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·PatJe-1fi_:Tiile Daily Serltlnel .

Poll il&amp;r~--Middlepert, Ohio

years, died Tuesday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
He was born al Hartford, W.Va.,
on June 7, 1913. asonofthe late Tom
and Minnie Cunningham Lyons.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death qy two sisters.
In addltkln to serving as a law
enfor&lt;Pment officer, Mr. Lyons had
been a riverboat pilot Ill rtng his
can'fr. He was a member of the
Gallia-Melgs Lodge 95, F'raternat .
Order of Police; the Racine Volunteer Fire Department; the Racine
~mer~ncy Squad, and the &amp;lckeye Sheriffs' Association. He was a
member of the Baptist Church..
Surviving are three sons and '
daughters-in-Jaw, Harcy H. Sr., and
Wanda Lyoos; Jack L. Sr., and
Gene Lyons, all of Racine; Alfred .
H. Jr., and Pamela Lyons, New ·
Matamoras; a daughter andson-inlaw, Marilyn and Jim Burleson,
Clyde, Texas; two sisters, Rosie
McC!asky, Newark, and Greta
Tanner, Hebron; twa brothers,
Russell of Middleport. and CXis of
Marietta. Several nleces and nephews, 17 grandchlldrm and four
·
great •grandc h1'ldren aIso SUIVJVe.
Services will he held at 2 p.m.
Friday at tl!C Ewing Funeral Home
where friends may call from Hand
7-9 p.m. Thursday. Burial will be In
Evergreen dmetery at Letart,
W.Va.

~!ph'b.~ne

Icenhower. 09,
fol')'lll'rly of Portland, died early
Sunday morning at the Salem
Community Hospital following a
brief IUness.
Mr., IcentDwer was born at
Portland on June7, 19Z7, a son &lt;t the
late Homer and Annie lcentDwer.
In addition to his Pilfents, he was
preceded in death by~ step-sister,
Albe!U Keyes; tw0 step-brothers,
Lroi\IU'd (Buell I IcenlD""r and
Bel'nard Icenrower.
Si.IJVivlng are his wife. Grace
· lcenrower, Negley; a sister, Helen
Je!!ton, Syracuse; three brothers.
Lewis· Icenrower. Negley; Roy
lcenlower. Portland, and Clifford
lccntDwer, Pomeroy.
Services were held at 1:3() .p.m.
today at the Oliver Funeral Home
in s.Jern_

Alfred H. L}·ons Sr.
Alfm! H. "Putt" Lyons Sr.. 73.

Racine, a law enforcement officer
in Me~ County for a numher of

Middleport court
Four defen.dants forieited bonds
in the court of Middleport Mayor
Fro! Hoffman Tuesday night.
Charles Canter, Syracuse. fortelted
posted$lXJ
onona anmenacing
threatmcharge;
harassment charge; $lXJ on a disorderly
conduct charge and $1~ on a
second disorderly conduct char5"'.
Forleltlng bonds of $40 each. all on
speeding charges, were Dreama .J.
O'.!'ens, Mason; Carl L. Myers.
GaUipolls, and Rodney L. Rottgen ,

Marauders
to confront.
Vinton County
-Page 5

UMW official .raps pact concessions

Area deaths
Ralph E. Icenhower ·

Wednesday, October B. 19116

BECKLEY. W.Va. tUPIJ - A . Normally. companies are reo- Operators Association that 'signed -~, gett htough to UMW President
Richard Tfumka or Vic:&lt;&gt; President
United Ml~ Wortcers omctai says 'qulred to pay $l.lllnto the lund for the 1984 natk&gt;nal contrac(.
"TI£&gt;re have lleen !llrne different • Cecil Roberts.
the union leadership, by atendlag each ton of coal mliled.
"Trumka campaigned on no;&gt;
contract ci&gt;ncesstons to certain coal
Legg said tiP UMW International kinds of contracts signed for new
co
ncessions.'.' Legg said. ·"We want.
operators. has created a situation has granted such concessions to · companies." Corcoran said.
a
meeting
with Trumka or Roberts
that is "pitting brothers against some mineS, Including the Hernden . Legg also expressed hl~ displeato
have
ihcm
exPlain why they are'
brothers."
romplex Eastern Associated Coal sure that the UMW leadership In
giving these concessions.
Concessions allowed at some Corp. which has been !ll!d to Washingtoo has refused to meet
"If therels some reason that they
mines are coming back tll llaunt Beckley coal operator Kenny with. local officials and mmpany
are bettering the membership -a
miners at others, according.to Bill Childers, but won't do the same for maiu~ement about the matter.
logical ex~anatlon - they'll not
Legg, vice president of Local 2333.
other companies such as Pittston. .
Last week, ·Legg said, he telehear
anything more out of us."
legg explained Tu~y that the
"Jt's pitting brot!Prs against phoned the International but could
Pittston Coal Group laid off ll1 brothers." !.egg said. "Ii seerris like
miners at Its Ranger Fuel CoJl). ' every. time they -grant concessions
subsidiary recently and . plan~ .to to a small mine, orie of the larger
shut down its Beckley No. 2mlneby mines ends up with a Jayoll.
•
. tilt end ot next year. ife laid tbP
"P.unch rrblers have a cllmpetl·
Middlep6rt . $!14; Monty Chapman,:
. Twenty·flve cases were proactions were taken after die UliCW tlve advantage ovN W! ., (larll'!'l'
Pomeroy,'
ceslsl
Tw!sday
night
In
the
court
pf
$46; Roy ScarberrY, New.. ·
faiJe(! to grllnt Ita requ!tl ~- I • l'!tinesJ."
·
l'llrnffoy
Mayor
Richard
Sey
J
er.
Haven.
$44;
Mary L. Kitcheil
waiver r:l. required payments IRto
Joe Corcoran, a spo~esman for
•
Letart.
W.Va.,
$44; Rhonda,
FIRed
were
Gregory
Hi~ks,
thr 1900 health and benefits' fum .
the UMW In Washlngtoo, acknowlPomeroy, · $45 and CQSts, illegal Hoover, _Pomeroy, $45: Debt;ll'
ed&amp;e&lt;) he was not famUJar ·wlth tiP
Davis. Middleport, $45; Michael;
tum; William Weaver Jr., MlddleRan~r Fuel calie, oo t sald till&gt;
Lewis,
Rutland. $!14; Ruby Simp~
por't, $63 and costs, !IQuea!Ing tires;
p:&gt;Ucy tllei-e w.ould be In lne with TlmOihy Faulk, Mlddleyort, $43 son, $4~; Robert Fetty, Lang~vute : •
the Wlion's policy because· Pittston
and costs, stop sigll violation; Kelly
$45; Deatra Simms, Pomeroy. $44; i
Jg a memll&gt;r of the Bituminous Coal
·Thomas, Vinton, $44 ahd costs, " Mark Haffeit. Bidwell. $45; Fred_,.
The Sootheastenl Ohio OU and
speeding; Keith Musser, Racine,
Priddy. Mlddlepori, $44, all oo·
$11J and costs. po~lon of ·a speeding char~s; John Sdmter.,:
C.s Association wUI spoMOr a rally
at the .Ban Joh}ISOII Field HouRUI
coatrolied .substance; $313 and .Rutland, $43, stop sign violation; ,
tlr Mart.!lta Colie«e Can,us ·at 7
(Continued from Pafie 11
costs, destruction of property; $113 Norman Hawley, Middleport, $43,j
$11
. ,"
'0 .22 In street·,
"",7'12.95 .In ' and costs, Intoxication. ·and Ro· stop sign violation; Anna Chloom,
p. m. Thursda y.
""'
""
Speaker wUI be 0111o Rejlublican · water reYenue; Sl539.93 In reme- berta Batey, New Haven, W.Va.,
Pomeroy, $43, Improper bal'king;
gubernatorial canddate, :James A. tery; $2,140.49 in revenue sharlne; $fi and costil, speeding.
Charlenr Doczl. Middleport, $43,
stop sign violation; Ruby Fowler,
Rhodes. Admission Is free and ..U 12.Z70.47 In water de~s; alld
Middleport. $43, stop sign violation; ,
Meigs residents lllterested ill !ttl!. S6.&lt;ro In toemetery perpetual care.
Forfeiting bonds were Raymond
Scott Smith. Portsmouth, $43, stop
f)ltureofthl&gt;oilandpslndustryare
Council recessed untU 7 p.m. McFarland, Mason, W.Va .. $63,
sign violation.
Invited to attend.
Monday, Oct. 20.
. squealing tires; Kelly Stewari,

Racine

'

ELBERFELDS

'

·r Howard Miller

I. irloom Quaity •

wallaway.

German Mon•nts .Moon Dial • leautiful

BYBERKLINE

Chimes.

SMOO!ltl&gt;' ....,

REG. $1050.00
and 11150.00 I'

GI!HnY~lO

FW. 'Wl.IH5:

ORI'IJU.-

·~~~ $788

IN LE8S 1'JoW,I

7SOCIJNI6
WITH 11it ntCH

Of' A -

SAW II JO 1362.00 .

. Homecoming Sunday

..,. ElOOY lHE EliEFT1S
OF A """-AIM&lt;V &lt;U+/11!

RB:uNIR.SIT' &amp;.CX
• I&lt;IIAJ( li. PIJ1DtMIICAIIY

r&lt;ECU&lt;I! '!tl 'IOIJII llll6T

-~At!lill:liii'IOIJ

STOOLS
24 or 30 inch
hlighth, ltilrdy Cllt·
struction, fool nil

Sele

saaoo

.
PE•KT JOI Pllftl IIllO
HAWA-IW
PUSIIINI lo\CI A1((11111

SAVE 130.00

WOOD

aoaas
.............
............
iollmlolo--..

........... "'...,
S6901

Mming lime change
.AU'IIFUl

Olivc--Orange VFW Post 0053 wUl '
meet 7: 3() p.m. Thursday instead of '
8: :II p.m. The meeting wUI he held.
at the Tuppers Plains grade school. '

ACCENT
PIECES
Oll CURIO CAMITS
OU HAU CONSOlfS
Oll HAU TmS
GUN CAIINETS
Oll m. CART
OAIIAIIISTER

lOOKCASE
VEGETAiliiiNS
MINI DRY SINKS
MAGAZINE RACKS

ALL IIDUCED

Edith Reiser wUJ be at the Racine
Department Store on Thursday
!rom 10a.m. to 1:ll p.m. to assist In
the writing of Ohio ' Buck· Eye
appllcatlons.

Veterans .Memorial

SLEEP SOFAS
by NOIWAIJ(

•LIFETIME FRAME WARRANTY
oiNNERSPRINO MATTRESS
•DURABLE LONOWEARING COVEAS
•OUR REGULAR-•896.00

· Your Cholet
SAVE

$68800

·

DWcharges - Thelma Chase.

The'

non -invasive

echocardiogram~-

PuflXlse of the moblle unit,
according to the Mount Carmel
visiting staff, is tr:i gtve local
pa1ients access to state-of-the-art
cardiovascular technology and to
. expand diagnostic capabilities In a
local oommunlty. The ·procedure
would be to schedule several
patients on a day, brin!( In the unit
and do the testing and then return
the res ults ·to a cardiologist at
Mouat Car(Jiel, wiD would relay the
information to the local doctor.

WELCOME

many hours of communi~- volunteer service. He was one of the
original founders of the Racine
Volunteer Fire Department and
Eme 1·~ ncy Squad and the only
oMgtnal member who was currently active In the organizations.
Last year, he was honored as senior
hooorary member of the depart·
ment for his many years Of Retvice .
It was on Thursday, Feb. l'i, 1901,
after a number of publlc meetings
and discussions, that Mr. Lyons and
the late Hrnry Cleland. after
blowing the village siren. rai led the
first meeting of the Racine Volunteer Fire Department. At that
meeting, the organization was

AT UNBELIEYABL£

SA~INOSI
ORIG. S298.00 TO $5 99.00

$22300
TO
$44900

NOW

TREMENDOUS SELECnON
VINYLS -' NYLONS IIRCULONS - ILENDS
HUGE COLOR SELEcnON

.......,_

f/h•'•'lt

.....,_
llltiMI ··U

'

• l\l

..

It

•

·'

·'

procedures

formed that would provide Racine ' service kat the station.
Last night Racine Village Council
Village and the surmundlng area
voted to retb·e "44" as its call
with good fire protection. Mayor
numhers , the numbers Mr. Lyons
E .A. Wingett appointed Carroll
Teaford a~ fire chief, and Lyons
tradltlonaily used In his tenure.
was appointed as the first assL"ant Council also observed a moment of
sllent prayer in respect to Mr.
chief.
Lyons.
Mr. Lyons played an Int egral role
SeJVices for the Mr. Lyons will be
In the establishment of bylaws
held at 2 p.m. Friday at the Ewing
which for ttl&gt; most part. stU! exist
Funera I Home. Among hl s suJVI·
toda y.
Having learned of the death of · vors are his wife, Emma Autherson
Lyoos; three !llns and daughtersone of their fellow members,
In-law;
a daughter and son-in-law,
memhers of the Racine Volunteer
Fire Department observed a mo- two sisters. and two brothers.
ment of silence Tuesday evening In Burial will be in Eve1·green Cemememocy of Mr. Lyons. The depart - tery. Letart. W.Va .·
ment will also ID!d a memoria l

WASHINGTON. W.Va. tUPI I- .
About 2.00l poun~s of a toxic
chemical that causes dizziness and
suffocation at certain levels es·
caped in ii cloud from a DuPont
plant , sending sorn£&gt; 1.~ workers
and 150 peopl£&gt; across the river In
Ohio to safety.
A DuPont spokesman, David
Ramsey, said the Wednesday
morning leak of hexanuoropropy·
lene occurred when a worker JAJlled
off the regulator and the mmpound
unexpectly seeped through a valve.
Displaced residents of Porier·
field, Ohio, across the·Olio River
from the DuPont plant, returned to
NO ENTRY - Ohio Highway Patrolman Larry and flrenien, to a ...arer distance. The gus cloud WIL~
their bomes arou nd 12:45 p.m.,
Buntlrig directed traffic away from the area ~ a gas caused from a chemical leak from the Tello~
about 4'h IX&gt;urs after the accldent,
cloud at the lnlersec:tlon ol Ohio routes 618 and 339 manufacturing area of the DuPont Washington
which occurred durtng routine
near Belpre Wednesday. Moments after INs photo Works plant, located' across the' Ohio River, In the
mal~t enance
on a pressure
was .taken, the area was evacuated,lncludlni police background. (UP~)
regulator.
Sgt. J.P. Bragg o! the West
Virginia State Police-descrlhed the
a.m.. followed more than an hour year after a tanker truck from the
proportbns."
chemlcal .comp:&gt;und as toxic, say·
Wood County chemlcal-rroduclng
Pollee In both states said they later by Porterfield ~esldentS: .
ing It can cau·s e dizziness · and
As a precaution, aliout 14 visitors facUlty overturned on Route !15 In
were pleased with the handling of
s uffocation In certain
to Blennerhassett Island, located Larkmead.
the emergency.
concentratk&gt;ns.
less
than a milesouthofthe DuPont
The Oct. 14, 1985, leak &lt;t aldlcarb
Work crews man aged to seal the
"It-was like a fog,"_Bragg said of -leak In about an hour. Plant plant, also were led to safety.
pentachlor!de forced the E'llacuathe cloud. "Nothing
of any major P?i'S!lnnel returned ar90nd 11:30
The accident occurred nP'lrly a tlon of about llO pro pie.
.,

•

•
LAYAWAYS

patient
the Emergen&lt;.'Y Room with dlest
pains was evaluated. Here the patient is being
examined hy Susan Gaspar, director of the
non-Invasiv e laboratory, and Dr. Mukesh Shah,
cardiologist.

which cart he performed with the
inoblle service include peripheral
arterial examinations, peripheral
arterial waveforms, cerebrovascular and venous exams. duplex scan
for carotid arteries, and

Workers,
·residents.
flee from
toxic leak

........ 1111111 - ·

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

In memory of its long1lme villa~c
marshal. Racine Village Councll
met in special session Wednesday
evening to ,pass a f!'solution to
respectfully retire Its police squad
"No. 44" title. the call numbers of
Racine Pollee Chief Alfred "Putt"
Lyons, who died Tuesday evening.
Mr. Lyons served the Village of
Raclnr and Meigs County as a Jaw
enforcement officer for many
years, and for some time even
provided his own vehicle as a jJl)licc
cruiser.
Not only had M!1. Lyons served as
Chief of Police in Racine. but also
served In other respects including

ULE

Friday

Admissions - Brian Hartman,
Pomeroy; John Hayes, Chester;
Michael Hubbard, Syracuse; John
_Green, Albany;. Alfred Lyons,

heart muscle and valves, as well as
check the blood supply to 1he heart
muscles.
He said I hat It can even show how
advanced the disease Is, whether·
the treatment is working. and can
give the prognosis or some Indication of how long the person may
Jive.
Shah said that while the equip·
ment has been available for about
four years. tiP quality continues to
Improve and is more effective In
diagnosis.
In add ition to the echocardio!iam equipment. the mobile unit
contains a duple~ ~an lbr arteries,
which can check such the flow of
blood in the legs, and can be used to
pvaluatr stroke victims.

Racine Council ·honors late Alfred Lyons

The Rerum Jonathan Meigs
. Chapter of the Daughters of the
American Revolution will meet
, Friday. 1::11 p.m .. at the Grace
Epi..:opal Parish House. Guest
speaker will be Steve Powell.

Racine.

EllllPI10IW. CXllo\10!1

THR(Wt AUl!JhiATUlW.

AT TIIO'lWCII CII'A -~

Joppe Church Homecoming will
· be held this Sunday. The Gospel
RaY5 wUI sing at 2 p.m. following _a
carry -In d inner . Eyeryone
, welcomr.

Applirations taken

' ..

BAR

ry~ w~lcome.

OAPSE 453 in Southern Local
SchOOl District will meet 7 p.m. thls
evening (Wednesday ) at Southern
Hi~h School.

ByCHARLENEHOEFUCH
Cardiac Death and Cardiovascular
Seritinel Staff Writer
Disease international symposium,
The Ohio Heart and Vascular ,to be conducted at Mount Cannel.
Institute's Moblle Diagnostic Unit
Wednesday's visit to Veterans .
of Mount Carmel Health Center Memoria_! was the first stop of the
visited Veterans Memorial Hospl· mobile unit. which wUJ travel over
tal Wednesday to demonstrate for Ohio, demonstrating and offering
physicians and staff the latest the specialized cardiovascular serstate-of-the-art technology avalla· vice to hospitals and physicians.
blc for cardiovascular diagnostic
Fully equipped and staffed with
testing.
technicians, the mobile Unit will be
· Dr. Mukesh Shah, cardiologist at able to provide cardovascular
Mount Carmel, and Susan Gaspar, dtagr1Qstlc tests, eliminating the
dlreetor of the non-invasive labora· . need for smalllDspltals to purchase
tocy at Mount Carmel, conducted the expensive equipment and hire
an in-service for the staff giving the specially trained technicians.
demonslrat!ons of thr echocardloShah said the echocardiographic
graphlc machine.
machine is non-invasive, meaning
Three of the local hospital· s that nothing.has to enter the body,
physicians will go to Columoo s and can pick up diseases of the
Saturday to attend th£&gt; Sudden

MAPlE

United Mettxidist '
• Chutth Homecoming wlU be held I
Sunday with di nner at 12: ll p.m.
alld apecial services following at
1:45 p.m. Rev. Liston Halley wUI
._.u. Singing bY the group
BloOdline wUI be featured . EVl'-

OAPSE unit to 11)eel

'
lf,

left Is Dr. ,James WithereD, chief of stall at VcterMs,
with• Susan Guspar and Dr. Mukesh Shah,
cardiologist, Mount Cannel Health Q!nter.

ECHOCARDIOGRAM- WhUc Ill&gt; Ohio Heart Md
Vascular Institute's ~IobUe Diagnostic Unit from
Mount Carmel Hospital was visiting Vctm~ns
Memorial Hospital fora demonstration Wednesday, a

Diagnostic unit updates Veterans staff

BECTIIC MOTORIZED RECUNER

·Grandfather
Clocks

Fla~'IJOds

A Meigs Cou nty grand jury
sessiOn scheduled for 9 a.m.
Thunday has been 'canceled. Ju.
rors should not appear.

26 Cents

.

•

I

Se88ion ranrelled

3 Sections, 32 Peg's

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

__

Rhodes to 8peak
. at area rally

ial Hospital physicians and other slalf members were
given a demonstration of lhe echocardlograptic
machine, one pie&lt;!e of equlpmentavaUableontbe new
Ohio
Heart and Vaseular Institute's
Mobile Dtagnos.
-

Meigs County Emergency Medical SeJVlces reports fo)lr calls
Tuesday.
Pomeroy at 9:12 a.m. to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Brian Hartman to Veterans Memorial 1-klspltal; Rutland at 12: 01
p.m. 10 Scipio Township for George
Green to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
t&amp;l; Racine at 4:26p.m. to Third
SlrnE'I for Allred Lyons Sr. to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Rutland at 4:31 p.m. to Meigs Mine No.
2 for Myrl Knowlton to O'Bienness
Memorial Hospital.

"

evening. Tonight,mostlyclood:v.l
Low In the mid 40s. Winds; ':~I
around 10 mph. Friday, Ill
cloudl'. High near 00.

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. October 9,1986

LiiD;jjEiMiio&gt;iN~Sii'IRAru::in;;o~N~~;;;~V~e;jte;;r;;an;s~M~emo~r~-=~t;lc~U~n~lt~fro;;;m Moont Cannel Hospital. second from

Emergency runs

m~ts

mo..t(y cloudy

Irp~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;==~
l

T1le state highway patrol cited
Mary E. Bell. 70, Parkersoorg,
W.Va., for failure to maintain an
assured. clear distance, resu lting in
a tWO&lt;ar accident on Ohio 7 in
Salisbury Township Tuesday.
Bell was southbornd at·3: 45 p.m.,
trailing a vehicle dnven by Susan C.
Nickles. 32. Gallipolis. according to
the patrol. Nick les stopped for
traffic and was struck In the rear by
Bell. who was unable to stop in
time~ Bell 's vehicle was damaged
heavUy and Nickles'· moderately.
No one was injured.

· DAft

827
Super I...Quo
7-32-38-11-9-12

~umlng

a slight chanoe of s_J'll"1ers

•

a1 y

. C011vrightod 1986

Patrol ci\es driver

·

-

•
Vol.36, No.11 0

~ttery

Daily Number

••

Mayor's court ends 25 cases · •

Mason.

Churl'h plans event

Ohio

MOBILE UNO' - Susan Gaspar, director ol the non-Invasive
laboratory, Mount Carmel Hospital, stands resides Ill&gt; mobile unit
&lt;.'O DtWnlng CardiOVIL'iCUiar equipment, The unit WW be traveling around
Ohio providing the tatest technology In iliagnostic testing to small
hospitals and p!lysiclans.

Firm slates,. striping
on.five county roads
Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Meigs County Commissioners
was brief and to the point .·
Cpunty Engir)eer Phil Roberts
reported the Chemltrol Co., Gibsonburg. will b&lt;' in thecountywlthln the
next two weeks to stripe portions of '
County Road I at Salem Center;
County Road 5, from the Middle(Xlrt
corporation limits to the crossroads
on Ohio 124: County Road 75 from
Veterans Memorial Hospital to
Ohio 7; County Road 22 at Laurel
Clift; and County Road 24, which is
Union Avenue.

Celeste plans ·
waste
fee hike
.
'

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPli-Gov.
Richard F. Celesle says if he Is
re-elected, he will try to raise (ees
for companies who bring their
hazardous waste into Ohio, so the
Buckeye State will not be a
dumping ground .
The governor told an Industry·
environmental seminar on hazard·
ous waste Wednesday that mthe
next four years, he wants ld cut by
one-third the amount of toxic waste
dumjJed into landfllls.
"A strong economy which en·
dures really depends on how well
we nianage, protect and are good
stewards of our natural resourres,"
said the governor. "Our businesses
need water, clean water, to manu-

~:U:~~~elrp~;:~;s. ~~~nd :J~
entrepreneurial practices go hand
in hand.' "

In the past, said Celeste, hamrdrus waste disposal has lleen "a very
expensive p:&gt;llatlon control shell
game" with the movement of toxic ·
wastes from site to site In one fonn
or another.

Roberts also reported IP will
assist Sclpkl Towns hip Trustees in
obtaining state permits for worK to
the rngln!' room d tll'lr fir!' statkln.
and that plan s for tiP Syracuse
restroom project have bt•en
reviSed.
The Syracuse _project is to be
fu nded through a $7,000Communlty
Development Block Grant from the
Ohio Department of ~velopment ,
however, bids opened last .week by
the commissioners were -substantially higher than the $7,CXXJ allot ment. The mmmissioners tabled
the bids at that time .
Roberts reported th at the state .
has authoJ; 7.ed ttl&gt; project to.
proceed right a way rn an individual
quote basis. rat h('r than by advertised bids.
Roberts said he would be raking
the revised plans to Columbu s
today t Thu rsda~' 1 fo r approval
!rom the 'statl&gt;.
Cierk Ma"' Hobstelter rq:&gt;orted
that Rutland 's Communi ty Development Block Gra nt paving projl'Ct
has lleen compll'!&lt;::&lt;J. _
Rutland was awarded Sl7.:\10 in
CDBG funds to pave New Lima
Road within the village corpom ·
tlon. How€\·er, the low bld from the
Shelly Ch., Thornville, was Jess than
$12 ,(JX). &amp;'Cause of this, the commissioners were able to arran ge
chan~ order 1hrough the statc.
thereby enabling Rlltland to pave •
College StrC€t in front of 'Rutland
Elementary, in additkln• to New
Uma Road.

a

TV listings
inside Friday.
Weekly TV ll'!tlngs, previously
a part oft'-! Sunday newspaper,
wm be puhiished fn Friday's
paper effective Oct. 10. ·

c

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�r

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I

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Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio .

!

..
The ·Daily Sentinel

1.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE 1\t.EIGS-MASON AREA

· ~~

~s:m~

~v

,..,_.._....,...,...,.,.,.d,=

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assist11111 Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
,..

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press'

Association a nd Ute American Newspaper Publishers Association.
.LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sh.ou ld

be

R
.
·
t
·
.
·
.
b'&gt;
··· James J. Kil~trick:l.
· . en -a-worn ._
. ---~---. .·. . . .-----::-----::-~
--·
--:1
···

WASHINGTON - Suppose you
looked in today' s paper and came
across a · classified ad under the
heading of ,"professlona,l services,"
and the ad read this way:
"Womb lor rent - Heal! hy
woman. 34. Scotch-Irish descent;
mother of two healthy children, wUI
serve as surrogate mother by
artificial Insemination. Fet&gt; negotl·
able. Call this number after 6p.m."
A nelvspaper ad along those liites
last year caught the attention of
Wllliam and Elizabeth Stern of New
Jersey. Both are 40 years old. He is
a biochemist, she a pediatrician.
·For whatever reason, she is
physically unable to conceive a

chlld, and the Stems earnestly
wanted a baby. They read an ad
offering the services·of.! be lnfertll·lty Center of New York.
One thing led to another. The
Sterns entered. Into a 1&amp;-pal(e
contract with Mary Beth Whiteheaq, 30, who had two chlldren of
her own and wanted no more. The
contract guaranteed payment of
$10,COO to Mrs. Whitehead. plus
$15,[XX) fqr mectlcal expenses and ·
the center's fee. She was duly
Inseminated with Stern's sperm.
On· March 'n she gave birth to a
female chlld.
·
The con tract, according to I be
National Law Journal, contained

less fhan llO words

long. All letters are subject to f'd hln g and nlJSI bl&gt;signOO with na me, address and
telephon e number . No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In

good tas te, addrPSslng Issues , no t

pe rson.~li tles.

No better deal
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In the middle of the yea r, House Democratic
liberals began signaling their displeasure with Chairman Les Aspin of the
Armed Services Committee and suggesting be ought to be booted out r:1 the
prestigious job in January.
·
To paraphrase Asp!n - a philosophical and professorial oort given to
snappy answers- "Jeez, that would be goofy."
Aspln. D-Wis., wrested the job away from the aging Mel Price, D-111., at
the start of this Coogre$5 in 1985, jumping over several more senior
members for the post. The House Democratic Caucus, at the start of each
Congress, votes on retaining committee chairmen, and if one is !lJSied the
race is on to replace him.
In Aspin's case, were he booted out, conservative Texas Democrat
Marvin Leath Is actively seeking the job as ~Charles Bennett of Florida,
who has served 38 years in the House. Liberal Nick Mavroules of
Massachusetts, while not running for 11&gt;2 job, Is ready to become a
candidate if Aspin Is ousted.
Asp!n's volj!' last year for the MX missile, after liberals thought he had
promised to start opposing the missile, and then conceding major points to
the Senate In conference, won him few friends. His switch this year for aid
to the U.S.-backed rebels in Nicaragua ang!'red the liberals and started the
talk of replacing him.
·
But last month- six weeks alter touching ctfthe rush for his job with a
pro-Contra aid vote - Aspin arrang!'d for defense bill debate to occur
under debat,ing ru les that clearly put arms control advocates and other
House !iht?rals In the driver's seat.
Conservative Rep. Henry Hyde, R)ll., described the rule as Asp!n 's
attempt "to rehabilitate himself witt) the 'Sister Boom-Boom' wing (liberal
wing) of the Democratic Party," a reference to a flamboyant San
Francisco tmsvestite who drew attention at the last Democratic
convention.
,
. That may well be the case, but it is nothing new for a man who revels In
· the minutiae of parliamentary procedu re and legislative fine print.
Liberals who want Asp!n out might consider tllat tile ·Contra vote had
. nothing to do with the arms control agenda they have pushed , even though
Aspin's yes vote was a switch from his earlier votes on the Issue.
And under his chairmanship they have go tten a better hearing of their
agenda both in committee and from tbe House- and scored their biggest
victory of the Reagan years - than IIIey· might have had from a more
conventional chairman.
. Asp!n is unconventional, there's no denying that. He runs tlx' oommlttee
in a relaxed, almost informal fashion . His proclivity for press releases Is .
~ legendary on Capitol Hill.
; He's Interested more in long-term globaldefenseplanningthan in buying
: any weapon tha t comes down the Jlkc or stuffing the pork barrel. But he's
also becoming adept at the legislative. "stroking" necessary to build
. coalitions and the tradeoffs tha t must be made.
For Instance. when an amendment banning rrost U.S. nuclear tests for a
: year passed, Asp!n gave credit to more liberal co-sponsors of the
. legislation who had come up with tile Idea r~ ther than hogging the
· limelight. He did the salTie'earlier at a press conference 1Etail!ng aseriesof
: arms control amendmen ts to be ctfered to the bill.
And when liberal Rep. Tom Downey, D·N.Y, needed help fo r corporate
const!tuenl Fairchild. which is trying to save its T-46 jet trainer, Aspin . perhaps not unmindful of his standing with the likes of lliwney- sided
, with those keeping tbe program alive.
As pin may be a bit of an oddball and may not vote the way liberals want
all the time because of the clash between defense .&lt;eality and wishful
, thinking, but his willingness to give liberal positions &lt;Ut airing and
somet imes mold them to suit his own cl2fense purposes, would argue
, against ouster.
Liberals may not get a better deal e !sew h~e.

