<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13268" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/13268?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T21:20:59+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="44240">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/9883480841f008e04d6dcad632dacc36.pdf</src>
      <authentication>dc0ebfd6ca75053d63f6b890520905d4</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="41579">
                  <text>•

I

•

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, September 23, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Millions pledged for nation's farmers
CHAMPAIGN, Dl. (UPIJ -Rock
and country music's elite came to
the heart of com country for the
Farm Aid benefit concert, reaping
millions of dollars In pledges and
sowing a message of hope for the
nation's struggling farmers.
"Hang on. We're trying to help,"
Farm Aid organizer and country
music star Willie Nelson said when
asked his message to the nation's
struggling farmers.
Nelson, following pelionners
such as Bob Dylan, Kenny Rogers.
Neil Young and Merle Haggard,
brought the nearly 15- hourevent to a
close early today· with a lengthy set
that Included "On The Road Again"
and " You're Always On My Mind."

As the crowd of nearly !ll,IXXJ left
the University of Dllnols stadium to
the recorded strains of "America
the BeautifUl" and a IO.mlnute
fireworks display, pledges continued being made to a toll-free
telephone number.
Gov. James R. Thompson said at
least $3 mlllion to $4 mllllon was
raised by Sumay night from
telephone pledges. No official estimate of money raised was imll1"'
dlate!y avallable.
Between $ll million and $50
million was expected to be raised
through mall,. telephone and corporate pledges. The telephone hotllne
tl-lm-F ARMAIDl wUI take pledges
lor a year, Nelson said.

'

Two teenagers hurt in accident
Two Meigs County teenagers
and released at
Veterans Memorial Hospita l followIng a two-car accident Sunday
afternoon on Salisbury Twp. 361.
Mildred S. Parsons, 16, of 37670
Ohio 124, Pomeroy, was treated fora
muscle strain in her back, while a
passenger in her car, Mlchelle L.
Stobart, 15, of Rt.1, Middleport, was
treated for multiple scrapes and
bruises, hospital officials said.
The Gallia-Me!gs post of the State
Highway Patrol said Parsons was
were . treated

southbound on 361; about one-tenth
of a mile north of Meigs County 3,
when she. allegedly met a northbound vehicle which was ln the
middle of th!' road. Parsons
apparently sw&lt;'rved to the rJght, lost
eontrol of her vehicle, went off the
right sidPofthe hlghway andover an
embankment In attempting to avoid
a collision, troopers said.
Parsons vehicle sustained light
damage in the 4:05 p.m . accident,
the patrol '!"id.

At least one local Iarmer In the
heart of the nation's Corn Belt,
however, wondered lf the event
would really help Ianners battling
to keep going despite high Interest
rates, low crop and land prices and
falling exports.
"What difference IS lt . golng to
make?," asked Jerry Wallace who
owns a farm north ol Champaign.
' 'They (city dwellers) don't care
about ourproblems, and on !heather
hand, I don't eare ahou t their
problems."
Billy Joel took the stage shortly
after 8 p.m. EDT to open the
prime-time portion of the concert
and drew cheers .with "Only The
Good Dle Young."
Marty music fans stood to applaud
tlie 60 country and rock stars and to
avoid sitting on the wet field at the
stadium.
"I don't know how much money
.we're going to raise but with this
song I think we're going to raise a
little hell," Joel said to Introduce the
song, "Only the Good Dle Young."
" I grew up next toafarmonLong
Island," said Joel. "I saw the
problems these people had .... We'd
like to show there are people from

the music Industry from New York
and lA who are concerned about
(farmers') problems."
The concert provided music
lovers and the few farmers In
atlendance with a unique blend of
country and rock music.
Fans keeping time to the Beach
Boys midway lhrough the concert
shook the stadium press box perched upon the uppermost level of
the stadium.
"1 ne\ier felt lt move like that
liefore," said Tony Lawrence, a
guard.
Thompson said his fellow politicians also had seen something
special.
"While Congress debates the
farm blll, they will be talking about
this concert." he said. "They will be
talklng about It because the whole
country has seen lt."
Concert organizers said paid
a ttendance was 78,312. A television
. '
feed hy the Nashvllle Netmrkcab)e
company reached23mUlion homes:
LETTER FROM CAGNEY - WOlle Nelson reads a letler
Nosertouslnjurieswerereported, , from Jimmy Cagney expressing hls support lor the American
although one hospital reported
fanners at te Farm Ald concert In Champaign, Ill. Sunday. (UPI).
admlltlng one person sUffering from
chest pains. Only a few arrests were . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

butt Seabawks
-!rlllllll' . ...

Venue chan8e
_,.p._a

e
Vot.35, No .113

•

at

r
[

,
t
(

'c
(

l
l

I .

I

-.

.

She , re tarted the engine, but it
stalled again, before she guided the
airplane into a w()()(]ed. area on
Camp Conley just behidn the
National Guard Armory off Rl. 62.
Mea nWhile, the pilot of a crop

COLUMBUS (UP!) - It' looks like an Increase ln
the sales tax is the only way Jackson County can help
itself out of a money crisis that auditors havp warned
about since March.
A representative of State Audtior Thomas
Ferguson went to hat for the financially troubled
county Monday before the state controlling board , but
his ideas about loaning the county money were shot
d~wn. howPver, and now it'll be up to the voters.
Randy Luginbuhl, a liaison for the state auditor,
outlined terms ol a $262,500 loan to the State
Coni rolling Board. The money would come from an
&lt;•mergPncy fund and give Jackson County enough
money to meet Its payroll for the rest of the year.
About 20 Jackson County offices workers, Including
eight sheriff deputies , three janilors, employees in the
clerk of COU11S office and the dog warden have been
laid off. Others are being paid through donations, or
by automobile dealers who don't want the title office
to close.
In tabling the issue, controllin g hoard members
said they feared "opening the floodgates" , to other
financially strapped countiPs, and expressed concern
over set.ting a "bailout" precedent.
Board members also said that, although the
emergency loans to municipalities a nd school boards
are legal, there is no provision in state law allowing
for extension of money to counties.
Luginbuhl argued that counties were not included
because " at the time the law was written, It was not
needed." He said the precedent the state should fear

What a difference

a BDco Door makes!

. RAWLINGS-COATS

BLOWER

FUNERAL HOME

Meigs County happenings...
Emergency squads
answer eight calls .

I
1
I

E
b
!
0

•
I

d

M&lt;'igs County Emergency Medical Service a nswered Pight calls for
assistance over the weekend; four
on Saturday and four on Sunday.
On Sat urday at 12:17 a. m., the
Racine Fire Department was calleed to a trailer fire at the BobWhite
rPSidence on Water Street. At 4:53
p.m.. Racine transported Jim
Ha ffey from the station to Veterans
Memorial Hospital . At 8:58p.m., the
Salem Center unit was called lor a
missing hunter. Rutland at 9:22p.m .
was called to assist Salem Center.
The hunte r, Douglas Brown, was
located.
Sunday a t 10: lla.m ., Racine went
to 47958 Stall' Route 338 for David
Sayre who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Tuppers Plains
at 10:47 a.m. transported Robert
Henderson from Cole's Sohio to St.
.Joseph's Hospital. Middleport at
12:24 p.m . went to 667 South Second
for Leona Roach to Holzer Medical
Center. Pomeroy at 2:41 p.m. was
called to Mulberry Avenue for
Roger Kiln&lt;' to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions--Kathry n
Fisher, Middleport ; Estella Condray, Exeter. Va.
Sa turday Discharges--JOdl HUI,
Paul Altier. Lillian Werry, Sea
Sublett, Lloyd Jenkins, Millard
Gi lmore. Kathryn Oliver.
Sunday Admissio ns -- David
Sayre, Raci ne; William Voll, Ru·
!land; Jeffrey McKinney, Racine.
Sunday Discharges--None. ·

~

g

•

n
7
~

6

•

c
~

R
6

Sunday homecoming
Homecoming serv ices will be he J.:l
Sunday a t the Eagle Ridge Com ·
munity Chureh. Morning service
will be at 10 followed by a basket
dinner at 12 noon. Singing by the
Bissell Brothers will be featurro at
the 1: 45 a [ternoon service. Pastor
Car l Hicks welcumes the public.

2
p

n

8
3

g
~

h

•
c
••
I

•
2
p

~

Dinner meeting set
Fenney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, and the Auxiliary wlll
meet Wednesday at 6:30p.m. lor a
dinner tn be followed hy meetings of
both groups at 7:30p.m. Members
are reminded that dues are payable.
The Eighth District conference of
the Legion wlll be held on Sunday at
Wellston, and the district Auxlllary
conference will be hosted by the
Middleport unit on Oet. 3.

Meets Tuesday
The Meigs Area Holiness Association will meet a t 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church with Rev. Lowell Ford as
speaker.

Wednesday meeting set
Wildwood Garden Club will meet
Wednesday, 7::JJ p.m., at the home
of Ada Holter. Members are to bring
materia ls lor a dried picture.

Mid-week service

Frances Brewington

CAAplans
commodity
distribution
Free cheese, dried milk and rice
wlll be distributed to eligible
families In Meigs and Gallia
Counties on Wednesday, the GalliaMeigs Community Action Program
announces.
Some type of identification should
be presented and persons plcklngup
for others must have a signed
sta tement of consen l.
Dlstrtbutlon begins at 1 p.m. a t the
following locations:
Gallia County - Guyan Fire
Dept., Mercerville; Mt. Carmel
Baptist Church, Bidwell; Gallla
County Fa lrgrounds, Gallipolis, and
the Gu ldlng Ha nd Sehool at
Cheshire.
· Meigs County - American Legion Hall, Racine; Tuppers Plains
Fire Station; Town Hall at Pageville; Meigs County Fairgrounds at
Rock Springs.

hatchway with a m odern, all-steel Biko Door. It's ruggedly bui lt.
watertight, and so easy fo r everyone in the fam ily to use! What's
more , it will make your basement more sec ure again st intrusion, And it
will pay for itself many times over by saving repCJir and rep lacement
costs.

If your home was built without the con"Venience of a direct base~ent
entrance. ask us for a copy of Bilco's Instruction Booklet for Adding

Outside Bas~mem Access.

. . ..,., " '

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Three
people purchased Ohio Lotto tickets
with the same slx number on them
as pulled In Saturday nig ht's game,
Ohlo Lottery Commission officials
say.
Numbers c hosen were 4, 10, 11, 19,
29and 38.
These three ticket holders can
redeem them today at a regional
Meets Tuesday
lottery office and become eligible for
The senior citizens of Harrison- their share of the $1,435,638 jackpot.
ville wUI have their regular monthly Lottery olficlals sald $3,401,153
meeting Tuesday evening at 6 p.m. worth of tickets were sold for the
with a supper to celebrate July , game .
Lottery officials say 400 tickets
August and September birthdays.
Those coming are asked to bring a were sold correctly naming five of
covered dish. Visitors are weleome. the winning numbers. Each ticket
holder can claim $638. There are
Ohlo Eta Phi Chapter of Beta. 16,719 tickets wlth four of the
Sigma Phi Sorority wUI m eet winning numbers. Each are worth
Tuesday evening, 7: :JJ p.m .. at the $41.
Wednesday night's drawing will
Senior Citizen's building. Pledge
have
a jackpot of an estimated $1
members are to meet at 6:30p.m ..
million.
prior to the regular meeting.

·""'"fJ i11

992-3748

MIDDLEPORT

CONVENIENT OFF THE STREET PAR KING
mul .w•• uur di. .• t'lay. U''••'ll ~i• ·•• _Yuu f n ••· lilt•ralul'r'fll l

1/n il . 0;.

u-1•

cnn

-~HJ(J(f'd

a

c·on/raclflr

h 1111' 111

111 irtij/all il for ynu .

FREE PARKING - Meters, some 190 of them,
were removed from the parking lots along the Ohlo
River In Pomeroy Monday creating free parking lor
motorists lor the first tlme since l!!Mi. VIllage officialS
are asking people who work In businesses In toMJ to
park along t he parkin~ lot wall thereby allowing free

,~

SERVI,tTIIR®
Latex Paint

Sl 499

mr ENDS sAt, SEPt. 21TH

Gallon

Best Quality
Latex Flat
House Paint

Exterior
Latex Flat
House
Paint
Our Good

SAVE 56° 0

$1599
Gallon

Quality

Best Quality
Latex Gloss
House Paint

SAVE ON INTERIOR PAINTS
SAVE

s4oo.ssoo
$1199
Gallon

Best Latex Flat Wall
or Ceiling Decoration

latex Flat
Wall Paint
List .price $8.99

SAVE

ssso

$1299
Gallon

Best Latex
Satin Gloss
Enamel

.

DINING lOOM ONlY

$3•25.,

CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

PH . 992·5432

setting is "allowing a county to close."
County Commissioner Marvin Keller, the only
representative of Jackson County present at the
meeting, ·was asked by Rep. William Hlnig. D-New
Philadelphia, whether he had signed vouchers durtng
the year approving the expenditure of money that he
knew wasn'lthere.
Keller said the vouc)lers he signed wpre for
equipment and bills, notJ!&gt;ayroll.
"County departmen~ continued to pay, and w en
grant raises, on 1984 spending levels, when they knew
we·wpre ,antlcipatlng less revenue this year," Keller
said.
Rep. Robert Netzley, R-Laura, was most critical of
the loan plan a nd of county office holders.
"Apparently they'vp been permitted to spend more
money than they ere going to take in," he said. "We're
being asked to bail out elected officials who didn't
follow the law ."
Netzley referred to a provision in the law that does
not allow counties to have spent more than 60 percent
of their payroll budget by June 1. Russell Rouch, a
deputy state auditor, said he suspects tha t county
officials violated the law, but added that !her Is no
punishment.
Keller said the only solution Is for the rounty now is
to tighten Its belts more. ·
"It might even be good for our county not to have
received the loan," KPiler said. "It definitely makes
for better county governments everywhere and for
Jackson County In the futu re."

parking along the street side of the Jots lor shoppers.
Pictured removing one of the mcoor heads from the
Jots Monday Is David Goodwin who serves a.s mct~r
repalnnan for the vlllage on a p:ut-tirne hasls. The
'parking lot meters have been bringing about $1.200 a
month Into the village treasury .

WASHINGTON (UPll - Coosumer prices, despite a leap In housing
costs, increased in August by only
0.2 percent for the fourth straight
month , holding the annual inflation
ra te to wha t promises to be a 13-year
low, the government said today.
Without tile month' s price accelerat ion blamed on rising housing
cosls, the Labor Department 's
Consumer Price Index for the
month would have shown no

increase.
With the slight price index
Increase - the same r~orded In
May, June
July - the annual
U.S. lnflatlon rate through August
stood at 3.3 percent, marking a
13-year low.
·
If the year ends with the same low
rate, 1985 will be the best year for
lnflatlonslnce 1972.
The Consumer Prlce Index for
August was 323.5, equivalent to a

and

cost of $323.50 for the government's
·sample "market basket " of goods
and services that cost $100 in 1967.
As students returned to the
classroom for a new school year,
school books and supplies in creased
hy 0.8 percent, the Labor Depart.·
ment said.
On the downside, a 0.8 percent
decrease ·In gasoline prices helped
pull down energy costs by 0.6
percent, twice the drop Il'Corded in
July.

•
Gallia board losing battle to keep Gavin Plant tax momes

SAVE ON EXTERIOR PAINTS-f~~~~sA;vE7css;oo:-

Latex Flat
House Paint

26 Cents

Consumer prices up slightly

King Builders Supply

99

latex
Semi-Gloss
Wall &amp; Trim

Gallon, list price $12.99

A better way ·
to buy do-it-yourself supplies.
Served with whipped potltoes, chicken
gravy, cole slaw, hot roll . butter &amp; coffH.
Sorry, no substitules except beverage-with
additional price.

'
o

~

Three lotto winners

Morse Chapel Chureh, near
Poriland, on County Road 35, wUI
begin havingmid-weekservlces this
Thursday at 7: :JJ p.m . with Pastor
Gary Holter officiating. A youth
program will be held on Monday at
6: 30 p .m . Everyone Is Invited to
attend.

'

.•

~
-,..,
.. ...--,.
A better way
.
:rfjl!:..·
to buy do-it-yourseH supplies.
--'

405 N. 2NO

Tuesday Calling Hours
2 to 4 p.m. &amp; 7 to 9 p.m.
Wednesoy Service 1 P·"'·

List price $10.99

Weather forecast
Today ... lncreaslng cloudiness
with a slight chance of a thunderstorm hy evening. High near 85.
Sou til wind 10 to 20 mph.
Tonlght.. .showers and thunderstorms likely. Low 50 to 55.
Chance of rain.. 30 percent tOday ..
60 percent tonight.. and 10 percent
Tuesday .
Extended foreclllll
Wedne!lday through Friday
Fair weather. IDghs In lhe 008.
L&lt;lws40to45.

Here's the way to add new beauty to your home. Replace that wooden

IH' ' I ' '! ' •

1 Section. fit Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

State controlling board
refuses $262,500 .loan

One pilot escapes injury, one Frances R. Brewington
72,
killed in weekend air accidents 258
POINT PLEASANT- The FAA
was expected to arrive sometime
today to investigate the em ergency
landing of a single-engine aircraft
which lost power and was forced to
land about two miles outside Point
Pleasant Sunday evening. West
Virginia State Police Identified the
pilot and only occupant of the plane
as Hilda Worley of South Charleston. who was flying a Starduster I
when the plane'senginPstalied out.

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, September 24, 1985

Copyrighted 1985

reported .

brother-In-law, John Vroman, Middleport; a sister, Ester Kissell,
Middleport; two nephews, John
Frances Rosenla Brewington,
of
Main St., Middleport, dled Vroman, Columbus; Charles VroSaturday a t University Hospital In man, Belpre; several great-nieces
and great-nephews.
aerial survey airplane dled Sunday
Columbus.
Besides her parents she was
when thea!rcraftcrashedlntoafleld
A homemaker and a retired
preceded
In death by a sister,
in western Highland County.
registered nurse, Mrs. Brewington
·
Gladys
Vroman.
David M. Finch, 22, Okemos,
was a daughter d. the late Eben and
Services will be at I p.m.
Mich., was dpad at the scene of the
Amy Bishop Bowen. She served as
Wednesday a t the Rawlings-Coats1:25 p .m. crash southwest of
an army nurse In World War II.
HillsbOro, said a spokeswoman for
She was a member of the Heath Blower Funeral Home with the Rev .
the Ohio Highway Patrol.
United Methodist Church In Middle- C.S. Zuniga, Jr. officiating. Burial
Finch was conducting an aerial
port, Evangeline Chapter of the , wUI be ln the Riverview Cemetery.
survey of area com crops when the . Order of the Eastern Star; Return Friends may call at the funeral
engine of the Cessna C-150 stalled
Jonathon Meigs Chapter of the home all day Tuesday with the
and the craft nose-dived Into a field,
Daughters of the American Revolu- family present from 2 to4 and7to9.
the spokeswoman said.
tion; Royal Nelghhors, Middleport
Th!' aircraft was owned by the
Child Conserva,tlon League and the
State Aerial F~rms Statistics Co. of
Ohio and West Virginia Registered
Toledo.
Nurses Association.
The National Transjortatlon
Surviving are her husband,
Safety Board was lnvestig;tlng the
James E. Brewington, Middleport;
accident.
a daughter and son-In-law, Sandy
and Roger Luckeydoo, Middleport;
two granddaughters, Amy and Lee
Serving the family of
Luckeydoo, both of Middleport; a

•

King Builders Supply
405 N. 2ND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT
CONVENIENT OFF THE STilET PAIICING

992-3748

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
OVP staff writer
The battle against legislation taking 30 percent of
the personal property valuation of Ohio's power
plants and distributing it to counties containing
transmission lines is a "losing· proposition in the
legislature" Gall Ia County School Superintendent Dr.
Neil Johnson told the board of education Monday
night.
" We put up a good fight, but now the on ly issue is
whether therP wlll be a three-year phase-In for Gallia
County ," Johnson said . Under the proposed phase-In,
Gallla County would lose 10 percent of Its power plant
va luation In 1987, 20 percent in 1988 and the full 30
percent in 1989.

over and· play dead. especially in the view that they
only do thls with electric utili tiC's."
Options. he said, include act ion by local officials and
" therP Is the possibility of fut1hcr leg&lt;&gt; I action.•·
A joint House ofReptoescnt a tives-S&lt;:&gt;natecommittl~'
is scheduled to meet Sept 30, but it "will be very
quick; cut and dried," Johnson said. The comm it tee
is scheduled to vote on three resolutions. inductin!! the.
phas!'-ln, he said .
In 19ll4, the Ohio Supreme Cout1 m·crtutnt'&lt;l a 19R1
administrative decision by the Ohio Department of
Taxation adopting the so-called "70-:&gt;.0 split". The
supreme cou t1 decision foll owed " 'series n[ suits filM
in 1981, !982 and 19&amp;1 by th(• Ga!!ia C'ounly Auditor a nd
the Galli a County Loca l Board of Edumtion. F:arlil'r

H owever, Johnson said the board should not " roll

this year. the coun ty recPiVf'li almosl $:1.:~ mU!i on in

b&lt;!Ck taxes from the suit. with approximately $3
million of that going to the school district.
The joint committee includes legislators from large
urban areas and "was stacked against us," Johnson
told the board. "They are taking money from us and
giving it to places as well as ot· better off than we are .
It is not a redistribution of wealth."
The commit tee heard tesllmony last week, Johnson
rep011ed, an d · the resu lts of the hearing were
" tenible" .
" If anybne neutral had listened to the testimony,"
the superintendent said, " we would have won hands
clown. The tax dC'partrnent ~auld not expla in how it

[70-30 split ) got to hP a policy and they can't even
&lt;'Xpla in how it works. They (committee members)
had thPir r.1inds made up and they didn't want to be

Southern hoard
adopts curriculum

Police chief's salary
set at $1,500 monthly
By BOB HOEFIJCH
Sentinel staff wrtter
The monthly salary for the
Middleport Chief of Pollee position
was set at $1.500 when Middleport
Village Council met ln regular
session Monday night.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
recommended that the salary beset
at $1.400 monthly sint-e the prevailing salary meant that present chief,
Sid Little. would be receiving less
money a month than he had
received before tlelng named chief
of pollee s ince he Is, ~s chief, on a 48
hour weekly schedule. New s tate
regulations require that overtime be
paid for over 40 hou rs with the
exception of the pollee chief, a nd
Little would have made more
money with overt :me In his former
• position than he would receive as
pollee chief.
Councilmen Bob Gllmore and
Dewey Horton commented that It
did not S&lt;.-em fa ir that Chief Little
would be promoted and receive less
money !han he would have had he
not been name to the top pollee
position oft he village. Councll under
emergency legislation passed an
ordinance providing for .a $1500
monthly salary for th!' chief. Also
the ordinance Includes a provision
that a parking meter person- now a
part time job - will .be paid the
m,jnimum wage of $3.35 an hour.

Mayor Hofiman appointed Councilman Horton as chairman of the
committee for development of the
depot proper1y. He will work with
the Middleport Recreation Commis·
sion and representatives of the
Middleport Chamber of Commerce
In worklngoutaproposal. A meeting
of the three groups wUI be held in the
near future.
· M&amp;yor Hoffman welcome James
Clatworthy as a new member of
council. C!atworthy was ·named
recently to fill the unexpired termor
the late Carl Horky. A thank- you
note was read from the family of the
Iatechlelol pollee, J . J . Cremeans.
Council agreed to upda te an
application to the Deparlment of
Natural Resources for a grant with
which to resuliace the basketball
courts at the park, the application
having been submitted for two years
previously. Mayor Hoffman appointed Horton chairman of thP
village finance committee and
added Councilman Gilmore to the
committee.
It was agreed to place a dust
retardant on Cottage Drive and to
hold a meeting with Meigs Juvenile
Officer Carl Hysell to further
discuss thl' establishment d. a block
watch program in Middleport .
Councilman Allen Lee King commended ""rkers for an excellent job
(Continued on page 10)
•

•

confu sed with the facts. They've got the votes and the
power."
Johnson also attacked the power companies and the
depariment of taxation .
"The power companies appraise their property and
then send the figu res to th!' tax department , which
then sends them to the county auditors ," he said. "At
no time does anyone leave Columbus to appraise the
property. It seems like It's kind of a cozy situation
between the tax commissioners and the power
companies. "
Personal real property has tisen in valuation over
the past several years, Johnson said, while the
utilities' rea l property has either held steady or
decreased over the same period of time.

