<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12958" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12958?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T06:02:01+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43930">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/03ab1a6f0c62b764bdc50f4d973b6a5c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f2f0a104d6250b74166de2215e72fb97</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40649">
                  <text>•.

.•

.

•

•

.

·~5~~~~~~~~~~~~

Gov. Celeste endorsed by.

Ohio .mental ·retardation group
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) -GoV.
Richard F.'Celeste has received the
·endorsement of a political action
grqup representing parents, caretakers and· educators of the men·
tally retarded, despite past prob· iel!ls )Vithln the Ohio Department of
·Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities.
The Ohio Political Action Com·
mltlee for Mental Retardation
endorsed the governor for reelection Friday, saying he has
delivered on promises to improve

the lot of the mentally retarded.
"We .believe Governor Olleste Is
strongly committed to a
community-based mental retarda·
lion system and will work to assure
that the system meets the needs of
both children and adults wlthoutthe
stigma of abuse and neglect," said
a r~lutlon adopted by the
committee.
Michael Donzella. chairman of
the group and superintendent of the

.

Cuyahoga County Board of Mental ,
Retardation, acknowledged that
Celeste had problems w!tli the .
department 'lnd with thetransferof
reSidents to group romes·. , ·
But he said loose problems are
being overcome. "In the past when
th~re were problems, oothlng was
done," said Donzella. adding that
OPAC: [VIR represmts advocates
for the mentally, retarded from ali
88 counties.

• • HANNAN TRACE HOMECOMING QUEEN AND
~ ATIENDAN'l'S- The 1986 Hannan Tl'8()e lomecom·
: inK queen ww; crowned at Friday's Ew;tem·Hannan
: Trace football game In Mercerville. Lorrie Feu~et.
: center, Is this year's queen. She is the daughter {j Mr.
•

and Mrs. Kenneth Feustel, Rt. 2, Crown aty. On leftloi
senNir attendant Paula Van Hoose, daughter of Mr.
lUid Mrs. Paul Van Hoose, Cro\\11 CKy. On right
Missey Halley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Brent
Halley, Eureka star Route, Galli(NIUs.

-•..
•

f

:

••
•

•••

•••
•
•
•

~

',

~- Page

3

Lotto

enttne
•

Pomeroy-Middleport~ Ohio, Monday, October 13,- 1986

1 Section, 8 Pages

Buick.s &amp; Pontiacs
'

By IIELEN THOMAS
UPI White House ~pnrter
REYKJAVIK. Iceland iUPI) The Iceland summit collapsed
Sunday, crushing hopes fo r a
sweeping agreement on nuclear
arms 'control. when President
Reagan rehlsed to yield to Soviet
demands for curbs on his "Star
Wars" space defense program.
The Soviets, Reagan said, wanted
to deny the United States the
opportunity to do serious work on
his Strategic Defense Initiative fo r
10 years and he declared, "This we
could not - and will not - do."
In a post moriem. Secretary of
State George Shultz said the United
States was "deeply disappointed"
by the failure after night long talks
put together a package that included dramatic cuts in strategic
and Intermediate rang!' weapqns
that foundered on the "Star Wars"
dispute.
"The Soviet Union's objective
was to kill off the SDI program.The
president simply had to refuse to

Now

On
Display
IN .STOCK
See Harland ~~woody" Wood
Kent Shawver
Jim Cochran
or Greg Smith

compromise," Shultz said.
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbache\'
was more bitter.
"This has been a failure. Afailu re
when we were very close to rnslt lve
results." Gorbachev said.
"The American side came to this
meeting empty hande&lt;l with a set ci
mothballed pro(Nisals from the
Geneva negotiations.' i.- Gorbachev
said.
But he also tried to find a bright
spot and added : "We made more
progress tban we anticipated when
we came to Iceland."
Shultz said the leaders. who met
for 7Y, hours Sunday - including a
surprise fourth meeting- fa iled to
set a date for a third summit in the
United States, one of the key
purposes of the meeting In Iceland.
"I don't see any prospect of it." he
said.
.Despite extended talks that
doubled the length of tlF second
Reagan-Gorbachev summit, and
progress In nightlong negotiations
that brought a sweeping arms

control package tantalizingly close
to approval, the two sides could not
roconcile Reagan's determination
to pursue "Star Wars" and Soviet
inlsistence It be cut back to a
laboratory·only research project .
"That was just a deal·buster
from the start." one U.S. official
said.
"We came to advance 'the cause
ol peace," Reagan said in a
farewell statement to Air Force
families at a U.S.·run NATO base
.near the ·Jcelandlc capital. "And ,
trough we put on the table the most
far· reaching arms control -!J'oposal
in history , the . general-secretary
rejected it ."
Nonethelm. Reagan said the
talks had "made great strides in
resolving most of our differences
and we're going to rontinue our
effort s."
Echoing that assessment , Gorba chev told a news conlermre that his
rendezvous in Reykjavik with
Reagan has "given us substantial
gains."

'

~.

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Reagan, Gorbachev
fail to reach accord

MODEL

Tonight and Tuesday, rain.
Low In .lhe mid' i!Os. High ill the
upper 50s. West to northwest
winds 10 mph or less tonight.
Clianee uf rain 80 percent lonighl
and Tuesday.

•

at y

•

Vol.36, No . t 12
.
t988

----

763

••

r:::=:======::::;....:,::..:.::::_,...:.:....:..:..;..:..:..;:.:;________

..

Daily Number

I

34-23-24-20'3·30 -

Fugitive
captured
AKRON, Ohio (UP! 1 - One of
three fugitives from the Roane
County Jail In West Virginia has
been caught.
City pqllce arrested David Dye,
18. on Oct. 1 at a home located on
Akron's south side.
, • Fellow fugitives James Dye, 20,
and Michael Koon, 21, apparently
· avoided pqlice by sneaking out a
second-story window of the same
house where David Dye was
arrested. The rouse was believed to
be owned by relatives of the Dyes.
Jamess Dye and Koon were
believed to have returned to ROane
County alter fleeing Akron. They
abandoned a stolen car at J ames
Dye's mother-in-law's home in
Roan e County. sheriff s deputies
said.
"It's really a tough situation,"
said Roane Deputy Russell Good·
win in West Virginia. "When you've
got gilys as crafty as these guys are .
and ail their family and fi·lends are
helping them, it 's going to be hard
to catch them."
The three men had escajl\'d from
the Roane County Jail in SpencP~ on
June 21. Akron pollee had arrested
David Dye oo traffic charges Sept.
13 but released him on oond.
David Dye, who had been
awaiting sentencing on juvenile
delinquency charges when he first
escaped, was exJX'Cted to be
.extradited to West Virginia soon.
James Dye had been awaiting
transfer to a·1state prison on a
probation vioia'tbn and Koon was
awaiting transfer to fhe Anthony
Center for au to theft.

Ohio Lottery

Astros even
•
up senes

'·

DEMOCRAT DISCUSSION
Jolym Boster,
Incumbent 94th district Ohio House of Represmtalives candidate, far right, is shown disco!tilng her
upcoming race for re-election with Henry .Hunter,
Meigs County Democratic Executive Committee

