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                  <text>Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, September 17, 1986
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Vol.36, No.109
Copvriphted 1985

ent1ne

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P•o••

2 Sections, 1 4
25 Cent•
A Multimedi• Inc. Newll)tper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, September 18. 1986

Meigs ,school hoard reinstates athletic passes
By BOB HOEFLJ&lt;:il
'
sentinel staff wrllet
Passes for free admission to athletic events for all
employes of ·lhe Meigs Local School District revoked a couple of years ago when tbe athletic
program was In financial problems - were
reinstated Tuesday night when tbe Meigs Local
Board of Education met In regular session.
The pasSes were reinstated by a unanimous vote of
the board at the sugges\1\)n of member Robert
Snowden. The reinstatement is effective lmtnedlately. It was the board's consensus thalli Is guod to
have employes on hand for athletic events and that
·the passes should be reinstated since the athletic
program financial woes have ended.

In a relatively routine meeting, the board employed
Mary Beth Musser as a klndergar~ aide for this
. school year and employed Joan Edwards as a cook.'
BUl Smlth was hired lor a kindergarten bus route
vacated by Bill Ratlilf. On a recommendation that
David Chase be employed as a bus driver pending
certlllcatlon and county board of education approval,
the board moved Into a on('ohalf hour executive
session and then returning to open session tabled the
recommendation.
Frances Runnel was employed as a reader guide
for a vtsually1mpaired student at the Melgs Junior
High School for four hours a day at $6.27 an hour. Her
duties 'with the student were outlined In the htrtng
agreement.

The board authorized Sharon Birch to attend the fall

district Ohio School Nurses meeting In Athens on Oct

3; Linda Yooker. Dale Harrison, BUl WUllamson,
Richard Fetty and Ronald Logan, vocational
Instructors, to attend a convention In Dayton, Oct. 3-5;
Logan to attend an OWE Council meeting In
Columbus on Oct. 29; Eleanor Blaettnar to attend an
orientation training session In Zanesville on Sept. 27;
Martha Vennarl, John Redovlan and John Amott to
attend a vi('W career development meeting In
NelsonvUle on Oct. 2 and an All Ohio Guidance
Cooference in ColUf'lbuS on Nov. 5 and 6; Greg
Drummer, Mlck Childs and Cliff Kennedy to attend
the NIKE Championship Basketball Clinic in
Cleveland, Sept 27-2\1; John W. Blaettnar to attend

the Ohio DECA executiVe councU meeting In
Columbus on Sept. 26 and 27 and the dlstrtbuttve
educatiOn district c coordinators' meetings for the
new school year, approximately six session. ·
Resolutions extending to all non-certified exempt
employes those appropriate wage and tringe benefits
afforded to OAPSE and extending to all certified
exempt employes those appropriate \leneflts afforded
to MLTA In newly adopted contracts were approved .
The board adopted a cheerleading constitutiOn before
moving into execu live session to ' discuss a
transportation problem with Janice Hankla and
personnel, finances, pending litigation and other
appropriate matters. All members of the lx&gt;ard were
present for the meeting.

Jury acquits

Projects
outlined

POint doctor
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Reagan Press
Conference

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Summit

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"We lake this summit very scriously. '
Ami . we ;m: going to try to ):!el itllo rc;tl
uisutssinns ... This has gnt In hc mnrc
than get acquainted."

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Fiilllll "Star
wars"
"The research lo scc if sud1 a weapon is

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lawyer, was asked why he didn't
CHARLESTON , W.Va. (UP! take the same approach in his first
All during his trial on kidnapping
trial. He answered by saying that he
and rape charges, says David Carr,
didn't
know as.much alx&gt;ut the law
noonebellevedhlm-noone, that Is,
·
two
years
ago.
except the members oft he jury.
"I
really
believed I would have a
The former Point Pleasant osteojudge who would give me a fair
path, making his second· court
trial," he said. "As far as I am
appearance in asexual assault case,
concerned, Judge (Andrew) Macerupted into tears Tuesday1when the
Queen has given me a fair trtal. He
Kanawha Circuit Court jury abo
has bent over backward to give me
solved him of charges that he
justice.
abducted and raped an 18-year-&lt;&gt;ld
"If lt hadn't been for a fair judge, I
Charleston woman two summers
would
have received a life sentence
ago.
on
top
ct
what I already have."
"A man's freedom 1s the most
With
a
long prison term allead of
P!'e9i®S thing in the world," Carr
hlm for tbe first case, Carr sees his
said.
life as "ruined. ••
"Nobody believes you . I made one
"I 'II never be able IIi practice
mistake and that was plcking up a
medicine again," hesald. "Even If!
~ prostitute. That was the truth. She
move to another state, I'll be
trted to extort me. And all through
· recognized.''
the trial no one believed me."
· Carr attacked the medical tests
Jurors considered the evidence
used to prosecute him In this week's
for a period of several hours. spread
trtal, saying they couldn't prove he
over two days, before agreeing on
h&lt;&gt;d raped the woman. He told the
the verdict.
jurors
lt was a matter of his word
The woman had charged that
against
his.
Carr of plcking her up in downtown
man Is capable of rape,"
.
"Any
Charleston ln August 1983, pu lllng a
Carr argued . "Just because that
' gun on her and handcuffing her. She
woman said that man raped me, ls
said he later raped her three times.
that enough to send me to the
Carr admitted picking up the
penitentiary? I hope there are
woman but contended she was a
peoplewhobel!evetberearewomen
prostitute who later trted to extort
who
lie as well as men who lie.
money from him because of his
Women
are not excluded from
earner charge.
lying."
At the time, the fonner osteopath
He also said his accuser lncor·
was out on bond awaiting trial on
rectly identified the gun she said he
similar charges in Putnam County.
pointed at her, and he questioned
He was convicted In 1~ of burglary
why she had not fought her attacker
and sexual assault In the Putnam
or trted to get away.
County · incident and ls serving a
Assistant Prosecutor Tom Casto
6().year prison sentence.
told
the jury that Carr fabricated the
"! didn' t do the other crime (in
extortion
scheme and said the
Putnam County) ,"Carrsatd·. "!was
try to flee because she
woman
didn't
oomc with my children when that
feared for her life.
happened."
Carr, woo served as his own

'-:---

ti.::tsible ... it's ):!Oing to L'Ontit'!Y.e.... l stop
short of lkploymcnL ... I'm willing lo
talk ... if it (ould hc used in such a way as
h' riJ the worlu &lt;If the nudcar thrcaL"

South Africa
"You must he doin):! something ri):!hl ... lhc
wry lacl thai both lite! ions arc unhappy.
One: says it gncs too· Jar, the other says il
···, ll&lt;ll!sn't gq lar enough . I must be prcny
ncar 1hc middle."

1'ade Imbalance

Warning , The Surgeon General Has Determined
Thai Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

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Lights: 10 mg "tar;· 0.7 mg nicotine- Kings : 16 mg "Ia( 1.0 mg nicotine av. per cigatetle. FTC Report Feb.'85

Not available in some areas .

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C PtiiiiD MOH,. IrlC 1985

"I lhink this lalsc impression's being
given that a lradc imbalance means
dch1or nation. This isn't our gnvcmmem
thm is cxpcndin):! more .. ..The American
people arc buying more lhan the
American people arc selling."

BLOCK GRANT HEARING - Mary Beth BID, of
lhe BDeye Jlllltt.Hoc_.r valley RePonal Developmeat District, ComrnlMioner Richard Jones, at rlghl,
and Coounlllsloner Manning &amp;wih, at left, answer
quesik!li8 from llfteen potential applicants at Tuesday

nlgbl's Corlununlly Dtwelupo•- lllod&lt; Gnat
hearmg at the Meigs County Courihouse. Meigs
County Is eligible for $103,400 of llllcal year 11185 CDBG
funding from the Ohio Deparlnient of Development.

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PUCO sets ·phone service hearing
Since last AprU, efforts have been
underway In Tuppers Plains to
secure extended area telephone
service to and from Pomeroy.
The proposal, spearheaded by
Tuppers Plains resident Mary Jane
Talbott, has been presented to the
state public utUitles commission.
PUCO has scheduled a hearing In
the matter for9: 30 a .m ., October 24,
at the Tuppers Plains Fire Station.
Telephone customers ln Meigs,
Athens and Washington Counties
would be affected If extended area
service were granted. Represents·
lives from General Telephone
Company and Western Reserve
Telephone Company, the two companies providing service to the
affected areas, are to be present for
the hearing. PUCO reps are also to
be ln attendance.
Talbott, a notary public, will be
stationed at various Tuppers Plains'
businesses on Friday and Monday to

obtain afflda\its for the extended
service from local telephone customers. These affidavits will then be
presented In the upcoming hear ing.
Forms wUl be provided for those
wanting to sign an affidavit and
those doing so wUl be required to
write their reasons for wanting the
extended service.
On Friday, Talbott will be at
Cole's Sohlo from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
and at Keebaugh'sRestaurant from
2-6 p.m . On Monday she will be atthe
Tuppers Plains Hardware from 9-1
and at Lodwick's Market from 2·6.
Talbott will also be going door to
door In Tuppers Plains to make sure
all residents are given a chance to
make their desires for extended
seiV ice known.
\
Sometime next week, Talbott will
be visiting businesses in Pomeroy
and Middleport. She notes that
many Tuppers Plains residents
must conduct business in Pomeroy
makln!l' telepoone contact neces-

sary from both directions.
Petitions with more than 250
signatures In favor of the extended
service have already been submit·
ted to the PUCO for review. The
signatures were gathered In less
than two weeks Talbott says.
Tallx&gt;tt feels Tuppers Plains has a
good argument for the extended
service since all government off!.
ces, doctors and attorneys are In the
Pomeroy-Middleport area of the
county. Tuppers Plains residents
with children enrolled In \OCational
education at Meigs High School
must also call long distanoe when
trying to reach their children du ling
school hours.
·
Assisting Talbott In her efforts to
obtai!) extended area service are
Darlene Bissell and Betsy Herald .
I think we have a guod chance."
Talbott says.
She Is hoping for a good turnout at
the October hearing.

Fifteen people attended a public
hearing Tuesday night at !'*' Meigs
County Courthouse to review re- '
quirernents for this year's MeigS
County Community Development
Block Grant lunds.
Meigs County Is eligible ' for
$103,400 'of fiscal year 1985 CDBG
lundlng, providing the county meets
applicable program requirements.
A maximum of eight projects could ·
be lunded from this total allocation.
This was the first of two public
hearings In the matter and Mary
Beth Bill. of tbe Buckeye HlllsHoc'klng Valley Regional Development Distrtct, was present to
explain the eligible activities and
program requirements.
The CDBG program, through the
county commissioners, can lund
such activities as economic development projects, street, water supply,
drainage and sanitary sewer improvements, park acquisition and
improvements, demolition of un·
safe structures, and rehabllita\lon
of housing and neighborhood faclli·
ties. The activities must be designed
to benefit low and moderate income
persons, aid in the prevention or
elimination of slums and blight, or
meet an urgent need of the
community.
Possilile projects mentioned by
those at the meeting Involved park
improvements, acquisition of im·
proved fire fighting equipment,
road projects, water line replacement and river access for
recreation.
Commissioner Richard Jones
stressed to appilcants the bnpor·
lance of clarifying proposed projects in detail.
In the past, Jones said, the
COI'l'rrussJoners have normally
lunded four or five projects in the
county. "We will probably be
looking in that direction again this
year,"headded .•
(Continued on page 14)

GDC staff dispatched to Cincinnati group home
GALLIPOLIS - Eight men who
lived in a Cincinnati group home
operated by Westfield Service
Management Inc. have been moved
to the Gallipolis Developmental
Center following the closing of the
tnme by state officials .
The Pippin House ln Colerain
Township was ordered closed
Saturday because It "needed re·
pair" and did not meet minbnum
health standards according to GDC
acting superintendent Pam
Matura.
The house was closed one day
following a court-ordered takeover

by the Ohio Department of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities of Westfield group
homes In Cincinnati, as wrll as two
in Columbus and two in Lebanon .
The eight men , profoundly mentally retarded and ranging In age
from their~ to 40s, were bused to
GDC following t be closing.
Matura, wbo heads a team of 15
that was sent from Gallipolis late
last week to supervise the Westfield
oomes in Cinclnnall and Lebanon,
said she recommeded the Pippin
Home be closed following an
Inspection last Friday. The closing,

she said, may be temporary until
repairs are made.
"The closing Is only until the tnuse
can berepalred," Maturasald. "we
don't knowhowlongthatwill be. We
wUI be meeting this week to
detennlne the luture direction all of
the Westfield tnmes should take."
Charles Grun'kemeyer, who supervises state licensing of group
homes, said he was told one ol the
men transferred was diagnosed as
having a parasite lnlestatlon. Because of the problem, he said, tbe
lx&gt;use may have to be fumigated .
James Seminara, a state licen-

sure specialist, had inspected the
Pippin House less than a week
before Its closure and said that he
had been satisfied by Westfield's
attempts to improve structural
problems.
Westfield had operated six group
homes in the &lt;:;incinnatl area until
Sept. 5, when one In Mt. Auburn was
shut down and seven residents
transferred, to the Southwest Res!·
dentlal Center in Batavia.The home
was closed because ofHclals said It
was poorly maintained and residents were not receiving proper
care.

President refuses to yield to Soviet demands
WASHINGTON (UPl ) - President Reagan, two months away
from his summ\t with the Soviet
leader, Is refusing to yield to Soviet
demands that he trade an embryonic U.S. space defense system fol
deep reductions In ~uclearmlssiles.

night If It was necessary that he and
Gorbachev like each other before
progre!&gt;s could be made.
"It isn't necessary that we love or
even llkeeachother," he said. "This
has got to be more than get acquainted, although that's important too.''

He also believes he and Kremlin
leader MikhaU Gorbachev should do
"more than get acquainted" when
they meet Nov. 19 and~ In Geneva,
Switzerland.
"I wasn't going to give him a
friendship rtng or anything," Reagan joked when asked Tuesday .

In the37-minute nationally tiroad·
cast session with reporters - his
first In three months and the 32nd of
his ad min lstrat~?n - Reagan ad·
dressed subjects ranging from
AIDS to trade but concentrated
most on the summit and lis

mindless stampede toward protectionism (that) wUl be aon('W&lt;!Y trip
to economic disaster .''
Reagan called AIDS research "a
Reagan, appearing healthY and in
top priority with us" and
command of tbe podium lf not tbe
rrltlclsm of the
Issues, spoke publicly for the first
time about the growing problem of half-billion-dollar
deadly acquired immune deficiency ·through next year as
syndrome and gave a muddled a vital contrtbution" oonsldertng
explanation of government statts- "our budgetary constraints."
On arms control, Reagan accused
tics Showing the United States has
become a debtor nation for the first the Soviets of using public relations
before the summit "to build an
time since World War I.
.He also repeated his warnings bnpresslon that we may be the
that trade legislation brewing on · vUlatnsln the piece and that they're
.
Capitol Hill ooukl lead to "a the good guys."
lmpUcatlon for superpower arms
control.

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Commentary
The Daily

S~ntinel

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

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ROBERT L- WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LEITERS OF OPINION ar£' welcome. They s hould bf ICss than 300 words
long. AI ! Jejters are s ub~ect to editing and must be signed with name, address and
: telephone number .. No un signed !('tiers will tw pu bllshPd . Letters shoultl be In
~ood

ta sre, addr esslnQ Issues, not personalities.

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Holdouts hurt parties'
hunt for candidates

Geneva COming Up ___;___W_i_llia_m_F._B_uc_k_ley;_J_r..
It is the eve of the showdown In

Geneva, and the talk continues to
revolve around a so-called "basic
bargain" which is strikingly unsatisfactory to the West and, a fortiori,
to the United States. Last weekend
Henry Kissinger analyzed the basic
bargain and·- tts weaknesses. The
strength and focus of his mind were
never clearer, and It Is worth
committing to memory the thrust of
that analysts.
What Is It that would be hailed as
a great vlctocy tor disarmament In
Geneva? A reduction o! 10 percent
In our nuclear weapons? Twenty?
Fltty? But not even areductlonof75
percent, whlch Is not going to
happen, would meaningfully a.l ter
the existing lnvltatlon to apocalypse
for the simple reason that a single

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launcher, with the advent of MIRV
.technology, can carey up to 15
deadly weapons and land them with
· utter precision. This bolls down to
the need to survive a first-strike
capability. As long as the Soviet
Union has such a capability, there
cannot be security.
Now tbe basic bargain toward
which the Soviet Union Is orienting
us calls for the reduction of
launchers by 25 percent (meaningless); OK'Ing continued research,
repeat research, on Star Wars but
without testing (meaningless); and
a reatflnnatlon or the ABM treaty
(fatal).
Under the ABM treaty the United
States already has the right to
research; Is doing so, as is the
·Sovlet Union. Moreover, under the

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treaty, the United States alre&amp;dy
baS .the right to test within
earth-'space, which we have been
doing, as also till! Soviet Union.
What the ABM treaty deprives us of
Is the right to test In space. And this
we need to do In order to pull Star
Wars out of the laboratory. In the
absence of a genuine neutralization
of the first-strike capability of the
Soviet Union, we have ro Intelligent
recourse than to develop our
defensive capability. And that calls
either for rnoditlcatlon of the ABM
treaty or for Its cancellation. Bear It
always In mind that In 1972, when
the ABM treaty was signed, ewlictt
statements were made that alter
five years the treaty could be
refined or jettisoned If we had not,
during that period, moved suPCess-

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incumbents who are going to run again.

· made up his mind.

~ :;: -: Although painful for the Il&lt;'mocrats. this reluctance among governors is
-:- .: not new and . not too many years back: the Republicans laced slmlllar
rejection from popular GOP governors like Robert Ray of Iowa and
: ·:· 'William Milliken of Michigan.
:~ :~ : A Republican political strategist, perhaps taking some comfort In the
;; ::·fa ilu re of th~ Il&lt;'mocrats to recruit governors for next ran, cites several

; &lt;.

&lt;

·:: ·: reasons.

:.-:: - ·- A major one, he feels, Is that the Senate Is no longer consldE&gt;red the
; ' · logical stepping-stone for the White Hause. The last two presidents,
Reagan and Carter, were out -of-office goyernors who never considered the
Sena te.
Then too, a governor enjoys a lifestyle that includes a mansion, oecurity
::
and pampering that he would not be accorded in Washington. And there
·• ·pr£' the very practical problems of maintaining two homes and moving a
. family , usua lly with school-age children, In a new iocation.
Col~;·ado Gov. Richard Lamrn. a lways outspoken, ridicules the idea of a
.governor panting to go to the Sena te- an Inst itution he considers In many
: 1vays inelfPCtive and unwilling to meet the pressing issues.
" I don't want to g0 to that debating society," Lamrn said recently. "I
do n't want to li v~ in Washington . I don't want to raise my children In
::
)Vashington."
·. But Lamm does not rule out the possibility that some day he may look at
·a Senate race and come to a different conclusion.
Even Lamm has kind words for some cJ. the governors who have made
the t rek to Washington- Evans of Washington, Bumpers of Arkansasand a fairly largr number of current senators were elected aftPr
.-·:.... .completing
their terms as governor.
.
For a politically ambitious governor. there are few options: If the state
·:
law permits, hecanrunforanother term; hecangolntoprlvatellle; hecan
',
mount a long· shot campa ign for the White House as former Delaware Gov.
P ierre DuPont , Virginia Gov. Charles Robb and Babbitt apparently plan to
do - or he can run for the Senat e.

.::~ Letters
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to editor

Wants Meigs County history
Hello! My name is Chelsea Gill.
I'm tn the seventh grade at Clyde
J unior High School. I'm doing a
report on your cou nty in my Ohio
-History class. I was wontlering II

No support in good times

Life is sure a funny thing. It's out
_of focus so much of the time.
-·· -. - Take my home town , Racine, for
.•
'example. It has stepped Into the
path of life's vagaries and been run
·over . It's just downrig ht sad that
street lights were not avaUable
when the old toWn had some life and
In need of them .
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It is sometimes painful to recall
those dark nights when a lantern
was used to make the trek to the
little house out back. In nice
weather It was a leisurely one but In
winter olympic records were
_Qroken.
- Now that we are no longer
required to leave the house lor
comfort 1not all ) and main street
alter dark resembles the movle
•
"High Noon, ·• street lights become
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superfluous.
.
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At least, when taverns were
-operating, a well-lit street would
have helped a well -lit citizen find his
(or her) way home.
Why, In the :«Js, parking space
was at a premium and It was a town
to be reckoned with.
In those days Racine would not
- · have seemed boastful were it to
-. -. proclaim Its many attractions. And
\

you would please print my letter In
the newspaper so people could send
me some information on your
county. - Chelsea Gill, 339 W.
Buckeye St., Clyde, Ohio 43110.

r.

why not•
We sported a movle house, pool
room, hotel (the Cooper House), a
prescription issuing drug store, a
couple of beer joints, two barber
shops, a hardware store, two banks
(First National and Racine HOrne)
where, as treasurer or the Boy
Scouts, I first opened our account
because Ed Howell, our Scoutmaster, worked there In addition to a
couple of other nice lolks - Vera
Beegle and Bert Crow -a produce
house, blacksmith shop, a couple or
garages, a creamery, two boat
manufacturing shops, a fen)' boat,
lour service stations, an electrical
shop, a shoe cobbler, two monument works, a butcher soop, two
restaurants, at least four grocery
stores, a bus line to Pomeroy, a
packet boat and show boat stop and
probably some that I haveo
omitted.
It seems strange, Indeed, that a
small town could support so many
businesses during the worst of the
depression and support so few In
these good times.
_
Anyone have any thoughts about'
that• ~ Floyd W. Clark, QiO!I NE
9th, Portland, Oregon 97211.
)

Southwestern seeks fourth
straight victory this Friday

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
~y-Middleport, Ohio
Wednnc'ay, Sept£"'ber 18, 1986

Much in the manner of a major league baseball managers in sprin~
training, political stra tegists are now tcylng to put together candidate
teams with the best chance 'of go ing all the way - winning the Senate
elections of 19&amp;;.
.•
But, also like baseball m anagers, they are plagued by candidates who
haven't reported and are missing valuable training time by coming to
camp late, some holdou ts and a veteran or two woo hasn't told the skipper
whether he wants another time at bat.
To some extent , the sla tes are set for the 31 Senat e elections next year
with :«1 positions - 20 Republican and 10 Democratic - he ld by
To fill out the rosters, the Republicans are going to bank on rookies
against the 10 incumbent Il&lt;'mocrats, and slmillarlly the Il&lt;'mocrats are
putting up new faces to go against the GOP·veterans.
Both sides have to find candidates to contest the four seats left open by
retirements - those in f\fizona. Missouri, Louisiana and Nevada.
In looking for the strongest possible candidate- especially ooe woo goes
against an incumbent - the tendency is tcy and recruit a popular governor
· at the end of his term .
A governor, if his popularity has survived his time in the state mansion,
has several built-in advantages, notably an organization ready to go,
.statew ide recognition ood the proven ability to raise money.
·· But, to th~ dismay of the Democrats, some of their most popular
governors are not getting into the game.
Gov . Bruce Babbitt of Arizona plainly wants to run for president and
feels he ha s a better chance out of office. Gov. Anthony Earl of Wisconsin
- has opted for another term. Gov. George Nigh wants to end his political
career a t home in Alabama. And Gov. Harcy Hughes of Maryland hasn't

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

"Gentlemen, choose your media."

fully toward genuine dlsanruu;nent
- which we have not done.
Now the strategy of the Soviet
Union, showcased by Gorbachev' s
Mad Man Muntz salesmanship for
the benefit of Western journalists
("Mad Man Muntz is giving away
everything In his soop! For practi'
ca!ly nothing! Muntz is Mad, but
YOU are the winner! "J, is to mount
massive pressll1"' on the United
States to surrender on the one point
the Soviet Union '· cares about,
namely our refined technology In
the development of a defensive
capability. Eliminate the SoVIet
Union's first-strike potentlal ·and·
you have eliminated, lor the !lrst
time since that potential· was
arrived at, 'e nticements to nuclear
war or nuclear btaclimaU.
Henry Kissinger proposes that
we move for a ban on MIRVed
rnlssUes stretching over 10 years,
and aiming at 100 launchers each.
And that during that period we go
full steam ahead on the development or · our strategic defense
Initiative. so that as we buDd down
the missiles, we buDd up our
defensive capablllty. Deployment
should be Urnlted to the defense or
our ABM nucleus, plus the defense
of population centers. Here Mr.
Kissinger makes the sensible point
·that both we and the Soviet Union
stand to gain security (rom the
almost certain acquisition o! limited but devastating nuclear ·
weapons by Third World powers.
Such powers (laney , e.g., Libya
under Khada!y) are much likelier
than the major powers to use even a
small inventory of nuclear weaponS
In a grand Gotterdammerung.
Major ·powers have all l!ut commit ted suicide In the past, but there Is
an organic reluctance to do so. And
the small power whose nuclear
weapons are governed by lana tical
Impulses are not easily deterred by
threats of retallatlon.