Southern's Local BoardofEduca!ion, ~onday night approved the
district spartlclpatlon lnChapterll
fu nding for 198:H!6, with a total of
$8373 to be used In the science
program for grades 7-12..1111' board
adopted courses of study In reading,
language and math. for kindergarten through grade 12; hired
Ralph Steinmetz to transport. Amy
Joe Davis to Rio Grande for
Instruction for the blind a nd Cindy
Winebrenner as a six and one half
hour aide at Racine Elementary to
assist In the first grade. "
The board also employed:
-RobertaMaidensasvarletyshow
advisor; •
- Wanda Sue Laudermllt as
substitutebusdriver;
- Marte Norris as a substitute
cook;
- Approved the admission of

Larissa Lan• , Mexico, as a tultuion
free foreign exchange stud!'nt to
attend Southern High Sehool :
_Approved J ulia Leilbeit as a
tuition student for the 1985-86 year·
_ Approved pickup and di~charge point s as submitted by the
bus drivers·
andappro~ed . cffectiveJan . 1, 1986,
a measure allowing all newly
elected board members to he paid
uptothe m aximumamountallowed
bv law . The exact amount has not
h€en deteimined and the measure ·
would not effect the two board
positions which are not up for
re-election .
Present for the m eeting were
Bobby Ord, superintendent; Dennie
Hill, treasurt'r; Susi&lt;' Grueser ,
David Hill, Dl'nny Evans, J oe
Thoren and Don Smith members of
the board.
' i

Man dies in tractor accident

INVE'&gt;11GATiON CONTINUES
continuing Its Investigation Into the cause of a Sumay airplane crash In
the Camp Conley arra of Mason County. Hilda Worley ol South
Charleston was forced down when till' plane's mglne staDed. She
walked away from the crash ""'o.o""·

A Mason County man was ldlled ln
a farm tractor accident near Pliny,
W.Va. on Big 16 Road Monday,
according to the Mason County
Sheriffs Department.
The accident victim was Identified as Edward F . Engel, 68,
Southside, W.Va.
Engel was apparently logging Ina
wooded area when the farm tractor

.

ovPrtumed, pinning hlm , a sheriff's
deputy said this morning . R~latlves
found the man following the
accident which oceurred around
3:45 p.m.
The Putnam County Emergency
Medical Serviee was dispatched to
the scene and transported the body
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

--•·

~

�.

- - -~-~ ........

.

Commentary
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

i'

~m~ ~L-"""'""T"""t~c::::~.~

~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETt'
Publisher
BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

· LETTERS OF OPINION a rc w£&gt;1come. They shou ld bP lt&gt;Ss than 300 words
lon g. Alll('tl ers a re subj('C'I to ed iting and must!)(&gt; signed wll h nam&lt;'. address and
teleph one numhf&gt;r . No unsigned leit ers- w!ll br published. Leiters should be In
, goorlta ste. addressi ng lss u ~'s. not pl'rsona l!tles.

Too
late for sanctions
.
in South America?
'there is a manuever In sailboat racing in which one skipper pulls ahead
by'CUttlng off the supply of wind to hls opponent's salls. It can be risky, but
done right, it wins races.
S'tealing his opponents' wind Is what President Reagan did on South
African sanctions.
By lifting some of the least ponlttve elements of the sanctions bUI passed
by : the House and Ukely to pass the Senate and putting them Into an
executive order; the president managed In one stroke to defeat, or at least
de('ay, congressional action against the Pretoria government and to
demonstrate that It Is the White House, not the Congress, that makes U.S.
foreign policy.
the advocates of tougher action against South Africa, wbo had been
working all summer to draft legislation with enough bipartisan appeal to
withstand a veto, had the skids greased to beat down a Senate !!Ubuster,
pa~s the bill worked out by a conference committee and, by all signs,
ov~r ride an expected presidential veto.
~eagan's action left them dead In the water.
Senators on whom they had been counting for support against adamant
wkite House refusal to budge from its soft approach to South African
apartheid defected the moment the president acted.
A loi of them were Republicans wbo had no real stomach for a !tght with
th~i r own president and Reagan gave them a reason not to 15et Into one. ·
There Is little disagreement that Reagan moved because he was going to
t&amp;ae a licking on the sane! iQns bilL
By Imposing sanctions under executive order, Reagan succeeded tn
asrertlng his control over foreign pollcy, was able to select the action he
considered least objectionable in the bill- a kind Of ili!Ck door Item vetoanj:l retainedcontrol over the actual action that will be taken against South
Africa. That includes the right to suspend the sanctions when he decides
sufficient progress has been made. It Is a good bet that would be less than
the·congressional critics of apartheid would be wllling to settle for .
That's just one of the reasons the congressional sanctions faction was so
hopping mad about the executive order.
· The other, and some think the major cause of the anger, Is that Reagan
very neatly cut off their wind in a race tbey thought tbey were going to win.
: There is a final consideration here. lt is possible that sanctions, whether
'i mposed by Reagan or enacted by Congress, a)ready are Irrelevant.
~ The South African government began looking for some way to take the
~wind out of its opponents' sales even before the U.S. sanctions were a
~certainty and found thll;t Its effor(s- even moving toward abolltlon d the
' hated "pass laws" -were not materlaUy easing the explosive situation.
:: Ever since the last Russian czar was deposed, scholars have noted that
~ entrenched governments that offer reforms in the lace of impending
• revolution often find themselves hastening rather than slowing their own
;fall from power. That cou ld be what Is happening in South Africa now .

'c
(

I

l

,
I

Ttle Ea~T GeRMaN~ Have
iNFiLTRaTeD eveRYWHeRe. I
DON'T KNOW WHo To TRu~l.
You'Re THe ONLY oNe I.€FT 1

I

CaN TaLK

io,

\

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

T~y.S&amp;pbNnber24,1986

Surnmer's end ________::J_am_e_s_J._K___:ilpa=---tr_ic_k

The Daily Sentinel
~~

Tuauily. September 24, 1986

OLD FRieND.

,

SCRABBLE, Va. - Here in the · mercUessly accurate. Everything · o! summer have disappeared, and
Blue Ridge Mountains, we are gets shabby at lh!s time of year.
the last of the Queen Anne's lace
dawdling around In the in- The la',VIl gqes to seed and the looks as If It ought · to go to the
betweens, arid there Is not much to meadows gu to seed, and along the laundry.
be said lor them. summer w1U not roadside ditch banks even the
This Is a big September for
quite let .go; .a utumn has only wUdflowers look a llttle tattered.
acorns. Last year there were
technically arrived. We are hungry We have one spectacular wUd· almost none, but this year there are
for the tart apple taste of fall . .
Dower, known as theJoyPyeweed, hundreds, and they are giving
The vegetable garden, which was that grows stx feet tall. It sup- Happy a hard 'time. Happy is the
producing luxuriantly a. few weeks posedly Is named for a Cherokee Shetland coll1e who snoozes on the
ago, Is down to a few tomato plants who used the plant In treating fever.
deck outside the kitchen. Overhead
that won't give up. The squash was At this time of year, the Joe Pye are the branches of a towering
the first to gu, then the miniature weeds are tired old Indians.
chestnut oak. The acorns come
A lew otber wildflowers are down ltke bombs, and she wakes up
cantaloupes. This year we grew
cucumbers in cyltndrlcal wire hanging on. There's stU! some yell1ng, "Who hit me? Where'd he
cages; the things worked weU, but chicory, as blue as a granddaugh- go?''
now tbe dead vines reach through ter's eyes; we have the tiny white
In theory, a big crop of acorns
the cages as forlornly as tbe hands and gold fall asters; there's golden- portends a hard winter. Maybe so.
of prisoners. The peppers and rod, of course, and .here and there The five squirrels that haJig around
eggplants called It quits a week ago. you'll see the pink and white out place have been busy all month.
All of us know people who have bouncing Bet, as pretty as a sp1ing · Except o! chipmunks, no , other
"gone to seed." The metaphor Is wedding. Most of the other Dowers antrnals hav~ come to call. I

"Live from the White House, a presidential press conference followed
Immediately by a response from the president's staff explaini519 what the
president really meant."

Program under fire
WASHINGTON - For the second time In 18 months, a federal
program that grants scholarships
to American Indians for medical
studies has come under fire.
Oversight officials have questioned
practices that have resulted In
preference given to relatives of
employees In the agency that .
administers the program.
The earlier review concluded
that the program's rules may have
been bent to allow award of a
$33,264 scholarship at Harvard to
the daughter of Dr. Everett
Rhoades, director of the Indian
Health Service, which manages the
program.
Although no evidence of ImproprIety on Rhoades' part was found,
reforms were made in the
appllca lion-review pi'O&lt;!ess.
"Whlle there is some evidence
that procedures were modified to
allow the award to Dorothy
Rhoades, Indicators • are that Dr.
Rhoades did not play a direct role in
bending any rules, " states the
March 1984 report.
The more recent review was

com plated earlier this month by the
inspector general of the Health and
Human Services Department. The
unreleased draft report, obtained
by our associate Tony Capaccio,
fo!Jnd "'weaknesse~ in many as·
peels" of lbe scholarship award and

haven't seen a rabbit in weeks, or a
groundhog, or · afox, and only a
couple of deer, but I had a thrUI one
morning just after Labor Day. I
stepped outside'about 7 o'clocK, and
there on the lawn was a wUd turkey.
He looked as big as an ostrich. I
never saw a bird that big, and he
had two hens with him. They took
off into the woods ltke a squadron of
B-52s.
Otherwise there's nothing much
to report. The hunting season for
doves opened a couple of weeks ago,
which meant that half the doves In
Rappahannock County took up
residence in our hay fields. Blfds
know a sanctuary when they find
one. I maintain a feeder on the
window by my desk. Doves are my
best customers. Two of them are
working on the free lunch now.
These doldrums won't last. The
gums and dogwoods began turning .
color about the lOth of the month. ·
Some of the leaves from the gum
are as brown as boots, some are a
ltttle darker than fire wagon red,
but they're aU as mottled (In Gene
McCarthy's phrase) as the hands of
old men. Leaves from an oak are
papery to the touch. Leaves from a
gum have the feel of good gloves. ·
Before long the maples and
hickories and poplars wUl trade
their summer's green for autumn's
red and gold. The nights will be
crisp artd even a ltttle shivery. It's
time to cut klndltng and to stack
firewood in the garage. Be gone,
summer! Go!
One of us Is going, anyhow. I am
headed for Japan, partly to do some
Interviews, but mainly because I've
never been there. I want to have a
look at Japan's system of pobltc
education. It's much tougher than
ours. I want to ride that famous
train to Kyoto, and I'm promised a
baseball game. I haven't had a day
off since Jan. 8, and Old Dad Is
drooping like the Joe ?Ye weed. By
the time I get back, we'll be Into
October. See you then.

review process ..
"Our review of 50 applicant flies
during the period 1981-85 disclosed
numerous instances where the IHS
(Indian Health Service) Internal
controls were bypassed," the report
states. For example, it noted, seven
of the 50 applications were pro·
cessed an average of 12 days afterthe filing deadlines 'h ad passed, ' enforced.
while 25 others sbowed no date of
In the Rhoades case, the direcreceipt.
tor's attorney said the earlier report
"lliS officials couldn'ttell us why
"was not grossly inaccurate, and
the seven applications were prowe're not saying that it misses the
cessed alter the cutoff date, " the
mark, but It does not tell the whole
report states. "Compltance with the
story." The attorney said that a
due date is necessary to assure
forthcoming Inspector general re·
fairness In considering all appliport will conclude that Dorothy
cants. By granting awards to
Rhoades "deserved tbe scholarship
lndlvldu~ls who may not have met
and won It fair and square."
tbe ms filing deadlines, other
After the director's daughter
qualified applicants may have been
missed the minimum score for a
denied awards."
scholarship by one point, according

to the 1984 report, she was
re:evaluated outside established
procedures and received a higher
·
rating.
Although the director "maintains ·
that he did not receive negative
advice," the 1984 report states, "the
evidence Indicates that elements of · :.0
his staff did go to him and contend . :':
that he could be compromised and ·-.~ :
possibly embarrassed If the award ·.::
was accepted by his daughter."
- ••
Rhoades'was told by tbe program '•,.•
coordinator that "there was no . ~ ~
ethical problem with the award.' " · ~
The report adds: "Apparently he , ~
accepted the latter's advice and the . :
award was made to this daughter.
~
Notwithstanding the abov~. the •
award of a scholarship to the •
daughter of a high-ranking official · ~
by that person's staff Is an apparent "
conflict of interest In my view.''
:
The report concluded that "the ::
system operative over the past ~
years" was to blame for such. •·
situations and made the Indian• •
Health Service vulnerable to' · •
criticism .

Life on earth

'
~

r

r
t

",F
d

~

p

6

2
p

n

e
3

p

e
~

h

•
"c

..•
6

2
p
p
7

JllueJ.Y.I, Ike wen 1
At Toronto, Jesse Barfield hit hls
25th homer of l))e season, and Tom
Henke SquelChed a MUwaukee
threat In the seventh inning to belp
the Blue Jays reduce their magic
number forcUnch!ngthe Easttltleto
eight. Toronto leads second-place
New York by.slx games.
11pn2,RedSoxl
At Boston, Juan Berenguer and
WUlle Hernandez combined on a
five-hitter; and Lance Parrish drove
in the game-winning run in the third
Inning. Berenguer, 5-5, allowed four
hits and one unearned run whlle
walldng t&gt;m and strlklng out six In 7
1-3 Innings. Hernandez finished lor
his :llth save ~f the season. Rangers
11, Mariners 4 .
At Arlington, Texas, Gary Ward
hit hls 15th homer of tbe year and
drove in four runs: and · EUls
Valentine drUled a two-run homer to
lead a 15-hlt attack. Dave Schmidt,
£&gt;5, won In his second start since
Sept. 3, 1982..

the league In strikeouts- and was
second In innings pitched with 189
1-3.
This season, Browning has picked
up right where he left off. He Is 18-9tbe most w1ns In his career - and
bas a 3.49 ERA. He 1s second on the
team in Innings pitched with 234 2·3
and second In strlkeouts with 134.
"The only goal I set thls year was
to )Xtch 230 to 240 innings," he said.
Reds pitching coach J!rn Kaat
said he has not worked much on
technique with the 25-year-old
Browning but has talked with the
pitcher about his mental attitude.
"I worked ori his frame of mind ,
trying to get )lim to chaUenge the
hitters," Kaat said. "Even that was
not hard to do because that' sthe kind
of guy he Is. This year, his
confidence and control bas 1mproved. He's just a good pitcher, but
he &gt;rorks at 11 •. He has made himself
a good pitcher."
Kaat, thougb, did help Browning
trnprove hiS curve and tempo.

Leaeue West pennant.
"It was good to get back In," said
Guerrel'll, whowent3-tor-4,drovetn
one run and scored the go.abead run
to help the Dodgers to a 5-3 victory
over the Astros last night. "I was
ready to play."
Cabell, who spent seven-plus
Bea8Clll8 with the Astros before
traded to Los Angeles JulY lOth,
made hls first appear1111ce in the
Astrodome since the trade, and
delivered a pinch-hit, two-run single
In the eighth to break a 3-3 tie.
The victory Increased the
Dodgers' lead in the. West to stx
games over secoad-place Cincln'
natl, which was Idle. Tbelr magic
numbertocUnchat least a tleforthe
division Is eight. Last week Los
Angeles lost three games In a row
and allowed Cincinnati to within 4\-2
games r11lrst place.
Guerrero, who missed the last 17
games with a sprained wrist, has
been especially phenomenal
against the Astros thls season,golng
19-for-49 with eight homers and 15

victory. 11ley

have won 11 clthelr Jut l2. St. Laulll
I'!IJIIJIII tbree pme~llleld clNft'
Yoric In the Eut. Each team 11M l2
pmea, tncludlna three with acli
other,left to play. . . . . . PI= I
At Plllladelphla, Gary Carter hit
Ill$ 30th homer of the aeum, a

two-run shot with 1\m out In the
thli-d, hls 16th game-wtnntng hlt.
Rick Agullera Improved to 9-G, and
Rog£: McDowell pitched three
innings to earn hls 16th save. Fred
ToUver, 0-2, took tbe loss.
Elqlos 18, CuiiB 7
At Chicago, rookie Andre Galarraga and Doug Frobel led a
five-homer attack with eighthinning blasts, helping the Expos
snap a stx-game losing stresk. 1be
game was delayed 43 minutes
becauseotratn 1n thellrstlnnlngand
was played In sh1f11ng 25 mph winds
and occasional showers.

RBI.
EARNS BIG HUG - st. Louis Cardlnala' Terry PendletGn (Plta a lug
from tearnmaie Tl&amp;o Landrum after tile Cardl' defeated l'?ttiiiJuJ'Ih, 11-4
MoQday night .. St.I.AJU!!I.Pendletoadubled w?thtwo011andlwooul .. lhe
eighth Inning to provide the Jll8I'IID alvldory. TemHer:randOzzleSmMh
are bt lhe foreground and Wille McGee Is Ia lhe background. Ul'l.

A's dump Indians, 8-7
OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) -There
are days when you can't even count
on bad pitch.
"I didn't expect Tony PhUUps to
hit that homer," said losing manager Pat Corrales Monday night
after the Oakland A's outfielder
stroked a fifth-Inning blast ' that
· helped sink the Cleveland Indians

a

8-7. '
Corrales said Phlll1ps' homer,
which broke a 3-3 tie, came despite
t&gt;m "bad pitches' ' by Indian hurler
Curt Wardle, but "Phillips knocked
the life out dthe baU."
Jose Rijo, 5-3, ptched 61-3innlngs,
gave up nine hits, walked six and
struck out six. Jay Howell notched
h1s 27th save.
With the score tied 3-3 in the f!fth,

the A'sscored four runs to take a 7-3
lead. Mike Gallegu opened with a
walk and, with one out, PhUUps hit
the first pitch Into the left ·field
bleachers, glirlng tbe A's a s.Jiead.
Bruce Boehle singled, w.S wUd
pitched to second and scored on
Steve Henderson's double. Hemlerson scored when losing pitcher
Wardle, 8-7, wUdpitchedhlrtttoth!rd
and forced hlm home with a walk.
"ln a game like thls yoo gotta
score a lot , of runs," said A's
manager Jackie Moore. "Rijo
struggled but be gave It everything
he had to get outo! jams."

"I think he's the most valuable
player In the. league," said Houston
pitcher Bob Knepper, whomustlace
Guerrero today. "Just look at the
month he had in June_;, 15 homers,
27 RBis. They'd be tnsecon&lt;~orthlrd
place without hlm."
CabeU Is even more !rnpressed
with Guerrero since beconunlng hls
teammate.
"I had played against hlm in this
league tor a long time, but I didn't
know what a clutch player he was
IDitD I gut here," Cabell said. "He's
IDibellevable. He makes till$ r1tense
awesome Instead of better than

A business insurarice
package, that is. It's
SERIES ONE, a broadcoverage, competitivelypriced plan for retail
stores, offices, churches,
apartments and drug
stores. Call us for a proposal and quot1tion,

average."
Tom Nleden!uer pitched 1\m
Innings for hls 17th save. Calhoun,
2-4, took the loss.
.
In other games, St. Louis edged
Pittsburgh 5-4, New York whipped
Phlladelpbla 4-1, Montreal overpowered Chicago 10-7 and San
Francisco topped San Diego 7-2.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992·6687
Stille Auto
fillY ....
thl

Cardlnalllll, PlrMm 4
At St. Louts, Terry Peadleton hit a
two-out, two-run trlple in the eighth,

CDJIIII

Sl'f(W.

riiiiiiCIS
UIDS THIS
SAniiDAY

•

•

Buchwald : -~

•

....••
')

There was great excitement on much hea vier flying saucer than we
"Yes, but we shall proceed as Earth when there Is no life there?" ;:
the planet of Venus this week. For ortglnaUy planned."
soon as the Grubstat\ gives us the
"Because If we Venusians can·:;
the first time Venusian scientists
" Are there any other hazards
added funds ."
learn to breathe In an Earth : ':
managed to land an unmanned · that you discovered In your
"Professor Zog, why are we atmosphere, then we can uvC. ~:
space craft on the planet Earth, and studies?"
spending billions and billions of anywhere."
·.,
it has been sending back signals, as
"Take a look at this photo. You
Zilches to land a flying saucer on
,,'
well as photographs, ever since.
see this dark black cloud hovering
. ••
The craft was directed Into an over the sur1ace o! Earth? We call
area known as Manhattan (named
this the Consolidated Edison Belt.
alter the great Venusian astrono- We don't know what it Is made of, .
...
mer Professor Manhattan, who
but it could give us a lot of trouble,
••
!Irs! discovered It with his telescope
and we shall have to make further
•
200,tm light-years ago) .
tests before we send a Venus being
-~
Because of excellent weather there.
"Over here you will notice what
conditions and extremely strong
•
4
signals, Venusian scientists were seems to be a rjver, but our findings.
able to get valuable Information on
Indicate it Is polluted, and the water
"'
••
the feasibility of a manned Oylng
Is unfit io drink. This means we
'
saucer's landing on Earth. A press shall have to carry our own water,
•
conference was held at the Venus which will add even greater weight
'
institute o! Technology.
to the saucer."
"We have come to the conclusion,
"Sir, what are all those tiny black
spots on the photographs?"
based on last week's landing,"
'"
"We're not certain. They seem to
Professor Zog said, " that there Is oo
••
Ute on Earth."
be metal particles that move along
•
"How do you know thls? " the certain paths. They emil gases,
science reporter of the Venus make noise, and keep crashing into
•
Evening Star asked.
each other. There are so many of
.,,
"For one thing, Earth's sur1ace these paths and so many metal
•
In the area of Manhattan Is particles that It Is impossible to land
.'
composed of solld concrete, and a Dying saucer without being
••
nothing can grow tbere. For smashed 'by one."
'•
aoother, the atmosphere Is filled
"What are those stalagmite ·
"•
with carbon monoxide and other projections sticking up?"
•
deadly gases, and nobody could
"They're some type of granite
I.
possibly breathe this air and formation that gives off Ught at
4
survive.' '
night. Professor Glom has named
"What does this mean as far as them skyrockets since they seem to
•
our flying saucer program Is
be scraping the skies.''
"You /Ike protectionism as a 'working man. '
•
••
concerned?''
"U all you say Is true, won't this
How about as a consumer?"
•
"We shall have to take our own set back·the Dytng saucer program
oxygen with us, which means a several years?"
.,
~

~'"'

~

Do ·&gt;~•• ll '~'n

..

~ Today

in history

Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 24, the 267th day o! 1985 with 98 to follow.
The moon is moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Venus and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
.
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Libra. They Include novelist
.' Horace Walpole in 1717; John Marshall, fourth chief justice o! the United
States, in 1755; novelist F . Scott Fitzgerald in 1896; and Jtrn Henson,
: creator of the Muppets, In 1936 (age 49).
•
On 1hls date in history:
In 1929, pioneer aviator James Doolittle demonstrated the first "bUnd"
: takeoff and landing, using only Instruments to guide hls aircraft.
, In 1955, President Dwight D. Eisenhower sulfered a heart attack whlle
t vacationing In Colorado.
.
•. In 1959 President Eisenhower and Soviet Premier Nlkita Khrushchev
' met at C~mp David , Md .
· In 1971!, the Israeli Cabinet approired the Camp David peace agreements
• and voted to dismantle Israeli settlements In the Sinal Peninsula before Its
• return to Egypt . .
: • In 1984, In a highly conciliatory and opttrn!stic address before the United
· Nations General Assembly, President Reagan called on the Soviet Union to
. rotn in "construcl!ve negotiations" on arms reductions and other Issues.
A t.hought for the day: Chief Justice John Marshall said, "The jXJwer to
tax Involves tile power to destroy."

i

J

Dl"I(" PhOrl

29.00
Champion 30.00
35.00
Strong
Polyosttr
36.00
Cord Body
37.00
lor Smooth
37.00
Riditog
37.00
31.00
39.00

Supnrno

••

ft

•c

Art

Berry's World

I

~

8-7.

~tbl! Cardlnalltotlltlrblrtb

llraliht oomeblck

·· ~

..

•

5

HOUSTON (UPl) - The .last
thing Tom Browning expected 1\'aS
to win 19 games for the Cincinnati
Reds.
"Being able to get all my pitches
over for strikes when they count has
been !rnportant," sa1d Browning,
who rurst onto the major-league
scene at the end r1last season with
three trnpresslve performances.
"As long as I'm able to challenge the
hitters, go right alter them.
"I've taken my lumps thls year,
but It's just 'a matter . of staying
consistent and knowing what your
capabllltles are. My confidence Is a
lot hlgber now. I hadanearlyslump,
and I began second-guessing myself. But now I'm not afrsld to throw
any pitch to any batter."
Last season, Browning, the Reds'
ninth-round pick In the 1982 draft,
was called up in Se)&gt;tember !rom
Wichita and started three games lor
the Reds, giving up just four runs in
231-3 innings.
He led the American Association
1n strlkeouts with 100- the second
ttrne In three pro seasons he has led

....-·.
.-....

;

~

In other games, Toronto beat
MUwaulcee S.l, Detroit edged !los·
ton 2-1, Texas clobbered Seattle 11-4
and Oakland outlasted Cleveland

.

(

n
J

S,GBBaY IIONJGAN
VI'I.,....Wi?lrr
Wltb theretumCJlPedfoGWI letO
to the lllll!llp andol CabeU to.
Houmn, the Los Anaetes IlcJdaien
areapln tlylna toward the National

rshikelead

...••..
•

.

c

ByMIKETUU.V
UPI Nalloaal BuebaU Writer
Two men who have been to the
playoffs Monday night reminded
the California Angels howdltflcult It
can be to get there.
Harold Baines, who led Chicago to
the .1983 American League West
title, and Luis Salazar, a member r1
San Diego's 198t National League
champions, hit home runs toglvethe
White Sox a 6-5 victory over the
Angels.
The decision preven\ed Cautomla
from gaining ground oo Idle Kansas
City, and dropped theAngels'lead to
a half-game over the Royals In the
AI.. West.
Gene Nelson, 10-10, went six
innings, allowing three runs, walking six and striking out four. Bob _
James pltcbed the tinal lnrltng for
Ill$ 29th save.
Baines' 21st homer of the season,
with two out in the llrst, g~ve tbe
White Sox a 1-0 lead. Cautornla tied
the score 1·1 in tbe second on Doug
DeCinces' 17th homer r1 the year.
Salazar followed one-&lt;~~~t singles
byJoeiSklnnerandRudyLawlnthe
third with hls lOth oomerr1theyear,
r1f starter Don Sutton,lS-9.