chairman, and Julle Lambe, lOth oongresstonal
district state central committee woman !rom
Washington Coonty. during Saturday night' s chUI
supper fund-raiser and Democrat rally at the Senior
Citizens Center in l"omemy.

~~~~~~==~r===--~

,J

Bureau will .clost'
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
License Bureau will be closed all
day Monday in obseryance of
Columbus Day according to Ruby
Wilt. registrar.

HOMECOMING ROYALTY - HighUght of this
year's Southern High School homecoming was lhe
crowning of Tammy Theiss a.• the 1986 Sou them High
School Homet'Omlng Queen. Tammy was crowned by
Lori Adams, the 191!5 queen wlo was es&lt;'Orted hy Seao
Grueser, during halftime activlles at Friday night's
Southe.,..Kyger Creek foothaU game. A senior, and
the daughter of Tom Theiss, Portland, and Pam
• '111el88, Syro~Cuse, Tammy was esmrtt'&lt;l hy Scott
• Burn.. From 11!11 1o right behind the qut"Cn and her
· esrort are Legma Hart, senior attendant, daughter of
Da1e and Kathryn Hart, Racine, escorted hy Tony
• Connolly; Rachel Reiher, senior attendant, daughte'r
of Randy and Robin Reiher, Racine, est'orted by Tim
Smith: Kim Adams, senilr atlt,dant. daughter of

·lim and Carol Adams, Syracuse, est~ed by Mike
Wolford; and Wendy Wolle, senior attendant,
dau~ter of Carl Wolfe, Waverly, and Suzwmc Wolfe,
Ramne, escorted by Damon Flsher· Doocotte Tullott
,junior attendant, daughter o1 D.;., Talhott, Long
Bottom, aod Barbara Talbott. Racbw, escorted by
Pete Roush; EUzabelh Smith, sophomore attendant.
daughter of Darrell and Gay&lt;' Smith, Racine,
escorted by Brian Weaver; and Amy Harrison,
freshman attendant, daughter of Craig and ,Judy
Harrison, Racine, t'Scorted hy Scutt HW, In front are
kindergarteners, Autumn Hysell, daughter of Roger
llyseU, Mason, W.Va., and ,JuDe Hysell, Racine,
flowerglrl, and Jes..o;e Little, son.of Doug and OnWiie .
Utile, Rat'ine, ringhearer.

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

J!4f1J

Hdif:JR[

r:t:c~mr;
Our.'fl7
are he_
re!
model~,

See Them
Todsg/

BUICK
PONTIA·c

GMC

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC • .
500 E. MAIN

POMEIOY OHIO
992-2174

'

KEEP THAT GREAT GM RELING WITH GENUINE GM PARTS
--.

- ...

'

CHRISTMAS IN OCTOBE~
SALE CONTINUES

ROYALTY - Royalty of the Racine MerchiUits
Association faD festival were featured on 'this float In · Jesse Maynard, and Junior Mister
Saturday moming's parade. The group included Wee
Lawrence and Matthew, EvlUis.
Mloiter and Miss, at front, llohhy Holman and Mary

........--

APPROPRIATE - This final by the Letart FaDs
PTO Wllc~ quite appropriate lor Saturday's Racine
Merchants Association taU fe:;tival parade. Done in

orange and black, the Jloat featured a witch at her
caldron, a scarecrow nestled in Cl)m shocks,
pumpkins and a stuffed anbnal.

SAVE ON QUALITY MERCHANDISE
THROUGHOUT THE STORE
•

-LAYAWAYS WELCOME•BLANKETS •MEN'S QUILT LINED
FLANNEL SHIRTS
.
•WOMEN'S
SLEEPWEAR
•CARHARTT WORK
CLOTHES
•LADIES' BLOUSES
•MEN'S BUXTON
BILLFOLDS
•MEN'S FLANNEL
WORK SHIRTS
•MEN'S SPORT
SHIRTS
•BOY'S DENIM
. JEANS
•MEN'S CORD.
JEANS
•WALLPAPER

•VIDEO TAPES
eCARHARTT -SWEAT
SHIRTS
•MISSY. &amp; LADIES
WRANGLER JEANS
•LITTLE BOYS' TOPS
•GIRLS'TOPS
•JUNIOR SIZES
JACKETS
•HOUSEWARES SALE
•VAN HEUSEN
SHIRTS
•MEN'S SWEAT
SHIRTS and
SWEAT PANTS
•RED HEART YARN
•M.EN''S BLUE DENIM

WESTERN SHIRTS ·
•GRANDFATHER
•X·SIZE LADY DEVON
CLOCKS
SPORTSWEAR
•WOOD ROCKERS
•SLEEP SOFAS
•SWIVEL ROCKERS
•BAR STOOLS
~N'EW FALL JEWELRY

•MEN'S WINT~R JACKETS
•LITTlE GIRLS
DRESSES
•LITTLE BOYS and
GIRLS J'EA~S
•CHILDREN'S J::OATS
AND JACKETS
.
•LORD IS.AACJ) JR.
SLACKS
•MEN'S DRESS
BELTS
•MEN'S WRANGLER
DENIM JEANS
•M,EN'S NECKTIES
•OCEAN PACIFIC
WOMEN'S
SPORTSWEAR
•WHIRLPOOL
APPLIANCES
•BERKLINE
RECLINERS
•WOOD DINETTES

"'EATHER- Saturday was a heautlful day !or the
!aU festival of the Racine MerdiMts Association,
which was (Nist(Nioc-d for one week due to heavy rains

which hit on the scheduled date. The plolo Is an
overaU shot of festival aetlvKic'S In the heart of the
lw•slness section.

PAINTED - Josie Jarrell, 5, was one of the
younger set who loved the face patuttng leature of
Saturday's fall festival staged by the Racine

Merchants Association. Applying the "paint" i'
Melissa Justis.

Two major Ohio ne~spapers go GOP with endorsements
By United Press International
The Columbus Dispatch enoorsed the Republican .
gubernatorial team in the November election and
backed Rep. Thomas Kindn ess ln.the Senatorial race
although the paper had twice before gone for Sen.
John Glenn.
In other endorsement s Sunday, the Akron Beacon
Journal also went Republican on the Supreme Court
races. preferlng Thomas Moyer CNer incumbent
Frank Ceiebrezze for the seat as chief justice ..
· The Dispatch became the first metropolitan paper
in the stat e to announce a gubernatorial endorsement
...;. backing the team of fonnerGoV. James 1\. Rhodes
and his lieutenant goveroor running mate Hamilton
County Commissioner RObert A. Taft II.
"Rhodes guided the state with policies of economic
restraint, less government and reduced government
spending," the newspaper said of Rhodes'16 years at
the top of sta te government.
The newspaper, In the endorsing editorial. said the
leadership ofGoV. Richard F. Celeste, a Democrat,

"has been helped Immeasurably by the recovery of
the national economy prompted by President
Reagan's economic IXJilcles."
Celes te's administration, the Dispatch said, "Is one
that, through bigger government and higher taxes,
endangers long-term E'CQnornic growth."
The editorial saip Ohioans have mdured a
permanent 90 percent income tax Increase, indict·
ment s or forced resignations of several admintstra·
tors and the collapse of Home State Savelngs Elank
under the Celeste admll)istration.

in tune with and responsive to the needs of his Ohio
constituency during hls present term.
"Glenn has shown that he Is not comfortable with
the political process at a time when key leglslatkm
demands more of the give and take than at any time ln
recent memory."
Kindness is clearly In step with the important Issues
of the tlrne, tlle newspaper said.
"Having served 12 years in Congress, Kindness is a I
home In the political arena. committed to serving an
even broader constituency and convinced he can
make a dllference for Ohio,'' the editorial said.
Besides going for Moyer over Celebrezze, (he Akron
"The people of Ohio have a chance to rrove away
Beacon
Journal also endorsed incumbent Justice
from this record and toward rnsltive accomplish·
ment s In government," the editorial said. "In Rhodes,
Robert Holmes and Joyce George, a 9th District Court
Ohioans have a candidate of demonstrated expe· · . of Appeals judge.
rlence, managementtJ&lt;ili and creativity."
"Fortunately," the newspaper said , "Ioore is an
Another endorsement from the Dispatch was for
excellent alternative to Frank D. Celebrezze on the
Kindness, a congressman !rom Hamilton who Is
baUot - ·.In the candidacy of Thomas J . Moyer. an
challenging Glenn:
experienced, fair judge now serving on the lOth
Distrtct Court of Appeals. "
Glenn, the paper said In an editorial. "has been less

•

The paper said Moyrr "ll'ould restorr dignll)',
decorum and impartiality to thr office of chief
justice."
in backing Haimes, the paper said "his prcsmCI'
and his written opinions have often tx:&gt;en a calming
influence on the Supreme Cout1 ."

Holmes's opponent is Francis E. Swe&lt;&gt;ncy , a
Cuyahoga Common Pleas Cout1 jud ge.
George was recommended because of her
"deserved reputation lor hard work. intPlligenCI' and
impartiality."
George has served the last lhrl'!' years as a 9t h
District Court of Appeals judge.
Her opponent. Herbe11 R. Brown. has a good
reputation as a lawyer in Columbus. the newspaper
said, but added thai he has not been prac ticing law 1he
past thfee years.
..-&lt;'·
' "We believe Joyce George's experience as a judge
makes her decidedly more qu alified."

•

�~~~~~---

,_

..

\

Monday, October 13, 1986

fCommenta
.
..

'

.

'

Daily Sentin.el
Pomeroy...:.Middleport, Ohio
Monday, October 13. 1986

'''

•.'
••

•
'

',,

I'

Media myth '.again __________Je_iff_G_ree_n_fie_ld

The ·Daily Sentinel
1ll Court St.'eet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
~lb.

'

.

ts:m~ ~._....,...,.....,.,c;~,=­
~v

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher .

\'
(

'r

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Conlroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Munager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

'

.•
'
••

A MEMBE R of The United

Press Infernatlonal, Inland Dally Press

AssociatiOn and the American Newspaper Publishers
. Association .
LE'ITE~S OF OPINION are welcome . They should tx_. less than m word~
lo~ g . Alllcfters a rc$ ubject toed ltlng and C11.1 SI be signEd with name address and
telephone number. No un sl!!tned letters wUl be published. Letters'should be In
good taste. add r ess ing Is sues , not personalities.

NEW YORK - As an Increas- Gall!eo could not ignore the evi· deserted by a majority of his own
Ingly skeptical voice about the dence of their Investigations, beret· party, Including the chalnnan of
vaunted power of the mass media to ics like me keep poln tlng · to tile the Senate Foreign .Relations ·
control public policy, I often feei 'evidence. The latest Is. a steady Committee.
like a 16th·century astronomer ·druinbeat of . disgust with tile
That action follows by barely two
trying to argt~ethatthe Earth Is oot government of South Africa - a ll'eeks an even more lmpor,tant
the center of the universe.
.government that has done every· decision by the state of California to
All around me are Important folk thing In its "pciwer to minimize the divest ItSelf of all ooldlngs and
who point to the omnipresence ·of media's power:
companies that dobuslness in South
television, note the spectacle of
CongreSs has just overridden Africa - hold!itgs estimated at $12
Important politicians scrambling . President Reagan 's veto of a billion. The law was passed by
for camera positions, and demand sweeping sanctions law against overwhelming margins In the
to know hC\1'1 anyone can assert that Pretoria - by far the most serious Legislature, and Signed by Gov.
. the media are mere Ill ayers, rather congressional repudiation of a George Deukmejian, a usually
than shapers of events. In my view.
Reagan forelgo policy ever. The loyal ally·of Ronald Reagan.
this Is somelhlng llke ·gesturing to law rescinds landing rights to South
These acts add 'up to tile' ~mst
. the stars and planets nnvlng above Alrlcan Airways, and severely sustained leglsll!tive assault on
us, an asserting, that the entirE.&gt; restricts the flow of capital to and · Pretoria ever s€en. They may or
uiliverse must turn around the
Imports from that country. So may not reflect sound policy, But
Earth.
massive was the consensus In they clearly reflect the mounting
..Yet, just as Copernicus and Congress that the president was belief that the United States can oo

•

.

•'

Flab·is beautiful

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPII - I'll let jimmy the Gr£ek and his Las Vegas
cohorts.fix the odds, but in a debate between ~rge. Allen, the former
prof~ssiona l football coach In Los Angeles, Washington and Chicago, and
• NAAFA, I wouldn't give any polnls.
Allen, now chairman of President Reagan's Councll on Physical Fitness,
•. told a news confernece that youngsters In Soviet Union are In better
• condition than in the United States.
"I have yet to see a Soviet youngster who Is very overweight," said Allen
after observing training programs In Soviet schools. "They're all in good
shape, the way I like my players to be- very little body fat."
;
NAAFA, as you might suspect, stands for National Association to Aid
Fat People. Needless to say, Its game plan Is different.
• It contends t!Je concept that "thin Is beautiful" has been overdone by bus
:~ companies, airlines, movie theaters, restaurantsandotherestabllshments
that provide patrons and customers wlth chairs.
. Fat people, NAAFA leaders argue, can't help being that way, and dieting
~ and exercise programs to lose weight can be dangerous.
':· I don't know what they might say about a move by the Nutritional Effects
. Foundation to reduce the fat content ct meat, so thatconsurnerswll!lngest
: more red corpuscles.
' Nor would r venture an opinion as to where this leaves us skinny tYpes
who are too small to play pro football. I do know, however, that at least one
former FBI agent has written a book not about spying but about obesity.
It is called "Fat Chance," and It seems to makesomeofthe same points
: NAAFA does , only better.
; "You can starve a hippopotamus to death, but It wm never be a gazelle,"
"
• wrote the author.
· He might also have pointed out that a dead hippowUI never be a sparrow
'
either. But that is another matter.
The next step, I assume, will be a fat liberation Jmvement, which wlll
lobby Congress for equal rights ' leglslatlon and field Its own· slate of
·candidates In future campaigns.
• · "Two desserts in very pot," a fat·loving pollticlan might promise, and
: many voters do Indeed have pots.
I also can foresee the fat bbby trying to presuade Congress to enact
.; legislation requiring wider seats In public transports.
,: If that proves too ex~nslve, maybe the carriers can maintain special
· . sections for the overweight.
' "Flab or non·flab?" a clerk might say as yoo are checking ln .
~
. I also can foresee a campaign for. new anti-dlscrlminatbn laws in
, employment.
; Take the ca
e male worker whose supervisor starts making
: suggestive remarkssuggesting she has fat ankles, thighs, hips, bust
. and shoulders. Would t . courts side with corpulent workers who complain
, Jhey were denied advancement because of their weight?
. We shall see. Meanwhile, drastic action is needed to give fat people an
, Image ct health. May the FBI should start slipping untrimmed junk food
; inlo the lunch boxes of Soviet school children.
'

..

Recall Pepper's degree

WASHINGTON - Rep. Claude
Pepper, O.Fla ., has received the
ultimate rebul&lt;e from a mail-order
· "university" that he exposed lor
awarding him a Ph.D afte- he sent
In four book.reports and a check for
$1,780. His "alma mater," Union
University of Los Ange les, has
asked Pepper to mall back his
diploma. ·
In a three·page letter ex~alnlng
the decision, a member of the ooard
of the now-defunct Institution
blamed the original award of the
degree last Decem her to misplaced
respect for the 86-year·old repre·
sentative and an excess of Christ·
mas spirit. The school officials
responslbl~ were of Japanese herit.
age, the letter explained, and were
simply treating Pepper w!Jh the
The Muncie (Ind.) Evening PrEiiS
traditional venerat b n that J apa·
There Is a down side to the upbeat rEPOrt that Americans drank less nese give their elderly.
alcohol last year. Imbibers may be lowering their consumption o1 the hard
"They also thought the degree
stuff, but they are high on liqueurs and cordials.
would be a great Christmas gift lbr
According to ... a private New York-based.rnarketlng group, overall the gentleman, who may not havp
consumptiOn of distilled spirits dropped for the sixth year In a row, falling too much time lefl to enjoy his
1.6 percent In 19S5. However, Arnertcans drank 4.6 perrent more liqueurs doctorate," the letter added. "Sha·
JIIIP cordials during the same period. ...
.
kespeare called It the milk of
: Ills Interesting to note that the highest level (( hardllqoorconsumption
, was in Washington, D.C., where people drank 4.93 gallons per person In
1985. One would think the bureaucrats would be so drunk with power that
they wouldn't need any other stimulant.
The Mllwaullee Journal
.
The design'ation "007" gives Ian Fleming's James Bond a "license to
Democratic NatiOnal Chairman
kill," and he uses it wlth Impunity In ridding the world of super·villains....
But what's going on these days In Colorado Is notflctlon,owlngtoa recently Paul Kirk was right in establishin g
enacted law Intended to protect from prosecution residents who killed a working committee of DemoIntruders. An intruder only has to be caught intruding to legally pay with cratic officials across the natbn to
his life. A high price, indeed.
outline a new agenda ol policles and
This current craziness, dubbed the "Make My Day " law In Colorado, priorities for the natbn.
The work of this 100.memll'r
also has ~n ~ dopted by California and a few otl-er states in recent years.
commission, under the chairman·
It has led to dismissals of murder'charges In several kllllngs ... Irtcludlng
ship of a forr11er governor of Utah,
one In which a 25· year-old mother was plugged In the chest by a neighbor
armed with a .357 magnum.
Scott Matheson, has oow been
summarized In an ll·page booklet,
Where do such skewed concepts of morality lead? ... Are we back In the
"New Choices In a Changing
"shoot first and ask questions later'' era?
America."
Minneapolis star and Tribune
I have not yet seen the full
A pleasant coincidence of the relghborly friendship between Canada and
"Matheson Report" - a larger.
the United States Is the nearly slmultanoous celebration of their great
more detailed document - but the
midsummer patriotic festivals: Canada Day on July 1, Independence Day
summary
is a constructive. alll'lt
on July 4. In each case, the holiday hooors Its country's rise to separate ·
timid,
start
.
nationhood. But coming so close together each year, they also
The
summary
report targets fiv e
appropriately symboll2e the rornrnonaUty and the Interdependence of tm
special Democratic concerns:
democratic allies sharing an undefended 3,50().mlle border. •
1. A commitment to strengthen·
So we applaud the proposal on either side d. that border to llnk the tm
lng families through tax breaks,
holidays next year through a joint declaratimo!July2and3, 1987,as "U.S.·
child-care credll s, job arrange·
Canada Days of Peace and Friendship." The two-day celebration would
ments that fit family needs and
highlight the long-standing peaceful relations be.tween the two neighbors
easter access to home ownership.
and the extensive trade and tourism that passes between them.
2. More flexible work places that
take Into ac count the dramatic rise
of the two-wage-earner family and
the single-parent family; these now
account for four out of five wcrking
families In the United Slates. Job
Today is Monday, Oci. 13, the 2S6th day ol 1986 with 1'il to follow.
and job-sharing arrangeschedules
Columbus. Day Is observed Joday.
ments,
plus
child care, must be
The moon Is moving toward its full phase.
struciured
to
meet the needs of the
There Is n9 morning star.
changing family In the work
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus. Mars. Jupiter and Saturn.
marl&lt;et.
Those born on this date are under tile sign' of Libra. They Include
3. A growing and oompetltlve
'American Revolutionary War heroine Molly Pitcher In 1754, actress Lillie
economy, including the upgrading
Langtry In 1853. puppeteer Burr Tillstrom In 1917, actor Cornel Wilde in
of education, a national "Education
1918 (age 681 , actor·slnger Yves Montanclln 19ZI (age65),comedlan Lenny
Corps" to lift teaching standards
Bruce In 1925, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher In 1925 (age 61),
and greater encouragement for
and singers Paul Simon In 1941 (age45) and Marie Osmond In 19;s tage 27 ).
small buslriess, family farms and
On this date In history:
enterprise development.
In 1775, the Continental Congress ordered construction of America 's first
4. A take-charge approach to
naval fleet .
world trade to head rtf (rOtllCtion·
In 1843, the Jt&gt;Wish organlzatbn B'nal B'rtth lnternatlonaj was founded
ism and decline · by stimulating
by 12 Immigrants In New York City.
_Ame r ican produ c tivity a nd

:Opinions ·of other editors

human kindness. A group of people
acting in good faith made an error,
and they would have committed a
harl karl had It oocurred In the old
Japan ."
.
In short, the letter explained,
"human frailty played an !mpor·
tant part In swaying the minds" of
the suicidal school officials who
decided to give Pepper his mall·
order degree.
Pepper, who holds Jwo legitimate
academic degrees (University ol
Alabama '21, Harvard Law Sehool
'24) , worked with Postal Service
Inspectors and his own Subcommlt·
tee on Health and Long-Term Care
to get his Ph .D. In a much
(JJblicized sting operation last year.
Their Intention was to show how
absurdly easy It is to ' get a
highfalutin degree by mail.
AI a hearfng on Dec. 11. postal
Inspectors told how the ca)ler began
when they answered an ad In
Popular Mechanics that offered
"university degrees by spe(:lal
1'/aluatlon of existing job expe·

'

Whal lllakes this stgillf!cant?
Last June, 'the South African
government Imposed a nationwide
state of. emergency. As.part of that
move, •television coverage was put
under near-totalitarian restric·
tlons. Pictures ol violence and
disorder are forbidden; so are

accounts of . .. security" measures

l

Today .in history

•

•

~

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPII
Somewhere between the sixth and
ninth Innings Sunday, Dave Hend·
erson's luck changed.
"I can't really pinpoint a reason,"
the Boston center fielder said. "I
went Jrom goat to hero in about an
hour or so. But I know this: being a
hero is better."
Henderoon certainly experienced
the extremes In Boston's 7·6,
ll·lnnlng victory over California
lhat sent the American League
Championship Series back to Fen.
way Park. He more than balanced
an unfortunate fielding episode with
a lwo-run homer In a four· run ninth
that b~iefly put Bosto11 ahead and
added a game-winning sacrifice fly
in the lith.
The Angelslead the series by a3-2
margin. as Manager Gene Mauch
bids for the first pennanl of his
2.'i·year managerial career and 'the
An R£' IS try for their first World
Series berth In the 26-year history of
the 'franchise.
Henderson and his Red Sox

By .JIM LUTTRELL .
UPI Sports Writer
The Atlanta Falcons and Her·
schel Walker proved Sunday they
could be forces In the NFL.
The Falcons. coming· off last
week's 11&gt;0 loss to the Philadelphia
