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"'
Monday, September 29, 1986.:,

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Page 12-The Daily Sentin8l

•

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

Ohio Lottery

Dallas beats
St. Louis

Daily Number
()4.9

-Page 3

PICK-4
1846

•

at y
Vol.36. No.103
· Copyrighted 1986

The Daily Sentinel
readers ·are specially
invited to a FREE musical
performance of...

THE UNITED STATES
ARMY FIELD BAND
and

SOLDIERS' CHORUS

slight chance of showers
tlunderstonll'l. Low near 'lll.
Southwest winds about 10 mph.
Chance of rain :.1 percent.
Wedni'Jiday, partly cloudy wllha .
sight chance olthundeJ'IItQnns.
111gb In the mid II&amp;. Chance ol
rain :.1 percent.

•

enttne
4 Sections, 48 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 30, 1986

26 Cants

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Clary testifies for defense in murder trial
POINT PLEASANT - Kermit
· Keith "Buck" Clary. on trial in
Mason County Circuit Court lor
murder, told the jury hearing his
. casfo Monday afternoon that he did
oot intend to harm William Keith
"Barney" Brumfield when he took
a .22-callber pistol to the Glenwood
Inn on the night of Jan. 14, 198ti.
Rather, Clary said, he intended to
confront Brumfield about rumors
he was allegedly spreading about
Clary and to "scare the h... " out of
him.
"Did you intend in any way to
hurt or injure Barney Brumfield?"
defense attorney Don Kingery
asked his cltent.
"No, sir, I did nol," Clary replied.
"You just wanted the rumors
stopped?" Kingery asked.
"Yes," Clary stated.
Clary, 53. of Lesage. W.Va ., took
the witness stand In his own defense
after the noon recess Monday,
following three full days of testtrnony presented last week by Prose·cutlng Attorney Damon B. Morgan
·Jr. The state rested Its case
Monday morning after Morgan told
Circuit Judge Clarence Watt he
would not be calling his investigator, K.R. Beckett. to the witness

stand to testify about a stalement
Beckett took from Clary in April.
Beckett was however, among
111tnesses call~ by the defense
when It opened It\ case Monday
morning.
ln lrlend's rompany
A 28-year Kaiser Aluminum
employee, Clary was indtcted in
May in connection with Brumfield's
death at the Glenwood Inn on Jan.
14. A state medical examiner
testified Thursday that Brumfield
died of a gunshot wound to the
chest. caused by a .22-caJtber slug.
Clary and his defense attorneys,
Kingery and David Nibert, main·
tain the gun discharged accidently,
resulting in Brumfield's death,
when Brumfield jerked his arm
upon being confronted by Clary at
the Glenwood Inn.
The defendant, upon being sworn
in, testified he spent much or Ute
day Jan. 14 In the company of
Robert "Bob" Holley of Glenwood ,
who testified lor the state earlier in
the trial. at Anne's Lounge In
Huntington, W.Va.
While at the bar, Clary said, he
and Holley drank beer and had
conversation about a variety of
topics. They lett the lounge at about

4 o'clock In the afternoon to go to a

news stand and pay a parking ticket
Clary had received, but returned
about 30 or 4() minutes later and
stayed until about 8 p.m., Clary
said.
During til' second timet hey were
al ·Anne's Lounge, Clary told the
jury. the subject of "queers" or
homosexuals came up. Holley told
Clary, the defendant testified, that
someone in the Glenwood area was
spreading rumors Clary was queer,
rut "at first was hesitant" to tell
him the source c1 the rumor.
Clary told the jury Holley said
tbere was "a rumor going around
on me, in the neighborhood up at
Glenwood, that I was queer."
'Straightened ool'
Alta- questioning Holley several
times about who was spreading til'
rumor, Clary said, Holley finally
revealed it was Barney Brumfield.
"I wanted to know so I could get it
st raightened wt," Clary said.
Clary added that Holley told him
oot to worry about they rumor, that
he would take care of it... that "he
(Brumfield) was scaroo and he'd
been scared before." Holley also
told him that Brumfield carried a
gun, Clary recalled.

During the conversation at
Anne's wunge, Clary said, Holley
revealed the discussion In which
Brumfield alleged Clary was queer
was held at the Glen\109(1 Inn.
Upon leaving Anne's Lounge,
before getting in their respective
vehicles to head home, "I told Bob
that I should go up to the Glenwood
Inn and scare the h... out of Barney,
something to that effect," Clary
said.
It was tJ-en, Clary told the jury,
that Holley again told him that
Barney Brumfield carried a gun
and was explosive.
:'When did yoo first decide to go
to the Glenmod Inn?" Kingery
asked Clary. "Alter I got home,"
the defendant replied .
Identifies weapon
Upon arrtving at his home in the
Greenbottom area. Clary told the
jury, he told his 111fe about the
conversation \11th Holley and told
her iHended to go to the. Glenwood
Inn.
"Did you look for a pistol?"
Kingery asked Clary.
"Yes, sir," Clary replied . Hetben
identified the gun admitted Into
evidence by til' court. along wlth
other state's exhibits, Monday

morning as the weapon he had
taken with him to the Glenwood Inn
til' night of til' fatal shooting.
"Did you load lhat plstoJ?"
Kingery asked.
"No, sir," his client replied.
Clary testified he had only shot
the pistol two or three times
previous to Jan. 14, and never with
regular ammunition, but with
bird&lt;;hot. The gun, purchased in
1900, was ~ft to him upon the death
of his fatber ilur }'Pars ago, he told
Ill' jUty.
Clary said his wife first asked
him not to go to the Glen1100d Inn.
but then asked that her son John
David Hannon, who testified earlier In the trial, go with him.
"When you left the house, where
did you put til' pistol?" Kingery
asked.
Clarv told the jury he laid the
pistol on Ill' car sea t, between his
legs.
Asked by his attorney whether h&lt;:&gt;
knew tbe gun was loaded, Clary
said. "I thought it was ioadrd with
bird&lt;;hot. "
Clarv testified that his step-son
rode with him to the Glenwood Inn
and, upon arrtving, Clary got out o!
the car, stuck the pistol down In his

belt tfrom til' witness stand he
indicated how he carried the gun
into the bari and went inside the
inn .
Vlctbn 'jerked'
The defendant denied he had
looked in a window before entering
the bar, lxlt said when he ;tepped
inside he saw Brumfield. sitting at
the first barstool along the length of
the bar and walked toward him. He
testified that Brumfield saw him
roter til' bar and spoke to him.
When he approached Brumfield,
Clary said, he was seated on a stool
~&lt;1th his arms resting on the bar,
and indicated to til' jtuy \11th his
own arms how Brumfield was
sining.
Clary "walked over to (Brumfield). pulled that gun oot from
under my belt and stuck It up under
his coat and told him to put his
tgunl upon til' bar," the defendant
said . He then testified he began to
frisk Brumfield.
Brumfield then jerked in the
stool , Clary told til' jury. "His left
arm hit my right handandthepistol
discharwd .'' Clary said.
He testlfied he tben "turned
around and walkect out the door."
(Continued on Page 121

Freed Journalist
heads for home

ON STAGE
SUNDAY,
OCTOBER 5
3:00P.M.
Lvne Center
~

43 YEARS lATER - It didn't occur io a young Anna Mae
Leamond that when she said goodbye in Kentucky to her best friend
and cousin, Roy Anus, now of CaUfomia, that she ww Im't be see in&amp;
him for 43 years. Leamond and Anns renewed their acquaintances
oo Aug. 31 at a special gathering in Kentucky. Left to right are
wamond. Anns, and Leamond's sis«!r, Julll' Olm.

Rio Grande College
A Civic Presentation
of the
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
in cooperation with
Rio

After 43 years, 'lost'
cousins are reunited
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer

U you hadn't seen someone for
43 years, would you recognize
him or her?
Anna Mae Leamond of Racine
says she did.
While growing up in rural
Kentucky, Leamond says she
was "a shadow" of an older
cousin, Roy Arms. In 1943 Arms
left Kentucky to join the U.S.

I

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They combine new sounds with old ... loud
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. The Soldier's ChorUB, considered by critics to
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heea.uoe of limited ••atinll'

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OR_DER NOW BY MAIL!
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He kept In touch \11th her
through letters from ttrne to
time. However, the last letter
Leamond received from Arms
was postmarked Fort Camp
Bell, Caltt.. and he was about to
leave for military duty overseas.
Leamond flllVer .heard from
him again.
'
Of course she tljought of htrn
from tlrne to time, but as years
went by and family members
continued to lose touch and
move farther and farther apart,
she began entertaining the Idea
that her cousin had t1een killed
overseas.
That was what she belleved
until last year when she returned
to Kentucky to vlstt an ailing
-relative. While there, she
learned that her "long bst
cousin" was alive and well and
Jiving in st.
eaw.
So Leamond ·renewed her
"cousinship" and "friendShip"
\11th Anns via long d!stanre
teleplllne.
·
Then she and her sister, June
Com, of Dana, Ky., tookaootion
to !llrpriSe Arms and !ly to
Colora&amp; where he was to be In
attendance at an army reunion.

Joe.

There they could renew acquaintances In person.
"I'm scared to death of
Dying," laughs Leamond. "I
wouldn't have done that Dr just
anybody."
Unfortunately, Anns had to
canrel his hip to til' reu non at
the last minute because of an
unexpected health problem.
Disappointed , Leamond and
her sister turned right around
and flew lllme.
This summer. Arms decided
to come back to Kentucky tort he
annual Arms reunion, near
Prestonsburg. Leamood made
plans to attend also. but, by
anot ber stroke of bad luck,
ended up missing the event by a
day.
Disappointed once again, sbe
was at her sister's bomeln Dana
when Arms called and told her to
stay J)lt He was coming up
there to see her. They made
plans to meet the next day at the
Dewey Dam park.
As Leamond and her sister
were driving through the park
looldng lbr a familiar face.
Leamond spied _a man lit a
tei£Phone lxloth. She only saw
him from behind. rut she knew It
was him, ".white hair and all."
As It turned rut, he was calling
her sis~'s llluse to lind oot
where they were, or if they had
missed each other again.
It was a wonderful afternoon
lbr Leamond, although shj! says
she and her oousln could have
speilt a week together and stlli
not caught upon 43 years: "Bull
was ~st happy to see him."

FRANKFURT, West Germany
IUPII - American journalist
Nicholas Danlloff, free after a
month of dententton in Mosoow on
spYing chai-ges, · new home to the
United States today, joking that he
had left his jogging suit in the &amp;&gt;viet
capital.
Danilof!, 51, the U.S. News &amp;
World Report correspondent freed
alter high-level negotiations between Moscow and Washington,
Dew to Frankfurt Monday after his
release. and departed the West
German city at 7:45p.m. EIIT for
Washington.
Danllof! and his wife, Ruth , left
on a Pan American fllght arrtving
al Dulles Airport outside Washing ton, D.C .. at 4:4() p.m.
Danlloff said he had been through
Frankfurt many times on reporting
asslgnements but never "in such
glortous style."
Pausing on the tarmac, Danlloff.
an inveterate jogger even before
the runping craze started , la mented that he had left his jogging
suit back in Mosoow.
The Danlloffs spent the night at
the Frankfurt residence of U.S.

Consul Alexander Ratrray .
When Danilof! arrived in Frankfurt Monday night. he said he knew
nothing of tJ-e real . that won his

treeaom. ·

"I know that I'm free," he said.
"It's wonderful to be back in the
Wesl."
A diplomatic source at the United
Nations said Monday Danilof! was
released under an agreement
reached between Secretary of State
George Shultz and &amp;&gt;viet Foreign
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze.
The source. who is not American
and who asked not to be identified.
said the deal catied for Danllof! to
be freed Immediately in exchange
for the eventual r£Patriatton of
accused &amp;&gt;viet spy Gennadl
Zakharov.
Shultz and Shevardnad&gt;e held
four prtvate meetings In New York
during the past week In hope of
strtklng a deal to ease the I.Ainilo!f
espionage controversy, which
threatened plans for a superpower
summit this year.
The United States has contended
Danllof!'s arrest on spy charges
was a ploy to make him a hostage in

•••

I

FREEDOM - American joumallst Nicholas Daniloll answered
questions on tbe airport iannac at Frankfurt, West Gennany, alter
arriving from Moscow Monday. DanUoll, accused of spying f&lt; the
Soviet Union, was allowed to make a hasty departure from ~· •SOOW
Monday attemoon. (UPI)
a &amp;&gt;viet effort to 111n release of
Zakharov , a &amp;&gt;viet physicist employed by til' UN. Zakharov was

arrested on spy charges in New
York precisely a week before the
KGB arrested IAI,niloff.

Tax reform backers seek to resolve squabble
By JOSEPH MIANOWANY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan expects to sign the tax
reform bill by mid- October, lxlt
members of Congress who approved it are trying to settle a
last-minute dispute over some
special tax breaks.
The bill was given ftnal congressional approval Saturday hy the
Senate, and presidential spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters
Monday that Reagan expected 11
would be one or two weeks before 1t
arrived at the White House.
Even In the best of clrcumstan.
ces, It commonly would take days
for a bU! the slzeo!the tax measure

Aides said if the House and
- more than 900 pages - to be addit tonal Jegislat ion, t be tax bill
printed on parchment and deli - would be sent to Reagan with the Senate could not resolve that
technical and printing faults.
di lference, tbe tax bill would be
vered to the president.
Besides
fixing
those
problems.
printed
with t be technical fault s and
But congressional aides said
however,
the
extra
House
leglsla·
sent
to
Reagan
.
there also was a relatively minor
tion
added
a
handful
of
special
tax
One
top
Senate
aide said because
problem with special tax breaks
treaks
to
the
!ill,
aides
said
Congress
wants
to adjourn this
known as "transition rules" that
which
miffed
some
senators
and
week, there would be "less than a
are designed to belp a variety of
prompted
them
to
decide
agalnst
a
:D-OOchanoe " such extra legislation
lawmakers' favorite projects and
similar
extra
measure.
would
be approved.
companies. The bill contains
hundneds of treaks wtrth about
$10.6 bllllon in the ne&lt;t five years.
Short(y alter the House passed
the b!U Thursday, it also approved
anotber piece of Jegtslatlon designed to correct a · number of
technical errors and prtnting probBy United Pnlss lnlemallonal
lems In the measure. Without the
School officials In Mlll'letta decided to cancel rla'5es Monday in
light of a state Department of Education ruling that the distrtct's
effort to provide interim Instruction did rot meet state standards as
the strike by Marietta Education Association membe rs enll'red its
fourth week.
The state said last week that Marietta failed to hold kindergarten
or handicapped classes, used uncertified teachers and failed toolfer
the required 45 high school cour..es.
Superintendent George Kingsmore said school ofOcials are
Total grant request will be$5,000.
considering
what can be done to address the non -complianel! areas
This amounts to $:fi() for each o! 16
and
get
the
district's
4,150 students back in the classrooms.
sidewalk ramps to be Installed
No
new
contract
talks
are scheduled In the d!strtct. and Kings more
. within the v1Uage.
said
the
school
board
has
made its last proposal to the 245 striking
It was necessary to pass the
teachers.
resolution in special session since
"Last Thursday, we gave them oor Cnal.dter, and they rejected
deadline tor submitting the grant
that," Kingsmore said.' "We'v~ adVise! the mediator that we're not
application to the state Is Oct. 1.
willing to talk. Yourflnaldl!rls ywrflnalolfer, and when yw J)ltali
Present for the rllo'eling in
of your cards on the table, yw don't go beyood that .''
addition to Reed were Mayor
Olaf O'Dell, spokesnuin for the MEA, said the teachers union Is
Richard Seyler, Clerk-Treasurer
stili
lllpetul that the school board will consider the (wchers'
Jane Walton, and council members
counter-proposal.
He said school officials aren 't bargaining in good
Jom Andei'SOJJ, Blii Young, Betty
. faith, and the flUng of an unfair lahor practice char~ ts being
Baronlck and Larry Wehrung.
considered.
Councilman Htmry Werry. was
Marietta teachers walked off the job Sept. 3 C7.'er economic and
abseil.
non-economic Issues.

State orders classrooms
in Marietta to be closed

Pomeroy will apply
for block grant funds
f'Qmeroy Village Council passed
a resolu lion Monday evening In a
:!(}..minute special session, to apply
for a Community Development
Block Grant to Install sidewalk
accesses for the handicapped,
reports Councilman Bruce Reed.
Coundl was made aware of the
grant through Pllmeroy Chapter 53
of the ·Disabled American
Veterans.
·
Sieve Eblin, DAV president, and
Kenneth Cunditf, secretary, were ·
. at the meeting to disCUss the grant
proposal whlcb Is *&gt; IE wrttten by
Kim Shields, Meigs County director
d. development.

---"...---- - ---- --· -- ---------- - -r------- ................;.;.......................

loO'. .-........_,.......... __ _~--- -- -, ----­

....

· -···--- -------~-------

�Tuesday. September 30, 191!16

Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~rb
~v

r"'T""L-.J L......... ~d · ~

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The Un ited Press I nt ernati onal, In la nd Da i ly Press
Association and t he American Newspaper Publ ishNs Associa ti on.
LETTERS OF OPJNJON

I

I

Sex and the .courts ______Ja_m_es_J._K_i:lpa--'t-ri___ck

The ·Daily Sentinel
~m~

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
P4meroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, September 30, 1986 ·

are wetcomr . Th(&gt;_v shou ld bC' less tha n 300 word s

WASHINGTON - Recent
months have seen significant legal
revetopments affecting secuai harassment In the workplace. Eloth
j:llbllc agencies and private employers - !llt to mention employees themselves - would be
well advised to catch up on the
changing law.
Until the U.S. Supreme Court
decided Meritor Savings Bank v.
VInson this past June, It was
generally understood that a woman
tor a man) complaining of sexual
discrimination would have to prove
exactly that: outright dlscrtmlnation. There would have to be
evidence that an employer had

long. All letters are s ubject toed Iling atu:l must bC' slgnrd wlth na me. a~drl'Ss an d
telephone number. No un slgnro letters will bf' publi shed . l.f'tters should be In
good tastt'. addressing Is su es, not JX&gt;rsona lilies

refUsed to hire, or to promote, or to
grant or deny certain prlvUeges on
account of sex. Title VI1 oft he Civil
Rights Act of 1964 expressly
prohibits this kind of thing.
Then came the high court's
unanimous decision of June 19 In
the Vlnron case, and now the 7th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has
added Its weight to the proposition
that discrimination comes In various forms. ·
The important thing about the
VInson opinion is that It flatly
rejected the argument that the only
prohibited discrimination is economic dlscrlmlnatkm. Speaking
through Justice WOllam Rehnquist

(the same wmiam Rehnqulst who
Is supposed to he so anti-feminist 1.
the court ruled that sexual harassment Itself is discriminatory. In the
VInson case, the complainant
charged that her manager at the
branch bank had led her Into sexual
relations, had fondled her in the
prt1Sence of other employees. and ln
other ways had created a kind of
sexual tension.
'

It Is not necesssary under Title
VII, said the court, to prove actual
physical harassment. It Is enough

to slllw that a "hosllle or offensive
working environment" has been
created. Women have a right IUlder

Jusr SA'l•••
NO.

Backstairs at the White House

The women who
back up Reagan
'

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON iUPii - There are some light moments during
President Reagan's campaign forays, even spiritual.
At a fund -raiser with Reagan in attendance in Los Ange les. actor
Charlton Heston introduced Rabbi Yola Butler. who quipped: "Dear Lord,
forgive me. every rabbi wants to be Introduced by Moses ."
Heston is noted for his role as Moses in a biblical movie.
The current issue of Cosmopolitan magazine features six young women
at the White House who help the president and the movers and shakers
carry out their jobs.
They find their jobs exciting, rewarding and time consuming, but giving
them little time for a social life, although some keep a cocktail dress in the
office just ln case the opportunity arises.
The women serve in personnel and media relations and arrange travel
and appointments. But President Reagan has no high -powered women at
the White House advising him on policy.
He does have one woman in the Cabinet . Transportation Secretary
Elizabeth Dole. And Rozanne Ridgeway, assistant SErretary of state. has
some clout and sits in on top-level meetings. But women do !llt have a say
tn major deliberations at the White House. They are still the hod carriers,
helping to make things work, but not Involved in reaching big decisions.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower, daughter of President Richa rd Nixon, a nd her
Husband. David Eisenhower , grandson of President Dwigh t D.
Eisenhower. have written books that will be oompetin g on the stands this
14!ll.
·: David Eisenhower tapped valuable personal leners from his
gi'andfather for his book, "Eisenhower At War," which has won rave

the law to a working atmosphere
"free from discriminatory lntlml·
dation. ridicule and Insult." Merely
occasional Incidents are not actionable. The harassment must be
"sufficiently severe or pervasive to
alter the conditions of the victim's
employment and to create an
abusive working environment."
On Aug. 28, the 7th Circuit handed
down its oplnlon In the case of a
woman who had been discharged
as a Ore department dispatcher In
East Chicago. The employer ln this
case was a public employer. The
case thus turned not on Title vn,
but rather on the requirement dthe
14th Amendment for equal prole&lt;&gt;
tlon of the law.
Speaking through Judge William
J . Bauer. the court ruled that the
dispatcher "was the victim of
sexual harassment that amounted
to sex discrtmlnatlon under the
Equal Protection Clause." The
woman had suffered "many Ins tanres of sexual harassment and often
complained of them through official
channels. but nothing was done."
"Harassment was the general,
ongoing and accepted practice of
the department, and high-ranking,
supervisory, and management d!lclals knew of. tolerated, and
participated In it."
All this added up to the very kind
of hosttle environment condemned
by the Supreme Court ln the Vinson
case. Said Judge Bauer: "Creating
abusive conditions for female employees and not for males Is
discrimination. Forcing women
and not men to work ln an
environment of sexual harassment
is nc different than forcing women
to work in a dirtier or more
hazardous environment than men.
Such IUljustlfied unequal treatment
is prohibited by the Equal Protection Clause."
The two judicial opinions, taken
together, should prompt prudent
employers into protective action.