•

•

t
!

Guen'ero returns;

3

I

I

------

Long ball provides
~5 ChiSox win

Browning seeks 19th
victory this evening

lack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear
In addition, the inspector general
found 20 applicants who listed
Indian Health Service employees
as references. In Itself this Is not
prohibited, but "examination disclosed many deviations from established procedures" for the
employee-related applicants.
For example, the Inspector general concluded that eight of the
related applicants were given
higher academic ratings by agency
reviewers than their scholastic
records justified, while 14 of the
appltcations showed no evidence
that filing deadlines had been

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

···-

Deluxe

All-loa.. il.t for
Mally of
Dltrelt's

.

Ill• Cars

HAZARD
AVAilABlE, ASK C)UR
FOR

~

...

Blat·Btlt
lia&amp;·Btll
lia&amp;-Btll
Gllll·?llditl
Ble&amp;·Btll

.....'
••'

16$/80RI3 Supreme
20S/7SR14 Suprtmt 49.00
205/7SR15

,•

Supremo 55.00~

23S/7SR15 Sup rome

235/75115

Xl

235/75115

XL

3hiO.SOx1S I

11-IE NAF.-MW: NETWORK .

65.95

AMERICA'S COUNTRY HOME

75.00

I GROUP W SATELLITE 'cOMMUNICATIONS '1984

Free· Installation!

•
•

CONSOLIDATED COMMUNICATIONS GROUP

•'

~

I

~

-.

..

Point Pleasant

675-5055

__

..,...

.

_..._ ..

----·-

-

.... ...

.

~· ·-· · ·-------·-- -- ...

-

· ·-- ~

.. .-- ··---- ---·--·- ---

--· ·-

--· ·~----- --·~· ·

..

•

�-

Page

Tuirtsy, September 24, 188&amp;

4 The Daily Sentinel

Auburn still on top;
Sooners remain No. 2

&lt;

1.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - WhUe a
chunk of the top ~ has produced a
new look, the voting by the UPI
Board of Coaches has heen consistent for the top two teams.
Auburn, which roared past Okla. homa Into the top Spot last week,
received 609points and 32Hrst-place
votes. The Sooners remained second with 500 points and eight No. I
selections. Either the Tiger s or
Oklahoma, which wUl play Its first
game Saturd ay at Minnesota, have
heenNo. I all year.
Meanwhlle, the famUlar faces of
Notre Dame, llllnols, Georgia and
Washington have come and gone
from the top ~ replaced by such
newcomers to the nation's elite as
Virgi nia, Air Force and Kansas. AU
three are making their debut In the
ratings this season.
For 17th-ranked VIrgin a, 2-0, the
move Into the top :lJ continues the
recent surge of lts.foot])&amp;ll program.
fn 1982, the CavaUers were 2-9 In
Coach George welsh' s first season
and have followed with an 8-5 mark
In 1983 and an 8-2-2 showing iast year
culminated by a Peach Bowl
victory.

to 16th In the latest rank!ngs.
Iowa (504points) cllmbedonespot
Into USC's vacated No. 3 position.
Ohio State (467) and Florkla State
(455) each rose a notch, as well, to
round out the top five.
No. 6 Penn State, which defeated
East Carollna, and seventh-ranked
Oklahoma State, which was Idle,
exchanged positions. Louisiana
Sta te cllmbed one spot to No. 8 while
Michigan jumped six places to No. 9
and Alabama rooved from 12th to
loth.
Michigan and Oklahoma State
each received a first-place vote.
UCLA beat San Diego State to
move from 13th to lith while
Brigham Young, with a lackluster
victory at Temple, fell two spots to
No.l2.
Arkansas climbed a spot to No. 13
and Nebraska, with Its crushing
vic!Ory over IIUnots, Improved from
17th to 14th. Maryland advanced one
place to No. 15. Texas held on at No.
19.
South Carolina and West Virginia,
big losers to Michigan and Maryland, respectively, and Arizona fell
from the ratings.
The top six teams appeared on all
Air Force, 3-0 and ranked )8th, 42 ballots.
also has heen drawing more
The Big Eight had four represenna tional atlentlon of late. The tatives In the ran kings. The Big Ten
Falcons finished the 1\&amp; season and Southeastern Conferences had
ranked 15th and were 8-4 with an three each - all In the top 10. The
Independence Bowl trlumph last Paclflc-10, Atlantic Coast, Southwest and Weslern Athletlc Conferenyear.
However , this Is a total turna- ces each had two teams In the
round for Kansas, 3-0. The Jay- ratings, and there were two
hawks last winning season was 1981. Independents.
Their opposition so far this season
After victories over Southwest
has not heen great and a good deal Louisiana and Southern Mississippi
morewUiheknownaboutthematter In which star running back Bo
No. 5 Florida State visits Saturday.
Jackson collected 495 yards and slx
Virginia Is one spot ahead of touchdowns, Auburn was Idle last
Southern Cal. The Trojans, upset by weekend. The Tigers play Tennes·
Baylor last weekend, fell from No.3 see on Saturday.

Scorebaord

N~ YORK ILJl'll - Hit&gt; Un ll&lt;'d Press
Board of Coarht-!1 To p 20
m lk'li:(' fOol ball raf lngs. with nrsl -pllll.-evc4ts

1

itlld r;:•r ordli In parl' ntlrs«'s , tl!a l pci nts
i b!IM'd on 15 points for f lr!il plaC'P, 1&lt;1 for

•

-.

Intr rna! k.ln&lt;~ l

sr'CCncl. &lt;'IC. I. and last ~ · s ro~n klD !f.
~A uburn J,t ! ) t2·0t
8)9 1
l Ok lahoma 181 rO-Ot Sill 2
3. Jowa 12-01
MN 4
4, 0h lnSII:t1 rl2-0 1

...

&lt;161 5

D&lt;n

-.

I

'

,
•
f

b
~
0

!
g

'

n

7
~

5

•

c

M

R
5

Olltllnd 8. ~ 7
......,..a...(.U~BDI')

Ibton (Oj@dl 1-101 11Toronto flllvll2-1),
7:l5 p.m.
D!lrott l'flftllll t.ltl II Mew Yorll (P.
NW!kro ~111. 8 p.m.
Blllll'nlft tMcGiq:r J3.12) II Mllw-.a·
1ft (W~ H)), 1:11 p.m.
Mlnn!MI (Butcher 11).13) at 'I'etaa

2

6

3
p

6
~

h

••
ol

.,.,
cl

6
2
p

~

,

. RUTLAND TIRE SALES

"OETTitiO 'tOU THERE SAFELt'
LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS AND
LIGHT TIUCI TIRES
*ALIGNMENTS *FRONT END WORK
*BATTERIES *TIRE REPAIR
LOCATED: MAIN ST .. RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8-6 MON .-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.

PH . 742-3088

M11ter Card and Vise Welcome

p.m.

0Uc110 (Sf&gt;•wr l.).llJ at Callb'Jia

tCaadl!lW I-1J. 10:30p.m.
Kwu Cil)' (Sabl!rhaien 1&amp;41) at htt)e

RETURNS IN 'BIG WAY - IAls Angeles running yard&amp;IWblngtoealfortheaJc~MoQdaylnleadlngthe
llan)s to a 35-2&amp; victory at the KJnailome. UPJ.

book Eric Dickerson eludgfes Sealtle Seahawks
oornerback Terry Taylor as he oontributes to' his ISO

Rams butt Seahawks, 35-24
SEATI'LE (UPI) - Despite
~mpressive statistics, Doug Reed
figured Dave Krieg would have a
difficult time against the Los
Angeles Rams Monday night.
Krieg was the top- rated passer In
the NFL last week and the Seattle
Seahawks were 2-0. But last night,.
Krieg was sacked seven times for 61
yards In losses and Intercepted
twice as the Rams downed Seattle
35-24.
11

1t was not surprise to me," sald

Reed, the Rams defensive end whO
had a game-high three sacks for
minus-24 yards. "If It happens In

practice, it's going to come In the
game. We're a hadgroupofguys, so
It's really hard to keep us out.
"We shut down the run, too."
Seattle's Curt Warner ran for just
32 yards and Seattle managed only
44 yards rushing. MeanwhUe, LA's
Eric Dickerson made his 1985 debut
something special by romping for
150 yards and three touchdowns In

Meet the Tomadoes

'The Victory Circle'

p
n

-·-

'; ..nnlo5, Mllw.ukl&gt;e 1
Defroll 2, SMIOII 1
Tl'ulll, 5eattlr t
CJUcaao 6, CalllorrM 5

IY~12-161 , 10:35p .m.
Ck&gt;Yeland ( W~IIJ.i)

Brian Weaver
HO, 153 pound
Freslunan tackle

SUN FUN

Hickel posts speedway victory

Chargtn'
Swartz's
to
the wheelCharlie
of a sprint
car.return
Swartz
placed ; second In the 'B' main and
9th In the feature.
Heats were won by Tlni Green d
Sacramento, Call!., Mike Zelter,Tndd Kane, and Johnny Beaber.

W

:&gt;-9, 128 pound

first lap crash that eliminated half
the field , then outlasted Jeff Houser
and Burnside to post! he big win.
The sprint car action was fast and
furious as Hewitt emerged as fast
qualifier with a time of 19:80 for a
speed of 1~ miles per hour.
The big story of the day was

lfiO....

N.l'I'IDN.U. 1.&amp;\GtJB

Clyde Sayre

MINERAL WELLS - Benny
Hickel of Pomeroy snapped Steve
Burnside's string of five straight
wins, winning Sunday's Hobby
Stock feature at West Virginia
Motor Speedway In Mineral Wells.
In the All-Star Circuit of Champions
sprint car feature, points leader
Jack Hewitt came from sixth
starting position to claim the $3,00l
top prize.
In the Hobby stock heat Hickel
placed second behind Burnside·
.Larry Holmes claimed the other
hobby stock heat.
In the feature Hickel survived a

0

C'Jeovl'iand at O.ldalld
~~~ at Torortto, Jilabt
Ol!tron at New York. Nltll
S.ltll'noR at Ml,lwtwlfto, nl.lfll
MlrlleiOOI at Tnaa. nl&amp;hl
ChlciiiO at C1lli0nil. rqtl
Kansas City at SPattiP, Nahf

helping the Rams Improve to 3-0.
Krieg declined to blast his line's
blocking- or lack thereof.
"We just got beat," he said
$Imply. "We've just got to come
hack and do better next week."
Dickerson, whosetanNFLrecord
last year of 2,105 yards rushing,
missed the first two games of this
season because of a contract
dispute. He ran 31 times against the
Seahawks and said he served notice
he's hack and better than ever.
"! think I played very well," he
said. "I thought! was ready to play.
Y'alldldn't tliink I was ready to play
butl fooled y'all. "
Rams coach John Robinson said
his star running back caught up on
missed pre-season work during the
first three periods.
''Eric had training camp the first
three quarters," Rnbinson said.
"The fourth quarter was regular
season for him. Seattle was after
Dickerson aU night and Eric wore
them down .''
Dieter Brock, the former Canadian Football League quarterback,
also proved he can play In the NFL,
throwing for ~ yards. He completed 12-0r-24 attempts, Including a
19-yard scoring toss towiderecelver
Bobby Duckworth.
Krieg spent much d the evening
on his hack but stUI managed to
complete 23-ol-45 passes for 267
yards and a touchdown.
Duckworth led all receivers with
four catches for 98 yards. Seattle's
Steve Largent caught six passes for
88yardstobecometheNFL'seighth
all-time receiving leader with 8,979
yards. He has caught at least one
pass In 110-stralght games.
After the teams played to a 7-7
halftime til', the Rams changed the
tone of the game quickly In the third
quarter.
Ips Angeles needed just 1:46 to
drive SO yards for a scoreearly In the
period. Brock lofted a 19-yard pass
to Duckworth, who grabbed It in the
comer of the endzone to give the
Rams a 14-7 lead.
On the ensuing kickoff Randall
Morris fumbled and Mark Jerue
recovered on the Seattle 2. On the
next play, Dickerson crashed In to
11ft LA to a 21-7 advantage with 12:57
remaining In the third quarter.

Freslunan end

PENNZOIL

I/
i)pU f
lt

'

PEPSI

Sl . Lou.
NY
Mnlrl

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

LPd.GB
M56.62'1'91 58 J/11 3
18 7'l

16

~I)

'-

Tl17 .4fk)22
23 ~

10 19 .410

Chi.

M !1l .3&amp;5 G

88 62 .!181 81 67 .M7 fi
T'f T3 ~13 Jl

'-'

""'"'
""'lJoo

75'13W&gt;l3

S.
AUnt

........

6J 8J .0 :Ji'h
!8 91 .:B1 29
. . . . , .......ttl

MontrNJ 10. Cllkaco 1
New York t , PtllladrlpN1 1
Sl , LouiS 5, Pl!tabllr'Rh t
Lol Anaeil'l ~ Houaton 3
Saa Franc:ilro 7, S.n D1f11o 2

........,,,o-(AII'IInaEM')

hklnlrNI tSmlth 16-51 at Chk'aco Wontenoe 6-9), 2:~ p.m.

New York IFt.TIIIItdrr: ltl at f'ttiladclpbla
!Rlldt..- J.lt,

~p. m .

Atlanta IP'Nvzl·lll atCIM"InMtl(Bivo¥n·
In« 18-91, 7::ll p.m.
PHtllbullCh 11\HlPf'll +!I at St. LoulJ

lHDI1on 2·2l, 8: :15 pJn.

.
1..01 Al'l&amp;t'k's !Welch U-41 al HOUIIOil
(Knepper 1!;-JOt , 8::rt p.m.
San Frudlc'u !Laf'oln11·14i a! San DI!'Ril
tDra\I('('ICY 12·10!, :KNI'I p.m . WedillliiiiQ't
G.,...

N4'lw York at Chk'IAD
MontrNI II Pl!tsbUtRh. niK!II
Atlanla at ClnC'InMtl, nlltht
Pblladrlpl!la a ! Sl. l.oul&lt;§, ,.hi
Lol Anat"'l"ll II Houstm, niJhl
Sa n Franclst'O at San Dlf'Wl, niRhl

TransactioD8
&amp;tHt.f

IX&gt;! roll - S l - trPI&gt;-IRc.'lll RWrd John
l..ong lo a J.)''&amp;r ronlrad .

LA Lak('l'5 - Sllf'l'd forw11rd Kurl
Rambl!l to a rn.~ltl· ~ar rontnK'I .
Phlllldclphla - Slp;npd cmf£1" ,k&gt;f'r (lou. ·

.,_

Gronr&amp;u

-

F-

N&amp;mfd

Nair

Your Social Security

Bike-a-thon planned

Disability: who qualifies
for the monthly payment?

'cause they knew about Dorothy
and Toto. ·
"Ride · Against Childhood.
Gues\S ot the Shusters were Mrs.
Cancer," a bicyHitri1ett J~ and her daughters,
cle event for the
Jan Brax and Marty Lew Jeffers.
benefit d St. Jude
Harriett and Mildred are first
Children's Hospicousins and the group visited the old
tal In Memphl$,
ltomeplace d the Grace Family In
wUl be held at 9
Pagetown - the late grandparents
a.m. Saturday,
of the I1W - with other local points
Oct. 5, at the
of interest for a couple of days
Meigs County Fairgrounds.
before a trlptotheFentonGiassCo.
Brenda Roush and Marjorie at WUllamsontown, W.Va. Mrs.
Smith are heading this year's Jeffers and her daughters left trom
· blke-a-thon for the hospital and WUUamstown for a quick visit to
there wUI be prizes for top riders. Amish country before starting on
Riders ' wUI secure sponsors 1o their return trek to Kansas. Mrs.
lnSUI1! the financial success of the Jeffers and her daughters--real
activity. Forms can he picked up at congenial people - loved Meigs
the various schools, according to County and were partiCUlarly
Roush and Smith, or Interested fascinated by the hills a Pomeroy.
persons can caiU call 9921-7357 or
992-7749. By the way, parents and
The Mississippi Queen which
.guardians must sign forms also for created so much excitement In the
participants under 18.
Big Bend area, I understand, will
not he passing out way again thisTerrle Long, administrator of the year. However, Bob Beegle says
romeroy income tax, advises that that Island Queen wUl be passing
all Individuals located or doing several times. It Is due to go
business In the Village of Pomeroy downriver on Sept. 26; up aga!J! oo.
must tue their third quarter of the Oct. 1 and down on Oct. 9; up again
declaration of estimated tax on or on Oct. U and down again oo Oct.
before Monday, Sept. 30.
29.
If you have not received the
Incidentally, Mr. and Mrs. Haappropriate quarterly forms, It Is rold Martin of Fort Lauderdale,
because you have not returned a Fla., wUl be aboard the Queen on
completed questionnaire to the the Oct. 1 trlp and Harold Is going to
Income tax dflce which Is located In ask the captain to give a special toot
vUlage hall at 320 E. Main St., Long In salute to Pomeroy as the, boat
says.
passes.
According to vUiage ordinance
Harold Is a former resident or
every person who has taxlble MeigS County and he · and Mrs.
Income or engages In any business, Martin have visited frequently here
profession, enterprise or activity over the years. They'D have stops at
Fubject io the tax, tbat Is not Gautpolls and Marietta on their
already being withheld, shaU file a early October trip.
· ~laratlon set!lng forth estimated
Income or the estlmat.ed profit or
Betty and Joe Foster have found
loss from business activities to- a once-filled helium balloon near
gether with tbe estimated due due. their hOme on Sorden Rnad, orr
or course, there are penaltlels If Eagle Ridge. The balloon was
you fail to comply. An offender Is launched by Mary BUurstlng,
subject to a maximum fine of $500 Bluffton, Ind., as a part of the
or six months In jaU, or both.
activities of youngsters from the
· lf you have any questions or have First United Methodist Church at
not received the necessary forms to Ossian, Ind. The Fosters wUI get in
'meet the Monday deadline do call touch with Mary to Jetherknowjust
.the office at 992·7000.
how far her balloon traveled.

.-

Arrhlbald

'

Mildred and Gerald Shuster
:entertained a trio of lnteresttrig
people from Oskaloosa, Kan. -and
they were authentic, I 'In surE',

aM!atant ba&amp;IIP.Iball &lt;"'e('h.

T.ampa Bll:Y - PIIK't"d RUircl Grnr
Sancl'n on II'IJUrftd ~·

We may have occasional flooding

ot the Ohio River, but aren't we
fortunate to be without hurricanes
and earthquakes! DokeepsmWng.

'(USFSltMII)

. 'nJE!IDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Revival at
Middleport Nazarene Church, beginning Tuesday and continuing
through Sunday. Services 7 p.m.
nightly and 9:30. a.m . Sunday.
Public Invited.

A Dhloloo oiMoHt-la, JO&lt;.

Published rvrry aftrrnoon, Monda y
through Frklay. 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Publlll hlng Company/ Multimedia, ·Jnc.,
PomProy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-n!Wi. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
Member: UnUed Press International,
Inland Dally Press Auoclatlon and the
Ohio Newapaper Association. Natlonal
Adverttslng Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 7~ 'third Avf'llue,
New York, New York 10017.

HARRISONVll.LE - HarrtsonvUil' Senior Citizens wUl meet 6p.m.
Tuesday with a supper to celebrate
July, August and September birth·
days. Bring a covered dish. Visitors
welcome.

POSTMASTER: Send address chnnaeA
In The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

SVIISCRIMlON RATES

Br Canter or Moler a...
One W£&gt;ek .... .. ...... ..... ...... ........... $1.10
One Month ... .. .... .......... ...... ... .

t .. sc.ao

One Year ... .. ............ ......... ......1• S57.20'
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dall y .... ...... .. ......·.. .... .. .. .... .. . 25 CentS
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car·
rler may remit in advanc~ direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit will be glv~n earner each
month.
No subscriptions by mall permitted in
towns where home carrier servlc~ 11

Mason, W.Va.
WEDNE!DAY
MIDDLEPORT
FeeneyBennett Post 128, American Legion,
and the Auxiliary wUI meet Wednesday night at the hall. A 6:30 dinner
wUl precede the meetings at 7:30
p.m. Dues are payable. The Legion
District 8 conference will be held at
Wellston, Sunday, while the AuxU·
lary district conference wUI he at
Middleport on Oct. 3.

POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter d Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
wUI meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at the
Senior Citizen's Bulldlng. Pledge
members will meet 6:30p.m. prior
'to the regular meeting.

LONG BOTTOM- Long Bottom
Community Association wlll meet
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the community buDding. Ladles of the
Association wUl meet at 6: 30p.m. to
finalize plans for the fall
· smorga5bord.

' POMEROY - Past Matrons,
Pomeroy Chapter Order d Eastern
Star meeting, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
home of Mrs. J .W. McMurray,

POMEROY- Wildwood Garden
Club will meet Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. at the home of Ada Holter.
Members are to bring materials ror

.

.

avallabl~.

J..lde Ohio
•
13 Weeks ...... ......................... .. . flt.:li

;; ~:::: ::::: ::::::::::::::::::

W'1th "• Sm'1le"
·

Locat.d In lacint, OK.

13 Weeks

O.tolde Oldo

:::::::::: :i:~:
,,. ~

· ·26 Weel&lt;s ..................................
... .. .................. ........... UJ.20

~~~~==::~~~~~~=~~~!2~W~ee~k~s~..~.. ...~~.. ..~-~.. -~..~.. -~.. ~...~..~...~..~.. ~159~-~110~

SALE.
•

PEDIATRICS
I would like to announce
the opening of my new office.in
Point Pleasant, West Virginia
OFFICE HOURS

