, Orioles 5

five hit s over srven innings, and
Mike Easler sin gled home Don
Mattingly to snap a 1-1 tie ~ the
eighth. SPnding thP Blur .Jays to
their fourl h loss in ltv.'ir last six
gamf's .

At Baltimore, Marty Barrett
capped a three-run sNenth Inning
with a two-run double, and Dwight
Evans hit two homers to help
futon extend its winning streak to
10 games. AI Nipper improved to9-9
and Joe Sambito got the last two
outs for his 12th save_ Rich Ilardi,
5-3, took the loss.

Wednesday, September 10. 1986

YOU'LL FIND

Bn•wt•rs :J, 'l'lgers I

At [X•tmil . Milwau kff' stm trr
'1'£&lt;:1 Higut&gt;ra improvrd to l H-9 and
relie\'Pr Dan Plesae j)iekrd up hi s
12th save. frank Tanana fell to 10-7.

Ywll&lt;ees 3, Blue -Jays I
At Toronto, Ron Guidry sca tt rrrd

THIS WEEK AT FOODLAND!
•Weekly
•Money Saver Items
•Everyday Low Prices
•USDA Choice Meats
•Tender Fresh Produce
•We Welcome Federal
Food Stamps and WIC
•We Sen Money Orders

ADVERTISfD nEM POLICY
Earn ot th&amp;!fl aawen1sed otems •s renurred rn ho• ·r~~ '' .l.J IIallle tor s,tle '"
each I( roger Store _eo cept as !.Opacrl ll:allo n01rn ,n th os ad II ·.;,e do run [lui

COPYRIGHT 1986 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . SEPT . 7. THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, SE PT . 13. 1986. ~ R!MEROY AND GIUIPOUS,Of\ STORES

ol11n actr;emsed ne m_ we w tll olfer vou you• cho ree nt .1 r omparahle •ten•
whefl a ~a rlable reile~ung the same saw•ngs 01 a rarncnec k wr,,n w ill
enurle vou to purchase the adven rse~ •te rn at tnc aflvcrtrsed o•&gt;Ce w~ hon 30
tlavs Ontv oroe "erdor coupon w•ll be acc emed ot• •tem ouo c r.a~ed

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIM IT QUANTITIES . NONE
SOLO TO D EALERS

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

TENDERBEST USDA
CHOICE BONE-IN

I

\

FUll CUT

Round

Your Low-Priced, .
Independently Owned
Customer Service
Supermarket
"BEST"

1/4" trim means 10-30% less fat
on Kroger beef.

U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

Boneless Top
Round Roast

SNOW WHITE
ALL WEEK

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

Double

Pound

This week your manufacturered products "cents off"
coupons ant wonh double at Kroger with $10.00 or more
purchase. Limited to manufactured products coupons
worth up to and including 5()(: Off . Coupons worth more
than 50C are r1111deemed at face value onty. limit one coupon
for aac~ produ~ purchaaltd . Limh one coffee coupon~ No .
beer, Wine or c1ga.rette couj:)ons Will be dOubled . Not valid
Of1 free coupons, Kroger coupons or retail food store
coupons . Trnt amount refunded cannot exceed the price of
the Item . You must purchase product in sizes specified on
the coupon . This offer applies only lo manufactured
products ''cents off" coupons for items we carry. To assure
product availabilit~ for a~l our customers, only one coupon
per shopping lam1ty, w111 be doubled on any brand item .
during each store visit .

MEAT INFORMATION HOTLINE
1-800-632-6900 '
Call Th rs Numbe r To il Free Wtth Ouesttons

Our Trained Meat Experts'

A~ Talk To

Tokay
:_Grapes ............... .

Steak

Kroger
Homogenized Milk ...........-......
SEAL TEST HOMOGENIZED MILK GAL .

Duncan Hines
Cake M"IX ......... ..

lb .

CauliFlower

99(

HD.

SEEDLESS

Crisp
Celery

White
Grapes

79~

FRESH
LEAN

GROUND CHUCK

S1 49

NO. I

RUSSET
POTATOES

•ORANGE •GRAPEFRUIT

10 lb. bag

$199

LB.

•art•u

Tropicana
Juice

Broccoli

$ 69
Gal.

. $1.79

c

LB.

BI·RITE

ELBOW MACARONI

TUNA
~- 5

TENDER BEST

2 lb. b01

WIENE~S

,.

12 orO"Picg.

2 FOR $1 OO

Or. Con

. .. .... 1818.25-·
5-oz
•SELF RISE •PLAIN

Hudson Cream
:NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE, SPRITE,

BATHROOM

:Diet Coke or
·:coca Cola ...... .

White Cloud
Tissue . . ... ..........

Flour
4-Roll

CREAMY
BI·RITE PEANUT BUTTER

2% Milk

Sure
:Deodorant . . .
..

Tide
Detergent . . . .

YOUR
CHOICE

Each

$)59

75¢ OFF LABEL

.2-0Z. SOLID, 1.25-0Z. ROLL-ON OR 4-0Z. SPRAY
ANTI -PERSPIRANT

QUARTER

RITE ,
BLEACH

69(

ALL VARIETIES

FOODLAND

Luck's Beans

Margarine Quarter

PORK LOINS

GAL.

ALL MEAT

WA~t:JIJ Oscar

$J69

Mayer

Wieners

72-oz.

Go Krogering during our Oktoberfest Celebration going on now in your
Kroger Delicatessen . Choose from a wide variety of German meats. cheeses
&amp; specialty items. Available now for your family's enjoyment!

1-lB.

TENDERBEST

PKG.

SLICED BACON
12 Oz. Pkg .

LET THE DELl DO IT FOR YOU!
AVAI LABLE ONLY IN STO RE S WITH DEll-PASTRY SHOPPES HOT FOODS AVA ILABLE llam TI L 7pm OAIL Y

IN THE DELl -PASTRY SHOPPE

BUY ONE POUND

American or Mustard
Potato Salad .............................. 1-lb . FREE!

29

German
Swiss Cheese
Pound

AT THCiEE:U:r oRNE'$'

Kahn's
Smoked Sausage .....................

$ 49
lb .
oWe Reoervo The Right To Umlt Quandlill

•Prices Effective thru_Sat., Sept. 13, 1986

•USDA Food S.. mp1 Glady Accepted

•Not A01ponsiblo For Typogrophical Errors

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

l'omeroy-1\IIIOOieport, UntO

Leetonia back ·.
has busy

By The Bend

By GENE CADDES

The Daily Sentinel
Wednesday. September 10. 1986

UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio
high School football ootes !rom
around the state:
Lynn Crider. Leetonia's !50pound senior quarterback·
defensive back, accounted for all
six of the Bears' touchdowns
Friday night In a 40-16 win over
Berlin Center Western ReseiVe.
On defense, Crider retumfd a
fumble recovery 47 vards !or
: Leetonia· s first touchdown and
: Intercepted three passes, returning
· twoofthem44and43yardsforiDs.
· Offensively, he completed 4 or 7
pass attempts, three ri. them going
for touchdowns of 55 and 32 yards to
Jason Smith and 40 yards to George
· Bell. Oh yes, Crider also puntfd
; three times for a 43-yard average.
• Tom Seney ran for 270 yards and
two touchdowns to lead Medina to a
· 21-7 victory over Ashland. Seney, a
5-foot-11, 170- pounder who carried
33 times. broke open a close game
; with a 65-yard scoring run In the
: third quarter.
O.J . McDuffie rushfd for 218
yards and three touchdowns Friday
night to pace Gates Mills Hawken to
a 43-8 win over Chagrin Falls.
McDuffie, a junior. had m runs of
40, 611 and 72 yards and now has
rushfd lor 3!11 yards and scored
seven touchdowns In two games.
Dave Lather's 171 yards rushing
and lour touchdowns paced Napoleon to a 42-13 decision over
Wauseon Friday night. Lather, a
6-!oot, 185- pound halfback, had TD
runs of 22, 4 and 93 yards and also
hauled in a 16-yard scoring pass
from Steve Bemlcke.
Pat Meyer provided all the
scoring Friday night for Antwerp,
which, despite being outgainfd 192
yards to 57 in total offense, beat
:Ecton 12-0. Meyer scored a pair of
second half touchdowns on a
76-yard punt return and a 00-yard
In terceptlon return.
Defiance's 10-0 win over St.
Marys Memorial Friday ni~hl
marked the first time in 12 years
that the Roughriders of Coach Skip
· Baughman had been shut out. Back
·In 1974, St. Marys was blanked by
lxlth Celina and Wapakoneta.
Youngstown Chaney's Jim VIvo
passfd for ll2 yards Friday night in
the Cowgpys' 27-12 l:lss to Austin·
towti Fitch. VIvo, a 6-foot-2, 1~·
"pounder, co~eted a school record
I; of!'&gt;! pass . Including a 37-yard
TD pass to Ty ne Reymlds to give
Chaney a 6-0 ad at the end t:i. the
first quarter. Fitch's Rlch Morrow,
ho~&lt;wer, interceptfd two of Vivo' s
tosses. returning one of them 99
yards !or a touchdown.
· In anothrr air show Friday night,
Elmwood's Ron Crawford hit on 18
of ~ passes !or :J:&gt;l yards and four
tou chdowns in a 42-13 blitzing of
North Baltimore. Crawford ran 5
yards !or Eastwood's first score
thrn threw TD st likes of 23, 22, 23
and 79 yards.
Ravenna's 27-14 win over Akron
Nm1h Friday night was the tOOth

Page- 7

·:--~---------------------------------------------------------------

We Reserve The RiRhl To '
. Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

~ It's

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
........,.TIVE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1986
'

•

USDA CHOICE

.

La

Chuck Roast ••••·••••

$11 9

Ground Beef ...'!.... $1 °
Ground Chuck L:·•••• $1 29

9

BUCKET
GRADE A

Whole Chickens:~~ •. 69&lt;
CHICKEN
49
Leg Quarters ••••~...
&lt;

.

LB.

Cube Steak ......... .

$199 .

Bologna~:.o:~:K.G~. S1

39

69(
Jowl ·Bacon •••• ::·.....
·

SMOKED

Ravenna, has an overall won -lost
r=rd of t()(J.!lJ.J.

Nashville may
rejoin Reds fann
system in 1987

RED or WHITE SEEDLESS

Grapes ........... .'!..... 79&lt;

1

BROUGHTON

·

2°/o Milk ••.••..•• ~!L~ .. $1 49

the USC'

$ 49
Cheese Singles ~:.~z~. 1

KRAFT AMER. IND. WRAP

3-DIAMOND

Pineapple ........':.•:2

I$

1

9(
Tomato Juice ••~.o:~ .. 6
STOKELY

·····couP&lt;W·······••
!• SURF DETERGENT •
•

•

••••

: 147
0

oz.

BANQUET

Fried Chicken~~a~:~x•• $2 39

Limit I Per (ustomor
Good Only At Powell's S•lll'llllrlltt
OHtr bpirts Stpt. 13, .1916
S

•••
••

LADY BORDEN'S

PURINA

TOMATO SOUP

CAT FOOD

oz.

4f$1

limit 4 Per (ustomor
Good Only At Ptwtll's
Offer bpirts Stpt. 13, 1916

s,..'""'..tt
S

6.5

PUREX BLEACH . :

sf$1

oz.

Umil S Per (ustomor
Gtod Only At Pewell's s,..rma,.et
Offer bplres Sept. 13, 1916
S
•

• ••

GM;., '

~!,( ~l

•
~:
:;
~

'.
:,;

.•.

Meeting changed
POMEROY - The regular meet·
!ng of the Return Jonathan Meigs
Chapter of the Daughters d the
American Revolution has been
postponted from Sept.12 toSept.l9.

GAS-1 5,000 to 35,000 BTU
and

VENTED &amp; UNVENTED

NICE SELECTION OF ELECTRIC HEATERS

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH

MASON, W. •VA.

Rt. 33 AT THE IT. 7 BY-PASS, POMERY, OHIO

Grid-Backed
Furnace Filters

Powerlu12.4 cu. in . engine. Automatic and
manual oilers. Exclusive Wearguard"
chrome-plated cylinders. Carry case
·
included. N245-18CC

Efficient spun glass filtering . Rugged metal
retainer grill. Designed for use in both lurnaces
and central heat/air units. Available in
8 sizes. NSSR38499,498,497,496,493,503

SPECIAL PRICE

SPECIAL PRICE

$f74!!

5l~
150150,1,2,3,4,5

$6.69 case of 12

~Frost Ktng•

Winterizer Fertilizer

Plastic Gutter Guard
Vexa ~ plastic won't rust or corrode. Easy to cut. K&amp;eps
leaves and debris from clogging gutters and downspouts.

$f99

6" x 25' IVX625

SPECIAL PRICE

150147

New. Formulated lor thicker, sturdier fall lawn, and
bettor spring green-up. Covers 5,000 sq. ft. #23507

d-CCIJ.

giSTIRLING

Lavatory Faucet
Non· metallic with smoked twin handles and chrome·plated
housing. Contains water sayer flow restrictors. NOS:J. 72

\\:;r

·-·48"

Anochrome
Standard

$-195
I .~,s

12" .x.36"
Walnut
Shelf

12"
Anochrome
8r'ICkBI

Solidi\" particle

PlatMt finfah fixllnea

board. vinyl covered. kJr decorator or utility
11980W .
use. 1180 OPANO

IBOANO

SPECIAL PRICE SP£CIAL PfiiCf

SPiiCIAL PfiiCE

'1!!..

'4~!"'

32-GaJ.

-;PECIAL

99!,.,

Roughneck~

PRICE

T.

Less mfr. mall·ln.

can
rra~. '

Toughast, most durabte
trash t;ontainer available.
Ti ~ht·lltting

lid locks

in odors . 12894

rebate$2.00

Costafter~

mtr. rebat• ~ l.iOI#J

Flea and Tick Killer
Kills fleas and ticks on dogs and cats. Also effective on
rugs, upl\olstory and other furnishings. 11 oz.l62

~

.

Dusk to Dawn Light

$8M

Hardware LumiJer

l!f5 l/1 -.~rs7

SPECIAL$f'29

Acrul/c Latex PRICE
'l"'J, with Silicone Less
m/r. malt-In
CaU"
rebate $1.00
UMinslde and aul. Resists

moisture and mildew. Paintoble.
euy to clun up. 20 oar mfr
Cost after
guarantee. 10.Soz. ltB101
mfr. rebate

VISE-GRIP.

SPECIAL

I"
/(:'.

·, __,,
_

29;.
¥

150141

$9"

2-Pc. Mini
PllerSet

PRICE
L••• mfr. malt-In
rebate $3.00

package. 11280-GS

mfr. nbate-u •wr3s

One curved jaw, one tong nose
Ideal lor dellc«te or pracfsion
Colt after ~9
work. $3.00 rebate coupon in

SEAVdiTM.
25' TaP:_ RUle

~

t75 Wattdoluxe mercury vapor lamp included.
~~~~:~lcally turns llghlon

$r.!33

SPECIAL PRICE

;z; PHILIPS
SPECIAL PRICE

6'!!,

1

SPECIAL PRICE

au:/!P.!.~!a~~/!~~r.'f!!
t6"
centar maotdnga. Ultra rigid epoxy-coated ateel
llud

6

b -. Free.,..•• 6' pocket •
tape rule Included.
~

SPECIAL PRICE

ftllt
...:t1

#51Jt36

Individual dealers may MmH quanlltles. Individual tlea~rs may not stock all1tems.

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY

400 North Second Avenue
MIDDLEPORT

j

We stock
stove pipe
and fittings.

"I can help
you set racly
for winter:•

PICKENS HARDWARE

18" Chain Saw

God Only At Powell's !uponnart.et
Offer bpiros Stpt. 13, 1916
s

;

accompanied Lori Pat tPrsnn 1o
F'f'nlun Glass n'&lt;·rnt lv.

7:30 P.M.-Bro. J. T. McHan, Evangelist

HOM ELITE®

"'" roy, Friday wlth srr\iing from 5 to

Ice Cream .......~~;:;. $199

CAMPBELL'S

10.75

Pomeroy area, mt&gt;t tiEir molJ'Klr

and Mrs. Thompson In Lancaster
and returned Mabel to her home
here.

There will hr a public dinner· at
• the Senior Clll7.rns Cent er. Pome·

\

M ~1 so n.

lt;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::::::::::::~~

Sunday, Sept. 14 thru Sunday, Sept. 21

~.

.Jerry and Susan Coleman o!
Rutland are anmundhg the blrtho!
a son, .Justin William. born on June
30 at the Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He welghfd eight P,:lllnds, three
ouoces and was 211nches long. Mr.
and Mr. Coleman have two other
sons, Jeremy, age eight, and
Timmy, age live.
Maternal grandparents are Gene
llfld Sue Hall, Pomeroy, and the late
John Loper, and the paternal
grandparents are Gene and Shirley
Coleman of Rutland. Maternal
great-grandmother Is Dorothy
Cartwright t:i. Mason, and the
paternal great-grandparents are
Gall and Althea Miller of
Middleport.

Mrs. Rose Patterso n. flu lland.
and Mrs. Dixil' SlawtC'r.

OLD FASHIONED TENT REVIVAL

· Public dinner Frida)'
~· at Senior Center

Coleman birth

Welch family while Mr. Hines

underwent eye surgery In Athens.
Mrs. Helen Dais Is a surgical
patient at the Holler Medical
Center.

1

SPECIAL PRICE

. 6: 30 p.m. The menu will be bak&lt;"'li
; steak, green ix'ans, cole slaw, roll
:: and beverage at a cost of $.1 per
~ person. Dessert will ix' available a!
an extra cost.
i\ round and square danae will
follow !rom 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. with
music bv the Stringdusters. Admissl:ln !or ·,he danae Is $1.~ a person.

Mr. and Mrs. Steve Stanley,
Athens.
Thea and Wilma Hines spent
several days herewith the Kenneth

96.
Mrs. Moore, the Walters and .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;ii
Mrs. Thompson then went to !
Monroe. Mich., and visited Sterling
Park rn Lake Erie and Maxine
Nelson who returnfd with them to
Tolfdo. In Columbus, Mrs. Moore
and Mrs. Thompson attended a
retirement party for a friend of
Mrs. Thompson's and vlsltfd Mr.
and Mrs. Tom Smith, Mrs. Richard
Maier, Mrs. Denise Whitt, Rhlnna
and Holly and Mrs. Virginia ();Lay
Arbaugh and attended a Oippers
game In addition to a game at
Whitehall where Mrs. Thompson's
grand•on was playing with a
Lancaster team. Oh- and Lancas·
ter won.
Mabel's daughters , Mrs. Marlene
Wilson and Mrs. Linda Jell of the

The Rutland Church of God
congregatkmwUI be staging a yard
sale - really a popular activity
: these days - lJ&gt;g!nnlng at 9 a.m.
Friday ..:.. and, in case of rain , the
' sale will be rmvfd Into the church

• •••••

$469

Now you really can't say that
Mrs. Carl (Mabel) Moore ooesn't
get around much any more.
She speot two weeks In Columbus
with Mrs. Audra Thompson and
they really moved. They vlsltfd In
Tolfdo with Mr. and Mrs. H. R.
Walter and Mrs: Etrel Smith,
former Meigs school teacher who Is

Parrnts of students at the
Salisbury Elementary School will
have the opportunity to meet their
kids teachers as well as I he new
principal, Wendy Halar, at an open
house to be held at the school at 7:30
p.m. Thesday. Sure there'll be
n!resbments.

:
"

Thr• fu'(!s Ai\ affiliate was thP
first working agrf'&lt;•menl the Sounds
had when prokssional baseball
n;urnfd to Nash\"iliP in 1977. The
two orga nilJJiions parted two ~ars

j

who during his carrer servfd as

~

la rrr thi s wrek

COLUMBUS. Ohio !UPI I
M.E. Collision, driven by Douglas
Brown, paced the fastest mile on
Tuesday's card at Scioto Downs,
going I: 59 4-5 In the featured pace.
The docking was the best ever for
the thn.&gt;e-year-old gelding which
won his third race In six starts.
Brown had the J:11cer In the lead all
theway.
I
Inertia olosfd from fourth around '
the !lnal turn to finish second, 3 1-4 ·
lengths back. Shanmn Henry was
1
third.
Golden Lass defeatfd Kyleana
and A.C.'s Success In the eighth
race to return $5Q!.OO on the ,
perfecta combination of 94.
.
The crowd of 2,567 wagerfd .
$212,002.

~-

,.
·
:

quotfd sources close to the Sounds
that the club will announce a formal
Tri~IL·· A agrwmrnt with the Rfds

Scioto Downs

Rev. Ralph C. Zundel, Zanesville,

~-

1\i\SHVILLE. Tenn. tl:Plt
Thr Nash\'ille Sounds may hr the
!arm tram lor the Cmcinnati Hl.'ds

of thP drsignatfd hitters.
The Reds, now affiliated with lhP
I:X&gt;nver Zephyrs of the American
Association, have reportedly been
n&lt;'goliating with S&lt;'Veral cities,
including Columbus, Ohio. Denver
and Louisv ille.
Sounds President Larry Schmit·
tou r·!'fused to tither confirm or
denv the arrang&lt;&gt;m('f]l when con·
tJJcifll bY telephone in AirUngton .
Schmittou is vice-president or
marketing for the Texas Ranger&gt;.
• '"W&lt;•"ve had inquires !rom about a
dozrn teams,'" Schmittou said.

::

basement.

•. Middleport First Bapdst Churches,
: . wlll be returning to lxlth communi·
.~ : ties to speak this month.
·'')·
r This Sunday, Rev. Zundel will be
,. speaking at evening services at the
&lt;: Middleport First Baptist Church
: and on the following Sunday, Sept.
: 21, he will be speaking at morning
• sE!'vices. 9:30a.m., and at evening
:· ·services, 7; 30 p.m . at the Pomeroy
:; First Baptist Church . His topic at
: tnth churches "111 be "The Second
::. Coming of Christ" . Rev . Zundel Is
:; an octogenarian.

Leigh. Leigh, in his 17th season at

C"' OfrDVPfS!' 0\'('f

-: Rev. Bill Perrin Is doing well
: · following cancer surgery at
· ~ Camden-Oark Hospital in Parkers·
;. burg. What with his heart condition,
: it was a situation that took some
.~ . monitoring.
: · Rev . Perrin, who is in his 22nd
:; year In Pomeroy, Is ,expecting to
·: return to the pulpit at Trinity
,; Church on Sunday, Sept. 21. By the
; :way, Rev. Perrin Is really apprecta; live for all of the cards, flowers,
• letters and phone calls during the
:. trying times - not only that qut he
&lt;:marked a birthday on Sept. 8 and
; . appreciates all of the kind gestures
·• on that occasion.
'
Lee Wedemeyer, superintendent
~ of the Carleton School, has been
~, ·: selected as one of seven area men
~-· and women who wiU be honored bY
; .; the Area 24 Private Industry
: · Council at an awards dinner at the
: -· HockingVaUey lnnonSept.19. The
·•· awards dinner honors people
who
.
•: have helped provide jobs lor the
;.· unemployed of Southeastern Ohio.

Mr. and Mrs. Ray Patterson
spent the past weekend at the New
Rlver Gorge In West VIrginia with
their activities Including while
water rafting.
Four of the Riggs family have
enrolled in college this !all. Paul
and Danny are both at Ohio State
University, and Lisa and Linda are
at Ohio University.
Mr. and Mrs. Duane StJJnley had
as Sunday guests Mrs. Dorotlzy
Townsend, Columbus; Mrs. Mar·
guerlte Townsend, McArthur; and

~: pastor of lxlth the Pomeroy and

carerr victorv for Raven Coach.l()('

Jatf'r in a

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentbtel staff Writer
, Activity is buzzing !P Middlepori
.~ j1S members of
·: the Middleport
· Chamber of Com:· rnerce busy
: themselves with
,; the final prepara.
.: lions lor Satur-,
:; day's fourth an·
• nual block party.
:.. lncldent.ally, the drive-through at
~. Central Trust will be closfd Salur·
:. day morning due to the party. That
; area Is usfll for bingo during the
•. party and, of course, North Second
;: Ave., from Dan's to Mill St.. will be
;.: blocked off Saturday morning so
;~ that things can be put Into place for·
.. the party which stJJrts at noon.
,: On Friday from noon to 2 p.m ..
;~ there'll be a luncheon served picnic
: · style the comer of Coal St. , and
0: North Second Ave.. with the
: · Middleport Chamber providing the
:: food . The luncheon is lor helpers at
·~ the party, business owners and
:: their employees and entertainers.

..,

again .
'Jl1r NashviliP BannPr Tuesda.\ ·

party time!

.

KAHN'S

Sliced

Harrisonville happenings,_________

:Beat of the Bend

'

.

�Sesnimber 10. 1986

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Ohio

MASON
.FURNITURE CO.
It Just Might Be The Most
lmpprtant Savings Event In Their
36 Year History...
Don't Miss It!

Second Street

Mason, W. Va.
(304) 773-5592

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

hutch Sill mild wood c:Nir1

$588

· Reg. 11495
3
Colonial plllow arm I
llorol print wood trim.

3 Piece Contempororyl

Mutti-color

Jacquard

fabric.

MUCH

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

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

788

$

CoionW 81droarnl

Solki\NOOdl 81111m IOiid l)lne tulll. Triple

1

* -· nu.m

mlrn:w. ~~~ ~-· c'-t.

hHd • klotbOitd.

744

4 Ptect hdJOornl

1

. Solid ook. wood trim.

FULL SIZE

Athlty_Pint wfth fbll ..... print d,_.,_
liMit . . .. wrbl ~- , . en.. cflnl &amp;
lftllld ...... d

88
$849
$399
$1
-

MATTRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS
$164 44

•

.

Reg. S699 .95
Colonial Sleoperl
Queen lize lleeper. Antron cert-

ter match rust/ brown

print.

Nl. SleopsGreotl
SET •••• •••••••••••••••••••• •
Reg. $279.95
FoAl Slzel
Sealy "Giondale" twin lllzo sot.

OHI CIAL PARTICIPATING DULER 1

$

439

12 SENSATIONAL HOURS TO SAVE!·

1

$46 9

Reg. S729.95

au- Slzel

, Traditional Qu..., Slooporl
Three cushion sofa/ sleeper.
: Brown rrylon !lint fabric .
PLUS MUCH. MUCH MOREl

1

THURSDAY! SEPT. II! 10 TO 10!

SET•••••

~~~~~~~~.:'•••

GET MATE

REG. 51099.95
3 PC. CONTEIW'ORARY

FREE

$299

1

$128

TwinSiu
.Solly
"Giondlle" twin size set.