Mishandling waste ____Ja_ck_·A_n_d_er_.~o_n_&amp;_1.,-o.~_:_ep_h____:Sp:,__e_ar

WASHINGTON- The Pentagon
is one of the nation's biggest
producers of hazardous wastes fro m dangerous chemical compounds to radioactive and biological materials that could polson the
revieW$.
;' Julie Eisenhower has written a touching, engrossing biography of her environment for generations.
Yet the military is exempt from
mother, Pat Nixon. a private person thrown into the political fray .
: Mrs. Nixon was a popular first lady with the people and the press. She federal regulations that govern
dlways went that extra mile to make the White House a hospitable. warm. private industry. The genera ls
don't have the Environmental
lnvlt lng place.
: Her daughter tells of her childhood when her rmt hcr died when she was Protection Agency or other federal
J.3 and she had to take over running the family household, sharing chores watchdogs lookin g over their
shoulder.
with two brothers.
This may explain the Pentagon's
: Mrs. Nixon often suffered in silence . particu larly during til&lt;&gt; Watergate
scandal. and observers have often wondc•red whether the rutcomc would appalling record in tl1e disposal of
poisonous wastes despite t tv&gt; expenhave been different if her husband had list ened to her.
diture
of millions of dollars. Pen:- But Julie Eisenhower makes clear that Nixon. in trv lng to shield the
tagon
toxic
waste cont racts have
family from his ordeal Ihat eventually engu tted his pres idency, was unable '
..to prevent them from being hurt. only from knowing the facts until it was sky rocketed from $4 million In 1982
to more than $88mllllon this yearloa late.
: Her book, "Pat !lllxon - The Untold Story.'' is an in teresting and and will total well over $3 billion
important hehlnd·the-sce nes view of life in tli White House for history during the next five years.
But according to the Defen's e
buffs.
'
'
Department' s own Inspector gen: White House policeman are paid to ~'uard the' president. and they do that era l. the money is not well spent.
"The Department of Defense is
with great courtesy to the public. especially at the gates. Tht•y also handle
With respect those who have come to ser thr president to plead their cases no t ln full compliance with the
Resource Conservation and Recov~~ have no appointment.
; But sometimes they are assigned another role- to hold the press at bay
.when White House chief of staff Donald Regan passrs down the colonnade
)liter waving President Reagan off to Camp David from the south lawr.
· Reporters first try to question the pres ident. who L' smiling, wav ing and
1gnorlng them as he heads for the helicopter to whisk him to his retreat.
:Then they race to sec if they can roJTal Regan , who has his fingers on all the
MJNar, N.D. !NEAl - Earlier
-power buttons in the White House,
this year, several parents with
;. But Regan has ordered the policeman rn duty to mid back the press until
hyperac tive imagin at ions de ,be returns to his office. In some ways it was ever thu s. Bu t it also accounts
manred that the school hoard here
for Regan helngdubbed "Mr. Prime Minister·· and "Deputy President" at
suppress the popu lar chtldren's
:itmes.
books that they helleved contained
"sexually suggestive Illustrations."
Becalfse Minot has frequently
succumbed to to those who Insist
upon censoring material they see as
~ Today is 1\Jesday. Sept. 30. the 273rd day of 1986 with' 92 to follow.
salaclus, subversive or otherwise
.• The moon Is moving toward its new phase.
offensive, the llloks presumably
~ There is no morning star.
faced the literary equivalent of a
' The evening stars are Mercury, Venus. jV!ars, J upiter and Saturn.
reath sentence.
: Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include German
But this city apparently learned
physicist Hans Geiger, co-inventor of the Geiger counter, In 1882; film
some Important lessons from tlllse
pJrector Lewis Milestonp !"All Quiet on the Western Front" I ln 1895;
earlier attempts to ban books. In
tormer Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox in 1915 (age Til; novelist Truman
this year's case, a committee of
Capote In 1924 ·
ntnp people - parents. teachers
and librarians - was formed to
carefUlly assess the allegations.
After considering the matter t&gt;r
several weeks, the committee
rejected the flimsy complaint and
voted to retain the hooks - "Where
ttv&gt; Sidewalk Ends" and "A Light In
the Attic," both by She! Silverstein.
That episode Is Blustratlve of an
enlightened attitude that exists In
many communities at a tlme wren
other cities and towns are allowing
self-proclaimed guardians of j:llbllc
morality to suppress books, mag aztnes and plays they find personally
repugnant.
Score of examples of such
censorship are documented ln a
new report, "Attacks on the
Freedom to Learn," prepared by
People for the American Way, a
constitutional liberties crgantzation
based ln WashlngtQn, D.C.
"The number of censorship
Incidents orchestrated by the far
right continues to rlse," the report
says, noting that several ultraconservative groups . ceaselessly
complain about "secular huma~EJH
'"
.,. .....
nism" In books and educational
materials.
'f· .""'

ery Act and other environmental
laws and regulations," the lnspec·
tor general concluded. "Overall
management of hazardous materials / hazardous waste is unsatisfactory . ... The hazardous waste
disposal contracting procedure is
inefficient. at times ineffective. and
costly. Trainin g and education of
hazardous material handlers, supervisors and commanders Is
In adequate."
This alarming conclusion was
based on Inspections at 39 military
bases In the continental United
States and 33ln Hawaii, Guam and
seven foreign countries. Our associate Donald Goldberg obtained a
copy of the closely held report. Here
are ltV' highlights:
- No one has laid down the law.
There Is no co mprehensive,
Petagon-wlde policy on the handling of toxic wastes. "The DOD
approach that "the
mllitary
services know best what they need
Is causing fragmented management," the Inspector general's

report observed.
- The Pentagon Is out of step
with everyone else. For example,
the single policy guideline followed
by the brass was promulgated In
19lll - and D:&gt;esn't conform to
federal laws or regulations. Even
the Pentagon's basic definition of
hazar&lt;bus waste doesn't agree with
that laid down by the federal
@lVernment for private Industry a crucial dtst inctlon for legal
reasons. And military officers
routinely allow storage of dangerous materials In flicUities that don't
meet government standards.
-The military probably doesn't
know what It's doing. "Qualified
engineering, scientific and envirOnmental specialists" are In woefully
soort supply in the Defense Department, partly for budgetary reasons.
"Public Jaw. public Interest. hazar&lt;bus. waste program emotional
Impact, personal llabtuty of the
Installation commander, etc .. wUJ
not allow DOD hazardous materlal/harar&lt;bus waste staffing requirements to be Ignored," the report

Fighting the censors ______R_ob_e_rt_W_al_le_rs

·troday in history

--

·;

"•

Dallas finishes strong in 31.-7 NFL victory over Cardinals
By WARREN MAYES
ST. LOUIS (UPI I - Just when
the St. Louis Cardinals thought they
were getting back In the game. the
Dallas Cowboys put them out.
The Cardinals scored on the
opentngdriveofthesecond half, but
the Cowboys used a kickoff return
to set up a decisive touchdown en
route to a lopsided 31-7 victory
Monday night.
"We started to jell after (Gordon 1
Banks' kickoff return," said Dallas
Coach Tom Landry, who tied Don
Shula for second place for most
eareer victories as an NFL coach
with 256. "After we scored, that
seemed to take the wlnd from their
satls.
"Our comeback in the third
quarter was the key. We did the
same thing against Atlanta last
week and didn't wln. The ability to
bounce back was encouraging."
With Dallas leading 10-7, Banks
galloped 56 yards, hefore Cedric
Mack made a touchdown-saving
tackle at the St. Louis 43.

Minot probably reached the nadir
of Its censorship efforts In 1982,
when lt banned Newsweek from a
high school curriculum on the
grounds that the magazine was
permeated with "humanist" notions. The prohibition was hastUy
rescinded after It Inspired nationwide derision.
This year, however. several
members of the review committee

NY Giants at St . louis, 1 p.m
Dallas at [lem.·er. ~p.m .

Majors

lndlanapotls at San F'ran&lt;'is&lt;."U. 4 11m
IMfalo ar NY Jets, 4 p.m
T;~mJ)il Bily a.II.A Rams . 4 p.m

i\MF..R.ICAN LEAGliE

8y Unik'd Pretlto lnU'rrwuklnal

"""

Monday. Ocl. 6
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9&lt;l Ill .fffi If! i l .145 ~ 1 1/

dkr;ton
N~· York
Toronto
Drtroit
lif'l.'l' land

tl,') 72 . ~1

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Cif'\'l'lantl t:-.i;&gt;i&lt;m 11 \l 1 :11 ~inr'oi''&gt;~IIJ

IS. l:li,ll: .'f, p.m
California tMrCasJdllli 91 al Kan~sfit~
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enthusiastically defended the boOks
under attack. A teacher said they
were "extremely popular In our
school," while a librarian said they
were "well loved by children and
adults."
In Minot - and other communities throughout the country tlllughtful people understand the
purpose of education Is to teach
young people oow to think, not what
to think.

111.1 'i.1 !lill !1.1 7~ 'i:.lo!l :JI1·,

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l'lnsi:RIIl!h 1RhcxFn l'i·ll l at St Louis
tCOX ll ·tll,lt.Ji p.m
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Transactions
Baslll'tball
Ph iladelphia - Tradf'd N"nt('r (l('tt1on
J r• hTLo;c.n i\1\d a fir.; I· 1'0\l n::l draf1 pick in 1~
1o1 Sra lt lr' lor «'nlr r Tim McCormic ~ &lt;tnd
forward Danny Vranf"'i
f .....,
~1:. rist - :\am t&gt;d Thn Murra\ J ssL~ tanl
('().]('h

Wa lvf'd y,1fi' rn·l•I\·Pr Alton
Alf'X L'&gt; r.U ln]Uil'd rN' I'\'&lt;'
Nf",,' En)lland - Tradl'd crfr n~ h· r tllck
V...r\Ci&lt;' 1ar nn to San Dk&gt;~ ChaqOJ't'!&gt; lor· " "
undbclosrd t!llt7 draft r hok'&lt;'
Hoc.ilf'Y
11f'lm il - Srnt ~ltemPr Mark Lal-bn:'!lt
and ck'f(lru;('ffial1 Jim ~11h and Ptlll
l') &lt;;arta no In Adlrondark of t tl' Am;•rk"an
lh.w:·tw.· l.rai!Uf' and r iRhl 'ol'\nl'[ Brmt Frd\·li
to R('~ lr\&lt;1 u f ttw:&gt; W(";tf'm Hock~ l('al&lt;\l('
Ho•r11ord - Sus~ndro drff'nst.•man Mark
l'itt('oon for Jn ina&gt;llnll&lt;' pt•rlod fnr lalltnl!.
to r('IJOf' IP llln¢lamton d thfo Anwri&lt;'an
ll ••·kf•\ ].J ·aj..'\.1!'
M\nnc•&lt;;.o:;ota - Sli,TJI.Id 1it:;ht wing £linn
Ci('('al'{'lh and 1•·1• ~~o1nJ! Brinn MIJ('LA'Ilan to
thn"l" w.u &lt;'Ontrac·rs
!olo1.1.'1•r

W•·hlt;l - Go.;olkwpr r Jatt Oi('S('n rrtin'd

lJPI ratings
NFL standings
,\nwrll·llfl ( 'onh•n'III'C'
fA-a

rt·

\\' L T

1'·\

1\..E\o\ \'ORK tl :P11- The L:nltf'd Pr[l!o.~
lnlo'l'lt.tllurul l Roord of Cwc~ Top :111
!tlllf't:&lt;' lootball l"&lt;lfln J&lt;s . ......ith n.·st·pill('('
\'Ot"" ••nd 1·rnu ·d In ])lln'nt hC'Sf'!i. tota l polnl ~
1hHSI'&lt;l on 1"l \X) lilt o; lor Ill :-t pi;Jo: "t'. 1~ lor
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San Fran
1.,\ Rams
"'""' Orlfofl.'

1

Sunda_\·. Sf'pl. :JI

PhlladC'Iphl :t J.l , L\ Rams Jl
PltrshltJ:h Zl . ll ouslon IIi rlrf 1
SM F'rancl~ :tl . Miami 16

WW!hlnl(1on 19. S(la"lfo I~
NY .IPI ~ 'Jl. lndlnnapoll~ 7
f)(ln v('l' '!l, N~· Eruti!Uid l1
LA Ra kh~ 17. San Dlrgo 'Ll
AtiUIIl&amp; :n Tll(TI])II Bay 'II

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:n . Sr. Loots 7
S.rda)', Ot't. 5

{'\Jl('lnnaU \ 'S.

G Bay

(MI!II."I 1

ll"('f'h · in~:

\ 'Oif"\·

Ail

l.-unr:lllltr •d

Saturday's games
~alunl"'"
~lo fliiiP~

Foathall Sc~

8" Ullled Pre&amp;tlJMenuUionw.J
ntlnol~ ut Ohio Stat('
Wl'!llf'rn Mldl at BowUn!i: Grt'l'n
C'rlllral Mlr h at I&lt;Mt Sl
Eust~rn Mlrh at To ~PM 1n 1
Miami at OhJo Unl\'MITy
l.oul!lvUk&gt; &lt;IT Clndnnall
DuqUMrf' a t Dayton
Cmtral S1 at Llnroln 1Mo r
Mhland at GoorwtCMin ~Ky1
Baldw.,·WalliK't at Wab.a~ 1lnd 1
Capital at Marietta
Hf'ltl-1~~ at M ~lld ll$l\lm
Wl!tmlrr!l a t Mount Union

NY C.lants '11. r.;,..,.,. Ork•aru; li
-14 . f'lnr lnl'liltl 7
nC'\·rt:Uld U . tx&gt;trolt :!l
Mlnll("!l\01" 4:! , (;r«'n fl.ao, ~
K11n~.'l n~· :JJ. BJffatlli
('h~~

D11l ht ~

tlihl'' '

p.m

C'l!'vrland at PlltsbuJ"A:t'l , 1 p. m
Houston al D£&gt;11'011 , I p.m

LA. Rn ldt&gt;r!l a t Kansas City. 1 p. m
MJaml at NN.' England, 1tJ.m.

Mlni'II:'!!Ota at C'hiC'ap;o. I p.m

rtllli&amp;d('lphla ~~ Atlan!il. 1 p.m
Wuhlnwon at NIW Ork&gt;ans, 1 p.m .

OhloN orttrrnatOtll'rbeln 1n1
Alk&gt;JZh('ny a! WOOS!{'f
Ohio W~an at Case Reserw
Otlr&gt;rlln .at Dl'tllllon

Kt'llyon at AJbkm 1Mk'hl
Bluffton al Deftana&gt;

HOJI(' IMIChl at Ftndla)
Hiram at Crow C lfl• ·1 Pa 1
.lolln Ca!T'OU at CaMl'gie-MelJon 1P11 \

n·nll!llll!amf'

Jl'l 1
Fon'('.

improved to 16-14 despite surrendering three lllme runs to set a
record of 49 homers allowed in a
season. Hall of Farner Robin
R.orerts hoo held the previous
record, 46 with the 1956 Phlllies.
Y IU1 kees 8, 11 ge rs I
At New York, Dennis Rasmussrn. 17-6, scattered six hits and
Dave Winfield drove in his 100th
and !Ol.st runs of the season to lead
the Yankees. Winfield recame the
first Yankee sinCE' Joe DiMaggio to
drive in at least 100 runs in five
straight seasons. DiMaggio' s
strmk lasted seven straight years
(1936-1942} .
Red Sox 7, Orioles 5
At Boston, Wade Eloggs went 2for
4 to ra lse his major league-leading
batting average to .353 and drove in
three runs to lead the Red Sox.
Boston needs to win its remaining
six games to record a 100-victory
season t&gt;r the first time since 1946.
RIUlgers 3, A's 0
At Arlington, Texas. Pete Inca vi gila hit a two-run homer and Ed
Correa and Jeff Russell combined
on a four-hitter to lead the Rangers.
Correa. 12-13, gave up onP hit,
struck out eight and walked three
before leaving alter six innings with
a sore right arm. Ru ssell notched
his second save.
Royals 2, Angels I
At Kansas City, Mo., Lonme
Smith homered and George Brett
doubled ln a run to Uft the Royals.
Mark Gublcza. who gave up a
homer to Mark R,yal in the t&gt;urth
inning , improved to ll-6. Bud Black
finis red for his eighth save_California starter Urbano Lugo fell to 1-1.
Dodgers 10, Padres 0
At San Diego. Orel Hershiser
sca ttered eight hits for his first
shutout of the season and Jose
Gonza lez, Pedro Guerrero and
Mike Sciascia homered. Hershlser
improved to H -13. wser Ray
Hayward, 0-2, lasted 2 2-3 innings,
during which he uncorked three
wlld pitches and committed an
error and a balk.
At Chicago. heavy rains forced
postponement oft he game between
the Mariners and thP WhiiP Sox.
Weather permitting, the game will
be made up as part of a doubleheader tonight.

to Dallas.'' Lomax said with a
laugh . "It' ' rot the interceptions

By United Press International
Akron tailback Mike Clark has
hePn named Ohlo Valley Conference Offensive Player of the Week
for his part in a come-from -behind
:/D-17 wln over Central Florida
Saturday.
Clark, from Cleveland, Ohio.
rushed 31 limes for 255 yards and
two touchdowns.

The Daily Sentinel
!USPS IH-!160 1

A

Dh~lon o(

Multimedia, lnr .

Publlshi'd rvPrv artPrnoon. Monday
through Frida Y. 111 Court St .. Po·
mProy, Ohio, by thr Ohio ValJ('y Pub·
lls hlng Company ' Mulllm('d la . Inc ..
Pomrro'J. Ohio 4~769. Ph . 992 -:!l:Jfl. Sf'·
cond d~!'s pos la~f' paid at Pomf'roy.
Ohio.
· Mf'mbN :

United Press ln lNnat ional.

Inland Da il ~· Prf&gt;ss As soc i a tio n and the
Ohi o Nf'wsPa p&lt;'r A ssoclat lon . National
Advl'rttsln ~

Rf'prC'S I'ntatlve. Branham
NPW.spaper Sa lt•s. 733 Third Avf&gt;n ue.
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POSTMASTER : Sc&gt;nd addrE'Ss ('hanJ.!:PS
10 Thf' Daily Sentine l. 111 Court St.
Pofll('roy, Ohio 457£8.

that oother me so much as our
ln abUity to Jll)Ve the ball."

'

I

Local bowling
Photrmacy Not1 h.

NITE owu;
Skyline IIml'l!l
September 17, 198fl

Team

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16

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Kut

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Ind. Gamt• rhlgh r. Shirl(&gt;}' Sullivan, 184:
Carol Llt chflf'ld, 178; Pat Bali!Juanlta
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Mart. 6.li; 112. 623; Team Series { hlgh~ : Duke
ll'U('k!ng, 17R9: K Mart. 1773; Kut N Kw-l.
1711.

IN PAIN - Ballbnore tatcher Jom Stefero appears to gasp for air
alter being hit by a foul-tip ofl the bat &lt;i Boston'sMarty Barrett Monday
night. Stelero was taken from the field on a stretcher. (UPI)

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By SCOTT NEWMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Chicago Cubs pitcher Greg Mad·
dux can thank Jody Davis for a few
months of bragging rights in the
Maddux household.
Greg Maddux outpitched brother
Mike Monday night to lead ltv&gt; Cubs
over the host Philadelphia Phillies
8-3. It was the first big-league
pitching matchup between brothers
since Sept. 13, 1982. when Joe
Nlekro heat brother Phil 5-3 at
Atlanta_
Although Greg Maddux wiil he
named the best pitching Maddux
circa 1986. Davis contributed more
than any pitch thrown.
Davis went 4 for 5 and drove ln
flve runs. Phillies Manager John
Felske, who arranged the family
affair when he held back Mike
Maddux a day ln the rotation,
ordered Leon Durham walked
twice Intentionally to pitch to Davis.
Davis slu gged a three-run home
run in the fifth, his 20th homer of the
season, and, ln the ninth, he singled
home two runs.
"Don't ask me if I would do it
again." Felske said about walking
Durham. "I showed you I would do
it again. It didn't work either time.
I'm not sure if I would do it again
tomorrow."
Greg Maddux improved his
record to 2-4 and Mike dropped to
3-7.
"I'm happy to beat any team; I
had four straight loses. It is just a
coincidence it was against my
brother," the Phlllies right-hanrer
said. "I felt for him when he was
getting hit. It was fun batting
against him and. when he came up,
I really tried to strike him out. Now
we are going out to dinner."
The game is believed to be the
first time ln major-league history
two rookie pitchers started against
each other.
"I'm sure my parents are happy.
at least one of us got a win," the
Cubs right-hander said. "But everybody is making too much ri this.
Blood is thicker than water but I
really wanted this game. This was
the first time I ever saw him pitch.
He deserved to win; he pitched
welL"
ln other games, Minnesota edged
Cleveland 6-5, New York routed
Detroit 8-1. Boston shaded Balli ·
more 7-5, Texas blanked Oakland
3-0 and Kansas City edged Caltlornla 2- 1.1n the National League, Los
Angeles pOunded San Diego 10. 0.
Seattle at Chicago was postponed
because of rain.
Twms 6. Indians 5
At Mi nneapolis, Raney Bush's
two&lt;Jul single ln the eigh th inning
lifted the Twins. Bert Blyleven

'U.\ t!

'11 7 10

half," Stallings said. "We missed a
lot of passes l:Alt that's !llt Neil's
fault. I didn't think about taking
him out hec1!use that wruld only
hurt his confirence.
"He's our quarterback and he
was doing the best jlb he could."
" I threw the ball weD. especially

Maddux brothers,
both rookies, in
rare duel Monday

~

11 lfl'&gt;l'il !.Hll

:\ 0

Quarterback Neil Lomax threw
four Interceptions, finishing with 14
of 33 passing for only 112 yards.
Stallings did !llt crlt icize Lomax.
who was loudly booed ~ the sellout
crowd.
"Early, he did play weD oot
nobody played well in the "'rand

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MIIM~ERIC.o\N

0 2n
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OHIO mNFERDIICE
11ald-\\'a111K'f'
2 0 !l

Kansas City 2. California 1
TPxas .'1. Oakland 0
S...attll' 111 Ct11' AJ!O. ~ ..

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grid standings

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8;;11 Stat&lt;'

N~· York !l;, Toronto 1
Bo:o.lon i. BaltlmOI'{' ~

(1lll'aj..'O

Amcng the more outrageous
examples of censorship during the
past year cited In the report:
Shakespeare's "Romeo and Jullet" was attacked ln OklahOma for
"encouragement of suicide and
drug use," while "Macbeth" In·
curred the wrath of Colorado
censors for focusing on "death,
sulctre. ghosts and Satan."
T~e widely used Merriam·
Webster College Dictionary was
ban ned from some high school
libraries in North and South
Carolin a because of some of Its
definitions.
Two Pulitzer Prize-winning novels - Allee Walker's "The Color
Purple" and Harper Lee's "To Kill
a Mockingbird" ..,. along with
contemporary classics from J.D.
Salinger's "Catcher in the Rye" to
Kurt Vonnegut's "Slaughterhouse
Five" were the object d censorship
attempts.
The recent report notes that 39
percent of all censorship lnltlati~es
were successful ln the past year·
compared wtth 23 percent four
years ago. However, the majortty
of toose efforts continue to be
turned back by sensible community
leaders.
In a Kansas · town, -a review
committee rebuffed parental complaints about "sexually explicit"
material In Ms., Mademoiselle and
Redbook magazines. In a Missouri
oommunlty1. John Steinbeck's "Of ·
Mice and Men" survived a flimsy
challenge.
In earlier years, slmUar complaints were dten heeded In .Minot.
On one occasion, an Indignant
editor of the Minot Dally News
publicly complained that a pf:ll·
censorship member of the toea!
board of ed1,1catlon had "a unique
conspiratorial vision ol oow the
world works."

Hershp! Walker, who rushed for
82 yards on 19 carries ln his first
NFL start. ran for eight yards and
caught a 10-yard pass to j:llt Dallas,
3-1, on the St. Louis 24.
Walker, who caught five passes
for 57 yards and a touchdown ,
gained 11 yards on a screen pass,
hefore Tony Hill beat Uonel
Washington in the end zone for a
10-yard touchdown pass. The score
gave Dallas a 17-7 lead.
"We had come back alter being
down and then they get the big
kickoff return," said St. Louis
Coach Gene Stallings, who was an
assistan t under Landry for 14 years
at Dallas. "We didn't want them to
get @lad field position and they
made a big play."
Tbe Cardinals, 0.4, took the
opening kickoff of the second haif
and drove 76 yards In seven !iays to
cu t the Dallas lead to 10-7.
"We made some plays and had it
going," Stallings said.
But the Cardinals did lit Ue after
that

Scoreboard ...

t VIol ~

warns. "Qualified engineering and
scientific personnel must be employed full lime."
-Our friends overseas are being
difficult . Disposal of toxic military
wastes In the Pactnc poses Its own
set of problems. For example,
South Korea and the Philippines
may offer a ready market for sale
of surplu s paints, solvents and other
potentially hazardous materials oot Japan won't allow the sale of
virtually anything of this nature
that's made in the United States.
And ncbody wants such polsonrus Items as Uthlum batteries, or
ammunition boxes treated with a
deadly fire-retardant chemical.
Simllarly, Ill country In Its right
mind will take material contaminated with the cancer-causing
chemical PCB off the American
military's hands. The only solution
ln these cases Is to ship the stuff
back to the United States for
disposal.
"This Is a very costly process,"
the Inspector general noted.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

ALL-SEASON

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OF 3 TIRES AT
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Subsc ribers not d£&gt;sirlng to pay t heca rrl{'r may remit In advance dir ec t to
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SERVING MJ;IGS CO. 20 YEARS - 1966-1986

POMEROY

',

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Mary Lou Retton
retires at age 1~
NEW YORK !UPI) -Mary Lou
Retton. America's Sweetheart, announced her retirement from gymnastics Monday at the golden age of
18.
The bubbly pixie who won fiv e
medals at the 1984 Olympics.
reluctantly gave up her quest of
further glory for the joy of returning
to schooL
"Gymnastics was my llle for 11
years," she said. "I spent my whole
life in the gym, six hours a day
every day. Now there's kind of a
gap in my life. But I achieved the
goals I wantted at an early age.
Now I have the rest of my life to do
what I want."
She wants to pursue studies in
communications at the University
of Texas, where she is a freshman,
and to remain involved with
gymnastics as a coach and announcer. She is in negotiations with
NBC to work as a commentator on
gymnastics events leading up to
a nd including the 1988 Olympics a t
Seoul.
"I'm very excited a haul being in
school." she sa id . "I haven' t been in
a formal class atmosphere since
the lOth grade when I had to do
correspondence courses. l gradua ted tha t way, and I don't think I
learned as much as if I had been in
school. If I didn't attend college, I
feel I would have regretted it. "
Classes started Sept. 2, and
Retton says during the first few
days she was the object of stares
and attention whenever her na me

was called. or while walking on the
campus.
"They're getting used to me
row," sh? said.
In Speech 319, Retton had a
surprise tor her teacher a nd
classmates_
" I had to give a five-minute
sp€(&gt;Ch, and everyone was expecting me to explain how to do a flip or
I he intrigues c1 gymnastics. Instead
I brought a spare tire with me and I
ex pained how to repair a flat tire. I
know all ahout that."
The 4-foot-9 gymnast became a
heroine to the American !llblic with
her exploits at Los Angeles. By
winning the all· around IItle, ·she
became the first American woman
to earn an Olympic gold medal in
gymnastics. Then came the decision as to whether to rrnew her
intensive training for another
Olympics.
"It was a very difficult decision ,
something that wasn't decided
overnight," she said. "A lot of
thought went into it, and I discussed
it with my family and friend&lt;;_ I felt
this was the best decision for me.
The stress of gymnastics and the
business world was too much for
me mentally with all the traveling
involved. the resp:mslbHity of being
somewhere and always baking
your best.
"Ever since l was eight I wanted
to win an Olympic gold medal, and
everything worked rut like a
storybook. I felt I accomplished my
goals."