Opinions of other editors
The Union-Leader, Manchester, N.H. .
If U.S, Senator Gordon Humphrey accomplishes nothing further in the
remaining days of hfs IPnure, he will long he remembered for the New

;1 ·

By Un ited Pres!i lntermdlonul
Wai f'S Conference

Patrick Dlvl'ilon
W L T Pts, GF

&gt;

The

00. ·

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0 0 0 00

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Vantouwr
Los i\ngc les

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00
00

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2G; 18. Ch~\'eland St,Joeeph lti; n .

Woooler 14: Itt. Lakewoo4 st.
~ Edward 13; 19. Cincinnati Moeller
II; 00. (ti e) Galton, Columbus
Mifflin, WestervUie North and
Wintersville, 9 eaCh.

Class AA
Team
I Ci\PE (Ill) 118) (i-0)

00
\10

Polnts_

.. 27Q
2 !lie) OnvWe !IU) (!) (1&gt;0) '20!
t (lie) 11'1111&lt;11 (Ill) (3) (6-0) . 20!

1 Ur.hllfta (Ill) til 11-0) :

5\'ounp Meoo!:ll 110) (5·1)

1 Cotumbuolle8a1es
(6-0)

(6-0)
til) (2) .

m

1410
122

Ill
8 Wf!eeler~hurg ,(111)(6-11)
· 78 ·
9
talta Marga'lia UVJ 16·0) 58
If GarDeN Hto·Try (Oil (8-0) tl
Seceod ten: • fl, Akr .. .st.
Vlacen&amp;·St. Mary 35; 12. ThomvUie
Shl'l'idWI %3: 13.(lle) Philo and
Licking Valley, 19 eadl; 15. Bellf.&gt;\'ue I'H ; IlL A\'on IS; 17. Uhrlchs-

c..

\'Uie Claymont 1-1; lit (tie) Ken·Htoo, Columbllfi Hartley and 8ry1lJI,

11 eacta.. ' .

Clas11A

Team

Polnl!i
I lkt'hOM ,Jrlf tV) (13)(6-0) . 217
Z.Crook•vUt. IV) II) (8-0 1
136

3 Versalll,. (IV) tJ) 16-t)

1211

p.m.

' t Newar- Catholic (VI (5·1)

125

Nl·w .rerNey at NY Ranaer:-1, 7:33
p.m .
EdmontOn at Phllnd clphla. 7::U

100
,7 Tiffin Calve rt (V I 121 (1-0)
90
II Ga!&lt;"S Mit t lV)(%)11-0)
'65
9 Buckeye Nnrth (V) tt) (6-0\ 59

tV) tl-0)
6 Melloouoltl tV) (I) U·D)
3 St. Henry

to Mogadore (V)(H)

tOll

to

Second ten : ' II , McComh 33; 12.
Ayers\'llle 29; 13. LJshon 10 2'7; 1-t
( lit&gt;) Arcanum ~I) and Conotlon

wN•k'" Unlt('d Pn'!! s International

Valh•y, 23 4!ach: 16. Port'imooth
Noire Dame 22: l"i. i\llt'll Ea."'t 21;
Ul. (tie) Edr;ertoo and R:IUman, ll
rod!; 20. Twin Valley South, 10.

Ohio High School Board ol Coacht&gt;s
footha ll ratlngi'i (wllh OHSAA

Transactions

!'OLUMIIUS

iUPf l

-

This

plotyoff divl~lons, first pia('(• \'ot es
a nd " 'on · lost· ,rp eo rd!'O in
par1•nthcses ):
Cla.'" s AAi\
1'eam
Points
I ('ant ' n Mt·' .~· ( I) (IK) (6-0)
2'73
~ Ct• nh&gt;r'llt• (I) ( ti 1 ( tHI)
~:u
:1 N fnnton Hoovt•r (I) (I) (6-0) ~0 1

8.,.ehaU

ByMIKEBA~

count In consideration for regular·
season awards:
HOUSTON (U P!) - Whether
"You have to look at Mike Scott
Mike Scott doctors the baseball and. if he doesn't win the Cy Young
may .never be proven. One tll!ng, Award now,I don 't knowwhowlll,"
however, is certain: he definitely Lanter said. "He just pitched the·
scuffed the New York Mets' liest game you could·aga!nst a good
,
· cluti."
reputation Wednesday night~
The Mets complained throughout
· Scott, wbo this year became the
fourth National Leaguer In history . about strike calls from plate
to fan ' lXl batters in a season, . umpire Doug Harvey. "There may
continued his blazing string . of have been a couple of marginal
strikeouts against the NL East calls, but the umpire certainly
chaP1plons.
,
didn't beat us,''New York Manager
The split-finger S(lfiCiallst tied a Davey Johnson said. ·
playoff-_game record with 14 stri·
But Gary Carter, who has.
keouts and surrendered just five accused Scott of sculling, asked
hits and a walk in a 1-0, Game 1 Harvey to examine a ball In the first
victory that must rank with one of Inning. Harvey kept the bail In play,
the best postseason pitching perfor- the Astrodome crowd of 44,131
mances In history.
cheered and Carter fanned fo r the
It may have tlePn Scott's best first of three times.
/(arne of the season, even if he did
pitch a no-hitter to clinch the West
"Harvey sa id before tile game
that
Scott doesn't cheat,'' · Carter
Division.
"No, I think it was a bigger game said. "He once caught Don Sutton
than the no-hitter,'' said Scott, who doing something with the ball and
tied John Candelaria's NL playoff- Sutton sued him. He's not l(Oing to
game, strikeout mark. "It wasn't a call it on Scott."
do- or-die for either team. bu t we
Glenn Davis provided tbe Astros
didn't want to.lose the home- field with the game's ooly run in the
advantage."
second inning when he pounded a
Scott ·was so impressive thaI 1-0 pitch from Dwight Gooden int o
Houston Manager Hal Lanier for- tbe center- field seats.
got post season performances don't
Dav~ also took a run away from
UP! Sports Writer

' ?

•
TIES KO RECORD - Houston catcher Alan Ashby congratulates
pitcher Mike Scott (right) after Soot! slllt out the Mets, 1:0, to wiD the
Firsl NL Playoff Series tilt Wednesday in Houston's Astrodome. Scott
fanned 14 New Yorkers, equaling a play!tf mark sti by Pittsburgh's
Jolw (candyman) Candelari:i in 1975. (UPI)

Baltlmoft - Rt-taln('ij for nexl

!110011011

coache~

Elrad · Hendricks,

Frunk RohlnMon, Terry Crowle)'
und .Jimmy Wlllh•mK: did not offer
a 19H1 l'OIIIract to plkhlng cQuch

and mix things up more," said
Hurst, 13-8 this season."! wan ted to
keep the Ang!'!s from hitting one up
In the wind like Joy ner did !Wit h a
solo homer in the lift hI.
"My goal was to !Did us close
unt il late in the ga me and that
happened."
Boston collected 13 hils off a t rio
of Califo rnia pitchers that threw an
unimpressive 169 pitches [)Iff eight
Innings.

nlg

2

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Inside Meigs County

13 Weeks ....... .. .. :......... ............. $17.29
26 We&lt;ks .............. ,..... ,............. ~14 . 116
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Oulslde Melp County
13 We&lt;ks .................................. $18,20
26 Weeks ,.,., ........ ...... :............ , SJUO
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Today in history

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ALL RECLINERS
REDUCED LOWER

..-----------__.JL-------:-------t

Overshadowed electioriJ

our and the forriler Met f&lt;Utned Ray
Knight to end thr game.
"I'm ju st as proud of the fieldjng
play as the homer," Davis ~} d . " It
saved a run and was JUst as
importanf.' '
The Mets will have an opporrunit y to squa re the best· of-seven
series tonight when left ·hande.r Bob
Ojeda facrs Nolan Ryan. ·
"This has been a career season
for me and the organiza tion," said
Ojeda, who was 18·5. "We're going
to fin ish I be job star ting tomorrow.
After Doc tGooden I and Soon, my
junk will be quite different."
The Mets hope so. They won 108
games - the most in the NL since
1909- and ted the league in batting,
bu t were IJJnchless Wednesday
night. Besides Strawberry. they
man aged to get only two runners In

the Mets. W!ih Darryl Strawberry
on second in the ni nt h, the first
baseman dove into the ho!etospear
Mookie Wilson's wounde r. He
tossed to Scott covering first for the

Boston romps ·9-2 to even playoffs ·

Gr!ch "to stop. "1 made a wrong
By ROBERTQ DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
decision."
On Grieb's reaction, Stubingsa id,
BOSTON iUPl) -So much for
:.1 didn 't see it. We didn 't discu ss it •
respecting tradition.·
Kl'n' Rowe.
Seattle - Coo.chffi Phil Regan
~ \\•orth'ton ll l {:1) (6·0)
li Z
The California Angels and Boston we won't discuss !t."
and Deroo John~ton will nol be
t Tot Wht'mr til 16-0)
m
Red
Sox committed blasphemy
Hurst. who finished with an
retatriro for 1911.7; of~ered a minor·
ti fl ew Bcn'dic'nt• (II ) (6·0)
110
Wednesday
with
a
display
of'poor
ll
·hitter
that he described as
leajtU&lt;' pru.ltlon to lnft ('ld cou.t'h
1 Au)Otl'lown Fl't'h (I ) (6·0)
K0
Marly Martlnea .
defense and sha ky baserunning "nifty" after striking out four and
that mocked the30t hanniversary of walking none, surprisingly said he
New York Yankees right -hanc12r was "predictable.
.
Don La rsen's perfect game overt he
"I asked Geddy (catcher Rich
Brooklyn Dodgers In the 1956 World Gedman 1 to call for more fa stballs
Series.
'
Boston fared better, winning 9-2
behind determined left- hancl2r
Bruce Hurst to even !lie best-ofseven, American League Championship Series at a game apiece, ·,
and .Red Sox Manager John
McNamara was in a forgiving
mood.
5JI JACKSON PIKE - RT. J~ WEST
"It's the nature of the game to
make an occasional mistake," he
446-4S24
BARGAIN MAT1NEES SATURDAY I
'said. "Nobody' s Infallible. Erro rs
SUNDAY - All SEATS $2 .50
are going to~ made because this is
ADMISSION
EVERY TUESDAY$2 .50
a game played by human beings.
- - - LAST DAY: - - Nothing Is a sure thing."
"~ERICAN ANTHEM"
, StU!, there had been two axioms
&amp;' 9:DO P.M. RATED lPG l3l
concerning thE' Angels believed to
• H.'Juv!Yedt.
be unshakeable.
, ITICIII holllll and prlmlltW
land known to man
One has been promulgated by
Now 01 he'l 00110 do
·Ma nager Gene Mauch , who ha s
il mciJt" lhroygt\
a WMit In,_.,. 'lt:xk.
said repeatedly that his team
"never beats itself."
The other is more of an opinion
the Angels have about their pitchtrig staff• if Mike Witt beats you,
Kirk McCaskil l wlll be twice as
tough.
·
In McCaskill's defense. 1&gt;2 did
DESCRIBES FLY BALL INCIDENT- Bobby Grieb describes to
pitch well after six of tbe first seven
press how he lost a fly hall in the !lin in the ftfth lnnln&amp; ~edOOidi\Y IlL
batters hit the ball hard.
Boston's Fen way Park to allow what proved lo he the wmldng Red Sox
But the Angels' defense. lronl·
run. Boston evened the AL Pli\,Vctff Series at 1-1 with a &amp;-2 triumph.
rally plagued by bright sunshine
(UPI)
that Is a trademark of Cal!fomia,
stumbled throughout the game and .
had a record- tying three errors in
an Inning, the seventh, that led to
three Red Sox runs.
Mauch. after saying McCaskill
"pitched a better game than
anybody I've seen in my 45 years
(i n baseball) ," stalked out of a
By GENE CAD DES
McKinley, which boosted its postga me news conference when
UPI Sports Writer
record to G-0 Friday night with a asked about Bobby Grich's disasCOLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI)
36-14 win over Lancaster. topped trous day.
Cant on McKinley, CAPE and Del- the Class AAA ratings for the third
Gr!c h, who hid from reporters.
phos J efferso n had no trouble conseCutive week over runnerup
committed an error, lost Dwight
retainin g their No. 1 positions in this CentervUie.
week's United Press International
The Bulldogs reee!ved 18 of 29 Evans's game-winning pop double
Ohio High School Board.of Coaches first place votes arid T/3 poll points. · in tile . sun and ru ined California's
football rat ings,
CentervUle, left completely off the scoring threat In tre sixtll wren he
ballots of two of the voting coaches, was thrown out aftff rounding third
got six firsts and 234' points too far. Grich then vis ibly berated
following
its 24-3 win over Spring- third-base cooc h Moos e Stub!ng.
•
"That was my fault ," said
field North.
Stubing,
who di d mt signal lor
The Daily Sentinel
Northh Canton Hoover. with WI
points and one f!r$t place vote,
(us I'S 141-1!60 )
wound up third for the third w~k In
A Dtvifilon of Multimedia. Inc.
· a row following a 3.() win over 1
Massillon Perry, whDe Worthing·
Published rvery afternoon , Monday
throu gh Friday. 111 Court St., Po·
ton and Toledo Whitmer tied for
merov. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
fourth with 112 and Cleveland
llshl n'g Company/Mul1 1mPdla . fn r .,
Pomeroy , Ohio ~5769 , Ph. 992·2156. Se·
Benedictine moved Into sixth with
/,
cond class posta~ e paid at Pom('roy,
' 112.
1
•'
Ohi o.
Austbttown Fitch, which handed
Member: United Press Inl ernatlonal,
Massillon Washington Its second
In land Dally Press Association and rhe
loss of the season (14-10), advanced
Ohi o Nrwspapc r Association : National
from
13th a week ago to seventh,
Advcrtlslna Repres'cnta tl ve, Branham
Newspaper Sales. 7:\.1 Third Avenue.
followed by Cincinnati Purcell
Nrw York. New York 10017.
Marian in eighth and, In a tie lo t·
POSTMASTER : Send address c han~cs
nin th , St eube n v ill e a nd
to Thr Dally &amp;mllnel. 111 Cour1 St.,
Middletown.
PolT!E'l'oy, OhiO457et
PureeD's jump from 14th a week
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came on the strengt h ct Its 13-10
By Carrier or Motor Route
o'nc WN'k ................... ,.... ,. .... ,.. ,.$1.25
overtime win over Cincinnati
One Month .................. , ......... .. ... $5.45
Moeller Friday night. The loss
On e Year ..................... .... ...... .. $65.00
knocked Moeller all the way fl'llrm--rll- SINGLE COPY
fourth to 19tll ana marked the first
PHICI!
Da ll y .... ........ ...... .. .... ...... ... .. 25 Cents
tbna since 197'.! the Crusaders have 1
The Converse• Aerodyne~ Is designed for the woman who
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Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
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rter may remit tn advance direct to
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cushldnlng and stability so you can work out longer.

been

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0 0 0 00 00
Smythe 'Dtvlslon
Edmonton
0 0 0 00 · 00
Calgary
0 0 0 DO 00

UPI Prep Potl

Hetmi 3

\

Oo 00

0 0 0 00

p.m.

test.-;---~------~--A_''-:-B_uc_hwal--'--:'d\

1

00
00 •.
00

p.m.
St . l.imls l!-1 Los Angelest. 10::13

· . .: '

- -1.~ .

GA

82 .
82

Second ten: H. Gahanna Uncob1
28: 12. Cincinnati St. Xa\'ler 27; 13.
Berea !8; 1-t. North Canton GlenOak 22; 1~ Cincinnati Prbu.-eton

UI ..CialmDie (Ill) !3)

Jl .nt .
.
\\'as hlnJttOO at PlU ,.hurgh , 7::15

Now, according to SEnatv at'
ces, the State Department has
fallen back on Its old delaying
tactics. The Foreil(n Relatk&gt;ns
Committee was assured that a
nomination fo r inspector general
will be sent to the Senate any day .
oow. But It seems unlikely thah;;
candidate can be named, commit' "1
tee hearings held and a Senate vote ,,
arranged before Congress adjourns ~
for the election.
•:? ~
BEER MONEY STRE'I'CHE:t&gt;: ""'
The nation's tlePr drinkers 1111!'- ·
have saved. $1 bUI!on a ~ar wiiN ~·­
Congress failed to pills a Iaiii' \
exempting beer distributors from· 1
certain anti·trust rules. That'swhal
the Consumer Federation of America estimates beer buyers would
have had to pay ·tf the exemption
had been granted. Tire -estimate
was extrapolated from the price.
Increases that occurred In stalES
that allow distributors to set up
exclusive sales networ~ . The
Industry lobbied hard 'to get a
nationwide exemption !trough Conl(ress, bu t the language was f~
cut from tbe Treosury Ap(roprla•
tk&gt;ns bUt
·L

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Or trull at QuehN:,. i!a5 p.m. ·
NV ISIMdtrs at Chicago, S::U

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Thursday's Games

Hampsh ire· style common sense he displayed in sponsoring legislation to
allow a realistic Ji.'i mph speed !!mit on ru ral Interstate highwa y~
What good can be said of the present generally disregarded 55 mph speed
It all started when oo mebody got al ready tested by the CIA.
s!on that everyone In Washington is fountain outside ' Jesse
•limit In such areas? Its enfora'ment foolishly wastes the valuable time of the idea to test horses for drul(S.
being checked on a regu lar basis.
office, once when I bought boxer
·There was some hell to pay when
•'the police, makes scofflaws of otherwise law abiding citizens, breeds
Many of us are just being shorts at Blaom(ngdale's, and once
Then somebody else said, "As the Whit e House leaked a story that
.contempt among the ci tizenry for law and government. violates states' long as we're doing It for horses ,
subjected to random testing when when I asl\ed At1orney General EIJ•.
al l heads of state would have to take
r ights, and directs attention awa)' from the fact that alcoiDI and drugs are why don't we test football players?"
we're
in a public place.
a drug test before they met with the
Meese at a press conference H ~ ·:
the rea l highwa,v killers.
I've only been randomly tested was having trouble understanding
It seemed like a good Idea , except ' President. Prime Minister Mar·
ThL· Hartford (COM.) Cour-.U1t
three times - once when I was· the ConstitutiOn of tbe United.
the baseball teams complained that
What srcms so sad about the Nicholas Dan ilofl incident ls that so many if tbe ,authorities were screening garet Thatcher was particularly drinking from a public water States.
a spy. In a Ga llup football players, they should do the disturbed when they sent hera kit in
Americans suspected that Mr. Daniloff may have
:poll conducted for tbeTimes Mirror Co., 66 percent of the respondents said same lor baseball players. The the diplomatic pouch.
To show there was nothing to It;
1bere was "a good "Chance" or at least "somewhat of a chance" that
track stars said they wanted to be in
Presklent
Reagan took 'a test. As
:Oanlloff worked for the CIA. They apparently did not believe DanUoff or on it too, and before you knew it,
everyone
suspected.'tbe
President
their own government.
' ~
they were testing basketball play- passed It It with flying colors, and
Such results do not bode well for the credibi!ty of the government or the .ers, croquet teams, wrestlers and
Steeped deep In the shadows cast by tile o:pochal fight ilr control d the
Nancy
was
shown
giving
him
a
kiss
media. They also reinforce the need for maintaining a clean distance bowlers.
Senate, Is another election with.a significance that ex tends to therndoftbe
when the results were announced.
betw('('n Jtovernment and the media.,,.
century.
• A female volleyball team in
Drug screening became the most
The Sew York Time;
Alaska went to the Supreme Court
This, reminds Curtis B. Gans o~ the Committee for the Study of tho
serious
obstacle to foreign
· The Soviet Union lost a missile submarine off Bermuda, and gained a complaining that men were being
American Electorate, is the election for state lcg!si&lt;llur!'S, which besavs Is
relations.
'measure of respect . Had Mikhail Gorliachev mai ntained standard Soviet
tested 10 times as often as women.
the tru~ battleground for political alignment.
' .
One of the big stumbling blocks to
secrecy and denial in the face of disaster, he might have cast a pall of The court ruled that women were
holding
a
summit
concerned
the
Except
within
state,
and
not
even
always
there,
the
elect
ion
of
seats
In'~
mistrust over this w('('k's summit meeting In Iceland. But be broke with entitled to equal drug checks under
the legislatures get very little attention.
.
1
question
of
whether
or
not
Gorba·
enduring practice, Informing President Reagan about the accident ... The the law.
chev would take a drug test. The
·Thev are overshadowed by , the headline-grabbing contests tor thl&gt;.,.,
Soviet Union's new spi rit of candor is as welcome as It ~ necessary.
Although the dope screening Soviets !nslst!!d that Mr. Reagan
Senate,
the House, g~vernor, lieutenant governor, lnitlath·es andjust ali&gt;~! .'::\
Nuclear acr iden ts, civ ilian or military, respect no national borders. Yet started in sports, ·It soon hit the
everyt hing ~Ise - except maybe dogcatchers.
' ':;,.
had to . take their, word that
last April it took Moscow two and a half days to warn the world_oJ the . e!vUlan populat!onc - - ·
Gorbachev was not on dope·. The .
But
It Is in these ~lect ions - In 1986, 1~and 1~00 - that thr Republican ,
radioactive cloud spewing out from the stricken nuclear re.rtor at
Politicians urged that every
fight lot political dominan ce wUI be fought.
.,,
CllemobyL That disaster prompted an in terna tional convention binding schoolchild in America be tested. Americans held out fo r on-site
A dra matic party switch, such as the ooe made by Sen. Phll Gramm,
Inspection.
:COuntries to give prompt no !icy of nuclear accidents. With the Ink scarcely Corporations gave all employees
Not only the White House but
R-Texas, or GOP gubernatorial candidate William Lucas In Michigan·,
dry on the accord. Mr. Gorbachev has tived up to hls word.
little paper cups as tbey Uned up lor ot her branches of government are excites the faithful and lenjls marginal !lnpetus.
• .,
,. . Yet the accident cannot simply be di smissed In a glow of gratitude for their paychecks.
now insisting on checks for drug
But these switches have little to do with the lbng-rangto shift of tOO:
unaccustomed candor. ,. , Recently there have been too many Soviet
Banks·demanded drug checks on use. Congressional candidates are
parties, If there Is to be one.
.
, .•
mls~aps for comfort.
customers In exchang!'s for rrori - filming corru'nerc!als holding up the
The next three elections for $late legislatures, howcvrr could rad!c~!!y ,,,
gages. ('o one could use a credit resulis of their tests on television
alter the landS(' ape. In 1991-lollowlngthe 1900census- the congres~lontl~ ,
card unless· he had a fa vorable and demanding their opponents to
districts, as well as the !eg!slative districts, will be redrawn and the nlap ·
report from the lab.
makers' w!IJ be !he legls!atures.
\ •.
db the same.
The Army, Navy, Air Force and
A suggesUon to have the nine
The_party that'controls the most legislatures, Gans pointsoot, wUI be lila ,
the Marines aec!ared mandatory members of the Supreme Court
position to redraw district lines in Its favor. The map making,even lea'~ :
testing for O!lr boys In uniform. And ' take a test before deciding 'a case within the one-man, one-vote requirement, can be delicately balanced ill:;,
Today is Thursday, Oct. 9, the 282nd day of l9!ll with 83 to t:&gt;liow.
the White House ordered everyone was greeted with stony silence by
that a Democral!e stronghold turns Into a Republican bastion -or the :.
'l11e moon Is approaching its first quarter.
from ihe Secretary of State to ·tile
other way around.
.
the Coun , The reoson is that .the
There Is no morning star:
lowly Secretary of Agriculture to Supreme Court will have tO' decide
More tftan one solidly entrenched Incumbent has found himsef, Iollo"inR
'l11e evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
being in samples before a Cabinet sooner or later whether mandatory
the census, In a district of a far different composition- and lost.
'Those born on this date are under tile sign ct Libra . They include French meeting.
screening Is const!rutional or not.
For tllose not watching as closely as the CommUter lot'! he St~ Qlthe -.
fompOSer Cam!lle Salnt·Saens In 1835, German !ilysiCist Max von Laue In ·. . President Reagan declared tllat And if they take the test and fail,
American electorate, the Republ!carts are gaining. ·
,
:•
~. American evangelist Amtee· Semple McPherson In IBOO, ' and everybody In Nicaragua had to he
they would be held in contempt.
The committee points out that since 1976, the GOP has gained 553 !;eat a¥ ~
~clan-composer John Len!!On In 19«&gt;.
tested b)! the ~O!llras, woo were
I dOn't wish to give the impres· the lower houses of state leglslatuf~!S and 135 seats in the uwer house~.}::

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llutfuiO ,..,.,.,.,,0 0 0 DO DO
· Cllmphcll Conferenct•
~o rri i'i Division
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W I~ T Pts. GF
Chi t.: li~O
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talgary at Boston. 7:35 p1m.
Buffalo at Winnipeg, 7:35p.m.
Montreal at 1'0rooto. 7:33p.m .

Service may be appointed InspectOr
general of the Department -~

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Toronto

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A senator's challenge __J_ac_k_A_'nd_e....,..rs_on_&amp;_J_o_se_ph_S_p_ea::-""-r:~ .:
last year ordering the appointment
of an "indepencl2nt and effective"
inspector general.
Unfortunately, the law did state
explicitly that the Inspector general
must not be a member of tbe
Foreign Service. For IJ'Ofess!onal
diplomats accustomed to interpretIng every word, phrase and clause
ct .treaties and . prolix off!clal
commutiiques, thl s was all tbe
opening they needed . ·
But first the wily bu reaucrats in
Pettifo~y Bottom decided to test
congressional w!llpo""'r ~ stalling. They claimed that, because of
the Gramm-Rudman -oost-cutt!ng
requirements, tiE department
didn't have the mo ney to sa. up an
Independent, fully staffed Inspector
general. Congress gave them $12
million.
Their bluff called. the diplomats
complained that they couldn't use
that much monC') ·, Congress remained adamant.
Finally convinced that the lawmakers are serious. the cl2partment nominated and Inspector
general for Senat~ apiJ'oval. He
was a Foreign Service officer.
So Congress passed new legislation that sta ted ex plicitly: "No
career membe r of the Foreign

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·'t~:~

WASHINGTON- What's gotten inspector general," Lugar wrote In
into Sen. Richard Lugar lately? The a confidential letter to Shultz.
mild-mannered Indiana Republ!·
What led Lugar to Invoke the
can has long tlePn considered the dreaded name of Foggy Bottom's
Mr. Peepers of the Senat e, a Irascible nemesis? It all began with
diffident , hard-working spear car- a 1983 General Accounting Office
rier on a stage dominated by prima report requested by Rep. Jack
donnas.
Brooks, D-Texas. The GAO point·
But first the Foreign Relations edly criticized tbe State DepartCommittee chairman challenged ment tradition of appointing a
President Reagan over· South Foreign Service officer as Inspector
Africa. endorsing sanctions that the general.
Whit e House rons!ders counterproductive. And now Lugar has taken
on Secretary of State George Shultz
'"Irese personnel face person~!
over an unportant personnel mat- and exter nal Impairments to their
ter within Foggy Bottom.
independence when theY are as·
The normally even-tempered signed to Investigate their own
Lugar is furious at Shultz and the supervisors. other senior post offiFor-eign Service "old bOy" network cials and Individuals with whom
for what be '1ews as a deliberate they live and socialize at. foreign
refusal to follow clear congres- posts," the GAO repor t noted.
sional Instructions on a choice 61 a · A Senate expert amplified tllis
new inspector general for tbe State point to our associate Lucette
Department. In fact, , he was .so Lagnado, saying: "The Foreign
st&lt;'amed that 1&gt;2 made a veiled Service Is a small, clubby place. l}n
threat to sic the depa rtment's IG wa s likely to have Bved next
srverest critic, Sen. Jesse Helms. door to 1he wrson he was inves tiR-N.C., on the stubborn diplomats. gating. His kids may have gone to
"I want to repea t a very strong school with the audited peroon's
belief. which I sha re with Sen. _ch!ldrm. We nee1Ed someone from
Helms, tha t the department stx&gt;uld the oots!de."
take immediate action to ImpleSo that's what ·Congress decided
ment the law regarding the office of to do- or tried to do in legislat ion

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W;...., htngton .....0
NV INhmders ••0
NV Rangers .... O
l'ltts hurgh .,. ..:o
Nt•w ,Jersey ..... 0

Gl\

Quehe&lt; ...........0

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Philadelphia ... 0

iltl ..