FREE

MUFFLER
INSPECTION

EAGLE STOPPED - Kevin Barber (22) rumlng
back for lhe Eastern Eagles was stopped handily by a
hosl ol Wahama White Falcons during last FrldiiY

1rUnte Of

months won't he enough to keep
Even while the president was
unemployment !rom Increasing.
campaigning last year on a promise
Q. What about lnt&lt;'I'I'St rates?
not to raise taxes, his claim that the
A. Look lor only minor lluctua- · country would ' 'grow'' 'tts way out
tlons. Generally, the cost of money of the deficit was greeted with
will stay about where Itis. Thechlel skepticism. This skepticism has
determining factor Is the Federal grown since then, as It became
Reserve Board, whose chairman, clear that the administration's rosy
Paul Volcker, Is playing the.money forecasts were cockeyed. The
supply like a Stradivarius, hoping to White House originally projected a ·
stimulate the economy enough to real economic growth of 3.9 percent
avoid a recession, but not enough to this year and four percent in 1986.
cause lnfiatlon.
Now It seems certain that growth
As one Internal government won't even reach three percent this
study, seen by our associate Mike year, and may be even less next
Einstein, put It: " Presently, the year. This means billions less In tax
chief policy risk appears to be a revenues and, thus, an·even bigger
future tightening by the Fed In deficit.
reaction to several successive
Q. Is there any way the de!lclt can
months of fast money grow,th . he made manageable?
However, a slower-than-expected
A. The~ Is, but only the president
gross national product growth rate and Peter Grace seem to realize lt .
in the coming months would reduce
Reagan argues - correctly, we
the demand lor funds, and perhaps
believe - that the budget can be
prompt further easing by the Fed."
brought under control If Congress
Q. Has President Reagan stopped will just force the government to
worrying about the huge budget
stop wasting billions of dollars
deficit?,
every year on poorly administered
A. He\.J1Jst stopped talking about
programs. Grace has Identified the
It, that's all. The deficit Is sWI there,
areas where cuts can and should be
bigger than ever, and somethlng
made, and Con~ has sown no
will have to be done about 11.
Inclination to follow the recommen-

By COLLINS YEARWOOD
UPI Sports Writer
With 18 games left and tralllngthe
St. Louis Cardinals by two,' it may
stW be.early for the New York Mets
to panic. Just the same, New York
can Ill afford the erra,t lc offensive
showlng It's been putting on of late.
In the past week the Mets are 4-4,
scoring no less than six runs In their
· victories and scoring no more than
one In their defeats.
"At this point you can't slip, you
can't make too many mistakes,"
saldDarrylStrawbercy, whoscored
the Mets' lone run In a ;.1 loss
Tuesday to the PhlladelphlaPhU!es.
"You've gotto score runs. You can't
fall too far behind. If you do you'll
lind yoursel! In trouble like we did
tonight."
Shane Rawley pitched a fivehitter and Glenn Wilson werit 3-for-4
and scored twice to snap Philadel phia's three-game losing streak.

datlons. The savings announced
with much fanfare alter the
congressional budget compromise
are overrated to the point of
fantasy. Congress must screw up
Its courage and make the tough
de&lt;;lslons necessary to reduce the
deftclt (but don't hold your breath) .
Q. What will become of the

crises going on that half the time
you would never know you were In

one.
But In Washington crises are buUt
up slowly and dramatically. First, I
know somethlng Is going on . I don't
know what It is and my next-door
neighbor has been sworn not to tell
me. Butiknowheknows,andthat's
pretty spo;&gt;ky right there. Then I
hear that something Important is
going to be done about something I
don't know is happening. Key
figures In government don't show
up for dinner. Other key figures do
show up for dinner. This Is to
confuse everyone. The Secretary of
State catches a cold, the Vice
President catches a cold, the entire
Cabinet Is sneezing. It's sate to say
when the President catches a cold,
Central America gets pneumonia.
But that's aU I know.
A newspaper friend calls up and
says, "What do you know?"
You reply, "Whatdoyouknow?"
He says, "I know It's big."
You say , "I hear It ' s

you have a crisis at home.
The main difference· between a
crisis In Paris and a crisis In
Washington Is that If you're an
American In Paris and the crisis ts
serious, you know that the Ameli-

Elsewhere Chicago blanked
Rawley, 12-7, struck out three and
walked one. He is 6-1 since the Montreal 3-0, Cincinnati defeated
San Francisco 6-1, Houston heat
All-Star break.
The Cardinals picked up a game Atlanta 10-6, St. Louis pounded
on the Mets with a 10-4 rout of the Pittsburgh 10-4 and Los Angeles
decked San Diego 7-1.
Pittsburgh Pirates.
,
Cubs 3, Expos 0
Philadelphia scored three ruru; In
AI Montreal, Jody Davis hit a
the fourth to take a ;.o lead. Mike
Schmidt led off with a walk off three-run homer and Dennis Eckstarter Ed Lynch, 10-8, and went to ersley and Lee Smith combined on a
third on Wilson's double. Schmidt four-hitter to lead the Cubs. Eckersscored on Ozzie VIrgil's !!elder's ' ley, 9-6, had ·a no-hitter until Razor
choice. With one out , Wllsim wentto Shines singled with one out In the
third on Rick Schu's !orceout at sixth. Floyd Youmans dropped to
second and . scored on Rawley's 3-3. Smith came on In the eighth for
single. Randy Niemann relieved his 29th save.
and Jeff Stone singled home Schu.
Astros 10, Braveo 8
At
Atlanta,
Glenn Davis homered
Virgil's 19th home run gave
Philadelphia a 2-0 lead In the second. . and drove In three runs to help the
Wilson led of! with a single and Virgil Astros to their seventh straight
sent a 2-2 pitch over the left-field victory. Frank DIP!no, 3-6, won In
relief. Braves starter Zane Smith
wall.
The Mets cut the lead to r.-11n the fell to 7-10.
Cardinals 10, Pirates 4
fourth when George Foster doubled
At Pittsburgh, Joaquin Andujar
lxfme Strawbercy.
went the distance for his Zlstvlctory
against nine losses. The Cardinals
received home runs from Ozzle
Smith, Cesar Cedeno and Willie
McGee In sending Whitey Herzog to
his !roth career victory as a major
league manager. Bob Kipper fell to
0-1.

_.....

SVAC-p
ADGameo
Team
WLPOP
SouthWE'Stern ........ ......... ... ... .. J 0 44 29
Symmf'S Valley ......... ... .. .... .. .. 2 1 47 41
Hannan Trac£' ..... ..... ... ....... ~.. 2 1 71 29
Eastern .. .... ........ .. ............. ... 1 2 61 74

North Gallla ... .... ....... .. .......... 1 2 :ll 33
2 aJ ~
Kyger Creek .... ....... ............... 0 3 lJ 75
Sourhern ... .. .......... ......... .. ..... o 3 )J 97
OakHUI ........... ..... .. ... .... ... ... . l
- ~ 's Games

president's tax ...reforms?'"~""

Dak Hill a t Southwestern

A. White House chlel of stall
Donald Regan has made a personal
push on Capitol Hlll to get tax
reforms passed before Chi1strnas.
His argument Is that Americans
need to know what their new taxes
will be so they can plan their
finances at the outset o! the new
year.
Q. Who will benefit the most !rom
the president's tax plan?
A. The biggest benellclaries
would be the poor, whose taxes
would be reduced 17 percent. But
the rich (those with Incomes over
$a:Ml,OOl) would save 10 percent,
three percent more than the
middle-class. This is Impossible to
defend politically; already the
White House has signaled that It
will withdraw Its proposal to cut the
capital gains tax.

CriSiS~------------------A_r_t_Bu_c_h~
__
ld

Livlng In Washington during a
time of crisis can he a vecy
neJ;~e-racking experience. Having
gone through two dozen crises while
living In Paris, I think I'm In a good
position to compare the differences
between the two.
For one thing, In Parts you rarely
meet the people Involved in a crisis.
Occasionally you run Into a French
spokesman at a bistro, but for the
most part the people working on a
French crisis are complete
strangers and unavailable to the
foreign press. There!ore, since the
crisis Is being handled by people
you don't know, you have the
feeling the situation Is well In hand.
The guy woo Is out there on
Sunday painting his fence, or
raking his leaves, Is the same guy
who Is In charge ol working out the
master plan 'for the Joint Chiefs or
Stall. The fellows you play poker
with are In charge o! decisions that
could alfect everybody. And It
doesn't make you feel any better H
you bluff one or them out of a hand.
In Washington your dinner
partner could be the wife or an
Important olflclal, and It scares yw
to wonder how much influence she
has on her husband'sdeclslons. And
It isn't beyond belle! that a
congressman or senator In Charee
of world-shaking events could pinCh
yourwifeunderthetable. WhUethls
is human, It also scares the devil out
o! you.
In Parts there are no secrets
when It comes to a crisis. As a
matter of fact, there are so many ·

night's 45.6 loss. Eastern laces Buffalo of Putnam
County Friday. Scott WoUe _ph~o.
. ·-

Cardinals increase lead over Mets

Economic future _____J._ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_~_a_n_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - As practitioners of the "dismal science,"
economists disagree with each
ottier vociferously and eternally.
Sometimes It seems as II they take
some kind o~ Hippocratic oath to
disagree whenever possible.
Yet rarely have we encountered
such emphatic disagreement
among the members of the distinguished fraternity as they are now
expressing on the future of the
American economy. Their forecasts run from gold-plated prosperIty to hair-curling recession .
We've studied government reports and picked the brains of
leading economists, tcying to synthesize answers to the questions
that, \P judge by our mall, are
bothering or baffling most Americans these days. Here are the
results:
Q. Is the economy heading up or
down?
A. Barring some unforeseeable
calamity, there should he a modest
rebound before Christmas. Over
the longer range, however, the
outlook is gloomy: A recession is
likely In 1986. The moderate
economic expansion In the nex1 few

can government will evacuate you.
But II you're an American stationed·
In Washington and the crisis takes a
turn for the worse, you can be sure
that nobody cares what the hell
happens to you.

Be.rry's World

The Eagles ' only score against a
also scored a Wildcat m .·
By DALE R0'111GEB, Jr.
powerful
Waharna Whit e Falcon
Coach
Dave
Angles'
North
Gallla
OVPNewsEdllor
club
carne
with 1: 26 remaining In
Pirates,
a
Orst
game
winner
over
Coach Jack James' Southwestern
the
contest
when Ryan Bearhs
Batavia,
hopes
to
get
untracked
at
Highlanders will attempt to keep
scooted28yard$.
Wahama'sol!ense
Pprtsmouth
East.
North
Gallla's
their winning streak intact Friday
compiled
283
total
y&lt;~rds, 194rushing
dienslve
has
been
Inconsistent
of
night against the Oak Hill Oaks In
and
89
passing
while
grinding out 11
one of seven Class A contests late. The Pirates have lost their last
first
downs.
Involving SVAC schools. Other two games, 13-0 to Green and just
non-conference battlesfindGreenat this past Friday night, were edged
Southern; Ironton St. Joe at Hannan 14-7 by Southeastern of Ross.
North Gall!a jumped Into an rerly
Trace; Kyger Creek at Symmes .
7-0
lead on Dave Hammonds' 10
Valley: )'lorth Gallla at Portsmouth
yard
pass from Mike Kemper. That
East and Buffalo-Putnam at
scoring
effort was set up when Steve
·Eastern.
·
McAvena recovered a Panther
Southwestern, so far, has lived up fumble on the openlngklcko!!. Chris
to its pre-season billing as being one Higley put the ll'anthers on the
or the top teams In the SVAC this scoreboard with a two yard run with
season. The Highlanders usually 5:24 left In the first stanza .
hard-hitters 011 defense, have been Quarterback Jeff Fairchild scored
in three close contests and came what proved to be Ihe winning Til
through with victories In all oft hem. when he rambled 35 yards on a
For the second straight game, the broken play in the Second period.
Highlanders got an outstanding David Roush led North Gallia's
offensive performance from run- d!ensive attack with 59 yards.
ning back Jim Burnett and a good
StWw!nless
defensive effort from
John
MUFFLER INSTALLATION
Coach Mel Coen's Kyge~ Creek
Woolum, who had a crunching Bolx:ats and Coach Bill Hensler's
SPECIALISTS
tackle of quarterback Gabe Patter- Southern Tornadoes are still seek·
If your muffler's making way too
son in the fourth quarter, causing a ingthelr first victories of the season.
much noise, drive into The Muffler
Bay and get a free, professional in·
fumble at the Viking 11 yard line Kyger Creek was a 14-0 loser to
spection for muffler leaks, holes ,
which was recovered by Bennie Waterford last Friday night while
damage, broken hangers or clamps
Boyd. Boyd also had a recovery d. a Southern was ripped by a youthful
and for weak or corroded pipes. If it
fumbled punt at the 50 yard line In Huntington Ro~ team, 36-0.
needs replacing , we'll Install a
the fourth quarter. Burnett, woo
tough, durable Walker&lt;' Tru-Fit•
The Bolx:ats, woo have been
rushed for 149 yards In· 17 carries, whitt&gt;-washed In two of their three
muffler at a very corn petit ive price.
although nuf!!lng a sore back, games, sorely missed the brother
t·ecovered a VIking fumble as dlil combination of senior Todd Hudson ,
brother, Harvey and Chris and junior Rick Hudson. ThP older
Hampton.
Hudson was on the sidelines with a
Last Friday night was the third knee lnjucy while the you.nger
straight game In which Southwest- Hudson , a running back, was out
ern's special teams forced the with a back Inju ry. They may he
opposition to make at least one back for this week's engagement
major turnover.
against Symmes Valley.
Meanwhile, injuries played a key
SWHS faces an unpredictable
role
in last week's 36-0 romp by
team this week In Oak Hill. The Oaks
after searing no points In two Huntington of Ross over Southern.
previous outings, defeated Ironton Three players suffered key injuries
St. Joe, 19-2 tast Friday night. Todd including AII-SVAC nominee Kelley
Capas caught the Oaks ' first points, Grueser, offen sive lineman and
a 21 yard play from Kim Strickland. linebacker, Jimmy Wolfe and Brian
Later, Ike Hale grabbed a 28yard Freeman, senior halfback.
AI Eastern. the Eagles after
aerial from Strickland and Larcy
suffering
two straight defeats will
Adkins ran five yards for another
attempt
to
bounce back a~a lnst a
score.
320 Sth St., Racine, Oh.
opponent,
Buffalo of Putnam
bigger
The Flyers recon:led a safety In
County, W.Va.
the tljh1J period.
. Going lor No. 3
Coach Dave Owens' Hannan
Trace Wildcats seek their third
straight victory against Ironton St.
Joe. Last weekend, freshman
quarterback Jay Jarrell fired three
touchdown passes in leading the
Wildcats to a .'!2-13 victory. Jarrell
hit Sean Colley , junior transfer from
Southwestern, on a %i yard strike:
Grady Johnson on a 36 yard pass
SUPERIOR .................................................... SHREDDED.... Ib. $2.19
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�--~--------~----------------~------------ -

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday. September 18. 1986

Pomeroy-Middkiport. Ohio

McGafr~

Har-rumph!

It's Big Eight vs. Big IOthisweek
By~.AMOSB. HOOPLE

Pipkin Genius
· Egad, friends!
•
· Thisweek!t'stheBigEightvs.the
Big Ten In college football . Ne·
braska and Colorado of the Big
Eight play bost to, respectively ,
· Illinois a nd OhioStateOitheBigTen .
With miXed results.
In Lincoln, Neb., it's therunningof
Corhusker Dougi;&gt;uBoseaga Ins! the
passing of IllinoisQB Jack Trudeau .
Both teams were upset in their
openers, but now they have things
t~nder controL
We look lor the 'Huskers to
triumph, 27-24, In a bruising battle.
· In Boulder. Colo. , Earle Bruce's
offensive-minded Buckeyes will be
slowed by the leg Injury to premier
running back Keith Byars. But Ohio
State has enough overall power to
outpoint the Buffaloes where they
roam, 35-7.
·
A trio of contests share top billing
In the South: The Georgia Bulldogs
tangle with Clemson &lt;CBS-TVJ, the
Florida State Seminoles ente rtain
Memphis State tWTBS-TV I and
South Carolina hosts a lwaysdangerous Michigan.
The Bulldogs, who have found a
QB in WayneJohnson, figure to have
a better balanced attack than they
have shown in the early games. In a
squeaker, giy~ it to Georgia 17-14.

FlorldaState'soffenselstoomuch
for Memphis State to handle - the
Seminoles will roll to a 38-7 vlctory.
South Carolina's Gamecocks
boast the finest tandem of running
backs In the nation, Kent Hagond
and Thomas Dendy .This pair ,a long
with QBs Allen Mitchell and Mike
Hold, spellsd6wnforMichlgan. The
Hoople System sees it 35-211n favor
of South Carolina .
In mol'&lt;' key games, NotrP Dame
will dump Michigan State 31·21 and
Pittsburgh will edge Boston College
~1 -28 . Robbie Bosco, wbo enjoyed
one of his greatest efforts In their
Meadowlands opener against BC,
will bring his BYU Cougars across
country again to trample Temple
42-21. And rugged Rutgers will
duplicate its '64 triumph over Army,
ttimmlng the Cadets by the identi ·
c~l14-7 score. Har-rumph!
Now go on with my forecast :
Soa~W'd;.~.l , .~ .t l

,\h

Mal')o'lllnd2-l w Vlr¢nll21

Miami IOhl01 21 &amp;w)~ C.l1'ftl 11
M1111"1:'1oliil3Montana 15
~Ussl!iS!PPI H Arkarl!la!l Stall' 11
MISII!ilitlpl St :llSoMisA'..~Ippl2l
Na\y211ndl~na :!1
Nt~bra.~ko127 flllnoL~ :34

Nonh C'arouna Statto:li Wlikl' Fort'!lt u

1'\o!l"(' [);am£&gt; :n M!dll~tan Slulr 21

,

Ollo~otft• :fHOJormlo 7

~n:ll ~an tord:ll
(ln'llen~utf' 'n F'l~ooStal! · l ~
Prnn~k·anla :W Conll'il2:1

Penn Stwte J6East CarOlina 18
Ptlt3l Boston C'ollfo~ Of!
I'Urtllr J2Jl.i.IIJ Staff' 7
Ru iRf'n•l .. .\ nn,\ i

Sou th Oirolln.-. ;r,MlC'hlJt:llll !I
Soutl\l:'rnf'ul :.fiBI¥1« 1'1
s,·raru.¥ .-v; Kmr &amp;att&gt; 11
T~a~ II Ml.,sou1t 1-1
Tl':ll.as A&amp;M .r . Northf'astl.wtslllni! :.!I
Ttl! :11 Kan.'Vt_~ St;al!• 1?
T1•'a" T('('h :.!t \:01'-lh:•w;t l.wl&lt;~lana 21
TrU 31! Kam..a!l SialI' Jj
TMIOI ~ Tf'C't1 ~ ':'IOI'Ih Trxa~ Stair l k
t;CJ.,\ 2.1San Dk&gt;,ro Slat(' 1-1
W&lt;l'hlngton 'Zi HouJ&gt;ton J)
Wt~~hlnRTon ~lll&lt;'42 Utah &lt;t1
Wlsrort~ln:IJ:'\M.·~ ·t l .a~ \'~ ~ N
\'ai1•2RBrown'll
Frlda,y'll ,\ft!MIIJ!lhStllool Gamt'M

Rella Glulb. 'lhe tHm called a news
pitcher AndY McGaftlpn said be OOIIIen!nre' ilr this af1emOOn at
CINCINNATI (tJP[) -

wasn't going ID ''play around" after
hls teammal&gt;!s had given him a
bonus In thetlrstlnnlngo!Thesday's
game qalnst the Giants.
And he didn't. McGafllgan, 2-J, ·
struckout10anddldn'twalkabatter
In leading the Reds roaS.l vlctory.lt
. was hlssecondcompletegameotthe
year,
Dave LaPoint, 7-14, toOk the lo.ss.
"I felt Ukel was strong through the
whole game. But tour runs In the
first Inning helps. That was a
bonus."
·
The Reds jumped on LaPoint tor
four first·lnnlng runs by strtngblg
together five singles and a sacrltke

\' lnlunrOu~~ ·~ ,\k&gt;xl!Jidrr
Jt.lpro;•
:l)

l2

!. irtmbk&gt;
f\l'lwm·l YorkllF'~·u J HocklnJ!O
al 31 Wl'llslnn 11

Ah o b.t m &lt;~l"&gt;Cind nmotl:.!-1

K~'f'1' Crr'f'k t;Symrn('S Vallo:-;. 0

f\UI ·th f &gt;l!ll l.a 'Ei Portsmouth Ea!H 20
Dullalo 1\nnam 21 t:ast{'rnli

IWL'4:! Tt•mp1t•21
(ol.:uwl'JL:~ Ia-.·t'!u• 1~

(~ lli poll~

l&gt;ul«' .llOhloU MIW'I'sil) 1:!
~1orld &lt;r St utf" :ll Mro1phJ~ Sr atl' ;
fi4.;•q~lu Tff'h U Vir¢ni&lt;~14

1:1 Pm1M!'l(l01h 12

A:llnt Plo:-a.-.ant U Adwn..; l!t
~\'a\w~·

26 .Jack.'!On 12

Looan ~ C!rt'JC'\·IIIr 14
.lohnMan'il\ioll :.11Mark11ali
~th I'Uin!ll Rock Hill ti
\o\'h('("lmbuflr H Cool flt 'O\'f' O
Hlpk':\' 7 Hunlin~nriHlgh li
Irontoo .li Ao:•:d Co.mly 14

I ~ ~ll'f!:W 17 C'lm1son H
l!an·urd :ll f'o lumhi&lt;t W

l••11·u .;2r-;onh Illinois 15
lo11'a Sl :!1 \ 'andl'rbilt 7
1\;msa,; :!l lndinnn S1att· 11\

1:1

defending sectional champion Ma·
ra uders with a 38, but medalist
honors were captured by the Blue
Devils' ace Tom Meadows.
, Other Marauder scores Included
Shawn Baker with a 40, Marty Hart

Meet the

shot a 41, Lee Powell had a 43, and
Rodd Harrtson came In with a 44.
Reserve Todd Baker had a fine 42,
but his score did not count In the
results.
Besides Meadows' 01, other Blue
Devil scorecards read Greg Roder·
ick 40, Bo Allen 43, John Stewart 45,
and Steve Bradbury.
CI'OilS Country
Meanwhjle, Meigs' sophomore
cross country ace runner 'Rex
Haggy finished with a second and
also a thtrd place ln.a pair of recent
Invitational cross country runs.

A.ll Intereste&lt;l lp&amp;rtles
will be given an opportunity to be heard. Further lnformalton may be
obtained by contacting
the Commission.

the Athens Invitational meet,
the Marauders finished fourth In a
race of eight schOOls with Haggy
leading Meigs Wltb a second place
among 10 runners. Other Maraud·
ers placing Included Chris Shaank'
with a 36th, Chris . Kennedy was
40th, and Joey Snyder was 43rd.
Wend! Kliles was 14th In the girls'
race.
In the Warren Local Invitational
last Saturday, Haggy came home
with a third while Kennedy was
15th. Klees came In sixth In the .
girls' race.

.,

combinalion

8115 lbro /11]1!85.

HARDWA.RE CO •.