REG. 5999.95
EARLY AMERICAN BROWN

RECLINERS!
ltyte recliner.

Reg. 1429.00
RedineO'I
lloo1dlne co mel oolld color han.te

249
$289

$

roctiner.

oontomporory style wall

.

roctinar. Redine tine inchao
from wei. Choice ol colors.

239
1

SENSATIONALI

REMARKABLE!

RECLINER!

$269
:=::..~~!Ut•~n. s99

R~g .

Very nice brown '-&lt;1.
two-wey reclifMM'.
Very Dll'ablel

9winog Roell..!

T.. City IOiid ,.._ twlng rodcer
ttnllt!. Ptdct.d l.t &amp;. t.ck

o...

I

t1311 .95 to t2l9 95

OlooltMI.

ta¥·MIY I'IIJitolll for ChnttmiS.

Reg.

1199.95

$128

1

IMPORTANT VALUEI

5 PIECE
COLOR TV'SI
WOOD DINNETTE Zer~llll 13", 19", 25': &amp;
SET!
27" - · Tr•

Four tolid pine chairs with

mendoul 11Ving1 on all

~~:!..':"::tZd 3e" x ":e~T-.:~ES EVER I

$199

Reg.
$329 95

MAGNIFICENT!

BARGAIN!

5 DRAWER
CHEST!

GUN
CABINETS!

Medium pine finish chell.
Lots af IIOI'oge opece.
Protaotlve Topel

191NCH

I, 19.96
Reg.

1

1

RIOM

1

REG. SJ099.95
DARK OAK SINGER '

4 DRAWER OR 5 DRAWER

·--...................... $68
......,..•
_____ ,_, $99
..... .... 01 ~.m--.

$88

•

Honov Pine lix gun

Reg.
1279.95

I. I.....

coc:trt.IW....... -=t • ret. •h*-•·
EI.CH PIECE •••
Atg.

tU.Hto n38.11
•-

BUY ONE

~Ampo l

Desk .........................516888

•

~

GET ONE FREEl

~- China. 'M)OCI . . . tllbt.

$199.
.....
... . . .................. .- ... $29 9

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

ca-

$16 9

1"-M«IIS.I

t'INft-tiiM . . , , _ . . .

aNirt 811d

OHEATOU.U

~_a.... 5Pteots.tl
bu ..._ tr.Tie wpldrtiNII • tlctne
llldl ctl....
SUPER IUV!

•

1

SLEEPERS
$299 95

$7 9.

CLOSE OVTII
Ungorlo cheot and nigh1 llland 1110

..........

~A~EV~O~LU~TI~ON~A~AY~I--~

SOLID
WOOD BUNK BEDSI

Solid plne 2"xB" bunk 0111. Sop.....,. 10
mol&lt;e twin bedl. Beoutfful stytlngl Laddar
inckKiod. Bedding extrel

SALE

REG. S999.95
EARLY AMERICAN BROWN

SALE

REG.

S249.9S NOW

&amp;man brlnos yo. nlgl!nlmo ccrnlorl will! darttmo boluly 11 • r!Qhr-llmo
price A vor~ry Ill' duroblt. coro·lfBI llbrlco Uf)ilalllor lroncl,.,..
rronsltiOI\II !llopors, llfslgntc! to rrans1omr any room Into , bedroom.
llsllno comtort 11
wllll kiln dried ~~~- ' ' -· Ullrllux eo&lt;e
culirlons and • hlgll qulilly lnnorljlnllfl monress. ~~ ~ l!llo '' , special
savings ro vou So Slop 11r11m1ng and como .. far vourserr.

$12500

EA. PC.

'""rod

$woS200.00

WALL UNITSI
8t Allhlov wall ""'"· Opon. drop Nd
8t drowor unill. Chooee pocon, lght pine
and dark plno flnilltao.
PRICEO TO GOI

OUTSTANDING!

NEW AND EXCITING!

LOVESEATSI

DAY BEDSI

An odd pioc:e lcwoo 11 In otock at drootic
reduction~. coo- from on •rrov af styloo
Mld fabrics.

Reg. 1239.95

TWIN SIZE

MATTRESS &amp;
BOX SPRINGS

lltoice of lnss cr wlilollrms. Bill day bed orrlj cr
also corroos ollh pop-up urit. 8odclinc extra.

\Wh

SALE
44

Loveseat ...................$344
REG. 51099.95
TRADITIONAL FLEXSTEEL

JUST ARRIVEOI

Bed

REG. 5699.95
TRADITIONAL BASSETT

SALE

Sofa &amp; Chair ............$544 44

Reg. $899.00

SPECIAL

•

SALE
44

SWIVEL ROCKERS •
$138 88

Sofa/ChcirI Ottomoo ....$644
REG. SJ099.95
HIGH BACK

.,,..,lll'l" hl!)ll·

s

&amp; Chair·····~······ $4 99 95

REG. S1299.95
EARLy AMERICAN PLAID

COFFEE TABLE

lorJil!"'l !".,. a r1.1rk rh~rry t.n-.;hl
Ro, nrl l! n.-t ...,, r.ocktnll'

, ___

REG. SJ099.95
CONTEMPORARY

Sofa &amp; Loveseat ......$548 88

TRADITIONAL BASSm

TABLES BY BASSETJ8
(hf'or~ ~n lor1~ ilrlfl

SALE

Secretary Desk.........S188 88

•

WITH MATCHING ENDS

Choor

REG. S379.95
RIVERSIDE

Sofa

4SoU , H-tl

$58800

$122 22

•

19.