I Steu'vll)e (II) (8-0)
. 9, Mlddl!!l'ol (1), (1-Jl ,

. !\at lon ltl Ho ckey Le~gue

.,
this provision : "In !he best interests trial in Hackensack Nov. 3.
Sp
much
tlr
the
facts.
The
ca~
of the child (Mrs. Whitehead ) will
not fmm or at1empt to form a raises perplexing qllflltlo~ ot~r
parent-child rela tionship with ·any contract Jaw, family Jaw•. constltu~:
child ... she may conceive ... and tiona! Jaw, even tax law. Is a '
shall freely sunender custody to surrogate's womb a 1Epreclable
William Stern,. natural father, asset? U the issue Is dec11Ee! on the
Immedia tely upon birth of the literal terms of the contract, one
child·' and termin ate all parental body of law apPJ!es: It the case
right~ to said child pursuant to this . comes down on the Dexlble precec
dents of family law, 'the best
agreement."
·
·
As It ·turned out, the surrogate !riterests of the· c,ilild lllw~
mother ""'lshed , She refused to paramount: As ror, ~.-titulklll81 .
rurn over the baby girl. The Sterns law, the N!nth im d 14th ' 1\rilend-·
sued for breach . of. contract and men!S may guarantee IDtll \he
specific wrformance , and gained father and the. surroga·te rmt1Er.;1
custody of the Infant under tempor- right to procreat~n. Law studeitr~:
ary cou'rt order. The case Is set ilr could argue thls one all nil!hl and
into the morning. ·
· · ,:. ·
What of public policy? Contracts .
in patent viOlation of. public law or·
IJJblic policy caqnot be ' enforced:.'
There appears ~~ be lltUe or mo •
statutory law ·on the subject' of .
surrogai~ rrothers. Half a &lt;il~err:;;
states, theLaiY Journal ~rts;.are' ·
thinking of legislation,~~ they~~
thinking gingerly about if, C~IIfor.t:.'
nlu's Senate killed an elaborate blll1'
to regulate I he practice.
·.-; :
The question etten Is as~d II
surrogate motherhood, wlich dates; ·
only to 1976, is in any way ditlerent.
from surrogate fatheriDod. For
many years sperm has b('('n
implanted anonymously In womerf ·
whose husbands are infertfil". \fl! is
immoral, unet hlcal or Dl&lt;'l(al l&gt;r a"
woman .to !111 her repocdlcllve
organs oot for hi re. Is it equally
immoral, unethical or ill&lt;'l(al l&gt;r a:~
man to do the same thing?
.:~
What about surrogate '.' carftt
ers"? Suppose a woman sells hef~
eggs to a medical · laboratory;/
whrre tile egl(s are fertilized bY"
do natea sperm, and an egg lhen is' ·
transplanted to a contract carrier ·
who will bear !be resulting child? In.: .
such a caS(' the lllrr!er ·ha' "!Xi : ·
genetic connrct!on to her beby. ~-?
such agreements violate t lr l aw~ ~
every.,1ate &lt;JgJinsi "ooby bu ~ ing"t,· i:i
..... . .
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I Clll'oll r..,'l IDHB-D)

Majors

i

Scott fans·· 14 as
Houston w~s' 1~o

r

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Thursday, October -9. '1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

to

-HoOsiers hope_ end _Buckeyes grid .hex

outhem
riday; Eastern
travels to HT

Ohio State Is 2-2 overall and 1-0 in_ State at Michigan, Purdue a!
By J{ENT McDILL
fate again.
the
Big T~n alter shutting out · lllinols, Wisconsin at Iowa and
"This (game) Isn't our season." .
lJPI Sports Writer
Illinois
14-0. It was the first Buckeye Northwestern ·at Minnesota.
Indiana · gets Its llrst .. test as said Mallocy, In his third year at
· The Mlchlian-Michlgan Slate'
shutout
since 1~. ~
pretender to the throne this week Indiana. "Sure, I wart to go in and
"I thought that was a very fine game ·has so. many angles. not
when the. unbeaten Hoosiers play win but If we come out on the soort
defensive performance," said · _excluding the Intrastate rivalry,
end,
that
doesn't
mean
we're
going
- Ohio State In a key Big Ten
Bruce. "We were very · spotty Michigan coach Bo Schembechler
to Jose the next six.
·
conference matchup.
offensively.'
We are Improving ala says the rivalry blanks out every"I
!eel
we
have
made
Improve·
the Southerners are looking for a
By SCO'IT WOLFE
The Hoosiers are 40 overall and
very
small
pace."
thing else, including the fact the
Sentinel Staff
big turnaround and a strong finish.
ments.
What
I
am
talklitg
about
1-0 In the Big Ten after . beating
The rest of the Big Ten schedule . Spartans are coming off a difflcull
Aft er three weeks of SVAC The talen~ of Scottilurrts and his Northwestern. They are also rated now•ls a winning season. We need
for Satunday Includes Michigan 24-2l loss to Iowa.
' football action Noi1h Gallia, Oak Increased development have added 19th In the nation, similar to their that this year."
Hill, and Southwestern are sitting a much needed IDost to support the No. 20 position last season at this
The was
last time
Indll!Jia
beat
Ohioa
on top of the SVAC standings with strong running or junior Pete
In 1951,
more
than
time when they were also unbeaten. State
perfect 3-0 marks, whUe l'ilelgs Roush.
.
decal!€
before
any
rlayers
on
either
.
But the 1985 Hoosiers lost their
Roush weighs In just under 600 next seven games to finish . 4-7. team were lxirn. Last season, E_arle
County's hopefuls Southern and
yards fur the.season. The unpredic- Indiana coach Bill Mallory does not Bruce's club scored 28 plilntsln the
Eastern remain winless.
This week the status of at least table youth of KC can be quite believe his club will suffer the same second quarter and won 48- 7.
one league-leading club will Chan!:" damaging if not controlled early as
as North GaUia oosts Southwestern · much talent Is In a strong developin a battle of league unbeatE!Is. mental stage.
The highly praised SHS Hne of
Kyger Creek (1·2 and 3-2 overall)
goes to Southern, Eastern visits an last week wUI have to curtail the
EAST MEIGS- In girls' high ners with 14, while Sara Adkins,
in ju 1y-plagued Hannan Trace (0-3 efforts of Tom Waugh, Bobby . school varsity volleyball action Memra Ingram, _Pam Reese, and
and 24) , and Symmes Valley visits Gordon and compary.
visiting Eastern dropped a close Wilma Rollback had good often·
At Harnan Trace, Eastern hopes match at Oak HIIJ, the n returned slve nights .
Oak Hill
With only four league games to gain Its firSt SVAC win of the ·.tot, poiit" a convincing triumph
Mel Mankin led Eastern with
,
remaining, defending league Cham· year.
15, Trlsha Spencer had 5, Lisa
over Hannan Trace.
An Inexperienced Eastern crew
pion Southern would have to ~
At Oak Hill Eastern won the Driggs 4, Amber Short 4, Amy
undefeated the remainder of the has Jed to Its own demise lately as opener 15:10. bul dropped two Connolly 3, Amy Hager 2 and
season to have any · hOpes fur several costly mlst~kes have re- consecutive 13·15 matches to the Amy Berkhlmer 2.
sulted In scores !rom the opposition. Lady Oaks.
Eastern's Varsity boosted Its
arother league title.
.
Sbowing signs of Its true potenThe Tornadoes have slnwn In·
overall
rll!'ord t~8-10 and 8·3 in
Bev Wigal paved the way ro~
tial,
Eastern
has
yet
to
play
as
tbey
the
league
with 15·5 and 15-2 wins
creasing improvement over the
the Easterners as she tallied 15
past few games and soowed much are capable, but with s6me early points, was 16-for -ll In setting, over Hannan Trace.
po ise in suffering a disappointing confidence could b? tough on the and 2-for-2 spiking.
disabled Wildcats.
·
loss al Oak Hill.
Wigal paced the EHS win with
Tanya savoy had 8, LEsa
Jeff Johnson and Doug Beaver Rucker 7 with three aces, Krist! 9 points. Hawk 5, Rucker 4. SaUtilizing homecoming as an
Incentive. the TOrnadoes hope to have provided m:&gt;st of Eastern's Hawk 7 with four aces, Arlene voy 3, ~ltchle 2, and Spencer 3.
Wigal was ' perfect from the
rebound with a win over the ground game, while Steve Horner Ritchie 2, Melissa Nutter 1, and
has been a big yard-gainer at hls Lee Ann Robinson 1.
floor with 4-for-4 sets and 1-1
up-and-down Bobcats. '
Led by several key senior leaders end position. QUarterback Bryan · Hawk was 8-14 spiking, Rucker spikes.
Durst, who has Suffered a slnulder 6·7, Savoy 2·2, Nutter 1·2, and - Ruck er and Hawk were tough
injUiy and back lnjuiy already this Ritchie 1-1. Missy Adkins paced at the net with 2·3 and 4·5 nights
season. Is again a qu estion, taking · Oak Hill with 13 mar~rs, Angie respectively as Hawk slammed 3
POMffiOY 801\UNG LANES
away the main Ingredient Of the ·Caldwell, and Barbie Hensley kills.
Early Wednesday Mixed
Eagle·aerial assault.
The EHS JV 's posted a big win
had 5, Sherry Car.ter 8, Melody
T"'""
· O&lt;;ober L, flllti
1'1•
Mark Griffin has subbed quite Galllamqre 5, .DeAnna Lewis 1, of 15-4 and 15-9 to boost their re•L ..
.................... ............. li
well
cord to 6·8 and 4'3 in the league.
Gretchen Ondera 3.
"L ... .......................... ............ .... .. :li
Hannan Trace, alter a 2-0 start,
Amber Short sparked the win·
The Oaks won the reserve tilt
Middleport Lunch Room .. .....,., .......... .. .. :!! has suffered Its own woes and are In three sets , 15-5, 12-15,-and 15· ners with 13' P!Jints, Driggs had 6,
Tony's Carry Out ....... ,., ..... ... .............. .. 2:1
JA R. Consorucllon .............. ,............ ..... l8
quite be atable despite a good effort 13.
Mankin 5, Spencer 3, Connolly 2,
J.D. Drilling ............. ...... .', .. :........ ...... ... J6
from Its voonger team members.
and Berkhlmer 1.
Dawn
Horton
paced
the
winHlgh Scrlrs: Ray Roach. !D2: Ru,&lt;&gt;s Carson,
~
CC 19fl6 Ponderosa. Inc.
~
Busl&lt;'I' Ph&lt;lpo,m, 2nd High Series: !lobi
Game
time
lor
ooth
contests
Is
r------------------------.1.-----------------------Hcnsl ey , !)q5: Caroly n EBchner 477; Bett~y
7 30
Smll h. Maxlnr Du~an , ,164; High Game: r: - · __.,;.______.,.

r...:-:--::'-!!!!!iii~~~-1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~:--

Eastern splits loop

Russ Carson. 212: Buslf'f Phelps, 199; Ray
Reach. 190: 2nd High Game: [)(obi Hensley .
2()2; Carolyn Bachner, :ro: PaiCarsonn. llll
Tea m Sf&gt;ri&lt;"S : Tony's Carry Out, 1901:
Tmm Gam&lt;'. T ony's Carl')' Out. 'JJI.

I SVAC standa·ngs I
(ALL GAMES)
TNlm
W L PF
Sorth Oallla .............. ..... , ..:; I 12':
OakHIII .... . ....... ... ... .... .. ... .5 I 116
Southwl'slern .... ... .' ......... .....l I IH
Ky~~:t•r Cr~•t-k ..... .... .... ..........l '!
i :l
~y rnnll'N Vallt&gt;'' ...... ........ : .... .3 :1 1011
Hannan Trat·t• ...... .. .. .. ........ 2 -1 X6

New Zealand tops
America II by 1.5

a

Ea!!&lt;lNn ......... ........ ...... .. ... .. l

FREMAI\'TLE , Australia tUPi l
- New Zealand defeated America
II bv a con\'incing i minute. !i
seconds and Dl'n nis Conner's _Stars
&amp; St ripes came from behind in the
final ym·ds lor a six-second victory
over San Francisco's U.S.A. Thursday in the America's Cup challenger races.
New Zealand's fiberglass boat
and Stars &amp; Stripes. the San Diego
Yachl Club cnt1y. are the lone
unbeaten contenders, with five
lli umphs apiece. The 1\ew York
Yocht Club's America II slipped to

:n

SPALQING
Pi\
1\fl

ANTI-FREEZE
COOLANT

Value 514.00'

a:•

105
1:17

SAL£ PRICE.. .......... $J.6S

tO IKK

Souttwrn .. ................. .. ..... .. I 3 j3 15-l
iS \ 'Af Onl,, )
TL•am
" ' I. PF
PA
Sorth Gallla .......: ..... .. .... .. .. :~ II 9M
Oak Hill .................... ........ ,;! 0 'I

19

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~outhwt&gt;Ntt•rn .... .. ..... .. .. ... ... :l 0 Wl
0
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North Gllllla -12, EWilt•rn 6

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'
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Southwt'l&gt;ilt'rn at North Gallla
Kyjit£&gt;r l"rt•t&gt;k at Soulhem
Easlf'rn al Hunnun Tract•
Symm£&gt;s Vall£&gt;~' at Oak Hill

1 cooling system if needed with pnuine GM coola~t. check hoses
·'
1 clamps and drive belts. (All Added Labor e. Parte E.tra)

LIMIT 2

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WITH A STANDARD IGNITION TUNE-UP

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SEALED BEAMS

START WITH POWER!

r--~---------COll PON·---..;.-------,

WINTER COOLING SYSTEM SPECIAL

AFTER REBATE ON
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WAGNER

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YOUR GM VEHIClE RUDY FOR TliE LONG WINTER. HAVE pressure check entire system for leaks, drain and fill

WITH THE
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SALE PRICES GOOD THRU 10/15/86

These Special Apply to GM Owners Only

If REGULAR PRICE)21(6 • TAX

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DISC BRAKE r:RII-1
OR BRAKE SHOES

ALIGNMENT SPECIAL

$795

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alignment.
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5 ·
REGULA~+ TAX
Special Price
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CALIPERS ·
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AHONG AS GALVANIZED STEEL MUFFLERS

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GOOD THRU NOV . 1. 1986

I

lubricate suspension, drain oil alii replace filter using Mr. Goodwrench
oil alii AC filter. In this special we insist on usine quality Mr. Good·
wrench oil anti P£ filters. This is an honest to goodness special on quality GM parts. No substitue for quality. Limit 5 quarts oil.
.

Special Price

GOOD THRU NOV. 1, 1986

$1995 •TAX
(Witlo C••••l

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ALTlRNATORS
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UP I ROTOR KITS

COMPUTER ENGINE ANALYSIS
Let us take your erJCine's pulse wtth 'our smart En&amp;ine Analyzer. ·
(This is not a tune·up and does not Include tune-up labor ortune·up ·
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(With c•.,...

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-----------------------------'

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FRIDAY' S TO 6; SATURDAY 9 TO 3
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. , 992·11814
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•

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SPAll! PlUGS
flA!HERS

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loturd•r• 1:00 o.m. till 4:00 p.m.

.

'

PT. ~ASANT

GALLIPOLIS

GOOD THRU NOV. 1. 1988

•

'

.-/

I

•

I

•

By KEITH WISECUP
three touchdown· !avortte," said
;.
Sentinel ~
··VIking first-year eoach Scott
-McART!fVR - . Unbeaten and · Blakely.
playoff·hope!UI Meigs travels to · Although new at Vinton County,
VInton Counly Friday in the 6-0 _Blakelyhasseveny~arsexperience
Maraudel'l stiffest test In several as a head roach In Wlscpnsin where
Weeks.
&gt;' .
he coached four conference cham·
• Vinton County, losers of two pions and two undefeated teams lh
straight after opening the season his tenure.
with four consecutive shutout wins,
Most feared VIking will be
are In position to lay stake to a part quarterfu\ck Scott Gilliland, a 6-2, _
olthe·TVC championship with a 3-1 180 lb. senior and a three-year
mar~-,
starter. "We'll be racing one of the
Meigs leads ~~ league with a better quarterbacks we'll see this
unblotched 5-0 mark While Belpre · year. He bas good size and is a ~od
folloW!! at 4-1. ·
·.
. athlete," said Meigs coach Charley
' '&amp; !pre, whom Meigs &amp;&gt;teated Chancey. . · "
~.whipped the Vikings 30-7 last
The Vikings started the se;lson in
Satur:ctay.
Impressive ,style, rurining off wins ·
· ; :!We actually stopped Belpre, but over Zane Trace (2£.0). Miller
t~ hurt· us on punt and kickoff (21-0), 1Federai-Hocking (37-01, and
returns and one !mig run while a Alexander (34-0). VC has come up
lli¥1 punt snap hurt us. !think Meigs er;npty the past two weeks, oowls better lhan Belpre because they ever. lOsing 14·0 -to class A
E!fCecute sowell and are very quick. powerhouse Portsmout!l Notre
In general, we're very Impressed Dame and last week's loss to
with Meigs and they're much more Belpre.
"We're Impressed with their
talented than us. I'd list them as a

defense. They hav_~n't given up · lb. SE!IIor tackle Scott Po!M!llls also points while Dalley, who has kicked Scott Powell. (12-207) or
HT
Howard jl2-184i
much all se~tson and maybe the best · llsled as doubtful_after falling down 14 consecutive extra points and Is . Jesse
RG
Denny Welsh ( 2·~5)
team we've .faced since BelR~e some steps and bruising his back: · 16-lB on the year, fullows with 34 Jason Bush t12·218) or
(second weeki," state&lt;) Chancey.
· Jesse Howard, a 1841b.senlor.who points while McElroy has added 26 · Jared Sheets 110-178)
• LG
Don Bunce 112-1911
And .the Meigs mentor knows has totaled 31 tackles as a defensive and W. Howard :ll.
Musser (12-183) or
Junior quarterback Mike Bar· Steve
defense when he sees it. His end, · wool(! replace Powell oo
Scott Hanning (11-:!05)
LT
Marauders have protected their offense:
trum has passed for 5lO yards, Bill Brothers (11-160)
L'E
QB ·
end zme success!UUy for 21 straight
Other stalwarts oo the 'lJ)ose- hitting on 26 of ll5 (4tl per cent) with Mike Bartrum (11 -~0)
FB .
quarters. having run ' of! five egg' Marauder defense Include five touchdowns and six intercep- Paul Dalley (12-189)
King (12-170)
wB . '-..
cons-ecutive shltouts . Blakely cornerback Phil King with 24 tlons. Another junior, Chris Smith, Phil
Huey Eason (12-1691
.
TB
summed up the -Meigs deferise, tackles and a team-tfiadlng thr~ leads In kickoff returns (498) and
!DEFENSE) ·
.
saying, "Five · strali;ht slutouts Interceptions, end Raymond Rider punt returns (8-52). Junidt BUI · ENDS-J. Howard and Raymond
speaks fi:Jr.ltself. There' s no nred to and linebacker Huey Eason with ID Brothers, Eason, ard Kitchen· all Rider 112-1941: TACKLFS-Bush or
Welsh and Paul Wolfe 112·253) or Po·
say arything else."
stops apiece, and soplnmore line- have two Interceptions.
well; LINEBACKERS-Dailey an~
The Meigs defense could be backer Jeff McElroy with 18
As a team, Meigs has out gained . Jeff McElroy (10-150); OOBNEKha~pe\a:l with lhe absenre rl. 218
tackles.
··
their @ponents by a . ..topping BACKS-Eason and ·King: H,U.F·
lb. senlo.r center-defensive tackle
Eason leads MHS rushers with 1846-1023includlng a 1222-788 advan- BACKS-Donnie Becker (12-1521 and
Kitchen: SAFETY-Brothers.
JaSQn Bush, ID~ver. J3ush, who 448 yards on 82 attempts (5.5) while tage rushing and 624:285 in \he air.
V.INTON CO UN'I'Y
shares the Marauder lead In tackles sopoomore Wes Hov.ard has gained The' Marauders have rutsoored the
· ' (OFFENSE)_
PLAYER (Yr. Wid WI.)
Poo.
with linebacker Paul DaUey with second place with 219 yands In ooly· opposition 34·0 bt the !lrst quarter,
32. has a tender shoulder and is • 24 tries (10.4). McElroy has gained 57-12 durtng the socond, 41-6 bt the Wayne Boring (12-170) ............... LE
Bob Mullens 111-210 .. .............. ... LT
listed as cjuestklnable. &amp; sh has 245 yards (7.0) and Dalley 173 15.1). thlrd , and 4tl-Oin the fourth. The 81-6 Chuck
Harper (Jl-185) ............... LG
b?en • held 'from ,_contact until
Senior ·end J. R. Kitchen Is second half margin Is pleasingly Shannon Jones 112-190) .. .. .. ... ...... C
Friday : If 'Bush can't go, sapiD- running away In reoelvlng with 16 surprising, since the Mags ll!cond
Andy Par.tee (12-1701 .......... ... .. .. RG
mo~e Jared Sheets wUl fill In at
catches for ~4 yands and three team: defense, wjlich has played Doug Slavin 112·205) .. ................ RT
Matt Martin (12-1651 .. .... ........... .RE
center while,startlng guard Denny touchdowns. King follows' with 4 mlraclous against first team or- Scott
GilLiland (12-180) . ............. QB
Welsh would fill at defensive tackle. receptions for 56 yards.
lenses to keep the 5rorele;s string Nick Glll (12-175) ..... .. .... ............ FB
Another Marauder lineman, 21Y7
Eason Is the scoring leads with
Jason Boo'the (11-1601 ,.... .. ......... TB
. 42 !il&gt;ing.
Jim Ousley (12-165) .. .. .. ...... ....... SB
Probable start ing llneu(ll:
(DEFENSE)
ENDS-Boring and Matt Saunders
MEIGS-VINTON COUN'J'Y
PROBI\BLY STARTING UNEUPS
110-1701: TACKLFS-Greg See 111MEIGS '
190) and Harper; LINEBACKERS(OFFENSE)
Mullens , Martin; GHI , a1,1d Partee;
PLAYER (Yr. and ftl.)
Pos. DEFENSIVE BACKS-Boothe, Ousley, and Clllllarrd.
·
J. R Kitchen 112-168)
RE

c

.

'. I"'
,~,,

'I

Meet the Meigs Marauders

PAUL WOLFE ·

TODD CULLUMS
6-0, !~Pound
Senior Guard

CALIPU KITS
CARBURETOR KITS

IRAIIr ROTORS
IGNinON kiTS
FUEl 'PUMPS

PPfROJ
if lnc1 ht.

MASON

Route 33
992-2139
713 ·551 1
I100 o.m. tilt 5:30 p.m.

DENNY WELSH
:;.7, 205-pound
Senior Tackle

RAYMOND RIDER
~3 I!M-Pound
Senior Tackle

Um-kurrtph

In Texas, ·sooners Jace a long
Egad, frien ds' The race fur the
national title In college football Is
heating up - with many of the
top-rated teams playing dangerou s
oppOnents..
It's also llme once again fi:Jr two
of the oountry's vieroest traditional
rtvalrles: ·Oklahoma faces Texas
fortheBW time; and intrastate foes
Michigan and Michigan State 111'€1
lor the 78th time.
i1le" Texu Longhorns lead In
their series with the Sooners.
47·29::4. However, over the last 20
yean, Oklahoma has won 10 times
and Texas eight, with f'Ml ties.
_ Piayed In the Cotton Bowl In
Dallas, as part of the Texas State
Fair. tiE annual game brings out
the best 1h both teams. So- while
Oklahoma has one or its best-ever
~~ggregatlons and appe,ars at first
glanre to be the easy choice, we see _
It as a fairly close rontest. Give ltto
the Sooners, 28·18.
· Mlchlgan's"-~olverlnes and the
Michigan State ~artans have b?en
butting heads slitce 1898. wilh the
Wolves holding a commanding
51-22-4 edge. Both teams know their
way Into the end zone. Among the
star - performers are QB Jim
Harbaugh of the Wolves and
Helilman Trophy cardida te TB
Lorenzo White keying the Spartans.
On balanre, we see Michigan
squeaking by Michigan Stale. 31·27.
In the Big Eight, the Nebraska
corilhuske~. lookln~ forward to
another conference crown, .take on
Oklahoma State. The Cowboys won
the lltst t\Ml games of this series In
1900 and 1961; but since then It has
been slim plcktn·gs as Nebraska ha s
won 23 games. The other was a 17-17
standoff.
It hasn 't always been easy lor
Nebraska, though. And this game
won:t be easy if the Cowboys can
. spring TB 'ftlunnan Thomas bose.
Hoople Is calling Nebraska to beat
Oklahoma State, 35-27.
Clashes in the Pac-10 have strong
Washington topping Stanford, :fi·

UP/ ratings ...

WBE OIL AND FILlER

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

•

Vildngs test Marauders; Meigs -eyes for 7th wm In row

•

-------------c:OUPON------ ------

REGULAR~ • TAX

•

,'Senior Tackle

JIM
COBB .
uKVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC

1

The Daily Sentinel-,.-&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

p

1&gt;-9, 25.'1-Pound

me batlery.

I

11uscl.v. October 9, 1986

. n

I

Local bowll'ng

I

match~

.

Besldes ' Moeller. other AAA
lostirs woo dropped from the top ten
were Gahanna Lincoln. Galion and
· Massillon Washington.
CAPE. a 46-6 .winner over
Loveland Fiiday night. picked up 18
of 3l .drst place votes in Class AA
and 270 plilnts. well ahead of
OrrvU!e and Ironton ..tlch , Iron!·
cally, with ai5 points, tied fi:Jr the
No. 2 spot for the sa:ond consecutive week. Last week, they both had
185. '
Urbana again wound up fourth,
whiR You.,stown Cardinal Moo·
ney rmved Into lith and St.
Clatn;vllle sixth. dropping Colum~~ DeSales IWO sp&gt;ts to sevenlh.
RDundlng WI lhe AA t&gt;p IE!! were
Wlftlersl~ll'g, Castalia Marga·
retta and Garfield l'i"lgh ts Trinity.
making Its ttn;t appearance.
Detphos Jefferson, which
blanllld Ada 3:1·0 Friday night for
Its sixth win'without a loss, held the .

14; UCLA surprising Arizooa,
21·18; ' Arizona State dumping
Oregoii;" 36-21; arid Southern Cali·
!ornla cruisin g past Washington
State, 42·7.
The '.YNC wUI have an exciting
day with Arkansas taking Texas
Tech, il)-8; Bay or defeating Southern Methodist, 40-13; and, in a
beauty, Texas A&amp;M barely outlast·
lng Houston, 31-28.
·Interesting non.conference pair·
lngs look like this: Penn State over
Cincinnati in a eliff.han.,:'r. 31-21;
Maryland squeaking IJy Boston
College, 23-21; Miami (Florida)
overwhelming West VIrginia. 42·17;
Florida State beatingTulane.ll-21;
ard Alabama crushing Memphis
State, 35·12. Har-rumph'
SATURDAY, 9CI'. II :
o'\lr Force U Navy 17

day

\\'l chlla St 2"1 Cent. Fla . 24

Wl!llam aad Mary 33 Leh lgh Ill
Wyomlnr 2'T Utah 25

Gallipolis 17 \\1arren I~ocall6
Logan M ·lacl&lt;.•on 6
i\thens ~~ Marlt•lla It
Wt•llston 24 Nelsonville-\ "ork

1986 DODGE

~II

COLT

Meigs :11 VInton Counly 0
B{'lprt• 34 Ah•xanderO
Trlmbh• 6 MlllerO .
Wahama 44 Ft•drrai -

Hoeklng 6 (Non·L&lt;•aguel
North Galllu 7 Southw~slern
~t

-.,

drive. 4 c~ . bucket seals.

...t~nillilli!;.

PHIL lUNG, Meigs' 6-2, i'lllpound senior wingback·
comerback, was named winner
of the Meigs Jaycees "Player-of·
the-Week" award lor his per1o.mant-e both offensively and
defensively against t~e
NelsonvDie-Vork Buckeyes on
Oct. 3.

6•

Kyg&lt;•r C&lt;eek

.

Jt..

stod&lt; # 69581.2 doo~. hard top, Jront wheel ,,

Southern 12

Ea"tern 13 Hannan Tr&lt;\.L'l; 12

Symnws Valley 22 Qak Hill

:ro
Purtsmotlth Wt•st 21 \\'a\'frly

6

Fairland 3t Rock Hill M
foal llrnV&lt;' 2t Chcsapeakel2
Polnl Plt•asanl ~2 Millon 20

Alabama 38 Memphis St. 12
1\rbon.a St. 36 O~on 21
Arkan~UaH :II TPns TEch A
Auhu'm -12 Vanderbilt 16

Ceat. Mich .
Clemson 37

~ W. Mich.
Vlr~lnla IS

Wlscons~

Birthstone &amp; Diamond

RING

Miami (Fla.) 42 W.Va. n
MlllmltOhlo) II Toledo ill
MlchiKan 31 Mlchlo;an St. l'l

M111MI&amp;IIIppt St. 2!5 Ark. St. 16
21 Colorado 14
Nebra.~~Jka 35 Okla. St. 27
N. Car. 30 Wake Forest 00 .
Northwestern 17 Mlnneflota I$

NOW

MIR~rl

GOLD

Ohio St. t l Indiana 13
Oklahoma 2R Texas lA
Penn St. 31 Cincinnati t1
Prln celon RColumbia 6
Purdue 30 llllnols 27
San IOAe St 15 Vtah St 13
Sou. Cal 42 Wuhin"on Sc. 7

$12995

Diamond Birthstone

NECKLACE

14K GOlD

South'festern LA U Tulsa 24
TempleJS EMl Carolina 17
Tenneuee 24 Ann:v '7

Tuu AAM 31 Houllma !8

NOW

TeJUUI Chrlltlan -It Rice 10

Washln~on

,

WAS,$169.95
, SAVE 140.00
ALL MONTHS IN STOCK
APIIL SUGHTY HIGHEI

14K

Noire Dame 3H Plttsbu ri'Ch Zll

Mexico ~

Vlr«fnla Tech ?JI s. Car. U

1980 FORD
-T·BIRD ·

Stock # 66321. 2 dooJS. 4 wheel drive. 6 cyl..
auto. ttillS.. PS, PB !M/FM rad~. buck~

Stock H 60832. 2 doors. hard top. V·8. air
cond. on~ rool. auto ttans.. PS PB. tilt wheel.
CJuise contr~. !M/fM radio. ~ereo tape_radial
tires, wMe walls.

BRONCO II

.

AIRES

14

UCLA :1 1\rlzona t8

1984 FORD

1982 DODGE

Iowa St. 3$ Kaa!!M 21
Kentuc"y 2R Ml~Risslppl I~
Maryland 23 Bot~ton College 21

Texu-EI Puo 3S NI'!W

•649"!

'819! $)295 •269"5

13

Col.ate 33 Yalt&gt; :l8
Florida 42 Kent ST. 25
Florida St. 31'1 Tulane t1
Fresno St. -19 N. Mex. St. II
Georl!la ~ Loohlllna St. 17
Geor~a Trch M N. Ca r . St. 22
Har~ard 20 Cornellll5
.Holy Cross 27 Dartmouth 7

Iowa 49

Stock H30861 . 4 wheel drive. 6cyl _air rond.,
PS. PB. power windows. power dopr bcks. I!
wheel. cruise conlrol. AMifM ra!~. ~ertll
tape, radiallires. buckel ,..,15_short wide red.
rear ~ep bu"'"r. RaUIII!S. gid~R r8!r glass.

i7495
sea~

Baylor 10 SMIJ 13

BowHntc Green~ Ea!&gt;lt. Mi ch. 21.
fti'(Nn IR Penn~ytvanla 17
Califomla U 0rt"Jon St. 21

1983 CHEVROLET
S-10 4X4

·

WAS SJ69.95

35 Stanford J..l

SAVE 140.00

MATCHES ABOVE liNG

• Continued from page 3
biggest margin of I he three leaders.
The Wildcats got 13 of 261irst place
votes and 217 poll points. CI'OJksvUJe. which advanced !rom Dflh to
socond , had rne llrst place vote and
136 points.
VersaiiJes moved Into tlird. up
from a tie for sixth a week ago,
while Newark Catholic felt the lull
effect of Its 14 -13 loss to AAA
Watkins Memorial lhe previous
week, tumbling from second to
fourth.
·
St. Henry, despite a 28-tlwin wer
previously' unbeaten New Bremen.
sUpped from fourth to !lfth. while
McDonald, a 6-2 winner over
l'l!tersburg Springfield, advanced
from tenth to sixth. ·
·
Rounding out the Class A'top ten
were Tiflln Calvert, Gates Mills
Hawken, Brilliant Buckeye North
and Mogadore, which lost 7•0 to . ·
Windham. Its secol\ll defeat of the
year.

SJ29·95

7 DIAMOND
...CLUSTERS

$4995
·WAS 199.95

SAVE $50.00

YWOWOI WHin
AU CliiStiiS IS'Y. OfF

POMEROY
992-2054

Diamond l=nrr~n

$1695
SAVH16.00

25%

GAWPOLIS
446·2691

Stock H 30521. 4 dooJS. !l!dan. ~ont wheel
i 4 c~ . air cond.. onyl roof. auto. trans ..
. PB. cruise rontrol. AM/fM radio. oadial
i . •Me walls.

------1986 FORD F·150
SUPE~

---

CAB

Stock H 30961. 6 c~ . auto. ttans.. PS. Pa
iadial !ores. ~ ion )ickup. stort wide red . rear
step bu mper, IJIUII'S.

i9795 •&amp;79"5
1984 NISSAN
200 sx

1984 MERCURY
GRAND _MARQUIS

N 69741. 2 dooJS, coupe front wheel
4 c~ .. air cond .. PS. IXW'l!r winltols. ~~
cruise control. AMIFM ra!il. Wtll
, l!ldial tires. buckel !8315, rear .,;noo.
, "'" root.