Eagles, defeated the Los Angeles
Rams 21&gt;14 to take over sole
possession of first place in the NFC
West. The victory improved
Atlanta to 5-1 - the best start In Its
21-year history.
Walker caught six passes for 155
yards and rushed for 45 yards and
two touchdowns, and Steve Pelluer
threw for 32.1 yards and a TO to lift
the Cowooys to a m whipping of
previously unbeaten Washington .
Gerald Riggs ran for 141 yards
and a touchdown and Mick Luck·
hurst kicked four field goals as the
Falcons rediscovered their winning
touch.
The Rams, who had entered the
game tied for the NFC West lead
with Atlanta and San Francisco, fell
to 4·2. The 49ers lost to Minnesota
27·24 In overtime. ...
Th(' Falcons limited the Rams'
Eric Dickerson to ·less than 100
yards rushing for the third consecu·
tlve time, allowing the NF!;s
leading rusher just 73 yards on 16
carries.
Riggs, who is second In tlie NFC
In rushing, gave Atlanta the lea&lt;Hor
good at 10.7 with a 4·yard touch·
down run with 2: 16 left In the ftrst
half.

lienee, education, achievement, down last month, shortly alter
fast and Inexpensive." A question· demanding the return of Pepper's
nalre soon arrived, on which diploma.
Pepper Indicated that he wanted a
Unfortunately, not all diploma
Ph.D. as soon as possible for no . mill cperations are as hannless as
more than ~!il.
Pepper's Ph.D. In 1983, postal
The cost turned out to be nearly Inspectors learned that 98 people
double, but Pepper had no difficulty had received spurious medical
meeting Union University's aca· degrees from a man In Alexandria,
demlc requirement: four book Va., after paying $al,!DJ to $28,(XX)
reports of about three pages each and attending graduation ceretm·
on any of the 44 books fmany of nies in the Dominican Republic. At
them best-sellers) that the doctoral least five of these phony doctors
candidate said he had read.
then got licenses to practice
A postal Inspector picked up medicine In the United States.
Pepper's sheepskin at the unlver·
In 198J, the FBI organized .a
sity, which was also a center tor "Dipscam" Investigation that
acu(JJncture and Oriental inedl· turned up medical diplomas that
cine. At a mock-solemn ceremony could be had · for as little as $28,
In the congressional hearing room, · diplomas from fictitious schools
Rep. Ron Wyden, D·Ore., awarded and others forged to look like
Pepper his diploma.
degrees from Harvard, Yale,
"Well, well, well," said Pepper, Emory, Alabama and other reputa·
"I have always wanted to be Dr. ble schools. Checking the alumni
Peppet."
rolls of Its "Dipscam" targets, the
· He told our associate Stewart Fm found holders ot fake degrees
Harris he hasn't decided whether working In the Defense, Justice and
he'll return the degree as re- Commerre Departments and lii!V·
quested. Union University closed era! other federal agencies.

right direction. At least it Is bett!!r
tlr Democrats to struggle with the •
great issues of the day than fight
over procedural rules and tllCh·
Diques ot political combat.
The "New Choices" documents
provide a good starting point for
Democratic voters and candidates
In 1986 and 1911!.

'

teammates, however, return to
where to the ballpark where they
went 5HJ this season. the ll'st
home recoi:U In the league.
With Boston ahead · 3·2 in the
sixth, California's Doug DeCinces
lashed a two-out double off Bruce
Hurst. Bobby Gricit then hit a drive
to the J96.foot mark In ldt-center
field that Henderson leaped and
speared, bul tlie ball popped rut of
his glove and over the wall for a
homer when the ootfielder crashed
into the wall.
"It was a horrible nightmare, but
Don !Baylor) encouraged me.''
Henderson said. "He said. 'Don'J
worry , yoo'll get them next time."'
Bot h Baylor and Henderson did
so, but not before an RBI double by
Rob Wilfong and a sacrifice fly by
Brian Downing Improved the An·
gels lead to 5-3 in the seventh.
Bll! Buckner· singled to lead off
the Boston ninth and. one out later,
Baylor· belted a pitch from starter
Mike Witt over the left-field wall.
After Dwight Evans popped up,
Mauch brought in reliever Gary
Lucas.

' At Dallas, the Cowboys Improved
to 4-2 and rroved within a game of
the flrst -pla~e Redskins and New
York Giants. roth 5-l, In the NFC
East.
Desp!t(' the performances of

'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Ohio.
MembE'r: United PrNis International.
Inl a nd Da lly Press Association and the
Ohio NewsPapt'r Assoctal lon. National
Adve rtising Re pr ~ent atlve, Branham
Nl'W sp aper Sales, 733 Thi rd Avenue,
N("W York , New York 10017.

0
0

One W..,k ........ ... ...... ... .. ............. $1 .25

SINGLI! COPY
PRICI!
Dally . ....... ... ..... ...... ....... ..... 25 Cents

Th e Dally Sentinel on a3, 6or 12 month
b:isls . Crf'dU wlll be gi ven carrier ea ch

t3

52

13
26
52
•I

iP

;

Baldwlri·Wallact• 10. Musklngurn
CapilaJ n, Otterhel1110
Mount Union 28, HeldelherK 21
Wlltenht'rl( H, Marietta 0 .
Dayton 27', DePauw 17
All et;hmy 14, Ohio Wesleyan 0
Ca.w Rt'Scrvc :15, Oht'rlln 13
Denll&gt;lon :16, '){enyon 0
Munt..'heslPr 13, Bluffton 10
\\'ouster 15, olohn Carroll U
Wilmington 28, Dt•flan ce 11
Carnegle-M t' ll on 24, Hiram U
\hyne st~th• ·H Tlflln 6

166 67

133 .M-1
106 llti

IOOU3
lt 1~7

I~

Ohio Sf 'l ... Indiana 22
Bowling Green 24, Esn Mh.' hl.an
Florida 52, Kent Sl 9
Miami Z-1, Toledo )t
BaJI Si :fJ, Ohio Unh·erslly 9
Penn St Z3, Cincinnati 1'7
Middle Tennf!!!lsee 2-1, 1\kroo 12 .
Youn~~:st own Sl 30, Tenn. Tech 6
Central State U, Florida A&amp;M 3
A!oihland 17, Sl. .Josephs lind) U

Centra l

Prep scores
Sarurday
Akr Flr4~1ont&gt; 20, 1\kr North 0
Ashl a h Edr;ewood 7, 1\sh St.John
fi

I. A. Rams I~

Dallas a t Philadelphia, I p.m .
Dt&gt;INMI at LJ\ ltam:o~ , ~ p.m .
Grt•t•n Ha.v al Cl•~w l unfl , I p.m.
Hou!&gt;tton at findnnati, I Jl.m.
lndlanapllll:o~ at Buffalo, I p.m .
l.r\ Kaldt•rs at Miami, 1 p.m.
New En.:: land al Pitts hurgh, I

Austintown-Fitch
Ot~y j

FOUR-BASE ERROR- &amp;ston centerflelder Dave Henderson g~es
up for a long fly ball hit by Angel Bobby Grich and has the ball in his
glove but loses it over the fence lor a home run as he hits the ~nee.
(UPI)

Walker and Pelluer, both are
""peeled to continue playing behin~
Tony Dorsetl and Danny White,
respectively. Dorsett played spar·
ingly In his return from a knee
injury and gained 22 yards and

Bt&gt;echw uod :l3. Kirtland il
Bt•llaln St ,John -It,

HOUR SERVICE
EE DELIVERY
COMPLETE

1011 Viand Street
"

J

1\otin~o

7

Bshp Don. (K'\'i\) !12, Buck eye\\'
fi
Rutkt_'Yl' N 14, Brid~teport 0
Clf' lgnathls I.J, Lahwood SlEd 5

fit• Univ ·~. PIIIK Shadysldt• 6
Col \\;atl f'rsoo 7, C'ol \h•hrlt• 6
Contln Val ilti, ,Jt•wE&gt;H-Sdo 0
Day Mt•adowdale 14, Day Pai 0
Dt'lpho!'i ·h•fl 46, Cridcrsv ll P1•r 0
E Cant oo tl. Tusky Valley 3
E Uverpooll7. Bcllairf' J.J
fo~airflrld Union 2K, Lli•k,ng Hts IH

Garl Hl{t .o;Trln :sa, CleCenl Cathti
Gatt~ Mil HuM.·k 2M, Glln'kJU r

At'ad :i
(irand Val ;u; , T hompson L('da;t"-

mont n

GIVE BLOOD
WEDNESDAY I OCTOBER 15

White
inju ry. is still bothered by a hip
Elsewhere. Chicago dumped
Houston 2il·7, Denver dropped San
Diego 3J.l4, Miami IGpped Buffalo
27·14, Detroit defeated Green Bay
2J.lt Cicv('iand oowned Kansas
City 20-7. ew Orleans edged
Incii po · 7· 14. the Jets stopped
New England 31·24, St . Louis
trip
Tampa Bay 3fl.J9, the
Giants routed Phllad('lphi a 35·3.
Minnesota nipped San Francisco
27. 24 In overtime and the Raiders
shaded Seattle 14·10.
At Houston. Dennis Gentry and
Walter Payton each rushed for a
touchdown and Kevin Butler kicked
two field goals to help the Bears
• stay unbeaten. Bears quarterback
Jim McMahon, who was not
scheduled to start because of a
shoulde r lnjUJY, completed 13 of 33

POMEROY SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

1 P.M.-5:30 P.M.

f~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SHOULD BE

RC COLA, RC DIET
DR. PEPPER, SUNKIST ORANGE
8-16

$139

oz.

8ns.

298 Second St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio

DON'T LET YOUR
SON OR DAUGHTER
GO BACK TO SCHOOL
WITHOUT TAKING
THE NEWS FROM·
HOME WITH THEM
ONLY S48.75
FOR 9 MONTHS
.

'

THE

"WE SPECIALIZE IN CARING"

~24

You 1\oloo"

RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Drill

n

BE THANKfUL .YOU CAN

ii-10, ITJ.Pound
Freshman Guard

li1

w~k .

26

iO

Kansa.o.; Clt_y ... 3 3 0 .SOO 112 Ill
tA Raldt'rs .... a 3 o ·.500 106 102
San Di ego ...... 1 5 0 .167 IlK 139

Chicago ..... ... . 6 0 0 1.000
1\linneHola .... .. -1 2 0 .667
ONroU ..... .. .... 3 !l U .500
TampaBuy .... l 50 .167'
Grl' t~n Bay ..... 0 6 0 .000
" 't&gt;s.1

p.m .

Saturday

Seattle .......... ..t 2 0 .667 UK l'IK

National Conference East
W L T Pel. PF PA
\\'ashing"ton .. .. 5 1 0 .H33 J20 9i
NY Giani "! .. ... 5 1 0 .K33 1:10 73
Dallas ....... .... A 2 0 .667 li! 11-1
Phlldelphla ....2 -1 0 .333 1W U2
St. Loul" ....... .1 li 0 .161 76 129

.f4'(f'i, 9

College scores

Denver ........ .. fi 0 II J.liOO 179 10 1

.Sunday. Ot·l. HI

.
PLEASANT VALLEY
.'l/1

Subs(' r\bers not de-siring to pay the car·
rl er may rt'mlt In ad vance direct to

Mali'Suboortollono

\\'1!'SI

f hh·ugo al Minnesota , I Jl.m .

HOMER WElSH

KELLY OGDIN
6-1 HB-Pound
Sophomore End

One Year .... ................... .. ..... ... $65.00

lnolde Metp C..nty
Weeks ........... ... ,................. .. 117.29
Weeks ................. .. ....... ........ 134.06
Weeks ..... ...................... .... ... 166.56
Out~de Melp Count)'
Weeks ......... :........... .... .. .... ... 118.20
Weef&lt;s .. .............·................... 135.10
Weeks ..... ...... .............. ......... 167.60

Houston .•~ ... ...1 5 0 .167 100119

Monday. Oct. •

Denver at NY

•

One Monih ................................. $5.45

av~llable.

165

Cfntral
Cleveland .... .:4 ~ 0 .007 IJlll IU
Clndnnatl .... .. 3 2 U .600 1211U
Plttsbugh·T .... l .J 0 .200 83 125

Ton ight
PUt shurgh ut flnl'l nnat I, !I p.m .

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

No subscrlpHons by mall permitted In
areas where home carrier st'rvlce Is

~5

lnflaJJapoll!oi .... o 6 0 .OOU

Denn•r :n. San l&gt;it·~n H
LA Raldt•rs It S1•atllt' IU

•POSTMASfER; Send address chan!i{es ·
to Tho Dally Senllnel, 111 COurt Si.,
Pomeroy. Ohio 457(1),

0

..

Mlaml ............ 2 ~ 0 .3:13 1l3 190
Bulfalo ...... ·.... ! S 0 - ~~7 HR 135

Mlnnf'Sota 2i, San Fr:md:o.t·c• U

,
s
EI.
.. ti .

Pomoroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·21!16. So·

New F.n,;lnd ... 3 3 0 .500 162112

(()'I')

!i~IJ(II)

cond class pos tag£' paid at Po meroy ,

Tampa Bay al NeW Orlea~•· I .

'II' L T Pet. PF PA
NY JebL .......• 5 I 0 .833 l!Mi 130

NY Giant s :m. l'hlladelphia ~

Published ~very aft ernoon, Monday
lhrough Friday, 111 Court St., Po-

Berry's World

American Conference
East
·

Nt•w Orl f'anli li , Indianapolis U
N\' .r.-ts :n. Nf'w Enghmd t~
Dallas :10, Wa"'hlngton 6
St . Loui0o1 :10, Tampa n,,y 19

MIKE SOUTIIERN
6-7, 182-Pound ·
Sophomore Tackle

meroy, Ohio, bY the Ohio Valley Publlsh-lflg Company / Multimedia, Inc..

N\' Glanl!!l at Sr.attle, 4 p.m . '
St J.ouls at 'Washington, I p.m .
SaD DiegO ~tt Kansas City, .J p.m.
San FrancbK.-o al Allanta, I p.m.

By United Pr~s I~ter.natlonal

Atlanta~~ .

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPS

·p·.iil;···- .

Chkago :!o, Ho1uston i
DtotroU 21, Grel'n Ra)' U
Ch•nhmd 211. Kansa."' CU ,v i

Meet th Meigs
Marauders

SCOTl' HANNING
11-9, 205-Pound
Jul)ior Tackle

· .NFL standings

Sunda~· . Od.
Miami ti, BUffalo U

A DM1Io!' of Multimedia, Inc.

I

·~

Atlant a .......... 3 I D . ~:J 150 lOll
SF 19cr'" ....... A 2 'b .667 1641 9i
LA 'Rums ....... ~ 2 0 .667 I Ui 110
!\'f'W Orleans .. 2 ~ 0 .3:J:J 91 115

Falcons upend Rams; Walker leads Cowboys

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale Van Atia

erly negotiated, can give us a safer,
more stable world and should be
5. A more rational and realistic (llrsued oot or. hard·!Dsed realism
defense and for.elgn policy, lnclud· and self-Interest."
·
lng limiting "Star Wars" to I'e·
Although I would like to see a
search at a reduced level. The more progressive, more imaglna·
policy commission couples support · tive and more courageous agenda
for nuclear·arrns control with a than the Democrats' "New Chol·
recommendation for a greater ces," this at least Is a step In the
Effort to strengthen our conven·
tiona! armament program.
"Democrats feel that stronger
. '
conventional forces In Europe are
an effecti ve way to help prevent the
. use ol nuclear weapons and that our
European allies shou ld contribute
more to their own security and
assume a greater share of the
defense burden," 1he commission
says. !If this Is an effective way to
sell arms control politically, I'm all
for II , even though !·think we are
alr~y spending enough on con·
vent.\onaJ arms and far to much on
nuclear overkill.)
Such ridiculous proposals a s
"Star Wars" and tbe MX missile
would seem to be Ideal targets for a
common·sense rebuttal. However,
to avoid a "weak-on·defense" label,
the Democratic drafters qualify
their opposition to these boondog·
gles. Better to waste the taxpayers'
money on such white elephants
than lose an election to some
jingoist charging you with being
soft on the communists.
The summary report calls for
sanctions against Soutjl Africa's
racist regime, but ducks the
question of support for the contras
In Nicaragua as recommended by
the Reagan administration. Unlike
the confused and vacillatlng Rea·
gan policy on arms controJ, the
Democratic repol1 states that
t arrns-rontrol arrangements, prop·

'Should Scott pitch again, he'd
have a chance to become the first
pitcher to win three games in a
seven-game, . postseason series
since Detroit's Mickey Lolich ac·
complished the feat In the 1968
World Series against St. Louis.
Scott, who was acquired from the
Mets In 1982 .for Danny Heep, was
again accused of doctoring the
baseball.
Houston, held to four hits last
ilight , sl))red i.ts 11lrts on home runs
off starter Sid Fernandez. Ashby,
who hit eight homers this season,
belted a two· run shot In the second
after shortstop Rafael Santana
could not catch his lou! pop near the
stands. Dickie Thon, who hit three
homers all year, added a solo shot
In the fifth.
Tbe Mets had only four base·
runners In the game.

Bosox luck changes;
rally to down Angels

A new agenda ______----,-__G_e_or...:...ge_M_.cG_ov_e_rn
Innovation.

'

longer aasociate Itself wlth the
system of apartheid.

(iragnet arrests, jX)llce or army
violence against blacks); so are
accounts of anti-apartheid rallies
and demonstrations; so are ac·
counts of !lJposltion to the security
measures themselves.
When the state of emergency was
passed, many journalists feared
that Pretoria h3d devised a brilliant
scheme to take the Issue of
apartheid off the world stage.
Television needs pictures, the
argument went. Without pictures,
. the story would fade from Western
newscasts; when the stories faded,
so would awareness.
Thus, the argument went, Squth
Africa would demonstrate to other
governments that public policy
could be controlled by driving the
words and Images about that (Xlllcy
out of the fJJblic consciousneSs.
In a sense, the strategy
"worked." The restrictions did
Indeed eliminate coverage of violent deaths, mass arrests and other
acts of repression. When dozens of
whites were taken Into custody
during .a church ·service, tor
example, It took that news two or
three days to make It out of South
Africa.
But in a JTJOre Important sense,
the tactic failed utterly. Thestateof
emergency apparently convinced
· many mainstream (Xllitical figures
that "constructive engagement"
was a farce; that South Africa had
no Intention of facing the !.ssue of
apartheid head on; that the govern·
ment ,was relying on the endless
patience of American conserva·
tlves and moderates to prevent
strong actions against Pretoria.

The Lighter Side

.
hander, experienced no problems record of 16 straight . scoreless
UPI Sports Writer
pitching Sunday on three d&lt;iys' rest , . lnilings, breaking the previous
NEWYOR~ (UPI) -MikeScoit firing a tl)ree·hitter to lead Houston
record of 15 set byD.on Sutton of the
showed Sunday he· could pitch to a 3-! victory over the Mets and Los An~les rlodgers in 1974. He
effectively under unusual condl· even the best-of-sevE'n series at two also sti1Jck put five , giving him 19
!Ions. Jim Deshaies can do the games apiece.
for the series and the record fo r
same today.
Even though Scott, who struck mosl strikeouts in an LCS. Dave
Deshaies, Houston's rookie left· out 14 to beat the Mets 1·0 Steib had struck cut .18 for Toronlo
bander. will start Game 5 of the NL Wednesday, did not possess the last year.
Championship Series (3: 10 p.m. overpowering fastball he had last · If the Astros can win one of Jhe
EDT). when he faces . New York week, the Mets found him unhitta- next two games, the Mets would
Mets ace Dwight Gooden. Deshaies ble. New York collected three have to face Scott again, In Game 7
hasnotpltchedslnce0ct.4M,ifhe . singles: Ray Knight's In the fifth , · at the Astrodome, to win tlieseries.
performs like he did the last time he Mookle Wilson's in the eighth 'a nd Houston Manager Hal Lanier and
had nine days' rest, New York wll! Len Dyksira's In the ninth, and hit
New York Manager Dave Johnson
be In trouble.
·
few balls solidly.
like t}jeir respective teams' odds K
On Sept. 23, pitching with nine
· "Once he gets two strikes oil you , Scott pitches again. .
days' rest, Deshaies struck out the he's probably, the toughest goy In
"The last six starts, he has been
first eight batters he faced to set a the league to get the fat part of the
overwhelming." Lanier said. "If
major-league record and pitched a bal on," Knight said.
the series goes seven. the !'4ets
Jwo,hit shutout against tbe Los
would have to lace him three times.
Scott, the spllt·flngered·fasthall
Angeles Dodgers.
I'd be pleased to ha"e him go in the
specialist, blanked the Mets for
Scott, the Astros' ace right· seven innings to set an NL playoff
seventh game."

'Jly JOE W.UZZI

'

'

.

.....

Scott s~lences Mets · again~·~'Tevens ~series-

PBIJ'~2-The

.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DAILy. SENTINEL
"WE DELIVER"

•WE BILL ALL INSU
E
•PURCHASE AND .RENTALS
CARE EOUII'MENT

Point Pleasant
'I

�•
.,
•

.•

.

.~ Organizations
.

Receiving til!' blankets w~re lelt to right; Laura and
Lisa Taylor, Miami University students; Usa
Henderson, student at Rio Grande; and Don Dunfee,
Ohio University student.

Mcxlern Woodmen honor several
Stadium blankets were presented '
to college student. members who
reeeived scholar., hips and Statue of
Liber!Y travs to several recogn ized
for community service at the recen t
Honor's Day Observance of Camp
IIJ!XXJ. Modern Woodmen of Amer,
icn. held at Carr's Oak Grove.
Alfred .
Receiving the bl ankets werr Lisa
and Laura Taylor, twin daughters
of Charles and. Pat Ta,vlor: who arc
attending Mia mi Un iversity. Ox,
ford ; Lisa Henderson. daughter of
Harold Lee and Wilma Henderson.
Alfrro. a student at Rio Grande;
and Donald Dunfee. son of Ha rold
and Betty Dunfee. Little Hocking, a
student at Ohio University.
Charles Taylo r had prayer
preceding the picnic. -a nd Ralph
Henderson. Coolville. Warren Elli,
~tt and Alma Swartz. Alfred, 1~ in

the pledge ceremon.v. Marjorie
Malone, Coolville, accompanied for
a hymn sing.
Recognized for excellent achieve·
ment in academic. soc ial and
historical endeavors were Kody
Johnson. Canaa nville. fi eld com,
mander, · Federal Hocking High
Sc hool Band; .Johnn.v Breedlove.
Coolville, Ohio University Upwar·d,
Bound awards recipient; Margaret
Ann Parker, Chester, president 9f
the Meigs County Historical ~,
cirty; Ida Livingston. Guysville.
volumepr instructor. Ki!ver1 Indian
Center; AnthOny Sargenti. Ames,
ville. founder and president. Civil
War Round Table of the At hens
Cou nty Historical Societ&gt;· and
Museum, and Charles Carr, Alfred,
advisor. Alfred Livestock 4-H Club.
The "Just Us" country mu sic
band composed of Bill and Jim
Beam, Coolville. and vocalist,

Marie Wells. McConnelsville. pre5,
ented a program of bluegrass
music. Money was collected for a
leukemia patient, Rick Spicer.
Corning, to help with his medical
expenses, Cheer plates were taken
to several s ick and shut in members
and game and door prizes were
awarded to Sonja and Brian Keirns.
Cassandra and Cheryl Sparks,
Amber Livingston, Melissa Guess.
Hobart and Alma Swartz, Jamie
Bean, Sha nnon Breedlove. Chuck
Taylor. and J im. Sharon. and Osie
Henderson.
A Hallowet&gt;n masquerade party
will be held on OcL 2Ci at 6 p.m. at
Carr's Oak Grove. Alfred.
Trays bearing a mplica of the
Statue of Liberty oil paintin g by
Leslie Cope, local artist. were
donated by Dave Lovett. Mutural
Federal Savings and Loan. Athens.
for the honored members.

;

conduct meetings
.

Dues were 1 paid and it was
announced that tre next mretlng
wUI be held at t re home of Mrs.
Doris Koenig.

Issues In Ire Ohio legislature
dealing with women was the treme
of a talk given by Rep. Jolynn
Boster at the recent meeting of til!'
Middleport,Pomeroy Area Branch
of the American Assoclatbn of
New ctOcers ·were elocted and
University Women held at the
Installed at the recent mretlng of
Lutheran .Church in Pomeroy,
the Veterans M~orlal Hospital
She noted tliat there .are 11 Auxlllary held In t . afeteria. ,
women In t!J.o House•. two In the
They are Lou
Bearll;, presJ,
Senate, and several serving as dent; Jal)ice J?aniels, vice presJ,
judges. She talked about the strides : dent; Clara Burris; secretary;
In management made by women in · Carrie Kennedy, correspmdlng
the fields of human servtces, secretary; and Mll!')l Fo,lmer,
mental ' heath, department on ag, treasurer.
Plans w~re discussed for honor,
ing, taxa tim and employment
serv Ice s.
ing older members afire auxiliary,
Bills for women's good are oo longer active, by making them
usually Introduced by women, she honorary members. Members
said, and noted that the IllY tXjuity were reminded to continue saving
Issue Is part oftre battle against sex Powell's Super Valu cash register
discrimination. Sre also com, receipts which can be redeemed for
men ted that Uitle progre;s towafd one PffCent of the total. Slips are to