110 W, MAIN ST.

PH. 614-992-2811
"Everything In Hardware "

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE

NOVEMBER Sth ELECTION

of ...... ......,iMd i!llmf. ... l\llqoioed 10 btl rMdily lvlillll'l l(pr .... in 11dl KrOQIII' Stare, t •CIOI II
tPKifically no-.d itl This ad . I f - t1o rut1 out of -"'.adveniMd Item. we w in otter y01.1 your choie1 of~ comoelltlll
~. wMn ~. reftK1inq the umeuving1 or a rainch.ck which w~_l entit'- you to purchtll !I'll tevtniHd
itM'o 11 1he ecf\otf'lietd DliCI Wittlin 3D AVe . Only OM vendor COilP';m Will be ICC ~16d per Item pun:hftMl.

New \"ork, New York 10017.

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED. VISIT THE BOARD'S OFFICE IN PERSON , .,
or PHONE THE BOARD OF ELECTIONS, OR MAIL THE BOARO ACARD.
YOU MAY IEGiml AT THI FOUOWING LOCAnONS:

Holtllts, Pomoroy

Mow*y lhru frioioy 1:30 to 4:00

DEPUTY aEGISIIAa Of MOTOa VIIHCUS, 116 Mu.orry AWl, P-roy
Monoloy, W....lltlay, Friday 9:00 re 4:00
Tuotoioy 1o.oo to l:oo
. ThuriMy anti Satur4oy 9:00 to hOG
COMMtSSIONIIS OffKI. Molt• c-ty ,_..._, Pomeroy.

ADD1110UL HOURS POl RIGimATION

Free lnsta at
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Thur..., h ...... Sept. 19, 26; Oct. J - 6oDO p.111. 1e 9.00 p.111.
Salurday1: S.,.. 21, 21; Del, 5 - 9oOO a.111. 1o I :DO p.111.
....,, Oct. 7o AIL DAY 9oDO A.M. 1o 9.00 P.M.

pricl .

Wf RESERV£ THE RIGHT TO liMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

PC:SI'MASTER: Send addreSs changes

Pol1'0!roy, Ohlo .S7t!l.

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2' Weeks .................................. $31.20
52 Weeks ............. ...... ............ .. . $59.80

FRFE? Thousands of area residents have spine
prc&gt;bl••ms thot could be helped by chlropracllc core. 11 Is also
way of acquolnllng you with our slolf and foci IIlles
While we ore accepting new patients , no one ~eed feel
obligation,
DANGER SIGNALS Ol= P ! NCHED NERVES:

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Big K ,
Soft D.rinks

.'
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2-Liter

'

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RfiS.(.fa ONsuv
.,et 8 ~•~·
Pota~ a"'ng
W1sc

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Boneless
Rib Eye Steak

NEW CROP GOLDEN
OR RED

.,
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1. Headaches, Dizziness, Loss of Sleep

• · Numbness in Hands or Feet

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Tomato

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16-oz .

$
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Doz.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

~~ 12-0Z. CANS,

To-

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$

KROGER

Grade A
Lar·ge Eggs ...

,,_

T•I--Tt U..

Pork &amp;
Beans .............. .

KROGER

To AI

-''·-

CAMPBELL'S

White
Bread ........

1-lb.

5 . Pain belwet'n the Shoulders

6 . Painful Joints, Nervousness
7. Lower Back Pain, Hlp Pain , Pain Down Legs

1i Campbell'
omato S s
10.15-oz. oup

PREMIUM

Nabisco
Saltines

49

Delicious
1
$
Apples ........... . 5-lb.
Bag

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Welcomes Your
Federal Food
Stamps

Pound
•

·

oes
· oag

1o.,b

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

2. Neck Pain, Tight Musctes
·
3. Pain Down Arms, Shoulder Pa in

To-

Not only was the Bengals' dirlense
borrendous last Sunday, the offense
was stagnant much of the time.
Wyche, who used all three ol hls
quarterbacks - Ken Anderson,
Turi&lt; SchonertandBoomer Eslason
- against the Cardinals, says he's
not going to announce who his
starting quarterback will he lor
Sunday's game against the San
Diego Chargers.

COPYRIGHT 1 - · THE ltfiOGER CO. ITeMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY ~FPT 15
THROUGH SATURDAY, SUT , 21 , 1. ., IN CAUI"'l-1$ &amp; POMEROY.
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MIIGS COUNTY lOUD Of IUC'IIOIIS, Masonic Tllllplo ..... P-roy
P. 0. lo1 411, ,_,.,, OH. 45769-0411 - PHONE 992·2,97

REGULAR HOUAS-a:30: 4:30 Monday thru Friday

TOTAL UTISFACTIOIIIIUAUillf
EYeryttling V® bi.IYII!I\IOglf ~ QUIIantMd for YOUt 10ttl . .tllfK11on rtgl~ Of manufac:tu~r . II 'fO\j arti'IOI
Nlltf!M. l&lt;roliJ8f w~l rep~~u '1'0'1' nem with the NrM brlll'ld or 1 tomsMr.tlle brn or refund vour puK:hlll

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the criticism. The effort will be
made to completely Otp.flop this
l"'lf'k from last week. It can be

'

.·
::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~
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,.

TO REGinER TO VOTE, YOU MUST BE:

*A U. S. Citizen
*At Least 18 by the General Election
*A resident of Ohio

baskeball team practicing layups.
You have to go back to the
fllndamentals sometimes.''
Wyche, whose team lost its
playol!chancesbydroppingtheflrst
Dve games last year, was asked oow
he would answer critics woo
contendtheBengalsmayaireadybe
burled for 1985.
"I'd say that would be a Uttle
early, a llltle humorous, as a matter

of fact,'' he said. "Theothertearnsin
our~areaUHandwe'rejust
a game back at , 0.2. There are 14
games left and we play all our
dlvtslon rivals twice."
Despite the poor start, Wyche
Insisted spirits remain high.
''There are no morale problems,
so we' re OK." he said . "Our players
are not grtm, but serious and
business-like. Each player Is reas- .
sesslng himself. Everybody's shar·
lng the blame and everybody's
going to share the celebratlon.
"Our team wUI not lay down after

Member. United Prtta International,
Inland DaUy E*ea Auoclatlon ud the
Oblo NeWap&amp;~AuoctatiQn. National
AdverU.lq
ntattve, Branham
Mewapaper San, 733 'ndrd Avenue,

located On Main St, in Rutland
*Complete Front End Parts &amp; Service
*On-Car Computer Balancing ·
*Chassis P11rts In Stock
FRONT END ALIGNMENT SPECIALISTS COMPLETED
THE DANA SCHOOL OF CHASSIS REBUILDING &amp; ALIGNMENT
For Appohitment Call 742-2057

YOU MUST BE REGISTERED BY
OCTOBER 7, 1985
.

You must update your registration when you change
your name and address.

we find out what tackling is all about
- bending the knees, locking tile
arms, keeping the eyes open right
before the hit. It's like a pro

Ohio.

POMEROY, OH,

IGS COUNTY VOTERS

MEIGS COUNTY SENIOI CmZINS, Mu. .rry

AIMRT!SED mM PDLICY

f.d.

DUGAN'S
FRONT·END ALIGNMENT

EBERSBACH

Drummond and Kelly Roush had 12
and 10 servlce points respectively.
Beth Wigal served 17 points lor
Eastern whlle Tonya Savoy added
11.

a!toriiOOfl, ,.Monday
throuah Friday, 111 Olurt St., Po·
meroy, Ohto, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Ut:hlna Company/ Multimedia, Inc .,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·:1156. Se·
cond class polblle paid at Pomeroy,

DO YOU HAVE ANY PROBLEMS SUCH AS
PULLING, SHAKING, SHIMMERING, OR
DARTING? THEN BRING IT TO THE FRONT
END SPECIALIST.

lb•r flul tO&amp;/

K)'ger Creek's volley ball team
increased Its season record to S-1
Tuesday night with a two 16-14
victories over Eastern after drop·
ping the first match, 15·11. Jill

Publi.'f.ed every

'

$47.44

KC volleyball team ups mark to 8-1

..'

992-6601

Wltb SJ.IIO -ill• ,.,_

5-8, 135 poond
Junior End

. .

FOI APPOINTMENT CALL

(394)(7391)

Brian Diehl
5-10, 145 poond
Senior center .

tt18P8 1111-. .)

MONDAY-FRIDAY 8 A.M.-7 P.M.
SATUIDAY 9 A.M.-1 P.M.

warranty.

Scott Kiser

.

week."
The ~2 Bengais were humiliated
on defense last Sunday In a41-271oss
ID St. Louis. The Cardinals rolled up
447 yards as tbe Bengals missed
tackle after tackle.
"We simply were oot very good
stopping the other team, so tb1S
week we're going to get back to the
fundamentals," said Wyche. "It's
going to he a week d good, tough
practices on the fund~mentals blocking, tackling, running and
passing.
"We're going to run drUis where

A DIYII!oa ol Molll_l., lao,

Announcing Extension of Hours

blade. lJLliSied. Full
2-year home usc

IMI~

The Daily Sentinel

JAMES WRHERELL, M.D •.
WILMA MANSFIELD, M.D.
LAURA KRISTER, M.D.

2-HP motor. Metal blade
R••rds penni! metal and
masonry cuning with
proper blade. Steel
wraparound shoe for
extra support. Includes
7 1/~-in .

yeara

MEIGS HEALTH SERVICES

llaek 1: D«ker®
7114-ln. CJreular Saw

Pete ,Jolmson
~10, 143 poond
Junior guard

Wyche
lectures
Bengals

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CINCINNATI (UPl) - Dlasatl8·
fled Cincinnati Bengals head coach
Sam Wyclle conducted a "no holds
barred" meeting wltb his winless
team to launch a rugged week of
practice lor the sloppy-playtngctub.
"We held a no holds barred
discussion, team-wide, lor about 25
minutes," Wyche reported Tuesday. "I dldn'tsUgar-coatanythtng.
"I laid things rut as they stondand
said to get the problems fixed. I told
them that mistakes were made that
won't happen again. We're going to
beshakln' andbakln'andawakethts

13 Weeks .......... ................., ...... $14.56

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
BY; Mary Ann Orl!nskl,
Seo"'t.a.ry

·rn

FALL SALE

•

r;::=======::;==~

The PubUo Ut111t1es Com·
m.i8elon ·or Ohio has set
for pubUo he&amp;rtng C&amp;se
No. 85-02-EL-EFC, to
revlew tt.e fuel procurement
pract!ces
and
poUoles of Columbus and
Southern Ohio Eieotrlo
Company, the operation
ot ItS Electric 'Fuel Component and related mattere. Thts hearing Is
achotluled to begin at
10:00 a.m. on September
23, 1985, at the offices or
the PubUo Utilities Com·
mlsalon , 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215.

Meigs' golf team avenges loss to Blue Devils
POMEROY - The Meigs golf
team avenged its only loss of the
season against 14 wins recently
with a 162-lffi win over Gallipolis at
the JayMar course here.
Parker
led the two-tim~

llr

LEGAL NOTICE

Davis, Buddy Bell drove home Nlck ,
Esasky with a hit, Dave Concepclon
knocked In Perez and Bell S&lt;.'Ored on
Bo Dlaz' fly out to make It 4.0.
McGafflgan sal(j he prlmartly
used his fastball and change-up.
"With a 4-0 lead I was not gonna'
play around and get behind them. I
just went right at them."
The Reds' win held the Do:lgers
magic number at 13. The Do:lgers
led the Reds by seven games going
Into their game at San Diego
Tuesday night.
"We'replaylng prettygond, that's
the Important thing," said Reels
player-manager Pete Rose. "If we
keep playing like this, thtngswlllfall
Into place."
It may have been the last game
Jim Davenport managed lor the

( lak 111117 ~ulhwe'!ito:-rn 6
Cin'('I'I:USl.Jut)l('l"ni2
llunn.:an n·OI('(' U l!'Onlon st . .I{)(' K

.\rilona2tiCal ihwnla 1 ~
Mllona St 21 Pariflr 111
Mkamola~ :!\ Thl'k.J 21

know. I. eJqleCt
there I will
be
something
1omoJTOW.
really
wasn't tlllnldng about It durtng the
game. I have no control of the
situation."
'
Davenport Sllld It has been a
trying year.
"It's been trustatmg, no question
about it. A lot of bad things have

....•

happened,buttherehavebeensome
posltlvethlngs, too. Wewerelooldng
better
from some &lt;1 the
players, but that's not an exruse. I •
am not pleased with lhe year,"
Davenport said .

CaDdlelllek Park In SaD FraDClsco,
1'1!pOltally to UUIWJK.'eRotle'Cralg
will replace Davenport.
A8la!d U be expected to be tired,
Davenport said, "I really don't

fly. Tony Perez sllwled home Eric.

MPI,c~4-IM!Ilt'T' 6

Warrm

~ ·un1· :1J H!n• t.1

1\rntUC'k ~· :1.') 'l'ulitnr-

LqJ 11Color"adoSta•r 2~
1..01115\•UIC' ~ WrslcrnKl'flhrk)· Ii

hurls Reds pas~ Giants

Wednndey, Septem.-18. 1985

Ci

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NOW

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I &amp;-Pack
I
LIMIT Z_..,ACKS WITH t11.M
I
ADDITIONAL PURCHASES
1 12 LIMIT OlliE COUPON PER FAMILY

Alii I'UASE IIMIMIII
OCTOHa 7 IS THIUIT DAY TO Fll A CIIANGI Of NAME Alii ADDIIESS
IN 01111 TO VOTI IN
FAIL RICnONtll

t•

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SMOOTH OR CHUNKY

SWEET OR CREAMY COLE SLAW
AMERICAN OR
'

Kroger
Peanut Butter

Mustard
Potato Salad

28-oz.

3-lb. Tub

••

••

Springdale
2% Milk
Gallon

47

•
•

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES
WITH DELl· BAKERIES
HOT FOODS AVAILABLE
ttam TIL 7pm OAILY

OF
!101111 lUll. SIPT. ti-SAT. SIPT. ll,
I 100
. IUI.IICT TO APPllt:AILI ST~TI t LOCAL T~KII
..., .....................~..........~~..................................~..................................~&amp;...................~~.............. \ ,

.'

I

).

�.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

...

· :~~~~

Wednesday. September 11. 1985

•

·· ·Starkey
: birthday rioted

Scoreboard ...
Majol'8

-

lbnton t.!it'ott 11·11 at Lal A~
tWtldllh1L »:31J p.m.

NND.'WAL I.&amp;'GI.IB

lly Uallft ..,._...

~ .

'\

W

Sl . 141.

NY

Mnl"

Phlla.

ou.

"'"""'

LA

....

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LPd.GI
!II !rl Jn8 fJ1 57 .eot. 2

nil'

au

M 12 .eJ 11
61 'l6 .468 21~
f7 95 .331 41

Cncnnt

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

Saa Ok7J 111 San Franc.ill'o
CWiftnlrt a1 Atlanta
Pltllbul'Jtlal Monii'Hl. !VI!ftl
Olk«eo 11 Nf'W York, rWtf
St. Lwll 11 PhDD.olphla, ""'ht
JiouSIOIIII J..oe AnJr!f'S. nlithl

-

.\MER.ICAN LOGUE

W

finfl)
NY

.......
"'"

91

IIi

T1
74

Otn

Hsrn

s. ORo

72 73 .61 19lr'j

63 a'! .441
93 .367

· Mlwlreto

A tint

sa

Clvlnd

S. Fran.

LPd.GB
53 .632 ~ .YJ7
li
(lj .538 1-'%
10 .S14 17

Toronto tDiviJ HI II llol;ton tN!pprr
S.Ul. 7:Jep.m.
Bl"
MUwau~ !~ lUI at
..~
r~ U-121. 7::fi p.m.

Mr. an9 Mr. Roy Wiseman,
Albany, entertained with a party.In ·
observance of the 9lst birthday of
her mother, Oma Starkey,
Carpenter.
• . Cake and Ice cream were served.
ln observance d the occasion, and
' ' Cowers Wei'(' Pl't'SEI!ted to Mrs .
Starkey by a grandson, Donald
Jones, here from Alexandria, Va .
for the oe&lt;:aslon. Numerous other
• ~rts were presented to the'IJ&gt;oored

Nfow Yorll IP.Niekro Jrt.lOl -' [)e4rolt
1Bm!n~Pr t-51. 7!:ti p.m.
oakland rRi}o J..JI at CIPvcland (Sdlukr
.J.!IL7: JI p.m.
Ll-.1
C'allllrnla rSUnon 14·81 at ChlrtaU ,,,.,....
son 9-91 . 8:ll p.m.
Seattlf' !Swift Mil atKar~sar.CitytG\Ibk'la
13-71. s:~p. m.

..,......,..o....

St-ank&gt; at Kanu-'1 City. night
~PW York a1 Deiroll, .~111
Mllwau~ ~IBal!lmorv. night
California al'c'hlcago. night

271~

~~

.556

2

1&amp; EB ..517 71h
'Ill ~ .tt!J 12%
t1l 76 .472 14
61 79 .t."'!! 16
51 9'l .361 .1}

.

:
:
:
•
•

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$P~CIAL OF THE _WEEK

'

CHICKEN SANDWICH

,l

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t

CORRECTION
IN TODAY'$ INSERT
Foodland Coupon For

S1.09
WITH FRIES.... $1.59

COKE, TAB, SPRITE, DIET COKE

'1

tould

8.
lllr OZ. BTLS.

••
19

ADOLPH'S

ad

Plvs Dtposil

DAIRY VALLEY

NOT SJ.59
AS STATED

We Are sorry For Any Inconvenience
To Our Customers

"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason lritlge
POMEROY, OH.
PH.9U-2556

o•••• ____..,. +OO
•

Two absolute powerhouses have
developed on the grtd this season;
the Meigs Marauders and Wahama
White Falcons. Both are perfect at
~0 and both have won In big ways.
Meigs certainly doesn't set1le lor
just winning, they get the job done
early, whipping their opposition to a
point of no return. And at the same
time the · Maraud~rs are true
sportsmen. ·In each game Meigs
has had the opp6rtunily to completely obliterate its opponent as
Meigs' 41·3 halftime lead indicates.
The Marauders of Coach Cha rlie
Chancey, however, have called off
the forces ea rly allowing time and
experience for their up-a nd-co ming

YOU SHOULD KNOW

TOU.CCO CO.

FACT #23

·-

'

stars.
Three of Meigs' tougher oppone nts are now history and the future
looks bright lor a stellar season.
Unfortunately, Eastern a nd

Marauders ranked
14th in AP poll

•

POMEROY - The 3·0 Meigs
Marauders were ra nked 14th in the
latest AP poll ta ken thls week.
Meigs gathered 41 points In the poll,
missing the top ten by a mere eight
'points.
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary was
the leading AA pOint-getter with 183
while . followed by defending division IV state champion Louisville
St. Thomas Aquinas wttMIPJ33.
Ironton was t hird with 128 points.
Other division Ill schools In
Meigs' same region besides Ironton
included Wheelersburg (15th). Co·
shocton (:!Oth), and Philo (24th).
The Marauder ranklng is be·
lleved to be the highest in the
school's history.

\

PRICES EFFtCTIVE THRU SATURDAY, SEPT. 21, 1985

: The first annual Schultz family
• reunion was· bel!! on Sunday at the
~ home of Albert and Faye Schultz, A
, covered dish dinner was served.
• · Horseshoe, card games and a
• Softball game were enjoyed by the
grou~. Plans were made for the 1~
reunion to be held at the borneol Jim
and Lisa Burke.
· Attending were Mr. · and Mrs.
Schulz, BUI, Linda, Christine and
Billy Schultz, Pomeroy; F'rank,
Ann, Seanna and Rhonda Fahner,
· Springfield; Linda, Rob: Kelly John
Johnson. Steven Wears. Jim, Lisa,
James and Ashley Bur)re, Jon
Burkes. all of New Concord; Terry,
.Julia and Jas011 Murdock, London;
r)ave, , Alberta, and Any Hysell,
Middleport; . Edna Heiss, .Joc
~eelfer, Janet and Chad Augen·
stlene, all of Lowell; Bill and Gladys
punbam, Clark, Randy, Tim, Curt.
;t'roY and Joey Dunham, Belpre.

~+____.+Ob

III!~MOlDS

Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Clark,
PeniiY and Wendy, Middleport, and
Mr.BrandonofnearFiushlng.Mrs.
!!tar~ also received many cards
troll\ family and friends .

298 SECOND Sl.
POMEROY, -OH.

:• Shultz reunion

SEASON CHAMPION - Beiii!Y Hickel of Wolf
Pen recently claimed the 1985 SkyHne Speedway
Hobby Slook Champlooshlp In Ids numher 51 Camaro.

Cl 111151lJ.

STORt HOURS
,
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM ;

guest
• • Othf!rs at !hi&gt; party were Mr. and
: ~. David Wiseman and Owen,

82&amp;!.~-

1) 6fo

We Reserve The Rieht To
limit Quantities

'

MIXED

Fryer Parts ..•.!!...•. 49(

SMOKED

•
P•ICniCS

Hill family
· reunion held
Thl' annual family reunlon•of the
deset'lldants of Inez HOI and the late
Julian Hill .' and t.he late Jerry and
FlormCl' Hill, was held at ·the
. Coonskin Park Sunday at
Charleston.
·
AttPnding wer!'CecU and Marlene
Hill, Teri and Robin. Winfield, W.
Va.; Norman and Janet Roush and
Garen. Charleston. W. Va .; Clarence and 'Susie HUI and Kristine;
Don and Mary HUI;Heaih, Carissa
and Corey, Ethel Euler, Darrell and
Slllriey Dugan, Kim, Richard.
Kevin and Erica, Henry and Kay
Hill, Melinda and MoniCa, Dolly
HOI, ·-Margery Roush, L~rry and
6race Grt!fln, lllt'Z Hill, David and
Lillda Hlll. ·Seth and Jason, ?Pny
and Bobbi Hill and.Jerl, Tommy and
$ally. HUI. Angie and Julie, Dennl~
and JanN Hill, Courtney and
Marcy, Missy Rainey, Roger and
Jane Ann Hill, Scott and Heather,
Racine; Joe and &amp;-t h Brown,
Minersivlle, .Jim Clark, Megan and
Jerry. Poll'K'roy. ,.

LB
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SUPERIOR .

LB.

Lunch Meats........

79&lt;

$ . 19

1

U.S.D.A CHOICE

89
Steak
•.•
'!
••••
$1
Round
BUCKET . .

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Cube Steak •.••!!....

$. 99

1

•

KAHN'S SLICED .

.........:~...• $129

Bo~ogna

Poet's comer
• ..,. Ollr&lt;r "' .... ._.
I - h o w many, by 1aklng tiro 11m..
Can remember ttx-lt. life Qf stn?

Can l'f'l1"['mbtr thr knocklnR atlrart'!i door,
Wht&gt;n tht'o Saviour wanted In?
And lw::lw oJd Satan within thf'lr ure.
1\lrnt"d their heart as hard as stont':
Lefl tlrm with miiHons hM't' m £&gt;arth.
Feelln~ lost and all alone.
Until that

frelln~t

IJK'am• so weal,

1lM" mind COUld stand no mol'f':

• FACT: 194 million Winstons are smoked on an average day by
people like you who appreciate quality.
• FACT: Over 9 million packs of Winston are sold on an average
day.
• FACT: To ensure the finest quality, Winston uses 26 blends
of select tobaccos.

THOMPSON SEEDLESS

For ttl(! lime- had rome to answt'r,
To 1~ rap upon IlK&gt; door.

The kncoPs Wf'N' tx-nt In humbk•n&lt;'Ss.
Whllt&gt; pardon was asked trom Jtn:
From lhl• &lt;&gt;nco who had alwuys bl&gt;l•n 1t~rt' .
But rM.".~r was k'l ln.

Whi·te

So at last. with another look ut tblngs,
And your prt'St"'ftl Hfe to It'S!;
Rt&gt;nwmbl"r how you ust.'d to live,

BROUGHTON'S

Do you think II was tJwo tx.'St?
Would you tr•adf' the&gt; pN~crot mind and hean.
And that homE' on faraway sh91't":
•
· For alllh&lt;' sin you U9£ld to knt:rN,
On fiK' othrr sick' of that door?
- ~· Olm D. Harr1son.