,a,r mChalf

~~~=:v bed

•

DESK &amp; CHAIR

o.ya.r._

Six

binet. Two docn w~h
t...,......t ~lind lockl.

Out C..: ll• ~ T.o:1

Kanp 5 pilct 'Mrrto French wilh avid lrim.
01'811M', min'or, 5 drawer chMt &amp; tVIIin or

SALE

REG. S249.95
LIGHT OAK

STUDENT

EACH~ECE,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

Sle,per Sofa

BEDROOM SUITEI

SALE
44

ProtktM!

. .. Choialoftwo~.

tlyllo

YOU'LL LOVE THIS!

•

CW!Tab6111

COCKTAIL OR ROUNO
TABLE

Qvaiity and beoufy or e 11 ( ombinotion wv
•ouldn I txp«1 to lind In todoy '1 ft1Gfkt1 piCI(t .
but yo~ con fond bott. In ""1'1- 1 Growt'". Con llriKttd ol pint l'ngrflvtd wood prodv&lt;ll ond
Ml«!td hom:fwoodt \('mpl i"'ented ..,. GUI._., ·
tlcatly M ••gn..:l fori¥ A,....•kon bran lin,lhel;j
hofdwort Seil'tl lh11 donong gtll~p ond di,... ;.,

REG $11-15

STAlliNG

SALE

Triple China .............$544

PLUS MUCH, MUCH MOREl

~ode-

DINETTES
$99 95

SALE

~ COPY RIGHT 1!HI6 COSEC' INTEFINATIONAL. INC . ANY UNAUTHORIZED USE OF THI S M"TERI AL OR PARTS THEAE OF ISPAOHISITEDSV LAW

CHAIRS!/ROCKERS!

. ...,. ..

EXTRA SALESPEOPLE .. .
EXTRA OFFICE STAFF .. .
EXTRA CREDIT PERSONNEL ... AND
EXTRA DELIVERY PERSONNEL WILL
BE HERE TO ASSIST YOU!

NATIONAL NETWORK TV AND LOCAL NEWSPAPER AND RADIO ADVERTISEMENTS AR6
ANNOUNCING "NATIONWIDE BASSETT BARGAIN DAYS VIII" FURNITURE SALE!
GIANT BASSETT FURNITURE INDUSTRIES, THE NATION'S LARGEST SINGLE BRAND
FURNITURE MANUFACTURER, COORDINATES THIS NATIONWIDE SAVINGS EVENT
OFFERING NOT ONLY BASSETT FURNITURE, BUT EVERY ITEM IN EVERY PARTICIPATING
STORE AT REMARKABLE PRICE REDUCTIONS! YES! EVERYTHING IS REDUCED!! IT'S
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY! SAVE 10%, 20%, 30% ...YES! UP TO 60% OFF!

$

Aeg. S349.oo
'
Wall Rec:tinarl

SALE

PERSONNEL!

ITS SWEEPING THE COUNTRY...FROM COAST TO COAST!
0

SALE

' •

'YTII:II

• OPEN A NEW ACCOUNT..
• ADD- ON TO YOUR
PRESENT ACCOUNT!
BANK CARDS WELCOME!

1

STAlliNG

England Sofa •••••••••.•$488 88

S6818

Reg. t379.00
Rock"' ReclineO'I
l.o-L-IIO'j beige '-&lt;! trent&gt;

•

Sectionai ••••••.••...•.••..SS88 88

CHEST

CREDIT TERMS
AVAILABLE!

RECLINERS
$99 95

Sofa &amp; Chair ••.•.••••••.$499 95

$}6
8
I....
•

All. $249.95

Sofa &amp; Chair ••...••••••.$799 95
REG. 5999.95
EARLY AMERICAN FLORAL

•

e BUY 1 Imperial "Bed of Roses" queon

SALE

Chair •••.••••••.•.••.•.•.•••.$16888
LAMPS

1

REG. S1699',95
EARLY AMERICAN FLEXSTEEL
REG. 5399.95
CONTEMPORARY ENG.

I

EPERS!

$389

e

.,

PLUS MUCH, MUCH MOREl

Reg. S599.95
&amp;rly Ameoica10 Slooparl
FuH oize lola sleeper. Multi-color
plaid fabric.

AND SATURDAY

NICE VALUE!

a.uen ~ alite 'o\Mh . . . tri.n Tripi&amp;
d,..., . ...nicll minor. chHt hudboad
end nighlllllnd.

1

F~IDAY

•

BEDROOMS!

$

Reg. S1395

THURSDAY,

h1t11 !age

PLUS

. IEG. $995.
Z. piece Early American, Blue Flonl
~tlbrown wolt.

1199

$

o.rt. Ollk O"'lnCI Rooms.,,..
C~tham Coun1y !Ilk Mlht . F~ gtua hght.t

•' '•

$199.00
Pop-Up············· $279.00

0.01~ .. . .......... ...

SALE

·Sofa Only ..................$599 95
REG. S1799.95
BEIGE FLEXSTEEL

SALE

Sofa &amp; Chair ............$799 95

$9888

LIGHT OAK &amp; DARK PECAN

e BEDROOM SUITES

$299 95

TOMORROW! THURSDAY! 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M.!

CLOSED TODAY TO RmucE PRICES 011 EVERY ITEM 111 STOCK!

MASON

FURN ITURE
2nd Street

·.

co.

EMPIRE FURNITURE F POMEROY

Mason, W. Va.

(304) 773-5592

. 108 WEST MAIN ST.

-12 FANTASTIC HOURS!

'
••

~

POMEROY

992-3307
L

' ·- · ..

�--

.

•

.Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

..

In the spotlight
By CINDY S. OUVERI

Wednesday, September 10, 19.8 6

Pomeroy-Middk!port, Ohio

Pears at peak season; enjoy other ways than just raw fruit
Color depends on the variety of
the pear. Pears ready tlr the
harvest become rrore rounded and
develop a waxiness m the skin.
Also, they separate easUy from the
tree with .a sllgbt upward twtst.
The lentlcels (small spots on the
skin) are white oc green when the
pears are Immature. when the
lentlcels become ll'own In rolor,
this Is another guide that pears are
ready to be picked.
High quality pears are firm and
not overly soft.
Pears are available ln a wide
variety of forms, Including fresh,
canned, and dried. Now ts the time
to enjoy them fresh wring their
peak season.
Ripened pears can be stored kl
the refrigerator for 3-5 days to
maintain high quality.
We usually think of pears as a
fruit to be eaten raw as a snack, but

Counly Eldllllloa Agent

HOIDI! Eoonomlcs/4-H
. :·nurtng a recent trip to the
.grocery store, I noticed the fruit
section was well stocked with a
'&lt;Vide variety of pears. Late August
and Septeml:er are peak rrontlli t&gt;r
this juicy fruit.
;.This week "In The Spotllgbt"
.bjkes a look at the rutrltlve value,
lllrvestlng, and use of pears.
: The most comrron types d pears
are Bartlett, Bose, and D'Anjou.
Calolie range Is 851n a Bose variety
(3 per lb.) to 120 calories lh D'Anjou
jlear (2 per lb.). Pears provide a
fair arrount at potassium and also
contain VItamin Band plxlsphorus.
1bey are low In S?dlum.
•·~ Pears should be harvested l:efore
they are tree ripe. Guides on the
'Proper time for harvest Include the
color of the skin, finish, and change
.l!ltentlcels.

Green ·Thumb honors
Worker with award
preparing exhibits.
In order to upgrade her skills, she
recently completed three quarters
of work In office procedures, work
processing, math and English, a
total of 849 hours, through theJTPA
program. She now holds a certlfl· ·
cate In office services.
Mrs. Hazelton Is personable and
professional, quite creative, and
has historical knowledge which
makes her a valuable employee at
the museum,
"The people who come In, the
history, the genealogy, I love It all,''
commented the mother of five
children who hadn 'I worked for
many years until the Green Thumb
program carne along. The certlfl·
care cites her dedication and
willingness to woril as an example
for aU older Americans.

. : Vada Hazelton of Pomeroy was
·the _:eclplent of Ohio's Outstanding
.(/reen Thumb Woriler Award for
·May and was presented a certlfl·
?teat a recent area meeting held.
at the Senior Citizens Center here.
: ~ George R. Sprague, state dlrec·
,lbr. made the presentation noting
J!!at Mrs. Hazelton's picture will be
· hung with other state winners In the
qgency's office at Ottowa.
· • Green Thumb Is a federally
1Unded work training program In
ron-profit agencies for loose over
55, sponsored by the National
!tarmers Union. There are 620
worilers throughout Ohio.
&lt;· Mrs. H.azelton was nominated for
·the award by the board of the Meigs
r ounty Pioneer and Historical
$oclety. She works 20 hours a week
as a museum aide, conducting
tours, assisting visitors In locating
lnA&gt;rmatlon, sorting materials and

erred pectin;

there are several ways of preparing
Note: When using !lrrn varieties
them. The can be se!Ved with of pears, do not add sugar until the
d!eese slices as a dessert, slm· last 10 minutes of rooking. Serves 6.
mered and served wann tlr For variety, add a few cinnamon
breakfast or baked for dessert. candles, or a stick of cinnamon or
They can also be frozEn, canned, or cloves to the syrup, or garnish with
d!'led. Some quick and easy ways to a l!w sprtgs of mint.
lftPare this tlavortul fruit are as
To enjoy pears later oo this year,
tlllows:
thlsreclpefortuttl-truttljamwould
Simmered Pears
l:e a colortul addition to any meal.
2 pears; 213 cup water; l/3 cup
TuiU-FrutU Jam
sugar.
with powdeftld pectin
Wash pears, pare, core, and
3 cups .chopped or ground pears
halVe oc slice.
• (about fi,i)Ounds pears); 1 large
Mix !llgar and water and bring to orange; 3,4 cup drained crushed
a boD.
pineapple; ~ cup chopped maraAdd fruit to boUing syrup.
sd!lno cherries '(~nee bottle); %
Cover and return to boDing.
cup lemon. Juice; 1 package powReduce heat untn syrup Is simmerlng and cook for 10 minutes (soft
varieties) to 20 minutes (llrrn
varieties) . Cook untU fruit Is tender
but not mushy. SUr as little as
THURSDAY ·
possible to avoid breaking fruit.
POMEROY - The Preceptor
Beta Beta Oiapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority wll meet at 7: :II
Thursday at the Episcopal Parish
House.

5 cups water.
Fill and seal containers using
To prepare trutt. Sort and wash Extension recommended proce·
ripe pears; pare and core. Chop or dures. Process 5 minutes In boiling
grind the pears.
water bath. Makes 6 to 7 half· pint
Peel orange, remove seeds, and jars.
chop or grind pulp.
.
Dld You Know That : The pear we
To make jam. Measure chopped · know today as Bartlett reached our
pears Into a ketUe. Add oran.ge, country shortly before 1800. It
pineapple, cherries, and lemon originally was found growing wild
juice. Sttr In pectin. Place on high
1n England In 1770. The name
heat and, stirring constantly, bring Bartlett came from the name of the
quickly to a full boll with bubbles estate owner In Massachusetts
over the entire surface.
where they were planted.
Add sugar, continue stirring, and
For .a pickled pear recipe, contact
heat again to a full bubbling boll. the Meigs County Cooperative
Boll hard for 1 minute, stirring Extension Service at Box 32,
constantly. Remove from heat;
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, or call
skim.
992-1»96.

Community calendar/ .area happenings
AN11QUITY - The 14th H.A.
Fred Hayman and Garnet E. Polk
Hayman reunion will be Sunday,
Sept. 14, at the lxlme of C.E.
Hayman Sr., Antiquity, beginning
at 10 a.m. Dinner at noon.

FRIDAY
RUTLAND - A dance will be
staged at the Rutland Civic Center
from 8 to 11 p.m. Friday with music
by I tomlc Sounds. Admission Is $1. a
person.

REEDSVIll.E - The 50th an·
nual Buckley reulon will be held
Sunday, Sept. 14, at the Belleville
Dam Park In Reedsville, not at the
fire department as was agreed
upon at last reunion. Pot luck
dinner at I p.m.

POMEROY -Mary Shrine 37,
Order d the White Shrine d
Jerusalem, wUl meet at 8 p.m
Friday at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

RU1l..AND - The 14th annual
Wood reunion will be held Sunday,
Sept. 14, at Forest Acres Park, near

SATURDAY
POMEROY -TheJoyfulSounds
of Kingsport, Tenn. will be at the
Full Gospel Lighthouse each evenIng through Sunday.
RECOGNIZED- Vada Hu·
zelton was selected from lim
Ohio Green 1bumb wolilers as
oulstandlng for the May. She
displays her ceJtlllcate at a
recent Green '11nunb meeting.

Fife.. ... reunion conducted

l

RACINE -Free entertainment
night at the Shrlners Park In Racine
Saturday beginning at 7 with the
Bend River Boys providing entert.alnment and the Ladles Awdllary
r1. the Fire Department holding an
Ice cre.am soda!. Residents are to
take lawn chairs.

Edna Lochner

~ Missionary

. set to speak
: Miss Edna Lochner. missionary
. for 23 years In the Kingdom of
Sulazlland, will be speaking Thurs.
day al the Racine Church of the
Nazarene. She will share her
experiences, her vision, and con·
. cern for conununicating the gospel
·of Jesus Christ through the printed
:page as well as by word of mouth.
; Her program will include a slide
·presentation, curios, and some
printed materials. The service
·begtns at 7 p.m. a nd the public is
·invited by the Rev. Lloyd D.
:Crimm Jr .. pastor .

:wolf Pen notes
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Colley, and
Ca lvin Lee. wo&gt;re Labor Dav
,visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
·JohnsOn and Tammy.
: Other recrnt visitors of the
~ Harley Johnsons were Mr. and
•Mr s. T e rry Johnson of
:Ravenswood. ·
·
; Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp of
·LangsvUle joined Mr. and Mrs.
·:Charles J. Knapp fo r dinner
tecently.
. Debbie Mu 11Jhy Basham of Flor
l da was the recent guest of Mrs. Iva
'JohnS?n. She also vis ited with her
grandmother, Mrs. J R Mu11Jhy
'and Peggv .
,1"
Mrs. Leslie Frank and Sarah
Beth of Texas Road wPre Wednesjlay visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
tJaninl! and Ronald.

Ross and Bessie
Fife met · recen tiy at the Kyger
Creek Park t&gt;r a reunion . . A
covered dish dinner was enjoyed at
noon with the Rev. Raymond Fife
giving the blessing.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
. Eddie File Jr. and Jennifer, Tracy
and Terri File, Clarence Fife, Don
Casto, _Mr. and Mrs. Guy Priddy,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mr. Dale Priddy
and Derrlk, Linda, WendaU and
Ryan Baylor, Mrs. Brenda Hood, ·
Adam and Emily, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Roscoe Fife and Terri,
Mr. and Mrs. John Leach, Mr. and
Mrs. Don Roush and Amy, Julie
and Matthew Wandllng, Mrs.
Brenda Jeffers, Ryan and Melissa,
Joey Custer, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Newell, Middleport.
Mr. and Mrs. James Priddy,
Rutland; Mrs. Jeannie Buckley,
Sam and Chuck, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Fife, R.achel Burns,
Stacy and Michael, Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond, Unda Rohr, Mr. and
Mrs. Buddy Fife, Mrs. Evelyn
Matthew and Jay, Mr. and Mrs.
Don Leach, John VIeth, Mrs .
Marsha Browning and Mary Ann,
Mrs. Georgia Fraley . Cheshire,
Mrs. Lois Taylor, Worthington; Mr.
and Mrs . James Keeler, Mr. and
Mrs. Geroge Keeler. and Mrs.
Marte Keefer and Carman, Leon.
W.Va.
Mrs. Delores Riggs, Teresa.
Jack, and Johnny, Mrs. Pam
Gordon, Kelly and Timmy, Letart,
W.Va .; Roscoe Fife, Bidwell; Mr.
and Mrs. Grahl Russell, Pennsylvania; Mrs. Kathryn Rossell, Mason; .
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cook and
Shelly, Mrs. Cathy Smith, Chrissy,
Grrry, Point Pleasant; Frank Cook

TOPS

Jr., Sydee Wlntzor, N.C.; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Tyree, Rachel, Travis
and Carl, Maryland; Mr. and Mrs.
Clarmce Might and David, Mr. and
Mrs. Rick Metheney, Ricky, Erik
and Latlcla, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Ralph, VInton ; Mr. and Mrs. BUI
Scragg, Parkersburg, W.Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Max Thllxlut, Delaware.

Special of the Week

\

11 PC. SHRIMP

t

S1.39

•

RAW PEANUTS .........~••• $160

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
514 EAST MAIN

992-6910

POMEROY

Wt Acctpt
footl Stampt

CHEVROLET
-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC
"FOUila. Y SIIIOIS OIDS..cAD •.a.Y.''
COMPUTERIZED ENGINE ANALYSIS

Give your hich tech auto the edp wiUt our new Allen Encine Analyzer.
Sllte of the art dia,nostic center that's ny ahead olanyof tht compe·
tition. The newest mthe field of Generllllotors. Trouble shootinc di·
li ll&amp;n~1stic equipment with computer and tllllloc cap~bilities .
REGULAR 126.00

S19 95

+TAX IWITH COUPON I

Good thru 0 ct. 1

ALIGNMENT SPECIAL

Get started on the right track for winter with a
genuine G.M. front end alignment
llfGUUR $39.00

s,.;,~Ai Prlee S2995
TAX IWITH COUPON)
95
Alignment Check.! 12 !No &lt;OIIPOII Nlldtdl
+

Good thru Oct. 1

0

DEPARTMENT STORE
Phone /42-2100

f

: PHIClS LHI:CfiVL lHBU SAT. SEPT iO. IY8ti

$

SWIFT'S 3 ll.

Canned Ham ..................... 6. 95
ECKRI(H
$
Jumbo Bologna........ !~....... 1. 97
Kahn's Wieners ....... l~~-~~~·..... 1.69
AGAR
SHREDDED .....Ib. $2.39
SiKED
18.
$2,.19
801.Ied Ham •••••••••••••••••••••••
Homemade Ham Salad ... ~·..•. 99&lt;
12 OZ. 16 SLKE

24 CT.

IAJN:K. PROC.
CHEESE ...........~t...... Sl .89

HEAD
LEnUCE .••..••.•...••.•••..••• 69 (

7'h OZ. IAUARO

30 CT.

BISCUITS .......~~!... ... 2I 59(
I OZ. SWEET ROSE

CAUF.
CELERY ......................... S9c
3 II. lAG NEW

MARGARINE

PAniES ................... 2I 69(

YEllOW

·"it•• I• I Prlea S1995

"*"

N&lt;ll. 30, 1966 ard ~ ~be used only b' llle
poo:hao;e a!~ S.ladlllll' H.S. class rirgs.

Good thru Oct. 1

........

~

+TAX IWITH COUPON)

AnENTION DIESEL OWNERS
We now have a fully qualfied factory trained
dieaal technician.

ENGINE PERFORMANCE CHECK
IEGIJLAII S$2.00

•TASPECIAL

$2 595

.. Good lhN Oat. 1

212 1. Mlln, Pomeroy

MONDAY
FRIDAY 8
308 E. MAIN

J-2209
873

24 OZ. OlE-IDA

Hash Browns ............~~...... S1.39
II OZ. BANQUET
TV Dinners ................~!!~..... S1.39
16 OZ. TASTE-D' -SEAS
Ocean Perch ...••••..•....'!'~~ ••••• S1. 97
26.4 OZ. OIANGE DRINK

Lubricate auapenaion, drain' oil ond replace filter using Mr.
Goodwrench Oil end AC Delco Filter.
In this speci1l we insist on usin1 qu11ity lr. Goodwrench Oil &amp; A/C filltrsnot •n oil brand or cbNp filter and oil. Thlsls1n hon.st to f)odnm specltl
on quality Gl Plrts &amp;Gil Service, no subst~ute for qutlity. Limit 5qtl. Oil.
IIEGUlAI 126.95

Salt on the besl dtis ~- Jl(p,l'wllh
speriallreecusrom optlom. OKx~ )OOr
lilvorite sl)'le today.

~

oo+~· ••••o

RUTLAND
l~- ~

a.m.

The operator or a propane
distributorship testified thai ttx·
FBI Instructed him to carry
through on a $3l,OOJ bribe which
resulted in the Indictment of I.aw
Director Antonio DiCarlantonlo
and Fire Chief John Prayso on
charges of extortion and conspiracy
lo commit extor1 ion.

DiCarlantonio and Prayso are
charged with unlawfuUy requesting
$3l,OOJ In return for ensuring that
Atlas Gas Products be allowed to
sell and Install propane gas units
wllhln the city limits.
Jodie Glaub, the operator of Atlas
Gas, testified thai the FBI had told
him to go to a meeting In
DICarlantonlo's office last Mav 14.
"They (the FBI I said If they lthe
city officials 1 want to do business.
they'D make an offer," related
Glaub, whose identity had nol been
made public before the trial.
The propane distributor said
there was some discussion of
money being transferred. "I be·

TO IS

8T03
POMEROY. .OH.
.

Tang .••.••...•..•...•.•••......~:...... S2.79
29 OZ. OSAGE

Peaches .................~:•••• $1.09
17 OZ. DEL MOIIITE
Sweet Peas ...........~~! .... 2/S1.19
16 OZ. VAN CAMP
Pork &amp; Beans ....... ~~!....... 2I 97(
3 OZ. UPTON DEUF.
.
Tea •••••••••••••••.••••••••..•••!•!••••• S3.6·9
J41/t OZ. BEm UOtKER
Gingerbread Mix .......~~~ ••.• S1.29
24 OZ AUNT .MIMA WHnE or REG.
Pancake. Svrup.....,.....~~~ .... S2.49
32 OZ. AUNT •MrMIUTTEIIA1UI ·
Pancake Mix ..............~~~.... S1.49
101/t OZ. PLO(HMAN'S
Mustard .....................~A!......... 59&lt;
.Towels •••• :·.~.~!!~~..... S1.29

•

I

'

AKRON, Ohio (UPii - A
Summit County Common Pleas
Judge has revoked the bond of one
man charged in the bludgeoning
murders oil"" University of Akron
women .

Ueve they said, 'what's tt worth,"'
he n~alled under cross examination by Thmas M. Tyack, attorney
fo r the fire chief.

Richard Cooey 11. 19, of Akron ,
pleaded Innocent Tuesday ro
charges of aggrava ted murdPr.
kidnapping. robbery and rapP.
Judge James Winter revoked
Cooey's $2:i0,(0) bond, citing thi&gt;
death penalty specifications in tlw
charges.
Cooey appean'&lt;l shllkcn al ti'X&gt;
hearing, during which a I rial dale of
Nov. 20 was S('!.
-

.J.

'

"But you made oo offer because
someone told you that was the way
to handl e 11, is that right?" asked
T'yack.

COMPLEI'ES - lntematlonaDy acclaimed power equipment
executive James W. Yount, left, led a professional develolpmmt
seminar completed hy BDI McDaniel, center, of Pomeroy Home and
Auto. Ed Turner, right, Is territory manager for Slihl Chain Saws,
sponsoftld of the execluslvesemlnarforlts dealers. Yount Instructed the
dealers In teclmlques of service and business operation. to enable them
to do a better job of serving cuslomel'5.
~3 I

MASSILLON tUPIJ -A $4 million grant approved by Massillon
City Council should help brin g nearly roo new jobl to the city, officials
say.
Council members approved I he development fund grant .Monday,
which will be split between two Stark Cou nty businesses.
Representatives of Park Farms of Canton say they will use their
share of the money to flnan C\" part of a $14 million (Xlultry processing
complex .
Valley Systems Industri al Maintenance and Cleaning of Ca nal
Fulton plans to expand to Massillon, officials say.
The two projects should be completed within two years.

surrender.~

license

CLEVELAND iUPI) - A Lakewood pha rm acist has agreed to
surrender his pharmaceutical license afler pleading guilty to drug
and I heft charges.
Richard Ratner, .11. owner of Ratner's Pharmacy , plrndt'&lt;l guilty
Monday to two count s of traffickin g in drugs. seven counts of illegal
processing of drug documents and one coun t each of theft and petty
the fl.
Prosecutors sa id Ratner agreed 10 surrender his li cense as pari of
a plea arranl(!'menl. Ten 01her felony count s were dropped in plea
negoti ations.
He was accused of filling forged prescriptions lor f\&gt;rcod an and
Valium. He also pleaded guilty lo fraudulently billing Blu e Cross &amp;
Blue Shield of Northern Ohio fur $2,008.

Officials eye closing office
PAINESVILLE iUPI J - Lake County commissioners say if
balancing the budget means closing the county pms~ulor ' s office .
then so be it.
"My position is th at If his (Prosecutor John Shoop! office has to
close, then It has to close," Commissioner Michael Coffey said
Monday. "We're not going 10 operate in the red."
Shoop Informed commissioners last week that he needed an
additional $86,000 to pay the salaries ol25 employees through I he end
·fi the year.
'
·
Slicop has joined several county officials challenging the
commissioners' claim tha t the county cannot accommodate 1983
budget requests.
Department heads were warned late last year and early thi s year
that they might have to reduce bl1dgels by nearly 25 percent,
commissioners sa id.

Ex-GOP leader kills self
LONGBOAT KEY , Fla. !UP! I -Former Ohio Republican Party
Chairman Earl Barnes, a staunch ally of former Ohio Gov. James
Rhodes, killed himself wit h a single gunshot at his vacation home,
police said.
Pollee said I hey were investigating Barnes' death Tuesday as a
suicide and had no reason to believe foul play was Involved.
Barnes, 65, apparently shot himself during the afternoon at his
home In the posh Fairway Bay development on the F1orlda Gu~