'769!
1984 PLYMOUTH
GRAND FURY

•679"!
•
1984 CHEVROLET
SILVERADO C-10

aulo. b-ans.. PS. PB. IM wheel. cru~e
, AM/FM rad~. rear .,;nti:¥1 defoll!lel. ,

Stock H30211. V-8 air rond .. aulo ttans.. PS.
PR IX&gt;Wilf windows. power doo1 bcks. ~~
wheel, cruise control. AM/FM rad~. ~ ton
long wide illd ""r step bulf'l)t!r.

'549S

'79-l:§

# 30!51. 4 &lt;llors. V-i. ai1cond.. ooyl

/

�.

,.

,.

.

Page-6-The DailY SAntin•!

• '·'';

" " ' "' "

"' ,, . "• • ' " '-" ' - ' " "

"'·"'• I •~' ' ' " ' ' ' '''·· "

, "

'o

'

.

_.___
. ,_.Local Briefs:·-·· ......_.__.

Three couples'Jile for divorce
Filing for divorces ln. Meigs County Common Pleas Court, both
charging · gross neglect of duty,' are James Michael Bentz Jr.,
Middleport, against Sl!e Ellen Bentz, Middleport; and Richard C.
Randolph, Pomeroy, against Etta N. Randolph, Liberty, N.C. ·
Filing for divorce rharging gross neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty is Melissa Manley, Middleport, against Michael Manley_,
Middleport.
.
.
,
·
.
Petitioning the court for disSQiutions of their marriages are Alan C.
Wilson. Racine, a'nd Beverly J. Wilson. Middleport: Grover L.
Riddle, Syracuse, and Diana M. Riddle, Long Bottom.

Scipio seniors plan bean dinner
The Scipio Senior Citizens Friendly Neighbors Club wUl hold a
bean dinner frol'rl'11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at the Scipio Fire
Station In Harrisonville.
Beans will be cooked In a kettle.over'an open fire. The club will also
have hOmemade apple butter and pumpldn pie for sale. Cost of the
bean dinner is $2 for adults and $1 for children.

Annual Bissell chili supper set
The annual Bissen chill supper will be held at 6:30p.m. Saturday at
the Hayward Bissen residence.

.
Gun shoots to resume in Racine
The Racine Fire Department will resume its gun shoots beginning
this Saturday at the Bashan buildihg. 6:30p.m.

Club schedules Friday dance
The Meigs Senior Citizens Dance Club will hold a dance from 8 to 11
p.m. Friday at the center on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy. Admission
is $1.00 per person and those att~nding are to take snacks -for tbe
refreshment table.

EMS unit.~ respond to 4 calls
Four calls were answered by local units Wednesday, the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services reports.
· At 3:52p.m. , Middleport went to I he Stonev.ood Apartments lor
Pearl Bunce who was treated; Rutland at 4:20p.m. took Amanda
Richmond from Township Road 175 10 Holzer Medical Center;
Middlepot1 al 5:02 p.m., took Pearl Bunce from Stonewood
Apartments to Veterans Memorial Hospital and Pomeroy at 6:37
p.m. look Carl Hendricks from Oak Street to Holzer Medical Center.

Racine fall fes·tival set Saturday
A fall festival being staged by the Racine Merchants Association
will be held Saturday with a 9:45a.m. flag raising ceremony at the
t&gt;Jst office lo OJX'n the ~vent .
A parade at 10 will be lead by Racine American Legion Post 602.
The' festival was scheduled last Saturday· but was postponed a
week due to heavy rains. The same schedule ci events as originally
announced will be followed this Saturday.

Meigs .County Court
issues fines for DWI
Fined Wednesda.v in Meigs
Coonty Court by Judge Patrick
O'Brien were Frank E. Younj:t.
Pomeroy. $2!10 and costs. tO days In
jail, Ul day license suspension,
DWl; Robert Gibbs Jr., Syracuse"
$:JXl and costs. 10 days in jail, 1 ~
day license suspension, DWJ ; $7.1
and costs. 10 days In jail. no
operator's license; license plates
and registration suspended, and
cosls, failure to control; Harold
Mays, Reedsville, $lXJandcosts, 10
days in ja il. 120 day license
suspension, DWl ; costs only for left
of center; Jack R. Miller, Langs·
ville. $250 and costs. 30 days in jill!
suspended. sL' months probation.
drug abuse; Cha rles McCloud Jr ..
Middleport. siJ&lt; months In jail
suspended to 60 days, llcense plates
and registration suspended, costs
and one year probation. driving
under FRA suspension;
Michael Gard, Reedsville. 10
days in jail with ,nine days
suspended. six months probation,
restrained from complainant and
residence. and costs for each
charge of criminal trespass and
cr iminal damag ing; Duane
Barber, Reedsville. 10 days In jail
wilh all _!;o.Jt 1wo days suspended ,
costs, six monfhs probation. res·
trained from complainant and
resid&lt;&gt;nce, criminal trespass. Har·
vey Faw III. Rutland, $100 and

costs, reckless operation.
Earl J. Nisley, Mount Perry. $10
and costs, failure to display a valid
registration decal; Sherry G. Tackett. Racine, $:!1 and costs, failure to
control: Ernie Cross, Langsville,
$W and costs, refrain from complainant and property, six months
probatbn. disorderly conduct: Ml·
chael Hanson, McConnelsville, $:!1
and costs. failuretocontrol; Randy
Garver, Lancaster, $W and costs,
failure to cent rol; Kenneth Mykel·
bust , Marietta , $10 and costs,
failure to display valid Ucense
plates.
Fined fo r speeding were Jerry
Blair, Lakewood, N.Y.. $!8 and
oosts; James Stacy Jr .. Tuppers
Plains, $aJ and costs; Marshall R.
Wolfe, Gallipolis.' $21 and costs;
James Ghrist, Monroevllle, $24 and
costs; Bruce W. Blackston. Pome·
roy, SZ! and costs; Robin Kitchen,
Middleport, $21 and costs; John w.
HessJr., Pomeroy, $32 a~d costs.
Fo~lting bonds were Bobby
Rupc, Fl:&gt;meroy, $15, failure to
control: David Carmin. Cbeshire,
S:D, improper backing; Burtlna
Klein , Fl:&gt;meroy. $45, no ·child
restraint; Shannon Shields. Athens. '
$:i0, speeding; Darr1n Brooke.
Palmetto, Ga.. $50. spi!edlng;
Dwight Shamblin, St. Albans,
W.Va .. $00, speeding.

THE OFFICE OF DR. MAnHEWS .
&amp;.DR. KENNEDY WILL BE
CLOSED FRIDAY, OCTOBER
1OTH &amp; 11TH SO THAT THE
DOCTORS AND THEIR STAFFS
MAY AnEND 'A CONTINUING
EDUCATION S,E,INAR·TO
BETTER SERVE YOU. .. "·
'

tHAN.KS

.

· 198.6 .

.

High court candidate
to ,address fund-raiser

Court case not dismissed
The Meigs ~oun.ty C~rnmon Pl~s ·court case of Keith Adkins,
Wellston, et.aL, against CIUford Manley, Middleport, et.ai., hasnoi
been dismissed as was reported in The Daily Sentinel. The-parties In
the matter will be dismissed in the near Iii ture unless good cause to
,Prosecute can be .shown the court on or before Ckt. 25. .

.

October

Reagan leaves today
for Iceland meeting

GOP lawmakers urge
cuts in state budget

Strike continues

Ohio weather

P '

J'aliJle
' d

FLORIST

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FOR COLD

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STOCK

TIMEX
WATCHES

25°/o OFF

MEN'S QUILTED

FLANNEL SHIRTS
•

WOODLAND
REG; 116.99

SALE

WRANGLER
REG. $22.99

•..

SALE

LAYAWAY NOW FOR. CHRISTMAS

Phorrnoc y
Klnneltt McCuiiOUfh, R.Ph.
Clllrlel Riffle, R , Ph .
hnalel Haning, R. Ph.
MOA. Iflru Sat.I: IIOa.m. lo t p.m .
SUIMII~ 11: II,. 12: JO and s tot .m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH, ,2•1tU
Friendly Service
E . MAin
Pomtrer, O.
OpenNigf'll$1111'

$18 50

ALL BLANKET.S 20°/o OFF

SWISHER LOHSE
•

$13 50

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

.•

'.

By The Bend

•

.

•
. Lambert; two daughters, Margaret
.,
Welch, cor¢\'lerclal Fl:&gt;lnt, and
Herbert R. Brown. candidate t~r
Drexel Albert Lambert, 72, Route · Judy Snowden. Rutland; two silos.
the
Ohio Supreme Court in tlx&gt;
1, Rutland, died Wednesday at Clarence Lambert, Route 2, Pome·
upcoming
November election wil
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
roy, and James Lambert, Porne·
A coal miner and construction roy; two sisters, Virginia COllette, be the featured speaker at a chili
worker, Mr. Lambert was born Detroit, Mich ..· and Marte Trent, · supper fund,-ra1ser and rally to be
Nov. ·7, 1913, In .Logan County, MonavUie, W.Va., and two broth· held Saturday night at the Meigs
W.Va .. a son of the late Andrew and ers, Raymond L;imbert a11d Ernest County Senior Cit lzens Cent~r.
Margaret (9tchen Lambert. Be· Lambert, both of Route 1. Rutland. · 'Mulberry Belghts, Pomeroy.
Dinner wlll be served at 6 p.m. ,
sides his parents, he was preceded Also surviving are 12 gran&lt;rhildren
and
nine
great-gran()children.
with
a program to follow at 7:30
in death by two brothers, James
Services will be held at 11 a.m. p.m:
and Andrew Lambert, a grandson
Brown reclved his B.A. in
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
and a great-granddaughter.
Home
with
Rev.
Jolni
•
Evans
economics
from Denison Univer·
· Mr. Lambert wqs a member of
officiating.
Burtal
will
be
1n
Miles
slty
and
a
(loctor'
of law·from the
the Rutland (l!urch of God. He was
Cemetery.
Friends
may
call
at
the
University
of
Michigan
Law School;
a vet(I'an of world War II havtrig
funeral
home
from
2-4
and
7·9
p.m.
For
llx&gt;
past
25
years
he
has been a
served In the U.S. Navy.
!rial
lawyer
in
Columbus,
Friday.
leading
Surviving are his wife. Edith
specializing In Supreme Court and
appellate practice.
Brown has been a federal land
commissioner and an arbitrator
registered with the American
Herbert R. Brown
Arbitration Association. He Is
seeldng the seat now held bY
retiring Justice Cllf!ord F. BroWn. be on hand for the Saturday night
Henry Hunter, chairman of the event.
By HELEN TIIOMAS
year.
The public i~ Invited ana tickets
UPI White House Reporter
"So we go to Reykjavik for local Democratic Party, repqrts
that
JolylUl
lbster,
incumtent
9Hh
may
be purchased from any
peace," Reagan said. "We go to this
WASHINGTON iUPil -Pres!·
district
hOuse
.candidate,
and
Jan
Democratic
committee member or .
dent Reagan departed today for his
meeting for freedom . And. we go in
Long,
formerly
of
Mlctlleporl.
17th
1
at
the
door.
Entertainment will be
Iceland summit meeting with
hope."
District
Senate
candldate,,will
also
provided
by
a
bluegrass 'hand.
.Soviet lead~r Mikhail Gorhachev,
"1bday, we are making history,
saying ·"success Is not guaranteed"
and we are turning the tide of
but holding out the prospect of
history to peace and freeoom and
hope," Reagan· said.·
progress in some oft he tough issues
'facing the superpowers.
The j]"esi~nt has emphasized
Alr Force One was airborne at
that his three private sessions with
Gorbachev on SatUrday and Sun· ·
9:56a.m. from nearby Andrews Atr
Force Base. Reagan Is scheduled to
day are designed to lay- the
arrive at Keflavlk Airport, near
groundwork for a full-fledged SU · "
perpower summit ·meeting later
Reykjavik. at 3:05p.m. EDT.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPil -1\vo ganlzatlons and group homes for
Departing from the text of
this year iJ the United States.
Republican
state legislators have the mentally retarded.
"I have long believed that if we
rema'rks at a White House depar·
warned
that
Ohio's budget prob·
' "It has been the federal govern·
ture ceremony, Reagan took time
are to be successful in pursuing
!ems
will
Qe
magnttled
in
flscal1988
men t which has balanced the
to deal with Congress over its
peace, we must fa ce the tough
by
escalating
state
employee
pay
Celeste
budgets, along,with spenqfailure to deliver legislation to keep
issues directly and iDnestly and
levels
and
rising
costs
of
Medicaid
ing
down
the state surplus," Van
the government In money.
with hope," Reagan said. "We
and
group
homes
for
the
mentally
Meter
told
reporters.
. "I've had enough," the president
cannot pretend that differences
retarded.
aren't there, seek to dash ell a few
said, "I cannot and will not
State Reps. Thomas A. Van .
countenance further delay" in
quick agreements, and then give
Van Meter referred to a tnemo·
Meter
of
Ashland
and
·
Robert
E.
passing a permanent spending btu,
speeches about the 'spirit of
randum Issued to legislative lead·
Netzley of Laura told reporters ers by the st~teOf!lce ofBudg¢t and
·
Reykjavik:'
one that is snarled In a dispute over
a requirement that Reagan live up
· "In fact," Reagan said, ''we have Wednesday that .unless cuts are Management saying that a $458
to tlx&gt; unratified SALT Treaty.
serious JYOblems with the Soviet made, the state wUI start the fiscal mUiion cash halanre as oflast June
"Aey further delay and procrasti· positions on a great many issues. year July 1 with a spending level3.5 30 will be spent down to $54 million
by next June 30 to pay for an Income
nation.' ' Reagan said, "can onl&gt;· and success is not guaranteed. But, percent above the income level.
But a spokesman for the aciminL~· tax reduction.
serve to undercut our mission" to
if Mr. Gorhachev comes to Iceland
The OBM pointed out this would
Iceland.
in a truly eooperalive spiril. I think tration of Gov. Richard F. Celeste
said
expenditures
are
being
raise the spending level to 3.5
we can make some progress. "
Reagan emerged from his Uvlng
watched carefully and prepara- percent a hove income fbr fiscall988
"That
is
my
goal,"
the
president
quarters to applause from most of
said. "That is my purpose in going tions are being made for some and said precautions are being
the Cabinet and several hundred
savings In the next budget.
taken In preparing the next budget.
to lcelan\J. The goals of the United
staff members. lamilies and public
"It's crystal dear," said Van
States
peace
and
freedom
on the South Lawn to announce thai
Meter,
"t hey have overspent, and
throughout
the
world
are
great
his goals for I be weekend meeting
Van Meter and Netzley said the
goals, but like all things worth administration has balanCPd tlx&gt; they are going to be short the first of
..ere :·peace and freeoom."
achieving, they are not easy to state budget on federat relmoorse- the fiscal year. They can either cut •
The president also emphasized
attain. Reykjavik can be a step, a ments· for IlK' last four years,' and spending now or admit before the
that American unity in suppOJ'ting
usetul step and, if we persevere, the that the governor either should election that a tax Increase is
his foreign policy was essential In
goal
of a better. safer world will start cutting state expenditures or coming."
the negotiations he faces with the
Celeste told reporters Wednes·
some
day be ours and all the tell the people that a tax Increase
Kremlin leader cNer tre coming
world's."
day
he ooes not an tlclpate a tax
will be needed to balance the bldget
The Reykjavik meeting, which in the next two years.
Increase as long as the national
Reagan has called a "hase camp"
The two Republicans said state economy slays healthy.
leading to the fuil -'scale summit, taxes have gone up by 33.1 percent
Netzley said he would make
was ex peeled at the minimum to since l983. while state spending has selective cuts to keep !be budget In .
POWHATAN POINT, Ohio
produce a prod for the Geneva risen by 36.3 peroent.
balance, while Van Meter recoinIUPT I -In spite of a back-to-work
arms negotiators to reach an
mended
across·the·board cuts, In·
order from a federal judg~ who
They said the gap will widen In
accord
on
mutual
reduction
of
eluding
education and welfare
declared their three· day-old wild·
fiscall9!l8-ffi because of across-the·
programs.
medium-rang!!
missiles
In
Europe
cat strike illegal, union workers at a
board pay incrmses for state
and Asia, according to Secretary of- employees, rising debt service
Netzley expressed fear that
Quarlo Mining Co. operation rP.
State George Shultz. The date for costs on capital construction pro· legislative leaders will use a ·
mulncd off the job toda.v.
the big summit also could be agreed jects. and Increased costs for . windfall of revenues from federal
Quarto Mining spokesman Phil
upon and aides Indicated that there welfare, health maintenance or· tax reform tp balan ce the budget ,
Wright said the company had not
may be some progress on chemical
Instead of cutting the state income •
decided what action to take in
warfare
and
the
negotiations
on
tax rates as planned.
response to lhe workers' failur(' to
cutting
back
superpower
long·
retum to their jobs on thr afternoon
rang~&gt; st rateglc missile arsenals.
shift Wedn~sday and I he overnight
South Central Ohio
•
shift today.
"We have some options we w~nt
Becoming. mostly cloudy with a
sUght chance of showers by evento explore," \'{right said this , nze UDC
Ing. Tonighl, mostty cloudy. Low In
morning.
CLEVELAND
(UPI)Wednesthe
mid 40s. Winds north around 10
Local United Mine Workrrs union
day's
:10
million
Super
Lotto
jackpot
mph.
officials had urged the · 7:i0
went unclaimed. raising the top
ml'tl'lbers of UMW Local F85 to
prize for next week's drawln!: to
Friday, partly cloudy. High near
r!'turn to work on the midnight shift
$7.5 million, an Ohio Lottery 60.
Wednesday.
spokesman said today.
Ohio Extended Forecast
The numbers were seven. 32, 38,
Saturday through Monday
M(•ifC,, Counry '11 'Olde t~ l Flori.Jr
Veterans Memorial
11 . nine and 12.
Fair Saturday and Monday with
352 EAn IUIN
There were 132 tickets sold, each a dlanoe of sholll!rs Sunday. Highs
POMIIOY,
01110 '5769
Admitted - Hazel Weston, Ra- worth $521, bearing five of the six
throughout the period wUI be In the
614/992·2644
cine; Agnes Brown. Pomeroy.
Discharged - Martha Taylor,
numbersof $40
andapiece.
6,529 four-of·Slx
•
winners
Lowell Wingett, Brian Hartman,
There
were
110,126
three-of-six
John Hayes.
winners of $3 each.

Drexel Al Lambert

.

The Daily Sentinel

•

Thursday, October 9. 1986

Page-7

'.

In. the spotlight:

.

,

• •

•

·. S\Veet potatoes provide nutrttton ·in
By Cln!W S. Oliveri 1"
About half of a largl! sweet potato · de.terloration spreads rapidly
Home ..Ecoaomlcs/4-H, AgM~
(3V., ounces) contains about . 114 which wm affect the taste of the
Fall signals the season for many calories raw, 141 baked In the skin entire potato. Allow 1·2 lbs. lor four
popular fruits and vegetables fn. or 114 boDed In the skin. ·
servings. Aoout 3 medium potatoes
eluding potatoes, pumpldns, gourds
There are (!Ver 40 types of sweet wUl equal a pound.
and sweet potatoes. This week "In potatoes grown In the United States. · ·Sweet potatoes should be stored
The Spotlight" takes a look at the . Orily a 'few are produced for the .fn a humid, well-ventllated area
versatUe sweet potato, its.nutrlt!Ve dinner table, otl~rs arE&gt; used for with, the ideal temperature at 55
value, storage and uses.
starch or llvestock Eed and others degrees. Raw sweet potatoes
The sweet potato is one of the destined for tbe cannery. This should not be refrtger ated because
most complete foods known. These dellcio~s vegetable Is available they will spoll right away, devaopnative Amertcan vegetables are so year round rut allis peak from
lng soft spots 311d hard cores. Once
nutrltiousthat'youcouldpracllcally October through the winter.
they are cooked, however, that's a
live on them!
· . When selecting fresh s'weet pota· different story. They wUI keep "'lte
SjVeet Potatoes afe an excellent toes at the grocery store, look for nicely In the refrigerator.
sourceofVItamlnAandC, iron and thick, chunky medium sized ones.
Sweet potatoes can
ared
fiber. One medium bolled sweet Those that taper towards the ends bY baking, steamln
lllng, deep
potato has about twice the recom- are preferable.
frying, pressure
oklng or a
m~ded dietary allowance of VI·
Choose well shaped, plump, firm variety of other wa . They can be
tamln A for an ad4lt, 36 p(I'oent of sweet pota,toes With skins that are used for soups, salad , baked goods,
theVitamlnCandagoodamountaf deep yellow to dark brown. Avoid main dishes or si tllsbes.
the other vltamlns ·and mlnerals.
one~ that are soft or decayed as · Some
tips fur using
Include

Weigh~

:-Use in place of fresh mashed
pumpldn for cake, breads and
cookies.
·
-Always drop in water ·lmllle·
diaiely after' peeling to j]"event
discoloration.
-Combine whipped sw
toes with maShed ru ta
turnips.
-Don't drown the tatoes in
ootter or suga\5; enj the natural
sweetness.
.
-Wrap in alum · m foil and grill
over hot coals. •
-lla
!a toes alongside
a roast. Peel potatoes and rub wlth
butter to prevent darkening. Place
next to roast for last 40-00 minutes r1
cooking time, turning accaslonally
In meat dripping to brown. Or
parooll fur 10-15 minutes and hake
for lJ minutes.

To enjoy tlx&gt;. sweet potato and Cooperative Extension Servtce,.
apple harvest this fall, why not try Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 or call
this apple and sweet potato 992·ffi96.
c serole,
We are currently in the prooessof
6 medium sweet potatoes, cooked 'updating our Homemakers Newand p&lt;Jeled (or 1lb.can); 2apples; 4 . sletter mailing list. II you. are n&lt;)t
T. margarine; Y, t. salt; \.)c. brown .currently on our list and would like
sugar.
to ,.he please give us a call. The
Slice potatoes. Put half 1n a newsletter is issued 10·12 times a
greased 2 quart )laking dish. year and contains Information on
Remove cores ·from apples and home and family living.It is affered
slice. Place half of the apples, salt, . free ot·chargi&gt; to the public.
brown sugar and margartne on top
Did You Know That: The sweet
of potatoes. Repeat process with potato is a root of a trailing vtn'e
remaining Ingredients. Cover and te longing to the morning glory
hake for 60 minutes at :fiO degrees. family. The roots contain latex
About 4 cups (2 lbs.) of cooked, which Is what causes the chalky
sliced or mashed winter !l(Uash or aftertaste. How must each oontalns
pumpkin could be used in place of is a genetic characteristic. As you
the sweet potatoes.
'
cut a sweet potato, a milky white
For additional ways to use sweet fluid may be roticeable. 'i'hls Is the
potatoes contact the Meigs COunty latex.

control class set'

Alfred ·notes

There will be a limit to the
The Meigs County Heal! h Depart.
num~r
of people 'who can be
ment wUI start a series of six week
classes for weight control at 6 p.m. admitted to each series of classes
which are to be held in the
on Tuesday, Oct, 21.
There wtu be a choice of nights conference room of the multi·
for classes - either Ttlesday ·or purpose building, Mulberry
Thursday -: and classes are free to Beights, Pomeroy. Residents
Meigs Countlans. Each class will be shOuld register as soon as possible
two hours long and attendance is due to class size limltallons.
Those wishing to register may
· required at only one two hou r
session weekly. dasses will Include call the health department at
nutrition education, recipes, diet · 992-6626 anp those calling are to
recall sheets, exercise techniques Indicate their preference for Tues·
and other phases of weight control. day or Thursday evening classes.

rPricing your goods'
seminar is planned
You sen or give away many more
handicrafts, artworks, hanmewn
, Items or baked goods than yoo
, think at bazaars, hake sales, school
functions, and as gifts.
If you mat&lt;~ Item, how oo you
..,. decide whatl~orth? I! you price
It, what Is it worth? With holiday
bazaars coming up, this topic Is a
popular one.
A meeting will be held on Wed nesday, Oct. 22, at the Meigs
Counfy Cooperative Extension
Office. You can choose the time
to attend; 1·2: 30 p.m . or 6:30·8 p.
m.
There will be discussions on
the many factors that should be
considered in ~terminlng tlx&gt;
pri~e of an item. Forsomeofyou, .
it's church bazaars or bazaars
for other organizations. For oth·
ers it's festivals or fairs or flea
markets. Or what about the bake
sales here and there?
More and more people are having opportunities to make and
sell handi crafts or artwork or
handsewn Items o·r baked goods

SAR names
dinner

speaker

Ewing Chapter of the Sons of the
American Revolution, which cov·
ers. a multi-county area with
meet lngs In Pomeroy. will ce le·
brate its 50th anniversary with a
hanquN on Thursday. Oct. 30.
There will be free beverages one
half hour before the banquet which
wlll te held at 6:30 p.m. at the
Western Sizzlin' Steak House at
Athens.
Speaker for the banqueet will be
the Rev. Kenneth V. Kettlewell,
chaplain general of the National
Society Sons of the American
Revolution. He Is also chairman·ct
th~ National SAR Commlttl'l.' on
Chaplains of the American Revolu·
tion. Besides his SAR credentials.
'he Is a l1rd dl'gree Mason. pastor of
the Trinity Presbyterian Church ci
Zanesville. and president of the
Musklngulrn County Association of
Church&lt;'S. He was also a guest of
Pr~sldent Ronald Reagan at a
Whitr House luncheon in 1982.
All SAR and DAR members are

from their home.
Where do you start if you want
to sell an Item? What are some
things to consider when you. price
that Item? Who decides what the
"worth" of an Item is? How
much should you make an hour
for your time?
Does It make a difference what
price you put on an Item If you're
pricing It for your proflt .... or If
you price It for the good of the
.church or other organizations?
These and other questions wlll
Ni\ME:Il- Thesearctre
a winners,
Van Matrc; ' kindergarten;
te discussed and answered In a
poster t'Ontest held annually by the Middleport Fire Darst, first grade; Rick Smith, semnd l{l'ade; Stacy
lesson taught by .Pat Glass, South
Department to stress the Importance of this week's Davis, third grade; Becky Meier, fourth grade; hack
District Extension Specialist,
Fire Prevention Week. First place winners In lhe row, Fire Chief .Jeff Darst and first pliiCe winners,
Home Economics. Ms. Glass has
contest held lor studenl• at tbe MlddlepiH't Jessica Johnson, klndegarten; Mali WUIIams, fir.;t
been working with quilte-s, craft·
Elemenlw-y School received ciiSh pro,es of $10 whUe grade; Bl".ul Whitlatch, second grade; Laura
ers, and others with home bus!· • second plat-e winners received $5 each. "1nners Penhorwood, third grade. Fourth grade lrst place
nesses to help determine a fair
pictunod Include, front from left, serond place winner, Adam Wyatt, was not present for the photo.
price for their work and their pro·
ducts .
·
Call the Meigs County Coope·
ratlve Extension Service at 992·
6696 by Tuesday, bet. 21, if you
The comm1ss1on of Esther tion for the exemplary ritualistic
Mrs. Harden announced lnspec·
are planning 'to attend. The meet Harden
,
member
of
the
Guiding
tlon
dates, Belle Prairie Council :!\9,
work
and
alsO
for
gifts
given
her
at
in g is free of char ge and open to
Star
Council
124
,
Syracuse,
as
Belpre,
Oct. 13. 7:30p.m.; Chester
that
time.
Also
speaking
brieny
on
the public.
deputy of District 13 was announced
tlx&gt; S{'SSion was Esther Smith. past Council 323. Chester. Oct. 21.• 7:30
at the recent district meetingofthe deputy.
p.m.; and Guiding Star Copnci1124 ,'
Daughters of America. held at the
Syra~use,
Dec . 11. 7:30p.m.
Eileen ,Clark, dis,trict counc)lor.
Chester hall.
presided al the meeting during
Others present were Faye Hose!·
The appointment of Mrs. Harden which time practices were held for ton, Iva Shu ~s. Essa Varner, Belle
to the position was announced in a balloting, Initiation and instaUation. Prairie Council, Belpre; Matgaret
,letter from Doris Dodds, state Helen WoU was pianist.
Cotterlll. Betty Biggs, Betty
councilor, read al the meeting by
Friendship night was anouncC'd Spencer. Guiding Star Council.
Janice Lawson, district secretary.
for Nov . 16 at 6:30 p.m. ·at the Syracuse: Ethel Orr, Sandra
She at~ read letters from several Chester lod~e hall with potluck White. Lora Dam.cwood, Mary K.
other stale officers commending refreshments to be served. Chester Holter. Thelma While. Opal Hollon,
District 13 on the recent state Council wlll furn ish table service Doris Grueser, Betty Roush. Mar·
session held at Marietta. Dorothy and soft drinks and memters are to cia Keller, Faye Kirkhart. Erma
Ritchie.()! Chester Council was the take items for an auction to be held Cleland, JoAnn Baum, and Mary
presiding state councilor at that
that night. The new district officers Hayes .
session and ex tended her apprecla· wlll be lnsta!IC'd.
Q

D of A conducts recent meeting

Cremeans familj gathers for reunion
Rev. Ken Kettlewell
invited to attend. Reservations may
be made by calling Keith Ashley,
president, .at 992·7874. All reserva·
lions must be received by Oct. 24.
There will be a choice of three
banquet m~als . Membership re·
quests are welcome:

jordan reunion is ·conducted
The Jordan reunion was held ~t
the home of Russell and Marie
Mozlngo at Rutland reeently. The
descendants of John and Rozella
Jordan gathered with a picnic
dinner.
Cindy Aeiker won tbe door prize,
and Keith Jordan of Columbus got
the prize for having ,traveled the
farthest. Others ajtendlng were
Clarence and Maxine Jordan , Mary
Ash aM family, Mary Blankenship,

Robert and Pamela Wharton and
family , Leroy and Virginia Kesslnger, Pat and Cindy Aelker and
family,. Randall and Splrley Gibbs
and family, Chester and Margaret
Johnson. Tom and Charlotte Moztngo, Ryan Kelley, Angel Kelley.
Rusey Mozingo, Keith Clark,
Danny and Sheryl lambert and
family, Kenneth Romine and lam·
lly, Eric and Dean Hanka, Don and
Carole Russell.

Harrsionv.ille area· happenings
(5enda Donohue who attends the
Mt. Verron Nazaren~: College and
her slsle-, Linda, Columoos; spent
the weekend at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
Donohue. Kenda was the valedlcto·
riart at Meigs High School m1986.
Bessie Graham has returned
from Squth Carolina where she ·
spent a month with her two .
daughters and theiJI families and I
her son, Darrell, and hiS family.

Mr. an~ Mrs. Raymond Cotterill
made a trip to Olympia, Wash. tO
visit their daughter, Katherine
Domlgan and famUy, They also did
some sightseeing . enroute. Mr.
Domigan ~ In the miUtary service
while his wUe works In the real
estate business.
Mrs. Faye Cotterill accompanied
her daughter, Helen Bible, and her
famUy to visit relatives In Florida.