Cottage CheeSe

IIOUSE GmFlGWING?

S1 09

Margarine ......!!..... 59 (~
q

GERBER STRAINED

RHODES WHITE

Frozen Bread ..~:K~ •.. 6 9 (

Baby Food •••••
4.5

.•

446-7494
UAR.

ULTRA LIGHTS, 5 mg. "tar', 0.4 mg. nicotine FN. per cit1118118. FTC Repon JAN. '85: ULTRA LIGHTS lOU's, 5mg, "ter", 0.4 mg. nM:otine, liGHTS,
10 mg. "tar", 0.8 mg. nicotine, liGHTS 100's, 11 mg. "11r". 0.9 mg. nicotine. KING, 16 mg. "tat", 1.2 mg. nicotine. BOX: 17 mg. "t1r". 1.1 mg. nicotine,
lOO's , 18 mg. "ter",1.2 mg. n~otine, av. per cigarattl by FTC method.

Pt1JI'CIGRA"IY
Spring Velley PIIZI
Oelllpolla, Ohio 4l5631
CLOSED MONDAYS

'I

TONY'S

DOWNY BONUS ,AK

Fabric Softener

.IF YOU DIDN'T IICIIYE
OUR DISCOUNT
COUPONS IN THE MAll

CALL NOWI

oz .

•

HIGH SCHOOl.
SENIOIS

The facts
speak for themselves.
That's why Winston is America's Best.
Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.

49&lt; -

PARKAY ..

CliAII UP Wl11l (\..,
ClASSRD ADS ~ 1 ·

• FACT: Over the past 30 years, Winston
has sold more cigarettes
· than any other brand.

•

Grapes!~ ..•..

I

4
:::

$3

f·rozen Pizza.~6•0~· $189

19

• ••••• •
••••• • •·····cooPm·······
·····cooPON·······

•o • • • •

•• ••

•

MAXWEll HOUSE
•

·COFFEE

3 Ll.

$649

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VELVET

TOILET TISSUE

PAPER TOWELS
ROll

3/Sl

4 ROLL
PKG.

Unlit S Ptr CustGeod Only At Pewtll's
OHor bpirts !opt. 21, 1915

VELVET

•

•

••••••••••••••••••

59&lt;

limit 1 Per hslomor
Good Only lt 'owtll' s
Offor
1915

CHEER DETERGENT
147

oz.$ 579

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's
Olftr bpi1es Sept.

2t, 1985

�Wed~y. SeptMT~ber 18. 1986 ..

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

• I

Fiim to be shown about Amish ... :·
· "The Amish: Not to Be Modern,"
a 57-minute flbn created by Conner
Ohioan VIctoria Larbnore and her
husband, Michael Taylor, under the
financial sponsorship or the Ohio ·
Humanities Cou nell will bE&gt; shown at
7 p.m. Monday night at the
Middleport Public Library.
Thepobllc Is Invited to attend and
there is no charge.
· The rum chronicles a year In the
life of an Amish community in
Hobnes County, Ohio, one of the
largest Amish settlements anywhere. Of90,000Amish people in the
world today, a bout 5(l,IXXJ live In
Ohio.
The·unique film- unique because
the Afllish traditionally are reluctant to allow themselves to be
photographed or flbned - opens
with a scene of an Amish farm .
Narrated by the Amish people
themselves, "Not to be Modern"
follows the planting, cultivating and
• harvesting of crops.
It details their sbnple life style
without electrtcity, telephone, mo·
vie or records, or even buttons on
their clothing, and shows the people
in their plain garb, with the women
College In Hammond, Ind., this year;
In long skirts and bOnnets, and the
nurses' tralnln!! In January aodJayisafilth grader at
men In trousers and black coats.
the Marietta Cbrl!otlan School. Smith wW he available
Filming began In the fall of 1983
at any time and can he reached during lbe week by •
and
the premiere showing was In
phone at 614-37U'Tl'l.
Oberlin earlY this year. The
capacity audience included 30

PASTOR NAMED- Kenneth Smith, 743 Glendale
Rd., Marietta, has been called to pastor the Antiquity
Baptist Church, 47ll60 SR 338, Racine. Pastor Smith is
a senior at Marietta Bible College. He and his wHe,
Brenda, have three children, pictured. 'The eldest,
Debbie, will graduate from Kyles-Anderson Bible

Sorority ·chapter holds meeting
Final plans were made for a style
show and card party to be held on
Sept.l6at Pomeroy VIllage Hall at a
recent meeting of the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority.
Tickets are for sale at $4 each with
$2 for the style show at 7:30 p.m.
only. Door pries wil be awarded.
Models from the Profile Modei ng
School of Kay Hardwick , Gallipolis,
will present fall clothing from
several paricipating m erchants,

including K&amp;C Jewelers, Ether·
fe lds, Simon's, Dollar General,
Middleport Department Stolt',
Dan's, Sandy's Boutique, and Bahr
Clothiers. Members were reminded
tHat each one is tofu rnlsh four dozen
homemade cookies.
A socia l on Oct. 24 was planned to
Include an ali-day trip to visit the
Amish cou nt ry around Mlllersburg.
Terri Starcher, Buckeye Girls
State replt'sentative, sponsored by
the Preceptor chapter, gave high·

lights of herweekat Ashland College
where the American Legion Auxil·
lary's workshop In democracy was
held. MIss Stareher Is from Eastern
High School.
Rose Sisson and Jean Werry were.
hostesses for the meeting attended
by Jane Walton, president; Ruby
Baer, Velma Rue, Donna Jones,
Carol Tannehill, Betty Ohlinger,
Ann Rupe, Mary Morris, Roberta
O'Brien, Clarice Krautter, Vera
Crow, and Janet Theiss.

Harrisonville 0 ES has meeting
The a ltar was draped in m emory
of the worthy grand matron,
Katherine Wyre, at the lt'Cen t
meeting of the Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of the Eastern Star ,
held at the Masonic Temple.
Clara Mae Jeffers and Larry
Well , worthy matron and worthy
patron , presided at the meetlngwith
Stella Atkins. grand representative

to Florida being p~sented and
invited to sit in the East. Past
matrons and past patrons and those
having grand appointments, along
with Ruby Diehl , a 50 year member,
were welcomed. The death of
Roberta K. Mlndling, worthy past
grand matron was noted and It was
reported tha t the chapter had made

WEDNESDAY
SYRACUSE - Me igs County
Firemen's Association will meet at.
the Syracuse Fire Station, Wednes·
day, at 7:Wp.m.

ROCK SPRINGS- Better Health
Club Thursday, 1:15 p.m. at the
home of Helen Blackston with
Louise Bearhs in charge of program , a nd Tressie Abbott, contests.

· RACINE- Singing revival at
Racine Churc h of the Nazarene
Wednesday through Sept. 22', 7:30
each evening and 10:30 a.m. Sunday
with song evangelist Roger Brown
a nd his wife brlning the m essage in
song; public invited.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Democratic Executive Committee
meet ing, 7:30 p.m. Thursday,
Carpenters' Hall, E. Main St.,
Pom eroy; all inte rested Democrats
invited.

POMEORY Constitut io n
Week . Sept. 17-23, Return Jonathan
MeigsChapter, NSDAR.

MIDDLEPORT- Child Conser·
vat ion League m eet ing 7:30 p.m .
Thursday a t the Ohio Power Co.
offices. District President Cathy
Wray will install new officers.

FRIDAY
POMEROY- F.uU Gospel Busl·
ness Men's FellowShip Interna·
t)onal meeting at the Meigs Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy Friday
with dinner at 6:30 followed by 7: 15
meet in g. Speaker will be RObert L.
Swanger , pastor of Christ the King
Lutheran Church In Columbus.

POMEROY - Southern Band
Boosters wUI meet Thursday , 7:30
p.m .. in the band room . Parents of
hand members, lift h through
twel fth grades; are invited .

SUNDAY
M INERSVTI..l..E -Homecoming
Sept. 22, Minersville United Methodist Church Sunday School, worship
service begin 9 a .m ., basket dinner,

THURSDAY

son banquet.
The birthdays of Audra Well, Pearl
Canaday,
Brendawere
Kennedy,
and
DoMa Nelson
observed.
Refreshment were served by the
committee
of Lois
Wyant,
and
Ma¥
Gilliam,
Dallas
andLuke
Janice
DeBord, Raymond and Letha
CotterUI, and Jean Wood.

MIDDLEPORT- Annual picnic
of the legionnaires of FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Legion,
and their families will be held
Sunday at the Mill St. Legion Park
next to the Middleport Post Office
Sunday at lp.m. Barbecued chicken
wUl be provided and those attending
are to take a covered dish, their own
table service, and a chair. In the
event of rain, the picnic wiU be held
at the legion hall . ·

Southern yearbooks are In
POMEROY - The i984 Southern
High School yearbooks have arrived
and may be picked up during
regular school hours.
Group to meet

POMEROY - The Women's
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will meet at l p.m. Tuesday
in the East-West Dining Room of the
hospital Instead of on that evening as
earUer planned. The officers will
serve refreshments.

DRESS AND ·CASUALS

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Of·

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The prices of the vacuums will be lower
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The customer must HOOVER. ·
bring in an old vac, two-a peed
whether it runs or not, QUIKto receive the special ·aROOM'"
low price. Any . brand 'Qll: OUIET I ••
::11 SERIES V.cuum
of vacuum cleaner will
CASSETTE BAG
be _accepted.
CHANGERPutt .... _,.""" pop...tf
The Hoover® repre- tM
b.g. Drop-in·• hwh one
tnd dote the
sentative, Chuck Well- rMdy to me-n apln!YOY',.
man, will be at the CHECK-BAG SIGNAL
store from 10 to 4 on
Thursday, Friday &amp;
Sat1,.1rday, the 19th,
20th &amp; 21st, to help customers select the WITH TRADE
cleaner that best fits MFGRS. liST
$8295
their cleaning needs.
The sale will last
from Thursday, Sept.
S2039
19th to Saturday, Sept.
28th.
• HANG-IT ON A HOOK

Hoover Sales
Representative

dlft Into lht pafh ol aucllon.

Polyester s·lacks S1

•

•

.. .......
.' .. .' .
..-

.

.

•

S6 &amp; Sl

•A Selection of Ladies

.

POMEROY -

WITH ..'....' ..' '.
TRADE .,• ........

J09 95

Gigantic Hoover®Sale!
Experts predict this ·to be the Greatest
Vacuum Cleaner Sale ·Ever! ! !

•Ladies Vest Sweaters ·

ALL SALES FINAL, NO REFUND OR EXCHANGES

Here

.. .
....
. ' ........
.' .' .....
.... .' .
. ..

•

•

, U4363

•

~

•

''

•

.

-n

•

r

·---•
.
~

-•

--•

-.

~

~

•

•

OPEN

.

.

•

MON.-SAT 9 A.M.·S P.M.
FRIDAYS UNTIL I P.M.

••

••

,.

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

·'

'

•'

Hush Puppies Hurry, While

0°/o OFF 50°/o OFF 50°/o OFF
ALL CHILDREN'S

6 TO 20
32 TO 44

IMSI

FREE

'

SAVE ON A SELECT GROUP OF MEN'S

I

$2 &amp; $5 .

.'
. .' .. .
.. .. ...
...

l/2 PRICE

CALICO PRINTS

h~ld

~

SAY! NOW ON

IUY28ET1 .

SELECT GROUP OF

BUY·NOW FOR CHRISTMAS AND SAVE
SALE FOR

.;; .~

'HCICMR'

. SIDEWAL SALES

&amp; Slacks

.

:

-

4Ll LEATHER TENNIS SHOE SAYINGS FOR MEN
REG. 146.95 NOW 13000 SAVE IJ6.95
"NIKE" HI TOP
lEG. 136.95 NOW 12 500 SAVE 116.95
'NilE" LOW
CONVERSE PERSUADER LOW lEG. 132.95 NOW 12000 SAVE IJ2.9S

LEVI

Etnpire
Furniture'
to
.
-

noon. Afternoon services, 2 p.m .

SALE ENDS

Florsheim

Read the

•
I MIS

oofer

~ ...
•• •

Read the Best SeDer

The Daily Sentin~- Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

around work.
Production of the tum '\'as
financed with a $29,1XXJ grant from
the Ohio Humanities. Council and
additional money from the Natlolllll
Endowment for the Humanities, the
Ohio Arts Council and private _
•
supporters.
...

$93 on serving the Masonic fathe r·

I area happenings

Community calendar

Amish people who had rented a bus
to come see themselves on !Ibn.
According to' the director, for most
of the Amish there It was the first
film they had ever seen, since the
Amish don't believe In entertain·
ment for entertainment's sake and
all their social events ar&lt;' geared

...Vedtu•day, September 18, 1986

992-3307

101 WEST MAIN ST•

I• - :

•

.,

' I
I •

&lt; •

.

'

. - ... . ..

.

'

. - . ,. --.'

..,

~

�•••
•

.p age ' 10 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

•

Murder suspects ·aatested
SPRING CREEK, N.C. (UPI)Two fugitives wbo eluded a :mmemher posse and a high-tech
helicopter for three days were
fiushed frml a mountain wllcle~s
by a bloodhound named Brandyand
were charged with murdering a
state trooper.
WIWam Richard Bray and
Jimmy Rlos, both 23, had been
chased through the rugged Blue
Ridge Mountains near the North
Carolina-Tennessee border sind!
Saturday, when they allegedly

an 8J'tllinmeDt

~

ForesL

Chief Dla-

, -viNYL S1111G
' ••ALII Ill'* SIDING
.'
'llOWN ..
ltSUU110N

the fleeiDg IIIJ.IIleC!S.
"If II hldn't beellb' the 4
l
would mt haW beell cauPt.'
Graves said. ''She lteiptoursl*b

and we knew we were on
track. 'lbe fellows were
rea11y tired, bu.tlbe
the harder llbe'd pull."

stolen truck they abandoned after

..I;

a Pllll:;

l'ldll!i·

Nt SuHay Calla
'

Shortly before Bray

V

and ltD,

were caplllred, BrandybultlaiPOC;
where they had stQIJP!II ID , ~:
beside Charlotte Brailch.

The Daily Sentinel

,.

..••

VINYl &amp;

ALUMINUM SIDING

..

·--do~n1111otlan

,,,_Dooro

..-.,•• c1 " ..' " Win do we ·
•New 11ooflng
, "flU ESI'IIATIS"

PHONE
992-2151
lll ..ilt -lototM CIKs_, . ..
111 CMf'ISt..

/11/lfo

·- . INSULAnoN

'" \ ' •·

.

'

.,,
.,. J&amp;l ILOWN

U!r agreed. "Don't tballk Ill, ~-·

Brandy," he &amp;ald.

SIIIIIG CO.

-~ New ....... luill
I "Fnte Eatimet•"
......
t4t-210 1
,~ '
·~· ., .t4t-2160

u.s. ParkiWiger Dwl&amp;htlllc.(:ar.:i

owned by Burlte Coonty Sheriff's
Detective Steve Gra\'es got on the
traU of the fugitives Tuesday
morning, when they were seen
runnlng acro.s a tobacro field near
Doggett Mountain, a rugaed Wilder·
ness area In the Pl!gal! National

IISSELL

:·.1

Jonaer-Wfttjl',

.Coggins was shot to death.
The 2¥.,-year-tild bloodhound

captureTuesdayafternoonandface

-·~;

'

:i

a 90-poond

escaped Aug. 26frmlajallln0zark.
Ark., and made their way aoutl\ In a

first -degree murder after their

Business Seni.ces

pJece d clothing dropped by 0111 ~-

rust-colored
bloodbound, &amp;01 miiCb d the credit
for captul111i Bray and RIDs, who

kDied rookie Trooper Bobby Coggins who had stopped them lor
driving a stolen pickup truck.
Bray and Rlos were charged with

...;

·GraVel llllld Brandy~ j
rUle the fulltlves bad akliellaMI a
&lt;~~epofnt led them up arack cliff mal

trlc!J,.BobLaoeylnManllallat
2p:m. EDT, thesame~Cnafna ,
'ZT,Ia ID be burled at III!III'by Bcyson

City.
Brandy,

"

JAMES KEUEE
PH. tt2-2772

,....,.-...am

Roger Hysell

POOLS

VINYL UIEI POOL
ACRYLIC WALL POOL
AIOVE GIOUND POOL

.,_

... .......

Garage
lt. 114,P-•J Ohio

(

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

"stas··

IYDIOYICI CIIIIICAU

.....,.rt,

.... 11M. !lor.... l'llwy.
Ohio
IllS. 10 o.oo. to 5 p.on.

Also Transmission

PH. 99~·5612
or 992-7121

~14

992-2549

J&amp;F
DOZER. BACKHOE.
TIIENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER.
GAS • SEWER UNES.
RECIAMAOON, PONOS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTER&amp;.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

CALL
446·4Stt

"We Rut lu 1m"

EUGDIILOIIIG

Howard L. Writtsel

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

ROOFING

Complete Gutter Work
CompMte Remodeling
Roaring of all Tvpeo
Worked In home arM

IENTtL

20 Yhfl
"Free Eotimoteo"

trt~
Ollllpelll, ~It

St. Rt. 160

NOTICE OF SALE
Offer• wiN be raclived undt 11 :00 O'Ciocll A.M. on
the 21ot dey of October,
1881, at the Moyor'o offlco,
237 R- Str-. for the oal•
of the following daocrlbed
,..., emte. to·wlt:
Real -to oltuotod at the
cor- of Garfield ond South
Third Avenuo In the VIllage
of Middleport. Ohio. ThaVII·
loge acquired tltlo · to oald
rMI el'tllte by dHd recordlld

JUDGES' CHOICE - Kelly PhiWps of Spriag. field pla&lt;Jes a blue ribbon on a 11ant pumpkin p-own
: , on Lllnon's Fann, New Mlllurd, Conn., by Brian and
: Wayne Hackney of Brookfield, Conn. 'lbe giant lipped

the scales at 515-pounds to wbt the Eastem States
Exposition Pwnpldn contest. 'lbe pumpkin will be on
display during the Fair Tuesday. (UPI).

:f all festival plans finalized
RACINE - Meeting In regular
session Tuesday evening, the Rli·
· · elne Volunteer Fire Department
'lormaUZ€d plans for its upcoming
"Fall Festival" to be held Satuiday,
Oct. 12, from noon to 11 p.m. in
Raclne. Plans for the first annual
" Fall Festival" parade and band
. concert were formulated , along
wltb the origination of the first
a nnual "Racine Fall Classic" vol~ leyball championshlp.
" Saturday afternoon, preliminary
games In the first annual "Racine
Fall Classic" will he scheduled with
e hampionshlp matches slated for
: iater that day. A champlonshlp
t rophy and traveling trophy will he
presented to the winning team, with
the traveling trophy to be displayed
in a local business.
.. Any and all teams wlll ~
welcomed. All teams are to furnish\.
$10 entry fee. Mixed teams a re

.a

welcome.
• Itis hopedthatmanyofthe a rea's

local softball tea m s will participate
in the event. Tournament director
Lee Floyd announced tha t tournament sponsors are being sought
with the possibility of awarding a
larger selection of prizes to the
winning teams.
For further Information or to
enter, send team name and entry
to: P.O. Box 123, Racine, Ohio 45771
or call 949-3073. Early Interest In the
tournament will determine the
format.
The firemen voted to sell hot
sausages as they did at last year's
event. In addition, the horseshoe pit
will he open to the public.
Various organizations, bus inesses, and Individuals have a lready arranged to set up booths and
maintain a variety of activities
Including country music shows,
bluegrass, a variety show," games
and crafts. Refreshments of all
ldnds will be available.
Scott Wolle was nam ea to head

the first annual " Fall Festival"
parade, which will feature local
hlgh school bands, floats, and any
other interested participants.
Awards will he presented to the
local bands and each band will he
given an opportunity to perform In
the downtown area of Racine.
Anyone wishing to enter the
parade should contact Scott Wolfe
at 949-2045cor mall entries to Racine,
Ohio 45771. Mailed entries are
preferred. AU entries are welcome.
Prizes wtll he awarded to the top
floats In the parade; based upon
creativity and craftsmanship. Local homecoming flats are encouraged to enter.
The local firemen praised the
united community effort going into
this year's festival, especially the
work done by Beverly Moore, who
has helped organize the event. Any
organization interested In setting up
a booth or an activity should contact
Mrs. Moore at 949·2140.

In Volume 270, Pago 703,
Molgo County DMdo Ro·
corda.

___
_
.......... .................
..,._loW_,
Ia..:
do---ol·- =
Public N.otice

l'ulllic Notice

ot..,..rw•+=•••~·

,_
...-~-- ......

CGCU .... I&amp;ODII'fofthi

.....

ment bltl •• I . . IIIII ....
wllh . . . . . . . . . JMIIlll':

and

WHEREAS. the lllld povoeeditt~ of u. Rodt alol a

twQ..thlrdl of the ILb I : : : :
lloak of ..:1'1 DOii . . IJ
in tM affft11WIIiwe on . .
ilfoit&amp;lkt ......... PI'SJt'llll M
..r forth 1n ttw ,.,
• a•:
and
WHEREAS, the lupodn·
tondol« of lloo - rMit8 the . .
..... _.:farttwr.u d uufa

__ ,..._...,._
I...... .,

S1le of Mid r•l attatc
woo outhorlzod by Orll ·
nonco odoptod Jan. 12,
1981 . The vMioge rwHIVoo :-..:-:~":.':~:.:
the right to reject ony ond al depoeit~Ma. linll a a .. of
bida. The Ale i1 porauent to
_
andfDrthat
Section 721.03 of tho Ohio rt-vII ,
rMdl
lqlllcu- I
ReviMd Code.
NOW, THEREFORE. ...
Minimum bid 87600.
Sept. 4, 11, 18, 211; Oct. 2. 8 It II I ilit14 ..... of ..... of
Public Notice

law. hoowby

to -

110 , . tfhottw

do

8

... ,

heNby

-my that F_,.. lntorim

_, ...

...

-----lotobe
oonductad It ~0¥ in
Molgo County. Ohio, ....
CCMnpliod with .. .... prtllll. , _ by low ond lo
.mta.i to comman01 the
buliM!JI uf .......... "" d,.

•

Kucinich
feels he's best candidate
.
to retain control of Ohio Statehouse

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -Displaying
two blistered toes and a sore right
Jrnee, strolling gubernatorial candl·
··date Dennis J . Kucln!Ch said
:· TUesday the people of Ohio are
crying out for a change In the
· administration at the Statehouse.
•" And if he does not step Into the
· breech, said the 38-year old former
. mayor of Cleveland, the Republl:tans wlll "slaughter" Gov. Richard
'F . CE'leste In his bid for ~lection
next year.
· Kucin!Ch, now a city councilman,
.·:Pla ns to challenge Celeste In the 1986
cDemocratlc prtrnary '
• He held a press conference on the
'statehouse steps to recount the first
180 mlles of his walk across Ohio
during the past two weeks when he

.'

··.

covered territory from Cincinnati to
Columbus. He then started for
Newark, Mt. Vernon and points
east, hoping to reach Cleveland In
mid-to late-October.
" There Is a mandate for change,"
Kuclnlch told reporters In relating
his conversat klns with people at
shopping centers, farms, church
picnics and VFW halls.
"Wherever I've been, I've heard
over and over expressed a disappointment In the administration and
a willingness to tum It out (defeat It
In an election)," said Kuclnlch.
"Even you (reporters),ascioseas
you are to events, ha ve not
accurately gauged the level of
discontent this state has with the
current administration. It Is so deep

and so profound In the southwestern
part of the s tate that there Is ID way,
practically no way that the ad minis'
!ration has any opportunity of
winning the election."
Kuc lnlch said that Democrats and
Republicans alike expressed concern over Celeste's handling of the
savings and loan crisis of last spring,
his raising the state Income tax and
providing a smaU refund a year ago.
But the biggest criticism, he said,
was reserved for alleged unethical
practices and misconduct In !he .
Celeste administration .
"It seems that tills administration
has not accurately assessed the
values of the people d. this state,"
said the Clevelander.

JOB OPPORTUNITIES
APPLY NOW FOR A REWARDING
CAREER IN RETAILING
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
WE WILL TRAIN THOSE WHO QUALIFY.

a

~~IISOUlFIIGUATOa

d£it ....