Coast. said Ll. Tom Coons of the Longboat Key pollee department.
&amp;rnes served as the chairman d the Ohio Republican Party from
1977 to 1932 and the chairman of the Hamilton County Republican
Party from 19G! to 1977.
He was a close friend of James Rhodes. who is seeking his net h
term as governor of Ohio. Rhodes served as governor fi·om 1962 to
1970 and again from 1974 to 1982.
folice said they did not know If Barnes was alone at the tim e of his
dt"ath. He was divorced and Is survived by six children . His son Chris
was a former U.S. attorney for the 90uthern district of Ohio but
resigned this year.

CHICKEN BARBECUE
MIDDLEPORT FIRE STATION
SATURDAY, SEPT. 13
BEGINNING AT 11 A.M.

112 CHICKEN, BAKED BEANS, ROLL ••• $400

BARGAIN MATINEES SA11JROA1 I
SU NDA! • All SEATS 12. 50
A~ISS ION EVERY TUE SDA! 12.50

substitute bladder operation
By SANDRA L. lATIMER
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPl) - A
new operation for people without
working bladders has been pio·
neered by a Chlldren's Hospital
urologist who tran splanted a por·
lion of a spina blflda victim' s
intPsline lo crea te a substit ute
bladder.
Dr. Stephen Koff said Tuesday
the procedure, which he performed
In April on Rodney Fetherolf. 19, of
Columbus, could mean the end to
I he use of external bags by patient s
who have non-functioning bladders,
This procedure Is especially
important for children, Koff said.
because the intestine will grow with
the pallent.
The doctor plans to discu ss his
work on the 19-year-old Fetherolf at
lhe meeting of the American
Academy of Pediatrics In Washington in November and to the
American Urological Associallon
mt'('l lng In Ma y.
"I'm excited about this," said
Koff. ·'Doctors have been trying for
10 yea rs lo find a replacement for a
bladder. but only now are we
beginning to reliably ha ve the
bowel serve as a bladder without
leaking."
Koff used six inches of Rodnry' s
Intestine to make a four-centimeter
valve, which will keep urine from
leaking out of a nother piece of valve
thai serves as a bladder. A human
has some 30 feet of intestine.
"Tills Is the first time an Intestine
has been used torrovethe urine out
of the bocl\'." he said. "I'm pleased
with the r€Sults and now we can
start worldng on adults who have to

UTAH

have their bladders removed ."
Koff said the procedure can b&lt;'
performed In 31;2 to 4 hours and the
patient would probably have to be
hospitalized a week to 10 days.
"Rodney was in the hospital for a
month because we didn't want to
lake chances and "" wanted to
watch him lo see how his body
reacted," he said.
With this substitute bladder, the
patient has to drain the bladder
with a catheter four to six Urnes a
day, which the wheelchalr·bound
Rodney has been taught.
"I can do It myself," Rodney said
proudly.
His rrother, Sharon, added, "He
sets his little alarm clock and gets
up in the middle of the night to do
ll ."

Fetheroll, a very talkative and
outgoing high school srn[Jr, had
worn a bag br a little more than a
year, but had dlfflcullies.
"The odor was the worst ." said
his rrother.
But to Rodney, "earlng the bag
IXJSed ether problems.

"Students, teachers and nu rses at
school were tTuel," he said ,fighting
back tears. "T~·y made cruel
n&gt;marks. And teachers used to lake
me aside and tell me how bad I he
smell was. I tol d them there was
nothing I oould do about il andlherp
wasn't."
When Rodnry was born. he had a
life expeclanry of !bur years. His
mother believes th ai lhe boy's
illness was the mai n reason her
husband walkt'&lt;l oul when Rodney
was an infant.
When Rodney was oot• month old.
he had lhe fi rst of about 211
OIJ&lt;'ra tions. A shunt was placed In
his head IO drain lhe flu id from his
brai n.
Mrs. Fethcrull sa1·s lha l doctor
m ntinued to improve on the shunt s
and Rodney is now on his fourth
one .

Sen'ices slated
RAYMOND, Ohio iUPil - A
fu neral will be held Thursday
morning In the Union County
community of York Center lor
former state Rep. Lloyd George
Kerns who died Sunday al his home
in Raymond. He was 65.
Kerns served as a Union County
Republican chairman, Union
county prosecutor and Richwood
village solicitor l:efore being
elected to six two-year terms In the
Ohio Hou,...

1------------.L..------------'r-----------------------------~1
I
I
I
I
I

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

FRI. &amp; SAT.
SEPT. 12 &amp; 13

INSURANCE
111 S.Ca11d St., Po1111roy

10 P.M. TO 2 A.M.

JACKSON PIKE · RlJ~ WEST

- - 446· 4524

Grant to aid city's fiscal scene

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

ROCKY II
MULI£RRY ST.
RAVENSWOOD, W. VA.

RE/TAURAnT

------------------s
.99C
3 HAMBURGERS

A

v
E

66C

I
I
I
I
I

Wlltl coupon 11 lh. . . Pl11111t 1 ~11on1

lt11

71 ti•A~I N C hu , PI Pll. .ant: S.,.rNNr ..llll: ~IVItlt'fi'OOO . W\1 5.
llotMroy. a t1

- -

C~ OOtll ~!Of •lUG w1tt1 '"' Oll'll f Oll trl

..-----------------·.1
NO
p.urmc.!
.99C
CHARGE
··-·---·
soc
C'HECKINC
·-----------------l
ACCOUNTS
$1.
O''Eflt

\IAt.tO TloiAOUQ~o~

DEC Jt . ,gee

JH

E

Wllh C:OUI)On 11 lhHI P l.. ltrl lncallt too

111 1 711'1 A•I ,., Cfl11 . Pt ""•ant. Sw mmlt'1~ 111 1 . Al'ttf\lwOOd. WV &amp;
PO"*O't' OH
Caw i)Otll 1101 vlllll Wlll'l 11'11 01~ Oltlfl
OFf:E A \1.11.10 T,."'O.!Qiol OEC 31 . 1118

JH

s

A

FOR

'h CHICKEN ONLY ............................... $3 50

I

SAUSAGE BISCUIT WITH
EGG &amp;

s
A
v

2S .l

FRIES &amp; REGULAR

v

E

.

.J

CHEESEBURGER, FRENCH

'NIIh cou110 t1 11 thiN Pllllttl IOCAitOnt

2111 7th Afl . N. CPIII .. Pl. "'l..ltl t. Slltfiiii"IY•IIt. fltt'fiNWOOO ...

t-

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I
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SENIOR ·------------------1:
$125 · ~:
CITI.ZENS!* !
r-'1.ra
I
I
54c

Cot.l~t
QF,IA

~lfltf'OY . OM
1101 VIIIG Wlll'l II'IY OII'IIJ olf'trt

\IAt.IO

T'to.A()UQH O!C

]I

JH

·I·

SAUSAGE BISCUIT,

~0 GIMMICKS! NO MINIMUM BALANCE!
'Must be 62

ye~rs

of age or older

'

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

BANK

8anklng On Maaon Counfy'a Future
5Ut Street
New' Hawn, W. Va.
' 112·2135

2212 .Jacltson Avenue
Point Plelsanl, W.'II.

675-1121
"

Second Stntt
Mason, W.Va.

m -5514

!.

HASHBROWNS &amp;

vE

•· --·---·

1:

Will'! coupon 11 t i'IHI Pltllttl IOC:I t tOnt

I'

2111 1UI .lvt. ~ Cl'lll .. PI ~11111'11 : $""'"'111'1'•111. RI~II'IIIIIOOO &gt;N\1 &amp;

~~

58C

PEOPLES
0

'

INDEPENDENT

"I never would have made an
ctfer anyway," replied Glaub.
At a subsequent meeting May 20,
the figure or $.ll,OOl was mentioned
a nd another meeting set up, Glaub
testified.
That meeting took place May 28,
and Glaub, wired for sound, carried
the $3),000 Into the meeting.

11

Bond revoked

SUPPORTING

---Ohio Briefs:---. Columbus urologist pioneers

0

A dinner to be held a t Meigs High
School Tuesday, 7p.m, was planned
with TOPS OH 570, Pomeroy, met
this week at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The dinner will be held In Room
211 at 7 p.m. with weigh-In from 5to
6 p.m. Those needing further
Information may call992·7532.
Pearl Knapp and Bernie Durst
were top losers at the meeting with
Sylvia Neece as runner-up. Best
teen loser was Belinda Sayre.

Artf.an'edSIIadium~ U.S. Oass Rings
with Custom Extras at No Extra Cost!

This""'

•

By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI 1 - The
ex tortion trial of two Steubenville
city officials continued today In U.S.
District Cour1 . with the U.S.
attorney's office expected to wind
up its side of the case.
Tesllmony was to resume at 9

meetJ

·ce\
~y.ey..S99·~
.

"At the Elld of the Pomeroy-Mason Brid1•
POMEROY, 011.
PH. 992-2556

The Daily Sentinel- Page-

Testimony resumes in trial
of 2 Steubenville officials

Pharmacist

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Descendants of
Augustus John Warner and Mary
Ann (Blrda) French Warner annual reunion, Sunday, at Lake Hope
State Park l:eglnnlng at 12: ll p.m .

LUBE, OIL AND FILTER

'
9
$09

POMEROY - The Walter Gil·
more reunion will be held Sunday at
the Route 33 roadside park, right
traveling north. Gilmore's 89th
birthday will be observed and
friends and l'elatives are invited to
a ttend. Activities begin at noon.

With Fries •••••••••••••••••••••
s 1. 94.
.

GIEAT FOI PEANUT BllmE CANDY!!

• "speelal Prle•

ORANGE TOWNSHIP - The
Oran!J! Christian Church Homecoming will l:e Sunday, Sept. 14,
with Sunday Sehoul and worship
serviCes beginning at 9:30, dinner at
noon and afternoon services at 1:30.
Special singing by the Unity
Singers. The pubic Is Invited.

~·

. . , .~ ;

~ of

Rutland. Picnic lunch at 12:30.

Wednesday, September 10, 1986

Coupo~~t not ::r;~~ ~~y Oilier o1t1rt

1:·

------------------·1:
$2
r
JH

0"1" VALID llol.-ouGH OEC lt , 1!JI8

t

I·

BACON CHEESEBURGER,
s LARGE FRENCH FRIES &amp;
A LARGE

•

49 r
1.:

v
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I

1:

1:

'Nitft COYDOn II lftHI ltttlun IOC itiCnl

ztt 1 ttft Avt. N. Qlu.: ftil . P!.... n1 : S~Ntt".UI: Fllfttllwooa . W\1

........,o•.

58°

Couc!onl 1"101 YIIIG wttfl &amp;nY Otl'ler OIIIFI ,

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-----------------·
L--------------------------··--·-...,
0"'1"

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~ALID

TH"'UQH OIC. lt . liM

�: Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, September 10, 1986

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio

...---Local Briefs:--..
Appeals judges to hear 6 cases

Middleport
mayor's court

Are·a deaths
,----

Six cases were scheduled to be heard today when the Fourth
District Court of Appeals convened In Meigs County. Judges are Earl
E. Stephenson, Portsmouth, preskllng; Homer E. Abele of
McArthur and Lawrence Grey of Athens.
Cases scheduled for review Include Citi2ens Against Longwalllng
versus Division ct Reclamation; State of Ohio versus Taylor; County
ol Meigs and Andrews against Board of Trustees; State versus
Hysell; State versus Carter and State against Stewart.

Middleport police activities listed
The Middleport Pollee Department made 5l arrests during the
month of August and Investigated nine accidents, Police Chief
Sidney Little reports. Vehicles were driven 4,800 miles and parking
meter collections amounted to $1,024.00. There were 487 parking
tickets wlitten and merchant pollee collections totaled $48.

Firefighters answer 57 calls
The Middleport Fire Department answered 57 calls during August
including 11 fire and 46 emergency runs, Fire Chief Jeff Darst
reports. All vehicles were driven 3,193.8 miles during the month and
new engine 13 was placed Into service Cll Aug. 12.

EMS squads report eight runs
Meigs County Emergency Medical Se1vices reports eight calls
Tuesday.
Racine at 12:56 a.m. to Hill Road lor Jenny Dilchcr to Holzer
Medical Center; Syracuse at 9:56 a.m. to Welchtown Hill for Charles
Buckley to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 10 a.m.
transported Edna Lee to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
10:29 a.m. to Tuppers Plains for Herbert Matheny to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 11: 5l a.m. to Pine Grove Road tor
Hanison Smith to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2:32p.m.
transported James Coughenour to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland
at 3:10p.m. to Meigs Mine No.2 lor Frank Broderick to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 4 p.m. to Township Road 265
for Tim Smith to St. Joseph's Hospital.

Free clothing day set Friday
The Gallia·Melgs Community Actiln Agency will hold it s free
clothing day for low-income persons on F'riday, from 9 a.m. to noon.
at the old high school building in Cheshire.

VFW Post to meet Thursday
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 0053 will mee t 8:}) p.m. Thursday at the
Tuppers Plains grade school. All members are urged to attend.

Tent revival underway in area
A tent revival is now underway and will continue through Sept.l4
at Rodney, just 7 miles north of Gallipolis on U.S. 35, beside J'sMini
Mart, with Evangelist Charles Spence. Special music and singing.
Services 7:30 nightly. Everyone welcome.

Bond forfeited in Pomeroy court
Berinda Bunctette, Point Pleasant, was fined S&gt;3 and costs for
excessive speed when she appeared in the court of Mayor Richard
Seyler Tuesday night.
Fmieiting txmds were Virginia M. Lee, Chester, $43, improper
backing, and Kelly Gebhardt. Columbus, $4.1, excessive speed .
Blaine Qualls. Pomeroy, paid old lines of $134.

Man-in W. McGuire

bla, Mo., five grandchildraJ and
one great-grandchild.
Eesides his parents, he was
Marvin Wllson McGuire, 75,
Route 4, Pomeroy, died Tuesday at preceded In death by a sister.
Private services will be held at
Putnam General Ho8pital.
the
convenience rt the famUy with
Mr. McGuire was born in Meigs
rurtal
to be in the Mount Hermon
County on Dec.14, 1910, a son of the
Cemetery.
There wUI he oo caiUng
late Nile and Myrta Pullins
oours and in lieu of flowers friends
McGuire. He was a retired coal
may
make donations to the Pome·
miner and a steel factory em·
roy
Emergency
Squad. The Ewing
ployee. He had served as a '
F'urreral
Home
Is In charge of
Salisbury Township trustee and
arrangements.
was a member of ·the United
Molders Union.
William H. McGrew
Surviving are his wife, Betty
McGuire; six daughters, Patsy
Wllllam H. McGrew, ro, died
Ran!Ee, Columrus; Cheryl Morris, Monday at his residence, Route 2,
Reyooldsburg; Connie Hudson, Coolville.
Middleport; Lynne Arms and
Mr. McGrew was born in Topeka,
Regena McGuire, both of Porne· Kan.; a son of Margaret Egert
roy; Ricka Elder, Huntington, Allred, Route 2, Coolville, and the
W.Va.; three sons. Richard late Brian McGrew. He was a
McGuire. Marriett Islan d, Fla .;
laboratory technician and was a'
Howard Searles and Terry veteran of World War II having
McGuire, both of Pomeroy; ftve served in the U.S. Navy.
brothers and lour sisters. Also
Surviving in addition to his
surviving are 17 grandchildren and
mother are a daughter, Linda
slx great·grandchildraJ.
Vargas of Mount Shata, Calif.; two
Besides his parents. he was sons. Larry and David, both at
preceded In death by a son. Maryln home; a brother, Gene. SacraMcGuire Jr., a daughter, Malena
mento. Calif.; two sisters, Betty
McGuire, a granddaughter and one
Homes of Yuba City, Calif., and
great-grandchild.
Eva Campbell of Citrus Heights.
Services will be held at 1 p.m. CaJU.. fi ve grandchildren, and
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
several nieces and nephews.
with Rev. Carl Hicks and Rev.
Arrangements will br announced
Amos Tillis officiating. Burial wUI by the White Funeral Home at
be in Pine Grove Cemeter.v. Coolville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 this evening.
Augustus Cin·lt'

Edward H. Hedrirk
Edward H. Hedrick, 71, 133
Buncrnut Ave., Pomeroy, died
unexpeetedly Tuesday at Veterans
Memodal HospitaL
Born in Meigs County on Sept. 7,
19LS, he was the son of the late John
and Zora Kaylor Hedrick. He was a
retired electrician and a member of
Local ffi3 in Columbu s.
Mr. Hedriek was a veteran of
World Wa r II having served with
the 6th Marine Division in the
Pacific Theat er. He was a rnemiFr
of Humooldt Lodge 476, F&amp;AM.
Columbu s. and belonged to the
Ancient Accepted Scottish Rite.
Valley of Columbus, Shrine of
Columbus and Chapter 53 of the
Disabled American Veterans.
Sutviving are his wife, Virginia
Bailey Hedrick ; a son and
daughtrr·in·law, William F. and
Bonnie HPdrick. Route 5, Athens; a
daughter and !Dn·in-law. Donna
and David Keller. Reynoldsburg; a
bmther. Henry H. Hedrick. Colum

20 years, died at 10:15a.m. today at
University Hospital, Clllumbus,
following heart surgery Tuesday.
The former associate music
professor at RGC was wen known
for his direction of "The Mesiah,"
every other Christmas In Gallla
County. He toured with the Grand
Chorale at RGC and was co·
director of music for the college
chorus.
He m med his Master rt Fine Arts
from Ohio University In 195l and
was tiF first r£'Cipient of RGCs
Edwin A. Jones ExceJJence in
Teaching Award, 1985. The award,
selected by the college foculty, Is
given annually to those Instructors
who have made outstanding rontr1 ·
butions ID the college.
" The entire college community
mourns the passing of Merlyn
Ross," Paul C. Hayes , RGC
president . said. " His contribution to
this Institution . our students and
facu ity cannot br measured.
"He will be missed not only as a
member of the faculty but also as a
personal friend," Hayes continued.
"We express our deepest regrets to
the family and friends."
Prior to teaching at RGC he
taught at The Plains and the Kyger
Creek local schools. He also served
as Grace United Methodist Church
Min ister of Music. While in the
S&lt;'lvice he served as a soloist with
the U.S. Army Band School.
His wife. Edith Ross. suJVives as
well as daughter Stephanie Ross
Purcell cJ Rio Grande and son, Alan
Ross, who lives at home.
Preceding him In death was
daughter Lani Ross.
His wile Edie teaches part-time
Rio Grandi.' College.
No fu!l"ral scrviee arrangements
had been madras or prcs stim&lt;'.

Augustus Arthur Circle, 70. for·
merly of the Racine area of Meigs
County, died Tuesday at his
residence at 659 Balfe St., Toledo.
A ret ked boUmaker and a
member of Boilermakers Locai85,
Mr. Circle is survived by his wife.
Geraldine G. Roush Circle; three
daughters, Mrs. Gene W. Staff,
Mrs. Carol Taylor and Mrs. Mary
Jane Ulch, and three sons, Robert
Anhur, Raymond R. and James
SouU1 Centrnl Ohio
W., all of the Toledo area.
Sca tt ered showers and windy
Services will be held at 1:30 p.m.
tonight
with a low near 70.
Thursday at the Walter Funeral
Windy
Thursday with showers
Home, ~6.13 Glendale Ave., 'Jbiedo,
and
thunderstorms
likely. Highs
where friends may call after 2p.m.
will
be
near
85.
today. Burial will be in Highland
The probability or precipitation is
Memory Gardens, Waterville.
40 percent tonight an d ro percent
Thursday.
Merlyn Ross
Winds will be from the south at Ill
to
15 miles an hour today and
Merlyn Ross. Yl. Gallipolis.
increasing
to 1.1 to~ miles an hour
music instructor at Rio Grande
College and Community College for tonight .

Ohio weather

!Continued from Page 11
Democrat Richard Kimball were
unopposed in Arizona; former state
St•JL Hogpr Eddy won the Republi ·
can nomination at the state rnnven ·
lion and wUI run against Dmti in
Connecticut; in Wisconsin. Kasten
faces Democrat Ed GaJVey, executive director of the Nat ional
t'qotball Lcagu1· union during lis

Wade Andrew Pooler, son of
Kara1 Pooler, P~meroy, and Don
Pooler, Chesterhill, has returned
home from a week at C'amp
Superkids at Camp Mowana near
Mansfield. He was sponsored by the

The Rev . and Mrs.. James Cundilf
will be guest speakr·rs for a special
missionary 9.'wirr aI the Pomeroy
Church of the Na7arcnE', corner of
Union and Muiben·y avenues,
Sunday. Their present at ion will
Include slides on mi ssion work
Missionary projects for the year
will be discussed . Making a quil t for
missionaries will be a project and
loose attending are encouraged to

C~eurgp

LLJtintl 'r

Certificates issued
Slx bus drilw certificates were
issued Tuesday night when the
Meigs Cou nty Board of Education
met In lloglllar S&lt;'Ssion.
F!L't·civing t&lt;•rtificati'S we1·~ El nora Bernard. Eastprn; Debra
Bw· n.~. Carl Monts. Homer Payne,
Carole P hilli~s. a11d B111!'1' Stewart,
Meigs Local.
The board agreed to maintain a
work site for a JTPA person this taU
1i11d Virgil King. Bob Burdett~ and
Oris Smith. bowd 11'1Pmbers, along
with Meigs Cou nty Superintendent
of Schools John Riebel, were named
to attend a regional meeting of the
Ohio School iloards Association to
br held on Sept. z;, in At hens.
Riebel was also au thortzed to
attend school financing meetings to
be held at Groveport and Columbus
later this month. Harold Housh,
president, presided over the
meeting.

deceased . Case No. 25.089 .
On August 25. 1986, in the
Meigs County' Probete Coort.
Casa No. 26089. Robel1 A.
Wmn , 2740 Crone Rood.
Xenia . Ohio. 46385· 6166
wu appointed E &gt;lOCUtor of the
estate of Clera K. Wells,
decaasod. late of Middleport,
Meigs County, Ohio .
Robert E. Buck,
Probete Judge
Meigs County. Ohio
Lena K. N...elrood, Cleric
191 3, 10, 17, 3tc

Public Notice
ORDINANCE 11667

·
·
.

.
·
·

:

ORDINANCE BY VILLAGE
COUNCIL FOR VACATION
FOR A PORTION OF THIRD
STREET
Be it ordained by the Village
Ccuncil of the Village of
Pomeroy, State of Ohio, that:
On tho 4th day of August.
1986, o Patition was received
from Meigs General Hospital,
Inc. andVidaooom.lnc. for the
vacation of the part of Third
Street moro fully described in
said petition M&gt;d the Village
Council finds thetthe•ois good

Card of Thanks

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Edward Hedrick,
Pomeroy; Mallei Lane, Middle·
port; Zelpha Stewart. Racine;
Randy Riffle, Shade; Grace
French, Middleport; James Smith,
uingsvllle; Harrison Smith, Ra·
cine; Gary Scholderer, Pomeroy;
( barles Neutzllng, Middleport.
. Discharges - Randy Riffle.

CARD OF THANKS
The family of
CLIFFORD T. KAUFF
would ~ke to express
their sincere thanks
and appreciation to
friends, neighbms, the
Middleport Emergen·
cy ·Squad, doctors and
nurses at Pleasant VaJ.
ley Hospital. especially
Dr. Grubb, R011erand
Eden and the Blower
Funeral Home.
If we have forgotten anyone, we are
sorry and we thank
vou also.
Wife, Clara Kauff
and Family

64 Misc . Merchandise

"~lRbMAN'l

We ' !!I . .Stock
Mobile Home Parts

· or

THRU

Rebates

As Much As

SEPT. 14
Dig into the cool. rich. delicious taste of our
Peanut Buster Par1ait. · Or nut1y Double Delight' Or
luscious Banana Split covered with flavors like
strawberry and pineapple. All made with Dairy Queen"
soft serve, a real dairy product. Royal Treats. every.