The personnel is basically the
same, although healthier than a
year ago when the Falcons were
beset by wholesale injuries to the
offensive line and defensive secondary. But the chief difference
appears to be mental rather than
physical.

Meet the Meigs
Marauders

...

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...

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.". -&gt;!'f"

.~

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£16&amp;
I

BRENT ZIRKLE
5-10, 18!}-Pound
Sophomore Center

DENNIS B00111E
5-R, 191-Powrd

Freshman Back

By JIM LUTJ'REIL
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK tUPil - Miami,
following Its victory over Oklahoma , became the No. I college
football team in the nation Monday
and teams from the West Coast
captured seven of the other Top 20
slots in balloting by the UP! Board
of Coaches.
The Hurricanes received 48 of :il
first -place votes in earning the No. I
spot for the first tlme since the
second game of the 198&lt;1 season.
They defeated Oklahoma 28-16
Satunday to improve their record to

4-0.
The Paciflc-10 Conference. mean while, has six representatives
among the Top 20: No. 8 Southern
California, No. 10 Arizona, No. 13
Washington, No. 14 Arizona State.
No. 17 UCLA and No. 20 Stanford .
No. 18 Fresno Slate is the seventh
western team in the Top 20.
Miami, No. 2 last week. earned
746 points and outdistanced Ala bama by !ll points. The No_ 2
Crinnson Tide, 4-0, moved up a spot,
earning one first -place vote.
Nebraska, 3-0, jumped two posi tions to No. 3, while Michigan
maintained its No. 4 ranking . Penn
Stale earned the other first -place
vote and advanced a notch to No. 5.
Oklahoma dropped to No. 6,
followed by No.7 Auburn. Arkansas
is No.9.
Completing the Top 20 were No.
11 Iowa , No. 12 Baylor, 15th-ranked
Texas A&amp;M, No. 16 Michigan State
and 19th-ranked North Carolina
State.
"We approached the season with
the goal of taking one game at a

"Unlike some of the past years,"
said running back William Andrews who returned this season
after two years on the shelf with a
knee injury , "we've got believers on
this team_"
One of those is wide receiver
Charlie Brown. After being ham pered by injury during much of last
yea r's 4-12 campaign. he has been
excellent. catching 22 passes for 3ti9
yards. He had seven catches for 110
yards Sunday when the Falcons
beat Tampa Bay 23-20 in overtime.
"I'm going back to the Pro Bowl
and I'm going back to th e Super
Bowl and I'mgolngtodo it with ttl&gt;
Atlanta Falcons," sa id Brown, who
did. hath when he wa s with the
Washington Redskins. "! just fee l
this is going to he a big year b r me
a nd this team ."
The- Fa lcons, however. can 't
affond to bask in luxury . After
playing at horne against Philadel phia next Su nday, the F" lrons have
eight straight games against team s
that made last year's playoffs.
"It sho uldn 't be that way,"
Atlanta Coach Dan Henning said.
"But they developed the schPdule
based on a formula and that' s how it
worked out. "
A year ago, the Fa lcons were 0-4.
They started out this season with
convincing victories over New
Orleans (31-10) and St. llluls
(33-13) . They then rallied past the
Cowhoys t37·35 ) in Dallas on a
closing field goal .
The v ictory over tIF Cowboys
may havf&gt; been a factor in the
Falcons' sluggish first half Sunday
when the Bucs jumped to a 20-7
lead .
" We got a rold slap 11 the face,"
offensive guard Jo m Scu lly said.
"That rught to bring us down off our
euphoria ."

l

time," Mlaml Coac h Jinnmy Johnson said . "After the first game, I
told the players, ·we had won one
game.' (Saturday,) I told the
players in the locker room. 'We've
won fnur; it was a lig four, but now
we'll' looking for five.' All we have
accomplished is we have won lour
games and are looking for five.
That's how wf&gt;' re thinking ."
Southern Cal, 3-0, used a 20-10
victory over Washington to jump
from No. 12 to No. -8 ard lead the
Pac-10 contingent.
' 'I'm really happy for our play-

ers, but we want them to keep it all
In perspective," Trojans Coach Ted
Tollner said. "The ranking In the
,polls Ls meaningless at thls point of
the season. We want to continue to
inn prove as a team and be ready to
play every game."
Baylor, which had dropped Eight
positions to No. 17 last week after a
17-14 loss to USC, routed Texas
Tech 45-14 and made the biggest
jump of the week, leaping to No. J2_
" I've always said that you learn

r-------------------------

Name MAC honorees

t

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Mlddlf"JX)rt Lunch Roo m ..

1,1 .

TOill8to

~ 7:

Max\n(&gt; Dugan, 46.3;

'

GOING BACK TO
SCHOOL? TAKE~ A
FRIEND. THE
DAILY SENTINEL

2l4 EAST MAIN
:·JMEROY
992-6687

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, ::;.. : Dta1So8p

III

I E~y l '" ~- clprli:llttr
:

'

;,:,.

1

jEV'ellrJ•r l
~~~.

1

Star Cleanser.

32oz. bOttle l emon

Glo Dish Liquid

BEST-SELLING FULL-SIZE PICKUP
9 YEARS IN A ROW!• ..

'86 FORD F·150
XLTLARIAT

PACKAGE INCLUDES
Minimum rear a de, Heavv·duty battery. Bnyht
tow-mount swing-away mi,o rs. All- season BSW

::,~.

Cheerios

'

All Ver•l~t~s Ore /

or Ragular

21iter Soda

Ev~Jrycfav

Su11shrne IIi or oo~

A SAVINGS OF

Everyad~·

LOW
PrJCS'

E~·~Jryday

M•rc111 32cn. jlr

. A~~. Salad Dressing
Everyday - Panrry FM'I (161101! JUfJ

::;., Cider Vinegar
Everyday 1 P/oc;hm•n ·a 18 oz. bottle

_::;., , Squeeze Mustard
fvti)'C1ay

1

1 81ma32oz }WGRAPE.JAMOA
1

I Elf8f'(day I

Bema Grape Jelly

P,ttlflttf 16 01.

;at CRUNCHY OR CREAMY

89.

,f~,~

Cheez-lts

1•49
49

,---::-~-,-----------

' Ev4lryday

So Good 8 oz pl!g

;:,~,-

. Butter Popcorn

EVIlryaav
low
Prrle'

Everyda~
Low
Prrce'

•

Potato

Sliced V2 Moon
LPre Flufl 8 oz tLJbe Ragurar or

.19

Buttermilk Biscuits

r lb

p•g

All Va11etles

1.39

Seitz Bologna

1.09

Blue IMge 16 Ol. p11Q

Pork Sausage

Chunk Braunschweiger
Bllltt Rrctga 12 Ol pllg

Meat Wieners

27

Everyday i Prllsb"ry r r 5 oJ bol'

t.~~·

Everyaav

low
PIICB'

Cherry Strudel
Aunr FMJnre 8 count/lot

Pecan Twirls
2 lb 08Q

French Fries

Non-Foods

he,yda~

Low
Pnca'

Each ()?e
Pr!C*'

Mint Toothpaste

Frozen ·
Pizza

Pa~r

Towels

0

LOW
price\

-- -

lf ll8f)'mty l KIHIIKan rscounlbo~
1

Fish Sticks

Mr. P'.s 9 oz. p~.
AssOrted Varieties

2Ply
GtJEST RANCH

Evel'lda'l

V11n ooKemp 14 01 Frsfl Frllttl s or IJ 5 01

t.";.. · Kitchen Bags

Evllf)'dry l A.J_AI 50 coon!

. ;,::;. Lunch Bags

.69
.69
.49

25 lb. bag RATION or
-E~&amp;rtcJB;
,

Low

""''.

CHUNKS
DOG FOOD

399

_

one a week for the next four weeks. Drawings will be
held on Saturday. No purchase necessary, need not
be present to win!

100%
MONEY-BACK
GUARANTEE!..
·"

COUPONS

1 per customer Oller end s October 8. 1986

1.39
.49
.49
1.99

.39
.89

Tek Toothbrush

-Every&lt;taY 6 4 Ol luOf

/;,~~·

.59
.89
.79

Old Fasl'il()ned 12 ot P~9

MORTON
POTPIES •

WE iiLADLY ACCEPT
FOOD STAMPS &amp;
MANUFACTURER

Test dn.,.e any now Ford Truck and rec81ve a Ford Cap FREE
Lim ~

Mozzarella Cheese
Scllrerber IGOl pi!IJ

MORTON 8 oz. box Assorted Varieties

WE ACCEPT PERSONAL
CHEC~S FOR AMOUNT OF
PURCHASE ONLY

Test Drive aFord Truck
Sit aFREE hJI'd CliP!

Sc/lrarbru 8 ul pl&lt; g Sflraddfld CHE DDAR OR

.49
1.19
1.49

Frozen Items

7.5 oz. bag Delite
Aaaorte4 Varieties

Stop by and register for 5 Microwave Ovens to
be given away during our Grand Opening. One
microwave will be given away opening day- then

$744 ~

Margarine Quarters

Turkey Franks

Paper Products

.99
1.59
.79
.79
.99
.99

Dorta PtiOD I 10 Com Or

Jenrne·O 12 ot pltg

5 Grand Prize Drawings

clock , Sport wheel covers . Air condillon•ng , Cloth

RAPtD SPEC. PKO. !11501 B

Low

Pnce'

~·

Condiments

~:,. , Peanut Butter
.55
.29
Crackers, Cookies
•99
18 oz. pkg. Assorted Varieties
::::---._59 ,..,... REGAL
~~:. COOKIES •

group, Auliliary fuel tank , Chr ome gnlle. Ltght
group. Cruiseconlrol , Till steerrng wheel . KLT •
laritl trim. AM·F M stereo rad•o. Eleclromc digrtal

bench seat and more.

Everyda~

1.69
1.79

Frosted Flakes

.59

:::, ,

P125 75R•1&amp;SL !ires. Tintea !jlass. Conven•ence

Low

Prrc;a'

--~

::;.. Fancy Ketchup

putCI\tlld MOIIIIt11

E;e?da~

39

~Br~ttyPak

EverydaY, TllbJe Mllf 32 oz t:K!tlta
' Balld on thr manulactur~tr 1 l"99*ll1td ratarl ~&gt;&lt;• o1 p-.:klgr
CQrl'lplltd to lhe tr lditoontl "'99UIId pm:ong !Qr the opllonl

Prrce'

1•_
· t,:.
Instant Oatmeal _ _ _
· · ::.=:=::::--==-:.:.:..::;:___
Ev&amp;ryasy , General Mill$ 15 Ol

31
• .

Everydav
low

Snacks

Low
' Prrce '

Nature's Pick Dark or Lite 15.oz. can

low

Low

f~ay

PACKAGE INCLUDES:

Everyda~

.17
.69

12 oz. can Soda

- --

. ::;, A~ Gratin Potatoes

pfice\

Meats

All VlflftrlfiS Ot6f 01 Regular

Everyday
Low
Prrce1
Everydav
Low
Pnce'

'E'~~L 159
4x4 of the YEAR
ICCORDING TO 4-WHEEI DRIVE &amp; OFF ROAD MAGAZINE

LOW

Beverages

RICE • CORN • WHEAT each box

,Everydey l ldlhoatl .5.50l- box

e.vei'VdaY

Prrce'

Macaroni

Everyday

Sweet

1

Cook ·n Fry 48 oz lKJOfe

!

1- E~erydly l

I

1 ~~~.

FORD

OvonBest 13.501 ben

I Evsrydlty l

i ;:;., Brown Sugar

59
•

Peach
-- Halves

.39
.79
1.59
.35
.39
.89
.89
.19

, /;,",;., . Mini Marshmallows

, Everyd~y

Fruit Valley • 15 oz. can Slices or

fverrdlr l

1------------....I..------------------------

IS A FUNERAL NECESSARY?
.-

1

Vegetables

Ga mr

Death is one oHhe most difficult losses we can experience - espKrally the dealh of a family member or
spouse.
The visiting hours and funeral seiVices can II! "tools" that
help us accept t.he !act d death and pennan11t uparation
rs rul. The vrsrtJtron becomes a time of oonsolation to
those who hm experienced the loss - a time for friends
to SHARE their llief.
The fun~ral helps us remembe1 the life of the lost one.
It provtdes stren&amp;th for the flmily and friends and
communicates to all thoseattendin&amp; thlt this Hie is
now permanently Sltllaratld from ours .
It is my experiena~ tr.t many wtro do llll at111d the funeral ~ a loved lld close ane suffer more altnards. The
funeral Cll1 ~~~~~ I~ first sltpplnc stone to the rebuild·
111 of our own lrves Without 1111 pres•u• o1 the dlcused.
Call us if you'd like more helpful Information and
booklets on the subject of funerals.

/;,?;., Beef Stew

181f2 oz. box Assorted Varieties

j Ev&amp;I)'O'a~

£'18ryday

" "t)

728.

1

Evsryasy , Ranch ~ou!&amp; 24 oz. cen ·,

QUICK TIME • 10 oz. can

.. .. ~
14

Bu..,ter Phf&gt;lps. 197: Charles Smti h. Lql: Jack
Bachnff, IS6: Worrens Hl~h Gamt': Bt&gt;tfV
Smit h. 225; DPbl HE't1s ley, U!9; to.'laxtn(.
nugan, 179.
Tf.'am SE'rl~ : Mlddlrpon Lunch Room.
1900; Team Gam(': Middleport lunrh Room.

1

1.59
1.29.59
.89

-.-

Ml Henslev, 514:

M('flS Hlj:th

Pink Salmon

~~~.

!

Ml:'ns H l~h SE&gt;ri('S; Bu.~ter Phf'lps, 524 ; Ray
Roach. !00: O~·df' S.1yrt', 47.1: Womens High

Series: BE'tty Smit h.

1

oz. can

I'E;'i Ct;lllowith &amp;,ans

Juice

1l

115": ... "... :. "" .. ". '. ".... ...

15 112

!

. 1l&lt;

JAR. Construcllon ..
Tonv's Carnr Out

jEv8f}lday l

Cooler Items

Baking Needs

Canned Meats, Soups

46 oz. can Nature's Pick
Grade 'A' Faney

RAPID SPEC. PKG .

"2 ... .. .. ... . .

----......

Juices, Fruits

A SAVINGS OF
Plot
. .Jl

~

NOW OPEN TO SERVE YOU!
-

TOLEDO, Ohio I UP!) -Central
Michigan swingback Melvin Houston and Ball State linebacker Greg
Garnica have been selected as the
Mid- American Conference offensive and df&gt;fensive players of the
week.
Houston , a junior from Flint,
Mich , caught six passes for 143
yards, including two touchdown
passes of 47 a nd 48 yards. to lf&gt;ad
Central Michigan to a 5&amp;-27 win aver
Ohio University.
Garnica, a sophomore from
Kettering, Ohio, led the Ball State
defense In a 27-10 win over Toledo.
Garnica had four so lo tackles a nd
17 assists_ Two of his tackles were
for a loss of six yards and he also
broke up two Toledo passes.

Local bowling

Team

~ ~ -----, _

THIS IS NOT A BULK STORE BUY ONE OR BUY A HUNDREDIII

more .

EARLY WEDNESDAY MIXED
Sepl&lt;mher 17, 19R6

SC.oTf WILLIAMS
5-9 !56-Pound
Junior Tailback

more ahout yoursel f as an individ ual and as a team after a loss than a
big victory," Bears Coac h Grant
Teaff said. "I felt our team
responded extremely well against
Tech. They played absolutely great
against a great Southern Ca I team
. and lost in a heartbreaker and
came bac k with a vf&gt;ngeance
against Tech."
Joining the Top 20 were N.C.
State and Stanford. Dropping out
were Florida State and Maryland .

steering, AM-Ft.ll stereo radio. Tinted glass and

POMEROY BO"UNG LANES

CHRISSMmt
l&gt;-11, l~Poond
,Junior WlnghaA:·k

The Daily Sentinel-Page-&amp;

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Miami takes over top spot in UPI poll

Falcons 4-0 fi.J.st time in history
SUWANEE, Ga. (U P!) ~Now
the Atlanta Falcons must avoid
euphoria .
To the delight of their longsuffering fa ns, the Falcons are 4-0
for the fi rst time In their 21- year
history . The Falcons won only four
games each oft he las t two seasons.

Tueilday, September 30. 1986

Tuesday, September 30, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

l
Your par\lc!patrng Ford Oealet can arrange l()f quahlred buyers specrai.Annual Percentage Rate hnarn::mg on
select new Fora cars and trgtll trucks Or 11 'r'OU chOOse. vou ma~ get Casl'1 Bac~ · drrectly trom Fora wrln lho purrMse
ot B.n e!rgtbl&amp; vettrcle YOu ma~ keep tne ea!ll'1 01 apply 11 to ~ur ttensacll0t1 You mualtak e del1~ery hom cteerer Stock
by October 8. 1986 Ltmtl one per ctua~l,.d retaul customer See y0u1 dealer lor complete details Dealer COfllflbulton
may at!Oct customer savtngs

•

Prices guaranteed lhtough ~

··on selerten moo"' ~

October 7, 1986

· ·' Based on 11110bl &lt;l~a ' ' ii DIC mode l yf! &lt;JI
manulacturc• ~ rfli)O rtOd rclarr delrvene s

Pleasant, W.Va.

'

~

...

~

' .

�By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel
Tuesd!ly, September 30, 1986
Page-~

Beat of the Bend

Schultheiss reunion conducted

Flu immunizations hit
an all-time high Monday
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentlllel Slalf Writer
Flu Immunizations by the Meigs
County Health
Department hit
an all-time high
this year.
In fact, health
department personnel ran out ot
the vaccine at
about 11:45 a.m. Monday, the final
day to give the shots - and now
there is a waiting list
Norma Torres, Health Department Nursing Supervisor, said that
l,!Dl shcts were given during the
two and one-half day period. Giving
the shots started last Thursday at
the senior citizens center and then
was continued on Friday and
Monday at the health deportment
quarters.
Norma has notilled the Ohio
Department of Health of the big
demand locally and is hoping that
additional lrrununizatlons will be
available to handle the waiting list.

Chester Garden meets

College educations for six child-

ren- whew!

David Riggs, Route 4, Pomeroy,
and Gloria Riggs, Syracuse, have
five chlldren In college at the
present time - a sixth has
graduated. Three are at Ohio
University and two at Ohio State
University. The sixth Is Mark, who
graduated from Ohio U. and is a
pilot In the U.S. Air Force in
Oklahoma. Another oon, David, will
graduate this fall from Ohio State.
That leaves Paul, Linda and Usa at
Ohio U., and Danny at Ohio State.
By the way, all six of the young
people were In the Meigs High
School Band at some point kl time
durtng their high school years.
Grandmothers of the yoo ng prople
are Mrs. Fred Riggs, Rock Springs
Road, Pomproy, and Mrs. Stella
Adkins, HarrtsonvUle.

Perhaps, you missed Jonnie
Belinda, a gospel singer from
Mason County, when shP appM red
at the Meigs County Fair.
&amp;.san Sanders was awarded the
She was on the hill stage but It "Korean mink blanket", given
was a bh c1 a strange hour so a lot r1 away In a project by Preceptor
people dldn' t get to hear her Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
program. At any rate, Jonnle, who Phi Sorority. Now was that the
does a great job, will be appMrlng lav!'Rdar Item, I talked to Jane
at the Hemlock Grove Christian Waltoo about- and Jane, mum's
Church Homecoming which Is set the word.
for this Sunday.
Royalty candidates have been
Morning services will be at 9:30
a.m. and there wUI be a basket named at the Portland Elementary
lunch at 12: :n Jonnle wUl be School with a king and queen to be
singing at the afternoon program crowned at the school's fallfesttval
which starts at 1:30 p.m. and til" on Oct. 4.
public Is welcome. Think you woold
Selected as queen cancldates by
Pnjoy.
the student body were Krtsty Rizer,
Rachael Rose and Jessica Covert
Bill Lehew Is &lt;bing bett!'r aftpr and namoo king candidates were
being confined to the Holzer Kenny Rizer, Michael Evans and
Corey Hatflpld.
Medical Center.
In fact, he's so well that he and
Hang In there. I understand the
wife, Margaret, their son, BUly, and
her mother, Mrs. Sadie Thuener, temperature wtll drop Into the 70's
Symcuse, were able to go to come Thursday. Meantime, keep
Cincinnati last Thursday b see the smUing.

Robert, Ramona and Tony Hawk,
Betsy Blackledge, Jake Ludy,
Roditey, Tersera, Jprmery and
Justin Blackledge, Kelly, Lynn,
Derek, and Kodl Hawk, Patty and
Homer Lauer. Gary Sinclair, S;ldie
Ewing, Jan and Jerry Schultheiss,
Sonny and Cindy Kearn, Ted,
Jackie, Laura and Lynnette Lau&amp;,
Dan Betzal, Patti Klshman, BUI,
Rhonda and Derek Smith berger.

Children of Edwtn and Georgta
· Schultheiss held their third annual
reunion recently at the Clvltan
Pilrk In Marietta.
A basket dinner was enjoyed at
noon. Attending were Bob Price,
Dale and Madeline Munty, Rita,
Lyle and Allan Beebe, Paul Valentine. Garland, Derma, and Travis
Smltly, Judy, Krist!, 8lld Scott
Baker, Sheila and Ashley Regan,

Cincinnati Reds-Atlanta Braves
game.
Incidentally, Sadie, who worked
In Pomeroy stores for ma~y years
betlre her retirement, wUI be
marking a l:trthday anruversary on
Thursday -that's Oct 2.

-

Thomas L Fauher

Fauber gains Eagle Scout rank
ment and picked up trash within a
two mile radius of the VIllage of
Albany, on all roads.
This summer Fauber attended
the Philmont Scout Ranch In New
MPxlco for a two week wilderness
backpacking trip. He serves as
assistant scoutmaster for Troop 00.
Fauber was honored with a
reception at the Albany Grange
Hall with approximately 50 relatives and friends present .

Thomas L. Fauber, son of
Thomas E. and Geraldine Fauber,
28404 Fauber Lane, AIOO.ny, Meigs
County , recently received the Rank
of Eagle Scout. Fauber has been In
scouting with Troop 00 In Albany for
almost six years. He Is also a
member of the Order of the Arrow.
For his Eagle Scout project,
Fabu&amp; planned and superviSa:l the
building of a rnlni park behind the
Columbia Thwnship Fire Depart-

Your SocSec:

The rPCen t open meeting c1
Chester Garden Club and the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts held at
the Chest&amp; United Methodist
Church featured Alice Loomis as
the demonstrater.
Mrs. Loomis, using flowers and
containers brought by garden club
members, created 15 designs In cluding the centerpiece for the
refreshment table. AssiSting ll"r
were Kathy Francis, Kathy R!'ed,
and Carol Erwin. Members of
several clubs in Meigs County along
with others from the New Haven
Club were guests for thE'. meeting.
Members of the host clubs
provided finger foods for refreshments. Announced was the regional
meeting to be held in Marietta on
Oct. 18 when Dottle Bates, second
vice rresldent. of tbe OAGC will be
the featured designer. A regional
officers conferpnre wtll be held at
the Chester Church on Oct.ll. The
munty meetings for garden clubs
wtll be held on Oct. 16 at Trinity
Church, 7 p.m. New year lx&gt;oks
were prepara:l and distrtiJJted by

Sheila Curtis of Shade Valley
Council and Janet Koblentz of
Chester.
Pat Holter talked to tre group on
the new history of Meigs County
which iS being compiled and urged
those att!'Rdlng to write tll"ir famUy
histories. New ofllcers wUI be
Installed at thE' October meetings c1
ooth clubs.

worker earned $50 In the calendar
quarter With a maximum credit of
four credits In tre year. That work
measure was In use lor almost four
decades.
But $50 In the rnld-11l's was not
quite what It was In the 40's. So the
measure was changed to a straight
dollar gauge beginning In 1978 with
$250 of earnings resulted In one
quarter. The aroount of earnings
ne!'ded Is tied to lnfiatlon and
adjusta:l each year. In 1986, a
person earns a quarter of coverage
for each $440 up to the maximum or
four. When til" rmney Is earned
durtng the year Is irrelevant.