equity has been made since 1984. be turned in at the hospital· before
The representative said that Ohio Oct. 31, the cutoff date.
Next meeting wlll be reldon Oct.
wants to have child care and
dependent I'!X credits. ' .
28 at 7; 30 p.m. at the hospital.
September was named Women's
r ..
1
Health Month, and otber agencies .
Ia
realing with the Issues of women
which Ms. Boster mentioned are
Columbia Grange members plac,
.the Women's Inlornnatoo Center ingfirst in Pomona Grange judging
and women' s Business Resource of contests were announced at the
Program Service, both of which recent meeting of the giange.held
have a speakers' bureau.
at the hall.
Guests were Helen Williamson
ElizarelhJordan, women'sactiv,
and Pastor WIUiam Middleswarth. ities director, noted that the first
Virginia Carson was welcomed as a places went to Jane Llewellyn,
new member. The ofllcers served tablecloth; Bertha Crippen, center·
refreshments.
piece and pillowcases; Mary Jartin lll beO t 28 tthe dan, sweater; RoSE- Barrows, baby
Nextofmee
blanket and rug wall han""
. ng.
home
Helengw
Smith. c · a
"'
Bertha' Crippen took first place in
the toy contest. and Elizabeth
Jordan, first in the baking contest.
New officers were Installed at the The entries will be taken to tre State
recent meeting of the Rose Garden Grange session in Columbus on Oct.
Club held at the home of Mrs. Fred 24 for state judging.
Goerel.
Members enjoyed bomemadf' ii'P
Installed were Mrs. Grace Stout. cream and cake as quarterly
pres ident; Mlss Elsie O!Dey, vice birthdays were observed at a
president; Mrs. PhyDis Rlce, !I'Cre, supper.' The meeting was con,
tary; Mrs. Mary Jane Goegel, ducted by Eldon Barrows. worley
treasurer; Mrs. Vercla Stout. news master. Plans were made for an
reporter, Installing officer was open meeting to he held In O::tober
Mrs. Rubal Ca ldwell.
with prospective members as
Mrs. · Hazel Barnhill read an guests.
article entitled "Legends of F1ow,
· Arthur Crabtree, lecturrr had a
ers" and lor roll call members program on the constitution and Its
brought tll!'ir fav&lt;rite recipe and a
meaning. Meigs County Pomona
sa mple, Mrs. Goebel also S6'Ved a Grange visited Gallla Counry Porn,
salad .
·
ona Grangt" oo Oct. 11.

'
VMH Auxiliary

HONORED- CoUege scholarship winners who are
mcmll!'rs of Camp 10900 .Modem Woodinen of
,\merica wen· presented stadium hlankeL' Ill the
awards picnic ll!'ld recently at Carr's Grove.

'b·
Cotum VJange

Rose Garden Gub

.

Chester Council
Holiday party plans M&gt;re made
at the recent meeting of the Past
Councilors Club of ChestS' Council,
Daughters
of America, held at the
·
hall. Margaret Tuttle and Charlotte
Grant were the hbstesses.
The Christmas supper and pro·
gram will be held onDec.1o'at 6;30
p.m. at MomPerry'sBountyTable;
Ravensw(Xld, W.Va. There will ~a
$2 gift exchange. Fern Morris
presided at the meeting opening by
reading the'43rd Psalm. The Lord's
Prayer and pledge to the Oag wer~
given
In unison, and Thelma White
.
gave the secretary's report. Dues
were Increased to $5 ·a year.
Members were reminred to take
birthday cards for Ada Morris to
tre Oct. 21 meeting. Game; were
oondurted by Cora Beegle and
Ernna Cleland. Matrew Morris, a
guest, won the door prize, Rdresh·
ments were served,
Others attending were Mary
Showalter. Jean Frederick, Laura
Mae Nice, Mary K Holter, Goldie
Frederick. Sadie Trussell, ~al
Hollon, Inzy Newell, Etbel Orr.
Mae McPeek, Ada Bissell and
guests, Leota Ferrell and Sandra
Whit e.

Scout troop
Four new members, Brian Pen,
howood, Kevin Whobrey, Chad
Duncan, and David Pierce. were
welcomed at a recent meeting of
Middleport Boy Scout Troop 245.
New scouting coordinator, James
Hudson, attended the meeting held
at the Legion Park In Middleport.
Regular m~tlngs are held on
Mondays, 6 to 7 p.m. The llrst aid
merit badge was recently com,
pleted by the troop, Others attend,
lng were John Bechtle. Bobby
Johnson. Matt Craddock, Kyle
Simpson, and Dennis Little,
Plans were made to sell popcorn
during the next two weeks and to
attend a campout at Klashuta, Oct.
17-19. Next committee meeting will
be held on Nov. 3 with all parents
being Invited to attend.

Community calendar/ area happenings
Monday at the Huntington Grange
Hall. The main program will be by
the Meigs County Pomona Grange
with potluck refreshments. A home
economics program Is scheduled
for 7 p.m.
,
POMEROY - Bedford Town,
ship Trustees meet Monday ?p.m.,
townhall.
MIDDLEPORT - Women of
Heath United Met hodist Church
meet 7;30 p.m. Monday.
COMMUNfl'\' SERVIC'E - Recognized for t!J.olr
C\)lllmunity service and re&lt;:&lt;•lvilg StatU&lt;' ol Ulx'rty
·trays at th&lt;• awards picnic nf MWA were l«ft to right,

POMEROY - Chapter 53. Dis,
abled American Veterans. meet 7
p.m . Monday, chapter home, 124
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy.

Ida l.Jvingston, Anll•my Sarllllnti, t'harll's Carr,
Kody .John,.m, Wld .Johnny Bn'l·dloVI'. Margam
Park&lt;•r wa' al"" n&gt;cognlz"l hut wa' &lt;mahlt•to attend.

Melvin C. Morris tu Betty Cone ,
Roger Young. Yvonne Young; ford Manley, Audrey Galfrey;
Melvin S. Morris. Clifton L. Morris. Alpha Bailey, Homer Bailey, to Minnie Marie Abbott, E.R. Manley,
Ruth Durham, 0,974A, Scipio.
Roger Young, Yvonne Young, Affld .• Midd, VIII.
t;lucorp Inc., to Esther C. Ru, Alpha ,Bailey, Homer Bailey, par,
Jarold 0. Lambert to Violet
dolph, Robert L. Rudolph, parcels, eels, Scipio.
Lamll!rt
. 6.~A. Orange.
Olive.
Royal Crown Bottling Co., to
Gerald
Simpson, Shirley Simpson
Rucorp Inc.: to Esther C. Ru, Ferman E. Moore, Kenneth E.
'to Raclne Gas &amp; Sew. Co. Inc.,
dolph, Robert L. Rudolph, parcels,
Wiggins, tracts, Midd . VIII.
0.93A, Sutton.
Oran ge.
Donald Lee Headley, Mary Jan e
Alfred E. H. Crow, Marjorie L.
Cleland Realty, Inc., to Jay Hall, Headley to Virginia Meeker, 0. 79A,
Crow
to Merrill Lynch Relocation
Jr .. Pt. lot 88, Porn. V.
Orange.
Management Inc., lot 112, Racine
Elma S. Russell. Dec'd. to
Roy Proffitt, Lillian Proffitt to Vll l.
Truman A. Russell. Jay C. Russell , "state of Ohio DepL of Trans .. S..D,
Merrill Lynch Relocation Man,
Anita Sue Neutzllng, Commission, Syracuse.
agement, Inc., to Kenneth R.
er's deed . Porn. VUl.
Roy Proffitt, Lillian Proffitt to McFann. lot 112, Racine Vill.
Richard D. Blessing, Stell a Bless, State of Ohio Dept . ol Trans., S.22,
Clarence R. Sargent . Clara Mae
lng to City .Loan Bank. Sheriff's . $yracuse.
Sargent, Spencer R. · Carpenter,
d!'ed. Rutland.
Emmett W. Manley, ~ ·d . to Cheryl L. Carpent er to Kenneth R.
DUford W. Ferrell, ~ ·d . to Bertha Marie Manley, Corrine M. McMann, b ts, Racine VII!.
lylarjorie Ferrell, Affld., Syracuse. Ambrose, Anclll VanMatre, OJf,
Lora Maxine Little, Peggy A.

Thomas, Wilma L. Parker, Ruth
Pauline aka Pauline Thompson to
Richard H. Stewart, Betty Stewart,
Judge Entry, Salisbury.
Cheadle,
Dec'd., Ida
M.William
Cheadle,H.Affld
., Columbia.
Paul Haynes, Janice S. H~:~ynes,
to Columbia Gas of Ohio, 'Inc.,
Agree , Bedford.
Eugene Evan Davis, HUda Caro,
line Davis, Ill Eugene Evan Davis,
Htlda Caroline Davis, !llr5A, Letart.
Eugene Evan Davis, HUda Caroline Davis to Eugene Evan Davis,
Hilda Caroline Davis, 5AOA and
20.63A, Letart.
Jim Walter Homes, Inc., to
Clarence Lee, Rose Ellen Lee,
parrels, Salisbury .

TUPPERS PlAINS - Special
meeting of Orange Township Trus·
tees 7:30p.m. Monday at the home
r:i the clerk. Dorothy Calaway.
MIDDLEPORT - Job's Daugh·
ters meet Monday, 7;30 p.m.,

Middleport Masonic Loq;e.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Republican Women's Club meets
Monday, 7 p.m., Pomeroy MunlcJ,
pal BuDding Auditorium.
TUESDAY
ATHENS - Free voice placCr
ment wiU be a part of guest night to
be observed by the Sweet Adellnes
at 7 p.m. Tuesday at the First
Christian Church, West State and
North Congress streets, Athens.
HARRISONVILLE - Harrison,
ville Senior Citizens Club wltl hold a
blood prC'Ssure clinic at the town
house from 10 a.m. to noon.
Ferndora Story, R.N ., wUI be 1n
charge.
POMEROY -Belles and Beaux
s ponsor western-style square dance
at Royal Oak Resort Park Tuesday,
8,11 p.m., Gary Shoemake, caller.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
11

.F.REE

Bai1k·BY·Mai-ll
·.n111 I

Poet's corner_____"------:-:---~U'hai CIUII Give'.'
\-'ilwt g lf'ls h&lt;lV(' I
For OUI' h&lt;'avrnl\· Kin~
Onl~·

wordo; of praisf'

And &lt;1 \"Ol«' I hat will si n~ .

What can I ~lvr that wUI
Plf'asrour· Lord?
MySf'lf I must g-iv£&gt;
M y IOfl2\l(' I must ,l?Uard.

Such a sw('(&gt;t m&lt;.'lodv
111£' IOV.'Ning lr£'('

Only ,)('SUS .

His mountains majcstlc
Thr r iver , Thf' sea

Who kn&lt;M's our lau~htf'r a nd why

Who knCM's wh(&gt;n('Vpf 'Nl' cry
Onl y Jl'Sus

Who knows whatwer wE' say

Cln I offrr hPip
S.1vt' sonwonc from a fall .

Th• King of Klnf"

Has sllvt&gt;r'and JZO id

COOid Tgive warmt h
To somrofl(' who Is cold.

Olly .lt"SUS.

He knONs whrn wr slC"F'p
Where we lav
Onl y Jt"Sus. ·

HE&gt; knQWs roch dau~ter. Pach son

He'• ncvpr forsakrn .. not me

Only JffiU S.

What can I give

Npt. heavm or oo.rt h
Happiness anfllov('
Have va )u(' and worth.
Whar ca n I ~t v«.&gt; to Jesus.
QurKin~

A.nv .7Juls I cou ld win
Wliat rejoldng- if would trln ~.

For tw:' 's a frk&gt;nd thaT Ls true
H€' IOV(IS m(l and hr hn•ffi you

He' ll ~ver lf'aw us atone
Who rules from hls heavenly ho!Tt'
Only Jf'S us.
Mrs..Barbara James

"The Dove"

Ot Holy Splrll!
I destr.Pyw so much

Thr 1:81 gtrt ro me
l'd ~ladty ~vc all
Wh at God _e:aV(' to us

My !lOU! does ff'f'l and
J knCM• your truch...

His, 10\'(' and hts ca ll.

The sun does shlnt'
So brl~htly by day
While bellowtn~ clouds

Ht• lwl'd and he died
For all of mankind

the sky ~ftly lay.,
Jesus wants for hls sheep
[n

Will

Mrs. Bart?;lra James

To rome in ,..

H~ 's

"Only JetUi!'"
Who kncws what romoJT&lt;MI wUJ trln ~
Who knows whettrr suns rin~or rain

God's landscapes dci have

'Nho knows our sori"OVt' and pain ?

Who knows or intrrrrost ti'ar1

Who knows wlrnPVer Wf' pray

What can I ,~:lv(' to
ChriM who has all?

No RTC'aier t:ttfl
we eVf'r Mnd.
'

.. Only Jt"'Sus.

patlenlly waltln~ ro save us

from sin.

His little birds stng

Oh! hl llo; so hi~h
And valleys so I&lt;M'
Th('S('.wc&gt;re all made by
Thr God that I know.

Ju~· for mr.

The sign of his spirit oo earth
Her£&gt; below

God's splrllls lErf'
l tell you, lis so.

Ju.st q&gt;en your IV!art

ThP Saviour abovf'
He' UfUI\t wtth jay,
His ~ace and his Jove.

His STars STill shine
Jn H('l)ven abovp
Glory to God for all of his Jove.

The beautl!ul whit e Dove I saw

We Pay The
Postage.Both Ways!

My f'YCS STill OOhold
His wondPrs l see
For mv God did S61d

From my heart wOOre 1~ la1d.
Mrs. Barbara James

PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
AT ANY OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

The road may be rrugh
M~· burden Is light
I ran roo Cod's power
His ,glory. his mighT.

a dove

And his holy spirit

1&lt;1 Oowln~ today
A('('(1)r Jesus ChriSt
An d follow hi!; way.

When 1 prayed
Caused writing or Psal ms

--

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

CALl (614) 992·2104
(304) '675-1244
' "\\

.

PEOPLES
BANK .

JOHN ·A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARINC AID$"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ~-,.....,_------::=:::---Th-::e.:-0-•i_lv_Sen_t_ln_el~·_Pag_e_._s

Moiulay, October 13, 1986
5

.

,

l

Pqmeroy-,Middleport, Ohio

AAUW

.

"The letter lanlc"
MEMBER F.D.I.C.
Second Street
Mason, W.Ya.

m -5514

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point PIIISIIII, W.Ya.
675-1121

5th Street
New HaWIIIl, W. Ya.

882-2135

Public NC!tice

Public N otlce

Public Notice

NO!ioe of ElectiOn
On T-axl.ovy
In EXC8110flloe

7:30 o'cfoclt P.M.
By order of tho
Boord of Election-.
. of Melgo County, Ohio
Evelyn Ctertt. CllolnniWI
Jane M, F,.,..,yer, Director
Deled Sept. 2, 1986
(10j6, 13, 20, 27. 4to

for the pu;po., qf Cuonnt
Expenoo.
. Said ... baing; I rl!ftewal &lt;if
en exlltlng tu of 2.0 ntlls to

iness

Public Notice
NOTICE TO

CONTRACTORS
y., Mil Umllltlon
STATE OF OHIO
NOTICE Is hereby glvon that
DEPARTMENT OF
run
for
five
yeara
lit 1 rate not
In pu,.....OiofiROIOiutionof
TRANSPORTATION
excoeding 2.0 miH1 lor aac!t
floe Vitlagt Council of the
Columbus, Ohio
one doiW of valuation. wllidl
Village of Pomeloy•. Meigo
s.iptembar 28, , 986
amounts
.
to
10.20
1"-'tv
.
Countv. Oiolo, DM-.1 on the
ContrectSalos .
centlj for eaclo ono hundred
7th dey of July, 1988, there
legal Copy No. 86-837
dotlan
o!
valuation.
foo
five'
Public
Notice
will be subnilllad to o vote ot
UNIT PRICI: CONTRACT
yea...
the peopll of uid Pomeroy
Sealed propooaho will tie '
1loe Polo for ootid Election
Village all Gen ..l Elaction to
Notiol of Election
will be opl!ft el 6 :30 o'clock racelvad at floe office of the
be held In doo Vdlege of
.On Tax Levy
Oioector of the Otoio Deparf·
A.M.
lind """'"" open 111til mont
f'om800Y, Olllo, It the regular
tn E010011 Of lloo
'of Tranojxjotatlon, Ce&gt;
7:30 o'clod&lt; P,M,
placel of 110t1ng th&lt;nin, oro
T.., Mill Umitation
lumbus.
Ohio, m!ll 10:00.
By order of floe A.M ., Ohio
Standard Tlme,
Tueoday. doe 4th dey of
NOTICE Ia horeb'( given that
Board of Electionj, Til &lt;Belay, O.ctober
November. 1986, the quos, inpuraoanceofaRosolutionof
21, 1986,
· of Meitp Coonty, Ollio forl011&gt;rovemants
i1 :
lion of levying a tax,.in lxcon
Vllaga Cooncil of tho
Evelyn Cterlt. Chelmoen
PART 1: ·Melge County,
151 the 'ton mill lin!itation, for
··. of · Racins, Moi!is •Jane M. F;ymyer, Dlrecto1
Ollio, on Bridge No. P,'IEG-33·
the benefit of Pumomy Village ~~"'.IY· Ohio, passed on the · DatiOd Sept. 2, , 98&amp;
1678 on u. S. Route 33,
lor the puiJio• of Cumnt
dey of July, 1986, thOfo 1101 8, , 3, 20, 2~. 4tc
Soction 15.78, fm the City of
"-'""·
be oubmitled to a vouo of
Pomeroy(, by reploclng the
Said'"" being: • rii10WIII at the people of ootid Racine
Public Notice
an existing W&lt; of 1.0 ·mle to Village at a Gen8t8t Election to
ancloor ben It the lltCII of Ihe
placing . , OflOliY
&lt;run for five yeore at 1 rete not be held lndoeVillageofRacine.
e•coedlng 1.0 mill for each Olllo, at thor~ular placee of
Notioe of Election
:.':"=~~'"'at:
one doU. of Vllluetion, wflidl votlngthenoin, on Tuesday, tho
On Tax Levy
amounts to 10.10 (ten cents) 4th day of N...,mber, 1986,
In EXC8110flloe
approach """"· roopairlng ttoa
for- one hundlld dollars of the qUOition of levying a tax, in
Ton Mill Umltatioro
P..atthe endl of lt'etiVDM,
valuation. for five yO&lt;ft
exceaa o.f the ten mill imita,
NOTICE Is hereby given that end other ra.tlll ~. ·
lloe Polo lor ootid Election tion; for the benefit of Racine in puraoan~ofa ROM&gt;Iutionof
Pmject langth: 176-17 foot
will be open at 6:30 o'clock V~lage lor the purpo• of the Gallia-Jackson-Maiga or 0.034 mle.
A.M. l!ftd oamain Oplll until Cunent El&lt;pen101.
Work Langtlo: 2030 foot or
Mentel Health Board of the
7·30 o'clock P.M.
Said tax baing: a ronewal of Countios of Gtltia, Jecf&lt;oon 0
·~"J!:~ 111 for.., Of1)1etion
·
By OrdOf of the en existing tax of 2.0 mille to and Meigs, Ohio, passed oo
Board of Elactiono, run for five years at a rete not the 1&amp;do day of Jooe, 1986, of thio woott lhatt be .. sot
of Meigs Coonty, Ohio eKCaoding 2.0 mills for aaclo tloera wit be submitted to .1
Evelyn Cter!t. Chaimoan ono (Ioiiar of valuation, wllido wte of the people of 11id fo~~:d~..:J:;:O:~
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
amounts to $0.20 · j_,ty Coomios at e Gon&lt;nl Election to file with his bid a oefllfied
Del8d Sept. 2. 1986
cents) for eaclo one hundred
to be held In d&gt;e Coonty of cloack or culoier'1 cllock fat' en ·
equal to flva par C!lf!t
t101 6. 13. 20. 2:7. 4tc
dol~ of valuation, for five
Meigi, Ohio, It the 111QUfor amount
of
hilo
bid,
but In 011 ....., nioro
years.
ptacao of 110ting therein, oo
Public Notice
The Polls for said Election Tuesday, the 4d1 day of then fifth thou11111d dolln. II' a
IM1 par cent of loio bid,
will be op.., at 6:30 o'clock November, 1986, the quos· bond forfa
- --:-:-;-:::-::;---!
tho Director.
Notice of Election
A.M. and ~mein oplll ..,til tlon of levying e '""·in BXC&lt;!OI payable
11/ddon
...,.,
apply, on the
On Tu Levy
7:30 o'clocf&lt; P.M.
of tho ton mil limitation, for · proparfot'Tns. fofquellflcetlono
In' Exceu Of 1loe
By order of tho the benefit of Gallfa.Jacftson· It Iaiii tan daY. prior to the
TM1 Mil Umltation
Soard of Eloctions. Meigo Minta! Htottlo Board for date oat for op.,ing bids In
of Meigs Coonty, Ohio the.pu- of Cll01'811t op•al, ecoordance with Cheptor 625
NOT ICE 11 hereby given that
1 · of
Evelyn Cleoft. Chaioman ing axpenMtS.
in puoaoancie ole R""' .uaon
Jane M. F,.,..,ver. Director
Sold tax being: an additional Ohio Revised Code.
floe Board of TOwn"'&lt;P Tru• D -• S
2 1986
PIIW\1 .,d apecificationa are
tax of 1.0 mil to run for five
-of tho Township of Olivo,
a~ apt. '
oro
file in tloii' Department of
years
at
a
rata
not
excMcling
Meigs Coonty, Ohio, pused (101 6. 13, 20. 27. 4tc
Trenaportatlon
and the office
1.0 mill for each ooe dollar of
on d&gt;a 3rd day of July, 1986,
of
tho
District
Deputy
veluetlon,
wf1id1
a..-nts
to
Public Notice
there wll be .Ubmitted to a
Olrector.
$0.10 (tan cents( fat' eaclo ana
vote of the paople of uid Olive
The Director reservea the
t.Jndlld dollaro of valuation. right
Town~ It a Genont Elec·
Notico of Election
to rejtc1 any and an bids.
for fMt years.
lion to be held In the Townoloip
On Tax Levy
Wamro J , Smith
lloe Poll for ootid Eloction
of Olive, Meigs County, Ohio,
In Excess Of Tha
Director
will be open at 6:30 o'clock 110!6. 13, 2tc
at tho ragulor pl1011 of voting
Tan Mill Umitation
A,M
,
and
oamein
open
un~l
therein. on T.-day, tloe 4th
NOTICE Is h-y given that
diV of Novamber, 1986, 1f1o in puraoance of e R..,lution of 7:30 o'clock P.M.
By order of the
question of levying • .... ll the Vilega Cooncil of the
Board of Elactiono,
,,.,_ of tho tan mil limita- Village of Pomeroy, Meigo
of Meigs Coonty. Ohio 3 Announcements
tion. for tho benollt of Olive County. Ololo, passed .., )loa
Evelyn
Clark, Cllaimoan
Townoloip Vltlage lor the pur· 4th dey of August. 1986, th8f8 Jane M. Frymyer,
Director
poll of maintaining and op•· wif be submitted to a vote of
Dated
August21
,
1986
lting cem118rleo.
the people of said Pomaroy 110! 6, , 3, 20, 27. 4tc
If. the 2 young men
Said ... bling: • ren- of Village at o General Eloction to
111 oxistlng tBll of 1.0 mls to
be hold in tho Vill~e of
in the blue pickup
Public Notice
run for five ye. . at a rata not Pomeroy, Ohio, at 1he regular
who
"borrowed" the
a•caoding 1.0 mill for oaclo placel of ·voting therein, on
Notioe
of
Eltc1lon
aluminum ladder
one dolllr of valuation, wflidl Tuesday, d&gt;a 4th dey of
On Tl!&lt; Levy
amounts to e0.10 (tan contsl November. 1986, tha lfliOI'
·from
the storage
In E"""'' Of The
lor ooch one hundlld dollars of tion of lavying a tax, in excass
tanks on property in
left MHI Umitation
valuation, for five ya.._
of the ten mill limitation, for
NOTICE Is heooby given that
lloe Pols lor ootid Election the benefij of Pomeroy Village
Minersville, return
,.,;tt be open It 6:30 o'clock for the purpo10 of pnMding in P!r'IUIInce of a Resolution of
same before 25th
A.M. end remain open ..,til and mak1talning fire BP,PII'I· the 'Board of Townoloip Tou~r
Oct. your plate
of tho Townoloip of
7:30 o'doclt P.M.
tus, eppliancos, buildings, or l.toblnJn.
Meigs
Coonty,
Ohio.
By order
sites therefor, or the establishnumber will not be
BOord of Elections, ment Mid maintanance of lin as passed on the 7th day of July,
reported to
of Meigs Coonty, Ohio of fire alamo. telegraph, or the 1986, t1oent wll be Mlbmiltad
to
a
vote
of
the
people
of
11ld
authorities!!
Evelyn Claolt. Chelomen peym111t of ponnon1111, pertJane M. frymyer, Director
time, or vc*lnteer fireman or Lebanon Townlhif ot 1 Gen·
Elaction to W held In the
DatiOd Sept, 2, , 988
fire fighting companies to oral
Township of Lebanon , Metgs
110) 6, , 3, 20, 27, 4tc
op..te the aame, including County, Ohio, at the 111QUfar
the payment of linom.., em,
placos of voting therein, oro
ployero contribution ""lUired Tueoday,
Public Notice
4th day of
under section 742.34 of the November, the
1986,
the quos,
Revised Code. or to purcloNotice of Elio:tlon
ambulanat EKIUipment, or to tion of levying a '""· In exceos
OnTaxl.ovy
thO tan milt limitation, ~
provide 1mb'ul.,ce or emer· of
In E,_sOf lloe
gency
medical
oervicOI op8', the benefit of Lebanon Town,
Tan M~l Limitation
atad by a fire dopartmant or lhip for the purpo10 of maintaining end operating
NOTICE Is hereby given that fire fighting co,.,.ny.
601
in puOIUIIIce of a R_,lution of
cemetelies.
E . Main
Said
'""
tieing:
en
adcl~lonat - Said'"" being: an add~lonat
the Board of Polk Commis, ,. ,.. of 2.0 mHI to run for five
POMEROY, 0 .
oio'*' of the County of yurt at a me not exceeding tiiX of .08 mill 10 run lor five
Meigs. Ohio, pooBI on the 2.0 mils for eaclo ono doll« of years ot a rate not OJtCoeding
992·2259
21st day of August, 1986, wluation, whidl amounts to .08 mil for eaclo ono dollar of
NEW
LISTINGS
- Newer
thoro wll be aobmitled to a $0.20 (twpnty contol for eaclo valuation, which amounts to
home
with
Gambriel
type
vote of tho people of laid one '"'ndred dollors of vatua· $0.08 jeight c&lt;1111) for eaclo
roof,
plush
carpet,
tremend·
ooa huoored dotters of valul· ,
Meigs County at a Gonnt
for five yeore.
ous living room with cathe·
Election to be helcl in the lion,
The Po.. for laid Ela:tian tion, for five yeen.
The Polo fat' ootid Election
County of Moigo, Ohio, at the will be open at 6:30 o'clock
dra l ceiling, ~ooe fireplace,
111Qular pie- of 110ting the, A.M. and ~main open &lt;01til wif R, open It 6:30 o'clod&lt;
equopped kitchen , 3 bed·
A,M. and remain open &lt;01til
rein. on Tuosdly, the 4th dol' 7:30 o'clod&lt; P.M.
rooms, fu II basern.ent, 2
.
of Novamber, 1986, tho quos·
g systems, large older
heatin
By order of the 7:30 o'clock P.M
By order of the
tion at levying • tax , in excaas
Board of Elections,
barn,
pon
d and ap proxima,
Board of Eloction1.
of the tan mill Hmitation. for
of Meigs Coonty, Ohio
tely
30
acres
ol nice la yin g
of Meigs Coonty. Ohio
tN; benefit of Meigs Coonty
Evelyn Clalk, Chairman