Ill tloa a. ; Lowol
olIN WITNE81 WHEIIEOF, t

on!

I

PIUS: Olfico s.,,ie &amp;
fom~ .... *i4diot
ond Grllllo:ation

·. IUTtWTl SAW &amp; SEIMC£
:, W. ... AFtllfl•

• wtJII¥4

0

1 sPUD QUUI IAUMOaY

.... Tll..itlt•

SIIAI.
It! 4, 11,11, 211,-

•• tety

IIDENOUit
TV &amp;APPLIANCE

l"ublic Sale .

• 'A uction

CIISTEI-915-3307

4/1/Hn

WEEKLY AUCTION

'

EVElY FIIIAY NIGHT
7:00 , ...

N/111 AU-. 21
"miii"PIIFICr'
1110105

1

Mil"' P.ckagae To Choo11
Fram...... Lownt Priced
lENlOR Pt~- a• in Towft

HOWERY AUCTION HOUSE

. •••••••k ... f .....
. &amp; aown.:
Coli. " tllla• lot for An

lt. 50, 5 Milts Ent ef All•••
At Atht111 Linsttck S.fl Gr1111MI

,.,.._,..,..Prien

NICE HOUSEHOLD SAL£ - Extrulct 30"·111
ranp, FUIS, IUIPJt, lllttal utility Clbillltl, 1'1-

fril., IIWII cltlirs, IIIII tables, I'Kiilltr, ll!li,s,
antiques. lawn mower, roll-awar lltd. piciHs,
couch, dinette stl, cookinl utensils, lleds, radios, clocks, washtulis, color TV, CHir clltst,
stone jars ud juas. crocks, e~nllltl p&amp;ft,
washer and dryer, doll collection.
lfOTI: 'filii is c..... tM IMidW Jiw.
"

,

JOI 3r4 St., llieino, OH,
...... 992-6712
Or .... t49-J031
Altor Aug. 21

8-19·1 mo. pd.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE

SlatioMr..t
a ,':"""'k

SlgM,
St-,
""ln•s for:M,
Copy Sonim, It&lt;.
t5l MiA St., lli.._t
104 Mukry ••• , _ . ,

GRAVEL • SAND

TOP SOIL ·
FILL DIRT

992-3345312/tln

10-8-tfc

~:

to 24'x36'
. Insulated Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

A1cine, Oh.
Ph. 61.·U3-5191
10-6-tfc

SATURDAY, SEPT. 21, 1!1_5
10:00 A.M.

o/UncloK. Poge
UndoK.Poto
Supslntlftdlnt
of Benko

(9) 4. 11 , 18, 21, 4tc:

TEAFORD
Real Estate
2t6 E. 2nd St.
I" hone
1-16141·992'-3325

USTlNG- Reconditioned
, one lloor 3 BR home
IMiddlleport. Elec. or ~heat
and I&amp; mode kitchen.

c

Middleport, Ohio
1 - 13-tfc

rf '
••

•

W\NTADS

'

'

. I

'

',. 111111 Estell General

........... loll of

,.
o!

SaturdiY, s.,ttlllbtr 21, It 10:00 A. I ; 1

l'ersonel fro,.rty, Alll ...ll, Clllector lt1111 If 1111 '
Estlotr K. PPwtll, Itt 7'l Jilrsl HtiM full of 1M41 41111rj 1
ituosl Extn...y lltlellistltlc tellews: •
'·

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bitdrooma, 2 complete batha, dining
room, living room and large recreation room. Located on 1
acres. Large farm pon~t. Racine
area.

HOME NAnONAL IANIC
CAlL

'
10-GO~~ MAIIDSTITCHED .QUILTS: Appliqued "Princess .
Feather ; 1ppllqued "Sunbonnet Girl" &amp; "Overall Bill"· blue·
/whi\~ embroidered "Blue 8ird"; "Dresden Plete": "Geese i~ :
Pond ; close st~ched petchworl! w/hundreds of squares re-

dlll:na outwerd; 6-petll epplique; and other quill$.
I PIECES OF GIIAP[ COLOR ERICISOII GLASS includinc .
decanters/cologne; winged side bowl; and pas~b(e Erickstri ·
rare "Cella lily" paperweight in arape; some very 11011 :
~nckson ~!ass. Over 70 piem of aood 9u11ity fostoria';
Ame!:can .atassware 1ncludina larae serv:n1 pieces, tilis
fostona serv;ce wes used only two times! Other IIJO(I atassln ...
eludes: 7-Heisey cut "Roster Heed" cockt•illlesses· beauti·"
ful K.T.&amp;K. deco. pitcher &amp; bowl chember set· letd crystal'''
cut bowl; Fenton; Stone "Cow" pitcher and meny other aaod' ;
:Iems!
..
FUIIIITURE,: Walnut Easnake settee; mahoa. Duncan P~ytt, "
style extensiOn table &amp; 6-ribbon back chairs w/needlepoint;, ,.
Colby Wnnpr ~; laney walnut mentel clock; ROiiSe cede~ ·.!
chest; lood childs oak rocker and other items!
, ,1
ALSO MODERN: l ·~ar old G.E. washer &amp;drylf;Zenith Chro-'
ltiiColor IV; lenoul:vonf room suite; Drtxel bed &amp; chest· &amp;
hundreds of otfle items
'
AUCTtON££H IIOTE: ._, aood ~UIIity 11t• 11 ..11
lilt. Salt wjU lest Ill .,, ~ Clllillll, cltPI,IIMII &amp;&lt;
c-y fill, let to -.tltlll2-ar Jll'lll w/tlllc ......_
1111 fir '"IJiat.
II ltlr 11&amp;1 Ytl)"" i.ctlllt .
t . .: CUll 0., el lilt " Cllld 1111' 'IIMiw II
L•cltl
Call fir F~

'*

AUCTIOIIEI: OnJE O,EIIAI
315-7115 or 314-2211

...

.. £.M1in

HolM is leellt4 II 111 lonr01 St., hiiiiWillt '::
Ollio on U.S. ltoutt 33 1111r lilt center of IIIIMI:
ville. Easy to fiiHI. Siens in yard.
•·

Sales clerk8, receivers, cashier8, 8ecurity
and office personnel

F•r•
E••l~•••t
Perla &amp; Sarvlee

1·l·tfc

·(
'

thrething, ..wmill, shingle
mill, molaesea making .
Country mulic deity. Admit·
1ion e2.00.
AA Criaia Pregnacy Center.
Confidential . Free preg·
nancy teat and-or informa·

tlon. Phone 614-742-2629,

collect if necesaary.

73-19 ford lr.

Fat Burner! Gobese Grape·
fruit Extra Strength Cap·

sules.

'I'OMEROY,O.
992·2259
"'OIIERIIIfENDs TO SELl in
Seplember!" Make an ofte~
l'roperty will be purchased for
haN the appraisal made 4
yean 11101 This, clo~e 10 down·
town Pomeroy, needs work
but could be I!IIOd home or " ·
vestment. Call today and
make your offer!

COUNTIIY ESTATE- O'er 4
ecres of ground with a beau·
'· tiful new home. l'h story
home, lull basemen!. 2 car
11reae. in-ground pool, and
many other features. Call to·
day. $64,500.

FAIM - 98 acres, house,
' bam, other buildings, and
' miner~ls, elc. $48,900.
2 RENTAL UNITS IN ~10·
DUI'OIT. Need some work
• but wHI produce income.
'16,900.
NICE Ill STOIY IIOil I~ Pomeroy on a I!IIOd street. Base·
men~ prqe; other features.
' $28,900.

IEAUTIFUL OLDEI HOME
with up lo 4 bedrooms, par·
lor, sun parch, basement. all
in aood condition. On a gOOd
street. U9,900.
IW.TOIS
llillrJ I. Cltllltl, Jr.
' tt2-lltl
J111o Tnmtll Mt·2NO
Do1ti1 T1n1t1 tH·IIIZ

·.&amp; m·
-~~

&amp; · 107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.
'
PHONE 992·7075

Now Selrlng All Of

'

,

Melg• County

._

',d

-

- Addons •nd ~inu
- Roofing 1nd guner work
- Concrete work
-PiumtHnv and eltc1fic.l

(F- Elllmotoo)

992-6215 or 992-7314

P-••r. Ohio12-8-llc

EnPit-A-Car. tht ll!odlrft way

to :lrin the 11hiclo ol your
cHi ct.

Aret

8/19/1 mo. pd .

Middleport.

Needed Immediately: tOO
people serioutly interetted
in losing weight. 1· 800·

992-9991 . Roben &amp; Judy
Hartsoe, Rt. 1 , Box 310,

MOBILE HOMES MOVED,

t

insured, - reatonable rates.

tf

4

Coli 304-676-2336.

Giveaway

-S ma-ll . -mou-nt b-arbe-dw
- ire .

~~~ . 614-256-t435

•tt•r

Lovable email dog, 4 years

5 Kittens. 304-876-1928.

Help Wanted

Beeline offers free clothes,
good money, no ca•h investment. Wotk your own hours.

i~

FOR THE
lOTH OF YOU

3 cute kittens. 6 weeks old.

304-676-6714.
6

Lost and Found

;;~

SnUNG'
Jlr{"'
1AtltiiiG SALON
PH. 992-3912
fall lickoff - Sept. 9 thru 20
HAll CUT &amp; STYLE... $ 7.50

Slgn up end win • free pue to the local Home·
coming Game of vour choice .

Call 614-992-6737

Tonning S!*tiCI !J·~·.. :~·~·~;~:.::::::::. ............ ~.;s~

Breakfast set chair. Call

614-378-2389 or 614-379 2767 .

Situations
Wanted

Room-Board with family
willing to pt"ovide support
service• for gentleman age
56. Contact Joann : fi'14•

446-8146 .

lEN'S
APPLIANCE
SEIYICE
915-3561

All M1ke1

~Waahera

•Dithwethera

•Range•

•RIIfri.-•tora .
•Drvera•Freuen
PARTS end SEFivic:E

Qrarr

LICINSID INSURED CERTIFIED

FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES
• ClWING INSPECTIOII
~
• flUE CAl'S INS!AU£0

.

~

• CHIMNEY REIUILDtHG

1
'·-.V

&lt;

'

l

.,

I\

" TOTAL FIIIEPLACE .
ANO CHIMNEY WORK "

'

INOUSTIIIAL
STAINLESS STEEL LINERS

448·2026 or 614-24$·
9180.

Room and board for senior
citizens, retirees end disabled . Special care. 674

Babysitter for 10 yr. old boy.
Father works shiftworh. Call
Po11tlon : City Manager ·
Ht~lth Commlnioner . Citv
of Gallipolis, Ohio (pop.

6 ,&amp;001. SolelY negotiable
upon qualifications. Commillion form of gCJvern·
ment. Full-service city. 88
employee a . Budget expendi·
tures approximately 84 million. Quallflcatlons desired:
Degree in public edministrlltion or equivalent with at
leaset 6 years experience as
city manager or 5 years 11
assistant city manager and 2
Vtlfl 11 city manager. with
proficiency in grants management .and good fiscal
management skills. Send
appllc:atlona to City Clerk.
Gallipolis Municipal Building, 618 Second Ave., Galli·

polis, Oh

4'6631 .

Plum St ., Middleport. 614·
992-3695.
Have vacancy for men or
women . Elderty only. Care.
room. board and laul'tdry.

Coli 814·992·8022.
Veeency for the elderly in
our home. Trained and tif·
teen yeer1 experience. Cell

One certified Medical Tech nologist. weekdays. Send
resume to bok 300. in care
of the Gallipolis Daily Tribune. 826 Third Ave .• Galli·

stampod envelope: Elan Vi·

VETERANS : Do you wioh
vou had stayed in the
military1 Regret loslng that
retirement income? Sorry
you didn ' t take advanlage of
the GIBill to get vouu:ollege
degree? Maby it's not too
late. Join the Army Pietion•l
Guard and receive a monthly
paycheck . life insurance•.
retirement benefits, and the
New Gl Bill. It pSVI ful(time
student• •140 . 00 per
month. 3A time students
half time students 870.00
per month. up to maximum
of 86,040.00 . We have the
be1t part- time jobs around!

Coli 304 -876-39&amp;0 or 1·
800·642· 3619.

4 bdr .• bath. ulility room.
living room. kilchen. anct
din:ingroom . Big 2 car garage with attached grlln·
house, CJn 3 acres,

""it

collor. Call 614-441-818\.

3 bdr.. family room. 11q1
Adrian Avo .. '39,000. Coli
61 4-446· 3718.

614-448-8038.

18 Wanted· to Do
Will paint trailer roofs &amp;. cut
tobacco . Call 61 4 · 256 ·

1628.

Car• painted . $1 00 and up.
20 ye~n- e.~~~perience. Phone

614 -986-4174.
Wallpapering, neat and pre cise. References available .

Call 304·676· 2001 or 304·
675-4&amp;83.

Fw ancial

1·-::-:---:::-u- s"'i_n _e _s s_ __
21
8

Reduced $1 0.000 multi·
unit apanment complex. all
1 bdr., some furnia._.,
resident menager, renl«l
pay all utilities, •pprcic.
51,400 mo. income . Owner
will pay clo•ing cost. Catl

days 814-692-1189 oro•.
614-594-2874.
Mull oeii.. 4P ocro, 4 bdr., 2
baths houn. farm equip-

ment . Call 814·268-1790.

Modern 3 bdr. home trame.
lerge kitchen. plenty of
cabinets. refrigerator •
electric r•nge. dispoul. din·
ingroom. 2 full bath. car·
peted. full basement tift.
iahed. central •ir, new gu
fumance, fenced in bHit
yard. l•rge carport, ,.•elY-to
move in to. good location on
Sunaet Drive on Upper S:e·

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

Opportunity

cond Ave. Coli 614-4482573 or 614-448-1171 . '

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PU8·

One of a kind log ellbln ..
Raccoon Creek. 7 mH..
from Rio Gr•nde, 11 mllei,
from Gallipoli•. Air condld•
oned, eleclric furn•ncM.
washer, dryer, county .,..
ter. priced under •ao.ODO",

LISHING CO . recommends
thai vou do butlness with
people you know. and NOT
to. send monev through the
mail until you have invetti·
gated the offering .

!-=------.::____

Own your own jean ·
sportswear, lediea apparel,
children•. large size. combi·
nation atore, petites, malernity. accenoriea. Jordache.
Chic. l ... '-•vi, E Z Street,
lzod, Esprit, Tomboy, Calvin
Klein, Sergio Valente, Evan
Picone , liz , Claiborne.
Mernbers Only. Gasoline.
Healthtex, over 1000 oth·

oro . $13,300 to $24,900
inventory. training, fixturea,
grand opening eta . Can open

15 dayo. Mr . Keonon (3061
678 3639.

LOST: White 9 mo. old

Information .

7532 . References provided.

polio, Oh 4563t .

- - - - - - - - -tc-

fn~m ~ 1

T. L.C. Phone 614-992·

Will pro11ida infant and child
care in my home. Loti of

Mark

envelope 'City Manager' .
Appointment will be made
mid-November.

Government home

In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr.
just finished. full basement,
nice lot. large rear deck, with
valley view. priced lo sell,
$39,&amp;00 . Will consider mobile home trllde·in. Call

614-992-'7314.

.lumiohed. Call 814-a'n2141 .

Make ~ffer 2 bedroomt, ' .i
acres. 2 car garaa•. •
reasonable offers coriaf•
de red. In Pomeroy, 01 ,f.;

678-2513.

20 acres, 3 bedroom COUI'I•
try home with 1 '1:1 batt.,
fully carpeted, ·kitchen lftP·
pliancills included, full bile·
ment with fireplace. fa"'ily
room. 2 car gere;eattached.

Call 614·992-6084 .

6 rooms end bath. NMf

Pomerov · Middleporl, 1 "h

fem81e German Shepherd,
Lower River Rd . lo Rt. 218

acres. Call 814-992-7453.
7 room houH. 1 'lr beltt..
g1rage on Gravel Hill. 4
bedroomo. Middleport . 814·
992-5714.

red &amp; white. mole . Coli
814-448 -9453.

In Pomeroy. 5 room hom.
wilt'~

8

beth. carpeting, ltomt
windows, new gea furneoe.
partial blsemenc. •torete
buifding. Reasonably~~
Must ' " to appr.c:i•te. C.n

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

614· 992 ·1783.

Three (3} ahcty-five Pll·
sanger achool buees will be
offar.cl for ule at 1 public
aucllon on September 'llh
by lhe Southern Local Boerd
of Education. The euctlon

3 bedroom• and betii. !Afiolw
St., RutlanJI. Can be...., 1111
lond contrtlct ~h ll'niiiJ
dOwn peymen11 tan 114,
992-5851.

will take place at the South·
ern Local High School cam-

Six room houM on 49 llt'8t1
Full booolflent, ,flw loti*t.
prlvoto, ctooo to lowno. c:.tl
814·992·7082.

"*"'lng II 7:00 I'.M . AU

ttl,..

b.,.., ere In running

.-lon and ,..., con be
_ , prlof 10 the Ale II the
Southern Local bu. gerege.
Recine. Ohio. Term I of ule:
Ceeh . Auctioneer ; Den
Smith.

McDaniel Custom Buleher·
tng. opon 8 doyo o ·
304-882-3224.
'I

.

,

House for ule: lea oHM,
garage. garden •re•. GfMn
School Dittrict. Call 814·

Coli oloer 5PM. 614-286 ·
6237.

LOST Copper nose Bug._

&lt;tt~imnry

livinG room, f•ll

boument. $29,000 l&gt;r
•4.000 take over paymenta .
Call614·44&amp;-7360 .

lox propertv . Coll805· 887·
8000 eKI. GH-10189 fO&lt;

oreo. Cotl614·446·7861 or
614·448-9430.
(CUT OUI fOI MUll USfl

3 bdr, large

(U·repeir). Alao deliquent

$105.00 ,.r month. and

FOUND on Cora Mill Rd .

2 bdr.", fully cerpeted, vinyl
siding, lerge lot, atoraoe
bldg.. garden , re.tr"ic:t..,

Coli 805·887·6000 Ekl. R-

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

tfn

H.omes for Seta

31

9805 for current federal list.

.tal -715 3418 Enterprise
Rd., Ft. Pierce. Fl. 33482.

304-896-3581.

Rr. ol hLl l t!

Free lingerie, good time,
undercover wear. pany plan .

Urge maple tree. muat be
removed. 304· 882·2966 or
8 week old puppiea. VJ
Beegle. 1h Nor. Elk . 4male. 3
female . 3 ttub tail. Evenings

----~----- l========~~

Government jobs. •1&amp;,040·
$69.230ayear. Now hiring.

old, mixod breed . 304-675·
7659 .

'882-2475.

more.

Can ofter IPM. 614-288 ·
5237.

EIIr Asaembly Work!
$600.00 per 100. Guaran·
teed payment . -No
experience-No 11les. Oateils
send self - addressed

1 female puppy, 7 wHka

Help Wanted

12

2 kittens 1 male. 1 female.

litter trained . Call after 6PM,
614-446-2611 '

11

$27,500. Call 114· 2&amp;1·
8200.

S1:rv11:1:s
11

-J::~·;~~;:~~::.

different itema. doMe.
year.2 canarays,
clothes,

lrnp luyrnr:nl

814-4411-6550.

Racine Gun Shoot tpon·
tored by Racine Gu!" Club .
Every Sunday. beginning •t
1 :po p.m . FKtCHY Choke12
guage shotguns.

2218

Sell AVON meke 45%. Call
614-448 -3368.

Television Usteniric Devices
Computerized Heari1111 Aid Selection
Heam11 Evaluations For All Ages

No Down Ptrmtnt
Lower Monthly Peyment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING
Bok, 326
Pomeroy, OH. 45769
for fllttr Strvict

Pharmacy,

old . Call 814·245-9t48 or
614·446-3446 .

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

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Wo'd Iiiio to introdlct you to

lt/IIIAIJQ.Iln~d
II
fll cl

~

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

wo.O.

INTERESTED IN A
NEW VEHICLE

Fruth

Rood.

·~=========~~, thl•

WVe. Engines pertormlng

BLUE. STREAK CAB CO. '

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

ATTOIII£Y: JAIES F. SHUIAIEI

Sui..::1Jir".::"-

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

t4t-2013 01 992·7301
"'

but will
I:Ons~uctoo cost lD se1t1e
IUY 110W
FIX IN nME
FREE PARKING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

YOUN-G'S

HAllY CHUIYHOLIES
ftOWEI OF ATTORNEY FOR
ESTHER K. POWELL

Down Home Deya. SteamGat Engine Show Sept.
20.21,22 . Fraziers Bottom ,

Crooton. NC 21615. t -9t9385-6808

BOGGS

clolhes, ltereo, typewriter.
Garage Sele 4 Family Thurs. toye. miiC. iterile.
.'
19. Fri. 20. 9 to 5 . Fairfield
Acret. Fairfield Centenary Thurs. • Fri .

43946.

end E-Vap Tablet1. Fruth
Pharmacy.

4«

Authorized Joha DHre,
New Holland. Bush HOI
Farm Equipmttlt
Duler

• lets

''

lttttallation Available

Colt

&amp; Vicinity

Two Family Sot. 21, 'f95· Yard oole, Sept. 18·19-20.
498 Maple Drive (Spring
Volley Ell. I Electric typewri- 17&amp; Midway Drivo, Now
ter, aree rugs. etc.
Haven . Adult•. childreru

Buying
all gr•des
of
aluminum.
Premium
peidfor
large loeda. Call for quote.
Scipio Energv, located 1 :1.4 Catting
mile• 1111 of Pagelown on Four regional TV commer·
Townohlp Rood 141 . Meigs cial . All ages. "fo experience
neca11ary . Will be InterviewCounly. 0 14-992-34&amp;8.
. ing in Southe"l Ohio area.
Wanted;old pianos. Paying WMk of Oct. 1. For appoint·
$20 and $40 each . Firat menl call between 10:AM ·
floor only. Write giving 7 :PM, Mon. -Fri. 814-890·
directionli. Witten Pianos, _0_2_2_2_.- - - - - - Bo• 188, Sardis, Ohio

Fat Burner! Goben Grapefruit extra strength CIPIUIII

1:-1:"

DOUGLAs w. unu-an~y

PUBLIC AUCTION

Cleaner, one hatf mile up

73-79 Ford lr.
. ......................... I I 00
Doors ......................... I 13 S
73·10 (ho•r· Tr.
10·15 Ford lr.
_
________ _. .......... •tso
Doors .........................$t45
73
lr
11-79 ford Tr.
.
s.....:............. $70
. Grills ...................... $52.10
73-rt hnr Tr.
10·15 Ford lr.
Gtlllot ................... •31.50
llootls ......................... I t45
73·79 (ho•J· lr.
Il-l! Ford • ..,.,
aodlor ......................•u
Hoods........................ •l3o
71·79 (Lo•r· lr.
13-15 Ford R..,., · t
, .. , ........................120
Gtitlos ,.......................... 75
Ntw •MI Und Avto Gl11s-Late Mo4W Parts
9·1

· "Fret Estimates"

rna ~

chine repair, · parts. tnd
auppllat.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum

f-· ,_.... . . . . . . . . ,_,.. . . . . . . . . .

(• No. u,m .

ftOWU OF

SWEEPER and sewing

.

...... Pt"Piiiiiiiiiiif··--

Plantz subdivision. ·

snw~lter.

3 Announcements

73·10 (h.,r lr.

Tlilttgl--ln lho

•

DAft SIIITH - AUCTIONEER

"Ntt

Pomeroy-Mason Bridae
SINGLE '24. 95
•live entert1inment
'Free HBO •Restaurant
.Olympic Pool
· A.U •
304-675-6276• .If

I

"*·•

ESTATE OF JESSIE M. WDEI

A1111 UUIIG ~ 1111! II IS

8 miles bom

Goorgeo Crook Rd.
814-448-0294.

73-10 th"J lr.

repair Gas Tanks.

k

"*
t.,.:
"*pt:

POiff PIIASANI, W. VA.

goods, gla11ware. 842 ' " "
S f., Middleport. Sept, 1fltt;

&amp;. 2 Families ~oving Out .

silver

3476.
Aluminum •~rep. Sell your
oluminum ocrop directtothe

ItT. 62 SOUTH

9-11· 1 mo.

core , radiators and
Miter coras. ,Wt ·can

;

Located 1111 St. lt. 241 just out of Chtsltr, Oltit. lllis
is till ptiSOIIII property of the late JtssM ....,,
usniiG: Coins, 2'h gal. eatvan~ed biicl!tls, so pl. drtiiiS,
12 11, Wood extension lldder, milk cans. wooden bencllll,
12' atu111num ladder, plush plow, sell! spteldet
IDols, 21"Lawn Boy push mower, chest freezer 20cu.
bie leal, fllllnd !able, relrigmtor, Tappan range,
dishes, foci . ~ co~.~:h/hide-abed, haH tree, lamps.
lows, ~umidifier, pictures, couch &amp;chair, calli llble, sewtne
mach1ne, d1mng room IJble .w/4-6 chairn, china Clbinel,
small desk &amp; chair, cleaning ltd &amp; sh~ s11e11s,
nens. kmck-kn;teks. 4 pc. bedroom suite, bool!s, chest ~
drawers, electric heater, sweeper, old woodwortcing t11o1s,
lrame hook rugs, Slone crocks, pitcher. dr;er wrin&amp;tr ·
washer, stands, wash tubs, Iaiiie, baskets, ard other misc. ::

~

items.

.:•..:tor.:oo~._m,_isc.:.;_.~·----f.;
•
Now limo Rood , Rutlone.
Lawn, Garden. and BaM· Sept. 18th, 19th, ond 20ttt.
mant Sale. Salurdly Sep- 9th , houoo on right. Gtoo4·
tember 21st on Neighbor- were, whet-nOtl, Ford 151•.
hood Rd, Two tentha mite spoke wheels, clothiftt.
•
from Rt. 7, south. Boat, 614-742-2502.
furniture, fawn OQLiiprnerll,
Clothes, pictures. yar&gt;d
Franklin furnance,
'

Yard Sole Sept. 20-21. 9 to

coin1, ring a, jewelry,slerling
ware. old coins, large cur~
rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur·

kett B~rber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, Oh . 614-992·

Co. Rd. 28 .et John D.,...
wood ' s . Beby f~rnitur ••
eiQihea. maternity clothN.

feed mill.

45769 or call 614-9927760:

4/29/lln

Pomeroy
•
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
•
•
_, ·-·- .. ---.-.-- .... ··- ..... ·.·
•
Thurodoy through Boturdoy.

Yord Sole Sept. 19. 20, ond ond 20th. 9:30-5:00. Fem
Grimm.
21at8idwoll. on Rt. 664.

wood. cupboard•. chairs,
ahesu, baakela. di1hea,
atone iara, antiques, gold
and silver . Wrlte · M . D.
Miller, Rt. 2. Pomeroy. Ohio

)',... Eatlmetoe

'· We Cln ra~ir and re-

I ,AT192·2196
HILL FORD

coal heateu .

e.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE. Btdo, iron,

Ph. 915-otlotl

I al10 acitl bciil1nd rod

ESTATE AUCTION

A.D., 1986

TO BUY uoed

wood

814-446-21539.

...........-.ONe

; ·YIOlll
1

WANTED

•
............................ 7

Sale at Cenl~anary Town·
house S.pl. 19 ·Furriiture,
kerosene Meters, winter
clothes, bedspreads. ml8c-.

9·8.

ule, or aervice buaineaa In
Meigt Co. Call

IIAICM
CONTIAcnNG

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

l

Jim Mink Chov.·Oido Inc. ·
Bill Gene Johnaon
et 4-446-3672

Gellia or

,•

'

We pey ca•h for "'• model
cleen uNCI Cllrl .

All qr part of retail, whole·

•Co111plett Remodelinc
*Room Additions
*Roof inc
•Sidinc
•Garaps &amp; Pole
Buildiqs

Sizes Start From 12'xl6'
UTILITY BUILOI NGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

Ooroge Solo 3 Fomlly 19·20,
476 Kathy St.

--------- I

•
ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDIJtGS

&amp; Vicinity

Wanted To Buy

Buying daily gold,

; :out radiato.rs. We also

PART TIME POSITIONS AVAILABLE:

WE ARE AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER M/F,
INTERESTED PERSONS MAY APPLY:
OHIO JOB SERVICE
39350 UNION AVE.-POMEROY
SEPT. 18, 19 &amp; 20th- 9 A.M.-4 P.M.

• ONe. "

OIJP¥ of .... llf

Itt :CU Jm ,,lllllf ,,.

9

.. .... 'Giiiiif;oiii........ .

SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd.
• Olive St. oolllpolio. Coli
814-446-3159 .

. 949-2263
or 949-2969

COLLECT:

THE QUALRY
PIINT SHOP

•lllllH

' I;SYLVAIIIA .. '

AUCDOIIED: IHMy Hewery

in Ita ArlidN of lncCNpcwadon.
GMin my lwld.ond
olllciol s.t II Columbuo,
Ohio. thlo 30th cloy of Augbot.

Public Notice

.

I£,AIE YOUR SALES
AIO SEIYIC[
•; H~AOQUARTERS FOR

. .,

feetl A,.iWM.
TIIIMS: (IIIII fir Check wit~! PMitiwt II

Auguoi31.18BI.·--

~

1,1MI',altt j:,'~

-· '
__

...... ...,.
.....merver
. -"'__,_
O
hio,--.
.....coo-llo
'"'*-

STATE OF OHIO
..
of .... of . . . .
DIVISION
A._,31,1111!1....
dRod
copy
of
.....
.....
OF8ANKB
CER11FICATE OF
mont·to Molgo In tho olllco ol
the
of ........
Al/THORITY NO. 1010X
gothor with. ·-dllod- of
To - F-InWim1, Undo K. Pogo, Suporin- the " - - ' of tho " 1 In

_ , . of . - .

jl

l'ublic Netioe ·

992-5875 Or
742-31

Guttera • Downopouto
Gutter CI.. nlng
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

7111 / tln

Public Notice

CaH:

NEW-REPAIR

v•n&amp;AlUMMUM

U·fif~E

FOR ALL YOUit
WiliNG NEEDS
Aesidenlial • Commercial

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. ••1~.~

Public Sale
8t Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER lt!RVICE. Eotata,
form, antiquo, llquld-n
ooloo. lJceMICI Ohio ond
Woot Vlrglnlo. 304-7735785 Or 304-773-1430 .

MILLER
ELECTRIC
.SERVICE

CON\'IACTING

3-24-tfc

RENT A CAR

B

3 bedroom homo, 8'11 Jtill'·

cent 11sumabte 101ft• . . , .

- '· Reduced -.n \It
t48,000. 304-17.5·104'1' .

.;

,

'

�31. Home• for

18. 1986 ··:

Wednaaday,

Sentinel

s•

LAFF-A-DAY

51

HouHhold Goode

154 Mlac.

.•.

•

Merchandllt

- n t, nice-n, 1ow
110'•· , -101-413-2812.
lly o - ·· FuMy fvmiohod
2 IMdroom co~ !Mih
Iorge Uvillfl roon&gt;, llltchen
Md beth locot... on Union
ComPII"'und Rood ot Union
Centolwly RoN. two mi ...
from N41w HoWft , fuol oH
hMt. Porco! conoloto ol2. 7S
..... !Mih 2 ocreo of hnc..t
pasture. Price e21.000.
T...m. AYIIIIoblo. 304-773·
85115.

The

Television
Viewing

~CRITICISM IN "11£

1111 110HondoATCw~JI ' I , new "'!!.u .....,
1
- . -ttoo...... 1lt4441· 0108.

8y owMr. 2 laadruom ranch,
704 M - Roecl. Point

.

SePtember 18, 1986
TRACY