one, and now specially priced.

WI

YOU.. ....

®

MIDDLEPORT DAIRY QUEEN
700 North S"ond
Dairy o.-n•1s proud to s\4:lP()t't our local chltdr91l's hospHols through
the Osmond Foundation's Ollldr90's Miocle Netwolk Telethon .

D.O.

I

tal. Inc. and Vtdeooom. Inc. is
hereby vacated.
The Village is satisfied that
there il good caute "or the
vacation of this and that the
same wil not be detrimental to
tho general imereot .
All rights in 1he por1ion of
Third StrMt doocribed in 1he
patidon shell i'ture to .the
abutting property owners.
Meigs Gem... ! Hospital, Inc.
.,d Videocom. Inc.. • their
inter-' may appear accordilg
to law and 1 copy of the Hme
1111111 bo recorded In the Office
of Rocorder of Meigs Coonty,
Ohio.
SECnON 1
That this Ordinanoo is do·
clarod to be il the pu btic
intereot. that. the cons111t of 1
said ViMage be 111d .,ch "
con• .,t is hereby giv... to
VKteooom. Inc. to contruct

and being
lot lows:

li!iiPJ

~

1•1

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

i\

".a''·,,

HHc

I

j

i_,

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

Begi1nr.g

' ·

,t'·

"~' ....

Fot All Vm Pthtlilll N11dt

with plans and tpecilialtions
as presented to council. ·
SECnON II
That. situate in the ViUage of
Pomeroy. Solisbu'YTownahip,
Meigs County. State of Ohio.

Real Estate General

E . Ma,nlo.i.:IIIOiaW•

POMEROY. 0.
992· 2259
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
-One floor 2bedroom ho~re.
Ru ral water , range , refngeraIDI and bath. $16,000.00.
NEW LISTING - MORNING
STAR SUBDIVISION - 3
acre parcel of vacant land.
Road hontage. water &amp; elec·
Inc are avatlable. $9.500.00.
NEW LISTING -POMEROY
PIKE - Beaultful ho~re.
Beautiful sett1ng1 Newer 3
bedroom ranch 00100 with 2
w garage, decktng, lull ba·
semen! . 2 baths Clean elec·
Inc heat 20 acres of
wood ed land for h1king &amp;
hun t~ng' $62.000.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
right s1ze and the nghl pnce'
3 bedroo m ranch with at·
tached garage on level I
am lot. New vtnyl s1d1ng.
ElectJ ic B.B. heat. Excellent
condition $38.000 0.

Jim Cobb
CHEVROLET.OLDSMOB.ILE·CADILLAC
308 E. Main Sheet
Pomeroy, Ohio • 61~ 992,6(1 14

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992·6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949·2660
Dottie Turner .... :992:5692

A

..

~

[B :
.REAL1111

00f11J ..V

described

at a point on the

Real Estate General

TEAFORD..[B
.

Real Estate IUlllll
216 E. 2nd St ...
Phone
1-16141-992 · 3325

Over

S2Q A MONTH

FENCE COMPANY ·

We

LARRY'S SATELLITE SALES
(With Lorry's Carpet Outlet)

742·2027

992-6173
CJ

-az:

;(

Hoti SII• &lt;t

/1\ ' d &lt;1 (j ll d til' I S

New &amp; Repai•

25 Years Experience

HART'S
CONSTRUTION
992-7811

8115/ 1 mo .

Brua&gt; R~ .

RADIATOR

Council Pr811idEI1t

SER~ICE

We can repair and rfl'o
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil ~nd . rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On September 5. 1986. in
the Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No . 25.231 .
Paul Moore, 327B5 TR 100.
Racine. Ohio , 45771. was
appointed Executor of the
estate o f Clinton H. McNamee . deceased. late of
32857 TR tOO. Ra cine,
Ohio 45771 .

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
M iddteport. Ohio
1 -13-tfc

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Sapt ernb er 4. 1986, in
the M eigs County Probat a
Caurt. Caso No. 25246, R.
Marie Tum er, Route 1, tangs·

Addona end remodeling
Roofing end gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and e lectri cal
work
lFree Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pontfroy, Ohia
4· f5.'86·fc

ville, Ohio. 45741. was ap·
poin1 ed Admi'listratrix of lh e
estate of Clarence B. Hoffman. deceased. late of Rout 8
1. Langsville, Ohio, 45741 .

Roger Hysell
G~rage

Robert E. Budt ,
Probate Judg 8
Len a K. Ness elroad. Clerk

NEW HOURS

BLUE STREAK
CAB CO.

NEW- REPAIR

SENIOR CITIZENS
HARTLEY SHOE STORE
VILLAGE PHARMACY

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years

949-2263
or 949·2168

CALL COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843·5425
7-15-86 2 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

4-16-'86 tin

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homts Built
"Free Estlmatae"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday CaRs
lilt /tin

IYs, Antennas
Sattllte Salts
Installation
Service

· 0
ec rome rgans
Mobile service

•· •0·'86 tin

.::;;.:;:,;,:~

.

"" Slriplllgl!oto• !toanp 1"'"
C..L PAJNnNG
(hester, Oh.
PH. 985-41_0_1mo.

1
1 15:;:..:·::::..~
L----~·

Wanted To Buy

SWISHER ·LOHSE
C&amp;K MARKET
FRUTH PHARMACY

We pay cash for late model clea~
used cars .
Jim M1nk Chev .·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene John son
614 · 446· 3672

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FO~

TOP CASH paid tor ·s3 model
an CI newer used cars. Smith
Buick· Pontia c, 1911 Et!a1ern
Ave.. Gallipolis_ Ca ll 6 14 · 446 ·

8/201'8&amp;

2282

•ZENITH

•SYliANIA
•SPEED QUEEN IAUNDRV
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SAlES &amp; SERVI CE
Wa Hm AFull Tlt11t
Shop Teehiclu

o.IMy

RIDENOUR
&amp; APPLIANCE

TV
CHESTfR-985-3307
4/ 1/ tln

WANTED TO BUY used wo od &amp;
coal heaters . SWAIN'S FUR.Nf ·
lURE. Jrd. &amp; Olive St. Galli po ·
lis Call 614 -446 -3159 .
'
Buying daily gold, silver coMls,
rings, jewelry, sterling ware. old
coins. large currency . Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport . Oh. 614 ·
992-3476.

Employmenl
Serv 1ccs

3 Announcements

11

Help Wanted

1- - -- - - - - -

SWEEPER and S6W ing machine
rep ei r, part s. and supplies. Pick
up and delivery. Davis Vecuum
C leaner, one half mde up Make Christmas money. sell
Avon . Make 45 percent. Call
Georges Creek Rd . Ca ll 614 · 614 -446 ·3358 .
446 -0294

vard SaleS

.

.

"" I
,('! •••

·' ,··~ ~; .•

.

~f\..'\)fllfN-'-~~~ il'll'\-.'\)flll'il!i'/-~ ~~'"'""'-~~ ulri'llr;;.,'i'_,.&amp;

Gallipolis

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-9949
Boll lorton, Owner
8127/ 86/ 1 mo.

F1/l ''IN

y,.,

$p~el1/

Get ahead of Old Man
Winter. Have those
furnace motors
checked. cleaned and
bearings oiled for

'16.00

RUSS EIIUIIC
MOTOI IEPAII

PH. 742-2070

BODY WOIK StO Per Hr.
Complete Car Painting 1375

9

Vl!lrd Sale _ Good clean items for
sele. Fri. end Set . 101!1m till7pm
13 3 State St .. Gallipolis . OH .

190 MULIEBY AVE.

Water Dop1. OH St. 11. 124

1/27/16/1 mo .

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SEIYICE
U.

S.

RT.

SO EAST

GUYSVILLE, 01110
Aulhariud Jahn D11re,

El t

__

Oh.

Several families . Infant s to adult
clothing , some new furniture
and appliances . Salem St ., Ru ·
tland. W ed ood Thurs. Sept.
10th and 11th.

Middleport, Ohia· 45760

ll 281!ln

LOST block Nanny Goat with
white ")(" on side, Rt . 2 Nonh.
304 ·675 -5162 or 675· 2359

First Time Rt. 7 in Addison .
be!lide Wamsl ey'! Grocery
Baby items and jeans. Wfld and
Thurs. 10 am to 6pm.

MUND, OHIO
lox 27 I to"""• ld.

(6141 992-7714

Lost ; Be11gle dog . Black and
white . l ost near Prospect Hill .
Reward . Call 614· 992-7822
afler 6 :00p.m .

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

New lacatl1101:
161 North Stcoad

m•um PHONE

Lost in Harrisonville-Ktngsbury
Rd . area . 3montholdbrownand
white Collie pup . Brown leether
coll ar . little girls pet . ·call
614 ·742 · 2245 any time.

Huge yard sal e . Sept
10. 11 ,12 ,13 9 :00 ·4 00 175
N.Third Ave .. Middleport . 614 .
992 ·3120

We C•rry Flthtng Suppll"

r

Kittens !&gt;Orne long haired. color
mo!tly white. 304· 675 · 1838 .

Yard lillie. Centenery. Frtdey
Antiques; Vi cto rian dr esse r,
desk table. guns. stone jars.
chairs. tools, clothing. mi!lc

lo&lt;attd lohind llodint Crull

Pay Your Cable 8o
Phcme BHI1 Hera
~ IUSINISS PHONE
l6t41 992· 6550

3 year old Male English Sheep
dog . well trained to 11 good
home. 304-n3 -5323 .

Thurs. amd Fri_ 1/J mile pall Five
Points on At 7 . Watch for signs
10 ·00 -?

A
PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Four kinens. litter trained . 304675- 1136 eher 4 :00 .

&amp; Vicinity

Prim"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUIIINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

APPL.·61M49 -2145

Pomeroy,

10-8-tfc

PH. 992·5682
or 992·7121

"At Reasonable

Border Collie. Female. spay&amp;d .
Great with kids _ Needs a home
where she won ' t be tied . C.Jt
614 992·5583 .

Announcemenls

TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGfS

2-17-86-lfn

,

107 Sy!omare St.

" Free Estimates"

AUTOMAnC

" BISSELL
BUILDERS

Cittl
.

TAXI TOKENS ON SALE AT

Alto TrUIIIIhtlo•

6-17 -tfc

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE EStiMATES

4 kittens. 2 weeks old
614 -446-0815

pm.

PH. 992-7075

REPAIR

ROOFING

Free k1t1ens . Call 614 -245 ·
5430.

lost : Big black long hair9d cat
With red co ll11r. If found . please
call 614-742 -2027 after 7 :00

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Howard L. Writtse1

9 month old GreatOanepupvery
loveable. Clal 614 - 379-2114
call evenin gs

6 Lost and Found

8·13 lfn

Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

(9)10, 17 . 34 3t c

1V•614-143-5248

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
Swim Molds · lnlerpreting Setvices

7:00 A.M. to 1:00 A.M. Monday thru Saturday

tCiori&lt;IT•a~su•MI

J.R.'s REPAIRS

mo.

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

•ROOFING 8o
GUTTERING
•SIDING SOFFIETT
•REMODELING OF
ALL TYPES
•TREE TRIMMING
•CONCRETE WORK

~8 - 116 - l

L3 liSA M. KOCH, M.S.
:r: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
z

4/ I n

Public Notice

Two Benji type dogs. 1 male. 1
female. to a good home . Call
3a8 -8800 .

Regist ered Himalai Fil cat 6
years old, good home . Must stay
indoors. Call614-446· 3267

Also Update and Service
Most Systems

PH. 992-6931

Call

446 ·9535.

I 00 unsuambled 1hannels.
NOW A COMPLETE 10 FT. SYSTEM FOR

ACCENT

Richatd D. Seyler.
May"' of Po merov
1913. 10. 2tc

Six kittens, liner trained .

9-4· 1 mo.

SATELLITE IS STILL THE WAY TO GO

3/2/Mn

19) 10, 17, 24 , 3tc

AVE. - Nice
okler 3 bedroom in IPod ton ·
drtion. 2 full baths, hot water
heat, storms, 2 JIOI'th~ &amp; ba·
semen!. $28,000.
HYSELL RUN - Good 2 BR
one story home oo level lot.
Asking $2'1,500.
.Have Selllna Problems
Call 992·3325

3 kit1ens, 2 male, 1 female. 6
wks. old Call 614 -367-0138.

lusintsl Forms,
Copy Smices, II&lt;.
2Sl Mill St., Middlepo•t
104 Mulllmy b., Pomeroy

Robert E. Buck .

~tJ"LaERRY

!

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS
INSURANCE WORK

446-2062

r

Giveaway

2 long haired gray S. white maie
kittltfls. 6 weeks old . Giveaway
to good lo .... ing nome Call
614 -446 -2393.
.

..________.....;.....;________tl

Probate Jucge
Lena K. Nesselroad, C le rk

NEW LISTING- Rtve1lront
lot an d mob1le home below
the dam . Ideal lor the sum
mer vacationer. Older mo·
bile home IS fUJniShed and
in good condttton . Ju st
$450 0
NEW LISTING - 15 ams. 3
bedroom home, bath. drilled
well, natural gas heat. nic e
native oak kitchen. carpet ·
'"~· paneling, small bam
and other buildin gs to1
$37,500.
NEW liSTING - 2 BR ooe
floor. remodeled home in Sy·
racuse. New krtchen appi1
ances. full basement. central
atr &amp; heat, garage and lg lot.
$36,000.
67 ACRES - All mmerals.
mostly hactor land on ha~d
road at summer.
POMEROY - Ntce 6 rm.
home near the stores Ca•·
petin g. l 'h baths. ntce lg.
kitchen , garage &amp; small lot.
On ly $19.600.
TRAILER PARK- 22 Spaces.
citv water &amp; extra acreage on
Rt 124.
MINERSVILLE - Remo·
deled 8 rm. home h1gh on a
htli T.P. water , bath. gas fur·
nace, carpeting &amp; lg. lot.
$12,000.00 - You can buy
lhts one. Ha s nverview. 3
BRs, base ment &amp; has been
remodme led.
81-LEVEL - 4 BRs. 2 bath
tubs. central atr &amp; heat, pa·
lio. CJpetmg. and lg. ~t in
Baums.
VIEW OF RIVER - EKcellent
2 story frame on Main in Po·
me roy. 1\? baths, hot water
heat, carpetin&amp; foyer, base
men! &amp; modem ~!chen .
3.75 ACRES - 3 BR old
home. All utilittes near Rus·
Itt H1lls.
POMEROY - Older home tn
need ol repatr. Has 4 BRs. 2
baths, gas F.A. tum ace, 2
porches &amp; lg. lot. Asking
$18,000.00 . What can you

4

::;ERVIN G THt f AI LOUNT'f AH~A A IO GE 011

992-3345

description is to describe the
southwest end of Third Street.
Said description to incl.ldo all
of Third St- hom said Third .
Street' s iltersection with the
northeast tine of Lot 348 and
said lot line extension across
said Third Stroot to the odgo of
Third S'b'aet and extending in a
southwestetly direction to the
end of said Thiro Street
SECnON Ill
That this Ordin111a&gt; be and
remain i1 1ull 'force from end
after the earliest period al lowed by law .
PASSED: Aug . 18, 1986
ATTESTED : Jane Wahon .

McDaniel Custom 8utcfterin g: 6
days week, 304·882-3224 .

and Graduation
Stationery, Magneti&lt;
Signs, Rubber Stamps,

Public Notice
as

Racine Gun Shoot sponsored 1-Y'
Racine Gun Club. Every Sund•v·
beginning at 1:00 p.m . Facta.ry
Choke, 12 guage shotguns. •

FOR FRFE ESTIMATES CALL j ROY BI 1C KLE

Offi&lt;1 Supptits &amp;
Furniture, Wedding

The Samuel Allen Eblin m1nion
IA11 be held Saturday. 'J p.m .. at the
Rock Sprin gs Grange Hall. Those
att ending arr to take a mvered
dish.

,...-----==.,....

acoordenee

chutchBI.

~

•Cleaning Inspection
•Flue Caps Installed
•Chimney Rebuilding
TtlTA L f iRFPLMJ A~ l l
CHI MNFY WORK .

PWS:

Reunion set

nor1healt tine of Lot t84 of tho
VIUaga of Pomeroy, said point
also being at thlaouthemmoat
point of Lot 348 of tho said
Village; thence No11h 40 dog.
18' 67" East 66.00 feet along
said Third Street and the
oouthoast line of 111id Lot 348
to the western moll point of
said Lot 348; thonce South 49
dog. 41' 03" East 30 .10 feet
to a point on the IOlltheallt line
of said Third Street; thenoo
South 40 dog. 18' 67" Weot
66.24 feet to the eouthom
most point of said Third str...t
said point being on the no•·
theOII ine of said Lot 1 84;
thenoo North 46 deg . 25' 14"
West 30 .19 feot along tho
IOUthwest line of said Third
Stroot and etong the no11healt
lineohaid Lot 18410thepoint
of beginning, containing 2020
.,. ft .. (0.046 acres). "'".e or
leu. excepting all !agel e....
m1111'11 M&gt;d rights of wry.
The int!Wit of the above

NEW LISTING - SYRA·
CUSE - Beautiful river
vtew &amp; nver frontage plu sa
cute little 2 bedroom house
with sitting porch &amp; storage
sheds. Forced air natural
gas heat or you can use
wood &amp; coal for elliciency.
$14,900 .00.

''

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators

The I mages wil be performing
Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at the Zion
Church of Christ located six milE's
north on State Route 143 !rom tlle
Route 7 bypass. The new ~oup has
performed on sl'Veral occasions
including at the Oh1o Valley
Christian Assembly. Making up the
grou p are Tara and Teresa Tho·
mas. Steve Spencer, Ke,•in Wines
and Aaron Welch. They present
contemporary Christian mu sic.
The p.Jblic is invited.

Public Notice

LAND CONTRACT - PO.
MEROY - Jlh story irame
home witt1 7 rooms, 3 bed·
rooms, equipped kitchen and
approx. ll acre. Just $3,000.00
down and $246.10 a month for
15 year $25,900.00.

u."1hlt·
ll.·li"ltl

cause for the vacation of said
street and further the vacation
of the st•oet will rDt be
detrimental to the gennl
intoreot and the Village of
Pomeroy is the owner of Third
Street. a portion of whim is
proposed to be vacated and
doe~ consent to the same and
hMoby ordainod • to lows:
That portion of Third Str..,t
.. describod in the , _ n
filed by Meigs Gonoral Hospi·

in..,rovament. II

675-46~2

/

Singers set

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wnlt Oa•lly Stnlintl Classthed Dept.

Public Notice

Noah "s Ark Animll Parle..
Schooll,

FIREPLACES &amp; WOODSTOVES

"Free Estimates"

Twenty-four ladies were in at·
lcndance Tuesday for Ladies Day
at Jaymar Golf Course.
A scramble was held with low
scorP and low putt s going to the
team of Nancy Reed, Nellie Brown,
Sara OwPns and Roberta O'Br ien
Chip-in·hole prizes were given to
r\anry RC'ed. Sara Owens. Clmk·c
Krautter and Eli7.a bfoth Lohse.
Next Tuesday. a scramble will be
held. followed by a catered lun·
cheon. Tce·ofl time will be 9 a.m.
Ail members are invited.

Interest Rates
As Low As

LICENSED -INSURED-CERTIFIED

Installation Available

~fl"ik(_) .

Mayor

985·3561

All MIUI

111 Colli! St .. Ponwroy , OhiC -4~769

Estate of Clara I( WeDs.

LARGE
E TORY

SERVICE

A CHIMNEY FIRE
CAN DESTROY YOUR HOME
Q!~imnry C!tarr

.lfttr 5 (all

Public Notice

Services

•d

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

and Brandy, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Chuck Kennedy and David,
Mason, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. David
Kennedy, Jennifer and Gregory,
Pomeroy, and Mike Kennedy, a
student at Ohio University .
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Palmer of
Florida have been here visiting
relatives including Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Theobald . Middiepo11 . and
Mr. and Mrs. William Kennedy.

The Daily Sentinel

3 Announcements

family
614 -384 L-;:========:~========:::1========::'1 2108
picnics.reunion1.
bir1hd•vCellpartie~
o• 1-800-282-2167 .

take quilt pieces with them to Ule
service. An alabaster offerin g will
also be taken and items will be
collected for a mi ssionary gift box
to be sent to needy mis sionaries
overseas. Baby clothes, paper
plat es and cups, bars of !Dap, and
children's toys are among t 1&gt;2 it ems
needed . The public is invited to
atta1d .

Joe Kennedy, CoUieJViJie, Tenn ..
and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Kennedy,
Hudson , Mass, have rt&gt;turned to
their homes after visiting herewith
thE'ir parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Kennedy.
While here a family gathering
was held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Kennedy. Others there
were Debbie Kennedy of Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs .• John Thomas, Adam

Ladies' day go!f

Year-End
Prices on

children about !herr lung disease,
how to live with It, how to prevent II
attacks, exercises for Increasing
(CUT OUT FOR FUTURf USE)
their lung capacity and taking
responsibUity for tiFir medication
1n addition to providing fun, games,
spiritual teachings and comraderle
with other children having the
same physical problems.

Family returns home after trip

1

: ln govcrnorsra=: ln NewYork,
Republican Andrew O'Rourkr. like
Cuomo, was WlOpposed; in Conncc ·
ticut. Democratic Gov. William
O'Neill had no ~rimary opposition
and will facr Bclaga, winner of a
lilfw - wa~' racr: in New Hampshire. Hepublican Gov. John Su ·
nunu b11Jshed aside token opposl·
Uon and will go against Democrat
Paul McEachern in the g~?neral
t'lrctlon; In Vermont , Kunin wUI
face Hepubllcan Lt. Gov. Peter
Smit h and Burlington's Socialist
Mayor Bernard Sandt&gt;rs. 11lnning
as an independt·nt.
In other go1wnor mrrs: in
Wismnsln. Democratic Cov. An·
ttuny Earl dispatehro minor oppositiln and w!IIJun against 1\e~ubli ·
can i\ssemhly leader Tommy
1110mpson. In Minnesota. !)&gt;mo.
cra tk· Cov . Hu&lt;l.\ PcqJi ch '1Jtvlved
a stUf challcngro From St. Paul

American Lung Association of
Ohio, tiF Soutlleast Branch In
Athens.
He is one of the asthmatic
children sponsored by the associa·
tion. Purpose of the camp is to teach

Missionary to speak at church

NOTICE OF
APPOtt'ITMENT
OF RDUCIARY

BUY •••

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Child returns home following camp ·trip Business

Twelve defendants were fined
and silt others forfeited bonds In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Gary L . Cremeans,
Rutland, $425 and costs, three days
in jail, driving while Intoxicated;
RoiFrt L Jeffers, Pomeroy, $425
and costs, three days in jaU, driving
while intoxicated; Dorsey 0. Ohlin·
ger, Pomeroy, $425 and costs, 10
days In jail, driving whUe lntoxi·
cated; Sally J. Moore, Middleport,
$100 and costs, possession of
marijuana, and $50 and msts,
disorderly manner; Brian J. Hunt,
Racine, $10 and OfSts, squealing
tires; Betty L. McKinley, $10,
ex f)red tags; Richard Kennedy,
Rutland, $50 and costs, open
container; Donald Lovett, Middle·
port, $50 and (I)Sts each on two
charges ri disorderly manner; Carl
E. Stewart, Cheshire, $25 and msts,
open container; ·Ronald Powell,
Midd teport, $25 and rosts, disorderly manner; Shirley Butcher,
Middleport, $100 and costs, posses·
sian of a controlled substance; $100
and costs, possession of marijuana.
and $50 and costs, disorderly
manner; Rod Clonch, Pomeroy.
$100 and costs, possession of
marijuan a.
Forfeiting bonds were Daniel R.
Ellis, Albany, $50. running a red
light; Michael T. Gard, Middlepor1 ,
$40, and Charles E. Rathburn .
Racine, $40, ooth posted on speed ing charges; Larry L. Hein es,
Pomeroy, $fll, mnning red light;
Kenneth W. Madden, Middleport,
$100, disorderly manner, and Tam
am J. Childress, Pomeroy, $~.
driving while intoxicated, and $50,
failure to control l'ehicle.

Before

Women net

Wednesday, September 10. 1986

No~ Holland, lush Hog

farm Equipmont
Dtaler ,

Fll'tll E•u lp 111..t
P1rte &amp; Suvlee

1-3·'86 Itt

Yard Sale on Kemper Hollow Rd.
Thurs .. Fri. &amp; Sat 9 · 5 Mise

items .
Moving Sale Fri. &amp; Sat. Clothes,
househ old items. electrical
supplies, etc. on Will Grey Rd
behind NGHS follow 1igna.
3 Family Yard Sale and Crefts .
Sept. 11 . 12 &amp; 13. 10:00 til196
Garfield Ave. Something for
Everyone.
Garege Sale 77 State St . 10em
to 4pm. Friday &amp; Saturday
Furniture , c lo t he s, toys,
miscellaneous .

On College Rd ., Syracuse. Ohio
Wednesday end Thursday from
9 ,00· 300 Humidifier. Bear
Compound Hunting Bow , Home
Interior. child r8fl and adult ciO thing, tovs. and misc.

Big yard sale De)lter Co Rd