pasture.
$
~9.50
0. 00 .
Evelyn
Ctertt.
Chelom111
Park District for tho pu- of Jane M. F"""vel. Director
Jane
M
.
Frymyer,
Dirtc10f
Cuorent El&lt;penao.,
DatiOd August 12, 1986
Dated Sept. 2, 1986
NEW LISTING- RUSTIC
Said'"" being: en ad-..,1 1101 6, , 3, 20, 27. 4tc
(10!6, 13, 20, 27, 4tc
tax of 0.6 milt to run fat' five
HILLS - Noce rand! wrth
yaars at a rete not excaedtng
colonial porch , large livin g
Public Notice
0.5 mlo fat' each one dolllr of
Public Notice
roo m with tioeplace, 3 bed,
valuation. whidl amounts to
roo
m, l'h car garage, patio,
$0.011 (five centol foreaclo otta
Notico of Eloction
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
cenlra l air, an,d a large lot.
ilJndlld dollero of valuation,
OEn Tax l,evyThe
.
The Gallia,Moigs Commun,
$39,900.00 .
for five yean.
In JU:Ois 01
·ity Action Agency, No01h Sa·
The Poh for ootid Election
Ten Mill Umilation
cond end Eut Main S~oots,
TUPPERS PlAINS - A12x65
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
NOTICE Is hereby given that Chosho're, Ohio 46620, e non·
52
R
f
. of profit organization. is taking
mo~~ home wrth a I x I
A.M . and remain open until in purwJance o a 810lu7:30 o'clocf&lt; P.M.
the Village Cooncil of the sooted bids 11 of Octobar e.
fam i~ room addrt~n . Has ~,
oped ceilin!l;i wtth skylight, in·
By ardor of the Village of Middleport, Meigs 1998, on the following vahl,
~rcom System, equipped kil·
Board of Elections. Coonty, Ohio, pused ott the cle: 1 ton cob andchaosls wlth
- e cube body, opecHicotions eo
chen , and heat wtthgas at well
of Meigs Coonty. Ohio t4d1 day of July. 1986,
Evelyn Ctalk. Chaimuwo will be oubmitted to 1 vote of follows:
head price, plus royalties flom
Jane M, frymyer, Director
the people of aaid Mlc!dlapo01
1. One(1 I ton cob endchos,
gas well. Approximately ~ acre.
Village at a.Genonl Eloction to sit w/ cube body. jWIIeel bue
$19 500 00
Dated August21, 1986
be held in the Village of to accommodate 14 ft. box)
' ' '
110(6, 13, 20, 27. 4tc
Middleport. Ohio, at the rogu,
2. Heavy duly elfernetor.
1• placeo of voting tloenoin. ott
3, Four 141 speed .,.,,,
MIDDLEPORT - Two story
Public Notice
Tuesday, d&gt;e 4th day of mioslon,
frame house on approxima·
November, 1986, the quos,
4. 360·360 cubic Inch V·B tely'36'x7(l' lot, 3 bedrooms.
· Notice of Eloction
tion of levying a '""· in .,..... engine,
fireplace, stormdoors &amp; wio,
On Tax Levy
of the tan mill limitation. for · 5. Gauges for oil, temper·
dows. Assume 8~% interest
In e.,.., Of The
the benefit of Midclaport eture, and ahernator.
for 23 years balance. $119.23
T.., Mill Umitation
Village for the P"IJXI18 of
6. H!Jivv duty ooprlng w/ e&gt;
P&amp; l on $14,200.00. MAKE OF·
NOTICE Is hereby gi- that Currl!ftt .._..,.
vertoad.
fER $15,500.00.
inpuraoanceofeR..,Iutionof
Said'"" baing: aronewel of
7, 10,600 GMW.
ttoa Board of Trusteos of the .., existing tn of 3.0 milts to
a. Power otooring.
EASTERN DISTRICT _
Town"'lp of Rutland. Meigs oun fat' five veers at a rete not
9. Power brakeo.
County, Ohio, passed on the exceOding 3.0 mills for aaclo
tO . Heavy duty shocfu
Acreage approximately 41
28th day of June, 1986. th8f8 one dollor of valuation, wllido !front t!o rear).
acres with 5 acres tillable.
will be aobtnitl8d to a vote of amounts to $0.30 ltloirtv
11 . Spare wheel and tire.
New ooe flooo home with ba·
the people of 10id RuUand cents! for each one hundnod
12 . 30,gal. gao tonk or
sement, 3 bedrooms, mo·
Township It a Genonl Efec, dollars of valuation, for five larger.
·
dern kitch en, free gas, F.A.
tiontobehetdintheTownoloip years.
. El .
13. Duel auto/de mirrors.
heat. 2 car garage, chain
ofRudond. Oillo,ittheoegular
lloa Polo fat' •d ectoon
14 . Roar step bumper.
f
01
ptac of voting - n. .., will be op111 at 6;30 o'clod&lt;
link yard fence, ru~ tr ees,
15 . Swinging reor doors .
Tuesday, the 4th dey of A.M. end nomain open until . !6 . Opan between cob
grape &amp; berry vines, plus
November, 1986. the lfliOI' 7:30 o'clod&lt; P.M.
end cargo body (no petition!.
gas royalties. MAKE OFFER.
tion of levying a w , in ....., ·
By o.rder of tho
Tloele bids orust 111 lo01h
of tho "" mill limitation, for
Board of Elections. hill. toCCurato and cotr11lete
NEW USTING - RACINEthe benefit of Rutland Town·
of Meigs Coonty, Ohio infomoation as required by
1.4 acres and a nice ranch
ooltip lor tho pu- of providEvelyn Clerlt. Cheloman this invitation of bids. The,
type home with basemen! and
ing and mlintalning fire ;;ppe, Jane M. F,.,..,yer, Director
penalty for makingt•enat•
detached garage. 3 bedrooms,
rotus, applloncos, buildings. or Dal8d Aug. 2, 1886
menlo in bldslo preocrlbed in
bath, no·ce lot w·llh garden
JOitoo thooefor, orthe-fioh, j10j6. 13. 20, 27, 4tc
18 usc 1001. AccMIDrlea
mont end main-a; ollin&lt;B
oro dllcouraged end IJ•urv
space. $28,001.00.
of lire alarm. telegraph. or the
Public NQtice
optlono are Inappropriate.
r&gt;evm111t of ponnoniWOt, pert, - - - - : : - - : - - " Seoited bids wll toe acoaptad
flEW LISTING - Baum
time, or""""'-- or ,
.Notlolol Election
oot114:00 p.m.. October 17,
Subdivision- Appro!ima·
flro fighting COOI1Jirliol to
On r .. 1.ovy
1986. at the Gtlllt·Melgo , tely 5 yrs. old , H bedroom
op..ta the uma. Including
In E"""'' Of lloe
Comroonity Action Agency,
home with 2 baths, deck,
the f&gt;l'lllllllt of fnmto1 em,
T- Ml Umilation
North Second end E•t Main
porch and garage. Split
ployoro contribution requlnod
~·
hat Streets
Chithire, Ohio
.
under MCtion 742.34 of the
NOTICE II herebv given t
foy er design all tn J&gt;!!.od co~ ·
46620: At thet tiroie ell bids
Revioed Code, or to pun:h- in puOIUIIIcoofa R-'"lionof wtH be opanad IWid reviewed.
diiion . Natural gas forced atr
.,.,lenCII oqulpmon~ or to tho Village Cooncll of the
Purcheoe Is aobjectto IP·
heat and central air. Nice
IIOOVIde ombulance or . , .. Village
M~
by tho Deportment
lot. $59,910.00.
..__,
Coonty, of
Ohio,R"':'!t
P
oro
"~ -ovol
~
Ohl D ofI
0
... ~-.- medical - · &amp;do dey of May. 1986, U.. Energy and
epar • Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
by 1 1ft dlportm1111 or witt blaobmitted to 1 voto of mont of Dovelopment end
•
992 6191
h fighting co...,.ny.
d
RuUtnd
should
occur
wkhin
2,4
Sold tu being: ., addltionot the people of Ill
.
waoko of the opening of tf.
Jun Trussell ..... 949·2660
11x of 1.0 milt to run for five VIllage at 1 Gonnt ::ion: bids. The Gallla,MalgiCom·
Dottle Turner .... ,992·5692 .
1'0101 Ito roll. not excaodlng be held Ohinlothelt ~. r:.•llr munlty Action Agency reo·
OlfiCL ............. 992· 2259
1'.0mllslor..,.,onedotlttof Rutland,
' ""'~
lfVOI thorlghtto accept or
valuotion, wflido lmDUntl to piiCII of voting4 !heroin. on rolacllny and all bldl.
l0,10t,.,centlljforoilchCIIle Tueodey, '" th day of
Tho Geiiii·Molo Communr
~ndlld - 1 of voluotion, ~. 1886. tho
- ity Action Agency II on Equel
tor five"""'
tion ot tw,ing • '""· 111 .,.,_ opponunlty EfrC)ioyor t Equet
ootid E-n
ten miN
Hmllation,
fat' Provider
&gt;yiltThobe Pols
openlor
at 1:30
o"clod&lt; of
thotho
benollt
of RuUtnd
Village
13. otS
14, ..
11 ioao.
, 114tc
t·'

ICUT OUT FOR fUTUil USll

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
98$-3561

All Mabe

•Dishwashers

Y.QuNG1S

A'

A."l! 1'ftd -

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addonl lnd remodeling
- Roofing .nd vutter work

- Concreto wortl

- Plumbing 1nd electrlc•l

work
(Froe Eotimatesl

V. C. yOUNG Ill
9'12-6215 or 992-7314

L_~P~om=er~o~y,J~~~

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and r&amp;'core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also ac'id boi I and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2196

Middleport, Ohio
1·13·tlc
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZEN IT"

~SYLVANIA

•SPEED QUEEN tAVNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp;SERVICE

We NtvJ AFall n.e
Shot T11hlelu
u Outr
RIDENOUR

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER-915-3307

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation

F11 All V111 Ptlltltf W
PWS: OHitt Suw~n &amp;
Furniture, Wodding
and Graduation
Stationary, Mlgootk

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
Nlw loratian: 161 Nortlo Se&lt;and
Middleport, Ohio 45760
r

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We CarTY Fltbing -Suppllll

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Ph&lt;one Billa Hare
IUSIIESS PHONE

t6 t41 992·6550
IESIIIN(I PHONE

t6 14)

i3

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

z

Licensed

:z::

(614) 446·7619 or (614) !!92-6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
1·13 tin

STAR GAZER SYSTEMS
TUPPERS

992-33453/2/d~

BllCIC WALNUTS

DESC-111 ALONE f385
tHERE AilE STill AmOX. 100 UNSIJAMIIED CHANNElS

CHAlLIS WEIEI
U7-623S

Per Hundred Pounds

After Hutting oro

BUILDING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING

INTERIOR

SEPT. 29-NOV. 8

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.

NEWEU'S SUNOCO

COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL ,
-FREE ESTIMAltS-

Hammons Huller

· Juat Bring your Bleck
Watnuto still in the hull
10
Choot1r, Oloio
Mon.·Sot. I ono· S pm

985-3350

g,2U6,1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING

•BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built
"Free Eatlmat81" ·

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

317 N. Second

$PEC/Al/ZIN6 IN WINDOW &amp; 000/1. /I.EPI.ACENENT
9-IHIH mo.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FOR GREAT IUYS

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILI!, OHIO

AIIIIOllllt:C liii:IIIS

Authori1td John DMre,
Now Holland, lush Hog
farm Equipnoonl
Dealer

Far111 EqulpM..t
,.,.. &amp;

s.,.,..

1-3.'86 tic

1/tt /tin

EUGENE LONG

BISSELL
BUILDERS

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

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

tin

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINn &amp; AWMINUI
Complete Gutter Work
Camplet1 Remodeling
Roofing of all Typal
Worked In home ar11
20 yaars ·
"Free Eotimat.. "

CAll COLLECT:

Ph. (614) 843·5425
1.1· 18·11

ACCENT

FINO cp•ANY ·
PH.

992-6931

u..r s c•
742·2027

SWEEPER and ttwiftg miChine
repair , parts. and tuppl11. Pick
up and delivery, Davit Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georg• Crnk Rd . Call 114-

'45,029,.

•

Raclnt Gun Shoot 1p0n10riCI by

ChoU, 12

gu~ge

shotgun

LADIES. CAN YOU ltNG1
THINK NOT1 Can you Clfll' a
tune but sing too low to li'IQwith
the r..io or church dlolr? lll1n
m1ybe vou era the perfect ba11
for SwHt Adtlln•. Come hive
your voice checked Tulldly,
Oct. 14th at 7:00 p.m. Firat
Chrlnlan Church , comer of Wilt
Steta and North Congr•t St..

Athono. Ohio.
LADIES, ..00 YOU UKE TO

SINGl~ to Sww Aclelin•
gull( rdght Tund.y, Oct 14th
at 7 :00 p.m. at Ftm Chrlnlan
Church, comer of WMt Stitt St.
and North Congr•• St., AtMnt.

Ohio. '

Abaolutaty No Huriting on Ray mond Smith .
'

4

Giveaway

Kinlft gray &amp; ~ige, muhf
colorld. 9 wk old klttMYI litter

Half Toy &amp;hlphard half mlrd•Dob•m~n aman dog, vary
tmart , good with children, tam .
ily pol. C11t 81,·Ziil,1343.

ture

·"frH Estimates"

ln1tallatian A•tillabll

Kltt.n• liner trained ., good
hom1. Colt 114,441,3897.
Half Ub. ma141. 3 Ylltl old. Call

5t4,388,11U.

Roger Hysell
Garage

992-3410

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Rt. 124, Ponttrey Ohio
REPAIR

~lao

Truc•lnl••

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-tlc

2 lclttent, orange tla•. lhort t. ir
klnan . 304-875-1312 .

Puppill. 5 waek1 old, 811(1111,
call after 5:0Q PM. 304·87&amp; .

3796 .
Helf collle· halt German &amp;ht·
phord dog, 304·118,3823 .

6

Lost and Found

LOST Tigll' eaton Grav•IHIU Ad.
Choohlro. Colt ,,.,387·11189'"

,,, ....., ,z,ea.

UOO reward for: retum ~ or
informetlon IHdlng to the whe·
rtaboutt of mala black lab . kilt
in OJ White Rd .
Call

•r•.

814,&lt;445 ,0370.

AUTOMATJC
TRANSMISSIONS
REIUILT &amp; REPAIRED

GUN SHOOT

814,:J81,fla4, ,

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Iathan Building

'304 ,875r6'84

190 Mllii•Y &amp;VI.
PO.IOY, 011.

PH. 992-9949
loll Barton, Owner
9/27/16/ 1 mo.

EVERY
SAY. NIGHT·

Found· 3 H,l• whh coUtrt,

Frededck Rd.

idwell arM. Call

LOST . white. bllck, tan Walker,
red collar, thy dog. if aeen ctll

or

304· 175

5

11544. LII11Hf1 Ambraaia.

7

Yard Sale

6:30P.M.
Factory Chol!t
12 Gauge ShotgUIOo Only

.........GiillTJ)olls'··· ,... "
8t Vicinity

10·8-tln

·· ·-··---·-·-······· ·· ·········· ··
Mon., Tue1., •

Real Estate General

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, Inc.

FOR SALE

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

HUNTING CABIN in heart of
deer and turkey country.
$3
,500·00 ·

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

w... J1c:kton

Pike-left It K•MIII M1rket.
Tum out •econd kine. Third

traitor on left. Lot 24.

Mlch~111 Sii•IO Ntil. Mon .· ?

Chrittmaa IDyl, ctoth.., hon.
interior. b1by ,f'-\rn .. knickknacks , Jewelry , misc.

9

Crow
O'Brien &amp;C
0.

Announcement~

trolnod . Colt 514,'41· 0635.

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

Realty

3

Racine Gun Club . htrvlund.y,
beginning It 1:00 p.m . F.ctory

CAll 992-6505
9'12-5427 or 992·3026
10/ 5/ 1ono.

LARGE . FRAME HOUSE in
Pomeroy,$4nice lot,00 has fire
damage, •500 · ·
CALL992· 2720 or 1
992·3589

EYE THE
WANT ADS

BOGGS

HALF COST of SPAY I
NEUTER at time of Adoption
Belanca Paid monthly ID
Humane Society

UNDEVELOPED acreage ao
acres or less, excellent lllnt,
ing $300.00 per acre.

Middleport, Ohio

PHONE (614) 992-5009

lL.::==---=::::::.;.J'l,I----.;,..---IJ...,.~~~--.:.":"..,.,.[j;jto. . .iMI

open 111tll .

PAINTING ExTERIOR

lnnocul1tions

RACI!tt, OHIO
PH . 949-2210

NOIMAN WDEI
667-3074
9· 15 ·'86

S500 Adoption f•
tncludos Wormed and first

Home National
Bank

011.

DESCRAMilERS WITH SYSTEM PURCHASE - $365

Starting Pric1 ..... S800

ADOP~ON

110 acres on
RainboW Ridge in
Chester Township.

PI.AitiSr

SAME SYSTEM AS ABOVE WRIIOUY IUIDTE SJ,250

IIIIGS CO. HUMANE.
SOCITY HAS BEAUTIFUl
IIIMNS and CATS FOR

Unimproved
Land For Sale

Clinical Audiologist

I 0' 2" All AlUMINUM ILACK MESH SEA 811£EI£
SATElliTE SYSTEMS. Fun Remote. Installed ........ 11,650

Signs, lufllosr Stamps,
lulin•s Forms,
Copy Senkn, liL
25S Mill Sr., Middloport
104 Mofbtrry Av., Pomiroy

~16.'16

Real Estate General

Sellc!ion

a:z Swim
. Molds • IniiiJII'Itilll Setvices ·

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

THE QUAUTY
PRINT SHOP

W~DNESDA~

CJ Cof111U!erized H•rirw Air

Service

4/1/lfn

,...,, -

FREE HEARING TESIS

· REASO"ABlE. • Rllllill
8-20.'116 tin

PARTS and

·

J.R.'s REPAIRS

614·843·5248

•Dryers

tru-.

ces

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH paid tor '13 model
1nd n.war u... cara. Smith
Bulc* ·P,ontlac, 1111 ElttMn
....... Gottlpotls . Colt .,,, .... , ,

2282 .

WANTEO TO IUV ulld wood.
coal hiattf'J . SWAIN'S FURNI-

TURE. 31d. &amp; Olivo St. Goll/po;
lit. Cali &amp;14-f,.-1-31 &amp;9 .

Buytnq daily gokt. ailver cO.,..I 1
rlnp , jewelry , 11trling ware. old
ttoina, lara• cur,..cv. Top Pfl·

ell. Ed . lurlllft l1rbw Shop,

2nd. An. Middt-rt, Oh. '"·

892 ·3ol78 .

�.'

I

.'

'.

•
Page- 6-,The Daily Sentinel
9

-lAFF-A-DAY

Wanted To Buy

.
.
We pay cash tOr lata modal eiNn
used cars.
·

44

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

SL

Waa~ert,

Jim Mink Cheo.t.·Oid• lne.

(/(

2 bdr. unfurniahad apt. in Crown

Bill Gene Johnson

City, Coli 814-251-_1620.

614-441-36 72

Regency Inc . 'apartmant 2 bdr.,
utiliti• partly !)lid, nice. Call
304-6?5· 6104 or 3Q4 - ~7.6 ·

Elit ploy me Ill

7926.

Ser v11:~s

Fumithed apt . adults only. Call

11

614 -441-9623o

Help Wanted

Make Chriatma1 money, sell
A'olon : Make 45 percent. Cell

614 -446 -3368.

Rep s 1\ieeded for butinest ac··
count! . Full-Time, $60,000·

,

&amp;80 ,000. Part-Time n2.000·

Experience body man naadad to
build salvage car1. Tools re·
quired . Call 614 - 388 -9815
8AM -5PM.

Qualified meat cutte&lt; Se"d
rt~ume

to Box T400 in care of

theGallipolisDaiivT&lt;ibune. 825

Third

Ave ..

Gallipolis ,

45631 .
Now hiring driven.

Oh

~

t~f=~~;;;;~~;"i;;';~~";~~~~~:::::::::1
HomE;tS for Sale

Country musicians: lead guitar.
drummer. steal and bess. If
capable and depend3bla call

large corner lot. Countryaire
Estates . Carpeted. 3 bedroom,
livingroom, FR , 1 bath. garlge,
$48,500 . Call 61 4·448-6271 .

Telephone solicitors needed to
work evenings hours. Apply in
person Greal American Floor
Care Center. 46 State St.,
Gallipolis. Mon . &amp; Tun.

2 bdr. house full baaement. 2
baths. 1 an1ched garage 1
unattached , outbuilding•, 1 3 A.
m-1. ·new fence, Iota of pine
tree.. pond . Call days614-446·
2107 or eves. 614-246-6800. ·

1 .111ory 3 bdr. full basement
Vinyl aiding. carport, good
nlighborhood. $23.600. Call

R-9805 .

614-246·9378.

Live· in : Need a woman tiO yra. of
age to live in. Take care of 2
children . do ~ght house work,
m o derate cooking . Room·
board-sal•r'1 · Call after 7 :00
p.m. 614 -742 -2050.

Country home 2 1tory 9 room•.
remodeled, new carpet. kitchen
&amp; bath. 037,000. Call614-446-

A11emblers Wanted. aam up to
$60 .00 per day assembling
display clown! . Material IUPP·
lied . Send stemped self ad·
dressed 111 valopa, .Hawks land·
ing. P. 0 . Box 13493 , Orlando,
Fl. 32859 .
Two aalespersons needed to
service a National Advertising
campaign during October .
S26 .00 per week potential if
willing to work hard. Call
Electrotux collect 304-768 3213 between 9· 11 a.m. or walk
in at 4526B McConkle Avenue
S .W ., So . Ches., W.'V . Ask tor
Mr .. Williamson .
Unafraid man, woman or couple
to stay nights. " House Set"
work vsrias from few ntghts to
vaeadon time up tD 3 we~• ­
Send rasu me and referen ees.
So• C-20 care of Point Plea.. nt
Register , 1 ~!JO Main St., Point
Pleasant. w . Va.
TELEMARKETING . Hon-ie Improvement Office needs telephone solicitor fDr immediate
position. Mala or female . Please
c.ill 304-675 -5252 .

6 room house. 1 .2 acrn. Double
ear garage. located on Rose Hill .
Bargain priced *20,000. Call

614-678-2513.

Government Homes from $1 . ~ U
repair) . Delinquent talC property.
Repo11euions. Call 806 -687·
6000 Ext. GH9805 f~r current
repo list.
4 bedroom home for uta. Price
reduced. Good Jocation. Call

61 4-992·6972.

In Middleport, 3 bedroom, 1 'IJ
story hou111. Completely remodeled, fully insulated, carpet,
forced air g1a furnace. Low
utilities, fenced -in baclt yard.
ttortge building. A•klng
t21 ,500. or make offer. Call

614-992-6018.

3 -4 bedroom house near tchool
and hospital. Priced to sell,

U3.000 . Call 6,.-992-6060.

Pomeroy. no down payment
needed . Three bedroom ,
equipad kitchen, , bath, bas•
mant. A.C. carport . Call 514-

992 -2802.

380 GJtnt St . Middleport. I

good locJtion. Call 614-992·

Situations
Wanted

2&amp;02.

Roo m and board for senior
citizens. Specie! loving care. Call

614-992-6873.

Would lihetotake care of elderly
woman t1 my home. 6 year•
experience. 304-576-2989 .
Work Wanted, fix-it man, no job
too large or too small. Jim
Branham ct~ll304-n3 - 5638 .

18 Wanted to Do
'Christian baby liner' day care
uperienee. Second Ava., locahon . C1ll 614-446-2760 , low
prices.
Electrical worlt, free estimates.
Industrial. Commercial. ~ ni·
dential. Call 814-448-3028 .
Tired of mowing ? CaM me.
814 -448 -3178 . Also lawn
mower repair&amp;. light hauling .
--~-__:_-- - lc­

FIAE WOOD . Locu1t. Maple.
Elm, Walnut. 130. per pickup
Ia.:! . dellv•ed. Call Bill SIKk at

814 -992-2289.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

6, 4 -388-8746 .

2 br, kitchen , bathroom, with
laundry room, living room •
djning room, all elec. Approx. 7
miles from Pt. Pt on At. 62. 2
tractlapprox . 1 acremareorless
ovtrlooking Kanawh1 River.

t40.000. Coli 3o•-e75-U40
between 8 :30 and 4 :30.

log home, 3 -4 br, all alec. fully
carpeted, finished b11ement,
Ambrosia. 7 miles tram Pt. Pl. on
Rt. 12 . City water, paved
drlvew•'f &amp; septic tank, situated
on Yt acre, overlooldng K1nawha
River. 180,000. Call 304-8766440 between 8 :30 1nd 4 :30.
Ranch styla, 3 bedrooms, family
room . good location . New
Haven. 304·882 -3620 .

32- Mobile Hornes
for Sale

1818.

•

2.09 acres State R~te 564Wheaton Rd , •s .soo . Trade for
30 h . or aarger camper. Call

614-388-8745.

Rentals
-.
4-.1~'H'ou----s"'t'"o-r---;:;R:-e-n-:t­

58

2 bdr. furnished duplex in
Racine. 8200 par month. Oep·
osit &amp; reference required . Call

614-949-2801

614-949 -2801

2 bdr. houae with garage carpeted, curtaina. dishwasher &amp;.
refrig . Near new city pooL 106
Kin eon Or. Rant UOO mo. dep.
&amp; lea1e required., Call 614-446·

4347.

New 3 bdr. 2 bath houtt in
Aockaprlngs Pomeroy. Newly
redecorated . C•ll 814-44615fi2 or 614-992-6304.
1 bedroom apt. in Middleport all
utilities paid. i200 per month.
S100 deposit. Call 814-9926611 daya or 614 -992-6763
evenings.
2·3 bedroom hoUse in Pomeroy.
Unfurniatltd, SuiJar Run area,
clo11 to J(;:hool. very nict1. Pay
own utilitiu and deposit required . Day 614·992-2381 or

614-992-2720.

3-4 bedroom houM in Pomeroy.
fully furnished, w·d , miCfowave,
newly remodeled. rec. room. Pay
own utilititl , deposit required.
C:111 days 614-992-2381 or

614-992-2720.

2 bedroorm, tuH basement. free
g•. UOO . per month. Call
e14·843-&amp;309.

81 Dakbraok .. pando. IXC.
cond. Muat Mil. Call 814-379-

2587.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

ING CO. ,.command• thm you

Professional
Services

Sfarkt· Tree and l.wn Service.
H e dg es , s k rub1 , buthu
trimmed. landtcaping, stump
and le1f removtl. 304-678·
2842 or 576 -2010 .

Rea l Est ate
31

Homes for Sale

• 3 bdr .• s ir. pool, gtrtgt. Nice.
Comrtlerclal pro perty. comer
lot• &amp; highway tronttge. lilt
w ith Ul. We have btlyers. A-Ont
Real Estate-Brok•. Call 30•·

674-5104 or 30•-674-5388.

lor ule · M11on · 2-ltory, 3 br, 2
full bttht, corner lot. pttio, o•
heat. 132 .000. Only serlou1
inqutri... Ph . 304 -713-15148 or

675-6596.

Stlt fty Own•. Greenbriar
Estet ... 3 br houH, 2YJ bathS,
large 11\ling room , din ing room.
air coM., family room w-wet bar •
&amp; woodburning fireplace. 2 car
gar~t . 2 1h acre lot. Shown by
appointment only . 304 · 875·