~~~~~AC(
HIM·

WEDNESDAY
~/1~l85

· 79 Motor1 H • C1mpen

------------------:·

.•
..
..-

.•

...
..-.

EVENING
(I) (I) (!) •

1 :00 •

IJj N-.
(J) 8locldluotlrl

(I)

&lt;II •

CD

In

Aeroblco·llodles
Motion

(J) Andy Orlflllh
(I)
Audubon

' •

I

-

(I 1

Wildlife

Tholltre

em Voyoge ol tho Mimi
• Dllfntnt Sln&gt;k•
IHIOI MOVIE: · -

32 Mobile Home•
for S81e

Lode'
(J) CD NIC Nightly

a

1:30

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES,
4 MI. WEST, GAUIPOLIS.
RT 31. PHONE 1114·441·
7274.

eon, Yortlthire. end t..ke·
front at almllar uYin11. We
have a Brookwood and
Elkton on dlsp18y. We're

Carol 9umott
fMncfa .

end

CD Mlozclo Sportolook ·

·

(I) Carol 9umott
(I) • 1JJ ABC Newo (CCI
• (I) &lt;11 cas Nowe
(I) Dr. Who
Body Eloctrlc

4 bdr. houoo, Bulovillo Rd ..
otovo fumioh.... f275 pluo
dop. CoU 814-441·027e.
Houoo end both, lltgo yord In
Rocino - · Coli 114-912·
IIIIB.

EIMa Home Center- Chillicothe and Circleville. Open
late-Open Sunday. Both Iota

Noohuo 14a70, completely

2 bdr . lumlohH, oil utYitoo

furnished.

pd., except elect.• COIIVII·

W1aher 1nd

3
dryor. Coil 614·949· 221 .

1974 Hlllcroot 1 2x65. 2
bedroom•. Good conditon.
Port lolly lurnlohod with un·

nlont lacotlon, oocurity dopo
ooit ,....,-, Colll14·441·
8511 ·

derpinning lnd 2 porchea.

FumlohH. AC, , _ , no city
tUn, buutitul riverview, in

f4,BOO . Coil !114· 892·
8283 or 814·992·2478.

Keno.,... F - ' • Mobllo
HomoPort&lt;,l14· 441· 1102.

1 2xl5 Elcono Troll.,.. Good 2 bdr. oir cond., now carpet,
goo hMt, privlote lot In
condition. 1 milo ooot of Gollipollo . Coli 814-44$·
Chootor on St. Rt. 248.
.
1 409
Make ollor. Coli ovonlnlo 1...:..:.~·------114·9B5·4486or814·98 • 14x18 mobllo homo on 1
3841 ·
-- - - - ·1 ocro lot 1210 mo. pluo
1975 1 2•16 2 bedroom utYitloo 2 child,... oc~.
mobile home on 6 .ern of

lond. Doublogorogo otongo
building. Klngobury Rd.,
Pomoroy. Phono 814·112·
2584 or 814-992·2774.

w•W• Oct. Vinton .....,
Coli 114· 2lll-tllt ·

2

bdr. apt. control oir,

refrigertar &amp; ltove. t225

181.00 lor tho polr. Coli
mo., pluo dopooit, · ,.,.,or 114·448·2117.
poyo utllltloo, ref. Nil· CoU
114·441· 31111, oltor 5
SWAIN
• , 4·448,448,'
AUCTION • FURNITURE
12 Olivo St.. Golllpollo. Now
Upotoirt unfumlohH opt., 6 uood wood·cool ot-. 8
corpetod, ol utYitloo pold, no pc wood LR oulto t'399,
children, no poto. CoM 81 4· bunk beds *119. antron
441-1837.
recllnoro 199, now • uood
bedroom IUitu. rengea,
Apt. lor ront, 231 Rur Firat wri,... wooh.,.., • oh001.
Ave., 2 bdr., •221 mo., ref. New llvingroom suite•
• dop. Colll14·448·4928. 119•·1099, Iampo, oloo

One or two bedroom •partmente in' Pcrmeroy. Fur·
niahed or unfurnished. Rent
nogotllblo. Coil 114-892·
1723.

Myoro .oubm.,.giblo pump, 2
HP, 2000 gol. utility tonk.
CoM 814·286·1201.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED .
lnsuM, rellonable rttel.
Coil 305·678-2338.

1. 3 bdr. 61· 2bdr. mobile
homea for rent. Call 81 4·
448 •3371 .

APARTMENTS. meibllo

t4,000. 304·171· 1108.

34

Buaine11
Buildinga

Commercill building for ule
or rent on Main St, New

Hoven, W.Vo. Coll304-882·
2061 .

36 Lota 8o Acreage

Tralter tor rent, 2 bdr. Call

114-448·4480.
2 bdr 1170 mo.. or 1331
mo . oU utilit... paid. Roc·
coon Rd. CoH 61 4·441·
9348.
14x.70 2 bdr. ILipM' nice
edulta only, no !Mtl. neer
Holror hoopltol, p-t• lot,
12110 mo. Coli 114·441·
2300.
2 bdr. mobile home far rent

In Euroko. Coil 1114·251·
1140.
2 bedroom furnished mobile

homo, 175 dopooit Nqulrod.
Utilltlu, portlolly paid .
Phone 304·875·81 1 2 oftor
Lot on Btlr Aun Rd . Rae- 1 ;_:&amp;p_
.m_._ _ _ _ _ __
coon Crook, 13,100. Coll1 ·
304·622-2078.
44
Apartment
Loti for ule on lend contrllct
for Rent
with amelf down p8yment.
Coll81 4· 388-871 1 ofter I .
Burial Lots, Concord Cern.·

tary . Phone 304· 175· 1 121. JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equol
14 ICfll 1nd 1"12 ICfll Oft Houolng Opportunltyl
Kanewha River. 30-t-675- monthly rent mrtalt •119
lor 1 bedroom ond l2041or
3202.
2 IMdroom, ,dopoolt 1200,
locatad ' M•r Sprtng Valley
Plora and F~nd , pool
Rl!nlals
and Coble TV ovollablo,
office houra •• poulble 10
omto4pmond7pmto8pm
Monclov·Frldoy. Coli 11 4·
41 H ouaea for Rent
441 · 2741 or lono
3 bdr. rench, located on At.
180, _ , NGHS. t300 mo ..
11110 dop .. no polo. Coil
814· 3BB·I711 ofter &amp;PM.
3 bdr. air cond., within city

limito. Coll814· 441·4110 .
3 bdr ., double garage,
brNzeway. College Rd ..

Syrocuoo. 1300 pluo dop·
Mit. Colll14·441· 1478.
HouM 4 room• a Nth,
tumloilod. 735 Roor 3rd.
Avo. Coli 814-4411 -3170 or
114-441-1340.
Eureb. nice one atory 2 bdr,
will rent, leaM or lend

contrO&lt;lt . Oopooit • - • •·

cea required. Blackburn

Rootty, 814·441· 0001 .
3 bdr. ranch on Jay Or ••
kitchen. Uvlngroom. fllmHy·

room with flroploco, utility
room, 2 car g1rage, •44 . U71 mo. pluo dop.

-got.

Col 114·441·4921.
2 bclr. Ptantr Subcllvlolon •
now 3 bdr. 2 both hou• In
Pom.,.oy. Coli 114· 441·
1 ISU lift• I .

m••-·
Nicety furnlahed mobile
home, eH. apt., aentrel air

ond hoot In chy, ... uho only.
114·441·0338.
Fumiohod efllcioncy 1180,
utltloo pold, ohoro bath,107
2nd. Avo. Golllpolio, odulto.
Coli 448-4418· alter IPM.
2 bdr. opt .. good loootion.
·CoM
-·
utillt ... portly
304-171·8104
or
pold.

homet. hOUHI. Pt. Ple111nt

ond Golllpollo. 814.· 448·
8221 .
'
Lourolond Aportmonto, Now
HoVM. Equol Houolng Op·
portunity. H11 vacancy. For
more Information cell 304·
812·3711.
2 br lpilrtmenta In Hender·

oon. 304-875·1972.
One bedroom epertment,

convenient location, coil
304-876-2441 .

Boby otroller, good cond.
Colll14-448-0429.
Kindlewood burning atuve
1510; Coli 614-448·81181 .
Shroddod borll UO pickup
load . Yew a t1 0 each,
Scotch Piiie t24 uch, 2
mYoo North of Slvor Bridge
on Upper Rt. 7. Coli 814·
446·4630.
Moving Sale, Spinet Pleno,
living room ault, beda . Cell

114· 387· 7248.
jenny Lynn boby IMd with
mott,.oo. good cond. t70.
Coli 814-446·3492.

46 Furniahed Rooms Lorge bumper pool toblo.
Slotobottom. Col814·448·
For ,.,t Slooplng Roomo 9850.
ond light . houoo kuping - - - - - - - - roomo. Porll Control Hotol. Bunk bodo • dooU 171 . Coli
Coli 114·441·0781.
814·446·9663.
45 Space for Rent

I ft. Zenith coneole atereo

171. Coii814-317·7B81 .
1984 VHS·VCR Ilk• now,

Mabile home lot, 12'di0' or

omollor, e75-tor pold, 4th
• Noll, Galllpollo. Coil 448·
4418 oftor 8PM.

top loed, 10 day- 1 progrem

timor, 1325. Call 614·448·
7375 .
40 ft . Fruohoul flotbod

Troller opoco lor Nnt US tllmden treiler. good cond.
mo. iftdudlo wot• 6 gor· Colll14·379· 2881.
boge. Col1114-2117-7287. 1 - - - - - - -' -- Six Hot wM:Ir r1dletora.
3 officoo !Mih omoll kitchen. Phone 814-912-7813 or
1218EootomAvoUOOmo. 1 _1_14_·_9_92_·_11_3_1_4_.- - - IS room unturniahed 1·
opt .. l200 mo. Coli 114- Slight point domogo. Flooh·
448-7872 or 114-441· lng orrow oign. 1219. Sovo
1980.
t2541 Ughted non-arrow,
1247. Unll&amp;ht... 1199. Un·
COUNTRY MOBILE Homo bollovoblo quoNtyl L-1.
Porll, Route 33, North of Foctory ;1(8001423·0183,
Pomoroy. Loreo loto. Coli 1 _a •_Y; 1_i_m_•_
·-----114· 992-7479.
,.
10 inch Cr.ttman radielarm
Trlliler 1p11cn, ~m~~ll child· uw. Oood conditon. t2&amp;0
ren occopt.... out Loculi or boot offer. Older Mon~·
Rood. Rt. 1. bock ot K•K. mwr_ w·~ 1 ot ho
1 14 192 771 8 . . 178. oll
304·111·10711.
1 - - - - - - - - - 1·- - - - - - - For ulo;FI,.-. Cut your
own. •111. 1 lood. AH hord
wood. 114· 742· 2473.
61 Houaehold Goode

3 hondmodod ldqullto:.Rqucl•..
r.
quoon
on
1111
•••·
814· 982· 7118 or814·112·

._2::3_,,_._ · -=--=-~~-' ~TO
G
R"PA
NY'S
UN
~ IRS,
hot dip robiiHIIng, aM tyPoo of
gunomlth
owvlco,
17
•3_04
_·_
_1_·_4_8 _3 _1 ·_ _ __
1Air light wood end cool

304-878-5381.

Uood R.trigorotor, rollowov
IMd. goo range and d l oot !Mih oia cholro. Carbin
Snyder Furniture, 111
locond Avo.. Oolllpollo.
114-441-1171 .
7401'&gt; 2od. AYII., 3, bdr., 1 - -- - -- - 1190 mo .. 1 bclr .• e1:11. E - clothoo dryer. IIODd ~.7"'2"'"· good oond.
0opoo11 Nquhd. c.e 114· oond.
Coli 114-251· _ _
. _ 1_ ·_1_0_1_· _ __
1
441· 4222 bllt"oo" I • .11. lc8;;2;1;;;1;olt;-;,•;;lj"P;M;;.;;t.;-;;; BLIGHT PAINT DA~AGE.
- . , . rodooaroiH 2 bclr I'
and dT,l for uio Flllllling arrow olgn t211.
~·..,. 121141 u 1 htod non·
304• 7 1 · 2171.
·~··
"
•
•PICroomo. im
oto oocu·
orrow. '247. Un Iightod
e210 mo ~-n 114
~
1119. un-.blo quoltyl
poncy,
· ""
'
•~or
TV. Loool Foctory: 1 liOOI 423·
441·
7021.
0113, onytlmo.
Fumlohod officlonoy 1110
mo. utlltloo pol d. 7 Noll
Avo.. Qolllpolio. Coli 441·
4411- 8pm.

-'*·loot

••o.

.... - •c;;,:

Large 2 horaetrait.r reedy to
uoo. Coli 114-281-8522.

Ho,.. very ge~tle, bay color.

4-H copoblo. Coli 814-241·
1038.

2 llocll AllfiUO buRolor Ulo.
Coli 114·742·2810. '

1987 Mercury Vlllogor ole·
tion w-eon. runs but hledl
to bo rootorod. 289 -ino.
euto tr~~na . PS &amp; a. asking
1195.00. Coli 304 -882·
2894 bot-n 4·1 PM, Man
through s.t.

'

'

·~. '

• '

.... .

••

'

· 81 Dido Cutlooo Supremo.
d·6 engine, cruiH conlrol,
I •C. 304•871•7476.
1978 Robbit,lood running
cond, 304-17 ·4311.
1174 DodGe Oort. good
condition, 1300. 304-175·
1995.

ALLEYOOP

··

(JJ Sosen'o Soh Water

Joumol
The
that

events

and

shaped the wortd from
1945 to 1986 are exam·
ined. (3 hrs. l
181 STIR CRAZY · More
Fun ThM The Movlel
Seriee Pre,.,ierel

CBS A.dv

der. break out in search of

-li·

col fromlng.
dry·
wol. bothr-. kitchono.
dooro • window lnotollo·
lion. 304-175·2440.

the real killer. (60 min .I
(I) .
Moc:NIIii/IAhrer
Newshour
liD The Abortion 8onle

Ia swear one of
those doqs barked
English!

.

-

James Jacoby

·~·

,.

"

~.

''

..

,....---------, --.. .·
NORTH

... ,..

.KQH 2

•Au

.,,.

.. . ..

.542

0.

••

•s

.

ersy . l3 hrs .l
• MOVIE: 'Uttlo Coooar'
IHIOI
MOVIE ;
'The
Terminator' (CCI
(MAXI MOVIE: 'The. Blues

0 0

-

'-------------..J

_,now

-....,

•,

..

, ' ..

D

Mog.
(I) CD Hell T-n St .

lty THOMAS JOSEPH

mascot

goat

t60 min .l
Cll700 Club

, ~u.!,':, ~~ Baaing from
181 CHARLIE • COMPANY
lt' o p.,...,. va Kldo/
Everyone Winol Nowl

CBS Adw .

Iii (J) ® Charlie •

-~

Company (PREMIERE) Char·

lie Robinson suffers from
stage fright when he must
address his son' s high
school class to talk about

·.

his job.

Cll The Abortion Bottle
lCCI Films reflocting both

WONDER ·· ·I
JUST ET SUPPER
OVER AT

ELVINEV"S

pro and anti-abortion views
are featured in thiS examina·
tion of the abortion controversy . (3 hrs.)

1 GAVE
TH' VITTLES MV

!1;30

NUMBeR ONE
BLESSIN'- -

181 He Hoeto N- ComHy
EveryW-IGBumo' ComHy Wukl

CBS

D

Adv

(I) (}II G - Bumo

Comedy Weolt iPREMIEREI
A gi~ with a highly devel·
oped sense of autosuggea·
tion falls in love •nd
complications ensue .

•

MOVIE; ' Nightltllnl'
10;00 D ill CD St. Eloewhoro
jSEASON PREMIERE) An
mental patient with amnesia
is mistaken for ·a Review
Board ollic:iol , a new gyne·
cologist counsels a childless

SNAKE!!
H!;:'L.L.

ee aACK 600N. HE'S .JUS'f

GONE 1'0 G!:'f" SOME'THING FROM THE
~EAL.L.Y
N~S'f"Y HEADACHEi!

FL.Y'IN' DOC FORA

couple and Chandler and
Morrison clash over Viet-

•-

nam memories. j60 min.)