(304) 675·7300
LOCATED : Suire 113 M.dical Office
Building at Pleasant Volley Hospital
Point Pleasant, West Virg inia

ln the last article, we talked about
the history and Intent of the
dlsabU!ty programs under Social
Security. As we said, disability
benefits are paid only when a
person's Impairment Is severe
enough to prevent the worker from
performing any kind of work at all.
No payment Is made for partial or
temporarily disabling Injuries such
as a broken arm or leg simply
because Congress dld noi Intend the
program to c()ver temporary absences from work.
A worker quallftes for dlsablllty
benefits by having Social Security
covered employment for five of the
10 years prior to the onset of the
disability. Because younger Income
earners would have difficulty meet·
lng that five of 10 requirement, less
. work credit Is needed for a man or
woman 31 years old or younger.
A 22-year-old, for example, could
receive dlsabUity benefits with as
STYLE SHOW AND cABo PARTY- Kay Hardway, owner of
little as six quarters of coverage,
Protllel ModellqiMudlo, Galllpola, and sevel'lll of her modelo wW 111age
just a year and a half of Social
a style revue lor the l'receptor Beta Beta Cbaplel' d Beta Sigma Phi
Security covered work. This Is
Sorority 'lbul'lday ullfK. Tile models wW l!how clotlmg from atores 1n
Important Income protection for a
P(llllei'Oy and Middleport at 7: 30 p.m. precedlog tbe card pal'ly at the
young tamUy should the breadmunicipal hnUcHug Ia Pomeroy.
winner suffer a disabling Injury or
Impairment because both the chUd·
ren and the other parent could be
eUglble for monthly benefits, too.
ln addition to the disability
coverage for the Income earner,
there are two other categories of
disability benefits which expand the
Lenora Lellhelt was named services are underway at the Rock protection further. Widows and work. Remem ber, if you have any
chairman for the annual commun- Springs United Methndlst Church
questions about Social Security, be
lty halloween party to be held at the this week. The program by Teresa
sure to contact our office.
Rock Springs Grange hall next Ahbott Included articles entitled
Mr. and Mrs. George Arnold of
month when the Rock Springs "Anesthesia" by Mrs. Leifheit;
Better Health Club met at the horne "Special Precau\lons for Outpa· Granada Hills, Callf., visited with
of Helen Blackston.
tlents" by Beuna Grueser; "Every her aunt, Mrs. Gladys Williams and
Adonatlonwasmadetothecystlc Drug Safety Rule' ' by Louise Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Balderwon.
Kim Reed was an overnight guest'
fibrosis lund, and contributions to Folmer; "Aspirin" by Frances
of
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Long at Belpre.
the club were made by Agnes Dixon Goegleln; "Antibodies" by Mrs.
Mr.
and Mrs. C. Ed Humphrey
and Harold Blackston for use or Abbott; 'Tylenol" by Phyllis
some medical equipment following Skinner: and "Six Steps for Drug recently celebrated their 42nd
wedding a nniversary.
his recent accident. Also noted was Safety" by Nancy Abbott.
Mr. and Mrs. John Ludwick of
the donation of a cane by the famlly
The contest conducted by Mrs.
of Mark Grueser Sr.
Abbott was won by MOdred Jacobs West Jefferson visited with her
PbyD!s Skinner opened the meet· and Louise Bearhs. Louise Folmer fat her , Ben Buckly.
Mr. and Mrs. Dohrman Reed
ing with the Lord's Prayer and the will host the. October meeting with
vac
a tion ed In P e nnsylvani a
pledge to the Dag. Mrs. Leifheit had
Helen Blackston to have the
recently.
devotions and for roll can members program and Louise Bearhs, the
Mrs. Eloise Ludwick of West
commented on what they Hke best contest. Attending the meeting
.
Jefferson,
Mrs. Ma rilyn Coulson of
about fall. Officers' reports were besides those named were Beuna
Torch,
Mrs.
Zit a McCain of Coolgiven by Louise Folmer, treasurer, Grueser, Violet Hysell, Frances
ville
and
Mrs.
Vivian Humphrey
Goegleln, Louise Folmer, Ann
and Nancy Morris, secretary.
recently dined out to celebra te the
It was announced that revival Mash, and Michael Leifheit.
birthdays of Zita and Vivian.
Dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Pickens recently were Mr.
and Mrs. George Arnold of Grana dried picture.
p.m. Everyone Is Invited.
ada Hills, Calif. , Key Long of
Belpre, Mrs. Gladys Williams a nd
THURSDAY
Free doOtlng day
Ruth Anne Balderson.
POMEROY - Meigs Chapter of
POMEROY- Free clothing day
David Brown of Columbus and
Make Today Count will ·meet at 7 wUI be held Thursday at the
Mr.
and · Mrs. Walter Brown
p.m. Thursday at the SenlorCitlzens Salvation Army, Butternut Avenue,
vacationed
In Canada.
Center In Pomeroy. All persons with Pomeroy, from 10 a.m. untU noon.
Mrs. Sophia Gaudette of Lowell,
life threatening Ufnesses, their AU area residents In need of clothing
Mass.
and Bob Gaudette of Wafriends and relatives are Invited.
are welcome to come.
shington, D.C. visited Mrs . Evelyn
Mundry a nd Mrs. and Mrs. Cheste r
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta Grange anniversary
Mundry Jr. and Lori. They also
Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
RACINE -The 50th anniversary
Sorority, will have a card party and of Racine Grange wUI he celebrated visited with Chester Mundry Sr., a
style show at 7: 30Thursday night at Oct.l3, 2:30p.m., at the grange hall. patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospita l, Pomeroy.
the Pomeroy village hall. .
The celebration Is open to the public
and past masters are invited to
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport come. Three 50 year pins and
Presbyterian Church Women's As- cerUficates and one 25 year pin wUI
sociation wUI have a potluck dinner be awarded.
Thursday, 6:ll p.m., at the church.
Group I will present the program.
Garden tractor puB
SPECIALIZATION
HARRISONVll.LE - A garden
POMEROY -Mid-weekservlces tractor puU, sponsored by the Scipio
LOW BACK PA IN • PINCHED NERVES (SPIN E)
NECI&lt; &amp; SHOULDER SYNDROME • EXTREMITI ES • HEADA CHE
at Morse Chapel Church wUI begin Township Volunteer Fire Deparl·
SCIATICA • FAIL ED DISC SURGE RY • ATHL ETIC INJURIES
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. A you !It ment, wUI be held Sunday, SePSYS TEMIC DISORDERS • NUTRITION AL WORK ·UPS
program wUJ he held Monday at6:30 tember 29, at the fire station In
SCOLIOSIS SCREENING (SPINAL CURVATURE )
I
INJURY , PERSONAL , AUT O , INDUSTRI AL
Harrisonville. The pull will begin all
BLOOD ANALYSIS • LABORATORY • PHY SlCAL THERAPY
p.m. and wUI feature 800, !Ql, lOill,
1100 and 1:ro lb. weight classes.
Medicare &amp; Ohio &amp; W. Va . Workman ' s Compe ns ation
Entry fee Is $3. Gate admission Is
The annual Sinclair famlly reun· $.50. Refreshments will be
WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.
!on was held recently at the home of available.
Noel and Anna Sinclair, Athens,
2415 Jackson Ave. 304-675-6433 Point Pleasant
with a potluck dinner at noon.
Games were enjoyed during the
aflernonn with pictures being taken
and the history of the family being
presented.
Recognlz6l were Dick and
Wanda Davis and family, Frank·
ford , Ky. and Sonny and Barbara
Family participation in funeral services is becomKegley and famUy , Wallingford,
ing increasingly common as more people realize that
Ky. who traveled the farthest; Ora
this is one way to make services more personal and
M. Sinclair, Pomeroy, the oldest;
at the same time allow mourners to express more
Elizabeth Jean Barrett, the
fully the ir love for the deceased.
youngest.
Family members, including children , can take part
OthersattendlngwereRobbleand
in
luneral services in a variety of ways. These in Lynn, Bob and BUlle ·J r. Barrett,
clude
readings or prayers, prose or poetry readings,
Jacksonville; Gayle and Denny
or
special
music . Carefully considered and preRosenholfer and Sarah, Chris and
pared,
such
personal contributions to the service
Duane Miller, Peebles; Paul and
help
honor
the
memory of the deceased .
Mildred Hauber, Melody Roberts,
Clyde Adams, Long BOttom; DeWe have had quite a bit ol experience with arranging
lores and Robbie Hawk, Charles,
funeral services unique to each situation, and weal·
Margaret and Chad Sinclair, Robert
ways follow your wishes exactly. If you would like to
and Mary Bowles, Pomeroy.
talk about family participation in services, please
Robert, Anne and Angle Sinclair,
call us or stop by.
Kenneth, Shirley, Pau~ Carolyn.
Craig and Brenda Sinclair, Shade;
Vlrglnla and Lori Freeman, Todd
Sml~•
Cooper, Sam Davis, Viola and
Brandl Sturgill, Christy and Cben1e
(1141 11Nl41 .
Billllower
Jame5 N. Blower
MIDDL..aiiT, ~tO
Aldrich. Jackson, and Ron and Nota
Bretz, Columbus.

Rock Springs Better
Health Club meets

ReedsviUe ,notes

---

WAUGH CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC, INC.

CAN MY FAMILY PARTICIPATE?

WllLIAM c. CAlLIHAN, n,
M.D.

Monday through Friday
9 :00a . m . to 5 :00p . m .

widowers Who are disabled can
receive monthly checks as early as
age 50.
lf the deceased spouse had ·
enough Social Security work credit
and the physical or menial Impairment Is severe enough to be
considered disabling, then benefits
can he paid. This type or dlsablllty
benefit Is also available to divorced
widows and widowers providing
that the marriage to the Income
ea rner lasted at least 10 years.
People with dlsablllties that
began before age 22 may be eligible
for childhood dlsablllty benefits
based on a parent's earnings. One
of the disabled person's parents
must either be receiving a Social
Security benefit or have died with
enough work credit to allow a
survivor's benefit .
Many of those with disabled
children are relieved to find that a
monthly income Is available for
their children. With that knowledge, a lot of parents structre trust
fund accounts with other resources
to supplement the Socia l Security
benefits their children wUl receive
upon the pai'E'nts' deaths.
Rounding out the comprehensive
package or protection Social Security provides, all disability beneficiaries who have received benefits
for 24 months are entitled to both
paris of Medicare.
The next colu mn will be devoted
to the paths avaUable to a disablll ty
beneficiary who wanls to go back to·

Sinclair reunion

Mall SubocrlJIII...

$181

· By Lou Harvath
F1eld Representative

·Community cale:ntlar / area happenings

The Daily Sentinel

8 PACK _ 16 OZ.

~Service

at Oaklllld (RIJo

1·31. 10:3!5 p.m.
We'

Beat of the bend

!lel&amp;lnel S&amp;alf Wrlltlr

70 Ill .481 15

(W'UUimll~J.IUS

Page- 6

By IIOB HOEFLICH

,~

:::=:~

18 z •
17 19
15 z

received by many outdoorsmen and
sportsmen throughout the United
States and was especially welcomed
by members of MelgsCounty's local
I would like to thank Sentinel
hunting and fishing organizations.
Annually. the Ken Arnsbary Chap- staffer Dave Harris for his work on
ter of lzaak Walton organizes Us
the recent pigskin picks that our '
_portion ct the national event. At last · staff bas published. I would like to
word, plans have heen formulated
especially thank each member d
for a varil'ty of activities this the panel and our weekly guests.
Saturday a t Royal Oak Pa rk near
By the way Dave Harris has heen
the Meigs football statistician for a
Pomeroy.
September 28 wUI mark the 14th number of years and has done a
annual observance of National tremendous job compllllng and
Hunting and Fishing Day. NHFDay keeping records for the Marauders.
was established by the President at lfDave lsn't Meigs' nutnberonefan ,
the request of Congress in 1972 as a he certainly Is In the top five. He also
means of giving recognition to supports aUMeigs County teams.
Speaking of statisticians, Bill
hunters and fishermen for their
many contributions to conserva tion. Hoback and Ike Spencer have qone a
NHF Day is sponsored by more than !lne job for the Tornadoes and have
forty conservation organ izations certainly helped this writer wllh hls
' across the United States, Including accounts of the game.
Izaak Walton.
Eastern has the most complete
Palmer, this year's chairman, staff of statisticians that this writer
said, "I am pleased to serve as has seen for a long time. They know
Honorary Chairman lor National exactly how, when ,andwhereevery
Hunting and Fishing Day and to play happened duringthecourseofa
have the opportunity to encourage game. I would like to commend this
people to conserve our natural and group for an outstanding job.
wUdlife resources."
Among the statisticians are John
Palmer noted that hunters· and Beaver, Lee Gainer, Rogie Gaul,
" fishermen play a "major role In this Charlie Massar, Mike Hauber, and
country's conservation programs Troy Bearhs .These young men
l hro u gh t heir c lub s a nd were outstanding players In their
organizations."
own time and aU were members of
Eastern's 1()..() SVAC championship
Southern grid Coach BUI Hensler team In 1981.
Is more than happy to have the help
After last week's game it looks as
of Steve Deaver. That's Reverend though the Eagles are again oo the
Steve Deaver, the newly assigned right track despite suffering a 10-8
minister at the Racine First Baptist loss to Buffalo-Putnam.
Church. Reverend Deaver Is curIn closing I would Uke to again
rently team chaplain and Is also a congratulate Meigs for another
key asset on the sideline since he has great game. UntU next time I'll see
much experience d his own on the you in the victory circle.

~

73 11 .WI 12

·sm

2.1.112

This announcement was well

-

DeJ67 -

Bt e .5&amp;1
7T ?2 .5]7

(Jclnd

225 1.1

gridiron.
Reverend Deaver played college
football at AustlnPeayUnlversltyin
Clarksville, Tennessee.
Currently the luckless Tornadoes
are 04, but legitimately could he at
least 2-2, or possibly better, with
some of the statistics they have
compiled . I,ast week Injuries
plagued the Tornadoes, but I'm sure
they have the ability to come back
for a strong finish In the league.

an~

5I •

C'.t.llt
KC
Chi.

AJ.M and Tl")ta.. ,Christlan .

BY SCO'J'I' WOLFE
Arnold Palmer, one of the finest
play~rs In the history of golf and
often described as the most popular
golfer In America, will serve as
Honora ry Chairman lor National
Hunting and Fishing Day, Septemher 28.

eM .G.

CM ..

vol~ : Art!:ona, Bayklr,
(;eor2ia, Miami 1F1a 1. Mln n£'50fa, NOi rr
!Jam('. Soo th Carolina. T('fiTH!ft' , Texa!

7. 0k la hm SI!I lt t20'1 :111 6
8. Louisiana Stal t2-lh 293 9
9. Mlrhl.llan ti t t:Mh ?JO 15

u.,

.... ..., 12\!

""'

MIW....

Tu~~Se~amber24, 1985

LN.Oa

lll!ll.m .. 61 . . '
., • .1M
11 Tl .!J) Jll,i

NY
II&lt;""

1-Unrankl&gt;d.
Ottn-s l"l"«"lvln~~:

Statt• t.lOt t'i.'i li
6. PmnStal&lt;' tJ.Ot
3:!7 8

W

,.,.

12. Brigham YnR(l-11 191 to
1:'1 . Arkunsa~ t2-0t
152 14
l!l. Nctra!!IUI IJ.lt
l lA 17
15. Marylllll d 12·11
10716
16. Soullrrn Cal 11-11 !17 3
17. Virginia 1:2-01
19 z
IR. Air F oi'C'f' !1-0J .
19. Tl'xas t 1·01
2o. KansaS 1~ 0 1

~. Flor ida

10. Alabam n n_or

U . UCLA J2·1HI

-

. . _ , . , I£VRJII:

College ratings
l

lly The -Bend

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

Majors

The Daily Sentinel

.,

Starting~ ~CenbriTrustis

:
havingaSakon~JVU really uxmt.:

~

MemberFDIC

ii·

POLICEMAN OF THE YEAR- Davttllleller; a .aJeer wllb the
Mit be" Pollee DepMmiiJI fer the Jlllll&amp; five ,_.., uhcted
•• ·~ of the Y_.' Mid pr nfll a pllqne .._,, - of
~G&amp; II de S&amp;tv- l'on•"'J, It manted lo tile farn8o o-A HI ilrlcll C
Pm•Gi· Tiley !Jaw two dau....... Vlllerle Ala IIIII 8linlb' IAe lllld
live lo BeyaaldlburJ.

- ......-k-----"'-""'----·--...-·- -.. - ----·----- -- -

~.~

ff--1 .JfoMe

-' .

Plut. . .Attention to Oet•lll

'

�..
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Seminal

Tua1dey. September 24, 19815
Tuasday,

Nancy Reagan visits earthqq8ke .devastation
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - Amid

concern" Americans have lor
Mexico and to present a U.S.
the ruin, rubble and acrld dust from
government
check lor S1 million the collapse of much of Mexico City,
equal
to
385
million
pesos.
llrst lady Nancy Reagan says she
The first lady zipped !rom the
found her four-hour tour of the
ornate presidential palace where
earthq uake wreckage "j ust
she gave the check to President
overwhelming.'"
Miguel de Ia Madrid and his wife,
The first lady made a detour to the
Paloma, to the scene of turtous
Mexican capital Monday on her way
to a four-day stay In Los Angeles to , rescue efforts to find survivors In a
devastated apartment bufidlng.
s pread a "".neighbor-to-neighbor""
She also visited a relief center and
message of ""sympathy, love and

,

•

l
j

1'1

I

a boapllal, llnlshlllg ller tour at the
U.S. Embassy, telling the workers
they had proven, "Whatever we're
asked to do, we'D do."
Thrwghout the day, when asked
her reactions, the tlrslladyfound the
sUver Unlng In the earthquake's
cloud of death and destructJon.
""The whole day was emotional
but It's wonderfUl becaull! we're all
working ~... she said upon
leavtng the city's atrpon. ""I have

_ ....

.... .....-

/

atretdliJia out a hand d sympatl!y,
love and ccmcem.~·

But asked her IIUI1lii8IY

of the
day, she IIUide a dipk)malle point.

"OVerall, I wu very Impressed
with the Mexican people and de Ia

""'~

Madrkl's command of the situation," abe said.
American reporters saw a grimfaced 11rst lady who showed Utile
outward emotion. She cmce bit her
lip as she watched workers dig

•/

J

tremendoul admiration for the
Mexican people and what they are
doing themlelvell.''
Reagan stoutly denied shewu &lt;11
a dlplomalle mlulon or even a
aood:wW ml•elon, clelc:rlblq It cmty
as ""one aeJabbar to another

/ ·~

througiJ the concrete of an apart·
ment compleX and her eyes grew
moist as sbe talki!d with a W(ll!lan
rwlllJna a rellef a!nter.
"Just overwhebntng," she said
after talking to tlle woman.
Olltalde, a minute before. a man
csme walling down the sideWalk,
apparently haYing beard bad news
about a loved ooe: Two other men
comtorted ldmand the three moved
away, all crying and shouting.
In Interviews at the Mexican
airport, aboard her Air Force jet
and at the Los AJI&amp;eles airport, the
first lady did not relate any personal
details when asked to sum up her
journey ·but seelllO!d fascinated by
the use of dogs who can sniff out

-

Busines~.· .~ Services

people burled alive In the wreckage.
She said she would can her
husband Monday nlgbtanduponher
return woukl give him a letter from
de Ia Madrid thanking the
government for the money and
praising Reagan for encouraging
the victims and rescue workers.
Reagan had planned to spend ihe
week In Los Angeles after visiting
her alllng mother, Edith Davis, ·In
Phoenix Monday. She postponed the
visit to her mother to go to Mexico.
Shewu to attend a lund-raiser for
the Jotfrey Ballet tonight, make
publlc service announcements on
drug and alcohol abuse at NBC
studios Thursday and then receive
an award from the EntertaJnment
Industry Council for rer efforts.

r:=::~~~===:;rr;:=======:::;r;::=·=·~======:;,::~===·====:::;~;:::;::=::~===:::;~ FOUND · 9·22· 86 amolt
~· ACCENT
INTERESTED IN A
J&amp;L BLOWN
1 •Complete Rtmodelinc ~~~ 6~4-~7.'2:l:s":.toy Rd.
FENCE &amp; SUPPLY
NEW VEHICLE
Roger Hyse I doom Additions

puppy near Charolai1 Hilla

u.s.

,
I.

PH. 992·6931

'fter 5

Call

742-2027

"Free Estimates"
lnslallation Avallablo

1

SUPEIIOI
SIDING CO.
Complete Gunar Work

~

"Free Estimatea"
CAll COllECT:

P.h. (614) 843-5425
911212 mo. pd.

r'

Ollllpellt, hie

1111/tln

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
*ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELLITE SALES &amp; SERVICE
W• Han ~ hll Tl••
Sho~ Tnhllclu
OR

Ollf

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHEsrtR.....:985·3307

4/1/tln

'
SLOW TASK - Rescue workers remove debris, a
brick a1 a time, by hand, wbDe~hiDg fonurvlvon!
buried under a collapsed building. Many people wt!l"e

If you ar'e hiJhly motivated, up for 1 ch•llence
and sales onented this may be your opportunity. We currently hlvt a position open in our
Circulation Dtpt. for someone with 100d people skills, able to work with both youth and
adult carriers and can insure all accounts are
collected. this position requires hard work and
a positive attitude.
Apply by sendinl resume to Box 8,
% The Daily Sentinel, 1ll Court St ..
Pomero , Ohio 45769

••

buried alive after earthquakes shook Mexico City 1as1
week. UPI.

Monroe death still listed as suicide
LOS ANGELES ( UPI) -Seeking
But If the pollee were seeking to
to dispel23 years of speculation that end the controversy over Monroe's
Marilyn Monroe was murdered and death they did not succeed.
authorities covered It up, pollee ,
have released their Investigative
Anthony Summers, a former BBC
report , but It does not stlll the
reporter whose book on Monroe's
controversy over the death of one of life and death wlll he released this
the world's best known sex symbols.
week, said from New York that he
Chief Daryl Gates said Monday obtained the same material earlier
the report confirms t he official
this year and characterized It as
version of Monroe's death In 1962"superficial.''
that she committed suicide by
"There Is no way the material
swallowing dozens of sleeping pUis.
could be regarded as substantll!l
A department spokesman said the enough to quell reasons lor (furtrer)
report was released to dispel
Inquiry into why Marilyn died," he
"specula tion, Innuendo andout·and·
said. ""I don't claim that she was
out lies"" tha t Monroe was murdered
murdered, but tre case remains
and th at pollee and coroner's open. I don't think she committed
ofllcials covered It up to protect suicide. It was eltrer accidental or
At tomey General Roher! Kennedy.
she was murdered.''
The half· lnch·thlck report coun·
Critics of the olflclal suicide
ters charges raised In an October
theory claim Monroe was Injected
1975 article In Out magazine that with the fatal drug dosage, but the
suggested Monroe, 36, was mur·
pollee report stated that such
dered with a lethal Injection of Injections would have caused puncbarbit urates.
ture wounds and needle marks,
The magazine suggested the which were not found during the
pollee a nd coroner distorted evl·
autopsy.
dence to protect Kennedy, who. the
Another section ol the report was
article c laimed, was present when
devoted Coroner Theodore J . Cur·
Monroe r eceived the Ia tal overdose,
phey"s contention that Monroe was

.------------L--------·
I

I

Curb Inflation

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
FEDERAL NATIONAL
MORTGAGE
CORPORATION.
Plolntlff
- VI. -

CARL SCHULTZ. JR . Idee.)
Etal
Defendants

CASE NO . 85-CV-234
Judge Knight

NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE.

I
I
I
I
I

Carl Schultz. Jr. and Jef·
lrev Scott Schultz, whoae
last known residence is Carl
Schultz, Jr.• Route 3, BOx

Public Notice
LEANER. SAMPSON

So ROTHFUSS CO .• L.P.A. '
Attomeya for Pl1lnllft

Cincinnati. Ohio 45202
191 17. 24;
110 1. 8.16. 22. 6tc
Public Notice
86-7811·TP-PEX
LEGAL NOTICE
Notic:o il honoby givon thot
Morv Jono T_,. ond
other ...- . ol the
CooMie E•ch- ol The
W...... A_.. Tolephono
Compony how 0 COlli·
ploint ""' Pubic Utltizioo

Com........, ot Ohio-·

CJassifleds and

ma-.

Savell I

-.u.

I

mo-by--

, . ,.

Homicide ruled in ·patient's death
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Franklin
County Coroner WIUiamAdrlon has
released tre results of an autopsy
showing that the death of an Ohio
State University Hospitals patient
was a homicide.
Ricky DeLong, 21, of Columbus
died In January 1984wllenhechoked
on a piece of gauze that had been
placed deep In his throat. Adrian
said Monday. His death certificate
Indicated death was caused by
Injuries received In an car crash.
DeLong's body was ordered
exhumed earlier this year as part of
an Investigation of Dr. Michael J.
Swangu, who was a surgical Intern
at the hospital from June 1983 to
June1984.
Swango Is under Investigation In
connectkm with several SUIPiclous
deaths that occurred at the holpltal
while he was an intern there. The

probe began after Swango was
charged In Quincy, Dl., with the
non-fatal polsonlngsofslxparamed·
lcs he worked with there last year.
He was sentenoed to five years In
prison last Aug. 23 after being
convicted of placing an arsenic·
based ant polson In the food and
drink of the paramedics.
Adrlon also released the results of
an autopsy on a second body
exhumed as part of the lnvesliga·
tlon. It showed Ruth M. Barrick of
Coshocton died of natural causes.
TheautopsyofDeLong'sbodydtd
not show any evidence of poisoning,
Adrton said.
However, Assistant Franklin
County Prosecutor Edward Morgan
said the jliuoa:ulor's office does not
plan to conclude Its Investigation of
Swango untD sclentlall develop a
test that can detect the polson ricin tn

y.,, Plirlifl N"''

furniture, Wttltling
and Graduation
Stationwy, Ma ..etic

Signs, lubbor Slamps,
lu1in111 Forms,
Copy Strvicn, ltc.
2SS Mill St., MidlltpOft
104 Mulb•rr "'·· l'omeror