3816 evanlngt.
~

bedroom OOu1t with tHached

gerogo. FHA I@Pn&gt;ved. 304·
4!175-8182 after 1 :00.
New bi· IWII home, l1rgt l~~itl

tot . Nla vl.w Kintwha River.
IE•c location. Henderson.

.53.000.00. 304-171-1144.
'I

Furnished apt. 1 bdr. t235
utiliti1111 paid. 701 4th Gallipolis.
Call 448-4418 aher 6 pm .

Apartments for rent In Pomeroy.
One and two bedrooms. Call

1 bedroom apartment. Newly
carpeted . HUD approved . 402 %
24th St.. Pt. Plea1111nt. Call

614-992-5868.

2 bedroom. furniahed apartment
for rent. Adults only . Call

614-992·2749.

1184 Shultz mobila homt
14x.70 with 10x20 upando on
lhringroom • kitchen araa. total
altc ., 3 bdr. , 2 bltha, GE IPICI
saver microwave in kitchen, will
Itt underpinnng go with tralltf'.

Coli 114·379-2725.

12x80 1973 Arlington IJ• haat.
2 bdr., axcelltnt cond. Must aee
this one. •4.9&amp;0 . Call 814-446·

0175.

1973 12k815 Utopia 011 heat, 2
bdr .• excellent cond. Must ... to
appraciate. tri ,91SO. Call 814·

441-0171.

Must sell, moved will not refuse
any rauoanblt offer. Brand new
1988 24x40SunwoodAC, OW.
axtru lnaulation . Furnished,
nur Green School . Call 513-

Nice 2 bdr. moblla home 2 mil•
from ho1pl1tl. ICCtpt children,
cable, natural g11, central tlr &amp;
hHt. C11t 814 ·2•5· 5223 or
1985 14x80 mob+lt home. 1
mile below Gallipolis Damon Rt .
7. Call after 3:00. 814·258·

0722.

2 bdr. mobile bomt in country
coft1)1ttely fum .. ex . cond. t250

mo . Coli 81•·318-8B05.

3220.

46

Nlct 2 bedroom trailer for rent in
Chtthlre. On nlc. lot. Call

HOOO . Coli 814-949·2668.

30.-773-5828.

'81 Wlndtor 2 br llrge living
room &amp; klteh.,, 2 porch• &amp;
underptnning. greet cond. Mutt
.... 304-882-3718.

12k811 , 2 bedroom, furniahlld.
*115. month pfus depoait and
utilhiN. Call 814·992·7479.

304·675-11422 or 175-7971.

1984 14x54 Manston moWe
home, ltvtd In one ya•. 1xcal·
lent condition, ,tl,700. 3Q.a.
8715·8039 lfltr II p.m.

2 bedroom, furnllhed, good
cl•n condition. 1 child, no ptta.
New Haven. t180 . per· month.

Coli 304-8B2-2•11.
2 bedroom all electric, t 1 60.00
month plus utHhl•. G111ipolia

Forrv. 304-171-•088-

3 bedroom mobile home. totel
tltctric. t300. month . •zoo.

Depooit. 304-171-3000.

2 bedroom furnished mobUa
homt. wa1hw and diyer, 1lr
c;ondttion. 304-871-487.a .

.,

0476 .

All Snapper aeld MTO mowers in
stock, on aale now! Swisher
Implement . Call 614 · 44G·

0475.

~f4_~e:. 4~~:.6 Ford PU. Call
Fiahar Grandpa Bear wood·
butner brand ntrN retail over
teOO. last ooe $4315 delivered .
Ca11814 -448-9210 evenings.

614-2&amp;6-1393.

9976.

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light houte keeping room a. Park
Central Hotel. Call 614-446-

0766.

Roan for rent, diV- week.

Concrete blockt tllsil• ytrd or
delivery. M110n tand. Gtllipoh
Bloelc Co.. 123'/a Pile St ..

Galllpolio, Ohio Coli IU·448·
2783.

Pale Building• by Quality
Builders. Workshops, carporta,
animal shelters. gariQII. FrH
eatlmatet . Phone 61•·38•·

1712.
66

pupploo. Cell 614-"46·3844
"'" 7PM.
Half Labrador &amp; hllf Golden
retriever. Ca11114-245-9397 .

Rtf. Plot Coon Hound fi yrs. old,

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
Route 33, Nonh of Pomeroy.
Large Iota. Cell 814-992·7•79.

Regllttrtd Pit Bull P.,ppies.
Show ehampkm airtd. t100.

Auto Parts
&amp; -Acce11ories
6:05
6:30

Musical
Instruments

6:36
7:00

Mtlrote. Win•ap, Rome, Rtd &amp;
Goldtn Dtliclout, Jon11hon appltt. Ckler, PIJ"11kins.sorghum.
honey, apple butttf, jam •
jtllt.. Dunrovin FNit Farm.

checko. Coli 814-992-2107 .
3359.

For Lease

Bedroom IUtla far Nit. Complete. t310. 14 ft. camp•
..,.. otv. Ul an offer. Call

_,r

Urge first floor five · room apart·
mant, 1 YJ btth, newly re·
daeorattd, *325 mo. plut utili·
till. Rtf. 6 dep . requlrld. Ctll

'14-992-IB73.

114·448·4421 or 441-1819 .

Olive 11 .. Gallipolis . N.w &amp; ulltd
wood-coelstovn, i pe wood LA
Illite 1399. bunk beds ,t199 ,
antron recUnert en. new II
uled bedroom lllitn. ranges,
wringer waahert, • sho•. New
llvlngroom IUitn 1199· •898,
lamps. 1110 buying coal• wood
lftovtt. Cell 614·446·-31159 .

Sot 114-448-1199 . 627 3&lt;d.

noo

uo.

Craftsman 180 amp weld trend
Craftsman 10 lndl redial arm
IIW , 3Q4-n3-5878 .

Now open. Iota llrge applft, aM

varietl•. All fNhllr'ld produce.
Jedla Marlett, AI . 35, Htndtf.
10n, W. Va.

barim ...

drlvo. CoN 114-367-7225.

1970 vw Bl)l 11.000. 1911
Wllliol pldwp. CoR 114-4413112.

1971 Chevy lmplll. 52.000

actual mi. .. t750 . Call 814·

742-2187.
Farm Equipment

1882 Olda CU1I111 ·c.lais. 1
owner, excellent condition.
loaded, glua T·tope. very lharp.

U.S . 35 Wilt, J1ck10n. Ohh).

KIOO. Col 814·742·3142.

M•IIY Fergu10n, New Hollll'ld.

1980 Bul&lt;* Si&lt;ylerk. 4 door.
11 ,200.00 . Coli 304· 176 ·
1283.

.

luoh Hog ..... llfVIco. o.e.G Uled t,.ctors to choOM from
&amp; m~tat. lint of MW • uNCI
aqulpn-.nt. LlrtMt llltetiOn in
I.E, Ohio.

67&amp;-3334.

SALEIIO
ctntLlahttd,
offl F...nctn·
hlng
arrow a~nper
12781
arrow 12:181 NonUghtld e2311

1!8001423-01 13. onvtlmo.

1879 Ford 310. dutl·wheel 4
· whHf drive welding trucll: with
welding bed toot
and new
200 Imp Lincoln weldlr,
good condition.

•11.000.00: 7-0 Fill

AN~

Dozer MW, cetl 304-273-3118

or 304·273·H30 .

81

Truclce for Sale
New mnalsllde-kt 1toak reeks to 72
fit I ft. ,Mckup tNck bed: raund
..lefetd•: 3 paint ...1. h..dltr; 1112 4x4 wheel drivt, 6 .2L
gootl uied bruohh1111: I ton· dleall 4 "'d., iodl outo. ¢611
wegon gMr; 14 ~~~~ 3 point 114-38B-1741.
ptows: 3 p:»lnt patatoa ptow: 3
point 12 lncll pollhole diQ•J 1174 II pa11•ae' lnttm•
12 It molal plio: ' ft. 3 point tiontl bua. auto. trans, new tires,
gr8dtr bl.. t; 12 fl alilrinum Nnt greet. f1 ,000. Clll 614·
boat and motor; ather f•m 2111·1313.
ltema. Robert Hill. Raclna, Ohio.
114-149-2013.
Wreck• II Chevy 440 HOI!Ma,
-owlnglnl boo . .. 12.000. Coli
New end ulltd Pllrtl lor Whh:as, 114·28 ·1393.
Oftvtrt, M·M. Deull tractGrt.
Sldtr1 Equipment Co.. 304· 78 DOdge iHakup 'h ton . Call
171·7421 .

114·381·8194.

Homtfttt eft . . 11W ttle, Sup•
Xl·AO 3.5 cu lncft engine,
manull end auto oll6ng, 18 In
powenlp blv $219.00. Wthtva
o~tr 30 good UMd tnd rebulh
... , in •ock from ne.oo to
e110.00. We will giv1 1 trtt
cftaln or lt.ct chlin IIW lhlr·
P.,• with the purehMe ot lnY
uaod · KMI• SlrVico Con••· lt. Rt. 87, Lton, W. Y1 ,

18715 International Lon•ttr. 2
ton, 22 tt flat Hd, axe 1hapa,

yeLt..

2286.

73

Vana &amp; 4 W.O.

81 Carevtft llr, CNIH, tltlwhHI ,
AM-FM CUMttt. Ctlll14 ·218·
1308. t10.900.
71 Ford Bronco good cond.. new
tir•, niiW Phlult tylttm. 3&amp;1

modH;.t • "'d. 12.100. Coli
114-"41-11383.
. 1982 SubaN • WD ~n , YO

Now buying thtll com or e•
CIIJm.CallforletNtQUotM.Rivar

City Form S-ly. 814·448-

~~:111:1~1=.==;:==::::;==

cond. 13,800. Cell 814-441·
4141 .

'72 ChiVY II mn. 4 wholl dtt;o,

NRS gctod, ftew t!r~ . e11r1
engine. tranemluion and body

peril. .1 .100.00. 304-1712704.

Livestock

Good mal• bNih goat, liJW'IIIt.

74

llveiiCick: 20 hMCI cro•· brtd
llodl: cowt, vet cham tor

Wh-. 814-882-7103.

'"'"'p.m. 304-273·21148 -

boellftt aondhh)n, tiDO . 304·

t20 . CoH 114-2111-1321.

Motorcycle·I

1888 Ktwuakl .300 Four

-tv colvea • 111 1111. v - •· H..,dt
•

CXIOO. 11n Model.

171-11201.

"PAArY

7:35
8:00

himself and the Tanners in

trouble with 1he FBI when he
attempts to contact the
President.

()) Father Murphy
C!J Magic Yeo111 In Sports
[I)
[I) MacGyver 160

guc[c:~!"

a

a

CD MOVIE: 'The Ab·
sent Minded ProftSIOr'
())
MacNeil-Lehrer
Nowohour
()II Gl illJ Kote &amp;. Allie (CC)
. Allie's fear ol hospitlls sur-

iH"-Vt:'$ 11}·/,
(11 - 'YNlA. N .

Home
Improvements

faces when she must un·
dergo minor elective sur·

HOW FAR IS IT TO THIS
SHE MENTIONED?

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

gory.
(jj) Wonderwork.: Words
by Heart (CC) A 12-yearold girl growing up in 1urnof·the·centurv
Missouri
shows courage in the face of

prejudice (60 min.) Part 1.
(R) .

@ MOVIE: 'Chino!'
8:05 ()) MOVIE: 'A Touch of
Clan'
8:30 II (J) Gil Amazing Storln
A 1eenaged sci-fi film fan
suddenly finds his life turn-

304· 578·2391 or 814·441 2454.
Feny Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304·67&amp;-1331.

AINGLES'S SERVICE. aKpe-

rlenced earp~nttr, ltiCtriciln,
maaon, palntlf, rooting Undud·
ing hot tar tppli~tion) 304·

175-2088 or 876 -7147.

Starks Tree 1nd Lewn Service.

Hadgu , 1hrubbs, buthaa
trimmed, landaetplng and
ttump ramovel. Wlnttrb:ltion of
lawn and lt.t ,.movtl. 304·

ing upside down when he

EEK &amp; MEEK

steps into a scene from
'Psycho'.

I 1-11\Vf:t-J'T NOTICED AIJT

1 AM

l
!

C!J Zenith NFL Monday

1 CRAzY OR Ul5 :rr\t.
ll..a&lt;l.O SE£M 10 &amp;. GtlTI~G
MORt VIOLUJT LA'TE.LY '?

l~CREASt. t~

Night Match-Up .
()II
(j)) My Si•ter Sam
9:00 8 (])Gil MOVIE: 'Can You
Feel Me Dancing?' ICC) In

a

VtOLEI-XE.

Ste'reo.

())700 Club
C!J Volleyball: USA VI.
USSR 190 min .)
[I) D ()) NFL Football:
Pitt1burgh 11 Clncinnotl
ICCI13 hrs.)
()) Day tho Unlve111e
Changed: A Pttr1Df1el View
by Jamn Burke (CC) This

178-2010.

Rotary or cable tool drHIIng.
Most W'ella completed samedrt.
Pump ul111 and stnllee. ' 304-

a95·3102

Ashby Con•tructlon , ctrptn·
tery. remod.ling, room addition ,
cement block work. roofing,
lnttr~r and exterior ~ntlng ,
siding. F,.. estimates. 304-

175-5441 or 171-!112.
82

I

i

program introduces how a

culture·s view of i1self end
1he world are reflec1ed by

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
HI, THERE-I

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

MY N.A.ME' 15
WINTHROP.

....-r------"'
ITCOULD 5EI'IOR5E ...

WELL,
IXIN'T F6EL

WHY DO I ALWAY6 RUN IN'TO

YOLJR NAN£ CQ..ILD

PEOPLE L IKE THAT FIRST

BE FLORABELLE. .

THING IN THe MORNING::!

BAD...

the smallest details and modified by innovation and dis-

covery. (60 min.)
()II II (j)) Newhlrt (CC) Af-

cer reading a Western novel.
Dick altempts to realize his

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

childhood dream of becoming a cowboy.
liD West of the Imagination: Wild Ridel'l This episode looks a1 tha renderings

Cor . Founh tnd Pine

GolllpoNo, Ohio
Phono 114·441·3818 or 114448-4477
B3

Good· 1 Exctvltlng, bltemtnti.
foot.,., drlveway1. ttptlcttnka,
land10eplng. Call 1nytime 814·
441 ·4137, JtmM L. D1vtaon,
Jr. owner.

·B4

of artis1s Frederic Remington and Charley Russell who
are largely responsible for

Excavating

Electrical
&amp; ABfrigeratlon

the popularity of cowboys.
160 min .)
9 :30 (jJ ID (j)) 20th Annual
Country Music Aasoclo·
lion Aworde Special Kris
Kris1offerson and Willie Nelson host the annual country

BARNEY

-~------~~---.
I HOPE

IT WAS EASY AS PIE!!
I GOTlH' CLOTHES ALL
WASHED AN' HUNG ON
TH" LINE • • All BV

~ou

Repair &amp;uvice .
Rukltntiii·Commerclll lnduatritl Otn•al Repair. Appliance
reptlr, eltc. rtPIIr a oontrict·
lng, lie,na~ mllttr electrician
12 yr1. exp. lnaurad. Contact I ill
Sturgeon 875-1708 or Kftln
Otul 876 · 4252 . 24- Hour
Service.

music awards show from ·

DIDt1fT

the Grand Ole Opry House in
Nashville. TN. 190 min.)

FERGIT TH'
BLEACH,
PAW

MYSELF!!

G&amp;s

"You mult learn t9 forgive your
enemlei," eaya the elderly aun- _
tlti. "It'll drive-them - a -."

I

. 86

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

8 ~i~!~~~LEER LETTERS TO 1 1 1A1 1 1 1 1
YESTERDAY'S SCIAM-111$ ANSWEIS
Endul8 '- Belle - Honey -' Feeler - HER EYES
Two woman talking about lamouiiOCiallte: "She's 10 rltey, aha hu deslgnar baga undar HER EYES."
·

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Altering
destiny

poolollllod. Coli 114-218 -11•1
or 814·441-1175 or 114-U&amp;·
7911 .

L.EONt91~

300

'I'OIJR MIDDL-E
FINGE~!

PEANUTS

~

~­

b

Upholstery

1163 See. Ave.,

"THE TIP OF

50· AND "fHt::
H!::tGH'I 30
CUBITS!!

2919.

114-441-7833 or
1133.
-

a.eow-ro

Cue.ITS,

'"f'He E3Rt::ADIH

Watttrlon's Water Hauling,
rtllontble retas, immedi ... e
2.000 gallon deltvery. clatems,
pools, well. etc. cell 304·578-

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

··DI51ANCE
FROM 'r'OU~

SHAL-L. f3(::

Dillard's Water Delivery. Clat·
trna, pool, II wtll. Anytime but
Sunday, 114·441-7404.

87

. 'THE

-v

-

A &amp; M Custom Couchn and
Rtupholstery. lt. At. 7 , Crown

I

WAS

mh:k

•CDM•A•S•H
Monaglng Our Miracleo: HHilh Core In Amorlco A panel discussion

TI\'{ .

CD

concerning the harvesting

and diwibutlng of vital orljllns Is featured. 160 min.)
(jj) Story of English The.
roo1s of Block Englieh. in·
eluding ths American alove
1rede. 1he Creole tongue,

Gallipolis.

81~ - Ul! -

m

N•-

FROM NOW ON,
NOTiliN6 BOTHERS ME

W~O CARES'? Wl-lO
CARES? WllO CARES?

and HartltfT'I slang, are exam~

City. Oh. 114-218·1470. Evo.
114-441-343B. Open ~lily Ito

inlid in this aplsode. 160
min .)

5. Sat. 9:30 to 1 :30. Old a new
Uphotttrtd .

@Tho Honoymoon11 :30 D CD Gil Boot of Canon
Tonighf s guests ore Ml·
chael J. Fo&lt;. Weird AI Yonkovlc and Chlfleo Nelson

Mowrev'a Upholstering ltr'llng
trl oounty1rea21 Ytlrt. ThtMit
·in furniture uphollttrlng. C1ll
304 · 175·4154 for fret
•tlm.tM .

WEST

EAST

+AS

•8 7 2
.Q10632
• Q97 5

.AJ94
t8 3 2

•s

• Q 10 9 8

SOUTH

•s+A

.KQJ43

10

.AKJ64
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
West

North

Eas1
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • 5

L----------......J
mond queen. but now East had only
one entry. - the spade ace - to live
his partner a single olub rufl, and the
contract oould no longer be set.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Away!

DOWN
1 Thin roc k

5 Pats
2 Panama
9 Stockings
port
10 Run away 3 Almost
with
spelling oul
12 E!!YPtian 4 Goller's
dancer
gadget
13 Forceful
5 Proda15 Mrs.
mation
Yeeterday'• Auwer
Hoover
6 Medicinal
18 Word
plant
16 See
30 In view of
before
7 Wet
19 Main artery 31 Dangerous
long
ground
20 Cross the
emotion
or now
8 Be frank
goal line
39 Neapolitan
17 Wing (Lat.) lllntertwine 29 · - de Lune" painter
18 Sheathe 14 Golden 24 Restrain
36 Link
20 Card game Horde
25 Augur
37 Bill
21 Rhode
member 27 Oklahoman
and coo
Island's
motto
221mogene 23 Wary
ZG "Howler'
26 Keep
count of

27 Painful
28 Stage group
29 Black
Sea port

32 Ritual
response
93 EAA"
34 Chin ese
river

35 .Journalist
James

37 Air SQuadron II""

38 !Joost

39 Formerly
40 Time period

41 Eu.r. river

DAILY CRYPI'OQUO'I'FS- Hen'e how to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW
One letter stands lor anolher. In this sample A is used
for the three I.'s, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinls . Each day the code leiters are dille-rent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

10-13

trade. 1he Creole tongue.

1"He

+, K J84
.732

~~tc•'IW

a

SNAKE!!

11·11-11

.K 8 7

When the opening lead is obviously
a singleton, declarer does not have to
. be a geniUB to see into the future. If he
oan identify the circumstam:es that
will defeat his contraot, he should then
look lor a way to ohange them.
In a recent pairs oompetition, many
declarers who arrived at four spades
were oonfronted with the opening club
lead. Why not all? Because it is not
usually best to lead a singleton in dedarer's suit. Often partner holds cards
that will produce a trick or two if dedarer is left to his own devices. That
was not the case with the current deal.
Those ordinary declarers who won
the club and played a trump to the 10
in dummy got their oomeuppance
quickly. East won his trump a~ and
shot back a club for West to ruff. West
then played a heart to East's ace. and
aoother club ruff sealed declarer's
fate. But one shrewd declarer altered
his destiny. After winning the opening
club, he played A-K of diamonds and
then the jack. When East followed low,
he pitched his heart. West won the dla-

and Harlem slang , are eJCam·
Jamn Boya Wttllf Sarvice. Alto

NORTH
.10 9 6

By James Jacoby

*

ined in 1his episode. (60
min.)
(jj) @ Newo
10:10 ()) MOVI E: 'Good News'
I 0:30 ()) Bill Cosby Show
C!J 1986 lntomatlonal
Wot0111kl Tour (60 min .) IR) .
•CD INN New1
(IJ) Thlo Old House ICCI
11 :oo • m ()II •~JJ (JIJ
Hordcaollo and McCor·

.

A Complete tho chucFI• quoted
_ . V by lilling In rho missing words
L.-l.......l.-l........L-1-.J you develop !rom stop _No. 3 below.

Rooanne Cash. Charlie
Daniele end Tho Ollk
Ridge Boyt on COUNTRY
ROCK. Tonlte II 9:30
NASHVILLE Ad, .
10:00
CD Odd Couple
()) Slory of· English The
roo1s of Black English. in-

General Hauling

I

ALUTTY

1--T-1:....:r,.ls.:..r-1..;_iTI,.:...Ir-1

cluding the American slave

30•·875·211118.

75 Chovrolot pl&lt;*up 1310.: 70
Chtvrolet car t300 . 304 -171-

.I PA~t: You ·GO IN,S"IDI:- 'iHECtUC:,&amp;cE?N coop ANP

" HONEYSUCKLE HALL.~'

'IIU oltor I .

1113 Dodgo Chtrgor Shelby, e

.tter

Fieollll~r~l Fow left. aaeloeally. 83

-------

-

Ser vi ces

304-871-4230 or 30•·176·

1180 Hotldo Civic. "'"' good.
Ohio. Cell 114-"41-17n. ,.._ lookt - · 11.000.00. I foot
114-441-31112. Up front • ..,. compfett lltellltt sv Item
tori wtth WIPPMtY DVtl' 40 WMd uoo.oo. 304-171·7142.

82 Wanted to Buy

Wood splitter, hNYY duty, 11
h.p., 18 g•t. 2 11111• .,...,..,_split
upta41lncftlength. 48 ,0001bt.
pr....... 304-875-4127.

."

.. 5

•'

min.)

'71 Ford Pinto ••tton waoon.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. IR 311 W. OoHipoMo,

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

Witch,

I

good work car. front wheal

Coli 814·245-9487.

small tqulptMnt, d .. lm. renttl
clothing tllllzal.lniNitted con·. '71 Ford 2,000 trtctor, brulh
relit t21. up. &amp;em lorMrvHie' a, hog, gr.dtr blldt. plawa, boom
Junction Independence Ro.t • pole, m.,u,. tprtldtr. 304·
okl Rt. 21, Fridav. S.turdty, 773·1117.
Sundrt. 12:00 to 8:00 p.m.
TraNer for Rent . Ph. 273·511515.

e?.OOO.OO: 10 oorloo Dhcll

114-441·0322.

2233.

75 ctlevy Impala. 35Q motor •
transmiallion. Rune good . tlOO.

t.lfrn Sllllitltl'\
&amp; LIVI'~I!ii.k

SURPWS REGULAR ARMY
CAMOUFLAGE CLOTHING- Phono 30•-881-3874.

bo••

Us.:! Fumhur•r Waahef &amp;
dryer, electric range, g11 rangt,
wood ttble &amp; 2
btds,
• • • · &amp; racHn•. 3 miltS out
8uii"'IHI• Rd . Op., lAM lo
&amp;PM. Mon. thN 81t.

75 Chevy Monu V·B, aptclll
thll ~ 13150. Call 114-379-

1180 Dodoo Colt. wrtci&lt;od:
1300.00. 30•·882·21183.

a,oo AM to 1:00PM. 30•-1714412.

Sofas and chlir1 priced from
tJ95 to e996 . Tabl• t60 and
up to •126. Hkie-a-beda f390
to e695. Rec:llnen t221 to
*376. Lampe t28 to *1215.
Dlnents e109 lnd up to •4915 .
Wood table w· O ch 1ir1 *285 to
t7t6. Oeek
up to 1371.
HU1ch• ••oo and up . Bunk
bids eomp'-ta w· mattr• ...
*296 and up to e3915 . Bilby beds
*110 &amp; *176. M1nrtsM1orbo11
apringa full or twin •• 3 ' rirm
t73. end tel . au., atts uze.
King 1350. 4 drtwtr ch11t M1 ,
Dr•urs eat. Gun cabintta 8 .
1 D, &amp; 12 r.n . Gl!l or electric
r•nge U? . Baby m.nrattll
us • •45 . Bed ·tram•
UO &amp; ICing frame
Oood
. nlacdon of bedroom 1Uitt1,
metal Clblnet:s, htldbotrdl*30
and up to •ea.

814-"48-0382 .

Oravtty btd w.gon • hsullttln
=~;r;,~••
· ~~o 14-

Rough cut lumber. ...IOI'Itd
walnut 5Q cents botrd foot .
White oak •1 .28 ptf thoUJIRd.
Cen be seen Wtlktr Wreck.,,

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

1181 Ford Escort Stllktnwagon
AC, 31 MPG. new Miehlen
radials, ulling far pay off. C1ll

Firewood for tile. S.atoned oak

S1lel 50 Ptr cent offt Flllhing
llfOW •ian 12791 lighted. non·
arrow *2&amp;91 Nonlighttd t2311
Frtt lettffll Ftw ltft, IH
locally . 1-800·423 · 01 83.
anytime.

,...,.

role oppos~e Paul Newman
in the upcoming film. "Tha
Color of Money"ernM•A•S•H
a()) People's Court
[I) Nightly BuolneSI Repon
.
()II Newo
(jj)
MocNoii-Lohrer
Newahour _
II G1 (jJ) Wheal of Fortune
@ Berney Miller .
()) Senfonl-ond Son
· U (I) [I) New Newlywed
Game
C!J NFL Fllml
g CD Too Cloeo for Comfort
())Judge
()) Buttorllin
1]11 Wheel of Fortune
Gl G1 Gil Jeopardy
@Benson
[I) The Honoymoone111
0 (J) (jJ) ALF ALF lands

a

•
;&gt; ,j' • ? .-

Call 114-2151-1383. ·

Pontiac 3&amp;0 automatic 1 trans,
good condhktn. Ctll 81 4 ·446·

12,000. CtH 114-.211·1211.

2788.

JO~

27 ft. Tnrtwood camper aetf
cont1ined , good shape, U . SOO.

RON ' S Television Service .
HouH calla on RCA. Quazar,
GE. Specialing in Zentth. Call

O.lllpollo. Oh .

t4,000. 304-112·2211. •

1\71 'o.uanr 2 Motbi'ola, 25
lndl color T.V. good oondhlon.
NMdt tomt repair. 1110. Eltct·
ric guhtr tnd ctte, 1315. 37 k..Audion Orgen. e10. 114-149·

SW~IN

7:05
7:30

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1984 Ford E1cort wagon, auto,
air, AM-FM, wirarima, U ,999.
John's Auto StiM,' 8ulr.tillt Rd.

epeed, IC, pb, pa, blut • 1ltver,

8122.

.

882-32114.

Uncondkton.t Uftrtime gu•ran 1H. Local ret.,.nc• fumithed.
FrH •t1matt1. Call collect
1· 814·237-0488. day or night.
Rogers Ba1ement
Waterproofing.

Ford JubUttrectCK P'owt • clllk,

condition . 1200. Call 814· 112·

AUCTION • FURNITURE 82

MerctdN 460 111 7bx sharP
wlll.trada. Call814·88&amp;-7311 .

triC10fl. 1000 10011.

7 piece living room 1uite. Good

61 Houaehold Goods

ct.lne buggy, UOO .

Firewood for Nil. $38 . per Did
or &amp; loada tor •uo. Delivered
end 1tackld. Call 114-9482101 after 5 ;00 ,
·

llr-ood. 114-742-2212.

'

1 A~WA~ LOOK FORWARD
TO OUf? WARM RWNIONI

1980 AMC Spirit, good motor,
front end. 1974 Ford Gran ad a
for parts. good motor and
tran•n'Masion . 304-882· 2862 or

1t82 Dodga Dipomal auto air,
AM wira rim.. *2,799. John '•
Auto S1lt1, &amp;~avilla Rd . GaMipolis. Oh.

12-1. Clooed Mon. 181 S. Eoll
of Albonv. Oh. 814-18B·I29e. '1980 Chevy Citation no rust.

114-2111-11481 .

.':.: WEI.CO!Itei.CJ:,O.O tliOJI:j!,!

1988 Chevrolet Sprint plus. 6 1971 Rover 19 ft . travel trtilar.
apd. tr~narhtt~ion, radio, eM .1 tilly 111f contained, crank out
cond. Very low mllllfle. bcel· awning, excellent cand . C1ll
lant ga mileage. Call &amp;14-246· 614-367-0682.

08118.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

CROSS&amp;SONS

1971 Jeep Commando. AKC
Registered Toy black, femala
Poodle. Spayed . t200 . No

[I) Entemlnment Tonight
Tom Cruise diacusses ·his

4657.

noo. Coli 114-251·1393.

090. CoN 814·441·4141.

81

Mountaineer Auto Body Parts.
1318 lth St. New Haven W.Va.
his the largest InventOry of after
market p11rt1 tn the area at low,
low price1. 73-10 OM fenders
.f31. GM doors $78. 73-79 Ford
fernie,. 131 , Doo,. t99 . Wa