.•

\

.f2 Come
I Fellow
on stage
5 French
.f3 See 7 IJown
seaport
DOWN
I 0 Enthuse
I Fisher·
II Martin,man's box
Klo\g, Jr.
2 German
13 Director
city
Kazan
3 Spanish
province
14 Off the
skiff
4 Shade
· 15 Building
of green
19 Australian 31 Carried
win••
5 Vo'V1811
" ..,'ld d og
32 Confed·
16 ':flke ha.•tR 6 Strata,~~em 20 Watered
erote
17 Skin
7 Numerical
fabric
33 Attack
problem
suffix
23 Stone
35 Cer·
18 ~eavy
8 Artist's
markers
amie
20 Gentle •
display
24 Allegory
slab
o n My 9 Roman
2li Eolabllsh 38 Asian
21 ~nger
playwright 21 Raked ite m
holiday
22 - tn
12 Provide
28 Recruit's
39 Awhile"
18 Present
reply
reactio n
23 flackbone
28 Popular
comic
strip
27 Zesl
28Growl
29There·
fore

(Lat.)

30 Anlarctic

PEANUTS
nlEI' SA'! A LOON
l-IAS A CALL 'fi.IAT 15
VA6UELV FOREBODING•••

M!\·00·00·00..•

TOO FOREBODIN6!

[jll Equolfz.,.
(PREMIERE! A one-men ·
security compony deola with
a computer techniciln
mixed· up in a government
blockmail achomo end o ain·
gle mother tormented by a
sychopath_ (60 min.)
HIOI MOVIE: ., . , . _,
Tho Dulin• ont1 Fll of II
(I)

3t "True -·
(1969 ftlm)
40Jewish
song
41 Toward

Cil (I) (!) •

(}I,.._

(I) 1)1 •

"' .:

'

....

)

••

.,

......

.....

6-+-+-+-+-+--

.•

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOI'ES -Here's bow to work II:

8-18

VYXQ

PQJRilT

OYEEROT

AJE

I X, S C J 0 C V . C J U V
. Ye.&amp;eru,•o
FACTS TifAT ARE NOT
· FRANKLY FACED HAVE A HABrr OF STABBING US IN

c.,._._,

'mE BACK. - SIR HAROLD BOWDEN

··· _,
~

...
0.
• i5

One letter stands for another. In Ibis sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length 1nd formation~ the words are all
hints. Elich day the code letters are different.
CltYPTOQuOTE

IQJUWHR C V ;

rn Tm•••··· World

• ·~· • I

"

Ouce' ICCI

·1 0:30
, 1 :00 •

'

•

QRIQYUR

....... S1vlo

0

2 ..

r.

·10:15 (I) MOVIE: 'QI VII' Port 2
!MAXI en.o lnlllioiMkwlll

'

••• t

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
CIS Adv.

0

volcano
UMalay
gibbon
35 Qulet 1
36-ho!!IO
town
37 Obstacle
of trees

181 THE EQUALIZER
Finally ~·o On

D

HAVE 'IOU EVER
THOU6HT THAT MAYSE
YOU'RE A LOON ?

ACROSS

Our !lido. Prerniorol

•"

-,.

-

.... .,. .f

9:00

come out of his catatonia .

IT AIN'T NO

.'

t~~

WINNIE

.. .

·· ~

8;30

helps an abandoned boy

'

.~.

s•

Brothero'
(JJ Outdoors TV Fishing

Dominic's

~-

...
...
.
.

pro and anti-abortion views

.. ..
.

..

...

are featured in this examination of the abortion controv-

0

.

.. ,

(CCJ Films reflecting both

-1.

l'. ' •

GJ 45/86 lCCI

(I) •

BuHdlng end .; remadallng,
rooting, maiiOnMy. llectri·

-··on

Buolnno

a
()) ® Stir Cruy
lPREMIEREI Two buddies,
Ioisei~ imprtlonod lor mur·

•eoo

~ .

WEST
EABI'
South's luck Memecl to have run out. • J 1o
He woo lbe openlna lead In dummy • J 7 ·u
.KQ 10 IS
.
and played a club to bla jack, but It loot • K 10 7
•Jiu
to Weal's queeo. He later played a club . • A Q v 7
.1014
to hla klnl. wblch loot to West'a ace. .
SOUTH
Thall he attacked the diamond salt. A .
• A 17
53
diamond to the nlDe loet to lbe 10, and
wben be next played a diamond to lbe
• AQ1
queen - I'm ......, you've got It figured
• KJ 5 z
.
out by now - that card loot to the
Vulnerable: North-South
lo.laa. Every card wu wrona and de- ·
clarer 1011 four lrlckl to 10 set In what
· Dealer; South
wu, In fact, a contract that could be w..t
NOO'III l!!ut
made with ablolute certainty.
' ,
It's fine to Lake fl.....,.. when
Paa
P111
there's nolhln1 better to do, but • sU· · p . .
Pau
PUI
perlor approach is to force the opponenll to lead your ltllta for you. DeOpening lead: • J
:&gt;o1 I
clarer lbould win the opening lead
with lbe ace of 1p1oles, play a heart to
~......
,1 '
the ace aad trump a heart. A spade is
now led to lbe kina and another heart
-~· '
trumped. Both lbe dummy and tleclar·
er'a band are now elbausted of hearts.
· ~·
The defeaolers have no more trumpo ptlll In the nine. .That wUI play ·•
left; and It Ia
for South to j111t Welt. If Eaot -ODd plays anolller ....
play 1 low club froin bla haad. If East club, South plays the jack and Weot is •c··
wins aad plays a diamond, declarer end played once again.
,, ,

people

. \

·--

(I)
Nightly
Report

tims. (60 min.)

S]'llY llEHit.JD ME , IlOYSi WE'RE
GONNil HAFTII. FIGHT O UR WAY
10 11-1' COURTY.A.RD!

~

Knee-jerk
finesses

Cil Flipper

r

---------·'·I

Yeotonloy'•l Jumllloo: LANKY AWASH HUNGRY DETACH
An1vt11er: What 1011 of exlatwnce did that craplhOOter
lilod? - A "SHAKY" ONE

..

Eot
Dolor..
(JJ Fiohln' Hole
(I) Major Loog... Bneboll;
Cincinnati II Atlonto .
(I) • (I) Family Feud

involved with the lives of
three boys whila working at
a camp for young cancer vic-

oppllcotlonl 30 ·875-2011 • • . _ ·
or 871·7311.

/

CAniNWI tomorrow)

• •'7'

.·' ...." .

rn

RINGLES 'S SERVICE, ox·

1871 4 dr. lmpolo, po, pb,
auto. trana.• ec. good concli·
Timothy hoy mixed oquoro I _li_
·on_._30_4_·_1_7_1_·3_1_6_4_.- '
boloo •1.21 bole. Colll14· '13 Comoro Z21. allx-tns,
Plumbing
'• •
38B·B720.
27,000 mlloo. mun ooll . 82
• He•tlng
Price nogotilblo. 304-171·
Building meterial, concrete
2719 boloro 3 p.m. or otter
blocks all lizea, lentila, flu
Tr .111 spnr 1.1111111
I p.m .
blockl, cloy tllo . Dollvory.
CARTER'S PLUMBING
Golllpollo Blocll Co.: Pine
AND HEATING
1976 Coprlco Cloulc. pb,
St., Qollipollo, Ohio Coil
Cor. Fourth •d Ptno
po, pw, tilt ·-lng
814·441· 2713.
71
Autoa for Sale
GoHipollo, Ohio
oc, runo good. 304-171·
Phone 814-441·3888 or
3124 oftor 5 p.m.
Block, brick , morter and
614· 441·4477
m..onry ~pplln. Mountain TOP CASH paid lor 'BO
·•
Stoto Block, Rt. 33. Now model and newer usad cera.
JIM'S PLUMBING 6 HEAl'·
72 Trucks for Sale
Hoven. w. Vo . 304·882· Smith Buici&lt;·Pontioc. 191 1
lNG . Rt. 1. Box 311, Galli·
2222.
Eeatern Ave .• GaiUpolia. Cilll 19B2 Toyota 4a4, I opd., polio. Colll14·317-0178.
61 4 · 448 ·2282..
longiMd, 40.000, AM· FM
atereo. ~cket Mltl. cuatom
66
Pete for Sale
19B1 red T-blrd Town Lon· compw top. Aoklng ,5,900. 83
Excevatlng
d.u exCellent condition, ntw C.ll814·251·8387.
liroo. Coli otter 5 ;30 81 4·
HILLCREST KENNELS 2411-9480.
1975 1 ton GMC plci&lt;up 4 Good· 1 Elcav•tlng, biN·
8oordlng ell breodo. Hoot...
·"
dr., compw -lol, dual menta. footer~, drlveweys,
indoor-outdoor fectlltlea. 74 Monte C.rlo deapenda·
whettfa, auto, alan Inside &amp; -tic tonko, londocoping. · , : .
AKC Dobormon pupploo; blo. t25il. Coli 114-440· out. n. 200. Coli 814·441· Coli onytime 114· 441 · • . ·:
·S tud lktrvlce. Coli&amp; 1 4· 441· 4972 or 814-446-4117.
4219.
4537, Jomoo L. Dovioon, Jr: • · .
7791.
owner.
1910 Flan. eir cond., over
1982 GMC von 'Londo De·
Brlerpatch Kennell All · 40 MPQ, 11,000' ftrm . Coli oign' copUIIn cholro, duol Oo- Worll lond - g.
breed grooming. Indoor· 614 ·441·9613.
- t • oir conditioning. land101ping, •tc. Free eatl·
outdoor boarding ftcilltiet.
power windowa &amp; locka, tilt, motoo. Coil 114·448-8038
Englith Cocker Spaniel. 1978 Cordoba very good cruin. AM ·FM ceuette. or 114·192·7111 onytlmo.
311· 9710 ..
wort&lt; cor, 1100. Coli 614· 305 cu. in . direct driver
251-9387.
tranemialion 44,1500 milea. J .A.R. Conotructlon Co.,
Oregonwynd Cottory Ken·
new tires. Can bll IMn •t Rutland , Oh. 11 4· 742 ·
nol. CFA Hlmoloyon, Pwoiln 197B Oldo Flronzo. •••· Plc
- Pac Supermark~U . 2903. looomonto, Footoro,
end S.. me .. kittent. AKC aond., low miluge. PS , Pl.
.,0,300, Coil 114· 448· Concrete work, Beckhoe'a. •
Chow pupploo. Coli 446· 1ir, AM·FM CISHtte. Call IOII ...vem uage.
Dozer a Dhcher, Dump
3B44 oftor 7PM .
014·441·8124.
truckl. • w•~«·v••· sewerft . Chevrolet truck bod lor oloctricol llnoo.
Molo -lck. 1 yoor old. 77 Muatlng new pens. new 8oolo.
Coli 114·448·8521.
Not rogiot-. 135. Coli lirH, new p•int, axcellent
614·8111·3540.
ohopo, 12.000. Coli 614· f . 750 Ford uood cond ., 900 86
General Hauling
261·1417.
droo. 381 onglno. Ctll 114·
Floh To'* ond Pot Shop,
3BI·9833 . .
241 :r J•ckaan Avenue. 1979 Rabbit. 1976 Ford
Boys Water Service. "
Point Ploooont, 304·111· LTD . Coli after 6PM, 814· 1181 Chevy plck·up truck. Jtmea
Aloo poolo fillod . Coli 114·
2013. Fioh, blrd1 end mclre. 388· BB23.
PS. PP, V8, outomotic . 900 211·1 141 or 614-448·
mileo. e8,900. 814-949· 1175 or 114·448·791 1.
0-mon. Coli 304·675· 1980 Toyotl Coroll1 meny 2810.
16B2.
eKtree eK. cond. Mu1t Nil
Kan's Water Service. Welt,,
12,800 or ben olfor. Call 1978 Chevy 'IJ ton. btu ciotorno,
poolo fillod . Phone
814 -441·7414.
nlco. 11700. Coll814·9:'9· 81 4-367·0123 or 814-317·
67
Muaical
2801 . No Sunday cello, 7741 nlgM or doy.
lnnruments
1177 Chov. Monto Carlo,
ploooo.
..
raHey wheela, air, cruiN,
Waugh'•
Wtter
Service
:
··~:·1·
ttereo, no rust. nice Clr. Call
1911 Chouy pickup, olr Wollo, ciotomo, poole. Fool: · • .;
Bundy trumpet, mnd • _e_1_4_
· 44_0_·04_9:_B_._ __ _
condition. AM -FM ltMIIO, Nliable llfVice, CtH 814:
'
boollo. Collll14· 441·0385. 197 7 Monte Corio, uood outomotic, 304·171·1431 . 218·1240 or 814 -2&amp;1 , '·: •
1 130. !loo-ble roteo.
•·
Band lnll:nunenta. Frenlri'a work car. C•ll 114-371· Ford 302. good condition. 1 -:-:--:--- - - - -- - ' ,
P-n Shop, 430 Second 2348 ·
304·171· 2080.
·
Haul llmootono, oond gra :
uol,dirt, bulk or bog tortHI1er •
Avo., Coil 814·441· 0840. 1910 Chryolor lth Avonuo,
Dodge 4x4 1973 ,_.,. ond limo. Exooloior Solt
good condition. one owner,
Incl.,
n - tlroo "10.00. Worko Inc. 131 E. Moin St.,
Blockburn Roolty. 114-441·
68
Fruit
304·175-4218.
Po....,.oy. 814-892·3891 .
0008.
8o Veget•blea
Will do wotor houllng, · fill
1119 Plymouth Sotolllto, 73
Ven1 8o 4W.D .
alatern lnd fill awhnll'\ing
low mUNge. newcarb., new
poolo. Co11114·912·1818,
Konnlboc polatOH '1 0 : 100 dre1. good running cond ..
lb. wUI doli- It not too lor.
or boot ollor. Coil
•
1910 von ~ ton. Good. Pull
Colll14·317·7230.
814· 381·9043 oft.,. lpm.
......
Upholstery
boot or tMHor. ••200.00. 87
C.III14·MI·2121.
Wlnt• pototooo: Wo h""o o 79 Cutluo Supremo AC,
,,
IIODd oulltiiY of good ICon· AT, PB, PI, Y· l , now tlru,
TRISTATE
hond. 11.00 pw now .. houot, AM -FM
74 Motorcycle•
h-.... Your contoinoro. . . , 12,191. Colll14·
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
Hulftph,.y flrmo. c R-•· 441· 7123 oft.. I .
1 183 Boo. Avo., Qolllpollo.
- •• Ohio. 114·378·1215.1-------- 114·441·7133 orl14·441 ·
Cioood lluncloya.
11170 Novo UOO. 1971
C-·DUI A9 uood Hondo'o 1833.
Dullor 1300. Coll814· 441·
at r~du•d ottw. Cen be 1-:~-:-:-::------­
Conning - • " " now 0¥111· 9813.
- n et H - lhop.
R • M Fqmlturo Monufoc·
turing, St. · Rt. 7, Crown ' '
apon
7
cloyo
·
oolil1inii'R;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;:
oblo.
lor fl'laoo oo OUIIIIIY lol 1172 Ranchero good ohopo,
1871 Trillll!llh 7110CC Bon· City, Oh. Coli 814-218·
umu .... I04·771: .-t21 . 1100. 1171 N"""' ovf., 3
-"'o 11 ,000 ...... IIODd 14'1'0. ooll Evo. 114·441·
- · · Marllet, M-. W. opol., e100. Col 114·441- oond, U ,IOO. Col 114· 3431 . Old • now
Vo.
2000 or 114·441·4114.
448-7117 ..... IPM.

I I I I I I J

• (I) Whool of Fortune
(I) s-od City TV

Tonight
• WKRP In Clnclnnou
8;00 •
ill
Highwoy to
H - CCCI (SEASON
PREMIEREI Pan 1 of 2.
Jonathan and Mark become

• •
·.
' '·

Rotary or coblo tool drlllng.
Moot wollo oomplot... oomo
doy. P u n o p - - -·
304-815·21102.

)FOR(

•

· ~·. · ·

"""""'
•(jJ Wheel
GJ ofEntoruinmont

........

M

(JJ llportocontor
(I) Mary Tyler Moore
(I) Entertainment Tonight

rn.._..,

Stort&lt;o T,.. ond Low~ s....
vice, otump ,.movol, ~678·2010.

I I I

gootod by

.

. m ,.._ aon·•

ANNIE

periencld cerpenter, et«tri· '1 ~ ••
citn, m111on, pelftter. roof·
lng (lncludlnl hot ter • : ,

Upho-.

.

...

r: ·

2 yoor old horned Horolord
bull. Coli 304·481· 1987.

2 bdr.,' w.,hor • dryer,
fonc..t yard. behind Zinno
landing t111 MO. plut
depoMt, Ooxol gas. CeU
614.441·7044 9-1, or 114441-8010 I -tO.

'' . ''

• •

Apartment for ront 1221 Coll814. 441· 3119.
mu. AH utlltioo pold. Colli-::;:========
111 4·441·8111 bo!oro e.
I
63
Antiques
Rivwlidl Apto. Middleport.
Spoclal roteo for Senior
Cltlrono. 8130. Equo!Hou•· 1 oak tlibla,l mahogany drop
lng Opponunltl•• · 114- leo! toblo with 5 cholro. Both
912·7721.
t310. OBO. Coli 814-949·
2101.

~(

MocNoii/IAhrer
Newellour
• IJJ New N111t10 Thlt
Tune
• Jefleroono
7;30 •
ill New Newlywed
O.mo

ALLI HAD
TO ffiAR W/&gt;6
R:AA IT-:aF.

. .&lt;·.

Fetty T,.. Trimming, otump
removal. Coil 304· 871·
1331 .
'

tho--·

.••.

~

'

Now onongo lho clrciodloti. . IO
fomt tile ...,... - · .. aug.

®

RON'S Tolovlolon ~orv...e.O: · ;-:
Houoo collo on RCA. Quuor: • •
GE. Spoclollng In Zonltft0: • !·:
Coil 304-178·2381 or 814· • •,•.
448-2454.
, :. •:r •

buying coal &amp; wood atoves.

1971 Fleetwood mobile
homo . 1 2•05 with Iorge
room on front. 2 4x 2 • ger·
•••· Two loti on Main St.,
Tuppon Plllno, Ohio. Phone
814·1117-3789.

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

t......

....

A

P'A~KINe

SP'OT'THAT'S iHIS.

®Nowe

30s ,~

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILUNG
Pump ulol. oorvlco. Rogl•
in Ohio. AM guoront..... Coli 304·273•
2811. Rovonowood. W. Yo . •

before dlaconnected .

2 bdr. AC, fully furnlohod,
utYitioo paid. Colll14·448·
4110.

Kirttwood, 12x61 mobilel
home. Good condition.

)

rn ~ of Fortune

J.ond L. lnotollotlon. Roof·
lng, vlnylllidlng, norm doore
and wlndowl. frH ntl· . .
motoo. Colll14·182·2772.

Automotlc Movttt -ohor
• dryer. Both .,. old but In
wortdng ordw. Thoy oro otMI
in uoo ond moy bo tooted

Firewood-cutup alaba, t
truc11 lood 1100, 2·11BO.
Pickup lood, you houl '111.
HEAP occeptod. CaM 114·
241-58(14.

.

•

D.ond M. Cont...,.,.. Vinyl
aiding, repiK~m•nt ~ln ­
dowo. lnoulltlng, roofing,
n.w and nmodelllng. con·
croto. CoH 304-773·1131 .

Valley Furniture. new •
uood. Lorge ooction of qUiol·
tty furniture. 1211 Eon.,.n
Avo., Golllpollo.

1 IMdr_, opt. lor ront.
Nk*y lcc·tN. ContM:I VII·
lege Menor in Middleport.
114 - 992 -7717. Equal
Houolng Opportunity.

1911 Holly Porll mobllo
home. 14"70. mult Mil,
304·576-2947.

..

BASEMENT
WATERPI!OOFING
Uncondltionoll"-ttmo guo·
rlntM. Local NfM'enCW
lurnlohH. F,.. ootimotoo.
Coli colloct 1·814·237·
0498, day or night. R-•
Booomont Wot-oollng.

FumlohH, I 171 mo. poy
own utllltloo. Call I 14-448·
9244.

private, Point Plelunt ......

1972 Flamingo 3 bdr .. 1'h
both. totol oloctric. CA.
refrigerator, oomolurnitu,., 42 Mobile Home1
Bx10 dock, 11 ,400, toko
for Rent
• - poymonto. Coli 114· ~------'---245-9847.

Fot!Htr

Cloon. no poto, odulto. ref.
roqulrod. li;oll 114·448·
11119.

90'-·

12110. pw ' month. D-olt
and r•ferencea requlr•d.
304·111·3008.

aToxl
IMAXl
MOVIE:
'Tho
Privltl Eyeo'
7:00 • ill PM Moguino
(I)
Courtohlp/Ecklio' o

Upatairs 3 raom1 &amp; bllth.

For renl. option to buy. 3
IMdroom, 2 both, largo living
room ond khchen . 0 -· FurniohH opt., 1 bdr .. U21
~onv..,ientty located on US
loOko . - . e1100. dopooit, mo .• 920 4th AVII .. Qolllpo·
23.
.. 310. pw month. FDf op· Me. Udlit ... pold. Coli 441·
1 974 Colobrity, 1 2•10, oac. pointmont. coli 114·982· 4418 oft.,. 8pm.
1- - - - _ : __ _ _..;,
con d. Coll61 4·2411· 9 148 or 3841 .
814·448-3441.
3 bdr. duplo•. now carpet,
3 br houoo,
4 mi. now both. now oppllonooo.
.1979 Liberty 1 4x51 2 IMd· obovo N4lw Haven, no child, 1441-nd Avo .. 1271 mo.
room, furnished mobile no lnoldo polo. Rol. Roq. Col 814· 441·0190.
home, excellent condition. 304-111· 2793.
111 furnance. Mull Nil,
2 bdr. opt., Crown City,
U , IOO. Coil 814-441• 3 br porlioHy furnlohH, e111 mo. Col 114-211·
oxcollont woll, wood hoot. 1411 ovonlngo.
38B1.
1986 Now Moon 10xl5,
good con d.. t2, 600. Coli
814-379-2830.

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duC8d to t23,9911. Modi·

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11

.Jackson deputies face layoffs

$374,200 grant
thrills mayorBy Judy Morgan
OVP Stafl Wrller
Mason Mayor Agnes Roush read
In the newspaper that her town was
one of the 78 communities selected
by Gov. Arch MOOre .to receive a
share ol $73.1 million In state and
federal grant money . But it took a
tener from the governor himself to
make the idea sink ln.
"I'm so excited about it," Roush
says of the $374,200 award which wlH
be enable the town to build a senior
citizens multipurpose center.
And she has good reason to be.
It's not often Mason, with a
population of 1,430, receives such
funding. Recorder Lots Test, who
has worked at town hall for the past
10 years, remembers it happening
only once before; in 1980 as
emergency grant from the Department of Housing and Urban
Development provided for the
construction of a new water storage
tank.
The grant for the senior citizens
center also came as a surprise to
Roush beCause a similar application
In 1984 had been turned down.
Following the denial of. that
application. Roush and town offi ·
cials secured the adv ieeofJim Stone
of the Region II Planning and
Development Council In Huntington. Stone reviewed the first
application. made recommendations and assls'ted In the preparation
of the new application. Officials
from Region II and the Governor's
Office of Economic and Commu nlty
Development also visited the proposed site of the multi-purpose
center, the B.F. Board property at
Second and Horton streets adjacent
to the Mason Youth Center. Preliminary plans submitted with the grant
application call for the construction
of a 75-foot by &amp;Hoot building facing
Second Street (Route 33). Roush
says the center wut feature a dining
area and kitchen, a recreation area,
a craft room and restroom facilities.

Th&lt;' building will he used primarily by senior citizens for programs
such as the Southwestern Community Action Group's nutrition program anbd craft and recr!'atlonal
PUil'Oses.
The nutrition program. which
serves about 45 seoiors dally. and a
s.enior citizens workshop have been
operating from tw-o trailers l)l'ar
Mason Town Hall. Roush said the
new building will bemoreaccesslbl&lt;'
to senior citizens and will allow for
expanded programs In more pleasant surroundings.
The mayor adds, oowever. that
while priority will be given to
s!'niors, the building wUI available
for rent to olf&lt;'r civic organizations
and Mason area residents.
"We want to make peopl&lt;' in the
community a part of (the center),"
Roush says. She forsees use of the
building being go)lerned by a board
of directors to include town officials
and senior citizens.
Town council will be responsi ble
for maintenance and upkeep .
Gov. Moore, in his lett!'r to the
mayor. said, "Yourproject to create
a multipurpose senior citizens
center fo·r the town of Mason will
significantly contribute to the developm!'nt of your community. I am
pleased to support your efforts."
Roush Is not su rewhen ground wut
be broken for construction. She
anticipates traveling to Charleston
In the near future for Instructions
from the governor's office on what
steps the town should take next
regarding advertising for bids for
architectural and contractural

seJVices.
Roush says the town will probably
be submitting more grant applications for community projects in the
future. The governor's award, she
says, "certainly gives us the
initiative and the incenlive.
"We (town council) want people
to know that we live here and we
care enough about our community
to work for it, " Roush says.