992-3345

3/2/lln

"""*·

subject to abrupt mood changes and I
355. Rocino. Ohio 45n1 lng t h o - - oltwoand Jeffrev Scotl Schultz. woy. nonoptiDMI oKtondecl
had a his lory of taking barbiturates. I
Address Unknown, and the lfN .-vice beturoiua1 the
"On these occasions, she had I
unknown hein, devisees, le- CooMie E~~eh- o1 The
"I
called lor help and h~d been "' I
exacutora, admlnl•· weotom R...,.. . Tolephono
I gatees.
tratora. spouse• and aaalgns Company ond the Po"*"y
rescued," Curphey said In tre I
I and the unknown guardian&amp; Exchonge . ol Gononll Toloreport, "From the ln!ormatlon I
I of minor and / or incompe- phono
Compony ol Ohio. The
collected about the events of the I
I tent heirs of Carl Schultz, Jr. Commisoion hM oclloduled
evening of Aug. 4, II Is our opinion I
I and Jeffrey Scott Schults. this
Caoo No. 115· 7811·
of whon reaidences are TP-PEX. for pUblic - . . on
I
I all
that the same pattern was repeated
unknown,
will
take
notic;e
I · Wrih! your own id and ordrr by mail INith tllisl that on the 22nd dey of Au· Thurodoy. Oct-.. 24. 19B6.
- except for the rescue."
ot 9:30 o.m .. 01 tho T I coupon. Cancel yaur .t by phone when rou get 1 guat,
Federal Na- Piain~ Fire Oepertinent. Route
Curphey said massive doses of
, results. Moner not refundable.
1 tional 1986,
I
Mortgage Corpora· 8111 . T _ . Ploinl. Ohio
Nembutal and chloral hydrate I
tion tiled Its certein Com· 46783. At tho
I
ol
""gulped within a minute or two" I
plaint in the Cqmmon Pleaa
Name
____________
;
portioo
of
....
be
Court of Meigs County, afh:wded an opporturdy to
killed tre glamor queen .
Ohio, in c..e No . 86·CV·
Chief Gates said the report shows
OYidonce - n t 10
I 234 on the docket of said ""'
thio .....
Monroe's death was dellnltely a
Addr•~------------------1 Court. and the object and Anyopocific
1i-- of
porty moy
prayer
suicide.
of
which
••id
Com·
I
obt.in further lnformotion M·
plaint is to foreclose said gordlng thlo
"She committed suicide by bar·
Phone
plaintiH'a mortgage
,.. lng on inquiry 10 tho Public •
blturates; that Is the reality, and
corded In Mortgage Book Utilities Commi11ion, 180
there Is nothing very special about II
136. Pogo 861. Moiga Eut B - SUM!. Columbuo.
Print one word in eath
C ircl&lt;"'
County, Ohio Recorde. upon Ohio 43216,
except lor tre fact that she was
1pa~e below. la1h iniMI
the following described real
or gntup of tigurn touth
Ad Wc1nted
MarUyn Monroe. It's not a pretty
estate, record title 10 which THE PUBUC UTIUTIES COMas o word. (ouat nollt
story, " Gates said. "It's very
10 I 11 alleged to be held Uy Carl MISSION OF OHIO
t
3
6
and ddnn or phw
tragic."
"umbtf il ustd. You'll ttl kd• ..
days ~ays I Schulcz. Jr. by deed re· . By : Mary Ann Orlinski,
in DMd Book 26 7. Socm.y
bet ftr re1ul11 it yoy • ·
Censored from the report were
I corded
Page 1. Meigs County, Ohio
1nib1 tuN'f, tiv• Pfiu. rN
I DMd Records, t owit:
telephone numbers from Monroe's
lribuno J•ttfw.. tht riglli loll Sl.Ou $1.00 $11 . 00 $13.00
19117. 2411011. 3tc
Beginning 1t en Iron pipe
last phone bUI, and death scene
~
Ia das11fW', edit ., rejtcl
I
locotod
ot
the
aouthuot
an' ad. Your all will h Tt 2i suo SI,OO Sl 3.00 $11.00
Public Notice
photos taken at her home In Los
comer of lot No. 3 ' of
I
.
put
in
th
proP.•r danificl·
Angeles.
1 lion if you II chtck tht
TYREE'S
SUBDIVISION
1t ll SI.OO StO.OO '1 s .oo $!l.OO I withi11 Racine Village; lhence NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Gates said the deletions were I proper boa htlow.
OF FIDUCIARY
,
I north 333.2 fHt to the cenmade "to protect people's privacy.''
Septa- 6. 1986. In
I'
I ter of St•te ROute No. 124; thoOnMeigs
ThtH ca1h rutes
County Probote
I
I thence eatt 114 feet with Coon. CoM No.
indttde diuounl
24882. Tino
I
]Wanled
I
I State Route No. 124; thence R. Rooonboum. Route 4. Hy·
Sate
lOUth
21"
30"
..
.,
318
feet
;
I (( !For
oolt Run Rood. Pomotoy. Ohio
JAnnouncemenf
11.
II thence wesl 246.2 feet to 46769.
I 1 !For
wu 1~1 AdRent
the
pblce
of
beginning.
conI
tl.
1 taining 1 .4 acres, more or
!9. _ _ _ _ _ 1
Oougllo
A. olR_,beum.
·
tho - ·....
ol
bodies.
Mtsa.
-.toto ol Route 4. Hyoott
All
of
the
above
name
deHe said Investigators want to test
20. _
--_
' -_
-_
-2. _ _ _ _ __
R.., Rood. P"""""y Ohio
2!.
_
_
fendant• are required to an- 45769.
•
for ricin In tissues taken from the
3 . _ _ _ _ __
21. _ _ _ _ __
swer on or before the 201h
Robert
E."lluctc.
bodies of several people who died
dav of November, 1 981, or
. Proboto Judge
they might be denied a hear·
under suspicious circumstances at
5. _ _ _ _ __
leno K. Noooelro&lt;od. Clerk
1J. ----u
______
_
the hospital.
(9) 10. 17, 24 ltc
lS. _ _ _ _ __
Investigators are parllcularty
:M, _ _ _ _ __
1.
lnteresled In tre testsbecaUII!pollce
RMI Eltate General
27. _ _ _ _ __
found "recipe cards" describing
'
how to make ricin and other poisons
In Swango's apartment In Quincy.
10. _ _ _ _ __
30. _ _ _ _ __
11.
In the DeLong homicide, Morgan
31. _ _ _ _ __
SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bed ~
said Investigators want to In~
:».
_
_
_
_
_
_
t3;
room1, 2 complete baths, dining
everyone who had contact with him
12.
:». _ _ _ _ __
durlni the 48 hours before be died.
room: lh(ing room and large reThey have not narrowed a list of
15. - - - : - - - - - 35.
Jj. _
-_
-_
-_
- -_
-_
creation room. · located on 8
suspecll, he said, partly becau~e
t6. - - - - - acres. large farm _pond. Racine
!leVeral of thole who had contact
-iiThiiCCIIIPGIWIIIRIIIIIttlnct
I ·; area.
with the victim have not cooperated
Tllellallrl..tlell
I
with Investigators.
111 C.rt Sl.
I
Morgan said Swango wp one 01
457"
!leVera! doctors and 111ne1 work1n1
on Del.ong'slloorwhen he died.
.~!-----------~~----.-.---~-

Pay Cash 'for

Ftt All

PLUS: Offict SuppliH &amp;
ing in thi1 caH.

I.------

_____
_
., ______

•Basements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; GE!s Lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

•

HUD
PLUMBING &amp;

1
========
14.-------

21------2'1.------

REAL ESTATE FOR S4LE

t:

,.._..,,o...

1

HOME NAnONAL BANK
. CALL 949·221 0-Ask for nm

LAin1loHom, Ohio

farm. antique, liquidation
sales. Uctnstd Ohio and

ON IACTING
Eatlf1!.1t~·-

We Alsp Carr¥
Fi•toino Supplies.
IUSINISS ~HONE
llt14) 992·6SSO

re~odellng

- Roofing 1nd gutlttf work

- Concrete work

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
Pom1roy. Ohio
12·B·tlc

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

New Homes Built

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls
3/11 /tfn

SALES &amp;SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorizod Joha Dure,
New Holland. Bush Hoc
Farm Eq~ipment
Dealer

F1r111 E•ulpllltlf

Sizes Start From 12'116'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

to 24"x36"

lnsu.l ated Dol Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
Racine. Oh ,
Ph. 614-843·5191

10-6-tlc

ANGIE'S PIZZA

•• ..,.......................no

locklf Panel1 ...............125
73· 79 ChOYy. Tr.

(ab (Ofntrs ...... -·..........120

All M1kts

•Wathen •Dishwasher•
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryer• •Freezers

Sal11

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

&amp; Service

Howord L. Writesel

ROOFING

Heal Pumps. Furnaces

NEW-REPAIR

446·9416 - 446·2112

Gutters · Downspouts

8/ 12/2

niOS

EYE THE
WANT ADS

FOA GIWIT IUYS
64 Misc. Merchandlae

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Cotl 304-678-2338.

mora information write COu·
pon Club, Rt. 1, box 14,
Southside. W . Va . 26187.

8· 13 tfn

a.

Nice male dog Bassett
Dachshund . Brown like
children, 4 yr. old. Call

BLUE STREAK CAB CO.'

t
t

Now S,rlng All 01
Mslg1 Counfg
t
end Suttoundlni''
-t
A,ltf 9/ 20/1 ~

STYUNG &amp;
TANNING SALON

614-367-0156 .
Abandoned : 2 fighting
cocks. Coil 61 4·446· 1 354,
Abandoned : 1 mala puppy 4
mos. old, black· tan. cute.
friendlv. will be medium

lizo . Cotl614·446-1354.
Abandoned : 1 female kitten.
4 mot. old, blue striped with
cream, cute friendly. Call

814-448-1354.
I-B-o- g-of- cl_o_lh-in_g___c_o_ll_6_1_4_·
388-8449.
2 ye1r old Registered female

lob. Coil 614·387· 7228.

••.

Jj,.,· .
PH. 992-3912

Bleck lab. puppy, 8 weeks

old , Cot1114-367-7228.
6 females Y.z Austrialian
Shephard, 1f2 Collie. Call

814-38B-9614.
6 kittens to good home. 4

TANNING SPECIAL

PAY FOI 11 SESSIONS '32.50
IECEIYE 1 SESSION FREEl

949-2263
or 949-2969 .

NOWTHRU OCT. 12TH

4/~/tln

yellow. 1 black . Call 614-

387· 7116.
Reg. red mtle Doberman 6

yHrO old . Coil 614· 387·
7781 ,
Electric

JtO'&lt;~e

to

gi'&lt;~l

awav

for porta. Coil 114-446·
1149,
Several .cores of wood to be
cut. Cut your...f . Trying to

cleor up. 114·843·5149 for

}Jimnry

diractiona.

LICENSED INSURED CERTIFIED

FIREPLACES &amp; WOOD STOVES
• CLEANING INSPECTION
• FLUE CAPS INSTALLED
• CHIMNEY REBUiLDING
....-::-·'\.

l -, \

\

'

j

"'"'·""'

~

"" TOTAL FIREPLACE
liND CHIMNEY WORK ""

INDUSTRIAL
STAINLESS STEEL UNERS

Sell AVON moko 45%. Coil
614-446-335B,
Dependable, mature wom1n
to care for elderly woman In
home. Send r11ume and
references to Box C21. c-o
Point Pleaunt Aegiater.

12

Homes for Sale

For sale by ownar. Modern 3
bdr. home frame, large
kitchen , plaanty of cabinets.
refrigerator &amp; electric r1nge,
disposal. diningroom, 2 full
batha. carpeted. full base·
ment finished, central air.
new gas fumance . fenced in
back yard, large carport,
ready to move in to. good
location on Sunaet Drive on
Upper Second Ave. Can help

finonce , Coli 614-448· 2573

or 614· 446·1171 .
3 bedrooms and bath . larkin
St., A utlend. Can be aold on
land contract with small
down payment. Call 814·

Situations
Wan1ed

Room and board for senior
citizena. retirees and dis·
abled. Special eare. 874
Plum St., ~iddleport . 614·

992-3695.

992-5858.
Six room hou1e on 49 acrea. ·
Full baaement, free heat,
pri'&lt;lata. close to towns. Call

814-992·7082 ,

Have vacancv for men or
women. Elderly only. Care,
room. boerd and laundry.

Coil 614-992-8022 .

Vacancy for the elderly in
our home . Trained and fif·
teen years experience. Call

814·992· 73!4 ,

6 rooms. bath, utility room .
Moving . Reduced price .
Good conditon . 814-992·

5204.
- - - - - - - - - - lwOB

9 rooms, 17 acres; garage
with shop overhead. cellar.
outbujldings, mineral rightl.
Contact R.T. Stewart, Ru-

ond S40 ooch. Firot

15

Schools

floor only. Write giVing
Instruction
directions. Witten Pianos, , - - - - -- - - Box 188. Sardia. Ohio 1

43948.
fillpliiYI IICIII
Se1 v1~e s

:r~illor.;rroinln,g_ !con·

of

Dayton for past 16 yean.
Real placement service emphaaized. For complete writ·
ten details call: Friendly

In Pomeroy. 6 room home
with bath, cerpeting, storm·
windows. new gaa fu.mace ,:
penial basement. storage
building. Reasonably prieed ..
Must aee to apprepiate. Calt.

614-992-6763 .

.

3 bedroom home, 8'/z per- ·
cent aeaumableloen. gard~on .
tpot . Reduced down to·

t49.000. 304-675-5047 . . .

Will paint trailer roofs &amp; cut
tobacco . Cell 614-266-

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

......

7 :PM. Mon.-Fri. 514-890·
0222.

31

Cot! oflor 6PM. 814-2B8·
5237.

WANTED Ladiet interested

·~-;·

Aluminum acrep. Sell your
aluminum scrap direct to the
smelter. Buying 111 grades of
aluminum. Premium paid for
large loads. Call for quote.
Scipio Energy. located 11.4
miles ant of Pegetown on
Township Road 141 . Meigs

Casting
Four regional TV commer cial. Allagea. No experience
neceaaary. Will be Interviewing in Southaa.. Ohio area .
Week of Ocl . 1. For appointment call between 1 O:AM·

1969 2 br trailer for ule
10JC60, furn .•• oil tank &amp;
underpenning, t1200 . Do
not call unless really interested . Call between 101m-

Pharmacy,

In starting Coupon Club. For

··,
~~
~~
-

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

Help Wanted

50"o. 1-609·453· 2892.

MOBILE HOMES MOVEO.

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

FOI THE
BOTH OF YOU

Middleport. Oh. 614·992·
3478.

11

18 Wanted to Do

ineured. reaaon1ble r•tes.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

ic

Buying daily gold, sil'&lt;ler
coins, rlnga,jewalry, sterling
ware, old coins, large cur·
rency. Top prices. Ed. Bur~ett B1rber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

Grindly residence .

Beeline offers free clothes.
good money, no e..h invest·
ment . Work your own houra.

992·9991 . Robert So Judy
Hemoe. Rt. 1. loK 310,
Croaton. NC 28815. 1·919·
3B5·8808

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

....- ----~...

FURNITURE. Beds, iron,
wood, cupboards, chairs,
ehaau. basketa. dishea.
stone jars, antiquet. gold
and silver . Write-M .D .
Millar. At.2. Pomeroy, Ohio

~

Fat Burner!- Gobeaa Grapafru.Jt Ellltre Strength Cap-

Needed Immediately: 100
people teriously interested
in losing weight. 1·800-

992·7013

1111

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS .

Help Wan1ed ·

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

Grilles ........................... 175

PHONE 992-7075

614·445·2&amp;39 .

~~;,:~~====, tains.
pots
and pansRt.
. Some·
thing tor
e"ervone.
124.

11

Hoods ......................... 1130
13-15 ford Rangor

10.7 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

All or pert of retail, whole·
ule, or service business in
Gallia or Mtiga Co. Call

uo

G,m. ...................... ss2.so
ao.l5 ford rr.
Nood, ......................... '14S
83-15 Fotd Rongor

4·5·tfC

&amp; Oliva St. Gallipolis. Call

114-448-3159.

a.

AA Crisis Pragnacy Center .
Confidential. Free pregnancy ten and-or , inform•·

sules. Fruth
Middleport.

DooJt .••....••••.......••••..•$145
71·79 ford Tr.

PARTS and SERVICE

10-8-tlc

O...ality lntertherm
Air Conditioners

Doon ......................... l135

10-15 ford Jr.

Television listening Devices
Computerized Hearinc Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

i
z
-

915·3561

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410

HEAHNG &amp; COOl.. G SUUMS

,.., ..... , .........................141

13-79 ford Tr.

AUTO PAllS

I

heaters .

lion. Phone 614-742-2829.
collect if necessary.

Ntw and U.M Auto Glan-late M-1 Parts

Cll

coal

SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd.

814-448·0294.

13·79 ford Tr.

. -

•

Wanted:old pianos. Paying

SWEEPER and sewing mechine repair, parts, and
Pick up and
aupplles.
delivery, ·Davia Vacuutn
Cle•ner. ·one half mila up
Georgaa Creek Rd.
Call

Under Ntw Management (f.ormerly Giovanni's)
9-20-1 mo.

73\ 79 Chtvr' Tr.
Gri!IH ......"············ '31.SO
73-79 ChOYy. Tr.

Card of Thanks

3 Announoemen1s

Middleport, OH.
PH. 992-3559

, ...... , .........................'41
73·10 (hOYy lr.
Oaor.......................... s100
73-10 Chtwy. Tr.
Hoooh........................ 'ISO
73·14 (hOYy Tr.

wood

238 Condor St.. Pomeroy.
Back of MGM Farm City,
HugeGargeSeleContinues- Sapt; 26 . 28 , 27 . 10~4elch
snare drum Ht, 4 aport
caps, hounhold ltema.
dav.
si.zes jeant. winter jackets
Yard and bescment lilt.
coats. shoat, boots, toolt,
end Iota more. 4 milea·trom St1rting Wednelday, Sept.
HMC on old 180 at Ever- 26 at 9 :00 1.m . Gat cook
green. 814·446-1339.
1tove, picturet. drapea. cour·

tland. 814-742-3006,

*SUBS *SANDWICHES
*LASAGNA *SPAGHETTI
349 N. 2nd

WANTED TO BUY used

County, 814-992-3468.

"12 Varieties of Pizza"

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

CONTRACTING

IIIIIIEn'S MDIIII &amp;
MIIIUFACTUIID lOUSING

8·8 tic

I·J·H•

DENNY CONGO

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201

742~3195

mo.

Part• &amp; Servin

J&amp;F
DOZER. 9ACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS So SEWER LINES.
RECLAMATiON. PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
S.DtRT

992-587S Or

Jim Mink Chov.·Oidolnc.
1111 Gene John1on
814•441-3872

46789 or coil 81 4·992·
7780.

The family ~f Matger~tt
Houldashelt would like to
all who helped in our
bereavement. Rev. Miller tor
hla word• of condolence•.
Ewing Funer1l Home, pall
bearers. thoee who sent
food. flowers. carda and
thote who helped in any
way. Mr . and Mrs. Milton
Houldeahelt, Mr. end Mrt.
Dale Smith and Amber
lohn .

Call:

349 N. 2nd
OH.

(CUT" OUT fOI FUTURE USE)

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDI~GS

1

Residential &amp; Commercial

GIFTS

73·10 ChOYy Tr.

BOGGS

Ann ou 111: e111 en ts

FOR ALL YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

AND

(Free Esllmatea)

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
t-13-lfc

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE

LINDA'S
MEXICAN
POnERY

- Plumbing 1nd electrjcel
work

PAT HILL FORD

A.A.A.
304-1175

9-23-tlc

- Addon• and

We pay cath for late model
clean used Clra.

We can repair and recore radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Rl. 62 SOUTH
POINT PlEASANT, W. VA.
8 miles lrom,
Pomeroy-Mason Brldce
SING~E '24.95
•live entertainment
o.Free HBO •Restaurant
•Olympic Pool

·-···-~--------·--~··-~--·····

choalnut St .• 10:00-5:00.

Woat Virglnlo . 304· n3&amp;78S or 304· 773-5430.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

SALES &amp; SERVICE

,··-----'·----.--

&amp; Vicinity

RICK PEARSON AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE. Elloto.

F
ree

Middleport

Yard 111e Sept . 23·27. 1

Ph, 915·4141

3-24 -lfc

&amp; Vicinity

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

MARCUM
Y

(

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

Call: 742-2407

'"Free Estimates'"

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

Public Notice

•Landscaping ·

446·4522

AUTO
St.RENTtL
Rt. 160 .,,.

LOOKING FOR A CAllER

T
Also ransmission

JAMES
PH

8

•Garaps &amp; Pole
Buildl' ncs

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

317 Nar1h !O&lt;ond
Middltparl, Ohio 45760

CARPENTER
SERVICE

U-SA~E .

Ill Court St.. Pol'llttOJ. (IIIio4S7"

•Sidinc

····· ·p·c:;.n&amp;.:o;;·········

······oaiiiiioiis·-·· ··

•Roofinc

Rt. 124,P-roy Ohio

HEATING

•All Types of
Excavating

YOUNG'S

"W• Rut F, Ltn"

PHONE
992-2156
01 Writ• Dailty Stttli•.t Clluihtll DtJt.

COMPANY

RENT A CAR
. CALL

The Daily Sentinel

"FRrE ESTIMAUS"

MEIGS

'

r

'111111 site Is In bJapalapa, just !IOUih of Mexico
UPI.

Box. 326

EXCAVAnNG

Roofing of aU Types
Worked irl home area
20 years

'.

:U.HOUR DUTY - Grave dlgen woddn11 St lllur
llhUI8 dla......,of lbellw-u.... of-pavmneeded
for vldlms of last week's ear&amp;hquake In Mexloo Clly.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnoulotlon
•Storm Oooro
•Storm Window•
•Replocomont Window•
•New Roofing

Pomeroy, OH. 45769
ForfiSierSorvico
Call 614·992-6737

Ga rage

INSULAnON

to drivo lht vohiclo o1 your
choice.
N o
p
t
o·. own aymen
lower Monthly Payment
BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
TRUCK LEASING

EUGENE LONG

f.. Complete Remodeting

-

r•• to
Enpct.:A·Car, lht modern ..,

We'd likt to introduct

Wanted To Buy

VINYL &amp; AlUMINUM

.

6 lolt and Found

2 puppies to give •wly. 1
malt and 1 female . Mixed
brMd, both.. white. 814-

992-2502.

Trovia ot 1513!424·4593
today.

1528,

8 pm . 304-676 -1269.

Celt otter 5PM. 814·286·
6237,

Ftnanct,il

One certified Medical Technologist, weekdays. Send
reaume to box 300. in care

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

21

of tho Gollipolio Doily Trib·

Business
Opportunity

une. 826 Third Ave .• Galli·

polio. Oh 45631 .
Counter help: local conve·
nient store now accepting
applieations for full
part
time counter help . Willing to
work flexible hours preferred. Apply in person at the
General. Store. 240 N. Col ~
lege, Rio Grande, Oh Tuea.

a.

Sept. 24. Fri. Sept. 27
10AM-4PM .

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB ·
LISHlNG CO . recommends
that vou do busina.. with
people you know. and NOT
to 1end money through the
mall until you have investi·
gated the offering .
Own your own Jean Sportswear. lediea, Child·
rena or Large Size Store .
1 DO's of Nat'l brenda .
816,900 includes $10,176
inventory. fixturaa, suppliet
and more. Call tod1yl Mr .

1792.
32 Mobile Homes .
for Sale

22 Money to loan

14•70 3 bdr,. 1 both. now

Easy Auembly Workf
1600.00 per 100. Gll&amp;ran ·
teed pavment . No
e11perience-No sales. Details
send aelf·addra1s1d
stamped envelope: Elan Vi tal -71'6 3418 Enterprise

HOME OWNERS -Refinance
to low fixed rate. Uae equity
for anv purpose. leader

1973 Schult mobile home

Mortgage
3061.

Co. . 614-592·

Rd .. Ft, Pierce. Fl. 33482.
VETERANS: Do vou wish
·vou had staved in the
military? Regret losing that
retirement Income? Sorry
you didn.'t taka advantage of
the Gl Bill to get your college
degree? Maby it' 1 not too
l1ta. Join the Army National
Guard and receive 1 monthly
paycheck, life insurances.
retirement benefits, and the
New Gl Bill . It paya full lime
atudents $140 . 00 per
month . l.4 time students
e1 05.00 per month , and
half time student• $70.00
per month, up to maximum
of $6,040.00 , We have the
best part~ tlme joba around I

Coll 304·87&amp; -3950 or 1·
800·842·3819.

23

Professional
Services

Water walla drilled and aer·
viced . Prices on request. Call

614·7•2·31•7 or 814· 992 ·
5006.
PIANO TUNING AND RE ·
PAl R, back to school discountl, tree eatimatas .
Ward '• Keyboard, 304-876 5500 or 676 · 3824,
McDaniel Custom Butcher·
ing , open 6 d•vs a week ,

304·882· 3224.

1----- - - - - Re.tl Estate

WANTED: HIGH SCHOOL
SEN I0 RS ANO GR ADU · I 7:--:-:----:--:::-:-'ATESI The. Woot Virglnio 31 Homes for
Army Netionai Guard nHds
individual• who are looking
for a pan-time lob with a
good future . Are you wond ·
ering where you will get the
monev for collet~e1 The new
Gl Bill will pay full time
atudenta •140. per month,
up to a maximum of •&amp;.040.
The student loan repayment
program repay&amp; a major
ponlo., of outltandlng Fed ·
••I etudent loans, up to

110.000. You moy oloo bo

carpet. 2 2. 000 BTU air
coflditioner, 16,500. Call

614-367-0577 .
1979 14x70. 7"12 acrea,
located on Rt . 325 ne1r
Number One Minai . Call

514-742-2259 .

'

Trailer space 1 mila from
Hospital Wlter· trash paid.
166 mo. plu1 deposit . Call

614-448·1354 .

1--------:--:--:

2 bdr .. fully carpeted. vinyl
aiding, large lot. storage
bldg.. garden , rettrietad,
•27,600 . Call 61 4· 268 6200.

1- - - - - - - - - -

1971 Brookwood 12x85.
1v, batha. 3 bdr. gas heat,
new carpet, like new cond .

Cot! 814·448-017&amp;.
1983 'Fleetwood 14x70, 3
bdr., 2 full bathe, like new.

Cat! 614-388-8633.
1978 14x70 Norris 2 bdr.
with large awning Ia 2 set1
concrete stepa, t13,600.,

Cot1614· 256·1 465 or 614256·6434.
2 bdr. 12x&amp;O mobile home.-

t4.500 . Colt
1650.

814· 258 •

1972 Flamingo 3 bdr., 1 'h
bath. total electric , CA.
refrigerator, some furniture,
8x10 deck, 16,800 . or bast

offer. Coil 614 -245-9647 .
1969 Raycraft 2 bdr. trailer,
I 1 , 700 or bast offer. Call

514·3BB·9341 Tom Glenn

In Rio Grande. new 3 bdr, Rd .
just finiahed, full banment, 1 ---------~
nice lot. large rear deck, with 1982 14x70, 3 bedroom.
valley ..,lew. priced to sell. 112,500 . Call 614·448 13'9 ,1500. Will con 1 ider mo· 6231 .
bile home trade-in . Cell 1- - - - - - - -··lc-

814·441·8038 .