•

taste

The Cremeans family r€\lnion
was held recently at Forest Acres
Park with 'ill relatives and friends
attending.
Those attending from here were
Theodore Cremeans, Tommy and
Shirley Simmons. Thomas.' Dee,
Tyler and Thomas Simmons Jr..
Sharon Wise, Crlssy Taylor,
Danny, Judy, Angie and runny
McDonald .Jr., Katl(y Jeffer, Car·
roll and Barb Smlth, Charles and
Rebe~a l,emley, Lisa and Kenny

Zuspan Jr., Frank Smith, Ted and and Mary Smith, Bob and David
Marge Cremeans, Danny, Barb, Smith, Wesley Young, Cheryl.
Darrin, and Derek Cremea ns; Beth Bryan and Randall Smith.
Hobstetter, Charles and Linda
Also attending were Estil and
BOyles, Vicky and Bethany Boyles. Vera Cremeans. Trenton;. Cena
Heather Hawk, Maude Smith, Crem ea ns, Jack Cremeans,
Paul Musser, Everett, Slx&gt;rry, Mickey, Joyce, Andrea and Nicole
Phillip and Ellzateth Smith, June Cremeans. Gene and Lavinia
and Iva Cremeans, Richard and Blower, all of Huntington, W.Va.;
Glenna Fetty, Chris, Sheila and Melanic Dudding, Athens; Fred,
Kristen Napper, Basil and Kate Cheryl and Adam Kaybr, Wendell
Cremeans. Phyllis Spangler, Ar· and Zelma Kaylor, New Haven ,
lhu r and Glennls Musser. Karen . . W.Va.: Marvin Cremeans,
Richy, and Paula Gilkey, Luther Columoo s.

Sunday school attendance 'Sept.
14 was 26; church attendance, 28.
On Sept. 21 Sunday school attend·
ance was :E; church attendance, ll.
Colonel John Taylor, Torrence,
California was a church visitor
September 14 .
Eighty-five people attended the
Alfred homecoming Sept. 21. Ten
churches other than Alfred were
represented: Albany UMC, Rich·
land UMC, Orange Christian, Zion.
Betbel, St. Pauls UMC, Belpre
Calvary Community, Keno, Columbus Cburch cl Christ and Christian
Union, and San Antonia, Texas.
Regu Jar Sunday school and
church services were held In the
morning followed by a basket
dinner.
Afternoon servi~s were opened
wlth greetings lJy Sunday school
superintendent Lloyd Dillinger and
prayer by Rev . . Don Archer.
Singing groups featured were·
Joyful Noise and Suhshlners from
Albany UMC and the Alfred Choir.
Mr. and M Clarence Hender·
son en·teriained wlth a birthday
dinner for Lee Benderson, age 95,
on Sept . 14. Present were Mrs. Lee
Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Henderson, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman
Benderson, Mr. and Mrs. But
Amos, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lee
Henderson, Sharon and Lisa, Mr.
and Mrs. Carleton Fotlrod, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Pulllns, all of Meigs
County; Mr. and Mrs. Dave
Williams and Aaron, Belpre; Mr.
and Mrs. Chuck Follrod, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Bender·
son, De Land, Florida; Dale
Henderson, Fernsdale, Michigan;•
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Sargent,
Arkansas.
\&gt;1f. and Mrs. Tom Avis, Jona·
than and Megan, attended the
wepdlng of her brother, Rod
Justice, , to Becky ·Lawless .at
Indianapolis,' Indiana, Sept. 20.
Mrs. Avis was a featured singer;
Jonathan, junior groomsman;
Megan, nower girl.
On Sepl. 21 Sara Caldwell visited
Pearl ' Randolph who· has just
returned from the hospital.

Singers to appear
Dan Underwood and Reflection,
a singing group from Cincinnati,
Will be appearing at the Zion
Church of Christ for the Sunday
rnPrning worship services at 9:30
a.m. on Sunday, A carry-in din ner
wll be served at noon and the group
will also present an afternoon
program beginning at 2 p.m. There
will be no evening services on ·
Sunday .

Meigs County property transfers
U.S.A. Farmers Home adm., vs.
John C. Bacon, Jr. eta!, Judith A.
Bacon, eta!, to\ 16 judgment, Mldd.
Viii.

Galle Clendenin, Dec'd, Samuel
W. Cozart, Charles R. Cozart,
Affld., Lebanon .
William H. Cleland, Jane w.
Cleland to William L. Cleland,
~haron L. Cleland, parcels, Sutton.
WOllam J . King, Cledlth Jane
King to Franklin King, Jr., Louetta
E. King, 0.582A, Scipio.
City Loan Bank to Guy E. Bing,
Partl lot, Mldd. VIU .
.
Robert w. Barnitz, Corma 1..
Bamltz to Frank Herald Jr.,
parcels, Porn. v.
Spencers Grocery Inc., to Home
National Bank, lot 7, Racine V.
Edna F. Walker Dec'd, Neva P.
Russell, Cert. of Trans., Mldd. Viii.
Rubert G. Pickett, Dec'd, Eloise
M. Pickett , Affid., Iied!ord.
Dale K. Anderson, JuUa Rodre-

quez . Bayo Anderson , to Jerry L.
Bentley, Donna D. Bentley, pareels, Porn. Vlll.
Lorenzo D. Davis Sr., Dec'd, to
Roger W. Davis, Cert.. Porn. VIII.
Lorenzo D. Davis Sr.. to Lorenzo
W. Davis Jr.. Roger W. Davis,
Zelda Davis, Cert., Porn. V.
Roger W.· Davis. lrls J. Davis,
Lorenw D. Davis Jr., Jane R.
Davis, Zelda Davis to Jennifer L.
Sheets,-Trustee, iot 8&amp; 9, Porn . VIII.
, OsbY A. Martin, Mary A. Martin
to Central Trust Co. N.A., Sheriff's
Deed, Salisbury.
Louise Fleming Noll, Janice
Fleming Karr, Josephine Fleming
Shinn, Charles H. Shinn, Margaret
Fleming Baker to Cbarles H. Shinn,
Josephine F. Sh~. parcels,
Lebanon.
WIIlla!'Q F. Harris to Herald OU &amp;
· Gas Co., right of way, Sallsoory .
Marlin R. Swain, Sh!lron J. Swain
to John Wilson Young, Wilma F.

· Young, 0.838A, Olive.
Howard I. Snyder, Martha Mae
Snyder to Frank Herald Jr.,
·parcels , Porn. V.
Ellen Rought, Gerald Rought to
Gerald E. Rought, Ellen J . Rought,
· parcels, Pomeroy.
Water Ways Coal Co. to Roger
Manley, Sr .. lots 7 &amp; 8, Midd. Vlll.
Dana Hoffman aka Dana E. aka
Dana !?r., to Rickie L. Koenig,
Susan K. Koenig, parcels ,
Olive/Orang!!.
James H. Woodyard, Bryan
Kellh Woodyard to William
So!!lsby, 7.45A, Chester.
Southern Ohio Coal Co. to Wesley
L. Grounds, Unda L. Grounds,
4.25A, Columbia.
Patricia G. Gibbs to _R. Gregory
.·Gibbs, parcels, Sallsoory.
. Ella M. Scarbrough, to John
, Winford Scarbrough, Cert.,
Lebanon.

Tamara Ha;v.man

Birthday noted
Dan and Fa ith Hayman, Syra cuse, surpn sed their daughter,
Tamara , on her 11th birthday wit h a
skating party at Ript.::y, W.Va ., Oc:t.

4.

'-

Attending wl're Kimberly Jenkins, Heather McPhail, Eddie and
Larry Willis, Lisa Pyzner, Daniele
and Zorah Hensley, Mary, Ro·
seanna and Rhonda Van ·Meter
Reba Stover. Ruby Bowman :
Donna and Jeff Redi)'Jan, Robin ,
Annie and Nicole Satterfield, Char·
lty McMelon. Danielle Stone. Mary
and Brenda Carney, Angela c.aj..
ney, Terry Rucker and Jan et from
Beckley, W.Va. and the honoree's
grandmother, Mary Carney. .
'

�..
Page-8-The Daily $entinel

Pomeroy Middlep"prt, Ohio

·~ Fa,m'ily ·medidne:

.

•

.

.

I"'UIDnc Notice ·

Breast cancer kills .more women.than other disease
'

By EDWAR_i:l SCHRECK, D.O.
women are more Ukely to get the
Assistant Pr oless or
disease than blacks, Mexican
of Family Medicine
Americans or native Americans.
Obi o University CoDege
Women with no children or wbose
·. of Oste ojJaiNc Medicine
first 'child Is born atter age 00 are
Question: My mother has breast also at greater risk.
cancer, ·and I'm concerned about
Qu1i1K1 on: flow common is breast
my chance~ Of contracting the cancer?
disf!'!se. Am I at greater risk
• Answer: Breast cancer kills
because Of my mother?
more women . than any other
Answer: Breast cancer is five · disease. ItacoountsforZI percent of
times more common In t!rJsewltha all cancers In women, and 18
family history , of the disease. . percent of cancer deaths. Each
Statistics sbow as well that whlte yea r about 115,000 American

~

women are diagnosed with breast perforrmr:-g monthly breast self·
cancer and 37,000 die tram lt. ()qe In · examinationlssotmportant,as'are
eyery eleven women In this country pertodlc breast X·rays, or mamnio·
WUI contract breast cancer at some ·grams: Women· should have .their
point In her Ute.
first mammogram between age 1i
. Querotlon: .What can I cio to . and 40. After age 40, a nnammo· ·
decrease mY chances of getting gran\ should he done every one ·to
breast canoer?
. two years, and after age 50, evay
·
Answer: We dori't know what year.
.cauSes breast cancer and therdore
To ex;unlne yOur breast. for
it's hard to know bow to prevent it. - canoer, use your eyes and han!k to
However, we do know that the spot lumps, tenderness, chan~s In
earUer breast cancer is detectoo, 5Y!llmetry or appearance, dimples
the higher the curer ate. That's wlzy In the skin, pulling In o! the nipple,

Speaker announced

Service

~a

GREAT FALLS, Mont.- Monta· Point Pl~asant, W.Va.,· stands
na's "Big Sky" country. with Its watch as a security specialist at
spectacular blend of vast plains, Malmstrom Air Force Base.
crystal blue lal&lt;es, rugged 'moun- . "My joblsas'afireteamleaderln
tains and varied wildlife, has charge a a tour-man team,trained
always been known lor Its isolation and preparoo to deter bostlle
and 'untamed wilderness. It's along actions occuling under my jurlsdic·
this stretch of America's northern lion," said Horton.
bor&lt;i&gt;r, covering-over 23,001 square
"I like my job because 11 Is
miles, that a small group of Air ' challenging and r get a chanoe to
Force men and women stand watch serve my country atthe same time.
24-hours-a-day ·ready to respond to 1 work three days and three nights
or&lt;i&gt;rs they hope will never come. each shlft1hen I am off for six days,
Air Foroe Staff Sgt. Rickey R.
however, I usually end up working
Horton, son of La ran R. Horton, two of my days of( running convoys
Rou_te1, F1at Rock,Aia.,andGlorla or In tra!IJing.
·
B. Hussell, 558 Sand Hill Road,
"The ooly thing I don't like about
·

--

;;;.... -

Air force SS~I Ricke)' R. Hatton

'Art Fl'tlig

•

Career Awareness Into the Oassroom" as her topic.

my job Is the amount of time It
keeps me away from my family .
My wife, Catlzy, Is very supportive
and Is a major contributor to my
success In the Air Foroe. Together
we plan to mal&lt;e this a career.
When I was in Italy and I would get
a terrorist reporl, my stomach
would turn, because I knew my
family was also a terrorist target. "
The 341st Strategic Missile Wing
is the d&lt;i&gt;st Minuteman unit In the
Air Force. It was established in 1961
by President John F. Kennedy as
America's "Aoe In the Hole" durtng
the Cuban Missile Crisis. The unit
oow ·has :nl Minuteman lntercon'
tlnental ballistic missile sites lo·
cated across 23,000 square miles of
Montana grain nelds.
"Our mission is to keep the
Minuteman missiles on alert and
ready at a rmmerlt's notice to
defend the Unltoo States. Many
Americans don't realize that these
missiles are what keeps us free."
Montana Is rich In history, which
dates back to JBai when the Lewis
and· Clark expedition IQOk note of
the area, and described "The Great
Falls of the Missouri" In their
Journals. Loca too in the foot hills of
the Rocky Mountains, ghost towns
from the land and gold rushes it the
1800's haunt the Montana plains.
"At first I dldn'tllke this place. II
was too barren and, since I spend
most of my day looking at the vast
plains, I was a little disappointed.
Now, I really Hke It here. My wHe
and I bought a house and plan to
stay here a while," said Horton.
"Canada, Yellowstone and GlacIer N~tlonal Parks are near,here,
which makes good traveling and
vacation spots. The people are
great; they have a sort of an old
!as hloned way dthinking. Don'tget
me wrong. they aren't hillbillies,
they just have a lot of good morals.
"Montana offers good hunting
and fishing. and the snow-covered
Rocky Mountains are lust awesome to see."
Horlon Is a 1981 graduate of
Northsand Mountain High School,
Flat Rock. His wife, Cathy, is the
daughter r:l Lee Roy and Sue King,
Route 1, Point Pleasant. The
Horton's have a daughter, Tiffany,

2.

.

POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Seta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority w:li bet raveli ng Thursday
to Jindra Winery. For more
lnformallon ca ll Ja ne Wallon.
POMEROY -The Sacred Hearl
Catholic Women's Club will meet
'Thursday e\'ening In the rectory
!oUowlng 7 p.m. mass.
GALLIPOLIS - 8&amp;40 meets
Thursday, 7:30p.m .. home of Inez
Marchi.
ROCK SPR INGS - Rock
Springs Grang~e meets Thu rsday.
7:ll p.m. Installation of new
officers wlll he conducted.

FRIDAY
Rl.J'I'LAND -Dance at Rutland
Civic Center, ~11 ' p.m. Music by
Flashback. Admission, $2 single, $3
pey couple.
Rl.J'I'LAND -A yard sale wlll be
he ld beginning at 9 a.m. Friday at
the Rutland Chu rch of God on State
Route 124 towards Rutland.

SATURDAY
APPLE GROVE -Hymn sing at
7:30 p.m. Saturday at the Apple
Grove United Methodist. Church

featu ring the Gloryland Believers.
NEW HAVEN - New Haven
Volunteer Fire Department will
sponsor a Captain D's dinner from
11 a.m. to 6:30p.m. Saturday at the
fire station. ·
SHADE - There will he a revival
at the Shade United Methodist
Church Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, at 7:30 nigh tly. Speaker
will be the Rev. Stewart; singers
nightly.

funded pi'ogram administered
by tile State. The .County

F1.A1WOOC6 - Homecoming
at the F1atwoods Un~ted Met!rJdist
Church Sunday; carry-in dinner
12:30. Special service at 1:45 p.m ..
fea turing Rev. Uston Halley; Blood
Une singing group featured.
MIDDLEPORT - International
Order of Job's Daughters practice
lor inspection, 2 p.m. Sunday,
Mld:lleport Masonic T~mple.

Public Notice

#SS100
Schroedor Drill Model
·.c DB 2000 1\·17 #285 .
to ootiofy acommerclot loan
datid the 14th day of June,
1988.
THE BANK JOSEPHINE
RESERVES THE 'RIGHT
TO BID.
TERMS OF SALE: •CASH"
· Tho Bank Jooophono
P.O. Box 471
Preotonoburg. KY 418&amp;3

111tlc:lpoteo being eligible lor
approximately $.91. 700.00 of
Fiscal Yea• 1988 Cl)BG !unci- (91 25; (1 qJ 2, ~- 9. ·1 2
. ing. providing the County
meets applicable program
Public ·Notice
requirement&amp;
On Septembe• 9. 1988. tho

t.£GAL NOTICE
Cwnty C(lllducted its ~rot
The
Public
Utllklol Comrnilpublic hearing to. inform cHi- lion of Ohio hoi
odltduled for
reno about tile CDBG pro· hearing c- It&gt;.
8&amp;-1973gram, how it "JJY be : 4aed , TP·AtR,
tt-elnattw
of
what acti•ities are eligible, and the Iippi
n ot Weotam
other importlltnt program R-a Talephol)e Cof1'Ciany·
rt;K~ulremants.
·
,
to ln.._ Cllltllln of its ~fad
A second public hoamg will ldleo:lillld fixi1g rlleo and
be held Octobef 22. 1986,at 2
lor """""""" .-vice.
PM . in the Commissionore dtargeo
~.. lha putpOOo of providing
. office !O&lt;itoct " tha County an opportunity to i!ftoreotid
Courthouse to, give citizens an m....,... ot the .public to·
adequate opportunity \o re· teotify In this proceodlng, local
view and commEilt m the hearing 1 will be hold at the
Cwnty'o proposed CDBG 011· following tif11811 ond locatlono:
plication, Including which proOctober 21 , 19B6
jocta will be funded this veor, II Tueoday,
8:30
p.m.,
Com'
befo•e ti-e County.aobmlts ita munlty Centw, 41 South
application to (he Ohio Dep.,. Ovieit St., -"-lv Room.
mont of Dllllfllopment, Office Hudlon, Ohio 44238.
of Local Government Services.
Widnaoctay, Octobo&lt; 22,
Citizens · are encouraged to 19B6118:30
p.m., Powhatan
attend ttlis meit~SJ on Oc- Point, Grode School Audlto·
tober 22 to eXprMB their viaws rium, 2nd - . PoWIIatan
_,d comments on the Coun- Point. Ohlo.43942.
.
ty's , proposed CDBG
Thuflday,
October
23
,
application.
1986 116:30 p.m., Kent State
MEIGS COUNTY Unlvenlty, ~tabula ComCOMMISSION pus, Main Building Audlto·
Mary Hobstetter, Clerk rium, 3326 W. 13th Stroot.
(101 9, 1t~
Alhtabula. Ohio 44004.

':':.In

-w

Tha amount of the ravBlue
Increase requested is

Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
A PUBLIC SALE will be
held by The Bank Josephine

on the 14th day of Octobe•.
1986 at the Bank's equip·

ment lot located one(1) mile
north of Cheshire, Ohio on
Ohio Route #7, also being
the location of Jav· MarCoal
. Company on the east ara&amp; of
· State Route #7. TimeofsBie

$10,939,000: The J11ajor
isa~es

in·thil cue are:

aJ the determination ot.lhe
-priotaleveto ot apll'oting
revenues. oparatWig axpeni&amp;S,
and taxes;

bl the determination of the
appropriate rate !!a•:
c) tile determination of
appropriate rata of ralum;

dl

the
·and

tile dotominotlon of

appropriate rate ciOiign

will be 1:00 p.m. Sale is for
the purpose of disposing of
lhe following mining eq,uip-

other

ment :

64 Misc. Merchandise

14 BU 10 Joy LoadingMachine #9652
·

tariff mattare: ouch •

long·Airdox Feeder BrBBker

Starter &amp;

Tailptece

440

#BC3068
Jdy 18RB 4-Wheel Drive
Cutting Mac~lne440 _#17781
S&amp;S 4B8 Scoop. Chatgot,

.

and 2 sets of new banerias

#1144
500 KVA Pemco Substa·
tion 490 to 4160 #A6363·
1077

VILLAGE :
PHARMACY

600 KVA lin'e Power In-

Snodgrass
birthday
Da vid 'JYler Snodgrass, son of
David and Mary Beth Snodgrass.
Racine, recently celebrated his first
bh1 tx:lay at the home of hls
grandparents. Jim and Rll th Snod·
grass and also at the home of his
grandmother, Anna Mae Obitz.
David had a Care Bear cal&lt;e and
aU of his guests were served
refreshments. Anending at the
home of Mr'. and Mr. Snodgrass
were Katrina. Denise and Jim
Snodgrass Jr., and Kl'vin, Lisa and
Jamie Snodgrass. Present for the ·
oooervance at the rome of Mrs.
Obltz were Joey Phillips, Allsha
and Ashley Jenkins and Aaron
Price.

We're Rollini
the Savings!.

11amples:

ARAS PINNACLE
Stttl IMitlll, 10,000 milts, wor.
ro•t-;·, plw rood hD1.,t, fin
n·
,klct~~ttnt

I,..,.

nm

'IJSIIOilJ

ltttil UUJ

MONDAY
POMEROY - Bedford Thwn·
ship Trustees will met In regular
session Monday at 7 p.m. at the
townhall.

ARAS SEASONAL

r.......'!

b~t . r...

ho1attl , ...

ARAS:CUSHIONAIRE
roM
165 / IDIIl

lil1 "''

ra•tN.

PlU / 10113

lthlil '49 .95

'-••nl

lllflllfM.

. ltMli!US

o..~, c..t S3993 "• ••.oo Oto~r Cost 127JO,_ ~.00
lo\I.M CE I TAK

BAL.ANCE .1'AX

ELLIS AND SONS SERVICE
•

~OHf¢

PHONE 992-t~.t:.

LOCUST, MIDDUPOIT

;

2·s~-

Publ.ic Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
llobert E. ~-.
On September 16, 198&amp;, In
.
Psobeto Jucltlt
the Meigs · County Pmbote Lono K. N.......,ad,
Clertc
Court. C•o No. 25.2112, J . . 181 26; (1 Ill 2. 8. 3tc
L81end Crena. 3e4o Bellecreat
46208. was ~ntld Exocu··
tor ot the eotate of Evelyn M.
GN8111!', deceasat lata ol 86
Soul~ Foutth Street. Middle·
port. Ohio 46760. .
-;--=;:;;-:=-n=:--Robort E. Buck. 8
Public Sale
·
ProbateJudga
Lena K. N•selroect. Cllllk
&amp; Auc~ion
191 25; (1 OJ 2. 9. 3tc

EACH

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAMP SHADES.
CAN BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

WOOD &amp; COAL
STOVES

· New locadon: .
168 North Se&lt;'"'d
Micldlsport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Cany Fishing Suppliee

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phoone Bitls Here
"""'• - BUSJNfSS PitON!
(6141 992·6S50
RISIJINCI PHONE
16141

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Addons and remadallniJ
Roofing and gutter work
Con crete work
Plumbing end electrical

AIJNAYS
.walk home

with a friend

We have available at no cost to you, a strip of 7 pressure
f--:!!...:::.....;_...,...;..------1 sensitive labels to be applied to note books, book covers, lunch . boK, book bag, ,bicycle, anything the child comes in contact with
going to or coming from school . Each label is designed to serve
as a constant reminder that the child's safety is at stake.
·
Protect your children, keep our kids safe, come in today and
get your strip of safety labels for your children absolutely free .
Supplies are limited . W,e are doing this because we care , .

SAVE •••

work

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

y,,

Plltlltt'N~tn

and Graduation

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

Stationery, Mognetic
Signs, Rubber Stomps,
Busintss Forms,

614-843-5248

Copy StrvKn, Etc.
2ss Mill sr .. Miildtoporr
104 Mulborrr A• .• Po ..ror

REASONABLE • RELIABlE

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

992·33

. SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

YOU WILL NOT FIND AN EQUAL
QUALITY STOVE ANYWHERE AT
OUR·PRICES ... .
BUY DIRECI FIOMFACIORY

.

'97

rt SICONI AVENUI

•DDUPOIY, OliO

PIOIII 992·6661 -••

•

701 2ND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS,OHIO
OPEN DAILY TILL 6 P.M.
SUNDAY 12-6

BLACK WALNUtS
Starting Price .....
Per Hundred Poundo
After Hulling on

SEPI. 29-NOV. 8

Just· Bring ·your Black
Walnuts still in the hull
to

OLD TIME . HEATING CO.
;

usod cars.
Jim Mink Chev .-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

614-446 -3672
TOP CASH pakt for '83model .
and newer used cars. Smith

CAL L 1 ROY RICKl

F

IHI

tOUNT~

II'IIGS CO. HUMANE
SOCIETY HAS llAUTIFUL
IOmNS and CATS FOR
ADOPTION
Includes Wormed and First
lnnoculat tons

HALF COST of SPAY/

NEUTER at time of Adoption
Balance Paid monthly to
Humane Society

CAll

992·6~05

992·5427 or 992.3026
10/5/1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reosonable Prices"

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
~ 16-'16

A ljlA HIO( llJH

Annou nee men ts
3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing machine

5500 Adoption Fee

tfrr

repair , parts, and supplies . Pick
up and deliverv. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up

Georges Creek Rd .
446-0294 .

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gutter Work
Complel,o Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked in home area
20 years

No Huntin g or Tre~spassing on
Pickens Farm, Fletrock. W. Va.
All violators will be prosecuted.
P. A. Pickens.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDA'IS
Corrctuterizetl H•ri• Air Selection
Swim Molds· Interpreting Services

L:i LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

.:J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

ACCENT ..

BUILDING

FENCE CO. .ANY ·
PH. 992·6931

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

INTERIOR

After 5 Call

742·2027

PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTI·ON CO.
317 N. Stccind

Middleport, Ohio

COMII'iRCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMATES-

PHONE (614) 992-5009

"Free Estimates"
Installation Aval,krble

$/IECIALIZING IN W(Nf&gt;OW I. f&gt;OOR REPLACEMENT

NEWEU'S SUNOCO

--s ,.. \

Chester, Ohio

Mon,·Sat. I

BOGGS

STAR GAZER SYSTEMS

SALES &amp; SDVICE

TUPPEIS I'I.AIIJS, 011.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST .
GUYSVIll£, OHIO

Aulhariud Jolin DHro,

10' 2" AU ALUMINUM BLACK MESH SEA BREEZE
SATELLITE SYS1£MS. Full Rflltott. lilltalled ........ $1,1150
SAME SYSTEM AS ABOVE WRNOU1 IEM01E Sl,250

New Holland, lush Hog

DESCRAMILERS WITH SYSTEM PURCHASl - $365

Farm Equlprotnl
Doaltr

THERE AlE Sflll APPIIOX. 100 UNSCltAMtliD CHANNELS

DESCIAMIIII ALONE 1385.

Ftrlll E••IP IIIUt
Pert• &amp; Servl11

CHAlliS Wl.l

•67-•ns

'

Help Wanted

Giveaway

Make Chriltmas money, aell
A110n . Make 45 percen t. Call

4

614 -446-3358.
2 kinens, 2 middleaged cats.
Black &amp; tigei-. Call 614 ·379•

2421 .
Yellow&amp;. white kitten . friendly , e
wk. old . Call614· 446 ·355t .

5 kitten to good ho me. lin er
1rain«t . Call 614·446- 3897.
Fullgrown hoUn dog 'A
P"'lnese- 'A Gorgey, not use to
children , prefer older paraon or

Reps Needed for business ac·
counts. Full-Time , S60,000 ·
$80,000. Part-Time $12,000·
818 ,000. No sailing , repeat
busineu . Set your own hours.
Training provided . Call 1·61 2'.
938 ·6870 , M-F, 8am to 6pm
!Central Standard

Ti:t·

E11perlence body man 1eedad to
build •fvaga cars. \·"ools requ ired . Call 614 · 3 8- 9815
8AM-6PM.
---~- -

Male bird dog, cat &amp; kittens. Call

614-388·8368.
2 female bl1ck poodles. Call

Pirt·time. No stud&amp;nU . 16 hra
per week t4.sp per mur . Some
IWenings &amp; weelcendl . Cell for
eppolntment. Bosnrd Memorial

614·441·6689.

Ubrary, 8,. · 446-READ .

Free kittens cute &amp;lo\leable. Call

Qualified meet cutter. S.end
resume to 8011. T400 in cere of
lhe Gallipolis Daily Tribune, 826
Third Av e ., Gall ipolis, Oh

614-266-6736 .
2 cabinet mrtdels stereo rl naedt
of repairs. CaiiGH -446 ;3897 .

45631.

'{ard Sales

·····:·GaiiTpolis..........

NOIMAN WEIER

•u-3o7c

9-15-'86

·-···--p·c;;n·e-rov......... ..
Middleport ·
&amp; Vicinity · · .

&amp; Vicinity
Garage Sale beh ind Bitlweli Post
Office. Oct 9. 10 . 11 , low

. .. ......... ................... . l:

prices.

8 family . Oct. 7through 11 fro~
to 6:00p.m. Firsttrailflr Of!

c ..0ort Sole Fddav tOth. 202
Kmeon
lf&gt;OrtNiechoto,
leisure Dr.
suit,Mans
luther
SJede

19. Mens and womens clothing
ot all li1es. chlldrens cbthing ,

s weaters , women
otothH, brown • bo;ge alghan
new , post hole d~ger. mlsc.
jacket.

1 ~::::======9=9=2=·~6=1=7=3=====m:o:.~~ -Vtrd

-z

11

--------Experienced Media Saln Repa
Need. Sese plus Qomml11ion.
Call 3)4-767 -7881 Monday
thru Fr iday, 10 to 4.

CALL COLLECT:

(With Larry's Carpet Outlet)

"a-z:

Emp loy men!
Services

Absolulely No Hunting on Ray.
mond Smith .

Ph. (614). 843-S425
,, . 1

LARRY, S S.ATELLITE SALES

Bob Barton, Ow1111r
9127/ 86/1 mo.

992 · 3476 .

•• Free Estimates"

We Also Update and Service
Most Systbms •

PH. 992-9949

Buying daily gold, sillier coins,
rings , jewelry, sterling were, cid
coins, large currency. Tgp pr ~
ce~ . Ed . Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. A11e . Middlepon, Oh. 614 -

Racine Gun Shoot sponsored by
Raci ne Gun Club. Every Sunday,
beginning at 1 :00 p.m . Factory
Choke. 12 guageshotguns.

•

1'10 MULIEDY AYE.
POMEROY, 011.

WANTED TO BUY used wood 8t
coal haaters. SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd . &amp; Olive St . Gallipo·
lis . Call614-446 -31 59 .

Call 614·

couple. Coll814 · 258-19t9.

EUGENE lONG

Buick-Pontiac, 1911 , Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614-446·

2282 .

446-2062

•,1 HVIN\• IIH

yYanted To Buy

We pay eesn for late model cl~n

on,;,.

Soloodd•
Friday
'10, Blood
cloth...
&amp; end1.
monter. 101 Meblene Or. off
180 . •

Garege Sell[; 4 mi. east of Porter
on 554. Wed., Thur1 . &amp; Fri. B.
George.
•
Yard Sala OC1 . 9 &amp; t O. Summer
· &amp; Winter cloth ing, old books.
stuffed toy• and other articles.
16 Belmont Drive.
Moving Sale at Gr&amp;en Terra ce
Mobile Home Court, Lot 75.
kitchen table &amp; chairs, canning
jars, humidifier. 9·6, Oct . 11 ,
Firat Time Th is Year Yard Sale
Thurs. &amp; Fri. Oct. 9 &amp; 10 . 9 til?
Mens 6 women a clothes, sweat·
trt &amp; boots. Children a clothes, 2
SJ~nl. 2 Mts of tlre1. 18mp1. On
Burnt Run Rd. acrou from
Manin Stone Coal, on Rt 2t B.

a.

First Time Evtrl Four Family

Yard Sele. Oet. 10th &amp; 11th.
509 8&amp; 511 Buhl Morton Ad .
10· 1

GaregeSaleOct . 10&amp; 11 , 9tll5.
386 Martin Dr. Rt. 160 ne~t to
Bob M cCormick Rd. Boys&amp; girls
10y1, household &amp;
Vard Sale Fri., Sat . 9-6. Play
high chair . crib. 2 twin
girls I boya, clo thing,
, skttll, One mile p11t
an right.

llema, flbrlcall
cr•ft bcokt.

Hammona Huller
'

9

, .