10 :QQ. ?Ciothesandmisc Sept
1Oth through Sept . 15th.
Yard sale 12 · 13 - 14 hom 10-6
Between Eastem High School
lind Tupp ers Plains off R1. 7 by
Succes s Rd . Infants th ru adult
clothing. toys. fumituut,
plianci!S. car parts. linens. cur
tai ns. glassware and many other
item ! Prices reduced last dey
Rain cancels .

•••

4 Family Yard Sale Thurs. &amp; Fri
lots of nice items . lower
Garfield EKt .

11 -12 at the lee residence on
Boy Scout Camp Rd . in Chester
from 10 till 3 . Cloth&amp;a from
Infants site to adults. Also misc.
items and toys .

Community Yard S•le Ri o
Grande Estatea . Sept . 1 1 &amp; 12
10-4 . Misc. gelore.

Gtur~ge aale at Charles Kings . on

Yard Sale Thursday Sept , 11 , 9 -1
Nice boys clothe1. table &amp;
cheira. Rodnay Vlll~t II follow
signs .

....... p....................... .
omeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
-. -·-. ·-·- -- .. ·- . ·-- --- ·-- .... --.
3 family yard sale 1st tlmo . New
Hope Rd. Chester, Ohio . Sept
11 &amp; 12 Watch for signs 9-4 .

Quills. 'h si1e box aprlnga •nd
man,..,, coffn table, c•mping
cot, edutt ctothlng fl•rge and
sm•ll). some mite. 4th trail• on
right , Btlhln Ad. off At. 124
Sept . 11th and 12th .

Wolf Pen Rd . Thursday 11nd
Friday Rain or shine.

PfPieasant

-···

&amp; Vicinity
···- ·········-··-·······

3 day Yard Sale, Thur~. Fri. Sat .
Sept. l1 .12 , 13 . 107locustSt .
Hend erson , W. Va. 9:00 till 1:
Giant Yard Sale, Wed, Sept. , 0
through S•t, Sept. 13 . 60 7
Henderaon 81. Something fo
...,.,yone.
V.rd Sale fira ti.,...tNt ~ear , 5
Maple St. . Maon, W.Va. rlan d
Stt. Sapt12.13 . Alin cenoela .

�_P age-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, -Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

11 Help Wanted

41

H ousas for Rent

Hou" tor rent. PottMt Creek
X-ray TIIChnlci~n, AAAT certifl·

Rood. 304·875·8759. ·

,..
••per•ot d•hd.
ParttkM 15 w•~P
week tnd

Cottage, ' 2 rooms. beth, fur·
nihed, utlllti• paid, t55 00
week. 304·876 -3100 or 875-

catbn prtf.,.ed. At ll•t one
1

w..-y other W'Mk..,d, Pey il
oonwnenanete with taperfance.
S..d reeu me to Boa TIO in cer.
ol tho GoHipolil Dolly Tribuno
8215 Third Ave .. O.aipoua,

411831 .

Be09.

3 bt houH. 2205 N Me1n

30•·468·1728 olte&lt; 5.

oh

New Haven. 3 br home m town,
buement. UOO. month 2 br
home. nice tot, bllem.,t. t160
month Hometteld Reelty. 304-

hparlmc.d Media Sales Rept.
needtd . S..a plua commitlion.
Call 304-757-7881 . Mon .-Fn ,
10-4

576-58•0 Of 882·2405.

Secrlrtarlal work bookkeeping,
OO~W~&gt;uter expartence. Send r•
tume to T-10 in care of the

Burdette Addn. 2 -bedroom. full
buement Cslt for more infor
medon. 304·676-44BO Truat
Dept

Gallipolit Dailv Tribune, 825
Third

46831 .

Ave , Gallipolis, Oh

3 bedroom ranch. baeement.
garage, Rolhn1 Street New
Haven. tecurity deposit, 304882- 2946 or B82 -2430

Experienced commercial refrigeratkJn HI"Vict men . Send re-

aumetto Bo• T-90 in Clreofthe
Gallipolit Daily Tribune. 825
Third Ave .,
45831

Nutritoon~t

Po•hMin

()pSI .
ContreC1, pert-time. For further
.,foomotMin, call tho Gollia
County Heehh Depal1"*"t et

4o48-4812. "' 292

Opportunity Employer.

Equol

Exetcise Techmcian. lmmdiete
open~ng for individual to a11i1t
the Director of Fltne.. in plenning, cou nsollingand developing
fitneu and exerci1e progJima
ror empioye11 of 269 bed tcute
care hoapital. Previous exp•
rlence in tp0l11 related aetivitl8t
tncluding fltn•1 programs deair·
able. Good que1t relations skills
nsentlal. Excellent Mlery end
benefit program. Send resume
and 1el1ry requirem ... ts to:
Rotte Ward, Director or Person·
nil Hoh-er Medical Center. 386
J1ckton Pike. Gallipolis, Oh

46631 .

Oiractar of Frtnest lmmed11te
operung for Individual to assume
m111111emtnt rnponsibilltle1 for
developing, org~nizing , 1nd implementing a COfl1)rehensi'le
heahh and fitness program for
Mn~Jioyees of 269 bed acute cere
t-oapltal Degree or extenaive
axperience in E11.cerc11e PhVItOI·
ogy, Phys1cal Education, Sports
Medicine or related fiatd necel·
s•rv- Previous health care management exper1 .. ce htghly delhab le Good quut relations
skills n•ential. Excellent ulary
111d benefit program. Sen real me and salary htstory to . Rosie
Ward, Director of Personnel,
Moizer Medicel Center, 386
Jachton Pike, Gallipolis, Oh
.6631
Farm help wanted . Cell 814·
379· 2351 after 6PM avanings
or enytime weekends

3000

jobs ltst
818.040- 869,230 veer. Now
hiring. Ca ll 806-687-6000 Ext
A· 9805

go vemment

Easy Assembly Work! 8714.00
per 100. Gu~ranteed PIIYment.
No n les . Detatls--Sendstamped
envetope: Elan- 71 6 3418 Enterp&gt;iu. Ft. Pierce. Fl 33402
Mature , reliable person needed
br hght house -keeping and baby
1ittlng In New Maven araa m my
IIJrnt Cell 304-882 -3704.
Homemakers and Career People.
Use yoor spar1t1meto eam extra
money with Friendly Home
Partin, a netionwide company.
Immediate openJngs for Mlnagers end Demonstrators n thtl
eraa It ' s easy, fun and profita·
bla No 81!-perience it necesMry.
All you need IS 1 detireto make
money, have run end a lew hours
of tpere t1me We Will provide
everything you need to get
started and there 11 No Cuh
lnvestmc!lflt, No Collecting, No
Oel1vering and No Servtce
Cherg e. We heve two full Color
catalogs w•th over 700 exciting
toys end gifts. ell 100 percent
Guaranteed featur111g the new
animated lllking Doll Crickat
whtch will be advert11ad on
nationel T.V With Chn1tm11
JUS1 around the oorner vou are
a~ra to get a greet stan. Don't
mill this •citing and rewarding
opportunity For more informatiOn call· 1-800-227-1610
LIVe ..-. female companion for
elderly ledy m Chnh1re erea.
L10ht house work Wrtte Daily
Sentinel Box 729C Pomeroy,
Ohio
ASSEMBLERS WANTED Eern
up to •eO PM QIY 81111mbling
di1play clowns Materials supplied . S•nd stamped nlf eddreued enve lop e · Hawks
ltnd1ng . P 0 Bolt 13493, Or
IMdo FL 32869.
Mature relieble person needed
tor light housekeeping &amp; bebyslltll'lg in my home. NIW' Haven
ar!NI . 304-882· 3704
Expenenoed hair dressar 304-

875-2930 "'675·3388

AVON . open
304-676-1429

temtor~es .

call

Expmien oed medii tiles representltivas needed B1u plus
o0mm1uion 304· 757-7881 ,
Monday thru Friday 10:00-4 00.
AIR TRAFFIC CONTROLLERS
•xtran.::. examinetion now open
For tuther I'Jio write P 0 . Box
276, Sterling. Ve. 22110.
Men w1nted br generel farm
work on hOne farm . Wrhe Box
P-9, Potnt Ples11nt Register,
200 M••n St . Point Pleasant.
wva.
OPENINGS AVAILABLE selling
Mem Mec's guaranteed ltne or
toys. gifts. home decor items.
etc NO deh\olering, collecting or
1we1tment Your hours. Call
304-675-6768 or 1-800 -992 ·

1072

12

42 Mobile Homes

Galllpolit , Oh

Situations
Wanted

for Rent

"I have this uneasy feeling
that they ffiay g1ve
• the CQUfltry back to

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE QHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING 1!'0. recommendl that you
do bulin•• with peopla vau
know, end NOT to send money
through the mall until you have
tnvntfgered the offerJng

Commercii! Buikting for sala
Upper Second Ave . Gallipolis
62xM buitding Cell 614·446-

4o423 .

Own your own Jean sportswear. ladles apparel ,
childrens-metemity, larga tiles
petite. dencewear -aerobic or
acce .. ories store Jordeche.
Chic. lee, levi, lzod. Git1no,
Gu••· Celvin Klein , Sergto
Valent•. Evtn P1oone. ltz Clai borne, Member• Only, Ga1olin.e,
t-leehhtex over 1000 others
114.300 to 125 .900 Inventory,
trelning, tixturn. (~rand opening
etc Can open 16 days. Mr.
Loughlin &amp;12 -888-•228
Established tanning bed busi
0111 1n Point Pleasant. two
Wolfe Satum beds Will sell
seperatety. 304-676 -'072 after
4 00 PM.
lntemetion1l Metal Butldtng Mar.~facturer Selecting builder·
de1ler in 10me open areas High
potential profit in our growth
industry (303)769· 3200 ellt

Need aomeona to cere for vour
loved one1 Round the clock care
lor embulltory man or women In
my home 16 y..,. experience.
Tupper• Plain• area . 814-187·
3402 enytime

18 Wanted to Do
Lt11ons on all woodwind inltrumllfltt, oboe, bassoon, llut•.
cllf'intt. ux . Cell lora Snow

51··251·1614.

Profluk&gt;ntl Sawing in my
kt mt. 15 yeera experience. Call

3 bdr mobile home for rent ,
close to Chesh1re Call 367 ·

7148

Ntce clean, 2 bdr lurmshed.
water pe1d, on Rt 7 , IJ200
month Call 614 -245·5818
Two bedroom. $150 per month.
875 deposit Call 379 ·2435

PHONE 614-446-7274.

3 bedroom trailer. 8260 plus
850 dapottt No dnnkmg, fight
mg or pets 614· 367 -7267

1973 Baron 121165, 2 bedroom. 12x66, 2 bedroom, futnist\ed
11h baths. woodburn&amp;r. washer &amp;186 Plf month plus dep011t
&amp; dryer, 86,600 good shape. and ut1ht1ea Cell 614-992 7479
Cell 614-367-0477
1976 14x70 Gettysburg 2 bdr, 2 Two bedroom mobile home ,
full baths, garden tub. porch &amp; furnished . phone 304 -675awning. 2 ecret. axe. cond , 81512 after 6·00 PM
unal elac Call 6,.·256-6520
Mobile home for ..1e 10x65
New Moon 2 bdr , mobile home,
completa set up . good cond
82.860 Cell 614-367-0187
1976 Gehysburg. 14 x 70, ell
electric 2 bdr , 2 full betht,
gsrdan tub. 2 air condl'lt oners.
porch a~d awning E xc cond
Call 266·6620 or 266· 6602
1976 Champion, pertly furntshed. A1r cond . undarpinnmg Call 379-2187 enyt1me
MOBILE HOMES MOVED .n sured. reasonable rates. Call
304-676-2336

44

Apartment
for Rent

IT~ (ll.l~y

Furn . 4 rooms &amp; bath clean No
peta. edults only. Ref &amp; dep.
required Call 614 -446 -1519
Regency Inc. apar1ment 2 bdr
utihties panly paid. n1ce Call
304 -675-5104 or 304-675 -

7926

1984 Honda XA80, good cond.

W11hera, dryers. refrlg•atort,
ranges . Skauu• Appliances.
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
CrMt Motel 614·4ot6·7398.

/

1982 Honda 50 . good cond,
5260 00 304-676-3476

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used epplience1 and TV sets
Open BAM to 6PM. Mon thN
Sat 614 -4416 -1699, 627 3rd .
Ave Qellipolia. OH

75

Dmettn •109 end up to 8495.
Wood table w-6 cttatrs f286 to
S796 . Desk 8100 up to 8376.
Hutchas $400 and up Bunk
beds complete w· manreuas
1296 end up to 8395. Baby bods
$1 10 &amp; 5175 MaHrnse• or boll
springs full or tw1n 863, firm
573. and $83 Queensats$225 ,
Kmg 8360. 4 drawer chBit 866
Dressers $89 Gun cabinets 8 ,
10, &amp; 12 gun Gas or electr1c
range 8375. Baby mattruses
53~ &amp; 846 . Bed hamet S20 .
130 &amp; Ktng frame 850. Good
Hlection of badroom tuites,
metal cabtnat!l. headboards $30
and up to S65
Used Furniture Washer &amp;
dryer . electric rMge , wood
table &amp; 2 bend-tea. beds.
dresser. &amp; recliner. 3 miles out
Bulavillo Rd Open 9AM to
5PM Mon thru Sat
614 -446 ·0322
Check us out on our livtng room
su1 tes 8349 &amp; up Webber &amp;
Bushhne New Gibaon apphan
ces Mollo han Furniture Rt . 7
nonh . Kanauga Call 614 -446 7444
Wa1her and dryer, tn good cond
6200 far tha pa1r
Call

Was her , 895 ., Kenmore
washer, 8125 : Weshnt~houae
washer. lika nfMI S1 60 ; Mtytag
drye r, 896 .. Whirlpool dryer .
596. Fng1datre dryer 19 5 :
woodburner heat stove, 8100 ..
white 2 dr . refrig , &amp;125 ; s1de by
51de refrig . $196.: frost free
rafng , 5126 ; apt. s1ze refrig .
$125
Skaggs Applian ces,
Upper RIVer Rd 446 · 7398
GE

i· ID

-- --3069
-- l~==========:::;;:::=========~ cond.
304-675
. -21 ft Werit . 460
Chevy
hp

engine , Berkley Jet Drive .

u.soo oo 304-576·2006 .,.

54 Misc . Merchandise
10 toot Hill Meat Cooler w1th
large COI'TlHelsor. tubmg. very
good cond, Digetal mflllt scales.

ter 5 oo

71

Autos for Sale

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Bloch , brick. sewer pipes , win
dows. lmtels, etc Claude Win ·
ten. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614 245 5121
Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
dehvery Muon send. Gallipolis
Bloclc Co . 123 1.'1 Ptne St,
Gallipolis Ohio Cell 614· 446 27B3
Pole Bulldmgs by Oualtty
Builders Work•hops , cerpons,
1111mel sheltera. garages. Free
estimates Phone 614 · 689 7121

56

Pets for Sale

1983 Plymouth Rehant wagon 4
spd au, AM -FM 52,499 1982
Plymouth Champ 4 spd
$1 .995 John 's Auto Sa les.
Bulaville Ad Galltpolis. Oh
1968 Mu stang, 6 cyl , aut o,
runs good Body needs so me
work Call 446· 0045 aft er 5p m
an d weeh en ds
82 C1tatton one owner low mdes
e-cellent cond1110n CAll 614 446 6337 altar 5PM .
1981 Olds Cutlass Supreme
Brougham Spor1 wheels Body
ond drtve tram perfect
Cell
379 -21 15 after 6pm
1979 Ford S350 Call61 \a 256 ·

1658

1967 Chevy 4 door, 6 cyl , auto .
rally whftel! 5600 Of trade for
Volkswagen or p1ckup 614 -

992-6919

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennal
CFA Himalayan , Perstan and
Siamste kittens AKC Chow
puppies Call 6 14-446-3844
attar 7PM
Purebred Greet Dana pups 4
black males wtth white blazes on
chMt $100 each Depostt w•ll
hold Cell 614 446 -1364
Regtslered ITUII Ie Pug. Fawn with
black ntllk 1 year old. Call

614 -446 7862

OmAga Motor Home mounted
oo 1984 NJS san 12.000 mtles.
S leeps 4 20 mpg 5 speed trens
$11,500 Phone 614 992 3921

Ref for sale 304 -675 3382

Weter wells •arviced and dnlled

2 yea r old mm11ture lang hatred
red Duchund Csll evemng&amp;
614 -446 3243

31

Real Eslale

576-2381

Homes for Sale

1993, 14x70 Commodore 2
bedroom, 2 full bathl. utthty
room, undet"penning. central air
umt. total electnc, unfurnished.

Furntthed apartment. ncond
floor 3 rooms with private beth
References required . Call 614·
448 · 2216

304-n3-6963
2 rental house- 2 bdr 18,600 1
bdr. with basement 19,000
With levels loti In the villaga of
Crown C1ty . Ca ll 6U -446 161 1
3 bch .. brick. central air. gas
heat 467 Jerry Dr Cell 614 446·20•9
For Sale by Owner. 3 bdr home
tn town Call 676-1028 a1ter

5pm

House &amp; lot lor ~ale . Bulll\ltlle
Rd 3 bdr , fully Clfpeted. central
heat. AC , Yl acre 1600 down ,
10% APA . First payment Dac
5th Cell co llect 814-894-3B81
ask tor D S Saba
3 bdr. 1 V• beth, large living room
With fireplac• . W1lk in closets.
kitehen cabinets. t'leat pump,
washer &amp; dryef Average alec
bill 1100 month . Large garage.
pool 12x24, lrutt trees, grapes.
large flowM gatden Almost 1
acre ground Will constdAr land
contract whh down payment or
cen ••ume kN!n . Call mornings,
614-t\48 -4703
Convenient locetion off Upper
Rt . 7 , 3 to 4 bdr. F P m LR ,
complete kitchen. bwld 1n diS hwasher. range, oven, micro wave &amp; washer -dryer. TV room .
1800 or 2700 down &amp; 30 yean
financetng available Kyger
Creek School 848.000 a11tra
land available 614-446-7627
6 room housa 1 2 ecret Double
car garage. located on Rou Htll
Berg1in priced 120.000 Call
&amp;14-678·2513.
61ft acr11 on C R 28 , jUst out of
Recine. 3 bedroomt. full base-ment, ftreple ce, wood-burner .
cloted pet10. central a.r Pnvate
letting. Call after 6 ·00 p m

614-949·2191

3 bedroom. 1 V1 story house 1n
Middleport Completely ramo
deled Pr~ced to sell . Shown by
eppotntment on ly Call 614-

33

Farms for Sale

30 Acres
Hu tillable land.
houte, barns, pond Southwestern School District Call 2•6·

9248

Beautiful home 1n Flatwoods
area ol Pomeroy 17 eerea S.
spring led pond availabl e Cell
614-446-2369

34

Business
Buildings

749 Thtrd Ave 1800 SQ h
Commerc1el or warehouse
Parkmg on Bide AdJacent to
th~rd &amp; Pine St Call fl14 -4462362 for appoinement

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
R1ver Front lots, located 14
mlle!lsouth of Pt Pleaaant on Rt.
62 150ft w1de. appro11 1 361t
deep lot pr1ce 88000 Owner
lman cmg at 10 pflrcent ISOO
down and $100 per month Call
304 -273-5479
Land to bwld on VlfY niee &amp; flat ,
conven1ent location 2 lots 400
11 by 166 f1 260ft by 166ft
Call fl14 446-7627
Ashton butl ding lots with pubhc
water. rnabtle hornet Permitted,
304 · 676· 2338 or 30• · 678 -

2267

3 bedroom, 2 story, par1ielly
furnishttd Post Off•ce •ncluded

For Sale by Owner, frame and
brick, 6 rooms and bath, lot
76x400. electric baseboard
halt, axe con d. sele price in low
30s. 100 per cent tintn cmg , Rt
2. tour miles from Pmnt Pleanot , 304-176-2600
3 bedroom brick, 2 cer gerege,
fireplace, In ground pr1vate pool,
11h bltht, t10tltle bldg. 304882 -3775 lfter 8 00 PM .

N.w HouM 3 or 4 bedrooms, 2
b1th1, femity room, eat in
kitchen. formal dtnmng room
with french doors Ieiding to
dedi. full b. .m..,t. IM-ge garftill, entique bridl front, vmyl
lkllng,mettl thtrmo ptne win dowl. wall ln1uleted Mt Ver non Aw.. nMd to see to
IPPrlcete quellty of this home.
Will rent wi1h option to buy.

o•

to buy. 304·875·4680 .. 075·
19U

Duple_., for rent 646 Second
Ave , Ga lhpohs. 3 bdr hvtn·
groom. din ingroom , new kit ·
chen, backyard. rafrlg . &amp; range
8295 plus utilit1aiJ &amp; security
deposit . C1ll 614-448 ·0690
Unfurnished 1pt.. 4 rooms &amp;
beth Cenhelly located One or
two adults, references &amp; sec
dap . required Cell 614·446 ·
2 bdr , uttlitlll , unfurn1s hed 3
Garfield Ave $176 per month
plus depos1t
Call 446 7544
after 1pm
Modern 1 bdr apt Ca ll 614
446 ·0390 .
Four room apanmant. close to
s hopping end schools . Appliencn furn1shed
$21 5 per
month ,
Call 446 · 75 15 or

446-7311

1 bedroom tpt for rent 8utc
rent 1tat1s 1215 a month thet
includes all utilities Deposit
required of 1200 . Contect Vil lage M•nor Apt Middleport .
61•- 992 -7787 Equal t-lou11ng
Opportunity.
2 bedroom furnished apartment
for rent Adults preferred 614-

992 -2749

2 bedroom, furnished or unfur ntlhed Remodeled Lerge pe11 0
On Spring Ava , Pomeroy Cell
after 6 .00 p m 61 4· 992·6888
Apartments tor rent 1n Pomeroy
One and two bedrooms Cell

1 '11 ecres more or lets 500 ft
road frontage.. city water, ell
ulilitin , Fletrock. 8 m1ies N Pt .
PI At 2 . no.ooo or best offer
304· 675· 1620 after 6 00
21ots Grandview Heights, phone

304-676·3626

Renlals

1 bedroom apartment upltftlfl
Newly carpeted throughout
Penlv furniahed C•ll 614 992
5908
1 bedroom epenmant in Middl eport All utilities paid 1200 per
month 1100 deposn Call
614 -992 -6611 days end 614 992 -8763 8\lenings.

For rent turmshed 1 bedroom
apt in Middlepor1 Call 614-

41

Houses for Rent

Mouse 3 bdr stove &amp; rafrlg.
Rodney Village II 1276 mo
Reterencet Cell446 ·•416after

8PM

446-6278

Real n1ce home. furnithed
Adults only No pets Overlook·
tng Ohio RNer In Min••ville

Ca11614·992·3324.

Nice 3 bedtoom houn, famity
room. garage, bl.,mltlt, FA
heat, 6 wooded acra· b•rn.
1260 per month , •100 d1po1h .
No ln1ide pets 10 Ee•t St .
Pomeroy. 614-423 ·8289.
2 bedroom unfurni1hed house In
Middlepon. 1200 rent. Call
614·892·3467 evenMlQI
3 bedroom. 2 bath, all electric
home in New Haven, W.Va.
Shown by appointment. Cell
814-949·2470 1fter 15 p.m
5 room tnd beth. 11 acres Cell

614·849·2931 .

53

Antiques

Want ed . Handmade quilts made
befor e 1940 Call 246 944B .
OLD ORIE \NTAL RUGS
WANT ED Any size or condthon
Cell toll free1 -800-433· 7847

Callahan's Uaed Ttrfl Shop Over
1 000 ttrel, SIZeS 12, 13 , 14, 16 ,
16. 16 5 8 miles out Rt 218 .
Call814 256-6251
Plest1c cistern 1tate 1pproved.
plastic aeptic tanlu, ptalt tc
culverts, matal culvens RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES . Jack
son . Oh 614 -2B6-6930.
Full size box springs &amp; manress
fum Lihe new , only 2 months
old Cost 8800 w1llull foJ $350
Cell614-266· 6261
Long woodburner. gilts door.
w1th 14 tt chtmney pipe and
accessories limited use $660
Cell 614-448 -1986

Musical
Instruments

2 tnslay backhoes K-12 2
2 ind-Io water pu.,..,a &amp; hose
Cal 304-882 2237
Che!lt freezer 10 cuft 1160,
wathe r S15 Call 614-25615 58 .
Cash

Reg iltat , brand new.

$275 Call 446·8222

Frtck Sawmill, 3 block restoc ked
All metel 16 feet
CBr rtage. 68 inch sew blada
1968 1 '1~ T. lnternatKtnalll.lfll)
tru ck St1hl 0 -32AV Chelnsaw
Call 367 -7519
24 It round pool CO W4Jete with
Pllll"fJ &amp; filter solar cover, wlflter
cover. new liner 1450 Call

APARTMENTS , mob1l1 homel.
houset Pt Plaaunt and GalltpO·
hs 614-446 -8221 .

L111de Star rmg &amp; necklac• 1100.
Call 614-441 -2202.

Complete drum !let hcellont
for begmners Call 614 -446
7862
Upright Kimball Pien o Needs
tuned Good condition 614
742-3135
King Alto Saxophone Very good
condttton S300 Call 614 985-

4175

Piano $100 00 , t rumpet
576 00, sexaphone • 125 00 .
304-675 -6762

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Red rasberries

Taytors Berry
Patch Cal 614· 446 8692 or
614 -245 -65064
Late can ntng tomAtoes John
Hill, St Rt 33B . Leun Fell!l
U 00 pet buahel. 614-247 26'2
Yellow Free Stone Canntng
Peaches now evailable Call for
pr 1ces and varieties Bob 's
Market. Meaon, W Ve. 304773 ·6721 Open 7 day1

Farm Supplies
&amp; L IVBSIU~k
61

1978 2 door DAtsun 8210
Hatch back New tir es. nAW
brakes , good body. AM FM
!ltereo. run!l good 8800 Ca ll
614 · 992 6417 or 614 -992 -

3453

669 -3381

' 82 Pont tac Bonnev• lle , 4 door .
Vinyltop. V-6. Atr . Auto . P S PB .
A M·FM st e reo . ttlt. rear wmdow
defogger , velour tnter1or, body
l_~t cond . htgh rmleage, 304

f1112 2796

1982 Chevy Cavaliar front
wheel dnve, 11uto. 4 cyl. new
tues , 51,950 00 304- 675
4181
1979 Volkswagen Rabb1t good
co nd , $1 , 200 00 304 · 676

4072

79 Buicll lo Sabre, 74 Bmck

Rtvera 304 -675 -5162
' 81 Plymou th Hom on good
co nd S1 .JOq 304-B95- 3638
1976 Olds Cu Uns Supreme
8500 304 .675 6466
1984 Ford Esco n. 304 675

6153

' 79 R1vara Bwck. almo st show
ro o m condttton . esk1 ng
54 ,800 00 pnce negotiable
304-676 ·2563
'79 Monte Cerlo.
7690

304-675 -

'79 Monte Carlo, 70.000 mtles,
ac, cruis e. ps. pb. tilt steering,
lett front fender slight damaged

01 .1100 304·895-3638

Farm Equipment

72

CROSS lo SONS

1982 Dettun 4 apd. AM FM
wne r1m1 . &amp;2,599 John ' s Auto
Sales. 8ulav illa Rd. Gell1pohs,

U S 35 West, J•cbon, Ohio

614 288·6461

M1sny Ferguton, NIIIN Holland.
Bush Hog Selet II Service . Over
40 Uled tractors to choosa from
&amp; OO!TPie1eline ot new &amp; used
equipment. Largest selection in
S.E Ohio
JIM ' S FARM EQU IPM ENT
CENTER . SR 36 W. Gallipolis.
Ohio. Call 614-446-9777, eve