1975 12•55 2 bodroom

One of 1 kind lov cabin·
Raccooon Creek . 7 milea
from Rio Grande, 11 milea

mobile home on 8 ecrea of
land. Double geraga ator1gei
building . Klngabury Rd .,
Pomeroy. Phone 114-992-

thon '20,000. on oduco -

from Gotlipotio. Air condlli·

bole ond it'o youro. 114·
742·2118 .

oned, elactrlc turnanee,
washer, dryer, county wl·
ter, priced under &amp;30,000,

3

utilize lhe dotoyod trolnlng

fumlahod . Coli 614· 379·

option and the split training

2141 .

' 3 "-utlful olrippod tdtleno,
phone 304·171·1714.

By owner. 6 room hou11.
bath. all elec, alumn siding,
storm doors end windows,
city water, furnished or
unfurnishad . 304-468·

3-5PM dolly.
- - - - - - - - -lc -

tlonal btnefltl, PLUS. vou
receive a monthly paycahck.
lit. lnauranca. end you Cln

,,.hood. 3 montho old. Need
IOfMont to love. 304·876·
6686.

$15.500. Cotl 304·BB2·
2407 or 882· 2297. Coli
after 6 p .m.

Tote 704-274 -5956.

1- - - - - - - - --

people kittena , Uttar

Old Kaylor Store ~· Broad- ·
Run, 7 rooma, 1 Y.r bathe.
Le1ky roof, city water,

NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
ITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST. GALLIPOLIS,
AT 3&amp;; PHONE 814-446727 • .

Part·time delivery penon
needed. Must be 18 vrs . old,
able to work weekends Ia
nights. Have own car (with
inturance) . Apply in person
at the General Store. 240 N .
College, Rio Granda. Oh .

tleglble for a $1,500. or
Tortoi• shell calico mothtr ' •2.000. enllatment bonus.
COlt ond kittens. 614· 742· A combination of Guard
232B,
program can provide more
Hay. 2nd cutting. You rake.

By owner, 2 bedroom ranch,
704 Marietta Road , Point
Pleasant, nice location, low

option to onond belle ond

1-------::- - -

advanced training without
mlulng school. We have
whet It takaa to meke your

Price reducad, 7 room
hou11, with bath, utility
room,gasfumance.largelot

lulu,.! Coli 304·875·39&amp;0
or 1·800·842-3619, ·

with gorogo. Cot! 614-4462897.

2664 or 814-9112·2774.

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

On rented lot. EJtcellant
condition. Clean . With or

without AC.

furnlahlngo.

w11her~dryer. awning. C1ll

114·9112·24511 alter 5:00
p.m .
Movlng ·nHd to Mll.1914

Shultz . 3 bedroom. Catl
614·949· 2663 .
-.,--------- lw08
,-_,

�"'.
44

Apartment
for Rent

46

bedrooms. stove, refrigera · Housing Opportunity)
tor , steps ~nd blocks . monthly renlltarts at $169
$7950 . Call 614 - 992 - for1 bedroomend.204for
7479
2 bedroom, deposit $200.
located n ear Spring Valley
MOBILE HOMES MOVED . Plaza and Foodland. pool
lnsurad , reasonab le rates. and Cable TV av~lable,
Call 305-576 -2336 .
office houn as pouible 10
am to 4 pmand 7 pm to 9pm
'1980 14~~&lt;70 liberty mobile Monday-Friday. Cell 614home.3br,1bath, gerden 446 - 2746 or leave
tub . total elec . central air. message .
fireplace , stove-ref.. must ~ ~.:.:._:.:_:;__ _ _ _ __,_
bo moved . 59900. For appt . Nicely furnished mobile
304 - 675" ~ 860 .
home, eff. apt .. central air
and heat in city, adults only.
1971 Flamingo 12x65. 3 Call 614-446·0338
bedrooms. air con dition, ex- 1_:.:.:..:____~---cellent condition, refrigera - Furnished efficiency $160.
tor and stove. Must seH utilties paid, share bath, 607
61 4· 446-0684.
2nd . Ave . Gallipolis, adults.

1975 Gove rnor 1 4 ~~:70 mo-

Farms for Sale

33

83

62 Olive St .• Gallipolis. New
&amp; used wood -coal atoves, 6
pc wood LR suite $399,
bunk beds $199. antron
recliners $99, new &amp;. used
bedroom suitea, ranges,

sh~aa. ~==========:-r::=;==:;::=:;:=:;:::.:=l

4th . Gallipolis, S 1 95 water
32 acre farm -- drilled well. paid . Call 446-4416 after
J V2 m iles from town . •8 pm .
··

54 Misc. Merchandise

68

Sofas and chairs priced from

Accordian. 120 bate tor
sale . Eitcellent condition.
New ·Franklin atove. Hay for

$285 . to 1895. Tobloo, •&amp;o

sole. 614-992-688B.

AKC re·g iaterad Ml'n iature
Schnauzer puppiea. 3 fem&amp;~lea. 3 males. Champion
bloodlinea. $1 &amp;0 each. Cell

Call614-446-3169 .

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

&amp;560.,

wi1h small down p·a yment .

Call 614-388-B71 1 after 5 .
Building lot , % acre M -l , 2
mi. from Holzer hospital.
electric &amp; water available.

S5. 500 . Call
2614 .

614 · 379·

One acre wit h septic tank .
electric pole . well -house
with deep well . Blue lake
Dr. off Bear Run Rd . Great
buy f or S3, 500 cash . Call

304-522-2076.
2 level lots for sale . Greer
Road, 7 miles from town .

Call 304-675-5689

Furnished apt., 1 bdr .. $225
mo ., 920 4th Ave .. Gallipolis . Utilities paid. Call 446441 ~ eher 8pm .

41

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. ranch . located on Rt.
160. near NGHS , $300mo ..
$150 dep., no pets . Call
614-388-871 1 after 5PM .

5395 .

3 bdr. duplak, new carpet.
new bath, new appliances,
644 Second A&gt;Je ., S275 mo.

446-1637
Apt. for rent, 238 Rear First
Ave .. 2 bdr ., $225 mo ., ref.
&amp; dep . Call614-446-4926 .

3 bdr .. double garage ,
breeze w ay, College Rd ..
Syracuse. 5300 plus deposit . Call614-446-1478.
4 bdr . tibuSe, Bulaville Rd .,
stove furnished , $275 plus

dep . Call 614-446-0276 .
Modern 3 bedroo m , double
gar age , 2nd .. Syracus~ .
$300 month plus deposit.
nice location. Call 614- 992-

7032 or 614 -446-2340 .
Near Waterloo- farm house,
5 rooms, bath, 1 child .
S125 . references &amp; deposit .

Call 614-643-2644 .
3 bdr ., air. all utilities paid,
city lim 1ts. Call 614 -446 4110 .
House and bath, large yard in
Racine area. Ca ll 614-992 -

5868 .

614-446 -9596 before 6.

6 14-992 -3054 .
3 bedroom homu in Middleport tor rent or sale . Call

614-992-2598 .
- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Ni c:e. small4 -room and bath
house in Middleport with
att ached ga rage . Ideal for
single or cou ple . Sorry no
children or pets. Available at
end o f month. Stove. rehig erater provided . Hoefli c h.

1 bdr . furniahed apt, in
614 - ~46-

Utility bldg . spacial ;
30' x40'x9' with track door
&amp; aerv . door, t6266
Valley Furniture, new • erected. Iron Horae Bullden,
used . Large section of qual- 614-332-9746 collect.
ltv furniture . 1211 Eastern 1 - - - - - - - - - - Ave_., Gallipolis.
BUILDERS
C I o ae out' s - S•urplu sElectric clothes dryer, good Salvage.

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Special rates for Senior
Citizens. $130. Equal Housing O~portunities . 614-

992·7721 .
2 bedroom apart~ents .
New Haven. WVa. Newly
remodeled. In town . 814-

cond, •80 . Call 614-268·
6261 after &amp;PM .

992· 7481 .

8 ft . wood &amp; upholstery
antique sofa, good cond.,

i bedroom apt. for rent.
Nicely located. Contact Village Manor in Middleport.

$100. Coli 614-448 -2t68.

'614 - 992 - 7787 . Equal

Couch, loveaeat, 2 chain,
complete outfit, 8460, good

Housing Opportunity.

cond. Caii614-388-B186 .
One or two bedroom apartments in Pomeroy. Furnished or unfurnished . Rent
negotiable . Call 614-992-

Mixed gra11 hay for ule.

Call 614-949-2424.

1-::--:--:-:::--:-:--:---::--

6723.
One and two bedroom furnishad apts. for rent in
Middleport area . All utilitiea
paid . 614·992- 5084 attar 5
p.m .

54 Misc . Merchandise
1------.....;.
___

2 bedroom second floor apt.
Total electric. Across from
Pomeroy Fire Station. Cell
61 4 ·992-73t 4.
Unfurnished apartment for
rent in Syracuse. 614· 9927689 attar 5 p.m .
Apartment for rent. no child ren . Available after Oct.3 .

Coll614·992-2749 .
APARTMENTS , mobile
homes, housea. Pt . Pleasant
and Gallipolis. 614-446 Laureland Apartments. New
Haven . Equal Houting Opportunity. Has vacancy . For
more information call 304-

even1ngs

partla·lly furntshed .
eMcellent well. wOod hea t ,
private , Pom t Pleasant area .
$250 . per month Deposit
and references reQuired .
br

BB2-3716 .
2 br apartment• in Hender-

oon. 304-675 -1972.

co nd . and neighborhood,
near Ordn'ance School. 304-

675 -4580 or 675 - 1962.
Large recent ly redecora ted 2
bed room house. good loca-

tion basement. lots of st orage ,' well to wall ~a rpeting.
all applian ces mcluded ,
S300 00 mO nth , deposit
and reference required. 304-

675-6586 .
2 bedroom co ttage , for
edditional i nformation call

614 -446 -4602
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr . furnished . all utllitea
pd .. except elect ., .convenient locat ion, secunty deposit reuqired . Call614 -446·

865B.
Furnished, A.C, cable, no city
taxes beautiful riverview. in
Kene~ga . Foster ' • Mobile

Firewood -cutup

slabs.

1

truck load 11'00. 2-$1BO.
Pickup load, you haul 816.

HEAP accepted . Call 614245-5B04 .
40 ft . Fruehauf flatbed
tamden trailer, good cond .

Call 614· 379-2668 .

614-446-2166 .
Wood &amp; coal furnance.
forced air $260 . Call 614-

379 ·2138 bolora 9PM .

For rant Sleeping Rooms
n'nd light house keeping
rooms . Park Central Hotel .
Csll 614-448- 07&amp;~ .

Now 1985 ATC 110 Hondo
wheeler,

never ridden.

Save. Call 614 ·446·0608 .

SB9.95 ...
Prehung 9 ft. thermal gles1
steel door'• crosabuck or
panel $139.96 .
1 pc. fiberglau tub and
shower white and color
'17'x.19' white gold vanity
with top •29.96. marble top
&amp; vanity $39.96 .
3 or 6 pc. tub wall kitl, white

lnColor longated comodea't
siphon jet $89.96 .
4 ' x10' P.U.C. sewer and
drain pipe with bell (t pc.

266-6417.

4x8 wood an maaonite
paneling woodgrain and

660 1. doesn't work but it
would if someone had knowhow. We'd like to sell the old
. one for •200., •• 11. The
Daily Sentinel, 814 ~ 9922156.
1 ---~-:::--:-:::--.--­
Wood and coal heating 1tove
for sale. 2 pieces of triple
wall atove pipe. 614 ~ 992 -

II . )

prints. •5.99 to ., 2 .99 .
PENN'S

WAREHOUSE.

Wellaton, Ohio, hours 8· 5 -

Call 614-384-3646.
Building material. concrete
blocka all sizes, lentils, flu
blocks, clay tile. Delivery.
Gallipolia Block Co .• Pine

St.. Galllpollo, Ohio Call
614-446-27B3 .
Block, brick, mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33. New

Hoven. W. Vo. 304· B82·
2222 .

56

Pets for Sale

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

614 -992-7479.
- - - - - -- - - - lw08

onow tiroo, P195· 76R1 4 .
e16. 114-992· 1149.

Briarpatch Kennels All ·
breed grooming. Indooroutdoor boarding ftclllt ....

TONY'S QUN REPAIRS,
hot dip reblu-'ng, 1H typel of
gun1mlth work, flit servica,
304-675-413f .

Englloh Cocker Sponlol.
388-9790.

1------:::--:------::-

throom. stove with ovtn,

Chow puppiea. Call 441-

rofrlgorotor, oloOpo 4, 1900.
Copymachlna•40- Old time

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

Upstairs office or bualne11
IPICt for rent. 2 rooma .

218Va E. Main St. ln4uire at
218 E. Main St, or call

1- - - - - - " - - - - -

614 - 992 - 5484 . B : OO
2 00 1 .:.~_;________
t 0 10 00
o.m
:
p.m ..to 4 ;30: p.mo.m..
.
10 h . truck camper. be·
MASON

COUNTY

FAIR

RENTAl, storage apace
available for cars. boats,
trailera at Fair Ground1.

304· 875· 5463. 9 AM to 5
PM for rat1t1 and

Home Pork, 614· 446 · 1602 . informedon.

''"

.

ceah register,

•10. 304-

171-7880.
Burial Iota. Concord Cemetery. 304·6715-1128.

-

~-

.

-

..

273·3447,

tion. 304-676-3t 54.

66

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeda. HHted
indoor-outdoor facllitiel .
AKC Doberman puppiea:

Stud Sorvlco . Coll614·446·
7795c

Dragonwynd Cottory Kon·
nal. CFA Hlf'1aloyon, Ponlon
ond SlomoH kltfono. AKC
384ol oftor 7PM .

Eng. Springer Speniel AKC.
Reg . shotl. tall clip.

wormod. N- • wflito, 9·W,
f171 -11. Call 114·3888282evenlnge.

__. __...... ~-------~--

Seed

&amp; Fertilizer

l5,800. 614-992-6883.

~------2

19B2 Type 10 Chovv Cavolier. Good cond. 304~675-

67B2.
Conn trombone like new.
Seed wheat, cover crop
wheat, feed wheat. rye,
barley. Altl1er Form Supply.

Call814-246-5193.

nory UM Church. Call 814·
448·2B466.

Tr onsporlat111n

Asaume small monthly payment on modern ltyle piano,
like new condition. Can be
seen locally. Write. including
phone number to: Manager,
200 Athlone, Cueyville, ll

71

TOP CASH paid for 'BO

82232 or call (61BI 346·
6927.
- - - - - - - - - - lw08

1981 red T-blrd Town Lon·

614' 742-2643.

dau excellent condition. new
tire1. Cell after 15:30 614-

Premier 1nara drums. Excel·
len~ condition. Hardly uaed.
Ca~e included. 614-992-

246-9410.

I-----------

7574.
Trombone. please call 304-

676-3809.
Buetcher alto nxaphone.
exc cond, tee at 2019
Muwell Road.

1976 Cordobe very good
work car. tiOO. Ca'll 114-

266·9387.
77 Muatang new parta, new
tire1, new paint, ucellent

ohopo. *2.000. Coli 814266·6417.

i 979

Robbit. 1978 Ford
LTD. Coli otter &amp;PM. 614·
388·BB23.

Fruit
Vegetables

1981

VW

repair.

Old oarcornforoole. n.OOo
buohel. Coll61 4-949-2679.
Chuck Yost.
Canning peaches now avail·
able, open 7 days week, call
for price• as aupP.'Y ia

limited. 304 - 773-&amp;'721.
Bob's Market. M..on. W.
Va.

Fm11 Supplies
&amp; LIVI!~IIlr:k

Rabbit

needo

Mon.-Fri. 9AM to 4PM. Coli
..:.6_14,..·-44_6.:.·_:&amp;_1_79_._ _ _--:

1

1978 Ford Fairmont4cyl., 4
apd .• atandard. Horticulture

blono e10 bu. Coli 614·
268-1906.
1981 Dodge Colt 4 opd.
with economy shifter,

Jackson,

Ohio. 81 4-286-6451.
Mauey Ferguson, New
Holland. Bush Hog Salea II
Service. Over 40 used
tractors to choose from 8t
complete line of new &amp;
uaed equipment. largest
selection in S.E. Ohio.
John O&amp;er 360 C track
loader, torka, bucket ,
wench, canopy, low hours.

Coll814-268-8246 or 614·
887~4•02

evenings.

Circulating Batch Grein
Dryer. Stored Inside. Model

280. t1.000. Coll614-986 3966 .
New Holland has no-interest
financing for 24 months on
new or uaed hay and forage
product•. grinder~. mix.era
and manure spreadera. New

Hollond Speclolo For Sap·
tamber. 1-Now Modal 329
manure

spreader

140bu.

Cooh only 12900.; 1-New
Model 366 grl.nder mlxor.
100 bu larger tirea. Caeh
chopper with both hHds

e1900.; l-uNd Model 619
New Holland manure
oproader 217 bu; with hydond goto 121 00.; 1-Uoad
Model

847

round . baler

15900.; 1 - Uood Modo!
t080 9 it. Gohl hoyblne
e1900.; 1-Uoocl Supor 717;

chopper with 1 row hnd

19B2 EXP . 4 op. air.
ounroot. •4000. 304-6768B5B.
1974 Dodge Don, 8200.
304-675-6995.
1978 Buick Regal, loaded,
one owner. All new tirel.

Call 304·676· 1BBB otter 5
p.m.

6889.
1957 Chevy, 4 door. excel·
lent condition, *2600.00 .
18&amp;7 Chevy. 4 door. fair

ohope, noo.oo . 304·896·
3838 alter 5.

1974 Chevy Impala, 4 door
sedan. Coli 304·676-3430
or see at 222 Park Drive,

53,000 mlleo. e650.

379-2726 .
Chevy 4x4.

Prl•.
3A!

1978

'69 Chevelle, 400 engine,
auto, AM·FM caaaette, rally

wheelo. et .700.00 . 304676 -7376.
1975 Ford Maverick. · maroon, 4 door, &amp; cylinder. 200
eninge, good running cond,

uoo.oo. 304-671 -2569 .
'76 Monta Corio, e200.00
needs

transmi11ion . 304-

676-5751.

360 Chevy transmitsion,
Old•mobile tranamiUion,
auto. Two 350 Olds diesel
enginea, four old atyla Chevy

~OT THI\Y'I&lt;I'
G~TTING A MON~HI'.·
HUNTifoJG ~A!&lt;TY

HI.

rally whaolo. 304-896-3638
after 5.

TOGETHEI"..

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1974 Nova. 350 engine, fair

'84 Ford Escort l. blue. 2

1983 Buick LaSebre, low
mileage. 2 door. air, tilt
_cruise. 306 V-8. like new .

Phone 304-B82-2776 .

Servtce~

BORN LOSER

txll~ LIKIO AMAl-l \.i:l==:: :J

Home
Improvements

AHA! TH~, MY FFt!EilD,
·'PJ /lf.E A

®COS9J'T
MMEAIJilJb

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

~T

Cf~
~D

Unconditional lifetime guarantee . Local references
furni•hed . Fre, estimatea .

1111s fJe;w
I

'FMR'!

Call collect 1-614-2370488. day or night . Rogers
Ba1ement Waterproofing .
D.and M . Contractors. Vinyl
siding, replacement win dowsr insulating. roofing,
new end remodeling. con-

camps .

J.and L lnttallation. Roofing. vinyl siding, stOrm doors
and windows. Free esti-

Christopher Down?

0 ([) ®l Homotown Chris·

YIAI TIN&lt;:;!

topher hides out in Whitley
after being named in a paternity suit. (60 min .)
Cll
MacNeil/Lehrer
Newshour
®Nova ICC) .AIDS: Chap·
ter One.' The efforts to un·
derstand the disease of
AIDS are examined. (R) (60
min.)
I'll MOVIE: 'One. Two.
Three'
[HBO]
MOVIE :
'The
Terminator' {CC)
[MAXI
MOVIE:
'The
Bachelor And The Bobby·
sox.er'
·
B:30 ([) ID G2) Growing Pains
ICC) (PREMIERE) The father
of a tong Island family becomes
the homemaker
while his wife goes back to
work .
9:00 III 700 Club
(I) ID G2l Moonlighting
(SEASON PREMIERE!

Pump ulaa. service. Regis·
tared in Ohio . All work
guarentaed. Call 304-273·
2811 . Ravenswood, W. Ve .
RON 'S Television Service .
House calls on RCA. Quazar.
GE. Specialing in Zenith .

Call 304-676-239B or 614 ·
446· 2454.
Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304·675-

1331.
RINGLES 'S SERVICE. e• perienced carpenter, electrician, mason. painter, roofing (including hot tar
application} 304· 67-6-2088

or 675-736B.
Starks Tree and Lawn Ser·
vice, stump removal, 304·

576-2010 .
IB) 'THE OTHER LOVER'
" Lindsay Wagner In
Obsessive Affair!

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day. Pump sales and service.

304-B95-3802.

11.900. 2 door. black-oilver
interior, high mileage, good

cond .. loodad . Call 81 ....
446-7404.
.
82 Camaro. t·top. V-8.
block, 34,000 mi .. looded,
u.ooo . Coli 614·882 ·
7184.

1973 Oldo 88. good running
cond, body fair, •326. Call

614·448·t912.

,
19157 Fleetwood Cadillac
UmoMnt, 3 111t1, fair con·
dition, •1.600 or beat offer.
81•·448~1197 .

1----------.,1979 Z-28 Camero. AC. PS,
PI, titt wheel. 1977 Olda
Cutloll Supremo. Coll814·
256-1652 oltor 3PM.

·1- - - - - - - - - - -

1981 Buick LASobre LTD,
olr. PS. PB. AM·FM

casaette. V·6, very clean,

e8.898.

Coli

814-446·

1185.

1982 GMC von 'Lando Deaign • captain chaira. dual
heat &amp; air conditioning.
power window• &amp; locka, tilt,
crui11. AM ·FM caaaette .
305 cu .in. with direct driver
lransmitslon 44,&amp;00 milea,
new tires. Can be '"" at
Pic-Pee: Supermarket,

e10,300. Call 614-446·

266-1141 or 614·446 1175 or 614-446-7911 .

ei,OOO.; 1-Now Hollond CB, vo,Y good cond. Coli
481 9' hayblno domonotro- 114-441·0330.
tor . .200.; 1·UIIOd N Hollend blo-r uoocl 1 Ml· 1978 VW Doohor, outo, 4
oon No. 25 t1300.; 1 ·UMd cyl .. 4 dr, hotch back, no
No. 8 Now Hollond foraae ruot. Call 114-446-8807.
- 10n e1eoo: 1-uoect
forogo wogon t1100.; 1· 1870 Chovolle Con. good
UIIOd L· 4ZS H - d top, runo good, noeclo body
oldd ot- loaclor •8100.; • pelnt lol&gt;. t1,250. 1914
1-Uood 71B chopper ond 1 lntomotlonol Scout 4 WD.
row haad 13300. K - . tor porto, gaod anglno,
Service Contor, R1. 2 Loon trono. ond tranofwrw caM.
'St. R1. 17. Ph. 304·118· Call 114·371·2131 before
3174.
,IPM . .

~ HlJ/NIJ FM\IL"'' i!tl.lf\fE'S I~ 'lliE
~ ~~1i:/ol\ ... A t&gt;4T ~ 'lliE
Hf;,\t) HERE, A PAT 01J lliE HfAl)

1978 Dodge with topper

614· 367-0623 or 614-3677741 night or day .

814-992·7544 after I.

Waugh's Water Service.
Walla. cisterns, pools. Fut,
reliable service. Call 614·

1982 GMC S-15. Slorra,
low miles. auto, air. ttereo.
caaHttl, cruiM, long bed,

llko now. Coli
88B5.

814·388·

1 9B1 Chevy pi.. up, olr
condition, AM •FM otoroo,
outomatic, 304-675-5431 .

Cloae~out All uMd Honda's

ot NduOid off&lt;or. C.n be

256- 1240 or

•
•

A M16'&gt;1\IE HfAtwHf!
•

•

•

•

.
~

'

~

G

SNAKE!!

614 -256 -

tiSIHE
L.IITL.E
Pl-EASURES
IN l-IFE ..

Haul limestone, aand, gra ·
vel,dirt. bulk or bag fertilizer
and lime. Ekcelsior Salt
Worka Inc . 638 E. Main St ..

'!'HAl

MAKE YOU
FOR GEl
YOUR
WORRIES

Pomeroy. 814-992 -3891 .
Will do water hauling , fill
ciatern and fill awimming

poolo. Coii614-992-6B68 .

87

Upholstery

1884 Hondo ZOOS 3
whMier. IXC. con d. Al10
riding b-1• ......,.o, panto.
kid- bait, helmet ......
gleo. C.H 114·441·7121.

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 163 Soc. Avo .. Galllpolio.
814·446·7B33or814-4461B33.

1978 lu1ukl 1000, t 3,600
mn.o, nice. Coli 114--441·
1607.

turing,

--··· --~~---------....,:.,..._..--

ThfM$VCS• ..

•

1 1 30. Reasonable rates.

...n 81 Honda lhop.