Sale AddMI

(GUAIAtiTEED)

352 SECOND.AVENUE
GAWPOUS, 01110
PliO. "6·0902

t 011 FREE ESTIMATES

$20 AMONTH

REPAIR

6-17 ·tfC

INDUSTRIAL

NOW ACOMPLETE 10FT. SYSTEM FOR

New Homes Built
"Free EatimatBI"

NO MONEY DOWN
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

LOST black and white Coo n dOg,
shocking co llar on neck . Ambro ·
&amp;Ia lfe&amp;, REWARD , 304-876·

STAINLESS STEEL l!NERS
INSURANCE WORK

Over 100 t~~mambled channels.

BISSELL
SIDING CO •.

lllto Jrustnlttlod
PH. 992-56'82 ·
or 992-7121

j\

SATELLITE IS STILL THE WAY TO GO

•BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

l

. \.•....,,,.;

or 949-2860

PWS: Of!ict Suppi11 &amp;
Furniture, Wedding

•ALUMINUM SIDIIG

. ON STOVES &amp; ·
FIREPLACE INSERTS

i.

•

V. C. YOUNG Ill

F11 AH

GUN SHOOT

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Cali614 -446-177J.

•Cleaning Inspection
•Flue Caps Installed
•Chimney Rebuilding
"TOTAL FIREPJ.AC[ AND

.PH. 949-2801

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

•vltm SIDING

·
4Q01
· /I0 AND MORE

bimne_y q!are

(Free Eotimatasl

l/11/tfn

I!

FOUND Pres cr iption sun ·
glasses. Found in Coun St. area .

5484 .

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG

8-20-'lli tfn

Roger HyseH
Garage

Rd. Call614-446-9780 .

992·2196

-

LOST Red Pomerai... Lott on
Adamavilfit Cora R'if"'Nees n,adi-

6104.

Mlddlepon. Ohio
1-

.---~----,

NOW YOU CAN

. Emerqtncy 949·2516

cation [reward l. CJII 614· 24&amp;·

PAT HILL FORD

or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls·

The amazing growth of the "MISSING CHILDREN" problem •
has becO('le a national subject. We want to do our part to be
that the safety of our children takes top priority in our
community.

RACINE, OHIO

Offict~949-2438

SER~ICE

.

6 Lost and Found

LOST, female St. Bernard on
Mortonwooda &amp; Bulaville-Porter

We can repair and r&amp;tt
core radiators arid
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas.Tanks.

PH. 949-2801

l:;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_j

RAYMOND E. PROFFin. (MAC)

RADIATOR

4/ 1/lfn

Faclory '""•
12 Gouge Shalgllls Only
10·8-ttn

Silll kittent, long haired, CIIII:OO
PM, 304,675·5764 .
.

'LICENSED-INSURE D· CE RTIFI ED

.

EVERY
SAl. NIGHI
6:30P.M.

•

Red' male Doberman . 2 yr1. old .
Call 614•742-3081 evenings.

304-676·1928 .

•Dryers •Freezers

"HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC."

Bashan Building

Cel1 ·614-992·70n a1t&amp;r 6;00.

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

PARTS and

N.J. 1-row corti pi cker, Super chiei post hole auger, J.D. ~5
mower, J.D. 292 corn planter. 7ft. bush hog blade, 12 IUD.
lime spreaaer, 404 N.H. hay. condit ioner. 5400 Hession
round baler, I.H . 46 baler and 46 baler parts, I.H. hay rake,
2x16 plow, 3 pt. disc. pull type bru sh ho g, last hitch two botlorn plow, 2A.C. small round balers, 18ft. hay elevator w/gas
motors, Blac k Hawk &amp; I.H. 100 manure s prea d~rs. gravily
wagon, 3 pt. bale spear, Baltic Malic fertilizer spreader,drag
disc. II at bed wagons, two· wheel trailer, hay ted der, two-way
plow for Farmall A, and mor e.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Free to good hOme.~3 ·..,e.ved
female eau. 1 male neutered
;:
cat. Alla~o·t• included , Trein 'ed. ·'

•Refrigerators

"TRAILER"

CHESTER-985·3307

614·2~6-

5430.

•Rangea .,

1986 Chev. Custom Delu xe IO ,auto. w/318 m1les, FIOOFord
~ckup , 1965 GMC pickup, JH KB7 truck.

Shop Tuh1lelan
" Outy
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

-

Free kitten1 . Call

•Waahen •DishWashers

"TRUCKS"

"EQUIPMENT"

~ '";:.•~~!~~··a~r~r ~:::~:;

included . C•U 1fter 6, &amp;14·441·

628 ..

All Mike•

J. H. 460 util ity, diesel, fast hitch. li ve P.T.O .. 8 NFo rd (good
rubber!. 45 W.O. A.C:, 350 Far mall diesel, li ve power &amp;TA., J.
D. roun d aKie B &amp; cullivator, 2 ~d J.D .'s for parts, Farmall
Super A (wrecked, as is)

•ZENITH
..SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SAIELUTE SALES &amp; SERYICE
We HIIJ AF1ll Tl~r~t

. N.-E.C.A.· CONTRACTOR

985-3561

"TRACTORS"

DIRECT FROM
FACTORY TO YOU

KEEP OUR KIDS SAFE I

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

This is the personal' property of the late Clarence
Hoffman. located from St. Rt. 7 bypass ol Pomeroy·
Middleport. Ohio, go approx. 9'12 miles to St. RL
325, then apprtix. 3 miles to Danville. Turn left on
Cti: Rd. 2 (Briar Rid&amp;e Rd.), go approx. 2 miles tQ
Hoffman Rd., then v, mile to farm. Watch for signs.

1973 New Moom Mobile Home.

E'LEttRIC, :Inc.

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

SATURDAY, OCT. 11, 1986
10:00 A.M.

.

GREAT ·

Four adorabiB, piByful kittens.

ESTA EAUCTION

.

molo .. 2 f·m·l· •.u.. ·"

IPIYid or -neuterecl. 4 yellow. 3

======-~··====:::z=ar:~~iier•v. 9•11 et4-38e.-saa:aJ

FILL DIRT

Avenue, Cincinnati. Ohio

WE ARE YOUR SALES
. AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Vehic&amp;e

ONLY

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL .
JUST CALL!
992-3410
·UM.ESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

tllu.

4-15-'86-fc

SIZE 23X30X007

We 111'1 selling Mr comjlltte
ltock of tir.IDI $5.00 om our
cost, plus bolonclng Cllld ta.
listed below art just a few

•I dlj&gt;radotlon
(10) 2, 9, 2tc

Pomeroy, Ohio

ALUMINUM .SHEETS
FOR SALE

OVER
DEALER COST!

buoln• rot•;

r-: .

l\lkl~j:!Jni

''2·6215 or '92·7314

54 Misc. Merchandise

ss

Oto~r BALANCE
Cost 14 73S "'" ''·'"
&amp; TAX
~--

'.

d) Koy, PBX and

·'

Eats
• Positive I.D.
DAN SMITH: AUCTIONEER
(614) 949-2033 or (614) 992-7301
"Not responsible tor accidents or loss of property."

Galio 300 Roof Bolt a• 440
AC #1473
Joy 21 SC . Shutde Cor
#ET 12437
Joy 21 SC -ShutUe Cat
#ET 13143
S&amp;S Service

e) pole

Cash

AC #1552

D-avid Tyler Snodgrass

diroctory ........ end - ·
vloe oonnoctlon chll'gtl;

Case #25246 .
R. MARIE TURNER : EXECUTRIX

side Box 41&amp;0 to 480 and
. 550 #9452·9486
Galis 300 Roof Bolter 440

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-mont

usiness:Services

Public Notice

Refri gertor, desk, bunk beds, table &amp; chairs, misc. dishrs.
Stoker-Malic heatin g stove, chest deep freeze , picture
frames, 36 ft. wide spread trailer, truck racks. I.H. wheel
weights, platform scales, log chains, big vise, ~ mber, Cre·
sole lu mbe r and poles, approK. 800 bales of hay, 300 bales
of oai straw, approx. 150 bu. ear corn, some lar ge bales, 3
new galvanized feeders, 3 pipe feeders, creep ieed ers, and
lois more.
'
·
·
'ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Misc. Model T trucks, tin coffee poi, churn, mi sc. bottles,
Cornes cupboard, tricycle, wagon, engmes. I.H. Burt 'Mill ,
wooden beam single plow, Mode l Ttruck bed, cider press
and lot smore.

#54-14n
36-inch x 100-foot New
Radial Stocke• #851 8
100 HP Joy Bolf·D•ivo,

cany-ln dinner at noon followed by
a 2 p.m. service . wtth The Gospel
Rays singing.

PT. PLEASANT - Bend Area
Gospel Sing will be held Saturday, 7
POMEROY ~ Annual meeting of
p.m .. at the Gospel Light!rJuse . the Meigs County Pioneer and
Church. flllnt Pleasant. Featured Hlstorlca I Society will be held a I
will be the Narrow Way Singers. 1: 30 p.m. Sunday at the Meigs
Charity, the Unroe Family, John a Cou nty Museum, Five trustees will
Crump, the Reflections Trio. and a . be elected to nve year ter~s.
cantata by several area churches.
Public lnvit.ed.
RACINE -Revival services wUI
begin at the Mount Moriah Church
.
SUNDAY
of God, Racine, Sunday through
RlJfLAND - Homecoming- will '1\Jesday, 7 p.m. VIctor HoUarld,
be held Suilday at the Rutland evangeUst.
Church of God, Route 124, Rutland
with ~nday school at 10; praise
POMEROY - Homecoming at •
and worship at n ; Dinner at 12:00;
Carleton Church, Sunday. Morrilng
· afternoon service 1:30 p.m. with worship at 9: 30; basket dinner a I
Ken Luke: special singing.
12:30 p.m. The afternoon program
begins at 1: ll with the Gabriel
JOPFA - Homecoming at the Qlartet, several ileal slngl'rs, and '
Joppa Church will be Sunday with a tre Gospel Tones.
·

'

Block Grant (CDBGJ SmaH
Cities Prog11m, a fadoretly

'

Community calendar I area happenings
THURSDAY

ment for fundilg uildar the
Commul')ity Development

·parsons,- EI!Zli!Fflf Alm W'ellstet':' · ~
Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Woodliiu, Mrs,
Rott;on, and Mrs. Denlsonaitended
the open meet lngof Chester l}arden
Club and the Shade Valley Council
of F1oral Ans.
-:
Flowers over the past rmilth hav ,
been furnished forscve~dlure!!f:'s
by Pauline Atkins, Miss !Dk'h), Ruth
Erlewine, Mrs. WIIUamson and
Mrs. WilsOn. Mrs. Cilnaday~nteied
the Friendly Gard!!ll Cl\lb's·flower. •
show receiving )Ill honorable II'Jell'·
tion on her arrangement. Plat;~~: .
were made tobuyrulbs !orplantenr '
in the park iii lo'. .er Rutland:.•
Marcia DeniSon won the travelliJ&amp; -~
prize donated by Mrs. Woodard.~ j
Stella Atkins will!l'ovl&lt;i&gt;t~onefolD
the next meeting. Mrs. WUllarlJS9~ !
won the door prize. Refres~!! ~
were seved from a table-center....
with a rose arrangement mad e .~
Mrs. Canaday.
~ ..

"Treasure5- ftom Nature" was
!\letter was read 'from Lucille
thet,hemeofthe rrogram IJ'esented McClimter, reglonal 'directqr an-.
by Pau Une Atkins at the recent
nounclng the fall regional meeting
meeting of the Rut Jan d Garden to 'be held at Marietta. Members
Club held at the home Of Stella are io take plants and qther I ems ·
Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
fort he sales tables. Binda Diehl and
Mrs. ,..tklns talked about ruck- Neva Nicholson reported on the
eyes, chestnuts, gourds and roiored Wilkesville meeting on Japanese
coril. and told how to dry the plants Dower arranging. It wa s noted that
and materials · so that they are Stella and Pauline Atkins . had
suitable for use In arrangements. anended the Washington State
· Also as a part of the program on Dahlia Show, that Eva Robson had
nature: Opal D~r ol the Meigs Sol! . attended the Vinton Dower show
and Conservation ·office sbowed and judged the Wildwood Garden
slides on progress made in conser- Club Dower show. and that Edllh
vation over the past 50 years.
Williamson . hact visited Stahl's
Pearl Canaday gave a paper on Nursery.
,
"Save the Land" trom an Arbor
Neva Nicholson. Binda Diehl.
Day Foundation publication. She Ann Elizabeth '1\Jrner. Pauline
·cautioned about removing trees Aikins·, Stella Atkins, and Marcia
and shrubs from land ani! river- Dmison attended a reception for
banks where erosion rnlght oocur.
the regional dfrect&lt;r. and Mrs.
Timely gardening tips were given Diehl. Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Nichol·
by Marcia Denison.
son. Rober1.a Wilson, Margaret
Dorothy Woodard presided at the
meeting with Stella Atkins giving
devotions. "A New Day" and Miss
Diehl reading, 'Smell the Roses."

challenge' for man

4 .

dlschar~

or unusual
-either clear . tion .while standing betlire-a mir. :·.
or bloody ...., from the nipple. The row. Place your han!k ~*!
examination sbould be done at the your sides, then· ~als!! t'iiM ·!i"e'r ·
same time each monih, preferably . your head, .them '!JI'ess «&lt; iWr
about a week after the end of the waist. .In .each position, •'leoii ~r
menstrual period.
breast symmetry lind appelr~.
The self-examination can ' be
If you see somet~ ' Jn -h ·
carried aut in -three parts. ·rust, use self-exaintnatlon that 'seems IIIR'I• '
a circular massaging motion in the · ual, see your doctor. As with almost.
shower or bath when the skin Is wet all forms of cancer, early dete::tlon l.
and sOapy SQ that the angers can Is the key to survival. Ifyru are oot : :
glide over 11. Next, use a similar familiar with the breast 9eif-I!Xam. ·;
motion while lying on your back. ask your family plzyslclal til srow· ;
Finally, perform a vis~al examlna· you hoW: to pei;form it.
· :·

The

Ohio

P.ubllc Notice

NOTICE OFPUBUC.HEARING
The Meigo County Comrnio·
sionan. Intend to apply 1D ti-e
'OhiO Department of Develop-

Rutland Garden Club has meetidg

· Art Fettig, author of dozens of Selling Lucky, How to. Hold an
books. wil l he the ·keynOie speal&lt;er " Audience in the Hollow of Your
when teac hers and administrators Hand, How Funny Are You? and
from across Meigs County hold the very popular Three Robots
their annual in -serv ice meeting on series of books and tapes for
Friday, Oct . 17, at the Meigs High children.
· School.
.
The annual in-service mEFting
Designated a Certified Speaking will get underway with registration
Professional by the Natio nal Speak- and coft'ee and donuts from 8:30
ers Associatio n. Fettig gives a.m. to 9 and folloWing opening
speeches and co nducts seminars exercises which conclude at 9:30,
ttu·oughou t the free wor ld to Fettig will speak until10: 45. There
parents. teachers and st udents of will he group mEFtings on ·grade
all ages on Ihe topics rlself-esteem. levels in rubject areas from U to 12
success and pos it ive ll\·ing. He is noon. Following-lunch there will he
president of Grm&lt;1h Unl imited . a workshops with Fettig using
corporation &lt;i&gt;dicated to !ringing "Bringing Out the Grretness in
positive concepts to people.
Students" as his topic and Cindi
Among Fell ig's books arc Fllsi- Gharis or the career development
tive Parenting, a Gui&lt;i&gt; to Great- section of the Ohio [Jj\partment of
ll('ss: It Onl.v Hurts When I Frown . Education. will using "lntegra!lng

Thursday, October 9, 1986

1nd misc.
&amp; S1t.
Old , It

r:~~~~~~~~:

Oct, t O,
ligf'lthou se

Rt. 160 N. 2
Yard Slee Thurs. &amp; Fri. K.K.

Mobile Home Lot 12 . 9:00·1·

lett on Peach Fork Rd . Co . Ftd .
birth and up. Many mise ilt:"nl.

Oct . 8th end 9th. le•g ~ ~ ""'· 2
mi. on Flatwoods. B c. v ~&gt; cl .o~.hes
B· 18 , shoe~, boots. 2 coal ar'ld
wood atovu. new G.E. pan able
organ, mile. dishes, ca mpiJt' top .
Yard Sale. Sat .. Oct. 11th .
Freed ' s, River view Ori ve .
Middleport.
Vard Sale; 20 Railroad St .,
Middleport. Coats end lots of
chlldrens clothes. 10:00 -3:00 .
Oct. 91h, 10 th, t 1th.

4 f11mlly. Oct . 10, 10:00-6:00 .
208 S. 2nd. A11e. Middleport .
Coats. clot hing tor everyone.
metal wardro be, canvaa car
'cover , Jenny Lind twin bed .
chest of drawers, vanity, je·
welry , drepM , shoes . old re ·
cords , loys . Lowest prices. 614 -

992 · 2077.
Friday Oct. 10. 2 and three
tenths of a mila ou t Hy sell Run
Rd , Play pen, Children .,dadul1
clothes, bottle sterilirer. receiv .
lng blankets. many misc . items .

3 Fa,mily Yard Sale 773 Grant
St ., Middleport . Mines, Jr'a &amp;
men s clothing . Gold J .C. Penny
draptr!, with thermal lining ..
Bed~pr&amp;i111S , medicine cabinui &amp;
brown J .C . Penny drapes . Sat.

9· 4.Porch sale. Oct . 10 , 11 , 12 .
Bobby Fitch' t . Long Bottom.

lost hou~e be hind Post Ot1ice in
Long B9ttom a1 Tom H111ymans.
Friday , October 10th from

1 0,00-4:0o .

.. ..... PfPieiisiiric···
&amp; Vic_inity
. ...................... .........

.-.

Vatd S11le. 2326 Jefferson Ave .,
Thurs·Frl. 9:00 to 5:00 , baby
bed; youth and. adult clott\es
mise itemt .
·
~
'
Yard S1le, Fri and Sat , Oct. 10
and 1 1. Ck)thin!J. mlsc. 26
Warwick Rold .

Yard Sale on Leon Bid en Ro ~ .
due t o illness. must ttlllota of
good things. Too many to lilt.
Something for ~rvon• . Former
Stephen~ pillet. OCt. tth tHl ?, .

'.

'

.'

•

t

:

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-l 0- The D~ily ·Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

LAFF-A-DAY

44

266 for more

tnforma,tlon
Easy Anembty Work! $714.00
per 100 Guaranteed Payment
No Sa les . Details -- Send
Stamp ad

Envelope

Elan - 715

34 1 B Enten:mse Ft Pierce. Fl
33 482

3000 Government Jo bs lltt
S ,6 ,040-S59 , 230 vr Now Hir'"9 Ca ll 805-687 6000 Ext
R-9806

'"9 P 0 Box 13 493, Orlando,
Fl 32859

3213between9-11
a m Avenue
or walk
1n
at 4526 B McConkle

Pit living room auite. 1100 . Call
814·1192·7638 .

Nice 2 bdr a~ 4 miiM from
Galllpoll1. $tove, retrlg., &amp; water furnished , t210 a month, no
poto. Coli 814-448 ·8038.

Pfcken• Used Furniture Good
q.tallty used fumiture . Open 110
I or cell for •polntment.
3Q4·675·84U'" 87&amp;-1450.

Furn efllciency apt. carpeted lit.
quiet, 110gla work10g penon
onty Call 114-448-4607 or
614-446·2602.

UHd green Wh1rpool wuher,
good cond, 1160 00 , 304-6753633.

"!n this next roung, get in
close and beg l..i0 r m- ercy •"

31

Homes for Sale

41

Houses for Rent

895-3890

w or k va nes from f~;~w nights to
vaca t•on time up to J weeks

Send resu me and references
Box C 20 caro of Potnt Pleasant
Regts ter, 200 M11n St , Pom t
F1e11sant, W Va

Delivery person at lea!t 20 hours
wee k, hourly pay plus commtsston and ttps App ly m person
Must have reliable transporta·
uon V1Uage P1zza In n

12

Situations
Wanted

Room and board for seo1or
Ctltzens Spectal lovmgcere Call
614 -992 6873

4 bedroo m hDut8 ·wrth baMment , 3 bedroom houH OWl'
tnple garage plus the forrnet
Ron ev• mlr:t. bldg tn New
Haven. 22x120 all for onaprice
$45,000 Phane 1-304-812:2564 All cumrntly renti!CI. Wltl
sell s&amp;parate

3 bedroom home, 1,-4 a-cre:s.
Jerry ' s Run Aold, US.OOO 00.
CitY water coming. 304-5762668
Ranch style. 3 bedrooms. family
roo m, good loca tion , New
Haven 304-882-3620
Sale or rent, New Haven. 3
bedrooms. 2 batht, flrpiKe,
ga.rage, $38,500.00or $300.00
month plus depo~t . 304·273·
2471

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

18

Wanted to Do

'Chr1s t1 an baby sin er' dey ca re
Second Ave, locatiOn Ca ll 6 14-446-2750, low
Jr'IC8S
e )lpe r~ eflce.

P1ck up for salvage? App liances ,
TV . motors. car banerles, etc ,
etc Call 614-256- 1747
-lc FIRE WOOD. Locust. Maple
Elm, Wa lnut. $30 , per p1ckup
lo ad , delivered Ca ll BtUSlack at
61 4-992· 2269
.

Financial
' 21

Business
Opportunity

! NOTICE !
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO recommends that you
do bustn eu With people you
know , and NOT to sand money
throu~ the matl until you ha\le
mves ligaled th e offerang
OWN YOUR OWN Jean Sportswear, Ladles Apparel,
Ch1ldrens-Matermtv, Large Stze.
Pet1te. Dancewear-Aerob1 c or
Ac cessories Store, Jordache.
Ch1c, l ee. Lev1, lzod, G1tano.
Gueu. Calvin Khun, Sergio
Valen ta, Evan Fticone, Ltz Clll·
borne, Members Only, Gasoline,
Hea lthtelt over 1.000 others
$14, 300 to 525, 900 Inventory.'
tr...,ung, fixtures. grand open ing , etc. C1n (¥)en 15 days Mr.
lou gh lm (612 )888-6555

·- ---=---- - -Real Estale
31

Homes for Sale

NEW AND USED MOBilE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAliTY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 Ml
WEST, GAlliPOLIS, RT 35
PHONE 614 ·446-7274
1971 Elcona trailor, 12x86, 2
bdr . 1urntshed, on rented lot
Close to town 8"18 out buildmg Call 114·446 ·9955.
1•h66fatrmorU Beyvi.w 2bdr ,
all electriC, underplnmng, new
carpet, $7,BOO C1ll 614-2455816
14x70 Gettysburg, 2 bdr ,
baths. pOfch awnmg. 2
all elec. exc . cond. Belt
Call 814-25&amp;-8e20 or
614-266·6602

1976
2 full
AC '•
offer,

a

81 Oakbrook 1 exp•ndo. axe
cond Muat •II Call 614-3792587
1984 Shultz mobtle home
14x70 w1th 10"20 expando on
liv1ngroom It hitch .. area, total
alec , 3 bdr . 2 baths, GE apace
saver mierowave in ldtehen, w1ll
181 underpinnng go with trailer.
Call 614-379-2726
81g 11v1ng &amp; big selection of
used &amp; benk repoueSied mobile
home Call Kanauga Mobile
Hornet , 614-&lt;&amp;46-9682
12x60 1973 Arlington gaa heat.
2 bd r , excellent eond Muat aee
thts one $4,950 Ca11614-4460175
1973 12d5 Utop11 gas Meat. 2
bdr . eKcellent ccnd Must see to
apprec1ata. tiS 950. Call 614446-0175 .
12Jt60 liberty ell electric tretler
an , 2 bedrooms, underpinning awning on moat wmdows. 2 porch• 3 tva down
•bandt, new carpet m hving room
and hall, refrigerator and stove
$7000 Call614-949-26l8
Ctntr~l

MOBILE HOMES MOVED In sured . rea1ontble rttes. Call
304·676-2338
'81 W1ndsor 2 br large liv ing
room &amp; h1tchen, 2 porches &amp;
undarpenning, great cond Must
sell 304-882 3715.
Muat tell 12•65 1971 New
Moon. good cond .. furn ished.
woodburn er. air cond, washer,
dryer. porch, •e.soo. Call304773-6687.

35 Lots
large corner lot Coun trya~r e
E11a1es. Ca rpeted. 3 bedroom.
Jivingroom, FR . 1 beth, garage,
UB .600 Call 614-446-8271 .
Nice 3 bdr , 1n cou ntry Prt ced in
920' s Call614 -245-9162
2 bdr house full basement, 2

baths. 1 atta ched garage 1
unanached , outbu ildmga, 1 j A.
m-1, new fence. lott of pme
trees. pond. Call diVs 614 4462107 or evn 614· 245 ·5600.
6 room house 1 .2 acres Double
Cllt' g11rage Located on Rose Hill .
Bargain pr iced 920.000 Call

1!.

Acreage

1 acre 2 car garage 30xJO heet,
water. electnc. Set up for mobile
home State Route 564 Call
614-388·8748 .

2 09 acres State Route 554·
Wheaton Ad , t5 .500 Trade for
30 ft or larger campet' Call
614·388-8745
35 acret. Racine, Ohio. Hora•
Cava area Calll14 -992-7644.
16 acres. Beech Grove Rd.
Rutl•nd, wnh ges well Mutt
sell 112.000 firm. Phone 614·
992-3901

614-678 -2613
Government Homet trom t1 (U
repair I Delinquent tax propeny.
RepoJSeulon• Ca ll 805· 687·
6000 Ell GH9B05 for cunent
repo li nt
4 Mdroom home for sale PriCfJ
reduced. Good location Call
614-992 ·8972
In M1ddleport, J bedroom, 1%
s torv housa Completety remodat ed. fully insu lated . carpet.
forced alf gas furnace Low
uttlituts. tenced-1n back y1rd,
storage bu il d ing . A1 h ing
•21 , 600 or m ake ofler Call
614-992-6018

Alhton bu ilding Iota with public
water. mobile homet permitted,
304· 676-2338 or 304-6762287
J ... rv·a Run Road, 1 acre lot,
good well, uptic 1yttem, met~
10•12 It building. 304·675·
2366.
•
40 ecru . approx 15 acr .. farm
bottom, plus cabin ideal for
hunter~. call 304·8l5-8883 after G·OO.

Renlals
41

For ule OJ rent . hst Matn St ,
Pomeroy, large home 3 bedro om, 1 bath, khchen. living
room. TV room, full basemtnt, 4
lots Call after 8 ·00. 814-9864427.
2 br, k1tchen. btthroom, wtth
laundry room, living room &amp;
dining roo m, all eleo Approx. 7
mll81 from P1 PI on At 12. ~ 2
uacts 1ppro". 1 acre more orl••
overtoo•lng K•nawha River
140.000. Coli 304•176·6440
betwHn 8:30 and 4 ·30.
L~

home. 3-4 br, allelec fully
carpeted. 11ntlhed baaement.
Ambroala. 7mtl81fromPt.PI on
Rt 82. City water, pavlld
driveway &amp; weptlc tank, situated
on v, acre. overlooking Kanawha
Rlvtr. 180,000. Call 304·878·
8440 botwten e,30 and 4,30. ·

74

1 bedrobm ept for rent Beaic
rent s~ans 121 &amp;. a month that
includes all utilities Oepoatt
requtred of 4200 Contact VIllage Manor Apt. Mlddlepon
814-992-7787 Equal Hous1ng
Opponynltv
·

5 l'l)(lm house tn Pomeror. 2
bldroorN 1 btth. IIUndry room.
1 CM gartgl , buih·in kitchen.
caft11oa.tely e..-pettd. draperies
fumithed, Very priyetenning. 5
nli(\ from town, No ptts. U75
pklt Llfilities Deposit requtred.
Sllnd rauma and referenCft to
1'h4 Oaity Senttnel, Bo.- 729 S.
Pomeroy. OhiO
Mou"ntain lodge style horne 3

bedrooms.

1 'h baths. large
tivirrg·dinin; room w1th ctthed·
ral ctilings.. fireplaea. Iaroe lcllchtn. full b.M~t. garage
Horne Of'l 30 acres with 2 b..-ns,
fenced pasture. pond. orchard
ssso. PM month. Caii614 -742-

211S.

3·4 bedroom hou• in Pomeroy,

2 bdr fumiltled duplp In
Racine. UOO per month. Depotit a reference required Call
614-949·2801
.
2 "bdr furnlthed duplex in
Racine . t200 Pttr month Dep·
osit &amp; reference required . Call
614-949·2101
TraiiM for rflt'lt 2 honft lnd 1
pony for tale. Call &amp;14-24&amp;·
6492

.....,.-, ~ed . rec. rvom Pay
own vtititl• . ~Mposd reqund .
-tall days 614-992-2381 or
614-992-2720.
2 bedrooms, full baaemfll'lt, frae
gu. t300 per month Call
614-843-5309
In Middleport, 2 bedroom, newly
remodeled house 1225 month
plu1 utilltiea. t150. depoatt.
Reterencn requtred Frigerator
and stoveav11lable No pets Cell
614·982-5018
2 bedroom home in Langsville.
Deposit and reference requtred.
614-742-2641 after 6 00 p.m.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

19B5 14"60 mobile home 1
mile below Gallipolis Dam on At.
7 Clll aftet 3 00, 814-2566089

All wood burning Uoves 1n
stock, reduced to cost. Swishar
Implement Call 614 -446 0476

2 bedroom, panty furniShed
apartment off Spring Ave ,
Pomeroy · Large patio and yard.
Call after 6 :00 pm. 614-9926886

AU Snapper and MTD mowers 1n
11ock on sa le now! Swtlher
Implement . Call 614 - 4460476

APARTMENTS, mobtle homes ,
I'IOusas Pt Pleesanl and Gelllpo ho . 614-446-8221 .
Furntshed one bedroom apt. all
electric, no pets, referen.c es Call
after 4 00 PM 304-675-3788 ...
In Middleport 2 bdr. fumis hed
ap1 . 1-304-882-2666

Furnished Rooms

45

1983 Dodge v~ ton ptckup
w· toppet, loaded, equipped for
towning , 13.000 m $7,500
ftrm 1983 Dodge Diplomet AT.
PS, PB, 11r, slant 6, 56,000 mi.,
$4,000 1978 26 It Terry
camper, rully self oontatned
w -awmng , atr, hitch Bt microwave , excellent eo nd , sleeps 6
$4,500 firm 14ft fishing boai
w-trailer 9425. Call 614-4461495

For rent Sleepmg Room'a and
light house keepmg rooms . P~rk
Central Hotel Call 614-4460758
Rooms for rent day w eek
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614~6 - 9580 . Rent as low as $120
month

46 Space for Rent

One htng size water bed, solid
oak bookcase headboard, all
acceuones. Roper microwave
oven &amp;. cart Norge upright
freel!ar. Washer &amp; dryer Call
814·266·6522 .

Trailer space for ren11n Ffac1ne
Call 614-949-2068.