614-446· 3692 . Up front tree tors With w1rrenty over 40 uted
tractors, 1000 tools.

19B2 Chevy Shortbed. 83.000
mtles , loaded . 54300
Call
367-7767

Farm Supply . Sale at Bidwell
C1sh Feed Store on G1ueho
barbed w1ra Sept . 26 Call

614-388-9888

vester with 1 I'OW corn heed
International 1260 Grinder
nuer, both good cand 30•-

273·4215.

1976 Ford F·100 Custom
pi ckup, 44.000 mtl os, cemper
top, vef'l go od cond 81860
Call 446 ·0254

1976 6 cyl . stand ard 1979
V-8, automatic Call evenings
614-446- 3243
1976 Dodge 0 100 p1 ckup w1th
cap, runs good, engine gnod.
boby good , 318 two barr ell.auto
trans , 81.460 or best offer Call
614 446 4422 or 614 446 ·
9600
1983 Mazda truck topper. good
oondthon , 13,600 Call 614 -

2&lt;6·6630

Cattle riCk, 10 foot slide-in.
For rent Sleeping Room• end
hght hou1e keeping rooms Perk
Central Hotel. Cell 614 -446 -

0756.

Large Tanning Sed for 1ale
Inquire at P.O. Box 217, Syre.
cuse . Oh•o

pm

month.

lnground pool cover 261146
1100. Green Etrly Am. couch
and chair •1&amp;0. Flbtt gl"' car
ca'rrler •&amp;o. Uprigl'lt freezer

Sleeping room on Moond lloor.
By week, t36 . By month, 1116.

Coli 814·992·8022.

48 Space for Rant
MobHe home lot on Rtcooon
C'Mk Rd . Cable TV 1Vtl1able.
t&amp;O. diiP, required . .,0, per
month.
CeH 441·791 1 or

445-1287.
COUNTRY MOilLE Home Pork.
Route 33. North of Pom•oy
Lergelots. Call 814-&amp;ta-7.-79 .

62 Wanted to Buy

Firewood tar tale. e36 per loed
Call 614-949· 2601 after 6 ·00

Room~

for rent dty. week
month. Qallia Hotel. C•ll 614441· 8580. Rent •• low 11 t120

$180.00. 304-468·1783

0200. Klmboll DrgMt $995.

61• · 992 · 7681 or 614 -985 -

3840.

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn Call tor latest quotee River
Ctty Farm Supply, 114 -446 -

2985.

83

Livestock

814-388·9336.

For ule RICOH office copier
mectlme FT4010 wHh collator,
ltand; reduction ceplblltty • 3
PIP• trayt. 304· 175-8880.

Polled CheroiR bull A-a. gln·
tl•. 2000 lbt. plu1 . Top bloodlin• .
tleif•rt. FFA, 4 ·H.
projects, excellent dub calve•.
Young bull protpect•. Georlle
Woodward . Call 814- 37 -

Turtleyl for qle. Cheap. Call

R,.

21197.

Thfllquertet'l llmmMJtel bull, 8

montho old, clll304·578·8979.

.:t CALL

, - % THO..&gt;E GAPS IN MY
l'i WO~I&lt; HI.)TOfeY? ..
QIJAI-.IT'Y TIME.

73

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1986 Chevy convertlon van.
dual &amp;If , auto . stereo , TV , low
mileage. exc cond Cell 614 -

446-4141

81 Ford coverstOn van , 23 ,000
miles. loaded. 18 ,000 Call
1978 Jeep Renegllde •x•. V8,
3)4, 3 tpd , good conditiOn
Ce ll 446·21 43.

992-3194.

19815 Ford Economy van , auto
trensmis1fon . PS. PB, AM-FM
radio and cauett• player, PW
ltld lock•. Cl\lill, tilt 1teerlng
wheel, like new . A1klng
UO ,ISOO.OO, callanytlme after

10.00 AM.

mortal (60 min ) (A)
® Bring 'Em Back Alive
II) Bodybuilding: 1984-85

Toyota mot or home , $2,400 00
fum, 304 -576 -2651

Services

School and Natalie desperately attempts to ge1 her

Captain and meets w1th
Mussolin1 Br'ld Hitler wAile
Byron IS accepted tnto the

Navy

US .

Submanne

Uncle Aaron out of It aly. (3

81

hrs.) Part 3 of 6. (R).
C7J MOVIE: 'Mussollni
and I' Part 1 of 2.
&lt;Il MacNeil-Lehrer Newah·
our
® _CI) ff2J Drug Knot iCC)

fj)

Home
Improvements
B~SEMENT

WATERPROOFING
Un condttional hfetima guarantee Loca l references furnished .
Fr ee est1matea
Call collect
1 614 -237 0488 . dav or mght
R o ger!l Basement
Wat tt rproolmg
_.:...._

___

Fvorgraans. shade and fruit
tr ees Tree 11nd !ltump removel.
Sand . grave l. 1111 dnt mulch.
fn ew ood end coal delivered.
Don's lands capes , 446-9648
RON 'S Te le vision Servtce
House calla on RCA . Oueur,
GE Spec1ahng '" Zantth Call
304 -576- 2398 or 614 446 ·
2454

Former pollee officer David

Toma attempts to help a
high school student experi-

EEK &amp; MEEK

menting w1th drugs. (60

mm)

HA"'- C,OU AW IDEA cr
11-\E. IMF¥\CT lHIX:r iV IS
HAVIfJG OfJ K S:XIAL
COOS(IOUSIJfS) (XSOCI~TY ?

1 JUST WATCH
TI-ll SOAPS

OOR

RINGlES 'S SERVICE. expenenced carpent er electrician,
mason. p'amter, roofing [includ•ng hot tar epphcatton) 304
675 2088 or 675 -7368
Stark s Tree and Lawn Service.
landscaptng 304- 576 -2010 .
Rota ry or cable tool drdhng.
Most we11s completed !lame day
Pump soles and servtce 30•·
895 -3802

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

A brutal
defensive line

MY R&lt;!IRENT5AR511&lt;Ylt\GTO
DOC/ DEi WHICH COLLE"~E.

I SHOUl-D GoO TO.

.9

••o

2.

6f~a•"t,(
by THOMAS JOSEPH

women held capt1ve by the
Japanese during World

ACROSS
44 She l••r
I Aspe&lt;l
45 .Jom
6 Droop
m
9 Alazer
DOWN
reature
1 Entreat
10 Roys' ,.·h•••l, 2 Cut in Lwam
for short
3 ()r hL'i'S
IZ Choice
4 A&lt;ijust
13 Ramhlt•d
5 S1strr
Burma city

@ Boxing: Mark Breland
vs. Bobby Joe Young (2

hrs.)
Mi&amp;ai&amp;aippi (60 min)

Cil (j]) Seeing Red: Stories

Vi('t&gt; ~

31 Obje&lt;•l of
legal
&lt;"onlrnuon

35 Pros.

Vietnam War. (2 hrs.) (AI.
9:30 IJ Cil@ YouAgeln1When
Henry gets Man a JOb '"

pE&gt;Ctor's
4Ut&gt;Sl

38 Fuursnmt•'.o;

one of the company' s su-

gaoii!PI
37 Oahu

permarkets, Matt goes on
strike the first day. (R) In

garland

Stereo.

38 norgninr

10:00 8 Ill @ St. EIHwhore
Ehrlich and Chandler are
arrested
at
an
anti·
apartheid protest, West·

film
40 ('urrt'('l
42 IJ&lt;&gt;II.'Itly

phall and Auachlander de·

•a Surd n,·l

ahoKIP

bate whether or not to

spend • 500.000 on hospi·

DAILY CRYFI'OQUOI'ES-Ile~'• how to work It:

tal renovation and Turner

87

of a deceased pa-

Felt

Forum,

Square Garden

M_owrey's Upholaterlng ••rvlng
trtcoun!yaru21 yaart. The beet
In furmture upholst•ring. Call .
304 - 876 -4164 for heli .
estimates

HI,MI' NAME
IS TAPIOCA
. PUDDING!

Y V K Y NV
S K

Madison

'

K C V

(fl) lnhOvltlon Tll.!.J!cts

VOU

CARE

TO 60 1l) THE MOVIES

ME, WOULD 'fOU ?

end

AFTERWARDS, WE
COULD STOP AND GET
SOME ICE CREAM ..

"i

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Robert

Palmar,

fi'

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S K

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Yeoterda)''o Cryptoqtlote: I AM INDEED A KING
BECAUSE I KNOW HOW TO RULE MYSELF. - PIETRO

PMS are explorod.
@Solp
1 1:30 IJ (}) crJ) Tonight Show
Gue1t host Jay Leno wei·
Ooldra Herr and Pam Dowbar. (80 min.) In Stereo.
CII Boat of Grouoho
(]) lportiiC.n,.,
Cll WKRP In Clnclnnoti
6111J.)Texl
G (J) ABC Newt Nighdlno

Q K K 8

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NVFG(;

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fiction •urrounding

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PEANUTS

1163 See Ave.. Gallipolis
&amp;U -446 -7833 or 614-UI ·

R II M Custom Couches lnd
R~uph otstary, St. Rt. 7, Crown
Ctty, Oh . 614·266· 1470. Eve
814-446 ·3438 . Open d1ily 1 to
5. Sat. 9:30 to 1.30. Old 6 new
Uphostered

One letter sl.ands for another. In this sample A is llSed
for lhe three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, lhe length and fonnalion of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different
I;KYPTOQUOTE
9· 10

w

Upholstery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

tient. (60 min .) (R).
Cil Major l.eegue 8aoebali:
Atlanto ot Son Diego (2
hrs., 30 min .) Live
611 C7.) Odd Couple
@Newa
10:30 CII American Snapshots
fJI C7.) INN News
&lt;Il Dorothy Healy: An
American Red
(j]) News
11 :00. CIJ Clllll CIJ ®.,
liS Nowo ·
® Bumo&amp;Arren
II) Ker.tll: Nero BudwoiNr
Liberty Ciaulc From the

2919

nt' utral

aow...p

reported killed during the

Watterso n 's Water Hauhng
reatonable rat es. imm e dtat~:
2.000 gallon delivery , cisterns ..
pools. well, etc call 304 -576-•

34 Sea duc·k

of"'Miam1

spots a woman he believes
is h1S wife, who had been

Otllard 's Wat8f Delivery C1at·•
erns , pool, &amp; well. Anytim e bul·
Sunday, 614·446-7404

ur t wtgs

26 Ethically 36 PhO&lt;'nH 1an

23Tcmpn
Llghl wood
27 Powntate
28 Exudo·
29 Johnson

tine divorce case, Magnum

SNAKE!!

law

14 African

24

party dur1ng the 1930s is

baby

29 S&lt;·ottish
nver

river

examir1ed. (90 min.)
® Cl) ii2I Magnum, P.l.
While tnvest•gating a rou -

General Hauling

20 Expf'l
23 Fourth·

II Custodians down play 32 Vigllanl
of Lhe
24 Broom
33 H1gh-strung

sir!ht
22 English

passions comprising the
American
Communist

AMOS

7 Mru·aw
8 Overall

21 Offshore

([) Portrait of America:

The &amp;trongth of political

CHAWIN'

6 Nimble

16 Ululate
18 Yale
student
19 Signll'y

of American Communists

I THOUGHT
VOU GIVE UP

or Oresh!~

UAm·.

1IJ 700 Club

BARNEY

\•Q

This year's winners of the Goldman WEST
EAST
• K98
Open Pairs, a grueling four·session .JS
'IQ 9 2
event held annually at the Eastern .J854
+ 1076432
States Regionals, were Dave Rosen- tAQ
berg and Allen Kahn My father, who • K J 10 8 4
won the event twice, would have apSOUTH
preciated the expert defense shown by
63
this pair on today's deal
'I A 10 6
IKJ
The bidding indicated that North
.A 7653
and South had almost enough points
for game. Rosenberg (West) reasone&lt;l
Vulnerable. Neither
that since he bad 12 points of his own,
Dealer Soulh
his partner could not have much. He
therefore chose a passive lead of the West
South
North Easl
I NT'
heart four instead of an aggress1ve
club lead. South won Kahn's queen Pas.o;
2 •·· Pass
2 NT
Pass
3t
with the ace and led a low club toward Pass
Pass
Pass
dummy's queen. West won the kinf Pass
• I 1· 14 potnts
and noted his partner's play of tht
nine . Was it a singleton or top of a •• Jacoby transfer
doubleton? Since it cost nothing to fm~
Openmg lead: 'I' 4
out, West led h1s club four to dummy '~
lone queen. East ruffed with the spadt
nine and dutifully returned a low dia· •
mond. (West's low club asked for a dia·
mond return.) South's jack went to
West's queen, and West now cashed
the diamond ace and led another low ruffed w1th the s1x, but tl wa s &lt;Wer·
club. Declarer ruffed with dummy's ; ruffed by Wesl's Jack. Wes 1 pers•sted
seven, and East overrufled with the With another club, and dum 'ny's queen
eight. (Declarer sbould have ruffed of trumps was overruffed by East's
with dummy's ace and pulled a round king. That made seven tricks for !he
of trump or else should have discarded defense, sending the contract down
dummy's last diamond.) Back came three for an excellenl Easi·Wesl score
another diamond . Declarer bravely ~ ';o.

when she gets stuck baby-

THEY1RE TRYIN(!i 1V FINDONE
THAT G-IVE6 6CHOL..AR5HIP6
FOR BOORISHNESS.

NORTH
1-10·81
.AQ71 2
• K73
\\ 1985
2

By James Jacoby

sittmg a group of ch ildren .
(R) In Storeo.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Comp lele

•

Evolve - Pagan - Light - Menace - MOVING
Wife: "The lady next door hu a dr89S lust like mine." Hus·
band: "I
suppose ~ want a new dr899." Wife: "It's
cheaper than MOVING."

con1iders adopting the

Jamos Boys Weter Serv1ce Also
pooiNftlled Call614·256 -1141
or 614 446-1176 or 614 44ti7911
•

•

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM-IITS ANSWERS

Nell's romantic dinner with
her boyfriend 1s disrupted

Good 1 E•cevattng , bas emants.
foo lers drtveways, septic tanks.
landsce pmg Call anyt1me 614·
446-4537. James l DBVISOn,
Jr owner

85

•

. , UNSCRAMBlE lETTERs
FOR ANSWER
1.

queror"

TERBACI&lt;V,
Excavating

•

f9 PRINT
NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

9:00 IJ I}) liS Glmme a Break

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

B3

•

counts (60 min .)
MOVIE: 'The Con·

675·6152

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pme
Gallipolis. Ohto
Ph nne 614-446- 3888 or 614·
446 4477

(j]) Song of Survival (CC)
The bond of human spirit is
thi~
shared
between

..

tho chuckla quoled
by fd lmg in the mi!Sing words
L......J'-..1.-..L.-L......J-.J you develop from step No. 3 below.

.

@

A1hby ConAtrucllon , cerpent·
1ng . remodeling. roomeddtlions,
cement block work. mterior and
exte rtor ptuntmg, stdtng Frea
estlmete!l 304 ·675-5446 or

82

I

SHECON

1--..;,,,...;.,,,.i.;;.,I.;;.....;.I...:.:.TI--1 0

War II tn Uus documentary
highlighted by classical
works based on the1r ac-

Fetty Tree Tnmmtng stump
removal Ca ll 304 -6751331

1833

1979 Chevy 12 pnsenger win·
dow van . AC , Cruil:e, 1ilt whettl,
A· 1 condition . SlOOO 614·

Heaven Jonathan courts
an elderly woman , who
was his w1fe when he was

Mr. &amp; Ms. Amarlca Championships
Competition

614·388·9704

For S1le: 15.000 BTU nn.nll
gu h••11ng etove. FOJ more
lntar~n~tlon call 814·992-8388.

Fuller Brush Productt. For free
delivery call304-818· 1090 . R•
pruent1tlve Wanted G1llia
County .,.,.

WHAT DO

from Posedena: CA. (60
m1n .) (A).
IJJ Couatoau 160 min)
Cil CJ &lt;IJ Winds of War
(CC) Pug " promoted to

Trucks for Sale

Oh

New Holland 717 FoJage Har-

M1118d hardwood slabs, •12 per
bundle Containing epprox. 1 liJ
tons . FOB Ohio Pallet Co .
Pomeroy , Ohio . Call 614-9926,61
'

1986 Ford F150 Z8 Auto
transm1ss10n. ov er drtve . fu el
lllJecttOn. 1 2 000 miles $9500
614 -992 3566

1978 LTD PS . PO . AC ,
electric trunk $1000 firm 614 -

New 8royhill head &amp; foot board
$200 Wtll u ll littler 16 or 28
cuft che•t deep freeze S160
Ca ll 614-448 ·4496.

614·446·7627

4 bdr 2'h beth. livingroom.
dtningroom, krtchen, 8300 par
mo &amp;100 depo1it 8 ma Ieete
Cell 614 448-3667.
Newly redecorated 3 badroom
house AvlilableOctober 1 Call

25 tnch GE color T\1 . UO 00
304-675 -2816

992 -6304.

2 bedroom tpt Galhpohs Ferry,
304 -675-2548 Of 676-6783

57

6374

0444 .

614 -992 ·6216

992·6018

In Middlep&lt;trt, 3 bedroom, f1re
place and wood burner A~tuma ­
bleloangoeltoretltorSept 16
Price goet up 6 plfcent

Furn1shed apt edult!l only Ca ll
614 -446-9523

New Whlrpool lmpertal 70
Wa!lhmg machine. 304-675 -

72 Chev p1 ckup for parts good
front Ianden. good hood 304-

1980 Olds Cullau Auto , PS .
PB. a1r. crwse control. 11elor
interior Good condition . very
clean, beautiful car Call 614
949-2558

Furmshed alf1C1ency 15160 mo
ut1littet pttd 7Yl N~ul Ave Call
446 -4418 after BPM

Gold 1lor1 couch . good co nd
304-675 · 5773

P~R~ONN~l

614·949·2594

Mobtle home lor sa le by owner.
1974 Kttkwood 12•60. 2 bedrooms, 304-675-6'51

Unturn 1 bdr apt., cerpated.
ut1ht1et pa1d, no children, no
pttu Call814 4416· 1637

1980 AMC Sp1rit been wrecked .
good 4 cyl engine. transmts~1 0n,
front end , etc
1978 Ford
Gr11nada 304-882 2862

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Professional
Services

9 months old Beegles. tram oct to
run rabb1tl , 304· 676- 2779

FRANK AND ERNEST

our
Ill (lZ@ Wheel of Fortune
@ WKRP in Cincinnati
7:30 1J CIJ Cll Now Newlywed
Game
@ Major League Boaa.
ball's Greatest Hits: 1978
World Series (A) .
IJJ All in tho Family
fj) C7.) Too Close for Com·
fort
Q ())To Bo Announced
&lt;Il Mother end Son
® Wheel of Fortune
Cll (j]) liS Jeopardy
@Allee
8:00 IJ (}) ® Highway to

I

.....---------, -.

®Newa

PARTS GRAN 0 OPENING
SALE I 1318 Ftfth St , New
Hav an, West Virg1n111 Phone
304 -882 3729 Fulllmeoftruck
an d car part s evadable Most
pnces are cut lo dealers coat
throu~ September 8th Oel111 •
erv avai lable

1969 Chevella Good she pe
New rebutlt mgin P- 52 000 Cell

Father to mother: "Adult
education will continue as long as
children need help with their

llll MacNoii·Lohror Newah·

MOUNTAINEER AUTO BODY

••••

I

L I KL E R

8:00 IJ (}) Cll CJ Cll (lD Ill !IZ
liS News
@ GreenAcres
@ Mazda SportsLook
I1J Andy Griffith
mm Jefferaons
11) Reading Rainbow (CC)
llli.Living With Animals
@ One Day at a Time
8:30 IJ (}) liS NBC News
® Tho Rifleman
@ Fly Fishing With Joe
HumphrevCil Beverly Hillbillies
&lt;IJ CJ Cll ABC News
fJI CD Hogen's Heroea
&lt;Il Doctor Who
® Gl (lZ CBS Newa
llll Body Electric
@ Welcome Back, Kotter
7:00 IJ (}) PM Magerine
®Alias Smith and Jonaa
II) SpoiUConter
Cil Sanford and Son
CIJ Entartalnmen1 Tonight

WOlD

Rearrange lettel'l of the
• lour . ocrombltd words bf.
low to form four simple word1.

f»CD M'A'S'H
CJ Cll To Be Announced
&lt;Il Nightly Bualneaa Report

TransmtSSIOns. all types. over,
front, rear, 4 wheel drive. prices
start S 100, w111 dehver Call
614 379· 2220

614 -992 3465

1979 Dodge Aspen Station
Wagon $650. Cell 614 · 667
6101

2237

iHE OZONE IJ.'/ERI

16 ft lilt top tandem tratler ,
3:&gt;4 ·675 -1769

~r

Child star Drew Barrymore
talks about her new TV
movie, " Babes in Toyland"

DE~TR()YING

895 3638

Purebred border collia puppies
from workmg dogs Three male.
two lem11le. wormed &amp; 1ho ts .
5126 . Call614.446· 2359

1 2x60 Mobile Home, e11c con d.
all furmshed wtth epphences,
awmng 14.800 00 Phone304-

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1980 AM C Spmt Sun roof. 4
cyl. 4 speed 61300 Cell

Prckans Used Furniture Good
q.~ahty used lurmture Open 9 to
6 or call lor appointment
304 675-6483 or 675 -1450

Free estimetM Cell 614 ·9925006 Of' 614 · 742-3147

76

304·&lt;73 9126

-------- k -

Hoover washer, portable, co ppeton e 304 675-3626

14 ft f11htng boat with motor
end tretler Call 614 -992 -2794
198ij C heck mate sk1 bo•t .
18' 1 ' 15 0 hp Johnson out board wtth accessoriet, exc

2 bdr. unfurn . with appl at 681
Third Ave , Galhpohs 5260
month plus utthttlt Call 614-

24&amp;·9595

R~FU~ED TO eAT 8ACK
IN EIEVERLY HILL$ WOULD
LOOK PRETTY GOOD TO
YOU NOW.

'IOU

NIGHT WITHOUT
!ATII&gt;JG-

Valley Furniture. new I used
lllrge sectton of quality furniture . 1211 Eutern Ave ,
Gallipolis.

8395 toend
$995.
Tlbl•
t&amp;Ofrom
Dnd
Sofas
chairs
priced
up to 1126 Hide·a·beds 8390
to S695. Recliners *226 to

BET THAT '&amp;UIUJT' .STfAI&lt;

I'LL ~EVER.
GET THROU6~ THE-

Boats and
Motors for Sale

'IULII SCCtl(llA-L&amp;t.~Se
_ _ _ _..;__:; ldltod
ClAY I. 'OIIAN

TIAT IIU.T

I

EYENINB

1986 Honda 260R FQurttaK liM
new $2300 Firm. Tecumtef'l
10hp r1d111g lawn tractor engtne
5150 304-882-3579

USED APPLIANCES

GOOD

WEDNESDAY
9(1Q/86

!380 00 304-676-6109

1982 Clayton, 12x60, all elect·
ric. exc cand, best reasonable
offer. 304 -676 2486

23

Television
Viewing

1981 Honda CB 760. 2, 600
m11es. 304-876 -6624.

;~~~~·~ -

antron reclin.-t t99, new &amp;
uNd bedroom IUit•. ran\111,
wringer Wither~. &amp; tho• . New
livingroom eui1• t199·t699,
lampt, elto buying coli &amp; wood
ltovn. Call 814-441 -3159 .

446 -4011
2 bdr unfurmshed apt in Crown
c .ty Call 614-266· 6520.

BORN LOSER

379·2668

3 badroam mobtle home .
121165. 304-676 -2816

E111oell.,t oond, 3 bedroom
houN. full b..ement, large lot,
quite ne~hborhood. upper Lin·
coin Ave, wtll inlullted, 129 .00
budget. Will rent with option

30.·171·2784

at Ever.

NEW AND USED MOBILE 992 -6858
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 36

CARI..'fl£.

wood-eoalato""· I pcwood LA
auita •399. bunk bedl t199,

s375 Lamps .$28 ,. tt25

Ntce 2 bedroom mobtle home for
rent Neer Racine Cell 614

HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml

wou'i,

79 Buick Regal BlAck- red seat
Clean PS . PB. a1r Good condl·
tlon 304-773 -5670

Work wanted. experienced t•m
hind w~nt• fob in tobecco,

ful ,. pttrt lime. -"lnd school

for Sale

l»r-1''1'

Olive St.. Oalllpollt. New • und

White Chmese weedet" geose fa r
sa le 86 oo each Call304 ·882 -

304-575·41·0 Of 875-1982

WNI do bol&gt;y•ittlnlln my homo

pnvete lot

Motorcycles

16

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1974 Harley Davidson, dresser.
uc. cond $3000 Cell efter
6pm Wed, Sat and Sun

Stngle cush•oned sofa Rust
color L1ke new $375 Call
614 -992 2363

514·992-3143.
114-4o41-11285.

32 Mobile Homes

SWAIN
AUCTION lo FURNITURE 112

2 bdr. 2 batha. kitchen fur
mshed. 1 1 Court St . 8326 per
mo plus utthhll . reference &amp;
dftPO•it Call 614-446.4926

2403

Co11614-992·3181
Wtll baby 1h in my home. have4
yean old playmate. r•atonabl•
rates Rio Grenda &amp; V1nton .,...
Call 814· 246 -9157

hom Gellipoht,

~======::::::::::r~
2 bdr. mobila home
3~"""~""""""~""":'s~""":-:1
1 Homes for ale
green . Call448-7032
F1nanml
21

74

Uirry Wright

Wednesday, September 10. 1986

51 Hou1ahold Goods

14x70 Bayview 2 bdr., unfur·

niohed. ve..,noco.locoted2moles
Cell 614-446-2300.

6 room house on corner lot. Low
utilities, attached garage, conva·
ment locatiOn 823.900 Cell
eventng• 614-992 -3798 or days
814· 992 3345 amd ask for
Dallas Weber

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Adults on~. no peu . $250 mo

US."

Mcl clldiiOIOI:

Wednesday, .September 1 0. 1986

(I) Auotln City Limits

Alloo
(j]) ABC FlU Rovlew _
Speolol Alon Thlcke prev10w1
ABC"• upcoming loll pro-

(lD

grams and interviews ABC
lucille B~ll. Howa.rd

star•

Hesseman a,nd Ellen Bur-

styn.

Gl (j]) T.J. Hookot Hooker
and Romano ·track down a

man who has been Hxuelly
aaaaultlng ferhale joggers.

(70 min.) (R) .
(!J. News
.
(

l

•

..

1• "

�•

6-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. September 10. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

•••. '2799·· lii!&amp;t a.
MUTCH, TABLE. 4 CHAIRS

...38zs.oo
IT JUST MIGHT BE THE MOST
IMPORTANT SAVINGS EVENT
IN THEIR 73 YEAR HISTORY ....
DON 'T MIS S IT!

®

OF GALLIPOiiS
11899"

ENGLAND

LOVESEAT, OIA..
.American lui PIDil.

1169915

RIVIRSIDE
CHAIR. Sue Blue
;tCC!IInlry Style
11199" FLEXSTEEL
Grey
Contt11111orary
'999" SOFA,
, CHAIR
Tracl. llluve Floral

$9480°
$98888
$688 81
$48881

499" Comttlllpomy
SLEEPER. Plaid

. l1g. 1949 Salid Oak

.: U"lilaaa
'

'

'

ot-;..

·a
··

..

a.&amp;. 11000 Sprinc Air

.

OFFICIAL PARTICIPATING DEALER!

12 SENSATIONAL HOURS TO SAVE!

THURSDAY! SEPT. 11! l~ TO J: !

SAVE NOW!
EXTRA SALE SPEOPLE .
EXTRA OF FI CE STAFF
EXTRA CREDIT PERSONN EL ... AND
EXTRA DELIVERY PERSONN EL WILL
BE HERE TO ASS IST YOU '

IT'S SWEEPING THE COUNTRY... FROM COAST TO COAST!
NATIO NAL NETWORK TV AND LOCAL NEWSPAPER AND RADIO ADVERTI SEMENTS ARE
ANN OUNCIN G "NAT IONWID E BASS ETT BARG AIN DAYS VIII " FURNITURE SALE!
GIANT BASS ETT FURNITUR E INDUSTR IES, THE NATION'S LARGEST SINGLE BRAND
FU RNITU RE MANUFACTUR ER, COORDI NAT ES THI S NATIONWID E SAVINGS EVENT