1173 Horlty Dovldoon
Sport-. 304·671·1MI.

!JOT ~ UI&lt;E ~ ·Mooi ... 'Wf 11-lef ~ SVIU&gt; Vf IIJfO

•

Ken's Water Service . Wells.
cisterns, pools filled . Phone

exc. cond .. tz.eoo. See at
Spring Valley Plaza or call

1\jf't' ~JA~
~

THERE ...

tires. 361 engine. Caii614-

38B·9B33 .

• •
THAT'S ALL RIGHT ...
IT WAS ONLY
A SUGGESTION ..

R • M Furniture ManufacSt. At. 7, Crown

City, Oh. Call 114· 266·
1470, coli Evo. 114-4463438 : Old lo now
UphooteNd.

___

days - THE' PRICE OF SEATS

IIIDGE

James Jacoby

The finesse goes
round and round

NORTH
+A
• A84

.AQJ94
+Q843

EAST

WEST

of us who travel the tournament trail.
They certainly play more deals in an

t-U-15

.6

+KQJI08

• 93

.Q7;2

I

• 8
+A 9 2

.76 532
+KJ107 5

afternoon, -since they don 't have to
wait for slow players to catch up. If

SOUTH

+76542
• K J 10 9 3
t K 10

they're defending , they try to beat the
contract. If declaring, they try to

••

make the contract. In either case, extra tricks can go you know where (unless, of course , the contract is

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

doubled).
That homespun philosophy can lead

~~ot

Norlb

4.

Db!.

to some unusual plays. Do you think Pass
only a rank beginner finesses first one Pass
, way and then immediately the other :

East
Pass
PaSs

-

min .)

Pa ss

lead, declarer took what seemed the rank beginner by immediately leading
easy safe play: He played a low heart the 10 of hearts. When West followed
. lo his jack. If this lost to the queen, the low , declarer let it ride. East naturally
hand would be duck soup. A spade con- showed out , but declarer wa s in con~

tinuation could be trumped (with the -trot. A heart to the ace and a diamond
ace if n~essary) in dummy, trumps .back to his king enabled him to next
would be drawn and the diamond win· pick up the queen of hearts and score
ners would produce an overtrick. But an overtrick.
a funny thing happened . West Smooth"lfl~ NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

42 Var iable star
in Cetus
43 Ne&amp;dle

ACROSS
1 Pondar

5 Spoken

(comb. form)

11 F~bm:ator

45 Mone'stic
47 Nimblest
50 Silety

13 Seaport m

~gene~

(abbr./

51 New York
India n

1bbr.)

52 Ore digger
S3 Pale color
54 Citw of
Manassth
DOWN

18 Hereldlc
bearing

19 European
blackb~rd

21 French lslend

24 Compass

1 lew
2 Ruu ian ed1ct

pGilll

2S MicrophollEI

3 OiSIJitChed
4 Sound of
hesitation
5 Liberian

26 Confused

27 Long tjme
28 Hindu deity
30 Purchase r

25 One of the
Three

7 Actor's part
8 Eng lish
9 't'NtS (Fr.)
10 Landing boat
11 English p1eins
14 Wagon
journew
15 Spanish
erticle
16 Famous
20 Enti-..ens

34 Vegeteble

spread

35 Russian
secret poliC e

31 Oelunct
lootb~l l

league (e bb r.)
40 Move, as
F1do' s tail

41 Eye inlecliOn

currency

23 Water (Fr .)

6 Outer

sulfil

36 Burmese

•hort

natives

33 Chemie.el

22 Bernstein, for

Stooges
26 Pnr G'!'nt's
mother

27 Tokyo's
formar name
29 HOOS IIII

State

(abbr.!
30 Prom1se

solemnl'f'

31 Guido's h1gh
note

37 Wizen
38

Fr~nciscan

39 Resin
41 Nep~y

leether
42 Middle (lew)
44 Slip ol paper
46 Mint
47 Cui short
48 Aclr.ss
Claire
49 Sell (pharm.)

52 Mother

32. Nullllies

f.ll INN News
11 :00 0 Cil CIJ CD 0 CIJ ®l iD ·
{1Z News
I]) Man From U.N.C.L.E.
(]) Motorcycle Racing :
1985 Stadium Supercross
presen1ed from Pasadena .
CA .
Ci) Tony Brown's Joumal
@ Lost in Time A study of
southeastern American pre·
history
examines
early
Indian cultures and their ef·
feet on man's probable mig ration during the Ice Age.
(60 min.)
I'll Bennv Hill Show
1 1:30 0 (I) CD Tonight Show
1
Tonight's guests are Ted
Danson , Lou Rawls and A1·
e)(andra Paul . (60 min .)
III Boot of Grt&gt;ucho
(]) Sportscenter
([) New Newlywed Game
0 ([) Simon &amp; Simon
(I) Latenight America
®Taxi
® Star Hustler/Sign Off
Ill
G2)
ABC
News
Nightline
f.l) One Step Beyond
11:45 [HBOI MOVIE: 'Teachers'
{CC)
12:00 I]) Best of Groucho
(]) Unlimited Hydroplane
Racing: Greater Oklahoma
Thumderboat Classic from
Oklahoma City, OK .
(]J Entertainment Tonight
liD MOVIE: 'Star'
g (ill Eye on Hollywood
8 Gunsmoke
12: t 5 [MAXI MOVIE: ' Deocl and
. Buried'
.12:30 IJ CIJ CD LAte Night "!i!h
David L.8tterman Tonight's
guest is Charles Kuralt. (60

3.

Souch

way? How about a lop expert? And
· how about lhe play being correct?
Opening lead: • K
South was a shade light for his jump
to three hearts after partner's takeout .L.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___j
double, bul bidding only two would
have won this month 's award for li· ly played a low heart on the jack. No
midity . After winning the opening matter. South did his imitation of a

examined .

General Hauling

f . 760 Ford good cond .. 900

PASTRY

The most bru tal aspect of baKing these

Tractor Pull Championships
from St. Louis. MO .
(j]) Innovation 'Hooked.·
The causes of ,:!rug iJddiction .and the efforts of rehabilitation
program s are

Co .,

James Boy$ Water Service.
Also pools filled . Call 614-

1---------

1875 4 dr. Chevy Impale.

IHBOI MOVIE: 'Conan The
Destroyer' ICC)
IMAXI MOVIE: 'Daniel'
10:15 (1) MOVIE : 'Hud'
10:30 I]) Celebrity Chefs
(]) 19B5 Hot Rod: Truck &amp;

Oh . 614· 742 -

8096 leave me..age.

1970 Oldomobilo Ooltol8 4
dr., aulometic, PS, PI, n.1n1
good. Oooclworkcar eeao. l-=:-:--::-:--:--~:--­
C~ 114·245-9194 or 114' 74 Motorcycle•
441·8747.

PS, PB. auto, redlo. eir •

f.l) Odd Couple

2903. Basements. Footers,
Concrete work. Backhoe's,
Dozer S. Oitcher. Dump
trucks. &amp;. water-gas-sewer electrical lines.

85

I Answ~y.

Join t~ Jumbl1 Lon~ l"an Club 1~ fK'e!'H IlK llghl · w~ Sur,r Jumbl" , ..ry
month, F« lrH 11mple1, nnd 1 po1Wtrd to: Jurn.,le Lowen 1n Club, e/o thll
llWIIIJIIPif, P.O. Box 101 , P11mw11 . N.J. 08085.

Algeria
1• Winne r
15 Seafood
17 01 age 1l ll l..

the Une
ill) Newswatch

Good-1 Excavating . basements. footers. driveways.
septic tanka, landscaping .
Call anytime 614 - 446 4637 , James L. Davison, Jr .
owner.

Construction

Jumt&gt;es: PLAIT SUITE INJECT

Yastarday·s

12 Nuts

land , where he is suspected
ot 'murder qy Scotland Yard .

Excavating

Rutland,

XXXj

THE(

(Answers tomorrow)

min.)

(60 min .)
([) Ul G2l Our Family Honor
(I) Kanawha County on

J.A .R.

•s.soo.

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the svrprfse answer, as suggestacl by the above cartoon.

XI I XXXJ

Mswei:(

®Lifeline (CCI 'Dr. Daniel

tients. (R) (60 min .)
9:30 (]) Championship Roller
Derby:
10:00 1J (I) CD Remington
Steele (SEASON PREMIERE) Part 1 of 2. Laura
traces Remington. to Eng-

lNG . At. 1, Box 366. Gallipolis. Call 614-367-0576 .

stereo, bucket seats. cuatom
camper top. Asking

t J I XJ

Adv.

Smith_· The Chief Resident
Physician / Obstetrics in Los
Ang eles' Women 's Hospital
is seen at work with his pa-

614-446-4477

1982 Toyota 4x4, 6 opd ..
longbed , 40.000. AM -FM
Call614-268-9367 .

CBS

AIDS are examined . IRI (60

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or

1976 Ford Pinto good trana-

1978 Chryaler New Yorker,

An

ter One .' The efforts to understand the disease of

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Dozer Work land clearing ,
landscaping, etc . Free estimataa. Call 61 4-446-8038
or 814-992-7119 anytime.

HOW YOVHAV5
TO PAY FOR:
SOME I&lt; I ND:5 OF
PI.ASTIC SUR&lt;SER:Y.

MOVIE: 'The .
Other lover' {CC)
Cll Nova (CCI 'AIDS: Chap·

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

83

ITHERAHj
I I [

0 ([) ®l

GASOLINE ALLEY
Booq definitely
has moved!

Carpentry end remodeling.
room additions. painting.
plumbing and repairs. Phone

72

ponotlon, tJOO. Coli 81 4·
446·0782.

CBS Adv .

FRit:MCI! D!WCIY'5'

COLEMAN WATER WELL
DRILLING

)

My friends who play rubber bridge
ciaim they have more fun than those

'* Paternity Suit Slow

C'MOM 1'10\'1, SiWV! Gil'/
&lt;";'6\'0 T~ YOUft NEW

matoo. Coli 614-992-2772 .

82

. I Kr

By James Jacoby

IB) HOMETOWN-Can A

ANNIE

crete. Call 304·773-5131 .

between 5PM 8t 9PM .

Trucks for Sale

I])
Courtohip/Eddle'o
Father
(]) Sportscenter
(1) Mary Tyler Moore
(I) Entertainment Tonlght
CD Wheel of Fonune
0 ([) Wheel of Fonune
([) Second City TV
®l News
®
MacNeil/lehrer
Newshour
OJ (ill Pric:a Is Right
g Jeffersons
7 :30 0 (I) New NewiY"'led
Game
I]) Please Don't
Eat
(!) NFL Arm Wrest ling
(1) Major League Baseball:
Atlanta at Cincinnati
([) 0 ([) Family Feud
CD Jeopardy
Cll Nightly Business
Report
®l Wheel of Fortune
(I) (U) Divorce Court
fl) WKRP in Cincinnati
8:00 1J (I) CD A · Teom {CC)
{SEASON PREMIERE) The
team travels to Italy on a
mission to rescue a judge's
kidnapped daughter. {2 hrs .l
I]) Daktari
(]) A.W.A. Championship
Wrestling
,
([) Ul (j2) Who's tho Boss7
(CC) (SEASON PREMIERE)
Pan 1 of 2. A secret is re·
vealed when T any and An gela realize they attended
adjacent childhood summer

Ceii614-38B·9780 otter 6 .

81

8 CD PM Magazine

Daisiea

1978 American Pligrim
slide-in truck camper .
SleeP• 4, stova, icebox 6
furnance . Very clean, 1750.

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·

ton. good

cond. Call 614-446-4746

Call

•

304-675-4322 .

door, 5 spaod. 1 .6L-HO .
Alter 5 PM 304·675·3772.

98 miles

e1500.;1 · NowHollond311

o..,,

1978 Datsun 200 SX, excellent condition, low mileage,
price reduced . 304-676-

Charger 15 apd.

baler demo natrat or

' --

814-446-6179.

cond, '260.00 . 304-7736873.

1977 Grand

CROSS lo SONS

u.s. 35 West.

VW Rabbit. Noodo

42.000 miloo, AC. t2.200.
1980 Chryolor IABoron 4
dr .• 6 cyl ., auto, •3.000
miloo, e2,500. 1985 Dodge
16.800. 1984 Dodge Day-

Farm Equipment

•

Call Holzer Clinic

tona 3,000 mllea. &amp; 1pd., air
cruise, •6.960. Call 614-

61

1981

repairs. Call Holzer Clinic,
Mon. thru Fri. 9 am to 4 pm.

8t4-446-2282.

Saxophone for sale. Excel·
lent condition. $350. Call

&amp;

Autos for Sale

model and newer und cars.
Smith Buick-Pontiac. 1911
Ealtern Ave., Gallipolil. Call

only t5800.: 1-U..d Modol
707 3 point N- Hollond

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 . North of
Pomeroy. Large Iota. Call

•&amp;

1976 4 dr. Impala. p1, pb,
1uto. trans .. ac, good condi-

Valve• to $24.96.

3 ornamented wrought iron
porch posts. •25. 48 inch
shower enclosure. 12&amp; . Akal
8 track player recorder. •&amp;o.
8 pair decorator shutters.
2&amp;x.9.
per pair. 2 pair
ahuttera, 29x11V... '7 per
pelr . Kitchen Aid dish
waaMr. 160. '1 set studded

trailer space on
Bulavilte-Addison Rd . Call
814-367- 8232 or 614-4464266 .
·
Large

Mulch at raw. Phone 304-

Embo11ed 2'x4' ceiling tile
some fire rated a1 .89 ea .
Suspended ceiling grids (12'
main tee $2 .501 4' tee 80

83 .49 oa.) (100 pc-$3.00

- - - - - - - - - - lw08
Price Wert Flashing arrow
sign t2&amp;9 . complete . Save
•2&amp;41 Ughted non-arrow.

Bundy alto uxephone,
1325, Artley clarinet $160.
Both in excellent condhion.

or color 839.95 to $89.95.

wall angle $1.99).
Colonial clear white pine
casing . Window and door
trim 32 eent ft.
Veneered interior white pine
door Jamb's &amp;8 .99 pr.
3'x15' foil face fiberglau
insulation 88 . 12 aq . ft .,

W. Fully loaded. 3B,OOO
mile•- Ex.callant condition.

'

Prehung 6 or 8 panel at&amp;el
Insulated exterior door•

1981 Pontiac Grande Prix

Coli 814·949·2424.

Marble vanity '• topa. Se conds all sizes choice

$30 .00 ea . .

1978 Novo for 10ie. Good

Avo .. Call 614-448·0B40.

58

Fuel oil •tova &amp; tank. $75 for
both. good cond. Call 614-

6296.

46 Space for Rent

back 139.95 oq.

•16 .96 roll .

- - - - - - - - - - lwOB
PVH . 304-675 -45BO or
We have a new copying
675 -1962.
machine. Our Old one, Xerox
45

Aliminum aiding 8' wood·
grain an twin 4' with foam

centoi(2' tee 40 conto)l10'
MCS programmable turnatable 24 function remote
control , $'176 firm . Call

1 br apt . carpeted, wastier - 1247. Unlighted 1199. FrH
letteral See locally :
dryer hook.. up. Eke . cond .
11800)423-0163. onytlme.
and neighborhood near

Furnished Rooms

Root tru11 (up to 20' ·
s 1 6 .00) (20' to 30' -120.001
(30' to 40'-*25.00).

8t99 .00 to 8229.96.

3

304 -895 -3006
3 br house. ca rpeted. exe

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

&amp; Grain

Mixed gre11 hey for ule.

Hammond organ suitable for
small church or new ltudent. Can be seen at Cent•

0 . Call 614-245-6121 .

door. herdtop. Beautiful.
Look1 •nd drives like new.
Original owner 80 year1 old.
Florida car. Lowmlluge . No

Band inatrumenu. Frank's
Pawn Shop, 430 Second

alter

7 :00

Auto Parte
Accesaories

614·446· 7421 .

1973 Ford Galaxy 600. 4

ront. Fully "''Uipped. Coli
814-948·265B.

blloo e1 .26 bale. Colllt4388-B720.

anytime.

TV oetl . Open BAM to 6PM.

Hay

&amp;

1--...;_---:::--:::----::--:::---:

Timothy hay mixed square

Colllt4-446-7421.

County Appliance . Inc .
Good used appliances and

1978 Chevrolat Monza
Spider. CanbeaeenatOan's
Exxon in Pomeroy. See
Benny Hickel.

3104-468·1898.

Musical
Instruments

$199.00. Free lettonl Soo
locally: 1(B00i423·01 83.

Building Materials
Block. brick. sewer pipes,
windowa, lintels, etc .
Claude Winters. Rio Grande,

Mon thru Sat. 614-4461699, 627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolls. OH .

1552 after 6 .

2 bedroom house in Middleport . Fen ce d yard . $190
plus utilities . 61 4 -992 7177 after 6 p m

3

614·446-739B.

Two marea, one quarter
horae and one th·o ·
routhbred, one atud quarter
horae. Have two yur~old
hort.e trailer end saddle.

work car with new tirea. Call
eveninga. 614-949·2849.

Call 614-446-4881
6:00.

55 Building Supplies

condition. 12200. Call814·
378 ·631 1.

84

Price War! Flashing errow
sign *269.00 complete.
Save $264.001 Lighted nonarrow, t247.00. Unlighted

Electric heatera. fana. mo·
tors. carpeting. tirea, antique furniture, tools, misc.
Rear 2019 Maxwell, Point
Pleasant.

GOOO USED APPLIANCES

614-446-3474 .

8221 .

992 -2509

turdoya, 304-875-1849.

Washers, dryers, refrigera ton, r•ngas. Skaggs Appliances. Upper River Rd.
beside Stone Crest Motel.

1 bdr. apt .. laundry room; no
pats . water &amp;. trash paid,
$225 mo . plus deposit. Call

614-992-5292.

2 bedroom Out.s1de Pomeroy Large yard . JJart , fur nished $175 per mo . plus
depostt . You pay ut11Jties .
614 -992-2381 deys 614-

675-5792 oltor 6 p.m. See
at Cochran'• Exxon on · Sa-

614-446-0322

614 -245-9595 .

67

614-992·6B19.

boat; 3 HP Johnton motor.

304· 773-1411. Good riding

uo.oo. 304-87&amp;-2110.

Baby bedo, 1110 . Price $900.00. 304-876·

Used Furniture -- Metal
office desks. 3 miles out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
Spm, Mon. thru Sat .

~-------- - lw08

2 bedroom house tully carpeted in Pomeroy . S180 a
month . S50 deposit . Call

1----------

reclining aeats . 81 ,99&amp; .

oon e260.00. 304-175·
3634.

2 year~old Holatein ateer. 2
year old Black Angua heif•r·

111.1: year old Male Poodle,

$66.

Apartment fo·r rent $226
mo . All utilities paid . Call

1979 Ford LTD. 4 door, P.S.

- - - - - - - - - - lw08
1979 V.W. Rabbit. Excell8nt

Point PleaHnt. 304-675·

Antique br111 bed, full
$300. 304-676-1868.

cabinets, $350. Gas or
electric rangea e376. Baby
mattreuea, 126 &amp; $36, bed
!romeo $20, 826, &amp; $30 .
king frame $60. Good selection of bedroom suites.
rockers. metal cabineta,
headboards 8 38 &amp; up to

Upstairs unfurnished apt ..
carpeted. all utilitiet paid, no
children, no pets . Ca11614-

1-----------::--::-

P.B., air. cruiae. tilt wheel,

horae•.

2063. Fiah, birdt and more.

820.andt26 .. 10gun - Gun

Call 614· 446-0690.

Middlepon . Call

304· 773·575B .

Manre11as or box aprings. 6874.
full or twin. $63 .. firm. •73, I ~---------­
and $83. Queen 11t1. 1226. 7 HP Unico riding lawn
4 dr. chests, 849 . 5 dr. mower. 30" cut. rebuilt,
chaeta, $69. Bed frames. good condition. Call 3011-·

&gt;

1980 J&amp;O·diea~ engine. Call

opd .. AC·. Coli 614·387·
0653.

Fiah Tanir. and Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Avenue,

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

upto $225. Hutchea. $560. Extra nice new 10x16 atorBunk bed complete with age type bern building, light
mattre..es. 1276. and LIP to gray with white shingle•.

2 bdr. apt . convenient to
down town. stove &amp; ref.
furnished . $260 mo . Call

Rentals

Wood and coal atove, wash·
ing machine, cook 1tove.
Corning top, two TV'a.

$145,

8285 to 8745. Deok $110

614-446 -4926.

Lots for sale on 1a11d contract

oota bado

Recliners. $226 . to $375.,
Lampa from t28. to $1 26.
pc. dinettes from $109 ., to
436. 7 pc. S189 and up.
Wood table with sik chairs

Com mercial building forsale
6_·7_0_2_5_·- ----,-- or rent on Main St. New _4_4_
1
Haven . W.Va. Call304-882· 2 bdr . apt ., 11 Court St ..
205 6 .
S325 mo. , ref. &amp;. dep . Ca!l

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

614-992-2607.

and up to $126 . Hide-a·
beda,$390. and up to

apt, with AC. large spacious
rooms . immediate occu pancy, • 250 mo. Call 614 "

1t71 Chryolor Cordobl baot
o«-r. S.on dune kon 6 HP
liko now. Coli 814-446·
4265 otter 6:00PM.

1------------::-:-:

pip.
t215 ..ch. 10ft. aluminum

$17, 5 00 . Phone 304- 882-

2497 or 304-882-2297 , 740V• 2nd . Ave .. 3 bdr.,
Ca ll after 5 p.m.
$190 nio .. 1 bdr., 8135 .
2 Deposit required. Call 614446-4222 between 9 II 5 .
Business
34
Newly redecorated 2 bdr
Buildings

76

Purlbred 'Y orklhlre

Pets for Sale

9/24/85
EVENING

Benyo otoreo. opoakon. do·
penclablo. 14,000. Call614·
441· 1749.

2822. John J. RoM.

New livingroom
wringer
waahera . &amp;. IUihl
$199- $699 , lamps. alto
buying cool &amp; wood ltoves.

HP. t~ec . trolling motor, tilt
trailer, Cenvas covt~r, excel-

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Ohio

Television
Viewing

car, new radials. exhaust.

C.ll 814-742·2BBO.
- - - - - - - - - - lwOB
Ctub Calvoo. Colll14·949·

AROUNO,._

lent cond. Call 814-2469163.

1981 Toyota Celie• GT. 6

Cett•. Heifers,

WHAT BRING!&gt; THE

B-8-doovo.

2 .BiackAngu•bullsfOrHie.
Samm-.nul

Pomeroy- JV!i~d!~port,

C•maro

__
'h_t_o_n-::P::U.-:6
WANTING TO BUY BABY J.-1-9_7_9_ C_h_ovy
HOLSTEIN BULL CALVES . cyl .. 3 opd. 1986 'h ton
FROM AREA OAIAIES . OMC At, PS, 30.11 cu.ln .
CALL VEAL BARN, 114· engine. 1984 V. ton GMC 2
246·8102 OR 114·448· tone point. PS. PB, nlco . Call
B108 .
814·448·2633.

SWAIN •
AUCTION lo FURNITURE

Boats and
Motors for Sale

·1980 Torry boll boat, 26

2 yr old buH H.,.IQrd· red
Ang
. uo cro11. Colll14-2419596.
•

51 Household . Goods

-----~--:::--:::--:::--:-

Chevrolet

76

AC. PS, PB. AM -FM rodlo,
100,000 mn.o. goad condl·
tiOII . Coli 814· 448·8209

LiY•atock

Butcher goota for Nle 10
conto lb. Coli 114·311·
9181 til I, or 114-446·
0161 oltor 1 .

l --::-::-:-:---::-;c--;;;:-=-:-:;-:-

· Furnished apt .. 2bdr., 131 "¥2

1171

Autoa for Sale

1973 Hondo Civic gnat gor

Merchan!ltse

redeco rated, utilities partly
paid . Cal\304-675-5104 or
304-675-5386 .

71

F•rm Equipmen(

Sn.go woaon. woril. cond ..
•eoo. c.11 614-441-2111.

3 office• with small kitchen,
1218 E""torn Avo UOO mo.
5 room unfurnished
apt .. S200 mo. Call 614446 - 7672 or 614 -446 1980.

2 bdr. apt .. ·good location,

3126 .

81

Space for Rant

lo Neil. Gallipolio. CalL 446·
4416 alter 8PM.

Call 446 - 4416 after BPM .

Tuesday. September 24, 1985
DICK TRACY

-------

-

--~----

Tuesday, September 24, 1985

Mobile home lot, 12 'x 60 ~ or
•mailer, t76 water paid, 4th

JACKSON ESTATES
1973 Vandale 14&lt;70, 3 APARTMENTS (E quat

bile home with 3 bedrooms
and 1 ¥.! baths. 304-882-

. ....

-

Pomeroy-Middlepon. Ohio

Page 8 The Daily Sentinel
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

...

.,.

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.brity ~ cry9togrwns.,. Cf . .,., rrom quotation• by famou•
p.op., put .nd ~t . EICfllttl..- In the cipher 1tand1 fof
lfiOfhllr. Todty'' ~; E ectuall B.

by CO NNIE WIENER

"YC

HKAAD
AO..GF
EYTTO.
OZKT
IRBDQ
11

KLAZP.PZLTS

VAATG
CZ
CZ

FBMR
WaS

y•N
VZD

RLZKJF
ZLR'O

FBMA
YC

aJZ."

a

GZTN

PS

VRI
IFBDCZL .