2 bedroom. lcld1 no pets. t200
month plus ut1l1ttes. 8ulav1lle
Rd. Call 614-446-9204
2 bdr trailer m country Nice
area For more lnfornetion ctll
614·446-0059 or 304·676 ·
8209.' ' .
2 bdr. furnjshed V: mi. off 160
S166 mo plus depOsit Call
614·388-9651

275 gal . fuel o1l tank for sale
Call 614 - 266 - 8251 after
7'00PM .
F11her Grandpa Bear wood burner brand new retail over
1600 Last one •435 delivered
Call614 -446-9210 evanmgs

large 2 bdr. trall8f, 1 mi. out of
town on 68B. no pets Call
614-246· 9693 or 614-446 ·
1J23
2 bdr . mob1le home in country
completely furn , • " · cond . t250
mo Call 614-388-9806
Nice 2 bedroommobtlehome for
rent Near Racine Call 614992·5858
Nice 2 bedroomtre1ler for rent tn
Cheshtre. On mce lot Call
304-773-5828 .
12K65, 2 bedroom. furnished .
1185 month plu1 depo1it and
utilities . Caii&amp;U-992-7479
2 bedroom. furnla$td , good
clun condition. 1 child, no peu.
New Ha&gt;o~en . t 160. per month.
Call 304-882-2488.
1 2~t66 , 2 bedroo m. partially
turni1hed I 175 month. •1 00.
deposit. Calll14 992-7093

Steal culverts&amp; ft diameter 8 tt
d1amete. Up to 28 ft long · Call
614·256·1393

Wanted to rant trailer spaca,
small trailer tn Wilksville area
Joe Morgan, 614:446-0766
Roo m 11

Heavy duty gas station. type air
COtr'flreasor. S500. Call 614266-1393

49

For Lease

M1xed hardwood slabs S12 per
bundle Containing approx 1'h
tona. FOB OhiO Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 614 -9926461

Large flnt floor five-room apartment , 1 'h bath, newly redecorated . 1326 mo. plus utilities Ref &amp; dep. requtred Call
614-446-4426 or 446· 1819.

Beauty Shop equ1pment 2 complete we t stations . 2 all purpose
hydraulic cha1n, 3 drvert Call
614-986-4175
Sturdy cage• Us ed for rabbits.
&amp;20 each Can 614-985-4175 .

Merchandise

1971 Jeep Commando AKC
Registered Toy blach, female
Poodle . Spayed . &amp;200 No
checks Call 814-992-2607.

51 Household Goods

Wood 31 1ght 1rontdoorwith lock
and h111 ges. $60 Ca11614-9923359

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St , Gallipolis. Neyv &amp; used
w~d -coalstove•. 8 P.C wood LR
SUite $399. bunk beds 9199,
antron recllnefl 599. nBIN &amp;
u1~ bedroom surtes. rangea,
wrtnger washers, &amp; shoes New
liv~ngro om aultn 1199-t599,
lamps. also buy1ng coal Ill wood
stoves. Call 814-448-3169

Bedroom 1uite for nle. Complete t360 14 ft . ca mper br
sale. Gtve ua an ofler Call
61,4-992· 6873.
Platform scales 155 Call 614992-2184, days only

Firowood forsalo 835 per toad
or 5 toads tor $140. Delivered
and stacked. Call 614· 949~501 i ltar 5:00.

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV aata.
, Open 8AM to 6PM . Mon thru
Sat 614-.446-1699 627 Jr~
Ave. Gallipoli1, OH. '
'

firewood for aale Seesoned oa k
firewood. 614 · 742 -2292 .

'

"Wonder Coal" wood burner
with blo wer t 100.00 . 304-8963096

Valley Furn1ture, new 6 used .
l.arge 1ection of tJ.~ahty fumltu re 1 216 Eutern An
Galllpollt
'

Two lamps. curtalna. breahfaat
set, mttel cabinet, mattreu for
aale, 2311 lincoln Ave , Po~nt
Plenan1 .

lAYNE ' S FURNITURE
12d0 mobtle homa Very clean,
private tot No pett 1200
month, 1100 depo•it . Refer·
enc. reqwred Ctll 814·99211 73 or 814-992 -&amp;208 af1er
8 ·00pm
Two bedroom. air cond, Gallipolis Fetty, 2 blocks from Poat
Office, t 180.00 plus utilities.
rehencea, 304-67! -4B74.
2 bedroom all electric, •1 50.00
month plus ut iliti•. Gallipolis
Ferry. 304-675·4088

44

Apartment
for Rent

R~f!f1CV Inc apartment 2 bdr .

ut1l1t1es partly paid, nict, Call
304-675· 6104 or 304·676 ·
7928
Furnished ept adults only. Call
814·448-9823

Duplex for rent 848 Second
A&gt;o~e., GaHtpolta. 3 bdr Irvin·
groom, dlnlngroom, new kit chen, btckyard, rlfrig . .. range.
128&amp; plus utiliti11 &amp; ltturlty
deposit. Call 814·448-otto.

&amp;13'11 3rd. Ave 1 bdr. private
bath, •140 p., mo. Deposit
required Call 814-448·4222
bltWI!'" 8 &amp; e .
fumiahld apt.· d:35. Utllhltl
~old . 1 BR , 920 4th. Gall..,llo
•48·4418 lftar 7pm .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W•herl. dryers, refrigeretofl
rang81 . Skaggs Appliances:
Upp• River Rd. beside Stone
Cr., Motel. 814-44&amp;-7398

55 Building Supplies
8ulldlng Materials
Blodt, brick, aew• pip•, windows. lintele, etc . Claude Win·

New • uaed refrig , ranges,
Wllhtrs a dryers . 8 pc. wood
L.room IUit• UOO. Molloh.,
Fum., Rt . 7 North , GatupoU 1
Oh. 114·448· 7444.
'

6:35
7 :00

I~~=========::;:::::::::::~

~

56

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Canary Kennel
CFA Himalaylf'l, Peraien and
Slemeu hlttens AKC Chow
puppies. Call 614-446 -3844
after 7PM .
Halt Labrador S. heir Golden
Csll814· 246 · 9397

retr~ever .

Ref . Plot Coon Hound 5 vn old.
S200 Call614· 266· 1274.

4 p1ece Ludwtg drum set whh
cymbal B. carrying cue 1850
Call 614·446· 8633 ot 614·
367-7197
P1ano, Kimball , artist console.
1900 00 304-675-2611 after
4'00.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Now open, Iota large apples. all
\llrletlet All tru1tsand produ ce .
Jacka Market, Rt. 35, Henderton , W. Va.

Form Supplies

&amp; L1v es!ock
61

Mounteinaer Auto Body Parts,
131B 6th St. New Haven W Va
ha1 the largest II'Wentory of after
market parts m the area at low
low pricee. 73-80 GM fende r~
I 39 G M doore f79 73-79 Ford
71
Autos for Sale
lendera $36 Doors 699. We
new have short and long P U
GM bed Side, blazer Sides and
1913 Chevrolet Impala, verv eartv and late Ford bed sides in
good cond. 2B3 eng., good tires, , stock A lao parts for cars and
everything worka, $1,800. Call vans . badliners., step bumpers,
Sharp 775 ' apray gun and cup
614·446-9407
999, while they lut Battef'!es
1980 Pont1ac Sun B1rd good and eel. Also available a 3 year
cond . 41,875 Cell 614·367· rust thro ugh warranty on Ot.Jrtop
quality body part1 . Out'.Jde Wast
0644.
V1rg1ma Call 1-800-523·20;3
West - Vug1n 1a 1-800-654 -·
79 Ford Bronco good cond . new In
4667
t1r", new exhaust system, 361
modified 4 spd . S3, 100 Call
1980 AMC Spint. good motor
814-446·8383
front end 1974 Fo rd Granad~
1979 Oldsmobile Cullan good ' for ~ ~rta . good motor and
cond. Call 614-446-2026 after •transmluta n 304-882 2852 0 ,
882 3254
BPM

1982 Ptymouth Champ 4 spd .
low m1leage, sharp, $1,799.
Johns Auto Selea Ouiavllle Rd
Galhpolia
'

19 Camara , f -tops , cnuse,

a~r

AM -FM. caeseue . Blue metallic,
$3 ,300 Call 614-245·5884
after 5
79 Monte Carlo good condtt1on
11.200. Call 614-256-6608
.tter 5PM.
1988 Plymouth Tur11mo 5 ap d ,
•.mroof t5 ,:JJO Call 814 -446
1562
1982 Dodge Oipomet auto atr.
AM w~re r1ma, ·~.799 John 's
Auto Salas, Bulaville Rd , Galli polis , Oh.
Volkawagon flJna buggy, i300
Call614 ·256· 1393
1980 Chevette runs good .
02.000 con 614·266· 1393.
1984 Chevatte. 4 door , auto,
tactorv air, 12581 actual miln
L1ke new . 83996 Call Eddie
ft.pp at 614-843-6235.
1975 Chevv Impala. 62 000
actuel miles. $750. Call 614742 ·2187

Farm Equipment
' 71 Mercury BobCat. S1 50. Call

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S. 36 West. Jackson. Ohio
614- 286·845,,
Maney Fergu10n, New Holland,
8ueh HO'g Sales a Service. Over
40 used tractors to choose from
B. mftl)late Ina o1 new &amp;. uted
equ1pment. largest Mlec::tion in
S E OhiO
•r

614·882· 7836

Gra&gt;o~1ty

bed w.;on &amp;. haul gr11n
elev•tor Call after 8:30 814446· 3337

of extras, pakl •3.600 will

62 Want ad to Buy

·~Chevy II Nove. exccond. lotl
t2,500 ;J04-675-2296

••II

19BO Omega euto. air cond, 2
door. fmnt wheel drive , 4 cyl,
~;.•2 •~:nng, bett offer. 304-

e:

1980 Honda Clv1c. Nnl go o d.
looha good, •1.000 00. S foot
complete utellite ayltem
130Q 00.004-876-7642
.

1----------72.
City Farm Supply, 61 4 -448 ·
2986

63

Livestock

Good male brush goat. gentle.
$20 Call 814· 251· 1328 .

I msporl ;i lloll
71

Autos for Sale

1918 Ch•rolet Sprint plua. 1
~ . trentmlllion. rldlo , ex.
cond . Very low mileage. E11cel·
mileage. Calll14~ 24e-

=:J"

ten. Rio Gr~nde, 0 . Call 814·
246·8121

80 AMC Conoord OL . Payoff
• 1800. All nfw tlrt~ , 1"11¥111 water
• Concrete bloclt1 allailel v.ard or ,..,.., , 48 ,000 mll11. C.H 814·
delivery. ~aaon atnd. Gallipolis · :188· SI822 ..
Bloc~ Co.. 123\1 Pine St.,
GoOd used floor model and
GalllpoUs, Ohio Call 814 ·446- 1985 Ford 2 door Esoort. 4 ~d , ·
pon:tble· c:olor TV and •rvice1.
2783.
air, AM·FM. new tlrN t2 H9
Call 814·448· 1148.
John ' s Auto Sal•, auiavlllf Ad '
Pola Building• by Quality Oelllpolla. Oh.
·
Whirlpool Wllhtr a d!Yer. couch
Bulldera. Workthopa, carpons.
6 chair, .-.cllntr, bedroom auhe,
anlmtl ahtttet'a, gtreg,.. Free 117t C.ptl4 O'f'l ,, 4 apd., turbo,
Iampi &amp;, coffee t8blt, end tHin. ettlmat11. Phone 114·889·
ahopo 11480. CoU 814Clal 814-448-3224.
7121 .
318· 1121.

nl.,.

1982 4x4 wheal drive. 8 .2l
dle1el 4 IPd .. lock outs. Cell
614-388-8'745.
1978 2 ton GMC Nptic tanh
p.l~ing tn.tek &amp; hoMa J oh n's
Auto Sal" , Bulavllle Ad. Galli polis. Oh.
1988 Dodge pickup 6 cyl , Auto
trans •, ahor1btd , 18000 Call
304·876· 2835.
1976 Ford pickup. 44 ,000
nilte. Camp• top . Call e1 4448·0254.

71 Ford Ranger XLT, eutomatl c,
Pl . Coli 814· 288·1222
1874 86 pa11engar International bUs. auto trana, new tires ,
n.tna great, t2,000 Cell 614·
2118· 1383.
Wreckflf 88 Chevy 440 Holmet,
IWinging booma , 12.000 . Call
514-268-1393.
1974 GMC 1,4 ton truck , auto ,
heavy duty 1873 J.ep low
mileage. Call304-876-1386.
1975 lntamat"'nal Lonutar, 2
ton, 22ft flat bed, exc sh1pe,

Services
81

Home
lmprov~ments

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lif etime guarantee local references furnish ed
Fraa estimates Cell collect
1 614-237-0488, dey or n1ght
R oger a 8 eseme n1
Waterproofmg
RON'S Tel evi11o n Service
Hou 1a ca ll s on RCA, Quaza r,
GE . Spectelmg in Zenith Call
304· 676 -239B or 614·4462464 .

EEK &amp; MEEK

''

JCM CJf LOJE. LAST
I30r A MOMe..Jr...

•.-

.

.

~- -

I

~w-'~·~·------------~----__; 9
~RT~ MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
r-7.___ _ _ _.,..---,

.,

THEY'RE THt; WRL.DI;;
EJREATE6T BALLET
ARTISTS.

\

THAT'e A LOra= NAMI:
R;R A a::lt.JPLE OF TIPP'f·

CARTER"S PLUMBIN G
AND HEATING
Cor Founh and Ptne
Gall lpolis. Ohio
Phone 614 ·446-3888 or 614446-4477
Excavating

BARNEY

GOod-1 Excavating . baaament 1
fo oters. drivewey1. septic tank s'
landlcaping Cell anyttme 814:
448~ 4637 , Jam al L DaviSOn,
Jr owner .

84

1!.

WtN THEY FIGGER A
DOG'S AGE.OL' BULLET·- VOU
MUST .BE PUSH IN' A HUNNERT

Electrical
Refrigeration

G&amp;S R epa 1r Se.rv1ce
Resktent ia i-Commarcial Indus:
trial General Repair, Appliance
repair , alec. repair &amp; contract·
ln g, lice naed meater electr1c1an
12 yn exp Insured Contact Bill
Sturgeon 675 -170B or Kevin
Gaul 676 - 4252 24 -Hour
Serv lce

,.
:;;:::;~:::::::::::: . ,,
85

General Hauling

Jamea Bova Wat er Servtce Also
pools filled. Call 614-256-114 1
or 11 4 -446 ·1175 or 6 14-44 6
79 11
Dillard's Water Delivery Clst·
erns, poo l, 1St well. Anytime but
Sunday. 61 4 -446-7404

87 .

Upholstery

SNAKE!!
"•

••

811 Caravan air, cru lae. tiltwheel,
AM -FM Clllette. Calll14 -258·
8309. 010,900.
' 72 Chevy '4 ton , 4 wheel dnve,
runs good. new tiree. extra
engine, trantml••"'n and body
pana. t1 .800.00 . 304-e78-

2704
'73 OodgtMaxl V1n. goodcon'd,
GOOd motor, 304-875· 7147 or
178-2088 .

DON'"f
THE WIND WI
MAKE 'THEM

••
••
•

WA"T'ER!!

••
'
•'
••
•

•

'•
••

••

Vans &amp; 4W. D .

1973 AMC Jeep good condl·
tlon. Coli 814· 448·9835.

'•

WAS 1tiAT1 Wlll1 Wfb '!

c::::;;..;...-c.....Jt

&amp; Heating

83

TRISTATE
• UPHOlSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave . Gaii Jpo hs,
614· 446 ·7833 or 614 -446 ·
1833.
.

.••

11

'(
(

R &amp; M Cu1to m Couche!l and .~ :
Reupholttery, St. Rt 7. Crown ~, t
City, 0~ 614·266 ·1470, E•e • •'
614·446· 3 438. Open daily 8 to v 1
15. Sat. 9 :30 to 1·30 Old &amp; new .,..; :
Upho stered.
r '•J•

BEST RE6ARDS, 'lOUR .
E)(· SWEETJ.lEART ''

TOE D\NCE:RS.

Game
@ NHL Hockey: Edmon1on
et Philadelphia (3 hrs ) L1ve.
fa (!) Toe Close for Com·
fort
Ill 1Il Judga
(f) Fall an~ Rise of Ragin·
· old Perrin
® WhNI of Fortune
Qj) (j}) ® Jeopardy
\lJ) Benson
7:36 Cil Tho Honeymooners
8:00 II Cl) ®Cosby Show (CC)
The Huxtable fam1ly plans
an evenmg w1th 1he Count
Basie
Orchestra
for;
Grandma and Grandpa's
60th wedding anniversary
In Stereo.
(I) Coral Jungle: Th• Hun·
t_ry See
·
® Ill CII Major League
Bueball: National League
Championship Gemo 2 The
New York Me1s and the
Houston Astros c ompete
for the Nat1onal league
championship. (3 hrs.)
fJl (!) MOVIE: 'Dallaa Cowboy Chao~oadors ff'
IIJ MacNoii·Lehrer Newshour
® Qj) il}) Simon &amp; Simon
(60 min.)
[J) Living Planet: A Ponrait
of the Earth (CC) Anenborough ventures to the Himalaya s and Antarctica. two
~ of 1he earth"s most fng1d
zones and explores its ex·
traordinary vanety of ltfe
forms . (60 min.) (R) .
@ MOVIE: 'Tho Goodbye
Girl'
. 8:06 II) MOVIE: 'To Catch a
Thief'
8:30 D Cl) (ill Family Ties 1n
Stereo
D Cl) (ill Cheers (CC) Cliff
ftnds a prospecttve husband for his mother when
he meets a wealthy man m
the bar In Ste reo
(I) 700 Club
IIJ Nova: Case of the
Fro1en Addict (CC) Doctors
become detectives when a
prisoner m a San Jose jail
. becomes paralyzed with
the symptoms of Park in·
son ·s Disease (60 mm.) (R).
® Qj) II2I Knoll Landing
(CC) Karen 's kidnapper
sets f1re to the farmhouse
wh e re she is imprisoned,
wh1 la Grog reali1os 1ha kid napper's 1dent1ty and sets
ou1 10 track h1m down. (60
m1n .)
•
I]]) Myotory: Shroud for a
Nighting1le (CC)'In this in Siallment, Ch ief Dalgliesh
attempts to question• a
gravely ill Martin Dettinger
about the Sinister pol1t1cal
overtones of the chief's
current mu rder cas e. '( 60
min.l
9:30 D Cl) (ill Night Court After
Dan saves Chnstme's life,
he 1nsls1s th o1 she pey him
beck by sleeping with h1m.
10:00 I) Cl) ® Hill Strool Bluea
Hunter com es U'nder department pressure f or his
o ff· duty shoott ng of an
armed teenager while Davenport slows the wheels of
just1ce to protest a proposed cut in the publ 1c defe nders' wo rk f orce (60
mm .)
•
fJ) (!) Odd Couple
1IJ Tho Africans (CC) ThiS
premiere episode exam·
lnes Afnce 's geography
end clime1e. end 119 aHec1
on Afncan hiStory and
IJ.'OW1h . (eo m1n.)
® Qj) 1I21 Kay O' Brien (60

. r.l:-r-z.:;.A..:.:R'TE:....cMI 'l

.ILl I.

·.If:-,lrT.I~~~;...;.I---1
G R I D I I.;f ~here's an art. babysitting.
::;:·;-~~~ book
lent Hey eat
lo watch
r~=-~~-:;:~·
·
while TV, r,.d
to

air~ NIWI

.,_,J...-J.

L• ...i..I.-..L
. ..l-..-:1-::::o'L
•

-

8

t 0:25 1Il MOVIE: 'Skyjacked'
10:30 (I) Entorprloa USA •
@ Bicycle Racing: Whea1
Thins Men'8 Cycling (60
min.)
Ell (!) INN News
[D Tony_Brown's Journal
1 1:00 I) Cl) CIJ ilJ IIJ ® Qj) tDI
® Newa
(I) Hardcaade and McCormick
·
Ell (!) M'A"S"H
lfil Constitution: That Dellcste Balance
\lJ) Tho Honoymoonera
1 1:05 IIl Kentucky Fried Chicken
Blu~reoa Muoio Feotlval
11 :30 D lll® TonlghtShowTo·
night's guests are Richard
Pryor and Sean Penn 160
min.) In Sterao
@ SportoCanlttr
•
Cll WKRP In Clncinna11

..

Ill tDI Night Hoet Nicola
finds herself being 1error1Zad by three street punks.

~

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-lETS

'

.

ANSWEIS

Useful - Happy- ~ ,.... 7hMt - PLUS PARTS
Mechanic to trainee: 'Tall him the job wiH coet $175 11 he
doeen't flinch, add PLUS PARTS."
•

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

A long shot
pays off

NORTH

lf.t.u

+96 2

"6

• 963
+K Q 10 5 U

By James Jacoby

Undisciplmed pre-empttve bods cre- WEST
EAST
ate problems not only for the oppo· +J 10
+QB754
nents but sometimes for you and your "KQJ94
"8 7 2
• J8 7 5
partner as well. Look at today's deal. t K 10
+A
North traded on favorable vulnerabili- +J987
ty to stick on a rather loose three-club
SOUTH
opening, but I know very successful
+AK3
experts who would make the same bid.
"Al053
If South knew that the three-club bid
+AQ 42
+&amp;2
showed garbage, he would have
passed Instead, hoping for better
Vulnerable: East· West
clubs in the North hand, he tried three
Dealer: North
no-trump. ·
These days even a novice player Wool
Nortb Eaot
Soallt
will know to hold off taking the ace of
3+
Pass
3NT
Pass Pass
clubs immediately, eventually deny· Pass
ing declarer the use of dummy's club
Opening lead: " K
suit. Any declarer worth his salt
knows that will happen. So if you're
not vulnerable and not doubled, why '------'----------....J
not play all out lor the distrobution
that will allow you to m~ke your er played to the I 0 of clubs to make
contract?
five club tricks and his ambitioUJ
South allowed the king and jack of game contract.
hearts from the West hand to win the South Made a nice play, but I'm just
first two tricks. West now switched to perverse enough 'to wonder what
the spade jack. Declarer won the ace .would have happened if West had
and played a club. When West fol- blithely put up the jack of clubs when
lowed with lhe eight, declarer played the suit W89 lint played. Is it conceiv/ow from dummy. Of course East had able that declarer ,would still have
to win the singleton ace, and South !at- played low from dummy?