But how many quart&amp;s do you
reed? The most anyone needs Is 00.
But families can qualify for survivor benefits If the lncom~ earner
had a few as six quarters and
youllgl;'r workers could reretve
disability benefits with six quarters
of coverage. A simple way of
determining needed quarters !Or
retirement benefits Is to add 11 to
your year of blr1h. Somrone oorn In
1922, for example, would need 33
quarters of covera:l earnings .
Anyone born after 1929 n!'eds 40.
We have a ff€e "Statempnt of
Earnings" form ava ilable you can
use to check on yoor work rocord

Harrisonville
Nora Jordan, Middleport, and
Hazel Stanley, spent a day with
VIrginia Jordan; ChUUcothe, while
Duane Stanley attended a Prestlytery meeting there.
Katrina Donohue has returned to
Hocking Technical College this fall.
1\venty-slx Individuals visited the
September blOOd pressure clinic at
the town hall.
Steve and JuUe Stanley, Athens,
were recent visitors of their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
Napper and Mr. and Mrs. Duane
Stanley.

Dllltrld Technician
POMEROY - What can I do to
lmprovPtbefarmpondonmyland?
This question Is asked t1y tandowners woo have one or more
00

maintenance
is theproperlY.
key tD having
ponds
tll"ir·
Basica
good usable pond.
Meigs County has ahout 700 farm
ponds averaging 15 to ID years old.
Sizes range from V. to three acres of
water surface area. Most of these
ponds n!'ed maintenance to ensure
a good 8ouroe of water for livestock,
wlldllfe and recreation. Maintenance bicludes fencing, watershed
management and fish population
control.

NUIISE OF HOPE - Rebecca Jeaa TUill!l of Rutland has been
seleded 18 Nune of Hope for the Melp Counly liDit of tile American
Caacer Sode&amp;y. DauKhter of llle Bev. and Mn. Amos 'IUs, Rutland,
she Is emp.,ed at Veterans Memorial llolpltll wWe oompletlllg
tnllnlnf lo beamle a rePalered nune at Hodl~g Technical Collete·
'l1lls weekend lhe ~ for Oldo Nune of Hope at the llyalt
Rege~~cy. As NUI'IIe of Hope, Mils 1lllls wiD 8peak aad educale on
cancer 188ues at cornmunlly event&amp; IJical chapia' olftcen are Bqlh
Werry, prelildenl; Kennll Walton, vice proldent; Jelllllle Wllllel't!ll,
secretary: and Erma Smith, treasurer.

Past Matrons meet
A trtp to the Fenton Glass Co. at
Wllltarnstowr., W.Va. with a dlnnpr
to foUow at Sebastian's In Parkers. burg was planned for Oct. 16dur1ng
a recent mretlng of the Past
Matrons Club of Harrtsonvtlle
Chapter 255, held at the oome or
Mrs. Harley ErlewlnP.
Mrs. Harold Rice presided at the
meeting with officers' reports being
given. It was decided to dispense
with the November meeting due to
the many Installations. Harrtsonvllle Installation was announced for
Nov. 14, wlttr Grand Chapter being
announced for Oct 26-29. The

annual Christmas dinner and party
was set lor Dec. 4 at 6: ll p.m. at
Western Slzzlln' Steak · House,
Atll"ns. There wlll he a gilt
exchange.
Stella Atkins read "The Morning
Sun" and thanked the group for a
money tree and gifts. Allegra WUI
and Golda Reed won the door
prizes, and others attending besides
those named were Pauline Atkins,
Clara Mae Morrts, Donna Nelson,
Betty Blshlp, and Avanelle George.
Sandwiches, cake and fruit salad
were served.

Michael enlists in Air Force
Gregory J. Mlchael, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Everett Michael, Symcuse, has enlisted In the Air Force
delayed enllsbnent program, according to T -Sgt. Steven Elfrink,
Air Forre recruiter, Athens.
Michael, a l98i graduate r1
Southern High School, Is scheduled
lbr mUstment In the regular Air
Force In February, next year. Upon
.,:acluatbn from the Air Force's six

- - --·

~-- - ,

week basic training course near
San Antonio, Texas, Airman Michael Is scheduled to receive
technical training In the air cargo
specialist earlier field. He wW be
earning credits towards the associate degrEe In applied sctmces
through the community ooDege rJ.
tile Air Force while attendlllg basic
and technical training sclxxlls. ·

I

tored for good management. A
pond soould be stock!'d with the
light kinds and numbers of fish for
the size of the pond and level of
management you plan to follow.
bass, blYeglll and

stocked.
The Meigs Soli and Water
Conservation Dlslr1ct (SWCD) has
available a Farm Pond Kit that
provides Information and ttps on
managing the farm ·pond for

?

A gooa clean . pond can be
managed lor fishing. Weeds and
unwanted vegetation can hinder
fish popul3tlon control. Dead waterweeds and other organic materials
use oxygen when decomposing.
Rapid decomposition can cause a
serious oxygen dellclency, thus
taking oxygen away from the llsh.
Keep cattails and other growing
plants out of the pond by following
rocommended controls. Cattails
wlll not survtve In water over two
feet deep. Get to a two bot depth
quickly around til" edge of the pond.
Fish population must be monl-

The Rock Springs United Methodist Church Women wW have a
yard and bake sale Thursday
Friday beginning at 9 a.m. eacfl
morning at tile church. In the event
rJ rain, the . . wW be held jl) the
churi:h basement. AU~ wW 1
go to charities and missions .

'

'

OR MORE

LB.

9
s
J.
Frankies ~::·
v
7
9.V
Bologna
*1
S
9
Sausage
SUPERIOR

1

OR HALF
LB.

BAlLARDS

GENUINE
U.S.NO. t

Hams

Pork Loin

Leg uarters

$ 89

WHOLE

LB.

SUPERIOR
120Z.

Bacon

PKO.

$159

9.48 .
7.20

Lila MIIII-In Albllt

SWEET TENDER

so LB. BAG

$ 39 $ 98
·

Ul·

69+

2LB.

8A8

$149

SLB.

BAO

SOUTHERN

Yams

4m.$1

JUMBO 24 CT.
MICHI8AN

Celery

STALl(

69t

lOW-30

Corn Muffin Mix

10W40

Motor Oil

CASE 24/71/t OZ. HALf CASE

Motor Oil

tsoo

-~-(llj

$250
QUANT.! TV
tl.

u.

co••s •"'W'

"'*' you~ f)ioe Mac's

Receive up 10 an llddltloniJ $10.00 rwbiiii
Mllc'l Number 13 (pllt'111300) ........... S2.00 Alblll
Mile'• Flldletot
111~ ....... S2.00 Alblll
Mllc't Super Fill F1ulh /jlllt 111SIO! ••••••• S2.00 Allllll

a..'*'

THE MOTOR PARTS CO.
157·WalnutSt
Mkldlipoit, OH

162 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

922·2131-

448-2962 .
''

rM.C8lll ))IOducts.

Slop l.l!llk (t1

.. . .......... ' .. - • $2.00 Rlblli

. MIC.. Iili'IY Duty
and
Btod&lt; fllpollr (11700) •••• ·' .......... '.

CRISPY SER~E

Lunch
Meat

Bacon

1LB.

PKG.

SLICED

Slab
Bacon
BALLARDS

FULL

CASE

••
*10

HALF

CASE

CASE t2/24 OZ. IIALF.CASE

$ 00

*12

ITEM
n.,_.,,,.

QUANTITY

*1099

LB.

~AN

CAMPS LIGHT

12/U 11.

CASE

*4 P11ehee

•s

ll.

24/16 tl;

CASE

*16

HALF
CASE

REITER

$600
$300

HALF
CASE

OAL.
BLUE BONNET

$500
~ALLEY

Margarine
$ 00

*14 *7

II.

0

•s

••
••

*4

Chloke1

Soat

FULL
CASE

24/16 u .

$
HALF

CASE

*12 *6
*18 *9

••

OAL.

CASE 30/t LB. QTRS.IIALF CASE

tsoo

QUANTITY

BELL

Margarine

CASE 12/28 OZ. IIALF CASE

_$600

$250

fruit
Drinks

6/3 LB. IIALF CASE

CASE

HALF
CASE

CASE 6/4 ROLLS HALF CASE

Oold
$

CASE

Pillsbury Biscuits

Citrus~

CASE

PATnES
6 LB. *10 99

Noodles
24/S OZ.

24/16

,.

HALF

••

SAUSAGE

·u,-are·;. 0r

Cornoz.
CASE

$699

ORIENTAL, BEEF
PORK AND CHICKEN

THOROFARE
WHOLU(ERNEL OR
CREAM ST1LE

$600
$300

. ITEM
noroflro'
5 7
11eh

FULL

SLB.
PICG.

LINK 6 LB.

Baked Beans

COUIIYII

Mllc't CoolinG ~:t:Seller lnd

SUPERIOR

AU EM'S

Beef Stew

89

10 LBS.

LB.

Red KldnevCarrots
White
Beans
HB.
24/15 oz.
Potatoes 8A8 $100

MARTHA WIITE

TOTAL t2 QUART PRICE

HALF

Chuck
Roast

SWEEUREIICA$ 349 Radishes
S9t
Oranges .
1LB. BAG
HO-SAE 30 Motor Oil
12 quarlll of NAPA HO-SAE 30

$ 69

BONELESS

U.S. NO. 1

Idaho
Pot
atoes
tO LB. BAG

Onions

NAPA Allll'lrtllllnl

FRYER

LB.

LB.

Qltj Mli*lllt . . . . .

SLICED

J.

WHOLE

19t
Cabbage
fELLOW COOIOI C $119

SALEENDS .
OCTOBER 19, 1988

TAVERN

.