Meigs County happenings...
Divorces sought

Court eases dismissed

JACKSON, Ohio ({}PI)- Eight of
the 16 employees In the Jackson
County Sheriff's Department will he
laid off this weekend due to the
county's financial crisis.
Sheriff Edgar Rayburn said
Tuesday the remaining eight
workers will be used to maintain
dispatching services. The department provides dispatching services
to all the rural volunteer fire
depaf11nents In the county.
"Maintaining dispatching is our
·main concern beCause of the
po(entlal liability if someone has a
fire. '· Haybum said.
Last we.&gt;k, Rayburn closed the
' cou~ty Jail and released the five
prtsoners whc were In the facility .
Common Pleas Judge Thomas
Mitchell had instructed thesheriffto
give top priority to dispatching
services ~th his reduced work

'.• '
~~

-

.... ...,..........
.
,.k

..

-•

- -·-·

Ioree. The judge also ordered the
release of the five prisoners.
Several other county oftlces
expect to make _fUrther layd!s·
beCause of the financial crllls.
Several court orders are pencllngto
Ioree rounty,corrunJssloners tofulld
those offices.

.

. \'.

Ohio lottery wmnen
'

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Tues·
day's winning Ohio Lott!'ry
numbers: Dally Nwnber
Tlck&lt;'t &amp;ales totaled $1,064,013.50,
.with a payoff dueof$425,353. PICK-4
()(!)7.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$155,81KJ.50, with a payoff due of
$70,186.
PICK-4$1 straight bet J?IIYS$9,564.
PICK-4$1 box bet pays$797.

''

-.

--

NEWBUILDINGPLANNED-Masonareasentorcltizenswhohave
been participating In provams operated out of two rnobfte homes, will
soon have a new building tD gather bt. Above, Mason Mayor AKOes
Roush, right, and reconler Lois Test, left, display preliminary plans for
the new senior citizens multipu'1JOS" bulldlng.which will be constructed
with funds from a $374,200 grant awarded recently by Gov. Arch A.
Moore, Jr.

Area death
Garnett E. Dan~t
Miss Garnett E. Darst, 76, 822
Sylvia St., Loulsvill&lt;', Ky., formerly
of Mlddlepon, died Tuesday at
Humana Andubon Hospital in
Lou isville.
She was born Jan. 6, 1909, a
daughter of th&lt;' late Joseph 'a nd
Il&lt;'ssie Rice Darst. She was a
veteran of World War II having
served as a sergeant In the U. S.
Army. Sh!'served In t~e army forlO
years. She was
member of the
Long StrPet ·Baptist Church In
Louisville. She· was employed as
office man'ager for the Robert
Struck Co.

a

Surviving area brot her, Clarence

E. Darst, Naples, Fla.; two sisters,
Mrs. Edna Davidson and Mrs.
Frances Davidson, both of Rutland;
an uncle, Cecil E. Rife, Reynoldsbull(, and several nieces and
nephews.
Preceding her in death besides
h!'r parents were a sister, Lera
Maxine Darst, an Infant brother.
and two other brothers, Dale Darst
and Robert Darst.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home with Rev.
Ea rl Eden officiating. Burial will be
In Miles Cemetery at Rutland.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on
Thursday.

•

809.

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. Starting $ePfRmher 3(), O!ntralTrustis
havingaS¢e on samethingyou really uwt. ·
Member f7JIC

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e
Vol.36, No.110
Copyrighted 1985

Meigs, one of .65
counties involved
with new child
abuse programs
Meigs is one of 65 counties in Ohio which will form
local Chlldr&lt;'n' s Trust Fund Boards to administer
state allocations for child abuse and child n&lt;'glect
prevention programs. .
The enactment of Substitute House Bill 319, which
beCame law on Dec. 26, 1984, wUI provide the funding
for child abuse and child neglect prevention
programs. The new law also allows for the
establishment of a county Child Abuse and Child
Neglect Advisory Board.
In late sprtog, Meigs County commissioners were
giv!'n options of forming a local advisory board or
joining with other counties to form a multi-county
board. They also had
option of forming a local
· trust fund board or alto ing the stat&lt;' to administer
Meigs Coonty's alloc~t .
The law specifies
t a county may receive a
minimum base of $1 ,&lt;XKI a year. It is expected to be
late J!Jgj before specific allocations are known.
At this tim&lt;' It Is believed that base allocations
could tncreaseln future years If some counties do oot
use their allocations.
.
It Is the understanding of commissioner Rich Jones
that each roun~Y' s money ailolment may be applied to

medical car&lt;', temporary housing, training, rehabilitation and other child abuse-n&lt;'glect related needs.
Commissioners plan to form the five to seven
member trust fund board next we.&gt;k. This Is the first
step In the state's funding cycle. The board Is to
consist of members representing both public and
privat!' child-serving agenci&lt;'s and persons with
knowledge in programs for children. The suggested
appointees Include county or local school personnel,
juvenile Justice representatlv&lt;'s, school nurses or
county health department personnel. parent organization members, communications sector persons and
service club members.
At Wednesday's Meigs commissioners' me.&gt;tlng,
the board refused a proposal from Romola N.
Hopkins, executive ' director of the GaUia·JacksonMeigs Mental Health Board, to participate In a
multi-county advls!lry board with Jackson and Gallla
Counties. Commisslon!'rs fe.&gt;l committed to their
ortginal decision of forming a local board.
State fUnds for the new program are coming from
the raising of fees for birth and death certificates by
$2, and raising tlie fees. for !Uing divprce and
dissolution decrees by $10.
'

Marriage licenses

Weathe'r forecast

•

2121. .....

A $38,000 interdepartm!'ntal
transfer approved last we.&gt;k for the
Car let on School will be used torover
salary increases. Meigs County
Commissioner Rich Jones ex·
plained at Wednesday's commissioners' meeting.
Jones reported to the board that
Lee Wedemeyer. Carl!'ton SchoolMeigs Industries superintendent,
met with Jones ear Uer this week and
explained the transfer In detail.
· Wedemeyer had requested an
appointment with Jones to assure
Jones of his !Wedemeyer's) Intent
to employ Meigs Countlans at the
Syracuse facility .
At the meeting, Jones questioned
Wedemeyer further about the
unusually large transfer.
At last week's commissioners'
meeting, · Wedemeyer mentioned
that new state mandates required
raises In the minimum salary paid

to teachers. However , he was
unclear as to administrators at the
facility also receiVIng raises.
Thlswe.&gt;k, Wedemeyer told Jones
that salary Increases have been
given topeoplein thetopadminlslrative positions. These raises and the
changes in the budget to allow for the
raises l)ave been approved by the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation.
Effective immediately, Wedemeyer's salary Is being raised to
$3l,rro- an lncreaseof$8XJJ. Keith
Black, assistant administrator, will
receive $26,(0) and David Milliken,
workshop director, $21,rm.
At last week's commissioners'
me.&gt;ling, the board indicated dlspl&lt;'asurethat positions at the facility
often seem to go to out of county
people. Wed&lt;'mey&lt;'r, who Is from
Gallia County, explained In his
conversation with Jones that he has

only hired one out of county person
slnee he beeamesuperintendenllast
year, and thatwas Black, also from
Gallia County. Wedemeyer told
Jones he hadoff!'red the position to a
MeigsCountian, but lh!'positlon was
refused.
Millik!'n was already on staff
when Wedemeyer was hired .
Wedemeyer assured Jones that In
the future, although It Is not
necessary. he will advise the
commtssion!'rs before job appointments are made. The M!'igs County
Board of Mental R!'tardatlon has
sole jurisdiction over operations at
the school and workshop, not th&lt;'
commissioners ..
Wedemeyer agri?ed that since
Meigs County tax dollars fund the
school and workshop, Meigs Counlians should be considered first .
1Continued on page 12)

RAWLINGS-COATS

BLOWER
FUNERAL HOME
SERVING THE FAMILY OF
(Name of D~eeased)
(Time of Calling Hours)
llime of Service)
(I' lace of Service)

2 MOTOR POWER
TEAM

The following are just two instances where we think this type of display would be helpful.

I) Many people in our community have trouble reading the smaller basic print found in the regular news·

paper obituary. This we know by the many calls wept daily askine about the time and day of services.
2) In Ieday's fast pace world many people do not read the newspapers faithfully. We hope this display
will &amp;ring attention to the death of friend if someone is just glancin' through the paper.
This display will only be published in the newspaper with the families authorization. The most im·
portant thing to us at the Rawlincs·Coats·Biower Funeral Home is the family we are servine. That 11
why we take the time to plan each and every detail the family has requested and then carry oul the best
possible service we know how. II you have any questions or comments please let us know.

JAMES N. llOWEI

"Service Plus .. .A ttenlion To Detail!"

llll llOWEI

Uae It like '" electric broom,
but with more conwmiencel

-"CORDLESS
;..vERSATILE
..-PORTABLE
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W RECHARGEABLE

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HI'MIIrOil

NOW ONLY

$16995

• A·c:omp ..te home--cleaning
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aulomatk:ally ldjultl to dHp ciB!In all

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FREE
PARKING

2 Sectioni, f6 Pages

26 Cen11

A Multimedia Inc. NewiPaper

'
- &lt;".~ ""~&lt;'"'
·~ .... ~ .:';

OPEN HOUSE SET - Developers and board
members for 1be Maples, Pomeroy's newest

apartment facility have fonnulated plans for an open
house. The event wDI be held from llo 4 p.m. Sunday,
Sept. 29.
'

Pomeroy's newest apartment·
facility holding .open house
The Mapl~. Pomeroy's newest
apartment facility for the elderly
and handicapped, wUI hold an open
house from 1 to4 p.m. Sunday, Sept.
29.
Opened in July, The Maples has
12 efficiency apartments and 33
one-bedroom units. Six apartments
are equipped to accommodate
handicapped resid!'nts. Tenants
must meet low-Income crtterta as
set by the federal government. and
rents are subsidized based on the
ability . of each tenant to pay. All
utilities ar&lt;' included In the monthly
rent.

The open house will feature tours
of the buildings and several apartments will be open for visitor
inspection. The Maples is owned by
the Meigs County Elderly Housing
Board, and members of that board
Will host the open house.
Representatives of the managem!'nt company, Silv&lt;'r Heels Devel·
opment Co., also will be on hand to
explain the application process, and
application forms will be available.
The Mi,iples is located at 100 E.
Memorial Dr., adjacent to · Veterans Memorial Hospital and the
Senior Citizens Center. Its construe-

tlon Included extensive renovation
of the former children's home as
well as the building of a new
addition. Resident manager is Mrs.

Evelyn Clark. The Maples was
constructed with federal funds
made available through the Depan ment of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) and provides
equal housing opportunity.
Board members " are Ric hard
Jones, president ; Manning W!'bs·
ter, Paul Barnett, Velma Rue,
Frank Cleland, William Young.
Eleanor Thomas a nd the late
Robert McGeE&gt;.

seek court order
for one percent sales tax increase

ffiLuMBUS iUPi l -Facing an
empty treasury Friday , five Jackson County elected officials have
asked the Ohio Supreme Court to
force the county commissioners to
impose an emerg!'ncy 1 percent
sales tax to ke.&gt;p the government
operating.
County Auditor Donald Clark.
who filed the request Wednesday in
behalf of other county officials, sa id
it is "the l&lt;'gal duty and responsibility" under the Ohio Const ilution for
the commissioners to provide
salaries and fringe benefits for
county officials.
Joining Clark in the suit were
Robert S. Hughes, clerk of courts;
Warren Gilliland, county recorder;
Sheriff Edgar Rayburn; and Lawrence Gill, chairman of the board of
elections. Hughes and Gilliland laid
off all their employees last we.&gt;k.

Some cl!'rical help was retained
through private donations.
There was no indication when the
high court would rule on therl'quesl,
br wheth!'r the jurists would be
wUlln!: to step tn'to the local dispute.
Spokesman John MrGory said it
would be at least next Tuesday
before oral arguments could he
heard.
Three county judges ordered the
romm1ssioners earlier to come up
with $57,500 for continued operation
of lh&lt;' court.
·
Clark's legal action said there are
no funds to pay a health Insurance
premium due Sept. l . and that alter
Friday his office ·will have no
employees to write salary checks.
Clark said that unless the tax Is
imposed or funds raised in another
manner. all county employees will
have to be laid off, the jaUclosedand

pa trots removed from county ro'ads .
Two jaU Inmates already have
been released and thre&lt;' ot hi'rs had
their sentences commuted . A grand
jury considering 18 criminal cases
was dissolved for lack ri. funds. the
court suit said.
Commissioner Marvin Keller has
consistently opposed the sales tax
hike, which n.:.quires a unanimous

vote of the commissioners in the
absence of a public vote.
Two sales tax increases - onf'
through Dec. 31 and the other
beginning Jan. 1 - are on the
November ballot . but the county
board ri. elections does not have the
$18,910 necessary to conduct the
election, according tot he lawsuit .
The sales tax hike would raise
$900,&lt;XKI a year. County taxpayers
pay the general !i percent stat&lt;' sales
tax .

Gallians capture father-son
look-a.;Jike magazine contest

SAVE $50.00

Many years ago families at the lime of a death would
hire death cryers, which would go out into the com ·
munity and publicly announce that a death had taken
place. Then as time went by people began using the
windows of local businesses to display death notices.
In modern times the daily newspaper and now radio
have become the method to give notice of death. This
new display is just another method of giving notice of
death.
We feel that it is very important lor all the friends
and relatives to be maae aware of the death of a loved
one. Many times we have heard the reerets of a friend
because they were not there to comfort a widcw or wi·
dower. Friends and relatives are very important and are
needed to he I p ccmfort the survivors.

enttne

$38,00() budget transfer·
earmarked for salaries Jackso~ officials

12 forfeit bonds
in Pomeroy court

WHAT IS THE REASON FOR THIS NEW DISPLAY
I HAVE SEJN ON THE OBITUARY PAGE?

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday. September 19, 1985

'tj

Projects_ _

Se-vera l casrs have bPcn disDivorce ac tions have Jx&gt;rn fil&lt;'d in
_;&lt;_c_on_ti_nu_;ed..:....f':..:
'o:..:m:...:p:.=a.::ge::...:.:ll_ _ _ _ __
Meigs County Common Pleas Cout1 missed in Meigs County Common
by Brenda M. Hysell. Pomeroy. • Pleas Coort including the Racine
Jones noted that ryot all projects
made to the Ohio Department of
, against Thomas E . Hysell. Pome- Home National Bank against Ray- can be funded but that the more. Developm!'nt.
roy; and Bonnie Haggerty. Pome- mond G.W. Cundiff, Mason, er al;
applications submitted, the better II
Present for last night's hearing
roy. against John Mat·k Haggot•ty, Chari&lt;'S F. Sarg~nt, Coolville. is for the' counly as a whole.
were Herb Elliot, representing
Pomeroy. Both ~Ia int~fsan• cha rg­ a gainst Orange Township Trust ees;
Applicants hav!' until noon on
Rutland Village; Charlie Bar)1etl,
ing gross nrgloct of duty and Bu&lt;'l K. Ridenour. Ch&lt;'Ster. e t a t. . October 9 to submit their proposals
Jr. and Stephen Powell. oft he Meigs
against l&lt;a iset' Exploration and to the commissioners. Ineligible
('XtJ1'mP cruC'It,y.
County Park District; Shirley
A divorce has bern grantrd Mining ro .. Ravenswood; Clar!'nC&lt;' projects will then be elimlna ted a nd
Johnson. Lebanon Township; ChaE. Hill. Racine. et at. aga inst Kaiser a second hearing will be scheduled
Mynlc 1.. .Jacks. Shadr. from
rles Blakeslee, Meigs County PlanDannie W. .Jack s. Long Bottom, on Exploration and Mining Co., to review thr final proposals.
ning Commission; Jack Satteriield,
grounds of gross nc-gk'Ct of dul~' und R&lt;J\'C'n swood.
Application for funding will then be
Bob
Gilmore, Fred Hoffman· and
In ot hrr cou11 act ion. Paul G£'rurd
extreme c1uclty.
[)('wey
Horton, of Middleport VIlGrantC'd :J dissolution ofma rriagl ' has l:x:'('n comrnissionc'CI a deputy
lage;
Robert
Byrr, Meigs County
wrrr C'ht•ry l A. Harmon. Middlr- shPrlff with a IPrm ending the first
Emergency
Medical Service;
MonelL!~' in J&lt;Jnuary, 1986.
JX&gt;rt. and Terry .1. Hurman.
Lamar Lyons and Roger Willford,
Hartisonville.
Tuppers Plains Fire Department;
Twelvepeoplefo~nd
Mt&gt;t&gt;i~ Thursday
Robert Wingett , Syracuse VIllage;
three
others
were
fined
in
the
co.
u
n
Robert Bet&gt;gle, Racine Village; and
Th0 Rock Springs &amp;ttor Hra lt h
Ma rri agC' licC'nSf's hi::IV&lt;' hei:'n
•
of
Pomeroy
Mayor
Richard
Sey
ler
Mary ~'ranees Baumgardner,
of
Club will mt'&lt;'l · al 1;30 p.m . i"ucd in Meigs County Proba te
Tuesday
night
.
Pomeroy.
Thul'&gt;ida,v at the homt• of H&lt;•lrn
C'ou11 to Henry Walter Rider, 211,
Forfeiting wore Tent'nce Ayala,
Blackston with Lou isP RP;uhs in
Ma!'on, W.Va. , and Regina Ann
Two emergency runs
$45; William Lawson.
Detroit,
char~ of the pm~·am and Tn-ssi&lt;'
Sm ilh, 19, Middlepot·t; Brian Keith
Abbott in charge of contests.
Connoll_1·.- 21. and Tanya Ela ine Racine, $46; Barbara Wood~ Point
Two calls were answered by local
Pleasant, $47; Mary Entwisle,
F ortnry. l 8, both of Recd"·illr.
units Tuesday, the Me igs County
Indian a, $45; · Debora Thomas,
Emergency Medical Services rePomeroy, $43; Raymond Willford.
ports. At 9:24a.m .. Middleport took
Veterans
Memorial
Today ... mostiy sunny with a high
Middleport, $43; James Mayo,
Mat·gar&lt;'t
Clarkfrom203ParkSt. , to
80 to85. Southwest wlnds5to15mph.
Vincent, $45; Allah Lambert, SyraPleasant
Valley
Hospital. Pomeroy
Admitted-Sea
.Jay
Sublett.
RaTonight...mostly clear. Low
cuse, Sl6; Albert Parker, Pomeroy,
at
2:07p.m.
rookRelnoLindfrom
his
Kal
hry,r
Moore.
Syracu
se.
cinp;
around 00. South winds less than 10
$44, all posted on sp&lt;'eding charws;
home
on
Condor
St.,
to
Holzer
Discharged--Mart ha Howell ,
mph.
Terry Farrar, Middleport. $41.
Medical Center.
Thu rsday ... mostly sunny with a Kevin Spaun, William Rife. Flor- assured clear dis tance; Edward
C'nce Ci rcle.
high 80 to 85.
Midkiff, Jackson, $63, failure to
Chance of rain is near Z&lt;'t'O
register motor vehicle; Roger
percent today.. Tonight a nd T ~ mt't'l Thursday
Clark, Pm11and, $375, driving while
Thursday.
intoxicated.
llw Meigs Cou nty Democratic
Extended forecast
Fined were Dennis Boyd, PomeE ;&lt;X'Ull\'P Comrriin cX- wi!l m('('f &lt;.~ t
Friday through Sunday
roy, $51 and costs, sp&lt;'eding; Jene tta
Fair. Jtiglti inthe80s~liday .. 751D i: :~ 1 p m. Thursda ,v at Carpt•ntors' West Durham, Middlcpo11, $263 and
1111 Satunlay and in the 70s Sunday. Ha ll. 1-:. Main St .. Pomcro~' · All costs, leaving the scene of an
Lows mainly In the 00s Friday and lnt('I'C'Sl IX'mocrats urc invi lcd, Si.Jid accident, and Tim Herdman , PomeHf'm~· Hun1 er. c hairman.
Satunlay and In the 50s Sunday.
roy, $113 and costs, intoxication.

3

11

Wedneaday, Saptember 18, 1881

Per-14-The Daily Seminal

MODEL90A

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

f,.,,,,,4,
. ...... ""
- · · · ..4

MJIIBOR IMAGI!S - Bopr., left lllld Roberl Hood
of(;e!Jipnloareaearmlrror..,.. uf-holher. 'l1le
1...,..111111 - woaalook-llllke oonlell&amp; apcinrlon!d by
the National Enquirer, chollen from 737 total Mtrles.

- ...••

'lbey not IIIII)' look allle, bul have nnllar
peraonRI!I!eo, luive dell"""" In Ja 9 eMIIdmlnlolnllon
and woltt loplher aiiiMidn&amp;-Taaner In Gallpoll8.
(Photo by Lee Ann Welch)

By LEE ANN WELCH
OVP Staff Wrller
Like father. like son, sothesaytng
goes. ln Gallipolis. the father-oon
combination of Roger and Robert
Hood brings new light to the saying.
Roger. 50, and son BObby, 23, were
the wlnn!'rs of a contest In the
National Enquirer for looking alike.
Their photograph is In th&lt;' Sept. 24
Issue, which hit the newsstands
Wednesday afternoon.
The Hoods have been mistaken
for brothers, ev!'n twins, and have
numerous slmUaritles - style of
glasses, smiles, sensesofhumorand
a lackofhalr. ·'II used to both&lt;'r me,"
Bobby sald of looking older than his
23-years, "but It made me grow up a
lot faster ."
They have always looked alike,
although Bobby Is 'h inch taller and
three pounds heavier than his
lather. "And even when we both had
halrwelookedailke," Bobby told the
Enquirer.
·
Working together at HaskinsTanner, both have degrees In
business administration, Roger Is a

graduate of Marshall University
and Bobby graduated from Cedar ville College last spring.
They seem to hav&lt;' had fun with
the whole idea of being alike.
Standing In Haskins-Tanner being
int!'rviewed, Bobby would mimlck
~ery mov&lt;' and stance his father
took.
Oddly enough, Roger and wtre
Carol Jean are par&lt;'!ltS of a set of
twin girls, Brenda and Barbara.
Still, dad and son are the ones
everyone has difficulty telling
apart.
"We hadfunjustknowingwewere
In the contest," Roger said, adding
they didn 't know they had won until
an aunt of Mrs. Hood's called alter
receiving a copy of the Enquirer In
the mall.
111&lt;' Hoods, along with mother·
daughter winners Nadine Sturdl·
vant and Cheryl Jackson d Peoria,
m.. where chosen from 737 total
&lt;'!I tries to the contest.
How did they get Involved? A
friend of the family, Mrs. Luke
Settle, sugge8ted they enter. Mrs.

Hood took a snapshot of the father
andsonand.,nt it in . Thencxtthlng
the Hoods knew, they were ca lled by
the Enquirer and a photographer
showed up to take over :ro pictures
of the t~W. The rest , as they say, is
history.
"The Enqu~·er was very thorough," Ro~r said, noting they
even went so far as to obtain a a copy
of Bobby's birth cermica te. The
newspaper documented every fact
and called the Hoods six times to
make certain or things.
Bobby said he Is s till having a lit Ue
trouble comprehending how many
people will see their photograph and ·
reafl th!'ir story In the Enqulr!'r.The
newspaper boasts of having the
largest circulation of any paper In
the country, Bobby said.
Nonetheless , this father-son look
alike duo has made Gallipolis
famous for more than just the
French 500, they've made the
National Enquirer. Right now. It' s
the hGttest material In town, and
probably the hardest to find In the
stores.

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