PREVIOUS SOLUTION : " There are $ome men who, In a
tifty-titty proposillon, Insist on getting the hyphen too "
- Lawrence Peter.

ci 1M5 b'i NEA, InC.

321

�~~--~1~0~T~h~e~D~a~il~y~S~en~tin~e~lwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww~Po~m~er~o!y=:M~id~d~le~po~rt~,~O~hl~·o~wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwmwwwwmT~u~e~~~Y~·~S~e~~~e_m_bewwr_2_4~._1_9_8_5

Ilia sheriff .· wants lawsuit
rd in Meigs County court
rpt .t for the change of the

"iU,(KO.COO law suit,

i11 •

'in~ thcl!

•1o;'

~changed

has been received

.s (\lmmon Pleas Court.

&lt;(\J

t:

thPtrta l

'r)l'Jnl.V'

t"&lt;~m'"'t

to, move thC' case to
ounl&gt; w"s filed by a lega l
1_11' '"{'t'lting James M. Mortt·
" ill\&lt; \Iva L. Su llivan of the
&lt; 'unty Sheriff's D€part·
1 ••:I; ore among the defend·

,, ·

1u~st

sTates that plaintiff~
l'iiH' requPs ted a cha nge
itl)lll Ca llia County to
t ll nlv on fhP grounds that
I ilnfair tO permit Ga llia
ju 1ro.; to hear the case
1 1 .1' t ;a Ilia County sheriff
· fl. ht.&lt;., t1C&gt;puties.

r

£l

1

" ·, thP defendants oppose
,m·,f(' to Jackson Cou nty on
~rtimds · th(lt
the Present
'' l ' r'ii.&lt; in that county with
~

·i

1.:,: U\U nt)'

1 .

•tn t h.P reasons for and

office ho lders at

mery, to obtain a fair and Impartial
hearing subject to great dispute.
Thedefendantsaskthatlfthecasels
to be transferred out of Gal lia
County , that Meigs County be
considered since it Is an adjoining
county with an environment and
circumstances similar tp Ga!lla
County .
The miginal court action, filed In
Madison Cou nty and transferred tO
Gallia County, revolves arou nd an
a uto accident in Gailia County on
August 1, 1981. According to the

Driver faces DWI charge after wreck

H{~e

chief's

•t' nu&lt;d trom pa~e

I)

Uf..rlhE&gt; riverbank area of
auJ asked council to study
riw•np::.:s of a sign on South

~iiru,

·\T
t·

" ''&gt;

&lt;' ,d&gt;•o!gnatingl heloca tlon
{""'"'bypass.
i t ·• w ,; .read from Hartley
'l·e Pnint Plf'asant. in rega rd to
t n1·· II)( clled near the river Off
'' l'hPietterindicatedl hallhe

dur&lt;r being stored there is
I 'Ul·l ·~nd that i8 in only one of
.-11

mks. There is no Lntent ion
• 1i:,£-ltl(· or}')(lr three tanks into
Pi· t~u· nrarfu ture,according
l·,

h ttrl rhr company has plans
ipt[_n~ the tal'fk."i but nor in 19&amp;5

cgtJI.lrch['('ksaremadeat the..
1dr Hlk't~!1t tlln'C' t i.met=; a week,
1
1f' '· ·lll'(L Jt wasa lsoagreffl
"''" l'lty Limits si te checked
Ul! H\;-Jt gaslinr tanks once
1'\IT·

WEYERS CAVE, Va . (UP! ) -

jesse E. Brinker
Jesse E. Br inker, 64, Fi fth St ..
Racine. a Racine jeweler and
watchmaker, died Monday evening
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Drinker was born a t Graham
on April 18, 1921, a son of the late
Or ion Edwin and Sarah Jane
Roberts Brinker.
Su i"'iving are his wife, Naoma; a
daughter, JoAnn Collins. Racine:
two sons, Joe, Little Hocking, and
Ronnie, Kanauga; six grandchild·
ren, Eddie and Penny Sue Wolfe,
Joey, Jessa my, Ariel and Benjamin
Sti nker; four great -gra ndchildren,
Rebecca, Nicole, and twins, Kala
and Kara Wolle; three brothers,
E lmer, New Haven; Homer. Las

1t

ru 1

IJ;'

including abou t EO)

·plants . The conlraband
h" nPd at the Meigs Cou nty

JjllillL

'J

Wi\1iam Qu\vey,

i'n •r

_] , i

l.rmg~.o·\'ii!P.

I.mrist'

Burbridge.
h iclry. PPnn.v Smith .

•, Jf.' "'·

' (· 'wrgt&gt;n &lt;'Y runs
\• ,~.
1~1\

t)l

rrt

,

..

c·unty EmPq;rncy Medi -

't'l' 1CP

'

rc·rlorts two ca lls

o,.,,h•mcnt: Rutland al4:43
r•d. Hill !{ond for Eva
VPtf ·rans Memorial

REG. s1.49

H

•r•

,,,fter forecast
df'at cmd cool. Low40to
• f.ad1~ lmhnr!Fthlf'winc.\s.
\ · "if1. l;l\' .. o;;un ny. High again
r l1!.2)H

("n•"WI· of rain is 40 prrcent this
,(.)r i'm~ HI pcrcf'nl this afternoomr H r zero Jlf'rcrnt tonight and
' ' r lay

Extt•mWd lnn'('a."it

..,
Prices Are In Effect Wednesday, -Se t.

•

S) dwusc- Firf' DPpart 16 p.m . toil brush nre at

;11 1

'

ROYAL CROWN
PRODUCTS

DORITOS
8 oz.
BAG

99(

GROUND BEEF
LB.

79(

8 PAK-16 OZ.

Limit 2 Please

$119

SUPERIOR

LUNCH MEAT
REG.
$1.69

;hy th rough S:dunlay
through t h ~;~ period. A chaliCe
l1 r If Tin~rlay, then fair ll'rlday
,1"'·' • ,tun!ay. l&gt;aily high."i around60
t ~tl .. y 60 to ti.'i Friday and 65 to
"- '·'

99&lt;

LB.

.. ....... ,.

.

.......,. ~,

•

2s, 1985 :Only

FRUIT

LUNCH BOX PIES

PARKA Y MARGARINE

4/$1
YELLOW ONIONS
3 LB.
BAG

'

3'9&lt;

LB.

2f$1

After two days of questioning,
jurors have been seated in Meigs
CountyCommonPleasCourtforthe
aggravated murder trial of Lindsay
Taylor,~. RFD. Pomeroy.
The final members of the jury
were choSen abcut 3: 3! p.m.
Tuesday !lfternoon. The trial got
underwayat8:3la.m. thlsmomlng.

MURDER TRIAL UNDERWAY -Testimony hegBlllhlsmonilnlln
Melp Couni)' Common Pleas Court In the agpvat.d murder cue ..
Lindsay T11)'Jor, 37, RF'D Pomeroy. Taylor Is chiii'J!I.'d wllh the Oct. 17,
It83 sbootlnl death of Danny Wayne Melton. ·

The source said Celeste, who Is
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A spokes·
man for the Ohio Department of traveling In India, had not made a
Mental Retardation and D€velop· final decision as r11ate Tuesday.
The source said the governor does
mental Dlsabllltles has denied
reports that department director not want to . "humiliate" Johnson
Minnie Fells Johnson wiil soon be and wants to handle her dismissal In
a "classy, businesslike way," the
asked to resign.
"There are an awful lot of stories newspaper reported.
Another source told the news·
going up and down the MRDD
paper
there Is general agreement
grapevine," said spokesman James
among
Celeste's advisers that
Bruney. "This one Isn't true."
The Columbus Citizen-Journal, Johnson must go.
"The chorus is all singing with one
quoting sourcesclosetoth~ ad minis·
tratlon of Gov. Richard F . Celeste, · voice," the source said.
Cails for JohnSOn's resignation
reported today that Johnson will be
have
· increased since June after
asked to step down .
revelations
were made of mlsman·
"You can speculate it wiil happen
agement
and
abuse of cllents' funis
soon," the newspaper quoted a
al
state
centers
for the mentally
source, who asked not to he
retarded.
An
Ohio
Senate sulx:om:
Identified, as saying. " You won't he
mlttee
Is
investigating
the
wrong If you speculate It will happen
allegations.
soon. ''

FROZEN POTATOES

$199

( r'l)l

'

3 °/o OF GROSS SALES

""''!. Jlilgltt·time lows itt the

l1 1-

l

I ,jrW 1fh,

&lt; '-' '·

J-_1 AND (UP! I -

~ '
"Inning Ohio
n1lm l i~' :-. ~)aJ iy ~umber

r!:

WILL BE DONATED
Mon·
Lollery

t~;s

'! i• k•
'· II'S totaled 51.006.575,
wltil a [HVPtf due of S.'Xl6,426.50.
~ J(.'J\-1

We Resef.l'e The Right To
limit Qua!Mities

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM -10 PM
Sund ay 10 AM -10 PM

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 S
SOUTHERN TORNADOES
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9
EASTERN EAGLES

,!.n
~ 1,1

~

tiekPI sales tota led
"llh a payoff due of

12

·r.•

lstralght bet pays$5,100.
&lt;•~1 "" tll't pays $425.

r&gt;J&lt;

298 SECOND ST.
POM EROY, OH .

SHOW

~OUR

o

'
•

jurors, Martha Durst and Ann Boso,
will also be listening to evidence
presented In tbe case.
The beginning of Taylor's trial
marks theendofa two-year struggle
by Meigs County authorities him
into court.
A grand jury indictment charging
Taylor with the aggravated murder
of :ll-year-old Danny Wayne Melton,
of Canton, Ark., was returned in
Meigs County on Oct 17,1983.
Melton's decomposed body was
discovered In a trailer at Forest Run
on Oct. 10 of 1983. Officials said
Melton died from a gunshot wound
to t1te head on Oct 5. Taylor and his
mother, Mary Edith Taylor, had

resided In the trailer.
On Oct. 11. Taylor was arrested
near Parkersburg in connection
with Melton's death.
Extradition proceedings began
Immediately. oot it was another
year before Taylor was returned to
Meigs County. Delays in a compet·
ency hearing for Taylor stalled the
extradition process. An Initial
hearing found Taylor incompetent
to withstand extradition and he was
then committed to Weston State
Hospital in Weston, W.Va .. for
treatment.
The much-postponed extradition
!lnaily came abOut In March of 1985
lollowlng a competency hearing
which proved Taylor had been

restored to competency and was
capable of returning to Meigs
County to face charges.
A Meigs County competency
hearing followed in April, this time
to prove Taylor capable to stand
trial on the aggravated murder
charge. Taylor was found incompetent and was transported to the
Timothy B. Moritz Regional Forensic Unit In Columbus to undergo
training In the areas of courtroom
proceedure. Following treatment in
the Columbus facility, Taylor was.
according to medical personnel,
again restored to competency.
The trta!ts expected to continue
into next week.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
U.S. coal Industry would pay an
additional $1 bDiion In taxes over the
next flve years If President Rea·
gan's tax reform proposal was
enacted, says a study released
Tuesday by the National Coal
Association.
The report, conlucted by the
Price Waterbcuse acccounting
finn, said the increased tax burden
could raise domestic coal prices by 3
percent, resulting in reduced demand that could cost 6,400coal field
jobs and29milllon tons of production
annually.
The report predicted the increased tax bill- 45 percent higher
than current tax levels- also would
exacerbate America's trade deficit
by making U.S. coal exports less
competitive overseas and Imported
coal more attractive here.
And II said the tax hike likely
would he reflected in higher
electricity blils for consumers since
utUities are heavlly dependent on
coal.
''This tax program coukl be
disastrous for the coal industry,
disastrous for the nation's energy
policy and disastrous for coal states
like Pennsylvania, Kentucky and
many, many others," Sen. Arlen
Specter, R-Pa. , tnld reporters.
"This would demand the coal
industry pay more than its fair

share," added Sen. Wendell Ford ,
D-Ky . .
National Coal Association Pres!·
dent Carl Bagge said the most
hannlul provision of Reagan's plan
wotild be the repeal of the 10 percent
dep!Qtlon allowance for. coal, which
he said would account for $904
mUilon of the $1 billion tax hike.
Bagge said the depletion allowance was essential for the mining
industry to recover capital costs that
rise as coal operators dig deeper into
mines and nonrenewable coal
resources are depleted .
The administration contends the
depletion allowance often exceeds
the cosls Incurred ill' operators.
Bagge suggested the admlnlstra·
tlon's proposal to eliminate that tax
break was "an oversight " that
would be rectltled when Congress
realized its devastating impact on
mining industrtes.
"We think nobody really realized
the critical need for a mining
industry in this country," he said.
"Urban America doesn't under·
stand the s!gnltlcance of mining.
We're fighting for our survival

elsewhere and discourage efforts to
find and produce·more coal.
A report released by the Energy
Information Administration In Au·
gust also predicted a tax increase for
coal operators under the adminls·
!ration's lax plan, causing a 5
percent lise In coal prices.

Three offer testimony
Three witnesses testified Wednes·
day morning in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court
in the
aggravated murder trial of Lindsay
Taylor, charged with the slaying of
Danny Melton two years ago.
Tom McKay. Jr., testified I hat he
is an acquaintance of Taylor and
that Taylor does own a sawed off
shotgun, allegedly the murder
weapon. He said Taylor Is "slow"
when the area of Intelligence of the
defendant was brought into play.
Jack Scarbrough, who found

Seasonally adjusted
new factory orders
in billions of dollars.

Bagge said the otlJ?r major
problem In Reagan's plan was the
proposed elimination of the Investment tax credit, which he said would
drive investors out of the coal
industry to seek better returns

WASHINGTON (UP!) - "Big needs to modernize and expand.
But increases there have been
tiCket" factory orders jumped 3.4
percent In August, with all of the sporadic since that category last
gains posted by the aircraft and peBked in May of last year.
Durable goods orders are
. defense Industries, the Census
watched
closely by economists as a
Bureau said Tuesday.
reliable
guide to tlte mood of
Orders were worth a record $1117.9
business.
The eKpenslve durable
bllllon after seasonal acllustment,
goods require financing to ooy.
$3.5 blillon more than July.
The total was helped by a large which also provides a measure rl
Increase In mllitary orders, which the ~fleet r1 high Interest rates.
Durable goods orders have gone
run lndependenl of the state of the
economy. Without the miiltary mwn in three of the last eight
orders themonth'sgaln would have months.
Shipments of durable factory
been less, at 2.5percent. And without
products
went up 2.5 percent In
aircraft orders there would have
to
$105 blll!on, the first
August
been no Improvement at all on the
clvllian side, one government ana- Increase rl greater than 1 percent
since last Septemher.
lyst said.
The Industrial economy depends
Orders In July dropped a revised
00 beth new
and the oocklog
2.3 percent.
Orders dropped 2.1 percent for of untilled old orders for Its
machinery In August and orders for niomentum. Unftlled orders in·
primary metals were virtually creased 0.8 percent in August to$.'fi4
blUJon rut wotild have declined If
unchanged.
One positive note In the figures · detenseordersweremtlncluded.
was a 1.5 percent lncrmse In the
Milltary orders have been ex·
Important catesory of non-defense tremely strong for four months,
masking tre weakllesS bt the overail
capital goods, the new machinery
and construction gear that lndusrtv
~res.

Melton' s body in the Taylor trailer at
Forest Run testified that he had
gone to the trailer home to get
clothes helonging to Taylor's sister
and was accompanied by Taylor's
uncle, Alvin Taylor. He related
details of finding the body hefore the
two left thetrallertogotoaphoneto
notify officials that Melton's body
was in the trailer.
Oerk of Courts Larry Speitcer
was then called to enter into
evidence, an eariler assault indictmen! against Taylor.

Durable Goods

here."

Factory orders up
3.4 percent iri August

A study performed by Arthur D ..
Little consulting finn said the entire
mining Industry would suffer the
same hann as the coal Industry
under Reagan's proposals- higher
taxes leading to reduced production
and employment.

3.4%

109
107
105~----

103 ._,__ _
101

97

orders

~0.'11

PH I: I

lose the most are In rural a.r eas already economically
depressed because r1 high unemployment.
"A lolnl committee of the legislature has been
meeting in order tD reach some form of compromise
hefore recommendations are made and taken to the
General Assembly for a vote, " Snyder said.
"I urge thOse In oppos!llon to this Issue to contact
their state senators and state representatives asking
them to voice their opposition to t1te adoption of the
7().3} formula. The benefits reaped by the adoption of
this formula does not begin to outweigh the
devastation that will be felt by many schools across
the state," Snyder concludes.

Coal·industry hi\ hard by President's tax plan

ORE-IDA CRINKLE CUT

SLB. BAG

"Supporters of the 7().00 argument claim that
fa!mess is the Issue,:• Snyder said.
"Is It fair tntax power plants dl!!erently than we lax
any other manufacturing plant?" Snyder asks. "Is It
lair that counties with power plants must provide
services to the plants and not receive some benflts
. from the seiVlces?
"Is it fair that these same countieS must also
tolerate dally environmental hazards of ash. coal,
dust, high traffic areas and the like and also give up a
portion of. their tax base to others? I don't think so."
An emerging common denominator In the Issue Is
that power plants are most often located In rural
areas of Ohio. And, the school districts that stand to

Taylor murder trial underway

ODMR director
•
may resign soon

ianw.., Alley, RarinP;

{ 0'

Department of Taxation to appraise personal
property taxes, 70percentgoes tothetaxlngdlstrict In
which the utility Is located. The remaining 3! percent
is distributed among the other taxing districts where
the utility hils personal property - power lines.
Equally crucial Is the fact that local ilovernment and
townships stand to lose substantial funling if these
bills pass.
.
The 7(}.3() form~la was founl Invalid by an Ohio
SUpreme Court ruling last summer which was based
on a lawsuit flled by the Gallla Local School District.
The lawsuit sought to recover the property valuation
which had been transferred out of the district.

.

Fra nk Bise.

11 ~IS·

1 t.t•

The Southern Local School District stands to lose
approximately $141,698 in actual true dollars if
proposed House and Senate legislation is adopted,
according to State Senator Cooper Snyder, R·
Hillsboro.
"These blils re-establish an inequitable formula for
the computation and· distribution of electlie utility
property taxes," Snyder said in a statement released
today. "The legislation calls for re-establishing t1te
7().3(} formula for apportioning the value of personal
property of electric companies. The result is that the
rich get richer and the poor get poorer."
Under the 7~ formula used by the Ohio

out ern orna oes a

·\.\~ning ,7:30p.m .. atthe

h

Senator blasts 70-30 utility property tax ,split :

Following the proceedings from
the jury bcK will be six men and six
women: Kemp F. Beaumont,
Cecilia Hart, Ethel Lowery, Charles
Withee, Harley Riggs. Lorena Aull,
Florence Gofl, Rebecca Codner,
Timothy E. Smith, Dwight E.
Burton, Wesley D . Manley and
Florilla Baker. 1\Yo alternate

r,·w(~a rdC'nCiubwi llmect

1,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, September 26, 1986

The airliner did not carry a flight
data recorder or a cockpit voice
recorder.

POWELL'S
SUPER VALU WILL
RECOGNIZE OUR BEND AREA HIGH SCHOOL
.
.
FOOTBALL PROGRAMS BY DONATING 3°/o OF GROSS SALES TO
HOOL FOOTBALL TEAMS

Section•~ 14 Pea••
25 Cerlt1
A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

2

'

Vol.35, No.1!4

cause.

lnn"!-;day

fr

~u

The pilot of a twin-engine airllner,
flying in "soupy " fog over the Blue
Ridge Mountains, reported · his
navigation system failed before the
plane crashed into a peak and
·burned, kUling alll4 people a beard.
A Civil Air Patrol helicopter
spotted the smoldering wreckage of
Henson Airlines Flight l 517 in dense
woods Monday night , m ore than
eight hours after it blipped off radar
screens on a !light from BaltimOre lo
the Shenandoah Valley Air port.
Two doctors we re lowered from
the helicopter to the crash site atop
the peak butfound no survivors and
authorities planned to begin removing the bodies a t daybreak.
CoL David Carter, a Clvll Air

at 10:20 a.m. EDT Monday.
A state police helicopter and two
Marine helicopters scanned the
mountains and dozens of pollee
officers and volunteer rescue squad
members joined the search on foot
ln the treacherous wilderness.
"Visibility is pretty poor rlghl
now. It's really soupy here,"
Virginia State Police Sgt. Gerald
Shoals said before the plane was
found.
A team of Investigators from ihe
FAA and the National Transportation Safety Board was en route to the
crash site to try to determine the

n.• ~'pt. 26.

tr

ts

t,

Vegas, Nevada, and Roy , Mason, W.
Va.; three sisters, Virginia and
Anna Faye Roush, NeW Ha ven, and
Frances Gibbs, Hartfoi'd , W. Va ..
and a number of nieces and
nephews.
Besides his pat'ents, he was
preceded ln dea th by a brother,
Fe•·reiL
He was a member of .the Meigs
Chrlst ian Center and was a veteran
of service ln the U.S. Navy.
Services will be held al 1 p.m.
Friday at the F.wing Funeral Home
with Mr. Ron Brinker officiating.
Burial will be in Mound Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m.
Weclncsday.

Patrol spokesman, said the airUn·
er 's pilot told the FAA in his last
radio contact that the plane's
localizer - a n essential part of its
navigation system had
malfunctioned.
The plane then was 11 mlles
southwest of the airport and
wandered in the fog and clouds
before crashing e ight miles east of
the airport near G rottoes . officials
said.
"The fog obscured the lop of the
mountain ridge. He was flying in the
c louds," Henson Airlines spokes·
man John Presburg said.
The State Pollee launched a
massive ground and air searcl1 for
the plane after the Federal Aviation
Administ ration reported it missing

enttne

at y

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 25, ·1985 IS

' rt •&gt;~st&gt;s dismissed

~

rear storage compartment in the bus porcltased with
the support of lUI IU!Onyrtlous donor from Whitworth
Bus 8ales, btc. of Ml amisbtll'J:, Ohio. Mark AbeD,
director of student developmeni Md J o\m Lawhorn,
AD and head ~ketball coach at Rio GI'IU!de College,
pose with Rio's newest vehicle.

NEW BUll- Rio GrMde College recently added a
new bus to its m otorpool. The Aerolt.'c h T-Abus will be
used for student sports Md activitieS. Built on a 1985
Ford Econolbte chassis, the streamline vehicle seats
25. '11tere is plenty of storage space Inside Md In a

•

•

e
Copyrighted 1985

Plane crash leaves 14 dead

.'f'lT• J'f'ffiQV('(J.

Jl cases have been dis·
in '\h•igs County Common
l ourt:
Elizabeth Sue
~..,
d. . ht agai nst Nicholas J .
t-'n'~:hl.
Amer it ru s t Co rp .
"ll:isl Kilrl F. Culp, PI a!; Shelby
1! &lt;lil'dnst .J ames L. Mayfield,
minist.rnkn of I he Ohio 13ureau ci
~ r'·,·J"sComiJf'nsation, PIal.
r.,. 'urtht'l' o1et ion. lhP rouii. issued
r JC't IJlhf' drstructionofilJegal

•

A Meigs County man escaped allegedly went off the left side of the
injury in a single-car accident road, over an embankment and
Monday 'night on Sutton Township struck a tree.
Winebrenner's vehicle sustained
129, according to the Galtla-Melg'
heavy damage in the 10 p .m.
post of the State Highway PatroL
Troopers said Kelly C. Wine· acc ident, troopers said. Wine·
brenner, 25, of Co il~ge Roaq, brenner was cited by the patrol for
Syracuse, was northbound on 12\J, .' fa ilure to control his veh icle and
about one and fou r-tenths miles
DWL
north of Meigs County 35, when he

w Ihe county's problems,
iblllty of any county offi ce
""'h as Sheriff Montgo-

• 1 1,

~

cburt docket, a vehicle driven by
LonnlaA.McCoywasbeingpursued
by a vehicle driven by Deputy
Sheriff Alva SuUivan when the
McCoy vehicle went out o! control
and struck a car driven by Ricky L.
Martin who allegedly died a s a
result of injuries received. Relatives
of Martin and of Sandra Herman.
owner of the vehicle driven by
Martin, all of London, Ohio, filed the .
action for money against McCoy,
I he sherlf!.'s department and Gallla
County Commission .

SUPPORT!
I .

B08'JER KICKS OFF RIO SOCCER SEASON - SU&amp;e Re!to• !II u
live .Jol4'm Bo I ldd&lt;ed the 11n1 ball lD open lfle 111!11 Rio Gnnde

11000er Rall&lt;JII on Slanley L Ev81111 Fleld Tueodllr aftemoou.
• Re*'- .-,., look on In badqraund. FIDdlay ~ cap&amp;ured the
CoiJep!

maid!. ....

--

95

ASONDJFMAMJ J A

1984

1985

UPI Graphic

FACTORY ORDERS UP- "Big ticket" faelory ordersjwnpedU
~ with all of Jlle galnll poMed by tile llrcnft aad
delelllle llldullriee, the Cellllll8 llure&amp;ll uld ~ay. (Ul'l).
,

percelll bt

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="189">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2779">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="41581">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="41580">
              <text>September 24, 1985</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2852">
      <name>brinker</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