TENDeR

Yard sale set
and

The Information kit Is tree to
anyone Interested In Improving a
pond . Contact the Meigs SWCD by
stopping by at 221 West Second
Street, Pomeroy, secondfioormtre
Farmers Bank or t1y phoning

~~~;ar~e~t:he::::mo~st:co~mm~on~ly~~ll~ves~toc~k~,~wll~dllf~e~an~d'~rec~re;a~tlo~n~.;992;-004;7~.f:7:::~~~~

Fencing around a pond is necessary wben used for livestock
watering. Keeping livestock out c1 a
pond wUl keep the water pollutionfrEe. Locating a water tank below
til" pond will (rOVIde clean water to
livestock tlr many years.
The watershed, or the total
surface area the pond cotll'cts
water from, must have good
vegetative cov&amp;. This cover will
oold the ooil In place and keep the
pond from having muddy water
and fUllng with sediment Woodland or permanent grass are
excell!'Rt covers for a wat&amp;shed
area. It Is a good practice to have
sod cover around a pond Instead of
trees. Leaves falling Into the pond
wlll cause black looking water and
use oxygen w!Jile decomposing.

to LBS.

RED SKIN

and to learn how many quarters
you have to date. Just complete the
form and print "QC" In the upper
light corner. You'll get yoor
earnings statement In the mall
ahout 3-li weeks after you send It tn .
If you'd like a form either stop In
or give us a call . And remember:
when you have questions ahout
Social Security beneftts or covetage, do yourself a favor and go
the source · first... your Socii!
Security office.
Too often the answers you get
from a frtend or neighbor are just ,
opinions or misconceptions. We've
got the facts for you and are ready
to help.

Basic improvement tips for your farm pond
By David A. Burt

..

FRESH

How much needed for eligibility?

By LOU HORVATH
Field Representative
Whether it's at yoor Social
Security ofllce or at the video
arcade, the conversation often
turns to "how many quartPrs do I
reed?" While I can't speak to the
latter, I can give you some
InfOrmation of til" first iSsue.
Th qualify for a Social Security
benefit, a person has to establish a
ttme connection of wvered employment or self-employment The
quarter of coverage Is the measure
of the earnings time.
The term originally derived from
tre four .calendar quarters of the
year. Credit would be given If a

4 BIG DAYS

ITEM

FULL
CASE

Also a~/lable at

*7

14/16 tl.

*8 *4

24/16

participating DHieta.

*4 *2

Soft Drl•b

....

Do• I..

*4 s••.,

All the right parts in
all the right places:·
• l!fl6 Natioli11 Auttmallvt l'artt "-Utlan

10/S "·

ll.

*4

*1

...,.

fllkll

CortMI••

HALF
CASE

•s

24114114

Rebllt '

u.

so

$

ll.
'.

*16 *8
*7 *I

�.

-

Tuesday,

Ohio

30. 1986

·Community _cd1en4ar 1 area happenings
.• A surpise · ll'lrty was held
recen~ h&gt;mrt)lg Fred A. Engle
Jr. , otPOrtil!l)4on~ 15111 tirthday.
Hosting the pany held at the Pizza
Hutlii Ravenswood was his rrolher,

~AY .

With rrotorcydes and served folloWing plzia -and jjop. Attending
were his mother, brother Shawn
Engle, Calvin al)d Peggy Dowell, .
Roger and Debbie Dowell, KJril
Lewis, Todd and Lois, Muffle
Davidson, Marllyn Cooper, Christie
and Gary Lee, Tom Buckley, Kim
Ball, and Jason Riggs.
Sending gilts were his uncle Ga ry
€roper of furtland, his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Woodrow Engle,
Middleport, his grandmother, Margie Brown, fumeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
James Lackey and family, Lenore,
W.Va.

'
'
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - . Middleport
Evangeline Chapter Order of Eastern Star Is having a rummage sale
Wednesday through Saturday, 10
a.m. to 3 p.m .. In the basement of
the masonic temple.

Fred A. Engle ,Jr.

Fish stocking, with help
By Opal Dyer
SoU-Water

fish for the size of the pond you
have. In ponds of average fen il ity ,
Office Secretary
stock 100 largemouth bass. :llO
POMEROY - The Meigs Soil bluegill and 100 channel catfish per
and Water Conservation District is surface acre.
SpOnsoring a farm pond fish sale. · Farm ponds stocked with lar ll"-Largerrouth bass, channel catfish mouth bass and bluegill produce
and bluegUI are available.
good fishing. Channel catfish usu. Place orders for fish with the ally do not reproduce in a bass·
Meigs SWCD by Oct. 15 by calling bluegill pond. You will need to
992~7. Collect your fish on Oct. 23 restock the !XJnd with catfish every
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds three yea rs fo r good catfish fishi ng.
retween 12 noon and 1 p.m. Brtng a
If water is runnlng through the
container with 10 gallons of !XJnd spillway when you stock, place a
water per 100 fish ordered.
tr mporary screen across the Dow
This year we are offering for sale for 10 days - no longer. This will
Largemouth Bass at 40¢ each; prevent the tlf'wly stocked fin ge·
Channel Catfish at 55¢ each; and rlings trom leaving the !XJnd.
bluegill at :JJ¢ each.
For more Information. contact
Minimum lots of 25 fin gerlings the Meigs Soil and WaterConserva·
per species will be sold.
lion District. P.O. Box 432, Pome·
A fish !XJnd shculd be Slacked roy. Ohio 45769 or phone 992-6647.
With the right kinds and numbers of

Meigs property transfers

Scipio.

Adeline Snowden to Jeffrey K.
Snowden. Carolyn Snowden. b ts lJ
&amp; 12. Rutland.
Earl J . Wright. Beu lah B. Wright
to Ronald G. Wrighl. Linda A
Wright, parcels. Salem.
Frank Gilkey Jr. to Connie S.
Gilkey, parcels, Rutland .
Esther DeLay to Robena Dill.
undivided l / 3 in!.. Pomeroy VIII.
Charles W. Leamond. Ellene
Leamond to Clifford King. tracts.

Carolvn Gerlac h, Lari'J Spencer.
Mary Spenoer. Eugene Goff. Ca rol
Goff to James G. McKenzie. Carol
.J. McKenzie. 83.67A. Bedford.
V. Faye Newhcuse, Lucille Duke.
Oliver Duke. to Cecil Roseberry.
Dorothy Roscllen-v. 5A. Le-banon.
Dykes Real Esta te and Rentals
Inc.. to Gerald Donohue. Linda K
Donohue. 3.713A. Scipio .
Ka ren S. Davidso n to Bo nm e .I.
Smit h 6.5A. Sutton.
.Juanita Sigman to Flovd !&lt;vic
Rupe. 13A. Rutland.
Eunice Eblin . Dec'd. to Walter
Eblin . Larry Eblin. Roger· Eblin.
Sandra Kav Morris. Affid. r;, int ..
Salisbu r~v. ·
·
Lmn· Eblin. L.rVan ia Eblin.
Roger E blin. Judith Eblin , Sandra
K Morris, William E. Morris. to
Walter Eblin. 96 '100A. Salisbur-v .

Orang~&gt; .

Mary Kathryn Gerlach. aka
Kathryn B.. George Wischner.
Mary E. Wischner. Osca r F'.
Gerlach, Alice Gerlach, Dou glas
Golf. Linda Goff. John D. Gerlach.

Mart ha Robinson. Df'&lt;' 'ct tw
adm.. to Opa l Wint Pr. parce l~.
ec ipio
Tmman A. Russell. Dec'd. Jav C
Ru5'el l. Affid .. Pomcrov Viii. ·

WMFI has meeting
New officers were installed at the
recent meeting of the WMFI of the
Laurel Cliff Frrc Met hcdist Church
held at the home of Jean Wright.
Installed by Eva Robson who
used Japanese lanterns with sym bols of beauty from that cultu re.
were Mrs. Wright. president and
chairman of outreach; Iva Powell.
Vice president and missions education chairman: Kay Clark. secrc·
tary; Donna Gilmone. treasu rw:
Wanda Eblin. Slewardship: Ewlyn
Young. penn) -a-da) dn-rct or: JanIce Haggy. CYM director.

Chapd IS having a revival starting
Friday . and continuing through
Sunday, Oct. 12, with Evangellst
Wllton Beck from H!gll Point, N.C.
Servl~s wlll start at 7: ll each
evening and feature special sing·
log. PastDr Dewey J9ng Invites all
Hymn sing
to' attend. The church Is ilea ted on
PORTLAND - Hazel Commun- Rt. 143, one half mile off the Rt. 7
Ity O!urch, on Rt. !24 ootween bypass.
Portland and Long Bottom, Is
having a bymn sing Sa!Ufday
evening starting at 7:30 p.m. The
group Saved wlll be featured .
Everyone welcome.

..
, ~DE - A hyn'ln sing will be
held at the United .Methodist
Church Sunday, Oct. 5, at 1:30p.m.
VIctor. ~artet w111 be the featured
singers. Tbe public Is Invited.

MIDDLEPO~:r - Middleport
.Church of the Nazarene, ~ Beech
St., will be In revival Tuesday
througti Oct. 5 with services at 7
p.m. nightly and Sunday m6rnlng
at10: ll. :·

Mary'·En~.
.,:. The blrthdi!Y cake was decorated

· Edna M. Lavender. nka Edna M.
Nance. to Guy E. Bing. lJJts.
Syracuse.
Charles E . Burri. Dec'd. to
Margaret E. Burri, Cert .. Leta rt.
Warren D. Black. Estl-er M.
Black to Henry Eblin Jr .. Hester
Eblin, .013A, Rutland.
WadeS. Hannah, Mabel Hannah
to James S. Hannah , 14 ffi JOOA .

Hymn~

a mont h. TPf'n girls of the church
will ass is t.

Kav Clark read a letter from
Susan West welcoming new sec rr·
!ar ies. and Mrs. Wright read OIK'
from Carol Bing encouraging
members to branch oo tin Christ ran
ctfons.
Refreshment s were served by

Mrs. Wright. Mrs. F\Jweil and
Beu lah Ochier.

THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Stated meet·
ing of Middleport Evangeline Chap·
ter Order of Eastern Star will be
held Thursday. Officers to wear
st tw t dresses. New officers will be .
elected. All members urged to
attend.

Revival
POMEROY - Calvary Pilgrim

Yard sale
The Harrtsonvtiie Elementary
Pro wUI sponsor a yard sale at the
junction of llM and 143 in Harrisonville on Friday and Saturday. Items
fort he sale may be left at the school
before Oct. 2. Hours of the sale will
be from 9 a.m to 3 p.m.

ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
T0\\11Ship Trustees will meet
Thursday, 7 p.m .. at township hall
on Rock Springs Rd.

Robert Lewis Harris

"GETTING YOU THERE SAFELY"

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSEr,IGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES .

Kenneth . and Mary Crossen
Harris, GaUipolis, are announcing
the birth of their first child. a son,
Robert Lewis, att Pleasant VaUey
Hospital, Point Pleasant. Sept. 10.
The infant weighed seven pounds,
11 ounces and was :ll ~ Inches long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Joho Fooce, Vinton, and
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth E. Harris, fumeroy.
Paternal great-grandfather Is Lewis Harris, Minersville.

LOCATED: MAIN ST ., RUTLAND:' OHIO
OPEN : 8-6 MON .- SAT.; B-8 FRI.
PH. 742-3088
Master Card and Visa Welcome

Come OneCom• All

Under Ntw

RNsonable
S•t·up Rates

Manog•~nent

. ··,

SIDEWALK SALES · 9100 a.m. to 8:00p.m.
RENDEZVOUS CAMP TOURS • ALL Day at Fort Randolph
FLEA MARKET · City Boat Dock (Open lo Public) Dealers Wela~me
HERITAGE QUEEN CONTEST· 11:00 a.m. Pt. PleaiGntPott OHice
ENTERTAINMENT AT FORT RANDOLPH (Krodel Park)
Step1

Saturday, October 4th, 1986
SIDEWALK SALES· 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
RENDEZVOUS CAMP TOURS • All
Day at Fort Randolph (Ktodel Park)

7:00 p.m. • Sugar n' Spice Pom Pom Corps
8:00 p.m. · Mlkkl Casto's Cloggers (ag.. 3·14)
9:00 p.m. · ltomlc Sounds (Hund system provided by
Chuck Ewing)

SOCCER TOURNAMENT • 8dJO a.m.
to dutk at Vocational Center
AGES: UNDER 10, UNDER 12, UNDER 14, UNDER 16

DISTANCE RUN· 9z30 &amp; 10:00 a.m.
1 mile, SK and 10K
·starting point-behind Heck'• Plaza
AWARDS FOR RUN· approx. 11130
·a.m. Tu·Endi•Wei·Park

I

PARADE· 2100 p.m.
starting point-behind Hack's Plaza
ENTEITAINMENT AT FORT
RANDDOLPH (Ktodal Park)
6:00 R.m. • Jonnle Belinda Meadows
1:00 p.m. • Bluegrass music,
clogging, and tquare dancingPublic Invited to Join the Fun!

- ...-

P.A. DENNY STIRNWHIELER EXCURSION
Moonlltht Dlnn•riD•nce Crul1e
{four houn)
7:00 p.m. to ll :OD p.m. Wilson's C1terln1 Stnict
CISh Bar hill
$24.95 I PtrMn or $44.95 I C4Upll

Departure Schedule (1 Hour Rides) 10 a.m.· 11:15 a.m. •
12:30 p.m.· 1:45 p.m.· 3100 p.m. &amp; 4:45p.m.
Adults (ages IS &amp; over) $5.00 Children (ages 5-14) Children (4 and under) FREE

...·.. ',CAUSED.

For more lnform•tiDn con1act M•son Co. Ct11mber of

commerce Office 6Js-1oso.

Bottle Doys Sponsored By these Community Minded luslnessesr
•Botdman Furniture

•Domino '1 Pirza
•Fartory Outll'l Sho ....
•Irvin'• Auto GIMs 5.-rvlre
•Ja.k Rous h Motor Car, Int. .
•JohMon'• Suprnnark""'
•MrDonald"o
•Th~ Peoples Bank

HECKS
DISCOUNT STORES

IPotnt PleBAont Hardwa,.
•Rardin'• Shoe Center
•Shop Qulek Food Marl, lnr.
o'flffln Credit Jew•lero

•Wap1er BI'OIIdfutlng
•Wrotrm Auto Storr

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

oG. C. Murphy Co.
•Poinl Pl-ant R~tdot...­
•Almedo'o

•B &amp; S Supply
Fronk!! ~
•Bowlneol' o

•Ben

Co.

•Citluno Notional
•LaMo...,.. Be1uty Shoppe
•Smllh'o Plumbing &amp; H~atlujt

eCooy Corner
•Four Seuons Florllll
•Fnoth'o Ph.....,ooy
•Hom. Steak Houoe
•HO&lt;kenheiT)' Pharmooy North
•Pital!ler's
•Willa'• Bible Book St....,
•Leo Wllllomoon J&lt;,woleil
•LaiTY'• Corpd Oudet

Rt. !24, Pomeroy Ohio

4-16 -'86 tfn

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE)

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Also Transmitsion
PH. 992-5682
6-17 -tfc

I

I

I

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

PAINTING

EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. Sacond

•Washers •DishwasOOrs
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

Middleport, Ohio

day, beginning at 1:00 p.m.
Factory Choke ,
shotguns.

12

guage

McDaniel Custom Butchering,
6 days w eek. 304 -882 · 3224

4

PHONE (614) 992-5009

2 fr aeliitt en• to a good hom &amp;. 2
males. 1 white &amp; 1 brown . Cell

SPECIAL/ZINC IN WINDOW I. POOR REPLACEMENT
9-12-86·1 mo

WANTED TO BUY.used wood&amp;
coal h..t era. SWAIN'S FURNI-

TURE . 3rd . &amp; Oliva St. Gallipolis. Caii614-441-3Hi9 .
Buying daily gold, ailv er coin I.
ring&amp;, jewelry, sterling ware.
old coin s. large currency . Top
priC'!"I . Ed. Burkett Barber
Shop, 2nd. Ave. Mlddlepor1 ,

Oh. 8t4-992-3478.

Empi:Jylltl! ltl
Serv tees

4 whit e kittens 7 wks. otd. Call
614 -446-4213 .

4-5·11(

hlterl'l

2282.

Giveaway

COMMERCIAl - RESIDENTIAl
- FREE ESTIMATES-

All Makes

ACCENT

FENCE COMPANY ·
PH. 9412-64131
lfhr 5 Call

F01 All Ym P1iwfhrJ N11d1

992-3345

Per Hundred Pounds
After Hulling on
Hammons Huller

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
lnst allation
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile s_ervice

8-10-'86 tfn

Over I00 unscrambled 1hannels.
NOW A COrN'LETE 10 FT. SYSTEM FOR

SEPT. 29-NOV. II

$20 A MONTH

Walnuts still in the hull

We Also Update and Service
Most Systems

Just Bring your Black
to

NEWELL'S SUNOCO
Chester, Ohio
Mon.· Sot. 8 am- 5 pm

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

985-3350

992·6173

9·22-86·1 mo .

3/11 rtn

4 I

SATELLITE IS STILL THE WAY TO GO

EUGENE LONG

PlUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
New Location:
161 North le&lt;Ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We CarTy Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
(6!41 992-6550
AE51DINCI PHONE
{614) 991-7754

9-8-861 mo

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

(!) Co~uterized

Hmring Air Selection
Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

z

-a:

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM

614·-446-4027
Puppies· 6 wks . old
614 -256 -1688

Call

;:3 LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Complete Gutter Work

I: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Complete Remodeling

z

Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area

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

20 years
" Free Estimates"

CALL COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843-5425

8-13 tfn

111 5 86

11/11 ' !In

Eacrot. 3360 Eut Llvlngoton,
Coombuo. Ohio 43227. an·
d/Of P. 0 . BOK129, PolliOIOy,
Ohio, 46789, addrtBI mwun·
Avrrry lloogleOl and Helale
Googltoin. ruobond wife. A~
bon Googtain, Blld ChariOI
and Muene . Goog!oin. !..abind Btld wife. as plointtffo.
filed a c...,taint againrt you
in the Common Ptoroo Court.
Meigs Cwnty, Ohio, Caoo No.
86-CV-165. dernondinn that a
coal leue doted Juno 7,
1982 botwoM1 plaintiffs. Av·
trt Qooglain 1111d Hat ... a Goo·
gltin.. rullbond and wife, AI·
bon Gotglain and his wife, Su·
.., Goeglein. now daalased.
and Chatloo Googloin and Maxeno Googlain, ruobend and
wife. 1111d Ollie Oiomond Coal
Corporation, .-.d ., agr•·
mant doted April 23, 1986
between Avrrry Googlein and
HeWte Googtoin. husband and
wife, Albert Goaglain, Single.
and Chatloo Gotgtoin ond Ma·
,..,. Goaglein. ruabend and
wife. and dolendants. Dark Di·
amond Coal Cooparation and
M•rkal Mining, Inc .• be can -

and

thot pa11811ion of uid premitea be ordered r81tond to

pttintifft. Avrrry Goeglein and
Helene Googtoin, ruoblnd and
wifa. Albert Googlein. and
Chatloo Googloin and Maxene
Googtein, rullbond and wile.
.,d. further dom.,ding thttt
judgment be "'"dored in
pttintilfo', Avrrry Goagloin 1nd
HeWte Googtoin. t..oblnd ond
wife. Alben Googloin. .,d
ChariBI Googtein and Max1111o
Gotglein. t..llbend and w~e.
tovc&gt;r egtinrt defondonll. Dark
Diamond Coal Corporation
and Mari* Mini'lg. Inc.. i1 the
amoum of Forty Two Thou·
..,d Seventy One and
191 / 100 Doii01WII42 ,071 .91i
together with interest and
for auch other relief at law Of
in equity 11
be found to
be neceuarv and proper to

m•v

gront plaintiff• full ratief and
recovery of plaintiffa' co1U
herein .
You are notHted that you
art required to •n•wer the
complaint with -in twenty eight days after the l•st pu blic•tion, which will be pub·
lilhld once each week for
six consecutive week•. the
lelt publicaUon will be m.te

In case of your fallu re to
anawer or otherwise rll·

pond a1 permkttd by the
Ohio Rulel ot Civl Proco$tro within the limo ototod,
judgment by detouM wltl be
,rendertd eg•inlt you for the
relief de mended in the oomptolnt .
Lerry E. Spencer,
Clark of Cwrto.
Molgo County . Ohio

IN THE COMMON Pl£AS
COURT. MEIGS COUNTV.
OHIO
GEORGE l£MLEY.
PLAINTIFF
liS.
THE HOCKING DOMESTIC
COAL COMPANY.
DEFENDANT
NO. 86 C\1 241
SERVICE BY
PUBUCATION
The Hoclclng Domestic Coal
Compony, Nelsonville, Ohio is
hertlbv notified that ~ has been
named defendant In a legal
action mtitttd Gaooge LJtmley.
plaintiff vs. The Hoclcing Domestic Coal Company. da-

~~.;'!,~!t ~!·~~;cv~

and is ponding in the Common
Pleas Court. Meigs County
!Pomeroy), Ohio. 45769 .
The object ot the COft'4llaint
is to acquire titie to the
following describ6d1real estate
by order of the Cwrt.
Said reel estate is described
as foMows:
Being the surface of the
following described real estate
to-wit: A tract of land in 100

aero lot No. 383 in Salisbury
Township. Meigs Cwntv.
Ohio, described as follows:
Beginning at the northeast
corner of Elijah Frazier's one
and eleven one-hundredths
acre lot said comer being in the
cent8t' of the public road

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

1 'ill

.;r.; w&amp;r.l lid-·

Expttrienced Medie S1les
Reps . n eedll'd . Saseplusco~­
rnissio n Call 304·167· 7881 ,
Mon.-Fri.. 10-4

Offiu 949-2438

No. 380: thence eort 220 teet
to the canter of the public road;
thence !lOUth 24 dog. west
242 feet along the center of
said public road ta the place of
beginning. containing 1

10/ 100 """"'·
Reference

Volume

121

DESCRAMBLERS WITH SYSTEM PURCHASE - $36S
DESCIAMBLER ALONE 1385
THERE ARE STill APPROX. 100 UNSCRAMBL!O CHANNEll

CHARlES WEBER
667-6235

Emerqency 949- 51

86 · I

1..-'--------:-------..-..-......,
54 Misc . Merchandise

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

defeodent .to Mllwtr or otherwise respond as raquired by
Ohio Rules of Civil Procedure

iudgmant will be rendO&lt;td
agtinrt ~ too 111e relief demanded in the compllint.

larry E. Spencer.
Clerk ol Cwrt~
Meigs County Conmon

Plllintiff
VL

CLIFFORD R. SMITH. et al
Dttandanto
Cast No. 86-C\1-98
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
You aoe hort!Jy notified 111at
you hiiVO _ , named Defendant in tile ICiion antilttd
Diamond S1111ing1 Loan Com-

LOST -Tiger cat on Gravel Hill
Rd . Cheshir e . Reward . Call
614 · 367 ·7669 or 614·4462455 .
LOST-Female dog. blonde, 36
lb ., m&amp;d ium height. Between
Rio Grande &amp; Vinton . Call
LOST in Tycoon Lake erN ,
male English bulldog !lucky dog
commercia l type dog) light
brown &amp; white , oM , cannot 1 ee
or hear good. Family p et. Call
614- 245 -5497 or 814-2466231 .
LOST $100 cash r8'Nerd for
r etum ·information I eading to
tl1e whereabouts of a male
black Lab . lostioO .J White Ad .
area . Call614-446 -0370.
lost· collie , tsn black and white
pup . Grear Road area. Wearing
black coller . 304-876-1320 or
675- 5419.

ONLY

25(

·······Gallipolis···

extra money with · Friendly
Home Parties. a nettonwJde
COfT1Jif'IV · Immediate openings
for Managers and Oemonltrl tors in ttl is area. It's easy, fun
and profitable. No nparlence
is nucceuary . All you need ill
desire to make money , h.va
fun and a few hours of IPirl
time. We will provide everything you n a ad to g at start ltd
and there is no cash inv m ment , no collecting, no deliver·
ing ,.,d no aervice ~erg a we
have two full colored CltiiOfll
with over 700 exciting toy11nd
gifts. 1111 100 percent guaflnteed faa turing th a new antmat«&lt; talking doll Cric;kat
which will be advertised on
nahonel T.V. With Ct'ltiltl'nll
just 11ro und the corner you are
1ur e to get a gr•t st8rt. Don't
miss this exciting endr awarding
opportunity . For more informltitm call : 1-BOD-227·1&amp;10.
3000 Government Jobs list.
869,230 yr. Now
S16,040
tiring. Call 806·687-6000 ext,
GH -4662
HELP WANTED - Siding appli·
cators who have out of town.
work exp ari ence with profetlional Home Improvement
comp1nie1. Call 614- 992 ·
32.83 , evenings, 6 -9.
Som11on e to drive kidney dialysis pa11 ant to tluntington o&lt;:c.sionally, tor more informetion
call 304- 676- 3098.

SER~ICE

We can repair and reocore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.
Middleport. Ohio
1 -13-tfc

Addona and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete wor!.
Plumbing and elec tr ica l
work
!Free Estimates)

o~

oth er

3 fam ily yard sale . Oct . 1st and
2nd . Butternut Ave. Baby
clothes. mens , girlsjuns. many

aizet .
Old Rt . 7 . Oc1 . Jrd . &amp;
books, misc. lots

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

.......P.omiirov····-.. ···
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

es &amp; Elizabeth Searles·
7 in Cheshire. Oct. 2nd &amp;
10 em to 6 pm . Applian ce,

YOUNG'S

992-2196

yard ul e at Mary
. Ch eshir a, OH. Oct.

.M .

1 mile Nonh of Ch est er on
Surmer Rd . stChevelieq . Bov•
ctothing up to 18 months,
Women . men and lergt
woman Misc . hou1 ahold
it em1. Saturday Oct . 4 from
9-2.

r~nt

enary townOOus e. Oct. 2 &amp;
Clo cks, lamps, pfaltlgraff
ldioh eo, home interior. small
curtains . &amp;

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Garage ule: Thur.- Fri .- 811.
Oct. 2, 3,4. M•nv different
items . 3 15 Condor St. Pomeroy .

3 fam ily Clothing, household
iteml, miac. County Aold 3, 1