'

~~~-~t.f
by THOMAS JOSEI'H
ACROSS
I Use a
letter-

DOWN
I Ferry's
landing

opener

place

5 Hurl
9 Capacity
II Town
In Mass.
12 Witless
13 Precept
15 · - o' My
Heart"

18 Comic,
Louis -

2 Large ship
3 Pic ture
4 - foil
5 Provide
party need.o
6 Sailor's
assent
7 Jo hn Glenn
is one
24 Breed
8 Vocal
of dog
trill
25 Extend

18 "I Camera" 10 Sinew
19 Execute 14 Pastry
21 "High - "
treat
22 Geological 17 Craving_
20 Lack

period

the right
28 Meek

31 Tenant's
contract
32 Type face

36 The same

(Lat.)
27 Tense
38 Actor
28 They're Re&lt;h Linden
in Bostoo 40 Do certain

28 Yearling 23 Shivering 30 Little bit
24 "Harold - " r.'""'Tr'"ft"'T.I,..

handiwork

of old

comics

26 Late

Italian
statesm...an~~,. h.-r-1-27Watch n
28 Musical

note

29 Knock
1

'

ror dOing

30 Walk like
an Infant
~3

Swiss
canto I}

34 English
river

35 Yale
s tude nt

37 Churc h tax
39 Sober

m++-

41 Ardor

42 Und e rgo
43Trust
44Abound

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here'1 how to work It:

'""'

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A IS used
lor the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters
apostrophes,the length and fonnatlon of the words are ali
hints. Each day tl:}e code letters are different.
10..9

SH

G Q S

HA

E

VC HA
S K U

Q A

Z Q AU
SKU
NHGS

S K U

·y E I

G KE YU

EAY

RHHO

MUWYVW U

cuw .zuxs

·,

QG

wu -

Z W U -G K N U AS . - 0 E AU
~ V G S t1 A
Ye~~terday't Cryptoqaote: TilE BEST WO MAN HAS
ALWAYS SOMETHING OF A MAN'S STRENGTII ANO
TilE NOBLEST MAN OF A WOMAN'S GENTLENE'ss . OJNAH MARIA MULOCK ,

170 min .) ·
12:00 (I) Burno &amp; Allen
CD NFL YNrbook
IIJ Jtfftroono
1!11 (!I Rawhide
llJ 1IJ Taloa of the Untx·
jltCittd
12:30 8 Cil (ill Lato Night with

I
'·

the chuckle quoted
by fllltng 1n the misamg words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

CRYPTOQUOTE

• (I) ABC Newo NIQh1i lne
(j) tHI Magnum, P.l.

!l,

1
the kld8 are

and

I

It

L E E M R Y , -.
l--lr-:ilris(:..,:b,_~I..:.~T.~6-l 0 Complete

g,oo

fa ffi T•xl

~--~--~----~--·~
Mowrey ' s Uphol atermg serving ,
lric0i.lntyarea21 years The best
In furniture upholstering Call
304 - 875 · 4164 for tr ee
estimates
•

MQMENT1 WI:~

&lt;

1;;::::::;;:::::;::;::::::=
82
Plumbing

IJ.JSOO.Oll,.t;;=::::;:;=;=::;;:::::=:===

•

WHAT

'

Rotary or cable too l drilhng
Most wells co mpl eted same day.
Pump ulas and se r111ce 304·
896 -3802
Ashby Conetru ct1 on earpentery, re,nodehng, room addition ..
cement block worh roo fm g
Interior and exter~o; patnttng:
ai ding . Free estimates 304676 -644 6 or 676-5 15 2

TI-lE. f'Yl.ltJ a: Lalt. LASTS
A UFE11ME. ~H

Til~

Starks Tree and Lawn SeN1ce
Hed ges, s hrubbs . bu s h e~
t r~mmed
lan dsca pin g an d
stump removal. W1ntertzetion of
lawn and leaf removal 304676·2010.

Watte rso n ' t Water Hauling ,
3:»4· 575~2886 .
re11onabl e rates , lmmed 1ate
2,000 ga llon delivery, cis terns,
11n Ford 2&amp;0 , utility bed poott. wa ll, etc call 304·678 1ogtther With rllbullt 400 engine -2919.
to
:114·bo
882·lnotallad,
3437.

73

&amp;108 !

'"'*

fully, salt eontamed , crank out
awnmg, excellent coJJd Call
614-367·0682
•

Trucks for Sale

Now buying shell corn or ear

com . Call torlatHtquotel A1ver

n;~

5AY MY ..S"I(;NAL;&gt;
BE:E=N SC~AMBI-EP
A L-ONG TIMe.

19 ? 1 Rover 19ft travel tra1l er.

5

1978 Multang , '"c cond, 4 cyl,
ttd shift, 11,800.00 f1rm Cell
304-87&amp;- M35. If no answer
leave mesaeg

pF:~Ftfe.l

A LOT Of pEopLe-

' 79 Ford P.. to lletlon wagon ,

Ollvert, M-M. Deutz 1ractora.
Skters Equipment Co ., 304676· 7421

I~;;:::;:;;:::::;:::;:::::;~::::

Motors Homes
"&amp;Campers

1976 LTD Ford V-8, radio,
pq.wer windows. elf condition er
8500. Call614 ·992 ·3311

New and used parts for Whttat ,

:c·o Ft:

SATElLITE DISH CO.

Fo.R

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . expe·
ttanced carpenter, elect nc1an,
mason , pa1nter, roofing (includ
lng hot tar 11pp lt ~at1on) 304676·2088 or 676·7147.

304-675 ·4230 or 304-675·
7669 after 8

Homelite chain uw ula, Supar
XL-AO 3 e cu Inch engint.
mtnuel and ' auto oiling. 16 In
power tip blvl289.00 Waheve
over 30 good ul8d and rtbulh
saws tn llock from f75.00 to
t160 .00 . Wa will give e free
ch.lin or eltct chain uw sharpener w1th the purch ... of eny
Ulad IIW. Ketflf' SMVIce Center, St . Rt . 87, leon, W. Va .
Phone :JJ4·895·3874.

FtfANK AND ERNEST

Fetty Tree Tr~mming ; stump
removal. Call304 675-1331

1980 four door Cha&gt;o~etu ,
84.000 miles, $950 .00. 304·
875 -7400 or 675-3724 after
6,00

(jJ) Barney, Miller
7;05 II) Sanford and Son
• 7:30 D Cl) (f) New Newlywed

Get your ca r ready for wtnler
Pa1nt fob starting $,89.00
:D4· 676 · 2663 after 4 p m

79

(]) Merda SportaLook
Ell
Jefferson•
(f) 3-2.-1, Contact (CC)
lfi) Under Sail
ClJl Facto of Life
Ill Andy_ Griffith ·
.1) Cl) ll1l NBC Newt
(]) B..t of Bill Dance
® . ( f ) ABC Newo
fJ) (Jj Hogen's Heroes
(f) Doctor Who
,
® Ill tDI CBS News
I]]) Body Electric
CHl Good Tlmu
Ill Beverly Hlllblffleo
I) Cil PM Maga1lne
(I) Hardcutle and McCor·
mlck ·
@ Sport.Center.
® Entertainment Tonight
ET VISits Richard Crenna
'on locatiOn in Toronto for
the film1ng of his upcom1ng
TV movie, "The Ruling PasSion".
·
fJ) .(!) M'A"S'H
Ill Cll People's Court
IIl Nluhtly Busineaa Report
®Newa
·
I]]) MacNeii·Lehrer Newah·

our
Ill tDI ®Wheel of Fortune

Auto Repair

1979 Cougar. 302 automatic
PS, PB, AC, AM·FM . Call
614-949 ·2092

1980 Buick Skylarh, 4 door,
JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
11.200 00 Call 304 -675 CENTER SR 36 W. G1lhpohs
1293
Ohio Call 614 -441-97n, eva:
614· 448 ·3692 Up front treetors with w."anty over 40 used , 77 ChryJierNewpon good co nd
Call 304-676·2377
tractors. 1000 tools .
Ford JublielriCIOr plows &amp; d11h ,
$2,000. Call614 ·268-8288 .

77

.

1967 C~m•ro New engine,
tran1mi11eon. exhault, and tires
t2300. Call 304-n3-5649

a

Seers video arcllde, Atari oo mp.atlble, lncludH 2e game cartrldg•. game peddl11, }oy atlck.
and ttortge ca.. •125.00 or
bnt offer Call 304-876· 5070
after 5.00 PM .

6:05
6:30

350 diesel engine, VW parts,
1973 GMC ptckup truck Calt
614· 388· 83&amp;8 .

•u.

Uaed Fum1ture: Washer a
dryer, eiKtrlc range, gaa range ,
wood 1able &amp; 2 bend! a~, beds.
driiHt', &amp; rethner 3 mll11 out
8ulavllle Ad. Open SAM to
&amp;PM. Mon thru Sat.
114-448·0322.

Rearrange latter• of the
ocromblod wordo 1&gt;0'
low 10 form four slmplo wordt.

EVEN!NQ
D CIHIJ O ()) ID Cll tDI

£P.

Dodrill' • Auto Pans 2112 m1.
Nonh of V1nton on St Rl. 180 is
the place to buy your uaed auto
parts. You'll recaive faet
frlandly service 9 the best useti
part• ava1lable. Call 614 -3889615

1-- - - - - - - - -Sofas and ch•rs priced tram
For Ale sm1ll pony. t&amp;O. Call
8396 to 0995. Tiobl11 160 and
up to •125 Hlde-a·beda t390 Ltwn Chief, 32 lnd'l cut , one 814·387-CM124 .
to 169&amp;. Recliners 1225 10 year old. lawn trlcto r. t900.00 .
10 hens for sal1. t2 . each . Call
0376 l.ompa SZB '9 1126. 304·882·3770 .
morning or ev.nlnga 814·7ol2·
Dlnettas 1109 and up to 149&amp;.
Wood 1able w~ 6 cl1alrt,.t285 to Craftsman 180 amp welder end 2125.
t795 Dflk 0100 up to 8375. Craflamln 10 Inch l'ldial arm
Registered Quarter Horse, geld ·
Hutch• t400 end up Bunk saw , 304-n3-687B
ing, 6 yrs old, good ..u . well
beds complete w-menreuea
U95 and up to tl95 Baby bed 1 lota o1 bathroom item1 and new broke. trellers well, ttaa been
t110a •175 Mattrt~sn;or tox · toya, Wed Thurs Fri. at the ehown, payment plan with ap·
Henderson laundre Mat.
provad cr•fit, trail rid11 wall.
aprklga full or twin
firm
plcod to 1111, 1800, 00. 304·
t73, and 183 Queen sets t225.
King t350 4 drawer ctl•t 165. Emeraon VCR , one year old, 8'76·8789.
304-896· 3394 .
Or11sers t89 Gun cltbtnett a
10. a 12 gun. Gas or etectri~
Hay 1!. Grain
range t376 . Ia by manreaaea Rough cut lumber, oeaoonad 64
136 &amp; •45. Bed ffam• UO
wtlnut 60 cents board foot
·---------tlO
King frame 160. Good Whi1e oak 11 25 per lhounnd: ..
Can be Hen Walker Wrecker, large round b1la of hay *10 H .
setecUon of bedroom kllth
metal eab1n8U, haldbo•d• uO B·OO AM to 5 00 PM. 304 ·875- Square bllll 11 .2&amp; ea. Ctll
4412
1nd up to tee.
814 - 441~ 1052 after 8.
•

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Transmissions, all types. over.
front, rear, 4 wheel dnve and
parts. Will deliver. Cell614 ~3792220

614-~7 - 7216

Trailer apaces. small children
accepted, At 1, Locust Road
back of K &amp; K Mobile Homes.
304·676-1076

Trailer 2 bdr middleagad couple,
W-0 , ck)ae to town, ref . req Call
614-446 ·4063 .

76

Tra1ler step• for sale $26 Call

Spac1ous tratler lots for rent wdtl
playground end l)lcnic facihties.
at Fam1ly Pnde Mobile Ho me
Park, Rt . 2. Gallipolis Ferry. W
Va . 304-676-3073

6 :00

0 four

®Ntws

Dolar- 460 John Deere dour , 6
w a y blade . good cond .
510,600 Call 614- 384·6270

It •126ft Ca11614 992-3194.

10/9/86

fiAt lAlLY
. "IlLII

(I) BIQ Valley

Cocker SpWiiel pups, AKC miniature Schnauzers, CFA Pers1an
Guns for sale Ithaca model 37 , Cets. Sl•mete kittens for sale
Deerslayer 1 2 ge pu tr'fl shot- 614· 992·2807.
gun, new In box , unftrad , IDlng
$275 Winchester Can.:l11n Pa- Registered Pit Bull pupplea.
Cific Centennial rifle 32 win spc . Show champion 11red . t100 .
each Cell 614-843 · 6164
n8W' In bo". unfired . 1 or 2.700.
esktng S450 Wtnch•ter N.R A.
Centennial r~fla 30 -30 eel , new
57
Musical
in box; unfired $460 WindlesInstruments
ter Blcentenmel carbine 30· :KJ
cal , naw 11'1 box, unftred 8600.
Ca1161 ,4-446 ·9407
Snare drum set. e11c , cond ..
Naw bed for 86 Ford PU Call
S160 Trombonew1th case 890.
614-446-4292 .
Call 814-448-4141

2 bedroom. furntahed apartment
for rent Adults only Call
614-992-2749

2 bdr . 111 utllltln paid e)lcept
alec . fum . or unfum .. sec
deposit required Convenient '
location Call 614-446-8558 or
47 Wanted to Rent
614-446-4778

••eel.

2-3 bedroom houu In Pomet"O¥
Unfumlahtcl. Sugar Awn ,,.·1,
cioN to tchool, very nice Pay
c;awn utllltl.. end deposh: required . Ooy 114-982-2381 or
814· 892·2720.

1 bedroom apanment Newly
carpeted. HUD approved ~ 402'h
24th St , P1 Pleasant. Call
614 ·992·6tfti8.

2 tra1lar spaces in Middleport 50
Nice 12x60 2 bdr on Rt 35 2
m1ln ffom ho1phal. towards
Rodney Cla l 814-245-6223 or
114-446-3897

1 bedroom ept. in Middleport an Nicety furnished mobile home
utllitiea pakt 1200 P• month.
CA 8. haa1,
location,
t100 dapoolt Call 814·992· · adults
ortly CeiiiS14-446·0338

81511 daya or 114-992-8763
evenlnoa .

Plastic c11tern state approved ,
plastiC sep11c tanka, plastic
culverts, metal culverts ,RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son, Oh 614-288-5930 .

fuly turnishld. w-d . miCtOwave.

2 bdr. unfurnished apt. m Crown
City Call 614-258-6520

Houses for Rent

1 bedroom apartment upatairs .
Newly carpet ed throughout
Partly furnished . Call 614-9925908

Vi~wing

1986 Kawasaki KX80 · Vary
good condition. Muat sell Call
814·99.2· 3377 after 4 30 p l'fl.

64 Misc. Merchandise

Callahan '• UNCI Tire Sh-op Over
1.00011res. size.s12. 13, 14 , 1&amp; ,
18. 18 .5. B miles OUI Rt. 218
Call 614-266·6261

t 1iU. ~ i1lll5 LllTLi~W&amp;~al

M C?tortycles

1988 HondaV. 65 Magnum. Call
304· 675· &amp;360 o• 304· 675 ·
31142

Kenmore waaher and dryer
1460 00. 304-675 -2058
'

Ap.artments for rent In Pomeroy

Television

Mli I:ICH ~

Green 10fe bed 826 00 Brown
10ra and chair t4e DO. King •i•a
heedb()ard 845 00 . $100 DO for
all Phone 304-B82- 2334

So Chas . W 'IJ At k for 1...----------~---~------... One and two bedrooms Call
Mr W1 lham9on
I
~ 614 -992 - 6216 .

Unafra1d m¥1, woman or couple
10 stay mghts '' House Set "

uny Wright

Bamco mattroes QUeen li:r:a,
Sacropedic. 80 x80 , 1 week old,
304-n3-59oa .

SW

Need IBdy to live 1n w1th elderly
cou ple l etart , WVa Call 304

®by

GE aloe range 30 lnctl• whhe
304· 676-8461
.

Furnished efficiency 1160 utilitiel plid, share bath. 701 4th,
Gallipolla. Call 446-4418 after &amp;
pm.

d.splay clown s Material aapphed Send stamped self add~tlssed l!f!velope, Hawks Land-

f,~~~~~.,;~ ,::;:~~. ~dd;' 1

Household Goods

Unfurn . 4 rooms &amp; b•th, c.hlrally loc1ted, no pets, ref &amp; sec '
dep. Call 814-448·0444.

Fumiahed apt. 1 bdr 123&amp;
ut1l11ie1 patd. 701 4th Galhpoh1.
Call448 -4416 after f; pm.

Asse mblers Wanted eam up to
$60 00 per dav asse mbling

Two sa lespersons needed to
SB!VICe a NatiOnal Advert1aing
ca mpat gn du r1ng October
S25 00 pef week potential if

61

Apartment
for Rant

KIT

Kin; ab:t w•terbed very good
condhlon, t17&amp;. Ctll 614·379·
2386.
'

The 0 .0 Mcintyre Park Otatrict
IS taking applications for c•ntfi ed DlU1e» Aerobic toStructot~
unt1l October 15 Call 614-448·

4612, e.-c.

Thursday, October 9., 1986

Pomeroy Middfeport, Ohio

The

I

..

'

David lettermen Ton ig ht' s
gues1 11 Martm Mull (60
min.) In Stereo
•
Cil Beat of Groucho
(]) Avia tion Spec ial: Flight
Ou01t (60 min.) (R)
(]) MOVIE: 'The Fountain.
head'
()) ABC Newo Nlghtflne

�·.
PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

..

Sale I

BLANKET
SALE!
Our entire stock· salt priced.

EUREKA QUIC.K-UP
SWEEPER .

Solid colots, pallt!lls. All first

quality. Buy now for yourseH
or Chnstmas gi•ing.

•MEN ' S NECKTIES .
.
•VAN HEUSBN DRESS SHIRTS
oMEN'S CORDUROY JEANS
•MEN ' S BASIC DENIM JEANS .
•BOYS' BASIC JE~NS
·
4BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS
•MEN 'S DRESS BELT's
•MEN'S SP'O Rr'SHIRTS
•SWEAT SHIRTS 8o PANTS

$2900
EUREKA IIINI·MITE HAND SWEEPU ·

ELECTRIC
BLANKETS INCLUDED

$1995
LADIES' INTIRE STOCK

,-I

i) J
!/

BUY NOW AT TIISE
GREAT CHRISTMAS
IN OCTOBER.
SALE PRICES!

I

\

\

J

$' 3 ~88

·I

II

(

Casual and Dressy Blouoses by Judy
Bond, Gailord and Laura ~e
Sizes 8 to 44-Reg. Sf4 to S37

YHS FORMAT

lj

$7 66 TO $33 96

I' 'I

f'

BLOUSE SALE

'

$10 96 TO $2886
MEN'S
WINTER JACKET

SINCE laM

car•hartt

HOODED'
SWEATSHIRTS
Polyurethane foam lining,
machine washable. lllavy
zipper front. Attached hood
with draw string. Regular
and extra large sizes.
Solid color.

Our entire seltction on sa" ·
naw. Regular and extra large
sizes. Leather Jackets
included.

•

Our entire stack of
Wrangler jeans in sizes
6 to 46 and 3/4 to

ALL JEWELRY

15/16

20°/o

Reg. $20 JEANS ••• sl7.59
Reg. S24 JEA~S .... SJ9.19
Reg. S28 JEANS •••• S22.39

Reg. S26. 99 .......... Sale 522.99
Reg. S31.99 ..........
$27.99

OFF

Save ,20°/o
Layaway For
Christmas

I
LITTLE GIRLS'

.~

Playtex®

'

'

DRESS
SALE
Special Christmas in Oc·

"

•

/

/

Sale

~

~ ---- - -· -,

20°/o OFF .

to~r

sale prices on our
new fall dresses.
Sizes 3 to 24 mos., 2 to
4, 4 to bx, 7 to 14.
Reg. IJO to 140

ALL
PLAYTEX
\ \
.I PRODUCTS

/

Sale $798

'

SLACKS
SALE

•

I

~.\

at y

Pick your favorite from our

By·HELEN THOMAS

The president planned to rl'leet today with Secretary
of State .George Shultz. Wl)lte House chief of staff
Donald FU!gan and national security affairs adviser
John Poindexter.
Reagan's chief arms negotiators also traveled to
Reykjavik to be on hand to provide asslstan.ce:
Pobldexter told reporters. ~·We're well prepared."
Gorbachev arrives today but Reagan will walllDllll
Saturday to open private tal'~ with ttte Soviet leader
at Hofdl House, the legenda~y haunted oousethat will
serve as their meetblg plaet.:.
.
One admlrl!stration aldP dented reports that
Reagan and Gorbachev w~;~re ready for a "hand·
shake" agreement on an accord on medium-range
missiles.
.
"An agreemept on intem1E,'dlate rang\' JlUsslles 6

UPl White House RepOrter ·
. REYKJAVIK. Iceland (UP! I - President Reagan

·and his key advl.sersaremeetlngtoday, preparing for
:til€ weekend summit with &amp;Jvlet leader Mikhail
.Gorbachev and one aide warnS that a ooped-for
· agreement.ln one area of arms roouctlon Is "not a
:done deal "·
: The 75-year-old president had a low-key arrival in
:drizzly Reykjhvlk with greetblgs at Keflavlk airport
from Iceland's President Vlgdls Finnbogadotur and
·ottter Icelandic officials.
' Reagan plans to make courtesy calls on
:Flnnbogadotlir and Prime Minister Stelngrimur
:Herrnannsson to thank them for making arrange·• ments for the summit in a record one week's time.

selection in the Housewares

Billfolds ............ Sl2 .80

Department, 1st floor.

R"!!·

hoods.

commltteesald. anextra 54.&lt;XXljobs
\voutd have been available b1 the
domestic industry and 2.8 million
tons of steel manufactured abroad
and sold here blstead would have
corne out of U.S. mills.
"The committee finds that while
the president's steel program has
reduced ttte surg\' of steel Imports
into the United States, It has not .
done so sufficiently to eliminate the
threat to ttte existence · of oor
domestic steel!ndustry." the report
concluded.
•
,
Admbllstratton officials have ac·
knowledged the program' s effec·
tiveness was hampered by &amp;art-up
problems in latel981andearlyl985,
bu! tttey ·said the partial success
obtained so far·shows the effort wUl
work over the klng run.
However. the committee sa,ld the
prog!"am was fundam entally
nawed b1 that it did rot apply
lmporlllmits On a global basis and

JUNIOR SIZES 3/ 4 Ia 20
Reg. 11J Slocks ........... I13,SO
Rtg. 122. Slacks ........... IJ6.50
127 Sla&lt;ks ........... I20.2S

Billfolds ............ S14.40

did not adlequateiy rover all the
dl!!eren t tvpes of steel products
shipped to the United States.
Reagan announced his program
b1 Sept emt~r 1984 after rejecting
reeommendatklns from ttte [J.S.
Internatklnal Trade Commission
that the !10'1ernrnentlmpose broad
quotas and · tariffs on various
carbon steel imports found to have
bljured U.S., producers.
Reagan said sweeping Import
limits woold ang~:&gt;r U.S. trading
partners run d provoke retaliation
against U.S. exports. Inaddition, he
said U.S. •consumers woo ld pay
billions more dollars ~r gonds
ttecause of h1tgher steel prices.
As an alte1[native. Reagan said he
would negol.late separate "volun·
tary restraint agreeinenls" with
steel-exrorttpg COWl tries that. cu·
mulatlvely. 'Would achieve the 20.2
percent goal ' br flriished steel.
Congress ratified Reagan 's prO·
gram by paBslng leg!slalkm giving
the preslden t power to ·enilrce the
agreements , and· setting ttte 20.2
percent market share as a goal.
Since then. the admlrilstration
has reached agreem~ts with 17
countries and the European
Community.

UPl Statehouse Reporter

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) -Gov.
Richard F. Cei!;Ste Is a "pay-as·
you-gogover;nor while his Republl·
can opponent. Jarrtes A. Rhodes.
"played Rlissian roulette with
Ohio's !utu n~" with huge bonded
debt. accordlngtoCeieste'sruMing
mate.
At the same time, Paul R.
Leonard, the Democratic romlnee
for lleutenanljgovernor. said Thu!li·
day thalthe •Celeste administration
has no plans to raise taxes during
the next four.years.
Leonard appeared before the
Press p ubb of Ohio. made a
pres en tajlon and answered

CARHARTT BROWN DUCK
HUNnNG CLOTHES ALSO SALE PRICED

1"!1. $25.00 to '27 .50

Billfolds ............ S20.80

SALE!

Close-Out Sale I

See Our New Seleetion

Corningwear, Rubbermaid, small ·
appliances, cleaning supplies,
kitchen utensils, dinner ware,'
lossts and gloss sets and
mon.

ANTIQUE SATIN

BATH TOWELS
and
.KITCHEN TOWELS

DRAPERIES
Limited quantity in·solids
and patterns. ~iscontinued
patterns and colors.

112 PRICE·
.

'

ELBERFELDS

.

WALKING 'JEii11MONJAI.S- Pom~roy rt!lldents BU!y Joe and.
Kay Spencer can been spoUed early every IJI)min(f as they routinely
walk through ttte \'lllage in ooe dlredlon or the ~rer. The Spmcers
are convlnrecl that walking Is good for ywr heart, your .,ngs, and
your attitude. 'lbey will he assisting with ihtl American Heart
Assoclation's "turkey.walk to be held Saturday, Oct. 18, from' l lo 3~
p.m., at Meigs High School.

. soc';at;on
Heart as
·.sl·ates ,.,urkP'\!11'a
k
1
.J :~ l
"1
Ill

I

Make excellent gifts. New
colors, new patterns. All
first quality. Ready for your
selection.

HOME FURNISHINGS
1st FLOOR
.' .
ElbstFeldt
POM£10Y, OHIO

16141 992 ·3671

CHA!tlE CARD ·

not a do~e deal. the aide sa~?· The eastest part JS
over. Were at the hard part.
.
Shultz said duration. ver~lablllty andot~~r aspects
of negollatl~ns In ~nev~stlll htadhto be n . e::,do::'ci
The P":~ 1dent so . s pu uman ng ~
regional Issues on his agenda. f~h particular
attention to the Soviet occupa~~n~·d ~an~a.~. ll
Reagan was descnbed as co . 1 e?t an ~
prepared " for his second sum:n~ With the :~~
leader. The two world lead~~- ere .ex~1tn In
announce the date of a luU-sca e su mmit ~ g
the United States by the time they complete their six
hours of ta~ks Sunday.
. h h did
The preside~! left Washington st':"';mf t : 1 e in
not expect to stgn any agreements m ce an . say g

Moscow's positions ?n a great manY issues ..
"Success Is not guaranteed," Reagan told
dignitaries on hand to bid him !arewell. "So we go to
Reykjavik for peace. we go to this meeting for
freedom. And we go in hope." ·
The president tried to avoid jet lag during the
six-hour !light by having an early dinner of his
favorite dish - meat loaf- on ICelandic time.
Hatless and wearing a tan raincoat. he stepped off
Air Force One and boarded a motorcade to the U.S.
Embassy, where he got a tour of his temporary .
residence on this volcanic Island south of the Arctic
. Circle by U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Ruhwe and his
wife. Nancy.
·

DON'T STOP STIRRING - Wednesd~ and
Thursday were apple butter makkig days llr
members of the Scipio Senior Citizens Frlencly
Neighbors Club. After peelbig .17 bushe~ of rome
' beauty apples, the group mllde approximately 250
quarts of apple butter- the old fasljoned way - lo a
coppe,..llned kettle over an open lire. The apple ootter
Is ttelrig sold for S3.50 a quart and any~e wishing to
make a purehase may call 74Z.= 1o the
HarrlsonvWe area. 6911-0021 In the Aloony area, 1&gt;r
visit the group's bean dinner on Saturday at the are
station In HarrisovUie. On hand 'Thursday to take
turns stirring the sweet concoction were, left to 'right

.• 1o frolll, with balldo on the paddle, Sadie Carr, VIolet
llillon and Tllebna GOes, second row, Louie Ou1sll1111 ·
and Exa Mae Christian, T.K. and MOdred Workmam,
and Nellie Bergan, third row; Emest Carr, J1nuny
Dillon and Sarah RoDins. otrer groups In Meigs
County which wDI be making apple butter m~utle:
'111e Rutland Cburcll of Gild, on Thursday and Friday,

•

Oct. 18 and 17. Place orders hy caUing 'MZ.211110 or stop
by the church, and Racine United Methudlst Olurcll
on Wednesday, Oct. 15. Quarts and pints w11 he on
sale at the church after 5 p.m. To place orders call
M9-2139.

l.ro,nard: ~o plans·~!.~~!~~~~~:~~ taxes

Sale Prices

IJUO to 118,50

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

'

.

. WASHINGTON tUPI) - The
: Reagan administration's program
• to reduce steel imports has given
: anemic U.S. steelmakers some
' relief, but loopholes have cost an
: estimated 54. &lt;XXI American jobs and
: ~eptthe industry from regablblg lls
· compelt1lve feet. a congressional
: report says.
: A study released Thursday by the
• House Government Operations
; Committee found that. two years
: after ttte administration effort
· began 1 Import levels are still too
"high . and the "voluntary" steel
·~ Import restraint program has not
~ achieved Its target goal.
: The five-year. program was
· supposed to redu~all steelimports
to 20.2 percent or tht' U.S. market.
compared to a 1984 peak of 26.4
~nt. Instead. as of June 198i.
imports were hoverlrig at 22.7
percent of ttte market.
If the target had been met. the

Complete telection of styles ontl sizes; Jackets,
coalt, &lt;overalls, bib unrolls, dungarees, vests,

R"9. $15 to '17

2 .Section , 1 6 Pag es

jHouse study.finds loopholes
.Jn steel import limit pr~gram

WORK CLOTHES

Billfolds ............ IJD.80

enttne

~eagan 'prepares for atTivll.l o~ Go~~~~~~~U"'"""'""

CARHARTI
BROWN DUCK

Our ntw Christmas seltc~on
roody for wour choosing. All
quahty loolhen in a "'riety of
. slylos and 1olon.
Rll!l. 113 to 114

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, October 10, 1986

s·ALE!

Steclal PriceS!

BILLFOLDS

OFF

•

By LEE LEONARD

DUTCH

20°/o

PICK-4
6665

joons.

BRAS - GIRDLES
PANTIES

BUXTON

Save now on cookYfort: P;rex,

·

., Voi .J6, No_. t11
• Copvr.lghted, 1986

Tonight, partly cloudy with a
low 45 to 50. Light soothe~
winds. Saturday, partly cloudy
with a high near 70. .
·

920

100% polyester slacks, poly·
/woe I blends, poly/ &lt;olton
blends, corduroys,

I '

To$31 98
Plant Them Now!

LORD ISftACS

Daily Number

.e

.qo

LADIES'' ·

VIDEO
·TAPES
T-120

Long and short gown~ long and
short robos, night shirts, pajamas,
T~ies~ mini gowns.
SIZES S to XXI Dnd 32 to 48

'I

PANTS, SWEATERS,
TURnE NECKS, KNIT TOPS .
MISSES
SLIPS .
'
Reg.· $12.00 ••.• Sale s9
Reg. $30.00 .•• Sale S22 .50
Reg. S36.00 ... Sale $27.00

. AVANTI

FALL SLEEPWEAR
·SALE .

Ic

SPORTSWEAR
SALE •

.. MEN'S
&amp; BOYS' WEAR·
•FLANNEL WORK SHIRTS ..

· Cordless rechargeab". Vacuum
deaner.

sAvr20°/o

PANDORA ,,

SA~EtoN THESE ITEMS

Ohio Lottery

Mets even
·in playoffs .
,- Page.3

Ill

......,

·

Have y~ ever seert a · ti6n Is ·ttjlng to sp~eal the word
Turkeywalk?
that walking Is !teart-healthy
You and YOIIr family can see exercise that all fam ily
and participate In a turkeywalk memt:ers can enjoy. I»ctors
Oct. lB. from 1to3 p.m., at Meigs rtrorrunend Zl·ll minutes of
Local High School. when IQcal brisk walking at least three
residents gattter· for ttte Arnerl· . times ~ 'week to ttelp rondlttoli
· can Heart Assocta lion's heart and lungs.
turkeywalk.
Turkeywalk also oilers tncen·
Tu!Xeywalk Is a walk-for· tlve prizes lor walkers. Walkers
pledges event tor ttte ent ire turning in $.1l oc · Jll!lre ·will
famUy. Areabuslnessesarealso receive a free Thrkeywalk T·
encouraged to sponsor a team c1 shirt, 'Those turning In $00 or
turkeywillkers. Funds ralsed . .OOrewlllrecelveaT·shlr:tanda
throughturkeywalkpledgeswlll ' turkey. 'Imseturnlngb1.$19lor
be used to support the American more wUI receive a T·shlrt,
Heart Association's programs c1 · turkey and an American Heart ·
research. education and com· As!K&gt;Ciatk&gt;n hooded sweat sHrt.
munlty service.
For more lnt&gt;rmatkln, or to
·
register, call 992-6222. Plooge
But l'ilrkeywalk also presents ·· sheets may ·be obalned by
a message of IJ'€Ventl0n:
· · contac!blg MW!e . Mldklfi at
The·Anierlcan Heart Associa· Bank Ole, Pomeroy.

...

'-~-------~-......
• I'

,f

questions.
· The Dayton mayor said Rhodes
stuck Ohio with a $2 billion
unemploymen t compensation lund
debt and a large debt on capital
co~strucllon proJects:
Governors who gloss over delicit spendblg play Ru ssian roulette
with the jobs and livelihood of the
very people that they were electEd
to protect. and Jim Rhodes has
played.~uss!an roulette with Ohio's
future, tte said.
"I s~ Dick Celeste as 3 pay·
as-you-go governo.~. as much as
humanly po~ible, said Leonard.
"Jim Rhodes was the kind of
governor who dwelled on lxlnded
lndebtooness and preferred to pass

political leadership in thls state."
James A. Duerk, Rhodes 's cam·
palgn aide said that by borrowing,
the forme~ Republican governor
built university buildings. technical
schools, parks and highways at
Inexpensive rates. "They wruld
cost six to eight tlmes as much
now," said Duerk, who added the
Rhodes bond Issues are being
retired
Due;k said Celeste opposed a
oousing bond Issue "b.ll when tt was
lime to hand ru t t~ k&gt;w-lnterest
mortgages. he p~t on his drum
major's hat and got at the head of
the band. He ooesn't mbld lx&gt;nd
Issues if they help him get some
·

Senators OK jurist's hnpeachment
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Harry everything I believe in was as· ment articles charging Clallxlrne
Claiborne - , disgraced, defeated sau lied beyond repair." wrote the with purposely filing false tax
and stripped of his fooeral judge· Nevada judge. The note was given returns for 1979-19ro, mlsbehavli&gt;r
ship bl .a historic Senate Impeach· to a Las Vegas newspaper pub· and high a-lmes forbelnginnvlcted
rrtent trial- !~mmed It up In a note llstter who championed his cause. · while in ol!lce, and brblglng
• scribbled to a ~riend: "A part of me
U.S. marshals later esoorted disrepute upon the judldary.
died here tod&lt;ly."
Claltnme from the chamber for his
Under special rules used in the
The Senate. convenblg as an trip back to prison.
trial,
Sen. Strom Thurmond, R
Impeachment court for ttte first
An overwhelmblg majority of
S.C.
,
the presiding officer. In·
tllne In 5() years. convicted Cia!· Senators convicted Claltnme of
structed
senators to stand behind
borne Thursday of three of ttte fo)lr each of the three _impeachment
their desks when their names were
articles of lm.p,eachment- s!mUar articles. easily surpassing the .called and vote elt·her "gull ty" or
to lndlctment!l.
two-thirds vote required by . the
gu ilty."
n' was only the fifth time in U.S. Constitution for ronvictlon b1 the "not
The
voice votes lroke an eerie
history a fed1eral o!fl~er has been rare procedure.
silence
In the vaulted chamt:er. ·
Impeached 11nd removed !rom
Clatlxlrne Is the JJth federal
After
the !our votes were com·
office.
official - and the .ninth judge ·
pleted,
Thunnpnd
read an order
The House began Impeachment ever to face an Impeachment trial.
procedures against Claiborne b1 Four judges prevk&gt;osly were re· formally rustJI!g Claiborne !rom
July, ln!uriati!!d that he refused to moved from otflce, the last in 19~. office. which ooncluded: "II is
quit his post nr give up his $78,700
"We did what we had to oo ... . therefore ocdered and adjudged
arimml salary despite his Imprison· E\1!n the judiciary Is not aoove ttte that the said HaJTy E. Clallx&gt;rne be,
ment for tax b-asiOn.
law," said House Judiciary Chair· .and he is ~reby, removed from
He had been convicted of tailing man Peter Rodlro, D-N,.J., h~d rl o!!lce."
to report mcome of nearly $107.&lt;XXI a nble·memt:er. House panel that
The Senate decided not to vote on
b1 l9'i9 and 198l and bas been served as the prosecution in the whettter to bar Claiborne from ever
serving a two-:year prison sentence ·" Impeachment trial.
holding o!!lc.e agabl.
at Maxwell A: lr Force Base since
For the first time In history, a
May.
group of 12 senators- blstead c1
Claiborne's lawyers spent Thurs·
Claiborne. Ill, Ustened b1 grim ttte fuU Senate - heard the day runnblg !rom court to court b1
·· silence as the .senators, standing at evlrence in the case during a week an attempt to halt the Senate vole,
ttte!r desks, msponded "goUty" or of hearings. TheSenatethen,actlng argulrig the judge was not given a
"notgu!lty"wlhentheirnameswere primarily' on that panel's advice, chance to fairly p~t his side c1
called. Afterwards, he wrote a note · spent three days deciding whether ·the case to the .full Senate. They
tn red mk on ~ piece c1 paper.
to remove Claiborne fi'om o!!lce.
were refused at 'every turn. blclud·
: "A part r1 011~ diEd here today, not
The Setrate deliberated !Jivately
lng rejectklns by two Supreme
!because of &lt;lefeat but because for nearly five hours on Impeach· Crurt justices.

..

.

. . ...

.

Leonard said the Celeste admln·
lstration will be dedicated to "oolng
more with less" du ring its nextfour
years. and wUI make the government "lean and mean."
"There Is no plan, absolufely no
hiltlen agenda. no plan in this
admbllstratlon to raise taxes in ttte
next four }ears." said Leonard.
He was responding to Roodes's
aUegatk&gt;n of a week ago that an
admbllstratlon oodget memorandum soows excessive spending is
"catapultblg the "'&lt;¢ate of Ohio
toward another Celeste tax hike."
"When Dick Celeste and his
running mate start telllngyruthere
wtll tte ro tax plan, yoo can believe
there is one," responded Duerk. • ·
"Celeste.sald in 1982 ~had ro pans
to increase taxes. But w~n he gut
blto o!!lce. he couldn't wall to drop
his 90 percent tax increase on the
people of Ohio."
·
Leonard ~aid there is no need for
a tax increasebecauset he economy
has Improved sinee 1983 and
Celeste has balanced, the oodget
and buill up a reserve.
'-'
"That cash reserve will serve as
a cushion to protect the stateofOhlo
against any·downturn between oow
and tht' rod of the next admlnL•tra· .
tlon," said Leonard. "We have a
governor of today who is piann!ng
for that eventuality and a governor
of yesterday who made ro pans for
a recession and was operatlrig the
government on a shoestring on a
day-to-day basis .
"Jim R!Ddes Hkes to blame ttte
recession ilr the fi nandal lroubles :
during his last years as goverror,"
said Leonard. "Had ~only been as
smart as Dick Celeste. had he had a
rably day !u nd. hal tte had a
cushion to protect this state against .
a recession. he woo ldr\;t hiive 'to
blame anyone else.
"U only Mr. Rhores had managed the state's flnan01s and
blvestments as well as tte 1\ppar·
ently managed his own while tte
was &amp;Qvernor of Ohio. we'd be in
Fat City today," said Leonard.
He .was Nferrlng to Rhodes's
bloome tax forms which soowed tte
netted more than S9 million In
property sales and Investments,
.from 1981·85.

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