OFFERING NOT ONLY BASSETT FURN ITURE, BU T EVERY ITEM IN EVERY PARTICIPATING
STO RE AT REMARKA BLE PR ICE REDUCT IO NS' YES t EVERYTHING IS REDUCED!! IT'S
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY' SAV E 10%,20%, 30% YE SI UP TO 60% OFFt
• CQ~ Y~IGI' T 1~86 CO~ (: C • IN 11:!1 Nfl l tQ ~IIL

SENSATIONAL!

1

N(. ANY Ufllf,Ul HORt lEO JS f. 0 ~ I IU ~ MA1 € HI I'll 0 11 1-' AH T~ 1 Hfi"ll CJf !~, f'H U HIBI llD /IV LAV\j

REMARKABLE!

flEX STEEL
BIG MAN'S

$128 88
$58818 RECLINER
$168 88 Reg. S899.95
$168 88 $544 44

PLUS MUCH, MUCH MOREl

EXTRA PERSONNEL!

• OP EN A NEW ACC OUNT
• ADD -ON TO YOUR
PRE SENT ACCOUN T '
BANK CARD S WElCOME!

IMPORTANT VALUE!

OAK ROLL TOP ODDS-N-ENDS

TABLES ·

DESK

Reg. S1399.95

Values to 5399.95
STARTING AT

MAGNIFICENT!

BARGAIN I

SPRING AIR

ALL

QUEEN
MATtRESS
SET
Beck Support.-

MIRRORS &amp;
PICTURES

Chirro Comfort

1/2

.... '1299.95 Set

$78888 $3888

$599~9

Regular Price

TABLES!/LAMPS!
139" tlc:h. Oak

1

TABUS

Rag. 1629" Oak TV.
srEREO UNIT
PLUS MUCH, MUCH MOREl

DINETTE SETS!.
1111. '899" 7PC. 011t Finish
Dlfj mE w/Formica Top
.Rei. '799" 5 Pt. GIMI lap
DlllmE wiLl. Olk Trim
1111. 1599" 5 Pc. Gills tap

PI8£TTE w/Brown Velvet
CHAIRS .
... '999" 5 Pc. Solid ....
TABLE w/Formica Top &amp;
4 CitJtaln CHAIRS
'

BROWSE FOR HOURS... EVERYTHING'S REDUCED!

CUSTOM DESIGN YOUR CHILD'S ROOM WITH
AMERICA'S 1 SELLING YOUTH GROUP!

FREE!

ALLLAIIPS-BUY 1 -

GET MATCHING LAIIP

S54nov:
S38888 _
S24444:
S4881

MUCH MOREl

A COMPLETE
HOUSEFUL OF
NEW FURNITURE
CAN BE YOURS AT
MAJOR SAVINGS!

EVERY NAME

BRAND IN OUR
INVENTORY
REDUCED!!

BUY 3, 4. 5, OR MORE

•BASSETT
•FLEXSTEEL
•BENCHCRAFT
•ENGLAND
8 . Reg. '249.96 HUTCH.
2-SHELVES ....... '168.88
c. Reg . '269. 95 '198
Studon1
88
DESK. 4·DA . .. ...
·
D. Reg . '269 .. 95 ~U T C~
2-ShelvH ... .. .... ·
·
E Reg . '239 .96 CHEST.

98

~·.~~-~:':-~:::.~'":'·~'":'~~~::::~e~T':H:'!:IS~lliiiMiiiiRiioRiiOioiR,....... .. ... ,
1

88

,.l;,;D;,;rw,;;.;.
..

·d
SOFA an
LOVESEAT

268

•KINCAID

CHEm SOLIDS AND
•

A DARK CHEIIY FllliHI
RDUIIII. Elftl 01 COCKliiiU

~EVOLUTIONARY!

.

.

$9811 EA.

DESIGNJ~

4 ~-~

saaa~8 .

568888

Reg.
'999'5

I

..

ITS AN EARLY AMERICAN SUITE WITH
.
A RICH MAPLE FINISH BY BASSETTI! REG. $1199.95 ·

:l~=~Er:\D&amp;-:rJ
AND 4-DRAWER CHEST!

5) "·

·
SLEE· ~Eit ~ . .
Full Size.-Fiock t;ltm._Flial
s5'a·a~~
$38-'888
GI.~ . Top
,~s ~~

leg.
S&amp;999S

I ~~: I

EJ

A¥1.

Pho11o

~6·1.05

Golll,olla

OF GALLIPOLIS
.

I

'

12 FANTASTIC /HOURS!

·.

. VINTAGE CHERRY IS
"MELROSE" BEDROOM!
YESIBA8ims• MABIIFEEIIT W11N1E
CHERRY FINISH SUITE WITH IDOR
DRESSER. LANDSCAPE MIRROR. 5·
DRAWER CHEST . ..
-- ...

0

,

\•_•

CLOSED TODAY TO REDUCE PRICES ON EVERY ITEM IN STOCK!

U2

'.

.FI.IXSTEEl

TOMORROW? THURSDAY! 10AM TO 10 PM!
CRED IT
TERMS
AVAI LA BLE!
• OPE N
A N EW
ACCOU NT ..
• ADD -ON
TO YOUR
PRESE NT
ACCOU NT'
BANK
CARDS
WEl C OM E!

S78 888

NEW AND UCITINGI

DINEUE
Moun Chain.

QINING ROOM'
lllh'CH,_TAIL£,

"VIRGINIA
4-PC.

~~;;;;~O~U~T~S~TA~N~D~tN~,Q. ~,. . . .. _ ,

I
IIADmONAl-PfC~N
SPECIAL OFFeR!

W/DIAWEIS
Fullwave Manre• lit

:.'!,·
.. 9ts

SOME ONE-OF-A-KINQ ...
SO ME LIM ITED OUAI'ftl·
TIES EVERYTHING \S
REDUCED! HURRY!!

YOUR CIIOICE

Vli&amp;RS III&amp;Ulll 1Y lEG. 1189.95

PlUS MANY, MAllY MOREl

OAJC'WATER BED

$78888

BARGAINS!
BARGA-INS!
BARGAINS!

"WINDSOR PARI"
TABLES BY BASSETTt~~t

liNG SIZE

Blue Flor1l Traditional

REG.
'1499.96

.

•KEMP
F R
'1 39 95
· og .
·
CHAIR. ......... .... .. '98.88
H &amp; 1. Reg . '349 .96
Single DRESSER BASE
&amp; Verticol Fromo

ROOMFULS OF FINE
FURNITURE AND
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I

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2 Sections. 16 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

square feet of office space for social services, with a
department funds .
minimum of four offices. A two-year leasesoould also
Roberts reported he has agr('('d to assist Columbia
Include interior and exterior malntalnance.
Township trustees In widening a sL'Cion of To"nship
The board approved Rutland F1re Department's
Road 1 near lhe Meigs-Vinton line.
plans to purchase fire equipment from each of four
Roberts and Ted Warner, county htghway
companies which submilted equipment bids two
superintendent, reported that snow equipmcn: at the
weeks ago 10 lhe board. Rutland will buy equipment
counly highway garage "Is In good shape for winter"
from the Sutphen Corp., of Amlin, totaling $.1,&amp;11.:-&gt;l;
with two graders and slx snowplows.
Finley Fire Equlpmenl, McConnelsville, $2,317.83;
Warner reported that sealing of coun:y road s is
Warren Fire Equipment, Warren, $2.076; and Oils
nearly finished and that employees arP presently
Mountaineer, Ravenswood, W.Va., $3,175. The Ore • working on County Road 35.
department choose the lowest bids for all equipment
Roberts. Warner and the rommlssioners discussed
needed. Total expenditures will he $11,210.33, to he
briefly the rosslblity of having a highway department
paid through an $11.1XXJ Community Development
equipment sale, but no definite decision was made in
Block Gran!. Tl)e remainder will he paid with ftre
the matter.

In rrsr&gt;&gt;nS&lt;' to a question from Commissioner Rich
Jones. Warner said that highway deparmenltruck,,
loaders and graders (wllh Ihe exception of an older
grader!. are equipped with beepers to warn when the
equipment is I:Eing operated In reverse. The question
was sparked by a recenllncidenlln Hocking County In
which a highway department official was run over
and killed by a piece of equipment as it backed up .
Warner said all new equipment is equipped with
warning beepers.
ln final business. !he commissioners approved a
request to purchase a new television for the men's
section of the county infirmary. The infirmary has
sufficient funds for !he purchase.

Glenn,
4 banks
facing
lawsuit

Eastern board seeking limit
on out-of-district staff trips .

PLUS MUCH , MUCH MOREl

ACCESSORY, Occas iona l Table. LAMP, Ro cker, RECLINER, and P1cture Reduced'
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STAND, And Every He adboard REDUCED UP TO 60%1Every Di nmg Roo m Su ite Al so
Reduced' PlUS. ALL CHAIRS, Chinas . SERVERS, T,ables . BUFFETS, An d Occ as,ona l
P1eces at SPECTACULAR PRICE REDUCTIONS! D1netteSets 1MAnRESS SETS! Bunk
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LIVING ROOM SUITE REDUCED! Plu s . Eve r y C ha ir, SOFA, Love seal.

Incredible savings events! Now! The ul!lmale furniture sale of
the 1980's .. .' Bassetl Bargain Days VIlli' From coast to coast,
participating dealer stores wi ll offer not only exci ting values
from Basset!, buC every Item in their selection wil l be reduced!
Plan now to allend th is lmportanl nationwide savings event!"

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursc;tay, September 11. 1986

By NANCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel Staff Wrller
Bid openings for office space for the Social Services
Division ol lhe Meigs County Department of Human
Servlces, and for restroom facilities for !he Syracuse
roadside park, have been set for Oct. 1, 1:30 and 2
p.m., respectively, In the office of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
Both the Syracuse project and the request for office
space will he advertised as soon as rosslble, the toard
announced In Wednesday's regular meeting.
Plans for the Syracuse facility have tEen rompleted
by Meigs County Engineer Philip Roherts and a copy
submitted to the commissioners.
The Department ofHuman Services L&lt; In needof950

$499°2,
$54900
S37909,
S14959,

lu~ura

at y

•

County commissioners schedule bid openings

,.15.,. .aa

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MATTRESS SETS!

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ANNOUNCE BASSETT BARGAIN DAYS VIII...
AT LEADING STORES COAST TO COAST!

Reg. '249" SWIVEL
ROCKERS
Reg. 'll99" 2 CHAIRS,
I OTTOMAN, Velvet Red.
All three pieces
Rea. •399" Blue Contemporary SWIVEL ROCKER
Reg. IJ.49" Blue
WING CHAIR

il.jl . tl'~('l

'29ft"
let Pint IIRW£
IIIIDII,•IID.
liGHT •. ::j1 .
0001 CIIST
.

INCREDIBLE!

RECLINERS!

2:!4
~uper Louo
21-2-31-27 .) 0-:!6

·
Vol.36, No.90
Copyrighted 1986

Showers and thundt•r&gt;;tunu,
likely torugl~. wUh a ~•w lk··
tween 63 and iU. Partly cloud~·
Ftiday, with high• betwe-en 75
and 110. '111r probabilUy ol
predpltation is 70 pe"'ent tonight and near zero Ftiday
night .

Dail) NumiH·r

•

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Ohio Lottery

evtiit·ts

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ReJ. IJ.49"
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R... '799" BASSETT
RECLINER Rust &amp; Beige
Stripe. Early Amer.
R... '799" Flexsteel
RECLINER. Trad. Print
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The Eastern Local Board of
Education, meeting Tuesday in
regular session, approved several
requests from personnel to a !lend
school-related meetings.
It was noted that the board is
attempting to limit thl' numi:Er of
personnel who atlend workshops.
meetings and conferences by requiring reports to the board and
related personnel from those who
attend such activities.
Approved by lhe board were
requests from Cathy Johnson,
Chester principal, to attend a
Tri-County Principals' In-Service
meeting on Sepl.17 and a Beginning
Elementary Principals' Conference on Sept. 15-16. The board wUI
1!!\Y .]'o~~~-~ mlleage for lhe
ln-~rv~ meeting. Costs ,to the
board lor the principals' conference
wiU be a registration lee of $95, $65
for a single room, and mileage.
The board also approved a
request from Dennis Eichinger,
Eastern alhletlc director and head
basketball coach, to attend an
Athletic Directors' Clinic Ocl. 5-7.
Registration and mileage cosls for
lhe clinic will I:E paid from the

district's athletic fund. The board
will pay the costs for a substitute
teacher for Eichinger.
A trip to lhe Farm Science
Review In Columbus on Sept. 24 for
Vocational Agriculture Teacher
Brian Windon and 17 students was
also approved. The toard will pay
lransportallon costs to Include
gasoline and the regular salary of
lhe bus driver. The board wUI also
pay for a substitute teacher for
Windon.
Some elementary schools In
Eastern district do not have head
teache rs. It was reported that this is
a problem when a principal from
one of these schools must attend
functions outside the school durtng
day hours. In order to alleviate the
problem, the board decided that a
substltute teacher should he hired
to replace a regular teacher In lhe
school, who would In tum replace
ti:E principal for the day or days
Involved.
The following business was also
conducted by the board:
-Con! inulng contracts were
awarded bus drivers Flossie Dill

and Rulh Masters, whose names
were unintentlonally omltled from
a r:revlous list of drivers who were
awarded contracts.
-Hired Pam Doughitl as girls'
junior varsity volleyball coach.
-Hired Don Jackson as a
volunteer girls' junior high volleyball coach, at no cost to the board.
-Added Wanda Wolfe to a list of
substitute cafeteria workers.
-Approved payment of mileage
to Coach Ralph Wigal to a track
even! held this past spring In
Columrus.
-Following completion ri the
ngular rusiness. the board rroved
Into executive session.
Present for the · meeting were
ooard members Roger Gaul, ~"!'·~'
Smith, Kaley Manlcke and
Caldwell; Board President Susie
~elnz; Superln ten dent Richard Roherts and Eastern High Principal
Dan Apling. Clerk Eloise Basion
was absent because of a death In the
family.
The next regular meeting of lhe
toard wil he Sept. 23, 8 p.m. The
r&lt;Jbllc Is welcome to attend.

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP! I - 'llle
Federal Elections Commission has
filed a lawsuit against Sen ..John
Glenn. his 1~ presidential committee and four Ohio banks.
The sui!, filed Wednesday in U.S.
Distrlc! Court In Columbus,
charges !hat $2 million In campaign
loans were illegal. It seeks civil
penalties against the defendants of
S5.1XXJ or more.

MORE SPACE AVAilABlE- Danny Circle, an employee rl GaWa
Paving Inc., Wellstm, applies a fresh 11\,Ver of striping at the site of the
new parking lot built lor Holzer CliniC Inc.'s main facUIIy on Jackson
Pike m GaiDpoU... Gallla Pavmg representative Paul Edwards said
nearly :1!0 new parking spaces are heing created from the areu hehlnd

Holzer Medical Cent..r.

Panel backs fire chiefs action during toxic blaze
By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! I
Miamisburg Fire Chief RotErt
Menker set the stage lor controlling
a dangerous phospl'orus !Ire two
months ago by forcefully taking
command and rebuffing two at ·
tempts lo overrtde him .
This was afflnned Wednesday by
several panelists, Including
Menker, a! an Industry-sponsored
seminar on how to handle disasters
with hazardous chemical
malerlals.
Mayor Dennis Kissinger of Mia·
mlsburg said there were four
different phosphorus emergency
response teams. railroad and shipping personnel, chemical company

RGC names
new director
of program
RIO GRANDE - Richard Utton
has been appointed director of
conllnuingeducatlon at Rio Grande
College and Community College.
A native of Jackson. Utton
graduated from RGC with a
bachelor's degree In secondary
educa !ion, majoring in history, In
1m. He received his master's
degree from John Carroll University In 1974. ·
He has taught history and social
sctenre part-time at RGC since
1~. Lltton serves as accompanls1
for the college's Graner Chorale
and choir.
"As director of oontinulng education," Utton said of his appointment, "I hope to see course
dferlngs expand as the oollege
branches out into areas oot prevlously SI!!Ved.
"Rio has always done what Rio
does well," he added. "! want to
iJ.IOd UJXln !hat"
Meeting the needs ri the non·
traditional student Is what continuIng education Is all about. Litton
said.
He was a member of RGC's first
Grande Chorale In 1966 and has
remained active ln college musical
and dramatic jl'Oducliore since his

.

.

'I

'

officials and representatives of :ll or
40 agencies on the chaotic scene.
where a toxic cloud threatened
human·health. "Everybody wanted
to get Into the act," he said.
Kissinger said Menker's command ri the situation was challenged, first by personnel from CSX
Transportation, owners of the
derailed tank car. and later U.S.
Environmental Prolection Agency
regional representatives from Chicago and New Jersey.
"Within W minutes there was a
head-on with somebody t rylng to
control it," recalled Menker, saying
he told Police Chief Rohert Goenner
Ia "send him on his way."
"We set lhe stage (lor effective

control of the situation)," Menker
Michael K. Dalton of the tec hni told Jill law enforcement officers, cal support seclionofthc Ohio EPA ,
fire fighlers, city officials 0 and also credited Menker for his strong
representatives of chemical com- presence, saying the Ore chief
panies attending !he dayiong se- knows hest !'ow to fight a !axle
minar sronsored by the Ohio chemical fire.
Manufacturers' Association.
"We had some problems from
Menker, Kissinger and Goenner people, oot from Ohio, who didn't
appeared on a panel discussing understand that,' ' said Dalton.
"Lessons Learned from Miamis· "Bob set !rem st raight.
burg," the five-day episode which
"Chief Menker did a fantastic
saw more than :Jl,!OO Miami Valley job," said Dalton. "He new exactly
residents evacuated from lhelr who was going to do what, and who
homes and rrore than liO people would help him."
overcome by toxic white pl'osptoDalton said II was evident when
rus fumes.
he arrtved on the scene thai a

system was in place to cOmbat the
fire and deal wllh other problems.
in contrast. said Dalton. the statl:'
"had some lcrrtfic problems"
Including an emergency assistance
program thai "falls apart In the
field" because of lack of radio or
telepl'one communications.
Dalton said the EPA wasn't even
certain wbo, In Its own agency, had
the authority to act at the scene.
Goenner, the rolice chief, warned
his fellow rollce officers to make
contact with amateur radio operators now. and securelheircoopera llon In case of a disaster.

Legislators eye reductions in deficit
WASHINGTON (UP! I -House
and Senat~ budget leaders predlcl
Congress will have to cut about $10
bUUon from lhe deficit thls fall to
safely slide In under the red Ink
limit or the Gramm-Rudman balanced budget law.
An unusual joint meeting of lhe
House and Senate budget commit·
tees was rostponed Wednesday and
rescheduled for today to begin the
process of complying with GrammRudman.
Administration and congressional estimates show about $9.4
bUUon in deficit reduction Is needed

lhls month for Congress to avoid
nexl Hve years, and desplle this
forced across-the-board cuts under year's windfall, will bse aoout $17
the balanced budget law.
billion next year.
Lawmakers have said the tax
Gray said Wednesday If lawmakreform bill, expecled to be ap- ers could stay within the planned
proved thls rronth, soould provide budget and approve about $10
an SU billion windfall to the llllion in deflclt-reductjon meagovernment, which could take care sures, he would he ab~r·to assure
of Ire deficit problem !hls fall. but the House (thai) we wllii:E under
House Budget Commltlee Chair- the Gramm-Rudman lhresoold ."
man Wllllam Gray, D-Pa., and his
That thresoold Is $154 billion Senate counterpart, Pete Dome- within the required $10 billion of
nicl, R-N.M., are r&lt;JShing for atout Gramm-Rudman's $144 billion
$10 bllllon In cuts to avoid an even target for fiscal 1987, which begins
higher deficit In 1987.
Ocl. 1. The federal deficit currently
The tax bill gains and loses Is atout $230 billion.
money several times during !he

Silence surrounds Gorbachev letter
WASHINGTON !UP!) -Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev has
repUed to President Reagan's
Richard Litton
appeal for the release ot jailed
American reporter Nicholas Danlgraduation.
Utton's wide-ranging interests loll, but lhe president says "It Isn't
are reflected by the societies In sate" to discuss the delicate Issue
which he holds memi:Ership. They publicly. .
Reagan revealed for the first
Include the Na tiona! RaUroad
time
Wednesday night that GorbaJ.lls1orlca•Soctety, Phi Alpha Theta
J.llstorlcal Society and the Titanic chev responded to a letter he wrote
appealing for Danlloll's freedom
Historical Society.
He Is a memi:Er of lhe Royal and assuring !he Soviet leader that
Society of Church Musicians and a the journalist Is not a U.S. spy.
When pressed by reporters,
fellow ·ct the American Guild of
however, Reagan begged off any
Organists.
. In addition to his degree pro- further comment, saying, "I don't
grams, Utton has Conducted post- want to rock the boat. It Isn't sate to
graduate sludles at Ohio University discuss the matter."
and Case Western Reserve
The p-esldent madethe remarks
University.
at a li~k-tie dinner in the Rose

Garden In tooor of visiting Brazl·
The department would oot reveal
· lian President Jose Sarney.
what was discussed and Dublnin
Asked If Danlioff, a U.S. News &amp; declined comment as he left the
World Reporl correspondent jailed rullding, IJ.It a senior department
Aug. 30 ln Moscow, mlgh t be olllclal said, "The diplomatic moreleased soon, Reagan said: menlum Is continuing."
"1b!re's no way ID tell."
A private American group,
· Roman Popadluk, a White House meanwhlle, has pined the ftght by
spokesman, said today !hat, "Diplo- announcing plans 10 cancel a
matic l'!ilrls have heen intensi- cuttural exchange next week In the
fied," to win Danllofl's freedom. Soviet Union unless Danlloff Is
But thi! United States Is holding released from jail.
back from stiff retaliatory meaAn admlnlstratbn riflclal told
sures such as sanctions.
United Press International today,
Soviet Ambassador Yurt Dublnln "We have made clEjlr to the Soviets
met with Secretary of State George !hat ti:Ere would be no trade," of
Shultz for 15 minutes at the State Danllotl and Gennadl Zakliarov, a
Department Wednesday ID discuss Soviet United Nations employee
the case, which threatens to derail arrested and jailed 11t spy charges
plans tor a U.S.-Soviet summit this In New York Aug. 23.
vear.
\

)

"The loans made by (the!
dllfendants ... were not made in Ihe
ordinary course of business. The
collateral accepted by the banks for
the loans to the Glenn committee
was Insufficient to guarantee repayment of the loans," the FEC said In
Its sui!.
Offered as collateral were future
fund-raising proceeds, office equipment , dime! mail lists, a $2 million
Insurance policy on Glenn's life,
and 18 letters from Glenn fund·
raisers pledging !heir l'!forts to
ret Ire !he loans.
Banks are prohibited from oontrt·
lxltlng to polllical campaigns. The
four banks, each of which made
SiOO,!OO loans to Glenn's presidential committee. are the Huntington
National Bank, BancOhioand Bank
cme, all of ColumiJJs. and Ameri·
trust of Cleveland.
The Ohio Democratic senator
said the FEC's action putlhe Issue
hefore !he courts, where he wanted
II .

"Not oniy has ti:E Federal
Elections Commission done exactly
what we wanted ti:Em to oo, bul
what we actually forced them to do
by filing our own suit against the
FEC on July 11.
"The FEC Is not a judicial body
and we told them that ~ they were
going to go around making charges
against lhe banks and the preslden·
!Ia! comminee, we wanted them to
do It In a court of law, where we
would get a fair and Impartial
hearing.

"Both the bank.' and the rommlt-

tee feel that our n·eatment by the
FEC In this matler has been
artJI!rary, Inconsistent and wrong
and we're !Ired of having this cloud
hanging &lt;Wer oor heads. We're
anxious to gel al l !he facts out
hefore toth the ('C urts and the court
of public ~Inion . "

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