mil 8 from tlarrisonville. Qc.
tob er 1st through 6th.

992-62!S or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4 15 -'86-lc

3 family Oct. 2.3.4. 52&amp; Front
St. Middleport . Guns. IIWfl
mower. baby clothes, adult and
kids. Fumitura, dishes.

BOGGS

EACH

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIU£, OHIO

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMERED LAMP SHADES.

Authorized John Detro,
New Hollond, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

Deolor

CAN BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

Farm Equlpme11t
Parts &amp; SeNiee

1·3-'86 tie

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

WE ARE YOUR SALES

•VINYl SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSULA nON

AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERA10R

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•SAIELUTE SAtES &amp; SERVICE

We Hn.t AFall Tl1111

New Homes Built

S~ap Ttt~tlele.

"Free Estimates"

D•tt
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
111

costs of this action; that 1he

mortgage be fort&gt;cloiOd and
that the liens and/ or int•••
in or on llid property,~ any, be
manf1aled and the real eotata
title qulottd and uid pooperr,

Ysrd Sale Wed . 430 Lari1t Or
Adult end littl e boy• cloth Ill,
dish at. drap as. lou of misc.
Garage Sele Oct. 1, 2 , 3 &amp; 4.
One mila out Rt. 218 .
BasemantSaleOct. 2&amp;3.10til
6, 212 Ja ck mn Pike. Adulu
do thing , .ometoyt , m~y other
things.
Yard Sale 2 , 3. 4. Tablea.
ciDthlls and knick knacks, Fairview Evergreen Rd.
Y11rd Sale 610 2nd . AVe. Wed .
&amp;. Thurs.

57 Gsrfield Behind 56 . Oct. 2.
3. Ralndat a I , 7. Small ref rig erator, braakfllt ut.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Public Notice

- - - - - - - ·lc Homemak ers and Car ear P eopi e. Ua eyotH 1paretim a to Nrn

'(ard SaleS

SIZE 23X30X007

PH• .,49-2801
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

CHESTER-915-3307
4/ 1/ tln

3/ 11 / lln

8 Family Yard Sale 218 Third
Ave. Additional mdse. 2 good
elec. stoves.
Yard Sale Oct . 1, 2. 3. T exasRd.
8th houu leh ah er Evans
Packing. Wlnter·IUmmar do·
thing, HeUowun oortumes
123 4th Ave. Oct. 1. 2 . 3. 10 to
6 . Clothes, baby tclo thes, other
things.
3 Family Vard Sale Bib._ childr en• &amp; adult clothea. mi1 c.
itm ... Mon .-Fri. Andy Dodrill
Road. Rt. ,10. Vinton .
2 Garage Sel es 6 mil e1 down
Rl. 7. Wed . 111 thru Sat . 4th .
Dish wash ar &amp; misc.
Yard Sill e 838 &amp; 640 2nd. Ave .,
Thurs ., Fri. &amp; Sat .

sokf in the forectosure action
and all amounts due Plaintrtf
be paid from the prollllodl of
the ule.
You are requited to antwer

which wNI be publilhed

IN THE COMMON Pl£AS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTV.
OH!D
DIAMOND SAVINGS llo
LOAN COMPANY

FOUND white &amp; tan dog. 1 year
old 45 lbs. Rio Grandtt area. Call
after 5:00 614-245- 9535 .

Make Chri1tmu monev . sell
Avon. Make 41! percent . Call
614· 448 · 3358 .

&amp; Vicinity

9·

RADIATOR

Green Terrace Mobile Home
Park. Community Yard Sat e. At
141 C..--tenary Oct. 1 , 2, 3.

Pleas Coun thtt Comploint within -.tv.
t8t26; 1912. 9. 16, 23. 30. &amp;tc eight t281 day• after the toll
publlcttlon of thlo Notice.

Public Notice

Lost and Found

NORMAN WEBER
667-3074

PAT HILL FORD

order afthe Cwrt and for ouch panv. Plaintiff, vs. Clifford R.
other reUef as may be jusl and Smith, et al .• Defendanto. This
aquita~ .
action hu bean uligned Case
The defeldant is requirat to No. 86-C\1-98, and io ponding
ani"A''H' the comptaint within In the Court of Common PItwenty-eight doys olterthelart of Meigs County, Ohio,
publication of this notice. 45769. The prayer ot tho
which wit be published once Complaint dem101do judgment
each weelc for Sx conJBCutMt againrt the Defendant. CIH·
weeks, the lut publication witt ford R. Smith, in the sum of
be made on the 30111 day of 822.011 .09 . with intereot
Septamber. 1986. and the t1oormn at o rota of 16.38 por
twenty-eight days for answer doy. tram Apf~ 4. 1986. on&lt;1
will con-rnMce 81 that time.
In case of the failure of the

6

...-- - - -- - - - - , J ~::~~,:• tools &amp; tots

2 6

page 509 Meigs Countv Deed
Records .
The prayer of IBid action is
that the above described real
estate be awarded to the
plaintiff. Gaooge lamley. by

Spay ad yr old female tiger
stripped moth er cat. 3 kittens,
2 black and whit e. mal e, 1
calico female. 304-675- 1269 .

Need. Base pkls commit~ion .
Call 304· 767·7881 Monday
thru Friday, 10 to 4.

TUPPERS PLAINS, 011.

RAYMOND E. PROFFITT (MAC)
RACINE, OHIO

6 year old G ermttn Sh 8Ph erd
dog to giv 8 awey. Good wetch
dog. Call614-247-2022

10' 2" All ALUMINUM BLACK MESH SEA BREEZE
IATHLITt SYSTEMS. Full Remote. Installed ........11,650
SAME SYSTEM AS AIOVE WITHOLII IIMOTE S1,250

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

leading from Middleport to
Gallipolis, Ohio: thence north
81 dog. west 225 feet to the
edge of a cliff; thence in a
northeasterly directton 215
feet along the edge of a cliff to
the soulh ~ne of 100 acnt lot

STAR GAZER SYSTEMS .

GREAT BEND ELEORIC, Inc.

Smell amount of barbed wire.
You take down . Call 614-256·
1435 after 6 :00PM .

614-246 -6043

Public Notice

.::ldri!IIS wa c / o Duulld H.

Ooputy
191 2, 9. 11, 23, 30;
t10)7, 8tc

• p.rrce ..... $800
Storttng

lnslallatian Availttllla

RfASONABLE - RELIABLE

By M1rlen1 H•rrllon,

PRINT SHOP

"Free Estimates"

742-2027

Bob Barton, Owner

nau~t&gt;t

BLACK WALNUTS

PLUS' Office Suppti" &amp;
Furniture, Wedding
ond Groduotion
Stolionery, Mognetic
Signs, Rubber St ...ps,
Business Forms,
Copy Sen""· Etc.
2Sl Mill St .. Middleport
104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

614-843-5248

celled .,d held for

THE QUAUTY

C!!~imnty

once

Bleh week for li• t&amp;louccoolive - .. The lilt publica·
tiQn wilt ntmOin an the 30th

C!!art

LICENSED -INSURED-CERTIFIED

FIREPLACES &amp; WOODSTOYES

dey of September, 1986. and
the twenty-eight (28) diYt for
enswer wiM COrnrYW"IOI on that

•Cleaning Inspection
•Flue Caps Installed
•Chimney Rebuilding

data.
In the c . . of your failure to
anrMr or othtrwite respond
11 r&amp;qUII1td by the Ohio Rulli
of Civil Proctdura. judgment
by default will bl ••odootd

;"f
·
.
_
I
.\

agtinrt .,.... ond for t11o relief
- d In tho Comptalnt.
Doted lh 1o 20111 day of
Auguot 1986.
LarrySp.,car.
Clerk of Courta !'--;;;==;-;;';;;;;;;;;;--'
i8126; t9)2.9, 16,23. 30, 6tc
' " ....... - . .........
ftl' ~A:Ut

I

BUILDING

INTERIOR

S~RVICE
985·3561

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
or 992-7121

PH. 992-9949

on lhe 6th dey of October.
1986 and the twenty-alght
dltys for anawer will com·
mence on th8t data.

Totuob mlilb~ of: CitillnS lbti0111llllllin bont). ~ ·o loni 1"'"'1 P!oo•nt~ FMII-J Rardin's
Slloo c.nt•: f ., s.o- fl&gt;rin: - n y 1'11o-.lor111: C - o i -:Ctty hldi,..

•B. J. Buildtro, lnr.

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

knOM1, wllltalce notice that m
tho 12th cloy of June. 1986.

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS

•Point Dlolrlbuting
•Point Pl-ant Federal
Savlnp &amp; Loan Aooor.

81!7/ 86/1 mo .

CASE NO . 86-CL -165
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To Ollie Diamond Coat CO&lt;·
paration. whoae IIIII lolown

Friday, October 3rd, 1986

•Automolivr Supply Co.

$p~l•l
Get ahead of Old Man

VI .

. ..-V'

Saturday, October 4th, 1986
4th Street Landing, Point Pleasant, w. va.

.W£ ARE SORRY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE. DUE TO APRINTERS ERROR
'011 OUR OCIOBER I AD. THE GREAT OCTOBER SALE. THE METAL LEAF
liME WAS INCORRECTLY LISTED ON SALE All.J7. THE CORRECT AD
~ PRICE SHOIJLD BE 3.99. WE REGRET ANY PROBLEM THIS MAY HAVE

y,,

·OARK DIAMOND COAL
CORPORATION. et ol .

.

Point Pleasant, w. va.

ADVANCE SALES .
25' DISCOUNT

Fr/1 ollftt

Defendants

P.A. Denny Sternwheeler Excursions

Vickers and Naomi
Young. The Five F\Jints Class has
been changed !Tom Wedn esday ID
MondaY night . New members are
always welcome.

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

Roger Hysell
Garage

Buiek· Pontlac, 1911

Ava., Gallipolis. Call 814 - 441·

b:p erien ce d Media Sales R ept

Plaintiffs

I

Arll

4 kittens , epprox . 3 wk1 . old .
Call 614·446 ·0815

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
AVERY GOEGLEIN and
HELENE GOEGLEIN, et al.

@

SAnJJI:DAY I

Barbara

2·17 ·86-tfn

Public Notice

SUNDAY - All SEATS $2.50

the most weight lost beteen

949·2263
or 949-2168

BISSELL
BUILDERS

9127/ 86/1 mo.

Phone 4&lt;16· 4524

Gene Hudson lost the most

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

MUlBEDY AVE.
POMEIOY, 011.

36 WE ST

Weekly weight in the men's class of
Slinderella Tuesay night at Maoon.
lJi the ladles' class. there was a tle

REPAIR

190

In

AOMISSION EY[A! TUESDAl 11.50

· NEW -

PH. 742-2070

(Open To Pblic) Dulars Walcome

~ TI N E E S

ROOFING

lox 27 I lontine Rd.

FLEA MARKET • City Boat Dock

8AAGAIN

Howard .L. WriteMI

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

Friday &amp; Saturday
October 3rd &amp; 4th

Animal Park
Schools, churches .. colf1)any
picnic1 , birthday parti as and
family reunions. Call 614- 384·
2108 or 1-800- 282· 2167.

Noah 's

Aacin eGun Shoot sponsored by
Aacin e Gun Club. Every Sun -

RUTLAND, OHIO

BATTLE
DAYS

&amp;14-446· 3672

Business Services

'15.00

For more information
call 304-422-41641
or 614-742-2882

To Buy

TOP CASH pakt for '83 modal
and n rw er us eel cars. Smith

Winter . Have thoso
furnace motors
ctlecked. cleaned and
bearings oiled for

OCT. 3·4·5 and NOV. 7·8·9

Want eel

We pay cash for late modtl
clean ua ed e~n .
Jim Mink Chtv.-Oidl Inc.
Bill Gene Jotlnson

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wrile 0Jtll'f Stnlmel Clusilied Dept
lll Caurl Sl .. PomtiOJ. Ohio 45769

Lo&lt;attd It hind llading ( retk
Waltr Dopl. Off 51. Rt. t24

*Sponsored by: Area Merchants and City *Not Responsible for Accidents

JACKSON P!I&lt;E ·

"

Harris birth

LARGEST SALE EVER IN SEPTEMBER

*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR

for a missionary meeting on Oct. 2.
The working fund coUection was
taken. and the next mreting
aimounced for Oct. 14 at the church.
Katie Parker was a guest .
Devotions were glven by Mrs.
Wright, with Mrs. Powell reading
Phil. 4. Officers' reports were given f - - - - - - - - - - - - - - l
and prayer was by Mrs. GilmorE'.·
Mrs. Haggy shared her plans for
the youth groups. grades 1 through
6 and ages 4 tllrough 5 with
meetings to be held on two Sundays

.

LEON - Leon Allegheny Wesleyan Methodist Church will be In
revival starting Friday and CQntlnuing through &amp;lnday Oct. 12 with
Rev. Clarence Gandee. Services
with special singing at 7:30 nightly.
Sunday evening services. at 6: ll,
tbe church Is located on Rt 2, 10
miles north of POint Pleasant.
Pastor Winfield Mayle invites the ·
public.

POMEROY, OHIO

Free Met hcclist Ch urch in Athens

tor

set

RUSS ELECTRIC
MOTOR REPAIR

An U1\'ll d llun v.u:-. l l..tll 11 um 1:1e

.Stindereffa

Revival

9

3 Announcements

The Daily Sentinel

MEIGS' COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS

*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Ohio

'

·, FLEA MARKET

RUTLAND TIRE SALES

Pomerov~ Middleport,

Tuesday. September 30, 1986

'

\.

INDUSTRIAL

.....,'./

STAINLESS STEEL LINERS
INSURANCE WORK

f(Hl!Hfi

!',tlrMIII' , I tdl

9-4-1 mo.

fl()'f 1\l("-lt

446-2062
I

,

•,

,

,

1 1 ,I,

, ,

•

I

Yard Sale 81by clothes. odd &amp;
andt. 128 State St. Thurs. &amp;
Fri .• 8-1

!

CHIM NEY WORK"

j

YardSIIa0ct. 1&amp; 2. 9to5. 11h
mile down At. 7. Toys, cloth ...
furniture, ttc.

Oct. 3 · 4. 10:00 to 4 :00. Harri·
sonvill e St. At . 684 6th houl8
on left. Household h emt, tools.
okf crates, somt collectibles.
Loh of other thingt. Rain
cancels .
4 family yard sale : Bump erPool
table , furniture , tcanner, radlr
detector, electric B.Q. grill,
P.U. snow tire, clotl1ing, and lots
more. Skate-A-Way , Chettef,
9 -5 Thur. and fri. Oct. 2&amp;3
1 mile north of Five Points OR
St. Rt . 7 . lots and lots of.
childr ens wint tr clothtng . Al10
lots of adult clothing, plus miac.
Item s. Great buys. Oet. 1, 2.3
only . 9:00· 6 :00.
large yard sale: Shop and hend
tools. babv items. c1nning jars,
clothing, toys, andhouaewaru.
Wed . Thur . Fri. Oct . 1,2, 3.
10 :00 till 6 :00 pm. 107 Plea·
tant Ridge Pomeroy, Ohk&gt; .
Garage Sale Spencer. Tupper
Plains, Oct . 2 , 3 &amp; 4th. 9 111 4 .
Wafds rid ing mower , slide pro·
jectOf , tc reen , glauware. n~
quilted bedsprNdt, 2 new
velour comforts, jean , &amp; ate.
Block Sale Sat.

·· ··· Pt ·preasiiiit ·····
&amp; Vicinity
A moving ta le, tv erything yOU
csn think of. Stsrting Mo('l ,
S apt. 22 conttnuous until e"
it ems told . C1mpbeHs, J erid'ld" .
Road, 3 bloch from Gino's. •
Watch for sign1 .
Yard Sale. Wed thn.t Set.."
tumac e for mobile home. axe-:
cond, beby bed , mise clothea;.
At. 2 North Rollinttown , 10 :00.'·

HO

'TOTAL FIREPLACE AND

.

~

Yard Sale W eel. , Thurs .. Fri. Sat.
1t 30 &amp; 32 Chillicoth 1 Rd .
Quilts, pillows, cloth... baby
mattress, crafts,

Bam Nle Oct. 1 .2.3. off 124
between long Bottom. Por·
tland, Junkins Walls Run. Smith
Ridge , Edgar Brewer r•i-.
denc e, watch fortlgnt . AntiQue.
wood bedt, quilts, collectors
itema , numerous kinds cloth a.,
sho n , a few whit oo 11, booka.
dishes . silver ware . Rain or
t hin a.

I

I

I

- - - - - -··
3 Family Yard 01IUpolia Ferry .;
Wed.·Thura. R1. 2 acro11 from _
Stauffer entrance.
••

..

l.af'9e Yard Sale . Childrtni"·
ckuhee, tumlture, proutds t~
Community Service. 2022Jet,
feJtOn Blvd. Pt. P1 ...1nt. Be ...

Ultf
AI:
DIAMONDS 1 _!hull
td_•_
• -_c_'"_'_'_'·_w_~-d-;:
,·.. M_•_d_
Fri. 1:30-3:30.

�Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel
11

LAFF-A-DAY

Openinga for 2 electricians,

42 Mobile Homes

2 bdr mobile home on Upper
R1. 7. Cle~n. furni1hed, weur
pakl, 1200 a month C1ll 814-

ye1r1

Dtalary position awaillble, appty
Sc amc Hills Nursing C enter

245-5818.

Monday thru Frld1y 9 to 4. Pan
time . limited hours

Total elec. 2 bdr fumithad.
ldultt only. no pett, TV cabi a
evaillble. CaM 814-367-7438

avail.t.le in ...

po11tlon

t8blish ed auto ••I• firm Long

hours

2 bdr. 12.1180 Holly Perk.
wather-dryet' hookup 'h mi
p..t HMC Ret &amp; dep requ~rld . Call 814 -44&amp;· 4389 or

Good ben efita. Appty

now fer a r ew1rdtng career

Send to Boll T-200., care of
the Gallipohs Deity Tribune.

304-675·9760

825 Thtrd Ave Galltpolis, OH
4&amp;631

Furnished 2 bdr. mobil a home
m Crown C1ty Call 614-256·

Wanted · 25 to 60 carpenters
3-5 yn experience plus hand
tools &amp; transportation necessary WorkmColumbus&amp;Grove
Ctty, OH CaH 614 -878 -0934 or

6620

3 bdr prtvat e lot, water fur·
n11h ed Near new school R ef
requfred Call 614-446·0514

614 -871 ·3318

3 bdr , 14x70 $280 plus $60
d epoait lnclud es water &amp; gar·
bag e No dnnkmg, t1ght•ng, or
peu Call 814-387 7267

Excell ant income for pert time

home auembty work For 1nfo
call312 741 -8400 ext 313 .
(l i 'llli ."'9 ~ ........

Help Wanted

derk teller

Local fmancial

Start Pert time

Send resume to Bolt T-300 in
care of the Galhpolis Daily

Tr1bun e. 825 ThLrd Ave, Galli·
polis. Oh 46631
Baby srtt ar my home for 19
mot old M F 8- 4:30 Refer

ence reqUired
614 -446-3294

Please call

Easy Assembly Work I $714 00

per
Guaranteed
Payment
No 100
Salea
Details-Send
Stamped Envelope Etan-715

33482

Musicutns EKP&amp;rtenced bess
player drummer and light man

w.nt ed tor top 40 Rock and
Band Call av enmgs
614 - 992 - 6137 or 614 -992

Count~

6936
Live m con"C)an•on single
woman at l east 50 y eara otag e
Take care of 3 dllldr 8fl, do ltght
housework, mod erat a cooking
Will fumiSh room 1tnd board M'id

\

i '

Dflver Mechanic tor local Co
Mutt hev e tools and &amp;Jtp e
rutnce Send rMuma to Da•ly
S entm el Box 729 M. Pomeroy.

Oh0&gt;

Salet and marketing !)arson
Bookkeep ar · rae eption.st
Pref erabiV 1 vr exp er1ence but
not necessary Must have own
car Send R e1um e to eo~ 731
Racm e. Ohto
3000 Government Jobs L1st
$16 .040 - 159 230 yr Now H•r'"g Call 805 -687 - 6000 Ext
R-9805
Lady to hv e •n With elderly lady
Patient not b11d -tast Call 614·

992-3769

call

Exper1enced med1a sales re·
prnentat1vea needed Bue
plus comm•u•on
304 -757·
7881 . Monday thru Fr~day

10 00-4 00

\

.

\

\

' "'

23

Professional

32 Mobile Homes

s ervic 88

for Sale

Fult t1m e pos1t1on open for
resident manager to manage
133 unrt for ap1rtm ant complex
m Revenswood. WV
Send
resume to Colon1al American
Development Corp 3BO S
F•fth St
Columbus. Oh10
43215 Attn John Hunter

614·992-6868

12x8&amp;, 2 bedroom turmahed
trailer SUS month plus dep·
011t and utiht1 II 614- 992 -

7479

44

Phny Truck Step wAnt ooo k and
a11pe"enced h elp Call after
10 00 AM . 304 757 8367
Ass emDI en Wanted. earn up to
S 60 00 per day au embhng
display clowns Mat er.al supp 1• ed Send stamped 1 elf ad
dr eu ed envelope Hawks
Landmg P 0 8011 13493.
Orlando Fl 32859
Someone to dr1v e k1dn fiV d1alv
111 IJIIII ent 10 Hunt.nglon oc ca••onally. iOJ more mformat1on
call 304 -675 2098
A1rhn 11 Jobs S18 747 Ill
t59 .856 year now ~mmg Call
ro b hn e 1 5,8· 469 3635 exl
A 19 80 tor mto 24 hrs

18 Wanted to Do

Gu 1tar and Bass l eu on• Call
614 992 6524
Baby 11t11ng 1n my hom e. c an
Carolyn Rou sh 304 773 5414

Financial
Bus in ass
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAL LEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends that you
do busm ess wnh people yo u
know . and NOT to 1 end mon f1Y
lhrou(fl th e marl unt1l you hflv e
1nv ett.gat eel t he off enng
Fflck uwm1ll 3 block A e
ttoek ed 68 ndl bled e Good
cond 81800orbe~t offer Cell
&amp;14 387- 7619
:__
-

_______ ...

Own your own beautiful t11gh
volume onepnc:e t19 991hoe
stor a Uc:Hes-Chlldrens·M ens
All 11111 quality m erchanths e
Natlonatly known brands Bus
Nike. C1pezio . Candt8s, Joy
toot . Pro Keels. Jolu 'ne V•
sk)ns. Ptolinl , Evan P1con e. La
Q ..r. Vlvi~na . R eebak and
... manY more . U6, !K&gt;O 1ncludes
beglnnmg lnv entory -trammg ·
fixtures: grand CIP en11g promo
lions. S eU "rvic e or full
service ttore C1ll anytime for
thtt unique apportumty Pre1
ttge F•hions601 - 329· 2362
Free bfochur e W 1 open 111
types of app1rel etoree Our
most popular Jtor" ere: 1)
Can•r Shop for women 2)
t 13.99 On •Price llditl Start
31 FMnily Apptr Sotr 1 Ov er
1000 top bftnde svtlltble
118',9715 COfT1tl•te. You Clft be
open within 2 we eht. C•H
1-404· 489·..,.38 1nytlme d-v
or night ar m week endl

USED

APPLIANCES

Washers. drvert. refrigerators.
rangtt s Skaggs Apphancu,

Apaf(m ant
for Rant

---------2bdr unfurnished apt inCrown
City Call 614- 256-6620

Eslale

Coll614-367-7667

Furn•sh ed apt Adults only Ce ll

1969 Holley Park 2 bdr dinm·
groom. eir condit1on1ng. retrig
&amp; stove, underpinning. porch
84,000 Call 614-446· 7020.
1966 Fleetwood $2,500. Call
ath tor Ed. 614-448-7044 or

31

Homes for Sale

Gov arnm ent hom e1 from $1
(U· r epa.r) D ahnqu ant t1.1: property A epoaa easions Call B05
687 8000 a~~:t GH -4662 for
euuent r apo I itt
Beautiful home 1n 1rea ava•l•
ble flatwoods area of Pomeroy

Cell 614-446-2369

Houa e far sale 6 rooma &amp; bath,
apartment up1ta1rt, 3 rooms &amp;
bath , 14•70tra•ler3bedrooms,
LR . DR lneome $700 month
S55,00Q . Call Earlie Carr, 614·
256- 1846 call anvt1m a 641
Th~rd Ave
3 bdr . atr, pool. g~~rage N1ce
Commercial prop or1y. corner
lots &amp; h1ghway frontage List
With ua We have buyers
A -On aReal Estat e· Broh er Call
304 -674· 6104 or 304- 674

614-448-8080

1976 Rosemont 14x70 31arg e
bedroomt, total at ec New
carpet 87996 French C1ty
Brokerage Cal814-446·9340
1971 Elcona tratlor, 12x66, 2
bdr. fum11h eel , on rent eel lot
Close to town Bx18 out bu•ld
1119 17000 CaiiBU-446·9956
or 614 446· 1441
2 bdr mobile home. toward
Crown City. Kenny ' a CarryQut
Atkmg 81,000. Callaher &amp;.OQ.
814 -258 -6646 or 614· 266·

6878

For u l e Roush Len e. Ch eah1re
trailer &amp; epprox '11acr e lot with
porch &amp; storeg e bu1ldmg Call

614 367-7492

33

Pnce reduced br1ck ranc:h 3
bdr swlmmmg pool. 2 level
acr &amp;I Call 614-446- 3027
Conv em ant location ott Upper
Rt 7, 3 to 4 bdr FP .n LR,
eomplet e k1tch en bmtl 1n d11
hwa1her. range, oven. mlcrowaveS.wlsher·dryer, TV room,
1800 or 2:700 down &amp; 30 years
financ1ng aveilable . Kyger
Creek School 848,000 e11:tre
land available 614 446 7627

Farms for Sale

3 bd r home. l'h b1th. LR ,
krthcen Call 614-446-7628
8 room house 1 2 acrea
Ooubl e car glfag e Loc•t ed on
Rose H1ll Bargam pnc ed
S20 000 Call 614-87B 2613

30 Acres
H11 tttl.tJI e land.
house bams, pond Southw &amp;lt em Sc:hool D11tnet
Call

246-9248

240 acre farm 6 miles north ot
Pomeroy on Old 33 60 acres
tillable land 2 dwelling• 614947 -2338 1fter 3 30 p.m

34

mshed, 11 Cour1 St 1326 per
mo plus ulllit•es, referanee &amp;
depottt Call614 446 -4926

614-446-9623

Duplex for rent 646 Second
Ave • Galltpoha 3 bdr ltvm
groom, d1mngroom, new klt·
chen. backyard. r etr~g &amp; rang a
S286 plu1 ut1ht1et1 &amp; ucunty
depo11t Call614-446·0690
Nicely furmah ed mobile home
CA &amp; heat. axe el 1oeat1on
adults only Call 614· 446 033B
6131fl 3rd Ava 1 bclr pr•vat e
bath 8140 per mo 0 eposlt
requ~red Call 614- 446 -4222
between 9 &amp; 6

2 bdr. unturn uptlalra apt
ov erlook1ng CitY p1rk Pt~vat e
ra•r entrance w1th very mce
large rooms - S400a month Call
614-446 9836
FurniShed apt S235 Ut1l1t1es
paid 1 BR 920 4th GallipoliS
446-4416 eh er 7pm

- --1 bedroom apt. tor rant Baatc

rent start a 8216 e month that
•nelud et all uttht1e1 0 epos1t
required of 8200 Contact
Village Msnor Apt Middleport
814 992 7787 Equal Hous1ng
Opportunity
Apartm ants tor rent 1n Porn e
roy One and two bedrooms
Cell 614 -992 6215

35 Lots &amp; Acr eag e

1 bedroom apartment upsta1rs
Newly carpeted throughout
Partly furmsh ed Call 614 992

5908

2 bedroom street l evel apart
ment N1ce yard, p11t1o off
Sprmg Ave . Pomeroy Ce ll
614 -992·6B86 aher 6 00 p m
1 bedroom apt Ntce for work·
mg person 402'12 Tw enty'fourth
51 . Pt Pleasant Call 614 - ~92 ·
6868
2 b adroom apartment for rent
Middleport
8185
per
month
1100 deposit Call
614 992 6611 days or 614
992 6763 evenmgs

tn

5 aOfea wooded , c1ty achoo ls,
beautiful home s1t11 Call 614·

446·3027

Grant St M1ddl epcn Oh1o 6
room and bath. garage , good
locat•on Call 614 -992 -2602
N1ce 3 bedroom, 2 bath home
Near M e•g• H1gh School Csll
614 992 3226. 9 11 p m
Government Hom fl s from 11