now heve lhort end long P.U.
OM Hd lide, blazer llid111 and
etrly and lite Ford bed sldas in
lftock.Aito part1 for cars and
vent, bedliners, st~ bu,.,..,ers,
Sh1rp 775 spray gun and cup
*99. while they last. Batteri•
and tct. Also av1ilable a 3 year
rust through Warr1nty on our top
quality body par'la. Outtlde We at
Virginia Ctll 1-800·523·2013 .
In Wut Virginia 1 ·800-654·

1980 Cht'llette runs good.

Snare drum Itt. exc. c:ond .•
e160 .. Trombone with caae

6461 .

Wood 3 Ught front door with lode
and hing•. eeo. Cslll14-912·

•so.

57

Hou111 for rant and trtiler space
rent . 2 horMtS and i pony for
nle. Call814·2415 -5492 .

Point PleMant.

()) Big Volley
C!J Mozdo Spoml.ook
• rn Jefferson•
()) 3-2-1. COfltiiCl (CC)
·(jj) Here'oto Your Health
@ Facta of uta ·
[I) New Loevoltlo Beover
0 (])()II NBC News
C!J Action Otrtdoon with
Julius Borao
til [I) ABC Newo
g CD Hogen'• Heroes
[I) Doctor Wl1o
(jJ 0 (j} CBS Newe
(jj) Body EIIIC1ric
@GoodTimeo
())Down to Earth in Stereo.
II(]) PM Mlgozlne
.(1) Hardcaatlo end McCor-

a

Dodrill's Auto Parts. 2'1J . mi.
North of Vinton on St. At. 180 is
the place to buy your used auto
part1. Vou'll . recaivt fut,
friendly MNICt 9 tilt best uted
Plr'lt availllble. C1ll 614-388·

Coli 81•·2116·1393.

68

Mixed hardwood sltba . t12 . per
bundle. Containing approx. 1Y!
tons. FOB Ohio P1llet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. Call 814 -992-

.Autos for Sale

Volklw~gon

Cabinet style atareo 1376. C1ll

Trailer tPacet. •mall children
ac:cept•r At. 1, locuat Road
bac:k o
• K Mobile Homes,

49

30··875·5941 .

614 -387-721 I .

Spacious trail• lots for rent with
playground and picnic fteilities,
at Famlty Prida Mobile Home
Park, At. 2. Gallipolis Farry. W.
Va. 304 -676-3073.

71

1182 Plymouth Champ • apct,
low miiHgft, sharp, t1.799 .
Johnl Auto Slits. £uleOJiUe Rd .,
G1Uipolis.

For Hit woodburntt, beby buck
fireplace Insert, t400 . Call 614 ·

Real sorghum. Stete At. 175.
*3.00 quart. later McCombi.

large round bale• of hay 110 ea.
Squ1re balea •1.26 ea. Call
114-441-1012 lifter I .

Border Collie puppy putllbred
from worklnl dogs ,' t125. Call

Plano, upright. good c:onclit6on.
will delivar, 304-175·2088 "ttr
7 p.m.

o••

Hay &amp; Grain

1200. Coli 814 -2&amp;1-1274.

King woodburning stova t150 .
Dinnet table &amp; 3 chaira t115 .
Gibson whitJ rafrig UO. Ken more dithwashar *70. Freezer
1126 . 2 metal diah cabin at• *10
each. 4 pe.llvlngroomsulte $2:8 .
Call 814-448-92157 aft• &amp;PM.

80.000 BTU Amsnd1 9111 fur·
nace e1oo . Small
heater
t20 . Setrs b•t Kenmore micro·
wave 4 cabineta tor •zoo. J .C.
Penny home CB with antenna
e7~ . Ctii614-U8·· e&amp;llli3.

304-882-3429.

84

918B

•

614-266-1739 .

175·6799.

T ra n s ~urtat tu n

614-446·23 9.

Buckeye model2315 wood &amp; coal
stove, good cond, e160. Cal

Regis._td Quarter Korl8. g,td·
;.g, 8 yrs old. good lilt. well
broka. trliler• well, htt been
shown, ptymtnt plan with ap·
proved cNdit, trail rid• wall,
prlctd to nil, t800.00 . 304·

Pets for Sale

011tgonwYnd Catttrv Klf'lnel.
CFA Hlm1layan, Ptrsi.. and
Siameae kittens. AKC Otow

379'2745.

mon1h. Gatua Hotel. CaN 814·
448 -9180 . Rent a1low •• e1 20
month.

Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

.99HB58.

Plastic cistern Ita .. approved,
plastic septic tanka, plastic
culverts. metal culverts . · RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES , Jackton, Oh. 614-286-5930 .

Appla 2-E RGB color, due disc
drive, VGC. $1 , 50 . Comet with
many gsmes. Call 814- 388 -

Apartment in privale home,
privale entrance. 304-676 -

nithtd, tow utiltfi•. larg1 lot.
Can 8'14 ·441-9204.

Nice 2 btdroommobflehomefor
rent. Near Racine. C•ll 814-

245-6121 .

114-246-9577.

2 bdr. 121166 , completely fur·

121100 Liberty all IIK!rlc trailer.
Ctntral t lr, 2 bedrooms, under·
pinning , awning on moat win·
dowa, 2 porch• . . 3 tyt down
bands, new carpet In Nvlng room
and hall, refriatrator and alovt.

Ca11114-256-8251 .

Building M1teriala
Blodl, brick, sewer pip•, win·
dows. Nnttl•. etc: Claude Win ~
tll'l, Ria Grandt, 0 . C1ll 814 ·

In Middleport 2 ·bdr. furnished
lllpt ., 1- 304-882-2588.

County · Appliance. Inc. Good
uHd applien~ and TV 11t1.
Open SAM to 8PM . Mon thN

814-446-3711.

Callah,an ' s Used Tire Shop . Ovtr
1,000tlret. tlzes12 , 13,14, 16,
18 . 16.6. a miiM out At. 218.

8 month okl ftmala Beagle UO.

1089.

Mobile tlomtfor rent, 2 bdr., KC
achool diatrict. Cell 814-448 ·

•

mick

66 B!lilding Supplies

.

Newa '

C!J SpotUCenter
54 Misc. Merchandisa

'

6:00 DlllCDDCD[JJIJ (j))GIJ

8116.

Firewood tPtit &amp; h1ul«&lt; 111
hardwood , PU load *40 dell·
vered . Call 614·446· 3028 or

11.·441-3197.

2•5-5889.

utility bldg .•
lftor~ge ~g .. '-' acra land.
Route 2 · 4 mil• North from
Point Pltllant. Anne Schmitt.

{0-14

~

Antiques

St0\18 for tala, coppertona &amp;
con . self cl..ning oven . Call

2 bdr. trailer furnished . W-0 .
CioN to town. Water &amp; trash
pakl, Ctll 614-448-4083 or

trailer,

~~ -

elch. Coiii14-B-13-6164.

1983 Clayton mobile home
12x80 &amp; 1. 3 or an acre111ither aell
together or Mparate . Call 814-

12'xtl

~

814 -"46·2223 .

153-5901.

1-304-171-4031.

~­

....

WOII

·TIIAr DAILY Q.fii!Q
PUULII 0~

WENIN9

~ ~
___.....~

Sonti~ei-Page-7

10!13/86

2220.

Green aota bed •2&amp;.00. Brown
sofa af'ld chair US.OO. King size
headboarcU45.00. e100.00 for
all. Phone 304-882-2334.

APARTMENTS. mobile homaa.
houses. Pt. PleauntandGitlipolis. 614-446-8221 .

46 Space for Rent

1 bedroom furnlahld duplex
400, 211t Strtet. USO . month.
2 utiliti• furnish~ . Adults

~J(.f'la:T 0/~.v.t;;.

Tranamlgions, all typ ... over,
front, rear) 4 wheel driva. 1nd
parts. Will deliver . Call 814 -379·

304-676-11483 or 671-1450.

256-1393.

1 room, furnished .tficiencvapt.
in langsville. $100 per month.
Call 61-'·· 992-5692 aher 5:00
p.m.

180 &amp; Bul.tVllleRdl . 2 bdr. •160 . Valley Fumltura, new lit uatd.
month. deposit required. no Large NCdon of quality fumi·
pate. Call BU-448-4491 or turt . 1218 Eutern Ave ..
Gallipolis.
814-441-3188.

3 br. 14x18, 1973 DougiM
mobile home, undtrpHnlng and
8x10 detached porch. t4,300.

78

Plckena Ultd Furniture. Good
quality used fumlturt. Open 9 to
6 or call for lippointmant.

Heavy duty gas alation. type air
compressor, t600 . Call 814·

2 bedroom home in Langsville.
Oepotlt and rafafence required.
614-742·2541 after 6:00p.m.

5 room house in Pomtfoy, 2
bedrooms. 1 bath. laundry room,
1 car oar~ge. built· ln kitchen.
completely carpeted. draperiM
furnished. Very prh11tesettlng, 5
min . from town. No pets . *275
plus utilities. Depoait required.
Send retu me and ref8tences to
The D1lly Sentinel, Box 729 S.
Pomeroy, Ohio

'1tti

T,elevision
Viewing ·

Boats lnd •
Motors for Sale

61•-381-9783.

3 piacellvlrlg room1uite in good
conditkm. Call 614 -388-8489
after 6:30.

St1111l culverts&amp; ft. diameter, 8ft.
diamete. Up to 28 ft . long . Call

614-992-&amp;018.

3 bedroom home in Dexter,
cloae to coal minH. If interettad
clll 814·742-2729 .

HO~

-

' ' M1r~ TW1in 140 HP ·t0 .b0w
seats, skis&amp; trailer e4,500. Call

71B1 .

All wOod burning ato\1111 in
ttoc:k, reduced to oo at. Swisher
Implement . Call 614-448 ·

.1 bedroom apt. for rent. Basic
retlt starts *215 . 1 month that
includtl 111 utilities. Depo1rt
required of 8200. Contact Vii·
lage Menor Apt. Middleport.
614-992-7787. Equal Housing
OppOrhlnity.

Rooms for rent: PfBfer women.
call 8:00 AM to 6 :00 PM.

do . bulinen with peopl• you · Big savlrig &amp; big Hltct ion of ·2 bdr., all utllltlaa paid except
know, and NOT to Nnd money uMd &amp; btnk rtpCMsaaled mobile eltc.. fum . or unfurn .. IIC.
depo1it required. Convenient
lhrou~ the mail until you have
home. Ctll K1nauga Mobile location . Call 514 -448-8&amp;88 or
inv•tigated the offering.
Homet. 11 4·448·9812.
614-441-4778.

23

Furn . efficiency apt. carpeted &amp;
q~iet single working per1on
only . Call 814-448-4607 or
614-446-2602 .

In Middleport, 2 bedroom. newly
remodeled hou111 .. *226 . month
plus utilitiet. t160. dopo1it.
Raf•encn required. Frigerator
and stove avai11ble. No p&amp;ts. Call

1971 14•70 Gottyoburg, 2 bdr ..
114-949 -2803 0&lt; 114-448· 2 full bttha. porch &amp; awn ing, 2 42 Mobile Homes
AC 's , aM elec., ••c . eond. lett
2738.
for Rent
offer. Call 11"·258-81520 or
114-211-1&amp;02.

Business
Opportunity

Nlce 2 bdr.
apt. refrig.,
4 miles&amp;hom
Gallipolis
. Sto~e.
weter furnifhMI. 8210 a month, no

2 bdr. furnished duplex in 614-992-8216 .

Racine. .$200 per month. Oap·
osil lit reference required . Call

76

~ICA

Oh. 614·448·7•44.

63

I

"·

Unfum. 4 rooms &amp; batt!, Cen~
trallv located, no pets, ref. llt tee. {
dep. Call 614-448· 0444.

Furnished efficiency 1160 utili·
35 acru. Recine. Ohio . Horse ties paid, share bath,· 701 4th.
Cave area . Call 614-992-7644. 1Oallipolil. Cell446 ·441 Baher6
pm.
.

O"lv. 304-17&amp;-2851 .

Will do babyllttlng on week·
tr~da in Mete• Cwnty 1rt1. Ctll

21

Furntshed apt. U ·3&amp; . UtilitiM .
paid. 1 BR . 920 4th. Gallipolis. .
446-4416 after 7pm .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
304-17 -1076.
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
Uptown busine11 or Dfficespact
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. RT 35. 3 bedroom houte in Henderson. for
rent in Colonial Plaz1 . C1ll
PHONE 814-448·7274.
w. v._304-175-7448.
304-175-2194 or 671·9746.
14•86 Fairmont Bay\liaw 2 bdr.,
all electric, und-.pinnlng, ntw
carpal, *7,800 . Call 814-245·

Dti"IUI~ l)A~ IN 11112.. CDW!'II&amp;U~ ~
~ ~I" ct.fb~l~lllEI
.

petl . Call 614-448-8038.

1 acre 2 car garage 30x30 heat,
water ..elactric . Set up for mobile
home. State Route 554 . Call

2359. -

rooma. bath. garage, workshop,

12

613112 3rd. Ave. 1 bdr. ·private
bath. e140 per R:'O. Deposit
required . Call 814-448-4222
between 9 II 5.

years tO develop a language,
and now you say you don't
want toT'".l'\..1.d\.
T u about I't?."

Pizza. Call 614-446· 4040 .•

3000 Government Jobs List.
S16 ,040- S59,230 yr. Now Hiring . Call 805-687·600Q bt.

VI(
Jhl"'
P&amp;n~ .

"It took us thousands of

oo·mino's 31

614-446 -9669 .

Nicely furni1hed mobile home
CA &amp; Meat, e~r:cel . ·k)catlon,
adults bnly. Call814-446-0338.

.

Motorcycles

30•-175-1310 qr 304-6753602 . .
.
.

N.w.....,• used refrtg.. r.ngll;
wash. . • dryen . I 'pi). wood
L.room euite 1400. Mollohan
Fum ., At. 7 North, Gsllipolla,

The Daily

OhiO

1988 HondaV~ B&amp;'Matgnum. Call

drylfl, refr'all'ltora,
rangaa . Skaggs Applllncu,
Upper ANar Ad. btsld1 Stone
Cr~t Motel. ~14-448 · ~~8 .

Range eso . Call 614-446·

Duplex for rent 646 Second
Ave.. Gallipolt1. 3 bdr. livin·
groom. diflingroom, ntw kit·
chen, backyard, refrig, • range.
$286 plus utilitl• &amp; ·Mcurity
depoait. Call 614•446 -0890.

$18 ,000. No selling, repeat
business. Set your own hour~ .
Training ptOOJided . Call 1-612·
938 -6870. M-F, a.-m to Spm
(Central Standard Time).

74

61 Houaehold Goods

Apartment
·for -Rent

1v1onaav. uctober 1 ::s, Ull:lb

Monday, October 13. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

u xcv

Z MD

Z MD

yc

If

ll E H

G B ll L

z

WX C EPil
U MIHA ,

F ll V

ALMGilE,

FZ

W C E

Z M D

C E H
MEWil

EA1'1ll

FA

IMAWMYYME

lllW C RRilH - -

Yeaterday'a CI')'Ptoqu~te; BEAUTY OF STYLE AND
HARMONY AND GRACE AND GOOD RHYTHM DEPEND
ON SIMPLICITY. - PLATO
[I) National Geog111phlc

Reilly_ 160 min.) IR) In
StOJeo.
C!J Sporta(:anter
8CDT1XI
[JJ ® Mavnum. P.l.
(j} Simon &amp;. Simon The
Simons ora hired by A.J/ s

Explorer

a ())

N•w•
•CD Rawhide
[I)

tiJSCt\1

a

old girtfriend to investigate

12:16 [I) Gldgtt
12:30 D CIJ Gil Lite Night with
Devld Letterman 160 min .!

the 20-yelf·Oid murder of
herbrotherata1960'srally .
170 min.) tRl 12:00 ()) Bums &amp;. Alton
C!J Auto liKing '88: World
Sports C!" Chompionohlp
Spa 1OOO'Irom Belgium . t60

(]) Best of Groucho
D ()) ABC Newt Nlghdlno
[JJ MOVIE: 'lnsldo Delay
Clovtor'
@ MOVIE: ' Popor Chaee'
t 2:40 8 (j)) MOVIE: 'The Other

In Stereo,

Woman'

min.)

\

'

'

�·.
Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

.....--Local Briefs:----- I Area deaths
scwn schequles annual banquet

The annual Meigs SoU and Water Conservation Dlstrtct banquet
wUI be held 1\Jesday, Nov. 18, at Eastern High School, aC&lt;.'Ordlng to
SWCD Chalnnan David E. Gloeckner, In action taken at a recent
board meeting.
The meetin~ will begin at 7: 18 p.m. with a meal of baked steak,
mashed potatoes, gravy, green beans, slaw, rolls, pie and Iced tea
and coffee served by the E;astemBand Boosters.
·
Election of one supervisor will be conducted. CaQdldates are
Gloeckner, of Letart Township, and Stanley Hutton of Salem
Township. Noml!lations will be taken fro~ the noor at tile meeting.
Absentee ballots may be secured by Writing the dlstrtct ctfl&lt;'e, or by
stopping bY the office on the day of the meeting.
In other action at the recent SWCD mrettng, It was decided to send
letters to U.S. Rep. Ralph Regula and Sens. Howard Metzenbaum
and John Glenn urging them to vote for the release of the aJ percent
of fundings that are eligible for reclan)atlon of abandoned mineland.
These monies arc from the severance tax paid on mined coal andean
only be spent on reclamation.
Those attending the meeting were Gloeckner, Rodney Chevalier,
Thomas Theiss, Rex Shenefield, Gordon Gilmore-, Ned Dooley,
David Bun and Opal Dyer.

Middleport chamber to ~t
The Middleport Chamber of Commerce will meet at I p.m.
TUesday at the Middleport Dairy Queen.

EMS units respond to 8 calls
Eight calls were answered by local units over the weekend, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
Saturday runs included Middleporf at 3:26p.m. took Margaret
Arnall from 480 Broadway to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at
8:09 pm. took Pauline Foster from Pomeroy Health Care Center to
Veterans Memortal Hospital; Middleport at 9:50 p.m. took Floyd
Reynolds from Grant Street to Veterans Memorial.
On Sunday Middleport at 2:46a.m., took John Ward to Veterans
Memortal; Rutland a.t 2:36 p.m. took Greg Smith to O'Bieness
Hospital in Athens; Rutland at 6:49p.m., took GarJll't Williamson
from Salem Street to Holzer Medical Center; TUppers Plains at 7:21
p.m. took Nancy. Dean from Owl Hollow Road to St. Joseph Hospital
in Parkersburg. and at 9:22p.m. Racine took Barbara Taloott from
Peart Street to Veterans Memortal.

Pomeroy police cite driver
Steven K. Gardner. Route I, Shade, is being charged with reckless
operation. leaving the scene and no financial responsibility as the
result of an accident on Mulberry Avenue Sunday at· 9:08p.m.
Pomeroy Police report that the accident oxurred near the
intersection of ll,lulberrv Avenue and Breezy Heights. Gardner was
traveling· south when he failed to negotiate a curve and hlt the
northbound car of Rhonda Thompson, Cheshire.
There was heavy damage to the Thompson car and moderate to
the Gardner vehicle. Gardner allegedly left the scene and was
arrested later at the mobile home park !Etween Poll'\eroy and
Shade.

Junior high boosters to meet
Southern Junior High Boosters will meet tonight at 7 at Southern
Junior High School.

On the VCR scene

&lt;-Out of Afric.a ' makes
for .outstanding choice
Bv ,JEFF HD..LEi\RV
Thb 'month's releases In yoor
local·videostoresoffrredsomcvery
good viewing by their emphasis on
well -structured story lines and
excellent acting. ln an age whc'rc
the movie "Rambo" is considered a
masterpiece of cinematography. a
tendency toward sacrificing story
for special effects Is frightening.
That's why it's always refreshing to ·
sit down and actually sa- a good,
intettlgenlf)· done movie that the
producers and dircctors obviously
took great pride in.
One such .movie is "Out of
Africa." a beautifully done film
about lsak Dincsen. or actually
Karin Blixen. a Danish woman who
became a famous author. who .
cametoAfricaonl) to learn the sad
tmth that life is not on an)· level
simple or problem fr'C&lt;'. .
The fi rst thing she learns in factl~
that Africa is a. male-dominated
world whc'n innocently walking Int o
a men 's rlub. she is asked rurtly to •
leave. Hcmernber that this'mOI'ic is
set in a time when ERA did not
exist. so tight from the start we are
given some subt le hint that this
movk&gt; Is concerned with lwo levels
of struggle; woman against man
and woman against em·ironment.
Metyl Str('('p, who plays Karin.
demonstrates OllCf' again her abil·
ity to drvelop a character into a
beliP\'able. acceptable person. Ro·
Irn Redford. who plays the
adventuru Denys and also the
romantic interest, is st Ut as much of
a dt&gt;llght to sre oo the scrll'n as he
always i,. Sydney Pollack, who pul
thls film together as its producer,
definitely knew what he was doing
this time. The movie buffs among
you will note that there are some
similar ities in the movie to "Other
Side of the Mountain." but thev do
not detract fi·om what isobl'buSiy a
flne movie. This Is one I recommend highly to everyone who wants
to sre a movie that does not seek to
see how many screams It can elicit
or how many gallom'of blood can be
• spilled . "Out of Africa" Is rated PC
and runs for two tvurs and 41
minutes.
The next movie Is a collaborat Jon
between Sleven Spielberg · and Chris Columbus (no pkes please!,
the man who ' wrole lhe movie
"Gremlins." "Young Sherlock
Holmes" Is a movie about what
might have happened If Holmes as

•
Monday,
October 1.3. 1986

Pomeroy-'-Middleport. Ohic:i

a boy mN a 1wy young War son for
an adventure. Something such as
thl s is called a pastiche. a slot;,;
which u.'ieS an author's characters
in what amounts to an unwritten
adventure.
The star;.; concerns how a
mysterious person in a black robe is
stalking pro pie in Victorian 1.ondon
with poison-tipped thoms that drive
them Into a frenzy with incredibl)'
realistic halluclnatilns.
Holmrs, having been expelled for
a cheating scandal which l~ a very
convincing set-up ~ an memy,
becomos involved when his mentor
becomrs a victim of tlr figu re and
dies with the word "Alar" on his
lips. The boys, along withtheman 's
niece, track down clue after clue
untU -I'd better oot spoil thls
movie except to tdl 1·ru that
Professor Moriarty Is In this too. It
is very possible that 11'1? might be
hearing more from Nicholas Rowe
and Alan Cox, ~ho J:iay Hoimesa nd
Watsqn, respectively. The PG-13
rating Is for the OO::essarUy violent
conlrontation .between Holmes and
Atar atthe md. This movie runs for
91minutes andlsoneofSplelberg's
finest movies since "Raiders of the
Lost Ark."
Next month. more rrovles I hope
that you will check these andotheJ'S
out.

)

.

......

·. Bengals trip

That would give Congress only
two working days this week, since
today is Columb.JS Day.
A major obstacle was cleared
Friday, when House leaders resolved a dispute with President
Reagan over arms control provi·
slons the House sought to include in
a catch-all spmdlng biU, needed Io
keep the government running.

•

aty

I

inL'Umhent Auditor Thomas E. Fergn!!On; !Ole
Maison, for lncumhenl Secretary of Stale SheiTild
Brown; Mike MuDen, for Altomey General Anthony
.J. Celebretze Jr.; Jane Frymyer, coordinator for
Stale Rep. Jolynn Bosler; John lhle, for Chief Justice.
Frank D. Celebrezzc; Bee icy Triplett, coordinator fo,&gt;
Stale Senate candidate Jan Michael !.Dng; and·
Hunwr.

like to increase funding lbr higher
student's education to 33 percent.
"As we do that, I believe we can education. he also has a responsibll·
responsibly keep a lid on the tuition · ity to taxpayers to keep the state
for our students. ·• Celeste said. "My budget withln reasonable limits.
"There is a temptation· to say H
prtorry is to provide money to the
this tax will generate so much
universities.''
Celeste said the best way to money, then let' s spend it all," said
provide a healthier job market for Celeste.
"! think the pecple of Ohio have
prospective qJIIege graduates and
wan
ted to strike a balance between
keep them In Ohio is to strengthen
a
responsible
level of taxes on the
the state's economy and provide .
one
hand
and
a genuine commit jobs near college campuses.
ment to better pe-ilnnance in
Duling the TV program, which terms of our services."
aired in nine Ohio cities and was
The sa me student pursued Ce·
paid for by Celeste's re-election teste about more money for col·
campaign committee, Celeste ans· leges to make them "top rate"
was uncertain whether the final wered questions from editors and among the natio n's institutions.
Celeste said that Ohio's growih
version would, be acceptable. A reporters · at college newspapers
House-Senate conference commit· and radio stations. He also fielded must be steady and strong.
"All of us would like to see us do
tee planned to finish w&lt;rkon the bill calls !rom viewers across the state.
One
college
reporter
asked
Cemore
in education," he said. "I
TUesday and send it to botlt
leste
why
he
chose
to
cut
taxes
last
believe
we are making real prochambers for votes.
year when there was an excess of gress. But we aren't going to do it
A stop-gap spending bill , to keep state money instead of pourir.g overnight and we arm 't going to do
government agencies funded more fund s into the education it by putting . heaps or money
forward at one time. It's going to
through Wednesday, was approved program.
Although
Celeste
sa
id
he
would
take time to move into a position or
by Congress Friday, lut Reagan
leaders
hip."
did not sign It untU Saturday In
Celeste
told one caller tram
Iceland. An earlier stvrt -term
Hamilton
that
Ohio's taxes are
money biU ran out at 12:01 a.m.
"ver'y
competitive
with other
EDT Saturday, leaving the fede ral
South Central Ohio
states."
He
said
he
had
put a lid on
government technleally broke until
Tonight and Tuesday, rain. Low spending.
too president signed the second in the mid 50s. High in the upper fils.
measure.
West to northwest winds 10 mmph
or
less tonight. Chance of rain 80
A dispute between the House and
percent
tonight and Tuesday.
Senate ·over welfare benefits has
Ohio
Extended Forecast
blocked agreement on a reconcllia·
Wednesday
througll Friday
tion biU needed to bring spending in
Fair
with
highs
in the 50s
line with the congressional budget
531 lAC~SON PIC.E · RT. ~ WEST