!U r epa1r) 0 ehnqu en1 tax prop·
arty A apou eu1ons CAll 805 687 6000 E1111 GH9806 for
currant t epo hat

3 bedroom onethlfd acre 4 111
m1l es out Sand H1ll Road , Sears
washer end dryer a1r cond
linch en apphances 304 676
2698
For Nl e 3 br home w1th ltvtng
room , d1nmg room, k•tch en and
fam1ly room on N Park Dr

25 acres wooded . ClfV schools
Call 614 -446· 3027
Syracuse 1 acr a bu1ldtng lot
ut1ht1 es 1vatlabl e 1 bloch from
pool 88000 0 B 0 Call 614·

992 3717

6011:100 lot Syracuse Garage
apartment structut e N e ada
w ork t6600 0 8 0 Call 614

992 3717

F11h1ng camp along Oltv e Green
Creek About 3 miles out ot
8 everly Oh1o Com as w1th
trailer 2 lot dr•lled well and
el ec1r1c Call aft 8f 5 30 pm
614 949 -2912
Ashton butlding lots With public
water, mob1le homea permit ted. 304-676-2336 or 304-

676-2267

House 5 rooms bath J etferaon
Blvd Call ah er 7 p m 304 -676·
1142 or 675 -7298

2 br. k1tch en , bathroom. w1th
laundry room. ltv1ng room &amp;
dmm g room all el ec Approx 7
miles from pt PI on Rt 62 2
tracts appro11 1 acre more or
I en ov erlook1ng Kenewha
R1v er 840 000 Call 304-676·
5440 between 8 30 end 4 30
Log home 3 4 br . all elec fully
carpeted , fimshed basement,
AmbroSia 7 m•les from Pt PI
on Rl 62 City water. paved
duv away &amp; 11pt1c tank, situ
ated on ' 'h acre. overlooh1n g
Kanawha RtVII
Cat!
304 675· 6440 between 8 30
and 4 30

aeo.ooo

Gov ernm ant houamg from
11 00. you r epalf Also . d elm
Quant tax propert1e1 and foreclosure prop erteu For mto eall
!refundable) 1 316·736· 1610
ext 573
3 bedrooms, 2 bath1, f•m•lv •nd
dm1ng room front porch gar
age halt ecr e Willtak e mobile
home trade -In 304-676 -3030
or 675·3431
3 bedroom, all ef ec. M.. on, W
VI pt'IC8d 1nth 8 30 ' 1 304-896-

3463

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 9n 14x70 Fairmont BIVVI ew
2 bedrooms, c antr1l1ir, waah 8f
and dryer , equipp ad tor wood·
burner. kitchen ll)pli~nces . un
derpinning Call 614· 986 ·

3566

MciBILE HOMES MOVED m·
sured. r eaaonabla ret es Call

304·575·2336

Vlctoritn mobile home 14x87
on one 1cr e lot Glenwood.
304-678 -2018 before 4 ·00 or
1fter 8.00 PM.

APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
houaea Pt PleAsan1 and Galh ·
polia 614 -446 8221
Two unfurntshed apartment~ . 4
rooms and bath . 5 rooms and
beth Chftan W Va 304 -675 -

3216

Houses for Rant

2 bclr , 2 m1l ftS from Galhpoha
St Rt 688 1200 plus d epo11t
Aeferencerequ~red Call614 446 -3413
2 bdr . $100 monlh 20 mllet
out 141 to 233-Dry R1dge Ad
You pay u1ill11es Call614-4464 703 mormnga ot e 14 379

2886

In Oanvtlle, Ohto 7 rooma , 1 V2
batha Call614- 742 -2347

Desk style SfiWIMg m11chme
cab•nut . 4 pc wood frame family
room set brown j)llld l1ke new,
eoffae table 304- 675 3364 be
fore 6 00 675 5909 after 6 00

54 Mise Merchandise
C&amp;llah&amp;n 's Used T1r 11 Shop Over
1,000tlf8S,IIIZeS12. 13.14.15,
16. 16 5 8 m1IM out Rt 21B
Call 614 266-6251
Plastic e•atern state approved.
ptast1e sopi te tanks
pi&amp;SIIC
culvert1 , meta l culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPAIS ES . Jack·
son . Oh 614 286 5930
F~rewood

for aele 530 00 PU
load Cell Roger Maade, 614
388 -9341
F~rewood for sale all hardwood.
sp irt &amp; hauled $40 full p1 ckup
load Call 614 -446 - 302B or

614-446 2223

Matal secretary desk Call after

6 00 614-446 9346

Cress ce ramtc hdn L1ke new
240V Call614- 446 2163 after

Ten speed b•ke, hke new $60
Sofa &amp; chair good cond S50
Call 614 256 6002
Metul closet $25 Sears organ
w1th benc:h, great Chnstmas
g•ft S200 Oua:uu 26 lf'ldl color

TV. S200 Call 614-388-8620

Onfl third carat solltare round
wh11e gold d1amond necklaee
Apprarsed at S6QO W1ll tell for
S 360 N1ce Christmas g1ft Call

For rent Sleep1ng Rooms and
hght house keepmg room s
Park Central Hotel Call 614·

446·0766

Furnished room Range, refng
S116 Uttlit1 es pa1d 919 2nd
Galhpohs Smgle mal e. thar e
bath 446 441 fi after 7 pm

46 Space for R ant
large pt~vet e mobile ho m e.
apace m Centenary Call 614
446 -4063
COUNTRY MOBilE Home
Park. Route 33 North of
Pomeroy lerg o lots Ca ll 614·

992 -7479

t:--:----- -- --

upng hi freeur 2
b&amp;rbell sal
12•16
carpet allm excellent condition
Call 614 -446 -4169
2 used console televt11ons ana
RCA . one Zemth Call for more
1nformatmn. 614 446 9476 af·
tar 5
N1ce W 0 couch &amp; chalf. lamps.
coffee &amp; end tables recliner. bdr
1u1t other ttema Call 61 4 -446·

3224

M•ud hardwcod slab s. S12 per
bundl e Cont atmng appro11 Ph
ton s FOB Oh 1o Pallel Co ,
Pomeroy Oh•o Call 614 -992-

Half Pn ce I Flesh•ng arrow sl{lns
S289 I L•ghted no n arrow
S269! Nonhghted 82291 Free
letters I Few left See lo cally
11800)423 0 163. anytime
Surplus
Army regular ISSUe
camouflage . all acceasones f1eld
gear uaed rental clothmg , Army
f1etd IRcketa new camouflage
k1ds , tr&amp;ller for rBf1t Sam Some
rvdle s East of Ravenawood,
Phones 304- 676 3334 Pt Plea·
un1. 304 -27 Y: 6656 Old Rt
21 Fn Set Sun 12 00 8 00
pm
HALF PR ICE Flash1ng arrow
111gns $289! • Lighted. nonarrow 8269! I Non lighted
S229 1t Free l fln11r11 t Few left
See locally 1!800)423 0163 .
enyttme
Rough l1;mbe1 t 1&amp;0 1doo ft.
f~rewood 120 -ton , Quality
Stone, Handeraon. W Va phone
304-675 -1 100

55 Building Supplies

61 Household Goods

010000 304882 2301

Buildmg Matenala
BlocK , buck. sewer pip•. w1n
dowt. hntels, etc Claude W1n ·
tera. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614·
246· 6121
Conerate bloch• ai11izes yard or
deltvery Muon ~and Gtlllpolla
Btock Co . 123'11 P¥1• St ..
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 61 4 -448·

2763

AUCTION

SWAIN

&amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Galhpoha. New &amp; uaed
wood -coal stoves, 6 pc wood LR
42 Mobile Homes
.ulte U99. bunk h«&lt;l t199
_ 1ntron I'OCiinere t99. newfor Rent
Jolted bedroom auites, rangea,
wringer washers , &amp; ahoee. New
Nice 2 bedroom trail for rent
Uvlngroam auites t118 · •6ag
in Ch esh•r e On mee lot Call
lll'llPI. also buytng eoal• wood
304-n3-582B
ttov.. Call 614 -448-3169

Pale Building• by Qualt1y
Builder• Workahope. cerporta.
animal shelters. gereges. Free
eatimatet Phone 814 · 889-

&amp; 7121

L

2 br At 2, 1 1mtfl ehlld
tccept ed t150. p.,. month.
plut utillti •• Cell 304·17&amp;·
3002 or after 6 30, 17&amp;-8389

County Applitnct~, lne Qood
u.N .&amp;pplilnCN end TV aeu.
Open BAM 10 IPM, Mon thru

Sa1 814·448·1899, 827

3r~

Ave. OtUipolis, OH
Now taking eppllcetlont on
Moblle Hom11 In KS.K Mobile
Home 'P1rk. •110. per month

plua u~lld.. . Call 304·878·
3002 ..
8,3o. 875·1389

•11•

Vallty Furniture, MW 6 uald .
· Llrge Medon of quality fumi·
ture . 1218 Eaetern Ava
Gallipolis
·•

Dregonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA H1malayen. PeratAn and
Siamese kinens . AKC Chow
pupp111 Cell 614·446· 3844
after 7PM
Purebred Border Col he pu pp 181
from work1ng doga Three male.
two female. wormed &amp; ahols
8125 Call614· 446 ·2359
AKC Reg Oalmation1 pup. male
S125 Call 614 - 446 - 2075
even1ngs
Half Labrador &amp; half Gold en
rotrill\ler . Call 614 :.!46- 9397
Go ld en Retuever pupp1e1 - 8
wks old AKC regiStered . Only 3
left {a ll malea 1176 e1cht -so
hurry! Includes shots, pap era. &amp;
dog food C•ll 614- 286 -5110
today
For saleAKC Doberman pupp1es
red &amp; black tail docked
Wormed shota, papers 850 Call

614-446 -n9s

56

57

Musical
Instruments

AKC Bassett pups 2 female, 4
montha old Spec:ial price t90

614·867-3868

Bo• qu•tar. 1 yr old org.nally
8367. aell 8160 Saxaphone
S250 Both good cond1tton Call
614 -379 -2183
Selmer S1gnet SoloiSt wooden
clafln81 With case Good eondt·
11on Retail value S750, will u ll
for 8350 Call 814 ·446-1683
Set of Oi•on drunw and cym
bales S300 00 Pevey Base
guitar and amplifier like new.
0350 00 304-676-3628

58

Fl\lit
&amp; Vegetables

•

Livestock

Polled &amp; homed Hateford bulls
A.l Dulls spring calving cows
Lawrence Burdell Call 614 246 5181
4 horse tra1ler $1.000
614 256- 1393

Call

For sale 2Stmmenta1Helfer 1'h
yean ald. Call 814- 986- 3549
after 5 00 p m

Transporlation
Autos for Sale

1986 Chevrolet Spr1nt plus 5
spd tranSmiSSIOn. radiO. I:U
oond Very low m1leege bcel
lent gat m1leage Call 614 245 ·

9698

1983 Studebaker looka good
runs good $600 00 or trade fer
truck. 304-676 -4684
1979 Cap fl . 4 dy . 4 spd turbo
n~ce
cond1t1on 81,450 Cell

1985 Plymouth Honzon au1o
trans . Bit cond
AM FM
ca11ene. 22.000 mtles, owner
mov111g mutt sell $5995 Call

614 446-2719

79 \lolkawagon Ouher

Red resberr~es. Taylors Berry
Paleh . Ca l 614 446- 8892 or

614·245· 66064

Yellow Free Stone Canning
Peaches now available Call for
pr~cea and var1at1ea
Bob ' s
Market, Muon, W Va 3Q4
773 -6721 Open 7 days
Canning beats for aale. 304
675 -6667

&amp; Liv es tock
61

Farm Equipment
CROSS

&amp; SONS
U S 35 Wett, Jackaon , Ohto

614·266·6461

Massey Ferguaon New Holland.
Bush Hog Selea &amp; Serv1ce Over
40 us ad trActors to choose from
&amp; co~letellne of new &amp; used
equipment Largest select ton m
S E Oh10
CENTER SR 36 W GAII•po ha.
Ohao Call 814 446 -9777 . eve
614· 446- 3692 Up ffont b'ac·
tors w1th waiTinty OVtlf 40 uaed
tractors. 1000 toolt
Gravely traetor, electnc start 8
apd . wtth enechment will sell
separate. Call 614 -448 -4149
Cue 600 Combme . sell propelled w1th 2 heftda New
ldfla Cornp1eker ptcka 2· 30 1nc:h
rows
Call 814 245 - 5622
ev&amp;nllll)l
New idea No 323 one row corn
P•C:ktlf F1eld reedy hcellent
cond1tton Call 614·985· 3865
or 614 986· 3888
New and ueed parts fer Wh1tea.
Ol1vers. M ·M , Deut:1 traeton
Stders Equ1pment Co, 304·

676 7421 .

Homelite dl•n NW sale. Soper
XL· AO 3.6 cu lnd'i engma,
manuel and auto Oi ling, 16 1n
power tip bav •289 00 We have
over 30 good used tnd rebuilt
1aws tn •ock from 175 00 to
$160 00 We will glvfl a fr-a
chain or elect chlin uw ahar·
pener with the pureh11e of any
ueed SIIW . Keefer Serviee Cen ter. St. Rt 87, Leon, W Va
Phone 304· 896-38 74
Fall new and uaed equ1pment'
apeeials . One New Holl1nd No
8 , 3 beat• torage box with
• tandem axle 12 tOn wsgon
$8.900 00 . One No 8 bo11 with
10 ICtn wtQOn f&amp;,&amp;OO.OO One
Model 30 tor~~ge bio'Mir 1. 000
RPM 82,800.00 One uHd No
8 forage wagon with 10 ton
running gear U . 100.00. One
utad 6·717c:hopper81,70Q 00
0ne uaad 71 I ehoppar with 1
row he.t t3,&amp;00.00 On• ueed
718 with 2 raw head
13.000.00 . One new 474 teven
foot daluxe Myblna 85,900 00.
One new 481 nine foot deklxe
haybine •1.100 00. On a New
Holltnd 302, 1.200 ljurry m•nure aprNider *1.900.00 One
307 tandlm axla llurry IP'8.cler
2.200 tel$11 ,100.00. On•3S3
eighty bu New Holland grinder

oi.BOO.OO.

Dna 355

hundrad bu grinder mlxer
$8,800.00. One New HoUtnd
L· 462 lllkl lt•r loed..- 30 hp

35 ft bus, pr•vate coach. very
good cond Sleeps 6. good for
gospel or •ng•ng group Ready
for the road call 614 -379 ·

2640

purllJ, 49 .000 m1les Call 614·

388·9622

ET 101ns Robert Wagner on
rhe San Franc1sco set of h1s
upcommg TV mov1e, " Here

I'll (I) M'A'S'H
Iii([) People's Coun

FRANK AND ERNEST

T"HAi 5f-IOULI&gt;
MA!CE THINGS
A L.O,.
_ ...:::, E:'A.s'IE'/2!
WEL-L,

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
Camper 18 ft toilet 1hower.
kn chen ~utppod . sleepssn1 self
oontamed , S1 700 Call 614446- 1358

Ill@ @ Wheel of Fonune
@ Barney Miller
7:05 Cil Sanford and Son
7 30 0 IJ) ® New Newlywed
Game
I]) Inside Baseball
I'll (I) Too Close for Com·
fon
0 (])Judge
CII Bless Me, Father
@ Wheel of Fonune
Ill @ @ Jeopardy
@Major League Baseball.
Chicago Cubs at Philadel·
phia 13 hrs I
7.35 Cil Major League Baseball
Cincinnati at Atlanta 12
hrs , 30 mtn ) ltve

8:00 0 C1J @ Matlock Ma11ock
must defend an exot1 c dancer accused of murdenng
her v1nd1cUve eK-husband

i60 mm I In S1ereo

27 tt . Trotwood camp8f self
conuuned . good shap e $2 500
Call 614 266 1393

C1J Hell Town

THAVE.5 !l ·30

(]] Superbouts Arroyo vs
Al t (Atlan11c Cit y, Januar y,

fl• -..,.._~ -

Must sell I Truck camper, steeps
s1x Ice boll stove, furnace Call
614 985 3839

1985) 160 m1n I

ALLEY OOP

Cil Iii ([) Who's the Boss 7
ICCI

I SURE WISH DOC WOULD GIVE ME A
LITTI.E WARNING BEFORE HE .JINI($
ME AACIUNP WITH THAT ~CHINE
'
OF HiS!

1971 26 tt Winnebago A V
Good cond1t10n $8000 Call

614· 986-3857

Pan2ol2

Newshour
@ Gl @ Wizard S1mon
come s to the rescue when a
10ckev fnend and h1s hor se
are both InJured before an
•mponant race 160 mm )
(jj) Nova: A Normal Face

The Wonders of Plastic
Surgery ICCI The emerg·

WATERPROOFING
Uncond1110nal ltfetime gueren·
tea loeai references furmshed
Free e111mete1
Call collect
1-614 -237 ·0488. day or n1ght
Rogera Basement
Weterproofmg

1980 Chevetle runs good
$700 C1ll 61 4· 266 -1393
79 AMC Spirit. 6 cvl . AC cru11e
control, PS, 3,400 miles $2,300
very sharp Call 614 -446 · 3200
76, 78, 79 All 1n good cond1
t1on Call614 -448 -8261
Sbeet rod, 1948 Ford Coupe
Call 304 676- 6644
1980 Chevette Red AC , auto
$1100 1978 Chevy Capnce
Wegon Goodcondition $1100
Call 614 -949-2B01

For sale or trade 1977 8uiek
Century 350 VB. auto trans mlulon. PS . runs good. good
tires. good car. $975 or best
offer 614· 992· 3323
1986 Oodge Shelby Charger
reltonabty prleed turbc engme
:1)4-882 3146
1979 La Sabra: 1976 SUlek
Rlveria 304-676-6182

1984 Chevy Stott1d1le. 4 whl.
dr • red. PS. PB. AC . tilt.
AM·FM, 1u111 gal tank, chrome
ttep bufTJier lmmtculate Ctll

44&amp;·6297.

1-:-:-::-:-=-- - - - - 1974 68 p1saanger Interne·
tiona! but, auto trana, n.w tlrea.
runt grNt. 12,000 Cell 814·

2118-1393.

1---------Wredt_er 88 Chevy 440 Holmes,
twlng'"g boome. 82,000 . Call

1180 Ottatn t1 .999

19BO

aun •1.111 . John'a Auto Sal••.
Bulaville Ad • Oaltfpolle. Ohio.
1972 Chevy Suburb1n . Goad
running condition . Ne.tdt body

...,... Call 814-742 -2517.

Ray Luca's gang to St

level 'godfather 160 m1n )
In StmAo

f----r-.1..;.;.=-,:1,I :....:.---11 l

l

Sign on rear w•ndow of station
• -r-C-'TA-"W-r'T--'H;...--.,1 :.; wagon
loadad with children: Oon'l

.~ I I I I ."

I

WDDIESIN'THEWINTER .
MY DA-D MAKES THEM ...

THEY MUST BE PRE:TTY
GCOD. AFTER HE f.IA'51WO

CR THREE OF THSM .. .

HE PUTOCN A L.AMP.5HADE
AND 6/NSS 'SUCKLE
CONN, WIN60CKI!'

•

.

.

BARNEY

posal plan1 1n Alsen , LA 160
mtn .)

SALLS 0' FIRE!!

([) 0 Cil Jack and Mike

IT'S FIXIN'TO P.OUR

NOT EVERV
TREE HOOSE
HAS A STORM

DOWN CATS AN DOGS

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE lETTER S
TO GET ANSW ER

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Pestle - Ameba - Orbit - Uphold - UMBRELLA
The elderly genl stood 1n the pouring rain with no prolec-

t•on He explained, "The one thing I have never been able to

save for a rainy day is an UMBRELLA"

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Practicing
to deceive

FL.ASH AE!&gt;OUi'
50ME1'HING
YOU'VE'. DONE .

Watt e rson ·• Water Heuhng .
teuonable ra1es. •mmed1at a
2.000 l)llllon delivery, c11tern s,
poole, wull. etc cell 304-576 ·
2919

Upholstery

1833

ee:T A

PEANUTS
'·
'

R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reupholatery, St. AI . 7. Crown
C1ty, Oh 614· 266· 1470. Eve
814-446 3438 Open datly 8 t o
6, Set. 9 .30 to 1 30 Old 8t new
Upho1tered
Mowrev'a Upholstering servmg
trtcountyarM 21yeara Thebfllt , 1
In furmture upholaterlng Call ~· ~,.:
304 · 676 · 41 54 tor tree • •
estimates
_,

SUDOE:.NI-Y

DOESN'i' SEEM
SUCH A G~e.AI
IOE::A?"

t8 5

EAST
+A Q 9 8
"Q 6 2
• QJ 6 3

+KJ

+5 2

WEST
.KJ 10 6 4 3
• 984

In July lhe Grand NatiOnal Team
Champ1onsh1p was won m Toronto by
Seymon Deutsch. Jim Jacoby, Bob
Hamman and Bob Wolff. It was Sey·
moo's first major national champiOn·
shtp Today's deal, taken from a re-

SOUTH

+

gional tournament m Texas where we
were pract1cmg before competmg m
Canada, shows Seymon earning a Slg·
nif1cant ptckup through a deceptive
lead
Seymon, Slttmg West. made a onespade overcall . North's lhree-club btd
was pre-emptive, and East jumped to
four spades etther to make that con·
tract or to get in the way of whatever
South might be wantmg to bid Rtght
or wrong, South concealed hiS dta·
mond holding and btd five hearts Everyone passed, and without much ado .
Seymon placed the jack of clubs on the
table .
Place yourself in declarer 's seal
and try to be obJective. Doesn 't that
club jack look like a Singleton' And
what chance would you have to make
hve hearts 1f you played dummy's
club queen, saw East take the kmg and
gt ve his partner a club ruff, and then
had the defenders play a heart at you'
On the other hand, if dtamonds were 3·
3, you could take the club ace, play A·
K of diamonds and ruff a diamond,

.AKJ10 7 5
t A K972

• as

Vulnerable Ne tlher
De aler Sou lh
West

North

East

Pass

Pass

P ass

Opemng lead

+J

then ruff a spade back lo your hand
and play A-K·J of hearts to make your
contract And that's whal declarer
lned to do
Alas, West ruffed the third diamond,
cashed the king of clubs aod played a
spade. Declarer still had lo lose two
more tricks, and Seymon Deutsch had
taken one more gtant step toward WID·
ning the exciting championship in
Toronto.

~-~bv THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
3 Tennts
I Any child,

to W C

sen-e

4 Garden
herb
5 Maxtm
6 Tra£htJonaJ
knowl edge
7 F'it - fiddle
8 Baby bug

F'ields
6 Sow
10 Canane
II RosaUnd
Russell
moVIe
IZ Lane

13 Speec htfy 9 A!Wr ess

10 Average
16 Palm leaf

I ' Kind of

deer
15 Change

Yesterday's An&amp;wer

21 Dessert wtnf' 35 Po kf"r
40 G ardne r
22 Surpassmg
ope ners 41 Roy
24 lnvaston 23 Comtc
36 "The
..43 MusiCal
Euaene -

force

Cll SCTV
&lt;Ill Managing Our Mire·
cle•: Health Care in Amer·
leo This progr6m fea1Uras a

pariel dtscuss1on concerning
doctors '
responslbthttes
concern tng pat1ent confi-

den11ail1y 160 m1n .)
11:30 D (])@Tonight Show
Tonigh1's guest IS Joe GaraU!,ola 160 min.) In Stereo
(J) Bell of Groucho
C!l SportiCenter
(I) WKRP In Cincinnati
• (!) Tol
• CIJ ABC New. Nlgtnllnt
. CIJ Au8tln ,City Umlbi
I
(II (9 Mllgnum. P.l.
• IB1 Hot Shob Amanda
llf"'d Jake go undercover in
on old castle 10 lnvos1iga1o a
·g!lostly murder. 170 min.)
11:110 (I) Partrell of Amtilco:
Mlnllllppli60 min.)
t 2:00 CIJ Doble GIHII
(!)NFLY..toooklfll.
CllJw!l'1reona

• lil Rtwhkle
• ()) Ttlll of tht UneK·
pecttd

note

edge
29 Regress

31 Shade
of blue
32 Sue m court

33 Assuage
3G Separate
36 Half a
sawbuck

39 Ught fare
42 Out of
the way
44 Use

47 Run away
DOWN

i60 m1n I
® News
10·05 (I) MOVIE: 'Against All
Flags'
10:30 Cil Celebrity Chefs
8(DINNNews
® Roughing 11
CHI News

lpcress -

28 For all
to see
28 Slantmg

story about college professors pressured to gtve passtng grades to star athletes

(!) NFL Ann Wrestling

e:ve:~

t I0 4
• AQ 1097 43

45 lmp•rud,, nce
46 Group

•rn M•A•S•H
-rHAI

9·30-86

.3

By James Jacoby

or unil

I Type
of knife
2 F\lnctlon

•

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTF.'! - Here's how to work II:

1&lt;30

.

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A ts used

News

DO YOU

NORTH

+n2

ICC) Jack1e uncovers a

Cil Burna &amp; Allen

SNAKE!!

Comple le I he chuckle quO!ed
by f il l1ng m the m• ssmg words
you d ev elop lr om slep No 3 be)ow.

PRINT NUM BERED tEllERS IN
IHESE SQUARES

11 ·00 •mrnaCIJ®G WJGID

General Hauling

_

21 Poznan
native

stal hazardous·waste dis-

Excavating

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 163 Sec Ava , Gallipolis
614 446-7833 or 614-446·

•

of a Woman·
®lUI W MOVIE: 'Agatha
Christie's Murder in Three
Acts' iCCJ
(jj) Cuba· ·ln the Shadow of

the battle over a controver·

Good- 1 b cavatmg , basement s,
footers drtveways. sept1 c tanks
lendsc 11p 1ng Call anyt1me 6H
446 4637 James L Dav1son
Jr owner

87

.

30 Manner 39 Atr-defense
34 PersonnP)
group

v1ew w&gt;1h F1del Cas1ro 160
mm)
10:00 II Cil @ 1986 SEASON
PREMIERE Among lo·

CEllAR

85

.

chant
20 Shoppmg
18 That guy
area

Doubt Th ts documentary
e,.;ammes Cuba and ns tnner
struggle for d1rectton. It s relations wtth the U S . and
features an exclustve 1nter·

·'

Ie

LETEDS
~-'TI::....:;lr-.,;11;.._:,1-=-r-16-4

[CCI 160 mm I

Cil MOVIE. 'Tycoon: Story

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

'ltl.l '5f-OLILO 6eLI- HOT

Bother To Count. There Are-.

25 Boundary 31 Loafing
27 Font
38 French
leve r
marsha l

Cil 0 Cil Moonlighting

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Cor Fourth and P1ne
Gallipolis. Oh•o
Phone 614· 446 - 3888 or 614446 4477

83

I

FOOL!

I

'

17 SliJ!hl
addresses 18 Mwntai.n
17 Hawaiian 19 Thought

C1J 700 Club
I]) AWA Wrestlong 12 hrs 1

AND HEATING

72

19 86 Ford Ranger. take over
payments Call 81 4· 448 ·9267

Torello s

LOUIS, Luca·s nattonwtde
scheme
sports-gambhng
gams the approval of a high·

CARTER S PLUMBING

Dillard 's W&amp;t er Delivery C1st
erns. pool &amp; wen Any t1m e bu1
Sunda'l . 614 446 7404

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

While

ntght's stones are a look at

James Boy s Water Ser\IIC&amp; Also
pools hlled Call 614- 266 1 141
or 6~4 446 1175 or 614 446
791,

Trucks for Sale

O IJJ~ CnmeStoryPRE·

enme unit tratls a member of

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1972 Camara, runt good, auto.
lboveaven~g• con d. needa tome
rear end body work, tJOO 00
firm, 304-876-8427 after 8 00

PM

9 00

696-3802

For Sale or ttade 1971 Javelm
SST 304 Auto. 2 aJn rooh .
atereo, good llru. runs good .
good thape Sh1rp 81200

Maggte arranges a reunton
of Jason·s medtcal school

band

Rolary or cable tool dulling
Molt wells completed same day
Pump ulaa find serv1ce 304·

82

plorod i60 mm I IR)
8.30 CII Iii (]) Growing Pains
SEASON PREMIERE iCC)

MIERE

Starks Tree &amp;nd Lawn Serv• ce.
Hodgem shrubbs . bushes
tummed , landtc:ep'"g and
stump removal W1nter~zat1on of
lawn and leaf removal 304
576· 2010

1962 Mercedes Benz 190 S
Make offer 614 · 742·2229

$1200 Coli 614 -992 -5858

MJD WE'LL
SET 'rtXJ FRE.E. '

.676-2088 or 675-7147

1976 Old• 98 Regeney 87.000
m1les, new pemt. exheuat Ma
Mon $1600 814· 742·2229

1972 Cornet Dodge 1 owner
318 motor, 8 cyl Haa 67.640
ectual mrles P S , P.B, auto
Good tires, goad condition

' TE.LL. U5 I.VHAi v..t.
IJJNJT' 10 !&lt;.lOU...

M~tJ 1~.

RON ' S Telev•ll o n Serv1ce
House c&amp; lls on RCA Ouuar.
GE Spec 1ahng 1n Zennh Call
304· 576 ·2398 or 614 -446·

Ashby Constwchon , cerpen·
terv remodeling . roomaddi11on.
cement block work, inter1or and
extenor patntll'lg. Stdtng Free
estimates. 304- 875- 6446 or
675 -6162

614-742·261J,2.

lrEAH.M
\IJHAT'MY
U9JP.UY

9320

RINGLES'S SERVICE , expe·
r~ enced carpenter. electrt clan.
mason, painttlf, roofing fmclud·
1ng hot tar apphC411t10n) 304·

ence of plasuc surgery and
ns use as a tool to repatr factal dtsftgurements ts ex·

EEK &amp; MEEK

Wurds Tree &amp; Scrub Serv1ce Top
tnm &amp; removals Cell 6~4 - 256 -

Volkswegon Glne buggy t300
C1ll 614 ·256-1393

sudden

I'll (I) MOVIE: 'Julia·
CII
MacNetHehrer

Home
Improvements

Fetty Tree Tnmmmg. stump
removal Call 304 675- 1331

Angela's

unemployment plunges her
1nto self-doubt whtle the family 1nes to solVe the cn sts

Services

super conditiOn Call 614 -446

2

1

Nawshour

•

81

11 I I I

Cll Nightly Business Re·
pon
® News
@
MacNeil -Lehrer

Mountumeer Auto Body Parts
Inc: . 1318FihhSt , New Haven .
W VA Phone 304- 882·3729
ham a full l'"e of body parts for
cars. truc~l and vens Sep tember Spec1als
Escort ,
Chevette, 720 Datsun. 79 ' 83
Toyota 4114 p u
fendan ,
tJ9 00 ' 81 up Ford and G M
p u fendera , $46 00 Hood a.
t99 00 '73·' 80 G M tailgates
and bu~ers , S55 00 ' 81 -up
G M te1lgutes and bumpers,
865 00 '73 - '79 Ford tailgates
and bUITl)flts 865 ' 80-up Ford
tailga tBB and bufT1)ers. 175 00
Only a ltm1ted quent1ty to be sold
at those pnces. so hurry t Dehv·
ery ava•lable

2464

8261

News
ClJ Green Acres
(!) Mazda Sponslook
Ill m JeffeniOns
Cll3·2·1 , Contact iCC)
@Back Pain
@ Facts of Ufe
Cil Andy Griffith
II(])@ NBC News
Cil The Rlfler1)8n
(!) Outdoor Life Magazine
Hosted by Wilham Conrad
Cll Iii Cll ABC News
1!11 (D Hogan's Heroes
Cll Doctor Who
®lUI W CBS News
@ Body Electric
CHI Good Times
il) Beverly Hillbillies
II(]) PM Magazine
ClJ Alias Smith and Jones
C!l SportsCenter
il) Entertainment :Tonight

a Th10f, There a Th1ef

76 Bu1ck Regal, 79 Grand Pm ,
78 Plymouth Fury Sport all 1n

01,800 00 •ell. Ono uaad Dodgo D·BO 01 .918. 1978
B-ot810thlnyhp,_buckot Chavy LUv 01.489. 1878 Dot·

W. Vt. Phone 304-885·3874.

'"'

BASEMENT

Two 1979 Toyota shtlonwag ·
ons. now tltts, alt. rebuilt
engme. no ruJt. $2500 S.
$1600 Call 614 -446 7019

011 ,500110. Ona uNd 841 814· 265·1393
N- Holl.,d 880 h round balot 1- --,---- - - - U,BOO 00. Two- 881 N- 1981 ChO¥Y C·10 07,999.

Holt.nd 1100 ft round . bel.,,

Auto ParJs
&amp; Accessories

Cell

R&gt; AMC Concord OL Payoff
t ~ 800 All new tlfM, new water

Far111 Supplrc s

76

614 256-1626

614 388-8465

AKC regl111red. Red Male Doberman, 10 montha, good n•· • t i, IIOO.OO. Inter•t tree fln.,c·
tured, 1126 00 304· 8715 - lng on New tor~~g• equipment
untlll~t. 1. 1117 an hly toola
2249.
until July 1. 1987. KHfera
Service Center. 81. At 87. LMn,
AICC BoJ18r, f.male, 304-176·

2995

Now buymg thell corn or ear
corn Callforletet.tquotea Rl\ler
Ci1v Farm Supply, 614 446·

63

7.00

Truck bed. 2 B V 6 motor &amp;
other parts Call 614- 266 -6439

62 Wanted to Buy

2985

6·35

HP motor Carpeted , wtth hve ..,.
well Ca ll 614 992 -2794
~

-;;~=;:~;=;::::==

Farm Equipment

6

71

"

1986 Lowe 14 h Baas Boat 9 8

Sunflower rake good condit ion.
8276 00 304-675-6083 after

614-949 -2166

mlxot

Pets for Sale

61

Purebr(Kt Siamese kntens Call

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

Trailer 1pace1 1m811 Children
ace ept ed . Rt 1. Locust Road
back of K &amp; K Mobile Hom ea.
304 -676 -1076

1 bedroom apt In Mlddl eportall
utiliti ea Plid 8 200 par month
t100 depo ..t Call 614·992H11 dey• or 814-992 -6763
evenings

Pets for Sale

16 cu ft

VCR~

2 bedroom house m M1ddl e
port No p ell D epoalt and
references r equ~red 614 992

Merchon rlrse

56

Bevans Ver1aty Shop On 790otf
21 B Chnstmes tova Op., 7
days a week

5 roams and bath 11 ICf as •n
country Quiet
R eferencea
anddepot~trequ~rad Clll614

2 bedroom home for rent
Depoait and nft~~ence a re
qu~ted . Call 1fter 6 .00 p m.
814 -742- 2641
h .b2 .fclaa44

/DieMbJICA.InC

614-446 1583

3 casea of "Str1wberry Shol1 ·
c: ake dolls with clothes, 12
dolla 6 Aecesaones . all tor

5018

+-----------,..----------•

676 -1450

Specious tra1ler loti tor rent
w1th playground and p1cn1e
fae111t1es al hm1ly Pnde Mo
b1leHomePark. Rt 2 Gallipolis
Ferry, W Va 304-676 3073

949 2931

i.AR2.\.{__..

Furnished Rooms 6461

Rooms for rent . dey wflek
monlh Gall•a Hotel Call 614
446 -95BO R flnt aa low •• $120
monlh

Rentals
41

2 bedroom furntahed apart·
m ant for r ent 1n Mtddl aport All
ubhtles pa1d Ca ll 614-992·
6084

45

Of

6:05
6:30

Boats and
Motors for Sale

18ft fiberglass Runabout 76 HP
Evenrude. tra1lor. real good
shape Cell 614- 256-6743

()R.I~

Pa1loe a~r na1ler 2 oombW1at1on
cuttmg torches Rcekwe!l porta
ban saw 1 ton chamfall oak
ch•na cab1net Call 614 -388 8711

2801

749 Thtrd Ave 1600 sq It
Commerc1al or w1rehouse
Perktng on aide Adjacent to
thlfd &amp; Ptn e St Call 614 -446236 2 for appoin em ant

1 ·io

VASEER

8:00 II(])CIJIJCil®UIWl @

old $1960 Cell 614 992
n6B

5

Duplex 1n Racme Niee. 2
bedrooma, lurn•sh ed S225
plus uttlltl aa Call 614 949

Business
Buildings

304 675 -6483

EVENING

Motorcycles

75

'

lAIII

I

9/30/86

1986 Honda XR600R 2months

Avccado rafngerator s1de by aide
S195, retngerator frost free
8150 refngerator coppertone
8150 refrigerator harveat gold
like nuw $195, wa1her &amp; dryer
portable S96 each Hoovtr dryer
895 aulo washer 195. 20 W1
gas range $76 Maytag wnnger
washer 896 Skaggs Apphanees. Upper River Rd . 614 446·

1980 Fairmonth Heppy Home,
52 by 14, 2 bedroom. $7,500

~l.EAW~~

.

WOII

Viewing

1979 Ford Bronco. PS
4 speed. AM -FM tape. good .
shape , 304- 875 - 6115 aft er ' ·
5 00 PM

Crest Motel 614 -446 -7398 ·

Get your car ready for wmtar
Paint JOb atart1ng •189 .00
304- 675- 2663 after 4 p m

304-676-3423

S ew1ng alt erat10n1 . m endtng
e11penenced 11'18mtr e1s does
qualny work Call J ack1e 614·
245 9371

GOOD

'PJTO A&amp;.LL~, tM

PB. AC •. '•

Used Fum1ture Washer &amp;
dryer, electnc range, gea range,
wood table &amp; 2 benches. beds,
dresser. &amp; recliner 3 miles out
Bulev•lle Rd Open 9AM to
5PM. Mon thru Sat
614 -448 0322

Water w ella s erv~ ed •nd
dnlled Free estimates Call
614 - 992 · 6006 or 814- 742·
3147

Re~l

't''KinllllAI,&lt;AA~.rr..~.

1980 Ford F260 4 wheel dr1ve.
351 , 4 apeed, lock out hubs.
good eondrt10n 13600 814742- 2373 after 4 00 pm

Upper River Rd be11de Stone

R eg ency Inc apartm ant 2 bdr .

Avon r epr es entat1v e want ad
JUSt n limB lor BIIICitmg Chr1st
mas ul e• Phone 304 -576
231B

.e

N1ce 2 bedroom moD1Ie home
for rent Near Aaein e Call

~~T

1.\\.1:+(,

1982 Dodge Ram Convenion !l'
Van 8 cyl excellent eondltH)n ..,
Price reduced . 614 - 949·2226

74

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r.::::~~r--~
-------il
Television
't\1'1:6 Too
\WE. l

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

Sofas and ch11rt priced from
$395 to 8996 Tabl• $60 and
up to t12&amp; H1de·a· beda 1390
to 1696 Recllnlt's 1226 to
$376 L•mpt US to 1126.
Dinettll 1109 tnd up to 1496
Wood table w-6 c:haiu 1286 to
t795 Oetk t100 up 10 1376
Hutch• 1400 and up. Bunk
beds eomplete w -meftreuea
t295 and up to 83915. Baby bod1
$110&amp;$176 Mahrnteaorbo)l
spnnga full or tw1n $63, hrm
$73. and •a3 Queen aets1226.
Kmg 8350 4 drawer ch•t •e5
Dre..era SB9 Gun Clbll'l811 B.
10. &amp; 12 gun Ga1 or electric
range 8375 Baby mattreuea
835 &amp; S45 Bed frames t20,
S30 &amp; King frame &amp;60 . Good
selection of bedroom SUites.
metal cab1net1 headboard! 830
and up to 865

NEW AND USED MOBILE ut1ht1es partly pa•d. mea Call
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY 304 675 6104 or 304 675 7398
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml 7926
P•ekens Uaed Furn1ture Good
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. RT 35
qual•tv used furniture Open 9 to
2 bdr 2 baths. k1tch en fur
PHONE 614·446· 7274
6 or call for appomtment

5366.

PART llME WORK WITH FUll
TIME BENEFITS members of
the army natiOnal guard earn
good pay and CJ.Iahfy for out·
standing ben eflls Non prK&gt;r
11WV1ce enlistees beg1n eam·
1ng $7B 00 for one week end
per month and pnor aervice
enl1st eea can qualify tor as
much a S163 BOforoneweek
end High tchool and college
lltudtmU can delay 1he1r bas•c
tram1ng until the school term
ends m June 304 675·3950 or
1 800 642 3619

21

(

"I always try to look on the
bright side. For instance, if it
weren't for air pollution, the
sun's rays would probably
melt the Arctic icecaps and
wash us all out to sea."

salery Call after 7 00 p m Call
614 -742 -2060

304-676 1429

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3418 Enterpuse.Ft P•arce.. Ft

AVON . open tarri1Drtll!

51 Household Goods

BORN LOSER

LAYNE ' S FURNITURE

rience a mult Must have over

Sales

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Lllrry Wright

for Rant·

•

cornm enal &amp; induatrlal exp e·

12

Tuesday, September 30, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

T~~~bar30, 198~

for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sing le letters,
apc~~~trophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
CRYPTOQUOTE
8-30

YX X
y

B K R

V B Y B R

RPOYXXS
B KR S

DV S

N E B E G R WV

L H

NY W W J. JI

Ill

C L J R T II n X

I R

I 0 B

RPOYXX S

HTRR
MLXBY E TR
Y..tet'del'o c.,ptoqoote: BLESSED BE CHILDHOOD, WHICH BRINGS DOWN SOMETHING OF

HEAVEN IN1U THE MIDST OF OUR ROUGH EARTHUNESS. - HENRI AMIEL

®I MOVIE: 'Loot Flight'
12:30 • (]) Gil Late NIGht whh
Dtvld Lett""""" f onighf s
guests ere George Miller and
musician Roland Gift. 160
min.) In Stereo.
()) Flthll' Knows Beat
(!) Top Renlt lloldnll fi'Om
Lea Veg~a, NV 190 min.)
iRI.

C1J ABC

Nawa Nl!lhttlne

0 Cll More Rool People

@ MOVIE: 'Herper'
12.4 0 Ill (ill MOVIE: 'Ballad of
Cable Hogue'
12:50 (I) MOVIE: 'Crawlapkt'
t :00 Cll Bachelor Fillhlr

Cll Dick C.vett
Ill (!) Wild, Wild W"'

•.•

_

.

..
•

�Pege-12-The DaiJy Sentinel

Pomeroy-

Clary testifies_
. _(c_on_ttn-ued_rrom_P_age-1)-- Area deaths·
Clary testified the E!l tire E!ICOUn·
ter with Brumfield lasted ' 'a
minute, a minute and a half."
After leaving the bar, he got In the
car and drove home. Upon amvlng
home, he asked his wife Judith to
drive him to ·the state pollee
headquarters on Route 60 In
Barboursville. "I was so tore up I
couldn't drive," Clary told the jucy.
He also testified, upon direct
examination by Kingery, that he
was not absolutely sure he had shot
Brumfield when the gun discharged
and that It was approximately an
blur alter he arrived at the state
pollee office before he learned
Brumfield had died.
'Knew they weren't true'
Clary has been under the care of a
doctor since shortly after the
shooting Incident, he testified.
After Clacy testified to the events
of Jan. 14, Klngecy asked him,
"Buck, why did you go to the
Glenwood Inn?"
"I went to the Glenwood Inn to
talk to Barney Brumfield," he said.
"I wanted those rumors straightened out. .. stopped right then and
there."
"I knew they weren't (true),"
Brumfield said when asked by
Klngecy about the rumors. "But
other people didn't."
He said he took a gun with him to
the Glenwood Inn because "I had
been led to believe Barney was
carcylng a gun on him and that he
was explosive."
"Did you Intend to hurt Barney
Brumfield?" Kingery asked Clary.
He responded no.
"Did you IBtend to shoot Barney
Brumfield?"
No.
"Did you Intend to kill Barney
Brumfield?"
No.
"Did you Intend In any way to
hurt or Injure Barney Brumfield,"
Kingery asked.
"No sir, I did not," Clary replied.
"You just wanted the rumors
stopped?" Kingery asked.
"Yes."
Vohmtary statement

Clary further said, upon direct
examination, that he would not
have taken a gun to the Glenwood
Inn the night of Jan. 141f he had rot
been told earlier that Brumfield
was carrying a gun. He also said If
Brumfield had not been at the Inn
when he arrived, he would have
"gone back home."
He also testified that he gave a
statement to K.R. Beckett, the
Investigator for the prosecutor's
offtce, voluntarUy, understanding
his rights and that by law he was rot

Emergency runs
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven calls
Monday.
Rutland at 1: 'J1 a.m. to Meigs
Mine No. 1 for Errol Roberts to
Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy
at 6:21 a.m. to Peoples Terrace for
Charles Gibbs to Holzer Medical
Center; Rutland at 10:10 a.m. to
Meigs Mine No. 1 i&gt;r Mitchell
Barnett to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland at 10: 48 p.m. transported
Jasper Robinson to Veterans Memorial Hospital; latE!" to Holzer
Medical Center; Middleport at 5:18
p.m. to Oleshlre for Henry Davis to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at
7: 47 p.m. to Star HoUow Road for
Maxine Hobbs to Veterans MemorIal Hospital; Middleport at 8:~
p.m. to Sixth Avenue for Gene
Hudson to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions Mason, W.Va. ;
Dexter.
Discharges Mary Pickens,
Clara Young.

Gretchln Yeager,
Maxine Hobbs,
Howard Thomas,
Howard PhUllps,

Finn files suit
Sears Roebuck, Columbus, has
flied an action In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against Marcia J . Capehart, Middleport, requesting judgment of $4769.79.
In other court action, a settle·
ment was reached In the case of
George and Evelyn Burkey against
Cooper Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
Inc.

Trustees to meet
Lebanon Township Trustees Will
meet Wednesday, 7 p.m., at the
township buDding.

Blood drive Monday
A blood drive wUl be held
Monday, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m .. at
Eastern High School. The drive Is
being sponsored by the student
councU. Donors are urged to attend.

MaJTiage li~nses
Marriage 11censes have been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Clearence Gord::&gt;n Proffitt,
56, and Boonle Sue Willford, :B, both
at Portland; David Richard Durst,
21, and Cynthia AM Harris,~. both
al Reedsville; Cark&gt;s Robert
Geyer, 19, Rutland, and Rebecca
·tAu AmbroSe, 21. Pomeroy.

required to give such a statement.

Upon c~aminatlon, Prosecuting Attorney Morgan asked
Clary, who testified he knew and
liked Brumfield, and had drank
beer with him on occasion, If he and
Brumfield "got along."
"We sure did," Clary replied.
Clary also said upon crossexamination that he had never
heard that Brumfield carried a gun,
nor had he heard of the rumors
allegedly being spread about him,
prtor to Jan. 14.
"Then all you had was what Bob
Holley told you?" Morgan asked.
"Yes," Clary said.
'Not real Intoxicated'
He testified, also, that he remembered the events of the day of Jan.
14, Including that he left Anne's
Lounge In Huntington about 8 p.m.,
left his rome In Lesage at about 9
p.m. to go to the Glen\\00&lt;1 Inrt,
returned home after the sh:lotlng,
and arrived at the state pollee
headquarters at about 10 p.m. He
testified that although he drank
beer throughout the day, he was
"not real Intoxicated, not real
sloppy drunk."
Morgan questioned Clary exten·
sively about his relationship with
Brumfield, who Clary revealed had
once visited him in the hlspltal,
about when he deci&lt;Pd to go to the
Glen~ Inn the night of Jan. 14
and about the gun used In the
shooting.
Clary testified he usually kept the
gun loaded with birdsiDt and stored
on top ci the refrigerator In his
home to scare black!Xrds away
from birds he enjoyed watching and
feeding.

"You didn'tcheck the guntoseeif
it was loaded (bei&gt;retaklngittothe
Glenwood Inn)?" Morgan asked.
"I just took it for granted it was,"
Clary said.
Morgan also asked Clary when he
decided to go iJ the Glen \\OOd Inn
the night ci Jan.l4, and Clary said it
was after he arrived home.
"But you'd already told Bob
Holley that you were going to the
Glen\\00&lt;1 Inn to scare tiE h... out ci
Barney BBrumfield.. .to get the
rumors !topped?"
"I said I siDuld go," Qary
clarified.
"And yru thlught about it all the
way up the road?" Morgan asked.
"By the time you got to your home
In Lesage, you'd deci&lt;Pd."
'Clear 11\V name'
"Maybe a little after I got
h:lme... " Clary responded.
Morgan questioned Clary about
what happened when reentered tiE
Glen~ Inn.
"You didn't just put the gun up to
(Brumfield), did you? Isn't It true
you went like that?" Morgan asked,
pulllng back the hammB" ci the
gun. " ... you ~Qlled ~ hammer,
didn't you?"
Clary sh:lok his head and Morgan
asked, "Is that a yes?"
Clary then told the jury upon
questioning by the rrosecuting
attorney that he doesn't koow If he
had the hammer all the way back or
partially back. Morgan Indicated
the hammer doesn't stop half way
back. "Unless you hold it," Clary
said.
"Were you holding It?" Morgan
asked.
"I don't remember," Clary
replied.
When asked if Brumfield put a
gun on the bar when Clary or&lt;Pred
him to oo so, Qary revealed he
dldn 't. He also said upon crossexamination that he did not feel a
gun on Brumfield when he began to
frisk him.
"You and Barney Brumfield
never had any type of an argument
or diagreemmt in the past, had
you?" Morgan asked.
"No, sir," Clary replied.
Onn direct examination, Qacy
had respon&lt;Pd In the afftrmatlve
when asked by Kingery if it was
Important to him that the jury
believe him.
Asked ~ Morgan why It was
Important that the jury believe him,
Clary said, "I don't want to be
convicted, I want to clear my
name .. .! oon't want to lose my job, I
don't want to k&gt;se my friends ...
"I'm rot that kind of a pE!"son"
whl would commit mur&lt;Pr, Clary
told the jury.
"You said yru went to the
Glen~ Inn to stop the rumor
then and there ... " Morgan said.
"Yes, sir," Qary replied. "I
wanted to talk to (Brumfield) about
it. ..
Also testifying Monday were the
&lt;Pfendant's wife, Judith Clary, who
described !Er Ill sband as "vecy
upset" and "shaking" when he
arrtved home from the Glenwood
Inn the night &lt;1 Jan. 14. She said her
husband gave her the gun and
asked her to drive him to the state
pollee &lt;tflce.
Mrs. Clary told the jury her
husband said, "You might as well
take me fNer iJ the pollee statk&gt;n,
they wUI be coming afte: me."
She further &lt;Pscrlbed her husband as ·"devastated" when he
learned later that Brumfield had
died.
Among witnesses testifying for
the &lt;Pfense were two al Clary's
co-wcrkers at Kaiser Aluminum In
Ravenswood.
Expected to testify today were
several !l¥lre character witnesses,
the lloctor whl has been lreatlng
Clary since the Incident and a
weapons expert.

HOGG· &amp;·ZUSPAN

George A. Jeffers

PRE· . INTER SA~INOSo

George A. Jeffers, 66, New
Haven, died Sunday In the Holzer
Medical Center after a long illness.
He was born In 1919 In Mason to
the late Stephen and Elizabeth
Lange Jeffers.
·
He was retired from the Mountal·
neer Plant In New Haven, where he
was a shift engineer, was a veteran
al World War II where he served in
the U.S. Air Force, and was a
member of the St. Joseph Catholic
Church in Mason.
Surviving .a re his wife Pauline
Russell Jeffers cl New Haven;
three daughters, Georgann Fink ci
New Haven, Mrs. Alicia Thcker
and Mrs. Jane Stanley, both of
Gallipolis; one sister, Mary Viers of
Hollywood, Fla .; and seven
granlklllldren.
Services will be Wednesday at 11
a.m. at the St. Joseph Catholic
Olurch with the Rev. John McGin·
nlty officiating. Burial will be In St.
Joseph CatiDllc Church Cemetery.
Friends may caD at the Foglesong
Fureral Home today from 6-9 p.m.
Rosary service wili be at 7 tonight.

90 LB.

· MlTAL

ROLL

IMSULATED
I

DOORS
PRE·IIUIII

ROOFING

WIDTH OIIL1

I

•

(SLIGHTLY BLEMISHED)

ROLL

WHITE, eLACK,
BROWN, GREEN

I

Claude Buskirk
Former Rutland resident, Claude
Buskirk, has died at home In
Colum'bus at the age of 66.
He Is survived by his wife, Betty
Walters Buskirk, formerly of Mid·
dleport; a daughter and son-In-law,
Usa and Joe Cordi, Columbus; two
granlkhildren, Jordan and Jared.
Columllls; his mother, Effie Buskirk, Middleport; his mother-Inlaw, Ruth WaltE!"S, Columbus; one
trother, Sherman Buskirk, Middleport; three sisters, Kathleen, Margaret and Eileen; numerous nieces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
father, Sherman Buskirk; one son,
Daniel; and one brother, Clarenre.
Services will be Thursday, 10:30
a.m., at Long's Funeral Home,
Cleveland Avenue, Columbus.

Farm Bureau
•
meeting
set

Plans have been completed for
the annual meeting of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau, Rex E.
Shenefield, president of the Meigs
County Farm Bureau Federation
announced today.
'·
The annual meeting and dinner
wUl be held 'Nesday, Oct. 21, at the
Chester Elementary School. The
Eastern Band Boosters wUl serve a
steak dinner, $3.50 for adults and $1
for chUdrm.
The meeting wUl start at 7:14
p.m. and providing entertainment
wUI be the Shady River Shufflers, a
clogging group Instructed by Ge·
raid Powell.
Members and guests are asked to
~ure reservations as early as
possible by contacting board
members, Donna Davidson, 742:MSS; Harcy Holter, 949-2644; Ralph
Carl, !m-2'184; Tom Hamm, 949-9492574; Sylvia Midkiff, 992·7216;
Hilber Qulvey, 992-2338; Eula
Wolfe, 247-2638; BUI Carr, ~3882;
Norman Wlll, 992-2791; Pat Holter,
992-7261; Alan Holter, !m-5010, and
Shenefield, 669-4831.

MOBILE HOME

UNDER··
PINNING
2815

SHfn

FIBERGLASS

GUnER

.

10

ROLL INSUL·ATION
88.1 SQ.

n.

n. JOINT

$540

14lf2C SQ. FT.

l1f2"X 16'

$ 1278ROLL

PEl IOU

PRESSURE TREATED

14lf2C SQ. FT.
S1960ROLL

3 /2"X23f
1

us.12 SQ. n:
PEl lOLL

FEN.CE

POST
3" TO 4" DIA.

241f2C SQ. FT.
48.96 SQ. n.
S1200ROLL
PEl lOLL
6"123" 241f2C SQ. n.
75.07 SQ. n.
S184010LL
PEl IOU
6"X 16'

$299

8 FT.
4" TO 5" DIA.

8 FT.

A-RICAN MADE 15112"

$399

$1899

BARB WIRE

UTILITY GRADE 214'5

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy with a
slight chance of showers and
thunderst.orms. Low near 70.
Southwest winds about 10 mph.
Chance al rain~ percent. Wednes·
day, partly cloudy with a slight
chance of thunderstorms. High In
the mid 80s. Chance of rain 30
percent.
Ohio Extended Forecast

$3·59

... and Save!

8'

10'

12'

14'

16'

$122 $154 $184 $214 $246
418

Thursday through Saturday

418
1/4''

Chance of showers and thunrerstorms. Highs wUI be between ffi
and 85 Thursday and In the 70s
Friday and Saturday. The low will
be In the 60s Thursday and In the 50s
Friday and Saturday.

Oil, gas meeting set
Oil and gas producers should plan
to meet Thursday, 7 p.m., at the
Lafayette Hotel, Marietta, to dis·
cuss politics and regulatory reform
- "where do we go from here?"
The meeting Is sponsored by the
Southeastern Ohio 011 and Gas
Association.

Lattice
Panels

WATER BOARD

$479

$1199

$5'99

7/16"

EACH

Id11l Fo, Th1
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MASON, WV

CASH &amp; CARRY . ,

PHONE
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.

ONLY '

,\

,.

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