resolution for 1987. That bill, along Wednesday and Thursday and
PhOne 4tl6- 4~
ranging
from
the
mid
50s
to
lower
with too larger catch-all moneybiU,
BARGAIN MAT INEES SA1URDAV I
00s
Friday.
The
tow
wUt
be
from
the
must be passed belbre Congress
SUNDAV • ALL SEATS !1.SD
upper lls to middle 40s Wednesday
can adjourn.
'
M~ I SS!ON EiERV TUESDAl IUD
Another must ·pass bill - raising and in the 30s Thursday and Friday.
~TOBER 10 thru ~
the debt limit -remains In the
: FRIDA&lt; thru THURSDAV !
wings with no date certain for
action by the two chambers.

During a half-hour live television
appearance Saturday night, Ce·
leste said he would support an
extension of the 4 percent ceiling on
tuitions at Ohio's colleges and
universities but only if enough fuods
can be sent to Ohio Institutions to
lower the percenta&amp;e cost of a

Ohio weather

By BOB HOEF1JCH
. Sentinel Stall Writer
Middleport Village has been approved for a $15,500 ·
Ohio Department of Transportation grant for the
continuance of the Blue Streak Taxi Service.
Mayor Fred Hofft'nan announced the grant i:&gt;r the
1987 f.lscal year when Middleport Council met In
regular session Monday night. The grant Is allowed
under legislation governing the elderly. Senior
: citizens pu~hase tokens and ride the cabs at a
reduced charge through the program.
Mayor Hoffman also announced that he has filed an
application for a $20,000 grant under the community
block grant program through the Meigs County
Commissioners.
The money would be used to purchase tl)eformer
Empire Furniture Store buDding, which would be torn
down and the lot would be offered for sale. Mayor
Hoffman reported that an individual has committed
to purchase th~ Jot and construct a new building on the
site.
Council noted that there,will not be a trtck &lt;r treat

night tn the village this year. Replacing that activity
will be a Halloween party to be staged at the Meigs
Junior High football field on Oct. 30 by the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce.
Council granted permission for a banner to be
Placed overhead across one of the streets In the
business section. The banner will promote passage of
tile tax levy for the Gallla.Jackson·Melgs Mental
Health program at the November election.
Thf€€ residents met with council to dlsruss
comments made at a recent council session by Bill
Quickel in regard to trailers and mobile homes: They
were told that there Is no clujnge in the town in the
placement of trailers and.probably will not be Ilnless a
majority of pe&lt;~ple express a desire to change present
poUcies.
One of the residents, Eller Lewis, pointed out that
some trailers "don't look so good," but by the same
token, neither do some of the lrJuses in the
community.
Mayor Hoffman assured the residents that
"nothing has changed" and Coo nell President Dewey

Wlm &lt;&gt;very disc or 1011

COUPOII

of

_color prlnr film brought
in lor processing.

10°/o
OFF
ANY PURCHASE OVER

By MAT'DIEW C. QUINN
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - U.S:
summit participants thought Presi·
dent Reagan had clinched an
unprecedented arms control deal
Sunday but were caught off-guard
by Soviet leader Mikhail GorbacheV's last· minute demand for
"Star Wars" restrtctlons that left a
sweeping accord In bits and pieces.
Two senior officials, speaking on
coodltion of anonymity, provided
the account of the ._,tlationa In a
meeting with reportei'l; Monday
aboard the Air Force jet that flew
Secretary of State George Shultz to
Washing1on from Brussels, Bel·
glum, where he briefed allied
leaders on the summit.
The officials described intrtcate,
delicate negotiations over two days
In Reykjavik, Iceland, between
Reagan ana Gorbachev and the
working grou{'&gt; o! aides named by
to tackle the whole range of thorny
issues dividing the superpowers.

Frantic negotiations on a comprehensive arms control package
reach&amp;! a climax Sunday afternoon
when SOviet Foreign Minister
'Eduard Shevardnaclze' informed
Shultz that a Soviet demand for an
extension of the '1972 Anti-BaUistlc
Missile Treaty wruld "make or
lreak this deal," a senior adminls·
tratlon official said.
But when Reagan returned to
Hofdi House !or one last meeting
with Gorbachev, the Soviet leader

demanded the ABM treaty be
altered to restrict researdi oo "Star
Wars" to too laboratory.
Reagan· balked at such a restriction, concerned It would.sruttle the
Strategic . Defense Initiative, or
"Star Wars," (l'ogram, which Is
aimed at developing a land-and
space-based anti-balllstlc missile
shield.
After some back and forth, an
American official said, "They both
said in essence, I can't do H."

Nursing facility hires .
Roger Covert is the new
administrator of the Pomeroy
Health Care Center. a facili ty of
Americare of Care Enterprlzes.
Covert comes to Meigs County
from the Lebanon County
Manor, where · he spent · 10
months In administration after
being licensed last August. He Is
a graduate of Bethany College
where he majored In psychology
and .Is a veteran of the U.S.
Army.
Prior to entering !he health
car~ field. Covert hod 15 years of,
manag e ment · experience,
mostly in telecommunications,
mu ch of which was with General
Telephone. He Is also a former
school teacher and guidance
counselor.
Covert and hi s wife, Marianne. and their 5-year-old son,
Christopher, live in Markln.
Mrs. Covert is a school teacher
In that distrtct. While the family
will continue to reside In Markm,
Covert plans to reside In this

WITH THIS COUPON

Men's and Boys' Insulated Underwear; Purple, Gold,
Green &amp; Gray Sweat Shirts, Tube &amp; Dress Soc:ks, ·Women's Shaker Sweaters &amp; Vests, Skirts, Slacks, Blouses,
Jackets, Suits, Hose, Ar*lets etc ....
Quilting Materials, Mountain Mist Batting, Stuffing,
Thread, Dress flllaterial, Zipper &amp; Thread, Eyelet Edging,
Cushion Top Material.

RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
949-2100

UCINE
President Reagan

'•,

26 Cents

l

Th~ groups assigned to deal with
arms control, headed by chief
administration arms cant rol ad·
viser Paul Nltze and Soviet arms
contol negotiator Vlktor Karpov,
had met aU Saturday night and the
next day, trying to close In on an
agrrement of a scope nt&gt;Ver before
achleved.
The talks covered the range of
arms conttpl Issues: strategic
nuclear weapons, intermediaterange nuclear mtsstles, nuclear
testing and defensive and s~ce
weapons.
A senior official said the arms
control working groups began by
finding common ground on reduc·
lng s tra tegic weapons and
intermediate·· range missiles. They
then moved on to tile ABM !teary,
which the Soviets oontard limits
"Star Wars" to research rut the
administration says allow.; re·
search. testing and development of
space-based systems.
Debate ce~tered oo three Issues :
Soviet insistence on a 10-to 15-year
period of extending the treaty
during which time neither side
could pull w t; Soviet concern a bout
Reagan's plan to deploy SDI after
the 10-year period and how "Star
Wars" could be conducted during
the 10 years.

because Middleport has not received a "yes" or "no"
answer from Pomeroy VIllage officials in regard to
property, in . Pomeroy Village, above the Sears
building. Middleport had wanted that property made
a part of Middleport ViUage after it was in'dlcated that
there are possibilities that a business would open
there providing work for aJ to :Jl pecple. Middleport
could easily provide the required sewage if the
corporation limits were moved between the two towns
so that the land would become a part of Middleport ·
Village, It was reported. Gilmore said that he feels
Pomeroy Village officials should have come forth
with some definite answer on the program.
Councilman Jack Satterfield reported that he has
looked at Oliver Street and lbund the paving
satisfactory, but Indicated that stone Is needed along
the berm , Mayor Hoffman indicated that Dmestone
will be placed In locations recommmded bY
Satterfield.
Attending the meeting were.Mayor Hoffman, Clerk
Jon Buck, and Councilmen Horton, Satterfield, King,
James Clatworthv. Gilmore and Wlliiam Walters.

Op~n~nt

requests
•
•
mquu-y
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UP!) -Ohio
Supreme Court Chief Justice Frank
Celebrezze's opponent in next
month's election is calling for a
special investigation to determine if
Celebrezze's actions were Influenced by an organized crimerelated political contrtbutlon.
Thomas J. Moyer, a Republican,
called for the investigation of the
Democratic chief justice Monday
alter tbe Cleveland Plain Dealer
'"'
; I'
reported that Celebrezze received
'
$15.500 over the las!four years from
political acHon commlttres l'lll) .bY
Locals 310 and BOO of the Laborers'
International Union of North
America.
The committees have received
money !rom convicted felons and
others who have been Identified
p_ublicly as members or associates
of organized crime families, too
•
newspaper said.
The Plain Dealer said 9Jnday
HONORED- Louisa Johnson, an employee ol Dr. Jom Ridgway lor
that the chief justice, in turn. made
at least two decisions that helped a
the past 25 years, Is pictured rreelving lUI engraved plaque from Dr.
Ridgway and staff. The plaque message et&lt;lends thanks to Jolm!!On lor
top union official, Chester Libera"a lifetime of dedicated service to IJle medical prolesslon." Before
tore, who controls ooe of those
working for Dr. Ridgway, Johnson was employed In the office oltm late
committees.
Dr. T.A. Hewetson for a number ol years. Sunday afternoon, Dr. 1111d
On two oxasions, decisions by
Mrs. Ridgway and staff held a reception and open house homring
the chief justice helped Lll:ljratore,
Johnson all he Meigs Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Refreilmenls
treasurer of Local 310's PAC, who
were served and Johnson received a number ol gifts. Sir will relhthls
was convicted of arson In 1919.
Celebrezze cast a tie-breaking
month.
vote overturning an appeals court
decision that upheld Liberatore's
arson conviction in 1982.
Five days later, a Celebrezze
carl'pargn fund roceived $5:UXJ
from Uberatore's union' PAC,' the
Plain Dealer said.
The chief justice also freed
Liberatore from jail alter two lower
negotiations." Rep. Norman Dicks, chev In Iceland forced Reagan "to courts ordered him imprtsoned
0-Wash., said Monday. " It 's going choose between confilcting goals of
pending the appeal of an arson
hls administration - deep reduc· conviction.
to get a lot more scrutiny."
Dicks said the arms control offer tlons (in nuclear arms ) and stra·
Jim Gravelle, CetebrE!Zze's camfrom Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba· tegic defense."
paign manager, said campaign
.· r--::~--------:~~k;-!.-----.::---:'.----, worke~ . had been advised to refuse .
any further contrlbutilns from the
PACs and to return any money
from them If it was determined the
Representatives of the Meigs Lo.cal Board of Education and the
newspaper's &lt;rllegations were true.
~
Meigs Local Teachers Association and a federal mediator continued
Moyer sa id . the allegations
negotiations for a new contract between the two in Middleport
against Celebrezze were "a kick in
Monday night.
the stomach"to the judicial svstem
The group met from 6 to 10:45 p.m .. exchanging proposals, but no
·
and to union membel'S.
setllement was reached.
"As an Ohio judge, my heart
. With extensions granted ,so far by the teachers associatio n, the
literally aches for our system or
present contract expires at 12:01 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 16.
justice and fo r every Ohio judge
However, a day-by-day extension has been granted by the teachers
who is working to maintain people's
after that time. Should teachers decide to strtke, law requires that
confidence in the fairness and
the board receive a lQ.day notlceofthat intention before such a strike
impartiality of that sysl&lt;'m."
begins.
·
Moyer said .

I

·'

Congress plans closer look
into-space defense proposal·

Ro&amp;er Covert
area during the'wrek, returning
home on weekends to be with his
famlly .

WASHINGTON tUPI) - Presl·
dent Reagan's "Star Wars" program faces much closer scrutiny in
Congress because of his refusal at
the summit to keep Its research in
the la~ratory in exchanJll! ro.r
nuclear weapons elimination. lawmakers warn.
House and Senate negotiators
have agreed on a $3.5 billion
spending cap for "Star Wal'S" In
fiscal '1987 -on top of the $5 billion
spent in the last three years, but the
program, formally known as the
Strategic Defense Initiative, has
taken on added Importance in tile
aftermath of the summit collapse In
Iceland.
"Obviously, next year peoplewUI
view tt as a-weapons system and not
as a bargaining chip in the

Contract ta s conttnuz,ng

Reagan optimistic over arms talks negotiations

EVERYDAY
7 DAYS A WEEK

$1.00 THRU OCT. 22nd

1 Section . 10 Pa(jes

A Multil)!!dia Inc. Newspaper

Horton stated that should legislation ever be passed
governing the placement of trailers or mobile homes,
the "grandfather clause" would protect residents who
already have their trailers and mobile homes In
place.
Council approved the September report o( Mayor
Hoffman showing receipts of $5, 745.151n fines and fees
for the month.
Councilman Allen Lee King discussed the need for
intersection curbings to be changed for the benefit of
handicapped persons. Mayor Hoffman said that he
has received an estimate of $300 to $350 ro rconverting
thoSe intersection curbings In the business sec tion for
more easy movement by the handicapped. King also
asked · council to look over a building being
· constructed at the corner of Hartinger Parkway and
Sycamore St reel.
King charged that the wilding Is not the quality that
It should be. Mayor Hoffman sa id that a buUdlng
permit was issued for the construction but that the
structure had been made. larger than the permit
indicated. Council will look at the structure.
Councilman Bob Gilmore registered frustration

Gorbachev's stance on SDI
caught U.S. te~ off-guard

new administrator

in the day.
Harold L. Mays, 19, Rt. 2, Vinton,
was walking on the roadway,
one-tenth mile west of Ohio 160, at ·
3: 55 a.m. and was stmck by the
delivery truck, driven by Michael
Wheels. 28, Rt. ·3, Bidwell. accord· ·
lng to the patrol.

enttne

Middleport gets grant to continue taxi service

r------------':-1

A· Rt. 2, VInton man was
pronounced dead on arrtval at St.
Mary's Hospital, Huntington,
W.Va., this morning from head
injurtes alter being struck by a
westbound Heiner's Bakery delivery truck on U.S. 35 In Grren
Township of Gallia County earlier

•

Pomeroy-Mi~dleport. Ohio, Tuesday, October 14, 1986

· Copyrighled I 986

Gallia man dies in morning accident

3RD

3848

•

The anti-drug bill. considered an
election-year plum for most
membel'S, Is threatened bY a fight
Reagan, who was in Iceland over provisilns for the death
meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail penalty in cases of drug- related
Gorbachev, had promised to veto murders. The House put the
the bill If the restrictions remained provision In, but Senate opponents
in the S500 billion meas\lfe.
are threatening a filibuster to force
·It out.
·
But Reagan objects to other
Senate leaders · hope to cut off
provisions in the rmney bill, and it debate and get a vote Wednesday.

a

PICK-4

r

Vot.36, No. 113

Partb Cloudy !Ainight, with a
low between 35 ood 40. Partly
cloudy Wednesday, with highs In
tile ml~ 50s. 'llle probability of
precipitation L• 30 percent today
·.and near zero tonight and
Wednesday. ,

Daily Number
202

-Page 3

Lawmakers strive
for adjournment
WASHINGTON IUPIJ - Some
"must-do" business has twice
delayed Congress's scheduled ad·
journment, but lawmakersbelieve
they will be sprung thi s week to go
home and campaign, so they can
come back.
Earlier target dates have come
and gone In the past two weeks as
Congress tried to untangle assorted
legislative knots. Progress, . how'ever, has been made on each of the
remaining Issues, and House De·
mocratlc leader Jim Wrtght said
Friday, "I believe I sa-light at the
end of the tunnel."
Wright, of Texas. suggested the
99th Congress will adjourn Wednes·
day , mainly because lawmakers,
anxious to get borne and campaign.
probably will not stay in town after
that day.

Ohio Lottery

.

.Pittsburgh

Celeste pledges aid for higher education
,By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!i
Money for education and jobs for
what they've tratned for are two
problems Gov . Richard F. Celeste
hopes he can ease for college
students.

......

Halloween.party .

Albert Vanley Stewart Sr., 76,
Wesi Columbta, W.Va., died Saturday In Holzer Medical Center.
Born Feb. 6, 1910, In West
Columbia, he was the son of the late ·
George W. and Lydia Shafln
, Stewart.
He worked as a laborer, was a
member of Laborer's International
Union of North America, Local543,
and ' was a member of West
Columbia · United Methodls t
'•
Church.
Surviving are his wile, Hilda L.
Stewart; one son, George F .
Stewart Sr., Middleport; two broth·
ers, Carl Stewart, Middleport, and
Ray Stewart, Columbus; and t tree
grande hlldren.
. He was preceded in death by one
son, Albert Van ley Stewart Jr., who
died in 1935, five sisters and fiv e
brothers.
Funeral services wUl be at 2 p.m.
TUesday at West Columbia United
Methodist Church with the Rev. Joe
DEMOCRAT COORDINATORS - Coordinators
Hatcher and the Rev. Emmett
for Democratic candidates for seven district ood
Rawson officiating. Burtal will
statewide races were recognized by Meigs County
follow in Kirkland Memorial
Democrdtlc Executive Committee Chalmlan Henry
Gardens.
·
.
Hunter, far right, durtng Sliturday night's chili supper
Friends inav call from 2-4 and 7-9
lund-raiser
and rally. They are, from left, Peggy
p.m. today ai Foglesong Funeral
Brickles, coordinator lor incumbent Treasurer Mary
Home, Mason, and one hour prior to
EDen Withrow; Connie Dod&lt;;on, roordinator for
services at the chliJ'di.
·

CLEVELAND (UPI)-TheOhio
Lotto jackpot will be increased this
week alter this past Saturday's
game dldn' t produce any winners.
Numbers chosen Were3, a!, 23, ?A;
30 and 39.
!.Dttery officials said $3,ll6,228
worth tickets were sold and that
created a jackpot or $1,225,003.
However, those player who had
four at the numbers won $52 and
those with ftve received $939.

Saturday Admissions : - Jile
Bonecutter, Middleport; Michael
Smith, Pomeroy; Benjamin Fields,
Hartford, W.Va.; Linda George,
Haydenvllle; Floyd Reynolds,
Middleport.
Saturday Discharges - Paula
Brown, Joe Bonecutter.
Sunday Admissions - Jack
Delph, Pomeroy.
Sumay Discharges - Loretta
Tiemeyer, Michael Smith, Charles
Withee.

l

•.

Albert V. Stewart Sr.

No Lotto winneF

Veterans Memorial

...

By HELEN moMAS
UPI White Hou!le Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Presl·
dent Reagan Insists the "door Is
open'· for more superpower negotl·
ations and tile opportunity to
eliminate the threat of nuclear war
Is ·~closer than ever\' despite t1te
collapse Qf the Iceland summit.
R!!a&amp;an; expressing optimism
but speaking defensively, made his
remarks In a 20-mtnute nationally
televised address from the Oval
Office Monday night, explaining
wlzy he and Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev failed to nail down an
anns agreement at too weekend
summit In Iceland's capital city.
"I went to Reykjavik determined
that everything was negotiable

.. ..

"In effect, he was killing SDI."
except two thlngs - our freedom
and our future," the president said. Reagan said. "I had pledged to the
"We are cfosef'than ever before to American pecple that I wruld not
agreements that could lead 19 a trade away ·sm - trere was no
safer world without nuclear way I could tell our people their
government would not jrotect them
weapons.
"(But) we wUI not abandon the against nuclear destruction.
"SOl Is America's insurance
guiding prtnclple we took to
Reykjavik," he said. "We prefer no pollcy that the Soviet Union would
agreement than to bring home a keep the commitments made at
bad agreement." .
Reykjavik," he added. "~Dl Is
Reagan, who boned his speech America's securtty guarantee lfthe
untU. air time, emphasized that Soviets should, as they have done
negotiations !Jad · foundered be· too often In the JESt, fail to comply
cause of Gorbachev'sdemand that with their oolemn commitments."
research on "Star Wars," the
However, " the president said,
Strategic Defense Initiative, be . "I'm stUI optimistic tbat a way will
limited to laboratory tests for 10 be found. The 'door Is open and the
DPJ:X?rtunlry to begin elimlnatingtoo
years.

'

Reagan also said Gorbachev did
nuclear threat Is within reach."
Reagan said he "went the extra not Indicate whether he was willing
mile" In Iceland but gave no hint to come to the United States lor
that the SDI would be any less of an anotrer summit. as the leaders had
obstacle· to arms control In the agreed last .vear at their first
future. In words that could be meeting in Ge neva. It. had been
described as vintage Reagan, he expected' that Gorbachev wru ld
repeated his argument for strategic visit Washington latE!' this year ot'
defense, dismissing Soviet empha· next S(l'ing.
The president and his top aides,
sis on the 1972 Anti· Ballistic Missile
who spoke of disappointment and
Treacy.
"What Mr. Gorbachev was de· frustration &amp;!nday; sought to de·
man ding at Reykjavik was that the Dec! criticism of the lreak cb wn
United States agree to a new through a different tack Monday.
version of a 14-year-old ABM treaty They accented the positive, notln~
that the Soylet Union has already progress ~n proposed deep cuts In
violated," he said. "I told hlm we nuclear arsenals -proposa ls both
don't make those kinds' of deals in sldessald remain on the bargaining
table.
the United States."
'}

_.

......

~

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="200">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2790">
                <text>10. October</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40651">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40650">
              <text>October 13, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="103">
      <name>stewart</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
